I V| 3 f ^ I f \ k I olUN 3 “Dr. Ward’s condition ,has deteriorated and he has. [had to be returned to mechanically controlled breathing.” ’ The apparatus employed was known as a Barnett ventilator, an iron lung type of machine. Ward has not recovered consciousness since swallowing a 'heavy drag overdose yesterday morning before-he was doe to attend the last day of ktlOkf Bailey trial. - And so he. does not know he was convicted. The pneumonia struck in the afternoon. In Today's Cautious x; Ike urges careful scrutiny of N-ban-* — PACK 'A4i. Recreation , Program in Waterford is popular — PAGE B-l. Deepening Crisis Veter drives increase Negro pefitieal leverage— PAGE B-2. Ansa News . .......A4 Astrology .. AW Bridge ............ 04 Comics ..... Editorials Food see. D-6-E-2-E-3 Markets ......... E4 Obituaries ....... E-5 Sports ........D4-D-13 Theaters .. T.,.D4 One medical' source said pneu-monia was a common complication in barbiturate poisoning. Normally, patients recover from their coma more - quickly than Ward and are treated with drugs. But with Want still unconscious nearly 36 hours after the dose, such treatment would obviously be difficult, the source The, Weather Home Edition ■ The U.N. Command said the North Koreans were carrying weapons used in the afnbush Monday. ' ,v ’ ■ , The United States denounced The broadcast made no menttoo of. the atnbush»killing of two U.S. soldiers just south of the demilitarised zone Monday or the skir-mish six miles farther south Tues*; day fat which another American, a South Korean policeman ' and four-North Koreans diedb ’ provoked attack.”- * - U.S. Army- patrols' aided by -spotlights searched the banks of . the Imjin River along tiie demili-1 tarized zone for more Communist infiltrators. THE PONTIAC MCCOOK TONt|A€,3fI€HIOAN, THUESDAY; AU{H&T/i* By Ndrth Korea K Will Attend N-Pact Signing To Take Command of High-Level Talks MOSCOW (UPI)- Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev will attend _ Monday’s signing at the county 4-H’ers' were chosen yesterday to reign as king and qpen of the 4-H fair next week. Eighteen-year-old Tom Middle ton and Carmen Sue Miller, 17, partial nuclear test-ban treaty and take personal command of high-level talks with the United States and Britain,* It was learned today. Informed- sources said Khrushchev changed his vacation plans in order to take a personal hand far the treaty . signing ceremony and. the di>-cussions that will follow with Secretary of State Deem Rusk and British Foreign ^ecret«7 ^ Lord Heme. ii' < Khrushchev had been scheduled to leave for his Black Saa retreat today and relax for. at least two weeks before mking a journey to Yugoslavia on Aug. 20. ■&. w ★ 'It was officially announced, meanwhile, that Rusk has cepted Sjoyfot Foreign -Minister Andrei Gromyko’s--invitation to remain here-for three or four days sifter thert@imonial treaty signing Monday. Lord Home similarly is expected to stay for the three-way talks. The foreign ministers will continue the private discussions initiated by Khrushchev, Gromyko, Undersecretary of State W. Averell Hardman and Britain’s - Science Minister Lord Hailsham last month during the nuclear-treaty negotiations. Free Parking Ends /rijffiy City officials again warned downtown shoppers today that there is ae more free parking en municipal off-street perking . loti. . ■ ,v / The meters began operating again this morning and cars parked by expired meters will be ticketed by police. A> agreement between the city and' Downtown Pontiac Baslness Association, which preridod feee parking on metered lots for six months, «x-fired today. To Reign at Fair 4-H Royal Coupl The best of this year’s crop of were selected to rule over the ,500 youngsters participating in the annual event. ' * Carmen, who works on* her 4-H projects along with other members of the Seymour Lake Club, could hardly waft to. call her. parents, Mr. -and Mrs. Mil-ton Millef, at home, 3411 Dart-month, Brandon Township. Although surprised yesterday, her mother is accustomed to Carmen’s winning 4-H horiafs. When she was 15, the pretty redhead with the glowing smile was chosen best of the 4-H’ers entering dressmaking competition. Brig. Gen. Diaries Pershing Brown of McAlester, Okla., acting commander of the 1st Cavalry Division, ordered searchlights to brighten the 18H-mile«front patrolled by bis outfit. Bodies of the fear dead Americans, will be escorted home for burial. The four are Pvt. David A. Seiler of Theresa, Wis.; Pfc. Charles T. Dessart HI of Drexel Hill, Pa.; Sgt. Toy D. Chapman of 15045 Mahor Ave., Detroit; and Sjgt.' Edgar L, Parish of Valdosta, Ga. But Carmen doesn’t limit her inter esta te 4-H work. She is also a member of the’ student council of Brandon High School, where she will be a senior next year. After high school, Carmen will be off to Eastern Michigan University for studies in special education. ‘ . FAIR R0YALTY —• Carmen Sue Miller and Tom Middleton beamed yesterday after they were chosen to reign is king and queen of next week’s 4-H fair. Both are veterans in 4-H work. ‘ : Carmen’s king is'1 following in the footsteps of aft older hrbther, Larry, who ruled over the fair In 1959. Tom also is Ad newcomer to the winner’s circle. He is i junior 4-H lender MSB was chosen by Lake Orion High School to attend ’Wolverine Boys State in Lansing this. ye*r-’. Tom lives with his parents, Mr. and Mrs: Keith Middleton, oil their farm at 2610 Stoney Creek, Oakland Township. House Group Agrees on Cut in Foreign^A TWISTER DAMAGE — This Sfote highway Department (ruck and the roof of the department’s sign shop at Cadillac were, dam- aged when a tornado hit the area last night. Witnesses said the track was thrown' as high as telephone lines.- . * At Cadillac Outskirts Tornado Stldk Cadillac un — a roaring tornado .mauled several buildings, tossed a panel truck to teiephone-vyire height and threatened at least four counties in Northern Michigan — but Injured no oix — last night.. • The tornado missed a resi- dential area in Cadillac, where roar eastward across the north if concentrated its punch. It side-of Cadillac', whops jt lore also bypassed the Northern District Fate nearby and the Clare County Fate in Harrison before dying in the cool night air! Residents watchedtiie/ funnel form out of swirling clouds and the roof off. a Highway Department sign shop and flattened a scrap material warehouse. The fwister .also damaged Mackie Eying Governorship glass shop and- a service station and folded up a 100-foot-tall Wexford County Highway Department radio tower. Also Views Congress if Road Post Abolished Freta Our News Wires WASHINGTON' — :1be House Foreign Affairs Committee agreed today on a foreign-aid bill total-' . ' < • • ^ ing Slightly more than,$4 billion,' % >way Orat- or about $437 million mss thantoisilWierJohn Mackie sa yshe President Kennedy sought. ' Rep. Thomas E. Morgan, D-Pa., chairman of. the committee, announced after A closed-door session , that the total approved was $4)467,675,0M: The President originally naked Congress for $4,525,325,QM. Administration sources subsequently, indicated however that he could get along with less. Only would consider running for -governor or- for Congress in. 1964 if the legislature, in implementing the new constitution,- decides to abolish his job at the end of this year. “It wai whirling around so much yop couldn’t tell which way it was going,” one Cadillac woman said. The funnel passed'over a resi- -dential area and then veered, south? with two" state/police cars racing it to warn farmers in thfe/ area. One car had to stop,, momentarily to let the twister pass. jTroopers said it sounded like a freight train. And any proposal to wipe out, his job or limit his powers , until his term of office expires in mid-,1965 would be “a 100 per cent routine vote on a blatant' political* move,’’ Mackie In addition to reigning as king [Tuesday remains before'the com-of the fair, he will be exhibitingiinittee clears ft.for House action. two calves and three stalks of ~ ' clean” copy of the * bill ne^t said. The highway commissioner Doctor Ward Near Death With Bronchial Pneumonia his prize corn. The two outstanding youngsters were chosen by judges Mrs. Elizabeth Kittle, 4-H agent for Genesee County, and Howard Helden-brand of tiie Pontiac Press-editorial staff/ Also Included1 on the judging panel- were last year’s king and queen, Lyle McLachlan and Rick! ann Hoxie. This year's honored couple Will be featured in a parade through Pontiac Monday and will be LONDON IIM&r* Stephen Ward lay near death with bronchial pneumonia tonight while a machine pumped breath into his drugged body.. Doctors- at. St. Stephen Hospital reported the 50-year-old playboy osteopath took a turn for'"the|S[0W?Sf ceIcmony®| . r f ■ V-. , ^ ’ L; v . . the 4-H fairgrounds, Perry Just worse after a morning operation ^ introduce a tubejsouth of Walton, Tuesday night, into his windpipe to help , him breathe. . , A medical bulletin in t afternoon said: Final cyts of’|438 million were made today, the largest being $160 million from the President’s contingency fund and $180 million from the military assistance program. The Alliance for Progress, aid program for Latin America suffered a modest cut of $50 million, reducing the administration’s request to $600 million. The authorization bill merely its a ceiling-on >the program's expenditures for the year. Still come is an appropriationsMl which provides that actual money. That Ik where tiie big fight on tiie always controversial program will come. ‘‘Dr. Ward’s teriorated and he “I have fully intended to finish out my term, but if Mr. Brown and the othera| in their erudite political opinidjhyjdedde J should CITED FOR RESCUE -- Oakland County Sheriff Frank Irons (right) yesterday presented . his department’s first'certificates of merit to two men who aided in the rescue o(six persons whose boat sank June 16 in. Dark Lake. The award recipients are Jack Houser (left) of .1137 Rorewy, Commerce Township, and Roger . Bryant of 6188 Borowy. William McKeeYer of , Northville, win also assisted in tiie ’rescue, will receive a similjar certificate. v defiantly yesterday the suggestion by Sen. Garry Brown, R-Scheolcraft, that the legislature may either abolish the job or strip him of his authority/ Brown is chairman of-an agency subcommittee of a larger leg-istative*'committee' stqdying implementation of the constitution in the special foil session. . '* * He said the legislature could enact a law abolishing Mackie’s $17,50ft-a-year job, or limiting his powers and. duties, when the new fbur-membdr» bi-partisan highway ebmmission is created under tiie constitution. The weatherman said tonight will be fair and mild with a low of 62, but clouds will dot the skies tomorrow, and temperatures will riSFtr87. Scattered thundershowers and warm is the prediction for Saturday. ’’ : t Morning southwesterly winds at 5 miles per houir will shift to west to! northwest at 10 to 18 m.p.h. late today diminishing tonight-and becoming southerly at 8 to 15 m.p.h. tomorrow. - U n I e as tills is done, said Brown, Mackie could continue to exercise his authority until he goes out of office on Jane 30, 1985. The lowest temperature before 8 was 62. At 2 p.m. the recording fas 77.- be thrown ou| At $he' job, then T will have* to change my Mackie said. means I Would' insider for another political office — governor or Congress.”, Mackie’s name is usually included on the list of potential Democratic candidates for governor and he has been, regarded vho might make a chat-1966. He has not been discussed wide*-ly as a 1964 candidate because new constitution,' against which he spearheaded the Democratic party’s opposition,,.pm vides that any elected official whose'job is abolished cqn serve out his term. News Flash WASHINGTON (ft- Employmentin the United State* rose te n mw all-time high of 71.1 million in July while nnAm-ployment showed a substantial although seasonal dtxlhiw for this- time of yearr the Labor Department reported today. Chuds to Roll By as. Temperature Sdlts Up fo B7 ‘ There were no further serious damage reports, however. Wexford County Sheriff Pan! Lance was on the scene when -the twister cot a swath SO yards wide and abeat one-quarter mile long, in the north, business section of Cadillac. / A light sprinkling of rain fell j in the downtown Area last night. Police followed the« tornado about 20 miles to the Cfore-Gscoo-la County border! Funnel siriit-ings also were reported in Midland County and the Weather bureau issued warnings tq Gladwin, Arenac, Saginaw and Bay counties to the east. “I was driving northward gL the-time, when I saw the twistew come booming out at a. dark . cloud,!’ Lance said. “It hit so suddenly that I had to gun my car backwards to-get out of its . path. “I saw a State Highway Department sign truck picked up like a toy, lifted as high as the telephone wires and thrown back down on its roof,”-be said. Traffic Toll Hitt 937 EAST LANSING (X) - Traffic accidents have kilted 937 perannz in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by .state police showed today. The toll lit this date last year was 825. For Industry. uunuuMMure Drive Tops $103,6| \ Pontfoc’s Greater Industrial Development Corp. gathered Mried momentum with 23 more Individuals or firms pledging support. This is fif addition to the 99 firms or individuals reported previously. ' Returns as of thjs' morning total $108,600, up more than $7,000 Since yesterday, according to the Chamber of Commerce. . Tlte development corporation has options on land for an h-dustrial park. to-iteaiw more companies and jobs to the city. ^Oakland County Congressman William s. Broomfield wired congratulations today on the successful drive. - “Poatfoc is to be congratulated on this energetic. Imagine- ■ tive approach. I am sure that this program wiU provide new jobs and new opportunity Jw Pontiac. “Max Adams, The Chamber of Commerce and The Pontiac Press have done an excellent job in pointing opt tiie heed for this program,” he concluded. ~ Additional Pledges, AustimNorvell Agency. Metes and Powers M. A. Benson Co. ' Bland, Luther & Thelma Bedford, Francis C. Brown, Kathleen M. Buckley, Betsy ' City Beverage r | Dickstein, M. Kehheth Erickson,1>. // FUMw, or...., ' • Galen Maonfadurhif Co,, Inc. Hodges. H. yime i\\i. Lewis Fimtiture "Co. • Mineweaser, Richard Miller, Francis F. Napely, * John C. & Phyllis J» Pearce, H. S. Price, Henry Dr 1 > Sheppard, Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Sherwood, Thomas Walls* Merrill F. * Kathryn Jaae i Wilson, A. Glenn 4 Hakn.M^ WhftfiiU, r A—2 THE; PONTIAC PRESS, THUBSP^f, ATOUST 1, 1968 JFK to Renew Support Plea WASHINGTON (UPI) w President Kennedy is expected to emphasize anew today hie hope for oyerwbehnlng congressional and public support of the nudear teat ben to be signed in Moscow next The President scheduled* a LAWRENCE E. MILLER OHjcer State Award for Service Trooper Lawrence E. Miller of the Pdntiac post has been named Michigan State Police' “Trooper at the Year” tor 1962, pews conference for t'pjs. (Pontiac tine), which could serve as a forum for Us new appeal. The conference was being televised and broadcast Uvc to the nation. Miller, 21, was named yesterday a four-man civilian committee in East Lansing because of the diversified nature of bis public service activities. These included first aid classes for school bus .drivers in Oakland County, many instructional pearances on rescue breathing and traffic safety matters and work with Juvenile groups. Last year ' Miller trained over 150,000 persons .in moutb-to-mputh resuscitation and taught traffic safety to 73 elementary schools in the Pontiac area. . Stationed at |he Pontiac post since June 1960, Miller is married and lives with bis family •t 4915 Walnut Lake, W«st Bloomfield Township. -In February, Miller was recognised for his service to the community by the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce, who named him the Pontiac area's outstanding young man . of the year, The Trooper of the Year award carries'with it a $500 donation'll which can be used by Miller in three ways: furthering education, donations to charitable causes or worthy projects or for the welfare of department workers. . Kennedy was believed ready to give some indication of U.S. reaction to the attitude of French Pfesidant Charles de Gaulle, who has declined to sign the pact and plans to continue his test program. .... , v ; It-.was considered unlikely, however,: that the President would clarify in any grept de tail the question of whether the United States was prepared to assist France with information and weapons if the French keep their experiments underground^ Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman said yesterday toe President could be expected to give some observation on the French attitude toward nuclear testing. The President was understood' to be wary of taking too definite a position pending further study. Harriman pumped more steam into the administration drive for test ban approval by asserting that the United States would lose our leadership of the world” if the Senate failed to ratify the ban on air, space and underwater tests. He spoke at a National Press Club lunch not long after the White Hopse announced that a 11-man delegation, including torn Democratic and two Republican senatorxrwould accompany Rusk Moscow Friday. ★ ★ ★ Exemptions OK'd in Bill Affy; General Clarifies JFK's Rights Bid ’ From Our News Wires WASHINGTON -Atty. Gen. Birmingham. Area News Ringswood PJan journey to X)z- Robert F. Kennedy agreed Jo-’ I, beJu- ua^to exempt barbershops, I ty parlors and swimmiiu poofe to travi' PAYS VISIT - U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara (right) left today for a look at' West Germany’s forward defense along the Iron Curtain after spending a day-and-a-half talking to West German officials, including ' Ar photofax Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.(forty.' The talks covered such subjects as weapons research and new West German defense spending in the U.S. Arms Confab Recesses GENEVA (it — The 17-nation disarmament conference into an 11-day recess today to make way for the signing of the American-British-Soviet nuclear test ban treaty in Moscow next week. New Quakes Hit Devastated City SKOPJE, Yugoslavia (UPI) — Three new earthquakes struck devastated Skopje today, sending its battered residents fleeing into th£ street in panic once again bujt causing no -further damage or injuries. However, Yugoslav Rescue Center officials who announced no new casualties said they would speed up toe evacuation of toe city, wrecked by a catastrophic earthquake last Friday. They, skid there have been close to 200. tremors since Friday, but, that most of them have been- minor. . Officials also said workers dug out the bodies of three more vie* tims last night, raising to 057' the total number of dead recovered. The Weather (er Full U.S, Weather Bureau Report * PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and Whrm ... day, Ugh 85. Fair and mild tonight, low 62. Partly cloudy and warm Friday high 87. West to northwest winds II to 18 miles today diminishing tonight becoming southerly 8 to 15 miles Friday. •Wind Telocity Difeotion:__________ fun,seta Thursday st 7:53 p.m. - Sun rises Friday at 4:21 am Sfaoa-seta Friday tt 3:35 a m Moon rises Thursday at IrOC p.m Downtown Tempo Sleet Doctor Top Executive of Argentina BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)—Dr. Arturo IlUa, a moderate liberaT unknown to interoa-tional politics, Is Argentina’s president-elect two pocket civil* wars and 16 months after the military grabbed the country. Barry Yells 'Police-Stale' at Military Off-limits Order WASHINGTON (JR—Sen. Barry The country doctor, 62, easily ]nation> jacketed a “police state’ won victory, in the electoral college Wednesday. He got 261 votes, 22 more than needed. Within minutes After it became obvious the job as 29th president was Illia’s, the military-dominated caretaker government of Rtssk dent Jose Maria Guido freed the 27th president; Dr. Arturo Fron-dfed. Froridizi had been a prisoner since the military command deposed him March 29, 1962. He was held first on an island in the Piste River and. for the -lastfive months at San Carlos de Bariloche, a winter re.sort in the Andes. TO BE CERTIFIED . Illia’s election is to Tie certified by Congress Aug; 12 and tie will be inaugurated Oct. 12, ending the Guido regime which survived 30 attempts to overthrow it, The two major attempts came last Uepte There was no immediate comment from Kennedy, who has been a favorite target for Southerners who’ oppose- the administration’s civil rights program. Goldwater toldthe Senate that a‘ directive Authorizing commanders to bar servicemen’s visits to segregated ureas near military-- bases “started in the attorney general’s office.” He said teams headed -by Alfred B. Fitt, assistant secretary of deTense for civil rights, had visited base areas “completely April and lest September. Illia’s inauguration will contimte the legal fiction of two presidents for Argentina; Frondizi's term not expire until next April 30 and he has steadfastly refused resign. Won't Press Traffic Charge No charges will.be brought against l&ichael Flanigan, 18, of 4539 Major, Waterford Township, in connection with a fatal traffic accident last Sunday, according to-the Oakland County prosecutor's office. Assistant Prosecutor Daniel C. Devine said today-there was insufficient evidence for a warrant against Flanigan, who was driving a truck from* which Stanley R. Prince, 12. of 2026 Kohler, Waterford Township, fell. 'The boy was fatally—injured when an approaching car driven by Paul Farmer, 25, of. 463? F p u r t h, Waterford Township, Goldwater has opened fire orv a Pentagon directive that could put segregated communities off limits for servicemen. The Arizona Republican, regarded as a leading contender for his party’s 1964'presidential nom- charge yesterday, at Atty, Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. Nuclear Test Is Postponed PROMPTLY DENIED A Defense Department spokesman promptly denied that Fitt or any members of his group have or haul Information on businessmen taken from.income tax records or foe files of any govern* ment agency. Goldwater proposed an investigation into “the directive and those people who have pushed it and the full use of the power, of the police state hy the attorney general.” Sen. Richard B: Russell, D-Ga., service -committee, „ said in an interview that President Kennedy “surreptitiously” set up the civil- rights committee composed pf “three Negroes and four white members who are associated with the extreme left wing of the Democratic party” Without informing Congress of the. action. WASHINGTON UP) - The government announced today that-“technical difficulties” necessitate postponement of plans to detonate a special nuclear device underground at Carlsbad, N.M., this year as part of its program to develop .peaceful uses of nuclear explosives. The project, known as “Project Coach”aimed at study-ing the possibility of. producing, new' chemical elements by mews of nuclear blast! — was originally. scheduled to be held some time daring 1963. Takes Over as Chief-of Naval Operations WASHINGTON (AP)-The Nav? changed commands today, welcoming aboard Adrt. David L. McDonald as. the new chief of naval operations aind bidding farewell to the retiring chief, Adm. George W. Anderson. , McDonald, 57, a native of May* ville Ga., moved from the 6th Fleet add Eastern'Atlantic Corn- struck him at Sashabaw near mand to the Pentagon post—the armed with dossiers on the bus- inessmen in the community, complete with every figure the committee can get out of income tax returns." “ Sen. Sam.-Ji Ervin Jr. raised the issue to his marathon examination of the Attorney general. He qionojwlized toe committee’s entire session yesterday and continued his searching questions today-41 In New York, violence broke Hit. afeain today at a hospital site in • Brooklyn where police have" arrested more than 600 civil rights pickets in clashes during ttie past,, two weeks. Police battled a demonstrator who jumped si patrolman after he had discovered a cache of eggs— apparently intended as missiles. The demonstrator was sdbdued apd arrested. 10 Die in Crash Near Toledo TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) — Ten migrant farm worker!, eight of them children, were killed last night en route home fronjt movie when their station wagon smashed head-on into an oncoming tractor-trailer rig,. t The crash, one" of the worst singj^jutific accidents in Ohio histwyaappened on a straigtit stretch of Ohio $1> about 10 sir tout! miles Southeast of here. 'Authorities were several hours learning the identification of the victims because friends and relatives spoke only in Spanish. The grinding crash wiped out one family of seven and' three Children from another family. which do -not cater to travelers frorn the.Jdministratlon’8 hotly •disputed public accommodations bill. - Kennedy told , the Senate Judiciary Committee ttiat he “would tie tiappy to accept a clarification” of the administration proposal . although he has maintained that the measure was not intended to cover such establishments. By fold morning there were 18 arrests, i4 men and four women. One of the women weighed 300 pounds and it took six patfpimen and three policewomen to .carry her to a police van. The pickets are demanding the hiring of more Negroes and Puer-Ricans by New "York’s multibillion dollar construction industry. As of last night, a total of 752 persons have been arresteef to city-wide ciVil. rights demonstrations. ■ \ . • In Chicago last-night, hundreds of whites' milled around the apartments of two Negro families in an alLwhite neighborhood for the third straight night and. beefed-up police units moved in to restore order early tofeay. Bricks and rocks were hurled while police, who sealed off the area and closed taverns, struggled to disperse the surly crowd. BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Kings-wood summer day campers will visit the “Land of Oz” Friday afternoon before, tatohg leave of to* Bloomfield Hills camp rite. They will conclude their camp activities with an adaptation* of L. Frank - Baum’s ‘'The- Wizard of Ox.” . * The 2 p.m. presentation Is under the direction of Robin Ruhf. A. cast of\« cMidftmFriday at First Presbyterian Church. Burial will fellow in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield.: Mr. Buchanan died yesterday after a brief illness. His body will be at Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. until -liobn Friday.. \ An engineer for Pomtiic Motor Division, Mr. BuchanmA was a member of the Society of Automotive - Engineers, < Engineering Society of Detroit and the American Society of Bpdy Engineers. Surviving are his wife Gra'ce; two children, Liixjfo and, Ronald, both at home; and a sister. Girl, 18} Hurt as Car Leaves Pavement Homti. Buriil. trill follow^ in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. • K jg Mr. Lewis .died unexpectedly yesterday.' A transport driver, be Was a member of AFL-LIQ Local No. 389,-Detroit. Surviving are his wife Mabel; his mother1, Mrs. John Lewkowicz of Winnipeg, Man.; and a broth* Asks for Exam in Traffic Death Man Face$ Charge, of Negligent Homicide Zehnder, 21, of 1941 Golfvfow, * Bloomfield Township, wat^ killed when bis car struck two trees after he swerved to avoid DiVita’s auto, according to township police. " DiVita told officers he was making a U turn at the time. r Also injured in the crash, was Zehnder’s bride-to-be, Betti 22, of 32 Murphy^* In ^ light of Oakland County’s traffic fatality records so far this year, .Prosecutor' George Taylor yesterday warned that negligent homicide warrants will be sought in any death “where there is < the least shred of doubt that tho driver was blameless.” ; Zehnder’s was tile fourth coun- . ty traffic death in three days. Death toll for the year in the county is now 80, compared to & at tiie same .time in 1962. Taylor attributed the '“appall-ig” highway bloodbath to “fox enforcement of speed limits.” Israel, U.A.R. Agree JERUSALEM, .Israeli Sector W).. ‘— Israel and foe United Arab Republic,, bitter foes who have, -accused each oth£r of trying to develop' atomic weapons, agree they will not conduct nuclear Walter Aj Lewis Service for Walter Ar~LewiS( I, of 16253 Kirkshire, Birmingham, will be 10 a. m. Saturday j tests above ; ground or under- at the Manley-Bailey. Funeral'water. A Berkley girl was Injured early today when the car she was in .was driven beyond the >aved portion of i-75 in Pontiac township. Sandra Vinyard, 18, of 1558 W. 11 Mile, suffered ^multiple lacerations of the face, She is in good condition at St. Joseph. Mercy Hospital. The driver pf the car, John E. Bennett, 21, pf 750 E. Square The dead Were identified as ^8 Blooinfield Hills, ied.aff Felix Campos, 4L Florida "City, Fla.; bis; wife Catherine, r AMERICAN MADE SHOES At SIMMS low ‘BirHiJay 8b>’ Prices SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS sheriff deputies fost he wanted to see how far the'road was. paved Waterford Town-1 same route Anderson had fol- highway and their children, Joseph, 12; Rosa, I and then did not see the end until Maria, 14; Teresa, 7, andwas too late. j David, 5; and Guadaloupe Chko, - ♦ ★ * and her brothers, Raoul, 13,1 He; was ticketed for driving and Jaime, 7. past the' barricades and into a (Miio highway, patrolmen saidiprahibitive area, the Campos station wagon passed Neither Bennett nor another a car on the straight stretch of;passenger were seriously injured; i lowed. tractor-trailer. into the jin the J: 17 a m. accident a quar-jter mile south of Walton. Hl*h«»t Ump«r»tui Mean temperature Wr-“-- - Orchard Lake Aye. .. 55: Lot Antol«| 51 63 W®*®*’6 65 56 Miami Bch>4| W ’#: 76 (0 Milwaukee I 74 56 Now Or leant • tnnnt v. 75 51 Now. York 55 . 70 I 66 66 Ooioha 60 <51’8 Atlanta 66 75 Phoent* 55.75| ft ■. Bismarck . 55 54 Pittsburgh __.il 1 -c—-———————— IBostUn 86 66 Salt Lake C. 07 72 H. Chicago 63 70 8. Francisco <1 54 f . ... . . « a —_ a —^ . Will Close ( SAVE Tonite-Frida This DISCOUNT Onl r~Satwda y at SIMM n SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS : NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers are expected tqnfyht in western Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia While it will be fair to cloudy elsewhere. It will be cooler in the eastern ptiio Valley and J over the northwestern Plains and parts of the nprtiqm Rockies. In the upper Mississippi ^ ^ a” Motorists who normally use Orchard Lake Avenue should-find a new route next week. Orchard Lake will be closed to through traffic At Cass and Telegraph beginning Monday’ for construction of a Sewer and repair'of a railroad City officials said the sewer trench Trill be cut across Orchard Lake at Thomas. rfi CREWS WORKING . Grand Trunk Western Rail-' road crews will be working . on the crossing near Beau* dette Park. \ Weather permitting, the work should be completed by next Friday. _ - 7/ The detours will affect all empty into OrchariL take. particularly Ottawa, N(porhelS,_4^|n*(m. Bagley ana\Frqnklii\ Boule-.yard. 20% OFF Ladies’ and Man’s TIMEX WRIST WATCHES . The ejLSlbounij Orchard Lake will I vehicles .coming 1 Johnson'and Franklin Boule vard, but westbound traffic . will be routed to West' Huron. * .At the Orchard Lake-Voor-heis-Ottawa Intersection, westbound’traffic on Ottawa ' will detour onto Voorheis and eastpound .vehicles wilt be detoured onto Ottawa.' / T'b>9* wirtthoo pre fully guaranteed. Choice ,of ftow stunning 'modelj for. A---------------------------^ Federal tag. V rX- 7'-'* — The «ewer arid raft crossing' work la preparatory to black .topping Orchard Lake later . this month. ' , : ' Canvas Uppers-Crepe Rubber Solas [Men’s Sram SHOES r» Lightweight canvas uppers* in .light blue colors with crepe rubber ffoxibie Soles, smart one eyelef'styling. Sizes 7.to il. s Save On Men’s and Boys’ Quality Canvas Oxfords 92 • SUP-ON STYLE • aUBBER SOLES • BLUE OR BROWN Summer convas oxfords in popular slipon styta. Blue or Arown uppers with heavy duty rubber soles with cushion insole and cushion orch type subport: it . OVSt to 12, >oys' 3'/2-5-S'/2-6. Group Ladies’ SUPPERS selection of slippers in corduroys, - scuff- styles, terrydotbs, fancy scuffs, open foe fancies, .etc. jn selection of colors ohd styles in sizes 4 to 9. ■*' '/A. \ u ,TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. tMURSDAY, AUGUST 1,Jl9 SUMS OPEN ToitHe til 9p.m mm Ka—8 . ^Special Prices for. Ibnigh^Ffidgy-Saturday • . fRlDAY/& SATURDAY STORE HOURS 9 AM. to 10 RM. —Since 1934 YOUR Money Always Got YOU MORE at SIMMS —and If* Still ■ True Today! iiMW rab a Handful of Peanuts . . enjoy fresh roosted peanuts while you shop Simml — 'shucks, we don’t core, throw ’em on the floor (the peanut shells We mean) and just pick up the many bargains you'll find on every floor. ’ Final Wind-Up. / Tonight-Friday-SaturdayAre Your Last Chances to Win a Part Of SIMMS ^522 CASH GlVO—A—itfay ~ A drawings Wt,’and you may win o prize of $29 SILVER DOLLARS. Ask for frne ticket Averyttme you're,in the store and thenwatch the winners board for your name. ijimms employees and members of their families are not eligible. We reserve the right to limit all quantities OOR BfST hRO BIGGESTSALE OF THE YEAR SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS Compare. This LOWER PRICE Anywhere Kleenex sheets Tissues tit .Owned apd Operated ■ By. Your frtendt ond—i Neighbors SiflM 1 >54 - flautttu* Bedrooms Nurserias The chapel wUljCOst aboutv$126,- : 066 including fiffnlrtringii add fees.' Builder is Sund Construction Co.,1 Oak Park ' « I Mr. Alfred G. Wilson and Rev. Robert F. Uermanson, minister of the church, will participate in the ground breaking . ceremonies along with Wendell Mason, the church’s clerk of session, who will preside.; 11 • Mrs. Wilson is donating an or- : gan to the-chape) in memory of her late husband. They formerly i oWhed the property whifch later WOOL FABRIC ard died1 at 1:12 a.m., nearly four hours after the assault. Their «ssailanf\ is now 'serving a life sentence in Jackson "Prison. He has never explained the reason for the attack. As, with most young ladies, appearance is important to Naomi. Her biggest regret about Yeturn-iiig to the hospital ft the fact that it Will be necessary to cuf NYLON 100% WOOL AND 80% WOOL-20% FABRICS - SEVERAL TYPES Spocial Purchase 2.99 and 3.99 Values became Lawnrldge Estates. The congregation Is hoping the! chapel win be ready for the first THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY,- AUGUST J, lQea Two Competitors Agree o , County Needs Super Salesman to Lure New Industry Consumers rvwtr . Ou., and|alwuld be prepared'to pay such beat location for new and cx-igruiproadliy what aa todivld- , fol,0 Howard. . They noted that many new in-ii panding businesses and Indus- Ml builaeaa or indue try will re- The planners agreed that a re-dustries have a tendency uf mt Wanted -r. a super salesman bf high, integrity, having sound judgment, an ability to write well and possibly an engineering background. A nun of these qualifications should be found' to promote . new Industrial development in Oakland County, qccerding to ' two competing power salesmen who should know. Robert S.-Howard, industrial development engineer for Detroit Edison Co. Their advice war sought, by AREA NEWS an individual $12,000 ►yearly,’ said Brewer. ' The committee, an offshoot of the County. Planning Commission, is asking the county ti hire a-director of an economic 'development program, yet to be developed. - They are- Horace L. Brewer, director of area development for the county’s npwty operative Eco- The announced goal of both the nomic Development Committee, j program and its director would ’Furthermore, the county be to sell Oakland County-ds the YOUNG COOK - Naomi Jean Reed, 14, prepares salads with her mother, Mrs. William -L. Reed, in the kitchen of g£ir home at $290 White Lake, White Lake Township. The vifc* tim of a brutal beating in March, Naomi will return to the hospital Aug. 12 to undergo extensive facial surgery. , ' :. Teen-Ager' Will Surgery toRemove Scars •■A county economic director Both Brewer and Howard ate familiar With such a- goal, fOr different reasons. ^ Hey compete in vying to steer new industries into their They noted that many new ln-fi; . , , . jstries have a tendency Uj kHilio would have to work up a quire in any new location., Ia Isearch center would provide alcnte around such a tenter ^merejspirltvnf pu bile ^cooperation this r • s p a C t, aa engineering brain-power pool on which area research people, are- available to throughout the area, said How-background can be most help-1 industry could draw. |them on a consulting basis. -lard. ' , • . ;;. respective firms have the franchise to provide gas and electrical power.' The prize in each, instance is another large oustomertbr either Consumers Power Co. or Detroit Edison. NATURE OF JOB They agreed, that if the county, is going to enter this promotion-al field in the general interest of the over-all community, that a super salesman is needed be- j cause of the very nature of the job. They described the field of luring Industries as highly competitive among communities even as it- Is between their respective companies. They further noted that, several counties already have the jump on Oakland County in this respect. into .... , j cities and smaller communities' are actively engaged in this com-j petition today, Brewer pointed j out. He estimated there are 35 communities in Oakland County alone competing for now lq-‘dustrles. In trying to coordinate these; efforts for the. general good of ‘the whole county, the director of, county program would have to* protect, the interests of each community so long ’as- it still has a chance of landing the, com-1 pawy. * . . 4 By JIM LONG WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -r. A teen-age girl will enter Pontiac General Hospital soon to undergo , operations Jo .erase the physical •cars of a nightmare four month? ago. cornea transplant’ but doctors! ed 'Storing Naomi’s recovery,” tell us that the eye ft too bqdly JaM Mnt^Rped.., damaged to do any-good," said Naomi’s mother, Mrs.- William L.J were said! Reed. ’In the event 1t is lost to the (-first bidder, the director ..should be wHL enough informed to be able to immediately offer other,1 I more particularly suited locations jin; the county for. consideration. ; Indelible, however, are toe emotional scars suffered by-Naomi Jean Reed toe evening of March .16. when she was critically beaten And her brother Leonard, 16, killed by ;A, Jong-time friend, Carl Case.* He attack occurred a quarter-mile away from the Reed home at 6296 White Lake. For a while it was bettered that Naomi might lose (be sight of her right eye, “But. it is getting stronger," said , Mrs. Reed. “She may not even have to wear glasses." — * And how is Naomi taking thg| prospect of another stay-hospital? LOOKING FORWARD ’Actually; Jean “This means all of the com- „ ----, ,. ra unities will have to be sure I "Especially all toe prayers that Aey caB ^ the dlrector; ere said." ■■ ____ .- -- . To date, ithas not been neces- l must understand that lf sary to make a withdrawal from]^ «n How long 14-year-old. Naomi will remain, in toe hospital after she is admitted Aug. 11 is uncertain. .. i shift the gain elsewhere in the} the Naomi- Jean Medical Fund, - , u~ early May by White , ***** th*n los€ th*.ben* SCt Ul> in cauv inojr uj tviuici -t .. ___ Lake Township officials. Hospital j j altogether, insurance has covered $1,900 irn . \ medical expenses so far. “The. director should be able. it . ''if'' it - to write well because at least; I Canister and. mail coritribu-arr turns to toe fund have reached™ byt,e‘t*r’KP®S*,b;y • — : - . followed by county , brochures he his fifst Contact with a prospect (nearly $1,900, and “officials -say I' . nr„aro that about $400 more is expected!has he,ped PreP*™-j from canistersnotyet returned. | “He should also be able to she's called by her parents) ft looking forward to it,” Mrs. Reed I said. “She wants to get it over. The sooner the better, so she can |wwfTtlril!iir:' .4*;' •——4- Ground Breaking Sunday PLASTIC SURGERY . Plastic surgery is required tor her forehead and toe left side bf her face, hit a number of times by a tire iron. A small metal plate will replace shattered bone near toe left temple. It will be necessary to reconstruct a bridge for her smashed • nose. Roots- of teeth knocked out in the attack will , have to be removed so that, eventually, she can be fitted with a plate. When Naomi does return-to classes at Holly Senior High School, she will be in the ninth grade, for Church Chapel in Avon Since being discharged from} AVON TOWNSHIP - CIm* mroting in Uwnridge Hall since the hosnital Aoril 13 the dav be- in« a five-year building drive, February, 1958. In fall of that fore Easter toSni hS riLted *"««* wi» * broken for W th€ chUrch was organized,' fore Easter, Naomt has adjusted ^ unfVersity Pres-land the building campaign' remarkably W*H. ^*su™*”g by terian Church following. Sun-[launched, Iintegral.part . - . ■ | ' _ * t . :l Lawnrjdge Hall will continue to -- ^ 'zM m^if,elconltemPortry|be.an integral part ot the entire During the Oakland CoanJjUJfc^1 ®ss,gn> {he chapeL alreadyL^^ - - z. "^^'jq^^jider sonstruction; will be ajme-f No Mwuat of medical knowl- Fair, whtto -heguto;.^^««^‘^^^ wklhLldd-: Architects Linn Smith Ass* edge will restore visioq to .teUniLsUI'^.^ter-4^i cltofa,.have de-Wt”pve - --- - IjteUtton. ‘ L sighed the chapel a* a church. left'eye. • -_— “Wq'haye had an offer of a Pick Manager of Detroit DSR Tt was while returning home, from a friend’s, where she whs working on a 4-H sewing project, that she and her brother^ yvere attacked on a country ‘•.fi road by Cake. ^ It^wSeing built On Adams, # solUrof'Crooks, on Lawn-ridge which the church Extending into the middle of purchased Vom toe Charts |lhe sanctuary,, toe chancel .will Burgess family 5tJ years ago. , .[he centered around a; communion* table. Directly overhead a Celtic congregation been Until toe day before she was [released from the hospital she was' listed in critical condition. 'she LOOKED WORSE “’‘“"V DETROIT (UPI) — Mayor Je-r police who saw the brother and route P. Cavanagh revealed yes- 8ister after ^ bating said terday hia choice as the new gen-|appeared ^ Naomi was in the) eral manager of the Department worse, condition of the two. Leon* of Street Railways is Lucas S. Miel, 55, s semlretired business-lian wlm no transportation experience. lUntil July Y, Miei was presiJ dent and general manager of toe | Commercial Steel Heat Treating Corp., Detroit ''Yesterday, toe DSR Commission appointed Manuel Zechman, 53. a Detroit attorney, to succeed Lap J. Sullivan to toe $l7r SI4-a-year jolt as D6R general "let. Sullivan had been acting jff her hair to operate The *:■ ‘ , - t . i m'NAVY- GlennRrUnder-' t0 .H*Q^ was graduated from Hony^auticran when th irst MicUgin University' ret“r?f? home fr°m the hWJJitaf p^Jd „oW plans ia enter will hale her shaven 0$Dcfcr Candid ate School, her hair grows back. ,vHe is tile son 'of Mr. awf Mrs. 'The th • ugh tf u lue s » j Glenn Underwood, 5680 Hills-at triends and strangers alike, , boro, Davisburg. Industrial su- suspended from’ the May 23. rsce enrisimas aunaav. .... !rt Stiutenberg is chairman of the building committee. gOWral manager until hia deatiLboti in moral support and ron- , pervision was his major at ** ’ tributions, has been appreciat- ^WMU. Rev. Hertnanaon said eatrljy con-tstruction of the church jwas made (possible through the aid of Pon-j iliac’s First Pretoy terian Church.; which contributed approximately, $10,000 toward the project. i SHOP MON., THURS., «l. * SAT. NIOHTS Till 9 It’s Nearly Hia Pollen-Count Time! Helps Relieve Sufferers from Hey Fever, Asthma, Allergies!. A1*K>IW sidcsi Dining Rooms Quick from staler smoky fM ch hu •f'n’iey, THE WONDERFUL NAUTILUS AIR PURIFIER $1988 Spocial.Purchase! Formerly Sold for Up to 49.951 No- need to breathe unhealthy ol is marvelous ptfAeble unit pulls dirty air 4e thraugh el) - thick filters'with-2 pounds of activotM charcoal granules—the some oir-perifying'principle used On the atomic submarine Nautilus. Plugs in onywhiry, hos a fuM one-year worronty. Filters much more air per minute than competing units anywhere' near Nt< prlte. Se« it'nowl jPaifa*M ffesuenyresj . . Level Terrific Price on Heavy Quality, Revetiible 9 by 12-Ft ROOM SIZE OVAL BRAID RUGS 4i'No rug pad needed ' • American mado • Groan or brown . a Size is approximate a No Monty Down it Matching sizts available Shop and Compare! . Famous H00VER Model 33 UPRIGHT SWEEPER • Boots as it swoops ps it doans > H8 Changes spood for best cleaning - automatically! : ttaite’* Rugt and Vacuum Cleaneri... Fifth Floor Phone FE fJSfl Severol lovely wool ond. wool-nylon blend ;'fabrici ot o sensational low prldel'Chaote from basket weaves, novelty weouUk-«ad flannels in - many colors for back-tb-Khoof and fall . Ail 54? wide. Sew and save noW) ratHee .T.TAdHA fhef ~ JPHE PONTIAC BfeESS,f THURSDAY, AUGUST I, im A—5 Dummy Aids Police With Patrol Duties BOISE, Idaho tfl-Sgt. Dean Bennett of the state police is' doing double duty as a law-enforcement officer these days. Not only does be patrol him-self, but his likeness sits by the tside of the road in a simulated police car setup on*highway 90* Trooper BtnhettWas the model for ftp officer la the iMckup, which is the exact sise of a state police ear. The Idea of the “silent patrol,” according to State Police Sppt Col. A. E. Perkins, 4s to shook tjhe unwary* driver to alertness as he drives by it. The realistic patrol car was designed, executed and donated to die (date by an advertising sign company. •. ^ N.Y.Potice Curb Painter NEW YORK (JR Thomas De Grezia drives around New York with % bucket of red paint. He paiilts curbs IS feet on each ride of fire hydrants so motor- ists, can Judge the rntyirngm. -distance." . . Jft’s helped everybody but De Grezia; He’s recfeived'two tick> ets for parking too close to hydrants while painting the curbs. Pe Grezia’s employer, who has a city contract to'paint the curbs, said Wednesday the company would p$y the tickets. An average steam locomotive Has about one mile of boiler tubing. Show. Bus Carries Welding Exhibition CHICAGO (ON) - A big yellow bus rolling from town to. town throughout the United States collects no fares and carries no pas- equipment for demonsttty'dng of a. variety of Chiemetron Corp.’? NCG gas-shielded arc - Welding processes and related equipment to welders, educators and otherg ta ths lndittry . It’s a “welding, roadshow.” The 30-foot vehicle is crammed with •'Tbe large amount of power required, bythe welding wits is supplied by a generator carried' aboard and a striped awning can be unfurled from .the side of the bus to cover' an outside demonstration area, Students Prison Profs COATESVILLE, Pa. (ft — All Bgjlook, Fred Herrick and Bob Bendlowicz are students at West Chester State college, but twice each week they becofoe teachers at Chester County Farms Prtyon was started in INI, more than 100 men have taken advantage of the opportunity to toarn. The three college juniors art the second set of students from the state school to serve as Volunteer instructors. 7 Since the educational program • V: St. Joseph* Mo., was the starting point tor the famous Pqtqr -in a unique school for prisoners Express Which Tan between St. Joseph and Sacramento, Calif., beginning in I860. CHARGE Y0UR PURCHASES SHOP MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 DOORS OPEN EVERY PAY AT 9:45 A M. Come see our superb collection of C Double Knit Wools SUMMER SPORTSWEAR BONAHZA! $197 > Were 2.99 to 6.99 $24" to $59?9 • Short Shorts! W Jomaicas! • Pedol Pushers! • Wrap Skirts!., We're)‘expecting d, smaii dot on this Oltel Denims, gaberdines sail-cloth * and tarpoon cottons and blends ie plaid; and solid, colors Including white. Sizes 8 to 18, most sizes >n most_ style*. Save to $5.00! A. HALF SIZE KNIT lor the womot.of fashion! Our dramatic three-piece ensemble of double knit wool with harmonizing tnultUiued Persian patterned shell ond framed collar. Exciting new colors sizes A 4% to 221%. • ' ' v R. EXTRAORDINARY ... how this elegant three-piece costume floiters every figure! Handsome cardigar over a scarfed sbort-sieived ond stud-fastened OwblouMrSkn skirt, double knitworijAdlaFdtno^w.SrzWlOto20. t*..-- . V- Moderate-Priced Drain... Third Floor MEN'S SALE! ash n Wear Cotton Short Leg and Sleeve MEN'S SUMMER PAJAMAS 2~$5 Cool short sleeve, knee length pajama* in button front coat or slipover middy style. Ideal for hot nights. Sizes A* B-C-D in solids and prints. Large Group of Men's Fine Quality SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS t . Many fabrics . . mod are wash and. wear. Button dowr and regular collars In stripes, plaids, embroideries solid colors and aigny more. S-M-L-XL. Charge several! ’ t ANOTHER CREAT VALUE FROM WAITE’S STREET FLOOR MBPS DEPTS. VERY FAMOUS BRAND FOUNDATION SPECIALS! LOW BACK COOL COTTON BRAS SELECTED VALUE! Town & Country PUTS Reg-10.99 your very favorite s in a cool In a eOol cotton, yie In sizes 32 to 2.95 rups. Limited -time -SKIPPIES" GIRDLES A PANTIE GIRDLES These ore the' famous brand - e "Sklppies" that are best-teUr 5-W fng styles at the regular price f0 5 95 .. ^yourtot sevingsl Sizes S-M- • L-XL - '' ' GIRLS’ COTTON KNIT SEPARATES Shown is {ust one of the pert flats jot nice savings.. /this one -in black leather with and adjustable lace for added fit, a different touch. Come select yours now atydver $3.00 savings! Sizas 3 to 6X tops . or pedal pushers Ware 1.99 Special Group of "$ummerettes" Women's Canvas Play Shoes * (AQQ Ties, slipons ond wedgies : in black, tan, ted. beige ond V,' • combinations. Most sizes. Sizes 7 to 12 tops or Jamaica* Ware 2.49 $U7 Now tythe.tm to sove on cotton knit ploy cfothesl Mat up seW in blue or brown. Knit tops ore In *ytee with a without collars. Charge sevenoll T" mte Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS 'Boats on County THURSDAY, AVGUST 1, IMS Hazardous as 1 .believe that our county water patrol should try lo our boating -enthusiasts realize that boats on the water present the Same -hazard that automobiles dov 6h streets. There must be, a sense of responsibility instille4 in the operator, so that he will respect both. the higli powered vehicle which he is operating and- also his neighbor, who prefers the 12 or 14 ifUp>-aside a burning cigarette down upon toe tows. ..■■■ ^ Since this practice may create an incentive Contrary to tol«P many-repeated warnings by- “Smoky the Bear,” I suggest the -Advertising Council and similar agencies use their influence to have stich advertising methods, corrected. . . .. V . ■ ■ , R.D. ^Any Clubs, Activities for Senior Citizens?’ Does Pontiac have a widow’s dub or s 'discussion club? Wha^ ‘Relax— They Agreed To Wait A While!' have reversed their role to onp of innovators. The * results will be watched with more than casual in-terest In marine circles. do the' people do between SO and 65 yean old? Is there a social group for this age bracket? . - f • Tally Ho. David Lawrenee.Says: ‘Slimmer Journalisraulnstitiite Worthwhile’ But something seems to teU us that before the end of his tour; the puzzlement and surprise of our visitor will have gone the way of all flesh, and he will be viewing . America’s hemlines with as much interest as its skylines. • Southern Solons Jab at Rights Bill Pact Signing Benefits E. Reich I thank you In behalf pf Michigan State UniverrityHigh .School Communication Arts Summer Institute for*your sponsorship of Lindt Saranen and Joy Ann DeLauter.' We-have bad enthusiastic comments * from all the students and feel that it was a wortawhil&ekperience. ■’ T' Mrs. Leta Reed » • conference Coordinator WASHINGTON — Sooner or lat- quickly to atreaty whose pro- r the trinlrnru in IKa froohr han. li oil __~r'- * - i_ By JAMES MARLOW - Associated Press News Analyst..., .WASHINGTON—Southern politicians have attacked President Kennedy’s, civil rights bill, now. in Congress, from seven ma'n directions. . But Mississippians particularly have per-scmally -attacked the President, and his brother, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy! Although the. announce! purpose of the bUI.is to guarantee Negroes equal treatment, Ute Southerners, all Democrats, .have spent little .Public Often Ignores Crime Rate Reports We have become nearly as hardened to periodic reports of accelerat-..... ing rate of crime increase as are the 4*™® on Negroe*:' rl8hts-miscreants on whom the_disquieting statistics are based. But a mild surprise—albeit, a wel-' come one—is occasioned by an FBI report that murders in 196? Showed a 2 per cent decline in number from the previous year.. And . the Nation’s police cleared up 93 per cent of those. ★ ’if ★ Unhappily,, however, that does mi indicate a. 93 per cent rate of conviction. Of, those cases dis-poeedof by*the courts last year,' about half resulted in dismissal, . acquittal or' reduction of the' charge, ~v— *' J The FBI analysis gives no consideration to the oft:heard complaint that the courts, through action , of either , bench or Jury, are prime to softness toward the perpetrators of ' crime.. ., ■ er, the trickery in the treaty ban? ning certain nuclear tests was bound to emerge, Jjyt It was hardly expected to become evident .. so quickly. 'For the stratagem by which the United and the othe,rl Western . powers are to be invei-1 gled into, a recog- LAWRENCE nition. of- the puppet, government’ of East Germany has just been '"revealed.-, . qr* ' f visions might be meaningless in themselves but which enabled him to attain a position of parity in the diplomatic world; not only for the Communist-bloc countries in Eastern Europe but for East Germany itself? .__It now becomes apparent what the tactics of the Soviets really were. It is inexplicable why the Western representatives were so ‘Company’s Claims Misrepresentations’ Bob Considine Says: Thoresen, Inc. claimed a-device iUalls “Pix:Fix” gave “movie- • clear television pictures in four mhuitia.” Now it has agreed to-ready to accept as Signatories all cease -and desist from misrepresentation to its advertising. The countries irrespective of whether company agreed to discontinuance of the misrepresentations. ; A’-■ ; ★ ’ \ ■ • it advertised Quit its device checked all signals and was the result of 'a famous electronic engineer’s discovery, that 100,000 people were using it'and that “movie-clear pictures’’ would ' __result. _ An tff these clalms are misrepreseBtatioMi. , / National Better BusinessBureau, Inc. NawYork , / . ‘ • -v*‘- • • they had toy real relationship to nuclear testing: Here .are the seven directions they've taken so far in statements at congressional committee hearings: The Kennedys are toying to grab more, power and have encouraged toe negroes’ activities; and the” bill is unconstitutional, is a MARLOW . shortcut, to tyranny, is an invitation to violence, and would deprive all Americans M- personal-, and property rights. The mast controversial pari *f the bin -the one which has brought the most stoeiuous -Sontoern objections — involves public accommodations. a,.!.________... A . jk .. A.-..' ' , it .would ban ’discrimination against Negroes in business places catering' jo the . public, such as stores; restaurants,' motels. PERSONAL ATTACKS The personal attacks on the President end Walter Uffiricht, head of the East German Cbmmuniri regime, announces that East Germany . will sign the treaty-after it has been formally - signed by^ the United States, Great Britain and -the: Soviet Union.' It advertises dramatically to the world toe acceptance of East Most Exciting Travel Joy Was Aboard Sidewheeler totoii HONOLULU This .was the -day for exciting travel in the. life of .the Considines of Swamp-poodle, Washington, D.C. This was toe day of the “St. Aloysius Parish picnic, to Marshall Hall, Md. The method of 22? «nw»ce wa, national agreements' with the West. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, Republican leader to the Senate, anticipated this very step when oh Tuesday of this week he Issued • statement which-laid: his' brother came' from three Mississippians Gov.' Ross Barnett, Atty. Gen. Joe T. As a matter of fact, intelligent studies of court performance are sadly lacking. Jddge And jury act from a wide variety of motives, only one of which may be an inclination to “take it easy” on the defendant. • ♦ ★ ★ , ★ ' So'it is not a simple matter of the police doing agreat Job In some fields and the courts not keeping pace; The figures also refute belief in some quarters that the courts are agencies of stem, retribution—eager to speed defendants toward death or life imprisonment. . .Obviously, much technical murder : and mayhem to never penalized at all. Patterson, and Sen. John F. Stennis — and from Alabama’s Gov. George *C. Wallace. Barnett accused the President of “Sowing seeds of. bate and violence,” said his brother is personally responsible for “putting mobs to the street,” and blamed both Kennedys for encouraging demonstrations, sit-ins, and local law violations. Patterson said Robert Kennedy has “dqfi-onsfrated his immatority, irresponsibility, ahd fiendish delight’’ in wielding power and_ that toe ‘ two; Kennedys are * '-’tar more" .. ^‘Ai^ nation can become a, party to the treaty automatically simply by notifying the Unit-■ ed States, the United. Kingdom and the Soviet Union that It accedes, to or has ratified the treaty... >; •••' i “Since the Soviet Union to 1M9 imposed on East Germany its puppet government known as toe 'Gentian Democratic Republic,’ the United States and the United Kingdom have refused, despite repeated Soviet urging, to acknowledge East Germany eig a state because its‘boundary claims violate the Potsdam agreement. . “Under tiie treaty- draft for a partial test than, East Germany, by the simple and, at present, side wheeler namqd t (j e Charles. McAllis- ^terrkaarSTn^ consigned to a museum or the. deep, One must] assume. Looking backjm from the view- CONSIDINE point of a subsequent lifetime of footloose living, this'annual excursion qbwn the muddy Potomac and the delights that awaited|us, about 15-miles. from home, still stands out ’as the most exciting travel experience of my life. •; through the day. And then the woe of getting back to the' Charles McAllister for the long voyage home. The born of the great ship would sobr alarmingly now and then, warning one and all that he would be left to tod terrors of a blacked-out amuse, ment park If be missed the boat. Once aboard, our Mother uSed * ♦oj rovfir ns with" nnwppflPnr*< fending off certain undefined TheAtotoitoc By United Press International Today TsTthuraday, Aug. 1, toe 213th da^of ,1903 with 132 to fol- ThH €oiintry Parson low. Tbe/moon is approkehtog^fidl a, ■ dangers she assured lurking to thje, night air. The morning Stars are Jupiter and Saturn. Hie evening stars are Mars and Saturn. Those born today include American author Herman.Melville, in ;ia& " ... / ' On this day to history: . — In 1790, the |irst U.S, census was taken, tlhe population was 5,929,214. things np 3lfbugh to gather supporters for yonr pause — you’ll * attract some . critics, too.” ..' .... In Washington: GOP May Have Datk Horse Race responsible” for racial violence than the “rutiilem^teSders who are promoting racial unrest.r\ . s - ■ ■- , ' .■ ' Sr , A ★ ’ • S tennis called the civil rights bill a “colossal grab for power by the attorney general.” Wallace accused toe President of bringing the nation “to the brink of civil war” by what he termed an attempt to appease the leaders of qk Negro civil rights demonstrations; South Carolina Hoy./Donald Russfell denounced the bill as “coercive legislation” which will, “breed resistance and perhaps violence.”.' " A # : ★ - ★ - ■ Louisiana ReGu. Jde-1). Waggoner Jr., said the President has issued on “open invitation Automation Providing ‘Shipshape’ Voyages ____________________ Automation, which turitoup In the ^ ma^vtolatice” ^ _______l . “ 7* w c gross fails to enact his bifl Negroes will seek a “remedy” ta the streets. must unexpected placed, has gone to aea. '. . To a landlubber, H would seem that ships in their silent and mi-'H jestic plying of ocean lanes would offer little fodder to the man-eating technology. •—it- '.it '1 ‘ it But reports indicate that in the 'years ahead there wilt he far fewer men going down to the sea In ships. A J a p a n e s e shipbuilder has launched a 29,000-ton ocean tanker, the sixth in a series ot Increasingly automated vessels. . The creW oC thls one ftumbers 31, with toe United States and the United Kingdom instruments of .accession to the' treaty would compel them under Section 5 to notify all other signatories that this' ‘state,’, which neither the ; Uflited States- nor the United .Kingdom recognizes as a ‘state,’ ’had become a party to the treaty.’.’ —. • There would be no recourse yhj der the treaty’s language. /CUBA, TOO" Communist -Cuba, by complying With procedures under article Hi, could, of course, qualify automatically as a party to the treaty. , * The treaty would prohibit Cuba from nuclear testing underwater, in the atmosphere and in outer* p‘cMm “*• A "feverish period of saving nickels i»receded each annual ex-/ pedition to the fqr-off amusement park named for John, Marshall. The younger members of the -family wo Bid. add to their meager treasure by going— throagh Tthe eld neighborhood around the railroad terminal collecting outdated .newspapers, . potties, rags and i c r a p s of metal to sell tor/k few pennies to the junk man on Northeast H Street. ' / ' _ Every “ridr’ at Marshall Hall, including the terrifying roller, coaster, epht a nickel.. . / w; fi w On the great day, my mother would see that we were By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NBA) - A year /before the Republican ^Na*. /tional Convention nominates its 1904 presidential candidate in San EDSON n«e3 are bemg Pennsylvania. There are two oth- All the presidential possibilities er governors, James A. , Rhodes who don’t get top place oh the of, Ohio and Mark Hatfield of GOP ticket may also be put In Oregon. . :• this class. v In -Congress there are. three faywite^son- Senators -r- Uotidah The most intriguing dark hors* Francisco, ' t h e AUott of ^Colorado, CUfford .Case ,who ^ ju,t come of ^ IaK MAAfMfl un (a* nf Nhur Tnrcov onn Thrnctnn R . . ^ ..... job seems up for gr-abs^ 7 Sixteen possi-biUties ready b e 1 ng mentioned. More [may be expect-'' of Nfcw Jersey, and iThruston Morton of Kentucky,'though the ktsT Wwo disclaim any interest. al- Finally, Rep. Janes. Byrnes Then you oome to the really. [ed. The fact that dark' horses of whom,there -are many nomi- six so far. Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel it in the runnlng and-ex-Sen. William F. Knowland indicates nobody has the nomlna- of California. fire being proposed tion sewed up. * « : . to head their state delegation as The current theory 6f some ob- ^orite son candidates for bar-, servers that’New York Gov. Nel- gaining purpose. There is an el-son Rockefeller and Arizona Sen. ement he« of keepmg- the ultra-Barry G• 3-ff pmrrryfe prkssl Thursday, august vims. Committee Okays Rules WASHINGTON (l/k) ^ Congressional tax wrttttS Tave unanimously appriVed legislation designed to .make home ownership one of te best hedges that an American .can (aka against inflation. i oa ncrampit to coto ^ The House Ways and Means Committee yesterday affirmed by a 334) vote an earlier decision to add special benefits for homeowners to the across-the-board rate reductions to income taxes President Kennedy wants enact- _ berth, notified tbet at a r«rn-n^ottng^of the' Com minion ol' m Ctty ot Pontiac, Michigan held Juts 1*63 by resoluthm It s>M declared io the tefiUtion Of tot City Ccaralsakm construct curb, gutter. -great and gravel •Dd releted w*r€ sn.Tellahr— -- end that the plan, profile of i>ald Improvement Is on T?*!» farther intended to construct ami) Improvement -la accord anoe with the plan, profile and) estimate, and that Sic —‘ thereof shall be defrayed by special aeoordlnc to frontage — the lots and panels of Avenue from Sarasota Avenu to taglw wood Avene-abell constitute the special assessment district to defray *3,»55.70 of the esUmated opel and eypenses thereof and that »1.#1J3 of the eettmated ( and espenaeetoareS. ahall be paid ft the Capital tmaroremenf Fund and I *570.00 the estimated coet for is stubs shall he defrayed * special sessment against Lota 50. to. 00. U, 04. 05. 00 Dixieland Bubdl vision. HOrK® IS HERBY GIVEN That the Commission of the City Fontlae. Michigan win matt to Commission Chamber on August JO. lsei a* • efttook p.m. to near suggssUons and nliMMM ----— k- s declared ti lar meeting of the OpmmtsslSB of the of Fontlec, Michigan held Mfjfc M ■y resolution It ■*--.—■ — intention of to construct cw ft-FuTf -—H Avenue at aa estimated cost ot 135.053. I plan, profile and estlmi It Is further tnteoded to eoustruet sale Improvement to accordance with fb< plan, profits and estimate, and mat the cost thereof shall be defrayed by special ’assessment r «"T,i^**,I to ■ froo*— ana that fcll of the lets and parcel--- . fronting upon either aim of gerasota Avenue from Oakland Avenue to Talla-hasses Avenue shall constitute Sts special assessment district to WW aa.M5.so of the arttwaiad cost —‘ Mto pensss thereof and that *11,330 — estlmsted cost and expenses thereof shall be paid from the Capital BUMNiMf rani and (*■“ ““ “ Jha nrttotajM **“*' lall bo deftaysd by i,W«M specie BuhSv ^’ifOTTCI) n HERBY OtVBf _ That the Commission of the City of rwittee.. *PjOtr~~ —4 -NOTICE OF INTENTION TO COR* STRUCT Curb, Outter, Oram and Oravel on Montlcello Avenue. You art hereby notified that at a regular meeting of the Ccimmtatlon of the CSty of Pontiac. Michigan held Ip* by resolution It was declared to be't Intention of the City Oetamtsatan construct euih,’ gutter, (fad* and na\ _ . and related wen on Menapeue Avenue Kb Orlando Avenue to InsUwood Ave-- — ----------------*-id cost Of *4.531.45. W a T3==r-‘- r pub- “'lt“ls7urther Intended to construct said ‘ rovetaent In accordance ulth **•-a profile ’ - * mate, and tha defrayed by si fronUng upon either side of Moottcello Avenue from Orlando Awnus tn.Jngto wood Avenue ehsrfl cOBiUtule ths specie! assessment district to defray 13,7*7.5C of the estimated sort and expenses thereof Jtnd that $1,753 *5 of ms estimated . coat and etpeam jheseef ahwlfbr “ from the Capital Improvement Put NOTICE MRERBY. GIVEN That th* Commission «f the City of PontlacT MIchlgan will meet to gtoj ,v'-"~t*TVir I*1*"**** f" Au«u*t 3°. 2 | o'cSocITpSTtoTreer iu*iei_-~ I objections that may ha made by The provision would grant a “one-in-a-lifetime’’ In break to taxpayers who sell their tames lar a profit after reaching the age of (5. }fhe treasury estimated that it would mean tax savings of til million a year to elderly homeowners. It was one of a number of tax revisions approved by the committee' as it began a final round of voting cd -a compromise version of Kennedy’s tax-revlsion-and-reduction program. ★ ★ ★ -In day-long balloting flie committee approved structural changes in tax law that would net about $655 million a year to additional income tax payments. Hie biggest revenue producer — denial of UA. tax deductions for payment of state and local- taxes on gasoline, cigarettes, alcohol and ante tags — accounted for $500 million of the. total. These and other revenue-producing revisions gtill to be voted upon are designed to limit , the bill’s final revenue loss to a maximum of about $10 billion after rate reductions for individuals and corporations art Included. PRESENT PRIVILEGE Under present law, homeowners already enjoy- - special tax privileges. A homeowner -can postpone indefinitely payment of taxes on profits from the sale of his home as long as he promptly reinvests the profits in the purchase of a more expensive residence. The legislation which the committee approved yesterday la aimed at solving the tax problem which arises at the end of the line when the retired homeowner decides to sell his home and either buy a cheaper one or.move to a tented apartment or house. At that pointy the committee agreed, the taxpayer should get ‘ohce-in-a-lifetime” tax break. Any profits from tha sale of [ residence by a taxpayer 65 or older would be tax exempt If he sold the home for $20,000 or lew. u. * ’ ★ ★ ’ ★ Under a formula which t h j-nWimiffoo approved, profits on homes selling fra* moire than $20,-000 would be partially tax exempt. * . For example, one-half of the profits would be tax exempt when ;a home was sold for $40,000; one-third of the profits would be fax 1 «u . Gray, JDevleburg DimaM H. Cunningham, Clawtoo end tonatanca E. Tolman. Clawson aeons J. Irak*, Oaj.eian eod Phyl-l« JE, Blllfter, Auburn Helfhte Bkndenon. Royal Oak and H, Birmingham . Obrecht, Bloomfield Hills Ua L. Bennett, Bloomfield BattUMl), maud Tte* - L. Spock, 2059 Martell ' rye,'26 W, Bennett and Don-y. -785 Kenilworth Carroll; Oxford and Ann I. Haverahav. 820 Boston and win 1AH Wnulnn. I.nbd Dnarl Olen R. Ward, 6M Arthur and Edpa I. Putnam, tn Arthur •' ^ *****-ft IU Mate and nlley W. Wilton. 20* Maplrcrest / George W. Callaghan, Romeo^ and baron J. Clin, Rochester vf L. i. Raah. Bocheater and Haiti B. bompton, Romeo __ Charles L ' Turner. vM* W. Wilson BJLgstivus’ai ind Lets J. JoSwlg. 229 E. Walton Oeone W. Watson, Hanoi Park and Baldwin ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 30" EldffrlC Model RD38-63 THE PONTIAC PnE&$.,.tHUESDAYt AU&UST. lk 1^63 Fine IS “PAID” — Louisville, Ky., Police Court clerk Harold Alwes bolds a Japanese 000-yen bill sent' to .the court to pay for a parking meter violation. The yen, worth $1.35, arrived in an envelope postiharked from the Army and Airforce postal service along with a duplteattof the parking ticket..The defendant actually owed $6 but the city is going to ,^setye for $1.38 “because a yen is better than nothing . ^ . O Marriage Licenses HERE'S WHY FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES ARE YOUR BEST BUY NOW! BIG TRAOE’I MS I JuFch3r5?l' si Penney’s color rhythms inarearugsl newest, liveliest accent rugs! colors individually inlaid! deep viscose rayon pile! 3 x5 Hurry... we expect these rugs to dance off our floors! The, styling is exciting... the colors are rich^. dramatic ... the quality is fabulous.. . the price incredible! Come feel'the deep ~pile77. Bee h6W beaulifuflywe colors are combined . . . see what careful workmanship! Wonderful to brighten a dull comer.add a splash: of color. anywhere in,the*house! Come see... hurry! colon: dramatic combinations -of blues, greens, browns, oranges. • You got doubls value! We need lots mora tradorlns! So you’ll got big, big allowances on your old appliance. And we're clearing out our '63 Frlgldaire appliances to make-way for i now shipment So they're priced to movefast.Limitedquantities, limited time! Come in right away for YoWbig values! HURRY! days ONLY! I Budget-priced FRIGIDAIRE 2-door refrigerator! • Giant 100-lb. zoro zona freezer ‘ with soparato door. • Automatic defrosting in refrigerator soction. • Twin Porcelain Enamel Hydrators— roomy storage door. ONLY With Trade Low-priced FRIGIDAIRE RANGE - With Instant Heat! 4-Speed-Heat surface unit gets'red hot in soconds. • Cook-Master minds oven-cooking ~r , for you automatically, o .Broil 100 times* —yetpever nood to \ dean your oven. ONLY •2H wmr Trade “ *Spatter-Fre« Broiler Optional FRIGIDAIRE WASHER Soaks-Washes-Automatically! • How 12-lb. Rapacity • Rinses extra dean and bright. • Cleans dothes inside and out.. ONLY i*204 with Trad* CLAYTON’S PENNETS MIRACLE MILE » Store Hours 9:30 a. m. tp.9 p. m. Quality Furriiture Priced Right! • 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. Phone 68Z-1100 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS I1LL9P.M. mm L retreads 4.(3939 4450 #4850 Your Choice of Fixtures 1 Wall Light iling Fixture if, .11.49 lalr(l balh kl or Rtf. $1.89 ceiling fixture mIcjHu weekend. ■n/VHEEL BALANCE Bifgfst Selection Ever! Slightly Used TAKE-OFFS! Coldspot Dehumidifiers Dry Damp House Air SpeeiaUy Priced! 11-pint eapoeity* ' Tim CENTER 1 FE 3-7068 3t W.MONTCALM I Jutt West of Baldwin New II.S. ROYAL TIRES I A—10 l THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSPAY. AUGUST 1, 1968 V Farmers spend an estimated produce crops' tUS to SUI minion annuaily fori million for m equipment, goods and services to I family living. • goods 1 Vernier Announces Swedish Spy Quit DONT OVERPAY FOR PRES0RIPI10NS... Shop at Yavr Neighborhood ] I.D.L DRUGSTORE LMkfirflwSIcB With the LB.L Triauglt that Wennerstrom was tagged as. a spy risk lour years ago; But Erlander claimed tip. security service lacked evidence until May, (when Wennerstrom was ar tested. ; New U.S. Bomber Faster Than Sound Sat Military Honor* for Docoatod General STOCKHOLM, Sweden Facing mounting criticism, Premier Tage Erlander told the nation' lagt night an exhaustive probe would be launched into the government’s alleged delay in arresting Air Force ,Coi. Stig Wennerstrom as a Soviet *py. Erlander paid the “extent of Wennerstrom’s criming! activity’ was learned only after he confessed that he had spied for the Soviet Union for 19 years. A special government Investigation commission has disclosed Iowa Convict Remains an Top of Water Tower FORT MADISON, Iowa (UPI) Convict William T„ Bradley' remained* atop the 125-foot water town* at the Iowa State Penitentiary today for the fifth consecutive day. EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)—A^oew fighter-bomber, with speed listed at about 1,000 miles an hour, has bs6n tested at this desert test'center. Northrop Cprp. said its F5A, designed to carry guns, bombs, missiles and napalm, is the only faster-than-sound U. S. aircraft capable of landing on «od fields close to combat areas. SANTA FE, N.M. (AP)-Maj. Gan. Patrick Jay Hurley will be buried Friday with military hon-| ore after services in St. Franda. Cathedral.---- ---...A The 80-year-old soldier diplomat died in his sleep Tuesday night at his home. . • >.;; Give your spare a Pair Killed in Car Crash Bradley, 46, apparently was protesting his 26-year sentence for assault and being, an habitual criminal, 1 Some of the planes are destined for use in military assistance program countries. •.' 1 DEARBORN MV— Elmer D. Upton, 45, of Garden City, andf Mrs. Caroline Kukurka, 41, of Dearborn Heights.vere killed yesterday, in a two-car head-on $ph on Hines Drive, jus! north of Dearborn Heights. You Can Count on Us...Quality Costs No More at Sear NATIONAL SEARSfH HOME APPLIANCE h Coldspot 13.7 Cu. Fh Refrigerator-Freezer Sale NO MONEY DOWN . on Sears Easy Payment Plan Forced-air cooling keeps frost away anti temperatures steady; even in 163-lb. true freezer. $pacemaster shelves and crispers snap in where you want. Egg basket; Auto Cube. Flush-Wall fit. See it tonight... at Sears! U14ES Top Freeser Model...... 1247 Sears Own Kenmore Console. 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Rondod picture tube reduces reflections, seats-1 of Hard- Sjlverlone Hi-Fi Tape Recorders teg. 9(19.99 99“ Electric Guitar, Amplifier and Case 59“ SEARS Reg. 96.9.99 \ NO MONEY DOWN*. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Whylet damp, humid summer air ruin yourhome? Ex-cesa humidity is uncomfortable’, damages furniture, promotes mildewing. *Dehumidifier removes tip to it pints of water from tke air in a 24 hour period. Appliance Dept.-Sean Main Batement DOWNTOWNPONTIAG i *if > PHONE FE 5-4171 New U.S. Royal tiros' are anginaarsd to keap your spars in the trunk King Tire Center’* KING SIZE deeds during INVENTORY REDUCTION Sell-A-Rama 50x14 White Sidewall* orand new U.S. ROYAL. THE PONTJAQ PRESS. THURSDAY, AVGUST I, 3963 A^-ll -Junior Editors Quiz oh QUESTION: How cak. » parachute prevent a person from falling tee fiat? ir ★. . ★' • ' ANSWER: The principle of the parachute has been known for Vloog tune; Leonardo da Vinci drew a sketch of a man using one in 1495. Rut it was a long time before people got up enough nerve to try them, for the first successful jump using a parachute was not made until 1783. When a man jumps from a plane, the force of gravity itarts to poll him down,'and he begins to move so fast that he would almost certainly be killed if. he hit .the ground. But if he has a parachute strapped to his back and pulls the ring attached to the “ripcord,” the rolled up parachute wtll pop out and begin to open. ' Then, as in the big picture, he will drift slowly down and can land oo the ground without injury. What has happened is that the very large, wide surface of the open parachute has offered resistance to the air. Inis resistance is hot enough to prevent the airman from ~ moving down, but it blows his tell just enough so he can tend safely. - • .• , ★ ★ dr ' ;!». . ... FOR YOU TO DO: You can see these principles, gravity and the resistance of the air, really'at Work if you make a parachute of your own as shown; If you haven’t a silk handkerchief, a handkerchief-sized 'Square of some other very light material will do. 'w ~ ‘ • _ v.; After making it, foil it up carefully and wrap the threads neatly ardund it. Then .toss it as high as you can into the air. Hie wind will carry it a good long way when opened. Be an. American Airlines i Stewardess Travel while you work!! U* iiwlw, sMm IraMsc •Mdtd—AMrlcss AJrttuM train* gas fraal • nymar* v • □ O Afa‘20-27 □ With Sehaal Sradaata □ rr.tart'taM □ W»lfA 105-140 , V ' □ Mara aormal vfskxi a i- ; SPECIAL INTERVIEW Sftturdiy, Auf. S. » A.M.-l P.M Aaiariaaa Airline, Ticket Counter Metropolitan Airport IMroH, Mlehtfon ’ -v‘ NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE . AMEFT/CAAf A//7F/A/ES® “An Equal Opportoaltr Cmptoyoe" Vatican Weekly Says K's Stand Aids Red Cause • VATICAN CITY ( AP)~The Vatican. weekly magazine L'Osservp-tore Della Domenca said Wednes-j day Premier Khrushchev regards[ peaceful coexistence as a\qulck| and easy way to assure ultimate, victory of the Communist cause. / i it it ' ' , Columnist Federico Alessandri-, tiL/aunriientuig on dSe MoliJbW' nuclear test ban trwjtjMn an editorial, wrote: ifc ; ★ “It Is evident that there has been a change on the part of the Moscow government. Must we assume, then, that communism also has changed? ★ ★ * “We must not forget that, for Khrushchev and the present' era of the Soviet Communist party and of all brotjner parties, coexistence is at the ptesftlt time tee easiest and quickest way far ultimate victory of the-fCommunist} Eliiiwte “sweatim” tanks til low-cost BripMIl* way! 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Complete with (traps and book*. 54-in. long. Eight suction, cops. 89ocnoo«w«* L mrrnrn gggDoqQpaan-sSr Craftsman Socket Sets ; with 69 Needed Pieces Regular separate prices -- --- / it fpl $65.24! Save $25.25 ^ >NEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan . ALLSTATE High Qualify Seat Belts Enjoy added auto safety. Our seat belts Reg. $4.99 ‘ exceed government, SAE, state require*’ gwinA mepts. DuPont nylon webbing, Ynetal-to* ‘ - Jmm .metal qqick release _bockle.. 7 colors. aW *pr7 Pair Consist* of 2 Belts for 1 Person Charge It Get this wide selection of most-needed sockets and wrenches. VrMi. drive sockets are kot-forged. Thin walls take heayy. strain. Wrenches of forged alloy ateel for lastwg service. Shop *til 9! Hardwire Dept., Main Basement Installed In.Your Car.... ALLSTATE Clear Plastic Seat Covers Kenmore Gas or Electric Ovens'and Surface Units a^uLrir .t *22.951 Heavy 12*Gauge Vinyl m 139?? . Sale! Color Bath Outfit With HOMARTFaucets Just say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears. See your new upholstery while yon protect it! Built-in “fade-stop” blocks* out harmful sun rays. Will not crack, split or discolor. Fite snugly. Egsy to. clean with' damp cloth.- Juy Row « . . save $5.18! Auto Accessaries, Perry St. Basement Regularly priced at $169,90 Complete built-in cooking! NO MONEY DOWN on Seay Easy Payment Plan lTunch oven, mechanical 1-hour timer. Thermostat Control, special low (140°) oven setting. Easy-clean, porcelain interior. Surface units; Isp-mount-contrhls. 4^59.95 Garbage:Disposal, “600” . . ,..... 44.88* 5169.95 Kenmore.portable Dishwasher .. 154.95 y-‘ ■ - f Plumbing and Heating Dept. Regular $202,29 Four Colon! *169 NO MONEY DOWN on Sean Eaay Payment Plan INSTALLED Bath Outfit (standard first floor replacement). Includes material, permit* and labor for., r, . . .*.,,. .. 294.50 Tub Enclosure, Reg. 839.95 33.88 v $79.9SVAnity Cabinet Lavatory-.. .....,. 69.88 , Perry St. Btuement . -. “*•' J ^ Satisfaction guaraitffced or your mon^r tack1* SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5*4171 'jk-a. THIS PONTIAC PltKSS, THUHSPAY, AUGUST t^MW8 Spectacular opportunity for a Huge Saying! As Senate ConSiders Signing Ike Is Noncommittal By JACK BELL ,ta withholding commitments fflr Associated Prefts Political Writer] tlto treaty. W A SHI tf GTO#f — Former plrkaen thanked Mansfield for President pwight D. Eisenhower his “generous statements.” He has* flipped" on a caution light for Republicans maneuvering gingerly into position for Senate com. sideration of the limited nucleSr test ban toeaty. Eisenhower’s .statement in Near York -Wednesday that the agreement between the United States, [the Soviet Union and Britain * to [halt all but underground teats has “some-advantages and some dim advantages” just, about sums up the majority opinion among Senate Republicans. ' Or. ■ 1 So, too, did'his refusal tb take a stand .on the pact'until military man and scientists have testified fully about all aspects of jt. ■ In language similar to the call added-that he would “lean over backward’’ not tor injure the President on a foreign policy matter. But.,it stuck m many Republicans minds that if the Senate ratifies the treaty, Kennedy would be the political beneficiary Reds Discover Escape Tunnel next year’s campaign of dny. eas-ing of world tensions that might ac&ppi&y the action. ..iT-J WANT FULL STORY Partly because of this and partly because they want to satisfy as well eta. they ,c$n constituents who are suspicibus of -possible Soviet trickery, Republicans generally Want to get a full accounting of the views of the military men and scientists to weigh along with those of Kennedy's representatives. V if fn the end they-come to the conclusion that Aiken already ' reached—that the advantaged outweigh the disadvantages' — the treaty probably would be assured of approval by a margin much larger than the required two-thirds of those voting. Undersecretary of State W. Av-ereil Harriman, who headed the American tdam at the treaty ne- diplofhatlcjgotlations, said Wednesday of the pact: “There's no secret agreement in this thing, no gimmick to It, na secret understanding.” Hq said the people of the world want to see an end to radioactive pollptioa of the atmosphere from above-ground nuclear testing. The Federation of American Scientists, meanwhile, entered a plug for Senate ratification, call-tog the agreement's first step toward control of the arms race. Senate Republican Leaded Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois for a “minute examination" of the treaty’s implications, Eisenhower added: “We must listen very closely.” Eisenhower’s noncommittal po-; sition obviously was disappointing. to president Kennedy and JewsAnalysi: Democratic cohgressional leaders. They would have liked an - em dorsement which might nudge GOP senators along toward favorable* vote; : . TWO AGREE For a time it looked as though the President would have. diffi* cutty in getting GOP representation at the Moscow signing ceremonies, But -he was able to persuade Sens. Leverett Saltonstall, and George P. . Aiken, R-Vt., to join the delegation which leaves Friday. ★ . r 'it. ■ Everybody concerned has said that partisanship oughttohaVe no part in the Senate’s debate on Mu treaty.' Ih,the Senate Wednesday,-Democratic Leader Mike Mafl&ield of Montana told his colleagues .thpt Dirksen imd Sen. Bourke B. Hick-enlooper,X-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Repitolican Policy,* Com-mittee, wereNpot being partisan BERLIN 1UPI) - Communist I -police today discovered a 50-yard-fl long tunnel under the--Berlinjl Wall and blocked' the escape plotil of “a large group” of refugees.® The communists detected . the I tunnel before it was completed.! and apparently none of the ref-jl ugees who planned to use it was ] arrested. ? * / a ★ ■ Eastern police discovered, thell tpnnel at a point 30 yprds behind [I the wall on the bprder of the | French sector. ,/ Informed sources said the j| tunnel was unfinished and still had many more yards to go to its goal in an East Berlin cel-ler. It began nnder an nnnsed I Jurick newsstand 20 yards inside west flirlln. The exact number of.East Bef.-jl liners who planned to use the|| tunnel when It broke through was [I unknown, but informed sources I said it was “large,” at least 12. T ■; ★ ★ ... it- " Eastern policfcr began to search I the bbrder for a tunnel last nightjl and stationed a border gOard and ! a police dog at a street corner. I A working party of 12 police-1 men began to dig at the cornerjl today and discovered the tunnel. I Western police who observed the I action did not see any arrests, j COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK ■■:Ml •• ... : ncaranfr - ___a ■presents The DETROfT LIONS FOOTBALL SAME INTRA- SQUAD SATURDAY, to Wisner Stadium... 8 P.M. General %%00 Reserved C FITZPATRICK’S PHARMACY OSMUNDS n - *■ ^’' - --V OSMUN’S TOWN AND COUNTRY. TEL-HURON* ROCERS SPORTING GOODS * , CRIFF'S GRILL - . - , \ . DR. JOHN HAROLD . %IUNT'S PET SHOP, TEL-HURON ‘ ' OLIVER UUICK \ ~ . £ ‘ CHIEF PONTIAC PHOTOENGRAVING-CO CAPITAL SHOP, m-HO RON, • CRUHIM CLEANERS Zionist Unit Collect Israeli Fund Agent WASHINGTON (UPI) - Thell | Senate Foreign Relations Com-1 mittee today made public testf- jf mony depicting, the . American [I Zionist Council .(AZC). as a “con-1 Sduit’’ through which funds, sup-jl piled by a registered foreton I [agent have been distributod. to or-1 ganik|ttona.and- individuals seek-1 | tog toxinfluence U.S. public opin-]| jonin favor ofjsrael. The sworn testimony showed that the AZC received slightly -more than $5 million from toe Jewish- Agtacy forlsrsel during the eight yean which ended Dec. 31, 1962. Isadore Hamlin, executive di- II rector of the Jewish agency’s I “American section” office to New I York, said his organization, which I is registered with the Justice De- I partment under __ the foreign ]l agents’ registration act, under- I wTote more than 80 per cent of I the Zionjst council’s budget untitlf January of this year. The foreign relations group scheduled a public meeting, today to follow up on toe testi-J mony, which was received at a private hearing on May 23. The senators are investigating lobbying activities by Americans in behalf .of foreign governments. The, AZC, with headquarters in I New York. is a top-level coordi-1 nating body in which nine major 11 U.S. Zionist groups, including I Hadassak and the Zionist Or-jl ganization of America, are rep-jf resented. 1 +■ " it . •* I In the published testimony, ■ Hamlin agreed with a statement! [by Committee Chariman J. Wil-tl Ham Futbright, D-Ark., that the J Zionist-council was “merely act-1 tog as a conduit” for large sums L ; of money supplied by the Jewishjl ^agency to help create a “favor- j lable image” of Israel among i molders of public .opinion in the I United States. - 1000 BONUS M TOP VALUE STAMPS with any purchase OHtr Expires S »ptc 1. I9S3 • ROY BROS. STANDARD STATION . '•jfeH 9Hl PAM . ! flffllii g'l 150 N. Saginaw St. Next to Sears QvtThei/Go/ FRIDAY-SATURDAY-MONDAY We've gone over our entire stock and selected hundreds of garments and drastically reduced them to move them out fast! We won't carry them over - Out They Go Now ... AT FANTASTIC REDUCTIONS! Look! Save V& to Vs the Original Price on Coal Summer Tropical XMTX Regular $55—$60—$65 Sellers. Out They Go At? Famous Haggar Slacks Take Your Choice Now At- e Dacron Blends "'o^Wosh *n* Wears e Plain Front* and Pleated - 0 Ivys and Continental* e All Sizes . ' / '• All Better Grade* 2 ...•15 PINC0RD SUITS $21951 SPORT COATS F1067I $5.95 famaqs Brand $3.95 and $4.95 Short Slesve A $C SPORT SHIRTS Cfor 9 $3.95 and $4.95 A KNIT SHIRTS Afor 9 $65 and STS Famous Brand* SUMMER SUITS 01 uptom $■* i)98 TROPICAL SLACKS 1A $35.00 QUALITY CAifl7 SPORT COATS 248? ».B SNORT SLEEVE $498 BAN-LON SHIRTS d Entire Stock S4.95 and $5.95 CAQD STRAW HATS «l Up to $5.95 Haggar Men's C Uqp WALKING SHORTS *» I ARCHIE BARNETT Barnetts 150 N. Saginaw St. Next to Sabirs Rememben — You Don't Need the Cask! tumsm, Open Friday and Mmday Nights ’til 9 P.M. THE PPyyiAC PfrBSS. THURSDAY, AUGEfST 1, W' A--fo JFK Takes Resignation of Aide to New Zealand WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Kennedy has accepted the resignation of Anthony b. Akers as U.S. ambasseodr to New Zealand.-* •' 1' Press Secretary Pierre .Salinger said‘yesterday that Akers, a former New York attorney,, would be given another government assignment to be announced later. Z Such o$ Writing/tox Congressman What/Tgu Doi^f^o Slw^Persdndlify Trpifs, Too ! By HAL NEW YOWt tAf) - What yt)U haven't done-tells what kind of person you anf almost as clearer SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE! . One Lot of Chiklrsn’s Play SHOES Ino Lot of T/en-age Dress f FRIDAY NIGHT SAGINAW I TffllPJL / * SHOE STREET WASHINGTON 111 - The Area Redevelopment' Administration announced today that Livingston -County, Mich., has been removed frSrn Its Ifiif Wtf&r eligible -for redevelopment assistance be- you nevefc' ‘ never tried to do, waA/ii makes an reverse W* dgraphy of your life—reveling to yoUTBfelf 'is well . as to strangers, BOYLE Just to get die game started, here’s a partial list of things not done by one man who, now past the Itett-cefitary mark, never hasr* 1 ' - # - ★ * * Owned a. square inch of soil. Piloted an airplane. Tipped a head waiter to get a table'. ’ '•* ★ • 4 * Bawled out the same bods twice. Kept a songbird—w a parrot-in a edge. —- ^1 w . • w . . Slept in a house in which George Washington had insomnia. Used a vacuum cleaner— Bought or carried a' briefcase. Borrowed money from a millionaire.*——'^' Seen a one-armed paperhanger with the hives, v* f Played any musical instrument except a pocket comb covered with a. .piece of tissue paper. Watched an eclipse. ent a night in. a haunted I Learned any oew dance since , Iwiw __________ , the fox trot. , Won a first prize in any kind oft Hunfed any "animal larger than lottery. la rabbit. ■ v ■; All flare and fiction, and 110 inches wide, ... but the detachable collar is real,.. die softest, richest kind of black Mouton*. The laminated . foam backing is real, too... real warm mid practically weightless. Ap accurate and pretty pretension, in sizes 5-15. .V. Hears WHY YOU SAVI AT aofelftt HAU • W» mII lor c«h onlyl ■; • TKoro or* HO credit chorgul Wo kovo no credit tsMttt . • You sore bocooto wo «o»ol Air-conditioned tor your shopping comfort. . > Plenty of Free Parking • IN PONTIAC—200 N. SAGINAW STREET II^ CLARKSTON-WATERFORD on Dixie Hwy. Just N. of Woterford Hill New PostalService” Is Proven Speedy A test of Pontiac’s new Accelerated Business Collection and Delivery (ABCD) postal service proved that the fast mail-delivery system works. * The, Press tested the four-hour delivery promises of the post office Tuesday with a special first class letter. t Addressed to Max Adams, manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of. Commerce, the letter was mailed at 10:46 a.m. in an ABCD, designated mailbox in front of the Huron Building. The mailbox stands about 200 feet from the Chamber Of Commerce‘offices in the Biker Building at Huron and Wayne. The letter arrived at the chamber offices at 1:55 p.m. — more than an hour, inside the four-hour time period, the post office inaugurated its ABCD service in downtown Pontiac last week. Under the system, a letter mailed in dc-- signatech mailboxes by^'Tff.m. wifi be delivered, by 3 p.m. the same day. ‘ The-service is in operation Monday, through Friday. Twenty* eight collection pointer have'beet* designated in the downtown Cashed a check’ at an out-of- town hank.______ Stayed awake cleaj through a Wagneriah opera. -.Spoken a foreign language. Inhaled a cigarette. .... ■ » A i. An" ' i,i. Cooked any dish more complicated than bacon and scrambled Learned how to tune a television set in—and wifeout—at the same time. Failed ,to give h quarter to a panhandler without feeling guilty. Believedrhrany superstition except that knocking on wood helps bring good hick. . w ★ * - Written a letter to bis congressman. Shaken hands with a king or qQeen. Had a manicure in a barber shop. • v . Met a payroll—or missed a paycheck. , r ' ;J; ★ dt ★ Looked" up~ht the stars on a summer night*'without wondering where he’d come from—cod where he’d go. • : " ''| ’ So what’s on yoiir list of things undofie that helped make you who and what you,-are? - ~ Off Federal Aid List cause of cOntlnulrig lmprove-‘ WifilY ifr'WIlflTfpHBirTwii .dHjf * S e v e n U.S. Presidents iNw>. born la log cabins: Jefferson, Jackson, -Fillmore, Buchanan, Lbijcobii Garfield and Artyur. 1963 ^ ---MODEL CLOtErOI/T! ffimw MUST SELL ' ALL MODELS IN STOCK! BRAND NEW 1963 Rambler' 2-Door Highest Trade-In Allowance! *1594 Delivery! SUPERIORRAMBLER 550 OAKLANDAVE. - FE 5-0421 BIG SAVINGS! To insure that you get the very best foVyour money..»at the lowest possible cost.-.. W1CKES offers only nationally-recognized brand name goods. Only top-quality, time-proven products are qoldi For your protection and complete satisfactionj WICKES will accept nothing less! > PATIO DOORS BUILDING SUPPLIES Phonix OVERHEAD GARAGE DOORS RANCHER STYLE OARAGE DOORS- S-Section • Roll-up With Light* Glased (Reduce* Condeniation) (Equipped with Keyed Lock*) g/.av l uar dm 66.50 16*7.,.. 79.50 J Oarage floors - 8*7..........$ 8x0.......... 9*7.......... 9x8........... •: Rancher 5-Seetion Oarage------ Carvod Panol* Made of California Redwood ■: 9x7,.......... .$87.50 16x7........ \ Phsnix Magic-Lite Fiberglass Qarag^Doors ■i 9x7.............$85.50 16x7. \ v ' ' (Other Size* on Order Only) : Comm ere ial 1%” Garage Doors— 5-Section Roll-up — Torxion Spring Included i 10x101 Sect ion Open For Glazing...,-..., j ... 12x10 1 Section Open For Glazing....... . $ 92.50 fe .. 129.50. fe .. 131.50 fe ...$165.50 || fij InStock ^ 6' (2-Lite) ..$116.90 OnOrdorOnly 8' (2-L(to).. * 141.80 3 V (3-Lite) ., 172.65 • | t2' (4-Lite) . . 224.70 Screen... Screen.. Screen,.. 2 Screens . ..$13.60 ... 16.00 ..,13.60* . . 27.20 7!fTi6.50 | Single Glaitd - 3/16" Thick :: On Order Only ?. 6'(2-Llto)..$ 54.33 • Screen . . . $9.40 fi 8'(2-Lite).. 63.83 Screen . . . 113K . $140.00 fe 9' (3-Lite).. 106.73 Screen . . . 9.40* ’.. 168.00 | 12' (4-Lite) ..121.45 Scrota . . . 11.20 YOUR COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER SIDING • P: If- ■ fei Upson 5iamg ana hccbsiviic* — %"—12"x] 2* Primed Siding .. ...... 4x6 Primed Trim Blit Siding (All’l 6'Lengths). . 44"-1x8 Primed Trim Bilt Siding (Air) 6' Lengths)..,. • • •. %<*_24"x12' All Waathet. 1 . 4 Soffit System, Primed* 1 Side e ;(Includes3Vents),pc..... ••.. Siding Fasteners, per 100 .... — . $161.73 ft 221.70 P > .> ~221.70 || .. 3.98 W: 2.50 feiji - Garage end Bern Siding- Dry White Spruce-Kiln Dried 1x6 Pattpm 106 (tio. 2 & Better?... Tx8 Pattern 116 (Na..2 A Better).. . .....122.30 M 122.50 :-fe: Etling Aluminum Siding-.025 - Without Backor . . ........... sq.,. Styrofoam Backor.......... sq. .. .02(TThick — Without BackSr-tq.;. ...;$25.65 m .... 5.10 fife ....-2Tt65 sfe HOUSE DOORS Pino Entrance Door*— 1W — Glared -Model612-9-Utf Cro<* Panel (Toxic Treated) 3^6-S... $24.00 Model EDX-12 . Diainond-Lite / (Toxic Treated) 2- 8x6-8... $33.85 3- 0x6-8... 34.30 © : Owens-Coming BUILDING INSULATION j|§ Fiberglas Roll Blankets-^ Per .16" and 24"Ce«ter* m T w^iconomy...................... fife V Medium, 16" Only........... fife 2" Medium (Foil Faced), 16* Only.... fe-f 3* FuH Thick.............. ■ fife 3" Thick (Foil Faced)..... ...... feS' 3" Thick (Double Fell. 16" Only..... |:fe: 6“ Fiberglas Batts (16"fc48")..... P 6“Silltfedler..................... 1000 Sq. Ft. ......$28.50 ......... 37.50 49.50 49.00 61.25 73.50 .........86.75 ......if&t 1.29 Etting Entronoe. Fromos- £ ^ Rough Opening Double, 10" Sidelites ... 64%x84 ... Double, 14" Sidelites, .. 7246x84 .. -Single, 14" only . . . 5544x84 . ■ (OnOrdorOnly) fife Now EHing fife ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOORS • $71.50 fife Storm and Screen Inserts, Ail.Hardware Included ■ !7tSA5 H ' 24i>64 3-0x6-B *• 5$7?- m ■ $25.95 CASH AND CARRY PRICES BATHROOM ACCESSORIES *»V, ' Medicine Cabinets - Swinging Door, . w/Fluorescent Side Lifts v R.0.14"x20ShL* ■ P *17.50 * Swinging Door, . Sliding Doors with R.b.-14"xl8?~ Top Fluorasciint Lit# No Lite* ' (R.O. S0"x20") *5.25 *25.95 Slidiflfl Doors, • • V V* - No L»o... 10.50 •fe __.24x21 Stdinless.SteelSiqgle Bowl w/BuiltrinRim .21.25 •fe _ 32x21 'Stainless Steel Double Bowl w/Built-in Rim. 27.95 fe 42x21 Magnif-o, Cast Iron' Double Bowl fe ‘White, $84:95 j Color. ................ 89.^5 | v . .COPPER.WATER LINE . fe- _J?M" Copper, Rigid- V H" 44“ 1« 114" •fe 20* Lengths, per length 2.60 4.10 6.40, 9.05 fe| "L" Copper, Rigid— fe: 20* Lengths, per length. . 3.50 5.40 fe____Copper, Soft — •. . . , fe: 60* CPils, pericoil ...y 6.75 11.05 fe Copper, Soft - " . *’■' - fe: 60* Ceils, per coil... 1.415 24.30 Revere GLASS-LINED WATER HEATERS | Featuring: Fiberglas. Insulation,. Balked Enamel Finish, Magnesium Anode Rad, YQ0% Safety Shut-of* Control*. . — • -- - •• ^ GAS HEATERS : *47.50 40-Gal., Glass .... *56,85 ELECTRIC HEATERS 52^3al., (Low-Boy). ■ *60.50 52-Gal., Glass,V*i: *70.85, 82-dol-. Glass.*89.75 FINAIMCING SERVICE AVAILABLE • INDEPENDENT TRUCKING SERVICE Prompt Delivery Reasonable Rates PLUMBING, HEATHS ELECTRICAL 752-3501 HIGHWAY M-53 IVi MILES SOUTH OF ROMEO Prompt Delivery Reasonable Rates PLUMBING, HEATING ELECTRICAL 752-3504 L A' S T 2-DAYS .L H-H.fi .111 llv-CLEARANCE SALE ENDS SATURDAY / IMIS aid SHOES EAGLE, NORTHBROOK, FROST A FROST, KINGSWOOD 70 PETROCEUI, ,J. HART SCHAFFNER & MARX, FASHION PARK NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS - Dacron is a registered T,M- lor duPont's polyester fibre. yog wont, for this >017 big selection features special Dacron-wools, Dacrtfn- wool-mohairs, pure silks, Mohair-worsteds, Dacrpn-silk-wools, and wash 'n' wear Ddcron * " * ' , t r , — ~ blends. Choose from one- and two-trouser suits or versatile 3 in 1 Good Mixer) in regular and natural ^boulder models. Arid,there's a full selection of shades and patterns, os well as our Customarily complete selection of proportioned sizes. This group includes some year-round weight suits and the same big savings. aui, HART SCHAFFNER A MARX, HAMMONTON PARK, AUSTIN LEEDS EAGLE, NORTHBROOK, KINGSWO9D, MONTCLAIR, PETROCELLI, EAGLE, HAMMONTON PARK, AUSTIN LEEDS last two days to save on STORTSWEAR FULL-FASHION BAN-ION SHIRTS in short sleeve style, with 3-button collar placet. S, M, L, XL.. 4.79 FAMOUS MAKER BERMUDA SHORTS in ivy ond continental styles. Sizes 30-40 in solids’and pattern's..........3.99 FAMOUS MAKER SWIMWEAR in lastex, stretch and boxer: styles. .Sizes 3Q to 40 .. ......... .. . 3.99 FAMOUS MAKER SPORT SHIRTS in short-sleeve, regular col-: lor styles. Plaids, stripes, checks. S, M, L, XL. .199, 4.99 COTTON KNIT SHIRT-JACS with cardigan front and jacket waistband. S, M, L, XL......i. s.159 WASH 'N' WEAR DACRON BLEND SUCKS in pleated, belted _ond beltless plain front styles. Dacron-blend bengalines, shadow checks/ iridescents. ........ .. .4.79, 6.79 DACRON-WORSTED SUMMER SUCKS in trim single-pleat "and slim plain-front styles. Cool bengaline. weave.K. 7.99 IRIDESCENT DAttON-WOOL TROPICAL SUCKS in a trim plain-front beltless style with adjustable waistband. .9.99 FORSTMANN WOOL AND IMPORTED FABRIC SUCKS. One-pleat models in Forstmann tropical worsteds; plain-front belted models in imported light-weight worsteds... .19.85 SUMMER SPORT COATS. Dacron-cottons in muted plajds, checks. Dacron-cotton seersuckers, and imported Ipdia madras ______......;.............................. .2195 DACRON.WORSHD SPORT COATS in trim natural shoulder. 3-button and 2-button regular models. Plaids and checks. 2195-35.95 FAMOUS MAKER SPORT COATS in tropical worsteds,’pure Silks and fine Dacron-worsteds. Many shades and patterns. ~ *4195-7195 No Charge for AHeratiens STRAW NATS. Famous molds. WRIGHT ARCH PRESERVERS, year-round shoes. . FURNISHINGS NECKWEAR. All-silks, Dacron blends, repps, foulards, shan- ■ Tungs, neat patterns. Many shades.......... HOSE. Nylon-stretch, ban-ions, fancy cottons, open-weave cottons, Dacron-cottons .............. .................79c HOSE. Fancy orlons, solid and fancy Lisles, nylon-stretch ond imported, English wools. ................ ..........98c Open-weave briefs ............. Open-weave undershirts /... . . Open-weave Tee-shirts ,.... . ...........r. . r; Cotton tee shirts ..... ..... ».. .. .3 for Cotton- undershirts .........................3 for Imported lisle undershirts ............: Fancy pattern boxer shorts T, .-.<,4'.',;-. .• Famous Maker posture brfafs.................. Posture Gord boxer .shorts. i....; PAJAMAS. Regular coat style; some famous mokes. .189 SUMMER PAJAMAS. Short-sleeve, knee-length.. 199, 3.89 '"p - THE PONTIAC. PRESS ; THURgPAfr, AUtfUST 1, 1968 ; ^PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. Complete No Mono/ Down - $3.00 o Week Complete with with' oloctric joctor, all ac rrs A COOlr POOL-— Instructor Mifcthm . Dennis (right) gives stirr.o-diving pointers to Diane Cu&aBkat the* Alpine- Motei pool, where swimming-instructions are offered for both .Waterford end White Lake township young- sters: Looking om (from left) art COimie Bwi-ley. .lifeguard Marilyn Nichols and Robert. Lawyer', director of the Waterford Township Recreation Department. These Youngsters Are Learning Fundamentals Of Shimming From Waterford Township Recreation Department Instructors At Elizabeth Lake, One Of Five Lakes Used For The Suinmer Program the right to represent the town-1 will end Aug. 9. Swimming at the ship in the .finals last week in {outdoor- pool, however, will con-Livonia. jtinue until Aug. 18 and the .day Most of the summer activities camp will extend through Aug. 23. Waterford Township’s comprehensive summer recreation pro-. gram has attracted morjrpartici-pation this season than ever .before. . - " _ -7 ★ . k . - Most of the attendance increase has been recorded’in the swimming program and day camp.. Playground participation is about] at last year's level. , / Recreation department .director Robert Lawyer attributes tile climb from 782 swim pro- gram participants last year, to 1,919 this season to both the warmer weather and the addition of a swimming pool facility. “Besides the five lakes used last summer, we now alsio utilise the Alpine Motel swimming pool,”. Lawyer said. ★ • ★/: ir" Carolyn Klender directs the lake $.wim program with a staff of five assistants while Marcelene Dennis supervises sessions at the WATCH THAT GRIP --- Tennis instructor Sue Wisenberg emphasizes, the importance of the grip as" she coaches .Paul Atkins on the Waterford Township High School court;. pool, assisted by Marilyn Nichols. |from 195 last year.; to 190 this jerball and tennis, respectively, lior Olympic trials -held earlier Registration in the day camp summer. Drops of 130 to 122.and A midsummer highlight of the this month. Youngsters from all conducted at the Highland Rec>| 120 to 109 were recorded to btoop-j recreation program was the juh-1 area playgrounds doi reation Area by Mrs. Warren Al- . - _______ ton has reached 440 compared to 333 youngsterslast summer. Paul Atkins and his staff of nine playground directors and nine assistants conduct both indoor and outside activities at'13 elementary school sites. The largest single phase summer recreation prograi playgrounds had a registration of 2,254 laOt. year and are expected to record about the same total when the season ends Aug. 9. Playground activities include such events as softball and trade while the indoor activities include leathercraft, copper tooling, rice painting andplaque painting. INCREASED PARTICIPATION Other, summer programs have shown increased partic tion this summer over last year "are baseball with 789 registrants compared to 688 in. 1962, and basketball with 60 compared to 45/ Participation dropped slightly in three activities. Regis tratiop for softball fell Her Husband Deserted Just Once Too Often . STANTON, England. (URI) -Josephine (Candy) Hollingworth said today she reported her estranged husband Leslie as a 10-year deserter from the British arnty because it was “the only way’’ ;to saveiheto. marriage. ‘Like any than on the run he had itchy feet,”, she said. “He] was restless. I was- never.sure THEY ROUGH IT TOO - Not only day dampers, but counselors , and even the ctitop program director all rough it at the Highland Recreation Area. Counselor Mary Phyllis Grile, (left) is shown here pouring water for camp director Mrs. Warren Allen. AIMING FOR FENCE-r-Paul Rummell, 9, digs in for a hefty cut at the ball during a game at the Waterford Center School playground- - Craig Gibson,. 10, is the catcher. - If you're looking fprSIZE and SAVINGS. where he was. HAS THE PERFECT DIAMOND FOR YOU! QUARTER CARAT OF DIAMONDS Alluring, scintillating, blazingly alive with tha brilliance of Parisian nights. Exquisite diamonds beautifully ..set in finest mountings of 14 karat gold; BELL AND HOWELL COLOR MOVIE OUTFIT „ fov' 5900 No Men#/ Down - $1.25 a Week HALF CARAT OMHAMONDS Regal brilliance reflected in magnificent diamonds totaling a full half carat. Thrill her now with fine diamonds in skillfully styled T4 karat gold mountings. $5.00 Dowif — $2.50 a Wook ONE FULL CARAT OF DIAMONDS Largo fiery diamonds with the brilliance 6nd fascination of the stani. Exquisitely styled and sot in-, master-crafted mountings of finest 14 karat gold." ' Y ' ■ 7 yy " Y . Carrying Cat# 24900 B#dg#t T#mit Lam mmm mm. IMPORTED 2-TIER TID-BITTRAY Ideal for see; yourself, at a gift lefe'ef toeee Colorful, hand - painted diihas accented by a rich maple finished wood stand. Perfoct for- any TiKSAlE SPEEDWAY phoyeh. HIGH-SPEED - TESTED ^ BUY NOW AT SPECIAL LOW PAPNELLI JONES' PRICES ON ALL RIVERSIDES IN AUGUST! PONTIAC ONLY! Curb Service Now Available" Store Hours: 9:S0 A. M. to 9:00 P.M. ( Monday through 'Saturday PONTIAC MALL The Deepening Crisis Political Leverage of Negro, Increasing /Editor'* Note — In a potentially powerful weapon in hi* fight ayabtet segregation, the Negro it onOuuiUtieaUy taking part today in a massive vote registration campaign. At the * number grows, the political leverage of the Negro increases. “Ttaurtb in o speciaBud series of artMee ty-The Associated Press on the racial crtiiij ' By RELMAN MORIN TUSKEGEE, Ala. (ft - The Negro woman says she i* 50 years old and wants to register to vote. She doesn’t know the procedure, neve: having done itu v In the offices of the Tuskegee Civic Association, a Negro organisation, (hey give her • sample copy of the Alabama registration farm. Slowly, studying it Une by line, "She fills in the form. A TCA official finds some minor errors but otherwise, he says, the papers are in order . He tells her where, and on which days. she can file a red application. ■ \ .... - *♦ ■ ★* ★ H it is accepted, she will be a registered voter. •, A reporter questions her. She says, Simply: “I just want to become a citizen of our country. Being registered will make me a foil citizen.” -SCENE RE-ENACTED This scene -r with Its immense potentialities for the Negro movement—is being re-enacted in hundreds of cities in the Southloday. It is tiie result of the voter-registration drive. Throughout the -South, Negro organisations are working to register .more ot their people, thousands ot mot and women who never voted before. Aa the number grows, the political leverage of the Negro Here, potentially, is a powerful weapoir in bis fight against segregation. The drive moves through many channels. The woman in Tuskegee may have decided to try to register after hearing a constantly-repeated radio appeal, attending a meeting, or simply receiving a hand-bfli v ■ : ■ CONDUCT CANVASS Elsewhere, Negro workers can-gass a residential district on registration days, ringing doorbells. H the housewife isn’t- registered, they urge her to go to the courthouse immediately. H she has no. transportation, they pnh vide it" If she says she eaa’t leave her children, they offer to baby- < 1 [County. The judge wrote in his Orjhev station themselves in memorandum that: / ■■ municipal buildings.; “18 affiants, more than half of A, Negro comes in for, say, a whom had college or advanced driver's license. (degrees,, were rejected , for such They ask whether he is regis-, inconsequential, formal, techni-tered. If not, they try to per- cal mistakes,” suade him to do so, there and then. •■ w . ■ -- The sign, reads, “I'm not registered because I’m a mula. What’s your excuse?” W: A ■ * ♦ Speaking of the voter registration drives, Bishop George W. Baber of tiie African Methodist Episcopal Church said: ■ "The Dbjectivu of the campaign would he accomplished substantially by registering and voting every single, eligible voter within sight or' hearing of our membership. “Qnr goal Is a minimum of two ntilUoa new Negro voten, North and South." The movement is steady and seems to be gaining momentum. What are the results?. Exact figures for the South as a whole are not complete. However, the Department of justice and the Southern Regional-Council’s “voter education project” pinpoint the changes in some specific areas. • , - ■ ★ ★ . ★ In Tennessee’s Haywood and Fayette counties, a Justice Department official said, Negro registration Has jumped from ISO to about 5-,000 in five years. Bullock County, Alabama, had four Negro voters on the rolls in 1961, he said. Now the figure is tjmr............1....— In the city of Montgomery, the rate of registration of Negroes used to be about M0 a year. Now It it about MO per month, be said. Statistics on 11 Southern states, compiled by the Southern Regional Council; indicate that about one-fourth of the Negroes of Voting age are registered. The fig-tires show a total of 5,045,000, of whom 1,344,000 are registered. Wiley Branton, an SRC executive, said the figures are incomplete, some counties being as yet untabulated. COMPARISON Comparable figures for the white voting population in these states show 17,539,000, of whom 10,568,000 are registered. . i...jW -• it q Especially hi areas where Negroes outnumber the whites sometimes by as much as five to one—many devices have been used to keeppolitical power in the hands of the whites. Registration boards met irregularly arjd at widely spaced intervals; They worked slowly, and then quit for the day, while Negron were still waiting fai une to file applications. Or they rejected applications on technical shall be 'no imprisonment for debt’.”’ BARNETTS EXPLANATION Mississippi’s Gov. Rosa Barnett, ascribed tiie small number of registered Negroes in Us state to other cauaat.------_ w ^ * * In a copyrighted interview with U. S. News and World Report,” Mhfr--------- “The primary reasons fewer Negro voters include illiteracy, apathy, and the law requiring payment of a poll tax. So many Negroes are net qualified to vote.” As to literacy qualifications for registering, be said: “Tliay have to be able to -read and understand and interpret a section of the constitution of the state of JtiissUSippr We don’t believe in having ignorant people elect oar official!." .,• ★ ♦ e Aa Negro voting strength increases, what are the political implications for a candidate for pub-office in the South? ready — although it is. difficult to say with certainty — that the Negro vote tipped the balance in certain elections. Seme TesUeete of Bbrmtag-ham, Ala., for example, say Negro ballots eosted T. Eugene (Bill) Cornier from the city government. Other* are net-so sure. In any case, the thousands of new Negro yotes can he today to go to the man with 'moderate” views on segregation and against the candidate running on a program of strict “white supremacy.” In a^dSPL election, this could spell the difference. In TUskegee, Ala., Negro lead- ers say they already outnumber the whites in registered voten. Thu, theoretically, -they could elect a mayor and an entire city government. But William P. Mitchell, executive secretary of the Tuskegee vie Association, says: "We would discourage an all-Negro slate. We don’t want Negro domination and we have preached that for years, ' fo; ‘I I*"' ' 'We just want to vote for but qualified man.” Next: The economic effects. Hear Befter j Crystal Clarity—No Static DANAVOX FULL 2 YEARS OF FREE SERVICE SAVE 20% THURSDAY- FRIDAY - SATURDAY Was 19900 NOW For Example, on March IT, 1961, after s long legal battle, a federal court in Alabama ruled lawsuit involving Macon Another device, is the-“voter dink;” This is a meeting whidi Negro instructor! show would-be applicants the technicalities of registering, how to correctly fill out the forms. In Tuskegee alone, during the month of June, there were 19 such “clinics.” ALABAMA MULE And there is .file famous Alabama mule. He walks through the struts of Huntsville, carrying a sandwich billboard. He ordered the bdard to register 64 Negroes and to give priority attention to 4Q0 applicants on the waiting list: . * Similarly, in testimony before the House judiciary Committee, Atty, Gen. Robert -F. Kennedy said: “In' one county. Negroes have been required to copy and inter-pret long, archaic‘ sections of the constitution, and .then have bun rejected for omissions of punctuation. Whites, opeanwhile have bun tasked to copy such simple provisions as, “There PAUL’S \ 0PEN.24 HOURS • HAMBURGERS \ “ SS4 South Telegraph \ MA 4-1 PONTIAC 785'Pontioc Trait Walled lake PARNILU JONES TEST-DRIVES WARDS RIVERSIDE ST-107 TIRE AT SPEEDS UP TO 138.46HIPH! n Wmmum § J| Riverside 4-SQUARE GUARANTEE |. Asoinil road bacor4c Hi !b. 3, NaNamWa xnica at «l brambn. 4, Saliifactib. .wiik.4 naNaa* RIVERSIDE TUT CAR The Mercury Marauder Parnell! Jones used to set a new Pikes Peak Hill-Climb record. PARNILU JONES TESTED RIVERSIDE TIRES ON THE INDIANAPQLIS 500 SPEEDWAY TRACK. THEY DELIVERED OUTSTANDING ' PERFORMANCE FOR tflM AT STRAIGHT- ‘ AWAY SPEEDS UP TO 138.46 MPHI Pornelli Jones, record-breaking winner of the ’63 Indianapolis 500-mile race, proves Riverside tires arebuiitto last! 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MOSftJW (UP!) -Yl* Bolshoi Ballet Will open a 10-week tour of the United states and Canda^n Study Ionosphere Space Data Foy-Johnston FSUat and Wallpaper iyflRA'CLE J#DUE $$ m mwi CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)i —Scientist? are studying datar ra- ground stations and orbiting spacecraft, especially in deter-mining the most effective- radio dioed from apayioad which rfced 8,000 jniles into space to studythe frequencies. ionosphere. The probe, hurled upward Tuesday by a Blue Scout rocket,; relayed nearly four hours til excellent signals before burning up as planned during atmospheric re-entry above the Indian Ocean., 28 Bodies Wash Ashore in Arabian Plane Crash BOMJJAYVlndia (Af)-A total of 28 bodies were reported today to have washed ashore since the cnfah Sunday of a United Arab Airlines Jet into the Arabian Sea. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID We Pick 'Up FI 2-0200 pwr$«w Jtli'* fell Coma. ini Dent•. miss this ’ outstanding opportunity fo savo ... hurry to Wotdtl^i. see tha latest stylos, colors ... • at low. pre-season prices I ’' The Air Force experiment was one clj^veral being conducted at various \j.S. launching bases to chart the ionosphere, layers of globe-circling electrical particles which affect communications on earth. The studies could lead to better. communications between Thousabds of fishermen are helping police in the quest for the remains of the 63 passengers and crew of the Comet Jetliner which crashed in k heavy rain while eri route from TOkyo to Cairo. aia. *.*s Pretty cozy... the way our fluffy Acrilan* acrylic pile flips to box quilted nylon! Warm peaked hood, with braid trim andV front/ Zipper pockets on nylon side, knit Wristlets for snug warmth. Surprisingly quick-care— it's machine washable. Sizes from 4 do 6x. 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Superb reproduetiew. 2 speeds. 'I plays 3", 5" or 7" reels. 90 days Fie# • seryice. 6 months parts warranty. In* J eludes mike, extra empty reel and foil : reel of tape. \ AUTOMATIC 2 SPEAKER STEREO PH0R0 I; True dual-channel stereo i: with 2 speakers. Flip car-i.~ Way* By Dlt WILLIAM BRADY Mr.JE.-T. W/Writes: / ' ‘.‘Probably , you are familiar }. with ‘Urn Wisdom of the -Body,’ j: by Walter B. Cannon, professor j of physiology at Hairod. The $ chapter on calcium should inter-j est you., 4 “You are right about-calcium, 11 think. I have always “been a l heavy milk drinker, having been [ raised on a farm. At M l am|( I quite yuppie and read without l glasses. •*1 have seen no reference in your column to the value of milk as a source of vitamin A, sometimes called the eye-pro-tecting vitamin. ** “I believe you are right about : calcium raising the pain thresh-: old. I have often noticed that I : seem less sensitive tp . aches and : pains than many. tut I think you are wrong : when you lay so much emphasis \ on teeth. My mouth Is a dentist’ j nightmare —. only three lower i teeth and a broken upper plate J left. The plate was made when ‘Ml bad more teeth than I have t n6W.” from childhood np to the present. I hit a three-bagger by teadh ing that persons whose Intake of calcium ahd vitamta JL4s ad» quate, have fewer aches afig pains and hence are not a^irio eaters, as so many uninformed or misinformed Americans Ore. This ‘ i simply applied physiology. Onrof the five functibhseHu^ ium enumerated in Samson Wright’s “Applied Physiology,” 5th ed., Oxford Press/is that it ‘regulates excitability of nerve fibres and nefrve centres. A h ★ I lay a good deal of emphasis Jjinn JEWELERS ONE SOUTH SAGINAW-FE 5-5731 Let’s say I got a base on ball once; struck out and hit a three-bagger once. That wouW^make my batting average $00, anyway. I talked about milk as a source of vitamin A» although I have said repeatedly that whole fresh milk, cream and butter- are the best sources of vitamin A in the everyday -diet.„ I struck out on teeth. That Is to say I igy as much emphasis ns possible on the Importance of keeping teeth functionally efficient — one’s own or the dentist’ yet evidently many readers of hlgher-than-average intelligence, such as yourself, Mr. W., still think I am wrong about it. For all I know, maybe the dentists themselves think so— only rerely do I hear from a dentist, unless it is to reprove me for my teaching (1) that brushing the teeth doesn’t prevent decay and (1) that so-called pyorrhea Is degeneration -of jaw, tissues due to.malnu-trition (nutritional deficiency) oh thd importance of a good daily ration of milk in the everyday diet. This means that everyone should consume not less than lti pints (three glasses) of milk daily, or, if one wishes to enjoy better • than • average nutritional condition the daily, ration of hulk should be a quart. Primarily this is advisable because milk is ’ the best food source of calcium. But it is difficult to teach simpletons these things. - Of course I don’t know; but l am more and more impressed with the idea that att adequate daily ration of calcium and vitamin D (the vitamin essential for utilization of calcium) is good prophylaxis against not only tetany (painful nocturnal leg cramps in persons who have passed middle age, or so-called growing pains in. young children) bpt also against angina pectoris and coronary thrombosis. (Copyright,. IMS) HOURS: Mon., Thurs., Fri., tat. M '. Tues., Wed. M 2266 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD 5 FE 4-5216 ' . 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BLOOMFIELD OFFICE North Woodward at Square Lake Road YOUR NEW NEIGHBOR—our Bloomfield Office—is providing all our bank's*services immediately while plans are being completed for the Hue banking structure to be erected on North Woodward at Square Like Road. THE BLOOMFIELD OFFICE will have unexcelled facilities— for checking and savings, loans of all types; s.afe deposit boxes and complete trust service. Drive-id windows and . ample free parking are included in the plans, with ' appropriate landscaping, qf the property. Your NE"^ NEIGHBOR welcomes friends and customers; old and new, for all hanking services. BANK of tk COMMONWEALTH Resources $547,000,000 ^ BLOOMFIELD OFFICE . 'X MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY: 10 A.M. to 5 P.*M. FRIDAYS: 10 A M. to 6 P.M. Y fMi,.- opesinuMRi-MUtiu SINGLE COAT COVERS MOST SURFACES. EASY TO APPLY WITH BRUSH, ROBLER OR SPRAYER DRIES TO A LASTING FINISH IN- 24 HRS. WHITE, AND COLORS PRICED FOR A TIGHT BUDGET Famous “PRO” HOUSE PAINT SENSATIONALLY PRICED, 2 CAL. EXTERIOR HOUSE PAINT $048 GAL. MATCHES OR RXCRBD8 PERFORMANCE OF OTHER f ~~ ONB COAT COVERS ITS OWN COLOR • , SELF-CLKANINQ. NON-CHALK 1 NO APPLIES RAWLY .. . DRIBS ? QUICKLY WHITE AND COLORS 3 ONE COAT ACRYLIC LATEX HOUSE PAINT NO PRIME! NEEDED*^ 98 GAL • tax Y StrRPACK I THE MBIT SO 9000 ITS ~~ — SOU WITH A DOUBLE GUARANTEE VICTOR MONEY-SAVING EXTERIOR DAYS SPECIALS" SHINGLES . BRVCK, CKMKNT BLOCK rUJW* SMOOTHLY -NO LAP MARKS DRIES IN M MINS. -LETS YOU PAINT IN WET WEATHER :« BLISTERING AND PEEUNO practically eliminated . w^*~ • TOOLS CLEAN UP WITH SOAP AND WATER eWHITE AND COLORS »sys*r m fmti wN 398 GAL klMML iiEXTERIOR TRIM & DECK ENAMEL SHOP'1 CLOTHS 1-0'9#H \ __ 22c each |- *** um» • MASKING TAPE | YARDS! | 1' ---Aft- ilV ANOULAR 86< .... - J lOMO HANDIC SAM r— 1 fESi'S^ JSPMT MINT1 j PAINT POT I liUMSO CAN m'W |L AT 1i o coiors | PAINT THINNER j GAL’ I 19*'39 • one coat Covers any COLOR • NON-FADING, HUSH GIORR " - 1 • GIVES.RICH. EXTRA. TOUOK PINUK - ~ .. • PRIES SMOOTH-NO BRUSH MARKS -..— • RESIST* PEELING, MIL-1 DEW, RUST • WHITE AND COLORS P/UMT BRUSHES JJfS IN YOUR CAN UDDERS WOOD 4 FT. ....»*$ *17 5 iFT. ....... $ 3.77 STEFS Aft. $477 ■XltmiONS 16 x«* 5 JM iaTTNmONS n x ..$ 9.97 24 FT. X..$1497 VICTOR FAINT CENTERS OPEN I MON. THRU FRI. 9 TO 9 SATURDAY 9 TO 6 L . Ova 50 VICTOR PAINT CENTERS TqAOt^HiOUT TNI MIDWEST I'-.-' M.rrS.ndi.. Shown AT.II.klr Only .( xlor.s I.lilrd Rrl.w: ” ' t 138 N. SAGINAW 906 W. HURON v *- Downtown^faiilijK Opp. Tel-Huron Center l Op*n Moil, and Fri. 9 to 9—Other Day* 9. to 6 - Closed Sundays •- THE yONTJAC ftRKgS, THUft«I^AY/AtjGt;S(t 1, 19,63 / Plenty of Free Parking * WALK LESS * SHOP EASIER * SAVE MORE, Most Stem Dint (nor Night til 9 Fit. Fashion loaders for over 30 years SALE SPECIAL fHITE COTTON SHIRT-CLASSICS ADVERTISED Perfect Match-Mates for Girls! GOOD THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ORLY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE TERRIFIC BUYSI • Regularly 3.00 . With short sleeves, for misses 30-36.. • Regularly 4.00 with long sleeves, for misses 30-42 .., 19* I49 \ 'tep right up to good grooming 1 Surest way to keep your wardrobe at | the peak of perfection at all times is i to entrust yopr dry-cleaning to us.. b Both Locations -Tel-Huron and 26 E. Huron full-fashioned flat knit nylon SWEATERi full-fashioned stretch nylon PANTS SilM 74, to, 12, U ipi *,clX Open Every Night Yfl 9 ch7l»reNsV * Uss Tour Security Chsrfs rE S-l allOccasiort . summer dresses formerly *9.98 to *19.98 Many styles, and fabrics in sSlids, .prints and novelties for, juniors, misses, half-sizes. Dark and light colors. ~~ Wmi^LMANB I TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER LAST 3 DAYS SHOE SALE 20% to 50% OFF FRENCH SHRINER-TAYLOR AAADE BASS OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR AVAILABLE AT TEL-HURON STORE ONLY HUSH PUPPIES Open Nights 7 w* WRIGLEYS 49,93 Now *6“ ( )SMUN'S^-~X2 V - M _ ~ownivw>lew-mjip- ^ STORES FOR MIN wi neen IfRESGE’S | m —the family's choice CLOSE-OUT SALE 0H~~rr^ Us RECORDS Stereo and Monourak 33'/3 L.P. Top Name Artists, Bands, Pops, Country K >z\ and Western Special Law Price to 1 school \fashions Wools for Back to School! and Early Fall Sewing Queen Ann by Carletex WASHABLE FLANNEL 54 Inches Wide-85% Wool, 15% Nylon “IToit’l Shrink Omi of Fhn—— Many colon to choose from, including tile new Mallard. , Blue and Cranberry. 1 yard makes rf beautiful skirt, also ideal for suits, and Jackets.- *298r.H Other Wools to $5.98 Yard WOOL BLENDS 54 INCHES WIDE V 60% Wool, 30% Nylon, 10% Acrylic Solid and Plaids , •J98 yard ClfHRnNH CAMERA MART mvilxsYor FOR MEN tFLORSHIEM’S High ft Mid tfeels *6 Funsters *5 —'Hrr OlD W^\ j-0 id r Values to 24.95 GROUP OF AMERICAN GIRL Men’s Crape Sola —“ CANVAS SHOES EES$200'»if Man’s Leather Sandals $2 KEDETTE’S & SUN STEPS IBS Values to 4.99 WOMEN’S Stripe Tennis Shoes \ By Wall J op Known J OH MANY.OTHER SAVINGS TMRU-0UT THE STORE SEW ’n SAVE FABRIC SHOP Ph. FE 6-4451 TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Secu rltyCha rge ffon oredltere OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL 9 SECURITY CHARGE. ACCOUNT SERVICE Tel-Huron Shopping Center FE 4-029(9 7 "Oakland County's lAtruest ShoeSidra” 1 @/oti <*#e coec/us/My in viiepl» _ parents us often becomes the way we continue to punish ourselves for offending otters. This is what psychologists call "compulsion” — a blind and rigid obedience to- some forgotten con-clusioh we made as helpless, frightened little boys and gins. It a form of slavery. (AU rights reserved. Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) Sepiembe planned by Carole Elaine ,Moss, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl £, Moss, West Highland Drive; and Marine Cpl. Bo-tin,iH Clyde Milton, son of the Bonnie Miltons of Orton Avenue. Bride-Elect Is Honored ■ v Mrs. Harold Sontag and Nancy Prutow* honored August bridewlect Virginia Barron at a shower Wednesday evening in die Prutow home oh North Telegraph Road. ^Tte hdnoree is the daugh-ler of Mrr,^hiliip--Schwarti of Michigan Avenue'and Flor-entino Barron of Waco, Tex. r Arriving from Lake Lure, N. C., for the party was Mrs. future bridegroom, Michael Vincent Bell. Gloria Buck came from Lansing. Ease Tired Feet A topical foot powder to prevent, relieve and arrest -athlete’s foot and other superficial fungus infections of'-the skin has just been introduced in aerosol form. The powder -spray is also ideal for easing hot, tired arid aching feet. BjrttyTs Announced Mr. #nd Mrs. Andrew Van-der Vennen of Grand Rapids (Dot Slosson, formerly of .Pohtiac)v announce thto birth of their second child and first daughter, Kristeen Dawn, July 90. Even i.ng * Foshion^ Long beaded crepes and fur-trimmed brocade suits will b* “to" for fall cpcktafl and theater events.' The largest reserves of uranium ore so far discovered in the nation- are in New Mexico.-----j Shorn poo ond Sot $1.00 Permanents $5.00 and. up Thurs., dSrk, Sat. BtfKsie’s Beauty Shop 684-0525 - Milford. MWh. import epociol Holism wool knits* exclusively ours at one low price $ff88 Bravol It'jrhere, the savings event of* the7year on our better than-, ever Italian knit collection. All -thb important hew looks* .ir^flaT^”" Cvqol knit* made just for ds with • the care we'.khoto'you appreciate. All have fuJJ-faSbjdned*. ragjan v , sleeves, elastifized waists and ~ (new detailing!/All in sizes*8 to __ ,• 16/ olive, .charcoal, red, royal, brown,, tobpe. Mock in groupw. Save now ot-thia-one low price. • Double-check the costume..-your best fashion bet for days at home or on vacation. Sew it in practical cotton print or check, j Printed Pattern 45Q3: Women’i [sizes 36, 38, 40, 42 . 44, 46, 48. Size 36 dress 37* yards 35-inch; jacket 144 yards. ^ [ Fifty .denis in coins for this a pattern—add 15 cents tor each] § pattern for first-class mailing] and special handling. Send to || Anne 'Adams,‘. -care of Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York'It N.Y. Print plainly name, address] |jj’ with zone, size and 'style number. ji|i ^ Pattern free! Mail coupon in-1 4slde new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog, ready nowl Over 300 de-sign ideasT^all sizes. Send 50 :* cents for Catalc^>. • I*: Labor Statistics Over half the women in the.: labor fprce are {harried and over half ‘-of these have children under 18, reports the Population'Reference Bureau. MiRACLEMILI SHOgHNfiXiNTIft- -Rpods SALE OF SUMMER MERCHANDISE • BATHING SUITS • DRESSES ' • POLOS - • SHIRTS • BID0SET • CANVAS SHOES -»SHORTS USE YOUR Security CHARGE i SHORT SETS • SKIRTS • PAJAMAS ^HAR THURS., FRI., SAT. Only CHILDRENS SHOPS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER SQUARE LAKE & TELEGRAPH ROS. FE 8-9522 Opnn M 9:00 l FINAL UVSS 23 OES Units | Set Breakfast Jor Sunday jT . ’■"* Twenty * three dhantCTs-ef* |ii;; the Order of the Estofn Star, i$ Oakland County Association, 1$ will serve their arniual break- I S Test 8 to llitya.m. Sunday IS at the Clarksto'n Community# I £; ‘ Center, / - ' V - Included on the menu will . be pancakes, sausage and apr 4 plesauce. Tickets may be purchased at the door, and ^friends are welcome.-' n f . For reservations, contact Gordon E. Stayt, Earmon Howard, Charles H. Moore or William Leach: HYMAN AFPELMAN Russian Bom, World-“ ‘ Used Evangelist ^ DR. APPLEMAN 7:30 P M. NIGHTLY I U - SUNDAY ^: -3:00 P.M. & 7:00 P.M. J HEAR THESETOPICS: THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 “what’s my line?41 ; . Zehr.Sings,in Gospel Concert / FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 “SIGNED, SEALED BUT NOT DELIVERED” shop every night monday thru Saturday to ,9 p.m. WIN KELiM AN’S tel-huron shopping center yNetimode 2 pair $1.50 82 N. Sagiiiaw St. ^ SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 “WHEN COMMUNISM RULES THE WORLD” HEAR THE JOIN THE ★ MASS CHOIR A t BIG SING featuring Bass-Baritone Recording Artists ELLIS ZEHR % ★ y * EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH I TENT CATHEDRAL ^ ’ 825 Golf Drive (Nixt to the Pontiac City Golf Course} ' | A Plenty of FREfe PARKING - FREE Staffed NURSERY I ‘DIAMOND FLUSH"-Jacquard. ^ 14.98 CABLE V-NECK. 11.88 DIAMOND ■ CARDIGAN. 11.88 “ON THE SQUARE" Jacquard. 14.98 ■|UPETAL DOT" Embroidery. 19.99 THK PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1968 Modernistic design on this crisp tailored blouse features a circlet collar and soft rolled-up sleeves. In pink and green orinLit-eests abnat-ffl—- Boredom is perhaps the most vicious enemy of a vibrant personality. Any woman of man who desires to possess that elusive and magic quality-ncharm—cannot afford tohe bored, or to bore. The old saying that “An interested person is an interesting one” is so very true, trite though it may sonnd. If you obterve. yott^jHad that the person who charms you seems to hang-on your every word. If you are a fastidious person, one with good taste and a degree Prof. States Science Needs More Girls MADISON, N. J. {OPD - The number of women training for careers in science is h- . creasing,_but Jtktt rapidly -anough. So says Dr. William G. Tor-pey, manpower specialist, Office of Emergency Planning, 'the federal government. Torpey,‘writing in the current issue of “University Woman,” said additional numbers of women should be enrolled >in collegiate programs to “meet even current demands” for scientists. He predicted, there would be ‘ 'opportunities for considerable additional numbers of women” in the field. Hfi added that "a fundamental reason for the very small mum ber . . .is a traditional (al- ; —though seemingly irrational) ~ attitude that adepce is a man’s field.” The “University Woman” is a quarterly ‘magazine published on the camps here of Fairleigh Dickinson Univer-sity. of discrimination, you will, of necessity, have a wide-awake, questioning mind. However, being critical is a habit. It may flatter your ego, but it is a deathblow to charm. The habit of criticizing comes easily, and creates; a temporary feeling of superiority. It may become a chronic habit before you realizeit. We all know the person who isn’t satisfied with anything. The dinner was awful, the play was awful, and if^the reviews read otherwise, the reviewers don't know their business. Everyone they mefet is stupid. At acquaintance of mine once said, “fikHvidualism, unless it can become socialized,- is truly a pain in the ndck to society,” and no truer words were ever spoken. Individuality as such, can be a charming trait. But it cain also ' be overemphasized to the point that the individualist becomes the eccentric. Boredom blankets life with a fog of drabness, and .can even cause physical illness. It certainly takes the spark out of personality. If you wish my free leaflet, *‘Grace and Charm,” send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 57 to Josephine Lawman in care of The jPontlac Press. kAJ n DUSir ust n ess Setting— ' Shaping — Styling—‘ and of course Selling Wigs'a Things, lac. 91 West long Luke Rd. Bloomfield Mils, Bjildu , ■ ■ ' M74S49 . ' gloves when you wash-windows or hang out clothes. , . Polish golf irons with silver polish to make them look like new. * — Lt A.. S. V * ★' • . • v-4s.- * DEAR POLLY— Here is a sewing tip: When making darts in the waist of a dress, I pin a piece ofUghtweight cardboard or a long envelope from th« top dots to the dot at the end of the dart and machine stitch alonAthe edge of the cardboard. The cardboard opt of a hoseHxnc is -excellent. This is a fast method and the lines will be straight and will come to a nice point. ~ ' • —-•••, . T * — Mrs; H. L ' “»«*r ' .*■ , ■■ it/-, it it DEAR POLLY — Whenever our family makes telephone calls, we "put the 10 or 25 cents in a little “kitty’* bank that ' stays near the telephone.Then whep the telephone bin comes, we have the money ready. --^iss D. H. is _ is it. . ' ■ " X ----- DEAR POLLV^ I find ironing hoard damps uafeful in reupholstering piano stools, chairs, etc. 7. First clamp the material in pltfce with the spring-type^ clamps and hammer-in the upholstery tacks. Remove clamps. No more slipping add sliding, no more baggy upholstery. You get a tight, professional look. ‘ —A. McG. it' it' it DEAR POLLY — My daughter in Denver sends me your . column, which I enjoy so much. Here is a vacation hint: When a family is going mi a vacation trip by cat,. pack suitcases for the children in layers, a complete change in each layer. Allow two days’ wear for a pair of blue jeans. The clean' clothes are never messed over; everything for one change is together. Put all soiled clothes in another suitcase or a laundry bag. Mrs. M.M. it ★ ' it " ■ * . DEAR POLLY — l have learned ao many practical household hints from ttfe column that it. is a pleasure to pass on one of my own. When I polish the arms, sides and legs of chairs that have cloth seats and backs, I always hold' a large square of brown paper over die upholstered part while I polish the wood, to protect the Upholstery. I keep this paper over the seat orback even while I am rubbing off the excess polish. 'v ' -Mrt.t. w. Share your favorite homempking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver-dollar if Polly'uses yoiir ideas in Polly’s Pointers. Golf League Holds Picnic The Ladies Tuesday Tee Golf League held its annual picnic following a round, of golf Tuesday.. Mrs. Robert L. Taft opened her Shoreview Drive' home for the occasion. Refreshments were saved after a brief business meeting. Mrs. ‘ William Sparks and Mrs. Thomas Zielinski headed the committee work for the day. Plans were - completed for4 -the husband’s day picnic Aug., 18 at the Deer. Run Drive ' home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Anselmi. Mrs. Raymond Kniesel, Mrs. Calvin C. Warner and Mrs. George W Parsons will work on die committees for, this event. .' - Winners for the team {day for the day included Mrs. J. L. Root and Mrs. D. E. Van-tine, first-place winners; Mfs. Kniesel and Mrs. Taft, second-place winners and Mrs. Euell Smith and Mrs. Warner, third-place winners. Mrs. Addy- Wiezcerak and Mrs. Taft were prize whiners for low gross and low net, re--spectivtly. Garden Group Names Officers for Coming?Y$ar Mri. Warren C. eleven of Tiltoore Drive was hostess Tuesday evening to theLor- tion. . .★ w; ’ it ■ The president, Mrs. Ray Aden, appointed -- committee chairmen for die coming dub year. . 7,... 77 Mrs. James Mood- Twill serve on the civic improvement committee; Mrs. Fred B a r n father, conservation; Mrs. Glen E. Hickson, conservation; Mrs. Robert Humphreysand Mrs. Robert Smith, marketing; Mrs. eleven, program; Mrs. Robert Smith, publicity ami library; Mrs. 'Joseph Carpenter,. telephone^ and Mrs. Elvin McCarty, hospitality. Party Honors Naturalized Citizen Group ■\’7,’..'T.T A graduation party. Monday. evening ^ tba daiaroom ar Pontiac Central lRm. School honored members cl Janice. Antona's group who became naturalized In court l a s t week. v—, 7 Mrs. Lee Hill and Americanism chairmen, Mrs. Mary Todd, General Richardson chapter, D.ART,~and M r a. Joseph . Phillips of the American Legion Auxiliary, Chief Pontiac-Post, spoke briefly. —— it.. w w, , New American citizens tom ored were Verna Paine, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Krampetz, Mary Tsompanas, Mr*, a Mrs. Gerrit Hoogensl Bernice Wheeler and Mr. awLMrsr Fred Madarasz. Slide. Jntb Bags Slide sandwiches into with a OLD FASHIONED BARGAIN DAYS Women’s Dress Shoes High A NM. High HmI* .2“ lfaiM Children’s Pratt and. School Shota vn 377 2Pr. 5.00 2 Pr. 7.00 Lodiot’ Taan Aga Flats 2M 2 PT. 6.00 Man’s Drota and Casual Shots Woman's Oonm flats -1M 2Pr. 3.00 Children's Sandals : i” Women’s Summer r~—CoauolaT 1«-1"-2” MiasatTannis Oxfords. 7 Six* 13-3 J) Quality Cleaning v Since 1929 Miracle Mila Shopping Cantor Opon Every Evening Until 9 P.M. 1 QflUlFlCrrSHIBT SEBVtCI 1 SURPRISE TABLE AT 22* 0|5en Monday thru Saturday 9 30 a m. to 9 p m Fntlihin trailer* far orrr .1O year* Dry cleaning or ig inated in I France about die middle of the lftfi century. - ' I TEL-HUR0N CLEARANCE: ENTIRE SUMMER STOCKS FROM ALL 5 RB STORES now at give-away prices 0 ' Collected here for your convenience: ALL of our fa’mous:maker summer fashions, reduced for final Immediate clearance. Dresses, .. swimsuits, sportswear, accessories, sleepwear included. Hurry in! RB Shops; Pontiae-Tel Huron, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Ftmdala PONTIAC MALL Utagri^wo! you’ll Find More M Z? AT ALBERT’S ! _ ri Magnificent Hand Knits Imported by Albert’s , _ Directly from Italy! from MORE MOHARtH6% Mohair; 32% Wool, 8% Nylon l > ' V' - MORE YAL)UE! Because Albert’s imports directly from Italy, you get the finest hand knit mohair, sweaters at the lowest possible’ price ! ' ■ . ' . MORE STYLES! V-NeckspCardlguni}, Jac-quards, In.tarsias, Hand Embroideries, Crochet Buttons. JVIORE COLORS! White,-pink, blue, peach, ' green, aqua, yellow, beige, red, royal, bgoWn, black. Z / 4 w ‘) B—12 m as mm THE BONTfAC frltKSS, frHURS&AY, *, HMfr Build Moon Shot Site, Swamp Yielding t o Spaceport A Joint community impact committee estimates the working force will increase from its pres- By HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE CANAVERAI*T>u -Bulldozers, pfledrivers, dredges and otter machines are wresting control of great areas of swampland from snake and alligator as, the United States builds the huge1 spaceport from which astronauts will rocket toward the moon and plants. Most of the work is concentrated on Merritt Island adjacent to Cape Canaveral, where the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is acquiring 87,000 acres on which to erect facilities of almost incredible dimension. ★ t * ■ There also is furious construction activity on Cape Canaveral’s original 15,000-acre plot as laughing equipment and pads are readied for the two-man PAjedt Gemini j»paec flights slated to start next year and for early tests of the Apollo moonship and other space vehicles. $,ON ON JOB More than 5,000 construction workers are on the job. In 12 months there will be about 9,000. In the next three years, $1.7 billion will be spent on .building work. - .■-■■rtp, ■ * . *... * . The space agency is paying'an estimated $55 million for the land on Merritt Island .and on a thin' < strip of offshore territory north of . the present Cape boundaries Merritt Island lies west and northwest 6f the Cape. • Some 400 homeowners are being displaced by the-acquisition, most of which is swamp, woodland and orange groves. ' * ★ + ' . ' The dominating feature on the bland will be Launch Complex soon (hi thb massive undertaking, which will include three launching pads for the giant Saturn 5 rocket which Will ferry Apolla astronauts to the moon, hopefully in 1968. ★ ★ . ★ The Saturn 5 will be as tafi as a 36-story skyscraper, weigh 3,000 tons fully fueled* and generate 7.5 million pounds of thrust. At a cost of about $100 million for each larachmg^ihe rocket will to orbit a l20-ton space laboratory is jet for 1965. BUFFER ZONE . Thousands of acres as a buffer zone to protect the ears and property of citizens frpm noise and .shock waves. -TO make Merritt Island more accessible, NASA is building rail: lines and a four-lane causeway to bridge two rivers which separate Cape Canaveral from the Florida Mainland. '"'LA1 .it - W The Air Fprce b creating islands in the Banahq. River on which to construct assembly and Hails Senate Red Aid Action WASHINGTON UR- Sen. Philip A. Hart. D-Mich., commended the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today tot recommending that the President again be given piower to grant Poland and Yugoslavia special trade conces-| skids. The most-favored nation treatment would be restored to j the two countries if a bill that j would give- the President such I authority b approved by Congress. . v In a speech for the Senate, Hart! slid: ' “Oversimplitied, the problem] b thb: Is It ever prudent to as-1 sist a country whose allegiance,! . direct or otherwise, is to the So-J yiet Union? ' * ' J “Based on ^my-^observations | during a recent study trip to Po-j land, I say yes. Or ★ *.. “Certainly I don’t pretend to be] an expert on foreign affairs after a seven-day trip abroad. But a! dpn doesn't have .to spend many days in Poland to discover that thb b a nation of people intense-! ly>fond of America.” control apparatus for its Titan space booster . Titan 3, with two million pounds throat in the first of its few is scheduled to launch Syna-Soar, a manned plane-like spacecraft which could be used in military reconnaissance. PROGRESS ON PROJECT In the original Cape Canaveral area, construction b progressing these projects: - Complex No. 37, which will have two launch pads tor Saturn and Saturn IB, each with 1.5 million pounds thrust in the first stage. Four Saturn 1 first, stage tests from Complex 34 were sue-1 6essful, and the initial two-stage shot — with an 18,000 - pound: satellite — is set from No. 37 for next October. * ★ ★ ‘ Complexes 19 and 20. formerly'used in the Titan military missile test program, are being redesigned tohandle the Titan 2, which will, boost Gemini, and an early model of Titan 3. First orbital launching of an unmanned Gemini mode] from 19 b set next December. Initial orbital launching of the two-man Gemini grew is scheduled , for the fall of 1964. Complex 14, from which four Mercury astronauts vaulted into orbit, to being remodeled for the ] Atlas-Agepa rockets which will! launch the target satellites for later Gemini rendezvous maneuvers. ■ — Pad 13, one-time AtiaTmllP tary missile test stand, is being redonq.so tip Atlas-Agena pad. The Cdpe. then wifi have three Atlas-Agena facilities for a number of spaqe explorations. — .A second Atlas - Centaur launch pad Js being built. Thb rocket, which experienced early test difficulties, uses high-energy liquid hydrogen fuel in its second stage, giving it more punch than Atlas-Agena. The rocket it boost the unmanned Project Surveyor mooncraft and otter scien-’ tific payloads. ' ' ' Mercury Control Center, where America’s six manned space shots were directed, has been renamed . Mission Control Center and b being enlarged anti refitted for Gemini. CLEARANCE BERMUDA SNORTS A SWIM SUITS *1?* 2 tor *3" SUMMER SLACKS '$280 w OFF STRAW NATS 100 and 150 $io°° SUMMER SUITS SUMMER $ffg SPORTCOATS *1 TUXEDO RENTALS - REASONABLE RATES CONN’S >Q CLOTHES W 71 N. Saginaw ent 25,000 to 47,ON by mkH985, leveling Off at about 41,NO in l$N when the bulk of construction will he complete. The committee figures Cape Canaveral's annua^ payroll will bq about $235 million in 1966, compared with $158 million in 1982. swum RIG SUMMER SPECIAL! We're overstocked and must soil 32,461'sq. ft. of material-—so NOW IS YOUR CHANCE TOBtlY flu SIDING ESTIMATES Right in Your- Own Home NO OBLIGATION I Your Choice 1 OF COLORS Completely Installed— No Hiddtn Extras— All Labor and Materials CALL NOW Operators Oh.. -Duty 24 Hours Including Sunday Calm 4-4507 STERLING ENCLOSURE PHHNNNMaHNNNNNNMNHHMMNN^HMNMNMNMHHNNMNHaMMNNHNHNHNHHHi BE PAT I BIT! 20 W. ALLEY ST. f A (Rear of Pike St. AAP) - THE ALL-NEW, GREATER WKC IS BEING BUILT AT A FAST PACE... AND IT WE CAN INVITE YOU TO OUR SPARKLING NEW STORE! IN THE MEANTIME ■ ;i fl NO MONEY DOWN -YOUR CREDIT IS G [jM - 3 FULL YEARS TO PAY At Warehouse AT WAREHOUSE HOLLYWOOD BED ENSEMBLE ty Kfrtnmnir* mplote with inner-spring mattress, box spring, washable plastic headboard and iegs. £ Keg yi ,'^r 8-PIECE MAPLE BUNK BEDS 2 single • width moplfl *44’6 £•' *4838 ROLLAWAY BEDS WITH MATTRESS Feldi up compactly and rolls, away for easy storage. All metal. . Inntrapring mattress. ' *2816 Famous Thayer 6-year size crib with plastic' toothing -rads. Stool spring. Wat-proof mattress. „ 3988 Deluxe COLUMBUS 30” GAS RANGE Felly insulated M" oven. Largs full width, storage drawer. Auto-"li.atto top Renters. >*9862 AT WAREHOUSE • FREE DELIVERY • FREE SERVICE • FREE FACTORY WARRANTY! FR1GI0AIRE SPEED QUEEN Deluxe - AUTOMATIC WASHER Water temperature control, Automatic lint romovor, automatic sediment ejector, 5-year mission guarantee. Special cycle for silks and woolens. igg&ijtaaiM. 2-pnnt, 13 cu. Ft. ' 7 REFRIGERATOR No defrosting ever in refrigeratoi section! I OO-lb. zero/one freezer. Twin porcelain enamei hydrators. 5-year warranty. Free service. ModaLFDS 13T-63. . *Sff *258 At Store A Warehouse MAGNAV0X STEREO, HI-FI CONSOLE East German Soldiers . - - Crott Border to West BERLIN (II— Three East Ger-fl man soldiers, including two bor-ll tier guards, fled fl\West Berlin I during the night, West Berlin poJ|| ice said. /. .j A 21-year-old and a 26-year-old Who were on patrol together wore their 'uniforms* but abandoned; (heir weapons. Ite third man] suore civilian clothes. AT STORE and WAREHOUSE AT WAREHOUSE and STORE ) RCA VICTOR *19” Portable TV With FREE Stand # Comptota with rugged motol .land a Superpowerful "New Vista" ^ _ lunar e Front-mounted "Goldan Throat" . sound. Modal V4A064 No Money Down $139 MAGNAVOX CONTEMPORARY CONSOLE TELEVISION Full-transformer powered chassis, 260 sq. in. optically filtered screen-plu* alf tha features that* make for hotter sight end sound. Tho Traditional, 1-MV155.” In mahogany or walnut. No* Money Down $188 8-Piece BEDROOM 0UTF You gat Mirror .drussor matching Cq ‘chest, bookcase bed, ihnarspring ' I mattress and matching box spring plus 2 boudoir lamps..’ .. AT WAREHOUSE E-PC. DINETTE SET Mar-proof tap labia with chromo tri matching' chi Spadding now. n0 Money Dawn 29* AT STORE _ ELECTRIC 10-Cup Ceffss PERCOLATOR “Celor control" How -r*8“ Down w AT STORE VOQUE AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER with NITE-LITE "• OPEN FBI. MON. NIGHTS til 9 NHMMMI WKC’S TEMPORARY LOCATION 144 N. Saginaw Street MHHHM *mc SOUTH TELEGRAPH RD. AT SQUARE LAKE RD. SIDEWALK SELLING 2 DAY S Friday and Saturday-Aug. 2 ft 3 GREAT FUN! .. GREAT VALUES! 42 STORES ft SERVICES OPEH 9:30 AM. TO 9 P.M. FREE PARKING FOR 5000 GARS TJtfc PONTiA^' PR'ESS, ttt^IRSD'AY, AlTGtJSl* % M J imt HBnm c jr l' ■Mir — jiur\c MIRACLE MILE Look at these 6utsfanding values, for this bargain event* Great Buys lor the entire family. Shop early. SALE LADIES’ Or More! GIRLS’ PRE-TEENS "Skirts - Dresses Ponses Skirts Slacks Blouses Coordinates Coats 'Suits Sportswear Halters Shorts T-Tops Slacks Beach Bags—t PedalPushers Spring Suits Pajamas INFANTS* and TODDLE RS’ SUMMER PLAYWEAR Sportswear Blouses . Skirts Shorts Swimwear. BOYS’ Bermudas Deck Pants Bay Shorts ,v)y • ■ ■ -j sy - T \ - - * yy~ ■ ' ■* • \ pg § Ladies’Swim Saits Entire Stock Ladies’ ..■V Id T~ - ■* ||- " BTh • il'feiljljqi&tip* '"11 j, 1/3™ 1/2 OFF ^ • Jantzen • Rose Marie Reid . || o Cole of California • Petti Sommer Dresses Regular to $25.00 690..990 M 0 Roxanne • Darlene ^ •v!* • ’ ■r ’ r-* f ■■ . Men’s—Ladies’-JJoys’ VkjAi* REG. TO ♦9.95 Puppies by WOLVKRINki Children’s Famous Brand Shoes *4°° Ladies’ American Girl Shoes DreaaStylee 3»nd A YolllPollTAPC Aborted colors. Mid, • *7™ lldillU ulluyl D S»ick,fed(OM, H»fl» • * • • • • • • • • Ladies’ Summer Sandals".»? .... $2.J3 ll.S. Keds, Ball Band, Bnskens Men’s Portage and Pedwin Shoes °££.~. *6°° Reg. to 910.95 Dacron Blend" Q Men s Slacks . . • . ... • * • t) • Reg. to *39.95 ; /> Ladies’ Spring Coats Reg. to 98.96 Ladies’ Handbags a • • • •* Reg. to 84.50 Ladies’ Blouses . .... .-tr Reg. * pair $1.25 . £l{\c Ladies’ Nylons •. t. .tu pr.OU Reg. to $5.00 Short Sleeve Men’s Sport Shirts ..'. v Reg. 85.98 4-Poeket '199 Men’s Sweat Shirts .. .. 1 ‘Values —4ft— $8.98 O ODDS ’N’ ENDS Robes, sleepwear, shorts, slacks, hats, caps, blouses, gym trunks and other items., - i m ..15“ 3“ Reg. to $5.00 ft 100 Jewelry * V • •.... ... . .<£ror X J99 m m m m i Ilk Wi Reg, to 81.00 Men’s Socks .... ...; .'.jioo Reg. $5.95 Long Sleeve - .. T , ' Men’s Sport Shifts ./'.., - — Reg- to $55.00 - ■■■■ ' -| Men’s Suits ...... Men’s Sport Coats .... JLO Reg. to $1.50 ‘ fifSXp Men’s Belts ........ }fiS 5V Reg. to $29.95 -i aaa Mm’s 111 Wealter Coats....,. lowo J99 Reg. to $5.00 Men’s Swim Suits........ Reg. $3,00 Long Sleeve Boys’ Sport Shirts f.., Reg. to $5.98 Boys’ Husky Slacks . .. . Reg. $3.00 Boys’ Swim Trunks .... I59 J99 |«6 P —Sj ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY* AUGUST 1, lf>83 Rim C-3 Just Pictufe . Yourself in these so right baek-to ; ^ school; classics S COUNTRY Ml$$ *1295 Country Mies shifts into a cotton oxford shift.. .for cool comfort and warm compliments. The Bermuda cottar itJj accented with a distinctive lantern pin. Beautiful result: V the traditional Ieoh of Country Miss. In teal blue, olive v green. Sizes! to 14.7 COUNTRY MISS *1495 ‘S3 The classic look of Country Miss ... in this traditional t Ivy .Striped woven Oxford. Full skirted with Bermuda collar accented with eur distinctive lamp pin. Cranberry. / Sizes 6 to 16. PEGGY’S t^RACLB MILS \ entire remaining^ summer s to off Jantzen and Petti swim suits 40% off famous make bras, * t ■ ■ ; s' ■ ". m former values to 10.95 • discontinued styles . summer dresses Juniors, Misses, Half-Sizes ■| * ’.iV' * *\ \ 1 y , * V. • .' ' ' . ;; 6“* 10” 14"8 t former y allies to 29.95 white stag and majestic sportswear i/a off see our ^acks and tables of odds and ends on the sidewalk i at ridiculous unbelievable prices s :Jk, ^ . f . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THiraSDAYV^UGtTSTl, 1998 ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY C-3 get first choke of winter's newest fur-trims on LAY-AWAY! 59.95 79.95 • most-wanted luxury fun . •. natural mink, Norwegian • superbstyfing.. .expensive workmanship., .fineheavy blue fox* rayon satin finings • couturier fabrics... ribbed and polished wool zfeefines, • all important fashion colon... black, taupes, browns, wool worsted faitie, brushed wool-and-mohair ’>• grey*, dear rads, blues! • misses'sbei 8 to 1^ petite stes 6 to 16 In the group PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE 'STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M.to 9:00 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1968 C—5 SIDEWALK SELLING 40% to 70% Off Dresses, 3 to 15 WERE 10.98-14.98.cow 8.99 WERE 17.98-19.98. now 11.99 WERE 22.98-25.00.. now 14.99 WERE 29.98-35.00.. now 19,99 WERE 39.98-49.98 . now 24.99 SPECIAL-Were. 14.98-17.98 now 10.90 and 6.90 . Shirts, Wraps, Culottes WERE 5.98 ....... now 3.99 WERE 6 98-7.98 ... now 4.99 WCRE 8.96*9.98 . . . now 5.99 Blouses, J-Shirts and Tops WERE 4.98 ,.. how 2.99 WERE £98 .. now 3.99 Swim Suits, Famous Brands WERE 10.98-12.98 ... now 7.99, WIRE 13.98-15.98 .. . now 9.99 WERE J6.98-19.98 , ... now 11.99 WERE 22,98-29.98 V , . . now 15,99 ; Cabjn Boys, Capris, Jamaicas, etc WERE 4.98 . >. . . . now 2.99 WERE 6.98 . . . . . . now AA9 WERE 5.98 . . . . . now1 3.99 WERE 7.98-8.98 . . now 5 49 • Mimele Mila Shopping Center MIRACLE MILE SHOE BARGAINS THAT ARE ALMOST UNBELIEVABLE 77 Pairs of WOMEN’S DRESS and PUY SHOES rfrlue* to 9149S SPEC!ACGROU P ;W Women's and Girls' Casuals Fiats ancN)ress Shoes \ Values to $14.95 |92-288-385 NOW SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S CASUALS now Values to $9.95 USE YOUR SECURITY CHS. 1/ shoes Michigan'* Largest Horsheim Denier Miracle Mile Shopping Center FE 8-9700 OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. lhoo> South Telegraph ^Square Lake Road on selected lot* ef feoionefale merchandise taken from our regular stock of (nye^ end beyi' foehions. / . ‘ Discontinued Styles of Men'e Wash 'n Wear CASUAL SLACKS Regular ■tig to f5.98 ShQ NOW I Men's Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS AND WHITE CRESS SHUTS Regular to $3.98 1 AO ... NOW Boys' Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Regular to 1.98 j q NOW Famous Make ... Blue Denim DUNGAREES Refutar $4.25 4 QQ . . NOW Msrs UNLINED JACKETS . Regular to 7.95 l^S.HQYi MEN'S and BOYS' SPORT HATS Rejgulur to 2.98' ... NOW USE YOUR SECURITY OR OUR 90 DAY CHARGE ACCOUNT STMMC HOURS Ml UNTIL MIPM. MEN’S WEAR MIRACLE MILE SHOHUIfi CENTER. * • Aa • • '"X THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1,1960 . Foncy, d«ora»or »*»'• ’-*«* • Boy** cotton cr«w* anAoW o Girl*' oppHqucd andI ■ . • lace trimmed pontio* • Womon'* Hollywood • Natural color • All 6 foot long • 3 feet to 6 feet wide • Assorted patterns • Strips* and solids • Sizes 6 to 16 r creasert • 9-a«art.«» wo*t*-bo.Vt ppdred, pEid, odiu.«oW. d.?k pent* rib «nd*i Ban-Lon Boy*' t*l* *port ba • Complete with net ^ • Includes 2 racquets and shuttlecocks TENNIS RACQUET • Nylon strings • Laminated frame • Perfect weight and grip 5-Cell FLASHLIGHT • Wittt 5 Batteries IN FRONT OF OUR MIRACLE MILE STORE AND IN FRONT OF OUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. AUGUST 1, 1968 WORK SHOES MEN'S DRESS SHOES otevnd • cowb« •’•SOSideoe, CHILDREN’S TENNIS OXFORDS LADIES' THONGS CLEARANCE ,#ek Pont* • Winter pojombt itg-zzrz- :a 5^St2iEr fica-*fisr Sf||| n Assorted *tyl*t In cotton and stretch nylons • Wanted colors • Sites 4 to 14 Jr. Boys’ Short Sleeve “*•-seeled Vo,‘ systems MmildeV ' * Assorted solids, woven stripe patterns • Trimmed crew neckline o Applique trim #~Sltes 3 to 8 noy Our'Own pArtrr Expert draftsmen ■ LOW PRICES- Usd Your — Security Charge YOU CiUt BE CONFIDENT WHEN YOU DEAL WITH LOU-MOR JEWELERS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING a&ijAPRTEB At The ARCADE MEK’S clothing MULSH 3 I *5 Half Sleeve Rea, $2.95 DRESS SHIRTS Half Sleeve Rea. $1.69 SPORT SHIRTS R*g. $4.95, $5.95, $6 95 MEN’S WALK SHORTS ....... S3.S0 2 for $1.00 Rag. $8 95 MEN’S DACRON WORSTED TROPICAL SLACKS $5.96 2 for fit.TO Rag. $2 98 MEN’S BATHING TRUNKS......... $1.69 Rn. $1.95 BOYS Miracle Mile Shopping Center ’SWIM TRUNKS .................. $1.44 RICHMAN BROS. OpM.DaDy *30 A.M. I. 9 P.M. SIDEWALK DAYS SPECIAL! FRIDAY A SATURDAY AUGUST 2-3 Genuine Rebuilt VACUUM GLEANERS W ;■ '■ Ml OC NEW 7-FL VACUUM CLEANDtNOSE AN CMk No Plastic *___ unwm $A7S ALL HARES ■f iOOILS furtiongo WW. Yewr Re-usable Hose End. MICHIGAN NECCHI-ELNA Miracle Milo Shopping Center 2257 S. Telegraph-Arcade Area Om* ofMlckigmk'* . Original Discountert APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: tNtSUAl-NO.., . - . WE DO IT EVERYDAY!! It if not imvougl Tor a customer to come in and toll vi they havo a price on a cattain modal appliance, TV Or iteredand think wo can net dp better. In moot all cases they find we wilt do better in price and also give'service second to none. FREE FRETTER’S CARLOAD PRICES * MAKE THE DIFFERENCE Hotpoint Apto. Washer.... 149.00 Whiifpeal Washer Recon.,.. 19.95 Air Oehditieners 1-ton ... .119.00 Rotrigerator, Family Size ., 145.00 Tappan Electric Ranc* “400”.............ir. 2*9.95 Retriferator ISCa. Ft. Auto Defrost...... ... 199.00 Fraaxar, It Cv. Vt. N.S1S.W Portable TVs ...... . M.tO Dehumidifiers, Name Brands....". 49.05 Nadia AM/FM .. i-,.. . 24.00 Refrigerate™, used, tram ..............29.90 Oai Range, 36".......98.00 Ranga *0" Deluxe, Electric .....,...... 129.95 Portable Stereo Record Player.......39.10 Stare* Walnut Lawbey .... 19.06 3-Wpy Comb. 23” TV, Stereo, AM-FM Nadia ... 2TS.00 NC* Lowboy TV ;........119.00 TRANSISTOR RADIO ' With Evary Major Appliance During Sidewalk Days. At Miracle Mile / Friday and Saturday, August 2-3 ■NEW 1964 STEREO' dustAri&// j ^MICRO-TOUCH FREE! S U*. Maxwell Housa Coffee If FrattarCatl Beat Top Beat Price with a new long, law silhoyett* in genuine Cherry Fruitwood and ooMt, or Antique. . ■ - ..">• ' v‘v GET THE LOWEST PRICE AT FRETTER’S WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT SLIMI ALL NEW 19641 ALL NEW 1964 1 api S IS Is Miracle Mile Shopping Center (Bet. Kresge's and Kroger*) S. Telegraph Rd. at Sq. Lake Rd. OPEN MONDAY thru SAT. II A.M.-9 P.M. FE 3-7051 IERNDALE STORE-201 W. 9 Mile-LI 1-4409 Open Men. thro Fri. 9:30 fo 9:30-Sat. 9 to 9 .C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST >1, 1968 STAMPS Thrifty MILIIONSofFREE wSB.., iHmr, 1 EVERYONE WINS PLATING COVERALL QET CARD AND DETAILS AT KROGER MIRACLE MUE SHOPPING CENTER -----s Beef Sale! ivns vrini risHiiRU wi I AND DETAILS AT KROGER MIRAOLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER cos and ltom« Effo*>. : • • is. MUSHROOMS PftfCRS A STEMS g44» SAVE 16*—IN OVEN READY MAN POT ' v BAM BAKED BEANS TWICE RICH LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE SAVE 35* FROZEN BEEF. CHICKEN OR TURKEY MORTON'S MEAT P|ES SAVE 10*—KROGER SALTINE CRACKERS .... - 19c 29* SAVE 30-KROGER 13 EGG RECIPE ' * V ANGEL FOOD CAKE 6. *i • BACH 6^*1 SAVE 20*—EATMORE MARGARINE SAVE 17*-BIRDS EYE FROZEN PE AS »r CORN { __L__ ....V ' - \ . B VALUABLE COUPON « 50 EXTRA vUS, STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON AND $5 PURCHASE VALUABLE COUPON IONEYSeW MELONS..~.59‘ I IS EXTRA *25, STAMPS ■■HP vaiui 11 -------------- WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OP MB. PEG 1 z fl VALUABLE COUPON ECKRICH SMOKIES ] I Cmpm n«'at m Daurt W * EXTRA *2m STAMPS ,SI 1XTRA vffi* STAMPS S "SKsassissor i 1 COFFEE CAKI . PORK SAVSASE 1 FKISH MICHIGAN - blueberries . I hN at »1« » laM —a . Caapaa «aN at «m« m Oadi aaa J Cwaaa «aM at -__ ... .. _ Mttk -M iat„ Aa,. L t«M. I (a*ata t FBAN«-lN rm MS Poole’s Guarantee . a Greener Lawn ID 7 Days or Your Money Back! TURF BUILDER Apply it now to your lawn, fomwhlfi tho directions on til* package and you MUST have a greener lawn in 7 day* i or wa will give you yaw money bfcckj W ’ f llriw 01 * S ytassfi MS bf 95 5,600 Sq. Ft. —Coverage— on “ * LARGE GARDEN CART A ? Reg. $9,95 SPECIAL A MUST lor EVERY GARDENER! 2 Locations Your Complete GARDEN Supply Store LUMBER si HARDWARE CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING MIRACLE MILE .STORE ONLY! THE SMNt mJUMMS HUUD it FONUM) SEMI-BONELESS SMOKED OOVt WSPECT10 MICHIGAN FRESH LEAN Hamburger WHITE or ASSORTED COLORS SPARTAN ORANGE OR GRAPE RINGO DRINK. LIBBY TOMATO JUICE CHICKEN OF THE SEA CHUNK TUNA 25 FT. ROLL REYNOLDS WRAP TANG ORANGE DRINK vlask: brinekured DILL PICKLES 4«n°° 4‘!Xf$10O CANS ■ 29* 29* 39* LARGE SWEET CMTALOIIKS 4|«<|IB HOME GROWN SWEET CORN SPARTAN • ; _ MARGARINE QUART JAR HILLS BROS, or Spartan TREESWEET FROZEN THRILL 10c OFF IVORY FLAKES CHEER • ■ * ■ LiRc SPIC ’N’ SPAN ,*, We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. None Sold to Dealers or Minors. PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY* AUGUST 1 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST SHORTENING CP APT AN — - mn ocnM ' E 303 $100' 9 CANS | HUNT'S SLICED OR HALVES i Istioi y CANS 1 KICKS ..—-J ’Hamilton fresh grade "A" _ _. IMRESSS 45c DOZEN TU BWoodWianb BOToodWiand LAKE ORION Mon. thru Sat., 1 ft S H 1116 W. HURON Mott* thru Sit t tf tl ■ 3515 SASHABAW Sunday, • to S Sunday, 9 tot , Mon. thru Sat.,Its 1 Sunday, *9 to t' > ^ ft x$—t THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST,I, 1963 . ;®ff '% /' :■ 'll. '^44u^4^£d m&M Called Worst Disaster CroprRwhing Storms Throw South Korea Into Food Crisis if By C. 5. CHIN KIMHAl, Korea (AP)-Storms that battered South Korea In June lid July played-havoc with the barley harvest, plunging this country into a food crisis. it. if _W . * * “We have had floods *ul droughts before but this is the worst disaster In tny life," said farmer Kim Myung-Kl, 40. , ♦ ♦ .* He lives'*In Kimhai, County, about 20 miles northwest of the southern port of Pusan. Officials estimate about 90 per cent of the barley crop was destroyed there. ford 3-Door, eerlel number HMI will So eold «t public ttto ot 1(10 & Nine Mil Mod. Ferndilc, Michigan, thit sddrrsg. being whir# thi vehicle *“ atored and may a* Impacted. August l and a IIP —-----BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARINO Nolle* Is Hereby Given, that • Public Hesnng will be held by. tot fanning Commission of tof Towntolp of — find. Oaklend County, Mlchl August 5, 1863. — field. Oakland County, ‘" lit 5. 1863. at 1M .... Township H*U. 006 In laid Awn ship tor thi Hell. 4300 Telegl-spb : mi|p for tba purposi at following ‘ fteriget to To rtbai ilmi B-3 Oeneml Bustnus and—R4,—On* remtljr Resldentlel District to R-M, Multiple-Family District. tbi follownng described prop-M located fcOtMIR Telegriph and ----------"“1 Roads, south of Ward Part at am N* tt,e<___________ ginning atitba E V« corner of sab Section 0; UlMCS B. t' II W. 3IJ tt.. *7Jr *r mryr«l ft.; IhabeeN. 61* along said tt line 616.66 ft.. H. 66* 16* ft. >46.(6 ft.. JkO —r 6f* m wa fc ta to* line at Ward Road: ttmaea *. 60* 80' E.- along the center lino of — Roed 231 80 ft., tltoa southw line of 166 foot wldi Telegraph BW thence on a curve along thi BW ly Una of Tilignph Road with a radius attisXwvrw art S. Qort today was named president of the Bethlehem Steel Corp., America’s No. 2 steel producer. Cort, 52, succeeds Edmund F. Martin, who was moved up to the newly created post of vice chairman under. Arthur B. Homer, board chairman and Bethlehem’ chief executive officer. 6 ft.: thence I. covered by thi body Cf wster known as Square Lake la excepted from _______________________• roqieital ■ ^present. A copy if to# prMajid ..iange le on file in the offte* of the ■ Tpwnshlp Clerk and may be esamlned "chad M. RITCHIE ■ jdliaia ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Thi Raard of Bducitloe of thi Willed Dike Consolidated School! will ncelvi .... ....■ too construction and - completion Of aa Administration Build-tog (fob Ho. toll for thi Waited Lakl 618 North Pontiac Trail, Whiled Lake, Michigan, at which time and place all bids will hi pubBcly opined and read Base Bid "C** ftte Ctrl cal Work amount ol five architect and be haaiteMatad ----- - certified ctgct to **“ ,nd spsclflgettimi rosy ha ob-i and after Wadnaaday. July ted|maft|MdtemUtln. I within M. 1863. at thi offlts Linn Smith Asserts toe. . Adams Road. Birmingham. Michigan. -A aback to the amount of ““ “---------* bo rtibanltted at a deposit f of plans and ipeetflesttooe, ----- rifundid upon return of plane jpeclflcetlom In good condition a teq (loi dayi of too opening of m Each bidder will be allowid two'% of bidding documents. .... Accepted bidders wilt bs required . furnish satisfactory Fcrformanec Bonds and tabor and Material Bond, each ta tbi amount of 160% of- the contract, the total' cast of which shall be paid by the accepted bidder. >r to part, and to wmlvs any Informal- Hoard _______ Waited Lake Consolidated Schools dig North Pontiac Trail Waited taka, Michigan Mr. Richard g. Mites? Secretary _ July 25 and Augus lar meeting _______ City of Ponttee, Michigan neia my 1663 > by resolution it was declared „ bs ths Intention of too City Commission to construct sanitary sewer and related work on Northeast slda r'-fci--d Avenue from TaHshasooo Avenue to West Boulevard at an estimated amt at »21.406.00, and that the plan, proflls - 6e of. said improvement is public Inspection. "It U further Intended „ . said improvement to accord sues with toe plan, preflte and eetimsto, gad But « ths cost thereef shall bs defrayed by special ■■ assessment according ta front-ye lead that ell of toe lots and parcels - hounded dPVPWIMNUPUHHmUHK on East and Soutoscgt by OTRR Belt |p isiliislll■ iII by Oakland Avenue and on West by West Boulevard except that part formerly knowa OajlAm lto, 111. ITT Woodward Gardens Subdivision now vacated.shall constitute toe special assessment district ta defray $31,406.00 of the estimated east and expenses there-—y of too estimated cast ths Capital Improvement Fufla, NOTICE IS HERBT OIVEN That the Commission at the 01 Pontiac. Wt-Np- wffl moat s Commission Chamber an Au|Ufl 8, 1183 at I cfaigjh p «n t Edgy be puds by Dated July 31. IIP , families in our village who have H)e t:ice harvest isabbOtlhree enough grain ta last until the rice months away, harvest,” said Kinf | JCim and the others hi Ms vfl- “There ire only three or four lage of 30-odd farm hornet will have to find outside work. Many live on government relief food. Most paddy, fields in this southeastern region of the Korean peninsula are used for two crops a year, barley and rice. But most of the rice seedbeds also were rained. Present Head AAovacLUp- Name New Bethlehem President BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP)—Stew-iStevens Institute of Technology. Cent, now vice president of flethlehem.'s Pacific Coast division, is a native of Duquesne, Pa. His late father was a vice presi- dent from 1947-57 in charge Bethlehem’s steel division. Cort Joined Bethlehem in 19S7as a sales department cleric. He has degrees from Yale and Harvard. ships to farmers and city-dwellers people. Natlonwiae, a government esti- th*..."Biff, "P county government had 10,702 names on its work-relief program. They were from families who have little or .no land. UP TO ONE-THIRD Now the list has 67,393 persons, one-third of the county’s population. The government plans to give them work repairing bridges and irrigation dikes, and pay them in food grain. alike in this natios of ^ million iey crop .was lost. The loss was estimated at more than (184mU-lion. The price of rice, on the rise Bobby Darin in Hospital, a Victim of Exhaustion May. In Seoul, the capital, a 100-liter bag-a Hter is a Utile over a quart—which sold for (14.80 In January no# sells for (34.50, LOS ANGELES (UPI) er Bobby Darin was in Mt. Sinai Hospital today for tests. A spokesman said he was suffering from exhaustion and overwork and probably would be released within two days. Darin tottered the hospital yesterday after Ms physician told him to cut short an engagement at New York’s Freedomland amusement park where he had Food shortages and high Mod. collapsed And was unable to comprises have brought severe hard-lplete a performance Jast week. mate said; (5 per cent of the bar- 5 January, began soaring in An average office worker depends largely on the government food ration, sold at what is roughly the January price of grain, but the ration meets only 70-86 per cent of the need of an aver age family of 5.5 persons, Beggars, once cleared off the streets by the roUng military junta, have reappeared. Labor disputes over wages are increasing. The econonflc_troubles arocw-tain to hurt? (fen. Chung Hee Park’s chances to remain in powv er by defeating civilian opponents in a presidential election this fall. The food shortage has increased dependence ohThe tJhlted States,“ which recently granted a surplus grain shipment of 200,000 tons and is being asked to provide 400,000 tons more. pVSbg Olven. tost s Publlo a bS heli by tol Planning . ot to* Township ol Bloom- ____ ____Iim Ciwi, Wthtot, on August 5. 1IW. s-t o'oloek pm., xf **-- —----IpHIxil, 6166 Telegraph Rogd. tos%)ing considering Ordinance Orcniiniios; ., To Tessas froto R-P- Research Fork described prgosrtr, located so the eut eld# d Franklin Road, north ot Square lake Road: The North 6 acre* of tot Sooth 29 adrte 3 too Waft tt ft tbs loath-j-tt of Ssqiiaa 4, Bloomfield tsnip. j present. ^ eigiy^ot the jr^tiai. Homer said the appointments-: effective Thursday—“are a further reflection of Bethlehem’ progressive policies in broadening the scope of-the company’s executive leadership and are designed big to move forward in the challenging years whieh lie ahead.’ Martin, Bethlehem’S fourth president, who succeeded Homer in that post three years ago, . 60. He Joined the -firm hi 1922 graduation from the First Hearing on Wage tow Held in State LANSING W — An interim legislative committee met here today for tiie first of 18 statewide hearings on minimum-wage legislation — an issue almost certain to be high in Gov. George mast Romney’s 1964 legislative pro-gnm. - : •"" 1 Witnesses representing labor, business and the general public have been invited to give their views on the subject, one of the most controversial of the regular 1983 session. The joint House-Senate committee is heatMft by Rep. Don Gordon, RrLeland. Its members are fteps. Marie Hager, R-Lansibg, and James Xaroub, D-Highland Park, and Sens. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, Robert Vanderlaan, R-Grand Rapid* and William Leppien, R-Sagbiaw. The committee was created by concurrent resolution to study the oonMiuico *«grTG question of a state minimum wage law —; a perennial issue among, lawmakers — and make recommendations to the 1964 legislature. ' Although interim committees frequently have studied minimum wage legislation, special interest has been generated this year because a proposed law came closer to passage than ever before; the interim committee, with power to administer oaths and take testimony, will move on to Detroit for its second meeting Aug. (. • Subsequent meetings will be held in Warren, Detroit, Livonia, Pontiac, Flint, Saginaw. Mackinac bland, Escanaba, Traverse City, Manistee, Cadillac, . Grand Vox BASgwrw’"- Rapids, Grand Haven and Kala- Perfect Symbol Of Your Love i you buy for quality as Will as for beauty, look for ths ' famous name ‘’Keepsake" in. th# ring and bn ths tag. *225°° $100.00 Also to (300.00. Wedding ting (20.00 Wedding Ring $50.00 CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED ShxMtlS 24 NORTH SAGINAW STREET 'MICHIGANS IAR6ESJ JMIEK T THE PONTIAC. pfcfigSfr THURSDAY, *AUC&tST 1, 1963 \A Division of the 5. S. Kresge Company s for the Homo tona Handy Do-It-Yourself Kit! CHAIR-SEAT REPLACEMENT K-mart Discount Spectacular Plastic covered chair sett and back are thiclkly padded. Fit 44’* or 1” screw-on; or slip-on chairs. Golden Fern, in white, yellow* turquoise and tan. Just charge it! Deluxe Replacement Kit.. 4.37 ea. Heat, Stain, and Mar-Resistant Plastic Top! SPECIAL 7-PC. DINETTE SET SAVINGS PRICED! Convenient 48" Handle! PATIO BROOM Choose from Prinston or Woodgrain" patterns Exceptionally low priced., .just 49.97 for a complete 7-pc. 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W * ..^——- ilia Ilgg iXU frHE PONTIAC PRESS, ^HlfeSDAY, AUGUST 1, ^068 The forest Industrie* in the I Indu»try replaces, on tha aver-United States employ l^UN agi, «0 per cent of Hs profits into full-time employes and have an development and upkeep eom-annual payroll of nmre thNh|P^«hh,9|. |nr cant « |wra <5,500 million. , ■ ' ’ , |«g°- • _ __ _ ' RetiriiKl Air Hero Saluted by Troops ftQMOLUUr/tH - Gen. ftn-mett (Rosie) O’Donnell, an air hero uf two wars who was trained to be an army combat offloer at West Point,-retired1 yesterday from active service. -_O’Donnell, 56, took the salute of hundreds of marching military personnel— and the plaudits of assembled GI families — at Hick-am Air Force Base where he retired as /commander of United tates Pacific air forces. Overhead 56 planes, bombers, fighters, huge transports, droned over his reviewing stand. O’Doifc nell, a boy from Brooklyn, who H thr Tipt B|t9 bomber raid on Tokyo during. WorkTWarTIjTooSf the massed salute gravely. . Bpic Films Can ■ “By BOB THOMAS. HOLLYWOOD (APl-TSST'fii an old Hollywood saytaf Thit everyone has two businesses: their own and the movie business. That attfl terns to true. People everywhere aware of MGM’a. problems with! ’Mutiny on did Bounty1’ and 20th I Century • Fox’s| travails with THOMAS "Cleopatra.” There was a time when the coats and returns of movies' ward fe'ngwn oniytoblghstudloofficiala. Lately the companies have been two buetoMoes: le 1 talking openly about their fi-nances, possibly because of the prodding of irate stockholders. Take “Ctoo,” for example. Its cost generally la reckoned at MO million. . : ; The rule of thumb is that a movie’s groat return mint double its cost before turning a profit; this ia because distribution, advertising, the theaters’ share, interest, etc., keeps adding up. DOESN'T APPLY This double-the-cost rule does not apply to spectacles with huge budgets, however. Fox president Darryl F. Zanuck has figured $62 million will put “Ctoo*1 In the black. Advance^ payments have reached 620 million! film history, its cost will prevent • profit—at least until if & re-released years hence. * ★ ’ i The Marlon. Brando' film cost fit million and needed a 9S1 mil-lion return to break even. MGM has written off an (0 million loss on tte venture. ' There, is a bright side to the MGM picture “How the West Was Won,” a Cinerama western As of July 20, it had brought in a gross of ft.102,911 in this country, playing in 44 theaters. An equal amount has come in from overseas engagements, and the corn-figures the monthly gross at But That's Railroadin' He Don't Do TOWN & COUNTRY INN 1727 & Telegraph Road _• FE 3-9888 —FRIDAY SMORGASBORD— Choice Roast Beef Charleston Shrimp Pilou Bhked White Fish With Lemon Sauce Assorted Relishes From Ouf Buffet Table fcOMMERCE| ■ . MMISD VMKfiVme 1 EM 3-0661 1 Open 7:15 COLOR • . ttfOpERTY and UNION LK. HI. BOTH IN Rock Hudutn “A GATHERING , _ OF EMILES” 1 londro bra | Bobby Darrin 1 “IF A MAN L M&WERS” 1 PIZZA R«g. $1.60 Sim • HAM • CREESE (This week only)‘ D.licioui SPAGHETTI DINNER A 19 - • ' Carry 99 TILL) Call FE 3-9782 RICKY’S Acress from St. Jee'l Hoip. “KONBA” 4 "UGLY AMERICAN’’ Pontiac's POPULAR THEATRE Op*n — Confinuour 11 A.M. to .12 P.M. “ « TI 5-A331 Air Conditional STARTS FRIDAY ELVIS PRESLEY "BLUE HAWAII- FRIDAY, AU6. 2nd (10:45 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.) TEENAGERS^;’ 25'^ (The Southern . Railway recently hired as locomotive fife-men 100 elderly unemployed Negroes who never before worked on a railroad. They are manning the 8,000-tnile line’s freight and yard diesel locomotive*. The Southern, which is . not involved m the railroad dispute over alleged featherbed-. ding, contends its* inly obligation to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engine-men is to retain firemen on its passenger trains and to continue to list firemen on seniof-ity rolls. To learn what the newly hired firemen do and what they eafn, Chicago’s American telephoned one of them in Atlanta. Following are excerpts of the Newspaper’s story written by Bob Smith.) CHICAG0 UP) — Willie Glass is unique among the 100 elderly Negroes serving as firemen for the; Southern Railwayv He already has been hired, fired and rehired in the last two- weeks. ( ~ ★ ★_______ His duties in the cab of an Atlanta yard engine, however, the same as those of his aged contemporaries. “I don’t do nothin’,” he says., “I jyst set.” .For eight hours a day, six days a week, Willie Glass, who was 60 on May 7, site in the fireman’s, seat of a diesel locomotive which has no coal, no shovel, no firebox, and, according to road officials, no seed for a fireman. ^Ocgasionally there’r a little | overtime, too — 4% hours during his-first two weeks on the Job, (which boosted his paycheck for 12 days to»|197.97. problems,” Willie says. ‘‘Everybody has been nice to me . .." Occasionally WiUie leaves his seat, .but.It’s only to stretch his legs..Be still watches switching and; shunting operations with some interest, but it’s getting to be old stuff to him now, especially since he really isn’t an integral part of any of it Railroad officials that his presence in the cab toe’t-e safety factor either, World Scouts Start Jamboree Torchlight Rite Begins Gathering .in Greece That’s considerably more than the “70-some dollars” he made weekly during his 10 years as an job he held. • .;*• • W • “T was a city sanitary foreman,” he says, “i^was totin’ garbage.” =.....'........ As a railroad fireman, Willie says he has banker’s hours — • a. m, to I p, m. Of course, . he gets time off for lunch .. since -freight and yard engines generally contain two other men anyway, the engineer and the head-end brakeman. Despite, the inactivity, Willie likes the job'“real good . Willie was laid off last Sunday because “they said they were laying7 off one of the trains. ■ A " k • ★ Yet, he accepts this temporary unemployment philosophically. is. prepared to report Wednesday to resume his engine duties, he chuckled about being fired and rehired so quickly, and said: That’s railroadin’, I guess. MARATHON, Greece (AP)-A traditional Boy Scout torchlight ritual, magnified to a mammoth scale) inaugurates the 11th World Scout Jamboree tonight on - the historic Plains of Marathon. ' Sr * •• More than 6,000 visitors were expected to join 14,000 scouts from 70 .nations to see -Crown Prinoe Constantine of-Greece open the 11-day jamboree of. games, displays, competitions and tests of scouting skill. After, the opening address by the prince, who is Greece’s .chief scout, a . scout chosen at random lights a torch from a special fire and hands it down a line to 'his comrades. IGNITES GOBLET At the end of the relay The torch ignites the Olympia goblet, and the vast gathering sends the strains- of jamboree song?. ecbo-ing across the 2,000-tcre encamp-ment area 6n the plains where outnumbered Greeks routed Persian invaders in 490 B. C. , ■*"' Fireworks explode a festive pat-across the night sky as a scout from each of the jamboree’s n subcamps accepts from Constantine a flame to set biasing within the 11 great rings of tents. -The tents themselves indicate the far-flung origins of the participants. * West German scouts brought some of the most distinctive tents. I Theirs are’ black, with a hole at As, with aB* the new men, »1 the 'top to let out smoke, supervisor went along with Willie Pone 0fc the most modern tents] on His first run—merely to show belongs to a Canadian contingent] him where to sit and the location|Theirs are bdx-like and big enough: of the comfort station. From then; to stand up in. They have screens I on, he was on his own. . - ^ j and flap windows that roll up and! "I haven’t had any troubles or [down. -v. 1 WU-irld Jkiil DUE TO LENGTH OF PROGRAM EACH FEATURi SHOWN ONLY ONCE SHOWN MO P.M. ONLY Bette Dnis^TJoan Crawford "WHnT EVES HAPWNED To BflBYJANEr SHOWN t:20 P.M. ONLY jacmemmoit andieeRemiGK “dbysof wine ano Roses”# ose-^Rea/Big on theBaimy” la an-. Although it will be ^Mutiny on other story. Although ■war of tbs biggest jrosetnktan i-elraa* It onstlll and broke even at 666.5 Another recent Winqer, was the Mined; Brothers’ releasefor United Artists, “West Side Story.” U cost 67.1 million and has grossed 624.5 million. The projected grbss on the first time^around te 635 These figures demonstrate why studios have been willing to go for broke on a huge epic. Some of the companies may have approached the breaking point, but they remain In business. - million dollars. COST 612 MILLION “How the West Was Won” cost 612 million, a tidy amount for epics nowadays. Its break-even point is 620 million, which may not be fqr jtway. The advantages of playing for high stakes is demonstrated by two other MGM winners of the past. ~:,;; ★; • ★ • \. •. Tjte granddaddy of them all, “Gone with the Wind,” cost 64,-300,000 in l939. In five releases it has racked up rentals of 667 million, making it the biggest moneymaker of-all time. Its achievement is even more remarkable when you recall that theater admissions were much less during its early release than they are now, [THE MOST TERRIFYING^ MOTION PICTURE I EVER CREATED! VINCENT PRICE! IM MS MOST CH1UING P0RTRAMI OF CWL WM iliuri oi* a madman TECHNICOLOR JZ&Zt ' Tonight 7:00 and 10:00' ■ALSO’" —‘ wmzum UFWIME —LOUBJOURDAN 'll« S)«S - ii..— 7 TowlflM 8^30 Only Doora Open 6;48 P.M. Ben Him” to pushing the longtime champ with a total of 665 ,55 DAYS at PEKING SUPER TECHNIRAMA TECHNICOLOR BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATRE 332-3200 Showing tonight . FIRST RUN PONTIAC Orl?it With fh« A*tro-Kidlt" I CYD CHARISr- KIRK DOUGLAS: 6FAND OPENING CELEBRATION! 4 BIG DAYS — THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY ..Chonne'l 9 TV Stars Larry Sands 4 Jerry Booth open * ■"oft^ Lorry & Jerry's LITTLE CAfSARS PIZZA TREAT. ii u' u u u nnr •k SEE YOUR TV FAVORITES IN PERSON* Thursday evening ot 7 p. BILL KSWAISDIJ t Friday evening at 7 p-.m.. CAPTAIN JOLLy All day Saturday FREE CARICATURES Y JOHNNY CF2A Saturday Mvening at 7 p.m. iAPPy+jgppylg ./ i ’■ -£■ Sunday evening at 7 p.m. Mntmmim >t7 GIANT UMBO CONTES i & NTEST *TU>I F01? ALL)f free entertainment-autographed picturas 'iiiuiniuiiiiiiiuiiiiiiuiiuiinniHiiiiniirui^.,CKJWor,n Pontiac's newest .Cel ebri ty T ake-Odt Restaurant. Serving the finest Pizza, Chickan) Shrimp, Spaghetti, Ravioli, and other specialties,. Channel 9 TV Fovofifet wliy | JeRbY « LITTLE CAESARS This Coupon Worth^I*OO Toward the Purchase Bj dfa.BUC KET OF CHICKEN- -- LENWOOD PLAZA (at N. Perry) PT r flflj! '^DAFIER AUGUST 8 IL>OljlO: *jC» ♦ QJS AIM BAR *9643 * AKS7I WQ10S543 f J II * 9743 ♦ 73 ' ♦AM • WC *3 W99 ♦AXIOM ■3; ♦kqjios North and South vulnerable South Wool IV 1* *♦ 4* ---- Pom 5 ♦ Pom spade Bobby won te dummy, drew tramps and conceded a trick to tee ace of clubs. Bobby reasoned as fellows, “West would not jump to four I i with only three trumpe so East has five spades only. East would not overcall with a five card suit headed by ace-nothlng, therefore he must hold the king also. Of course, I can trump the spade and make the hand if diamonds break 3-2, but West did jump to four spades and may very well hold a singleton diamond. in that case I can’t afford to use a trump.” V*CRRD(ft’/x*’t+ Q—The bidding has beam By OSWALD JACOBY Wat’s four spades is. known as a/barricade bid. He wanted to' /make it as hard as possible for hte opponents to Had their best' spot. North, doubled. He bad good defen se against qmdes' wad no desire to play fori 11 tricks. any-| where, but South * took the double out Then Norte chose diamonds for tramp. East won the spade opening with the ace, not the king, aad promptly returned-a tew spade. He tel four tramps and Ugh hepes of beatfeg tec contract If he eoakl persuade tramp teat tew spade. He would have succeeded in his* purpose 'if South .had trumped in but internationalist Bobby NU1 of Houston, who bold the South cards, went into a long huddle and elected to discard a low club. - After West played a low Bart seatt Wert North 11 1¥ 14 If 4* If • ♦ Pass Pass T You, South, hold: ♦S WAQJ7I5 |4 ♦AKIM What do you do? . A Pwihls. Tan outfit to take three tricks as alnit them an* fee aren't folnf to he able to-make ■tat hearts. TOD ATS QUESTION » Instead, of bidding five spades Wert jumps to six spades over your five hearts. What do you do now? '-".‘Ti PONTIAC 4b 88. THURS jgB PONTIAC PftESS, THURSDAY* AUGUST I, -196,3 P-r7 Japanese Rightists Maintain Influence by Burning, Killt By CONRAD FINK AP News 8peelal TOKYO^ #— Tbs twoyoung meit-walked boldly into the luxurious bouM, carrying tools of their trade: pistol, can of gasoline, handwritten manifesto. Handing the paper to a Servant they fired two shots-into the floor, sprinkled gasoline around and threw down a lighted match. As flames surged through the house, the men strolled away. The house was destroyed. -It was owned by Construction Minister Ichiro Kono, a member of Japaii’s ruling Liberal-Democratic party and Prime Minister , Hayato Ideda’s conservative, pro-American government;——— _Jhe^act was political terrorism as practiced* by Japan’s small but dangerousrjghtj&jn^ National police estimate right-, 1st groups nufnber 400 and their firm membership 70,000. They sometimes quarrel with each other, Splinter in all directions and are believed to be politically insignificant. The rightists wield influence all out of proportion to their numbers for two primary reasons; ★ • * it 1. They represent a dreaded history of arson and murder before World War II, contributing to the death of parliamentary democracy. 2. Because some rightists have a murderous disregard for lives — including their own, —, none ptzthenropponeatt every feels •ala.'-' , Many government officials inever are without bodyguards. Left- ist leaders, the rightists’ avowed targets, sleep uneasily. SMEAKCAMFAH»r Rightists had been conducting smear campaign for months agaiiyrt Kono, charging In pamphlets that ha is soft on commu- in Japan — to improye trade re-, lations with the Soviet Union. The manifestoJeft behind when Kono's house was burned July IB declared: "Ibis is Just the beginning.. If the Liberal-Democratic party doesn’t repent, there will nism. Thig apparently arises be mor^ fires, from Kono’s desire — widely beld| The note was signed: "Patri- otic Comrades’ Society, All-Japan Patriotic Organizations Congress! Responsible person — Shu-suke Nomura." > . Nomura, 28, president'rof the society, surrendered to peike two days later. Authorities said he cheerfully admitted burning the house. A friend. Takuo Matsuno, soon wasairested and paBoa bad prao r ttedlly the entire membership Of the "Patriotic Comrades’ Society’’ behind bar*. In December 1981, police uncovered a plot to murder Ikeda thought 4a he with the individual terrorists who seek out one vie- leftists. But the immediate danger tflment policy’’ that he said wa» time or, at the most, a few. Some, such ■as^a 17-year-old boy arrested nearlkfda|s house last fall, fry to martyr them- and members of his government selves. The boy cut off a finger;---------r_^ ______ _ and set up a rightist regime. |protesting "weak-kneed govern- Aaanuma, in l980, killing him. turning Jai»m .'tato •. -nMferi. of * Others, like 17-year-old Otoya Yamaguchi, take up the knife or gun. Yamaguchi drove a short sword into tKe abdomen of the Socialist party’chairman, Inejiro 5 Killed in NY Crash Deal Hearing Nears End NEW YORK (UPI) - A Bronx County grand jury may complete hearings today on an automobile accident in which .five persons died. The yn of a Criminal Court Judtge could be indicted by the panel on charges of vehicular homicide. The youth, 23-year-old Gareth Martinis* operated one of three cars involved In the May tt-eel-lision. Yesterday, the grand jury heard 28 witnesses, Inclod-lag Eugene Kramon, a sandier of the crash, who testified la a wheelchair. 1 Twenty-one additional witnesses'have* been subpoenaed to Appear before the 23-member panel. Martinis, who could be sentenced to five years in prison and fined ' $1,000 if convicted of vehicular homicide, has indicated that he will not testify. * ' • it it it- On July 1,- a three-judge panel which had heard the case acquitted Martinis of reckless and .’drunken driving and of leaving the scene of an accident, all misdemeanors. Vehicular homicide il l felony. That decision sparked a public outcry, apparently because the three justices took only five minutes to return their verdict and because all three were associates . of Martinis’ father, Bronx Criminal Court Justice Joseph A. Martinis. .. Remarking on the speedy verdict, a relative Of victims of the accident said bitterly: "That was Only one" minute rlife.” However, the Bronx Criminal Courts Bar Association, ’ which investigated! the case, said that ",. . no other Judges could have conducted this trial except those who could be labeled colleagues of judge Martinis." - 1 The panel noted '"glaring contradictions’’ in the testimony. Several witnesses, including the police officer, who arrested die youth, said he appeared drank shortly after the crash. Other testimony alleged, that Martinis had been speeding and driving arrAticaily at the time of the collision. However, a bartender who bad served the youth, plus another policeman who interviewed Martinis at a precinct house, said ho did not appear to be intoxicated. There was no indication of the nature of yesterday’s'testimony. Kramon shielded b|s face with p newspaper while entering and leaving the courtroom and refused to talk with reporters. (ASTaHlMMMt) BUSHY BRANNY Wipe rim Of tod glatt wNh lemon from which Juice boo boon squeezed. Dip rim In sugar. Add teO'Cubee. FRihcff wift lemonade; hod with CMk Burgundy Wide. PfW Win* SuM*. r. o. •*■ wr, no* n*w, MM. cask:—* WINES Calls Congress Slowest Show WASHINGTON (UPD - A Republican senator yesterday described die first session of the 88th Congress as the “biggest apd longest running slow motion show to hit Washington In years.” A Democratic spokesman took vigorous exception. . Sen. Jacob K: Javits, R-N.Y. said President Kennedy and the Democratic-dolhinated House and Senate “cannot shun the responsibility for this standstill legislative logjam." He said if the Democratic party b "so much in conflict with itself that it cannot lead affectively,, then the coon try should know that.” Majority feeder Mike Mans-! field, D-Mont., said, however, he failed to see any - “enthusiastic support” by Republicans for such administration programs as aid to education, medicare, mass transit, foreign aid or youth employment,.all listed by Javits as stalled in committee. , Mansfield prodded committees, however, to "please -get busy on the legislation on which you are holding hearings. Time is getting short." U.S. Rear Admiral Dies; Wat White House Aide .WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rear Adni. Pauls P. Powell, USN, Retired, a former White House aide, died yesterday of cancer. He was 70 . . Powell had served as chief naval aide at'the White House to Presidents Herbert Hoover and Pranklin IXRoosevclt. A Naval Downtown f . D—tS faE P0K Y1 AC PRESS. THURSDAY, AtTCUST 1, 1968 Blueburgers Are Siapto Prepare Hw’i MW Wif to afcfi gourment flair to the burgers you prepare this summer on the oat-door grill. • #.' * * Simply crumble some mellow Americamblue cheese on the regular beef pottles Just before they ore done. The result blueburgerel * ,,. The combination of beat end lue cheese always ha^ popular, and a blueburger is an easy way Jo combine the two flavor-mates. American blue cheese is bndff ‘ ed-priced at supermarkets and] other statm that sell cheese. Vou can add milk, water or no iqrid'at all when you are get-ting eggs re^dy for scrambling. Canned Whole Oniarts Excellent for Kabobs ' Although raw onion wedges are usually used* to thread between plages of land) orbecf for skewered broiling, drained . canned whole small onions may be substituted. This is a good idea to1 those eaters who want their onions really tender —.a stage not achieved during skewer cookery with the raw vegetable. mssssmm flenulne t II MAC-0-iAC . 1 PAINT PAIL formica| DbcoaHiwd-M 1 F-R-E-E Patterns If H wttii each paint orJ»f .. H on* 5-quaft ptaitk point. Tremendous 1H Ill Tunut Fomuu n Savings I I*-, DO-IT-YOURSELF Ceramic WallTrie - 39‘ WC LOAN TOOU _ rwnimv.9 imrwhi iiu MniM . » >HfC X& Our Own Installation Work Done by Experts tv oroi moil, twms., mi. tc a»w mu ran sahkims is rear____?* PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER fl*r By JANET ODELL^ „Paatlar Preta Feed Editor August is Sandwich month and on this first day we offer you some of the most tempting recipes in our files. These are all special sandwiches, not the kind you put in Dad’s or Junior’s lunchbox. They’re sandwiches you’ll serve liter a spirited game of cards in the evening. They’re sandwiches you’ll , be proud to offer your dub when it meets for luncheon. ' ■ ' They’re sandwiches fancy The only thipg they Save in common is bread. Every year The . Wheat Flour Institute sponsors a rnntpatfor. 1075 W. Huron St. Phono 334-9957 If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Sandwiches Have Many Styles Spread ahrljnp mixture eyer toast. Cover with Cheese Sauce and sprinkle with paprika. Broil uati) lightly, browned.» .Garnish each with ft cup cole daw, on§ spiced crab apple and parsley. Serve open-faced. Note: For milder Version, decrease pepper to ft teaspoon and Tabascetqdash. Cheese Sauce 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 tablespoons enriched flour lft cups milk ft tBBspuua salt—-----v— ft teaspoon white pepper 1 cup pasteurized process cheese spread coming wetted down and sog- gjr.' *'f ;,' Gala Sandwich Loaf Avocado Spread Crab Spread Egg-Curry Spread lft • pound loaf Qosliced enriched sandwich bread ,V Mayonnaise or salad dressing Cream-Cheese Spread the best sandwiches invented by. individuals' in professional food jobs. Our first recipe today is one of the top three sandwiches. The ‘creator, Mrs. Lorine Goynes, pantry girl at the Sky ILanes and Cimmaron Room, Omaha, Neb. received $500 for her entry at a special - luncheon in New York this week. Ibis is the sandwich yon can serve for the main coarse of a luncheon. Shrimp A Li Qeyues ■ • ’ 1 cup chopped celery ft cup chopped green pepper ft cup chopped onion' 3 tabl&spoons butter or marga-•: rine r. 2 pounds cooked shrimp, cleaned and diced ' 1 eup chili sauce »• . ' : 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon lemon juice . ft* teaspoon salt ft teaspoon pepper ft teaspoon Tabasco 12 slices Russian rye bread, touted -Cheese Sauce Paprika lft cups cole slaw ' 6 spiced crab apples Parsley Cook celery, green pepper and onion hi butter or margarine about five minutes/ or until tender. Stir in shrimp, chili sauce, Worcestershire sauce,lemon jjiice, salt, pepper and Tabasco. Place six toast slices on baking sheet or heat resistant serving plates. Cot remaining toast • slices'Jn half and place on op-I posite ends of whole slices. Melt batter or margarine In saucepan. Stir in flour to make smooto paste. Gradually add milk, stirring constantly. Cook over, moderate heat until thickened, stirring 'frequently. Blend in salt and pepper. Stir in .Cheese spread'over low heat, blendbig^mtil smooto. Makes I sandwiches. A sandwich loaf is such an easy food to serve pt a shower. All the work is done Ahead of time.' The different thing about this recipe is that the bread layers are stacked vertically. This prevents the bottom layer, from |»e- Avocado slices Prepare A v o e ado Spread, Crab Spread and Egg-Curry Spread and chill; Trim bread. Slice lengthwise Into four equal slices; ■ Spread 3 hread~ritoex-with mayonnaise or salad dressing. Spread 1 slice with Avocado Spread, 1 slice with Crab Spread and JLIUce Egg- Carry Spread. Stack spread slices in older and dose with remaining* bread slice. Press together gently. Push 4 or 5 skewers through k»f from top to bottofh. Turn loaf on side so me three fflUngs show fa top of loaf. Frost top and sides of loaf with Cream Cheese Spread. Remove skewers. Refrigerate lopf until firm, aj. least 1 hour, hr until serving time. Decorate top of loaf , with, egg slices and avocado slices. >' To Stra*. .cut into l’/s-inch slices. Loaf will be euy to Alice and will net slide apart H eat with print of knife pttrpen-dicalar to the serving plate. - ager or your husband'! friend! after a polar game. _____ Avocado Spread 1 ripe avocado, peeled and diced ft cup mayonnaise or salad ' dressing i teaspoon lemon juice ft teaspoon Tabasco Combine ingrrdients and chill. Crab Spread, 1 cup cooked flaked cfab meat (Tft-ounce can) ft cup mayonnaise or salad dressing teaspuui . ^... 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce ft teaspoon salt Combine ingredients and chill. Egg-Curry Spread 4 hard-cooked eggs, diced ft cup finely chopped radish ft cup mayonnaise or salad dressing ft toaspoon salt , ft teaspoon curry powder Combine, ingredients and Chill. Rakes 12 servings; _ Cream Cheese Spread 2 cups softened'(ream cheese (two 8-ounce packages) 3-tablespoons corn sirup , Whip together until mixture is of spreading consistency. Now for the he-man sandwicn that will satisfy -either Super Sandvrjch Large loaf Italian bread (about 18 inches long) ft cup prepared mustard lSsUqes salami Jtableapoona well - drained sweet pickle relish 18 slices sweet fresh cucumber pickles 8 slices process American cheese, halved diagonally Parsley Cut bread into 8 equal pieces. Slice each piece in half taking* nt to ent all the way nuvH§dj spread wilt mustard. Place 2 salami slices (folded hi half and filled with pickle relish), Z Pickle slicea and a cheese triangle in each piece to form sandwich. , > Arrange sandwiches to form loaf. If desired, wrap in alumi- ____ foil; bake in 400 degree (hop oven 10 minutes.; Garnish .. with parsle^. • Frozen Suckers Freeze nineapple juice in ice cube trayl until almpst firm. Insert small wooden skewers for anH frt+rt? anlid. Tint— various colors, if you like. Children find these a cooling treat • on hot afternoons. we're brood Top Quality REMUS BUTTER { >t | lb. Fresh, Cherry Red Juicy, Tender, Well Trimmed Hamburger 0Q| Fresh Ground Hourly HOMEGROWN ^ IA£ PEACHES IQib 2-Inches and up ■ , . nu TIIE COB U.S. #1 Michigan -q l QQ£ Potatoes lu'fcBL 'SIRLOIN 'ROUND Peters Large- SLICED BOLOGNA Peters Ikinless LARGE CRISP HEAD -M LETTUCE FRESH HOME QMWl CUCUMBERS Boneless Rolled RUMP ROAST mfWtown FOOD CENTER 706 W. HURON BEER—WINE—LIQUOR These Prices Good Thursday/ Friday and Saturday STEAKS ■SSI • SWISS • CLUB t FARM FRESH LJ2Z: LARGE EGCS RS* PAN-REDI FRYERS LEAN-RIB-CENTERS " gfcgfT NIIK CHOPS 65$ SHANK JUNEDALE BRAND SMOKED LEAN BUTT 39$ HAM 49$ =MHWH ■ ■». ■* ■ Fanm TURKEY -DRUM STICKS m FRESH SLICED PORIC OR BEEF LIVER m' YOUR CHOICE GRADE 1 SKINLESS _ ■ — TENDER TASTY • 3 lbs. HOT DOGS 01 • 2 lbs. Pork & Veal Cutlets LEAN, .MEATY ■ TASTY ZESTY •2 lbs. PORK STEAK ■ * 2 lbs. MIHUTE STEAKS 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open Friday Evanings til 9 P.M. i Thjs A (tin Effect Both Store* - _ Friday and Saturday .. MARKETS Quality Meat Since 1931 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON -PLAINS Opan Thurs. thru Sat. 9 A.M. to.9 P.M. Opan Sundays 9|LMu to 6 P.M. fm '•<1 U frHE gQNTIAC PjaESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, I96B r D—-9 Seniors' Champ Vereul^ee Wee at Waterford Hills Goif Opporients Friday Seby^Generatians By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Prow Bob Dawson, at the age of 85, and Jackie Detfbs, 10, are separated not by * years but by generations. Thcty'db haroone thing in common, golf! tiac’s greatest athletes, was playing football and track at Pontiac High honors he gajndd In golf came ini the aenior ranks. Jackie has to -concede 71 years to Dawson, bnt what Dawsmi has done ate senior, toe little <9 pounder from Orlando, ‘ Florida, can counter in pee-wee ranks. Friday at l0:0(f a.m. at Fnew Waterford Hills hole, par. 27 coarse which measures 1,075 yards. There won't be any fan* fare of the Palmer-Player .sort. There won’t even be a trophy going to toe winner. But,,as fantasies . come to life, Dawson and Debbs each have something extra • ordinary, as far as the game of golf .gWf—1 \ _ the state seniors at Port. Huron, he tried to match his age With a score of 85. He missed by one stroke and came, in with an 86. School in 1890. He started playing golf at the age of 42 and for more than 40 years the game has hem close to his heart. i^Ul the Golf Club on Dixie Highway, the match of two - Dawson has seniors’ titles galore to his centuries will take .place. MATCH SET Dawaon and Debbs will meet each other on ,the 9- pfamships in the national seniors, s t a t e seniors and western seniors. * Just a few weeks ago, in - STARTED AT I Debbs certainly has the a d v a nt age in golf. He . started at the age of three in 1956 and in the national pee - wee tournament at Ria. Pinar- Golf Club in Orlando he finished 4th in his b r a c k e t among 15 Toys. 'Now io years old, he has 38 junior tournaments uhder his belt, including a pee-wee championship at the age of five when he weighed only 41 pounds. Little Jackie, who now measures only 45 inches in height, is still even big. enough to ‘carry Ms • own golf clubs, which were specially designed aad-made by Wilsoo.— His bag has the full . complement of clubs, ex- . cept that he has no two , iron. He dairies what he calls a 2Mi Iron and tftesb a three-iron. Movie and televisioti studios and national magazines have recorded many, of Jaclde’aleata for, the past six years and many of “the top .pros in the country has watched with amazement the golf Scrimmage Is 'Rubber' Ganie Past Tilts at Wisner Field Barr Ra-lnjurei Knee but Coach Terms 'Not Serious' Saturday night’s intra-squad scrimmage between toe DETROIT (JH — The Detroit Tigers‘are idle today. Their bats have been idle for the past three days. Ip three gamps at Baltimore, blue team and defensive white team of toe Detroit'Lion? will be the rubber game between the two units since the contest was switched to Wisner Stadium in 1961. ■ For five' years prior to the switch to Wiener, the scrimage was held in training camp. The crowds became-so big that is was decided to stage the scrimmage in full dress with gate proceeds going to.Charity. —— . In 1961 the defensive won a 15-9 decision,, and last year with Milt Plum and Earl MorralT leading the way, toe Blue team won, . 22-12. The Lions received a jolt yesterday when Terry tor limped from toe field after he was kicked to a tackle by rookie Cart Kassulke to a pass-in scrimage. Barr was out of action after the 6th game in 1962 when the same knee- was injured forcing him to undergo surgery. Coach George Wilson said later - however that toe injury was not serious.and.Barr would be back in scrimmange drills. Whether or , not he would play in Saturday's intra-squad game at. Wisner is i not yet known; _ y ALL-STARS ~ Friday nightr assistant coach Bob Nussbaurapr will be in Chicago of the annual College All-Star football game featuring the world champion Green Bayj Packers against the collegians. Tiger Bats form at toe tek> to the traps, On fee green, etc. - “There’s nothing more I can do fpr his game,”, aajd Ope of the nation’s top pros, “the only thing left for him 1s to -grow up-” — i ..Three weeks ago at the Colonial Palms Golf C|ub in Miami, Jackie accomplished something that the most ardent golfers strive to get once in their life- - tim» ' Ho iiuaH a 7.imn nn a 116 yard hole for a bole in One. The tournament, primarily made up of teen-age junior golfers, ran 54 holes, and Jackie finished 11th, Including a round of 73.. J) o t h a n, Alabama, and later he will be entered to ’ toe Fee-Wee Nationa 1 championship for the 7th Tht-elder Dibba, Charles, once a. resident of Ferndale who as a caddie worked unto, Ebble Goodfeltow,' when the exited Wing hockey star was caddie master at Oakland Hills in 1928, has been Jackie’s “pro” consultant since 1966. .» ' - the Tigers managed to score only two unearned runs on 12 hits. They wasted two. fine .pitching pcrformaneeer-r"— The result: Losses No'. SI, 58 and 59 in 102 games and a slide deeper into ninth place. The Tigers now are 3 Mr 'games behind * eighth-place Kansas City. —— Mickey Lolich lost a three-hitter, 2-1, Monday night when the Tigers had only two hits against fromer, Michigan State star Robin Roberts. They -were hiasledM Tuesday'night. Frank toy lost tost night, 2-1, giving up five of six Oriole, hits. Baltimore’s Steve Baiter, who gave.up six hits picked up the credit for the Orioles’ 10th victory in 12 games, against Detroit this season^__________ PontUo Press Photo Dave Keaggy' Jr., 16, National Archery Champ Keaggy National LOS ANGELES — Sixteen-year-1 she won the women’s inter nation-old Dave Keaggy Jr., of Water-]al round with a score of 1,071 ford Township won the men’s amateur competition of the 79th National ,A re he r y Association championships, here yesterday. Keaggy, of 3807 Aquarina, finished with lt124 points while Ed I Rohde, Muscatine, Iowa, led the] Miss Vonderheide, American champion, lost her international -title last week to Helsinki, Finland, to Victoria Cook of Minneapolis: ' The former tournament record score was 1.070. set last year by All the scoring came in the first toning. Ross Snyder, who helped Detroit score an unearned run with an error Monday, donated another run by dropping Dick McAuliffe’s fly after Don Wert had walked. Wert went to third when Al Kaline grounded into a double play and scored on Rocky Cola-vito’s bgpken-bat single. toy gave up three of his five hits in the Orioles’ naif of the first. Singles by Luis Aparido and Snyder and a walk to Boog Powell loaded the bases with {none(Hit. , ~ One run scored when JimGen-tile hit into a force play, and the tie-breaker came aerpss^on i gle by Al Smith. BALTIMORE McAuliffe n Kaline rf , Colavito 14 “•—"in if 111 o Aparlclo u 3 0 0 0 Snyder cf-rf 4 O' 0 0 Powell U 4 0 3 1 Saverlne ct 4 0 0 0 Oentlle lb 4 0 0 O Smith |T 4 0 2 0 Brandt If 3 0 0 .0 Robinson 3b *00 oarot(n; c — U 1 0 Ai ale 32 1 4 1 Total! -Doubled for Lnry in ... Trlandos In Hh. ■ Detroit , , , .... • ... ■ ovuio noo x.viu, aci lose jew w, professional competition withl,.jAnfta Mae Medert of Cincinnati. 15S* In the national round, Mias Von- Keaggy, who finished third in derheide had 1,628. the international competition at Terry Witt of Waterloo, liwivfwKW* #3633? Helsinki, won the men’s interna- was flr8t fa toe Inteimediate^^^^Au^? tional round here with 1,124, and bovs’.class aces 15 to 18 with 8 wtimw i. . . ____• ages io io, wiui a JB—Adair, Trlandoo. O—Barbor, McAu- ihad 1,496 in the York round. I score of 1,099.' um«.__ Cincbmati’s Nancy Vonderheide I In toe crossfapw division, Rob- uryL, --------M______established a National Archery]ert Brennemapof Cincinnati ledls^’"**.. ____ . _ . Three Lion rookies have been Association tournament record asjWth 1,276. given high praises by All-Star I Pantlaa Frets Photo PEE WEE AWAITS .SENIOR - Ten year old Jackie Debi», -stop won the national pee wee golf championship at the age of five, will meet former senior’s champion 85 year old Bob Dawson, one-time Pontiac High'athlete, in a match Friday morningon the new par-3 Waterford Hills course on Digie Higflway. In February «f 1912, Jackie was to toe field of the baseball celebrities’ tournament to St. Petersburg. He edme to with 55-57-112, and there were Blay top— names of baseball that followed him to the final -scoring. He played in the tourna-ment as a guest, but in ‘ his owmright Jackie could very well be included in . the • baseball celebrities’ ' —list. He plays Little League baseball as well and has held down a .471 batting average, Oh-yes, as a sidelight to his “veteran” sports career, Jackie even swam in,' a Competitive 50 yard" ' freestyle event at the age of three in St. Pete. FUTURE MASTER , In two -weeks Jackie will compete in the “Future Masters” tournament at mm® mmmmmmmmmmsm Debbs migrated far Florida 18 years ago and has been to the motel business since leev- __ tog Michigan. He. has ■" inactivated himself from golf as player and has, devoted his time to caddying again, for the 19-year-old ' “pro” of the family. Jackie went back to Oakland Hills, the scene of his father’s childhood yesterday. He came .in with 57-52-109 and called the famous layout oh-Maple Road, the “toughest” course he has ever played. - The 6ebbs have numer- *" ous. relatives in.toe Pontiac area and Jackie be- ~ came acquainted with Bob Dawson when the Pontiac senior wm to Florida last ‘ winter. . Upon tfie Debbs’ next visit to Michigan, it was' agreed that Jackie and Daws.oh would^ match strokes. The big day has arrived. ■Die Pee Wee chamjnon Vosus the senior’s cham- ' 1 pion, tomorrow morning. fl MMMMMMM i Greatest Dash' Paces U. S. HANNOVER, Germany (AP)— “It must be the greatest 100 meter ever run,” said United States track coach Payton Jordan, an old sprinter himself, of the incredible relay anchor leg by Robert Hayes on . the. opening day of the^United States-West Germany meet. Hayes, the burly Florida A and M sprinter who holds the world 100-yard .dash records, took toe baton five yards back of German The remaining eleven will be run today, ' The’ American team, smarting under published criticism of their attitude in Moscow which has just reached toem here, poured on toe Germans. They feel they pave been hit below the belt” - T^boySTtWnk theyare being M bitternegs crucified,” Jordan said. The criticism isn’t fair. In all my years'as a runner coach I never saw a, more decent, anchor mair Alfred Hebauff, blazed past the German and won Wednesday. , The American team was timed in 397^seconds.. It was the highlight of the opener of the two-day meet, hr which the Americans ran bp a 64-42 margin and won eight of the 10 events. Tennis Meet to Continue Coach Otto Graham. Halfback Larry Ferguson of Iowa is. ex- j pCcted • to start for the stars. : L He is considered one of the k fastest backs on the squad. Tackle Roy Williams, 6-7 andN : 265 pounder from University of j ' the Pacific, and Daryl Sanders, * 250 pound tackle at 6-5 from Ohio \ State are toe other members of \ the squad. They will be in Pontiac Satur-. ’ day night for the scrimmage,' however, they are not expected to j l see action. hard working hunch id boys or coaches. This is a fealty dedicated team. A magazine article tha't the athletes feei implied the team was cocky and loafing Jn the Moscow meet: which it narroVtiy wbny net two victories in 110-meter high hurdles, with Hayes Jones of Pon-' tiac the winner to 13.6 seconds. 800 meters with Tom O’Hara of Chicago to front to 1:49.3, the broad jump, with ..Ralph Boston IHWf Inches. Henry Carr’a brilliant 45.4 seconds victory in the 400 meters, was overshadowed Wednesday by Hayes’ great relay leg. JONES TRIUMPHS The Americans wrapped up one, Ibe pole vault, wnere donn Pennell of Miami, Fla. went to 16 ft. 4%. inches and the discus won by Rob Humphries 'of Long Beach, Calif., at 166 3% inches. Only the 5,000 meters and, the hammer throw were won by the Germans. OFFENSIVE BLCE LINEUPS ,' J ..’’r-- • tbs.in . __________POS. HOT. WOT. APE NFL 6-2 209 23 Tim Watkins Nick PlHrosante Nick Ryder ..... Terry Barr - Dan ’ Lewis Larry Ferguson .. Darryl Bandera , John Oordy ............ Paul WaM ............. Dan LaRoae ..... .... John Oonsaaa .......... Jim mbtaa ............. Al OreenS ............. <6-7 205 ^1^230 Iowa State Houston Notre Dama Miami Michigan -Wlsconaln ■■ ' „■-««» Notre Dama\ • lUlnols BUM AHaona Kansas State Colleka u. Pacific __Tennis action iq the County Invitational tournament resumes Friday evening and continues through Sunday with the finals of j.all events. LMen's singles action is slated par Friday” evening af8 j00 p.mr at Oakland Park, wito the quarterfinals laid semifinals of all |nuitches on Saturday. | In rain-delayed matches, Cickl nd Al Craft won 6-3, 74 from Goff-Kearns and 6-3, 6-1 from Minton-Hoffman to-move] into the quarterfinals .against Hibbs and HarSen who won 6-1, 6-0 over McBrearty and Brandt. Ibis is-toe time schedule at Oakland Park: Pittsburgh t 11 Teiik :: : : :i| ■ 11 fli -3- DEFENSIVE WHITE UNHUP TBS. IN rot. mot. wot: aoE nfl ........DHB S-n lto S3 .4 3 Whitworth 3 Missouri ( No Collet* f lows, 1 Jsckson 8t»te 7 nmvfr.lty nt Detroit 4 Washington 8t»te ......... lyder Flanker—Bair. Stuftstm DEFENSIVE DEPTH CHART End—McCord. 0’Brlen..n~---- TacWterBundta. Peters' I I Tackle—Brown. Rceberg ■ End—8: WUUatt*. Imperldle. Lloyd LUk—BretUchneidar, Messnrr •• MLB—Schmidt: Oahauu RLB—walker, Clark m LB ...,n . Dnlverlsty of Detroit Brigham Your* ¥t£i A & M Syracuse^ Notes Dams jPjVT—*|. S-l 235 31 ‘ Pittsburgh Iowa SUte Michigan State Hampton tost. Southern Illinois 1.1‘BmM I Sou the fa' caUWml* . DE. U 333 LB^-Lsine, Kaosulka . RH—LeBeau, Maher IS—Lowe, Kink Schleber T R3—Lary, Hgll, TranU ::W non-returnable bottles full of E&B fibulousbeer ‘ AND -:obeGk4be4ow.price^ that’s a treat •too!" ' The regular season for the city softball leagues will conclude to-1 ; night at Nofthside Park- The * ] Millwork, nine will seek to tie] for fifth place when it moots Jet] .. Bar at 7 p.m.; in a B contest] •jPontiac State Hospital’ wilt at-< tempt to clinch toe final play-! off spot agatost.Ftost Cburch ofi ^4 the Brethren at 8; 30 pjn. ( NO DEPOSIT NO RETURN’ £ 4 B Srawlng Ce , OeSrad 7, MKR. P-2TO THK^ONTIAC PREB^, THURSDAY. AUGUST 1. 1M8 SALE! 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Adjustments mode by every K-mort store in the country whereRoodKin^—mm—rn» CAR SERVICES FOR YOU AT K-ntort • Broket Installed • Whoal* Balanced • Saat Balt* lattolled , • Shock Abtorbtr* Installed • Tuna-Up . a Free Safety Chalk ' : No Recappable Exchange Needed We'll Toke Your Old Worn Tire in Trade \ Regardless of Condition Another Way K-mart Saves You Money K-mart SERVICE SPECIAL BRAKES RELtNED We puN all 4 wheel*, dean drome, re piece broke mAm lining, adj. d 4 wheel*, add fluid end road te*t. I|H| Guo, 30,000 mile* or I yeor. American made can IjV I •Mh *td. brake* only. SERVICE CENTERS ONLY-SHar Expires U|. 4 ■■ Foul Line Hit Decides Game in Class A ■y Cranbrook 'lnche|‘ Toward Top Position in City Playoffs Cranbrook ..today holds first place in the city men’s baseball [league by .a matter of inches. The Bloomfield Hills nine ral-[lied for an exciting $4 victory over the Cli] joins during the regular season for the winners. "• / ••—•••» t . * At . * Cranbrook took the decision a solid twpout, two-strike double on the left field foul line by pinch-hitter Larry Demrick in the bo t-tom of the sixth Inning that drove in two runs and reminded that baseball hi, indeed, a game of todies. The Clippers had led from the first toning when Stephen Haynes rapped a bases-loaded stogie for two runs with two out M the top of the toning. Dick Mosher’s triple leading off and a one-out safety by Tom Demrick — whose second single ignited the winning rally — cut the ~visitorsumargin in haH to the botton^of the initial stanza. Bob Readier and John Billed don kept the score that way tor the next four and a half innings until the older Demrick came out of tiie coach’s, box for his bat heroics. The Clippers put the tying run on base leading • off the last frame, but ran themselyfcs out [of the ball game when/the runner urns caught stealing after Bil- rlesdon’s 10th strikeout victim._ The big right-hander added a little spice by getting toe loop’* leading hitter,/Felix Brooks, to fan for toe final out and strikeout No. It./ Tonight there will be a-muist game between Huron-Airway and Talbott Lumber at 8 p. m. under the Jaycee No.*2 diamond lights. Defending champion H-A must wintoretain any hope of catch-, tog Cranbrook and to hold second place. ' Talbott must triumph or see its chances for the fourth1 and final playoff spot almost completely disappear. The recreation department announced yesterday there will be a doubleheader Friday with Loa cal 594 playing Oxford At 6 p; in. |and the Barbers meeting M. (I. Collision at 8:30 p. m. f Some nights the game so mudrepftier. Barry Door clinched first place to toe qlty Class C softball race just by showing tip last night. It gained a . 74 forfeit victory from Local 03 that enabled it to finish one full game ahead of Monday night upset victim Bud h Lou’s Bar. ‘ Nor was it a hard time for the other- two victors tost night. SoftbaH Victories Easy for Some City Throe -Turnesa brothers lostto toe finals ot fte PGA £hamplon-ship, joe bowed to Walter Hagan to lfVT, Jim to Sam SnoadTfi 1948 and Mika to Ban Hogan to 1948. Jim' broke the losing tradition by beating Chick Hubert In 1MB. In Class B, G&M Construction Scott Harrity .National Boys Speed Champion Special to The Pontiac Press PORTLAND, Ore. ‘— Scott ‘ Harrity, lL of Pontiac won his second consecutive National Juvenile “C” Boys speed championship here yesterday Jil toe North American Roller Skating meet. 0 ...★ it * Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Harrity, "HIS Bielby, won the same -title tost year' and captured the Juvenile “B” crow to 1959. A member of the Rolladium Skattog Club, he competes Friday in the Juvenile Boys free skating division. *’ ★ . * Sue Welch Wahlig and Dave Shafer, also of the Rolladium club, qualified for Saturday’s senior pair free skating compe- had an -easy tone disposing of Motorcar Transport, 13-5,* and main tailing a dim hope for p share of a fourth place to that league. Daa Smith’s three stogies, Idas three douMswtanfl two triples by Mi teammates made the Mlllwork team’s task much easier agalast Buettner’s. G&M’s Dale Bfdder had a double and triple to lead a 10-hit attack against MTC. He also btoed with Dwight Butter ‘ I£Sm LOW. LOW PRICES WALLS HA9DWAU 6545 Commtrct Road IULMAN HAIDWABE 3545 Elifiabotti ' Lako Rood mco HARDWARE #3 3320 Auburn, WE’RE PULLINGJ>OWN NEW 1963 CHEVROLET LONG BOX '/a TON PICKUP Complete with Air Flow Heater, Two Speed Wiper and Washers Taxes and Transfers N89SM HASKINS CHEVROLET-OLOS 6751 DIXIE HWY. at M-15 (Tour Cross Roads to Graatar Savings) CLARKSTON MA 5-5071 MIRY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM GLENWOOD PLAZA •-^Charge It a NORTH PERRY STREET at GLENWOOD! * graphing. Smooth, laathor • • oasy to writ* on. Not a goto* ball,, but official six# and uhapo. Tho porfoct . presentation SQQg ball. WQ C. ROGERS SPORTING GOODS I |24 E. Lawrence FE 2-2369 EoyjriAC frifESS, Thursday, AuGus'f: ■n-ii' The first funds approprieted by (development of. water resources, jgational study of the Mississippi the federal government for thelvoted in 1120, provided for a navi-[and Ohio rivwgJV ' ’ \ . , ONLY CHICAGO (AP)—A massive air attack appears to be the College All-Stars’ beat weapon against the National Football League champion &reen Bay Packers Friday night—but even Head Coach Otto Graham doesn’t know' who will ad it. After a dress rehearsal under the lights of Soldiers Field Wedensday night, Graham still was speculating about his starting quarterback. ★ .* The four at his comm are performance- proved over billions of miles! 7 exclusive reasons why 'Jeep' vehicle* are your best buy I I. town leWol cent A wheel drNe vohklot 5. built from »he ground up o» o 4-wheel drive 3. highest resqfe value due to fuMtional dedgn A. performance proved ever billion* of miles of J. Mg poylood sispocHy et> e short wheelbote world-wide service 4. 3 power takeoff point*-frbnt, center, rear 7. only complete line of 4-wheel drive vehicle* ASK POf A DEMONSTRATION TODAY) All Nop 'Jee#' Glodiaior AS New 'Jeep* WetOMer - WRlCHS MADE ONLY BY KAIMKR jNf CORPORATION OLIVER MOTOR SALE^ I BILL SPENCE, Inc. (Jaap Division) 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FI 2-9101 FeeHac, Mich. 6673 Dixie Hwy._ MA 9.SI6I Clarkiten KAISER PRESENTS THE LLOYD BRIDGES SHOW TUESDAY 8 P. M. Coach Seeks Commander ior Massive Ar Attack AMEB1CAN LEAGUE am mi Washington . WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS New York 3. Kansas City 1 t, Bolton, 5 WuhlnyMn 1 1, Detroit I, TODAY'S GAMES Betted (Wilton 1-11) at Balttmor Cormlck 3-6). nlfht ......... Only came tchadnlari “BIDAY'8 GAMES. .... .. Let Angelei, ntgffl et' Kansaa City. night . _ «...—... NATIONAL LEAGUE Wee Lew Pet. I Let Angelei .... 64' 42 .tot - Cincinnati .. Philadelphia Milwaukee . PI tU burgh jrew*^?erk . . . , » 71 .Si WEDNESDAY'S EESULTS U* Heisman ‘Trophy winner Terry Baker of Oregon State; Wisconsin’s Ron Vanderkeien; Mississippi’s Glynn Griffing, Who goes oh both offense and defense, and Sonny Gibbs of Texss Christian. The Packers, who dismantled the All-Start, hist year 42-20 a three'touchdown burst in the last quarter, still rube about a 14 point favorite. Their ace fullback, Jim Taylor, has tested his injured knee and says he ia ready. The game, sponsored by the , for the 90th year, will be broadcast and televised by ABC Staff ing it iHTTrfn^rirtirrn fitnnriarrt . Time'. FOUR STRAIGHT The NFL champions, have won the last four games in the series! and hold a 19-0 victory edge. There'have been two ties. The Alt-Star squad of 50, with] Michigan State’s Ed Budde and Alabama's Lee Roy Jordan cocaptains, is supposed to be one of. the best assembled by Graham in his six years as head coach. ~~7------....it_★..★ :- .. ' There 1$ exceptional heftiness in a lihd backed by a rangy secondary attuned In pea* ripfenn* The offensive line, especially adept in-protection of the passer, is the mogtjjpipressive of any in recent years. Three halfbacks—Iowa’s Larry Ferguson, Washington’s Charlie] Mitchell and Bob Paremore of Florida A&M—rate with the fastest in All-Star history.- eMMae 1. Milwaukee Pltteburgb I, Houeton •, uin> Loe Angeles S. New York 1. night TODAYT GAMES CUeaaa (Jsckjoo n-»> at Milwaukee (Le-*3Master 7-5). night Onclnnetl (Jay 444) at M. Louie (Slm- FKIDAY'S GAMES New Tart at Milwaukee^ t. It Philadelphia et 8t. Louli, night .Loe Angeles et Houston, night Pittsburgh at ClneinkaU. night - Pro Linfcsmcm Insist! Sf. Paul Field Tough ST. PAUL (AP)—Many «f the big names are missing for the St. Paul Open Golf Tournament, but one of the favorites, Dow Finster-wald, insists it will be a hard one to win. ’ Hills Golfer Ousted FLORENCE, 'g. C. - John French of Bloomfield Hills was eliminated in the first round of the U.SL. Golf Association junior championships here’ yesterday.' Some 140 'pros and amateurs teed off today, for'*the opening round of the 72-hole, 135,000 tourney which carries first place money of 15,300. Bryon Nelson won 19 tournaments Qn the PGA Tour in 1945, for a record no other golfer in history; has ever approached. Wirli’s Most Powerful Outboard! 100-H.P. MERCURY OUTBOARD & *1075 ONLY 4 First Coom First Served NO MONEY DOWN Easy MMrtMf\fiyiMirti ^BIRMINGHAM \ MATXUT TMt S. Woodward >1 Adomi Ed. -BIRMINGHAM * JO (-4717 - MI V*IU Open Dolly M; MM., Than.* Frl. M OPEN SUNDAY I t* S O" WIN %W.m KNOCK THE Ow of OSMUNS CARL'S GOLFLAMD 1976 S. Teiegraah M. A SIGN YOU MAY NEVER •' AAA Travel Bulletins constantly .keep Auto Club travel counselors up-to-date on road construction areas on the major highways all over the United; States ana Canada. This information is passed along to you in the form of a routing to and from your distillation that by-pnsaee 'detour areas. Up-to-tha-mipiite hiyhWav information ia just a part of our service to you as an Auto Club member. Stop in to see us aoon! * AUTOMOBILE CLUB 76 WILLIAMS ST.--FI 5-4151 S. A. Wirken, M1-1IM R. L. T«n. FE 1-MI* C. S- Wilion, 4*4-2531, - C. H. Bonn. FB Mill E. V. Koonor, (Halt?) 4S7-1M1 E. G. Tynan, 174-1110 H. w. MoNnUoy, OL 1-7741 Jock Bontn. FE (-MM C. W. Zloglor, OB 4-14M D. B. Allan, 425-1*40 >1 phono hooks for offlooo In * Pittsburgh nt Cinclnnotl. night If MONZA MIA »» IT MEANS "MY MONZA" YOU'LL SMILE WHEN YOU SAY IT. FOR THE CORVAIR MONZA IS A HAPPY KIND OF CAR. A FRISKY, FUNSTElTffiAT ENJOYS SHOWING ANY ROAD - WHO'S BOSS.. ^ r—"T* SO THAf'S WHY WE SAY BEFORE YOU SAY "MONZA MIA" YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO DRIVE AMERICA'S FUNSTER DURING "MONZA MIA" WEEK AT "CHEVY-LAND" MONZA COUPE SSiiii98 la 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION 145 TURBO FIRE ENGINE WHITEWALL TIRES COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE GROUP » SPARE WHEEL LOCK MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES r~4m~MICHIGAN'S LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER 631 OAKLAND RdBsw FE 5-4161 NYLON COMMANDER220 built with ' TRUCK-TIRE TOUGH Super-Syn Rubber! 15-MONTH GUARANTEE A’GUARANTEE YOU CAN TRUST! Against blQwouts},cuts, brisks caused by road hazards encountered normal driving nationwide. If a tire is so damaged beyond repair, you gat Mi allowance for remaining tread against the purchase of a replacement at current retail list price. FAST, free mounting tin mum lonly 9.99* 2 only $19 3 only 281 4 only *31 •6.70-15 black tube-type, plus tax arid one tire off your car for oach tire you buy. WHITEWALLS AND OTHER SIZES LOW PRICED, TQOI CHECK THESE SPECIAL LOW PRICES AT ANY OF THESE DEALERS MU 111 North Perry St.# Pohtiac Optn.Fridays #hi ? p.m. ^ FE 2-0121 m v m =£53= or w? mi V D-rl8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THttitSPAT, AUGUST 1./I068 ^ m y^rr NATIONAL CAMPER TRAILER {'Display model .,, Complete with spare tire and bunk I bed. Slebps four. 1 Reg. $548.45 SALE PRICE $445N i SPORTSMAN CAMPING TRAILER . Display model . .. Complete-with spare tire.and mat* . tress. Glass fiber body- SALE PRICE *299##? I Reg. $450.00 W« Rent Tent* and Eiiuipnimt! t. ‘ “Y<)ur CampingHeadquarter^ ; Mon,, Thurs., Fri. 9 till 9—Tties., Wed., Sat. 9 till 6 JOE’S SS SURPLUS • II N. iMluw IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TE 2-8022 CLEVELAND (AP)*- Log Angeles. pitcher Paul Foytaek, who became' the .first American League pitcher to give up four Into Record Book 'Capture Guns' Aid in Study, ^ of Elk Herd Elk are being hunted-4>ut not for keeps—by a pair of Conservation Department field, men in the Pigeon River area of the northern Lower Peninsula as part of a research program launched early thttryearto guide tlie future man* agement of these animals. Instead of-using high-powered rifles, the-men are stalking elk hyith a so-called “capture gun" which fires sedative-loaded darts : at their targets, p 'After being brought uncter con* trol by an immobilizing drug, the anhnair^ne tagged so that" Department workers later this year can trace thieir, movements from summer to winter range, and learn more about eUc conceit | trations from- season to season. Tri Hnt»f »*M maw >ava marked. {five elk. successive, homers in one inning, aald the fourth gophwnsSFK served up Wednesday night was supposed to be a brush back pitch. ; ~ But the pitch canto right over the platie, according to- rookie Larry Brown. Woodie'Held, Pedro Ramos and Tito Francona had stepped up to the plate ahead of Brown and laid the hall out of the park. It was in the sixth inning of the; second game of a doubleheader, which' the- Indians swept 1-0 and 9-5. Clean-Up of AD 1963 Pontiacs and Tempests Out They M At BIG Savings to You During Our Clean-Up Time Sale ^O&oselrdm a wide selection of a ^ special group of Bonneville con- ^ vertibles and tempests to be sold at special sale prices! Most Models Available for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY There Must Be A Reason -Others Talk Deals, But Pontiac Retail Makes Them! . Pontiac Retail Store Wants Your Business T 65 Mt. Clemens St. fe'V;V^ The ace right-hander of A&W Root Beer's Class'C champions garnered bis 14th victory without a loss in loop contests lpst night by topping.Dinky’s Hideaway, 9-4. Another “C” contest saw Rockcote Paint whip Dixie Bar, 18-4, as manager Ray jergo-vich accounted for seven runs. Black posted 13 straight wins to jlead A&W-in the regular season - Jchampionship drive. He was I eri in an inter:loep All Star game OUTSTA* 1961 PONTIAC 2*Ooor HARO TOP 4DING USED CA tN2 F0UD FALCON 2-Door R VALUES 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop <20 1953 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE WWV*VSanflaa,mUia. _ __ Jssitrin $2.295 53^..! *1,295 1961 CHEVROLET Bel Air Sport Coupe tMAVIeefbie, ee outomotic tronum1|#ioo, $0 CQC power etArtwfu broltee. 0m fVVV 1962 RlilCK LeSABRE • 4-Door Hardtop Wltti radio and Kaater, . ^ _ _ outamati**lransmii»ton, CQC power Rtaering, brakes. fcjVVU CCDUIOC UnilDC. To Batter Servici pur Customers-Mon. thru otnvlut IfUUtlOi fri.« a.m. tu uwam., tat. uso am. tii 12 The. Pontiac Retail Store FE 3-7951 M BRUSHBACK “I .was trying to brush him back, said Foytaek, the third Angel pitcher. “The count was 2 [and 0. It shdws you I didn't know where my pitches were going.'* Altogether, when Larry Brown came to bat' the Indians had racked up six homers in two games, Including twq eyh by Ramos and Fred-Whitfield, and one of Whitfield’s was a grand home run. expect on the pRch he bit just over tbe leftot.' * In addition' to setting an American League record, tbs four successive home rum tied the major league mark setby Milwaukee jn 1961. Los Angeles Manager Bill Rig-ney came out shaking his head when he went to the mound to call in a relief pitcher. Foytaek laughed about the four homers In the dressing room, . ■/ "What else is there to do but lhugh?" be Spid. “I was glad to get out of there alive. At lean I've got to go into the record Also ta-the AL—Tom Treshto homer with two' out in the bottom of the ninth gavir New -York’s first-place Yankees a 3-2 decision over Kansas City; .the Chicago White Sox beat Washington 5-2 Baltimore beat Detrbit, 2-1; and Minnesota trippfed Boston P5. Ralph Terry'held the Athletics to five hUa,J>Ut they bunched two of them and two sacrifice flies for a 2-2 tie in the seventh inning. Tresh pulled It out for the Yanka, however, with his clutch homer off -reliever Ted Bowpfield in tbe ninth. . The. rookie said he expected to be knocked down on the Tirst two pitches and didn’t know what to A & W pitch Hurls Softball Vktb^rNm f4 Algie Black has picked right up Where he- left off in thS Waterford- Township softball activity. off game for a strong showing. Ray Heatop led the champs itegl last weekend but came right hack night in the first A&W play- with two stogies and three juns batted to. Rockcote, in addition to Jergovich’s clouting, had a solo homer from Jim Shulte. - Tonight, the top Class B. contenders —Spencer Floor CqvJ* ing and Lakeland Pharmacy — will collide at 8:30 p.m. following jhe . ‘Haskins Chevrole t-Lakeland Pharmacy Class C contest at 7 p.m. on toe Dfayton Plains dia-j mond. SERVICE CENTERS S UNSURPASSED!! 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Saginaw, Pontiac FE 3-7021 U 6-6265 mt THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY*’AtJGtrST 1, 19Q8 D—18 Playoff Action Hodvy Auburn Height* Boys’ Club, making a strong hkf for a pair of city junior baseball league titles, piloted It* way yesterday Into the driver’s seat in the Claisa D and Class ,F playOffa. The Heitfits’ ‘F’’ team had to go 12 innings to defeat the Potv tiac Firefighters, 1-1, while the •‘D’ squad received another top pitching performance to beat fYanhlin CaPununity Asaodation, 44. . . A walk to Dick - Coleman, a fielders choice, au error and a struck out IS Auburn bitters In nine innings of pitching, but olio collected three of the four firefighter hit*. * The Heights’ Class Q team needed JuaLsix hits and the strong right-arm of hurler Mike Hurklow to defeat Franklih Community Association, 4-0. Buridow, taking a cue fropjit pitching mate Roger Hayward, allowed the losers two hits and fanned 10. single by winning pitcher Bob Burt gavi the ‘F’ team its margin ef-vitxory,———k—I Tony i)sLaIt*sa stood out in a losing cause. He not only enth clinched the win for the Heights. Going into the last frame the "winners held, a slim 14 lead, But'Tr jtro^run tnpie oy Lynn Thorpe put the game out of Franklin’s reach. -t-j------------1— In a major upset yesterday, the defending city and state ‘F’ champion Falcons were eliminated from playoff competition by the Three Sisters Buckets, 8-7. It was the second straight one-run defeat for the Falcons, in playoff.action. In other junior league {day, defending city Class D champion. Pontiac Beys1 Club kept its tide hopes alive by edging Bloomfield HUb, 2-0. Bob Trevino turned in a one* pitching performance for the - 25,000-Mile Guarantee nihil rul hsssrda hr (hr epeel-mileage, Kfilml MNto la material! and trerkaaaaaklf for life M tread, adjnatmeeta prorated ta I with U.S. BoyalTread™ U. S. Royal AIR RIDEW Nylaa 2 for $1990 6.70x15 Tube-type 'Blackwell Whitewall... 2 for $25.90_- All prices phis tax and smooth tire off your .par- Tires mounted free. { AUTO DISCOUNT CENTER 680 Mt. Clamant St, Car. Ild Blvd., Pentiac -Open 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily - Phone Fi 4-0975 U.S. ROYAL TIRRS Engineered to keop your iptn in the trunk PLUMBWG DISCOUNTS ON AU PLUMBING SUPPLIES WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! WHY FAY MORE? . . . SAVE AT SAVE! 3-MECE WW»_er.Choke ef Caters FREE STANDINO QLOSET DtlTdUXD ON KKQUKST — SEE OC* COMPLETE DISPLAY SHOWER templete whh I CABINET *32“ BATHTUBS.. ..*34“ AEG. $89.95 The vary newest one piece hit,, it't beautiful, you mutt taa it. Factory Irreg. Other terrific values ia tubs from $10 sp. FREE STANDING TOILET ir J-Pe. Cast Iron Colored BATH SETS KITCHEN SINKS Pert Stainless Steel $2495 Part Cast Iron .. $25.95 Part Steel.....$ 495 Irreg. Catered or While Malta Yew Owa Peel KITCHEN SPECIAL New 42" Cabinet SJQ95 Sinks, Cemplefe PI BERG LAS LAUNDRY TRAYS Cempiets With Stan* and Faucet All Kinds lit Stack *19“ EXTRA SPECIAL *32* Copper Pipe >4" Ward Ige’ as* Leasts Baid OC* Biajieta— V K Sell dB« St* Celt W w* vis*#- 21' Length Hlaafc MW Oalv. * Complete Stack EXTRA SPECIAL! 24" ALL FORMICA VANITY AWABR CABINET S59W With SU • INSTALL IT YOURSELF—WE RENT YOU TOOLS WSWBS* 172 S. Sagiaaw »«■«« n «»• ?7>?i'NlalON1w?«L~ xTaYrr’siM winners. The loss eliminated Bloomfield from the playoffs. BA?attPQBPACnQN TWe Waterford Firefighters moved to within one-half game of firat place in the Waterford ’O’ league last night by defeating Lakeland Pharmacy, 10-2. Lakeland hurler Date Manning, ter the aecead straight wight, hfA ynly ffoliUra behind him. But unlike Tuesday’* upset ever the Optimist Lakers,' Manning didn’t re-, ceive.much hitting support In Class F, Harwood’s Mike Vidor and the Drayton Daisies’ Rick Kogeiman both threw nohitters. Kogelman had the last sijr though, the Daisies downed the Harwood nine, 4-1. Other games had Boys’ Chib No. 1 defeating Boys’ Club No. , 8-7, in Class E; the Falcons routing the Jets, 15-6, inWTlass ” and Siankster & Jones heating the Fraternal Order of Police, 1M, in Widget play. PONTIAC PtATOPP RESULTS Cleat D (American) Boy*' Club 4 Franklin CLA. lac B.O. S Bloom(IHd Hill. . Claaa I (American) McDomM’* 3 Pontine Optlmiat 1 Miss Chancllor Takes First Win in WMGA Phyllis Chandler won her first weekly WMGA' tournament yes-Iterday at Rochester Golf Club by firing a- 44-41—85, six over women’s par. Two strokes behind were Mra. G. F. Langford and Mrs'. Chris Miller. ★ * .* Mrs. Miller, ex-Pontlac city woman’s champion, had 4i4-43. Mrs. Clarence Luber took first flight gross honors With 48-47—95. .Mrs. Dougina Orsham ........... 13-4 Trtllla Jack* ..._____.1......... 43-4 Mrs. Nick Panaaluk ........... 43*4 Mrs. Charles 2ahm .......... 11-4 Mri. Fred Brook* .......i.... 41-4 Mrs. Sidney Ayls ............. 4*1-4 Mrs. ctutrlss Larson .......... 44-1 ‘Irs. James Courtney ......... 81-4 . FIRM rUGHT Low gross—Mrs. Clsrsncs Lubsi 41-41 -*«•. teat net—Mrs .1. FCIark 101.IS ; low net—Mrs. William tracts 13-1 Adderly t Mickey Wright Return! . MILWAUKEE IB— pdf queen ' Mickey Wright, rested and reedy to resume her charge on three recorda, rated the favorite's rote among 42 of the nation’s top proa and 21 amateurs’ teday as that.; $12,500 Milwaukee Open got under ' way at the .North Shore Country | Fawkes Press Photo -—SKI 8TOP AHEAP^-Rob Powers of Pontiac, winner of the boys’ state slalom championship at Oxbow Lake a week ago, will try for added honors, next week,. Aug. 9-10 when the Midwest regional* are held in Minnesota.' Class P (Amerlesn) A. H. Boys' Club 1 Pont. Plrsflghttrs1 1 Sisters SwskstS I Falcode 1 Class P (National) ... J Pontiac B.C. 4 Yankee* Class P (Major) ___AT*. R.A. 4 LeBaron Knlghta Moose .10 at. Mikas ' Class, P (International) , X-lt's SI A A W Miller Realty I Pontlsc B. C. 7 Wtiget T-Ball Boston 31 Yankees Friday’* Playoff Schedule—Clasa (American) Pontiac Boys' Club Franklin c. A.. JC Mo. 1, 6:30 p.m. Class D "’Vwstlousli Arnold Drugs-Optlmlat iLsuri fi st. pysd'i-Rsmpssn * ' * * The latest total showed an in- Ex-Vermont Jurist Dead SOUTH NtWFAl^S, Vt*-FT. REFRIGERATOR-plus-FREEZER WESTINGH0USE GIANT f4-CU.-FT,J-b00R ORDER BY PHONt • NO MONEY DOWN ANOTHER TOP BRAND lA-CU.-FT. UPRIGHT FREEZER NEW NORGE 12-CU.-FT. DELUXE REFRIGERATOR ORDER BY RHONE • NO MONfY DOWN SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE! FINXl CHEST AIR CONDITIONERS UPRIGHT FREEZERS Ail sizes in stock, for immediate delivery. Chopse from Fedders, Westing-house, Admiral, Gibson, Chrysler, Emerson, Welbilt, and others. OUR ROCK-BOTTOM PRICE? V ‘ Moke us^a silly offer . , . you might suddenly own ah air, conditioner! V" AMANA 13-CU.-FT. WITH “CONTACT” FREEZING 100% SATISFACTION GUARANTEED PONTIAC MALIKS Elizabeth Laka Ref., Corner Telegraph N«xt Doa/to J. L. Hudson Co. L APPLIANCE i APPLIANCE DEED SCULPTURED VISCOSE RUGS FOAM Back ma Completely ma- chine washable. Lint Free. “ ~ THE POOTIAQ PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST..!. 1903 Won't Be N-Power Soon HONG KONG (UPI) - Communist affairs experts here to^ day expressed reservations about the speed with which Communist .China is racing to become a nuclear power, following a Peking statement which made it look as If ft Chinese strike force is only months away. There is no Arm indication available hare that Comma-Bist Chhia’s nuclear research recently has been accelerated. It has been expected for the laat few years that Peking will set off a nuclear bomb, perhapsi Observers here are of the opin-in 1963, probably in 1964, and al- ion that, with dm present , out-moat certainly by tH8, ' ^ Hook for Communtit China's tip •Speaking of China’s nuclear dustrializalion and for Sino-So-progress at a Peking rally.last viet cooperation, it may be 10-Prtday. Kuo' Mo-Jo, president of to-20, or eyes 30, years after Pe-the Chinese Academy of Sciences,Iking hat succeeded in setting off said: “The present attempt ef a small number eMonutries to control the destiny of the peoples of the world by means af monopolies in nuclear weapons will also certainly fie smashed In the not-toe-dktant a nuclear explosion before the Chinese are able to “central the destiny of the people of the world” by means of their own nuclear weapons. INSUFFICIENT Within tHe*limitatiOfts of pretent-day perspectives, China’s industrial capacity is insufficient for producing the highly complex structure ef aircraft or mi*-siles needed to establish a nuclear deterrent. The Chinese have not yet started production of their own model 'of a jet plane, ;; The application of alloys of titnqlum and other heat-resistant metals towards the mass production of turbojet engines, is said to be one of the many, areas of industrial technique where the Chinese are lagging. The lag in its aircraft production recently compelled China to .using these’ reactors Tull force the Chinese should have amassed enough plutonium-239 by late- this year to set off a big bang ‘somewhere in western. iMnkiang. Recent information is difficult to get, but intelligence here_____ that Pricing was in possession of purchase six Viscount turboprop aircraft froth Britain and contrast for spare parts and fuel This type of aircraft met theL at needs .of- commeroialalr ¥ port in Western countries in the ' middle-1950’s. * ,, |NOT MASTERED Kuo Mo-Jo said .that- China niques which the Imperialists have been able to master.” “Imperialists" is the Chinese Communist designation for the Western countries, where many of -Peking’s present micleat ’scientists were orignaliy. trained. The Soviet Uniop gave Communist China four nuclear reactors in 1955: For at least three years after that, the Russians supplied Peking with small quantities of natural uranium, tritium and other nuclear elements. It is calculated here that by had not-yet “mastered!! the tedi-nique of producing nuclear weapons. But, he said, “We are of the firm conviction that we revolutionary people will surely be able to master the new tech- Some others received training in the Soviet Union, although Soviet aid of this type is now reported to Have ended. ‘ East Gorman and Family Dash in Boat to Froodom WITTENBERG, Germany (UR) —An East Gertnan family ot five dashed to. freedom in a motor boat. West Germdn-border police satoioday. A 50-year-old employe of the East German navigation office al Wittenberg placed his family in hne of the boats he used on his job, gunned the engine and reached the West German bank of the Elbe Jttver without -being spotted by Communist guards John Quincy Adams, then an ex-President,' was a passenger on the train involved in the first railroad accident'inthe United yesterday afternoon, police arid. States in 1833. The train was passing through New Jersey when its axle broke. Causeun-determined. Highway Wei for the aver--,age American is increasing at^ I the rate of 100 miles a year. Aim mmmmm PpTlSALE! I OPEN NIGHTS TILL 10-SUN. 10 A.M. TILL 7P.M. BLEACHED SNOWY WHITE COTTON MUSLIN each GROCERY 1PECIALS! WIN ™ *500 IN YANKEES . HOLE IN ONE CONTEST HOT DOG aid HAMBURGER BIRR i To Be Held In Conjunction With the Yankee Sponeored Michigan Open Bolt . Tournament SHEETS Stays snug and smooth on -your bod. You simply register at your nearest Yankee Store . . if one of the par- ticipating pros draws your name and Wins tho prize, you share tho winnings . . each pro will bo shooting for 41,000.00. EACH MATCHING PILLOW CASE % CELLO WMF PNG. of FILL IN AND BRINu TO YOUR NEAREST YANKEE STORE NAME... ADDRESS' CITY...: FRESH BIG 46-oz. Gan Hi “C” Fruit Drink BIG 2-LB. BOX-49* SANDWICH AAA COOKIES STATE............... OR MAIL IN IF YOU WISH m CANNON TOWEL ENSEMBLE BATH O AM SIZE.......Lfor al HAND O TOWELS.... d for ■ SCATTER Orango; grape or pineapple grapefruit. DACRON CURTAIN PANELS 63” - 72” 81” Long DREAM FILLED Assorted flavors: Vanilla, strawberry and duplex. 3 PIECE TIER & VALANCE SET $1.98 Value $■ Fringed Ends-Latex Back SO x 50 Choose from solid colors and tweeds. Limit 3 Cans Smuckers 20-0z. STRAWBERRY PRESERVES FULL 14. BAG POTATO CHIPS Washable challis and sack doth 36" long. - PULL POUND Liniifz Limn 2 Bags m 14-in. X™--* 3-PIECE TANK SETS WASHABLE Prevents tank ■44 MOLDED FOAM PILLOWS BLANKET RAYON 8% NYLON 2-SLICE AUTOMATIC TUASTER 50-FT. Plastic Clothesline Some With Button Center SWING AWAT CAN OPENER WITH ZtPPERED COVER Prevents tank sweating. Colorful • patterns. Washable. Usually $2.98 Pure white. Odorless, washable, foam filled. OR i DOUBLE Steel reinforced. Smooth plastic tap. plaint and printtd All chrome base. » Mothproof Fully automatic with stand. Thermostat control. •Jr. Boys’ I , RECK FANIS W ALL STEEL UTIUTY 40-OUNCE JUICE DECANTER KING SIZE m • Zipper front closure • Tift belt • Sixes 3 to 8 With Brass LEQS Selection of patterns. para stoolsMC Ideal for ironing or playroom Ladies’ Combed Cotton KMT TOPS % sleeves in stripes. Sizes S-M-L Ladies’ 3.96 to 5.95 COTTON DRESSES $3 Solids. Drints. SDaahetti straps Solids, prints, spaghetti straps PERRY AT MONTCALM » MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 1 package frozen patty shells 1 quart ice cream Sliced peaches , Prepare patty shells according to package directiona. Place a scoop of ice cream in each patty shell and garnish with S or 4 peach slices.' Serves 6. 131.95 FLAVOR WST and $3 Purehaw With Coupon CAMPBELL'S Vegetable Soap FLAVOR k»5T Fig Bars With Coupon Below and $3,00 Purchase CAAIPbfll'S PWtiiou and $3.00 Fresh, Ripe WHOLE VUMeruteloRis sheet box one with n.- W,neondag4 '°y* AugU9f f Cu,tofn*r. R#_ B-r . the F PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1908 Fruit With Pork * Keep i Jar of spiced crab apples on baQd to serve with ham, Steaks or pork chops that * are to be cooked oh the outdoor grffl. to those pork dMps until the meirt is white through; make a small slit to teat) Two' Convenience Fogds Better Barbecue The outdor barbecpe has, ba-AmericSn as the morn- ing. This Is the time of the year when the men don the ctjpTs ing coffee break. Now, with the apron, take to hand, and barbecue Mason in full 'swing, families from Maine to California isrp enjoying outdoor entertain- show off their culinary talents. The mouth-watering aroma of herb-seasoned stuffed fish roasting over the charcoal fire will excite the appetites of guests, and neighbors as well. This savory stuffing has a unique and luscious taste which enhances the flavor of any fish. Large fish, such as red snapper, sea bass, cod, blue, and striped bass are best for this summer-time feast. To round out your barbecue nothing compares with the wonderful flavor of patty shells fiiied with ice cream and Barbecued Stuffed Fish , 4 to 5 pound fish Salt and pepper 2 -cups packaged herb-seasoned stuffing" " V . cup snipped parsley BARBECUED FEES—This, succulent herb-seasoned stuffed' %r cup Water------- fish is perfect for your summer-time barbecue. It is easy to % cup melted butter prepare, fun to code, and delicious to eat. Melted butter for basting Mate It 1 Part Your Vacation Plans To Include... 'Wash and clean fish. Thoroughly dry inside of fish and lightly season with silt and pepper. Combine herb-seasoned stuffing, parsley, water, and b cop melted butter; toes lightly. Use this mixtnre te staff fish. Secure opening Witt skewers or heavy thread and place fish in folding wire grill When fire is ready, barbecue fish about 15 to 20 minutes on each side, basting occasionally With melted butter. The time may vary, d e p e n ding on the weight njMhe fish'and the heat of the fire. Serves • to 8. Virtually <31 nectarines grown in California today are new varieties developed since World War II. Cannod Foods Lower In Prict Ovor Yuan When foods ware first commercially canned, coat to the consumer was high. Canned peas, for instance, Roldfer S i can. Today, to an economy of sharply rising costs, the price of canned foods has remained remarkably stable, according to the National Canners Association. Because food remains appetis-l Ing and nutritious in sealed containers, a whole year’s Harvest may be packed at one time and distributed throughout-the year. Thus the consumer simultaneously gets the economy and fine flavor of foods packed at thej pedk of their natural Mason. Ran, EVERY Meal Price Is A LOW PRICE . . v EVERY MV! Effective through Monday, August 5 Right Reserved To Limit Quantities . Shank Portion - Sugar Cured Smoked Ham • Fresh Picnic Pork Roast Fresh Ground Hamburg Your Choice Shpulder Pork Steak . . . . . 49» Young Tender Turkeys ..... 39a Skinless Franks Komocki's Grade 1. 3 f Komacki's Grade 1 0 pkg.^1 ^ U The Pontiac Press WTI0W Here’s How It Works: When ybu return from , /.your vacation your Pontiac Press carried will bring you your Personalized Pontiac Press Vacation Pak . with* all the/papers you have missed at the regular lBj . weeklyrate- - -7;y'T?" •- ’' ; / ■ *' ' _ The Pontiac Press Vacation Pak will bring you up to' date oh all the news that’s happened in your world I whflfl you were away. . *y ' Ask Your Carrier or Dial ||§S§332^|g§i® Circulation Department The Pontiac Press Hollywood Ice Cream Assorted Flavors a ■ ■ Dairy Maid Butter Fresh Creamery Butter ■- a i • Print 59V coffee •gsa'aar .... & 59? White Satin Granulated Sugar.... 5^58* Clapp’s Strained Baby Feods .....,juSe Heinz or Clapp’s Junior Foods ***** 4*« 49° 1/4 OFF r . With TW. Coupon You Got V. Off the Regular Price of Any One Horn of Our Rogufar ’ JWREYor | Market Basket j faked Good* ! Except docoratod cokos, wod- J ding cokuc and special «e- I dan. • | Coupon valid through ScrlUf- | I day, Augu.t 3, at Sayan. - FARM MAID Chocolate Milk Quart Carton Dixie Highway in Drayton Plains at Williamt Lake Road and Walton Blvd. Ddily 9-9, Sat. 8-9 - Sunday 9-6 Pontiac Mall Shopping Confer on Telegraph in Waterford Township Doily 9-9, Sat. 8-9 - Sunday 9-6 'Glemrood Plaza to Pontiac South Qlonwflod at Furry Daily 9*10 Sat. 8-10, Sunday 9-6 ~TT" •/ vh»- TtIK frOyTfAC fflftES^- iTHtJRSPAV. AirGUSt Ifr 1 st%=i Serve Fruit From o 'Tree' TMneapple-Peppers A charming, cool and pretty way to aerve summer fruits is to arrattge them ton- a topiary tree. This is a tiny “free" of to^mvared -Styrofoam or «w»>g into which fresh cut fruits add maraschino cherries are placed 'in alternating rows, divided by sprigs of jpint or ivy. ’Iras is a simple arrangement that'may be made up in advance and kept chilled until serving time. -Your family andj guests help themselves to their favorite fruits and to a choice Of dips mad^aiittrlfSlfant nonfat tnUkcrystals. .... f crystals, this refreshing new idea cook bines the Season’s fine fruits with wholesome and delicious dips. The dipfe are Anise and Guaca-mole. —One is sweet >; 4 . with the surprising flavor .of crushed anise seed; the other is a savory . . > of avocado, lime juice and anchovy paste. The instant crystals give, these dips their velvet-textured flavor and all flie proteins. B vitamins. phosphorous and calcium ■ of 'tycup sugar Vt cup marsbmalloW cream . Gnacamok. Dip l medium avocado Vt cup jce water H cup instant nonfat dry milk crystals 3 tablespoons lime juice 2 teaspoons onion-jui^t. Vs teaspoon Tabasco Vi teaspoon anchovy paste Mash avocado with fork or Mend in electric blender. \ instant crystals ia bowl; whip until soft-peaks form (3-4 minutes). Add ljme juice; continue whipping until stiff peaks form (34 minutes longer). Gradually add. avocado pulp, onion juice, tabasco and anchovy paste, beating constantly until well blended. Makes IVt cups dip. Anise Dip % cup ice water & cup instant nonfat dry milk crystals 2 tablespoons lemon juice--— % teaspoon crushed anise seed Mix ice’ water and instant crystals in howl; whip 'until soft peaks form (34.minutes). .Add lemon juice and anise; continue whipping until stiff peaks form (3-4 minutes longer). Gradually add sugar and- marshmallow cream; beat until blended: Makes 2% cups. dip. Topiary Fruit Tree 1 piece styrofoam or oasis,' . pvramid-shapjed. 12 inches FRUIT TOPIARY—The colors and flavors are captured in a tiny ‘.tree” of cut fruits . .*. served.with Ahise and Guacamole Dips made with instant nonfat dry milk crystals. Parboil hollowed out, green peppers until slightly softbdt still brilliant green. Fill generously with canned pineapple tidbits and kidney beans , which [have been-drained, then marinated in French dressing in refrigerator several hours. Both bay leaf and basil .benefit tomato dishes. * ' Quick Fancy Dessert ’ Dissolve sugar ip hot, orange juice and pour over a White cake as soon as it comes from the oven. Delicious dessert! Toast Croi utori* To. make croutons for Caesar Salad ami other dishes, cut slices, of white bread in one-half inch cubed. Toast the brwa^ji cubes in garlic-flavored olive oil until golden brown and crisp —keep beat/ low and allow plenty of time for fate. Ever add. chopped water cress to creamy potato soup? iugh and 5 mowr nidp base. Silver of colored aluminum foil Small-leaved Ivy, or fresh ‘mint Vt cup red maraschino cherries (about 14 cherries) 3 orange slices, cut in quarters 12 white grapes 12 small cantaloupe balls, 12 California strawberries, with hulls 12 small honeydew melon balls % cup light corn syrup 2 tablespoons maraschino cherry juice * Firmly seat styrofoam or oasis pyramid in serving dish. Cover entire pyramid with foil. Using wooden toothpicks broken in half, attach alternating rows ef ivy or mint and fruits, using fruits given. (Arrange orange pieces in over-lapping pattern.) In small saucepan, bring corn syrup and cherry juice to a . boil. Lightly brush all fruit with the hot glaze. Chill until serving time. Serve with • Anise . and Guacamole Dips. Seafobd Salad Tastes Better With Cheese For that special warm-Weather luncheom here’s how to give seafood salad intriguing color and delectable flavor. Simply add a blend 01 1 cup mayonnaise with V« cup . (about IVt ounces)'crumbled American blue cheese, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, and 2 tablespoons each finely - chopped parsley, chives, and watercress to the basic seafood mixture. . U.S. #1 MICH. NEW AbL PURPOSE POTATOES 50-lb. BAG DELICIOUS, HOME SWEET CORN 2S* Doz. CALIFORNIA HEAD LETTUCE for : Home Grown CABBAGE 2$ It Rod Ripe NO LIMIT TOMATOES 195* 8-lb. Box Only CALIFORNIA PASCAL CELERY »* ea. U.S.#1 jBananas 10 ‘Fresh, PEPPERS It. U.S. #1 New POTATOES 20c It lbs. f. Delicious Frath ICUKES 8*. FARM FRESH PEE WEE SIZE Grade A Size W ' EGGS: Dd#I- FRESH GROUND ALL BEEF TEC - 2 lbs.13* GRADE 1 SKINLESS NOT DOGS 3"- 39' HICKORY SMOKED Picnics 291 SPECIAL SALE! SPARTAN OLEO 5 Lbs. 89* REEF POT ROAST FRESH DRESSED FRYERS £ 261 DELICIOUS SMOKED "“"Si SAUSAGE ASSORTED LUNCH mi 39! \ Fresh 1 Radishes 5*. I Gordon Fresh - ONIONS 8*. 3 SISTERS’ SUPER MKT 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School Fresh Frozen BHD'S WE DINNERS YOUR CHOICE £■ •Chicken • Turkey •Beef MehrO-Grast 1 Vi-lb. Loaf BrenstHI^-Cliicken 61 lyfa Conned "1 HHUSH ^ ” YOUR ..• HAMBURGER choice * PETERS ' 1 • HOT DOGS 0||l: , 1 PETERS SLICED # , flO^ 1 [4BOLOGNA Campbell's Porte £ Beaus 1£ IF Puff's Facial Tissue ASSORTED COLORS 400 Ct. Pkg. 19* Zion FIG BARS 2;,2S* ASSORTED FLAVORS Cm food Hub Fruit Cocktail %F 2S* SALgS DAYS THURS., AUG. 1st thru SUN., AUG. Mitt Ft gtitrvt Right to Limit Quantities—None Sold to Dealert CHICKEN LERS ...431 CHICKEN WINGS... 18-CHICKEN BREASTS 49 ,: BACKS! NECKS... 10 J PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS m FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS Vgpi Food Town NoMe*! aooos'<5m» Osmoe ■ 263 AURCRN | BBS E. Pitt ST. | 7BB AUBURN ST. | ■ Or-* 041 «w«k | ormtKg.'et rjLM I ■ tAA«.T»M«. I oo^.Wtak I »***•«»• 1 J oosopsunoavs J ownsunoay»»o R ■qm»7P«y«fWmii j StS ORCHARD LAKE AVE. 1 OtMf AJtWttJA. . 6 days a Week OftN SUNDAY • I. S | 7500 HifklandM. OWN SUNDAYS 1“ 1200 Baldwin Am. I atCriaaMa I OfP4 SUNDAYS j 1275 Coolty LsksRd. | IMbUb OPEN SUNDAY ill I r m. DOUBLE GOLD BELL STAMPS With purchase of $3.00 or more, excluding Beer, Wine and Ggaretteo. It 1 Coupee. Expire* Aug. 4,1963, £ ,ihA)M(iifiiri\|ii(tVfl:.i:dHir.wu(i)fiWHA)MflK iiiMWlMW»wwwwurunwwwwwru»VM»Eg^ Food Tt'wshPeopli’s Donut Stomp Coupe" = g < iiua m MFREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 2 Ibo. or More of SLICED BACON. ||| m nl Feed Tewn-Neple’o Bemo Stamp Coupon « --------- ------- ‘ ■ Ml *l| f4)fiuiuiwiuiui\fiwiuiuivfiwhmfiwiwhmmhifii/^) ^iOM»WM1WWWWVtUIU>iMlinifMIU)UntlWMSg< C5§i Feed Toww-Ptoplo’s Bonus'frowo Coupon"' ss;* C-owh r 1) u\ r i\ f two r i) r 1) fa mm fa iii m ra it) (Mwiwi'ffe; sXW W WM) W W WWUJ W UWMtoW W W Ql UHtgg; SO FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase 50 EREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of Any Jb. or More of POLISH SAUSAGE * of“2 Jors.or'More of PICKLES or OLIVES of 3 tbi. or More of DRV MUON! Limit 1 Coupon. Expires Au« 4, IP68 |fS| '• ' * Limit t Coupon. Expires Aug. 4,1 Hi. j«»g% L !.a i.k o.L a.v i.S i.kTvTt^rTirflrtSSP V SZ.ViA iiA lA Miil M fit t m Food Town-Poopjo’s Romo Itowj Poujox CH FREE GOLD BELL lJU Stamps With Purchase of &. or Mole Cant of Umtf\1 Ceuiwin. Expires Aeg. 4,1903. ' 3^iitwtamtafiiiiiHMii .'.HiHWiWiifiifiifHfiimfiFfli-w ve tu uMtnutii vtruAininv nn»n'im "'wP I DOG or CAT FQOPtir , Limit \ Cfepen. Expires Auf. 4, tPcl IKt vuvi mi w tu.Mf.Mt turn MiMfwuffiflliFi r^u yr THi: PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ]AX$GUST 1, 1963 amce MARKETS The foQOWtag are top price! covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by theta in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by Idle Detroit Bureau of Markets -s of noon Wednesday. due* Appier. DucImu / uueberrlet, crate . jj*. Mwm^rO il Bette, topped . Broccoli, dor. I Cabbage, curly. Cabbage, fed. il Cabbage, aprouta. Airlines, Rubbers Lead Advance Mart Prices Show Slight Rise NEW YORK (AP)—Airlines issues spearheaded a* slight im-provefnent in stock market prices early this aft Trading Most groups t | JWallStreet wafoeckjngthTIig swer to the halt yesterday of a three-day advance which some traditional summer rally. would hold to its timetable' for. stripping Northeast Airlines of its Florida routes. American Airlines gained about a point on a block of 8,800 shares and Pan American was up about a half. .. ~9: ,rBteel aiin ^ethlehem United Aircraft and Boeing gain gained fractionally! velopments were a. drop in manufacturers orders and higher inventories in June, ____________ . .. U* market apparently already aSbbTnf itondcrd.h'bp.'. V. r» had digested reports of reeut-d SrrSfSLftdv il®, corporation earnings for the sec- Suunowra«k ..am - • J;2 ond quarter and was turning Its “' attention to third tjuarter profits. Eastern and National Airlines •jo leach advanced 144 as the Civil •It Aeronautics Bureau indicated it i.«o Outside of the airlines, rubbers were the only group solidly in the plus column. Goodyear, Goodrich and U. S. Rubber advanced fractionally. Aircrafts ya* mixed with ■A' gain of nearly a point .by ............... . _ jChrysler evaporated to a minor About the only discouraging de- loss. American Motors and Stude-baker were up slightly and General Motors and Ford eased. tag about half a point. Bgirelant. i««c m lit &SXZ& Potato**, ■* Jodlihoo. i Stadliha*. i •quoth, Ac gquasb. Hal fa**';: . .V 4.00 ::: il • SST •«. .'.'.nil Mustard, bu. ............ ..... Sorrel, bu....................... LETTUCE AND SALA0 GREENS Celery Ctbbaf* ........ ........,.$| Eecarole. bSiuhad Lottute; Bibb. pi. Lettuce, Boetdu, dc Lettuce, head, bu. Lettuce, hood. do«. Polaroid and Xerox, which have been making wide, moves recently each advanced about 3 points and Governments were mostly Jin* changed. Stock Exch.—- U.^Sr Smelting, Control Data and Electronic Associates saw gains of a point halved. . TTie averages were helped by. gains of 1W by Union Carbide and iiJiy ifo Ptfflt, NEW YORK (AF1>—i- Jtmertcan Stock Exchange. pal El Pw 28% Kalter Indue •%' Cohu Elec 4% Mead John 22% Creole Pet 42% Mohawk Alri J% Fly Tiger 1% Muek P Ring 15% Oen Devel 6 Sherw Wm 70% Imp Oil MV* Technlco 10% In* N Am 01% * A '” ' " Prices were mixed on the Amer-lean Stock -Exchange in quiet ■ trading. Corporate bonds were mixed The New York Stock Exchange CW YORK (AP)—Following 1* a Usl * Bohn Not gates tjected atoek traneactlone on the No* tide.) Blah Low Last Chi. ■■ (hdi.)Hlgh Low Laat 1 1:30 ». I JXpm—iT^_ York Stock Etchant* with RriHir , —A— -** Sato* Net pending r 11 UW MW 53% . I I 2% 3% 2W — W .2* nw isw is w — ■ 48 26 28W 25W — x3 IT 12W 12W - W CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS' CHICAGO (API—Chloago Merchantlle I Ikchanjo — Butter otoody; wholesale 5 Car. M B 57Vi; M C 7. _ Eggs unsettled; wholeaals buying price* | unenenged to lW lower; TO pi--------------- hotter Oyado A white M;’ i__________ _ mediums 22; gtandardg MW; dirties B . MW; checks 26. “ • MW MW I4W 23 12W law 12W ^7 MW MW ‘MW • 17W 2*W 37 to < M MW MW ----- 21 71W TOW 72W —1W 17 13to 13 Vk 13 to 27 23% 23H 23% 1V«— ' i CHICAGO FODLTRT , CHICAOO tfl — I USD A) — Live pouf- B toy: wholesale buyinc prices unchanged; r roasters M-M; special (*d white rock ’ Iryers lg%.20; barred rock fryers 11. • MW. MW MW. 4 M 21% 22W MW .. 6 26% 36V. 36to - 26 Sjk 43% --- -------Jl POTATOES CHICAGO, Aug. 1* (AP) — i USD AI -Potatoes arrivals 42; on Track 1U,IS tgfal U.8. shipments 45; .auppllea moder-iu ala: demand moderate; market for 1— white* steady round reds firm; < Hffi vs sie&oy, rounu reas nrm; curios -___k tales: OaHfarnt* long wHtag g.10; i Texas-round red* 3.2t;" Nebraska ,r—11 reds 3.26: Idaho roupd reds 3.36^ 3 tSW 1«% 14% ........ I 14%- 14% 14%-----W 26 S8to 35% 38 . 72 MW M 28 — W DETROIT. Aug. 1 fAl Today's receipts: Cattle hoes 60; sheep 160. Cattle compared will Choice steers and hellers _ after opening the week so cents lower; < ■MM -— ' 1 heifers steady, retain- * w, vmij. «a cent decline, tows M < . ,.t higher: bulls fully steady arcund ( JO head high choice to prime S"“ ’' TbBeMssjlWOT---moderate^ r*— Mah #60-1.31. - — SOW ' MW ..... „J 71W 70% . 70% — % 38W -■ Ht;! d 33% 32% M% ..... 3 28% 28V* Mto — to *41 m 26% UW — % I MW M% \ W , 80 snv, Vs — % M MW I 103 34W 331 1 7 14% 14%, saws 75 40% 46. 42 88 12W 34% 34% 10 43% 43% MW 11 17% 17V« 17% 24 36% MV* 36V* 10 «W MW 44% 7 51% 11W 11% . ■ 52 UW M UW — W IS 30% 30W 30% + " • it 44% 44% 44% . ■ -7.MW MW 62 49% U 40 — .. 3 MW MW MW — W —B— i High Lew Last Chf. „ 48% 46to 46% — % M 02% 02% 0IW V % 0 35% MW 35% + W lit 34% M% 33% — m 2 74 .73% 74 20 52 61% 51% 9 MW 11% I S 1U% 166% 168% Vlti Publkln .330 Pullman 1.40 PurpOU 110 10 76% 74W 74% .10 0% , 6% 0% 8 37% 37% 27% 43 M% MW MW —R— 71 MW 67% 07% — W 11 21% MV« Mfi A 31% 11% ... I ft f% 2% — % 0. tow 42% 11% + •' m 10% 15% 16% — 22 30% MW M% ... 0 41% 41W 41V« *-13 31% 37% 37% — M 31% 31 31 1— M 37% 37% 37% — -10 ' 14% 14% 14%'-* % IS 42% 43% 42% ' ........., 1 23% 23% M% RoyDut l.M( 110 47% .47% 47% Royal mob 2 o% : 2%' o% 1120% 20% 20% —W 30 30% .38% 30% 4- % >49% _ 33 37% 30% 30u> 2 40% Isto i 2i% i I 31% 1 • 7% . 20 45% m ' 46% -t 0 72% 73% 73% - • J% 22% “*T Hook, Ch lb Hotel Am Houoo F 1 40 , ... 7% —r¥ & Sl% 51% 5i% + V, 11 M% MW 30% + « 1 3W 2W . 3% .... M 56% 51 MVs + >! 19\43% 43% 43% — W 11 73 13 tkTTFga 23 V% 6% 2%,+ W :—ix~ - 25 23% 23*k 23% — % 8 07 MW 63% 63% -4» 02% 42V, 69V,— 42 31% 11W 31% — AT 55% 22% 22% — 11 9 UW 51, 81 to ... . 21 34% M% 34% 4 9 60 61% 62 ... 313 19% -14% IS _____ M 37 32% .30% —.% ni Cent 2 lot Rand 3a InlandSt 1.60 Intsrlak 1.60 I 53% . 1- 50% I 79% f . -J7U — T, O 53% — W I 50% — % 2 TO - W Si rVOSVs .44% 4«4 3 70% 70% Wh ... 8 13% 13% UW — 45 MW 02% 09% — 34 M 91% 01% —% InUflnsr 1.20 tot Nick 0a tot Pack l totPap 1.05b HWmnp to \ ... 1 MW MW, MW -63 437 to 430 430Vi 31 64% M% M% - .3 05% MW 05W M UW UW 13% . .. . 3 21W 21%21% — W 8 31% 31% 31% 56 27% 26% 37% 17 30W 36% 38% Johns Ifauv | JonLogan^ro JonashL 2 JO KalaarAl .90 KaysRo ,40a Kennecott If . ] Kern CL 2.40 15 46% jtfW 'OOW 4 % T - 7 18% 118% ia% 4 % T •6 83%,-53% 53% — W T 11 J5% 25% M% - a - —K— 38 35 34% ‘34% 5 40% 40% 40 % —T— 84 30% 80 20% .. 72% 71% 71% —1% 1M 17% 50% 17% /H II 14% 14% 30 70% 73% 74% > 05% 4 140 23% M% ■ | 28 35% 35% 36% — 30 30% 20% 30% -13 MW 30W 26V, -la «ss& aau nu. , NEW YORK - Gen. Anthony C.'-McAuliffe, famed for his nuts” reply to a surrender demand, said today he feels almost the same way about retiring as ■a business executive. [|m already, unhappy at the prospect of not coming to work tomorrow,” McAuliffe said in his last hours as a vice president and director'of American Cyanafhid Co- _ . * Pontiac Exec Gets New Job M. R. Spears, former director of Pontiac Motor Division's field training, has been named head of the new* owner relations department. Frank Bridge, Pontiac general sales manager, said the new department’s primary objective is to record the views of Pontiac owners coast to-coast. . dr * ' dr. 4 Gar owners will be questioned about styling, mechanical - features and dealer service,, ‘‘In addition,” Bridge j«id, “we will encourage diem to write us direetly. to spell oat new ways the factory can improve foe product and service.” A native, Texan, Spears Joined General- Motors in 1924. He came to Pontiac Division in 1934 service adjustor. . He went on to become assistant to the sales jnanager before his most recent post. Spears resides at 1089 N. Woodward, Birmingham. Grain Slow, Mixed With Little Change Grain totures little genexaj CHICAGO (A prices showed change today in rather slow and somewhat more mixed early dealings on the board of trade. August soybeans backed down cent or so. a bpshel .during the first several minutes, but all other contracts shifted only small fractions either way from previ-ous closes. Corn attracted little support after four previous declines. Dealers said, that grata may have become a bit oversold in the view of speculators. Loss had amounted-to about 10b cents a bushel since die season’s peak of around $1.31, a little over From Chemical Concern Noted General Retires By ROGER LAW AP Business NewslTriter can Cyanamid under its compulsory retirement at H policy. Almost , 19 years hgvt passed since he wrote an imperishable page in American military annals during the Battle of the Bulge, then ragtag around Bastggne, Belgium. ' -Although his paratroops of the 101st Airborne Division were surrounded and outnumbered 4-1, McAuliffo spurned surrender to the Germans. The tide of buttle turned in victorious end to World War n. Looking back, McAuliffe, still a McAuliffe fr (lifovtag Amcri-[wiry MOot-g and ; 138 pounds, Successful*! nvesting % ■ By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 13 years old and a paperboy. I have $200 to invest and have been thinking of haying stock in Studebaker. Your advice would be sincerely appreciated” N.Y., A) You’re 'not oifly a thrifty ind far-sighted paperboy, but a very courteous bile as well I urge you with the utmost sincerity to give up—at this early stage in your career—the tempting but general!^ fallacious idea _L_ Architect Firm Announces Revamping Swanson Associates,. Inc. Bloomfield Hills architects and engineers, today . announced the firm’s first reorganisation since its founding ini 1047. Robert n5*j Swanson, AIA,! ?4 W, Long Lake, succeeds founder: Robert FJ Swanson as pres-:! ident. The* latter^ become! cljaii man of the hoard* of directors, SWANSON Robert S. Swanson has been with the Arm since 1953 and has served as chief designer the past several years. He also sits on the board of directors, to which Were elected Floyd H. Heineman, Jack K. Monteith, Mrs. Pipsan S. Swan-sonJJohn K/ Grylls and John Palms.. Heineman wax-named business administrator. Monteith will serve as vice - president - secretary^ Grylls ^s- vice-President-treasurer. Richard R: Brown, diief mechanical -engineer, was appointed an associate. that you can make easy money in low-priced speculative stocks. Studebaker operated at. a big deficit in the first quarter of 1963 and earned 2 cents a share last year from operations. The company id diversifying, But it is still essentially an automobile producer that has been losing its share of the market ii^ recent yerfra. If I were in your position, I would buy a v&y strong, high-quality stock for grtwth. Borden, the great dairy company, is just such a situation, and I .recommend it to you.. Q) “I have been considering American Telephone 4%’s due 1999 now selling under IN. This offering 1b below the price set originally by the syndicate. Do yon advise me to bay?” R. G. A) I’m sorry, but I do not.,... Bond prices fluctuate strictly in accordance_ with jnoney rates. When money rates go up, bond prices go down, so bond yields rise. The yield on Treasury bills has been rising steadily, and this is a key indicator of the trend in the I price of money. One-year Treasury bills are now selling to yield close to->3% per cent, and the Federal Reserve has just recently lifted its own discount rates— || the fee which,jt charges on loans :to member banks. ^ * ■ The rise in the discount rate to 3% per cent —which took place two Weeks ago —may ultimately result in higher long-term interest rates and tower bond prices, although this is not certain. I would- postpone bond purchases until the money situation stabilizes. , (Copyright, 1963) palaver, and never get anywhere; '“They fito a report and that’s the aid of it usually. I still feel the same way.” '............ McAuliffe said post-World War II assignments, including a stint as commander-in-chief of the U.S. Army in Europe, paved the way for later success In business. “A commander who spends a lot of 4kne overseas already is in big business,” he said. Following retirement from foe Army, McAnURe Joined American Cyanamid, a chemical concern, at foe age of 17 in 19M as general manager of engineering and contraction, rising to a vice presidency lat- TREND OF STAPLE PRICES NEW TOR K (AP)—The Assoctat Pres* weighted wh°leaale BlltO IM*» Previous Day 152.71, Week Ago II .102.77idM5 M.„, NWI .159.09 152J2 160.78 169.78 age equals 100). agreed the incident capped. his colorful and varied carper.. SATISFACTION “Nothing else gavel me foe same satisfaction and thrill,” he said. r * Much ps he would like to keep busy, McAuliffe made it dear he is not interested in sitting on advisory boards at tbe^Pentagon. They’ve asked me three or fsnr times, and I always said no,” be said. “I don’t believe in bonds and commission. AO foey do is sit ^ When company headquarters, now ill Wayne, HJ., were in , Rockefeller Center in Uptown Manhattan, McAuliffe used to walk to and froxh work, a distance of about 35 blocks, from his 86th St. apartment. TWO-MONTH TRIP His immediate plans are for a two-month trip to the Mediterranean with hie wife and tWee grown children. Then.- he’ll take up residence in Washington. McAuliffe said he felt the same principles contributed to.his success both in the military and business. One of the foremost: ‘‘Never- go to see your in- < perior until yon’re.sent for.” Of foe outlook for war or peace today, McAuliffe said he found the nuclear test ban .treaty initialed last-week by Russia, the United States and Great Britain ‘very encouraging.” “But I always liked Theodore Roosevelt’s crack about* speaking softly and carrying a- big stick,” he said. “I hope we keep doing News in Brief A lady’s coat with a mink-trimmed collar valued at $169 was reported stolen; yesterday from Zuieback’s Suburban Shop the Pontiac Mall. Seven tires and wheels valued at $210 were reported stolen yesterday from four different cars at the Superior Rambler used cgr. lot, 2120 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township! Armand Stefani, 7110 Hatchery, Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a 14-foot boat,'25-horsepower motor and boat accessories valued at $1,000 were stolen yesterday from ta front of; his house. Rummage Sale August 2, 9-1, |Pon(Jac Navy Mothers, CAI, i:w+7.12:Building, Waterford. ' ' —Adv. choice heifer* 21.7243; etani________ good 32-31.71; uUUtr cow* 16-18: and cotter 11.so-15 utility — - - Rummage Sale—Baby Furni-ture“ and clothihg, Thursday, i i Friday and Saturday until 0, 514 IE: Columbia. , ■ —Adv. •tandard and food 13J2. Sheep compared laet lamtrt »te*dy 21.7AH 75 oprtDg Umbi 16 75-21 7 •22,50-25.00 etandart ~ . . codple lot* choice belter* 23.75-24.00 good! CnNOai 2.30 ■ —* —---------------------- 1M artot I OmdMTN; 8heep 178t. Steady about 100 beadj contCW or eeeurlUao atiumed by wd—When ™;|M«a*. investors Growth .. od—Next day>Mat* investor* Dhiet . .r _gutoom Qraww , .....:. receivership or,Teievltlon Electronic* ... th#_B_*nk™ptc^yjWeMlngtOT Equity .... MEETS • FACTORY-DFFICIALS — C. M. to serve retail customers. T^he meetings were Shelton, (left) of Shelton Pontiac-Buick, held at-the main plant in Pontiac. He is-Rochester, a member of tin Pontiac Motor r fthowh shove with E. M. Estes (ri^ht), a Gen- i St Soil 0ty,*ion national debtor,.-..council, conferred .13 70 1460 this toedt with members of Pontiac manage-li 43,i».T»| in an exchange of ide*s on how better eral Motwa vice president and general manager of Pon^ac, and Frank-V. Bridge, general sties manager. IS m m THE PONTIAC PRESS. THPR&P/^AP&UST 1,1968' m 'JS—**6 Deaths mPontiac, Neighboring Areas .. if i ! ■ m2 5 * LOIS A. ANDERSON Lois A. Andefeon oMU Lowell •. died yesterday. Her body is at ' the SparksrGrtffin FuneralHome. . MRS. ELMER GILSON Service (or Mrs. Elmer (Dottie E.) Gilson, 73, of 535 Emerson, will be 11 a.m. Saturday in Voorhees-Siple Chapel with burial in Ferry Mount Park Cemetery. -Mrs. Gilson, ar member of the First Christian Church, Washington, Ind., died, yesterday after a three-month Illness. Surviving, besides'her husband are two sons, Charles Coleman and Floyd tiUson, bdffl or Pon- Death Notices ANbERSON, JULY 31. 1163. LOIS Alien*. 4U Lowell. Funeral ar* rangementa are bending at the Spares -Ortffln Funeral Home wners Mrs. Anderson via ue In California ; sister, Mrs. Gtenj Sorter of Holly; and eight grandchildren. nora c. Foley MILFORD - Requiem H i g h Mass for former resident Nora [C. Foley, 70, of Detroit, will-be 9:30 a.m. Saturday at-Our Lady and . Mrt Virginia Jenks of of Loretto Catholic Church in Detroit. Burial will follow in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. Miss Foley died yesterday after* lengthy Illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8. p.m, tomorrow at the Hammond and Haas Funeral* Home, tiac; and , five daughters, Mrs. Clyde Dugger of Valparaiso, Ind., ynHpn Pfmm of Pontiac Mrs. Peter Luchasz of Alpena and Mrs. William Fisher and Mrs. Carlos Biggs, both of Evansville, Ind. KEITH A. HARRIS Keith A. Harris, two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert J Harris of 61 E. Rutgers died yes-|grday of a virus infection. His body i$ at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Surviving besides the parents are grandparents, Albert Harris, , Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bucsko; and great - grandmother Mrs. Edna Boyle. MRS. RHODE WILLIAMSON Mrs. RMbde (Ellen E.) Williamson, 55, of 3831 Lotus Drive, Wa-1 grocery store. two dau^ters, Mrs.' JVUliam C. Brendel and Mrs. L. G. Green, both of White Lake Township; and five sisters,’ Mrs. Leone Burke of Rose Center, Mrs. Berne ta Johnson of Florida, Mrs,. Deryl Tousley of Grand Rapids, Mrs. Muriel-Crabtree of Pontiac Former owner of the Milford Style Shop, Miss Foley was a Clarkston. Also surviving are four 'brothers, Irving .of Clarkston, Alton of Romeo, Stanley of BeilairO and Leland of Clarkston. EDWARD S. PETTIT ( ORTONvILLE — Service for Edward- PETER KRUEGER JgGHLAND TOWNSHIP—Service for Peter Krueger, 65, of 1831 Lakena, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, WalledLake. Mr. Krueger .died Monday after a two-month illness. He was, proprietor of a retail terford Township, died Yesterday after a brief illness. Her body is at the Moore Chapel of Sparks-* Griffin Funeral Home in Auburn Heights. t .... » | Mrs. Williamson, a practical nurse at Pontiac General Hospital, leaves her husband; her mother Mrs. Amanda Williams of Auburn Heights; seven sons, James of Seattle, Wash.. Gary of North Platte, Neb.,‘ Eugene of Detroit, Rodney of Gingellville, Mick of Waterford Township, IWmy nf Amw.Arbor and Rick at bottle. Also surviving ate nine grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Breckenridge and Mrs. Una Sny-k der, both of Auburn Heights; and three brothers, Gene Walker of Rochester, Fred Everett of Pom tiac and Robert Everett of Waterford. , . MRS: WILLIAM CORNELL HOLLY - Service for Mrs, William (Mary Jane) Cornell, 62, of 203 Jones,, will be 2 p.m. Saturday'attheDryer Funeral Home, v^urial will be in Rose Center’ ^ Cemetery. . _ Mrs. Cornel died unexpectedly eat^r today. She was a member of the auxil-' - iary of Amel Schwartz Post.No. 149, American Legion, and the Blue (Star, Mothers. Surviving besides her husband are three children, Donald and 4-- Oiettr both of ’Holly, and Mrs. Dale McNamara of Royal Oak; two brothers, Lee Caswell-of Rose Center and Jacob Caswell of • MRS.. FRED SCHULTZ f IMLAY TOWNSHIP - Service ALLEN B. ORR . - jfor Mrs. Fred (Viola) Schultz, 52, WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — [of 2731 Graham, will be 2 p. m. .Service for Allen B. Orr, 61, ofjfomorrow. at the Muir Brothers Pontiac Lake, will be 2 p.m. Funeral Home, Imlay' City. Bur-Saturday at the Lewis fi. Wlntlial will follow in Imlay Township aiLsoN, July inf i**3, dottie . E.. 535 Emerson Ave.; age 73; wtfeoF Elmer ______ Charles Coleman, Mrs. Clyde Dugger. MTS. William Dean, Mrs. Mar Luchaaa and Fiord Ollson. Funeral urvloa will be Uaturday, August 3. at- U a.m. at the Voorhees - Slple Funeral Boms with Rer.Tbeodor* Moetoe at-delating. Interment 4n Perry Mt. Park Qkneierv. Mrs. Ollson wtfl' Fun*n Jfef “ the Voorhete Slple KARRI ,, will be 2 p.m. Saturday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Jmemfaer—of St. Mary’s Rosary) Home. Burial will be in Qrton-Altar Society. Surviving are 4 wo brothers, Rev. Dominic I. Foley, former pastor of' St. Mary Catholic Church here, and John J. Foley of Menominee. Contributions can be made to file Little Sisters of.. the. Poor1, Detroit. Half Wanted Mala; t, ' AFTER « Must have a mAi to work 4 hours per evening. Earnings of IS# per-week. Must b« neat’appearing and good worker, start, immediately. Openings/ Mad lor full time map. For inrohnatlon call Mr. Oreen, OR 3-8022, S p m. to l p.m. ^ Experience Necessary assistant, manager POSltlOi anoa C If JULY 31. 1503, KEITH' a., si d. Rutgers; beloved Infant, ton of Albert* J. and Edna J. Harris; daar grandson of Albert Harris and W. «S2rHMK'JH|| Bucsko; doar great-grandson Of Mrs. Edna Boyle, Funeral rangements are pending af Doqelson-Jolws Funeral—B yheke baby Keith will lie In si KRUEOER. JULY 35, 1503. PET 1531 Likens Drive. Milford] 65; dear brother of Mrs. Jul______ Koenlng, Mrs. Marie Htlden-brandt. Frank and Jaoob Kruger. Funeral service will be Friday, ATTENTION START IMMEDIATELY MECHANICALLY* INCLINED MAN Bo sales experionao necessary ai we.will train you.. Must bo able to get .along oq $100 per month to iterff job la permanent. Call PE 5-9243. 5 p.m. tonight only. Walled Lake. ORR, JULY 31, 1863, ALLEN B .. hand of Helen Orji. dear n |“ Lakevlew Surviving are two‘ brothers, Frank of Walled Lake and, Jacob of Germany, and twb sisters.. WILLIAMSON. Juui si. sau,. jmj-lifnH.r3S31 uwuiTjmirwWW* ford Twp.; age 5ft; beloved wife of Rhode Williamson; dear daughter of Mrs. Amanda William*; dear mother of James, Gary, Eugene, Rodney, Mick, Rick and Donny Williamson; dear sister of Oene Walk*,Tiffs. Evelyn Brer“-enrtWgc, Mrs, Una ttoyder, Ft and Robert Everett. Funeral i rangements are pending at 1 Moore Chapel of the 8pft! Griffin Funeral - Homa- Aubu^M Heights, where Mrs. WlUlamsCn Funeral Home, Clarkston. Burial will' be. in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. A farmer, Mr. Git died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of OlMtak-w-^- _ ^~111 land. County.Sportsmen’s Clutei^bonfeld oT Bay City and Janef'j "tSBT and the National Archers Asso-[*huItz,_ at jwme ciation. Cemetery. Mrs. Schultz died Tuesday after a long illness.. Surviving besides her husband pre two daughters, Mrs. Donna her mother, ______ jMrst Mary Werth of Imlay City; Surviving, are his -wife Helen, a sister and three grandchildren. Hospital Plans Get JudgeVDK Southfield Zfening Vote Is Ruled Invalid Police Chief Fired From Post in Troy TROY — City Manager David E. Firestone fired Police Chief David E.. Gratopp yesterday, saying the chief had a “lack of abil-yesterday ordered the city to per-jty (q manage a department of nial of the permit by a 4-3 vote years, both before and after Troy Pontiac Soldieries in Alaska Accident ; A Pontiac soldier serving in Alaska was killed in an auto accident Tuesday night Aear An- chorage. Dead is Spec. 4. C. Ciif- . . - , ford .A. Johnson. 35, son of -Mn. from-the planning commission s and Mrs. Byroq Johnson, 33 W.|decision, and not as an adminls-l SOUTHFIELD—Oakland County dreuit Judge1 Arthur E. Moore mit construction, of -a ^-million osteopathic hospital at 12 Mile andEvergreen roads. . -Judge Moore ruled in favor of Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, which twice had' been denied a building permit by City Council ' in a zoning controversy. Die judge said the council’s der Wlut 1 ville Cemetery, Mr. Pettit died* early today after an itiness of three years. He was an'employe of the Fisher Body Division, Graiffi Blanc. ‘ Surviving are his wife Dorothy, , — and sevan children, Alton and jJunjrAl^ Bonf Arlen, both* of OrtoiiVillC, Alvbl] in the U.$. Navy, Mrs. Ealine Caverly of Hale, Mrs. Evieline Branan of Flint, Mrs. Edwina McKay- of Grand Blanc and Mrs. Alberta Godfrey • of Imperial each. Calif. - Alsb surviving are three stepchildren, Jim Phelot of. Orton-ville, and Cqtf and Joan Phelot, both of Flint; her mother, Mrs. -Norman Stoner of Lupton; a brother, five sisters and 11 grandchildren. ' * lather Mrs. William <3. Brendel and MlCnn O. Green; dear brother Of Mrs. Leone Bum, Mrs. Ber-neta Johnson, Mrs. Denrl jCoysley. Mrs. Muriel Crabtree, Mrs. Virginia jenks, Irving, Alton, Stanley and Leland, Orr: also survived n'fSM grandchildren. Funeral service will he Saturday, August - A-------— Lewis E. wlnt b Rev. Ways* Inlegnieni in wdriR - ’ ■ iary Pet-. Ealine s Godfrey, a Pettit; de -pwmafri* ‘openTacdoiUmert TU-««S Co. Experienced men under in person. Mr. Pruniy. Buck, Finance Co. Walled Lake, , IMp Wwttsd.Muto 4 PROFESSIONAL CAREER tH LIFE Insurance sales. $410 a month atari-lag salary, commissions, paid vacations. and paid. fringe benefit*. Ut i-fni. ■ •-.* PROOHAMBR 1401 CARD EQUIP-menl. Baldwin Rubber Co. FE. REAL ESTATE SALES PEOPLE Business/Is good, we need t' ambitious sales, l»ople to baht -*”1 •—d homes, REAL ESTATE SALESMEN . Need tpo‘‘full, time sales people to handle new eQd used Itomoe, plenty of leads dj -• *■ Mr. Schram. REAL ESTATE SALESMAN. Experienced. or willing to train you lor good earnings In our very active Office. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 341 OAKLAND AYE. OFIK $-f ATTENTION moo Smie to work°wlUi laree electrical appliance company, we will train. Call FE 5-0243 tonight. Ask ' ■ Mr, Face. 5 - 7 pen. REGISTERED PHARMACIST. Excellent opp--1 —““— pharmacist AUTO MECHANIC, DEAL- Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 16 SOUTH CASS BRIDGEPORT. _________FE 4- BORINO I and lathe naaos, tiny MU second aplfta, journeymen only. . Steady work, oyertime schedule. 15 Mile CoolldgeYarea. Equal Op-i—iartlthlty—cmpldyer. Jeret’-dustrles, Inc., -MI 7-1202. brother of Irving revMj. v. Westphal. Mrs. Loretta_ Hoopi Mrs, Mary Spearman. Mrs. HUi Parkinson a—”-- *■ _______KaUy; grandchildren. Funeral aervlet wlU be .Saturday, ------ X at 2 p.w. *t the C. F. . ...an Funeral Home With, Rev. .gO^^ytruff. officiating. Interment AUTO MECHANICS AND MECHANICS helpers mulfi tools. Keego Sales and Service. Keego'Harbor. BOOKKEEPER-OFFICE MANAGER Must • be capable of taking .full charge M records for several medium sized corporations, Also be familiar with NCR operation. Include resume and State salary requirement to Pontiac Press Box 22. STATION ATENDANT, . 21 married, apply Red Fox Gasoline, Dixie Hwy„ Clarkston. ’ . lyed by WVRVHnVM*. wVI August 3. at 2 p.m. —- “■—si lu . _________IctatL... Ot-tisiville Cemetery. Mr. Pet-ui will Ue In etate at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Orion- with payments as loW as 110.00 « BUDGET SERVICE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 'Pontiac State 'Bank.Bldg. . -v - FE e-0456 ■ Pontiac’s oldest And largest -budget f--- __ it Office Appointments - Adjustment -Service ■’- --- •‘^^-9281 ml graduate, i ’’Pdf apptTcaii ~FE w m benefits. CARPENTERS NEEDED AT ONCE. MICHIGAN, CIVIL SERVICE 11 a LJBVEL POlmUNI. Bal-ary *6.366-57.634 annually. Supervisor . Administrators f”' ___*Full placement __ - habllltatlon services lor ehU-) dren and parents. Must have .’two years M child welfare experience ami Master of -social Work Degree. AH Mlchl-gan ClvU Service benefits, Including an. excellent itato contributory Insurance' program and an outstanding retirement For additional lnforma-contact Mrs. McNeil. . MAN TO RUN HIS OWN iwn ' parking lot. BxetUont opportunity, to be In business for youteelf. Apply corner Clinton end ‘Lawrence across from . ~ turners Power between .0:30 IVERYJJAT MEN ARE laid OFF, often- lor reasons beyond tbolr control. Do you' have In Inc— to faU back ont investigate ... pari time work today. Write Pen-tiac Frees Box 70- . EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATION I. Telegraph. ability. Sal apply at 1 that type ”. % ★ w • Firestone said today he has: been giving Gratopp both written and verbal warnings for morel than a year. Thegchief had been.head of the police department for file past 11 D. E. Pursley. FUNERAL HOME ; Invalid Car Service wa«= in.cnffiHpnt to overrule the city’ planning commission’s .approval. He said'the law requires a two-thirds vote. Tfie fwo-fiififis fille applied, be said, because the council could act. only as a board of appeals “His operation of the depart-, ment has not been satisfactory,” Firestone said. The city manager pointed-out that Gratopp had wot turned in the required monthly reports since JUMiy. —--------r-r*—— PHI trative body passing on requests. Pres^itly a 17-man force, the The dead'man’s father-said anM^J18 own or^?ances the unit is presently headed by acting announcement from the Army did Ptannm« > conmusaion’s vote:Chief William Schwandt, also an Wot give details of the accident, « « recommendation. .... i “The planning itompUsston vote ............. . .. he Fairmount. DRAYTON PLAINS Donelson-Johns Store -Detective good opportunity, exc. emplojree benefits. Reply to- Pontlec Press Box 63. SINGLE YOUNG MAN FOR 1 n equipment place. 6 d_.— t. Hew to Pontiac Press Box OUNO MAN O V E fc .f» J.fW auto to work on ntabUoM* W surance routes. NeSt and .pro-greSelve. willing - to- work i-U 11 time. Apply between 10 a.m. and if a m. Fri. and" Mon. 04 Au-’----’ PtmUaci ”,-k PONTIAC MOTOR- DIVISION ’ HAS^ OPENINGS ■ IMp noted haw* 1 BEAUTY OPERATOR WITH OOOD following, call' — ““ - * 5-7160 after 7 p.i CCXBMETld " onto . AND .. CLERK, ‘ l tlma, experience noceeiery. coMpjrrjti(T. middlW. *—-» to Uw* to. general FOB Body; Draftsmen Designers . . —GhpfVcrs •_.. ■ f ; Detaiiers—— SURFACE GRINDER—OAOE8 AND EXPERIENCED OH ALL TYPES OP CONSTRUCTION AND REMODEL INO WORK. MUST BE ABLE TO 'FURNISH BEST OP REFERENCES <3 A M CONSTRUCTION, 3256 DIXIE HIGH- HfiET METAL MECHANIC FOR Outside work. State reference — Reply to Penllao Preee Box 66. 1HINOLER8, EXPERIENCED, AS-shingle work. Reply to Pen- __Press .Box 95. ' !• WANTED: EXPERIENCED APPLE YOUNG MAN. ___ _ _ .htlac aro« —'pSomM^ri -J. .Seller*, W-4000, between 5 and ■-Layout Men—- FOUR to §JX Month Program with a possibility of permanent em-ployment. EXCELLENT WORK; ING CONDITIONS AND BENEFIT PLANS.- Apply' SALARIED v -Personal Department Glenwood & Kerinett Pontiac,’Michigan Telephone 332-8111 ‘ ext. 664 or 585 FOR APPOINTMENT - CURB • WAITRESSES ■2.2135 between $ AOED nouei-n. FE CklLD WELFARE SUPERVISOR ary *6.366-67,934 annually. 8u- . pervlaor - Admlnlatratora for . public 'Chid welfare effleta In Kalamazoo bad Oakland Coun-tloi. FuU placemenu and re- . habllltatlon eorvleoa for ehll- letlem ■ ____j Mlohl- .... ____l servlce benefits, In- cluding an excellent state contributory Insurance program and an outstanding retirement plan. For additional information, contact . Mrs. McNeil, State Department of Social Welfare. 117 Lapeer. Phone MfTprtAwd, ment of Social Welfare. W. Main Street, Michigan. Phohe R «•••. Ru equal uppifitunity emplqy- Nepeaalag. - 4-4011’or DopOrt: CLERK-TYPIST Natlonamnance «6MP»l!gr«~W Telegraph near Dixie, CURB WAITRESSES. A § W DRIVE w A N W peasant i W aldron P with varied qnanUttea - and discount*. state experience, age. aal-ary expected and give work ref-erences. Reply to Pontiac Preee, Box 02. EXPERIENCED COOK, OOOD wages. Apply In perspn Mullaney’i Fine Poods. 2031 ’Opdyke. EXPERIENCED ----------- - knowledge of-typing and.trial b ' ance. Full tbQf In Bowling all ift N* 1 [} i HOUSEKEEPER — COOK. MATURE lady for doctor's home to Birmingham area. Live to Monday through Friday, weekends off. child 2'/,. Private martin; utt, Tto Other help emplbyed. *40. Musi have recent city references. JO 4-5950 or 620-1131. - - „ _| HOUSEKEEPER. LIVE IN. EXPE-rlenced, ref. MI 4*“‘ BILL - MANN, BULLDOZING, hour service. MA 5-6121 OT 3-6652. DO YOU HAVE A DUST PROB-. lem? Call EM 3-2449, anytime. Llqnld chloride 'or road oiling, *--- gtor Duet Control. ; 9 a.m. Cramp.Electric, 3465 Aubari - Rd., Auburn Heights. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY- FOq ’ advancement with the'national con-—sinner finance company, must be - between -23 and 25 years of age and high School graduate. Good steady salary, with ear allowance - furnished, a liberal plan of company benefits. Write pondec Preee Box 56- QlYing complete reebm*. EXPERIENCED GAS STATION AT- V HOUSE AND REMODELING —-----. 518. 363-6508. Asphalt Paving Fencing Floor Sanding FE 5-5167 CARL, L: BILLS SR.. FLOOR —^---------1 gSndtast. EE 14m m4W. - -____ JOHN taVlor, FLOOR layin6. - nd Bnlehtog. 25 years EXPERIENCED MUFFLER brake man SB -----hake. _ _ -axoerl^eo,] t.___,.u. Generatora—Regulators—Starters r, q. SNYDER, FLOOR LATINO. ! j Batteries $5.95 Exchange **ndtas’*nd fimenmg. p hom fe . VIS UT* Hl _____T —-------WSw. 730a Auburn •ITONTOOTT FUNERAL HOME . Serving Pontiac for 50 Yoare I Oakliftd J~~ “ 1 EXPERIENCED STATION ATTSlT dant, - Mechanical ability required. Dave Ashland’s Service. 3649 Au-[ bum Rd.. Auburn Helghte. - FOOD FREEZER — Salesman I.F.ADS. LEADS. LEADS SPARKS-GRIFFIN ■ FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" ' FE 2-3041 Voorhees-Siple funeral home fe 2-4371 Cemetery Loth 4-A 2 GRAVES IN WHITE chapel. . othef^than that Johnson yras a _ passenger in a private auto. The was the contrdHing vote, body is tseing retpmetf to1 Pontiac said, for burial. Veteran of nine years service, Johnson was dworced End had no children. 11-year veterjan. Firestone said JMassachusetts investors _ hospital on residentially roiled land/'upon a finding that the use will not be injurious to the surrqnnding neighborhood.” -/Tile fffitof'1’* 4-? fame «ft. er Judge Moore sent the case back to-4he city, saying the'previous vote against the building permit was improper because such extraneous matters as citi-zen protests had been considered # ■ , _ in addition to the question of to- Jf/O BOUPCl OV©r jury to surrounding property. 1 The Trust offers a dfverSified and supervised Investment in the common stocks of fare than .100 companies selected for high investment quality.^’A ProSpectts and,other de-/scriptive material may b«.obtained by writing: Walling. Lerchen & Co. 402 fentioc State Bonk Bldg. Pentiac, Mich. FE 2-9275 Gratopp to resign Monday, and The zoning ordinance permits- ft* acting with the confirmation Break Info Safe at Movie Office, Take $100 in Cash A safe cracking at the Bhje Sky Drive-In Theater- in* Pontiac Township was undeir investigation today by detectives from the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Manpger Harry Thompson dis- requested of the City Commission. Gratopp refused to resign, Firestone said, and was fired early yesterday. - ..‘4 IF is expected-that a new police chief will be appointed within two weeks, Firestone~said. - , ‘ . ”•* PsrsoMls ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 ra.Mjft. ConfldenUal. __________ to Circuit Court for Break-In DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. • 73* Menominee. FE 5 7805. Lost and Found' i. rE 4-5*67. . LOST: GREY AND WRITE MINIA-ture German Bchnkuaer, '.last seen to Vicinity of. Twin Lakes Subdivision and M-59. Wearing . tur •Heidi." Rewsbd. Call days. FE S4II1. Ext. 73W. nights. KM 3 7463. LOSf: P»pr TOT* BAG. AT Tig TtEWARP A SLEEK BLACK CAT VI-cfally Rochester mkIwZO Mtie Rd., retl collar, multiple ..toes, reward $10. Call MI-4-0939.1 noily iiiuui|^uu uis- Tnurwwhln edvered the break-in and tHeft ~A0®I“n,*,*~ Three" youths ^charged with breaking apd entering a Waterford TownShip, supermarket Sun-1, use day night yesterday0' waived CT-j amination in justice court and' were boupd -over to Circuit Court for arraignment Friday. They are Roger Miracle, 17, Robert Van Kleek, 17, and his brother Roger, 16. The trio live at 455S Rdfiek- Independence of the safe when he arrived at 5 MEN WANTED, 475 A WEEK oetorv—education not a baffler. Physically handicapped accepted If otherwise qualified. Applies-being taken at 7300 Cooley R-l , Un-ipt Lake. ' , , . 1 Above-Average Man [23-42 Worth- *113 weekly guarantee foy special type route work. 56 < slope duly, ear end phone ,=_-_ tfa^ 1 Wa mM ^dabvearing^ experi- 3-8565. AU are being held in the coun- P e Rd. off Commerce Rd. HANDYMAN WITH SOME MECH-ante and electric ' knowledge, could turn living quarters If Tellreil. Reply"ta Ptaittxc~Preie HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE men, part ol full "time, car necessary For appointment call PR 5-3686. 3:30 -to 7:30 p.m.. . V- KITCHEN HELPERS. WILL TEACW to. cook. Morey's Golf k Country KITCHEN HELP WANTED. MUST be 18 or over, neat and dependa-.able, ho' exp. necessary, apply person only Cracker Barrel Ggfintry . -CARPENTER W O R X, NEW AND Most he experienced to general shop Work. Jig work.Tmd arc welding. good future: MI 4-8320 — Ext. FE' 54U55 , ,*’ ' ,FE 5-I0I4 -j Building Modernization ALUMINUM aToRMS ”— "S©Bt6’ Awnings Porch - patio .-roofing. c. WEEDbN. CO. ** " Garage Builders GUINN CONSTRUCTION Homo lfKprovementi, porches. , port*, additions. All types of ment wort, pottos, driveways, i I 6024)105. CARPENTRY AND - ALUMINUM m. ol i-y CARPENTRY, -^KITCHENS. ADDt-tloni.. garages.' PK 5-0010..—-GENERAL CARPENTRY. KITCHEN ■ ' ’ iste, refteatloo tms. FE 5-1215 C orpof Sorvko Custom Carpet Layers Installation and custom work All work guaranteed. SCHWEITZER CARPET SERVICE. cleaning, repairing, laying, free estimates, FE £6933 or FE 2-7893, Cement Work CEMENT. C O NT R SEEDING. SODDING, BACK HOE-bulldoatog. Freo estimates. EM EVANS k SZABO COMMERCIAL sod hauling. Imlay City. Merf blue graas. 724-2161 or 726-2471. Television, Radio and Hi-Fi Sorvita FE 4-4045 Tree Trimming Service ACE TREE-STUMP R EMOVAL Trimming. Get our bid. WHOM. BILL’S TREE "TRIMMINO AND . removaL. Very tow coat FE MOO*. CUT THROAT TREE REMOVAL Call around — Try our low bid 852-4070 Lwrert prices 3*3-3023 t TREE TRIMMINO AND REMOVAL.! I Reasonable rates.' , FE 3-37011 LAWN MOWER REPAIR. 13 YEARS experience 1- to '3-day. service. pick up and aeavery; or 20M*. . jjkowodBeiklers NE1DRICK BUILDING SERVICE — Home, Oarage, Cabtoeto. Addi-tions. FHA TfeRM8. FE 4-690* TALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed to door* end wit dowe. Complete building service. 1025 Oakland Av»- PE 4-*00 >r Specialists Free EsUmates -- afternoon shifts only._____ tact - Williams Research Corporation - 2280 West Maple Road r Walled Lake. Poured Concrete Walls . Rockwall Go. lend resume . to Pontiac p Jfooi' ' qt OR ldq«« Cewvelwcenf Hemes Piano Tening ——ME6HANJG'—- Must have Hydramatlo treaemli ■skin experience and. or, good turn sup map. Pontiac dealership. Mui have tools. 603*2*E>A»k for, MSrl< MECHANIC Day or night- employment. In a we equipped modern shop: B available, paid vacation, i___ Ina. See service manager. Wilson Pontiac Cadillac. 1250 N—Wood-ward. Birmingham. 'AtowwjM PI.KASANT. HOME* FOR CHRONIC-ally 01. Doctor on Can. Graduate nurse on duty at all times. Ia-dlvldusl attention. Reas, rates. Local refefence Rowell 1864. 2575 N. Latson Rowell. . Phone RoweU PIANO TUNING7=v=—— Recondition old plsyers and up-righta, or eontlder buying. PtastaHni Service A PLASTERING AND REP/ Reasonable. Pat Lee, FE 2 792S __ PLASTERINO. fKEE ’ESTIMATES. Trenching TRENCHINO, SEPTIC Tracking’ I front end loading. Track Bental Trucks to Rerff Vk-Toh1 pickups 114-Ton Stakes TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT ■ Dump Trucks —-8eml.Trailera Pontiac Farm -and Industrial t ractor Co. . 82 8. WOODWARD re s Asti, .: T." ■ Open Dally including S FE 4-1462 Uphostering A S PE ' ;thff ’ theater, 218(1 N.‘ Opdyke,[ty jail after failing to"meet bond ixrrsiMmifOti M^$VSf. [yesterday afternoon.- [hot by Waterford .Township Jusr *• Police found the 150 pound safe tice John McGrath, some 700 feet from the office. It * ;* * . j had been hidden behiixl a fence. They are accused of thq break-. The fiootvbad been ripped open in Of the ClintonviUe Super ** and $MX) in cadi was missing! ket, 6494 ClintonviUe. ■E-i I* 'fijg yONIIAC PRESS. THURSDAY; AUGUST rsfe :,v> M.L. |Rf--ta. J g___I- 1 HUB insurance cubs, mar have Bn aMT casualty experience, apse* tar tetter giving i|i and n-onoe U> P. O. Sox 124. 1Union BT* ' IdUW'MMHt* *flx tSmS iT5»J=mv •** &»g ._S5jrv^ I__________ MHHIta 6 mm. -MinniJtAQK LADT TO CARE FOR ..4 JMD children and light bouse- NUltMte MDK. •Bp, tMlpmMHHMP apt Acres Nursing lam*. irket. 1M Huptor ntotVgroAxT' Blvd. ‘‘PERSONABLE_________________ __ Pox UAH Airport outre, typing »nd offlo* experience nedeunry, reply to own band, with earn* plate return* and (alary requtra-msnts to Pontiac Press Box 34. POSITION OPENINb POR MAN-Mar. talas. promotnB'~..r- Yard (Mods and Domestic Departments. Sales experience n areas ary. Excellent opportunity for a real leader. Par appointment contact llr. Smith -L1-S171. RELIABLE WOMAN TO TAKE care of home and children, live to, OR 3-8013 TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR WAI-. trees M aook, personal appear-ay ^stay, at the oreen Parrot. > BHOtf PRxasKR. pdecE work wt Ojasrantee.—wUt train, apply Plash Cleaners. 3J9 W. Huron. -roE^rorapBT WAITRESS. OVER XI. NO KXPE-rtenc* necessary Apply In person after S p.m, Dell’* fnnr-3481 Ellsa- CEMEN^T WORK. ALL RHJOH. _______________iTW days. —t—l ELECTRIC motor SERVICE RE-- halrwWMMnywiii^~ “*s^Mh| FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- lfl», will finance. R. 1 Meyers. OR i-1345. . TAILORING AND 'REMQDELINC.__________- _ fur worr Edna Warner. FE 5-2133. (MvaisscsMt—Naning 21 |____________________ UPSTAIRS. . adults.-after • p.m. 108 Dresden. 3-ROOM AMD BATH.- PRIVATE EN-trance. 7M W. Htfton. t 3 ROOMS NR. K MART.' ADULTS. VACANCT POR ELDERLY PA-ttent in any condition In our completely equipped rest — —if orpr**------------ . __________826-0281. Mtvim bmI Trucking) ' 2 l-A MOVING SERVICE. REASON-, able rates. FE 5-3458 PE M888. nT CMWFUL MOVING., Yates. PL 2-3999. 6SS-35I3 -..JBob’s Van Service MOVING AND STORAGE . REASONABLE RATES 1 h NIGHTS. OVER 21. N uiennh necessary. Apply eft I p.m. Dell's Inn. JttlXUiabs Lake Bd PE 2-2981. WAITRESS EXPERIENCED, NEAT, *“” “— ---- -X3i. | days. rant. Mlr- T70MAN T0 LIVE IN BABY-SIT- fora 8:88 ■ liBI. ■ ______________/_ WOMAN dVER 29. CARE OP 2 child. days. Sylt WOOL ^FRESHER, STEADY WORK, isekeaplng, r. Rewj to NO DNMJ Cleaners, 1115 uoSt YOUNG WOMAN R5gT nbusekeeplng, $ days. Keoto Har-to Pontiac Press Box 58. Help Wonted AGES 35 TQ 60 trw^«*"plrf'ame or' tall. *Pi£ vlous business experience help---- ful. Phone FE t-OOi,— r BOOKKEEPER AUDITOR: EXPER- Padding—18 Years Experience ROBERT TOMPKINS .OR llIU LKHTT KAULgfCL REABONABIJ^, H$ve P|ckup Will Haul Painting & Decorating 23 A-l PAINTING. INTERIOR AND terlur. free estimates, days. I486, eves. 338-8594, _________ discounts for cash 682-8620 hauling. PE 8-»48>TI______ Vtft&T PAtNTWO, DBCORAT-tag, paper, removing. OR Z7334. ORIFFJS BROTHERS Commercial—Residential Painting and decorating. OR 3-8048 TIZZY 1-RboM EPPICIRNCT Alberts Apartments I BOOMS AND HATH. ADULTS. 1 CLEAN Roqtis. CLOSE IN. 143 ’ PLOOR^ I 2 OR 1 ROOM8 ON B utsfleld. TrE > drlntlni. PE .30341. 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE and hath, attractive, utilities tarnished, oouple, PE 2-4812._____ I abjUg AND BATH ON SILVEfc ■ Utilities paid. OR 3-1372. . 6-403!l.... . BOOTES, NEWLY-— . Couple oflljr,338-1140 . 4 ROOMS' AND BATH. ALL *MOf* : DEcentATi M0 after I p. BfKiti Osqnn 4 ROOMS AND BATH. WITH 2 , bedrooms, Ml newly tde^rated and ----------- —- -po deposit! Avs. Phone Miner - ww • afe ** * I OAKLAND, 3 ROOM, PVT. bath, turn., 516 a week. EL 8-1884. > MECHANIC. PON- 1 ^jura, I get tired of bein^i tein-ager, but It’s th« only thing ! know!” ROOMS CLOSE TO TOWN Avon Apartments . S rooms and bath, on bus 1 no children, ref., required. .LEEPINO ROOM. PRIVATE *N-l^trsnee M PMrsnes after 5 p.~ BACHELOR APARTMENT. 2 ROOM private beta ant —i— * ■ PE: 5-6304, ' BACHELOR -- CLSaN, PRIVATE, carpeted. jMhllts. PE 3-4376. CLEAN 4 ROOMS AND BATH, LOW- c 6t OR 3-2888. ROOM OR BOARD FOR --------------- — 2-58*2. TRAILER . Nice’ yard._ Very Ioce 2 rooms: private I. write Miss Toney, S8« Dixie K, Waterford. *■ ■ •*■■■■*■' id ealary expected. CAB DRIVERS. FULL OR-PART Sm 9 night ehlfte. Apply ■ *1 Hotel. t Chief Cab. Co Waldron 1 e preferred, cell before EXPERIENCED FRY—COOK FOR- Union Lake Rd. Commerce HAVE AN IMMEDIATE OPENING for 2 sales -people In our reel department. Experience prt-!■' wired hut will train If neeeeisry. - ‘Plenty of fleer time ana proepeets. OeB % A. Tayler. crtMSMir-MAN OR WOMAN WITH Ca£ MM (R I established _______Route. Wellsd Make 13-83 per hour worked. Apply t. Perry, 8:45-9:28 a. TILK FINISHER -ALSO DRIVER for dry eleaners. Pontiac Press Bex M. ' -- : ~ ’ ‘ OPPORTUNITY STUDENTS, _________________ earn S h O per hour selling , Watkins quality products. Apply ---rMC-Worth Perry, 8:M to g;» iftii. Sales Help, Male-Female |4 TOY DEMONSTRATORS e-BlL._______ 1, gilts and novel- Our1 demonstrstoi ___ties at leglllmate discount prices. Win ntttcf every .month. Top com-• mission. Call for detells. - -HOMS parties, me. — QRIAT OPPORTUNITY WITH NEW ear and naat appearance, gates experience desirable. Phone foe T OB 3-8875. * JLNI fe Dr SALESPEOPLE TO work full Ume.‘ Experience preferred but will train. Plenty of leads and floor time. No phone calls fur Interview, see Bob Harrell. Teltviiion-Radio Service 24 HAVE YOUR RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP , Trained Service Men, Reasonable prices. Free Tube Testing. Montgotnary Ward Pontiac FE 4-5882 nts-Unfurnishtd 38 Re*t Offict SjjiBce . APARTMENTS IN TEL • HURON • arcs. ^rtvats^cnlTance *“ only, DORRIS, PE 5-2047. Rent Business Property 47-A Transportation ROOMS. .BXTH. FIRST FLOOR, heat and RoT water. FE 2-7425._ . ROOMS. NEWLY DECORATED, Mh—nice yerd,-adult4,. np pets. 852-1023: V ANTED: erences.fi INSURANCE: FIRE. WINDSTORM JO Wonted Children to Board 28 REUABLI LICENSED HOME BY ; S REDECORATED SPACIOUS rooms 'overlooking perk qeer Tel-Hurdh. Oas heat, fireplace, (trage, available Sept. Adults only. Reply to Pontteo Praia Box lot: ___■ INTEGRATED 3-BEDROOM APART- Some caretaker's work. 673- MODERN 2 BEDROOM APAR’f-ment, ground floor, lights and hot water turn,, .Drayton area, OR -1-1131, rafter; 7. OR 4-0003. • ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL Adulte Only . . .. FE M8H Rooms WMi Board _______ Center, Syly.en. 683 3300. STORE. INQUIRE 3M VOORHEIS ■ PE 3-8381. 30 by- 60 BUILDJNO POR RENT, Dwle Hwy. Drayton Plains. LI 3-1487 qr PE 3-3613. PONTIAC AIRPORT, APi ssss. office and locatod *for° 'raplS ________aealhUlly^Ratraitu property tax ratjw. Phono i9.ooo a during or idtaHy I tiding. —pranmn . .till bath and basement, good neighborhood near Fisher Body — no down payment required. CaSwAnSmRD REALTY,11 OR i-ifri. * ’ 348 MONTH Excluding tax and in ^JSS DoWn . $400 DOWN 3-Bedreoin, I^ldarly New IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ' Everyone Qualifies LAND CONTRACT TERMS. SPOTLITE BUILDING CO. 8608 Down, j-bedroom brick ranch — basement —patio —fence, ----- — - Moore, S3t- CATALPA. ROCHESTER. 3- 1346 CAT/ Sell on iow~down payment. 517-288- 1450 SQUARE FEET. Cape Cod. S batl... . ment. Lake prlvUsgM. Wooded ‘ - -—ac Lake bedrooms. Paddock liter Itso DOWN. 223 N. C P^« JLi chh-pren . Rent Heeses—furwithed it rooms and baTh, near m0t 'WhNMLlBfiifa “ ■ jSSSt Wanted Houtshold Goods 29 , nt 2-7267. lUCTION sale every satur- day at Blue Bird • Auction. We'll _________ _ , buy furniture, tools end appliances. : COOLEY LAKE FRONT, riD ,um_____Ill'll.. i r ....... - i ns. Hi bath, fo __________MElrost 7-516T j Bash, for furniture and ap- _________________________________ pllances. l piece of,houseful.. Pear- j MIDDLE . AOS COUPLE TO -LIVE M B A T. storms, and screens, 1780 down, assume mortgage, 563 n mo., 3*38 Minton, 3 BEDROOM ON CANAL AT Lake," 1 bath, 3 .garage. acre. 683-1845, —bbd.1 5 p.m. and weekend*. oUteatia-BibROON HbCHBSTER area, ttniane. $12S~ Wyim. | basement^ ■■■ k**' '*”* * 3 bedrooms; 338-0205. LET US BUY IT OR SELL IT EOR - SMALL MODERN HUUbE IN LAKE YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY | Orion, FE 3-7212. AUCTION. OA 8-2611.______| ......: 1 1 ' REFRIGERATOR. 10 CUBIC ~~ larger. FE 4-4313. | Rent Houiei-Unfurnisked 40 „_____heat, lirge let:: A.' OA S3813. •BEDROOM. MUCK .. RANOI^j^ baths, fireplace, family rppm. hi Ins. basement. 21-ear gifage. L 220-foot lot. 731-2421. 2-BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE'. IN-13 BEDROOM- 1H„CAR. -OAR autre 129 S. Edith. FE 4-8378. i Drayton area. 3900 down. I Wanted Miscellaneous Humphries. i-Reslty. 83 N. Telegra Employment Agencies ADMINISTRATIVE machines. OR '30 I 3 ROOMS, 1 CHILD WELCOME. OFF } bedroom brick, 1V4 bath*. .! Oakland. 350 a month. FE 5-3278. base moat. 2 car garage. Ovei 1 '" '1 ri ' sere wooded lot. immediate I cupancy. Lake privileges. Williams Lake. Built-ins. gas *■*** *’ ““ oak floors, tils bath, birch cupboard!. QR 3-3046 after 6. Ruse McnAb T METER ALUMINUM siding duplex homo for late, live In 1 side and 1st the other make your pay-, manta, small down payment, at taka ear for equity, OR 4-0143. ANYONE - ROMES ON LAND CON- FHA and VA. ■----h WYATT REALTY Dally 18 to 3 * . in’ tract, PHA ai S.WNDERS Associate NO MONEY DOWN Ni-e Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA ASSOCIATE BROKERS 183. Franklin Slvd. FE 8-9663 Wyman Lewla ATTENTION 1 . WE BUILD 3-BEOROOM TRI-LEVEL PEATURINO: bullt-lir vanity, j CUSTOM BUILT RANCH HOME, 3 bedrooms furnished, basement, gergfet, meny extras. Must eeetl- ftea. MY H488. ■ -------- I^UtTTOP donelSon park _ _________ yard”"Sen* sold Id Ow parly OO own tonne and down payment.' Only K. L. Templeton; Realtor i. oil#6rd ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD, 4-B3SH 11,008 down. Tmmadlata Sion. EM 3-6703. H AC wimVtt7 im. ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES 3 bedroom, aluminum aided, li privileges. OR 4-1313. FOR. SALE BY OWNER.-nFMahd. T— —- tree and, clear wl id- baa house. 3 Clarks ton on Mil. Bec-(e on Hadley Rd. MA HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Lev^l $9,-995 z$lv0TO0WN LVb-Car Oarage Oa . / OFEICE OPEN Mod. Thru „ . I__ C. HAYDEN, Realtor 1 3-4804 18751 Highland Bd. (M-M) SWEETHEART • created by ; - DLORAH BUILDING. CO. FE 2-9123 » HIITER OUT BALDWIN - Excellent c WEST SUB, BREXDEL LAKE, 4 roomss and baa. oil furnace, attached garage, lake - prlv. 54,950. NEAR WATERFORD HIGH. 3-b room, bath, -targe lot, 57,960 a 554.00 per month. Small down p ment. Call B. C. Hitter Realty. 3 Ella. Lake Rood, FI 2-0178 or 4-2000 or FE M674, honEVmooners LAKE ORION AREA. 3 LAKE LOTS ‘ bedrooms. 56,800. A. Sanders IttSSlLJ&EJMMMlIH Solo Monos NBAS UNION LAKB VILLAGE. - attractive 2 bedroom hoeps, many ' ------- 682-3106! ' ' ;' - 37 MONPfY ®OWN, level or ranch stmri- homes • ■lot. Modal open 10a. g„Plattley, bldr. 'i#w ______________ I: - bedroom bungalow, targe corner let, must Mil cheap, 54.500 — $1,500 down — 463 per agOnth, aaludlns Taxes and Ins., or 0300 Bawn - fha oa Trade tor 3-brd- nothing DOWN-FOR Gl’s 3 BEDROOM BUHOALOW AUTOMATIC HEAT — LARGE LAKE FRONT —NLartO —. ---- --In Waterford Area. 4 Bedrms. TUed _ , iaiL-35ft~pVrW WRlSHT irEjSrK 3|l Oakland avo, FE 3-0141-3- Open Eves. Evas- after 0:00 FE 4-5041 .. I ralr i *wtt PROSPECT STREET whole dollhouee mi_ — for amall famUy. I rooms, - carpeted uv living fsomi __j furnace and water heater. 59.105.------- ANDERSON STREET —0 rooms ——and both, narptttil living room, full beaatnent; ell Mat, aluminum storms and screens. A real buy. -only 57,900. JUDSON BIREET r- 7-room. 1'4 ____betel. excepUoniAly Alee famUy, ___home or one cMUy be ocnverted to l-famlly Income. AH neatly decorated and In eXAallent repair. W,800r *‘— — Miller Realty: 67aWVeat H Oribn-Oxtord' Area NfiW 3-BEDROOM ‘ FULL BASEMENT $150 DOWN $75 MONTH ^eluding taxes) Steady to CARLISLE-B • ORTONVILLE 4 Mdroom Town nouse near churches and' shopping. - Living room With fireplace, dbilng room and large kitchen on first .floor with l bedroom and bate. Home haa new furnace. 50.950. terms or WATTS REALTY NR *-3950 1956 M-15 At Bald Eagle Lake Otter Lake A rambling 9-room brick tri-level on a large wall shaded lot^Tb^U dignity and coarm. n is well plaonsd add laid out with separate areas Tor entertaining, living and sleeping., 545,000-oo terras. By ap- WARDEN RJBALTY » Kspvsir l~7n<- lal.1 tee-lew J— m COLON-, aluqii-i sldtd, fencejl. carpeted, 2- AI Pauly, -Realtor 4515 Dixie, resg " * *— - ---1,- PE 3-7444 LARGE FAMILY?7 *5 -------...» „■ MHH of this 4-room (3-bedroom) and lot tee other make your payments. Lo-1 oeted on eoriisr- lot In Keego Harbor. plat a stone's throw from Cass Lake. Each side has gtaaaed-tn front and back porches, full dry basements and gat heat. City aew-er. Pull price 512,5007 Down-pay- taka, pririlsgaa, I Sunday,, 2-4 p.m lACRtPICE 4-HI _____ - BEDROOM HOME ou Joslyn for 52.000 equity, will ' t.-nrip for- boat lot — eaug)- »■!»(* FE4r2i61. LASX • CHANCE NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT 1st-MO. With pr Without Basement : floors, plastered walls,! Model open dally fr______|.... m, 50.50S On your lot. To Cor. Kinney and Corwin, 1 I d, eall Hitler Realty, FE east of Oakland. 2 blocks Jl SMALL 4-ROOM BUNOALOW. NEXT TO LAROB SHOPPING CENTER. 55.200 CASH PAUL JONES'RE- SUMMER BAROAIN8 75' Jake frnotage — Lovely 2-. bedroom tpodera., Newly decorat. -family: .home d colonial, 5 bedrooms, 2 g rooms. Pireptece. n. Hot water heat, 3-Spaclous' grounds. Dorpthy Snyder Lavender 7001 Highland Road (MM) 10 Miles West ot Telegraph-Huron EM, 3jt3303 Eves; 867-54H v* ” Special ’ ' WATKINS LAEE-PRONT HO. Beautiful, haMjgE*iSA eesreoma. ahaattmw okted,..— story. Paneled Interior write, tag-burning, naturnl /fireplAce. Sepnrat® ^sses.lon!>tAsk*or MM. ff oR ■Mm. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KENT CITY — NORTH — 33 ft. eerpaUjl AREA 3 bedim. ______Carpeted .llv., rm, with fireplace. One bedrm. down- rage. '1 lots. *11.500. NOTPTHside — Here_ a nlae l muimsu.. uu uwm, .i (t only bs.900 ahd only *950 d Boyd Kettt Inc., Realtor FLOYD It*NT! INC., REALTOR- 3200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0133—Open Evaa.__ --------Prw FSFIlfl JOHNSON can be purejiaaed with dosing* costs added tb price of homo. Interest at IK per eapt. Call lor further information.' i. call Carroll Braid. A. JOHNSON & SONS REAL ESTATE—INSURANCE 1704 B. TELEGRAPH - BARGAIN MIXED' NEIGHBORHOOD EASY TERMS WITH OOOD CREDIT MOVES YOU INTO THI8 LOVELY 7 ROOM 3 BED-ROOM HOME — ALUMINUM ~'-fllDTNQ WITH MURAL STONE-FULL BASEMENT — NEW OAS FURNACE AND HOT WATER — „ t CAR OARAGE — LOVELY SHADE TREES ON LPVELY LOT PLUS BARBEQUE. WRIGHT . 383 Oakland Ava. FE 2-0141-2 Open Eves. Eves, after StOO PE 4-8941 GAYLORD INCOME PROPERTY — 2 'large homes that have a rental value of 0254.00 per month, owner la -living Iq one—unit. 'Most all OLDER HOME but in very good repair. *3 bedrooms. Sun room. New furnace. Wall to wait carpeting. Outside Bar-b-que. Pull price. 310,000. terms available. Lawrence W. Gaylord -FE-e-0683 or MY 8-3331 Broadway and Flint Italia Orion GEES WEST SUBURBAN 4 BEDROOM with I1/, baths, fun batemeht. gas beat, nice area., Only 33.800,full pries. Call now. CV 3 BEDROOM. NORTHERN HIOH area. Home In nice condition. Nice large rooms.- full basement. |aa beat and lqte more. Only NORTH SI ...... ..... . BEDROOMS excellent condition. Full ’ — gat steam hasi wall carpet, 514.900 with terms, GIL-S REALTY CO. FE 44173 331 Baldwin, Ai Open 9 a.m. to 0 p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ‘TRADE ASSi^TNAT. $475 PLUS ____tromfting t_._ .tcctural background c mandatory. ~Pf€*tan-Walker-Smith Wanted ts Rent . SOMEONE "PLEA8k” RENT U 14 - BEDROOM HOME ON. PINE1 HILLTOP REALTY,, BOOKKEEPERS __________, .- OR 3 BEDROOM home for Northern High teacher from Aug. 1. Two ehthlren. call evenings 673-6869. -BEDROOM HOUSE.’ WITH OPTION to buy. West Side, 334045._ BOULEVARD HEIGHTS - — 2 Bedroom Unit — 374 Per Month Contact, Resident Manager 3-Bedroom—Basement Oae heat — hardwood floors Formica counter tope 51,000 25179 or FE 4-3990. " : of Montcalm^ ATTRACTIVE -QUIET LOCATION. large lot—trees. 3 bedroom brick j Belaire Home Builders ---ft, llylii* room 32 by 15. »«- LI 2-7327 Birch euDboards 544 East Blvd. at Vriancte . ,* MidWest Employment 455 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 5-9227 JR. EXECUTIVE rCEAN 3 -. BEDROOM BRICK basement^ ^g a JisaL neighborhood, Mar- Pontiac Airport, 3125 a month. OR 4-0351. " ‘ JEFFERSON TERRACE 5 rooms ana bate on Jefferson Ave Autbmatlc gas beat. -Oarages -----------------cteug $100 Down ' LEARN HEaTy EQUIPMENT. weeks, on Dosers, Drag Lines: el .—FmeTJacemcnt. "KeyT1 S«o w le Rd.: Deimlt 21. PI !• EVELYN EDWARDS^ .. "VOCATIONAL COUN8EL1NO SERVICE" Telephorte FE 4^0584 Instractioni-Schoolf 10 -Finish High School He classes. Rapid progress. Prepare NOW for college or better lob. For free booklet write to Detroit Office. National School of Home Study, Dept; P.P., 27743 Mound Rd , Warren. Mich. Work Wanted Mala 11 CARPENTER ' REPAIR WANTED • paneling and cabinets. FE 47361, CARPENTER WORK LAROE OR .small Jobe. FE 3-3701. CEl^ENf WORK ALL KINO* Reasonable. OR 3-2630. MARRIED MAN WITH 3 CHILDREN ■cads work, experienced la palnt-Ing. FE 3-6503. Q-HETIRED PAINTER. REA-sonable. 335-88*2 * . ’ * YEARS 3 BEDROOM I immediately' by young “ si ecutlve and family uwvtna-lnto. area. Prefer Waterford area iwar Lady of Lakes Parish . Too ■ character and ■ —credit, references available, (tall Id 9-4776. H toll. ro-, verse charges. BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL BRICK ml. family room, hot- water boat, ramie (lie, vanity -In bath.. >rms. screens, gutters, birch cab-•ts,. fermlea lop*. Hothlng down ISHN C. MYLES, BUILDER sonable offer accepted. 612-31 youF: home lor a trado-» • < new home or one of our fine bigs. Call our office or. com AUBURN HEIOHT8 AREA j , I rooms, • automatic heat, full j ] basement, 1V4 sere, $700 down, i - Newlngham Realtor, UL 2-3310, I m 14375. ■ ' i 1 tUL 2- 6YLVAN LAKE FRONT- CUSTOM .. bOUt home. 5 bedroom. 3 full bath. WiU sacrifice. 541.000. FE liner i p,m. 4-7241 or FE 5-6120. ^ ^ |||| W1XOM. LEAVING SYLVAN LAldd 1 BEDROOM, j representatives, is modern formica paved ro»d. bus service, good M --------------- Ti i^te^lTbafe Lakclront -: 00 down. 653-1253. Brand —' Soil Homos - 49 BARGAIN RANCHER SSSJ lovely ns urban living - WRIGHT I 2-1941-3 , Open S?ea. gy#~ -$250 down plus closing costs wUl move you In. - e to Lincoln Mercury R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 OAKLAND AVE, OPEN t . 4-1027, , . RAQir rtTI T 7 lovely Lake-front ranch. 2- orvoiv. oili car garage, breeieway. good sandy On eur JoLwr yours, s«nl-flnlshsA|- —beach, sscriflcs feavTST ~it*ter as you want tt. You finish interior! EM 3-6491. tnd save money. Any slss wlth or1 -- ——.... without basement. No down pay-ment on 'your tot. small down pay- Wintad Real Estats Needs____________ ■■■ offer, no Commission. Mr. Davis, 438-9473. Bari GASH BUYER Has up to 43.400 for home. Eiwood Rarity NEEDED All typo* of Real Eatato. If you hate ta'dUwoatag It*11No**obta 001-0074. Do- WANT TO SELL? _____QIVE US A TBY WE NEED L1STINQS Janies A. Taylor, Realtbr W32 Highland Bd. . (M44) OB 4-Q30* HtgMand WANTED TO LEASE WITH OPTKH4 ‘ buy or buy with ' ' Mixed aT: St^tinr^nsl- Neighborhood Tb-SETTLE iSTSTE: 512,750 "Completely furnished" ry. 3-bedroom brick ranch S years pl,Ul) old. carpeted living • roam- with 1 *—■ picture WTHdow,. drapes through-ouf'Alle bath,- water softener, 16 Eve*. OR 3-4553 PE 2-7Q5g -3 BEDROOM—TULL BASEMENT BY OWNER. 2 BEDROOM. PUIZ| —basement. 1-----------““ Watkins ■sssr-i%y NEW 3-AND 4-BEDROOM HOME 207 W. Yale at Stanley RENT OPTION $59.89 A MONTH Excluding' Texas and ms. Immediate occupancy, paved st basement.. Model open Datly-Bundsya MICHAELS REALTY 333-1555 WE 3-4300 UN 3-1383 JOES AND NEAT 3-BEDROOM -ftfeme ta Lake Orton MY 3-1351. Rent-Option . TO QUALIFIED PARTIES New 3-Bedrodtn Ranch OXFORD—$il0 MO. Marlon Bldg. Cc. NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS_ FIIUIT MONTH, NO-PAYMENT HURRY! HURRYI „ HURRYI PRICES FROM SS.1S0 TO $10,900 JEDROOMS, FENCED BACK ^miL^ood condition, Msrquette St. bedroom miok ikDE HOME. Clean and to good condition. Oae htai '3 car garage, . Large loti t accept good land contract » -s^ tetSted iaill htaua to «t-changc. 50,000. OWncr. PE 5-411)4. 4 Bedrooms, oas heat, black fl LAHQE ROOMS. 1 itago. Vhcdwrin writalfSfigr | Um Ktt Jay, CMQHn n. i cctn. nax/sr X BEDROOMS. Farmhouse With lege. 1714. 1135 l*4L*a. 682 2820. Or, MS- i i - ■ ----—:-------' Pie are c: Work Wanted Female 12 , waNted; Please call EM 3- 5 ROOM, PULL "BASEMENT. OAB £ Itnt Uks Cattsgs. 5TI toe - l—g,—e*«vsnHnl terntei_ NORTH OF PON-i " OR 3-7227._| ' , TOM COLORED LADY - WANTS NIGHT work, rt1 •reMtf / y. j wa HH| OIRL DESIRES WORX AS JUNIOR nky- AND 4 ROOM ---- — get cash for you. PAUL JONES REALTY. FE 4A550. WANTED Listing on houses. CEDAR INLAND LAKE FRONT { 3-331L_____________________________ BEUABLE OIRL WANTS BABY slttln* and or general housework. 'vlctang -* M Union Lake. Good reler- ________M 3-3768. _ ' ' WOMAN TO CARE FOR ELDERLY person or b* centra ton, -Write TFo55tlAC REALTY FE 5-8275 37 Pontiac Press Box 2 work, also 'MMSal I tadbi __.les 628-3^— ___ ,, ADDITH&NS, REMQDELINO. c6n- crete, masonry. carpentryn un-derpinhiag. basement under pree-ent bonding, COMPLETI Bt lUIUHNa SERVICE - J 6-6377 LOJS-CARPENTRY AND CE- ment work. FE MM. Agortinants-NraMMd refined Adult. PE 34044. Bedroom efficiency apart-menu. Fully furnished. Parking. North-NortH’east Bide. FE 5-2261 or FE 4-4206, REAGAN ftEAtmPUL »FRONT CORNER. Frigtdrir*. light cooking. 317 N. Perry. 4-ROOM HOUSE. EAST SIDE. NEAR ■ schools, stores and town. 45,050. OR 3-4300. - . .' . 0 . ROOM. H O O BABB MENT. pensioner, PE.I GIRLS. AFTER 4 P.M. on* person, apply’.J34 N.-’Penr. no drmkars. ■ ■■ . ■, " ANb/ S-ROOM B S? R E J. O R mmim:'. ttaka-wdn. $30 and •loo RtehtaMfllsML Mm. Liicy. ‘2"«ion*' WhllM. i { RQOM APARTMENT FOR LADY. afp,77« Wt ” ^ «ten5%.% 40 Acre Estate Located 10 ml. nor -•a payed md jrwateja. T rooms spd .8 . baths, kitchen __j at Pontiac th' frontage on secluded area. dttlonal-3-car as rummer guest Rolfe H. Smith, Realtor ... , ‘ 244 S. TKLBQRAPB : -■ WIMBH 34A 8-tOH BY OWNER, 3330 COLONIAL WAY. Bioomfield Tap., bi-tevri ranch, approximately 2.000 sq. ft., 027.750 dr reaa. offer, leaving at*** . Mll> . . ' , -■ CASS LAKE FRONT, COZY -room, year, round, sandy beach, Ic tree. 624-3933. CABS CANAL FRONT. 2 • BED-room. Basement 3-Oar garage. »maU down. M3-MB5. CHEAPER TftAtt NORTH PoNTtAC $69 Down NEW 3-BEDRQOM HOME $55 Month Excluding taxes cad insures** "Everyone qualifies: Widows^ t credit problem.*' , Furniture finished cabinets P4U- atrrmtE DAILY'. SAT, AND REAL VALUE CHIPPEWA AT HURON r 3 BED- Ne down psynysnt No mortgage cos} ■ * First mnhlh free Payments like rent MODELS , rnueuKUAV • , ■ WESTGWN REALTY* i AFTERNOONS 14 9 niter 7:30, LI t it Blvd., MODEL .erT OK YOUR LOT Iroom, brick and riuml-i,1 full, basement, center )a cabinets. 2 car garags. E. J. DUNLAP ’ ' ~*l! 8-1136 NEW 3- i -BEDROOM HOMES . m w-xale at Stanley 0 Dowrt, $59.69 A Mck Excluding taxes and Insurance Basamwt, ar|* lot, paved.street* , .,__Mof Possession Trad* Ure "old" for ta* new 333,7MB WI ^4300 UN 3-2352 NEW HOMES- Full Basements 3-e*r garage, a ter beat. With' 1.700 down WlQ) sssns ggaar CLARKBTON, LAROE i-BEDROOM CUSTOM BtJILl ' HOMES YOUR LOT OR OURS , ’Ross Homes, Inc. FE 4-0591 , • CUSTOM HOMES Quality built - Priced righl ^ri direct wtto Bulkier. CarriganConal lofty (24-9261 ROOh. OL : $00 . down: $68 • per mo. TRL-LEVEtl HOME IN THI-COblT. try. large living room wiih fire-, place, 3 bedrooms, large fomjl orloh • carpeting, I Rm, Inside plus lore -ming pool as a, bonus', i 3 BEDROOM ___iflghborhood. >rch. Patio.' Dta- and 3 baths. Nlc* M to schools. MA 4-2930. ■Waterford OAKLAND LAKEFRONT lOO foot lakefront, 3 bedra basement, large living rot --------JtEUs 17.5(5). ti OLD ENOU« CHARM - V'J-ExoeUent west side location, 3 bedroom. frit baseTnent. l. car garage/-large living W4te fireplace, separate dining room, V- only tlSObo' — 51.508 down, plus mortgage costs. SEE tt TODAYS WATERFeRDREALTY OR 3-1371 ,2981 Dixie. Hwy. \ '■ -OPEN SUNDAY— . - AVILL EXCHANGE Excluding taxes and*ln*ur*nce. lyH-l^adreatn mcdclmi COrtlsl* OPEN 10-8 DAILY. . SPOTLITE BLDO CO, it out trade-4r plan MONEY DOWN '-S bedroom, family steed Rite] sctocious falk-ta (loseu. oak fle RUSsItL YOUNG tori Batata \ n 4-3206 .room, brick, lovely lq4.\treec. shrubs ate., attached gaHg*.\*qutty Si 58800. Balance 51U per teonth. Went* property to Pontiac LEW HILEMAN, S.fbc. Realtor-Exchangor \ -----HURON, FE 4-1579 iH-Brick Rancher , Featuring 3 ‘bedrooms. 22' " m.. fireplace, very nice Fjuhflyranr “ *"■ recreation room i Frushour Struble to Elisabeth Lake Road STOUTS Best Buys Today THERE'S A PLACE — test, laundry trite*. 2-carjta-Now vacant tor lmmedlkt* occupancy in 'dime tor school., ~ 51.000 doVn.'balance on land ioh- WILjLBUJLD do^SbS^Ld “ Williams lake 3 bedrooms, panetod living ream. Ute bath. 380 ft. from the lake. Only 1500 down. 388 per month'. Need, we k*y morel Phone 474-.1888 by arttefitmsnt only. WITHIN WALRIMO DISTANCE downtown. New J bedrdom IH bath, dak- floors, full, basement. vtn range In kitchen. 07MJI . or 888.48 per teak* pur Phone PS 3-1318. ' WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT - Quality year-around home, features 16x19 -------)tad living .room, separate -iX“ room, modern kUchcnT I ramie Ute bath, basement with flnlahel recreation room, cora-ptete bar setup. baautlfuUy landscaped yard, sandy, be ash. breakwater, sundaek. boar garage. Air Y-3L.--------- < J ---------------- 85 DOWN — Ideal starter bam* for young couple, * ' bath. uUllt---------^* wlth basement, oil furnace. mJF .. Wftrren Stout ^exltot* 77 N. Saginaw St. FE 3-8165 MulT 1 a It Listing Berrtce '. Ilk, baths, fireplace, carpet-ling snd drepes. basement, gas neat,- 2(4 ear garage. 1 lots. Priced at 417.700 with *1.770 down.'; WALL. ITREET: Good buy to this famUy home ■ ,11X12 living room, dining room ' modern kitchen, 8 extra largi bedrooms, bath, bsmt„ front ant v- back perch. Small house bn bad of lot and garage. Priced at 37. 950 V*-w rHA. ' ■ - ' . Carpeting uu.. dU ndet. xa-19.580, FHA, MOO John K. Irwtn DORRIS styled kitchen, overlooking the lake. Carpeted ltvtaQ room,' lVk bates, and attached garage, *18,- _ _ „. ^jFbga*- . finished recreation 1 2(4 eaf attached ga- LeBARON AREA; Very nine area off Joslyn,' 2 bedroom bungalow - with fun basement and gat neat, excellent retirement noma - Or Starter for young couple, f* i 1(4 c ' garage. info AND CLEAN: Dilutes! tela -9 ream bungalow located north side. Carpeted living rooin end ’ itlntog-Tecro. tiled tethrgwspt-ta«^_orit . fteori, .fun^y rmjmt- , SSST' TRADE; If you riant to sell yoUr' ? 3.. bedroom homo, wtth frit base- ment, and wre mterbsted In a good rental Inver' ‘ *■ * to-r ’ “ ' Sharp 8 bedroom nhnhtaum; sided, 'bungalow, okt base- Huron Qwdona. M-ISO. DORRIS A SONS. REALTORS 534 Dixie Hwy. QR 4^)324 MtfLTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE T / Salts Houms - a I; BRICK • -V TRI-LEVEL 2 BATHS NOTHING. DOWN *wStqwn reaLt^ CLARK U ACRBS. Plus 1 baths. iVt ear attached garage, atraam on property. III .apple tree*. Oood place for Horae Lover sQnte U miles from Pontiac. (27.500. forms. «“ ONLY .HOP DOW*. Terr clean 2-bedroom bungalow, gas Mat, 1-car garage, fenced yard. 99,799 ATTENTION MB, OX BUYER. Ho down payment, no- mortgage ' oosta^ Neat 2-bedroom bungalow, fit' completely fenced with hew foaetog, newly decorated. new aid fog. Lake prlrUtges. Ouy (7.909. , CLARK UAL ESTATE 1101-W. Huron. It. ' FE 3-7888 W^eau n 5-5146or FE 8-1880 eellence" beet describes every phase of lie planning and construction. : n is prostlgs^ln -ovary 1 and quality Hill y Dale Homes' Srpbmta d- W(413(8? OR349(4. BATEMAN Trading. * Is Our Business 4 BedriBi Lakeiront Largo picture window In living with most beautiful acMla i •cross lake- that you oould i And. Recreation rra. on lower w •J* level, g fireplaces,1 buU_ YJnge- oven add dishwasher. Beau-end sand beach, I oar garage and S ear garage and —— -.at of lown, owner avtogjatat* cod priced at (31.100. -ill take- vacant lot In bMM TRADE West Suburban < I bedrm. brick ranchar _ taehed garage. Nice lake prlvUeges only l block, ntm features»• chmlng Ilk bath*, natural fireplace. *od carpeting. Extra sharp Pp large spacious 110 k 144 ft. “l .P^cly .Undsotpsd. Just 818.800 with 81.810 dwn. plus costs -THE MODERN WAY Watkin? Fills 3 bedrm* brick, ful bullt-lnr bar end nl for /Veryone to 0 way. Lengthy daaeripMoa* will-not do thto property Justice. If you -am Marehfog, f— ‘— Pt " | I ir *tsJf whY sladlv i particular* concernms 1 arrange a per--trip dor you. NORTHERN BARGAIN If you would Ilka 'o northern home, i brick fireplace. The mountain op site offers *; beautiful view. — — -—f four thenno- » and Crystal Lake, i ---- ldng Inland lake. : tl down 1* the total cost to m “ 1 payment* ago < 190 pet uttbuoT WAtERFORD HIGH •AREA r Waterford High Like to locate___ ——School? Here 1* _ _____ ________ that can - bo easily purchased. I two bedroom •PBBUJPL large pleasant elghborhood streets. 11,WO Is all movs into UUs ontai__________ W “per- .month REALTOR PARTRIDGE • Is The Bird To See FE 4-3881 EASTWOOD^ development Immediate Occupancy SEMINOLE HILLS Iroquois Street between < brick, SroojKs. 3-car garage, fireplace, ceramic tile bath, * ^raltfaBy- iMcHonpw. ---- PONTIAC KNOLLS New beautiful 3-bedroom homes. Hewed ranch, colonial, quad-level. All brick, 114 baths, paneled recreation room, built-in oven and range. . Colored plumbing, attached garages —Large family kitchens. GAOE ' NEAR^ J08LYN, 3-bedroom , jfoU haaemant. “ rich, carpeting TrT nirl _. rooms and hall. Drapes ...... tains, aluminum storms and . screens, landscaped. 50x150 lot. » existing 5 per cent Vanch '* ----------------Is $73.13. . V " contract. Payments to Mi..........Pgffi landscaped. Dfotag I" end .1-bed room tionk ol cdty. Mlnli big costa only. down, offs-handle your rental proh. Industrial and vacant property. EASTWOOD REALTY 68 Carr 334-0511 Harriet Ross, Broker O'NEIfc MODEL ~ OPEN DAJLV 2 TO 9 3903 SHAWNEE — Beaut; . Rite's newest "Idea Home o Oakland County”_l« I nice family room , I — —„oajoy. M4 |B neat, carpeting, water . j. and Mir nice foatuno. lot and blaqktop street, W aider boUsetraller tor part equtyt. Reid Buy at 811.950 with 81.500 ox ^ *” wnt EQUITY 18 MONET Lake front Reduced ■ * weeks. # bedrms.. P.A. oil heat end 3 ear garage-Real nice and beautiful (and - SMSIBd relaxing. Full prise now Only (to,—, eUg ieepuiialile duwu payment. CALL TODAY. ■ t-—TRADE YOURS Brick Ranch •I d nice hdfen. streets 1, Winding paved wonderful area* of*n west of town. Specially 14.500 with $1450 dwn. LET'S TRADE - Suburban . With take privileges. Real nice jsven carpeting fed comer lot. dryer Included. Only fl.MO with^M •TRADE. . the Bateman way Realtor PE 8-7161 Open *-*. M.L.S. Sunday 1-5 SCHRAM $9950 NQ MONEY DOWN THE ^IG T 3-bedroom tri-level, with i Northern -High 4 bedrooms, carpeted living room, separate dinig room, full basement, gas heat.' On a large lot. Alum./siding, and 114-car garage. Price/reduced to settle-estate. Vacant- ■ •'//"' ./;A- 2-bedroom bungalow With ’carpeted Uvlng room. Youngstown kitchen, oil heat, alum, storms and screens, /near Winter aqd Llncol Jr. high, IVAN Wx SCHRAM REALTOR- FE 5-9471 JQ8LYNCOR. MANSFIELD $al« Houms JjHLi ppft'jlAC BRVESS,* THURSDAY, AUGUST I, 1 « CARNIVAL By Dick Turner Salt Forma IRWIN ... _l_*oara side WMrMft ranch home on 9 shady •bt» with 18-foot living roOm*°gas mSL hill basement, aluminum (forms end screens, on jtnved 7 ST MICHAEL** AREA huge family. 5 bedrooms, ft, JyUifM'. gas h shady lot, Thla home u ni glOJOO _ -HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL Medrooro bungalow on . large 00-, toot lot, tough -- - -*“■ --T— U"Sk a real nice ho._. „ _w JhUy 81,110 withlow paymems. MULTIPLE LISTTNO SERVICE 8 Room Ranch i2 trade for home In'Oxford. "See this lovely home, ege* go two lUM, Spa t room and full dining t ~~ carpeted. Kitchen bee In equipment. A paneled adjoining the living room, 3 gain priced’ at 816,950,’Yeirna. Incorrie _.his la a large 8 KiftAMfib Oood siaeo Toosn* throughout Norse Lovers __ JUe soonlo.YO acre Wtwn with 3-bedroom home, bam and other ----------------nkWO acres of state lhnif 'adjoln^w amtil^ttite^and s^tng on property. ■5 Village Acres Clarkston Area . 85-acre- farm with 3-bedroom home, barn and 3-car garage. 86 tillable acres Ideal for beeLlcatUe operation. Just off M31. .837,500. Terms. C. PANOUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE Mill St___ MA 7-3815 Sal* Bmlngis Proyrty 57 4 lane ooncrete highway, t of M-StSeloec In. No.-1 light Industry Cl and 3 General Bi • G 3 extensive Business 1 Real Location ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC-. Npn o.i _your land ^contract. Cash tridge. Brick “I didn’t mean .to buy so much, Quigley, but the parking meter stuck and I hated to pass ■ - *v up the opportunity!** > . i. « . 15x30 terrace 0 looking the- fenced ______________ tatnly a basement — gas heat, a 14 bath and divided recreation area. PRICED TO SELL; CALL Humphries ,, FE 2.9236 BUD": living room, fireplace, carpatlng uid drapes, lovely kitchen7 with frigerator. ,1V4 bathe, full basement. automatic beat and hot .....................wood paneled $ljgp Down Large rider bon 8100 DOWN. THREE BEDROOMS, basement, . carpets, drapes, storms and screens, nice 313. Russell Price “ yard, paved. RORABAUGH E 2-5053 Realto: Woodward at Square . Lake Road Auburn Heights Owner leyvlng P ntlac area offers this A-k Income- property. Includes 4 houses, 3 tern Jots,, fur-nitdre included In S' (f these homes, AU have gas heat, 3 |k-rages, nice towns ‘ Make . property carry tl Real Estate ____ ________( HOWARD STREET NEAR fireplace, S oar PERRY STREET attahhed gahage. Offered at t&T- 3 houses and ljtore '“*’- ___________________ Ig, Now a* apartments. Both tUHises a —*- jtentala - total have 3 aparitnet $3M per month. ...... _ I__________ or Nvltl trade for good lend contract or moritagai. K G. Hempstead Realtor. % W. Huron. f% 4-8384. ‘BUD”, Nicholie, Realtor 48 Ml. Clemens St. - fe 5*i::: : fter 6 P,Ml FE 2-3370 2-BEDROOM COTTAGE, 3 on pnhow Lake; NICHOLIE basement. ( CaO today.' HA h LOTS, . 31868; month, located living room, , foil bath, living kitchen and bedroom newly deco ...... „— ------------ plus storage. SIX FAMILY INCOME west, side location. Full 30 ACRES ON CANEL west of JPOJmAc. with MULTIPLE USTINCTSERVICE. 2 APARTMENT INCOME NORTHWEST SUBURBAN and WILLIAMS LARES tits, lK-story. basement, clean good condition: 100x151 .lot. “hopping. A VERY OOOD BUY AT SOUTH ANDERSON 5 rodm bungalow, with Uvlng r dltling room, kitchen, and 3 FULUPRI^to^Ml'lI.OOo'doa , > ultra kitchen, JP igrous bath and Family n. plus the laundl^room d basement provides s lot leads out to* the lakefront. Whether -you Intend to build now w j —__________________..eas fo*®kdap- tat.lon7.to the Home In Your Futqre. Mr. Lucas will be - your host. Fg ,5-4884. - TRADING IS TERRIFIC BEAUTIFUL 3 BedroOm* suburban home. An exceptlonal-' ly.clean , house Inside and out -FunYwsement — New 114 ear garage — Large- lot -. Blacktop Street — 8cbool buses to house. Owner purchased larger borne. Priced for a qulck/sric. < r *9,900 on terms. teat 3 bedroom brick contemporary ranch. Built In oven ' apd range. Recreation room m basement - ... .... rag* — dlshmaster — b o-matlc Wat - Retjng to .1 -INVESTMENT. .. _______ . story — 3 apartments with ----- T $240 per month. ' only mo down. it folks {15.500. ‘.full dming ■n>ttaoil HOT OFTEN DO WE RAVE V homes In Pioneer Highlands for *11.500 but hero to ,one for you. Two spacious bed-rooms plue a 17 foot all purs' pose room. Clean, ,~**“*^ > basement. Williamson 1 nace. Incinerator. 1 « garage, paved drive 1 ' ing.. Honestly, you'll I gou^looked. 10 per cet “Sr" O.I. NO MONEY DOWN two bedroom rancher with home of hla ownl Compari- ': R«V O’fTcll Realtor ' MULTIPLE USTINO BERVICE • .Smith Wideman — PONTIAC, I__________ LARGE 4-BEDROOM RANCH HOME. OR WILL DIVIDE.- $24.-furUrnTraiafla'-950 TAKES ALL. TERMS. BA8HABAW MAYBEE AREA ;! W.H.BASS and'dIn^SSi. Kl^^'ind^utuf' REALTOR >E 3-7318 BUILDER ty room. CARPORT, Corner lot. "Specializing In Sradea’1 Newly * decorated. ABOUT $350 CHOICE 310x300 FEAT LAKE-MOVES YOU IN. ........- -1 — ■ WEST SUBURBAN —Two bedroom bungalow.. Carpeted--living area. Kitchen and utility '• room. Fenced hack yard. ' ■* privileges. TERMS. snoitapmac ANNETT ENJOY PEACE QUIET 1 GIVE AWAY $7,400 Cash* Lake Shore. Shell home. fS-rtge. basement. 3 bedrooms. Pleas-- ■ Lake. 6435 Leytonstone, W. Tun. t.TT 1J1901 . Bloomfield Twp; LU 1-0291, HAMMOND.LAKE .4 Bedrms—FHA ______ LongfeUow Sc|>ari .area. ilK LAKE FRCWTAOE. 87.300 rooms very large. Basement Attractive lot with., many trees, with ne*—.Luxalre gas for- sloplnR to lake. Excellent site lor nace. Lot 50x130. HOMO, low! Tri-level overlooking beautiful bay . FHA term*. I and close-to fin* home*. ~ f • HOUSEMAN - 8PITZLEY- Seminole Hills Attractive Colonial Ratort Property MOBILE SITES. DON'T RENT. BUY to aero, 130 down, 09 a OR 3-1399 Bloch Bros, Crop. Lots—Acreage Leslie R,. iTripp, Realtor 75 West Huron Street ___n Min______________ Ascot Stre^N Ideal for offic •tore. 20 ft . alley at ,th« i Only $7^5 doarti. BREWER REAL ESTATE Eve». 6«-51W Qarkston Area ' 17 Va secluded acres. Frontage — 3 roads. Magnificent building 3>room cottage. Electricity. Close to ^Highway I-T6. $13,000, terms. Rolfe H. Smith, Reattor 344 8. TELEGRAPH * PE I-7548 ' ___ MA 8-1998 High Hill ‘Village protective community of fine me sites. Winding paved streets: . _sny ' hilltop looaileas. mtge, rating with r OR 3-1331 after 7:30 ID^AL LIVING 13,500, 93,1 , ORTONVILfe 1 rolUqg tend; your ranch Borne. 99.250. INDIANWOOD , v subdivision, excellent-location, !1 restricted, well planned com-ntty of fine homes, Investigate SCOTT LAKE ROAD fcRAWFORD AGENCY 258 W. Walton FE 8-330 Ladd’s Building Sites 100x330' — PAVED ROAD. A Well located^htigh Jot^ with exc. drain- parcel for oh t wells. A corner ’ PAVED ROAD. On Nbrth side In an excellent nelghbor-Beauttful sloping for exposed overlook lng ^shaded scaped lot. fuU alia eened p DR, n am, kitchen. 2nd fir. 3 I roams, one master else, tile bath, tod fir. 3 rins. storage. Basement ~ ...... e privileges,' RV4 oi taehed garage, 13 mile and Hal-I. . stead Rd. 110.500 — *1.000 down L or trade. FHA or O! terms. I. PAUL JONES REALTY FE 44530 leauliful Hi ■RHUC, T730I ft. Also 3 wooded sloping ..JEM charming fishing pond, htori^ Lotus—lake . —~ Modern ■M_______________^. located on tor g e lake-front, .lot. ^Features full clous living room with fireplace. Includes- dock and sandy beach. Befog arid furnished, lot c j 813.500, 91.(00 down. “teJ month. PONTIAC LAKE — Estate llzi nicely landscaped and fenced attractive gate entrance — em two-bedroom masonry < tng with fireplace, family 1 . for 114,100. term* to suit. BRENDEL LAKE i ... Cozy, ^bungalow , featuring fire-"'"texw; family room, large screened porch, combination uni-lty room and workshop. Across - atraat from lake with -privilege*. retired couple. -Only 97.950; $1,500 doWn^ WE NEED LISTINGS „ james a. taylor \ 7793 HlghtontM^ (M50) OR 44)908 ARRO •re (SiuXite1 toT^mm ; ""Wf-RuiM-r-Wr Trade .hornet, at sj|to| moat folk* ___I________ and screens, 144 car garage. Walking distance to Northern High, Monthly payments Including taxes and insurance 853 kt 4% per adbt'in- d aluminum Uvlng ha. toulttjn oards *—4 New 3-bedroom brick tench, Slate enti pane windows/. room, 144 ceramic ______ range,'- formica cupboai counter tops, full basem____ .... teat 3-cer attached garage, oood neighborhood and lake privileges. Shown by appointment only. WANT PRIVACY* — You 1011 have 1 thla neat 3-bedroom, plufoi- heated {torch .which- could be divided into 2 rooms. Trees,: shrubs and flowers, Lake privi-' leges. Only mortgage Costs down, 'MgdwiedR' l fully insulated Alumlnusr storms 'and acreeku/ Lake; prlvtlrgrs • Washer and dryer lnctadfd is price, at *8.500 Will take, good, car. -at part down payment . 51« CASS-ELEABETH ROAD . PHONE 682-22it ' MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 13X23 family rm . brick fire-1 place wall, ultra qtodernl kitchen with bullvins. basement. tile floer. rec. tin.. I Kbrick . established community mi “™?' I consideration. Came to model at Mlddlel T» 00x300' ON 8ASHABAW. Close to. among good, homes. Some trees, exc. drainage and thallow wells. 9500 down. . r •• LADD’S INC. I after 7:1 Cherokee Hills v * muntt Z' bette tMZMM**and4Ui close-in, convenient location — Only, 1 mile west, of Pontiac Melll Drive out Ella, Lk, Rd., - Scott Life—Rd., tarn right to blocks to' Lacota. Carl W. Bird, Realtoi; .503 Community 4-431lr .New Bloomfield Homes We are the exclusive Pontiac >rasentatlvea for a HOUSEMAN - SP1TZLEY ——OTBPORATION-------- MI 4-7432 ,, FE 8-1331 E veilings MA 6-7321 • - LAKE LIVING SET have several models or Well . constructed 3, 4 site 5 bedrm. homes fo Bloomfield area. Spilt level. Chatel and ranch. Prices ft*" e» o«« uj •••> Pictures WE WILL THHD1 Realtors 28 E. Huron St Open Evenings and Sunday l-; FE 8-0466 _________________ -15 MINUTES to Pan1 Ac, 3795. llOitlownTllO mo. Boat tJW - Swim. OR 9-1395. FE 8439fc3loch Bra*. Corp. LAKEFRONT — 3 BEDROOM, CAR-pettng fireplace, screened porch. $14,200. OR 3‘7555'.' LAKE-FRONT LOTS. to Pontiac, $3“ -■— . Fish—Swim—1 •vi 4;'4-4309. Bloch'" $2,500 7 "terms.” excSie s Lqke privileges, rustle, up. Also starter homes, swli t. boating, fishing, trees, hi) 250 DOWN - ONLY T YEARS OLd] Wf^b7 8f rm. modern bungalow with full °T 0 basement. Oil Ac furnace. Oakl floors. Newly decorated. Soundly! constructed. LOW interest- Easy 882r2300 or 625-1886 $8 500 PULL PRICE _ WOODHULL LAKE. 4 L O T 8, 3 cottages, priced low. to settle -tate. $3,500. OB 3-9630. Wanted!! • ' FE 4-0985 ' • Lots In the City of Pontiac . SPOTL1TE BLDQ. OO. . iPiiBI ui, iu iiuug quarters above—a corner property with’ lets of parkin/ - ,916.04 well ootpb-h — *36,000 4,500_SQUARE FOOT BRICK BUILDING — ample parking suitable for any type business 1(1 ft. x 4M ft. lot overlooks lake — suitable for rest hoThe— restaurant — car safes room and Stc. -i- 148.500. UNDERWOQD REAL ESTATE BUILD TO SUIT, WATER-mra Twp., sen or lease,, warehousing, manufacturing or retailing, Lloyd Smith' Homes Inc , FE 2-2144. Business Opportunltit* 59 A RARITY ."BEER DISTRIBUTORSHIP I bounties, priced to tell fast, $3j limited. REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is The Bird T,o- See • High " Income Potential . HE Steady loeal-eon- r advertising by factory . appointment write, mabw phone number to Sure-W Motor Products, P, o. I 81. Detroit, 33, Michigan- CARRY. OUT- Rsstaurant. Like new equipment. ■ Priced at less than cost. Only 13,500 down, uan 6100 per month: Mutt see to appreciate. JOHN LANDME8SER, BROKER MICHIGAN “CLASS C" ■- Ludlngton area, no dancing or food, grossing over $40,000, «-keg draft system, a rqal busy spot. $16,000 down. Includes property. Class-'C Resort-. — —r -------1 property < tees, lady alone, and .c&hhot ha lie. $l5.ooo down for all. will i opt-trade, call today! J. I JoH*Realty I 5-8987 or 833-M ELDERLY MAN TO RUN HIS OWN downtown parking lot. Excellent opportunity fo be In business for yourself. Apply corner Clinton Established Grocery. And Meat Business 8DM license for beer and wine. 3 -story double store building. Two 8-room opts', upstairs. Wld- cludlhg business a n d fixtures. Now showing nice volume of business with unlimited possibilities, Located on main atreet in a busy area In Oakland' County. ■ ,i« A. JOHNSON & SONS, REAL “ESTATE—INSURANCE 1704 B. TELEORAPH0M FE 4-2533 LOCAL CARTAOE AND TRUCKING opportunity available. Small capital ’ Investment. No privloui management experience, necn-sary. Professional truck driver grefarred. Apply Pontlkc Pres* MECHANICS SPECIAL Drayton garage. 28x50' 113' Dixie Hwy. frehtagt over, jtist $3,000 puts fo busbesq, • HAGSTROM REALTOR W._Hurem-" OR-4-03J8 Business Oppdrtunities 59 Will Exchange Detroit, fully equipped, ;£qulty. Rad; 9450 sgemenl, free ^ Incqjne , l! W*?i I LEMAN, ‘ S.E.C, - Realtor-Exchaftgor 1011 W. Huron n 4-1(79 Sola land Contracts ZO^PerHCetlt Discount Loud contract (old toy lltetoT. , Present balance IS 93,4*9, 936 per mo. lnel...( per cent interest. $i,97( will htetola.* ’♦C FANGUS, Realtor ORTONVILLE’ 4(3 Min St. . NA 7-3815 AN IMMEDIATE BALE Land"Contracts Wanted Coatracts-Mtg. 60:A "NO WAITING “Immediate sale for good land contract*. For a quick deal call RSTip.' vfisntv «"*" 3434 W. Hill .' WARDEN REALTY, Money t* Loan U r _■ q,lysed _Mwto^JLender)^ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE ' FAST. .CONVENlkNT . Auto or Other Security 24 Months to Repay Home & Auto Loan Co. 7 N. PERRY . FE 5-9131 BUCKNER • FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN- BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontiac—Drayton Plans-Utlca Walled Lake—Birmingham Signature AUTO or FURNITURE “OAKLAND “LOAN COMPANY i Bid*/ LOANS WHEN; YOU NEED $25 to $500 - - We will be glad to help you STATE FINANCE CO. JtPARTMENT SIZE REFR1QER- TEAGUE FINANCE tO. 202-N. MAIN ROCHESTER ROMEO . 214 E. ST. CLAIR " LOANS' 125 TO 9500 ' AUTOS. '■ ' LIVESTOCK , ' HOUSEHOLD GOODS "Friendly Service” HOME OWNERS CASH UNLIMITED- Exclusive plan.'1 Remqdel you GASH Lochis to $3,000 Consolidate your'debts with 4* months to repay- No foes < _ , kind and wa : provide credit life Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. „ U- W. Huron Tclephona Fe t-4033 MORTOAGE OfT ONE ACRE UP. With 150-foot frontage. No appraisal tea; B. D. Charles, Equitable Farm Loan Servleo. 1717 S. Telegraph, 4-0521. CUT YOUR PAYMENT8 ONE-HALF by quick cash home loan up to $2,500 Irom Voss and Buckner, 10 W. Huron (t.. Room 209. Ph. Swaps Evenings c 5 Acre Parcels, ■ Rolling scenic land, some wooded, some on blacktop. $300 down. 10 Acre Parcels 30 Acres i wooded. JUst off of M-13, (t 00. Terms. HURRY. “ ^C. -PANGUS;- Realtor . ORTONVILLE —"----- 433 Mill St. . .NA 7-3115 BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, BEAU tiful wooded ■ Iskn l ' ' V ACANT • . lfieo! Beautiful 14— -----belong: and garaje E 9-7051 BROKER a E — Sltaated an. luge1 1, lot 6 room bungalow ________________ ' cKtoaEu&nTwifo North#™ Property ran carpeting. ' We panj ~ - - ■>*— '">»■ ' 1 COMPLETELY FURNI8RED CABIN I — Mto. Michigan. g.«B0. OR 1-4300. x 135 ft. lot. 3 term bedrooms Nloe large family room. Ceramk tiled bath, /oak floors. Gas tired hot water beat. Bast of workman ship tad mate rials, priced at ealj remodeled home ceqens condition. 100 n. on sne Water' and priced at only 914,25c. FAMILY CABIN S Wooded -, ridges, treat at: ponds within 5006* acre* pn '»•% ' ; • i Tractt- ; 935 par a Write - phons tor price* - map. WHdcfhjjss ' roJera .ream rancher to_________ borhood (4 ft. Uvteg latte ledgestone. flrei teoned -l> tit garagt tiled bath. Large lot w •Jft.',1 5*2' OEOROE WELLINGTON SMITH' tuent neJ5h-|MA 6.3925 . Franklin. Mlohlgaff • •!¥> ' ■ i n We trade 1 LIST foaf would * not1 otherwise. "Open 9 p.tn, Multiple LtsUng Service. L. H. Brown, Realtor 509 Elisabeth Lake Road Ft). FE 4-3194 or FE Mill IM _______— te acre wooded building Site. On AuSable River, , 001 stream, on,hwy., 50 to choose from. 11 miles 'east of Orairliac. hunting and . fishing . aplenty. •tsoft hroysrty CABIN ■ THU FOLLOW1NO FARMS- are 1 in Oakland County — central Fonttaa — Flint1’ — Detroit — at good exproitwaya. ' $L \ Usto — borders late potential — priced farm buildings go ore tend -available up *-^{arm~ buildings.. — - bordering 3 roads W— land value . $28,500. 100 ACRES at oSSoo!1 184 acres — a real teritla high, scenic farm — with earns — main mm terg« ' —-ill 3.(40 foot re 29 500H' I ACRES - brick homo - bams WE RAVE — 'frqm l aero need 7 Oive 1 UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 1 I, Clarkaten 334-3351 OVER $10,000,000 WORTH OF CHOICE Business and :. “ Investments IN THE NEW MICHIGAN BUSINESS OUIDE TO OET YOUR COPY SEND II TO Partridge & Assoc-., Inc. "' ------ PONTIAC 1.050 W. HURON Restaurant^Owner I red right! Located on busy high 1 to qusy area Now sbowTni equ^jment. desired • feature _____________ _ Stainless stool fixtures, jinn, sir conditioned, busy and f“ “ ' into a small well desli Closet ait 7 — (13.000 full prlC -. UNIVERBAL REALTORS 334-3551________ Eves. 48(4387 uid all pack) designed bid 94/000 dow Trailer Park-Grocery 33 Unlt parir plus eosy grocery. Top cqpdttton^Not at least 110,006 year here, will consider TRADE, n real bargain at 949.090' stock on terms. Let us shew WARDEN - realty -.iron _________333-715L WATERFORD TOWNSHIP LOUNOB, ... conditioned, paved parking gus^S /ream home; wlU const ; NATI^IAL ’**P?lE 1-71 Pontiac Press Want'Ads ■Are Mighty.Midgets. jlhousands^.Read Them , Daily — That’s Why.' ' Results Ari FaSt and . 4he Cost Low, Tty One, See -for.;Yourself! - ) I 45-FOOT 1-BEDROOM ANDERSON coach. Beautiful condition. Trade oh home -outside Pofitlac Of MU. 7-2340. 100 ACRES WITH OR WTIROUT Brown City FI S-H JHATTAO MANGLE, . 16 INCH-TV * for small accordian or gun, boat —*“ or what have you. MA 9-1709. SACRIFICE 4-BEDROOM HOME OFF Joalyn for 93,000 equity, will trade lot or equal “ “ WILL TRADE '53 CADILLAC FOR pickup or smaller ear. Oorden's Auto Sales. l«ei Joalvn. T% 9A3ae WIUr-TRAbE EQUITY IN 3-BED- Sals Clathlin' I DRESSE- ________ ______ 3> 14 and 16, lika new, boj ate* 14 and 10, mans suit <■ Real bargains, MY 3-181 CLOTHES, is. 5 tops, ( FE 4-7,061. LADIES DRESSES AND SUITS size 12, 14 ■“ — and 16, ntSnt suits bargains, ------- MATERNITY CLOTHES. 8IZE ... ■ place drefs. S tops. 6: slacks, 3 1 LIVINO ROOM SUITE, • NEW; lamps, breakfast set. china eabi-net, klso new. Admiral 10 tech electric stove. Oil NouhVap Dr. 3 BEAUTIFUL HANt^ K^IT RUO8 V- 1 . “ .fb sjoas ■ 3-WAY sPLOOR LAMP „(». rfLQND table 99. ttec; typewriter, rJtur tsbls — ■ ' mtofe-BL 2-3234, S^PIECE BEDROOM •gods 65 3 ROOMS "fURNITURE ' WITH RANOE^ftEFRU3ERATOR $319^15 MONTH Nfw ^furniture of all kinds. Pai tory oeconda. About to price. Beat tiful bedroom and livtog joot USED FURNITURE 'T. crg» 913. apt.* gad and anges 935 up. Elec."andLsa* Ilka mv HI, rebuilt May- guaranteed refrlgeratofo,. ihd washers. All sties, TVs 139, sofas SIS, bedrooms 9 Uvlng rooms (90. Odd bods, are A nigs, dinette sets" and"sofas. Every tplng in- used furniture at Bar* gain prices. _ BARGAIN HOUSE, 10? N. Case at Lafayette FE 3-6*42 BUY—SELL-*TRADE "-------*—■* — Lafayette 1 POSTER BED, MATTSESS springs,—gad condition.—820. Dresser ana mirror 919, Swinging door, *0 fo, * J3 fo. 94—FE 21 INCH USED TV, $35; WALTON TVl FE' 2-2257. Open 9-9.. 515 E. ' Walfdn. Coritor of Jatlyp. , . 40 YARD* OF NEW CARPET (jjl. DuPont ‘'SOU'. :by Downs_____ ■1 Rug plant 1J36' Whtttemore 78 INCH SOFA, FLOOR L unpaid balance of 8132.80. . FIRESTONE STORE “ N- Saglnqw . • ' FI 4-9979 AUGUST SPECIALS Maytag Wringers,, rebuilt-.;..* Easy combination ' washer, dryer, installed, rebuilt^ , 91 Refrigerators, _ renewed ...g Easy Spinners/ new ...........91 10' refrigerator, now 1 THK OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP ■■ Huron Bt- • FE (-1896 — - kinds NEW Ate USED. Visit our trad* dept. ' real bargains. ...... - _ 0 Heights so Auburn, monthly « Michigan Nccch uid guarani a. 336-4521. APARTMENT SIZED OAS RANGE *29,95. Maytag wringer washer mM. new upright freeter $159.95. AUTOMATIC ZIO ZAO SEWING machine. .‘‘Fashion Dial" for but; tonhoies, designs. Mind hams, etc. Walnut Cabinet.. Take over pay-merits of $6 per month ft# 7 months of $42 cash balance^ Uni-Company, FE 4-0Q05. ARARliMENT SIZE NOROE ELEC- Vaorbets. good ■ condition. 3jt56 BLOND CORNER TABUS, COFFEE table, 2 step-up tables, % lamps, cS piece red aecttonsL 4100. FE BED AMP BOX. SPRIN08, GAB CLOSING OUT Bedroom tote, box sprttge and *----living r 0,0 r~ -' ---------_ . ---sets, CJUUTB, rockers, lamas and tables, odd chaste, dressers, bads, bunk beds EVERYTHING MUST OO! Easy Terms ~ BEDROOM OUTKTTINO CO. 4763 Dixie - * Drayton PaHna OR 34734 DAY BED GLIDER AND CHAIR. Aluminum. Like new. Mattress and springs, now slsctrii roaster. Metal chairs. Oil burner, brats 5 to 10 rooms. PE t-ISM.________ DININO ROOM SUTTE. E*. pX- It Jewel gas stove, tlS. I___ —i dryer, 940. Buy wringer w t, *36.. fe mate. jT ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINE, OR 1-4S73. , • FIRST TIME IN MICHIGAN" —FREE HOME DELIVERY— WHOLESALE [EATS AND OROCXRIES Savings -up to 40 per oral, soap, sugar, eoffee, flour, butter, eaka mix. cereal, soup, vegetablea. vr aw w rma c&n r 'or free catalog and Information howtar how you ean buy at these rice*, *47-l*n, 94 r—I— u ...,,l-loj—_ e . , j. m m 'fNP *• dltlon, MS) Ft idra, W OUvar. RE^RioKAitTpit — 6666 SINOER CONSOLE ZIO-ZAO *3690. Lar|e selection. OR 4-H01. Curt's SINOER PORTABLE, OOOD CONDI- SPKRtAl? AUTOMATIC W“A Y'iib . softner, platform rocker, matching .stool, and brawn tweed rug -13x18. 1 Venetian blind 9’ 2%" m OB 3-3149. USED 40 - INCH TAPFA# 666 range for gale. OR 3-960S. USED OE' REFRIGERATOR, GOOD" —(20. FE 4-5344. “WAIT-NO LONGER” J Roper and Magic^Chef gaa Range* _rl*l__ ____ 5 _ _ BHec. Dxyera. » 7 Frlgtdalre Refrigerators 7 Whirlpool Gas Refrigerator* Fflgldalre Dlshwaabert 11 new prevtoua modela priced to fit your budget. These are the b**i buys you have been waiting for. 1*0 a Fine selection of Used Applt- ^'CONSUMERS ' ./ POWER-CO. ; I W. Lawrence FE 9.7m WESTINOHOUSE 14' REFRIGEBA-' WEBTINGHOySE I R C inch, (30. n 5-8751. W05ff — COAL STOVE, 813, Ml . beby bed, mat treat. 1 WYMAN/S ED BARGAIN STORE . gaa range ....... 124.95 „ rang* .............. 641.6s________ 34" El**, -rang*- ^<355.55 7 El*c. refHgdrafor 639.95 5 piece dinette set *29.95 : 3 piece sofa bed cult* ....... 939.95 “ piece aaettonal adfa _____$49.95 . piece curved seetlodal ... 9*9.91 - 19 w. Ttr E*Z Term* Ft 4-186S 65-A CRANBERRY ^EROHE, 1 HANG-lamp*. •Furniture, dteltea, ate. foot Antlqun, 10349 OakbUL RADIO. STEREO. TV SPBCtALE AY OrfoneU’a, American made. U translator pocket India, regular eem-piet* with aorphdikaa. eaaa and batteries. Regular 924.15, 6l4.se. tuning, easry handle, telaampo antenna. tig. Wehoor Music Man portable a ten# two extension apeakera. 4 speed changer, rasular.( Used Television, your e GRINNELL'S’ Pontiac. _ 6*34)433 USED TV - YEAH 21-inch Zenith . 17-inch Motorola ... SYLVAN STEREO-TV Sal* Miscellaneous te-BAO BATCH CEMENT MIXER, used very little..3X5#. l eteel mar-for box, f transit, OR 339>*. 1 HORSE DEEP WELL PUMP *50. 1-CAR PRAMS OARAOi~ USED COMBINATION COAL wood, or gas rang*. *75, Tappan combination, washer and'dryer, was 9595, now *1*9.99. PhiUlpa ■■ Rraa. 136 Plastic tlte :. . 2 for 10 Tile, Cement sod Trim, 9**5 Asphalt tils .......-,impL6i«'ini(» 2255 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 5MM SLIDE CAMERA AND I lector. 875 FE 5-2979. 35 SQUARE YARDS OF CARPET- ing and pad; ' __... ___ ____ stand; ratchet dlaa; mlsc. plumb- tog Items. OR 3-1635.___________ 19 BTU, LUX AIR- OIL MllUAdK condition. ______ 1.- MA 6-3537,, - GALLON OIL DRUi, oellent condition. OR 1-3*31. 300 FEET OF HEAVY DUTY; lx* H beams, 30 ft. lengths, ideal for. DIAMOND RINO AND 1 ding band, else 5, 875 or t FB 34041. -—«■ C V.-TON PICKUP, 250QAC f^ou'ARi'wnLiNa'TS' Fay .MORE to get a siding m * " ■-Taat the_ lire of your non guaranteed siNOEB wrr OIBSON. 2-TON Aik CONDITIONER. HQTPOINT AIR-CONDITIONER. 1 IM “ edit. R. B. Muhro Elec. FE 5-8431, HOTPOINT DRYER. * OL 1-19(8 PtONRlTE IRONER, WHITE CAjT- lsaving state — furniture re* so liable, also, electric atav*. Kenmore washer and dryer. 332- LaWrenoe, FE >4119j '682-1970. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS/ 2385 MIDDLE BELT ROAD; MOVED 0 S. PIKE — PEAR- MOVINO. MUST BELL, COMPLlETE solid brass fireglac« Qhnaon floor' polisher, n FE 14615 or FE MW. FURNITURE MOVED Is] RCA COMBI player 6a FE 4-07(3. RkFRiaKRATOR, (35, ■ “ |j| "flodlng. pohtlao J: Mflndlk., __ -—.fSNxMNc rraJKi. "' automatic Zly-Zag acceaaorte* f Cabtnei modS*UVS'(r!reSlS ------contract poymonte of (I.M. -----M-«na. 3364531, - - FE 3-91 Anchor fences NO MONEY DOWN ' FE 5-7(71 ARMSTRONG 80.000 6tU GUN tjp4 oil furiMHgiqU| controls corn-mate, Including 09 gaL Ml tank. Very jood eoodltlon. *138. Call BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AMD Hardware, Meat aapjlBia.' crock and pipe and flttiBM. Law* 1 Paint, Super Kbmlraa ALUMINUM DOOR. * X m reaa.priee.TlSW.Huraw. BEEF AND PORK — HALF AND ! quarter*. Opdyke Mkt. FE 1-7*41. BROKEN SIDH^VALJt.FOR RKTAIN-Ing walls. Cone's Rental, WE 84642. Board with 30# pteiOa letters, alia *X12. *13 60 far *1.71. OEM-ERAL FBINTINO AND OFFICH SUPPLY, 13 W. Uwronaa s TOYS: —■** ' *“icycle;. Ll- 673 6571: ELEtTRIc'RANGES. fo-hfCH. tttft >aiimjrsSSSBt' -------------------------- ■ Orchard Laita. . FOR DUSTY -jrasirss R—« \ e.<; ^ THE PQNT1 ACTRESS tHURSPAY, AUGUSTS, 1068 FORMICA Dtadbttnt prices ^““riSk.To'S Feucett* S* » Hut* Hood* 93* and ff . ?%Itxe»£ HAMMOND : CHORD ORGAN WlM Vtt bench and lot* of TSSS®6usic to,I. T*i**r*hh Rd. FT *“ • Acre** lr«n T»1 Huron Chickling fraud piano, mahogany, __________mam — law; year's Uff model*. Ouarantajd fir I JfMII. IBM Vilut. MW. aarafefcrt. no down pvnjol -Michigan Fluorescent, 3W Or- ftnx HID URAL with bos spring mattreos. fit. pood condition. FE t-MW GA8 DlfD. UXE NEW. « ai nriDTikl.fi DISHWASHER, !■ y awsSkto mumc ££»( w aojcnafisTtetall^ 7N1 yl AA r T ' ^ n Swi ** fiOTPOINT REFRIGERATOR, KEN-mor* gas stove. formica table, chain, garden tractor with mow-", snow plow. r~ * Radio-Stereo TV SPECIALS $14.00 A^LKSTXRKO° PHONO. 1 - alba speakers, 4 speed automatic changer Reg. *99.95. m, HHH ~0 bathtubs, — shower ataUs. imguiers. TiTriflc values. Michigan Fluc- MOV1NG—LIKE NEW QAS DRY EH, grocery scales, also mtsc. house-hold items. 324-1*31. . _ MTJLLER FORNAC*. OIL OR GAS, heats 6 rooms -or more, used 1 winters, umcrlltcmg. 33044 Bogr- NEW CARLTON SIAINLiESS STEEL HniiMn Mcinlr . lintU l»Tn> ffUCtt. *125. Thompafn. 7005 115* ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND Step Railing corners, and PQstr room dividers. AVIS CABINET: 1570 OpdykO, FE 4-4590. PATIO STONE PORMS. STEEL, M «5; PIPE. NEW per hundred "ftgi .... |io.2( Thomp, *12.87; 2" 822.89. O. eon, 7008 M-B* West. Fluubiko BARGAINS FREE. Standing toilet, 51S.95; 30-galloa heater, 549.95: 8-ptece bath sets, . *59.95. Flberilas laundry tru. trim, , 519.95 32-inch shower stall, trim, . *53.95, 2 bowl (Ink, *2.90, lava., 92(5,, tuba, 510, and up. Pipe cut ST threaded. SAVE PLUMBINO " CO.. It* s. - PLYWOOD -OF _____, — Plywood Dlst PE 2-0439 ' MS APIECE OR REEL TYPE USED MOWER, ©. ' Hardware, 19*0 Opdyke Rd. SINGER SLANT NEEDLE SEWING of* account In * months at M per month or 561 cash balan Universal Company FE 4-0905. SPECIAL ■ * g V grooved Mahogany . «*ta% Birch ....; I •Ban Baaflng Nylon Drawer Guides ............ __ oldrng Doors any alas *db wic FI 2-2543- PONTIAp/ PLYWOOD m n.I.lwirT FE 1254 AT A I L SHOWERS. - COMPLETE ----wltir faucets and' curtains. *f*“ value, 534.50. Lavatories. < plete with faucets, 814.95; Sol *11.95. Michigan Phiorescent. shard Lake —37 ~~— IARD SIZE PHONOORAPH , ■ Rrcba HTANDA1 records “STOP THAT DUST ^CALCIUM CHLORIDE MOVED TO nt l. PIKE — PEAR-FOR DUSTY ROADS OR DRIVES ■ *2.75 — 100 LB. BAG jAYLOCK coal a SUPPLY CO. —THIS WEEK SPECIALS— 5"Cardboard $ x rSin V'lljSSlF X S’ ... *12 95 DRAYTON PLYWOOD Mil Dixie Hwy,__OR 3-5912 $68.00 NEW MAONAVOX V PORTABLE. Front tuning. Telescop “$119.90 IiuTe'obangefl 4 speakers, 42"wl walnut can (net Reg. 83*995. $248.00 FAMOUS MAKE STEREO CONSOLE PHONO AM-FM WERE" RADIO VM automatic changer speakers ' walnut. Reg. *299.95. $198.00 MAONAVOX19" PORTABLE T automatic tuning automatic bright-nest, telescope antenna. Disc, mod- - $138.00 •GRINNELL’S PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE' . PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE 37 8. SagluAW ”* ltTO Offict .r. GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUPPLY. 17 W. OT R1NCE. • By Anderson & Leeming mi Mid-Sutntnpr Specials See The East. Then Buy The Beet At "Lake & Sea Marina, • Owens'Cruisers 3V tCeSO’ Crls-Craft Speed Boate Evfairude E^in — PqkOOO 1 Many Used Bargains —'We Trade. Saginaw at S. Blvd. FE 4-9587’ • 't,. caIBt CHfcIS CRAFT .. . __ ... — cruiser with trailer, 79 Maratm Mercury, flberglae. $895. 683-4405... CHRIB CRAFT 17-FOOT UTILITT,' Surge 3-4____ 53 gal. eleolrlc 700 bu. oa». “ 1957 Ford tl_,— . John Deere M0 tractor, ________Dtora'lJi^mi wire Me baler, Johrf Deere No. t* side rake, 4 rubber tired wage and decks, drags, plows, post h< digger, posts. Jeweliy wagon. *1 Met&mora Bank-clerk, Lunch. Mi Fenton Forester — Prop. Bud Hit matt auctioneer, Oxford Heir lift * Everything tor the boat OWENSMAIINE SUPPLIES' 396 Orchard Lak* Ave. H U UikRA MARINA H0U$E BOATS 93.995 to *5.893-CARSON'S BOATS WE TRA1 "tony^s”mArine FOR EVINDUDES. V18IT LOOMIS' BOAT! ' tim' DAY LILIES, WE WILL HAVE —constant—display ' ‘ ■ Sept.. 1st. Now select YlliF ^-.1^ - m bloom. TRe Uftonvme NilKserles. Kortwiy. 3*'10" long. NOW OH DISPLAY, m ------- your vlewmg.PMMEPI^^^^^^^ Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 1521 Holly’ Rd.. Hally ME 4A771 fa SRE- THE WWW WOLVERIKl varieties. Large c sonable.-you dig ai «rs. Sat.. Sunday August 3 only. 750.Orion Rd. Lake O 2-HORSE TRAILER. READY roll. Can be seen at Chet’s 8i dlery, LI 4 * WEEK OLD PIGS. 1305 MIS. OR ton elite, -na 7-3375._• ■ EVENING AND SATURDAY RIDING LESSONS ALL. APPALOOSA HORSES „ . Children, Adults HORSES BOARDED GOLDEN H CORRAL lSOO- HlHer Rd ..Pontiac , , EM 3-mirf VACATiOKf TRAILERS. HITCBE5 Installed cars, wired used hitches, $5. OOODELL TRAILER. 3300 S. Rochester Rd.. UL 3-4580. ' WITH THIS AD . Century?s Factory Authorized Salii Only 75 . Custom built Travel Trailer# <»n be sold. CHESTNUT OELDINb. GENTLE, 1 I, MA 5- THERMOOr \PHED BUSINESS eardc. 1,000 only *8.50. GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUP-"PLY, IT W. Lawrence St. Storg Equipmsnt ASH REGISTER -chine combination. NATIONAL ELECTS ■ ‘ ~ good condition, I 12 GAUGE PUMP, 35 MARLIN LEV-er. .410 clngle. all like new. first *138 takes. FE 5-8771. MILK GOATS *20, BILLY GOAT, MO, MA 8-3*82. - NEW RIDING 8TABLE, 13650 NEAL ■*s‘, DavUburg, 834-30*3, call for Lila. Riding instructions avall- ____Groups Weigome. WELSH MARE. ,13 HANDS, GENTLE *135. Pinto gelding, good rider •’”* MY 3^2723.: _ ■ , Hay—GraiH—Fssd APACHE CAMP TRAILERS, are new add by the Apache factory dealer in Detroit. The new Improved models at the low price. No handling charges. Bring this JB oh & ¥iW Produce Specials*, Homegrown■ peaches ....... *2. 10 lb. basket —r.. ..... No. i new Mtch. potatoes 50 lb HomegfdwB eorn ... u. ■.: s « Other product Pontiac APACHE CAMP TRAILERS - NEW and used, over 510.000 tn camping .Aflulpment’ on display at *U times. Open dally 9, a^i-L t» A T-SheU, 37j 8. Telegraph. l-A BEACH SAND. 5 YARDS. 97 and up Gravel, fill, cushion BUI Male, EM 3-6373. CRUSltKb STONE. *3 YARD. -MAN-ufactufed read gravel *1. Pea DARK RICH FARM TOR SOIL. * yards 810 delivered, FE 4-6588. . BLACK DIRT MfiL’S TRUCKING A-l top soU. Mack dirt, fin dirt, sand and gravel. FE 3-7774. SAND, GRAVEL. FILL. CEMENT, trucking. Pontiac Lk. Bldg*. Sup ply. 7655 Highland BtL OR 3-1554. SAND AND GRAVEL. BLACK DIRT Mid tog kOil. PE 4-5529. Fsts-HEiitiin Pn 79 . BRITAINY, FEMALE, 5 MONTHS. AKC, bred to hunt./NA-7-3931. WATER AND SUMP PUMPS. NEW. rebuilt and serviced, Used refrigerators. (7341122. Midwest Plumb-lng, 6005 Highland Bd.. at Airport. YARD SALE: OLD DISHES AND —■ glaac ware’ -Friday Aug; 2. * to 3.-6175 Flamlnf* Lake Hd. Clarkiton. cff Oarkston-Orion Rd. ATLAS —MET-AL LATHE. DRILL press, table saw; air compreuer, : bench grinder, vdlve machine. OR ■ 3-6028. FORD TRACTOR. SHERMAN DIG--ger, Dearborn leader, HltUop trail-^ Lincoln welder. KcC saw. FE 5-1327. Camsrat—Service FOR SALE: BRAND NEW MAMIYA C-3 body with ease And grip. Good price. LI ••11*3 or FE 3- ACOORDIAN. 139 BASS, LUCE' NEW, BABY GRAND PIANO AND BENCH. like new. sacrtflSO. FE 9-45*9. B FLAT CLARINET BUFFET FE 3-5571. BABY GRAND PIANO fruitwood finish. Completely ref In-ished and rebuitt* IMS JO. MORRIS MUSIC CLARINET, GOOD CONDITION, beet offer, 333-7259; _ ' CONN AND GULBRANSEN ORGANS Saturday 9:30 a.m. to l:0o p.m, LEW BETTERLY MUSIC COMPANY 441 6-8001 Free Parking In net Across from Birmingham Theater JUMCTBICJaiIIXAR.DO] away, double ^pickup DOUBLE C 9 with Bigs 5300 compli * JULY* BARGAINS CONN Sptnet Organ .... .... * Besunfid mahogany and bet i^^^sHtaat' GRAND PIANO ,.... ..teB ■ ■ '■ —. f«mdltlon. 4'6'' and - PIANO TUNING—LESSONS WIEGAND MUSIC .CO. PONTIAC’S Sheet Music Headquartefi 479 Elizabeth Lake Road r (Opposite Pontiac Hall) : FE 2-4924 'i. REAL BUYS.IN ANYTHING IN MUfelC AT THE WORLDta LARGEST MUSIC STORE CHAUI GRINNELL’S 5-YEAR-OLD AKC SILVER ORA? "‘'man Shepherd, male, ' beet , POODLE 560 UP. 1 down., $1.25 A -week. open evenings tlll-9. _____SHUNDI - MALE, I. 135, 333-7465, ' v Bassett AKC BRITTANY SPANIEL 1 excellent pedigree. 255 Au FE 3-3S33. shot*. OR 3-7695. DALMATIAN PUPS. GROWN DOGS; purebred. MA 8.3933 Eves. PASHCHUND PUPPIES. AKC, - U) weeks, reasonable. OR e-0387. DACHSHUND PUPPIES. *30. I DaveOrubb’s at good-price*. ____________Produce Co: 7605 Highland Hd. (M59). t. SIDgS.. 4 1 Meat Packers, Airport. Flienfflyfiefipl*—servtng- -you with -respeEfTOpen 7 .nays. 8 'til 6. 90 days Is car1- r’— ------. Motor Scooters ie»—cuShm an^ b aolb~ jkotoiu 1958 CUSHMAN MOTORSCOOTER —7. Meadow Ave. Off B. Blyd- E. Bushman buskie; actual FE 5-1037. Motorcycles 1956 TRIUMPH, condition, has ' 625-1515. 88" 500 CC. NEAR’MINT, ,..*450. 363-0057, - WHIZZER MOTORBIKES, AMO-^ ‘ -engine and j»rU, UL 2-2912. Bicycles ____ OP; NEW *2f.tS UP- Scarlett's Bicycle* and Hobby Shop B. Lawrence “ ■ ■ 5 RICHARDSON, CLEAN d out. Con be sefn at 1940,. Lakevetie Rd., Og- CUSTOM COMBINING — WE WILL combine your wheat, .12' se'-1 pelted combine, ready to gc - CULTIVATED BLUEBERRIES CASH PAID FOR USED TRAILERS. Pontiac Mobile Homes FE 5-9902, CLOSE-OUT SPECIAL ON USED -GREAT LAKES / DETROITER / PONTIAC CHIEF --- PACEMAKER------------- NAYTONAL ---------- ROSY • , STEWART —=-. RICHARDSON. — MARLETTE PALACE - .-■■J • FLORENCE / ROYAL __ And /many more to ehooae Trora. These have- atl neen reconditioned coin are ready to mpva Into. Only (105 down. Alan spefctaL 19(3 Pontiac 54x10 front dunne room — Only 13.9*5. -53*5 down. N6W 50x10 Fofillac Chief *3,695. «, Bob Hutchinson mobile homes 1301 Dixie Highway OR 3 ' - Drayton Plain* 3pen » ^o 9 Dally Sat. • . • 8un.l2-5 .GOOD 16 - PtOO T ALUMINUM house Mailer. ' sleeps Phone 332-42(7.: Boats—Accessories O-FOOT SAIL. BOAT $05. 8907 Snowepple Drive, Clarkston. O-FOOT RACING UTILITY WITH trailer add 18 HP Kvlnrude with control*. Swap or sell. $125. FE 8-851j.______________ 2 f<5ot “ALUMINUM ROWBOAT. USedS times. MI 4-3533. 1FOOT RUNABOUT MARK » Mercury, control*; light*, and trail er. $350. 3M-4S73. ’ , . _ lJFOOT DUMPHY, GLASS BOT-exc, -condition, 40 - horse ison' - elec.,: new tilt tralter, tlSO. FE 441*3. MOBILE HOME 50x8, CARPETING, redecorated, 2 - bedroom, ■ *2,495. FE 2-------- FOR SALE 160 ACRES OF OATS being cut now, 300 acre* of straw, trucks available .for. hauling, MAln 9-3)722. LARGE CULTIVATED BLUEBER-rles, 350 Wise Rd.. Commerce. EM farm Equipment 10 X 47 GARDNER-. GARDEN TRACTOR WITH PLOW. Cpme out today tltrt mltlwtor OR 3-6912. OXFORD TRAILER SALES •/ t New 10* wide Marlettes, Stewarts. Generals. Vagabonds. Windsors.... Yellowstone and Gem travel, units -priced to cell. All sizes, terms to your satisfaction, many, used (-10 and campers. 50. units on display- Order your 12 " - 62 long. ! mile * MASSEY HARRIS SUPER' 26. SELF propelled combine, also several P. T.O. and eng. driven combines. Davis Mach,, Ortonvllle. NA 7-3292 HDWE. Phone, HARTLAND 2511. SPECIAL PRICING ON JOHN Deeye demonstrator tractors. Also good selection of'used tractors prices you can’t afford to miss. ' trade and finance. HARTLAND; AREA HARDWARE. .Hartland ------- Phone 3511. ____Grten on M34. MY 2-0721, EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR --------7, free esUma;— -*•*■ ___accessories' — - --- Mobile Home Sale*, fne. «01 DIM Hwy.. Drayton. Plains. OR 3-1202 MOON. 1962 LIKE NEW, 1«..'2 bedrooms, S plece^hath. 33L75js. Parkhiirst Trailer Sales >TNE8T IN MOBILE LIVING IS t. " *• - aturlng New lloon-Buddy t way between Orion a USED TRACTORS _______and makes KING BROS. FE .4-0734 . ~ FE ‘ Pontiac Rd. ,at Opdyke 88 14 foot. Aluminum trau.fr. j excellent condition *ieepi"T~ at 6435‘Highland Rd..Mate pffer.1 17 >OOT U8iD TRAILER, SLEEPS 5- >600. 33S-S420. _ j 1959 OEM ALUMINUM TRAtLER, BHGK1B MOBILE HOIfEB-------- Good used home type trailers. 10 PER CENT'DOWN. Cars wired and1 hitches Installed. Complete I line Qf part and bottle gas. , Wanted -etekd .tratlere:—;——-i 4-9743 . ’ m3179 W. Hurdn ~WE NEED YOUR TRAILER I . Ahv Pise—any type BUYERS- WAITING! F ’ your trailer tor you! VE BUY-WE SELL—WE TRADE Holly Travel Coacb Co. HO HoUy Rdrr'Holly ME 4-4771 TRAVEL TRAILERS ■ 2932. Guaranteed“ at Warner ’Frailer Se Wal’y Byam's excttlng carava .. Good selection t A H RACE . MASTER SUPER Stock.—(StMTlwIth tubes. Used TRUCK TIRES traction tubeless FAMOUS JLAYTON TRAVEL TRAIL- arc 1 ,-nnt.a Inert S14C.4. 1C stock. FE 4-5793. FREE TAME WHITE RATS FOR pets, science protect*. FE 1-9903. GERMAN SHEPHERDS—SINCE 1*» —Guar. Liebestrsum. 23230 Lahaer. ueLUxe* at - 51250, 14’ stanaara - without brakes 5850. Also Rover. | compact crank down and Blest* IT tor the small ears. ^ SHORT'S MOBILE HOMES 1171 W. Huron - * FE 4-9743 HAMPSTERS. WHITE MICE. ALL Pat Shop, 56 Williams. FE 4-9433. FOR RRNT, NEW APACHE TENT trailer, pvt. owner. UL ?*4M. UALE ©COTTIE, 18 MONTHS OLD. FE 2-4657. fc. ' PIONEER PICKUP CAMPER, RUO-gedly constructed, insulated. War* ner Trailer Sales. 3098 *W. Huron FE S-1609. . . PROFESSIONAL ' ' POODLE ORObMlNO For appointment phone fe S-3112. Hunts Pet Shop Open Eves till 9 p.m. RENT YxlUR. TRAVEL. TRAP.ER— from us, and use rent as part down , pevme when you Return, from New 1963 14.5’ CREE . (Sleeps up to S people) ■ HOLLY, TRAVEL COACH NC._^ 15210 Holly Rd; Holly MX 4-9771 . —Ouen Dally ana Sundays— PAIR PUREBRED SIAMESE CATSt kittens, aervlc*. FE 4-04*0. . PARAKEET BABY MALH8- 94 95 - 305 First, Rochester.' Ot 1(372. PARAKEETS.' CANARIES. TROPI-cal fish. ’Cranes Bird Hatchery, 94M Auburn. UL S-33M. CAMPERS 1NIW1 -FOR RENT. - 3123 Lapeer Rd. 333-9816." FART BEAGLE PUPPIES. >UL 2-55*9 ■ pick-up And camper nit chev . rotet^%^ton ^y7__duly_w|Ui^tet four, many extras. Call for de-talla. OR 3-0154. - / POODLES. SMALL, t WEEKS, male 11 months, itud*. UL 3-3300. PUPPIES FREE, « WEEK OLD, 1770 Revere, OR 3-046/ REGISTERED ^TOMERANIAN nh SALES and RENTAL^ Right Cunpers. Wolverine Truck Campers. Wtmtobwo Trailers. — Draw-Tfte. Reese.- L-Z hit hitches -i gold and Instilled. - F. E. HOWLAND ' BMAIJ. PUPPIES to EACH. '; -, FE fmt ' TO A OOOD HOME, i KITTENS. 682-2607 Aoclktoi ■■ /, ,10 B & B AUCtIcJn BALES EVERY WEDNESDAY. 7 30 P.M. EVERY SATUIUJAY 7:30 P M' EVER SUNDAY 2,(9 PM. Sporting Goods — All Types Dtor -Prizes Every -Auction •Vi buy—eell—trade, retail 7 day* ■ ..Consignments welcome 5099 dud* Hwy . OR 3-1717 3145 Dixie Hwy - 'OfP'gJttoj TRAVEL TRAILERS^ Aealatr—TR* new light telfl ■ eonialfied. Also Fleet .flint and Taw a* Brava Mil contained Iran ELLSWORTH AUTO . and TRAILER SALES! (577 Dixie Hwy. • , IfA g-14991 WBOT cWAPt BEHE- ra. F. WoodwarJr 15 FOOT FIBERGLAS. BOAT MO-- lor, and trailer, 2-yrs. old. eteer- lag and all elec. OB 4-0145. 16 HORSE ELGIN. BUNS GOOD 550. FE 4-86*4. 16-FOOT PLYWOOD CABIN CRUIB; ^ trailer.^R 3-8212. FOOT THOMPSON LAP8TRAKE, onvertlble — - — ...s'. isM^MY'yra. , a FQOT SAILBOAT. SLOOP leged. new tells, OL 1-0781 NYLON BAIL Suitable for small boat. 1 last, used three time*.' SO-horse Inboard. 6(3-1645. SPECIAL ______ _____ „ BEAU- Marina". Dthtphy,- Olassmas-ter, Waterbtrd boats. Johnson Motors. 14016 Fend ton Bd.. Fenton. VACATION SPECIALS^ Several flberglas runabouts com-'rlc Kvhtrudes or Jor skiing, from plete wltl Johnson's *695 up. 14' Cherol I runabout, 30 1 CLOSEOUT - New 12' aluminum fishing bouts, ' slightly feathered ,1109.- PAUL A* YOUNG, Inc. 4030 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0411 * day* ~ OMiuM WATER SKI SHOP Cypres* Gardens - Hydro-Fllte • Bay viewer Sail boats . -' Flberglas Car Top Fisherman Sea-Ray - MFO - Steury Pontoons - Canoes - Cambers Johnson Motors -' Service Parts ' PINTER’S" ”~ "Oakland County’s Boat Lane” 1370 N. Opdyke (M24) FE 4-092$ WANTED TO BUT FROM PRIVATE Wwitod Cur#-Tjrucw ’1>1 ' $25 MORE . For that high grad* used car. see uc, before you s(ll. R. J. Van’ Welt, 4540 Dixie Highway. Phone : pR ,n, | - __ 100 OLD CARS WANTED "THE STABLES'.' FI 4-6000 ALWAYS A BUYER Of JUNK CABS . and trucks, OR 3 2938., if ALLEN A-BON INC. « - ALWAY8 BUYING AND PATINO MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNIK AT— BIRMINGHAM ,ePL^:?itX“PUTHlND,,tl Averill's 2020 Dixie Hwy AJAX TRAILER. 16 SCOTT-ATTWA-1 • motor FE. 4-0031... MOTOR and trailer. BUCHANAN’S Two only - 15 ft. flberglas boats, ^complete rigs. *1495. One If ft; flberglas boat, complete rig,, 5L398. 13 ft. alumlnuni boats, *109., Trailer, $89. EM 3-2301, 9969 Highland Rd. BUY NOW-^SAVEI SCOTT-TRAVELER-WINNER •----WAY-SAIL BOATS___ . CANOES-PONTOON BOATS HOISTS—DOCKS ‘ . MERCURY—SCOTT ' WEST BEND MOTORS INBOARD-OUT DRIVES WE SERVICE ALL MAKES ALLOVSTERLINOTR A1LERA CAMP TRAILERS—MARINjrFADJT SPORTING aOGD8-ACCE8«)RIE6 ALUMACRAPT O and W OLASTBON .. terms CRUISE-OUT BOAT BALES 63 E; Walton 9 to 9 FE 3-4408 CHRIS CRAFT - LIKE NEW. CALL Tom Batemen. FE 3-7141. COMPLETE BOATING OUTFI+, EV-erything In cxc. condition. 80 bj. Johnson just overhauled, FE 4-4727. DAWSON'S CLEARANCE — Prices ' ished on - bokttar, equipment, good buyr — rude motors, and ^Smco traOiT * te-ILi*' ' ■■ Hlckoi Left — DAWSON'S SALES „ Jst-QiimulStOg fi Jet outboard motor. Both 13' demonstrators. — 673-2824. M 6c M : • MOTOR SALES Mor^ Money .. FOR SHARP LATE MODEL8 OUT-STATE .M ARKETS 2527 DIXIE HWY. . OR 4-0333 v ' OR 4-0309 LLOYDS- BUYING' -Good.Clean Cars . 2023 "Dixie Hwy. Wepay n -- FE 8-4055 Now swUhsd Troth 103 1334 OMO Itb TON TRUCK WITH tend am axle, fold - down sides. Priced to sell. Hamilton Fuat * Supply, RoUf MB 4-3311. MM DUMP TRUCK, OOOD CONDL 1*51 DODO! PICKUP: IM1' FORD pickup; 1M1 chevy pickup;' 1958 OMO Stake. HUTCHINSON SALES 3935 Baldwin Rd. city of Birmingham. 3*43. PAft SON CHEVROLET C“ ““ Woodward Avt.. Bln 4-2735. .___________ 3955 BUICK. AUTOMAtlC. 3 DOOB, apod condition. 3171. 553-3530. 1881 CHEVY Vi' ton Apache "8l" pickup, hew tlrec.. Mansfield Auto Sales Itni Bbldwtn * , 336-33*0 330 CHEVROLET 1VTON PANEL truck, Extra clean. 3335. FATTER-“BON CHEVROLET CO., MOO S. Woodward Avt., Birmingham, MI 1962 FORD PICKUP, CUSTOM CAB, LONO BOX. 4-SPEED IRANS-Ideal for a camper. ROME fi-"*"""" 1963 CHEVROLET Vb TON PICKUP. - 6 cylinder, standard shift, heater. 1179*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET PATTERSON . . CHEVROLET COCO. 1000 S. Woodward Ave., Blr-mlngham, MI 4-2735. GMC-TON PANEL. CAN BE seen at Ken Mobile Station corner Dixie Hwy., and Williams Lake Rd.. Drayton 1963 CHEVROLET Vb TON PANEL, 4,000 actual mtlea. new car guar-ante*. ■ Light blue finish, glass. PATTERSON CHEVROLET M 1000 8. Wbod-i^r ” ham, MI 4-37 Better U$ed Trucks, . GMC : Factory Branch , _ OAKLAND AT CASS ' ' ' : FE 5-9485 ■ .' (TERNATIONAL* TANDEM LI90 Dump truck. 1953 with 1953 --------- 15,000 miles on motor, good eond. - tut trailer S’ wheel, 5 ton cap. . fow* boy trailed .10 ton cap. *350. get-Winslow- truck scale* 20 ton PICKUPS springs* A-l Mech. condition. '({ $495-$995 JOHN McAULlFFE FORD -OLIVER ©VICK and JEEP MANSFIELD • Auto Saks ' 1076 Baldwin Ave. • 335-5900 ire you buying a new or courtesy ar. We will buy your late model GLENN'S 954, West Huron St. V 4-7371 ' - PB 4-1797 vve.neeJd cars a clean '54 to "60- "--ANYDRIVER. Sow? \ ; — SEE US . For COMPLETE INSURANCE how i FRANK A. ANDERSON, AGENCY" 1044 Joslyn Ave. . FE 4-353 .SAVE ~' on Auto Insurance_ New Aetna Auto-Rite, Policy save* Careful drivers REAL MONEY. (25,000 liability, 11.250 medical/ 51.000 death -(WnpftL $20,000 uninsured materiel coverage. $11.00-QUARTERLY 2 can (17.00 , BRUMMETT AGENCY Ftrdpi Cart r ----• _1------ - 8UN ROOF. there te eoattog •IteO*- payment as let* gang. DonTbe late \ %thU orryl Batter get bora H0*U Mr. flO’Hira, on tor the whole . and- be sorry I first because we are dUoountlng the price t« only $995. Easy oaA h* arranged 9*8. lacy tennt : BIRMINGHAM 1-1 CONDITION. 1*83 1UICK BKY-llner, 4-speed, poeitivo traction, bucket eeata. JP-MM. 1*57 BUICXS, 5 TO CHOOdE FROM, Ste a* 3197, 14 doWn and to per k, wo handle and arrange all 1957 BUICK 4-DOOR SEDAN. Double power. Like new. 3595 full price. LUC&Y AUTO SALES . "Pontiac's'Discount Lot” __ l*3 8. Bagtnew ---- -FE 45914 1937 BUICK ROADMA8TER, 4-DOOR hardtop, 4-way - power, extremely shaj-p. air conditioning, (795. 693- ^_____ .. 1ERA HARDTOP. Automatic, power steering, brakei and window*. Cruise control, signal seeking radio. All .leather Interior. . BQB BORST Istncoln-Mercury , -. 510 Woodward Ave. Birmingham ■ ■ * MI H8X 1958 CADILLAC COPPfc. HYDRA- 'BRIGHT ....SPOT" j©eom© \ Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-04^8 ’' mimtfMtm ■' 1S> 1MT CADILLAC XARDTOF, COUPE JSS& jag* t??4 "jssrlar 1853 CHEVROLET. I _________3U Judaea, 1954 CHEVY, RUNg' hem. Waterford, ___ 1355 CHEVY WAGON. RflM QQOD. IW^CHEVY MADY TO dgm 1957 BEL AIR 4-DOOR CHEVRC XUCKY AUTO SALE CHEVY 1*67 CONVERTS Air, akto., power bral steering, radio and hea body. 5*95- itM 5r7**R 1997 CHEVROLET BE LAIR 8PORT coupe, Vl Powergllde, radio, heat- • ei. cliHi eelli. title rlien *795. PATTERSON /CHEVROLET CO., 1999 g. Woodward Ave-. Ml 4-3735. IOTICE (late Delivery B. teat one 1957 __ __liquidated at any kftcr the puMIsblng of tela This automobile is a Bel Air hardtop with radio and heat- payments of S2.25 or payoff the total balance due of 8197. This au-temebU* may (be seen at Kin^/Auto Sales — - gaalnaw FE B41403 1*67 CHEVY * STATION WAOON. very*nice. FE 3-7542. H. Biggins. 1957 CHEVY V-8, 2-DbOR, ^ERY nice, FE 3-7542, H. Riggins Deal- 958 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, BTAmAKD TRANSMISSION, RADIO.heater, warn bide-WALL TIRES. BIO ENGINE. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF $37.95 PER MO. See Mr, Parka at Harold Turner . Fofd. MI 4-7509. . Foreign1 Cars 1961 ANOELIA. EXCELLENT CON-dltton, 30 miles , per gallon, best offek, (17-540.___' Make Sure You Can Stop REliNED BRAKES FORD-CHEV-PLYMOUTH , ; 1948-1963 / 1 SPECIAL! S19.39 A Reg. *$26:95' • hidude# ■ -. Lining' And Labor <-CunipafaWe prices on a other' makes . Goodyear : I Store ; ^30 S. Cage FE 5-612J SAILBOATS ___ Snipe class,. all fiber TftSSed. atanfmum mast, stainless steel, rig-ffing* good sails* 383 Ironstone, Rochester. 651-6648, 1 . —LONE STARS’— -Riviera Cruiser Raft, 16' and 20' . Now On Display-: ———'Starting *11750 ~ • Alum. 24'.cruise Lin£rJI. - Alunt. 18’ Voyager Cruiser Flberglass Capri (Rear Square Stem Canoes. to 1225 ' ' Hig Savings on:. > ' • IS ft. •'Flbei«l»ssrCanoe . k ft. Aluminum Canbe - North Oakland County's, Largest Lone gtar Dealer 1933 Mercuns 6 to 109 H P. Cliff Dreyer’s -Gun and Sports Center 15310 Holly Rd, Holly ME '4-3TU KESSLER'S Aqua-cat canoes Onerd . Complete pat-te. and service 10 N. Waehtngtotr QA 3-14*0 MARINE INSURANCE 32 00 PER <100 and up. Liability OlOAOOfor *—. Hansen. Agency. FE 3-7093. Michigan tuRbocraft -fET BOATS Q-foot runabouts and 'SO Plata Hwy^ Pontiac ' STOP—LOOK«SXVE Fabulous Hydrodyne Comboards Larson-Duo-Chetek-Feathercraft BYptRUOE MOTORS and TRAILERS I Sylvan Pontoon Ptosis Alum and wood-dock* Grumman. Old Town Canoes 'Yeur Bvteruds Dealer" | flarfin^ton Bout -WorKs ■ ■ WANTED All iOnds of’ ' , BUICKS HIOHE8T PRICES PAID IN CASH.... FISCHER- BUICK \ BETTER DEAL at- cars and trucks FE 8-2336 WANTED: 1899-1963 CARS Ellsworth . AUTO SALES l_5SJL_ •$$ TOP DOLLAR $$ ■ FOR.. . -v . Clean Used Cars -• JFRHMK ^Bright;.Spot11 WOULD LIKE TO TAKE OVER payments or buy tandem dump. FE 2-3252 Ustd A»t»-Truck Parts 102 1955 PLYMOUTH ENGINE 6 / FE 8-1469 • ." COMPLETE 1961- VOLKSWAGEN PICKUP *995 Autobahn* Motors, Inc. QR 4-6463 -7956 MSRCEDEg BENZ--- , OR MOM . 158 VW' CONVERTIBLE. RADIO, whitewalls.;. 32,606 actual miles. Very -clean. Bronze finish. Call Just Arrive^ 13(519 Austin Healey Sprite 1 r Dike brakes, bigger engine, finer trim. ^ $1969- kStop In and teat drive. A Superior: ^ . Rambler REABQNABLY PRICED TRANS--nation. 1(53 Renmult-Dauphlne, h sunroof and-new tires, 844- SUPERIOR -RAMBLER' • 550 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9421 .959 VW KAhMANN OH1A CON-vertible,* new topf new paint, exc. condition, ,3i,330wATO Open FM. ,'tg 1_______________ M(J8T 9ACRIFICE,,lg-FGOT CHRIS . Craft cabin cruiser, fu#y equ' ted twin 25 . h.p. Bvipnid* er OR P463I , ,___GMC to TON FICKUFj ,335-5237 'I after 5 p.m. , . • l!| 19M FORD DJlWe. F*9i; 5306. . /per nients. ■Liros Llncoln-Mercufy \ .. Lot No. 2 3031 Oakland Ave. rs e-tost - fe s-«( 4 DAY MONEY BACK •GUARANTEE This guarantee means that if for any reason (except for ^ abuse or accident) you are hot pleased with. your-purchase, we’ll refund your money; - _ ly broken m” ,...L.....82295 ' 1981 CHEV R OLE A Impale Convertible.. Automatic, . V-8. radio, -heater, whitewalls. Beautiful black finish with red trim. One owner, new ear trade-in. Yes. folks. It's nice, ly, broken In.*, ........ .32285 t, heater. Won* brakes, Hydramatic, ri heater, whitewalls, guari actual miles. Can't HEVY 2-DO<5R Sedan, tic, (-cylinder, radio. Whitewalls. Guaranteed Guaranteed 20,000 actual L.JUu*_ wlth' ma I ao Butek for « 1662 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop. Has all the goodies; power steering, brakes, Hydramatic, radio, heater, white-walls. White finish with aqua S’ :ThU ‘m* * ,eCOBt2435 1356 PONTIAC Btarchlef ,4-Door Hardtop. Low sweeping design LhatTviir^ioqmriiyft for years-to come All of Pontlac'e noted performance. Top wit . around 1959 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door. No ear ever rode to fame more quickly. Always sought after-always popular. A very fine car. a Very low price......91295 1*83 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan. Superb performance with good' economy____(lne of tee—aatest, beat looking cart on the highway.- Nothing could be • finer. A demonstration wlU convince you........ ......*• ■ -. -....33795 ’only 3.404 nr. *arT{wii 1963’ VW Sunroof. Beige finish with red leather seats, l^own- radlo. On economy this is It. Price ............91559 iedan. ig, power crakes, radio, heater^and and brakei, Automatic, whit£ walls. Yes. everything but tee kitchen sink. Car lists lor 95.300, selling price .............94358 1932 PONTIAC Bonneville 3-Door- Beauti- alchlng- 8fito5 a with a official .' Going 1*93 RIVIERA. Yes. folka, let' go first class ta . Riviere that-loaded: Buy big .discount. .. ■ car. Lists out for price ‘ 1*to“PONTIAC LDOOT Hardtop? HvdramaUc, radio, heater and whitewalls. Kimberly blue finish with trim to match.. Don't pass It up. telali ft'..... 914(1 1*82 PONTIAC Btarchlef Vista. -Don't settle for anything less. More eer per dollar and top all-around value. Buy It tor ,lte top.a its. Lest economical. .....IW SHELTON ' P5NTIAC-BUICK Rochester \ OL 1-8133 mm tp, ■<. ,.; -v.^v THE PONTIAC pfess, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1,* ^^IlMjOKt’ W4 t«U CHIVRQLIT 1-DOOR, AN KX-celltnt Mr. No money down end only 6296.32'per month. LLOYDS’ Now and Ustd Cars 1/963 ■ . .. Llncoin-Mercury W FB 8-4055 No, t .. 1033 Oaklahd Ave. PR HQM DEAL SALES. 4650 Dixie, OR 3*3733., - . . ’* 1958 CHEVY WAOON 2-DOOR 8, rool sharp, FE 3-5036 after ~ 195* CHEVY CONVERTIBLE. 348 •tick, ekceUant shape, must sell . Immediately, 8735. Call MI-8733. 1038 CHEVROLBT8, EXCELLENT condition. 5 toehooM from, as low as 8307. 83-down and 88 par week, - WO handle and arrange all financing. ISO 8. Saginaw St. 1088 CBEVY. 4-DOOR. 8 ACTOUAT-lc. Mechanically excellent, good tires, no rust, ISOS. DIXIE SQUARE ORAL. 4650 Dixie, OR 3-1733, 1059 CORVETTE, NO ENGINE AND 1959 CHEVROLET a DOOR STATION . as $38.78 pet month, for further lnformatlpp call Mr. O’Hara, credit BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 686 8, Woodward -’....Ml 8-3000 1980 CHEVROLET CARRY-ALL, • passenger statlon wagon. Owned by the city of Blrmlnxham. 8698. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., —i 1850 ’CHEVROLET IMPALA CON- LUC^Y^UTO SX-LES Lor FE 4-2214 195? Chevrolet Bel-Air 4-door, i automatic tranemlesion, 6 cylinder, power steering. 869S. Van Gamp Chevrolet MILFORD * - MO 4,1025 jpaint^ ^°l NEED A. LARQE SPACIOUS 8TA- m ’STw/fiTs’L.:: — 4-door • tat ten-i wun raaio, beater, transmission hhd lot te. A Birmingham one Truly - ----- - 80S dw ___17 per __ information chll-Mr, O’H__ —1> -mates*.——-----------&;■„1 •. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 886 S. Woodward______MI 6-M 1960 CORVAIR .MONZA. 102 H.p. ah, a Birmingham let in time for v ---------15 down. *4?.*lper ad Bn fur- . MONZA, 4 - SPEED TRANS-mission. Excellent shape .. .61496 Autobahn Motorsr Inc. 4455 W, Huron Our Tow full price .of only .$995 should please you too. Easy terms can be arranged to fit your budget and you gat a full year written guarantee. BIRMINGHAM CHRYBLER-PLYMOUTH INC. BY OWNER, 1957 FORD VS Exc. condition, PE 3-8411 (57 FDBD. 4-OOOR, GOOD CON-dltlon, 1380. 883-1180. 1967 FORtf 4' DOOR. HARDTOP, exe. condition. OR 3-6(61. FORD 1957, V8, 3-DOOR STICK. LOW jgUeage, very clap. $450. Ml 4957 FORD RANCH WAflOWl Vk Marvel Motors 251,Oakland Ave. jrtatlon $197. no el handle and arrange fl FAIR PRICES Patterson' MOTOR SALES End of Model Demo Clearance ’Most models to xhoose from; Falcons torT-Birds. Priced to sell.- _ BEATTIE YourFQRD DEALER Since 191. ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE 8TOPLIOHT OR 3-1291 lVsO FORD 3-DOOR AUTOMATIC, radio and banter, power Steer-H 1,8*3.58 per (FioooR - . 'NOTICE ( ■ Immediate Delivery after the publishing of this ■ This automobile Is e.Falrlene 2 door hardtop with- radio and er. It to In excellent condition, Thto automobile may be eltlmod by jmyrnents o 1M8 FALOOir---2DOOB. RADIO. HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANS-MISSION, DELUXE TRIM, WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OP 129.78 PEft MO. See Mr. Write at Harold Turner Ford. Ml 4-7900. I960 FORD 8 rgCK. ISSoT BY DOWN.- PAYMENTS OF 126.75 PER MO. See Mr. Parke at Her-old Turner Ford. MI 6-7605. 1956 FORD 4-DOOR, RADIO. HEAT- MI 6-4536 L CON- heater, automatic transmission, 146 down, payments as low as 627.18 per month. Cell .Mr. OTfar 196a THUNDERBIRD CONVERT1-ble. Burgandy. Jull, power, ebarp ......... ..82195 Autobaihn Motors, Inc. • 6455 W. Huron (MM) 1960 FORD FAIRL/®®7 “50 door’. Radio, heater.. automatic, whitewalls. VI engine. $1,005 John McAullffe ■ ; FORD •630 Oakland Ave/ AUGUST SPECIALS 1988 BONNEVILLE SPORT COUPE, hydramatlc, radio, heater, now" brakes, power steering, whttewal Ivory. Sharp. Low dqwn payment tie beauty. Hydramatlc. radio, heater. power brakes power steering, whitewalls. Low down payment. WE HAVE A FEW 1963 DEMOS $ THAT MOST/OOl! TER.RIFIC DEALS! • • STOP IN LET’S DEAL TODAY! V Haupt Pontiac Open Monday, Tuesday and Thureday until. 9 p.m. One Mile North of U S. 10 on Ml! month.' LLOYDS 1962 FORD CONVERTIBLE, -BTICfc, SHARP. 11895, FE 5-0110, W. VALE.______*■ , . - 1983 >ALCON FUTDRA, AUTO . __________k interior, 61798. JEROME FERGUSON Rochester FORD Dealer OL 1«87» I FORD V8 AUTOMATIC STA-on wagon, A large roomy power-it station wagon. Yours for only 145 dowq and paymsnts as low ■ The penact yaoatlc d m Ponjiac ‘ \ Retail : :-j7 y, Stpre 6^Mt. Clemens St- 1962/FORD GALAXIE. 4-DOOR,/ cylinder, stick, radio mid hr-'* Power steering end brakes, onto lid's car. 81,688. i JEROME FERGUSON/ M~ DOUBLE CHECKED 2 DOOR HARDTOPS 1959 BUICK Electro 1 Door Hardtop ...- .$1488 1962 BUICK Skylark 2 door Hardtop V..... ,... .$^595' 1958 BUICK. Special 2 door Hardtop .......7 :...:. .$ 795 1961 BUICK Electra -2 doqr Hardtop .' ..... .-.....: $2385 U: DOUBLE CHECKED 4 DOOR’ SEDANS^ 1957 PONTIAC Star Chief; 4-door sedan ....... .$ 695 1957 BUICK -Special T Door .Sedan . 595 1961 BUICK LeSabre 4 Door Sedan ....... ;V7. v.. / .$2095 1960 TRIUMPH 4^door Sedan. 4-soeedbox,....... $ 495 tDOUBLE CI IECKED-^H)OOR; SEDANS 7/ 1959' PONTIAC. StPfchief 2 Door: Sedan; 1959 BUICK-LeSabre 2c Deor^ Sedan ... 1961 OPEL” 2 Door bedan .. /...... / . >. 19§1 BUICK Special 2 Door.Sedan. ..... .:$1488 ..$1295 .$1295 r.$1695 ■ .7'. // DOUBLE CHECKED; CONVERTIBLES 1959 CHEV^ Impaki Convert iBle . .. I .$1576- 1961 ELECTRA "225" Convert/fele :7 7;.. ,.\..,. .$2585, 1962 BUICK Invicta Convertible - -.jrrtjz77777-.: .if2777 1961 CHEVY Impala Convertible ...., .$1775. * : '77 DOUBLE CHECKED STATION WAGONS 7/ . . 1959 FORD Station Wagon, Stick ....,.......... .'..$ 795 1959 CHEVY Station Wagon; Automatic ..... u. .^y. .$ -995 J-9fiQ.OPEI. Station Waaon,- Stick .,'77.;..... .$ 995 1961 TEMPEST Station Wagon, Automatic . *..: $.... .$1484 * Look‘for the f Lot Willi . the Double-Checked UsW Car Signs ’ , OLIVER ‘ 196 and 210 ORCHARD LAKE'. ‘*FE2-9$5': ; Demo. ancHnodel clearance- sale FANTASTIC SAVINGS RAMBLERS Are Going Fasf * IN NOW! I LARGE TRADErIN , Allowances BILL SPENCE rRambler-Jeep. 6673 Dixie Hwy. at MIS CLARK8TON MA 8-5861 1962 Pblcon BEATTIE “Ydur jbaD DEALER Since 1934“ ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE 8TOPUORT OR - 3-1291 1962 FORD WAOON, 4 DOOR, V-8. sutomatlc, radio and heater, power steering .and ! brakes, factory official car, 61995 JEROME FERGUSON Rochester FORD Deftlea OL l-97TT~ct— 1959 CONTINENTAL 4-DOOR HARD; BOBBORST Wianlcfll—conilltlon. _ wm; tlfW top, Iftfta. Bloomfield. - 8AVE ON NEW AND USED CARS ,> AT : WILSON _ PONTIAC CADILLAC BOBBORST Uncoln-Mereury ' * 520 Woodward Ave. •• -Birmingham ■ MI a-45 SIMMONS DEMOS . 1953 T-BIRD hardtop... with power steering, brakes, radio, whitewalls, low rnueal*, epbOees. ■ *~ 1963 OALAXIE 500XL 2-door hardtop 220 h.p. motor, Crulsamatlc, radio 2-speM whitewalls, washers, por 1963 FORD OALAXIE 500 3-door Victoria *230 h.p. Crulsamatlc power steering and brakes, radio, abarp. 1963 FAIRLANE 2-door with VI glne. radio, and Ford-o-matlo ti mission, aharpl 1963 FORD Oalnxto 9 v.RAY SIMMONS BETTE RJ5ERV EPS YOU SQhD WHERE BETTER, KEEPS YOU t-__ Ml S. Lapeer Rd. CGME VISIT . > RUSS JOHNSON'S USED GAR STRIP v \7. ONE FULL BLOCK OF E»JE USED CARS. DIRECTLY-ACROSS THE STREET FRO^KNEW CAR. SALESROOM Under Lights and Open. Every Night ’tlkP. p.im ■ Mondfty Thru Friday DEMONSTRATE: ClfAND prix , , Red with black cordova top, white Interlpr, power ateering, brakes and window*, easy eya' glass, tilt steering wheel, hoes' private cor.* . $90(f DISCOUNT- GRAND Kimberly blub with black ’‘Interior, ■«• wheels and discs.' tilt stearins wheel, pn steering, and braks$, safety traction. This li ^ rB “r' $1,000 DISCOUNT . ’63 RAMBTEir^M^A^ADOR- Bucket seats, automatic, power steerlng^ pblvtr; brakes, easy , eye glass, white tires, Thlt la • -$ooo DISCOUNT Individual reclining seat!, automatic, 6-eyllnder, radio, heater low mileage. Gold and white with all gold Interior. Economical transportation. -$500 I SUMMER SPEQAL&- ’61 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE • All white, blun top, power -ataor- • tng, power bmkea. Sharp as a $2195- - 1062 MERCURY - COMET; This to an Mi’ black *beauty' with red * interior, automatic $1695 1961 RAMBLER WAGON: $1395 1959 FORD "T*1 GALAXIE Hardtop/ This (harp nil white 2-Door to n one-owner with V-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering, power bmkea,- ’ ’61 CHEVROLET . , CONVERTIBLE v . Beautiful one-owniy. - Power steerthlt. power brakee, automatic. Brown and whlta. $1995 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA $1295 1960 FALCON “ 2-Door. This gas-saving beauty is ready ‘to go. Coipt see and drive It,. Priced right’ at $795 1959 CHEVROLET - WAGON 1961 CORVAIR MONZA Coups. This little beauty to Mi . red. Haa bucket itato,• nuta>-matlo transmission, whitewall tires. Bargain at „■ $1695 ' 1961. TEMPEST '- Wagon with, light green finish, 6-cylindsr engine, stick shift. A.' , reel gas saving beauty. $1495: 1962 J»ONT.IAC 4-Door Sedan, one owner, Btarchlef. Automatic. Y-l,’ leath-antrilb, low mllange. ‘This to a beauty. Priced to sell. $2395 1961 ANGLIA English Ford 2-Door. . A $1195 $1095 .$795 . MANY MORE TO CHOOSE .FROM- - Russ Johnson , PONTIAC- RAMBLER-DEALER- Lake Orion M-24 at. the Stoplight MY 3-6266: WE FINANCE WHEN OTHERSCANNOT REGARDLESS OF GREDITSTATUS WECAN PUT YOU IN ONE OF OUR MANY USED CARS . ’ || (100 TO' CHOOSE FROM)' EVEN IF: ‘ YOU HAVE BEEN BANKRUPT YOU HAVE BEEN . IN RECEIVERSHIP -YQTJ H&VNHflDr A REPOSSESSION WE£UARANTEE DELIVERY IN S MIN; LISTED BELOW ARE SOME OF THE MANY CARS ' • ' Wff HAVE l-UK IMMEDIATE LIQIHDAIION-—L- . — ' , ; 1956 Cadillac Convertible, Full power.- powder fpr a ate as of Aug. 'L 1963. _JjULL ’LIQUIDATION PRICE WEEKLY PAYMENTS 83.58' - 1958 : Ford 4-Dooi;\ 8-cyllnder. automatic, black with w^jte top. FULL LIQUIDATION PRICE S197 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $2 80 1959 Chevy ■ Impala Convertible, Automatic, V-8. Boautlfur Jet black finish with, black top. FJTLL LIQUIDATION PRICE ^79t^ weekly Payments laic i95a iac- PULL" LIQUIDATION PRICE $497 WraXL-r*PATMENT|J»5» - 1959 Mercury PULL LIQUIDATION PRICE * WEEKLY PAYMENTS 64.10 ’ 1957 ~ Buick • Special 2-Door Hardtop. Rsdte, heater. Dyrlaflow. Beautltul M-tens bronlo and white. FULL LIQUIDATION PRICE $397 WEEKLY PAYMENTS $4.80 SPOT DELIVERY . i ; 5 MINUTES WIDE SELECTION, StoediT * • -NO PROBLEM PAYMENTS To SUIT YOUR BUDGET CREDiT MAN-ON duty:' ■. FROM . - 9A.M; 9 P.M." ^ 1957 Chrysler Imperial . 4-Door. Hardtop. Full p o pe t\ ' ten maculate. ^ Estete ^ULti IJQ6lDATTON PRICE $597 WEEKLY PAYMENTS 68 80 -i§57r ; Mercury’ Montelalr 2-Door Hardtop. Radio. heater, tu-tono blue and PULL LIQUIDATION PRICE ; $197 WEEKLY PAYMENTS 62.80 1959 Chevy 4-Door Btatton Wagon. Radio, ‘—tar, 6 109-S. EAST BLVD/ At AUBURN FE 3-7162 7JP---’— THE PONTIAC PKfeSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1063 1 LLOYDS Lot, No. a 123 Oakland Av 1M COM ■ Tot DOOR. RADIO, ' h»»t«r. automatic. Jet black. Ada It payment. a OoFor furtb Mr. O'Hara, i m*lBIRMrNOHAM RAMBLER ss... roSSfc" GOOD SHAPE. 8PK- . Autobahn Motors, Inc, 4455 W. Huron • » OB 4-SMS JmJ MERCURY METEOR, 4 DOOR. ISfi. 1 k JEROME FERGUSON *> Roche, ter. FORD Dealer , • hardtop. Automatic^; newer steer. I fit and- BrMtaa. "rnrof neater, lac-*— conditioning. Full BOBBORST Lincoln-Me reutv tm f. Woodward AVe. • guburban Olds 865 S. Woa&Ward . 1958 OLDS STARFIRE. LOADED.. 19U Bulck Special, like new • 1960 Dodge Polara hardtop 1»M Olds m hardtop Economy Discount. 2325 Dixie ■Looking, for a dependable !used car at a good price? - Come tff the - Liquidation llM. ' - s LIQUIDATION LOT 385. Oakland at Sanderson i. All Cars Priced For ' I. Quick Liquidation We Arrange Financing New and Used Cart 1M 3*7. No cash necessary. ■ LIOTIDATION LOT i ■■ms Mm ■IMS '6tM t-bbOR. hARDTQF. Olaan. OB J-0679, lMl OLDSMOBILE STARFIRE convertible. Exe. Bucket, seats, power. Owner . transferred. Best offer. ________ ______ _________ station wagon. Power steering Power bragee. Radio. — First >M0, MI ♦-.HOT* 1956 OLDS TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL Dynamic M, S Poor, la excellent condition, no ruat.---- Terrific falue $495 1 YEAR WARRANTY Suburban Olds 565 fi. Woodward Ml 4-44*5 l Year warranty. \ Snhiirhaft Olds 5 8. Woodward, ; MT4-44I5 1887 PLYMOUTH MOTOR. Ml good condition lttl Cadillac' ,$loo good condition. For tnon information call OR 3-0144. JEvery Pocketbook: . LIQUIDATION LOT 60 S. Telegraph Across trow Tel-Huron R & R MOTORS 3 Hot Specials ’59 Chrysler. Saratoga. 4 door hardtop, automatic : (2) ’59 Plymouth’s Custom 4 door wagons, Vt au matte, take your pick ,,.... 0885. W Warranty on all c WMm Today s Special Bargains ALL CARRY 2 YEAR GW WARRANTY PONTIAC’S IQfih TATA TIN A Now .$1385 1959 CONVERTIBLE Pontiac Catalina. White with white and black matching Interior. Fully equipped. WAS 01585 19W CONVERTIBLE Pontiac UataUna. A beautiful auto with fUU power. ^>4960 M 2-Door‘Wardtoi Now $1585 Now $1365' r> I960 PONTIAC 2-Door Hardtop. A beautiful white. One-owner Birmingham - Now $1385 1961 PONTIAC 3-Door Beige.; can't he i frohynew. The big bargain the day. Only $1595 CHEVROLET'S 1959 IMPAI.A 4-Door Hardtop. Fully aqulppe Including power steering. Beai ttful tu-tone fob, . WAS 01480 1962 MONZA to to choose from. Four e floor. Like new. WAS 81895 Now $1695 WAS gtSfe •• Now $1345 Only $1445- Only $695 OTHER SP^bTAN BARGAINS 1960 STARLINER 2-Door Hardtop. Luggage tin, beautiful matching interior. Now $1195 MERCURY; _____Jardtop. A beautiful 1> mileage car, fully equipped. WAS 41445 Now .$1185 I960 FORD 2-DOor/ Automatic, radio, or. Clean, low mllenge. WAS $MM Now $795* -4959 PLYMOUTH. Fury 4-Door Sedan. The perfect fimtly car. -*■ — WAS I Now $695 • t060 BODGE 2-Door Hardtop. .Automatic, fu factory equipment. WAS-01001 . Npw $895 1961 VALIANT 3-Dmc Hit_d_toj>. Automatic, power steering and full tactory ------* -Well -kept-, awe own -New$i295- Only $845 I960 PHOENIX 2-Door Hardtop. Full equl.im including power steering. -WAS. A Now $1275 ,198) DODGE 4-Door Sedan.- 6-cyllnde-, not a mark on it-. Runs beautifully. Now $795 Has' power ateerlr wlpdows. aeat. ‘Low’ mileage’. •Bimlngnam trade. -WAS 81180 Now$1695 il959 BUICK^ 4-Dooa. Beautiful pne-Ov -invicte Sedan. - Full lac Now $1095 wsstokd;' ■i Jik’c new and look* 1 r. Low mileage with at -Only $395 and new. „ . FK l»4( • BIG tike New 1861 Lasabre convertible, white, red Interior, black top; .tb|g car. Equipped with PP^-tte^rlng.i W,"*Dl,$2195 Suburban Olds is s. Woodward 1858 PLYMOUTH "FURY V8" I door with automatic transmission radio, heater, amt white-car mechanical'' ly and pleasing _ kan white finish with a dark blue ton and a neat blue In-dandy family vtertor. Here l ten guarantee. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth, ini 112 S, Woodward MI 7-3214 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR. :ga|n. ( I. BAR- y, dealer EM 8-0061, radio, MUil add extras, 6725 or fair offer, 334-2066. v ___ . l|66u PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE - 1858 P_______ White with b lop. exc. oonaw Call OR>1511, Ngw ond Utgd Can 106 0 OLD CARE WANTED list metro Convertible. 1200. 357 W, Beverley, PE, o 1858 AMBASSADORdWTAT TATiON______, power brakes. 270 HP. engine. kd^atlon^S i^-3800 ” RAMBLER AMB A8SADOR 4 or sedan, power steering, power, ekes. Individual seats. Yours for! ■a “ ^ For, a*.low m $31.93 _____________ further lnformatiou call Mr. O'Hara manager. 'BRIGHT ‘SPOT" '.JEROME .Orchard Lake .at. Cass I BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, unkttL aeate, new tires, brakes. 1. PE 4-6455. 1856 PONTIAC CLUB g DOOR: DIO, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITE SIDE- WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY . . MONEY DOWN. PAYMENT* OF 8*3.75 PER MO.‘See Mr. Parks 1850 POfn'tAC 4 . FoWer_ brakes.'. 1 I860 PONTIAC 1-DOOR, HYDRA-- matte, Power steering and brakes, radio, beater, whitewalls. Solid blue finish. 81.285. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1806 8. Woodward Awe.. Birmingham: Ml 4-2735. TEMPEST 4 • DOOR SEDAN » PONTIAC -^CATatmA" ■or sedan with Hydramatlc, p< r> steering, 1 ■' |---- '■ ________ ______ and other extras. .Original silver gray metallic finish with neat multi-color Interior -trim. Performs and handies eery nicely and It is .guaranteed in writing' for a full yeas. OUR MONTH END SALE PRICE Is only 63185. Easy, financing' chn be arranged on new car terms, Birmingham Htgin— 1851 TEMPEST. EXCELLENT CON- SALE CARS 106 4 DOOR SPORTS yii ■■ft. Clcin. . 3-1854. ■■ '___________ ■ 1862 PONTIAC CATALINA . CON- ertlble. hydramatlc.. powe dose. Come and seg' why. Has I matching Interior. 12.485. PATTER-power steering,, power brakes, 4>lg SON CHEVROLET CO.; 1000 8. engine. 1*5 down, payments ■> low Woodward Are., MI 42735. “ 5?7.!*>er A™?**1: Fqr further 19*3 PONTIAC TEMPEST STATION' InfOTmatlon. call Mr. O’Hara, ered-1 wagon. Clean. 1 owner, 21550. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER MI 6-3906 1862 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTQP. ijl"" "STICK BHlff c^t^lSpil^-’^TlAC CATAUNA^dOR t black beauty -uA|gJ ■ brakes, like NEED ROOM ! • 8 ear • p e c I a 1 s 1854 end ’ 1855 - Ch«v**. Fords %nd Buiclys. f3$ 10 $95. EconomV Motor Discount. 2337 1960 RAMBLER CUSTOM STATION 861 AMBASSADOR 4 DOOR SEDAN power stoering, power brakes, automatic transmission. Red with pietchlnr red and gTM^totertpr mqnth. For furtKrbSorauiuon caU Mr. O Hara. credit ' I certified mfloi. tnenl. as lew e*, *44 IS ,-------------- Full price 81.585.' Up to W mlleg-per gallon on this beauty * r warranty. HuiTy, this e BIRMINOHAM RAMBLER ■ Cass Lk, Rd.' HASKINS USED CARS t throughout, 'Solid Maro, 1861 CHEVY PARKWOOD 4 door 863 CHEVY BEL'AIR 2 door. V8, powergllde. radio, carrys new-car1 Warranty . Silver bluer finish. -Save HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds Mansfield . : AUTO SALES 10761 Baldwin Av&_ ....33S-S9G0 ■«Q PONTIAC 2tdoor hardtop; po. 58 PONTIAC 2-door hatd steering and brakes, White. ^'■59 'FgRP'"Oaiffjtrc 2-doOTrhurdtop.4 ■ md"* Automatic, red and bjMU ’58 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop. ■60 PONTIAC Catalina 4 “Steering and hi p. 30,000 miles. SPECTACULAR AUGUST - SPECIALS \61 .Chevrolet Impala Convertible V-8. automatic 4ransmlsslon, double pqwer, radio and heater. id wank with ftlktk tell. '62 Chevrolet Impala Convertible V4. Powerglltle. radlo end hei / «r. Black with red Interior a whitewalls.. $2399 '62-Chevy II- 9 Passenger Wagon 6-cyltuder. Powergllde. radio* and heater, . fawn 'beige with. . beige frim. ^ $1799 '62 Chevrolet. linpafa' -v-Sport Coupe- jwSrglide ' with - powe radio and heater. Bolli ver„wlth red Interior. $2199 1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORTS COUPE Corvette engine, 4 speed ‘transmission, radio and heater. ■ jet black with red interidf. ■ . $1999 : '62 Chevy II 300 4 door- 4-cyllnder with power steering, power brakes, standard te tft. tuHooe turauoli# ana Ivory with whitewalls.. $1499 '61: Chevrolet Impala Conyertible- /-«. automatic trsnsmisslo $1799 '62 Poritiac “OR:¥lfWa Sports’Sedad' $2399 '59 Chevrolet r fcV- : Biscayne 2 door Tcyllrnffc standard' tr*h«mt»-sion. radio and heater, sottd polo white with whitewalls. ~$899 '60 Ford. Fairlane. 500' d-DoorT^Y-l. standard transmission, , radio and • heater, runs good. Robin's egg blue wjth whitewalls. • $799 '60 Chevrolet Parkwood, Wagon * " , 4-Door, (-cylinder. * Powergllde, $1399 '62 Rambler Custom Classic 4-Door, automatic transmlesten, radio and beater. U's Uker new. ■nild white with turquoise trim. $1699- '62Chevrolet Biscayne '4 dbor : (-cylinder, standard tn slon, radio and heater, ■tprea ytth red Interior. $1599 '61 Chevrolet Bel Air Sports Sedan “•' (-cylinder, Powergllde, power, $1599 '59. Chevrolet Parkwood Wagon ' ’ i * V-g. Powergllde. power stem; lng. heater and signals. Solid $899 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES ■ ; ,-—’631 OakloRd at Gtssl-- FE 4-4547 '- ^ -FE-5-4161: - BLRMlNG+tAM chrySLer-plymouth. INC. 812 8. Wood iv I J957^RAMBLER. STATION WA Marvel Motors 1808 PONTIAC. GLEAN. |125. 1856 PONTIAC HARDTOP. CLEAN. EM 3-0081, Conwt LLOYDS BUY YOUK NEW ■RAMBLER -HOUGHTEN & SON® !8 N/ Main It Rochester OL 1-9761 Llncoln-Mercury Lot No. 2 2923 Oakland Ave. 1857 PONTIAC, POWER STEERING and brakes .: ......- 2325 1857 PONTIAC stick , ..8185 .8273 _____________ hardtop .... 1958 PLYMOUTH 4-door ........ 2355 HUTCHINSON SALES 3835 Baldwin Rd. . PE 5-2742--------- FE 8-0057 - SEE THE •‘DEPENDABLES" KESSLER'S DODGE Lapeer Rd. MATTHEWS- '' . HARGREAVES . -—CHEVROLET-— Has Opening for AU Late Model Used Cans Call or drive by 631 Oakland at Cass - TOP PRICES ' OFFERED This ; Week's SPECIAL ETFmANCE VERT RgASONABLY 1858 Rambler 4-dobr. 6 cylln. standard transmission? 960 Pontia,c 9 passenger, fiill-pov automatic, radio andheaterr^ 958 Ford Ranch wagon. 6 cylinder 1 Year Warranty 'BRIGHT SPOT'! 7- JEROME Orchard Lake at Cass ■ FE -8-0488;,- - BIRMINGHAM ■'-TRADES.' Every used car offered for rpJ;ril to" the public"is a bona fide* 1-owuier, low-milcagc. , sham ^ar. 1-yeaf, parts and labor .’arfahty. '56 BUICK 2-door h‘ardtop, p3wei 56 FORD TliunderMrd eonvertlbls '59-CHEVY Impala convertible, add white. Power steering brakes, VS, automatic. 59 PUEGEOT.4-door super, l-o 11 FALCON Deluxe, htg motor, automatic transmission,-. 4-door, beautiful'blue ftnieh. pith 33,000 n ) MERCURY 2-door. VI, etlyk, 1 1863 R1VEIRA (2) 1863 8PECIAL conyertlbU 1962 SPECIAL 4 AUQtJST 1, 1968 *bMr spfl ■ E—l E—It: • ■-u*Todd/s Television Programs— Programs fumishod by stations listed In this column art subject to change without notice Chotwwll-WJIMV Chesssl 4-WW.MV Chsewl 7-WXYZ-tV CIuSbsI 9-CKLW-TV OmqiotI SO-WTUS TONIGHT 6:99(2) News, Editorial, Sports, Weather (4) Deputy t (7) Movie: “The 49th Man."(In Progress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (M) What’s New 6:25 (4) (7) ,Weather,' News, Sports 6:30 (2). Highway Patrol (56) French Through TV 7:01 (2) Peter Gunn (7) (Colors Michigan Outdoors t - , t (9) Huckleberry Hound (56) Japan: Changing .- Years' 7:30 (2) Fair Exchange (7) Ozzie and Harriet (9) Movie: “Mission in —— Morocco.” (1959) Lex Bar- 1 ' her. -..--J (56) What in the World? 8:00 (2) Perry Mason (4) Two Faces West * (7) Donna Reed (56) Beyond the Earth 8:99 (4) Dr. Kildare (7) Leave It to Beaver •:90(2)-Iwilight Zone ~ . - (7) My Three Sons (9) Wrestling 9:91 (4) (Color) Lively Ones (7) McHale’s Navy 10:00 (2) Nurses ^ . (4)'Summer Special ■1 (7) Premiere PF (9) News, Weather, Telescope UAW 10:91 (9) Man in a Landscape 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports '• \(9) Pioneers 11:25 (7) Moyle: “Wicked as TV Features Billy Graham's World DR. KILDARE, 8:90 p'. m. (4) Dr. Kildare is sued when patient dips from drug he administered. • ■ ■ ■ - TW1UGHT leader fails to sway, audiences until he receives advice from fftnn'THng source _____—____- - LIVELY ONES, 9:90 p. m. (4) Comedian Allan Sherman, clarinetist Pete Fountain, guitarist Charlie Byrd, trumpeter A1 Hirt join host Vic Damone. „ PREMIERE, 10:00 p. m. (7) Blackmailer threatens to I ruin high school football coach if he doesn’t ^threw big «■—^SUMMER SPECIAL, 10:00 p.m. (4)^Life story;of §. evangelist Billy Graham. -• - *-> Apartheid Slap Pushed ia UN. Africans Hit Regime of Johannesburg UNITED NATIONS, Sf.Y. (UPI) —African members of the United Nations today pressed their at-talk on South Africa’s segregation policies before the U.N. Security Council following a successful move against Portugal. the Africans seek “‘firm and pa«itjv»” action • ayaiimt white government of South Africa for Its' “apartheid” program of keeping whites and Negroes .separated and of denying Negroes any real part in the gov-erment. But counsels of moderation by the United States and Britain appeared to be haying an effect. The Africans* opening speeches in the apartheid debate yesterday were surprisingly mild in They Come.” Arlene Dahl. 11:99 (2) Steve Alien-Variety , (4) (Color) Tonight Car-son. ■ V - it) Movie: “Flying High.’1 (1991) Bert Lehr, Pat O’Brien. FRIDAY MORNING 1:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On .the Farm Trent 6:25 (2) News - , 6:30 (2) Specteum 7:19 (2) News (4) Today.... (7) Funews 7:95 (2) Fun Parade 7:99 (7) Johnny .Ginger 7:41 (2f King and Odie n r r- q r 7" r* r- r HP r 12~j rcn nr 2 iTI jf® r I R T5" 20 21" H U 3“ | 24 25 26 g|HHg| ■BBBI 32“ 33 1 35 36" 3T w i 35" 40 IT ZZj W B w 4T r— 46 47 48 ■ W 50 51 52 ST sr 55 5T w sr 8T sr 6T ■t 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:89 (7) Big Show-8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s M er r y-G o-■■ Round. ^ ”v4-'' 9:91 (2) December Bride (4) Living « ' . • (7) Movie: “Mrs. Fjj . bert.” (1947, British; (9) Abbott and Costello 9:99 (2) To Tell.tbeyTruth ■ (9) Window ory Canada 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:09 (2) Cennie/Page (4) Say (9) Robin Hood 10:25 (4) 10:30 (2)/l Love LuCy . (Color) Play Your Hunch (9) Movie: “Murder Without Crime." (1951, British) [9:41 (7) News 11:09 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) >rlce Is Right (7) Jack LaLanne il:99 p Pete and Gladys . (4) Concentration______ (7) Seven Keys FRIDAY AFTERNOON 1 Liquid bodies 5 Eucharistic liquid holders ; • 9 liver oil . . * 12 Italian stream 13 Scottish take 14 ice ----- 15 Illumina tion 17 Observe 18 Rings , 19 Saturated in a liquid 21- Mineral springs 23 Male cat - . 24 Feast day (comb- form). * 27 Herbert E.—^--29 Recompense 99 Terminate1 . 34 Mulct. -36Deviteiis*— ■■■■—■ ---- 37 Puzzles . V. ~ —98 Essential being 39 Love god 41 Sioux City gal 42 Entangle • — 44 Grafts -V-'.,..".. , 46 Least excitable— 49 Winged .. 53 Aged ;M MK "' '—: 56 Fourth Arbian caliph 57 Metal 58 Insights 59 Varnish ingredient 60 Depression 61 Italian community . DOWN . 1 Coarse hominy . . 2 Great-lake V 3 Girl’s name 4 Pollutes 5 Altitude (ab.) 6 Frozen dessert 7 Land measure '8 Shroud, \ . 9 Soft-faiwick ' 10 Molding \ . 11 Legal document 16 Reach for \ 20 Heavy voluntas \ 22 Genus of grasses \ 24 Native of Media \ 25 Cutting implements' \ 26 Excitable- \ 28 Flavor . \* 30 Unbleached 31 From himself ; \ . 33 Utopian 35 Military gadget .140 Housekeeper -43 Lukewarm 45 Abate . 46 Fuel . 47 Spanish stew 48 Painful * 50 Affirmative votes. Sl.Canvas shelter 52^Gaelic 55 Explhsive -----Answer to Previous puzzle Californian Doesn't Agree New York Has Everything By JEARL WILSON NEW YORK—A California tourist ruined my day Just as I was trying to convince Diana Dors of London, and Hollywood that New York has everything v. . everything. \ it.1'" ★ jt' ! made out a list of things, to hand to her chauffeur. Signs, characters ... > ,, . “If you ‘ enjoy humidity /The parkways jamtned/The beaches full/New York’s a summer Bra festi-vull.,. “So many tilings to see and do/Hie rumbles at the Brooklyn Zoo/Hurry up and make your will/New York's.a summer festlville.” . In front of BuddhlsPliei9qDirten~-I—waaj making a note that Diana could hear Buddist lectures tree. A young guy cricked a finger at me. “Dries New York have a Japanese town?" -^MoA'-I said, unhappily, “San-Diego dobs!" he exclaimed . . . “Oh?” I walked away. He followed. “Sacramento does!" he pursued- “They call it ’Little Tokyo.’ ” “Good, good^" I walked faster. He was right OB my heels. “Loa Angeles does! San Francisco The action taken against Portugal for its cotehjal policies in Africa also was more moderate than the Africans had demanded. . 'it Hie council-voted 8-0 to request ail Countries to impose a partial afms embargo on Portugal .and called on Portugal to grant self-determination to its African colonies. The United States* Britain, and France, which'are allied to Portugal through the NATO treaty, abstained from voting. Portuguese Foreign Minister Alberto Franco Nogueira called it “most revolting resolution,” hut it was considerably watered down through amendments submitted by Venezuela. , r * : it What this did was to change the wording of the resolution to milder language, calling on the council to appeai to Portugal instead of Issue orders to it. ^(4) ’(Color) First Impres-' SMWr ‘ t i : (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:25 0) News 12:3M2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences ' .’ (7) Father Knows Best * (9) Dr.' Hudson’s .Journal 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:11 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) General Hospital . (9) Movie:- “Meet Me in St. i Louis." (1944). Judy Garland,- M a r g a r e t . 0,’Brien. , 1:9M2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho - • i • (7) Girl Talk 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will! . ■ Talk. . (?) Day in Court ,2:25 (4) (7) News ' 2:30 (2) House Party- . , • . (4) Doctors .1 • (7) Jane Wyman 3:66 (2) Star Playhouse / (4) Loretta Young f-~ ~ ; (7) JQueen for - a Day 3:15 (9) News 2:99 (2) Edge of Night ' \ . (-1). (Color) You Don’t- Say.’■ V (7) Who Do You TYust?. \ (9) Vacation Time 4:lk(2) Secret Sfbrm w Mk Match Game ‘ ^ (7) American Bandstand 4:M (4) (lews. 4:99 (2) Millionaire • (4>^Make Room for Daddy ’ (7) Discovery ’69”’‘--" - (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:55 (7) American Newsstand lilt (2) Sea Hunt —v— 1 “ i- <4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie': “Zanzibar.” (1940) (9) Larry and Jerry 1:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:91 (2) Whirlybirds ’ (56) What’s New "t 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:51 (4) Carol Duvall President Announces U. S. Education Week WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres-ident Kennedy has proclaimed as Amerkin Educa- tion Week. it-" ★ ' ilr, In his proclamation yesterday, Kennedy asked Amricans „ to learn about the quality of educa- Peking Threatens Boycott of Conclave Tokyo UR — Red China threatened today to boycott the Ninth World Conference. Against. Nuclear Weapons, opening in Hiroshima Monday, unless the Japanese Justice*.Ministry withdraws its refusal of visas to three Chinese delegates. The leader of-the 14-member Chinese delegation messaged that hia group was postponing Its departure from Hong Kong until visas for all. the Chinese <* ‘ gates were issued. A 14-member-Soviet delegation JaJftjrrive-from Moscow Friday nigh t . The Tostice ministry has Teftned entry to on* of Its arlg. Inal members. The ministry said it barred the Chinese and~tiie Russian because they are individually undesirable, not because they ore jCom-l munists. It did hot elaborate. ‘ a. Diana, we’ve got everything including Californians proving we don’t have everything. THE MIDNIGHT EARL Some politico* predict Rocky Will eventually support Romney . "Stop Gold water” . . . Leslie Uggams is flying back to start TV-taping this, week .. . Miss Universe went to La Fonda del Soi to salute Peruvians’ annjyersary. People exclaimed, “She looks like Anne Bancroft!” ... . ★ .- / . ' REMEMBERED QUOTE: "The eaaiest person to deceive is j one’s own self.1' Rosamond Williams! SONOTONE SO K. C«ra*U f| MOOS | SorvicM and SuppliM for ALL HIARINe -AIM-——.aJfc.—... .Gentle Donkey for Hire? (UPD <— A woman advertised today in the Times of London for a “gentle donkey required to Hire for one month; lav-loving care assured.” .' “Architects cover their mistakes with ivy, doctors with earth,1 says the Irish-Digest, “and bridles with: mayonnaise.” . . That’s; earl, brother. - ' V-: . r (TkaBsn StbOImU, !■«.) ■> Cache of Explosives Said Bound to Cuba MANDEVILLE, La. W — FBI agents seized a cache of explosives at a house in a resort section near here yesterday. An informed source said the ‘ explosives were part of a cache destined for Cuba. There have been no arrests. - More than a ton of dynamite and 20 bomb casings were found at the cottage across Lake' Pont- Drop In at Army Field 5CHWEINFURT, German (UP!) — Six Czechoslovakian spenti planes made storm-forced landings on a U.S. Army air field yesterday. Hie pilots were allowed to fly out after questioning.! Refrigerators >39? ELECTRIC H 4-259S COMPANY 825 W. Huron dynamite, in 50-oound containers,! was in a two-wheel trailer. I Also confiscated were paraphe-naiia tor putting warheads on! bombs and 50 pounds of nuodex,! j tion and opportunities tor the in-a jeily-Uke substance which is .dividual Which Schools, colleges mixed with gasoline to produce! and universities now offer. | napalm. CONDON'S TV for Big Valins .. RCA tad ZENITH — . Excellent Service Color, Block and White SUMMER SALE ■ * $90095 *nd On AH Colo, TV toll AUTHORIZED SALES | AND SIRVICE Licensed Dealer by Michigan T.E.S.A. I.lceme No. 1IS» . CONDON'S RADIO & TV 710 WEST HURON—Across Pram Now Port Office / PI 4-9736 USED ESS BUYS 16“ OLYMPIC —»I4H 17" MOTOROLA •1995 14" MOTOROLA ny* 17"TELEKING w 17" ZENITH W5 21 "MUNTZ f29»5 21 "AIRLINE ♦34M 21" CROSLEY W 20^ MOTOROLA •39®* 21"RCA ®4995 Cash or Terms 60 OTHER SETS 30-DAY-EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE TV Sit E. Walton Blvd. FE 2-2267 CORNER JOSLYN OPEN 9 to 9 —Today's Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZQ 27Q)CKlW(iOO) WWJ(9SO) WCAR(1130) WPON(l 440) WIBKO 500) WHFl-fM(94.7) TONIOHl * •:0*^WJR» New* WWJ, Newt . CRLW, News WXY2. N»*» WJBK, Robert B. Lee WCAR, Bacardi* WPON^Bbb Levrence Sho WHFI.NtWt t:IS-WJR. Business Re** . WWJ, Business WXTZ. Ales Dealer - CKLW, D. Shafer > WHFI. Music Jar Moderns WJBK. Kemjedjr , 1:»a-wjr. lows. Sparta . WW.J, fhohe' OnlAlon ’ WXVB Bd Morgan CKLW f -fee a la WJBK, J. Bellboy ______ wxtz, bah Aim ' CKLW. B. Slecrtat . . f Sa^w/^cLiral Caaatt CKLW, Bob Staton , l:W—WJR, World Tonight g:lf—WJR. Erehlng Concert S:9B— WWJ. Music Scene t:M—WJR, Detroit Sympb »:*•—WWJ, World News titt—WWJ. Music Sean# M:aS—WJR. Jim Latfnce WWJ, Race, Religion ll.-a*-WWe. News ; - CKLW Joe Gentile . WCAR. News, Sports WJR. News IlfU-CKLW. Bob Staton llrSa^WJB Music • WWJ. Mhslc TU Dasrn WCAR. Carender ' FMDAf morning (tab—WJR. News. AM :' WWJ. News. Roberta -• Wtri. Fred WeH. Nawa WJBK, News. Arerf WHVT. Rom. Music -■»- -«:•—WJR. Musis BaU WPON. Dais Tlno Traa—CKLW, Newt. Toby David Tria-CKLW. New*. David Siaa-WJlt, News. Guest CKLW. Nawa.-Oavia iia<—wjr. Music Ban SrSS-W/K. News. Rarrle CKLW, Nawa. M*M WCAR. Ntgs. Martvn WHFI. News. McLeod v-Sria—WJR. Lee Murray llraa—WWJ, -News, i \, - . Ask Neighbor J , • Wivz. Break fas!. Club cklw. Joe Vjan WJBK. News, Retd WPON. News. Olsen cklw. Jot Van U:aa-WJR. News. Oodfray WXVZ Winter ^ mi) JOT VaR -.yV; liras—WXTZ. Winter. News __FRIDAY AFTERNOON Iraa—WJR. News. Farm WWJ. Nawa, Martens-CKLW. Ju Van ,wcar. Nawa. Purse lira#—WJR. Bud Oueat WWJ. Emphaau. Martens lraa-WJR. Nawa.. Aft Ltnkl* WHFI. Nsrwa. Burdick trfa—WJR. Garry Mtodre, t.-aa—WJR. Nawa. Sbowcase ' WWJ. Neve. Hultman WXTZ. Joel BebAettan. News WJBK, News. Lee • WPON. News.‘Lawrence ' iH-wjjt Ne wa. 'Jimmy t:.ta—WJR. Ml Jroa-wwj. Ne . . Bumper C WARD-WAY BUDGET PLAN • Ne Intarast • No Carrying Charge o Make Payments at Our Store 17-19 $. SAGINAW ST. Open Tonight jf? PM. FREE J-DELIVERY Special limited . —Wcr - - One - 3 Cushion 1 JAOO Sofa Reg, 149 TWO — Lounge Chairs 39.95 tea. Reg. Reg. Price. Danish-inspired styling^ in the fdam cushioned Sofa and 2 luxurious Loungo Chairs for beauty and comfort. Striped and s^lid color coordinatOd fabrics to enhance your deco?. SAVE W All 3 Pieces “YouMust Be Satisfied—This We Guatanteer -In! 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Colorful. Toy ^Lark”. Auto Reg. $11.88 Charge It A real beauty in blue with—kite trim and 8" vrrmillion-trimmed wheel*. Jet-type (leering wheel. _ 33-in. lortg. shop ’til 9 Tonight. Friday & Satirilav! back** SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 ^Satisfaction guaranteed or your inoney You Can Count on Us... Quality Costs No More at Sears e.iNrir—i« c.»wi»,a>a I The Weather U.S. WeXDifr ■aremn r«« Fair,/MIM Tottlfkt Partlv 'npii TiU. ■ THE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSUAY^ OTfetrST 1; 1963 —SfcPAGES- S&ys-NoifhKor^a At Cadillac Outskirts pppppfpn^ VOL. Vh tfO/ IST TWISTER DAMAGE - This State Highway Department truck and the roof of the department’s sign shop at Cadillac were dam- aged when a tornado hit the area last night Witnesses said the truck was thrown ah high as telephone lines. Tornac/o Strikes North Goldwaler Hits Pentagon Order on Segregation Arizona Senator Says Robert Kennedy Using 'Police State* Tactics To Reign af Fair 4-H Royal Coupl 7| Reds' Charge Ignores Killing 1 of Three Yariks CADILLAC W — A roaring tornado mauled several buildings, tossed a panel truck to telephone-wire heitfit and threatened at least four counties in Northern Michigan but injured- no one — last night. The tornado' missed, a reti- Residents watched the funnel dential area in CadiUae, where form out of swirling; clouds and it concentrated jts punch. It also bypassed the Norther# District Fair nearby and the Clare County hi Harrison before dying hi the cool nirfit air. Mackie Eying roar , eastward across. die north side of Cadillac, where It tore the roof . off a Highway Depart merit sign shop .and flattened a scrap material warehouse, jjr/ fciS---iZ, * . •. ♦ -j0 ' ' ■ The twister also damaged a glass shop and a service station and folded up a 100-foot-tali Oxford Cotmty Highway Department radio tower; —--t . “It was whirling around so much yon couldn*t tell. which way it was. going,” one Cadillac The best of this year’s crop of dountp^-H’ers were chosen yesterday to reign asjcing and queen .lofthed-Wfalr nfxlweek. Eighteervyear-oid Tom Middle-ton jind Carmen Sue Miller, 17, ware selected to rule over the yJug members of the Seymour Lake en best of the 4-rf’ers entering Club, could hardly wait to call her parents, Mn and Mrs. Mil-, ton Miller, at Ijomej 3410 Dartmouth, Brandoa ToWnship. • Although surprised yesterday, _____ydufigstets participating in her mother is accustomed to Car- the annuqle vent.. jmenis winning 4-H honors. Also Views Congress ^ funnei if Rood Post Abolished with two state police cars racing it to warn farmers' in the area. One car had to stop momen-tariiy to get the twister pass. ’Drapers sftd it sounded like a freight trdte. WASHINGTON UP)—Sen. Barry Gold water has opened fire-on a .Pentagon directive that could put segregated communities off limits for servicemen. The Arisons Republican, regarded as a leading contender for his party’s 1984 presidential nomination, rocketed a “police state" charge Wednesday at Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy. * There was no immediate comment from Kennedy, who' has been a favorite target for enters ~yho oppose the adminis- iCarmen, who works on her she was 15, the pretty redhead 4-H projects along with- ether {with the glowing smile was chos- America. Accused of Justifying Imperialism With Imaginary Threat LANSING UB—‘Highway Commissioner John Mackie says he youki consider running ter gov-emor or for Congress in 1904 if Hie legislature, in implementing the. new constitution, decides to abolish his-job at the end ofj £ And - any proposal to wipe out his job or limit his powers until Technical Hitch Forces Delay in 'Peaceful' N-Test ' WASHINGTON UP) - The gov-eminent' announced today .that “technical difficulties” necessitate postponement of plans to detonate a special nuclear device underground at .Carjsbad, N.M. this year as part of its program to develop peaceful uses, of nuclear explosives. The project, known as “Project Coach” — aimed at study-teg tee possibility of producing new chemical elements by means of nuclear blasts — was originally scheduled to be held some time during IMS. But the Atomic Energy Commission reported today teat . a postponement Was needed because of technical difficulties “related to tee development of the special nuclear explosive device required for this experiment." _ The original plans called for detonation of a device packing somewhat less than 10' kilotons - of energy — tee equivalent of 19,000 tons of TNT. 1965 would be “a 100. per cent blatant political move,” Mackie Mid.. The highway commissioner reacted defiantly yesterday to the 'suggestion by Sen. Garry Brown, R-Scbo«lcraft, that the legislature-may __________ the job or strip him. of ‘his authority. —TT Brown is chairman of an agency subcommittee of a larger leg- , j ... ■ , : .1 City officials dgaln warned islative committee studying ten-,ua, ui-the special faU session. • | on .fi^t parking He said the legislature could! *ots‘ ^ ^ A enact a law abolishing Mackie’s $17,500-a-year job, or limiting'his powers and duties, when the new tvsbb uiidnnit uhu a r — w he goes out of office on June tered lots fdr six months, ex- locratic party” without informing1 Jury in the Old Bailey Court j- The probationary periods will, 30,1965. pired today. * > Congress of the action: | (Continued on Page 2, CoL 4) ;run concurrently. -vwgvj “I have‘fully intended'to finishi ‘ , . . ” . , • - - T"7 out my term, but if Mr. Brown ■■ ■ „ In Today's Press Cautious Ike urges careful scru-. tiny of N-tete "^ PAGE A-B. Recreation Program in Waterford 16 popular PAGE B-l. 1 Deepening Crisis Voter drives increase Negro political leverage— PAGE B-Z. . Area News'......;..A4 - Astrology ...vV..D4 • MlpPZ V;:.. Comtes ----D4 umnci ...tro News Flash IteMi Obituaries VM4-" ■ E-5 a ; D*-D-l$ Theaters M TV-Radio Progrates K-U :' Ijftiil, -ftef lagan .. Women’s Pages 1 'hi? term of office expires in mid, Saginilw and Bay 1QKR timitlsf Ko “a Iflfl was* nont -assea ”ver B ni tration’s civU rights program, dential area and then veered . Gold water told the Senate teat a directive authorizing commanders to bur service-teen’s visits, to segregated areas near military bases “started in tee attorney general’s office.” He said, teams headed by-Alfred B. .Fitt,-assistant-secretary of defense for ciVH righto; had visited base areas “completely armed with dossiers on the businessmen irt the commiihity, complete with every figure the corn* mittee can get out of income tax' returns.” PROMPTLY DENIED | ThSBcr* followed the tornado about 20 giiiea to the Ctare-Osceo-|i County: border. Funnei sightings also* were Veported in Midland County and tee weatter bureau issued warnings to Gladwin, ties to the east. There were no further serious damage reports,-however. mm dressmaking competition. But Carmen doesK’t limit her interests to 4-H work. She is also a member of the student council of Brandon HlghlSteboI,- where; she will- be a .senior next. year.j After hltf; ^1, ^rmen will SEOUL, SoUtfa lU«ML» . be off to- Eastern Michigan Uni- Z tr verstiy for studies in special ed-1"—Commiinist North Korea ucation. - ! accused Ihe-United States Carmen's king is following in'today of “war provocation the footsteps of an older brother, I . j ____ Larry, who ruled over the fairjPl0^ in divided pen* “in 1959. Tom also is no newcomer insula. It ignored ^the,Red to the widner’s circle. ‘ suicide squad that^Slipped - . FAIR ROYALTY — Carmen Sue Miller and Tom Middleton beamed yesterday after they were chosen to reign as king and queen of next week’s-4-H fair. Both are veterans in 4-H work. . into South Korea this week and kitted three U.{5. soldiers. The North Korean' foreign ministry accused the State Department of -trying to “cover up tee criminal nature of U.S. imperialism in South Korea and to justffy the long-term occupation of South Korea by tee U.S. Army.’*1 “By playing np tee Ms-existent t hr e a t frtm tiM — Norte,” said, a Communist . broadcast, '“the U.S. imperialists are foolishly trying to camouflage the war provocation plots they are hatching in the South.” -North Korea said the Americans are trying to justify “aggressive acta of mete own.” It said the United States has heightened tension by introducing “atomic weapons and guided missiles and turn-ling South Korea into an atomic craft, that the A.ia» either ebolish fT66 FdllUflfl UV6r 9 him af 'hit I , ‘ . in Downtown lots wardDrtgers 1 leamsterExec G,ouai)d will be crowned In' a public ceremony atjbase, scrapping aqd violating the tee 4-H fairgrounds, Pefry j«st Korea armistice agreement.” south of Walton, Tuesday night. * - | American commanders in Korea admit they possess weapons capable of firing nuclear, warheads and that'atomic tactics are practiced. They normally decline- comment oh whether nuclear warheads are stored in Korea. American troops “whase hands are dyed in the blood of * the Korean people” must get out of South Korea, the Com- ! munist broadcast asserted. The broadcast made no mention of the ambush killing'-of two TJ.S. soldiers just south of the demiM? tarized zone Monday or the skirmish six miles farther south Tuesday in which another American, South Korean policeman and four North Koreans died. USED IN AMBUSH The U.N. Command said the . North Koreans were carrying weapons used in - the ambush Monday. The United States denounced the ambush as a “vicious, unprovoked attack.” U.S. Army patrols luded by (Continued-on Page 2, Col. 3) The weatherman said tonight will be‘fair and mild jvith a low of 62, but clouds will dot tee skies tomorrow, and temperatures will rise to 87. »». Ftoyd B. llarmon, 49, aeere-]—S c a tte r e d thundershow-~ ers and warm is -the prediction for Saturday.,, . Morning southwesterly winds at 5 miles per hour will shift to west to northwest at: 10 to 18 TO.p.h. late today diminishing tonight and becoming southerly at 8 to 15nuptu tomorrow. A light sprinkling of rain fell In the downtown area last night; The lowest temperature before 8 a.ro, was 62. At f’p.te‘.~the recording was 68t WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Foreign Affairs Commit-toe'retched agreement tottoy'on( $ foreign aid btil totaling slightly less than |U billion. This was ft* million below what President Kennedywonted. ^ ‘ Vonliao Pff** Phot© CITED for RESCUE — Oakland County - award recipients are Jack Houser (left) of -Sheriff Frank Irons (right) yesterday presented . 0137 Berqwy, Conjperce Township, and Roger his department's fifst certificates of merit to Bryant of 6188 Borowy WtlUam McKeeveToC two men who aided in the rescue of able persons ' Northville, who also assisted in the. rescue, whose boat sank June 16 in Clark Lake, Thq will receive A similar certificate^ , 1 * . Far 1ndu5try Drive Tops $108,600 | Pontiac’s Greater industrial Developmeilt Corp. gathered added | momentum with 23 more individuals, or firms pledging support. This is in addition to the 99 firms or individuals reported .Merrill said Woods had 16- previously. , « Kays to which to file an appeal Returns as of this morning total $106,600, Up more than |7,900 with the 10th District Court of since yesterday, according to the Chamber of Commerce. Appeais to Cinctanati. -—L- The development corporation has options on land for mi in- Harraon had'faced a possible dustrial park, to draw more companies and jobs to the city.. Oakland County Congressmen William. S. Broomfield wired congratulations today on the succested drive.' ;^ f?* “Pontiac is to he congratolated on this miergetic, imaginative approach.. I am sure‘teat this program wifi provide new jobs andnew' .opportunities for Pontiac. “Max Addms, The Chamber of Commerew and Tt|g Pontiac Press have done an excellent job in pointing out tee need Mr. aximum sentence of 72 year in jail and a fine of $240,000. The (teamster official'had been 'charged .with embezzling $2,085 from the union treasury by using gasoline credit cards fb purchase j gasoline creuu uuus w ^^luwcr ----------------> supplies for his private, 32-foot program,” he Concluded, cabin cruiser. Smith, to passing sentence, said “union funds are not at the personal disposal of union of-' flcials no matter wjio they are.” HarVnon had been free under a llO^lMhfl:. 1 • Each of tije 24 .counts carried a maximum fine of $10,000. The embezzlement counts each caiTied e maximum jtel sentence of five years and theTalsification counts, one yedretch.. ;. - " Austin-Norvell Agency M, A. Henson Co. Bland, Luther & Thelma Bouford. Francis C, ' Brown, Kathleen M. Buckley, Betsy City Beverage Co. Dickstein, M. Kenneth Erickpo&L* :. .Cz Fisher, Richard W. . Galen.Manufacturing Co., Inc. Hodges,; H> Vere Lewis Furniture Co. ' 4v - Metes told Powers *• > . MinCweaser, Richard ■ • Miller, Francis F. • Napely, John C. It Phyllis J.‘ , Pearce, HI ,S.'; . J : Priee, Hmry D. ~ Sheppard, Mr. and Mrs. D. Ti Sherwood, Thomas Walls, Merrill r. «f Kathryn Jane. ' Wilson, A. Glenn & Helen M. Whitfield, thomas ... ySN THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AtTGU9T t, 1968 WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Kennedy is expected to emphasize new today his hope for overwhelming congressional and public support ot the nuclear test ban to. be signed in Moscow next 11* President scheduled a LAWRENCE E. MILLER Officer Gets StateAward Jor Service Club lunch not long after the West Germany** forward defenses (AP)-Dr. Arturo Illia, a moder- \ Trooper Lawrence E. Miller of the Pontiac post has been named Michigan State Police “Trooper of the tear” for JdUf. " , Miller, 29, was named yesterday by a four-man civilian committee in East Tasting because of the diversified nature of Us public service activities. These included first aid classes for school bur drivers in Oakland County, many instructional appearances on rescue breathing and trttffic safety matters and .work with, juvenile groups, Last year, Miller trained Vpver HO,000 persons—in—mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and taught traffic safety^ to 73 elementary schools ui the Pontiac area. Stationed at the Pontiac post since Jane I960, Miller is married and lives with his family at IMS Walnut Lake, West In-February, Miller was recognized for his service- tn the community by the- Pontiac Area Jun- inr nULi Aunnwiw who ***“ rorW _____________ 2 commerce. drei A Gromyko to try to work named him the Pontiac area’s - - - - outstanding young man of the year. - The Trooper of the Year award carries--with it a |500 donation whkte xan be used by Miller in three ways: furthering education, donations to charitable causes or worthy projects or for the Welfare df department workers. 7 news conference for 1 p.m. (Pontiac time), which could serve .as a forum for appeal. The cenfereace was being televised aud broadcast live to tee nation. Kennedy was believed ready .to give some indication of U.S. reaction to the attitude of French President Charles de Gaulle, who has declined to sign the pact and plans to continue hi* test pro-' gram. it was considered nnlihely, however, .. teat the would clarify in any great .de-thil th« Question of whether the United States was prepared to assist France with information arid weapons if the French keep their experiments underground Undersecretary of State W. Averell ifarrimaa said yesterday the President could be expected to give some observation ou tee French attitude Inward nuclear testing. The President was understood te"be wary of taking too definite a position pending further stady. Harriman pumped more steam into the administration drive- for teat ban approval by asserting that the United' States would lose our leadership of the world” if the Senate failed to ratify the ban on air, space and underwater tests. He spoke at a National Press White Home announced that 11-man delegation, including four Democratic and two Republican senators, would accompany Rusk to Moscow Friday. ★ * * Conference on Arms Pauses for Signing GENEVA (ft - The -17-nation disarmament conference into an lbday recess today to make way for the slating of the American-British-Soviet nuclear test ban treaty in Moscow next week. The conference cochairmen — Charles G. Steele of the United ^States and Semyon K, TurapkhT of the Soviet Union —are going to Moscow for the new dttenssions scheduled by tee Big Three foreign ministers. The conferees adjourned only two day? after they resumed work following a six-week recess. Gen. E.L.M. Burns of Canada suggested Steele and Tsarapkin get together in Moscow with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and* Soviet Foreign Minister An- out .an agenda for the Geneva negotiations. - Trerffi’c Toll HHs 937 EAST LANSING (ft - Traffic accidents have killed 937 persons in Michigan so far this year, provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll at this date last year was 825. COURTESY CALL - U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara (right) meets with West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer in Bonn,- Germany, today, while conferring With German defense officials on weapons, research within the NATO alliance. Defense Chief of U.S. to See' German Army BONN, Germany (AP)-Robert S. McNamara, U.S.’ secretary of defense, left today for a look at along the Iron Curtain. .. a.. ■ -Aa He had spent a day and a half .talking to top West German officials, including Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. McNamara and West -Gorman Defense Minister Kgi-Uwe von Hassel said their talks had been fruitful and heipfol. .. .... They have been talking about a new agreement on West German military spending in the United States, designed to offset American spending on U.S. troops in Germany. West Germany now is ^pending $600 million to 8700 million a year in the United States, and MdNk-mara would like to raise the fig- They also discussed new weapons, including a missile-firing tank that West German experts have for the 1970s. 1: West German military men have been pushing hard for a forward strategy that in a war would protect as much of West German territory as possible. This implies an early decision on the usq of nuclear weapons. I to Argentina Presidency Associated Press Staff Writer BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ate liberal unknown to. international politics, is Argentina’s pres-ident-plect two pocket civil wars and H months after the military grabbed the country. The country doctor, 62, easily won victory in the electoral college Wednesday. He got 261 votes, 22 more than needed.. Within minutes after it became the legal fiction of two for’ Argentina. Frond! does riot expire Until 30 and-he has steadfastly to resign. Bui close associates said Fron-dizi would not make trouble for the new president.and would form loyal opposition.. The two were members of the old Rtocal party, but spBt whea the party divided in 1957. Frondizi reportedly describe ftlfa as “a good friend-of mirtC” arid “an intelligent man, a com; obvious the job as 29th president mpn-sense man,” urns Illia’* tha militnrv-HnminntpH _. . was Ulia’s, the military-dominated caretaker government of President Jose Maria Guido freed the 27th president, Dr. Arturo Frondizi. Frondizi had been a prisoner since the-military command deposed him March'29,1982. He was held first on an island in the Plate. River and for thelajt five months at San Carlos de Barilochey a win-ter resort in the Andes. TO BE CERTIFIED Illto’s election is to be certified by Congress Aug. 12 and he:will be inaugurated Oct. 12, ending the Guido regime which survived some 30 attempts to overthrow it. The two major attempts came last April and last September. * * .Illia’s inauguration will continue K&flas hpme town of Cruz del Eje,‘Illia said he was happy Frou5 dizi was freed. Leaving the door open for personal . consultation with Frondizi, Alia said, “I would be glad to talk to any Argentine citizen.” ‘ - Illia inherits -leadership of countoy beset by huge foreign debts , unemployment, economic woes of awesome proportions and controversy , over development contracts with foreign oil companies.' Orchard''take Ave. Close Street The Weather FaB UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny and warm today, high 85. Fair and mild tonight, low 12. Partly cloudy and warm Friday high 87. West to northwest winds 19 to 18 —miles today diminishing tonight becoming southerly 8 to 15 miles Friday. V ■ M>r«l Moon rises Thursday at l:M p Downtown Temperatures ......... 11 am...........M ....... *s 14 m. ..........M ........M I PM..........<6 lowest temparstura .....................I Mean temperature ............ Weather: Mostly sunny, day; raJ night .. —. — - - - yersiarai " a Tsar A(a in Pontiar . temperature . .... temperaUAe--,-..-. temnarature ^...... Weather: Sunny Houghton Lansing Marquette Muskegon Traverse C. 7» I 74 H Maw Orleans M 70 O. Francisco 61 M M s. feT Marta M M Seattle (1 00 Tampa H U Washington 17 . NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers are expected todight in western Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia while it will be fair to cloudy elsewhere. It' will be cooler to the eastern Ohio Valley and. over the northwestern and parts of tha northern Rockies. In the upper Valley £ will be warmer. Motorists who normally use Orchard Lake Avenue should find a new route next week. . A A,' A : Orchard Lake, will be closed " to through traffic at Cass and Telegraph beginning Monday for construction of a sewer' and repair of a r a i 1 r o a & crossing. ■ City “officials said the sewer trench will be.cut acrosp Orchard Lake at Thomas. CREWS WORKING Grand Trunk Westerly RaiL road crews will be working on the crossing near Beau-tiette Park. We lit her permitting, the Erotic should be completed by pext Frjday. . TTie detours will affect all streets which empty into Orchard Lake, particularly Ottawa, Voorheis, Johnson, ¥ ( Bagley and Franklin Boule- ” vard. ^ 7k ; * - TheeAstbound lane on .Orchard Lake will be open to vehicles Cbhiing from Bagley, Johnson and Franklin Boulevard, but westbound traffic “Will be routed to West Huron. ;At the Orchard Lake-Voor-heis -Ottawa intersection, westbound traffic-on Ottawa eastbound vehicles will detoured onto Ottawa. 7k The sewer and rail crossing work -is preparatory to black topping Orchard Lake later this months ■' N. Korea Charges U.S. Warmongering (Continued From Page One)., spotlights searched’the banks of the Imjin River along the demilitarized zone for more Communist infiltrators. ~~~ Gen. Charles Pershing Brown of McAlester, Okla., acting commander of the lid Cavalry Division, ordered searchlights to brighten the 18tt-mile front patrolled, by .his'outfit.. - Brown also ordered out heavier patrols and a power boat loaded with soldiers to search coves along foe river. Travel In single jeeps" was forbidden. “There must be at least two vehiies in every detail and we’ve started riding shotgun throughout the area,” Brown said. \ ’ ' * Kim Sung-eun, South kofean defense minister, said Monday’s ambush was a fjitite effort to force the American troops to withdraw from the Korean front. 10 Die in Crash Near Toledo TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Ten r migrant farm worker?, eight-of them children, were killed last night eh route home from movie when thfir station wagon smashed head-on into an oncoming tractor-trailer rig. The Crash, one of the worst single traffic accidents in Ohio history, happened on a straight stretch of Ohio 51, about 10 miles southeast of here. Authorities were several hours learning the identification of the victims because friends and relatives - spoke only in Spanish . The grinding crash wiped ' out one family of seven and three children from another family. 7k # • A . The .dead were identified as Felix Campos, 41, Floridit City, Fla.; his wife Catherine, 36; their children, Joseph, -12; -Rosa, 10; Jlaria, 14^ Teresa, 7, and and her~tjrother»r*aoul, 13, and Jaime, 7. Ohio highway patrolmen said the Campos station wdgon passed a car on the straight stretch of highway and smashed into the tractor-trailer. House to End Rights Hearings Rioters Put Chicago on Racial Scono From Oar News Wires WASHINGTON. - Slow-paced House hearings oil civil rights wind toward an end today while in the Senate the stage was set for another round’to the debate itweoy. Atty. Gen.’ Robert F. taped? and Sen. Sam Ervin, D;N. C; jw The Hou?e Civil Rights subcommittee, which began taking public testimony on May 8, hears from South Carplina Atty. Gen. Daniel _ McLeod. Friday, the group starts its crucial, closed sessions to work out a bill. Meanwhile, to Chicago, hundreds of whites milled around the apartments of two Negro families in an all-white neighborhood for tee third straight night arid beefed-up police adits moved into restore order early today. Bricks and rocks were hurled white police, who sealed off the area and closed taverns, struggled to disperse the surley crowd. Four policemen were injtlrfed and at least 47 persons, including six Negroes, were arrested. Two Negfa boys .were knodeed off th^to-hicyclea and beaten'. Police frouf every district in Chicago were summoned to quell the demonstration in the white working dun neighborhood about one block, from Chicago's South Side where most of the city’s 800,006 Negroes live. Civil rights pickets tuitoed out again today at the New York City construction site where a battle erupted yesterday when police tried to move the demonstrators belling barricades. v" • _ In Birmingham, Ala., downtown Mores whieff had quietly desegregated their lunch, cot ters have been picketed by groajTof white iheii. " In Baton Rouge, La., three Negroes have been hired as city policemen — the . first of their race on the .police force. Chief Wingate White 'said three white men'and tile three Negroes were among 14 persons who pa civil service test Tuesday^ In Hollywood several top entertainment personalities said they will march on the nation’s capitol next month in support of civil rights legislation. .The delegation .includes actors Charlton Heston, Marlon Brando, Tony Curtis, Mel Ferrer, Jpny Franciosa, Peter Brown and Burt Lancaster and director Billy Wilder. A cast of 40 ichiidrea from -5 to 12 yean ok! is nofe. in rehearsal for the play. Campers are making their own costumes of cardboard? paint and other materials: When the characters eater the. Emerald City, the parents and friends to the audience will don special glasses which will make tee scene,AN FRANCISCO (UPI) - i retired Navy vice' adthirai six crewmen, Who abandon^! a 8250,000 luxury yacht during a cruise from Hawaii to California, were picked up by a Navy submarine shortly before midnight last night about-600 miles south; west of San Francisco. Vice Adm. Gerald Bogan, onetime commander of the jJ.S. First Task Force, and his crew cast themselves adrift from the 104-foot yacht, Freedom lb, to a 14-foot boat yesterday afternoon. There .was no imnjediate explanation for their action. UL the seven men were picked up by the USS Razorback at 11:50 p.m. PDT (2:56 a.m. EDT Thursday) arid all presumably were in | good Condition. The 'submarine i said they would be taken to Sanj Diego'. Robert Buchanan Service for Robert BUchanan{ 50, of 1280 Suffieki, Birmingham, will be 2:3i) p.m. Friday at First Presbyterian Church. Burial will follow in Acadia Park Cemetery, Southfield. Mr. Buchanan died yesterday after a 'brief Illness. His wilt be at Bell ChapeJ- of- the William R. Hamilton Co/ until noon Friday. An engineer for Pontiac Motor Division, Mr. Buchanan was -a member, of the Society of Automotive Engineers, Engineering Society of Detroit arid the American Society of Body Engineers. Surviving are his wife Grace; two children, Linda and Ronald, both, at home; and & sister. Walter A, Lewis. -Service-fur Whiter A. Lewis, 60, of 16253 Klrkshire, Binning; Asks for Exam in Traffic Death t U Man Faces Charge of i . Negligent Homicide Eugene DiVita of Detrpit yesterday demanded examination on a negligent homicide charge in the traffic death of Raymann Zehnder Jr. Monday afternomu _ DiVita,. 29, was arraigned yesterday before West-Bloomfield Township Justice Earner Dieterle. He was released on a personal' bond to await examination Aug. 27. Zehnder, 21, of 8041 Golfview, Bloomfield Township, was killed when his car struck two . trees after he swerved to avoid DiVita’s auto, accortOng to township police. DlVJtta told “ officers he was making a U turn at the lime. Also injured-ip the crash was -Zehwiefjs - bride • to - be, Betti jggs/22, of 32 Murphy. ★ ★ ★ in light of Oakland County’s iffic fatality records jp far this' year, Prosecutor George Taylor yesterday warned that negligent homicide warrants will be sought in any death “where there is the least shred of doubt that the driver was blameless.” Zehnder’s was the fourth coup- ; ty traffic death' in three days. Death toll for the year in the county is nour 80* compared tq 5J, at the same time in 1962. Taylor attributed the “appalling”- highway bloodbath to “lax enforcement of- speed limits.” , Israel, U.A.R. Agree . JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector (ft Israel and the United Arab Republic,* bitter foes who have accused each o’ther of trying to develop atomic weapons, agree tiwy will not conduct nuclear— ham. will be 10 a. m. Saturday-! tests above ground or underat the Manley Bailey Funeral'water. * 1 .Doctor Ward Near Ded (Continued From Page One} -had convicted him on' two counts of living oft prostitution. The 50-year-old Ward was being drip-fed through a- vein with a nutrient solution containing a heart stimulant. j f A ' '•#. - The throat surgery— a tracheotomy to insert a breathing'tube to/a hole to Ward’s windpipe — whs performed this morning at Stephen Hoaattal. where he been unconscious since 6 ajn. yesterday. ;'; -v..: '.-V ' A A '• A . . ' -The afternoon medical bulletih said:-''’ ■ * ■■■it-- A A ■ ,.j . “Dr. Ward’s condition Has de-teriorated and he has had td‘ 6e returned to 'mechanically controlled breathing.” * SAVE Tonite—Frida This DISCOUNT Onl y—Saturday ) y at SIMMS SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS 1 20% OFF Ladies’ and Men’s TIMEX WRIST WATCHES wag ' $7.15 Tims* Ago' 9 Watehts . . 0 7M S2iir- 8" AMERICAN MADE SHOES At SIMMS tow ‘Birthday Gtff Prices SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS Canvas Uppers-Crepa Rubbar Solat iMen’s SPORT SHOES Lightweight canvas uppers in. light blue colors with crepe rubber flexible soles, smart one eyelet styling. Sizes 7 to 11.___________' Save On Men’s and Beys’ Quality Canvas Oxfords 92 • $UP>0N STYLE • RUBBER SOLES • BLUE OR BROWN Summer convos oxfords in populor slip-on style. Bloc or brosm uppers with heovy duty rubber soles with cushion insole and* cushion arch type supp&ti. Men's sizes AV4 to 12, ’ boys' 3Vi-5-SV4-d.. .Group Ladies’ SUPPERS Council Session to Eye Airport Waterford Group Alio to View Government CALICO Function! of township government and the Pontiac Municipal Airport wrill be discussion topics atnext Tuesday’s 8 p.m. meeting of the Greater Waterford Community Council. held at Pierce Junior High School apd are open to the public. ' the only NEW ^g^nyfon can 'W' may time 'by Alexander Smith township supervisor, will dicuss the township, budget, taxes and the ahrport. Police Chiet Millard Pender will' explain the operation of his department and Fire Chief Lewis Goff will'speak on^the fire department function. . TOSHIBA 6-TRANSISTOR RADIO 5BP including Case, earphones and battery Washable, no-iron^rayonr 54" wide pr.7 ’SI* long. White/gold. 'i ^ .... . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST I, 1968 EXQUISITE STYLING! EXCEPTIONAL VALUES! EXCELLENT DURABILITY! ,• Elegutt, classic design usually seen only in fine Wiltons—now available for the fifSt time in 501 textured Mrlon earpet at.a low ■ price! > < • 'rtie marvelous durability of Du Pont 601 continuous filament nylon—wears longer—«-« won’t shed or fuzz! A progress report on the township’s ,water apd sewer programs will be presented by Melvin Straiter of Johnson and Ander-■, Inc., the township's consulting engineers. The council; which Opposes ex-panskm ofjheairportto support Jet ainfu^prawntly is forming an airport study committee to further invtotigate probable effects of expansion on the Community. • Resilient, moth and mildew proof, non allergenic. • >'• . - • Living Colors—inspired by Nature herself' and a joy to decorate with. DRYER’S CARPET 1028 West Huron ” FE 8-9675 Open 'til 9 pjn.—Saturday ’til 6:30 YOU WILL LIKE OUR BUSINESS METHODS ■ IMPERIAL—CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT Norway Woman First Gal to fly Over North Pole BODOE, Norway (AP) - A blonde Norwegian housewife today became the first woman to complete a flight over the North Pole from' Alaska to Norway in a single-engine plane. Ingrid Pedersenf^O, landed her esgna at this north, Norwegian city,. completing a flight from Fairbanks, Alaska, with a short stop at Nord, Greenland. sales BIRMINGHAM service • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH • 911 S. Woodward r - Phono Ml 7-S211 DISCOUNTS ON ALL MERCHANDISE A. $995 Including earphone, cate, and battery CORVAIR 10-TRANSISTOR RADIO (Can be used around factory machines) PARK JEWELERS rmI OPTICIANS 1 N. SAGINAW ICmWc nil St | Dr.Chemey The flight wfS a busman’s holiday for.W husband, EUnar, chief navigator of the Scandinavian Airlines system, Ht navigated the plane across the ice cap around the pole-as he has done more than 150 times with airliners. He also made a great number of photographs of the ice from the low height at which the couple flew. . •* The-couple landed 49 hours and 46 minutes after taking off from Fairbanks. A large crowd was at the airport in the light summer night. - Freeman Visits Polish Farms; Grain Plea Made? WARSAW, Poland UP) — U. flj Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman visited Polish farms today after reportedly hearing a plea from. Communist leaders for grain ,to feed this drought-stricken nation, Freeman was to inspect private and state farms and one of Poland’s 28,000 “farmers’ circles.” E Poland’s - predominantly private farmers are asked io Join the circles to cooperate in the Use of tools and fertilizer. . Freeman.'was received yesterday by Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki and two members of the poUtbureau, Vice President Edward Ochab. and Planning Commission Chief Stefan Jedrychow- The talks reportedly covered shipments of U.S. surplus grain to Poland and U.S.-Polisli trade. KEEPS PRICES DOWN REG: 1.99 TO 3.99 SHOE SALE vomited quantities ... while they last! OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF^$| WOMEN'S 'N CHILDREN'S Summer sun-fun shoes OPfN fVERYJiWHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday . DOWNTOWN AND 7 DRAYTON plains KE/EPS PRICES DOWN Stock the linen closest sky high! WHITE SALE BEDSPREADS A special purchase! 3 charming bed spreads in full,or twin sizes YOUR CHOICE CHARGE IT Bates Hobnail with hundreds of woven dots and wide fringe. White) pink, moize aqua and beige cotton. Twin, 78x105”, full, 96x105". Washable, pre-shrunk. Ideal far /bur home or summer cpttage. Bates Calico, in full or twin size with row after row of tufted baby chenille with luxurious shag cuff. Frosty pink, new gold, deep blue, moss green, beige, meloh and whiteicottoh. Machine washable. Clendale, woven heirloom type,-reversible in antique or bleached white. Graceful colonial design with lofty loops, bullion fringed. Washable, pre-shrunk. Full or twin size. Get them for yourself or for gifts! GLENDALE Kitchen terries, now Print patch quilts 4.99 Dacron pillows 1/ Dacron* polyet- ^ QA nn ter, non-allergen- •g'yy Heavy cotton terry, jumbo 17x30" size. Lint-free, absorbent, easy-dry. m . Colonial prints, bound or ruffled. Machine wash* j abterfuft or twiw^ ~ Dacron* polyes-ter; non-allergen-Jc_ Washable. - Rose print cover, i •Reg. T.M. DuPont 10.99 challfs comfort 88 R a y o n challis, floral, modem or provincial prints: 72x84-lnaf” otr|.wear. Easy to wasli,„63)<99-inch. 72*108''or twin fitted 81x108“ Of full fitted^,.....;..,.:.:...l.rf 42x36' pillow casts .................. *1* .2.49 percale sheets Feature -'easy-on' corners, sombed *i finish cotton per tale for smooth finish and greater wear. 72x108" or twin.fitted^ llxIOl", tuD fitted . ‘ 42x38'' pillow, coses CHARGE IT CHARGE IT' Matchstick cam —light, airy natural ba'iqbae, wipes - clean with-damp /doth. 24x26". . FEDERAL DEF>T. STOflES - .30x10“....... ■ 30kl^^.i.^..„..X., * S4“ wietthhty volancc THE PONTIAC PRESS. TSimtSPAY, AUGUST l, IM3 that W^merstrom was tagged as ■ m risk four years ago. But Erlander claimed (he security service lacked , evidence' until May, when Wennerstrom was inter Announces dish Spy Quiz < New U.S. Bomber Faster Than Sound Set Military Honors - => ’ for Deceased General SANTA FE, N.M. (AP)-MaJ. Gen. Patrick Jty Hurley will be buried Friday with military honors after services in 8t. Francis Cathedral. The 80-year.-old soldier diplomat died in his sleep Tuesday night at his home. STOCKHOLM, Sweden^ — Facing mounting yriticism, Premier fage Erlander told the nation last night an exhaustive probe would be launched into the government’s alleged delay in arresting-Air- Force Col. Stig Wennerstrpm asa Soviet spy. Erlander said, the. “extent of Wennerstronl’s criminal activity’’ was learned only after be confessed that he had spied for the Soviet Union for IS years. \ EDWARDS AIR FORCE RASE, Calif. (AP)—A new fighter-bomber, wldi speed listed at about 1,000 miles an bout, has been tested at this desert test center. Northrop Corp. said its FSA, designed to carry gunk, bombs, missiles, end napalm, is the only faster-than-sound U., S. aircraft curable of landing on sod fields close to combat areas. Iowa Convict Remains-. or Top of W&ii»r Towar FORT MADISON, Iowa (UPI) Convict William T. Bradley remained atbp the 125-foot water tower at. foe Iowa State Pianiten-tiacy today for the fifth consecutive built-in dial buttonboler,.built • in sewing light- Handsome walnut veneer wood cabinet lends itself to any room. See this lovely console machine Ionite! . 4450 #4850 Kenmore Dryer Has Giant 12-Lb. Capacity Sewing Machine I), Easy Payment Plan Kenmore Washer Has _2 Speeds,'3 Cycles Your Choice of. Fixtures ULTIMATE TIRE. Hath W all Light or Ceiling Fixture Sale-Priced at Sears- Fine For-All Fabrics NOMONEYDOWN Normal'heat plus “Air”.----------tint Filter, handy Load-A-Door, -white acrylic-enameleetfiniah. TMai your fabric, set water temperature and -walk away! Built-in lint, filter, agitator plus much more! :Ra If.44 ehmmr.plated bath lildht nr Reg. SI.K9 ceiling fixture .on nfethis weg k-enpey, manpower specialist, Office of*Emergency Planning, the federal government. TOrpey, writing in the current issue of “University Woman,”. said additional numbers of women should be enrolled in collegiate programs to “meet even current demands” for scientists.* He predicted there would be “opportunities for considerable additional numbers of women” in the field. He added that “a fundamental reason for the very small num^ her ... is a traditional (although seemingly irrational) attitude that science is a man’s field." The “University Woman” is .a quarterly magazine published on the campus here of Fairleigh Dickinson University. of discrimination, you will, of necessity, have a wide-awake, questioning mind. However, being critical is .a habit. It may flatter yodrego, but it is a deathblow to charm. The habit Of criticizing comes easily, and creates a temporary feeling of superiority. It iriay become a chronic habit before you realizeit. ' , ★ * *■ a We all know the person who Isn’t satisfied with anything. The dinner was awful, the play was awful, and if "the reviews read otherwise, the reviewers don’t Know their business. Everyone they meet is stupid. ' r— An acquaintance of mine once said, “IndivMuR&iii; unless it can become, soclaIlsed,nb truly a pain in the neck to society,” and no truer words were ever spoken. Individuality as such, can be a charming trait. But it can also be overemphasized to the point that the individualist becomes the eccentric. • . #v Boredom1 blankets life with a fog of drabness, and can even cause physical illness. It certainly takes the spark out of personality. v If -you Arish my free leaflet, Grace and Charm,” send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 57 to Josephine Lowman in care I The Pontiac Press. (BcIcmH to Ik* Re filter and Trlbvne Syndicate. UH) oufijUniu business Getting—r. * Shaping—*' Styling and of course Selling Wigs ‘n Things, Jic. / 91'West Long Uki Rd. Rplly's Pointers Wear Golfing Shoes By POLLY CRAMER . DEAR PQLLY. — My husband said, “Send these to Polly.” While tutting grass oi^ajterroce or slope, fmar golf shoes. This makes for sure-footed cutting and has not hurt our Lnum. fit cold weather, wear, cotton gloves under ydur rubber gloves when you wash windows or hang out clothes. Polish golf irons with silver polish to nudte them ,k>ok like tjew* ~ ' * — L. A. S. ♦ tHF--*'•*••• • “ DEAB PQLLY — Here ii a sewing tip: When making darts in the waist of a dress, I pin a piece of lightweijtftt.cardboard or a long envelope from the top dots, to the dot «t the end Of the’dart and machine stitch along tbe^edge of die cardboard. The cardboard out.of a hose box is excellent. This is a fast metbbtf and the lines will a nice point. be straight And will come to Mr- —Mrs. H, L, DEAR POLLY —’ Whenever our family makes telephone aa&r^iut the 10 or 21 cents in a little “kitty” bank that 'sfiiys near the telephone. Then when the telephone bill comes, we hfeve"the money ready. — Miss D. H. ‘ *. ★ > ★ DEAR POLLY — I find ironing boird clamps useful in reupholstering piano stools, chairs, etc. First clamp the material in place* with the spring-type clamps and hammer in the upholstery tacks. Remove clamps. No more slipping and sliding, no more baggy upholstery. YOU get a tight, professional look_* - — A. McG. DEAR POLLY — My daughter in Denver sends me your column, which ! entoV so much, toe is a vacation hint: When a family is going on a vacation trip by car, pack suitcases for the children in layers, a complete change in, each layer. Allow two days’jwear for I pair of blue jeans. The dean clothes are never messed oyer; everything for one change is .together. Put all ^soiled clothes in another suitcase or a. laundry bag. . ' ‘ — Mrs. MM. —: ...• j ^ ★ ★ it DEARTQLLY — I have learned so many practical household hints from the column that it is a pleasure to pass on one of my own. t,. When I polish the Arms, sides ang legs of chairs foai. have cloth seats and backs, I always hold i large square or brown paper over the upholstered part while I polish the w6od, to protect the upholstery. I keep this, paper over the ' seat or back even while I am rubbing off the excess polish. ' ' r ..... .,*•# -Mrs. L. W. Share* your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silvej^dollar it Polly uses your ideas in Polly’s Pointers. Golf League Holds Picnic The Ladies Tuesday Tee Golf League held its annual picnic following a round of golf Tuesday. . Mrs. Robert L. Taft opened' her Shoreview Drive home for the occasion. Refreshments were served after a-brief business meeting. Mrs. William Sparks and Mrs. Thomas Zielinski headed the committee work for the day. Plans were completed for the husband’s day. picnic Aug. 18 at the Deer - Run* Drive-1 home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Anselmi. . Mrs. Raymond Kniesel, Mrs. Calvin C. Warner and Mrs. George W. Parsons will work on the committees for this event. Winners for the team play for the day included Mrs. J. L. Root and Mrs. D. E. Van-, tine, first-place winnerk; Mrs. Kniesel ami Mrs. Taft, second-place' winners and Mrs. Euell Smith and Mrs. Warner, third-place winners. Mrs. Addy Wiezcerak and Mrs. Taft were prise winners for low gross and low net, respectively. Dry cleaning originated in France about the middle of the 19th century. GardeGroup Names Officers for Coming Year Mrs. Warren C. eleven of THmore Drive was hostess Tuesday evening to the Lorraine Manor Garden Chib, a branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Associa-iidfc - The president, Mrs? hay Allen, appointed committee chairmen for .the coming club year. • A -jk ■ <3 Mrs. James * Mood 4 will serve~ on the civic Jma ids wui inwove- iTFfSC merit committee; Mrj, n B a r n father, conservation; hire. Glen R. Hickson, con- _ servation; Mrs. Robert'Hum-phreys and »Jifre. Robert Smith, marketingnfire. Clev- ; en, program; Mrs. Robert Smith, publicity and library; Mrs. Joseph Carpenter, tele* , phone;’ and Mrs. Ehrin McCarty, hospitality. Party Honors Naturalised Citizen Group > A graduation party Monday evening in the Classroom at Pontiac Central High School honored members of Janice Antona's group who became naturalized in ‘ court .1 a a t week. . . ^ * • .*—•* * ‘ bfrg, Lee Hill and Americanism chairmen, Mrs. Mary ,Todd, General Richardson chapter, -DA.R.< and Mrs. Joseph Phillips of the Amer- ican Legion Auxiliary, Chief Pontiac Post, spoke briefly. ' ;w, i * New American citizens hon-. ored were Verna Paine, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Krampetz, Mary Tsompanas, Mr. a-hd Mrs. Gerrit Hoogenstryd, Bernice -Wheeler and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Madarasz. OLDEASHIOMED BARGAIN DAYS Women's Dress Sheet High A M*d. High H^*l« 2“ 2 Pr. 5.00 Women’s Oinvss Flats 1M 2 ft. 3.M ChNtfren's Dress and ■ . School Shoes 277 -277 2, n. 5.00 i nt 1M Children's Sandals i“ Ladies’ Toon Aft. Flats 2* Woman’s Summer Casuals i“-r7-2“ Men’s Dress and Casual Shots |W . v . Misses Tonais Oxfords Shto 13 -.? 27* $$$ . : Mirocl* MU* Shopping CmitMT SURPRISE TABLE AT 77* Until 9 P.M. mmmu Open Mondoy thru Saturday 9.30 a.m. to 9 p m. TEL-HURON CLEARANCE:: ENTIRESmiMER STOCKS FROM ALL 5 RB STORES fitow at give-away prices 0 Collected here lor your convenience: AIL of our famous-maker summer fashions, reduced for final fmmediate*clearanco. Dresses, wimsuits, sportswear, accessories, sleepwear included. Hurry in! nimiAL JOALL Mognifiem^ YOU’LL FIND More M AT ALBERT’S! Magnificent Hand Knits Imported by Albert’s Directly from Italy! from MORE MOHAIR! 60% Mohair, 32% Wool, 8% Nylon! - MORE VALUE! Because Albert’s imports directly from Italy, you get the finest hand knit mohair sweaters at the lowest, possible price! , , ' v''- MORE STYLES I V-Necks, Cardigans, Jacquards, Intarsias, Hand Embroideries, Cro-qhet Buttons. • MORE COLORS! WWte, pink, blue, peach, j green, aqua, yellow, beige, rSd, royal, brown, .black. ?TT' WM: A THE PONTIAC, PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1963 Noted General Retires MARKETS the following ara; -top,„prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots-Quotations are furnished by me Detroit Bureau of Markets ] noon Wednesday. Product Apples, DuchesB , Peaches. < Sun^HavetvJsu. VEGETABLES Wall Street Puzzle^U- Stocks Fall Into. Pattern NEW YORK Vnis a Carbide advanced ^Rainbow, more than a point and Du Pont gained a half. . Polaroid, introducing a new camera today, gained nearly ~2 points while International Busies Machines was down 1, * * * ★ ' Opening blocks included: General Electric, off V< at 77 .7-8 on 2,000 shares; Sperry Rand, unchanged at 15-on 3,000; Xerox, off Vk at 243 on 1.000: and Eastern Airlines off V4 at 23 7-8 on tjm.—----------- Corporate and igov^mmenl bonds were mixed. ."Yesterday the Associated average of M stocks ' to 267.4. . American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AT) — American Stock Exchant{.. Cal XI Pw Kaiser -}n4vu Cottu Bite «% Mead . John Creole Pet 42 >4 Mohawk Alrl Fly Tiger . IVi Musk P Ring Oen Dawl- . * nherw Wm —nvr~ Kgr^ant. long typo Onions, dry, lb-Onions, green, bch. Onions, pickling, lb. Paraley. curly, bob. The New York Stock Exchange By ROGER LANE AP Business News Writer NEW YORK - Oen. Anthony C. McXuliffe, famed for I” reply to a surrender demand, said today he feels.almost the same way abopt retiring as a business executive. “I’m already unhappy at the prospect of not coming to Work tomorrow,” McAuliffe said in his ; hours asa vice president and director 6f .American Cynamlri th* G^inkmia. ,Co. JTm not going to like H unless [ find something; interesting to Jc£’ .'" ; •—; McAuliffe is leaving Ameri- can Cyanamid under its com? pufsory retirement at R policy. Almost 19 years have passed since he wrote an imperishable page.in American military annafa during the Battle of the Bulge, then raging around Bastogne, Belgium. Although his paratroops of the Iglst Airborne Division Were surrounded and outnumbered 4-1, McAuliffe spurned surrender to The tide-of battle turned in succeeding days, hastening a victorious end to World War II. Looking back, McAuliffe, still a wiry S-foqt-8 and 135 pounds, Pontiac Exec GefTNew Jot m Successful 'investing M, R. Spears, former director of Pontiac Motor Division’s field training, has .been named head of the new owner relations: department. Frank Bridge, Pontiac general sales manager, said the new de- By ROGER E. SPEAR paperboy. I have $200 to invest and have' been thinking of buying stock in Studebaker, Your advice would be sincerely appreciated.;’ N.jL A) You’re not only a thrifty and far-sighted paperboy, but a very courteous one.es well. I urge you with die utmost sincerity to give up—at this early Studebaker operated at W big “ t in the first quarter of 18H agreed the incident capped his rotorful and varie^ career. SATISFACTION “Nothing else gave me the same satisfaction and thrill,” he said; Much as he would like to keep busy, McAuliffe made it clear ' he is not interested in sitting on advisory boards at the Pentagon. ‘They’ve asked me three or Innr Hmw, 'wiyl T plMfryt tald no,” he sill “I don’t believe hi boards and commissions, ml they do Is sit aroudd jBd ' palaver, and never get iuq*--where. ' “They file* a report and that’s die end of it usually. I still feel-the same way.” 'McAuliffe said post-World War n' assignments, including a stint as commander-in-chief of the U.S. Army-in-Europe, paved the;way - for later success In business. “A coipmander who spends, a tot of time overseas already, la. inhig hn«tiwn.”heaaid. ___________ Swan son' Associates, Inc., Bloomfield Hills architects and engineers, today announced the firm’s first reorganization since ■mmammits - founding 1 n ^^^H1947. | Robert $. Swanson, AIA, ju- W.. Long Lake, ^succeeds founder ]j£ Robert . IP; 3% per cent — which took place [Swanson as president. The latter [becomes chair-'man of the board of directors. Robert S. Swanson has beta with the firm since 1953 and has served as chief designer the past several years. He also sits orrthe-board of directors, to which were elected Floyd H. Heineman, Jack K. Monteith, Mrs^pipsan S. .Swanson,-John K. Grylls and John support **tte*‘ and earned 2 cents a share bud year from operations. The company is diversifying, but it still essentially; ' an- automobile producer that has been tosbig its share of die market in recent years. If I were to your position, I would buy a very strong, high-quality stock for growth. Bdrden, Following retirement from-the Army, McAuliffe Joined American Cyanamid, a chemical concern, at the age of 57 to 1158 as general manager of engineering and construction, rising to a, vice presidency later. Wpen company headquarters, now to Wayne, N.J., were to ~ y the great dahy rompany, Is just Rockefeller Center to uptown i a situation, and I recom-* mend it to you.. Q) “1 have been considering American Telephone 4Vi’« due 1$9$ now selling under IN. This offering Is below the price- set originally by the syndicate. Do yon advise me tebuyj” R. G. A) Em sorry, but I do not,' Bond' prices fluctuate strictly in accordance with money rates. , When, money rates go up, bond prices go (town, so- bond yields rise. The yield on Treasury bills has d been 'rising steadily, and this is , a key indicator of the trend to the e price of money. One-year Treasury bills are now selling to yield ® dose to 8 Vi per edit, and the Federal Reserve has just recent-’• ly lifted its.own discount rates-the fee which it charges on loans , to member banks: The rise to the discount rate to two weeks ago —may ultimately result in higher‘long-term inter- * rates and tower bond prices, although this , is not ceriato. I would, postpone bond purchases until the money situation stabilizes. (Copyri^it, 1963) Steel Firm Promotes 2 Heineman was named business Administrator. Monteith will serve as vice • ^president • secretary, ___and Grylls as vice-Presideni- cerits a bushel since the season’s]treasurer. .Richard R. Brown, peak of around $i.31_a little over'chief mechanical engineer, was appointed an associate. NEW YORK (UPI) - Edmund F. Martin, president of Bethlehem Steel Corporation, has been named to a newly created, post [of vice chairman and Stewart S. .Cort, ,vice president to charge bf the Pacific Coast Division, succeeds Martin as president, Jt was announced.yestecday. ___________ Arthur B. Homer, chairman and chief executive officer, announced the changes to the top Xu J n echelons of Bethlehem, the na->«, J;*1 tion’s second largest steel* produc- t-!K jij er. Cort also becomes a director ' «.i [end a member of the executive committee. Manhattan, McAuliffe used walk ie and -from .work, a distance of about 35 blocks, from his 86th St. apartment. TWO-MONTH TBS* His immediate plans are for a two-month'trip to the Mediterranean with his wife and three gfowlr children. Then, he’ll take up residence in Washington, / McAuliffe said he felt the* same principles contributed to his suc-cess both in the military and business. One of the foremost: .“Never go to see your superior Until you’re sent for.” Of the outlook for war or peace’ today, McAuliffe' said he found r the. nuclear test ban' treaty ini- * tialed tost week by Russia, the United States and Great Britain ‘very encouraging.” •• “But I always liked theodore Roosevelt’s crack about speaking softly and carrying a big stick,” he said. “I hope we keep, doing it.” News in Brief lady’s coat whim mlnk-irimmed . collar valued at $1M ~ was- reported stolen yesterday from Zuieback’s Suburban Shop to the Pontiac Mall. Seven tires and wheels valued at $210 were reported stolen yesterday from^four different cars at , the Superior Rambler used car . lot, 2120 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township. Armand Stefani, 7110 Hatchery, . Waterford Township, told police yesterday that a 14-foot boat, 25-horsepower motor and boat accesses valuea" at $l,000 were stolen’yesterday from to front of.. his house. Rummage Sale August 2, 9-1, Poptiac Na v y . Mothers,’ CAI Building, Waterford.. —Adir. ' Rummage Sale—Baby Furniture and clothing, Thursday, Friday and-Saturday until 9, 514 E. Columbia. r-Adv. ----- BP ■ uuuihcri. M to M }«*««•; » to Bocttr K 8*, 1'f L3.0 lower: shippers took around 40 per cent £et 80 ol salable supply.; 1-2 200-225 lb botchers 2*“®/ 40,b„ IMO-ll.U: around 150 head at 11.11; 2** MM4 1 150-550 lbs 15.50-10.00; tome Dout A l.JOf 1-1 300-540 lbs 18 25-10 50 late: load P°*Ch 1.60b aroOBd 275 lbs 14.25; 1-3 350-400 lb soot Ores* t:2# — 15.00-16 25; 2-3 400-450 lbs 14.00-15.25; 450- duPont ‘ jbMod|B0iUC6 jTlOo SsftSSfffo j* 554 John »t j».50* cKlceiSr1* L*ik $nI Ml lbs 34.66-25.25; several loads fuSl choice ,ond prime 1.400-1.“ 34.25-34 TS: cbMOO 1,360-1.4M "~ UJtti:-«evifol IteSe over i,« i tiMdM; ’ VOOd 555-1.350 lbs ai.w-av.w-, ' standard and tow food 20 50-12.00; load E,*‘r, bt,r*' hbtb choice and prtiky LoiT II iuM(hter 5» idHn Mdl: load bigh choice and prime!re* Corn ] ; tf jlb Choice. 000-1.100 IS 32.75- Jerro 1.60-1 WOd 22 50-22.25; couple Vlltrol 150 Made food and choice 33.50; utility and Firennr lb .rOMMlffalal cotse . 15.00-16 50; canners FstCbrt 1,611 ' and cutters U.25-U.2S: uUUty and com-; Fllntkt JO saMelal biUla 18.50-20.00. Fla PL 126 ■sweep 100; small supply tprlag slau«b- Fd «aL **■ r rimuth Tor FooteM .— A MIIIIIJIr: shorn slaughter ewe« ir>orf4 u n I Mjp »etee^a jC^D 4*1 ?I.55( rood and choice 15-150 lbs X«.50- 55eeS£ Flo BOW-JONEg NOON 47114011 STOCKS 20 Indus .vfi.SRl pL*OUe . ...W 3 ORalls .... ’ -a If ttlfber erode rails . 15 nsaond grade Mb. - >• *•“>« uJuUes.O. .. MEETS FACTORY OFFICIALS — C. M. to serve retail customer^ The meettogs were Shelton, (left) of Shelton Pontiac-Buick, ; held at the Rato planUto Pontiac.J He is-Rochester, a member of the Pontiac Motor shown abovejwith E. M. EsteM^t),.a Gen^f Division- national dealer council, conferred erpl Motors vie* president and general manager this weefk with members of Pontiac manage- of Pontiac, and Frank.V. Bridge, general sales Irtent in an 'exchange of ittoai dti hnw liptter manager. ’’ A/v 1- n; 7,_____________________________________; ‘* i "_L