Record Waterford Turnout Boosts See Column 5 The Weather V.S. Weather Bureau Ferecait ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 121 NO. 46 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1963 —28 PAGES But Margin Narrow Constitution a Victory for Romney How Michigan Voted -A YES .... Constitution (5,103 of 5,208 Precincts) ....808,589 NO ...797,635 Adams .. Non-Partisan Supreme Court 670,163 Holbrook . ♦ . 508,313 Black ... . 760,992 Smith .... .. .415,610 Democrats Republicans I Superintendent of Public Instruction § Bartlett......833,144 Hatch ......775,179 | MSU Trustees Vanderploeg .772,272 Nisbet.......801,530 ft Stevens ...... 789,380 Rouse ...... 783,069 1 U. of M. Regents Power...... .812,926 Cudlip ......796,418 | Thurber ......794,618 White ...... 766,109 | Board of Education I Tuchow.......748,359 O’Neil ........817,726 I Wayne Governors I Woodcock ... .807,101 Whittaker .. . 789,647 1 I Ference ....783,506 NoeckOr .... 768,518 | How Oakland County Voted Institution YES ...V. . . . .89,144 NO Non-Partisan .... 53,674 Supreme Court Adams ... ...58,592 Black .... . i.. 58,073 Holbrook . 46,490 Smith .... . ...45,738 Russians Fire 4th Unmanned Moon Rocket Start of 3l/2-Ddy Trip Reported Normal by Soviet News Agency From Our News Wires MOSCOW — The Soviet Union launched its fourth unmanned space rocket towards the moon today. The official Soviet Tass news agency said the automatic space research station is known as ‘Moon 4.” . Tass added that everything on board was functioning normally and said another report on its progress would be made , It is expected to reach the vicinity of the moon in 3M» days. Tass said the launching was! part of the Soviet program for exploration of outer space and planets of the solar system. The report said the inter- | Democrats Republicans Superintendent of Public Instruction | Bartlett ..61,153 Hatch .......82,808 I Vanderploeg MSU Trustees . 57,161 Nisbet ...84,466 I Stevens . 57,147 Rouse .83,306 1 Power U. of M. Regents ..59,303 Cudlip .... .. .85,176 I Thurber ... .. .58,631 White . .81,978 1 I Tuchow Board of Education ...54,640 O’Neil..,.. ...86,178 I v " I Woodcock . Wayne Governors ...59,845 Whittaker.. ...83,317 1 Ference ... ,. .57,743 Noecker ... ...81,707 Argentine Leader Claims General's Coup Is Crushed BUENOS AIRES UPl - Two retired army generals proclaimed a revolt in Argentina today. 78 Predicted for Tomorrow Up and up the temperatures do. The weatherman predicts partly sunny skies and a high of 78 for tomorrow. The low will be a mild 87 tonight. Morning winds southerly at . 2 miles per hour will become 10 to IS m.p.ht southwesterly tonight and tomorrow. Thursday’s forecast is scattered showers and thunderstorms with cooler temperatures. ■ ' The low reading in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a. pi- was 67. The mercury had climbed to 78 at 1 p.m. Four hours later, President Jose Maria Guido announced that his government had crushed the effort to oust him. Navy forces that surrounded Guido's executive palace in downtown Buenos Aires began to withdraw just after the government communique * announcing the crushing of the revolt. The Navy forces, answering a call from the rebel generals, had set up machine-gun em-Tout the city shortly before noon they dismantled their fortifications marched away. ★ ★ 4r The rebels had announced their revolt was aimed at blocking elections hr Which they believed followers of ex-dictator Juan D. Peron would win control. Guido, struggling to achieve a (Continued on Page 2, Col. IV from an orbiting space platform. The use of such unmanned devices is a preliminary to attempts to land men on the moon, a goal of both Soviet and U.S. governments. - It was the second unmanned, space launch from the Soviet Union this year. Last month, Soviet scientists! sent Up Cosmos 13, an unmanned. Sputnik which went into an earth orbit. Morcow Radio said the last stage of the rocket was put into an intermediate orbit and from there was sent toward the moon. Romney Heart Encouraging News Governor 'Delighted' at New-Con LANSING (iW — “I’m delighted,” beamed bov. George Romney. “This was more important than anything that happened last fall.” Romney was talking about approval of the new state constitution. He was terming the vote more vital than his own election as* governor. Itools to deal with our state prob- “This is a result in the very |ems best interests of the state,” Rom-1 ney said. “It finally gives us the[ PHILIP J. MONAGHAN In Today's | Press County Results Voters cast ballots in area townships, cities — PAGES 18 and 19. - Cuba Raiders Exiles captured, boat confiscated, some press on - PAGE 10. Spldshl K plays at Black Sea despite povyer play talk— PAGE 8. Area News ........18-19 I Astrology ........'..20 | Comics . ............20 ! I Editorials W. j Markets ......a..... Obituaries ..........22 Sports.......... .18-17 Theaters ..... jy.---10 TV & Radio Programs 27 s Pages...11-13 Ex-GMC Man Gets lop Post Will Head Up Dayton Appliance Group Former manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division Philip J. Monaghan has been appointed! group executive in charge of the GM’s Dayton Household ^Appliance and Electro-Motive Group. Monaghan, a vice president since 1953 and head of the GM, Manufacturing Staff since 1980, replaces Nelson C.’ Desendorf, who retires May 1. - Edwin C. Klotzburger, of 1090 N. Glenhurst Drive, Blri Romney, showing up late lor a midmorning news conference, said he had only two and a half hours sle^p last night. But his enthusiasm seemed undimmed. * * . * “The margin was small,” he said. “But the margin that called the constitutional convention was small.” Romney said he was not distressed because his Republican slate of candidates didn’t sweep into office. * h ★ “Considering the recent history of Republican candidates," he observed wryly, “it whs very couraging.” ★ * * “It was a tipsy-turvy election for a while," he said. “It just goes to prove again one vital fact of life. The differences between success or failure in politics, sports, or any field of life, are very small. It all depends on the extra effort.” . has been appointed group executive in charge of the Body and Assembly Group. He has been GM vice president and general manager of Fisher Body Division since 1958. OTHER CHANGES other organizational changes, Grosse Pointe Farms resident Robert H. Gathman was elected a vice president and appointed to succeed Klotzburger; Wallace E.. Wilson, general manager of the Rochester, N. .Y. Products Division, was named to succeed Monaghan; and Harry Hawkins, sales director of the Saginaw Steering, Gear Division, was promoted to,fill the vacancy at the Rochester Division. Monaghan, who lives at 940 C r a n b r o o k Road, Bloomfield Hills, joined General Motors at the Fisher Body Division, Detroit, in 1036. He was appointed manufacturing manager of ‘GMC Truck k Coach in 1951, and two (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) 4 School Taken by DETROIT (iP)—A record turnout of voters gave Republican Gov. George Romney his first vote of confidence in office Monday by adopting a new constitution by a narrow margin. There was something to cheer about in the Democratic camp, too—capture of at least four of eight educational posts and two “nonpartisan” seats in the State Supreme Court bench. Some 1.6 million voters turned up at the polls for Michigan’s last spring election. Under the revised constitution, such elections will no longer be held. The new constitution doesn’t take effect until Jen. 1, 1964. That’s when it will become “the supreme law of the state.” The first governor and other state officials to be granted extended four-yeft terms under its provisions won’t be elected until November 1968. Suburbs Carry New Document Oakland Leads State to Constitution Victory By JIM DYGERT Suburban voters, led by Oak-... a., , « * land County’s 35,470-vote margin Romney, Michigan s first GOP ,jn favor 0j jj,e new state con-governor in 14 years, and ai dark stjtutiori) were credited today horse for the 1964 Republican carrying the document to presidential nomination, had.. narrow victory at the polls staked his leadership prestige on yegterday Related Stories, Page 8 adoption of the new constitution which he helped draft as a delegate to last year’s constitutional convention. Declaring that the election was of great national significance, Romney insisted that defeat of the constitution would have meant “a great setback for the fundamental process of democratic society." In fighting for adoption of the document, Romney was facing two 'familiar foes he defeated last November -‘--'the Democratic party and labor union leaders. The former automaker also had campaigned in behalf of candidates on the QOP Ucket. Oakland County voters approved the ndw constitution, 89,-14 to 53,874. They turned out in record numbers for the spring election in response to urging by the county’s own Gov. Geroge Romney for ndoption of the document. While helping Romney gain prestige with their contribution to the victory, county voters gavi the new constitution ai MB greater percentage of their vote than they gave Romney - in his drive for the governorship las1 fall. ★ it it 'Yes” votes accounted for 62 per cent of the county’s unofficial 142,818-vote total on the document. Romney won 60 per cent in November. Only 1,000 fewer county votes were cast oivthe constitution than were registered in the contest for state superintendent of public instruction, the race in which the most votes were cast. County voters showed considerably more Interest in the document than did the rest of the state. The election of Incumbent Justice Eugene Black, 80, of Port Huron and former Justice Paul Adams, 54, of Sault Ste. Marie swung the balance of the court from n 4-4 split to 5-3 in favor of candidates nominated by the Democratic state convention. Here is the way the other races went: ! * * * * Democrat Lynn Bartlett, 58, ofj‘ More than two million Michi-Grosse Pointe Woods was re-|gan voters marked a choice for elected state superintendent of,state superintendent of public inpublic Instruction oftr Republi- struction, ,but only 80 per cent of can Raymond Hatch, 52, ^of them also voted-on the const!-Okemos. F Incumbent treasurer Mrs. Dor- _ . . . ... . othy Olson registered the largest Democrats scored a s gnifleant vld in any o{ lhe )ocal victory in yesterday's Waterford' * defe*ti Fred L Morn. Township election as the pary ing8tar 5 flll t0 4,745. boosted its present 4-3 Township TRUSTEE RACE In the township trustee race, Incumbent Republican Loren. D. Anderson garnered 5,080 votes to edge Democrat John H. Verhey, who had 5,086 for, the fourth They lost the fourth by only trusteeship. Incumbent Democrat John S. Coleman led the field of eight Board margin to 6-1. A record spring vote of 11,* 330 was cast as Democrats won the top three administrative posts qnd throe trustee spots. JAMES E. SEETERLIN . throe Votes. , ’ ■ gent — Democratic incumbent Eugene Power* 47, Ann Arbor, and Republican William Cudlip, 58, of Grosse Pointe Shores were apparent winners over Democrat Donald Thurber, 55, of Grosse Pointe, and Ink White, 49, of St. Johns. For Michigan State University trustee — Democrat Don Stevens, 48, of Okemos and Republican Stephen Nisbet, 67, of Fremont polled more votes than incumbent Democrat Jan Vanderploeg, 62, of North Muskegon and Republican Arthur Rouse, 51, of Boyne City. For Wayne State University governor — Democrat Leonard Woodcock, 51, of Grosse Pointe and Republican- Alfred Whittaker, 68, of Grosse Pointe led the ticket ahead of Democrat Michael Ference Jr., of Dearborn and Republican Marshall Noecker, 49, of Grosse Pointe. Whittaker’s margin over Ference was a narrow one, however. Adoption of the constitution was by a close margin of little more than 10,000 votes. The tight vote reflected the fierce battle waged over the document both in the convention itself and after it was approved by the delegates. Romney, who had served as a vice president of the convention, was In the forefront of the fight. He urged that It be adopted because, he said, it represented improvements In every article over the present document which hqd stood since 1908 and been amended some 70 times. Placing his prestige on the line, the governor said in the closing days of the campaign that the election could be the most significant in Michigan history. (‘Our election is of great national significance," he declared. “Adoption of this new constitution will remove obstacles to effective functioning of state government. Defeat will accelerate replacement of state and local responsibility with federal programs and federal responsibility." Romney insisted that the document was not partisan in nature, but the Democratic party denounced it officially as a vehicle for establishing Republican control. One of the staunchest foes against the revised constitution was the man Romney beat last November, former Gov. John Swainson. Labor forces also threw their strength into the battle In opposition to its adoption. In an ironical twist, the votes of Swainson and his wife Alice might not be counted in the official tally. They sent in absentee ballots to the Plymouth precinct where. they usually vote grounds they still own a house there and ihtend to return shortly. But the election board chairman, Mrs. Barry Alford, said she would challenge the votes on grounds they should have been cast in Lansing. One of the/most heated controversies of the new constitution centered around the legislative apportjpnjpient article. Democrats insisted the legislature should be apportioned on population basis for both houses in line with the “one man-one Vote” principle. The new constitution would apportion the House on a basis close to straight population, but the Senate would follow a formula based 80 per cent on population and 20 per cent on area. Wegman received 4*949 and 4,820 votes respectively. BOARD OF REVIEW In the board of review race, Carlos Richardson, a Democrat, defeated his Republican opponent Roy A. Dorris 5,209 to 4,932. Democrat Walter Brinkman polled 5,549 votes for highway commissioner. He was unopposed. Waterford Township voters cast 4,875 votes for the new cbnsitu-tlon and 5,243 against it. it it h. Seeterlin, 36, of 4597 W. Walton Blvd., said last night that he planned ho immediate “drastic"^ changes. . . \ ‘I will exert my greatest efforts toward the progress of the township, especially in the area of water and sewer problems,” he said. The newly elected supervisor theorized that the constitution ' sue was mainly responsible for attracting’an approximate 50 per cent voter turnout in the township. ★ ★ ★ 'About 40 per cent is the normal spring election participation," he said. Fangboner, who is presently the township fire chief, will resign from this post when the election results are declared official. dally zoned acreage in the city became an issue in the commission race. Craig and Frye were strongly opposed to this proposed change, favoring, retention of the city’s present status. Because one of them was reelected and the other defeated, the issue remains a moot point. it' ★ ★ ; , Unopposed incumbent constable Homer J. Murphy received 494 votes. Burial will follow in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit............. Mr. Pappas died Sunday after two-week illness. A prayer service will be conducted , at 8 . tonight at William Sullivan & Sons Funeral Home, Royal Oak. .. Mr. Pappas was owner Of the Town and Country Lounge here and the Sloppy Joes Restaurant in Madison Heights. Surviving are his wife Katherine; two sons, John of Bloomfield Township and Anthony of Royal Oak; two daughters, Mrs. Steve Vidakoblch of Waterford Township and Mrs. Raymond Novotny of Clarkston; a brother and eight grandchildren. Waterford Results at a Glance —Local— Democrats Republicans man, as the most significant factor^ the victory. hat Oakland Comity thing is whit turned this over,’’ Milli-man said. “Certainly this margin provided more than the margin of apparent victory.” Many observers considered as equally significant the fact that the constitution won 45 per cent of the Wayne County vote all-out efforts of Democrats and the AFL-ClO to defeat it. Supervisor Seeterlin .. 5557 Johnson ...4970 Clerk • Fangboner 5180 Kainpsen — ...5145 Treasurer Olson ..... ...4745 Trustees Coleman .. 5382 Anderson .... ...5089 Preston ... ...5060 Evans .... .5126 Kuhn ...4853 Verhey ... 5086 Gidley ...4662 Justice of the Peace Peres 4588 McGrath .... ...5507 Richardson Board ofKtSVtBw 5209 Dorris Y ...4932 Constable Carter 4949 Smith ...5096 Wegman .. 4820 Lowell ...... :1.5032 Highway Commissioner I Brinkman .....5549 New Constitution i YES . * .4895 . NO . .5243 “State- Superintendent of Public Instruction Bartlett ... 5242 Hatch ...5037 MSU Trustees / Stevens ... 4985 Nisbet ./.. ....5211V Vanderploeg 4873 Rouse ./ — ...5159 • U. of M. Regents Power .... 5090 Cudlip\.... ....51*2 Thurber ... #....5024 Whifr j..5090 Board of Education Tuchow .. ...,.4795 O’Neil ..... ...5342 Wayne Governors Woodcock . .5021 Whittaker .. ....5188 Fcrcncd ... .../.. 4941 Noecker.... ....5096 / Non-Partisan Supreme Court Adams — ......5633 Holbrrfok ...2548 Black — 45816 Smith.... ...2455 ■ 1 1 * Suburbs Top State OK of Constitution BIRMINGHAM - Voters here retained two incumbents seeking re - election to the City Commission and added a new member. lcumbent Commissioners Wiliam E. Roberts and William H. Burgum were retained with votes of 4,119 and 3,835, respectively. Also winning a seat on the commission was David F. Breck, (Continued From F e One) Romney managed only 40 per cent in Wayne County last fall. Oakland County voters heavily faVored Republican candidates on the statewide partisan ballot but had comfortable margins for State Supreme Court candidates nominated by Democrats. They gave Raymond N. Hatch 82,808 votes for state superintendent of public instruction, the smaUest margin given a GOP nominee on the partisan ballot. His Democratic opponent, incumbent Lynn M. Bartlett, received 61,153 -votes in Oakland. Republican James F. O’Neil outpolled Democrat Gerald Hi-chow, 86,178 to 54,640, in county balloting for a State Board of Education post. IN HIGH COURT County voters gave State Supreme Court Justice Eugene F. Black 58,073 votes in his successful bid for re-election, and former high court Justice Paul L. Adams won 58,592 votes to help return him to the bench. Both were nominated by the Democratic party. 1 GOP • nominated Donald E. Holbrook and Richard G. Smith polled 46,490 and 45,738, respectively, on the nonpartisan ballot for two seats on the State Supreme Court. In the county’s vote on the constitution, Pontiac and Waterford Township voted against It. 1 it it h Uejal Pontiac total “no" to 4,546 “yes. d results had 5,243 “no 47825 “yes.” ■ ★ ★ * Pontiac Township also went against the document, 1,006 691. Others with majorities against the new constitution were Oak Park (3,727 to 3,349), Madison Heights (2,895 to 2,164) and " azel Park (2,464 to 1,064). ★ , * \v it. Areas voting Overwhelmingly in j favor of the document were Blr* mgttham, 7,459 to 890, Bloomfield Township, 7,421 to 785; Bloomflled Hills, 868 to 85; West Bloomfield Township, 2,861 to 926; j Avon Township, 2,467 to 1,557; Southfield Township 3,730 to 418; Troy, 2,411 to 1,398; Southfield, 5,236 to 2,813; Royal Oak, 12,-067 to 6,323. * . it t The constitiution also won in' Berkley (2,779 to4*016) and Fern-, dale (MB9 to 2,440). He polled 3,393 votes. ★ ★ it ■ Defeated challengers and their votes were * Elizabeth S. Bagby, 2,262; Walter R. Denison, 2410: George L. Derr, 1,774; Frederick 1, Bahr, 1,489; Mabel R. Murphy .,430; Robert J. Spaulding, 536; William B. Woodburn, 507; and Allen D. Tucker, 441. The three Birmingham commissioners will serve three-terms. Doris D. Mosher and incumbent James E. Tobin were unopposed for the two three-year terms on the Birmingham Library Board. Mosher received 5,048 votes and Tobin, 4,823. ★ Re-elected to a four-year term as municipal judge was John C. Emery Jr. He polled 5,728 votes. His brother, Edward B. Emery, retained his office as associate municipal judge for four years with a vote of ,5478. Both were unopposed. George E. Pappas Service for George E. Pappas, J, of 179 W. Berkshire St., Bloomfield Township, will be 1 j, m. tomorrow at St. Nichols Greek Orthodox Church, Detroit. Ex-GMC Manager Named to Key Post (Continued From Page One) years later was named manager of the division. Klotzburger, who joined GM in 1923, was named to supervise Fisher Body expansion and modernization programs in 1954. He continued in that assignment until his 1958 appointment as divisional general manager. OK New Type WASHINGTON (UPI) - The .House Banking Committee today approved legislation to allow the government to issue a new type of $1 bill to combat a threatened shortage of silver. The pew bills — known as federal reserve notes— would gradually replace present $1 bills known as silver certificates. Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon had warned that unless the authority to issue new bills were granted, the day might come when it would become profitable for the public to melt down UJ. coins and sell the metal. Authority for the Federal Reserve Bond to issue a new currency was contained in ah administration bill that would repeal or drastically overhaul silver laws tint have been on the books since 1934. The committee approved the bill 18-1. One member voted'present. * * (f Retirement of the existing silver certificates would make silver automatically available to the Treasury to meet the growing demands for coins resulting from population growth and widespread use of vending machines. The Treasury how haahS million ounces of silver which it cannot touch because it must be held as backing for its $1 bills. The Shepherd 1 "The judgment ts God’s” Dent. 1:17 He calls for water to wash his hands ... As Christ before his judgment stands , , . And gives in to the mob’s desire . , . And what high priests and scribes require. 1 , . Though Pilate washed his hands of Christ . . . And let His life be sacrificed ... The judgment was on Pilate’s head . . . And he has been condemned Instead ... Of Jesus whom he would de-stroy ... With a& the tricks he could employ. JULIEN C. HYER City of Pontiac Results at a Glance New Constitution YES........4546 NO . t........6001 Democrats Republicans Superintendent of Public Instruction Bartlett .....6570 Hatch......... .4561 MSU Trustees Stevens ......8273 Nisbet .......4748 Vanderploeg___6169 Rouse . .*....4642 - U. of M. Regents | Power .......6531 Cudlip ........4854 j Thurber . ...6364 White..........4629 Board of Education Tuchow ...... 6071 O’Neil ...... .4806 Wayne Governors Woodcock .....6360 Whittaker ....4673 Ference .. .. 6218 Noecker..... .4601 No*n-Portisan Supreme Court Adams ........5634 Holbrook......2677 Black ......... 4861 Smith ..... 2848 President'Will Honor Son of Blind Vendor WASHINGTON (AP) - Ignacio (Lefty) Chavez of El Paso, Tex; tried to get into the White House Monday as a tourist and found the doors closed. Today thdy will be wide open, for Lefty has a date with President Kennedy. ★ ★ *-• Kennedy will Install the 17-year-old Texan, son of a blind broom seller, as the ‘‘Boy of the year” of die Boys’ Clubs of America. He is what the club calls the nation’s finest example of ’‘juvenile decency.” He has the credentials to prove it. The high school senior is an honor student and varsity baseball player and is active in a half hundred community activities, including acting as a volunteer guide at the Lighthouse for the Blind where the brooms his father sells are made. When he was younger, he used to guide his father through the streets as he sold his wares. . He pitched in to help the family purse by working as a vendor at sports events and during the summer labors in a bottling plant. The money is turned over to his mother to help feed the family of five which is of Mexican-Spanish descent. - ★ • ★ The award is more than an honor and a handshake from the President. It also means a' $1,000 scholarship from the Reader’s Digest Foundation — one big step along the way to becoming a law student or a midshipman at Annapolis. The United Stat about 16 pounds of coffee per person per year as compared with six pounds in coffee-producing Brazil. Insurance Rate Hike THE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY APRIL 2, 1963 \ 1 ItEE LANSING W) — The State Insurance Department reports it has approved an increase in rates for bodily injury and property damage liability coverage by the Detroit Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange. The average increase will be an approximate 12.5 per cent but will vary with the location and use of the car and age of the driver. The increase was approved effective April 1 and will aply only to policies written on or after that date. There is no increase involved for - comprehensive or collision coverage, the department said. Geyser Kills Livestock AREQUIPA, Peru (UPD—A geyser erupted last week in Cailloma Province, killing livestock and causing some crop damage, it was reported today. No persons were reported killed or Injured. Save up to $100. Last Week! FACTORY-AUTHORIZED Mobmvw "STEREO THEATRE" The "American Contemporary” gives your NOW ONLY family a wide variety of superb viewing JOOO and listening. Videomat if* tuning, 260 sq. VS Q Q inch TV, Micromatic* stereo record player, no DwruCmSlr FM and AM radio. Mahogany. Silver Seal* Rwired Save $40 Magnavox STEREO Graceful "Traditional” style in mahogany. Stereo Phono, FM-AM raaio. Micromatic* player. Silver Seal* warranty. NOW ONLY 198.50 No Down Payment Required x Vidcomatle tuning adjusts brightness and contrast automatically, dr Micromatic record player has diamond stylus guaranteed 10 years. Your records can now last a lifetime t W Silver Seal Warranty: 90 days service, full year on parts and tubes. *■ . CHARGE, 4-PAY/PLAN or BUDGET PLAN PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE . . . 27 S. SoflilaW . . . Phone FE 3*71 {>8 PONTIAC MALL STORE . . . Telegraph Rd. ,J . Phone 682-0422 f -Junior Editors Quiz on— f ELECTRICITY Explorer 17 Fires Tonight CAPE CANAVERAL, Fta. UPb-The Space Agency planned *Yo| launch the Explorer 17 satellite | tonight to make the most extensive study yet of the earth’s atmosphere. If all goes well, t|ie satellite will make exploratory sweeps through the atmosphere at altitudes ranging from 155 to 580 miles. Eight measuring devices are to gather information on composition, density, pressures and temperatures. QUESTION: How does a transformer work and what is it used for? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: “Transform” means to change. A transformer is a device which is generally used to change the voltage, or force, carried by an electric current, making this voltage either greater or less. How transformers work is shown in upper picture. Alternating current (the kind generally used in houses) comes from the left (A) and makes several turns around an iron core inside a transformer. This creates a magnetic field which sends out lines of force, and these jump across to another wire coiled around the core to the right to produce in this coll another current. But since there are more turns in the right hand coil, the current leading out of it willvbe stronger in voltage. In picture (B) the right hand coil has fewer turns, and so the current going out to the right has less voltage. This “step-down” transformer is the kind used by the young folks in the big picture to operate their electric train, which works on less voltage than is carried by the house wiring system. “Step-up” transformers, as shown in (A), are used to send alternating current from power plants over long distances. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Memorize these three words and you will understand your electric equipment better and have more fun: volt, a unit of electric force; ohm, unit of resistance to current; ampere, unit of electric current received. One volt meeting one ohm of resistance delivers one ampere of current. Doyle's Daughter Leads LONDON (AP) — Air Commandant Jean Conan Doyle, daughter of the late Sir Arthur Conan Doyle — creator of Sherlock Holmes — took over as director of the Women’s Royal Air Force Monday. She succeeded Air Commandant Dame Anne Stephens, retired. WEDNESDAY-2 to 3:30 p.m. REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED Laborite Will Visit Kennedy WASHINGTON (AP)-Harold Wilson, Britain’s Labor party leader, calls on President Kennedy today to tell him what the United States can expect from the United Kingdom if his party wins the >next general elections. ★ ★ ★ Whatever the Briton will say cannot surprise the President. Since his arrival Saturday Wilson has had a series of conferences with Kennedy’s top aides and has addressed the National Press Club. * ★ ★ However controversial some of Wilson’s other views sound—such as his suggestion to recognize the East German Communist regime, to accept as a fact the present German-Polish boundary—he may find a sympathetic listener, in Kennedy when he explains his position on conventional versus nuclear weapons. WILSON’S BELIEFS Wilson strongly believes that (1) Britain should beef up its conventional forces under the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and (2) that the Conservative government’s ambition to have an independent nuclear force is unnecessary. * ★ * The two questions are closely linked, Wilson maintains, as Britain could afford to strengthen its conventional forces only if it gave up its nuclear dreams. The Labor party would favor, Wilson has said, putting more emphasis on conventional military strength—particularly within NATO —and de-emphasizing the idea of an Independent nuclear deterrent force.* These views go along with Washington’s. State C. of C. Reveals Three Staff Additions LANSING (AP) - Three staff1 additions have been announced by the Michigan State Chamber 6f Commerce. Ernest Teachout wil be manager of membership relations, concentrating on new memberships and financial support in out-state Michigan., ■ Martin Kingsbill will promote membership and finances in the Detroit area. William Wickham will be general legislative counsel. Vice President at GM Will Retire on May 1 DETROIT (£1—Nelson C. Dezen-dorf, 65, a vice president and director of General Motors Corp. will retire May 1, GM announced yesterday. Dezendorf is a native of Portland, Ore. He became a vice president in 1952 while general manager of Electro-Motive Division at La Grange, 111. trine Cigarettes at LOW PRICES AT SIMMS If i Famous. Slophano Bros. Cigarettes — Marvels and Cos-coda brands now at low, low prices. Stock up. MARVELS Cigarettes PER CARTON ill ft Regular size, rsgular J ® tobaccos, famous Mar- carton of 10 Plus Tax pocks. CASCAOE Cigarettes PER CARTON Menthol flavored *26 Plus Tax re Know Pretty-But We Sure Got Beautiful Price tags and Service D C Cl I DC I Insure Your Outboard Motors, DC dUlVC! Doati and Equipment! Z Insurance s328 Par Hundrad if MINIMUM $10,00 . This Insurance not Only insures you on the lake but while you are transporting tool Be Sure You Are Well Insured Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 368 W. Huron St. > - V ,5- *j Ph. FE 4-8284 * TRUMAC TABLETS wm th* M UL MNlfc »tho entire United Ststss m| Csntdi to ke Mm Internally for roller of tlmn MMUtlM. - J Xn Ul sight dnu! csvltJw ti Nkrasthiitg. If nu suite h • tbm condraont ME k Many of our customers toll ui that wo look like tho old general «tor#-you know, cluttered aisle*, merchandise piled high, old wood floors, people bumping into each ether—and things like that. But, all this add* up to extra savings—no fancy fixtures, no plush carpets, etc.—and those saving* are passed on to you in tho form of 'BEAUTIFUL PRICE TAOS'-the LOWEST PRICE TAOS around and wo also have SERVICE—remember, when people waited on YOU? Well, this wo still have at Simms — psopls to help you with selections, answer questions about th* items, and try to mak* sure that you’re pleased with your purchase when you loav* our store- So next time you're downtown, look for us —wo'r* easy to find-98 North Saginaw Straot. Corns to SIMMS Tomorrow 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. For These Extra 'BEAUTIFUL TAO BUYS'____ SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Spring-Summer Colors and Prints v Cotton Yardgoods Disoount ■ Mi gfe Price C PER YARD W _____8 Cotton fabrics In gay prints and stripes—for spring and summer blouse*, (L A1 skirls, sportswear... for yourself and tha | e family. No limit. Radies’ Sporty CORDUROY Tennis Oxfords ^ AMERICAN Made WHENEVER YOU CAN’T SLEEP ...take this sleeping aid with confidence Whenever you can’t sleep because of simple nervous tension or daily problems, take Sominex with confidence. Taken as directed, Sominex is so safe and effective you can take it whenever you need it. Tests in leading hospitals and among hundreds of private patients prove Sominex is wonderfully effective. You enjoy restful sleep, awake refreshed. Contains no barbiturates. Not habit-forming. Get Sominex for natural-like sleep. Available without a prescription. Ask for Sominex. SIMMS BROS. 98 N. SAGINAW—DRUGS DO YOU TAKE VITAMINS AND STILL FEEL TIRED?’ If you take vitamins and still feel tired, your trouble may be due to iron-poor blood. Vitamins alone can’t build up Iron-poor blood. But Gbritol can I Bccnuse just two Gbritol tablets, or two tablespoons of liquid Gbritol contain 7 vitamins plus twice the iron in I-lb. of calves’ liver. ' In only one day GBRUOL-iron is in your bloodstream carrying strength and energy to every part of your body. Check with your doctor. And if you've been feeling tired because of ircui-poor blood,' take Cekitol. liquid or tablets, every day. You'll feel stronger fast in just seven days or money back from the Gbritol folks. *Due to Iron deficiency anemia SIMMS BROS* 98 N. Saginaw—Drug Dopt. (Ailv.rtlMm.nl) Stoss INI isrsymptMiUcisilitsI SINUS CONGESTION iMiinlNriii Stay tom Floor Waxer and Extra Pad 'Tsddy' floor waxer with washable floor pad and , Jr extra roilll pad which (its standard waxers up to 9% pinches. Long wood handle. Limit I. Portable Laundry Cart 199 $3.00 Value—Largo capacity canvas bag set Into folding tubular metal frame. Smooth rolling^ casters to move .It around. Folding BRASS LESS TV LAMP 1 and BED As shown — assorted-designs. 121/2x17" tray. All metal tray Trays 77‘ 10-QL, Galvanized PAIL © «,» 75c Value—Hot dipped galvanized ppili with bale handle. For home, garage, shop, store, etc. Limit 2. Plastic Clothesline-tOO-Ft. C $1 Value—Jumbo 100-foot hanks. Strong wire center, h won't sag or stretch. Limit 300 feet. TVz-FT. STEEL Clothesline PROP ROUND Wioker CLOTHESBASKETS $1.49 Value-Sturdy carrying handles. Only 32 leftV................. 79! 88* ■attt* . THK . afte>* 20 y®ars af added privilege for the afternoon.!retirement and casual, token ' fnnpnomont onnnnrnnpp KvrOTl Tickets are now on sale at the mntry will be . T S Byron Nelson Flirting x>rae and Al * . . « r i With Comeback Notions tournament appearance, Byron oaa n„...i iJ^clson is flirting with ideas of a 300 Bowl. Spectators will not bermeback permitted to shoot posed shots, The jjag^g tournament, start-during the tournament iteelf. Lg may genre as a . I ... s 8 „ for|springboard back to bigtime golf Wednesday beginning at 6 p.m.|for the lean Roanoke, Tex., cattle The PBA Open will be bowledjrancher( the mechanical marvel Thursday and Friday afternoons of the iate 1930s and early 1940s. and nights and Saturday morning | and afternoon. - Ticket prices range from $1.50 for the early afternoon sessions (actually beginning at 11 a.m.) to the $3.50 charge for the finals on Saturday afternoon (beginning at 3:30). National television will carry the finals. The semifinal round is slated tor a 9 a.m. beginning Saturday. Approximately 500 seats will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis. “I don’t say I’m going back on the tour or that I’m going to push all these strong, young fellows aside,” Nelson said today, ‘but I’ve decided it would be interesting to get my game back in the best possible shape and see how I’d fare. always kept myself in physical condition. I’ye ‘ my outlook so that I’m not so scared any more. I’ve worked harder on my game than have in several years. I still Royals Change Owners, Again, During Playoffs CINCINNATI (AP)—The Cincinnati’s Royals have changed hands again—while the team still was in thd middle of the Eastern Division National Basketball Asso-ciatonplayoffs. Warren Hensel, wealthy Cincinnati businessman and minority stockholder, said Monday night he had completed a deal to buy 56 >er cent of the club’s stock from Emprise Corp. of Buffalo, N.Y. let his mind wander back to those glorious days Of two decades ago when he was king of the fiar-wiys. • He won the U.S. Open in 1939. He captured the Masters in 1937 and again in 1942, beat Ben Hogan in a playoff tor the latter. Dpring 1944 and 1945, he won 19 of 31 PGA tour tournaments, including a record 11 in a row, and set scoring records that never have been duplicated. He averaged 68.3 strokes in 1944 and 69.6 in 1945. Then suddenly he retired, limiting himself to the Masters and the Fort Worth Colonial tournaments. Pontiac Rolladium Gets Regional Meet T Qualifies 31 Swimmers for S>fate Meet The Pontiac YMCA will send 31 entries to the state YMCA swimming championships to be held Saturday April 6th at Hunt Junior High School in Jackson. Some of the best times in qualifying were turned in by the prep division swimmers. John Mason will swim in toe 50 butterfly and 100 freestyle, with . Steve Ydelin in toe 50 free and individual medley. Alap swimming for toe preps will be Carl Hiller, Mike Staab, * i«n« uuqko^w • •>«**! Tto Pontiac Rolladium has am afflicted with putting nerves | been selected ^as to® site of toe---------- ~ , —that’s age I guess but I’ve11963 Great Lakes Regional Roller and medley relay team of built up a lot’of confidence.” 1 Skating Championship July 3-7. | Staab, Joe McMillan, Chuck „ . *, ,. . I The board of control for toe i Porritt, and Dick Boyce. Nelson came to toe Augusta j^,. Skating Rink Operators . th T , division Ed Tut- Roltodtan. and eighth dJ*1* STSS Be* a 76. Then he had a 73 .The the „ountrv for the regional 8WUU ““ f“ourcj' *7" *"T third time it was 70, two un- 8 Coppersmith a strong choice to der par. "I was real pleased with that Winners from 1 improvement,” he said. 4‘Now, l|other regional! will gather in don’t have any delusions about; Portland, Ore., July 27*Aug. 3 my chances of winning. But if, for toe American championships. * do well, then I may play in | The Michigan State Roller Skat few more tournaments, and ing Championships are scheduled then next year—.” ' I for June 22-25 at the Mt. Morris At this point, Nelson may havelSkateland Skating Arena. TffiBEPMIMBM MHinf DODGE II COMPACT SURPRISE. LARGE ECONOMY SIZE the individual medley and the breaststroke. Chuck Powers will swim toe 50 backstroke. The Midget division qualified both medley and freestyle relay teams. The free relay will be made up of Jordie Rosenthal, Jim Bloch, Jim Gauthier and Dave Hardenberg and toe medley will be comprised of Ralph Ashmead, Gary Mayer, Greg Mayer and Rick Jenkins. Jim Block and Jeff Klann will be in toe backstroke. Golf Winnings Put Player, Palmer 1-2 I DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) - Gary Player still leads the list of top ten money winners, but only by a $lim margin over Arnold Palmer. Player has won $23,592 this „ear, as compared to Palmer’s $23,225. Number three man on the list released by toe Professional Golfers’ Association Monday is Jack Nicklaus with $16,715. Tony Lema is fourth with $14,-831 and Bill Casper Jr., fifth with $13,928. Gimeno Bidding for Net Titles in Twa Events Surprise! Comfort has come to compacts. Dodge Dart takes on a pack of six-footers with ease. Yet this roomy one is priced like other compacts, saves like ’em too... and then some. That's because of things like a new 5-year/50,000-mile warranty*. Little wonder, Dart’s the success of *63. This year’s sales are up 115% over our compact sales of last year! Get Dart, the large economy size compact. COMPACT DIM expanded to iMtudi port* replacement or mt chirp for required perte or Ait DODGE DART fiirtr (rifttmltilon eijM md intirnil (hart* (•xoludlrtg manual clutch); torqu* convtrUr, di •huff *unlvwrail ktllttft (•xcludlng dull covtfi), (Nf IXlt Aftd dlfflfintlfll, Iftd Mil WHrrI bfRfll -provided Ihe vehicle hat been eervlced et .Veeonetle Iritervill occordln, lithe Dod|l Certll o CHRYSLER CLEVELAND (AP) - Two tall, wiry-typo players with different styles will meet tonight for the singles championships of the professional' tennis tournament at Cleveland Arena. Spain’s Andres Gimeno will face defending champion Earl (Butch) Buchholz of St. Louis in the singles competition. I The 6-fOot-4 Gimeon will team with Luis Ayala of Chile against Australia’s Rod Laver and Ken I Rosewall for toe doubles title. 1 I Gimeno is a young Spaniard whose strong serve, graceful ground strokes and powerful overhead play give him a classical ap-; pearance on the court. Buchholz,' a 6*foot-2,170-pounder, likes to hit the ball as hard as he can and SVARTAN DODGE 211 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET, PONTIAC — EE 8*4541 -SEE "EMPIRE", NBC-TV. CHECK YOU^, LOCAL LISTING.—- ---CARL'S-— OUTDOOR DRIVING RANGE OPEN 1976 S. Telegraph M. FI 5-8095 h GO FARTHER! GO SAFER! 11|| All at this low, low price ’ Co farther—with a newly designed, at ' . resistant Cold Rubber tread and n< -100% nylon , . .NNNNP ___by exclusive Dayton method, is- positive blowout protection—guards against bruise and impact damage! And the Flyer's new tread design adds extra non-skid lofter—more functional sidewall co iiilience—the “luxury fe ALL TIRES I See The Hew DAVT0H FLYER Today! MOUNTED FREE WcMpaqr- All Dayton Passenger Tires i by TheDayton Tire* Rut for the life of the original mu «wiih failures caused by CHUCRHOLil,: CLASS, NAILS, SPIKES, etc,-, ae well as DEFECTS IN WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIAL Adjustment made on a pro- no n I OX MILtAOC LIMIT! (StARKET -7Lr°N \jPl ml *•* FE 8-0424 1144 W. MAPLE RD.—Wolled Uk« MA 4-4477 MUFFLERS COST LESS BECAUSE THE INSTALLATION IS FREE AND THE MUFFLER IS GUARANTEED FOR AS LONG AS YOU OWN THE CAR ON WHICH IT IS INSTALLED OPEN DAILY 8:30 A.M. 435 South Saginaw FE 2-1010 Safety Service Specialists FRONT lEND ALIGNMENT FRONT WHEELS 0ALANCED * Reg. $12.95 Value $095 MOST CARS OUR EXPERTS DO ALL THIS • correct caster • correct camber • correct toe-in • adjust steering • full safety check ED. WILLIAMS Wheel Alignment, Balancing, Brakes, Mufflers 4S1 S. SAGINAW at RAEBURN, Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1963 ,v^n' Keys Advance Uneven The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of noon Monday. Produce Apples, McIntosh, 0. A. Applet, McIntosh, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C Applet! Northern Spy Apples, Steel.®.* Beets, topped ................ Cabbage, curl*, bu. ........ Cabbage, red. bu. ...........• Cabbage, standard variety. 1 Carrots, topped, bu........... Horseradish, ’pk.-' w.‘.',’,’.' Leeks, dot. nebs. ............ Onions, dry, 10-lb. bag ...... Onions,, set, 32-lb. bag ..... Parsnips, cello pak ........ Parsnips, >/» bu. ............ Potatoes. 50-lb. bag ........ Potatoes. 25-lb. bag ......... Stock Market Rally Continues .. 2.25 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT. April 1 (API—Prices _____ per pound ft Detroit tor No. 1 quality live poultry:' Heavy type hens 24-25: light type hens (; roasters over I lbs 26-37; broiler' and flyers 3-4 lbs whites 20V,-21. Whites Grad* A Jumbo 40-43*; large 31-41; Urge 30-40; medium 30-34; small 21-30: browns Orade A Jumbo 30-40: extra large 30-37; Urge 30-30; medium 20-33; email 31; cheoke 27-30. Exchange—Buttoi________ sale buying prices unchanged: 03 AA 87*; 02 A 57Vi; (0 B 50V.: 001b; cart 00 B 67%: 00 O 07. Begs uneven; wholesale buying prices unchanged^to 2 tower; TO per ^cent^or mediums 30; standards 31; dtrtUs 2010; checks 20. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO, April 1 (API—(USDAi— Live poultry; Wholesale buying prices tjjhigher^ to ^lli^jiwer^ roasters, 26^ (bde.) High Low Last Chf. OrandU .00b AbboltL 2.20 2 iov. 55* OOVs - VklOranGS 1.40 *5?.ws* «mjL h ti ; special, ted White 1 eg hen turkeys 2010. Livestock Cattle 2000. Bulk early supply slaughter steers and heifers, good and choice predominating, quality not quite as good as last Monday; cows in normal supply; good and choice steers and heifers fairly *'*>“ ■«*"ly; good and oholce steers fairly active, eteady; lower —,ii- ,„t week’s low close; tew lota ^hlgh to low choice grades steady -.HM cows steady to tveak/ choice to* prime steers 20. steers 23.50-24.50: pood steers 22.00-23.M; stands: Hogs 1000. iarly' trade* on barroi and guts 230 lb and down very actlv 14.75; 2 and 3 100-230 lb 14.34-14.15. Vealers 140. HWady; choice and brln 30.00-35.00; Standards end good 23.0 30.00; culiand utility 15.0033.00. 1-21.00: good am cull to choice s CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, April 1 (Afl-HOM fairly active, butcher* 25 to 4(T . sows steady to 25 higher; shippers took ...,.-14.40; 2-3 240-300 lbs 13.40-14.00; shipment 3-3 310 lbs 13.75; package 300 lbs 13.00; load 3s 420 lbs 11.74; mind 1*3 300-400 lb SOWS 13.25-12.40; ----------- 11.25-13.25; 3-3 500-000 lbs NEW YORK MB—The stock mar-ket rally continued in active trading early today. Key stocks staged an uneven advance, • with small gainers outnumbering losers. Some gains wont to a point or so. General Motors and Chrysler touched hew highs again, GM adding a fraction and Chrysler rising more than a point. Airlines were strong, Pan American World Airways making a new high on a fractional gain after opening on a big block of 11,700 shares, later trading on 7,000- Others in the group added fractions. ' Ford and Studebaker were about unchanged. Steels moved higher on balance, although Bethlehem eased. Youngstown Sheet rose about a point. Tobaccos continued generally higher. Up fractionally were Reynolds Tobacco, Philip Morris, Lorillard and Liggett & Myers. Great Western Financial gained % at 10 on 5,300 shares. Losses of. about a point were taken by Johns-Manvllle and Polaroid. * ★ Down fractionally were Chesapeake & Ohio, Boeing and General Electric. I Gen Devel Small gains were made by !™DJb.S* Gabriel, American Telephone,. Union Carbide, Texaco and U. S. Gypsum. Opening, blocks included: General Motors, up V\ at 66% on 5,000; Montgomery Ward, up % at 36% on 4,000; Royal Dutch, up % at 47% on 4,500; and International Paper, up i at 3114 on 4,000. Monday, The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose 1.3 to 259.8. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were generally higher with most changes narrow. On the upside were Aerojet-General, Reliance Insurance, Ka-weeki Chemical, Creole Petroleum, Barnes Engineering And Syntex. American Stock Exch. Figures After decimal point? are eighths NEW YpRK (AP) — American Stock 37% Mid- 6% Mohawk Airl., 6 12% Musk P Ring.. 12% 98% Novo Indus ... V/ South Lyon Company Sets 25-Cent Dividend The board of directors of Michigan Seamless Tube Co. of South Lyon has declared a cash dividend of 25 cents a share on the $5 par value capital stock. Dividends are payable May 20 to stockholders of record on May 6. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API-Follow b 10:30 price.: OlenAld .50 lOooXrdk 3.20 Ooodyear 1 da.) High Low L.al Chf. 2 lift lift lift .. 15 45% 45* 45% - % 13 34 34 34 + ft ■; heavier weight, alow, a toad] moderately ----- -- - oowa fair! ilrly aak; i toady; helfei IMP Ml to 25 high, active, fully ateady; Dial— around four load. prim. 1 225-l,3ao lb ataara 25.75; 1-"’“ choice and prim. 1,100-1,41................ 25.50 Including aevaral loada prime 1,350-1,400 iba at 2S.50; ItaU —- ----- prlma l.llio----------------------------- 900-1.150 lba 23.75-24.75; comparabla grad. 1,150-1,400 lbs tl.40--34.50; gr— ioo-l,300 lba 23.00-23.50; load lota ml)... good and choice 1,000-1,250 lba 33.26-22.75; load high choice 1,024 lb h'"-“ 14.34; other cnolce 440-1.100 Iba 33.11; good 11.44-21.10; utility and mania! oowa 14.71-10.40; oannera cuttera 11.50-14.74; law high yl( . eultar 11.44; ahslly oannera 13,00-12.40; utility and oommarolal bulla 18.76-20,60, choice iambi with prime abaent; (laughter Iambi and awea moatly itoady- —■ aral Iota good and cholca 50-1*0 lb -elaughter Iambi with wot flaeooa 10.00; 135 haad choice 104 lba wltn w« muddy ftoacaa 11.50; utility and good 15.00-17.50; dack choice undar 130 lb woolad alaughtor awai 0.00-0.00, Stocks of Local Interest Flgura'l after decimal point* are eighth: OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The following quotation! do not nao aaaarlly rapraaent aotual tranaaollona Datroltar Mobil* h Electronic! International . Frlto-Lay, no. .. ........ McLouth Steel O*.......... Mlcb. Beamleaa Tub* CO. .. Mohawk Rubber Co.......... Pioneer Finance .......... Santa Fe Drilling ........ Tran*. Oae Pina Una ... Wolverine Shot .... Wyandott* Chemical MUTUAL F Keyaton* Growth K-i . nt Treasury Position AJIndUa ,21t asra-i AlllaOiar .50 XmwUi .10 Alcoa i.20 Amend 3.40 AjpAlroa V _^arS'lb A^cya? loo A EIPW 1.00 AmFP .04 Am MPd .00 AMct Cl 1.40 'y% mo ,._lPhoto .33 ASmelt 3.40 AmStd .00 AmT*T 3.60 . .. Ampex Cp AmpBorg .00 $St«nCh °4* u BaldLIm .40 BaltOB 1.12 Kili L Oh ____nit 1.30 leoaman BeechAIr .60 Ball How .60 Bendii 2.40 TSB& ■» Beth Stl 1.50 Bigelow 8 l 1 3ft i S -IBr? ! T V 46%' + ii .46e evdenN .60 *2 55* 55* 55V* + ft:' 70 M Bft F t S UiSkJRi sifet a •j 8% 8k i k 1 ¥ 8k ll 8* 8 8 .+J 10 }Bft 20ft 20ft + % x\ gft f jk:*|gyay 8 fit 1*#:$ ,t sm a I* J h 8k 8k S±k, 2 16 10 If 5 23ft 33ft »ft + ft1] 11 45* 45* 45* - *1 3 lift. 30ft **% + *! {-"Oft 75* 78* - ft J« il 8ft 8* I..... *8 l*'4 Ilk ilk + '* *3 8k 8k 8k —R— 13 13* 11* 13* . 3 34 13ft 34 V 1 38 35 35 ■ • ‘ r 31* 31* 21* + 8 00* 00* 00*'. + 1 15* 18* 18* . 0 sik Ilk ilk +■* 1 30* 3ok lok V 4 i* if i "I 1#4 2^ 8k m -i —H— , 8k + * > -V 43* ... ■ 30ft 35ft - * (kde.) High ........... 2 24ft 24ft 34ft .. 36 43 42 43 U 66 65* 66 3 64ft vr Brunewk .00 “•Co .50 41* i i 41* + 3 lift 01* lift 17 10ft If* If* 3 13* 11* 13* 11 >0 14* 15 ..... 41 30* 10* 30* + * gam pH p 3.30 CdnPac 1.50 Caae 31 CaterTr 1.20 §Er ® Cencolnat .50 CenHud,1“ iianaAlrc i ChmpRn L20 0 Si* 31* lift + ft Minor--Ch lTO Kf.io. n 8k n 8k;kXi50Mn2.o «•«».! i m m m RX 11 sok 40 ft 40* +"* 1 «k m :« l 8k m 8k ntPap l.05b nt TfcT l ITS CktBrkr hna Man 2 ne«2f,*2.50# v Mfg 1 •outline ----1 Oaa a ... Pac 1.20 Sou Ry 2,00 SperryR ,78t 1,80 D1.20 iBtsrand 2 {StdKolle ,60t 3 ST" 33% S7* + ft ItO IntP*1.80b 10 27 ,30ft Soft + ft StO N J «5g 30 40* 40 . 40 , + * Stand Pkg, J 1| 18ft 15ft " ’* 5 34ft 3sk 34’/I + 'ft 1 3ft 2ft 2ft .. 3 12* 12ft 12ft ., 3 W* 7ft 7ft + 1 33ft 21ft 33ft 4 3 45ft 45Ve 46V. - 2 75 75 75 4 7 lift 34ft 31ft 17 44 421* 421* + 10 lift Mft 44* .. 3 44* 0* 09* - 0 n* 7ft 17* .. -42 31V* 31 lift 4 4 44ft 44ft 44* 4 2 jIV* 11 Ve 14ft 4 3 »% fi| mm ~K— ) 16 36% 1 17% 7 72% _______HP Low Lail Chf. SheUTra ,76a • Sinclair 2 ^SgfM ^ Soconv 2.40 16 66^ 66*1 goCal Ed w96 x20 32% 32% TenOaa .36g .-Texaco 1.40a jUTexG Pd ,44a L Tw POO 1°2( Textron 1.40 fnlokol t ut Tidewat Oil Timk RB 2.40 Tran W Air Tranam .80b Tranaltron 1 40* 40* 40* - 2 m 8k li i 0 lift 13 V. lift . 25 2fft 36V. 28* 4 7 rift 41 Sift 4 3 67* 67V. 47* 4 4 lift loft 16V. . ” 8k I?* 8k+ 35 63% 63% 63% .. 6 14% 14% 14% - * «k Sk 8k;;. 2, sk 3Sk 8k;k 5 Oft fft Oft .. 32 lift lift 3lft - 1 Sift 41ft 41ft 4 —T— 10 lfft Mft M* . 8 r 8k 8’A,+ 0 14 14 14 4 5 Mft 60ft Mft 4 If 02X 03 02ft 4 6 31V. 3lft lift + 1 36* »ft lift 4 1 33 31 33 1 86* 50* M* 4 1 15* 15* 18* + 6 45ft 48* 48ft - 1 5* 6* 5* .. 0 46* 40ft 46* + 10 . 28 * 20 * 30V* 4 iS'Mk^ktk ,50b 17 1 nit Aire 2 3 4 *■“ Cp ,36e - -■ ..*'71 tin orun .ooa xl Mft 34% 34* . .* ML loaa Co 1.00 ll 10 38* 36*/. - l as SSi Skij hft;; Leh V ind Lehmn 1.34* LOPGla 2.60 UbMojt .Ilf LlggAM 6 Lltlonln l.OTt LocXAlr ^.20 LoneSSaa 1 LongILt 1.72 Loral Electr Lortljrd ^3|40 1 1ft Ift Ift ... . i-ajMB|:k 10 13ft ij'i Mft ... 10 8* 03* 8k 4 ft 11 81* 51ft 81* 4 ft Mid la Martin* ttl 8:?cDx ur MerrCh 1SK WV“ MnntDU 1.40 Mont Ward 1 Motorola 1 ComEd 1.30b Con Edla 3 CooEl Ind 1 CnNOaa 2.30 ContCan LOO Contfn* 3.20b font Mot .40 JontOll i.Ma Copper R Corn Pd i.40 crane Co 2. Cronipt. \ 8k flk W r ♦f ilk uk ■ 1 03* 01ft ^ _ . »k 8k M* + ftljjatBlac L00 1 Ift 8* Oft 4 * NatCan .7tt 0 - 02ft 53* 63ft -- ft NCajh R 1.30 4 20Ve 21* 28* 4 ft IN Dairy 2.20 10 30ft 20* 24ft 4 * Nat DlOt 1.20 1 40 40 46 ... Nat oen 3 Mft Mft Mft 4 * Nat Oypa 3b 1 44* 41* 04* + ft N Lead .75g 13 MV. ll* 41* 4 * N Steel 1.00 I Mft 38* Mft 4 ft NBng El 1.13 3 60* M* 65* ‘ I Mft Mft Mft 4 “If Ml Sng .. .’Cer.. , NY Ch 5 6 .'got 2 14ft 1 0 30ft 20ft 2Mb . 1 8k 8k 8k+ I 8k Bk 8k:.. •j 8k § 8k ;k i r r ti tflC 4ft If 0»ft If* MV. 4 * 4 10 lo 10 4 ft l\ 8k 8k 8k 71 70 31* Mft 30ft 4 ft 4 04ft 04 04 ... —N— ! \ 8k 8k 8k 4 04 ” 8k M ... I 25ft 26* 26ft 4 V. I loft loft loft 4 V. 1 44* 44V. 44* -8 76* 70* 70* 4 II 37ft 37* 37* - 2 28% 28* 20* ... 11 lift 16V. Mft - * 1 if iik I ?.| rag ‘S'lv l 1 VF i 4 i h it* 8 4 ia mta 4ft 46 ♦ 30% - 78 Borx .80a §1 Si6"*’ US piywd 3b US Rub 2.30 US Smelt lg T 8k 8k : • 44^ ll'* - 1 35 70ft, 70* 70* - lahy Pk t Pub i Wr 1 f ? 7 k |n Slu!'1? T Oti'.BIev 1.80 Dacca 1.20 Deere 2.20a Det Stl .15ff Dlaney ,40b * DomeMln .80 Dout A 1.30f DowCh 1.00b Dr aaal.10 ----*, 1.60g ,t i ll 1 Mft Mft Mft 1 33* 33* 33V. 1 ¥ r r xl r Jm 8k -■* JIllT! —E-l 2 56* M* 8f* - * iarald1 .30 l| 1M* M l8* -ft ? J*8* k:k 1 13* Mft 137. ... 7 8* 8k Ik + —v— VanAll 1.40b . I 35* lfft 35* - 2 12ft 13Tb lift 4 vietpw iso i 8k 8k M* —W— Walwth 1 7ft 7ft 7ft ... WarnPie .50 2 13ft 13* 13ft + WarLam .70 0 28* 30* 20* ... Wn Bancp 1 3 left 36«b 35* Off 1:8 J1 m m Sk 1 HbJa ip White MM 2 5 M* 50* 80* 4 Winn Dit .M 3 Mft 20* 28Ve ... Woolwth 3.50 7 71ft 71* 71ft 4 Worth In 1.50 0 ^0 20 30 4 Yale&T 1 10 ffft 39* 20ft ... Yng 8hT 6 32 48 M* 16 41 —55— Eonlth it la I Mft 61ft 51ft 4 Sale* figure* are unofficial, Unles* otherwise noted, rate* of dll fend, in the foregoing table are annuL. ——*' *--ed on the laat quarterly ledaratlon. Special or W' ‘1m Military Faces Defense Query McNamara Questions Submitted on TFX WASHINGTON (AP) - Members of R military board face today questions drafted by. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara about their recommendation that the TFX warplane contract be given to the Boeing Co. of Seattle, Wash. ★ ★ '. it McNamara overruled the board and gave the contract to the General Dynamics Corp. of Fort Worth, Tex, • The Senate Investigating subcommittee is conducting hearings to learn why. \ # Members of the vboardr headed by Air Force Maj. Gen. R. Ruegg, have testified they rated _’s design as promising a better, cheaper version of the TFX — experimental tactical fighter. MERIT ONLY McNamara has testified he awarded the contract only merit. He said General Dynamics had a superior design holding promise of a billion-dollar saving to the taxpayers. He submitted questions for the subcommittee to ask the board which he believes will throw light .on the controversy. • The contract involves plans for ultimate expenditures estimated at 16.5 billion for 1,700 of the versatile, supersonic TFX planes for the Air Force and Navy. This would make it the biggest contract of its kind in Pentagon history. ★ ★ * Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., the subcommittee chairman, has declared the subcommittee wants to learn whether favoritism, poor judgment or what other factors may have entered into the award. NEW CONTROVERSY A new controversy developed Monday over a story published in the Fort Worth Press last Oct. 21 under the byline of Seth Kan-tor, reporting that he had learned from top government sources that General Dyanmics would get the award. Kantor is a reporter for the Scripps-Howard newspapers. McNamara has testified that he didn’t decide until November well after Kantor’s story was published, which company would get the contract. dlaburaementa bi plua etoek dividend, a... J-||T dividend. . ___... .-Declared or paid •took dividend. e-Peld lilt year. I able In (took during M63, aallmater value on ex-dlvldend or ex-dlatrL. x - Declared or paid eo far n-Declared or paid after el dividend or split up, k-Doolared or t this year. *n accumulative insus \ ’menia r Identlf i. b-Annuai rati Liquidating d Liquidating dlvl In 1463 nlUi ■hk;& Ibutloi Due to til health, owner Clark D. Heenan is discontinuing his operation of the Pontiac Testing Laboratory, 1014 Baldwin Ave. Michigan Testing Engineers, Inc. has acquired the company records and equipment. The Food Town supermarket chain has been accepted for membership In Super Market Institute, a Chicago retailing service. Food Town operates stores in Pontiac, Union Lake and Waterford Totvnshlp. id omitted, deterred or no action at laat dividend meeting. r-De-or paid In 1M3 plus stook dlvl-a stook during M 3. toutlon^dat*. old-called. —xex dividend, y-Ex Dlvt. dend and aalea In full. x-dla-Hbt distribution. kr-Bx rlghta. xw-without war-~~>nta. ww-WIth warrenta. wd-When die, touted, wl-when laeued. nd-Nekt day r the Bankruptcy md^v .. .394.9 130.9 143.3 399.4 :;; 3«iV*i3oY Am Is?;! »Ajf«o .. .., 366.2 132.2 138.7 264.2 .,367.6 131.8 141.6 256.6 HlSjl ‘.‘.I llil Tii m m McClellan said Monday McNamara's testimony and Kantor’s story ‘‘both can’t be true.” He called on Kantor’s sources to step forward and identify themselves, or release Kantor from a promise not to reveal their names. Business Notes Business Prospects Continue Improving By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Business prospects continue to improve. The latest gains are in industrial production, espe-daily in the making of durable goods. And this is cheering because much of the slackness that was disturb-1 ihg during the winter waS in this sector. Yet for all its perkier appear- a boom is what many labor and business leaders say would be needed now to cure unemployment and the profit margin squeeze. But the brighter prospects for the immediate future are impressive. are from customers who expect to use the steel soon after delivery because they are optimistic about their own business outlook! ing against the outside chance of a strike late in the summer, should the labor contract be re- 4______ H| DAWSON I opened and negotiations stale- ance, the economy ig showing no mated. But steelmen insist much signs of heading for a boom. And |of the orders on their books now STATISTICS SUPPORT Backing for this view comes the latest figures by the Department of Commerce. , They show new orders received Orders for steel are pouring in. by au manufacturers rose 2 per The mills expect April output to |cenj jn February to a record high, be largest in the last 12 months. |E;conomjsts regard these orders They iciftw that much of the latest aa a leading indicator—that is, ordering spurt is sparked by hedg- pointing the direction the economy in general may be taking in the months just ahead. The rise in durable goods orders was 3 per cent. The biggest increase was a 7 per cent rise in Will Lead Vote March Negro Vows Defiance GREENWOOD, Miss. (UPI) —Police today broke up a voter registration march led by Ne- I * * * | » Successful % * #• •% * *■% By ROGER G. SPEAR . Q. “What is so good about National Lead? About 1959 I bought some and have watched it sag ever since. Whenever I try to sell it, some character advises me to hang on to this splendid long-range situation. Wouldn’t I be better off for growth with a good utility?” J.D. Pennsylvania Firm Buys Companies in Jackson JACKSON (J1) — A Pennsylvania firm headed by Dr. Howard H, Aiken, former Harvard mathematics professor, has purchased the A. D. Knapp Co. and its two subsidiaries. Dr. Aiken and his P. R. Hoffman Co., producer of equipment for the electronics Industry, made the purchase from A. D. Knapp, 71, sole owner of the A. Decidedly so, in my opinion. I* regard National Lead as a fading blue chip and find it hard to understand the attitude of near reverence that so many ultraconservative investors seem to have for this stock. It must be the aura of greatness that lingers on from a distinguished past. National Lead is strong financially; and the dividend, reduced year, now seems secure. Earnings reached a peak in 1956, however, and the trend has been downward ever since. The shares set an all-time high of 138 back in 1957. Since t h a ' time, they have declined about 26 per cent in price while the Dow-Jones Industrial Average has advanced 27 per cent. I advise you to switch this stock into American Electric Power. it it it Q. “I am a new investor and am confused by the constant use of the teriq. ‘growth, stock.’ What Is a growth stock?” R.L. A. This is a good question, particularly at a time like the present when the growth label is too often applied indiscriminately to any stock which shows a rise in earnings for a year or two. Broadly speaking, a growth stock is one whose sales, earnings, and dividends have risen considerably faster than the economy as a whole over a period of time. Our economy has been expanding at an average annual rate of about 6 per cent since World War II. Any company whose annual earnings growth rate has been substantially above' this for long enough period to establish a pattern can be termed a growth stock. In addition — and this is important — growth companies are usually rich in research and operate in expanding industries. (Copyright 1963) GREENWOOD,'Miss. (UPI) Comedian Dick Gregory vowed to lead Negroes in a voter-registration march today in defiance of Gov. Ross Barnett's denunciation of such demonstrations. Gregory told a crowd of 1,000 cheering Negroes last night that “these people will find out that America is too big for Mississippi.” Barnett said yesterday in Jackson that Negro demonstra^ tions in this delta town we like “a loaded bomb resting in a street” and that state and local authorities had the right to remove such dangers. He promised to uphold authorities who have broken up previous demonstrations with police dogs and barricades. Grain Prices OPENING GRAIN Dapoilti llioal veor July 1 ,.-t withdrawal, rucai yi Gold MMta';;: . Mnoltidea 6306.600,61 loot to itatutory llml WASHINGTON tAPI-The Oath port-tlon ot thatTfaaaury compared With cor-1 rcipondlnf Sat* ft y**r ajfo: ^ ^ Balance .......% a 0,433,073,047.35 Dapoalta flacal year Withdrawal*' flioai yr.' S mImo.mL’mlm Geoi ci» Total dobt .. .. .'MM,127,408,500.30 g' Dyriai ........ HBWBRlI.......................... I * ll srvio iti 15 8»S iitt/ «* + 9MPi3p h Wml * 7,aw,aw,.i..u. 6 74.042,123,888.61 npjjJ&V ,'Ug | sit. 111,044,487.47 tlTH&KI 00 '8217,413,360,202.73' Oinnrr “ 6 10.000,030,700.01 6» P». gro Dick Gregory. No arrests The governor blamed Greenwood’s troubles on “agitators” who, he said, have been in other Mississippi communities and left ‘strife, turmoil and heartache.” “I do not like the governor’s comments about outside agitators coming in here,” Gregory said. “Hitler could have said the same thing about Southern white boys.” Gregory said he was ‘.‘very impressed” with Greenwood and noted that there was no “harass- iron and steel orders, with auto and aerospace industries reporting good gains; * * * Manufacturers sales also rose in February to a record. But the rise , orders was even faster. So for the second straight month the backlog of unfilled orders swelled. This, too, spells good times for at least the nearby weeks and months. SLOWLY DISAPPOINTING Much of the optimism this spring is based on the still climbing total? of personal income and retail sales. The only disappointment is that they aren’t rising 'aster. Business confidence also is bolstered by official reports that the nation’s corporations are planning ;o spend more this year than last for new plants, and more especially for new equipment. That puts all three sectors of spending on the upgrade: business, consumer and, of course, government. Federal spending is due to increase in the months ahead, and still bigger boosts are looked for in outlays by state and local governments. It still doesn't add up to a big enough increase in the general economy to erase the problems. Most .pressing is that of unemployment. With the labor force growing faster than new jobs open up, labor leaders say the ranks of the jobless are more likely to increase than shrink. They also charge that much of the spending by business will be to install machines that require fewer workers to turn out the same amount of goods. it ' r t r ★ Business leaders reply : Give us more incentives, the chance for ment” from the police at last more profits, lower taxes on earn-night's meting. He said he ex-|{ng8| anc| we’ij go into new ven-pected no trouble today. tures and expand our old ones, * * * 'and thus make more jobs. In Aberdeen, Miss., Federal so the spring should be better District Judge Claude F. Clayton yesterday declined to issue an immediate order sought by the Justice Department that would prohibit Greenwood officials from interfering with Negro voter applicants. Clayton set a hearing on the injunction request for Thursday, saying he does not consider government charges that Negroes’ rights are being violated sufficiently to warrant “trampling, on the rights” of officials without due process. Gregory addressed a crowd at the Wesleyan Methodist Church last night. ^ If The reports are true and these thjngs had happened anywhere in the world, America would be at war,” the Chicago entertainer said. He charged the federal gove ment was failing to protect rights in LeFlore County while protecting foreigners all over the world. than, the winter months, but the basic argument is unlikely to simmer down. News in Brief Thieves, stole $658 in cash and an undetermined amount of whisky after gaining entrance through the roof of the Atlas Super Market, 1461 Baldwin Ave., Eugene Cosma reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Rummage sale, Fri., April 5, 9 m. to 4 p.m. Birmingham Unitarian Church, Woodward at Lone Pine. -Adv. March of Dfynes Benefit-Fish Dinner, 5 Spot, 2585 Dixie Highway, Wednesday, April 3rd, 12 noon on. —Adv. Rummage Sale. All Saints Church, Guild No. 2. Thursday, April 4, 1 p.m. Exchange St. entrance. —Adv. Announcement! The Department of Agricul-| We buy, sell, rent, repair, teach tore established Its Section of and exchange all musical instru-Seed and Plant Introduction inlments. Music Center, 268’N. Sag-1897. ’ Inaw St. FE 4-4700. —Adv. Pontiac, GMTC Output Rises Pontiac Motor Division and. 11,427 Tempests produced for aland trucks for the month and GMC Truck & Coach Division to- total of 53,233 last month. In|quarter. day reported substantial Increases March 1962 there were 37,274 Pon-iDRQp by FORD CARS in production for March and for tlacs and 12,977 Tempests built the first quarter of 1963 as com- for a total of 50,251 cars, pared to the sarhe periods last * * * y«ar* I In this year’s first quarter the £ 't pro- The local car and, tr duction hikes followed throughput General Motors Gorp. Pontiac Motor Division reported produced 2,983 more cars in March than the same month year ago and 13,884 more cars in the first quarter of 1963. it it ★ Thi. total increase was entirely in Pontlacs as Tempest production was down som^vhat. MONTHLY FIGURES There were 41,806 Pqhtlacs and Ford reported a decrease in the number of cars produced over a year earlier, and an increase in truck production. Studebaker had decreased 'pro-i duction in both cars -and trucks during -March, while American Motors also had a decline in passenger car output. t > it St The firms, followed essentially - total was 157,242 Pontlacs and Tempests compared to 143,358 for the first quarter of 1962. GMTC reported production of 8,027 units last month compared to 7,871 in March 1962, an increase of 156 units. In the first quarter this year j the same-trend in their quarterly there were 24,116 trucks and production r e p o r t, Studebaker coaches produced, an Increase oft having decreased erfh and- trhek , 1,128 over the 22.988 built In the production, and Ford reporting a same period last year. decrease in passenger cars, but * * ■ Or I an Increase in trucks. American’s Only GJM and Chrysler showed: quarterly output was weir ahead production increases in both cars'of 1962. ' , Dee officiating. Interim IN LOVING MEMORY OF father, William H. Bloke! led away Agrll 2nd.! 1(61 Thoughts return to soenes long past Time rolls on but memories last, —Sadly missed by hts children and Dex-A-Dlet tablets, M < THE ECHOES 731-3163. if T il A “Music for aU occasions." oMBn Churches, ohganiza-tlons, W for selling? ? FB 2-3033. IN DEBT 1 all your,—. ly payment. Pay Off Your Bills — without a loan — • Payments low as (10 wk. Protect your lob and Credit Home or Office Appointments City Adjustment Service 714 W, Huron FB 6-9261 oeT OUT OF DEBT ON A PLAN you can afford Michigan credit COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FB 0-0460 Pontiac’s oldest and largsst budget assistance company. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Donelson-Johns HUNTOON Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME FE 2-8378 Established Over 40 Yr— SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service” FE 2-3841 Cemetery lots 4>A CHOICE WHITE CHAPEL LOTS. Will divide. Reasonable. FE 8-2806, FE 2-8734. Confidential, Y MAID SUPPLIES. 1 Menominee. FE 5-7603. BLACK MINIATURE POODLE IN the vicinity of Hammond Lake. Solid black with sliver tipped tall. LOST: NOT OUR DOO. BUT HIS COLLAR. TAOS ATTACHED. Ll------No. 2129. Vicinity of Oakrldge LOST: OERMAN BHEPHERD Police dog, female, lit year, tolaok and tan with collar and license. B 4-6867. reward. ! MEN WANTED WHO ARE IN-lercstcd In a career In the healing and Cooling field. Neat and ambitious and willing to got ahead. Apjity 497 S. Saginaw between 10 ___.4 WANTED. NO EXPERIENCE anteed. Apply 66 Newberry, *9 to 11 AUTOMOTIVE PARTS SALESMAN experienced In calling on filling stations. Royal Otk arcs. References. Reply tb box 66 The Pontiac Press, AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OP-erator and setup. Burns Automatlo Corporation, Roseville, Mich. PRes- PHONE 634-1025. II The Pontiac Prcs« AN EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY awaits you, where you are your own boss w|th no dlroot soiling. Look under Business Opportunities. A.S.P. CAE YOU HANDLE A HEAVY Job? Ara you 38 to DO years old? Did you attend high school? H you want to work, send us a long hand letter answering the above physloal condition, family, home, last place of ^ employment and Post Office Box * (12. Pontiac, —BOX REPLIES— At 10 a.m. Today thorn were replies at The Press office Id the following boxes: 18. 15, 17, 30, 35, 37, 45, 02, 03, 65, 66, 72, 82, 92, 03, 97. IT’S SO EASY to .Place a PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD ! Just Dial FE 2-8181 YOU Are Just One of Our 245,000 Readers . . To Reach the Other „„ 239,999 Call FE 2-8181 r i...' Male EXPERIENCED 1 CLERICAL HELP >, single, retirement £$. Apt$ FOUNTAIN HELP AND DISH-WASHERS. Boy* 17 and over an-ply in person. Howard Johnson s 3650 Dixie Highway. Many extra - Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED (5 Rh Positive. (7 Eh Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE GENERAL CONTRACTOR. EXPAND-lng work force needs Equipment Maintenance Man and Job Superintendents. Experienced on schools and commercial buildings, Call for Interview with owner, FE 4-4581 or write Buddy Construc-tlon Co., P.O. Box 147, Pontiac. GOOD CAR WASHER, 650 PER __Reliable and sober. Call.eves. 791-4536. EXPERIENCED DINNER SHORT order cook. Wilkin's Restaurant. ••*5 Orchard Lake Rd. FULL AND PART-TIME SALES-men, good pay. company benefits. Apply 50 N. Saginaw, Mating MAN TO DIG DITCHES ON FARM. PRESSER MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL MEN’S SPORTSWEAR SALESMAN, experienced **- cedent com In person, Hughes, Hi Buftrln. Pontiac Mall. MECHANIC. ALL AROUND SERV-vloo station. 25 or older. Experienced only. Send full resume to Pontiac Press, Box 6». ___ NIOHT MEN. APPLY IN PERSON 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Waterford Drive to Theater. NEEDED AT ONCE Door to door ealesmen to work In 5roups of 2 or 3. Explaining the ewel Tea Company Servloo to housewives. This Is a permanent position. Salary while in training. Extra^ benefits. ^Contact^Mr. Jen- WE NEED MEN Opportunity to earn $75 a week or hotter learning our bueinees. ex- gM? T&W «L‘t° male. 6 or 6 night; FOR ESTABLISHED Collins Cleaners. Rochester. OL ROUTE > 650 Woodward, NEEDED AT ONCE 2 men 19-35 to fill vacanolos left by promotions. Posslbllltlee unlimited The men selected will nav* » good opportunity to advance machine repair and ^building rnaln-r*?nce0eind*ma*ntenanc7Vsupervleffn Management Training Leads to Executive Career in Finance A well-plannad program wW^spe- on a completion of training, you are appointed branch manager^— management team with vital responsibilities for the profit and growth of the organisation. Advancement, eecurity, liberal salary with Increases based on jjerlorm- HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CO. tb S. Saginaw, Pontiac, Michigan SUPPLEMENT INCOME Old established firm will train qualified applicants for character and credit Investigating In Oakland County. Applicants must have knowledge of typing, free time during business hours and automobile. This work may be done as secondary employment or by retirees having business background. Write full qualifications to P.O. Box 3036, Federal Station, Fontlao, Michigan, STABLE MAN TO WORK WITH STOCKMAN Ted'i ha* an lmmadlato opening for Paid vacation, li VERTICAL mill and BORINO MILL OPERATORS. Afternoons -Must be Journeymen. Royal Oak 629 E. Buell' Rd. Ambitious, MMI, Job. employed ill KLgln WANTED: WELDERS. CAPABLE m 'lassing Navy Weld teat. O k W —.'Ineerlng. 2979 Dixie Hwy._____ WANTED: MAN 'll T6 30 WITH *• "(scape construction experience, i able to drive truck. FE 8-0495 2197 Orshard Lake Rd. before WANTED: MUSICIANS FOR ROCK —- roll band. Rhythm guitar, sloe, i, drum and saxophone. Non->n. FE 8-0582 before 10 p.m, YOUNG MAN, NEAT APPEARING with selling ability to learn furniture business. Excellent o^or- APPLICATIONS N O 682-1680,________________________ BABYSITTER. 8 DAYS. OWN transportation. FB 2.1856. after 9. COSMETICIAN—DRUG CLERK—EX-j)erlenoedv Jack's Drugs. 480 E. WAITRESSES ... Couibi. 1430 Moon Like Orion. OA 8-9630, ctm# wfUTniis. ii orover, wanted at .William* DrTve-In. 27*0 Highland Rd. at,Duck Lake Rd.. Highland. Midi, . CHILD. CAEB. VICINITY - OWEN I "^-1. FE 2-2639 Sflor 9 p.m. CARNIVAL By Dick Turner “It’s Junior’s customized job. He used a 15-year-old motor and a 5-year-old nest egg!” CONVALESCENT HOME EXPERT ence, l.p.n. or L.P.A.N. day shift, ' ' 8-0944. COUNTER PERSON FOR DR cleanert, Experience preferred will train. Steady work, good o portunlty. MA 6-7207. 6870 Tel ELDERLY WIDOW COMPANION EXPERIENCED COOK FOR CLUB work. EM 3-3907, * - “ T‘” i -- dally. EXPERIENCED SKIRT WRAPPER and marker, for dry cleaning pit-’ — Apply Liberty Cloaneri. 1 EXPERIENCED SALESLADY. THIR- EXPERIENCED WAITEesT .......... ED. Must be neat and trustworthy. Pled Piper* FE 8*6741. Call Mr. Shepard for an appointment. EXPERIENCED COOK AND KITCH-en help. Apply in. person. Wilkins. 4105 Orchard Lake Rd. v EXPERIENCED COOK* MUST BE Burger Drive In. OR 8*0040. Dining Room Hostess Ted’s of Pontlao Mall have an opening tor a dining room hostess. 20-30 years of age. Paid vacation, Insurance benefits. Apply M person only. Ted’s of Pontiac Mall Elisabeth Lake at Telegraph HOUSEWIVES: STILL TIME TO earn money for Easter goodies Luster Cosmetics. Earnings — " you qualify. 334- MATURE WHITE WOMAN FOR babysitting. ‘ -- 698 *■“ or MI 0-79 , AVON CUSTOMER - a tig demand (or Avon oUg™Uon0wrU?P.O^Bo?M?Dray° | m plains or phone FE 4-4508. 1, ESTATE SALESLADY-PRE- work but good earnings assured. OU established company. L. H. •’ llor. Ph. FE |ri||h Brown. Brown Realtor. ! 2-4810. 8EWINO WOMAN. PART-TIME. UP-holsterlng. out .and'now, 546-6323. TYPIST FOR LAW OFFICE. INTEL-llgent. good appearance, ahortband not neoessary. FB 4-9803._______ WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED. HOLI-day^ Drive-In, Keego Harbor, 882- WAITRES8E8 24-40. : WAITRESSES WANTED 1MMEDI-ately. Apply In _porion Howard Johnson’s. 3880 Dixie Highway. Many extra benefits. WAITRESS Apply In person 300 Lounge, 1 Cass Lake Rd.. Pontiac, Mtoh. WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSEKEEP-lng, child oaro. Oxbow Lake area. Phone after 7. EM 3-3443... WOMAN ifO (SARB 1 o 80. Live In. OR 3' DINING ROOM WAITRESSES Ted’s have Immediate openings for dining room waitresses on day and the night ihlft. Must be II. Apply in person only. TED’S WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK 1 DAY a week. Oxbow Lake Area, EM 3-3442. after 7,_______ 10U8EI homo average. FB 2-3053. t! more For (ages, prefer oouple ihfld welcome. OR SHORT O R D E RCOOK WITH grill and' plan experience. * Highland11 SHORT ORDER COOK. 0:30 A.M. to 1. Dsmas Drive-In. 356.9626. WOOL PHESSER WANTED, PAl?T ._ ptrl0lli Art-Craft !ersl’Soohi time sales persona. Decorating experelnoe preferred but not essential, See Mr. Bishop. LEWIS FURNITURE COMPANY INSTITUTION SOCIAL WORKER To flit future vacancies. annually. * effective > uly 14. 1913. All Mlohl* Ran civil service benefits, iolunr— sa is a bachelor’s degree September 1, 1963 ’* a major In the eoolaj examination, M I1 h I g a n Civil / oe Commission. 320 „.l Wglnut St., Lansing SfiajRV Sales Help, Male-Femel« 8-A EXPERIENCED INSURANCE MEN EVELYN EDWARDS “VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE” SECRETARY POSITIONS One Jr, and one Sr. Typing an shorthand necessary. 0 day weel Salary *225-9270. Age 19-30. Midwest Employment 405 Pontiac State Bank Building WHAT’S YOUR LINE? STATISTICAL TYPIST . I__ STENOGRAPHERS ....$325 -$500 TELETYPE OPERATOR .... OPEN OAL FRIDAY ...$$80 PLUS MEALS OFFICE MANAGER SOME BOOKKEEPING ........... — $40fl FEMALE ACCOUNTANT .... OPEN Call Kay Carlson a PRESTON WALKER 16-3663 1565 NORTH WOODWARD SMITH AOENCY « Instructions-Schools LEARN HEAVY EQUIPMENT, 220 hrs.* on Dozors, Drag Lines, e*~ Free placement, "Key." 6330 W. Mile Rd., Detroit 21. PI 1-7323. LEARN SUCCESSFUL SELLING. Work Wanted Mate A * 1 CARPENTER. LAROE OR small Jobs, FE 5*2841. AMBITIOUS 16 YEAR OLD Saturdays. 682-3617 CEMENT WORK ALL KINDS. REA- SONABLE, OR >.2638._____ FURNITURE REPAIRED AND RE- LAWN CUTTINO AND OARDEN* Ing. FB 2*6418. MAINTENANCE MAN. year around in projc* homes. Steady work. TREE CUTTINO AND TRIMMING. Yard cleaning. Lawn work, Light digging and hauling. FE | 333*9779. YOUNO MAN bESIRES STEADY Work Wonted Nmols 12 r CLEANING AND A-l work. FB 4*1131. 1 WALL WA8H* Bujldlng^Ss^ BULLDOZINO, EXCAVATINO, SEP* J, AAtAVfl .... EM 3-0881. ______. BLOCK WORK. SPECIAL- toy hi commerolal^ building alio CARPENTRY, GENERAL____________ pairs, modernisation, and platter-tog. Call EM 3-6961. PLASTERING. NEW A BED BUILDING MATERIALS, usod 2x4s. 25c oaobl 2xlxl2-foot and If toot, (I.2o^oaoh;^ga> and oil and lavatorle*, apartment ‘ ~ m 'rlgeratora_ —• too numerous ffiMffiHMt.......... “ Phone 335-9332. CEMENT CONTRACTOR Quinns Construction Co, FE 8-9122 hauling, tel/ j88>76ff. . Lawrence St. FREE ESTIMATES ON.......... .... jjgg will finance. R. B. Munro Wwvrio Co. PE MI81._____ ELECTRIC motor silt VICE BE------- J rewinding. 218 E. Pike, BBM Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKINO. TAILORING. AL-teratlons. Mrs^Bodell. FB 4*9053. AND ALTERATIONS. ALj^TOWLETB^^NDSCAPINOi ..81 ..Tmming* 775 Scott Lake Rd g*B 4*4228, LAWNS. DISCING. GRADINO. MA 5*2574 or OR 4*1608. LAWN CUTTING Small and larga eatate». Spring clean up. Power rolling. Free eetlmatei, OR 3.Q44I, Intoffls Tex Ssrvlcs _ 19 96, NONE HIGHER, LONG FORMS S“or7e*lvlJi*FtilMsfi y0Ur ”0W*’ SiliU-Si cwFidenwal : se— 9 specialize In perac l relume. Reasonable MM , M 5, Pike (oorner MllI) FE 4-H92 .—SONABLE RATES experience. Dwight B INCOME TAX . , is up . ,H & R BLOCK CO.! Nation’s Largfxt Tax Service 732 W. Huron St. weekdays 9*9, Hat,, i i. M\ HUME OR OFFICE UNTIL IS . MR i Friendly—Dependable—Experienced KEYS h NACKERMAN 2628 N. Perry FE 2-3171. FE 8-2297 Convalescent-Nursing 21 CARE POR AMBULATORY deriy men or retired Mniien Home privileges, TV, I LAWN WORK, HAULING, MOVING, : odd Jobe. OR 4-1933, FB 2-7421. VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATES Padding—IS Years Experience ROBERT TOMPKINS OR 4-1512 Painting a Pstorattog 23 A-l DECORATING —PAINTING — plastering — papering. Free Eat., nlacounta for caal), 682-0620. A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. Papcrlng.lFE 8-6343 MASON THOMPSON—DECORATOR. Interior-Exterior, FE 4-8364. INTERIOR—EXTERIOR PAINTING A. C. Blrmcyer. 335-8692 Evenings reaaonabie. FB 2-9006 WASHING, RATE R & H PAINTINO AND DECORAT- Television-Radio Servlet 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE Trained Service Me°' Reasonable prices. Free Tuba Testing. lontgomery Ward Pontiac Mall 26 LOW COST HOSPITAL INSURANCE CALL TODAY" FRANK A. ANDERSON. AOENCY 1044 Joslyn____FE 4-3631 Wanted Children to Board 28 Wanted Household Goods 29 AUCTION SALE EVERY BATUR-day at BlueBlrd Auction. Weil buy furniture, tools and appliances. *-----------or MEIrose 7-Sir LET US BUY IT OR SELL IT FOR Wanted Money 31 Wanted to Rant RETIRING alr*a 2-bedi- - iruBSS* TENANTS WAITING, FAST * Shore Uvlng Gnnrtert 33 WOMAN WOULD LIKE WIDOW IN good health to share home and help with Invalid husband, FE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE . JOIN • THE “BEST SELLER LIST” Buyers walling for aU kinds of REAL ESTATE and CONTRACTS. Call “NOW” for quick, eour-toous servloo. Warren Stout, Realtor, 77 N. Saginaw St.. POn- have property to sell call us fono help In disposing of It. No obligation. OEOROE R. IRWIN. REALTOR NEEDED AU types of Real Estate. If you have property to sell caU us for help hi disposing of It. No bbllga- Customers Waiting HOMES WANTED ON LAND CONTRACTS OR FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS . 146 Prank’ll) Bird FE 6-9663 PRIVATE PARTY WANTS 2 OR 3-bedroom house With' basement In Drayton. OB 3-4407. WANTED TO RENT OR BUY amaU home In Drayton-Waterfori y and tell land contracts: PONTIAC REALTY PONTIAC REALTY oggegr n 6-6278 Apartmsntt-Furniihed l-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT. AU utUltles. FE t4m,___________ l-BEDROOM EFFICIENCY APATOV ments. Fully furnllhed. Parking. North-Northeast fide. FE 5*2361 or 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberta Apartments 290 N. Paddock — * “ -BEDROOM. FIRST FLOOR, utilities. Pontlao Lake. 673-5349. ROOMS AND BATH. 90 COTTAOE. FE 4-8612. Pvt. - _______ _____ BATH. PRIVATE entrance, newly decorated. Adults only. 916 per week. 105 deposit. **“- —1-4051, i 'iMxna" "and bath, newly BACHELOR, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, downtown, redecorated. FE 5-5129. COLORED — FRANKLIN BOULE-vard. 3 rooms, private bath and entranoe. References required. 073- KITCHENETTE. PONTIAC L AK B PARTLY FURNISHED APARTMENT, 7 rooms, S baths, ■■■ private entrance. ( come. Mu-* —1 30 par < 73-0491 i REAL^NICE^ROOMS AND BATH. Near Oakland University, FE Apartments-Unfurnishad 38 l-ROOM__________ Alberta Apartments O N. Paddock______FE 2-2095 ■ LOWER. NORTH H, HEAT. HOT f, 140 lit. Clemons. 4-ROOM UPPER APARTMENT — only. 565. FE 4-3690. -immi-B8 ir turn, to adults ROOMS. BATH, HEAT. REFRIG- 5 ROOMS AND BATH. LOWER. 37 Park Place. FB 4*8612. clean 6omfortabUg XSHT 3* bedroom apartment. Stove and refrigerator fura. Share oost of util-Ities, $85 a month. 4-room houat off Oakland Avenue. Immediate possession. 150. Val-U-Way Realty. 34S Oakland Ave, FE NO VACANCIES AT BLOOMFIELD ---tea. Hot— rentals. ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN XraRY DEfAIL-*^"1 Onto — font Houses, Fornlthetf 39 5-ROOM HOU8B AND 1-CAE OA-rage, downstairs, gas heat. 165 plus UtUltles. 45 B. Cornell. FE Kl77t.___________________,____________ 2-BEDROOM HOME. ACRE LOT. North elde of Pontlao FB 445(1 -BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE. IN- 2-BEDROOM, NEAR 8CHOOL8 AND Architoctnrol Drawing NEW HOUSE AND REMODBfINO A-l ALUMINUM 81DINO FREE ESTIMATES 625-2 THOR CONTRACTING ALCOA, KAI8ER 8IDINO STORM WINDOWS. DOORS REMODELING and ADDITIONS Kraft Siding & Roofing FREE ESTIMATES “ i **“ AWNINOS, MODERNIZATION^ Combinations, 8ldlng, Porches BRADFORD WINDOW <1 SIDING »ree Eat. FHA UL 2-2553 Asphalt Paving DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE Estimate. FE 5-4(85._________ Basement Water Proofing SUPERIOR Evenings AppUi. FE 6»64 KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. BTARTERA AND REGULATORS REGULATORS, $3.95' ___ Boots—Acceiiorle*_______ (TOP—LOOK—|AV* Fabulous New Hydrodyne Outboards Larson-Duo-Chstsk-Psstheroraft EVINRUDI MOTORS Tea Nto — Ajax Trailers tflvaii Pontoons—Floats Aluminum At Wood Docks Orumman—Old town Canoes “Your Bvlnrude Dealer” Harrington Boat Works 1599 B. Telegraph Rd, 332-6033 LICENCED BUILDER WANTS RE-pair work. Kltohens a specially. Carpentry e... FE 2-7310. GENERAL CARPENTRY, KITCHEN rms. FE (-<»<« Floor Sanding L. BILLS 8R„ FLOOR I. FE 2-5789. 652-5065. OHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYING Rending and finishing, 25 years experience. 332-6975. . SNYDER, FLOOR LAYINO, ,L FURNACES lervlccd. C. L. I CLEANED AND Income Tax Service ALL WORKINO PEOPLE’S AND buflnm toxes prepared. $3 and upe J. 8CHIMKE. OR 3*3943. 8601 High* land Rd. (M80), REPORTS PRE* CUSTOM HOMES Home* Garage. Cabinet*, Addition* "‘H TERMS. TALBOTT LUMBER Olass installed in doors and wlr now*,. Complete bulldbig scjvlce.^^ Plono Tuning AAA PIANO TUNINO WIBOANDS _______ FB 2-4924 A-t TUNINO AND REPAlRtNa Oscar Schmidt FB 2-5217 Plastering Service >, Pat Lee, FB 2-7922. Television, Radio and HI-FI Sorvlce DAY AND EVENING SERVICE. Bailey Electronic!, FB 5-4054 or FE 5-5154. REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TVi Tree Trimming Service Trimming, C C ft STUMP REMOVAL General Tree Service fST a^ktdE^rm"»33»fur M<1' montEoss treE service Tree removal—trimming. 339-755 HAUL1NO AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE 8-0095. Lioht aRd heavy trucking, —‘•blah, OH dirt, grading and gra-and front and wading. FE TOP SOIL. PEAT, BLACK D) road gravel, and fill dirt. EM 3 8iRVICE see Clautficatton No. 21 Trucks to Rent Vb-Ton piokupa ___ltt-Ton Stake. TRUCJM_~ lEACTORS and Equipment Dump Trucka — Soml-Trallera Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. SI S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FB 4-1442 Open DaUy Including Sunday 'E 5-2692 Ul Virginia F_ .rai^Xs’iil^s^iNO..... "99 W. WALTON BLVD. BLOOMFIELD WALL CEANER8. WALL WASHING AND CARPE'I cleaning. Low ratoe, FE 4-1077. WALLMA8TBR witL AND ’' *—oleanlng. Free Bst, F~ ‘ * Wanted Old Concrete s u L T S ? TRY W A N T A D S FE 2 8 1 8 1