wMB Tin Weather *•* Chance el Ratal idmmi m n* u m. 124 —. NO. THE PONTIAC PRESS ~ ~~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN MONDAV; JULY H 1966 —4(Tpa^ES UNIT,?SS^i®NAL Home Edition 132 ir it it it Tornadoes Lash Five States in I ★ ★ • ★ ♦Pi * * * - ■ * * * ' * * * Tff.HBiaiwwwiJMiJW'BniuBaM - ■ Six From Area Are RUINATION—This charred tangle was believed one result of overnight storms that racked Ohio Saturday night and early yesterday. Authorities believe lightning touched off the fire that left this Columbus lumber company looking as it .does. Damage was estimated at $275,000, only a fraction of total damage from wind, lightning, fires and power failures around the state. Thunderstorms Rack Parts of Ohio Valley Woman Shot in Gun Battle With Officers POST FALLS, Idaho (AP)-LiiUan Jo Ramus, the young woman who charged out of a motel room, ■ spraying bullets MMMH from a gold- f plated Ml carabine at police-j men and FBI j agents, lay seri-! ously * wounded \ today but was; responding treatment. One FBI agent1 was wounded MISS RAMUS “night Saturday before the 2fr year-old woman fell with bullet wounds in the head and left hip. After “emergency surgery at a hospital in Spokane, Wash., 20 miles away, she was taken off the critical list. "After we told her to come (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) In Today's Press Not Coming Russian trade team stay-in home. — PAGE D-l. McNamara Report Claims $144>illion savings to taxpayers—PAGE B-7. W. German Vote W., Berlin mayor credited with Socialist gains— PAGE A-7. Area News .........A-4 Astrology ......... C4 Bridge ........... C4 CTossword Prole .. D-l I Comics .............C4 Editorials ........A-8 Markets .......... C-7 Obituaries .........D4 Sports ........D-l—D-J Theaters ...........C4 TV-Radie Programs D-ll Veterans’ Series .....B>U Wilson, Earl .......WI Women’s Pages B-l—B-5 ill ONES “It’i just tike skateboarding, only it’s on water.” \\ * Hopes Fading as Air Strike Talks Reopen Union Official's Blast Dims Chancts- for Quick Settlement WASHINGTON UP — Airline strike negotiations reopened today on a sharp note that further dimmed hope of a quick settlement of the walkout that started last Friday. Joseph Ramsey, vice presi- By The Associated Press Heavy thunderstorms rumbled through the Ohio Val-. ley and parts of the Great Lakes area today in the wake of tornadoes that ripped through five Midwestern states. Although storms caused extensive damage in parts of northeastern Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin, the ____________________ beneficial rains brought dent of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists and chief union negotiator, en-' tered the conference room and said: "The public should know that there hasn’t been five minutes of real negotiating since this strike started. "These carriers are standing pat, protecting their profits, waiting for the President or Congress to help them out. "Union members on the airlines are asking to share in the profits,. Detroiter Dies in County Lake Accidents and violence brought death to six Pontiac area persons and a Detroit man this weekend. Four persons including two Pontiac residents died on county roads. A Detroit man drowned at Kensington Metropolitan Park and a Pontiac Township woman was killed in a gas explosion near Sault Ste. Marie, t In addition, a Farmington Township man died early yesterday from gunshot Gunfight Fatal to Area Man Fight Over $50 Debt Is Linked to Shooting wounds inflicted during an argument with a m a n police said was a good friend. Dead in Pontiac area traffic accidents are Vem N. Gettel, 44, of 786 Pensacola;'Dorothy J. ARRAIGNED IN SHOOTING — John Lee Ott (dark shirt), 22, of 22570 Tulane, Farmington Township, is taken into custody by Farmington Township police following a shooting early yesterday in which Ott’*btovi, Donald Gama, 22, of U7S* Woodington, Farmington Townihip, was killed. Toe two reportedly quarreled over $50 which Ott claimed Garren owed him. much-needed relief to parched areas. Chicago recorded .54 inches of rain in six hours, and Green Bay, Wis., measured .90 inches in.a similar period. About half an inch of rain fell on a wide sectionxd Indiana. Morning temperatures generally were in the Ms and 70s, except for much of the Northwest where the cool 50s prevailed. Forecasters said the mercury would soar to record-breaking levels in most of the central section of the country late Monday. The weatherman said readings a round'the 100-degree mark were indicated in much of the Mississippi Valley and the plains states. DAKOTAS SEARED Blistering Iwt weaUicr scared the Dakotas Sunday. Pierre, • S.D., recorded a high of 113 degrees, and Huron, S.D., sweltered in 112-degree heat. It was the highest reading ever recorded in Huron. Monday morning’s low readings included 42 in Klamath Falls, Ore., and 43 in Redmond, Ore. "After all these years when they have accepted substandard conditions, airline employes are entitled to a better deal.’1 GET ON WITH JOB Ramsey handed out mimeographed copies of the statement but declined to elaborate on it, saying “we bettor get on with the job.’’ William J. Curtin, ehief negotiator for the five struck airlines — Eastern, National, Northwest, Trans World and United—arrived in the hallway as Ramsey was speaking. He listened before entering the separate conference room for his group. Asked for comment, Curtin said: “We have endorsed the emergency board recommendations which the President himself characterized as the framework for a just settlement of the dispute, and we have even im-■ proved upon it in our negotia-tions.” ____________. 2 Yank Jets Are Downed in N.Viet;3 Copiers Lost SAIGON, South Viet Nam UP)—The Viet Cong shot down three American helicopters in South Viet Nam, killingv four U.S. and nine South Vietnamese soldiers, while two more U.S. jets were lost in the air war-against the Communist north, an American spokesman announced today. A Navy fighter-bomber became the 285th plane lost in the 17-month air war _________ against North Viet Nam early today. The bombing continued with an attack on another oil storage depot 130 miles west-northwest of Hanoi near the old French base of Dien Bien Phu. U.S. Reported Planning Troop Buildups in Viet Orders to Stand Trial on Bribery The pilots reported that two buildings were damaged.. Ground fighting in South Viet Nani dioddown, with both U.SZ~ and Vietmanese headquarters reporting only light patrol con-tacts. Tornadoes caused much damage Sunday night and early Monday in Minnesota and four other Midwestern states. Violent weather also lashed parts of the country from Idaho to New England. No deaths or injuries were reported, but one twister demolished a Wadena, Minn., home and another flipped over two parked airplanes in La Crosse, Wis. Winds in the Wadena area in western Minnesota also wrecked a barn and lightning ignited a fire that |^t|roya(| another White Lake Township Supervisor Edward Cheyz this morning was ordered to stand tripl in Oakland County Circuit Court » on charges of conspiracy to bribe and bribery. The case was set for trial after Cheyz, 39, of 2900 Ridge, White Lake Township, entered an innocent plea at his arraignment before Circuit Judge WU-4 liam J. Beer. Cheyz was released aai his bond continued at $LM9 pending the trlaL A trial date was In the jungles northwest of Saigon, a battered Viet Cong regiment escaped toward the Cambodian border, leaving at least 238 dead after the U.S. 1st Infantry Division decoyed the guerrillas into a furious fight." U. S. military men declined to speculate whether the 2,000-man enemy force had taken refuge in Cambodia. NEW YORK (AP) - The United States has begun a major expansion of its armed forces and is planning further trsope buildups la Viat Nam dRpttFUffldHl optimism about the war’s progress, the New York Times reported today. No , official pronouncements about the buildups have been made, but as of June 30, Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine forces exceeded their budget levels by 100,000 men, the Times said in a dispatch from Washington. The Army, it was reported, has been instructed to continue recruit training at a level of 50,-000 men per month for at least the next three months. A 22-year-o 1 d Farmington Township man stood mute at his arraignment yesterday on the charge of murdering a longtime friend over a $80 debt. Examination for John Ott of 22570 Tulane was set for Friday in Farmington Township Justice Court. Ott was jailed after he and the victim, Donald Garren, 22, of 217M Woodington, Farmington Township, shot it ont in front of Garten’* home about 1 a.m. yesterday. Police said Garren -was at home entertaining several friends when Ott appeared demanding the money which he said Garren owed him. Witnesses told police Garren said he did not have the money. Police are still checking the report that Garren then fired several shots with a 22-caliber 1 revolver, chasing Ott from-the home. Witnesses fold police Ott returned later and the two shot " it out in front of Gqrren’s home. Garren was struck in the chest - and abdomen. Ott reportedly fled in his own car. Following the shooting, Farmington Township Chief of Detectives R a s s Conway talked to Oil’s brother, Melvin, 2$, of Bedford Township Oakland Oakland Drowning Highway Toll In ’66 Toll in ’66 18 74 Law Y«»r Latt Yaar to Data 18 to Data 83 Trisch, 44, of 60 Douglas; Morris' L. Howe, 29, of 1176 Smith, Birmingham; and Harold Spalding, 87, of Royal Oak. Mrs. Harold Smith, 17, of tile Commonwealth, died at Soo Memorial Hospital yesterday .from burns suffered in an explosion, and the body of 88-year-old Edward Wendt of Detroit was recovered early today at a Kent Lake swimming area. Gettel and the Trisch woman were dead on arriyal at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Saturday after their car went off M24 in , Orion Township and skidded 118 feet into a tree. ' Ott to lurreMer to police. “After about a half hour, Mel- vin came to his father’s house - where we were waiting and said his brother would see me if I went alone, went unarmed and wasn’t tailed,” said Conway. “He was hiding in some woods near Eight Mile and Merriman but came running out after we had waited there a short time.” Conway said the two had been friends for a long time. He said both were married but separated from their wives. Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies said they were unable to determine who was driving the automobile, which left the road south of Silver Beil about 3 p. m. STRUCK AT INTERSECTION Spalding was killed yesterday when, according to Royal Oak police, a car struck him in the southbound lane of tempo-, rary 1-75 at an intersection just south of 11 Mile in Royal Oak. Police said an investigation into the accident is continuing. HflWfe dlw Saturday after Tils motorcycle crashed Into $n au-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1). Heat 'Relief' Didn't linger The charges were brought against Cheyz in April by the Oakland County Grand Jury. Grand Juror Philip Pratt alleges that Cheyz intended to use his influence to have property rezoned for an apartment development in return for money. The project was proposed by Mrs. Willard Dawson, a White Lake Township businesswoman. - Heavy thunderstorms Saturday afternoon broke last week's hot dry spell. But, after a brief cool period, the temperatures dumbed again. Cockfight Lays an Egg Last montb^additional charges of conspiracy to extort and extortion stemming from the same alleged land deal were dismissed against Cheyx at his preliminary court examination before Waterford Township Justice of the Peace Kenneth H. Hempstead. SAGINAW (AP) - The Tuscola County cockfight laid an egg. Just when the action of battling boosters was said to be getting good in a wooded area 39 miles east of Saginaw, an airplfia swooped down and its loudspeaker bland at the <6 excited fans: u ■. “You’re all under arrest.” It didn’t help for the fight fans to rua. State Police Trooper Robert Jenkins of the Bridgeport Post said troopers, dressed in camouflage liniforms, had infiltrated the area several hours before fight fans arrived. FILMED Police commandos were hiding in trees, in the gran and on utility poles. One was perched high operating a movie camera for evidence. Police said teas came from all ovor the state, bringing beer and picnic leaches.’ Troopers from five posts were involved in the raid. TWO ROOSTERS In a cockfight two roosters, trained to kill, are matched in a circular pit and are equipped with metal spurs to make their slashing more effective. j Betting is an added attraction for the fight fan. Such fights are illegal in Michigan. Fans were loaded onto a school bus, taken to Mayville Justice of the Peace George Foster and fined $19 each for loitering *at an illegal event. Police said they are continuing the investigation to determine the leaders of the ring. One other problem police face is what to do with the 199 roosters confiscated in the raid. A heavy rainstorm Saturday afternoon brought a drastic temperature drop of 20 degrees in * 4Vi hours. By 5 p.m. the thermometer read 68 degrees. A half-inch' raiafall disappeared into parched ground. Unfortunately after the storm ended, the temperatures began to climb. By midafternoon yesterday, it was back in the 90s. t Today’s high will be in the 180s with al chance of late afternoon and evening thundershow-tkn. . The heat will continue with tonight’s lows between ,87 and 78. Tomorrow's weather will be in the 90s with chances of thundershowers. Wednesday's outlook: The same. » , Downtown Pontiac’s low prior to 8 p.m. was 71 At 1 p.m. tbs mercury had climbed to IS. T M0BAT8 JUDOS % MM A* , A—2 Jig ll^pl • warn * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULf 11, 196« Weekend Read toll Hits 16- in By fke Associated Press A collision between a government Job Corps bus and a car claimed two lives and pushed Michigan's weekend traffic toll to 16. ’ X Albert Setterbo, 71> (rf Suttons Bay, and his wife, Gear 65, were killed when their carsph lided with the bus at an inter section near Cadillac Sunday. Eleven bus, passengers were injured. convention opening in Detroit Monday. Miller, a .stunt man of the silent movie .days, was struck down by -a hit-and-run driver while, crossing a Detroit street in bis | her car hit a tree off LAkeshore Drive in Chippewa County's Bay Mills Township. William F. Rome, 18, of Grand Hdvert, when a car in which he was riding ran off an Ottawa County road in. Park Township north of Holland Sunday and rolled over" several times. Harold Spalding, 87, of Royall Oak, when he was hit Sunday by a.car racing with another car on temporary 1-75 at] i wheelchair. £ OTHER DEATHS \Also killed: Two Adrian youths, Charles e R. MaoGeorge and Earl R, Price, hothxM, Sunday when their car struidi^a tree along The weekend victims also in- M52 about a mile south of Middlesex in Royal Oak. eluded crippled Ralph A. (Dare- U. S. 223 in Lenawee^Catmty's;OVERTURNED 11114 d«lj) Miller, n, ot Proeid^, M«liso„ To^p. ^ ' ; H„ ulu>„ 3, JIAM|/// f|/ | J ||| | R. I advance agent for the Julie Gingrass 20 of Saultf^at when a c£r Paralyzed Veterans of America Ste. Mane, Ont., Sunday when husband, George, 40,1 Iran off P75. 10 miles north of J Flint, and overturned, Saturday 11 night. „ 11 Vem N. Gettel Pen- I isacola, Pontiac and Mrs>Qor-othy Jean THsch, of 60 DouglaW 11Pontiac, both 44, when the car! I in which they were riding Satur-|| day, ran off M24, four miles I north of Pontiac, during a rain-* Storm and struck a tree. 'Frozen' to Trailer Tackle Saves Girl's life 7 Are Victims of Accidents and Violence (Coqtinued From Page One) tomobile on 10 Mile m Royal Oak. * Oakland County Sheriff's Deputy Fred Scholz early today pulled Wendt’s body from about six feet of water at Maple Beach in Kent Lake. A coroner’s report indicated that Wendt, last seen Saturday morning by a son, had been dead since 11 ajn. yesterday. Wendt had gene to the park Saturday far a picnic and became the object of a search by park police when Us aoto-mpbile was left overnight la a parking lot. Mrs. Smith was on a camping trq> with her husband and granddaughter near Sault Ste. Marie when a propane gas stove in their camper, exploded Saturday, critically burning her. Smith, 61, and 9-year-old Dianne Smith were hospitalised with bums at Soo Memorial Hospital and are reported in fair condition. State police at St. Ignace said Mrs. Smith was attempting to light the stove, but found it was turned off from the outside. She turned on the gas, returned to the camper and lit a match, causing the explosion, police said. WBhgAN’S ARSENAL—FBI agents say Lillian Jo'Ramus, 28, an escapee from the Spokane, Wasfc>sdty jail, had these weapons in her possessions an Idaho motel where Randy | friends at Ludjngton State Park Miss jrw r Brosseau 44 of! *8 WM *eriouily wotmdpd in a gun battle ..................... Inkster, Saturday in a two-carl wjh P°Uce. The FBI said she came out firing crash on U-S. 24, five miles north of Monroe. Morris L. Howe, 29, of 1171 Smith, Birmingham, when, his motorcycle crashed into a car in Royal Oak Saturday. Mrs. Garney Allen, 30, of Stockbridge, when her car rammed an embankment five miles north of Stockbridge Sat- “IS. U*. Gill, 29, tej™. LUDINGTON (AP) Seiy, a former high school foot-ion Lake Michigan. Standing on ball halfback from Ludington, wet ground last Tuesday, she made one of the toughest I climbed into a house trailer. An tackles of his life when he electric shock swept through leveled Irene Albrecht—it saved her body, her life. “I couldn’t let go,” she re- Irene, 17, of Ludington, was called in an interview Sunday, camping with a group of girl- “it pained me all over my body.” Irene said she screamed for Randy who was camping on the next site. GOT A SHOCK 'I must have been there three < or four minutes when he got struck a guard rail Saturday on|| there,” she said. At first, he the westbound Ford Freeway ' tried to kick my feet loose. He Detroit, got a shock, too. Ray McMillan, 16, of Detroit,| 'Then he took a run at me struck down Friday night by a and tackled me off the trailer, hit-and-run driver as he ran| I started to have convulsions.”[across a Detroit street. the pistol-grip Ml carbine (center) and shot an FBI agent in the leg. Found in her room-‘ were a 22-caliber rifle (top), a 44-magnum carbine, and fountain-pen-size tear gas gun (right, center). A 38-caliber pistol was taken from her. Deliberations Resumed in VA Home Loan Case waT injured fatally’ when acsrl"0™" ***.,*. 2 in which she was a passengerM resumed deliberations in Randy applied first aid until I r I All * ' park officials took Irene to a| TOOieC/UllfC6f hospital. Doctors at Stearns! Hospital said Randy’s quick ac- r tion may have saved Irene’s| 110/71 LUflCfClU life. Is Dead at 80 national tor the Democratic committee. The government said the alleged fraud Was carried out through the use by' Levinson and his company of Wayne National Life to get approval of VA loans that would not pass proper inspection. A hospital spokesman said _ delay of a few more seconds could have meant permanent paralysis or death. President, Family Returning to D. C. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)— President Johnson headed back to Washington today after a long holiday that coincided with the July 4th recess of Congress. His plane, with Mrs. Johnson, their daughter Luci and Luci’s fiance, Pat Nugent, and Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Tex., aboard, took off at>10:36 a.m. E.D.T. The President and Mrs. Johnson flew to their ranch home some 70 miles north of here June 30 after appearance; in Omaha and Des Moines. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly sunny and hot today with a chance of late afternoon or evening thundershowers. Highs 1847. Fair and continued quite warm tonight Lows 07 to 75. Tuesday partly sunny with a chance of afternoon thundershowers again and continued hot. Highs N to tt. Winds mostly southwesterly 8 to 18 miles today briefly higher in thundershower*. Wednesday outlook: Thundershowers and hot. Tetty In Pentiac | Saturday In Peattac •ding I e.m.: L . . <•« rwwdW ewnUwn) Highest temperature ............. the government’s home loan fraud and conspiracy case today following its convictions financier Ben Levinson and two codefen-I dents. ! Levinson, 60, LEVINSON head of a mortgage company and onetime prominent Democratic party m* .^^SrtSSffBrSi Romney Cites Labor Record Woman Shot in Gun Battle With Officers (Continued From Page One) the motel door several times, then fired a single shot inside the room, apparently to make us think she had shot herself,” said FBI special agent Robert who was shot in the leg. “We told the officers over the bull horn to stay back, then she Birmingham Area Nawt Board to Consider Plan to Restrict Sm Pools BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -A proposal which would restrict the use of wading pool; and small swimming pools will be considered tonight at the township board meeting. The proposal would amend the present swimming pool ordinance to require all pools Which have a depth of two feet or more to he fenced, te fenced. The action is a result of the increased use of small pools during recent hot weather. Township officials have been receiving a growing number of complaints about the noise and safety hazards created by the pools. In other action, the board will Consider a proposal to rezone a parcel of land on West Long Lake Road just east of Telegraph. The lot is presently occupied by the'Willow Way Playhouse. Rezoning would provide for a change from a multiple family district to an office building district. ' BLOOMFIELD HILLS -** Arthur W. Courtney III, of 3311 Kernway, Is one of thirty geology students now enroute to Dubois, Wyom., where geology field courses are being; conducted by Miami University of Ohio. Arthur, a student at Franklin A Marshall Cbllege, will be attending the courses through August 13. Deputies Ticket 3] on Area Lakes Deputies from the safety division of the Oakland Cbunty Sheriff’s Department issued 31 violation tickets on county lakes this weekend, most of them for reckless operation and excessive speeding of powerboats. In addition, 167 warnings were handed out for minor offenses and deputies assisted 39 times in* cases where boaters ran oul of gas or encountered other difficulties* Heavy rains throughout the Pontiac area Saturday afternoon ___ were cited as holding down the opened* U^door andltarted fir" of person crowding . * , rniintv li ing,” he said. county lakes. The Michigan Kidney Foundation’s trustees have elected Mrs. M. M. Burgess, 1156 Country Chib Drive, as honqrary chairman of the board. Mrs. Burgess is one of the foundera of the Torch Drive agency, devoted to bettering care and treatment for victims of kidney disease. She has been a member of the organization’s board of directors since it was established in 1955. Brothers Burned in Explosion of Gunpowder Two Bloomfield Township brothers were burned seriously Friday night when a can of gunpowder they were using to ignite a smoke bomb exploded in their hands. Jon Scavone, 18, of 536 Rolling Rock, is in good condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with burns on his face, hands, and arms. His brother Alan, 14, was hurt less seriously and was released from the hospital after emergency treatment. Police said the boys were setting off the smoke bombs in front of their home when one of the bombs failed to ingnite. There were “almost a hundred” officers surrounding the motels said the wife of the prominent jwemocrauc periyi . ATl.SING (in>n_Gov George®Wn*r’ I®rB* D“Vid D°ty' fund raiser, was found HANDLE The sawed-off MI carbine Franklin Mortgage Co., and "Richard D. Mitchell, president of the defunct Rem Realty Co. MONTEBELLO, Quebec (XI -Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, 80, who took the first Canadian amyorarseasinWorld Warn ^ government charged died here tolay. fraud and conspiracy in connec- Geru McNaughton’s car. L m an StaSad $4 mil-spanned many fields of public\ >n Veterans Administration semce. induding P^^Hhome loans handled by Levin-dency of the National Researchl , Council, wartime army com- _ , . mander, brief service as de- deiiberaWthe case fense minister and later u?«ains‘ Edward P^ang Jr., Canadian chairman of the *** ternational Joint Commission. He held th( latter post until his retirement in 1962. Andrew George Latta McNaughton was at once soldier, ! Teamster President James Hof-fa’s assertion that he has done more for labor than former Democratic Gov. G. Mennen Williams. Hoffa last week said Romney has done more for labor than Williams and his remarks brought a “not so” blast from had. bden fitted with a pistol handle so it could be used as a hand gun. Her wild flurry of shooting sent ballets through, a screen door into. Rockwell’s car and flattened the tires on her own automobile. scientist and diplomat. When well into his 70b, McNaughton became Canadian chairman of the International Joint Commission and concessions from the United States for huge quantities of American - generated Columbia River power to be turned jto Canada... r A'S i Twrerctr vented the cathi National Life insurance Co. and Ross C. Howard, former executive assistant in Levinson's mortgage company. PARTY ASPIRANT Levinson, well known Democratic fund raiser of the President Franklin D. Roosevelt era and once an aspirant to high party office, was found guilty of 17 counts. So was his company. Mitchell was convicted on 19 counts. The trial lasted 10 weeks. The maximum penalty The officers then opened fire Democratic House leader Jo- with pistols, rifles and a shot-, seph Kowalski. I gun. Miss Ramus fell to the] Romney today claimed as ground, screaming, credit during his first two I.iati. ESCAPE 1 feMsl, lli hF if ft jlftflOft fine gnd friidll* iode-ray compass tsv. vpars imnrisonment Judo? progr. China Hints: No Troops 1 . . five years imprisonment. Judge 1 that enabled airplane pilots to!'n,omas p Thornton deferred j get proper bearings. * sentencing. But it was as a soldier that jn 2952, Levinson lost in a hid he was best know. „ At the outbreak of World War If I* he organized a battery of the Canadian field artillery and] went overseas with the first con-j tingent. He was promoted to! | command the 11th artillery brigade, and later was wounded] in the battles of Ypres and aa] Soiskons. 771 Just before the armistice In 11918 he was appointed general j officer commanding the -Canadi-*3 an corps of heavy artillery compare the savings at SIMMS new store before you buy! terms of office a minimum Authorities had been looking wage law, the construction : for last sept safety' act, increased work- |13f when she and Joan M. Bos- open tonite 'til 9 p.m. tues. and weds. 9 a.m. to 6 p.nr men’s compensation benefits, and a strong labor department. “I know you can’t find any comparable period in Michigan history when so much has been done for the overage working man in this state,” Romney said of his two terms in office. Kowalski, who defended Williams’ record at a six-term gov- ley, 29, of Spokane, both held on forgery charges, used smug-gled-in hacksaw blades ta saw through the bars on a cell window in the Spokane city jail. They jumped from their third-floor cell window to the roof of the men’s quarters on the second floor, then two stories to the ground. Miss Ram^s.jnd JkSS-PJtai -of- • folding Itrollsr • tun conopy • basket for carrying diopar bog and packages • foot- ras* programs “were goals Williams terfeiting $40,000’ worth of $20 fought for years ago and which bills, and printing 85,000 worth] were frustrated by-Republican] of fake unemployment, welfare legislatures,” land railroad pay checks. | North Viet on Own? DeonUw Temperatures TOKYO (UPI)—Communist-China hinted With'lhe reuinrof "peace, he| today it was not prepared to send troops . ’ - , 1 . r _ _ I Inin Inn t/lnl came back to Canada and began I Weather: Pleasant ’ lvcniic vault w vaiiauc Tthe nucleus of what was to be-J " come the Canadian Army that • 77■* he commanded in World War II. RATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers an ”1^ tonight in the Great Lakes area, upper Mis-atoiippi Valley and northern Rockies. It will be warm and hwmiH east ef the Mississippi Valley and cooler in the nrrjto— Plains and Rockies. 32 Crewmen Safe as Freighter Sinks VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) — A leaking Italian freighter trying to reach shoTe^sank early today after she had Men abandoned oy her 32-man' ei^w. | The crewmen were rescued un-i {injured.- c< { The 441-foot, 14,100-ton Paes-| j turn,, a World War U Liberty ship, went down about 23 miles south "southeast of Cape .Hatter-as, N.C. She was headed for Norfolk, Va. She sank at 1:10 a.m., about 10 hours after her crew had left in lifeboats. A Coast Guard patrol vessel landed them here this morning. into the Viet Nam War. It said so-called “peoples wars” can be won only if “the people rely on themselves." The declaration came in an editorial in the official Peking Peoples Daily and - followed bitter attacks yesterday on the United States and Soviet Union. “The people should and can oaly rely m themselves to make revolatims and wage peoples war in their ewa country, since these art their own affairs,” the editorial said. “No outside aid can replace their struggle. Whatever its amount, it is only auxiliary.”, dr ★ ★ , The Red. Chinese commentary said the Communists in Viet Nam were ‘‘mauling’’ the U.S. “mainly on'their own strength." RUSSIANS CHARGED A top Chinese Communist official yesterday charged the Soviet Union was deploying troops along the Sino-Soviet frontier in “col* lusion" with the UJS. war efforts in Viet Nam. The charge was made by Red Chiaa’i Foreign Minister Chen Y1 at a hums rally ia. Peking, aad broadcast, by the official Cemmudst New China News Agency. Chen also holds the title of vice premier in the Peking government. He said the United States, through Secretary of State Dean Rusk, bluntly urged the Soviet to “get busy and start helping us make some peace out there.” “The U. S. State Department admitted that the United States had informed ‘various key interested governments,’ including that of the Soviet Union, in advance of its decision to bomb Hanoi and Haiphong," Chen said. “The bombings,” he said, "were entirely the result of U. S.-Soviet collusion. The facts are very fc&uk. “The Soviet revisionist clique Is redoubling its efforts to take united action with U. S. imperialism in a big way to sabotage the revolutionary struggle of all the peoples of the world.” Referring to the tense SinoSoviet border area, Chen said, “They (Russia) are making deployments along the Chinese border in coordination with the U. S. imperialist encirclement of China.” Reports reaching Western capitals have indicated that the Soviet has bolstered its border troOpa at certain hot spots along the 5,600-mile frontier, particularly in the Soviet Kazahtstan-Chineee Striding area hi Central Asia. famous Trav-I^EEZ' baby stroller 9.95 vein* - now 11M american ‘COLUMBIA’ convertible bicycles for boys and girls 20-Inch Siam 99 29 Charge It! All Major Credit Cards Honored • lidewalk bike with 20" from# • 2 wheelers with training wheels • ball baarihgs * reinforced frame * large selection of bicycles at reduced savings • comport our prices and models. Genuine 'COLUMBIA' deluxe ‘playboy’ & bike 4788 better than pictured mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 i-4 Byrd Conservatives Face Stiff Threat in Virginia KICHMOND/V*. (AP) - The conservative Byrd organization faces the stiffeat opposition yet to its political power from the moderate-liberal wing of the Democratic party in Tuesday’s primary. Virginia voters, with the. unique chance to pick both Sen- Believe France Can Start on H-Bomb in Year PARIS (UPI) - France will be producing enough high quality enriched uranium within less than a year to begin constructing its first H-bomb, the French Atomic Energy Commission announced today. In its annual report, the commission said the nuclear planti at Pierrelatte in the Rhone Valley has been producing enriched uranium since the beginning of last year. I A second plant at Pierrelatte ifias been functioning since April t 11965, and a third since this spring, the report said. It said the fourth and final plant, designed to produce 'the highest quality of enriched uranium, will be operating before the middle of 1967. PNH Girl Grad Plans German School Stud/ Barbara Nelson, a June graduate of Pontiac Northern High School, is spending 15 months in Offenbach, Germany, on the “13th Year Abroad” program of the Youth for Understanding I Teen-age Program, j Barbara, daughter of Mrs. Frances Nelson, 65 E. Fair-mount, will enroll in an accredited German school while living with a host family. ate candidates, have a choice from among the two men in office, Sens. A, Willis .Robertson and Harry F. Byrd Jr. and challengers with state legislature experience who have come on strong! THIRD RACE A third race of almost parallel interest is for the 8th district House seat where Rep. Howard W. Smith, a powerful congressional figure as chairman of the House Rules Committee, is — at 83 — seeking a 19th term. A challenger nearly 40 years Smith's junior, George Rawlings Jr., a Fredericksburg attorney, has goaded the old conservative to do what he has seldom had to do in recent times — get out and campaign. Byrd, who succeeded his retired and now gravely ill father last November, by appointment, is opposed by Armistead Boothe* a north Virginia attorney who served with Byrd in the state senate. Robertson, at 79 the same age as Byrd Sr., is opposed by state Sen. William B. Spong Jr. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS f OPEN Tonlte /til| ||P.M. Tues., Wed. Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. To nit e, Tues., Wed. Only 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Clothesline T-Posts 2-Inch All METAL Launch to Prepare for 3-Man Flight CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -powerful Saturn 1 rocket scheduled to send an unmanned Apollo spaceship on a searing! suborbital hop three quarters of the way around the globe Aug, 20 to clear the way for an attempt to orbit three men in a similar craft in November. The national Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA disclosed the target date for the! test flight yesterday. The announcement broke the agency’s custom of withholding such dates until 30 days before l launch. Paint Thinner-Gai. Gallon can. Best to clean brushes and clothing. In factory sealed con. Limit 2 cans. Durable Folding Wood 5-Foot Ladders Sturdy folding steplodder in full 5-foot height. With pail platfohn add steel rod reinforced steps. ¥ jy. »»*»**** * * T** * * * * 4- * * ** simsM Fbrbwch wwr of lounglna. %-Ungth dmm b#od> or button front shift. Sum S-M-L SIMMS'®. manufacturers clearance « HATHAWAY Shirts THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY II, 1068 Avon Asking Referendum AVON TOWNSHIP - Mem-bers of the Hamlln-Livemola Homeowners Association plan one ray or another to get a rezoning referendum bade on the ballot — hopefully In time for the Aug. 2 primary election, ' i About SS members of the group met with their attorney Friday night to explore routes they might take in their light to have a recent rezoning decision by the Township Board referred to the voters. “Our attorney explained several courses of action open I , to is,” said Mrs. John W. I i Chastain, a member of the group. “He's going to investigate them and then advise us which one to take. “We’ve done everything according to law and we feel the judge’s decision was wrong.”, ★' ★ * Oakland County Circuit Judge] Arthur E. Moore ruled two| weeks ago that petitions demanding a referendum vote lacked a sufficient number of signatures. * ★ * Hie petitions were circulated by irate home owners last March after the Township Board approved the rezoning of 46.6 acres between Hamlin and Avon roads west of Livernois from general farm to light industrial. LEARN BY DOING—Dora Miracle, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Miracle, 21530 Renselaer, and Michael Martin, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Martin, 22327 Tredwall, both of Farmington Township expand their nature studies by making bumblebees. Lending a helping hand to the two children is Mrs. Nancy Brodrick, teacher at the special education summer program at Gill Elementary School, Farmington Township. At Farmington Twp. School Sales Are for Holly Firm ( Recreation Used as Learning Device FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — A special education day-camp program at Gill Elementary School is proving that recrea-nal activities can be learning devica demic subjects. Seventeen mentally retarded children between the ages of six and twelve are enrolled in a n/vffv _ _ . „ half-day program designed to H^Y - JJieCiaude B. Lve knowledge Schneible ., 714 N. Saginaw, fa recreation " activites. has announced an increase in sales during the past fiscal year with volume now in excess of $2 million. George Schreiber, president of the firm, reported domestic sales up over 40 per cent with foreign sales charting a 12 per ' cent increase. ★ He attributed the increase to new sales engineers who have been added across the country. Schreiber said the company, which manufactures air pollution control systems for foundry and chemical industries, plans to expand the sales and display facilities at the plant. Smith Chosen President of Milford Board MILFOIL!)—James Smith has been elected president of the Huron Valley Board of Education. Also elected wre Mrs. Asa Smith, secretary; and Harold Porter, treasurer. These children are mentally handicapped who can be ed- it ca ted. During the school year, they are carolled in special education classes. * * * Mrs. Nancy Brodrick, a teacher at Gill School, became con- Less Reading Noted in Township Library WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Although there is an expanded book list to chose from, township residents appear to be doing less reading. The township library has added almost 2,000 items to Its collection boosting its total to 22,-according to a report by Mrs. Eunice Tuttle, head librarian. brary than at comparable libraries. The use of the Westacres Branch of the library has almost doubled since.it opened in February, Mrs. Tuttle said. This improvement and growth of the book collection will be the main effort for next year, she Said. The school board also agreed] brary. to raise salaries for substitute teachers from the present $18 a day to $20 a day. Teachers serying more than 10 days The land and building on Commerce was sold to the township by the Oakland Housing Authority for $50. Total remodeling _ .... . . costs were $28,530 with assis- The collection has been en-,tanoi ^ a federa, ^ of larged by the addition of friend’s] 133. of the West Bloomfield Town-1 * * * ship Library revolving Collection Library projects and activities of new fiction and by a maga-jh av e included an organized zkie grant from the state li-story hour for pre-schoolers sponsored by the Pine Lake g 120 9 flay. AfflirdM ffl ffiaiVffie From April 1, 1965 to March 31, 1966, the library’s circulation was 105,927, about 1,200 less Women’s Club Theater Group; and great books discussions, a heritage day exhibit of township history, student art exhibits, liatpry, student art exhibits, a is«^ pooirsale. and ah 'gaster about what would hap to the children during the months. She explained they often have what to do in their time and need a Structured, ine schedule to feel secure. Mrs. Brodrick considered the program a solution to After receiving from special educa-and school officials, she set up the first summer program in 1962. D u r i ■ g their half-day sessions, the children has nature studies, song sessions, hikes, picnics, and games. But whatever they do, the activity is used to explain academic principals and abstract concepts. Mrs. Brodrick explained that one day the children traced each other’s shadows. From this activity, they learned how to use the word “shadow" and what colors shadow is. BY DOING Most important, the children learn by doing. Things can not always be Explained to | Mrs. Brodrick said, they have to be acted out. For example, they are not told how to play a game, they are shown. The children also have the opportunity to plam their own •divides and Held trips. Up for serious consideration by the young stndents are field trips to a farm and the zoo, and snch activitives as a train ride, touring “Mg boat”, having a picnic, and merely riding around Detroit la a bus. These seventeen children were invited to join the p r of ram. Most of them come from district schools, but a few are from out- the new agreement, they will! Mrs.TOttiesaidthe drop is] receive $22. Imuch less at the township U- puppet show, all sponsored by the Friend’ 'Good Old Days' Not So Bad By PHIL BROWN | This base becomes extremely Associated Press Writer important in comparisons, Fer-EAST LANSING — In case ris said, and generally it is a you ever have wondered whenjgood idea to know not only the those “good old days” were, statistics, but who the statist!-agricultural agencies generally cjan is. figure them as back between For example, he added, since 1910 and 1914. ! wheat sold for $1 in 1910-14, it "It was not a bonanza]should sell for more than $3 now period,” said agricultural econo-10 produce parity, mist John Ferris of Michigan] But, said Ferris, scientific ad-State University, “but price re- vances have made it possible in lationships were generally favor- recent years for fanners to pro-able for farmers.” Iduce wheat more cheaply. * * * Agricultural agencies, he said, This meant the money a farm- have adjusted their ideas of er received for his crops went! parity prices accordingly, a long way in buying the things * * * he needed. Price supports based on 1910- Thus, sometime in the 1930s, 14 parity, Ferris said, “would 101A 1A . 1 -----1 1 the 1910-14 period became a “base” for comparing prices fanners payyyith prices they receive. INDEX CLIMBS have everybody going into crops where more efficiency has come into the picture.” Only two commodities, he inuE* added, now are above parity - for paid by farmers has climbed to!and **”: Ho?* ft? •« close m considering 1910-14’s in^*!2^^,!,lS^uJUt,nOStCOm' as 400. In Michigan, the index ]modit,es are beloW-of prices received has climbed!PARITY INCOME to 247 — about 75 per cent, as! The more important goal, Fer-high as prices paid- iris said, 1s parity income -not * * * parity prices. A higher output at Or, as some farm organize-Ibelow-parity prices can result tians put it, prices received areiin income, he noted, at about 75 per cent of parity ] “Farm income still is below In ardor to roach 100 per cent, a bushel of wheat, for example, would have to hay as many 1 it did in 1910-14. parity, but it is Improving,” he said. “With a reasonable year, (in terms of weather) it should move up appreciably this year.” Boy Named Eagle Scout FARMINGTON - Tim Maho-ney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mahoney, of 22751 Lilac, has been awarded the Eagle Scout rank, jjfc ' He is a member of Boy Scout Troop 110, sponsored by O'Ur Lady of Sorrows Men’s Club. During his scouting years, he has served as patrol leader, quartermaster, assistant senior patrol leader and senior patrol leader. In 1964, he was elected to the Order of the Arrow, scouting honor. ford it, the tuition is $60, but many of the children attend on scholarships from Farmington and Detroit foundations, civic organizations, and interested individuals. Troy Board Seeks School Land Funds New GOP Club to Hold Election of Officers INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — The newly formed Independence Township Republican Club will bold election of officers at and Big Beaver east of Cooi- TROY — The board of education has applied for funds under die Open Space Land Program to help finance the purchase of land for two proposed new schools. Under the program, the federal government will reimburse a school district np to N per cent if It caa guarantee that part of the land it bays will remain open apace. The board will use the money to purchase four acres of a proposal 10-acre elementary site between Wattles and Big Beaver west of Coolklge and rix acres of a proposed 16-acre ‘ high school site between Wattles its next meeting at 8 p.m.jidge. Wednesday, at the Township Hall. The club also has scheduled a candidates’ night fix 8 p.m.July 20 at the Township Hall. Candidates for township office will be presented. Lions Slato Golf Dqy The Huron Valley Lions Club wUl hold their 14ih Annual Golf Day at Highland Hills Golf Chib, Highland, Aug. 17. Roosevelt High Clast Plans Reunion July 30 WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Roosevelt Higi School’s Ctdssof 1961 will hold a reunion at the K-Falls Lounge & Restaurant, 1990 Hiller, July $9. Reservations may bo made with Mrs. Russell (Nancy) Edwards, 5630 Clqjry, Waterford all white shirts from our regular stocks in 4 collar styles 5.99 or 3 for17 Hathaway is one of The finest makers of shirts the world over. . . ond this is the first time we've been able to offer these excellent shirts at this unbelievable low price. It's one of the best values of the year, so stock up now and take advantage of this remarkable saving. They're impeccably tailored with long sleeves, in white. Choose from smooth* broadcloths with spread collar and French cuffs, regular collar with French or barrel cuffs, tab collar with French cuffs, and oxford cloth button-dowh with barrel cuffs. Don't delay. Come In now while selections are complete, , - this sale lasts for Just 1 week only Oer llrmlsgfcwi Slap Opam 96sudsy, Taaaday sad Wsdaatday Fran 9:30 AJNL to 5:30 PJL 100 Horae Stmt ■ Nell•« Mail Star* Oman Brary tming to 9 PJL 309 N. Tdagraph U, Naths r * THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, lftflg A-~» 'CIA Wo(k Routine; Few James Bondi WASHINGTON (AS)— Adm. Walliam F. Raborn, retired, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, says few persons employed by the ClA' actually participate in clandestine activities. “The nun who Joint CIA has far less chance, in the course of his career, of identifying with P| James Bond or «The Spy Who Came in From the Cold’ than he does of serving as an academic statistician, administrator, accountant or supply officer," Raborn said. \ * ★ Mr "Our major business,’’ he. explained in a copyright interview to U.8. News ft World Report, national -intelligence, and socaUed covert operations are a relatively minor part of our overall activities." Raborn said the CIA’s main Job is to inform top U.& dais of viriut Is happ around the world that might affect the national security of the United States. . He said “some classical pionage is required” but that “a great deal of the raw information is public, or available with a certain amount of digging.’’ Between 30 and 50 per cent of the 18,000 practicing physicians in New York City do not have hospital, appointments. SHOP WAITE'S MON., THUR., FRI. and SAT. NITES UNTIL 9 P.M. NEW DE-MOIST! NOW FRESHENS AIR WHILE IT CONTROLS DAMPNESS Simply honf it wherever dampness occurs. Soaks up its own weight in air moisture, yet does not drip. Can ba used over and over again. Safe. And now De-Moist includes SENTROL, ir packet of poly flakes that helps freshen > air. ideal for closets, basements, storage trunks, etc. ■ NEW GOUGHIAN NO RUBBING Aluminum &-Chrome CLEANER SIMPLY BRUSH ON, RINSE OFF . • Aluminum Doors • Windows 8 Screens • Furniture 0 Chrome Bumpers t Grills • Fixtures O Trimming • Stainless Steel . Housewares... Lower Level 8-0z. 98' musty odor: ing. Odor Its M-OZ. CAN ONLY 1* lili SHOP WAITE'S MON., THURS., FRI. and SAT. 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Printed petal perfect la e swum jacquard on luxuriant Terri-Down* Aquamarine, Greee Mongo, PMoP Fink, Tropic Gold. Domedlcs... Fourth Floor % i Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS • West Hun* Stmt Tf MONDAY, JULY 11, 1986 \ HAROLD A. mZGKRALB • Vto* PrwMut tad O. Uuniu Jot mm Local •Adrtrtltin* Mtnoltr It Seems to Me . . * People Who Back L.B. J. jon War Remain Silent As time inches along, it’s interesting to note' that so few advocates of President Johnson’s steppe d-up bombing program haye leaped to his support. M The majority want it. Many polls prove this. ★ ★ ★ And yet, the bulk of the public utterances comes from critics. However, the President does not need to-accept this as a personal thing visited upon him exclusively. From times immemorial, we in the newspaper business have learned that the opposition is always the element that jumps forward ahd expresses itself freely. Those who cheer, merely nodasllentagreemen 4. Apparently that’s human nature. It’s the opposition that seizes a pen, pencil or typewriter and usually the attack is vigorous. ★ ★ . ★ \ |n the current instance, polls in all sections indicated the people wanted something else done in Viet Nam. They were dissatisfied. I| there were alternate suggestions, the “let’s continue as is,” proposition always finished a dismal second. . Our own Representative Billie Farnum’s poll showed: Withdraw ............ ...2,501 Continue as we were ...... 3,437 Take action needed to win ............... 6,555 And yet, today the critics are the ones who jump Into print or grab the nearest soapbox. The President’s vast army of supporters remain silent. ★ ★ ★ Mr. President, accept the word of a citizen who has lived with this for a lifetime: The militant minority talks. Satisfaction spawns silence. You, sir, rfre moving with a mandate from the majority. The Nation became dissatisfied with "war as usual." We were getting absolutely nowhere. People wanted a change. You are receiving applause from coast to coast but it isn’t as noisy. Militant Communist wings all over the globe were ordered into full cry qitd told to arise and scream. /This they did, seizing the cudgel and hacking- away . with fury* Proceed onward, sir. Conclusive Actions .... Our "supreme” Court still "carries on." For a time, Americans fervently hoped each decision that was greeted with cheers by the crooks, lawbreakers and the Communists might be the last. Perish the thought. ★ ★ ★ A University of California law student is scheduled to become the court’s newest clerk. As an undergraduate this Michael E. Tigar was an ardent exponent of Communist activities. He was votod "youth leader” by the People’s World, official organ of the California Communists. Once he was a delegate to the Communist World Youth Festival in Helsinki. He , writes for Red papers. ★ ★ ★ Tigar was “pinpointed” with other Communist students in the campus riots. And now? He leaves with a diploma to take up work for our "supreme” court. Draw your own conclusions. De Gaulle’s Gaul! Charles di Gaulle is one of the world’s enigmas. He throws his weight around Europe, tries to overwhelm the Communists and returns with a signed. "agreement” that the Commies would repudiate ovfernight if, they wished * v '______________ dollars France owes us from World War One? That was nearly a half century ago. The total now is $6.5 billion. Our administration gravely accepts every, de Gaulle excuse. Don’t 200 million Americans come ahead of this international Doesn’t the astute Frenchman? How about that five billion ★ ★ ★ If they do, let’s get tough. * Let's get our money. You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet! David Lawrence Says: Viet Peace Closer Than Thought And in Conclusion .... Jottings from the well-thumbed the pay’s low.. ?Over- notdjjook of your peripatetic re- heard: “One good thing about in-p0Ar: flation: my kids can’t get sick It was nice of the,broadcasters of on a nickel candy bar”... the Mis Michigan contest to Inter- wh'th" 1 e,er rupt the commercials frequently and spoken word„ are the«,irUe8t in ' let the audience view the contes- (h# higtory of the BCreen. g^. tants.. ..... I met Senator ^ it breaks attendance records Robert ORirriN the other day and everywhere. was happily impressed with his ★ ★ ★ . genial personality and gentlemanly Farmerg are compiaining bitterly manner........... Mario .*****£ over the Administration’s attempts .70, just left for Italy to visit his * mother and father, age 95 and 108 to hold dow* farm prices while respectively. . . . . Dennis everything flse edges upward. They . Day is expecting his tenth offspring, claim they’re cheated by Washing-■ ■ft ★ 1c ton politician who say this move is Scouts advise me that Carla a «fight against inflation.” ..... I Aderenta de-_m_g»g J First graders in New York *erv“ who don’t measure up in reading one of the arear . . attractive young ' 1 will have to take the year over fot / ladiesA the first time. It’s creating a furor Gaseous Clay^r _ W but'the school decision is applauded. Is arranging >■ IgaM.......... . Dept; of Cheers and tour in foreign B jeers: the C’s—Donald Khatt, lands for a series W sheriff’s Dept., for his safety work sf fights, but hea oyer th Fourth; the J’s—Oakland Et Count, W accent, the fitting’s “for keeps” and —Hahold A. Fitzgeeald WASHINGTON - Peace in Viet Nam is nearer than most people think. What is said in the press and over the radio by both sides is naturally uncom-'promising, but ^ more signifi- JB cant is the MlH peace talk going on right now confidentially in several capitals of the world. A 1 though' Prime Minister Harold Wilson of Great Britain LAWRENCE will visit Moscow at the end of this week and not long afterward will come to the United States to confer with President Johnson, the decision as to whether or not there will be peace in Viet Nam rests now with Red China. Pressure for peace is growing. In the past week, Secretary of State Rusk had an opportunity to explain the American position in conferences at Tokyo withhigh officials of the Japanese 'government who are in close touch with Asian developments. Ambassador Goldberg has had an important talk with the Pope at Rome and the Italian government. Some of the things Goldberg said will undoubtedly be relayed to the Communist side. , The most encouraging aspect of the whole world situation is that no one-man government is making the vital decisions today, as was the case when Kaiser Wilhelm and Adolf Hitler of Germany and Joseph Stalin of Russia used dictator-lal powers In uunductlng their foreign policies. Even in Peiping, as hi Moscow, a committee-type government now is in charge. The risks of a large-scale war are in the back of the minds of those who rule the roost. The making of an armistice or peace agreement is never easy to detect in advance because, to be successful, the process has to be carried on in Secret. The late. Dwight Morrow, American Ambassador to Mexico, once told this correspondent that, in a,most vexatious dispute involving religious overtones, progress wasn’t discernible until both' sides agreed, in effect, that the controversy was "insoluble” for the time being. This tended to center atten- The Almanac By United Press International Today is Monday, July 11, the 192nd day of 1966, with 173 to follow. The .moon is between Its . last quarter apd new phase. The morning stars are Venus and Saturn. There are no evening stars. '* • * w On this day in history: In 1952, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower was nominated for President by the Republicans. In 1955, the Air Force Academy was dedicated at Lowry Air Base In Colorado. tion on what the diplomats call a “modus vivendi” or method of living with the problem by gradual adjustment. ★ ★ dr * Face-saving, of course, is involved in what is said openly. Thus, the Soviets have joined the Red Chinese in demanding publicly that American forces be withdrawn from Viet Nam as a precondition either to negotiations or any armistice agreement, and in declaring that a cessation' of bombing isn’t enough. This, however, Is superficial stuff designed for public consumption. The Soviet Union, like its ally Red China, wants peace in Viet Nam because the war there isn’t getting anybody anywhere. It is an enormous expense and could delay concentration^ internal problems which, if not given first attention, might suddenly bring a new committee to head up the government in Moscow or Peiping or both. Skillful negotiators from the neutral countries must cautiously. explore what would "save1 face” for the Communists and at the same time avoid any humiliating position for the United States, which cannot agree to stop the fighting unless certain assurances are forthcoming. .★ ★ * The eventual formula adopted probably will resemble the one that ended the war in Korea. Praises Commisstyn’s Stand on Housin Units Regarding the City Commission’s refusal to rezone the property north of Herrington Hills at this time, we Pontiac citizens should be thankful we have men on pur Commission who will stand by their convictions regardless of pressure from the news media or influential citizens. • MRS. LILLIAN METCALF 1107 DUDLEY Says Elly Supports Only Own Followers Elly Peterson and her poUUcri clique are trytog tomato-tain power over opposition or divergence .CES! aims.POpposition ^automatically labeled Bkchite, extrem-lam,” etc. ^ # » Every day their attack on good Republican*, “Birch” and otherwiief becomes more bystateal. primary if a sham. Support of primary candidate. i> given if they will wear Elly’s nose rinf.^ The John Birch Society is not^ticai. tor a Politics would make it partisan. That w^al^to about 40 per cent of Democratic membership or about 66 per cent or Re-publican. One political strategist ■*** “H1"J" under your party bed, cut the legs off. Ia tola Elly a answer for our Republican Party? I hope not. We need everyone. BRUCE E. DUKE EIGHTH PRECINCT CANDIDATE FOR REPUBLICAN DELEGATE FARMINGTON, MICHIGAN Cost Is Big Hurdle in Area Development “Really Concerned” accuses me of being "penny wise and pound foolish.” Maybe so. A penny for foqd rather than a pound to change a suburban area into a city type abyss. Our forefathers and many areas of the world did not and do not consider septic tanks temporary stopgaps. ★ * « A properly installed septic tank is not unsanitary, according to many publications. In some areas this may ntt be true but why should we all pay to develop said areas. Better they remain undeveloped. My children have contracted some diseases in school, but I do not advocate closing schools, t maintain a happy, healthy child is one with a well-fed belly and not necessarily one who lives in a home with sanitary sewers who may be not so well fed to pay the cost of the sewers. > ★ ★ ★ Remember that after sewers comes piped water and never------------| ^ invoices. Talk to people in Troy Town- ship about their water and assessments, etc WALTER F. GROGAN Thinks Medicare Deduction Taken Early I think Medicare is starting out in a rotten, crooked way. They said it wouldn’t start until July 1st. Our Social Security check last month waj for May. This month’s check is for Juno and they have taken out $3.00 for July. I think w# are entitled to a full check for June, or to this the Democrat*’ way of getting BRUCE L. BARTLETT 46 CADILLAC Bob Considine Says: Tag of ‘Most Wanted* Bane of Mobile Felons NEW YORK — The July issue of the FBI’s Law Enforcement Bulletin asks a provocative question and gives an interesting answer. Question — What is 5 feet 9 inches tall, weighs 164 pounds, is 37 years old, and, has a lengthy criminal record sprinkled with violence? Answer: the average FBI "Top Ten” fugitive. Sixteen years have passed since the le*a Bill Hutchinson, head of International News Service’s Washington Bureau, approached J. Edgar. Hoover and his assist- CONSIDINE ant Clyde Tolson with an idea. Give INS a list of the "Ten Most Wanted” criminals then at large, Bill suggested, and INS would distribute pictures and descriptions Of them to clients throughout the U.S. and the world.' This would alert many more persons than normally would see such pictures on post office bulletin boards and in police stations. Hoover and Tolson though it was a good idea. Jim Lee, the best rewrite man we (or anybody else) had was given the task of writing a short and graphic biography of the ten men whose names, pictures and records were supplied to us.' ★ ★ ★ His style ignited the program, made it what it subsequently became after INS’s idea passed into public tjomain, so to speak. FOUND, PUT AWAY * Since 1050, some 1\S “most wanted” fugitives have been found and put away for their crimes, 81 of them directly as a result of information from public sources. “The FBI feels this program has greatly contributed to the solution of one of law enforcement’s moat perplexing problems, that of the fast* moving, far-ranging criminal fugitive,” the Bulletin observe*. "Concentrated and continuous publicity has proved exceedingly important in eliminating sanctuaries for these wanted criminals, and Director J. Edgar Hoover has frequently paid tribute to the demonstrated- public service interest of responsible American press media, such as newspapers, magazines, radios and television.” (putrtbfo or Kim wmw symteata) Question and Answer How do you get the . City to cut weeds adjoining your property? We’ve had break-ins and window peepers, and it isn’t safe for a female to come home after dark. When We chase the prowlers, they head for the tail weedi and no one can find them. Police-have tried to help, bat they say to call the City and Grand Trunk (owners of the property). We’ve done both, bat all we get is a run-around and taller weeds. E. WATSON 523 MEADOW REPLY Your view and your safety should be much improved by the time you read this. Hugh MacLeod of Grand Trunk assured us that written notification has been sent to an official of Grand Trunk Maintenance and Way Department to have the situation corrected by the first of this week. Mr. MacLeod could not immediately determine why this has not been done sooner, but if for any reason the voeeds aren’t cleared by Tuesday, caU him at Detroit 962-2260 and he will take whatever further action is necessary._______ Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Too Little? The San Francisco Chronicle Sign in a sportswear shop: "Buy your girl a bikini—it’s the least you can do for her.” On to Infinity? - The Daily Oklahoman Governmental agencies have a recognized ability to outlive the purposes for which they are created. ★ it I * They regard nothing with greater revulsion than their own prospective demise, regardless of whether their continued existence would serve any purpose. Another tendency to to spend every dime they can lay hands on, regardless «f whether the molts are commensurate with the money they apend. These inveterate bureaucratic traits are apparent in the deepening concern now being expressed by space officials regarding what will remain after they’ve reached the moon. ♦ * * Their sense of urgency to attributable to the fact that space exploration entails long "lead times,” and the Apollo-Saturn project already is over the hill from an engineering and spending standpoint, Oven though the huge vehicular system isn’t yet ready to be test-’ flown. ★ # * . In this instance tile sky literally to the limit. Bnt a lot of overburdened taxpayers will be disposed to raise a point of order and inquire whether a government -so clearly threatened by inflation ought not to be paying a little more attention to its spending priorities. ★ ;★ ★ The war In Viet Nam is costing billions in addition to an ordinary defense budget that has been running for years in the neighborhood of $50 billion annually. Meanwhile, the Johmon administration is introducing all manner of new domestic-civilian spending programs in furtherance of its so-called Great Society. : ft it it A spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- Th, Ponttac PlW b tattvruo tar carrfcr tar Si rant, • wmtti taharo mtlM In Oakland, Gnome, Uv-taoston. Macomb LopMr and WMktanaw Count* It b StOjSS • SMm nt. oo a roar. Alt mail *ub-••-|lw pwm h idNMk I0O hat btta p,M rt Ota M' r«ta at OwOk, micM—■ M—tar af AOC. ministration says he would "hate to see this great team of engineers and scientists dissipated.” But exactly what national objective is served by going to Mars and how would such a purpose compare in order of priority- to the government’s many earthbound commitments? ★ ★ ★ It’s sometimes pointed out that unnecessary effort would be Involved in taking a rocket to the moon before launching it against a target on earth. Nor Is it agreed universally that a rocket launched from n space platform would be any more devastating than one launched (Tom the ground. Since no governmental agency ever recognises a convenient season for its own dissolution, a successful trip to Mara presumably would call ter an eventual conquest of some planet still more remote. Such a process could continue until it ! distant galaxies or until it completely bankrupted the taxpayer!. Discovery. *. The Mason City (la.) Globe-Gazette Adolescence is when boys discoaer girls and girls die- 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 A—T Berlin Mayor's Political Stock on Upgrade if. Maids ■ " ' - * - '■ S Claim Russian Ships, Seamen Threatened MOSCOW Uf - The Soviet Union protested to the United i States Saturday against U.S. air raids in the vicinity of 'Haiphong, North Viet Nam, Thursday, which it said “created a direct threat to Soviet merchant ships and the lives of Soviet seamen. , • ★ * * A protest note handed to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow said some Soviet ships were almost hit and added: "Hie responsibility for the passible consequence of such actions fully rests with the United States government." SIMILAR PROTEST Poland registered a similar protest last April, say the Polish motorship Beniowski was damaged, “during a piratical bombing of one of the ports near Haiphong" while taking on coaL BONN, Germany (AP) West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt’s political stock, rose today after his Socialist party scored big election gains in West Germany's richest and most populous state. The outcome of the balloting Sunday in North Rhine-West-phslis dealt a sharp blow to the The ruling' coalition of Chris-an Democrats and Free Democrats emerged with the barest prestige of Chancellor Ludwig majority of 101 of the 200 seats. Erhard, whose Christian Demo- crats lost 10 aeats in the state Parliameit Metal Fatigue Blamed in Plunge CHAMONIX,'Francs (XJPI)— that killed one person and injured 13 others, officials said today. Metal fatigue may have the weekend cable csur’ crash The $dcialists picked up nine seats from the Christian Democrats. With 00 seats in Parliar ment, they are now the strongest single party in the state. The Free Democrats took one Christian Democrat seat, winning 15, and the Christian Democrats dropped from 06 to 16 seats. Heinz Kuehn, 45-year-old jour- nalist turned politician, headed the Socialist ticket with Brandt i, was generally credited the victory because of his oratory and tireless campaigning. Ss?1 *' ewe Brandt had been written off as a political has-been on the national scene following his second defeat as candidate for chancellor last year. Observers now predicted that he would head the Socialist ticket again in the I960 federal elections. Many believed that' Erhard, who campaigned aa actively as BTandt in the state, contributed to his. party’s defeat by antagonizing voters In some Ruhr communities. The chancellor’s continuous references to his role in West Germany’s, economic fight Inside the Christian Democratic party. Some members want Erhard to dump the Free Democrats from his coalition and join with the Socialists, who control enough votes in the federal Parliament to block le$-mlracle did not slt weU CT min: tstttion requiring a tVo-thirds ing areas hit by unemployment. Drowned out at one rally, Er-after calling his hecklers “rabble.’’ PREDICT FIGHT The results of the state election were expected to touch off majority. Even fthe ’ name Adenauer failed to scpr* in North. Rhine-Westphalia! Dr. Max Adenauer, son of tiie former chancellor, was defeated in Cologne where his father first gained prominence as lord mayor. Famed Lawyer Dies NEW YORK (AP) — William A. Hyman, 72, internationally know lawyer and author of “the Magna Carta of Space,** died Saturday. Hyman, an expert on air and space law, was honored by the National Health Kedera-after he won a legal battle to prevent experimenters from inoculating aged, indigent hospital patients with cancer cells without the patients’ consent. An investigation into the cause of the Saturday crash that sent three cars plunging 100 feet into the “white valley" in the shadow of Mont Blanc, is still under | way. ★ ★ . But officials speculated the metal axle that snapped and sent the first car plummeting may have broken because of metal fatigue. This loss of strength in metals has been blamed for some air crashes. renneui ALWAYS TOUT OUAUTY 9 COMPARE ... the outstanding quality, the unfailing dependability ond the unbeatable values of Penney’s own Toddletime layette necessities. All made to our strict specifications, then tagged at the lowest possible pricesl A U.S. Embassy spokesman in Warsaw said the United States replied that it would investigate the charge, but strongly rejected the language of the Polish protest accusing it of aggression and go act of piracy. Firemen Susppct Arson Is Cause of School Fire DETROIT (DPI)—A $100,000 fire destroyed e section of the Furman Junior Higfh School i Sterling Township Saturday. Sixty firemen from the area fought the blaze. Sterling Fire Chief George Schultz, who estimated the damage, said an arson investigation was being conducted. FEDcRAL’S CLOSED TUESDAY FOR INVENTORY Toddletime lb ! | MORE TODDLETIME LAYETTE VALUES! COMPARE! Knitted terrycloth towel sett. . ... . 1 Jt I n^atota trienf pnnta . . . f fcrt knit washcloths, 2‘for........■ 4lo—------Quality knitted'»ocqoo»;iHor.. Cotton receiving blankets, 2 for.....1<39 Solid color gowns and Idmonos, 2 for a Cotton mattress protectors, 4 for ...1.00 Printed knit gowns and kimonos, 2 for . Pima cotton gripper undershirts, 2 for..... . 1.40 A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAV, JULY 11, 19ft6 Regularly 6.49 to 6.99 to WardsjufflUlxl Identify 14 Killed in Viet Nam WASHINGTON ID.- Defense inske, Tampa; Spec. 4 William mond Widmann, Lindenhurst. Department today identified 14 H. Mayhair, Milton. North Carolina — Lance Qd. US. aeivk^mankilled in action North Carolina - Pvt. Chris- James .0. Gregory Jr., Catawba, in Viet Nam. topher E. Brooks, Kings Mouiv ARMY tain. Florida - Sgt. Bernard Wal-!, ^i"*-**' Charlei L __________L. Moore, Columbia. . | Washington — Pfc. Lance J. ICleveland, Puyallup. . . . i Wisconsin - Capt. Neil G. Kansas — 1st Lt. Philip B. Reuter, Milwaukee. Hines, Galena. ' Puerto Rico - Staff Sgt. Gil-^Missouri — Cpl. Richard D.| E. Binion as missing in action. His home town and nearest relatives were not named. Missouri Mart Named as Hoad Fire Buff At the same time, the Pentagon identified three Marines who j have died of wounds. They are: California — pfc. Raymond C.j Griffith, San Francisco. ■ DETROIT (UPI) - George B. ;berto Soto^rel«- S*" JuM* Beaumont, of St. Louis, Mo., has;MARINES been elected president of the* In- Arizona — Lance Cpl. Este-ternational Fire Buff Associates'ban M. Alvarez, Tucson, at its international convention. [ Connecticut — Cpl. Johnnie L. The organization, composed oMBlout Jr., Groton; Pvt Paul H. more than 35 local fire bufflPhiliips, Hartford, clubs, operate canteen wagons j Illinois — Lance Cpl. Lara-at the scene of majdr fires or sette E. Avington Jr., Chicago; disasters, assist in fire depart:Lance Cpl. Dennis H. Gin ter,! New York — Marine Pfc. ment public relations and in fire Chicago. j Harold D. Gibbs, Brooklyn, prevention work. J New York — Lance Cpl, Ray-1 The army listed 1st Lt. Curtisl Three men were listed as'dead from nonhostiie causes. They were: Oklahoma—Army Sgt. Nbrris J. Denton, Lawton. Kentucky — Marine Pvt. Ronnie C. Jones. Louisville. Chris Craft to Resume Output as Facts OK'd HOLLAND (UPI) — The jChris-Craft Corp. was scheduled to resume production of pleasure boats at two plants today following the ratification of new three-year contracts at its plant in Algonac and the Roamer Boat Corp. in Holland. Both contracts call for A wage package increase of 38 cents an hour over a three-year period. Workers at Algonac voted 164-106 Saturday to accept the new contract while striking workers at the Roamer Boat Corp., a Chris-Craft subsidiary, voted 96-20 in favor of the new contract. MURDER SUSPECT-This is a police artist’s drawing of the man wanted in connection with the slaying of Mrs. Betty Reynolds of Grand Ledge, who was Thursday afternoon. After March King Posts Chicago Demands CHICAGO iff - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr-yesterday brushed past signs calling for “black * power" to poet the demands of his Chicago civil rights movement on the front door of City Hall. The posting came after ■ heat-defying anti-slum redly in Chicago’s Soldier Field and a traffic-halting march through the Loop. Better housing, more Jobs and better schools were among the demands. Earlier, King linked arms with civil rights leaders, including Floyd McKissick, national director of the Congress of Racial Equality, to form a common front in the struggle for Negro equality. ★ ★ ★' McKissick, who at first had said he might not be able to attend the rally, told the crowd of some 35,000 that the concept of black power - had been misinterpreted, that it meant only that Negroes" Have a right to deter mint their ■ own futures." . . ir He called for a "united black consumer bloc that would be able to strike at amy concern," and ended his speech with a pledge to come to Dr. King’s aid «t >ny time—‘‘He's my brother.” King recently has been in disagreement with McKissick sad other advocates of black power. James H. Meredith, Brat known Negro graduate of toe University of Mississippi, who was wounded daring a recent march to Jackson, Miss., told the rally that all civil righto groups most Join to fight “the system of white eupremacy.” The slogan “black power’’ was seen in crudely painted signtf and heard in the chants of clutches of young Negroes and in the words of some of the many speakers at the rally. Save on house paint! 3 DAYS ONLY! CHOOSI QUALITY OIL OR LATEX SAY Hou SE re«tsfs ^co lorat ion ^arom woob/stiicco/huomy/asbestoii**®1 -w ACRYLIC LATEX Each aalonof Guaranteed House paiN, *** Bering. stays bright • ^a8ts ^ ■prtad lot* not to «xcmU 450 *q. ft. per gallon. If Hfc paint fails to cover os itstsd hors. Words w« Wards high quality interior latex GIVES OM-COAT COVRAGU OIL BAH—Guaranteed to cover any color in just one coat-^-saves time, work and expense! Durable oil base lasts up to 6 yean! Low-chalk colors are ideal for trim. Won’t discolor from fumes or smoke —resists mildew staining. ACRYLK LATEX—Non-fading colors resist moisture blistering, stains fronrrust, washdown from corroded copper, alkali damage. Great for masonry surfaces. Easy to apply. 1 coat covers own or similar colors. White, colon. REG. US Kbfhsr lotex qf lWs price for hiding power, washabiiity, appearance and easy applied-tion. Hows on smoothly to a beautiful fade and stain-resistant finish. Brash marks disappear; dries odor-free in 30 min. Many colors. 1.81 off! One-coat drfpless latex paint On. coat com, any color! it's guaranteed! Dries odor-free in 30 mih. leaving tough scrubbable finish. Matching enamel, qt..1,99 REQ. 6.59 Fun to do-easy to use SAVE 1-00 NOW ON WARDS PETITE ANTIQUE KIT! *99 Wr REG. 4,99 • Personalize new furniture • Revitalize your old furniture • 2 steps creata oxciting effects Now you can, give furniture your own distinctive touch. Wards Petite antique Idt is priced so anyone can get in on the antiquing fun. And, it’s easy—just apply base coat and graining glaze, ‘wipe and exciting heirloom pieces are yoursl New! Winds natural redwood seder , Savks time, woti^ money! Stains and seali in fust 1 coat—restores redwood to a glossy finish. For all un-painted wood finishes. REG. 4.11 CTHDC OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY OlUni. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS! SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. \ THE PONTIAC PRESS jPONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 B—1 Preparing for the pony cart rides to be held at St. Mary’s-In-The-Hills’ Country Fair Saturday are Mrs. Alton J. Den-ster of North Lake Angelas Road (right) and her 10-year-old daughter Jeanie. The pony, Duncan, is, one of the many who will be carrying riders at the Fair on the Church grounds. • . * Annual Fair Takes Place on Saturday Kiddieland, an old-fashioned blacksmith, and rides on an antique electric car, pony cart and on poniei will highlight the annual Country Fair at St. Mary’a-In-The Hills Episcopal Church. * * ★ The old. Ivy-covered atone church, with its stone-fenced, tree-sheltered grounds is located on Joslyn Road at Greenshield, south and west of Lake Orion. ★ ★ it. ‘ The atmosphere of the fair, with its gay booths and colorful exhibits, auction, attendants in old fashioned costume, entertainment and special features will be in keeping with the bucolic setting. The fair begins at 10 a.m. Food will be* served all day with a ham dinner featured from S to 7 p.m. WSkhen's$&ctioD July 11-17 Meadow Brook WEDNESDAY "Maslc Alive" lecture by Karl Haas, previewing Meadow Brook Music Festival concerts. 7:30 p.m. Matilda R. Wilson Hall. Admission charge. THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY , J Meadow Brook Music Festival concerts. 8:30 p. m. ] Baldwin Pavilion. Detroit Symphony with pianist, Van | Cliburn. Admission charge. SUNDAY Meadow Brook School of Mask University Orchestra 1 concert. 2 p. m. Baldwin Pavilion. Albert Tipton, con- I I ductor. Open to public without admission. Meadow Brook Music Festival concert. 6:30 p.m. I I Baldwin Pavilion. Detroit Symphony with Van Cliburn. | i Admission charge. Daughter's Friend.Has Seen Doctor ABBY By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My eleven-year-old daughter picks the most peculiar friends. Her newest —e h u m-wurrlesB ~ me. Shi camel over yesterday! with a stocking! cap (in July!)! which she said! she couldn’t^ take off be-! cause the doc-l tor had found! some “crSw-® lies” In her head and he had shaved all her hair off. (I do believe the child had lice, don’t you?) Now this little girl is sweet and nice as she (fan be. She even got my daughter interested in the Bible, which I think is fine, but I shudder to think that my daughter may catch lice from her. How contagious la lice or whatever it is that she had? Should I worry? WORRIED DEAR WORRIED: The child with the “crawlies” (dr whatever it was) has apparently seen a doctor, so whatever she had is now under control I wouldn’t worry. * ★ ■ * . * , DEAR ABBY: I took my freshman year over again and I am still a freshman, la other words, I failed everything again. I admit I fooled around the first time, but I really tried to make it this time, but the work was too hard for me. My parents don’t believe me. They think I let them down, but I really tried my best I would like to quit school and go to a trade school, but my father says I have to graduate from high school if it takas me 16 years. What can I do? ASHAMED DEAR ASHAMED: Enlist the help of your teachers. They will know if you really did your beat or fooled around. If you worked up to your OabkcHv Ind failed;"" Do Not Include Answer Cards With Invitations By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I am going to be married this summer and I would like to know If it is correct to include self-addressed answer cards with the invitations. — Joan M.' Dear Joan: I think I have been asked this question a thousand times, and the answer is still the same: No! People have become so lazy about making the smallest effort .to answer invitations that I think they’ll soon be sent out on IBM cards. If a bride, or her family, cares enough about someone to ask him to anything am important as a wedding, the least that that some one can do in to take two minutes to answer the invitations by hand! THE DEBUTANTE ^ Dear Mn. Post: My husband and I have been invited to a reception hr my niece who will be making her debut at a country chib. Does this occasion require a gift?-Caroline. Dear Caroline: Close relatives generally dp send a present to the debutante. If need not be elaborate; a charm, simple Jewelry, or | pretty ornament for her room, are all appropriate More distant relatives and friends nsualiy send flowers./ Short, but Not Simple, Is Fall's Fashion Nod By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK-The short evening dress, is the big evening dress for fall and winter. Add to iT a bushel or so of beads and you’ve the picture of what’s chic for formal evenings ahead. Beaded dresses have been standard Tare with some manufacturers of women’s wear for any number of seasons. But now, Just about everybody is drawing the bead on fashion and “firing away” as one writer put it PRICE GUTTERING TOO Short, tent-shaped dresses are paved with glitter. The skinny shapes are often transparent, heavily beaded all over on nude chiffon. And to give you an idea of the work involved, Mol-lie Parnis, the designer-manufacturer, said that to bead enough fabric for just one of her best-selling short formats takes one seamstress five weeks.. No wonder price tags read $800 on up to $2,000 retail. Designers use beads in assorted pale colors, and sometimes with dramatic results in shimmering jet overall. WWW Beaded after beaded dress showed from members of the New York Couture Business Council, Inc., which last week staged a series of fail shows for the nation’s fashion reporters. This week, another organization—the American Designers group-has its day in the spotlight. That idea of the 'nude underlayer of fabric often is. carried out with a separate, beaded "cage” over It. Or sometimes the beading’is omitted and oth- " er luxury touches added. The Grecian-born., designer George Stavropoulos, now headquarters in New Yorkv uses the master’s touch in a floor length chiffon, *nude in color, with the cage in red’ Swiss-made lace. Long sleeves of the cage are roomy through the shoulder^ narrowed to a tight wrist. SAMUEL WINSTON The firm of Samuel Winston, long in the beading business, refers to its double-layer dresses as the “shadow:”. Designer Roxane shows the shadow In sequin-encrusted lace, or in pale gold, metallic n§t over, deeper gold lame slips. Roxane created short wool cocktail and • evening ensembles with headbandings, often with the beaded border of the .coat set above the beaded border of the dress, tunic fashion. The short evening dress is "to” for fall, but the long formal goes on and on, anyway. Shapes range from slim columns to tent-shapes, with narrow tops, swirling skirts. Some of tiie more spectacular come to cut velvets hanging from jeweled neckbands ami with jeweled armholes. Others are yards and yards of chiffons in white and pastel color combinations, and sometimes with several shadings of ■’ one color. Again the overall beading—in the tube, or column shaped formate! Or, some designers use fake jewels, rhinestones and crystals. A Roxane evening extravaganza of gold on white net designed for Samuel Winston’s Fall 1966 collection. The bodice is covered with gold floral jeweling trellised to the hemline. 4 Crawlies' Worry Mother you have nothing to be ashamed of. And I agree, trade school might be the answer. ♦ ★ * " DEAR ABBY: Mv BlBBiM and i were divorced three years agok but you would never know it from the way MY family (get this — MY family) treats him. He is included in every family gathering, apd is told constantly they still love him “like a son-in-law, brother-in-law nephew, uncle, cousin,” and so on. I don’t mind telling you that this gets my goat. What do you think my family is trying to accomplish anyway? THE “EX” DEAR EX: Either your family IS trying to “get your goat” (and succeeding) OR they figure the divorce was a mistake (yours?) and they simply like the man. ★ * * DEAR ABBY: The wife who ' was. worried because her husband's hobby was flying is all up in the air about nothing. If the four-wheeled fliers ojf our highways can ever produce a safety record equal to that of the pilots of our nation, doc-ton and undertakers will have to start moonlighting to make a living. Tdl her to let him fly and be happy. If he’s killed, it will probably be on the highway between home ausd the airport ‘‘ANOLDHLCrr’ MONTROSE, COLORADO Problems? Write to Abby, in care of Tim Pontiac Press. For . a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters fqr-All Occasions.” When fashion talks about nighttime glitter, this is the kind of dress it has in mind—the evening fire- .works of -Marie McCarthy for berry Aldrich. This- most imaginative designer uses, over a flesh-colored slip, a sheer but surprisingly strong pale net cage of 100 per cent Du Pont nylon, embroidered with gold brilliants and dripping ivith gold beads. JULY FESTIVAL OF SAVINGS! 71 ENOUGH TILE FOR A 9’x12’ ROOM FOR ONLY $1141 9**9*—fin* Quality Light Colon, Groaitproof LINOLEUM RUGS 9’x12’ $498 Each Wo Bey Glass Loomis end ACROSS From The MALL 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE RO. FRONT MM FflHKIM FE 4-5216 Open Mon,, Thurs., FH. 9 to 9 . . Tue*., Wed., Saf. 9 to 6 / 7 B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY II, 1888 ALL PERMANENTS NONE HIGHER 1 — New lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Haircut ’ . 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Stylo Setting. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Basley Mkt. 333*9660 Realities of Refinancing Home Mortgage CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? - - - SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-0181. By MARY FEELEY Conaitaat in Money Management 'Dear Miss Feeley: I have a mortgage of $2,500; | at 4% per cent remaining on my [house. I would like to borrow $10,000 — wWto pay far-col-I lege for sons, some for home improvement, and the balance for investment. I would like to repay this loan over 18 years. The bouse is valued at about $1B,«M. Would refinancing be best? Or would a separate loan be beat? I am & My income lant year was $8,500. Would there be closing charge if I refinance, as I am still the original owner and the bank the same one that has the original mortgage? G.R., Wantagh, L.I. Dear G.R.; It would be extremely diffi- [cult to get a “separate loan" (Or $10,088 for 1$| FE 3-7028 Sound The Call for summer school SUMMER SCHOOL IS FOR YOU IFs YOU WANT AN OFFICE JOB: Get a head start on a Sacra* tarial, Accounting, Clerical, Business Administration, or Office Machines program. YOU ARE GOING TO COLLEGE: The student who knows Speedwriting shorthand and Typing is way ahead. You can learn both this summer for accurate, complete note taking-and for preparing college papers. YOU ARE A COLLEGE GRADUATE: Office skills providt a meant of getting a start intne field you prefer. V / •Air Conditioned Comfort Pontiac Business Institute 18 W. Lawrence Street — Pontiac MARY FFF.LEY Refinancing would be your only way of getting $10,008 — but that, remember, would be at the going rate today. You could hardly expect to jay ' than j8 per cent on this "new" money. If yon do arrange for rad* nancing of the mortgage — for $12,5M at C per cent -you’d bd paying $188.71 • month. And this wauldi’t include property tax, upkeep, and other expenses. If your income is $8,500, this Mrs. Donald Young New Auxiliary HeacT payment would prove pretty steep. You would having closing costs again, too, since refinancing la Uke netting bp a mortgage loan. How about refinancing for 15 or 30 years, rather than 10? On a 15-year basis, monthly payments would be $105.40 - or 880-5$ for a 25-year period. Maybe you’d find one of these figures more comfortable to Uve with. w * , V . As for using some of/this loan for investments — well good, provided your investments justify the cost of the increased interest rate. Give this some thought before you act. By SIGNE K A RLSTROM Mrs. Donald Young newly elected president of the Women’s Auxiliary to Grace Hospital has had a busy few weeks. Daughter Susie came home from Syracuse University and together with some friends from the East and Dr. and Mrs. Young they spent a few days at their summer home in Lewiston. Now Susie has left to visit with her friends at Peekskill, N.Y. .* * ★ Mrs. Young is packing boxes to be sent to their son, Captain Donald Young who is in the Southern Central Highlands in Viet Nsun. He is a member of a special advisory team of doctors. Headquarters is a big tent and he h£s aent an urgent appeal home for books and some electrical appliances. t * ★ Serving with Mrs. Young on the Board of the Women’s Auxiliary from this area are MesdameS: Charles E. Darling and James Blodgett. FROM GERMANY A visiter from afar was the guest of honor at a dinner Mrs. Abner Heggen had in her home on Cottontail Lane recently. Mrs. Gertrud Schuch-ard from Hitzacker, Germany was the guest. Mrs. Scbuchard is spending this summer in USA as guest of Mrs. Donald Kehl in Dexter. She is doing a good bit of traveling, especially to the music centers which are of" particular interest to her. For as many Thursdays as they can, there is a carload of music lovers coming from Dexter to the Meadow Brook Festival. Other guests at the dinner were Kathleen and Janet Kehl and Mr. and Mrs. James Cameron Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Willett Jr. have their grandson Eric Miller with them. Next week his fnother, Mrs. H. A. Miller will come for a short visit and take Eric home to Glen Ellyn, IU. ★ ★ ★. Mrs. Loma Dorsey of Texas is spending* most of the summer with her sister and brother-in-law,. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Xresge of East Long Lake Road. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lang, their son and daughter-in-law, the William .Langs, and their daughter and son-in-law, the John Cannons, were hosts at a buffet supper Sunday evening. Guest of honor was Eugene A. Moore. Forty guests were invited to the senior Langs’ Bloomfield Hills home. MediGs Endorse Electrolysis SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Electrolysis is the best method for a woman to remove facial hair, reports the California Medical Association. But, the association says, electrolysis has these drawbacks: some women find it. painful, it is rather expensive and it sometimes causes skin irritation. ."In the hands of a competent technician, however, this method is safe and sttfe," the association adds. PRINTED PATTERN MOM POM® «g Carole S. Beckett, daughter of the Herman A. Becketts of Pensacola Street, has been awarded a $500 scholarship by Clairol to attend the beauty school of her choice. The only scholarship recipient in Michigan, she is one of 25 withers in 19 states. Voile Returns to Favor for Home Sewing ‘ A sheer delight — that’s cool and airy cotton voile,' summer’s most stylish and versatile fabric. It’s being used for smart day dresses, beach cover-ups, and Western-styled shifts as well as romantic after-five ‘fashions. Whan you . -seta, with v< or any sheer fabric, the National Cotton Council recommends that you choose a pattern with a minimum of seams. Before cutting out the fabric, pin it . to' tissue paper to prevent shifting. Handle^ the tissue and fabric as one piece when..basting and stitching. Reduce machine pressure and use a fine needle with finer than average stitches, about 15 to the inch.' 4786 sins 2-$ SALUTE SUMMER-sev coatdress skimmer in ice cream cone-crisp pique or linen-weave rayon for vacation trips, visits, fun. Very, Very easy, three main parts. Printed Pattern 4780: Children’s Sizes 2, 4, I, 8. Size $ takes 2 yards 85-inch. Fifty cents in coins for each pattern—add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., •West- ITth St., New York, -N.Y. 10011. Prifit Name, id-dress with Zip, Size and Style Number. Summer Fashioh Festival— 350 design ideas in pattem-packed Catalog. Fun, play, work, travel clothes—all sizes. 'Clip coupon in Catalog—choose one free pattern. Hurry, send 50 cents for Catalog. The William A. Statons of Somerset, Ky. announce the engagement of their daughter Connie of Cincinnati, to Marion Lawrence Noble, ton of the James Nobles of Ortonviile. She attends the University, of Cincinnati. Her fiance will graduate next month from Eastern Kentucky State University in Richmond. Aug. 27 vows in Somerset are planned. CariwemiN Beida y*»r Yicilion with ■ rrfrmhing new Custom Designed PERMANENT and HAIR COLORING $10.50 and UP y ^ r Beauty Shop Bikrr Bldg., FE S-7186 See PAUL HAHN GOLF SHOT ARTIST * , At Ours GoUland Tne., July 12, StSO P.M. Jimmode SALE "SMART GIRL” dreu ahaer seamless, nude heel, demi-toe, a knit ear micro. 44* 2 poire 85/ 82 N. Saginaw St. ' €. R. HASKILL STUPIO Hat Photographed Over 2000 Weddiiifca. May We Make Your Pictures? Mr*. Jerry W. Deey 1 Mt. Clemen^ St. Price Include* t 0 Picture for Press O just Married Sign • Wedding Guest Book • Miniature Marriage Certificate a Rir* to Throw • nujNt: MATur PEARCE Floral Co. To Remind You We will be doted on Wednesdays during July and Avguife Please plan your visits and phone calls with this in mind. Phone FE 2*0127 Bonded cottons come with underlinings already attached. HAVE YOUR DRAPERIES ' CLEANED and DECORATED FOLDS We iteam-in DECORATOR FOLDS with spwcial-~t*wd—nwchlnwryt '"This*" process assures you that the folds are steamod In at the desired length — assures even hems and no shrinkage! Our Yean of Experience It Your Assurance of Quality MAIN CLEANERS 4480 Elizabeth Lake Road CALL 682-4880 Pianos Played in 23rd Annual MUSIC FESTIVAL!. The* SAVE on Our Popular "HOLLY" SPINET PIANO $545 FESTIVAL SALE PRICE OTHER SPECIALS /*»" *385 GRINNELL'S PONTIAC MALL and 27 S. SAGINAW, DOWNTOWN ;, Use Your CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN-f90 days same at cash) or Budget Plan GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac; 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan Pauli’s SHOE STORE CLEARANCE Red Cross SHOES NOW JUST $090 _ $J|90 All Sale. Final! We Accept “Michigan Bankerd” Charge Plates! 35 N. Saginaw, Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11,1966 Help is here for the unfortunate lady., who longs to have the scent of exotic perfume linger behind when \she leaves'the room, but whose skin Is allergic to the touch of the smelly stuff. International Management reports that a California perfumer has come up with a hidden solu- MRS. RUSSELL ALLEN WOODRUFF MRS. DOUGLAS ALLAN MEAD MRS. GARY RICHARD PIKE Area Bridal Couples Exchange Nuptial Vows During Weekend Woodruff-Folkman Nancy Carol Folkman became * the bride of Russell Allen Woodruff of North Cass Lake Road, Saturday, in the First Methodist Church 1 n Mount Clemens. Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Folk-man of Mount Clemens and. the Ralph L. Woodruffs of DeWitt are ■ parents of the MATERNITY FASHIONS MATERNITIES • U NIFORMS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER oraw EVENINGS UNTIL nine Reduce-Easily-Surely from a 16 to a 12 45 MYS and its Fun! START NOW! Get In Shape for Summer Fun! by Joining HOLIDAY HEALTH CLUB *2.50 PER WEEK ON A COURSE BASIS Gall 334-0529 or Drop by Today Open Evenings til 10 P.M. ★ Take It Off ★ Build It Up y mutiit Firm The Holiday Way Membership Includes Steam Room Invigorating Mechanical Manage Effective Individual Programs Luxurious Modem Studio Convenient Unlimited Visits Healthful Solarium Sea Rooms Over 2N Stadias Coast to Coastd and World Wid# 1 N. Perry St. Phone 334-0529 Free Trial of all FakilUiet 1 N. PERRY ST. (Pikm and Party) couple who' left on a New England honeymoon after the church reception. PEARLS ON LACE Pearl frosted Alencon lace in rose motif accented the bride's gown and court train of blossom white silk organza over taffeta. Lily petals held her illusion veil. ★ * ★ Her bouquet for the afternoon voVs before Dr. John Jury .held Shasta daisies and gypsophilia. * ★ ★ Honor matron was Mrs. Guy Francis of Mount Clemens with bridesmaids, Ellen Loudon, Kenmore, N.Y.; Mrs. Carl Benner, Detroit; and Mrs. James Galbraith, Warren. a ★ * Lloyd Steppey of Warren was best man. Joseph Cox, Ypsilanti; Douglas Harlow, Midland, and Gary Steinhardt of DeWitt were ushers. The newlyweds are graduates of Alma College. Napkins Come with the Food Potato chips, cheese cur lies, peanuts - they’re all fun to munch. But when the munching is through, how do you cope with your greasy fingers? Wipe them on the lining of your pockets? Shake hands with a friend? A potato-stick packager In Greece has a better answer to your oily problems. His snack packages have two-compartments - one contains a crispy delight and the other a folded paper napkin. Fall Earrings Drop Some of fall’s earrings for evening drop, all the way to the collarbone. Some are a series of baubles, elongated in design, others huge discs attached to long chains. Mtad-Harouf union Vows were taken by Judy Ann Haroutunian and Douglas Allan Mead of Iron Mountain, Saturday, in St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church in Dearborn. The Louis Haroutunians of Douglas Drive and the James Meads of Mount Pleasant are parents of the couple who began an eastern honeymoon after the church reception. WWW Re-embroidered Alencon lace highlighted the bride’s gown and chapel train of white silk organza over taffeta. DIOR BOW A Dior bow of peau de sole cradled her iiluson veil and pink roses accented her bouquet of white carnations and Stephanotis. WWW, With Mrs. Gary Bryce, honor matron, were bridesmaids Roianne Brew, Araxe Ohane-aian and Jean Swartzlander. Gary Bryce was best man with ushers Steve and John Mead and Edward Haroutun- . The couple are alumni of the University of Michigan. He will be receiving a master’s degree in forestry. Home Dry Cleaning Will Be Possible If you’re sick of paying the ever-higher drycleaning bibs, if you despise the chore of carting your winter woolies to a do-it-yourself machine 10 blocks from home, you’ll be happy to hear this news from Electrical World. * * w In just a few years home dry-cleaning units, converted from ‘ qg machines with the flick of a switch, will be available. It may ruin business for the little shop on the corner, but it will certainly help your budget Pike-Slade Vows were taken by Marilyn Sue Slade and Gary Rich-' ard Pike of Andersonville Road, Saturday, in the Drayton Plains United Presbyterian Church. The couple left for northern Michigan after the rite per-' formed by Rev. Edmond L. Watkins, and a chufch reception. ■WW W Their parents are Mrs. Robert D, Slade of Thirza Court,* the late Mr. Slade, and the David O. Pikes of Cecilia Ann Fragrance Is Deep Secret It’s a (by lace-trimmed envelope, which k pinned to tha wearer's undergarment. Inside the envelope’i waterproof iftitog i sponge Insert. You simply saturate the spemge, with your favorite scent I—v youl wmell lovely and the I perfume rill never touch you. ^flTrrrrrmTTTnrrrrrw-OTm^ : Scandinavian Tour ^ • Leaving September 12 th. : 21 Pays—Via Air Jet s' PONTIAC -TRAVEL SERVICE I Pontiac Mall Shopping Cantor LL SOOTH IN MU OFFICt tUIL._ _ _ V ItaiNMn Mum MI-4000 ^ O Iitnmnniiiimu » a mimmotnppjy . Careful Use Essential for! Bug Sprays The summer season means it’s *‘bug time.’’ As a result, more insect control chemicals are used in and around the home in summer than.at any other time. . , ' Following are some simple rules on the proper use and storage of indoor insecticides, recommended by the scientists at Geigy Chemical Corporation: e Never use an “outdoor” or garden spray inside the home unless it b specifically labeled for home and garden. • Find the proper type of Indoor spray for the purpose, and use it. For crawling insects (water bugs, ants, silverfish) use a surface spray on baseboards, under sinks or other places where insects crawl. A “space” spray, applied, into the air, b the kind to use for flies, mosquitoes, gnats and other flying pests. • Always read and follow label directions carefully! 11 . Always store pressurized cans on a high shelf out of children’s reach. The council of Family Health recommends a locked cupboard, if possible. Bloomfield Miracle Mile Only 'IK HOUR the most Shirt Sonrioi FREE Slorigt at Regular Price •1.60 VALUE for 98* _ Dry Cleaning Special __ Tuesday, Wednesday, July 12,13 • Slacks • Trousers • Skirts • Plain Sweaters ;: 2 for 98* (Pleats 2c aa.) Professionally Dry Cleaned ud heated Bloomfield Minsk Mile duly Dial 312-1822 Street, Independence Township. Alencon lace touched with pearls accented the portrait neckline and Kabuki sleeves of the bride’s sheath gown and detachable train of white silk organza over taffeta.. CROWN A small crown of seed pearls capped her bouffant illusion veil and her bouquet held white roses and lilies of the valley. With Joanna D. Lovett, maid of honor, were bridesmaids Charlene Griffith, Barbara Hockin and. Robin Slade, her sister's junior attendant. Larry T. Davis performed the duties of best man. Ushers were J. Rand Culley, Martin Everett, Dale Hughes and Larry Tate. The couple will reside on Andersonville Road. She is a graduate of the Henry Ford Hospital School of Nursing. 35th ANNIVERSARY SALE! i EASY BUDGET TERMS ON RE-MimiNG or NEW G'STOM- FURNITU RE WILLIAM MIGHT Furniture Makers and Upholster re-re 270 Orchard Lake e FE 4-0558 AH Workmanship Guaranteed 5 Year* PRICES SLASHED ON ALL1966 MODELS! CARL’S GOLFLAND SUMMER _ LAUNDRY SALE! ALL BRAND NEW-IN FACTORY CRATES! LIMITED QUANTITY! BUY NOW AND SAVE! JET ACTION WASHER! 5-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN AT NO EXTRA COST! FOR FURNISHINO REPLACEMENT FOR ANY DEFECTIVE PART IN TRANSMISSION! DRIVE MOTOR, AND WATER PUMP! SOAKS, WASHES, BLEACHES, DYES AUTOMATICALLY Medal WAR MATCHING DRYER.. .*133.00 for Only *158 FRIGIDAIRE Family Size 2-Door Bargain! »Automatic Defrost »Separata 120-lb. Freezer for Only $233 FRIGIDAIRE PORTABLE DISHWASHER LOAD IT IN THE FRONT bwsmj Frigidaira Diehmobilt has convaoiant rolt-to-you rack* that make loading and $ 158 Automatio Oven It Uke Having a Maid! Fe-igidaiie Cook-AAastar *178 121 N.SAOINAW-FE 5-6189 Your Appliance Specialists closed wen. gfhwrhobw-jinii, jutv, auoust: THE frONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 11, IH6 Our Field Is Growing!! & T* So fart w*w derided la (rive every | l Jf. "Potential StudenT* her flirt... \3frT “FMECE OF CNANQI!” to efteoorape' yon “To Mart school woner,” “To, graduate sooner,” in j»f effort t»» decreae the gap in'the Mipply and demand of our 'Gradual**. Inquire about your "PIEtEflf CHANGE” TODAY* “Specialists In The Educalion Of The Hair Stylists of Tomorrow.** + An Excellent Hobby. + A TrrmcnilmK Time killer. + An Excitina, (llamorou* and Rrwanliai Career. Fail or |iiM tetinie elansen. YOU pay a* tydlc.ii, $5.00 orrkly. KREK'PLACEMENT SERVICE ' Shampoo and Set SI.10 - Permanent* $4.95 up. " Tint* $3.50 up — Manicure* 8.V' Haircuts $1.00 — Bleach $6.50 up CUSTOMER SERVICE ^ Open 6 days and 3 evening*. AH work done by Senior StudenUn* supervised by Instructors. State College of Beauty 47 N. Saginaw St.,. Pontiac The Symbol Of Succew. 333*9249 Husbands Morel Muscles Need Exercise V ing hint this column, let’s encourage the move awly from thia town of yours. It’s more then possible that he htmeelf really wants to jet away from the competitive strains and tensions HH __________ on him. But being so proud, be thing — terrible scenes, tension;whistles and roaars of stadium Vftlir hlloKa__,,. mnr_. can’t know that either. and ugly silence between him1 admiration. He'd have said bL£ £izTw KL-SL ----------------------------—^- and the boy when scores are himself, “O.K., my day of gtatfE f* I X • I posted showing the child lait.jii over. So vhmt? What haveL^ ^ h ^ athJ GdlitOmiCI l§ Our whole town is obsessed with the fans’ whistles and roan real -JZZ ““ " *“r l““1 . our Little League, the kids get-.ly done far me.? Nothing. But^e £ JJg * JJJJ for magnificent bodily power. ^ y * ^ By MURIEL LAWRENCE ;unfelt contempt *or Us own attAhto failure to deliver more' of ! DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: jletic weakness that compels him those meaningless whistles and My husband is so ashauned of.to pile acorn o«i the cHH^ roan of grandstand approval. | our son’s poor record in ourlathletic weakness. a a * ,*■ Little, League games that be! Had he ever found the courage; Maybe moving to another town warts to move to another state.jto lace the loss of his athletic tap ipsane on the subject of He was himself a star athlete. | stardom, he would also inarit-'Little League competition would Every, season it’s the same;ably have faced the losi of;be a good idea. dm to pera^mta hh *■ fcrnztoTthc -ragur. oil WeddinO this town’s craze for sports sue* 3 pitch ANSWER: jfor him ti How year hut* FREE Aretz- U ide DELIVERY I SALES • RENTALS HOSPITAL BEDS WHEEL CHAIM • CANES CRUTCHES • COMMODES iplrir Line of Sickroom Srerit PHARMACY, INC. SM Woodward Avanuo Medical Building - Neil te St. Joseph Merer Hospital FE 2-8383—FE 4-9915 body of his! How he most despise himself for the loss of (hose “star athlete" power* that won him so mach grandstand admiration! Because it is his secret arid| Morning Vows Unite Area Pair in Recent Rite | j Ml MRS R. C. ELLIOTT Pop Jewels Washable Enterprising teen-agers are making their own “pop” jewelry from colorful sewing trim, the Nitional Cotton Council reports * Bright lengths of cotton ball fringe, fitted with snaps, are being turned into ankle and arm bracelets, or looped into multi-color necklaces. Aside from its “pop” appeal, the jewelry has a practical value ... it's machine-washable! He’s fa* the spot of a drag addict whp consorts with other addicts. He just hasn’t got what it takes to kick Us owe addiction to grandstand admiration, consorting as he does with other parents who are so addicted to it that they have to bribe their chiMrea to get it hr them. The Garth MolHcka of Merry Road flew to San Francisco on Saturday for the marriage of their son, Garth Joseph Mellick Jr. to Donna Suzanne Cbenault in the Hamilton Air Force Base Chapel. CoL and Mrs. Charles Che-nault of Phoenix, Ariz. are parents of the bride who is a graduate of the University of of which can your bus- California in Berkeley, band possibly accept as true.; * * * I For, people like him, who take' The bridegroom attended great pride in power, go wild Lawrence Institute of Tech-with fear at the idea that they nology. [are themselves controlled by; . The Mellicks will honor the jfeelings . they know nothiiqr bridal couple with an open {about. So my suggestion that; house Saturday from 2:00 to .your husband is controlled by' 0:00 p.m. his unknown scorn for his wan- Honeymoon travel will in-ing athletic powers would fright-1 elude a tour of the northern MRS. R. W. SCHWARZE I'*0 W® terribly. Instead of show-1 midwest and western states. Dries Toys Fast Children’s small spiffed toys may be dried quickly Belva’s House of Hair Styles SPECIAL ReguJLmr $12.95 PERMMEMTS $095 Includes cut and set Appeintmee* NMAInjiNimur? Open Late Mob. aad Fri. ! Marcia Ann Sprague, daughter of the Marshall W. ! Spragues of Blaine Avenue'recently became the bride of ; Wendell G1 en n Franklin, of I Auburn Road, son of the Owen R. Franklins of Madisonviiie, Ky. ■ . \ j The couple spoke vows be-; I fore Rev. Frederick J. Klett- D ’-Jp I I ~ir ner at a morning ceremony Dl IUt. r lUo in St. Vincent de Paul Catho-1 | * • g lie Church. OrfhlH^ Iww | White nylon lace fashioned a 1 11 1 “ / { gown for the bride who car- . « ; ried white carnations and pink DOLIC]U6l ; Sweetheart roses atop a white * ! prayer book. - I * * ★ . An evening ceremony and Lois Sprague was her sis-1 reception in the First Baptist ter’s honor maid. Andrew j 9"“^ tnarhsd the vows of Sprague stood as best man ! ^>ame*a. ^ean Beach and Rob-with ushers Dennis Forster i ert WWfo® Schwarze. and James Bago. ' The bride, dauggiiter of Mrs. Following the reception in I Herbert R. Beach of Clarks- AIL the CAI Building, the pair left j ton and the lata Mr, Beach, | fee* St- for a southern honeymoon. Three Operators to Serve You UU Williams Lk. Rd. 671-1834, *S*51 GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY STREET AT GLENWOOD .Yeic Styling and Cool Comfort! LADIES' CUSHIONED TENNIS CASUALS Our Regular 2-36 $ Tuenfav, Wednesday 1 ONLY Two-eyele-t tie bal oxfords with soft cushioned linings, full cushion insoles and lightweight out-soles. Uppers in black or yellow canvas; also light blue or cranberry cotton denim, Sisesto 10. Charge It at Kmart appeared in white silk organza over taffeta touched with Swiss embroidery . BIBLE BOUQUETT A tiered veil of silk illusion and bouquet of phalaenopsis orchids and ivy on a Bible | completed her ensemble for i the rite performed by Rev. ! Robert Shelton. Edith U. Beach attended her sister as maid of honor and Bertha Thornton was bridesmaid. Frederich P. Schwarz* was his brother’s best: man. They are the sons of Adr. and Mrs. Rudolf Schwarze of Pineburst Drive, Independence Town- { ship. Jon Studebaker and Gerald { Galligan ushered with Charles j and William Beach. The couple chose a northern ; honeymoon. Checker Board Set Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church.. ■Reception in the Bemis-OI-sen Amvets Post followed the rite performed by Rev. Richard Reynolds. * * * , Mr. and Mrs. Leon J. Perkins of Pershing Road and the Kingsley Elliots of Center Line are the newlyweds’ parents. A nylon illusion veil held by1 a jeweled tiara complemented the bride’s gown of white satin with Chantilly lace overskirt. She carried white roses. Attending their sister were Mrs. Gerald DeBoer, honor matron, with June Perkins and Betty Millard as bridesmaids* ★. ★ * With Bernard Hull, best man, were Donald and Ken-' neth Elliott, their brother’s ushers. Spool Holds Tape Try fastening one end of the measuring tape with a thumb tack to a luge size empty Roll the tape on the spool and fasten the loose end with a bit of tape. This will lengthen the life of the tape measure and make for a neater sewing basket. Newlyweds after washing by pi a c I n g them in a hairdryer hood. Make Home in the East ymmmi Airman and Mrs. Robert Clare Elliott (Sharon May Perkins) left fix' a northern honeymoon and his base in Boston after chapel vows Complete Picture Story of Your Wedding $0095 Only Complete ALBUM INCLUDED 7 DAY SPECIAL Offer can be used for any 1966 wedding if appointment mad* within 7 days. KENDALE’S TeL FE 5-0322 or FE B-32SU 45 W. Huron CLOSED SATURDAYS Mon., Tim*., Thun. 12 - 8:30 Wed. and M. 9-9:30 Not Good With Other Plan* MIRACLE MILE frcoMoffla&h and DRY CLEAN FEMIM Suzy Perette SENSATIONAL SPECIALS ON PERMANENTS | Suzy Perette has created this.wear sizes produce’a better fit.j The blouse is!See chart for size best for you. I Giant checkerboard squares I I -in contrasting^ colors to |two-piece dress. ^____________________ 1 match decor — painted on a criss-erpesed in front with slot • 8 8 £ Jj family room wall will create' seams, while back interest is it is » a*- MS a vivid background to show- added with bound buttonholes ” 3* g 5T Slpruler formal shaft c«*e pictures and provide on ^ diagonal, —easier than; «' * g blender, formal snaji miMalinM . hanijine # sounds since the dress is cut; -From Nape of n«* to want The P i c t u r e and Frame entirely on the bias. j Misses Size 12 requires me p i c t u r e and frame | ' ■ Isieeves; JV4 yards of 42” fabric. A simple. »4™igbL*kirt to ; To order pattern No, 150, state T'tj™ size; send $1.25. Pattern Books zfopered oo the side. Dy the No a ««! fto. 29 are available ^ttera both ways, -wtth and {or ^ ^ Mch of wUhont sleeves. Fabric sag- Win6or Pattern Book with 55 ****** are wool crepe^ raw „ avaflable for $100. silk, shantung, linen and cot- i Address SPADEA, Box 913, toB*- G.P.0 Dept PX-0, New Yprk,| Spadea’s exclusive ready-to- N.Y. 10001. CUSTOM Vitalizing Permanent Reg. $15.00 for Tinted and Bleached 12™ in glowing red doubleknit wool, by Kay Zito, j institute suggests hangings of Peck A Pecfc, hm^ ^fovorite prints, Taamily photo-Stately chausable that ' graphs, needlewrork samples, can be shifted to pro- {childrin’s drawizxgs, or vaca-.. I , twn snapshots. FVame «pa: Vide shoulder and arm ; rately' and hang in individual cover-up. ; squares. mnrmTrrnrrrrgTTmrniTiiivi BTTTTmrB j 11 N. Saginaw St. Think of it! The luxury of onr £25.00 Salon Cuitom Vwr Sale-Priced— _ __ Sou for Only *15°® No Appointment Neededl ' Beauty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 ...STAY LOVCUtftp WKAPt BITTIIV WITH : SUMMER COTTONS guaranteed to stoy fresh, neat and crisp cool as o summer breeze with fox Professional Dry cleaning. Sizing proccessei odd original body and lustre ond colors sparkle bright as new. Bring yaw I summer fun *n sun fpshions to fox today for your best foot forward on every* social occasion TRANSISTOR PHONO PLAYS ON 6 BATTERIES Quality Cleaning Since 1929 LiAoi>> °RV CLEANERS . cau/toi>>ky for CONVENIENS T PICKUP AND DEt-lVERY 719 Wws-W Huron ; > FE 4-1 536 lumijuiitukimutumiitt.t niititfli PLAYS EVERYWHERE! Indoors, Outdoors, In the Car! | Weighs only 434 lbs. yet plays any size, any speed record, monaural or stereo. Powered by 6 flashlight batteries, it is all transistorized and has 4" -speaker, built-in 45 rpm spindle and break-resistant case. Diamond needle guaran-j teed for IQ years. ^ / ■ { SPECIAL BONUS $25 worth of Mercury Records . AT NO EXTRA CHARGE ALL FOR r $25.00 Mercury Records ^^95 | $39.95 Mercury Phono | $64.95 VALUE Pk» BottW GRIN NELL'S, Pontioc^Jk^l, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, Use Your Charge, 4-Poy Plan (90 days same as cash) or 27 S. Saginaw St., Budget Plan WVoNTGOMERV WARD the fojkhac press, Monday, July ii,idga B—5 OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 8 ".M. Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4010 TELEGRAPH RD. * Pontiac 24 WEST HURON In DmmUmm Ftnti—rK 4-1234 CM*., CryM.l, Cifl. •md Etkmm AUtm fmrmllar. Right before your very eyes! The delightful, the unusual, the beautiful! The Pontiac Mall Art Market and 0 Betty Baldwin's ''Artists1 Showplace" All This Week... thru Sit. July 16th Hundreds of objets d'art to and purchais... including oil paintings, matal and wood sculpturt, water colors, floral arrangsmsnts and craftsd jswslry. Style House luxury-smooth white percale sheets wear and wear (a) Saawy white cettea Woven 190 threads par square inch after washing. Stronger than mwTm, yet lighter In weight. Sanforized fitted style with elastic comers. Reg. 2.81 full, flat or fjttsd.2.08 Reg. 1.39 coses, 42x38".. .., Pr. 101 Twin, flat or fitted WHITE SHEETS LIMITED 4 TO A CUSTOMER COLORFUL PASTEL PERCALES “Williamsburg” "50-Pc. Dinnerware Johnson Bros, service for 8 in a new open stock grouping. Decorative floral pattern in brown* and burnt orange on beige grounds. SO piece* fegiiliriy935, now29.95. “Moon and Star”' Hand-fashioned Glass Reproductions from tbo original old moulds. Open stock with many fine pieces to choose from. Reg. 3.00 goblets and sherbets in groan or bine, each 2.50. Reg. 4.00 in ruby red, each 3.50. Glow in Dark Glitter continues for after-five wear in the new clothes collections. Sleeves are studded with sequins, collars are framed in them, and they border hemlines. Or, lode for beading all over. MIDSUMMER y SPECIAL WIGS CUT AND STYLED *10 House of Wigs (New Location) 0 ISO N. Perrr - FE 8-6216 Rule-Shaw Wedding Takes Place in Flint MRS. R.D. RULE Vows were taken by Sue Ann Shaw of Flint and Ronald Dean Rule of Grand Blanc, son of the Thomas C. Rules of Camley Street, Saturday, in the Linrtln Park Methodist Church, Flint. Reception In the church par-‘ lors followed the evening rite performed by Rev. W. C. Prout. ♦ A A . White Sweetheart roses and ivy formed a cascade bouquet for the daughter of the junior David W. Shaws, who ap- row Ola ? */ ' ' y'' SAVE ON IMPORTED FABRK WHITE-ONWHITE DRESS SHIRTS Stock up now while the savings are great . . . on fine imported .fabric white-on-wbite dress shjrts. Short sleeve models with regular, tab, and button-down collar ... 499 §1 I y &i v\ iimi Ifiil «£» ' »*' #. ;pp»|| SAVE ON A LARGE GROUP OF BERMUDA SHORTS A large group of Bermuda shorts in crisp, wrinkle-resistant Dacron-cotton—many of them permanently pressed. Some by famous makers. Traditional plain-front models with belt loops, adjustable side tabs....'.. WE’VE REDUCED EAGLE’S LUXURIOUS MOHAIR-DACRON-WOOL SUMMER SUITS TO A LOW This is one of the most luxurious summer suits you can buy: a great value at its regular price.., and at 64.75 it's nothing short of terrific. It's smooth, lustrous, light in weight, and remarkably wrinkle-resistant. You'll find it beautifully tailored in One- and two-button models — with Eagle's expert attention to detailing. Choose from a fine selection of solids and patterns... in lustrous shades of navy, azure blue, grey, brown, olive, and green. SAVE ON ITALIAN COLLAR SHIRT JAG WITH SHORT SLEEVES A savings-pocked selection of goodlooking Italian collar shirt jacs. Choose frotn short sleeve models, in smart solids, plaids, stripes, and checks ................499 i.'Mii ;, SAVE ON SUMMER STRAW HATS: ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED Choose your favorite style jgnd brim width. in a good-looking straw hat; Panamas, cocoaiiuts, and mi Ian straws, in g good selection of colors. Priced from . A 99 . f 199 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 B— I McNamara Credits Program m $14 Billion in Taxes Saved" WASHINGTON \fi - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara say a his cost redaction program has saved the taxpayers 914 billion over the past five,years—$4.5 billion last year alone. McNamara made the figures public last night in a report on his program. He noted that the savings had been made “despite the extraordinary demands of our military operations in Southeast Asia.” McNamara scheduled a midafternoon news conference today to discoas the report. There are three main principles in McNamara’s cost reduction program. He listed them as: ★ it it -‘‘Buying only what we need’’-fiscal 1966 savings $1.6 billion. {-“Buying at the lowest sound price”—$1.3 billion. -‘‘Reducing operating coats through the termination of unnecessary operations, standardization and consolidation”— $1.6 billion. la his,rep art to the President, McNamara also indicated possible cutbacks in defense baying which has been* inflated by the widening U.S. commitment is Viet Nam. The secretary wd “the tendency to overfinance and overorder is especially prevalent when our forces are actually engaged in combat! . "N,\ ★ 4 “We came out of, the 'Korean war, for' example, with about $12 billion of surplus stock on hand—we hope to avoid a similar waste of national resdurces during the Vietnamese conflict.” McNamara’s report said the $4.5 billion saved last year was $400 million more than estimated earlier. He predicted that by fiscal 1969 annual coat savings win come to $6.1 bil- 6 Are Killed in Nebraska FALLS JCITY, Neb: (AP) -Five members of a Nebraska family, returning from a visit to relatives ift Missouri, and a Chicago man died in the flamihg wreckage ofa two-car collislor at,a highway junction abou eight miles northeast of here Sunday night. The victims were Durwood Little, his wife, Leona, and their sons Dale, 7, and Darwin. 4, aU of Crab Orchard, Neb.; Little’s brother George W. Little of Te-cumseh, Neb.; and the driver of the other car, Eugene Pellergini of Chicago. The Little car burned after the collision. Pay Hassle Idles 91 Nurses CASTRO VALLEY, Calif. (AB) — A mass resignation of Castro, Valley's Eden Hospital registered nurses, seeking higher wages and bettep working conditions, has drastically reduced 1 die hospital’s services. Surgery has been canceled. Ralph Hartley, negotiator for the -striking nurses, „ said “the patients will'be truly abandoned” if negotiations fail to lift nurses from “the lowest paid professional group in the country.’^ a * - * Elmer Massmann, administrator for the 243-bed hospital, said, “We are not admitting any patients who might'be termed critical or risk patients.” The nurses, 91 of the staff’s 107, quit Sunday at 7 a.m. after rejecting pay proposals which they said were entirely inadequate. The hospital called ln it»> IS supervisory nurses for emergency duty. Hew Te Held FALSE TEETH Mere firmly la Fleet iiiniw n» ■iihiis— Iiiie^infg bum wh»n you out. lamb cr taint Just iprlnkl* a Uttl* PASTBTH cm your pUtM.HU* alkaUneinon-add) powder hold* felee teeth mor. firmly and mora comfortably. 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The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac 5i v?inran street-FE 4.1555 m B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOftPAy, JULY 11, IM* Dixie March Results Shown Readers Ask: What Chance Has (EDITOR'S NOTE—Tw Amo-dated Press has completed a survey in which readers were dafcfd what interested or Good, Bad Fotind|frouhted feemaboufthe United States and the world, 'A series in Assessment ' of readers’ questions were _________________P | _______ [lected from thf^jurvpy. Jh« racy. It’s'just as strange to the whttmfv M vmiNr. in I0'1*1* “ ^ »v«ragt Vietnamese as the leg- i. Democracy Is a meaning- By WHITNEY Miy°V^G JR ’{democracy m Viet nam - the end o{ the too eggs is to thel^ term to ^ Vietnamese. Executive Director |first in a senes that seeks to American mind. |f| | the immediate! [[impact it hasr 'made. One result of the March was the realization that a Negro cannot -feel safe from brutal attack in the state of Mississippi. The shooting of James Meredith proved that. But if a single Negro faces danger, the March proved that large groups can now demonstrate against segregation and be protected from violence. That the protectors were the state police signifies a hopful change in the state. Not, that there were no lapses, The state troopers obviously .found the task of protecting Negroes distasteful and the minor pushing and shoving incidents were capped by the ugly brutality of the gassing of the tent aite in Canton, Miss. Despite this incident, which can be compared to scenes from Nazi Germany as the troopers threw gas bombs at women and children and swung their clubs with sadistic joy, one overriding lesson emerges. That is, that for the first time in the state’s history, Negroes could look to the police for protection and, in the main, get it/ MASS MEDIA CRITICIZED Another aspect of the march was the unfortunate way In which it was treated by fee mass media. The great symbolism ol the march aad its purifying effect on the racist climate of Mississippi was dinted by the preoccupation of television and newspaper reporters wife exaggerated stories of conflict among the march’s leaders. They picked on the slogar “black power,” which merely a marching slogan rather than a plan, of action, andl a slogan held by only a minor-) ity of the marchers at that, and blew it all out of proportion. I Television reporters talked of how whites were being excluded from-the march while they showed film clips of whites marching along with Negroes. Such distortions did not givel the.nation an adequate picture of the sincerity and dedication that moved the marchers to demonstrate not tor separatism but for interracial cooperation and integration. It is unfortunate too, that Negro leadership which inter- -vened in the March to keep its goals focused and to in- | sure that the marchers behaved ia a responsible manner in the face of provocation. | Politicians, businessmen and! ministers abdicated their re-j sponsibility and duty to lead; and to be the voice of reason and moderation. ■ Convenient LowCost ■ Auto, Boat, Furniture 2 And vacation LOANS! S PONTIAC CO-OP ■ FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 156 West Huron, Pontiac luoii BUY, /SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! The sciatic iwrw b the longest and thickest nerve in the body, ■lirtbl from the small of the hack aad traveling along the entire length of the leg to the foot. rnaanu on this aerva nenally follows a low back injury. Patients complain of pain usually in the bnttoeks side of the thigh, ‘ in the calf of the leg- State ----cannot sit, stand or patients < lie dewa Paia pills may help, hat enly far abort periods of time. The sensible tiring l* de is to tea your Chiropractor, who will give you a thorough examination, take X-Bayt (ta And the area of nerve In n It Chir iprart Chiropractor aad get well. Br. H. H. Alexander Chiropractic Phrtician 1028 Jo.lv n Ave. FE 24)111 I L £X3#L11, t j/j ; A , * > f THE PONTIAC PRHWSS, MONDAY, JULY II, 19^6 fc-4 Sometime soon, Carol Hansen’s j fiance will askhimselfifhe \W lias enough life m insurance. ■ how much is enough. A timely question. Not only for a husband- ‘ to-be, butforanyone withnew responsibility security or your company pension Will provide, fv * V$ That’s why you own life insurance. You realize it give* you an important advantage over alljother types _• _ . follow you faithfully? \ 1 1 1 i 1 1 Circulation Manager, The Pontiac Press P.Q. Box 9 Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Indeed 1 want to know what is going on at home so please mail The Pontiac Press to V ~T ~~ l Name................... 1 1 Address / . . i*. 1. 1 1 ■ v.>. ' ' '*■&. ' ■ • ■■ y • fity............ ... ..State 1 Start with the issue of . .step sending with issue of ... l 1 My Home Address is...... ...City......... Just dip and mail This dt t J * Coupon L flff *91 i . m ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY., JULY* II, 1960 B—11 Veterans' Benefits—6 Services Offered Job-Hunting Ex-GIs (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the 6th in a 17-part series on Veteran*' benefits.) ByRAYCfiOMLEY Newspaper Enterprise Ann. WASHINGTON ^ The federal government offers five services to veterans looking ter work: • Job counseling. '• Job training. veterans are eligible far these services, regardless of the length of activo duty. , Unemployed veterans with N days of active daty or a to ea- ployment paymeats. HVV The rise of these payments Precedence in job referrals, hnd the length of time they’ll • Unemployment benefits. • • Vocational rehabilitation. There is a part-time or fulltime local veterans’ employment representative in almost 2,000 local State Employment Service offices in the SO states. Hiese men are expected to give special" help to veterans. There should be such an advisor in the State Employment Service office in or near your city or county. At these local employment service offices, you as veterans are given priority for referral to appropriate training programs and job openings. ★ * ★ First consideration is given t the disabled. be paid varies from state to The maximum weekly amounts range from $30 to #86; in some states, additional amounts are paid for dependents. The maximum period tor which benefits are payable ranges from 12 tp 39 weeks. LIMIT VARIES , You must file your application for unemployment compensation within a time limit which also .varies hum state to state. Booze Feud Between Ohio and Canada COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A small liquor store in the middle of Lake Erie is causing headaches among Ohio’s antismuggling forces. The store is just across the border on Ontario’s Pelee Island, IS miles from the Ohio mainland. Agents of the Ohio Department of Liquor Control pre convinced that Pelee is a major source of .Canadian booze seeping illegally through the walls of the state liquor monopoly. Brig. Gen. Jack J.G. Spragge, head of Ontario’s Liquor Control Board, denies it. His records are secret, but he says Pelee’i business volume is one of file lowest in Canada. A LONE QUART Under Ohio jaw, private citizens can import only one quart of any alcohblic beverage, and the state levies a 28 per cent markup on that quart. Larger amounts of liquor must be bought from state stores or warehouses. |$ A fifth of scotch costs about $2 | less in Canada, and if a gallon of the stuff can be sneaked into I Ohio, it escapes not only the j All wartime and peacetime [this amount may be increased as much as 810 a week, plus tor depen- Trainees may work in outside employment up to 20 hours a week without deduction in tee training allowance. ON DISABILITY A veteran with a nected (Usability may be onto up to four years or more of vocational rehabillta-tion. The veteran must be prepared to show this rehabilitation is needed to overcome his for work at Am nearest local state employment office nnd ask for beaefits'at the claims office of the State Employment Security Agency. You must be prepared to show your Separation Form DD-214, Social Security card and a record of employment, if any, both before and after military service. ★ ★ ★ Veterans who are underemployed or unemployed and cannot reasonably he expected to secure appropriate full - time employment without training are given priority at State Employment Service offices for vocational training programs. IN SCHOOLS You can get this training in schools or on-the-job. Training allowances may be paid to eligible trainees who are unemployed and who have had two years of gainful employment, including military,service. The regular training allowance is generally equivalent to the weekly rate of unemployment compensation In your state, plus subsistence and travel expense, where necessary. Under tome circumstances, Before a disabled veteran begins training, he will be given vecntiounl counseling to help him select a suitable occupation nad EARLY BIRD VALUES "SUPER-RIGHT1 FULLY COOKBH Semi-Boneless HAMS No Confer Slices Removed lc The amount of training will vary according to the degree of disability. Eligibility will vary according to the period the veteran served. * * * Benefits have largely expired for World War II veterans, except the seriously disabled. ENROLLMENT Eligible veterans may enroll in schools or colleges, train on the job, take institutional on-farm training or enter combination school - job training programs. While in training and for two months after rehabilita- Fryer Legs or Breasts (With Rib* Attached) 59- may receive subsistence allowance la addition to their disability compensation. The subsistence allowance for a veteran enrolled for vocational rehabilitation training is 8110 toll time without dependents, $150 with one dependent, and $175 with two or more dependents. While pursuing on-the-job or institutional on-farm training, the monthly subsistence rates are $95 without dependents, $125 with one dependent and $150 with two or more dependents. Disabled veterans should apply at any Veterans Administration office. (NBXTi Insurance) | "Veterans Benefits" * c/o Pontiac (Mich.)PresS I Box 489, | Radio City Station I Now York, Now York 10019 I Please send me.......copies of Ray Cromle/s new book, "What You'vo Got Coming in—Benefits for U.S. Veterans,” at $1 par copy. I enclose $ ....... (Pltait print clearly-this is your moiling label) ’’SUPULRIQHT" NKW YORK BONELESS Strip Steaks * "SUPER-RIGHT" BONILISS Chip Steaks. • . .. "SUPER-RIGHT" -SKINUSS All-Meat Franks • "SUPIR-RIGHT" CENTER CUT Smoked Pork Chops REELED AND MVIINID Med* Sise Shrimp •. FEATURE VALUE Champion Saltine Crackers "Super-Right" Fully Mature, Corn-Fed Beef Round Steak Center Cut Cube Steak Rotisserie or Rump Roast 1-LB. BOX 19 state markup,but $10.50 in fed-1 m a me eral duty. | • . Donald D. Cook, Ohio’s liquor control director, cities newspa-1 ADDRESS............................................. per estimates that $50 million in i liquor is smuggled across thei1 CITY................. .STATE...... ;ZIP.............. lake each year, but he says the|| Mok. ch«*"*??<**■ 'Tionof**'* r*»,h- ” d«y* ,!.« tO** tk«“CO fM*"*01 Uocc^* intUTe^V ,~otO tH®‘ in addition to this special protection, you receive our •current rate of 4% par cent compounded and paid quarterly; which gives you an annual yield of 4.118, which is the HIGHEST return paid on regular insured passbook savingein Oakland County. 1! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JOEY 11, IMP ItV a Pleasure to Shop and CHOPS SUGAR * POM CHOPS 89M COUNTRY STYLE I SMALL LINK | SPARERIBS i PORK SAUSAGE 1 LUNCI VALUABLE COUPON DOUBLE Gold Bell STAMPS Coupon Expires Wednesday, July 23,1966 With Thii Coupon and $5.00 Pinches*. | (Exeopt*CMM> WinoorCigprettot) ■gj Limit 1 Coupon P*r Customer mmg| AABADOWDALE FRESH FROZEN FRENCH Mi FRIES IV 9 ounce pk|. FRESH FROZEN WEST FARM FRESH FROZEN • CtttCKfiN • T^«STt||EF i > & * MM MM m\ . C REAMETTES—7-oz. pkg. Elbow Macaroni GRADE "Av LARGE EGGS AAAZOLA OIL CREAM CHEESE SALAD DRESSING r DEL MONTE > TOMATO JUICE SCOTTS DECORATED AA PAPER TOWELS ft" 29* ORANGES SALAD dressing 9 ft With Coupon v and Purchoto of S5 or Mora MEADOWDALE GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS M ' If! jfM* * V t I FREE COLD BILL 1 Stamps WitH Purehas* of 2 wholo or cut-up FRYERS FREE COLD BELL Stamps With Purehas* 2 pounds or more OKIES Awre/c ( FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 8 pounds or more POTATOES CAT or DOG FOOD PORK ROAST SUPER MARKETS FOOD MARKETS C-t r fi I Jl THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, I960 PASADENA, Gdlf. (AP) -Hie king, cool shadows of even* tag hive proved a tonic for America's ailing Surveyor I spacecraft, giving the spider-like device another chance, perhaps, to photograph sunset on the moon. ★ it ' t Scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory said the 620- AF Wtrealwta TIGER ON THE JOB—Ray Fuller shows off Tiger, an t-year-old Pomeranian, who feels right at home wearing a construction man’s hard hat. Fuller is boss of a construction crew tearing down a downtown building in Cincinnati tar urban renewal and always has the pooch with him. The dog has crossed the nation three times, following Fuller around construction jobs. Farmers-Police Battle Greeks Blame Reds for Riots SALONIKA, Greece (AP)-The Greek government toda^ blamed Communists for six hours of fighting between wheat farmers and police in Salonika in which 200 persons weue injured. A government statement laid that the farmers’ protest yesterday against wheat subsidy prices was unjustified and that Communists had, exploited It “to achieve their aims." Stones and broken (ticks littered afreets on the outskirts of the city #f half a million. Nearly 200 tractors and otter farm machines were left wrecked, burned or But calm had returned, and people went a ness as usual. Surveyor Cools, May Shoot pound craft’s battery — thought to be gn the verge of death Fri-| day — had cooled enough tojaw low frew sequences of photos, perhaps Tuesday. The ‘ battery temperature spared to 140 degrees Friday night, close to the melting point, but had since cooled slowly to 111 degrees, “well within opera- ting limits," Vsaid project director Robert J. Parts. PUZZLE Still a puzzle is why the temperature dropped to the normal range. Earlier it was theorised that a,short circuit cused the overheating. Parks said the nefct photo so-uence, according to plana, ahould begin Tuesday when Surveyor’s signals ‘coma Into range of tha % Ironing dish at GoMstone, Calif. F* * • . ★ * The most important photo ao-quence, Parks added, comes Wednesday night, when Surveyor records a lunar sunset while the moon is in position over" tha South Africa tracking station. . BRONSON We Stock A Complete Lino SUSPENDED CEILING TILE 19 From Ic i baMat'T’Matai «L 12,12 Acoustical Til. I Ft. 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Hand* ----------------m son* daubla dra.sar with WORLD WIDE'S PRICK attached mirror, AmaV chart, and fujl sis# bad NO MONEY DOWN FREE DEUVERY 139 MODERN LIVING ROOM SECTIONAL 14 foot of comfort and »tyia ub in IhU TacHAMI. CIVI««HWW» •t long wearing easy l ' Groat varyatility far any ream arrangement. Fully reversible foam cushions, wide pillow arm styiinf .WORLDWIDE’S PRICE Upholstered fn ysur ehelee at colsnlal pattams that will *lva — aiitp' at sun Alinlud ptilew” .bsilii and roiststbla fwt ssst cushions. Both hsv# wlng-bsck styling and plaatsd skirts. NO MONEY DOWN-FREE DELIVERY WORLD WIDE'S LOW FRICK MASS SELECT BEAUTIFUL 100% NYLON CARPET AT UNHEARD OF VALUES Beautiful continuous fi lament nylon with pad and including installation, as low as SQUARE YARD *WITH PAD INSTALLED , in traditional, madam . and “early American” stylos ... With beautiful mala I, ceramic, weed and glass bass*. Shades • designed far hosts. COLORS AND STYLES FOR ANY MOTIF OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 A.M. OPEN SUNDAYS NOON TIL 8 AM. MICHIGAN’S UNREST FURNITURE CRAIN DISCOUNT PRICES 3 PONTIAC STORES DIXIE and TELEGRAPH MIRACLE MILE NEXT ti hurt North Sid* yV**tSid* EastSida YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A WORLD WIDE STORE / THE PONTIAC PRESS,. MONDAY, JULY 11, 1968 C-i Namu the Whale Caught in Net, Dies pKATfUt, Wash. (Ap) - Namu, the gentle world-famed killer whale who became a m?™^.picture ,tar *IK* * subject for many acientific studies, is dead. Ted Griffin, who bought the 4%-ton, 20-foot whale from two'Namu, B.C., fishermen and brought him to Seattle for a marine attraction, aaid the friendly beaut apparently drowned when he dove under a float at his waterfront pen and got caught in a net Saturday night Griffin said Namu had been acting odd far a week or se. He aaid summer is the whale mating season and that the big mammal, which had to come np for air from time to time, may have been trying to encape when he became entangled. While here and at winter quarters across Puget Sound near Port Orchard, Wash., Griffin had trained Namu to do tricks and haul his owner on his back. FIRST TIME It was tin first time a killer whale had been kept alive for any length of time in captivity. Dr. Merrill Spencer, one .of the scientists who has been studying the big whale, said the carcass will be turned over to Seattle’s Virginia Mason, Research Center for further studies. it it ★ Griffin, who paid $8,000 for'the big whale, said Sunday he had not decided whether to try to capture another one for his aquarium. Burglars Forgot Tools In a Fast Daparturo CINCINNATI, Ohio UR — Burglars had a bit of bad luck when they broke into a Store in suburban Evendale early They were apparently frightened away when the store’s cleanup crew opened the store. They left behind burglar tools valued at MOO. Viet War, Foreign Aid Faces Congress After 10-Day Recess WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress, ending a 10-day vacation today, barely has time to put down its suitcases before shouldering the burden of major decisions on the Viet Nam war| and foreign aid. Both houses are expected to take up Tuesday the compromise version of a $17.4-billion bill to authorize procurement of military hardware and pave the way for an across-the-board pay raise for the armed services, actual funds depend on appropriation measures to be considered later. ★ ★ ★ The authorization bill, substantially larger than administration recommendations, includes provision for several controversial items such as a clear frigate and a start on a second, and development of a new manned bomber and the Nike X antimissile system. The House next takes up its version of the fd-l-billion foreign aid authorization act, - which for the first time would authorize two-year program. Congress previously has insisted on authorizing foreign aid only a year at s time, with a full review each year. . The Senate has a different version which may be considered late in the week, or more probably next week. Viet Nam and foreign policy generally are certain to figure largely in the debate in both chambers. The Hopse has only minor matters before It today, but the Senate considers a House-bill to give federal civilian employes a pay raise of about 2.9 per cent, with in provements in fringe benefits. Red Chinese Nix Plea for Viet Confab Some Progress Hinted in Ohio Ford Walkouts CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) An official of the United Auto Workers’ Union hinted yesterday there has been some progress in talks with the Ford Motor Co. to end a strike at the Arm’s three Brook Park plants. A member of Local 1250’s bargaining committee said “Well keep talking as long as there is| some hope of progress.” ★ * * The local’s 8,600 members went on strike last Wednesday in a dispute over health safety grievances. While negotiators were in ses-. sion, the union charged that Ford’s labor relations staff is ’‘immature and irresponsible* and that the company is frying to play one plant against another. LYNDA BIRD? - Yet, it’s the President’s daughter with a new hairdo as she arrived at West Berlin’s Tempelhof Airport. New way of combing makes the difference. At right is Maj. Gen. John F. Franklin, the U.S. commandant in Berlin. Question Routed { for Boy's Benefit INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP)-“ Which of us has not done something of which we were ashamed?” asked the Rev. George S. Nable, preaching at the annual novena of the Sisters of Mount Carmel Sunday night. A 4-year-old- boy replied, “I haven’t done anything.” Father able said he would redirect his question to persons 12 years old and above. TOKYO (B-Communist China rejected Saturday India’s call for a Geneva peace conference on Viet Nam. It called for complete withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Viet Nam before holding such a conference. Peking radio, in a Chinese-language broadcast heard here, said the rejection was made by Premier Chou En-lai in a speech delivered at a banquet given in honor of the delegations to an Afro-Asian writers conference which concluded Its session in Peking Saturday. Chou said the Indian proposal was made to benefit the United States and "to deceive the world.” ★ , "The United States has from time to time violated the Geneva agreements. The Geneva conference should be ealled after the United Staaes withdraws its forces unconditionally from South Viet Nam,” Chou said. HER PROPOSAL Prime Minister Indira Gandhi qf India proposed Thursday that the 1954 Geneva Conference" on .Indochina be reconvened immediately, to be followed by cessation of hostilities. She Said a settlement of the conflict should be based withdrawal of all foreign troops from Viet Npm and guarantees of independence for Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia. Weeks----------------- Of Back Pain Now Relieved “After week* of ptin in my bock and hip*, 1 tried DeWitt’* Pills—got wonderful relief,” say* Mrs. R. Gardner, Waterloo, low*. DeWitt'* Pilla act faat with a proven analgetic to relieve pain of backache. Their mfld diuretic atetion help* eliminate retauned fluid* end flesh out irritating bladder watte*. If pain pesaiats, tee your J—na DeWitt'o Pill* often_ where other* fail, relieve minor mu*c!e aches, too. In-list on the k ' - Pills. At all L DeWitt’s Pills J Bombings Fail to Move Reds' WASHINGTON (AP) - Roving Ambassador W. Avereil Harriman says recent bombings of North Vietnamese oil storage faciliies have not brought the Communists any cfpser to the bargaining table. Harriman said North Viet Nam and Red China remain opposed to peace negotiations and want instead* to win the war. it it f; ■ But Harriman aaid the purpose of the* bombings was not to force North Viet Nam to negotiate. STAY GOOL WITH A GIBSON OR FRiGIDAIRE AIR CONDITIONER Consumers Power Taltphona 33-3-7812 Wrigley / mists, m. m m\ ALL BEEF' Ground Right • • The Wrlgloy Way tram Quality Beef Now you con have thil BLENDED BIFOCALS That tell-talw dividing line is * ' NO LONGER OBVIOUS TO OTHERS. You d&’t toll your aga... why show H? Now... imoother, easier focus is yours • . . No more split double vision from the line. You’ll look better, and see better, with blended Bi-Focal* from ' Nu-Vision Optical Studio. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE 109 N. Saginaw St. E. STEINMAN, O.D. FE 2-2895 Open Daily 9:30 to 5*30, Friday 9i3p to 1:30 Title Satisfying Pip - Assorted Revert fay go Jy 5 Assorted Flavors Jell-0 SAVE 15c o GELATIN nccccuTC with coupon erf left 3 ox. UC9>EK I) with $5 purchase wt. pkg. All Varieties - Frozen Banquet ' SAVE 20c A cevpen ef Ml > All Purpose • Hygrade Shortening THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONPAY, JULY 11, 1066 C—4 According to tfao U.S. Office of Education, 5,M7,4U attxf are enrolled in the nation’s col-| s and universities this * demic year. BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! THE HERE >P.»» IB.) /B — /ll\s OPEN AT 7:30 . SHOW STARTS AT DUSK AAA 4-3135 r Soar*1* •flato. }S§* • HARRELL MCeeas JtSeu Barbara «M».UNIEDJIiiI6TS COMMERCE Haggarty Rtf. sfEttsi NOW Thru TUESDAY Mulls $14* Children Under It Free 7:30 BONDED ENTERTAINMENT! James Bond Does It Everywfiorai SEAN CONNERY THUNDERBflLL" • ALSO • (HEWTHEWSim HUHBSBRE BLOODCURDLING fomemestsis! jimuMu mum ! 'HOWTO noeaur-simiim Summer Replacement Is a Hit reformed rock *n' m "I g Ell Ew\;, _Vr 11 By BOB TBOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD-The hit of the summer television peers to be e reformed rock ’h’ roller n anted John Davidson. He is the husky baritone who took over for Andy Williams duringl the hot weather run of the Kraft Music Hall on I NBC. Ordinarily, a THOMAS summer replacement show has the Siberia-like qualities of playing the Elks Club In Fargo. But John and his youthful band have given the Monday night outing such verve and style that there is already talk of elevation to the majors—a win-r show. “Yes, there is talk,” John confirmed, “but Fll believe it when I see H.” UPPER RANKS Still, there doesn’t seem to be much doubt that he will asceifU to the topmost ranks in show business.. No career has been as well planned and directed. It helps that he also has talent. John Davidson’s schedule has simmered down a bit so that he has time to talk about his geoning career. Until recently, he was working weekdays at the Disney Studios in his first film, “The Happiest Millionaire,” then hustling to NBC a couple of blocks away to tape the TV show on weekends. ★ * * “Now we’ve finished all 12 shows—we were scheduled for 13 but got preempted on July J ” he said. “I thought maybe! I’d m disappointed with them and find things I with I had done differently. ‘But I must say that I think I did the best I could. If anything, I think I might have tried to, sing more. But I did about five numbers a draw—three solos, and just about exhausted my whole repertoire.” SON OF MINISTER John is 24, the son of k Baptist minister of White Plains, N.Y., and theater arts graduate of Denison University. He started as a rocker, then went straight He might still be singing in night clubs and summer theaters except for a meeting with Bob Banner, the television producer. Banner signed the young man to a personal contract and outlined a five-year plan to develop him into a star. First came the CBS series, “The Entertainers.’ The show flopped but Davidson didn't. His dimpled, ingenuous charm and robust voice established him as a Comer. WWW He followed with the “Fantas-ticks” .special, a Columbia Records contract, Bell Telephone Hours, etc. It was on the latter that he was spotted by the Disney people. Then NBC decided that John was promising enough to fill. Andy Williams’ spot. “Now we’re two and a half years ahead of schedule," said John. Like many young performers, he refers to his career self in the first-person plural; perhaps tertainer nowadays requires ani entourage of agents, coaches, press agents, and arrangers. I It’s not likely that the real, John Davidson will become submerged by the image-makers. He is too level-headed for that. “I’m happy with what I’m 9* ft-CAL Stf 30* Valid thru Sot., July 16, 966 ut Krayor Dot. 1 Ernst. Mick. I _ LJ ■ Limit Ono Coupon. ■ I at Krayor Dot. A Eost. TOP VALUE STAMPS fi-LB BAG OR MORE POTATOES | at Kroyor Dot. B East. Mick. hfpB a WITH THIS COUPON ON TOP VALUE STAMPS TOP VALUE STAMPS ■ ■ WITH THIS COUPON ON 2 Pkg* Fryer Parts 2 Pltgs cut-up Fryers, ■or 2 Roasting Chickens1 9 Valid thru Sot., July 16. HU _■ ONE MAGIC BROOM WITH THIS COUPON ON Z ■WITH THIS COUPON ON Z COUNTRY OVEN I2H-OZ E m 2 REFRIGERATOR JARS ■ CARAMEL PECAN ROLLS ■ ■ 2 *‘i. ■ or 1-LB, 2-oz ■ ■ KROGER OLIVES . . ■ FRUIT STOLLEN ■ ■ ■ ■ - ■ L* Valid thru Sat., July 16, 1966 ■ Valid thru Sat., July 16. 1966 _J * Valid thru Sat., July 16, 196* ut Krayor Dot. I East. Mick |(1 I at Kregrr Drt. t East. Mleh. | at Kroyor Dot. i East. Mick. Am ■■■■■■■■■ a ■■■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■pwlll m c—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULy 11, 1PM Jacoby on B ridge 'Russia to land. Craft on Moon, Bring It Back' NORTH (D) 11 AAlOt* EAJf ♦AQJ9 2 ♦ 7 WEST EAST AQT V KQ 106 4PJ732 ♦ 8543 ♦ K 10 ♦ AJ104 *KQ983 SOUTH ♦ K 9 6 5 4 3 V 8 5 ♦ 7* ’ A 6 5 2 Neither vulnerable Wert North East South 1 ♦ Pass 1 A » Pass 4 ♦ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—V K * If you bid yot cm get Into trouble. If you put ysa cu get into trouble. It it a “book” pass bit any winning player it going to retpond one spade. He knows that he is askng for trouble by bidding but he figures that he is asking for worse trouble if he passes and he also knows that if by some lucky chance his partner can raise spades everything may come up roses as* a result of his spade bid. The roses bloom today. He responds one spade and North raises to four spades. We$t opens the king of hearts. South wins with dummy’s ace and plays ace and king of spades. . Then he takes the diamond finesse which loses to East’s because you are going to seel #*** ",**£*! it repeated for • c,uk ami a hear several days ^mediately. Southijffl more make an overtrick. Nothing The reason is ke€P h,m ,rom mak,n* that when your “,s *ame-partner opens If South passes at one di-j the b i d d i n g amond West may decide to bod with one of any a heart. Or he may'took at that) suit but . spades singleton spade and decide to j you are in the let North struggle at one di-“Hanged if you amond. If he passes to one dido, hanged if I amond, North will probably you don’t” position. -1 make about two odd. If West reopens with one heart anything may happen. North and South may.still find their spade fit and play at four- spwies. It. is more likely that East and West may buy the* contract at some number ornearts. V If they hay it at two, three or four they will make their contract If they go to five against a four-spade bid they will only be down one V+CHRD Sense** By JACOBY dc SON Newspaper Enterprise Assn. You are going to get ratherl - tired with today's South hand Q—The bidding has been: West North East Soul ,,, 1* Pass If Pass f You, South, hold: *A8 UJK 4QU +A108G What do you do? A—Raise to two hearts aaly. With 14 high esrd points and no singleton year hand is not worth a jump raise. TODAYS QUESTION You bid two hearts. Your partner goea to three dubs. What do you do now? TOKYO (UPI)—Russia will land an unmanned apace vehicle on the moon and bring it back to earth before trying, a manned flight, visiting Soviet cosmonaut Lta Col. Vladimir $oiriarov said in a statement published today. fComarbv, quoted by the Asahi Evening News, said the unmanned expedition would be followed by a space dog to the moon. He added he was certain a Russian would still be the first man on the moon. Komarqv, who is heading" a 107-member Russian delegation jto the 2nd Russo-Japanese Youth ‘festival at Lake Yamanaka, was cartain of the three-man Soviet spaceship Voskhod I. Ministers Meet to Solvie Persian Gulf Oil Row Leprosy now claims some 10 million victims throughout thej world. •, . COPENHAGEN (UPl}-Min-isters from Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait were meeting here today in hopes of solving a conflict on Persian Gulf oil rights. The delegations met -earlier in Stockholm, a Kuwaiti spokesman said, and decided to continue discussions here. JACOBY BERRY’S WORLD Mrological Forecast i * 1. i. Don't noNwiic. _____ _ lump at flrot otter. Realize odvlco < offer may not be complete, 7* end see — BE OBSERVANT. SCORPIO (Oct. 21 - Nov. 21): Follow through on pdas. C it Bill in the pool—no b S cap!” BOARDING HOUSE . Em- work!, advertising. You can go aheod. Marriage Licenses Stontor id Olen- a O. Lamb, Birmingham Dennis D. Smith, Lake Orion ■ is J. Wineland, Like Orion John E. Tralnor, Royal Oak and Nancy i. Nowack, Farmington - m I. Edwards, Walled Charles V. Fattora, Warren and Fa lino A. Erkklla, 7SS First and Eva Stromback, Detroit Stephen J. Gabriel, Rochester ■ Connie L. Kohn, m N. Astor Sandra L. Bloomquist, Birmingham Stephan A. Plkeshuk, Drayton Plal and Thana M. Foster, Drayton Plaint Richard L. Rainier, Walled Lake a Sherry L. Paslnski, Clawson Roger L. Oathout, walled Lake a Carola -A. Hamilton, Novi Larry L. Andrews, Union Lake l David J. Oliver, Milford and Charlo A. .Pritchett, 2S Hudson Gary R. Crisp, Detroit and Mlchelt A. GMsky, 305 S, I ---------| Cortwright i Anita - Moran, 72 Foster Charles L,. McGowen, 410 .Fourth I Shirley J. Laid law, Lake Orion _____ ____MR j» Salmar and! Rebecca R. Kirschenman, Portland -Larry A. Marr, Drayton Plains and Diana L. Saddler, II S. Anderson | Garold W. Pope, Royal Oak d Irey Bishop, Haiei Park and l MY WORD,MACK, HOW CAN VOJ JOKE AT) \■ ^ h ATAtlME UK&1WI6 ? MARTHA * 1 HAVE A WILD HUNCH YOU 00,MA30f^ OPEN THAT I -SIMPLY DOESN'T UNOliflSTAND / pClENCE-// 3U6 OP HOME &R6W VOL) HAD /] hidden in-me lamp ? m OUT OUR WAY BEN CASEY I’VE GOT SOMETHING X> CA7, DJID—1U MAKE rTRRIff AND PLEASE LET Ml FINISH BEFORE YOU SV ANYTH INS. THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom By Jim Berry By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY FttJUW TAKUM MB SACK TO EARTHi AND CONFOUNDED ■ YOB CHAPS CAN NAMUM OWN JUPITER KOOKS PRICE! PAY HEAP II* PILE UM. UNDERSTOOD y-rpr MAPS! --------- ENGLISH ...OR IP { -----■*< . Itl II X COULD USE MY HANDS TO GESTURE! Wrt 11 111 EEK & MEEK By Howl* Schneider By Ernie BushmUIer —WHY-NOT--- PRETEND THAT ITS FUN ? — MAKE A GAME OUT OF IT ,— By Bad Blake DUCK By WaH ] m ' :‘ii SSmSE THri PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11,1966 C—f The foilowtag art top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by .them in wholesale package Iota. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markers as of Tuesday. Produce VELi-.. CherrlM, SwMt, 14 Q.R. Crt. —iBMfc'lfauWf. ,., vaerruLas Stocks Hold Small Advance Cabbag*. a. bu....... Cauliflower, dz. .... Clary, PaacM, dz. it Calary, J New YORK (AP) — The stock market held a small advance iirjnoderate trading early this afternoon. Selective demand for blue chips kept the averages a bit ahead but considerable caution prevailed amid reports that interest rates had risen to the highest levels of a generation in 'of the money market. sideraUe underlying optimism based on die increasing flow of favorable corporate earnings reports for the second quarter and increasing signs that financial Institutions were nibbling at high quality issues for their portfolios. Airlines were ragged as the airline strike continued. #" ★ * Selective gains perked up electronics, steels, drugs and tobaccos. All tibe leading motor stocks were a little higher. Rails and utilities showed little change on balance. The Associated Press average of M stocks aUooon was up .4 at 324.2 with industrials np .7, rolls unchanged and utilities np A The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 2.56 at 896.60. Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. O’Okiep Copper was up about 2. Hanoi to Try 60 U. S. Fliers 'War Crimes' Will Go Before Peoples'Court aiiwM. oz. och........2I00 Kohlrabi, dz. bcb. Onions, green, dz. bch Parsley, Curly, dz. h m is,................•.4,..;; 2M lire New York Stock Exchange Job Figures Key #0 Setting Policies LONDON (UPI) - The Yugoslavia news agency Tanjug quoted reports from Hanoi today as saying that about 60 captured U. S. airmen “will be tried as criminals'’ by a special court. The Ta n j u g dispatch, dated Pnompenh, Cambodia,said: “Reporta from Hanoi say that the government of the Demo-Republic of (North) Viet Nam will form a peoples' court before which captured pilots frotn planes s over North Vietnamese territory will be brought.” The agency said the Hanoi regime “does not consider these U. S. citizens as prisoners of war for it has not declared war on theU.S. A.” BOMBING DEATHS The captive pilots, Tanjug said “will be tried as criminals responsible for the deaths of a large number of North Vietnamese citizens who died from the beginning of American bombings of the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam.” The U. S. launched its first air attacks against North Viet Nam in February, 1985. ♦ i h Tanjug said that about 60 U. S. airmen are being held by the North Vietnamese Communists. They recently were paraded through the streets of Hanoi in handcuffs during mass demonstrations of support for the Ho Chi Minh regime. Dispatches said the crowds screamed for the blood of the “Johnson sky warriors.” PARADED Dispatches by other Communist news agencies from Hanoi said variously .that “several score" and “several dozen" prisoners were paraded. Radio Hanoi on Friday broadcast demands by three women that the airmen be executed as war criminals. By SAM DAWSON AP Btulnets News Analyst NEW YORK-How many people have jobs-and who has them — plays an increasingly important role in setting both business and government policies. And the trend the ployment report! takes this summer will do much to solve many of today’s! puzzles. DAWSON The monthly figures on how many people have jobs and what percentage of the labor force says it can’t find jobs has bedh a chief reason in recent years first for making money easy and now for making credit tight. The kies was this: easy credit would help the economy expand and make jobs for the disturbingly high number that overheat, tight money, would help want off a bust that would cost many jobs. O * ’ i The large number of .people out of work in 1963 and 1964 (the jobless rate of the monthly statistics) was the prime talking point for cutting taxes. And the record number now employed and spending lots of money is one reason for talking about raising taxes, the reasoning: a tax cut would give consumers and business more to spend and thus make jobs;, and now the idea is that the recent exuberant spending and speculating may have to be curbed by raising taxes again. POLICY DECISIONS So importaht has the unemployment statistic beemne in recent years in ecoftqmc and' political thinking that itu closely associated with many Of the Great Society programs, especially those with the accent on helping people who find it hardest to get jobs and hold them. ★ h As the jobless Ate has dropped in the last year, the gaugb of prosperity has risen. This is the Gross National Product, or total output of goods and services. The two curves to react on each other. The more people there are at work and spending their wages, the greater the dollar volume of the conomy. And as the GNP rises, as prosperity spreads, so The jobless rate plays a part does the opportunity for gainful in purely business policy deci- employment, sions. As one guage of economic But it isn’t quite that simple health, the employment statistic or automatic. Booming prosper-<*- and particularly the trend it ity and lots of jobs also can is taking - can help determine bring problems. And that’s what whether firms play things close is worrying business and gdv- didn’t. have them; and then!to the vest or go all-out for ex-Jernment leaders now. when the economy started tolpansion: Ford Tells GOP Business Notes Douglas £. Lock, 2651 Avon-hurst, Troy, has been appointed equipment engineering manager for the recent-1 ly formed Equipment Operations in Ford! Tractor Division, Ford Moto'r Company. Lock will dire c t engineering design and iopment 'of Ford's u t i 1 i t y and tractors, and equipment and agricultural implements. He was formerly industrial equipment engineering manag- WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, the House Republican leader, said again today that the Republican Party should not make Viet Nam an issue in the 1966 political campaign. -- “If It Is an issue, the American people will make it one," said Ford, emphasizing views voiced previously. * * * Republicans should do everything possible to get the war over as quickly as possible, Ford said, adding that “I applaud anything President Johnson does to get it over with.” ^ Ford endorsed Johnson’s decision to step up the bombing of oil storage depots in the Hand and Haiphong areas of North Viet Nam. GOOD LAST YEAR ‘But/’ he said, “I want to point that if this is a good policy in July, a policy to weaken the will of the North Vietnamese, it war just as good a policy last December.” The Republican coordinating committee, of which Ford is a member, last Dec. 13 called for maximum use of American conventional air and sea power against significant military targets in order to minimize casualties and bring about a swift and secure peace. ! #•. * * Asked what he thought would be the effect of the just com- Roy Jordan, 7300 Tratham Court, West Bloomfield Township, is the new manufacturing and pUnt engineering for the Highland Park M-151 Military Vehicle Operations, Ford Tractor Division, Ford Motor Co. He was formerly assembly process supervisor for manufacturing engineering at the same plant. Aloysius F. Power, vice president and general counsel for General Motors Corp., has* announced the appointment of Patrick J. Crowley as a member of the GM legal staff. William R. Stacy will succeed Crowley as director of dealer relations on the GM marketing staff. Stacy was formerly assistant manager of Chevrolet’s eight-state Midwest region. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)^Th# enh position q tw----- --- I 11,131,27*, 10*.52 1 12,219,214,223.51 Flacal Year July I- . 1,110,*47,7*2.43 1,011237,392.74 1,434,04*,020.40 13.1 (Xl-lneMfoi $3*4,251210.70 subject ts itatutory M—“ STOCK AVERAGKS Rra* pay H.1 Mi wi# Age 75.4 Iff m ET3.1 mi 8* fcjK&Sfr-N ijs as '9i k ns CMWll(* Mr TN AlWClM aa is la*. Itilli Noon Mon. . *72 J 1774 :: :1*?:2 18.7 ...473.3 1M4 nSHtS?..: ---4S3 Ufa . . .S37.* 213.1 in* hum ::: INI Law .... 'Scratch Viet as Issue’ pleted Mkday recess by Congress, in which members had a chance to get back home and tape tiie thinking of their constituents, Ford said he thought public resentment over some of the administration programs would tend to slow Congress down. The increase in the cost of living and federal spending are part of the reason for the public resentment, he Mid. VOTE AGAINST “The impact of the anti-pov- erty program and Qther Great Society legislation which has faUen on its face to some extent,” Ford Mitf, “may make some Democrats vote anti-ad-ministration. If they do not, they may pay the penalty in November." Ford Mid that if the present swing in sentiment from the Democrats to the Republicans holds, he expects the GOP will pick up 40 or more House seats in the November elections. Porsche Says Europe Cars Are Safest. STUTTGART, Germany (AP) —The man who helped develop the Volkswagen and Porsche contends European cars meet higher safety standards than American automobiles. Ferdinand Porsche Jr.tm of the - Ponce Automobile Works, said American - made cars 'are built to meet U.S: laws and road conditions and many are not up to the rigors of high - speed European driving standards. * • * * Porsche made his comments] in an interview published in the July issue of his company’s' magazine, Christophorous. Brakes bn American cars, he Mid, “probably are good enough for America in view of the speed limits.” And for a top speed of 110 (kilometers per hour), thq brake drums of. 10 years ago suffice, but that is contrary to ' we regard as technical advances. HIGH SPEED , ‘We believe that we' must build automobiles that can be driven with 100 per cent safety at their maximum horsepower capacities.' Our production series lie above the (safety) standards demanded by the Americans.” SHORTAGES The low jobless rate can mean shortages in some skilled labor fields. The appetite of labor for higher wages grows fast when the scarcity is the supply of labor rather than the number of jobs. And big wage boosts can feed inflation. At the business end, a booming economy means lots of Mies to a free spending public, highly employed and well paid. And as production costs rise and competition is dulled, the urge to raise prices is stronger, and the chances are better of making -increases stick. ■ * * ★ * • the statistics the government will be reporting thissum-mer on employment and the ' . rate will have wider effect than just what the figures themselves may seem to say. They can tell you whether tight money is working, whether tax-may be raised, whether prices and wages are going up and by how much. And perhaps they’ll give an idea of what government spending plans may be next year, and also business spending plans — and of course ‘ consumer spending plans will be in the weeks ahead. Police Disperse Demonstrators Porsche added that American “ automobile makers do not meet j their own standards when more \ than one person is in the ru * bring tested. . . J “That Is particularly illogi-j Sulcal,” ha remarked. GRENADA, Miss. (AP) Steel-helmeted highway patrolmen, wielding billy clubs and gun butts, drove off some 306 Negroes demonstrating outside the Grenada County jail, as sheriffs deputies scattered 100 jeering whites. But civil rights planned new demonstrations today—a swim-in and a read-in — in their test of public accommodations in this town of 7,914, halfway between Jackson — the Mississippi capital — and Memphis, Tenn. • * The trials of some of the 43 civil rights workers jailed for staging a sit-down demonstra-on a Grenada street come tip today in city court: Many of the Negroes dispersed Sunday from the jail area had come on a sympathy march for the 43. Also scheduled today was preliminary hearing for two white men arrested after shots struck near a federal official and two others as they were about to go into a Negro church late Saturday night. A column of patrolmen, armed with shotguns, carbines and tear gas gjenades, were marched into one group of about 200 Negoes standing near the jail at dusk Sunday. News in Brief Waterford Township pd are investigating a burglary at the Family Restaurant, 3500 Elizabeth Lake Road, today which change, cigarettes and candy, total value of $50, were stolen. ■fr ’' Frank P, Marcartney, president of Aero Dynamics, Inc. will serve as chairman of Region T for the 1966 Michigan 1 Aviation and Space Week, Sep-' tember 10-16. Rummage: Howards Methodist Church, E. Silver bell Bald Mt. Rd. July 14-15,9 a.m.-l p.m. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am single, in my early forties, and my concert is my livelihood after age IS. At that time I would receive about $125 a month pension pins Social Security: I have $16,100 insurance fully payable ■t age 85 and $1,888 in savings. I own General Motors, Revlon and Standard of New Jersey. I will soon receive $588 sad would like to Invest this money for growth. I thought about Sean, Roebuck sad am considering selling Revlon at a slight loss. What would you advise?" R.A. A) I like all the stocks you own but I do not feel you have a sufficient reserve in ravings to meet future contingencies. Revlon is an excellent stock has shown good growth, but from a price standpoint has really got nowhere for the past IVs years. I would mU this stock solely to build up your cash reserves. Sears, Roebuck has been de-. pressed in price like so many blue chips in a rather speculative market. I think you might do very. well with your $500 in this issue: (Copyright, 1888) Child Is Hit by Motorcycle A 3-year-old Independence Township girl is listed in fair condition today at Pontiac General Hospital after being struck by a motorcycle hear her home. Mary Graves, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Matthew Groves 'of 5063 Cecilia Ann was hit shortly before 7 p.m. en Cecilia Ann just south of Sunnyside. Harold E. Bowker, 37, of 311 N. Perry, driver of the motorcycle told Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies the girl ran in front of him from between parked cars. Bt HCUMie 1.MM IMnT IN DIVIDiNDS MCI — aaivut . } tit ■ C—8 THE PONTIAC PRKgS. MONDAY, JULY 11, 1066 $1000? Beneficial Just call up or come in.'Get the cash you want last to do your shopping, to pay your bills, to enjoy the holidays. You pick the terms ... you pick the payments... at Beneficial, where you get that BIG O.K. for cash! Call up and see! ■INIFICIAL FINANCE SYSTEM • 1700 OFFICES C0AST-T0-C0AST Loans up to $ 1,000 on your signature, furniture or auto. • ION. Saginaw ............... .............334-9595 Beneficial Finance Co. of Detroit - PONTIAC— (2 Offietsl Beneficial Finance* Co. of Waterford • 477 Elizabath* Lake M. .......... ........334-45i 3 OPEN EVENINGS* BY APPOINTMENT—PHONE FOR HOURS By DICK BARNES AimckM Press Writer LANSING - When the cat’s away, the. mice don’t play they just use long-distance telephones and a stand-in governor to keep the state rolling along. » The "calf of course, la the governor. State business, politics, and an occasional vacation take him out of the state. What happens to state business when he’s gone, such as last week when Gov. George Romney attended the National Givernori Conference in Los Angeles? Michigan constitutional law has long provided that when the governor leaves the state, the lieutenant governor becomes acting governor. He even draws extra pay to make his usually HEW 7-FOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, Al| Rubber SJ95 Exchangobl* With ‘ Your Old Ro-Us*- j obi* Hot* Ends Regular 7.50 _dome In or t ree Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS Diipowl Bag»-Hoi*»-Bru»h*i-B*lti-Attochm*nt*-Efc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Applioncei Using Our Own Parti" Complete With Attachments Frio Home CURT’S APPLIANCES -FmettryiitMiiiWtiDmmyr ' 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD Never a State leadership Lag lower salary the same as the governor’s during the acting period. Before the advent of modern communications, an acting gov ernor conceivably could have wielded significant power with the boss out of touch. Lt. Gov. William Milliken spent much of his time working in northern Michigan last week while Romney" was gone. A State Police car quickly delivered the one emergency proclamation — dealing with a forest fire hazard — which, had- to be signed i Romney’s absence. it * ★ Sit of Romney’s top aides, ranging from budget director Oceans Store Key Minerals Jy Science Service WASHINGTON—’Che 330 million cubic miles of ocean around us hold valuable materials in solution - common salt, magnesium, bromine, potash, soda, and other natural elements. Only four of these elements are commercially extracted at the present time to any extent sodium and chlorine (in the form of common salt), magnesium and bromine, pointed out Dr. John L. Mero, president of Ocean Resources, Inc. La Jolla, Calif. About 3.5 per .cent of seawater consists of elements is solution, Dr. Mero told a conference on “Exploiting die Ocean,” sponsored by Iks Marine Technology Society. Thus each cubic mile of seawater, weighing about 4,7 billion tons, holds about 166 million ton of solids. Certain bodies of water are richer in minerals than others. Recently a body of water was found in the Red Sea that contains, from 1,000 to 50,000 times as mUch of such elements iron, copper, manganese and lead as does normal seawater. Glenn Alloa to political adviser and Unison man Walter Devries, wigi him to Los Angeles. All kept in .regular daily contact the Lansing staff to keep business moving, along. BIU signings and other routine business were announced by the executive office even while Romney was gone — the result of actions he took before leaving / THE THIRD MAN Third man in succession — in case the lieutenant governor leaves, tod — is the secretary of state. James Hare, a Democrat, and secretary since 1955, has Been acting governor for about 200 days — but only two since Romney became governor in 1963. Hare, the state’s chief historian, says the acting governor role has never readied me fourth tiian in lint, the attorney general. The closest the fourth hum has come may have been during April 1965, when Romney and Hare were both in Europe and Milliken was acting governor. A top aide to Democratic Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley periodically came to the Capitol press room to announce kiddingly what time Kelley planned to lead the National Guard into the Ueutenant governor’s office for a coup. M Official Dias MOSCOW (AP) - Alexander P. Rudakov, 55, a secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist party, died Sunday following a long illness. WELDERS NEEDED Full Tima — 6l)«yi a Waak Presently Working 11 Hour* a Day Starting at $3 ip to $3.50 par btar Apply at Plant Between 8s30 A. M. to -5:00 P. M. ANDERSON TANK t MANUFACTURING CO. 2702 NORTH BOUT HWY. FLINT, MICHIGAN . TRADING BOATS IS-EASY WITH A PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JUST PHONE 332-6181. DAY SPECIAL OFFER MONDAY-TUESDAY-WEDMESDAY new spaamar. AUTOMATIC WASHER and DRYER lave on ONE! Save More on BOTH! AUTOMATIC DRYER ... 3-way haat control to dry all fabrics safely-Hi, low or air only. Exclusive "In-a-door" lint trap. Positivo timer control. Drum stops automatically whon door is opanad. $138. - ■ AUTOMATIC WASHER ... Watar temperature control, partial Todd tub fill. Autojnatic lint rtmovar. Automatic sediment ajactor. Special cycle for silks and wooltns. $170* BUY BOTH FOR ONLY *306 PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT i No Down Payment * 90 Days Same as Cash * Up to 36 Months To Pay 61*fN TONIGHT 'TIL 9 P.M. - PARK FREE IN WKC’S LOT Rear of Store THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 ' {iguring lt Was every day now. ____ l-only thing he could throw me in' {such a situation. It was inside, just above the belt and I knew it was gone as soon as I connected. It sure felt good.’’ {YANKS FALL Yankee Manager Ralph Houk, who had hoped to have the team at .500 by the All-Star break, watched the Yanks fall 12 games behind that mark and 20% games behind the leagueleading Orioles. Homers by Ed Brinkman and Bob Savarine gave Washington the victory margin in the first game, while blasts by Willie Kirkland and Ed Brinkman powered the Senators in the second game. Ftwry IF Kai i ne s Clout Not Enough as Tigers Lose to Twins MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (AP) — If the Detroit Tigers had nine Al Kalines, they might win the pennant. Kaline walloped his 21st home run of the season Sunday, a two-run clout in the lixth inning, but it wasn’t enough as the Tigers bowed to the Minnesota Twins 4*2. The homer was Kaline’s eighth of the month and his fourth in the four-game' series with the Twins. Earl Wilson^ who started for Detroit, gave up a pair of two-run homers to Don Mincher and Harmon Killebrew. mn r“““: Freehan in the seventh and pinch-hitter Gates Brown ain- But Boswell struck out Dick McAuliffe to end the inning. Willie Horton and-Don Wert got on base in the ninth, but pinchhitter Jake Wood struck out to end toe game. along with Sweetan will call the signals for the rookies this week. Other veterans to report are linebackers Mike Lucci and Wally Hilgenberg, fullback Tom Nowatzke, end John Henderson, center Ed Flanagan, defensive end Larry Hand, defensive backs Jim Kearney and Tom Vaughn and Pontiac’s Jerry _ 1 1. . I W Rush, who is being moved from *?**8 d°wn ft defensive to offensive tackle by|h«h-fly,n* on four coach Harry Gilmer. Lucci and Hilgenberg will be given a crack at toe middle linebacker slot vacated when All-Pro star Joe Schmidt retired to join toe Lions’ coaching staff. fop rated rookies, include Bruce McLenna, Little-A 11 America halfback from Hillsdale who hails from Fenton, end Bill gled him to third with two out. Malinchak of Indiana and guard Doug Van Horn of Ohio State. Missing will be 245-pound lineman Bob Kowalkowski of Virginia who will be with the College All-Stars until the All-Star game August 5. and kept Baltimore from increasing its eight-game lead over Detrojj. Brunet, how 9-5, won his fifth game in a row, while Steve Barber, 10-8, took his first loss after eight straight victories. Kansas City climbed into sixth place with its sweep. Rookie Jim Nash threw a three-hitter in the first game for second triumph since being called up from Mobile. Joe Nos-sek hit an*inside-toe-paric home run. In the second game, a single by Larry Stahl drove in the go-ahead run and a double by] winning pitcher Jack Aker| drove in an insurance score. 9 in Michigan National Golfers Publinx From Our News Wire MILWAUKEE — Nine Michigan players are among a field of 150 that teed off this morning over the tight Brown Deer coufse in the first of two 18-hole qualifying rounds in the National Public Links Golf Tournament. “It’s long and real tight,” said Pontiac’s Tom Balliet after, turning in practice rounds of 75,71 and 80 over the 6,765-yard, tree-lined layout. The field will play another 18 holes tomorrow after which the low 64 scorers will eater double rounds of match play Wednesday leading to the 38- Boat Racer From Area Gains Title hole semifinals Friday and the 36-hoie finals Saturday. Along with the nine state players in the tourney is former Pontiac City Champion Mike Andonian, who is now playing out of Camarillo, Calif. Anddhian toured the course over the weekend with defending champion Arne Dokka of Studio City, Calif., and both came away impressed -with the rugged layout. Dokka, 22, is trying to become the first champ to repeatv since Dick Sikes. Cither Michigan golfers after the title are Allan w. Thompson of Pleasant Ridge; Roy A. Iceberg of Southfield fTimo Kil-pelainen of Farmington; Phil C, Marston of Jackson; Don Brooks of Femdale; Clarence L. Pozza of Detroit, and James Walker of Detroit. Hole-in-One Event Won by Larry Friar Larry Friar, Walled Lake , Hank Ball, veteran Drayton I Plains’ hydroplane boat racer,! gained sweet revenge over the weekend at Dayton, Ohio and. qualified for thei national cham-!golfer ’wha m enter Oakland pionships later this month. Community College in Septem-Ball drove his Wait-4-Me 48- ber, won the Bogie Lake cubic-inch powerboat to first Country Club Hole-in-One place over-all in. the Eastern'tournament Sunday. Divisional Championships o n j Friar was the only shooter East Wood Park Municipal Lake among 75 entries to put two of era, from Texas—Tommy Nobis (80) and Pete Lammons (85). The West won the Coaches All-America game, 24-7. (See story on Page D-3.) by finishing third Saturday and first Sunday. In the process, he nosed out 1965 national champion Panl Bauer of Cincinnati. Ball reworked his engine just before last month’s Marine Prop Riders’ hydro races at Loon Lake and finished second to then, and has since done JL over twice more while preparing for the divisional effort. He ou traced 12 boats in his two heats. More than 121 craft from east of the Mississippi River and eastern Canada competed in the nine events at Dayton. Ball, however, won't be going to the nationals in Seattle11 weeks hence. This weekend he is planning on competing it Columbus, Ohio. three shots on the green of the 190-yard fifth hole and his best effort lauded seven feet from the cup. Lee Murray of Union Lake and George Black, Jr., of Orchard Lake finished second and third respectively. , . n Ladies winner qras Ruth) Graham of Union Lake who put her shot 14 teet from the cup. Large List of Entries in Father-Son Meet More than 400 fathers and sons will take part in the annual Golf Association of Michigan Father and Son tournament Tuesday at Birmingham And Pine Lake Country Clubs. A golf exhibition and dinner will follow at Birmingham CC starting at 6:30 p.m' D-* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 Hagen Jr. Stirs Memories of Dad in Local Tourney CLEANING UP-Sue Pitt of Highland Park, NJ., speeds through the water in winning the 100-meter butterfly event in 1:08 at Warsaw, Poland, yesterday. The American swimming team, on a tour of Europe, won all of the 11 events in the first half of a two-day meet with Poland. Class 'A' Rec Nines Have Big Innings Big innings featured the victories by Pontiac Class A Baseball League members over the weekend with no change resulting in the top three places in the standings. The Clippers (11-2) exploded for six runs in the fourth inning to aid Billesdon. .Consecutive singles by Jim Broonie, Bill Estes and Dave Simmons ignited the outbursts, and. Larry The R. T. Clippers continue Johnson's two-run safety capped atop the race after an 8-0 cop- it. quest of CIO 594 as John Bill- Johnson finished with three esdon hurled a one-hitter. * w ★ Teamsters 614 stayed a half game bad, whipping Talbott Lumber, 12-2, in another Sunday contest. Booth Homes, while, won twice — toppling Evans Equipment, 14-5, Saturday and M. G. Collision, 7-2, yesterday — to grab fourth place. Scots Take to Sanders Colorful Doug Pleases Fans California Pro 2nd to Nicklaus in Open swing left the longest memory; after the British Open Golf Championship — even though he | was a loser. Doug Sanders of Ojai, Calif., one of the most colorful characters in the game, was short by three inches with a putt on the home green Saturday that would have tied the winning score of 282 shot by champion Jade Nicklaus, the Golden Bear from Columbus, Ohio. ♦ ★ ★ If that putt had gone in ders and Nicklaus would have played off over 18 holes for the title Sunday — and anything could have happened. But, speculation aside, Sanders caught the imagination of .the knowledgeable Scottish fans. His 71-70-72-70-213 was the most consistent golf shot on the 72-hole test over - the difficult Muirfield links. It wasn't only consistent, it was entertaining and it gave the golf addicts something to talk about until the next British Open. WRIST ACTION Sanders’ wrist action powers the ball more than 300 yards off the tee despite his short back-1 swing. How did he learn to do it that The Standings Anertce* League Wsa Last Pct. lsMnd Baltimore R » Ml — Detroit 41 3S .578 ■ Cleveland .44 37 .H4 10 California 44 34 . 541 11 MlfWIOiOPO 40 45 .471 17 Kamoe City . ... 34 44 .430 id Chicago 38 47 .447 1* Washington 31 4f .443 1**/* New York 34 41 .438 30V* Boston 37 & .414 22 | Saturday'* Result* Detroit a, Minnesota 1 Washington 3, New York 0 Boston 4, Chicago 3 Battimora 10-1, California 2-2 1 Cleveland A Kansas City 3 Sunday's Results Minnesota 4, Detroit 2 California 4 Boltlmoro 8, Washington 3-4, New York J-2 Boston B-1A Chicago 44 2nd game, 10 Karoos City 4-5, Cleveland 1-3 Today's Borneo Ho gaonos scheduled. Tuoeday'e Gome AH-Star Oam* H St. Leul* American League vt. National League i National Loagae Wm Leal Fct. Behind San Frondico .. S4 33 .421 -Pittsburgh ..... S3 33 413 1 -Loo Angolas .... 47 34- -SO* 5 Philadelphia .... 44 33 .541 7 Houston 45 40 J20 1 St., Louis 37 43 .474 13V, Atlanta 41 47 .444 I3V4 Cincinnati 37 44 .444 13 New York 35 41 .433 17. . Chicago . 34 57 .313 .24 Seriirdoy't Results Pittsburgh 4. New York 3 Philadelphia 11, Chicago 4 Sen Francisco 4 Cincinnati 7. 12 In- ° s?.* Louis 7, Houston 1 Atlonta 4 LOO Angolas 2 Sunday's Results x-Pittsburgh f, Naw York 4 Clnclnnotl 4 Son mnclsco 1 Chicago 14 PMIadalplila 2 Houston 4 St. Louis 5 Atlanta 4 Los Angtlee • Today's Somes No games scheduled. Tueedoy's Oam* AR-Itw Game el St. Leal* 1 American League vs. National League singles and three runs batted in, besjdes catching Billesdon’s one - hitter. -The right- hander whiffed eight. Bruce Mann' single in the fifth Inning ruined the hitless effort. The Teamsters (10-3) had a five-run fifth to make Dei Saekett’s fifth victory with three tingles, two rbi's and three runs scored. I Sackett had two hits and two runs driven in before giving way Ito Tom Walters for one inning. -*- * ♦ I Booth (8-6) pushed its winning streak to three straight with its! two wins. . Gary Pearson made his first mound stqrt in more than a month to get the winj over winless Evans. Morey LaPratt also returned to the lineup aid rapped two singles and a triple for three rbi’s, aad Jerry Hill also brought in u trio with a double and two singles. Ed Sp a r kman posted his fourth victory in Sunday’s beat-| of M.G. (7-g) by scattering seven hits. Charlie Honchell, whose three-bagger scored the first run, lit a decisive four- Young Walter, Partner Reign at Forest Lake Bill Benjamin Joint Son of Golfing Groat in Capturing Title By BRUNO L. KEAlfl® Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Who could think of anything else but golf when the name Walter Hagen is mentioned? In this case it** Walter Hagen Jr. who' has carved himself a small niche on the links. *- ★ . ★ Hagen didn’t win any National Opens or British Opens as Hagen Sr., once did but he produced a couple of spectacular shots to earn he and his partner Bill Benjamin the title in the fourth annual Forest Lake Invitational Golf Tournament. Hagen and Benjamin won the final match of the championship flight by defeating ex-champion Harry Nederlander and one of thC state’s top amateurs, Tom Draper,. 2-up. The match was decided on the tricky par-three No. 17 hole where Draper missed a four-foot putt for a bogey to give Hagen-Benjtmin the lead. On the 18th,. however, Hagen powered a four-wood shot out of the trees, dropping It four 'In (he afternoon when I’m feet from the cup from where rhnning anything I come out Benjamin canned it for an eagle .... <—j -i—iJranetr»r»K urom nouywooa ran. oo tic iu tffitch the hprses. I can keep three. Lheol hit intheraBv) I *» ‘oreP»rt ** sinceljteeps 11 frailer bus on the P«rk- track of th/^oalUon that; N^erlander, w* tfc HAPPY CHAMPS—Walter Hagen, Jr. (left) and BiU Benjamin grin with the glee of golf champions after winning the annual Forest Lake Invitational tournament yesterday with a 2-up victory over Harry Nederlander and Tom Draper. Hagen, 46-year-old son of one of golf’s great, names, is a member at Edge-wood. Longden T""'.";1 Dawn INGLEWOOD, Calif. (At*) —tthe jockey about' any peculari-j inf-refreshening hav< For most of his 40 years as a I ties a hone may have.” his early morning jockey Johnny Longden was up * * * the races in the *ff around dawn and spent modt of Longden and his wife, Hazel, "In (he afterno his waking hours around the live in Arcadia, some 20 miles| not dinning anyth! _ racetrack. I from Hollywood Park. So helto watch the hrfrses. [(the only hit in the rally! ★ * * Tonight, Cranbrook (7-5) risks its hold on third place against Talbott (3-10). 0 IM (•» CLIPPERS u as a »u a o o Green ci a1* 3h • O 0 Stephens cf O • Douglas If 1 Taylor If Extra Effort Title Keys for Richey Youngsters INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) Those Richey kids, Cliff and Nancy, put out the 120 per cent advised by their father Sunday and captured their second straight ’.singles titles in the Western Tennis Tournament. The brother-sister combo from Dallas then moved to Milwaukee, Wis., for today’s start Ralston teamed with Charlie of the National Clay. Court Pasarell of Santurce, P R. Championships. Twin the doubles title fromi * * * Richey and Marty Riessen of Cliff, 19, downed the nation’s Evanston, 111., 6-2,6-2. played in 100-degree weather and capped a weekkmg tourney. Nancy, 23, who shares the nation’s No. 1 women’s ranking with Wimbledon champion Billie Jean King, stopped Peachy Kellmeyer of Charleston, W.Va. 6-0, 6-1. rtph 1 a t Totm . I. T. Clippers Rum Batted __________ .. _ immons. Pitching—Kendrick 10 HER, I SO, 4 W; Billesdon 1 H w, i hbp. “ our Kendrick 411). It... lesion, Kendrick; Broonie, simmon hoik Hemes ........oil mo J-7 M. C. Collision ....... Ml Ml B-l - Sparkman (4-1). LP - McCloud top player, Dennis Ralston of H , |Bakersfield, CaE, 6-1,’ 1-6, 6-1, Wqll, said Sanders, who has U 2 jn the title match which ,was a wisecrack for every occasion,1 . “I began playing golf with my employer’s clubs. ■ “He might have come back any minute, so I didn’t have time to swing the club very far.” Sanders tied for second place along with Dave Thomas of Wales. In his final round Sanders ■ electrified the gallery at the injury and a dull javelin Dull Javelin Proves Costly ninth green by pitching into the hole from 85 yards with a wedge for an eagle 3. The ball plumped onto the .’ green and rolled 18 feet intojhe cup. An official of the Royal and Ancient Golf ftClub, which rims the open championship, confirmed that the shot was pre-cisely 85 yards. Californian Is Inter-Collegiate Ski Winner CYPRES-S GARDENS, Fla. . (AP) — California skier Larry Penacho, 22, topped Florida's best water skiers Sunday to win the over-all honors in the first National Intercollegiate Water Ski Championships at Cypress Gardens. /: : .tf'. j ; The San Diego State College senior didir t win a first in any of the /three events — tracks, slalom, or jumping - but gained enough points by placing second in ail-events for the over-all title. Two Florida skiers, Roland Hillter and Joker Osborn were . in a three-way tie with Penacho 'at the end of Saturday’s conl-pstitkm, but Osbem, a Polk jtador College sophomore, took as unexpected fall in the slalom run mi failed to make the top "three in the single aid event. prevented a couple of Pontiac teen-agers from taking the junior division crown in the Michigan AAU Decathelon Championship in Flint Saturday, * * ★ Jon Costello, Roland Garcia and Jerry Hinsperger, all grad-uuates of Lincoln Junior High School, placed second • third-fourth for Pontiac ill the decatheion which was won by Steve Gorsalitz of Clio. Gorsalitz totaled 4,240 points. Costello picked up 4,-175, Garcia 4,657 and Hinsperger 3,895. In the javelin, Garcia and Hinsperger failed to_ac6re ,a sin-point in each of their three attempts because they were unable to get the point of the javelin to stick in the grbund. Garcia; with previous tosses of 120 feet, needed only a toss of 75 feet to pick up , 450 points Which would have given him the title. ; 7 ★' * * Costello ^suffered a muscle pull in his back while competing in the pole vault, and as -a result, he cleared only 7 feet-6 inches, well under his usual 10-foht leaps. . ^ * * * The speedy Costello set the only junior division record with a 4:29.4 effort in the 1,500-meter run on a wet track. The- old mark was 4:32.4 set in 1965 by Alan Kennedy of Oscoda. In a carryover from the rain-delayed Tri-State Tourney at Cincinnati, Joaquin Loyo-Mayo of Mexico and Jaime FHlot of Chile beat Robert Potthast and Richard Leach, both of Arcadia, Calif., for die doubles title, 6-4, 6-4. CAN'QUIT George Richey, who wai ranked eighth in the pro tennis circles in 1952 and nbw spends much of his time helping his son and daughter in their international competition, said he told the youngsters they could quit tennis when they wasted it- * ★ ‘But I also told them,” he said, "if they were going to play tournament tennis, they would have to put out 120 per cent, or forget it. They have." * * Cliff said, “My dad is very critical and lets me-know what do Sunday in scrambles races my weak points are. We argue like any father and son. But it* reassuring to have him wit me.” “A word here and there from him helps so much,” Nancy added. retiring and becoming a trainer ing lot at Hollywood as a rest-jwiy," he explained, of thoroughbreds, things aren’t ~ much different with Sir John. O • TrudMU » I 0 0 Johnson c I 0 i Stnchn r» 4 0 1 Broom* lb 4 0 0 EltM lb 4 0 • Slmmoni 3b 1 .003 010 0-1 III ........on IM X—14 10 I I (J-0). Lour—Wobur (0-1). Pott Takes Crown in Panama Tourney PANAMA CITY, Fit (AP) ihnny Pott marked his third tifie in five years at the Little Tournament of Champions with a 14-under-par 130 on the Panama City Country Club golf course. fired a final round 64 to ease by Jay Hebert, who.shot at. 69 after tieing the course record in the opening xmdwith a 63. Tied for third at 134 were Tommy Aaron, who shot a 66, and Lionel Hebert, who carded [a 70. Pontiac Cyclists Take 2nd, 3rd in Scrambles Two seconds and two thirds were the best Pontiac Competition Team motorcyclists could at Mr. Holly Ski Resort. Ted Newton and Chuck Shank finished two-three in the Class A Lightweight event, Phil White was second in B Heavyweight and Chuck Fordyce has s third in A Heavyweight. Longden rodeSs last horse as professional jockey at Santa Anita last March 12, closing out his career in a most spectacular fashion. That was the date when he noted in a U shot, George Royal, to win file $125,000 San Juan Capistrano Handicap by a m It brought John’s world record winning total to 6,032, one that won’t he challenged for at least a few more years. Then Longden turned trainer fpr his old friend, Frank McMahon of Alberta, B.C., who races a stable of a dozen or so horses Canada as well as at the current Hollywood Park meeting here. FIRST WINNER Longden’s debut as a trainer was almost as dramatic as his farewell to the saddle. His bqpse, Attention III, won. At 59, Longden refuses to slow )wn. “It reaUy hasn’t changed my life touch,” he says, “I always was at the barn early when was riding. I still get on a few in the morning. ’It helps me to know how the horses sure coming along in their training and to be able to teU Miss Fis Finals Victim DAYTON, Ohio (A — Connie Capozzi of Middletown, Ohio, twice came from hehind to win the girls 16 championship of the Western Junior Girls Tennis Tournament Saturday, defeating Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills, 6-4, 6-4. Miss Fisher had led in both its, 8-1. Miss Capozzi, who is 15, had advanced in the semifinals Friday by eliminating Nancy--Om-stein of Hamtramck, 6-2, 12-10, Miss Fisher advanced against 11-year-old Plums Bart-kowicz of Hamtramck, 7-5,6-2. Waterford V Rolls, but So Does Leader ItmmM II « Milford 4 10 Trey f I Berkley 1 14 A busy eight days of crucial games began successfully Sunday for the Waterford entry in the District 18, American Legion Baseball circuit as the runner-up nine conquered Berkley twice. Waterford took 12-4 and 84) verdicts from the once-victori* ous tailenders, but didn’t gain ground on league-leading Farmington - a 24) and 16-1 dual whiner over Clarkston. Third-place Southfield stayed in step by hammeriag Milford, 5-3 and 19-3, to remain right behind Waterford. Troy divided its twinbill with Walled Lake, winning, 63, then losing, 74. Waterford can cut its gap to two games behind Farmington in a makeup game tomorrow night against Troy who it also three hitting in the second contest. Jerry Tinkle and .Torn Webster wore the first-game hitting clothes. Southfield’s Lance Pesci and Bill Davidson stroked three apiece as Tom Berkert coasted to the win fit the second game after Steve Steinman won the first. Craig Georgeff had two hits in the opener. meets next Sunday in a double-header. Also on its schedule are. MilfaE(LWf!dneaday,.„and Walled Lake Friday. BIG DAY Joe Durso bad a big day for Waterford yesterday. He went five-for-six at the plate and was the winning pitcher in the opening game. - * * * Jack McCloud finished up for Durso, who allowed only three safeties. Dick Miceli also yielded three hits and struck out 14 in taking the second game. Dan Giroux chipped in wifii a three-run homer, a double and single for the day. Chuck Viane’s three - hit hurling and Rick Krwnm’a two-hitter featured Farming-tea twin victory over Clarkston. Beth pitchers whiffed 11 and Kramm went, three-for- All-Pro Golf Event Finishes in Tie GRAND ISLAND, N.Y. (AP) — Dave Hill of Jackson, Mich, and Ray Floyd of Fayetteville, ty.C., finished iq a first-place tie with 36-hole totals of 142 Sunday the first annual All-Pro Golf Classic at Beaver Island Golf Club. A playoff round was canceled when Floyd left for a flight to St. Paul, Minn, and Hill agreed to split the first and second-place winnings of $4,750. Floyd carded a 69-73, Hill a 68-74 in the two-day event A! Balding, Doug Ford and Tommy Jacobs tied for third plate with 144 totals. {crown in 1964 with Gene Eyler, Draper moved into the-fin-als by defeating defending champions. George Linklater and Dr. Robert Lurie, 1-up. EXTRA PLAY Hagen amd Benjamin, meanwhile, went 20 holes in the semifinals to win over Tom Clark and Howard Slocum of Ann Arbor. In this matqh, another fine shot, a wedge shot to three feet by Hagen deckled the match on the second overtime hole. . Meadowbrook’s Tony Skover nd George Lakotlsh were first flight champions while Roy Potvin of Forest Lake and his Canadian amateur champion partner Nick Westlock won the second flight. <-A large field of 288 golfers, 144 teams, in nine flights competed in the tournament, which drew some of the outstanding amateur golfers in the state. CHAMPIONSHIP PLieHT Pontiac Sailor Takes Traverse City Regatta TRAVERSE CITY - Leo Wasserberger of Pontiac Yacht Club won the fifth annual George Smith Regatta on Grand Traverse Bay Sunday.' Other winners, in order, were Joe Dissette of Bay City Yacht Club, John McGnf-fin of Grand Traverse Yacht Club, Harold McLonghlin of Grand Traverse Yacht Chib and George Berry of Pontiac Yacht Club. GARY PLAYE CnwapooKiewMWHOUO.1 Nederlander-Driptr del. Llnklaler-Lurle, UP Hagen-Ben|amin def. Clirk-Slocum, 3-1 PlMH Hagen.Benjamin del. Nederlsnder-Drep-3-up FIRST FLIGHT Seenl-FInols Gadbaw-Conroy ’ del. Adems-Dewson, 1-T. Skover-Lakotlsh del. Kottler-Kukes, 'otvin-Westlock 4 PotvIn-W/esllock dll. I *• THIRD- FLIGHT Eynen-Wdst det. Hoover-Gluckstad, 3-3 Davls-Weyared det. French-Ed Duffy. 3-1 —!——•— aawh ————— Eynon-West def. Dovls-Weyand, 4-4 FOURTH FLIGHT Forbush-Ufnar def. Magnus*. Nation, -1 K. Skover-P. Skover def. Pettlbon#- Forbush-Ufner def. Skover-tkaver, 3-1 FIFTH MONT BerneJ-Vermlttl def. W. MocKenile-S. DeBusschere-Ryff det. Reld-Dlttrlck, 1-Vlth-Dr Dobakl def. aynyen-lmtoff, Frlth-Dr. Dobskl Parcelis-Holl def. Cirins-Bergasan, 3-3 Final* Parcalla-Hall def. MeadowaOrtlg, 1-up RIOMTH FLIOHT Ringsred-Fortuna def. Maora MacLattan, •up, 13 Frlend-Duhaime def. Cstnar-Msaksny. Ringsred-Fortuna def. Frland-OufMlma, Arkansas Gal Golf Champ COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Dorothy Germain of Blytheville, Ark., won the Broadmoor Women’s Invitational Golf Tournament with a 1-up triumph over Kathy Ahern of Dallas, Tex., in the 36-hole finals Sunday. It was her find tournament victory. s Germain, 19, gained her .in on the 35th hole where she sank a 3‘4-foot putt for a par and Miss Ahern missed a 1-footer on the tricky green. Neither was able to gain more than a 2-up lead in the closely playad 03592641 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 P-# Major League Boxes • i n T BufordI 3b Jtio Tartabuii jgoo cf .4130 Yitrmni FRoblntn rf 4 0 10 Conlglero rr a i * a Maitliib 11 1 3 Seotf 1b 3 1 V < Agjfrto. fooo ooy Sb 41 st a McCraw lb 4 11 0 GSmlth 3b 4 0 0 « CauHYlb 2 0 11 Ryan C 4 0 0 1 2b (000 Santiago p 2 1 ) o Prow* pb VO 0 0 McMahon p loot Romooo ph 0 0 0 0 SMJr, Wflfialm p 0 0 0 0 mi Petrocelll CIS), Foy (4), Martin (1). M— « Sr.*0"- $-W5u- Horjjri (L40) ...'I WP-Horlan, Santiago. T—2:l»j McCraw lb 5 1 3 0 Foy 3b Adair aa 10 4 1 oornlth tb Barry ft 4 0 0 0 Ryan 'c Burooaa pb 1 0 1 o Moratwad p Honan pr 0 0 0 0 SlMldon p Lamaba p OOOOOslntklp Plaaro p 0 0 0 0 LGraan ph ButhardT p 1 0 0 0 Wyatt p wllhalm p 1 0 0 0 Jonas ph Skowron ph 1 0 0 0 Damatar ph Lockar p 1 0 0 0 McMahon p E-Buford, McNertney. LOB-Chlcaeo 14, Boston S. 2B—Agee, Kasko, Causey (31, McCraw, Adair, Petrocolll, Yastrzemskl. HR-Conlgllaro (15), Foy (71, Apse (»), Romano (4), G.Smith (7). SB-McCraw, Buford (2). S—Scott. IP N RERBB SO Bushardt .......... 22-3 4 4 4 1 1 1 (2). T—3:28. A-14,700. ib r h Bi 40 0 0 14 2 HUopaz It 0 0 0 Papltona It 4 0 3 1 ______ . 000 Clarke u Harrelson lb 4 0 1 0 Bouton p Casanova c 4 0 2 0 Hamilton p Brlnkmn ss 4 111 White ph MCrmlck p 4 0 10 Renlft p Kline p 0 0 0 0 Marls ph Barker pr 301122 Total ______■■ _ „1 1 0 Aparlclo aa tCnggg lb 4011 Powell lb Wrego*l Ip 3 0 0 1 FRoblnan ft Reichardt It 3 11 0 BRoblnsn It AAalzone 3b 3 011 iowbna V School 3b 1 0 0 0 PJldmoOH f9 Warner rf 312 0 Bielr eF ‘ “ ' .... gtchebrn c •arbor p RS,1 4110 Won p Drabpsky p „ Total 32 40 Total to 0 4 I • 40 010 110- ______... 000 000 #00—i DP—Baltimore 1. LOB-Callforn' Baltimore 4. 11—Warner, Cardenal. S-Barber, Bad Brunei (W,M) t Barber (UjH ■■•l Wait It Drabowskv ..... 2 . . . .WP—Barber. T—2:00. A-14,432. NEW YORK PITTSBURGH abrhM ob r h CJonae ct 5 0 0 0 A OCronpool lb 411 0 Pagan » _______________0 OOal p. Arrl op 00 0 0 LwtCh ph W i*her p 0 0 0 0 Face a BTaylor ph 1000 Ilemento, Btanoll. „ ...... low, MMRidpf(2). HR-1 Sb^lem-te. ^St.^.ll 2-3 2 0 0 WP-FoeO. T-2l*. A—24,150. FHIUOILPHIA CHICAGO obrhbl abrhl Rolas cf ,5010 Fhllllpo cf S 1 1 Cafllaon rf 4 010 Backert 2b 3 11 XToylor Ib 4 0 0 0 fWHIemt rf 3 3 1 Allen 3b 4 0 1 0 Santo 3b Iff OCuenn If 4 0 0 0 Bro— “ Groat u 31 0 0 Bar White ib OOli Hw U acker c 4 I 2 2 Cap • is Total . Itiladel Chicago ____k*. Uacker »o»l too sunning d., 9-5) " 1 " Fox ......... Culp > ....... Total M lb 11 * - .1 M0 0*1 _ ... ...lit tit 110-2 DP—Washington Now York New York I. 2B—E. How Brinkman (41, Savorlno (3), H ip—Richardson. MCrmlck (Mi, 7-7) I it I WASHINOTON Blaingmo 2b 4 1 1 l White If 4 i Savermo Ib I 0 1 0 Richrdsn 2b 4 VttHflnO rf S 1 1 2 Gibbs c 4 I Lock et , 5 2 3 0 Pepltone ct 4 Noe lb p IT 1,1 HLopoi.rf ft. I Kirkland It 5 2 3 2 Peterson p 0 0 O O 0 0 Schofield si Womock p Clarke ph C Union rl 30 0 0 0M13P Total 33,! ____■■ ..... Ill lit t It NewYtrk ........totttiiOi E-GIbbt, Papltona, SChofMd/ DP-New York 1. LOB—Washington A, New York 4. 2B-Ctsanovi, Whit*, Brinkman, Blaelngamo, Lock (2), Barker. HR—Kirkland (3). Valentine (I), Papltona (It). SB—'volontlno. S-Humphreys (2). „ IP Mil ER BB SO Hmphrys (W, 3-1) 5 I 0 0 2 1 / Richer* ....... 32-3 3 2, 2 0 3 Cox .....*........ •M/l too .« Womock (L,2-2) ... 3 5 5 4 1 3 T—1:11 A—14471. 3 0 10 Cmpnorls si Gonzales 2b 3 0 0 0 Charles lb 11 Crandall c 2 0 0 0 OGraon 2b 4 1 ODnghue p 0 0 0 0 Noaaak cf 4 1 Curry ph 1 0 0.0 Chnvtrlt lb 2 0 RAIIon p 0 0 0 0 Root c It MDewelf p 0 0 0 0 JNash p 4 0 anka: 3B-Browne,iii Ellsworth. RERBB SO 1- j n 4 4 3 4 2- 3 0 0 0 2 1 .... a 3 4 4 0 3 "lur." I I f'l' l I y, 4-13) t 0 2 2 1 0 Jv Cult (Backert). WP—Fox. BALK—Cult. T—2:10. A—13443. HOUSTON ST. LOUIS sbrhbl . abrhbt Brando 4 0 It Brack It 4010 S Jackson ss 111 0 Budiak 2b S 1 I B Wynn d 410 0 Jeviar 2b ------------11 Nicholson rt II0 0 Francsna Harrison lb 410 0 JWIHamt Staub If 42 24 Flood c* A sprmntt 3b 4 1 2 0 Canada Lilli* 2b 4131 MCarva Glustl p itll Shannon r Latman p toot smith 3b AAantilla ph 1 0 0 o'Maxvill « Farrell p a o a a sSdna, Raymond p Cuellar p lb Iff 0 4l 1 0 0 • •v73fS ___HI- • Flood. OF- IP. . H RERBB SO Ferez .„ Ravlatlch e Shamsky rt Simpaon rf M3y Raymond (Cepeda). T—2:52. ^sbrhbi >AN F**MC,,C0 f lilt Fuantas 2b 4 0 0 ( 3 010 Hart ph foot f 41 ii Haller c 4 t 0 ( tb itotMeys d 40ti " McCovey “ DJohnson ; Ruiz 3b Pappas p - -, . Peterson If ' 3 0 0 0 Gobrlolsn rf 0 0 0 0 Virgil 3b 3 0 0 0 Schroder ss, loot Herbal p 0 0 0 0 Rurda ph 3 010 M Dan I el p Miss H 'Thunders' to Victory CINCINNATI (AP) - Not even, a sudden thunderstorm could deter Sandra Haynie. And when it was necessary, she put on thdtpressure Sunday to Win the $20,000 Buckeye Savings Women’s Professional Golf Tournament. The Fort Worth, Tex., girl fired a final round for an 11-under-par <0 for her first tournament victory of I960. She had placed' second four times this year. LEARNING THE GAME—Jodie Beauchamp (center), 14, of Drayton Plains and Cheryl Golding, .12, Waterford are two of the happy children now receiving bowling instruction Thursday evenings at Airway'Lanes under-the sponsorship of the Waterford Organization for Retarded Children. Proprietor Frank. Benning is one of three Airway staff members instructing about 30 youngsters in the program. Handicapped Kids Enjoy BowlingDates Falcons' Rookie Shines in All-America Grid Test ATLANTA (AP) - Randy Johnson is getting better all the time, but the rangy Texan says his biggedt football challenge is still ahead. never dreamed I would be where I am now,” the Texas A&I quarterback said after he guided the West to a 24-7 conquest of the East in the Coaches All-America game. “Now my big challenge comes when I join the Falcons." had completed 20 passes in both of his previousi All-Star tests, and his latest showing came despite a back injury he suffered the first fime he was tack* led. "It hurt a lot and I could hardly talk,” Johnson said. '/If made me real glad that I wasn’t playing for the East, because I’ve never seen people hit on defense like our West team did.” ELECTRONICS DAY md EVENING CLASSES Note Farming Send coupon, call or visit llotrstfi • f ♦ 11 • today, t a ntW carewr Tomorrow. By JERE CRAIG “They loved 4t, we’re really pleased.” These initial reactions of a mother indicate bowling is making an important contribution in the lives of retarded children Thursdays at Airway Lanes. The Waterford Organization for Retarded Children, aided *by Airway manager Frank Benning, is conducting a four-week pilot program in bowling instruction for the handicapped youngsters. The benefits have been obvious, and an extension of the WORC program seems likely this fall. Now halfway through the initial phase, the youngsters will return to Airway for their final two lessons at t p.m. the next two Thursdays. OPEN SESSIONS The group invites any mental-r retarded child to join the ses-ons. A parent or responsible adult must accompany the participant and a $3 registration fee is tiie only charge. So far, approximately 30 youngsters — ranging in age from • to 20-have received the bowling instructions from Airway personnel. League teams likely will be formed this fall. Instrumental in starting'the bowling program are WORC president Peggy -McClendon, board member Billie Beauchamp and Mrs. E. D. Farrell, in addition to Benning and the Waterford Township Recreation Department. The organization was formed about a year pgo by parents of the children. Other officers include Carrie Roucksberry, the vice president; corresponding secretary John Rumas; treasurer Elmer Goulding; and secretary Don Cook. Anyone interested in working or .heljping with the program is invited to contact one of the officers, the recreation department or come to a bowling ses- San Fnnciico BOB 0 0 0 0 0 Rosy, .Colemon, Cardenas. DP— Cincinnati 1, San Francisco 2. LOB— Cincinnati 3, San Francisco 0. “ Harper, Peterson, Virgil. 3B—Mays. I Virgil (2). S—Schroder, Rose. IP H R KR BB SO Pappas (W, 1-4) ... f 0 I I * * AAcDanlel ... Manry ....... “3—Heller, 1W 12-3 0 0 0 t-i 1 1 I : 13. A—31,903. -LOS ANOSLBS Davellllo ph 100 0 ‘ Tdi)'—rrn—ran—n’rr*' ClwMtnS .. . . ttt It* ttt— 1 Aaron rt 4 01-0 LJohnson r 4 • 1 o Carly If . 402 0 TDavis If . 4 0 2 0 S—AM*. DP- KanMt City 1. LOB— !SS35£X WWitlW McDowell (L, 4-3) M 3 4 * 1 O Kelley 41-1 4 0 0 1 3 Tores lb . 4111 ttuert IS 1000 delaHoz 3b 2 111 Lefebvre 2b 3 0 0 0 ^Soiling 2b 3 0 2 1 Roseboro c 3 0 10 Woodwrd u 3 0 11 Kennedy 3b 3 0 1 0 t-emaster p 3 0 SO COsteen p ,10 0 0 Parker ph 10 0 0 Sutton p oooo ODonoghue 2 10 0 1 1 R Allen f 1 -1 » ® ) J.Nuh (W,2-1) .... » 11115 7-4:20. Ferrara pb 1 0 • • Regan p 0 0 0 0 Atlanta *l,,l TsUI 31 •( 0 CLIVE LAND KANSU CITY,' • tbrhbl *b r h bl Lo* Angeles e e e ggg ago —a DP-Attente V Loe Angela* 3. LOB— Howter 2b 4 1 2 t Cmpneclt it 4 2 2 0 swj 4Si}2#§Xlbd0 03 t#i5 Atlanta 3, Lot Angeles 4. * IP H R ER BB SO Lemaster (W,M) .0 S 0 0 • 10 coievito rf 4 if i Alctf p 111 I Whitfield tb 4 0 1 t Herthbgr rt 4 110 C.Osteen (L, 11-7) . ( 4 2 2 1 2 Sutton 2 00013 Alvti* 41)1 Reootlb 4*21 L Brown »i 2 0 1 t Cherlet 3b 3 0 0 1 A/cue C 2 11 1 Stahl If 4 0 2 2 Ragan .1 1 o 0 0 T—2:W. A—37446. Davellllo pr 04) 0 t OGreen ! Hargon p 2 0 0 0 mol c Curry ph 1-0 0 0 Stafford I Raditz p • 0 0 0 Stock p Wagner gti- 1 0 0 0 Teiton pd LOB—Cleveland 8. IF Hargai (L.44) .... 4 I 4 4 o RadOtZ ............ 2 2 11 1 Stafford ..........HM 3 2 2 1 Duckvmrth"!!!'!!.' 1 10 0 0 Aker (W,4-1) ...... S 3 0 0 0 WP—Hargan. PB—Azcue! T—2:34: I Trick Shot Exhibition' on Tuesday Golf Slate Paul Hahn will bring his bag of golfing tricks to Pontiac tomorrow night for a one-hour performance at Carl’s Goifland, across from Miracle Mile. The show is scheduled to open at 1:30. Sponsoring Hahn’s appearance here is the Pontiac Optimist Club. Pontiac Proa ' Hple-in-One Club 7JtonwSmitn ... is hereby admitted to The Pontiac * I Press Hole-In-One Club on this day J n for having aced ./his JfjTgg shot op t bole at . ■ on the day of U.S .Horseman Rides Winner Naal Shapiro Claims Achen Show Feature AACHEN, Germany ’ itl — Neal Shapiro of .Glen Head, N.Y., rode Jacks Or Better to yiefany Sunday in the feature $3,-750 grand prize of the Aachen international horse show. ★. # • * The triumph was the sixth for the United States in the show. Shapiro was the only rider to take his mount over a two-me-ter S-Wi high wall and 1.70 meter 5-7 high hurdle in the third jumpoff of the show’s climax event. Shapiro had a faultless ride. Cry* Jones of Bloomfield Hills suffered braises Saturday wbea she fell from her mount, Fro, while competing in the Prize of Nation* eques-train team jumping event. Brazil’s Nelson Pessoa, the 1964 winner, was second Sunday with three faults on Gran Geste. Holland’s Anton Ebben was third \ with four fault? oh Kairouan. A field of 33 started the event over the first course. Sandra collected $1,950 to bring her earnings to $14,838, third on the Ladies Professional Golf Association’s list. It was the 13th time In IS events she has finished in the top five. But luck again escaped Susie Maxwell of Tulsa, Okla. She finished five strokes behind Miss Haynie to wind up in second place for the second straight year here. Miss Haynie had rounds of 69-67-69, and Miss Maxwell 77-67-72 in the 54-hole event over the 36-36—72 Clover-nook golf course. LOPED IN Near the end of the final round, a thunderstorm came up, speeding up the play, if anything. "We sort of loped in,” said Miss Haynie. “The wind really hit On the *nd he can see every-ien, and 1 was scared,” where,” Hecker said. “I don’t Standouts for the West included another Falcon rookie, linebacker Tommy. Nobis of Texas, and Carl McAdams of. Oklahoma, a linebacker headed for the New York Jets. Donny Anderson, the.$600,000 bonus hopeful of the Green Bay Packers, was an offensive standout for the West, catching six passes for 54 yards and one touchdown, and gaining 20 yards running on 20 carries. Johnson was named the game’s Most Valuable Player after he connected on 24 of 38 passes for 237 yards and two touchdowns, and scored once himself on a three-yard sprint. "I was named the outstanding back in the Senior Bowl, and the Most Valuable Player in the Blue-Gray game,” Johnson add* ed. "But this was the best of all.'1 ONE MORE The 6-foot-3 stringbean has! one more game left 4'- the College All-Star battle Aug. 5 in]. ANTWERP, Belgium (AP) — Emerson in Net Win Chicago — before he starts what Australian Roy Emerson defeat-National Football League ex- ed countryman Fred Stolle 7-5, perts believe will be a great pro 6-1 for the men’s singles title ini career. [an international lawn tennis Johnson was a first round: tournament Sunday, draft choice of the Atlanta Fal* cons, and his play in the All-America game had coach Norb Hecker beaming. He sure can throw the foot UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ava. a Min. From Downtown Pontine 16th green, she added. "I hurried in preparing shots but once you get set over the ball it'doesn’t matter.'* Clifford Ann Creed of Alexandria, La., who started the day only a stroke off the pace, faltered to a 75 Sunday and slipped Into a tie for third place at 212 with Shirley Englehorn, Santa Fe, Calif. Carol Mann and Peggy Wilson were next with 214 each and defending champion Kathy Whitworth had a 215. COMPLETE think I’ll trade him.” Johnson was to report to the Falcons’ training camp over the weekend but will spend only four days there before going to Chicago to start preparations for the All-Star game. “I can’t believe I’ve gotten: where 1 am,” Johnson said, ‘but I still know pro football is' going to be the toughest thing I’ve ever dShe.” NO FLUKE Johnson’s play in. the All-America game was no fluke. He I Get All The i?acto~ ...TODAY! DON NICHOLIE 53Va Wait Huron FE 2-9194 FE 4-0581 I Former Hills Gunner Sixth In Lonjg Race Formed Bloomfield Hills High School speedster Tom Kearney finished sixth m the Breenan Memorial five-mile race at Belle Isle yesterday. Lou Scott of Detroit, who now attends Arisons State University, won the race in SI:M, well ahead of Tony Mifsud of the Motor City Striders. DIRECTORS Louis H. Cole Investments David B. Eantes President, Eames and Brown, Inc Robert R. Eldred Executive yiee President Community National Bank of Pontiac Harold A. Fitzgerald Publisher, The Pontiac Press Alfred C. Girard President and Chairman of the Board Community National Bank of Pontiac Alfred R. Glancy, Jr. President, A. R. Glancy, Inc Alfred R. Glancy HI Finance Department Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. Harold S. Goldberg President Thomas Jewelry Company, Inc Howard W. Iluttenlocher President H. W. Huttenlocher Agency, Inc Harry M. Pryale Consultant laf tonal MIMIIS OF THI FIDRAl DIFOSIT M1UMNCI CORPORATION Bank DOWNTOWN OFFICE FOURTEEN MILE-MOUND OFFICE LAKE ORION OFFICE MILFORD OFFICE ROMEO OFFICE WALLED LAKE OFFICE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN STATEMENT OF CONDITION as of dose of business June 30,1966 RESOURCES Cash and Dae from Banks...».....$13,614,477.86 United States Government Obligations 26,517,062.29 Other U.S. Government Agencies..• 5,399,531.28 $ 45,531,071.40 State and Municipal Securities.. 35,481,088.21 Other Securities...................................... 417,095.34 Loans and Discounts...... 40,344,650.45 Real Estate Loan*................55,865,123.30 95.709,773.73 Aecnted lnteresx.^.....^ri^u....... T, 121,867.98 . Bank Properties and Equipment.... . .. 4,675,661.22 OtherAasets........................................... 233,589.73 TOTAL RESOURCES............................... $183,170,147.63 > LIABILITIES Deposits* Demand.................. .$68,351,633.72 Savings and Urn........... 97,069,587.74 U.S. Government...... 3,868,442.29 TOTAL DEPOSITS................................... $169,289,663.75 Unearned Interest. 2,248,751.43 Aeerued Expenses and Other Liabilities . 847,444.76 Reserve for Loan Contingencies ...... 1,266,699.09 CapitalStockgCommon......••••••• $ 5,000,000.00 Surplu....... 8,900,000.00 Undivided Profits.. ....._________ 399,736.39 , General Reserves................... 217,852.21 ^9jS17j588AO \TOTAL LIABILITIES u... . »^ \ ' \ V $183,170,147.63 United State. Government Seeerttiw in the amount of *7,001,79(3.50 Book Valne, la the foregoing ,, Clement are pledged la teenre Federal and State Government DepoXlU including dapedto of " II I lS5,OOS.aS e Mrs. Bell died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are three eons, Charles R. of Ann Arbor and William G. and Willard A., both of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Lewis Robertson of Pontiac; a sister; and lj[ grandchildren. MRS. JEAN T. BUCHANAN Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Jean T. Buchanan, S3, of Grand Rapids, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Voorhees - Siple' Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, TrOy. Mrs. Buchanan died Saturday, A retired army nurse, serving overseas during World War I, Mrs. Buchanan was a former member of the Cook-Nelson American Legion Post No. 20, and the D.A.V., Chapter It, Pontiac. She also was a nurse with Oakland Motor Car and the Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Keith Nicolls of, Glen Ellyn, 111.; a son, James~S. of Utica; a sister and three grandchildren. Surviving besides her husband are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alden Johnston of Brown City; one daughter, Mrs. Richard D„ Root of Waterford Township; one son, Robert Eugene of Pontiac; two hrothers, Ronald Johnston of Brown City and Orville C. Johnston of Pontiac; and four grandchildren. ALEX STENWALL Service for Alex Stenwall, 72, of 179 S. Francis will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. A former employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division, Mr. Stenwall died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving are two s o n s, Gerald of Pontiac and Paul O. of Waterford, and six granchildren. DANIEL R. COWLEY AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Daniel R. Cowley, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cowley, 3890 Mildred, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. The boy died Saturday. Survivors include three brothers, Charles, David and Gary; two sisters, Kathleen and Beverly, all at home; and grandparents, Mrs. Alma Cowley of Pontiac and Raymond Felix Sr. of Rochester. MRS. CLYDE DUNLOP MRS. UYLESS SPANGLER Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Uyless (Mary Lucille) Spangler, 51, of Brown I City, will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Carman Funeral Home in of 5765 Garthby will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Elton Black Funeral Home, White Lake Township. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. A GMC Truck and Coach Division assembler, Mr. Hall died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving are his wife, Bessie; his parents, Mr. knd Mrs. Edward Hall of Miami, W. Va.; a daughter, Shirley J. at home; three sisters; and two brothers. MRS. WILLIAM HIGGINS HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. William (Henrietta M.) Higgins, 61, of Jackson, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Highland Cemetery. Mrs. Higgins died Saturday. Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Jerry Boldt of Highland Township, Thomas of Union Lake, Richard of the U. S. Navy and August of Union Lake; two sisters, Mrs. Bertha Franklin of Fowlerville and Mrs. Len Kimmel of North-▼ file; two brothers; and 15 grandchildren. MORRIS L. HOWE BIRMINGHAM - Service for Morr is L. Howe, 29, of 1176 Smith, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R. Winifred B. Otis Of Farmington; a brother; • sister; and three grandchildren. MRS. HENRY MUNROW PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Mrs., Henry (Dulcie) Munrow, 49, ef MRS. FRED L. WATERS 2753 Genes died today after al HOLLY — Service for Mrs. short iUnees. ‘ Fred (Lula) L. Waters, 82, 120 Her body is at the Voorhees- College, will be at 2 p.m. Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Wednesday at the First Baptist Surviving is her husband, church, with burial,in Lake- the Acacia Park Cemetery; Birmingham. Mrs. Van Wie died Saturday after a brief illness. She was a member of the First Methodist Church, Birmingham, and of the Birmingham Eastern Star, Chapter 220. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Glenn H. Moyer of 19242 Warwick, Beverly Hills; and t wp grandchildren. FRED R. McLELLAN COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Service for Fred McLellan, 70, of 0012 Gittins will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Elton Black Funeral Home in White Lake Township. Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. A retired Detroit Police Department detective, Mr: McLellan died yesterday gdter a short illness. He was a member of Oxbow Veterans of Foreign Wars Post No. 4156. Surviving are a son, A. F. Schwartz of Union Lake; two brothers; a sister; four grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. side Cemetery by Dryer Funeral Home. Mrs. Waters died yesterday. Surviving besides her husband a^e a son, Jack of Southfield; two daughters, Mrs. Robert Maugans of Springfield, Ohio, and Mrs. Robert Lewis.of Anaheim, Calif.; a sister, four grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren. Cantaloupes Survive Rocky Road to Mart Death Notices Hknry Munrow. Funeral arrangements an pending at \|he Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, where . (Suggested visiting hours 1 to ,5 and 7 to > p.m.) moHTiit July t in*, baby GIRL, 4644 High. Independence 'Twp.; beloved Infant daughter of Leonard and Lonnt Righter; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and awF-- m mm •later « i■ dear' Eaton R I Jo Righter. Grave-was hold today at 11, i Munger Cemetery, I, Michigan. Arrange- ---- ---_ by Coats . Funeral Home. Drayton Plains, Michigan. IPANGLER, JULY t, IN*. MARY LUCILLE. Ml Maple Valley Road, Brown City, formerly of Pontiac; age SI; beloved wife of Uylott ’ r mother of A (Janotl Root end Robort I Gerald (..J8IPBMIIIN survived by ilsc grandchildren. Funeral sdrvlce. will ha held wed noaday. July IOOM^h TELISKY. JULY PAUL. Bloomfield Township; age ear father of Mrs. Mary Recitation of tht III be today at 7:30 p.m Voorhees-Siple Funera % ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Clyde (Minnie) Dunlop, 70, of 325 N. Alice will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. a m. n t t - i Mrs- Duftlop died yesterday Brown city. Burial will be inLftera Iong ^ Uie Goodland Township Ceme- Surviving besides her hosiery, Lapeer County. band fo„r song) ayde j Mrs. Spangler died Saturday Jamegi and alI PECOS, Tex. HI - A Pecos farmer, moving a load of canta-I loupes to market, discovered °M WTl I TAM K hirmni « H* h* had n# brake8- He SH Tuttoey, July I wudoiAM k. NitHOLS across a train track just ahead f! »5» ukremien cetho WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP —• of a train, collided with the right jjjJo termer, *tietroA.' Service for William K. Nichols, rear tire of a tractor-trailer rig, Mr.MTei°ky'wifuie,,h 76, of 9358 Waltham will be 10 careened across Highway 80 and-!*- mV tours j’Tj'eJld'T a.m. tofnorrow at the Huntoon I finally stopped in a field. \ j ■----------------7------ T1________ r v. . ^ TT_________ Funeral Home, Pontiac.. Bur-] Not one cantaloupe spilled,! ln Memoriom Hamilton Co. Burial wHl be inljf1 wil1 in Perry Mount Park and no one was injured. ’ in loving memory c the- White Chapel Memorial c„ & Ptmtiac- j—---------------------------—- who p,,„d , Cemetery, Troy Mr. Nichols died Saturday 1 Mr. Howe died Saturday in a aftei; 8 lon? i'lnesis- « motorcycle accident in R o y a 1^°]? °* S^ier Oak. He was an employe of j " ^°‘ » CERTAIN UCBPTM vDIICRIMINATIOig i-::cauii op tax, so X; SOME OCCUPATtONS A X CONSIDERED MORI v TRACTIVE TO of one tax than 1 •;<; OTHER, AOVBRTI X’MENTI AMI PLAl » UNDER THE AAAI.11 vl FEMALE COLUMN# * JR CONVENIENCE ON Rl_ V. IRS. SUCH LISTIMAt A X- NOT INTENDED TO , X-CLUDE FEIIONI either six. Htlp Wanted M#Id , ' t '3600 MONTHLY GUARANTEED SALARY PLUS BONUS AND CO. CAR We train. Personal Interview only. Cell <74-2233 4 p.m.-7 p.m ,_____ A I MECHANIC FOR GM DEALER ship, imd at once! Apply In Per-son to Heupt Pontiac. Clarkstan A-1 OPENING FOR EXpCRI- Pontiac, Michigan Member Multi-pie Listing Service. . ALL AROUND TOOL DOOM MA chlnlets for fixture work. Full or part lime. Patterson Mfg. Inc. MtO Commerce Rd„ Union Leke.___________ A MAN FOR STOCK DOOM AND 1 light deliveries. Apply In person 1 to 4 p.m., Leslie Electric Company, M Oakland Avenue. A PART TIME JOB $200 PER MONTH AStlltAHT PARTS MANAGER, good opportunity for experienced —| ~~i 3-7H2. ig payables, receivable a Death Notices after a brief illness. She Was vice president of the Blown City First Meth6dist Church W.S.C.S. ENDURING MEMORIAL We are specialists in fully guaranteed monuments sculptured from Select Barre Granite Monument! INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices 7£UeMa,-t7,tuic6 *)*c. Call 334-7774 painting. Klohna Truck's self-contained mobile unit enables its to clean your homo using OUR OWN water ___________ Also SPECIAL PRICES ON • Aircraft • Trucks • Heavy Equipment a Mobil# Homes of Rochester; a daughter, Mrs. George Geis of Rochester; 10 grandchildren; a brother; and;] three sisters. FRED GANZEL j HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP Service for former resident Fred Ganzei, 74, of $t. Ignace, will !be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Highland Cemetery. | Mr. Ganzei, a carpenter, died Saturday. I He is survived by three brothers, Kenneth of Highland Town- Northtown Transit Mix Company. Surviivng iwhis wife, Barbara; four children, Morris, Pamela, Kimberty aqd Christopher, all at home; four sisters; and two brothers. MRS. NORMAN JOHNSTON IMLAY CITY - Service for Mrs. Norqian (Flora A.) Johnston, 87, of 3419 Biacke Corners, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow atj Muir Brothers Funeral Home, with burial in Goodland Township Cemetery, Goodland Town- ship. Mrs. Johnston died Saturday. She was a member of the West Goodland Methodist Church. Surviving are two daughter*, Mrs. Edwin Johnston of Lapeer and Mrs. Elva Stine of North Branch; seven grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren. MRS. HAROLD PACfe SR. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Harold (Gay-hell K.) Pace Sr., 60, of 1600 Ward will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mrs. Pace died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband |are two sons, Harold Jr. and Marvin, both of Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. Howard Floyd of Clarkstpn and Mrs. John Van-hook and Mrs. Gene Griffin, all of Pontiac; a.brother; a sister; and eight grandchildren. MRS. GEORGE A. LEET WILLIAM R. HALL COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for William R. Hall, 43, . BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that t Planning Commission of the Towns! of. BloomfiaM will hold a public hoorii at tha Township Hall, at 4200 Tglcgrai I changes to Ordinance No. 47, a bejng the Zoning Ordlnanca 'ew section to ba known a 1.5 entitled "Open Storage dantial Lots", be added to ii II, of 22823 Lakeway will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Thayer Funeral Home. Burial will be in] Farmington Cemetery. BELL, JULY T ALICE, lit H beloved wild I Funeral service will to Raid Tuesday, July u, at 1:30 p.m. at St. Trinity Lutheran Church with Rev. Ralph Clay-In Parry / Mrs. Ball Win lie in state at the Sparks- Griffin Funeral Home. (Sumested visiting hours 3 to 5 BRAUNSTEIN, JULY~7Tft44. JOHN F.. Inverness, Florida, formerly of Kaega Harbor; age 71; beloved husband of Anna; dear father of Mrs. Millie Tark, Mr». Gladys Gul-Jetf, Mrs. Ruth Ksrr and John M. Braunstein; also survived by one brother, one sister and four grandchildren. Recitation ef. tha Pariah Rosary will ba Monday. July 11, »t Carl Oy. Q)ontlion Time Has Proven Many Things ... • Many years of service by tha Donelson-Johns Funeral Home has profoundly influenced out community. Tima has also brought us fgjt friends from near and far. Folks know that Donaison*Johns provide the- finest funeral service •** that there is none better. Time has also strengthened the loyalty of our patrons assuring > dll that Donelson-Johns funeral service ^ will prevail in the future. (Phone FEDERAL 4*4511 CPa/ikinq On Our S' Q)oneL 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC SECTION 1407 5. Open Storage an ar Parcels. Tha o&en storage to II rasMtotlal lots or parcels of „ , permitted By the Board gt Appeals. In granting temporary permits to • except parking and/or storage from the above regulations, ----------------- * BABY GIRL RIGHTER INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP - Graveside service for the baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Righter, 4644 High, was held today in Munger Cemetery, Eaton Rapids. The baby was dead at birth Friday. Survivors include a sister, Lori Jo at tK>me, and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, C. J. Sumner, and Mr. and Mrs. Leon-| ard Righter of Missouri. Mrs. L*et died yesterday after! MRS. JOHN SCHATZ a long illness. - HOLLY — Service for former Surviving are a son, Clyde G- resident Mrs. John (Vella) v .. ... Farmington; two daughters, ^ ,55 of Uplandi oiif., will » TNewst*ad of fe«t be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the y^rl0OmfiCld Townghip and Mrg- Dryer Funeral Home, with 1 Ron- advertisement for bids graveside services at 3 p.m. offpSF.Af’jSrSSt mS /Ica^c^mct^, Cadillac. th* Pontiac Township Haii, tom opdvki Mrs. Schatz died Saturday.* P&p XSS T^mctokrnf Surviving besides her husband y**!*1 t, - | are a son, Bobbie Conklin; a stepson, Grover of Auburn Mrs. Christine Kelly and Mrs. Wanda Miller, both of Upland, Calif.; Mrs. Beverly Lutz of Las Veges, Nev.; a sister, 19 grandchildren; and three great grandchildren. ■aSPRMIH Reel-■ Rosary by tha 3rd rat Knights af Colgm-todsy st i:30 p.m. at horns. Funoral sarvico Tuesday, July 12, at of Refuge Catholic 4, JULY t, .1PM, .JOJkN arty ot m Washington ige S3; dear mothar of Ith (Doris) Nicolls, and . Buchanan; dear sister t. Also survived iSg.naK66 WtTMPtoOC.--. QKBI m. uS w. EXPERIENCED MAINTIHANCE Die Setter ebatn, L»fc> Orton. ■ARM AMD UURN~W Haig WwM I EXPERIENCED MAN FOR AUTO GOOD OPPORTUNITY Far alt-round young rim tor llg Ing fixture store.! Mult be n ‘ ----1 minded. Fol* time ( NltOCt Mr. Rabh PH I AND GARDENERS, or ruil time, top' pey M it*. Coll Arthur. Treacher. Pontiac Prase Sox Ni tar* EXPERIENCED I. D. GRINDER HAND tvlotion Tool A Gauge Co. 24*0 Telegrsph-Southfleld EL 6-5466 * Electro-Mechanical * Technician Trainee Detroit Metropolitan Area SALARY OPEN Age 2h35 Major office Equipment company needs several train* ees. Expenses paid while in training. Company Car Plan .. • Tuition Aid Plan Commission 4 Pension Plan Paid Vacation GROUP LIFE AND MEDICAL INSURANCE Phone 567*2555 Mr. Granet or Mr. Ellis en equal opportunity employer _ Hydramatic Man Who Knows His Business position ha future.' cerrlee e good aatory an benefits. Como in tnd talk It ova denlth - • ^ MR. CHUCK MILLER Downey Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland D (C A P E CONSTRUCTION . LIFE GUARD, RED CROSS QOal ! Hied. EM MMI., 4 p.m. _ | MACHINIST WITH MILL. LATHE; —1 the per experience. Yur >und |ob, top retea, working hour week. Plihtr Corp. Meoto Rd. Tiey, “ — MACHINE REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE MAN TOR DAY SHIFT OR MAN WHO PBRIJ HI IS qualifiecp and willing to LEARN. FRINGE BENEFITS AND TOP WAGES. ROCHESTER MFC. CO. ROCHESTER, MICH. IMMEDIATE OPENINOS TOR TULL and part time drafting Instructors, mutt be vocationally qualified, salary open. Apply Far tonne! Dept. ■ Oakland Community Collooo. 240* X—Me — —--Told Hills, 447- 2Bovl'* NSURANCE INSPECTOR, fl—I I “ee, alto Brigh- •roo. Full tlma JANITOR office building. V id men. In good h n Social Security bi S p.m. Apply in 4-5215 for appoli.-- KENNETH 0. HEMPSTEAD 1*5 Elliabdth Lake Rood, Pontiac JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT. RECENT business school graduate to work with cost system end Inventory control. Diversified duties with liberal benefits. Cell Mr. Ztccardelll. 334-2588. All Ployer- LABORER CITY OP BIRMINGHAM . art mem of Public Work.. Minimum age It with tenth grade education, able to peso medical •xemtaatton. Soiery range SI.S0 ‘ 83.DC ear hour tor a 40-hour wot Fringe benefits Inc hide tick Hfi veceTlon gey, Ineruanot prograi and sold holidays. Aaslv Mond Friday, I Mm Holy Wwtad N—h 7 CLERKS, FULL TIME, DAYS, EX-celtont salary, paid vacation. . SHERMAN PRESCRIPTIONS Maple-Lahoar Rda. Urmlnghem ,PORTER\ drivers IMangt. Van* i hotpitolliatlon. cation and chi mini. Must be ttb Lake Rd. » tor I n ...d commission position ..— Offer! financial security, fringe benefits, paid vacation, company car, end an opportunity tor advancement. Qualification ago " so, high tchool graduate, view 7 -- — “ REAL ESTATE SALESMEI wanted ot the Mall. Inquire about Mir gtnsrout commission program. VON REALTY George Vendertiarr, Rttr. —MLI the Mill Room lit I-58OT________ Evoo. OR 3S033 RETIRED MAN TO WORK IN OAR-■ end orchard. Ml N. Squirrel. f p.m. dell h. Pontiac M . Tele- MANAGEMT TRAINEES (22-28) $18,000 POSSIBLE WITHIN 2 YEARS Michigan's largest used car dealer is opening 6 more lots this year and needs men to manage them., , ( No Experience Necessary as we hove a complete training program, salary plus bonuses, fringe bent- PROCESS ENGINEER TOOL DESIGNER AND DETAILER Experlti hydriull nlnohem tBrOTSR I - Boy restaurant, toto- IHORT QRDEl.. _____iter edrCtab, ulBMl COOKS, ADULT ONLY UNTIL AUG- y facllltlei. Call |. clerk, iNiFictOe, l SUN' employment end . Air cendltlanad. Top trial. Cleaners, lT" __________ilokf are*. 447-7557. ■•"•J CURI GIRL. <2000 HOURS AND R™1 ■■■ 1 Pled Finer Restaurant, 4370 g, Impark id toythflel M. C. MPG. CO. LAKE ORION Fhant MY 3-37fl . . Equal Opportunity -------- — EXPERIENCED COOK, $1 order, good wagw, paid vi Little frown Jug. EM M iMXtn. EXPERIENCED till train. Exceltont a. Apply to Pentlec S. Telegraph, Pon- RETIRED? LOOKING FOR PART work? Church need m m handymen, 20 hr*. Rial Estate Trainees Guar. Training' Salary Irem • high earning salesman anable you to bacoma elate “ id end tarn In exeats N yterly. For confidential I SALESMAN. MEN'S WEAR RETAIL oiet aid, iNcVns riker »lpo. PE 2*181. 8«« Anneuncemento._ Drayton . IRRIM ■ YORK REALTY. 11.00 per hour guarintaed, plue bonus. Call Mr. Korby at 874-383. VORKRBALTY. YOUNG WOMEN INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION ---------aner *- train “* typing mqulrgd. Mutt be reedy to etart work Immediately. SAURY $425 PER MO. Meying^aRd JracUeg 22 AA-MOVING Help Wealed M. er t. BEAUTY OPERATOR, parlance preferred, no' m FE 2-48*3 or OR 3-3541. ex- BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED ■H Positive l RH Nag. 37.00, 810.00 - II DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE In Ponhac FE «*M> ' Track Dr. W * EUR DRIVERS, MIVATE SCHOOL, school year. 118847, Ml 4-1801, Ext. ■................... — 8*2f7 GRILL COOK. EXCELLENT PAY. With til fringe benefits. Pled Piper Restaurant. 4370 Highland Rd. FE COUPLE, HOUSEKEEPER, BUTLER HOUSEKEEPERS - MAIDSPART end full tlm*. Too pay, frit torme, tranaportaNon. Cell Ai Treacher 848-9700. HOUSEKEEPER WANTED. ___________332-4448 HOyiEKIEFER, FULL CHARGE — Widowed, working moT" | to ~ days. MS *^aa^gvl",.*MDl- BOYER'S ELECTRIC ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. 1 Residential * Commercial FE 4-5505 Httrryl Hurryl ............... Discount Price* Pwe BnWmatgg FE 4-783* Call* JIM JOHNSON Asphalt ________________ORMM BULL DOZING, BACKHOE WORK, PARKING LOTS, TENNIS COURTS, excavating, tondeceptog, jlgto tew-Cwrtr*c,"f,,| eaptlc"field.“iTi^^repingi. Duality asphalt seal coat-1 bulldozing, front-end load* Ing Serv. Driveways, perking tote, er, trucking end beck ho*. 628-pptchKg. <7»9n4~ ________ 1550._________________■ CLARKSTON roofing company, —urence end own. 87343*7. HOT TAR ROOFING Robart Price Reefing, FE 4-1024 ROOFING AND REPAIR Shingles SPECIALIZE I IncT FE5HO orFEMSC. ' 1 Irich 4 Hack Stwke~ BRICK. BLOCK AND FIREPLACEl Fencing Bgildiag Modernization ----;------------------poNTIAC FENCE CO. “.ST Sgl” Plxle HWV:---------_0RMFS size.- Cement work. Free estimates. Pedy-Built Garage Co. QR 3-5811.1 r 2-CAR GARAGE. Ittt ' ADDITIONS CABL L BILLS OR. NEW AND Alas Alum, windows, deers, Siding, old floor sending FE 2-578?. GRAVES CONTRACTING 1 ola ---■ lnY' Free EatlmaSai |B Flow i All Types of Remodeling —------------- —Itlons, ettk ------ , — —*, o»ra( BiumifMim siding* roofing. Fret i No down payment. G & M Construction Co. sanding end Hnbhlng. F I JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing. 332*175. LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Old floors made gMaj^H Concrete poured basements . end footings, garages, breeze-ways, t mltc- Carpentry work. FE 441*2.1 Cabinet Making j ■1 MERION SLUE SOD. SODDING, seeding ' end grading. No money down. Bmps Landscaping. FE t-OU). or FE 5-33QZ. AO COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, sodding, seeding, grading, Brot" Concrete, retaining walls. Top t sold by toad. Free Estimates. I 8-8314. ■ " EXCAVATING, DREDGING, I ing. grading, leveling, seeding sodding. A-1 top soil and l I dirt. Free estimates. Reasoni too small, free estimates. 338-1850. rings.____■___________ Carpenter contractor any merion blue sod, pickup on size |ob*. Free Estimates. 332-4138. delivered. 4843 Sherwood. 428-2000 Carpentry, new and repair. ■ ~ * estimates. 3359181._____ |MUg"- RIP. FRUSHOUR t STRUBLE I BEDROOM S E M l-MODERI frMM house on largo lot W Mill mero. Now kitchen end nowly a«c oratod. Aluminum storm:, lort* 444%57 otter I 5-BEDROOM BRICK I rooms, m story, utility re basement, goo hoot SIMM land contract. FLATTLEY REALTY <29 COMMERCE 100 FT. LAKE FRONTAGE, SAND buck, S bedroom bride, got hot wotor hoot, 2 cor garaga. EM mu bot. 1-7 p.m. 330 E. SHEFFIELD GI'S, SSO TOTAL DOWN PAYMENTS BOO A MONTH TOTAL Cuts, 3 bedrooms, got hoot, aluminum Storms and screens, 97,700 Near schools and shopping. JASTER 31250 PLYMOUTH, LIVONIA GA 2-7010 KE 1-3300 MM DOWN 1'BEDROOM BRICK ||],HO ON FHA TERMS, FLU. MOR1WA9R COSTS. MIXED NiUHlORHOOD. r "------ !ar yard E 3-7090. rard. Clark Real I It FERRY STREET $6,500, V$750 Sewn, land contract. K. L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR 33St Orchard Lake Rd. 692-0980 064 ROBINWOOD. 3 BEDROOM FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $59 Mo. Ixctudtag taxes and Insurance ONLY $IQ Depositv ikj. WITH APPLICATION T , 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LAROJTDINING AREA WILL ACCBFT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES; PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND MY. AND SUN. OR COME TO 210 KENNETT ' NEAR BALDWIN RB AL VALUE REALTY For Immadiata Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 2JB3 UNION LAKE ROAD BM 94m HNWI INDEPINDENCE TOWNSHIP PRICED RIGHT Gl SPECIAL OF THE WEEK and Elizabeth privileged. Hat YORK IE BUY- WE TRADE R 4-0363 OR 64242 47)3 Dixie Hwy., Orayten Plllna GAYLORD BI-LEVEL HOME. Built-In testurea, balcony off living rasm, 3 t — ful fireplaces, 3 car garage, wiring. A vary beautiful for a family to own end Call MY 2-SMt. FE I-Mf3. ACREAGE. Wa have all else $ building sttea. . exclusive !aka$ront _ I Call (or datalla. MY 2-3031 FE 34493 LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD Broadway and Flint Sta. Lake Orton 32)4 Open t .1 mnnt, gas hart, large IM wafts a formil dining rw Pdflng throughout, dear _ *a n^sped^OMSf tactsad garsgs with slsctrlc door opanor, dose to schools, anew l lent bsnk terms. Priced pi YORK Mixed Neighborhood MODEL OFCN AFTERNOONS 1-S AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY OXFORD - 2 BEDROOMS, UVtldfr JUDAH LAKE BSTATES -rooms, garage, gas heat. Terms. 363-5477. ROCHESTER. NORTH. ON TOP OF MB. 5 bedroom. Has everything Including Indoor peel. Kbduced to 144,Wd. 651-1776. SALE OR TRADE. EQUITY bedroom lake front home, in, tor smaller home an Pot wart side. 132,950 Full pries 3913._________________ SMALL NEW >«>OSE. 730 SQUARE Model merit, aluminum siding, largo ing area, attached 1 car gas___________ This home can be built on your lot for as low as $14,950. Open Saturday sndSundty tram B NORTHERN SCHOOL I.' Columbia RUSSELL NEW HOMES FULL IAIEMSNT RANCH 116,700 BI-LEVEL IT • LAKE FKIVILEGSS - ONLYBN DOWN LOW At I12S A MONTH I includes tana and towrbnc-Taka Commerce Rd. to S. Com-merce, tod to Glingary, 12 ml/ ‘ FAMILY TAILORED HOME YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUHG, Mb W. HURON NEED SOMETHING WITH QUICK POSSESSION? sharp 2 bedroom homo with hardwood Noon for SHAG. Has a garage phis s Mg lot with room for expansion, MOO down on YORK TUCKEft REALTY CO. t03 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. 354-1545___________ VILLAGE OP MILFDRO. LOVELY — Hardwood floors. Birch boards. Many extras. $15400 No agents 3434034. VON tlac Motor, lto Botha. TIM basement. Large garage. Only 111,500. You pay only cloning costs. overhead. Full price gym gi. VON REALTY \ GEORGE VONDERHARR, Raaltor WEAVER MILTON WEAVER Inc., REALTOR of Rochaatar 4514141 • Village of Unhagjjy . WHITE LAKE High Abovfl the Laka MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR INOIANVILLAOB BRICK. 7 roomi heat, 3 car garage. Juat 117,1 Mm contract. LAKE PRIVILEGES With Nile '____ gain Buy." Largo fenced and locked lake area so you can beat the T' ‘ ‘ botB In vary nice ---------1, 3 lota available M ----"" LAKELAND ESTATES BY ROSS HOMES FE 4-0591 338-4324 FE 5-8183 SEMINOLE HILLS natural flraplaca, roc room wim fireplace * ' " bath, 2-car garage. t09xl75' mmtakBn"-----------------J ...,...d In Vb bath off recreation room. Ample closet apace. Roc-- reetloo room 3(7x30', 2 car garage, large 3ta acre 1st, partly wooded. 04,500. terms. BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS Sharp brick ranch home. 7 room carjjrtad throughout.^Fireplace family . Largo J LAZENBY LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS Lovely 2 bedroom rancher hoe laka privileges on one of the finest beaches In Oakland County, just the perfect spot to raise a family) near schools and shopping. Haa large carpotod living room, exceptional kitchen, 2Vi cor garage. Situated on • nicely landscaped fenced-ln yard wins roar pattsT Priced Of only 117400, 10 par cant down plus closing coats, or taka over tha existing 446 pier cent mortgage. Hurry on this one. ROY LAZENBY, Rialtor " 1393 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0801 Multiple Listing Service IRWIN with gas heal, aluminum aiding. Storms and screens. tVk bath, — rag*. Fenced yard. Offered i first time i 01 BAST SIDE Three bedrooms with full bate-mant and gas heat, tile bath, decorated. Hardwood floors. Garage. Vacant and terms. Evas. Cali Mr. Castall FE 2-7171 TAYLOR HORSEMAN'S DREAM Located on blacktopood ----- near Ortonvllle, only 10 minutes landscape. Paneled 'ail garage, plastered, with ... door opener. Patio ant ___. Wit OF THE MOST APPEALING HOMES WBttAMT HAD TO OFFER. CALL FOR AF-POINTMENT. SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS FE 44526 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Northand 3 bedroom homo. Nowly dtcoratod. Large living room, Ing room and kltchan. Beset_____ Gas hut. Priced at S11.750 FHA or Gl. jtat us show you. LAKE FRONT ORCHARD LANE bw oat turn 1 lots of at "BUD' If You Want Brick 3-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT. HJ— some ginlmtrti— 3 wo66I6Tl,„ . Elizabeth Lata. each, OR 53301 .WWtyg d largo londacapad yard. In Woodward and Iquara rear featuring large llv-m with flraplaca, carpal-drapes, aaparata dining anoroua kltchan »IT mi 120' ON L0N6 LAKE fbontaoI. Drayton Woods tonT horn* alto, 4 NICHOLIE-HUDSON ASSOCIATES, INC. 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201, AFTER 6 P.M. FE 4-8773 COTTAGES AND HOMES BUILT TO your plana or ours. Sea our Saorto-man Cabin at Pinter's Marina Sale*. 1370 Oadvk*. OL 14701 or FE 44934. KINZLER IDEAL FAMILY HOME NEW BRICK RANCH ARRO CASH FOR EQUITY—LAND CONTRACT >HAmlnum>frMaS8Mi-AlSll?L,,d ,lu‘ Only 000. Btttor hurry on Ih WATERFORD 2 bedroom ranch homt. ...... living room. Kltchan. Utilities _ many txtrat. Fart basement. Gaa heat. Garage and large lot. Priced at 09,950 61. No dov----------- 0300 and good credit, offered. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR Oakland Community I to appreciate. BM 9tm cANAL Wr6WL oeai ceienlal building site, 43900. .Ttrms available. Sislock & Kent, Inc. . AW Pontiac State Bank .DEER LAKE FRONT 100x373. Partly wooded. Sloping tor open besement. Sand beach. Blacktop private road. 115,000.- CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE new Avacadd carpeting. Close sand beach and family lun a year-around. Vacant and pron possession. Priced below presi YoHN0nKINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dixie Hwy. 474-3235 Across from Packer* Store Multiple Uatlng Service Open JAYNO HEIGHTS LAKE LOTS In beautiful sub. nestled between 3 natural City water, caved roada, t lake privileged lata avi Choose new. Term* It dealres MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE T“1 WmS rrosHouR $23,000 i bought s * $3,500 do toaturat large kltchan with toad at cupboard apace, dining araa paneled family ream with Nrt place, 2 car attached garage Includu over- Vb acre of land priced below duplication at 117, 500, torma. J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY Rtal Estate—Building—Insurance 7731 Highland Rd. (MSt) OR 44304 MT ““ **“ WALLED LAKE AREA room brick ranch, Ml, ___________ 2 hill bltha, 3Vb-car garage. IS’xSO' hulIMn ----------------- “ 624-5190. OPEN NEW MODEL SAT, 1 SUN. 14 IM0N. THRU FRI. 3-7 WEST WIND MANOR ' 1340 I. WILLIAMS LK. RD. NEAR UNION LAKI VILLAOB BRICK WITH ALUM. FAMILY ROOM 1 BEDROOMS lVb BATHS ------ATTACHED OARAOB $17,400 Flw lot SEE PLANS FOR OTHER MODELS STARTING AT MJM. WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS J. C. HAYDEN, Raaltor .... ...... ' Rd. M-59 OWNER TRANSFERRED helrt. Priced lew at llBRI. living room'with a natural flraplaca plus mere good to*. For man Intormetten about thia YORK WE TRADE vlth flraplaca, built-in Gi A real bitouty at MS ELIZABETH LAKE aautHul brick bltoivtl laka f. _ ... Motorway Drlv*. Safa aandy beach. Over 3,000 feat of floor araa. Haa 34* living roam with flraplaca, 3 completa kitchen*, 3 bedrooms, IVb hatha, 24' pan-atod rec. ream with fireplace. Thermopane windows, radiant floor host, ntfachad Scar garage, 49 dock. A prestige home tar lust $31,000 with- Warden Realty 3434 w, Huron, Pontiac NORTH END — 3-bedroom ranch In excellent condition. Wall-to-wall carpeting In living room. I Oil hail. Storms and, screens. Pfrtlj) fenced yard. Paved street. “ A LIFETIME OF PLEASURE can owny«Hi!'keA r"?liSn* Un,*V >C tltul Elizabeth Lake. Brick ranch, hast In living. Join the lucky 1 bedrooms — posslbl* third on*. By appointment. Ted McCullough Sr„ Realtor PHONE 682-2211 5)43 Cass-Ellzabeth Road _________OFiN DAILY 94 EQUITY TRADE ratti.^CalP'andMinvaT experienced salesmen e LOVE NEIGHBORS UVdAaJSRJffBelUKE PRIVILEGES: Across the street fro IRWIN LAKE FRONT: Located on beautiful Square Lake. Brick ranch home. Six rooms and IW ceramic tile baths, Laundry, kitchen with builHm. Eating area overlooking the lake. Full baasmant with furnished room. Soma of the many sprinkler i nm, i acra m BIB large kite with cupboard* galore and d washer. Some of the extras: < piece, air i barbecue, 2 FIRST TIME OFFERED Put yaur paint brush and broo away. This 2-bedroom bungal I* sharp tram top to bottom. soveral closets, fenced rear yard FHA orGL *"* ’ 2?rwT Brown Waterford -2JAMILY mCOME Cooley Lake offers —thraa bad-am, formal Raaltora 6 Builders Since LAKE FRONT! 400 ft. On the warn ssK.'aai This Ts presently a l but caukl be made yeer round dwetllr fly. LAKE FROIfT situated pleasant PONTIAC NORTHERN like new 3 bedroom bungalow. Features: easy to clean tile floors, gas heat, aluminum storms and vanlantly arranged ^kttcha?' and dining el. Friend under 110,000. y sized area, cnrpetbtL large let. It's very itt be seen to be rice reduced to G17,-a available. NO MORTGAGE COSTS To pay wlwn you lust taka (Mar Mymants on thia 1 year old brick- 3 large bedrooms. Wall ta ____________ c I e a e I a. Gleaming oak floors. Fenced yard. Gaa heat. Blown-In Insulation. Roomy kitchen and dining araa. Full price $13,300. List With Us-Wr Sell a Home Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 S4S Oakland Ava. Open Attar hours FE Htt4 or FE 4-! I. Call tor additional John K. Irwin GILES NEAR WATERFORD CIVIC CEN-TER - Capa Cod built In 1955. Specious reams throughout, family size dining, 3 large bedrooms. 7'xf' utility plus full baasmant, Itk-car garaga. Breezeway. Walking dilutee to grade schools. Price enl $15,900. BEDROOM BRICK - Locals a«rt of Auburn Height!, oak floor plarttrad walls, closets, oil H heat, besement, 3 car garage, loti. 017,500. Terms. aiioKtoT evergreen trees. Prlca. DORRIS CLEAN, COOL, LOOK - It yaur first impression of this ey m pealing aluminum sided a ranch In Donalaon Park, a drew of Importance amonL .... araa'l leading dtlzena. 6 spacious mama with comfortable living--------- with flraplaca. Beautiful beam bright cheerful t_____ aion attic tor future h__________ storage. Outstanding baasmant w ! APPEALING LAKE FRONT, blue water of Loon L LOTUS LAKE ESTATES - Ona of tha most popular west i areas with privileges on c and trams homo Struble ream, largo Bear garage, nice yard. Blacktop street, axes Dent buy at ItUBD on Gl torma or trada In your heme. INCOME 3 family on Whittemors St., 11 rooms In all. Gaa FA fumeca, full basamant, t car garage. Sailing i garage. A large and ndscaped lot. Just nt town. 114,990. JACK FRUSH0UR MILO STRUBLE Realtors —»• . MLS 3SB1 Highland Rd. (M99) Sc KEATINGTON ful lakd-trens and lakearlvl-its available. Plan to live In •autlfui new town In Orton LAKE FRONT LOTS IIS MONTH 2-BEDROOM SIZE COTTAGE 5100 deposit will buy this MhcM' at only $1993, BIR month Including lot at Merrill Laka. 369 frontage enry Phi Mkh. pi i Barryton 1 H 7-382-5597. NICELY FURNISHED SUMMER COTTAGE On point at Bald Bagto U near M-15 at Ortonvlllo. Lar yard. Approximately 375 ft. I frontage. Unobstructed vim eci lake. Clean neighborhood, lit STOUTS- Best Buys Today Contemporary — Design 4 bedroom heme, custo built, Maturing large entry ha to ttrpetod living room, Inform dining area, ultra modern kHc an with all built In appliance 2h baths, beautiful rec roor... bar, den, patio, galeeny, attached 2W ear garaga, paved drive. TRADEI TRADE I TRADEI 3 bedroom on Ryhran Lake. IT* frontage. $21,000. Will trade tor house In Reed araa. Drive by — »»7 Stratton. Call us far datalla. JACK LOVELAND 3110 Casa Lake Rd. ■_______681-1155 WATERFRONT LOT ON PRIVATE $39,500 with torma. KtHtring High — Only 1 Meat from this brand 7aneh” witti select _ oak and dining ifittTX water, attached , mediate po $10,750 — Total prlca on this 1'badro home In Northern High ar with carpeted living room, Kraaflt.^arge front porch » aluminum awning. t2,0W dm balance on land contract. little Eden — view. $6,500. Terms. MY 24731, Laka Orton tor datalla. M. Gala lar. E. E. SHINN REALTOR 0100 par acre — IVb mltoa flam Lake Michigan, 6 mltoa south at Mackinaw Bridge. Solid wood*, use Coleman lantern, bath with path. MunUr-e —rqdtaB. Mak* Sh IP-July it at lltoa, Rbbbt* Fry rty PONTIAC - CLARKSTON • land art*, 59x159 let, neat clear or wooded. BP99, BIG I Bloch Brea., OR 3-1191 9 Strimriran Frapirty 52 ROCHESTER AREA Lovely 4 bedroom situated an 3 beautiful landscaped acres with !*» a2« JPF-fflS STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE L#ts—Actm|b^ Wl- F0R FAMILY FUN swim In Elizabeth Laka and llv in. thli IVb story 3 bedroom horn wWi garaga. ai 4,500. piwn* 451 1588 for appointment. SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE SUBURBAN LIVING 100 FOOT LOTS VILLA HOMES, INC VRED BARN VILLAGE NO. 1 wed of AA-B4 between Lake Orion and Oxford behind Alben'i Country Cousin. Modal phone 6JF1545 O'NEIL 3-bedroom ranch. Lotus Laka with a lovely beech. Call today. for tee this one. Move in before school itartt. Tito p LORRAINE MANOR Ctoat-ln |ust oft Ellubefh Lake Road, 1-bedroom brick ri b* sold and la priced accordingly at $13,930. FAST POSSESSION ■ haa bought new 00m, aluminum: I. Asking (12,500. OWNER NEEDS CASH Nic* 3-bedroom with basement near General Hospital. Clean and N M condition. Brice reduced to S7JM| you can't go wrong on this ehd~ Wa can ahew.any time. II r.:J, B'*" . y!' MODELS V ' YOUR CHOICE-RANCH, COLONIAL or TRI-LEVEL $16,150, plus lot DrivB out M59 (Huron St.) to Airport Road turn right 1 Vi milts to Modtls, OPEN DAILY 2 to 6 - OPEN SUN. 2 to 8 RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 352ttk PONTIAC LAK£ RD. OPEN 9 TO 9 --------AFTER 4 CALL OR 3-7408 EVENINGS AFTER 6 CAUL. MIS ar's mortgage. 0650 dawn, MB per mo. incHxXt taxes end Insurance. List With Us-Wt SbII a Horn* Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET -REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland M. Open 9-1 After hour: FC 6M7 ar FE 4-4300 0 DOWN TO Gl a ranch. Full ba l». Prhrata tone a Laka. Only t ERFOI •man. Real) » Dixie Hwy. Lbs Brown, Raaltor 509 Elizabeth Laka Read (Acreaa tram tlM Mali) _ FE 1-4110 ar FE 44564 KEOT IETT PROPERTY PREVIEWS RMRi toptdjpVb ,n foundation with full base-mt, 1 nice bedrooms, oak floor:, Warran Stout Realtor H N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 54165 Open Evea. Till I p.m. Multiple Uatlng Servlet vacant Lots in auburn Haights aqgi — “■ * 4:00 p.m. room with plctura window. ... um tiding. Prlca .Includes com-i decorating atorma, screens, m door*, front and tide parch TIMES 14 VACANT LOTS near Longfellow school. Will trad far land contract, home ar wht h*BRfe REAL ESTATE ns RUtar Bldg, “ ' ' 'BUZZ' BATEMAN ECONOMY INCOME INVKSOk'1 SPECIAL—1-unlt Income, convenient to downtown. INVESTOR'! SPECIAL—3-unlt Income, convenient to downtown, at $21,500. Better check an thia one RIGHT AWAY. ' $400 dawn plut ■RBMMIL. dm ta Waartwwrd Avanua. Throe , _____________________ . dan, racrartlan ream with *lr■■!■«, IH bath* and tola at extra toaturw. Ixcellant close-in taction and raaaonabty priced at II9AS9. Make year appointment NOW .TODAY. ,, FLOWERS AND GARDEN ttMmVa ■ .ElfoNW, to,—, _ T .. rooavii. if battto, gad FA. heat and other nl $17«R$a and rw WIN really lov# It I a 300-ft. tot with lata t gator*. Three baa-foaturta. PrtcN at NEW' MODELS YOU CAN TRADE PONTIAC BATEMAN REALTY ROCHESTER FE 8-7161 M.L.S. Raaltor , 0L 1-8518 377 S. Ttltgraph Rd. 730 S. RochastK Road 3 FAMILY BRICK v 3 bedroom: each, everything aaparata, full baasmant and garaga. $14,500, IMOG down. 6 ROOMI AND BATH - West fid* In City. Convenient ta but, school: and Oaneral Hospital. 2 car garage, full basement. $7,too. FLOYD KENT INC., Raaltor SGHRAM| Northern High Area 34*dr*om ranch with HW I! tog room, t'xl V kitchen and dl IjU, LKr s J DcO 1 large kitchen ' space, family r garage.,. --------- $17,900. I carpeting A drapes, 2 (KAMPSEN Let us built YOUR new home on YOUR lot or ours!! We have exciting models to show YOU USED HOMES ship, comptoiMy r_________ lest 2 years. On a 139x03'..... edlolnlng a goH course end shop- gig center, rental*--------- at waeent time and 1175 per month, < i land contract. Clarkston Area Homesitis ml. narthwatt of Clerkv .... ............BIN Groan Laka front let, 109x139. 109x215' atoping lot to stream $1,400 to ac>e Dear Laka prlvttagaa, weeded kllhU, ' . IMM 3-Bedroom Brick Largs living mnE tintohaa__________ m baths. 9x39 cuvarad petio, tor^only MIG down plus dosing List With Schram and Call the Van nil JQ3LVN FE 54471 CLARK HORSE FARM. Sto ACRES. HORSE BARN. S2J.508 terms. CtoTS Pontlec, modern 9 room, 5 Bod-room homo, nice born wtth wotor «nd olodrlcjjy. shodo fruit Into, numerous Christmas trees. Might^accept your tamo or land LAKE rRONT. CRESCENT LAKE. $21,900 torma. I room, W-tovoL room, tomHy room, 2 ssrsiT&rSt-1 •SatfUS't: Open Evfhlngt & Sundays 1-4 FE 8-0466 RHODES A rtal year round homo. C $36,500 with *4,000 down, tala IBBB aOBPBCt, IN EXECUTIVES HOME, 6 n I vS&gSi M, a It 'ttiSSg.1*! knotty ___________Jt, gae naes, x lake privileges. Onto $12.- WEST BLOOMFIELD. EkCOllsnt' 6 room home, 3 Bedrooms, wall to wM^coruar b»_ living room, dining 'rSSt Hot*. _____I $1500 to B64I "lots today. INDIANWOOD SHORE! NO. 3. yiB( Mnaoltaa, blacktop at root*, gas ovollibld. locate your tamo In ■ prog resolve community. Call Ai&r jTrhodes broker curs ^ lasemenl' i Wood Farms subdivision o rage, will to wall carpeting, gee hut, glass enclosed porch mokes toll a exeat lent buy at enly tit, 950, Terms to suit. - Acreage, cornerinp l /S and Sash-abtw, total araa 4.5 -g^-' for muttlpla dwelling .... type buslrwss.^^m*^ proper ^ls merit, 2 car •rtactad per eg* with extra unattached 3 car, homo would make an Mail professional office, call for appointment an this first at taring, a* it is otoroy* cur policy hare It tbim roelty to offer you the finest opportunities is purchase root properly, ngrtr offered--------—*•' *" -™ $3,000. Term*. $3,500. FE U GOOD SELECTION OF VACANT homo tits* — lets or acreage — level, rolling, weeded or cleared. . Give us a call and toll ta what you hove In mind. Underwood Real Estate 625-3615 If no ona. 4154459 Lake Orion—20 Acres Near Indtanwood Country Club. Sctnlc high watt, wooded. Has small bldg. 9jem road*. $12,000, form*. Clarkston—25 Acres FOUR-BEDROOM COLONIAL- Let us pick you up tram that rut your h and Mk at this largo'family ham# tor 'YOU!I out booaniid 3 cor garage, to lot, privileges on Welkins tort across Ito sheet. Price- — $18,500 call u* tor arranging easy RED-WHITE-BLUE!! tvwntagi on I otto fcr » Time? Realty htrew Property SO 2-FAMILY INCOME AND 7-FAMILY MetamOra-80 Acres Mail tocaWdtt to , own riding group. Iconic tog, many nice buildings Only 5400 par acre. Annett Inc., Realtoi Peon Evenings B tundayi 1-4 f 'Sh* pair, Prl ' iTta BLUB Call KaMMi. mak* arranfw WANTED: ^Batomaraon (-. . need on* nwr------ ound out our d M|lB Kimpoon. Huron Strati MLS FE I pm. Can or 3-3iTi VON REALTY IOJEBHARR, R MLS . Rl Krmm DUCK LAKE. FRONT — 75x209 -53500 — 1500 down. HAGSTROM, Realtor , £ D—S THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 LIVE PH COUNTRY STYLE ‘ 14 IwhOM OpyrtfWw W * ••‘UTY SHOP, ROCHESTER E FRESH COUNTRY AIR. spring mil. Mm. ISIS down. 10 ACRES, blacktop rood, panornm & la raal Matt. Warden Realty tm MawrtiM tmk U I PC. IOMI 1 MORE TIME ■ RAND NBW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4:00 Wnkly r NEW UVINO ROOM BARGAINS^ 2-piece llWno-rocmT »ul*a!Xo"*!!a tables, matching ceffee labia, tw dacorator lamps, all for *10*7 Onl NEV^Be'DROOM BARGAINS II ACRES, ovar 500 fast ____ adlolm state land and soil second tilling. Ideal for partner Is kom. Owners approaching (toi without property. Lease 2P prop"i wM ExUlIENTSERVICE STATION 6-piec e (brans locations tor rent. Paid training Double dresser. Moke end financial assistance for those clwst, box spring an who qualify. FE 4-1511 or LI 3-M0 mattress, two vonlti alter 7 p,m>. •____ • | tor 612*7 *1.50 wtakly. GARAGE, GAS^ USED CAR SALES, Between Paddock PEARSON'S FURNITURE Me IUpmNM Bull V RECLINING CHAIR WITH MATCH- CARNIVAL By Dick Turner PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" - 3 PIECE BEDROOMS WITH , mlsc. FE MM. WANTED tO BUY Leaded •Una lomga or lladtd glass latwR ohadai. pe NfU. . WASHER RES. GAS STOVE, SIS. RE-Irigarator with lop tratlar. S40. Dryer,, *33. TV, SSL Electric stovs, MS. V/ Hank. FlSOM. HASHING MACHINES, CONVEN-ttonal, •ufomethfbump, lilt.SB Value, see .95, scratched, no down payments. Michigan Pluoraocant. 3H Ore Hard Life. FE 44402. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our is w. Pika Store Only Odd tables and limps... From SJ.95 Occasional choirs ...Prom 15.OS — I Walnut dresser with mirror 824, „ I pc. Ilyins room suite .....MR... "-- - Apt. size gee stove .....*3*9jj >1 BOWLING lent equipment. .Largo *. chairs, tlVoo'd Wl,h *°m* woed*' *3#;wo C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS! OPEN 7 DAYS 030 M-IJ Ortenvlllc CALL COLLECT NA 74B13 LOT, ICrXIM-, NEAR EXPRESS way, cash or termt. *25-1442.1 lot ifedssxMnosr, schools! nearby. 64900, OR Alois. 1 large lc 4. FE 44688. metal cabinet. _atc. EM 3-5550 ______ l PIECE WALNUT DINING SUITE, good condition, *300 FE S-6J97 SM case walkl-tn. Business grow-1 lag awry year. 1307,500 with 9X|2 LinOlEUitl RujS . $3.89 Colling LAKE AREA S.D.D. * access with a capital "S" - Liquor Floor Shoe — 4255 Elizabeth Lai %Mr&j£Senmar JH "Hross From thi Moll* only 10 hours. I_, __ I__f log S160.000 Valuable highway 'tor natui rail estate Included for 115,000 045% down pluo Inventory. —-------- 'Mi Guar. elec, i > Guar, Elec. .. illtl Your Credit Is i EASY TERAAS ,. 6J9I ... sft.es d gross- 30" GAS RANGE. CONNECTIONS I Glen PINE LAKE. SEVERAL tOO'XISO' lots, toko privileges, Sylvan — 425-1136 or 334-0222. -----------------------------Nic!t,| «. Grossing S40.000 In boet sales lus repair*- Ideal location to odd (her sports end camping linos. IM N. Coes. SIMPLY CHARMING Is ill you eon uy about beautI- ^l«CRITARtAL SERVICE. S.YEAR — .... ... ... t Spacious] established business ruiiv PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE I W. HURON FE 4-3511 ■MjlM—CATALOG rofflfig hills lets foe* p . there OL 1-4491, 30" PHILCO RANGE Phllcou Refrigerator Ken more 40" elec, range ,6 Elec, water heater CRUMP ELECTRIC Auburn Rd. FE 4-35731 I USED FURNITURE, STONE Y'S. CHERRY OESK, WALNUT DROP leaf table, unusuol chur chest and ovol mirror, low bey. etc. Moving. 1 burnle. Clarkston, 625-274; CHINA AND BUFFET Wl Th round grtess, china coblnot. mis- sion oak ball tree, Birds ay* maple bed and stand, round palno stool. All refinished, excellent condition. EM SSSSB otter I e.m. ROUND OAK TABLES; ICE CREAM chairs; - dry sinks. Y-Kiiet Antiques. 10345 Ookhtll, Holly. ME ACRYLON CARPETING WITH PAD. ...clS’. Avocado green. Like new. 628-1279- APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERA-I ixcellent working qmffljMi . Harris, FE 5-2766. SET OF i CHAIRS ique—-Birdseye and Tlgo New cone seats. 1041 Holly. Vt mill Nit t Soft, d . Call , Hi-Fi, TV l Radios 21-INCH USED TV ............. Used 3 tpeed phonographs Walton TV FE 2-2257 --------- Walton, co--------* Privileges, ■ homtslfes - Pick SOFT ICE CREAM AND SAND-aream nom. nw™ been wich shop, reasonable down pay- Iboul. Only 2 mllet North) ment. 473-3764 or 473-»337.________| TRUCKING BUSINESS. INCLUOINgIbEDROOM LADD'S '151 International tandem dump, desk, BIS .. mwTiic and 1163 Chevrolet single axle, and dres OFrPONTIACM) Br_!r. MSP Trucking, 674-2553___________4 Ch*sl FE 5-92911 Walters lake Sail Land Contracts •ovaral scenic large SET OF 1 WATT, 2 CHANNEL :.B. talkies, I IBB "J— condition, soiling YEAR AROUND VACATION living WoMrford Hill Manor nmlng — Fishing — Boating— BEAUTIFUL SMALL± PIECE Oh amnnmm, p “ price. 4734251 naBirJWt KNIGHT BASI «« CB radio. Range xia'I and” dresser, ~”S29. 'Dresser, 620. Chest of di'MrOn, S12. 30" gas T~ range, $39. Elec. Range, 115. Re-.. Irigarator, BIS. Smith Moving Co., 601 371 E. Pika. FE 4-4364._____ BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE I solo. BRANO NEW. Largo and; small size (round, drop-loaf, rtc-l lingular) tables In 3, 5 and sots. S24.95 end up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE I 111 E. Pike PE 6-7MI WARREN STOUT, Reoltor brown on 6-arm couch, iso, » N. opdyke Rd. FE 54165; iteptable. Form leg top. S5. 332-Open Eves. *MI B p.m. ACTION rr* •t Vk original AND MOBILE 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS lie us before you deal. | Brake, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road. 'TilGOOD COAMAERCIAL LAND CON-tract at * per cent, will.dla- ------ count 15 per cent. After 6 P.M. ’ 673-0602.__ '________________ c **om! Wgnfed Controcts-Mtg. 60-A F BUNK TEDS Choice of is styles, trundle bed) triple trundle beds and bunk bad complete. S49.50 and up. Pearson' SPECIAL Invasion, 106 acres ve blacktop rood, edge el s 29 mlloo from Pontiac. Multiple Listing Sorvlci 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS rgsntiy needed See us tx _________________________57 6 BUSINESS LOTS ON AUBURN UL 2-4242. 11,703 |Q. ET. STRATEGIC DOWN lawn location. Only S2S.OIIO. LESLIE R. TRIPP. * ELECTRIC APPLIANCES- RANGE -! 155, washer B35, dryer 33f WARREN STOUT, Reoltor electric stove, not table 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 54165 and chairs. S25; Living Room — ii Bedroom Set with Hex .... hi, MO; Another bedroom sot BSD; Lounge Chair, $30; Lamps, Open AAon. and TINS. CASH For yoor equity or tend contracts. Don't ton that home, . smallest possible discounts. Coll 692-1820. ARRO REALTY 5143 Coss-Ellzebeth Loko Rood FRUITWOOD DINING SET. OVAL tibia with leaf, 6 "" chairs. Matching lx Call 651-1375. 37331. Rot. FE 4-4813, I Monty to Loan (Licensed Money L AL PAULY LOANS GIROUX 4500 Highland Rd. (M-S9) «73-7B37 STORAGE 1 foor masonite building, squaro feet, toilet, • gas. neai Pike, Bargain price, very LOANS- TO $1,000 RECORD PLAVER NEEDLES HARD TO FIND? SEE US — WE HAVE MOST ALL KINDS. JOHNSON TV - FE 34S69 I E. WALTON NEAR BALDWIN. RCA WALNUT CONSOLE STEREO - AM-FM combination. Exc. con pltlon. SI TO. 476-2337. REPOSSESSED COMBINATION TV GOODY^r’IeRVICE STORE » W. Pike - Pontiac I USED TV'S ...119.95 Sweet's Rd 422 w. Hure __________________ For Sal* Miscallantous 67 16 OR AT LEAST 16 PER CENT off on any tygt at HEATING lob. REASON, Am licenaad. 25 year* txperlegce, operate from my home With very little expense. A.B.C. Heating. 482-5623 before 19 a.m. oi 36" PLASTIC PIPE, 1346 PER IM*. 1" plastic pipe. 55.36 par lOO*. IV." plastic pipe, 51,51 par 100'. IM." plastic pipe. 110.26 oar 100'. p lake pump Hilltop Antiqut Shop Old. docks, furniture, lamps, turn, cherry bed—complete, y bed, aid dishes and miscellaneous items. Come In and leak irr~‘ 5904 Dixie Hwy. at Waterferd 474-1013.__________________ HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL » A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists Of: ■piece living room outfit with 2-piece ‘ivlng room suite, 2 ,r" :ocktail table. 2 tebls D 9 xi2' rug Included. I uallty since 1795. CALL US TO SEE FE S-954S—Jed Vlllely-OL 14622 1 3-YEAR-0LD KIRBY TRADE IN FROM NEW MODEL KIRBYS — *50 UP. CALL STEVE FERGUSON. SERVICE MGR. 674- tonholes. hems, d< sacrifice for $40.2 monthly. 1O-year Call credit d i suit* « cnetr* full ilzi ing mattress an chlnflr visit. Quick, frland H W. PIKE ly, helpful. _ LATE MODE FE 2-9026 | »» Is the number to cell. . OAKLAND LOAN CO. , ■ 202_Pontiec State Bank Bitty. | E. Pika St. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. f E. HURON FE 5-1501 L KIRBY VACUUM .50. Curt's AppIlMCt «l 363 2622. CERTIFIED SEWING CENTER. Is ROOM OtL SPACE HEATER AND 1 — tank. 625-6021. - ■ . F PINK BATHTUB, ONLY 1 scratch, S29.95. 6. A. Thompson. NOS M-59 W, ' fxl2' LINOLEUM RUGS S3.95 EACH Plastic Wall tlk 1c ea. Calling tile — wall penellno. cheap. BAG Tile. FE 44957. 1075 V WOLVE rr; Bl ' I 3051. LINOLEUM RUGS. MOST SIZES, LOANS TO $1,000 To consolidate trills into or i l.------ Sgiek ^— LIVING ROOM SUITE, chair,, bed cot, S75. swivel chair, 535 332-363! MAGIC CHEF AND ROPER GAS , stoves, will se " “ 1 44292, Call eft. I experienced counselor*.!MAHOGANY BUFFET) CHILD'S TA-- insurance^ jivsllebl* -| ble, chairs; baby Hams. FE B-2955. . MAYTAG WRINGER, ALUM. TUB, I puma, <40. 332-3222. 72* COMMERCIAL 1-SECTION TO*> — I------iabiw for 674-2004. f AIR CONDITIONER. e 673-9061. ; IS0R, MEDIUM : COMP.. zed. 673-B659._______ .feXbklTLENT CONDITION "Yes, I did use the bananas In my mud pies! Banana pie happens to be Jimmy’s favorite!” Fer Sale Miscellontous 67 be held outside in tent and building. A truckload of _______ merchandise 'In every weak. Groceries, sporting goods, fiardwr— Items, lewelry, furniture, etc., < 2301 Dixie Hwy., Mon.-Frl. I Sat; 9-4, closed Sun. FE 44205. JOHNSON S HORSE POWER A Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie, Dray-ten, OR 3-9767. >IL SPACE HEATER AND TANK. Good condition, raat. 363-77M. OLIVER SUPER SS END LOADER, terracing blade, alia blade tor night. OR S1S44, Blech Bras. Picnic tables, five sizes lawn ornaments and Mils. I " — Bill's Outpost, 3265 Dlxl< PLUMBING BARGAINS. FI Standing toilet, 616.95. 30- heater. $47.95; 3-place bath______ 659.95. Laundry tray, trim, 619.9S; threaded: SAVE* PLUMBING C( 641.Baldwin. FE 4-IS1L__________ POWER MOWER URVICE HertYa- FE M311 SAVE LAWN, TIME AND MONEY ___PIK revarslbla weal rug, a sectional, .Hackman and ta-d lamps. MA 6-2661. SWIVEL CAR TOP BOAT CAR- — cultivator, radial arm saw, rlc clothes dryer, like new, itn table and chairs. Call after n. OR 3-3SOO. TALBOTT LUMBER BPS house paint No. 211, 16.95 gal. ------------------"-741, GUITAR, 3.PICKUP ACOUSTICAL. Revert imp. with two' 12" speak-ers and tremolo. 4B24137. ____ Reasonable. 4344014. MUSIC FESTIVAL TRADE-IN PIANOS. Choose^from uprights, grands, CONSOUPIANO .........$369 GRINNELL'S (DOWNTOWN) 27 S. SAGINAW PIANO: USED BALDWIN, 1100 3364733 STANDARD GUITAR. NEVER BEEN PIANO >AND ORGAN GUITAR Store EquipniEnt___ COMPLETE EQUIPME MM, cases, coi FE B-7943. Sporting Goods 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. FE 6-4402 BOWS, ARROWS, SUPPLIES COMPLETE SCUBA DIVING OUT-fit and accassorlM. Lika naw, list. If InItraatad, phene FE 44013. GOLF CARTS, S4BO VALUE, BIBS. ■lx convartlbta. Sand—Gravel—Dirt _______76 A BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, gyvel, crushed atone. FE 1-1695. A-l TOP SOIL. PEAT, SAND, GRAV-- and fill. Del. <25-2231. Cook-Dunn alt — ‘wie Inter . latex pi Oakland house whits No. paint, 15.59 gal. I gal. - *"'* *fI' 4-4397 1 TOPSOIL, SAND AND GRAVEL, bulldozer and back hoe available. Ken's Dirt and Dozing,. Clarkston. BLACK DIRT AND TOPSOIL. FE b 44EEI. API Landscaping. SULLDOZING - DRIVEWAYS AND finish grades our apeclalty. ----- —id graval. OR 33730. ............. Immadiata Installation. ASH Sales. MA 5-1591—MA 5-1001. THE SALVATION ARMY REO SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to matt your —B Clothing, Furniture, Applli GOOD RICH TOP SOIL AND BLACK dirt. Dal. FE 44WE. MOD. TRUCKING. _SAND, GRAVEL, dirt. 673-1161 or <734404._____ PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-gjjL^Sand, gravel, fill dirt. OR FT. FLUORESCENT Iignra, igeai for. workbenches, shops, $19.95 value, $10.99, marred. Call at factory show mem. Michigan Fluorascant, 393 Orchard Lake USED OFFICE DESKS, SWIVEL PotE-NaEtiof Dogs FEMALE, i MALES REGISTERED tof-lBo*** puppk -At.^DLE TRIMS^ SHAMPOOS, WkmAm ** **---lUfll 79 Travsl Trailars PUPPitt, MIXED BREED. w&sre® aarvtce far aama. Pi SIfF. -SIAMESE KlTTENS^REGlETMife THE ONLY LOVE MONL. ..... Aactiwi Saiw AUCTION EVERYt WEONESOAY, ----t. Auction rand. 1300 C reset $347 i tor The Dodge Good fill the White Nat" . Spartan Dodge 7:|S kA. 7:30 PM. 1:00 PM. ..JRY SATURDAY iVtRV SUNDAY ........ .— t Buy—Sail—Trade, Retail 7 days ConsIgnmaMs Welcoma bIb auction > Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 PERKINS SALE SERVICE AUCttaMBN Swartz Craak 635-9400 livestock S RIDING 'NORSES, I 13 , CART GENTLE OR SPIRITED HORSES for sal*. Double (D) Ranch. “* Cllntonvlll* Rd. 673-7657. HORSEBACK RIDING EVERY DAY at the Go Man H Corral. Also wast-arn riding lessons. 1100 Millar Rd. 363-4559. NEW HILLSIDE RANCH Trail riding, by the hour tti__ rolling hills «l Clarkston. Beautiful woods, axes I lent horses, guides --- .... ----- p^y rides In-^ boarded. Located a MA 5-2932 tor appointments. YORKSHIRE FEEDER PIGS, 2784 Ldha Pleasant Rd. RA 44396. Hay—Groin—FeeJ «4 I ALFALFA AND BROME, CONDI- , CRIMPED. Poultry CHERRIES. SPRAYED FRUIT -Pick yourself. Me Par quart. Ft 2-7260. RED RASPBERRIES FOR BALE. P144449.________ Farm Eyripgwt 17 BALE ELEVATOR, NO. 4S INTER-natlonal hay baler, Ne. 64 International combine. ME 4-3175 or MA 9-2B32._______________ _____ ?4»L . ____________makes at farm n chinary. Momenta chain s:— - SUMMER SPECIAL NEW WHEELHORSE TRACTORS MODEL NO. 606, 4 h.p. with recoil starter and 32" rotary mower 6649.90. NOW, 6513. MODEL NO. 656. 6 h.p. electric 0 tt. long, l to a ft. wlda Motorcycles 95 1959 HARLEY-OAVIDSON. 8, CaH FE 2-0962, 965 HONDA 305, 3700 MILES. 6575, FE 2-3690 after 4 p.m. 966 BSA LIGHTNING, 61150. EXC. Condition. 2,000 ml, FE S-2719. HARLEY-DAVIDSON, B2S0 4744233 1966 HARLEY-DAVIDSON SPORT* 1964 HONDA TRAIL 90. MAI-1SS6. 1966 HONDA SUPER to A-l CbNbl-S3S0. EM 34416. 1966 TRIUMPH 650 CC THUNDER- 15 HONDA SCRAMBLER, CUl-tomlzod, 363-2766. 6550. 1965, 200 ROAD BIKE. SCLLINO BM.WW ____________________ BRIDGESTONE Trades RETAIL, WHOLESALE 'Swaps in- cabinet. With automatic zlg-zagger for buttonholes, hams, fancy stltch-■ ' . Ranr ------g i, TVi I V. FE 2-3454; LIGHT MANUFACTURING Near UHO and Walton Blvd. 120 - ... 555 smalt house on profsarty ! — CHEVY'siNGLE AXLE DUMP,! ! 14 Chavir impale, Judy : td Tandem axle a 693-6157. aLl' KRONZR SUMP PUMPS, SOLD 1 epalre.d. exchan^H, - W. Shpfflold ^ Best < ......ely plug monthly. 5-yter gui— ... ----. ......— lessons included. Call^M^^m.H .. ... POLLAR 'srLVER.fONi~cbFDl ™"a6er at CERTIFIED SEWING FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET w ™ii uL'eL at CENTER. 343-2622. . 1650 S. Telegraph ------- ■STM1'.11' h- '' ' "pm AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG wing machine — deluxe maple cabinet. "Early Amert- ANCHOR FENCES \(deneD"iuin or°uo ??-Y-mL"t.,rNO MONEY DOWN FE 6-74711 year guaranty. “ PERMUTtT SOFTENER. IS*. EX- wtthPitE,cort ml UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 Brunswick toll. phiLCO ELECTRIC STOVE, 33S - i Good condition. 6514646. _ REPOSSESSED COMBINATION TV- pITcator, Stc''*Forb«InFrRiHng Office Supply, 4500 Dixie, Drayton Plaint OR 3-9767. SarBietp. pe 'b-uw.1 1-A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS, STUD WASHED WIPIfflG * With its bitarior paneling of COA ALUMINUM. NOW RENTING AT 4-YEAR-OLD, TRAINED, REGIS-tered, male, English Pointer. SI SO. 331-6144 iffr 4 p.m. I Office Supplies, >. 693-5121 Ball It Howell - milking parlor, a barns. proiecror aquipmmf. 115 Hblstelnt. . Cash or purchasod wlfh or with- of equal vaiuc. n :k and fool*. Bui Wing* ! go Harbor. much oiIlaRGE 3-BEDROOM price el farm. Convenient, teri BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 $. Telegraph FEB-9641 iinlRNS Opportanitias 59 BEAUTY SALON COMPLETELY equipped. Clientele built up. For appeiAhhent, call FE 2-son be-tween 9-3 er FE 2 5820, "OPLE'^ittaiusaKa. ... aa aJ.u.th Ll^mTwTPEYim Bottle Gos Installation I wo 100 pound cyllMori and aqulp-you havei „Mr i'ca. Call Graa* Plaint Gas CoJ — Kao-1 GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE fe 5-cb72- , a — 40 W. Pike Pontiac j CAST IRON SOIL PIPE, NO LEAD | .no □«/ (or REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES, VS«S' .teel'*.'lSk^i Fter^ AW-j ,^Xla^,^'06mmL,l*nC* _'| V^Z^!^005 JvSpj, 64 repossessed colored and I YOUR WELDW00D HEADQUARTERS DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. Walton _ OR 34*1* Hand Tools—Machintry 61 MONTHS OLD PLOTT A JOHNSON'S is E 4-041 igHt VACATION TRAVEL TRAILERS S17E. WALTON PE 4-5853 12 WEEK OLD BEAGLE PUPPIES AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEII TRAVEL TRA" Since 1922. Guaran See them and Wt I -_______— tion at Werner Trailer Seles, 3091 W. H----- ----- - ------------ Wally SEE THE NEW CORSAIR ON that la being deni tad to tha Ha; Fund. Then came sat our mod of 14* to 23*, hilly ----- You'll find they at. _______ yeu want tor a vacation Ellsworth TroiUr Saks 6577 Dixit Hwy. Pltim 6239.95 up As low 06 8IS down „ PAUL YOUNG MARINA 4030 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plalm OR 44411 " Open 7 days o week BSA Mark II Spocial Hottest rood Mko svollobto -ull race angina — racing stylo 5-14 la Pontiac Press Box Wt*'* MMk ONE MAN Established business with exclusive handlist, high, profit margin, low ayithlU, prestige product m«nu-, factored,by DuPont Co. Excellent 1 growth agpertunity. Owner tmabla I fa hMdtl atone. Rdqulres i small; 1 investment far equipment and ih-vantqqr. Can finance part It need*-! aery. Will train end o**i*t you. Call from 9 to 5.852-1703. Michigan Appliance Co. -----------■ --- | 3382 Dixie ■*- '**“■ Salt Clothing 64 repossessed colored tvi.i——CONCRlTFSTEPS^ Used clothing. »4 Baldwin GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE special: three ]■ tiepi S2i-asj FE 4 1 039 — FE 4-SI62 ___ ^.-*,.^1 Other silts I2.25 • foot. ^ ---Ye 40 Wt - .- ____l895!5 ACME STEP CO. Sale Household Goods ti SINGER. Wholesalers-Contractoritlumeer Ce's.l automatic. "Dial model" makes 8 -10 -12 AND 14 ,b.cndR^^d,'?» tSnS^I fact5Vr!ceiECT* or poymenfs of *6 PER MO. Guar- . »s prices UNIVERSAL CO. FE 10905 fSS1 ^ SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE. Special Summer , Acres ait Free Parking ig needle biel-A Slltch, *S.S2 Monthly gtr, In cablnat. 1 S3.34 monthly SALE. USED BARGAINS nrM.maker I .M.,i retrioeretnrs. i wiy* " *4.SO nx GRAVELV TRACTOR WITH CUL-menthsl tivator. SCanmort Inner, new pad 651.521 and Cover. Attar 6 pjll. FE 34308. I GARDEN TNACTOR' WITH CULTI- _____| vafer and »now abw, 646. 603-2*46. 130 j, GAS FURNACES. CONVERSIONS. HOT WATER BOILERS, CITY AND STATE LICENSE, CALL FOR ItliiMd FREE ESTIMATES. PONTIAC |4M$ HEATING CO. 67*1*11 OR 4*2- ■Kfc! RICHMAN BROTHERS SEWING CENTER 3359283 ■' GOOD USED VACUUM CLEAN-. 837.00 ERS — BIS.50 UR GUARANTEED. ALSO REBUILT KIRBYS WITH ' - E GUARANTEE AS NEW _____' KIRBY SERVICE B SUP-’ PLY CO. 3617 DIXIE HWY. 474-204. ■. ■ HOT WATER HEATER, 30-GALLON §es. cuiaaagfWf Mpraved, WJt value, *39.85 and 8*95, matted Michigan Fluemetnt, 391 Orcfiard COMPRESSOR, MEDIUM) sued. USGMIf. _ LATE MODEL GRAVEL TRAIN, carries St tons; CMC 16-speed V* Diesel; 2 alum, trailers, actual 44,000 mllet. Bargain. MA 3-31*1. 6335 Sashabaw Rd., Clarkston — Musical C 71 AKC ENGLISH SETTER PUPPIES. V 13546*3 . AKC REGISTERED GERMAN Shepherd, 7 mos. blade am' ' male. 662-2476. MORRIS MUSIC 14 S. Telegraph Rd. Acrau trorn TSHtomn sKC REGISTERED. POODLE, Mack, 1-year-old, StS. OR 1-2114. ILL PET SHOP, SS WILLIAAAS St. FE 64411. Mynah bird — APACHE CAMP TRAILERS Factory Demonstrator, never l— to camp In. 6359. c»en daily 'till I p.m., Sunday 10 un. to 5 p.m. BILL, COlLeR. Apache Factory Hometown Dealer. 1 mile APACHEL*CAMP TRAILERS Somethin; Ing — Un: "THE REO IARN" Jacobson Traitor Salts I Williams L«k* Ed. OR 3-SWI STARCRAFT CAMPERS PINTER'S MARINE - 13TB Opdyfcd TED WILLIAMS DELUXE CAMP-Inq trailer, sacrWICt, 473-M17. FREE I FREE! Ve will make your 139 down p ment on new Nandi overhead c Super M er Trail 99. lotlce: Free helmet otter ends Ji I AND SEE THE NEW BASSETT PUPPIES graolI PUPS, MALES AND FE-males, seme registered. FE S-1273. BEAUTIFUL MIXED GREED PUP- 7216 Ceefpy Lk. Rd. 363-5599 VACATION SPECIAL camtartf of hams, to' IM* Dodge Campar, camp Maly awlpaad including forflHa, radla, heater ale. gas iMvt, rtfrlgerefor. 11* t wiring, and dinette. Factory rrenfy for your prafecflen. Caw EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED 6li S*fY90» . BM 37WS OkAND PIANO. REAL NICE, 6149. Upright planoe 660495, Flute, 629. Smlm Moving Co. 171 " Ifi FE 44S64. ENGLISH POINTER PUPS 12-5755 AFTER 4>.M Apache factory hometown ; dally HI I f-1^ i. to 5 p.m. BILL COLLER mile east of Lapeer S Oakland in Badge. FREE-FREE With every Suzuki, 11 months e 12,000 mile warranty. Getter ttwi anything yeu can wear. CUSTOM COLOR _ (AT WBdWlM Treat 1 ct-d- HONDA 50 CC. LATE 1*61. 0* MtLlI Small baby Grand Plane, excell conditlqp, real beauty. Used Spinel Plane, Ilka naw. i now 6450. Used Spinel Plane *269. Gollogher's Music S. Telegraph hell mu* of Orchard Lite* El. FREE PARKING FOR SALE PUPPIES 65. 625-2*70. tMAN SHORT HAIR POINTERS, jst sell. Best effer. All shots, II-nse, peeers, 476-3314. GROOMING AND SUPPLIES OSTER CLIPPERS AND BLADES SSI* Dixie Hwy. ____OR 34970 BRADLEY CAMPER. ALUMINUM cover* lor any pWM*. OR S4S3*. BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum cavers and campers ... any plckup. 4267 LsForetf, Wafer. ford. OR 3-55*6. _____ CAMPING TRAILERS FOR RENT 1491 N. Jesiyn. FE S491I. KITTENS, PRES TO GOOD HOME, 4 weiia, friteed. 6744*36._ MIXED . COLLIE ~ SHtFNtRD ewbwii ir ul gam. POSbLE STUD SERYKI. +TnY fays Apricots, Jet Black. Paper White % Black Miniatures. Puppies ter satq OA 4-3397. A TRAILER M *441 W. Huron L PE 64*4 LOOKING a wed Suzuki? Suzuki owners , Mtttxfleq, (hey would rather CUSTOM COLOR wolverine truck cAMpEffsl Norton 750cc Scrambler Hit. Special. 81325 CAMPING SITES u EM mS* wui-Ki a *RRVICEii •*“ RcNT-A-CYQE *y TMR HOUR, MY OR WRRK. (467 2-BEDROOM MOBIL HOME. II let up kt good park near Ox-rd. Owned by Dan OaIdler. Par formal Ion all Herman Oe taler, Y 24721, Labs Orlan. I^«W*II>. *WL Rate, cheaper then owning. . Rl PARENT A CYCLE »4 S. Weadwari, Behem 447-74*1 W*«fi Rl^jlfi!bba^Si Rr THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOJTOAY, JULY 11, I960 fcr-8 _________H SUZUKI TUKO SALES INC. m B. AUBURN — ROCHESTER scramble pipe, Ipr^ttock JcnmMt pipe, with muffler. ,74 Hcyctes BOYS, GIRLS It", 34" AND W Wi*>t»td**4- IP Ytllow Jacket, W Mercury and trtilor. OK ^,11 BOTTOM. •II COflfTOlt. 628*1309._ »' ALUMINUM BOATS tff. TItAlL. • EH. IP cantos Slot, too lb. ♦rallare Slot. Now IS' flberala, boat# 40 h.p. Johnaon •Itcfrlc* too lb. traitor# battery-box $1350. BUCHANAN'S 9449 Hlphlond Rd._____*3-3301 14' STARCRAFT, 40 H.P. EVIN-rudo electric start. Trtilor, New tarp ond battery, r“ 4730701, after S P.M. _____ 14' BOAT, MOTOR, TRAILER WITH Kctiaorlts. m iill.________ 14' FISERGLAS, 30 HORSB MER-curyi trailer. 334-3430. W' lUUKn mat M.A. Mercury motor and trtilor, MSB. 14' ALUMINUM, TILT BlD TRAIL-ar, Johnson It hp, comp. 1400. 31347H. __________ 15' RUNABOUT WITH MOTOR AND trailer, windshield, steering wheel. Call otter 4 p.m. Real buy. 403 4447. ll' WfUtEHOUSE FIBERGLAS, m h.p. olic Start. osnsrotor. Alley trsItorSTjl. 2B4-77C_______ is' SPEED QUEEN FIBERGLAS. 40 < HP EVINRUDE. 0000 CONDITION. $450. >040 MIDDLEBELT, OPP ORCHARD LK. RD. 14' ALUMACRAPT OUEEN 14, 75 h.p. ivlnrude. cenvortlMs top. Lone Star trailer. f “ --- — SI Ml. Ml 43440.___________ . t4'-7" ALUMINUM AERO-CRAFT boot. Fully equipped. 75 h.p. Johnson Electromatlc motor, power steering. Trailer, full cover and ox- tros. UL 3-3352. _________ ll1 INBOARD CHRIS CRAFT, trailer and canvas. 1400. FE HW4. * tr CHRlAtAAlh1 INBOARD, 4550. 474-1400 tr ALUMA CRAFTGUEiN MER-rle. 50 he. Evlnrudo. Lone Star trtilor, with extras. 01,300. EM 33151. ■ . _______ hr THOMPSON CABIN CRUISER, reasonable, call after 4, OR 31041. 1043 CHRIS-CRAFT It* 0EA-SKIFF, lust prelaaolenally roflnlshtd, bow-ralL full canvas, IU h.p. VS. ' Guaranteed less than 35 hours time. Will trade for cor, or smaller boat or sell outright Tandum axle custom trailer, available. 338-452* days. Coll OR 3-9025. ‘ Ollmor.. Spartan.__________ loot JOHNSON MO to RS ANb boats, Rlso Shell Lake, Aarocraft and Goneva boats and canobs. Big discount on 1*45 boats, motors and canoes. 30 yrs. Repair Experience. TONY'S MARINE 54*5 Orchard Lake Rd. 4033440 ALUMINUM GUARANTEED BOATS, 154.501 aloe flat bottoms, V's, canoes, prams—all at wholesale prices. 3440 Dixie Hwy. Open I to mld-nlght, OR 31544. Bloch Bros. Now Is the Tims to Buy Boats—CLEARANCE-Boots Lone Stars IF to IS* ond MFO Inboard or outboards, GtaMtron Boots, and Fiberglos ond Alum. Canoes as lew as list. Rlvorla Crusler Pontoon Beats, Short Station boat lifts, and also Lent Star Sail Boats, low as 0*75. -GOOD BUYS — Oday Splnt Beat Cost New *7*5 NOW ONLY — *350 Centruy If Inboard, with lot gray, with trailer, S15t5 Like Nawl II' Kit made, (nice) Now trailer, with 40 HP. Johnson tats. CUFF DREYERS (Marble Division) 15210 Hotly Rd. Holly ME 44771 — Open Dolly end Sundays — PINTER'S . Stercorft-MFG-Thompeon Johnson Bets and Motors Wseros Pontoons and Water Bikes Cyprsss Gardens Wsler Skis "Doubts AA Motor Rtpolc Rating" - 1370 Opdyka — Open M, 1st. *-* (175 «t Oakland University Exit) CLEARANCE! 1965 Modols New On Ohpior Pontiac OMy v . MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton Open M FE 34402 FOR MERCURY OUTBOARDS. . Nor's Beefo A Motors, Latte Or! LARSON, INBOARD-OUTBOARD ......................ft. .01 Larson 14 loot outboard .(1145 Used Mil beats. If Is ........ oqulppsd ............ $250 up Rsaulatien 44594. MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES, INC. 3517 Dixie Hwy. - Pontl 473-7441 SAILBOATS. IB* TO W. WAYFAR-or, Wineglass, B-Llon, Aqua-Cat, ' Pacoihlps, F lying Jr* Kite. RenS-ais,' used boats. Avon Sailboats. Call OR 37*41 After ICRAFT, CABIN CRUISER 7" alum., head, full camping i road canvass, loaded with iris, 75 Johnson, trailer. * ' ry mtle! 43,708. FE 5-44S7. . 101 Niw ui Us#d Tracks 103 Naw BRd Us#d Con HELP! wo note too Bore Cadillacs, p«v MANSFIELD ■ AUTO SALES EXTRA lid EXTRA Dollar! «»< ■ .. P0« THAT . EXTRA Sharp Car ltwfs?lhTbl2t~' mt Averill MONET Paid For Sharp Cars nsodhuhdrsdss) sharp caeo-s to ' till wtetite orders, oms to stoc. It a hill city block GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Salas 104 Baldwin FE 345! Across trim Pontiac Statw Bank 1966 GMC i-Tbn Pickup Hooter, defrosters, backup lights, saat baits, 2-spoed wipars, washers, insida rear view mirror $1779 ' Including all taxas < PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC .Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 PAYMENTS TOO HIGH? STOP HERE LAST W* poy mors for sharp, tot* mo at cart. Corvatta* needed. M&N/l MOTOR SALES GLENN'S rvu TUUR U9CU C./AKI CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oskland.at Wtdw Track _____ P E 24314______■ WANTED GOOD USED CLEAN KILL PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR sharp pick-ups. BUD MANSFIELD USE D CARS tut Baldwin, niocks N. of Waltan ItSf BUICK 5 DOQR HARDTOP, STAKES and DUMPS 1969.1944-1945 FORD F-400 — 3x5 Dump* Pram $1995 to $2995 1963 FORD N-750 111" wheel bate, will take IE tody. 332 Cu. In. engine, 5 apaad, 2 ipaed, 92310 ply. $2495 Ola Slock of ether mekee and models to select from ASK FOR Track Dept. FE 54101 John McAuliffa Ford . 277 Watt AAentcebn Ave. 'I Block Beat of Oakland) TRUCKING BUSINESS. INCLUDING ’*1 Inlamellona) Tandem dump, 1943 Chevrolet alngl* exit. P Trucking, *74-2553, a Ftderal Credit Union. PE Foraiga Core 1*5* AUSTIN HEALY, 300, CON ... CALL MR. CA1H.__________ SPARTAN, *55 OAKLAND AVE. (JUST U MILE NORTH OP CABS REPOSSESSION INI BUICK WAGON, AUTOMATIC, WITH PLENTY OP POWER. MUST SELL TODAY FOR PULL BALANCE OF t»7 - NO « DOWN AND LOW WBHOY PAY. MENTS. CALL MR. CAIN. 333 4521, SPARTAN. $1397 ‘Aik For Th* Dodge Goad Spartan Dodge Maw ad Used Cm IBB New ond Used Care IBB Haw ad Bred Cm 1961 CADILLAC REPOSSESSION 1943 BUICK ELECTRA "225" MR VERTIBLE, PULL POWER AND luawrl. ANY OLD CAR OWN AND PAYMENTS OF JUST 01L*7 WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH, 4524, SPARTAN. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 . .... .. ...... iARB -— Yklickk Prop he. « )W. ^ ALWAYS BUYING JUNK COPPER « CENTS AND UPl Spartan Dodge UBBd AitbTretkPmf iei 1*U CHEVROLET PARTS — 454 pojltractlon rear and, I opal' ' Chevy transmission; 4-barrel 352 FORD ENGINE. 3*0 I 1*59 DODGE CORONE parti Sit. IS24270. CHEW • FORD - COMET ■ •VcyL, tort^igftBt; —■ ow orkiS.537-1117. r FOR FALCON 2-door sedan. Ex- 1942 Vokuwagan ’ iharpl 3yai _____■ SEE BOB BURKE ITrecks U FORD IU2,1100. II 1959 13T0N PICKUP. MECMANICAl-ly perfect, good tires, *275. Evan's Equipment, 125171).__ 1*59 CHEVROLET 1 TON, FLAT doted Van. This trectc runs and looks good. Tirol nr* alto very good, mnl te told to hlghoit bidder. Asking 11)95. "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE ------CHfiflfaLET------ Ml 32735 — I 1*43 tCONOLINE BUS DELUXE. 07*5. ME 4378, ___________ 1*43 #Djl6 F-250 1-TOM #-CYLlN-dor with 4-sgead Iranson I salon. 1 owner Ilka naw. JEROME FORD, Redmttr's Fart Dealer. OL i-fim. 1*44 CHEVROLET PacmhIB*. Flying Jr. Kill, rental*, uaad boats. Avon Sailboate. 152-3211 — it John R, Rd., Rachooter. SAILBOAT, 16' SNIPE CLASS, Fl-borglao hull, aluminum matt, ateel trailer, ready to Mil, $450. 4*2 0940, ■ GLA54PAR — MIRRO CARAFT_ — STEURY — 4BRUMMAN - KAYOT - EVINRUDE - PAMCO. — "HARD TO FIND - EASY TO DEAL WITH" MMWilMjS AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phan* AAAIn 3217*. . TERRIFIC BUY. W PONTOON. I»*4 USED BOATS 5* jSBrrapi. .77 „ 15' Loht Star fiberglass, 45 Mer-. cury, trailer, convertible top, S**5 15* wwoheeoe. ^tbargjiM #. » p-Johnson otectric, trailer. $*95. MANYOTHERS LATE & SEA MARINA I. Blvd. at loolnaw PE 4*5*7 Why buy in tht dark? Wo h*vo • fin* lotocllon of steed . complete ouim* of bool, meter, treiter. meewy JoR~~''~~ '—■ -1 rvdot with full owl.. Etch boot checked out In . YOUNG, INC. ** “T or oaiii ly * AM to 3PM Hm. g o.m. to I p.m. 1964 Ranch, ero Pickup with l beige finish, radio, hooter, Cruise-O-Metlc, whltewrolis. Now Only - $1396 BEATTIE DEALER S ..id in water* l the double stop 11 OR 3-1291 *45 FORD SUPER d*r with itewd load pkur. El owner Ufa n Rocheetert F4 ladlo, JER( M-CYLIN- ‘ ‘OH: FORO ________wmi. Von .Imck- ’Sr^M/sr®, Gnmaldi IMPORTED CAR CO. NO Bddwr _________FE 544 rs Ford Dealer OL 1-*71l. Heavy Di^ty One-Ton Pickuf>s springs, liras, . 1960-1964 GMCs and FORDS - $695 uid r. rWLL TKILC $397 DOWNEY'S New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland Noxt to .Rainbow car with, 10 mile south of Dixie and Teitgroph Rds 1963 BUICK Special four-deer, radio, hooter, au. tomaflc, V0. $695 ] DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. Now Used Cor Display Art* 1084 OAKLAND 33B-0331, 338-0332 1942 SUNBEAM ROADSTER, THIS CAR It IN EXCEL-1 LINT COWMTMNj RADIO WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY N O * pOyN, Aaeume 1963 BUICK iaxt the whole family ol this roomy nine etHOMor _ Artie white exterior,,with kid-proof oil vinyl trim. Autemefb — plots factory equipment am to toll today. FULL FRICI $1197 "Aik for the Dodge Got Guys In the White Hot Spartan Dodge wodjy poymonto CREDIT A4 _. MR HAROLD TURNER CALL CREDIT MGR. Pirkt ot HAROL FORD, Ml 37500. GM 963 VOLKSWAGEN * KARMAN Ghli convertible. 8875 full price i BOB BORST If FIAT ARARYh, 1500. SPYOER, RADIO. SUN MUST MOVE 1*44 CHEVROLET con vert fbte. No money down, 114.17 woeiijy. Coll AAT. Ocott, 333*743. ‘ DOWNEY'S Naw Uiad Car Location ,1084 Oakland N*xt to rainbow car waob, W mile oeuih et'Dixie and Telegraph Rds. 1964 CHEVROLET Slx-passtngar station wagon. Six cyllnitro, radio, heater, automatic. $1395 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. Naw Uaad Car Display Area 1084 OAKLAND . 338-0331, 3384)332 I price. *14*. ■H R North *f 14 m 20*55 Van Dyke at I Mi TRUPELL PI FORO STATION WAGON V-l, I ....................,,..,,.fltt Sava Auto , PE 5-3271 [ feel fine—why should offering to help with the dishes make you think I'm sick?” New end Used Cere White ............ ...... 100.000 mite Vogue tiros. Birmingham 1 owner now car trad*. Bank rata*. Full prlc* only $1495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLRR-PLYMOUTH *40 S. woodward_____Ml REPOSSESSION 19*1 CADILLAC COUPE MUST SELL TODAY. NO I DOWN; ONLY t»JS WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH. 33S-4S3I, SPARTAN, 155 OAKLAND AVE., (JUST 14 MILE NORTH OF CAM AVI.) EBADT FOR . PI ANft PAYMENTS OF JUfT ..... WEEKLY CALL MR. CASH, 333 452*. IPARTAN. 1944 BUICK ELECTRA HARDtOF, complete power, midnight blue, air eondlttenad, excellent, real bar-galn at EbJI». Ml S4M. JMF 1964 Buick Custom Wagon 'Ith champagne geld flnlah, v addle brown leather Interior, I 3 power oh Halting for y $1489 VERY CLEAN,! •l 1944 BltlCK BFECIAL CONVERT I 1%/power ateerhtg. brakes, ~ $495 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. New Used Car Dlfafaay Area 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331, 338-0332 Ission. r’«nty"only**449'down and weakly payments of Sl*.tf. HAROLD TURNER REPOSSESSION — 1*44 VW 2 DOOR ‘UW ■ ■ finish, No Money Dawn. $5.47 _ 444 5. WOC y. Call Mr. Maaon, at PEI BIRMINGHAM SPORT CAR CENTER W* Sell for Less 50 Select New and Used Authorized Dealer MG - Austin Healy — Sunbeam — Triumph *-Morgan — Fiat ' Complete Parte •II imoorls. Bank I 54 CADILLAC 4 DOOR, Al SwiBANKRUP™ *Rh 4S low at as Gown? Try King Plan Financing. Cell 1959 RED CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE - $450 NEED A CAR? um u, care. Credit. I accepted. No m. CBN jKI Gcpitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Jute oaot ef Oeklomd / Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth TM Oaklend Ave. FE 2-9150 Cadillac ) 1961 Coups i ArreOjtl^WjB beige^ttnleh, •nd’^Erekeo. A^trSy unteuo and h/xuripeo owomoMlo. , Batter hurrir*n tteio one) $245 DOWN , ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac ‘ Cadillac Cadillac 1963 Coupe DeVille Baautllul white tlnlah end one lo lust right tor your summer vocation. A low, Jow $345 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's |tew CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 lMS'CORVETTE, 2 TOPS, 345 IS CHEVROLET IMPALA 3 DOOR dtop. Rod finish ond automatic i power steering ond brakes. 1061 1959 CHEVROLET I AlltOrdllld Kingswood 9-passenger 4-1 MOTOR SALES door Station Wagon. Full "35 °,rv?i7wl^t*otTJitgreph1'4410 price $245 with bank ms chevy 4, stick, radio r . .. . white walls, vinyl Interior, ~~~ rates. Many more to! boii^ciock. 14,sop -■ ■ chooss from at KESSLER'S 196O"fAtC0N . Rod, auto., radio, hooter ' $195 Weekly payments .S2. STAR Auto Sales 60 S. TELEGRAPH K 8?661 1961 T-BIRD $1197 Spartan Dodge FE 3452t Village ■Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 INS IMPALA SPORTS COUPE, white with Mock vinyl top, block Intorloor, 327 otlck, FE S-174S. JMF John McAuliffa Ford Al Hanoute Inc.l 1965 Chevy Chavrolat-Buick Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Impala Supar Sport Convertible, candy apple red, w ermine e/hite interior,150 H.P. ' the floor. This ( Haw and llssd Cars 1M LLOYD'S 1964 FORD Gelexle sli# custom twqdoor. Vi. euteenetlc, booutHul Flamingo rep. Showroom condition. Wl dim. finance balance el tl ,403. One Year Sllvarcraet Warranty Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 STATION WAGON. 3 1964 Ford Galoxit 500 XL 2. deer hardtop, ted finish, bled vinyl roof, V3 onglno, radio heater, CrulaeKTMotlc power cteer Ing. Only — $1795 BEATTIE ir FORD DEALER 51 744 T-BIRD HARDTOP, 3-WAY power, a sweetheart, low mileage. n Dyke, at • Ml TRUOBLL F( LLOYD'S 1965 MUSTANG two-Ooor hardtop "lit" VI, Cruise O-Matlc, power steering, 1961 FALCON tation wagon. Automatic transmit sion, radio, hooter. Rod wlth White interior, Pull __ 44*7. 15 down ond iiiuma weekly payments of $5. Wo handle and orrango oil financing. Call Mr. Dm at; ' FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM. Just oast of Oakland ftl FORD WAGON, VI, AUTO. - REPOSSESSION 1*40 CHEVROLET IMPALA. MUST r SELL TODAY. NO t DOWN, SS.47j WEEKLY, CALL MR. jCASH, 33*-! 452*. SPARTAN, 155 OAKLANO Ave. (|u*t VA MILE NORTH Opi $2088 LLOYD'S r. Bucket Mats, au-ly excellent buy. No. weekly poymonto ofi One Year Siivercrest Warranty Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSYJROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low Ai $49 Down -and $49 Par Month HAROLD TURNER Marvel Motors\t 1*41 CHEVY 4, AUTOMATIC, EXC„ 4395. 4*2-5»7t. 1*41 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTl- GM mi CHEVY 4-DOOR SEDAN, BEL121 Air, clean as a — beto as ohtrpl $495, I John R NORTH at....I _______ 20955 VanDyka at I Mite 5L 7-0007 TRUPELL FORD (Owner's Gate McArmall 1*43 Cadillac a white flnlah, nimoor nxa -condition. 2-yoaP warranty. SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 Acraoo tram Pontiac State flank Cadillac 1964 Coup* DeVille Beautiful Mu* finish and factory air condttlanlng. Just right ter summer driving P’““'$345 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac 1961 CHEVROLET* kx>r. Automatic Ironsmlulon, 4-cyllnder onglno, redid, heate — cellent condition. No money Capitol Auto TRANSMISSION, _ RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN,-'. Assume weekly poymonto or N.M. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Pork! Of HAROLD TURNRR FORD, Ml 4-7S00. 1944 CHEVELLE SUPER SPORT 394, toko over payments or S2.300. FE 2-4574.___________' 1*44 MONZA .• ...i V-..fiAS 1944 PLYMOUTH S----- 1*42 tHfcVROLET IMPALA SUPCR Sport convortlblo with 4-sp«r ‘ transmission, $1,W5 at BOB BORST 1*42 CORVAIR WAGON. CLEAN — WOULD YOU BELIEVE JEROME 1*42 Corvalr, 4 apsad tram .. 1*42 Ford Goloxle SOS .. .. “10 Pontiac Catalina Coupe . • BETTER DEAL" l n McAuliffa For nd Ave. FE CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT j'' with automatic transmission. Black] finish with black Interior. FulU -price only 121*5 at. . 1 Autorama | MOTOR SALES hard'Laka Rd. ___N«lw_1^M*_af_T*rlegr 4 CHEVILLI SS 3 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 CALL MR. CASH, 334-4521, 9 TRANSMISSION, ________ AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, PULL POWER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Asauma weekly payments et I4.*S, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porfa at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml Autorama MOTOR SALES 2435 Orchard Lobe Rd. 4*2-441* 1 Mite Woelof Talaaraah 1*45 MUSTANG OT CONVERTIBLE, racing groan, saddle Interior, 4 speed, 2*9 4-barrat. disc, brake*, whitewalls*and wire wheal*cover*' iaise. mi 7-3S23. __ ROCHESTER DODGE Drive Away—Save Mora Pay HM ROCHESTER SELL TODAY. NO S DOWN, $7.f! WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH. XU-4521, SPARTAN, 155 OAKLAND AVE., (JUST \k MILE NORTH OP CASS AVE.) McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL OL 1-1551 IM1 ROCHESTER 1962 FORD 2-door Clean radio, heater, yours lor only — 1595 HOMER EIGHT Motors Inc. ' On M24 In Oxford 0A 8-2528 1961 IMPERIAL Air condltlenad (rant and re power steering, brakes, soot* a windows. Almost now tlroi. Tl car Is Immeculetel You can ha the prestige ef Imperial tor 1 tewpneooryjy^ Rank Financing BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1942 FORO GALAXIE 500 4-DOOR. VI, automatic.power steering and power brakao, solid. block flnlah - Lika now $995 at JEROME FORD. Rocheetor'i Ford C---------- OL l-*711. ____________J i R North Of 14 Mite 515-4000 Dyke at I Mite ‘ ----- rRUDELL FORD 1943 FORD, CONVERTIBLE WITH V-B ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMIMION, POWER BRAKRS AND POWER STEERING, RAOIO AND H EATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume^ ---.....------- -* nojSiT WILSON Pontiac Cadillac FE 2-7321 or 1*SS CHEVY 409, 4 SPEED, pool-traction roar and. excoll. shape. 4to Pontiac Troll, Welted 1963 CHEVROLET Ebony Bleck impale Hardtop with Prices oteshed contrasting rad trim. Povrarglido ------- V-* ond power stearing and brakea. PULL PRICE PE GdSEI DODGE, GOOD CONDITION, good second car. (ISO. 34 N. Shore. Apt. 2, Lake Orion. 1959 DODGE. EXCELLENT CONDI- lfSS CHEVY. RUNS $«89——■— 1965 Malibu 4-Door VS, eutematlc, power oteoring -brakes Hotter, radio and white-watte. Only _,___ ___ $1989 CRISSMAN CHEVROLET . (On Tap et South MM ROCHESTER OLM7E EViES, I AND______ tn Et, HS7iPWm.tM.pgte 1*57 Ford Station Wagon — 1*44 CHEVY 4 DOOR 4 CYLIN6ER stick, excel tent condition, VMS. 473-13*1. Strenehee. ____________ Bargain Minded Used Car Buytrs Attention Our 12th ANNIVERSARY SALE "OK" USED CARS. Shop the Bta "OK" Used Car Let et MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES "Chtvyland" dll Oektend Avoeee at Cate FE 44542 $1347 "AM for Tha JDodgeJSood Guys Spartan Dodge INI CHEVY 4 DOOR, AUTOMATIC. Good condition. RoMMeitotoM 3-5744. Coll evenings. *44 CH^VY 4 vertlblo. Son payments. 297 Hickory L h6me of OK USED CARS Haskins Chevy-Olds '' On US10 ot M15 MA 5-2604 4*44 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTl Midnight Wu* with white lop nd now tiros. IIMl. FE 5414] 1*44 CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT. "SET" onglno, power oteoring, brakoo end window*, vlnyt top. 3 to choos* Yarn. A* tear as .*1495 Autobahn MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW OOALjnt W Mil# north ot Mlrocte Mil* Ft $-4531 140 DODGE DART CONVERTIBLE, good condition, private owner $495. Cell 4iBM3S*. ______________ 5l LANCER, Ideal second cor, _____r seats. Extra iharp, *1,0*5 at JEROME FORD, — ——— Ford Pea ter. OL 1-*711._ MOVE 1944 T-BIRD. NO money down, I14J7 weekly. Cat' Mr. Scott, 333-7143. Lloyd's. • DOWNEY'S Ntw Used Car Location 1084 Oakland Marvel Motors 251 Oakland Av*. PE JMF 1965 Ford XL 2-door Fastback In bronxa, 390 VS 4 spood, cone matching bromo vinyl bucket. *4 Thl* It a beautiful car with 7 let* of GOII Just $79 down, nance balance of only — $1991 "It only tolwi a minute to Gat a BETTER DEAL” at 1965 T-Bird Convertible ladle, hooter, Crulse-O-Mattc, awar steering, b $3195 BEATTIE Cherry rad, \____ _______ bucket*, CrullO O MallC, r*____ tread whltewallo, still In naw c warranty. Only ISf town, Hnan $1766 matching bucket sea* PULL PRICE $1197 Spartan Dodge $$$ Oakland Av*. » (14 Mite N. at Casa Avt.f 1964 FALCON Four-door, standard radio, hotter. $695 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE. INC. Naw Used Car Display Area 1084 OAKLAND 3383331, 338-0332 1M4 AaiJMi'E, 3N, 4-SPEED, SSLs. 1944 FORD SEDAN GALAXIE, 500, - 1944 DODGE PO- 5-4101 McAuliffa. 1964 DODGE "4" (tick, axcattent liras, acano special. Meal 2nd car. Oaed « Mian. Only 1 $995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH U t --T All John McAuliffa Ford 430 Oakland Av*. PE S-41M 1*45 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARDTOP, radio, heater, extra dean 1-awnar car. *14*5 lull price at JEROME FORD Rochastecs Par* Dealer OL 1-9711. 1*64 FORD 219 STICK, NICE CON dltton. si 1*5. H. A H. Sate* OR HBI Own San. 1964 Ford Golaxit 500 Hardtop 2 door, with a white flnlah, tea vinyl reef, radio, hatter. Crate*' Matlc. whitewalls. Only — $1595 -BEATTE 1*65 FORD FAIRLANE 4 official's Car. las R at JEROmZ FORD Rachwtor'i Paid Boater. OL MTU. . IMS MUS- autfxnatic, (11*7 1 LUCKY AUTO >V. 1940 W. WMa Track FafHtsi if*jerome" ford) ■ _______ Ford Dealer. OL 1---------- ms FORD FAIRLANE 4-OQOR only tljts at JEROME FORD, Rochester's Par* Diaisr. OL 1-9711. 1*44 FORD GALAXIE SM, 4 DOOR hardtop, vi, auto^radte tear mHa-aga, perfect emditte*. Privet* awn sTmo-itS. FAIRLAhif! wi!"A W. (TRATH- I t P-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1966 Wm fgl fml Cm \H 1965 FORDS^S. JnEvIw AS LOW AS $49 DOWN Poyments os low as $11.95 HAROLD TURNER ' FORD, INC. 444 s. WOODWARD AVI. . BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7W Now md Usd Cm 104 *ug m6vi ^^TeRCURV ST* < it£b» V "HIT*6fc. T CYL- n»nt«l^ tfwwn REPOSSESSION 13 LINCOLN CONTI- ___________ IMS MERCURY 1 dear, Mu* »utom»tlc, VI, No I Money Down, 84.(7 weekly. Call Mr. Meeen el El Mill McAullffe.1 DOWNEY'S Now Used Car Location 1084 Oakland Next to Rainbow cor waeh, V mile eouth oi Dixie end Telegrepl Rdt. 1960 MERCURY TWo-door, radio, heeler, eutomellc $95 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILEe INC New Utod Car Display Area 1084-OAKLAND 3384)331, 3384)332 etearing, v-8, - - m^SffleAJVve.), 1755 PONTIAC. GOOD CONDITION. New tires. Cell OR 3*671. After 6. FE 8-0848. 1*S7 PONTIAC STICK SHIFT, RICH BILL SMITH'S USfD CARS 462 N. PERRY ST. FE 44241 automoMto . 1*46 PONTIAC. Yet, folks, aaeli .... 81295 * Special! ES BUT, AT SPARTAN DODGE you can buy a 1763 Tempest Sport Coup* for lust 1377. SSTOekland * - FE S-4538. 1*62 PONTIAC GRAND PR IX, Exd. condition, new tires, wire wheels, verb*sonic, sky Mu* with whit* Interior. FE 8*875. ____________ 84. W* handle and arrange a financing. Call Mr. Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto REPOSSESSION 1763 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, POWER AUTOMATIC AND READY FOR SUMMER FUN. MUST SELL TODAY. NO I DOWN AND JUSTflljr WEEKLY. MUST SELL TODAY. CALL MR. CASH, 33*4528. SPARTAN. HAUPT PONTIAC 1*64 PONTIAC Grand Frlx, automat to Power steering, brakes. 871 down. 1(65 GTO with 4 speed, and rail) ' utter 877 down. VENTURA 3 deer herdtep, au natto, power steering, brakes w car trad*. 1(63 CUSTOM! Wtgon, S speed, trlnr / 82 1964 Pontiot Catalina 4-Door 'Hardtop. Sparkling aqua finish wtttl matching trim, automatic transmission, power eteer-—I breket, ladle, heater and $1795 1965 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door sedan, with a beautiful "$2195 1*63 FORD FAIRMNE 2-Door Sedan. Standard transmission, V-S engine, beautiful Mu* finish. IMS BUICK ELECTRA "33S" ConvertlMt. ■ wheel, Dynaflow; Go First Cleu .. 1MB BUICK (doer. Fewer steer-Ing, automatic, 35,600 actual mile* 1-owner, almost like new .................. .... 8875 Infd CHEVROLET IMPALA 3- ------------- "........ T 1M4 CHEVELLE. 2-door. 1*45 TEMPEST LeMANS 2-OOor Hardtop. Standard trensmieslen, V-S "324" engine. Feet end eporlyl ......... .......... 81775 brake* ................. 81(71 1*64 BUICK ELECTRA "335" convertible. Full power,, automatic, maroon finish Iwhlto ^bp ... 82275 1*64 BUICK WILDCAT. 4-Door Hardtop. Power ' steering (7) Movie: “Morgan the Pirate’" (i960) Steve Reeves, Valerie Lagrange (9) Dennis the Menance (50) Superman (56) Friendly Giant 1:11 (56) Merlin the Magician 6:10 (2) (4) Network News (50) Little Rascals (56) Discovering America (I) Marshal Dillon 7:00 (2) Greyhound Derby (4) Gfcgo Pierrot (9) Movie: “The Red Sheik’’ (I960) Charming Pollock, Mel WeUee (50) Soupy Sales (56) (Special) America’s Crises 7:10 (2) To Tell The Truth (4) Hullabaloo (7) 12 O’clock High (50) Lloyd Thaxton 8:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (4) John Forsythe (56) Museum Open House 0:30 (2) Vacation Playhouse ' (4) Dr. Kildare (7) Jesse James (50) Merv Griffin (54) U.S.A. 9:55 (9) News 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) John .Davidson (7) Shenandoah (9) Movie: “Gunamoke in Tucson” (1968) Merit Stevens, Forrest Ticker 0:20 (2) Hazel (7) Peyton Place 10:00 (2) Mike Douglu (4) Run far Your Life . (7) Avengers (50) Talent Scouts 10:20 (9) 20/20 11:00(2) (4) (7) (0) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa « . Miss Jessie Binford, 90, called the “conscience of Chicago” in her more than 60 yean with that city’s famed settlement house, Hull House, died Saturday. She left her native Marshalltown for Chicago in 11:20 (2) Movie: "Forbidden 1902 after hearing Hull House’s Planet” (1956) Leslie director, Jane Addams, lecture Nielsen, Walter Pidgeon on social issues. 1 (4) Tonight Patti Finds Casino Patrons Torn 'Twixt'Waltz/ Hymns ... she’s the gal hells and other n ■ ■p By EARL WILSON NEW YPRK—Patti Page’s getting a new kind of reputation .. she’s the gal who sings hymns in Nevada’s alleged gambling hells and other nighttime denp of iniquity. I get almost as many requests for hymns as I do for ‘Tennessee Waltz,’ ” Patti said while here for a concert at Lewiaohn Stadium. “I do get complaints from people who say they don’t think a gambling casino is the kind of piece for hymns to be sung,” Patti said. “I tell them then they shouldn’t be in such places and they wouldn’t hear hymns sung there.” Patti laughingly added, “Mama used to say WILSON me meaner we are the more we go to church get straitened out.” I mentioned that the late Heywood Broun used to write columns with a Bible and a bottle of gin on his desk—getting a little inspiration from each. Patti sang at the stqdium with 91 musicians. Her husband Charlie O’Curran warned her: 'It’ll take an hour just to pass out the parts to the musicians. And if you go overtime—that’s $10,000.” It was so dignified that her conductor Rocky Cole was required to use his real name just for that night . . . Rocco Ootooci. ★. ★ w “He had to go back to Rocky Cole next day,” Patti said. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Hard-worker Jerry Lewis taped two Merv Griffin shows one evening to plug “Three On a Couch” . . . Lies Helper, the she-he recently of Dudes ‘n’ Dolls, got married in Maryland to “Pretty Boy Ernie” ... DagmarTl tour Ohio in “The Women’ with Gloria Swanson and other stars. AadTe Ponunbennu busted a leg diving into a pool, but he’s still hosting at Ronnie’s 60 restaurant, on crutches,.. . Leona Gage, a former Miss U. 8, (till it was discovered the was married), will open at a burlesque theater in Coney Island . . . A prominent entertainer’s canceling some of his summer -Stock dates—advance sales are lagging. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Shelby Friedman claims his hometown was always behind the times: “For instance, we didn’t get June huge till nearly August.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Narrow minds, like narrow streets, aren’t able to handle much traffic.”—Arnold Glasow. EARL’S PEARLS: A fellow mentioned that his wife has a terrible voice: “She’s the only person who ever got a letter from Mitch Miller, asking her not to sing along.” Dresses and taxes have one thing in common. Everybody says they can’t go any higher—but they ido . . . That’s earl, (Tha Hall tyaOcata, lac.) — Radio Programs— ——---1__ ; g . ■ WJR(700) WXYZfl 270) OClWfOO) WW-KtoO) WCAW1190) WPONfl 460) WJSK(1500) WHHfM(94.7l *:**—WJR, N*wi, Sportl 9WJ, NN» WXVZ. Nm sport* enum, Jmm. SSmc wjbk, Th9 Or9*n Homo! WCAR. NMfe Jo* Bocaraili WPON. M9W*. Iporti WH*t, Unci* Jay Show 9i1S—WW * Sports 4:30—WXYZ, Boalnau WWJ, H9VtOP> wjh. Cm* WJBK. |M 4:49—WJR. L WPON, News. Johnny I ram WHF>. Dlnnar Concart t:i5—wxyz. i«t Alan. Me 9:9*—WHFI, Srlhah Jaa CXLW, Mualc - WWJ. Now*. Soorti WJH, Newt. Music 9:99 WWJ. Newt, Sportl WHFI, Jack Fuller l*«9»-#xVzr Danny Ttylar 11:99—WJR. Ntwi, Sportl Mualc HI Dawn TUiSDAY MORN I NO Site—WJH, Mwk Hall WWJ, MOW* CKL.W, Now*. Bud Davlat WFOH. Mow*. Arlitna VMM DMnM WJBK. Ntwi, BOOM, ■«- WJR. Now*. Music Hall WRON, Now*. Bob Lawranc* 7:30—WJBK, Van Patrick 9:9B—WJR, Now*. Sunnyald* 9:30—WJR, Mwk Hall MMfjK dm WCAR, N«wa, Sandari WWJ Nowa, 9 Bay WHFi. Undt Jay CKLW, Jo* Van filt—WJR. Optn Houao WWJ, Aak Ntlflhbor 9>48—WJR, La* Murray Good lliae-WJR. Now*. Arthur WHFI. Ntwi, Encoro . WJBK, Nawt, Shirley E 11:39—WWJ, Mtiedy Farad mmmmm Annual All-Star Game TONIGHT AMERICA’S CRISES, 7:M p.m. (58) The first of a two-part study of poverty in America’s cities examines some problems “Confronting the antipoverty program. JOHN DAVIDSON, 9:00 p.m. (4) Singer Nancy Sinatra, comic Flip Wilson and singer-songwriter Brian Foley are tonight’s guests. AVENGERS, 10:00 p.m. (7) A Cabinet minister is caught stealing top-secret documents. Emma and Steed take it up from there. TUESDAY BASEBALL, 12:30 p.m. (4) The 37th All-Star game between the Americas and National Leagues is telecast from Busch Memorial Stadium, St. Louis. Detroit’s A1 Kaltae, Dick McAuUffe and Bill Freehan are scheduled starters. City Boy Struck While Riding Bike A Pontiac boy is to satisfactory condition it Pontiac General Hospital liter being struck while riding his bicycle. Saturday. . * * ★, Percy Patrick Jr., 11, son of Mr. and Mrs, Percy Patrick of 271 Prospect was hit on Wilson near tbe intersection of Going, accor&lng to Pontiac police. Donald E, Evans, 26, of 174 N. Astor, driver of the car, told police be swerved to a v o-1 d another bicycle just before hitting the boy. • '* ★ * The accident occurred ju >t after 3 p.m., police said. (7) Movie: “The Saxon Charm” (1016) Robert Montgomery, Susan Hayward (0) Movie “Bush Country Adventure” (1947) Chips Rafferty, Helen Grieve 1:19 (4) Beat the Champ (0) Window on the World 1:11 (7) News 1:31 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours 2:N (7) Dragnet TUESDAY MORNING 0:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 4:20 (2) News 1:21 (2) Summer Semester ■ 4:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:1$ (4) Today (7) Three Stooges 7:11 (2) News 7:31 (2) Happyland 8:90 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:ti (7) News 1:31 (7) Movie: “National Velvet” (1944) Elizabeth Tay. lor, Mickey Rooney 1:51(9) Morgan’s Merry - Go-Round 1:11(2) Andy Griffith (4) living (9) Romper Room 1:31 (2) Dick Van Dyke f:5i (4) News 11:11 (2) I Love.Lucy (4) Eye Guess (0) Hercules 10:25 (4) News 10:31 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye 11:11 (2) Divorce Court (4) Chain Letter (7) Supermarket Sweep-stakes (0) Vacation Time 11:31 (4) Showdown (7) Dating Game (50) Dickory Doc AFTERNOON 12:10 (2) News, Weather, Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Luncheon Date 12:10 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Special) All-Star Game (7) Father Knows Best (9) People in Conflict (50) Movie ~i*nm Rwmnman.. :90 (2) Love Of Life (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “Now Voyager” (1942) Bette Davis, Paul Henreid 1:25 (2) News liN (2) As the World Turns 2:40 (2) Password (7) Newlywed Game Bandits 'NM ■Take Some, | leave Some DETROIT (A — A pair of bandits robbed Francis Woods Sunday but they were nice about, Woods, 45, pf Detroit, was leaving the bowling alley where he is a clean-up man when he was set upon by tbe robbers. One bandit asked Woods how much money he had. ★ ★' ’ ^r; "Fourteen dollars,” Woods replied. “OK,’’ said the bandit, “W e’ll take ten." 2:20 (fc) House Party (7) A Time fur Us (50) Love That Bob 2:55 (7) News 3:90 (2) To Tell the Truth (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows 4:10 (2) Mike Douglas • N (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House 4:15 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:0# (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (56) Koltanowski on Chess 5:31 (56) What’s New 5:45 (7) Network News 5:15 (4) Here’s Card Duvall KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen$OCQOO COMPLETE AU9 7-Ft. Kitchen$OQQOO COMPLETE £39 INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Countei Tog»s, Sink with Faucets e----; — Arf CALL DAY OR N IGHT * ADDITIONS* FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION Late Valentine Helps to Save Marine's Life MILWAUKEE, WJs. «I -ferine has written to his parents in Milwaukee how a late valentine card and lady luck joined forces to South Viet Nam to save his life. Lance Cpl. Robert W. Montar, 19, wrote that he had the card, two letters and a cloth fatigue cap stuffed in the liner of his combat helmet to be kept dry. Then his squad encountered a Viet Cong ambush. “I got shot and a round went through my helmet,” he wrote. “I ducked a^n d checked for blood. No blood. Checked my helmet and saw a email hole where the round went to.” The card, letters and cap, he uid, had deflected the machine gun bullet. Church Council Bias} Seen Aimed at U. S. GENEVA (UPI) - The World Council of Churches (WOC) tomorrow opens a 12-day ence expected to bring sharp denunciations of stepped-up U.S. North Viet Nam. The churchmen, from more than 200 Anglican, Orthodox and Protestant denominations with some 400 million members, also were expected to criticize racial injustice and Western complacency about the world’s widening gap between rich and poor. Be Sun.. 15 Years ALUMINUM Skiing Experience ‘TED”... It’s The Bestjleally! Contractors ... We Can Save You Money! No In-Between Costs HOMEOWNERS ... SAME DEAL!!! NO MONEY DOWN-No Payments ’til September BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 731 NerthPirry M*mnr P**w*t At** cewsar *r c FE 3-7833 Operator on Duty 24 Houtb Daily .1 WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS - MO CHARGE 15 W. LAWRENCE Pontiac, Mich. 6 Month* Bwfara First Faymrant ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING HOME IM PROVEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS MOMUOKn No Saltomin’* Comm■■sion-Mo Middleman Profit! MO MONEY DOWN —FHA and BANK RATES NO PAYMENTS TE NOVEMBER Mombor PowH— g Chamber el Commerce Coll Anytime ... f FE 8-9251 (Ho Oblitatiea) 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC | Sow IS THE TIME FOR HU PBl^j • BEDROOMS 1 • BATHROOMS 1 FAMILY ROOMS | M395 • REG ROOMS e BASEMENTS • DORMERS • ATTICS • KITCHENS 1 FINISH^ BASEMENT New A Plan and Idem io Suit Your Heads • IDEAS and Income • MATERIALS , from $695 FOIE DECORATOR SERVICE NO MONEY DOWfl FREE ESTI MATES Available Up to , t Years ■■ M MO In Pontiac Sincm JE 931 \5W/tm ct> 1 032 West Huron Street FE 4-2597 NIGHTS ! SUNDAYS PHONE: 512-0(41 MA 4-1911 (11-2142 EM S-23M MY 3-1319 D—II THE PONTIAC PRESS; MONDAY, JULY H, im pjMbrMi.r.Q.kM--------------1 Mailbag Yields Facts on Marriage, Murder and Mosquitoes ... ' ■ .I. —in---------1 By HAL BOYLE think that war, no matter how wore long robes, Roman sol- have probably been written Brunettes look hairier than However, the mind can take QUESTION: How does an accordion produce music? ANSWER: The accordion and harmonica belong to the same group of musical instruments. Tones are produced by the vibration of small metal tongues which are set in motion by air being forced past them. In tke harmonica, the player’s breath supplies the air. In the accordion, bellows built into the instrument produce an air blast, being pushed in or pulled out by the player. The simpler,'older type of accordion (.top) produces one note when the bellows are pushed in and a key depressed, and another when the bellows are pulled out. Ibis makes it possible to play a tune on one side. On the other are a couple of big keys which when pressed down give an oom-pah-pah accompaniment in simple chords. You can’t get complicated music with it, bat by jerking the bellows rhythmically, a gay, swinging effect is By HAL BOYLE NEW YOR$ (AP) - Things a columnist might ndglr .know if he didn’t open hit Marriage expectancy is rising along with life expectancy.. Average newly-1 weds today can look forward to living together 43 years — un-of course, they try di- _ vorce. BOYLE Your skull is stronger and tougher than you think. It dan stand weight of up to 3,M pounds without being crushed. Here’s a wry footnote on togetherness: About 700 children in the United States commit murder each year — and in two-thirds of the cases the victim Is a member of their own family. Our changing ways: Only 50 years ago liver was regarded by many people as unfit for human consumption and it was fed chiefly to pets. Butchers often gave it away; now it is one of the most expensive of meats. It has been found that mosquitoes are more likely to bite sick than healthy persons. Maybe it’s because they figure that a guy with tired blood is also too jired to swat them. SIGN OF PROSPERITY Prosperiy note: Four out of every five U. j. families now own at least one automobile. And one in five families owns two or more can. Quotable notables: “Never (pohwcoI aOvnMmmnI) think that war, no matter how saatv nor how justified, is a eftne. Ask the infantry and ask the dead,” — Ernest Hemingway, • &. * No civilised man wore pants until after the fall of the Roman Empire.- Barbarians wrapped skins around their legs to keep out the cold. Roman civilians won long robes, Roman soldiers short skirts to give them freedom of action. But by the year 600 moat European men were,clad In trousen. It costs roughly 03,300 a year to keep an inmate in federal prism, jiutabout the same amount it wdliliO1 take to send him to a good state university. Musical tribute: More songs have probably been written about President Franklin D. Roosevelt than any other 30th century figure — over 100. Qulpi from our contemporaries: Catholic Digest magazine says “the ideal television show” would be orn “about a cowboy in a hillbilly spaceship who throws pies in a monster surgeon’s face.” : Brunettes look hairier than blondes but arsn'L If you bad > dollar for every hair on your wife's haa, you’d be worth $90,-If she were a redhead, $110,-if she were a brunette, and up io 9100,000 if the were a ural blonde. . * *.. * /, ■, In normal conversation you [apeak about 135 words a minute. However, thelnlnd cM take In and understand from 400 to TOO words a minute - which fortunately, ip about u fast aa anyone can gossip anyway. Ruffed rice doesn’t look very complicated, does it? Well, in the laboratory it has beeri found that 125 million explosions can be produced in s single grain of rice. You Can Count on Ok. ..Quality CoNts No More nt Soar In the modern piano accordion, the same note is produced-on both push and pull, but there are many buttons ’giving a great variety of chords. This instrument is a ' great favorite at dances. FOR YOU TO DO: Learn to “tongue” a mouth organ. Cover all the holes but one with your tongue; get one clear note aa you blow in, another as you pull air out. Police Hunt Kissing Crook LOUISVILLE, Ky. (B — Police | as he was leaving with a total of are knking for a bearded bandit imo, he paused and kissed her. who likes to do business with r The rogue and an accomplice invaded the office of Dr. Ivan M. Pearlman, an optometrist, yesterday and emptied his pockets. : * * . Then the bandit turned to Ptarlman’s receptionist, Gars Dempley. Police said he tied her up, emptied her purse, and, I ration here. Dies in 12-Foot Fall MONROE (B — Carl Haynes, 51, of Monroe, was fatally injured yesterday when he fell from a 13-foot scaffolding at the Consolidated Packaging Corpo- SAVE 30% to 40% ON EACH PAIR! DELISO DEBS S1Q9S Regularly to $24 ...•••• < » 11/ MARQUISE $1199 Regularly to <20.. & , // JACQUELINE • CORELLI NATURAUZER $0gg Regularly to <17 .... v .... . J 9 LARKS SPORTS & FIATS