THK' PONnAC.PRF^S. THUBBPAY. f, im BERGAMO, Italy (JB - Day altar day, ^ 10 achoolboys here are talked Into Bleeping I in clasB. Their teachers say they seem to i leam more Ihat way. t A “Uiaming through hypnosis" expert* roOnt is under way at San Vincenso’s. a Roman Catholic boarding school in this I north imiian city. % Tape recorders placed on each boy’s I desk are switched on as the lesson begins. I The teacher gives his lecture. I In one literature class, he read a poem f end its «igniff>anpe and com- ponent themes. The boys, all in their early teens, at-K tached earphones and played the tapes back. First came a formula supplied by Mario Bel-; Uni, 43, a hypnotist. DRONE INTO EARS ‘‘One, two, three — sleep, boys, sleep. Son-in-Law Impressed _ . five, six - relax, relax. Seven, eight, ____— sl^, now sleep, you are sleeping,” the recorders droned into the loys’ ears. ★ ★ ★ Aitef a few minutes the boys began crossing their arms on the desks, lowering their heads and sinking into sound sleep. Then came the recorded lesson. When it wu over there was another BelUnl message: ‘‘Wake up now, boys, wake up.” The boys yawned, stretched and straightened up. ★ ★ ★ The teacher chose boys at random and asked what they had learned. The experimenters reported that each boy called on, bright and slow students alike, | recited the poem 'without missing a word ! and explained In detail the meaning of the poetry. DeGaulle, Miners of Deadlock PARIS (API - The de Gaulle government and France's 200,000 striking coal miners squared off today tor what eeiild tMeeme a prolonged test of strength. ■ Bsman for the gov ment threatened stem measures if the miners did not obey President Charles de Gaulle’s back-to-WWorae-*'-w * * The strike leaders stood firm, niey said the miners wUl not return to the pits until the government at least opens negotlationa on their denuinds. The govem-I it will not discuss the wage and hour issues until worit resumes. The miners seek an 11-per cent boost in wages and a 40-f The government is offering a 5.7-per cent increase. MIGHT ORDER ARREST One informed source hinted that the government might order the arrest of leaders of the striking unions and key mine personnel for deling iha dr^ order. WMi 90 to 96 per cent of the country’s coal miners on strike, he conceded it would not be practical to arrest aU of them. Support for the miners buUt among unions throughout the atrv. Gas and eiectrica] workers sdieduled a two-hour nationwide strike Friday. Workers in the Lacq gas ReM of so western France-.-whlch supplies half the country’s gas—calM a two-day strike fOr today and Friday. resOntatives of the Catholic, cialist and Conununlst unions began forming an interunion strike committee to coordinate union strategy on a long-term basis. Local merchants offered credit to the miners and helped to raise funds for the miners’ families. Many town halls refused to post the government’s draft, order. Pope Meets K's Kin VATICAN CITY (UPI) - A professed atheist, Soviet Communist editor Alexei Adzhubei, met Pope John XXIIl, head of the Roman Catholic Church, today — nnd the atheist came away impressed and “very moved.” Adzhubei, son-in-law of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, first attended a nuss audience in the Vatican’s throne room as “Just another newsman.” Then, at its end, he was ushered into a private room for an ll-rainute special audience, an unprecedented meeting between a member of a ruling Soviet leader’s family and the Roman pontiff. Adzhubel’s wife Rada, Khrushchev’s daughter, accompa-Died him to the history-making ~ The Russian couple was alone the library with the Pope ex- When the Pope finished his speech at the general audience, held to mark his acceptance of the Balzan foundation’s peace prize, Adzhubei bowed his head In a reverential gesture as tlw pontiff bestowed his blessing On the throng. BOWS DEEPLY Then, when he was ushered into the papal library for the special audience, a high Vatican official said Adzhubei bowed deeply to the Pope. ★ ★ ♦ Mrs. Adzhubei covered head with a gold - lined black scarf, as is protocol for women at a papal audience. cept for a Russian-speaking priest who acted as an interpreter. ' The audience was another step in the Kremlin-Vatican reap-prochement of recent months, which has led to sepculation of a possible further easing of tensions, establishment of some kind of diplomatic relations and even a meeting between the Pope and Khrushchev. Adzhubei, who listened soberly as the Pope addressed die mass audience in French about the church’s “neutrality” and work for peace, said: “It was a fine speech, I was very impressed.” Vatican sources said the heavy-set, red-faced Russian appear^ ‘very moved” when he Mt the papal library after the private audience. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and not much change fai temperature with a few periods of snow flnrries toJny, tonlihTiia^^ DIreetloB: WnUrlT. Sub wU ThundBr SUB rlMi rrtdar ■ hU PrliUy ~ preeMint I %.m. velocltf I m.p.h (t t:30 p.m. Ait la Paallat Rlthait tamparatur* . LoVnt tr---- Mean temparatura II nuraOaj at-]:M p ^3 13 Los Aittvtes 4, II IS MUmi Boaeh u II n ‘j e‘oTaBi'3::: ' Albuquarqua II M Naat Yark U 31 WaSaaaSa)’ la Panilaa Uavaat (aaiperatura . Uaaa lamparatura ..... „ Waather—Plurrlaa Is D 31 B 8. Maria M aj I Brattia M M Tampa 31 13 WaabiBi Unveil Eastside Sewer Project (Continued From Page One) permit full development of prop-4he east side of Wood- veiopment at East and South Boulevards and along Auburn Avenue bast of the Belt Line Railroad. It also would take sewage from the hospital, relievtaig an overload on the existing Bag-ley Street sewer, and permit expansion of GMC Truck .& Coach Division. The lack of sewage facilities has for many years hampered 'any plans the division has for erpaiiding. I “Since the Murphy Park sewer {’Iwlll solve an already serious overload, it should get priority over any other sewer project,” advised Haloid Kelly, representing the consulting engineers. * ★ * “The Galloway Creek sewer would serve a larger area to the northeast, but most of this area & vacant and unsewered. Both sewers would connect with the new sewage treatment plant NATIONAL WEATMEiR — Scattered light snow or snow flurries should extend from the northern Plains across the upper Mississippi and Ohio valleys Into the central and northern Appalachians tonight. Occasional showers are expected over tte The Day in Birmingham Army Engineers to Stock City Fallout Shelter^ BIRMINGHAM - The Army Corps of Engineers has am noonced that It will stock this 14 public fallout shelters City administrative aide, John F. Saefke, reported today that with the addition "six shelters which will qualify under lower criteria,” to the ..eight already qualified, public shelter space will tfiple in Birmingham. Tile etttfgeocy provisions la-clnde crackers similar te a dieting wafer, medical snppUei and sanitary items. Saefke noted that under the federal program provisions are Sup-iritod for a two-week period according to each shelter’s rated equaling 10,090 caleriaB> Saefke said. Mayor Florence Willett has irocbdinfld March M Michigan Architectural Week in Blrmtag-tam. Her proclamation Vges “all ridsens to five thought te Ae importance which good archi-tectuce. contributes to their en- A.DOG FOR A DAB-Acfress Hope Holiday had her nose ‘fixed’ so she looks like this Maltese poodle Coquette. They will appear in the film version of “Irma la Douce.” In case (d aUacx eadi person be given a supply of crack- Asks Sniper Be Committed Plane Thief Buzzes City (Cmtlnued From Page One) mittad taking from a sporting (Contlmied From Page One) chiatrlsts who testified at yester-day’s hearina before Judge Charles H. MacMahon Jr.. 2248 rooda^ Court, Bloomfield Township, is presldmit of the Michigan Society of Arddtects. Iranian artist Jafar Shoja and Ruth MoUer Smith, a native of Brooklyn, N.Y., have Joined in a month-long exhibition of their work at the Little Galleq^mJ.-^ Maple Ave. The gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. The exhibition will close AiwUe. The first in a series of wJuca-ticmal and entertaining films sponsored by the Divine Science Ministry will be shown tmnorrow. Films Utled “Big League Baae-baD for Little Leaguers’^ and ■Out of the North” are sdiid- Time for the films is 7:90 p.m. at the Strike and Spare Bowling ^ Lanes, Maple and Telegraph Dr. Tauber,-one of tlffee w-®^***' . In the northern region the rep- wanted on the phone. When he Waterford Boy Killed by Auto Troy Man, 43, Dies in Mead-On Collision 23 A young newsboy was killed early this morning when he was Struck by a car in Waterford Township. A 43-year-old TYoy man was fatally injured in a head-on crash in Royal Oak yesterday. Richard Karb-Oaklaml ginsky, 12, of 6044 Highway Graper Road, Toll in ’63l Waterford Township, was dead on arrival at Pon- liac General Hog-pital after he stepped in front of a car driven by Dwight J. Schulze, 19, of 4220 Bunker Road, Walled Lake, e * * Walter KosUch, 1834 Boulane Road, died at William Beaumont Hospital at 11 p. m- yesterday, 18 hours after the car he was a passenger in was involved in an accident. State police said At Kafbgia-sky iwy, a student at Pierce with him in a car but he was already in the plane and was taxiing the plane into take-off position when we reached him. “He seemed to aim the plane right at us and Just missed us when he 4oft the ground/’ Berz said. Immediately upon learning where the plane had landed, Frank Macartney, owner of Aerodynamics, took off from Ae Pontiac Airport in a plane similar to the one stolen by Andcr-3on. As he appraached Berz Airport he spotted the plaae which Andenoa controlled and begaa punult. Shortly after, a Federal Avia-tioa Agency plane flying in Ae area, also began to track Ae stolen green and white aircraft. Macartney followed Anderson j than an hour. He made a smooth landfaig,” was returning home after de-his are proposed to handle miner AJuries. She told Royal added capacity fw future expansion. Rough estimates are that Ae entire project would take about year to build once conatnic-tion begins. Record Insurance Paid NEW YORK record total cantral and aouAem Pacific Coast wtA snow'flurries bi the HM^niAQa in lifo insurance higher areas. A cooling trend is expected across the northern Plains, Lakes and New England wiA moderating temperatures elsewhm. It will be fair over Ae central and southern Plateau and souAem and mid-Atlantic atotes. benefits was paid last year families of policyholders killed u BUtomobile accidots, the Institute of Life Insurance said today. curred at 1:39 a. m. The youngster walked from be-hmd a truck on WilUams Lake Road Just east of Airport Road and Ato the paA of Schulze’s car, according to police. ♦ * ★ Schulze was released by police after makipg a statement to the county prosecutor. IN BACK SEAI. Koatich was ridAg A the back seat of a car driven by Arthur Goodman, 62, of 5640 Houghton Troy, when a car driven by Mrs. Yvonne Hoffmbn, 32, crossed the center line and smashed Ato Goodman’s auto. ---------................... Mrs. Hoffman, 3008 Maplewood t. Royal Oak, was treated for learned Aey were askAg about the plane he took off running 1»-| Ae mnway and stepped A iNut wards Ae plane. ■TRIED TO CATCH HIM’ “Two of ua tried to catch up plane.. saM Stomberg. “There was no bouncAg and he taxied down Ae boy. He cited young Godfrey's “emotional flatness, his Indifference of a police car. to the seriousness of hA offense, He looked like a veteran and the potential danger that >e pilot,” Stomberg said. I might again find himself repeat- There was no damage to Ae|ing such offense if he deems it Eugene M. Brown ^aiM,~^OMof Ae~^essity| Service for Eugene ~M. Brown, tor immedAte commitment of 80, of 695 CoAnAI Court, will be I p.m. tomorrow at Ae St. Paul’s Chapel, ChrAt Church Cranbrook. Hundredsilee Fresh Floods Northeast Is Battered by Freak Winter Storm By United Press International Hundreds of more persons were necessary. After yesterday’s twoJMmr BurAI will MAw A White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Brown Aed yesterday after a brief illness. His body is at Ae BeU Chapel of Ae William R. Hamilton CA. He was a retired automotive Adams retsAed Juvenile Court JnrisdictAn over DoogAs to treatment A a mental Astitn-thm. The Judge’s decAAn came after Ae three paychAtrAA testified the youA was serAusIy mentally ill. ^ Dr. FAk, who was appointed by Judge Adams to examine Douglaa for Ae court, and Dr. Emmanuel Tanay of Detroit also testified at yesterday’s hearing. Drs. Tauber and Tanay were Surviving are hA wife EUza-beA 0.; a daughter, Mrs. Ridv-ard H. Kelly^f Bloomfield HllA; a sAter and two grandchildren. today A a fresh surge retained by Godfrey’s attorneys, (Alo River Valley. Detroit North of Ae flood belt, Ae! Guard Legislators at OAS Threats (Continued From Page One) He added that he recehmd warnings from the OAS A January. “I stroni^ supported Algerl-SB Adepeadeacc »d alas erW-^ the OAS very stroiMly,” Police rushed to MAs Bacon’s . County Prosecutor George F. |Northeast ms punAhed by 8 jayAr said yesterday he ron-^eportment after she reported Ae down after trailing him for more freak late winter stonp which'Adams’ dechlon! threat. A Scotland Yard apoket-combined heavy snows, freezing ^ deny hA petitAn to try Aeimmi said “precautAna” were be- Joblessness on Rise Again WASHINGTON un-Un«m|doy-ment A slowly rAAg agaA and exceeding the idle totaA of a year age. Tlie government was due to submit Ae latest report, for February, A midafternoon today. It was expected to show Ae nation’s seasonally adjusted rata of unemployment A back at around 6 per cent of the work force. Tlie rate was 5.8 per cent A December and 5.8 per cent A January. Native Missouri Sailors Lend Oriental Touch ST. LOUIS (UPI) - WlUam Groase and TarriU R. ReetT Jr. own a Chinese Junk. Hie men ordered Ae vessel from a shipbuilder A Hong Kong. The Junk was shipped to New Orleans, then baq5_to Paducah, Kyr anCT wiA nir umier lA own power to Kentucky Lake, where Ae Orosae.and Rees families take weekend saiA. mist, zero vAibility fog and winds up to ^55 miles per hour. The storm stranded school children and caused scores of mnltiplo-car craclnps A Ae BidfoA, N.Y., and Erie, Pa„ areas. The deaA toll from three days of flooding from Indiana to SouA Carolina rose to 21. At least 11 other persona were dead A the storm whkA raked the northeast and vAlent raA storms A Ae SouA. MANY RETURNING Many of Ae 4,000 persona driven from AeA homes by the first burst of flood waters were re-Aramg to titeif dwellings. Bat A cealral PennsylvanA the Ae-Januned Juniata River spilled ever its irnnks and forced evacnatfon of 589 persons along a 14'-miA stretch between Newport and Dnncannoa. Duncannon’s mayor decAred a state of emergency as flood waters cut off all ronda AadAg into town and Upped a foot deq>. on the maA thoroughfare. * * * Ice floea knocked down utility Dlea, cutting off the power temporarily last Civil defense workers and volun- boy as an adult A Circuit CAurt. If committed to Pontiac State Hospital Donglas could become eligible for release if psychAtrisA preaeonce him Ing taken, but he declined to dA-close detaiA for security reals. I am convinced AA was no hoax — the man was definitely French,” said Miss Bacon. “I rang off at once a Ae boy readies hA 19A birA-day. Judge Adams aaid„Ae psychl-atrAA testifAd that young Godfrey could be rehabAtated eventually alAough suffering * frmn severe menAd illness characto*-ized by Indifference, withdrawal, hallucAations and delusions of persecution. Tlie boy was A attendance for most of yesterday^ hearing, but appeared to pay little attention to the proceecUnga. telephone call, “but when I took ofi the receiver nobody spoke at the other end.” The poUtieal faror contAaed ever the taped teievAien Ater-view WiA BidaiH. A government spokesman declined any more comment on the AcAent, which put a new straA on BritAh-French reAtAns. But Labor leglsAtors drew up new questions to ask Ae government A ParlAunent. teerT rescued 23 persAA, Includ-Ag 13 eUerly nursAg tiento, from an Aland A JunAta. Oak police that she lost control of her car wbeo Ae powm- staer-Ag and brakes failed. The impact hurled Koiitich through tte wAdAield. Goodman and another passenger A hA car, William KrutzAa, 47, of 2529 GalpA St., Royal Oak, boA listed A ierAiu^^c^ tion at Beaumont Hospital wiA multipA fractures. The accident happened on Web-•ter Street, about 150 feet from! the aawsoD border. TOWNSHIP OF BLOOMFIELD The Boord of Review for the Township of Bloomfield will meat of the Township Office, 4200 Talagroph Rood, on; Monday, March 11, 19«3 Tuaadey, March 12, 1963 from 9 o. m. to 12 noon, and from 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. and on Thursday, March 14, 1963, from 1 p. m. to For the purpose of reviewino the 1963 roils for the Township of Bloomfield. tox assessment. Amo L Hulet, SupervAor THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1968 TFX Investigators Allege New Error WASHINGTON (AP)—A Senate Iqvestigator contends Secretary of tbe Air F(»ve Eugme B1 Zudnrt onderitated by $29.» miUlon the amount tbe government stood to sSVe it it awaited the Boeihg Co. a contract to devel^ the new TFX warplane. And, according to the Senate Inveetigatlone subcommittee, this brings to a total of about |61 million the dktent of apparent orors by Zuckbrt in evaluating Jerome Adlerman produced a doo-liudcert acknowledged that his Although Boeing was the low bidder, the contract was given to the General Dynamics Gorp., of Fort Worth, Tex., and the investigations subcomBUttee is trying-to determine if favoritism played any part ih the award. uii^t which, he said, showed the estimated saving from the Boeing design would have been HKJi mill^ not the 1397 million mentioned by Zuckert. ‘A difference of some 929.9 million,” Adlerman commented. Turning to the witness, Air Force Col. Charles A.~Gayle, program director for the TFX project, Chairman John L. McClellan, D-Ark., asked: ‘Would you say, flien, according to your records, teat this figure of 9397 million used in the memorandum is in error?” “According to this here,” Gayle replied, ‘‘that is cor rect.” He said he had never mated savings in piecing the TFX as a si^le aircraft system —with somewhat different versions for the Air Force and Navy —as compared to the cost of developing different air^aft for the two services. In a P^tagon memwandum made public last.Sunday, Zudio-t called it significant that the G»-eral Dynamics design offered po-tontial savings of 9923 million, while Boeing’s indicated ‘‘only 9397 million.” FROM WITNESSES In Wednesday’s closed • door hearing, subconunittee counsel Dann Battles Near Wind-Up contained some mistakes. And Tuesday, McCtellan spotted what he termed an error of 931 miUion or 931.8 miUion by Zuckert in flguring costs of research Witnesses have told the subcbm-mittee Boeing’s bid was 921-mil-llon to 941^millk>n tower than General Dynamics’ and its design better than that of the Texas firm. . The subcommittee has recessed its hearings until nmet Tuesday. Grips Seeds of Hope BIRMINGHAM, Ala. iUFD-City Commissiono- J. T. Waggoner, nteo got only 1,872 of nearly 46,000 heaid^lSB'9397 mmidn «tlmate yotes cast^ in tte tewman ra«: from any source but the secre- for mayor, refused to concede, tary’s mdno. jyesterday. ‘‘Just wait untU the l^lier, in a letter to McClellan, farm vde comes in,” be said. Hearing on Settlement With Chrysler Set j WILMINGTON, Del. UR-More| than XO months. litigation h^j tween Sol A. Dann and Chrysler Corp. appeared headed for con-J elusion as lawyers filed proposed' settlement papers in Court of Chancery yesterday. Chancellor Collins J. Seitz set May 13 as the date for a hearing. Dann, a 59-year-old Detroit lawyer and Oirysler stoddiolder, filed suit in August 1900, charging Chryder officials with mismanagement and illegal profits in conducting business with outside firms. Dana asked ttat the airts-mstive firm be placed la re- arreantiag hy Chrysler t Chrysler responded with a 939-million libel suit in Wilmington Court charging Dann with making false and malicious statements about the corporation at a stockholders’ meeting. Consolidated with Dann’s act-—fcB-ia^«ilUiyJudge A.James} Gallo of Delaware Common Pleas Court and his wife, who are Chrysler stockholders. They also charge mismanagement by Ctoyder. It te proposed in tbe setfiement | filed yesterday that after certain i changes are approved stock-j holders with regard to Chrys-ler’s incentiveHrompensatim plan for executives, the Dann and Gal-do suits will be withdrawn, and Chrysler will also drop its action against Dann. Ex-Govemors Honor ^Montal Health Director DETRCMT m -Charles F. Wagg, who is retiring as state mental health dfawtor, was honored at a dinner in the Veterans Memorial Wednesday night Among the speakers were termer governors John B. Swainson, G. Mennen Williams and Murray Van Wagons, and Robert A., Haines, dneclofia^ menlarinSlF tutkrns in Kansas. NEW MIRACLE FALSE TEETH RELINER 'd«nturlt« SIMMS PRESIDENT Tells Our Drug Dept. Manaser **Shaw PonUne Folk* Why Wm*rm StiU the Drug DUeounten** So Here’S MORE PROOF - Shop for DRUGS « LOWEST DISCOUNT PRICES FAMOUS BRAND - Saturday Mtra dlsoountt to show m whM wo soy'SIMMS Is SHU King of Righls lOMivod to limit qwantitteo. DRUG DEPT. DISCOUNTS 2:^12 SQ® ^ WPwrgrh polo CONTAC COLO CAPSULES 93< DAA. DENTURE CLEMSER ££.-=79» AHTACID TABS 9X96 poefc ot 900 oclioctdily. -|89 lobM*. BABY MILK FORHUUS 19“ SIHUTUS MrSIRUS |79 HEET 53“ N«w-WnOKROMEdfli SCHICK RU8ES 79c pock oft 5's. To fit xdi douMt odgo stylo •ofoty rcoort. Doiwxo RPOflO MO9* PiOOMv in FEPTO BISMOL USTERIRE umsEFne 93“ ■^49“ SHAVE BOMBS ToamPAsiE Your Choiee YOU floveii't Hud Your PreteripUou ^ Bom RouUy Diaooumtod Until Ifa Filled Here at SIMMS ... and lot we peova IV. JuaVtokaj you^ proecriptlon to ( pharmacy, ask thorn t (you hovo this rIghV] 'or tfia I bring H to Simtne for letor^ pharmociete fkn your octiy ae your doctor ordoee if. CJlUluXMB SIAAAAS Is OPEN TONITE^til 9 P.AA.-FridaV and Saturday 9 a.m. to 10p.m. Join In This SPECL4L SAVE^GS Event For Store-IRde IHacomt*- Simms Annual “PRESIDENT’S SALE” A Pergonal Message: We have been in downtown Pontiac since 1934 and I've seen many, many tremendoiiis values pass through Simms. But, I sincerely believe that the past few years have seen even greater buys in Simms. I ask you to compare before you buy—Another store may advertise an item at a few pennies less or more than vvkit we have at Simms—bet is it of the same quality? You really can't tell from a newspaper advertisement what the Hern is exactly, you have to see it for yourself. And another thing, many people hove told me that they hove gone to other stores for odvertised specials, only to find that thdy were sold out—I guarantee that Simms will have the item being advertised —and’if it is a short lot quantity, we'll tell you exactly how many we have in stock at the time of the advertisement. Now I've told the department nruinagers to cut prices even more for y President's Sale' because, we at Simms, wont to show YOU—the customer how grateful we are for your post patronage and with hopes of bringing you even bigger and better bargains in the future. Signed MEYER SIMON, Pitesidgnt-SIMMS BROS. Only Our “TOP MAN” Can CUT PRICES This LOW! Final Clearance of Better , American Made First Quality UOIES’-MISSES’-MATRONS’ Dresses Original $4.99 tp $13.95 Value Imagine getting a dress for $1.50 each when you boy 2... smart slyieir and fabria in too great a selection to list them oR—but you're sure to find two you wont at this low price. All sizes 7 to 52—tho not in every style or color. Famous names including 'Molly Goldberg' dressei Hi-Speed KODACHROME II COLOR MOVIE FIIM 1 88 $2.95 Value 8mm Roll 8mm MAGAZINE LOAD $3.15 VkSA 35 or ASA 404|>Md( terMeor and outdoor movloi. Toko bMur cdlar FILMS 35mm—20 Exps. 92.15 Folue 35mm—J6 Exps. JS.IO Value LOOK for the Thousands of Un-Advertised DISCOUNTS Throughout SIMMS Big Store! KiSFWSfiSMS PARK FREE Only at Simms in Pontiac 'Bungalow DRIK9TE’ QuaHty Paints e Latex White Paint eSemi-aiessVirhite I e Perch a Deok Enamel $4.95 Per Qallon -YourCJMee- Your choiM of the obove points at oo^low price....... —latex for ceilings and walls, fomi-gloss for woodwork, kitchens, bathrooms, porch and deck in battleship gray or light grey colors. SIMMS DISC9UNT BASEMENT New Shipment Arrives for Spring and Summer lotton Yard Goods Including RAYON DRAPERY 00 No Limit—Stock Up Cotton fabrics in gay prints and stripes — ideal for spring and summer sewing . . . »s, skirts, sportswear for yourself ond the children. Also o group of solid color ro^n drapery materials. 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS 70x90 Inch Size Sheet Blankets 1 2for $2.50 100% cotton bionkdt with stitched edges. Lilac color only. Washable. SIMMS SHOES at DISCOUNT American Made-lst Quality Canvas Oxfords 1M Quality-AMERICAN «AADE Ladies’ Shoes for DRESS-SPORT-CASUAL Dren pumps, sport o Etock heels, gum-drops, soil-'’" cloths, corduroys, leathers, etc. In popular styles ond colors.^ _ Not evsry size in oil styles and colors. Satisfaction guoronteed or your money bock. ^ WRIST WATCH SALE 11 DFF T Men’s and Women’s ‘TIMEX’ Watches $6.95 TIAAEX WATCHES-now 9“ $7.95 TIAAEX WATCHES-now 6" $9.95 TIMEX WATCHES-now r $10.95 TIMEX WATCHES-now r* $11.95 TIMEX WATCHES-now 9” $12.95 TIMEX WATCHES-now 1Q3* $14.95 TIMEX WATCHES-now ir $15.00 TIMEX WATCHES-now iir $15.95 TIMEX WATCHES-now .12" $16.95 TIAAEX— WAKHES-new 713“ $39.95 TIMEX ELECTRIC-now . .31" ‘MIRR0-MAHC’ Prstsura Cookers !99 spaed cooks In lA the time—prMarvM flavor and color of food. Unbreokoble control-you-con haof and it reguioles the pressure. ffainlese $teel Beatmrg Jk FoodWMps 5-Year Guarontee on rl". Wall Can Dpener tS.9S Velme 'Swing-A-Wa/ con ^ flft opener wMi brocket MUV and screws. With ■ magnetic lid lifter. M Am shone—oHial headh. If mi prataolus gear iMsId, dto j caUheudsgtormoNower STAINLESS STEEL SOrPe. Tableware Compiatf S«rvic« for 8 $9.00 ^^88 Value ruU. chip or peal. Durable for everyday beautiful for serving company. Buy far yourself and gift-giving. DRUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS CLOTHING DEPT. DISCOUNTS American Made—1 st Quality 'K’Ponts Sab! ElECTMC RNr S IISJIRmMniImi On-off swHch, with For DRESS-WORK-SPORTI Wearinc Great selection of pants for every purpose ... for man la sizes 30 to 36 and beys In sizes 6 to 16—in-dudieg sUsM, regulars and Gmurauteed-Brand Nem Electric Shavers LADY SUNBEAM Razor $1735 douUs bMd nuor wMi 41 4 M SCHICK Custom Razor Moraloo Floating Hoad ttV.W tnbt-nu Asoueour^ee^ - -|ioc*lorbMMr.liM«.|gWe Sunbeam S^ladeMod. SM.9S - MS-J nodil 4 RDNSQN *Big Daddy* niJO velus - Esr clessn,M vye 9 ere / I29.M ORYIRS General Eleciricv Univar- gue mm id, Dominipn and Schick ^ | Conw, sen Itw ctmpiM selection of hdr dTyms ••• onaf^^ particular noed and priced to fit your HAIR BRUSH ROLLERS 91 value—8 hdr hrashAWto^ rollers plus 16 rollo^Uv BA|H SOAP-1 Bare 15c Uni - Wri’sley's'MWto-soap in bouqueiflllC ofoppleblossom .... HOT WATER BOTTLE 91.98 combi notion bat- ^ He. Id guolhy. guoron- | wsp teed 3 years u / / SUPPORT STOCKIHOS 93.98 value-oN nylon ^ mm In fell fashion, beige | «« color. SmoN or Ige. tizoii ■ IIHIOAFVITAMIHr . 93.11 Upjohns 100 plus {m mm 24 free chewaUe vlto- | V ■ mmi for chNdfwi 1 MYAOEO VITAMillS 97.79itorke-OavtsIharo- J|mm . pouHcfonMfo.VtaaiiBS ondminoralt. lOOh... ^ mMk 98 H. SAGINAW . -n ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, i;HURS]DAY. MARCH 7, 1963 J- Vote in Voters in 10 area coininuniUe8| lee WOford were se> Will go to the polls Monday to lOcted at the eancis, John 1* - caat'-their-baUeta for local offi-; Wttiienip, tt 8. Hekomb St, cials on slates predominantly will replace him on the ballot., filled with Incumbent candidates.! incumbents are" Robert C. One of the main exceptions is 'Waters, president; Artemus M. in "Metamora where political jPappas, clerk; Mrs. Prudence hopefnls from both the atixens ;Dunston, treasurer; Uoyd Sibley, Gladys Harrington and Aaaesaorij Robert Weingartz. | Leonard Candidates for village offices In this northeast Oakland County i ^^Prog^lve ^ties are vy- asaeswr; and^^ ?"‘^'^lXirtbS%lI'ch U* I" ^ pre-fBorM. Treasurer Mrs. lag for most village posU. jer and Stan^ Radoye, truo-'*^^* "* Mart* 11 election. Marlene Mallia. "—‘ *--------------- Rochester’s balloting also prom-*««*• „, 1 ★ * * ♦ ★ W Ises to be active with 10 candi-l The three trustees will be elect- They are all running unopposed, gojh Sheik and Mrs. Mallia dates competing for five council «1 to two-year terms while aU Incumbents Charles Hamilton, previously announced their de-• other' candidates will serve for,Dwight Patterson and John ejgien n^t to 4eek re-election, on year. jSutherby are running for two- Voting will take place at the year terms on the Village Coun-ViUage HaU, 25 ST'Maln Street, idl. Voting there will be . in the fire hall. Following is a round-up of candidates in their respective vil-iages: Clalrluton Jennie Saunders and Assessor Ware. Trustees Donald Barnes, John Teare and Robert Suttod will 81 two-year terms on the council. Metamora " Oxford Also "Pylof An active race is assured here| the three incumbent conncil- u InILlWv”** In Monday’s ei^on, with candl-iinen are unopposed, but compe-' ^ dates from the Citizen* and thejutlon among the three ia expect- Seeking re-election for two-'j sessor.. Both poeitioM are for jprop.jg^ive parties vying for the'ed to be stiff right up until Mon-Unless there is write-in com-, year .terms as trustees are one yem. top village positions. iday’s election, petition, a slate of candidates for' Charles Carloss, William Far- jeuie Sutherby and Mrs. Cal- The Citizens party haa ^ain; * * * village office selected at a Citl- num and Irvine Tnimagc. vi„ Schields are seeking the posts nominated incumbent President under the village charter, sens party caucus last month. Unchallenged for re-election tolof village president and clerk, Percy Clark to seek reelection tojtwo candidates receiving the will be unopposed InMonday^l Igfnas are Village Presl-1 respectively. They will replace his office for a one-.vear term, highest number of votes in the election. jdent Robert L. White, Clerk Mrs. village president Lawson Sheik, Challenging him will be Billy general spring election are All incumbents except TrUs- IMlldred Gray, 'Lreasurer Mrs.lwho served the village eight Skellenger, 41#a S. Oak St., the awarded two-year temui, while — - - —------------------------------------------------------------------------- - iProgressive party’s candidate. the third serves for one year. the council In Monday’s spring election here. He win be running with the two incumbents, Howard Pnllit-tcr and Marvin sieweke, for the three trustee vacancies. The terms aU m for two years. Holmes ia a candidate for.t^ post being vacated by Donald Deemer. All other seekers are iBcumbWjts. They are President Wayne N. Black, Qerk Dorothy Carl, Treasurer Elaine Hosner; Aaausor Elgin Anger Sr. and U-j fartfy board mentbers Helen M. Stone and H. Dale Palmer. Wood Creek Farms' Vying for the one^year clerk’s slot wUl be incnmbent Grove C. Morse (C) and Mrs. Darlene Bmcy (PI M W. High ^ Incnmbent Treasurer Mrs.' Janette Sehenkel (C) is being challenged by Mrs. Dorothy Tvner (P) 4070 Blood Road, for a one-year term. Incumbent Victor Maslin is unchallenged for the village asses- ViUage President Norman'vB. Kreider ia unopposed for rooted hlSs, second two-year term in offico in this village's spring general election Monday. Seeking ejection to fill two vacancies on the Village Cona-cil are Benjamin G. DeCooke, mn Spring Road, and Mrs. The incumbents ape E. Wayne Robert J. Swift, 284M West-Converse, Gerald fc. Otriidi and! breok Court. j Edmund A. Unger. ^ iiMy will replace Arthur Buachl . land Mrs. Marion Lam, who pre-i ROCuBSlGf jviously announced their decision| r Five vacancies on this viUage’a! seven-member council win bej filled in Monday’s election here^ the outcome of whit* is of spedal siigiHricance due to the presmit not to seek re-election. Pastor Ends I sot's slot, also a one-year term. c^ncU’s split on the urban re-, * * * newal issue /YllSSlOn Ul Three ttvo-year trustee vacancies are oped’ in addl^ to the In adriltinn ' one-year'uttoxpilii»dlerm of Sam-mieA. Ray. .- Cit^eU^s party candidates for the two-year openings are Edward Haver, 4096 Blood Road, At the Feb.. councU voted 4 to S against addi- AF Base to the 182,060 federal grant application for urban rsMwal study. Hila, hi effect, kllla Uw ro-qnest „ ^w tfc. 'pastor of Lutheran Church of the a.r,.a;T^jyr kin*. w«t ot-' ; • reactivated pleted a five-day spiritual mission High Street. Is the only Prog-at Westover Air F o r c e Base, ressive party candidate for the , . „ , vacancies. Incumbent counclimen Jay E3- dred and Edwin Aldrich have Seeking to fill the unexpired | chosen not to run for re-election, term are Charles Flower (C) The terms of trustee John A Pleasant Street and Russefl SwetllBn»h«ritT ■«( RovHRv" ^ ^ Strategic Air CammondL. |(P) Third Street. . . woM-arw ezniriM. _ * ★ ♦ WEST BLOWdFDELD TOWNSHIP - Rev. A. Karl Boehmke, The mission was on behalf the Protestant servicemen and th^ families at this eastern base I Milford held ni^tly in the base chapel and visitp^rere made to service people at their active duty stations. A brief re- copies of each are printed. House employesy ' The fifth council vacancy, arises PROPOSED UW8 - Michigan’s repre- ;/ _ . avuve autv swiio™. a onei sentativ^ have offered 833 bills for consWera- (fnafi left) Bin NeweR, Joh Hubbanl and Jim . men and one womani“*,B. Martin, who resigned for fg. y,, Ahoniahw of tiM tlon in the house this session. One thousand Atonnedy are shown sorting and filing some of ijg competing for two council *•««•**> reasons. NeU Rosso waslbog. also was conducted bv Rev ' ...........................;s/the bills as they arrive from the printer. 'vacancies In the village election appointed to flU bis position coiwuctea oy itev. -.Monday. The terms are for three Monday’s election. Mir. Boemke served af chap- iyears. Vytag for the year remaInJng, .lain at Westover during the Ko- Vying for the two posts are Martta’s imexpired term ar« |rean conflict, 1956-92. He is cur-1 ---- ^ - - Rosso and John F. O’Donnell, rently chaplain with the 403rd 1210 SycauMte St iTnx^ Carrier Wing (Reserve) I Eight caodldatea are running 5*^*®** ** ®**^"‘‘‘** ^ for the other four vacandea. 'Ibe Area Income Tax Fighters fQ/PreseflWepof+4c^^ mailed, in which the tnayorj coverage, at i pointed out that the meeting is of j the trkonnty area during the vital importance for all pditical| April 1 elections, some 50,000 incumbents John Dodd and Ralph Weise, pins David Ward Young, 525 W. Commerce Road, and Mrs. Joaan Colton, SN Sunmlt St. .......................s leaders as well as citizen leaders] signatures can be collected. Rocreation^uilding, 24386 to help in the statewide petition-] That should be ‘enough to gp W. lOti-Mile^Rbad, here. ing drive. lover the top." the mayor con- GoiqpeDhg for the office of village president are incumbent Wilbur Johnson and James Bryant, 414 Benson St. The term of village president is for two years. 'Biaa.' three reedving the most votes will serve two years and the candidate in fourth place will M a one-year position. 4 Vie in S. Lyon for Council Jobs James Clarkson will in k I s message Clarksoa tinued. voiced the hope that with prop-200 notices have been er organization and sufficient Chiefs Disappearance Still Cloaked in Mystery WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -i Plano was last seen, the chief Mystoy surrounds the recent dis-| had said be was going to at-appearance of Township Police ^ tend a meeting on Juvenile Chief Andrew Plano, 61, who has; problenu that afternoon._ : Jittamissing since Monday ufter-t—s^.^^ y,Qgg sessions usuallyl 'last half an afternoon, we gen-' Township Supervisor Ed Cheyzjerally don’t see him until the' aa« todiy that foul pSy^has morning,’’ Cheyz continued. least 1,000 if not 2,000 signatures signing the post after heading the on this date,” Clarkaoo said. council for four years. Included in the list are Rewdd, Boeberitz, Jerry L. Dahlmann, 220 Helen St., Jamea E. McCarthy, 593 Romeo Road, and Harold Milton, 1002 Mahaffy St. ♦ * ♦ SOUTH LYON - Four men, in- Local funeral director Charles Also running are Ow«> Smith, eluding two incumbents, are con-, F. Sherman is seeking to fill the 1760 Lounsbery St., Kenneth C. jtosting two vacancies on the Cl^ “Each city in the metropolitan village presidency In Monday’sivan Nocker, 411 ‘Wilcox St., and Council hare, area will be asked to obtain atj^lection. Raymond Barrick is re*lEarl O. Van Norman, 1353 Calaf- They are incumbents Claude Ortonville GOAL IN SIGHT’ 'We will soon ba st tha806,4M| tiir vi^ge offices are inenm-rignature mark, and wa cannot bents, let this program fall now with' _ ... , . . ■0 litUe to go," ha added. . niey include cierx Lavem pa St. I Tapp and Frank Gibson, Andrew Rajkovieh, 109 Univw-■Hy St., and Wilson Westphal, |208 Elm Place. Stanley J., Holmes, 278 Sisson' Contesthig the office of may-It., is seeking his first term on| «J*cllia April Romeo The Vigilance Tax Committee,; _ _ i . • under the leadership of Berkleyi 3 OfOUpS—Joiri In Mayor George W. Kuhn, is op-i .-:t - - . . .. _ posing the inclusion of nonresidents working in Detroit L I A I olafe Area Loncerf been ruled out. However, he said^ it is likely that Plano “may be on his way to C^llfomla. ” m^g that she had Ml from her husband since his dis-Lu^^f appearance Monday afternoon ^ ^ , ... Che ^ Three Naval Cadets He noted the possibility that PfAm Ai-na HofinrPd [Plano may have met with foul ''V''' MWIIUICU and did not know his where-v- Cheyz explained that when Three area students attending the U.S. Naval Academy have appeared on the Superintendant’s , It was announced today. and Henry Schnster, Nt Whipple Bhrd. Earl H. Crawford. 312 S. Laf-iayette St., and Marj' Ann MtHer; of Whipple boulevard are vying for justice of the peace. , Incumbent Justice John.J. Al-jley previously announced his decision not to seek re-election. ROCHESTER - The sounds of has appeared in concert twice I voices and some 30 instni-.thi* year. ..jente will ring out here Sun-I mnsJc** event is open to n of Mrs. Carol P. Emmett, >n township,” he added ” 231 Oakland St., Birmingham; R.| The three musical units will * * a |l. Martens, son of Mr. and Mrs.'Join in performing the half-hour Plano’s private car. equipped'G«orge F. Martens, MIO Gqlf-composition. It will be led by with a township police radio, also {Side Drive, Milfoid; and D. P. Frank Irish, the high schoo* fa missing. Snyder, son of Mr. and Mra- Dar- choir director, rell P. Snyder, Royal Oak. Ckays Baled that charges be pressed against the chief oa-leas the eqaipmeat is returned. «V. v„ u.. _______________________SnperWe«J«>t’i .-.J^ .la tional Girl Scout Roundup wlU. He described PlmH, a. a loyal.^JSS^'^JliS also ba teatured at the session, iraitehle and honest employe whoi^®*^ coileges. All to be staged at the school, 4005 has done his job quite well Baldwin Road Accident Toil Soon EAST LANSING (AP) - TVafflc accidents have killed 224 persons in Michigaaso far this year, provisional figures compiled hy riate this date last year was 180. Juvenile work in the area. - State police this morning report police showed today. The «t no trwo of the mfasing police of- |were nominated to the academy ... .. ,___ . . . by U. S. Rep. William S. Broom- •He did his brat to protect the ^Oakland, residents of this township, Cheyz added. : ' ♦ ♦ * ' Plano, who Uvea at 9580 Portrj Michigan leads the nation in age Tr^ also has been active Inline production ofjrahiabla liard ma|da and yellow bircb lumber, and 81 pv oait of the world’s supply of from the upper peninsula. Solofati will be Mn. JoAnn MeVey, 'Hiomas Marsh and Mu^ ray Hulsa. Uader caadactar Richard Goldsworthy, the orchestra will I. They are by Manrt, "Five Pieces fer Orchestra” hy Bartok, and “Sympboay la D Major" by Sammarttei. Thit to the chic orchestra’s PARMA (UPI) - The wife of a _ ^ ___ I Jackson County deputy sheriff . J.-.. ‘'7!fri|htened off a wouM-bie molester Oak Parker Nabbednight by threatening to wun I wnw mumuw approached her H/'ti |\ II I 1 in the local laundromat. Wltn KODDery Loot Mrs. Luane Moe told authori- ' jties she was atone in the laundro-j li DETROIT (P - A 46-year-old truck driver was arrested by Detroit police and FBI agents yesterday less than four hours after a westaide Detroit savings and loan (dflce was robbed of $2,086. civic chorus, formed this year, haa been rabearstng two months * hi nde In tfaa oonoert FBI agents said they recovered the loot in a truck driven by frving J. Goyer, 48, 22» Clovar-lawn St., of Oak Park. They also found the pistol which he al-,legedly used in the holdup. j w a ♦ Tlie hiddup was at an American Savinga and Loan Asaoda- mat about 10:30 p.m. when the] man entered and went to the back door. She said he apparently diedeed the door to see if anyone was outside. Then he grabbed her from bdiind, she said, but let go when she thraatened to scream. ' w ■ w a Mrs. Joaxm WatUna, 28, Brooklyn, Mich., disappeared from a Brooklyn laundromat two Weeks ago Simday and has not been aeen since. She also was alone in the laundromat hie last time she was seen. Tha 80-voioe high adiool dnir tfoo. Goyar waa-bdd for hiveatlgB fbe total value of all researctal and developnunt work in Michi-! fan la 1181 pas eatiiaated Ja ea-Of 1181 mnioB. Boy What You Woat Whan You Cua Sowa CHARGE V IT Or Lay it Awoy $M Thtii Exciting WAITE DAYS SPECIALS! PRE-SEASON PRICED! 21" POWER MOWER >44 \ a pewaffol 2H RP. BriOB* K Stratton angbw a Sitkonliad bokad anomeldeck a Leof malcbar a StMl wheels with oil Impragnoted bearings a Remote thretHe central en hondle e 1 yr. engine worranty Afeieer*. < > Lower Level p PRE-SEASH DELUXE KING-SIZE CHAISE AND TWO DELUXE CHAIRSI 14,95 Value Chaiea 8.98 Value Choir 8.98 Vaiua Choir 3^91 Total Voluo <22 Small 0 Ploeocin a Stufdy 1* peUakoo ahnninum frameo a 7 delm 214* wMla Velen wabe ocreu belh chobond chaiea a Web sepofotors keep webe tout ond seemaiy in ploca a Double tubular oimsi nea-Hp legai nan-pinch hlagee Summer Fumituru... FffUb Fleer ROOM SIZE 9xl2-FT. OVAL BRAID RUGS Shop ond Compare • Oman or brown combinottons • Sisa ia oppioximata N AAatabing Size* Avollabte ......2.99 27by72«.....8.99 trhfASr.....5.99 48by72-...18.99 S0byS4*.....6.49 66 by 102*..... 19.95 itkm...F(fUFlMr 19" AMBASSADOR PORTABLE TV ^ ^0 ’75 TF...FfAk Fleer .■‘■K V;v. v/; ■: ^ .x,;',:, ■ ________. ______THE PONTIAC PRE3S, THtJHSPAY, M^CH Tr 19( ■ / A—5 Exciting Savings All Over the Storel WAITE DAYS .Buy What You Mood Now ^'and Sdvol 0PENIWU1FS FLEXIBLE cce lecNin SHOP TONIGHT TIU 9, WmERCIMr GLEUUUKE! SI c 39.98Coqf« ^ | ^ SI1M6-16 I V 49.98 Coots Shogmoor StaM 10^14 69.98 Coots •20 M3 eHqons-sn JACKETS WoF010.98-14.98 3** W0IO15.98...... 5“ W4I019.98..!.... 10“ Wofo 25.00-29.98.... 14“i TERRinC SMMttl ...nMFiMT Many Items Not AdvertisedI FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9:45 TlU 91 PARK FREE ALL DAY FROM 9:30 ON CITY-OWNED PARKING LOTSI Fomous Brandsl Indudos Somo Lyerol GIRDLE SALE •3“. *10“ OliooiiNeed fivmbefs of ginles oed poAty glrdlee 26^ FAiMOUS CONTOUR BRAS, Warn 3.95.. $1.22 Exciting Spociol Purchosol COSTUME RINGS $^00 FUNUS WIOE PUT TOGS Rag. 4.95 to A95 F347 5.95 Knit % Sleeve Sbpeweis.... 2A7 4.95 Istmudei...............3.97 7.95 Ploid Skirtt and Sleeks... A97 dwowwM>«lal|MlSlJ00oaeM SaortMMor... TOM PImt C3[n[II3EIl aaaa Qisaciin □i El 6313 E3 El 63 El xTxix Wo hove your siso in this BLACK KID SKIAAMER TSoH novor find e dioa moro fitting... and wo hovo your tin . . . of aavingtl Lot us fit you bi (hh gay, go-owywheiw block kid MEirS UNDBtWEM Ks 3'~.5“S 79e AtMoHe ^... 3 for $200 Sy. on mW for WoSa Days onlyl AN or* wlidomd and Sanforind. Boy Yoor Custom-Made DRAPERIES $<|99 RE6. SitORT Lovdy Lacn-TrimmMl NYLON SUPS S359 GMCStoeXomirtoM UNED JACKETS » »3« oMudi km Rtgwiar and ihort iMgAi. Sint OHM flopRn (oehMi wM RommI Iningi... lliia potfcei Sptfng and FoB lackti Zlpptf doting. Many now ooion ki tint 3-6X and 7-14. Boys' 6 to 16 Wothoblo FLANNEL UNED POPUN JACKETS s» ^3^ k*gt> tipptr ffoitt and odfutkibla cufft. Wodn obi*. Choott Mi In Uuo, rnd or bloek. tint «IdIA Th# AAognificont Xentury" ROYAL PORTABLE :^5 COAAPLETE WITH CASE aKoynlTabulf r • MagMMonHn a AwtaoMNc Uw Flodar • • LaatharCanykif Cota • 9Mgk Oa*k Tftple Siweino AAofi's Zip-Out LifiocI ALL-WEATHER COATS 24.9Ste 39.95 Veleeu *18" Eiptrtty loUoftd cooe wUk dpool OHoa acrylic plla iMngi to woor four ttotont of *a ytqrl Noidt and taGdi M raguior 42” A Riot of Goigoout Colors hi Thick AAARtEX HAND TOWELS Special PMchouel m 69ete1.89Vdvee 9 for * 1 It ti to bring yM Ana UHgm*t...SM)mdFlmr CMf’Pbar...5amtdPW Spyt'roar... SamdlW Mm’tWtmr... Strmi FImr Lmmt... Fawtb Ptnar WOMEN'S SHEER SEAMLESS HOSE •3p-*2 SpKial purchataof noadtttM 3 thodn Slh-il. Jbtfcty...5trtt«7lnr CASUAl ond DRESSY HANDBAGS ^{^3? V2 OFF Many Oyln In eatual aiid drotty bogt ol hoR pilwl HmMwm-.. Sttmrhtr SAVE ON ALTEST PRODUCTS! 1.00 Abet! Hoed ond Body Lotion. 2 for 1.00 1.49 AheNlMMlIn Heir Spuey 8Sc 2 for 1.00 AheelRol.ee Deedweet 3 far 1.00 PMiet...Sir«cfflMr JUMBO 57-INCH GARMENT BAGS Speekd Plnetieae 4% #6* * ’*vsi*" 2 *-3 (MM enyl ki loM^ floMl yrioLrM tie iVadaw... Seeof Fbor BOYS' LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS Wer.229 $100 to 3.98 1 Long doow eoltoiM and kni tpon iMtto 44(L 8ay^ran>...9«andfiMr . ■ - 1 ' ■ • t ^ — — tt Wait Ham Straet ' THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1963 R5JSS^J*RSBS?* Mtter Governor Romney Makes Wise Decision Once again Oov. Romney declares thkt he win not be a candidate for thrPresidential nomination In 1964. This Is sensible. It sounds like Oioroi RoMN?r ★ ★ ★ Shortly after Mr. Rpmney was elected Governor, his name was discussed across the Nation as a Presidential possibility in 1964. There were several prominent Republican governors variously associated with the Presidential nomination two years hence. At that time, Mr. Romney said his name should be removed. He explained that the job confronting him in Miclifgan was entirely too complex to ^nnit a simple solution in two y^tn. We agree contplctdy. ir ’ it\ ir ■ ■ ^ Michlgei) has been downgraded into the mt»ao far thktm Teitorat^^ can’t be effected overnight. It requires months of planning, coopera--tion and united action by both parties. The individual steps aren’t simple, and when they’re all added together, the task is really Herculean. ★ ★ ★ (iOVi Romney'proposes to accept ---the vtt-dict of ffiie Y'oters and stand with them. He will not leave a job half done. Our general financial situation requires months of work. Our over-all tax picture demands long study, suggestions from experts and a desire on the part of both parties to work together and extricate Michigan from the mess in which she currently wallows. ★ ★ ★ Furthermore, it’s pmrfectly possible that John F. Kennedy may be a pretty formidable figure in 1964. His personal programs before Congress don’t receive concerted action and some of his most urgent "musts” have been rejected. But JFK’s still popular. Don’t kid yourself. ' ★ ★ ■ ★ He is accepted with easy complacence by a huge number of people. True, he only won by the proverbial cat’s whisker, and he ^ has shown very modest ability as the Chief Executive, but the President and his wife are popular figures. Even congressmen who brush aside his measures, do so with an affectionate pat on the back and kindly personal word. ★ ★ ★ If he makes a monumental mistake or If this Cuban bus&ess gets out of hand, he might be a pushover. But those things are problmnatical. Hence Michigan’s Romney Will be. in a more strategic position If he continues with the big job at hand. Let Rockefeller—or someone else—slug It out with the President in ’64. Of cidents with foreign dignitaries have not caused this nation endless em-bartassment. 'currently the city is short 72 officers, and an additional 100 men are authorized for June. Future recommendations Qall for 160 more men and 40 dogs, and lor a'stnmger anti-lolterlng law and weapons restrictions. I>ong-range plans for . solution include more job training,* improved employment opportunities for Negroes, and speeded slum clearance. A large, economically depressed Negro population is theTejfto many of the problems, authorities feel. Negroes make up 54.8 per cent of the Washington population, but 84.6 per cent of those arrested are Negroes. ★ ★ ★ In the 15-19 age group, the venereal disease rate In the District of-Co-Imhbla is 5,728 per 100,000 population, as against a national average of 416 per 100,000. ___ _j^ ffOHcimioH indlfutcii by_______ Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy is that the Nation’s capitai has become a laboratory for first-hand congressional inspection of juvenile delinquency, unemplo3rment and crime.___________ ‘ Voice of the People: Grandmother Past Fifty Says Driving’s a *MusV “Vipo is this young siRout who suggested taking the M oldsters oR4he road and dmlving them? i ★ ★ ★ Good griefr I am S4 and have 6 grandchildren, bnt I am ling down a very good secretarial pesitiM is dw heart of I very good i Detroit and I drive 26 miles each morning to catch a commnter’s bns. Why? Because I have two A)ns, one ready for college this fall, and we can’t send them on peanuts. ★ ♦ ★ If my car is taken laway (been driving nearly 40 responsible years, nary a ticket, not even a scratch) I’ll just have to wheel out thd old helic(^r and commute that way. .j Grandma Peds at Dawn ‘Relax, We’re Following Through On Your Program!’ David Lawrertee'Says: Southern Whites Not ALL Bad ‘Need Dog Warden in Perry Park, Too* I agree with “Fed-Up Female” about a lady dog wai^. I don’t know who our dog warden is but most of us in Perry Park know that he’s not tvailable most of the time. But there are times he’s been out here when someone has called. I wish my camera would have been load^ the day he was driving along with a little dog running ri^t along behind the truck. Laughing mSHlNGTON-Almost everyone with a humane instinct would like to see better relations be-tween Negroes and whites in the One of America’s greatest cities is also one of its greatest shames. The Man About Town Was Power Deal To Make 4-Cylinder Motor Engineer Hits on 2 Deuces By HOWARD HELDENBRAND The MAT soak^ up a little engineering lore recently visHlng with Joha E. Linabury of 81 E. Iroquois Road. • • • He took me back to 1906 and his early automobile days. Albert Brush I||i4 glvea ap his oae-cyliiMler ear of the Pontiac and acquired tie Oakland ^aa-cettor at Mir PoH-Uac) . . . aad for four or five mootht produced h as a two- UNABURY Deciding to make it a| four - cylinder job, he gave my friend the assignment of making four cylinders show where only two shew before. (I think it must be something I ate.) • • • It was very simple — to hear him teO H. Just took two two-cylinder blocks, tied ’em together, added a water pomp for cooling (to replace the air cooling of the ''Wurs^lTTRe Gkjp"color bearer won, 1968 would go a-glimmering as far as Romney Is concerned; but the Oakland County man still has time, and another turn or two in Lansing will be a good thing for Michigan—and for Oov. Romney. transmission to sHding gear and —a four-cylinder motor, . Incidentally, virtually all'cars in those days crank^ counterclockwise-4 h e r e b y breaking innumerable arms because of the kickback. The new motor cranked ht the opposite direction. Mr. L. modestly declined to estimate how many broken arms he had r been disputed that prior to the innovation, a broken arm was standard equipment with Eli cars. But what particularly impressed thC' unmechankal MAT is that when the Pontiac Motor Divishm recently wanted a four-cylinder motor for the new Tempest, it simply reversed my friend’s I Existing problems are not likely to be solved, however, either by lawless] d e m onstrationsj or by reliance] merely on gal” steps, 80 LAWRENCE many of which go beyond the letter of the law. There’s something deeper involved. , ♦ ♦ * It is, therefore, interesting to get frim another country a detached and dispassionate view such as appeared a few days ago in “The Dally Telegraph” of London, England, one of the oldest and most influential newspapers in Europe. aw* la an editorial apropos of President Kennedy's message to Congress last week on “civil rights,” the “Telegraph” said in part: As all the world knows, what inhibits the advancement of the same force that operates, in greater or less degree, wherever he inherits from past generations a tradition of inferiority. “It is social prejudice; and that is a sentiment that can be outgrown, but not repealed. . “Though ail must applaud the President’s renewed campaign to enforce Oe equal law, acts of Congress or parliament cannot make the white man feel for the black man as a brother. “An American would be a political pariah who denied the Declaration of Independence, with its dogmatic opening that all men are created equal; but that ‘self-evident truth' will no more get a Negro an invitation to dine with a Virginian senator and his wife than it could induce the eminent Virginians who promulgated it to eniancipate their slaves. A social revolution is required, and will come, but only with time.” HOUSEWIFE’S LETTER By coincidence, the same day that a ropy of the “Telegrapfi”^ editorial arrived, this correspondent received a handwritten lef-ter from a housewife in Meridian, , Miss., which read as follows: ‘Why All the Glory for Betancourt?* With Eisenhower intolerant of Communists, Perei Jimenez, former President of Venezuela, was It is easy enough for some of vidually or as a race, among the He, "as the Ne^o agitators impatiently white people of the South. literal actmk M BetaiKOW Letters, moreover, from the more disceniing of the Negro leaders indicate that fliey do hot cdnsHeir~eveiyoBe wlio disagrees with them to be ‘Betitr Referees for Waterford?* The incident at the Waterford-Kettering-Waterford . Tbwn s.mD High School basketball game was unfortunate. * ♦' * Aside from this incident, we' have some close calls. The referees in thb instance lest control and we have had too much of this type of refereeing this year. * * * ' ' Perhaps the person hiring these officials should look into this and not accept “second best.” Without making excuses for anyone, our boys play well whether in first i)r last place and deserve the best. A Proud Pnent of WTHS Portraits to brush aside all stories about friendly relations between the white and colored people in the South amMO' sneer~even lirihe kindnesses in the solied for, relative to the size of the economy, is lower now than in the 1920s. The number of new business concerns initiated is half that ol the 20s, “Even the smaller incidence of failures may be deceptively comforting because this could merely indicate that die process of creative destruction has become more sluggish,” the profeseor said. "Few Olags ceoM perk qi this ecoBoiay a# powerMly as aa aagmeated flew of genuinely new products aimed straight at the Americaa coasumer,” he Paul A. Samuelson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, crashed through with a 21-point program on what the country should do to achieve economic growth. It was so long and detailed that he didn’t have time to read it. But it is all in his text and it goes way beyond anything-Presi-dent Kennedy offers in the way of government aid to private business {md^tocTalirolfare. OversimplUied, here are some Samuelson ideas: More public expeuditure to reduce the risk of private investments. Permit assets to be depreciated on a base that is inflated with the price level. Change from a system of graduated income taxes to consumption and wealth taxes- Give temporary tax cuts to sluggish industries. On monetary and fiscal policies, Samuelson’s reronunenda-tkms were so complex they, defy simplification. He himself got all mixed up in them. His text read, “. . . African policy should be to alter the parity of Uie dollar.” But when asked about this later be said, “I would not favor devaluation.” At the end of his paper, Samuelson wrote this as his final apology: “I wish I could have come here and promised that balancing Bie budget, preserving monetary discipline, reducing government expenditures and busting the monopoly powers of labor unions would usher in an era of grdwth and prosperity wjthout iitflation or tears. It was not my heart that kept me from doing so. It was my head and my fear of being in violation of the laws of fraud.” * ♦ * ^ (JeoiBe W. S^let, professor of American Institutions at Univer- sity of Chicago and presidentelect of the American Economic Assn., with rare sense of humor, took completely opposite views. “I am not freadr (»lKifhed" about the growth rate of the . American economy,” he admitted right at the start, "whether judged in terms of national suT' vtval, domestic happiness or in-terriational benevolence.” It was his view that science was vastly overrated and that the ^mericaii sapomarket has "meant more to Americaa ece-■omic progress than atomic energy. He thiuks mergers are good. He doesn’t fear head-on collision* between business and reguintkm is ineffective when _ the industry doesn’t wish to be regnlated. “I am su^esting,” he said, “than an efficient economy requires discontented businessmen, outraged labor leadei;8 an(l frustrated bureaucrats.” *■*-*■ Stigler refused to present any list, of recommendations to promote ‘economic growth, but he made a prophecy on what might happen if a set of policies could be devised to raise output 10 per cent per c^lta for the future: “Tten, in the well-faiown year 1964, average family income would be $M,000 before taxes, possibly somewhat less after tepees. And which of our pressing IM'oblems will have vanished?” this ne«spi(Mr is veil is ill AC Miri eUpiMMi. Th* VaottM Stan. Uieomb, Uni« CounBn B b »U.M a ytar; ----rtati w MMWm lad d oUwr • IB IlM Statw nSBO a d maU sWsortptlau payablt iTanci: Postal! has bm paid J>! 2nd elau rati it Michtfin Mimbir of XMO. THF POVTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. 7. 1963 Delroil Officer Pleads Innocent Seeking Connections of Gambling, Boxing DETROlf (M-A Detroit policeman was arraigned on a ftavt-degree murder charge yesla while fellow officers strove to untangle a web of reported con tions between gamblen and professional boxing. Patrolman Forrest A. Foster, 3S, was arraigned ia his hospital bed in the Monday -elayhig of John (Wimpy) Elliott, a minor Hgaie hi Detrors underworld. A plea el laae-cence was entered, for him and a March 21 hearing date set Foster admitted he shot Elliott bi the head after an argument over the contract of Detrait lightweight boxer Clene Gresham. He said Elliot came at him with a knife. Foster and Anthony Ferrante df PhUaddphia are comwners of Gresham’s contract. DENIED UCENSE nied a renewal of his Pennsylvania boxing license in 1158 bt-cause his name had been men-^ tioned in connection with gambling and illegal liquor activities. ... - * * * Foetm- was apprehended early Tuesday as he drove In Mount aemens with Elliott’s body stuffed in the car trunk. Foster was wounded in the thigh by a policeinan as he allegedly t^ to flea. Foster teld^operlors Elliott wu froathig for gamblers who tried to force the poitcemaa to sell Gresham’s contract Gresham, In Milwaukee for a fight tonight, differed with the Detroit policenaan’s version. He said, “Foster was trying to peddle his end of my contract to Clarence ^tlliams for but Williams would only go fw I7.S00.” ★ w * WUllams, a Detroiter, is awaiting trial in Detnrtt Fedwral Court on a charge of failing to purchase a federal gambling tax stamp. He was unavailable for.commwit. While governors are called “your excellency” and judges “your honor,” the chief executive of the land can be Imown oidy at -“Mr. Present ” FOUNDER'S NOW IN PROGRESS! EVERY DEPT. IS BURSTING WITH NEW SPRING MONEY-SAVING BARGAINS FOR YOU .. . YOUR HOME AND FAMILY! MEN, WEAR! BOND CLOTHES 4than OTHER CLOTHES IN AMERICA yVo charge for alterations! Just say **Charge It** PONTIAC MALL R«g. <.99 "Mr. Slim" contfnentof ffockt Extention front, ^ A no-pleot. Muted ploidt. 29 to 3d. V Ladi«t' 3.99 tpring ^o-pie€« skirt ttts Jocket or bloute J J with matching paste) skirt. 10-1S. A# CHAM! ir Babwf' or toddlers' 2.99 Easter drettos wide solecrien, ^ AA dohity de^. 9- # -'CHA1WI Tf 1-3. Girle' adorable 2.99 new epring dressie Sotidt or prinh) J J dainty trims, new A stylet. 3-dx. ^Oe MIOAY ONtY_ 'CHAliajr 10.99 Easter-parade fashions - GIRLS' GOATS - For tots: Tweeds, ploidt and lolidt. Sizes 4-6x in tpring shades. Giifti Rayon crepe, jersey in smart styles. Sizes 7 to 14 in tho group. Big savings.. 13.99 stylet for giHt 7-14 10.8S 6-ytar size, regularly 29.99 StORKtmtGRIB Save 8.11 oil hordwood frame in satiny Maple, natural or white finish-. Double drop sidos, 4-posi-tipn tpring, teething rail. Real savings opportunity. 13.99, 6-yr. tixe crib mottress.ID.88 Extra w-i-d-e for full beauty Reg. 11.99 Ivy styling LS^^TRTtO^'^UITS AAorvolous oasy-coro Dacron* polyestor ponolt ro-quiro littlo or no ironing, stay white wothing after washing. Jumbo 47 inch width in 45^ 54, 63, 72, or 81 inch lengths. Drip-dry, wash and hong. •Reg. T.M. DuPtnt Corp. Bettor spring suits for tho Ivy Leoguret' Eastor parading. 3-button, center vent models; in sovorol pottorns, up-tO'tho-minuto colors. Rayon/ocotote blonds. Sizes ^ to 12. Buy now at big savings. By DeVilbIss; Cleorance! ATOMIZER RIOT Famous monufocturor's clooronce irtcludot many pxdting stylos in twinkling crystal, booutifully ( colored "cr , unique < vanity boouty and hug# savingsl Stock, up nowl 12.98 styles for every decor Sale! '^all" lamps Tho now tailor lamps thot odd o docorotor touch to your room—at a big savings on ovory ono. Your chelct of AAodorn, Early Amorican, Traditional—3-way lighting, vfashablo shodos. Hurry. Save on girls' new 3.99 spring skirts 347 Pleated, straight or kihios; cottons, blonds. 7-14. Good selection of -new spring coats, now ^18 Longer jockota, clover details. Misses, Jr. sizes. - Fan ALYIKATIOttS Sale! Ladies' popular rofn or shine coots Poplins in Choflor-floldt, others. Jr's., Misos, and Potitos. •JOO Connon both towels, speciolly priced! 44< Big, obio r b 0 n t striped coftbit terry. 20x40” siM. You soye 58c on men's 1.19 pair if perfect 98c Gillette super Save! Rod Olid reel Hondsome brass finisb Waldorf spring pojamos Lady Coroline nylons blue biodes, now only set by famous Zebco odjustoble TV toble Sonforiiode cotton, ^ A 9 2 stylos. A, I, C, D. 1 Soomfroo stretch, JLOc Sh, Av, Tall. Spvol OO Pockoge of 15, Mm- A Qc pered, sharp. WO Push button control. ^ Lively action rod. ^ • T W Rolls on castors, hondy bottom shoH. M*m m 3 for 1.45 Federal Jr. Reg. 2.99 handbogs 47.99 boys' and girls' 2.99 rubber backed 1.39 cotton flannel boys' cotton u'weor in new spring styles deluxe bicycles, only 27x48" throw rugs soft sheet blonkets A-sMrH hHof» WhHo,6tol6. HMk., rod, bone pips- ^ tk calf. Tapestries. Aa.Vw plu$ vs* tMM 24 ood 24" sin, ^ ceosMr broke. "Mm twig^weortng, 7eol-. ^ art. Save 98c. M 60x76" size, stitched A Ac ends. yy 1.99 lodies' cotton Our own Federal men's Mayfair tronsister Four steel shelves Sole! Kodak's fomous print pojomos, now : 3 for $2 underweor tope recorder outfit odjust, well braced 94.50 Zoom comero Drip dry, cotton 0 AA plitso. Sizes 34-40. T-shirts, A-shirts, ^84 MM S-M-l. Briefs 30-44. MU .*8^ Easy, fun fo use at M 99 home, office, etc. Dozens of uses) ^ A M Tough onamol finish. For dramatic dote- Q A 67 ups. Auto. oloc. oyo. OFIN EVftY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday DOWNTOWN and DRAYTON PLAINS \ A—r® THB POXTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, lOM ? M ONTGOAAERY WARD nOULAI 2.t9 •AILYnHinD COnONPAIMUS 1 99 Y«^d|w¥»lom lor 12*inch rou^bi. NO PAYMENTS TIL AAAY on Boats, Motors, Trailers, Campers M ONTGOAAERY WARD SAVE! PLUMBING NEEDS Chrome shewerfiead with adjustable, spray, leg. 1.98 ' 99* Hghts, sliding degr medicine aobliiel, wall mount. Rag. 15.95 11“ Glatt tub Inelesure, aluminum frama, fits 4Vk or 5' tubs. Rag. 31.95 26“ Ik H.P. jet pump with 13 gallon tank. Reg, 8495... 69“ ¥t H.P. sump pump, bun body pump 3200 gallons par hw 34“ 33 X 22” stainlost steel sink. Regular 33.50 26“ SAVE! BUILDING NEEDS 4' aluminum window or door awning. Reg. 8.40 6“ Aluminum storms and sensens up to 101 combined inches. Reg. ,12.88 ....... i HI" Aluminum storm door. 1*ineh with hard* wort-installed 34“ Ceppertone range heed. W. H. 36* fan 45“ FURNITURE BARGAINS SAVE ON WARDS CBUNOmi 3^ R*g.4.7S eesoeABiit. Smart, money-saving accent for ony room. Double kiytr of white paint over 12x12-inch flberboord ponels. 1- - Power-pecked, BTU get heater wMi nnh eroof, gloM-fined tCMk. _ 52,000-iTU.....tf.00 52-gel. ehctrle.. .79.00 SAVEI 3-PC. RIG 1364«J! Ok RmO BOAT, MOTOR, TRAUR ly boot feotuTM lopsfralee» fiber glass hdl, outo-typo seats. Comptele wflh 40-HP motor and 1200-lb. frofler* Store Hours Monday thru Sotonkqr AM. to 9dX> PJM. Pontiac^ Mall AUTO ACCESSORIES BUYS Seat G)ver Clearance Discontinued Colors, Styles Up to 50% off M.Y.T. 3 oil additive for a smoother YAo running engine. Reg. 1.49 can... I *1 12 foot aluminum car top boat. A favorite 4 OOM with fishemiM Reg. 1^.88........ I WiT 14 feet aluminum eaL.tep boot. Reg. 40AM 225.00....... .................. IM ‘ ' A_ No payments till Moyl Shop Wards cmplete line of sporting goods and marine equipment. 1 Rea. 4.95 foldtng web chairs. Aluminum GS| with ledweed awe. Now only........ ■! Reg. 6.95 folding aluminum 088 web chair.'..................... V Reg. 39.95 mattress or box sprfaig, full 0088 or twin ........................ Reg. 24.95 6 year ctfa.. ....... 19“ Reg. 19.95 wood ployaid............... 14^ Reg.2.98careeol................... Reg. 4.95 auto deck.. ........... 1“ 21 ft. ^ upright freezer. Reg. 279.95. 248“ 14.4 cu. ft. refrigerator, freeaer. Reg. OC088 297.95............................ ADO Poweffal canister vacuum. Rtt88 Reg. 69.95. Newenly............... Ughlweigiil vacuum................ 19** ytewetreLt -*^**-*->-t-i- MllUy W BW8CI8 BMWIHQ mPCnWMb Versatile vanity mbiur. OM Reg. 14.95...................... O Sewing Machine Dept. " 'Phene 682-4940 Telegraph et EUzcdwlh Lake Rd. MAJOR APPLIANCES / ■. THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSt)AY, MARCH 7> IQgS Cownapere in Mood for Good Swig of Milk SIRACUSA, Sdly (AP) - 1T» Oostii sisters’ cows weren’t really stolen. Tliey were Just b«tow^ for their cont«its. f. * * Police said someone drugged the Costas* watchdogs Wednesday, ied fi^e of their cows to a deserted place and milked them. The cows wandered back—dry. J- Only Child and Farmer Enjoy Them , Winter Rains Cloud the Mind~bit. Thus the auditory and visual discrimination of the letter is WSU Plans Classes at Pontiac Northern Wayne State Univeristy’s college (A education will offer four courses at Pontiac Northern High School during the spring quarter. All classes will begin ’Tuesday, April 2. Registrations will be accepted by'mail at the office of off-campus programs, prior to the first clau meetings. Courses are designed to give teachers living in the Pontiac area an opportunity to continue their edneatioa leading to either degrees or certification. Courses include; H and P. Ed-acatlbn 3001, Education and Social Ideas; Hygiene 6235, The Nation’s Health; Physical Science 0193, Physical Science; and Speech 0061, Creative Drama for Children. New Secrets of Space Due WASHINGTON -More secrets of space will be revealed next week. New data gathered from the skies by six satellites wili be made public then. And the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has invited scientists from all over the world to hear the reports at a three-day symposium. ♦ a * There has been speculation that some important new discoveries may be included in the reports. Michigan Man Killed WEST BRANCH UT - Laren Engstrom, 38, of Portland was killed yesterday when his car akidded on snow-covered MSS in Ogemaw County and struck a Russ 'Circlorama' Show Be Launched in Britain LONDON (UP9-A Soviet “circlorama’’ movie theater will open in London next month, it was announced today. '•Circlorama’’ was described as sfSoviet-developed circular screen that encircles the gpdience and it to feel in the midst of the action flashed from 11 pro- Tlie coiorful^utEations add to the lesson what Is referred to as readiness activities, the concept of relative size, understanding of ordinals (first, second and third), visual differentiation or observation, (e.g. one rabbit’s ears are missing,) counting in left-to-right and line-to-tine progressions. Pupils thus learn the whole image of words from the start with all letters and sounds. The program, available only to educational institutions, is considered flexible in that it offers material stdficieiit for the fast leam^ ers, biit allows the slower pupiPscribed to keep pace with aq average level of achievement. I The child also is ready to recognize words heal’d on television, such as erisis, mysterious and creation — words he normally ouM not read until he is much Ider. The authors hope their newt reader will make remedial reading classes obsolete. GEORGE'S PARK FRE, ^niown /hatisc CiiQ Metered i^t Ar»f Downtown Hii Philanthropy Pl«a Doesn't Prevent Fine MILWAUKEE, Wls. (UPI) -County Julge F. Ryan Duffy Jr. fined Walter F. France, 56, ISO yesterday when he pleaded guilty to stealing coal from a railroad yard to help “the poor people who couldn’t buy coal.’’ Authorities said France carried the coal in a 1961 white Cadillac of his girl friend, whom he de-' as one of the poor people. FREE EASTER RASKET With puithats of $50 or mwo. AcCTimvtetol yo«r mIo*. slip* until you got $50 . . . difor oxpirOs ^ril JET-AGE READING - IWo Levittown, Pa., five-year-olds look at their reader, offering a new concept in'teaching first graders a command of 2,000 words within one year. FRIDAY-SATURDAY-MON. • ONLY COAT RIOT! Reg. 39.9S WHILE ^ TOO LAST JUST' haait up to 35 palloaa par hour. Efficient FiberiJua inrabtion. KMHii’paet abut off. Center flue, draft diverter. A.G.A. approved. Inatalletion Available Plumbing A JUatingDrpl., Pttry Si. Basrmmt “400” Series Glass Lined TboIe Gas Water Heaters So 69S« Reg. •81,“ NOMONEYDOWN* eetoautie eonlrob with 109% pilot eat oft S2jm BTU so-paeitj fivee 70a 43.7 falloM of bot water per bear. WUto enaaiel. AGA. apprevad. 40-God. Siaa......79AS 3-piece Bath Fixtures in Choice of 2 Colors Regnlar aeparate prices total 1120.95! Save B25 95 • NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Inchidea 5-ft. caat iron recess (vitreous finish) tub, vitreous china 19xl7-inch lavatory and reverse trap toilet in pink or blue. Trim and seat extra. See Sears for other styles of fixtures, lop! Save now! INSTALLA-nON AVAILABLE 54-in. Cabinet Sinks in White Steel With chromed faucet, trim. Porcelain enameled top fighto stains. Snre closing spring hinges on insnlated-doors. Seamless, easy-eleamlrawer interiors. Reg. <78.95 188 64‘ Vi-HP Submersible Sump Pumps Sears Price p 44’* „ .\OSIO.\EVDOWN* Wiler eoeWd bifth-speed meter likes Jeis power Remote twitek and Mart relay. Save! ^-HP 49.95 %-HP 59.95 Chrome Plated Lavatory Faucets 5’* Charge It Fits any 4ineh center bowL Mixing action has twin lever bindlet. Others up to <24.95 Sale-Priced NO MONEY DOWN OB Sean Easy Payment Fhn Use Kenmore “400” Portable Dishwasher Reg. NOMONEYDOWN on Scar* Vmt Pnjment Plaa Wmhes, riniea, drie* complete serricei for 12. ShnU off ,, anlomalicaUy. No imlallalion . . . jnit snap hoiea onto fineet New, completely in-ralated work inrfaeelid. Save jBoceatSeanl 9199.95 Lady Kenewe . .. 1S4.SS Kilehnm Cabinnt Dapt, Pnrry Sk Bantmna 66-in. Steel Cabinet Sink Outfits „ Reg. <129.95 Massive eize for atonge and work-space galore. Chromed fancet and trim. I ■ ■ Insulated doors with snng spring hinges. [ W W Poreeleifaed top. InstaUation avrilable. j^jioNEYDOWN Park Free Downtown fwnwml In City Metered Lot! Kenmore “600” Garbage Disposers Reg. 869.95 54*® Kenmore “400” Garbage Disposers Reg. 859.95 44» Fully Automatic j^-HP Tank-Type Sprayers Save time, me*s with thrifty roller set. 7-inrh roller, tog one-quart tray. Buy now! quarter*. Extradong handle. Crsal to thin paints, clean bmahet. Removet wpx, deep dirt from floors, appliances. Save! Durable Latex Flat Paint Reg. <3.45 2** Charge It Roll or bmth on amoethly. it bides wefl. Tools cleah faat in soapy water. Ataorted Regulariy at 899.00 S^ya any paint! NO HONEY DOWN on Seara Easy PayaMnt Ploi Ideal for homo, workshop, farm. Detivon 2.0 dm at 45 psi, mounted on 7Vk-«al. tank. Raffed cast iron* trouble-free spraying, toy inflating, more. Siphon! pressure gun. Other Sprayers at... $99 and 8109! Paint Dept., Main Bamtunt **Satisfa(^on guaranteed or your money back** SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE-5-4171 TrfB WINTIAC PKEW. THtTBSPAY, MABCH T. 19«8 3-DAYS CmLYtlliiulr Buys in Emy Dcpwlnieiit Ar rk*MM« I SOVIET BADGE — This is the mw Soviet cosmonauts' t badge. Gold-colored, It will have three grades; first class ' (abwe) for three fli^ta, second grade for. two and third clasa j for one. Want Specialized Training? SJWINGS ALE Tampa, pi*. (AP)-aiw- re-j trniteni in Tampa are ^tog to find a lion tamer Interested in a bitch in the Army. Uoned in Augsburg. Germany, i. The 24th’s mascot is The division took its request to The Mth Infantry Division, sta- the Tampa recruWng office be-* > the west coast of Ftorida is winter home of several circuses and animal trainers. Proportioned Drip-Dry It's Cultural Exchange? LONDON row — Producer and from I business trip to New York yesterday wearing a Cos^k hiat because “Everybody is wearing them in the States, which nudres you WMider If sosMbody Is plug-ling Stetsons In the Kremlin.” Cotton Strontium Level Rises j LONDON row - The level of| strontium SO in British milk in the year ending September 1962, | was 60 per cent higher than the prevkws year, the agricultural re-aearch council said yesterday. 0pm 4 NUm, Sliep lfoii.,'nmn., FrL, Set. ’U19 Vice Presidents buy two-trouser suits. Doctors and lawyers buy two-trouser suits. Some of the best-dressed men you see buy twO-trouser suits. It's^not just a matter of value, it's o motter of appearance. A second pair of trousers absorbs the wrinkles and wear, letk you keep a pair in well-pressed readiness—^for your trousers get so much more wear than does your suit coot. That's why some of the best makers in the country now tailor two-trouser suits in some of the finest fabrics obtainable. And that's why we carry most of them. Because HHS carries the most comprehensive collection of two-trouser suits you'll find in any store, anywhere. Moi^e famous brands, too. A collection that incorporates every Important style from the conservative three-button to the smart two-button . . . every fabric from long-wearing twills to luxurious, inn-ported siik-and-worsteds. And'knowing HHS, you know you'll find them In on exceptlohatty wide range of sizes; from 34 to 52; ahd^ irT^oportldh^r^ reg^ lors, shorts, longs, extra-longs, portlies, portly-shorts, and portly-longs. The listing below is only a sampling. The full selection is your% to see at any of our eleven stores. ^ MONTCLAIR Mitct6d olirwool worsteds ............. 59.50 VAN CARR sclKtsd oll-wool worsteds ...............59.95 CHARTER CLUB vested suits in Hne worsteds........ 69.50 KIN6SW00D worsteds and sharkskins................ 69.50 CUSTOM QUALITY imported worsteds and sharkskins .... 74.50 LEATHERNECK twill 14-ounce worsteds ............. 79.50 BELVEDERE imported worsteds ond sharkskins .. 79.50 & $85 BOTANY 500 fine oII-wmI worsteds..................69.95 FRWT & FROST imported and domestic fabrics ........ $95 EAGLE imported and domestic fabrics......$110 to 119.50 ilART SCHAFFNER & MARX imports ond domestics $110 to $125 OVR PONTIAC MAU STOM IS OPEN EVKY NIGHT TO 9 PJL THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1963 fONTIAC. MICHIGAN. ALARM — Pontiac Press photographer Edward R. Noble was cruising Crooks Road in Avon Township yesterday when suddenly a truck-swerved onto a railroad track. As Noble drove up, a man stepped casually from the truck with a strange-looking steel bar in his Legal Check Set for Waterford City hood Drive A petition for incorporation of Waterford Township as a city was referred by the Oakland Couaty Board ol Supervisors to its boundaries "romndttee day. The bmmdaries committee will review the petition at a fn* tore meeting to determine if ASTONISHMENT Noble saw the tool was some kind of crank. Usii« die steel bar like the handle of an auto jack, the man lowered railway wheels at the front and rear of the truck. Port Facilities Stir Hearings Public, Private Issue Crux of Argi LANSING-The issue of public vs. private port facilities on the St. Lawrence Seaway formed the crux of arguments yesterday as the House Marine Affairs Committee held public hearings on three pieces of pending legislation. Spokesman for privately operated port facilities spoke up against two bills which are design^ to make It easier for public port dlsfrlcts to raise money for buUding and expansion. Officials from port authorities in Wayne County, Monroe *nd Muskegon endorsed the ures, terming them necessary Ip make Michigan ports on the seaway more competitive with terminal facilities in other states. * * ★ ■ Both sides got togetha* in sup porting a third bill, which would give Michigan ports the right, under a 1934 act of Congress, to set up duty-free “free trade for the storage, remanufacture and repacking of goods imported for export. Rep. Oscar Bouwsma, R-Mus-kegon, sponsor of aU three bills and chairman of the committee, said he expected the “free trade rone" proposal would be ed out without difficulty. NO PREDICTKmS He offered no predictions on the other two, however. One bill would reduce from 60 to 51 per cent the percentage of total vote needed to approve gen-jeral obligation bond issues by port authorities. The other would enable public port developments to accept gifts, grants and loans from government or private agencies with the approval of a majority of the aRect^ county’s board of super:| dsors.^________________________ Foraser Gov. Mmray Van Wagoner, appearing is a spokesman for private port operators, said the measures would remove safeguards to the use of public money for port those seeking a vote on incorporation have meet all legal regnirements to date. The meeting hasn’t been scheduled yet. If the petition is found to be in order, the committee will recommend that me board of supervisors set an election date. * * it It is also possible that the committee will call a public hearing to assure that township voters are fully aware of any issues involved in the proposed incorporation. The petition was filed with the corporation counsel’s office I)ec. 4. A substitute petition was filed a month later because the map that accompanied the original omitted a half Minare mile section of the township north of Cass Lake. Members of the Greater Wa- State OKs Bonds for Dequindre Drain LANSING - The State Municipal Finance Commission yesterday approved the issuance of |5.4 million in bonds for construction of tile Dequindre inter-cqitor newer in South Oakland County. cipal Finance Commission today gpiHPved tile issuance of $5.4 mil- li^il.?2^lL*".‘^‘?^r.2terford Community CouncU who ^-Dequ^ «^er,iniU,ted the petition drive said Earlier the commission had refused to act, contending that Ks decision wasn’t necessary by I a w. Refusal jeopardized a $lJ-mlUion federal grant toward the project. The first bill passed by the State Legislature this session requires that the commission take action on this and other similar bond issues. Without commission approval, interest on the bonds tends to be st the baIc. Sales High i I for Pooch I I Licenses I p With deadlines Just v Ie passed for issuing voter ^ I registrations and dog i * licenses. City Clerk Olga '' Barkeley today announced -’■ some revealing figures. ; 'i ★ A- ★ Whidi line was the ■ " longest? * It was doggies 13 to 1. As of the deadline ‘ last Friday, the clerk is- | sned same 2,4N dog ^ lleenses "and they’re t stfll coining in,’’ she f said. i The $2 permits to own & ,a pooch, however, now cost 13. That’s the penalty for missing the March 1 -deadline. he action was taken to protect ownshlp boundaries pending completion of an incorporation study report by a committee of civic leaders. w * Township Board members have since reviewed the completed re-wrt. Further aetkm on its distribution was deferred pending a election date. Counsel, Clerk to Split Duties Supervisors to Expand Committee Post Job NEW MEMBER - Homer Peterson, center, was the first new member enrolled by the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce in its cuttent lsrailiBrahQi drive. Dr. Milton Hath- Areowide Drive Launched • rcaUae Prau Fkct I away (left) presents the membership credentials as John Stepanski of Stepanski TV looks Chamber Seeks 200 Members As areawide drive for “at least committee and brought up to MO more members” has been launched by the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. ruer of Cnstomade ProdneU Co., 4S4« Highland Road, was the first businessmaB to be enrolled. He was signed by Chamber of member John date Ml the Chamber’s activities, plans, services . and performances, committee chairman Dr. Lynn D. Allen Jr. said. “We want to acquaint these people with what the Chamber of Commerce does lor the community,’’ Allen said. "And, we want to emphasize that these accomplishment; are During the membership drive, all area business people^ will bo contacted by the membership Allen also pointed out that when an organization-fails to support the activities of the Chamber of Commerce, the CTtire community is the loser. * w ♦ Membership committee members are optimistic over indications of a continuing growth of industry and business in the area and have based their new mem- made possible only through the b«»ltip-goaI on this prospect joint support of industry, busi- ★ w ★ . •—s —to Current nmnlwrship in tht Chamber of Commerce is 750. The Oakland County Board of Supervisora has i«r^ to apdit the duties of corporation counsel and derk of committees. The two positioas have beta mmbined into one since 1051. Both the board chahrmaB, Debs Hamlin, and the bylhws committee have expressed a desire to expand the committee clerk’s ijuties in the county’s public relations field. “There’s no question the county has enough legal business to keep be corporation counsel busy,” said Hamlin, “And it is obvi^ we need to improve public relations.” Bylaws chairman William Hud-’’There certainly ‘ To Seek $2.4 Million for Projects in Area The Oakland County public works department will apply for federal grants totaling $2.4 mil-year. Don tdliq^ Wltor and sewer t ects In Troy, Novi and Bloomfield Toimship. DPW Director R. J. Alexander was authorized yesterday by the County Board of Supervisors to file tiie applications with the Federal Housing and Home Finance Agen^. The grants would be made under the federal govenmidnt’s Accelerated Public Works Act to create jobs here and in other distressed areas. A grant for $L5 million would be applied in Troy toward con- terceptor, H is scheduled for completion around the first of the Novi residents prqjfently are served by their own private septic tanks. They prevent further development of the area for sanitary reasons. A grant of $440,000-is sought in Bloomfield Township for construction oi a 4-million water transmission main. It would bring Detroit water into the township by the latter part of this year. ' At the same time, the , t clerk processed some 185 | g voter registration before I |L4Ii» deadline at p.m. J I Monday for the biennial i need to prompt public interest inigtruction of sanitary sewer trunk [their government.” 'lines at an estimated total cost * * * lof $3.3 million. Former Oirporation Goun^l ^ ^^um inter- Norman C. Barnard was also serving as clerk of committees until his recent appointment as probate judge. His successor, Robert P. Al- Van Wagoner said private portj V operators have long faced ^ | “threat’’ to their capacity to bor-| row and invest money as the re-l suti-of-frequent iilhiis for constructing publicly owned facili- REUEF — It was a' common occurrence. The man was Orazio Papa, of 823 Codi^ Hi^way, Birmio^ham, a track superviaur far Grand Trunk- Western- Bailrendi Papa uses the ■ unique truck in his work. reduction of the vethig requirement from 80' to 51 per cent would “endanger prhmte en- Keeps $J,000 Change NEW YORK (AP) - What would you do if a customer handed you a $899.60 tip? It happened to taxi driver Hany Kuester, who picked up a man about 2 a.m. yesterday in the Bronx and drove him abodt eight blocks. The passenger, smartly dressed in a camel’s hair coat attl gray fedora, handed Kues-ler what the latter thought was a $10 bQl for the 40-cent ride. * w ♦ The passenger left the cab without waiting for change. “I called him back, telling him hft had change coming,” said Kuester. The man started back , storied, waved his hand and told him to keep the change, Kuester said. A few minutes later, Knea-ter, 45, discovered H was a $1,808 bOI. He drove to his home in the Bronx, discussed the situation with his wife Elsie, thought it over all day yesterday, then telephoned his mother Lillian. “We decided to go to the police,” Kuester said. ★ * w fCuortff-of the big bill. They’ll check to determine whether it was part of the proceeds from a crime. If not, and no one claims it,- it will be returned to Kuester, who hqs three children. Officials of the Detroit-Wayne County Port Commission pointed out that a $7-million public port boqd issue in the county lost by a fraction less than the 60 per cent several years ago. ♦ w * ‘Michigan toda^... is the only state requiring a three-fifths majority vote of the people to validate issuance of general obligation bonds,” Carlis Stettin, director of the Detroit-Wayne County (Commission said. “It is more difficult to linahce port development in this state than any other among the Great LakdB - Seaway states.” Maid Had $125,000 ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - Miss Anna Weidner, 82, a maid, left an estate of $125,000, It closed today. Nei^bors said she apparently accumulated he weMth by shrewd investments. Of that total, tt were I new and 122 were trass- 1 ten. ------- While canines hold a ’ commanding margin in the recent campaigns, ^ they take a back seat to : voters in the total picture. ★ * ★ There are now some ; 36,902 registered voters ' in the city. Odds are that even with < late licenses tallied, the | dog licenses won’t exceed i ditiSBal dsties beyond those of corporation counsel. The clerk of committees position remain unfilled. * ★ . ♦ The next committee derk wooW have to be qualified to write news releases and speeches for county officials, Hamlin said. Calls for Missionaries NEW YORK (B - The missionary personnel office of the Methodist Church, 475 Riverside "Sour additiofud workers for inissronaryP"®" service in 25 countries abroad. connect lateral sewers from homes and other buildings now served by septic tanks to the De-quindre Intox»ptor Sewer. Construction of all three phases of the over all sewer system ti scheduled for completion by April next year. The Dequindre sewer will carry TYoy’s sewage into Detroit tar Enters Guilty Plea in Traffic Death House Wrecks Powell's Plans Makes Drastic Cuts in Budget Request WASHINGTON (UPI) - The dust was settling today over the wreckage of Chairman Adam Clayton’s million-dollar plans for the House educatoin and labor committee. The casualty list was still Incomplete. The House, without a fight TT~n . record vote, yesterday gave the education and labor committee $288,888 to finance its 1983 investigations and snb- This was a far cry from the $697,000 budget Powell originally asked for a two-year period. ^is request, phis about $300,000 A 20-year-old Lapeer you'thj®^jl®^. *'’**'? commHtw charged with manslaughter in the death of a 76-year-old Lake Orion man last fall yesterday pleaded guilty to n^B^ hornidtie b«i fore Oakland County Circuit Judge Stanton G. Dondero, Amos T. Wargo, 1967 N. U-peer Road, will be sentenced March 26. Wargo was the driver of a car that collided head-on with , a car treatment, along mth sewage|,y Clark N. Yost, 4445 ,• ‘"'orion Road, Oct. 23. Yost four days later. from 13 other muhicipalitiee in the Southeastern sector of the county; Novi’s grant wotod be for $478,888. It would be applied toward construction of a $1.4-miUion interceptor sewer that nltimately would carry Novi’s DetroK for treat- Known as the Huron-Rouge In- Wargo was accused of swerving into the path of Yost’s car after driving too fast around a curve on Orion Road. Jle and two of his passengers were sentenced charged as minors in possession of beer. For Apartment Building eaoh session for professional staff and clerks, would have put Powell’s committee close to tiie $l-millwn class. __•______ The committee spent about $928,000 in 1961-82. Actually, Powell’s committee never had a chance to make the millioB mark. The House this year squelched all two-year budget requests, reducing education and labor to a one-year request for $348,888. Then the cutting started in emnest,-with a final slash of $148,500 or 42 per cent, in Powell’s As if ta insim tiie controversial Negro congressman got tiie message, his colleagues earmarked $150,000 of the remaining funds Planners Support Rezoning The Pontiafc Planning Commission last night recommended re-tnnhig three lota on the south side of Glendale Avenue fw a proposed apartment buUding. to plans and drawings of the zested by Jack Leb, ef 2523 Garland Ave„ Syhraa Lake. mended that fmal approval of the rezoning, from Residential-1 Residential-3. be deferred by city immisskmers until Ldi obtains building permit for the modem apartment development. 258-FOOT PARCEL The 2S0-aquare-foot parcel includes properties at 867-881 Glendale. Ibere are now fpur ' on the three lots that will be de- ranging in size from small utility units to two-bedroom The devdopmmit Is Xeh. Jiaa-an option m buy the molished or moved if the land is Glendale property. The , plan- rezoned. will go to the City Commission next Tuesday for further action. Planners, however, raeoBa-' Leh also presented plans for a larger five-story apartment baiU-ing, but nearby residents opposed a building that large. * w In other business last night, the strtmgly opposed by owner; of some properties involved and persons Uviag near the resoned A request to rezone from residential to commercial tiiree lots tin the soutir side of Parkdale Street wu refared to the city’s zoning board of appeals which can grant* the rezoning on a yearly basli planning comimssibh recom-mended rezoning from residential T«,uu™ pl»» cril (or , U. t» ?«mercUI two jw tta riiqied MrucUrc taiH Mooiid Rnd landscaped court. 'Ihe buiWing *™*^‘«8™P"“®“-woiihl house an estimated 85 uhits I The labor subcommittee chairmen. That left PoweU only $50,008 to spend on full committee travel and “housdieeping” activities aside from the standing authority to hire 10 clerks and aides. His original budget would have given Powell about $113,000'^ for the ! same purposeh. I One of the known casualties was Powell’s personally directed “investigative task force.” He wanted $101,008 for It. Another possible effect was a crimp in the conunittee’s wide use on consultants. Powell had 30 experts under contract at one time in tiie last seaqioa. Committee travel, al-ren^ under the suspicious stare of the House Administrative Committee, also could suffer. Okay Bon on U. N. Flag The lota are at the rear of' SPRINGFIELD, ID. (UPI) -fronting on Bald-|The House Executive Committee ........approved a bill yesterday that would outlaw the flying of the United Nations flag on public buildings in the state. win Avenue. Owners of, the estab-liriiments want fo level and blacktop the. vacant lots for off-street B-^2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MABCg lOM Minnesota Still Stalled on Governor 8T. PAUL, Minn. OPfr-Tridt over lillnMMta’i dn«n-oat gov-emor’i electta neared an end today, but further court action threatened to staD the final ded-■lon hetneen Democrat Itolvaag and Republican Ahdereen for coidead Kari Ratvaag has faded to provo J«j||mU he mmH GOP iaeambent Gev. Efaner L. Anderses ta a recount. Tbm Swain, reoaunt director for Andersen, said the OOP may contend the nearly completed recount is no more accnrate timn which U*tod Andersen -the winner by 142 votes. ♦ ♦ Swain said no dechdon has been made yet, but GOP attorneys have reserved the right to con- Rehraag leads ^ 74 in the recount trial before a three-jndge tribunal. The panel has ealy 44 (challenged ballots to mle upon, pins about IM ballots tied np in a trial on GOP and Democratic charges of recount farefularities. cishm, attorneys agreed, an about evenly divided between Rol-vaag and Andersen. ♦ ♦ w A Rolvaag aide said it appeared "very unlikely Andersen can recover." Republicans weren't ready to con^e but agreed privately their chances seemed slim. Stranded freighter Pulls Itself Free BOSTON iJr^~ A Greek freighter which ran aground on a mut| flat in Boston Harbor refloated Itself early today, the Coast Guard reported. Ihe Coast Guard »id tup were en route to try to pull the 467-foot Nymphe free when it floated free on the rising tide. The Nymphe ran aground In IS feet of water on Deer Island flats near Logan International Airport early today. The vessel asked for a pilot and refused other aid. 4 Negroes Shot At in Mississippi GREENW139 88 B deanart. Each one caitfnlW t by akillad workman for < y. New bf h one CBiefnlly for depiodable tbciiSas? SHOP and SAVE NOIV... PAY LATEk. .. no immediate cash needed when you use your convenient Hudson*s Charge Account! THE POXTIAC^RESS, THURSDAY. >lAkcH 7, 1963 \ B—8 Faubus Hits 'Betrayal'of Air Guard LITTLE ROCK, Ark (UPI) -Gov. Orval Faubus accused the ™ Koverrunent yesterday of secretly recraittftg ArkwCMs N*-* tional Guard pilots of the 1961 Cuban invasion and then ‘‘betraying” them. Some of them flew in combat 6nd one air guard plane was shot down, Faubus said. Brig. Gen. Frank Bailey, chief of staff ef the Arkansas Ahr Nationai Gnard, uid he did aet Iomw what Faubus wah taikiag abont. But he added the Arkansas afar guard “did net have ny planes involved,” The Defense Department in Wadih^ton declined comment. Bailey said, however, that Faubus may have some information he doe not'have. He said he' did not want to piit himself in the position of either denying or confirming what the govemiMr Mid. ★ ★ A Faubus did not My who rsF" cniited the pilots. He Mid he knew at the time of the invasion that Arkansas Air Guard pilots were Involved, but could My nothing at the time. ____,“These patriotic Americans were led to believe that this enterprise had not only the blessing but the full support of the federal government,” he Mid. “We aU know what happened nt the Bay of Pigs. “This whole thing is a disgrace in American history. They tried to recruit some men in the North and couldn't do it, so they cante down to the South where they still have some patriotism and got volunteers among the National Guard." ’★.. ★ * He Mid there were a dozen Arkansas guard pilots based in Nicaragua, some of whom flew onnbat missions in the invasion. He Mid the pilots were sworn to secrecy, iMt their part in the action jeopardize their military careers. Would Set Up Customs-Free Zones in State LANSING Ue-A bill providing for soNcaDed foreign tnide zonpi at Midiigan ports—viewed as a spur to development of the St. ijwrence Seamy port facilities—appears to have the backing (rf the House Marine Affairs committee. yesterday, Rep. Oscar Bouw-sma, R-Mnskegen, the bill’s sponsor, predicted it would be reported eat by the committe, which he heads. The bill was endorsed by both public and private port officals in the hearing. The measure would enable Micliigan to taike advantage of a 1184 act of^CongrcM permitting states to set up fr^trade zones outside the jurisdiction of the US. customs department. ★ w ★ In them zones, goods Imported " ‘ffifni overseas can be stored, remanufactured and repacl^ed for shipment out again, duty-free. There pre six such zones in the United iStiates today. 'Smoking Not linked to Throat Cancer' NKW ORLEANS, La. lAP) -Imoking apparently has no connection with throat cancer, a St Lo^ cancer specialist Mys. Dr. Joseph A. Ogura Mid Wednesday the incidence of throat cancer hu not changed during the put 20 years although the smoking habit has become more wide- Ogura Is here to address the 28th annual New Orleans Graduate Medical Assembly. Cancer of the throat, he told newsmen, is “pretty highly curable,” and tiie voice box can be Mved in nearly SO per cent of the R«d ChinwM Refuse Flight by Russians DELHI (DPb-The Chinese n^miinlsts refused permission for a Soviet TU114 airliner to tiy over Chinese territory on an inaugural flight from Moscow to New Delhi, it was disclosed yesterday. Informed sources Mid refusal wM because the Soviets did not give sufficient prior-notice. HUDSON’SM BUDGET STORE Timely savings on fresh, new Spring-Raster fa^ons and accessorits! Mm for this event!; Unusual reductions on our own dependable brands, too. READ our big 28rpage Circular delivered to homes MoMay (copies at store entrances). Spring and Easter shoes BY ENNA JETTICK yss BIIIHTHDAY SALII First qutUty in com-fortablt mid and walking heels. Sixes 4Yi to 10, AAA to FEE, ^t not in every style. Othtr Emu Jtttick $ho0t M Mgulm pric*i. long wearing, woven-pottem COTTON FABRICS 69‘ YD. discontinued patterns. From a weil-k maker! Plaids, stripes, checks. 36 to 44-inches wide, 10 to 20 yards long. SALE! our lowest price on our own HUDSO’ HAIR, DRYERS Why not get one n/ theso dependable electric dryers for every uomsn m the family ... at these big savings! Mother, teen, even little ‘ sister, will like the time-saving convenience of her own dryer. 199 Over the past three years more than 3,000 ef our high quality dryers have been sold. iWing our 10-day sale, you an get tiie same dryer at exciting Mvings. Motor blows warm or cool sir. Use it bv hand or on non-tip stand. UL approved motor is en-ased in a sturdy metal frame. SALEI hoed attachment Plastic hood cets th« ibvinc iob dnnt .even faster. It leaves ha^ free for nail polidiinx, 1 40 tewino. reedinc. InUj itoy-in-place. ftnnly-6|uUted FITTED MATTRESS PADS 087 16x58-in. full-length view SHEET GLASS MIRRORS TWIN StZI ’ FULL SI21....1.17 8 88 lIRTttDAY SALE! Sleeping comfort, mattress protection! Bleached white, filling; &nfon*ed* fitted skirt so they keep the.r fit through many washings! BIRYHDAY SALE! Now you con afford one for every bedroom. Full-vision mirror of 1 premium - quality sheet glass with bes-eled edges. Qips and screws included. SALE.. . all wool SPRING COATS in fashion colors SPECIAL PURCHASE! Ottr own Corliss brand full-length in a variety of weaves and tweeds missa’S to l8Jfriefs!JAl/2 lo 24Y2> p*^ites' 6 to 16 i YELLOW, blue, green, white, beige, navy included. Your new look in weaves . .. beautifully captured in these handsomely styled wool coats. We show three from a group. A. Misses' three-button Style detailed stitched across front, back. Sizes 8 to 18. |. Brief-size one-button style. 141/2 to 241/2. C. Petites’ style with flattering puritan collar. 6 to 16. Use ypur Hudson’s ’Charge’. RAMILY-NIGHT SHOPPING Every Night till P.M. Monday through Saturday. Free Paved Parking. NO PHONE ORDERS! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH T, 1963 / Mond Lisa Goes Home Today NEW YORK (Un - The Mona Lisa sails for Franct today, ending her historic visit to the United States. earity Indian Magistrate Fired NEW DELHI flJPB - Dr. P.K. Das, distict magistrate of Tezpiff, has-been fired from government service for fleeing that northeast India town when i|^ was. threatened by advancing Chinese Cmn-monists in November, it wae announced yesterday. tions were taken as the 4M-year-otd palntiBg by Leoaarde da Vteci was prepared for shipmeat aboard the Hacr United States, departing at neon EST. The Mona Lisa was to be trucked to the United States Lines West 4«th Street pier in a motorcade along an undisclosed route. ♦ * ♦ Secret Service officers, NeW| York City police. French embassy ofndals andmnseum representatives were to see the Mona Lisa off. ' Highway Crash Fatal to Three IIETS Worit^hoe FRIDAY - SATURDAY Men’s Work SHOES IDEAL FOR SHOP WEAR Oil Resistant SOLES SIZES TO 13 73 NORTH SAQINAW STREET REESE un — A head-oh crash on M81 near hm today killed three of the four young occupants of two cars. The only survivor of the smash-up in Blumfield Township, Saginaw County, was hospitalised in Iserkms condition. * * * The•-Victims, aM from-Jl were Anna Barriger, 23,‘ James Danun, 22, the father of three and Damm’s passenger, Harold Van Poppelin, 18. ____ State police said tiie injured man, James Vermesch, 28, of Essezville, was driving east-bound on M81 in the wrong lane when the crash occurred. Ver-mesch was taken to St. Mary’s Hospital at Saginaw. “Vermesch. whose passenger j was Miss Barriger. apparenlty! tried to pass g third car aboutj the time of the crash. State! Trooper Charles Skeels said. U.S.’* Limits Bill for If. N. Work R*al Estof* Oparator Collapses With Attack GRAND RAPIDS (g»-Real a tali operator Lou Berman, 89, of Detroit, collapsed yesterday with heart attack in a downtown eoffee shop and was dead on arrival at Butterworth Hospital. Berman was identified by Federal Housing Administration of-ficals here as co-owner of Lexington Investment Co. in Detroit. Skeelasaid cars at the scene shortly after the crash. Police said a “third driver” notified them of the accident and said he would be back. “He never showed up,” Skeels said. j w ★ ★ Pictures of the three Ynen found in Miss Barriger;a..jiKallati. indicated the four may hdve been! friends, Skeels said. Road conditions were good when the cars crashed, police said. IT SURE DOES — This well-known slogan of a salt manufacturer formed an ironic background yesterday fw the picture of a stalled motorist in Dayton, Ohio. The watery scene was typical in the Miami Valley of Ohio. Remove Restrictions Against Italian Women ROME (^Effective yesterday an Italian woman can become a cabinet minister, a judge or an ambassador—if she’s qualified. Regulations up to now forbade women in Italy’s public adminis-tratidn. ★ ♦ ★ But early this year parliament approved a law barring this discrimination against women. 'The law whs approved in the official gazette this morning. ^ Voter Tyrnout | Near Perfect, ^ I Soviets Say | MOSCOW 0P>-Soviet election officials announced last night that 99.94 per cent of the electorate voted last Sunday in the election for parliament of the Russian Federation. Of these, 99.59 per cent voted for the Communist-approved single slat of candidates, the Central Electoral Commission announced. It also said that 32.8 per cent of those elected were not Communist party members. Results were much the same iq eight other republics that held elections. UNITED NATIONS (Jl - The United States served notice yesterday that it would not acc^ a bill this year f(w more 32.02 per cent of the total cost of the U.N. forces in the Con^ and ' the Middle East. |i ★ ★ ★ I U.S. delegate Frances T. P. | Plimpton stated the position at a | private meeting of a 21-nation I teat^4wcdvh^ fteelj proposals that would make the' States pay more than i Members, of t h e committee I quoted Plimpton as saying the United States, for the last six I months of 1963, would not accept i an assessment for the two forces j' amounting to more than 32.021 per cent. That is the parentage | the United plates pays of the ! regular U.N. budget. | ★ ★ ★ The United States has been contributing more than that to the^ two peace-keeping expenses, but U.S. contributions above 32.02 perj cent have been voluntary rather than compulsory assessments, j After Plimpton’s half-hour speech, the committee adjourned to March 13. I My low overhead, fomily-operated store con always save you money! Remember — no extra charge for delivery, installation or service at PRAYER’S — GENERAL ELEamC | CLOTHES DRYER ( With MI-SPEED Drying System I • 3 TEMPERATURE SHEaiONS* • SAFETY START SWITCH • DRIES 10 LB. WASH LOAD i PHca induda odding o 230-velt ikym alactriccrf circuit in ony rwsidwice, up to and toclwding o 4-family flat, in oWoit EASY TERMS AT IMTER’S VOUU HND PONTUirS LARGEST SELECnON OF RCA nCTOR COLOR TV-BUCK aM WHITE-STEREO NY THIS KW RMyiCTOR TWE ARE rau O GETTING THE MGST ■ OUT ap LIFE e TOO ARE NOT UnlMS Tsi’rt Esjoiiig RCA VICTOR COLOR TELEVISIOM Roconiers aiHER VALUES^STOREWIDE • The Best Deals Are at Prayer’s SALE PRICED From Only ’89” *450* Mat • Swim ra-G4MI I l«S4.lii.pktur» FREE BUOGCTTERMS I / wmoi^stdfayI 689 Orchard U.Aft. FEMKI OPfN EVENINQS TIL 9:60 SAT. TIL SiSO / y THE PONTIAC PRESS. ITHUKSDAY. ittARCH 7, W8 B— Free Collective Bargaining Still Solves Most Uisputes _ _ - _ .. m . m% ■ _ a \ M_A*_1_A. #^11 L... --aaaa* ■ if mIIK 1 (gDlTOR'S kOTg — The K tnntdy aiminUtratkm $$ek$ to exert Us influenee, insistently if not directly, in labor-management decisions. Argument stiU waxes hot over fune far tAto influence ehouU go. Third of four special «r-tielesJ better than 99 per cent of i That seUont-inentioned fact is why the national emergency yet even Oiose officials who of ttte Thft^Iartley Labo^ Management Act have never bea amended despite alarms By STERUNti F. GREEN AP EeoMmic Affairs Writer WASHINGTON - For all Its failures, free collective bargaining keeps the labw peace a lltUe t stiB4ooming threat to Polaris and Mimitcman missile production. before in peacetime—has been felt in three major ways. First; by the creation in 1961 of the President’s Labor-Manage-Advisory Committee. Its 21 ‘ttie breakdown of odleotlve bsr^ D downs of bargaining contend that : relations are The outcry was revived in die new Congress by tbe 88-day rtmt-down of all East and Gulf Coast ports, the newspaper blackouts in New York and Geveland, and the working about as well as any-ling ever works in a democracy. Ibey note Out: far in tbe 1980s less than oneeeveiith of 1 per cent of all working time has been lost in strikes. -zlhe-Jiuraber of workers in-' in big or little stoppages and tbe public have met regularly, frequently and quietly to talk out the crucial ‘ Surprisingly, they have agreed on many points. The coonnllttee’s policy st^ on automation has become, in effect the national policy. It now shqws iq? jB,Jht.|nittee. -as the new labor secretary, W. Willard Wirtz, has noted—loM effect when they become common- ‘Improvisathm offers nothing for the long-run future," Wirtz Proof Rut Washington’s nurse-maidiitg isn’t needed is claimed by ISsvid J. McD(............... of the United Steelworkers and a member of^tjw PresidCTt’s co^ in 1962, about 1.2S million, was the smallest in any postwar year. MANAGEMENT DEMANDS The record is the more noteworthy because, in recent years, cosUHirdened manageiqents have b^fun to make demands instead of just receiving them. And some major unions, hit by automation md chronic joblessnen, have been fitting less for pay boosts than for the very right to work. Survival Itsetf is frequently at : stake on one side or the othdt’. sometimes both. ’The public’s stake is bigger because in labor warfare, as in real warfare, the eo^ of brea(^ing foe peace have become intolerably high, in terms ^Ived. of both money and national curity. President Kennedy has asserted the "public intetwst" in private wage and price decisions. An ez-amfde was his strong criticism Feb. 22 of New Yot newspaper strike leaders, 'fte “third man" — sometimes from government, often a neutral private citizen— has ever more frequently taken a chair at foe bargaining table. report of every fact-finding panel and emergenby board. RIGHT TO FIRE ’Ibe policy recognizes the right of nuuuigement to fire workers displaced by machines; but'it imposes on management the responsibility to cushion tbe dismissals by such itevices as gradual reductions in force, retaaining, job plaoHnott and adequate severance pay. This is just a toehold on a mountainous controversy, however.,’Die fear-prevails that automation Will pedpitate even more bitter struggles ahead. In many recent settlements the problem of adjustment to new technology has merely been postponed, not re- citing noteworthy innovations in recent steel contracts, he told The Associated Press: "Cdlective bargaining kept pace with the times and still remained free in contracts negotiated with foe basic steel, alum- The days ol redconing lie ominously ahead, while newer, bigger robots claim more jobs and foe unfoas gird for hinder battles over shorter hours, unkm ahops and ofoer work-spreeding and job- The government’s influence — usually exerted indirectly and cautiously by Kennedy, but per-more insistently than ever tiveneas of union l^ders and imMarther last faU by working out, dustry managers. There are some encouraging signs of response. American Motors Corp. in 1981 broke into new ground for major Industries by working out a profit-foaring plan with the United Auto ***• Woiters. Kaiser Sted went a long step Vinyl Asbwttog LinttedTlMBOnly FLOOR TILE e OOtUINEMUIDVINn. , FLOOR COVERING nslMlM $07W Nr fTM ” 8«.Yd. •MWlOkUilwidWIw w^»38 Hf PlonMT Point PuraVinylTilg i ^}Taa./\ PPpidorCelers / 1 UteHme GuaicmtaW i 1 CARPET 1 »3”a 1 YOO%iMte 1 ScilniMUNI Genuine / ' 1 FORMICA 1 MMONTMUn.pATnMS ■ 39» 1 UNOLEUM RUGS STUi iszSr /I ASPHALT TILE 4i 12*xl2* IstQuol. Gwnuin* Oriwntal MOSAIC TILE 69*^ iT&a Cwiling Til* Slight Ineg. I eemuJ TILE SPECIAL 12x12 Acoustical Slight IQC NITYOQIISaF GENUINE CERAMIC WALLTILE 39* ff lACSLAM UM Coramic Floor Tilo _49?S0.PT. PONTI , Our Own in^l OPEN MON., THUI LARGEST TILE CENTER work dont by •xptrlf FRI. Til 9KX> PAL FREE PARKING in REAR If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! The second Kennedy innovation was foe posting, in January 1962, of voluntary wage-price guidelines. The aim was to hold boosts within the general range of average postwar gains in industrial pr^uctivity and thus avoid forcing prices up. Officials claim s(»ne success. They believe settlemente in 1962 wound up mostly in foe target area, with raises of around 8 per cent. GUnmiNES HAMPERED? Some said the guidelines hampered bargaining, however. Some utiions tended to reject anyfofog imder 3 per cent, even when companies couldn’t affwd it Some cQtnpimiiw refused to give more, even when their pay rates were clearly out of line. The third Kennedy approadi, now in process of alteration, took foe form of frequent but informall intervention — jweferaldy in ewlyj stages-in individual big disputes. The celebrated steel price crisis of last qxhig was the direct result of Kennedy’s effort to stajge-manage a peaoNfole, noninflatiao-wri settioamt He brought it off, but only at cost of foe greatest domestic crisis of his presidency to date. Well in advance of negotiations, Keimedy urged the Steehnuters to acc^ a noninflationary new contract. They did, taking fringe betterments but not pay increase. The'President called on leading steel companies by letter to bold foe price line; but, when foe union contracts woe signed, foe big firms raised prices. Mobilizing foe economic and po-tical powo' of tbe govowment, Kem^ forced “Big Eied’s” re* teeat But foe Iteor earned him 'antibusiness" label he has been trying to live down ever since, and may have helped precipitate the “Black Monday'* lapse of the stock market PUT OUT FIRE most recently, Kaiser Steel Corp. “The collective bargaining process is being improved-by in-ventivoiess, rather than by mere tinkering with the machin^.’’ NEW EMPHASIS The new emphasis in Washington is on foe employment of neutral “third party” outsiders. In the most recent case, Kennedy enlisted Sen. Wayne L. Morse, IKire., to do the head knocking that ended the 38^y dock strike. To Wirtz and many others it senns clear foat utile foe govern-can and will—in Goldberg’s (-“assert unhesitatingly and at all times foe natkmal interest in labw-manageiient disputes, the decision whether rallectiye bargaining will remain free, depends on the wisdom and inven- after many months of study wifo the Steelworkers, a plan to sal-rage the jobs of displaced workers 1 n d guarantee empioye< ~ of ev«7 cost saving made by the Steelworkers’ President McDonald has taken several phaaering steps. Us new contracts with the can Industry provide “sabbatical leaves ”’of three months wifo pay fw 15-year employes. ‘Said McDonald of this spread-work plan: “Only a few years ago people thought I was kidding, or had lost my reason, alien I projected the idea.” Next: Outlook for ’68. j880' UndflMi These are the two unique characteristics of Seagram’s V.O. While today's whiskies usually offer either lightness or flavor, V.O, gives you the ultimate in both. This combination maizes V.O. a rare e^xample of the distiller’s art—a whisky most people like the first time they try it Have m tasted its pleasures yet?"' $3.89 $6.20 vses. Mtm talw TM r Knov^rn by the company it keeps. Seagram’s Imported 1 6H1IIII ■IIIIWIIIU « HlUtll ■lllliu.lixmil 01ASS.S riMF.tutus IIIIILUIt MBMItlliMlieiTt 1075 W. H-,ron S». Phoiio 334 9957 IBs secretary of labor then, now Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg, continued to dash into every four-alarm fire on the industrial front. Goldberg managed to put most of them out by tioe (k persuasion, personality and his bag full (rf mediation gimmicks. Disputants began to rely on the government to solve their prob-1ms. And spectacular gimniicks HURRY! Detroit Edison's WINIER PROMOTION FREE WIRINO OR ARY RE ELEGTIO DRYER EMS UT0R06Y, HMCN 0 • 3 Heat SoloetieiB • Safety Start SKHsh • Big Caineity Host Tnp •12-Ul Ctestibf • Da-Wiinkler •EoMBiy Heat Tng FREE 221 VBtt Wirtaif, H NMMMiy, on Dotrolt Edison Unot ELECTRIC CCMPANY 126 WEST HUmCiSTRBr Opop 6 aA to I Mk Ewopt tatarday R 4-2I2S Great fashion. ..great value.. .Bobert Hall priced SPRING SUIT IN OUR INCOMPARABLE FAMOUS QNIGER WOOL ALL WOOL SPRING COAT A dashing look for a new season... white testursd tan^ twist wools sculptured te a fafoion silhouette. Rayon taffeta-lined jadeet and seat-lined skirt. Also in beigo. 8 to 18. See foese outstanding features: mandarin cdlar,^ wide sleewes, button-trimmed big pockelsl 100% wod, h^tly laminated to foam. Beige, bamboo, Uue. Rayon taffeta lined. B-lfL Use our convenient layaivay plan... no extra charge OPEN — SUNDAY ■ 12 to 6 PLENTY - OF FREE -PARKING IN PONTIAC-200 North Sogtnow StrtH IN CLARKSTON-WATERFORD on Dixia Hwy.^utt North of Wotarford Hill B—a THfe FQKTIAG PRESS, THUBSDAY> MARCH 7, ?963 _____ - ^ bwned-o^ ghell of th« Mason (left) are-nhown in photo, An esUmated 150,000 damage has City, 111., High School gym (lower rightfanff^«5hof everything at home." The first petty theft ^ to another, then another. Arrests fol- The youth was identified onTy lowed and he %as placed on pro-a "black sheep of my family,” Pat. (Had in the drab blue denim uniform of a Georgia reformatory, he was one of five young prisoners who addresi the school assembly recently. The quintet and an adult felon called Jim are appearing at meetings of parents and teen4igers as volunteers in bation three times. Then came the string of M burglaries and sentences totaling 14 years. T bought a yo-yo like this for 14 years of my life,” Pat told tils listeners. The other “Operation Teen- crlme prevendon propam, "Op- aratlon Teen-ager.” Jt was the idea of Supt. Walter Matthews of the Georgia Industri- Girl Watchers Had Eyes Matthews of the ueorgia industn- «i institata for Boys, th||f »ne Wrong Italians state sends juver^es who run sdoul of felony laws. Matthews started the project “in the hope that It will prevent others from 4!ollo^g in tfa« footsteps of young criminals." Toying with his yo-yo, Pat said he iukI never taken so much as' a piece of candy until he started running around with older boys. His flrst theft was a yo-yo, a toy on a string. ‘The funny part ot it," ftt ager” volunteers are baby-faced Wink, doing life for murder; John, with a high IQ, serving 8-10 yean for 75 burglarin; Cleve, who says he always has been a cheat, under a long sentence; and HaioM, TORRE ANNUNIZIATA, Italy (UPI) —Girl watchen Santo Cer-boni, 19, and Gabrlelle Maiello, 33, paid a compliment to attractive Antonietta Vezza, 18, as she strolled by but didn't notice her brother and father following. Police today sought Alberto Geza and his $on, Alberto Jr.; ior hitting Cerboni on the head and shooting Maiello in the thigh. serving 4-10 years for armed robbery. The Jonesboro high schoolen filed qAetly from the auditorium at the conclusion. “It's the most" Impressive program we’ve ever had,” one said. WASHINGTON (A - President Kennedy’s youth enq>loyment pogram is ovw its first hurdle. On a party line vote, a House Education subcommittee cleared it Wednesday and sent it on to the full committee. ★ w ............. Tbe measure would create a 15,000-strong conservation corps for youths 16 to 22 and a home town youth corps for young men and women in the same age' bracket. UTlSKtfl S«nd all «f your waahabi* blankwta/ curtains, bodsproads, ofc. ta us, for EXPERT SERVICE. % try Cleaners and Shirt Launderers'^ Beth Locotions — Tal-Huron and 26 E. Huron YOUR Do/lARS ALWAYS RUY MORE QUAUTY AT MeCANDLESS CA1^>ETS Practical as It is tuxupious . • • Carpet made with pUe of ACRILdN aerylUi ' BE A CARPET SWEEPSTAKES PRIZES,1000ADDITIONAL PRIZES. BRDJG YOTO BER TO OUR STORE AND IF IT APPEARS ON OUR MASTER SHEET YOU ARE A WINNER. Carpets made with Acrilan* are wonder* fol to look at, easy to Rve oh. outstanding array of palette-jperfect col* oja! Makes decoratiiig a pleasure — not a frneling chore. Resilient, longwear^ ■ing Acrilan atanda up Ho **family living**. They*re so much easier to care for too. Carpet with Acrilan keeps ita' handsome newdook year after year. Lets yon eitjojr your home more. A TELEPHONE CALL WILL BRING A QUALIFIED CARPET CONSULTANT TO YOUR HOME. FREE ESTIMATES NO MONEY DOWN Low Monthly Payment! Up to 36 Montlu to Pay A acrylic fiber CHMSTRAM) m*Lo Pile, 8 Color* ONLY M(CAM)UXS 11 N. Perry St. FK 4-2:>;U ALL WOOL Reg. 10.95 Oaly’r* i^DISGOUNT SAVINGS plusM iisssi At WKC’s 2 TEMPORARY LOCATIONS [ ir~n WKC’S TEMPORARY STORE 144 N. Saginaw St. WKC’S WAREHOUSE, 20 W. ALLEY ST. (Rear of Pii'C Street A&P Store) OPEN THURS. FRI. MON. NIGHTS til 9 WKC'S TEMPORARY LOCATION 144 N. SagmavY Street . \ ' ! ■ ■ > THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAV^. MARCH 7. 19H8 B-r GOP Takes Scissors to JFK's $98.8 Billion Budget WASHINGTON (AP) -BipubUcan leaden uld today Iliey are accepting President Kennedy’s challenge to spell out the l^ces where they would cut bB-Bans from his (WMillion bu^et. ;‘We’U give them a bill of par-ticulan when the time comes,” ■aid GOP Leader Charles A. Hal-I«k of Indiana, “and we’ll be re-utlt/ H^lan early _____, tor reduction is desirable'nated f^m a tax cut bill without and that it would be best carriediforfeiting Kennedy’s approval of out in connection adth revisions to it. make the tax code more equitable and restores some of the revenue lost by cutting rates. But there whether his recent statements be-has appeared to be difference of (ore a bankers’ symposium emphasis from time to time on the importance of revisions and now much they could be elimi-reforms at all. :Rep. Frank T. Bow of Ohio, h^ of a RepubUcan task force op budget cutting, said the detailed proposals for reduced i|lendlng«Fe'i&^ thrhiBdf ~ placed to use than—the senior ndnority members of the various std)commlttee8 considering appropriations bills. Kennedy, who defended fhat he called bis hard budget at his news conference Wednesday, also came in for some R^blican on tax reduction and tax revision. '"niey seem to Mow hot and cold,” Halleck commented. 1 GROUPS TOGCONG' ’ itop.ThaiM OfiiWbnnii«Bi, a member of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, said it looks u though there are two groups hi the administrattbn tugging the President in differ^ directions. Statements by Kennedy, Secre.. tary of the irmnOry Doti^ Dil-hm and others have agreed that Births ’The foDowinc is a Hat of reeent Pontiac ana births as neorded at the OaUand County Clerfc’s OfOoe '/(by name of father): 25JP5«,“cSS. Bobby a. Uaiou. MM 8_____________ Rl^ue O. JootBh, Mtt SUtw Vanv. WlUto i. Bbrlniii BMOOS. Mehard T. Btormaebar. IM Starr. Owald W. Howard. 41 W. BtiaUia Jamta C. Raat. (M Utkar. OaaiaM W. Ooz. 4S Saoaca. a^rl H, LtKoMi. T4 JL Saatard. ^X^gMa JT CoatroTO. m BloomtlaM BradW T OaUttiar, MIS Oidyka. LoMa O. Cladaa. M7 H. WlKa. Uward C. Ua. tn Mt. Claomu. ... Daatd V. ratta. US Jadaoa ot. Joaapta C. llaodoaa. SM rrankUa. : Harold R. Uartla. 44 Patnaai. Uorrta C. SklUam. SM S. SSitrlay. WUUam H. Bareema. SW4 Oianoa. PhllUs U Hm. 3SN HbBbarat. Altar T. Lawia. SSM Aubnra. Marla B. Smith. SNl MorSaa. Kraaat J. Barria. IM Chnraaa. OUbart A. Ual. SM 8UU. John H. Fhlatm. 4M Haraay. Ronald D. Mown. ITS HoTada. Karmatt B. Sparloek, tU R Taaaytae Botana H. BUtlar. SM Oolat. ,J|dwaid r HUL IS Fart naaa. Oary S. Uoyd, N B. Baraa. John M. FobA. its R boonola. Norman J. Rabarta. Ml ShoTl. Jamaa B. Slmaaaaa. 4M Braaeb itwtaa) Wartlay W. Brady. 414 S. MarabaU. -aikar. MM •—^ Kennedy was asked Wednesday ‘You would accept |13.S-billion tax cut without any! that isn’t what I said,” he plied, and added that he thinks Congress “will enact a tax reduction bill which will include important elements of the reforms that We set up.” ' Curtis said he believes Dillon wants tax reform but that other p^es^tial advisers seem deter-nihM on a cut at ail costs. Curtis added he thinks that we are talking about for reductionj Halleck, commenting on Kan-holding the budget (b abbul IMpDOt Uddng food out of childcen’sjned;^’s remark that it does not ap-bilUon would be enough spending mouths.” ' [pear "vre~bOght trbe cutting our control to justify a tax cut. I This was a reference to sugges-'defoises at this time,” defended ♦ ★ .★ hons mentioned by Kennedy at his own earlier estimate that a cut ‘There are 2S1,000 more fad-Wednesday’s news conference that of |3 blUh)n-|15 biUkxufor each il employes now than when Mr. economy advocates would cut|of the three armed services— Kennedy took office,” Bow saki.lsuch things as school lunch pn>.,inight be possible. ‘They are asking (pr 37,000 more.lgrams or aid to dependent, chll- “Here’s what I’d like to ask —— .L- ------Kennedy,” Halleck sak). “If,isltuation' as he apparently hedds, our international position is better now ffian It was under the prevkius administration, and if, as we know, he has better than ISO billion fw defense while Preskiant Eisenhower had less than billion, why does he need to spend $10 biUiomnore-in an improved “These are the kinds of areas|dren. DBBny U WUtt. TS N. BMl BIt1ARCH 7, 1963 Spain Revivals Aims on U S. Defense Pact| By HAROLD K. MILKS MADRID (AP)-A dearer picture is developing of what Spain wants for an extension of its dc-fpnse agreement with the United States. On the military side, the Franco government's main preoccupation is with ebtataing enough weapons and technical help to develop its own defenses; against possi^ hostility, with I emphasis on protection from air attack. Ob .4iw--fo«tieaP eide; clearly wants greater recognition as a loyal ally of the anti-Com-munist West. Its aspirations in-1 elude full idembership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. In the face of certain opposition from strong Socialist groups in Norway and Holland, the Franco government probably will settle for less. ★ # ' '* 'We knoW*that S^’s contribution to the West in event of a global conflict might be small beyond our cooperation in furnishing base facilities here,” said one senior Spanish military officer. “We know, too, that in event of war we cannot depend on Ameri-jean plants to protect Spain. That is whv we are anxious to build up—with AmeHean assistance and >9sbiiis3i-Mtruc^on-W own de- LOOK AT AFRICA “Developments in North Africa keep us looking over our shoulder in that direction. Our relations with Morocco are excellent today, I but when the Americans withdraw 'ram their bases there we must be concerned about the future. ‘Today Morocco has Soviet MIG fighter planes which turn out-|)erform the best we have — F86 Sabre)ets supplied under our agreement with the United States. We would rest more comfortably if we were sure of obtaining under a renegotiated agreement the certain means of defending Spain’s ports and cities from whatever force might move into the ^orth AfrUcga-vacuuiB-.'-' — ★ * w Military experts say Spain also will request technical instruction for some form of training in nuclear warfare. The rapidly changing* international situatioi^-and its effect on U.S. defense strategy—is certain to have a direct effect on renego- tiation of th^ Spanish-U.S. base American military community of agreement. 'The announced phasing out of the B47 nuclear bombers, with the three SAC bases in Spain are equipped, would appear to reduce the importance of these bases,” said one official. “At the same time the Washington emphasis ^ miuile submarines as a ]M-ime defense force increases the value of the joint air-naval base M Rotatin'^ Bay of Cadiz as a Spanish bargaining point. Rota would make an ideal headquarters for Folaris-firlng submarines assigned to the Medi-teiranean if a formula could< be worked out for its use.” hilLITARY COMMUNITY , Eying devetopments in U.S.-Spanish base relations are an about 27,000 service men and their families in Madrid, Zaragoza, Sevllla-Moron and Rota. Equally anxious about the future of the base pact are about 7,000 Spanish nationals employed by U.S. basM, and thousands more whose Uvelihood depends on supplying housing, food, and othw items to the Americans assigned here. Under the lO-year-old agreement, six months are provided fori renegotiation of the agaeenient| from the date either s^ gives notice. Spain gave notice in mid-; Three widely separated mark-j ers on San Salvador ^allege to note the spot where Christoirfier Columbus first, set foot in the !W world. REMOVAL SALE ENTIRE STOCK MUSICAL JWSTRUMEMTS--JIWEUY LliGGAGE DRASTICALLY REDUCED *19** LactW* MI»S ..*39- MW Sjaw PnUaui ^ .. W»rSMk« Cum IBN »35** nt.M - »« 3 •in" SSSS- Kssi. ED^RP^ Ut. S.,l.»r IBamett’s Just Arrived! Brands al Vam SENSATIONAL, LOW, LOW PRICES-EVERY Day of the Week NEW SPRING PRESCRIPTION FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 150 NORTH SAGINAW-Nextto Sears Huron Street 4895 Dixie Highway Next to food Fair THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCg 7, 1963 Keeps Her Busy By JEANMARIE ELKINS Being sMretary to both the city manager and auiatant city manager of Pontigc usually maans you don’t know what you'll be working on from day to day. With some 20 years experience as a secretary and five years in her present position, Mrs. Charles Pace seems to be taking things in stride admirably. A youthful - looking womsin with a quiet voice and shy humor, Mrs. Pace had ambitions to teach Latin and mathematics. To reach this goal she took a coUeg* preparatory course and as many extra daaaes as she was allowed. She “had no time” for busi-ness coutyes in high school and received her training later, at the Pontiac Business Insti-'' Clubs Outline PIgbSl^ for Intematidnal Fair JUDITH A. COLEGROVE Her job is made easier by City Manager Robert Stierer’s open-door policy. This relieves her of the responsibility to screen his visitors and phone calls. Among her other duties are schedifllng appoInRHemi, getting material ready for the annual city report and commission meetings, typing let- . .. ________ qaBy xpedabtgerts and^^ agenda for any informal meetings and handling a mailing list of some 175 people. She also must be familiar with a number and variety of departments. She must also have knowledge of the city June. vom are planned by Judith Anne Colegrove, daughter of the Virgil R. Colegroves of Milford end James Sidney Dailey, son of the Vacell D. Daileys of Responsibilities of the various clubs in the Pontiac Federation for* duties at the International Bazaar, April 24, were ouUined at a planning meeting Wednesday evening. General chairman Mrs. David Saks introduced her as-—sistants; Jdcs. Richard Wolfe, ethnic groups; Mrs.'Richard Veazey, program; Mrs. Char 1m Crawford, tickets; and Mrs. Raymond L. Cole, publicity- * * ★ This bazaar, patterned after the International Tea held during Centennial week two years ago, will take place at the Elks Temple. Hours are 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Representatives of various nationality groups liv- ing in Pontiac will hava display booths. Baked goods will be sold {fnd items of Interest displayed. Hostesses at the tea will be the responsibility of Pontiac Business and Professional Women with Mrs. Eva Dyer and Mrs. Fritzi Stoddard as cochairmen. WILL SELL COOK BOOK The American Business Wonwn will sell a "World Cook Book.” Mrs. Merle Humphries and Kay Vedder head the book commttee. Ihe League of Catholic Women, with Detaro Chapdelaine and Mrs. Arthur Crawford, will set the tea table and serve. Under the direction of Mrs. Arnold Hillerman, the Sorop-tlmist Club win sell shopping bags. City Panhellenic is handling programs with JoAnn Van Tassel u chairman. Ticket chairmah, Mrs. Crawford (Junior Pontiac Women’s Chib) is being assisted by Mrs. Paul Gorman. Up to the present tinne the following countries will be represented by booths: REPRESENTED America, with the Daughters of the American Revo-hrtioii, B. Grace dark randt Margaret Steward in charge. Scandinavia under the leld-ership of Mrs. Adolph Hom-blad and Mrs. Gustaf Perth For College-Bound Girls and how it is run. Name Panhellenic Tea Chairmen British Isles by the Queen Mary .Section, Needlework . Guild of America, Mrs. Walter Galbraith; Mexico, supervised by St. Vincent de Paul Church, Any job has its difficulties and Mrs. Pace’s is no exception. The main problem, she says, is people who call and expect her to know their voices. With die vast number of calls she receives a day this is an impossible task, and people feel hurt when she doesn’t recognize them, she laments. Almost as bad. she continues, are those who call and expect her to know who Mr. Jones is and where he is from (of course she may know 17 pecvk with that name and all she has to do is play Sherlock Holmes and deduce which one it is.) Chairmen for the April College-Bound Tea were announced at the Pontiac City Panhellenic meeting Monday evening. Hostess to the group was Lynne. Benter of East Iroquois Road, assisted Jiy Mrs. Robinson Bronoel and Betsy Carnall. The tea, for college-bound high school senior girls and their mothers, is set for April 13. Mrs. RobMt Crandall, chairman, announced her assist- A/l/ss Vore 'Showered' Expect Exec to Arrive for 2-Day Visit ants: Miss Benter, invitations; Miss Carnall, name tags; Mrs. Glen Dick, decora-tiens; and Mrs. John CoU-son and Mrs. Wayne Pyke, sonwity displi^ Mrs. Uni-liam Belaney will handle publicity. Mrs. Mary Ochoa; The arrival of Regional Director Mrs. John F. Tyler of Girard. Ohio. March 19, for Mrs. Charles Face checks information for one of the many reports she must type for city manager Robert Stierer. This is only one of a large variety oflluties Mrs. Pace has acquired as secretary to the city ma/mger and die assistant city manager. Europe Art Class Topic for 8 Weeks Mrs. Joseph McGee of Carlos Drive was hostess at a bridal shower honoring Elizabeth Mae Vore of Evadna Street. Miss Vore is the daughter of the OrviUe W. Vores. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Miles of Grand Rapids are parents of her fiance, Jere Dean Miles. pace for Birmingham Jiir Leaguers. Mrs. Tyler serves as director of Junior Leagues in Michigan and Ohio and on the 19-member board of the Association of Junior Leagues of America. She will join the league’s board membera Jor luncheon in the Birmingham Athletic Qup on the 19th. Guest speaker fdt the affair will be Mabel Peterson, assistant dean of woinen at Michigan State University. Speaker during Monday’s meeting was Mrs. Mary Hardy, county extension agent from the MSU extension sov-ice. Shet spoke on "Interior Design for Better Living.” Any area woman who k a member of a national college sorority is eligible for membership in Pontiac City Pan-hellenici Arrangements to attend a meeting may be made through president Rosamond Haeberle. Italy with Mrs. George He-hinga, Mrs. Eugene Rife, Mrs. Joseph Spadaforo md Mrs. Frank Soda of die Ital-ian-American Chib Auxiliary; Greece will be repreaentad by the Philoptoloe Society of St. George Orthodox Church, Mrs. George Mitchell and Mrs. Anna Papanichola; CANADIAN BOOTH Ibe Maple Leaf Oub will man the Canadian booth with Mrs. Harold Babb, Mrs. Stuart Townsend and Mrs. Harold McDonnell; Neighbors Gather Women's Section ArOaklmHh An eight-week course, comparing traditional and modern art, will get under way. March 21 at Ibe ViOage Woman’s Gub in Bloomfield Hills. Dr. Ernst Scheyer, professor of art history and humanities at Wayne State Uni-"I lecture on “Tra- Plans Speech Mrs. P. C. Herman, Jack-son, will speak to nwmbers of the Women’s Auxiliary to the Oakland County Dental Society at 8 p.m. March 21 at the North Woodward Avenue home of Mrs. Robert Vedder. Mrs. Herman, state chair- Ibat evening, Mrs. Richard Halstead will host a cocktail pour and buffet dinner for board members and Mrs. Tyler in her home on Spur Hill Drive. Kresge Library Fete Set ditions and Transformations in European Art” beginning at 2 p.m. Friends of the Kresge Library at Oakland University will sponsor an open house in the Ubrary Sunday afternoon between 3 and 5 p.m. last July. A group of 12 volunteer couples, interested In the growth and development of the university and its library, set up the initial committee. These include a quarterly recommended read^ ’ist, invitations to three or four special programs per year, access to records through an will be served, and die public is invited. Faculty and nonfaculty members wuf act as hosts and hostesses. Library staffers wUI show Quests around the building and\dlscuss the COuBcyODS. rv The Friends of th^ Kresge Ubrary becamei^ a jmltty Parliamenfarihins Complete Plans for Luncheon The purpose of the organization is to enable members to promote and benefit from the activities of the library. All proceeds are spent for books, selected by the librarians. So that membership costs will not hinder anyone, various categories have been set up with dues ranging from 85 to 8100 annually. WIFE INCLUDED Privileges of a single membership of any type extend to both husband and wife. ities to meet the faculty. Heading up the grouo’s calendar of activities are president Murray D. Van Wagoner, vice president Mrs. Theodore Yntema and secretary-treasurer Mrs. Joseph U. DodgO. Serving on the board of directors are the following couples: the James L. Camerons Jr., the Dodges, the Charles Feinbergs, the John Fitzgeralds and the William Donmoyers. Other directors aiw Dr. and Mrs. Gayton Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. .Q,. AUen Haflan, Henry Hogan. Mr. and Mrs. James Howlett and Mr. and Mrs. Car\ Ingraham. die list are Dr. A former Birmingham resident, Dr. Scheyer taught at Ganbrook Academy of Arts during the period when Charles Eames, Harry Ber-toia, Eliel and Ero Saarinen and Carl Mllles were associated with it. He earned m a g n a, cum laude doctorates from the Universities of Freiburg and Cologne and is curator retired of the ' museums of Cologne and Breslau. Bo(da and articles by Dr, Scheyer have been published in English, German, Dutch and French. He is assistant editor of GiUcipn, a research fellow at the Detroit Institute of Arts and has been a guest professor at the University of Michigan. ~ man of the Health and Edu-cation (Committee of the Society, will discuss the part the auxiliary can play in advancing dental health in Oakland County. A luncheon in the Birmingham Country Gub will follow Mrs. lyier’s talk to league members at the chib.---- Northside Neighbors C1 u b met Monday evening with Mrs. Sylvia Buffington, North Perry Street. Plans were announced for a money-making project, a food demonstration. Mrs. Roberi Rushing was in charge of the program, Estonia has Mrs. Walter Lange and Mrs. Paul Harvey for chairmen. Fashion Your Figure Club is representing Germany, Mrs Carl Rehm; and Japan, Mrs. Mariam Bowers; Gochairmen for the Ukrainian booth are Mrs. Ernest Spann and Mrs. John Lutzew; Bulgaria is the responsibility of the National Secretaries Association, Mrs. Michael Kerensky; Mrs. Sherwin Bimkrant and Mrs. Abraham Avadenka represent Israel; St. George Romanian Church, Mrs. Dimitrio Toth and Mn. Charles Parker; for Romania. At Tipacorr Meeting Club Plans Dance The Cuckoo Squares dance club will have its regular dance Saturday at 8:30 p.m. at the Waterford Community Center. Wayne Wilcox will be caller. Max Forsythe, caller for last week’s dance, was entertained by die group on Sunday. In the afternoon, Mrs. Sidney Smith, Birmingham Junior League iwesident, will take Mrs. Tyler on a tour of area league projects. These include the Child Guidance Clink, the Young People’s Art (knter at Ganbrook and the Bargain Box. Delegate Airs Con Con Isabella Meet Set Gn con delegate Henry Woolfenden spoke on the constitutional c 0 n V e n 110 n to members of the Tipacon Gapter of American Busi-ness Women’s Association Wednesday evening at the Waklnm Hotel Daughters of Isabella, Our Lady of the Lake Circle No. 479, will hold a business nwet-ing 8 p.m. Monday at the Knights of Columbus hall---- A vocational talk on her work as a professional secretary was given by Mrs. Ossie Gates. ^ Plans for the Tipacon Chap--^ pleted. The tea will be held March 17 in the Airway Lanes banquet room. On tte date some 400 ABWA chapters invite businesswonaen in their respective communities to become members. Guests for the evening were -Mrs. Margret ^wlding, Mrs. Theodore Murry, Mrs. Erwtai C. Boadway, Mrs. Ward O’Brien and Mrs. Leo James. Mrs. John McNeely, who will serve as luncheon reservation chairman, sponsored the demonstration group for the last study meeting of the year at Masonic Temple. Sorority Chapters During 1950-51 he delivered lectures in the Western ^ne of Gernumy for the Department of Cultural Relations The course, held March 21, 28: April 4. 11, 18. 25; May 2 and May ‘ Demonstration president was Mrs. Ralph Sbowalter, with the following'members partkipating: Mrs. Lee HiH, Mrs. Hans Sdijolin, Mrs. Harold Schlngeck, Mrs. George Watters, Mrs. I. J Gouin, Mrs. Ray Fraquelli and Mrs. Donald Constans. Mrs. Merrill D. Petrie was welcomed as a new member. JEANETTE J. KONARSKl Three area diaptws of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority made plans to attend the Beta Sigma Phi qty Councfl style dww and card party, March 20 at the 300 Lounge. Wash Hands First A' baby-care wqiert cautions that wariiing your hands care-fuOy with pl^ of soap and water sho^ always be the first stqi in preparing a baby’s fomaula. A May^4 wedding is ‘ planned by Jeanette Juliana Kondrski and William Raymond Stefimi. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aloisius F. Konarski of Dearborn. Her fiance's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Armand J. Stef am of Williams lake. Xi Beta Theta chapter and Zeta Eta chapter met earlier diis week in the homes of Mrs. Wendell Doolin and Mrs. Dennis Lowes, respectively. Luncheon, Hat Show Wednesday A hat show will follow a salad buffet lundieon sponsored by the Women's Am^ -eiaUon Wednesday from 12 to 2 p,m. in the First Presbyterian Church (lining room. Mrs. Basil B. KtanbaU is chairman and Mrs. Randall E. Spurgeon cochairman. Mrs, Earle Van Dyke Jr. is coordinator of the millhiery show presented by the Mary-Martha Group. To See Style Show honoe ot Mrs. George Pud-duck on Barries Road. . Mrs. Russell Parkins is incoming president; Mrs. Mil-ton Ott, vice president; Mrs. Mrs. John Combs disciused hicent Van "The Life of Vincent Gotdi” Monday evening ter the Xi Beta Theta group. Mn. John Ward preaented a pro-"Toola for the Art of Tuesday evening for tary; Mrs. Richard Pasdike, corresponding secretary and Mrs. Russell Lehigh, treasur- Prwi tk»U IT’ The hostess toU dThrir te-cen|l trip France. Supervising the “tossing of the greens” for Wednesday’s salad luncheon and hat show spmuor^ by the Women’s Association, First Presbyterian Churdt, ia Mr$, Basil B. KinUnUl of Lahaer Road. Mrs. Randall E. Spurgeon of Colrain Drive, approves the hat to be modeled by Mrs. EarU Van Dyke. Jr. of Angadiu Drive. Mrs. WUUam Hildetley will comment as the following models appear: Mrs. Douglas Booth, Mrs. J. E- Gray-biel, Mrs. Joe Duffield, Mrs. E. M. Malone, Mrs. Allen W. Hawke, Mrs. Donald Newman, Mrs. Howard Powers, Mrs. Q. Norris Priestap, Mrs. - CharlesE. Galloway, Mrs. E. Gilmour Winn, Mn. Luenz Vasbinder and Mrs. Bradley L. Scott. ----Pining room chairman is Mn. Leslie Ellis, with Mn. Winn in charge of the buffet table. Assisting with tkketa and details are Mn. Eart Bright, Mn. Jack Hunt, Mrs. Pierce Bautin and Mrt. Howard L. White. Tickets will be avaiUde at the door or from association B—10 THE PONTJAC #RESS? tHimSDAY. MABCH 7. 1063 X Special Selling! our famous Old Salem Solid Cherry bedroom furniture Lowly Bean Makes the Social Register ByJEANNELESEM / NEW YORK (UPI) — Ever since Aesop, men have be-litUed bewu. “Better beans and bacon in peace than cakes and ale in fear.” wrote the Greek fabulist iir “Hje Ttown Mouse and the Country Mouse.’’ ★ ★ ★ Delegates to a recent dry bean conference in Los Aipgeles were told that researchers now are ^ing to raiae the lowly bean to at least tl)e social status of an onion or a cabbage. So what if many dried bean diste are of peasant origin? They also rate high in nutrition, ec(^y and flavor. One of the most savory bean dishes is Fr^ gigot a la bretonne, or roast leg of lamb with haricot beans. The small whi& beans are boiled, drained, and seasoned with cooked tmnatoer and juice from the garlic-flavored roast. ★ ★ ★ Baked and boiled beans alone could fill up the r^ of this column space. Cassoulets are to southwestern France what Boston baked beans are to greatly in length, but basically, a cassoulet couista of haricot beans baked with meat and/or poultry. In Jewish cookery, navy beans are baked wiUi beef brisket, Miion, mustard, salt, brown sugar and mnlseses, hi Italy’s Piedmont area, dried red beans are dmked with parsley, pepper, cinnamon, mace, etoves, pork rind and lots of garlic. ★ ★ ★ A random sampling of boiled bean redpes indudes broad beans, similar to limas, cooked with artidiokes and dressed fdth dive oil, lemon Juke and parsley, a Grecian dUi; and brown beans simmered with red lentils, an Egyptian dish. Dutch brown beans, boiled and seasoned with bacon and fried onions, are served with sour dill piddes and mustard. Boiled brown beans with vinegar and molasses are traditional with pork or meatballs on Swedidi smoiadbp^. Mexico’s frijoles are pink, red or pinto beans, teOed and flavored with lard or bacon drippings. Drained, mashed and fried, they’re called refritos, or refried beans. ★ ★ ★ Black or turtle beans are essential to Brasil’s national dish, feijoada completa, a meat stew, and are widdy used in Caribbean cookery. - in the Orient, Korean pah jodr combines kidney beans with rice, lots of garlic and chill pen>er8. Japanese beans and rice are seasoned with soy sauce and sake, or rice wine. I could dte dozens of other examples from almost every natirni. They would include appetizen, soupS^’and salads, as well as main courses. The salads gmrally cmsist of boiled beans, drained, chilled, and dressed^’wim oil and vinegar or mayonrtaise and chopped or sliced raw bnkms. One Viennese salad is definitely not for peasants. It calls for $32-a-pound truffles. Expert Soys We Doubt Sahty Yanks 'Eat With Fear' CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UPI) The director of health education for the American Medical Association said yes-teday that the “fear image” hangs over the American dinner table. ★ ★ ★ “We apjxoach pur food aU toojrftm with doubts as to concern as to its nutritional adequacy, or notions as to ito medicinal quaUties,” said Dr. W- W. Bauer. “I like the SvMdish an>roacfa to eating so mudi better,” he said. “Food, they s»y, should be prepared with butter-and love.” Aid Society Described Alexander Zaphiros spoke on the history and functions of the Midiigan Children’s Aid Society before the Opti-Mrs. Club Tuesday evening in the Sky Room of the Elks’ aub. ♦ ★ e He is executive director of the Oakland County branch of the society. ♦ we Mrs. Julian Galan, president, announced a cancer sew^ session at the April 2 meeting in the Elks’ ChA. ♦ W * Guests for the evening were Mrs. Herbert C. Cooley, Mrs. Leroy Hartman and Mrs. William Powers. The Color is White! The Styles are Bright! The Price is Right! a. Diagorml weave all wool. Double breasted with stitched detail. ^ b. Fabulous mohair “pouf-ette.”'Foam laminaled back for a stunning shape. c. Elegant petti twist wool. Shirtwaist took with Johnny collar. Juniors 5-15 Jr. Peti£e 3-13 Misses* 8-20 KEGOUSttlWIN mm WltllMaiabrfctbwr HMUrllMlQliM (SEIK[E» SH»N0^ IMBNEST MOO^fAHtlCS II l»)niDnM*M(NllOMIMC ffe2>9l6S IfciiJiiiMijy Different Types / ‘Ibere are several kinds o^ felt material,^ all wool, wool and cottim, or wod and ray- Increase Helpings Bread crumbs added to scrambled eggs give them a new flavor and increase the size of helpings^_ ^ Why be “half" a secretary’ BIA nancy SSCBBTABT,, Dta’t fm «Ui far ■ krttrr Jah, wmn far—h« a NMsjr Ttyfar mtnsuj sad VHlifr far tka ami MraUa Jalw ia lava. Cal aar. aniqaa pwnaaHaad waiaias in dkana, aaaranaliaa, baNif. sraaaiiBS flaa eawflata aacratarial •idib. BacasM a rndal aaaeaiia^qppa laeialary aad a mdal waaiaa. « Spriag Tmm fapiai Morek II PONTIAC BUSINESS INSnniTE 18 W. LeWrence St. KEEPS PRICES DOWN SOFT PARTNER IN NEW LOOKS Lovoble'i dtiicote firmnesi rimpet -yOM-ito cool comfort 'nooHi now spring fosHlont «. 'Intarploy" eurvad bond taper claon-cut look. 32-36A; 32-38S. b. lo€0, »oWy linod foam cupi. dainty, fomlnino addition for wbtio contoun 32-3AA, 32-38B. e. Airy loom podding for "moro" look, tho axtro you nood for ■pring foihlom 32-3AA, 32-38B. 1 ISO ivmr pasmiom nmm in own h>unoatiom . toWaraTt aafarSy Iralaad aamHam M taa mmifr fSa Nm-t h taarfarf aarf iSfara NaMary. OPEN EVERY NIOHT TO f Mondoy through Saturday DOWNTOWN AfilD DRAYTON RUINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAKCH 7, 1063 B—11 = Carpi Lowe is Married Tbe Sihrercrest Baptist ChdG|Ch, Drayton Plains, was the setting for the recent marriage of Carol Joyce Lowe of Joliet, 01.. to Wal- Kiesge Jr. Bev. WnroB E. itoiith bnidated. gnd Mrs. Harold Lowe of,Co<*denfield, IH., are par-entp of the bride. The brid*- groom is the son of Mrs, Francis V O.^Rourke ot South Avery Road and Walter H. Kresge cd Auburn Avenue. Attendants at the Feb. 23 ceremony were the bridw groom^s sister Carol and Francis V. O’Rourke. The newlyweds are living in Gingellville. At SIBLEY'S _ plfx flwles .iond 6-peint fitting... >imt You coni go wrong on fit when every pdint it checked end re-checked like thill Thii itore keeps o record of eoch fitting your child geh. I MmF styles from which to choose. I Sisai^to*............... $7.50 SiMsd^toOo • • • $7.95 A $0.50 Siaes0V5«e12 , . • . $9.50 Sim.l2Mlo3 . . .$1®^*$10.9S| Caldron, No. 70 to Serve Buffet Following Dance . Meiqbers of fraq Caldron No. n, Daughters of Mokanna w^ill serve a midnight buffet supper following the Iraq Grotto dance, March 23 in tiie Veterans of For-Wars hall, Keego Harbor. .The group met Wednesday at the First Federal Savitigs of Oak-ind> ^»lans were also completed for theNApril 23 evening card party at Jm Federal to benefit the srebi^ Palsy Foundation. '\W w * Hefreslu^ts were served by Mrs. Victor ^odamer and Mrs. Albert Kugler. _______\—----- Group Makes Dance Plans The Friendship Dance coirl^; mittee of the Women of the Moose met. Wednesday at the Boyd Street home of Mrs. Lou Shans. Plans were completed for the St. Patrick’s Dance which will be held March 16 at the Moose Hall on Mt. Clemens Street. There Are Special Treatrfienfs for Victims of 7el6phonifi$' ABBT eanouii|Un ihMw i Get Lesson on Carpets A lesson on “The Selection and Care of Carpeting” was given by Mrs. Boyd Balis and Mrs. Fred Johnston at the Monday meeting of the Maceday Gvden Extension group. Mrs. Ernest Novotney opened her Fernbarry Stree home for the meeting with Mrs. Roy Best as cohostess. S. Th« aN.***. wiAfc Mrf m hMl ar* Michigan*$ Largest Florsheim Deder ‘‘ Ute Your Security Charge MWACIE MILE SHOPPING CENTER TEEGRAPH at SQUARE UKE RO. OPEN EVENING 'TIL 9 Demonstrates Resuscitation Gerry Lauinger of the Pontiac ' Fire fighters Association demonstrated resuscitation and the mouth-to-mouth artificial respiration technique to the Mothers’ aub of the Pontiac Boys’ Club at its Tuesday meeting. Hostesses wore Mrs. John Du-shane, Mrs. Joe Gibsm and Mrs. Dick Kirby. ^ . Guests were^. Willard Hard-enbury Jr. and Mrs. Bill Lemons. By ABIGAIL VAN JBUREN . DEAR ABBY; Can you help , me cure a woman of “telepboiiitis”? She calls m« X oh the phone ■If and I can’t get her off the line. a>e’s very .intsMiting to talk to, but she takes up more of my time than I can spare. Besides that, my arm gets tired. She has a car, and her children are in school all day, but she prefers lengthy telephcme conversa-Uons to a visH in person. She does this to others, too. It’s getting to be a daily thing. How can -I cure her without being impolite? SORE EAR, TIRED ARM IMEAR SORE: The moment you hear her voice, say, “I’m sorry, I am in the midst of something and can’t Ulk to you right now. I’ll caU you when I’m fr^” If you get “n^” and have the time, return her call. If you haven’t — doii’t. If she caHs again, repeal Uii trcal-ment until the cured. DEAR ABBY: I need some advice about a very touchy problem. I have the sweetest mother-in-law in the world, but one thing irritates me. We live far enough apart to write letters, and She writes to me at least once a week. I have never gotten a letter from her saying she is fine. Every time she writes she has just had an attack of something or other, or else something “dreadful” has just happened to her. It’s getting sp I hate to open her letters. I am always writing her that I am sorry to hear about this and that and hope that she is feeling better. I’ve tried Ignoring her complaints, but in her next letter she asks how come I didn’t mention her illness. Anj ai^estionsl DEAR DEPRESSED: Know your moUier-tn-law’s complaints for what they arc, and don’t let them get you Curl up cozy in this brand new Blanket^ Chair combining restful colonial design with a 38 by 59* Chatham all wool blanket. Available as a straight or rocker, Jhis chair comes in a variety of fabrics and colors, each complementary to the warm accent or earth plaids of the blanket. The loose seat cushion is offered in foam rubber dr dacron diagonal foam for built-in comfort. Conover Chair Co. MATTRESSES Expertly Rebuilt Ot LESS than Vi the cost oFo hew oneT OeanoBfeect ia Wilting 7 Teas FRIt PICKUP amt DlUVERY We SsecieltM la OXFORD MATTRESS CO. FE 2-nn ' i: .WHATS fl§ un sAui Our policj( >^ot lo carry sto^|(,Jo • SAVE! Beckwitli-Evans Sldl^DE Cl^ilNCE Tttrtiirtd Wool Inport WILTON PILE Lovely Scroll eHed In o heovy qoolHy lexivre. WoW-plle VVMlon. 12-fl. widths. 4 good eolofs. Extro good „ boy . .'....-.............. • ■ • ^ Continuous Fllainont NYLON PILE A very tperk4 buy, of on excellont, long-weoring loop carpel. Good eolofs. 12-ft. widths... WOOL-TWEED PILE A ml!l drop of o turquoise Coiwnerclal tweed. We hove stock m YJt.. 7* ond 12^ -Mdfc Seile prKed bekwv dealer's ............*• •• nylon PILE TWEED Special purchoieof o nylon-pile tweed,on fooih bock. ^ 6 good colors. 12-ft-widths... OuFoRt N1 Contlniiput Filanent Nylon Me Tho fabric meets the exacting demonds of DuPont for quoRly and weight eondords. irxIS'wldth-rdlnbow of colors..... ................ WOOL PILE BOUCLE WILTON famous moke lovely all wool doioly woven heovy boudo. 12* widths In six fino colors. IMuolly $9 9B «i- yrasM MWTMWnww WT erwew" IME, Tin eae Hy PabrIot, Golori fVEl^Y if Tincr tha -eovinla ora all yourl AM awellerif qogli^ . ^ ofcoaf*'’ arttf below . the tokingl |l«F,SSyJUiSecand Floor I 18 BUDGET DRESSES, VVere to 17 98 I 17 BMOOET DRESSES, Were to 19.98 18 BETTER DRESSES, Were to 22.98 18 BETTER DRESSES, Were to 25.98 " 1 || 27 BETTER DRESSES, Were to 29.98 ^ 23 BETTER DRESSES, Were to 35.98 ^ 22 FORMAL DRESSES, Were to 35.98 BRIDAL DOWNS, Were to $110 ♦7 ♦9 ni !13 •15 •19 •10 V 50% off SRORTSWEARf* AlofaFtoor 25 BLOUSES, Were to 3.^ •! 21 BLOUSES, Were to 5 98 Vt 36 SKIRTS, Were to 10.98 •S 24 SKIRTS, Were to 12.98 ^4 8 PR. SUCKS, Were 1)8.98 ^4 21 PR. SLACKS Were to 10.98 ^5 13 JACKETS, Were to 17.98 7 COORDINATES, Were to 17.98 •ft ‘ 9 COORDINATES, Were to 19.98 •IQ IIQIRLS’ DRESSES, Were to 7 98 4**'* 25 QIRLI’ DRESSES, Were to 10.98 5” 11 STORM COATS, Were to 17.98 6**-10*? a«-4*^ !•• M St SKIRTS, Were to 7.98 I ^ 15 BLOUSES, Were to 2.98 16R0BES,Wereto5.98 2T HATS, Were to 3.98 2“ PRE TEENS GIRLS’ WEAR"Laiitor Lewi IT ROBES, Were to ia98 •8 II SKIRTS, Were to 7.98 •S ^5 5 STADIUM COATS, Were to 24.98 ^ IIP* LINGERIE- Main Floor S5 PR. PAJAMAS-BOWNS Were to 12.98 2“ • ROBBS Were to 5.98 •& T ROBES 'Were to 17.98 Hi T ROBES l^ere to 29.98 •15 ■I B^12 the POyTIAg press. THURSDAY. kARCH 7. 1968 Name Chairmen hr Meeting in Area Chapters Alpha Chapter, Beta Theta Phi Sorority, appointed chairmen for a meeting of area chapters at Tuesday’s evening meeting in Mrs. Arthur McKinniss’ Clinton River Drive home. ♦ * ★ ’ „ Mrs. FYank Coad ,wili be . chairman for the March 19 event at the Consumers Power Co. building, with Mrs, U. C. Meeker and Mrs. L. Z. Monroe, cochairmen. Husbands of Alpha members will be guests at a cooperative buffet dinner March 30. Jane Davison will assist' Mrs. McKinniss, chairman. Use Rdlsin Bread A sure-fire way to keep raisins from sinking to the bottom of bread pudding is to use raisin bread to make the pudding. ST. PATRICK'S DAY CARDS TALLIES NAPKINS CRAIG’S GIFTS Miracle Mile Magnificent Spring Shots' ot Modtit Prices 299 .0 099 Drsis and Casual Styles MALING SHOES North ^Sagiaaw OpM MtmUf, Tk«rta>T, FriOsj ■■a SMBraty KTntBfi m R&M Dl MUTMENT STOSE Sororities, Frats Name Area Pledges By BARBARA GRIFFIN Many Pontiac area students have recently pledged social fraternities and sororities at the University of Michigan. Proudly wearing new pledge pins around campus, these students are participating in the pledging program, which will end for the, sororities with thf.formal initiafipp ceremony in early May. The ffaternlty plSges’^lt'-be made active members of their houses in September. DELTA DELTA DELTA Among the new pledges of Delta Delta Delta Sorority are Bar- Hosts Circle Her Home Mrs. Gerald Rose hosted the Monday evening meeting of the Lydia Circle of Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church in her Fourth Avenue home. A program on Okinawa and Formosa was given by Mrs. Carl Boneman. bara Steteer and Lois Farrell. Barbara lives on Franklin Road and Lois on Devonshire Drive. COLLEGIATE SOROSIS The pledge class of Collegiate Sorosis includes sophomore Barbara James 6f Percy King Drivejpl and junior Mary-love Russell of Lone Pine Road. ^ GAMMA PHI BETA ■.sGsinma jRh^&ta has claimed Diana Owen of Auburn Ro^d and Mary Ann Affleck of i^oodward Avenue as members of their new pledge class. ALPHA DELTA PI D6nna Tope, Diana Drive, and her pledge sisters of Alpha Delta Pi are being Honored by the active members of the sorority Sunday afternoon ,at an open house in their newly remodeled chapter house. - - -DELTA GAMMA Wearing the Delta Gamma pledge pin around campus is new DG pledge Martha Foren, Lake Angelus. KAPPA ALPHA THETA W Tra /« ITinds whip up a bid .e of Oriental dtmle ^iwUh a flowered \ "tongKong i itroller” ^---- Phi Taus have been recently reinstated. on campus with a new program emphasizing Kholar-ship. PHI GAMMA DELTA Amopg other area students iledging Michigan fraternities is John Kerns of Lake Angelus Drive, who has been given a . pledge pin by Phi Gamma Delta. THETA DELTA C« Also . pledging TSming rush was Bruce Coleman of West Iroquois Road, Theta Delta Chi. * * * Connie Crocker of Draper Avenue was recently elected a corridor representative for Angell House of Alice Lloyd,Dormitory. She meets with representatives of other houses in the dwm council and formulates dormitory poli- Kappa' Alpha Theta has three freshmen from Bloomfield Hills in its new pledge class. New ITietas are Jane Leader of Cran-brook 'Road, Kay Van der Meer of Interlaken Drive and Lynne Carey of Middlebeit Road. SIGMA PHI EPSILON Ted Barrett, Pine Tree Trail, recently pledged Sigma Phi Ion Fraternity. PHI KAPPA TAU Sophomore Ecf^ Raroutunian of Douglas Drive is a new pledge of Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity, The are participatiH this wedi ia the opera “The Hunters,” presented Jointly by the School of Music and the University Players of the department of speech. In the opera chorus are juniors Gary Relyea of Rosedaie Drive and Marilyn Vernon of West Rundell Street. Gary and Marilyn have been selected from the 50-voice Symphony Choir form a smaller opera chorus for "The Funterg.“ Karen Mc|Cinney, Welwood Drive, has been working on "The Hunters" in a backstage role. She is a member of the University Players and is on the wardrobe committee for tbe opera, assembling costumes for the many different characters in the cast. Associates' Wives Not Your Guests By the Emily Pest Institute Q; My husband holds an executive positidh tar a rather large company. This company does business with many outrof-town firms. Quite often representatives of these ■ firms come to town for several days on business. Some-' times their wives pccompany them. What, if any, are my obligations to these wives? My husband thinks I shpuld call 'jIbe wives and invite them to 'W;h to show them some hospitality while their hus-■ jre hup dtartaa the day attending to business. Hiese wives are perfect strangers to nw and I see no reason why tain them. What is your (pinion on this? ★ A: Unless your husband would like you to entertain these wives because be thinks it will be a real help to his business, it is certainly not necessary for you to do so. ★ w ★ Qt Is a wifa correct In referring to her husband who is a physician, as doctor? . A: Wlien speaking of Jtitb to his patients, yes, byt^en speaking to specipKacquain-tances, she “my husband” and>Jmtimate friends she calls'nitti “John.” Hard-Working w omen Put on Pedestal for 24 Hours Luxury! Knit this jacket with • warmth large and baby cables for and fashion. Jiffy-knit this jack^, and save 1 fortune. Use clpddlight mohair or knitting wej»t^. Pattern 925; direcfions siies 32-34; 36-38 included, Thipty-five cents in coins for thjs^pattern — add 15 cents for pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, The Pontiac mas, 124 Needlecraft Dept. P. 0. Box 181, Old Chelsea Sta-New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly patteim number, name, address and zone. Newest rage — smocked accessories plus 208 exciting needle-craft designs In our new 1963 Needlecraft Catalog — just out! Fashions, furnishings to crochet, knit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Pli||s free pattern. Send 25 cents now. By JAY AXELBANK MOSCOW (UPI) - Russi^ men snapped up usually jrtat nylons, perfumes arat'^other "female things” .tMay for their annual homage to the women ip thdir lives. Tombrrdw is International Women's bay, a coipbinafion 4-^other’s Day and Valen-/^une'a Day celebrated in Russia and other Communist nations. ,No matter what her age, the new “Socialist woman” will be put on a pedestal for 34 hours. If she works, as most of them do. We will have the afternoon off. Women are the same all over, and Russian sweethearts, wives, mothers and grandmothers looked forward to spMial cards and gifts of lingerie, nylon stockings, handbags and perfumes with exotic names like "Nocturnal Violet” and "Moscow Woman.” •These luxury items tradi-‘tionally have been hard to get in the Soviet Union, but this year the boys found no shortages. Newspaper notices told them, in effect, to “Come and g€t ’em.” Having the afternoon , off 'from work is one of the prize advantages of Women’s Day. It is estimated that approximately half of. all jobs in the Soviet Union are held by women, and there is complete job equality. DRIVE CABS Women drive taxis, tractors, trucks and trolleys. They dig ditches and sweep the streets. They mix chemicals and direct collective farms. Women account for two-thirds of , the country’s doctors, three-tenths of construction workers «td half of office workers. A few years ago the Communist party newspaper Pravda boasted that “Women are shown respect and honor in this country.” By contrast, the government newspaper Izvestia last night lament the “suffer-i n g” status of Americsoi women, saying they are frozen out of politics and do not enjoy equality of pay with In Russia many women are chosen as deputies to the various regional and local parliaments which meet briefly each year to rubbersUunp p SId* illti yteW o pro. t voeotW* glimpM of fh* tolumn-thift i with ill hlpben* belt . . . to weor or not. Cotton pique' coot with Arne! Triocetole ihorkikin ihift. Yellow and white coal with i “ vthila ihiFt. ^ Sizes 7-9>11 >13 II 24.95 ' R&M DEMIITMEIIT STME 1555 UNIOMUKE RD. UNION UKE VILUOl IM 34912 .■;«1 TODAY* FRIDAY-SATURDAY HmSPHKil niop SALE!! "ACTUALLY 2 Appliances IN ONE DfA WlIlDIPftAI RIA nllillli VVL 2DR. COMBINATION REFRIGERATOR FREEZER OiJy NO MONEY DOWN Includes delivery — 1 yeat. free “in home service” — full gruarantee — 90 days for cash. BRAND NEW IN CRATES-SAVE 98$ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH GOOD HOyiEKEEPING(^ of PONTIAC 51 W. HURON a ipirr Open MoR. FL 4-1555 and Fri. TiU 9 TflE PONTIAC tmJUjSDAY, MARCH 7, im ]ft—1$ Convention Considered Delegates were elected to the April state convention to be held in Detroit at the Wednesday evening meeting of Chapter No. M, CkiU Star Mothers. Mil. Leone Haberg was chosen delegate With Mrs. Cdive Burgess as alternate. * w * Mrs. Eva Welch announced a rummage sale, May 18. Teens’ Views Untouched by Labor Struggle By EUGENE GILBERT Presideat el tte Gilbert YoMb Resewch Ce. The labor vs. management bate ' •• > (•■f Mfferfaig public. tie d die early TUrties, wdb their aaartaig monoriea of and Violence and lockouts, bold no great emotional appeal modem teen-agers, Uving just a generatian later. Meet yeaagslers today, so It differences, pro or con, on the But, significantly, they validity of strtte issues. In fact, teen-agers livfaig in the relatively serene Sixties, so far as labor pS«1hSrSto**partiM*in*^;*^^ ARBITRATION ForYooKWcMlding QUALITY and Qnaiititx OUPbMMloMr. oAHiiiBMr Mrs. Jaaaeo Perstager C. R. HASKBLL STUDIO iMt.ClcnienoSu FE4-0553 THE FAMOUS NEW "SNOW WHITE" ond "CECIL ond BEANY" TWIN BEDSPREADS M2.98 Moof fM CbiTdrori Udoaif SHOP' ARDEN'S FOR THE LATEST IN ---SPREADS AND DRAPES TO CREATE ATTRACTIVE BEDROOMS Arden’s PONTIAC MALL 6S2-I1f1 appaars, Alak that ttrftss arc at best aa aatmeded way sf •ettihig labor dispateo, aU, at wsrot, a tymaical ImpooMoa them aa staunch defenders ofyibe youngsters were pretty WMI divided on this issua—M per cent tbou^t most strikes wers justi-fled, 43 per cent thought the otfaar way. Thera are no sharp emotional thsir position. A feeling of a plague on both your strife-tom houses Seemed to prevail amohg the youngstars polled. Ingly in favor (II per cent) of legislation to prohibit strikes in certain key industries and pro- Speclflcally, they opposed strikes by ' ' ,fairly well agreed in the opinion that something ought to be done about the country’s recurring labor troubles. Rat the questiMi shedd arbl-tratlsa be canpabary la slriksa A 'mneb more pre- strike dispute are guilty of exaggerated demands put forth m^y for bargaining purposes. ★ a a Ibese and other youthful estimates of the strike as a method of securing working between came to light in a survey conducted by our ration. AhSnt I.IM youagstfvs ctUes coantry were aske their opinions ttooght of striket and which side Oey tbonght was primarily FAVORED Are strikes usually justified? «ly 88 per ceat opposed. Boys were a bit more inclined to blame labor as the major culprit in a strike, and girb ware a bit more Inclined to blame min' agement. Either way, bawever, oaly a defence workers, policemen, fira-nwn, puWlc utility worl teachers, members of the armed forces and wwkers involved in engineering safety jobe. They were egnaOy emphatic (78 per cent) agMast strikes by » In the recipe given last week for scrapple, the M anaount of liquid should be r H 18 pints, not 12 QUARTS, n b Sorry! t L. A new polyeAylene bud vase molded in a ribbed antique pottery design is avaUabl/e. Eight indtes tall and tapering gracefully to a 2^inch diameter base, it is useful for garden club or flower exhibit use. The manufacturers say it is virtually unbreakable and untippable. ed the opinions of efAer sex, as eaa be seen from this table: Labor more to blameT-boys 48 per cent—girls 32 per cent Management more to blame?— ila^Rhper |ceni" Both to blame?—boys 13 per! cent—girls 20 per cent No opinion—b o y s 9 per cent— girls 12 per cent “In too many cases,” uid 17-year-old Gail Onstnid of UCross, Wis., in a typical complaint against unioiis, “striket are] started by union leadership for their own personal gain.” workers, lets emphatic ($1 per ceat) about wheiher transpsr-tatisa wsrkers sheald he per-mRtod to strfte, aad seaiewhat Opposed (U per ceat) to pat-ttaf sirfte restratats aa aews- wersatile sleep-lounse sets in two fabrics... 5.98 tosh, tait aft repeated ceah meat by 17-year-«id Charles Scheiag ef Camdea, N.J. **lbey (Biaaageineat) seem to farget tkto employes need aa lacea-thre to work aad beaeflts to matatoia laterest.” Teenagers were overwhelm- In almost all eases, the antistrike legislation faction cited public good as the greatest Linda Ross, 17, of South Bend, Ind., felt each group should have the right to bring to public attention any wrongs they feel are Ing done inside their occupation; | However, since these occupational areas touch so people’a lives, strikes should be worked out quickly even if the; govm-nment has to step in." WANT GOVERNBIENT INTERVENTION Three out of every four teen ment ought to step in, in a lingering strike dispute, rather than having labor and management fight it out. * i “Most laajer stikes, such at t h e steel strike," commented 17-yeer-eM Rosemary Krajew-tki of Meirec, Mich., “can af- j feet the safety aad welfare of i the people ead the ceuntry, and I the geverament must protect the PONTIAC MALL Add 35c pMtpfli for mail orders (Sorry-lNo C.0.D.S) New open looks by QualiCraft! Here a scoop, there a scallop, maybe a window or two creates the new look kA less shoe—so important QualiGraft artfully displays it atop heels tall, tiny or flat How see blacks slicked to a patent pidish or delicately texture-grained. (All uppers are leather noept $4.99 cii»croeS which is pretend.) The more expensive your tastes the more you'll $Q AQ A A appreciate our exclusive ()ualiCraft; expensive, yes, in evcFy way but their prices. Oetitf to I st/9 ■ T - ' ■ ■ : B-r-U THE POyTIAC PRESS, tkURSDAY, ^UrCH 7, r TIIURS, FRt, m, SUI. mart .OPEN DAILY lOwlO; SUN. 12-7 oiscoi/Nr fllVIDENO days: _ /SLPMWf>r>n ,PI DOLLAR-WISE BUDGET BUYS! F^pS^id^t'li-l-^AIRY CUTOUTS Discount Jl y/L Dividend X W Day, mm Women*! new-etyle square throat, cut-ont aide vamp with bow. Sices 4 to 10 in black, red, bone or patent Choice of heel heights. 100% latex wall paint dries in 20 min* ntes with no fumes or odor. 192 wash* able colors. Lily 5-qt wire handle paint pail free with 1 gal. Spectacnlar sale of long and short sleeve shirts. Ivys, continentals, snap* tabs, regular collar and jacket-shirt styles. Fine quality cottons. SJVIJj,XL sues. ____ If jon like to be correctly attired in flats you’ll fall in love with th^^ glove leather, lip-throat skimmers. Supple velvaflex sole. You’ll want ’em in red, black, bone and white! NOW 6 GREAT K*mart QUALITY DISCOUNT STORES TO SERVE YOU THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH T, 19C8 C-^ ■ ■ SPECIAL BUY! Zip-Front Nylon Laminated JACKETS. $15.95 So light, you hardly know you'rt woor- A ing It. Yet Ideol for all weather . . . m|||, ^ worm or cold. Smart slash pockets. See ell 5 new spriitg shades; AH-sIzes; > Value 090 ij TEL-HURON STORE ONLY SMUN’S : enty of Free Parking I USDA INSPECTED WHOLE I mvais I 29< Cut-Up.... lb. 33,1 TEL-HURON TEUHURON SHOPPING CENTER OpMtEtivyNiaht’iil9 ROASTING CHICKEN..... 39 lb. Mature, Grain-Fed, Specially Selected USDA CHOICE CHUCK 4 ITC RCAST.....1I Pot Roast Cut IIlb. CENTER BUWE CUT ....47& ROUND DONE CUT ....SCi, DONELESSGHUCIC WRIOL.EYS onr snper-dooper ‘LOCKER LOOPER’j classic GIRLS’ SPRING I Coats Shop Our smart selection of Easter Coats — The Fashion illnstrated is a Paris inspired eoat by Town & Cotmtry, expressing clever styUbg in Linen4ike laminate, luxuriously prtictical for big *n Little sister. ^ Siies4^..............14.99 Sizes 7-14...........17.99 MatchingHaU....... 1.99 Other atylea from 10.99 Boys* and Girls’ Toddler Coat Seu... 5.99 to 16.9! ■___Openlvery Night *tlL? 1 2 VsaTasrStsMttrCbarga C ■■■■■•■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I * JAYSON JEWELERS ~ camera mart speciai. shirt with all tha dassic touches Bermuda collar, roll sleeves, yoke action back... ond o beksr loop to hang HbylWhito. postals, 30-36. ^rm $Moe mnn^KMrmiL nr. A SQUARE THROATED NATURALIZER CLASSIC with the famous h^eUhugging, toe-free last New POUROIDJ^ ELECTRIC EYE CANERA “Vakiand Cmaiiy'g Largeti Shoe Stor$" !■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Ring-a-ding Rings the bell for Fashion ~a subtle blend of 84% ' Rayon and,16% fiattind ~ Flax for .. cool comfort with the natnnl wrinkle shy-ness of modem synthetics. 45 inches wide hand washable JUMBO TV DOG BIG 20" Plumb Roolistle Dog with Flapping wars ond deeorativw bow. Tho kids will lovo him. ■ Porfoct Pkturoa 2 In 10 Soconds ■ Roody for th« 2 Now Color Film ■ $|19 SALE PRICER silly NO AAONEY DOWN OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT ■ ] SCREEN iL_I 4" ■ I CNBIAL ■ I owTripml 72®^ for cowpltto KN ■AMITBM.. . 1.M UgMIMwB... ..M IHiaViawars . . 14S RMCa Trays... ..380 PMsCMrs... . 1.11 TIUHURON SHOPPING CENTBr i BE SMART, SHOP AT PONTIAC'S 1 Ci^ERA MAI^ 2 55 S. Telagiwph FE 4.955 ■ Chaws W—N* Msasr Dfa«—90 Osy* sa CaA Prints $1.69 yan Solids $1.49 yard Shandalay has die appearance of Shantnng--44 inches wide 60% Rayon, 40% Es^n thick V thin acetate. Hand washable. Jut wondetfiii f»r drum, •him or bUtuot. $2.19 yard. SEW ’n SAVE FABRIC SHOP Ph. FE 5-M57 955T Ah ) TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER Security Charge Honored Here sale! versatile orlon® double knit costumes Terrific savings on our collection of 3-piece costume coordinates. Chonei-fype jackets with sleeveless shells, slim lined skirts. Spring colors; sizes 10 to 16. In sportswear department. $12’® usually $21.98 shop mondoy through Saturday to 9 p.m. WINKBIiM^ ! TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER ■ Tel-Huren 2 Store ■ FANa VARIETIES AFRICAH VIOLETS 2J1 Get Ready Now for Your Spring Planting FRESH TESTED GARDEN SEEDS ■wJ c-« THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1068 Invalids Need Special Foods By JANET ODELL PMtlse Preti Food Editor What’s the story at your house? Do you have flu, chldcen pox, or |ome other misery? Are you trying to build up strength in an invalid or tempt the appetite of a ooovalescent? ★ ★ ★ ■ Your first concern is safety. You don’t want the germs to spread to the rest of the family. & keep the invalid’s dishes sep- cup pineapple Juice, chilled V« teaspoon pure vanilla extract a rotary beater or shake la a fruit Jar. Serve cold. Yield: 1 servi^. orange sections, addtag aO Jnice to the piiieapple synvi thea add water to equal 1 cap. Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Add the measured cup Of liquid and the vinegar or the lemon Juice. Chill until slightly thickooed. Fold in fniits. Pour • 1-quart mold. Chill u..ui How about a gelatin moM, eith-^j^ j. unmoW on let- er as a Milad or dossert? Us. ^ ,*rve ^ith mayoonaise. the new mixed fruit flavor gela- not hot. Test a drop from spoon on inside of wrist as you would ; in baby’s bottle. Ihen remove from beat at once. Add rennet power; stir until dissolved, over one minute. Pour at once into dessert dishes. Let set undisturbed 10 minutes until firm. CbiU. When ready tf serve beat egg 1 teaspoon grated Orapge rbid 1 package (S ounce) oiange or lime flavored gelatin m cups milk I'fiblespoon lemon Juke tin with three Undv of fruK. -^or dessert, unmold and serve arate and bdl hie sHveTwara^W. Hny ^ .4,^. EiflL .liwetened whiiyed cream. you don’t have a dishwari^r. Use ^ the fwnlly with the ^ stiff. Fold in orange or lemon you paper plates and cups to save yourself a lot of trouble. flick people have caprkious appetities and often have to be coaxed to eat. 80 make year trays attractive and keep serv-inp smalU Children adore minlatnres aiql if yonr small daughter has a small cooktaig set, use some of the atensUs for cooUng and serving. ________ shake may be part 1of the breakfast menu or a between-meal snack. Vanilla brings out the flavor of the fruit VanUla Fmit Shake I ripe banana 1 tablespoon fresh lemon Juice An entirely different ,kM of lidding, but one equally as nour-idilng is this Orai^q Farina Pudding. The cereal in It givee it body and the garnish of fruits makes it appealing to the eye-Oranp Faripa Pudding ) cups hot wat^* H cup orange hdce i tablespoons sugar 4k teaqioon salt idain or matt Three-Fmtt Hsid 1 can (SVk ounces) crushed pineapple tor tidbita) 1 cup diced grapefruit se^ona V« cup diced orange sections 1 regular size package (S ounces) mixed fruit flavor gelatin 1 cup boiling water 1 tablespoon vinegar or lemon Juice* . *—Uae vinegar if mold Is to be served as salad; use lemon Juice If inold is to be served as a dessert Drain pineapple, m« t to 8 aervings, about»% w Vk cup each. Extra mDk can be gotten into the dfct with rennet dessert. Thle le n U^t dessert made wWiont eggs, bat one that takes well to various gamislies. Qnlek rioatiag Island 2 cups milk 1 package vanilla rennet power 2 egg nMtes H teaspoon salt V4 cup sugar H teaspoon orange extract OR V« teaspoon lemon extract Orange or lemon flkes Set out 4 or S dessert dishes. Warm milk slowly to lukewarm, TniHs, froth, canned or froten Wiipp^ cream, optional Combine water, orange Juke, ■igar, ahd salt in large saucepan. Bring to a* rapid boU. Add farina skwly in a very fine stream, stirring vigorously during addition to prevent farina from lumping. Cook cereal until done, about 1 minutes, stirring- constantly. Remove 'from heat. Stir in orange rind and gelatin; Dlace over very low heat and stir until gelatin melU, about 1 minute. Rentove from heat. Stir in milk and latnon Jukpb Four into lightly oiled 4-cup mold.v Chill until firm. ★ ★ ♦ Umnold and serve with fruit and whipped cream, if desired. „Yleld:,.IU8»ilfS*^ ORANGE FARINA FUN FOR A SMALL PATIENT - A skk " child needs nourishing food- but it’s hard to peril up a lagging appetite. To add fun and color to a akk-room tray, try simple garnishing tricks such as this comical candy faca on a gelatin desiert and the cracker-parsley desert isle in a sea of soup. Paper service, from soup bowl to dessert dish, saves the time and work, of sterilizing dishes and adds color to the tray. corniGE CHEESE Lenten menus welcome this hIgh-protein, low-cost dish. Appetizingly creamy, with farm-fresh flavor assured by Dual Thermal Control. Serve some soon. MAPLLLEAF DAIRY ^ 20 I. Howord S». ^ For Hmm Delifery FE 4-2S47 ATLAS SUPERMARKET OoTMr BaMwin and Wattaa Blvd. PRICES EFFECTIVCl Thuraday, March Tth thm Wednttday, March 11th Your Choice BIRDS EYE • Perch Ptilfta • Cod Filleta 12-01. on MORTON'S Fresh Frsitn Dimitrs • OMekaae Turkey • Bad • Nani • taHabonr tMak Your OQ c Choic. 09«. i THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, 7, 1963* C—8 Find 2 Widows Knife Victims Stabbings Are Fatal * in Boston Area BOSTON (UPD—Two widows, one in Boston and the other in nearby Lawrence, were found last night stabbed to death in their apar^ BULGING WITH QUEENS - New York’s t waterfront is loaded with ocean liners at their I 1 Rhrer . From bottom to top are liners, America, United States, Bremen, Carinthia and the Queen Elizabeth, pulling from her pier. OPENINt SPECIALS Plastic all Tile 2vl‘ Urn pfk* 2 for tc hi *Mtt TUB AREA You Got: ALL FOR • 41M. FI me • 1 Bal. Mattie a II Ft. Cap elSimaler IIFtSMpe etCiaaaar ALL run $095 FULL BATH AREA ^ You Got: ALL FOR 5^555 • I taraaSar • llPtSaaa VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 7'/2‘- ixlN.NCartoR ARAASTRONG'S TESSERA 3895 CORLON URGE and SMAU ROUS anuME Ceramic TILE 39^ tt. ARMSTIMM6’S INLAID TILE **» 6!>- MEN FREE! Use Our Tools LADIES FREE! IUttttlim--Ne Pnrefesss Nsessseiy Pure Vinyl Tiln 5 Colors Asphalt Tile 4« FRONT door PARKING w*e Shot* 2Blks.W«f reUiroph 2255 ELIZABCTH LAKE BD. n 4-52161 ^ Jlbeir daothe-broogirTtrTB^^ the number of unsolved slayings of women in the greater Boston area since last June. The aUnost-nude body of Mrs. Mary M. Brown,-68, was foui^ in a shabby second-floor tenement flat in Lawrence where she lived ikne. A fooMoBg carving knife er fork was stock hilt-deep la her chest There were bloodstakss Sale at Du® ^® 48 S. Saginaw-Urfesii Renewal The body of Mrs. Rachel Lazarus, 66, her clothes pulled ov«-her head, was found sprawled across a bloodstained bed in her first-floor apartment in Boston’s Dorchester section. She had been stabbed in the chest. It was not known immediately • whether either woman had been raped. Police doubted Che slayings were connected with the still-. nasolved stranglings of eight An unidentified eyewiChms~loia~ police he saw two IS-year-old “toughs” rater Mrs. Lazarus’ apartment building shortly before her body was found. ! Polira conducted a citywide search for the youths. Police said the apartments of both women were thoroughly ransacked, giving the initial appearance that t^ motive could have been robr ^ in both cases. Marriage Licenses -------UMrUeittln. LMhlukT. SoutbfMd and A M. Bouthfleld bM U. WIek*. m W. WUmb. Rc=m A. IfMk. Blrmki(liiii tMbeUe B. WalUnt, Blrmlnghun. John W. Dnrlet. nnUm Lake aod AUan J. Stoddard.' LaaUne, MhsMiao and Leona II. MeDonald. «T0 KenQworth. JaneTl. W~ *' Kenneth aoel llann.. .________ D&U&m L. licSwaln- 11 HmmI Beid. And Hi C OTMiiMre. » Ar' * —_________________, ... _________ inerife S. Johneon. 19 Oamer. Lrle A. MeOIockUn. Farmlnfton i Beulah C. Barber, Detroit. Winiam O. Boon, »J3 OakpoU and S dra K. Loekard. 911] Oakn^ iPySr W.^Pcdj^, n^Tb^ and Pi Jatnes H.. King, ITS CUHord and Pa B. Betehel, In Seward. ; James E. Werthman. IfP WIndalde i 'Sharon M. Young. 19U Aubundale. WCHIGU ALPURPOSE POTATOES REPEATSALE! Hickory-gnwksd SLAB BACON NaH orWholt w Fresh • cukes • RADISHES • PEPPERS JE C • BREEN ONIONS _ J 88« PASCAL CEl£RY ...liw29* KADLEnVCE....2«°'19* ISi; TOMATOES . . ~19* CARROTS 2!19* I.FpwiwiS' Frath DritSHd STEWERS.. Fresh Dressed FRYERS a a.. Leuiy Meaty 17 29 DtlioioasBaef POT ROAST. Lean, Meaty SPARE RIBS BANANAS a . .2 >^25‘ RED GRAPES.. »^25' GRAPEFRUIT .. <^59* SatartwMt Oranges .jHMbotin Oranges Fresh, Lean Oround Reef 2179*^ liters Pure Lard^ i iSr Deliciens, Lean PQrkRoast'^29° Hickory Smoked ^ Picnics 29* Fresh Beef Uver'»> 29*^ 1 SUnESS HOT D06S. 3189* SISTERS’SUPER MKT. 608 W. HURON ST„ Near Webster School ITWOlPrBELONO! WARIPS HOME OUTFITTINa 00. Im to ... our eirtirt itoru and warahouM invantory avanatoaatar balaw eaal!l [ OPEN TMHRHT - FRIDAY I MONDAY TILL 9 P.H. iJvi!\G mum ki:d room REQ. 159.9S Sofq oi^ choir. 100% nylon with foom cushloM. He iteMyOnni-smWaaldy... REQ. 2G9.95 KrooMsr 2-pises Curvsd See-IkMiot. I00« nylon foom No Money lta.-.S.TIWNldy REQ. 239.95 Kroshlor Sofo and Choir. 100% nylon and foam. Choice of oolori. 100% guaranteed. Ho Momv Da—SJI Wncklb ncfl eikn om ncut ""nronio Sofa oml Ooir. Tufted hack ^ REG. 259.95 3-Pc. Sadioiial. 100% high pile nylon covert. Ctraica of colon, foom cuthlont, lorga modarn arm. 100% guarantoad. No Money Dn.~MI WtcUy REG. 199.95 Colonial rocking love seat. Reversible foom cushions. 2 only. No Monoy Down-12 Wookly REQ. 399.95 IVovtackd 3.0C SecUonaL B«m. UM - NO Money Dn.-4JI Wookly REG. 119.95 Danish Sofa—supported ploitie covers in block or turquoise zipper foom cushions. Solid wolnut frames. REG. 139.95 2-pc. Sofa Bed and Choir. Your choice of colors. Stunning decorotor fabrics. No Monoy Dossn-|t Wookly *89 *169 *148 *^nr *159 M39 *161L ’59 *78 REG. 229.95 NMw^Da.-IJ9WMldlr REQ. 99.95 Walnut Btmk Bed complete with mattress and springs. 1 only, floor sample.'a a • t a •... REQ. 219.95 Grey Doubis Drssssr, Mirror, Chsst gnd Bookooas Bod. Solid wood, duitproof aMensyDa.-2JHWtel4r rmOD---------- *129 *55 *119 doMennyDa-aJCWeeUr REQ. 249.95 REQ. 139.95 Mopie Bunk Bad compiatowMi m No Menny Dewa - Ija Wnekfy < *199 *139 *69 ODDS and EMIS BEDDIMG VALUES TO 59.95 Twin Box Springs, your choicn. All new and guaranteed. Take yovr pick at.................. REG. 9.95 Heavy Duty Steel Adjustable Bed Frame with Costers. While they lost. ^ ... REG.T29J5 Aluminum Folding Cots with Foam Mattresses. While they Imt____ REQ. 59.te Button-free Mattress or . Box Spring. lO-yeor written guarantee. Choke of Iwfai or full size. *15 1422 *14" *29 CDAIKS REQ. 79J5 Cofonioi Swivel Hostess Choir In beautiful cofonioi poHem. ■e Meney 0ew«-$l Weekly REQ. 99.95 Reclbier, covered In genuine uQohyde.Choiceofnewwtcc [MNyliiM-lJnreeMy. Silicone Fry Pan with # | mO Spatula.... R 14ODD SI 88 Dinette Chairs. ▼ ■ Your choice ............. H REIL2S.M S1C88 S« o( 3 Tobta, J s»a H H iCoffea.QokeojFj^iili H VALUES TD UN SA|(t Special group of higher priced Lamps. Your choice Mr VALUES TO 29.95 Odd Beds. rllW Your choice........ Mr ^ rcS?””-" W8 Dining Room Chairs..... VALUES TO 9.95^^ AAr 50 Wall Plaques. MM* Your chofce.......... Mr Mr VALUES TO 6080 «||QQ Baomfful Floor lamps, hfony fancy name brondnVqUR CHOICE. YALUEST014.96 CXM Hollywood ^ ¥ V®® Headboards......... /fg REQ. 1.96 Bedroom 4S SOUTH sHGinnui THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1968 Peanut Butter Updates Old Pie You have heard of the famoua into unbaM pastry shell. % pecan pie of deep South fame; in 400 degrees (hot) oven, U and perhaps you’ve heard of the heat to 360 de> peanut pie. But have you head of 3““*^ a Peanut Butter Pie? It wa8*^*“ •m bake pie adapted in a famous test kitchen 30 to 36 minutes longer. (NUng from an old Southern recipe. —Jahould appear slightly less aet In PEANirr BUTTER PIE j“"» U»» P™™! «l««l pniina. 1"®4 Pastry Per Oae-Crtst Pie • (Ma«h) 1 cup light or dark com syrup ,, , j « lnip»iir ' I Mcup.saw Hour j «g., .iighup b«un , . H teaspoon vanilla i"?“P. 1-3 cup creamy or chunk style 2 tablespoons cold water peanut butter Mix flow aad salt. Blend ell 1 unbaked 0-lnch pastry shell 14a 4horeagU|]t iM ferk. ^rbiK Blend filling injpwlients. Pour' kle afl sf water eVef liBRliraf mix wen. Praoi doogh flndy Iota ball with hwala. If too dry ■lx li 1 to 1 tabloopoaaa Mro save shoe repair barsaih save afl. COUrON SrECIAL ITitlwi^nagbMlgliflyr timnadl lately roil-,into 12-taich drda bo> HALF SOLES twoen 2 pieces at waxed paper. Wipe table with damp doth to Oaoalaa Oak UaHiar «r ke^ paper from aNpping. Peel off top paper; |dace pastry in pan, paper-side-up. Peel-eff paper; fit pastry loosely into pan. Trim V«-inch beyond rim of pan. Fold under and flute. Bake as Rakkw SMm Of HMm Siar-Uto SMm $■ QQ Sawad On WhMo Ym ^ ■ 07 -■ Pair AU WORK GUARANTEED radpe directs. Prices Good Friday and Saturday Only! A long knife with a serrated edge does a fine Job in slicing sponge, anglefood or chiffon c^. Um a Mwtng motiaa! „ j S. S. KRESGE'S SliM Ropair—Oosomont * Downtown fontioc Stmo — PEANUT BUrreR PIE - If you have week, during National Peanut Wedi. Use never made a peanut butter pie, by it this creamy or chunk style peanut butter. Leftover Beef Heated Served in Avocados A little leftover Sunday roast' can be easily turned into another | main dish with a brand-new look and taste. Saute 1 to 2 teaspoons curry powder in butter or oil for reduce liquid. Spoon Into Call-fomia avocado halves and ■ with steamed rice tossed with chopped parsley or chives. Heat Juice First If you are planning to use fro-a minute or two, then add a cup zen pineapple juice in a gelatin at chopped onion and cook until ^^3^^ boil the juice for a couple erCloMd Sundoy Fontiae Hall Skoppiac Cantar On Taiagrapli in Watarford Township Oady 9-9, Sot. 8-9-Cioead Sundoy Haawood Baza la ronKae South Hanwood at Parry Dally 9-10, Sot. 8-10, Sunday 12-7 THE POXTIAC TRESS, THURSDAY^ MAHCH 7, 1968 C-^ Soyiet Doesn't Fit Popular Picture; Be on Lookout By JOHN EDGAR HOOVER tht United States is cm>ieiuige haps a good-looking, Mata Hart Federal Bnreaa ef laves tigatieB Copyright INS, By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Inthis season of the Soviet ^>y — when target No,. 1 Moscow—we might Who is a Soviet spy?” ty]^, ready to romantically deceive, or a dire-faced fellow, in What do« he look llkef ” “Does a long coat,~Tactng op and down and Eftel Rosenbov were he have a profile?" Many people, undoubtedly, have a deflnite image of a spy—per- an alley. different, yet they were part of « * * one of the most dangerous spy Nolblix couU b. lurUKT ii.”'*'" "CHEVY-LANDS" CURT CRAWFORD NEW CAR SALESMAN OF THE MONTH FOR \ FEBRUARY 1963 MICHIGAtn lAROKTCHEVROLH CURT CRAWFORD KmmCmrSmlm ""CHEVY^IARD" 631 OAKUND pt CASS FE 5-4161 to do his evil work. All of these — including Julius the trath-fbr the profile of a Soviet spy today is that he has no profile! By this I mean it is not possible to set up any oemposltp picture—because he is so different, so vvied. Here is his great danger to our national security! * ■ "............■ The spy may be old or young, man'or woman, of any national background. He may be'highly educated or illiterate; he may be a doctor, dentist, stenograph^-, military man, government worker, scientist or of aiqr trade or professionv he may be highly trained as a spy or a neophyte; he may five in a cheap boarding house with no money in his pocket or reside in a swar^ home. JUST A CHEMIST Harry Gold was a rather undis-tlnguisM chemist from Philadelphia. His contact, Klaus Fuchs —who furnished data nbout America’s most valuable secret of World War U, the atomic bomb —was a highly competent, well-educated scientist. Another Gold contact, David Greenglara, though not a scientist, was in an Army but she twlped solicit her husband ed States under false identification papers. CoL Abel, for ex-anmle, posed as a photograph with a studio on the fifth Hoor of a Brooklyn building. He was an ordinary-looking fellow who would never command a second glance if you/passed him on the street-yet' he was a master Soviet vpy. assiffunent at Los Alamos wfudf vdived in espioiage- enabled him to sketch the lena mold of the atomic bomb. Then Ididn’t actually commit espionage, against the United Stgtes. w w ★ A typist, a file clerk or a charwoman—any person who has ac-cen to coveted Industrial and scientific documents—can be valu-d»le to tiie Russiadk. Intone instance the Soviets de-.liDh ■ technical librarian-in an industrial firm. Who else would have so many secrets at her fingertips. The Russians even furnished cameras to clandestinely photograph documents. In another a Soviet official made e mistake. He sent his suit io the cieano-s wHh a confidential document in a podtet. His source? A government enmkiyeina hi(^y After his arrest, the FBI found that his studio and hotel room were virtual museums of espion-hge equipment — cipher pads, diortwave radios, equipment for producing microdots. Located also were contaifteis, such as coins, shaving brushes, tie clasps, which had been hollowed out foi^the purpose of secreting espionage mes-tges. This lack of a standard profile >r a Soviet spy—his apparent anonymity and propensity to be of many types—Increases the task of the FBI. But, based on our experience, we have learned his habits,-tus methods of operatiPn—how identify and counteract him. That is our job as professional investigators. CmZEN’S ROLE You> the citizen, can do much to help us: I. Report promptiy any Information you possess concerning espionage, sabotage and subversive adlvtttes. J. Even if the information may afftw insignificant or nonpertinent report it anyway. Many times a sn^ piece of data, when placed with information we already possess, can solve an important case. S. Report the facts. The FBI is not interested in rumor, gossip or idle talebearing. * ♦ ★ 4. Do not try to conduct your own investigation. The job of countering SovieV inteliigence is a task for the trained investigator. 1. Be eonstantiy alert. , Not long ago a photographer called the FBI. He said he wanted to report some information. On the basis of this call we were : able to %nti^ a Russian diplomat who, ofWatlng-^ under an alias, was trying clandestinely to secure a special high totitude aerial map of-New York City of a type not conunerclally available —a map which could have been of prime military value to the This photographer’s vigilance paid high dividends. This is the season of the Soviet »py- -----—■ CODE *QUeBEC’ While the FBI was investigating the Col. Rudolf Abel espionage case, we ran across the code name of "Quebec.” Here was a Russian agent. Who was he. Our investigation focussd cn an Army sergeant previously assigned to the American Embassy in Moscow. Compromised by a Russian girl in Moscow with whom he had «i affair, this man became in- Then, l^ Col. Abd, tbwe-Sffe ildeep-cover Soviet kples —native there was David’s wife, Ruth. She Russians, professionally trained in espionage, vdio enter the Unit- HAVE ’EM! PORTABLE TVs SYLVANIA 19” One full year guarantee on all parte including picture tube. Very Specially Priced FREE DELIVERY I FREE SERVICE 190 DAYS for CASH 1 19P08 BONPEPBAFETY •5«*D0WN Aivind Staad OpUoiial Eztxa RCA VIUTOR lit ncniRE raTUUIT Complete wllh roll. ,156 Sq. In. Pletnre Aim COINPARABLE VALUE 29.95 YOtrU FIND THiSI FABRKSt • kisarioas quality wools! • nch long-wearing wo*and-Orloii* ; — ao^biendfafancs! THERPS NEVER A CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONi AT ROBERT HALL YOU'U PINO THtSi MOOILSt • dasacS-button! • natural ahonldar atybig! • baddng or patch pockeu! YOim FIND TWSI FATTOINli • mnhi-tqne plaids! • snbdued plaidsi • subtk cfaecnj S important aew Mae yay teneal mm r All parte and fdctiire tube guaraitteed 1 year. Complete With Table I RCA VIPTOR TRANSISTOR “NWEtLW’ NCKET Ulll Comidete’ with gift box, earphone, battery and leather carrying caae. 1J95 NRTABLE STEP AIJniUTiC lECOKI FLAW WOOL FLANNEL SLACKS vaih the crease that will never cease! Reganfleap of the number ol . times these slacks are worn between deanings, they always have a -pi^-JojA. Plain front VALUE 995 or sibgle pleat. 29-42. our quality tailored... ALL WEATHER COATS 15w95 valuo 39.95 Cravenette-treated for water-repellenP ^ »»«>“•- Salt, pepper, paprikr !*«•». P^iic «rom the lower part Drain liquid frgm J»M- •BiiSLM shoulder), loin roasts, oet • ’TorTTISra ^t measure; addlham. Fresh pork is cooked at enough milk to make 1V4 cupa.|360 degrees untU the meat Melt butter in a saucepan; stir Injthonmghly done and the meat is flour over low heat; add vegetable-milk mixture; cook and stir constantly until thfckenod. Add drained peas and com pnd well-drained onions, salt and pepper to taste; reheat. Turn into serving dish and sprinkle generously with paprika. Makes 6 to 8 serving!. Enter Contest About Foods grayish white throughout. Egg prices are lower this week. March is the first of four months when the price of large eggs usually reaches the year’s low. ’The decrease in price is timely for eggs are an excellent meat alternate. At 50 cents a dozen, large eggs are 33 cents a pound and slightly mere than four cants iach. Since beef supplies are ample, shoppers wiU And chock roasts and moot steaks hi the again this lyeek. A ^Homemakirs may win u much as $100 er o^ valusMe prisea by competing in the current cental apoMored by Greitm-Ele-troit-Ama food information serv- card, write in 25 :^yTiBirao not use convenience foods.” Mail this to Mrs. Josephine Lawyer. Oakland County Extension Dept., 1200 North Telegraph, Pontiac. The contest closes March 15. Count on one cup of tom salad greens (fairly lightly packed) for each serving when you are making a chef’s salad. amffe^ ler M cuts this weekend. He lamb shoulder has one bm which is easfly removed, lien meat Is ready to tie for roasting or to grind for patties or meat loaf. Poultry prices remain about as they have been, but a few special I roasters and comish I in CANNED nSH Canned fish is a more popular choice during Lent, and prices o( salmon, tuna and sardines are lower than during this period iut year. Alaska’s salmon pack was 3 cans (I ounces room crowns H teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 3 tablespoons olive oil ^ cup cider vinegar Turn mushrooms into a strainer over a bowl to drain thoroughly. .!.* shallow conUiner, put the ^t, sugar, oil, vinegpr and 2 tabiespoona of the mushroom liquid; stir until sugar dissolves. Add drained musHfooms. Cover tightly and refrigerate' for 6 hours or overnight, turning mushroonoa once or twice in the marinade. If oil solidifies, allow to come to room temperature before serving; drain lightly. Makes 12 to 16 servings as a relish. costs less than There is no difference in the Tuna comes in fancy or solid pack (which is the most expensive form), or in chunk style and flake or grated pack. Vegetoble oil is added to domestically canned tuna to enhance the flavor. Brine is often added to imported tuna. * March is expected to bring larger supplies of fresh produce, Slightly larget* amounts of snap beans, beets, broccoli, caullfloy-cora, cucumbers, eggplant, lettuce, mushrooms, green slight decrease hi wholesale ions. peppm“s, radishes, spinach wwmar weather occurs in the growing areas. California aspar-agus is now arriving in small quantities at high prices. March will bring larger sup-plies of avoca^. bananas and strawbeiTles. i^efe iie larger amounts of apples and pears than last year at this time. As of February 1, controlled atmosphere apple holdings were 33 per cent of the total against 7 per cent in 1968. this shows the increase in this of storage which aflordf. top quality apples long after those fiW regular cold storage have Spinach and Sardinas Arrange layers of canned chopped spinach, sliced hard-pooked eggs and Maine sardines in Indivlduri ramekins. Sprinkle with lemon juice. Cover with more spinach. Top with lightly butter, degrees F. prika. Sprinkle with pa- Fr*sh—Tasty CHTTERUIIQS 4t 99° Beef ’n’ Perk Sale! Armour Star PORK SAUSAGE 3... 89° 100% PURE Ground Beef Fresh Ground Hourly 3>-99° Potars Skinlass HOT DOGS 39; PORK CHOPS BONELESS ROLLED Rib Roast 69 1 Florida Seodlois GRAPE- 1 FRUIT ^ 9 m dot., 1' Froeh GREEK ONIONS S': 1' Frash Eg RADISHES picfl.5 1 * Crtep HmN I LETTUCE i 1.25° U.S. No. 1Rlp« m BANANAS i BONELESS ROLLED HHH, Rump Roast /8 ^ARMOUR STAR ranriARir 2,.29‘ mfWtOWB FOOD CENTER 706 W. HURON BEER-WfNE-L We Roseive the Righi te Limit Quantifies Ne«e Sold to Dealers or Minere THESE PRICES GOOD THURSDAY, FRIDAY and UTURDAY / “Do-lt-Yourseir Projeds -X Save You Money . and Can Be Fun! For all of you “Do-It-Yourselfers", here is a tip . start your project by using^. The Pontiac Press Classified Ads to buy that Bond Saw, Electric Drill, Electric Sander, Floor Polisher, Tool Kit or even d Power Jack Hammer. Use Pontiac Press Classified Ads to trade or sell your tools. You'll find that you will get Quick Results at a very low cost. » FE 2-8181 The PenSae Press Classified Department THE POXTIAC PRESS, THlLTlttDAy. MAR6H 7, 1068 C-—-7 Plump.. Tender.. Juicy WHOLE For Only U. GRADE i SLICED FRESH ... LEAN Jjn*r...D«||clowo '3g™ da« TWjr ------------ CHICKEN Wings T«ndar “ CHICKEN backs and WECifg IOLOGM IPORK steak, "♦ 39! Prices Effective Thrcugh Sun., March 10,1063 ) ;\ Yonr I Choice Lb. Our Own fORK SAUSAGE Lean-Tender ^4 TORK HamiKon - Faim Froth, Orada i LARGE EGGS ^Dol G«tYour SEALTEST ICE CREAM ; RLUE RIRRON MARGARINE "^CHEF’S DELIGHT CHEESE SPREAD 1-u. MWf Cln. II 2-u. QQc u rf .y_y HUXWELL instant HOUSE COFFEE BIG lOOZ. JAR J-lmlMl SEALTEST or BORDEN’S HALF’n’HALT “banquet PINE CONE TOMATOES No.jes Can 10' FOOD CLUB » TOMATO JUICE 19 WEAR-EVEN ^ a' Aluminum Foil 19 presh^e^^^ MISP CARROTS UniN«ISMpply| BLUE RIBBON . _ , Sponge Mops 99L Hunt's "•r :.!> vruow aiNG *^EACH halves RUNT’S Yellow CRng; Halves or Sliced PEACHES RO. _2!4^ CAN PEOPLE’S W FOOD TOWN ONIONSilO FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS THE PKEbS, THUKSDAl, AIAHIH 7. i\m Central in tndohesia JAKARTA, IiMkfwsla UR-Gen. James F. Collins, commander-iiMMef of the U.S. Army in the Pacific, flew into Jakarta today for a twsi74 rONTIAC pJunior Editors Quiz on—-- I THE COAST GUARD- QUESTION: What are the’HuUes of the Coast Guard? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: The Coast Guard motto “always prepared" de-scribes the spirit of this valuabre hfMghTfdie armed aei vlces.-Coast Guardsmen are always ready to aid people and ships in distress on the sea or inland waters, no matter what the weather or the r^k and no matter to what nation the people who need this help belong. Ike sendee started in ITIf as the “Revenue Marine.” TUs was ear first naval force. The mission of the first !• “cotters,” as coast guard vesseb are called, was to eliminate smuggling and piracy. . We illustrate one of these little ships in (B). At first, life saving stations on the coast were operated privately, but^the Revenue Cotter Service took this over InHTtridl «uch Mrviea being combined in 1915 under the name “United States Coast Guard.” Cout Guard lifeboats buck huge waves to rescue distressed sailors (A); their cutters check on and report dan-'gerous drifting icebergs (D). Helicopters now play a very important part in Coast Guard rescue Work. The men are trained at centers in Cape May, N.J., and Alameda, Calif., and future officers take courses at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn. FOR YOU TO DO: What watersport is the most fun? Boats? They’re great—but then you have to have a boat. Swimming? That’s it! All you need is your own skin. Learn to swim, not only for the copl fun of it, but also you can be your own coast guard, “always prepared.” .1. VATICAN CITY (ft - The thesis on divine revelation which divided last fall’s Roman Catholic Ecumenical Council has been revised and the new draft approved by a q>ecial commission. The council press office did not disclose the text of the new d^ in Wednesday. Tlie new draft will be submitted to the full council after it reconvenes in September A a * The thesis expands on Catholic teaching that both scripture and ^dition are the sources of God’s leveMled^ifortt^'T^jtest^^ ■ only scripture. __________L___ Douse Ship Hold Fire SOUTHAMPTON, England (fV-Firemen were called to a small blaze aboard the Sl,000-ton Queen Mary at Southampton docks yesterday. The fire, in number two utes. 'Youth Has No Cause' MEMPHIS, Tenn. (f»-Calling; today’s youth ‘-a generation without a cause,” a Methodist btadiop says the church is not presenting them enough of a challenge. Bishop James W. Henley of Jacksonville, Fla., told delegates to the Southeastern Jurisdictional Council of the Methodibt Church that “youth aroui^ the world is thing is going to get them, , and whoever gets tiwm has control of the world.” CURTIS MATHES rvnui M, V SPtCIAL SAlI-4-Way CoMbieetiwi SYLVAN STEREO & T.V. SALES - 4VIVAN CENTEB ,, .». .—— 2363 Oidianl Lake Road HiOMt 6t2-0199 “They are a generation without a cause,” the bishop said Wednesday night. “Somebody or some- Vatican Text onDIvind^Revelation TV Audiehce Rafingt Hit in Congress WASHINGTON (* - A former president of the National Broadcasting Co. says the television industry has been led into a nev«--never land by its slavish acceptance of audience ratings as an accurate measure of the viewing public. Sytveeter (Pat) Wea^ ahook his head in serrew ct he told a House Commerce subcommittee yesterday of the lengths to.uMeh the Jedastry has gone in Ms reliaace oa the audience Japanese Empress Is 60 TOKYO (UPB—Empress Nagako celebrated ho* (NHh birthday yesterday with a family luncheon with Emperor Hirohito, C;rown Prince Akihito and Prince Yoshi at the Imperial Palace. U.8. production of paper and paperboard in 1992 climbed to about 37A million tons, i ^mil-lion ton increase over 1961. Consumption in the UJ. also In-creai^ 2 millldo tons to 42 'mil- “It’s Just one step from diidc-en entrails,” said Weaver, alluding to the pagan practice of forecasting events by studying the spread out remains slain birds. Weaver, now television director for an advertising agency, testi-859^ 1899®^ mittee had beard officials of aH three major television networks tell of the importance (d the ratings in their (^atkms. "I’m greatly puzded,” said Chairman Oren Harris, D-Aric., that this great, important industry should be so dependent on this service and so satisfied with For All Your. PoinHng Noods... Visit SHERWni-WILLUUIS 71 W«W Hwwi S». ri 4-2571 FMIU* ll*U - W»-1*W SHaiVS mmm imw imm' Pontiac State Bonk Bldg. Golf Course Has Birdie Before Its First Golfer NAPLES, Fla. (if - The new Big Cypress Golf and (Country Club h»e bad a “birdie” before the first golfer reached the fi tee. The course was redes >y Hr- architect eagle’s nest discovi ea while groupd U.S. Steps Aside for Viet Nam, NaVy SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP) - The U.S. 7th Fleet has turned over patrol duty along Sopm Viet Nam's j coast to the ygdng Vietnamese; navy. Vietnameed radar stations and ir-type„vessek KStect igo Dlnh Diem’s Ameri-can-bapied regime from Communist ^rrilla reinforcements com-ing/ia the South China Sea. / ★ * * Although the 7th Fleet surm-dered routine work to South Viet Nam, military sources said Wadndaday, it still will be able to rush aid to South Viet Naip if nei^ibering^ r^^munist powers, sudi as Red China, threaten Vietr security. TlpaBMffTOeTrgKt anfl rigM tor spring Hart Schaffner& Marx Tempawate Suits Tempawate is HS&M’s ^'thermo-dynamic” miarvel, an all worsted midweight suit that’s right for any temperature ht»n SO* to 75*... oot^ when y it’s hot, warm when it’s not’ Weather-wise, Tempawate’s right for spring and a good part of every year. Style-wise, too, for HS&M tailors Tempawate in youthful, pared-down, natural lines... in. 1963’s hew lighter tones. Try one on today. From $85.00 WE PAY YOUR PARKING SAGINAW at LAWRENCE, Open Monday ond Friday Nighft Until 9 PAA. BIRMINGHAM - 272 W. MAPLE Open Thursday and Fridoy Nights Until ^ PM THE STYLE CORNER OF PbNTIAC PREPARE YOUR HOME FORSPRIMG! LUIffiER-BUIUHNG SUPPUES PUIMBING-HEATIIIG OfCTHKM. Um our wide choice of Wost Coosf Lumber to lend natural beauty to your recrQption area. i WEST COAST FRAMIHG LUMBER Thousands of piocas, Mllllona of foot all cartifiad andmd yt WICKES' Lew Pricoa. PREmUM WIRE SPRUCE ^x6r8TliraTf^.l.ii^^ ..... *92" . *93" . 93" 2xl,tfliniimLM«lkt.. 2xt0,12 and 14-FI. UniHit PREMIUM DRY WNIYE FIR 2x4^8thni28-Ft.Langttia FulllW’Thiok 1BBIBD.PT. .*100" 2x4,8* Long Studs ..89" REHIUM BOOGUS FIR PRE-CUT STUBS 2xl,1’tWU.( ...*99»* WESTERN PIRE SHEHinRC Kiln Driod Suifoead 4 Sidos Full 25/32* Thick .1x8 Boeitls .......■•(•■tii* • a 11 1x12B6aids.............. 1x8 Bhiplap-No. I............ PREmUM DQOGUS FIR IBBIBB 7x8f11Iii7|9^IT.1JiI1^ .noT" 2x8,8 M 28^. LftigHis......... 2x18,/thru 28-Ft. Lengths .. 2x12, 8 thru,2b-Ft. Lengfht. /... W JlsaiilHy Dhcoiid. EnBHmADiuNM Boun AkphoH impiagiwsled 28/32"-2x8Y->ldint....k. ...86** FIR PLYWOOD SHEATNIM (Cartifiad Grada Maifcod) 9/ir»-«rtOO.............................. ^ 1l9pM.srMru............................AM 4/,//,................ 2” a9pes.urnwu...........................tiO .......... 3** ........... H»»-4rtC09-P|p/....................... 3** npss.srMie.................... %”-4xt 00 Ptotgedl Side (Teaeh Sanded)... ^ Npet.srawu........................ BATHROOM SETS MIHTUId WATEB OLOSm WfouMfoWu Eoanaunf|^yg rNraoiabi ttoaiir...... VOaal Ifoa 14" ...W" ....MO" kHVMIUniB ' iraoundVMlIy (Cast Iran) Ltaa Trim......... aouarMTtuu WbHa •21" ^rcmt Khan IS" MAMMA 2lx1SVMily(eWM) Laaa Trim......... Oabr...... •28" , Ml™ M3™ RlfiOWM IM3-1H MOW South of ROMEO OKRi I1S8 to R188 Mondty ftmi SaMoy CASH AMR CARBT PRICES - Rppwpt DoOwtty 8mtof, Boatonable RatM Mnabiaf, Haatiiif, EtaetriGal 752-3591 752-3504 K THE PONTIAC PJIESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1968 C—» Day li, Day Oil Yoa C|i Always Bay Evsry Saecail Dalloa of VKTOIPAIIT Romney Provides Details on Capital Outlay Budget for VICTOI FAINT cmms 158 N. Saginow Op*n Mm. M. 9 #• 9 OHmm Day* 9 .1* 6 rCloa*4 lrado7> 998 W. HunM Opp. T«l-HiifM CMl«r Or** Mm. m4 Fri. 9 t* 9. Days 9 t* 6 (CloMd Snaday; 4518 N. Woodwork ■m. is and 14 Mila Rda., 11.0. Or*" Mm. and Fri. 9 to 9 Oriian Oayr > t« « ~ (Chnd Snudojl LANSING m - Gov. George Romney yeeterday sent the I^r isla'iure a detailed account of his proposed $2B.4«iiDion capital outlay budget for the 1MM4 fle-cal jw. The figare is |t.l nOIlM more than la the state's eaptal outlay badget for tte carreat yew and is in addMoa to seme $14 millioB asked by tiw ger^ , eraw fw tanaiediate pkaallai ’ for state projects. The kcdgeHn^odes some HSJ million fw education, an increase at $5.9 million over current appropriations. I 0*0 ‘ ! Romney’s capital outlay plan for the next fiscal year also includes 10 major projects to be consisted a^ a total cost of 919.T minuip, continuation of 10 othws fw $14 milliwi and swne $4.4 million to start U new project^. IW goveraw expiataied the projects represent “oar most pressiag needs jH this tfane.’- j The money k called I o r in Romacy’s reqaeoted budget of $147 millioa fw the aext fiscal : year. I In addition to the 3$ projects I scheduled fw completion, continuation w beginning, the Romney Iproposal asks for $1 million to be matbbed by community college ^districts for construction and $1.1 hot '*'■ . I * * * . HALEDON, N.J. (APi—Adozen| The govemw also asked law-homes and 10 cars received aj makers to approve a third state quick and splotchv paint job-!ofnce building in the capital cotor red—Wednesday when a kpt-'are^, and broaden bonding pow-tie of paint in a nearby industrial ers fw state park development plant poRjed its top. by gs s nfliiion. __Tt WM raining at the time, and between the rain and quick hose Firm Molces' Big ^ven of the projects listed ^ *15le governor arc on the list punt wnnhed off Wore *** * * * enrtier. will, one cluinge. An official of Alied Chemical Michigan College of Mining and . Corp.’s Harmon Colors Plant said | TedmologK would be given $150,-: a sidety disc, designed to open;ooo fw starting a new $2.5 million' [at 38 pounds pressure, opened I library instead of $150,000 to' instead at 42 poun^.’The bright I start expansion of itt heating red paint spewed' up and outj plant. Ithrought a vent pipe. ‘ ---------------— ’Iliere were no injuries. Poice said the paint gushed „ Rneein about 200 feet into the air and 800,000 Viwted Russia was carried the wind across Says Intourist the houses and cars. | ' ---------------- MOSCOW (AP)-The chairman To Talk About NATO iof the Soviet tourist agency says' that 800,000 foreign tourists and BONN (UPP — Heinrich von businessmen, including 17,000' Brentano, parUamentary leader, Americans, visited the Soviet Un-j of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’sjion last year. Clvistian Democratic party, will Vladimir Ankudinov. Intourist go to Washington March IT fw chief, said the visitors came from talks on NATO and European ;go countries, and the largest problems, the party announced groups, he said, included 75,0001 yesterday. Nqrwegiails and 18,000 Swedes. I UTEST STYLE ___CofiMiMntal Suits—Naw Colors 28" TO 49" SUMM[R! TRIMMER! S ACKS 3" 9*»». gs5 Soap Tab Dratt SMris 1»» to 3*» UHIIUTS Consaryativ* or ' CofitinMital JN OiS 8“ CONN’S SWEATER SALE Cardigans Zips I Slipoms T" CLOTHES 71 N.Saginaw ’TOKYO lAV-Kiiig Savang Vat-jliana of Laos wis greeted in Peking yesterday by Red Chinese | .President Liu 9iao WANTED Royal Oak St Mary face in this a managed a 57-43 victory last al|^ at Pootiae Bladdiaitos J CintriL hot Tan WRfDsr (M) assdi a frtondljr ton(a). I. Wagner is somaaded by Myars (21) and Garry But* Tigers Desire Backup Player at Short, 3rd Vetr Aortoio, Veal, Buddin Seeking Shot in Majors Again Br BRUNO L. KEARM a posithm near the infield sad decided to make a few mental •bservatioBB af a problem he wiU have to resolve by the totae the Tigers are ready to head Borto. Who was going to win the bffth of utility man? The Tigers have three candidates and Scheffing must decide which one will be best to spell Us infieklers for 35 or 40 games this None of toe torae, Don Buddin, Reno Bertoia or Coot Veal, are roddes, but Just like rookies they are all bkMing to get back on the major lea^ roster. The three are on the Syracuse roster for 1963, which will be managed by former Tiger catcher Bob Swift. AT SHORTSTOP The position which has Scheffing thinking about aasistance is sh^top. “I don’t think Giico (Ferndaiidez) can go 160 games, and I’ve got to have aomeone who can fill in for him once in a while witoout* hurtihg the sam." Fernandez, who became the flrst Tiger shortstop ever to Ut 30 homers in one season, jdayed in 141 games last year. Cleveland in a mid-wiater deaL had 148 games with the ‘Mbs. What Scheffing is thinking is that both Chko and Phillipa are good for 140 games eadi Wid the idayer he decides to keep as utility man wiD have about 40 games between toe two positions. Ub appears satikied with Dick McAuliffe and Jake Wood aa the second base duo, although McAuliffe is alao versatile enough to move around if necessary-★ ★ ★ Scheffing would like to keep McAuliffe and Wood strictly tac--second base purposes and far toto~ renoB he has toe Tigers’ greatest keystone a acker, Charley Gehringer, working with the pair at tola portion. Of the three utiUty candidatea. VeU is considered to be best de-fenslvdy. Bertoia has the atrouf-est bat and has had experience at the three infield positiona and is supposed to be a good fielder but only fair with the bat. Abe aronad for third bate duties b Doe Wert, see tone bitthig star and most vshmble pbyer at Denver, bat prone to Buidag emrs. Wert bas fleU-hig averages ef J21, IM aai JM la the zMasrs. The (dumces of the TIgerB making a trade for anotoer tafielder are somewhat remote so Scheffing b resigniiig himself to the fact he must make a dwlce from toe three candidates he has planned for Friday with more of. toe “varsity rostar” expected to (day and gk warned up for Saturday’s etoibition season opener against toe Minnesota ’Twins at Orlando. Sunday, the Florida “home” opener wiU be held U HeUejr field with Gtoringer, a Tiger eee* ond baseman for 19 yeafi, going behind the pUte to take the open*. pitch from i-BiMtond mayor William Loftin. Michigan in AAotMeot EVANSTXMf, m. (AP)-Midii* gan, unbeaten in conference dual competition, b favored to da-toroM Iowa to the Big Ten Wreetltog Giampiontoipe at Nortowestern University’i McGaw Han and Saturday. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 7. 1968 C—11 Church Squads ieekHonofS With Trinity Baptist salting ! away the loop crown last week, rthe YMCA-Church basketball jljleague’s senior division will turn 11 its attention to individual awards ■ land the runnerup race this Fri-•I lay. i * w w ■, I With All Saints Episcopal upset-jting rdnnerup Macedonia Baptist last Friday, 4M9 in overtime, -'Trinity-grabbed tlie crown with |an 83-2S triumph over Cenjiral I Methodist. ' ; The chaitipions .will meet Mace-1 [Ionia Friday hoping to complete| I an undefeated sea^n. Should ; they do it, All Saints could tie > for the second spot by whipping ! First Baptist. r Tke la^er squad also pulled an upset last week by pinning a 41-47 loss on fourtii place First Congregational. The other game saw 8t. Paul Methodist lU ISth straight loss, Ct-3t. Oakland Park will have its last ;hance for a win against First Congregational at I p.m. Friday. St. Paul wiU meet Central at 7:15 p.m., Trinity and Macedonia will play the 1:30 contest and All Saints will tangle with First Baptist in the 9:45 nightup. * * w Following the final game Friday, Lenworth Miner of Macedonia and Central’s Tom Smith will receive sportsmanship trophy “ds and the championship team and individual trophies will be given to the Trinity titlists. standinos W L V ijr 13 • Ut BaptUt loot* 11 1 at. Paul CLEARS BOARD — Mike Pope (16) grabs one of hla 20 rebounds in last night’s encounter with Hartland. Larry Warhus (40) vainly tries to match Pope’s 6-foot-5 reach. Ride Lavoie (3) is a bystander to the backboard action. League Swim Finals Set at Kimball Friday Pontiac Table Tennis Capl. Barber IT 31 PraBcll Pual IS H DarrU R'Ur N «3 Kenorrlj 33 13 Club 33 MM Preatop 33 U BaaMan'i M M Clark a Anita Print. 33 W Croekar .. „ Papat-Oain M H Conn. Utah. 34 14 A * W 33 33 Buattnar " ~ Tanlcht't Sctwdula-Capitol aa. Anita; Birmingham Seaholm, a heavy favorite to capture the state (^lass A swimming crown, will jump the first hurdle in its title bid Friday at 7:30 p^. in the finals of the Eastern Michigan League meet at Royal Oak Kimball. * * ★ Seaholm tankers dominated last week'’9 preliminary runs and are favored to go all the way in quest of their second straight state titleu The Birmingham crew shared the crown with Crosse Pointe last year. Ihree sdiaols — Seaholm, ing include Pontiac Northern, Birming^iam Groves, Southfield, Madison Heists, Utica and Livonia Franklin. NEW TIRES V,$. Royals All SiBos In Stock. FREE MOUNTING mmd WHEEL BALANCINO. Authorized Factory road hazard guarantee adjust- AIJTO DISCOUNT Comer East Blvd. on the Southwest Comer Open ItH kM. to I P.M. DaHy - Rhone fg 4-BI76 vived the _EML prellmlnartes last week. Four new records wow^ to preliminary events. Rayl Repeats on All-Big 10 Michigan's Bunti Also Selected NY Rangers Turn Toug h on Chiago By The Associate/ Press New York’s Rangers, a most obliging bunch of playmates for Chicago most of this season, turned tough at the tsorst possible time for the Black Hawks. * * * The Rangers had politely rolled over, and played dead the first 12 times they played the Black Hawks this season, losing 10 and tying two. And then, with Chicago going into the stretch and hustling for its first National Hockey League regular season title in 37 years, the whipping boy turned. The Rangers swept from behind a two-goal deficit Wednesday night, trimmed the Black Hawks for the second straight time, 5-2, and cut Chicago’s leading margin to two points. CLOSED GAP Becond-place Toronto closed up with a 4-0 shutout of Boston in the only other game played. ★ ♦ ♦ That left Chicago with 75 poinU and seven games to go. Toronto has 73 potots with ei^t left, including a home and hotoe let With the Hawks. WWW The muscular Hawks had a 2-0 lead on goals by Bobby Hujl and A1 MacNell when the Rangers fliddenly caught fire midway throujdi the middle period. Don McKenney was the big gun. scoring two goals and assisting on another. His 200th career goal tied it early in the third period,, he sent Vic Hadfleld to alone with the winner and then scored another himself. Camille Henry scored the other two Ranger goals, one on a power play A Hw 45, 50 sb4 75-M.P. 1M2 MiRCURYS s«silsbl« KuNGffAMi BOAT mm the other into the open net with 2f seconds to go. . Stan Mikita picked up two assists for ChioaRo and Andy Bathgate three for the Rangers. T]^y are tied for second to the individual scoring race behind Detroit’s Gordie Howe. 4r W W In Toronto, veteran goalie Johnny Bower r^rded his first shuL out of the season. Red Kelly scored twice. Frank Mahovlich and Dick PuYf once each for the winning Leafs. Boston is at Montreal to the only game scheduled tonight. Emmanuel Baptist Earns Share of YMCA Men's Lead Emmanuel Baptist tied Lake Orion Baptist for first place to the YMCA Men’s Basketball League as the. result of a 4541 upset this week. The Emmanuel cagers managed the slim win on the 13-point efforts of Geary Spangler afld Jim Horein. Paul Grammer txt • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH • 912 S. Woodward Phono Ml 7-1211 Milford; Lakers Lose Kettering, Wolves to Play _Swi.»rlond Win, ™. STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)— ^ English teams Switzerland outskated and outshotLams in group !a wiU compete England today and won the open-'for the world championship. By DON, VOGEL Waterford Kettering and host Clark.ston play tonight for the right to meet Grand Blanc in the District Class A basketball championship game. The Bolscats advanced to Saturday night’s final by ousting Milford 56-35 last night. Flint St. Mary bounced Waterford .Our Lady of the Lakes out of Gass D play in the other contest. / his baskets were scored in this loominal help from his teammates, manner while the other two I The game was marked by nu-were hit from outside. merous floor violations and poor Grand Blanc, co-champion of,P“***’ the Big Eight Conference, also is I Whe» ‘h® 'taal buiVer sound- making its debut in Class A. Like Milford and Clarkston, the Genesee County school had been Class ~ until last fall. George Sharpe tried hard to keep. Friday’s Class D champion- ship game from becoming an alL missed opportunities and faulty UHITED TIRE SERVICE DOES IT AGAIN MURDERS TIRE PRICES BRAND NEW MTiNa 6i70x15 BRAND NEW Tubel«ss White Walls . THIS WEEK IJIxU.... 1.00x14 ONLY 0.00x14 .... 0.00x14 FACTORY 4^*' 137” REMOLDS NoCappabl*Tli»N»od«d liiiriwiwiTiilr. ■' JLJ£| iiiwiM. iitj ^ | Iwt Tin M W ItM. to a IM | fpoRTirr»rpoitf$ri coiPKTi-RfwTsi^irKiiM'rivrii “ ■■ ........!? ^ ^97 sT/w.nF: MON. tiirw FBI. 'M *> SAT. 'til 6-ClOStD SUN. UNITED TIRE SERVICE •WHfRt PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED-NOT QUAIITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC i Neither Clarkston nor Kettering has been a Class A district finalist. 'This is Kettering’s second year. Clarkston moved into the top class after .several years as a “B’ school. The game will start at 7:30.^__________________________ Milford gained a 5-2 lead in the openiiy; three minutes, but that was to be the Redskins' only threat. They went scoreless for the next four minutes and fell behind 13-5. This was' one of two scoring droughts experienced by Milford which was making its Class A I tournament debut. In the second half, the Redskins were held without a point for six minutes and 11 sconds. Meanwhile, the Bobcats were building an insurmountable .46-25 ad. John James of Grand Blanc took scoring honors for the night with 21 points. Tom Sheffler topped Milford with 11. Grand Blanc opened in a zone defense but quickly switched to a man-to-man after falling behind. This effectively stifled the Redskins who hit only three of 18 field goal attempts in the first quarter. CONTROLLED BOaKdS Bob Kuch, Grand Blanc's 6-4' center, and 6-2 forward Pat jl^ascio controlled the backboards. Milford was badly outrebounded In the first half and made only slight improvement in this department in the last two quarters. Flint affair. But this Waterford Our Lady forward received only James was very successful with a drive-in shot. Seven of '63 DyRimic 88 4-DOOR SEDAN ^2588 *68?? ’62 Oldsmobile JETHRE Mni Cm^ Beautiful 1 Demo. DISCOUNT OF *700 '12 N MUs HOUDAT SEDAN Demo. Fully Equipped *3^ *63 Cadillac c Coupe *490 Down *127 Perik: Brand — "Now F-85 CUTLASS COUPE HIM* SPECIAL CUTLASS nATUaiSi • V-S CsrtoraHr lum l*M Ml Jrm/$ I *^•4 WWMwSWMton •Mmn %695 N«w 1963 7-85 *2,188 *55= 12F-I5 0MS CONVERTIBLE • Just One Left • %450 The W-l-D-E-S-T Selection of Cars JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC 280 S. SAGINAW STREET ed, St. Mary was scrambling to protect it^ slim lead. The Wildcats will meet Flint Michigaa School for the Deaf in the title game. have clear sailing to the basket only to be by-passed, by a teammate holding the ball. An 8 for 22 mark at the stripe speaks for iteelf. TOP SCORER Sharpe carried the Our Lady attack in the first half with 10 points as Uie Lakers fell behind n,eLakers lost because of free throw shooting. Several times a Laker would the second' half, but still added six more points. Dave Ottman picked up for Sharpe in the second half when he scored 16 of his 12 points. “Sharpe played a.great game For us,’’ said coach Bob Mine-weaser. "He was our only scoring threat in the first half and he had to do the rebounding.______ ! *' ★ * I “They wouldn’t pass him the! ball in the second half and this' hurt us. I would say he played very well after being sick all week.” The Lakers stayed within three to six points of St. Mary in the second half, but they could never catch up. With a minute to play, the Wildcats held a 43-35 lead. GRAND BI.ANC i.1«> i c mr_ J.D«Lude 4 3-4 11 ---- Matclo 1 4 1 I WardT Kuch 3 0-3 4 Flynn LMdholDLJ 1-0 1 Barjifi a 0-1 3 0-1 ■. ______ 0 t-5 sl aIrh'' 4 ON THE BALL — Bespectacled Bob Kilborun, of Ortonville, was only interested in the ball in last night’s, match between Ortonville and Royal Oak St. Mary. Mike Connelly (22) is r about to make a one-hand stab for the ball on behalf of the Irish. t MILFORD (Ml 0 3-3 3 Pet soi Tatali 33 13-30 M Total! 11 ■CORE BT QUARTERS □rand Blanc " " " MUtoi^a --- Rcid 15 15 10 11-50 1 0 10 10—35 »T. MART 40) WOLL (3»> • FO FT TP FO FT TP 1 3-5 15 Brandt 3 0-3 ___ 1 3-3 4 Sbarpi ' ' " LaBaria 0 3-4 14 Mettfei . - Richard 3 4-4 10 D.OUm'n 4 4-0 13 Martlnua 0 0-1 0 Boryi 0 0-0 0 Wood 0 0-0 0 Beau'i'd 0 d)-0 0 Total! iT 11-11 43 Total! If 0-33 3li ■COBE BT QUARTERS Flint 8t. Mary •* " Waterier- d OU. . 0 4-10 It ..10 10 13 11—43 I 14 10—30 Close Games Dot Tourney Results [___The competition was closer in the area district basketball playoffs Wednesday, iiight and a-ma-jor upset resulted. Unheralded Royal Oak Kimball played near perfect basketball and upset Detroit Pershing 39-32, at Fcrndale to move into a district title round there. The Knights will meet Highland Park, a 7145 victor over Hamtramek, in opener at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Another district final took shape at Farmington where Dearborn Fordson and Dearborn won to enter the Saturday njght final game. Fordson whipped Dearborn I^wrey, 67-43; and Garden City fell to Dearborn's Pioneers, 38-|34. I CLOSE GAMES j Three close games saw Davison edge Port Huron, 63-62; Fen-!ton slip past Brighton in over- . jtime, 43-42; and Hazel Park nip-^‘ Fitzgerald, 51-47. ' '' I Davison and Port Huron 1i^ -see-sawHeontest at winners managed to build a six-point lead after three quarters, 49-43, and it held up. Charles McCarter scored 31 for the winners while Chuck Ingram hit 27 for Port Huron. Fenton and Brighton were* tied 38-all at the end of regulation time but the 'Tigers scored a field goal and three fouls to the Bull-twinhni lings field goal and two fouls to take the one-point decision in the extra period. Hazel Park In-oke a 43-43 deadlock with Fitzgerald with three minutes left in its contest on a field goal by Bill Daniel and kept the lead to the end. Daniel’s 19 markers led all scorers. , ' ' In the Kimball upsel^vi^o^ the Knights madr vpr^ tew mistakes and coifimjKra a minimum ot pej'sbi^''louls to lead all the ^y ovir Pershing, the D c t ii^ity League cham-ijpitr was a big victory for us we’re very proud of With guards Lloyd Harper and; Dick Sanderson guiding the Knights’ controlled offense, the winners built a 24-12 halftime margin. Harper led all scorers with 10 points. ^ I boys,” a harox coacji beginning next -theVen* ngSl- Tuesday and continuing through SERVICE CENTERS UN.SUKPASStDI! BRAKES RELINED ONE HOUR SERVICE ALL FORDS • CHEV. AND PLYMOtmt-OTHEinj;s. CARS Ite.VS guaranteed i year $T95 SPRINGS Rfbuilt NlV-1|0«6„ HtRCULIS SHOCKS sy95 linULLO FHEI f um I DAiiy I a. m. 0* 9 f. m. • Sat. | a. m. 0# 6 p. ». 973 Orchard Lokt Rood (N«or Ttlsgroph) FE 3-9426 I GOLD CREST MUFFLERS BRAKES Highland Park had a big three going for it and led, 58-38 after three periods. John Trapp^77, Sam Mims l? and Bejiiy Jack-son 17 for the winn^psf Stan Janik and Niemer Hamood combined for 43 points in the Dearborn Fordson triumph. Dearborn 1^ its winning margin in thejmfst half at Farmington and ®j)el(l on to defeat Garden City. Swimming Lessons Offered by YMCA Swim lessons for six to eight- » year-olds win J^_offered-by"the —I r c May. The TnSrurfibn7~ortilcir^s offered to member children for |8 per class and non-member children for |10 per class, will begin at 4 p.m. on the designated days. FoUowkif is a list of the classes: C»«d BeKionerB--llarch 13. 14. II. 31. 30. 30. April 3. 4. Boys Beclnners—April •. 10. II. 17. ». 34. 30. Iter 1. Girls Btffi&Mrs—April •. 11. 10. If. 33. 35. 30. Mty 3. Boys Advanced—M«y 0. f. 13, If. 30. 33. COME MDSEE US attho PONTIAC MALL SEE OUR • BOATS • MOTORS • TIAIURS CRUISE OUT BOirSlPK 63 E. WALTON FE 8-4402 hn McAuliffe, 229 CARS MUST BE SOLD WITH TREMENDOUS SAVINGS TO YOa Take Advantage of These Terrific Deals Now While We Hove SPRING FEVER See Our Showroom Display of Spring Fun /63 Fords and lBoats FORD, Inc. Ooklond Avenue FE 5-4101 Farab faral thins . ■ < young men’s slael(| 6.98 For that slIck-as-a-whTstle look you likt in dress slacks — sliver slim "thins" in a wash 'n' wear Fare! and polyester blend. H" bottoms and'adjustable inside waist tabs. Dark olive, light olive and black. Waist sizes 28-36. OUR PONTIAC AAAU STORE ... OPEN NIONT TO ♦ P.IR. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 7. 1968 Ski Competition Close at Boyne Mt. BOYNE FALLS (UPI) - Just IS leparaiies the two top money win-oert on the Intemstionsl Profes-ilpnsl SU Racers Asar. istytiilt when the world’s leading pros compete in their last race of the season here tomorrow at Boyne Adriffl Duvillard, a French ace, has won |6,IIS in 10 races this season and Ernst Hinterseer, I960 Austrian Olympic gold medal winner, has ww 11,420. AusMan Anderl MoHerer ranks third with 16,071 in piiae money. OVERSTOCK CLEARANCE! Ref. $50.00 Limited NOW ONLY Quantity *29" SMRLim naOE and HOMY SHOP 20 L UwfWM ra 1-7049 PARK PRn IN RIAR Weather Can't Stop Jumpers atfirampian Annual Championihip Meet This Weekend; Areas Open This weak’s weather, not conducive to good skiing In the couittv, has not deterred Grampian Contain from staging its annual Southeastern Michigan Ski Jum^g championships this weekend. Sene of tte heat Jwnpers h the Midwest eHI take eH regardless sf fair ar fool weather, area officials vowed Wednesday night. Earl Hill will returrt\to. defend his title. Hill won laik^ year’s avant with a jump just undw r* feet and indicaUoas airll^et tury figure will Sunday. GUEST OF HONOR - Swiss ski instructor Maurice Schnyder may show off some more of his tricks this Sunday at Mt. Holly whari that area resort has its spring ski festhraL The fow European instructors at the resort will be guests of honor, phis the ski patrol members and various winners in the ski races at Mt. Holly this winter. Costumes will be the order of the day and iwizes will go to the best adorned skiers. The competition wfli be|^ at 2 p. m. on the Grampian Mountain jump. There will be an admission charge to qiectators. Nor has tte warns wet westhsr diseenraged Mt HoOy from having a Spring SU Fes-il Soaday in which cestemes, State Ski Conditions ICUT9TAI/ 9T.. T__________ ' tnAsWaLOnS. BIO M. lUDIItn: U DM*. 1 MW. * *** «°«X tlknt. * “*•* BOTW^^.._Boy«« U-4t bM#. '•xeeUMt.' TS nUA I Oooa M *xe«l BTAI, OkdlUi It bM*. 1 n« CWlMItlTB OORMBR. mnktori: SPRIM SMim ... is fun of Alpinw ... join the gay crovwi ofound ike p prano • . • enjoy hoi drinks arid mocks . .. enjoy your-lelft SKI RESORT 10 Milns WmI of Pontiac on M-S9 MT.. m*i*ad: M b«M. 'aKTUn Ro^mmoa: I bM*. 1-4 n J-U J itbM*. OOXMAW mLLS. Wwt Bruch: ( b« MW. Oood to •xc«U«Bt. I MAJOR MT.. cure: * bM*. t a* Vtry food. BNOW8NSKB MT.. CUr* Coontr: I bM*. 3 Dew. Pair to good. I MT PREDBRICIC Prcdult: K-ll bai >l-t n*w powd*r. ncelicnt. I ORATUNO PARK. Or«yllBt; M b*i U new. BiceUent. SYLVAN KNOB, Oarlerd: ll-U b« 10-13 D*w: Excellent. I PONRO RRSORT, OMalB*: S-lt Mti II new. BaceWeat. Mie irr- mm; s-m boM. s au. v* Mg will be the order of the day. Conditions are reported fair to good at that area. Pine Knob Grampian. Dryden rqiorts snSw on all sknies with a thin crust. Alpine Valley, Mt. Brighton, „.,4|Mt. Christie and Summit will be closed until conditions improve. TONI SAILER TONI SAILER’S ADVICE AND HEADS FOR A FALL. Practice but Don't Panic Skiing Tips by Toni Sailer TIRESVILLE U.S.A. DISCOUNT CENTER Opposite Tel-Huron 60 so TELEGRAPH RD 333-7971 All those weii^t shifts, shoulder shifts and all that pcdaworiE .Imust look rather omfusing on paper- It isn’t on toow. I am sure you’ll grasp the idea quickly, learning from your own intakes and those of your fellow students. The average stu-dcm gets the knack witfiln three ne\main thing is practiee I practiee. First yen’D ly should begin on an easy slopelthree days or so, move on to a and on hard-packed snow. Once steeper slope. Then on to deep you feel safe there, say after! snow. Caberfa* Ski Area Plans Annual Festival Caberfae will have its fifth a nual Spring Ski Festival and Ladies Day this Sunday. * w * A costume show and contest is scheduled for 2 p.m. The contest is open to the public. All women skiers will receive ttte ttricets to rid Sunday at the Caberfae ski area. You’ll puAyour weight on the wrong, i.e. &(S uphill ski. ’nuis your heel wra’t be able to apply enou^ prMsure to move the uphill ski’s rear end. You’ll get stuck bdore the turn. Once you’ve got rid of this flaw, you’ll start the turn all right, but you’ll panic in the middle of it because right then tt looks as if you’d never mai to turn around but plunge down all the way. That makes you lean back in horror and there you ait on your rear, legs straddled, skis TOSS. DON’T PANIC. There is danger whatever in this maneuver. It's the safest thing on earth if you just keep your nerve. So DON’T LEAN BACK because once you do that nothing can prevent a fall. Just stay pat and, on reaching , the halfway mark, calmly diift that wei^ Jo the dovnihill ski and the rest GRAMPIAN MOUNTAIN lMllME••• J & R AUTO STORES IFleo V I ns D. SAGMAW oj: C-14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1963 World's Largest Office Building Opens in New York NEW YORK (AP)-On a balmy ■pring morning early last June, gravely ill man was flown over mM-Manhattan- In a helicopter Erwin S. Wolfson had pulled himself from a painful sick bed to take one last look at the flowering of his fondest dream, what soon would be the world's largest commercial office building. Ihree weeks later, Wolfson succumbed to cancer at the age of 60. It was Wolfson, already a‘suc- gan to take shape in Wolfson's cessful Manhattan skyscraper mind more than a decade ago. builder, who thought up ^ build- Others have signed leases totaling, battered down The odds ling i“tSfiwrd |llT ltB^ over Today that building notes its formal opening—a 59-story, $100-million concrete and steel giant gainst its financing, and oversaw more than 25 years, its construction to near completion. STEEL UNDER TRACKS The handsome, octagonal-shaped structure juts up 806 feet over the former site of an office building, its ponderous tonnage supported on stedi columns in bedriick under a subterranean maze of railroad tracks, 55 feet below street level. _______ ____________________Many firms already are operat-................ .......... ______________ ... known as the Plh'Tlm BuilcBng:*ing out of Tbe-buiidiiig, which her May 4962. Since then, 7,600 workers In 75 different trades have Because of Hs height, bulk and central location in the heart of, Manhattan’s midtown cluster of skyscrapers, the Pan Am building became a landmark when only a steel skeleton. The new building is adjacent to Grand Central Station. Foundation work began in De-ceipber 1960, and the structural steel work was topped out In been applying the manufactured stone jexterior and installing the ^ntl^ millions of interior appointments. ROOMIEST YET ' Ihe l^uilding’s 2,400,000 square feet of office space makes it the roomiest office building in the world, second only to the Pentagon in Washington. The Merchandise Mart in Chicago is larger, but falls out of the strictly office building classification because much of its interior is. takea up in; showroom space. The roof of the Pan Am bulld-jag-cflamed after its largest tenant — Pan American World Air- ways — has been made into the world’s highest, heliport. When opened for traffic in May, the heliport will handle thousands of flights annually from metropolitan airports and to and from the New York World’s Fair in 1964-65. ’The building, financed by American and British interests, was designed to accommodate 100 firms with a working staff of 17,000. ’The owners anticipate another 250,000 persons wHl pass through the building daily. Beyond its financing, the international tone of the building is heightened by tenants from Italy, England, Canada, and Sooth America. Aid Bill Called Too Restrictive DETROIT UR - The United Auto Workers Union says the ent form would make ineligible for aid the diiWren of palwnts unemployed-before Jan. 1, 1958, chiklren of workers not covered by unemployment compensation, children of parents “earning 9 marginal livelihood by part-time work’’ and children of others in the most needy categories. ♦ * . w The House approved the bill «=hildre" nflccAH Kv fh* Hniiaji in th# Rtfltib . ^ ^ ...» ... passed by the House in the State Legislature is inadequate. ’The union stated iU position yesU^ay in a letter from UAW Secretary-’Treasurer Emil Mazey to Gov. George Romney. Mazey described the bill as “the most restrictive and most inadequate’’ legtslathm of iU type la the nation. Mazey said the hill in its pres- gin. It now goes to the Senate. It has the backing of Gov. Rom- Dies in Road Mishap SAGINAW W -^ohn E. Henry, 58, of rural Saginaw, was injured fatally near Saginaw last night when >his car struck the rear end of a dump trucJk^ „ . Recommends Merger Policy WASHINGTON (UPO - A White House task force has reoomipend-pd that gdvemment decisions on proposed rail aqd airline mergers be made in the public’s long-|mm interest rather than “to meet a short-run crisis.’’ Although no reference was made to pending mergers now be-f«t! federal regulatory commissions, the panel said the “imminent failure’’ of a- company should not be a criteria for merger approval. The U.S. has the largest total oyster production in the world. NY GIANT - This is th^ Pan Am Building in New York’s mid-Manhattan area, which will be formally opened today. The 59-story, llOO-million structure will be the world’s largest commercial office building. Urges Congress toRepeal Stations' Dearborn to Vote on OK of Florida Apartments DEARBCHTN ~ A proposal Equal Time Law l® authorize the city of Dearborn WASHINGTON (A> -The president of the National Association »of Broadcasters, LeRoy Collins has urged Congress to repeal the law requiring radio and television -sUUons to give equal time to op-lliuineg for Deiirbbm retired peo- to build apartments with federal aid in Florida will be submitted to voters at the April 1 election. Two years ago the voters rejected a proposal to build a com-plete community d low-rent pie in Florida. Mayor Orville L. Hubbard suggested the project. posing political candidates. ★ ★ ★ “Give us complete repeal for' something to you we have not had an opportunity to prove, ” he said.; OWOSSO rad by Brookfiald. Theta hard-(mlthed sharkskin worsteds wear longer and look batter than any suit yo'u’va aver owned. Traditional Ivy, American Lounge, one-button and two-button Continental models. Um Your Swcurity or Our 90-Day Chorg* Account MEN'S WEAR Mirad* Mila Shopping Cantor Opan 9:30 o.m. to 9 p. r THiE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MABCH 7. ms HU BOTH BIG STORES BRING YOB MIRACU BUYS as l1 I I hifani^ ora ToM/ : IpjP©®I§) PAHE r 1054-or.JAR [ ASSMtS RATORS MARASCHINO } ,|H | ,n . CHERRIES j . Limit T| C Two I Throo. Jf oGmPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP #1 CAN £ Two HEPSHEY'S 1^. r Chocolate Syrap ~ 17* IB KRAFT . ! BROADCAST CORNED ’SlSir jBpHKH ... io< < Tw» ■ \ p„it ^ 1 1 Two 1 RSP Fancy Sour PITTED CHERRIES SMCan HjV C r ■ 303 CAN CUT 1 GREEN BEANS || I ■ BIG 1-U. FRESHLY TURN FRGE (or 2 MORE PBGES «f BHRRMNS • OFEH NIGHTS fiH 10 FJW. SUN, till —2_______I'. . . An Income Ttt Inspector has Just objected to one (rf the Bro«!-way dandiea claiming that hll dinner date, with a beautiful girl was a business expense. “What do you mean?” demanded the Hfliil" ... A guy wf know i| •glmMy popul" in » last piraia. In-fact, it’# very aa-g only of bis mothar . Down at oiir (riandlr neighborhood tavern, they ware talking about Pean Imny grandtnatlMLgjw u IT ami still doesn’t need glasses -drinks it straight opt o( the bottle like she always did- Earl oil; MJ- TrfE rONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MARCH 7, 1068 _ Fads Origipoted by Kennedys Really Do Cptch On flag, has cone forth t«a to be wUstM, 1 BY MERRMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter WASHINCTON -Ha^kstain M On White Hotwei WWW Fads originated 1^ such pacesetters as President Kennedy and his family develop so much momentum at times that they JO# along for weeks after having sofved the iNirposa of the origin-atari- House-generated hiking craze are naore conventional. Fra; example, stores here and in New York re-liopt a Botinaahia Jump In dn-mand tor walking shoes, par^ ticularly for womep. WWW One lady who lives an the edga of the now frontier and who pror fesses. Jto have nqqnnl feet triad thraa rathar chi-chj heotaries In New York the othar aftenwan and each store’reported the Story jidd out of walking shoaa aaoept In nnosHnl iIm> fhaj< elegaat swhmiiing hole si the Robert Kennedys. So it la wHh biking, tho iMiHi kind. What Itorted out to hi i haas-ter for the President’s physical fitness program, partiMtIarly tor the armad services, has Iwnad Into • golden era tor P r a s s agents, gin mill operstofl twho put ppdpmeters on thilr WPii-resses), danca halls (TwIst for the President's Program”! »«1 Similar tad, plua recent snowy and icy weather. OH0 Of Urn ootko^i krgfr manafnetnww k km PiNfh and fsso^ bahM (w (trld feet U ckcutottag a memo m. lag the walhhig ctp“ ““V loading te lohing aaktet, kot the cash r^to are fine far retailers. Thlf partlPilar company reports • l,e0g per cont iBCTfese during the pgst twp wsski In ardara tor psihM t#»l ipnw-Soma anargptif mahew havf ^ fa slim In wiBdowi efffring.fai spra^ trentment for passing hikr ♦ * * Tho o(mw’i WM . •Presidant Renady’* wadwdiaBi are a abot-in-th(fc« fi«t BWW«»1 lai^ uta to Praatdent Kennady’s leal .fitness walking prpgrar has the nation by stem -Tar thosi yet nastwaiad. • MM wrflar, Clidyi hWH'i Mfr- ifellfui were af aAted help ta Mr aM^ Milan Faculty Gives In, Courses to Be Harder Ibe title? Hold on to yoor nap-8«te and footspray cin. *tnw Kennedy Walk.” A sompla fmm ft# lyrl<» thalonaanimantlviwarit--ftdi m lava with m M|yhan f saw dw No In yauf hot ”Va» nt ,om *>iag tho Eoh- ody waft " . ^ . bflsa ghelley knows a tr^ ^ Sho sees one. Obviously Ifr #nan00d l^y * cunwnt dance import from South America phia w difficuUiea with Canada, abe relsoaed another oittur-af -wodtueiititled, “Bossa Nova JldlLAN Ita^y (AP)-Afl«- 21 days, srcmtectimal students ended a sbwHi? striko at tho ynivondy Iflhm Wadnes^-ThayTmnonmNmo fgoid^ ted hewid (9 INr doiMfldg Isr MHd-ar olaMwork, sdffor mm, loo-torof by mmuM frgoHoing ar chltools and i aw bi imngiM thoir Nlaga onrrtowinm- m sto-dania eiaiwod tho owTNjjW wo» not difflNt fteugh to fit IhofP for aawpotltton nmradnya, An cstimatod throo mitoP Americans spond *»• luially In toe ptpramt of iki It tonitotorldrhdMimmitotof «»"«y “ vived speculation jither European «««"»>>«<»" United States. iVolvo (Canada) Ltd., which is based in Toronto, saya import duties and surcharges had increased in (Canada to a point [where cost studies indicate the cars would be much more favorably priced if assembled in Canada. * ★ ★ 'The five United States auto companies have manufacturing subsidiaries in Canada, all of them located in Ontario. Scotia site for much the same, reasdn the U.S, companies picked | Ontario — to be as close as possible to the source of Imported | components. Halifax is the Only I major year-round ice-free harbor on Canada’s east coast. 'The Swedish firm plans to import fully built-up bodies and engines at the begmnlng and later , will move more directly into Canadian manufacture, ’The Canadian government has I granted full duty exemption on the bodies for the first five years, lor until production reaches 10,-!ooo cars annually. ♦ it ' It Volvo sold just under 2,000 cars in Canada in 1962. John Kay, Samuel’s chief assistant, said sales were good early in the year and ’’we were certain vfe were gping to* reach 4,000 until the surcharge was imposed’’ .Xlaoida imposed a special sur- charge oh automotive imports last June. ' . Volve plans an initial annual Capacity of l,Slt cars and hopes to reach 10,018. Samuel says there it no present intention to market any of these fn the United States. ’The U,S, hat a fiiuch lets stringent duty on imported cart then does Canada. « Renault, largest of the French auto companies, has been actively interested in Canadian assembly but , no announcement has been made. Flat, Volkswagen and several British companies also are said to be looking into the Volvo scheme. prices on Canadian-built models. Samuel says the figures shouhi be well under present price tags, however. The Volvo 122S now lists for 83,205 in Canada and 82,595 in the United SUtes. 2 Die in Car-Truck Crash BACH m - Paul Carolan, 32, “ of Gagetown and Rolia Kretzsch-mer, 50, of Owendale were killed yesterday in a car-truck collision on a rural Huron County toad near here. The collision oc-auwed during a snowstorm. Russia is building a Siberia a vast scientific center reported to be a complex Of IS separate institutes to accommodate 50,004 Volvo said it has not yet setiresearch workers. MIRAGLE MItE MIRAGIE^IOW PRICES OPEN NIGHTS Hll 10 P.M. • SUN. 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. • PLENTY OE FREE PARKING D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, im Organizafion Under Fire T CIA'S Successes, Flops Stunning WASHINGTON (UP»-Pre»ldent government admits that the CIA CIA for the fact that pilot Francis Kennedy mice told the Central *ver fails anyttiing. I Intelligence Agency (CIA) that {“your successes are unheraled, your failures are trumpeted." I * { . It is a rare day when the Pra-sident of any other high official {in the executive branch of the AHWjOYMSCOKTS TKimLOBAiuma ~ nicETouvri! r GOES TO INDIA otS-JOenly ^ZZaKEEGO MUL NEWMAN GERALDINE RAGE puix nw MinBT But America’s super-spy or-gauiutiou has suffered euongh setbacimthat it Is under heavy fire by so^ie congressmen who supervision. The CIA has had some stunning success, too. It correctly predicted the outbreak of the Hungarian revolt in 1956; it forecast the British-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt^hefore the.^ues rrisSr it gave the U.S. armed forces ample warning that the Chinese were gonig to intervene in the Korean War. In some of these cases the CIA’s information was discounted or |g-JwredT_____________________________ harvest the U2 planes were reaping was frank in his admiration: “This is something we can never hope to do; it is espionage on a production line basis.’’ The bad luck was that Powers ” «. Powers crashed onto Russian soil in his U2 plane and was captured. The facts seem to be that the only thing the ClA can be criticized for is that it suffered_____ Oiinding stroke of bad luck, ipened shortly before President The flight of U2 planes over | Eisenhower was to meet Nikita Russia had been going on for {Khrushchev In Paris, almost four years. Most of the I a -* ♦ time Dulles has been a brllll- There was plenty of American JSQW! EAGLE SANDRA DEE, “\f A MAN ^SWERS" & “ PLAYGIRL" STARTS FRIDAY FEUDIN’, FUSSIN’ A FIGHnN’ Marjorie Main - Perey,J(ilbridei UouiARDjoiin5on'5 LUNTEN SWBCIAL o COMPLETE SEAFOOD INNER *129.^ o o roua CHOtei or •OLOIN miEO iUTTlRPLY FRCSH LAKE TINDERDWtn CLAMI DHRIMP ERIE PERCH French Fried Poatoei Creamy Cole Slaw Coffee, Tea or Milk Freshly Baked Roll and Butter Choice of Howard Johnson's 28 Famous Ice Creams or Sherbets SERVED FEBRUARY 27 THROUGH MARCH 9 AT --mn FRY AttifOO CAN EAT ^259 . flOUIARD JoHOfonJ 3450 DIXIE HIGHWAY at DRAYTON PLAINS What the CIA is still trying to live with and live down is thej disastrous blow to American’ prestige when anti-Castro forces attempting to invade Cuba were overwhelmed and forced to surrender at the Bay of Pigs. The CIA was in on the planning all the way. MASSIVE FAILURE The theory was that if 1,500 Cuban exiles landed on the la-land, the population would rise in revolt against Fidel Castro, it was a massive failure of intelligence and espionage on the part of the United States. | The criticism has continued so| hot that the other day Allen W. • Dulles, recently retired director: of the CIA, broke one of his owiii long-standing rules and wrote, this: "I know of no estimate that a spontaneous uprising of the unarmed population of Cuba would ensue.” Whot he probably means is that the CIA made no anch estimate, but the fact renuins that if the Cuban rauaaes did not rise the whole project was ant espionage man, and this was one of bis top achieve-mentsi ' Information about the Soviet Union that could, have been obtained in no other way poured into CIA headquarters month after month. A high British Intelligence of-flcerwlHrwM aware of the rich fumbling, all which put out at President and the national aecur-Ity council, nnfay be operating abroad and inteprening in the affairs of nations is the basis for much of the criticism. w * ■ * Many congressmen want the worst mistake the U S. offlclala CIA to operate in the same fash* made was to admit that Pou»T8j ion that British Military Intelll- was a spy. They should have stuck to their original story that a weather survey was forced-down jnd that it Imp. .•“Idently. Mown off his courae* .............. - - ' 'Persons who should know say Dulles argued in faver of that all thrmigh t.hi> rrisis. What concoms congressional critics It the possibility that the CIA dabbles in foreign gence (M.I.-S) does. M.‘I.-5 collects the information, evaluates it for the British Cabinet and then steps out of the picture] while policy 15 Delhi decided. Bull so far all congressional attempts] to restrain the (^A have failed, and by large-votes. least four different atatgipffltEjisijL i», is a^'^ "to ’ TeacHes for 50 Years four days. K SET TRAP Khruschev had set a trap by letting out a little bit of information about Powers at a time, and then waiting for American offi-ciab to stick their foot into it. Espionage experts say the Washington the CIA was h-strumental in overthrowing the regime of Premier Mohummed Mossadegh in Iru ud put a pro-Commauist goverament la Guatemala oat of bosiness. The thought that an American force, responsible only to the LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Jl - Sister Miriam recently completed 59 years of teaching without a day’s absence from the classroom. Most of her work was done in Boston, with a 19-year tour in Nebraska, before coming to SSl-Sinum and Jude School in4960^ A force of 1,500 Cuban exiles cannot defeat Castro troops totalling 200,000. Somebody in the government convinced somebody else that a small spark would light the fires of revolt. Dulles’ statement was unusual in that the fixed policy of the CIA is never to deny nor confirm any story. Thus there has been no comment on some other charges I involving the CIA and the Bay of Pigs Ihnding. ! Andrew 'Tully, in a recent book calM “CIA; The Inside Story' I says the CIA bungled the job on {several counts: the Cuban under-rground was not notified of thr invasion until too late; the CIA chose to do business with the extreme right wing faction of the Cuban exiles thereby shunting aside men better equippfto for a military adventure; the CIA informed Kennedy after the landing that Castro’s air force had been knocked out, an estimate that turned out to be 100 per cent wrong. SIGNIFICANT MOVE After the debacle Kennedy refused to single out any person or agency as being responsible, but merely said "there it Wanw^ enough for all." But it'is significant that he ordered an in-{ quiry into the CIA's part in the' adventure. Whether there is any' connection or not» Dulles sub6C~ • quently resigned as CIA. director and was succeeded by John A. McCone. i Many persons still criticize the un/r mm EXai)aTOHBSTRimf!EjaTJBES{C^ GDIinSinSIIIIER RASBUUn MUM lAVE IS A Houei many-;> SHENDOREO ISSb yhimg , -AyVB’FEAJUIEEtTe Jackie “OS ton KENWEDYli roWI*'’ SHOE SARI UDIES’NEW SPRING SHOES Draii floti and sport shoos. Bono, block, red, imdti-coter. Siaos 5-10. ^ DID DOrS’ DRESS SHOES HEN’S 6-INCN WORK SHOES THE PONTIAC PRESS, THtJRSDAV, MARCH 7, 1968 D-*—5 Frenchmen to Wait for Their Phones PARIS (IT—The year 1963 looks etter for the n«iich %hi|iiinna compaqy, but not mudi bettor for peo^ waitiBg for telepboaes. Jac^ Mvette. nbrirter for Pert Office, Tetefbeae aad Telegraiib, reported that ummey take* bi by the ntalrtry shMOd be IV hi 190. V New ^orto are being made, be possible .to have a “normal ..jituatiaii” hi Ming requests for • new telephones. Tliere is frequently a long waiting line at Paris. WWW New efOfrts are being made, though, be said, and the * Is beginning to improve. Awarded by County Commission j BEN CASEY By Naal Adams Rood Contracts Total $124,833 The Oakland County Road Commission Tuesday awarded contracts totaling H24AS3 for sofvei county road paving contracts. The total was mere thaa mjm leso than the lUlJM Aat had been estimated for the with Macomb County paying part of die expense of one projert. Some fear adtos of tMeet- Some nine miles of gravel road will be paved in the projects, scheduled to begin June 1 and be completed before the end of the The county will pay almost all the |73,m cost of building » eestiag MtAM wfll be flaaaced by fnad programs 1^ the tewaships eeneemed. All the contracts but one were awmded la Amt ityborltonstruc-tion Co. Peake Asphalt Co. of Utica won a $29,875 contract for thtt Avon Road-Dequindre Road project PROJECT oofirn The county primary road projects and tiieir contract flgureo miles of county primary roads, v*: I) i JACOBY ON BRIDGE 14 Pms 14 94 FBsi S4 8 4 Pus 4N.T. av Pus 6N.T. PUS 94 PUi 94 Pus that would be most likely to pre-' I. Here is the one I worked out I wdn the diamond, led a heart to my ace and discarded a dub on the king of hearts. Then 1 ruffM a hmat, led a club to my ace and ruffed a w ' nay’s ace of spades. This |day lokad kilty, b^ I could a£tord it as I was trying for six, not seven. Next I ruffed a diamood with my Ung of qmdes and my last dub wtQi dunupy’s five d les. didn’t care if this one was ovemiffed. I had succeeded in trunq^ing all my losers and it didn’t matter when the queen of spades made. rmm I a mile) and J of a adle ef Deqaladre Read between Avon and 24-Mlle reads. Macomb Coaaty will pay half of the Deqdadre Road porttoa of the 929A7> vni$eL 1) Clintonville Road between Mann and Maybee roads in Independence Township, about 1.1 miles. Contract price, 117AM. 9) Haggerty Read between 14- Ihe West Bloomfield-Commerca township Une, about 1% mfles. Contract price, I19A9I------ 4) Hatchny Road between Groydand St^ and Saginaw TraU in Waterford Townrtiip, about half a mile. Contract jn'ice, 46,960. ---- - WWW Local road projects with townships paying half the cost are: 1) Carroll Lake Road b^ tween Commerce and Cooley Lake roads and Wise Road from Commerce Road to existing pavement hi Commerce Tkwa-ship, aboat 2% mf price, MIAKL 21 Qdiow Lake Road between FdodiarfraJli Street and Elisabeth Lake Road in White Lake Townshty, about two-thirds of a mile. Contract price, $9,1M. 8) Walnut Lake Road between Farmington and Orchard Lake roads in West Bloomfield Tbwn-riiip, about a mile. Contract priro, $9,783. h« 14-bOle Read rdoeatkiL ea DRIFT MARLO By Dr. 1. M. Levitt. Tom Cpoke and PhM Evara By OSWALD JACOBY Looking at the opening lead, I came up with two distinctly different analyses. Either West had opened a short suit or he had led from the king to make me de^ whether to finesse at trick one. Assuming a short suit lead, how could I make the hand? I could |day the ace (rf diamonds, cash my ace and king of hearts and discard a dub from dummy, cash the ace of clubs, and then do a little crossruffing. Eventually, I could afford to let the queen of spades make, but if I could -4naka ei|^jBf^rAoTnine'triusqM in my hand and duhimy T wddd have Oe 12 tricks for a slam. The only danger would be in getting ovemiffed by the queen. A second trump lead would hold me to seven trump tricks. Therefore, 1 must plan plays Asli^ologicalj ♦ Fw^ast __ •t prerloiu MUtncc, yoi ■-niuhlna" bW«n fscion. -------- ■urprlM to find luit vbo'i bMO hldlnf. ItolDtalii otlm. boBt bMoa* unbroUMI (A». W U M.r W.: WU. four wSy to bopploca; oronlaa nron romonee. dOBCtu, Um ot ofrm- moDU with kind word*. Tour ebaneea on "t*mw ot ehoiMi" not to food. U-to Juno SI): UBioH TOO raaUr doiiro ttw truth—don’t look for ItTou’ro Ukolr to Hnd It todop. Anowon mv ropiWMBt lurprlm. ono-ciallf whiro tboM la oatborttr on la- '"cSidm (tmu as to ^ s eomoTAIk. Tour )ob to to Ott ^*lU10r“fjal^B^**A«?* MlT'MolntolB (toady, dotormlnad tUMb. Do what you know moat be done. Some way tempt aourace. imuatlTe. ImatoaUwi. -- ---ndem^ndopgudea^ir^;^ SfiS care. Bo' MuUMu**e2»ut leoBag^ Id really know tbaeo whi ‘•SWESSSn-wt.. Toar ------ '■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1068 u. I^MarkeTs^ i«R- The fonowbig are top prices covering salea of loeaUy grown produce by growers and sold by them in w^lesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Tracing Somewhat Livelier Market Jogs Little Higher Detroit Bu^au-of Markets, i noon Wednesday. Produce ApplM. JoultULB. bu. . AppiM. UcInUMh. C. A. ApplM. UolDUMh. blL . AWM. Nortlwni C. Apptop, Northwn.i NEW YORK (AP)—The stockjgarded as an encouraging tech-market has been largely ignoring of market jogged a Httle higher early this afternoon as trading be> came somewhat livelier than in recent sessions. Gains of fractions to about a point among key stocks outnum- Advances of a point or better ere made by a scattering of ^J*|stodcs in vari^ groups. Ability of the market to absorb ....offerings in quiet trading during i;^the past two sessions without showing price weakness was re- Pouitry and Eggs DiraOIT rOULTBT DWmoiT. Match 7 (Ar)-»riMP | . pn- peuiKl Al OMroH for M*. 1 sw llTC poultry; broUtn Ana tryori ao-ai; BattM I IIT loot I I (API—I " poM POT lotoa At Dotrolt by drat “wMbl Oralit**')? Si^o M-iSj ottrA Mtb-41: lATla ItVb-N; mtdium )V BiWn OTAdt A lambo M-toib: oxtro Urpt Jt-37(b; lATft ItH-M; modlum 34; cbooki 30-33. CHICAGO BCTTEB AND EOOt CHlCAdO. March 7 lAPl—Chlcofo UorcAotUo Bxchtnto — Butter ttea-*-wholoaAlt buyint prleea unehAnnd; ocoro AA int; P3 A VIVb: N B M M C UW: OATt N a 37V<; W C IT. Bn* IrrofulAT; uholeaxle buying prloM %4 labor to Vt higher. 70 per cent or bettor Grade A orhitea 31; mUod 34; medluma 44M; itAodArdt 33Vb: dlrUoo 33: chtokt 31. Livestock DITBOIT UVESTOCn DPTBOrr. March 7 (APi- (OBDAi Todoy‘1 rocelpta: Cottle lU. CAlvei : hoot M, ohoep 400. ..... (bottle oompored loot woek—SlAueliter Allied „ . - d bellert fully M cento lower; t AllloCho I2g ■ -‘,eody; around I AlumLtd " d high cholco aIooa i. nical sign. Buying was brisk fneHgb4R 4he first hour to boost volume to 950,000 shares compared with 770,000 in yesterday’s first iwur. PACE SLACKENS The pace slackened as the session continued. Oils, motors, steels, and drugs were among moderate gainers. * * While institutional Investors and traders appeared to be nibbling vigorous change in trend. The itereolypers-Join in Strike Bond Prices Open Steady Mayor to Inform Both Sides of Next Step U,S.{lnvesfors in Foreign Mart Giv&T excellent sales reports from the auto industry. ★ ] Big . Three motors moved up-j ward fractionally. American Motors dipped a fraction and Stude-baker was about unchanged. Minor plus signs were piwted by most of the top steelinakers. ★ ★ W Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly higher In slow trading. Among moderate gainers were Occidental Petroleum, Victoreen Instrument, General Plywoodi Scufry-RriBbowaewsnaenJbe would inform botfaj' Oil, Pittsburgh Railwavsr All- *siaes'To. ■’A-....... Tackling the investment prqb-m in its monfidy economic letter, the New York bank says that in 1962 private 'mg-term investments abroad came to $2.4 billion, private shwt-term assesbi atvoad increaaed by $600 million, and probably another $900 million flowed abroad unrecorded. Butoffsetting this the bank puts income on investments abroad as $3.6 billion and the long-term million. This gives the private ’* sector a $200 million assist to the balance of paywtoinfai. Beyond this American eijiorts I* of $18.2 billion and income fr(»n ^services of $4.1 billkm, totaUing $22.3 billion, topped by $400 mil-libn the oQtfiow of doUars for imports—$16.2 billion: and for serv-ices-|5.7 biUion. So the private sector had a surplus of $^ million in its balance Reconsidering: onIRSCenfei WASHINGTON Uh-Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., Service to eliminate a"l , data processing center for the Dep trolt area Is under review at A very high level. ' ^ Meumhlle, Secretary M Treasury Douglas ' Dillon announced dint he. win review the controversial proposal to reorganise a nnmbw of Internal ofipqmients. TheiovanunenUso- Reyenne Service officea. tor ran behind by $2.8 billion. American business isn’t arguing about the need for mudi of the It Just doesn’t want to be blamed for running the United States into the red. cSt^essFb/’i * 'Inviting t 4k. H By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We I edneation. My wife and like each year stwte, hoping that this pro-eednre tHII bofld ap eno^ capital to give the boys a good start Please recommend a good stock or stocks to snlt o Another would givo the department the li^t to aecqit graplp from the fe^al government er other puUlc end private ageades. A third would provide that Aw new department win serve as the liaison agency between the state aid federal government on quesiibna of edmomic deveh^ ment and public w« " The bill went to Ae Ways and Means Cunmlttee lAere it b eh-peefed to remain until early noit week. Biirsley said he hoped ^ ^ -------------- could be reported oat hy then, having them managed hyAeaoanfourbilbcanbe cooskl-Stnte D^ertmenf af Admlnb- aredasapadugs. TH5? PONTrAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1968 I)—7 •rwx'KwxvJSxWSrSi^ Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas ROBERT W. COFFMAN Service for Robert W. Coffman, Waterford Town^p, will be at 11 ajn. Saturday iii Donelson-Johiu Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Coffman, an employe of Oakland "Counfy Road Oommia* akm. died unexpectedly Tuesday. ' MRS^UROYCOLE Service for Mrs. LeRoy (Ettie D.) Cola, S4, of 474 N. Saginaw St. wUl be at 1:90 pjn. Saturday in Voorhees - S^le Chapel with burial in Perry Mount Parii Cemetery. Mrs. Cole, a member of the Fkrst Assembly of God Church, died yeflerday after a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Woolley and Mrs. Loveda Williams, both of Pontiac; a son A. H. Ode of Oxford; a granddaughter; and three great-grandchildren. several years. Gas Lamps Link Two Liverpools LIVERPOOL. N.Y. (UPI) -A cast-irtm gas lamp whidi illuminated a dockside area of Uverpo^ England, for nearly a centuiy until put out 6f bOsiness by electricity now shines Spain —in tiiis namesake city 3,3M miles away. ★ ★. ♦ The lampost, a gift from the English dty to this central New York village, stands on the lawn in front of the village civic ten-ter. ____________________ JAMES Rj MARTIN Service for James R. Martin, Stevens of 1030 Montia St., Waterford Township, died yesterday HTtrYVibon^Avr.-wfflli^ t* suffocation in his ted. 2 p.m. Sunday in Lebanon, Tenn. Arrangements are by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home^ ' Mr. Martin, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are his wife Kinnioi his parents, James Martin, and Mrs- Ollie Rhodes of Lebanon; a dau^ter Mrs. Delores McNeir of Pontiac; three grandchildren; and a sister. WUJJAM H. MARTIN Service for William H. Martin, 75, of 140 Chippewa Road will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Donel-lonJohns Funeral Home with burial in White Outpel Memorial Cemetery. Mr. Mutin, a retired employe of the City of Pontiac, died unexpectedly Tuesday after a brief illness. Besides survivors listed yesterday, three great-grandchildren alw survive., MRS. FRED L. DONIGAN Service for Mra. Fred L. (Lena L) Donigan, 77, of M Parkhurst St., will be at 3 pm. Saturday in Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Me-moriaUCemetery. Rochester with burial inL Say morning aft» an 11IBW of HARRY M. NOBLE Service for Harry M. Ntdde, owner of a trim s^ on Voor-heik Road, wiU be 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the Pixley Funeral Mt. Avon Cenaetery Mr. Noble, 73, of 207 Voorheis Read died yesterday after a long illness. He was a member of the Oakland- County Sportsman’s Club. Surviving are his wife Evelyn; a daughter liilrs. Goldie Banta; and three sisters, Mrs. Blanche Findley, Mrs. Pearl Karr and Mrs. Minnie Richardson, all of Pontiac. DAVID E. STEVENS David E. Stevens, 8-month-old Ml of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Surviving are the parents; a brother. Jay Ashley; ^two sisters, Charmaine Stevens and Elaine Ashley; and grandparents, Mrs. Bess Stevens of Deland, Fla. and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wuergess. Service will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hun toon Funeral Home. MRS. STEWART TODY WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP-Service for Mrs. Stewart (Pansy J.) Tody, 75, of 8215 Southeastern St., will be 10 am. tomorrow at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Burial will follow in Drayton IMains Cemetery. Mrs. Tody died Wednesday after a lengthy illness. Surviving are seven sons, Clifford Wheatley of Fenton, Lawrence Wheatley of Lapeer, firths Wheatley of Davison, Lewis Tody of CooperviUe and Ross, Verne and floyd Tody, all of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Kibbee of Davison and Mrs. Leon Richards of Pontiac; 25 grandchildren and five great-grandchil- WASHINGTON - Sheep ranching in Alaska’s Aleutian Islands is regaining Ihe foothold lost in World War II. w * ★ There, on the slopes of foggy volcanic isles rimming the Bering Sea and stretching as westerly as New Zealand, the grass grows green and thick. Few predators dat. Winttfs are surprisingly mild, the National Geographical Society says, though some of the 80 oc so islands lie exposed to North America’s most ferocious winds. “A mere sustained, prp- THQMASJ.TYRE ROSE TOWNSHIP -Service for ’Thomas J. Tyre, 55, of 420 Munger Road, will be 10 a.m. Saturday at Rita’s Catholic (3iurdi. Burial will be in Rose Center Cemetery. Mr. Tyre died yesterday after a five-week illness. The Rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Dryer Fimeral Home, Holly. Surviving are his wife Johanna; two daughters, Theo, at home, and Mrs. Ann Rose Bangham of Milford; a sister and a grandchild. Refurbished and electrified, was dedicated as an etowal li^t symbolizing international frie^ ship. The idea of the gas lamp gift came when Hie English city fo-stalled a modern lifting system, and the then Lord Miqw, Peter hkKernaiL‘Ubou^44wottid i»wwQi of new construction and The amount and value of construction activity in Pontiac laat month was well above that recorded in February a year ago. WWW Seventy-one building permits were issued for some J87L587 at the be nice for difta^nt places named Liverpool In various parts of Hw world to have these lamps.” Among the victims of the ikangeover were ^ gas l.«mpo which nsed to stand on the docks in front of repairs last month, according to Cart F. Alt, dty buMtig fo-^Mdoalal Cemetery. Monroe, 83, of 238 State Guinness Exports Ltd. bought the lamps from the city and cooperated in sending them without cost to other cities throughout the world. One lamp stands in front of the Benjamin Franklin Federal Savings and Loan Association in Portland, Oregon, and is back at work with its original gas. County Group fo Hear About Handicapped Edward La Crosse, national authority on education of the mentally handicapped, will be guest speaker at the March 27 spring conference of Hie Oakland County Council for Retarded i announced to- wOVtoe yvuui were lujureu j Quidren, was _announccu ^ twH»r crash day. The meeting is scheduled at Btrmtagham’s Seahofan High SchoeL Its purpose is to stimulate public concern for wider educational opportunities for retarded youngsters, according to~Stanford .Wallace, 12909 Wales St., Hunting-ton Woods, president of the Oakland (founty group. La C^rosae, education consultant to the National Association for Retarded Children, will discuss new concepts in education of the nwHitnlly handicapped____________ The county council represents parent groups that operate four day centers for 180 children and parents of children in state in- Construction hr February Up in Pontiac Burial Set Saturday for H. L. Monroe Service for Hector L: Monroe, retired superintendent of Uk Pon- tiac Water Departarien^ j^_>_^Br^Gerairtafm, p^ Witt C. Davis Funeral Home. Burial will follow in White Qiapel This compares to SI permits for 8238,183 in ewstmetion the same asMth last year. Last month’s permits also topped the noonth before. There were 45 permits issued in January. However, several large projects begun that month boosted the total construction vaiue to 83.077,270. WWW Fdxuary’s total #as due largely to permits issued for 8718,000 worth of tanks in Pontiac’s watm* system improvement project. There were six permits issued for new homes values at 841,000, compared to three permits for 815,000 in new homes in January, “year ago, 14 pomyfo were Is-sued for 8103,500 in home building in February. 2 Area Residents Hurt in Accident A Milford woman and an Or-tonville youth ■ • • ■ • in The drivMw of the ears, Mrs. Alice Sassak, 33, of 8578 Garfield Drive, and Ivan M. Lucas, 20, of 190 Glass Road, are both in satisfactory condition at Pontiac General Hospital with possible Police said that Lucas caused the 5:55 p.m. accident when he went through a red light at the intoeection of Oakland Avenue and Johnson Street. Aussles to Get Tracking Site A Soil Test Is Crucial Before Using Fertilizer CX)LLEGE STATION, Tex (UPI) Farmers can harm a good Held by adding commercial fertiliaos without first having a soil tost, Texas ARM Cdlage extension service says. Fanners should first determine the fertility and acidity levd of Ex-Water Chief is Dead at 83 Raise Sheep in Aleutians Make Comeback From Wartime Setback I have never heard,” naturalist John Muir wrote during a visit in 1881. Alaskan ranchi^ has much of the wild glamour'of the old frontier. The seas of grass are reminiscent of American and Chilian prairies a centioy age. One epic cattle drive on tlw mainland was described by a government official as “five years of hell.’’ American sheep were first imported to the Aleutians in 1853^ 14 yews bMore Ru^ sblcrfbm to the United States as part of Alaska. ’Tenuous efforts to establish ranching in the Aleutians continued until World War II when the Japanese invaded—and the sheep disaiqieared. As the Japanese were ousted, the islands began to bristle with United States air and naval sta- The tollowin? is a list of recent P'ontiac area births as rec«M?ded at Hie Oakland Cbunty acrk*8 Office (by name of father): At present, Hniee iar^ ranches totaling 481RI0 acres are flourishing on Unalaska and Umnak islands under leases from the United States InteriM* Depart ment’s Bureau of Land Management. These ranches have stodted perhaps 15,000 of the 20, 000 sheep they are permitted. Family Group Sete^ven#— I Family Service of 0 a k 1 a n d -County will hold its 13th annual meeting March 14 at Royal Oak KimbaQ High School. Guest speaker for the went idll _ Ave., died yesforday after an iilncss ef several days. His father Harvey G. Monroe served as superintendent of the Pontiac Water Works, w ★ s In 1912 Mr. Monroe succeeded his father as superintendent. He retired in 1950 after serving the city 52 years. Mr. Monroe was a member of Elks Lodge No. 819. He had also been active in the Oakland Couty Conservation Qub and a member of the origtaal Pontiac Gun Club. Mr. Monroe was a member of]' one of Oakland County’s oldest lineage to the Davis family that founded Davisburg in 1857. His great-grandfather Cornelius Davis was the first settler in Springfield Towndiip, arriving there in 1837 from Ulster County, New York. ★ ♦ ♦ Mr. Monroe leaves his wife, Ines; a daughter, Mrs. W. 0. Roeser of Pontiac: three grandsons; two freat-granddauj^ters: a brother Dr. John D, Monroe of Waterford Township; and a sister Mrs. Sarah Adele WiUits M White Plains, N. Y. TOKYO (f) - The United States has notified Japan that has found a suitable satellite tracking station site in Australia and won’t need one in Japan. A UJS. E m b a s s y spideesman said the U.S. Natio^ Aeronautics and ^>ace Administration, after studying repmls on sites in Japan, the Philippines and Australia, “had decided that a site in Australia M>pears to provide the must favorable location from a technical point of view.” Psychology Prof Raps Hazards of Conformity LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (^-“Assembly-line education,” which inhibits children’s curiosity and skepticism, furthers growing iSiHiBiem (ST nees, a University of Arkansas psydwlogy professw beliwes. ★ ★ * Four traits—curiosity, aggressiveness, skepticism and stamina — are valuable to man in his effort to cultivate his mental sources. Dr. E. Philip TYapp said. * * e When these traits are suppressed by a community in its zeal for conformity, the youngi^ bidS^'viu b* by firainwachMl CommlMloo of th» Cltyrt Foot director for the University of Michigan Survey Research Onter. He vnll speak on the topic "Mental Health Needs in the Normal Population.” The'meeting is scheduled to begin at 8:30 p. m. New board members and officers will be installed at the meeting. Pontiac Doctor Tapped for Institute Assembly Dr. Michael C. Kozonis, of Pontiac, will take an active part in the postgraduate training program of the Michigan Clinical Institute in Detroit March 13-15, serving as were^ nf the Thursday morning scientific assembly. The institute is cosponsex^ by the Michigan State Medical So- __-------------- —- ^ h^th organizations. Registration is expected to exceed 2,500. Kentucky Men Happy; Now Use Local Burley LEXINGTON, Ky. (JV-The year 1913 was a bright one for burley tobacco farmers. It was then that the first cigarettes contain-ing a substantial amount of barley weer marketed and promoted hwvily. Before that time, most dga-ky were marketed and promoted of aromatic leaf, the “Turkisb' type. Nvnez FOR BUM CttT ot PontUc wUl ncMi bids (or the purcb ......... -xelred by the City from the CODeerrt-on Dept, by deed, roeorded In Liber HI. Fnn Mi end except Imnde tor eld-ilhf 01 B. S4(ln>w Street, ell IyiO| reet ot the preeent Boctnew Street wld->lnt line.until t:M p.m. Kaetem Btend-rd Time on the lith d» of Much, Ml, nt the omoe ot the Cltt Clerk. It Airke Street, Pontine, uiehlian, e‘ leh time end pinoe. nU bide wui h ............ ■ rend aloud. City *V Pontiac’s Main Public Library has recently added to its “audio” collection, according to Phyllis Pope, librarian. New phenograph albums now ready for circulation at the main library are as follows. PHONO-ALBUMS (Musical and Spoken) — “Albums de L’Onck Max”; Bartok, “Concerto No. I”; "Isaac Stem With the Philadelphia Orchestra Under Eugene Or-mandy”: Berg; ’^^ic Suite.” ‘Webern: Five Pieces, Bagatelles, Juillard String Quartet”; Handel, “Ombra Mai Fu (Xerxes) etc. Conducted by Sir Adrian Boult”; Hindemith, “So-J4o. 3”; “Barber: Excur- “Martin: Prelude No. 7.” “Andre Previn, Piano”; Mozart, (foncerto in C, Sonata in F, Variations on ‘Ah, Vous I^ai-Je, Ma-‘CTara Haskil, Piano, With the Festival Strings of Lu-: ceme.” “Rudolf Baumgartner, Leader”; Mozart, “Concertos in' C Minor.” LONDON STAR - Sidney, 10-year-old parrot, eyes newsmen suspiciously at a news conference outside the Duke of York’s Theater in London yesterday. Sidney won auditions for. . . . TheismT)f a prime mliilstertnrned parrotTir “The Bed Sitting auerzejewsKr Room,” a sta^ play opening there soon. Births ---------Lockhurt. Ml Orueuwood. Jerome D. MlUe. im OrMtleld. Bobert L. Brine. IIM Wnehlnctan. Junto B. Kewleo. MSI W. BroMozd. PhlUp J. LuPine, MM HumI. Denuld R. Ruyt. »}] Bueklnshum. WniUm a. Doee. UI3 Wlndenteru. Frunk B. Arene. 1414 Southfield. Puul a. Wood!, m* Colonial Court. J. K. Bee, 1114 Stenley. UUtoB If. Oreen. MU Coldeprlnc Luto. Bukene L. Lewman. 1374 Weodridte. XbUe R. OoodfeUow. 1401 R. 14 Mile. Oarld P. Barber, 1143 Waoblnston _________ Reward L. kfltcheil ’ llM ___ Wayne W. Wrlxbt, MU i^oohL.... Cbarlea K. Pattenon, 310^wUUama- Jaiaea A. Behne, 1010 W!* 14 Ull Richard L. labeU 113 RMoedala. Jamee M. Aeh, 4M W. Uncoln. John P. Poln, lU ZueUd. Arthur L. Jo— — ' Trail. John J. Vma, 1________________ WMHam P^ard 1J1I Lahaer. . llito ooorslna. 1U2 OraeflAd. Robert J. Lynch. 031 ------- Angelo F. PerUpelle, UO Hawthorne. Arthur Ifaeon. 114 Walnut. Uo M. McDonald. ' ' ~ Relations Adviser Named by Romney sistment for financial affairs, and John Martin of Grand Rapkls is a special assistant for federal relations. Add to 'Audio' iFile New Albums at Library i hoven and Weber”; Scriabin / Symphony No. 3 U.S.S.R. Rgdii Symphony Ordiestra Conducted by Konstantl Ivanov”; “Serenade for Strings’’; “Borodin: Nocturne”; “Vaughan' Williams: Green sleeves,” “Fantasia”; Barber: Adagio.” “Eugene Orqiandy Ckmducting the Philharmonic Orchestra”; Starbuck, “Georgs Starbuck Reads His Works”: Strauss. Don (Quixote.” “George Szell Conducting the Cleveland Orchestra, With Pierre Fournier,” cello, etc. PHONO-ALBUMS (Languages) —Berlitz, “Simplified Spanish” (1(380); “Japanese — Conversation (fourse”; “Learn Modem Greek in Record Uroe”; “Listen and Learn Spanish”; “Readings From Basic Russian”; “Portuguese Conversation Course”; “Simplified Russian Grammar”; “Spanish Self-Taught”; “Spoken German”; “Spoken Russian.” Figures published by the World ‘Wilhelm Health Organization show toe Kem^f, Piano, With the Bam-j number of deaths from car acd berg Symphony Conducted by Ments is on toe increase aD ovei Fenlinand Leitner”; Mozaft.ftbe world. Deh Vleni Alla Finestra (Doni Giovanni) Radio Symphony Orchestra, Berlin, With Mieezyslaw sic for a Golden Flute, a Night Piece”: “Griffes: Poem’’; “Hanson: Serenade; Honegger: Concerto da Camera.” “Maurice Sharp, Flute, With tbe Ckveiand Sinfonietta Conducted by Louis Lane”; “The Orchestral Wagner, Tannhan-ser, etc.” “Wolfgang Sawallisch Conducting toe Philharmonica Orchestra”;. Romberg, “Student Prince,” Rossini, “Ln Cambiale di Matrimoaio.” “Renata Scotto, Giovanna Fioroni, Nicola Monti, With Renato Fa-saao Condneting toe Virtuosi di Roma”; Sabicas, “Flamenco Pnro”; Schnbert, “Trio in B Flat”; “Beethoven”; “Variations in E Flat.” “Trio di TYi-este.” LANSING. (fl-Leo of Flint, has been pained to serve with Gov. George Romney as an adviser on minority relations. Greene, a Negro, and operator of a Flint funeral home, served in a similar role during Romney’s campain for election as govemw last year. Greene is the third special ad-appointed by the governor."^ L. William Seidman of Gri^ piano”; Schumann, “Symphony Rapids is serving as special a^ No. 4 in D Minor.” “Manfred Schumann, “Intermezzi, Ro-lance in F Sharp’’; “Liszt; Valse Oubiliee No. 2”; “Proko-fievj^, Visions Fugitives’’: “Scri-abin; Waltz Dimitri Bashkir^, Massachusetts ■ Growth Stock r Fund , fOUNOfOMMU The Fund offert i diwernfied end supervised investment in tile common stocks of more thin go companiM j^K^ fM better than average growth possibilities. For a Prospectus and other descriptive material.write: Wntling, Urchen A Cn. 402 PonHac Slatt Bank BMf. Pontiac. Michigan PC 2-9275 Overture.” “Leonard Bernstein Conducting the NY Philharmonic Ordiestra”; “Scottish Folk Songs Arranged by Haydn, Beet- MAss40««rri »Msit)ts osoww iioct w _________________ par front foot yalua, ol Straet frontaga. The bid — any part ot ““ “—■— n V Loti I, people often become brainwashed aihilts or puppets, he added. Since WorU War n toe United State! has spent more than 841l! an kinds of aid to NATO countries. The Mddera will be required to rabmlt „ preUmlnary ilte development plan elevation of buUdtnge to be erected. 10% Suroty Bond tor tho amount ot i____ prapoeed eonitruetlon wUl be required of the euoeessful bidder c- — -• ... ..— ..------of —---------------- the completion of within one (1) year---------- The bails for bidding will be -. ----- ------ of the — aocaptanoe win be baead an tbe h.._ ---------------‘fixjr£«s le, Tbe City riiervee at relart aay er an ('the dtir*of^Jont^ D-t8 Death Notices ^OOTH. MARCH I. IM. OlOllOt W . (11 Pint atrert: Me 74. loved buebond of Loulw B< dttr teUter ol Mra. Pred Toeey. Mri Chvlee Hocevor. Mr> Cler-enot HanaM. Mn. Uo Norman. Mr WlUlam J. Murat and Hlli Randall; dear brother of Mri John UcLauihlln. AUo eurvlved by 10 (randchlldrtn and eight treat-frandchlldna. Puperal eerv-be »m bo bolA Hrldav. March I, IMI at the Voorheea-SIple Chapel at 130 p.m. with the Rev. U-mood Watklne officiating Inter-----—• -- ------y Mt. Park THE PONTIAC *PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 7. 1063 NM WISH TO BXTIND ODR flaarUelt thanki and appraclatloo to our frleade and aatgnbora, for ...................'’sr^ rt, Ronald ____ Viola and Dookard, lather aad-mothar Mr. and Mra. Jedin HIghlen. alater H^l — broth^ Harold. Loater. ^^^j^^Clydo. Clare, and Keith dOPPMAM. MARCH t at the ^D»nVla^-*Joh* CemeUry. Mr Ooflmaa will lie In etate at thr Doealaoa-Jobna funeral Home. COLB, kARCT g. 1N3. I OfT M. Saginaw Street orr OHT^J^DEBT OH A PLAN MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 703 Pontlae BtaU Bank Aldg. ■PI K)434 Pontlae^ oldaal and largaat budget Ta^etanee company.__ GROUPS. CHURCHM. OROAHSa----- "0 tor celling? 7 r~ ■ IN DEBT Arrange lo pay all y( with one email weakly p cmr^ Fonarns — 90Pmy\ ery >ecmoa wItt Re Pereefiy a Parke Department of the Cb cloielr related eubjeol. plue tv. Rare' eiMrtondt In the park or ^atn IUM. Salary range M.3M acraa of paite. tree pUnttna. tenance. and removal: Duiel._ ssr ajsssi ra’^App^'to' tte Pereeanel Office. Muni-*—' Building. U1 Martin Street, mingham. Mtehtgan. DEPENDABLE. WILUNO #OkxMS 33 to 4g yre.. hueky. good health. !a*fnl[?c;YnT».Mwn"^^^ Muit have refercncei and good driving rPCbrd. Parmlhg or tractor experesM balpful.^Ml ' "** nlghU onl^. DIE MAKER man only. .Day and efteraeaa. ■ton Die S Engtneertng On.. I Dequlndre. Madtaon HelihU. OIU OR WOMAN. BOOSBWORK. day and priday. JM. i own trane MA ROOSEKEBPER TO L I worffig I--------------- Interview. Laealed W. of I ^ Dr_ Unak. EM 3-3M. stk-isey MATOTE^ BABTSrtTER TP miH meebEAOED emdira-xsoV poi ba^^alttlng. live In or daye. OR ------------a lo walk er Drive-In. Roebaater lad ICO areae. Call - gfeat-irandehlldi________________ lea wtn be held Saturday. March ^ .... officiating, interment “-’k Ce---------- -- ss£m. pY}ih“a, iAKE TOUR ROBBT PAT POR IT-aelf. Openliw gift chop, aell hob-blea through ua. Write P.O. box ■‘» Orchard Lake. .............. J1 or part tl Apply 137 Palmer.___________ , EXPERIENCED pmD MBChUkto. ' Bee Mr. Ooana g a.m. to I p.ai.. ' EXPERiXN|^0 RADIAL DIBEE lp?i"Wit!l‘.iSr Xm. Pay Off Your Bills In Parry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mri ' Cola will Ua In aUte at ttia Voor heei.Slple Funeral Home._______ TONIOAN. MARCH f. im. LENA I Parkhurat; Me 77: baloved of Fred L. Donlgan, dear' *‘*. °b»m_ _ . ....ar of Mra. Robert Cramer. LOSE WEIORT Mra. Harry Barber. Mra. Oeorge -------------- Craw, Olenn and Kenneth Donl-xan; dear alater ol Mra. Ethel Orvla, Ed and Emeet Lamphere. Alio eurvlved b- •*-------- ^Cit^ Adjustment Service SAPELT^NI ..„nwuu»Mj w.... —i——e Dex-A-Dlet UUeu. FOREMAN. MI 4-303«. or PE 3-t3M EIJCPEIUEHnro CIXRICAL HEL Me will anil. Rooni and board ftimlahed. Fart or full tima. Ap^y Fontlae Praaa Box 13. EXPERIENCED SALESMAN “i*" fuuMTHl INrsettn 'ur"ay.**»&cb"i a Intetment^So'^lu'^aMl Ct“ma- ^DH^T PPHEBA tery. Mra. Danlgan ........ ....... ‘ ---- tin Tewnablp^’^m •. beloved hui-band af FIOMaw IL Latellc; dear father of Kwiort Laaelle. Aleo jervivod by two grhndchttdren. Funeral eonrleo wtlT be held Friday. March I. 1*63 at 1:30 pm. at the Bparka-Orlflln Chapel. In- fp n..----„-----------.— COATS FUNERAL HOME PEATTOH PLAINS OR 3-7737 D. E. Pursley E TRtMMBR. ■a ovpmiuablo. aaa Mr. • Will Maple. Orchard pull' time SALESMAN. 006D aea Mra. Owm, SSM Wait 1 Orchard Lake.________________ RECEPnoitfST Sl-M. OOOD~___________ lonallty. soma bustom axportaaMO. Slate background, rtf. to baa IS. The Pontiac Praca. _ _ ■ Single lady. 30-SS years ef ms. live In funeral homa, mual efficient with lelepbm. Neat a pleasant mual Ilka wurklat w ----—lual be wUlIng Ip irlaty at dutica, Intara anglng work. Haply w work raeord. haalm ri HARDINGE LATHE ktennfacturer wf atreraft an. mlealla parts loealad In Walled Lake baa lavaral apanlnaa for akparlaoeed Hardings Latha oper-atara. Top vaati and fringe benefits. Sand complete r- to Pontlae Preii, Box 103 iniDOEPORT millIm ^‘ihWr’t iather orMri"lna| Mae tleka. Earl w. and Uland . H. Martlh; daar br«thar ol Mrs. Oraoa Johneon and Rarbart Martin. AUo eurvlved by four graad-chlldran bad ttaraa great-grand-ahlldrcn. Funeral sarvlea will bi bald Priday. March t at 1 p.m FUNERAL HOME HUNTOON Blood Donors rUNEBAL ROME Serving Pontlae lor 30 Yaara Mkland Ava._PE t-SlM Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME - _ _______ Eathbiuhad Over 00 Tabra SPARKS-GRIFl?IN PUTTKRAL HO“* URGENTLY NEEDED . 10 Rb PotlUva. 07 Rh Natallva DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE IS SOUTH CASS __________PE f1047_______ MAilffiBfAHCl kUN - STAMPIHO TED'S Has Immadlata openings for Iba foUewing; Dining Room Waitresses Curb Girls Day Sbm TWO SHORT ORDER WAITRESSES needed Apply 7-0 a.m. or by ap-pointmant, MOM Dtaar, weal Huron at Bllsabath Laka Rd. Please a»k for,Irene. WAITRESS WANIVD. JOES CONET 1301 B. Telegraph. PE WAITRESS. U PN OVER. AFFLT Big Bay Drive In. 3400 DUIa Rltb- »ay.__________ WAimBBB. NtORTB NO EXPtRI- i^_Martli^ . CaiTiiter wnarum: ---------------■* “■ — orandeblldi will ba bald Sunday, 3 p.m. la Lebanon. Ti_____.... ..... Rev. A. D. Luton offleitting. Interment In Oreenwoed Cemetery. 3*3.£"^‘il’'r i WhgftMj^aUo iimvlved by tl “T vi‘rch“( de«r brother of || ee and nephewe. B will be Wd fl da^lCtrch • at 2 p.m. at w.., Dewitt C. Davis Funeral Home with Rev. Oalsn Rershejr offl-ciatios. Intermaot lo White Chspel Cemetery. Mr Monroe will He in state at the DeWltt C. Psvi& Ftineral Home. *^5a''v?fV«?.4on‘tr« -......................... eni. 3ey and Elaine Athlef: grandson of Mr. and Mra. _ Wuergise and Mrs. Bees Stevens •s:’’*iiTn?UB“v,sr5ii THo"u»S6h. liAAdH o. ifgi. Edith. 3S Clhranoe mrek; •» ea balavad wife, of Will --------; dear ■eepohelbla .. raaud by any other than my-lelf. Ray Barger. IM Elliabeth Pontiac. Michigan. ...--.-11 30 0-lkM. NEW' COMPANY ROCEEBTER AREA leads part time m«“ ‘ ' PART TIME, ■ la”' neeaasary. *CalT 333-3 from 4 te 7 p.m.______ PONTIAC AREA” ______ „r jawalry dept. In________ Yankaa Start. Miracle Mile. WrlU '*'nt”ae Vret'"" -------------- *' WANTED :~~^0ntL FOE QEHHRiUi Five-day week, steady work gnd uaual job banaflU. Apply by letter gli^ name, aSdraaa. telapliona, WHITS MlbOLSAOSD BABTSift. Junlo^ Sullivan. Arnold. Bobert and Malvin Melunar: dear ' ' «f Mrs. Edna Strelber, Mrs lah Sehwsru. Allen. WlllUi Vem Terry. Alee au---------- grendehlldren hnd grandchild Funeral be held Friday, REWARD Strayed from 343 S. Bdllh two 11 mo. old btbgle pups. 1 maU and 1 feraalt. black, white and tan. 14 in. Shy nature an'd uo cafiare PE 3-MB3____________ -BOX R.BI. Today there irere replies at The Press etflee la the IoIIowIbk boxca; 7, 8, 20, 28. M, U, SO, S7. S8, SO. 05, 70, 02, OS, 07, 102, 105, 100, 112. william and rvived by jS . .. ____________Mlchnel’e cllh- oUc Church. .RecItaUon of the Rosary will ba said Thursday ava-nlnc at l:M pm at tha Voorhtat-Slpit Puoaral Home, where Mri. ThAIIMMOO Will Hb IB BUtB 1b« tn Mt. aneL CIlffortL Lawrenu"Md' Whaatky. Haac, Verna, La-------- Rieharda. AUo aurvlved by 33 grandchildran and five -------- held Priday. March t. 1163. ____ CoaU Puearal Home nt 10 a.m. with tha Hav. Dorr Fockltr offl-elatiu. lat---------- "— READ THESE Classified Columns il grad. 31 t ot betlaiing aeiT. 3103 per week guarantee and axltnalve training. Cnr and lalepbone neeaasary. OR 3-3173. Serna part-timers wanted. REAL SSTATB 3UM A VWEK AND -------------------- _____ _________ laka loU, Oakland County. OR 3-II3B. SALESMAN WANTED: IXPERl- anca not naoataary, age 31-33. Salat Managtrt alto Apply at 4<" DUU Hwy.. Drayton Flab Wednaaday tbrough Pilday. I 4W««n aid Mu1 I Ihi-Migh a_____ SEMI-DRiVERS. MEN. 28 TO ». nsportlog travel trallera. _... YJri^°^*Aff*R10UX*'M«n{M re-A-Way .r.pr...nt»Jlv..^voj - aftwyp^m^'PTC Imw' WOUfAN WANTED. PULL OR FART time. Inquire Record Dept.. Tan-kea — Mlracla Mile. Retail lalea -------a necoaeary. must have isportatlon. No telapbona PUaaant working oondlUona good pay. aiparlance not nacaaaary, we will train. For appolntmaat call WOMAN TO TAKE CARE OP CHIL- A PART-TIME JOB Attar < p.m. 3 avanluit per week. Sift probtbU, 3103 fUkrtntred monthly. For Intorraallon call OR frthi'e benafitc, lor lltillmo on aitabllshed life Ipiuranc. ... rltory. Aaca .33 to St: PE 3-7781 APPLIANCE S A L IB M A I aalaa experience. 33-30. ____, amploymant.^ hue Rlui commis-■loo and other bantfits lumar Power Co., 33 W. lu«___ A-1 FRtSSER. Al^PLT IN PERSON Oa»ay OUanera, 13 W — - ATTORNEY tome background In real eclat and-or abalraci and title work tucceaaful applicant would eveni ually beeoma Involved In RIghl-ol Way purohaees. Appllcenis mui be membere of Michican Sinia Bn Aaan. Starting ttlary dependaat ug ait appttoiDa qualUlciliont a n ( backgraund. Send resume end sal ary raqulrtments to Pontlae Free Bex 31.______________- AUTO UiCRANlC WANTED. EX-Miienea on foreign care or r"' Minimum wagM tlob plug comn CAMP CHEVROLET. MH>ORO PHONE 334.1033. SECURE POSITION EctablUhed retail manulactuer hoc i openings In Tdiitlnc area for mar-' rled- high school grad 31 to 43 ' service established clientele. Ecr Ings and benefits are discussed Interview. CaU OR 3-8333. Also part-llmers naaded. _ STOCK. PART TIME,’ AOE 38 0 wee*k.' Apply at"'3y l” *Blvd. WE NEED’MEN Opportunity lo anm 178 n Week batter laarnlpx aur-bnalneaa. I perleneed men earning from $180 3330 per week. Call for appoli ment PE 3A1U.___ Two Trainees GUARANTEED SALARY CAB DRIVERS WANTED. MEN OR women. Apply to BUI WlllU, Chief Cab CO.. Partor B, Waldron HoUl. BSTABUSHED WATKINS ROUTE, ----‘IX abava ayertga. PI 3-3081. HELP POLIO PATIENT. UVE Of RETIRED COUPLE TO CARE POR --------- luuing in " _______-s OR 3-3 :at rbLiable cot ____________ malnlenance work In Birmingham, Reply to box 57. Ponllac Press. ApwImsiiHvf Hnia. tll-3« HOUSE MOVINO. «• D'Hondt Wraablng. ] 3 UMOMB 0 ■ETWTt. IOM8 AND BAttI, LI I, utUltles fumUhad. ad 873-1733___________ MB MODBHM. CRIU>, ------------------------------- 1368 PontUc laka I— PrynnkiHg 4 Ton*riH|^ * t)ir»EB. FgR_4iin»» CUBTOM TAILOR SUIT MADE AL- , to suit nltaratloha. OR 8-&X ' ORESSMAKINO. TAILORINO. tomtlona. Mra. Bodell. PE 4-1 Ihcshis Tax Ssrvics <3. NONE HIOHKR. LONG FORMS prapartd and typed la-------— Oeorge LyU. PTfc 3-0381. 3 AVBIUOB FEE IN TOUR HOME. B. Dunn, Tax Aeeountan' Tft. experleSM. OR t^mt. ACCURATE 3-BIOEOOM ROME. NEWLT DECO- js.m-rnfsr'irKS: *iS»f“'dois: 4-0133. 31 trance, eloie to town. PI t-0M3. We epealaUie Iq perianal U tax retuma. Reaeonable rt... B E Pike (earner Mint PE 4-1H3 I ROHE OR OFFICE UNTIL 10 Prleodly—DepeadahU—Expartm KEYS b NACXKRUAN all N Parry PE L3171. PE 3-3M7 INCOME TAX H^Sr-K^LOekeO. NaUan'a LargMt Tax Sarvlea Weekdays 3-1. Bat.. Sun. I-I WORKTNO MAN'S. MAS: BUSINESS retuma, 110, neot higher. PB ' 3-1330._________ ^HvaisKaBt-N«nlH| OOKIHa FOR NIC 8 LAROf elena 4 rewaat laaaaet upper ISl Wblttamora. All utlUUea. Ideal far 3 couples tbhrtbg. — _______ al? u’tlriiuaa!"Wcel ~ BrCTdway^'MT^^ PE 0-0330 avas. : AMrtiii»Hti-UirfiiriiIifc>d 31 WI^ CARE Pok 3 BLDBBLT PI -'e la my home, rtfartnatt, 1 Lake. Ta«r----------------- a - BEDROOM. OROUND FLOOR, private entrance. Near Blue Sky fticatrt, 380 a month. PE 4-3333. VAN SERVICE „ MOVniO AND STOBAOI REASONABLE RATES Mdlng — 13 Tears Rxparlenea ---^ERT TOMPKINS OR 4-1813 PoltlHg * PBCSEHttlllj A-1 DBCOHATma - srator. ailddle StralU Laka For Information caU Peart ancee, EM 3-4114, _________ 4 Rooms akd bat* oh auousta paper iwmovlng. PAINTINO. FAINTINO. DECORATINO imovlng. OR 3-7334. PAPERIMO. REMOV-*i. w—uiuu. 373-3S73. C. White. PAPER HANOINO A 8PECTAL1 Painting, Thempaon. PE 4-133' FAINTINO AVERAGE ROOMS. U3 per mem oamplete. PE 4-ir3, daye. • LAKE FRONT. 3tb PLUS BATH UP-par. Eicellent ahnpa and lodAtlcn. Worui^glrl or ooupU. Mf SUM Terraces. However, manager will - ------- fo- _____________Phone 333-3321. orchard court APARTMEklS MODERN IN EVERT DETAIL tsIsviiioH^adio Ssrvict 24 iMt Offks 1 *ST?wTf5?l.Sr- LAKH. BT 0 HE& COynCMPOEAHT IiillK itl^ Call Manager, 1 ___iiTte 8-Oir atrail antn MODERN OFFICE ““ 2»rt iwlHEW PrEynrty 47;A 1800 SQ. FT. firapisea. plenty of atamga. late of showroom. Largo parking r-Slw»r.Hau--aMi‘4 go wroMjur a retail buslneia dr •proleial—' businasa. CaU at your oao Itaaa. BATEMAN - Realty Company Per parson^ attention enU thi COMMERCIAL DEPARTMEH. 'EL^ONE FE 5-6311 BEDROOMS. . ------------- basament, Iw ear gar^. 00.750, with t'lt6 down. IM W. Colgate. PB 3-4A31. l-BBQROOM F&AMR. BASEMENT. 3 ear garage. Vb aara lot. 33300 down, assume land contraeL OR 4-1730. TO'* ROOMS. BATH. Ub CAR OA- nii3b.*py^ ohailar. ftoaat area. « tonm. CbJ owntr. OL Bam mJSQk& Largs aWe. fenced yard, W- a-ia-— “* “Srlak'YS. Bait^ offer orar 34.100 cash. MA 3-Bedroom Brick Ranch - -FmkoS-alraafe -r -allg- eaymUnepa SoWESi-r'em ,$100 DOWN •potUla Bulldlht C CUSTOM BUI HOMES YOUR LOT OR OURS Ross Homes, Inc. FE 4-0591 TRADE-INS ibadreawi raaeh. sas baat tllT conv^tDes.W5 a mootb ud up. NO CREDIT CHECKS Ho mortgagt approraU .naMad. SPOTUTB BUILDINO CO. PB 4-ooas 2-STORY kAMiLY Home Plcluraaqua a a 111 a g a^ gisat ihada traaa an an aara lot. 1 Brgt bedrooms, aeparate dining room. ' Se^*‘«'Lre.MnSSl fbie home. prirU^i^UcluM sfl!v^ *LAK^ONST. 07X031 dnya I PULL PRICE, tire damagaa. ... Near Case Laka. Ksego r. Elwood Realty. 033-3410. . JN YGUR LOT —tOOMONT Model Open Dally 1-t Jaeda!l*UL*3^Mfe 3Sl vboRHEIS. NICE HOUSE, ai famUy. sunken living room — firsplaaa. gaa bast. baMmaaL M.-100. PRA approved. 3300 down. Sam Warwick, oH-3030 er on-mo. BEAUTIPUL BRICK HOm AT 303 Crystal Lake Dr., hear Bag-ley. 0 bedroome. 13x34 living room, dtn, Youngstown kluhaa. 3-car garage, gas haat, atorma. 1-1000 atUr 0 3-BEDROOH. BI.----- baUia, anelsaad poreb. lVb,b baths, large raaraatlan room Ou*bSef tiroe ar**'"**'ho2a*** trade. ijMl for nppotnbmanl te aaal J. T. WARDEN, Realty 3434 W. Huron 331-7131 West Side... Nlroonu. pMiled Dbwli dteorftt« tr'' t«i ttaTMtfb- Suburban 3 bedraoma and fuioiwd attle far !T5ir^a8S!Si.'-S^ AN ACRE SETTIHa. laka prtrt-lagea. Nortbwsal af Famine, it ndWtaa drlra. FRICBO RIOBTI W. Walton... (Wner loeatlaa. Heart, madam bunaalow — 0 raanas and bstb. fullbaaement. I'/baeg gsrac*. Ob yes. wnU-to-Orai; cMpattng. AUn. plna paneled porch, comer aaO- Humphries FE 2-9236 Tf no answer eaU PI LSM3 Memffr"MJSXTSfo;n!U, TOpi rjs,KVisiOH YOU SHOP Trained Bervlca Man, Rani prices. Free Tuba Tastlsg Montgomery Ward Pontli _____ — _-rt!e, ctrneted living l^tlS^!*'^^^'amoean"'R5lty A Bldg. Co. PE AOOlf________ liST UDE. 3 "and 3 ROOM INSGRANCE FIRE WINDSTORM 3« per cant o« fe 3Son. fe 4J4m; WontMl CkildraN to Board 2t wanted EXPERIENCED BAKER an< baker's helper. Apply i" ” Huron. Thames Bakery. - CUuificEti'on the ctr of your choice. Region Dealers And Individuals... Keep this column fresh with daily listings of your favorite model and make at competitive pricea. IF YOU ARE IN THE MARKET NOW oraoontobe Consult Classification BE.VD AN EAR TOWN A COUNTRY POOD CO. Jflfl- (nr S** done U again We have atream •vxl W"»pf«non lo mike roon opporlunlly and n enee neeeteary as we give m^ugb^school^^^tiM field Our company prafatt men (between Mee of 31-33) with high ichotf educatloo. own car. travel • daye a weak (home weekondt) and able to tlart training on fuU taUry Immadlataly. If you qiialM and do not mind hard work then APPLY Prtday. March g from 10:30 A M. te 4:00 P.M. Mr. WllloughW at Oakkuid. PenttM, Michigan. PRESTON WALKER SMITH HM W- woodwgra- Midwest 405 PontlM^I lastraetlaiis-Sdieoh Employni late Bank Etd > MARINE E 4rt»a YOU Are Just One of Our 185,000 Readers . . To Reach the Other 184.999 Call FE 2-8181 Today1 ChoT. Olds dealarcblp. Ap- ^ loo Manager. Hasklaa CbaV- . ro nlai^ttt. "Kay," 3330 W. Ic HdT. Datrelt 21. D1 1-7333. my Servlao Manager. Mil., msfWrtmi ATnUCnVB, nOIEDMTE EARN-Ingt^taiereaalag^wM ax^^an- aver 23. 'No ,ouvaaclng. PI BEAUTICIAN, CUARANTEED SAL-sry pluc (mmmtsslon. Marie’s Beauty Saltm, 1073 W. Maple. WhlM Uke. MA 4-1313. evenings El^i^ A-1 CARPEHTBJL I —all Job. PE ftm._____________ BRICK, BLOCK. CEMENT ............... OR 3-0073. FURNITURE REPAIRED AND BE- , ROpPlNO AND MDINO 3dA|i WlfH CtfRB OifaE. Ahpt.T Akw . Boar, 131 North Perry. __________ piemtah god 1 T--------------------- “"I with ADA msmberthlp needed ‘ SOOrtiad honlthl with cantral-I food eerTln. 40-bour week, ral beneflU. including accumula-ilck leave and panelon. Balnry ed on quallflcatlcne and experi-s. Aoply; Pananoel dliwctor. at. ‘Ph Mercy RocpIUI, Ann Arbor, MIchlgcii. . ____________ ixpkRIEN^-EO WAri'HESS, MUST be 21 Telephena Ml 4 30“ EXPERIKNCED 8BAUTT Wontad HtosshoM 6—it 29 1 Blue Bird Auction. _________ ...... AUCTION, Ga I-L__________________ , :a8h #qe FURjtiTOiii aMB aF- rollmeamm. • -----hOUMlUl. P( i-bidroom HdhaK cARPKitit6 throiMhout, ftsaed to back yard, ' fuU Baaement. 300 Linda Tiau. | Pot colored. 33FT331._______ LAKE FRONT — 3 BEDROOMS. ' SSm Brlthtwood, WUitama Lake, par mantb. Open Priday. tp t -pxn. Sailuriday aed 8ui 10 am. toTpjn. VE 6-2741 ksiit Heytss-UwfMrnishtd 40 3-BEOItOOM HOOa OH TILOEN . *”■ - iMdROOU bkiCR TERRACE. IN- ArcbitectHral Drawlii| BW ROUTE AND BEMOOEUNG I HEAT, CON. •n loantlon. CaU ALCOA. KAIBEft SiDmd STORM VnNDOWS. DOOM. RBMODELINO and ArainONB Kraft .Siding & Roofing lTM PE 4-MW 18 8IDINO PORCHES PHA ULV2833 gyyit Watir Proafljiji CAU, L. BILU IR.. sandint. V Urn. 152-301 fraN taVlob. PLOOB 1 aaadfng and flnhbing. 3 jLat. HI-FI i FIANOS; TABLES,. IVRODpHT ntON dOM^B. ~7?(mngCcnEM yuS! - RADIO AND TT SERTK.. REBUILT TV'S FOB SALB Wa repair sewing machlnee and jac^uurg^Mt. Bwl.. Msr. BkkUILT ANd' OttliAN'IlkU Mfi . 313.H up. Obal TV and RaSaT •730 BliabMh Lska FB 4-3SM Ti4—Il ierffcii ACB TREB A StUMF REMOVAL THmmliis. oat OUT Md. ISLSilS. General Tree Service--^^»M4s.-^ nii^ MORTKOSS Tl ’ UtOOM TERRACE. DAB HEAT. ri RDULTB, 4 OR 0 UMFURR-Ithad room apartment or houaa. go not drink. Baat ol reftranoat. \\T2W_________ 5^®rs Livliig HvHrters WILL SHARE RICE HOME AMD . exMnaet with raUrad - drinker, ene who caa erencet. PE 8-0114. WILL share expense room home on lake working lady or eoupla. PE 3-1371 IwrtEd K-l Ettrt» 34 Do You Want It SOLD.. Or Just Listed? dicta attanUoal Wa ..... .... at aaca to tall your praperur to -— adVtntasa. fm 01 m u^ Warren Stout, Realtor 77 N. Si^aw -------- T^ntla te MONTH, COLORED OUT. aL meat new 3-bedroom alnsle h« ebiek.“i*-ins!^AL*VAL BOULEVARD HEIOHTS” — 2 Bediwom Unit — 373 Per Mcnth XAR-LIPE EATTXRT CO. ITARTEES AND REUULATOR8 REGULATORS. $3.95 m Auburn _________PH 3-1314 Boots-Acusswlss VISIT US DURDfO 1st Annual Boat Show “AT PONTIAC MALL Mar^ 4 tbrouth March 3 Harrington Boat Works 'Tour Evtanida Oealef'' 1333 8. Talagraph Rd. 338-S0I3 LL FURNACES CLEANED AND miaad C. L. Nalaon. FE 8-1738: iiicaiiM Tax Service ------------------------- RAUUNO and KUBBISH. RA3n AU, WORKIRO PEOIUW ANir ---------------- ---------- _ ^ UOHT , income tax REPORTS pared. Baldwtn-WaHoa arei Hayward. PE 4-7333._______ notary public ' HEIDRICK BUILDINO SERI Rome. Oarage ----- * FBA TBRMS 5S*'Z2KS*’ cisbineu!' _________Lytll LOe. 3 raomTaa^talS. b sarF,”assr' ‘ -RENT SELL OPTION motImS* Ulk. S»«,”"fAftLB k and utOMaa funUabad. NEEDED AU lypaa of Real Batata, have mperty to aaU aaU help fit dlapoMnt of It. » CWOUE R. mwiH, REALTOR n ^ PRITAIE ENTRANCE. LADY OB Inal. fMOloora. Concrete Ploora WINTER SPECIALS Kttebani. b a t h a, recreatlao raemc. addlUaht. No money down. Proa attlmatea. Oubm’a Caor“— tion. FE 3-3132. BCHWEiraBR CARPET 8ERTIC elaaatag, repairing. Inylng, fr aaumataa. PBlMgn ar PE i-TH COMBINATION DOORA. 311.33 ^athlM No. 8. 4e aq. ft. blaitlock bldo. supply _________FE 3-7101 TALBOTT LUMBER Olaat butaUad In daeri and win-d^a. Complata buUdlaf larvtae. hockiRo stoker coal 317.U PER TON Olga Pooa Stoker and Furnaaa LATLOCK COU CO. FB 3-nt AAA FIANO TUNIHO WIEOAND’S___________FE L3314 1 TUNINO AND REPAIRINQ f SgimMt_________PE 3AS1T Roun imuNo. klmtrical al- terationa. Uaenaad tmuieymM. Winter rata 1183 hr. FB 3-2133. PLMTEBINiS FBEk ESTlMATig D. Mayerc__________EM 3-0133 ONT ANb HEAVY TRUCKINO. fjORT RAULINQ. BlfENIlioe ANb weekendc. FE 3-3333._____ ^r»ch iwitiil Trucks to Rent Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. FL 5-8888 ~wai tkcUon iuarantaad. WALL 173 8. Saginaw __________PE r---- WaUpapet 5 now aandeH. pa ,-afaU! wSSki, “S' »«^t*t»rT OKHERAL BOUSKWORK. BT THE hour Call after 3, 333-3870. QIU DESIRES BABTErrmo. _________PE 4-3413 The More You Tell the Quicker You Sell! Want Ads Do the Job FE 2-8181 Try Theml TTE RAVE CASH L homes. Cail « Foul Jones, Retity. enAM AMO TOBCK —,r-:- -I’l OeS^^rttJiP _aut water llnaa. PE 3A331. PE 4-1633 PE 3 34U. ApHrtweirts--FHrteiiMl l-Bte^M„EPFICIBNCT AFABT- ' —ita. FuUy turalabad. Parfclag. ' ^Noiibaact alda. FE 3A331 ar 1 r Sab Nwnh INTHfe MibDLE OF AN ORCHARD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, > Sab Haam Sab mam TIZZY By Kata Onnn Sab Hmms ATTENTION' WE Ttur vitt 8ir ^aud$ « tppU. ptMha P8M. plum £LniSaWi.^**is5s: ayaa a road atda ifann lo aall iu*’?*#**' +w>«oet; brkk. Eka family Imbm, taiga oar- the praduea. Nka S-badroom bama wttb fun baaamaat aad »b-«ar garam. duet a wooderful ptaoa ta UTat SlRSt* an terma or wUl trade far amaUar boma. HI ewnar aaaaot taka ear* of out ^olyn Slif**dT Lorah BuUdkf. arehatd. realtor PARTRIDGE ,10ai W. RUROR FE 44811 1»1^ FAinLYTOUsii COLOiOaJ: l^terood Doealo^nt Co^3S-4»73. Raw 3-badnom. Waal mburbaa. Lake Malseo Bldg Co. OR iam . let af aioraga an taka lay*L ear attaoM taraga. Large M. ibatra by appoklmaBt NORTH PERRY CORNER S-faraUy earaar kt, 1 car garage, next to Voorbak Pimanl Home. Oood eondlUon. Bargain. WMTSOBUBBAN; "^rtek hama,wM be alapt to ElAR CLARX8T0N BCnoOLR S-badroom. Itb bathe, brtak front, 1*0 ft. lot. raduead ta SMSIb S3M dawn. PEA. Paul Jonaa Raalty Fi 4-SMO nk <£>ndbSdrbm?i^n^ room. Corunk Ukd both - moot. oU hoot. *9W mor tlgia~-IBwEt Iktol—‘ ^ £ -Waterford. IlriiK mi dktai room, ni nLLUUS LA*a - FHl«OfOO 1 sa.?s’ijK?fyi^ BM It todAVo i'Sr-SSiu’MWiJS; JOHNSON’ nUJAUB LAK> - » Moota k bcuh. LorriT 1 bwliooBi — Ml o boiomont. Vo^ nko tario Urtof EAST VOOlbTABO wSmoXi^ ^Mpo^. ^fS?' moat with now (u Mnuo,. roAlka.raom.,1^ onocbod gn- orollAblo. Now oehool. Inunedl-**«. enoMMkn. Prteod ot UT.iM Frusiiour LOOKINO NOR A gOUO t-NAMILT ---->MB. KERB U A DAMDT - u 1 raooa oad bath up. pbii - —-r -----„ - .voma and lt> botbo doom -*“- owpottag. flr^oca. and to "£l^, tnmm. brtngtn. tn 2ssiKk;*iJaur‘SSM moro dalafla. BToninn aflar (P.m.. eaU BowoM Loaaar. NK Adtn. A. JOHNSON & SONS RiAL ENTATa^SURANCR 17M A. TELBORAPH 1< E 4-2533 CalJ^ront ** a-bodroom lakofraat baao alum, ildtnf. auto, jao boat, rant, Ian md hood. dvvotlBf and ; drapaa tnelndad. RaoalltBt eondl- tar hall. Urlnf reroTtoS and kttehan on Tit floor, rooma. bath and largo klteban up. Baaamant. gaa boat and ga-ragal^jk VA - no down pig- t, plaalarad wall “wsssratitj John K. Irwin mwV«ri^U,. Pbana TO i-Hai -Roa. FE 4-aOa STOUTS Best Buys Today NOTNWO TO ado —Owner ha I takan can of all tbo hnprova-manta. now oarpatlng throughout, now gaa lumaoa. tUaMth. 3 largo badraoma. aaparala dining room. High aeank H aara parcel. coaTon-la^ watt auburbao loeaUao. Only I $13.30* With tatma. a AND atmi ._an you am me _ 4-room boma, on the - o down---------- lUprtca. D-to-waB aamtlng. ng to aall flrot. wc^mo TAX-RANOE-Why rant mora Into a aolld ___j> tha North End paymant naaded. 0T.SW NICHOLIEJf' WT itoN koe!** " North SuburbRii t-badrooia bnng^w wtto fun baaamant, oak fkora, plaatarad walk and 3-aar garaga. MkaM ' on 3 aoraa. Rabool bua to NobUm Hortbam and 3Udlae« 3r. Blgh. North End t-badioom hama with full bawf racraatton room and nlum. aMlaa. T^J^tmna 30 ba proud drf OEORQI ili'ntWIN. REAVrOj- , ----NE 1-T3tl ___4J Sab Iwbm fnurtf O * ;n Y-CLUSK IN Neighborhood Grocery Brewer 5e3* Estate ■eVSX'—riSi^'Vm Templeton DRIVE-IN CITY-CLOSE IN i/Jf?- “■ b?*tii '^r. ISiiii n. M lor ttu aa naad car lot In .. ^Ktnnr-with atattaa and rw UUTR-WIDEUAN RRAtYT ‘ 413 W. HURON STBRET _________rg 4-4*33_______ Professional Business Oocd loeaUcB, Baautiful apk aa yw’gy’^ss.aV l-'actory for Sale Factory at hUlford for oak at 'laaa. Madam offlcaa and ahow-oonu. 3.0W ag- ft- Dak LaoBWd. tmplra i-4S4T.____ Local Buildinj bnUdtag^ Brewer Real Estate JOSEPH'r. BJCm. SALES MOR. , PE 4-3UI Eraa. PE 3 ------TRL-LEVEL^-------- TRADE jt HM moTM you In. CiU CLAWMTOir ABBA •nir*# bedroom BHICI .Uvlnt bod dmini nr g^w^date: vacitt; araa. Eftchan cant, Ahou4 R**» moaaw Can today. Era. can Ur. Alton PE 4-SSS* mCROkJE HAROER Op. , tst* W. Hindu St. NR 341 GLES ROCBBSTER AREA, ■•?«««« nMaoMot. oU hast. Wdwaad Ikort — Plaakrad walk. 1-oar garaga. largo kt with larsa gatdr- •— hi a goad arta. Call now- NORTHERN RIOH ARRA heal, m haltia Vary largo lot Vacant. GILES REALTY CO. PH S41TS 3U Baldwin Arc MTTLgS£E*/Mo*ianCR NEED ROOM? $250 DOWN RnmaOlata poaaaaakn on ranch typo S-badroam ham. Nka Urtag ream with picture wtndow. family ktkb- ^A^iodXy•s^.a.r5; OTAWFORD AGENCY Sr^-pST ht”£?IS CHEAPER THAN RENT NORTH PONTIAC $69 Down NBW l-BEOROOM HOUR $55 MontJi a* tSSSlmf *wSwa!* dl-iraa partoaa with a aradlt Seb Hemes 4f Seb Hemet Oakland Heights NEAl 11 to wm otr i Wbler bod enblDOU M'S i. Laiwa U nd klt&an. G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. ^ 33 X m. Near abain^. tc- and cburchaa. Only tiM. 314W t'^WFO^ AGENCY >3 W. Walton S33-3S33 If E Plint____MY 3-1143 ARRO #f eon and lot that f.muy_ WATERFORD HILL AREA Rrkb -and ghimlnum. T-raom. t atory noSk. Naaturaa 3 hadrecc SK,MLS?k£5Sn«. pMa with aketrk aren aad ran.. Sw hoed fan. OU PA boat. 3-car gamga. iM loalaamtor. CLAREB-TDN SCHOOL DISTHICT. PULL NHICH nrjff. Smitln Wideman OPE^TOs!*^”4-4526 MILLER, EUZABHT^IiAlgC . HSTA^^, a guaUty boma -•nata yor ■ ____ cempaRbla homaa tn raa. Wa hara approstmataly a arallabk to irtek from for or buUdtng lobt. Theta are reinag. aoantc with paring. ----- II. gai. midf ) pokei. In I. A 330 dapotll of your choka RENT WITH OPTION 3-badroem atnsk boma faaturtng OAS BEAT O'NEIL NO DOWN PAYMENT SOI 01 - Wa ^ two 1. CLOm TO LAKE - 1. OFF JORLTN - Larw Ur-mt room (IdxlT). nko ktkh-an. 3 good bit badNMsa. all b2?aaS' aaSaalaODiy%f*3 '* g.’si.as.*e&sB‘w"S. a happy bame awaar. Can Bob O'EaU. PE 3-T113 Have Model to Show I ban mom raaUi — 3 w garadt. baaameat. Iharmo wlridowa. mm- S'si.s'lsssjr.s HIITER ggsin kb laadtc^je^^ao- KAMPSEN gar a tffii WITH A BUSINESS OR REAL ESTATE PROBLEJyJ MAKE A UORNINO APPOINTUENT WITH HE. AND nx PROVE 1 CAN SOLVE IT, OB LUNCH U OH ME YOUR ATTORNEY AND ACCOUNTANT ARE WELCOME PAWNER*^ ANYTIME I REAL ESTATE sraE&”!{iSD«» 50-STATE COVERAGE PERSONAL ATTEN™n TO YOU AND YOUR PROELBMS LEW HILEMAN, S.E.C. Realtor-Exc ' 1*11 W. EUBON a. COMMERCIAL BUILDING ORTOlinLLR 431 MUI m EA T-SItl —AM tkt*ihiA« sgjr*b NOB TOUE Land Contracts .-E,s!rrE.-su;:g'Tr Land Contracts uaa balbra m deal. Warraa it. Haalkr. ft M. Sagtanw *3. ^’optfco. " 3i7m. b sita’ss: parch. I r?S5f ? 4-NAUILY ANABTMENT. 1» aOUTH A mak blghr 330 dawn. WU down. Wh«t bj S^geluuiiliif- BATEMAN REALTY COMPANY CLARK LOW DOWN PAYMENT NOIOM Wa bara a gaod oakatlon, In aL. cat o< city, with amt without baaa-mank. 3 and 3 badroama. Nrkad from 33.33* la *11.***. Many nawly daaoratad and rnaaot. DESDUELE 14KB NEONT. laral. 3 badroonu. aaramiL — ^ -i. lam Urmg room wllh flra^ «. dmbg room, klteban, glaaaad sc.- siCd'r-.irMjs: DORRIS BBAUnNOL TBI-UVBL: Located , high OB a hUl sumuBdad by an ' abundaaaa of tawartng bardareodt. 8734431 or 171-5053 HOUSE NOB SALE A roal tneama buy, S »< bath. 3 larga eloaak d< owner piua 1 S-rogm ai._ Iffi: 'Su''l!rKSir.*’tt lS"olJaa‘*£r*ShJ!Sa".SSl bua Uaa. fia month laooma from 3 upper apu. Only tarsf. with fLTMdown. BaltaM m eontrart K^g Hmn^gaad. Eaallar. MS E. Jjju^Preperty Ti 3 . bedkoom nukhuhed. on Lake Orion, ft.#3* *»*»••* P*t month. R. Waehal. NK >4333. COMMERCE-ROUND L A K'E-W Iots-410 down, no a moath, flth-Ing, twimmiBf. boat doeka. OR 3-lf3». NB 4-MW. Bkoh Eroa. Carp. SYLVAN LAKE LOT Daatrabla kcaUon aa taka. 33X13*. Will aacrtflca I ____ . ^ peraonal at—...—- and COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT s- - TELEPHONTTEE 5-6“ CASH marts aa aa 'arlkbEL^^* CuUoufl 3143 CASS-BLIZABBTH BOAD NO WAITING Enmadlau tala tar good aauaa 3434 W H.uroB. yiiai* "'Karl Qanwlt, EM 34311! EM 34I*«I AUBURN HEIGHTS PAETY STOEH - itlful. ultra medarn. parldim. I comer. 34.0N mo. Two iH- BOWtUfO ALLEY aad CUaa C h one of ttaa north t boat cltka SSa’^rwnS-rVaiy'ISitJ able. BADE your houaa or load eaatm. on thU buty truck atop at junetko of 3 lane hlgbway In ratte area. Oroatlpg 390.000. Only 33400 It'a aatr gulck monay. SUPERETTE OEOCEBY - Oraaa ““000 Ptnaat aalf-aarra flxlura-idtng aalf-aarra moat dkpla) n. taty P™*”;?,'* Meeey te Leee (Ideanaad Mena $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE VAST^t^vinratN? heart atuik. 313.000 an aaay knna. ' PACKAOB Liamm. patant madl- ACEB CAMP SIDE. OAYtbRD area. fSTt ftiU prka. 31* f— no month. Adame Realty. with buUt-tns. gh — Com/ortable I ladgarcek flrapl and Scar garai ' Resert Prtferty BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WEEEE TOO CAE BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES m NfaUse — Drayton Plahii — DEcR WaUad Lake - Btrmtegham TEAGUE FINANCE C6, 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO Many txirs leeHirw — • or taiAU down parmtnt. WRIGHT aeraana. raaatlaa blln^. large h HURON WOODS Roar af Uarty*i mrtf oauraa. badroom brkk rami, attached ga-... w..^. living rely wwr--- a^rSamTli taka prtrUagaa. BparkUng jd Ikera. 3 badrdonna. and IT mara^mramk tUa bath room, nraplaaa. lerely wppar i — Lot 113x140. Baautiful detail Owner tranxfcrrad. Only 313.333 - ”roY8^ PRAOT^ EXECUHVE3 OH DOCTOE8 A woadarful ccmblnatkn tor boma and offten — Lovely old colo-‘-' 5 l^droomi. YTikthi. 1 larga-li rooma. fireplace. large dktag r famUy kllehen. new W wa^ L. 330-foot tientage of pared road, •pacloua. landtcapad *row*l». S-oar garage. Niked attraeUraly. T^rma. Dorothy Snyder IJivender TgOl'Hlgfalaud Read rk out the datalk. Tbk dapoatt „ eublaet to the, lak of your azUUng bouM tf not already aoM. »d tko rabjaet to ua pra-aanttng to you a aatUfac^ ut ____ _t the prloa aad bat pkaaa y—---------- _____o ohUgatlon, wmplatad the oak c paper work and e boma la *0 dayt or ----xtlra heme. _______ or compktad ear 'ikt yt.TerSur-fSwiihid —for broahura and floor If after a tour of nwth. built-in I ft. lamUy : gsa heat, attawsbeifmragai'ukli*' lot. Fasad itraat. Low taaae. I—-aad country Uytag at It'i 1 Only SU.IM Can taka osar 1 ant mortgaga. Bailor moskt 1 Flrat oftartug. BRENDEL LAKE Vary larga l-room laefront 1 Juit off 30S. S4 ft. UTlBx rwu., all other roame sary krge. lament. torcad air beat, targe Sm-lly room orerlooklM lake. Bacrl- "Tvn«ir C^L TWO TO NINE ll*4 SEAWERR LANE - EKAU'^- Uaata aur 8n< , Iba DOW Uaa t___ bidden faaturaa at the black famUyeem^ta^ SSfTrm'u’loro Ita*Fra^ profiteetel doeor 8od the loft tnder REALTOR PARTRIDGEjoL S4m” WEBSTER LAKE ORION-OXFORD enk 1* acraa wtih axoallant ce. 3 garagaa near Okfard 1 f aad iwrtly wooded. 110' from railroad aiding. Pi A GOOD SELECTION pareek. SS.S** to SS.SOt ismTST ORTONVILLB 431 MIU dt. WA T-SSIS LOCAL DEALRRSRIP AVAILABLE 1 —'-la reaUantlal fira and alarm aystam maautac-Mkaeapolta - Hoaaywell. _____ Auburn Hetablt 1------ .. m you mak tl* SM Ihta yaarf Plnanctal Awlet to gualUled man Tbp franchiaa. Oat lal now to full leaeon Just ahead. Includae 1 baauUful 3-badroem boma on erty Extra large net profU. 333. SO* phix stock down J. T. WARDEN. Realty i 3434 y. Huron_________333-719: NEW STORE k M-93 Shopping Flam 3*x«t Meal for tadlas dreis shop am chUdren'i wear. Reaaonabk rant — 1-4411 JNOCO STATION kaaa-paor baaltb baa di led the rettramant af the prai ‘ PERR^AN?^AETIHr — ^---------w.-.— profit busk TRInlly 13100. I'kfu. Por'^liSormatka os Trade Trade Trade Signature OAKLAND —Loan-€om|an^ ^ WHEN YOU NEED ' $25 to $500 wa wni ba Had to bate ywa STATE FINANCE CO. Eaxter-livinootorb Ml Pontiac State Bank BnOdkd FE 4-1538-9 LOANS tSaiSvnfrr LOAM^ E. LAWRENCE FE 34 rtgEJE lEEHE I BEFORE TOU BORROW UF TO BUILDING SITES Mans '*^1^ ** It Lapeer t 3-0331 h_parod it^ta? weUs. LOW AS 3*30 T.ADD’5 INC, (Perry MM) OR 3-iai after 7:33 33x137. 31.333. , -Voss & Buckner . W. Rurea and Sagtaaw gta. FE 4-4729 lawn. SIS m WILLIAMS LAK FE S-7S91______-Ml W. Waltea TAVERN And party atSre k buay JenrVm^ S-Mroom’OT^ f ht-l - Taiogro^ kre. 310.003 wlU handle. What base I - yen ta trade. H-\GSTROM DBELTn UUSS esnnBriaiiaj ^^***.*.i sajsil FE 8-0466 GAYLORD "BUD" West Suburban full baaamant, automatfc baat and Sjroik‘<‘ir£sr«iMTSj apal). Oftatad tt OILIO*. Lake Oakland Front DeUghtfnlly attraa^a * 1 takMmi boma witb aMaak car goraga. It'a all m ana 1 Witt ivT balba.'^aada at cim- youraaU tadbyl "Bud” Nicholie, Realtor Ve After 6 P.M., FE 4-8773 ' LAKK-FBOirr 7-room. 4-bodroom vUto rtertftUon room la boMtnwii. Seal. Askkg *U,*0R good kraw. ladgarcek flrapl^. fklabad reom awswiSa.'xaj™'; Lawrence W. Gaylord Lake Orion, Mkhlgaa HOLIDAY HILLS S Badroom ranah. tomSy roam. fuU baaamant with bar. earpat. pesadL inlii? - out* down. . SOUTH Bloomfield Highlands RORABAUGH , cv; aehonla alL urruaBELP Move Right In |L«M - SI*. Dan pta* £Sr^!T5aS?£S..-i^ DON'T Mias^jvr^ Don’t Read 5S3} k IfOI. ^0* tasaga, faa^ roar yard aad wan laadacapad. Oaa straaU*a27^Saa*ta echoSTikSnS S1.SW down k kw ktaraat with %«r!tSSdr^-s;.«.“>^ BATEMAN’S TRADE-IN PLAN It Really Workal PC 44m ReM ra *- Opm M ._.M.L4.. .tanday WILL HAHIM Here k a gaad aae. 8FBC3AL — Near Unkn g±«S!rd;:r‘,M; near PONTIAC PLANT -- Rxcel-lant 3-badraom aaml-bunialow with MV |M dmiftcoa modomlMd Uicb' Sewn piua mortgage aoMa. nxcp wtomqreoqp - On* of tCSad bmlj^a^. ito 4 booM plua tsry~ya^^ ,t^ WATU pmoifT SPECIAL -thro Mrt von eooitiiiM i !k rvodk— • ----- W Mn. tfftn oiM itrofo. mpm iiirkk lan^. S badroama. m7. HtHm room brkk ftraptaca, bulU- .Sl^tiaAMt * p.m. Vktt LET DS^BUILP - Tm^ yn. axpanmea. srR WILL' - oSbI;I0 am. • bwsbjsjsl.------------ L. H. BROWN, Raltor' U* RUmbath Lake Read Fh. FE 44IM or ^ >411* TRADINO n TERRIFIC RIGHT THIS WAV; H you are kakkg ter a rauaniMt ptiead bema an Iba North gda. It baa s ^a^liU, roam., ttS^ftrtt”&er. and 1 taw ^flaTFS^JS^ wUhtanaa. OLIO* dnwa. UfCRRASRD TRE HEE OF TOUE FA^Tf^'ny^^y an* tbk^aulwMmttal^ W^ MM mnw' to|e""toiaems? aak floora. full baeammt. gaa ' A REAL FAMltV EOSm -Tbk ksaly 3-badroam. Satasr brkk bama k Mat oO Weotf-ward Asa. aaar St. Joaaph Hospital Ekkory Oroea Setaool. Ikrga llelag ream erlth ftraptane. aaparala dim big room. *-:-10 ________ JJ ! Tuo ADJAcm LOTS ros L*n I THE FOMIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAKCH 7, IMW J j M Aim TOP COAT sm a. t eip- lliMd boj’i Um WAU (tM l«. 'l boj'A W9t* tm. »li« IT. PS MT44. JUST ARRIVED nd UblM, MA AMM. BLECTRlC DRTIll. Ml iMhUO-craior. 03 CsmplAto bunk bMS. like u«. cot t». will Ukt ITI. ELSCTROUJX vacuum CLCAksij XSTSSELTS? :;;;::::»S OwwwTiSntojnn^ 0(Km~Ih _________________ T n.t Mf » •nlu*l*t I B CARLT. KENWORB OIL RBATBR. AMD 1 ■m»ll wood burner OR »-«t» . . . _ . _ UEDIcmB CABINETS LAROB »' elMnlH tool!. T»ke mirror, iUiliaj mcrrcd tl.M. month pnymOTti. Only «».•» Inrc* MlocSon ot enbtawte with cMh prlM. OurafiM. Cbpltol or without UfirtMlIdln* door*. Aowint Cttitwi, PB ____________ Tbrrlflc buy*. Mlehl«*o Fluor**- b cent, m Orchard L*ko. — M i> NEW CORVAIR OAS REATBR. NBW UaBD WOOD PABTC RIMS. * t. 1 I n. IdoAl tor your inrat* ir workihop. tlM Ktot Bro*.. ft AdTlt, H 4-lUI. BARBBR E00IP1IB1I¥ >Oll lALB. tfl 8. >g Cttitwi._________ tl CUBIC FOOT CHI iT dMD CxoeUeQt Mtamw n^_SM 3rtMI TlB«f riMB IN MlCRlOAN" WHOLESALE MEATS AND OROCBRip -FREE HOME DEUVBBT-All n*tlon*lly odyrrtliAd biwnd M NMMiraM Gssdi 6S 1 CORNBM china t» BAST erib S*. Bunk bod* SM. M cle*o Phom b«Mh IS. Btf picture TV.'* Sli up. Prlddnlr* »uto. wothrr tSifedd*Hid.*“chJiiW or*, aprlni*) roll *w*yt. oil he*l-or* *nd ruf*. Ereryth^ ‘“•VlS '■—------ “-ri»ln prie**. ALSO >flS I. Kleenex. Pot n ____________________r. PB hlSSS NEW AND OSED PUPJtACBA IN- NOTION AKD YARD ' OOODh itock. Victor c**h resUter. — Informntlon mil: S7S-T7SS i - ninge. i'. ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AKD *' ) Bolll^ 90Dl*£*' PACHB CAIIP T1UULRIA S model*. SSSS up. Cbmper'* PATS' die*, 3SS Auburn, tH-SSW. metlon ehowlns bow you e*n bt ot three price*. S47 IK7. S to 5. PRIOIDAIRE BEPRiaEBATOB, goqd condHIon. S» Ml 4.MSS. KRIQIDABE AOTOMATIC WASll- IT top, ,0L S-IS72. After I p.m. dbehoCd ruRNUUDiaL i bdt-sbll-tuade BAROAIN HOUSE 101 W. Co** *t LMeyetu PE I SMALL DUNCAN PHYFE DININO nt. buffet, UbI* ond i cheirt. ___sis V? (torn. SIS up WeelUilhouee dryer. SIS. Lounf* c*--'" W**her*. SIS up. lronr.„ - y. Dreeeer*. bed*. *prlns(, lood* otSer furniture. BUY SELL-TRADE PBARSON'S FURNITURE «S Orehord Loke Are FE 4-7W1 J4 PRICE^REJECTS ■^srr's.'srw^s?^ KENlioRE ELECTRIC DRYER d M inch cl***lc Kenmon The Floor Shop MSS Blleobeth I PLYWOOD SPBCIALa _ V Pelt Board 4'xT ........I 111 '•—due Fonntoa .I7« iq. toot PONTUC plywood CO. Baldwin PB. MI4I PLYWOOD OF ALL JCmSs plenty Wtotar_______-------------------- to 7 p.m Eaav lemu BUI Coller Apaebt Camplhf Cootar 1 mUo •aat of Lapeer on U-21. RAND OUNS. SHOTOUMB. RIPUto. new ond ueod, buy. cell or trod*. Bufr-Bhell. I7S S. Telesroph. . JOBACB BAMD. ORWnXr PILL. buUdo«lns. Merrle Wohl. OR 4-I7S1. GOOD COW MANURE, Sth YARDS. PILL SARD. BBACR BAUD. LOAD-ed or deltyered. StonewnU Cow etnictlen Co. FB <-1171. I STURDY SLENDERELLA RBDUCINO LAROE KELVINATOR POOD - O-Rom*, like new. tIM. Bound ook dlnlnj room toble ond S choir*. *t*ndlng tollat, SIBSS: hekler. 149 95 ; 3-plece - ---- SM.96; Flberglu Uundry tr*y. trim SISS5; SMn *how*r *toU. *-^ -“SS; J bowl ilnk. SI.95 SAVE PLUMBMO CO. g ITS B 8«gln*w FK MISS • REBUILT - USED SWEEPERS. FE 4-7ISI. rlgerttor B5.'FE'i ■ MAHOGANY EXicufivf~DEB1, l-PIRCR UVINO ROOM SUIT AND S-ploeo dlolnf room *ult. Studio eoueb. S s** rtoyoo, kitchen UbI* nnd oholr* ond other Hem*. FE I-54SS. SS Auburn._________________ S-PIBCB UVINO BOOM OUTFIT, I pc. dlnlnf rocen outfit. Frlgldelrc electric ^yo. Bpe. bedroom mW 3 ROOMS FURNITURE WITH RANaE.''^lWOERATOR $319^$l-5 MONTH bargain house 103 N^ABS,^ , BUT — BELL - TRADE - FE 3dS43 B PIECE iEDROOM IBRAND 1 nej), “'emiy j Unu>i.*w*rchoui* priced, ISS, SlII ■ vc^. Pearson's furniture. ; 43 Orcbord Lokc Arc._____ t mcm uvvia boom ibrard now), doyonport '--- cuebloae. trolco ooi bico. 1 oefloo tob..... ... SL3^wookIjr'‘piMlJS^^ FU TUBE, 41 Orehord Lrtc Ayo. MATCHTNO TABLES. DANISH MOD- trarea Hdwe. 741 W. Huroo. RESTAURAIfT AOT> BAR EQUIP-ment. One air condltlooer. Two refrlferatlon eomprei " —***m maehtn« FE 2-1471._________ l-BAO^ AU'roMA|te AU, BINDS OF WOOD. I Ilrtploce, klndUns ond os on olco tree romovsl. ATc 1 ecoplni. FE 4'433S.________________ ODDS AND ENDS M.SS lomp, SS.M. SSS.N lomp. 13 91. 199.99 oomtr Ubio. SS.St. M.95 illrcr fox comer Ublo, Your* for SS.IO per month or oiA SS4.33 loUl. Coll Uy-swey deport- B . 10 EA'ai “TB Elliobeth I " SPEOAUS Prefinithed Okumo 4xS-Snd S3.SS 4xS V’ A3 Birch *1*!! DRAYTON IpWwOO'd I Dlxlo Hwy. QB 1 • BTAINLEM STEEL SINKS \ all SROWBRS COMPLETE with louccte ond curUIn*. SSS.90 yolu* S34 M. LoTOtorIc* cotnpleU with louccte. S14 SS. ToOeU, S1S.9S MIchlgen Pluoreteent, 3S3 Or- TALBOTT LUMBER nloltUn. S4S SS. nyl BINOER BEWna MACHINE. ElO Zagger for deiigna cte. Id beautl* *..*---e. u-u p„ ^ account |5.fc --------- in working C( MulUllib num 124 < SxiS RUOS VINYL UNOLEUM PLASTIC W'" ■hO TILE ______________ S-PIBCE DDUNQ ROOM SET. IRON- RIU Ironer. OL I-9SS3.____ lACUBIC-POOT NOROE REFRIO-erslor with SP-pound fi--- <1n6er sewino machine; ukk Sof,’ JiSu’oa etmS^llt’piymmli , SI orlflnel eontrset. Or, only S33.1* will Kindle. Cipllol Sewlns CcnUri PE P9407.___________________ SEWINO MACHINES AND VACUUM -.---- --------- jjj . S39.90. Elcc- THE SALVA’nON ARMY RED BRIELO STORE IIS WEST LAWRENCE S5M I typi-i^uit-» Dixie •jC^__________ with S yintty limp*. • p*. kUohen dlnetU I*L s dBi. ttU ruE Ineludid. i-Z Sth* WymsB PumltuT* ( E. Huron. SOLID mAFle double bed com- typewrlUri, S4S.BS. PorUbI* type-wiitort. claanad, al* ■* ad. I12.S0 up. FOR] Bwy. (Neat to Pontl OR 9*I7I7. alaa In oinningDaii 419 Frank St.* 10 7-3444.^c UPRIORT PIANO S30. VIOLlk AND . 930. Kenmor* Sewing Mo- 94.99. Cleonlng. 94.95. So* ||| LJ$?LJ3Lldy?l:— 1990 49-»CIIDB,intEPiUOIDAIRR USED ELECTRIC DRYER ' 1 TV**«iS4 ARO UP . SWEETS RADIO AND A^LIANm MECHANICS CHEST. COMP__________ ' SockeU, liming light. Torque-vionoh, rtdgt resmer. ring com-preiior, ring clesper. sewe, __________> teailers! a pew new 1993 medete *— - *— eoamc. Alllly* dlcpley See tb* c UoJ" t el big dl I modelg < CanUAEUA MALE PUPPIES ARC miniature silver POdDLS pup, 990. FE 4-717S.____ AKC TOY POODLES POE ETDD. eervlce. 9I3-0319. FE 5-I3M. .~Blsck ond FE eu309. ARC DACHSHUND PUMTSb collS female, BBAUTIPUL '-'-^k end whit*, popen. SIS or * tor cement bloeksf Cell offer EROUSR TOINTER PUPPIES FOB APACHE CAMP TRAILERS - . Exe. huntiv stock 3ERMAN BHORTHAIRED POINTER. mole, I----- ----------- “ 3-6853. Roeheetcr. OL 1-S373. PARAEEBT8. CANARIEa.' CAGES. By Dick TurDcr Wiwt>e Cm-Tnwtt , JO CASE DOWN ISSr BUICE'S wc hoec 3to '—i. (or 0* low sc BIST. ssrn OUT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar POE LATE MODELS M 6c M MOTOR SALES MAiYln McAonolly, ownor Oslo McAnnAlly USI N^ l^im^DRlTE-IN 4b30S__________ on 4 WANTED. CEMENT STAVE. iltobVc for moTlhg Doyld Field. . USED TRACTORS AO iton ond moklM KING BROS. E 44134 FE 4-UU ] Pontloc Rd. ot Opdykc_ USED FARM EtJUIPMENT: YOU i AIR8TRBAH UORTWEIORT TRAVEL TRAILERS Blneo 1S32. Ouoronteed for V Bee thorn end get * demonct tion *t Womer Troner Sele*. 8— W. Huron (i^ to Join one of Welly Byim'i exciting -' AUTO SALES 1076 Baldwin Avenue 335-5900 y tb ton eompor ....SS.I _______*4 ton. bl| box ...r I ■SO Ford tb ton. dolux# box ..*1.1 . ____________________ LL339* _________________ . I ARb 1S» VW PANEL. ONE >f enle ond one for porU. Droy- )D ores. OB 3440Sw___________ ; ISM ford P-dOO TltACTOB. *M engine, etrolght sir broket, I0:M Bo&*»t*r Ford Peeler, OL 1-STIl. Hrrar pownr. 1 ly diem. LUCKY AUTO SALES. "Poolloe'4 Dtocount Lot." t*3 8*glnow»^E 4-3314.__ 1962 Pontiac Catalina S-door hordtop with olitomsi tronimluton, rodle, beoter, poou “ $2!sSs" BILL SPENCE Rambler - 9AI9 umvujum. -3iiS « CnVBDXJBT «£?' l***9?*W^WAHI> AVEL BntMDWHAM. Ml 44738. NO MONEY DOWN 84*71.________ ISM CHEVY SnC^. J *14* n*v* AuIa^ FI few dlieounu. All nyi in* on dtopUy. too too new esmner. ItoM In weight, 8. plenty ef heed room i wmur Mute, open dolly to 7 p.ip. Boot lenne. B . ler Apoeho Oompint CenUr, 1 mnllsi mmat fi# T.miMtoW SM kCall “M zJMbto POODLE PUPPIES Ho Monty Down ^ PONTIAC CHUtP LONE STAR nnd WINNER BOATS MERCURY MOTORS Cliffer Dreyer’s Gun and Sports Center 1831* Holly HoUy ME 4-S711 BOAT SHOW BAROAIN BPECIAU ... ue ot the PontUe ISoll Moreb 4tb thru Moreb Stb or ytolt •taowroom. OATS — MOTORS — TRAILM CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES SS E. Wolton FE S-4409 Dolly * • ■ ---------— 1S6* CHEVROLET 'b-TON PICK DP ISSl CHEVY PICKUP, LOW MILE-OfO. SUSS. -3* OMC. flSS. 19SS Opdyke Bd.. FE r ____________ 1*47 WILLV8 JEEP PICKUP. S wheel drlee. Good condition. Hoc 1IS4 ongton ond reeonUy oesr-houlod.Pricc S3S9. Coll FE 34MS. BTERT b^lCOND YEAR, WE trodc bi rur Ford KconoUno Voni ond_i»^oct^tora wlto new lSn^' S BY THE BUSHEL OR7 — NEW JANSSEN — DIreet blow Sptesl Piano wlto bust In music llfbt. "Lot u* ehow you." Posture* not found In any otow piano and neeer beton eueb emol- ^ "used $m Lew Bettorly Mueto Co. SD S4III Acroos from BlrmUifbora TbMtor FREE PARICIira IN BBAB OPEN FRIDAY EVEWniOB. 0lfn,D^BIRD FEED AND POO FOOD cedar'^Jd^. Open S to*??Vind*y 10 ' ‘ Beiber’s Lowb end Pei S BLACK ANODS WHITE PACB - SOHMER PIANOS — NoUoneUy Aderrttoed By ■THE PRICE IS RIOHT" - east SPINDRIES WABREK. SM.i ......... let e( golf club* and leather beg. I LEW BETTERLY'S SIS. RoUtway work bench. Si*. PE jS-------- Formica Headquarters i Mew Location *17 ORCHARD LAKE RD CablneU. Toot. sink*. Hoods specitl Mica 35c C kITOHER ^SPECIALTIES FLOtbs .^JJotUm. ------------- FE SAlll ---—a___________—_ OIHIE PBBCIEIOE ROLLER MJJiaa. *Me^^^yU. leyi SS-lacb Jt ADDING MACHINE SALE wide eelscuoa of oU makes Ob MIw'MANDlii'MACT?!^ RDUaT iSm RBTON&n^ORD pricad from 8S4.M. Tormo. Opea tu 7 p.m. t^yd^ oooTonlMiso. ........... tSiii weak: drlee out; oome; cot what yoa art gotttog.’ IS* beet beef roast and rib *tou cut* tor SSI.4S. SSf brudot or sUwtot nMOti for SS.7S. SI* sirkrtn round and rump eat*. tasri’snssrjirj SS* toon pork ebopo o* «mA*d bnmriMator cat* to sU. no hock wr end tor lui^ SSonr htod*. ttonto. oHw and hateao ot eS jgg*jraai PONTIAC CHIEF PALACE RICHARDSON STEWART VAN Dina ---- VfNDAlM ond many more up to to pay. SiOS down. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales. Inc. 4301 DUIe Highway OR 3-1303 Drayton Plains Open 0 to 0 Dolly — Sunday* EXPERT MOBIIE ROME REPAIR TRUCK TTRBS SM-M, to ply. Nyton 1st. S40.M •leh. No Mon*y Down, 0 mo. to pay. Pickup nick Tin* OTO-IS. * ply. Troetton tab*l*** atemtobto 133.30, *100. RECAPPM ORE OAT SERVKK on B*ou**t . IS*S9/900-30/10.no*0 CoU PK 3-0391 ask tor Dick Ourraa -- I________________Wool Euren BUDGET TERMS s snm ra *«u BIRMINGHAM CHRYBLKR-PLirMOirrR INC. 913 e Woodward •" ■ * MI 7-3314 U5I I 1991 White Bimnot. rmUo. wbltewoll*. -•!3'^JSSi!SS.i99Y.-VVARD-McELROY, Inc. , BALE FOR PARTS. BUYER OP JOHK ’app^'^P. Stok. '994't. Mor-■hoU. 9 to 3. all d»y Saturday. 1989 TAUXBAUL. 9599. 1989 ANOUA. truck*. PE 3-3900 ____ CABS ARO -3S8S day*. «T*ntos*. •TOPJXLUMfJik IE MODEL CARS Pontiac Sports Car Inc. *“ —— -PE s-mt Averill's “TOP DOLLAR PAID” FOR "CLEAN" USED CAHi INI BUICK nCTICTA SDOOR SShTIffi and pcsi-traettoo roar and. I Igtoorownor. IS.1IS. MA 7-S OA SASSB.,_____________________ 195i SoicTL STRAlSH-r STICK, Mansfield JUNK TRUCKS. PAT CASH. Peorlmon Motor*. PE 3-SSSl. $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ POE ; Clean Used Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" AUTO SALES 1076 Baldwin Avenue 335-5900 *1 FMtotee Tmrturo Hardtop g,* 00 Csdlltoe Op*.. 4-woy pew*r iS.f ■M Pontloc Star Chltf Hardtop * 0 ’St Ford Palrlono 100. VO . . .t* S ’67 Poatloe 4-Door. 1 owaor $ 7 ’81 Bulck teeclol ^Door ... .f S^ ’H Bulck l^r, rou aloo ...f IM j!L»i>^«:sr’#r.7tr'.i SS M, n a-Dr. * 708 oa. sharp turomla poymsai* of *S *8 Ouarontood Worraaty LLOYD'S eteorJCnSIUi Ford FE'2^131 ■ OUAnoUM WMTM1I7 LLOYD'S - wmi g78a37s'oftor*:30orw**koiKl*. 1%I CHEVY Impolo 4Hloor bordtop^tonoUe tronaialilfia. poROr AtfOfMKkOWor broke*.'TB engtot. wbItewsU tiro*. E-E ly* *1***. sun iokt. ntotcbln* Intortor. on*-ojra*r. csr trrnl** 14.000 ootual mil**. $1895 JEROME ^BRIGHT Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 iMTcmv^aTHA=^6^A^ en?hu a ndto and bMtW and I* to *ie*Uant condltloa. ITh* full prleo li only 0107 with low wsokly poymoato of *4.«. Mo money down aoodod oa tto* honey. CoU or ee* credit men- KfNGACTOSALES Kt CHEVROai S^WXa^l 5i^0^*^,toniM. FAgE^ SON CHEVKGt^ WOODWARD AVE., EIEMtllfWIAM Ml 4-3738. _________ ii»~ciiivFYDOoirBKL cylinder, etandord tronomlul^ radio ond boater, new tire*. oU a*w exhaust systom. B**Mmobl*. 41 01- Ml COMET 3 DOOR RADIO. er. ButomoUe transmlstlon. • r*M buy ot *300 down poynwnU of S4S.lt par month. S4 Moptt* (OW> Guoraatowl Warranty LLOYD'S Uneoln—Mtreury—CooMt Mstoor—Engllob Ford Fe‘2“^5i31 BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered lor retail to the public is a bonafide I-owner, low- BUICK LaSobro hardtop . - THUNDERBIRO 18.000 mL *371* BUICK 4^loor sodon 81*08 *0 BUICK hardtop.JITOJ ■“ PONTIAC 4^ hordtap . MW - PoJmA^nSr ihorp . . $ M SSFid,. li FISCHER BUICK 818 8. Woodward, BTiom 3U 4-011 We Think Thlt 1001 CodUlae eoarertlblo t DB* of tb* loweet mlMof* oni cleoneet trode-to* w* bay* taou , to a Ions time. ThU Mock baouty ' baa a black and whlto Interior, r It It under 8.000 mile*. S4.W«- WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward aRMlWQWAM____Ml 4-ltl 960 CHEVY BISCAYlfE 2 DOG*,. Take erer paymento. MA 8-118*. ISO CHEVROLET .^^^^,-kS* •49 CadUlac CoBTerttol* -. *147 UNIVERSAL AUTO 3 W, Monteafan V TtUm $1495 JEROME 'BRIGHT -----SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 Him y.u..________ ..WO CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4.DOOR Cylinder, Powerg^. rmllo, beater. wbllcweLt. SI.0*8. Ba» terra. PATTKR80H CBKVUOlA ISO* 8. WOODWARD AVE. EIE-MIWOHAM. Ml 4-373A ISSl CORVAIR 711 4-DOOR SEDAN. powergUd* beater. wbltowaU tire*. GiUy {l3*8 Baey teima. PA^R- H.sw3iaj~ia»s- HAM. Ml tmt. 1961 CORVA ._..th“5ilT*‘HlSi’^P?YH.fi' Marvel Motors 1*1 oaiai^A**. LLOYD’S Ltocaln — Mercury — Comet Meteor — Enguth Ford ra S. Baginew FE 2^131 quoit Inttiior. $l.S0S.''Xaty i PAmemON CHKVBOLKT___________ lOOA 8 WOODWARD AVX.. BIR-MINOHAMe 10 44718._____ $3395 JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Ch-chard Lake at Cts* FE 8-0488 1*4* CRKVT 3-OOOR, SUST Pre-Spring Turnover 1963 DEMOS Dm** can must bt said tot* moa at tramindoua raducttonl BEATTIE "Your PORD DEALER Stale* ISM’ ON DIXIE HTTY. IN WATERFORD AT THE BTOPLIOHT OR 3-1291 IIM CHEVY BISCAYMk ImT 4 p.m. IMS CHEVROLET tt^UJl t-DOOt hardtop. VI cnflne. aulomatle, paw-or stoeiiai and brakaa. Radio, £*•(• •r, wbltowaU*. Only S1S9S. Ba«y torm*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET eg. IMS S. WOODWAHD AVE.. US* UNCOUT wg^nm. Marvel Motors •isi* aUiitlbLET a«~7 b66tt V4 mfln*. ptwerfUd*. turqatMa ftailsb. Only SUM. B**y tonr-PATTBRSm CHBTROin O ION S WOODWARD AVE., El IrotOHAM in»37«. 1966 Mercury 4-Door ._^innr ._ _ 8T,SM suarsntoed Only- *1,SN BILL SPENCE Rambler - Jeep CLAKEE^ir' MA S-llt UM CHEyBOLET^ TON PICKUP. OnTy S.ttt sctual mile*. Bxe*l-l«nt ecndlUon. Only STBS. *w term*. PATTERROM cnVROIKr CO.. IStS 8. WOODWARD AVI.. RI10CN0KAM. MI 4-S7M. -Special- 1959 PONTIAC Catalina Station Wagon TbU •xetBnt eoodttton automobn* wlth tb* byaramntte trsnsmls-Sion. TU* ent will mske *a lars* fmnUy. Act tmm»dUUIy •ntolioB*. &’* AiwUbw. $1495 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Qemens St. DoiTHTowH poarnAc FE 3-7954 1962 FORD Galaxie 2-Door aj.'SSl - BEATTIE OR 3-1291 tHB PONTIAC l^RESS. THUTtSPAY. MARCH T. jm Itow wi« tana*. PAT niRgoit ciivRotkT co.. iom « WOODV/ARD AVB.. BIRMINO i*AL ••jSr hJrintnu "3^ pm. * monej down needed here. . J”*.7*"8AL auto balbs S W. Montcalm . F* AJI .H7 FORD C Atler 5:30._______ UM PORO OALAXIK 1 ■--'‘sr. uitoRiMie m relle! HM. N MeAULIPPE II FORD »aUr and automatic trantmU-M. Full price la only ltt& «Ub I m«ne| dovn and» weakly pay- JOHN McAULIFFC • FORD WHITE WALL TIREt. Cell credit mir II ATSM. Herald I N«w nd Uaa4 Can .. ii---- ;ln*. eutmello heeUr. ^eket '■ rintoui " ler. ^M-9 Priced ■ , Right i(W PmUm CetallwA ee. dM. A r«el iberp him heeuty with redle. haeter end automatic tranimlMlon. Th* eondltloB li cxceptloaal and so Is tbo pMec. %ILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC ' 1350 N. ™ Woodward**"!'; • IIRMINOHAM ^____Ml C-IWO ; 1»» FORD FAIRLANB SM ADOOR. ' "• —-n*. radio, beater. Cruls-o-' ansDilsslim. Power sloorlni. irakes. Extra shani. (Sly Jasy lernis JERO»« FER. OUBON, RocbMIer Ford Dealer. OL l-Wll.___________ INI ford FAiHiAHE i-boim kg-dan. VI endnl, standard transmission radio, heater 4 brand new “-**. TurouoUe finish. Extra pie*, ily 11.3N. Easy terms. JERlfwE-EROUB— - - . _ . _ . OL 1-1 MARMADUKB By Andwwm d Lctming New —< 8^ Cn V;,. Ijji M FLYMOtmi BTICE . $89 ■' Ntw imI UfM C«n 144 biW bh4 OtMl Can .——A— — 4-DOOR CATaUNA. DBLOXE IIM FONTUC BONNE VOX] m. Full aower. l7}-47t3. vertlble. Full power. TrI-po ------^^—- Btna. New tires. Barp. ■ deraonsdll* Road. Waterferd RAMBLER power steerlDf aad bfakes. wla* dowa and power swivel seats. Automatic VI. Immaculate Inalde aad out. ILM. CRI88MAN CHEVROLET. ROCBE8TIR. OL l-BWl. ____________^ INI PLYMOUTH, FIRST IBI taka* It. FE S-TIM. INI FONTUC •EOFER CHIEF" I-door hardt^ that Will compare with cars costing much more. A smooth Ivory white etterlor with FONTUC STATION WAOON. (,'scallna- exc. woadltlon, full power, factory air cendlllooer. tS.IM. MY a-ICC. after i pjn. _______ INI FONTUC VENTURA 4-DOOR hardlon. t.ydrsnoatlc. power a- Ini and brakes. Vinyl trim. , StTViSSS?. "c'Sfevi&ti? ^ lOlh 8. WOODWARD AVB . MINOHAM AVE.. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-27M.___________- DON'T BUY ANY HEW OR USED can untd you i*4 our deaU-Oeea. Metely recoadUloned used ears at HIGHT MOTORS. INC. cbiyrolet • Pontlae ■ Bulok J55E915____________ / o* »g» “ YOU ABE BANKRUPT Need a Car No Cash Need a Car New im American I deer. It.TH delivered. RO.SE RAMBLER D—II N»w Uw< C«n 106 im yONTUe HARDTOT, JOSP steerini and brakes, ft Y-OtW IMS SAVE AUTO, FE Marvel Motors Ml Oakland Ave. I..I4II. FE l-llll. We bought a lot of things — a broken vase . - lamp... a broken.. IIM PONTIAC CX^AUNA 1 OOOk hardtop, hydramktlc. radio, heah er. wEltewalls. White wUhwloe trim. HIM Eaav terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. lOW S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMlMa- HAM. MI Aim. ______________ INI FONTUC MNNIVILLE BTA. Ilea Waion. n I-IIM._________ INI CHEVROLET IMF ALA. V-^ silver With red laterrlor. MU 8-MM,_____________ Attention New 'M's available All models Birmlniham Rambler. Up ti II.IN dlscoirat. Birmingham Rambler HI B. .woodward I. IM a. Saginaw. FE| isM CHEVROLET" IkiPALA S'TA. ' lion wafOD. V-l engln*, Fower-fUde. power atecring and brakes. Only nw. Eau tennaa. PATTERSON CREVR^T CO.. ION S. WOODWARD in. BIRMINOHAM Ml AI7M needed to drive tUe e Is sperkllof black • •nd a 1-swncr honey! new and the full price IN with no money doL.. to hue LUCEY AUTO SALES. ' PontUc s Discount Lol." “ Saginaw. FE 4-M14. 1961 PONTIAr BonaevlIIt. 44oer hardtop. .. sisertng. powtr brakes, hyttrhmatlc transmission, radio, heater, whlte-wtU tires, solid beige, with match-Ini lesther Interior, sharp car. low mUeage. new ear trade. $2395 ' JEROME ’'BRIGHT -SPOT" Ordiard Lake at €jrss~. 'EE r ' Ouarantred Warranty LLOYD'S Ltaccln — Mercury - Comet Meteor—Rnillih Ford ^£*■2^9131 1M« K)Hb“vir f-DOOB. POWI NOTICE INS Ford Station Wagon with 4 Ouaraatoed Warranty LLOYD'S Llncohi—Mercury—Comet Meteor—English Ford 333 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 (hU or teo credit manager Mr. KING AUTO S.ALES 1143 PLYMOUTH 3 DOOR. MECHAN- Icalto tood. IN. FE H3N____ tNl PLYMOUTH WITH RAOfo AND ‘-rater and In eaceUent cond' ' e full price U only 33*7 aekly paymeote of only __ 0 money down KINO AUTO 7 monthly. Unlveri- Pootlnc. Ford, f I IIN COMET WAOON. 4-DOOR WITH ' —-‘r. heetor. autoaaatlc *---- whltrwlla* ai.liS JOHN McAUUFP nice little trimmings bealdet t— radio and heater. The body and engine arc In the k— of condition. Th* full price good at only $447 with an— wtekly paymenu of only S4.M. Call or ae* cradlt manager Mr. Cook, for a real steal. KING AUTO SALES rttl IhArp. M« car traoor Hardtop with -----Sol- power etMrlng and brake*. Hy- • price dramatic tranamlaalcn, radio, beater, wbitewallt and beautiful blue nnlib with matchtar trim. Extra low Btleag* and la atlll Ilk* new tbppufboutl Spare-never usedI $2895 1958 Buick e-Door Hardtop with power ateering. power brakea, Dyna-flow radio, heater and white-wall Urea. Wav above Ihd riSi. trensmlsalon. r . 1958 Buick I-Door Sedan. Dynaflow, radio, beater, whitewall Urea. Locally 1961 Buick Special Wttao, t 4-Door with -----l,i,oklng ' ‘ k ride. Shop n $1695 ^J962^PQnliac Sedai 1959 Starchief 4-poor with power eteerlns. Ry- 3-Door Sedan. Fower ateering, pSi*’5ree ritrome^Yraunii powtr brakee, radio, heater. ttolMwell Ure*. Dawn fir* fin-lata with matching trim. SUIcUy $lf5 1959 Bonneville 4-Ooor Hardtop. Powtr tteerlng. power brake*, power win'*"— HydraraeUc. radio, heater whItewtU Ure*. Extra a Almost Uk* buying a new $1595 1961 Pontiac ^Stdan with powtr euertag brake* Hydramattc tran.u...-alon..radio,, beatej, -hltewalte. ““‘r^brS?., flnleb and mateb- $2595 1962 Pontiac ip. Hydran , n41o. hi _ BMtttlful fr iiuu w!tb rad li 9 Mil St only $2595 1961 Buick Hardtop ^fd h wfS^’m ”$3995 - $2395 1961 Pontiac’ —4-door aedan. RydramaUC. hi • .?5“” *r. whitewall Urea. Beaut bbi* flnlth with matching tr ™ TU* prtta to right at onto' - 1962 Studebaker 1962 Ford Daytona Hardtop. T-a onato*. hMdtop. Fow sutomsUe rsdlo. httttr wnlta* siMiin^ powtr brtkts, siilo* bMkri teatTve* llto maUe^^ win*, ^lo, bt.tor, that red hot sports madel Save whltewtlls. Low miles end ittll rbuildle fKm"^t It c^ new, Uk* new. I year Warranty. $1995 $2295 1961 Rambler Super 4-door. guar 1S.444 actual mile*. Itevt to buy a Udi $1495 j $1895 BIG DRAW... with weekly prizes and a grand prize FREE eOFFED - AND-CAKEtl SPORTS CELEBRITIES... Meet Dan Currey, Ron Kramer, and Tom Tracy . . . on March 23 SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 223 Main Street , Rochester, Michigan , • OL 1-8133 :7- ' '\: T>—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS>- THURSDAY. MARCH 7. 1968 T" /• ’250,OQQ 7* INVENTORY ‘250,000 3^' FE 4-4547 Oakland County's L^gest Volume Chevrolet Dealer FE 5-4161: ■V- . V THE PO^"TIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 7, 1963 V ' D— -Today's Television Programs- • ttrtei ta «Ma'«oknM «• Hb|eet U ehuce wlthoot notice oMMi chMM* 4-«wj-rT okoMyi 1—mxn.tr omuimI o-aaw-TT TONIGHT l;M (*) News (4) M Squad (7) Movie: “tower of London." (In Progress). (9) Capt. J0D7 and Popeye (St) American Economy l;|| (S) Editorial. SporU 1:11 (g) Weather (4) Weather l:» (X) Highway Patrol Nawa —- (7) Newt, Weather, 8|iorts (9) Saperev" ■'^—=1-. (St) Spotlight on Opera 1:41 (4) Sports ‘ 4:4S (4) News (7) News ’ 7:W (2) Sea Hunt 4 (4) Michigan Outdoors (7) Rebel (9) Huckleberry Hound (St) Glenn Gould 7:19 (2) Mr. Ed (4) (Color) Ge<^ge Pierrot (7) Oszie and Harriet (9) Movie: "Tallin the Saddle.” (19M). Join Wayne (St) French Through TV S:I9 (2) Perry Mason (7) Donna Reed (St) Computer t:19 (4) Dr. Kildare (7) Leave It to Beaver 1:19 (2) Twilight Zone (7) Bfy lluree Stms (9) Playdata l:» (4) (Color) Hazel (7) McHak’s Navy 1I;M (2) Nurses . (4) (Color) Andy WiUianM . (7)Cloae-Up I (9) Wrestling K99 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:19 (7) News, Sports 11:U (2) Editorial. Sports (4) Weather (9) Weather 11:29 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Weather (9) Telescope UAW 11:2S (2) Steve Allen - Variety (7) Movie: "J4iggler." (19S2). Kirk Douglas. (9) National School Show (5t) Your Health l:SI (2) Editorial lt:N (2) Connie Page (4) Say When . (9) Romper Room (St) Our Scientific World 11:15 (7) Hollywood Report 19:2S (4) News 1I:M (I) I Love Lucy ^ (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Girl Talk (St) French Lesson 19:N (St) German Lesson 11:19 (» McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jane Wyman (9) Movie: “He Found 1 Star.” (1941). Sara I Churchill. 11:11 (St) Spanish Lesson 11:29 44) (Cote) Tonight—CarsoBjiiiat (2) Pete and Gladys (9) Movie: “Hotel Reserve.' (1944) James Mason. FRIDAY MORNING t:M (4) Continental Classroom: Atomic Age Physics t:15 (2) Meditatioaa t:29 (2) On the Farm Front t:2S (2) News <:29 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental Classroom: American (jOV- (7) Funews - ^ 7:tt (2) Nevw -(4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:tS (2) B’wana Don 7:19 (7) Johraiy Ginger 7:45 (2) Kii« and Odla 1:99 (2) (Captain Kangaroo (St) Spanish for Teachers t:29 (7) Jack La Lanne (St) Friendly Giant t:4S (St) Spanish Leaaon 1:55 (9) Warm-Up 9:99 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: "Man’s Castle.” (193t). Spencer Tracy, Loretta Yoirag. (9) Chez Helene (St) Let’s Read • 9:1S (9) Nursery SclKxrf Time 9 J9 (2T Tb TMI the ■mith — TV Features Clay's on 'Tonight' -MOVIE, 7:30 p.m. (9r “Tall in the Saddle.” (1944). New cowhand starts job oidy to learn employer's been LEAVE IT TO BEAVER, 9:99 p. m. 47) WaHy decider j to throw party for Lumpy who has won college scholarship, i ■ twilight ZONE, 9 p. m. (2) Dana Andrews plays disenchanted with present who decides to retreat in time machine to earlier days. McHALE’S NAVY, 9:30 p. m. (7) Captain tries to fatten up McHale so he'll lose post. __ ANDY W1LUAMS, 10 p. pi. (4) Jonathan Winters and Martha Raye visit color show. MOVK, 11:2S p. m. (7) “Juggler.” (1963). Famous juggler wanted by law for wounding policeman. Kirk Douglas. TWUGHT, 11:30 p. m. (4) Cassius Oay, boxer-'poet,’ visits Johnny (teson on color show. (4) Concentration (7) Yours for aDwt- Nursery Nixed; Emotions Mixed; Marriage 'Fixed' Lei®ON4AP)--Htfhara K inson wanted a baby. A^and wanted a television sal, a washing noacfaine and an auto. Barbara lost. In court Wednesday Barbara sued John, 29, for divorce, charging nim with cruelty for depriv-ky her of the child she wanted. She tost again. * * w The judge said John is basically a decent chap who considered babies too expensive. He always told his wife they must postpone parenthood until they got their Song Title Earns-Money for Widow From Ohio Ii| 'the last 19 y^ 0 hospitals have neen butH i m tm hospitals have been built in the United States, Increaahw 49# number, to atkwt 7499 now la operation. (59) Spotlight on Opera FRHIAY AFTERNOfm 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (59) Memo to Teachers 12:25 (2) News 12:99 (2) Search for Tcmiorrow (4) Truth or (tonsequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:49 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go - (56) Spanish 12:45 (2) Guiding Light , (9) News 12:55^) News (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: "On Borrowed! Time.”'(1999). Lionel!"""«* J*"*® Stewart is appear-Barrymore. ing on the "My Three Sons” show :19 (56) Children’s Hour tonight. 1tJ9 (2) As the World Turns What makes his (4) Best of Groucfao news is that he is not portraying kT FILM FAVORITES - Actor Rock Hudson and actress Doris Day w«-e named last night as world film favorites at the 96tb annual Golden Globes awards of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. By EARL Wnsm NEW YORK-Sadie Vimnnerstedt, a 57-year-old Youngstown, Ohio, widow who runs a cosmetic shop, scrawled a note at the bottom of her grocery list six years ago last Valentine's Day — and addressed it to “johnny Mercer, California.” Speaking of Valentine hearts, why don’t you write a song and call it T Wanna Be Around to Pick Up The, Pieces when Somebody Breaks Your Heart’?” j Sadie wrote. ' Two veaii later Johnny wrote Sadie that he’d do it. (It iwobably took him a year )o get the letter with that address) Three years passed . . . Suddenly things ; happened. Sadie got the song ... in sheet | music ... on a demqjgwd . • bicHl^TIw’^'^lhen a new contract raising H to W. •Tm not going to record it myself... I’m looking for a good singer.” Johnny wrote to her. ★ ★ w Last October, ” Sadie told me by phone from her shop, “on TV, who should my daujditer and I hear sing the song but Tony Bennett: More tears of joy were shed that night!” f“'—cgHiB ahniilri mme Into several thousand dollars for Tony’s jrecord - coming hot after his “San Francisco” album - is rising: I in the charts. Johnny Mercer's never met nor talked to Sadie. It was all done hy maU and Sadie says "I never toU a soni what Pd done. I just wanted to get It out of my system.” TTiings are pretty wild at the cosmetic shop. “So ntany friends are crying for happiness (or Ine." Sadie says, "it gets to be almost like a wake.” , TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Woodrow Wibon once said H tookj him two weeks to write a 10-minute speech, one week to prepare hour speech, "but if you want a two4iour speech. I am ready ri^t now.” EARL’S PEARLS: “This man and his wife were happy for 25 years — then they met.” BPMBMBKWF.n QUOTES: Oscar Levant once asked his close friend George Gershwin. "If you had it to do over, would you fall in love with yourself all over again?” As the cannibal father said to his son, “Don’t tolk when you have people in your mouth!” . . That’s earl, brother. t TV Show Attempts Message With Gen. Jimmy Stewart By BOB TH(»f AS AP Movie-Televtoiso Writer HOLLYWOOD - A fellow any character; he contes on as a brigadier general of the Air Force}] named Jame Stewart. F u r t hermore THOMAS (7) One Step Beyond (59) World History 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:99 (2) Password (4) (CMor) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court (59) A^entures in Science 2:25 (7) News 2 J942) IMvoroe Court . 47) Seven Keys (56) Showcase 2:51 (4) News 3:99 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (59) Drama Festival 3:39 (3) MilUooalre (4) Youi« Dr. MMona (7) Who Do You Tnte? (9) Scarlet Hill 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Room for Daddy jgren’t square. ** 01 u I Fedderson, the father of five, ^ ^ Mickey M0US6 Club.—— IgirpecF the to The jud^e said he didn't think j that there is nothing wrong with Barbara, 27, suffeaed Injury to her <7) American N^sstod ischolarship. It shows middle son health because of John's dtUtudei (*) M^le: Disbarred. |iv,n OrnHv in iim> fnr » hiph He adds: “You’re growing up in the midst of a complex and woodroiis world of science. We take for granted our accomplishments in space. But this is only the ttoginning of the space age and the marvels of automation in our everyday lives. Progress in , , the future depends on knowledge, hjs pay for^^e^^ ------ stint is the minimum for actors >in a television film. What attracted him to the “My Three Sons” show was its theme. The segmeht was the first time the Fred MacMurray series attempted a message. I think it Is needed,” said executive producer Don Fedderson'. television series are for the birds. But I felt we had a chance to get a lesson across that could be important to young people. Ibe message: that eggheads I r r r 5 r r r (T It u 15 14 17 II H' 5T a- 5T w 5T IT d it i3 U r ir 45 50 51 U 64 56 BT 67 so 7 (4) (Color) Gewge Pierrot (7) Movie: "Creature With the Atom Arain.” (1955). Richard Denning. (9) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s New? 5:39 (59) Friendly Giant 5:95 (9) Rocky and IBs Friends (59) British Calendar 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall ^ Dot Grady in line for a high ' school lette for science achieve-meht. His contemporaries shun him, and he tries to throw the MOMENT OF TRUTH His fellow students change their attitude when Don wins the letter it is presented by a noted general. Stewart’s speech cites competing at Air Force Academy. He inscription at the academy: “Man's flight through life is sustained by the power of his knowledge.” segment demonstrates that situation comedies in television need not always jw dedicated to such marshmaltowy issues as: “Gee. pop, can I have the car tonight?” ionefon A4dbs 1962 WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR • 14 Cubic Ft. • lottom Fiwezer • N# Frost No Frost Only 299“' Tcimt Availahh HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC COMPANY Open 'til 9 FE 4-2525 Judy Garland at Premiere SONOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL BUYS $994 12%- ZENITH $1495 14" Stowart-Wamar $1995 16" A60T0R0LA $2495 16“ PHILCO $2995 21 AIRLINE •34’* 21** ADMIRAL $3995 21' MOTOROLA •49’* 14" PORTABLE •39’* 27" RCA •99’* 60 OTHER SETS 30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE WALTON TV 515 E. Walton Blvd. CORNER JOSLYN OPEN9to9 Fedderson sent the script to Stewart and got sn en‘ response, since it fits into hit own ind Air Force-thinking. The Elephant Made Dent SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain Ufi — Police asked s motorist how he got that dent in his (^ar. Naturally, be on it. Police took him t ! station for ~lesl. The Jrlv to a circus owner. Yes, the circus man f said, his circus was parading in San Sebastian. A traffic policeman blew his whistle, the elephant reared and came down on thew. LONDON (AP) - Judy Gartondip ras cheered Wednesday rilght at ] the worid ^miere of her first' mbvie singing role in eigM years. { * ♦ w ! A crowd mobbed the 44-year-old; star as she arrived at the theater! off Picadilly Circus (or the first! showing of “I (tould Go on Sng-| ing,” a heart-warming, tear-jerk-! er musical. j The audience gave her a stand-1 j ing ovation as she walked to her i seat. At a'party after the show she I was toasted by the international i I movie sef. ' ; "“'Ihis is the greatest night of* i [n^ Jife,” said Judy. ‘L CONDON'S TV f«r Big Vsliw ... Eicdlaal Smrice RCA and ZENITH Color-Block ond White 730 WBT HURON—ActM* h»m New Pott Offko FI 4-9736 --Today's Ra attendant on duty, j The measure is opposed by five: I automatic laundry ownmv. BOB’S RESTAURINT 101$ Joolyn FI 3-9$11 Sp$SlMttiaRdll$$tBiUs Ev«t Satavday FrmBf Slyto (All You Can Eat) ,^•1 p«r person 5-9 p.m. Femiiv Styl* FRIED CHICKEN Ep^Smt. 5-9 PJt. ALSO DAILY SPECIALS OPtN: 7 to * WJib-OaHy CtoM# M Oay WJB euw (IN) WWJ (IM) WCAS (lilt) WPON (I . Wuten iwa-w.li. . WW{, N*«a, [Vik Wali ■»•(. Tr*r Dt«U ----- Utai. A»try CRLW. KtVA Iltatt WJVK. Kfat. Awry wcAR. iMw*. utnya WPON. -Mm. Dtit TIm »:ia^WJK. Lw Murrey wxyz. Qttb CKLW, Jot VtD WJBK. Mt«t. a«M »JAR. Nrti. Martye WPQW. New*. OU«B WHn. Ntwt. MeUo4 WXYi WUittr'^ CKLW. Joe Via WJBK. Ntwt. R*M WCAK Ntwt WPON. Ntwt. OItta wm. Ntwt. Muatt ll;lt-WWJ. Ntwt. INUi , WXTZ, WiDttr, Ntwt FNIDAT AmBNOON KM-Wja. Ntwt. Ptm WW^Htwt. Lysbn Ntai. Para* l;lt—Wja. Oarry Mttr* wxyz. I_______ cau,w, Ntwt. Dttlet WJBK. Newt, U-WCAB. Newt. I WWJ. Ntwt. Bumper Oub WXTB. BtbatUia extw. Bperu WJBK, Ntwl, litt WMK. Ntwt, Shtrtdia Wrt)N. Ntwt. Jthntee Seasonal Savings NOW! BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME complete exterior FACE LIFT! ALUMIBUM-STOHE Awnings, Windows, Doors No PoymaiiTs 'HI JUNE Fru# EsHmetes in Our SkewroMn •r in Yonf Horn* FE 3-7M9 - 0p#u NUn. thru Pridny 'HI I FJIL LEO BOGERT, OWNER 919 Otclitto U. U.. I ito. I. rt Tateiapli jmilNG aad STORM WINDOW SALES Eod Paintiiisi-^ye Heat! D—14 THE PONTIAC "PRESS, TIII^SDAY. MARCH 7. 1963 Maybe Now He Wilhes He Were Born in 1961 HONOLyLU (UnApoUce Sgt. Ernest Bricktnan got a surprise j when he stoppedTniotorist Pedro State Welfare Unit Gets Acting Head I LANSINGThe Michigan Villaflor and asked hi» bifthdate. L^elfare Commission has named died liast Saturday ^t the age of 62. ★ ★ ★ A veteran of 30 years with the welfare department, Kellogg told a newiunan he was not interested in a permanent appointment to “April 13. ’ei.-VillafiorrepliedJl^y"" ^eUogg acting director'of “IMl that is.” And his driver’slth® State Welfare Department. TiceJw, issui^ W * ★ ★ that he indeed was nearly 102: Kellogg. 54, succeeds the late years old. i Willard Maxey in the post. Mazey Officers Bewigged, Bothered, Bewildered RENO (uro—Police admit they really have a problem in trying to find 20 wigs valued at |5,200 stolen from beauty salons in the| past week. ^ oii ( an (Onnf on l ... (,)ua 1 it> (Ost*-; No Moi <‘ at ^^^‘al I worked with Mr. Maxey for 30 years and saw what it did to ^ him,” Kellogg said, addins ‘‘We can’t very well go around one man should carry a load lute pulling everyone’s hair,” one'of-that.” __ Ificer said^_. 3 Days Only! Timely Buys in Eveiy* Department SAVINGS "spBiygi ^ t>n ('^iri (’oiint on I . . . (^ua I iI> Co'^l'^ No More* at Sc*ai ‘ 3 Days Only! Timely Buys in Every Department SAVINGS SALE -I I i Harmony House 3-pc. bedrooms •148 Recalarly at $189.00 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan The sleek, clean styling that decorators love ... the same light flowing look of costly imports, but look at Sears price! Beautifully crafted of walnut veneers on hardwood with shutter fronts. Includes 6-drawer dresser with rolled glass mirror, roomy chest and handsome panel bed. See this exquisite suite tonight! Save at Sears! Sears Conplela Fomilure Dept., Second Floor SALE Tire Sale Allstate Silent Cushion Guaranteed 21 Months tyrex* cord 6.70x15 tube- type blackwall 10? NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED • 4-ply tyrex cord resists damaging moistnro • Exbra deep tread grips the road at every atop • At these low prices mount a set on yonr car now—save at Sears • Quality for quality, price for price ’ ALLSTATE is your best tire buy lid tire, liTe yon a replacement tire ol .efund, cturging only lor the period df owneri^p. Check before yott huy. All adjnitmenU made by retail slorei are Tube-iype Blackwall ~ Tnbeleae Blaekwall Size Rek No Trade. In Priee, Each PlntTn SpMioI Sole Ace, Each P1mT« Sisa Ref. Xe Trade-la Price, Each riaiTn SpedalSala Priee, Each PtasTax 6.70x15 18.95 10.97 7.50x14 20.95 18.97 7.10x15 20.95 13.97 7.60x15 22.95 .15.97 8.00x14 22.95 15.97 WHITEWALLS........2.66 MORE Anto Aeeoaeoriea, Perry Su Baaement ALLSTATE Generators AsLowAi IQ^e. Rebuilt Csrburetors I Low As 5~. ¥ 299 tridge. Hold* 20.01. Snap.oa coapler. ^vol Grease SundfirdVoIuge 4" - —iur «U4UM.-----^ dttrgwft Handy ear* Aecaratelycontrolafeiicraterest- tridge. Watar* pat, proiaeta baitary aad afto beat reautanU clectrkal parta. Searal Don’t Take Chances with Worn Brakes Check Sears low price 3§8^ ^ Cbn^It Set Conalita of Shoea for 2 Wheria rivets, 25% more braking area than rivet type for safer, atopc. Better than moat originah. PrecMion Metchaadise! Jale^^fewest Ring Mountings to Enhance Precious Stones Our Best Nonallergenic ~ Dacron Bed Pillows Regularly at $21 to $24! 1988 Charge It Modem flahtail for 5 stone*; 14K white or yellow gold... reg. |21! Evening Star, 14K white or yellow gold, for aolitair... reg. $22.50. Carved Soliuir mounting in 14K white or yellow gold ... reg. $24. Wateh A Jewelry Repair, Main Floor Shop Tonhe, Fri. and Sat. ’til 9 ^SadsfiM^n gwantesd or your money back” 499 Tj? each Regnlaily at $^001 21x274iieh cut aiae I Charge It DnPont polyester with polynrethahe foam center. Chemically treated to regrel stains, odors and ipildew. Exclusive side vent constmetion. Choose from an array of Harmony House colors. Save $1.01! Feather Pillow, Reg. $2.99........... ea. 2.75 Foana Latex RIlow, Reg. $4.98...... ......ea. 4.49 QT7A1PQ 154 North Sasinaw OJj/liUJ Phone FE 5-4171 Tank Model Bicycles With Triple Bar Frames 3487 Big 614-bushel CapacQy 25-in. Lawn Sweepws Regnlarly at $39.98! Fully-equipped bikes Check Sears Low Price Finger-tip brash height NO MONEHT DOWN on Sears Eaay Payment Plan Plenty of chrome-plating on this dashing beauty. Twin headlight with wide-angle lens is set in chrome-plated head of tank. With luggage carrier. Coaster brake for amooth, sure atopa. Soe it... buy h now! $24.98 Convertible Bike, 16-ia.................19.87 Sporting Goods, PoRy St. Baaement »**Sidi|&tdioh giarantaed or your taomf btek** 2699 Just Say, “CHARGE IT” at Seats Large capw;ity sweeper... leb yon sweep more in less timol No need to tip over to empty... just lift out hopper. Bnubss adjost from 0 to 2V4 inchee. Save! »™aiim 2S-lneli Economy Sweeper, now only.......18.8S Dunlap Wheelbarrow, 3 cn. ft. ...... 6.66 Hardware Dept.,llaia Basement CJTJ* ATJO I54North Saginaw OXjtU\D Phone FE 5-4171 T^• Weather V.B. Weatihcr Bvrean.Fsrc Snow Flurries THE ■A' PR VOL. 121 NO. 24 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAV, MARCH 7. 1903 —56 PAGES Would Boost City's East Side Unveil Sewer Project Search for Victims in Collapsed Mill Dam Bursts in Connecticut 5 Die as Wafers Flood Town NORWICH, Conn. (AP) — Five and swept into a cord-manufactur-persons perished and one is miss-|ing plant, setting off a boiler ex-ing after a broken dam turned plosion, flood waters on a narrow, deadly * * * business district Wednesday night.' Four workers on the night shift , The water roared from a 15-acre were killed. One wing of thenhree-lake on a hill overlooking the city story building was demolished. Another worker is missing, state police said. Town officials said they expect damage to run into several million dollars. They said they would ask for state and federal aid as a disaster area. Russ Build-Up May Be Secret to Cuban Brass General Testifies on Information Gained by Aerial Photography WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Dean Rusk said today there is growing discontent in Cuba and “several hundred thousands” Cubans have indicated they want to flee the Red Castro regime. WASHINGTON (i¥)—The Army’s intelligence chief says the Soviets may be storing ammunition, military vehicles and aircraft f Margaret Moody, a mother whose husband and three sons made their way to a rooftop from their overturned car was carried away, by the waters. Her body was recovered today. . ■'I thought my wife was behindjin thousands of caves, in us all the time,” Thomas Mo^yj Cuba — and aren’t letting said,^”I don’t know what happehed|gyg„ top Cuban military UT IN TREE ’ ! personnel get close enough The roof collapsed. Moody said,|to and he put the boys-Thomas, 6; “Aerial photography has further Boy Sniper's Dad Asks Thai Son Be Commilled The father of 15-year-old Douglas Godfrey, confessed sniper slayer of his mother, yesterday petitioned Oakland CoUnty Probate Court to commit his spn to'james, 4, and Shawn, lO months-[^^ealed the extension of roads tojup ^ precautionary guard today Pontiac State Hospital as mentally ill. ’ ® r^rLTR S Parliament. ^ ^ ■ :water. They were rescued after Maj. Gen. ^ R. Fitch ^ reported re- Set Up Guard for Legislators Scofl^md Yard Acts After 2 Are Warned" ELEVATED ARTISTRY — An elaborate painting featuring a Pontiac Grand Prix Sports Coupe has caused many a downtown pedestrian to stop and gaze during the past week. Still in progress, the sign is located above the Cunningham Drug Store, Saginaw and Huron. One artist looks over his sketch board (above) while his associate seems to be sizing up the street observers during lunch hour. From Our News Wires LONDON - Scotland Yard se» ceiving death warnings from the Donald H. Godfrey 44, of 983 Dursley Road, Bloom-'about two hours fhe Senate Armed Services______ ____ _ .... .......... field Township, filed the petition shortly after Probate ★ * * Wednesday, “and pren^ ^Trorisr^^ Judge-Donald E. Adams ruled that young Godfrey ij * ^ j jen who were rescued from Uie de-ithat much military equipment) . would not be tried as an ajolished plant were hospitalized.'and supplies are being stored 1 P«Hticims. 1^ adult for first-degree mur- . ^ock and earth der. I structure 20 feet high, gave A hearing on the commitment way about 1:30 p.m. The water peUtion is scheduled for 10 .s.m.^ covered the mile to the down-tomorrow in Judge .Adams’ chambers. In a certificate filed with Godfrey’s commitment petition. Dr. Abraham Tauber of Pontiac raid the boy was “indifferent, apa-' thetic and unremorseful” toward his crime during his three examinations of the youth. town area in about 30 minutes. It was about two and one-half (Continued on Page 2, Cd. 6) underground.” At the same time, Fitch discounted recurring reports by Cuban refugees that offensive missiles or bombers are being hidden in the caves. Alice Bacon. 52. was the leader of an opposition Labor party attack on the secret visit and television appearance in Britain of Georges Bidault. The former French premier “He is vague as to the rea-murder. Dr. Tauber said, “stating only, ’ ‘She is bossy, untidy, and she had a big mouth.’ ” | At one time during his exam-| inations. Dr. Tauber said, “he •cried a^ stated. ‘I am crving, T hot for'her but for me because jl can’t go to school.’ * * * I and destruction throughout the “At ho time does he find him- East today, self in errdr jn his behavior and. ★ ♦ * he feels that h^cted properly,”! Drinking water was contami-the doctor said. mated, power lines driven down ___________ In a second certificate. filed|by high v^s and towering ice few snow flurries in Probate Court this morning by I floes swepfdoWn rain-swollen riv-the Pontiac area Dr. L. Jerome Fink of Bloomfield ers to drive thousands of persons DOUGLAS^^DFREY Bits of Snow to Fall Tonight Just to remind us that winter is still here, will flutter It is our belief that the So-jviets did, in fact, remove all ^ 'strategic weapons systems that^ were in Cuba at the time the , .u J quarantine- was imposed.” he 'll is iible Ihsl Oi^y did critic of OAS terrorism, used by some of the weapons WARNED LAST NIGHT '.systems present there.” • | Miss Bacon said she received A censored version of Fitch’s the telephone warning late report to the subcommittee, which night from a man -with a heavy investigating the Soviet mili--French accent who said: Rising River otil I build-up in Cuba, was made “You are on the OAS list and Threatens Ohio 'public after he testified. iyou have not much longer Floods, Snow Death Toll 29 By Cnited Press International Icy flood waters spread death tonight and tomorrow. The weatherman said temperatures tonight would , JS, BULLETIN A man armed with a rifle and described by police as a mental patient and very dangerous” stole a twin engine, six passenger plane and took off from Pontiac Municipal Airport shortly before noon today. Police and sheriff’s deputies were tracking the plane’s flight pattern ov^r the Bloomfield area at noon, fearing be might attempt an emergency landing. There is a sermon | labeled “JOY” . That you and I could well em ploy . . . “J” stands for * “Jesus” and the 0 For “Others” and the iS “Y” you know . . . s Stands for “Yourself’ and with these 3 . . . ! Completely joined then $ there will be ... A joy : complete you have not :: fciown . . . And that you can not grasp alone If this life-plan you will express . . . ’Twill make for wholesome happiness. JULIEN C. HYER. sons. “I am convinced this was no| hoax The Oakland County Board of Supervisors has i>« "Inulct. Tte dly would French,«»”“• T' rang off at once and phoned action was taken yesterday when the board; Although financing plans are ScoUand Yard.” ANOTHER CALL ii«,us commiuee SUPPOn-»--— figured per acre, rather than per Commission Eyes $1 Million City System Unofficially Indicates Move That Would Aid Development ’■*«*— By DICK SAUNDERS City officials last night set the stage for a development boom on Pontiac’s East Side. Commissioners unofficially indicated they will move ahead rapidly with a proposed $1.5-million sanitary project to serve the city’s northeast and southeast sections. Such a move would open a major area of the city to industrial, commercial and residential development. I Meeting informally, commissioners eyed results of a sewerage study by the city’s consulting engineers, Jones, Henry & Wil-|liams of Toledo. A resolution authorizing City iManager Robert A. Stierer to prepare contracts for final plans land designs of the sewer project iwill be ready for action at next Tuesday’s regular meeting. Present at the informal session were Mayor Robert A. Landry and commissioners Winfprd E. Bottom. Dick M. Kirby and Loy L. Ledford. Commissioners Charles H. Harmon, William H. Taylor Jr. and Milton R. Henry were absent due to illness or other unavoidable commitments. ’The trunk sewers will relieve major overloads on existing sewers and spur development of large undeveloped areas in the city. KNEW AREA VALUE Large portions of the east, northeast and southeast sections jf Pontiac have gone undeveloped because,they had no sewers. ; City officials have for many years realized the value this area jwould add to the city’s tax base if it were developed. One of the proposed trunk sewers is the Murphy Park relief sewer. ’The other is called the Galloway Creek trunk sewer. Estimated costs are $481,100 for the Murphy Park sewer and roughly $1,077,000 for the Galloway project. i It is, currently proposed that the two sewers be financed by a special assessment bond issue to jne retired over a 10-year period. This would necessitate estab-llishing a special assessment dis-itrict consisting of areas to be I served by thp sewers. I About 75 per cent of the total Icost would come from special I assessments to property owners Afterward there was another telephone call, “but when I took (rff the receiver nobody spoke at the other end.” The political furor continued over the taped televiskm interview with Bidault. A government spokesman declined any more comment on the incident, which put a new strain on British-French relations. But Labor legislators drew up new questions to ask the government Parliament. News Flash WASHINGTON 01) - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mkh., uid today a deciskm by the Internal Revenue Service ta eliminate a proposed data procesi-iag center for the Detroit dren is under review nt n very high level. ing Detroit as the site for the games in 1968. In other action the board of supervisors appointed Robert P. Allen corporation counsel for the county. Allen. 35, of 647 Gunn Road, Oakland Township, succeeds recently appointed Probate Judge Norman C. Barnard to the county’s top legal post. Allen has been serving as chief assistant corporation counsel since the murder of his predccesscr, Charles A. Davis, last May. The new corporation counsel originally joined the county as an attorney in 1956. He had served as court clerk for the late Circuit Judge Frank Doty from 1951 until 1954. The board of supervisors also ' bills in the state number of circuit judges in the front foot. Details will be an-cqunty from 5 to 7. nounced as over-all plans prog- The board was convinced the cedure are more tune consuming:Boulevards and along Auburn ot the Belt Une scl Iwlland told the board asiBaHi-oad spokesman for the present five| lature that would increase tfaemn a matching fund basis. two additional judges are needed to surmount an increase in litigation as the result of a growing population. Recent changes in judicial pro- The Murphy Park sewer would full development of property on the east side of Woodward Avenue near St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, industrial de-jvelopment at East and South The board of supervisors also formally accepted two federal grants for more than half a mit lion dollars. The grants were offered under the Accelerated Public Works Act toward construction of additional utilities at the County Service Onter and extension of Farmington Sewage Disposal System along 13-Mile Road. The grants totaling $519,700 are It also would take sewage from the hospital, relieving an overload on the existing Bag-ley Street sewer, and permit expansion of CMC Truck A Coach Division. The lack of sewage facilities has for many years hampered any plans the division has for expanding. GETS PRIORITY “Since the Murphy Park sewer will solve an already serious (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) » I THE PONTIAC PRESS. TllURSDAY. MARCH 7. 196a Mario Bellini Checks Snoozing Students Eyes Close, Pupils Open Up BERGAMO, Italy Day after day, 30 schoolboys here are talked into sleeping in class. Their teachers say they seem to learn more that way. A “learning througn hypnosis” experiment is under way at San Vincenzo’s, a Roman Catholic Iwarding school in this north ItaFian city. . .., Tape recorders placM^n each boy’s desk ate switched on as the lesson begins. The teacher gives his lecture. In one literature class, he read a poem i and explained its signiXcance and component themes. The boys, all in their early teens, attached earphones and played the tapes back. First came a formula supplied by Mario Bellini, 43, a hypfiotist. DRONE INTO EARS “One, two, three — sleep, boys, sleep. Son-in-Law Impressed Four, five, six — relax, relax. Seven, eight, nine — sleep, now sleep, you are sleeping,” the recorders droned tato the boys’ ears. ★ ★ ★ After a few minutes the boys began crossing their arms on the desks, lowering their heads and sinking into sound sleep. ^ Then came the recorded lesson. When it was over there was another Bellini message: “Wake up now, boys, wake up.” The boys yawned, stretched and straightened up. ★ ★ '★ ’The teacher chose boys at random and asked what they had learned. The experimenters reported that each boy called on, bright and slow students alike, recited the poem without missing a word and explained in detail the meaning of the poetry. De Gaulle, Miners at Deadlock PARIS (AP) - The de Gaulle government and France’s 300,000 striking coal miners squared ofif today for what rauld become prolonged test of*«rength. A spokesman for the government threatened stern measures if the miners did not obey President Charles de Gaulle’s back-to-work draft order. ★ ★ * The strike leaders stood firm. They said the miners jvill not return to the pita until the government at least opens negotiations their, demands. The government said it will not discuss the wage and hour issues until wift-k resumes. The miners seek anll-per cent boost in wages and a 40-hour week. The government is offering a 5.7-per cent increase. MIGHT ORDER ARRE.ST One informed source hinted that the government might order the arrest of leaders'of the striking unions and key mine personnel for defying the draft order. With 90 to 95 per cent of the country’ coal miners on strike, he conceded it would not be practical to arrest all of them. Support for the miners built among unions throughout the country. Gas and electrical work-scheduled a two-hour wide strike Friday. Workers in the Lacq gas field of southwestern France—which supplies half the country’s gas—calM two^lay strike for today and Friday. In the northern region the representatives of the Catholic, Socialist and Communist unions began forming an interunion strike committee to coordinate union strategy on a long-term Local merchants offered credit to he miners and helped to raise unds for the miners’ families. Many town halls refused to post the government’s draft order. Pope Meets K's Kin VATICAN CITY (UPI) - A professed atheist, Soviet Communist editor Alexei Adzhubei, met Pope John XXIB, head of the Roman Catholic Church, today — and the atheist came away impressed and “very nioved.” Adzhubei, son-in-law of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, first attended a mass audience in the Vatican’s throne room as “just another newsman.” Then, at its end, he was ushered into a private room for an 11-minute special audience, an unprecedented meeting between a member of a ruling Soviet leader’s family and the Roman pontiff. Adzhubei's wife Rada, Khrushchev’s daughter, accompanied him to the history-making audiences. When the Pope finished his speech at the general audience, held to mark his acceptance of the Balzan foundation’s peacft prize, Adzhubei bowed his head iii a reverential gesture as the pontiff bestowed his blessing on the throng. BOWS DEEPLY Then, when he was ushered into the papal library for the special audience, a high Vatican official said Adzhubei bowed deeply to the Pope. ★ w ★ Mrs. Adzhubei covered her head with a gold - lined black scarf, as is protocol for women at a papal audience. ★ ★ ★ ’The Russian couple was aion^ The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness and npt much change in temperature with a few periods of snow flurries today, tonight and Friday. High today 35, low tonight 25, high Friday 33. Winds mostly west to northwest 10 to 20 miles today and tonight. Umperslure precedlDR t '• i.m r Wind velocity I m WMlorly. • Thurtdoy at ( JO p m. in the library with the Pope except for a Russian-speaking priest who acted as an interpreter. The audience was another step in the Kremlin-Vatican reap-prochement of recent months, which has led to sepculation of a possible further easing of tensions, establishment of some kind of diplomatic relations and even a meeting between the Pope and Khrushchev. Adzhubei, who listened soberly as the Pope addressed the mass audience in French about the church’s “neutrality”^ and work for peace, said: “It was a fine speech, I was very impressed.” Vatican sources said the heavy-set, red-faced > Russian appeared “very moved” when he left the papal library dfter- the private audience. ★ ★ ★ Pravda Backs Coexistence Counters Peking With Reference to History W*alher—Most! remp«r>lare Chart 13 Fort Worth 04 14 Jackaonvlllr 71 1 Mi*m^"£aVh 83 }«llwt^krc ’ York 53 34 Omaha 38 38 Phoenix ti 45 36 PltUburgh 43 36 33 «l. U City 45 4t 31 * a 8. MftrU 39 40 88 rimpa 71 35 18 Waahlnston '54 NATIONAL WEA’THER — Scattered light snow or snow flurries should extend from the northern Plains across the upper Mississippi and Ohio valleys into the central and northern Appalachians toni^t. Occasional showers are expected over the central and southern Pacific Coast with snow flurries in the higher areas. A cooling trend is expected across the northern Plains, Lakes and New England with moderating temperatures elsewhere. It will be fair over the central and southern Plateau and southern and mid-AtlanUc states. 5JDSCOW (AP) - Pravda countered the latest arguments from Communist China today by in-jjjsisting that peaceful coexistence 581 with capitalism is correct and 88 history proves it. ]|l Pravda reached back 45 years jjjto assert that Lenin conceded a 31'possibility of Communist cooper-7 ation with capitalisUc countries. 511 ’The newspaper, voice of the Soviet Communist party, did not refer directly to Red China in a long article on the historical victory of the theory and practice of Leninism. But it went to lengths to argue that it was possible to make agreements and compromise with capitalist states — a petition the Chinese militantly rejected in a series of recent articles broadcast by Radio Peking. Pravda’s article was devoted to the anniversary of the seventh Communist Party Congress in March 1918, while Lenin was still alive. It agreed with Peking’s statement Monday that old time revolutionaries such as ’Trotsky\ : wrong. But, Pravda said, after signing of the Brest Treaty pulling Russia out of World War I, ’Trotsky and “left Communists’’ develop a scheme to “heat up” the advance of communism by a European revolution.. Lenin exposed this scheme and denounced it as absurd, Pravda declared. Waterford Boy Troy Man, 43, Dies in Head-On Collision A young newsboy was killed early this morning when he was struck by a car in Waterford Township. A 43-year-old Troy man was fatally injured in head-on crash in Royal Oak yesterday. Richard Karb-Oakland ginsky, 12, of 6044 Graper Road, Waterford Tqwn-^ fy ship, was dead on arrival at Pbn-tiac General Hospital after he stepped in front of a car driven by Dwight J. Schulze, 19, of 4220 Bunker Road, Walled Lake. Highway Toll in ’63 Walter Kostich, 1834 Boulane Road, died at William Beaumont Hospital at 11 p. m. yesterday, 16 hours after the car he was a passenger in was involved in an accident. State police said the Karhgin-sky boy, a student at Pierce Junior High School, apparently was returning home after delivering his morning newspapers when the accident occurred at 6:35 a. m. The youngster walked from behind a truck on Williams Lake Road just east of Airport Road and mto the path of Schulze’s car, according to police. # ★ * Schulze was released by police after making a statement to the county prosecutor. IN BACK SEAT stich was riding in the back of a car driven by Arthur Goodman, 62, of 5640 Houghton " ’Troy, when a car driven by Mrs. Yvonne Hoffman, 32, crossed the center line and smashed into Goodman’s auto. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Hoffman, 3006 Maplewood St., Royal Oak,'was treated for minor injuries. She told Royal Oak police that she lost control of her car when the power steering and brakes failed. The impact hurled Kostich through the windshield. Goodman and another passenger in his car, William Krutzina, 47, of 2529 Galpin St., Royal Oak, are both listed in serious condition at Beaumont Hospital with multiple fractures. ’The accident happened on Webster Street, about 150 feet from the Clawson border. The Day in Birmingham Army Engineers to Stock City Fallout Shelters BIRMINGHAM - The Army Corps of Engineers has announced that it will stock this city’s 14 public fallout shelters with emergency provisions next week. City administrative aide, John F. Saefke, reported today that the addition of “six shelters which will qualify under lower criteria,” to the eight already qualified, public shelter space will triple in Birmingham. The emergency provisions include crackers similar to a dieting wafer, medical supplies and sanitary items. Saefke noted that under the fed-wal program provisions are supplied for a two-week period according to each shelter’s rated capacity. * ★ ★ In case of attack each person would be given a supply of crackers equaling 10,000 calories, Saefke said. AT PhaUlai A DOG FOR A DAB-Actress Hope Holiday had her nose ‘fixed’ so she looks like this Maltese poodle Coquette. They will appear in the film version of “Irma la Douce.”,. Mayor Florence Willett has proclaimed March 6-9 Michigan Architectural Week in Birming-hain. Her proclamation urges “all citizens to give thought to the importance which good architecture contributes to their en- 'God Here Toni^t' —Flood Survivor Charles' H. MacMahon Jr., 3248 Woodside Court, Bloomfield Township, is president of the Michigan Society of Architects. (Editor’s Note: Yvonne Cel floodwaters Irom a burst dam in Norwiih, Conn. Here is her ston/J By MRS. YVONNE CELLUCa As told to UPI NORWICH, Conn. — “God was here tonight. He had to be. T whs visiting a friend on Baltic Street and left about 10 o’clock. T opened the door and stream of muddy, black wa and huge chunks of ice came roaring down the street. “I took one look and I screamed ‘run’ to my friend Bad Weather Death Toll 29 (Continued From Page One) Ohio University campus at Ath- A midnight curfew was imposed 1 men students for the first time. More than 1,500 persons — including 700 university students-vere taken from the flooded area. The Ohio River, which.crested at Pittsburgh yesterday, continued to surge toward a crest downstream and afficials at Cincinnati, Marietta, Portsmouth and smaller Ohio communities made emergency preparations. ’The Ohio was expedited to crest at Cincinnati at 60 feet, or eight feet above flood stage, by Sunday. In Pennsylvania, serious flooding continued today from Newport to the mouth of the Juniata River, Duncannon, Pa , Mayor John Wells declared a state of emergency. Rescue workers helped residents from their homes at Dun-cannon, Amity Hall and Newport. Ice jams towered 30 feet high on the Juniata River where it meets the Susquehanna. Flood damage in the Chartiers Creek Valley was expected reach $10 million. Winds up to 55 miles an hour whipped snow across western New York last night, closing highways, stranding motorists and shattering store windows. Icy roads were blamed for the deaths of two men. Mary Mazurkiewiez. ‘Come on, run, it’s a flood.’ “We started racing down tiie hill and the water and ice was following us. “My tirst impression was to run home and get my kids (Jean, 5; Angela, 3; Richard, 1. WWW 'I came home and called the police and fire department then my husband Richard and I v on the front porch to see how the-streets were. YELL FOR HELP ^ “By this time th^water was 3 feet deep ou^Broad we 'We looked acros^HP street and saw the people the mill. They were standing in a .three-story brick wing anS they yelled aerpss the road to us to ask what was happening, and I yelled to them that the Spalding Dam had broken. Vjpl “They screamejd back ‘Get the fire department. The mill is 6n fire- Please get help.’ “We saw smoke, then the explosion and the building just collapsed. 1 went hysterical for a minute. I ran upstairs, grabbed my kids and ran for higher ground. ‘You don’t know how it felt, not to be able to help those poor people across the street.” 5 Dead, 1 Missing astownl^oded (Continued From Page One) hours before it re<^4ad, leaving a thin coatiog of mud. Many persons said they slept through the night without knowing what had struck the eastern Connecticut city of 40,(X)0. p.ro. tomorrow, at the St.' Paul's Chapel, Christ Church Cranbrook. Burial will follow in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, ’Troy. Mr. Brown died yesterday after a brief illness. His body is at the Bell Chapel of the WUliam R. Hamilton Co. He was a retired automotive salesman. Surviving are his wife Elizabeth 0.; a daughter, Mrs. Richard H. Kelly of Bloomfield Hills; a sister and two grandchildren. Asks Sniper Be Committed Iranian artist Jafar Shoja and Ruth Moller Smith, a native of| Brooklyn, N.Y., have Joined in a month-long exhibition of their work at the Little Gallery, 915 E. Maple Ave. ’The gallery is open ‘Tuesday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The exhibition will close April 6. The first in a series of educational and entertaining films sponsored by the Divine Science Ministry will be shown tomorrow. Films titled “Big League Baseball for Little Leaguers” and Out of the North” are scheduled. Time lor the fihns is 7:30 p.m. at the Strike and Spare Bowling Lanes, Maple and Telegraph Roads. w ★ ★ Eugene M. Brown Service for Eugene M. Brown, 80, of 605 Colonial Court, will be 1 Unveil Eastside Sewer Project (Continued From Page One) City Health Officej^wis Sears ordered typlMid senhn and sug-thatyesidenlB take the shots as a precaumnary meas ure. ' All schools in the city were closed today. As a.health measure, downtown merohants were permitted only to tplean then-stores, W not to . cm any sell- J. Harold Walz, puiAic works director, said there^as no suspicion that the damfwas weakening . until a leak was discovered shortly before the dam broke. LEGAL NOTICE TOWNSHIP OF BLOOMFIELD The Board of Review for the Township of Bloomfield will meet at the Township Office, 4200 Telegraph Road, on: ' ' Mondoy, March 11, 1963 Tuesday, March 12, 1963 from 9 0. m. to 12 noon, ond from 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. and on Thursday, March 14, ti963, from 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. and from 6 p. m. to 9 p. m. For the purpose of reviewing the 1963 tax assessment rolls for the Township of Bloomfield. ” Amo L. Hulet, Supervisor jf overload, it should get priority over any other sewer project,” advised Harold Kelly, representing the consulting engineers. * ★ ★ “The Galloway Creek sewer would serve a larger area to the northeast, but most of this area is vacant and unsewered.” Both sewers would connect with the new sewage treatment plant and both are proposed to handle added capacity for future expansion. •w w ★ Rough estimates are that the entire project would take about a year to build once construction begins. (Continued From Page One) kitchen of the $40,000 Godfrey home. Mrs. Godfrey was killed by a 22-caliber bullet fired from outside the window of the home, from a pistol that Douglas admitted taking from a sporting goods store. MIGHT REPEAT’ Dr. Tauber, one of three psychiatrists who testified at yesterday’s hearing before Judge Adams, stressed the necessity for immediate conunitment of the boy. WWW He cited young Godfrey’s “emotional flatness, his indifference to the seriousness of his offense, ' the potential danger that he might again find himself repeating such offense if he deems it necessary.” After yesterday’s two-hour closed-doors hearing. Judge Adams retained Juvenile Court jurisdiction over Douglas to arrange for confinement and treatment in a mental institution. The judge’s decision came after the three psychiatrists testified the youthw was seriously mentally ill. -WWW Dr. Fink, who was appointed by Judge Adams to examinq Douglas for the court, and Dr. Ernmanuel Tanay of Detroit' also testified at yesterday’s hearing. Drs. Tauber and Tanay were retained by Godfrey’s attorneys, Thomas G. Kavanagh of Birmingham and Joseph W. Louisell of Detroit. TAYLOR CONCURS County Prosecutor George F. Taylor said yesterdhy he concurred in Judge Adams’ decision to deny his petition to try the boy as an aduit in Circuit Court. If committed to Pontiac State Hospital Douglas could become eligible for release if psychiatrists pronounce him cured later and the Probate Court agrees. Juvenile Court ' jurisdiction will expire when the boy reaches his 19th birth- -< day. Judge Adams said the psychiatrists testified that young Godfrey’ could be rehabilitated eventually although suffering from severe mental illness characterized by indifference, withdrawal, hallucinations and delusions of persecution. ★ ★ ★ The boy was in attendance for most of yesterday’s hearing, but appeared to pay little attention to'the proceedings. TsIMMS^S south FURMtTtiwc sEEISviTI I fflA (AP) - Puffj the cat’s entanglynent in a ball of yarn and “Run Spot, run'! are beaming as old-fashionied as Mc-Gtdfey’s Reader. The 172-year-old publishing house of J. B. Lippincott is Ing what it claims is a new concept in teach-1 1 n g reading to j youngsters. The publisher feels its new text, “Basic Reading,' the rising incidence of rea4ing spring inabilities among childi-en. may eUminateJOf THE NEWSi concern of many ....... ' educators over The authors, Glenn McCracken; founder and director of the New Castle, Pa., reading experiment, and Charles C. Walcutt, a linguistic professor at Queens College, New York, say their teaching method will give a first grader command of 2,000 words at the end of his first year. This compares with a vocabulary of some 378 words under the present look-say'' method. ★ w * Pilot tests are planned this in Iowa, Tennessee, California and suburban Philadelphia. The authors say that the basic Reading series combines the better features of two teaching meth-. ods now in use, the phonics system advocated by modem educators, and the look-say or whole word meaning method by which p/e-World War II pupils learned to read. SOUNDS !\S USED “Basic Reading,” say the authors, is the first series which WSU Plans Classes at Pontiac Northern Wayne State Univeristy’s college of education will offer four courses at Pontiac Northern High School during the spring quarter. All classes will begin Tuesday, April 2. Registrations will be accepted by mail at the office of off-campus programs, prior to the first class meetings. Courses are designed to give teachers living in the Pontiac area an opportunity to continue their education leading to either degrees or certification. Courses include: H and P. Education 3601, Education and Social Ideas; Hygiene 6235, The Nation’s Health; Physical Science 0193, Physical Science; and Speech 0661, Creative Dranu for Children. Michigan Man Killed WEST BRANCH OW - Laren Engstrom, 38, of Portland was killed yesterday when his skidded on snow-covered M33 in Ogemaw County and struck tree: New Secrets of Space Due WASHINGTON U’i -More secrets of space will be revealed next week. New data gather^ from the skies by six satellites will be 'made public then. And the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has invited scientists from all over the world to hear the reports at a three-day symposium. * * * There has been speculation that some important new discoveries may be included in the reports. Russ 'Circlorama' Show Be Launched in Britain LONDON (UPD-A Soviet “circlo-ranw” movie theater will open in London next monm, it was announced today. - ^ “Circlorama” was described as a Soviet-developed circular screen that encircles the gpdience and enables it to feel in the midst of the action flashed from 11 projectors. fully integrates phonics and whole-word meanings. Their system, however, never teaches sound isolation. The sound of letters and letter combinations are taught only as they are used in words. Phonics is the science of sound and teaches pupils to read phonetically. They learn new words because they know how a letter sounds. The look-say method is simply, ran spells ran. McCracken and Walcutt offer it this way; ’Three rabbits in varying sizes —big, bigger and biggest—are depicted over the letters “r” and ‘R.” The teachers stresses the ‘r” sound as it is pronounced in rabbit. Thus the auditory and visual discrimination of the letter is taught. it * * The colorful illustrations add to the lesson what is referred to as readiness activities, the concept of relative size, understanding of oris (first, second and third), visual differentiation or observation, (e.g. one rabbit’s ears are missing,) counting in left-to-right and line-to-line progressions. Pupils thus learn the whole image of words from the start with all letters and sounds. The program, available only to 'educational institutions, is considered flexible in that it offers material sufficient for the fast learn-I, bid allows the slower pupil to keep pace with an average level of achievement. The child also is ready to recognize words heard on television, such as crisis, mysterious and creation — words he normally would not read until he is much older. The authors hope their new reader will make remedial reading classes obsolete. His Philanthropy Plea Doesn't Prevent Fine MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) • County Julge F. Ryan Duffy Jr. fined Walter F. France, 56, $50 yesterday when he pleaded guilty to stealing coal from a railroad yard to help “the poor people who couldn’t buy coal.” Authorities s^ France carried the coal in a 1961 white Cadillac of his girl friend, whom he described as one of the poor people. GEORGE'S ^►BSRK FREE, m A/fff Downtown thttix Metered tot EASTER BASKET With purchas* of $50 or moro. Accumuiato your foiot slips i until you got $50 . . . offer ^ expires April , FRIDAY-SATURDAY-MON. M COAT RIOT! to 59.91 15 JET-AGE READING — Two Levittown, ^., five-year-olds look at their reader, offering a new concept in teaching first graders a command of 2,000 words within one year. Reg. 39.95 to 59.95 WHILE 100 UST JUST<en 4 Nites, Shop Mon., Thurs., Frl., Sat. ’til 9 5 DAYS Friday, March 8 thru Wednesday, March 13 During Regular Store Hours LOVELY CHILD PORTRAITS £/VSx7LIVim LIMITED TIME! FRIDAY thru WEDNESDAY Root In Carpet Dept. BIG 5X7 IN. **Cfctir/re Your Choice—First Print -99c Secohd4>ose . .-.....2.49 Third Ptae............US * CHOICE OF SEVERAL POSES * UMn 2 CHILDREN PER FAMILY * AGE LIMIT: 5 YEARS AND UNDER * TWO CHILDREN POSED TOC.ETHER IM "MXUOF/XmOH OUASANTEED er TODB MONET BAOK” SEARS, ROEBVCK and CO., Phone FE 5-4171 154 N. Saginaw wm ifirllwL 3-DAYSONLYf Timely Buys in Every Department SAVINGS ALE Proportioned Drip-Dry Cotton ^ Slacks 88 Better Because ... • Fabrics from famous mills: Galey and Lord, Dan River, MooreSville • 100% two-ply combed cotton— Sanforized, mercerized, machine washable “ • Sears laboratory tested for drip-dry wearability, creasie resistance • Generous seams, serged, pressed open for smooth fit reg. •11.98 hi-waist zippered panty «2.99 Powered with spandex elastic for firm, but comfortable, lightweight control. High-top, sleek and smoothing with 3-inch boned midriff. Firm acetate, cotton and spandex elastic front, side and back panels. In easy-csre white. Choose from sizes 28 to 38. Six detachable garters. Shop tonite’til 9 p.m. $5.98 Elfin Cordtex Wonderspan Bras, Longline Model; B, C & D cups........................4.99 Conetry Dapt., Socead Floor "Salttfectkm goaranteed cc ywr monoy Iwdc" SEARS Sears Warehouse Store, 481 N. Saginaw Open 9 to 5:30 Daily. ”As-Ia” Merehondise! 154 North Saginaw St Phone FE 5-4171 D—6 wtivmim THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MARCH 7, 1963 MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by then in wholesale package lots. QuoUtions are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of noon Wednesday. Produce racrr ApplM. D*Ha^. M. Appln. Jonkthw. . Trading Activity Up Gains of Key Stocks Prevail NEW YORK -The stock market moved generally higher early today in somewhat more active trading. Fractional gains outnumbered losers among key stocks. A scattering of issues were up a point or so. Trading has been very light all week and analysts noted that the market has been able I'n to handle offerings of stock without declining sharply. They say the list as on a pretty solid footing. Chrysler, up nearly a point and Generar Motors, up a fraction, helped give motors a sUght-liSjly higher tone. Little change was t.n shown among other major motor “•stocks. A report that merger proposals face a tougher time in winning government approval tended to dampen enthusiasm about the carriers. Airlines, also affected, were narrowly mixed. Chemicals were mostly lower. Although Du Pont gained a fraction, Union Carbide, Eastman Poultry and Eggs nmOlT POITLTRT DtTROIT. U»rch S (API—Friokt Pkld pound ot Oolrolt for Mo. 1 OuoUtp »:*TMlt#r7?»«^»*ibf"V4-2Bj*broSMi*lind syes were mostly higher. tijtn whuoi 11-10; B*rr.d Rock jo.»; "“e iiiuBuy iiiKiici. U;>S. Smelting advanced a point. IBM and Litton Industries were up more than a point. Oils, steels, and aerospace is- DITROIT. ttarcb 0 tAP)—IM prteu |Aud per doun ot Detroit b)r firit ro-ccfveri (Includlni Whltoo grodo A jumbo N-41Vk: oitri Ikrn MVk-41: Urge M-tt; medium 14- loA. CnCAQO BVTTSa AND BOOS CHICAOO. Merch I (AP) — Cbl UerconUle luchonge — Butler ite Bggi' About iteody; wholoeole' buying price! unebanged; 70 — —‘ grade ' 33 Ik: cbecka n. CUCAOO POVLTBT CHICAOO. March 0 (AP»—U*e g try: Wholeiale buying prieoe 1 lowei t, higher; roaitere U-34‘k. mostly 14W; special led Whiu fryers 1 31. ha^ Rock fryars 30-11. Livestock DBTBOrr UVBSTOCX DETROIT, March 0 (APi—Cattle 400. “ mrljr supply go«l kt»Ae or^down * strongl^some & cents higher! ___j good steers ll.M-11.40; stand- to lo« good steers II M-ll.M; utility 11.00-10.00; canners and cuturs •Rails yielded a little ground. Father, Four Children Perish in N. J. Blaze KINNELON, N;J. ifi-A father and four of his children died in a fire that swept their home here early today. The mother and three other children escaped the flames by leaping from second-floor win-They were hospitalized in fair condition. Kodpk, and Air Reduction took moderate losses. Among small gainers were Radio ebrp., Boeing, United Aircraft, Eastern Air Lines, American Telephone, U.S. Steel, and Montgomery Ward. American Stock Exchange prices were mbted. Gainers included Aurora Plastics, General Plywood and Technicolor. Among losers were Breeze Corp., Aeronca, and Giannini Controls. DOW-JONXS NOON AVKRAOXS BONDS " mSw grads r^s ’. S.’ American Stack Exch. Plgurta after decimal points are etgl NIW TORS, March 1 (APl-1-Amerlcan Stocks: Ply Tiger .... Osn Derel .. Year Ago .. IM2-41 High INldl Low IMl High .. . 1M.7 131.7 IM.I 133 .3344 UI.7 14S1 134. ..Mil U7.I 143.3 137.. . . M7.I m i 140.1 234.1 377.1 m.O 141.1 243.* . 213.1 17.4 114.3 304. . 344.1 IMS 144.1 261 311.1 112.2 111.1 211. The New York Stock Exchange steady to strong, i ACP Ind 2.M Admiral Air Red 114 AJIndus Jit Alcoprod .44 Alleg Cp Allei Lud I t aIIm^ LW . M% ' + 14 Vs 1444-Vk 140-440 TbVowa|_ „ . Can 1 l!lAmCyan 1.44 o.;a El Pw l.M AmPP 44 cents lower. No. 1 and 1 lM-214 lb rows and ftlu 1S.11-11.M; “ -* * 230 lb. 14.Hi*" - - 11.74-14.73; 1, 12.25- 13.21; 1 and 3 404-440 lb sowsi> 11.25- 12.21; boars 11.11-13.04. ^ ; r,; Vealers M. Unchanged. Choloe and|^Op^ » 2 «v 4 114., 3U4 IIH + • MV« 44 4414 - U 34*4 MS 14*4 II 13*< 33V4 33>« 1144 lllk im - ! .14a 13 1444 MS 1444 . CHICAGO UVXBTOCK CHICAOO, March 4 (API —(U8DAI — Hogs 3,344; slow, butchers opened el to 23 lower, laU and closing trade 23 lower; sows about steady; shippers took 44 per cant ot salable supply; 1-1 140114 lb. butchers 13.M-U.34; couple hundred bead at 13.34; mined 1-1 110-M4 lbs. 14.34-13M; 2-1 MO-MO lbs. 14.40-14 73; 1-1 M04M lb. sows 11.44-11.73; 400444 lbs. U.73-11.11; 2-1 340404 Ibe. 12 M-12.71. Cattle 4444; cajres Am per Cp AmpBorg .M Anacood .Mg ■ • -1 44 1 ...... 1.44 AnnCk l.Ma Aahl on 1.M AssdDO 1.44 Alchls 1.14a AURat 1.44 sse; slsughter „ _____ fairly aeUr- M higher; welgbu oter 1.1 to M lower; heifers sUady _ cows steady to string; bulls I. 404 lbs. M.M; choice 23.30MM; 1.M01.4M lb-. -------------- good 4401.M4 lbs. 11.30H.H; standard II. 0011.04; choice 4401.440 “ ---- heifers 13.40M.2S; few loa 000-1 044 Iba 23 3024.M: ec. 21.3013 40: utility and commerelM cows 14.3010.34; canners and cutters 11.00 14.34; utlUty and commercial buUs 11.30 M.M: load choice around 404 lb. feedi steers 23.44. Sheep 144; not enough to establish Treasury Position WABRINaTON lAPI-The cash posl- Carrier l.M tloif ot the Treasury compared will respondln, dau a year ^ BaUneO ................ 1 7,113.304.744.11 Deposits fiscal year July 1 .............. 1 70,347.064.141... Withdrawals fiscal yr. 4 ll.l4l.771.g43.M Total debt ............*^.116.144.104.46 CenSW 3old aaseU ............. riS.n7.42t.4l7.17:cerro 1 liBFtli 9, 1M9 *Ccr tood Balance ............... 1 3.712.127,647.11 DSMSlts flkbal year r 72H 714s 71H- H Mills l.M OPrecn l.M OPubBr .111 16 MW MVs : M 61W 61 I I MW xvt : ______ .llg 3 5W 5W OPubU IJOb 3 MW aw : Oen Slj l.M 2 MW MW OTeUSB M 37 MW ISW : Oen Tire w a 21*4 2IW : Oerber Prod 1.14 2 MW 53V< Oa Psc lb •• 7 3SW MVe 53W 11 13W IMW 137W 1 71*4 71W 71W — W 7 71’, 71W 71W ......... II 20Va 24W 26W — W • M MW M ■■ ■ 44W 61 -> V4 37 aw 24 MW — Stereotypers Join in Strike Mayar ta Infarm Bath Sides af Next Step US, Investors in Foreign Mart Given Praise OlenAld .M Ooodreb IM Goodyear 1 Grace .Mb. GraodU .64b GranCB 1.44 3 41W 61W 61W ___ _______ 1 1 16W 16W-WiGreyhd l.Mb 1 ISW MW MW - WlGnimn l.M 7 I4W 14W 14W - W Gulf UtK) 1 1 MW 24 MW + WloifOU l.M xM 4IW 41W 4SW —WiGuU 8U 1.11 I aw MW jaa ... II a a a - wl 47 42W 42W 41W -e W;Hambur 144 6 2„ ^ «•“** 1 *•> I 47W 4 i 47V4 - t Rupp CP at Ing Rand la bland g l.M Interlak l.M 3 MW aw MW . .. 14 MW MW MW - W I 61W 61W MW-W I 4IW 41W 41W - W 4 4W 4W 4W . .. U MW MW MW -el 11 ISW 1 3 a 1. 1.M 17 MW M n7 14W low IIW + M aw aw 33W-4 llW IIW IIW -M 46W 46 43W - 44 aw aw aw -f 13 MW MW aw - I M aw 41W 42W - 4 3 MW 17W 17W - 1 M aw aw 44W . M aw aw aw e 4 —H— II 34 34 M -< 1 11*4 IIW ati - ' 6 22S aw aw - < M 41 aw aw-’ 6 a aw a ... lb 11 aw MW 1 Bou lu : BperryR , OU Csl 2b - J Ind l.Mb BIO N^.6M^ Pkg War l.M Int Nick la mt Pack IntPap l.M Int TAT 1 Johns Man 2 3 SSW MW aw- 7 MW 44*4 a -M MW MW a - 1 11 ir* 17W - w M nw rv4 1 w - w a a a> a - w -liCi- KajrtRo .«)• •---TCOtt It ____JL tM KarrMcO 1 Kimbaark I Kopptn t Konrette Kr«Mt« 90t KrtsaSH .40* Krofer l.lt UftrS .4»b Champs 1.10 Chm^ IM Totftl d Stacks of Lota! Interest Figures after decimal points are elghUrs OVER THE COUNTER BTOCR8 The foUowIpg quotatloiu do not r eiearlly represent actual but arc Intended as a g approamata trading timge AIIT Corp. ............... Aunt Jane’s Pood ......... Detroiter MchUe Homm ... Diamond Crystal .......... Electronics Capital ...... Electronics International .. Frito-Lay, Inc............ McLouth Steel Co. ........ ■ Mich. Beamless Tube Co. . Mohawk Rubber Co.......... Pioneer PInanoe .......... Banta Pe Drilling ........ Trans. Gas Pips Lins — lli I MW MW MW - 1 glW 41W 41W .. 4 IV4 JV4 IW .. II MW MV4 MW 4 14 17W 27W 17W - t I7W nw 17W ..., 4 a 41W aw - w M MW 21W MH — V4 . l4 41W42W42W-WLeh V Ind MM MW M 11 MW 3IH H’4 , 27W 27W 11 17W 17 17 -f 1 TOW TOW 74W- 1 72 71W TlW- 14 MW MW. MW - 4 31 Sl*r 3IW - xl 44W 44W 40W -f 73 MW MW MW - 1 nw MW MW - I liw UW liw 4 23W i;w MW e JlLlggAll 4 nw 13W liw - w ChIPns lJ4a . . . .. . .. . . ------ ■ - ..... gJW 11*4 - W 13W 13W - W n nw -e w ____________ . MW 44W-W CltlesBT l.M 41 aw 41W 41W -f W ~'vk Equip 1J4M MW MW MW !V El I U M 41W 41*4 caCol 1.74 1 41W 41W 4IW If P IJOa II 47W MW aw Ulna R M M MW MW I, , soh 11 12 giw 51W M 27W nw 27W II M 14W M av4 a MVs »*4 I3W MW 47W 47V4 47W Col Gas 1.11 CoIPIet .at ■ ‘iS Com Ed I Mb Cen Edls 1 CuN Gas 1.M ConsPn l.M Cotitam M Cont can 1.N Cootlns IMb 1 ^ IB 47> 4j«“ if S' MW -W Mot .a I H MW MW .... aw 41W aw-w MW r-' Ut^4 1 ,*’®|Dan RI7 >1 H payco J3-W Dacca 1'-• M Dcart IMa .I4* *1 iSw MH Sw r ! ss a a:« 1 M nw nw nw - *' —P— _____M 1 MayD 8t 1.M McDouAlr lb Merck l.Na MbrrCh .llg JIOM 1J4 Mid 8U 1.11 Miner Cb .74 - ... ..J IIW-X14 M IHs 11*4 14 MW a*4 nw + 17 MW MW MW .. 14 14 ii’i ir,. 4 43V4 a 43 - . 4 M aw aw-iw —M— 4 MW M M - 1 M*4 MV4 MW -I- M- 2W 2 IW 11 MW M N — W I 43*4 aw 4SW 17 ll MW MW . .. 71 nw nw nw - w M MW MW MV4 - V4 Mast. Innstors Truet . Putnam Orowth . M Del Hud .Mg >>Idco row 1 01,D«t BdU 1.M n Dot BU .llg Wellington Pund ...... • Nominal QuoUtions. DU Sea Dome H Doug Wedaaaday lit DIVIDENDS DECLARED Pa- Mk. a Pay- ComOWke i.l iTpl ComOWka rf OpI MalaePub Arc ... .4, MaIntPubSye pi .Mm .m Q 1-11 J7I Q 1-11 4-1 .m q i-n 4-1 I 14W 14W low — w 1 aw aw aw xl4 MW NW »w 1 MW MW MW I MW M M -W 1 MW MW MW ” 1 UW UW nW 1 aw 45W aw-w ■ .10 n MW nw MW ' I Mf 4 MW MW MW l.Mb n MW MW MW Drese l.M 1 14 M 24 M MW U —E— B U MW MW 54W-H ' 11 inw lllW lllW - W B 1 MW MW MW 4. W< R 1 M M. I SW IW a MW M I nw ^ nw - w k mW-w :“Le^7 ■% NYCent Me NUgM Nofft I RwM . 14 aw MW aw + xU 7IW 7SW 75W-U M 14*4 M -l MW MW M*4 -I-M I7W 1 W 17V. _ 3 MW av. aw- 1 IW IW IW .. 7 aw 41W 43W-1 MW M MW-11 n nw MW-II 41W aw aw -I IIV. MW 31 w + NEW YORK (AP)-Local I of the AFL-CIO Stereotypers Union has joined printers and mailers unions in striking against four New York newspapers. In addition to the four newspapers closed by strikes, four other newspapers remained closed voluntarily. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, mediator in the 90-day-old dispute, told newsmen he would inform both sides today of his next step. The mayor declined to say what his next step will be. The mayor Indicated previously that he would recommend settlement terms if continued negotiations and mediation failed. Separate talks of both sides with Wagner continue today. Talks Wednesday lasted until 11:30 p.m. CiDES ‘FAILURE’ The strike by the stereotypers— who make the metal plates that are put on the presses to print the papers—was announced Wednesday night by James J. McMahon, president of Local 1. McMahon said the strike “has been made necessary by the failure, after months of negotiation, to reach an agreement regarding a number of important features of a new bargaining agreement.” A spokesman for the publishers said the stereotypers were “trying to make a breakthrough” on the issue of vacations. ★ ★ ★ Eugene Buttrill, a vice president of the Herald Tribune who has participated in negotiations, said ■4 “There’s no paper in the country that gives a fourth week after one year.” ;* Buttrill said four weeks (rf vaca-w tion usually are granted after 10 I s! year s’ semploy ment There was no word from the stereotyper’s union on the issues in dispute. 15TH VfEEK In Cleveland, Ohio, the shutdown of the city’s two newspapers into its 15th week tonight. Negotiations with three unions ere on tap today. The Cleveland Plain Dealer and the Press & News have been dosed for 98 days. By SAM DAWSON AP BniineBS News Analyst NEW YORK - American firms bvestlng abroad are accused of everything from exporting jobs to a share in the blame for the shrinkage of the treasury’s gold hoard. And some have wondered if they weren’t Caught in the middle in the fight between France and Britain over the future makeup of the European Common Market. Some are taking a second look at their plans for investing there. ★ * * But some kind words for American investors are coming today frtim two sources. The president of the European Economic Community, Walter Hallstein, says that some American products will be getting a better break in their bid for the rich European market and that American capital in’t be penalized. He adds that eventually Britain will be admitted to the Common Market, even if today French President Charles de Gaulle opposes it. And American investments abroad miay slow their fast pace of recent years for economic rather than political reasons, whether these be European objections or American policy. $22.3 biUion, topped by |400 million the outflow of dollars for imports—116.2 billion; and for services—$5.7 billion. So the private sector had a surplus of million in its balance of payments. The government sector ran behind by $2.8 billion. American business isn’t arguing about the need for much of the government expenditures abroad. ' just doesn’t want to be blamed for running the United States into the red. N sm B*4 31 - 71 MH N Mtk 4- 1 MV4 MV4 HV4 - ' 3 14*4 14*4 14*4 ... 1 IIH llH IIS + 11 M*4 MH M*4 4 ’ 1 77V4 77*4 77*4 - I 11*4 11*4 IIH ~ ' 17 7*4 *4 7*4 + 31 M*4 11*4 M*4 - ' Texins Ms 27 M>4 M*4 M - Tax PCO 1.M M 33*4 34*^ U*4 * TsxFLd .He 4 Its Mv; 24*4 - - ^ 1.46 4 M’4 14*4 M*4 4- MU 14 M>4 M*4 M*4 .. OU 1 24*, MV. MV. . I l.a 4 M M*4 M*4 — V. Air 1 U*4 U*4 U*4 . . aoh II a*, 44*4 44*4 — *4 _____ 6*4 4*4 4*4, Can 1.134 7 a 41*4 41H Twant Cant Dadannl I UV. V Ckrtl" *" ............ Un Elat UnOUCsl U t l.Mk 1 M U8 Rub 2 M UBBmalt .308 US Staal 2 Unirhal .07f DnIaMat .IDs UnOUPd Ms Upjohn H 2 6*4 r4 6*4 - 4 14*4 14*4 14H 4 4 24*4 M*4 NH . War Lam .74 1 24*, IS 24*4 14H 14*4 + 7 M*4 M». M*4 - M M*4 M^ 11*4 - 14 M*4 M 18*, - a 33*4 33 S3V. 1 37*4 17*4 17*4 . I a>4 av. a*4 - .. UnTal 14 Wat AB 1.4 WhSfep l.M WblU Mot I . ------- Winn Dlx .M 4 17H M*4 r*4 - V, Woolwth 1.M 64*4 a*4 - *4 TsIeAT 1 1 M*4 M M - TUI Hit I 1JH4 18*4 M*4 - *4 Joblessness on Rise Again WASHINGTON (iB-Unemploy-ment is slowly rising again and exceeding the idle totals of year ago. The government was due to submit the latest report, for February, in midafternoon today. It was expected to show the nation’s seasonally adjusted rate of unemployment ia back at around 6 per cent the *vork ffxce. The rate was 5.6 per cent in December and 5.8 per cent in January. Native Mistauri Sailars Lend Oriental Tauch ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Wiliam Grosse and Terrill R. Rees Jr. owil a Chinese junk. ’The men ordered the vessel from a shipbuilder in Hong Kong. The junk was shipped to New Orleans, then went barge to Paducah, Ky. and wta run under its own power to Kentucky Lake, wh«« the Grosse and Rees families take weekend sails. DAWSON The second source, an American bank with much international business, takes a look at the role of American investments abroad. Its verdict: The prWpte sector of the U.S. economy has a good report card. It hasn’t added to the U.S. deficit in the balance of payments, but has offset it to some extent. ’The economists at First National City Bank of New York hold that the deficit comes from government dealings of various kinds with other nations. MORE FOREIGN CAPITAL In additibn, European investments in the United States American private investments abroad by $15 billion to $11 billion. The implied inference: U.S. industry is getting more financial help from abroad in creating jobs that American investments so far have added to the European e'-’onomy. The other side of the picture conceded by the U.S. Department of Commerce which says government grants and capital outflows do affect our foreign. trade, adds there’s thd complication of "private capital outflows *vhich may stimulate exports while the capital is transferred, but. some instances, may contribute to the construction abroad of productive facilities which compete *rith our domestically produced goods.” it it it Tackling the investment jaxib-lem in its monthly economic letter, the New York bank says that in 1962 private bng-term mvest-ments abroad came to $2.4 billion, private short-term assests abroad increased by $600 million, and probably another $900 million floived abroad unrecorded. But offsetting this the bank puts income on investments abroad as $3.6 billion and the long-term capital inflow from abroad at ^ million. This gives the private sector a $200 million assist to the balance of payments. Beyond this American exports of $18.2 billion and income from services of $4.1 billion, totalling ^ Sees Rise in Strength BONN, Germany (JR—U.S. Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer, NAlG’s supreme commander in Europe, said today he expects the Atlantic Alliance’s nuclear and conventional strength to increase in 1963. Urisss otharwls* aoltd. spalkl i aTlBMBs an not Melwlsd. I »—Also oxtn or oxtros B-Annua roi gus stMk dIvIdoBd. d-DMiArsd or po IMl piM sloeE dlvMxod. •—Doclon or sadd m lar tUo itor. t—Poroble I stockamiit IML tstlDiotod cosh *at OD oxqUTld^ or Grain Prices U M*4 N —P— M 11*4 M*4 H*4 - *4 I H T*4 7*4 ... . I-a .21*4 a — 1 17*4 M*4 »*4 ... I a** M*4 11*4 U 14*4 M M - Ohio Ed 1.74 I a a a ... Olln Usita 1 14 a*4 a*4 a*4- Gut Mar J4 11 14H 11*4 11*4- OWW HI 1.M I 71*4 «*4 71*4-1 Oxt Pap IJI 4 14*4 M*4 MI4 4 —P— Pac GBR 1 11 11*4 a*4 BH -f PanAAIr M a M*4 11*4 a*4 . ParamPlol 1 I 17*4 17*4 17*4 ■* *4 da, ParksO 1 M a>4 14*4 14> - Vi,rul#. PtDDSjr i.aB 15 a*4 41* - PaPwLt i.a a 31*4 a* Pa RR a* a 14V4 14 - -, i.a 14 a a at or paid IB 14M plus slock 1—PajaMt In Meek 6ujli^lia iiUoa Jarraau. wu---------- . lJlt4 Jul. . . 1J4 Bsi. . 1.11*4 Mar^* lililt'iSi Successful % Invests * *