■< ' iU Tfc* W0oth»r ' i t;'" THE PONTIAC PRESS ■■V Home Edition VOL. 122 NO. 74 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SA'rUIlDAX. MAY 2, 1964—48 I‘AGES UN ITE SnA^IONAL LEAVES FOR SOUTH AMERICA-Oakland County’s for> mer civil defense director, John Madole, boarded a jetliner today for Call, Colombia. He will represent the county under the federal government’s Alliance for Progress with Latin 'American nations. Membera of his family, Robert, 13, Janet, 15, and Mrs. Madole wave goodby from their home at 2970 Lacota, Waterford Township. They will join Madole In Call when an older daughter can leave college In June. 'AH Military'Boses Face Economy Cuts WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense Secretary Robert S. MacNamara considers every U. S. military base potential target of his economy drive. Every post or installation is in “jeopardy” if it is inefficient, McNamara yesterday told a group of, Massachusetts congress- men concerned about the future of the BoStW Naval Shipyard and the Water-town, Mass., arsenal. The defense secretary said he had a ala^( ||t (rf jiitallBtions where costs could bcf cjjt and he would be “derelict” in nis dutj if he did not act. The delegation met with McNamara to protest vigorously the scheduled closing of the Watertown arsenal that will cut 1,849 jobs from the area. However, McNamara refused to-change his |dan to close the arsenal by l^ptember, 1967, claiming the defense department can get the arsenal’s goods cheaper on a competitive basis through private industry. He told the group that the defense department is studying 8,000 installations for possible economy moves and that a secret list has been made of bases likely to be affected. The defense secretary said since he entered the cabinet he has taken 551 announced actions to get defense costs down. He said these actions have affected 80,000 Jobs. McNamara said the difficulty In finding job possibilities for shipyard workers was a reason why no Navy shipyard closings have been announced. 'Caller' Held for Mind Test Romney laughs at Armed Intruder Visit - In Today's I Press } I ^ ^ Builders ^ Informative guide to I help with spring homes i garden plans—TABLOID Laos (Merger of right-wing, neutralist factions an ^ Bounced — PAGE 2. Vigil } “Too-slow” Methodist I integration is protested— I PAGE 2. , ' I Astrology ........20 ; Bridge .... 20 Church News ... ... 1315 q Comics 20 1 Editorials . ..... 6 1 f Home .Section 17-19 ^ Markets , ■ ' 24 rbltur^rics 25 Sports 21-23 ' Theaters 10 , TV A Radio Programs 31 ' i Wilson, Earl 31 Women’s Page 42 .| LANSING (AP) -Although Gov. George W. Rom laughed off the incident, police today held for mental exdmina-tion the man w|io marched into Romney’s office carrying loaded pistol in his attache case and a folding knife in his pocket. ★ ★ ★ Held on a 48-hour psychiatric detainer in a Lansing hospital ward is Charles P. English, 37, of Bogota, Colombia, and formerly of Miami. Police said he history of mental disturbance for which he was once hospitalized. English said he was sent here by former Vice President Richard Nixon. He got ope step inside Romney’s Inner office before state police bodyguard Jay Kennedy, 32, grabbed him by the shoulder ' yanked him back. * -k * "He said Nixon and 1 should run on the national ticket,” Romney said with a laugh after he and Kennedy talked later with English privately. NIXON API»0INTMENT English had introduced himself to several of the workers in the outer offices and told Mrs. Margaret Little, Romney’s appointment secretary, that Nixon had arranged, his appointment: He tried to follow her into the inner office, and in the doorway said to Romney: “My name , is English and I want to talk to you.” That Was as far as he got. Kennedy sat him down forcibly in a chair and asked him to open the case. When English refused. Kennedy opened it, saw the .38 caliber revolver,' and arrested English. ★ ★ ★ Police said in Bogota, where English’s wife and three chil-idreh live, he has a permit to own and 4:arry the gun, but this is not valid in Michigan. SEVERAL OCCUPATIONS Police said English told them he was an Ffel agent. Romney said English identified himseif ai. a’ Florida politician His (Continued oh Page 2, Col. 8) Castro Warns: Cuba Wilf Fire et Overflights Threatens Uso of Soviet Rockets Even if It Unleashes War HAVANA, . Cuba (UPI) — Premier Fidel Castro said yesterday that if negotiations fail to halt American reconnaissance flights over Cuba, his forces will use Soviet rockets to alhoot down the U.S. planes. “If by* shooting down one of those planes, we unleash a world conflagration, we shall not be responsible,” Castro said in a belligerent 2-hour and 17-minute May Day speech. *‘We have made, are making and will make efforts to see thOM flights cease, and cease they must,” Castro said. In Moscow, Russia flaunted a new antiaircraft missile and issued a new warning to th« See Pictures, Page 2 Nice Weather Is Predicted hr This Weekend You can put away your umbrella at last. The weatherman promises partly cloudy skies with slightly warmer temperatures tonight and tomorrow. » ★ ★ Lows tonight will range from 45 to 50. Tomorrow’s mercury will climb to the 66 to 74 range. The prediction for Monday Is increasing cloudiness and Winds today are southeasterly at 10 to 20 miles. \ ★ ★ 'w The lowest thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 46. At 2 p.m. the temperature was! 65. Dozen in Field for 90th Derby East, West Champs to Vie in Famed Race AP PMofax LOW AT 8TERN-The USS Card, victim of an explosion that blasted a hole below water yesterday, rests low at the stern in Saigon Harbor. The Card, a baby aircraft carrier, partially refloated at high tide, and it was hoped makeshift patching will prevent sinking again. None of the 73-man crew was injured In the blast. Vessel Sunk; 8 Wounded by Hand Grenade Viet Cong Is Blamed for Injured AAen, Hole Ripped in Transport SAIGON, Viet Nam l/P) ■—A bomb blast today wounded eight Americans —five officers and three enlisted men—oh a Saigon boulevard in sight of a U.S. aircraft feiry crippled and temporarily sunk by a predawn explosion. Security officers blam^ both .^^incidents on the Communist United States that reconnaissance flights over Cuba could bring the world to the brink of ar. Premier Nikita S. Khrushdhev himself delivered the sharply-wordad statatnaat after the antiaircraft missile was trundled across Red Square in tha annual May Day Parade of Russian military might. Western military observers said the rocket apparently was designed to bring down low-flying planes. KREMLIN RECEPTION Khrushchev, speaking of U.S. flights over Cuba at a Kremlin reception after the massive Moscow display ended, said: “We would like to warn those who are playing with fire once again to make them understand that hy subverting the principles of peaceful coexistence,' displaying disrespect for other countries ttiey could draw the world into the abyss of another world war The Soviet leader denied that the Kremlin had sanctioned the spy flights It. a secret deal with the United States^ ★ w w • Castro wad ri^rted to have raised objections to “Soviet-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Roses, riches and renown today awaitisd the 90th Kentucky Derby champion, fastest in a field of a dozen racing bluebloods. ★ ★ ★ Among the trim 3-year-oId thoroughbreds answering the bugle for the IVi-mile race were Western champion Hill Rise, unbeaten this season, and North em Dancer, the Eastern niler. Barring bwHninute with-ih’awals, AmerlpriJeieieit horse rdch b<(|ld wOFw the ttlnner, In luidltioB to the lOQ,-Mp it historic dinrchlll I)oit^, millions could see the race at 4:38 p.m. EST on television. The weatherman promised partly cloudy skies and temperatures around 70 by post time. k k k Long striding Hill Rise, from El Peco Ranch in California, came in with eight consecutive victories. CANADA FIRST A victory by Northern Dancer, owned by E. P. Taylor of Toronto, would be the first foi* Canada. Opposing them were nine colts and a gelding, Roman Brother. ' Ishkoodah, son of Needles, was the only son of a Derby winner in today’s field. Needles, 1956 champion, holds the record winner’s share $123,450. k k k Others in today’s field were Quadrangle, The Scoundrel, Mr. Brick. Dandy K., Wil Rad, Mr. Moonlight, Royal Shuck and Extra Swell. State Senate Okays Legislative Pay Hike LANSING (5^The Senate yesterday passed, 22-9, a bill which could make Michigan’s 144 lawmakers the highest-paid in the nation at $12,500 a year, including expenses. Pver the nine Republican negative votes, the Senate sent the raise-included in the $32.9 appro-’priation for general gov-eniinient — to the House for agreement on several Senate changes. The House already has ap-;pkWPiit the $4,250 pay increase, but the Senate knofiked off Houad-opposed bonuaeafor par^ leadfi^S ehgnibets. The House muM concur in this and other amendments to send the measure to Gov. George W. Romney for his signature. Five of the bills in Romney’s proposed budget appeared headed for House-Senate conference committees after the House ap-' proved them wld» amendments. KEY ISSUES Lady Astor Dies; First in Parliament . LONDON (AP)^Nancy, Lady Astor, the Virginia belle who despised liquor but loved politics so much became the first woman to sit in Britain’s Parliament, died today. ★ ★ ★ She would have been K on May 19. The woman whose acid wit riled countless Britons and delighted countless others during her quarter of a century in Parliament died at Grims-thorpe Castle, the Lincolnshire home of her daughter. Lady Ancaster, northeast of The exact nature of her illness was not disclosed, but a member of her household said: “This is not a sudden tidng. It is just old age.” ★ * w Lady Astor will be buri^ privately in the chapel of the Astor home at Cliveden in Buckinghamshire. Romney Aide Reports on High Court Suits LANSING (AP) - A U.i Supreme Court decision furnishing guidance for settling Michigan’s legislative redistricting problem is expected before mid-June, Gov. George W. Romney’i chief legal aide said today. Robert Danhof reported to the governor on talks he held in Washington, D. C., yesterday with U.S. Sdiieitor General Archibald Cox, who has an in-tervenor in six legislative suits beteftW court. He said Cox indicated flie government expects a decision on ail six cases before the U.S. court ends its term in Among key issues slated for conference appeared to be a $250,0W appropriation for a traffic safety center at Michigan State University, and $160,000 stricken from a state scholap ship program. The traffic center money was left out as the House restored some $7.1 million in operating, funds to state universities and colleges, whiich had been cut in committee. The bill for higher education was approved by the House at a total of 1147Ji milUon after the last of the $7.1 million was restored. Students Hear Law Day Talk Students attending Law Day ceremonies yesterday at Oakland County courthouse auditorium heard some special praise for local legal minds. “The Oakland County bench generally esteemed throughout the state as one of the finest,” said program speaker James Renfrew, a Royal Oak attorney. ' ' . k' ‘, k k Attending the program, sponsored by Oakland County Bar Association, were all seven Circuit Court Judges and Probate Judge Norman R. &amard. Circuit Judge James S. ThOrtmm presided. ; ‘ Top winner in the annual LaW Day poster contest sponsored by the Bar Association AilXiliary was Michael Wills, 17217 Margate, Lathrup Village. He received a $25 prize. Second and third placis winners were Patty DeVine, 12739 Bergman, Huntington (Voorfs, and Steve Brown, 29^ Spring Hill, Southfield. June Decision on One of these could provide the “guidelines” the Michigan Supreme Court says it wants before making its own decision on legislative redistricting. As Danhof reported on his meeting with Cox, efforts in the legislature to come up with a new districting plan appeared to have sustain^ a new breakdown. WALKED OUT Talks by a special 14-member House negotiating committee were broken off today when Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, accusing RepuWeans of using false vote totals, walked out of a meeting. “We still are willing to negotiate but I can’t stand any more of their nmisense,” said Montgomery. “They are trying to gyp ns with arithmetic.” The dispute centered around efforts to devise a House plan that would give each party m equal number Of “sure” districts the 110-seat House with the rest set up as “swing” districts that could go either way. Republicans caucused at midmorning and agreed to try to resume negotiations with the Democrats after a long discussion on whether to try again line up enough votes to push a plan of their own without Democratic help. GOP members reported, however, “the 56 votes weren't there” when the question came up in caucus. One Vietnamese also was wounded by a fragment. High, tide at noon and laboring pumps freed the Card from the bottom muck of the river. Divers who inspected the gaping hole below the waterline in the baby flatt(g>, a World Wmr II carrier credited with seven Nazi U-boat kills, said they coMld.not. immediately dettN I mine whether the blast thqt,s«Bt her down Was eixtemal or inter-nal. A man either in a car or on a bicycle -- wimesses disagreed — hurled the grenade Into a stieet running alongside the river front in the downtown area. TOP ARTTST-Michael Wills (center) of Lafhnip Village yesterday Won first place in the Law Day poster contest sponsored by the Oakland County {Bar AssociaUqp Auxiliary. Second and third winners were* Patty DeVine (left) of Huntington Woods and Steve Brown of Southfield. The contest Was part of the local observance in a national bar association effort countering the Soviet Union’s May Day celebration. , Suspect in Kidnap Questioned, Freed CHICAGO (UPI) - The Federal Bureau of Investigation early today questioned and then cleared a woman suspected of kidnaping the Fronezak baby. Marlin W. Jerfmspn, head of the Chicago’s FBI agents, said after four hours of questioning | that the woman, a blond whn was dressed in a White nurse-type uniform, was not a suspect in Monday’s abductimi. Johnson and William Murphy, leading the ^lice investigative team, directed the questioning: Viet Cong, considering them studied attacks of the May Day weekend. The ship was the 9,800-ton Card, demoted to transport work since World War II duty against German U-boats in the Atlantic. identifleation of the casualties of the homb attack was temporarily withheld. Four of The others were treated at an American dispensary and dismissed. The full blast hit one man in the back. Fragments injured three others. Blood stains were strewn across a 38-foot stretch of pavement. American and Vietnamese security officers rushed to the scene, about 200 yardk from the U.S. Embassy. Ambulances carried the wounded to a hospital. A U. S. spokesman said when the Card was hit it was iwe- , sumed that Red Viet Cong guerrillas had crept under the S^on commercial wharf udiere sjie was moored and exploded a charge against the hull. The vessel settled to the bottom of the 48-foot deep rivar. All the 73 civilian crewmen escaped injury. Bomb Blasts Dance Hall at Wixom Camp A bomb made out of gunpowder exploded early this morning at a summer canq) in Wixom, blowing up a portion of a dance hall. ★ ★ ★ , Extensive damage was. done to the roof, porch, dance floor and basement of the two-story frame building at the Detroit Finnish Summer Camp, 2490 Lyonia. Police Chief Frank Jadzinski said the explosion, which could be heard three miles aWay,;^ Occurred at 2:55 a.m. He said about a quarter of the building Was blown up by the blast The bpilding was - vacant at * the time. -The camp is open on weekends, but there was no activity there last night, said Chief Jadzinski. The bomb was placed on a porch near a door on the east side of the building. In addition to the building, a juke box, ta-^ bles and chairs and a public' address system were damaged in the bombing. ■ TWO ; A’ TTIR PONTIAP PRESS. SATTODAY, MAY 2, 1064 ' Vigil Protests Church's Stand PITTSBURGH (AP) - About 1,300 Methodist churchfoera from throughout the country staged a demoiutratioh In down-' town Pittsburgh today, saying their Church’s stand on Integration is not positive enough. They came from as far away as Chicago, Detroit, Birmingham, Aia., Atlanta, Ga., and Youths Injured in Racial Fight NASHVILLE', Tenn. «V-Scuf-fles between Negro and white youths injured several persons as racial demonstrations continued in Nashville, Tenn., for the fifth straight day. John Lewis, chairman of the national Student Non-Vilent Coordinating Committee, was among those injured. He was among nearly IM arrested earlier this week. Lewis was charged wldi contributing to the dellmpen-cy of minors by persuading them to stay away from school and Join the demonstrations. The scuffles broke out when Negro and white youths swarmed around a sandwich shop which closed its doors and refused to admit customers. The group of about 150 'marched from a church earlier chanting “Freedom” and carrying signs saying “We Demand Freedom.” ELSEWHERE: Two sticks of dynamite with a fuse that fizzled were found in a Kansas City driveway where private png)^ was being sold to a Negro family. Officers said the 10-foot fuse was blackened and that it apparently was extinguished by an eviy morning rain. Police in Fort Wayne, Ind., forced a path for Gov. George WaUace of Alabama through about 200 massed pickets. WaUace walked through the lowing a bomb scare. An I telephoneiv caller said a time bomb was set to exj^ode during Wallace’s coherence in the hotel No explosives were found. A motion before a panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of An>ei^ at New Orleans seeks a stay of prosecution of 285 civil rights demonstrators in Florida State Courts. Included is Mrs. Malcolm Peab^y. mother of the Govw-nor of Massachusetts. The dem-(msfamtors were arrested at St. Augustine, Fla. Jackson, Miss., and belong to a group called Methodists for After arK4dl-ni(d>t vigil of prayers, serwlb and hymn singing ^n two downtown churches the group, white and Negro, layman and minister, mai’ched to the Civic Arena where the General Conference of the Methodist Church is holding its quadrennial meeting. They knelt and joined hands on sidewriks outside the arena and quietly sang hymns. No police were about. VOLUNTARY PLAN The. participants in the protest poured into the city Friday night Just hours after the General Conference adiq;>ted a voluntary plan to remove racial barriers. The plan calls for transfer over the next four years of the church’s central jurisdiction, which represents some 375,000 Negroes, into the five other jurisdictions which are drawn on geographical lines. No enforcement mechanism was provided. The plan passed by an overwhelming standing vote. But many of the 900 delegates feel »it does not go far enough or fast enough. One rtiinister called it “very definitely a .Southern victory.” PLANNED PILGRIMAGE Ralph Roy, a layman from New York City; said the pilgrimage had been planned for several months. ‘We are not so much protesting what they did,” he said. 'We hre protesting the mood of the conference which was unwilling to move forthrightly for integration of the Methodist Church.” immediately after Friday’s vote some integrationists said they would push for a stronger program before the conference ends nezt Friday. The Rev. William H. James, a Negro delegate to the conference and pastor of New York’s Metropolitan Community Methodist Church, said the pro-Ibility of test heightens the possibil a new vote. The Rev. Mr. James said the pUtn as passed leawii itiUhit a provision of the Methodist constitution pass^ in 1939 which calls for separation of white and Negro mend>ers. He said he would not be satisfied until the conference “takes everything out of the constitution about race. What they did was only good publicity.” The plan sets up a committee to study elimination of the central jurisdiction but provides no finances or staff, the Rev. Mr. James said. He added that the main weakness was in its voluntary provisions "which means no one has to move under the constitution unless they want to” The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC and VICINITY —Partly sunny and a little warmer today, hiid> *5 to 72. Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with little temperature change. Low tonight 45 to 50; hig^ tomorrow 68 to 74. Winds soutoeasterly 10 to 20 miles. Monday’s outlook is increasing cloudiness and mild. Lowest temperature preceding > “ai I a.m.: Wind velocity 5 i Direction; East Sun sets Saturday at 7:33 p.m. Sun rises Sunday at 5:37 a.m. Moon sets Sunday at 10:20 a.m. Moon rises Sunday at 1:06 a.m. Gr. Rapid Houghton _______ Chart Fort Worth 7? 56 Jacksonville 73 67 Kansas City 72 55 Traverse C. 63 52 »r'“*-7T n Bismarck 60 45 Boston 4» 38 Chicago « a* Cincinnati Denver Detroit Pittsburgh 68 48 Salt Lake C. 62 32 S. FranclKO M 47 .............. n fo NATIONAL WEATHERr-Rain is expected tonight in the ; horthwest quarter of the nation and the lower south Atlantic states. It be colder in western thii^d of the nhtioh and the north Atlantic stytes. It will be warmer in a belt running from the Plains region to the south Atlantic states with little change elsewhere. , / SOVIET MOBILE ROCKETS-At the May Day parade ip Moscow yesterday, the Soviets " si| latest antiaircraft missiles mounted on tractors. The celebration was coupled with the warning that Russia stands ready to smash any attacker. VIENTIANE, taos (AP) Neutralist Pi’emier Prince Sou-•vanna Phouma announced Satur day he was assuming direction of all military affairs in Laos after a merger of neutralist and right-wing factions. He made the announcement on the eve of his departiire for Khang Khay and a conference with his half-brother. Prince Souphanouvong, leader of the pro-Commupist Pathet Lao. Goldwater Bader Sees No'Stop-Barry'Candidate WASHIN^ItON (AP) -John G. Tower, R-Tex., predicted Saturday opponents won’t be able to “zero in” on a coalition candidate against Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., in the GOP presidential nomination race. Tower, who has been campaigning actively for Goldwater, scoffed in an interview at reported recent efforts of backers of Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge to effect a stop-Gojklwa-ter agreement with sunmrters of New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. Rockefeller’s strategists greeted coolly overtures reportedly made to them by Robert Mullen, national coordinator of the Draft-Lodge Committee. “There won’t be any effective stop-Goldwater movement because the opposition hasn’t been able, to agree on anybody to oppose Barry,” Tower said. “They just can’t zero in on any coalition candidate. BIG HAZARDS 'One of the reasons is that there are some mighty big political hazards involved for any-.tipdy who heads up a stop-Gold-Water drive, whether- Barry wins the nomination or loses it.” Tower said he is confident Goldwater can win despite an expected setback in the May 15 Oregon primary. Polls indicate that Lodge, serving as U. S. ambassador to South Viet Nam, will top the ballot which lists him, Goldwater, Rockefeller, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania and Sen. Marga-et CSiase Smith of Maine. The Oregon primary has already been discounted,” Tower said. “Barry has virtually conceded that he isn’t going to win it and is concentrating on California.” POOR SHOWING Tower said he doesn’t believe a poor showing in Oregon would affecjt the outcome of his Candidate’s head-on collision with Rockefeller in the June 2 California primary.., He said even if supporters of Lodge, who is not entered in California, gave their votes to Rockefeller he doesn’t believe the outcome would be affected materially. “Lodge just isn’t strong in California,” he asserted. If Goldwater gets California’s nominating votes. Tower said he thinks the Arizona senator will go into the July San Fran- Tri^V Woman Dies in Burning House A 48-year-old woman perished 1 a fire yesterday that gutted bathropm and hallway of a home at 4500 Adams, Troy. Pronounced dead at the scene by Dr. K. F. Koerner was Mrs. John Southard, of the same ad- Police said Mrs. Southard was home alone at the time of 2:34 p.m. blaro. Fire damage was confined to i first floor bathroom, hallway ind bedroom. Extensive smoke damage was done io the; rest of the two-story honjie. ,Troy police and fire officials could give no cadse for the 5. No dollar value was set on the damage. " - ,, Firemen battled the blaze for an hour and ^ half. cjsco convention with at least 550 votes toward the 655 needed to win the prize. “I think he can make it on the second ballot,” Tower said. “It could happen on the first ballots, but only if some of the delegations start switching then. But if he comes close on the first ballot, it certainly will be difficult for his opponentii to stop him on the second.” Rival Blasts GOP Unit for Romney Plug Endorsement of Gov. George W. Romney,fw reelection by the Oakland County Republican executive committee has drawn a verbal blast from his only announced rival. George N. Higgins, Ferndale auto dealer, rebuked the GOP executive committee for endorsing Romney in a primary election. “No county committee has the right to endorse anyone in a primary election,” Skid the former state. Higgins promised that the committee would be in for some surprises. !‘Well over 3,000 persons in Oakland have signed my petitions and more than 12,000 have signed them throughout the state,” he said. Higgins is the only announced GOP candidate for governor. Romney has not yet announced whether he will seek reelection. However, party leaders have been circulating Romney petitions. Fidel: Cubo Will Down Overflights The premier of the sbaky coalition regime met with reporters Insidh his residence for the first time since a right-wing military Junta seized control in Vientiane two weeks ago. Previously he had talked to newsmen from an outside balcony. ^ As minister of defense as well as premier, he'said, "I will effectively direct all military affairs.” (Continued From Page One) American talks on Cuba,” apparently referring to reports of an informal cocktail party conversation here between U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler and First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan. NOT CLEAR It was not clear exactly what Soviet-American “understanding” Khrushchev was denying, since Kohler and Mikoyan during their conversation at a Japanese reception merely reaffirmed the positions of their respective governments. The 70-year-old premier once again stated his government’s support of Cuba in the event of any attack. “The U.S.S.R. fully supports the five conditions Fidel Ckstro advances as slogans safeguarding the independence^ security and peace of the Cuban people,” he said. ★ ★ “We have always said and declare once again that a threat to Cuba, the continuation of the violation of het sovereignty, the Instrusions into Cubk’ii''l^pace can have disastrous cortsequ- Castro said hia position was not based on any Soviet pledge of air or intercontinental missiles in an armed showdown with the United States. He said he assumed all responsibility for Cuban actions against the U.S. flights. He warned Cubans they must be ready “for a long fight that will never end” if the United States invades and occupies Cuba as a result of Cuban action against U.S. planes. Laos Premier Controls Arms SouvaRna M#rget Ntutrplflti, Rlghtiitf NO WORD YET There Was no word from Gen. Phoum Nosavan, a deputy premier and right-wing leader. In the past similar proclamations of unity have not been followed by concrete actions to make them effective. Souvanna said that he could not perform his defense duties before because the right-wing faction had control of the army. I^ added that reforms will be instituted in the armed forces to return it to the situation that prevailed prior to a coup staged by Gen. Kong Le, a neutralist, in August 1960. ★4 ★ 4r This led to speculation that right-wing and neutralist armed forces would be merged. The neutralists have been under separate command since the 1960 coup. ■'The group we used to call the ‘Savannakhet group’ (right wing) has disappeared,” Souvanna declared. “I am speaking in the name of the center (neutralist) and right wing.” TO MAKE APPEAL He addressed an appeal to the Pathet Lao to cease all military activity in order to create a better atmosphere for the Sunday meeting with Souphanaouvong. “^r will ask them (Pathet Lao) to help me by softening their position so that I can solve the Loatian crisis which has lasted very long.” Fighting between the Pathet Lao and right-wing troops flared on the Plaine des Jarres la^t week. Western sources claim the Pathet Lao is backed by as many as 6,000 regulars of the Communist Vietminh. Souvanna’s statement followed joint British-Soviet declaration in London Friday night demanding restoration of the coalition regime and denouncing the right-wing military coup. OUTWARD SIGN—Love can take many forms and in the case of Floyd Fofgette’s IpVe for his wife, Sara, he has banner^ it across their home at 135 Edison for all the World to see. Forgette, a tool and die worker in Detroit, raised t|?e declaration last night without his wife^s knowledge. Discovering the sign , this morning' Mrs. Forgette said, “It was startling and wonderful at thci same time.” The couple, married in Fremont, Ohio, will observe their anniverary tomorrow with a ^ass at St. Michael Catholic Churdi. Birmingham Area News, Proposed Budget Jump Won't Boost Tax Rate BIRMINGHAM - A 1964^5 municipal budget increased 170, M8 but not costing property owners any more than they are now paying wW be recommended Manager L. R. Oare to the City Commission Monday night, * The hike tq 11,939,711 includes salaries qf two new city employes and a 2 per cent general raise fqr all personnel, among other items. Snggeitedezpendlfiiroa. would requirt a ^TJt^nUI tax>(^ rate, netthig the same amount as the present 18-roill levy, according to Oart. The Income would remain constant because valuations In the city have been increased about 20 per cent to bring them up to state equalized levri. ★ w Hubert A. Lancaster Service for Hubert A. Lan-^caster, 77, of 1807 Humphrey Will be 11 a.m. Monday at the: Manley-Bailey Funeral Home,^ with burial in RoselandTarie^ eatery, Berkley. Mr. Lancaster died jyesterday! suddenly. He was a membeirof Grace Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Helena and a sister. , J ’Die levy would brihg In some 81,345,933, with the remainder coming from nontax revenue collected through fees. WAGES, INSURANCE Gqre said the recommended figure includes $34,740 fw wage revisions and minor changes to the insurance program. The manager also Is asking for funds Jo allow the police department to hire another detective and the sign and parking meter department an assistant. Estimated salaries for the two would total $8,000. Gare’s tentative figures show $200,641 earmarked for capital improvements. With a total of $313,241 in the fund, the city could afford several street improvements it has been considering, Gare noted. PROJECTED PROJECTS These include widening of Chester and Oakland, and improvement of the Forest-Woodward intersection. The City Commission will begin its study of the budget M. €. FUNERAL HOME 151 Orchard Lake Ave. WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE Office Furniture SALE DISCOUNT PRICES May M to June 30th SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE 15 Art Metal and A.S.E. Executive and Secretarial Desks 17 Metal and Wood OfHce Chaira 6MetalFUes 2 Metal Book Cases ' Come In and See These Items or Ask for List W ith Full Descriptions (ieneral Printiog & Offica Sopply 17 Lawrence, Ponti^ FE 2-0/135 DISPLAY SCIENCE PROJECTS-Nearly 100 aclench projecta prepared by'Wondary school students in Waterford To'wnship are on public display at the Pontiac Mall. Appraising one of the projects are science teachers (from left) A1 Pavlish, Waterford Township High School; Don Maxwell, Pierce Junior High School; and Arthur Lake, WTHS. The exhibit will continue through today. Admits Killing, Police Claim ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) —Joseph Francis Bryan Jr., charged with kidnaping iq Tennessee and South (Carolina, has confessed to killing a 7-year-old St. Petersburg boy, police said. Chief of Detectives Walter Tipton said the FBI notified him Friday of Bryan’s purported confession. The FBI in New Orleans, where Bryan was in custody, declined comment Tipton’s statement. The body of Lewis Wilson was found Thursday in a palmetto thicket at Venice, Fla., 40 miles south, of St. Petersburg. Police said a man identified as Bryan got his car stuck in the sand there the day Wilson disappeared. John David Robison, Mount Pleasant, S.C., was found dead March 31 Just north of Miami. Bryan was charged in Robison’s disappearance as well as the kidnaping of Dennis Burke, 8, Humboldt, Tenn. Burke was with Bryan when he was apprehended in New Orleans this week. State Senate OKs Tax Exemption for Big Industry LANSING (AP) - A $4.5-mil-lion tax exemption for heavy industry, including a sliding scale of reimbursement to soften its impact on local governments, passed the Senate 22-8 Friday. However, this did not mean final (iefeat for a bipartisan group of senators who had fought for full and continuing reimbursement. The downward-sliding, nine-year scale, plus a new local-option feature written in by the Senate, were not in the bill when the House passed it. The House version dialled for total reimbursement. CHRYSLER IDEA The property tax exemption for tools, dies, jigs and fixtures was asked by Chrysler Corp., Which told Gov. George W. Romney its immediate expansion would be in Ohio instead of the Detroit area unless the bill passes into lawl Train Crash Kilb 21 JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)-Twenty-one Arsons were killed and 108 others injured when a night train Jumped its track and plunged into a ravine last Thursday in West Java, the official Antara news agency reported today. Search for Gems •lanNy M^whing lor largor diamenat, •moraldt, rubiot and Mipphlrat Irom $1,000.00. 16 W. Humn ^L Downtolrn Pontiac FEdanJ 3^0294 SHOP SUNDAY 12 noon to 6 p.m Smart fashion ‘Wnd” MISSES’ NEW BUTTON-FRONT SHIRT-SHIFT 2.97 comparaAk value 3.99 Youll want an arm-load of these little button-to-the-hem shifts, at th|s low pricel Carefree blend of Pdcran® polyester and cotton... styled with convertible collar, roll-up sleeves. Pastel and white checks... misses' sizes. HIRi'S WHY • W* nil for caib onlyt wMi CAUK * Thoro oro no crodtt diorooil YOU SAVI , AT ROBIRT HAU • Too nnro bocowo «ro Ntvtf Plenty of Free Parking Open Sundays 12 Nodn |to 6 P.M. IN PONTIAC 200 North SoginoW . Street. IN CURKSTON- WATERFORD, on Dixie Highway North of Waterford Hill {• SIMMS OKR TONItE Ail 10 PJI. a—mr sum ubi i m u n m SWIIS-lln Store Where YOU Iqr Allow REDUCED WilCES Prevet H Again WHIi Those Speeiab For TODAY and MONDAY SELUNG! Sbnms fust won’t o'llew you to pay full iwtall prlcus and thats why Simms Is tha ItuslaM stoia hi town. Look bolow and to# what wo moan whon wo say 'REDUCID PRICES' — Com|Mr» yovrsolf,. anywhoro. Wo rfoofvo tho right to limit quantitlos. Stock Up For MOTHERS DAY QIFTS and Your Own Waar Ladies SEAMLESS NYLONS AMERICAN FIRST QUALITY ■Comparo 'em anywhere — Seamless demi-toe nylons - In smart beige tones. All sires 916 to 11—no limit buy oil you need — MAIN FLOOR. I JUMBO IT-Ounoa I'im* I ‘FHELL’ Shampoo HAIR SPRAY New, for the natural holr-do look. New slim grip can. Limit 2 per person.-MAIN FLOOR In Naw Unbraakabla Tuba 89e Size |ud a dab. Safe for shower Olid tub use. Limit 2. — MAIN FLOOR) ^NYUM or Stevens TWIST TWILL FABRICS In Mars Jackets, American made — Waterproof nylon Iri charcoal, or gold In sizes medium or large or unlined work jacket with double elbows, zipper front, 2-button pocket, tabs at waist ton or grey in sizes 36 to 46. All woshable. -BASEMENT Full 18-lnoh Swaep BAMBOO Lawn Genuine bamboo lines won't the finest lawns. Long handle. Limit 2.' 2nd FLOOR $2 For Your Elactrio Razor SCHICK Nwn ShflVGrs t $14,95 Value VUh . wniwiitniiii...$ti.w Get $2 (or old electric name brond i the purchoM of this new Schick Magna Power electric shaver.-MAIN FLOOR Royal Express 100% Pure Motor OH-2 GAL Simtn$ Price Factory Sealed container of SAE 10-20-30-40 weights. For cars, •trucks, tractors, etc.* Limit 2 cans. -2nd FLOOR Heew 6-Oeu(e VtNYL 8-Ft.Showe ------- leim me meDow Photo Albums $i.sa Value wer Cuitaia $2.98 Value Long or Short Slaevas ; ‘Big Yank’SHIRTS $2.98 Value 6x6 foot curtain pink, blue or ■ ■■ ,^yellow«^c ’ Kldkarle i Limit 2.-BASE-1« WINDOW OURTAINS Gtolned vinyl with flip windows to hold photos. 3 tlonal Association for ths Ad-vancemont of Colorsd PoopW may call a national onHay work at^n>*|« and |»'ay«r vigil if Oongrass falls to t>ass a civil riiditi bill In raasonablo tlmt, says oiw of Its officials. Alhod Baker Lewis, NAACP treasurer and member of Its 82-man board of directors, said Friday dw timing wUl be up to Roy Wilkins, the organlMtkm’s executive secretary. Lewis said demonstrations would be set up on a community basis. Police Arreit Man for Drunk ^Galloping' BIG IDEA-FUdier Body Division equipment repairman W. Neeson, 56 Putnam, has received |6,000 in savings bonds as maximum award under General Motors employe suggestion plan. Making the presentation was T.F. Wiethorn (left), plant manager, and H.A. Daniel (right), plant engineer. Neeson, who plans to retire nqxt year and has now won over 88,000 in idea awards, suggested combining convertible top subassembly locations. MOpNT SHASTA, Calif. (AP) — A 62-year-old man, arrested on US 99 by the highway patrol, was charged With drunk driving. The “vehicle** he was operating was a horse. Family. Quarrel Erupb: Man Dead; 2 Wounded CARO (AP)- A family quarrel burst Into a three-hour selge Friday in which a daro map wounded his wife and a policeman, officers said. Police said the body of Orville Sybert, 48, was found In a tear gns-filled upstairs bedroom of his home. A rifle was found nearby, they said. ★ w ★ Police said Sybqrt had wounded his wife, Ladauna, 80, and Tuscola County Deputy James Barriger, 38. Both were treated at C^ro Community Hospital. Mrs. Sybert suffered a wood splinter wound on her right arm. She was fleeing the house when Sybert fired, officers fald, Barriger suffered a flesh wound In the neck when he answered a family trouble call at the Sybert home. He returned to duty after being treated. Witnesses said more than S,-000 people in this Thumb-area community of 8,800 watchfd as some 20 police officers from nsighboring oommunltfoa at-tempfod to git Sybert to surren- PoUce did hot ftra a shot, but later used tear gas In an attempt to get Sybert to surrender. He barrloaded himself In the house after his wife telu-phoned TUscola deputlei following an argument. Mrs. Sybert uiter told Caro Police Chief Clayton Montei that the quarrel was over **hls lick- ing** a stepchild last Sunday un- ... . ... - -d chrl^ UI she bled. *nM child, Smith, I, wai not at home Friday. Police said Mra. Velva Hobnes, of Cfuu, had fled the house with Syl)ert*s son, John, 8, during the -argument. Holmes was working at the 1^- Tuscola deputy Robert Larsen crashed through the front door to rescue another Sybert 'child, 2-year-old SMne;^ who had been seen sitting to the living room floor. When police were assured that Christina, another.. stepchild, Kenneth Smith, 14, and a-third Sybert child, 2-mbnth-oW Laurie, were not In the house, they tired four tear gas shells. An hour passed and Sybert did not resport. A deputy an* and i^nd the body. *nte Saskatchewan ment hi)S been using a chemical similar to derrls root to qlear lakes of undesirable fish before restocking them with game fish. STOP SMOKING MNmcHVnKMtCUNK ItM Av*. ““ liilst’ gpsalsi Tee PIsse Dsyil Mm's, Wemm*t Site CMU^'e _ . «« MH iMlIifiMCoMpfrdlitnHaUSolM. i Wf ------- iNllUti.......... »•«' U' lOe Ixtrs ter SsbSIbS »r OrInSIns MM'i rtilN Bakhw UMlt... .»«b 71c U«M mrt 1^ »mr sk»»m «i# i*w m mm •«. ifwmUfllMTM rutod. iMik NlT Me lEISNER’S Shoe Repair 42 N. Saginaw Jt. “ Downtown Pontiac The ancient Egyptian temple of Kalabsha, near Aswan, bears an Inscription of about A.D. 249 sternly ordering herdors to keep pigs out of the holy place. LOW COST CM LORNS! 6MTC EMPLOVEIS FEDERAL CREDIT UNIOK Romping Upsets Launch 17 Italian Schoolboys Drown MARSALA, Italy (UPI)-Sky-larking schoolboys upset a motw launch off the coast of Sicily yesterday, dumping about 30 youths and 4 or 5 priests Into EARN MORE OR SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE lOTH OF THE MOHTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY CURRENT RATE EtuAlUkrd In t$90 - Nmrr mtimd ptvdmg * dMJ»nd. Oiwr 7.2 jvarao/'M«iiU of$temrUy*4Mmm CAPflOL SAVINGS a LOAN ASSOCIARON 75 W.$t Huron Ff4.0561 Downtown DetroH Offle* WosWnglon Blvd. Bldg. Cornor Stote StrtW •WO 2-1078 Hotm Otfico I Member Federal Home Loon Bank System the segf Seventeen students were drowned. Warm weather and a calm sea aided rescue efforts. The boat was one of three rented to carry 90 students and a dozek priests from Mar-sato’s Salesian InsUtuto on a May Day outing to the isle of It had traveled barely 200 yards when it overturned. “The boys were excited and were-acting up,** said Father Vito C. Falzone. “The boat capsized and I lost my glasses. I couldn’t see, and my robes were dragging me down. COULDN’T HELP “There was nothing I could do to help them.*’ Students on the excursion ranged in age from 10 to 18, and many of the younger boys Sixteen-year-old Michaelange-lo 'TUrrlsi, Who Was studying for the priesthood, saved the lives of four or five nonswimmers by towing them to the overturned boat before he drowned. All of the bodies were recovered and taken to a hospital here, where relatives were mak-' ing arrangements for burial today. Not many of us think for ourselves when it comes to matters in religion. We prefer to leave religious subjects and Bible issues to those sup-poshly trained and skilled in this field—the priests, theologians, pastors, and ministers. Sometimes we get the idea that the Bible cannot be understood by common people. Some religious leaders even teach and encourage this view. Does the Bible say anything about the ability and the responsibility of the average person to understand its message? Most certainly it does. To the Christians at Ephesus, Paul wrote: •Wherefore be ye not foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is” (Ephesians 5:17)r Surely God does not require of man that which is beyond his ability. The Jews of Berea, for example, are described in the New Testament as '‘noble.” Yet, they were not famous, nor were they rich or powerful. In I fac^ they were somewhat obscure. The description of their nobility is recorded in Acts 17:11: The cherry Industry In the state of Oregon produces a crop worth $7.8 million annually. im I Wait A Hinte-It Will (haiige! II This is not true of our business climate. The “trade winds” of commerce have their oripn in. manmade laws and institutions. It is man, not nature,, who controls. **Tbest were more noble than those in Tbessalonica in that they received tbe word with all readiness of mind and searched the scriptures daily, whether these things were so!* This reference to the Bereans is significant because it is plainly a tribute to a religious people.'^'* The Bereans were noble in attitude. They were noble because they were eager to be taught the truth—they were sincerely truth-seekers! Although ready to receive religious teaching from others, they were at the same time very careful to examine such teaching in, the light of the saiptures. Certainly the Bereans could not be called professional theologians. They were simple peo-pl6 of honest hearts and open minds-r-moreover, a people with a profound respect for the authority of the saaed scriptures. Unfortunately, this attitude of the. Bereans-s-the spirit of independent, personal investigation — does not prevail widely among religious people in the twentieth century. It is a sad commentary on our lack of love for the truth (2 Thessalonians 2:10-12). Man is in a pitiable state (a sad plight) when he possesses neither the intellectual vitality nor the spiritual interest to study God’s will for hijBiself. ■ The New Testament abounds with evidence that harmonizes with the attitude of the noble Bereans. The apostle Peter insisted that Christians should know what they believe and why they believe it, "ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you" (1 Peter 3:15). The apostle John places the responsibility direaly upon every Christian to follow the pattern of the Bereans and prove every teaching to be sure it is from God: "because many false prophets are gone out into the world" (1 John 4:1). By revelation John commends very highly the favorable charaaeristic of the church of Ephesus of being ready at all times to check truth against error. They had "tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars ..." (Revelation 2:2). Members of churches o(^ Christ today are simply trying to reproduce faithfully the church of our Lord as it existed in the first century— the same in doctrine, worship, name, organization, service, life and work- The Bible clearly teaches that the seed of the gospel—the word of God—^will produce after its kind, pure and undenominational Christianity. The first century church was founded upon the basis of the word; it folloyvs that the same word must serve as the blueprint for the twentieth century church. We invite our friends to ''search the scriptures" to see whether these things be so! The number one job oryour Chamber is making sure that the climate in your, community is one in vi^liich linsiness and indusbT can prosper and thrive. ITS YOUR NUMBER ONE JOB TOO-By working mth your local chamber yon can help tp insure a forecast that is a bright and simuy ^one for our area. The CHURCHES OF CHRIST SALUTE YOU . . . ^oman Write Box 555, Pontiac, for Corresponidence Course or Tract 16:16 'UNDERSTANDING THE BIBLE" , The Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce Morris Womack, Minister 3737 W. Big Beaver.Road ■: BIRMINGHAM Bob Murray, Minister Orchard Lakf and Middle Belt V SYLVAN LAKE Roosevelt Wells, Minister 210 Hughes Street PONTIAC „ Corson Spivey, Minister I36J N. Pontiac Trail Don Woodroof, Minis.ter ]27 E. Avon Road ROCHESTER 1080 Hemingway LAKE ORION ■ Boyd Glover, Minister « 1180 N. Perry PONTIAC v:k:. ‘wvV t V : , vi!;’ I r ‘|i p. , , . ,:^.,., • ■* J ^,:l, ,r:r- 'T V i THE pjjNTIAC* PRlj^S, SAT|mDAt. MAY 8> i;,:* fll f ’ ■ WE. Most-want«d color, most-wonted styling.,. at o low, low Words price I Rugged 12!4t oz. cotton bull denim is reinforced at points of strain for extra long wear. Theyl’e snmoth-ly tapered to fit snug, ride low on hips. San«« forized*, washfast. Hurry, save at Wards. ''Maiuriirink. 1« STORE 0:30 to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: Monday thru Saturday Pontiac PHONE 6824940 Tele^iraph at Elizabeth Lake . '‘t . '^i| •'** . ....... **') I'r - r. f./- JH ■ THE PONTIAC PItESS 48W«»t Rkirm8treH Pootfic, Michigan saVurday; may i, tm ”Sw ^°Ss^?Attfltor ^Cfa|«u!Su^^ O. K*«IIUU JORMN Loom AdmiMni llwMcor. Citizenry Is Confused Over Prayer Decrees There Is a vast amount of confusion over the 1962 and 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decisions that required prayers or Bible readings In public schools violate the First Amendment of the Constitution. ★ ★ ★ And compounding the confusion is the proposed “prayer amendment” to the Constitution, barnacled by 35 d I f f e r e n t amendments proposed by 147 members of Congress. the U. S. Supreme Court in 1952 held unconstitutional the evidence agaimdi an alleged drug addict obtained by forced stomach pumping.' It is inconsistent, wrote Justice Felix Frankfurter, “to hold that to convict a man, the police cannot extract by force what is in his mind, but can extract what is in his stomach.” We sort of go .along, in our unjudicial way, with the Justice. Promiscuous stomach pumping could etuslly «lead to license not stomached by the Constitution — the Invasion of privacy. Sponsors of the bill now before D V J / |XXI a House committee call it an act “to Wf unit uners Cuba Solutions put Ood back In the schools.” This precept is as phony as a three-dollar bill. Ood was never put an3Twhere by law. ★ ★ ★ The Supreme Court, which has taken a pretty good public beating in connection with the issue, did not bar God or the Bible from classrooms. .'The decisions only said that COMPULSORY prayer or religious recitation was illegal. The court spelled out clearly the principle of .separation of church and stAte—one of the basic tenets of the American social structure — and pointed out that the proper role of the state is one of “neutrality.” Moreover, the 1963 decision specifically held that it was not banning the teaching of religion as a curricular study. What backers of the amendment appear to have overlooked is that in guaranteeing Americans “freedom of religion” in the Constitution, the Founding Fathers also guaranteed us freedom from religion. , .-'a)#,,. ★ .★ . It sMms to us that too much furor has been raised over a question that in the final analysis'should be Individually resolved under the Constitutional freedom now providing such personal latitude. Fate of Stick-Up Man a ‘Hairline’ Decision The technicalities of the law often appear as absurdities — at least to bewildered laymen. Familiar to most is the provision of the Fifth Amendment under which an accused person has a right to refuse to answer questions that could be self-incriminating. But now we have a defendant refusing to have a haircut for the same reason. (The illogic of . what you have just read the ^ French call a non sequitur.) ★ ★ ★ It seems that a hooded gunman stuck up a couple of Philadelphia establishments, and in his trial the prosecution sought to fix guilt by matching hairs adhering to the masking hood with those adhering to the head of the alleged hood. ★ ★ . ★ However, when hairs were about to be clipped from the accused for comparison, defense counsel snip-pily halted the move, contending that the Constitution “intends that no man be f o r c e d to incriminate himself.” By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - The Johnson administration, as the Kennedy administration was, has been baffled about how to get F i d e I Castro’s communism out of Cuba. There has been no visible progress. Castro is still there, still boss. Now a special group of Republicans — headed by Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, brother of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower in whose time Castro came to power -f has prot posed solutions. { The group — called I the Repuhlican Citizens Committee’s Crit- MARLOW iCal Issues Council—came up with this: “It must be Clearly understood by the world the United States is prepared, as a last resort, to use military force to remove international communism from Cuba, just as it has long been prepared to use military force in Korea, Berlin, Lebanon, the Formosa Straits, and elsewhere.” These were poor examples. The United States was never prepared to use military force in those places except to stop attacks, invasions or takeovers. And Cuba isn’t threatening to invade or take over anybody. DIRECT ATTACK? Thtin f the Republican council proposing to go b^ond defense and into a ditect attack on Cuba, in which case it would be an aggressor? No. It said: “We are not advocating hasty and Improper military action against Cuba.” What would “improper military action” be, an invasion? ’The council doesn’t say. It hopefully suggests that. just, letting it be known the United States is willing to use force is “probably the greatest assurance that it won’t be needed.” So another question is raised but not answered: ★ ★ ★ If Castro doesn’t attack anyone and the United States isn’t willing to attack him first, how is the. American military force going to mean anything? OTHER SUGGESTIONS The council has other suggestions: 1. Invoke sanctions against allies who. sell anything to Castro. But this might hurt American alliances. Therefore, another question: Which is*^ more In^-portant to the United States, getting rid of Castro orokeeping alliances? 2. The Johnkon administration prevents Cuban exiles from using American bases for raids on Cuba. The council seems to suggest this is all right but that the exiles should be encouraged to use other countries’ bases. . 3. ’The United States should help form a Cuban government-in-exile, and support it. This would take some doing, since the exiles are widely divided in their thinking. American .League’s Top Ten Batters The" court overruled him and, the hirsute exhibit was obtained. But since the defense planned an appeal, the hairy evidence was deposited in the courtroom sAfe . pending the outcome. Theye.are grounds for belief though, that this hairline decision is headed for.trouble, since the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1944 ruled that protection against seif-incrimination applies only to verbal questions—not to compulsory physical or mental examination. ★ ★ . ★ Blit again, like a womah who can’t make up her mind about a new hat. Player Club G AB R H Pet. Freehan, Detroit ... 8 28 3 13 .464 Fregosi, Los Angeles . ...12 47 13 19 .404 Romano, Qeveland .. ... 9 35 8 14 .400 Malzone, Boston r .;.i2 47 5 18 .383 Bresoud, Boston .. .12 51 6 19 ,373 Hansen, Chicago ... 9 33 8 12 .364 Oliva, Minnesota .— ...14 62 13 22 .355 Tresh, New York — ... 9 34 3 12 .353 Wagner, Cleveland ... ... 9 37 7 13 .351 Robinson, Baltimore . ...11 43 5 15 .349 Verbal Orchids To - William Buethe of 841 Auburn; 93rd birthday. Mr. aqd Mrs. Ralph Holler 90 S. Jessie; 58th. wedding anniversary. Mrs. A. F. (Ida) Winters of 42 Washington; 85th“ birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse T. Byrd of Wlxom;,52nd wedding anniversary.’/' Mrs. Anna Barber . of 591 Kenilworth; 80th bir^day. i - ' James Robbins of 2100 Woodward; 102nd birthday. David W. Thomberry of Birmingham; 92nd birthday. .iTl m:. The POWER of FAITH iyWOODMIHMAIL i: . TM)"''? ‘fi " i' ’' I . '// Voice of the l^eojile: /i''. v'®' ‘City yoters Bedded;' l^t Commissioners Lead^ Voters have elected their leaders. Now let us up-holjjlppur democracy and let them guide oqr affaii*s. Let’s not run to them with every petty grievance or tidbit of financial wisdom and demand their personal intervention. ' ^ 'k W * W ' if a grievance is necesiary, let the friendly commissioner (whom wi, elected) take It to the head of the departmenf Involved and let paid professionals handle it. Let onrs be the biggest little city in the U.S.A. ★ W ★ A worh to the Commission: the average voter * doesn’t have drag and resents catering to the handful that does. R. B. Patterson 65 E. Beverly ‘No Shame in Not Paying for Vaccine* “Nobody Owes Me a Living” was wrong In saying nobody forced people to have large families. Doesn’t she know we have a God much piore powerful than-us? It seems her hffirt aches for things that don’t concern her. We have four children and twelve grandchildren and love every one of them. j No one should be ridiculed or caused embarrassment for being unable to pay for the vaccine. I’d much rather see them get the vaccine than contract the disease- Mrs. Fearl Vallad “I will lift up mine eyes unto the hll|s,„from whence cometh my help.” Psalm 121:1 Stephen Tyng Mather has been called the father of our national parks. 'The scenic wonders of God’s handiwork in Yosemite, Yellowstone, Zion National Park, to name a few, owe much to his concern and leadership, “(jod spoke clearly to him amidst the scenic wonders of the national parks and this message he sought earnestly to share with others,” it has been said. Born in California, Mr. Mather was an active churchman who supported with works and gifts Jane Addams’ Hail House, .United Charities of Chicago and the Illinois Home for Crippled Children. But his greatest contribution came when he was appointed assistant to the secretary of the interior and established a bureau of national parks. He laid the spiritual foundation of the national park idea, “. . . that these wonders should be left unimpaired for future generations to enjoy.” “Nobody Owes Me a Living” was right about one thing — you can’t get more for 50 cents. We have six children and were embarrassed only because we could give just |1. This vaccine is worth so much. Nobody made us have our six wonderful children, but if God hadn’t wanted us to have a large family he wouldn’t ^Ijave bles;^ us. It’s people like “Nobody Owes Me a Living” Who cause us embarrassment by. finding fault. But we hold our heads high. Only God is the one to judge us. Mrs. Beverly Betts Cla'rkston ‘Don’t Commit Your Political Beliefs’ There is evidence that canvassing and door-to-door crusading have a tendency to establish a record of the individual’s political alignment, sympathy or participation. Such recordings in the hands of various radical or militant organizations or individuals could be used for blackmailing or so-called political discrimination. Days of All Faiths: Ascension Day First Festival? By DR. HOWARD V. HARPER It may well be that May 7, Ascension Day, was the first big-festival ever observed by the Christian Church. It is said that it Was kept in Apostolic times, that is, in the first century, which would mean that Christians were commemorating the Lord’s Ascensioq, long before they had established any celebration of Christmas or Easter. The Ascension of Jesus is mentioned three times in the New Testament, in Mark 16:19, Luke 24:51, and Acts 1:9, but only the account in Acts goes into any detail at all. It states clearly that forty days after Easter the Lord took His disciples to “the mount called “Olivet” and there before their eyes He ascended by His own power into heaven. In Mark and in Luke’s Gospel no mention is made of the time lapse between Easter and this event, and the natural inference is that the Ascension happened only a few days after the Resurrection. is the only way to help him grow up. Here it meant that the disciples now had to grow up. God wants persons, not puppets. One mistake the disciples made — they thought Jesus would come back the way He went. One can understand why they thought this. Acts 1:11 tells that angels appeared and said, “Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye here gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus . . . shall so come in like manner as ye have seen Him go.” , On the Iftirface, this could mean He would come back in a cloud. And so they watched the skies. But ten days later they knew their error. He came back, but He came within them, as the Holy Spirit. And they did grow up—to responsibility, courage, initiative, and resourcefulness. They became “those who hav,e turned the world upside down.” CUSTOMS Ascension Day used to be a much bigger day in the Church than it is now. Perhaps a midweek day in our industrial culture tends to fall into obscurity. In earlier times one dramatic feature of the service in many churches was a symbolic ascension, portrayed by slowly-lifting a statue of Jesus from the altar through a hole in the roof until figuratively at least, “a cloud took him out of their sight.” All Roman Catholic churches and many others at Easter light a huge candle, called the Paschal Candle, whichp burns constantly during the forty-day Easter, or Paschal, season. In these churches the Paschal Candle is extinguished on As;; cension Day. (Copyright 1984) It is important that every citizen protect his right and privilege to express his political sympathy pr disagreement, provided by secret elections. ★ ★ ★ Do not commit yourself to unknown persons crusading with political literature or urging you to various actions. Accept their material, but reserve your ultimate action to yourself. AFAAP (Association for Advancement of All People) The Better Half “Where are your medium-priced lemons parked?” WashingtOii^ Notebook: Smiles Dairy Cows a Stigma on Texans? But both tradition and the Acts say there was a forty day interim, and the Church sets Ascension Day on the fortieth day after Easter. This is always a Thursday. Sometimes it Is called Holy Thursday, though some Christians mistakingly think Holy Thursday is the same as Maundy Thursday, the Thursday in Holy Week. , The big point if Ascension Day is, of course, the assurance that Jesus entered into heaven with our human nature and human body glorified. Certainly it does not mean to locate heaven as being straight up from, Palestine. NECESSARY TRAGEDY To the little group that gathered to watch the Lord’s^ departure, It was not 9' cause of rejoicing. They were left’ in utter, d^ted loneliness. But it had to be. There was an unrec-ognfzed good in His going. If .was like a parent taking his chiicT to school and leaving him there. To the child it may seem almost rejection. But It is the only way, the child can learn to live with his contemporaries, to tarry his own load, to get along without consthnt oversight. It Sometimes it’s as hard for parents to do with their youngsters as it is to do without them. A Georgia girl was arrested for driving while under the influence of liquor. A brandied peach. Santa has gone on his way but most people still love a fat man. Carelessness about payments as well as plain carelessness makes people lose control of their cars. You’re a right person if you do right by the boys in service by writing. WASHINGTON (NEA) - Flying from Washington tq Cleveland recently — shortly before an electrostatic discharge threw a bad scare into her party — Lady Bird J 0 h n son was reminiscing to, reporters about] her Texas] home. Noting that the Johnsons in addition to a large herd of beef cattle — own four dairy cows which haye the run of the LBJ Ranch, the First Lady said: portly Pierre Salinger, former presidential press secretary, recently spoke before Washington’s National Press Club. Introducing Cranston as a reputed intellectual, Press Club President Joe Dear mission. When they were here last week, they said they were planning to mail out a questionnaire also. “But theirs weighed only six pounds.” THOUGHTS FOR TODAY On the other hand, he .who prophesies speaks to men for their upbuilding and eiicour-' agement and consolation. — I Cor. 14:3. “Lyndon gets so mad when they wander,,in front of the house.” Later, one Washington observer agreed: “I bet he does. Down in Texas, owning dairy cow8 must be a greater stigma than hot driving a Continental.” The successful person is one who” is able to take hi^ talents and invest them in the business of living in a manner that leads to the accomplishment of a full life of service. —Rabbi Sol Roth Alan Cranston, California State controller, now locked in a primary fight fpr the Demo^" Several persons have noted that since he adopted bis trim, new hair styling. Presidential Press Secretary George Reedy be^s an uncanny resemblance to a white-haired, somewhat . overweight John F. Kennedy. Earlier, however, Re^y’s ■ shaggy mop of white hair prompted one observer to quip: “He looks like an albino Bea-tle.” “At a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing recently. Federal- Power Commissioner Joseph Swidler. revealed that his agency was planning to send gas companies a “very thorough” questionnaire to help tp, determine rates. The questionnaire, to be mailed at ;’ government The Washington Senators baseball club — perennial tail-enders in the American League — have now adopted the slogan, “Get the Senators off the floor in ’64.” When Sen. Ken Keating, R-N. Y., first heard the slogan, he thought it meant that cots would be placed in the Senate chamber so that during the all-night qivil rights filibuster sessions senators would not have to sleep on the floor. pense, was -four inches thick, weighed 10 poiyids. - The Associated Press Is entHled. exctuslveb to — -'m ot all ir ropubli printed »li Conduct yourselves wisely toward outsiders, making the most of the lime. — Colos-siahs 4:5. X / Subcommittee'Chairman Warren Magnuson,''^D-Wash., was astounded. “I .must admit,” -he said; that I am now quite impressed rith the Federal Trade Com- payobte In advance. i'" II'-i ‘ PONTIAC?MlcklG&r ^ MAri. r'r , ^ , ' . /■ jr , NEW BOND SOLD-Ciutoir L. Osmun, (left) senior vice president of Commiinity National Bank, sells the first $75 series ‘E U. S. savings bond bearing the portrait of the date President John F. Kennedy, to Alex A. Benach, owner of Andre’s Beauty Salon, 11 N. Sagipaw. The bond went on sale yester- day, the 23rd anniversary of the issuance of the first series E bond. Purchase price of the new bond, which will reach full redemption value in setren years and nine months^ is $56.25. Night School Accounting Courses One of the surest routes to a successful business career Is the broad avenue of AcodunUnK, AS' a mddem accountant you will be an executive in one of the best paid fields. You will enjoy interesting work, with security and opportunity. PBI graduates in accounting are corporation officers, partners and proprietors in every field of business, and in every type of profession. Pontiac Business Instijtiitei 18 W. Lawrence PE 3-7«28 Training for Builntii C train! iMiiad far W«t Germany. The May Day flag eaused • ftnmfcour delay at the Cast Gamtan Itorder wimi the U.S. train commanders refused to let the transports cross East German territory while the pennants flew. incident as another attempt by the Bast Germans to ostilhlish additional precedents for control of the access routes to West Berlin. The Western AHles do Communists’ tactics of trying to whittle away Western rights in ............dlty. Shortly after midnight, the East Germans provided engines without flags and the trains made an undisturbed trip across 110 miles of East Ger- thc isolated , The two trains-^ .bound far Frankfurt with 144 passengers and the other for Bremerhavcn with eight—left West Berlin shortly after 6 p.m. At the Potsdam border point, East German authorities provided locomotives as usual but both engines flew East German flags, apparently in honor of May Day. *^6 train commanders jammed nn the emwgeiipy • ■ .............id the braltes when they , noticed flags. The Bast Germans 9t-deiwd tha looomotlvM Iway, leaving the cars stalled on the tracki in tha Berlin auhurb. A Sovlat offhudb was seen limr The Eait^ Germans toM the U.S. cmpmanders their •'cars would not he allowed to proceed unless the Americans gava in. The East Germans customarily provide locomotives for the ossing. HOLD GROUND The U.S. commanders appeared to be under direct orders to hold their ground. Sburcfej^iBid the East Ger-msiw tried the same thing Tin a trocy trhin bound from West Germany to West Berlin Friday morning. U.f aokUers puUed down the banners and fae train continued on its way. w 4t Under a postwar agreement with the Soviets, the Allies have road, rail and air access to West Berlin. For years the Soviets have sought to win recognition ot the East German regime by turning-over control ot'tbe routes to the East Germans. Qsrii Jf. Cadd. U. al M Oat-tage reported to Pontiac ^llce that her purse, containing two rings valued at $100 and $M in cash, was stolen by two men who knocked her down while she was Walking on Auburn noar Judson last night. Akron Church's ,^Qve AKRON, Ohio (AP) .^ Nondo-mSauA HUhtood Cmpd is bucking tho trend of churches moving from the city to the sub> urbs. It has been moved closer to the center of the city—Akron’s Metropolitan Housing Authority Wilbeth-Arlington Project -r from its former location on the city’s southeast edge. The new $160,000 structure just was defeated. News in Brief Church, Birmingham, 1600 W. Maple. Ihurs., May 7,0 a.m. • 8 p.m.; Fri„ May 8, 9 a.ih. - 6 p.m. -H Rummage gale: Grace Luther-n Church, Genesee at Glendale. Thurs., May 7, 9-6 p.m.; Fri„ May 8, 0-12. -~-adv. PTA - Church Groups — For your next money-maker, try cotton candy, popcorn and ano cones, I supply everything. Big proflt-410 work. Call 8254641. 8. jO-7; 8at.r May 9, 0-11 a.m. Presbyterian Church, Huron at WayiuL. ' rating tubas, Tues. through Sat., 16o aa. Othar cake decorating supplied; ‘ sequins, styiofoam, art tomt flowar making mate-rlils, cbenilla, efa. Clao’s Handcraft S^, IM Oakland Ave. -4KlV. Church Big Foctor iii Recruiting Young DAYTON, Ohio (A ~ When young people go into fuU-Ume religious work, it “does h'ot come about through one individr ual, sudi as the minister, but I result of the flavor U tha ys Dr. Join local church,” says Dr. John I Parr of Lindin Avenue Baptllt Oiuith. frm SnStm (dtwl DMrM, Me “HltSSSi.llVZr'"*" •' A n» tfftcllv* sat* o« ItM trtmtar, ^ If •nterad; Mm, a* «iiimablt cwiil3*r»- 3. Whaltwr^ TpfJSww *S)Mh‘'s2irt •» ad|i«|fic« >' wia'MM j. aiM«^ of April. A.O.,T»5 . ' ............ ........... MW 1 1W t W4 - uni alrMW----------" ra-raalntr. VICTOR f-^UTT May I wM t IM4 NEW FULLY ELECTRIC American Made TYPEWRIIER t|98S8 and your old typoun^r plus faxes OFFICE MACHINES DEPT. General Prinliiig 8 Office Sjipply 1T W* Lawrtnec tt.f Pontiac FE 2-0188 [SUNDAY ONLY • nndw,hiley 79' CUBE I9 lh. • Letiflssly Ali • '8 STEAK PATTIES Wlb. prayton plains store only ass,!:* emriuND«Y IHM, 4a 1P.M. BAZLEY MARKET 4348 Dixie Highway - Drayton Plains JSPEClAIiY I MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDHEUATWniLYI | IWdni>l!nd AUGNMENT' e RapCiek front whaals e Balanet Front Whaafs e Cheek and Adjust Brakes • Sat caitar, cambar, toa-in : SUITS MONDAY ONLY Barnett’s "NonesHy, M’s Senealienal!” Las Hudson A most fortunate purchase permits me to offer those wonderful, quolity pieces for only $1.49 each ... Buy now for Mother's Day, Anniversaries, Wedding Gifts, Graduation and oven to put away for Christmas Giving. Les Hudson LOOKS LIKE NEW...RUNS LfKE NEW Complotoly Roconditioned MODEL 435 A B. DICK Electric MIMEOGRAPH MACHINE Rag. Price Item • $5.98 ALUMINUM ICE BUCKET BY KROMEX a $4.98 SOLID COPPER PUNTER BUCKET WITH WROUGHT IRON HANDLE • $6.50 HEAVY HAMMERED COPPER PITCHER WITH BRASS TRIM • $5.50 CHROME BREAD AND BUTTER SETS • S6.95 4-PC.CGFFEE SERVICE SET a $4.98 SOLID BRASS AND CDPPER WATERING CAN • Duplicates anything from Postal card to 8V5x14" stock easily ▼ i and efficiently. ■ SPECIAL AT Your Choice $149 I each BUY NOW! SAVE! •Close cylinder,'selective inking, .Just $195 hairline Registration. with this coupon • Reset counter. SAVE $501 AUDIO VISUAL CENTER 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-T523 SUPER KEM-TONE MONDAY ORLY SPECUlL! AT BARNETTS FamouM Dunhrook MIOWEIPHT SPORTCOATS ^ $2498 Dacron and Wool HAGGAR SLACKS fj.9$oiMf 98 15 Values ^ | | 2 Pair for $23.00 JBairrie'tt’s You Are Invited to the Woman’s World In The Pontiac Mall TUES. MORNING, MAY 5 at 9:30 Mall Community Room “i June Wedding ad It’s Planiig” Presented by Jackie Crampton Hostess of Bridal Preview on WJBK-TV Tickets are free and are available on a reserved basis qply. They may be obmined during regular ^ Mall hours at either the Culligan Water Softener Booth, Nationwide Insurance or Fiowerland, each located in the main Mall. The Schedule for Tuesday Program Is: 9:30-10:00 A.M—CoiTee Time 10:00-11:00 A.M.-FormaI Program 11 ;00-12s00 A.M.-.Informal Question and Answers NEW 1964 DECORATOR COLORS $425 gal. NEW 1964 OuPONT LUCITE WALL PAINT WHITE ONLY Oeeorater Colors »4".i HUDSON’S discount A HEAP 0> CLEANING FDR A WEE BIT D’ MDNEY! Now is th# tlmo to stora your wintor garrhonts and got your clothos cloanod and ranowod for summor and vacation. _ SAVP -! ON THESE PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING SPECIALS j- COUPON - WITH THIS COUPCW MON., TUES^D. SHIRTS LAUNDERED OR MORE 41 EAST WALTON .. . Opsn Friday 9 A.M. to 9 PM. dUljDlIior Wookdoys 9 A,M. to « PiA—Suo. 10 AJA. to 3 P.M. 9 Imtivldually Callophona IPackad with Dryclaaning gH |gg . Onlsref SI.SO orMore. Iinap ranu 1 O Daluxa Fini.h WCH 0 Ca.h and Cany REG. 5 FOR^’JS I COUPON - COUPON "" ^ . I MMn TUIt., Wra. I I MON.. TUIS, WED. 1 I II MEH’8 OR LADIES’SUITS , or PLAlk coats i I Ksra enc'' w' -QO' OKN DAILY 7 A.M.‘^ A PAL SAT. t AM. t. 6 P.M. .hevrolet-Olds., Inic. fA-fs af U.S. 10 - MA 5^5071 6751 PIXIE HWY. ClARKSTOM Yaur Cratsraads to Greater Savings FeeT the luxury of thick foam cushioning, end run your hands over the glhve-soft vinelle cover. Built to support and rest your whole body . no tnotter how you sit in if. Lively decOrdtor cobrs. You'll love one for TV or just relaxing. PAY$1.00 WEEKLY MONDAY ONLYI #•###••#••• # • •%: t • # »-# • # » » » » » #», • • • • • • • • • ,(i HANDI-HANG -PRE-PASTED ^TRIMMED -PLASTICIZED -WASHA6LE -MATCHING FABRICS -SOFFIT BORDERS JPor Mother’s Day Sunday MaylOth fBnVGESS GABDNJER* "SPICE BOr CIGARETTE CASE ind LIGHTER SET $|59 $229 Pir SingIt Roll THE SHERWIR-WILUMIS CO. THE POUTIAC MALL $690 AttraetIvM design of Hnoke# Sued* and Kid decorated with teuehee of gold mark>j tng on Bvffdto Coif. Fashion Our Now ALEMITE POWER-COAT Rust-prooRng Method Stops Rust and Underbody Corrosion Complotoly. aUARANTEEO FOR I YEARS on now oars. Stops rusting on old can. Ponotratos whoro undorcooting methods do not. Provides a tough, durable coating that impiognatos metal pores — keeps moisture, air and salt out. Won't erdek, chip or peel or form pockets that collect moisture and salt. Thru Mays Only This Ad Proved by the Post Office, Bell Telephone and Fleets. Call or come in now and save. DuPont LUCITE $J|49 All 1H4 Deeontsr Approved ooldrs in sloeki $4.88 Cal. PETE’S SERVICE CENTERS 42S.TELEaRAPH 333-9T94 HOW... ■ 0.1, This sale thru May 7th TOM’S HARDWARE 905 Orchard Lake Ava. FC 5-2424 Th* most powerful builders' saws in their class with totally failure«pro* tected motors... all ball bearing construction •. • new modern styling. Model 346:6%”^ Reg. *74.50 ■$i FREE Demonstration "DOWN Helds in Uyaway Whilit they latti KEEGO HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 682^2660 MONDAY ONLY SPECIAL! ATBARNETrS COOLTROPICAL SUAAMER SUITS SHOP IH YOUR OAR AT Famou* Brand TJH. TAPERED S1A6KS $4.98VatuM $298 Sizes 29 to 36 DIXIE DAIRY 1W0 LOCATIONS TO BETTER SERVE YOU Bamett’s 4820 M-59 49 N. TELEGRAPH RDJ Just Opposite Airway Lanes Batweerr Tel-Huron | ond The Mall | Freshly Bottled ^ HOMCGEHIZED VITAMIH "D" MILK- V^ QALLON (QIatt) In quantittos of 4 or more- 35^ ^INDIVIDUAL 'A GALLONS 36e~ CARTONS Me 4ormoro A| Va Gallon ^ " Individual A||e ’ Cartons J|| Vt Gallons BUTTERMIU Vz Gallon 38* TEFLON BUFFET FRYPAN MOLTI-PURPOSE FmrPAH-> COOKER-CASSEROLE^ ' 1 SO N. Soginaw $t.| Next tip Sean The Above Are Our Every Day Eow Pricet! ■}K,^ •TEk' r : ) ir TIIK |*ON^lAroblemI Complete Credit Terms pome OPTICAL CEMR 103 N. Saginaw— FE 4-.'>211'-FE 2-0291 H'lilown i'onliur-ArroNH from .Simi next Vo JaroliM’u'H Flower* THE MOST TAIKED ABOUT AND FOUGHT ABOUT FILM! ien Hi all conventions daii' love slay. tedanWU.Mm • "0«E9MHEYors,o.Br toect(ityl«iisMlW-A/eiiittetraW , 3H0BT (FltTO «WECn,;-t8tM.2B FgBTUBiTIIKI-liU-ltWl FORUM THEATER ‘TZN.S*aiNAWFES-l2tf r tlHIMYl MOM EFIM SmW TIMES-l:6«-ltia-T:2l-9:3B Y liO P.M.-SUNDAYr2:4S P.m. TfiimwDllUO CHILDREN^Under^ ''-i, 'Wi \! au\'\' „‘V [i; V V“'. vvui ^ -f.. Eye Radar Unit forWaterford > PONTIAC PRESS, ?|A i;URpAY. \l l^eqMestad by Police as Enforcement Aid Waterford Townihip Board membara Monday night will consider a iwllce department request tha| a portable radar unit be acquUad as a traffic enforcement aid. Cost of the radar system would be 11,295. The proposed unit, called a Speedalyzer, Is the same type now used In Poptlac. It can be attached to the outside of a patrol car or used Inside. In other business the board will consider a request from the Oakland County Road Commission that the township vacate a plqce of property between Farmrldge and Cass Lake. ★ ★ ★ The parcel had been platted as a road but never developed. Also Monday, a first notice of the proposed rezoning of a parcel at Hospital and Cooley Lake roads will be read. A change from Commerclal-2 to Commercial-3 is sought for an auto repair shop. MAY 2, _ 19041 ■ yiLEVEy The three largest vehicle-producing countries in 1963, outside of the United States, wem West Genitany, United Kingdom and France. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55,0«kl«nd Av«. FE 4-9591 PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER Aimed at Diprived Children ^ An averagb U.g> farm woijh«r In I860 hai^lrted 21 acres/ Starts Pupil Culture Aid Plan Forced to retire two years ago because of a heart ailment, a Bloomfield Township woman has instigated a “cultural aids project’’ aimed at Pontiac school children. TUTOR PROJECT-^ Cultural Aids Proj-, ect was launched Thursday at a meeting at the home of Mrs. H. A. Leven (center) 7420 Franklin, Bloomfield Township. Aimed at culturally deprived Pontiac school children, the propect was explained by Raleigh Hair- ston, director df education of youdi incentive of (he Pontiac Area Urban League. Mrs. Alfred Zweig, of 4640 Pickering, Bloomfield Township, will take part in the tutoring program. Former school teacher Mrs. H. A. Levin, of 7420 Franklin, Bloomfield ’Township, met Thursday afternoon wlth’a group of volunteers to Organize a tutoring program for culturally-deprived children. An estimated 10-15 volunteers, mostly elementary school teachers, plan to tutor youngsters picked by, the Pontiac Area Urban League, sponsor of the project. Mrs. Levin, who taught at City and CoUntiy School of Bloomfield Hills before retiring because of ill health, said one-hour weekly sessions will be held on a one-toope teaching basis. Kenny Lane Holds Key to Boxer's Title Future JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)-Stoffel Steyn, a 22-year-old South African ll^t-weight, hopes to make his May 9 bout with Kenny Lane of Muskegon, Mich., a stepping stone to a title match with Carlos Ortiz of Puerto Rico. About 10,000 fans are expected to attend the fight which has attracted more attention in South Africa than any since Vic Toweel won the country’s first world title in 1950 in the bantamweight class. ’^e Amazon accounts for about 18 per cent of the discharge of all rivers into world .oceans. Name Pair to Work on GOP Platform Richard C. Van Qusen and Robert H. Flint have been picked as Oakland County members of the Republican preconvention resolutions committee. They will be part of a 41-member body named by Arthur G. Elliott Jr., Republican state chairman, to meet Wednesday in Lansing to begin work on the 1964 Republican state platform. Van Dusen, 32205 Bingham, Bingham Farms, served as Gov. Romney’s legal adviser until resigning last year to return to private law practice. Flint was elected to the Republican State Central Committee last December. Vice president of Flint Ink Corp., he lives at 1577 Island Lane, Bloomfield Hills. The committee’s platform will be revealed next Friday in Grand Rapids at the start of the Republican state convention. Dies of Gunshot DETROIT (AP)—Wounded in what police termed ah attempted burglary, James P. Riley, 17, died in Receiving Hospital Friday. The owner of a drug store, Richard Johnson, 77, told police he shot Riley after the youth struck him on the head with a board. The project will be kicked off with a picnic July 1 for participating children and their tutors. TO CONTACT OFFICIALS Mrs. Robert R. Turpin, 108 Franklin, a social worker, plans ia contact officials at Bagley and Crofoot Schools in the process of selecting children for the project. ' i.'tt The Pontiac woman will also contact parents of children Involved, hoping to furnish each tutor background on the individual youngsters. Although the project is getting a small start, Mrs. Levin is hopeful that the program can expand as more volunteers come forward. She Said''that the offices of the Urban League can be called for further information. Mrs. Levin emphasized that the one-to-one teaching ratid Would enable the tutoring project to accomplish more. In addition, most of the tutors will be school teachers or former school teachers. A. I. AOOLIY , Phyiioil ThfMpifI TreatmanH for lOre aehlnf backf, muKlti, jolnfs. Head-aches, poor circulation, nervousness, etc. 673-5411 For The BE^yN Sioim PONTIAC’S CONSUMER-OWNED NON-PROFIT CO-OP OPTICAL OFFICE! • Sunglastat In Your Proscription: V ' • Choice of Frames For Every Taste and Every Budget: • Contact Lenses: • Industrial Safety Glasses In Your Prescription: • Safety Tempered Lenses For Children: Dr. Sidney Gilbert^ O.D. PONTIAC toNSUMERS CO-QHICAL 1717 S. TELEGRAPWNNP^ Phone 333-7871 ONE-HALF MILE SOUTH of ORCHARD LAKE RD. ATTENTION! FINAL MARI^DOWN^tr L & S FURNITURE . . . 3345 AURURN RD.-M-59 PONTIAC, MICHIUAN I some OUT OF BUSINESS SAEEl^ LA8T izfooi || Backs and Seats ........ 9U Each DESKS a"'".*’*.'*”. ^24” ALL FAMOUS NAME BRAND MERCHANDISE • Artistic • Stratoloungar • Carver • Bassett • Sealy •Dearborn •Denna •ftestonaire • La-Z-Boy • Broyhill • International • Cascc RECLINERS.. ^29” DRUM TABLES *24” ROCKERS . . ^14” BRIDGE TABLES *3” FOLDING CHAIRS *3*' COnOHMAnRESS $fiS0.„K TwinSiEas......a......e D DOOR MIRRORS *4» MAPLE REDROOM SUiTE $QQ95 • BnkcM.l.d WV CAMP STOOLS . . 99* TRASH BURNERS *1” .$4.95 Ranso Rafrlsarator $19.95 roll Size Bod $2.99 ^ Twin-Size Bed $2.99 c/> lAMP eQc SHADES 49 PONTIAC ■ w S- 1 N b AUBURN _ HEIGHTS ■ • ADAMS RD. 1 NR CROOKS RD 1 sri 4!4t Miles East of Pontiac 10 POLE LAMPS while they last - $498 MAPLE BUMK BEDS each $-|295 Used Fleerlamps... ....$1.99 Used Bedsprings ...«. . $1.49 Used Chinas ....$9.95 DdKIJ uriud » a • ■ a llOWn ^lOeod h Baby Mattress^.. New . $8.95 —— USED nCTORIAM DESK MAKE US AN OFFER 1 Used Ice Boxes (2 only) $4.99 Baby Play Yards, ■$«■**'1 Used Singer Sewing Machine Baby Swings .... ...a. Portable............ Baby Hi Chairs....... llAMsef CAM'MjeAB dhleASae ea ae Baby Casco Jumpers.. ..$7.00 wsvH aciuwsi wiiaii ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Child’s Rockers....... Used Class Door eia ae Foot Stools......... ,|Z.M ASh Trays.......... Used Gossip Bench .. ...$4.95 Cedar Chest a. .$15.95 1 lES Permit No. 1 AKONTWP. Oakland Co. 3345 AUBURN RD. (M-59) ' 4Va Miles East of Pontiac PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Store Houn 9-9 Daily ■Sunday 12-6 ho Phone Prdert ■'V: .«• A \ .. A'- , ' ' ," /j V .r ^ ■ , ' ). -?« r'.. V ' ' '' j.( ^ ,r ; 4’HE rONTtAC IPBfepS. SATURj}A^^^ t. lie* .... jV"^«il'n'f I'v." .....................I „;i i ' ’''iill•’ Let Ushers Tell Plans to Guests By Tile Emi|y Post Institut Qi My daughter is going to be inarried next wedk and after the ceremony we would like our many friends to go down into the social hall of the church for a piece of wedding cake and a glass of punch. The forthcoming marriage of Jfane Allen Wilson of Bloomfield Hills to David J. Collon in Christ Church Cranbrook Is the incentive for a round of^ parties and bridal showers. eon and trousseau shower glv-, Wes- HOwever, I do not want to make any mention of a reception on the invitations as people mi^t come expecting a good deal, and also I don’t want them to feel that they have to bring a present. Have you any suggestions as to how this might be handled? School friends at Univet^sity of Michigan and Kapp^ ibippp Gamma sorority sisters of Miss Wilson were first to honor her at a recent ’round-die-clock shower in the Ann Arbor home of Mary Evar-hardus. ★ ★ Members of Oakland County women’s climbs attended the annual meeting and installation of officers of the Oakland County Federation of Women’s Clubs in Ferndale on Friday. Standing in the fear is Mrs. Forbes F^call, Pin,ehill Drive, pres- ident of the federation. Seated are (from left) Mrs. D. Otis Tewksbury, Ferndale, installing officer, and Mrs. Edgar H. Learned, LaFay Drive, president Pontiac Woman’s Club. A: It could be handled by the ushers stationed at the back of the church. They would announce to all the guests as they leave, “The bride and groom are receiving in the social hall downstairs.” Mrs. E. Curtis Matthews, will honor her niece at a tea and kitchen shower May 13, and on May 16, Mrs. Earl A. Maxwell of Lahser Road will be hostess at a luncheon and table-top shower. TROUSSEAU SHOt^R Oakland Hills Country Club will be the setting for a lunch- A luncheon for Miss Wilson and her fiance, their attendants and visiting guests will be June 26 In Bloomfield Hills Country Club. Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Colombo Jr. of Lahser Road. Q: When addressing a letter to a person carrying a title in connection with his firm, do you drop t|ie title Mr. before his name? In other words, do you address a let- Daughter Feels Abused; Abby Says It's Just Love ter: Mr. John Smith, President Hammer Manufacturing Company address or do you address it to John Smith, President, etc? By ABIGAIL VANBUREN . DEAR ABBY: I am a 13-year-old girl with only one problem in the whole worW— my mother. I hate her.i This m a y| sound awful to| you, but hate her! I r e a 11 y do.l I used to thinkf I’d get over it But now l| ■ know I never" will. Sometimes I think I’ll ^ out of my mind if she doesn’t stop tearing me apart. She doesn’t like my clothes, my hair styles, or my friends. Don’t get me wrong, Abby, T have nice friends. They are very polite, and they aren’t .. wild or anything. She doesn’t like them because I picked them. Please help me. I cry myself to sleep at night. She won’t let me baby-sit because I spend my money on nail polish and hair spray. I can’t wait till I am 18 so I can leave home. Don’t tell me to discuss it with my fa^er. He is always on her side. And don’t tell me she loves me and is only doing if for my own good. You may print this letter if it doesn’t shcok you too much. And you can sign me— UNHAPPY’TEEN-AGER ★ ★ ★ DEAR UNHAPPY: Your letter doesn’t shock me at all. receive many such letters each week. Almost every normal teenager alternately “loves” and “hates” his parents. It is not easy to be criticized, restricted, cOTrected and disciplined day in and day out. is admirabie, but some grandmothers overdo it. I refer to the kind who wilt: (1) Interfere when his parents try to punish him saying, “Don’t pick on him. He’s just a little boy.” I kn6w you omit the title Dr. when using M.D. after a man’s name, but what about such titles ,, as President, Treasurer, etc.? (2) When the child goes to Granny’s for the day, filljiim with all the soft drinks, sweets and goodies he wants. He’ll throw it up when he gets home and miss a day of school. (3) Assure the child that if his parents are too hard on him, he can always pack a bag and “run away” to Grandma’s house. A: Doctor and M.D., mean the same thing, therefore you use one or the other, but not both. When addressing the president or treasurer of a company, you address him as Mr. John Smith, followed by his title. REHEARSAL DINNER The rehearsal dinner that evening will be In the home of the bride-elect’s grandmother, Mrs. Charles E. Wilson at ‘Longmeadow’. Miss Wilson is the daughter of the ’Thomas E. Wilsons of Bloomfield Hills. Group Holds Breakfast Wayside Gleanera met for a May Day breakfast Friday at the First Baptist Church. But parents who really love their children prove it consistently letting their children know what isexpectedof them. Localite Holds New Office Parents who are “soft” and permissive rear confused, insecure children. I don’t expect you to agree with me today. But keep this letter and read it* again in five years, and then" you will understand it perfectly. Good luck, honey. You are lucky. You are loved. Let her get away I promise you that your son will be exactly like ours. Eleven years old and spoiled rotten — thanks to his dotting grandmother. ANONYMOUS, OF COURSE CONFIDENTIAL TO “J” IN WEST L.A.: Don’t lend her any more money until you find out what she is doing with it. Anyone as desperate for cash as she appears to be could be supporting a very bad (and possibly dangerous) habit. Q: I received a letter of introduction in today’s mail from a friend introducing a friend of hers who is coming . here to this city to live. Will liu II J you please tell me what my with it, and oblieations are? A: You should write a note or telephone her after she arrives in your city and invite her to a meal or to tea. After meeting her you do whatever you can to help her establish herself in your city. The Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Table Rules of Importance,” describes how to eat spaghetti as well as other difficult foods. Dr. Ethel Calhoun, director of the Sister Kenny Foundation's rehabilitation center at Pontiac General Hospital, was honored at a White House luncheon this week. Guest of Mrs. L. ,B. Johnson at the event for “women doers,” Dr. Calhoun shared honors with Marian Anderson, Maria Tallchief, Katharine Anne Porter and other women of achievement. Mrs. George Cook and Mrs. E. A. Stepleton were chairman of the event. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy served as hostess. Appearing on the program were Pastor and Mrs. Robert Shelton and Mrs. Gordon Shelton. New Stockings Are More Snug Better fit, greater comfort, and shape retention are promised by the ‘ new Cantrece nylon hosieiy. A self-crimping property, introduced right into the fiber, is said to remain with the stockings throughout a “normal life” of wearings and washings in soap or detergent suds. Bridal Shower Tonight Mrs. Lucille F. Horton of Iroquois B^d was elected secretary oi die Michigan Dental Assistants Association at a recent convention in Detroit. DEAR ABBY: I just read the letter from the new grand-mother who called herself “LUCKY.” ’ " Get it off your chest. For a personal unpublished reply, write to ABBY, in care of The Pontiac Press. Enclose a stamped, self - addressed eii-' velope. To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self - addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of TTie Pontiac Press. Devotion to one’s grandchild Match Fashions For Abby’s booklet, “How To Have A Lovely Wedding, send 50 cents to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. The Voorheis Road home of Mrs. Ward S. Newman Jr. will be the setting this evening for a bridal shower honoring Renee Paulette Turner of Southfield. Cohostesses will be Mrs. Wesley E. Newman and Mrs. Lyle B. Saum. ley also of Southfield honored the June bride-elect at a des-^ sert and kitchen shower. Janet Chapman of Southfield was hostess at the recent tea and Carol Fin- Miss Turner’s parents are the Fred C. Turners of South-field and her fiance, Gary Michael Newman, is the son of the Erwin Newmans of Oriole Drive. Installed with her at the din-ner mating were Mrs Gladys Faundation Heinnch of Niles, president for the coming year. Other elected irfficers were Mrs. Marjorie Miller of Royal Oak as presidentelect and Mrs. Carole Kienki of !, treasurer. An appropriate go-together for today’s plunging necklines is the scooped - front, bare-back bra made of stretch lace. Obesity Rooted in Emotions Dr. A. I. Ragins spoke on “Substitutions for Obesity” before the Fashionette Club at a recent meeting in the Adah Shelly Library. To retain the fit of this dainty inner, item, launder it in warm suds after every wearing. Then finger-shape it while damp, and presto! no . ironing ne^ed. New Men's Shoe As a specialist in the fields of gastroenterology and internal medicine. Dr. Ragins briefed his audience on diseases that are prone t^ plague the ^ obese per- “Most cases of obesity stem from emoticHial ^pressures of various sources,’' he said, “and ahyone seeking medical help for this condition must first be determined to lose weight. A ‘lose wfight goal* must substitute an ‘eating«goaT. New ideas, in the offing: A new men’s shoe, soon to be on the market, appears to provide the utmost comfort and warmth with a soft, quilted lining throughout. From Paris comes a report that a cut velvet dress tie, featuring the large knot, has achieved' considerable popularity there- Identi fy With^Di tots Youth Unit Seeks Fund for Camp The annual fund-raising card party of the „ Tuesday Niters will take place Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Mark Twain School. Proceeds from the event will send members of the group (all physically handicapped young adults) to camp near Grand Rapids this summer. The group has contributed special equipment to Eieanor Traut for use in the orthopedic department at the school. They also provide- holiday baskets for needy families. Try markin(^-your children’s .clothing with dots instead of initials. Just use a different Ciub members will present a number of dots for each child, three-act play “Thin and Forty” ’They “are easier to recognize at ^ext week's meeting. . than tpe lettering. Pontiac Press Photo These gaily bedecked packages are prizes for the Tuesday Wters bfnefiijcard.party Thursday at 7:30 pirn, at Mark Twain School. Rob^t Blackburn, Blackburn Drive and Janis V/hite, Roseddle Street, club members, etamine the pretty packages. . ‘ ' Assisting the general chairman, Ellaine Schweitker are Martin Brovra, Sandra Colton, John Donaldson, Robert- Sea-tor and Yvonne Duffy, pthers working are Carolyn Felt, Robert Jenkinson, Ronald Martin, Glenn Blakemore, Andrea Rich and Patricia Roehm. , Last Concert pf Symphony on Tuesday Jane Wilson Starting on Round of Partin Jerome Jellnek, cellist, will be the solo arUst at Tuesday’s concert of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. This, the last presentation of the 1883-64 season, will be given at Pontiac Northern High School at 8:80 p.m. Music professor at the Uni- versity of Michigan, Jellnek ■ | bamelor’s and en by Mrs. Ormond S. sels of Birmingham a n d lughter^ Mrs. Charles R. inett on May 23. The bridal party and out-of-town wedding guests will be dinner guests of the W. B. Hargreaves In their Bloomfield Hills home June 24. JEROME JELINEK Mrs. John P. MacManus of Birmingham will give the spinster dinner for her sister on June 25 while Dr. David J. Coilon of Romeo hosts his son’s bachelor dinner at Selfridge Air Force Base. Nev/Officers Installed by Reducing Club received his ------------ - master’s degrees from the same institution. He continued his studies In New York City and "at the Royal Academy of Music in London. . ★ ★ ★. He will play “Cello Concerto” by Saint Saens and “Ca-prlccio Espagnole” by Rim-sky-Korsakov. ^^hc orchestra, under the baton of Felbt Itesnlck, will perform “Rousslan and Ludmilla Overture” by Glinka and “Symphony No. 5H” by Glllis. Tickets will be available at the door. t Tickets are available from members or at the door. ■ A Mrs. Joseph Lynch was installed as president of the Fashion Your Figure Club, Thursday, in Adah Shelly Library. Other .officers for 1964-5 in-, elude Mrs. Clarence Edwards, vice president; Mrs. Alfred Post, secretary,*’' Mrs., Odes Case, treasurer and Mrs. John Steele, corresponding secretary. Mrs. Milton G. Van Gordon is custodian of the scales and Mrs. Victor J. Muscat, weight recorder. Trophy chairman is Mrs. Victor Muscat, with Mrs. Ed-Ward Bowers and Mrs. Harry C. Tetter handling program and publicity, respectively. To Differentiate -dse a different color Igbel to mark each meat you freeze and you’ll be able to tell at a glance what is in your freez- Complete Coverage e WEDDING e reception MA JPrlo» Tou Ca»Aff»rd, Album With 12 Pkotot § Only ♦3495 fCive Us A CaU Today... rViUtBEN STUDIO ^23 E. LAWRENCE ^E 4-1701 DANCINO LiSSONS PftlVATI Learli in th« privacy of yc homo! For information c FE 2-0556. Tarry McOtena, Iwtiructar FACri ABOuf l^kARMACY by HOWARD L DELL ^ Your Neighborhood Phormocist RKMEMltER THE MASTtHH SCARSf 'av ••• vary lativ. raaileld lean atwiid tadey-and, ar * aan af aga, llv nt diva laiaarch liat prodvead chamaikarapautlc cem-lich maka tha emrr ai matlaldttir practically a tauliaa, 1 waniwna, pracaduia. Troa, Hia catf may rua at high . Yat, aik tha man wha paid $1,000.00 (ar hit matlaid Choose Your Pharmacisi as You /\ Would Your Doctor Baldwin Pharmacy 219 Baldwin oSe FE 4-2620 HUanilHr CLEANING Quick, Courteous Service! Phone: FE 2-7lh MWIY FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY RUG and CARPET CLEARING CO. 42 Wisner Street Pontiac, Michigan SYLVAN LAKE FRONT OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. Tri-1*vel, 2 large bedrooms, carpeted living room and diding ell, modern kitchen with built-in oven and range, dishwosher, family room, 2 fireplaces, 2Vi ceromic tile'baths, 2 cor ottoched garage, electric controlled doors' underground sprinkling system. $35,000, term's. 933 James, K. Blvd., off Telegraph. ' • WE WILL TRADE ' ANNETT JNC, REALTORS . E. HURON I . PONTIAC : EEderal 8-0466 OfficeiOpen Eveningn'and .f unday I-i J h A T lAY,. MAY THE P0IfTBAC PRESS, gATUiRDAY. MAY 2, 1004 ^ THIRT.EiEK,. ' At 8t, Trinity iufheran , : 'V /' ■ ;\ Boys, Girls Pray in School PRAYER J^T SCH00L--Chlldrtn of St. Trinity Lutheran School walk Bible lessons with regular school work, to the lighted candle and cross to offer a per- Sharon Altemann of 497Q Maycrest is In the sonal prayer during the devotional period of foreground. Mrs. Marvel Barnhart of 167 the school day. Boys and girls are taught lUviera, Waterford Township, is the teacher. CHURCH OF GOD The revival at the C h u r cli of God with Rev. Randy C. Hodges, the evangelist, wilt continue next week. ★ ★ ★ “Sowing the Seed of Faith” will be the theme of services tomorrow with Fred S. Hopkins, superintendent for the day. The Galilean Trio under the direction of Charles Novell of Cincinnati, Ohio will present musical numbers. Mr. Novell, the recipient of 'K 1962 National Teen Talent Award given at the Church of God General Assembly, is a teacher for Baxter Stamp School of Music. PROVIDENCE X The Citywide Choir Union will meet at the Providence Missionary Baptist Church at 3 p.m. Sunday. Clifford Coif will preside. 6 ★ ★ ★ Rev. Claude Goodwin will officiate at the service of Holy Conununion following the 11 a.m. service tomorrow. ASCENSION The Ascension Day dinner will b^ held at 4:30 p.m: tomorrow in the Lutheran Church of the Ascension. Bert Hebl will speak oh the history of the church and tell of local congregation’s organization. Future building plans will also be discussed. ★ ★ ★ Chairman of the affair is Mrs. Harry Langdon. Pastor Mires Stine will preach at both the 8:45 and 11 worship hours tomorrow. “Trust in Him” will be the senior choir number. Tho Luther League will provide nursery care. LIBERTY BAPTIST “Working for the Wrong Side of Life” will be the theme of Pastor S. M. Edwards’ sermon at the 10:45 a.m. service tomorrow in Liberty Baptist Church, 250 Fisher. The congregation and pastor will be guests of the Christ Temple Baptist Church in Willow Run at 3 p.m. The Baptist Training Union is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. and a special program will be held at Liberty Church at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Jack McCurry, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Da-visburg, wUl preach at the 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. seiVices at Silr vercrest Baptist Church, 2562 Dixie Highway tomorrow. A graduate, of Trinity Bible College and Eastern Michigan University, Pastor McCurry is also a graduate pf Pontiac Cen-: tral High Sdi^l, Bob Jones University and Detroit Bible College. liev. Wayne E. Smith, pas-, tor of the local church, will preach and show pictures of his missionary trip to Haiti at the First Baptist Church in Lansing, HI. A new series of colored film strips entitled “Surveying the Scriptures” will begin at 7 p.m, Wednesday. The series produced by Moody Bible Institute will cover all of the books of the Bible. Study sheets will be handed out each week. The films which will continue for 10 weeks will also be presented at the d a y t i m e Bible class at 1 p.m. each Thursday. AUBURN HEIGHTS U P. Family Week will be observed in the United Presbyterian Church of Auburn Heights tomorrow with Pa^r F. William Palmer preaching on “After the Wedding Is Over.” Elder Walter Meyer wiU lead the Children’s Church. During the service a filmstrip, ‘^Christian Prayer”i will be shown. Youth Fellowship will Join young people in worship at Orchard Lake Connnunity Church, Presbyterian at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow. Those participating in t h e Friendship Calling Program are asked to meet at the church for instruction and assignments at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. PONTIAC UNITY Everett Dell, minister at Pontiac Unity Center, is asking his congregation for Sunday School teachers and petunias. According to Mr. Dell the attendance is becoming so great more people should volunteer to teach classes. He also is seeking petunia plants for planting in flQwer beds at the church. ★ ★ ★ The Unity minister is at the church from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m* each Monday for counseling. The class is metaphysical Bible interpretation is set for 8 p.m. every Wednesday. MEMORIAL “The Prince of Glwyland” by the choir and “My Jesus I Love Thee” by Douglas Brown will be the musical numbers at Memorial Baptist Church Sunday morning. ★ ★ ★ Ronald Meyers will sing “No One Ever Cared for Me Like Jesus” and the choir will present “Rivers of Life” aj evening worship. ★ ★ “What Is a Christian” and “Belief Is Commitment” will be Pastor Gerald Rapelje’s sermon topics. NORTH EAST COMMUNITY North ,EMt Community Church will pay annual tribute to mothers and daughters with a program and tea at 7:30 p. m. Thursday. Guest speaker will be Myra Pangillnan, foreign exchange student from the Philippines and a student at Pontiac Northern High School. Refreshments will be served. ★ ★ ★ Pastor Lloyd Schelfele said mothers and daughters of the community are welcome. (EDITORS NOTE; This it the ftrit In a eeriet of articles describing religious teachings in daily tettiofit of Pontiac area church schools. It concerns St. TrMiy iMtherm School.) By IIARY ANGLEMIBR Poatlae Press Cbnreh Editor Children of 8t. TrlAity Lutheran School begin each day with prayer. “The forms in which the boys and girls pray and worship are varied in order to learn that true prayer and worship does not depend on a particular form but on Christian sincerity and faith," explained Rev. Ralph C. Claus, p a s 10 r of St. Trinity Church and School. ji* “The children,” he said, ‘‘regularly lead in the prayers and worship so that tlMy will not depend on someone else to do the worshiping for them, but will experience the Joys of fellowship with Gojl." Mrs. Marvel Ba^t, Un-dergarton teacher, hiM an altar in her roonT where the yeungstors take toms leading the group in a'memorized prayer. This is followed by a Bible story traiulated in terim of our daily living. One is always amazed at the parallels and direction to modem life that children are able to see in the Bible, the pastor said. WRITE PRAYERS In grades one and two, children write prayers, and sometimes lead in morning worship. This is a sample of an actual prayer: “Dear God, please protect me as You protected Jesus, Mary and Joseph. Protect my family and all my relatives from harm. Protect the governor and government and anyone else. “Help me not to be afraid when harm is here, and help me to remember You are always near. I ask this in Jesus’ name, Amen.’^ Another example; “Oh God, take care of the whole world, Aihen.” ' Roger Morrisqn is the teacher. Herman Schmidt and Mrs. Carol Nelson, teachers in the upper rooms, open the school day with prayers, reading of a short devotion or the singing of a hymn. worship period. The sermonette Is (Jlrected to their joys, sorrows, problems An object or a childhood experience Dr. Fey, al First Christian Dr. Harold E. Fey, editor of The Christian Century and president of the Christian Century Foundation, wiHlw guest speaker at First Clu-istian Church tomorrow morning. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Fey will be in Detroit over the weekend speaking at .area churches and principal speaker at the annual meeting of the Detroit District of Christian churches at Lakeside Christian Church In Roseville tomorrow afternoon and evening. ITie administration board of the district will meet at 4 p.m. with a discussion on “Restructure” following at 5. Supper is set fpr 6 p.m. and busineito session at 6; 45. Dr. Fey will^speak at 7:30. A minister of the Disciples of Oirist, he has degrees from CotneT .College, Yale Divinity School, Chicago Theological Seminary and Culver Stockton College. After visiting Germany under, Hitler and Russia under Stalih, Dr. Fey formed a lasting aversion to totalitarianism. He ,has DR. HAROLD E. FEY. , traveled extensively to othw countries and was a guest 'of Mahatma Gandi. The annual meeting of the local church will be held at 7:30 p.m. on May 13 in the sanctuary- ,, Story Hours in Homes Church Plans Bible Leader Training Dr. Emil Kcmtz, pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, and Rev. Chalmer Mastin, minister of Christian education, with the help of many members are undertaking a “Winning the Children for Christ” program. Dr. Kontz said the church is concerned in serving the Bethany neighborhood. Current programs not connected directly with the church include Boy Scouts, Recovery Inc., the Pontiac Woman’s Chorus, Weekday Nursery and recreation, Paula M. Shockey of thp department of childrens work of the American Baptist Convention begins week of special training at Bethany today. She comes as leader to help train and prepare lay leadership for toe children’s program. Her work will consist of teaching lay women to conduct neighborhood Bible Story Hours. The story hours will begin in two weeks in homes of various church members in the Bethany area. The Bible Story Hours are for children who are not presently attending any Sunday Church School. They will be held race a week for an hour for five weeks. Children will gather in a home a block or two from their own home to hear the message of the Bible put into the language of children. ; . ' Groups will^be .foi:;. youngsters 5 to 7 years of ffge; and for children 8 to 12 years old. Parents bf.children*ih the area between Jcrimson and Telegraph, and Elizabeth Lake and Orchard Lake roads may call the church if interested. Miss Shqckey will also conduct training classes for the lar Church School teachers at Bethany. She'^ will speak at a parents’ prqgram at 7:30 p.m. Wedfiesdayi On Thursday mornings toe entire school of eight grades be^S toe day in St. IViiilly Lutheran Church with Pastor Is used to demonstrate spiritiiil truth. One day the pastor had toe strongest student tied up securely with grocery string, each loop representing a lie. He demonstrate how one lie leads to another until one is completely entangled; and how easy it is to break toe flrsf ones by humble admission and repentance. In speaking of the religious work in St. Trinity School, Pastor Claus wld, “Here we find that our prayers and worship, „our learning and doing of Clod’s Wond, are as new, refreshing and challenging as Cach new day of growth' and life.” CHECK CONTRIBUnONS-Dr. WiUiam H. Gibbs Jr. of 442 Wishbone, Bloomfield Hills, left, and Rt. Rev. Msgr. Edmond A. Fournier check contributions to the Archdiocesan Development Fund campaign of toe Catholic Church. Msgr. Fournier is pastor of St. Hugo in the Hills Church. Dr. Gibbs is assistant to Arthur Lewandowski, general parish campaign chairman. Parishioners who have not yet donated to the fUnd dre asked to do so before Monday, the closing date. With Banquets, Sermons, Teas To Attend Dedication of Tower Mrs. Archie Crowley of Christ Chufch Cranbrook will attend the daydong aeries of. events when the new Gloria in.Excelsi| Tower of Washington Cathedral^ in Watoington, D. C., is, dedicated Tnursday. w. ★ w. ^ standing 301 feet tall, it Is tot highest tbmcture in our capitol^ toe highest point In Waslv-Ington, Mount St. Alban. At 12:30 p. m. all branches of our government will be represented, and the Honorable Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the United States, will speak. The procession for this |(^-ice will be led by Scottish bagpipers anddrnmmers, flags of all states, and young women in native costumes of 72 countries. Representatives oC many organizations which toe Cathedral serves will participate, as will representatives of other faiths. 'The festive services will continue through the evening. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Crowley is the wife of the Bt- Rev. Archie Crowley, a suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese Of Michigan. Churches Observe Family Week The beginning of National Family Week will be observed at First Methodist Church with Rev. Carl G. Adams preaching on “Meet My Friend, Jesus” at both morning services tomorrow. ★ ★ ★ The Sanctuary Choir will sing “Rejoice in the Lord” by Wilson and Mrs. Laverne Cox will present the offertory solo. Children’s Day will be celebrated'throughout the Church School with special programs. ★ ★ ★ The commission on education will sponsor a Family Night cooperative dinner and program at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday. Mrs. Oliver Diinstan, chairman, said a 30-minute movie entitled “A Chance to Grow” will be shown. The public is Invited. ST. LUKE The annual mother and daughter banquet of St. Cuke Methodist Church will be held at 6:30 p. m. Thursday in Fel-lowtoip Hali. Guest speaker will be Mrs. Indra Samuel formerly of Madres, India. She will tell of toe customs and dress of her native land. Mrs. Glen Noble is chairman of the affair. CENTRAL METHODIST ‘New Opportunities for Our Children” will be the theme of Dr. Milton H. Bank’s sermon when he preaches on the first day of National Family Week in Central Methodist Church tomorrow. Rev. Richard Qem-ans, assistant pastor, will also participate in the worship. ★ ★ ★ The Festival of Flne^ Arts which began yesterday" continues today, and from 3:30 to 8 p. m. tomorrow. An organ recital and presentation by the Chancel Choir are schedul^ for tomorrow afternoon. Folio wing tl^ 6 p.m. buffet supper four arena plajrs will be presented starting at 7:30 p.m. FIRST CHURCH OF BRETHREN First Church of the Brethren wiil observe Family Night with a covered dish dinner at 6:30 Tuesday evening. A film, Christian Home,” will be shown. The mother hnd daughter banquet will be held at 6 p. m. Friday with Mrs. Lloyd Stauffer (rf Detroit, the speaker. Mrs. Alex Brown will be toastmistress. Men of toe church will prepare and serve as waiters. Special recognition will be given mothers of different ages. Mrs. Leonard Blackwell, Mrs. Sherrill Grubbs and Mrs. Graydon Broadwater comprise the committee for the event. ORCHARD LAKE Rev. E d w a r d D. Auchard, pastor of Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian, will introduce diristian Family Week with a sermon on “The Bride and Groom.” During his seven years as pastor of toe church. Rev. Mr. Auchard has officiated at 164 weddings, counseling each couple prior to toe nuptials. ’The Crusader Choir will sing for toe last time this season at 9 a. m. with the anthem, “All Things Bright and Beautiful” by Ross. 11)18 choir of second and third grade boys and girls is directed by Helen Weiss. Ibe Chancel Choir will sing at 11 a. m. Senior High Fellowship wiU entertain about 200 young peo-. Breakfast Set for Ministers' Fetlowship The election of officers will be on the agenda at the breakfast meeting of Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship Thursday in ^Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church. Breakfast is set for 8:15; devotions 8:45; business 8:50 and program 9:20 a.m. A symposium made up of ihree pastors will discuss toe topic “Tbe Pastor and toe Funeral.” Participating will be Rev. Jack McCurry, Rev, David Dee and Rev. Philip Somers. Costs df^unerals will be discussed. Guests^mt iPriencIship Women of Fri^ship Baptist Crarch are planning a program at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow under the, chairmanship of Mrs. Lorraine Richardson, Rev. J. J. Blackfehere of ,Mtv Calvary Church will be guest speaker. pie from 10 Oakland County churches for toe showing of toe film, “Hie Big Blast,” at I p. m. tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sarto are advisers of the group, and Joanne Auchard is moderator^ The session will get together in the parlor at 8 p. m. to receive a communicant class of new members into toe cragre-gation. St. Paul to Offer Marionette Play St. Paul Lutheran Church will hold its annual Mother and Daughter Banquet at 6:30 Friday evening. Ed Johnson and his marionettes will present a pageant entitled “Neptune’s Kingdom.” ★ ★ ★ The marionettes will portray the story about toe bottom of the ocean and the many forms of life abounding there. ★ ★ Tickets may be purchased from any member of toe Ladies’ Guild. Children from five to 12 years of age will pay less than half price for a ticket. Those under five may attend the banquet foee. ★ ★ W Pastor Maurice Shhckell Wifi conduct toe public examination of toe Childs’s Confirmation Class at 10:45 a.m. tomorrow. The hitys hli girls will be received into church membership May 17. Ascensira Day wW be celebrated with a service at 7:30 Thursday evening. The mother and daughter banquet sponsored by the Women’s Association will be Wednesday evening in Fellowship Hall. A program featuring “Seven Stages of Women” will be presented in the sanctuary. ★y ★ ★ Ten boys working on the God and Country Award will meet with Pastor Auchard Saturday morning. , , 12,000 Have Finished Course on Marriage TOLEDO, Ohio - Since Its Inception 17 years ago, some, 12,000 young people have completed a preparation for nuu> riage course sponsored by the Family Life Movement of toe Diocese of Tbiedo and Toledo Diocesan Councils of Catoolic Men and Women. Ultimate purpose Is to help I young praple form a high ideal ^ of married life, sponsors explain. The course is open to those with definite marriage plans as weQ as those vdio as yet have no plans. BREAK GROUND - Rev. Harold Hughes of 65 Spokane, pastor, and James F. Hibbs of 574 E. Madison, president of the churoh board, m-e selecting a site for the groundbreaking ceremony of Hillcresi Church of the Nazarene Sunday. The congregation will buUd a new church on West Waltra Blvd. across from Lower Silver Lake. V \ .. .., 1 ' ■> I I "f.;, ' ’ ^^il^UKTEEN '• ’ lli'tj .ii '1. THB PONTIAC Prt^6S.\SAtUliDAYl MAY 2, 1964 FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD 2ION.fERRY 9.45 A.M. morning worship « SUNDAY SCHOOL I ------------ I Wben Han Beaolles The \ End of His Strength, LCk)dHMJu8t Begun. 11:00 A.M. I morning worship I Ewryom Walcoms 7:00 P.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE "Spend Your Sunday Evening With Us" Musical* at Mt. Olivo A nuialcal program la planned tor 7:30 Sunday evening In Olive Baptiit ^urch by jroubg people of the church. Participating 'Will be the Goldenaires, groups from First Fellowship Church, Detroit and local singers. Mrs. Ella M. Hardy Is youth director. CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC SCIENCE 1 :iENCE CHURCH v 12 Warrtn St.^c^ Speaker 7.30 PJA Speaker 7.30 I Horace John Drake Sllvtr Tea, Wedneidoy 7.30 P.M. "SERVICES FOR THE DEAF and hard OF HEARING AT 11.00 A.M. SUNDAY" HEAR THE FAMOUS WEATHERFORD QUARTET AT THE EVANGELICAL MISSIONARY CHURCH 2800 Watkins Lake Rd. 1 Mile NW of Pontloc Mall •Sunday School 10 A.M. •Radio CKLW 7:30 A.M. EVERYONE WEICOMEDI EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH 212 Baldwin Ave. Phono 332-0728 Sunday Service 9.45 A.M. — Morning Worship 11 A.M. Sermon Topic. "BELIEF IN THE HOLY SPIRIT" Evening Service 7:00 P.M. Reverend Dwight Rellbing, Minister Grace Lulherah lo Hold •. ■ ^ 12 InfoiTfiatioh Classes ^ FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North EaetBlvd. FE 4-1811 Pastor, VYM.K. BURGESS SUNDAY SCHOOL...........10 A.M. WORSHIP..................11 A.M. "SAFEGUARDS OF FREEDOM" EVENING WORSHIP...........7 P.M "THE CAST OF FRUIT" EASTER AT ST. GEORGE CltURCH-Kev. Gus Tsompanas, pastor of the St. George Greek Orthodox Church, leads the procession as he will at the midnight service of Holy Easter tonight. Carrying silver fans representing angels, are Speros Grapsas of 3762 South Blvd., Birmingham, left, and Evangelos Gianakos of 231 Michigan. Father Tsompanas carries the Resurrection banner surrounded by lilies. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 54 S. Main St., Clorkston - Sunday School..................9:45 a m. F4ornlng Worship................II o.m. Evening worship............,.., 7:00 p.m. Wed. Prayer and Bible Study .... 7:00 p.m. Central Methodist 13882 Highland Rd. MILTON H. BANK, Pastor Rev. Wtn. H. Brody, Assoc. Min.—Rev. Richord U Clemons, Aside. Min. MORNING WORSHIP 9.15 and 10.45 A.M. ^ 3$:^ ' "NEW OPPORTUNITIES FOR OUR CHILDREN" , Rev. Clemons ond Dr. Bonks Broadcast WPON 1460 - 11 A.M. Church School - 9.30 A:M. ;;i CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 and 10.45 A.M. MYF 5:30 P.M. FIRST METHODIST CARL G. ADAMS, Minister gS South Saginaw at Judson MORNING WORSHIP 8:30 and .11 A.M. "MEET MY FRIEND, JESUS" Rev. Carl G. Adams, Preaching 9:45 A.M.-CHURCH SCHOOL M.Y.F. - 6.15 P.M. WED. 6.30 FAMILY NIGHT Pot Luck Dinner and Program i ST. PAUL METHODIST 165 E. Square Lake Rd. — Bloomfield Hills Morning Worship 10.00 A.M. and 11.15 A.M. Church School 10.00 A.M. Intermediote and Senior Youth Groups," 6.00 P.M. Ample PoAing —Rev. James A. McClung, Minister—Supervised Nursery ELMWOOD METHODIST ;: GRANT ST. AT AUBURN AVE. i:-Eric G. Wehrli, Pastor _ Sundoy School.......10 A M, :■ Worship.....8:45 - 11:15 A M. Evening Worship.......7 P.M. Prayer Wed. ..........7 P.M. •: ’■ ST. LUKE'S METHODIST CHURCH i 3980 E. WALTON BLVD. p ' Wayne Brookjhear, Mliiiiler :X;I Church School . . 9:30 A.M. j;:;: Morning Worship.. 11.00 A.M. ALDERSGATE : METHODIST CHURCH ^ ; 1536 BALDWIN AVE. ,, Hor Church Service...............9.45 A.M. Church School..........II.00 A.M. Wed. Prayer..................7.30 PM. To Celebrate Easter The Divine Liturgy of St, Basil will be celebrated at 9:30 tonight in the St. George Greek Orthodox Church, 97 Mariva. Holy Communion will be observed at 10:30 p.m. and the Besurrection service will begin at 11 p.m. This is all in celebration of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. The Greek Church observes the day according to the Julian calendar. Before the beginning of the midnight service the Odes of Lamentation of the previous day are repeated. The Matins of the Resurrection begins when all lights are out and the church is in complete darkness. Rev. Gus Tsompanas, the priest, will take a light from the vigil light and give it those who are hoddlng candles. The priest will sing “Come ye and receive light from the unwaning light, and glorify Christ, who arose from the dead." Everyone will join him in singing the same hymn again. From this moment every Christian holds the Easter candle as a symbol of his vivid, warm faith in the ResUlrrection of Jesus Christ as Saviour, Pastor Tsompanas said. At this time the priest holds Christ's Church of Light NON-DENOMINATIONAL LoluJ Laka School, Wolarford Cor. Percy King and Horper St. Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Worship . . . 11:00 A.M. Rev. Eleonor M. O'Dell, OR 3-4710 Rev. Gerold R. Monroe OR 3-7650 CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 4780 Hillcreit,Dr.,Wolerlord Service 7 p.m. Rev. Bessie Howard, Toledo, O. 2 Services For Information Coll OR 3-2974 FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE STREET Homecoming Day May 3 SPECIAL FEATURES EVERY SERVICE SUNDAY SCHOOL - 9:45 HALF HOUR OF MUSIC: Instrumental and Singing. *' ' ' MORNINGWORSHIP-,-11.00 SERMON by Dr. E. W. Martin j DINNER TOGETHER of rp.M. MISSIONARY SERVICE at 7:(p P.M. Rev, Harold Stanfield from 1 Bolivia will speak,7 . SPECIAL MUSIC ALL DAY,(including Ambassador Quartet, Soloist Bonnie Wells Hortzmbn and others. / J. E. Van Allen, Pattor / •* REV. HARLOD STANDFIELD the Gospel and Banner of the Resurrection and with the people sings the angelic paean, the song of exaltation. A procession follows. When the priest starts the hymn of Resurrection the people Join In singing “Christ Has .Risen from the Dead.” The service then lakes on a joyous atmosphere with the people saying “It is the day of Resurrection, let us be glorious, let us embrace one another and speak to those that hate us; let us forgive all things artd so let us cry, Christ has arisen from the dead.” According to Father Tsompanas the people by singing the hymn admit that love of one’s fellowman is the solid foundation for the faith in Christ’s Resurrection. Divine Liturgy of St. John will .follow. At 4 p.m. tomorrow the vesper of love will be observed. During this service gifts will be given to all Sunday School children. Parents and children are asked to worship together. The Feast Day of St. George Is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Monday followed by Divine Liturgy at 10 a.m. In West Walton Area To Call on Citizens Rev. Donald E. Helland arrived in Pontiac this w(jek to begin the work as pastor of. what will become the MV Hope Lutheran Church. Pastor Helland who came from Luch, Wis., has established temporary headquarters at his residence, 1934 St. Jude, Waterford Township. The church building located at 517 W. Walton was constructed by the Division of American Missions of the American Lutheran Church through its church extension fund loan plan. In its continued program one new church is being started every five days, Pastor Helland said. Assisting the pastor for the-^ next six weeks will be Miss' Joan Emmert, home mission parish worker who will conduct a house to house survey in the area to be served by Mt. Hope. REV. DONALD E. HELLAND Plans «re set for an opening service at 10:30 a.m. on June 7 with Sunday School classes starting at 9i:15 a m. on June 14; The Hellands have two children, Sonja 4, and Bruce 2. OSU Religion Center * Marks Its 15th Year COLUMBUS, Ohio Wl - Ohio State University recently observed the'16th anniversary of its religious affairs center. The director is Milton D. McLean, appointed in 1948. His post was created after the university’s trustees approv^ a recommendation that a liiison officer be named to work with OSU and the religious cor imu-nity. FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School... 10.00 A.M. Sunday Worship. 11.00 A.M. Sunday.......... 7.30 l*.M. Wed. Prayer. 7.30 P.M. Saturday Service . 7.30 P.M. Rev, Tommy Guest, Pa$tor FE 2-0384 An Adult Bible Information Clan will be held tor 12 weeka beginning at 7:80 p.m. Wednesday in prace Lutheran Church. Claases are open to everyone with no obligation to Join the church. Holy Comihunion will be celebrated at both the 9 and 11 a.m. services tomorrow With Rev. Erwin X Umbach preaching. Dr. ^elkard DuBruck will direct the choir In singing “AIL Nature’s Works His Pra|pe Declare” by Young and “Hungry and Thirsty” by Oplc at 11 a.m. Kurt Carlson 1$ organist. 1st CONGREGATIONAL “If I Make You Sorry’’ will be the theme of Rev. Malcolm K. Elurtoh’s sermon: at First Congregational Church tomorrow. The Chancel: Choir will sing “Old Hundred” by Vaughn Williams and “Who Made Ocean* Earth and Sky,” a Finnish melody by Djorkson will be the number, by the ' Probationer Choir. ' Thomas Stafford of Grand Rapids will speak on “Adult Dropouts” at the parish dinner sponsored by the representative board of the church Wednesday evening. MARIMONT Nelson Matthews will speak to the senior high young people of Marimont Baptist Church at 6:30 tomorrow night. The junior highs will view the film, “Teenage Testament.” The Teens & Twenties group under the leadership of Bob Hassenzahl will discuss “Eschatology,” and the Jet Cadets will have a quiz entitled “at Bat” under the direction of Mrs. Marcella Spear. Clyde Allen will play a violin solo. Communion will be observed at the evening worship service with Pastor Philip Somers preaching on the “Ten Commandments.” The Ladies Trio of Five Points Community Church will sing, as well the Youth Choir of Marimont Chqrch. The Pals and Gals of the Explorers group of Pioneer Girls will get together for a supper at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the church. The Ruth Lee Missionary Circle will meet at the church at 10 a.m. Tuesday to work on quilts. JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES Twenty-eight new- ministers were baptized during the three-day . assembly of Jehovah’s Witnesses at St. Clair last weekend. Family Banquet Taday The missionary department of Trinity Baptist Church will stage a family banquet at 7 p.m. today at the church. Rev. Lee A. Gragg, pastor, will deliver a sermon on “Christian Family Life” at the 11 a.m. worship hour tomorrow. A service of Holy Communion will be celebrated at 7 p.m. I Among the local residents were T.' C. i^ndmit‘>> Edgeworth, Alberta Clement and Betty Petersm. Bach of the new toinlsteni has; been trained by the local opngrega-tioii In toaturea of the min-Utry, especially hbuse to house preaching, Edward C. Thornton, Ipresiding minister, said. BIRMINGHAM UNITARIAN (;HURCH vyoodvMwd'o, ton* Pin* M., lllsonrftoM HNh, Ml 7-3380 ^ HotMft Moriholl, MlnWtr "UNITAIIANS and AYN RANO" , 8«w4t», CMI, Schoolt N«fi*ry 10.30 GUEST SPEAKER' JacIcs^McCurray PASTOR OF ' FIRST BAPTIST CFjURCH DAVISBU^G, MICH. MORNING AND EVENING SILVERCREST BAPTIST CHURCH Sundoy Scli^l.........9,45 A.M. Morning Wdrship.11.00 A.M. Training Hour. 6,00 P.M. Evening SarvIc* .'. 7.00 P.M. Family BibI* Study Wadiwtdoy 7,00 P.M A Working Frimdiy Church For Friendly Working Poopl* 2562 DIxIb Near Telegraoh OR 3-3022 '(MMieM Onwh of Poniloii DRAYTON PLAINS baptist CHAPEL . 8000 W. Walton BNd, David Grayson Schojol SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 AM MORNING WORSHIP ! 1 AM For Traniportatlon . coll FE 5-3958 ' , AmdoniMtaV BiWe Bellevfng PASTOR CHARUS F. KEBN United Presbyteriarl '.Churches OAKLAND AVENUE Oakland at Cadillac Tkeodore R-’ Allebock, Poilor Audrey Limkonian, Yovlh Dlrocfor Sunday School . . 8.45 A.M. Morning Worship 10(00 A.M. Sunday School. . Ui20AM. Yc^Fth Meeting . . . 5.45 P.M. SvMing Worship 7:0oPM. Wed. Prayer.....7.00 P.M. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Prlmory Street 9.30 A.M. - Sundoy Si:haol II AM. -r Morning Worship 6 P.M.,—Youth Fellowships DRAYTON Oroyian Ploins, Michigan Bible School . . • 9.45 A M. Morning Warship 11.00 A-M. Youth Groups ... 6.30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour . . . 7.30 P.M. jChurch of Spiritual Fellowship MALTA TEMPLE-2024 PONTIAC ROAD Service 7:30 P.M. -r Jack Remmgtori, Speaker May 10 — Bessie Youngs COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. — FE 5-9960 Sunday School.........9.45 A.M. Morning Worship ....,. 11.00 A.M. Training Union.............6.00 P.M. Evening Worship. ......7.00 P.M. •Midweek Service (Wed.). . 7.45 P.M. Carroll Hubbj, Music Director Affilloted with the Southern Boptiit Convention BETHEL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST (Meeting In William Beaumont School) Church School 9.30 AM. Worship Service 10.45 AM. Donald P. Gobler, Pastor Phone FE 5-1792 APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRJ^T 458 CENTRAL Saturdoy Young People.7:30 P.W Sunday School and Worship... 10:00 A.W Sunday Evening Services........7:30 P.M Tues. and Thurs. Services......7:30 P.M Church Phone FE 5-8361 FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH 3411 AIRPORT ROAD Independent—Fundamental •--Premillennlal Sunday School....................I..;. 10.00 A M. Worship Service........................... 11 A.M. Evening Worship......................... 7.30 P.M. Deaf Class ...............................10 A.M. APOSTOLIC FAITH TABERNACLE 93 Porkdale ' Sunday School10 A.M. Sun. Worship .... 11.15 A.M. EVe. Worship ...... 7.30 P.M. Toes. Bible Study ... 7.30 P.M. Thurs. Young People 7.30 P.M. ’ Elder Ernest Wordell, Pastor FE 4-4695 m EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 645 S. Telegraph Rd. (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) A Fiinflamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptist Church I TWO GREAT SERVICES' \ In the 1,200 Seat Auditorium Baptism Every Sunday Night THE BIBLE HOUR... 10 A.M. Departmentalized. Sunday School for All Ages... with NO literature but the Bible. Dr. Tom Malone, Pastor WPON 10.15-10:45 AM. HEAR DR. MALONE teach the word pf God verse by verse In the larg> Auditorium Bible Class, broodcast on WPON 10:15-10:45 AM. Rev. Leland Lloyd . Sunday School Supt. Dr. Tom Malone, Pastor WPON 10:15-10:45 AM. BUS TRANSPORTATION, CALL FE 2-8328 NURSERY AT ALL SERVICES JOYCE MALONE, . Director of Music MUSIC TO BLESS THE HEART \ Sunday / 10 A.M. - Solo: JUDY BROWN School Attendance n A.M.-^SpecioI Choir Arrangement Last 7 . P.M. - Solo: BILL BLOUNT also ’ Sunday: ■ , \LADIESTRIO. —' 447-5 - . ’ . AA A ” , A. ■ . ‘1! x',. , ^ ■ .V.. A )i.. V' ' XI. \ I ■ ■A,Vi A...A J /-X'' LUTHERAN I CHURCHES I ’UKItOUttSmOD I Cross of Christ ttCOLoMniMrotTsttgrapli dwreh S«hool at 9i4i AM SsNfVlcaor w«nMpat II AM Amv 0. If. PtmlltVif J*Mfar ni«M44Mua St. Stephen Sashobow « Kamgf l>al« Evanton, fntlor i Church Sarvlcas... 8i00 A.M. I St. Trinity | Auburn at Joula (laiiSIdt) :j;j Ralph C. Clttiu, Pamr ;::L *:iiSuiidoy School....9<4S ?,^flnt Sorvtca........8.30Am:;|: f:i;8Moml.Strv|ct.....IliOO AM I St. Paul I Joilyn at Third (North SM«) RMtlauHetShaeMl V$Sum»»jr School......... AM^| ^ Swvleo............Uh4SAM J I PEACE .1 xAMm hdd at V/OuM TwntWp High ;:^cho«l, tSgMMMf lood m Cmom A;*oof :$ y: Sunday School 9i00 AM ;y Si Worship SorvIcolOtSO AM ^ 'i;; Rkh»nlH.Fmcht,Pai$ar | I Grace | Corner Genesseo end Olehdoto :|;| g (WMiSido) ^ ^Richard C. StuckmBytr, Pailor’^^ !:;^urch Service....9i00 AM ;:*: SiiSundoy School........ 9.00 AM i:;J,Church Service....... IliOO AM.|:;: . *:;Sunday School..11.00 AM M "The lutheron Hour" over % i:*: gClW ISiSOPMEvwSi Williams Lak« Church of » the Nazarene 2840 Airport Rood PtiUl Coleman 10 AM-SUNDAY SCHOOL n A.M^WORSHiPHOUR 7 P.M.-WORSHIP HOUR CHURCH SCHOOL 9.45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 11A.M. , First Christian Church DISCIPLES of CHRIST Rev. Jock H. Caork,Paitor 858 W. Huron St. Bloomfield Hills Baptist Church 3600 Telegraph Rodd 10 A.M. Sunday School 11 A.M. Morning Worship BETHa TABERNACLE Firit Penteeoif Church of Pontiac Sun. School 10 A.M. Worship 11 AJ eVANGELISTIC SERVICE Sun., Tuei. and Thuri.-7.30 P.M. Rav*. and Mrs. E. Crouph 1348 BoldwIn Ave. Eg First Presbyterian Church HURON AT WAYNE REV. GALEN E HERSHEY, PASTOR ’ REV. PAUL D. CROSS, ASST. PASTOR ALBERT A. RIDOERING, Christian Education Director [Worship Service.......9:30 ond 11 A.M. Church School..........9:30 and 11 A.M WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH 67 N. Lynn Sunday School.............10:00 A M. Morning Worship...........11.00 A.M. Wesleyan Youth . .......... 6:15 P.M. Evening Service . ...... .. 7:00 P.M. Btbh ceistered sarmoiu tahleh telll halp to sole* portonal probitnu. PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH 8 N. Genesee'(Comer W. Huron) 335-2773 SUNDAY WORSHIP METAPHYSICAL SUNDAY SCHOOL BIBLE STUDY CLASS lIi30 AM WEDNESDAYS 8:00 PMr EVEREH A. DELL, Minister ■ MISSIONARY TO AFRICA. TO SPEAK AT GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD Reverend Edgar M. Louton will be the missionary speaker Sunday, May 3 at the Good Shepherd. Assembly of God. Recenfl 1092 Scott Lake Rd. 2 Blocks N. of Pontiac Lk. Rd. , a British Colony In Southern Africa, Rev. Louton will tell of his missionory work among the Bosufo Tribe-people among whom ritual murder is still practiced. Mr Louton and his wife are both formerly of Michigan. The public is eotdiolly Invited to attend this missions service which begins of 10:00 A.M. Slides, curios, ond notivecostulhes will be shown. The SALVATION ARMY 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship 11 A.M.—Evangelistic Meeting 7:00 P.M. Tuesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:15 P.M. Young People's Legion 8 P.M.—Thursday LIEUT, and MRS. GARY 8. CROWELL Copd Miuh-Singing-Tnto to tho Word Preaching God Meets With Us—You, Too, Are Invited PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH Baldwin at Fairmont Sunday School........................10:00 A.M. Worship Service...................... II >00 A.M. Pilgrim Youth Society.....................6t1S PM Evening Servlee...........................7:00 P.M. Wednesddy—Weekly Prayer Service...........7:00 P.M. W. N. MILLER, Postor ir'-- *' ' f / ^ ^ ^ THE PONTIAC PkESS, SATURDAY, MAY,2, 1004 PiF'n-iKN; FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 North Roselawn ' Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship i 1 A.M. and 7 P.M. Tues. 6 P.M. — Family Night Dinner and Film / Wed. 8 P.M. — Bible Study and Prayer ' Fri. 6 P.M. — Mother and Daughter Banquet Jlev.' L. W. Blockwell, Pastor FE 2-2412 doneIsqn BAPTIST CHURCH Elizabeth Lake at Tilden Sunday School . .. 9:45 A.M* Morning Worship . -.11:00 A.M,. "fadione "THE HELMET OFiSALVATION" SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE 7 P.M., ‘ ‘ ‘ ■ "OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIE" ' ■ . SPECIAL MUSIC Pastor Lalona will be speaking at both services. / . MID-WEEK SERVICE 7:30 P.M. . Mr. Eugene Thomas —Sunday School SuperintendenI Af Chrisf Church Cranbrook Plays Carillon Concert Frederick Marriott, Interna- ing of the Men’s Club at 7 p.m. Uonally known carllllonneur and Monday. composer, will give the first carillon concert of the season at 4 p.m. tomorrow In Christ Church Cranbrook. Mr. Marriott of 6840 E. Dartmoor, Birmingham Is organist and choirmaster at Central Methodist Church, DetroitihHe is a graduate and holder of the first honorary degree of “Meri-torius Laureate’’ from the International Royal Carillon School k Mechelen, Belgium. Concertgoers may sit on the lawn of the church or in their cars to hear the music from the 62-bell tower of Christ Church. MEN’B CLUB MEETS William Strlngfellow, prominent New York attorney, author and Episcopal layman, will speak at the May dimmer meet- SUDES OF MT. KILIMANJARO - John Parvis of 3850 Commerce Road shows slides of his mountain climbing t6 Jim Strong of 3626 Orchard Lake Road. John is currently living with his grandmother, Mrs. C. E. Summers while attending West Bloomfield High School. Prefers U.S. Schools Climbs Highest Point One of the highlights of ikm Parvis’ two-year stay in Africa was climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, (19,360 feet) the highest point on the African continent. It is an extinct East African volcano with two peaks in the northern part of Tanganyika, near the Kenya border, ‘"rwo of my friends and I were five days bn the adventure. There was nothing to it. We just walked up and then walked down," said 16-year-old John. He went on to say there were no cliffs or crevices just a path leading to the top. ’The three had a guide and five porters to carry food and luggage, a luxurious climb. Rest huts dotted the path along the way. Bom in Minneapolis, Minn, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Parvis, he went to India with his parents, when 12 years old. His father taught social, studies in the University of Madras. During, this time John was at an American boarding school at Lucknow in Northern Ir Everybody spoke English at the school so he had no difficulty with language. His dad then became a professor at Uppheim College in Lusaka, Northern Rhodesia. John said he taught himself by means of a correspondence course from the University of Minnesota but didn’t apply himself too much. He enjoyed swimming and To Ordain Officers at Workshop Newly-elected officers of First Presbyterian Church will be installed and ordained by Rev. Galen E. Hershey at the 11 a.m. worship hour tomorrow. ''Elders of the Session chosen for a three-year period include Donald F. Dickerson, William S. Hilderley, Donald 0. Newman, Avery Shearer, Floyd Short and William W. Vander-cook. Those elected to the two-year term were William L. Herrmann and A. G. Winn. Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Brown, the William Neffs, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmo C. Jones will be ordained deacons. Trustees to be recognized are Mrs. , John Heitsch, Mrs. Asa Drury, Richard Irwlu and Basil L. Kimball. “What Is First?” will be the theme of the pastor’s sermon. The, Chancel Choir will present “Like As the Heart De-sireth" by Macfarlane. ROyce Everett will sing “Thou Art Gone Up on High” by Handel for the offertory solo. The Guy tluffields and Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. MaHkham will be coffee hour hosts. .%' * ■ ' Brigadier Ernest Alder, head of the Salvation Army Men’s Social Service Center, will speak to the Pioneer Youth Group at 6 p.m. tomorrow. • ' ping pong at the YMCA in Lusaka and >n*de friends among both the European and the When asked about missionaries John said they were usually out of the cities and near a hospital where doctors were so needed. “There’s no real system of education in Africa so when my grandparents visited us last summer my family and I de- cided I should return to Afuerl-can schools. It is sometimes difficult to make new friends moving around, but it is harder to leave friends once you have them,” were his closing comments. Here John skis, plays ping pong, swims, studies and attends Orchard Lake Community Church, Presbyterian, He thinks he will become an electrical engineer. Glee Club in Concert at Lincoln Junior High The Master’s Men of Lincoln Christian College, a glee club of 22 young men, will present a concert at Lincoln Junior High School at 7:30 p.m. on May 9. ITie concert is sponsored by Central Christian Church, 347 N. Saginaw. The group under the direction of David Hargrove, instructor of music at the college, will be on spring tour which covers Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Illinois. A graduate of James Millikin University Conservatory of First Churcli to Celebrate First Church of the Nazarene, 60 State, Invites friends, members and former members of the congregation to the homecoming celebration tomorrow, Pastor J, E. Van Allen said. The program will begin with a half hour of special music and singing during the Sunday School hour at 9:45 a.m. Featured will be the Ambassador Men’s Quartet, composed of Robert Caudle, Ray Hewett, Dan Schwelgert and Roy Murphy. Mrs. Bonnie W. Hartzman will be soloist. The morning message will be brought by Dr. E. W. Martin, district superintendent of the Eastern Michigan District, Cfanrch of the Nazarene. Dinner will be served at 1 p.m. in Roosevelt Lodge Hall, 22 State. At the 7 p.m. service Rev. Harold Stanfield, superintendent of the denomination’s mission work in Bolivia, will be the speaker. Services for the day will conclude with the music talent contest at 9 p.m. sp4. "THE PAYMENT OF GOD" Sunday School for All Agps — 10:00 A.M. 6:30 P.M. Youth Services 7:30 P.M. "THE WORSHIP OF GOD" Paetor Philip Somere preaching atjboth Services Sunday School 9:45 A.M. ' Worship-11 A.M. "The Responsibility of Discipleship" —EVENING SERVICE 7 P.M.-' y "The Power of Conscience The Pastor Preaching i CHURCH OF CHRIST Euabliiliad- A.D. i We Ar« Chr|jl'» Church In fullh and Practice Jesus Invites you to become a member ol His Body, "The Cljiirch" WORSHIP SERVICES ‘10:30 -- Lord's Doy Morning 7:00 P.M. - Lord's Day Evening 7i00 P.M. Wed. Evening Phots* 682-5736 or FE 8-2071 87lAFAYEneST. I Block Wail of Sean REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of latter Day Solnti, 19 Front St. n A.M.-Elder Jarold Outlond 7 P.M. — High frlesl Cloud* Cook Ouy Kramar, pastor FE 4-3293 CHRISTIAN SCENCE SUBJECT for SUNDAY Everlasting Punishment . Sunday Servlets and Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Services 8 P.M. Reading Room 14 W. Huron Open Dally 11 A.M. to 5 P.M, Friday to 9 P.M. , First Church of ^ Christ, Scientist Unvntflc* and WllUami Str**ti * PONTIAC CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 347 N. Saginaw, M*rrltt H. Bok*r, Min. Bible School 9.45 A M. Morning Servke 11 A M. Evongellillc SWvIce 7 PAA ' Youth Service 6 P.M. Wed. Bible Study 7.30 P.M. A friendly Church Cloie To The Heorl ol Pontloc The Church ol the Moyllowot PllStlmo The Filrat Congregational Church HURON AND MT. CLIMIN* AT MILL IT. Pontloc FOVNDBD IN tSil Sunday Morning Worihip 10:30 -Sunday School 10:30 Rav. Malcolm K. Burton, MinUtar A Church with o MoSotn Approach NORTH EAST COMMUNITY CHURCH EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN, 620 Mt. Clamani at Faalhanlone 9:45 CHURCH SCHOOL 11 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE "Rjllglon and lha Horn*" Wad. 8 P.M. - Bibla Study ond Catachlim Iloyd S. Schelllolo, Mlniitar - FE 8-1744 All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike THE REV. C GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector SUNDAY SERVICES 8:00 A.M.— Holy Communion 9:15 and 11:15 A.M.-Instructed Eucharist by Rev. Chas. E. Sturm. Church School FIRST FREE METHODIST CHURCH £01 Mb Clemens Street Compitle fdmily Circle-4 We Need 70 Families Sunday School 10 a.m. Worihtpr Services 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. SUNNYVALE CHAPa * 5311 Pontloc Lob Rd. TWO WORSHIP SERVICES 8:30 to 9:30 AM.-1lt00 to 12 Noon Suhdoy School 9:45 A.M. Evening Service 7:00 P.M. A WELCOME TO ALL Boptit CkuAckr ♦ SUNDAY SCHOOL 9t45 o«n. ♦ M0RNIN6 SERVICE IOi4S o.n. ♦ RADIO OROADCAST StotionCKlW lliOO a.yie ♦ YOUTH EEilOWSHIP 5t4$p.m. ♦ EVENING SERVICE 7i00p.iiia' 0 MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE •Wcdncfdog 7tS0 PelHa ♦ RADIOBROADCAST Sflturdoy •Station WDFG 6tlS p.nia OAKLUIDISA6IIUW Ics. lobitt Shiltra*P«tar ■ ^ Iv SIXTEEX THE PONTiAc press, SATUR13AY, MAY 2. 1964 POPULAR PLAY SHOES FOR INI BIG VALUES • MEN’S • YOUTHS CHILDREN’S W|ISHttLE $j97 SHOPPING CENTER and PERRY AT MONTGALM Open Tonite ’til 9 Sunday ’til 6 !r*< [ •Junior Editors Quii on^ ANIMALS Roofer.'Gf Poy RoU. P«. ta,«h «» DETROIT (AP) - A contract covering aome 500 workers ha# ^CH^CHOW. ^ AND A OAlUKia SHIP/ ...» ,™.v. » p.«. «.» --- nuiJn- mouth Of the another, is. usea in jnsKing ub- Southeastern Michigan »«>«>« AmawnWvw^^havo depths of tergents, InsecUddes, soda pop, Contractors Association. It In* Uqq feet or more, puttW the baking soda, drugs, dteese, dudes'a pay Increase of IS bed of the river wdl below sea vinegar, bread, glass, paper ceiits an hour. levd. . and porcelain. QUESTION: I find “chowchow” defined as “mixed." , Why Is this name often used fOr a chow dog? ANSWER: The chow is one of the oldest breeds of dog, believed to have originated in North China. One of the em-perprs Is to have kept 5000 of these dogs in his kennels. Perhaps the emperors like them because of the haughty, highly-bred look these dogs have. Their large heads with the ruff of heavy hair almost make them look like a small lion and their blue-black tongue, no doubt deliberately bred by selecting black tongued individuals, is another distinctive point, making them different from other dogs. They are muscular with beautiful coats. When the outside world began to trade with China, using sailing ships, the captains brought b a c k to England and America many unusual things from the East. When they talked with Chinese traders, both parties used what was called pidgin-English — a simplified way of talking. The word chow was used for food, but “chowchow" came to mean all sorts of odd and unusual things a captain might want to bring back home for sale. Among these things were the lion-headed dogs—and so, after a while, people began to call them diowchow dogs. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: If you color the chowchow a fine red orange you will get a good idea of what these handsome dogs really look like. They can be well trained, but are not apt to be too polite with strangers. In Primary, Conventions More Barry Support Seen WASHINGTON (AP) - A republican preferential primary in Texas ard GOP conventions in two other states today were expected to give some added support to' Sen. Barry Goldwater’s WrrH THIS NEW TUBE Motorola changes the shape of color television for good! nPlPttP j"" j' * Triunt ttfllng OiwMf.7«leoant sliding doo A ntl »■«/•* prle» fot a c/oe*-«a(«»~Tu"'» ifeeU ott att«f you're eileep . . . awakens you to your tevoriw radio program or with buna' alarm Had* Viallita cloc)i which' lights In the dark.... and .Laialarm*that aliancas buizer tor to minutes when it sounds again to wake you. Colors ; white, blue, bi >r pinii. Model C3« $2495 What a difference-in the shape of the picture!...in the size of the cabinet! You get a larger picture with this new 23* rectangular tpbe (23-inches Overall diag. tube meas.; 274 sq. in. picture viewing area), with a more natural looking shape than ordinary 21* (265 sq. in. viewing area) round color tube sets.. Yet cabinets are trim and attractive because the tube is appro.ximately 5 inches shorter tlian the round tube. See the new shape in color television, Motorola Color TV with the 23-inch rectangular tube, today! QUALITY EXTRAS ADD. TO YOUR ENJOYMENT OF MOTOROLA RECTANGULAR COLOR TV Motorola’s own ^hand-wired chassis is precision cratted with modern hand and dip soldering for circuit connections of high reliability. Motorola-designed color Indicator tells you when a color program or color signal is being transmitted, once set Is fine tuned. . Superb period and contemporary cabinetry including several models vVUh cabinetry by Drexel to match Ings. A Motorola excfusWel And eirer^ color set carries Motorola's *full year guarantee on all tubds piid parts, with free exchange or repair of any component proven •defective in normal use. Arranged .through selling . dealer. Labor extra. das, OBEL TV 3480 Elizabeth Lake Rd. bid for the GOP presidential nomination. The Texas popularity poll-instituted by party lexers in Texas in an attempt to emphasize Texas Republicans’ support for the Arizona senator—is part of the state’s primary election to nominate candidates for governor, Congress and state offices. ■ The GOP conventions—where Goldwater may pick up delegate support—were in Georgia and Tennessee. Maine’s convention entered its second day. AP SURVEY The senator went into the day’s activities with 200 first ballot votes, according to an Associated Press survey of the 491 deelegates already selected. This is based on instructions, pledges or stated preferences. The re.st of the votes are distributed this way: Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania 63, Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge 43, former Vice President Richard Mt Nixon 7, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine 14, favorite son candidates 34, and uncommitted 130. A' * Results of the Texas primary are not binding on the 56 Republican delegates who will be chosen in a state convention next month. Al^o in the primary were Nelson A. Rockefeller of N'-",' York—who tried unsuccessfully to have his name withdrawn— Sen. Smith and Harold E. Stas-sen. All are avowed candidates for the GOP nomination. HOME STATE Sen. Smith pn Friday night received the support of her home state Maine delegation's 14 votes for “as long as she is a factor” in the San Fra”ciseo convention. However, the delegation i.s expected to be released af'T fhe first ballot. Supporters of Gold-water, Rockefeller and Lodge were maneuvering for second ballot strength in the delegation. Georgia Republicans were naming four at-large delegates to complete a 24-vote slate. Eighteen already named favor Goldwater, two are uncommitted. Tennessee was filling out its 28-vote delegation with 16 members..,^ the 12 already chosen, .seven are for C»o1dwater, one tor, Nixon and font- iincommifted. The Azores islands are administered as districts of Portugal with the same status as those of the parent nation. 'There is no central government. II ' #■ i' i THE PONTIAC PRESS SATUIIDAY, MAY 2; mu PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. background for LIVING V ># liiiiiiiiiiiiSlii Two Approaches to One Floor Plan CRYSTAL CHANDELIERS -Two crystal chandeliers light Mrs. Halsted’s dressing room. Arranged on the blue, moire-covered walls are pictures of the Halsteds’ suns, Willard and Robert, from bal)yhood to young manhood. Lavender and crystal perfume bottles and soap dish on the blue laminated vanity carry out the blue-lavender color theme of the adjoining bedroom. A gold framed mirror is hung above the French provincial dressing tabl^ reflected in the vanity mirror. LOUVERED DOORS-The louvered doors of the Smith’s dressing room, both on the vanity and closet walls, pick up the shades tf the “broken line” wallpaper, two tones of blue, two of lavender and one of olive green. Spotlights light the wall-to-wall vanity with its counter-top of off-white laminate. Black ceramic tile is used in the adjoining master bath which is carpeted in iavender. By JODY HEADLEE Whether you have teen-agers still at home, as do the Linn Smiths, or grown children and grandchildi'en as do the Morris M. Halsteds, living at the Willits West Town Houses In Birmingham can prove exciting. ★ ★ ★ Pictured on this page are individual interpretations eadi family applied to identical floor plans. One chose stark contemporary furnishings and decor. The other decided upon traditional with an oriental flair on the upper level and modified contemporary on the lower. ^ Cece Smith, a siRthomore at University of Michigan, has joined pink and orange as color mates in the second bedroom on the upper level. the headboards of her twin beds and her draperies are in pink and orange stripe with bedspreads repeating the pink, w ★ ' w , A Charlotte Hoyem original, “Mr. Ladybug,” adds a bright | touch of orange and blue to off-white walls. ONE PANEL One panel of her shuttered Closet doors is painted orange as color emphasis. Black wrought iron chairs with black leather seats carry out the contemporary feeling of the room. , The second bedroom in the Halsted home is distinctively masculine. Against a background of off-white walls and blue carpeting are twin beds covered by tailored, deep blue On the oiled walnut bedside table is found a tall black lamp with silver overlay. Simple black and silver braid repeats the base colors,on the silver shade. Drawers on % slate-topped chest feature inlaid distressed mahogany in a harlequin pattern. A collector of interesting timepieces, Mr. Haisted has on his master chest a clock that never hqs to be wound. It operates by a photoelectric cell which gains energy from the available light rays. ■k it 4i The Smiths' sons — Linn, Jr., 17, and Kim, 13, — share the large, lower level bedroom with adjoining dressing room and bath. BOYS’ SUITE Their suite also offers a fireplace and sliding glass doors to a private (iatio. The Halsteds have arranged their lower level Into a family room and adjoining card room. Hanging on the wall of the card room is an antique clock which was once a vital element in' the business office of Mrs. Halsted’s grandfather, who was an artist in his own right. ★ ★ w A collection of his pen and ink etchings is still preserved by Mrs. Halsted. She keeps the drawings well protected In a rosewood inlaid sewing box which her grandfather gaVe to her grandmother two generations ago. Hidden in a secret compartment in the quaint sewing box is also a yellowed copy of the Ulster County Gazette dated January 4, 1800. It proclaims to a grieving nation the death of President George Washington. In contrast j^to the old fashioned clock, the balance of the card room is contemporary. WAVERING STRIPES Wavering stripes of olive green, light green and turquoise highlight the grayrblue background of the textured throw rugs. Affixed to another of the card room’s white walls is an Italian picture grouping depicting the French game Cameleon. The costumed figures are painted on the reverse side of the protecting glass. A ver.satilc folding card table is surrounded by four chairs with bronze leather' seats and finely woven cane backs. ★ ★ w Louvered floor-to-ceillng cupboard doors conceal the Halsteds’ stereo system. The adjoining family room continues the contemporary decorating technique. I.arger versions of the card room’s throw rugs complement the rodm’s white walls and gre%n draperies. Above the fireplace hangs a black and white Italian wrought iron and porcelain wall sconce. Black fireplace utensils attached to the white fireplace stress color contrast. ★ ★ ★ Japanese bird prints, 150 years "old, hang above the sofa upholstered in a modern fabric using shades of blue and olive green against turquoise. On the teak end tables are brass Japanese stoves which have been converted into lamps. The Noguchi coffee table of glass and ebony in front of the sofa is so heavy it takes two men to move it. Centered on the wall above the pianola are four ivory coins. Theke coins, ivory carvings of a water lily, peony, rose and chrysanthemum, are mounted on black velvet and framed in bronze wood with a shadow box effect. « For convenience in patio entertaining, a summertime pantry has been installed. It is copt-plete with running water, refrigerator and stove. ★ k k ' ' Both the Smiths and the Halsteads will graciously open their homes to the public for the Planned Parenthood League’s Home Tour. * * ★ The tour, which includes 13 locations, will take place May 14 from 10.30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mrs. Eliot F. Robinson, Linden Road, Birmingham, is general chairman of the event. SIX UNITS—Designed by Architect Carl Luckenback, the Willits West Town Houses are unique. Six pHvate units comprise the development. A landscaped central court permits easy access to the electronically controlled, two-car garages. Flanked, by woods, the occupants enjoy pleasures of country living plus convenience 6f being within easy walking distance of downtown Birmingham. Each unit features an upper level patio, enclosed by a redwood fence for privacy. Wrought iron gates lead from the central epurt to the individual homes. A garage entrance into each foyer eliminates going out into the weather. * INDIRECT LIGHTING—Desiring to make tile wall and ceiling the light source in the master bedroom, the Smiths had a 12-foot oiled walnut reflector installed on the side wall It conceals fluorescent tubes. Off-white-draperies, walls and carpeting set the mono- chromatic color scheme. On the massive white laminate-topped desk is a tripod lamp of black wrought iron with a straw shade banded in black'.' The twin beds feature cane and oiled walnut headboards and white' spreads. SWEDISH CRYSTAL—Displayed on the pecan - finished walnut chest in the Halsted living room is a sparkling chunk of Swedish crystal. Etched on the piece’s single flat surface is an Eskimo mother and her child. LUXURIOUSLY F E MININ E-r Mrs Halsted’s bedroom suite of rooms reflects femininity of its mistress. The wall-to-wall white draperies with blue butterflies repeat the bicolor background of the room, white walls and blue carpeting. The chaise longue and bedspread of the king-size bed are covered in a quilted blue-lavender silk. Above the French cherry headboard hang four exquisitely etched china plates framed in gold. THE LINN SMITHS’—Setting the accent pace for the Linn Smiths’ Contemporary living-dining ell is Charlotte Hoyem’s “Red Nude.” Predominately orange, the oil painting. salsb introduces shades of green, turquoise and blue. Off-white carpeting, draperies and walls create the area’s versatile background. Black wrought iron chairs with black leather seat^ circle the white^laminated'dining table. THE MORRIS HAJLSTEDS’—peep piled blue carpeting and white walls unite to form the setting of the traditional living-diping ell of the Morris Halsteds’ home, fhe floor-to- . ceilingt draperies shade from , green to blue to lavender. Plastic hoods operated oh a magnet system protect the draperies from the f 1 o o r mounted heating i Eastern motif is introduced by Chinese rugs i by the area’s accessories. Facing each other ii fireplace are a blue sofa and a white loveseat. , •J"'- ■■■ ■" '■ ■ ■ ' ./. Il/ 1 KU^HTKKN THE PONTIAC riiRSS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 Appitndmitely 69 per cent of Amei^an • m>inhlgh PUSTIC SHUTTERS Wm‘» R«t • • Nal Cott Un PMk Ur. I»M V € youHl love [Golf Manor See the New FAIRMONT Phone Model EM 3-2123 The SNOKLER Co. CUSTOM BUILUniG YOUR PUNS er OURS W. H. Tewueid & Soi Conplvl* CaylaMring RmtJc* FE 8-0803 or 363-7613 Breezeway Adds More Living Space ECONOMICAL LUXURY—A fully developed br^ezeway , between house and garage gives this modest sized ranch a low, expensive look and also provides an “outdoor living room.” The house contains three bedrooms, two baths. The architect is Rudolph A. Matern. H-M STATISTICS A one-story home with full basement containing a basic living area of 1,479 square feet excluding breezeway and one-car garage. Over-all dimensions are 28’2” deep by 79'4“ wide, of which the breezc^-way accounts for ir of width and the garage 14’. CARPETS Cempiete Selections of PONTIAC L?N0LIWM^C0. 461 Elizabwth Lak« Rd. FE 2-9269 ipartnients for Rent **lite in the fabulous** fontahwbleav 995 N. CASS LAKE ROAD 1 and 2 Bedroom Deluxe Apartments NOW AVAILABLE Apartment **102** Open Daily 9 to 9 for Your Inspection! Phone Today - FE 8-8092 or FE 5 0936 FLOOR PLAN-en into the hall. The bath also has a full ceiling lighting grille and a vent fan that operates with the light switch, assuring maximum light and ventilation despite the room’s interior locaticm. nie.bedrooms are well proportioned, well ventilated, and contain an excess amount of closet space—if that’s possible. Thp family-kitchen, a 15’8” room which surely will prove to be the most popular indoor room in the honse, also has an exceptional amount of window area making backyard from the dining room to the This outdoor living rooin, as Matern terms it, is perhaps the ulUmato'in indoor-outdoor Integration, a feature demanded by today’s living patterns. The house has a one-car ga^ rage, but it is oversized and contains a bank of closets and storage shelves which make it more than adequate for a one^ car family. You Get What You Pay For! When It comes to buying a heating system, the dieap^ price Isn’t always the towest price. You can easily be “taken” when you buy a heating system for your home if you merely compare prices and buy the To get the most for your heating dollar, contact a rep- ask him to list the size of the unit needed and the number and size of the heat distributors needed in each room. He should also give you an estimate of heating costs with various types of systems and with the different fuels available in your area. Another good check Is to ask your neighbors about their heating systems. You should also IoNl into the contractor’s service policies, his guarantee and his willingness to make final adjustments. Remember also, that spending subtly more for a 20 to 40 year heating system will prove much more economical than replacing the entire system every years. Documentary Film Available by Writijig “The Mayflower Story,” a 25-minute documentary film on the re-enactment of the Pilgrim voyage of 1620, is available for showing in schools, churches clubs and before groups of all kinds. To obtain the film for showing, write Aero Mayflower Transit Co., Indianapolis, Ind. 46206. Tbf Oil loiM tiiBir CAU C. $CHUm ^Hwna n 6-6466 or Nj 64I66/ HILLTOP REALTY Nuw and Used Homes | 673-5234 ro^er a. authier PATIO STONE CO. 10S70 llililMd R1 I MRm W««I «f MntlM Mrmrt EM 3-4825 Open Daily 8 to 5 See the . . . AMHERST HAMPSHIRE Swift Homes OF PONTIAC 2810 S. Lupesr Read Uks Orion 333-7637 e Ranch * Cap« Cod • Tri-Laval Priced From $21,990 LOT OWNERS/Custom Built FINISHED 3IEDR00M H0ME«6»m*42'*M01ITH JH KITCHEN CABINETS ' • OAS FURNACE < • COPPER PLUMBING > < • 100 AMP ELECTRIC SERVICE < TRI-lEVEl HOME MAHOGANY FLUSH DOORS ALUMINUM SIDING FORMICA SINK COUNTER FIBEROLASS INSULATION IMaPDIMO OASAOE MOOIL HOME OKN DAILY • 2600 S. TELEGRAPH RD. SOUTH OF SQUARE LAKE ROAD Your Own Private Lake 3 Miputes From Chrysler Freeway 5 Minutes To Downtown Birmingham BEFORE YOU BUY A H9ME OR LOT, SEE DEVELOPED BY HARRY MACKSEY MODELS! MODELS! MODELS! MODELS! HOMES ROM $25,9^ ioTS FROM $5,000 IP TAKINO PREtWAY, turn RIOHT AT ADAMS V V'. )u»To<9tLTi » LukeCharmPaoci souri/ \\\'{ f ^ / . MRW / » i ‘■•v, % \ iCMitsm-wa. i ’l^'.PIWWSIAY I TIIK PQNtlAC PRESS, MAY 2. t ' « ' ' ' f! ' , '''''''I''" .MNETOBN- LAP OF LUXURY-The master bedroom miite of Ivan Frankel’s new Gallery House is guaranteed to make homeowners feel like reigning ^monarchs. Its sitting room can be converted to a fourth bedroom or study, if Gallery House Opened in Knollwood Heights desired. Located, in Knollwood Heights ... Fairways, entrance on lyiaple Road one-half mile east of Middle Belt Road, the furnished model is open to the public. Base price of the home, without lot. Is $26,000. Built by the Ivan Frankel Construction C o m p a n y, Birmingham, Michigan, the Gallery House Is located in Knoll-wo^ Heights . . . Fairways Subdivision, off*Maple Road, one-half mile east of Middle Belt Road. ★ ★ A ^ All planning for the Gallery House is part of the long-range Kelvinator research program, designed to create homes for better living. The kitchen serves as the pivot center. From this point, facing toward the garden and children’s outdoor play areas, a mother has a home which literally revolves around herself and her family. The dining room and formal area to the right are a completely independent wing designed to avoid cross over traffic. . ★ ★ ★ To the left is the family room. This informal section is not part of the kitchen. It has its own separate entrance from the foyer. FRONT FOYER The front foyer is more than a spacious greeting hall. It is New Custom Built HOMES! Trade and Build FINISHED HOMES TO SHOW KAMPSEN ■uin COMPANV 1070 W. Hui^n FE 4-0921 the practical funnel, channelling traffic to each area of tne home. In addition to the ground floor laundry, the Gallery House has an extra large basement of 890 square feet. Roads In the subdivision are paved. There is a central water system with fire hydrants and County approved septic permits. Gas is available. ★ ★ w Located in Bloomfield Township, the area is serviced by the Birmingham Post Office and school district. Venetian Blinds Introduce New Narrow Slats Something new has been added to the American concept of the Venetian blind. It’s a blind with narrow slats of from one to one and three-eighfhs inches, about half the width of conventional blindsi , Although new in the United States, narrow slat blinds have been popular in Europe for more than ten years, especially in the Scandinavian countries. To fix the design, the tapes are made of slim cord which, when the blinds are closed? virtually disappear from view. When the blinds are tilted to an open position, the cord can be seen slightly. The manufacturers of Venetian blinds are hopeful that the introduction of the new line will expand the use of this already popular window covering. Storage for Outdoor Grill Convenient, protected storage for putdoor cookery equipment is provided in an attractive barbecue center that is easily constructed of wood fraiping and hardboard panels. Jhe storage cabinet for charcoal,. fire starter, and other Items Is enclosed with panels of a factory-primed exterior hardboard. A peg-board panel provides space for cooking tools plus shelves for plates, glasses, and other utensils. The barbecue center Is 36” high and 60” long. Depth of the cabinet section is 30”. ★ ★ ★ Five 2x2-inch posts support tl unit. SIMILAR FRAMING Similar framing also is used for the horizontal supports. Grooves cut In the framing hold the peg-board panel firmly in place. This type of construction, also gives the barbecue center a professionally built appearance. For a' free plan with construction hints an a bill of materials, request AE-394 of the Masonite Home Service Bureau. ■ North Wacker Drive, Chicago, III., 60606. Plan for Expansion When building a house that you plan to expand at some later time, you can save money by having the plumber install the necessary pipes at the start rather than pay expensive installation costs later on wh lot of tearing-down will have to be done. ‘ < Live In Beautiful Waterland i I "CIIRKSTOH GMDEHS” ' EXCELLENT SCHOOLS-CHURCHES and SHOPPINQ THE WESTERNER i 1350 Sq. Ft. of LlVINCi AREA Furnished Models FEATURE! 1, Spacious Family Room With Fireplapei^ 2. Large Kitchen and Dining Area 3.1 and V2 Baths ~ 4.2>Car Attached Brick Garage 5. Full Basement 6. Gas Heat 7. Lots 115x150 8. Community Water MANY ADDitlONAL ^FEATURES ♦OPTIONAL $500 * LOW TAXES ★ *15,590 *17,390 Prices : From ★ INCLUDING LOT* FHA Minimum Down Payment $590 to $790 Directions From Pontiac.. Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) to Ml 5 turn right 1 .mile to Woldon Rd.-right 1 mile to models or 1-75 thru Ciorkston. Left at Wqldon Rd. off Main Street. 6300 WALDOS ROAD WE TAKE TRADES. DO CUSTOM RUILDING ON YOUR PROPERTY. Built and Sold by: * ARISTOCRAT RLDG. CO. PHONE 625-2882 OPEN DAILY 12-7 SUNDAY FROM 11 A.M. 11 A- HUNDREDS OF HOME DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM. A ||4IN|MUM OF *100 DOWN AND PAYMENTS OF LESS THAN *85 PER MONTH WILL START YOUR NEW HOME. ETHEL SPECIAL Nowhere else is so much offered fOr so little. 3 extra large bedrooms plus large ilvlqg and dining areas point out tha old-fashioned, high standard quality of design that has been incorporated into the ETHEL THE ALBEE "SUBURBIA" A wonderful split-level concept ...designed with the family In mind! 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Includes U-L approved wiring fbr entire home, light fixtures, service lights, mast, door chimes, switches and outlets, 100 amp circuit breaker. • INTERIOR TRIM ...ail materials to finish inside, including dak flooring, red rosin building paper, birch interior doors, closet doors, baseboards, casing moldings, hardware nails, screwy looks and hingps. PLAN NOW TO SEE ALBEE THIS SUNDAY1T0 9P.M. Take Home Your FREE Copies Right Away! ALBEE'S DESIGN A-BOOM KIT ALBEE'S NEW 40 PAGE DESIGN CATALOG BOTH FREE WHEN YOU SEE THE ALBEE SAMPLE HOME NEAR YOU ALBEE KING HOMES RT. 12 WAYNE, MICHIGAN PHONE: PA 8-T400 ' Sample Homes open Sunday 1-9, Saturday 9-6, Daily 9-9. If you can't come in person,.clip and-mail this coupon now. City.,. Phone.^ Thi size of lot we ere planning to build on is........ , We are looking for a lot to build on "«»r- We now own or are buying our own house Yes,_________________Mo_ We are Tinting. ^ Yet___________■■ 'y Albee King Homes c/o 931 SUMMIT ST. NILES, OHIO ’RMH PP M HMI GENTLeMEN: Please send me your NEW DESIGN-A'-ROOM KIT. 0 Ipls'as* anclpsa 50C to caovwr UMdlina •nd'postige) NEW HOME DESIGN CATALOG □ (PtooM tnelo** $0* to cover htndHng tnd po*teoe) ■ i’ f 1't' . TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRieisS, kATURPAY, MAY 2. 1064 .P'J- Soviet Press Silent F/oiod Fight H/ncfered? AKQ4 f 10»«« iKQi wnnr ■*•>(!» AIT AllOIIS AJrTIS VAQI ♦ J4IS ANom Ajria «AKQI8 ■Ml i ‘WM NetOi Ito )♦ Tm It St pass pass »« I>BW 4to 4t PBM Bmb Pile Opeoinx ImA—A8 diamonds and if East keeps on oompetkig for a ikhile South dunild wind up playing a four diamond contract. Kb Natioiial InterooUegteto Toomament play West is in* sinicted to lead a dab and Sooth raffs ia. South will lead a diamond to dummy’s queen and after JBast shows out, South will have a slight problem about making his contract. He will have to do something about West’s trumps. MOSCOW ort I Mi i n DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evana ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Lei::lie Tnmer THOSE PHOMV OKOtM AMO PAVMSNTO) WHICH MAV COsr THE PLANT MIUIONS, WERB PROBABLV KKm ON A SiaNArURE COpyiNd DEVICE IN AM0N!B COLONVl BUT THEVD NEBO COMPANV CHECK-/ MORTY MEEKLE By Dick Cavalli By Ernie Bushmiller GRANDMA By Charles Kuhn ANO THEN SETTLH DOWN TO OETTINO MY VVOWK DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney 1 CHICKEN OINNEf? ■ asp DELUXE DINNER ■ „ WITH V ha^^p^neJ M<'. X rx.' k. II TtlE POlNT^IkC rtlfes’s SATtR]iAY;iMfA|Y 2; I; TWEiirTVtOli I, IK,' Iff’: • TODAY’S AMIRicAN LRAOUi Cl.v.i;nd ........Kf- MinniMla i « »( N«w York ......... 5 ' 5M Chlckflo ......... S . 4 lu I Waihingtort .... « » ^ KtniM City ..... 4 7 .M4 RRiDAY'l RItULTI Navy York 1, Waihinglen 0, night Minnaiota 10, Kaniai Cllv 5, Ui jjJ'W'** •* Chicago, night, Clavoiand at Ralllmora, night, rain Only gamat tchaOuM. TbOAY't OAMRI I WaihlnglM (Oitaan H) at Now (Bouton 1-t). Clava^aj^^jKrallck J^O) at U« Angalaa (Ballniky 04) (Paltri M), Datrolt (Wlckariham 1-1 > at bouquatta M). Minnaiota (Stanga »t) at K Waihingtan at Naw York, 1 Datrolt at Boiton MONDAY'S OAMRS .KriMtr.a-"*’ hihgton at Baltlmora, night Nt^lO^AI. LRAOUR Wan Last Pet. Bi lalphla ... 10 2 .133 - 'ranclKO ... 0 4 .M7 Itiburgh Cincinnati Chicago Naw York ........ 2 11 .134 PRIDAY'I RRSULTS St. Lout! «, PIttiburgh 3, night Chicago 1 Los Angai It 7, San Francisco TODAY'S OAMRS dlav 1-1) at Mooiiar 1-1), night. ______ (Friand 2-0) at St. Loots (Simmons 2-1), night Chicago (Buhl 1-1) at Houston (Owans l-l), night. Naw York (Jackson 1-3) at (Malonay 2 ) or Purkay 0- .. Philadelphia (Culp 1-1) at Milwaukee (Sa-dowskl 1-2). SUNDAY'S OAMRS Chicago at Houston ■ « Yor------------ San Francisco at Los Angolas MONDAY'S OAMRS Houston at San Francisco Pittsburgh at C Wind, Sand Up Scores in Tourney LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -More wind—hopefully not as severe as Friday’s — was promised golfers today as Chi Chi Rodriguez, the mighty mite from Puerto Rico, led the way into the third round of the $65,000 Tournament of Champions. ★ ★ Tit The 120-pound, 5-foot-7f4 Chi Chi marched courageously through the wind and sand to take the lead at the midway mark Friday with a two-under par 70 and a 36-hoIe total of 139. Hanging two strikes back was Jack Nicklaus, who had a 73 for 141 and this observation on the weather as he’ wiped reddened eyes: ★ ★ ★ “The conditions were as tough as they’ll ever be. It was not so much the wind, but the sand in the wind.’’ ‘WORST WEATHER’ Gary Player of South Africa, 1^0 had a 71 and is tied in third plac^with Doug Ford and George Knudson at 142, said, “It was' the worst weather I’ve ever played golf in.’’ . Arnold Palmer, who is five strokes off the front end with a pair of 72s, added that he’d just as soon try to play golf in a wind tunnel. ★ ★ ★ 'The site of this 12th annual event is the 7,073-yard par 36-36—72 Desert Inn Country Club course. Ford, the first round leader with a 67, settled for a 75. Favored Coif s in Bad Spot LOUISVILLE (AP)-^As the years roll on, favorites stand less and less chance of winning the Kentucky Derby, America’s greatest horse race. ★ ★ ★ Since the beginning in 1875 up to the 90th running today, the favorite has come in first 39 of 89 times. But since 1934 it has happened only 10 out of times, and since 1944 only 4 out of 20 times. George A. Pope’s Hill Rise, ridden by Willie' Shoemaker, the 6-5 choice of the handi-cappers as post time neared. Northern Dancer, the Canadian-bred colt owned by Edward P. Taylor with Bill Hartack yp, was the second choice at 5-2 in the field of 12. ON TO FAME Along with the declining chance for the favorite to win goes a rising certainty that when a favorite does win, the colt gobs on to fame. The four favorites who won In the last 20 years are ranked among the sports’ greatestr-Ci-tation in 1948, Hill Gall in 1952, Needles in 1956, and Carry Back in 1961. Going back a little further there were such favwites, who started toward equine imiMor-tality by winning the Derby, as War Admiral in 1937, Whlrlar way inr 1941, and Count Fleet in 1943. tA ★ ★ In the list of those who tried and failed at the Derby with odds of 8-5 or less are redoubtable names, too, such as Candy Spots last year. Bold Ruler in 1957, Nashua in 1956, and Native Dancer in 1953, Other favorites who failed include Ridan in 1962, Tonapion in 1960, Your Sports Calendar Pontiac Control Flint Central Memphis et Lepac Brown City at Almont Dryden at Anchor Bay Njew Haven at Armada , Clarencevllle at Brighton Clarkston at Bloomfield HU Northvllle at MIHord North Farmington at Birmingham Groves Livonia Franklin at Detroit Thurston Oxford at Kettering Marysville at Romeo Lapeer at L'Anse Crouse Utica at Warren Lincoln Monroe et Royal Oak Dondero Royal Oak .Shripe at Benedlctln 'K*- Track, „ Redford Union at WStled Lake L'Anse Creuse at South Lake Milford, Brighton at Northvllle Clarkston at Lake Orion Avondale at Host in 1950, who finished a miserable n|lhth, Olympia in 1949, who finished sixth. Knockdown in 1946, and Stir Up in 1944, Tft the crowd of 100,000 lured by br^ht skies, a fast track and a redoubtable entry list, the sentiment for Hill l^e was based not only on hfs impressive string of eight straight victories but also on his det^sive victory four^ys ago in the Derby Trial in the sparkling time of 1:351-5 for one mile. FIVE STRAIGHT Northern Dancer has a string of five straight victories, including the Flahningo and Florida Derby. Neither Hill Rise nor Northern Dancer has. finished out of the money. Behind Hill Rise and Northern Dancer, in the opinion of the handicappers, came Quadrangle, with Bob Ussery up, and The S(»undrel, ridden by Manuel Ycaza, both at 8-1. Other entries were Roman Brother 10-1; Mr. Brick 15-1; Wil Rad and Dandy K., 26-1; and Extra Swell; Mr. Moonlight, Ishkoo-dah and Royal Shuck, 30-1. The Derby disance is one mile and one quarter and each colt wilLcarry 126 pounds. Clarkston Wins Tennis Shutout Clarkston won its fewrth Wayne-Oakland tennis match in six starts yesterday, 5-0, over Clarencevllle. Berkley handed Pontiac Northern a 5-0 Inter-Lakes setback. Players from both winning teams took individual matches in straight sets. No set went into overtime. f CLARKSTON S,.CLAReNCRVILLR t n (wf Pothotf* i Golf Buddies Play for N-S Crown PINEHURST, N.C. (APr-Billy-Joe Patton estimates that he and Dale Morey played perhaps 100 rounds of golf together during the three years they both lived in Morganton, N.C. before Morey moved to High Point last " year- Today they met for the first time under tournament contfi-tionsJn the 36-hole finals of the North and South amateur championship. . ★ -k ■ * Each scored an impressive' victory in 18-hole semifinal play Friday. P.atton put out Wayne Jackson of Hampton, Va., 4 and 3, the fourth of six matches this week he has won by that score. . Morey surprisingly trounced Bob Allen of West Hartford, Conn., 6 and 5. Allen was runner-up lasWyear ^ when Patton won his second straight title and third since 1954. Berkley at Waterford Southfield at Pontiac Walled Lake . ............... Royal Oak Dondero at Troy Livonia Franklin, Oak Park at Nor Farmington St. Frederick at St. Michael Pontiac Central, Saginaw Arthur H I Saginaw . Redford St. Mary at OL St. Mary TeniHa Holly at Clarencevllle Clarkston at Bloomfield Hills BRRKLRY S, PNH t Larry SIbrack d«.*Coe, 4-3, 7-5; Jerry Ibrack def. Johnson, 4-4, 4-2; Jeff Beneci ef. Bayley, 4-1, 4-4. DauMst John Streeter and Rick Foa def. Hinson nd Buffington, 4-4, 4-2; Jim Clarke and jIm Jordan def. Schram and Watkins, 4-4, 44). WATER SAFARI WINNERS Robert Gillings (in back) of Lansing and Albert Wlding of Holly teamed up to win the 500-inile Texas Water Safari with this fiberglas canoe. The two finished the race Tuesday with an elapsed time of 80 hours and 27 minutes. They are shown here moving down the San Marcos .River during the early part of the race. • Canoe Champions Fail To Negotiate Traffic SUBSTITUTES COLLECT LAURELS—A gala reception for Ed Adams and the Widing brothers, Albert and LeRoy, was set for yesterday in Holly. But Adams and the Widings were tied up in traffic in Indiana and couldn’t make it. Civic officials decide(i to go ahead with the ceremony anyway. On hand to rceive ‘Keyes to the City’ for the absent heroes were Mike Adams, six-year-old son of Ed, and Dorothy Widing; wife of Albert. Making the presentations was Mayor John F. Oldani of Holly. ”• By FLETCH SPEARS HOLLY - The setting was perfect. But the timing was off. Several hundred persons lined the streets here yesterday afL ernoon awaiting the arrival of canoeists Albert and LeRoy Widing and Ed Adams, who were returning from Texas where they had taken part, 'With considerable success, in the 500-mile Texas Water Safari. ★ ★ ★ Albert had teamed witt; Robert E. Gillings in winning the marathon, and LeRoy and Adams grabbed the runnerup spot. Banners were waving, the band was playing, flashy , fire' engines were on display and the mayor along with civic officials were on hand for a ‘Key to the City! ceremony. But Adams-and the Widings faiied to show. They were bottied up in heavy traffic in Fort Wayne, Ind., at 4 p.m. and calied to say they imh-ably wouldn’t arrive befiwe 8 p.m. “We can’t wait until tonight,’’ Hope to Climb in Boston Tigers Only Game Off Pace BOSTON (AP) - Despite puny .241 team batting average and a 4.15 earned run average by the pitching staff, the Detroit Tigers moved into the first full month of the baseball season Service Set Tdmorrow hr Ex-Norfhern Afblefe One of the brightest stars in Pontiac Northern’s brief athletic history will be laid to rest tomorrow. ★ ,<.★ ★ Steve Thompson, 20, who led Northern to an Inter-Lakes Conference basketball title in 1960, died Thursday of Hodgkins disease. Funeral service will be held tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. at Voor-heis-SipIe Funeral Home on Perry Street. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. ‘ ★ ★ ★ The disease struck Steve during his. senior year. “I noticed that he was fatigued,’’ Hall said, ‘but he didn’t slow down.’’ Softbaii Meeting Set An organizational, meeting of teen-agers interested in playing slo-pitch softball in the Avondale Church League will be held at 631 Benson (off ^ast Boulevard) at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Teen-agers from'Auburn Heights and Pontiac are invited. During two years with the Huskie varsity, Steve averaged 16 points a game and cornered rebounds at an 18.5-a-game pace. “For his size (six feet), he was the best rebound er we ever had, ’’ PNH coach Dick Hall said. “He was, a tremendous competitor ... a ___ lot of desire,’’ THOMPSON Steve was named to the I-L All-Conference basketball teams during ^1959-60 and 1960^1, and he received All-State honorable mention in 1961. /★ k The illness forced him out of school for a week near the end of the ’61 campaign, and North-had a date with Pontiac Central coming up. juist one game out of first place in the tight American League race. The Tigers were idle Friday and were scheduled to open a two-game series with the Boston Red Sox this afternoon. Dave Wickersham (2-1), one of the three new players who have kept the Tigers in contention in the infant steason, was scheduled to start against Bill Monbouquette. Phil Regan, a winner on opening day but still looking for his second victory, will pitch Sunday. Four of Detroit’s seven victories to date have been credited to pitchers who were chucking for other major league clubs last Jason. Relief specialist Larry Sherry also has a pair of victories and received credit for a save on one of Wickersham’s -triumphs'. Mickey Lolich also has recorded two wins, one with help from Dick Egan, while Regan has the other triumph. Catcher Bill Freehan’s robust .464 batting average is currently the best in the AL. But he’s only appeared in eight games and just does qualify for consideration in the averages at this stage of the season. Jerry Lumpe, who last year was making the plays for Kan-City, is the best hitter among the regulars with a .268 average. Dick McAuliffe’s .2S5, is next. In fact, the Detroit infielders have carried "the team through Stpve, although ill, ..wanted to its first 15 contests. The four play. Hall put him "in the-line* regulars have driven in 22 runs, up an(i he responded with 25 compared to only 14 RBIs from points against the Chiefs. i the** (juartet of outfielders who have been employed by Manager Charlie Dressen. The Tigers’ skipper continues to scratch his head while wondering what to do with his pitching staff. Frank I^ry apparently left his best pitches in Florida, where he had his best spring in ages, and will be used in relief. Sherry and Dick Egan have been most reliable when summoned in relief. But the rest Of the bullpen has been a flop. Dressen hopes Julio Navarro, acquired from the Los Angeles Angels earlier this week, will be the third big man in the bullpen. Terry Fox’s arm isn’t any better and the Tigers appear ready to ship him out or place him on the disabled list. Dressen and General Manager James Campbell continue their talks in hopes of making a few more deals. But it appears that the only changes that can be expected from now until May 14, when all clubs must trim their rosters -to 25 players, Will be between the parent club and the minor league affiliates. After Sunday’s game, the Tigers journey to New York for a single night game with the Yankees Tuesday, then return to open, against Boston, an 11-day, 13 - game home stand Wednesday night. I Donald Campbell, publisher of the Herald Advertiser here, said. Campbell had undertaken the task of organizing the reception a little more than 24 hours before. k k k With t h e crowd waiting, Campbell decided to go ah^ad with the ceremony. SHORT PARADE -Following a short parade, Campbell climbed onto the bed of a truck, set up as a speaker’s platform, anil informed the crowd that the canoe heroes, would not make it. Mayor John F. Oldani completed the final act of the newly-prepared script by presenting ‘Keys to the City’ to Albert’ wife, Dorothy, and to six-year-old Mike Adams. A major portion of the afternoon crowd was still milling around when Albert and LeRoy rolled into town. It was 11:30 and those wljo waited wanted a glimpse of the whose canoe-racing ability had put Holly in headlines. Albert and Gillings, racing together for the first time, collected an estimated $7,500 in cash and prizes for their efforts in the Water Safari. k k k And in winning the 500-mile race, Widing and Gillings may have altered the design of canoes that will be used In futtire Safaris. Manning a fiberglass canoe, they moved well in front of the pack during the 415-mile river portion of the race and paddled across 75 miles of saltwater in the bays of Arkansas-and Corpus Christi. They pulled ashore at Corpus Christi Tuesday at 8:02 a.m., with an elapsed time of 80 hours and 27 minutes. All told, the journey from the headwaters of the San Marcos River to Ck>rpus Christi took nine days. Only 11 of 44 boats finished the race. ^ Widing’s canoe was a lighter (Continued on Page 22, Col. 1) Yanks Blank Nafs- Battey's Bal Batters Kansas City, 10-5 By The Associated Press Earl Battey -put the bite on Kansas City, and both came away aching. The only trouble for the Athletics, though, was that Battey’s ache struck too late. Minnesota’s All-Star catcher pounded a grand slam home run and a tie-breaking two-run single in 'powering the Jwins past Kansas City 10 -‘5 Friday night. ★ ★ ★ • Battey performed all of his destruction before being forced to leave the game in Ihe eighth inning when a foul tip struck his mask. The foul ball aggravated a toothache that4ias been plaguing him. The grand slam homer came in the sixth and gave the 1>ins a 4-3 e^e.\ His clutch single sent-Minnesota into the lead for good in the eighth. TWO POSTPONED . Rain and, wet grounds sliced the American League schedule to just one other game. New New York’s 10-0 victory over Washington. Cleveland-at Baltimore and Los Angeles at Chicago were postponed. Battey’s single to left center ■ ....................... in the eighth broke a 4-4 1 Rollins also singled home two runs in the inning. ' ★ k >k ■ Home runs accounted for all of Kansas City’s runs. Rocky Colavito stroked a two-run blast while Dick Green, Charley Lau and Jim Gentile. connect^ for solo homers. Minnesota’s Allison completed the four-bag barrage in the ninth. The YankeOs moved above the 5(X) mark for the first time this season behindl Whitey Ford’s two-bitter. Ford; gaining his second shutout, didn’t allow a hit after the third. Tdin T^esh sinjgled cross the only run in the fourth. . Ex-Tiger Wins 3rd Straight; Phillies 10-2 Rookie Richie Allen Also Assists Spurt With Punch at Plate MILWAUKEE (AP) - The Philadelphia Phils are making merry with a torrid start in the National League race and two of the biggest reasons are a veteran pitcher and a rookie thirdi baseman. ★ Right-hander Jim Banning, a former American League strikeout king with Detroit, posted his third straight victory and young Richie Allen boosted his average to a hefty .431 Friday night asf the Phils hiked their record to 10-2 with a 5-3 triumph over the lyUlWaukee Braves. The 32-yearold Banning, obtained- in an inter-Ieape trade, extended his scoreless string to 21 innings before he weakened in the ninth and was rescued by Chris Short and Ed Roebuck, Joe Torre was retired by Roebuck (Ml an infield grounder with the bases loaded to end the game. SIXTH HOMER Allen, who hit 33 homers for Little Rock in tiie International League last year^ hit his sixth for the niils and olso had a double in four official trips after he walked against southpaw great Warren l^ahn in his first time at bat. Running said he is pitching np differently than when he posted 118 victories against 87 defeats in nine years in the American. League. An acquaintance recalled some of his feats with the Tigers and Running broke into a broad grin. ★ ★ ★ ‘I remember the day I struck out Ted Williams three straight times and should have had a fourth,’’ the tall hurdler said. ‘“nie next time we faced eahh other he hit two homers ofif me, but we won 5-3. ★ k k “Williams is the greatest I’ve ever faced. I haven’t seen any-compare with him. I must have struck him oi]t more than any other pitcher, but he also hit If homers off me. And I bet he hit over .400 against me. What a one in the league yet wHo can hitter he was.’’ Publinxers Get Started at Morey's The Michigan Publinx Gcilf Association will open the 1964 handicap tournament schedule Sunday at Morey’s ttolf and Country Club, and Tam O’Shant-er Country Club will be' the site of the season’s first Pn>-Ant tourney. i , k k ; Some of Pontiac’s ranking amateurs will be among thi$ 290 golfers participating in the 18-hole Publinx play. Teen^ time is 6:30 a.mv Entering from Pontiac are Mike Andonian, Jim Anderson^ Wally Smith, Charley Barker, Ed Wasik, Tom Balliet, Ronnie Rothbarth. Area pros who will be bidding' for a share of the prize at Tam O’Shanter are Warren Orlick, head pro at Tam O’Shanter, aiM his assistant, James Picardi Walter Burkemo, Detroit Country Club; Bob feajda. Forest Lake Country Qub; Ted Kroll; Franklin Hills Countr§r Qub; A1 and Tommy Watrous, Oakland Hills Country Club; and Mac McElmurry, Knollwood (^untry Club. ★ * k ; The tourney starts at 9:38 Kalarhazoo Nine Halt$ Broneps Witli 2-Hitter KALAMAZOO (AP)-Bowling jGr^n’s Jack Thompson yield(d only two hits and three walks in leading the Ohioans to a come • from - behind 2-1 MidAmerican conference baseball victoi^ over Western S Friday. r,'vr f rfT\vb'. ^ '^'' 1r; * I'l'r . '■ ........■ ' ■ .» ; ■ ’■ .’V^:;_,■■' :’’ U ' . , Tm l^ONTIAO !PRES$, SATimt)AY, MAY 2, 1»64 f A Major League Averages m ^3 13 *33 m 47 17 IS 42 327 41 n 10 431.242 432 40 lot 10 44 ' ' 312 a 42 I 12 CLU* l*ltLDIN« C 11 201 103 11 310 141 2 2M ir 13 m I •Wthlngton Boiton Now York I to 13 .1 I 12 H .1 Romano Cla 3r 0 Ctutoy KC Brandi Bat Marls NY ' 30 4 12 0 13 0 5 ya Hinton Wat Gantlla KC Francona Cla 20 1 .201 13 0 3 .2U 0 0 1 .'207 10 2 12 :230 3 10 3 7 !230 Csih Dal 47 Bruton Dot 20 Yaitnw'tltl Ban 49 vavsMifw v»* 1 TtKimat LA S3 S Aparicio E Conlollaro Schilling e 30 3 .172 Pagllaronl Pgh 34 Maiarotkl Pgh 33 3 1 2 .150 powaii oai fr Klrkpatr'k LA 27 Horton Dal » Alvli Cla 30 'Trlplaa-HInhon,' Waohlngloo, 4) Oliva, ***S1»S!n**B8»at—Aparicio, Balltmora, 7) ,, Minnawta. V PITCNINO IP H BB so W L ERA 10 12 ■ 3 12 2 0 0.00 11 1 0 10 2 0 0,00 3 0 3 3 2 0 0.00 s 22 Iflckaraharn Oat 17 13 ’J 13 * j •atari Chi 20 10 • ' 10 0 3 20 13 7 10 1 13 13 3 1 .277 Mnbouq'to I idzik Wat .... 0 10 2 0 3.00 21 21 0 IS 2 1 3.00 n .0 20 4 2 1 1 3.00 12 10 3 5 1 1 3.00 . » 27 3 20 2 2 3.10 23 20 11 11 1 3 3.00 14 10 3 12 1 1 3J0 It 11 0 14 2 1 3.24 23 17 17 10 1 3 3.20 23 21 11 13 1 2 4.30 10 17 3 10 ■ ■ ■ 3 2 2 12 ADO 13 17 2 2 0.'41 13 .3 0 11 0 2 7:20 MSU Homers Whip lllini by 5-2 Count EAST LANSIN G(AP)-Jerry Sutton and Joe Porrevechio each hotnered , as Michigan State defeated Big Ten defending champion Illinois 5-2 here Friday. Porrevechio hit his. round-tripper in tfie sixth inning with nobody on. Sutton connected in the eighth on the first pitch delivered by reliefer John Peden. There was one man on at the time. The mini outhit MSU 9-7 but committed two costly errors. Craig Mundt, who homered in the seventh with nobody on, was tagged for the loss. Illlnoli ...............t Mich gan State ...... 200 001 02x—3 7 Mumlt, Peden 0 and Baker. Krasna Boat Class Set Monday at PCH A water safety instruction class will begin Monr day at Pontiac Central High School at 7 p. m. The Oakland County Sheriff’s department has charge of the sessions and certificates will be awaid-ed at the conclusion. Starting at 7 p. m. in room 134 (use Washington entrance), the three-hour classes will f o 11 o w the ; same format aS used i earlier at Waterford.. i NATIONAL LRAOUR CLUB BATTINO AB R H HRI s s r" 1 32 .347 2 «. J3I I 32 .230 Northern, . - A a .............. 377 172 2 15 .204 371 (4$ 2 10 .213 ion I r 443 113 14 13 .222 York 13 333 170 11 11 .272 ■ ■ - 434 132 14 7 .273 322 130 11 2 .271 321 104 11 12 .273 an 33 13 14 — 134 12 IS Chicago PhItadiilphI St. Loul* 1 FranclMO 12 321 130 22 17 .233 INDIVIDUAL BATTINO r Club AB R 30 10 17 4 Johnion CIn Bailey Pgh ~ Manke Mil Taylor NY 14 1 3 J20 3 17 2 4 10 .302 4 0 3 .300 Torr* MU Fairly LA W. Davit LA • Aloo SF 3 13 0 3 .273 42 10 13 1 S 11 1 3 .232 >‘o 50 1 .135 70 3 .142 Sleveri Phi 35 3 3 2 3 LEADERS: Doublet—Stargell, Pittsburgh, 4. Triplet—Santo, Chicago, 3. Stolen Batet—Wlllt, L^^ Davis, Los Angeles, 4. ■ m Homer—Wl Pitcher Club Maloney CIn Bunning Phi Klippstein Phi t Phi Brogllo ! ?lXe^MII O'Tdole CIn Hendley SF FItchor MU __ SO W L BRA 10 17 2 1 1.22 7 23 3 0 1.33 0 4 2 0 2jo .5 2 23 3 0 2.U 10 24 3 0 2.» 2 13 2 1 2.40 10 12 2 1 2.40 stailard NY brytdale LA Koufax LA Simmons StL Veale Pgh Schwall Pgh Jay CIn Nuxhall CIn Spahn MU Sadowtkl MU Culp Phi Jackson Chi Friend Pj|h 13 11 12 17 12 13 7 10 1 1 2.34 2 15 1 3 *“ 4 24 2 1 . 4 12 1 2 3.00 8 2 13 17 23 15 30 30 NoNebart Htn Ellsworth Chl Shantz StL Buhl Chl Bruce Htn 7 4 13 0 2 4.02 4 3 11 1 1 4.20 0 7 14 1 2 4J0 4 3 5 1 2 4.30 0 4 Oil 4.21 4 1 14 1 1 4.21 4 3 13 1 3 3.02 3 7 13 0 2 ' ~“ 2 13 14 0 2 7 3 2 1 1 4.23 'M'dine Rolls onlateHomei ANN* ARBOR (AP) - Michigan shortstop Dave Campbell drove in two runs in the third inning and hit a 370-foot seventh inning homer Friday to break a tie and give the Wolverines a 4-3 Big Ten baseball victory over Purdue. The Triumph moved Michigan into sole possession of first place in the Big Ten with a 4-0 league record. The Wolverines and Purdue had been tied for the lead with 3-0 marks going into the game. Lefthander Clyde Barnhart pitched a nine-hitter for the winners, striking out five and walking one. Purdue hurler Mike Purvis struck out four, walked two and was tagged for seven hits in going the distance for the Michigan’s victory was its 10th of the season against 11-losses. Purdue is 10-3 for the _____I .............. 200 008 130-3 2-1 Michigan ------------ 002 100 1 Ox-4 7 J Purvis and McKenzie. Barnhart and 'The American League has only two managers who won two major league penpants. They are A1 Lopez with the Chicago White Sox and Charlie Dressen with theTMrmf Tigers. Lopez won in Cleveland and Chicago, DreSs^n in Brooklyn. Chiefs Topple Midland, 3-0; PNH Wins, 2-0 Huskies Trip Bears; Waterford Blanked by Walled Lake Pontiac Central and Pontiac Northern’s baseball teams yesterday dispersed any gloom from the rainy weather with key victories yest^ay. Pontiac Central blanked Midland, 3-0,, to remain unbeaten in the Saginaw Valiey Conference raoe while PNH did likewise in the Inter-Lakes League against Berkley, 2-0. At Waterford, the Skippers were held scoreless by Walled Lake, 3-0, and Farmington took a 9-1 win over Southfield for its first triumph of the Chuck Owen yielded a lone first-inning single at Midland and walked <»ily two in stopping the Chernies, the defending League tiUists. Dennis Burrill and Neil Roberts had back-to-back doubles in the third Inning for the only run Owen needed. The catcher also singled in a fifth inning marker with his third hit in the game. The Chiefs are now 2-0 in the SVC and 3-2 overall. 17 STRIKE OUTS Roger Hayward fanned 17 batters and permitted two hits in halting Berkley, last year’s I-L champions. 'Die big right-hander drove in both runs for PNH. He singled home Dave Tinkis in the first inning and squeezed in Mike Burklow in the seventh. Northern is now 5-0 this year and 34) in the loop. Walled Lake pushed Us mark to 5-1 to remain the I-L runner-up behind the me-hit hurling of John Thomas. Farmington’s Steve Page tossed a two-hitter at Southfield and had hitting support friun batfei^ ttttflte 'Dick Johnston. ’The receiver homered with a man aboard in the fifth inning. Bill Freeman had two runs batted in with a double. Page struck out nine and walked two. The first hit off him came in the fifth inning and drove in the only run for the Blue Jays. Pontiac. Central ...... 001 020 0- MMIand . ...... OCOOeOO. Golf Honors to Yalp Yale’s golf teams have won 21 national championships. Stan Muisal, retired, batted .317 against Los Angeles Dodger pitchers in 1963. He hit .313 against the New York Mets. STRANGE SPEEDSTER—This weird car, completed by Henry (Smokey) Yunick of Daytona Beach, Fla., only two days ago, was unveiled yesterday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Smokey Jr. sits in the detachable cockpit. Orchard Lake Relays Draws 250 Entries ’The fourth annual Orchard Lake St. Mary’s Track and Field Relays will take place Sunday at the Orchard Mke oval located on Commerce and Orchard take Roads. aose to 250 athletes will represent 10 schools: Dearborn St. Alphonsus; Detroit Benedictine, Holy Redeemer, St. Anthwiy, St. Stanislaus; Farmington Our Lady of Sen*’ rows; Jackson St. Mary; Ntew Lothrop St, Michael; SaginaW !. Peter and Paul and the host school. Orchard Lake, St. Mary. ★ . w . ★ ■ Detroit Servlte, winner of the past two relays, will not participate this year. Detroit Holy Redeemer, runner-up for the past two seasons, and Detroit St. Anthony loom as distinct threats to capture this year’s champiemship. Last year seven of the /J1 track and field records were shattered. The Field events will get under way at 1 p. m. and the track events at 2:15. Meet director is Father John Gabalski, the senior track coach among the Detroit Catholic League Track coaches. TRIPLE WINNER Dave Graves won three events and was second in another yesterday as Clarenceville downed West Bloomfield, 70-39, in track. Vaughn McGraw won the 100 and 200 for the Lakers. Waterford Kettering and Lapeer played to a rare tie in golf yesterday at the Lapeer Country Club. Both teams posted 173s. Jim Howe and Mike Kimmer-er fired birdie 4s on the first extra hole to give the Captains the victory. They are 4-0 in TH-County play and 8-2 overall. Dave Parsch of Lapeer was medalist with a 38. Klmmerer fired a 30. Benedictine downed Orchard Lake St. Mary 3-2 at Pontiac Country Club. Rocky Pozza shot a par 37 for the winners while Larry Blalobrzeski was low for OLSM with a 39. Tim Barnes had a one-under-par 35 to lead Milford to a 148- 162 win over Holly. Bill Taylor had a 36 for the losers. Barnes’ score was a school record. High lump — Dava Oravta (C). 3.4 Shot out - Mark DImmar (WB). XM Paia vault — Frad Walton (C). 10-3 030 relay — Cla^encevllla. I:U 440 - Jeff Waldman Id. 34.3^ 100 - Vaughn McGraw (WB). 10.3 Low hurdfat - Gravat jC). 21.4 ' £w — McOraw (WB). 23.2 Mila - Wait Bloomflald. 3:41.2 Captain Post Habit Walter Hagen captained seven U.S. Ryder Cup teams. ’'Winter leagup bowling Was having its final fling this week with only the banquets remaining for most groups. The West Side Classic League finished Monday night with champion 300 Bowl holding a 41-point lead. The final night’s action produced 16 “600s” and 67 “200s”. BiU Green’s 224-254-677 was the top three-game effort while George Chicovsky’s 276 (642) led the one-game scor- '300” was also champ.at Wonderland Lanes in the Monday night Masters League. It com-)olnts piled 441.182 Peterson poi led by Dave (Perfect Game) Eby’s 189 average. This week’s scoring leaders were Bill Johns with 229-231— 673 and Paul Horie 256-668. Jim Sherwod had 254. Calavito Starts Well in KC 'Rocky Back in Homer Race KANSAS CITY (AP) - Rocky. Ckilavito is off to a fast start in the American League home run race and the proud, sensitive slugger makes it clear the pay cut he took from Kansas City owner Charles 0. Finley has nothing to do with it. Asked whether the $4,000 cut in his, $50,000 Detroit salary furnished him an incentive, Col-avito said: “I didn’t need that. My incentive is just putting on the major league uniform. I’ve always gone all-out for every club I’ve been with.” Colavito has slammed four home runs and is tied for the AL homer lead with teammate Jim Gentile, Cleveland’s Leon Wagner and Washington’s Bill Skowron. All four of Rocky’s homers came during the current A’s home stand and all were off right-handed pitching. BATTING .270 His eight runs batted in leads the A’s and he’s batting~.270. My timing is good and I’m doing a good job of waiting for the pitch I want,” Colavito said. The handsome 30-year-old slugger is certain to be a top threat for the American League home^run crown. The ball carries better to left field here than in any park in the league. The homer distance to left center is a respectable 363 feet, and he is a strong pull hitter. In the past six seasons, Colavito has' hit 222 home runs, more than any other American League hitter. He averaged 37 homers and 109 runs batted in during this span. | ’The Troy Baseball Boosters bowling tournament was won by a team from Pontiac with 3,179 handicap pins. Leading the team’s efforts were Roger Deever (548 actual) and Fran Glnfer (588). Also contributing were Joan Siggins, Dale Maulding and Roy Nell Deever. Roger Deever also captains the Family Furnishings team that is leading'’’a state handicap tournament and expecting to compete later in the Flint regional rolloff for a shot at the state handicap finals next month in Buchanan. Airway Lanes flnished its third annual Father and Son Tournament last weekend. ’The winners are listed below. Rochester opened the scoring with one in the second, two in the third, and added single runs in the sixth and seventh. Steve Kandrick fanned 16 Spartans, striking out the side in all but the third and fifth innings. He gave up three hits. OTHER GAMES In other games, St. Agatha handed St. Michael a 6-4 setback: Cranbrook downed Birmingham Seaholm, 9-4; and Birmingham Groves came up with three runs in the last of the seventh inning to nip Oak Park, 7-6. St. Michael picked up only three hits in dropping its second game of the seawn'. Roger Cook had the biggest blow for the Shamrocks, a single that chased home two runs in the sixth inning. MIKokI .......... 110 000 0-2 3 0 Clarkalon .. ..... 000 000 0-0 2 0 Sparkman (W) ' and Ward; Williams Harvey’s Colonial House took the championship rolloff from Wonderland Lanes in the Airway Lanes Tuesday B Classic this week by a 12-pin margin after the two tied with 78-54 records during the season. Individual scoring leaders on the final night were Merv Weber (220-212-637) and Ray Keith (245-609). Ed Wilkinson had 225-204-630 and Bob 'Turnbull 239-609. AIRWAY LANES FATHER AND SON HANDICAP TOURNAMENT PREP DIVISION I Ytars) I Gary Tate, 1267. I Series; BUI SIvir, 640. JUNIOR DIVISION (13-13 Years) Smith Jim Jones, 1272; Arthur and Terry Wat- Gary Quiliquit, 237; High Game; G BIlby, 237. Son High Series: BUI Devine, 662. Father High Series; Joe Blaylock, 601. MAJOR DIVISION (16-ir Years) High Team Series; Lou Koprinee and -------------^3 —i jfrrY Luth, George Allman, 1277;' Ed ai Son High Game; ther High Gabe; Be 1 High Mrles: Jerry i: William White, J ibe; Ed Luth, 231. Father High Series: Allen Atopn, '682. BACK ON TRACK-ioy Fair of Piih tJ ac wiU get the racing season started Supday at 3:00 p. m. with his present Pontiac stock car 71?! at the Dixie Speedway, north of Flint, while his old Bomb 719 will take pari in the ^uper-modified events.. Speedway manager Ed Jones of Pontiac announces that the track will run the two divisions this year. Driving racer from Pair last season. Milford Nips Ciarkston 9 inW-OTilt Redskini Keep Lead in Loop; Sparkman Fans 10 Wolves Ed Sparkmap put Milford’s Redskins a step closer to the ball title yesterday by taming Ciarkston on two hits, 2-0. The win boosted Milford’s record to 6-1 In loop play. Ciarkston is 4-3. Sparkman walked five, struck out 10, and drove in the first run of the game in the opening with a single that chased Jim Ward home. In Oakland A games, Avondale edged Clawson, 2-1, and Rochester trimmed Fitzgerald, 5-2. Lynn ’Thorpe went the distance for Avondale to pick np the win. The Yellow Jackets in the sixth on doubles by Dick Reddaway and Dennis Acker. Holly Reception Foiled by Traffic (Continued from Page 21) craft than most of the 44 that started the race. The other craft were made of aluminum. “With.odr lighter canoe, we picked up a lot of time during the early stages,” Widing said. PADDLED ACROSS And they altered accepted strategy when they reached the saltwater leg of the trip by paddling across. Most of the other boats were equipped with sails for crossing the saltwater, but many became entangled in wet sails and WCre forced out of the race. ■ Judo Powtri Surpristd NEW YORK (AP) - A four-man team from Brasil, competing In the United States (or the first time, stole the show frbn) the favored Americans and Japanese as competition began Friday night In the 12th annual National AAU Judo championships. MIohigan Aviation doa PonMao Munielpal Airport •T44I93>IV08.678-3TI1 . HI8HT OOLF WATERFORD HILL COUNTRY CLUB Sm the New '64 Dependahlea Dodge and Dort Cars end,Trucks ot KESSIER'S AUTO SALES 13-12 N. WatlilMNM St., 0x1320 OA S-IOOO Guaranteed fhipehape full years Every Traveler boat is guaranteed to be shipshape and free from defects in materials and workmanship for two full years or Traveler will make It shipshape at no cost to you for parts and labor. This handcrafted fiber glass runabout gives you all the thrills of fast, smooth planing . . . plus inexpensive operation. Distinctive Rite Deck styling. Back-to-back or conventional seating. MOTORS To Make That Boat Go! • Mercury • MerCruiser • Scott-McCulloch We Cerry-ALLOY TRAILERS OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 63 E. Walton FE 8-4402 Oakland County^s Largest Sports Car Center INVITES YOU TO SEE AND DRIVE iVSir TtUVMPH SPMTFIRB THE The Sports Cor With the Down to Earth Price ‘2077 Also Used Sports Cors in Stock. Choose from 15 New Triumphs, TR4's, Spitfires, Triumph Sedans, Sport 6't and the New 4 Possenger Convertible m?9 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY EASY FINANCE —BANK TERMS NO FAIR deal EVER REFUSED ANYTHING OF VALUE TAKEN IN TRADE COMPLETE PABTS & SERVICE ON ALL IMPORTS ^PERIOR MOTORS 550 OAKLAND PONTIAC FE 5-9421 W 'V/;, Seqholm^ PCH Class A {Contenders Today THE PONTIAC PRESg, SAtURPAY. MAY 2, 196| 1 • ( River Rouge^ P/cWorc/VV/n Cenfro/ Af/c/)/gon Relay Crowns MOUNT PUEASANT (AP) Tiny Plckford and powerhil , River Rouge each racked up their third straight prep track MI^IgOT^niyjirsity l^aya. h Web Morrison’i peren- tltlMf Friday in the 24th Central Flint Northern and Birmingham Seaholm are defending co* champions hi Oass A. Lansing Boys Training School la defentf ing Class C titUiit. Pontiac Central and Water* ford are expected to nsake niM Upper Peninsula power-house ••• -* -* —* e scored in 12 of 16 ^nts to take the Class D championship. River Rouge suiwlved a H strong challenge from Willow Run to take the Class B crpwn. Relays for the past two seasons, would up in the same order again Friday. Plckford notched 71H points. MSP was •*' *' <^> CiMMnIflS •ns >'< Ch«boyB«n im,; IJ, Class A and C schools will vie for two Inore titles today. distant second with S6 and Un-lonville had 38. THREE FIRSTS River Rouge scored in nine of 16 events to edge Willow Run 43 to 39. Willow Run made Its bid have finished 146 In the OMU by winning three team , relay Plckford, Michigan School for ] the Deaf and UhlonvlUe, which events. Lansing O’Rafferty took third with 30 points. Only two meet records fell--botfi in field events—as the runners raced over a track dampened by week-IoUg rains. , Rob Johnson, a 5>foot41 jun-nipr from Vassar, put the 12-pound shot 54 feet 10V4 inches to snap the mark of 534Mi posted last spring by another Vassar athlete, Jim Colosky. Ionia pole vaulter Bob Ban-hagei broke the other mark with a vault of 12 feet lOMi inches. Th|s bettered the 12-4 showing of Vassar’s Mike May in 19^. May finished third Friday. Haslett dropped from fourth place tp 32nd position in the final Class B standings after officials disqualified two victor- ous Hornet relay teams for use of inelgible runners. •rwo Haslett runners were disqualified for competing in more events than the rules specify, officials said. The ruling cost Haslett 20 points. Plckford’s Roger Hewer was the only double winner in Class D. He flashed to victory in the high and low hurdles, taking the 120 highs in 15.7 seconds. and coming back te cop the ISO lows in 20.9. Money Ends Row MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) -Some of the nation’s top sports car drivers won 6300-per-car appearance money settlements Friday night and called off their plans to boycott the weekend’s 310,000 Lagbna Seca races. rth« D«tf Hi l,*Unk>nvlK P*Tour 2J) f, Lak* Clfv ' city 1», f; lay city «. Mai K Say city «t. Mary'i 17, a, fraaioll IS, t, aaar Laka 11, 10. Pori Huron It. Itapnan'a lOVk. aFiwn wwaiVfay WHyiM TltCtlCry Jlft) StavanMn). i, Michigan School for Daaf. 3. Mount Atorrit St. Mary. 4, Plckford. S, Unlonvlllt, lf4I.S, “ ‘ 3ump2^i, Abram Powall, MSO. 1 Oranom, “— ■ - 2. Kolth Oraiiam, Boar Laka. 3, Dava Mamma. Plckford. 4, ~ ‘ " DeTour. S. Torn CoUghil 2vy'. Caniral Ralay-1, MSD (Keith Kov Towniand). 2, Plckford. 3, Unlonvillo. Fowler. S, Bay City Sf. Mary. 1:13.1. . ’’J'S ..''•‘'ll-'- Dick Cottle, Plckforo. 3. Gllndal Young, MSD. 3, tie between Biain Ball, UnlMVIiie and stave King, vaitaburg. S, tie between John Banin, Plckford and Dave Sohllcker, Unlonvilla. Plckford _______ Niipion, Dannii Skinner, Dick Mepon-t Bob Huick). 3, Unlonville. 3, Bear . ------.. . . g,, j.„. ^ l^Yard High Hurdlea-1, Roger H^er, Plckford. 3, Tom Coughlin, Beal City. Veataburg. 5, l ■ Mile Run—1, CHK)rge Dixon. 3, George Hill, Mary's, 3, Jim Slmnnor KrzyskI, Plckford. Jack 4:44.4. 100-Yard Daih-I, Clift Harris, Lake City. 3, Joe Lessald, Bellalre. 3, Bob Lapan, Bay City SI. Mary's. 4, Ron Ford, Mesick. 5, (He) Oarwl ---------- -------- and George Slebblns, Stephen's. 10.3. ^ tSo-Yard Low Hurdles-1, R< Plckford. 3, - ........... Tom Coughlin, Beal City. Malaria, Bay City St. ■— Schuch, Unlonville. 30.0. Mary's. 5, Put-t, bsve ' Takaca, MSO. S, Jerry J. 44' 3'4i''- Mld> (Lor High Jump-1, John Banin, I 2, Loren VanBevem, Unlonville. .._______ Klamerus, DeTour. 4, Dean Tompson, Plckford. 3, Dave Grof, Barryton. S' 10". "0 Relay - 1, MSD (Steve Kgyacs, Townse: . City St. Mary. J vine. 47.L * Shuttle Hurdle Relay — 1, Beal City (Steve Smith. Mike Ban, Dick Onstott d Tom Coughlin). 2, Plckford. 3, Kings-iu«. 4, Vastaburg. 5, Unlonvilla. 1:05.15. SSO Relay - 1, MSD (Abram ------------- Tom Kovacs, Ernla Tov----------' * Hoffmeyer). 3, Lake. C Bay City St. Mary's. S, Bear Lake. 1:37.5. Class B . . 3, Ox- ................. 5, Chesanlng. 0:37.4. Central Relay — 1, Willow Run (Sam Hicks, Ray Holly, Harm Holly, Lamont Miller). 2, River Rouge. 3, Cheboygan. 4, Bad Axe. 5, tie between Para VVest-ern, St. Louis, Flint St. Michael, Okensos. 1;08.95. High Jump—1, Dave St bridge. 2, Hal Vondrasek, _____ Walt Hampton, Cass City. 4, Tom Van Horn, Cranbrook. 5, Bruce Potter, Haslett. Rouge. 4, Okensos. 5, Cranbrook. 2:37.1. Shot put—1, Rob Johnson, Vassar. Clift Kittle, Flint Atherton. 3, Gill Gibson, Fremont. 4, Dennis Buolaes, Flint St. Michael. 5, Sam Campbell, River Rouge. 54' 10V4" (New meet record, old record S3' 4Vj" set by Jim Colosky of Vassar Kerr, I . . s Shepard, Stockbridge. S, Curt Belmers, Lowell. 14.35 (CMU Relay record disallowed because of wind). I Rosenberg, ,. Bi, _ , - ______ ...... ■ . ~,cktort.. 4, Dennis Poulos, Swartz Creek. 5, Omnia 100-Yard Dash—1, Larry Wood, Holley. 2, Larry Pick, Plnconnlng. 3, Bill Wenger, Cheboygan. 4, Dick Fox, Flint St. Michael. 5, (tie) Larry Chlswell, Cheboygan, and Bill Flneout, Haslett. 10.4. 180-Yard Low Hurdles Graham, Mount Morris. ............ ...... River Rouge. 3, George Watt, Whitehall. tiver Rouge. 3, George Watt, Whitehall. Dave Shepard, Stockbridge. 5, Chuck Still, Saline. 19.45. Broad Jump—), George Miller, Vassar.' 2, LaMar Miller, Willow Run. 3, Dave Shepard, Stockbridge. 4, Boyce Bowmen, River Rouge. 5, Bill Finer--91' 7'/4".* Middle Distance Relay — 1, Bloomfield ' Hills Cranbrook (Cranbrook declared wli ner after Haslett. disqualified). 2, Bl Rapids. 3, Mason County Central. River Rouge. 5, North Muskegon. 4:00.3. 440.Yard Relay-1, Willow Run ( Holly, Ray Holly, Calvin K'-"- Shuttle Hurdle Relay—1, River Rouge (Sam Campbell, Willie Betts, Clyde Wasson and Boyce Bowman). 2, Parma Western, 3, Cranbrook. 4, Lowell. 5, Lakevlew. 1:00.9. dared winner after Haslett disqualified). 2, St. Louis. 3, Chesanlng. 4, Flint St. Michael. 5, Oxford. 3:38.2. Pole Vault—1, Bob Banhagel, Ionia. 2, Jim Stewart, Lakevlew. 3, Mike May. 4, (tie) Rich Willis, Sparta; Ron Smith, Rockford; and Larry Groombridge, Cass City. 12' IOV2". (Breaks CMU Relay Class B record of 12' 4" set by Vassar's Mike May in 1943). PONTIAC'S inlerflaiioRal Raceway Park DRAG STRIP ★ ★ ★ SUN, MAY 3 ARFON’S Gree'n Monster JET DRA(3STER 225 M.P.H. ★ ★ ★ Take 1-94 to Marine City exit—3'/2 milea last or 26 Mile and Meldrum, 6 milei last of Gratiot. TRACK Pho.iB RA 5-9150 OFFICE Phons 822-6707 GLEN WOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry Street, Comer Glenwdbd 'f f'JWBNTy-FOUfc THE TplNtriAC PRESS. SATPRDAY, MAY «■ iMV GM Plans Factory North of Montreal QUEBEC crry (UPD - o«i- ttral Motors of Canada Ltd., yea-tetday announced plans to build a plant capable of producing 100,000 cars a year at Ste. The^ esc, 20 miles north of Montreal. The announcement, billed previously by Premier Jean Lesage as of “great national significance,” was made jointly by QM’s Canadian president E.H. Walker and Lesage. Walker said the plant, to be in production next year, was part of a $l20-mllllon expansion of GM’s Canadian operations. Woman Dies of Injuries JACKSON (AP)-Mrs. Frances L. Godfrey, 53, of Lake City died In Mercy Hospital here n>ursday night of Injuries suffered April 22 in a two-car acckteit At a road intersection ' in Jackson County. Sharp Losses Evened Marf Adjusts After Low Week NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market took some sharp losses this week but balanced them out with a couple of rallies that left the averages alxHit even as the week ended. Analysts saw the declines as part of a correction of the prolonged rise since last Novan^. How much further this correction had to go was a matter of doubt yamong Wall Street experts. Optimism prevailed for the longer term, based on rising profits and the general strength of the economy. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks dipped .3 to 303.1^ The moves of ail these indicators were minor. In the ovei^all list of 1,523 issues traded this week, however, losers outnumbered gainers by 7B2 to 537. Union, Rubber Firmi Potfpono Negotiations CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) >-Hie United Rubber Workers and three tire companies, Flroitooe, Goodyear and General, announced today they had mutually agreed to suspend negotiations on'the pension and insurance agreement because of a failure to arrive at a satisfactory agreement. The companies and union greed to resume negotiations later, but no date was aet. The comparatively steady performance of the averages ap* peared to reflect a reluctance of most high quality Issues to yield much ground. The plurality of losera In the entire stock showed a disposition to take profits on a wide asfwrtmsnt of Issues that have advanoail in jhe past six months. ★ ★ ★ Volume this week totaled X7r Slljno shares compared with 29,063,011 last week. About Si mlllioa of this total was acoount-ed for by two stoclfo, Texas Gulf Sulphur and Curtis Publishing. “ gained at 52% Texas Gulf and Curtis rose SH to 17W. 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HoUOtLP .72 Hupp Cp .31t Cant 2 Ing Rand : InlandStl 1.1 120 50'/4 JZi* so + to ;l?i S ki IntIHarv 2.50 231 71'* « 'j* InMInar 1.10a 573 Wto 5lto Mtof 3» 3 ”3to m 12tol imPay^ WJ'Mto Mto 32V*-1V* ItV oJ .150 ^ 2V* 23to+ Ito ^ 8 Z aa Jlto SJt'to —K- 235 30'* 35 30to- to 137 22'/* 20V* 21 - 13* Ti. « : Krosar l.io k2I7 3lto i 35V »to 27to 25V4-^ to pani Cats pat Staal .50 Olsnay .40b DIs $M I.IO ISS 'Uto 90 158 3^ 32to 175 155 13'* .......n .M .pougAIr 1.3n pow Ch 1.80 Dreuar 1.20b ... .. 13'* 13'*- to 175 34'* 33'A 3534- Ito 37 S3'* 53 53'/*— '* 57 24'* 253* 2H4— V* 187 25to 233* 2#*- 3* duPont 1.50* 135 23 Lab Port 1 LIgoftIXAA 5 Llonal Corn. LItfonin l.oet I 13'* 12to 123*-t 10 I7to 17V*.. I 2'A 2 2'* .. Ural atoetr Lorltord 2.50 ^ufcanat 1.50 ) 1.) Hlak f l 5Vk I MackTr 1.00 327 Mad''tq'oi M»om«C Jt to.r 1} i*to Marooar .25* MartInAAar I M 3M 21to Raading Co. .34 13to Raading 5S»v SSS. 157 1 11^ 133*+ V* 5SS&V1 RV.I— 'isIsriaiK 30 27to 27V* 27'*- in «to 8.*;,^ 134 133* 13to 13V*- to 430 131* 12 13 +1 „ 50V* 433*+ to .40,S'* a f? s fc 14Aa xllO 43 52V* 433*-.. IV* 01%- to «7 llto 13to. I5to+ to » m SaabAL" 1.M 74 441% 351* C.. issyr'cn 1.50 ShallTra .5lr Sharw-Wm 3 ‘4V»: ^S* 7v*7 to 131 47*ifli 45% 4r *f ^ 532 47+4 453* 44V*- 34 CondSCam 1 Lonas Oa* 1 ->4^ *■' .j--—. ■/. LongllILt .02 2»3 35'* 33'* 35'*+ Ito 73 35'* 33 F 1'* smith AO 1 SmithK 1.20a - - Socony M2.40 x440 77to 73 W4- '* 33'* 33to+ . ony iouCalE SOUthnC 'iJO x2ir's7"34"M'*"s4to+ SouNatd 2.20 50 53'* 533* S3 + SouPac 1.30 342 31 Sou Ry 2.50 143/ 431 Tam Oat ib Texaco XIO Tax OuHPtod IN m 12 to 554 m* 741% lito'+ Ito 153 Mto 57to Wto+ to SW M 974 77to 74 J5a 225 223* 1 < 1.40 255 41to dito 3 I UW 521 15 m 1 t Oil 409 944% M 9 TrKont .35* TimkRBaar 1 S3vlS ioto IS + 2to Trana W Air 449 Mto 34to 954*-II* Tranaam .50 934 51 404* M - Ito --------- 517 41* Sto 41*- to 100 35to 441% 47 - Ito 109 Mto llVk t1to+ to —U— UCarbM 3.40 x234 1214% 1224* 1234*+ to UnlonElac 1 141 24V* 94to 241% ... UnOIIC 2.40b 344 llto 794* IStof 41% Un Pac 1.00 270 421* 41to 421*-+ to Un AIrL 1A0 545 57to 540* 57Vk+ 14* Unit AIrctt 2 201 451% 431* 45 - to Unit Cp .3Sa 240 Ito I'* 5to+ ' Un Prult AO 244 21to 20to 21 - UOatCp 1.70 203 34to 34 34'*+ UnltMXM 1 141 20 10'* 104* USBOrx .10 02 34'* 331* 34'*+ to USOyp la 135 04 03 03'/k- to US Induot 302 Oto Ito IVk- ' US LInaa 2b M 414* 303* 4040+ .. USPlywd 2A0 10 771* 741* 74V*- to U5 Rub 1.20 251 52 50to M + to US Smalt S 379 I04to 911* 1044*+ 71* Unit WtMlan 74 41* Sto 534+ UnMatCh .40 2M 12to 12 12V*- Un OllPd AO 235 354* 331* 341*- 11* Upldhn 1 92 514* 501* 501*- 4* —V— VanAIISt 1A0 30 33 314* Ml* ... <•«"> 40 133* 123* 123*- Ito. |« l»* llto 113* l| 174* 144* 143*- 341 . 21I 454* 44to 45to- to 1 Knickrbck Fd ,_W— Knickrbck Or F 444 V-Kaiard Fund V. Ltxnptn Inc Tr M T .'id A.. P.I.P. 4J57 +34 XS* .445 , MAS M.M M4T9x9' 9.M. 9.79 9.19 9A4 tXII 1X59 1XM n.53 11.23 1X95 IIM 11.19 i;.7l 17.53 17.71 I7A4 flS 4.71 ^ X44 4.44 X4S 3A0 2X5 IN ________ 7.H 7.21 7.2s 7J4 1Xf7 10.79 ^IXS4 1XS2 X91 4.17 I 9A9 9.47 L... , XOI 7.99 7.99 I t.74 n Invait Tr oag SdMrtilati X3S X2I X90 X33 1XM 1X71 I0.N 1X14 7.10 7.00 7.09 7.11 Cemmon Stfc Fully Admin 3ro«m Induat X72 4J5 4.45 X73 Ham Fd HOA imperial Can Pd Imperial Pd 1X19 19.25 24.44 5J0 5.24 a.if 9.iv 5.77 IA9 1.77 X7I 3.13 3.77 3.63 3.11 ...............j;S 9.45 2.44 2.47 Incorp II IniXBani 9.77 ' 9.79 ----7. Fd 1.09 i... -... SJO 5.19 5.19 , Imwat Co Am 11.11 11.44 11.51 11.71 " • 13.14 13.04 1X1* 13. 7.59 7.44 t Tr I Stock SalfCtIva 1.05 12.00 12.02 12.00 2X42 20.30 BLM MS3 10.44 1X43 1X44 1X44 7.40 7J3 7J3 7.45 iniarconii 4.27 4.23 493 *.30 Invaot Raaaarcti 1494 13.95 I4.M 14.12 iilal Fund Inc 35.19 3590 3X17 3S.2S Jdiinitn Mut Pd 14.92 U7l 14.92 14.14 Invtit Bd B-1 24.74 24.71 24.7* S4.73 Mad 0 Bd B'2 23A4 MA2 9X40 2X41 Uw ^ Chrysler May Obtain Mack Truck n 11 DETROIT (AP) — A propoMl umlor which Qhryaler Oorp, would obtain otmtrol of Mack Tnicka Ind. will be considered by the respective boards of directors at special meetlng|t in the neaf future. This was announced Friday by Lynn A. Townsend* president of duysler, and C. Rhoadda MacBrlde, chairman of the board of Mack Trucks. Hiey said management rq»resenta-tiyes of the two firms have agr^ tentyUvely onr general Ifhe proposal Is that Chrysler Issue toii/Ma^ 20 year subto^ noted 4% per cept driientures of Ctoyrier wMch Mack would offer to its stockholders at the rqto of one 190 debenture for each Mdtn Md 1 10 37to 35to 37V*-I- toi^„ 300 53to 32to 33Vk- to; mIu 11.25 11.25 48.25 _______ 11.03 11.01 11.03 11.00 21.12 21.01 21.01 21.24 1.13 1.07 0.07 0.15 M.79 M.47 32.79 1X72 y Truit 3.B I. El 1.1 Cp 1. 1.40 •»,. Medical a ' to Mort^ B1 ' to MorM Bi 0.71 0.45 0.71 14.37 14.22 14.37 ________ 12.04 12.03 12.04 1X04 10.04 10.74 1X74 1X04 BC Or 8 4.99 4.93 4.97 794 IOC Int S 10.00 9.95 9.91 10.12 - ^ X “-'-F. Fund 14.70 14.20 1495 14.73 Wllwi Cp 190 75 42to 40to 40V*— toluie,,}—„th 4 99 4 90 4 93 4 99 WinnDix I.M 07 33 M Mto+ 1* .<•!? .i>” .!•!? WOQlwIh 290 x142 04to 02to 03 + to ........ .. .. 39to »to-1 —X-r— XaroxCp .40 1799 99to 9lto 99to+ 5Vk —Y— YngitShf 1.80 907 _47to 44to 447/*-Ito Zenith 1.20a 5M 77to 74to 741^ Ito WaiKLY N Y STOCK ULBS Total tar weak ....................... 27,111, Year ago .......................... 22,994,190 Two yoart ago ...,.T................. 19,37X710 Jan 1 to data ......................449,130,520 1943 to data ........................375,734,MI 1942 ol data .......................295,943,254 WBBKLY INVI5TINO COMPANIM NEW YORK (AP) ------Vm Olvin- pricaa 2.45 2.50 2.50 7.34 7.31 7.3' ‘ ‘ 0.74 0.41 " 4.22 4.21 4.22 4.1 7.34 7.24 7.31 7.1. •20.07 19A1 20.07 20.39 10.21 10.13 10.21 10.19 1A1 1.40 191 1.40 4.07 4.04 4.07 4.18 Fd 5.02 4.98 5.01 5.04 Stack Scl X Blactr Ilua RMga Mut londito^ Corp Cdn Inti Or Ft Cap Lite int S Century Shr* 1 4.02 5.95 5.95 4.02 9.54 9.50 9 93 9.55 4.M 4.11 4.21 4.23 11.45 1197 11.44 11.45 12.41 12.53 12.41 12.41 5.24 5.20 '5.20 5.28 10.10 10.00 10.03 10.10 15.43 15.34 15.43 15.40 14.74 14.41 14.74 14.72 10.41 1X47 1091 18.41 10.75 1X42 11.75 10.74 11.39 11.30 11.39 11.41 10.M 10.20 10.29 10.39 14.42 14.51 14.51 14.48 12.73 I2.«S 12.45 12.72 1.94 1.94 1.94 1.94 11.53 11.39 11.52 1191 7.71 7.75 7.70 7.10 Chata Pd Bot Chemical Fd Colonial Pond .... ..... ...— ..... Colonial Orth&En 12.89 tX>8 12.M 1291 Com 5t Bd , 7.14 MO 7.15 7.00 4.84 4.92 7.00 13.49 13.34 13.49 13A3 12.22 lin 12.M 12.17 Stack y Commw Tr A&B Cqmmw Tr CXD 10.21 1X19 10.21 10.22 10.54 10.52 10.53 "" 10.29 10.25 10.M 17.40 17.51 17.57 1.71 ............ .Campooita BX$ Compofita Pd Concord Fund .......... 1.60 1.49 1.72 1.71 1.71 1.73 9.71 9.47 9.49 9.74 Cony Orth Corp Leaden Crown Wstn 02 do V/ogh Mut F< Decatur Income Delaware Fd 1 . -2’* I Divers 0th «tk 4t^+ IV* Divert Invstmt 3.32 3.20 3.31 3.31 1.94 .0.04 0.91 1.91 1.27 8.24 8.24 8.27 12.27 12.09 12.21 1 5 44.60 0 11.01 10.M 10.21 10.22 1X2* _________________________ 15.44 15.39 15.41 15.43 Mutual Trutt 2.07 2.11 2.87 294 Natlon.Wlda Sac 23.40 M.40 M.40 M.S4 Natl Irtveitari 14.99 14.03 14.93 14.95 NalMnal Sacurltlai sariat: 5 12.19 12.24 12.21 4.50 4.49 4.50 4.51 7.35 7.23 7.23 7.37 4.11 4.00 4.11 4.13 * “ 0.29 0.32 8.39 - " 8.47 0.71 Growth 8.74 0.42 ......... Natl Western Fd 10.98 10.02 10.82 10.99 New England 11.54 11.40 11.54 11.52 OB , ,35 , 35 , ,g 14.39 14.27 14.33 14.43 .... jO.45 18.42 11.44 15.44 ChmXEIaC 12.79 12.4S 12.70 12.79 sr Cvp.Fd One William St Oppenhelm Pd Pine Street 14.27 14.15 14.20 14.27 U 12.71 12.44 12.70 12.47 9.41 998 *9.58 *" 9.40 ‘ 930 9.57 n Orth n Gao list Sh 17.12 1X96 17. 9.50 9.34 9............. 1X70 15.42 15.47 15.70 7.41 7.34 7.40 7.38 -- -j 11.47 11.48 I Selected Amer Sharehl Tr Be Shores Am Ir 15.51 15.44 15.50 1X57 20.14 20.04 20.14 20.14 11.05 11.77 11.85 11.07 10.57 10.47 10.57 10.54 15!90 1X77 1 41.42 41.37 4 20th Cent Or Inv 4.53 4.45 20th Cent inc 5.07 5.M UBS Fd of Can 10.82 10.72 40.01 39.M 40.01 39. 35.13 34.89 35.13 35... 12.85 12.74 12.80 12.02 8.1) 1.03 8.11 0.11 ]?;9l ]*2;J5 .................... 4.51 Valu* Lina Fundst 14.04 15.92 14.04 15.99 13.23 13.13 13.23 13.21 7.38 7.29 7.34 7.39 21.02 20.74 21.02 K0.84 9.75 9.49 9.75 9.70 Vangua Wait SI Wastorn Indust Whitehall Fd Windsor Fd 10.37 10.28 10.32 10.37 1X97 10.19 1X95 11.48 15.00 14.94 15.00 14.97 5.49 5.43 5.48 5.47 14.28 14.22 14.28 14.27 15.29 15.14 15.23 15.31 WHAT T,HR STOCK MARltRT DIQ This Prav. Year yaars ... 537 441 . 734 N. Y, Stocks N. rSflonda Amerlcark Si American'Bo 'mints.! Governments 1 lowe^v in in February and March aftOr an irregular January. The market steadied at the start of April, posted its best rMly in five months during the second week and then finished with a gradual upward move. Just about every bond advanced. More than a dozen picked up V* point or more. riold May Breakfast ot Newman AME The Senior Ush^ Board of Newman AME Church will hold the annual May Breakfast from 8 to 11 a.m. tomorrow. Women of the church will present a fashliHi show and bazaar at the Spring Festival in Be-thune School, 154 Lake on May 10. Rev. A. N. Reid is pastor. WEEK IN STOCKS AN6 BONDS Following gives the ronge of Dow*Jones closing overages tar week ended May 1. STOCK AVERAOE5 First High Low Last Notch. Inds 511.87 817.10 610.77 017.10 + 2.21 Ralls 194.94 197.12 194.94 194.50 + 0.32 Utils 13994 140.31 139.23 139.43 — O.M 45 Stkt 354.03 284.07 283.77 285.40 + 0.45 BOND AVERAGES 1st Ralls I -0.01 87.M 17.94 07.81 07.93 + 0.04 93.01 93,84 93.70 93.84 + 0.15 Is 71.4$ 71.45 70.92 71.03 - 0.30 AP AVI PA(il Ol <)0 S 1 OCKS i^’^S ■ ■■ ■Bi rTTi □ □□ ■■■ mui ymi HBHH ■ ffl ■■ E9!S MOVES LOWERr-For the ^ond straight week, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks moved tower, closing yesterday at 303.1 from 303.4 a week earUer. The Commodity Index, led by food and livestock, advanced slightly to 161.9 from 161.7 ip the preceding period. GM Says Rmrds Show Hiring Nondisig’iminatory DETROIT (AP)—General Motors Corp.', threatened with a protest demonstration next Monday, says its hiring policy and recofds prove that it does not practice racial discrimination. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People says thousands of persons will demonstrate outside the G Mheadquarters building here. Edgar Holt, NAACP president in Michigan, ,paid tiie protest is being called because “unfair employment, promotiixial and Auto Firms Set April Record DETROIT (UPI) — The auto industry produced an estimated 785,000 cars during April, an all-time high for the month and the third highest monthly production rate in history. Ward’s Automotive Reports said yester- Attoording to the statistical firm, truck, production totaled about 155,000 units, a new high for any month. General M o t oTs reported that its divisions turned out a total of 427,046 passenger caj^ 66,124 commercial hides daring tee monte, compared With 383,093 cars and 51,768 commercial vehicles during tee same monte last year. Oievrolet led the way with a new record of 228,856 cars and 55,317 trucks. The old record for cars wa& 228,039 units assembled last January and the previous high for trucks was 51,423, also set last January. Chrysler said its production for the month totaled 99,065 cars and 12,436 trucks. During the same month last year, Cihrysler produced 79,842 cars and 10,403 trucks. American Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - F wing Ij 1 I this wool 5 lost prices and Itw A«ota .50 Am FtatrofA .15 S3 Tto 7to 7'*- to ArkLoGoi 1.20 182 33to 32to 32to-to Asomora 93 to to to ASSd Oil & 0 543 Sto Sto Sto+ to Atlas Cp wt ' 120 1 15-14 1 . Bamos Eng 50 22to 20V* 21 -Ito iTplTlor ^ r Brown Co .«Lxd..,151 13to 13to 13to+ to -pb Chib 249 4to31S-14 * sa, a (s.w.’S)' ramo 1239 101* 9'* 9to-to - Mng .80a 10 33to 31'* 31'*-1V. Creole P 2.40a 144 47'* 44'/* 44to- to Data Cpnt 247 39to 36'* 35to+ V* Cp .lot 122 3V* 3'* 5P*... . Oils 1260 3 5-14 JV4 3 Feimt Pet .150 200 Hto Wto lOto-to Fly Tiger 153 8'* 8'* 8'*- to Gen Devel 301 5V* 4to 4to+ to Plywd t Yel .40 Gulf Am Ld 104 51* Hycon Mfg new 84 llto Imp Oil f40a 15 44to Karwr ^ndT 1M2 9to Kratter *“ “ * LIvInos Mackey .... ^ ... . AfIcCrory w 445 21V* It AMad John 91 44$ ........... Mich Sugar M ww . Atolybden 137 30to 20V* 30to+2to NewPk Mng .12f 211 3to 3to 3to+ to Pancst Pet » Ito Ito Ito.............. RIC Group 93( 134 9 Oto 8to+ V« Scurry Rain ' 91 13to 13 - 131*+ to Sbd W Air 1499 7to 6V* 7to+ Signaioit A 1 .355 30to 29to 29'* . Sperry R wt 274 7to TV* 7to+ to Syntex Cp .20g 3543 71to Mto 48 +4to I .78f 514 14to 1514 15to- to Ir 14 Sto 4to 4to- to 445 21to 19to l9to-1Vt .....................I 19to-lto 5'*... WEEKLY AMERICAN STOCK SALES Total tar week ................ -■ 7,752,815 Week ago .........i.............. 8,726,255 Jan r to date . .............129,740 084 1943 to dote .............1...... 94,848,479 WEEKLY AMERICAN BOND SALES Tdtal for week....................$1,347,000 -0°..........o............r,f7J;SS general malpractices of GM with reference to Negroes.” Louis Seaton, GM vice president in charge of personnel, said Friday the firm extends employment opportunities to qualified applicants and employes “on a non-discriminatory basis.” CONTRACT CLAUSE Seaton also said that GM’s contract with the United Aute Workers includes a non-discrinv-ination clause. In a letter tb 30 business, religious and civic leadm in Detroit, Seaton reported that General Motors has about 44,000 nonwhites on its payrolls in this country. The number is 9.2 per cent of GM’s natiimwide employment. Seaton also declared that em-ployment of nonwhites in creased 13.2 per cent last year compared to a total job increase of 4.1 per cent. The figures compared with 1962 employment. Seaton said honwhites hold many skilled jobs and super, visory positions and that GM recruits for nonwhite engineering and other types of college graduates. ONCE FOR ALL Holt, the NAACP leader, the organization is “going to demonstrate to General Motors once and for all that we demand an end to racial discrimination in employmei^ ^ job upgrading. “The thousands of 'marchers who are coming here from as far away as San Francisco will be living proof... that Negroes will no longer five with this kind of job discrimination nor, will they patronize a corpenra-tion whose products are' produced in the Jim Crow tradition.” Holt said Monday’s demonstration, scheduled for boon to 6 p.m., will be followed by smaller protest marches at GM facilities in other cities. Lower Prices Aid Weakness in Steer Morfcef CHICAGO (AP) — (tentimied liberal maricetings and 1 o w e r prices for dressed beef at wholesale outlets contributed to weakness in the slaughter steer market this week and the offerings sold steady to 60 cents lower. The decline was imi choice grade and below. The average Mice of all steers fof the wdek slipped to $20.62 a hundredweight, the I o w e s t Weekly average in more than seven years. Cattle slaughter for the previous we^ under federal inspection was reported at 480,000 head, largest of record. Indications are it. may have increased slightly this week. i‘'4 l/''l A 'A THE PONTIAC Jr t|» Ngw» from Washlhgion 1 SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1001 li TWEN' Vi To Ask Ruling on US. Subsidizing of Books WASHINGTON (AP)~.in the news firom Whshingtoit: U5IA SUBSIDIES; Rep. GIet»-aijd P. UpsGomb, RpCaltf., said today he will seek a ruling from the General Aocounting Office on the spending of U.8. Infonna. tkm Agency funds to sublsldlze secretly the pi^uctloh of books. Lipscomb Is a member of the House Appropriations subcom-‘inlttee that heard testimony abdut the program. Publication of a censored transcript this week showed that, among other things, USIA had put |14,9gj Into the production of an anti-Conununist book being sold In the United States and abroad without disclosure of govern- Upscomb said the General Accounting office has ruled that UlSlA must bonfine its informa- Says Selective Service Director J Tension Must Ease Before Draft Cut’ WASHINGTON (AP)-Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Service director, said .today he believes there must be a considerable change in the international climate before the United States can end the draft. “We haye got to get diis nation and the' world to the place where mutual fear is tremendously different from now,’^ said Hershey in an interview. “I believe things can be beL ter,” he added, “but we ought not to dieck in our gun until we Last month President Johnson announced idans for “a very comprehensive study of the draft system and of related manpower studies.” STUDY,GOALS The study, Johnson said, would “consider alternatives to the present draft selection system, including the possibility of meeting our requirements on an entirely voluntary basis within a decade.” There have been complaints that the draft system is unfair. Because the pool of eligible young men exceeds the need, some are, called while others are excused. The President said he was not predicting that die military manpower requirements could be met on a voluntary basis in the next decade but that the study “looks forward to that.” Emphasizing this point, Her^ shey said he has “very definite doubts” that military requirements can be met without some form of compulsion unless they are reduced “to “little short of a police force.” BRITISH DIFFICULTY He said Britain is finding if very difficult to klfip her armed forces at a level of around 190,-000 to 200,000 since the draft was dropped there. “Some people say we can have forces of 1.5 million without compulsion,” Hershey said, “but we’ve never done it.” Now the nation’s armed services number about 2.7 mUlion, with only the Army relying on the-draft. ★ ★ ★ “I have always felt that the military services got three or four enlistments for each of our inductions,” Hershey said. 'This fiscal year we are going to deliver about 160,000 men, up some 50,000 from last year. The services are going to receive some 600,000 to 700,000 men fo all, from the inductions, volun-taiy enlistments and re-enlist-ments.” Among the changes Hershey feels are needed before the draft can be discontinued: Deaths in Pontiac Area ALBERT C. BEARD Service for former Pontiac resident Albert C. Beard, 71, of Hate will be at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Forshee Funeral Home, Hade. Mr. Beard, a retired employe of GMC Truck & Codch Division Plant I, died yesterday of a heart ailment. He was one of the founders of the GMC ’Truck & Coach Credit Union and a member of Veterans of Foreign Wars. Surviving are his wife, Sallie; a daughter,' Mrs. Carol Pontney of Pontiac: a son, Kenneth of Aurora, Colo.; five grandchildren; two sisters and three brothers. MRS. AMOS PIERSON Service for Mrs. Amos (Alma) Pierson, 72, of 302 East Boulevard will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery, Lorain, Ohio. Mrs. Pierson died yesterday after a long illness. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Frank Christensen of Pontiac and Mrs. Sophie Wright of South Dakota and one broth- LESTER T. SNYDER Service for Lester T. Snyder, 70, of 1630 Parkway will be 2 p.m. Monday at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. A graveside service will be conducted at Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi, by Lodge No. 21, F&AM. Mr. Snyder died yesterday following an illness of three weeks. He was a retired linesman for tiie Detroit Edison Co. and a member of-the Central Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Alice M.; a daughter, Mrs. Harold Woodhall of Akron, Ohio; two sons, Lester E. and Paul F., both of /Pontiac; two sisters, four brothers, nine grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. CLARENCE VIRGm Service for Clarence Virgil, day-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Virgil, 461 Howasd McNeill, was held 11 a.m. today at the Willidm F. Davis Funeral Home witii burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. The baby died Thursday at Pontiac General Hospital. Surviving beside his parents are brothCTS and sisters, Ernest, . Donald, Debra Ann and Robin. MRS. william COOMBE ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Willi a m (Florence) I Coombe, 87, of 321 Wilcox will be 11 a.m. Mpnday at the Po-tere Funeral Home. Burial vidll be in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mrs. Coombe died yesterday following a long illness. Surviving are four sons, Harold of Rochester, William of PonUac, Clifford of Femdale and Ralph of Monroe; a daughter, Mrs. Esther Rutter of Rochester; eight grandcHMren; and 12 great-grandchildrem fintgn degranchamp ROMEO — Requiem Mass for Finton DeGranchamp, 75, of 356 N. Main will be said at 10 a. m. Monday at St. Clements Church, with burial in Fwestlawn Cein-etery, Detroit. Rosary will be at 8 p. m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Mr. DeGranchamp died suddenly yesterday after a brief illness. Surviving are two sons, Fenton of Warren and Eugene of Romeo; a sister; a brother; and three grandchildren. FRED G. ROUNDING CLARKSTON — Service for Fred G. Rounding, 77, of 5585 Maybee will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Rounding died yesterday after a brief illnessr A retired carpenter, he was a member of Faith Baptist Church, Waterford Township. Surviving are two sons, Wilfred F.. of Oxbow Lake and Maynard G. of Pontiac; 11 grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren. MRS. JOHN J. SOUTHARD ’TROY — Service for Mrs. John (Blandi) Southard, 48,4500 N. Adams, will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral Home, Birmingham, with cremation to follow. Mrs, Southard died yesterday in a fire. She was a member of the American Association of University Women. Survivi^ are her husband, John J.; a son, Robert J., at home; and a Sister, Mr^. C. Bean Engie of Birminf^iam. STEPHEN J. THOMPSON PONTIAC ’TOWNSHIP-Servr ice for Stephen J. Thompson, 20, ' 3196 Shimmons will be 2:30 y. m. tomorrow at the Voor-^ hees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, Pontiac. He died Thursday. “We have to have a climate not only periodioally friendly but have a world not of predator forces and people but of people who beUeve very firmly that other peojde don’t want to hurt them. We’ve got to have a climato in which we would not need so many people in our armed forces. The nuclear test ban treaty and the reduction of nuclear explosives production would seem to be a good start. “We have got to have active recruiting and incentives. It seems to me that every time the pay goes up inside toe armed forces, pay goes up more outside, and the situation is only worse than it was before. Also, I don’t want to depend solely on toe money level. Some of us have become so sophisticated that we have forgotten about patriotism and the flag. I would hate to see the time vdien the nation needed a mUUon men add the only w^ to get them would be some incentive of a material kind. Somehpdy else might offer to pay them more. “We ought to think of our armed forces as the elite. We ought to take a man in on probation and judge him by his performance rather than take him in on the basis of testing on paper.” Sf HI Openings for YWCA's Clinic on Jobs Openings still exist for the YWCA - sponsored job clinic, which, begins Monday and runs through l^iday. The five-day “Practical Ideas for Employment” will be o {-fered 3-5 p.m. at toe YWCA headquarters, 22 Franklin. Hie Job tips are aimed at unemployed high school grad- The clinic is limited to 25 pupils. The job clinic will feature, several local business, industry and government officias. ■k i -k Included wUl be Ted Ellison, of Michigan Bell Telephone; Ralph Dawe, salaried personnel office, Fisher Body Division of General Motors Corp., and John J. Barry, factory personnel, Pontiac Motor Division. tion activities to other countries and that on this basis the showr Ing of some USIA-made motion pictures in thq United States SMOKING: In the nation’s capital, nearly one-fourth of the senior high school students and eight per cent of toe junior high students are regular, daily cig- arette smokers, it was reported today. The figures were obtained in a random-sampling survey of >lto, p ■ students in pubito, private and parochial schools by toe District of Columbia division of the American Cancer Society and the D.C. Ckingress of Teens for. Cancer Education. COOL CHIMP—This chimp has been taught by his trainer. Bob Slover of Atlanta, Ga., to handle steering and gear shift of a sports car. The chimp, Cappy, shows he has the right attire (top photo) and can handle himself on a six-lane street (bottom). One observer remarked Cappy drove “better than my wife.” Romney Will Get Report on U.S. Districting Powers UNSING (AP)-Gov. George W. Romney’s chief legal aide is preparing a report to the governor today on what — if anything the U.S. Supreme Court may do on the question of legislative redistricting. The report by Robert Danhof, legal advisor to Romney, was to be based on talks held in Washington Friday with U.S. Solicitor General Archibald Cox. Danhof declined to discuss his hush-hush conversation with Cox, but described himself as ‘not discouraged.” This could mean he obtained an indication of when the U.S. court may hand down a decision in any one of six pending cases which could clear the way for solving Michigan’s legislative districting snarl. WAITING GUIDELINES The Michigan Supreme Court, split over the question, is awaiting “guidelines” from the U.S. court before ruling on the propriety of reimportlontt^ctif before it. While the governor awaited Danhof’s report, a 14-member, bipartisan negotiating committee in the House went ahead with its own efforts to map out new House districts. The drive was aimed at agreement on a plan which would give each party in toe 110-member House an equal number of so-called “safe” districts, with the* remainder being “swlng'^ districts that could go either way. The conunittee worked out a plan Friday that, on the basis of past voting records, would give Democrats 51 seats. Republicans 52, and leave seven as “swing” districts. ALLOW COURTS Also proposed was a resolution aimed at amending the new constitution to let the new Court of Appeals take over the redistricting problem if toe Legislative Apportionment Commission, already once unsuccessful, failed again. The Stature of Our Profession . . . . . . Improves continuously. Knowledge, experience, and careful attention hove oil united to better our funeral service. This in turn provides strength for tb.^ burdened, relief for the grieving. We steadfastly cling to oil that is good, yet strive to improve our service. We will be happy to provide you with full information at any time. Oi Q)omlion-^kns (Pkaue federal 4-4511 FUNERAL HOME 655 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC The survey results include replies to questioniiiaires by 4,800 students; and 4,200 students in 19 Junior high schools having total enrollment of some 30,000. UGHT SIDE: Republicans can keep thSir pennies, for toe White House haS never .been brighter, Says press secretary George Reedy. k ,k k President Johnson hasn’t o^ dered one outside bulb turned off, said reedy, but has “exercised some care to see that unnecessary lights inside the White House are not burning.” Johnson issued orders back in December that unneeded lights be darkened — a move that prompted some Republicans to label him “Light Bulb Johnson.” A reporter called Reedy’s attention Friday to a new GOP suggestion for contributions of pennies to underwrite a brighter White House. Said Reedy: “If the Republican National Committee wishes to deal in pennies --I don’t think I’ll finish that thought.” Motley Switcher Makes Bad Deal LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - A man tried to pull a money switch on a teller at a savings and loan association and wound up losing |1. He handed Alice Aldridge fqur $10 bills Friday in exchange for two 920s. Then he switched a $1 bill for a 120’ and told her she had made a mistake. “No, I did not. You’ll have to wait a minute so I can couh5 my cash on hand and prove It,’’ she replied. The man said he had to put money in a parking meter and disappeared, leaving his |1 behind. Flagrant Violation on Parking Tickets ASHLAND, Ky. m - Richard Sutton of fronton, Ohio, recently was jailed at Ashland until he paid $137.50 in fines for 31 overtime parking tickets. In sending the man to jail, the judge said the case involved “the most flagrant violation ever to come before this court.” 'Secret Data Used Politically' ATLANTA (UPB-Sen. Barry Goldwater charged today that President Johnson’s administration is using top secret information for political purposes. The Arizona conservative, here keynote Georgia’s GOP convention, said the administration, released hitherto secret information on U.S. reconnaissance flights over Cuba, thereby making classified information available to toe Russians. The radio newsman had tried to put a microphone in front of him, but Goldwater pushed it away. Goldwater, addressing a $25-a-plate breakfast in advance of his keynote address, said that prior to the release of toe infornution he, as a member of the U. S. Senate, had “sworn with my hand on a Bible,” not to reveal the infer- The Arizona conservative repeated his charge that the Soviet Union had a missile lead over the United States and that the Russian arsenhl includes 750 immediate range missiles “aimed at Europe.” Goldwater, in obvious reference to an incident with a radio newsman last night, referred to it as “rudeness.” Film Follows Service “Responsibility pf Christian Parents” a 16 mm sound film, will be shown following toe 6 p.m. service tomorrow, about 7 p.m. in the Chruch of Christ, 1180 N. Perry. “First Things First” will be the film slated for May 10. « Parachute Maker Diet OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Manufacturer Allan C. Scott, 91, who Was credited with deveIo|WMnt' of a parachute which enabled nien to ball out of airplanea, died Friday, Scott’s idea in 1918, still used, was a smaller (diet chute that pulled out the main chute. ramie Chair • Table RENTALS Rada • Baby Beds • Orutekas • Walkers • Oaffaa Uma • Funoh Bowls • Boat Raoks • Sllvorwaro and Olsbaa • SIlvorToaSirviee • Ohampaine Olasses - RENT IT -Maitor Draft ItflKR ------------II’III MO. IFE 4-40441 140 Oakland Ava. Sporks-Griffin FUNERAL HOUB 4SWimaast8i. GO BACKTO GO FbRWARDt Tho rooket failed. Tho solentlsta didn't abandon the pi^eet but oarafiiliy checked back for eau*e, found It, and that rocket performed perfectly. In the emeial game of life it It im- perfectly. ______ poteible to Go Back but it is voiy aimple to : plan and then Go Ahead to Snoeeia. J.L.YOORBIBE8 The minister asks, "Do yon promiso to •»'* and yon aiuwer, “Yes." That *Tet” eommUs yout it is • promise. Go Back before yon go ahead, ftilly appreelate the deep meaning of ^misee and yonTl eamorienee a liltlo bitoffo planned the biigest battle ever feaahti as detail was obeekod time and time aieiii,fer< error. He went Baok To Go Forward. Go Back To Go Forward is Inramnee for M.E.SH%B pleasant days shoed. YOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 . Gen. MaeAtfhnr did tho ImpoMiUet before be isined an order he went Back timei^ tinw before ho Went Forward. Eisenbower SAVE SPRING SALE 20% ” 40% Now Is the Time to Order Your Memoriol So You Con Hove It hocod for Memoriol Doy •1ST OP WORKMANSHIP MANY OlSIGNS TO CHOOSI As Shown $265.00 Others From $330.00 to $1^250 (Add Only Cemetery Cost) URGI SELECTION OF COMPANION MARKERS SALE PRICE $225.00 MARK EVERY GRAVE CRASS LEVEL MARKERS ITANBARD IN lOMR CBMiTIRIRI SALI PRICI $3900 BEVEL ABOVE GROUND MARKERS *4900 YOU ARE SURE OF SATISFACTION WHEN YOU SEE WHAT YOU RUT OFFICE and PLANT OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. to 8 P. M.—SUN. 1 ih 3 P.M. roNTIACGRANITE&MARBLECO. GEO. 1. SLONAKER OUlt 32nd YEAR 269*-Ookldn(i Avenue, Pontiac 17, Mich. Phone FE 2-4iM0 : y'\ .'A '*■ '•1 '-h'.U ?' ..T#ESfft--SIX TljtE PQMIAC PREsk yifTOnAY, MAY 2, 10«4 .0 -I » '■ fB w A N T FAST R E S u L T S ? USE PRESS W A N T A D S 332 8 8 Death Notices CLAY, APRIL », VH*. ORLCY, »H ■nt Church StrMi, Lak* Ork>n( XM; dear fathar ef Mrs. Adal-Schuhf da*r atap-falhar ol A*r. Florida Blanchaf and I— ranea; dear brathar ol ivi alao turvlvcd by ilMran and two araatjirand-•------------------- of Sorrow chlldran. EHct Lodge will ba at I p.fn. tlm , at tha Flumarfalt Funeral Oxford, under the aujpicea B.P.O.e. No. •ID. Funeral »erv- ---------- ...... .....I... • - all Fu Robert t, Oxford, w a Flumerfall Raneral nuugini ohi«i«mh». .w. ...,n,, ... Ka«t Lawn Cemetery, Lfl^Orlon. ®A?f;'*''?f2ikThrM': I. Sophia wnghf, ....lenten, ronorai be held Monday, May 4, ol 1:30 p.m. at the HunKxig Funer Come^ry, LwalnT^hloI"(Suggetfed visiting hours 3 to S p.m. and 7 l» l”0^r 5505 Maybee Clarkston; age 77; dear father Ol Wilfred F. end Mavnal-d G. Rounding; also survived by 11 prand- §&^*"Fu*nS?al'?i:fvr*Jirrffl £rtS*'''Fu“*.?al^ ”;ioU '" D?iyl5n Plains with Rev. Jack Spllia officiating. Interment In Pern; Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Rounding will lie In slate alter 7 p.m. this evening. (Suggested visilinji ,e^nln^. (Sug^es^ted SiJvM r7 ^AY®'i7 JIM4, L E STFR T ., 1630 Parkway, Pontiac; ape 70, beloved husband of Alice Snyder; dear lather of Mrs. Harwd ir'pau^V.1^dS?NeaT'b7othfr Marle^'^Droke,*'’Harry, Sosep'h, R^ and William Snyder; also survived Sre.ttranc?cWr'’'F'‘Jn'e"rars\rv‘i2S Tlh'£“"c'"'j*'S!xlhard} &r^Mmr*H."'S?“nk^‘‘o^&C followed by Praveslde services under the auspices of the Mown c Lodge #21 F&AM at Oakland Hills Memorial Garden, Novi. (Sug-oested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. Road, Pontiac lownsmp; age 20; beloyed husband of Jean Tpomp-beloyed son of Mr. and Mrs. les A. Thompson; dear grand- le with Rev. iimo. Interment tery. (Sup^sted VIRGIL, APRIL 30, 1M4, CLARfeNCE, 441 **r beloved Infant son of Ernest u Donald Vligll. Prayer service w, held this morning at 11 a.m, the William F, Davis Funer 'sterment In Oak H Card of Thankf HE FAMILY OF THE REVER-end John Sebastian, Jr., wish to express their sincere appreciation son and brother. We . wish to ax press special thanks to the Rev Hllding BIhl and the Perry Part Baptist Church for the comfor le Huntoon Funeral H In Memoriam g LOVING MEMORY OF OUR Dad who passed away 3 years ago May 3, 1941. In our hearts your memory lingers Sweetly fond and true. There is not a day. Daddy That we do not think of you. Sadly missed by your 4 daughters Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS AOS RECEIVED BY S F.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. All errors should ba rented Immediately, or no times It will be assumed ad li correct. The . P^ sumas no responsibility the diarges for that portion of tha flrst Insertion of tho The deadline for cancellat of transient Want Ads Is 9 a. of publication af " ----- ""f larger than regular Is 12 o'clock noon me day previous to publication._____ CASH WANT AO RATES (when cash ■ooompsnies order) Llnat l-Dey 3-Deys 4-Days $2.00 $2.44 $3.84 2!oO 3.40 5.58 2.44 4.48 4.94 N LOVING MEMORfY OF Charles M. ichralber, Jr., who passed away May L 1941. Though hters speed by From sunset ‘III dawn. Sadly missed by f N LOVING Mi«|tfHV 6F A*V fcl-lovad husband • Harold Shave-passed away 3 years ago or What iwould I give to deep your hand, Your happy face to see; toil n There's a memoiy fond end li And a token ol affection And a heartache still for you. Sadly missed by your wife Lillian and grandchildren. N LOVI NO" m¥MORY ‘SFTiLATKIl And helps us to forget. But time r- — -------- How muct sr yet. to fight It the blow. ly missed by h daughfer and sli I LOVINS^EM^ftY OF DANNY Ray Moreau, who left us “ — 3, 1942. Sadly missed by Dad, Ronnie and Debbli AnnouncBmeatt 'AVON CALLINO"-FOR SERVICE CHURCH. SEATS 114. ALSO R(X)MS available for social, lodge — ness meetings. Catering a quets. OR 3-S282 or 482-to. Get but of debt on a plan you can altord. SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 762 PONTIAC State FE 8-8454 Pontiac's oldest and largest budget IS $18 w Protect your |ob and ' Home or Office Appoln_____ City Adjustment Service^ ___Licensed and Bonded by Slate try" “bl ADaX ~ iFC Bros. Drugs. I, only $98c. Simms -BOX REPUES- At 10 a. m. today there were replies at The Press office in the following boxes: 2, 7, 11, 17, 21, 33, 56, 59, 70, 72, 80, 92, 96, 100, 106, 107. DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME "Designed for Funerals"_ D. E. Pursley HUNTOON _ Oakland'Ave. _ __ FE 2-8IM ■ SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME 'ThoughttuI Service" FE 2-5841 CemeteryJ^ti 4>hone FE 4-9882 after 4 p.m 8-PIECE DANCE BAND PROFESSIONAL — Not Rock i Roll, Available lor prbms, w dings, receptions, etc. FE 4-8537. DANCE BAND - phone FE , ..... or If no an- ' FE 7-9734. Confidential. AFtER THIS DATE 5-l-'44, l^wlii not be respqnsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Lucilo Place, Pontiac, Michigan. HOLD IT! . . , here's o better way to earn extra Wioney! • It's quick, simple and productive. . Just look around your home, garage and basement and list the many items that you no longer use. Hundreds of readers ore searching The Press's classified columns daily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the change that it holds! Try it! YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!. 332-8181 FOR IMMEDIATE CLASSIFIED SERVICE Pontiac Press ________ vicinity Hetchery Road and Williams Lake. Reward. OR 3-3818 days. After 5 iT^VEINmInT ALLOf-heck, made to Havana Payne, $95.26. Cell FE 4-8558,_ PLASTIC BOAT FOUND ON MACE-day Lake. Call OR 3-4638.______ Lost: i Help Wanted Ma]^ REPRESENTATIVE. EXCELLENT opportunity tor advancement with a national finance company. Prefer a man around 25 years of age. Must be high school graduate. Gcxid starting salary with car allowanee furnished. A liberal plan of company benefits. Apply Associates, 4474 Dixie Hwy., Drayton 2 EXPERIENCED SERVICE AT- tendanis with s--- --- knowledge. Also . mechanical ......- ..(perienced wrecker driving. FE 2-2814. $129.50 GUARANTEE t high school education, AUTOMATIC MEN.,.ABLE TO SET up and operate davenports —' °'' 4. Fullerton Mfg., 261 Mi - ______________________ AUTO MECHANICS, FORD Experience preferred. Tom Bohr, Inc., Milford. 484-1715. _____ BUILDER NEEDS EXPERlENCD around inen. NELSON BLDG. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $5 RH Positive DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE BORING MILL OPERATOR BRIDGEPORT MILL HAND MUST BE JOURNEYMAN ROYAL OAK TOOL & MACHINE CO. 38256 STEPHENSON HWY. BOY 18 OR OVER, NEAT APPEAR-432 Orchard Lake Ave„ ^^UHDER WANTED To contract for modest sire homes program.' Selling, financing and legal, details are attended to. Phone Waiitad iHaiG lUCKNRR FINANCI COMPANY has opaninj) for an ■ggi— young man who can qualify career In con»umer finance. Age 21 to 14 High schMl graduate e mlllTery wrvice completed ____j experience helpful Liberal starting aalary, wNh op- Inge benefift Including Slid profit sharing. It YOU UALIFY phone Mr. Baker. 4.Q54I for appqinfment. _ BUS BOY' Day ihitt, apply In parson at Tad's Bloomtiald Hills. eARFTNtlFriiiibeNtfiTLTTa. cal. CAB. 48M445 or 482-3094. bA-KFISTiROWblflLFe'ltirini'. modelliw work. FB 4-4909. chuScF 6RSups '’AK5”MSi*lTi' ■ citv' OF POkiflAC ■” FIRE FIGHTERS Salary 84,b83 — 84,049 Minimum requirements; .. - -------------Jlenl physical condition. High school graduate or, equivalent credits. “ ----- *-— le city of Pontiac, ediately pracadlng ly Personnel, 35 S. 0 appllc; m. May : _____ ________ -. __________ duties. Including bidding, awarding con- .....—1 supervision ol opertment ---- experience and excellent references. Starting salary open. Oefrolf area ' -contidenllal resume. Open ...........tlnle position. oration benefits. est selirng pre-cut homes. I's larg- -matlon call 333-74 DISHWASHER, MUST BE 18. .. ply at BUI'S, 575 S. Hunter, Birmingham, dishwasmer, IxPi'HilNblb" Must be over 30 DRIVERS WANTEbrBLCibMFTELO DIE MAKER MUST BE JOURNEYMEN ROYAL OAK TOOL 8,. MACHINE C6. 30^50 STEPHENSON (. ambit^ n. iri. Only ' -hply. S________ lAKLAND, PON- EXPERIENCED RATE CLERK os AND D, GENERAL OFFICE SUPERVISOR. APPLY NORWALK TRUCK LINES, 853 WOODWARD, PONTIAC. mBChan- ex^iencBd tRudk te. Diesel preferred. Apply 22 Congress, Pontiac. i'XPERTENCED DIESEL TRUCK drivers. Apply: 22 Congress, EXPERIENCED Garage Builders and Remadel Carpenters. 1. G-M Construction Ci experienced'cabinetmakers, steady work. 473-1198. _ EX PE R fENCE D“ LDCK~5p1 RAfOR, experienced tractor operator —•----------- FE 5-8214.__________ EXPERIENCED TREE TRIMMER 26-32. steodji^^^ploymont tor Ing pains. Short on experienced m ...... .1.. qualified fg become sa In the direct sales field. age 2( right r tabie. Fast offeratlon. Salary open. Apply Howard Johnson Restaurant, _ Woodward^ Royal^ EX PE RIE NC ED ~ TR EE '"TRIMMER or young man willing to ‘ 5899 W. Maple......- FIRESTONE WE HAVE OPENINGS FOR A. RETAIL SALESMEN NEAT APREARI... YOUNG MEN FOR INSIDE SALES. • B. BRAKE MECHANIC . EXPERIENCE NEC GOOD WITH MATH. EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY BUT PREFERRED. D. TIRE MAN TO MOUNT CAR TIRES AND SMALL TRUCK TIRES. FIRESTONE STORE 144 W. Huron St. No Phone Calls Pleasel Equal Opportunity Employer L TIME DELIVERY BOY OVER Apply Peabody's Market, 154 rnter Blvd., Birmingham. GARAGE Carpenters Crew leaders and men who ' leading a new crew. will help qualified contracting If neCL—,. ... ________ antee work every day. All seasons all neighborhoods. Association no barrier, /kpply in person, Crown Garage Builders, 3848 E. Eight Mile Rd. 2 blocks west of Ryan. FOrest ...... GAS STATION ATTENDANT, MUST I E N E R A L MECHANIC, 3-CAR dealership. Benefits. Experience necessary.. Ask lor Merle. GRILL AND COUNTER MAN. . GROUNDS KEEPERS, GLEN OAKS Golf Club, 36508 W. 13 "" Farmington, Michigan. tendent. . see C HELP HELP Our business Is booming, we nee< extra help. Grillmen, bus boys boys lor car hop. Apply Big Boy Drive-Inj. Telegraph and Huron, Dixie Hwy. and Silver Lake Road. Afviy in person, " IF YOU ARE AMBITIOUS 1 years ot age, h n opporfunity to make 0 $200 a week or better. LANDSCAPE FOREMAN. MUST have experience and ref. Apply: Jacobsen's Flowers. 101 N. Sagl- f AUTO PARTS MANAGERS to men needed, ages 25 to 34, salary while training. Unlimited opportunities. Call Mr. Ferrand, collect, Monday through Friday. MEN FOR LAWN CUTTING WORK laundry, apply 7:3 Orchard Lake Road. ;30-9 p.r 2530 N. C. R. NEEDS — haavy machinery. Should have mechanical aptitude, knowledge of hydraulic and electrical circuits. Excellent opportonlllas tor ^ COUNT^^^iRL ...... ,.1h."*«pr« 9, Pontiac Press. BXFWtiBN^b ORILl-VjiAITRiiS, n^l^s, 12 p.m.-8 a.m.. Call OR 3- ix¥EmiRcB"D^fm"Lnnre iTrprRiiNcTiW'cbUNVBR ■bi'h'L. Ap^v in ^san. 785 Pontiac, Trail, Wallatf Lake, b ‘ -* > ■ - ., 444-0073. ilbERLY WOf^ FOR MbTRIi-Iasi hpmi. Lov8 chlldran. Run home as own Father works 7 nights. Reply Milton Metcalf 2222 .........“in Oaar‘-“ HiipBRiENcEWwAlfRliisEi. Kitchen help. Curb girls. Real briyain, OM Highland Rd. iXPlRiftTCED COOK. #(1LL ANb pdrt time. Apply In parson, Town and Country Inn. 1727 $. fajagraph iXPERllNCEO FULL T' " Sflailady (sharp). No phone Apply R. B. Shop. North pTasa, Rochester.___________ EXPEFIENCBD WAITRESS, FULL “d part dma. Apply In parson, nvn and Country Inn, 1727 S. Ek>*?ffi4'NiclFw oirloSTwoman To live In, Bloomflald, 4 days, par wk.,_housekeeping^ 424-1 (ibbb COOK, ooob references top salary, " - ■--“—‘ In optlanal. 482-oi>( E H aT" TIBpi k E E sTj$fv¥Y~£REW CHIEF NEEbEb by Oakland County engineering Sand complete resume to Ron Press Box 42. lAC. jTM Tolrie Salesman Who's Ready to Be Sales Manager We nave several manager jabs apen. If yau're really ready to move up-we may have one for you! OFFICE NURSE ASSISTANT FOR physician. Give personal date, erances, experience and salary ... peeled. Reply to box 89 Pontiac reeks of extensive Ing, It you quality given your own sale RELIABLE DAY HELP FOR MO-tel cleaning, prater someone who ■Ives In clarkston or Waterford Area. 5835 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. RELIABLE WOMAN FOR" BABY sitting and house cleaning '" daps. OR 4-1788. RELTABLE MlbbLEAGEb WOMAN You'll get a substantia mission, plus . a liberal ovei - the salesmen under you. I yearly earnings should neighborhood of $20,000 a well as hospital insurance. WO MEN TO WORK ON FARM, experienced, north of Rochester, out Rochester Rd„ 425 E. PART-TIME BETTER JUNIOR SPORTS WEAR OPERATION, EXPERf ENCED ONLY. NADON'S, MIS ACLE MILE. TELEPHONE SOLICITOR, SALARY WANTED: EXPERIENCED SALESMEN Only top-notch Rambler, Chrysler, Plymoutlh —' Jeep, Franchise, plus sharp cats. Good pay plan, exce surroundings, no phone please. Bill Spence, mr. Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. WAITRESS, NEAT APPEARING TO Ight manager, Bob's Restau- ___ Keego Harbor. 482-9857. WAITRESS WANTED AFTERNOON shift, Lou's Coney Island, 473-9983. 4827 Dixie Hlgh^.__________ WAITRESSIsT 18 OR OVER. AP-ply Harvey's Colonial House, 5894 DIx'- WANTED: REAL ESTATE SALES-man, experienced with proven ability. Apply ALBERT J. RHODES, 258 W. WALTON BLVD., FE 8-2304 WANTED: USED CAR LOT ATTEN- a week. If you are l t can do this,' you < I looking for. ! Tommy Thompson, i (, Rochester. WE NEED 28 MEN BETWEEN ages 25-45 with good driving — ords, drivers license required, per hour, 40 hours tor 2-3 months, (3 shifts available), must be able to pass company physical. Apply 14 S. Cass, Pontiac. We Need Men Over 18 for all kinds especially landscaping ------------ handling, Mop.--Frl., _8;5 .and Sat. .;30-12. APPLY AT 14 S. CASS. MANPOWER INC., worlds largest lemporary t«lp service.__________ /ILL TRAIN sIAEN'FOR SALES career. $100 per week guarantee. Blue Cross. 473-1244 tor Interview. 9:30 to 4:00. ' AUTO ME- WANTED GENERAL chonic, would prefei some front end experience, year around work. Union Lake call tor Interview, EM 3-7321. foreman. Must be i transit, set grades, do ioi and suporvislon. State a ificatlons and experlenc Box 104, Pontiac Press . qual-Wrlfe i. Reply P.O. Box 38, Drayton Help Wanted Female Conrad. 335-4742. ALTERATION LADY, EXPERI enced In altering mens clothing. Full time, steady position, Barnetts Clothes Shop, 150 N. ' BABYSITTER DAYS OR LIVE I light housekeeping. OR 3-4704. A K E R Y SALESWOMAN BE-tween 25-35, 5 days, no evenings, must have own transportation. Apply mornings, Anderson Bakery, 124 W. 14 Mile, Birmingham. Ml 4- BEAUTICIAtpYi/ANtED, EXPERI-enced. Union Lake area, EM J-4249. BEAUTY OPERATOR, AT LEAST BEAUTY OPERATOR Experlemced preferred.** 674^501. Needed ot Once! Ford diechanlc lor Ford sales, with elperlenCpI Many company benefits! Apply In person, Beattie Ford, TJIxle Hwy, in Waterford. BUS GIRL, KITCHEN. PERMA-nenl posit/bn. 5 or 4 days. Apply Immediately. Howard Johnson "** taurant, 3310 N. Woodward, F R I ,N T E R, EXPERIENCED typesetting, letter press, lift graphing. Full or-part-time t CURB.WAITRESSES. A & W I Beer Drive-In. 474 W. Huron. CUrH^D INSIbE'GIRLS. SUPER counter GIRL fOR ers, experience or Wni or part time,, MA 4-7207. graph at Maple. , ,i. at Dixie. "Y CtEAt(-traln, full 45f0 Tele- ' ^ GRiirCOOK APPLY AT A 8. W ROOT BEER DRIVE IN, Wl BALDWIN._q HOUSE'KIEPER," MONDAY- FRl-day, II a.m.-S p.m., elderly coU-pla I and working daughtar, non-drinker, non-smoker. Own trans-portatlon. EL HOSTESS 7mS^* insurance w6mXn, now, to ____ complete charge of agt.. office operations. Malorlty of a< counts commercial. Bloomtiat area. Top renumeratlon. Sand reai to Pontiac Press Box Licensed Practical Nurses Immediate openings, 8322.41 p e . mo., starting salary, Increasing to $370.78, dlttarentlal tor evenings and night duty, 40-hour —'■ '— ______,. other fringe benefits. Contact Personnel Directory, P r - tiac GMeral Hospital.________ LICENSED PRACTI<:aL N U R" for small nursing home. Mr. I MlDDLEACiEb WOMAN FOR ' office work, able to land not necessary. - 3 P- 7 months baby 5: _ $». FE^iMoTafler^ S NEEDEb, aIlL SHIFTS, SUB ite care facility, acute physical dicine and rehi--------- Saleswoman plus commission, excellent « Ing conditions f Call 335-8124. WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS furnished, vacation .____ Telegraph ai streets. Also Dixie Hwy. i ver Lake Rd., 9 till noon WAITRESS, 4 NIGHTS A WEEK. Pasquale's Restaurant and Bar, 895 S, Lapeer Road, Lake Orion, ^pply^---------------------- - pa"rt time - jnly, 5-day week. Apply Golden Dome, Maple BAR WORK, Cunningham's Miracle H 0^ class coffee dlshwash-requlred. Ing or portering -------- better than average pay, fair excellent tips, paid lunch hour t..-resf period, hospital benefits. BItt's Coffee Shop, Telegraph Rd. -* Help Wanted ESTABLISHED WATKINS ROUTE, earning above average. FE 2-3053. EXPERIENCED . FARM CdUPLE, Pontiac Press Box 103. EXPERIENCED FOR SECRETARI al and general office. Must b< excellent typist. FE 5-8174 tor ap HUSBAND AND WIFE your family I 3 evenings p- -------- . .- . ... Car necessary. No canvassing, i party plan Call M' ' HELP WANTED, FULL OR PART-tlme. Also those Interested 1 future In the theatre business, need ushers, clean-up men, treshment stand managers. Apply at Miracle Mile Drive-ln Theatre. 2103 S. Telegraph. The Pontiac Theatre, 2435 Dixie Hwy. The Blue Sky Theatre, 2150 Opdyke Rd. and The Waterford Theatre, 3520 Alr- port Rd. It a.m; to 4 p.m. __________ HAVE AN IMMEDIATE OPENING for 2 sales people In our real estate department. Experienced preferred, but " ------ OR 441304. N OR WOImAN TO WORK I r DEPARTMENT. T h-o m a s inut department. Thomas B MEOI(!aL fiCHNOLOGiSt, bed General Hospital with gressive clinical- laboratory, hour week, /ANTED ALL AROUND KITCHEN help including dish washing, 228(1 Union Lake Road oft Commerce. TO -RpNTift Nf ED J^JJAN THAT nIeW EDJ MAN THA KE 1800 PER A »pt , MAKE . RESU/M (¥ANAbm~V5ud iffWTTliilJW .... —e15S MONTH. SEND 3NTIAC REBW year axperlenca wiling iww or ytad'^ homes. W« cannot handle bur tremendoui volutne of buil-nesi In the Pontiac area. Need 8^ managar right now. Ml SALEiffiAtr Great -Cantral iniuranct Company'of PeOrla, Mil-noli has opening In Pi^. I you to Michigan Plate University Ll-cenw school, all ekpanwt paid. Contact Bill Snyder at Highlander Moter, after 9:00 p.m. on Monday end Tues&y, May 5th and 4th. Phoifo 330-4641 ■ f pECEraHm 23 TalEvliion>ilodlo StrvIcE 24 RBRAIR WORK ........... YOUIHOP Trabwd larvica M8n, ReOionabl# MK{gotne^**W8rd ^***ife‘tlac CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY jwssra’irwi >8 Agancy, PE OdOH, ** and tS«d2*m'^niorai 20 pqr c.„. .. ance fo 1$ F-. -............... companies. K^ O. Hempstead, 0 348 W. Huron. FE 44284. , WaNtEdlouMhold 6«odi 29 '^"sob-lbT^ bedroom, ft •'.SBL' ^th”ineiuifoi heat,-hot wafer, range, refrlgaretor, alr-cendltlon-Ing. Adults only. w. c. Dlnnan. Rsslly. 887-4041. , DfEifi''9Tto 9 DAILY Heetad swimming pool, shuffle-board courts, putting green,^ eir conditkxisd, hot wafer heat, bullt- CAREERS BY KAY Ml 6-3663 Y,_Maple_B'hem_SylfeMI eVeTyTEDwards' ~ years experler Telephone Instructloni-Schooh 10 DIESEL ENGINE MECHANICS Fsetory training available I.T.S. 17581 James Couisns. ON 4-4404. lTa'S’n' WiERS, ORAblRS, cranes, field training. Key, 1— James COutans. Phone 044-4404. IBM TRAINING Learn IBM, keypunch, machine operation and wiring, 1401 — puler programming. Mich. ______ Board of Education approved. Free placement service. Free perking. Complete financing, no money SYSTEMS INSTITUTE 52 E. Nine Mile, Hawl Par* 547-8303 ________ Study at school or at home MACHINST TRADE TOOL 8, DIE MAKING-DESIGN ENGINEERING-DRAFTING AIR CONOITIONINO-REFRIG. AUTO MECHANCS ----1 ELARN ■Bhoha?EV4M/or............... Med Institute, ]340 $. Mlchlgaiv Chlrann. Ill XAMC ' Work Wanted Male CARPENTER, LARGE OR CE/MENt WORK, "EVENINGS AND — ^b too small. OR 4-1421 or FE 8-44 LIGHT HAULING _____________ 334-3048 ___________ WALL CLEANED BY NEW MA-chlne^ Results perfect. Save paint. ( DESIRES WORK OF Work Wanted Female 12 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHING houseclean|ng. 482-4843. CLEANINCS AND 'wALL WASHING. _____ 482-4453 or 4M-5534 HANblCAPPEb DESIRES HOME typing arid Ironing. Reasonable. pick I CONST. CO. PE 5-9122. MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS . aired by factory, trained men. General Printing and Office Sup- ply Co., 17 W. Lawrence St. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE-pairing and ;ewlndlng. 218 E. Pika, Phone FE e-3981. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR-Ing, will finance. R. B. Munro Electr----------- Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 AUCTION SALE E V B 6 Y SATUR-day at Blva Bird Auction. buy fumitura, tools and appll OR 3;W7 or MEIrow 7-ffl$. ACL 6ft 1 ¥ti(*l bF — appllanctt wanted quir'-.... I's Bargain Hou**, rB SSH FOR PORNitURB AND aI»-pllanoni I piece or houseful. Pearson's. PE 4-7I8I. ___________ USED OFFICE PURNlYuRB, FILES porlab'e typewriter and other ■—' ness machlnas. OR 3^747 i wI~BW~OL6'G(X6r¥D^ Wgytej te 2 ORDAINED MINISTERS DESIRE apartment o- '■ — *•—* “ East side ot __________2-1037._ 3-BEDROOM HOME II High area. Will sign FAST RENTAL SERVICE V • to owners. Havr I willing to sign li ■ OR 3¥EbROOM HCTMl ' -ton. 2 school — - L MapJe_5-2 STARTING JULY Ts FOR 2 OR Responsible party. _ - Write: Pontiac Press Box .., WANTBb: GARAOE, vltiNTfV'W tion to buy, 3-bedroom a Wanted Real Estate 36 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, /(.CREAGE _PAR-CELS; FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS. Warren Stout, Realtor (50 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8145 Dally (III 8 MUL1IPLE listing SERVICE TO PAY DOWN ON .. CHEAP OR UNFURNISHED HOUSE ON OAKLAND COUNTY lake. CALL AFTER 4 OR BUILDER >ts In Pontiac. Immediate ) commission, “ - M4-9575 Real Value Really.' ...........CASH..... 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 382 OAKLAND AVE. FE 2-9141 GET results WE NEED listings. Call us today tor quick sale and top market ‘DON WHITE, INC. around 4$5,000 cash. FE TRY US To sell your home, acreage, need listings. We buy and lend contracts. PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwltl___________FE 5-B2 WANT TO SELL? GIVE US A TRY PROSPECTS GALORE JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor 7732 Highland Rd. (M59) OR 4-0304 WANTED 2-FAMlLY INCOME FOR PAUL JONBS REALTY COMPLETE SPRING CLEAN-UP Fertilizing, seeding, sodding, lawn cutting, weed spraying. DAN'S LANDSCAPING, 343-2888. ’ LAVttT Garden Plowing GARDEN AND LAWN WORK Whitey's Landscaping Grading — plowing — rototllling Free estimates J. MCADAMS —. OP 3-5121 AOtOTILLING, GARDENS, LAWNS, 'any size. OR 4-0408 after 4. Convalescent-Nursing ROOM FOR 3 ELDERLY CONVA-lescenf ladies in my hornet inquire at 8065 State Rd. Goodrich, Mich. Movinq and Trucking 22 Bob's Van Service MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES Cornplete Insurance lERT TOMPKINS OR 4- LIGHT HAULING Painting t Decoruting 23 r LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR", Papering, FE 8-0343.' ERNIE'S Si^"v“ic|'^:^ATNTItrG, decorating and remodeling. 482-4132. WANT fO SELL? We need 2 artd 3-bedroom homes in good condition. If you ' property to sell call us. W do the |ob. ASSOCIATE BROKERS 14 Franklin Blvd. FE 8-9443 Wyman Lewis Manager 37 Apartments-Furnished I- AND 2 ■ ROOM EFFICIENCY 1 . ROOM UPP¥r, 1 LADY, f42 Chamberlain. FE 2-5702. I ROOMS, ADULTS ONLY, 439 OR- 1 LARGE ROOMS, NEAR GEN-, eral Hospital. No drinkers. FE 2-9755 or FE 2-4447. 1 ROOMS, QUIET COUPLE OR single lady. FE 8^ I rooms" floor, eve.,------- ------------ ------ side, agults, $110 per month. FE 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE 1, 184 Mt. Clemens. 3 ROOMS, CLEAN, PRIVATE, COU- pie only.JFE 5-4032. ___________ i'RbOMS AND BATH. BABY WEL-come. $25 per week. $50 deposit. Inquire 273 Baldwin Ave. Call 330- ROOMS, PRIVA-fE ENTRANCE. Close to Sear$. Adults. 258 N. SagL 4-ROOM, MODERN, PARTLY FUR- I ROOMS AND BATH, FIRST floor, all private, small baby wel-c^e. $30 per week w.lth $100 deposit. Inquire 273 Baldwin Avenuq. ral Hospita E 5-077L LARGE 5 ,-private fl Cottage. CONCORD PLACE LUXURY APARTMENTS BLOOMFIELD HILLS ADDRESS Immediote Occupancy 'The Ulllmeta In Private Living" One and 2 bedrooms - patios — balconies - beagbcalllngs. Children Invited. Near churches, shopping, recreation. Vk mild to Chrysler Fraeway. 2 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION DAILY AND SUNDAY 12 TO 7 RENTALS FROM $150 Located af Square Opdyke Roads Drive ward to Square Lak* R< t« Opdyka R«ad. We w CALL FE2-9S18 0 GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE CO. Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 5 ROOMS, OATH, GAS HEAT, I Utilities; $47. Inquire at 129 Edith. ____________________________ Big, Beautiful Brick Tovimship-fireplace, carpeting, e cellent condition. $125 per rnont.,, references. Call Dick Value!, FE 4- OOULEVARO HBIOHtS 544 East Blvd. at Valencia NEW 3-BEDROO/W RA|(CH. HURON Gardens. Immediate possession - , M^ 5-1582.____________________ PONTIAC MOTOR AREA — l6W, low rent. 3-bedroom single home, newly decorated. A REAL VALUE. 424-957^__________________ ___ south'PONTTaC AREA. 855 A/ib. Gas heal, 3-bedroom single.' Large dining area, chllarai come. 424-9575. ( —......... k REAL VALUEI ■TE, Rent Lake Cottages BEAUTIFUL ROOM FOR PROFES-slonal man, $12 week. 563 W. Huron St. FE 3*7111. CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, CLOSE DOWNTOWN AREA - SLEEPING room tor working man, 18. 119 Norton. _______^_______ FURNISHED ROOM, Hb/«E PRIV-• lady. FE a-~• - PLEASANT ROOM WITH BATH I private home on Oriole Rd. fc business or professional persoi “ --------- roomers. 338-4083. ■quiet, clean, GENTLEMAN. ROOMS KNO KrtCHE'NETTES TO ____ Reasonable rates. Springfield Township. 425-7091 after 7 p.m. ROOM A>(0 OR BOARD, I35M| Oakland Ave. FE 4-1454. 158 Chamberlain Rooms With Boord FOR HANDY MAN IN WIDOWS Christian home. Send reply tS ^ Pontiac Press Box No. 43.____________ MEN ONLY. LUNCHES PACKED 1012 LaSalle_______ REnV rooms WITH BOARD ROOM AND BOARD FOR GENTLE- Rent Farm Property AVON TOWNSHIP - T.IENKEN RD house or other buildings, land r^MIdwesf 4-5100. Rent Office Space 8 X 40' MODERN BUILDING IN the new FOUNTAINEBLEAU PLAZA; also 30X70' with lull basement. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor - .... "JiM27 AIR CONDITIONED 24x30 BUILD-Ing with full basement. Corner lot. Good parking. Located af 242 So. Telegraph. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor FE 3-7103______________OR 4-0427 MODERN ONE-ROOM OF-— $45 per month, Including I lights. Bateman Realty Telegraph Rd., Rent Business Property 47-A J X 40 NEW BLOCK BUILDING, brick front. Fast advancing area on west M-59. Suitable lor store or offices. Will lease all or divide. J. C. HAYDEN, REALTOR EM 3-4404 10751 Highland Rd. (M59) Sale Houses 49 ■BEDROOM HOME, 8 YEARS OLD, Oil furnace. Union Lake area. $1,500 down, $4,500. Call 343-4192. driveway. FE 5-5489. Call , $13,500. 482.4391. ^ ... ACRES 4-bedroom, basement, garage, ,< jJs‘?i'oh'’*v;,!!,i.»'‘^'“"'' ■BEDROOM RANCH. ATTACHED gerage. IV, baths. Bull basei Partially tlhlshed family brick fireplace. Patio . NICELY FURNISHED 3 ROOM modern apartment. Plenty ol' privacy. $30 ...... ”the fontAinebleau APARTMENTS WALLED LAK^, ‘ 3 ROOMS AND 3 r^EORbOMi ‘ $8,400,“"$ Sion. OL 1-0154. ^ GAS HEAT,'‘utrL- JJI'. room, nicely landscaped. 8500 ^bedroom brick RANCH IN nice Waterford neighborhood, close ‘hopping center, ?v , *ewer and water, IVj baths) family room, 2-car ga-Tsge, Wily landscaped. Cdtl Royal Dak, LI 2 3344 collect after 4 p.m. weekdays ■■—■-------------^ 4 pm. ■v::. I"- of Iwd.....-..... pond. Only 'JVIi mllM Mofori. Orly# off Iw. __ joilyn Rd. ond 115 Brown Rd. prici only 117,000 caih. ifiBK55irirRreTr'RiHeE~i^ unw lot In piMipnt artt naor m bolht, etraoM llv-Mpirtto dining oroo, tl icrNni, wator lolt- da* and wal^r,' pavad ...... 51,W lakai ovar 4V? par «*'L' i"drtoam. Ownar MASMWO. 3-BiDROOM, BASBMiflT; OA-raga, In axeallant city location. UM down. 335-3M5. 3"ffilftodAA lANere Blifii-way, 2”i!fr'a)s .toll of treei and Shrubs. 511,300 Associate SUCHj GRE At'poTE NTuL.'prl'ced 67 THORS — brick ranch, 5Wi room, 3 bedrooms, full basement, reconditioned. $12,800. — 1-story brick, 6 ige,“48!i-44 TV^RNr Y-fiKVEN gg"TWof.,'cVei%li‘M s.na „own and take ovar payi—“ B'^OWNER Friday, Saturday and Sunday FOR QUICK SALE 2 bednioma. Larga 11x42-ft. alad family room. Oppni on tiful londacap^ lot. Flroplao bosomonf. All face type. 2-car attach^, Inal cost In 1»54, 'll............ sacrifice, 517,900.. 2214 Middle Bell Road. Overlooking beautiful "— I. Orlg- - wni BY OWNER, 79 ACRES, BEAUTI- 4(M Summers Ph. 724-3744. beautHfOl CUSTOM . _____ on li------ /Mofropolltan I luuiiis, carpeted lUmu onu v.„-Ing rooms, natural fireplace. Bulll-Ins. Attached 2-car garage. Steel SOB wall and boat wall. Vacant. Contact Mr. KIght. PRe^tt 7-9202 BY OWNER - 3 BEDROlOM 97 S. Marrimac St. 335-0900. BIRMINGHAM ^BEDROOM BRICK garage, rtmodalad. 1547. tXarca St. lip l-f'* TRi-LEVEL. 3 BED-nttached garago. s service and close to Mall, city BLOOMFIELO^ILLS ADDRESS and school, low township taxes, 3-bedroom brick, l'/.-car attached garage, gas heat, large beautiful landscape lot, many more extras. Ideal location In refined nelr*'*''^ hood, PE a-3547.____ BY OWNER A boautlfully kept home, 24 x 55 on large corner lot. 3-bedroom, tiled bath, living room, dining ell. 14 X 24 recreation room, large utility room, seporate washar and dryer area. Aluminum siding and stone front with awnings. Perimeter gas heat. Excellent location for churches, schools and Mall. Listed at 012,700 for quick tale. For appointment call 473-0195. ' STORM WINDOWS, DOORS REMODELING and ADDITIONS Kraft Siding & Roofing FREE ESTIMATES PE 4-2448 KAISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SiO-INO, AWNINGS, GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS — DOORS, PATIOS, ROOFING. SUPERIOR. FE ArchitBCtural Drawing DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST FREE ESTIMATES ________FE 5-4980 f^REE iSTIA/iATES' PARKING LOTS 5 parking lots. :-42l0 until 9 p Waterproofing^ ^ Johnstone Wall Repair Cracked and leaking basement w^s. 335-9994 ............ 493-2997 KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. Generators— Regu lotors—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange BuiMing Mod^ 2-CAR GARAGE, S899 . Incl. OH Doors, Concrete Floore Additions, ------ BILLS SR., FLOOR SAND- BROKEN CONCRETE AND PAVING brick for retaining walls, patios, walkways, outside fireplaces. Oakland Fuel and Paint Co., 45 Thomas, FE 5-4159. ___________ MERION BLUE SOD, PitK UP OR delivered, 2401 Crooks. UL 2-4443. NEIORICK BUILDING SERVICE - Home, Garage, Cabinets, Add------ FHA TERMS, FE 4«4909. EXPERT ROOFINjG, SIDING Alitt gutters. FE 5-1024. NEW RdSoFlNGi HOT TAR ROOF-Ing, shingle repair, 852-1450: Emergency service. Insurance roof ro- RUBDISH HAULING, GARDEN plowing, and manure for solo. MA 5-1429 or OR 3-0545._ Sand, Gravel, Dirt Televifion, Radio and Jtl-^ar^^ REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV's 519.95 up. Obel TV bnd Radio. Elliabeth Lake______FE 4-4945 Tree Trimming Service down payment, low tlnonca. Apt. end Income. Lots end commercial ^rner lots. Inquire Economy Cars, T335 Dixie Hwy. BiBsiNGHA®*rryr-iiiM8eM brick ranch. Tiled basement, m-ear garage. Excellent ntIghIMr-hood, schools. Opoa 1-5 Saturijay, Sunday, or by appointment. BV'tSWNiiS:' 's-FAWiLTTS'Wl down, upper now lentad tor >840. Lower lust romodalld, — IVIhcar garage, large ro glassad-ln porch Includaa olocirld slovt. 7-plr*' breakfast ~sat, twin dresser. WhlttamOra n._. .. cants and St, Freds. By eppolnt-ment only, FE 4-733) days, FE ,e.rsV r CLARKSTON family ________ ______ _______ room, 2 full baths, fireplace, built-in oven and range, formica kitchen, 2'/9-car attached garage, large lot, paved street. Shown by appointment. Only 819,995, FHA tert“ wlll consider lease With option, ... tfede. Fronk Morotte $> Associates, OPEN PLEASANT LAKE finished recreation _________ ______ level, paneled den, 2-cer attached garage. Be our guest Sunday 27 Baycrest. Just off Elli Lake Rd; 5"“ — HAGSTROM REALTOR Huron OR 4-0358 ....... Evenings cell OR 3-4229 ------------ ESTATE. See 6F|iN• SATURDAV~Aji6“SUNBAY, number under For Sale Farms. | )2 to 4 p.m. 5-bedroom, 2-belh you're looking lor. 528,000, terms. No furthor Information by telephone. Coll lor appointment. DERWOOD REAL_ ESTATE. Clarkston Avea^M^ ■te Pi 3-BEDROOM HOUSE ON 5'/2 ACRES Nestled In .grove, 225 back ti.... rood. Fireplace, heated utility rown, no basement. 514,950, 55,000 9950 ELLIS ROAD PHONE 425-2998 OWNER ON PREMISES CASS LAKE .....—to- possession. On channel lust a low 100' from ...... lake. Such tovely 3-bedroom ranch homo, lust like, now, has V/i baths, separate dining room, large porch and 2-car garage. Carpeting drapes, dishwasher and flreplaca are Included. ■ Move next -------■' ond. 522,900 with easy tern COUNTRY 3-bedroom homo, 4 years old, full basement, oil furnace, plus utility off large kitchen, plastered number Is under bur For — Forms ad. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE. ____________ CRESCENT LAKfe. NEW TTRICK ____________.....0, 542 tr 3 Bedrooms, 50,750, 544 m bungalow, excellent location, 511, 90 per cent financing — e. Call OR 3-4525 attar 5. FRAME BUNGALOW, LARGE LOT White Lake area. Only 54,975 With 51,000 down. EM 3-7700, HACKETT REALTY. ________________ FOR SALE BY OWN^R; 3-BED- GAYLORD LAKE FRONT 5-room home, basement, nice breezeway, brick llre-place, hardwood floors, very good buy, call MY 2-2821 or FE 8-9493 or stop at office, Broadway and anlstlq** lOo. * A^'ln QUIEt and PEACEFUL —year around 2-badroom house, garage, stove, refrigerator, bods— on Oakland County Lake. Ideal working couple or retirees. II terested write name, address phone number on post card, to Pontloc Dally Press Box All Inquires will bo answered, Built-In' stove and oven In kitcher Glassed In porch, potlo and garagi Terms. DOROTHY SNYDER LAVENDER, RItr. 334-3819 ______________FE 5-^ RIGHT NOW-TODAY" I CAN BUY-EASY TERMS NOTHING DOWN MOVES YOU IN OCCUPY IN 30 DAYS »,750, $73 tr . taxes - _ _____ LOTS are acre JOSLYN ROAD TO FLINTRIDGE (2 miles beyond expressway) turn left at school to office (2 doors from school) OPtN MON. thru FRI. 10 to $ and Saturday — D'lorah B ’. Colwell FE 2 ROCHESTER AREA A fine 3-bedroom ranch on '/i at brick, ceramic bath, family rot fireplace, new carpeting, attec garage. 519,500, terms. MILTON WEAVER INC., REALT 110 W. University________OL 1-1 23,900. A FABULOUS 2-bedroom home In the village of Rochester, 2 fireplaces, 2 baths, dining room, attoched garage. Terms. — -. .......... ... ,— -.«c-! 3520 Pontiac Lake on. 5 acres to 200 acres. If you OR 4-0427 M.l 'ont Informotlon on farms ----------- >r Bill Segler. MY 2-2021. LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD TALBOTT LUMBER Glass installed In doors and wi daws. Complete building service. 025 Oakland Ave. FE 4-49 Moving and Storage Pninthg Badl^^ecornting t-1 PAINTING, DECORATING, plaster repair. Free esi. 10% disc, for cash. 482-0620. HOME IMPROVEMENTS , J’olectrlca*!. ir cent guarantee INTERIOR paneling, 2-1235. FINISH, KITCHENS, Carpet Service--Cjenni.tg Dreitmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT Electrical Controctort Gutter Company Compiei^ *®Yestroug_hJng^i s«r^^^ GRIFFIS BROTHERS Commercial — Residentla. Painting and Decorating OR 3-0049 iffTERiOR, EXTERIOR; ______________ spr4y painting. Free estimates. 482-4412. PAINTING INSIDE AND OUTSIDE. Guaranteed, FE 5-4823-FE 3dl09. WALL-WASHING - MINOR Rfe- Piano Tuning PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. hauling. I PLUMBING, HEATING REPAIRS. Furnaces, boilers, conversions. 24-hour service. MY 2-1121, OA 8-3424. Ethersoh Plun\blnB 8. Heating. Rental Equipment^ BROWNIES HARDWARE . FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS DRILLS - POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn ____________FE 4-4105 Wallpaper Steamer Floor senders, polishers, hand' Sanders, furnace vacuum cleaners Oakland Fuel S, Paint, 434 Or ^ .... pp A. E. DALBY TREE SERVICE Tree-Stump removal. Elm sprat ■-----------5-3005, FE 5 ■ General Tree Service Any size Job. FE 5-9994, 493-2997. TrvcMng HAULiNG AND ROBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE 8-0095. LIGHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED. LIGHT hauling, GARAGES ’AND basements cleaned. 473-8043. HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! We have 5 homes In excellent coi diflon In the North End of Pontloc with NO DOWN payments and only 5% Interest. You do. not ha' ~ to be a veteran to buy. 231 W. Cornell .... 59,000 200 W. Cornell .... 59,400 232 W. Longfellow .... 59,500 244 W. Longfellow .... 59,500 247 W. Longfellow .... 59,500 We have the key - HURRYI RAY 0'NE!L, Rea!tor 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. OPEN 9-9 OR 4-0427 M.L.S, OR ............ _ . ,_____ Basement. Some furniture. FE 2-5481. 142 S. Shirley after 5 p.m. Kiloo HARBOR, 3-BEbRdOM, ____^ p'-'y- <_________________ LOON LAI« FRONT, 4-BEDROOM brick, Jayno Heights. OR 3-0520. LOVELY 2-BEOROOM HOME, FIRE- LIGHT AND. HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading ahd grav-el and front end loading. FE f-0403 Trucks to Rent AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Tralleri Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 82 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0441 FE 4-1442 Open Dally ' ■ ■ Upholitering THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 4499 W. WALTON BLVO. FE 5-8888 BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls' and windows. Reas. Satlstac-tlon guaranteed. FE Welding PORTABLE WELDING. 24 I service. 493-4293. ________ Window Service Just Dial FE 2-8181 to Place a Low Cost Press CLASSIFIED AD! carpeted, one bedroom, large kitchen, full basement, new gas *— nace, shower both, yard with \ and garden plot, gbrage, bac Lincoln Jr. High school. Very sohable for quick cash sale. ----- by appointment only. Call 33^5510 after 5:----- SPECIAL UBURBAN . . . Lovelyillttle home. Large living room, one bedroom, nice kitchen and a 144 Oakland Heights, superb neig_- hood with lake privileges, 4-bedroom brick ranch,, beautifully la ' scaped, $17,200. Terms. SILVER LAKE FRONT upper level has lovely living room, 2 bedrooms, tVi baths, family room and convenient kitchen, 839,500, lake PRIVILEGES Clarkstog brick . ranch with full basement, beautiful family kitchen with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full, baths, many extras Included In this home. Owners transferred, ,532,-900. Rolfe H. Smitliz Reoltor modern bungalow plus twV attached garage with Interior of garage SiT tInIJhed. Nicely lor ' scaped. Plastic Iliad bath, las fully decorated. A home not Ji a house. Nicely landscaped. Oi country style , kitchen. Practical traffic pattern. Here Is a lot ol home tor only 512,500. Plans In our ofllce. , LAKE PROFIT SPECI/a^^--^ excel-' walkout bosoment, lakeside patio, L. H. BROWN, Realtor SHARP TRI-LEVEL LAKE ANOELUS GOLFVIEW ESTATES bedrooms, large living room. heat, large lots. ACCESS TO 5 LAKES. THIS IS A BEAUTIFUL HOME - SEE IT TODAY. ST. BENEDICT'S 3-BEDROOM COLONIAL Carpeted living room and dining room, full basement, gat heat, Incinerator, 2-car garage. ((LOSE TO DONELSON SCHOOL AND CITY BUS LINE. 513,500 FULL PRICE. OXFORD Beautiful, older home, large living room and dining room, corpated, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, batemeiil, new 2Vi-car garage, new gas furnace, large lot, 145x245. CALL FOR APPT. Smith & Wiedeman .OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. CLARKSTON 6123 Overlook Delightfully attractive 2-bedroom brick ranch home with attachod 2-car garage, 2 well landscaped tots, and Maturing carpeted living room and dining el, 2' big bedrooms, tile both, Immaculoto- and hot water, softener, glass enclosed sun porch. To Inspect, drive north on Dixie Highway (US-10) to M-15 right Vt mile to Princess, left 1 block to. Overlook and "Open." “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemons St. FE 5-1201 or FE 2-3370 HIITER rnV."A.vc5S?isr*"' NORTH SIDE - hoat, 14,700, N HirrER, REAl Lake Rd. fl I or VA 4-3t«, Mil or Utog. * OR, 3840 ■>*-1179 or FI 4- 4-3m, MILLER A 2 blocks to church. OPEN Sun. 2 to 5 P.M. Angelas Meadows Sub. 3594 Meadoyleigh Lone 80-loot brick ranch homo, excellent condition, close-ln suburban location, lealuros 3 bedrooms, IV3 baths, 2 fireplaces, carpeting and drapes, full basement, automatic haat and hot water, 2-cor attached garage, large lot Cyclone fenced. Priced at 522,500. To Inspect, take Dixie Highway to Silver Lake Rd., Maadowleigh Lane, lift to "Open. - “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201 or FE 4-8773 NICHOLIE Kitchen. Full baM- , CLARKSTON AREA Three btdrooln bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen and utility room. Gas HA heat. Vacanf. Abouf 8250 movat you In. WATERFORD HIGH AREA miMMM GUARANTEES SALE OF YOUR PRESENT HOME SUNDAY 2-5 1. OPEN: 3031 PAINT CREEK 2 ACRE SITE among rolling hills lust west of Rocheifor with nicely landscaped frontage on Peinf Creek. Impressive 8 rm. brick rancher with over 1800 sq: ft. of living eree and newer than new. BM country stylo kitchen makes for real suburban living In a beautiful country area; Approx. 53,000 down plui coats. Walton to Adams Rd., north ap----- 3 miles to Paint Creek Dr„ prox. 3 I left to'p 2. OPEN: 1164 AIRPORT ROAD IMMEDIA-re POSSESSION: el Wonder ig dIass ______ . I anchor fenced yard. _________ location Close to schools, immediate possession as owner has moved to Florida. $1,700 down plus costs will handle. Ellz. Lake Rd. to Airport Rd., right to property. . OPEN: 2908 MIDVALE SOLD ' 4, OPEN: 2232 MARSTEN ', gleaming oak , silent switches and other e features plus extra nice ;n. 942 ft. (feep lot on year spring fed lagoon. Dead street away from traffic ..,-„»s this perfect with Immediate possession. Just $1,200 down plus costs. Dixie Hwy. to Hatchery Rd., west to Hedge, left one block to Marsten. 5. OPEN: 298 SEWARD HANDYAAAN WANTEQ to fInM bargain pricad monthly paymanta approx. sSt plus taxas and Insurance. Auburn Avt. to Seward, right to proparty. 6, OPEN: 3567 HI LURE 3 BEDROOM, SW batht brick trl-lavel with dtillng room and extra nice kitohert. Cozy family ■room with natural flreplaca and lots and lots ^ extra toalurM Including carpeting, and dual pan* windows. Wonderful suburban 7. OPEN: 2755 COLONIAL WAY PRESTIGE AREA of Bloomfield Townsnip. Beautifully landscaped custom built rancher with attractive exterior colonial toaturaa. Ideally located lust off Sg. Lake ' close to Woodward Av*. brick fireplace ,ond a dream kitchen with all the builMns. All we can say Is It's Really Nice. Come see for yourself. 12,400 down plus costs will handle. Telegraph to Sq. Lake Rd„ left to Lasher, right to Colonial Way, left to property. 8. OPEN: 65 HI HILL BARGAIN PRICED for ona month. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, contemporary bl-level cloM to 175 Expressway. 2 car garage, contemporary styling. G.E. efficiency kitchen with buiTt-ln dishwasher, oven and range. Wonderful rolling suburban area and bargain priced "for 30 days with no morfg. costs. Just take ovar present mortg. with approx. $2,SOO down. M-24 to HI Hill, right to OPEN .DAILY 5-7.30 SATURDAY 24 SUNDAY 1>7 FURNISHED MODELS. Rambling ranchers and spacious tri-lavtl for the budget conscious. Terrific values from 59,975 to 512,980 on you*, lot. aiz. Lake Rd. to Airport Rd., r ght to AA-59, left to Whittier at Big ■'Bateman sign, left to mxtoels. Equity Is Cash-Trade Yours builf-ins i home comforts. You'll be happt surprised at the price; It w really fit your budget. Just 81,4 "- n plus costs. Only $13,950 fl OFF JOSLYN NEAR NORTHERN HIGH for depple with children, and close to Pontloc and Fisher plants. 2 bedroom brick' with targe upstairs to be finished Into lame, third bedroom. The material Is there, lust needs v>me labor. Priced accordingly so you can save- the G0LFV!EW ESTATES NO BETTER OPPORTUNITY: will ever present Itself than this one right now. Wonderful location lust minutes north of fown, 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace and attachad garaga. Sharp all the way and big family kitchen. Only 113,950 with S14W down plus costs. ACT FAST. ROCHESTER OVER 1400 SQ. FT. of'exquisite living area with a flooF plan that Is different. 4 very large rooms, P/S baths, basement and large, oversize lot. Only 4 yrs. old and better than new. Owner sacrificing for 520,950 with at- .Trade The BATEMAN WAY. 377 S. Telegraph Open 9-9 ■ Realtor M.L.S. W,\ FE 8-7,161 vSunddy 1-5 ■ OPEN SUNDAY 15 4770 ROCKCROFT N«w ttM , wwclowi kltcb— WIN) bum-lti own'*mil r»np#. Ml' gorns*' ••• S8T.i"« V s!?«rrD’irHwy,.. foot wyrWd Hill, turn riohl on » BLAIR REAL ESTATE OR 3-1708 ARRO W* BUY ~ WB TRADB WHY TAKE CHANCES? I-YBAR WRITTEN OUAtftvNTEE on malorlol and workmanihlp by local rerutable custom BUILDER, any »lie, any »tyl» RrkSl from ll!,400 and up. Your proioni homo, lot or land cohtrocl may wall oerv# ay down oaymonl, aptclal arrangomani llnandno. CALL FOR FURTHER DETAILS. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 wooded lot, walking dlHance to grade tchool, large llvIBli room, plenty ot cloMti, }'/y-car attached garage, newly decorated. Don't mls> tbit one, will trade. Ellia-bath Lake Rd., left on Com Lake Rd„ right ore Caii-Elljabeth Rf, lett on Tecumteh, right on Chip-man. Your host It Ted McCullough. 4075 WOODMERE Mr, Stone will be waiting lo thow you thif cute home, 73’ paneled living room, excellent kitchen, matter medroom 14x17', gat heat, itorms and icreeni, lake prlvll-egei. Dixie Hwy., right on Satha-baw to open tlgn corner of Wood-mere. SHARP 3-BEDROOM B R I C RANCH, In excellent condition, flreplacei, 2 bathroomt, full ba: rage. Loans o, ®e,,aa, lott. Owner moving to Florida. Call tor appointment. l-ttory home, carpeting viiig room, ,011 furnace, go-located on nice, wooded lot privlleget on Ellzabtth ig lor S5,9S0, termt. BEAUTIFUL LAKE-FRONT LOT with several.Oak treei. Ideal home with walk-out basement, c 73 toot on the lake and 247 i deep. ^ PHONE 682-2211 - -_jl open 10- G. FLATTLEY, 6LDR. 3434WS1 _^ Evee. BM SHM«2 SAVE' NOW - BUILDER'S CLOSE-OUT. NOTHING DOWN! 3 Bedrooms ' Full Basement $61 A40NTHLY Excluding taxes and Insurance Furniture Finished Cabinets , Storms and Screens Available ONLY 4 LEFT SPOTLITE feuiLDERS GILES hjft a^ «w ^‘•’orl ^ months, living room and matter bee carpeting, custom draperies, a automatic water softener, a bage disposal, plus an eli__________ door opener to the big 2-car garage. Built by "Beauty Rite." nlly room I fireplace; the fully tiled b with S4,500 down DORRIS OPEN EXTRAS OALORE room In popular Hit Spaclout family ttyl basement with tiled floor, bull bar and gat heat. Rear yard Anchor fenced with port Rd?'"turn'^S?*on M-S» to Irwin Dr. or Pontiac Lake Rd. acri MSf turn right on Irwin Dr. a SurSey?ta J.’'*"’ OPEN BRICK- Ys-ACRE LOT CLARKSTON AREA BEAUTIFUL BRICK. Situated _ lot 103*410' with velvety lawn. Home hat numerous telling appointments you will admire. Comfortable living room 13x24' outstanding kitchen I2xt2'; Mi^rn ceramic tile bath, 3 bright cheerful bedrooms, airy basement with plenty ot room for favorite blet. MIS to Northedge of Oarks-ton to 4420 Northvlew Dr. C Sunday 2 lo 5. Just a Olonce _ you know It's a community where fireplace, floors and plastered walls, basement, oil heat, solid drive. Anchor fenced lot. Lgcaled modern housing tub. Practically new carpeting, tile bath, well planned step - saving large and comfortable DORRIS 8, SON REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0324 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ANNETT Auburn Rood 4-room home on corner con merclal lot 100x220. Horn has full basement, gas hea. 2 car garage. $10,000. Terms. Pontiac Central Area home^ In good condition, . bedrooms, enclosed porch, full basement, new gas furnace. 2 car garage. $10,500. Woterford-Tri-Level baths, family room, utility area, gas HW board heat. Lot 80x220, garage. $1,795 down plus closing costs. S. Bloomfield HiglTlonds Brick ranch built In 19$1. S^clous living room, <<>nhig rooms, nice kitchen With , breakfast nook. Full .basement, finished rec. rm, fully air conditioned. Beautiful An- _____ Clior fenced and landscaped tot, 2 car atl. garage. Bloomfield schools. $29,500, terms. OPEN Sun. 2^0 5 P.M, •Indian Village . 3 bedroom Cedar Shake co lanlal. Wall to walj carpet Ing, fireplace, full basement gas heat. 2 car garage. Veri easy terms. Directions; W Huron to Genesee, north on< block to Owego, right to 749 ■ Owego, Open signs. See our display ad on 933 James K Blvd., Open Sunday 2 to 5 p.m„ on page — WE WILL TRADE Realtliirs 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenins and‘Sunday i - 4 FE 8-0466 2028. Immediate Possession. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 520 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9-9 )R 4-0427 M.L.S. OR 3-2028 TRADE Cherokee Hills Lot us show you this attractive ranch type homo with wall-to- ... carpeting, drapes throughout, ■ ■ rage, jlttul ceramic bath, attached i Donelson Park Carpeting dInTr floors. 3 b tlreplace"*in large beautifully finished " In lull basen '"* ---- ,.Jce big yard excellent location. $17,500. Will your home In trade. $1,000 Down This 3-bedroom brick Is loc________ on the east side. Has carpeted living room, tiled basement for Frushour Stmble REALTORS 3930 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-4025 _____M Val-U-Way Including everything. . TODAY'S SPECIAL 3-bedroom all brick ranch, wl full basement, gas heat, in tl ' city. Only $78 per month. $60 PER MONTH Including taxes and Insurance. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland____- Open Sun. OPEN Sunday 12-7 P.M. 1618 Joslyn Ave. Beautiful 3-bedroom ranch home with 14x15' living room designed for family comfort, lO'xIS' step-saving kitchen and dinette, full base-menf with unlimited possibilities, thrifty gas heat, extra nice 13' x 34' recreation area for hours of relaxed enloyment. DIRECTIONS: — Out Joslyn .Avenue, 3 blocks north of Walton Blvd. - ARCHT. SERVICE-FINANCING Mammoth 3-bedr 3-bedroom tri-h long-tasting mi signed for hours of family patio, area lor out-of-doors activities, thrifty gas heat. Priced at only- $12,950 plus closing costs and use your lot as down payment. Will duplicate on your lot or ours. WE HAVE SEVERAL TWO- AND THREE-BEDROOM HOMES AVAILABLE 'WITH A LOW DOWN PAYMENT DOWN PAYMENTS START AT APPROXIMATELY $250. 2-Bedroom Ranch U‘ kitchen and a 1?'x27' family room, gas HA heat, on a 40'x2l0' lot. Priced at $10,750 and can be arranged. Lincoln Junior High ' 2-bedroom bungalow with arate dinipg room, full bass and gas heat, I'/z-car g; Only $8,300. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 ■ 942 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY 312 RUSSELL Lovely IVz-story home ............ condition. Big living room with picture wIndoV, all carpeted. "KITCHEN WITH DINING space. 2 rooms and bath on first floor, extra large bedroom up, finished In knotty pine. Good closet space. Basement, gas heat,’ fenced yard. Priced at $9,950 — FHA. $310 down and $40 per month. LAKE FRONT Nice 4-room In very good condition. Living room, dining --------- nice size kitchen, 2 bedroof smlly room, large utility, t, I'/z-car ( ----- " -■ $15,500. Sot! Priced at HAMMOND LAKE large room, dining room, large kitchen; 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room . with fireplace, basement, carpeting and drapes. 2-car attached ga-' rage. Extra lage lot. Well landscaped with young orchard. Hammond Lake privileges. Priced, at $34,950 — shown by appointment. John K. ;]^win porch. 2-car garage. 813,900 contract. :0UNTY LIVING, yes we have tl 4-room home with lake grivriag New FA heat. Full walk-out bOL. mant. 5 acres of good soil. Tractor jrM soma equipment. All foi- OFF AUBURN, 4-rooiti refirt, t bed-rooma plus largai ullllly. Built In 195|. Entrance cloNt, Mk floora, carpeting In living room, new eolr-TV. Nice kitchen with itove ai refrlgaraior, l>/7 car garage. On 88,809, FHA terms. GILES REALTY CO. FE 5-4175 221 Baldwin Av MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KAMPSEN OPEN Sun. 2 to 5 2642 LITTLETELL SYLVAN MANOR costs buys this nici home, 1'/z ceramic heal, carport, paved ------ --------- Ij and mortgage ; three-bedroom c1?y’ _tTlFx PONiriAG rKESSr SA^ TIZZY ! ' , i'. j ' [JRDAY, MAY % fim Franklin Blvd. Araa CITY OF PONTIAC CHEAPEI^ THAN RENT $55.00, MONTH Excluding Taxes and insurance $47.00 DOWN NO OTHER COSTSI ( with special workers plan) HEW 3-BEDROOM HOME WI^Wi^DIVOR0EB|,^gVBN PROBLEMS ARE O.K. WITH US. I cupboards OPEN Sun. 2 to 5 3655 LORENA WATKINS HILLS Four bedrooms and 2'/S baths, center entrance hall, an open stairway, formal dining room, "U" shaped kitchen with bullt-lns, breakfast nook, basement, gas hot water heal, Iwnxar garage, paved street, sidewalks, community water ~ Offered at $24,950 with $2,500 down plus costs, or TRADE. Directions; Dixie Hwy. to Watkins Lake Rd. to Lorena. Your hostess, Rachel Levely. OPEN 150 MARLBOROUGH DR. OPEN SCENIC COUNTRY FARM HOME IVti ACRES While pIMence^and all — 4^^ stairs completely eluding all new kll and range. — bea - new bath — ft . basement. Walls replastered carpeting — drapes. One ot the most beautiful settings you've ever seon.J Huge barn — garage — chicken bouse, all excellent shape. I'rz acre corner parcel. Taxes only $84 year. 7 minutes ffom M.15 good credit. Bring your check book want It and we only have the one. Directions; North out Dixie le to Oakhlll Rd., turn right lo corner of oakhlll 8, Keir Rd. 10523 Oakhlll Rd. Watch for open signs. Mrs. Hillman, OR 3-2391, Mrs. Wooley, MA j-3120 your nostesses, representing Clark Real Estate._ CLMK' Pleasant kitchen, good eating — Completely tiled baseme Large fenced-in yard (nicely landscaped) 2 car brick garage, -lo grade and Jr. high set Only $17,900. WALKING DISTANCE TO I TIAC MOTORS 2 story home 3 bedroom bungalow In good ditlon, located in Huron Gardens. Eabng^space '“ bargain at $9,2 By Kate Osann “I’m putting some money aside for a rainy day. You never can tell when I’ll have to go to the moyies alone!’ I utility I CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUY, TO -TRADE, TO SELL OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 3101 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7888 Multiple Listing Service Income Property 50 2-FAMILY INCOME, 5 ROOMS UP, 4 rooms down, upper rented $75 per month, fireplace, '2-c4r -- rage, bargain for $9,500, te___ PAUL JONES REALTY, FE 4-8550 9-FAMILY APARTMENT BUILDING 1,400 square feet of living area, three bedrooms and two baths,* dramatic 20' living room with* three tharmopane picture windows,! floor to celling corner fireplace and carpeted too. Partlel basement, oil heat, finished two-car!* garage, two beaulllully landscaped. BIRMINGHAM. ATTRACTIVE 4-room home with Income apartment, private entrance. Near Torry grade school and shopping district'. $11,900. 052-1799 or Ml 7-0288. ion windows, colling tan, .... ______ Sion - priced at $28,450. Terms or TRADE. Directions: From “ Square Lake Rd. take Barrington trances. $14,900. FE 5 f; Lake Property 51 O'NEIL MODEL OPEN I to 6 2915 SHAWNEE LANE NEW CO-■ .. ' luxury ' LONIAL. _____ ... nice 2,700 square with 4 bedrooms, 2'/i room, large Iving n xllUn I range, laundry room on main finished basement, nge, lau Family water and a 2'/^-car garage with a large landscaped lot near lake. Drive out to Jayno Helt 2915 Shawnee Lane. We'll be py to talk trade. Accept Housetrailer nity and ludge for yourself, the privileges on Cass Lake, also extra apartment renting for $47.50 per mo. Owner moving lo fornla. Good terms.. J. J. JOLL, Realty FE 2-3480 __________482-0282 .... . _________________..X-ln1el0S- els, paneled den, 2 fireplaces, marble foyer, 4 baths, excellent fanijly' room and many o ' cellent beach foi $49,000. Terms c For appointment............. ...... ston, FE 5-3498, representing Clark Real Estate. ir features. E .mail children. BEAUTIFUL HOME SITES, OO'xlOO', In Sunny Beach. Walter's Lake. Two sandy beaches, $10.00 down. —*-----By owner. ha^ BRONSON LAKE, NORTH OF ... peer. Modern year-arpund home on. lake. Sacrifice. .Leo Briggs, 54 EDGELAKE COURT, PLEAS- , S''""®'’ '-apeer. •■"“ LAKE WOODS; over 1.70O WO 4-2381.____________________________________— I feet of living area plus CEDAR ISLAND LAKE. 4-ROOM dows to fhange as all windows are seeled glass. It has a beautiful sunken living room with curved bay window. The newly designed kitchen has, formica cupboards, bullf-ln range-oven and dishwasher, also a, spacious lazy susan pantry. Gorgeous family 'rec" room with fireplace and paneling. Basement tiled and painted. Gas heat and community water. All this on a large wooded lot and a short distance to the community beach. Drive out Elizabeth Ldke Road to Baycrest, right on Edgelake Drive. - - 8091 KENWICK - LIVE IN THE LAKE AREA, Brand new 3-bedroom rancher, dttached garage, large lot.- 'Designed arjd built by Beauty Rite Homes, Inc., lo give you the ultimate In living comfort. A homo you MUST SEE TOBaY. 4240 LEDGESTONE. You Our Lady of the Lakes Church and School from this Beauty-Rite sunken kitchen ; M-level. Glassed-In $1,800 C EM 3-3043._____________ Cass Lake Frontage Choice building site,' Improved. 100x150', $14,000. Vs down. Bal- JACK LOVELAND 9ino Cass Lake Rd. 482-1255_____ ■Ick ranch :nea 2'/j-car garage, sunken living room, ---- - . _ — features of this beautiful home. You are Invited to inspect Its fine workmanship and quality. Drive out Dixie Highway to Waterford Post Office, turn left on Ledgestone. Only $21,900 to duplicate. LET'S TALK TRADE. TRADING IS TERRIFIC JUST EAST OF JOSLYN, for the many fine families who want to stay where Dad can walk -to work and still keep the youngsters In Madison Jr. and Pontiac Northern High, Neat and clean, 2 bedrooms 1 first floor plus 2 big paneled Cooley Lake Front 3 bedrooms, step down living room, dandy fireplace, huge picture window and aluminum slide exit doors lo lake front. This home shows good taste throughout and located on a 50 X 150' lot in excellent' area. Price $14,950, $2,200 down, $100 per mo.. Includes ta;r uncluttered living, small '*■ cozy charm. Jewel ABSOLUTELY NO WHERE C you buy a 3-bedroom brick t level with large family room, fi; place, landscaped, paved drh 2-car attached girrage, Qpr-wal rear pafl04,and all the extra f« lures In fifls home at only $17,91 -Located .in a Jovely recldehtiz neighborhood of ------ *■----- the'l-75 Exoressu WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP. 2-bil room bungalow .In excellent ( ditlon. Semi-llnished upstairs LAKE SHERWOOD You don't have to be a millionaire to live like one In this custom-planned community, visit with us and Inspect our four beautiful models priced from $24,500 Sherwood. See tl I to Lake T?AY O'NETLrRexrttor 3520 PONT(AC»LK. RD. OPEN 1 Saturday evening after 4, call EM :3-794I, ' 0 8310 ’ and ludge for yourself, and ludge for yourself, tl.. y benefits if offers In fine llv-for the entire family, 25 mln-trom Pontiac. C. 0. BALES Realtor EM 3*4109 LAKE PROPERTY Large 75' x 250' lots -black-topped street — as low as $50 down — located North of Pontiac naar I.7S '/z-acre lots .with lake privileges. WRIGHT Eves after 7, LAKE FRONTS CEDAR ISLAND LAKE - Weve'l on high site, 3 large bedrooms, 2 complete baths, carpeted living room; paneled dining room; big family room;*Jil FA furnace. .Excellent value at $15,950. CEDAR ISLAND LAKE - On 70 ft. like front lot, 4 big bedrooms, large family room, spacious' car-peled living room with fireplace; well-planned kitchen with all built-ins; oil FA furnace. 521,000. LAKE LIVING LOTS. PRIVATE sand beach. Swim, boat-docks, fish. 15 minutes to Pontiac. $795. $10 down, $10 month. OR 3-1295. BLOCH BROS., FE 4-4509,______________ LAKE LIVING LOTS. PRI’MTE sand beach. Swim, boat-docks, fish. 15 minutes to Pontiac. $795. $10 down, $10 month. OR ----------------- BLOCH BROS.. FE 4-4509. LAKE PRIVILEGES, LAKE OAK-land. 4-bedroom brick ranch, 2rcar attached garage, breezeway and screened porch, I'/ti baths, Gray-- School. $14,950. OR 3-0272. Modern Lakefront Home One of the best locations, beach and large shaded area. 3714 ' ~ Dr., Waterford, $21,000. OR SUNDAY 2 to 5 place — full basement — 2Vi-CBr garage — hot water heat — remodeled kitchen — Might consider trade — Mrs. Snyder, sales lady, representing 2 3-1975. Estate, OXBOW LAKE Vacant 3-bedroom ranch sfyle, breezeway and garage, fireplace, aluminum and stone siding, private swimming pool, access to 4 lots on lake front across street. $14,750— $4,400 down or FHA 3 per cent. »AUL JONES REALTY FE 4-8550 RHODES OPEN SATURDAY 3-6 LAKE FRONT ON LOTUS LAKE. 7044 Terrell, $14,500. Terms. Williams Lake to Maceday to Terrell. 2419 GRANDVIEW, only $15,900. Terms. Hatchery to Grandview. On canal with 2 large lots. SEE THESE TODAY Our staff will be glad to assist you in buying selling and financing call TODAY FOR PARTICULARS ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE B-2304 258 W. Walton FE 5-4712 REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE"______ UNION LAKE FRONT - 3-BED-room, gas heat, terraced ground with large trees. 2-car garage, $24,900. 343-4954. UNION LAKE Cute, gbod sized 2-bedroom, large living room with fireplace, handy kitchen, full bath, utility room, ga' heat, near good beach, $7,950, $1, garage. $13,500, $1,350 down. EMBREE & GREGG Realty 1545 UNION LAKE ROAD Days EM 3-4393 Eve. EM 3-370 WILLIAMS LAKE PR* Cozy 2-bedroom, gas ti lot, nice neighborhood. ! down, balance to suit. C Williams Lake Canal lood subdivision beach, garden pace, aluminum siding, 2 aoms, full basement, garage. 00, $750 down. OR 3-742Q. Northern 10 ACRES NEAR KALKASKA AND South Boardman. $750, $25 down, $20 per nrxx ADAMS REALTY, 302 Auburn Avenue. F E 8-4095. ALCONA COUNTY, NORTH LAKE, Glennie, In heart ot Huron National Forest. Lake frontage. Easy terms. P. 0. Box 114, Clar'-‘— Mich. 425-2837; NEW RANCH RETIREMENT HOME starter. 24 x 30, fireplace, carport, near Hillman. EM 3-4879._ PONTIAC, MIN. LOTS, lOO'xlSO'. _____..ie. Bloch Bros., OR 3-1295. $1,995, 520 down. Suburban Property ^3 BEG, BORROW OR STEAL The time to see this very attractive Roman brick ranch on a nicely landscaped lot in Trail View Subdivision. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, eating space, ledgerock fireplace, lull basement. Thermopane windows, screened patio, closets galore, carpets, drapes, low taxes. Deal right at $21,900. Call 474-2177. JOHNSTONE & JOHNSTONE MULTI-LISTED HOMES subdivisiotl ot brick I gain, must be sold i «“ ■’50 - $1,500 down. ■ JONES REALTY FE 4-8550 lots • Acreaa^ 24 ACRES RIVER FRONTAGE eautiful setting on Shiawassee iver in Holly, Michigan. 3-bed-)om modern home. Spacious itchen. Part basement. Oil heaj. Lots - Acropgt 20 ACRES, 1,400' LAKE .FRONT-age, lake front cottage, ample trantdge. Commerce Township. cellent Investment at «45 per-- —FRANKS REALTY, 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD, EM 3-3208 O' "" 40 ACRES ROLLING LAND, 10 1 45 A. parcels. A.' Sanders, C 8-2013. Rep. H. Wilson, Broker. APPR(J)CIMATELY 2 - ACRE PARCEL WITH PRIVILEGES ON UPPER STRAITS LAKE, $3,000, 25 PER CENT DOWN. FRANKLIN GARDENS SUBDI VISION, GOOD CORNER LOT, $1,-500, $500 pOWN. LAKE OAKLAND PRIVILEGES. BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT, lOOx 120 FT. ONLY $1,800. TERMS. WATKINS LAKE PRIVILEGES. BEAUTIFUL CORNER BUILDING LOT, $3,000, $1,000 DOWN. $260 DOWN t, excellent site for tr CANAL LOTS OFF SYLVAN LAKE _______482-3028 or 402-3349.__ CLARKSTON AREA, 3 TO 5 ACRES BLOCH BROS., OR 3-1295. 10 ROLLING ACRES - le expressway, panoramic view. 0 EXCEPTIONALLY beautiful___ dotted with pines and oak, and backing state land. $247 per 422 M CLARKSTON HILLS ESTATES 1 to 2-ACRE SITES Well restricted — For the people who desire a ' ..... In protected su-----... .,.--- size 200x400'. Priced from $3,500 to 54,200. SELECT YOURS TODAYI CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE 5824 S. MAIN___________MA 5-5821 HIGHLAND - MILFORD AREA, 20 mln. to Pontiac, '/i-acre lots, $1,495 — $15 down, $15 a month — 4-4509. BLOCH BR»5. OR ! ROCHESTER AREA 2 acres with commercial possibility on highway, 8 room, I'/i story, 2Vz baths, full basement, small barn. $19,500 cash to mortgage. SCENIC TEN ACRES Beautiful building site, excellent neighborhood of new homes, Orion school district, bus at Adams Rd., $5,950 cash. 22 ACRES FOR 10 ACRES, $500 down an; ’“cLArTnCE RIDGEWAY' REALTOR 20 W. WALTON 338-408 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE VACANT LOTS AVAILABLE, $250 - West Side. HACKETT REAL-~ " 3-4703. 40 ACRES SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP Mostly tillable. Beautifully wooded High ai $4,400. 4900 uu OR 3- 40 Acres Rerrradeled 0-rm. home, 5 bedrmsi, full basement, barn 34x70, Implement sited 24x40. 35 miles north of Detroit. $31,500, tergis. 83 Acres-Milford Scenic rolling land, atkiut 70 acres tillable. Apple, pear and peach orchard. Pood 3-bed-rm. home, 2 baths, HW heat. Good barn with 24 stanchions, milk house and out bldgs. $400 per acre, terms. ANNETr INC. REALTORS Good - close In parcel with 1,730 ft. frontage on ' paved highway. Near expressway. Also 424 ft. on 56-ACRI FARM-ORTONVILLE AREA " t.'PANGUS, Rualftr 422 Mill St.____ NA 7-2115 ACRE* - HOUSE, BARR; Sondori. OA 8-2013. 400' PONTAGE -vale lake near orchard, I 4 GOOD PRI-y - wtll-ktpt - hone barni 3 bath! and 4' right on Oakhlll Rd. to c___________ Oakhlll 8. Kler Rd. Clark Real Estate. REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" Sale Business Property 57 AUTO DEALERSHIP GARAGE BLDG., GAS ST. Waterford Township on main highway. 4,950 sq. ft. Gas station has pumped as high as 25.000 gallons monthly. Land 244 x 275 about one and one half acres provides plenty of parking even for big trucks. A top notch value for only $40,000, terms. REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" 1050 W. Huron St.____FE 4-35 COMMERCIAL CORNER BALOWIN-Walton intersection. Building 40x 100', 40x40 basement. Off-street parking, air ------ DRAYTON PLAINS 40 ft. on Dixie by 550 ft. deep, zoned M-1 tight Industry, has large older 7-room house, could"' be converted to many uses, 40 ft. ad|oln-tng also available, open to offer. Ask for Russ Johnson, Comrrjercial office. KAMPSEN REALTY 071 W. Huron St. ' FE 4-0921 Jter 5 p.m._________OR 3-7114 Business Oppurlunities____ GAS STATION, LEASE $ d 559 Auburn, Pontiai .. smaller Income ______ _____ depreciation as well as appreciation, I have an excellent vehicle for you Jo accomplish this, valued at $120,000. Terms to suit your balance after exchanging. rwi, ■KfcK , GOING FRANCHISE In buiy Northed Michigan town. Doing volOmd. Well equipped. iFges pumps. Reel Bitele equipment end fixiurei ell '^^r only $25,000 down, plut Inventory of itock. REAL MONEY MAKER. Aek Petti-lohn'i Reeltore TODAY. At-lenie, Mlchlgen, Phone 785- DIXIE HIGHWAV I 412 ft. frontege aurant, 4 femlly querferi, plui I I, Terrific J^mi poialbllittea . ^ tell at only $35, '’•'p y*“« STATE FINANCE CO. 508 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 HOMP OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED ^elusive plan. Remodel "xwUhly payment. And extra cash “ need some. Call anyt'— “ Construction Co. FE ^CRE I With Wfoot Ironfage. No Pfolsal fee. B. O. Charles, E; fable Perm Loan Servlr-S. Telegraph. Fg 44I521. QUICK CASH LOANS UP TO $3,000 usually In two days tin We give you the full psh., There Is not a pet tor appraisal, survey oi You also now receive a l(fe Insurance policy. street. crfdlt w'lihr^kolVorgaK " VOSS AND BUCKNER, INC. building PONTIAC, PH. FE 4-4729 CASH Loans to $3,000 bij.nr;rifo‘E'x'fsi“cU"^^ ! “Pvenlent term Phone or Apply in Person Corp. 317 National Bldg. 18 W. Hiron _____Telephone PE 8*4022 Swnp*________ 63 BALDWIN AT INDIAN-*'■«<<« *5,888 equity for 35(ffl '*“• P'"»P®'-'y- Owner’ 482- STICK, GOOD 12' aluminum utility trailer 1954 CHEVY transportation, ”' " “'""7 frailer 4-8484^ ” or cash. I)2-GR ^sr^r-ho^'-^airE^ Barnas-Hargraves H rs WITH HUTCHES. 4 * PP'Y Boat- S«ll or _ 112 887 5892 or MA 5-4891. »P»9ad. 4 OR TRADE -.1942 Flying Scott boat, motor and trail-I'tor 4 p.m., 338-2785. WILL trade |■3,8(j6“EQUltY IN 2-bedroom home lor 10x58 house _ frailer. 48>1498 alter 5 p.m. {eleClethiliig ~~ ‘^"1^64 2 FORM.ALS, SIZES 9 AND 12. CALL . alter 4 p.m. 338-3254. 3 FORMALS. other ITEMST14^14'. ditlon. Reasonable. 473.0*50. 1957 RENAULT.‘SELL'FOR'PARTS or trad* lor ?? 482-2390. . J iMtoatiiim 64 'll" OMda 45 1 GRAND BUY includMi JN«ytllwi I »ltc« bwi-piK* fritn llvlno room luTio with n jBKrrw.^T,? ruo ontf • .boouHful i ploco (HnoHo with tormlc# top' • cho(rt. (Homs jjlM Salt Havpaiialil 0««di KITCHIN TABLI, KIRBy VACUUM ' - In oood condlljon -Coll PB Ig'liiiV VAeiiUiw;.LAVI Mdbli IIFiilS'- , ...... —Phllco brooM^MlI early Amorlcan or Daniah moMrn Mvlnfl room# and badroomi aboul Vi prica. Bunk badi. trundal badt, roll-a-wayt. wla bam and rockari at groat lavlnga. Plr-* tory sacondi, lota of and rofrl(|0ratorai BvwifuMMv «i UrfuB JOM BAROAIN HOU8B i-r TBRMS - BUY-»Bf ----------- Qpon ‘til 9 p.m. Dally, I 14W Baldwin at Walton . i' O. B. RBpRi6'iPAf6R, »l4i ’ i Norga Ralrigarator, t!$, Hot Polnl Built-In ovan and ranga brand ni aiM, Ralax-l-clior, tlo. It' Roi tlllar Hga ^t^w •». Call attar >A', tit. ^PltCi LIVING _____ _____ pdrtabla mrigarator, $3S. Blactric Iranar, tI4.M. Ralrlg-arator, t».50 and up. Odd ‘ tpringi, tS.OO. BUY, SELL, AND TRADE PEARSON'S FURNITURE 1 OF A KIND SALE ” All brand naw bargains. Sofa, t_ and chair (Brown), SM.S0. tola bed (gray), SM.W. HIda-a-way bad (Black Friaza), t1». Davenport and chair. (Turquoise), Itf.M. Davenport and chair (Gold Frieze) 190.50. Colonial love seat, (one brown . and one green), S79.30. Danish davenport and chair (Brown), 1139. French provincial davenport and chair, (Beige), tl59 .4-placa bedroom suite (Oray) U9.50. 4-placa bedroom suite (Wat nut), S89.S0. 4'-piece Danish bedroom (Walnut,) 1109. 4 > plect French provincial badroom(Cher- Lots < EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE BeautItuI name brand living r““-bedrooms, cocktail tables, bles and lamps. About V> price. .Easy terms. Little joe's bargain hc Open 'til 9 p.m. daily. Sat. 't 2-PIECB LIVING ROOM SUITE, 2 t^Vn SIZE taffeta sprIaCs Ivory, quilted, 4 pairs ot beige drapes long, 343-06I7. 5-PIECE WALNUT BEDROOM SET. FE 5-S923. ■ 3 ROOMS OF BRAND NEW FUR-nlture, living room, bedroom and dinatte — all (or S»5. $3.00 Weekly. Reason Furniture, 210 East 4-PIECE walnut BEDROf^M SEt vanity; bed; wringer washer. Oc- 4-Pi'ECE DUNCAN PHYFE DINING room suite. $40. FE 4-5384. t-Pieci BEb'RObM' SUiTfe: 6th-er turniture. 2S Hudson. FE 4-4135. 4^YEAR CRIBS,'$i4.95 A NO UP. Wet - proof crib matresses, $7.95. Pearson's Furniture, 210 B. Pike. 9Xl2 FOAM BACK STJOS, $14.95-UP. 12X15 nylon rugs, $59.50. 9x12 rug ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4C as THB FLOOR SHOP 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD PE 4-S214_______ 30-INCH ELECTRIC RANGE, VCIrY " -onditlon, $55. 33^ZM7. 30-INCH GAS RANGE 40-INCH tLECTRIC RAROI, SW. 40-INCH GAS range, GOOD CON- dltlon. 592 Raskob.______________ 1943~AUT6'MATIC TWIN NEEDLI zig zag sawing machine In wood cabinet. Does decorative sawing, hllssH hAm«. hiiHon hol«t, etC. !. «- APARTMENT-SIZE RANGE, $20; baby equipment, $20. FE 2-5124. AUTOMAfiC V^ASHER. BEST" OF- 3964. AUTOMATIC SINGER IN WALNUT cabinet. Saws on buttons, French knots, designs, etc., without attachments. Only nine payments , ot $4.42 remaining or cash price $59.58. Still under guarantee. Mlch-Igan Necchl-Elna. MAmriv«TTii;nFm^ Pw Salt Mliwlliiyyt 67 A0#»XTicniyA^ 178) Goodyear iM tMtor, SM) llg sat. , ___ ^ISsalj, offndrlganrtoiv^S^ rnitr*yy^-;rS?, ”"*^*'*’^* APAi THE rONilAC PRESS, SATyiilMV, MAV 2, ]Qlaca living room suite with t tables, 1 cocktail table and 1 7-place bedroom suits with d dresser chest, full size bed Innersprlng mattress end springs to match « lamps. 5-plece dinette set, 4 chronn Formica top table, 1 boo 9x13 rug Included. All f< WYMAN FURNITURE CO. ia chairs. 3127 W. HURON FB Sd813 ??T0M wall t6 WAlirN0"50IL at all, on carpets cTeansd with "lua Lustra. Rant electric sham-. aoar $1. McCandlsss Carpets. FURiirriirR"f--dAMi'' equiwnWf; sawing machine, zlg-_„ . _ signs, etc.. In walnut console cabinet. Taka over "*""»“*• »• *’ gar month tor ‘ in wairiui unisvia vau- ovar payments of $7 ir 9 months or $43 cash Ivarsal Co. FE 4-0905. 39.95, Reconditioned i CRUMP ELECTRIC 445 Auburn FE 4-3573 islB ra11o¥" AN6~RIFRtol»A-tor, good condition at $2.00 each per week. Used Stereo, good condition. $2.00 ‘"'Toodyear store 30 8. CASS__________FE 5 usioT" (partmant size gas r; lllghtly Damaged . SWEET'S RADIO 8. VANlW* tabTJ" APPLIANCE 334-5477 AND Blil¥a WYMAN'S' USED BARGAIN STORE AT OUR 18 W. PIKE STORE ONLY $29.95 ....... $29.95 _____ _____Iric washer ....... 34-Inch electric ranga ...... Guar, electric ratrigarator . EASY TERMS WRINOiiR WASHER, $i)0, REEL type riding nwwor, $50. FE 54371. _____Furnishings, 2135 Dixie Hwy. WkC WE sEWiCi" WHAT~WB ■ 30 W. Allay, .............. Antiqvti : 8-4521. VALUESI Adjustable bedframe ..... $ 5.95 Hollywood headboard ..... $ 5.95 Cotton mattress .......... $ 9.95 Inner spring mattress .. $19.95 4 drawer chest .......... $14.88 2-pleca living room suite .... $89.95 4-plece bedroom suite ... $89.95 MANY OTHER .BARGAINS. Open till 4 p.m. Mon^ FrI. till 9 p.m. BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE HWY. Droyton ^Ploins 673-9441 BARGAIN HOUSE MOVED TO 1440 BALDWIN AT WALTON BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beds complete, $49,50 and up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pika. COLONIAL furniture, LAR6E selection; everything for your home. Family Home Furnishings, -2135 Dixie Hwy~ ror. Telegraph. CiRCLE fluorescent LIGHTS, newest lights (or kitchens $12.95 value $4.95, factory marred. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Or- washer-dryer combination, Chinese rug, miscellaneous ifem«. 1626 Paunton, Birmingham. COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD AND' large appliances. Must sell. Like new condition. MA 4-3955. DUNCAN PHYFE DARK MAtft)G-any dining room table, 4 chairs. I hot pad; 9 3-2847. 6oUBLboVEN ELECTRIC STOVE with rotlsserle, also dinette table, 2 chairs and double sink. MAyfaIr ELECTRIC RANGE, EXCELLENT condition. 482-4423. ________ EASY SPIN-DRY WASHER, $40. Reel power mower, $10. EM 34990. ELECTRIC . STOV-. chalsb loCtnge, lawn swe cellent condition, like i 473-2239, evenings^___________ very good 0 after 3:30 GE WASHER AND DRYER, GOOD . working condition, $45. Ml 4-8899. frigi6aire imperTal ELEC-trlc stove. GE* 9 tt. refrigerator. Good condition. TE I MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, ' -------■ — brass. .......-....iques, Hlolly. lyE 7-5198. ANtlQUi SH<^ AND SAl¥ A8AV 4, 7, 8. II'a.m. to 10 p.m. St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 14340 Hubbard Rd., Livonia. Lunchson and snacks. Dally door prize. ' _parklng._AdmlSslon 81.00. _ ANTIQUE ROSMwOOD'sTUAR E grand piano, $375. Cane bottom rocker $35. Oak round (able with claw feet, $25, oak M with high lieadboard, $20. FE 8-9495 between A~NTIQUEL~CHiNA, OLASSWAfe E, 37 E. WMhIngton, Clarkstpn. CARNIVAL AtiD ART'OLASS. ._ Iroquois Rd. otf Cass-Ellzabeth Rd. Friday after 6:30 ' ‘ urday ah day. 482-2494. FAMILY HEIRLdONiS. UNIQUE Items and cut crystal. Fins and linen. Sunday 1-5 p.r week days by appointment, l Eleverly Ave., oft Baldwin _Pontlec. PE 8-2148,__ _ Hi FirtV & fadioB 66 Lp., FB 84IS72. fillings — plasllc, copper and cast ........- "1. Ptostle, ( a for , I galvai CBmTnT mIxIr, $38. OAI MdtOR 810, pressure ox»er, $10, Transoceanic radio, iW, odd dishes and ocear... --- POls^753-2015. ____ aEARlNCflAlF RelMilll electric typewriters, 20 i cant^ dIscoynL also ui^ and n tarlall files, tXleL^chalrsf mlnS.. graphs, offset graphs. Thermofax, tSO V. Forbes. 45W Dixie Hwy„ ■ ----ac Slate Bank er upright sweeper $15 each. Call evenings or Sunday. FE 5-2455. ^ &l¥f~FlBBZf»r 1cr"l63?r5, coffae urns, retrijgerating com- R PRICES _ YWrRTf _ -----,0 machines, desks, chairs, files, mimeographs, etc., new and used. Forbes Printing and Office Supply, 4500 Dixie Hwy., next to P^llac State Bank, (>R 39747 or Ml 7-2444. bdUBLE dARA6'B~METAL 6o6S, ------------ excellent condition. Call 343-3487. Drayton plYi^p MOVING TO NEW LOCATION 4112 WEST WALTON BLVD. DRAYTON PLAINS ForoDSW" coNCRiiTS plSors Use Liquid -— — mple Inexpt___. ..... Bolce Builders Su^ly FE_5-m FORMICA COUSTIR'TOPS .IP«rjiahi Ml|ctll«mim. ‘67 ‘““‘'UnO NBW —^------------ ilopj. FB S-7' lifilSniHiTO wiDDn._ Haii 68 1954. TBRRATKAC ip Case (roht-an -DOZBI, Kler/ is Camaras * i^lva 70 2,PRAaiCE PIANOS Raoondlttonad and delivered tlOO and $125 MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across from Tel-Tturon FE 2-0547 "UFRldHT TiANDs, OOOb CON dlllon. Orinnells downtown — FI AT CALUOHER'S nd new 88 note Spinet Plano, lut case now only 841“ SEE US BEFORE YOU BUYI GALLAGHER'S MUSIC CO. OPEN MON., AND PRI. 'TIL 9 P.t 18 B. HURON__ FB 495 CLOSING b¥f"lATX AtfVnjEW Janssen piano on the flo ~ — (;^ew Betlerly,>MI 4-8003. 3RNET," BXCELLfetit " Hon, OR 3 2104. Guitar—11*10110—Organ Private lessons, call today for lull lnf^rmaNgn.^^LLAOHBR'S MU- MAHOOARV BABiTGRANO ORTN-nell, lusl like new, FB 2-8215. NiwTokBlAm^^ H^03|^walnutr $795. Lew Baitterly, One Wurlitzer model or-gon number 4040. This organ has percussion, and slide, it's in a beautiful walnut finish, also has the built-in Spectra-tone virarito that adds sound and motion, with bench only $795. Wie-gand Music Co., 469 Elizabeth Lake Road; FE 2-4924. Piano tun-^ ing and organ repair. SALtS GUiTARS . Osi^i^spineT Go, Go, Go Daze Easy spinners, new ....... Admiral 10' refrigerator .. Phllco 10' refrigerator Maytag wringer OE automatic GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP WHITNEY SPINET, WACnOT, good condition. $300. FE 5-3874, Mulic Leiioiu 7T-A ACCORDION-GUITAR LESSONS Sales and Service. L, Pulaneckl. OR 3-S594. CLARltii?" 6 flat, 4 moving, 48M75L________ Hof^biNT EL6ctRTr~Bir7iR", Roper gas range, I year old, gas space heater with Ian. 473-7482. 1 spreads; 40" ........ ..........— — decorator lined drapes, white faille Chinese motif for 9 loot window; Boxch console radio; boy's Sax 5th Ave. Tweed suit, 14, and jackets; ROTC dress uniform. 447-3048. ______ KENMORE■ VcYCLa "AUTOMAT 1C 2-CYCLE t ------- „sd 10 times, also 20" rotary 2-cycle er, FE 3-7357 after 3:30. LADIES WEbDlNG AND InoAge- I *sacrT(ice! ruX-AIRE^i|A4^FURNACE. ARGE SIZ¥ PLANTEA4, WH6Ci-sala. New supply ot books, do" grooming supplies. Indoor plai food, ladles handbags, Vlt price. Jim's Salvage ...* ....‘-'— UPRIGHT PIANO, TUNED AND delivered, S85. 338-OIOt. j’slO ORGANS; LOWRYTceifN, Gulbransen. Sold at ridiculously low price to make room (or new merchandise. Grinnells downtown -*— 27 8. Saginaw, Pontiac. Travel Trajler* AIRO^LOW lIfet anrea. Frolic, Trolw< “The reason I asked whether you had any teen-age children is that I’d iike to use your phone!” Pe^untin|J^^f BOSTON BULL TiRR'lER PUPP F^402l__________ BbXlRVTYEAR old", WAfCHDOG, gfAGLES 829.00 German Shephards, SZS.OO lunl's Pet Shop FE 8-3112 OCiTi"fi" PUPS ANb Y60NG CAiRN' TERRieR PUPS, MAL'E, 4 ■ - , AKC, $100. 482-1727, PLrTl'665"dS66»ili6, DACHSHUND AKC 5 MONTHS OLD $25. FE 2-7945. 45 E. Cornell. dogs BOARDib-bOOS TRAlNkb. rkBi^A A»iiKK«a CC 4.944il BRgLUH FETfiR, dog for hunting. Tra Grub. 2 yrs. old. Hobbles A $m|8|)||bs 82 AAA COIN SHOP AND SUPPLIES. 'We buy, sell and irade. 0 days a week. 988 Baldwin A FE 4-0200. 2 RIOING^ORSES, 5 YEARS OLD, YE^OLD SORREL gelding, an excellent pullh prospect, OA 8-3111. "ARABrAliir 1 WELSH SfA BEAUTlFln^^AVl4ARI^ Will jump, gentle with children .......... 515 E. Avon’ Rd. — champion blood I _2-OTL_____________ GUINEA PIGS, TUrtTLES. I T TENS, HOUSE TRAINED, free to good home.jFE 8-1149. LABRADOR AND""POiNTE¥~ pies, pedigree on both sides. < HAIRED KITTENS, FR¥i SAX LESSONS -ltd Base Clarinet) F'siiwy IWI9UI eirnj Bftrl*SAX. QUftllty instructiM Including basic thaory. es A « Office Equipment Store Equipment FOUNTAIN, 11 STOOLS, 3 SINKS, (bobtail) sandwich table with re-(rlgeralor. Modern color bar. Cash register and accesiorles. Union Lake Drugs, SOSO Cooley Lake Rd., EM 3-4134. ^^ Sporting < salvage, prices _port at Hi|fcheiy._OR 4-06 to. __ LAVATOR lES" ~ Cb/yfFLETE “S24.! value $14.95, alio belhtubs, to eti, ihower etalls. Irregular) errific values. Michigan Fluorei MkATS ANb GR6CER1¥S LIMITED _____________ „ , every TV purchased, one 209 ece set of AAelmac dinnerware. Prlcei ***B. F. ^liRICH STORE in N. Parry FE 2-0121 TELEVISION — CONSOLE MODEL, solid mahogany cabinet. picture end tone (all --------- $450 new, will sell for $75. 3315 Lexington Dr„ Scott Lake. ____ USED RADIOS .......... ^ $ 3 95 up Used 3-speed record players $ 4.95 - Used 21" T.V............ $29.95 Walton TV, FE 2-2257. Open 9-9 For Saio MiicBlIanooui 67 1 WEEK ONLY GENUINE FORMICA ..S7c SQ. FT. URCH .............. . $12.95 IR .......... $5.95 I ' BIRCH PANELING PONTIAC PLYWOOD FE 2-2543 l-A ALUMINUM SIOINO, AWNINGS, STORM WINDOWS. 100% Solid VINYL SIDING ------ ---- through and Hit- .. stallad or materials only. JOE VALLELY CO. nsured Licensed References FE 5-9545 0 damage. I . 1-4423 H MOWERS, $447, 3 , ______________ „ - POWER mowers, $22.50-$24. S47 Orlando Street, FE 5-2984. ________ BEAUTIFUL PROM FORMAL., Exc. condition, turniture, antiques and clothing. Ml 7-1744. "X$' 2X4 BUILDItlG FKaMISS 15-FOOT CUSTOM BOWMAN BOA!. .40 h.p. Johnson electric motor; Mastercraft trailer, all for other I household Items, able, must sell before move. GOOD' KENMORE AUTOMATIC washer, $40; dryer, $30.- Phone 332-4247. 2} rNCTTjTM DANDY LAWN MOW- er, % HP motor. FE 5-8414. ____ 30-TNCH"SICKL^-BAR mowE r7 $25, $15, 24" boy's bike, $5, MA 6-1848. too AMP PORTABLE "WELDEli, battery charter, 11} amp plac- 1,000 GALLON 0 brands, saving up to 40 par ctnl Soap, sugar, coffae, flour, butter, caka mix, caraal, --------------yf” Cut up friars, 18c a lb. Dog food, 12 for 59c Froa Horns Delivery Call (or (rea'catatog. We reserve the rights to Hmll ____ quentity. Call 447-1577 moNaIch MbirLi" fVr'Tiol ' tun cart. 15-30 miles ---- EM 3 0871. . NECCHI DELUXE Slyi/lNG ........... chine, zig-zagger lor overcasting, decorative slllchei, etc. — Idvefy modern cabinet. Pay ott acco)int In 9 months at $4 par month or $54 cash balance. Universal Co. FE 4-0905.______ orNa)WENTalTro15'PoSciT and step railings, corners and posts. AVIS CABINETS 1570 C------ MOVED TO 40 CONGRESS ^T. next to Alton's scrap Iron yard DRAINAGE SUPPLIES - SUMPS Grease traps, steel culvert pipe Manhole rings — covers — grates All sizes round and square 4'*^to 30" BLAYLOCK COAL S, SUPPLY CO. CHOICE RICH, BLACK DIRT, yards tor $10 or 4 yards for I bellverad. FE 4958$. DRIVEWAY GRAVEL LOAD^b OR LANDSCAPING, TRUCKING, TOP PLASTIC ?1p¥s^ial, f6R the month ot May, buy — —' ----- Per 100' enll, 84", 1%'', 9.34, m'.', <1. healer, $47.95; 3-plece $59.95. Laundry trey, trim, $19.95, shower stalls with trim, 129.95; 2-bowl sink, $2.95; Lavs., $2.95; tubs, $10 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO.r 172 $. Saginaw, FE 5-2100. REEL TYPfe MOWER, 21 INCHES, ROTARYnyTowiR to' cIaftsSian OR 3-2815 SALE. Dsib" sw’liPfli rights, $7.50 up. Tanks, $14. Guaranteed. Barnes-Hsrgravas Hdwe. 742 W. Huron SHAMPOO BOWL FOR SALIT SLATE TOP, NEWLY Vi pool table, MA 5-2113. spfiNb'spiclALF 6n "A^^ teWl! PL Y"wobb" Dl S?R*I BUfORS paired. Cone's Rental. FE 8-6642. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Osjkland^ve. FE 4-4.595 THE SALVATtON aSmy RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your needs. I Clothing, Furniture, Appliances. USE GLIDDEN PaWtS FOR'TJE'C-orstlng your home, you will be glad you did. Warwick I.Suppiy Co., 2478 drcherd Lake Road. 482-2820. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS - ALL ' ‘a on display. Open dally p.m. and Sundays 10 a.m. s.m. Apache faciory home-dealer, BILL COLLER, I ___ - sett of Lapeer on M21. BRa¥d new WHITE STAR Slol, with bindings. 8175. 882-3109. c5mpetiti6n 66-karT; ___________OR 44)090. GOLF CLUBS, FIRONS, 2 V)60ftS, ' bag, Hettrick tent, Spruca-lodge, 10 X 12, Ml 6-9613. GUNS--BUYT.:SElX=filADE- ________ _ S. Telegrepti._ USED GOLF CLUBS FOR I Cell FE 5-6095.____________________ Sand-Gravsl-Dirt TO 3 YARDS BLACfC DIRT, D0-llvered, FE 4-0318. 2 YARfif LOADS OP FdAT. BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, GRAVEL, "" sand, builders supplies. FE 2- ... Ivan _Craycrafl. _ beautiful RICH, bCack "faSm pXkAKEET, BABY MALES, $4. 305 pirti, Rochester. OL 1-6372. p5o5LEir“PA"RAKreTs,~lSf rles, fish. Pet euppllas. Cran Bird Hatchery, 2489 ubum. 2-2200.________■ ffiblSTERED TEA-CUP CHIHiIa- ..JS puppl.-. -Fox Terrier stud se ind Toy E 2-1497. SPANIEL PUPPIES, IV and alert, exc. pr“ II hunting. Parents TOP COON DOG. FE 44347. oooLris, $50 and up, 6r GOOD HOME FOR __________ SATURDAY NIGHT at Bluebird Auction, 16853 DIxto Hwy. This weak we have furniture (or lust about every -- the house. Sale starts it Ballow, auctioneer AN PERKINS rartz Creak MiLis'nwis'T AUCTION SALE, ot Romeo, Ihei........ .......- toil Brewer Rd., corner Townsend ?Sii?TneWarm household antiques places, also 23 sheep, ewes due to _ lamb In 2 (', l^a I gravel. Mel's Trucking. PElitFECT BLACK £ PEAT HUMUS Fast .Loadi ig Daily Wellsboro, Walled Lake. See me Sunday or Monday at (he hoose^._ WANTED FILL SAND, RUBBLE. Square ‘ ' ........ ' 5-2800. pBti'Huifting Dogs 3-YEAR FEMM.E AKC C6lL|E. Needs country home. Make otter. PE 6'"'" 4 mas. old, reasonable. 4 : COLLIE PUPS $35 ' AKC BUFF COCKER PUPS, t BS.B AUCTION 5089 Dixie _Hwy. _ OR_ 3-2717 OVERSEAS auction Assets of Army Colonel—Transferred Frlgldalre refrigerator with freezer - like new gas stove, like new, TV, pictures, chairs and miscellaneous Items. 1958 Ford ranch wagon, very clean Inside , wopid make excellent dependable trans-porlatlon. This otlarlng Is nice, no lunk. Sale time 9 p.m. sharp, Saturday May 2, 1944. Terms-cash. Mike Soak Auctionaer. SATURDAY 7 P.M. Hall's Auction Sato, May 3, 7 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orlo Lewn fprnllure, lawn mowers, sol hide-away, round ( bedroom sulW, platform ------------- iBzy-boy, new, mattresses, paint, tools, refrigerators, chest ^ ^ Items. Consignments accepted dally Bob Dodson, Auctioneer. MY 3-1871, ' 3-4141. Plunti-Treei-ShrMbs 81A A-l TREES - SPRUCE, PINE, FIR, mugho, yews, and maples. Dig Your own. Bring tools and burlap. 2922 Sleeth, 3 miles west ot Commerce jyillage^'Dally. 484-0435._ blue ~ SH'PUCE, NORWAY" AND Scotch Pine, you dig. 4290 Fen--more. Elizabeth Lake Road to N. Avery. 482-4354. _ .1 S. UPRIGHTS, _________ __rge selection. 10 trees 115. You dig. Open dally. 12 miles north of, Pontiac. 'A mile north of -1-75 Intersection. Cedar Lane Evergreen Farm. 8970 Dixie Hwy. ■ HIGH WINDS TaBa " Has unusual perennials, Doronl-.cums the earliest blooming perennial Primroses. Leal head and Bibb lettuce planes, eerly cabbage and the earliest tomatoes, ready to plant. Also the newest annuals. 390 W. Buell Road, 5 mljes north of Rochester. BEAUTIFUL BLACK, 8395, PARADE saddle (or 8195. OL 4-2417. FAMILY cow; heifers. C"'-' _UL 2-5110. horsEtrailSSs f6r saIS;.....36 miles from Pontiac, OA 8-3017. MlLiY'S RIDING SCHOOL 13450 Neal Road, Davllburg, 434-494) EQUITATION, JUMPING, DRESSAGE REGISTERED HaCf” AttAB~" _0L 1-0475. ROAN~._________ enced rider. registered TENNESSlii WALK-Ing horse, 2 saddles, 3 bridles, ■nH fkck cupboard. MA 5-7731. SEVERAL HORSkS FOft|Xl¥. Circle T Ranch. Pasture now '--- Boarding stalls avallablt. ----- KIHIng area. FB 8-3913. lhy^ln>Fiad 84 1,000 BUSHEL OF OATS, 150 BALES ot second cutting alfalfa, ir. Poaltry 3421 Gregory Road. Farn^Product I "APPLES AND SWEET CIDER' Crisp and juicy - from our c storages. Bargains In utility grades from 81.50 bu. Oakland Orcnar— 2205 E. Commarca Rbad, 1 it east of Milford. 8 to 8 dally. CERTIFIED COBBLERS AND FON-!^^»H,^eM„,Polafoes. Charles 7-HOR$EPOWER tRACTOR, TILL- ar and cultivate- ---- Read, Clarkston. '*« ”1 TRACTOR AND Brt- t ' ' Country Cousin. MY 2-4t11. > Alban SALE OR TRADE FOR HOME, 1941 2-badroom' to* x 15' Marlefte, FE 5-0253. __________________ SALE OR TRADE FOR HOME, " 1941 2-Bed---"" - •" FE 5XB53. TiresM14.__________ I^CLBS, 258 OSMUN. NO Boats — Accotsoriot 14-FOOT MASTERCRAFT, 3 Johnson motor a'<>r 136 Washington. ,FOOT CLYDE. 25 JOHNSON, trailer, $350, 682-^03.__- 4 - Fobf OLASPAR, 40-HORSE Johnson, $750. OR----------- 15 FOOT Cutter, fibergla¥ cTibrokee, 14-FOOT ____________ ___________ power Mercury, Hosetow traitor. $1,095. Will trade. 4824017. ' ®oat, 1943 75 Johnson, ‘mbni. Ca Iraller, $1450. 1018 I board. Bast otter. Ml 7-1744 30 HORSEPOWER EVINRUDE MO-"'r. 8295. FE 8-4484. X 3-FOOT STEEL- BOAT DOCK 1th hoist, standard steel, u ' ' lason, $250, 482-4938. Cess-Ellzebeth Road 1958 CENTURY RESORTER, 1 v-8, olily 130 hours total tim Parted condition, with traitor. $: 000. Can be seen at Oakland M rine Exchange. 391 S. Saginaw : 1943 14 FOOT MlRRCf-CRApT RUN- 1944 14' ALUMINUM, 10-H( BOATS-MOTORS MERCURY-SCOTT MoCULLOUGH Traitors — Marine Acceeaorlei CRUISEDUT BOAT SALE 13 E. Weton 9 to 9 FB S-4402 ATTENTION BOAT OWNERS Manufacturers of custom c _ .Standard boat windshields — 24 hour service on all reptocement windshield. Complete stock of f|-berglas materials for boat covar-Ing, repairs and car bodies. Soltis Plastics Co. EM 3-4459 Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center MERCURYS - 3.9 to 100 lone STAR BOATS GLASTRON and MFC Bi cyl. available. Many acceisorles. W. Highland Road, turn right on Hickory - Ridge Road, to Damodo Road, turn toft and follow signs -------------------Tiptico Lako. Phone Main 9-2179. HORSE OUTBOARD Ik. Call 752-2015.__________ EARLY BIRD SPECIALS Michigan Turbocraft Sales Complete line of naw and usa< tot boats by Turbocraft. Sylvai Pontoon boats. SpIco-SkI Inodar and outboard boats, m; ' In California. Evinruda, Renken outboards and i 2527''i>IXIE HWY. OR 4-0308 Johnson sales - si siRViCi'' Traltort Everting t..______ OWENS MARINE SUPPLY 394 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 2e020 Kessler's Sea Ray Boats — Johnson Motore Carver Boats — Mirro Aluminum COMPLETE SfeRVfCE AND>ARTS W« welcome trades Open Mon. and Fri. eves. 10 N. Washington ' Oxford ’ pA 8-1400 OVER 60 BOATS ON DISPLAY Dorsatts — Thompsons — Johm son Boats — Eliminators — Duos Sail Boards — Pontoons and Co-"“demonstration rides ALUMIDOCK AtT aluminum docks — easily assembled — Model now on display. OPEN MON., TO FRI., 9-9; SAT., 9-4) SUN., ig-4 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. J)30 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains AAARINA ON LOON LAKE OR 44)411 97 best offer. 338-W98. ' 3-2301 PontiK, 4stol PINTER'S MARINE AND JOHNSON DIALER Brings You STARCRAFT BOATS Crulsert' Rvnebouti, Cenoas, Plih-Tig boats and a Sallboatl :ayotj;o^toons ARE hbrei KAYOT pontoons; 1370 N. dpdyl* 9 to I PONTOON PAYiSTTi PONTOO MA 5-1927. *_______ QUAtitV INSURANCE 6hl BOATS • and motors. Includm FREE traitor covtrMW. aBRUMMBTT AOiNCY, “"IA1355 tOH » FOR ~CLiAN CARS " or trucks. Economy Cars, S335 DIxIo. “TOP DOLLArpAID^' FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS Cancolod or Rofus^ n provkNi fint-IlM opv«r«j -• 1 vMrIy pr CALL NOW FE 4-3535 Frank A. Andarspn Apancy Foroign Cara IMS DKW >065I( SEDAN A German iporti car, and yi pal 3S MP6 taol Buckal laats. r UemI Can______ im CHiVV 4-DOOR, BLACK, ... ......... *I155RW65b tlatloA wapon, xylinpar, standard iransmlsilon, radio, and haatar, wiiltawail liras, pood runnlhp — dition. Bast oltartwal sm Station Wagon Chavy 1»S» Parkwood, clean, nihlwr. «ll nnu,»r. many S_______ S. ^ *>301. _Orlplnal c Homer Right GLENN'S - WANfib:1iii»T963 CARS Ellsworth AUTO SALES 0577 Dixie Hwy_______MA 5-1400 Wanted: Clean Yvette 1955, 1956 or 1957 FE 2-8iei, Ext. 236 WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4.6547_____ Junk Cara-Trocks 101-A 1 TO 5 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS wanted. Top dollar. OR 3-9659. 1 TO 10 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS wanted. ALWAYS BUYING juNK CARS - FREE TOW TOP « CALL FE 5dl62 SAM ALLEN & SON INC. IlMd Auto-Truck Parts 102 1955 FORD, automatic TRANS-mlssion, S30; 1955 Ford motor, S60. 334-6492 after 6 p.m._. BUICK AM-FM 1964 RADIO, $75, complete tuck i upholsterlnp fo-hood. 33S-4953. New and Usod Trucks 103 1953 GMC DUMP TRUCK, A-1 CON-dltlon. 651 Couphlan Dr. after 3 — • lay Satur-*— 1955 FORD PICKUP, RUNS GOOD, pood body, tires, FE,4-5115. 1999 CHEVY SEDAN DELtViRV, np rust, nice shape, reas. EM 3-0091. I CHEVY TANDEM DUMP, — —-• —-■-Tssis. No reau . MY 3-6157. 1961 CHEVY 54-TON STAKE RACK pickup, 2 new tires. 1-owner. Good condition. 11,150. 4451 Cllntonvllle Rd. OR >9784. 1962 CHEVY "60" SERIES, TRAC-tor, ve enpine, >speed transmission, 2-speed axle and full air brakes. ICC equipped. 1955 DODGE WALK-IN ISMALLl PICKUP, 1958 BUICK FORD %-TON PICK-UP. GOOD itor. and tires S145. FE 2-4267. FORD 54 TON, 1956 bOOGE pickup tar -- — FE 8-1215. 1957 FORD PICKUP, 54 TON, EX-cellant condition. Only $875. -------—-)uth-Rimbl“ ■— Chrysler-_ BILL SPENCE Clarkston 6673 Dixie MA 5-r 1959 FORD F-700 TRACTOR, 312 . enpine, >speed, 2-speed, full air brakes, heater, extra sharp, and Is in top mechanical condition I JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711.__________ 1959 FORD PICKUP, $645. OPDYKE Hardware. FE 8-6686. 1960 FORD F-600 DUMP, I yard box, 312 V-8 enpine, 2-speed, heater, 825x20 tire TO Better Used Trucks GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-9485 JEEP "Your Authorized Dealer" ■ OLIVER BUICK and JEEP. 210 Orchard Lake PE 2-9101 Sweepstakes Sale 500 FREE PRIZES Save Up to $400 ECONOLINE VANS PICKUPS ALSO big savings on all Used Trucks! 1959 FORD Vj Ton $795 1960 FORD Vi ton $895. STAKES and CAB CHASSIS 1957 C-S50 F 1959 FORD F-600 174"WB « 1962 FORD F-600 174"WB. cab and Chassic $1,695 1962 FORD F-600 14 ft. stage $2195 TRaCTORS 1949 F-800 FORD Air. $295 1957 FORD F-eOO air. $1195. John McAuliffe FORO 030 Oakland Aval FE 5-4101 1963 FOfco F-100 PICKUP V , PONTIAC-BUICK-CHEVROLET Oxford OA 8 2528 FORD 0 COUPE.. Sports Cors Galore! 25 CARS GO TO MEET QUOTA AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR: Jaguar Triumph MG Fiat Sunbeam Morgan Austin-Healey ALSO 25 OTHER USED SPORTS CARS. Complete parts end tervice or no lair deal ever relused. SUPERIOR RAMBLER SM Oakland Aye. PE $-9421 LIKE new, lyei ukw, auio., union lOOO-S' excellent $695. 1960 Austln-Heely, Immaculate, 1957 Mercury convertible $295. Pontiac Sixirts Car Inc., 467 Auburn Ave. 335-1511 958 ''VOLKSWAGEN, SUN ' ROOF, radio, heater, new brakes, clean. "'IMV VOLKSWAGEN 'W, BLACK SEDAN, A-1 CON- VW 1961 BLUE SUNROOF, IMMAC-ulate conditidn, radio. Special price $1,095 with $95 down. Stock No. AUTOBAHN MOTORS, INC. , Authorized \ ■A Mile North of 15 S. Telegraph . ______ Special price, SI,49S r $95 down. Stock No. 1427-A. cent unconditional war- AufoBAHN MOTORS, INC. 2491._ 1961 CHEVROLET, BLACK AND ______________ rust, Biscayne door, 6-cyllnder, radio, h e a I e whitewall tires. 50>4U3. 132T I Sellrldge, Clawson. CORi IVAIR 4-SPEEO TRANS- LUCKY AUTO SALES 's Discount Lot" SON, Rochester FORO Dealer, OL MONZA 2 6 O 0 R -,,eed transmission, re_ black Interior, only $1295. BILL SPENCE Chrysler-Plymouth-Hambler-Jeep - ---- 6673 or "* IMI CORVAIR 700, 4-OOOR, POW- i1 Rambler Convertible .. Chevy, impale Hardtop '59 Pontiac Bonneville ONE OWNER NEW CAR TRADES SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave._______FE 3-9421 i96raHflVROLlT MONZA 2-DOOR, radio, heater, 4-speed transmission. VJLLAGE RAMBLER 6 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM 1961 Chevy Parkwood Wagon 4-door, V8 engine, automatic ti mission, power steering and br BOB BORST LIncoln-Mercury 520 S. Woodward Ave BIRMINGHAM ’only”m7? KEEGO %Nt”aC sales 1962 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR, C4M- plete. $1,800. 67>7682. steering, radio, heater, windshield ,.Z CHEVY BEL AIR, V-8, 4-POOR, automatic, radio, heater, 17,300 actual mites $1,750 FE ■* 1962 CHEVY II NOVA CONVERTI-ble. ExcelPent condition. Reasdn- able. 68>1033.____________■ 1962' CHEVY BEL AIR 4-DOOR, N«w ami UmmI Cara 1( ' 1963 Chevy Monza reel beauty I $1895 Patterson Chr) rysler -II N. M n Sireel IQpi rochbstITr 1963“’7161, $95. SAVE AUTO. 1957 FORD FE >3278.______________________ 1957 FORD 2-DOOR HARDTOP, V-8 _ _______ stick, overdrive. Sharp! EM 3-4688.______________ 957 FORD CONVERTIBLE, SPE- ___ T-Bird engine, _________ .. brakes and steering, padded d and visors, signal-seeking rqi heater, vinyl top, looks like n $550. 626-2344 after 5 dnd wc I FORD 4-500R SEDAN, ALL Ihon. 33>3365. ... .____ 4-DOOR CUSTOM 300 with V8 engine, standard transmission, heater and Is extra, good ^ansportatlon, only $495. Jerome Ferguson, Rochester FORD Deal- 1959 FORD Galaxle Hardtop KING AUTO SALES 9. Huron at Elizabeth Laki FE 84088 1959 Ford Falrlane 4-Door v-8 engine, black and white h, radio heatei-, Cruise O-6‘ !r steering, and only $695. BEATTIE 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT Home of SERVICE alter the OR-3-1291 1959 FORD V-8 AUTOMATIC " or, real clean car with excelh bber. Priced to sell. PEOPLES AUTO SALES 68 OAKLAND 1959 FORD 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, STICK SHIFT. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of $4.95 | . Parks at Harold I GALAXIE CONVERT- 1963 CORVAIR MONZA 2-DOOR, less than 10X100 mi., $1800. Call Milford, 684-2791, __________________ brakes. 1963 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR IMPALA sports coupe, V-8, pewergllde, pow-. er brakes, steering, extras, low jmMeage. Private. Ml 4-3468.___ l"963 CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE, 1M Thornpsonw ____________ : 1963 CHEVY IMPALA ‘ISS",, automatic transmission, r dio, heater, pdwer. This Is real $2395 SPARTAN DODGE, INC. hardtop, auto, power steering, low nileage,_$^50^ 2-5483. mission........... and only 34,000 miies, sonu w finish. Only $795. Jerome Fergu Rochester FORD Dealer, 1959 FORD station wagon, automatic V-B, I running condition, full price oi $295 or ■ $3.45 a week. Call 6 Brown, Dealer, Ft 8-4036. SURPLUS MOTORS _________L^JL^ Saginaw $595 SPARTAN DODGE, INC. 1959 FORD 4-DOOR RANCH ___________ on. With' 6-cyl. engine,, automatic transmission, radio, heater, Fu -tone blue and white finish, extra cleani Priced-at only $795 Jerome Lake Road at M59. . 3300 Elizabeth 1958 CHEVROLET 2-OOOR, V-J tomatic, $595 full price will money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES '.'Pontiac's Discount Lot" > 193 S, Saginaw______ FE 4-2214 4-DOOR, 1963 Monza Coupe Absolutely Spotjess . Tinted glass, automatic, bucket seats, I full year factory warranty, transistor radio, back-up fignts,— $1,750. 651-6648 after 6 D.hr. 883 Ironstone, Jloch 1960 T-Bird 2-Doori Hardtop with automatic transmission, r< heater, fuJI power. One owner • is sharpi $1,595. New and Used Cara 106 ±r', 1960 Ford Falrlane 500 with 6 cylinder engine, w BEATTIE AT THE STOPLIGHT -Home of SERVICE after the S OR 3-1291 I960 FORD FAIRLANE V 1960 FORD 2-DOOR $595 SPARTAN DODGE, INC. 211 S. SAGINAW FORD SUNLINER CONVERTI-ble, blue with white top, full power, excellent condition. Call 363- LIQUIDATION LOT NO MONEY DOWN-MAKE PAYMENTS! FE 8-9661 I960 FALCON STATION WAGON, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHIT E W A L L TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of $7.95 per week. See Mr. Parks at Harold Turner Ford. 1960 FALCON 4-DOOR station wagon, fully equipped Including automatic transmission, tap condition. Specially priced al $695 SPARTAN DODGE, INC. 1 S. SAGINAW 160 FALCON, EXCELLENT ditlon, best otter, 682-1355._ 1961 FALCON FUTU'RA'SEDAN, 2-■■■■' with stick shift, 6-cylinder N McAULIFFE FORD 1 FALCON 4^DOpR, 6-CYLINDER _ . ____ SHIFT, WHITEWALL TIRES, V-8 ENGINE. ABSOLUTE-. LY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments ___ week. See Mr. Parks Harold Turner Ford, Ml 4-7500. 1961 THUNDERBIRD, LIGMT BLUE, 1961 Ford Fairlane 500 1962 FORO GALAXIE 500, 4-DOOR hardtop, automatic, brakes and steering, fully equipped. 674-1372. 1962 Falcon Wagon None nicer. Automatic, radio, healer, tint glass, luggage rack, excellent c Ironstone, Rochester. 1962Ford d whitewells. Only $1,695. BEATTIE 'Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT -Home of SERVICE after the Sale— OR 3-1291 1962 Ford Galaxie Convertible $J997 Patterson 1962 FORD CONVERTIBLE, EX"-ceptlonal condition, V-8 motor, standard, THEHOMEOF' Top Value AND GOODWILL BOB BORST USED CARS WILSON-' New and Urad Cora 106 1962 FORD FAIRLANE "« 4Kloor. Radio, heater, eu.—. trensmiiiion. A reel buy at 81, $9$ down, VILLAGE RAlvlBLER 666 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM __________^Ml 6-3900_____ 1963 Fp'RO 'CUS'tpM SiiO >DOOS, With VB engine, automatic trene-mlielon, radio, healer, power eteer-Ing and brakei, whitewalle, 81 F(!lRD*Deeler^&L Vw"'!. 1962 FORP f7uKLANE SOO 2-DOOR VERY SHARP, I verllble, one owi ditlon. See at 1963 FOR~D CdNVfiRfj'BLE, GAL. transmls«lon, radio, heeler, five brand new whitewalls, gundy - finish, extra iharp. OME FERGUSON, Roc FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. 964 FOlbr FAIRLANE 2-D6SR hardtop with big engine, low mlle-— Burgundy in colorl Only $2,595. N MCAULIFFE FORD 1964 T-BIRD LANDAU. WHITE II power. $3,550, EM >3182. I960 GMC SUBURBAN gar wagon, private 1 o cellent condllfM. 474-5657. 4-WH1SL DRIVg jlE^C; COM- 1951 JEEP, >WHEEL DRIVE, NEW 12-volt lyslem, new lop. No rust. $800. OR 3-5553. 1956 LINCOLN PREMIER 2-DOOR Marvel Motors 1953 MERCURY 4-DOOR STt^TlClN wagon with full power, mot‘“ bulTt, full price, $395. $5 $16.46 per month. Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Ave. FE >4079 1957 MERCURTHRaRDTOP, $95, Pontiac Auto Brokers, FE 4-9100, 1959 MERCURY COLONIAL 1960 MERCURY MONTEREY - hardtop, equipped with a... Ic transmission, power steering brakes, radio, h.......—' Vnd\,rrn,;: SPRING SALE PRICE onl BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymoufh 912 S. Woodward 1962 Mercury Monterey Custom Convertible with automatic transmission, radio, heater,, wf “ Interior, BOB BORST. 962 ' MERCURY MONTEREY door hardtop with beautiful gray finish, full power and is ready to go! Only $1,945. JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD 1959 Olds Super "88" Hardtop 4-door with automatic transmisslo brakes, sharp om-ownerl $l,S'5. BOB BORST model Chevrolets in stock. Easy terms. Bank rales. Stop by or call PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used cor offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty. 963 Buick convert 1962 Buick 4-door . $2095 _______________ $1895 962 Buick Special Convertible $1695 961 Buick wagon, 9 p : 11^! 961 Buick 4-dtar si 961 Buick-Special ___ 960 Buick HARDTOP .. 960 Buick 4-dix)r sedan . PONTlAg-CADlLLAC ) N. Woodward 4- Birmingham, Michigan FISCHER BUICK', 1963 OLDS "88" HOLlpAY c«upa. Thil car li tull> equIpiM Ok* taolia end li • beau SAVE $1200 SPARTAN DODGE, INC. an 8. SAOiNAW jjeev^^ly trailer hitch. V^i' A'UtfiSaiTO, ....... motor, battery, muffler, >cyllnder, standard shift, 1“” Jbl^outh 4-door. Cell 33>4213. 9» PLYMplIIiH ''VS "FuRV" door hardtop equipped with a axtraa. A iporiy ................ - white tap and whitewall tlree. Very neat 'red and " ‘ sts. iged to suit your budgiet. bur SPRING SaLe price only 959 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON, V8 automatic, $195 full price. N' mon.ey down, no credit problemi Cooper Motors 1961 Valiant "200" 4-Door Sedan w car trade-in I Own- $1145 Patterson v-8" : PLYMOUTH "BELVIDERE trensmisslon, power steering, or brakes, radio, heater, whltoy».. tires and other extras. Original factory finish Is an attractive Rosewood capped with a white top. Very neat harmonizing Interior tailored In nylon with vinyl trim and side panels. A nicely cared for oneown-«r car lhat Is guaranteed In writing tar a lull year. Easy terms arranged to suit your budget. Our low SPRING SALE PRICE only $1,395. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymooth 912 S. Woodward II 7-3214 1955 PONTIAC, 4-DOOR, AUtO-mellc, runs, $150. FE >3298. 1955 PONTIAC HARDTOP, GOOD condition. SI25. 682-6882. 1955 PONTIAC 2-DOOR, V-8, AUTO-matlc, new tires, good condition, EM 3-3165.________________________ 1955 PONTIAC, GOOD CONDITION. Good gas mileage. Good transpor- 1956 P0I4tTacT’'HYDRAMATIC. 141 Baldwin. ■ '____________ 1957 PONTIAC, ALL POWER, $250. FE 5-7601. wWN'TIAC'cb'NV'ERTIBLE. $450. Atl'h S. Saginaw. __________ I9'58 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. 1960 BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR HARD-top, power steering r"< 23,000 miles. FE 5-7025. r»v PONTIAC 4-DOOR, STANDARD shift. One owner. $995 ■"'* with no money down. ^ LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontiac's Discount LpF' ,ou PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, WHITE, FULL POWER, DUAL carburetors,, EX- niiKIMIMn DOIUATC CeLlENT RUNNING. PRIVATE OWNER. 11,500. 682-0467.________ 160 VENTURA SPORT COUPE, full power, .Hydramellc, new whlfe-....II* Av,-niion» condition. 1-own-$1,395. 67>8322. 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA 9-PASS-enger station wagon. Power steering and brakes. HydrematH, redlo, heater, whitewalls. Other extras. Original owner. Low mileage. Best offer. CaM_335-5263^ USED ( See SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK Rochester, Mich. OL 1-8133 DEAL WIJH Houghten & Son Delivered ,\eW 1964 PLYMOUTH-VALIANT $1754 Heater-defroster, _ signals, front cigar lighter, 101 hori..---------- . cylinder engine, front seat belts. Seeing Is believing OAKLAND COME VISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S , - ' Used Gof Strip 1959 PbiNTIAC 4-door> nice 1961 PONTIAC 4-door sedan ... 1962 RAMBLER American 2-dr. $1095 1963 PONTIAC 2-door, auto. .. $2225 1962 CHEVY Bel Air 2-door . . $1355 1962 CHEVY Impale hardtop $1765 1962 RAMBLER Classic .... $1027 1958 FORD i-Ooor hardtop ... $ 344 •— PONTIAC >door sedan ., $ 795 FbRD Falcon -Wagon ... $1195 1959 CHEVY Convertible .... $ 495 1963 Catalina Convertible . $2795 PONTIAC Bonneville ... $1193 Tempest Convertible .. $1959 #ONTIAC-Catalina $1175 ....IrAMB^LER Clasj|lc ... $695 1963 BUICK Special 2-door. ... $1695 1957 DODGE Hardtop ........ $ 295 ,—------------------„„ 1957 DODGE 4-door ^uss JOHNSON PontiaC'Rambler Dealer M24 at fhe stoplight, Laka Orion MY 3*6266 !te «M UM4 (m 116 1961 tISMPBSt WAOON,„.MU5T Mil. Ctajjh, 6conomleel. Si, taht con 1988 Buick hardtop ........... >1934 Chevies, (I wagon) ea. 4 Plymoulhi, '54 end >7, each 8143 1988 Dodge, (rough) ... ..... 1953 and 19S4 Porde, each .. -CONOM\ ------- 2335 Olkla Hwy. - del at M95. No money down. LUCKY AUTO SALES 193 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 l9«"V(firiTXr'bb^tiviRfiB red with wihita top. Beit oiler over {1,480. OR 3-3m _ iy|2 jlMp'ist' LeMAirs"^N V^ RT; I, excellint condition. $1,72 1942 CATALINA , COitVBRTIBLE, leogo, rool ehorp, all power, tlc.Ve >2891. 30R WITH aU- BILL SPENCE Chryaler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep. Clerkslon U73 Dixie MA 5-S841 Tali PONTIAC CAfALINA~8'PORt FE 2-7509. 1 lMT"Rib"BbNNlvirLl“6W^ Ible. Power ilaerlng, power brakes. mlnum wheels. Electric Crake Motor Soles. OR >4470. -or 3-9943. 942~bEL'UXi TEMPEST S?6R't coupe, A-1 shepe, auto. $1,295 1957 4^taor Chevy wagon, 4-cyl. , $425. Cell altar 8, 338-6243. I9« PONTIAC CATALINA SPORTS steering, whitewalls, tinted glass. $2,380. 3943 Olmsiead, Drayton. __ 1943 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBlC buckel^^eals.^^ctmso^,^ all^^^pOwer i?4r'BONNiSi^T^ top, ouiometlc, power brakes and steering, many extras, excellent condition, exceptionally clean. 1963 GRAND PRIX, , lion. FE >3742. 1943 BbSlitiVILLE CONVERtlBLe, red with white top, all power, many extras. Like new condition. Call after 4, OR >4944. 1?43' TEMPEST >DOOR, >SPEED, 4-cyllnder, $1,500. OR 3-0770. 1943 PONTIACfiMPEST LeMANS convertible V-S, stick, A-1. $2,295. UL 2-2342. 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR, 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOOR hardtop, extra sharp, aquamarine fully equipped, only 8,000 miles. By owner, financing can be ar-' 626-9976. 1963 TEMPEST LeMANS. SHARP, t cylinder. Aqua executive's. MA "OK" USED CARS 1963 CHEVY 4-door Biscayne >cyl-Inder engine, powergllde. $1,850. 1963 OLDS Holiday Coupe, green mist finishi $2,695. Haskins Chevy-Olds On M13 at US-10, Clarkston MUST SELL 50 USED CARS NOW! Regardless cf profit or loss. No fair offer refused. Anything of value in trade. Choose from 100 used cars, all with easy financing osid immediate delivery. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave. FE >9421 -SPECIAL- ■ I960 PONTIAC Catalina Convertible Has radio and heater, hydramatic transmission, power brakes and power steering, whitewall tires. A $1495 PONTIAC .RETAIL STORE ibw w4 iim4 can tee NBW, MUST BB I APhrtCIATBD, . 1E60------- KEKO PONTIAC SALES .. jgnntvMU blacky ddublf pow i»a^''' 1964 Gfb C 1959 Rambler Super 4-Door sMrat X w BEATTIE VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 40 DELUXE,,^ AUTO-matlc, private, bargain S400, call .......... -ja^e, '•*” «*• RAMBLER, 1943 CLASSIC 880, 11,-000 mllest Original owner, exc. condition. FB 2-2474 mornings. 1942 RAMBLER CLAS$rf~>bi55R Radio, heater. One owner BIrmIng- VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM Ml >3900 T940 RAMBLER'STATION WAOON. transmission. 15 down, 24 months VILLAGE RAMBLER 1. DON'S, P TO $5 A MILE YOUR SAVINGS BY DRIVING TO "THE BIO LOT" STARK HICKEY FORD 14 Mila Rd. E. of Woodward "Check With the Rest-Then Get One of the Best Deals Available at ROSE RAMBLER! Big fttock of now '64 Rambleri Used Cl ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce, Union Lak EM 3-4155 Rambler's the Carl Superior's the Place! FOR OUR BEST DEAL, AND FINEST SERVICE AFTER THE SALE: Stop By and See Why! FREE Danny Kaye LP record album to anyone who takes a demohstratloi ride In our all new 1964 Rambler. SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave. FB 5 GOODWILL II Old car down. 1959 BUICK Electra 225 4-door hardtop, power steering, brakes, J power windows, seat, power vent windows. This car Is brand new I Must be seen to be appreciated I 1963 PONTIAC Starchlef 4-door hardtop, power steering and brakes, hydramatic, radio, heater, "-new. Old Cf- ------- HAUPT Pontiac 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 A^^-8544 SUBURBAN OLDS "Birmingham Trades" 100% WRITTEN GUARANTEE Every car listed carries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Get one of our Certified Used Cars! Bank rates. 1963 OLDS "88"s, "98"s 1963 OLDS F-85's 1 $199$. 1961 TEMPEST 1^62 OLDS 9-Passenger maroon finish. 1962 OLDS "98" Hardtop Full Mwer, factory air conditioning. We have 3 ta choose from. 1960 OLDS Starfire , 1961 OLDS "88"s, "98"! 2-Doors, 4-Doors, Herdtops: AH have automatic transmission, radio, power. 10 ta choose troml ' 1963 OLDS 9-Pass. 4 door hardtop, __________ transmission, radio, heater, power equipped. Only $ir' ' 1962 OLDStutlass Coupe with V-8 engine, eulomallc, radio, hauler, buckets. A one owner new car trade I 1961 OLDS Cutlass Coupe, with VO engine, automatic radio, healer, whitewalls, bucket seats, sharp new car tradel 1961 FALCON Wagon l^h!r.w®''Tn.y“J5!lG*'’'° OUALITY Used Cars at LOWER PRICES See BOB MARTIN or BOB YATES 565 S. Woodward Ave. '' BIRMINGHAI^' / MI;4-4485 A. HI I ■I'','. ■! .y. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY a, 1964 THIRTY«ONE wif h«W notte* 7 T ..... 'f otfra ’TONIGHT 1:00 (2) Steve Allen (In Progress) (4) News, Sports (7) Wide World of Sports (In Progress) (9) Popeye and Pals 6:20 (4) Surfslde 6 (7) Rebel 7:00 (2) Death Valley Days (7) Dlckens-Fenster 7:30 (2) Jackie Gleason (4) Lieutenant (7) Hootenanny (9) Cheaters 8:00 (9) **Black Narcissus’ (1947) Deborah Kerr, Sabu, Flora Robson. 8:30 (2) Defenders (4) (C^lor) Joey Bishop (7) Lawrence Welk 9:00 (4) Mi)Vie: *‘The Seven Year Itch” (1055) Marilyn Monroe, Tom Ewell. 9:30 (2) Phil Silvers (7) Hollywood Palace 10:00 (2) Gunsmoke 10:30 (7) Car 64 (9) JuUette 11:00 (2) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:15 (4) News, Weather, Sports 11:20 (9) Movlfs: ‘‘The Man From, Planet X” (1951) Robert Clarke, Raymond Bond. 11:25 (2) Movies: 1. ‘‘The Lost Weekend” (1945) Ray Mil-land, Jane Wyman. 2.'«*'Fllght for Freedom” (1943) Rosalind Russell, Fred Ma'cMurry. (7) Moviesf 1. ‘‘MoBy Dick” (1956) Gregory Peck, Orson Wells. 2. ‘‘The Crooked Web” (1955) Frank Lovejoy, Richard Denning. 11:40 (4)^Jo Stafford Show 12:40 Movie: ‘‘She lUarrled Her Boss” (1935) Claudette Colbert, Melvyn Douglas. 1:30 (9) Interpol Calling 3:00 (7) All Night Shows 8:10 (9) Warm-Up ' 8:15 (2) Cathedral of Tomor- SUNDAY MORNING 0:30 (7) Family Living 7:00 (7) Rural Newsreel 7:25 (4) News 7:30 (4) Country Living (7) Adventurous Mission 8:00 (2) Electricity at Work (7) Communism: Myth or Reality? (4) (Color) Davey and Go-Uath (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) Mass for Shut-Ins (4) Frontiers of Faith (7) Understanding Ou World (9) Temple Baptist Church 9:00 (2) Let’s Find Out (4) Church at the (Crossroads (7) Junior Sports Club (9)Oral Roberts 9:15 (2) To Dwell Together 9:30 (2) Let’s See • (4) (Color) Bozo the Clown (7) (Special) Church Service. (9) Christopher Program 10:00 (2) This Is The Life (7) Starlit Stairway (9) Cathedrai of Tomorrow 10:30 (2) Christopher Program (7) (Color) Riverboat 10:45 (4) With This Ring 11:00 (2)^(Special) Chufch Service. (4) House Detective (9) Herald Of Truth 11:30 (2) Faith for Today (7) World Adventure Series. (9) Movie: ‘‘Murder in the Music Hall” (1946) Vera Hruba Ralston, William Marshall. SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Detroit Speaks (4) Southeast Asia (7) Championship Bowling 12:30 (2) Voice of the Fans (4) Top Star Bowling 12:45 (2) Tiger Warm-up 1:00 (2) Tiger Baseball Red Sox (7) Discovery (9) Movie: ‘‘Midsummer Night’s Dream” (1934) James Cagney, Joe E. Brown, Dick Powell. 1:30 (4) Sports Special (4) Sports Special (7) Issues and Answers 2:00 (4) (Sp^ial) Portrait of Two Winners (7) Directions 2:30 (4) America Wants to Television features Russia Starts on Communism By United Press International UEUTENANT, 7:30 p.m. (4) Rice has trouble settling differences between two men who don’t Want help. SUNDAY REUGION, 11:00 a.m. (2) (Special) Easter and Holy Week services in the Greek Orthodox Church. DEFENDERS, 8:30 p.m. (2) Newsman visits Red China without permission and has passport taken upon return to the U.S. GOLF, 3:00 p.m. (4) Final holes of the Las Vegas Tournament of-JiHiampions. MOVIE, 9:00 p.m. (4) ‘‘The Seven Year Itch.” Man has dreams of the beautiful girl living. upstairs while his wife is away for the sumnfer. TWENTY CENTURY, 6:00 p.m. (2) ‘‘Lenin | and Trotsky.” Story of how they set Russia | on road to communism. GUNSMOKE, 10:00 p.m. (2).Timid bank teller tells off his boss, has his first drink, dnd meets a young lady after being told he has only a short time to live. BONANZA, 9:00 p.m. (4) Cartwrights en- | counter unfriendly bounty hunter. DuPONT SHOW, 10:00 p.m. (4) Problem of ap urban school teacher. ‘‘Incident on Wilson | Street,” shows crowded Brooklyn area situation. RfOVIE, 11:25 p.m. (7) ‘‘Moby Dick.” Captain Ahab’s search for giant white whale who bit off his leg. MOVIE, 10:00 p.m. (7) ‘"The Glenn Miller Story,” tells of bandleader’s life and music. Know. (7) C2iampi 3 Famous English school 4 Shy , , 5 Dry, as wine 6 Newfoundland peninsula 7 Theater box 8 Abounds 9 Supplications ■ 10 European stream 11 Bewildered 16 Goutte reversed (her.) 20 Miss Page 22 Verb form 24 On top of 25 Challenge 26 Littleness 28 Dropsy 30 Good fortune 31 Playing card 33 Garret 35 Turns inside out 40 Achieve 43 Succinct 45 Confidence 46 Head coverings 47 Above 48 Lease 50 Range 51 Transaction Essential being 55 Health resort Answer to Previous Puzzle -Weekend Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZn 270) CKIW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHri-FM(94.7) M'S WCAR, WPON, E ... Bob Lawrtnes Show W>BK, Robert E. Lee WHFI, New. »:I$-WJR, Sport. CKLW, Parllsment WWJ, Fran Harrl* «:3»-WJR, Trend.. CKLW, Secretarvitf State WHFI, Music for AAodem. WXYZ, Science (I4S-CKLW, — iRi^r-—*-• X Sport. 7:W-CKLW, Album Time WJR, New. WXYZ, Lee Alan WJBK, Jack the Bellboy fitS-WPON, Ban Johnwn WCAR. 0. Clark 7:15-Sklw, Health WJR, Acappal. 7:J0-CKLW, R. Knowle. WJR, Report Card WWJ, Monitor 7:5«-WJR, At U.N. I:00-WJR, New. SMO-WJR, Karl Haa. I«:00-WWJ. Science Fair WWJ, interlochen ll:0».^WJR, New. WWJ, New. II:1S-WWJ, Melodle. SUNDAY MORNINO IR, Farm Revii (.M.W, Album Time WXYZ, Studio SI ...- ___ jeM Music Music ‘til Dawn <:3»-WJR, Organ Encore. WJBK, Heartbeat Theater WXYZ, Young People WSU CKLW, March of Faith 7:0#-WJR, News, Hymn. WXYZ, American Farmer CKLW, Church « WJBK, Hour of Crucified WCAR, News, Woodling WPON, Eolscopat Hour WHFI, News, Music TtlO-WJR, Farm Forum l:W-WJR, News, Changing liW-WJR, cnew. Tour WJBK. Must WPON, St., J WHFI, New. I:30-WXYZ, Message of ______ Radio______________ WJR, Renfro Valley fS»-WJR, News, Three-Quarter Time WWJ, Church Crossroads-WXYZ, Christians in Action WJBK, Voice of Church 7t30-WJR, Science. Music WWJ, News, Music WXY& Morning Chorale Changing Time. WPON, Sunday Serenade CKLW, Heb. Christian, WJBK, World Tomorrow WPON, Religion In New. WHFI, News, Music ulplt - ...._ ............. ASusIc CKLW, Radio Bible » Protestant Hour , The Christopher. WHFI, News, Music 10:10-WJR, Moscow Scene, WXYZ, Pilgrimage WPON, Emmanuel Baptist CKLW, Oral Robert. WJBK, Voice of Prophecy SUNDAY AFTERNDON 17;0g-WJR, Newt, Guest WWJ, News, Shelby New- WJBK, News, D. f l:3»-WJR, Sunday ! WCAR, Music WPON, Conversation Piece -......... Staton CKLW, News, Staton litBi-^CAR, News, Logan CKLW, News, Staton WHFI, News, Music WJR, N.Y. Philharmonic J:30-WWJ, Melody Parade 4;gg-^KLW, News, Stanton WPON, Green Hornet WWJ, Newt, Monitor 4:W—WCAR, Newt, Logan WPON, The Shadow S,og-WJR, News, Campus Concert WPON, Fantout Jury Trials StM-WJR, Hawaii Calls WCAR, Newt, Logan WHFI, Music. Ront. Speak. WWJ, Newt, Monitor SUNDAY IVENINO <:I»-WWJ, News, Science WJR, Newt, A.......... WXYZ, A - WJBK, Nam AMlgn. WCA^Nem, Logan WHFI, News, Music CKLW, Chrlstadelphlan. WPON, Youth Forum 7!0g-WJR, News, f WPON, Unversatlon F WXYZ, Sebastian, Mus CKLW, Voice of Phophecy WPON, Church of Week WJBK, Young America S:J0-WJR, The Headliner CKLW, The Quiet Hour WJBK, Name to Remember 7:W-WJBK, Law, News, t. News, Evening Hymns WPON,............. 7:30—WJR,-News, Church of America WJBK, Science, WXyL Academy _ CKLW, Bible Study I0:00-WJR, Treasury of Song ..... Catholic K. WXYZ, Hour of C —Billy Graham CKLW, Hour of Decision .WJBK, Newt, Concart "— Music , ...... News, M 10:3O-WJR, Chap^. _____ WWJ, Eternal Light < CK^, Light, Lila Hour WXYZ, Religious Pllgramage, Graham 1l:0O-WJR, News, Sport. WWJ, News, Written Word WXYZ, Freedom Sing. CKLW, Elder AAorfon WJBK, Music from Albums n<30-WJR, Music /fore Mid. -WJK, music . lore nniu. ...J, News, Melddy Parade CKLW, Bit of Heaven WXYZ, Issues and Answers MONDAY MbRNINO 4:0O-WJR, Agriculture WWJ, Farm, News WXYZ, Music, Newr CKLW, Farm New. WJBK, Newt, Avery WCAR, Newt, SnarMan WPON, Newt, Country N WHFI, Rott, Music 4S30-WJR, Music Hall WWJ, News, Roberts CKLW, Eye O^r, C WPON, Jerry Whitman 7iOO-Newt, Whitman I:e0-WJM, Newt, Su l:3^-WJR, Music Han 7iOO-WJR, News, Har.-le OiJO-WJR, Lee Murray CKLW, Mary Morgan 10:0O-WJR, Newt, Karl Haas WWJ, Newt, Ask Neighbor WXYZ, Breakfast Club CKLW, .00 van WJBK, Newt, Clark Reid WPON, Newt, Ron Knight I0:30-CKLW, Kennedy Calling Ilieo-WJR, News, Godfrey MONDAY AFTERNOON I2:tg--WJR, News, Farm WWJ, News,. Fran Harris CKLW, Newt, Grant WCAR, News, Purse 12.-30-WJR, Bud Guest CKLW, Joe Van WJBK, .News, Reid l:WF-WJR, News, LInklettef l;3IMAIJR, Garry Moore, WWJ, News, Friendship Club Itjg-CKLW,. News Shift Break ' 3:0t—WJR, Wood \ CKLW, Davies 3:30-WJR, Music Hall CKLW, Kennedy Calling '4iOO-CKLW, News,, Davies WWJ, News, Bumber Club LANI^ING (AP) - Michigan ranked third nationally last year in the number of sportsmen buying hunting and fishing licenses, says the Ck>nservation Department. The state had nearly 1*765,000 license-buyers to rank behind first place California and run-nerup Minnesota. Michigan was second in hunter numbers behind Pennsylvania, the leader. Noarly 860,500 gunners and archers purchased 1,142,745 licenses, permits and permits and stamps at a cost of $4,775,400. The state slipped one notch to fourdi place in the number of licensed fishermen, behind California, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Michigan had 903,190 anglers purchasing 1,079,322 licenses and stamps for a total of $2,272,541. Whither the Weather? Speaker Snowed Out HARRISBURG, Pa. - The Pennsylvania Gop Inprovement Association canceled the meeting it had scheduled in conjunc-with the recent 1964 Pennsylvania Farm Show because of a heavy snowstorm. The. principal speaker’s topic was to have been, “Predicting the Weather.” Rosamond Williams SONOTONE 29E. Comgll FE 2-1225 . Servioeo and Suppliao for All. HEARINO AIDS m\i uiriii! C&VrVIne. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK-Beatrice Lille actually believes in poltergeists —those spooks that move furniture while you’re looking at it and snatch your shoes out of your grasp when the doorbell’s ringing .. . Which makes her hilarious performance as the medium, “Madame Arcati” of the ouija board, in “High Spirits,” doubly fascinating. “Exist? Of course they exist!” Lady Peel shouted at me a recent 5 p.m. in Sardi’s while she was having her pre-performance-dinner. “And they’re very naughty, too . . . “In the summer theater,” she said, “I had a fan that was very important to me in a scene. I’d put it right down here where I could get U quickly. I came to get it and it was not there. And nobody else had been in the room. Oh, I told them off, the silly so-and-sos. I told them, ‘I’ll get even wtih you, you blankety, blank blank poltergeists!” ■fk ★ ★ One can never quite be sure with Miss Lillie. But she had stated this opinion More . . . about shoel being found tucked away on high shelves, above her reach, above the reach of anybody Vho’d been there lately. “At home in England one nlght,”^she said, “suddenly the curtain came right out at me across the bed ... and there wasn’t even a breeze to blow it. “Oh, they’re very naughty, the poltergeists. Very naughty.” Miss Lillie goes so far as to claim that in one of the seance scenes in the Noet Coward musical hit, which is sdp-posed to kid seahees, she actually felt herself galvanized by WILSON “Only once it happened,” she says. “But I couldn’t lift my hands from the table.” ★ ★ ★ THE WEEKEND WINDUP ... Producer Ray Stark, who was annoyed at his “Funny Girl” premiere party when the band played tunes from the rival “Hello, Dolly,” arrived in L.A.—and found a band at the airport playing “Hello, Dolly” (a gag by his aides-or ex-aides) ... It’ll be like the old days—Sammy Davis Jr»’ll do three shows nightly during his Copa stint. William Redfield has publishers bidding for his “Letters From an Actor,’’ about his experiences in the Burton-“Hamlet” show ... famed actor John Mills takes second billMg to daughter Hay-ley, 18, in “Chalk Garden” .. . Sandy Dennis, who won an awa^ for ‘“rhousand Gowns” ^ Broadway, refused the role in the film version. (She’s now In “Any Wednesday.” EARL'S PEARLS: Bob Hope stuck a timely line in his movie, “Global Affair.” Seeing an eiephant run by, he shouted, “Go Barry!” (TIN Hall SyaSleala, Inc.) Whiplash! In any < I involving the neck, it ie wine to oheck promptly with yonr Doctor of Chiropractio to let him dct«r> mine whether or not there is a need for treatment. Fast response here may mean the difference between a passing discom* fort and a permanent iitjiuy* THE GREATER PONTIAG tHIROPRAmC ASSOCIATION Fttt Further Informatioii Write Box 82, Pontiae Press NEED CASH NOW? BORROW FOR ANY USEFUL PURPOSE ★ Consolidate Bills ★ New Car ★ New Furniture ★ Home Repair and Modernization ^x; Save! Women’s Vinj'l Starline Luggage Sale Regularly $8.98 14” Beauty Case ^ Charge It • 10,98 Models Case 2t-ln. Pullman ...... 9«88* or 21>lnch Case ....7.88* 26>ln. Pullman ...... 10.88* • 16.98 Pullman Case, 29-In......... .*. .......... . 11.88* One-piece frame molded into’ strong .'l-ply wood box ^ . vinyl eovered.. Brass-plated hardware. OPEN STOCK! Luggage Dept., Main Floor *PLVSF.E.T. Regularly at $1^9.9.‘)! Visi-pake Oven Window NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Huge 25-inch oven . . . smokeless broiler. I^uilt-in griddle fbr qujck and easy meals. Visi-Bake door, oven light lets you;wgtch your cake bake.'Has clock-timer; easy-care finish. Save at SEARS! Appliance Dept., Main Batement NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan I9-in. overall diagonal screen, 174-sqJ in; viewing area! Tinted picture tube for glare-less TV ^ay or night. EMj sound from up-front 5»in. oval speaker. Built-in dipole antenna! $9.99 TV Table'.., 5.99. ’ , . RodiaAty Dept., Main Floor ' . ^N6 money down on Sears Easy Payment P’lan -36x48” table opens |o 72 inches with two 12” center leaves. Self-edge all-plafstic (walnut finish) toj). Brass finished legs. Matching chairs (Texora pattern) in beige. Seejt Monday at Seafs. Shop ’til 9! Furniture Dept., Seiond Floor ‘ "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Ponti iac Phone FE 5-4171 >rr-rrl"-"f'■P'j.,',a.y.’;P . -r.^r hn'i"'^" , ^ sin. ''q n-.f* \f* m Once again tie t»onliac Pml Brings ybtt an outstanding special eectibn * \ i Background for Living. i,. Jpdy Headlee has filled the following pages witi information on home Building, remodeliilg, home* for sale, tips for tBd ' -handyman, household "lips for the ladies, garden news, fainting finanoitt^ iii^uraitce and home planning. AJf of the in^edienUi yott fteedi ,>'' are hei'e tu hel|i you in the coming year to p^^n for a belter way of ^ through i Better i Background for living! ,r......'■•■ ". i? !.::sSh’»ii ■'fm'rrrrf . 'r?c'T“'‘5 Fjyjiig I THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 CLEVER IDEA — The Charles F. Hookers of Brooklawn Drive, Birmlnghamt are avid readers. Keeping their monthly' coOection neat, however, proved quite an exhausting chore. Until, that is, Mrs. Hooker combined ingenuity and curtain rods. To their front entrance wall, she affixed three brass rods. The current issues are draped over the rods, allowing the living room table tops to remain empty and dustabk yrithout a major cleaning campaign. Buy Now oihI Sm on These Guaranteed ^ 4 Early-Bird Specials! ASPHALT ROOHIK '•4-d<«’4f-t-T Mee ■leakHn In Teart! Mmy oelart ani MeiiSa Ti Meet Fram, Mew Designi Wrlt$»n Caarwit—ilfhm VWDam«f*{ COMPANY tmPmtlncSIntflfSl 1032 West Huron SlrMt FE 4-2597 tvnjnklng tm WMbralMiton S "S j5I ??!»* 5 " jUtarMMna*aiaa«WM FoNTMC! aaa-om WMUO lAKii MA 4-1091 UNION UKfa IM Maas WATBUORO araasaa Top QudHy • Expert - &n»cientious Woijcnwn^p To Kem You Cool fh Suihmei^Waim In The Wnferl FUR PHKES-YOM SniSFJIfiTIIW fillMHIEB! STURDY-QUALITY • CoadiBiaiiMi doors and ninilows at Ris HIT samns savoie INSULATION company 6561 DIXIE HIGHWAY ;r CASH t CARRY I PLVWCCD SPECIALS AKS-VoFir 459 per sheet....... « 4x8-<%FIR IPLYSCORE PRTIandei... 4X8-1.2FIR iPLYSCORE FSTSanded... 4x8-% FIR IPLYSCORE PATSanded.. 298 349 499 FOR THE HOME PAINTER 8x12 RUSTIC 009 DROP CLOTH fcV*s. fINI ST PAIN I IN 100 rtA ns ; ^■feiMACOLAC MIRACLE ■If'?.' Mi Laylex Wall Paint STUDS 2x44 2Sc 2x4-8.............49c 2x4-10........... 69c Clown new atock IMOOUeNRSIJURliRM Malclila«CrianlekqrMc ^ SPECMLS tFl.taw-toy 498: StapLaddara Shabing.. RmIwo.iI Piek.1. IRai 3 Ft. 4. i Rw T’Pasi Clothes Poles .9495! 8»Qia...........l Ipr- GEBKHT Roady-Mix . .« .. . 89c SWETROCK te8-%........... 1.19 PorHandCement ..1.09 4x8.% ,1.35 5 lbs. Gold Bond Joint Cement.... 85c 4x8-%............ ,1.65 LUIII6ER GO. BUDGET YARD All Pricat IflacHva Ifini Nlay 7.1964 M-59 PLAZA at WILLIAMS LK. RD. OR 4-0316 THE PONTIAG PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1904 THREE COLONIAL GRANDEUR - The four bedroom colonial, built by Silver Lake Construction Company, may be duplicated for $31,500. Locate at 2909 Shawnee Lane in the Jayno Heights Subdivision, off Walton at School-house Lake, the home offers many custom features. Among them are compartmentalized closets throughout. The large master bedroom is adjoined by a dressing room and bath. The model may be seen from 2 p.m. till dark daily. , family room *- The family room of the Silver Lake’s Jayno Heights model has a broad curved window, dressed with cepter-tied glass curtains. Completely furnished to give prospective buyers decorating ideas, the room is wallpapered in green. A multi-colored oval rug highlights the peg floors. A maple scale planter emphasizes the Early American theme on the floor-to-ceiling fireplace. Old Apartments Need Up-to-Date Face-Lifting Growth of new apartment construction, biggest factor in the housing market today, is increasingly turning owners of older buildings to modernization. ★ ★ ★ However, modernization must be more than skin deep if it is to do the job of meeting competition. Pointing out that poor heating can be a major source of • tenant dissatisfaction, apartment owners are urged not (Hily to put heating and cooling systems in good cdtadi-' tion, but to take advantage of the latest developments in hydronics (modem hot water and steam heating) as well. One of the latest developments, modem hydronic zone control,’with a thermostat in each apartment, permits tenants to select the temperature they prefer, and ends underheating and overheating. With zoning, whether there are two units or dozens in the building, apartments on . the shady side are just as “comfortable as those on the sunny side, and the individual thermostats can correct instantly for changes in weather or usage. Owners not only find they save as much as 20 per cent on fuel with hydronic zoning, but equally important, end a major source of tenant compiaints. Average Heating Bill A recent study shows that average heating and cooling costs in a 1,200-square-foot house shnuld be no more than $130 a year, providing the house has been thoroughly insulated, according to housing experts at Allied Chemical’s Barrett Division. Decorates Outride Old Wagon Wheel Old wagon wheels sometimes can be seen as decorations outside of country homes and farmhouses. _ Such wheels, which are still available at some outdoor furniture dealers, can be given at least two functional uses. With a couple of coats of white paint, one can be hung or supported near the house to make an interesting trellis. Or set one in a wooden frame and add hinges and you have a useful outdoor gate. The dripless type of paints especially good for baseinent walls and other porous surfaces. HOHEMPIIDIIEMEIIT R ■UILDINQ IN PONTIAC SINCI 1946 COMPLETE BUILPINfi SERVICES • ADDITIONS • ALUMINUM SIDINO « FINISHED ATTICS • KITCHENS • DNEEZEWAYS • DATHROOMS • OORMERS • CONCRETE WORK, MASONRY • PORCHES ^ • STORM, SCREEN DOORS A WINDOWS 1 MO mma powii Sine* 1945, theutondi of hom*own*r*i throuahout Oakland Coonty hav*. turn^ lo G A M tor th* quality erafUmantkip d*«lMd in th*lr buildMs n*«d«. Tli*r* or* hundr*dt of plan* to mIocI from and if* amoting how litti* your much n**d*d improv*m*nt« actually coit. If you domand | f*cHon In eonrtructlon, don't h*»lfal*, call todoyl **Our Work Is Our Reference!** CONSTRUCTION CO. Operator On Duty 24 Hours FE 2-1211 SPECIAL FINANCE PLAN Through pur 20-Y*or mertgag* plan w* can conaolldat* all pr*«*nt bill* into on* low *a»y monthly poymont UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY ON FHA MODERNIZE your HOME Special Sale LI6HTING FIXTURES 25%»FF VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TiU »5*»srs 9x12 LINOLEUM RUGS *31? I)o-lt-Yoursi-lf CERAMIC WALL TILE WE LOAN ■TOOLS 39 W« slock all ft motching floor ^ Itlo and nocossory frtml GENUINE ORIENTAL MOSAIC TILE nxxii” itt qushiy OO-IT-YOURSELF Axil Tr»Y« - C»nd, Olshis T*kl( 59' Asphalt Tile 4c Ea. WALL TILE 50% Off Reg. Sale Price 2e 1c 4e 2o 5e 2Vto 6e 3o So 4o MIRACLE , > PLASTIC LATEX Kfg. S6..VJ One Coat No Drip Plastic Reg. S8. J9 Sg95 Gal, MAC>0 PrimOf $5.95 Gal. HOUSE PAINT WHITE « FUT ENAMEL Reg. $7.49' '4?el. WOOD PANEUNO rra.flni>lnd No Mill RajMti ' A-l Oradt 4x7 .............. |4A9 4X8 leeieeNNOiNNiN ^5a13 In Shadat of Light'Ook Finiah, Madium Chanv FinUti, Walnut, Liaht and Dark FLOOR CRYSTALLINE GLAZED CERAMIC TILE 69t 1*1 """ FLOOR OR WALL ACOUSTICAL 12 12x12 CSQ.' FT. alt. irreg. PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Our Own installation work done by experts OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. 'til 9:00 P.M. FREE PARKING in REAR 1075 W. Huron St. 4 IT ****®"® 334-9957 H You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 Colonial Construction Up By JODY HEADLEE ^Oakland County’s, new homeowners have their eye on the sky as t^ey insist on homes built "up Instead of out.” For reasons known only to themselves, instigators of this colonial trend are causing a rustle that may develop into a full fledged roar. Ward Ross of Ross Homes stated that colonials represent 50 per cent of his new home construction. "The current movement toward the traditional two-story,” said Boss, "look idace abont four or live years ago. I think people were tired of the lack of home privacy and wanted definitive areas zoned off.” In the main, Iwai builders and developers agree that there is a significant housing trend towards the construction of two-story homes in Oakland County. They do not agree, however, on the cause. Some feel that the growth in the colonial field is due to an urge to return to the past. The majority intetrret the current market as a definite reflection of the rise in the nation’s economy. At one end of the scale, L. H. Grimes, sales manager of Bateman Realty Company, expresses his opinions cautiously. “Prior to 19W, companywide, we had almost no call for colonials. Recently, we havenoUced ap Interest In the houses. “Let me say, I don’t foresee an overwhelming push toward the colonial mar^, but I do feel that buyers are more colonial minded. NEED CONSENT ‘"rhe need, however, for ranch and bi-levels remains constant. For example, of the 28 new homes that we have under construction, not one is a colonial.” it it * Max Hawkins of Macksey, Inc. voiced a more afflrma-■ tive stand. "I don’t think this is jnst an Oakland C o n n t y move,” he said. “Its roots are over the entire Great Lakes region. But I do feel it’s in a particular price range. ■a ★ ★ “For instance, our homes in the $25,000 and up class, aver age 75-85 per cent two-story dwellings. "Below that cost, I don’t be-lleve you can incorporate enongh space to create a satisfactory colonial. “Buyers don’t want the stand ard colonial popular in the 1940’s. L' you remember, those models ,had formal living and dining rooms plus a kitchen rad perhaps a haff bath on the first floor. Upstairs, you found three bedrooms and a full bath. it it it “Today,” Hankins continued, "this would not sell. Proactive homeowners want dll that was Jki the 1940 house plus a family room and a main floor utility area, basement or no. Upstairs are the; four bedrooms and two or mrae baths. BEDROOM SUITE “In the fbrcseeable future, I on the main floors The upstairs will be earmarked for other family members. "Even in onr ranch homes, many buyers seek a traditional feeling by using reclaimed brick and other colonial appointments. "As to why the popularity of two-story houses? I think mariy of those in the market for a new home are second-home buyers lobking for something different. “And our high dollar economy has made it possible for them to achieve it.” ★ ★ ★ Strengthening the trend theory hut contradicting Hawkin’s price range ideas, another Oakland county new-home dealer reported that of the last 20 houses he’d sold, 12 were colonials. Hiese were in the $18,500 category. He explains the buyer demand, “you get more house for your money In colonials. It is cheaper to build up than out.” ★ ★ ★ ' “Yes,” said Ray Rapaport, custom builder, "colonials are on the increase, particularly in southern Oakland County. “The trend appears to be connected to the overall higher individual income. The higher a man’s Income bracket, the more he leans toward the conservative colonial.” “I would venture to say, that almost 50 per cent of the homes in the $25,000 and up class are two-story adaptations.” ★ ★ ★ Agreeing with flie majority, a representative of Mott Construction .Company pointed out, "the last five years have represented an imip-essive growth in the two-story line.' “Colonials have eye-appeal. Also, there’s a feeling of stability and elegance in a colonial home.” it it it The totals of a recent Pontiac Press survey indicate that 85 per cent of the companies and individuals contacted recognize a rebirth of colonial popularity. NATIONWIDE ’TREND? Does this rising C(donial market representa nationwide trend? “No,” writes Charles T. Stewart, public affairs director of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, Washington, D. C., "Colonial design in domestic ardiitecture never seems to go out of style.” He concludes, “It would be hard to pinpoint any time*at which a modern demand for this style started, since it has never really been absent.” Preston Figley, public relation department of the National Association of Home Builders, Washington, D.C., reports, "Our staff does not see a nationwide trend to the c4doniai style, but simply a steady popularity maintained through the various surges in other styles.” On the west coast, Jocelyn Cox, associate editor of “Home Individuality,” states, "We have noticed a revival of interest in the traditional home. it it * “I think, however, that it is not so much of a trend back to colonial homes as a reawakening of respect for heritage in our homes and a blending of the best from both the past and present in architecture and decorating. “The result is really a n^ew type of home which defies ahy favorite label, or at least a home which would be called a modern colonial built for twentieth century living.” In conclusion, the survey gives evidence that, regardless of the area, the building of modern colonials reprteents, if "not a growing trenid, at least a^steady safe market for homeowners. One in which there would be little or no danger of the style being a passing vogue, or poor investment. SALElTIll ON ALUMINUM AWNINGS SJiVE Up To 50% on InttaUatiort Costs W# tpaclaliz* In th* following cuilom work: .ALUMINUM SIDING (Wo cevor ovorythlna, no painting for tho lilotlmo of fho homo) • AWNINGS (all types) fpr Windows-0 PATIOS - DOORS « SLIDING DOORWALLS-Prime or Storm • STORM WINDOWS and OOORS-o PRIME WINDOWS o PATIOS ENCLOSED, Glass or Screen FULLU^ ALUAAINUM STORM DOORS f23>5 Com plutu with ' all hardware HAVE YOU HAD DISAPPOIMTINQ QUOTATIONS? If Attar 6 P.M. Call FE I-88SS or 644-431S Paiqf Hints Help Owner Your Spring paint job can be significantly inqtroved by using proper brushing techniques. Here are some rules to follow. Keep ra even pressure on the brush, using lot^ sweeping arm strokes., Use both sides of each brushfuU and end each strdce wiOi a light, lifting motion. Try to work across, as much as possible, to avoid lap marks in the paint. Always apply paint PLYWOOD SHEATHING (Auociation Grade Stamped) Per Shoot W’CD 4x8............. $2.60 V2”CD4x8............... $3.21 %»CD4x8..................$3.T3 %”CD 4x8 Plugeed 1 Side .. $4.07 FIR/F.L. (Construction, Max. 25% Std.) ASPHALT PRODUCTS MULE HIDE SHINGLES' 235 lb. 3 Tab R«gutar . -. . . $U.]9p«riq. 235 lb. Sol Seales..$ 7.95 per tq. 10 12 14 16 18 J3. Each 2x4 .53 ' ^ 1 .73 1 .88 1.03 1.17 1.32 1.4T Each 2x6 .89 1.12 1.34 1.86 1.78 2.01 2.23 Each i 2x8 1.24 1.55 1.86 2.17 247 2.18 3.09 Each 2x10 1.60 2.00 2.40 2.80 3.20 3.60 4.00 Each 2x12 1.94 2.43 2.92 3.40 3.89 4.37 4.86 1 iiir- "in me loreseeame luiure, i to an unpainted area rad work^i;.;. think these colonials wiU also into the wet edge of the prev-tgS imdudu’W. oiaatar bedroom mitte.dfXBly pointed pcurtion. «« big values for you FOR THE MONTH! If you with to receive "Our Monthly Price Lilt" fill i(| coupon and mail to Church's, 107 Squirrel Rd., Auburn Heights. <- NAME___________________________________- ADDRESS. CITY. . STATE. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. MAY 2, 1964, FIVE WON’T BE LONG — Before you know it winter will be back with youngsters’ boots, ice skates and snowball soggy mittens. Are you prepared? Mrs. William Mara of Knob Hill Court is. 'She has mounted a piece of pegboard near the utility door entrance. The clever mitten line keeps pairs together by a clothespin as they dry. “You’ll save your back and your lungs,’’ claims Mrs. Mara. “The handy hanger teaches children neatness almost by remote control.’’ Please note, she Said,'“almost, so don’t expect miracles.” Basementless Homes Hide Furnaces Neatly Local Association Can Be Contacted If you had to have a plumbing contractor in a hurry, who would you call? ,„f Many people would be at a loss in such a situation since they are not familiar with one. The Plumbing - Heating - Cooling Information Bureau advises' that every homeowner should locate a qualified contractor and keep his name and phone number alongside those of the doctor, police and fire department. A good way to obtain recommendations of fully qualified and reputable plumbing contractors in your area is to call the local association of plumbing contractors. Spring Time Is Carpet Cleaning Time HaveYov Caqiet Cleaned N0W!;£8m.» TUSON CARPET SERVICE OR 3-8966 100 Dixie Hwy. IF Where do you put the furnace in a home without a basement? With the types, shapes, and sizes of furnaces available today, there are a number of answers. The new horizontnl furnaces, for instance, can be hung from the ceiling in a utility room. Or they can be installed in a crawl space, attic, or loft. Or, if you do have a basement, they can be suspended from the rafters Whatever the location, the heating plant requires no valu« able floor space. With the furnace out of the way, there is more space for living and "1110 homeowner has his choice of fuel—gas, oil, or electric— with the new horizontal forced air furnaces. And in all cases, the heating system is easily and economically adapted to summer air conditioning as well. Another answer to the problem of where to put the furnace in a basementless home is the counterflow unit, so called because the conventional upward flow, of warm air from the furnace into the ductwork is reversed; HEATING PLANT In this case, the heating plant is installed in a closet, utility room ,or alcove, taking up very little floor space. Instead of . the ducts being overhead, as with a basement furnace, they are underfoot, in the slab. The counterfiow 50th Anniversary Celebrated in 1964 1964 is the 50th anniversary of the invention of insulation board, according to building authorities at Allied Chemical’s Barrett Division. This versatile construction material was first produced in 1914 in the basement of a paper mill at International FallSj, Minn. unit then moves the heated, filtered air downward into the duct system and throughout the house. Here again, whole-house air air conditioning can be added at relatively low cost. BUILDING MATERIALS • Sand • Gravel • Cement • Sewer Pipe • Concrete and Cinder Blocks • Concrete Steps • Structural Steel READY-MIXED CONCRETE fast . . . dependable . . . , radio dispatched TRU-BILT FE 4-9531 BUILDING PRDDUCTS CDMPANY 1992 Pontiac Drive, Pontiac m "Expert Home" REMODBLING Completo Homo MODERNIZING FREE PLANNING • FAMILY AND RUMPUS ROOMS • lASIMENTS eRICRIATION ROOMS • ATTIC ROOMS • NEW HOME FRONTS • Hitchens • bathrooms • DENS • JALOUSIE ROOM ADDITIONS BANK TERMS 7 YEARS TO PAY A ROOM ADDITION NO PAYMENTS 'TIL JULY LABOR and MATERIALS 1 Call Now! raOTECTED BY CERTIFIED GUARANTEE IFE 3-7833 BIG CONSTRUaiON COMPANY 739 North Perry-Pontiac SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1064 Model Rooms Are Displayed at New York World's Fair ualldi-we rangements adequate for guests as well as the family group is another solution for which the amateur decorator must contend. Problems such as these and many others are answered in the series of model rooms which nationally known designers have planned for the $2,300,000 Pavilion of American Interiors^ New York World’s Fair, in which more than 150 exhibitors are introducing approximately $10,000, 000 in products for the honte. ★ ★ ★ Living quarters for young America, for instance, have acquired vastly new concepts in the past decade. CHILD’ ROOM Today, a child’s room is planned with a scientific recognition of his growing needs as well as the psychological approach to neatness and order. ,A designer for one of the Pavilion’s model rooms l^r Juveniles has created a group of clever wall units to save space and permit flexihie storage arrangements. Whimsy gives an added appeal to this room in reproductions of beloved nursery characters on the celling for the Infant who must, of necessity, spend a good many hours on his back. ★ ★ ★ In another room, the problem of the unexpected guest in the small home is resolved with a decorator type sofa bed which conceals Its utilitarian overnight use in clean contemporary lines, making it an admirable choice for the decorator-type living room or study. An almost unbelievable accomplishment in the use of space for a living foom-kitch-cn unit provides areas for recreation and family activities as well. Such a plan should have great appeal for the young couple starting out with a small home where every inch of space must be organized for efficient living. Included in this model multiunit room is the ultimate in modem equipment for all facets of homemaking. Color, too, should be a prime consideration in the decoration plan of the smaller room. A wise choice of colors can give an atmosphere of spaciousness, making the small room seem much larger than its actuall dimensions. Under the imaginative tion of experien^ designers, model rooms planned for the Pavilion will preMnt many new and unusual approaches to color plans for homes of today, whether contemporary or traditional. Burn Winter HERE'S ONE PUCE WHERE YOU CAN'T AFTORD A MISTAKEI , '■y'. ' -iV.i In buying Insurance for the protection of your family ond property,, on error In judgement con be disastrous, ThatV^why, you need good advice every step of the’^y. ' ^ Our wide range of experience extending over many years has resulted Wn hundreds of' satisfied clients. We invite yOur business and it's welcome regardless of size. 368 W. Huron Streot Kenneth G, HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE Phono FE 4-8284 Spring cleaning produces a wealth of material that is destined for the trash .heap. And much of this material is usually of a combustible nature. Of course, the best way to get rid of this accumulation of litter is to burn it. And the best way to burn it, fire officials point out, is in a steel burner. Galvanized steel burners, available in several sizes, have perforated sides and covers which permit the trash to burn rapidly without the danger of having flaming particles spread to nearby buildings. Actually, you can use rubbish burners to burn your weekly supply of newspapers, old magazines, and unusable boxes and cartons. In the fall, they’re invaluable for burning leaves as well. f I Don’t Throw It Away REBUILD IT TODAY! Lot our eroftsmon rosforo pow eomfbrt> higlior quality Into your oroMht mottross or box spring ... Cornparo bofbro you buyl buyl ONE DAY SERVICE Guaranteed In Writing 7 Years 95 Wo Spocializo In $4Q5Q ORTHOPEDIC MATTRESSES (CO JO-Year Guarantee and up OXFORD AAATTRESS CO, ■ 497 North Perry Street, Pontiac ■ Serving Pontiac Over 41 Years IMMlB mnac uver‘tt sears ‘FE NOTHING DOWN - NO PAYMENTS ’til FALL Ail Sun Control |:| Products Are Con^ ^ I ditjonally ^ iGuaranteedli GUnERS • DOWNSPOUTS • CEMENT, STONE AND BRICKWORK o RAILINGS • ALUMINUM SHUTTERS' Come in ... See our large display of Siding and Trim Styles and Patterns THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2. 1904 SEVEN IT MAKES TO BUY CABPETING C OVERINGS Custom Vinyl FLOORS • Montina • Tessara Futuresq • Corlon 3511 ELIZABETH UKE ROM Opeirllon., Fri. Til 9 P.II. FE 4-7 EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAlT 2, Hj64i Practical Philosophy Homeowner's Answer “Half a loaf is better than none" is an especially useful piece pf practical philosophy for the homeowner — especially where there is a tight budget. With thought, imagination and very little cash outlay you can add to the convenience and beauty of your home by concentrating on certain strategic areas against the day when a more bountiful bankroll will allow you to have the “whole loaf." First, make a complete survey of your present home. Look for small areas that represent major cleaning problems, As you do it, be alert to what can be accomplished with a spe-cific material like ceramic Ule that combines beauty and prao ticality. Here are some example of directions your quest may lead: CERAMIC TILE Perhaps, when your home was built, the ceramic tiling was limit^ tq the area Imme-. diately around your tub or show- Tronble is Aat the wall areas around the lavatory, light switches and towel bars Electronic Filters Are Effective If you live in h three-bedroom home in a climate which requires heating f(w six months of the year, your furnace probably will circulate more than 100,-000,000 cubic feet of air through the house during a heating season. Multiply this figure by the millions of particles of dirt, dust, bacteria, anfl other foreign materials in every cubic foot of air and you get an idea of the importance of the filtering system built into all forced air furnaces. Conventional furnace filters strain out huge quantities of foreign materiais, returning clean air to the hou^e. An ;Cven more effective job is done by the electronic fiiters now on the market These units will eliminate more than 90 per cent of the air-bwne villains floating through the house. Although they use less electricity than a 10-watt light bulb, electronic filters will trap particles as minute as 1/100,000th of an inch in size. Packing Pointer to Avoid Damage Articles which could damage one another such as light bulbs and lamp shades should not be packM in the same container when packing for a household move, according to packing authorities. This applies even if they are well cushioned. also receive a lot of moisture -and — what wltlr' children’s grimy hands — present a many-times - a - day cleaning chore. Later on, you’ll want to finish the entire bath, but for now, content yourself with tiling just the area that needs it most. ★ ★ * Another likely spot for a touch of tile is the floor immediately surrounding your laundry equipment in the basement. Rugged and attractive quarry tile is a natural for the few square feet involved here. . Window sills and mantels which take a lot of abuse from sadden stonqs and plant-watering accidents are two more natural areas for permanent improvement. Another ide» for tile that is part decorative and entirely practical is to set a course of decorative tile around your kitchen just at the height where chair bmks do the most damage to yj'bur present walls. The be simple to achieve, e and easy to keep result distinci clean. Endless examples could be given, but you know your own home and needs better than anyone else. If you can’t have the whole loaf just now, why not help yourself to several slices of comfort and convenience until you can? DOIT YOURSELF! YOUR KITCHEN We’ll Even Lend You The Tools! Uj mosiac FLOOR aid WALL TILE 59j tq. ft. Genuine ceramic mosiac. tile at a special low price. OTHER BIG TILE BUYS FOR YOUR FLOORS, WALLS, BATHROOMS, REG. ROOMS, ETC. • rxir LINOLEUM RUGS • RANDOM ASPHALT TILE, 9" x 9" • ARMSTRONG INLAlO TIU, 9"x9" • SOLID VINYL-RUBBER TILE • ARMSTRONG TERRAZZO, 6 FT. WIDE, *q. yd. • LINOLEUM WALL TILE, 54" WIDE, running if. • VINYL'ASBESTOS TILE, 9"x9" $3.95 4c 6e 13c $2.49 29c 7c FRONT DOOR PARKING 226B EUZaETN UKE ID. FE 4-521S Mi/znaem iAKc mt.- ^ BdlfwYOB! 1964 MODELS for the BUDGET CONSCIOUS On Your Lot CUSTOM QUALITY YOU CAN AFFORD Other Melting big. valun plant In Celonialt, Itonchart and *Trt-Lovaltl Largn, tpaciout and loadnd with antra built-in fMtum. Priewd Ftoin SIMM to $1I,SN Wn WIN Build Tmt FlMt nr Owt OUDGET UWOKR 1. Full Batamont 2. 3 Bodraomt 3. Na. 1 Oak Floort 4. Formica countar tops Si FuH 2-ft. ovorhong 6. Fibargfo* intulation 7. Aluminum tiding TRI-IEVEL M2,275 1.3 Badiaami~iH birito 2. Flnithod family room 3. Frigidaira rang# and ovon 4. No. 1 oak noon 5. Flboraloa bitulatlon 6.1r4Mtq.l .. It. living oMo 7. Brick and olumbwm ‘4ir ^2,960 1. 3 Bodraomt, 1 Vt balht 2. Big family kHchon 3. No. 1 oak floon 4. Full 2-ft. ovorhang 5. Fiboiglot intulation 6. Ovoniso 2-cor gorago 7. Aluminum tiding DIRECTIONS: eilMbalh Uiko Rd. to Abpari Rd. Right to M-59; Uft to WhUHor Stroot oppotKa City - Turn Loft at Big “BATEMAN" Signl BATEMAN REALTY 377 South Telegraph PONTIAC FE 8-7161 it- : THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 NINE Iff NT RECTAMBBiAR TUBEl SLIRI CABIRETS! You get a larger picture (23-inches overall *119“ Sylvonio Stereo, AM-FAA, 1963 Model 1 Stereo Radio, Fruitwood H 1 V ' Philco Color TV Doors With Service Policy a *532*" 2 OVER CONVENIENCE MODEL J794 By General Electric Gesoral Elaelrie Introthiees P7 TheAmaii^ New Ismstion. Thai Cham the Oven Eleelriealljr Just three simple, easy-to-do steps and you benefit frodi the greatest of all cooking conveniences. (1) AAove door latch to "clean"; (2) Set oven controls to "clean"; (3) Set oven-timer for desired length of cIcKining cycle. That's absolutely all you have to do—the Self-Clean; ing Oven takes over using the same electricity you use to cook your food. C80KT8P COOKTOP-JP76X. Built in Push-buttons conveniently located front of cooktop. Four Hi-Speed Calrod units (2 extra Hi-Speed). One-piece construction. Available in Mix-or-Malch colors. Dark Coppertone, white and stainless steel. Vive Models to Choose From ALL IN ONE JM68 The ulllmofa In cool«enter convenience and beauty ... a range that gives you the true built-in beauty In a small space. Both cooktop and oven contained In one unit. Has the famous Mark 27 recessed top. Your choice of remote controls--each provides 5 exact heats for each surface unit. Available in Mix-or-Match colors, while and dork coppertone.^ Built-in notch in side trim panel permits installation in standard countertops without-notching. Sliding metal panel adjusts to varying counter thickness. . 6 Models to Choose From ELECTRIC COMPANY Open C A.M.to 9 P.M.-Except Saturday FE 4-2525 C25 WEST HURON STREET TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 1964 Summer's Coming Protect' Winter Wear With spring just around the corner (for optimists, that is!), It's time to think of storage space for all your winter garments and heavy bedding. Fur coats, too, must be put in a safe place during the' summer. Many handymen already have transformed one^or more bedrooms or hall closets into moth-repellent-storage areas by lining ,the areas with aromatic red cedar. This moth-repellent wood makes the closets ideal out-of-season storage areas. If storage space already is at a premium, consider the possibility of adding an out-ofseason storage area in a corner of the attic or basement. Cedar closet lining does not require solid backing; it can be installed over studs. Since the material is tongue-and-grooved to simplify fitting, it can be put up quickly. The average do-it-yourselfer can line a closet with cedar over a weekend.. The cost—less than $50! Such an improvement will increase the appraisal Value of a house by at least $100. Local lumber dealers carry aromatic red cedar closet lining, Which comes in pre-packaged bundles. It is easy to slip the bundles into car for the drive home. Just slit the packages open and you’re ready for work. A hammer, nails, saw and rule are the only tools required. Cedar closet lining does not re- quire any finishing. Paint or varnish would seal in the wood’s natural fragrance, which repels moths but is pleasant to the human senses. The first stej[i in lining a closet with aromatic red cedar is to remove old fixtures and equipment from the walls. Then locate the studs by punching holes in the plaster with a thin nail. Next build up the cedar lining, starting at the bottom and fastening the pieces to the studs with four-penny nails. When no corner molding is used, the joints should be measured carefully to assure a close fit.., Finish one wall at a time. Use the same installation technique for the ceiling. Whenever possible, line the inside surface of the closet door to gain maximum benefit from the red cedar fragrance. If the door isn’t lined, weatherstrip it to prevent the moth-repelling aroma from escaping. Remember, always store clean clothes in a cedar-lined closet. Fence Adds Charm According to the Southern Pine Association, a wood “bas-ketweave” fence blends rustic charm with a nice touch of architectural styling. As the term implies, the fence is composed of horizontal lumber interwoven among wood posts. Basement Space Put to Work Basements are bacoming ft part of the home’s living area. Play rooms, dens and photographic darkrooms are among the many uses to which basement space is being put. Since they get plenty of hard wear-and-tear, they should have easily cleaned, durable and economical surfaces. Quarry tile and unglazed ceramic mosaics are ideal materials for this purpose. A ★ ★ Your tile contractor can advise you on sizes, colors and textures, and answer any other questions you have on tile. ^‘Harry’’MCHOUE ... wa i Let Our New 1 LIFE INSilRANCE DEPARTMENT Serve You And Your family 1. Complat* Fomlly Pronrammlno 2. Panilon and DUability Incoma 3. Buslnau Continuolion Covarago 4. Ettola Planning NICHOLIE insurance 49 Mt. Clemens FE S-TSBS Pedy-Bilt Garage Go. BUILDERS OF FINE GARAGES 7T22 Austere, Waterford YOU CAN PAY MORE ... BUT YOU CANNOT BUY BEHER Let uf come out and show you our models, and give specifications and prices on your garage plans. ' NO SUB-CONTRACTING, DEAL DIRECT WITH THE BUILDER FOR GARAGE AND CEMENT WORK CUSTUM BUILT e BLOCK e BRICK e NO MONEY DOWN All Work Is 100% Guaranteed f/'l» to Yrar» to Pay OR 3-5619 COMPLETE MODERNIZATION PROORAM FREE ESTIMATES - FHA TERMS - CEMENT WORK a Racraalion Roomi # Br..i«woyi • Porchat • Roofing • Siding GARDEN SUPPUES MAOIC life GRASS FERTILIZER LAWNahiGARDEN SUPPLY •W: Oakland County’s LARGEST ■ ’Lawn'll Garden 1# SUPflY Apply ligkt weight bag of LIFE anytime of yeor. Grasses requir? what LIFE supplies . . . 20-10-5. Faster results, deeper green, healthier lawn in less • time. $095 a complete line of GARDEN TOOLS and ACCESSORIES OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. THE PONTIAC PKESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 ELEVEN CHILDREN’S IPLAYHOUSE - This attractive redwood A-frame “^cabin-in-the-wooda” to actually a children’s playhouse vdiich .was built fw u cost of approximately |200. The front door is only 5* rathw than the normal 6’8” height. The roomy 8’x8’ interior, whfch is 9’ high at the peak, affords plenty of playroom for children. Complete, detailed plans with working drawings and a materials list may be obtained by sending SOc to cover cost of postage and’hap-dling to Simpson Timber Company, Department P-1, 2040 Washington Building, Seattlb, Washington. Better Start Moving Soon Are You Prepared to Beat the Heat? The homeowner’s time for dreaming is running out. If you and your family pre to derive maximum enjoyment from the improvements you have been planning, the time, for action is close at hand. The transition from winter to summer — from concern over fuel bills to complaining about the heat — is all too short in many ^arts of the country. ^ If yonr object is to achieve a cool house during theis too-soon-with-us summer months, you shouid provide shade, shade, shade — by every device possible. Procedures for keeping heat outside the house are more efficient and economical than removing it once it is in. To assist the homeowner in his hour of decision, listed below are some of the basics for maintaining a cool interior during the hot months: SHADING WINDOWS: This is an absolute necessity, since glass is an excellent conductor of heat. One of the most efficient shading devices on the mar- ket is a new-style, roll-up aluminum awning which can be adjusted by inside controls to whatever position the angle of the sun requires. The roll-np feature eliminates toe chore of taking them down and putting them up, and their color variety permits choices ud^lch harmonize with toe house decor and enhance overall appearance. A REFLBCnVB ROOF: IThe closer the roof color is to white, the more effective it will be in keeping solar rays from getting inside and heating up the structure. SHADING WALLS: Usitig any means devisable to deflect sunlight is the golden rule for comfort. Some fine old maples or elms, properly distanced from the house, are an ideal means. If nature’s lack of foresight (or a builder’s depredation;) have deprived yon of this solution, the installation of a wide window awning or patio cover can bring about much toe same effMt. ' ' Pro<«ot bhiidrcn, pMs. prop«ily ANCHOR* FENCE • AB-oluminumortledoonstmethn • Attractive Modemmeih (1* weave) or standard dMinlink • t^ity construction, ftilly guaranteed • Installation by factoiy-trained ciew • Nationwide, oldest (established 1892), largest fenoe-makers for homes AS LOW AS $5.00 A MONTH FI 5-7471 NO DOWN payment • M MONTHS TO PAY • 1ST PAYMENT JUNE This problem is most acute on east-west exposures, since the sun strikes at angles approaching the horizontal. ★ ★ W MOVING AIR: - Anyone who has ever sweltered in temperatures over 90 knows the cooling power of moving air. Built by: Ross Homes 4-Bedroom Colonial ' with Full Basumunt AAODELOPEN 3633 LORENA DR. Wafklnt Loku Off DIxlu Highway Total Prico . Comfsleito , Including Lot ’24,950 The Vicksburg is a home designed and built for real family living and comfort. The many outstanding features ore ... e Seal Gloft ' Windows and Screens • 4 Bedrooms • Family Style Kitchlin ' 0 Family Room with Fireplace O Full Dining Room • forge Living Room • 2'/t Baths • Attached 2-Cor Garage • Full Basement ,0 Gas Hot Water Heat • Split Rock Brick o Built In Kitchen Stove and Oven • Large 87-foot by 130-foot lot. Model U Open for Your Inspection on Sundays 1 to 6 P.M. BmUlByllu BmUthr Thai Malt*, ■ Ham m Ha OSS HOMES INC. Phong FEdoral 4-0591. dJS'roM GARAGES WE GUARANTEE TO SAVE YOU MONEY! FRAAAE BLOCK BEICK ALUMINUM hTThCHEP QhBAOES Mambur GCCA "GET TWO BIDS AND THEN CALL US" We have no salesman to pay. We have our own cement crew with 25 years experience. All jobs sold by owners. « Every Job Carries Our Five-Year DIXIE quality Warranty ! UP TO 5 YEARS TO PAY . . . 1 st PAYMENT TO SUIT YOU! FRiX ESTiMATES: DIXIE GARAGE CONSTRUCTION, Inc. 5744 HIGHLAND ROAD (M-59)-BETWEEN CRESCENT LAKE and AIRPORT RDS. TAKE Airport road and then go east on M-59 CALL OR 4-0.571 OPEN DAILY & SUN. 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. \ TWKI.VK . r: TIIK PONTIAC PRKSS, SATURDAY,'MAY 2, 19G4 LAKE LIVING — The Mount Vernon In Laguna Vista Subdivision, bordering on Wolverine Lake, has 1,015 square feet of living space. Built by the Dlorah Building Company, the home sells for $12,:i25. The attached gar- age is optional. Sliding glass doors lead from the dining area to a future patio. White aluminum siding with black shutters arfe used on the exterior. Paved streets and community wAter add to the urban conveniences. FURNISHED MODEL — The living room in the furnished model of the Mount Vernon is painted an off-white. Carpeted in moss green, the room is traditionally decorated. A matching sofa and chair in rose denim introduce color contrast. The^rint of an old fash- ioned girl over the sofa is balanced with an enlarged replica of a serving-spoon planter in antique green. Repeating the contrast Is the high backed occasional chair covered in a floral print of rose on white. A cranberry glass and brass floor lamp illuminates the grouping.' Paint Number^ on Garbage Cans Paint your house number on your trash cans and covers to deter loss or theft on garbage-collection days. nized steel cans, providing the surface to be painted is clean before you start. To clean, wipe the surface dipped in a solution of vinegar and water., This will remove surface grease and let the paint “take” with better results. Paint adheres well to galva-1 with a cloth that has been Built By: ROSS HOMES Visit Our BLUE STAR MODEL (FumIthMl) in Shenandoah Subdivision 4-Bedroom Colonial ^ Featuring • AH Ca$ • Coifing • lake Privileges • Horseback Riding • Suburban Living ROSS NONES, 11.0. FlGolf Course - access to Wooddeck#r Lake for all property owners — make your* selection today. GORDON WILLIAMSON CbAAPAhYv BIRMINGHAM OFFICE 4066-W. AAapla Rd. 646-2535 GO MODERN-GO GAS with 3 and 4 bedrooms, face brick, 2 ear atlached jarate, family room, tas heal, full basement, DorWals to outdoor livin( FROM tJ| d| AAA ▼ T T as little as S140 DOWN FHA THE WOODSTOCK —face brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, full basement, compartmented bath, ‘'U” shaped kitchen with Formica or birch cabinets, disposal, gas heat, sliding glass DorWal, full insulation. THE WHITEHALL—face brick 4 bedroom colonial, full basement, 2 car attached garage, VA baths, "U" shaped kitchen with disposal, sliding glass DorWal, gas heat, full insulation. Dull I SunOii, 1 P.M. U I P M MODEL PHONE J3S cm ill Phtnt 13M909 THE WIUIAMSDURG - face brick tri-level with 3 bedrooms and easy to finish 4th bedroom and extra bath, finished baths on upper and irade level, “U” shaped kitchen, J car „ garage, panelled family room, sliding glass DorWal. CHARLES TUCKER, President, Tucker Realty Company *oy»: “These are the finest values I have ever seen for the money. They’re tremendous buys!" Sales by TUCKER REALTY CO. TMt it i Sil ll«i Stir Himi 6i Miortant to' create this good first impression, a leading industry program this spring is being called “Better Lawns Mean Better Living.” Many mor^ enjoyable sum-mer evenings are spent in your outdoor area when there are no insects to'pursue you or weeds to irritate you. Today, lawns are utilized for everything from a neighborhood playground to tbe scene of a tomial wedding. Better lawns DO mean better living when applied to the coming summer months, so it’s up to us to make them the best we can. If your lawn is infested with weeds, it is actuaUy a good sign oHts capabilities. Turf experts agree that any soil supporting an abundant weed growth can support a beautiful lawn. Investment of a few suniiy . afternoons in lawn maintenance will return not only monetary value in your real estate but will physically reward you and your friends during those pleasurable summer evenings ahead. Briefly, here is what you should do to create your better lawn for better living! Clean all leaves,awigs and dead vegata-tkm from the lawn,'Work up the boil in bare spots. ; Reseed with t^ quality grass seed adapted to your soil and climatic conditions. Fertilize to insure the lush green color in your lawn. Then apply a pre';emerge crabgrass control contain i n g Bandane. This Is the product that allows the grass seed in those bare spots to continue germination unharmed while controlling crabgrass and soil insects. Next, begin a watering program. Be sure the grass seedlings emerge in soil that never has been allowed to dry out. Continue to keep sqll moi^ at all times, niow high, and enjoy your better lawn. For more detailed information on lawn maintenance, contact your local lawn and garden dealer. He is prepaied to assist you in your personal “Better Lawns Mean Better Living” program. Ask to see his “Beautiful Lawn” shopping list that will show you exactly what to buy to convert that “Vacant Lot” appearance Into the country club look. If your dealer should not have this list, you can get a copy, plus many more educational tips from Velsicol Chemical Corporation, 341 East Ohio Street, Chicago, Illinois 80611. Interesting Room Effeot For an interesting effect in i recreatkm room, alternate bard-board panels of a selected wood-grain with a textured panel in the motif of travertine marble, a d v lie s the Masonite Home Service Bureau. ★ ★ ★ Both are factory-finished and easy to maintain by occasional wiping with a damp cloth. The low - cost, durable panels, are available at most lumber and building supply yards. Whether the climate is hot or cold, home owners want insula-ti6n in their ceilings, say bousing experts. HOME arpeting- I ile-Linoleum L S1O0 SASHABAW RD., DRAYTON KAINS (2 Bleeks North ef Walten) ITM42I Oftnn MON How TWHS.«la «-nU. t la 9-SAT. * la SiSO Complete One Stop Center for Home Modemixotion eaaasES WE GUARMilEE TO SAVE YOU MONEY «0tl TWO Bids and Tban Oal Ua" We Have Ne SlateMmen to Pay All Jabs told by Owners Batihihhfd In 1938 e Bathrooms • Aluminum Siding e Roofing-Outtora e Aluminum Storm Soroont • Awning and Patio e Furaaoa e Rao. Rooms e Pormort e Porohoo e AddHiono e Kitchans e Attic Rooms SIBLEY BUILDING & CONSTRUCTION CO. 2SI Yooriitis Rda, Pontlio FE 8-04T9 Lumber 4495 Dixie Hwy. HOURS—OR 3-1211 OPEN WEEKDAYS MONDAY thm FBIOAT IA.ll.tali80P.ll. UTOMlAYt free IAJL ta 4 PJI. RUSTIC REDWOOD HOARD Youll find the ructfc redwood board It right of home In your gorden forthe perfect fence material. The use of thlo new redwood la unlimited yet is to low In price. It can be' used for fence board, break water, board and batten fidIng, also for rustic Interior finish. ROUSH SAWN 1x12 ( - FUUSIZE *1690 SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 THE PONTflc PRESS. SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1064 SEVENTEEN FERTILIZER 10-6-4 ■ 60-LB. BAG GRASS SEED 1-Lb. BAG 19^ ARMOUR'S VERTAGREEN ROSE FOOD l'.v 39* STEEL CLOTHES POSTS Deluxe Fertilizer and Seed SPREADER GRADE, Y-GROOVED PHILIPPINE MAHOGANY 4’x7’ $099 SHEETS, Only O SAVE! PLYWOOD FIR PLYWOOD A'xO'xVe” SAVE NOW SELECT BIRCH A'xO'x’/e” SAVE 15" PLYSCORE 4'x8'x%” 2®® «« 4« ■■ NOW ^ P.T.S. FIR PLY 4'x8’x%' SAVE ;98 4x8 V-QROOVEO, 6-COAT, PRE-FINISHED OAK PLYWOOD Gold Bond PLASTER BOARD E£1 SUMP PUMPS Aluminum.Bas* Fully 9uor-ontaad. Ragular 44.95, Now 4x8xV4...................'....$1.19 4x0m,V2.,.....................$1.59 4x8xVa........................$1.39 4x12xVz............../.......$2.59 4x13xVo4........ .....$2.35 rOCK UTH, 32-n. Roll 99c METAL LATH, 2x9 dia. 96o All Pric. Abov. 10 orMor* READY-MIX CEMENT 5 Bags GOLD BOND PALUTEX PAINT or Mora OS' BAG |$jB8) 5-FOOT STEP UDDERS Haavy ralnforcail wood lad-dart for qll-around homa uta. Now! Vinyl Latex TOPFLITE PAINT jByJVol’f Gypsum Co. Whit* for 2®®9->. ALUMINUM HORIZONTAL SLIDING' WINDOWS AT *20 BELOW COST PAINT ROLLER and PAN COMBINATION AOc With Purchaa* of a Gallon or AApro Gold Bond Paint CLEAR WHITE PINE MOLDINOS 11/16x214 T.D. Casing Lin. Ft. 8e 11 /16x2Vi Ovolo Casing Lin. Ft. 8c VtxSYs T.D. Base Bd. .. Lin. Ft. 9c %x% Baso Shoo....Lin. Ft. 2c %x%-14 Round....Lin. Ft. 3c ,11/16x3% Stool..Lin. Ft. 9c i%xl 14 T.D. Stop ....'. Lin. Ft. 3c %xl % T.D. Stop.Lin. Ft. 3%c %x% Covo'Mould . . Lin. Ft. 314c 11/16x1 % Cove AAould Lin. Ft. 7c ___ In lots of; UBINET HARDWARE! #1880 CHROME HINGE Reg. T5c Sale 45c #286 FRICTION CATCH Reg. 19c Sale 10c #260 CHROME HANDLE Reg. 29c Sale 18c #181 Ch. Concave Knob 1 ' aoTV/// 2x4-8’Studs Beg. Lengths.. »114*«M fxt2 GflQDO II Cedar Boards.... III JALOUSIE WINDOV '““" St "iss.. $ • LOUVINS **"“'“* H«H Choiet -FOOT SLIDING GLASS DOORS Haavy dufy, quality aluminum A A8A frama. Buy l|iit.B-foot door at S pricaofao-fodt. ■ HAND SAW Rag. 2.69 1.00 ^ EIGHTEEN .......... "" THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 Need Te Enlarge Ydur -I'i: MODERNIZATION LOANS CAN BE MADE IN MINUTES Do It With a COMMUNITY NATIONAL lANKiOAN If you*re looking for financing $o onlarga your look no farther ,., Our hank is preparad so make She CASH available so you and on beSSer Serrm and lower rases,, .See us soon, Share is. no obligasion. WouM You'Like a HOME BUYER’S GUIDE It'f your* for tho asking . . . avallablo at all offieos of Co^nwi^y National Bank or mail tho coupon bolow and th* guide will be sent directly to you. T Clip and Mon to CommunHyNartanal Bank I Box 330, Pontiac, Mkhipan ' | I RUSH MY FREE GUIDE TO I Bank 16 OFFICES-Downtown Pontiac... W. Huron... N, Petty...Keego Harbor... Walled Lake... Union Loke.. Milford ... Lake Orion ... Wateiford ... Woodward.,. County Center... Romeo... Mall... Roche.ster., University and Bloomfield Hills. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation r* THE PONTIAC imESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1004 NINETEEN ' " "W WAtIPAPER SPECIAL! OVER 600 PATTERNS IN STOCK 1963 CLOSE-OUT SELECTIONS STYLE PERFECT 29”s.r. PRESTO PASTED 49%.r 'BIRQE QUICK 99*’6.r. CAMEO 89*’s.r E-Z-OU 99*t.r. VARLAR *r*s.r ACME QUALITY PAINTS Inc. ■ THE PfAK OF PAINT PiPnCJION 5/NCE !(?«-(" NVINIIN' TIKMS ■ FlUt COinR HKCTION UdVICt ■ Ml f t CmlVM AGME QUALITY PAINT 3 N. SAGINAW ST. tOft. PIKE FE 2-3308 , CLARKSTON GARDENS-“The Westerner” at 6300 Waldron Road, Independence Township offers 1,350 square feet of living area for 317,890. Built and sold by Aristocrat Building Company, the three-bedroom model is open from 12 noon to 7 p.m’ daily and from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday,. Its large kitchen and dining area, pictured above, overlook the family room. Sliding glass doors lead to a backyard patio. Served by community water, homes in Clarkston Gardens have private septic systems. Gas heat is available. Lot sizes range from 100 to 123 feet wide and 130 to 150 feet deep. Hand Tool Convenient The portable electric grinder, sometimes referred to as a hand grinder, is the first cousin to the portable electriq drill. It handles most of the same kinds of jobs as the drill, but because it is so much less powerful (with the exception of the type used in industry), it is used for lighter work. With a grinder—and the var- ious bits, abrasive wheels, cutters and brushes which Tit into the chuck—you caii handle almost any kind of precision work difficult or impossible with larger tools. I If there is any one sentence of advice more important than others in using a portable electric grinder, it is this: take it easy. i for a lifetime of musical pleasure BALDWIN Home Organs! The rich and hcuuliful Houndu of KKAI. orf(an iquHic arc now hrouaht lo you in this ulli|nalc of niuMical creations. Only BALDWIN features Panoramic Tone with Reverberation, Percussion ensemble, voice chanainK cancel bars and many, many other features you'd never believe possible at todj^’s low prices. Why shop around when you'*ll know at juM one playing, BALDWIN is truly the world’s finest! From '995 Ol>t>n Monday und Friday Fveiiin/(ii Calbi Music Co. 11*)N. Saninaw KE .^,.K222 for a home beautiful . INUM PATIO • Always Cool • Adds Beauty to Your Homo o .100% Rustproof # Ray Only Pennies A Day! installation THIS PRE'SPRING OFFER GOOD LIMITED TIME! oil FE 4-4501 Call Now-Special Operators on 24 Hour Duty STERLING ENCLOSURE TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATdj«pAY, MAY 2, 1964 LONG-TIME FAVORITE — Oak paneling now is available at lumber and building supply yards in factory-finished hard-board that offers top appearance, moderate cost; dent, wear and stain resistance, and easy maintenance by damp-wiping, it was announced by Masonite Corporation. , As expressed in the company’s Royalcote line, oak has a subdued pattern with mild tonal contrasts that make it an ideal background wall in a study, bedroom, dining room and similar areas. The panels are effective also in^offices, stores and other public places. The distinguished looking panels are easy to install with common tools and are low in cost. They have color coordinated vertical grooves at random intervals. Matching wood and metal moldings are available; also putty sticks and colored nails. Panels, one-quarter inch thick, come in two sizes: 4’ x T and 4’ x 8’. Installations may be made over wall studs in new construction or directly over old walls or furring strips in existing structure. Beauty-Durability Furnished by Tile If you’re house hunting, here’s a good indicator of whether a home is well designed. A" ★ ★ Are the bathrooms cbnvenicAt to ali areas of the home? Another point to qheck is whether surfacings us^ arc durabie as weli good to iook at. . ★ ★ ★ Ceramic tile in bathrooms and elsewhere indicates you’re getting beauty and durability as weli as good design. ★ ★ A And tile’s impermeability is particularly important for any heavy-moisture areas. YOU GET THE SAFEST ROTARY IN THE WORLD WITH MOTO-MOWER 21^’ DELUXE PUSH ROTARY Hera's how Moto-Mower's new Safety-Guard Blade works to push ob-jMts like rocks down to the ground., 8»r« On hanWIt remott tmpviM •lartor rotMs*. •oMy atandorio. UakfortMatMl bataf* you iMty. BARNES-HARGRAVE Hardware 742 W. Huron (Across from Now P.O.) FE 5-9101 Atk About Our Special Price* on U*ed| Rotary, Reel ood Riding Mowers 0 0 0 Quthc^ntic early american, contemporary, traditional and modern Our large selection of brand name Electrical Equipment makes us the lighting and heating center of the Pontiac area. Our showrooms have a complete stock of the latest modeb of contemporary/ traditional and Early American fixtures well as bathroom and kitchen fixtures. Full lines of outdoor fixtures cire also on display. Trained lighting personnel to help you with your decorating problems See Our Electric Heat Display Public Welcome COME IN and BROWSE Our Trained Specialists Are Here to Serve You SHOWROOM HOURSt Mmiday’tiiy TwMvFrL’lHS 175 S. SASIIUIIir-- FE 2-S251 Flia PARKING ADJACENT TO OUR SHOWROOM ^ . THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATVUDAY, MAY 2, 1904 TWENTY-ONE Bigger Better New Tract Homes »ms Tract 'homes are getting bigger and better all the time. Today’s tract home usually has three bedrooms, two baths .and up to 2,400 square feet of living space, according to one community coordinating firm. In 1947 the typical development house had two bedrooms and one bath, and cove only 850 square feet. The modern tract home usually includes many features formerly found only in custoni-built homes. ★ ★ ★ For exaniple, ceramic tile is being used more extepsively than ever before—on bathroom wails and floors, kitchen countertops and backsplashes, and even decoratively for entrance-ways and fireplaces. CERAMIC TILE The Tile Council of America, trade association of the leading domestic ceramic tile manufacturers, says there are four reasons why homeowners prefer ceramic tile; ★ ★ ★ • It requires little maintenance other than an occasional quick wipe with a damp cloth. • It cannot be scratched, stained or burned. • It actually costs less today than it did even in the depression years. • It now comes in a wide variety of decorative sizes. shapes and patterns. There are more than 250 colors and shades from which to choose. ★ ★ ★ Other features that today'^s tract buyer seeks are a family room, sliding glass doors, and a built-in range and oven. For all this, the average tract family spends less of the husband’s income than it did 17 years ago.^ , Have fun with cut-out animals by placing them in amusing groups. Here, a big frog is the center of attraction not only for his mate but also a pair of > turtles and three baby skunks. Pattern 472, which gives actual-size cutting and painting ^ides for all seven, is 35c. This pattern also is in the Animal Farm Packet N. 76 along with Mamma Skunk and other beguiling creatures all for $1. Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. Bedford Hills, New York. Tips on Repainting Dirty Surfaces Here are some tips on repainting your wood home from the National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Association. If the old paint is Just faded, dirty and chalking, t^e only preparatory work need^ Is to dust the surface before painting. ■A ★ ★ If the surface is extremwy dirty, a good practice is to wash it with , a mild synthetic detergent and rinse thoroughly with water. Allow the surface to dry thoroughly before painting. Remove loose, flaking or blistering paint with a wire brush and scraper. BUILD FOR THE FUTURE STOP SMOKINO TODAY! BUFFALO, N.Y. — Ci«*rette smoking ou^weighs all othM CAUiei of lung cancer. The risk of lung cancer Increases the longer you smoke and the more cigarettes you smoke in a day. It lessens if you quit smoking. VmcIuiW* prolontHd-actUfi IMillrol topiut«i Qvqllobl* •! iMdIiiB drug covnltris Pull wtuk'i lupply unly .75 ONI CAPSUU WORKS All DAY ASK OUR PHARMACIST FOR the facts 2 STORES PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS — professionauy perfect PROPfRlY PRiaO 689 E. BLVD. AT PERRY FI 3-7152 1251 BALDWIN NoarCOLUAABIA FI 3-7057 .xW \V' REFRESH YOUR HOME WITH DU PONT PMNTSf LUCITE HOUSE PAINT 6*® NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION 378 N.tlASS LUCITE Wall Paint ^MOORE’S‘S" STREAMLINED WHITE PAINT 4 97 QAI. 1 QAL. UTEX PAINT WITH 7” ROLLER and COVER....... .............3.44 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING DONALDSON LUMOER PHONE FE 2-8381 to perfection . . . IF You’ve included McCandless Carpet The Finest Installation Work Available! Customized Draperies Designed for Any Room In Your Home! OPEN Friday Evenings Til 9:00 P.M. jMcCANDLESS 11 N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAt 2. ,1904 Troublesome Cockroaches Can Invade Your Domicile Sprinlg and summer are the time of year when roaches and other common household pests become especially troublesome. And even .if you keep a taut house, you may still be Invaded by the American, German or Oriental cockroach. These species are so adaptable, they can live on soap, paper, cloth, even ink. In fact, the cockroach has learned during it’s 250-million-•' year history to alter its digestive system to accommodate almost any diet. While it prefers homecooked meals, it doesn’t necessarily ^ need them. When pickings are slim in the kitchen, the roach will meander to the bathrooni for a repast of shaving cream, toothpaste, hair oil, anything containing grease. How do roaches get into the house? YOU bring most of them in! YouVe even nice enough to pick them up at the grocery store and give them a nice, comfortable ride home in the grocery bag or soft drink carton. You won’t see the , roaches, of course, but the eggs are Tile Makes Exteriors Different If you’re looking for something to make the exterior of your home decoratively different, why not surface a portion of it with ceramic tile? This ancient and durable material now comes in an almost endless selection of sizes, shapes and colors so that it will be easy for you to find the tile that’s right for your home. » Homeowners will like tile on exterior walls because, unlike most other materials, it never needs to be painted. Its colors are fadeproof, and the material itself is impervious to all weather conditions. Because it requires no maintenance other than an occasional quick wipe with a damp cloth, tile means long-range economy. That’s just one of , the reasons why this beautiful material is being used on the outside of • more and more office buildings and institutions. If you would like to use tile »on the exterior of your home, it will be worth your while' to have an architect work out an appropriate design. No Shake, Rattle or Roll—Pack Tightly In packing any carton for a move to another location, be sure that there will be no shaking or rattling to cause damage ^to any of the articles. Packing experts suggest, too, that cartons be closed and sealed when packed. there. Each egg captnlh contains up to 8S potential roaches. Once hopie, these will hatch out In five to 14 days. Unless you act promptly, your troubles are just beginning — another generation of roaches will be along in about three months, depending upon the climatic conditions. ★ ★ Vi" According to the Terminix Division of Ei L. Bruce Co., one of the country’s biggest pest control services, the average roach infestation numbers about 2,000. “But it can range anywhere from two to 5,000 roaches,” says the company’s technical director, Frank H. Lyons. Once you’ve got a roach problem, how can you get rid of it? ★ ★ ★ Sanitation is the first step, notes Lyons. UVE FOR MONTHS “Cleanliness can hold down the infestation and keep it from getting out of hand. But you can’t starve out roaches — if necessary they’ll ' live for months on inorganfe matter inside wall partitions.” Positive control measures are necessary. Aerosol sprays ' will help tempiorarlly, but the real trick is to kill the roaches yon can’t see. This takes some doing. Even if you manage to kill all the adults, which is unlikely, egg capsules hiddep in the walls and baseboards will continue to hatch. And you’re constantly bringing home more eggs in the shopping bag. A ★ ★ The easiest way to rid your home of roaches and other pests is to call a professional pest control operator. Most companies offer a regular monthly pest control service. Colonial Green LAWN FOOD ' top Quality • Moderately Priced 2“ bagTccdtt 5,000 sq. ft. Non-bumlns, Iona lastina. oosv »o Sow gratt M«d Iho tamo day If you Ilk#. Equal »o many odv#rtU#d brands soiling up to 54.50. •.; REGAL SEED & SUPPLY CO. Ponllar - 2690 Woodtrord - VE Drayton — 4266 Dixie Htvy — M4 5t between the requirements of a new Job, usually, and the business of moving, heads of families are Rrone to neglect personai things.' The matter of a will is one of the things that have tripped more than a few intelligent peo--ple moving from one state to another. ^ Although a will that ia valid in one state can be probated in another despite differences in state laws, a long-disthnce move can still create problems. NEW STATE For instance, guardian and trustee provisions might have to be revamped to conform to the requirements of the new state of residence. Also, the executor you originally named in your former home area might be reluctant or unable to travel long distances to settle y<^ estate. In any event, hi» chargeable expenses for doing-so‘would be much higher. / Similar delay ' and expense might be caus^ by the neces- ?ity of checking witnesses who Ive a long way off. Since a will is a highly complex affair, /the moving firm head advises that you make any desired changes only with the help of counsel familiar with the laws of the state of your new residence. _£______________ Attractive Yard Possible With Project Plans “How to make your yard at-qractive with build-‘em - 'yourself projects” could be the name of this list of plans available from the Masonite Home Service Hureau: - • Woven Carport with tool room, AE-296. • Roll-Away Cabana, *AE-370. • Outdoor Living Room, AE-324. • PU^rhouse Plan for Children AE-313. ^ • Picnic Table and Benches; also Lawn Chair, AE-279. • Chuck Wagon featuring 2’x 4’ tip, rugged construction, portability, AE-376. • Garden Center with Greenhouse and Storage, AE-388. • Sand Hoop Play Space, new version of sandbox, AE-342. • Residential Awnings shade windows inexpensively, AE-258. Any three plans may be ordered free; extras are a diipe each. Write the bureau at 29 North Wacker Dr., CSiicago, 111., 60606. FULL PRICE $13,490 On Your Loti built By TRU-KRAFT BUILDERS Tokw M-15 to First Block-Right On* Block — Loft to Model One of TODAYS BEST BUYS! GOMPME 1HESE FEATURES * 3 BEDROOAAS > 2-CAR GARAGE * LARGE FAAAILY ROOM * BRICK and ALUMINUM CARPETED LIVING ROOM * ULTRA MODERN KITCHEN * 1V4 BATHS Sales By « GAS HEAT DON WHITE, inc. 2891 Dixie Hifhway OR 4-0494 Defies Comparison ... The All New 1964 QUAD LEVEL Oh V/ATERFORD HILL Check Those Outstanding Features! ^ IVi Baths ★ 32 Ft. Kitchen ^ Dining Room ^ Fireplace Sales By DON WHITE, Inc. 2891 Dixie Highway OR 4-0494 ^ Carpeting ^ Face Brick ★ 2300 Sq. Ft. Living Atm FULL PRICE $22,900 Plus Lot Quality Built By Oakland Cmstniction Co. Model Open SAT. and SUN. 1 to 5 P.M. ONE OF ' OAKLAND COUNTY'S FINEST SUBDIVISIONS Visit the Hill This WEEKEND! SMART BUYERS SELECT Because It Offers . . . TkeHiffi if UNEQUALED NATURAL BEAUTY The Hill is well known (or ifs beautiful orchards, fall evergreens and stately oaks — All are here. ★ UNSURPASSED SCENIC VIEWS Every large site (Minimum 100'Frontage) has an Incomparable view. , if SWIMMING, BOATING, FISHING, SKIING, GOLFING Safe, sandy, private beach, spring fed Von Norman Lake, connects to five well known lakes. Excellent fishing, private Boot Marina. Golf course adjoins Hill. ★ IDEALLY LOCATED Tvw) miles to 1-75 X-way, Waterford Township Schools, bus picks children up on Hill..Close to Churches and Shopping. » if LOTS Sensibly RESTRICTED and PRICED (from $3500} if CUSTOM HOMES AVAILABLE By QUALITY BUILDERS New models now under construction. • NEW ANDERSONVILLE RQAD ENTRANCE v. Now Under Construction ' » ' DON MIHITE, Inc 2891 DIXIE Highway-PONTIAC-OR 4-0494 TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1964 Resurfacing WooHen Floor? Get the Most Out of Rented Machine Renting a sander to resurface where the larger machine won’t a wooden floor? Here are some tips that will help you to get the most out of the machine: ★ ★ ★ • Never rent the sander until you are ready to use It. Sounds like unnecessary advice, doesn’t it? Yet it often happens that a do-it-yourselfer rents a sander, takes it home and finds he must first remove the furniture from the room, nail down loose boards and clean up generally. The result: his rental fee is higher than it should have been. • Always rent an edger along with the sander. The edger will enable you to sand close to the walls, stairs and other places reach. • Tell your renting dealer what type of floor you have and whether a lot of finishing mate- ^ “^he sander cuts rial must be removed from the «nuallv well on both forward and equally well on both forward and backward strokes. w w ★ -------• Use a closed metal con- two, three or more sandings are surface. He will recommend the kinds of abrasive to use and whether necessary. SPECIAL ABRASIVE A special open-coated abrasive get better results if you take must^ used when heavy coats short steps when guiding the ma- of varnish or paint are to be ch^n^ removed. • Raise the sanding drum from the floor at the end of each eiit before the machine TEEN-TIME HOBBY — Laurie, the daughter of Mrs. Jane Kendall of Noble Road, Addison Township, practices one of her favorite teen-time hobbies, telephoning. To make use of every bit of space in their converted “little red schoolhouse” the Kendalls’ had the phone recessed in the front entrance hall. The wainscoting rail of the red barn siding is an ideal spot to rest a weary arm when the conversation gets too long. Yellow wallpaper with red accents brightens the area. Modern Sink Disposer Avoids Garbage Mess Even folks who like early American decor aren’t very fond of the old-fashioned kitchen garbage pail — it’s too aqthen-tic. Odorous, unsanitary, it not only offends eye and nose but it’s a nuisance to empty and clean regularly. In today’s modern kitchen, the garbage pail is truly out-ofplace. Alongside the modern range, refrigerator and attractive decor, it is equivalent to wooden wheels oft a new car. The truly modern kitchen, sa(Vs the Plumbing - Heating-Cooling Information Bureau, is equipped with a food waste disposer in the sink. Shredding food waste into fine pulp and flushing it down the drain, this appliance relieves the homemaker of garbage disposal inconvenience. ★ ★ ★ Almost all types of food waste can be handled — scrapings, parings, bones, fruit rinds, veg- etable tops, pea pods and corn cobs included. COMMON QUESTION A common question raised about waste disposers concerns their possible clogging effect on sink drains. Modem units, properly used, do not dog. To the contrary, they keep drains immaculate because of the continual scouring action of the waste pulp. Disposal units cut down on the least liked of all kitchen chores — the after-meal cleanup. ★ ★ ★ Since everything is done right at the sink — both scraping and washing of dishes — countless steps and minutes are saved. One of. the earliest uses of ceramic tile was by the Egyptians in the pyramids and tombs. comes^ a standsHlI. Keep the drum off the floor whpn the sander is not in use. • You may go back and forth tied from the sender’s dust bag. Don’t hurry the job. You’ll • Vacuum the floor before applying the finish. • S*of All Your Fura ond OHior • Wintor Oarmonts • Havo All Your f Summor Clothoa Spotloaoly Ronowod With Our... msm r3<5 in the Northeast to fl,MS in the South. The premium for polyvinyl-fluoride pr^inished siding on this average house comes to approximately 1200 over the cost of conventional siding materials. Its manufacturer guarantees it won’t need painting for at least 15 years. Eliminate Muddy Walk Entrances Ah inexpensive way to prevent unpaved walks from booming muddy during wet spells is to cover these paths with roll roofing or sheathing, advise home specialists at Allied Chemical’s Division. Rooflng may be nailed to the tops of stakes and the stakes driven flush with the ground every few feet. “CUSTOMERIZED” FEATURES — The Albee King model h(»ne on Iftginaw Road (M-54), east of 1-75, south of Grand Blanc, offers “customerteed features with pre -fabricated economy. Redwood siding and sand-st(»ie trim complement the contemporary exterior of the three-bedroom home. The ease of traffic flow through every room and the ample closet-cupboard space delight all who view its Interior. The model is open from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Monday through Friday; 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Saturday and 1 p. m. to 9 p. m. Sunday. Its adaptable floor plan caabe duplicated in three or four be^irooms with the exterior choice, modern colonial or contemporary. THRIFT CENTER for it yourself ^ projects! 6-FOOT PICNIC TABLES YOU CAN PLAY IT ANYWHERE and EVERYWHERE d.1,’625" Including Bench for tho first f/m*-lhe magic of music ... the magic of an ergaa . and tha magic of portabMItyl Play H In your recraatlon room. Wonderful on tha paHo. Porfact lor tha aummar cabin. Just tha Inatrumant for a traveling combo. Outdoors. Indoors. Upstairs, in the-basarhant. Your homo, friends' homes. You can mska music avarywhara and anywhere with tha new l-owray Portsbk organ. Special uses In schools, churches, trallara, boats and camps-avarywhara that mobility la a fqctor. Tha Lowray PorUbk will make beautiful music... for you and you and you. Aik abNt a (ni hom trial-lMMm lN~and our easy paymenl pin iPhere Music It Our Butinctt Dewntawn Pontiae Royal Oak, 4334 N. Woodward 14 I. Hwon ». H 44>SM at 13Vk Milo o S49.385S OpM««on. oppri. of great importance in achiev-Ing^B durable paint Job. ^e cost of paint to cover the average house is usually a small fraction of the total cost of labor and materials. Hence, it is good economy to buy a quality product In order to lengthen the time between repaintings and thus reduce labor costs. family room. Italian glebe lanterns light the foyer’s wrought iron railing planter. Three b^rooms and one and one-half bathk complete the interior. Selling fdr $18,990 plus lot, the model is found in the Twin Lakes Subdivision off M-59 in White Lake Township. The g/ ain and texture of redwood can be emphasize attractively with a stain or a. coat of thinned paint wiped off with a clean rag before it gets dry., SENSATIONAL FREE OFFER for LOT OWNERS.,.! from the Public Service Division of CADDIE HOMES ADSoiuieiy FREE ORIGINAL PLANS WORTH UP TO ^500— To get your set of blueprints absolutely FREE mail the coupon or bring it in to the CADDIE HOMES office nearest you. Don't miss this valuable offer! -ANOTHER CADDIE HOMES SERVICE- SEE CADDIE HOMES TODAY LOCAL OFFICE: 9700 U.S. 10 Clarkston, Michigan Phone 625-6211 Or 1062 Lancaster Ave. Rosemont, Pa. ^ yOBlIC 1^1^__DlVIS!0^i>^ LIMITED TIME OFFER-fAity PROVIDES FOR EVERY SIZE EVERY DESIGN EVERY LOT EVERY QUDGEf Gentlemen: I am interested in a: n RANCH □ BI-LEVEL □ SPLIT-LEVEL n COLONIAL 8 GEORGIAN' OTHERS MAIL TODAY TO: CADDIE HOMES PUBLIC SERVICE DIVISION PP 5/2/64 I would like a set of architect's blueprints. • I understand they are absolutely FREE. I own ! a lot. . I NAME____- ADDRESS- CITY-__- PHONE___ -STATE. OFFfR EXPIRES 5/30/64 j If you feel like you ore continually moving your outdoor furniture, garden equipment, toys and furniture, that you no briber hove any hee,d for, then you should sell them today with a fast action Pontiac Press Wont Ad! Be Sure Te Order The Thrifty 6-Tiiiie Rate mm! MS Phone 332-8181 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATUKDAY. MAY 2, 1964 THIRTY-ONE Mud l^ms'Help Mothers To children, «|Ktagtime her-«kl» the end of ‘^prlnt«r captii* Mjr” In the hou«. Aa the outfll* doors season begins, however, many motheft wil trade a noUgr houoe for • (btiy one became meat ywmirten Mod to bccotne «mi|dllMgMtS.** More and more smart home-owners are solving this dirty probiem»with a home-style “decontamination dhandm’* — the mud room. Usually lecntad adyaceat to die utchea er badt deer, the mad reemprevides a place to remove dirty beets, Aoes and clotbes — wash dirty hands — evea take a shower — idl beyond the beaads el the famOy “living gnarters.’* This buffer zmt between yard and home has saved many a homemaker from cries of anguish by keeping her ciean house ciean. W ♦ ★ Variations on the mud room theme are many it can be joined with the laundry dir utility room — even the woitshop. Because the floor is usually concrete or tile, little eoncem is given to the dirt that Is tracked in — in fact, it’s expected. NEW HOME Persons pianning construction of a new home are advised to consider inciuding a mud room in their plans. For those already owning a home, tfaare are several ways to add the room. It can be placed in one end of a garage, la a convertod breezeway, in tbe basement with a special outside entrance, in a nUMfy room or in an addMoa baW oato the sidi orhadkoflbibaasu. In fdanning, be sure to include enough plumbing facilities for your needs. Along with lavatoiy and water closet, a shower staQ is perfect for your summer swii^ers when they an home from the beach cosirad with sand. ★ w * For specific information about a mudroom for your home, contact a qualified idumbtog contractor. His experience and advice will be valuable in assisting you to choose the ideal arrangement for your needs. Architect— tbe Key Man I Key man in the home building industry very often is the architect, who ccmstantly searches for new and better sohitibns to thg creatim of living space. Builders look to the architect for design ideas to sell houses, such as ceramic filed hearth benches, entryways, countertops and snack bars. Architects like ceramic tile because of ifo color, durability and easy maintenance. COMPME before you BOBROW! 11 IF YOU the detoih^'' ournew MMIOWIIER’S UNWPUUIl 0n2iu l^Consolidate All Present Bills Closing Costs Arrangements Completed Within 72 Hours FJUIILY ACCEFTAIICE GORP. FEIM022 31T National Building lOWastHuroh GENEBAL EtECTBIC aO**Electrie Benge and Oven Looks like ■ bunt-in, but no remodeling needed... fits in place ^ present tunie. Base cabinet optkHuI extra —AntonMlie timer and oven controls — Look-In oven. Featim^ Refrigerator We’ve Ever Had at This Low Price e • • New’64 GIBSON with •. • 14.7 Cm. Ft. #171-»ieFreczer • Frost Clear Throughout! ige5»rg Yott lloisV Forget **MOTHEWS DAY!** Him6 Auiomatie Washer The “01e» Stendby--Yonr mother and your motherV mother prob. ably 08^ a Maytag! ONLY $295 UEEKLY- 14J cn. ft. of storage— 29%*» wide, 66” higb-No frost an^here—171-lb. bottom fi^toxer — More door, storage — Two porcelain crispers. NO DOWN PAYMENT! en New ’64 Refrigerator aa •i-fcwk Deluxe Gas Dryer Largs 12db. eapaelty-tlaimeM lifetime drum .. . won’t nut,t or pifola to blow out. Ad-jotlablo heat contiol iaelading “Air Oaly.’* ♦169’® f 10 DOWN FREE BEtlVERY AND SERVICE! GENERAL ELECnUG *VeraonaV* PORTABLE Velghs only 12 lbs.— Cany it upstairs er down — Bnih-in an-tenna-rNew low priew Free Delivery and Service! 90 Days Same As Cash! THE Open Monday and Friday Eveninga* *til 9 P.M. GOOD HOUGPUIG SHOP 51W; HURON of PONTIAC FE 4-1555 TlIIK'rV-TWO ............. "■ THE PONTIAC 1’RESS, SATURDAY, MAY 2, BIRTHDAY CAKE and ICE CREAM piion* FE 5-95O0 now and join Budman't 57th Birthday Party* your froo Sara Loo Cako and Half Gallon of Ico Croam from Biidman't with any froU ostimato, no purchaso nocosaary. Cortifi-cdtoi for toth troats rodoomablo at all Wrigloy Supormarkota. M’s Onr KriMaT-ToH Mtiw Fna Gifit ... tha Samalional Savings... the Fantaslie CredH Tarmt! 1. t Dnn-No Paynents for FULL MONTHS SALE! Aluminum Gutters and Downspouts At low at $1.25 por wook le Down-No Poymontt for 7 MonthtI ' GALLJE9-02N M MNTUO CUL FE i-SEM *T 21S VMRiaiS ED. If no ontwor. Dial Oporator, otk for ENtorprito 6707. No chafe* ♦* yo“I Wo com# to your houto dolly 'til 10 p.m., Sunday 'til 6 p.m. with Froo Cako and |co Cfoom with ony froo oifimato. ^ BUY OlMCf WhyPoyMor^ The Weafker WMIMr BurMu l>or«CMt I’Hrtly Cluiidy (Otiallt «n Pag* 1) A'",_'' THE VOL. 122 NO. 74' ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATUKDAY, MAY 2, um4^48 PAGES UNITeP^P^MlNT^^NA^lONAL . ’ ^ "'■HTTl Pantlac Prau PImM LEAVES FOR SOUTH AMERICA-Oakland County’s former civil defense director, John Madole, boarded a jetliner today for Cali, Colombia. He will represent the county under the federal government’s Alliance tor Progress with Latin American nations. Members of his family, Robert, 13, Janet, 15, and Mrs. Madole wave goodby from their home at 2970 Lacota, Watertard Township. They will join Madole in Cali when an older daughter can leave college, in June. 'All Military Bases Face Economy Cuts' WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense Secretary Robert S. MacNamara considers every U. S. military base a potential target of his economy drive. Every post or installation is in “Jeopardy” if it is inefficient, McNamara yesterday told a group of Massachusetts congress- men concerned about thii future of the Boston Naval Shipyard and the Watei town, Mass., arsenal The defense secretary said hi had a secret list of installationis where costs could be-cut and he would be *‘(Jerelict” in his duty -if he did not act. The delegation met with McNamara to.protest vigorously the scheduled closing of the Watertown arsenal that w i IJ cut 1,849 jobs from the area, However, McNamara refused .to change his plan to close the arsenal by September, 1987, claiming the defense department can get the arsenal’s goods cheaper on a competitive basis through private industry. He told the group that the defense department is studying 8,000 installations for possible economy moves and that a secret list has been made of bases likely to be affected. The defense secretary said since he entered the cabinet he has taken 551 announced actions to get defense costs down. He said these actions have affected 80,000 jobs. McNamara said the difficulty in finding job possibilities, for shipyard workers was a reason why no Navy, shipyard closings have been announced. 'Caller'Held for Mind Test Romney Laughs at Armed Intruder Visit In Today's Press Builders Informative guide to Jtelp with spring .homes, i garden plans—TABLOID. ;i Laos Merger of right-wing, neutralist factions announced — PAGE 2. LANSING (AP) -Although Gov. George W. Romney laughed off the incident, police today held for mental examination the man who marched into Romney’s office carrying a loaded pistol in his attache case and a folding knife in his pocket. Held on a 48-hour psychiatric detainer in a Lansing hospital ward is Charles P. English, 37, of Bogota, Colombia, and formerly of Miami. Police said he has a history of mental disturbance for which he was once hospitalized. English said he was sent here by former Vice President Richard Nixon. He got one step inside Romney’s inner office before state police bodyguard Jay Kennedy, 32: gi-abbed him by the shoulder and yanked him back. “He said Nixon and I should UNtMan run on the national "ticket,” Romney said with a laugh aRer he and Kennedy talked later ■Hinri ^ - '• with English privately. hHHIbAII " NIXON APPOINTMENT IBPIIIIP li ’ Vigil . , "Too-slow Methodidf"' integration is protested— : PAGE 2. ‘ Astrology Bridge . ... Church News Comics ...... Editorials . .. Home Section ; jyiarkets .... Obituaries Sports Theaters - 10 TV & Radio Programs 31 20 ^ 20 13 15 20 i 6 M 17 19 f 24 ^ 21-23 Wilson, Earl Women s Pages . English had introduced himself to several of the workers in the outer offices and told Mrs. Margaret Little. Romney s appointment secretary, that Nixon had arranged his appointment. He tried to .follow her into the inner office, and in the doorway said to Romney: '’My name is English and I want to talk to you." That was as far as lie got. Kennedy sat him down forcibly in a chair and asked him to open the case. When English refused. Ttennedy opened.it. saw the .38 caliber revolver, and arrested English. * ■ it ■ af. Police said in Bogota, where English s wife and three chil-. dren live, he has Q permit to own and carry the gun, but this is nof valid in Michigan. SEVERAL OCCUPATIONS Police said English told thern he was an FBI jigent. Romney' said English identified himself "at a Florida politician;. His (Continu)ed on Page 2. Gol. 8) Russia Issues New Warning .on Overflights Castro Says Cuba Will Down Planes With Soviet Rockets MOSCOW (UPI) — Russia, flaunting a new anji-aircraft missile, was oh record today with a new warning to the United States that reconnaissance flights over Cuba could bring the world to the brink of war. Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev himself delivered the sharply-worded statement after the antiaircraft missile was trundled across Red Square in the annual May Day Parade of Russian military might. , See Pictures, Page 2 Western military observers said the rocket apparently was designed to bring dbwn low-flying planes. Premier Fidel Castro, in a Havana May Day speech, said that if negotiations fail to halt A m er i c a n reconnaissance flights over Cuba, his forces will use Soviet rockets to shoot down the U.S. planes. “If by shooting down one of those planes, we unleash a world conflagration, we ahaii not be resixinsible*” Castro said in a belligerent iFhour and 17-minute May Day speech. “We have made, are making and wlU make efforts to see those flights cease, and cease they must,” Castro said. KREMLIN RECEPTION Khrushchev, speaking of U.S. flights over Cuba at a Kremlin reception after the massive Moscow display ended, said: “We would like to warn those who are playing with fire once again to make them understand that by subverting the principles of peaceful coexistence, displaying disrespect for other countries they could draw the world into the abyss of another world war The Soviet leader denied that the Kremlin had sanctioned the spy flights in. a secret'deal with the United States. Castro was reported to have raised objections to “Soviet-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Nice Weather Is Predicted for This Weekend You can put away your umbrella at last. The weatherman promises partly cloudy skies with slightly warmer temperatures tonight and tomorrow. Lows tonight.will range from 47 to 53. Tomorrow’s mercury will climb to the 67 to 75 range. The prediction for Monday is increasing cloudiness and mild. Winds today are southeasterly at 10 to 20 miles. The lowest thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 46. At 1 p.m. the temperature was 63. Dozen in Field for 90th Derby East, West Champs to Vie in Famed Race AP PIWtSMx LOW AT STERN-The USS Card, victim of an explosion that blasted a hole below water yesterday, rests low at the stern in Saigon Harbor. The Card, a'baby aircraft carrier, partially refloated at high tide, and it was hoped makeshift patching will prevent sinking again. None of the 73-man crew was injured in the blast. Explosion Cripples U. S. Ship in Saigon LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Roses, riches and renowin today awaited the 90th Kentucky Derby champion, fastest in a field of a dozen racing bluebloods.^ Among the trim 3-year-old thoroughbreds answering the bugle for the I'A-mlle race were Western champion Hill Rise, unbeaten this season, and Northern Dancer, the Eastern ruler. Barring last-minute withdrawals, America’s foremost horse race held $114,300 for the winner. In addition to the 100,-00$ at historic Churchill Downs, millions could see the race at 4:30 p.m. EST on television. The weatherman premised partly cloudy skies and temperatures around 70 by post time. Long-striding Hill Rise, from El Peco Ranch in California, came in with eight consecutive Victories. CANADA FIRST A victory by Northern Danc- er, owped by E. P. Taylor of Toronto, would be the first for Canada. Opposing them were nine colts and a gelding, Roman Brother. Ishkoodah, son of Needles, was the only sbn of a Derby winner in today’s field. Needles, 1956 champion, holds the record winner’s share $123,450. Others in today’s field were Quadrangle, The Scoundrel, Mr. Brick, Dandy K„ Wil Rad, Mr. Moonlight, Royal Shuck and Extra Swell. SAIGON, Viet Nam, (/P)—A predawn explosion today sank temporarily the U.S. Aircraft Ferry Card in the Saigon River, and a grenade blast tonight injured four U.S. servicemen in a promenading crowd nearby. Police attributed both incidents to Communist terrorists. High tide at noon and laboring pumps freed the Card frofh the bottom muck of the river. Divers who inspected the gaping hole below the waterline in thfe ~ ----------------------♦^baby flattop, a World War Lady Astor Dies; First in Parliament LONDON (AP)-Nancy, Lady Astor, the Virginia belle who despised liquor but loved politics so much she became the first woman to sit in Britain’s Parliament, died today. She would have been 85 on May 19. The woman whose acid Wit riled countless Britons and delighted countless others during her quarter of a century in Parliament died at Grims-thorpe Castle, the Lincolnshire home of h«r daughter, Lady Ancaster, - northeast of The exact nature of her illness was not disclosed, but a member of her household said: “This is not a sudden thing. It is just old age.’’ Lady Astor will be buried privately in the chapel of the Astor home at Cliveden in Buckinghamshire. II carrier credited with seven Nazi U-boat kills, said they could not immediately determine whether the blast that' sent her down was external or internal. A man either in a car or on a bicycle — witnesses disagreed — hurled the grenade into a street running alongside the river front in the downtown area. The full blast hit one man in the back. Fragments injured three other:;. Blood stains were strewn across a 30-foot stretch of pavement. American and Vietnamese security officers rushed to the scene, about 200 yards from the U.S. Embassy. Ambulances carried the wounded to a hospital. A U. S. spokesman .said when the Card was hit it was presumed that Red Viet Cong guerrillas had crept under the Saigon comipercial wharf where she was moored and exploded a charge against the hull. The vessel settled to the bottom of the 48-foot deep river. All. the 73 civilian crewmen escaped injury. His testimony led to the government’s first conyictiop of Hoffa in several attempts. Hof-fa drew an eight-year sentence, which he is appealing. ’ Since then, Hoffa’s troubles have snowballed. He now is on trial in Chicago for conspiracy to defraud the union’s pension funds. Students Hear Law Day Talk Students attending Law Day ceremonies yesterday at Oak-' land County courthouse auditorium heard some, special praise for local legal minds. “The Oakland County bench is generally esteemed throughout the state as one of the finest,” said program speaker James Renfrew, a Roya} Oak attorney. ' TOP ARTIST-Michael Wills (center) of Lathrup Village yesterday won first place in the Law lj>ay poster, contest sponsored by the Oakland Comity. Bar Assbeiation Auxiliary. Secorid and third winners were Patty DeVlne (leff) of Huntir^ton Woods and Steve Brown of Soutlrfiel(L>The contest was part of the local observance in a nifional bar a'ssociajion effort countering the Soviet Union’s May Day celebration. ,• Attending the program, sponsored b;^ Oakland County Bar Association, were all seven Circuit Court Judges anij Probate Judge Norman R. Barnard. Circuit Judge James S. Thorburn presided. > Top winner in the annual Law Day poster'contest sponswed by the Bar Association Auxiliary was Michael Wills, 17217 Margate, Lathrup Village. He received a $25 prize. . • Second and third place winners were Patty DeVine,' 12739’ Bergman, Huntington Woods, and Steve Brown, 29798 Spring Mill, Southfield. , Hoffa Striking at Former Pal? LANSING The Senate yesterday passed, 22-9, a bill which could make Michigan’s 144 lawmakers the highest-paid in the nation at $12,500 a year, in-:cluding expenses. Over the nine Republican negative votes, the Senate sent the raise—included in the $32.9 appropriation for general government—to the House for agreement on several Senate changes. May Seize Local Headed by Witness WASHINGTO N(AP)-James R. Hoffa reportedly is trying to strike back at a former pal and associate who testified against A source close to Hoffa said the groundwork is being laid for possible trusteeship action to seize the Baton Rouge, La., Teamsters local of Edward G. Partin, who turned star government witness in Hoffa’s convii> Hon in February om jury-tanP ■ paring charges. ’The stocky Teamster chief sat white-faced with anger when Partin showed up as a surprise wltnels ^in |bha(ta-nooga, Tenn., to testify that he heard Hoffa offer op to $20,000 to bribe a juror in a previous federal case. OTHER PROBLEMS He also faces a high-level internal dispute oy.pr payment of his huge legal fees. Partin, business agent of Baton Rouge Local 5, is charged with e^hf zzUng union funds in an indictment dating from before he turned against Hoffa. A high Teamsters official confirmed that Partin’s activities are being investigated by top echelon union representatives. There was a meeting with Murray W. Miller in Baton Rouge last week in an investigation that may be a preliminary to establishment of a trusteeship,” the official said. BOARD MEMBER Miller, Dallas, Tex., is an international vice president and member of the Teamsters’ ruling 15-man executive boqrd. The high Teamsters source said a trusteeship over Par-tin’s local “would call for the international revoking temporarily charter of the local, making it a ward of the international until its affairs are straightened out.’’ Such action would freeze out present officers, including Par-tin. It is .uncertain whether Hoffa can succeed 4n wresting Partin’ local fiV^ him. He has the authority to put a local, uiid^r L, trusteeship. But the, local can the executive hoard, which, r^ cently^haS showed signs of tivenessv' Some of its meml rebelled Jast week against coi ftinued uhion payment of Hoffa’s lawyers’ hills after' the Team-iters"* general coi^eh. warned that-he believes uie practice-was illegal. 144 Lawmakers Could Become Highest Paid Measure Now Needs Approval by House, Governor's Signature The House already has approved the $4,250 pay increase, but the Senate knocked off House-opposed bonuses for party leaders of both chambers. The House must- concur in this’ and other amendments to send the measure to Gov. George W. Romney for his Passage came as the Senate phased finally on that portion of Romnhy’s $633 budget which was I it. These measnre$ also Were returned to the House for concurrency in amendments. Five of the bills in Romney’s proposed budget appeared head-Od for House-Senate conference committees after the House approved them with amendments. KEY ISSUES Among key issues slated for oenfannee ajipwred to jbw • •1280,(MH) approprlhtipn idr a fraf-he safety Renter at Michigan State Uniy^raity, and $100,000 frim a state schoIB^ slh;icken ship program. .’The traffic center money was left out as the Hiwse re-sU^ some $7.1 million in operating funds to state universities and colleges, which had been cut in committee. ’The bill for higher education was approved by the House at a total of $147.5 million after the last of the $7.1 million was restored. The Senate sweetened the proposed increase in state aid to public schools by $5.7 million and asked the House to approve the higher aid scale. PUPIL ALLOWANCE The Senate voted unanhnously for the boost'of $3 across the board in the per-pupil allowance to school districts, bringing the total cost of the school aid program to mme than $380 million. Bomb Blasts Dance Hall at Wixom Camp A bomb made out of gunpowder exploded early this morning at a summer camp in Wixom, blowing up a portion of a dance hall. Extensive damage was done to the roof, porch, dance floor and basement of the two-story frame building at the Detroit Finnish Summer Camp, 2490 Lyonia. Police Chief Frank Jadzin-said the explosion, which conM be heard three miles away,, oecurred at 2:5$ a.m. He said abont a quarter of the buildhig was blown up by the blast.' The building was vacant at the time. The camp is qpen on weekends, but there was.no activity there last night, said Chief / Jadzinski. ’The bomb was placed i on a porch near a door cm the east' side of the building. In addition-tq the building, a juke box, tables ai^ chairs and a tH>bUc address system were damaged in the bombing. ■LV 'two H3A0 3WW IPTAr PKESS. .SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1004 iail Protests Church's Stand PltTSBimQH (AP) - About 1,300 Methodist churchgoers front throughout the country staged a demonstration in downtown Pittaburi^ today, saying their Church’s stand on integration is not positive enough. They came from as far away as Chicago, Detroit, Birmingham, Ala., Atlanta, Ga., and Youths Injured in Racial Fight NASHVILLE, Tenn. WV-Scuf-fles between Negro and white youths injured several persons as racial demonstrations continued in Nashville, Tenn., for the fifth straight day. John Lewis, chairman of the national Student Non-Vilent Coordinating Committee, was among those injured. He was among nearly 100 /irrested earlier this week. Lewis was- charged with contributing to the delinquency of minors by persuading .them to stay away, from schoql and join the demonstrations. The scuffles broke out when Negro and white youths swarmed around a sandwich shop which closed its doors and refused to admit customers. The group of about marched from a church earlier chanting “Freedom” and carrying signs saying “We Demand Freedom.” Two sticks of dynamite with a fuse that fizzled were found in a Kansas City driveway where private property was being sold to a Negro family. Officers said the 10-foot fuse was blackened and that it apparently was extinguished by an early mcH-ning rain. Police in Fort Wayne, Ind., forced a path for Gov. George Wallace of Alabama through about 200 massed pickets. Wallace walked through the pickets shortly after 20 firemen had searched a hotel fol-Idwiftfl- a bomb Scare. An anonymous telephone caller said a time bomb was set to ■ explode during Wallace’s news conference in the hotel. No explosives were found. A motion before a panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at New Orleans seeks a stay of prosecution of 285 civil rights demonstrators in Florida State Courts. Included is Mrs. Malcolm Peabody, mother of the Governor of Massachusetts. The demonstrators were arrested at St. Augustine, Fla. Jackson, Mfss., and belong to a group called Methodists fqr church renewal. After an all-night vigil of prayers, sermons and hynnn singing in two downtown churches the group, white and Negro, layman and minister, marched to»the Civic Arena where the General Conference of the Methodist Church is holding its quadrennial meeting. They knelt and joined hands on sidewalks outside the arena and quietly sang hymns. No police were about. VOLUNTARY PLAN The participants in the protest poured into the city Friday night just hours after the General Conference adopted a voluntary plan to remove racial barriers. The plan calls for transfer over the next four years of the church’s central jurisdiction, which' represents some 375,000 Negroes, into the five other jurisdictions which are djawn on geographical lines. Nd enforcement mechanism was provided. The plan passed by an overwhelming standing vote. But many of the 900 delegates feel it does not go far enough or fast enough. One minister called it “very definitely a Southern victory.” PLANNED PILGRIMAGE Ralph Roy, a layman from New York City, said the pilgrimage had been planned for several months. “We are not so much protesting what they did,” he said. ‘We are protesting the mood of the conference which was willing to move forthrightly for integration of the Methodist Church.” Immediately after Friday’ vote some integrationists said they would push for a stronger program before the conference ends next Friday. The Rev. William H. James, a Negro delegate to the conference and pastor of New York’s Metropolitan Community Methodist Church, said the protest heightens the possibility of new vote. The Rev. Mr. James said the' plan as passed leaves intact a provision of the Methodist constitution passed in 1939 which calls for separation of white and Negro members. He said he would not be satis-ed until the conference “takes everything out of the constitution about race. What they did was only good publicity.” The plan sets up a committee to study elimination of the central jurisdiction but provides no finances or staff, the Rev. Mr. James said. He added that the main weakness was in its voluntary provisions “which means no one has to move under the constitution -unless they want to ” The Weather wmmmmmrnmm Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY- Partly sunny and a little warmer today, high 65 to 72. Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with little temperature change. La>w tonight 47 to 53; high tomorrow 67 to 75. Winds southeasterly 10 to 20 miles. Monday’s outlook is increasing cloudiness and mild. At I a.m.; Wind velocity S i Direction: Eait Sun sets Saturday at 7:33 p.m. Sun rises Sunday at 5:27 a.m. Moon sets Sunday at 10:20 a.m. Moon'rlses Sunday at-l:06 a.m. Friday in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Weather: Mostly One Year Ago in Highest temperature .... Lowest temperature ...;. Weather: Sunny Lowest T This Date ii Escanaba 51 45 Jacksonville Gr. Rapids 66 47 Kansas City Houghton 46 42 Los Angeles Marquette 53 47 Miami Beach Muskegon 66 52 Milwaukee Traverse C. 63 52 Albuquerque 72 46 Atlanta . 75 56 Bismarck 60 45 Pittsburgh' 6 49 38 Salt Lake C. 6 n 51 i'S/Marle** I 68 4] Seattle 5 67 46 T^pa 7 43 41 Washington 5 NATIONAL WEATHER—iRain is expected tonight in the uorthujBst.duarter of the nation and _|he lower south Atlantic state,S‘.‘'"lt Will be colder in western third qf the nation 5nd the north Atlantic states. It will be warmer in a'belt running from the Plains region to the south Atlantic states with little change elsewhefe. > ' ' i SOVIET MOBILE ROCKETS-At the May Day parade in Moscow yesterday, the Soviets showed. their latest antiaircraft missiles mounted on tractors. The celebration was coupled with the warning that Russia stands ready to smash any attacker. Perimeter Road Building Should Be Done by Fall Traffic should be rolling along the length of Pontiac’s |^.5-mil-lion perimeter road by early fall, and maybe sooner. City officials said yesterday that work will begin Monday on the last phase of the tearshaped, multi-lane thoroughfare around the central business district. The last leg follows Cass extended south from West Huron to South Saginaw. It is slated: to be open to traffic sometime in September, with the. possibility that part will be in use by late August. Work is already progressing toward completion of the stretch from South Saginaw to Mount Clemens on the East Side. The highway should be open to traffic from Its starting point (South Saginaw) to West Huron by July 1, barring any unforeseen construction delays. Initial construction of the last leg will get under way on Cass between West Pike and P^^terson and tfiat portion of Cass will be closed to traffic Monday morning. OTHER SECTIONS City Traffic Engineer Joseph Koren said that other sections of Cass would close as construe-' tion progressed. At the same time, West Pike will be reopened to through traffic between Saginaw and Cass Monday and West Lawrence will be closed, Koren said. Endorsement of Gov. George W. Romney for reelection by the Oakland County Republican executive conomittee has drawn a ver^i blast from his only announced rival. j George N. Higgins, Ferndale |iuto dealer, rebuked the’GOP Executive committee for endorsing Romney in a primary election. West Pike had. been closed several weeks to allow construction of a large storm drain along the east side of Cass. The drain, which is part of the Clinton River drain project, will now move northerly to Law- “ Barricades will be erected on Lawrence at the east curb of Cass, so'motorists going easterly on Lawrence will be able, to turn into Ca^s,” Kofep said. MOST OF SUMMER City Engineer Joseph E. Neip-ling explained that perimeter road construction “will probably close Cass , to through traffic south of Wejst Huron for most of the summer. “North of Pike, construction only involves widening Cass, but south of Pike it calls for total removal of existing Troy Woman Dies in Burning House A 48-year-old womdn perished in a fire yestenday that gutted a bathroom and hall'yay of a home, at 4500 Adams, Troy. Pronounced dead at the scene by Dr. K. F. Koerner was Mrs. John Soifthard, of the same ad- Police s^id Mrs. Southard was homo alone at the time of 2:34 p.m. Tblaze. Fire„damaged was confined to a first floor bathroom, hallway and bedroom. Extensive .smoke damage was done to tlie rest of the two-story home. Troy police and fire officials could give no cause for the bla^e. No dollar value was set on the damage. ' • • Firemen battled the blaze for ah hour and a half. | pavement and realignment «f Cam.” Nelpling said the work would be scheduled so cross traffic will be maintained most of the time. “Pavement must be ripped up, utilities relocated and storm drains installed,” he noted. “The bulk of the road bed will be prepared before the paving operation begins.” Rival Blasts GOP Unit for Romney Plug “No county conimittee has the right to endorse anyone in a primary election,” said the former state senator. Higgins promised that the committee would be in for some surprises. Well over 3,000 persons in Oakland have signed my peth tions and more than 12,000 have signed them throughout the state,” he said. Higgins is the only announced GOP candidate for governor. Romney has not yet announced whether he will seek reelection. However, party leaders have been circulating Romney petitions. Russians Warn qn Overflights (Continued From Page One) American talks on Cuba,” a] parently referring to reports of an informal cOcktall party conversation here between U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler and First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan. NOT CLEAR It was not clear exactly what Soviet-American “understanding”- Khrushchev was denying, since Kohler and Mikoyan during their conversation at a Japanese reception merely reaffirmed'the positions of their respective governments. The 70-year-old premier once again stated his govern-Jbent’s support of Cuba in the event of any attack. “The U.S.S.R. fully supports the five conditiops Fidel Castro advances as slogans safeguarding the independence, security and peace of the Cuban people,” he said. “We have always said and declare once again that a threat to Cuba, the continuation of the violation of her sovereignty, the instrusions into Cuba’s airspace can have ‘^disastrous consequences.” ■ Castro said his position was not based on any Soviet pledge of air or intercontinental missiles in an armed showdown with the United States. He said he assumed all responsibility for Cuban actions against the U.S. flights. He warned Cubans they must be ready “for a long fight that will never end” if the Upited States invades and occupies ^ result of Cuban action against U.S. planes. LaosPremiei' Tells of Merger Right Wing, Neutrqis. Join Now Coalition VIENTIANE, Uos (AP)-Prince Souvdnna Phouma, premier of the shaky Laotian coalition government, announced today a merger of the country’s neutralist and right-wing factions. Souvanna, neutralist leader, told newsmen he ^yas now able to speak for both parties. Similar proclamations of unity have been repudiated in the past. ‘The group which we used to call the ‘Savannakhet group’— right-wing — has disappeared,” Souvanna said. “I am speaking in the name of the center- neutralist—and right-wing.” Souvanna expressed hope that the pro-Cofnmunist Pathet Lao faction would follow the same path. * ' BltmSH.DEMAND Souvanna’s i^tement followed a joint British-Soviet declaration in London Friday night demanding restoration of the coalition government under Souvanna. 'The two countries, in a declaration by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and British Foreign Secretary Richard A. Butler, sharply condemned a cohp by rightist officers 13 days ago which paralyzed. the government. In announcing the merger, Souvanna did not say whether it had the agreement of the rightist coup leaders, who broke with the top men in the right-wing camp, Prince Boun Oum and Gen. Phoumi Nosavan, in staging the uprising. The insurgent right-wing army officers clamped their control over the adrtiinistrative capital of Vientiane April 19 and placed Souvanna and Phoumi under house arrest. CABINET REVISION The junta demanded revision of the Cabinet giving the right-wing a larger voice. The Pathet Lao opposed” the demand and answered with an attack on rightist forces in the Plaine des Jarres. Souvanna confers with his half-brother, Pathet Lao leader Prince Souphanouvong, at Pathet Lao headquarters in Kuang Khay Sunday. Meeting with reporters for the first time inside his residence since the coup, Souvanna congratulated the rightist leaders and said: “If the Pathet Lao accepts the same procedure, the same way of behaving, my task will be greatly easier.” As cochairmen of the Indochina peace settlement, Britain and the Soviet Union are responsible for overseeing the 1962 Geneva agreement guaranteeing Laotian neutrality. OUTWARD SIGN—Love can take many forms and in the . case of'•Floyd Forgette’s love for his wife, Sara, he" has bannered -it..across their home at 135 Edison for all the world to see. Forgette, a tool and die worker Pontiac Press Photo the sign this hiorning, MfS. Forgette said, “It was startling.and_wonderful atlffie same time.”,The couple^ married in/Frehwnt, ......... _ „ , Ohio, will observe tHeir anhiyer^^ary in Detroit, raised the declaration last night , tpmorrow with a Mass a( St. Michael Catholic Without his wife’s knowledge. .Discovering ' Church. ‘ Birmingham Area News Proposed Budget Jump Won't Boost Tax Rate BIRMINGHAM - A 1964-415 municipal budget Increased $70,-348 but not costing property owners any more than they are now paying will be recommended by Manager L, R. Gare to the City Commission Monday night. The hike to $1,939,711 includes salaries of two, now city employes and a 2 per cent general raise for all personnel, among other items. Suggested expenditures would require a 17.^mill tax rate, netting the same amount as the present 18-mlll levy, according to Gare. The income would remain constant becapse Valuations in th$ city have been increased about 20 per cent to bring them up to state equalized level. ★ ★ Hie levy would bring in some $1,345,933, with the remainder coming from nontax revenue collected through municipal fees.' WAGES, INSURANCE Gare said the recommended figure includes $34,740 for wage revisions and minor changes in the'insurance program. ^ The manager also is asking for funds to allow the police department to hire another detective and the sign and parking meter department an assistant. Estimated salaries for the two would total $8,000. Gare’s tentative figures show $200,641 earmarked for capital improvements. With a total of $313,241 in the fund, the city could afford several street improvements it has been considering, Gare noted. PROJECTED PROJECTS These include widening of Chester and Oakland, and improvement of the Forest-Woodward intersection. The City Commission will begin its study of the budget Monday, gearing its work to a May public hearing. Cornerstone laying ceremonies for the new Birmingham Masonic Temple will be con- Dems Try to Reshape Poverty Bill WASHINGTON (AP)-A major reshaping of the administration’s antipoverty bill is being attempted by Democrats on the House Education and Labor Committee. Although some provisions recommended by President Johnson may be scrapped in the process, the Democrats working it say the end result should be a stronger bill than Johnson submitted. There is trouble at the moment, however, because .each member has a different idea of how the program should be focused, and agreement may be hard to come by. There also is a problem of committee jurisdiction. The chairmen of two other committees have had to be brought in on an informal basis to work on ;ome of the provisions. moreVui MORE FUNDS The chief trust at this stage appears to be to beef up the educational features in the bill, particularly to channel more money to schools (n urban slums and impoverished rural areas. Sections dealing with aid for poor farmers, small businessmen and unemployed fathers on relief are in trouble and will have to be drastically revised ii they are to remain in the bill. The Democrats also are considering a new program that is aimed at helping widows who are past the age when they can get a job but not yet 62, when they can qualify fon Social Security benefits. One change already agreed on wculd establish an allocation formula to fix the sum each state would get instead of leaving it to the director of jjthe program to determine by his own means. Another would permit the entrance of women into tteiJob Traihing Corps, limited by'the administration to boys 16 to 22. How large' a percentage should be women has not been settled. ducted tomorrow by Newton S, master tor Michigan. Thp 11 other grand lodge o^ ficecs will accompany Bacon for the 2 p.m. rite. Now under construction on the west side of Woodward south of Chesterfield, the new temple is expected to be completed by late August. - Hubert A. Lancaster Service for Hubert A. Lancaster, 77, of 1307 Humphrey will be 11 a.m. Monday at the Manley-Bailey Funeral Home, with burial in Roseland Park, Cemetery, Berkley. Mr. Lancaster died yesterday suddenly. He was a member of Grace Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Helen, and a sister. 1, Session Today: on Rights Bill Debate Gets Slower as Test Vote Nears WASHINGTON (AP) - Weary senators were called in today for another Saturday session of civil rights debate amid signs that the marathon talk finally is running down. Senate oratory often diminishes once a time for voting is set, and an informal agreement finally was announced for the first test votes on amendments. The party leaders. Democrat Mike Mansfield of Montana and Republican Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, advised their colleagues to expect these next Wednesday. Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., the Southern, leader, agreed that as things now stand his forces would permit voting to begin on that day. The nature of the first vote also was revealed. Sen. 'Thrus-ton B. Morton, R-Ky., did this by calling up a new jury trial amendment as the pending business. Under Senate rules, it cannot be displaced without the Kentuckian’s consent. REDUCED VERSION Morton’s. proposal is a reduced version of the jury trial amendment of Sen. Herman E. Talmadge, D-Ga., for which the Southerners have been battling. As it came from the House, the pending bill contained no jury trial provision for criminal contpmpt cases growing out, of antidiscrimination injunctions which might be obtained under the bill. The Talmadge amendment would guarantee jury trials in all criminal contempt cases, whether arising under the bill or any other law, except for those committed in the presence of the judge. Morton’s amendment would give the same guarantee except that it would be limited to cases arising out qf the bill. SHOVED ASIDE The Kentucky senator’s move had the effect of shoving aside temporarily a Mansfield-Dirk-sen substitute offered for the Talmadge Amendment. This substitute would provide for jury trials in criminal contempts growing out of the bill only if the penalty exceeded 30 days in jail dr a $300 fine. The Southerners have termed this unacceptable. 'Caller'Held for Mind Test (Continued From Page One) drivers license! lists English i • • Vi ■ a commercial/aviator. He carried calling cards-identifying him as president of Latin American Develofiment Corp., chairman of “American Voters Abroad,” and as a lobbyist iif the U.S. Congress for “preservation of private property.!’ English wds -questioned "for more than four hours by state ’police. ‘ . “There was no indication Jtjiat he planned to harm the governor,” said Lt./Raymond H. McConnell, chief of the state police intelligence and • security division. “I personally think he had some political motivation in coming here. - ,.V I. j.. (r ‘'■Ti \ /'X EIGHT m m\H 1 k ' ' THE PONTIAC Mess, sAturpay, may 2. im JULDil U.S. Troop Train Delayed Reds Relent in E. German Flag Dispute BERLIN (AP) -r Communtat authorities relented undenr U.S. pressure today in the latest border hassle, hauling down East German flags from loco* motives for two U.S. troop tfalits bound for West Germany. The May Day flag dispute caused a fouiMhour d^y at the East German border when the U.S. train commanders refused to let the transports cross East German territory while the pennants flew. Shortly after midnight, the East Germans provided engines without flags and the trains made an undisturbed trip across 110 miles of East Ger- incident as another attempt by the East Germans to establish additional precedtmts for control of the' access routes to West BCrUn. the Western AlUes do not recognize the E*it German regime and have resisted the Communists’ tActics of trying to whittle away Western rights in the isolated city. The twb trabuh-one bound for Frankfurt with 144 passengers and the other for Bremerhaven with eight-left West Berlin shortly after 6 p.m. At the Potsdam border point, East German authorities provided locomotives as usual but both engines flew East German flags, apparently in honor of May Day. The train commanders Jammed on the emergency brakes ndien they noticed the dered the leaving the cars stalled on the tracks in the Berlin suburb. A Soviet officer was ieen nearby. flags. The East Germans locrnnotives w The East Germans told the U.S, commanders their cars wodld not be allowed to proceed unless the Americans ^ve in. The East Germans customarily provide locomotives for the crossing. HOLD GROUND The U.S. commanders appeared to be under direct orders to hold their ground. Sources said the East Germans tried the same thing on a troq>'train bound from West Germany to West Berlin Friday morning. U.S. soldiers pulled down the banners and the train ctnitlnued on its way. Under a postwar agreement with the Soviets, the Allies have road,/ail and air access to West Berlbj. For years the Soviets have sought To win recognition of the East German regime by turning over control of the routes to the East Germans. Akron Church^t AAove AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Nonde-nominatlonal Hillwot^ Chapel is bucking the trend of churches moving from the city to the suburbs. It has been moved closer to the center of the city—Akron’s Metropolitan Housing Authority Wllbeth-Arllngton Project — from its former location on the city’s southeast edge. The new |160,000 structure just was dedicated. News in Brief Special—standard cake decorating tubes, Tues. thrpugh Sat., 16c ea. Other cake decorating supplies; sequins, styrofoam, art foam, flower making materials, chenille, etc. Cleo’s Handicraft Shop, 366 Oakland Ave. Rumm^e Sale: First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, 1669 ,W. Maple. Thurs., May 7, 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Fri., May 8, 9 a m. - 5 p.m. —adv. Rummage Sale: Grace Lutheran Church, Genesee at Glendale. Thurs., May 7, 9-6 p.m.; Fri., May 8, 9-12. —adv. PTA - Church Groups — For your next money-maker, try cotton candy, popcorn and sno cones. I supply everything. Big profit—no work. Call 625-0641. —adv. Rummage Sale: Friday, Mhy 8, 10-7; Sat., May 9, 9-11 a.m. Presbyterian Church, Huron at Waynj. —adv. Church Big Factor in Recruiting Young DAYTON, Ohio W) - When young people go into full-time religious work, it ’’does not come about through one individual, such as the minister, but as a result of the flavor of the local church,” says Dr. John I. Parr df Linden Avenue Baptist Church. Contributing to this atmosphere, he says, are volunteers who work with the young people of the church in various pro- TOi paoeaSTY ownisi, quau-llwi iChMl •iktori and all olhar mtar-ittad partial of tha Srandon School Oli-... Oal--- -------- ----- — fricT, UBKiano «na imp of tha Clarkston Comnvmlty School!. --■-‘—(I County, Ford, Mrlai numhar Atf Ichlgan, ncrlbad laait M (4I.IS (S2.W acrai) from Brandon School Dlitrlet, Oakland and Lapaar Countlai, and addinii -------------- *- Clarkiton Conwnu. UjSj.** ... ... haraby notlflad that a pubiht haarlno will ba twid at Oakland School! Board of Bducatlon, Campui Drlva, Oakland County Sarvica Cantor. Pontiac, Mlchloan, on tha 14th day of May, it«4, at 4:00 o'cloolc p,m. 'to eoniWar tha ad-vlMblllty of tha abova daicrlbid bound- Tha Lapaar and Oakland County loard! of education, acting lointly, will latarmlna; 1. Whathar tha propoMd altaratlon of boundarlai will ba madai I. Tha affaefiva data of tha tranitOr, wmnnor or no* any parmnai or \raal proparty la to ba tranifarrad and. If !o, tha aquitabla conildara- Any Intaraitad partial .will ba givan I opportunity to ba haard at tha lima WILLIAM J. BMBRSON lacratar I ly I ifS4 PUBLIC AUCTION a ' laaa 0,45 ^ '“'all OP LAST DAl^Op'%OltTRATION MiAVM RtgUtmflon wIM dost it 5:00 p.m. on taif day of rMlitrafion axcapt for rail- Application u. ------------------ „„„ arm%rch‘r ^2ta'r'‘*r5!!)ia!’^ P^ri^i aj|j«|dy proparly raglitarod naad ra-ragiar. yn-fgu p Sacratary PUBLIC AUCTION On May 4, at 9:4S a.m. at POddock sRSvrXtr%‘ia«Kroiai;, ggh£b^^'^.rX*.T NEW FULLY ELECTRIC American Made TYFEWRITER 419850 and your aid typ^riter plus taxus OFFICE AAACHINES DEPT. General Printing 8 Office Supply 11W. Lawranoe $t.y Pontiac FE 2-0186 | ■ ■ ■ y ■ r»'w M'H K wr ROUND • Tender, J« CUBE • TSiidWf^ttley 79' • Lean, Inly jRA ---——$49 DRAYTON RUINS STORE ONLY • V'* * BAZLEY H^sr 4848 Dixie Highway - Drayton Plains MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDNESOAY-ONLY! Front-End • Repocldfrant wheels • Balance Front Wheels «|iCheckqnd Adjust Brakes * • Set caiter, camber, toe-in allforonly 6! B. Fa GOODRICH 111 North Parry, Pontiac FE 2-0121 FAMOUS BRAND r $6Sand$7S Fine Grade Wool SUITS All Year-Round Weights MONDAY ONLY Barnett’s 150 N. Saginaw St. Next to Sears "Honestly, It’s Sensational!” Les Hudson A most fortunate purchase permits m« ' to oKer these wonderful, quality pieces for only $1.49 each ... Buy now for Mother^! Doy, Anniversaries, Wedding Gifts,’ Graduation and even to put 4 away for Christmas Giving. J Les Hudson LOOKS LIKE NEW... RUNS LIKE NEW Completely Reconditioned MODEL 435 A. B. DICK Electric MIMEOGRAPH/ MACHINE Rag. Price Item » $5.98 ALUMINUM ICE BUCKET BY KROMEX SOLID COPPER PLANTER BUCKET WITH WROUGHT IRON HANDLE HEAVY HAMMERED COPPER PITCHER WITH BRASS TRIM CHROME BREAD AND BUTTER SETS e$6.95 4-PC. COFFEE SERVICE SET e $4.98 SOLID BRASS AND COPPER WATERING CAN • S4.98 eS6.S0 e SS.50 • Duplicates anything from Postal cSrd to 8'/jxI4'' Wk easily and efficiently. SPECIAL AT $245 • Close cylinder, selectiv^inking, hairline Registration. \ Your Choice BUY NOW! each SAVE! Just $195 with this coupon SAVE $501 • Reset counter, AUDIO VISUAL CENTER 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-1523 SUPER KEM-TONE AT BARNETTS Fantous Dunbrook MtDWEIQHT SPORTCOATS' $2499 Dacron and Wool HAGGAR SLACKS $13.95 and $11 $15 Values ^11 98 2 Pair for $23.00 IBametts 150 N. Saginaw St. (Next to Sears) Woman’s World In The Ponriac Mall TUBS. MORNING, MAY 5 at 9:30 Mall Community Room “A Jnle Wediiig awl It’s PJanii^” Presented by Jackie Crompton Hostess of Bridal Preview on WJBK-TV Tickets arc free and are available on a reserved basis only. They may be obtained during regular Mall hours at either the Culligan Water Softener Booth, Nationwide Insurance or Flowerland, each located in the niaih Mall. The Schedule for Tuesday Program Is: 9:30-10:00 A.M.-Coffee Time 10:00-11:00 A.M.-Formai Proitram 11:00-12:00 A.M.-lnformal . Queation and Answers PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER $399 w dailon UIRROS *OrWTD ECON-O-DRY CLEANERS jD,EJESr4Fl WAND SHIRT LAUNDERER 944 WEST HURON ST. ^ Haskins OLDSMOBILt Low OverKead Special NEW 1964 DECORATOR C^ORS NEW 1964 DuPONT . LUCITE WALL PAINT WHITE $449 , ONLY A HEAP O' CLEANINQ FOR A WEE BIT 0’ MONEY! Now is the time to store your winter V. garments and get your clothes cleaned and renewed for summer a-in'-v z and vacation. ■■ -WK- ■>.. ' ON THESE PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING SPECIALS . COUPON.- WITH THIS COUPON MON., TUiS.^ED. Jij SHIRTS-UUNDERED HUDSON’S a liadivkiually CallophonW . Pockad with DryciMning I pidaref $I.50er Mdra. 41 jBAST WALTON ' JUST EAST OF, BALDWIN AVE. , FE.4-0242 Open Friday 9 AM. to 9 P.M.: ' - AIi..OlK*r Weekdays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.<-.Suo. 10 A.M. to 3 P.M.'' I il9* • o.,«x.r.man „ »*0RE aCH. J e Coa^ and Cqrry REG. JJOR MS I I " COUPON “ “! r "" ‘coupon \ I MON., TUn., wn, 11 M0N„TUIShWE0. I a 1 I MEN'S OR UDIE8'SUITS , ** *0RPUIH COATS 1 Mcl l '90ei ‘TSkt* mi w__________________________ OPEN DAILY 7 A.M, to 6 P.M. S“AT. ■F-A.M.' to 6 P.M, xEimi M-15 at U.S. 10 - MA 5-5071 675^ DIXIE HWY. CLARKSON Ybur Crossroads to Greater Savings DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Home Outfitting Co* MONDAY ORLY! Lw(urw0r^. Reclining Chairs Beautiful gleve-soft < vinelle for comfort! ^79 Value Fee] the luxury of thick foam cush- ioning, ^nd run your hands ov ' ■ rerrlullt vin^le coverJBulIt to and rest your whole ixsdy sit In it. Lively decorator colors. You'll love one for TV or just relaxing. PAY $1.00 WEEKLY- MONDAY ONLYI /''-V '.av iXV’ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. MAY 2. lOOf \Northern, Central Nines Wifi NATIONAL LtAOUB CLUI ■ATTINO AB R H HR _________ *n 61 131 12 M .276 436 54 117 16 51 Chiefs Topple Midland, 3-0; PNH Wins, 2-0 Kr«llclt Cl» Sherry Del Plel> Min Stack Bal - ■ irdt Chi Anonbouci'ta B Rldzlk Was Rldilk w Pena KC Osteen Wai ' Drabowscy KC Lolleh Del 18 14 2 11 2 0 1.00 24 23 4 13 2 r •*' n : ? 1 p U 13 10 12 2 1 il2 20 18 ♦ W 1 III 10 4 3 0. 2 1 2.70 24 23 7 14 1 2 2.77 13 13 5 4 0 2 21 14 4 18 2 0 21 21 4 15 2 1 iS 10 5 5 1 1 3!oo 2»'27 3 24 2 2 3.10 25 28 11 II 1 3 3.40 14 10 5 12 1 1 3.84 14 11 4 14 2 1 3.»4 25 17 17 18 1 3 3.94 23 21 11 13 1 2 <.30 WlllhIte LA Stallard NY Drysdale LA 15 .5 8 11 0 2 7 ‘MSU Homers lllini Whip by 5-2 Count EAST LANSIN G(AP)-Jerry, Sutton and Joe Porrevechio each hometed as Michigan State defeated Big , Ten defending champion Illinois 5-2 here Friday. Porrevechio hit his round-tripper in, the sixth inning with nobody on. Sutton connected in the eighth on the first pitch delivered by reliefer John Peden. There was one man on at the time. Tlie lllini outhit MSU 9-7 but committed two costly errors. Craig Mundt, who homered in the seventh with nobody on, was tagged for the loss. Boat Class Set Monday at PCH 1A water safety instruc- i tion class wil] begin Mon- ; day at Pontiac Central ; I High School ai 7 p m. * The Oakland County I Sheriff’s department has i I charge of the'sessions and i certificates will be award- i . ed at tile, conclusion^ I ‘ Starting at, 7 p. m in ; room m (use Washington entrance), the' three-hour) i classes will follow the i same format as used s earlier at Waterford. Dennis Burrill and Neil Roberts had back-to-back doubles in the third inning for the only run Owen needed. The catcher also singled in a fifth inning marker with his third hit in the game. The Chiefs are now 2-0 in the SVC and 3-2 overall. Staub H Slevert F LEADE„.. Doublea—Stargall, Pittsburgh, 6. I 2.18 Brogllo 5 Ortega L, Ctanlnger O'Toole ( I 3 0 2.32 30 34 9 13 2 1 -- 30 24 10 12 2 1 I 1 1 2.77 13 7 10 1 17 STRIKE OUTS Roger Hayward fanned 17 batters and permitted two hits in halting Berkley, last year’s I-L champions. The big right-hander drove in both runs for PNH. He singled home Dave Tinkis in the first inning and squeezed in Mike Burklow in the seventh. Northern is now 5-0 this year and 3-0 in the loop. Walled Lake pushed its mark to 5-1 to remain the I-L runner-up behind the one-hit hurling of John ’Iliomas. Farmington’s Steve Page tossed a two-bitter at Southfield and had hitting support from battery mate Dick Johnston. The receiver homered with a man aboard in the fifth inning. Bill Freeman had two runs batted in with a double. Page struck out nine and walked two. The first hit off him came in the fifth inning and drove in the only ruh for the Blue Jays. SadowskI Mil Culp Phi Jacktan Chi i f hf li i 20 13 10 1 10 8 29 24 Ellsworth Chi Shantz StL Buhl Chi Bruce Htn Jackson NY Miller LA 'M' Nine Rolls on late Homer ANN ARBOR (AP) - Michigan shortstop Dave Campbell drove in two runs in the third inning and hit a 370-foot seventh inning homer Friday to break a tie and give the Wolverines a 4-3 Big Ten baseball victory over Purdue. , The triumph moved Michigan into sole possession of first place in the Big Ten with a 4-0 league record. The Wolverines and Purdue had been tied for the lead with 3-0 marks going into the game. Lefthander Clyde Barnhart pitched a nine-hitter for the winners. striking out five and walking one. Purdue hurler Mike Purvis struck »out four, walked two and was tagged for seven hits in going the distance for the Iosya,, Michigan’s victory was its 10th of thq, season against 11 losses: Purdue is 10-3 for the Mlchlgtn . Sizemore. .......■ 802 W...... . . - McKenzie. Bbrnhart 4nd ’The American League has only two managers who won two major league pennants. They are Al Lopez with the Chicago White Sox jahd Charlie Dressen with the Detroit Tigers. Lopez won in Cleveland and Chicago, Dressen in Brooklyn. Huskies Trip Bears; Waterford. Blanked by Walled Lake Pontiac Central and Pontiac Northern’s baseball teams yesterday dispersed any gloom from the rainy weather with key victories yesterday. Poqtiac Central blanked Midland, 34), to remain unbeaten in the Saginaw Valley Conference race while PNH did likewise in the Inter-Lakes League Berkley. At Waterford, the Skippers were held scoreless hy Walled Lake, 3-9, and Farmington took a 9-1 Win over Southfield for its first triumph of the Chuck Owen yielded a lone first-inning single at Midland and walked only two in stopping the Chernies, the defending League titlists. Alpine (5) nnd Roth. Golf Honors to Yale Yale’s golf teams have won 21 national championships. Stan Muisal, retired, batted .317 against Los Angeles Dodger pitchers in 1963. He hit .313 against the New York Mets. STRANGE SPEEDSTER-This weird car, completed by Henry (Smokey) Yunick of Daytona Beach, Fla., only two days ago, was unveiled yesterday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Smokey Jr. sits in the detachable cockpit. Orchard Lake Relays to Atfrack250Sunday The fourth annual Orchard Lake St. Miary’s Track and Field Relays will take place Sunday at the Orchard Lake oval located on Commerce and Orchard Lake Roads. Close to 250 athletes will represent 10 schools: Dearborn, St. Alphohsus; Detroit Benedictine, Holy Redeeim-er, St. Anthony, St. Stanislaus; Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows; Jackson St. Mary; New Lothrop St. Michael; Saginaw SS. Peter and Paul and the host school. Orchard Lake, St. Mary. ★ ' ★ Detroit Servite, winner of the past two relays, will not participate this year. Detroit Holy Redeemer, runner-up for the past two seasons, and Detroit St. Anthony loom as distinct threats to Capture this year’s championship. st year seven of the 11 track and field records were shattered. „ The Field events will get under way at 1 p. m. and the track events at 2:15. Meet director is Father John Gabalskj, the senior track coach among the Detroit Catholic League Track coaches. TRIPLE WINNER Dave Graves won three events and was second in another yesterday as Clarenceville downed West Bloomfield, 70-39, in track. Vaughn McGraw won the 100 and 200 for the Lakers. extra hole to give the Captains the victory. They are 4-ft in 'Tri-County play and 8-2 overall; Dave Parsch of Lapeec was medalist with a 38. Kimijierer fired a 39. Benedictine downed Orchard Lake St. Mary 3-2 at Pontiac Country Club. Rocky Pozza shot a par 37 for the winners while Larry Bialobrzeski was low for OLSM with a 39. ^ Tim Barnes had a one-under-par 35 to ledd Milford to a 148- 162 win over Holly. Bill Taylor had a 36 for the losers. Barnes’ score livas a school record. Clarvncavlll* 7C, Wt>i Bloomfitid 39 Broad lump — Jim Donally (C). 20-2 High lump — Dave Gravel (C). 5-4 Shot out — Mark Dimmer (WB). 43-4 Pole vault - Fred Welton (C). 10-3 080 relay — Clarenceville. 1:38 High hurdles — Graves (C). 15.7 Mile - Darroll Howell (C). 4:51.4 880 - Bob Havlland (WB). 2:044-440 — Jeff Waldman (C). 54.3 100 - Vaughn McGraw (WB). 10.5 Low hurdles — Graves (C). 21.4 ■220 - McGraw (WB). 23.9 Mile ~ WesI Bloomfield. 3:41.9 Captain PosfHabit Walter Hagen captained seven U.S. Ryder Cup teams. Winter league bowling was having its final fling this week with only the banquets remaining for most groups. The West Side Classic League finished Monday night with champion 300 Bowl holding a 41-point lead.. The final night’s action produced 16 “ 600s” and 67 “200s”. Bill Green’s 224-254-677 was the top three-game effort while George Chicovsky’s 276 (642) led the one-game scor- Waterford Kettering and Lapeer played fo o >*Bre tie in golf yesterday at the Lapeer Country Club. Both teams posted 173s. j Jim Howe and Mike Kimmer-er fired birdie 4s on the first “300” was also champ at Wonderland Lsjjnes in the Monday night Masters League. It compiled 441.182 Peterson points led by Dave (Perfect Game) Eby’s 189 average. This week’s scoring leaders were Bill Johns with 229-231— 673 and Paul Horie 256-66ff. Jim Sherwod had 254. Galavito Starts Well in KC 'Rocky' Back in Homer Race KANSAS CITY (AP) - Rocky Colavito is off to a fast start in the American-League home run race and the proud, sensitive slugger makes it clear the pay cut he took from Kansas City owner Charles 0. Finley.has nothing to do with it. .. Asked whether the $4,000 (iut in his $50;0(l!() Detroit salary furnished him an incentive, Colavito said: ‘I didn’t need that. My incentive is just putting on the major league uniform. I’ve always gone all-out for every club I’ve been with.” Colai/itp has slammed four home runs and is itied for the AL homer lead with teammate Jim Gentile, Cleveland’s Leon Wagner and Washington’s Bill Skowron. All four of Rocky’s homers came during the current A’s home stand and all were, off right-handed pitch: BA-TTING .270 His eight ryns batted in leads the A’s and he’s batting .270. .“My timing is good and I’m doing a good job of waiting for the pitch I want,” Colavito said. The handsome 30-year-old slugger is certain to be a top threat for the American League home run crown. The ball carries better to left field here than in any park in the league. The homer distance to left cen ter is a respectable 363 feet and he is a strong pull hitter In the past six seasons. Cola Vito has hit 222 home runs, more than any other American League hitter. He,averaged 37 homers and 109 ruHs batted in during this span. The Troy Baseball Boosters bowling tournament was won by a team from Pontiac with 3,179 handicap pins. Leading the team’s efforts were Roger Deever (548 actual) and Fran Ginter (538). Also contributing were Joan Siggins, Dale Moulding and Roy Nell Deever. Roger Deever also captains the Family Furnish: ings team that is leading a state handicap tournament and expecting to compete later in ;ional i the Flint regional, rolloff for shot at the state handicap finals next month in, Buchanan. Airway Lanes finished its third annual Father and Son Tournament last weekend. The top winners are listed below. Harvey’s Colonial House took the championship rolloff from Wonderland Lanes in the Airway Lanes Tuesday B Classic this week by a. 12-pin margin after the two tied with 78-54 records during the season. Individual scoring leaders on the final night were Merv Weber (220-212—637) and Ray Keith (245-609). Ed Wilkinson ha'd 225-204—630 and Bob Turnbull AIRWAY LANES FATHER AND 4 HANDICAP TOURNAMENT P DIVISION 2 Y«»rs) Son liigh lerles: Drew WIrIck, 720. Father High Series:^Bill Slvlr, 440. JUNIOR division , (li-15 Years) High Tealn Series: ...... -...... — llm Jones, 1272; Arthur and Terry Wat-on, 1271. ► ■ Son High Game: Gary Quitiquit, 237; ;evine, oov. Blaylock, 481. MAJOR DIVISION (14-19 Ytari) High Team Series: 4.ou Koprince and 'AiimsM 1077. Jerry Luthj George Allman, 1 Son High Garhe: William White, 240. Father High Gabe: Ed Luth, 251. Son High Series: .-Jerry Luth, 485. . Father H|gh Serles;-Allen Moon, 482. BACK QN TRACK-Joy Fair of P o n t i a c will.get the' racing season started Sunday at 3:00 p. m. wth his pr,esent Pdntiac stock car 1719 at the Dixie .'Speedway, north of Flint, while‘his, ol(j Bomb 719 will take part in^ the super-modified eyents. (Speedway manager Ed Jones of Pontiac angouncea Jhat the track will fun the two divisions this-year. Driving the,nlodifip,d 719 iis Bob-HoHingshead of Flint who bought the raCer frott| Fair-last season. ' . Milford Nips Clarkston 9 inW-OTilt Redskins Keep l|ead in Loop; Sparkman Fans 10 Wolves Ed Sparkman, put Milford’s Redskins a step closer to the ball title yesterday by taming Clarkston on two hits, 2-0. The win boosted Milford’s rk-ord to 6-1 in loop play. Clarkston is 4-3. [ Sparkman walked five, struck out 10, and drove in the first run of the game In the opening with a single that chaked Jim Ward home. In Oakland A games, Ayon-dale edged Clawson, 2-1, and Rochester trimmed Fitzgerald, 5-2. * Lynn Thorpe went the distance for Avondale to pick up the win. The Yellow Jackets came up with the winning run in the sixth on doubles by' Dick Reddaway and Dennis Acker. Rochester opened the scoring with one In the second, two in the third, and added single runs ■ I the sixth and seventh. Steve Kendrick fanned 16 Spartans, striking out the side in dll but the third and fifth innings. He gave up three hits. OTHER GAMES In other games, St. Agatha handed St. Michael a 6-4 setback; Cranbrook downed Birmingham Seaholm, 9-4; and Birmingham Groves came up with three runs in the last of the seventh inning to nip Oak Park, 7-6. St. Michael picked up only three hits in dropping its second game of the season. Roger Cook had the biggest blow for the Shamrocks, a single that chased home two runs in the sixth inning. Milford ........... 110 000 8-2 8 0 Clarkston ......... 000 000 0—0 2 0 Sparkman (W) and Ward; WiIMjims Holly Reception Foiled by Traffic (Continued from Page 21) craft than most of the 44 that started the race. The other craft were made of aluminum. “With our lighter canoe, we picked up a lot of time during the early stages,” Widing said. PADDLED ACROSS And tifiey altered accepted strategy when they reached the saltwater leg of the trip by paddling across. Most of the other boats were equipped with sails for crossing the saltwater, but many became entangled in wet sails and were forced out of the race. Judo Powtri SurpriMd NEW YORK (AP) - A four-man team from Brazil, competing In the United States for the first time, stole the show from the favored Americans and Japanese as competition began Friday night in the IZtii annual National AAU Judo championships Miohigan Aviation Do. Ponliao MunlolpsI Airport 614-0311 - Ivss. I11-1T9T . NIOHTOOLF WATERFORD HILL COUNTRY CLUB 4438 Dlxta Hwy. - MA 5-2489 North 4l Watartsrd Hill, South M M-15 Sae the Now '64 Dependables Dodge and Dart Cars ond Trucks at KESSLER'S AUTO SALES 10.12 N. Waihinjpon (t., OxMnl OA E1400 Guaranteed ■hipehape two full years Every Traveler boat is guaranteed to be shipshape and free from defects in materials and workmanship for two full years or Traveler will make It shipshape at no cost to you for parts and labor. 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MAY 2, m\j Mm mkmsi Toda>^ In Washington LBJ Asks R^study of President's Office, Obligations WASHINGTON (AP)-In the news from Washington: ANNIVERSARY: It was 176 years ago that George Washing* ton was inaugurated as the country’s first president and Lyndon B. Johnmn, the 36th president, feels now “there is a genuine need to restudy, reevaluate, reassess many aspects of this office.” Johnson marked the anniversary Thursday by inviting a group of American historians to the White House for the oc- Flanked by the schoiars in a White House reception room, Johnson procldimed the year ahead as one to commemorate the office and to strengthen “the service of that office in meetin ’ continuing chalienges.” CALL TO COLORS: The Defense Department has halved its draft quota for June, issuing a cali for 6,000 men — all, as usual, ticketed for the Army. VETERANS: The American Medical Association has registered with Congress its opposition to the treatment of veterans at government expense for illnesses not related to their military service. “We do not believe that having spent time in uniform should confer upon one the right to rp-ceive free medical care from the nation for illnesses and injuries which are totally unrelat^ to military service,” Dr. David B. Allman told a House Veterans subcommittee Thursday. The Atlantic City, N.J., physician said it is each man’s responsibility to provide his own health needs. TRY AGAIN: Two months ago, the House defeated 222 to 184 a bill to boost the pay of members of Congress and all federal workers. Thurtiday, the Housd Post Office Comnilttee votedIl4 to 3 to ti^ again, but with this difference: Instead of a $10,000 raise for the 536 senators and representatives ~ they now get $22,500— there would be a $7,500 boost. And it would take effisct next January Instead of In July. By delaying the Increase until after the election, a congressman wouldn’t be taking the political gamble of voting himself an on i^e spot raise. President Johnson favors the pay increase. PROBE: At Sen. Ralph Ya^ borough’s request, the FBI is Ut-vestlgating published allegations that he accepted $50,000 from Still Openings for YWCA's Clinic on Jobs Openings still exist for the YWCA - sponsored job clinic, which begins Monday and runs through Friday. The five-day “Practical Ideas for Employment” will be of- fered 3^ p.m. at thfe YWCA headquarters, 22 Fratiklii The Job tips are aimed at unemployed high school .graduates and dropout students. The clinic is limited to 25 |pu-pils. The job clinic will feature several local business, industry.and government officias. Included will be Ted Ellison, of Michigan Bell Telephone; Ralph Dawe, salaried personnel office, Fisher Body Division of General Motors Corp.. and John J. B a r r y. factory personnel. Pontiac Motor Division. Deaths in Pontiac Afea ALBERT C, BEARD Service for former Pontiac resident Albert C. Beard, 71, of Hale will be at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Forshee Funeral Home, Hale. Mr. Beard, a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division Plant I, died yesterday of a heart ailment. He was one of the founders of the GMC Truck & Coach Credit Union and member of Veterans of Foreign Wars. Surviving are his wife, Sallie; a daughter, Mrs. Carol Pontney of Pontiac; a son, Kenneth of Aurora, Colo.; five grandchildren; two sisters and three brothers. MRS. AMOS PIERSON Service for Mrs. Amos (Alma) Pierson, 72, of 302 East Boulevard will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at the Huqtoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery, Lorain, Ohio. Mrs. Pierson died yesterday after a long illness. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Frank Christensen of Pontiac and Mrs. Sophie Wright of South Dakota and one broth- LESTER T. SNYDER Service for Lester T. Snyder, 70, of 1630 Parkway will be 2 p.m. Monday at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Hpme, Keego Harbor. A graveside service will be conducted at Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi, by Lodge No. 21, F&AM. Mr. Snyder died yestenday fol-, lowing an illness of three weeks. He was a retired linesman for the Detroit Edison Co. and a member of the. Central Methodist Church. Surviving are his wife, Alice M.; a daughter, Mrs. Harold Woodhall of Akron, Ohio; two sons, Lester E. a\id Paul F., both of Pontiac; two sisters, four brothers, nine grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. CLARENCE VmGHi Service for Clarence Virgil, day-old son of Mr. and Mrs: Ernest Virgil, 461 Howard McNeill, was held 11 a.m. today at the William F. Davis Funeral Home with burial in Qak Hill Cemetery. the baby died Thursday at Pontiac General Hospital. Surviving beside his parents are brothers and sisters, Em-' est,,Donald, Debra Ann. and Robin. ,1 MRS. WILLIAM COOMBE ROCHESTER - Service for Mrs.. W i^Hi a'm (Florence) Coombe, 87, of 321 Wilcox will be 11 a.m. Monday at the Po-tere Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mrs. Ckwmbe died yesterday following a long illness. Surviving are four sons, Harold of Rochester, William of Pontiac, Clifford qf Ferndale and Ralph of Monroe; a daughter, Mrs. Esther Rutter of 'Rochester; eight grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren. PINTON DEGRANCHAMP ROMEO — Requiem Mass for Finton DeGranchamp, 75, of 356 N. Main will be said at 10 a. m. Monday at St. Clements Church, with burial in Forestlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Rosary will be at 8 p. m. tomorrow at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Mr. DeGranchamp died suddenly yesterday after a brief Surviving are two sons, Fenton of Warren and Eugene of Romeo; a sister; a brother; and three grandchildren. ^RED G. ROUNDING (CLARKSTON - Service for fed G. Rounding, 77, of 5585 Ma^e will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Goats^ Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial, in Perry Mouht Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Roun^iing died yesterday after a bri^ illness. A retired carpenter, he was a member of Faith Baptist Church, Waterford Township. Surviving are two sons, Wilfred F. of Oxbow Lake and Maynard G. of Pontiac; 11 grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren. MRS. JOHN J. SOUTHARD TROY — Service for Mrs. John (Blanch) Southard, 48,4500 N.-Adams, will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Funeral Home, Birmingham, with cremation to follow. Mrs. Soutterd died yesterday in a fire. Shi^ was a member of the American, Association of University Women. ’ Surviving are her husbsmd, John Jv; a son, Robert J., at home; and >a sister, Mi^. C. Bean Englenf Birmingham. STEPHEN J.’raOMPSON ' PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Sefv-ice for Stephen J; Thompson, 20, of 31% ^himmons will be 2:30 p. W. tomorrow at the Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Eoiite, Pdn-tiacr with burial ln Oak Hilf Cemetery, Pontiac. He died Thursday., - K the Texas promoter Billie Sol Estes back in i960. Texas Dehiocrat Yarborough termed the charge •— issued by his opponent in Saturday’s Lone State primary — “an infamous Ue.” Spokesmen for the Justice Department and FBI refused to comment on the matter, but one department source acknowledged the FbI has agreed to Yarborough’s demand for an investigation. Texas broadcaster Gordon Mc-lendon, Yarborough’s opponent for the Democratic senatorial nomination, introduced two men on a statewide television broad- cast Saturday and said they had made sworn statements they saw Estes give Yarborough an cnvelopd’ containing $50,(K)0 at Pecos, Tex,, in 1960. Estes has been convicted on state and federal fraud charges and his case is in the appeals courts. Says Selective Service Director 'Tension Must Ease Before Draft Cut' WASHINGTON (AP)-Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Service director, said today he believes there must be a considerable change in the International climate before the United States can end the draft. “We have got to get this nation and the world to the place where mutual fear is tremendously different from now,” said Hershey in an interview. “I believe things can be better,” he added, “but we ought not to check in our gun until we are sure.” ■ Last month President Johnson announced plans f(ir “a very comprehensive - study of the draft system and of related manpower studies.” STUDY GOALS ■’The study, Johnson said, would “consider alternatives to the present draft selection system, including the possibility of meeting our requirements on an entirely voluntary basis within a decade.’ There have been complaints that the draft system is Unfair. Because the pool of eligible young men exceeds the need, some are called while others are excused. The President said he was not predicting that the military manpower requirements could be met on a voluntary basis in the next decade but that the study “looks forward to that.” Emphasizing this point, Hershey said he has “very definite doubts” that mUltary requirements can be met without some form of compulsion unless they are reduced “to “little short of a police force.” BRITISH DIFFICULTY He said Britain is finding it very difficult to keep her armed forces at a level of around 190,-to 200,000 since the draft was dropp^ there. “Some people say we.can have forces of 1.5 million without compulsion,” Hershey said, but we’ve never done it.” Now the nation’s armed services number about 2.7 million, with only the Army relying on the draft. T have always felt that the military services g6t three or four enlistments for each of our inductions,” Hershey said. This fiscal year we are going to deliver about 160,000 men, up some 50,000 from last year. The services are going to receive some 600,000 to 700,000 men in all,' from the inductions, voluntary enlistments and re-enlist- CHANGES NEEDED Among the ci^nges Hershey feels are needed before the draft can be discontinued: “We have to have a climate not only periodically friendly but have a world not of predatoj;’ forces and people but of people who believe very firmly tiiat other people don’t want to hurt them. We’ve got to have a climate in which we would not need so many people in our armed forces. The nuclear test ban treaty .and the reduction of nuclear eicplosives production would seem to be a good start. "We have got 'to have active recruiting and incentives. It seems to me that evesy time the pay goes up inside the armed forces, pay goes up more outside, and the situation is only wor.se than it was before. Also, I don’t want to depend solely on the money level. Some of us have become so sophisticated that wp have forgotten about patriotism and the flag. I would hate to see the time when ltll^" nation needed a million men and the only way to get them would be some incentive of a material kind. Somebody else might of-fec to pay them more. “We ought to think of our armed forces as the elite. We ought to take a man in on probation and judge him by his performance rather than take him in on the basis of testing on paper.” Romney Will Get Rept ATLANTA (UPl) — Sen. Barry Goldwater charged today that President Johnson’s administration is using top secret information for political purposes. T hte Arizona conservative, here to keynote Georgia’s GOP convention, said the administration, released hitherto secret information on U. S. reionnais-sance flights over Cuba, thereby making classified information available to the Russians. on U.S. Districting Powers LANSING (AP)-Gov. George W. Romney’s chief legal aide is preparing a report to the governor today on what — if anything the U.S. Supreme Court may do on the question of legislative redistricting. The report by Robert Danhof, legal advisor to Romney, was to be based on talks held in Washington Friday with U.S. Solicitor General Archibald Cox. Danhof declined to discuss his hush - hush conversation with Cox, but described himself as “not discouraged.” This could mean he obtained an indication of when the U.S. court may hand down a decision in any one of six pending cases which could clear the way for solving Michigan’s legislative districting snarl. WAITING GUIDELINES The Michigan Supreme Court, split over the question, is awaiting “guidelines” from the»U.S. court before ruling on the propriety of reapportionment plans before it. While the governor awaited Danhof’s report, a 14-member, bipartisan negotiating commit- tee in the ’ House went ahead with its own efforts to map out new House districts. The drive was aimed at agreement on a plan which would give each party in the 110-mem-ber House an equal nupiber of so-called “safe” districts, with the remainder being “swing” districts that could go either way. The committee worked out plan Friday that, on the basis of past voting records, would give Democrats 51 seats. Republicans- 52, and leave seven as “swing” districts. ALLOW COURTS Also proposed was a resolution aimed at amending the new constitution to let, the neW Ckmrt of Appeals take over the redistricting problem if the Legislative Apportionment Commission, already once unsuccessful, failed again. The plan would provide for such a procedure if the State Supreme Court failed to settle the issue by Jan. 1,1965. There would be no appeal from the decision of the appeals court to the state high court. The Stature of Our Profession , . Improves continuously. Knowledge, experience, ond careful attention hove all united, to better our funeral service. This in turn provides strength for the burdened, relief • for the grievirig^ f V ” • We steadfastly cling to all that is good, yet strive to improve our service. We will be happy to provide you with full information at any time. ^Itone . federal 4-451V FUNERAL HOM 855 W^FfiURON ST. PONTIAC COOL CHIMP—This chimp has been taught by his trainer. Bob Slover o£ Atlanta, Ga., to handle steering and gear shift of a sports car. The chimp, Cappy, shows he has the right attire (top photo) and can handle himself on a six-lane street (bottom-). One observer remarked Cappy drove “better than my wife.” 'Secret Data Used Politically' The radio newsman had tried to put a microphone in front of him, but Goldwater pushed-it away. Goldwater, addressing a $25-a-plate breakfast in advance of his keynote address, said that prior to the release of the information he, as a member of the U.S. Senate, had “sworn with my hand bn a Bible,” not to reveal the information. The Arizona conservative repeated his charge that the Soviet Union had a missile lead over the United States and that the Russian arsenal includes 7 5 0 immediate range missiles “aimed at Europe.” Goldwater, in obvious reference to an incident with a radio newsman last night, referred to it as “rudeness.” Film Follows Service “Responsibility of Christian Parents” a 16 mm sound film, will be shown following the 6 p m, service tomorrow, about 7 p.m. in the Chruch of Christ, 1180 N. Perry. “First Things First” will be the film slated tortMay 10. Parachute Maker Dies • OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Manufacturer Allan C. Scott, 81, who was credited with development of a parachute which enabled men to bail ^oui of airplanes, died Friday. Lott’s idea in 1918, still used, was a smaller pilot chute that pulled out the main cliufe. 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MacArthur did the impossible; before he issued an order he went Back lime and time again before he 'Went Forward. Eisenhower planned the biggest battle ever fought; every detail was checked time and time again, for one error. He went Back To Co Foyward, Co Back To Go Forward is iniunmce for pleasant days ahead. VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 ^SPRING SALE 20%" 40% Now Is the Time to Order Your MemorioJ So You Can Have It Ploced for Memoriol Doy 78 INSTOCK FINEST OF GRANITES MANY COLORS BEST OF WORKMANSHIP As Shown $265.00 . Others From $330.00 to $1,250 (Add Only Cemetery Cost) LARGE SELECTION OF ' COMPANION MARKERS SALI PSICE $225.00 j, ' MARK EVERY GRAVE GRASS LEVEL MARKERS ' STANDARO iH SOME OtMETERIES « . SALE PRICE $3900 BEVEL ABOVE GROUND MARKERS *4900 YOU ARE SURE Of SATISFACTION WtlEN YOU SEE WHAT YOU BUY OFFICE and PLANT OPEN DAILY> A.M, to 8 t. M.-^UN. 1 to 3 P.M. GEO. E. SLONAKER ^ qUR 32n^ YEAR 269 Oakland Avehuei^Pontioc 17, Mich. 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