Jh0 W§ath0r THE PONTIAC PRESS yOL. 128 NO. U6 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, Mr^IGAW, ^JEsi)AY. JULY 27, 18(W^-^ PAGES Home Edition ^ IOC U.S. Destroys N. Viet Misile Site,- 2nd Is Hit CHANGE ANNOUNCED ^ President Johnson is pictured formally announcing that Anthony Celebrezze (left) is resigning as sec-retafy of welfare to take a federal judgeship Carnegie Exec Successor AP PhoWix and that John W. Gardner (right) will replace Celebrezze in the cabinet. Johnson spoke at a sp^ial ceremony today in the flower garden outside his White House office. ' Celebrezze Is Resigning From Cabinet WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson announced today that Anthony J. Celebreeze is resigning as secretary of welfare to take a federal judgeship. John W. Gardner, a Republican and president of the Carnegie Corp., will be named to the Cabinet post. Johnson announced his fourth cabinet appointment at a special ceremony in the flower garden outside his office. Celebrezze and Gardner, who was chairman of a special presidential task force on education last year, stood by. Celebrezze, an Italian immigrant who was a long-time ma'-or of Cleveland, is being nominated for a vacancy on the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth District. The court has headquarters in Cincinnati. In announcing this, Johnson .said: “1 have both a feeling of pride in Celebrezze’s accession to this high court — and a reluctance in seeing him depart the department he has guided so skillfully.” Speaking of Gardner, Johnson said: “He is regarded by his peers as one of the most knowledgeable men in the field of U.S. education.” Gardner, besides heading the task force that helped prepare Johnson’s 1965 legislative proposals in the field of education, was described by the President as having inspired last week’s White House Conference on Education. |liwiMiiiiiUiniiii[ii'fiiiiiiirtf'i»ir~ir-rii"r-^ In Today's ; Press ( Vief Fighting U. S. said now aiming for 8-to-l manpower edge - PAGE A4. Medicare How to obtain passport to health benefits—PAGE A-2. U. of M, OHicial Dr. Heyns named University of California chancellor - PAGE D-6. Area News .........B-1 Astrology .........C-5 Gardner, who was bom in Los Angeles in 1912, has been president of the Carnegie Corp. for the past 10 years. He piso heads the Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Teaching. ★ ★ ★ 'The Carnegie Corp. is a foundation that administers the philanthropies' initiated by steel baron Andrew Carnegie. Johnson took passing note of Gardner’s Republican allegiances in talking about him before a small audience of reporters. “He’s a Ph.D., an ex-Ma-rine, a former intelligence of- ficer, an author and a Republican, though not necessarily in this order of importance or proportion of significance,” Johnson said. The President said Gardner, educated at Stanford University and the University of California, “has been all his adult life an explorer in search of excel-ence.” Holder of honorary degrees from a do;en colleges and universities in the United States and Canadd, Gardner taught psychology at Mount Holyoke College and Connecticut College for Women before World War II. Heath Elected Head of British Conservatives He Wins First Ballot Majority; Opposition Bows Out of Race LONDON (^Edward Heath was chosen leader of the Conservative party today. His opposition folded after he won a first ballot majority. Heath headed Reginald Maud-ling, 150-133, with IS votes for Enoch Powell in the balloting among 298 Tory members of the House of Commons. Then M a u d I i n g, former chancellor of the exchequer, withdrew. This left the field clear for Heath. Heath, 49, has been the party spokesman for economic affairs. Under the rules prevailing for the first ballot, a candidate needed an over-all majority plus 15 per cent more votes than his nearest rival to win. FIRST FORMAL ELECTION It was the first formal elec-tidn of a leader in the party’s two centuries. Previous party leaders were chosen in private discussions in which Britain’s top Tory families had the dominant voice. * * -k The secret ballot took place behind closed doors in a committee room of Parliament’s lower house. ★ ★ * Newspaper pundits and opinion polls had put Maudling slightly ahead of Heath. A third candidate, Enoch Powell, 55, was given no chance of winning, but some thought he might take enough votes to make a second ballot necessary. Mean/ Complacent, Reufher Is Quoted NEW YORK (i?') — Walter Reuther thinks the basic problem of AFL-CIO President George Meany is that “he’s too damn comfortable,” according to Look Magazine. In the same article, the former CIO president says Teamster President James Hoffa never should be allowed back in the ---------- labor group. prefers “to get along with Reuther, United Auto Workers Meany. president who headed the CIO before the merger of the two when there are things giant labor federations and is « now No. 2 man in the AFLCIO, said in an interview that he (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6i Pleasant Weather to Stay a Few Days Warm, sunny weather will remain with Pontiac residents at least until Thursday t h e weatherman has promis^. ★ * ★ There won’t be much change in temperature today, with a high near 84. Tonight will be fair and cooler, low 54 to 62. Sunny is the forecast for tomorrow with a high of 77 to 82. Winds are northwest to north, 8 to 15 miles per hour. ★ ★ * Sixty-six was the low mercury reading preceding 8 a.m. in Pontiac today. By 2 p.m. the temperature had reached 84. READY FOR MEE-ONG - Henry Cabot Lodge holds a map of Viet Nam outside the Senate hearing room where he was approved as ambassador to South Viet Nam, today. Lodge gave a briefing to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the Viet situation. With him is Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., chairman of the committee. Romney, Rocky Hit GOP Splinter Units MINNEAPOLIS (iW — Govs. George Romney of Michigan and Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York joined yesterday in denouncing conservative splinter activity in the Republican party. Rockefeller, who has bowed out of contention for the 1968 GOP presidential nomination, and Romney, who remains _________ very much in it, assailed in separate news conferences at this 57th annual meeting of the nation’s governors, outside izations such as that Barry Goldwater. Romney said Rockefeller’s .. killed last night in Birmingham withdrawal from the presiden- ^hen his car struck the rear tial contest “doesn’t affect me in any way.” Then, in a long exposition of his views on international and domestic matters he proceeded to sharpen the sort of differences with President Johnson’s policies that a Republican nominee might find valuable. The Michigan governor was asked specifically about Gold-water’s organization. 3 Yank Planes Lost in Attack WASHINGTON LP) — A flight of 46 Air Force fighter-bombers today knocked out one antiaircraft missile site and damaged another in Nmih Viet Nam. Three F105 fighter-bombers were shot down, the Pentagon reported, by what was described as “intense conventional ground fire” during the low level attack on two previ- ★ ★ ★ ously undiscovered surface-to-air missile sites i i A' II Johnson Calls Cabinet Parley Discuss War Situation at Midday Session about 40 miles northwest of Hanoi. Returning pilots reported seeing two parachute! open after the bombers were hit. The two sites, using semimo-bile equipment which could be put in place in as little as 24 hours, are in addition to five sites previously identified as under construction around Ha-noi, the North Vietnamese capi- WASHINGTON (AP) — Presl-tal dent Johnson summoned his it *■ it cabinet to a midday conference The U.S. attack was launched today on the war in Viet Nam. three days after a U.S. plane “They’re discussing the situa-was shot down by fire from one tion in Viet Nam and the delib-of the missile sites. erations that have been going on PILOTS REPORT are still going m," said . , ^ . , rw-t White House Press Secretary Asst. Secretary of Defense nm n Arthur Sylvester told a news conference that U.S. pilots reported destruction of one of the new sites and damage to the other. Photographic evaluation of the strike results has not been completed, Sylvester said. D. Moyers. Johnson has had a series of top level conferences during the past week of manpower and equipment needs to bolster the battle against the Communist guerrillas. Moyers said Johnson talked County Driver Dies in Crash There were no reports of Si missiles fired at the attacking planes or of hostile air action,” White House Mc- the announcement said. J*®'’** «* Aslan situation, and received „ additional reports on manpower The strike aircraft were pro- j^e armed forces, tected by an unspecified num- it * it ber of fighter planes which flew f„formation he has overhead on guard against MIG requested will be supplied by fighters which apparently did end of the day,’’ Moyers not challenge the attack. DELAYED ACTION Officials said “conventional TO SUMMON LEADERS Ji^nson plans to summon ordnance’’ WM u!^ in the at-D,„^3tic and RepubUcan tack. They did not specify, but of another auto, went over a curb and hit a tree. Dead on a r-rival at Beaumont Hospital following t h e 9:10 p.m. accident was Donald F. Gollwitzer, 37, of 17175 W. 14 Mile. Police said Gollwitzer’s car was traveling west on East Maple when it struck a car driven by Joan Sullivan, 20, of 26106 Wyoming, Huntington Woods. delayed action bombs probably used, a practice customary in low level attacks. Sylvester said the new sites were identified “by thorough analysis of ail of the evidence, including photography, after a loss of an Air Force F4C on the night of July 24.” congressional leaders to ttiu “I believe it is essential Republican leaders carry out their complete political objective within the Republican party, . Sullivan, who was driv-without joining outside groups,” ahead of Gollwitzer's car in he said direction, escaped in- jury. FUTURE COURSE p„,. ., „ , Police said Gollwitzers car Rockefeller said it would be jumped the curb after hitting “disastrous” for splinter groups the other car and struck a tree to influence the party’s future five feet north of Maple just course. west of Columbia. White House today or tomorrow. “I would aisume it will be today, but if not today tonur-row,” Sen. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., said concerning the bi-partisan meeting. Mansfield, the Senate Democratic leader, said “the question „ ,1. r. r r, 0^ Nsm W8S discusscd incl- “JL. dentally” at a meeting of Demo- partment had stood on a state- conuressional leaders the reports that the F4C had it it ^ it been downed by a missile similar to those i^ch the Rus- generallMhe^JSrse of sians have emplai^ in Cuba j^e dellteiratlons now going on.” Pl ot reports had indic^ sj„ce last Wednerfay: the that the plane may have been downed by a SAM (surface-to- St ‘ wlfh S air) missile.” Sylvester said. conferemies with t^ out of range of the original five sites toward an increased American commitment of manpower and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) equipment. Hospital Fund Once a Dream, OCC Nearing Reality Bridge Crossword Puzzle Comics Editorials Markets Obituaries Protection Series Sports C-I-C-l Theaters D4 TV-Radio Programs D-7 WOson, Earl D-7 Women’s Pages B-4—B-5 (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first oj two articles on Oakland County’s projected community college.) By L. GARY THORNE Housed in a remodeled Nike missile base and a converted TB hospital, Oakland Community College (OCC) opens this fall just 15 months after voters approved the project. The two-year college has, in just over a year, progressed from a ballot proposition to the threshold of resjity. Classroom facilities have been acquired and are in preparation, equipment is being purchased and students are being admitted. Hopes for Oakland Oimmun-ity Qillege were conceived by a countywide citizens committee with a noticeable push from professional educators and the County School Board. ★ * ★ Electoral support came on the second ballot. Establishment of the college won voter favor in June 1963, but it took a second election last year to secure approval for the college’s one-mill tax levy. Voters also elected a six-member college board of trustees to govern the new institution. A Birmingham attorm^y, George R. Mosher of 551 Mo-hegan, was selected as chairman. He admits the board had little to start with other than a'dream of a mniticampus, conntywide school. Curriculum had been proposed by a citizens study committee. Three critical areas were designated: terminal (two-year) job training, adult education and the first two years of a four-year college degree program. * * ★ Prst task of the new college board was to hire Dr. John E. Tirrell of St. Louis as president of the community college. TEMPORARY OPHCES The second task was to rent a chair for the new president to sit in. Temporary offices were al.so established. Initial expenses were borne by the college trustees. Established in June of last year, the college didn’t receive its first tax receipts until early this year. In fact, first board meetings were held at the homes of the trustees. Dr. Tirrell, after board members had caucused in the living room, was formally offered his college post in the kitchen of the Mosher home. ★ ★ * It was only last October that the cigar-chomping Tirrell assumed the top administrative post at the college. FIRST CHORE His first chore was to borrow funds in anticipation of tax collections, giving the new school its initial operating funds. Tirrell, wha had helped establish three St. Louis Junior colleges, brought another thin- ly defined dream to add to Oakland County's hopes for more higher education. His dream was more sophis-, ticated than the singular creation of more college classrooms, and it, too, is to become a reality this fall. ★ ★ ★ Prior to coming here, the 38-year-old college administrator had demonstrated an interest in the application of data processing and computer technology to the college classroom. A visible outgrowth of Tirrell’s interest will be Oakland (Community (kil-lege’s pioneering tutorial program. SEPARATE STORV For the most part, (X3C classes will depart considerably from the traditional method of an instructor lecturing 30 students while the latter feverishly take notes. But, this is a separate story. Tirrell, while still a com-mnter from St. Louis, began (Continued on Page 2, 0>1. 8) Reveal $100,000 Gift The first major gift from an individual to the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund wa.s announced today by Ernest A. Jones, cochairman of the memorial gifts committee, when he revealed that Edward F. Fisher had pledged $100,000 toward the $3,250,000 minimum objective. Fisher is one of two surviving brothers who established the Fisher Body Co. and is a member of the board of directors of General Motors Corp. E. M. Estes, chainnan of the hospital campaign, expressed his appreciation for the gift, noting, “As one of Michigan’s leading citizens, Mr. Fisher has once again demonstrated his sincere interest in voluntary community projects. “This interest,” Estes continued, “as expressed by this very generous gift should provide mspiraUon for all of us who are working hard to ensure the success of the cam-paign. “This is^ concrete evidence that the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital campaign has been accepted as one of the most im- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) EDWARD P. FISHER THE POXTIAC PRESS. TUESpAY, JULY 27, 1965 West Accused of Arms Stall GENEVA (AP) ~ Soviet negotiator Semyon K. Tsarapkin accused Wealern powers today of deliberately deblocking dis-arnuunent negotiations and adopt^ policies “directly op-posb to disarmament and the relaxation of international tension.” Tsarapkin said in his opening address as chairman of the reconvened 17-nation disarmament conference that the talks were resuming in difficult circumstances because of “imperialist aggression in such places as Viet Nam, the Congo and Latin America.” ★ ★ ★ U.N. Secretary-General U Thant said the major nuclear powers will have to act swiftly to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. In a message to the conference read by his special representative, Dragon Pro-titch, Thant expressed concern over the increasing danger of a general race toward nuclear armament. Recent political crises have “considerably eroded the spirit of detente between East and West" which was symbolized in the agreements on a partial ban on nuclear testing, he said._ List Pledge of $100,000 fo Hospital Fund (Continued FYom Page One) portant endeavors ever undertaken in our area.” The memorial gifts committee is composed of 66 volunteers who are offering individuals in the hospital’s service area the opportunity to provide specific rooms in the St. Joseph expansion program. EXPANSION The conunittee is in the process of expanding its membership, according to Jones. He noted that memorials start at^ |2,1M for a super-. visor’s • office, and include patients! rooms from |5,4M to 17,200; examination and treatment rooms from ^,400 to $4300; child and parents’ rooms at $6,000; operating rooms at $21,000 and others up to $318,610 for the Clinical Laboratory Department. Altogether there are 405 different units available, with 37 already reserved or subscribed. ★ ♦ * The memorial plan provides for tablets to be mounted on the rooms given with a suitable Inscription according to the wishes of the donor. Pledges may be paid over a period of three years. “A most significant contribution could be made to a Renewal of hope and progress toward peace by the rediscovery of that area of mutual-interest.”. Thant’s message appeared to be addressed not only to the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union, but also to France and Cwnmunist China, who have both devel(^>ed their oym atomic arms. France has boycotted the conference. China never has been invited. * ♦ ★ '‘ITiose who have already embarked upon nuclear weapons development continue to perfect and increase their stockpile of nuclear weapons,” Thant said. “On the other band, a growing number of states capable of nuclear weapons development will be faced with extremely grave decisions in this area which will have profound repercussions. RESPONSIBILITY NEEDED Responsibility and restraint are ne^ed on the part of both.” 'hie talks had long been deadlocked when they recessed last Sept. 17. Recent statements from Eakt and West Indicated that the deadlock may be as rigid as ever, despite a new British plan to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. ★ ★ ★ In contrast to previous resumptions of the talks, delegates of the major powers carefully avoided any hopeful predictions. Diplomatic sources said they expected a repetition of the speechmaking which has become a standard feature of the three-year-old conference. TWO ABSENT Of the five nations who now possess nuclear weapons, two were absent. France is boycotting the talks, and Red China has never been invited. Britain’s disarmament minister. Lord Chalfont, and the U.S. disarmament negotiator, William C. Foster, arrived together from Paris after telling the North Atlantic Treaty Council about the British proposal for a treaty to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. ★ ★ * They told newsmen details of the draft would be worked out with the two other Western delegates, Gen. E.L.M. Bums of Canada and Francesco Caval-letii of Italy. City Commissioners' Meeting Is Canceled There will not be a Pontiac City Commission meeting tonight. Hiis week’s regular meeting has been canceled so that commissioners may attend the National League of Cities convention in Detroit. The next regular meeting of the commission will be at 8 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 3. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy today, not mnch change in temperature, high 78 to 84. Fair and cooler tonight, low 54 to 62. Wednesday sunny, high 77 to 82. Northwest to north winds 8 to IS mUes per hour. Outlook for Thursday: fair. NO PLACE FOR A CHILIX-A^U S. Marine shoos a Vietnamese boy away from helicopters about to carry suspected Communist Viet Cong from Tam Loc, southeast iM4 of'Da Nang yesterday. The boy, apparently the son of one of the captives, followed the Marines and their prisoners to the helicopter landing area. How to Get Passport to Health Benefits (EDITOR’S ROTE: The following is the tflird in a 14-part series on the new health care and Social, Security bill by John Troon, special writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.) By JOHN TROAN Your passport to Medicare will be a wallet-sized card resembling the kind Blue Cross subscribers carry. It will signify you are eligible for basic Medicare benefits provided under Social Security. It also will show whether you have bought supplemental health insurance entitling you to additional benefits. The cards will be mailed by the Social Security administration before July 1, 1966— when such benefito become available. If you’re eligible for Medicare and already getting monthly Social Security checks, you’ll automatically get a form on which you may sign up for supplemental insurance. . ★ ★ * You then will receive a health card showing whether you have taken out supplemental coverage or can draw only the basic Medicare benefits. SIMILAR PROCEDURE A similar procedure will be followed with persons receiving monthly Railroad Retirement or Civil Service retirement benefits. Eligible persons on regular welfare rolls also will be advised by mail. What about other folks who may be entitled to Medicare benefits? ★ ★ ★ If you’re past 65 and have work^ long enough under Social Security to rate monthly retirement checks but you haven’t applied tor them (because, for example, you’re still working), go now to your Social Security district office and file an application to establish your eligibility for Medicare. Other persons past 65 may r e g I s t e r for Medicare when Social Security offices start “enrolling” people for supplementary insurance. The first such “enrollment” -^for persons who will be 65 before Jan. 1, 196fr-wlll start Sept. 1 (or Oct. 1 if the Medicare bill isn’t signed into law before Aug. 1). This enrollment period will end March 31, 1966. Should you fail to sign up for supplemental insurance by then, you won’t have another chance until Oct. 1, 1967. it it ★ others may enroll during a seven-month period startinR-with the third month before the 65th birthday. BASIC BENEFITS For example, take a person who will be 65 on May 10, 1966. He could enroll for the supplemental insurance from Feb^ 1, 1966, through Aug. 31, 1966. Basic benefits (except for nursing - home care) begin July 1, 1966. ’The supplemental insurance takes effect the third month after you sign up for it—but in no case will it go into force before July 1, 1966. So hang on to any health protection you may have in the meantime.) * ★ ★ There also will be general enrollment periods for people who want to buy supplemental insurance after having missed a chance to do so, or who want to reenroll after dropping out. * ★ ★ ’These will be held the last three months of every odd-numbered year starting with 1967. GRACE PERIOD You may drop your supplemental insurance at the end of any calendar year. Or the government can drop you after a 90day grace period if you fail to pay premiums. If you drop out, yon may sign up again for supplemental insurance during any general enrollment period which begins within three years after you quit. If you drop Moon Mts Tuntday *1 7:M p.i Lowfst timporatvro ....... ‘iMn Iwnporaturt wealhar: Sunny, humid Hifhail and Lawaat Tan TM> Data In ti Y Manday'i Tamparatura Chart pena U 41 Fort Worth •. Rapid* I JackMnvIlla 71 40 Kaniai City 17 42 Los U is $. Francisco « Washlnpton 72 72 KATTONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers are prt-dieted tonight over the central plains and southei^ plateau eastward into the Ohio Valley and the Carollnas. Showers are also predicted over the northern Rockies and Pacific Northwest. It will be cooler over the Great Lakes and ppper New England with little change elsewhere. County Free of Polio Since June of 1964 There have been no cases of polio reported in Oakland County in more than a year, according to Dr. B. D. Berman, director of the Oakland (bounty Department of Health. ’The last case was reported June 18, 1964, just prior to completion of the mass sugar cube immunization program. The victim had not been immunized. However, it was a light case and he fully recovered. * The last serious year in the county was in 1959 when 37 cases were rept^ed and two deaths resulted, Dr. Berman said. ★ ★ ★ There were eight cases reported in 1960 and only five since then, with no deaths in the county as a result of the disease since 1059. SECURE SHOTS Dr. Berman advised that immunization shots may be obtained through private physicians, for those who have not previously been immunized against polio. While the disease is not common among adults, they can be carriers and can infect ehildren with whom they come in contact, he said. A "total of 455,000 persons, representing nearly half the population of Oakland County, received oral vaccine in April and June of 1964 in an effort to wipe out the disease. The special program was initiated by the Oakland County Medical Society. out a second time, you’re out forever. The monthly premium will be $6 a person. Of this, the federal government will pay half. Premiums start July 1,1966, or the third month after you enroll— whichever is later. * ★ * If you’re drawing monthly Social Security, Railroad Retirement or Civil Service benefits, the government will withhold your share of the premium from your check. WELFARE CUENTS Otherwise you’ll have to pay the premiums on your own (although a state may foot the bill for its welfare clients). The premium will be a hit higher for persons who fail to buy the insurance during their first enrollment period. TTie same goes for dropouts who reenroll. ★ ★ ^ The premiums may be changed by the government every two years, beginning Jan. 1, 1968. This will depend on how much money is needed to cover benefits and administrative costs and to maintain an adequate kitty. To Quiz Foster on 3rd Killing Faces Lie Detector Test in Teen's Death Twenty - nine - year - old Carl Foster, already convicted of killing two young Oakland County women, was scheduled to be given a lie detector test today in connection with a third killing. Detective Charles Whitlock of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department said Foster would be questioned in connection with the 1963 death of 14-year-old Connie Crossland. The former Pontiac factory worker will be taken from a cell at the Oakland County Jail to the Detroit State Police post to undergo the polygraph quiz. Foster, convicted last Wednesday of the February 1964 slaying of his wife Angela, 25, is awaiting prmiouncement of a mandatory life sentence. * ♦ w Earlier this year, he was sentenced to 10-15 years in prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter in the Dec. 12 strangulation of Mrs. Maurice Crook, 20, a Bloomfield Township divorcee. ‘SIMILARITIES’ Whitlock said Foster had agreed to take the test. He added there were definite “similarities”., between the Crossland killing and the deaths of Angela Foster and Mrs. Crook. All three victims had b strangled. In addition, there are indications that Foster frequented the drive-in strip on Woodward in Birmingham, an area in which Connie Crossland had been seen on several occasions |xior to her death. ' * * w The Crossland girl was found in a water filled ditch July 18, 1963, southeast of Lake Orion. She had been hit on the head and strangled. OK is Likely on Housing Bill WASHINGTON (AP)/- A $7.5-billion housing bill'containing a rent subsidy proton for low-income families wgs, ready for final congressional approval today. T Passed yesterday }>y the’iSen-ate, the compfomise meajure backed by the Johnson administration was scheduled for a midaftemoon House vote expected to send it to the President. The bill wbuld authorize creation of new programs and continuance' of major existing housing programs for the next four years. ★ ★ ★ Its most controversial provision is the rent subsidy plan which would cost $350 ihillion over tMrnext four years. Sponsors claim the plan would make 375,000 apartment units available for needy families during the next four years. TTie subsidies would* be limited to families eligible for public housing under existing standards. To qualify for a subsidy, a family wpuld have to pay 25 per cent of its income for housing. The. goyernnitent wodld put up the * difiference between this amount and the normal rent required to finance an apartment project. , The federal payment would go to nonprofit-type landlords such as churches, mdofls, cooperatives or limited dividend corporations. None of the subsidies would go to private landlords. Tenants would lose their eligibility for subsidies if their Income increased substantially. In siddition to persons qualifying under present standards, elderly or handican>ed persons, persons displaced from their homes by government action, and persons whose homes have been destroyed by a natural disaster would be eligible for subsidy payments. Meany Is Hit by Reuther in Interview (Continued From Page One) If the only things you are going to do are convenient and comfortable, the griat things will not get done. “This is the problem as the labor movement gets higher and higher levels of material comfort.” Look, says Reuther, referring to his disagreement with Meany over labor’s participation in the 1963 civil rights march on Washington, thinks "Meany has learned a lot. “If there were a march on Washington next week,” he is quoted, “I think he’d be in the front of the parade.” Reuther also is quoted as seeing “marked improvement’ in his relationship with Meany in recent months. Concerning speculation that he will succeed Meany as AFL^O president, Reuther reportedly said: “That job could be a very exciting job if you don’t get it under circumstances of spinning your wheels.” Birmingham Area News Board Sets 2nd Hearing on Blacktopping District BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP The Township Board last night declared it^ Intent to proceed on a-« special assessment blacktop-ping district on Glengarry and Whiteleigh. ' Following a public hearing on the proposed $10,840 project involving 35 sites, the board set a second hearing for Aug. 9. Petitions for the blacktopping project have been signed by over 80 per cent of the area’s property owners. In other business last night, the board upheld prior action lij the township’s zoning board to denying rezoning of property owned by Bloomfield Chapel. ★ ★ * Rezoning from single-fmnily residential to ^general bugmss district had been sought for the parcel pn the north side of Square Lake Road west of Telegraph. TO ASSIST ASSOCIA’nON Also last night, board members agreed to assist the Fox Hills Home Owners Association to,an attempt to control excess sp^ and heavy traffic in their subdivision. Hie board will ask the Oakland County Road Comndssion to install speed limit signs in the subdivision. In other business, the board passed a rmlution confirming the Chelmsleigh water main deficiency roll following a public hearing. Prominent City Resident Dies A prominent Pontiac rraident, Thomas J. Whitfield, 56, of 1466 Oakwood died yesterday following a lengthy illness. Service will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at All Saints Episcopal Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery by Sparks-Griffto Funeral Home. A tax consultant, Whitfield was a charter member of the Pontiac City Club and a member of All Saints Episcopal Church. He also was active In the Ki-wanis Club, Pontiac Elks BPOE No. 810, a former board member of Pontiac Boys Club, and the Huron River Hunting and Fishing Club. Surviving are his wife, Eileen; four daughters, Mary Jo at home, Kay of Kalamazoo, Mrs. Richard Harris of Pasadena. Calif., and Mrs. Charles Wait-man of El Toro, Calif; and five grandchildren. Issue Clears House; Next Stop Is Senate WASHINGTON (#1 — ’The Social Security-health care bill zipped through the House today and headed for the Senate, its last stop before the White House and signing into law by President Johnson. Approved 3-1 by both branches earlier, the second run through was necessary because the bills varied and a conference committee had to CHITCHAT—Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken talks to a private citizen during a visit to the Oakland County Courthouse yesterday. During his two-hour stay, the 43-year-old Milliken met with local residents who wanted to discuss problems involving state government. The practice of holding office hours to different counties was started 1^ Milliken in February. The Birmingham City Commission meeting was canceUed last night because of a lack of. were attepding the National League of Cities conference to Detroit. Opening for OCC Close By (Continued From Page One) his teuure here by first recruiting an administrative staff. Recruitment of a teaching staff has been nearly accomplished. The college board has acquired three campus sites with a total investment of about $1.64 million. Two sites — Auburn Hills (the former Nike base in Pontiac Township) and Highland Lakes (the former TB hospital in Waterford Township) — nave facilities to be converted to classrooms. ^ a ■ ★ a College' officials estimate the total cost to convert these facilities at $684,(XI0. ’They are to accommodate 3,000 students this fall. ’The two campuses will begin with a total instructional staff of about ISO persons. The third campus — Orchard Ridge — is lecated south of 1-696 and west of Orchard Lake Road in Farming-ton Township. The 135-acre site is to have buildings by the fall of 1966. Pr)lgress on the development of the college surprises even some of the school’s trustees, a a a “I thought that evening classes in some area high school looked like the only prospect for classes to begin with this year,” comments Mosher. CUT RED TAPE However, Mosher credits the Nike base acquisition with speeding development. The Army virtually eliminated proverbial red tape for the college to take over the Nike base, a a a Nevertheless, Mosher remembers that in June 1964, he was chairman of a dream. 'That dream will become a reality Sept. 7. (NtXT-WiMl esn tlw iMw OCC Missile Sites Hit in N. Viet (Continued From Page' One) which encircle Hanoi liut was within range of what proved to be two new sites. “It was concluded that the F4C was shot down by a SAM missile from one of the two new sites attacked today.” Thus, the announcement added, it was decided to destroy the two semimobile sites “which were protecting areas In which priority military targets He.” * A * These targets, Sylvester said, include ammunition and supply depots, barracks, lines of communication, “and other facilities which support the infiltration of men and material from ; North Viet Nam into South Viet < Nam.” ORIGINAL SITES He said the five original antiaircraft missile sites “are not operational so far as we know.” He said they do not “relate to military targets on the priority Hst.” The Pentagon released a map which showed for the first time the location of the five original sites, along with the two struck . in today’s raid. The map showed that three of the sites are southeast, sohth and a bit southwest of Hanoi while two others are northwest and northeast of the capital. PROTnCTED SITES Several weeks ago, the State Department spoke of four sites apd said they protected both , Hanoi and Haiph^, North Viet ! Nam’s main port about 55 miles east of the capital city. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 A—8 'Can't Stop Latin Revolutions' Cuba-Slyle Uprisings Inevitable-Fidel SANTA CLARA. Cuba (AP) -Fidel Castro says Cuban-style revolutions are inevitable in Latin America, with or without Cuban support. Any U.S. efforts to “cruaK^ Cuba," even if successful, will not stop the growth of revolutionary regimes like his among Latin-American countries, the Cuban prime minister told an estimated ,250,000 persons at a celebration Monday of the 12th FIDEL CASTRO anniversary of his attack on an army barracks in Santiago, Cuba. ★ ★ ★ Castro called on other Latin-American countries to start rev-lutions like the one that swept jm into power in 1959. Castro claimed that his regime has demolished nearly all Its guerrilla opponents. Speaking in the shadow of central Cuba’s Escambray Mountains, Role Loss for Aged Stressed ANN ARBOR (AP) - Entering the ranks of the aged probably causes a person more psychological stress than he feels at any other time in his life, a Western Reserve University sociologist believes. Perhaps the hardest blow suffered by persons in this age group is that they find they no longer have roles to play in society, Prof. Irving Rosow told the University of Michigan’s annual Conference on Aging Monday. 'The loss of roles, he said, ‘‘devalues and excludes the aged from significant social participation. It deprives them of vital functions that underlie their sense of worth, their self-conception and self-esteem.” ‘‘Whatever their abilities,” he added, ‘ they are judged invidiously, as if they had little of value to contribute to the world’s work and affairs.” AUTOMATIC DROP Old age. Dr. Rosow said, is the first stage of life to bring an automatic drop in status. Each earlier period usually brings an increase. What is more, he said, our society does not prepare people for this sud-' den change in the pattern of life. "Certainly with a broad horizon of leisure and few obligations, many people feel oppressively useless and futile,” he said. ‘‘They are simply bored— but not quite to death.” the site of many guerrilia attacks against his government, Castro said only tluree revolutionary groups remain there. ^ "And they are not organized in the form of bands,’’ he said. 2,MS GUERRILLAS KILLED Operations against the guerrillas in recent years have resulted in 2,005 guerrill^ killed or captured and the death of 295 of his own men, Castro said. In Caracas, Venezuela, a former Castro diplomat said that a continuing stream of Latin-American youths are getting training in Cuba so they can set up revolutionary movements in their own countries. ★ ★ ★ Odon Alvarez de la Campa, who resigned as councillor of the Cuban Embassy in Madrid, Sapin, in March, told newsmen the Castro regime has a widespread network of spies and subversives in Europe and Latin America. In Moscow, a Soviet official again expressed the Soviet solidarity with the Cuban people against ‘‘imperialist provocations.” At a reception in the Cuban Embassy, G. I. Voronov, premier of the Russian Federated Republic, said Cuba hoisted, “an invincible banner of socialism in the Western Hemisphere.” NEW SERVKE HOUKS WadiMtday—10 A.M. I* REMINGTON SERVICE Eleetrie Shavers -»nin floor (AtfvtiilMiiMnt) LOSING HftlR? TrMlm*nl Molhpd. MEN AND WOMEN Hair Consultant Here Tomorrow; To Explain Hair Problems The worst enemies of hair are I You incur no charge or obliga-neglect, mistreatment and im- tion by coming in for the consul-proper hair care. A little time fatjon ,^i)i tell you frankly ‘ , - -erely »heU..r .r no. »e Mr. F. I. Bredia will be in Pontiac, believe you can be helped, how Mieh. at tha Hotel Waldron on long it will take and how much Wednatday, |uly 28, 1965, Hours jt will cOSt. ^ ' cLT■in%*nd^a^k■ With the I ^WRITTEN GUARAOTEE Lesley Consultant regarding H you ore accepted for treat-your hair and scalp problems. | ment, you will be given a writ-Learn how you can treat your-! ten guarantee for the length of self right in the privacy of your ' time treatment is required, on a own home prorated basis. Nearly half of FREE CONSULTATION our clients are women. If you have dandruff, exces- | Male pattern baldness is the sive hair fall, thinning hair, ' cause of a great majority of excessive oiliness or dryness, i cases of baldness and excessive itchy scalp, or if your scalp is hair loss, for which neither the still creating hair you should ! Lesley treatment nor any other take positive action at once. I treatment is effective. Man Drowns Fishing KALAMAZOO UP) - Lou A. Hum, 64, of Kalamazoo drowned Monday while fishing in nearby Spring Valley Lake when he apparently stepped into deep water. RVINOrOVtlAC **Coj^o/** * Sa^irias « ♦ jCjSXfc * vl for VOLR MONEY ■ i,"g on Savings ^ ^ SKKMCK-open 'III Ml Lowest-priced 2-dom-from FRIGIPAIRE! • Comt saa the big 120-lb. size top freezer! • Come touch the vegetable Hydrator. • Compare Frigidaire shelf for 17 eggs. • Full-width, full-depth shelves-deep door shelf and more In the door. Medtl FO-12TJ 12.1 eo. ft (NEMA standard) Aitac coppar ar whits <228 00 CLAYTOX’S 2133 Orchard Lokt Rood Phone: 333-7052 Mon. ond Fri. 'til 9—Tuos., Wed. and Thun, 'til 6—Sot. 'til 5:30 P. M. SIAAMS Open Wednesday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. ■irittMii,YHiirM 3I« Tomorrow from 9 o.m. to 6 p.m. Simms you need and want at grdatly reduced gains. Bargains so big we must reserve advertisement. Look What Only 31' Will Buy at Simms! has this special "31 c Day" to celebrate our 31 st birthday... pick out the items prices, bring a friend and neighbor downton with you to share in these bar-the right to limit quantities. Ait prices subject to stocks on hand at time of ^ince 1934" Discounts All Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw KSiMBilfcB- Ladies’ Seamless Hose First quality seamless base in attractive shades (or summer and fall. Sizes 8 to lO'/t. — Main Floor Ladies’ Blouses First quality American made, on odd lot of summer blouses with short sleeves. Sizes 30 to 34. — Main Floor M 31 Girls’ T Toppers Broken sizes, one of a style. Summer toppers for your girls. — Main Floor 31 Ladies’Skirls r Odds and ends of first quality ladies' skirts ii sizes 10 and 12 only. Scatter Rugs Corpeting type scotter rugs in tweeds or solid colors. With foam or jute backing. — Bosamant Simms Birthday Specials Terrycloth Beach Towel Large 36x60 thirsty beach towel with ottractive prints. 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Sewn stars and stripes. — Moin Floor Simms Birthday Specials Stainless Steel Blades 59c value, package of 5 Sheffield double-edge blades. — AAoin Floor 60* Toni Shampoo 60c value, your choice of White Rain or Pink Pamper shompoo by Toni. | — Main Floor Pkg. 10’s Tampons 45c volue, your choice of Meds, Kotoms, Pursctles or Tompox. — Main Floor Men’s Hair Groom 49c value, your choice of Code 10, Score, Groom ond Cleon. — AAoin Floor 31 Carter’r Littia KNs 49c wIm, Corlm Un w. rmoauu Jeitir a. Xiut Ad»7nufii;"Sir~tM Karr i. En* TMOMMoif o. uaw li&KMilirHttar OtrmitoUoa Uabmw i Forecast Income Rise Could Trim U.S. Debt Barreling along in its fifth year of upsurge, a peacetime record, the American economy bids fair to produce $6 to $7 billion more in Federal taxes in fiscal 1965-66 than in the year just ended. On the assumption that the outgo of the next budget is not in excess of the 1964-65 figure, the additional revenue would give the Johnson Administration choice of one of four economic programs. ★ ★ ★ One would be to initiate another huge income tax cut on top of the income and excise tax cuts effected during 1964 and 1965. Another would envisage a vast Federal spending program in the areas of health, welfare, education and conservation. Still a third would combine the two, each, however, more moderate in scope. The fourth option, and the one we wholeheartedly approve, I would be to use the tax-surplus funds to reduce the national debt, the authorized limit of / which, following a recent boost, stands at a fantastic $328 billion. Inevitably there will be fiscal experts who’ll maintain that one of the first three courses is essential to keep the economy heated up in order to achieve thp projected excess of government income over outgo. ★ ★ ★ We’ll concede a small point in that direction by suggesting that but a portion of the surplus be initially earmarked for debt reduction, with the remainder subsequently to be used to reduce the debt further or to stimulate the economy — depending on the state of the economic climate. Reduction of the mounting Federal debt, which threatens in time to devour the American economy, would represent fiscal statesmanship of the highest order, and should be firmly supported by all who have the future of their country at heart. It is not too soon to acquaint your elected representatives in Washington with your views on this subject. Juvenile Lawlessness Ignores Nationality In any analysis of. juvenile delinquency, children of Oriental descent have always been conspicuous by their absence from the statistics. Respectful and well-behaved Chinese and Japanese kids just don’t get into trouble. Unfortunately, there are indications this may r^o longer be true. Police in Sacramento, Calif., for instance, report increasing involvement of Chinese and Japanese youths in such thiiigs as thievery and knifings. ★ ★ ★ Although none of this betokens a trend, and although the police would be quite happy if ^e rest of the city’s adolescent population would emulate the record of the Japanese, such hitherto unheard of iuci-dents have caused much soul-searching among the proud second-generation Japanese, the Nisei. ’’Somewhere along the way we are failing,” said one elder. Offered a captain of the Sacramento Police Juvenile Bureau; “I imagine it’s because the kids are becoming Americanized.” But this explanation only gives rise to, other disturbing questions whose implications range wide and deep: Why should becoming “Ameri- canized” mean losing respect for parents, for neighbors, for law and the rights of others? ★ ★ ★ What kind of society are we building where a pdice officer can matter-of-factly consider “Americanized” and “criminalized” as being virtually synonymous? More important, what can we do to change the situation? ★ ★ ★ There is little doubt that the answer to that, if there is any one answer and if the experience of the Nisei and Sansei is a valid guide, lies in halting the breakdown of the American family structure — a loosening process that foreign observers detected generations ago but which has accelerated under the stresses of constantly changing modem life. It is a proposition that not only Japanese but any other American parents might well ponder. Somewhere along the way, all of us are failing. Rocky Withdrew One Time Before By JAMES MARLOW Aisociated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON-New York’s Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller must have thought a lot in nine days, for within that time he decided to do what he had said , would be meaningless to do. He discussed the question of any 1968 presidential ambitions and closed I the door on himself. But this wouldn't be the first < time he did something like f that and changed his mind. What made it remarkable I about taking himself out of |_____ the presidential race this ]^Amx)W early is that the Republican field is as wide open as at any time in history. At this moment no one among the Repuhlicans, including Rockefeller, looks like more than a mere possibility for the GOP nomination three years from now. Rockefeller, twice elected New York’s governor, told a news conference July 16 he would definitely seek a third term in 1966. Winning that, of course, would keep him in public life. ★ ★ * That, In turn, would give him a good foundation for seeking the presidential nomination. But would he try for the presidency three years from now? He avoided a direct answer to newsmen at the July 16 conference. NOT THINKING Instead, he said “We are so far away from 1968 it is meaningless’’ to discuss it. He added; “1 am not giving it time or thought.’’ Then Sunday on the CBS program “Face the Nation,” he said he would not be a GOP presidential candidate in 1968 or any other year. He ruled himself out forever. He said something like that once before. } On Dec. 26, 1959, he said he would dot be ^ candidate in the 1960 race. He closed the door on himself that time after touring the country and finding Vice President Richard M. Nixon was away out in front. It-k-k He said then his “decision was definite and final.’’ SECOND THOUGHTS As the 1960 nominating convention drew near he had second thoughts, although it is hard to see why, since Nixon was still away out in front all by hinlself. Rockefeller announced he'd be willing to be drafted. Nixon got the 1966 nomination and loot the election. In 1964, when the field was wide open as now. Rockefeller fought and campaigned for the nomination and actuaUy said he wanted it before anyone else spoke np» That time Sen. Barry GoMwater got the nomination and lost the election. * wee Now, with no would-be candidate ahead of any other would-be candidate, it would seem natural for Rockefeller to try again. They Also Serve— 8-to-l Viet Manpower Edge Eyed Verbal Orchids to- V Jack Munnings • of Royal Oak, formerly of Pontiac; 81st birthday. Robert Cascaddan of Rochester; 86th birthday. WASHINGTON (AP) - Pentagon thinking now tends toward the view that an 8 to 1 edge, rather than the often-quoted 10 to 1 ratio, is a more realistic goal for a manpower advantage needed to deal with Communist insurgents In South Viet Nam. Even an 8 to 1 ratio would indicate a far greater input of U.S. troops than seems in prospect. The indicated buildup need under this formula would come to perhaps 650,066 more men. If a 10 to 1 ratio were applied, it wouid point to a requirement for about 900,000 more troops in South Viet Nam. American troops there now or due soon total about 83,000 and indications are that about 100,-000 will be added by the end of this year. Both figures are far short of filling the 8 to 1 ratio. Calculations for troop strength needed to handle the guerrillas have been lowered because of the rising number of Communist troops, coupled with their bigger fighting units. BECOMES EASIER The basis for this seeming paradox is the theory that the more the Viet Cong insurgents get away from hit and run tactics and the more men they field, the easier it becomes to hit them. The 656,000-man increase on the 8-to-l ratio is based on the current estimate that about 165,000 Communist troops are opposing about 566,000 Vietnamese troops, plus4he 83,660 Americans ttere or expected shortly and several thousand Koreans, Australians and New Zealanders. It also takes into account a 100,000-man increase in South Viet Nam’s f(wcesi Over-all, that would bring the anti-Com-munist military forces in Viet Nam close to 700,000. * ★ ★ Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara said last week the cuiVent ratio of about 4 to 1 is unacceptable. He did nqt specify an acceptable ratio and has avoided any figure of that sort. HEUCOPTER UNITS Officials say increased mobility furnished by U.S. helicopter units and added firepower supplied by U.S jets could be credited with enough impact to hike the 4 to 1 froop ratio to the equivalent,of perhaps 6 to 1. This wonid still leave a deficiency of about 366,666 men. The 10 to 1 ratio originated in studies made by the Germans of their problems with Russian partisans during World War II and in studies of the British experience in their successful U-year campaign to suppress Communist guerriilas in Malaya. ★ * * Records studied by U.S. experts show that in several clas-sichl counterinsurgency wars victory came with considerably less than a 10 to 1 margin. WON OUT In Malaya, the British and "Commonw^th forces finally won out with a 6 to 1 edge, la Greece, geverameat forces overcame Communist rebels with a 3 to 1 edge. In Algeria, on the other hand, the French had a Sti to 1 edge — and they lost. ★ * ★ It was noted that in Malaya, British forces were aided by the fact that the guerrillas lacked a privilaged sanctuary. Malaya had no common boundary with a Communist country. Capitol Letter: In Viet Nam, the guerrillas have a sanctuary in professedly neutralist Cambodia and there is an open border with Laos across which reinforcements stream from North Viet Nam. ★ * ★ In Greece, too, victory for the government came when the border with Yugoslavia was sealed off, depriving the guerrillas of a refuge. iVeiii USIAChief Has the Right Kind of Mind By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Thoughts at random: ★ ★ ★ Leonard Marks, the newly confirmed head of the U. S. Information Agency, obviously possesses, t h e_ lively, lnquir-| ing type of I mind needed to I d i s seminate I American prop-1 aganda abroad.! Uie commu- 4 nications ex-1 pert who was : Lady B i rd| J 0 hrrson’s Ruth radjo-TV attor- Montgomery ney is fascinated by flying saucers; would like to see a steppe d-up government research program to probe unidentified flying objects and the “probability of intelligent life on other planets.” ★ ★ ★ Some of Marks’ astronomer-clients have encountered mysterious objects while bouncing radio signals off solar bodies. Perhaps the attorney, who studied radio engineering on the side, can figure a way to bounce the free world message to Russian Ivans should the Kremlin resume jamming our Voice of America broadcasts. What will be the reaction of the Russian man-in-the-street when new U. N. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg has his first eyeball confrontation with his Soviet opposite number at the United Nations? Will Ivan give thought to the (q>pressive Russian system, under both czars and Communists, which caused Goldberg’s Jewish father to prefer life as a poor fruit peddler in Chicago’s slums to his former existence in Russia? ★ w ★ Why is it that no poverty program was required to produce such enormously successful Americans as Arthur Goldberg, Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, “Mr. Speaker” Sam Rayburn, “Veep” Alben W. Barkley, Abraham Lincoln and thousands of other self-made men and women? -By t od a y ’ 8 antipoverty standards, their parents would have been eligible for government subsistence allowances and the like. Are we perhaps overrating affluence, while downgrading the value of hard trials to tem- per character and serve as a goad?. In other words, are leaders born rather than made? The first U. S. president with the political courage to tackle the long-taboo subject of birth control is a man whose own wish for fatherhood was frustrated for a decade. Lady Bird Johnson longed for chilcb'en, but suffered three miscarriages before-giving birth to Lynda Bird after 10 years of marriage. Voice of the People: *Wrohg to Force People to Join Unions by Laws' Regarding Section 14B of the Taft-Hartley Act, it ia my opinion that it is not logical to force a man, against his personal and religious beliefs, to join a private organization through legislative decree. Saying that a union member has recourse from union abuses sounds good in theory, but does not work out in fact; too many union hea^ are absolute dictators. ★ ★ ★ By the same type of thinking every business organization should be forced to Join the local chamber of commerce because the majority of the businesses in the community voted for it. We have heard of people being imprisoned by the Iron Curtain and the Berlin WaU. If Section 14B is repealed, this administration may become infamous for erecting the Union Wall and depriving minorities of their rights. N.B. ^Elderly Can’t Afford Higher Qty Tax’ I thought we were to have a tax cut. Well, my taxes ,ln July were more than they were before the tax cut. Then Hudson gets a bright idea for a storm drain. We will be taxed millions more. ♦ w w What about the elderly people who can’t pay more taxes? Is Hudson going to pay them or are we to lose our homes and go on welfare? Soon there won’t be anyone left to pay taxes. ★ ★ ★ Call your commissioner and protest this crazy spending. TAXED TO DEATH Euromart Boycott De Gaulle Snags Plans By CARL HARTMAN BRUSSELS, Belgium OB—President Charles de Gaulle’s boycott of meeUngs of the European Common Market is slowing down developments of deep concern to the United States and the rest of the world, including the Kennedy Round of, tariff talks. j . De Gaulle is unfriendly to most of these developments. The other five members of the Common Market are discussing a proposal designed to end his boycott. The plan would settle the financing of farm subsidies in the six-nation area for the next five years, which de Gaulle wants. It would postpone putting the money under control of the European Parliament, which he opposes. ★ ★ ★ It may be months before the French president can be persuaded to send his. delegates back to major Common Market meetings. EXTENDED VACATION Experts working on the Kennedy Round at Geneva have gone on an extended vacation. The delegates can go on talking about tariffs on industrial products and about an hitemational grain agreement. But the French representative is no longer sitting on the committee that supervises them. The French government has been one of the countries that was least enthusiastic for the Kennedy Round aim—to cut tariffs on industrial goods as much as 50 per cent. ★ ★ ★ De Gaulle vetoed Britain’s application to join the market. Now a new effort to move closer together, which would be important to Britain’s weak economy, is also being held up. In Washington: Reapportionment Issues Clouded By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA)-Supporters of the Dirksen constitutional amendment on state legislative reap p ortiopment appear to have fought their battle with tonishing ineptitude. The aim of^ the proposal, course, is count ermandj the Supreme Court’s one-. B«<*8AT man, one-vote ruling of 1964, by assuring to the states the power to apportion seats on factors other than populaticm. ♦ A • ♦ But in making argument the proponents have managed to convey the Idea they are tq>-posed to pitHto* representation for the great numbers now crowded into America’s cities. Big labor and civil rights groups thus have been stirred to sharp reactien and have effectively mnscled up the once-thin opposition to the Dirksen measnre. It is temporarily stalled in Senate committee, and might well fail on the Senate floor if Sen. Everett Dirksen, Republican minority leader, employs some parliamentary device to g^ it to a vote despite the committee roadblock. * * A The irony is that, in fact, the state reapportionment issue has not for some time been « rural area vs. big city question. A new study by the National .Miinicipal Leagtie reaffirms strongly that the suburbs, not the center cities, will be the big gainers from reapportionment rooted in one-man, one-vote. Says the league: “Almost one-half of the big cities already have less population than their subnrbs. By 1976, the overwhelming major!^ will have less.” Nearly all of this country’s stupendous population growth is occurring in the suburbs—at the eiqiense of both rural and -.city areas. Many supporters of the Dirk-Mn amendment have voiced repeated fears that strict use of population factors in state reapportionment would lead in many cases to big city dominance. ■ A A A The League report, prepared by William B<^, notes that no city holds as much as SO per cent of its state’s population. Other studies show that only in three states — New York, Arizona and Hawaii — can a com-binatio) of three cities be found yhich produces more than half the state’s population. In all others, such combinations fall short. ? In IMrksen’s own state, Illinois, Chicago and the next two largest cities represent together just 37 per cent of the state’s total. Beyd observes, furthermore, that an cities with as much as 15 per cent of their state’s population have been showing l^rcMtage dedines ' for the last if years. Obviously, in rooting their case in the rural vs. city rivalry, proponents of the Dirksen formula have flawed their ar- guments with unreality and irrelevancy. And they chose the ground most certain to bring on combat from labor and civil rights groups. AAA As if all this were not enough, the conservative Republican elements which are among the most ardent backers of the Dirksen amendment may be trying to cut off their noses to spite their faces. GOP representation in big cities is already very low, and in recent elections has also dropped sharply in rural sectors. The swelling subnrbs are the new political battleground, the biggest' hope Republicans can have for badly needed gains in legislative seats — state and federal. Nevertiieless, they are seeking to hold the suburban seat: total down. Whatever the legitimate arguments for a more flexible ap^ portionment formula than thsi Supreme Court’s one-man, on&j vote, they are evidently being lost in a thick fog churned up by Dirksen ameidment adv»i cates who' have done too little solid homework, have arousea powerful enemies, and seeni not even to be acting sensibly in their own Interest. THIS PONTIAC PRESS. TUESrjAY. JULY 27, 19(>.5 A—5 Warns of Cost on Uneducated University Official Renews Fund Pleas LANSING (AP)—A university policy-maker warned Monday that future costs of dealing with uneducated persons will far exceed the expense of providing the education. Warren Huff, chairman of the Michigan State University trustees and the Michigan Coordinating Council of Higher Education, renewed the universities’ fund plea at a hearing of a House taxation subcommittee. North Korea Js Charged With Cease-Fire Violations PANMUNJOM, Korea (AP) — The United Nations Command in Korea charged the North Korean Ck>nununlsts today with a series of armistice violatiwis including a clash 500 yards south of the demilitarized z(H)e. w * ★ U.S. Maj. Gen. William P. Yarborough told the joint Military Armistice Commission that North Korea sent “an armed killer patrol across the military demarcaUon line’’ July 19 and the patrol “threw hand grenades at our soldiers in direct and flagrant violation of the cease-fire.’’ he told North Korean Maj. Gen. Park Chung-kook. DENIES CHARGE Park denied the charges and said the United States had manufactured the inddents. YaiixHXHigh also charged Ihat the two-man midget submarine found on the bed of the H«n River about 20 miles northwest of Seoul on July 4 was from North Korea. we* ’The crew of the 15-foot sub escaped before the craft was discovered by a South Korean army patrol, the American general said. WWW The sub was exhibited outside the meeting to a large crowd that included tourists from South Korea and miliUry personnel and reporters from Communist North Korea. The sub- marine had a North Korean flag and the name of North Korean Premier Kim Il-sung written on it in white paint. WWW The D.N. Command delegate demanded severe punishment for those responsible for the alleged incidents. Sevtre Drought Ends on Procossional Noto MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — Managuans turned out In a large procession Monday to pray for ralo in the District of Leon, where a severe drought was threatening the cotton harvest. The procession was led by Bishop Oviedo Reyes of the Ro- man C^tlM^c Church. A few hours later ’heavy rains, accompanied by thun^ and lightning, broke over Leon and the adjacent drought-stricken District of CSilnan^a. Killod in Gordon CHy GARDEN CITY (AP) - Kenneth Carnes, 19, of Garden City was killed here today when hb motorcycle struck the rear of a car. Yarborough, the senior U.N. Command deiegate to the truce taiks, also said that four armed men from North Korea opened fire on South Korean police agents and killed two of them July 18 in the Songchu resort area 5 miles north af Seoul. Referring to predictions by Gov. George Romney that, without new taxes, Michigan could be in the budgetary red in two years, Huff said; “We would have red figures in this fiscal year if education needs were being met.’’ LOW PERCENTAGE , He declared that 75 per cent of the high school graduates should be receiving public higher education instead of the 30-35 per cent now getting it. “Michigan youngsters are forfeiting their right to training and education for the world in which they live,” he declared. “We will have to bear that cost —and this far exceeds the cost of an adequate education program. “Only when parents and the public realize this will we get adequate support.” I Huff said student fees and the the health water property tax portion of educa- *1,-. l 1 j j tion support are at the satura-1 "*'•**“ . tion point. Hot Springs famous BONDING PROGRAM | He again asked—as the uni-; versities have done for years— delivered in that permission be granted for classroom and facilities construction via a bonding program. He said the state’s colleges tO Bliy who Suffer ffOITl and universities are three years ; ^ behind in their building programs. He said Michigan State could not take care of an estimated 42,500 enrollment in two years “without a crash building program.”. | He quoted Romney as telling him Feb. 5 that Romney would' not support bonding because “it ' would take away a reason for, tax reform. Huff said Romney Mountain Valley Water, just saw tax reform as a better I as you would drink it in the route than bonding to solving great health resort city from its Michigan financial problems. natural spring source. Huff said the dollar problem , go many doctors recommended IS denying an education to this water as aid in the relief youngsters who would have been of Kidney and Bladder symp-admitted to school four years toms that Mountain Valley *80- I Water is bottled so its benefits “We tell them to go to a com- i are easily available to people munity college where there is throughout the nation, none," he said. “We say their grades are not good enough when we know a certain per- ^elps stimulate kidney action centage of them would succeed. ^^the bladder irritation. Robert Turner, president of £,0^.40^. Macomb County Community' College and the Michigan council of community college administrators. said the two-year schools don’t get the support necessary to build technical programs. The subcommittee headed by Rep. H. James Starr, D-Lart-sing, was beginning a series of summer hearings around the state aimed at securing information on tax reform, Starr, like Romney, favors tax reform. “Two of your armed thugs were captured in the incident,” Protect the Poor Cat From Big, Mean Bird ; SAN RAFAEL, CaUf. (AP) -A sign posted on the office door at the Forest Farms Camp by owner Harold Gregg reads, “please keep door closed so bird won’t eat our cat.” 1 The bird is a turkey vulture. home PONTIAC KIDNEY and BLADDER SYMPTOMS Phone FE 2-5655 JIM’S MARKET 406 Orchard Lake Rd. Dealer for MAKE BIRTHDAY WISHES COME TRUE mmmmm ♦♦♦♦M4MMM44M.N.W.W SEND BIRTHDAY CARDS BY .. SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OP GREETING CAROS PERRY PHARMACY I PONTIAC I m EM awE. I I WATEEPOEO Mil Bill. Ui. RA. M M-f> NOTIONS, COSMETICS—Street Floo END OF MONTH CLEARANCE DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor 7 Pr. )r. wool suck* Sizes 5-11, Were 11.99, Then 5.99 .............................................. 4.00 2 Pr. Homespun Slacks Sizes 5-9, Were 6.99, Then 3.49 2.33 3 junior Sassies Were 8.99 ............................ 5.18 3 |r. Shifts Sizes 5-7-9. Were 11.99-12.99 . . •....... 7.88 20 Jr. Cotton Skirts Sizes 5-15 Were 6.99-7.99 ......... 4.00 12 )r. Culottes Were 4.99 .............................. 3.88 4 )r. Sleeveless Blouses Size 7-15 Were 6.99, Then 3.49 2.33 4 Halters Were 4.00 and 5.00........ .................. 2.66 36 Misses' Summer Skirts Size 8-16, Were 7.99 .......... 4.88 30 Misses' Dyed to Match Blouses Sizes 10-18, Were to 7.99 ......................... ............3.88 and 4.88 6 Dyed to Match jackets Were 8.99-9.99 ................ 4.88 13 Sleeveless Blouses Were 3.99......................... 1.48 7 Embroidered Linen Pant Tops Were 9.99, Then 6.00 . 4.88 7 Misses' Shifts Were 10.00 and 10.99.................. 7.88 17 Misses’ Culottes Size 8-16. Were 7.99-9.99 .......... 5.88 7 Misses' L. S. and Sleeveless Dresses Were 14.99 .... 10.00 24 Sleeveless Blouses Size 10-16. Were 3.99.............. 2.88 6 Sleeveless Blouses Were 2.99 1.44 10 Sleeveless Blouses Were 2.99 to 4.99 ................. 1.88 20 Maternity Blouses Were 3.99 and 4.99 ... . ■...... 2.88 12 Maternity Blouses Were 5.99 ......................... 3.88 8 Maternity Swim Suits Were 8.99 and 9.99.............. 6.88 18 Maternity jamaica Shorts Were 3.99 and 4.99.......... 2.88 12 Maternity Pedal Pushers Were 3.99..................... 2.88 1 5 Maternity Skirts Were 3.99......................... 2.88 36 Sleeveless Dresses Were 6.99 ........................ 4.00 20 Misses' and Half Size Culottes Were 3,99 1.88 28 Misses' and Half Size Street Dresses Were to 12.99 . . 6.00 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor 1 Wallet Was 5.00, Then 2.22 ......................... 1.48 1 Cigarette Case Was 3.95. Then 1.32......................88 3 Pill Boxes Were 3.00, Then 89c..........................59 2 Cigarette Lighters Were 2.95, Then 88c..................59 1 Leather Handbag Was 13.99, Then 6.22............ 4,15 t Leather Handbag Was' 10.99, Then 2.44 .............. 1.53 3 Handbags Were 6.99, Then 4.66 .....................• 3.11 I Handbag Was 5.00, Then 1.48 ........................ 1.01 I Handbag Was 3.00, Then 1.34 ............................89 6 Summer Handbags Were 8.99, Then 5,97................ 3.98 7 Summer Handbags Were 5.99, Then 3.97 ............... 2.64 I Handbag Was 9.99, Then 6.97......................... 4.64 1 Handbag Was 1 1.99, Then 6.97 .................. 4.64 5 Straw Handbags Were 3.00.......................... 1.50 14 Straw Handbags Were 6.00.......................... 3.00 3 Straw Handbags Were 12.00 .........................■ 4.00 6 Sleeveless Overblouses Were 3.00, Then 1.50......... 1.00 8 Dacron and Cotton Roll Sleeve Blouses Were 1.99 .... 1.00 2 Flowered Triangles Were 2.00 ....................... 1.22 10 Scooped Neck Sleeveless Sweaters Were $.99, Then 4.97 ........... ....... ................... ....... 3.»1 19 V-Neck Sleeveless Sweaters Were 5.99, Then 3.97 . . 2.64 3 Cardigan Sweaters Were 5.99, Then 2.66.............. 1.77 1 Chanel Cardigan Sweater Was 7.99, Then 3,55....... 2.39 1 Chanel Cardigan Sweater Was 8.98, Then 4.00....... 2.66 t 1 Slipover Shell Sweaters Were 7.99, Then 3.55........ 2.39 32 Pr. Gloves Were 4.00, Then 1.90 ..................... 1.27 41 Pr. Gloves Were 3.00, Then 1,44........................96 2 Pr. Kid Gloves Were 12.00................ ...• ■____ 8.00 I Pr. Kid Gloves Were 7.00 ................... •...... 4.66 1 Pr. Kid Gloves Were 8.00_______„ . •.............• , . 5.33 16 Pr. Nylon Stretch Gloves Were 4.00, Then 1.18...........79 3 Pr. Cotton Gloves Were 4.50, Then 1,33.................89 I Pr. Cotton Gloves Were 2 00, Then 88c..................59 1 Pr. Cotton Gloves Were 2.00........ ................ 1.33 40 Pr. Double Woven Cotton Gloves Were 4.00, Then I 97 1.30 1 Watch Was 39.95. Then 26.63 ......................• • .17.75 3 Pr. Earrings Were 1.00, Then 33c........ ...............22 4 Necklaces Were 2.00. Then 60c . . . . •................40 7 Pins Were 2.00, Then 40c...............................26 13 Pr. Earrings Were 2.00, Then 60c .......................40 1 Pearl Necklace Was 5.00 ...................... 3.33 1 Silver Pendant Was 1.00 ................................66 37 Pr. Earrings Were 1.00. Then 33c .......................22 I 3 Necklaces Were 1.00. Then 33c ■ ...................22 MEN'S WEAR—Sfrcct Floor 9 Men’s Leather Belts Were ^50-7.50, Then 1,33...........89 21 Men’s Leather Belts Were 1.50-3.00, Then 66c............44 22 Men's White Dress Shirts Were 4.50-5.95, Then 2.65 1.87 3 Men's Support Briefs Were 5.95, Then 2.97 .......... 1.98 20 Men’s S. S. Knee Length Pajamas Were 2.99, Then 2.50 ................................................ 1.67 6 Men's S. S. Knee Length Pajamas Were 4.00 ....... 2.67 6 Men's Pajama Bottoms Were 2.99 and 3.99............. 1.97 59 Short Sleeve Dress Shirts Were 3.39 ................. 2.26 I 5 Short Sleeve Dress Shirts Were 4,00................ 2.67 18 Cotton Summer Robes Were 4.99 ...................... 3.33 12 Men's S. S. Sport Shirts Were 5.00, Then 2.44....... 1.63 3 Men's All Weather Coets Were 19.95, Then 8.43 . . • 5.62 .4 0 Men's Summer Sport Coats Were 19.95, Then 12.00 8.00 27 Men's Summer Dress Slacks Were 6.95, Theii 4.22 . . 2.81 6 Men's Long Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 3.99, Then 1.00 .66 30 Men's Swim Trunks Were 5.00 and 6.95, Then 3.00 2.00 22 Short Sleeve Shirt |acs Were 3.99..................... 2.66 20 Short Sleeve Shirt Jacs Were 6.98-8.98, Then 6.00 . . 4.00 5 Shprt Sleeve Shirt Jacs Were 10.95, Then 7.00 ....... 4.67 1 Tissue Box Was 2.00................................ 1.00 8 Hair Setting Gels Were 1.50, Then 44c...................22 1 Make Up Set Was 5.00. Then 2.22...................... 1.11 I Cologne Set Was 6.50, Then 2.99...................... 1.93 5 Connpacts Were 50c, Then 25c ...........................12 7 Lipstick Cases Were 3.50, Then 1.17'....................78 9 Lipstick Cases Were 2.75. Then 90c......................60 6 Cream and Liquid Make Ups Were 1.50.................. 1.00 4 Cream Rouges Ware 1.25 ............................... 83 9 Compacts Were 1.50 ................................. 1.00 1 Perfume Refill Was 3.75, Then 1.70..........a..........85 3 Ciro Perfumes Ware 7.00. Then 3.11 J....... 2.07 2 Ciro Perfumes Were 12,50, Then 5.56................. 3.71 1 Ciro Perfume Was 25.00, Then 11.11 ................. 7.41 7 Aloe Shampoos Were 1.50...........:................. 1.00 8 Aloe Lipsticks Were 2.00............................ 1.34 6 Aloe Make Ups Were 2.00............................ . 1.34 9 Aloe First Aid Ointments Were 1.50................... 1.00 1 Aloe Leg Cream Was 1.50.............................. 1.00 • 1 Aloe Hand Cream Was 1.75 . . . . ■................... 1.17 1 Aloe After Tan Was 2.25 ............................. 1.50 20 Pump Type Moth Sprayers Were 95c, Then 42c...........28 7 Handbag Caddy's Were 2.29 .......................... 1.53 3 Terry Auto Seat Covers Were 5.98, Thqp 3.97......... 2.65 4 Dyrta.tron Lights Were 6.60, Then 4.40 ............. 2.94 7 Dynatron Lights Were 3.27, Then 2.18 y,............ 1.45 I Dynatron Light Was 7.83, Then 5 52 3.68 1 Dynatron Light Was I 1.25. Then 7.50 .............. 5.00 5 Dress Shields Were 2.00 ............................ 1.34 1 Dress Shield Was 1.59............................... 1.06 6 Sanitary Briefs Were 1.00 66 4 Sanitary Briafs Were 1.75 ....................... 1.17 3 Waist in. Garter Bplts Were 3.50 ;.............. 2.14 6 Air Fresheners Were 89c ......................... 60 10 Spray Furnitura Polishas Were 1.29, ITten 43c...........22 6 Drass end Coat Storage Bags Ware 3.99................ 2.66 2 Book Ertds Ward 10.00. Then 6.00.................... 4.00 6Car»dlds Were iOc to 6«c ................................15 4 Candles Were 1.25 to 1.75. Then 75c...................50 3 Candles Were 2.69, Then 1.33 ....................... *8 2 Corduroy Overalls, Wert 2.99, Then 2.00............. 1.00 WAITE'S guarantees every item at least Vs OFF! Eaqh item is reduced o minimum of Vs from the price It was in our stock before this clearance! Be here early . . . odd lots and broken sizes on Some merchandise. Use your your credit . . . it's easy .... NEWESDAY OHIY! Skap 9:30 'til 5:30 P.M. Sorry No Moil or Phont Ordon. No Dolivtrits. ALL SALIS FINAL RNAL SUMMER SHOE CLEARANCE CHOOSE FROM... Life Stride, DeRoose, Joyce and Town Square . . . SAVIIIGS of V2 ind lore Regularly 8.99 to 16.99 Come in early, you'll find a nice selection of fashion-right dress and casual shoes. Choose from the season's most popular motewols and colors. Savings of up to 9.99. Shop early for the (jest selection. Charge yours at Waite's. T. Women’s Shoes . . , Street Floor CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor 5 Infants’ Corduroy Crawlers, Were 1.99, Then 77c . . .52 3 Baby Bonnets. Winter, Were 2.99, Then 1.33.................52 2 Baby Buntings Lined. Were 5.99, Then 3.00................ 2.00 46 Baby Anklets Dark Colors Were 39c ..........................20 6 Baby Dresses, 12-18-24 Months Were 5 99 ............... 3.00 4 Infants’ Blankets 36x50-inch Were 3.99 ................. 2.68 7 Infants’ Summer Bonnets Were 2.00 ..................... 1.00 5 Infants’ Mismatched Terry Loungers Were 2.99................50 3 Infants’ TcpjJer Sets Were 4.00, Then 2.00............... 1.00 8 Famous Make Diapers Were 1.99 • •...........\.......... 1.00 15 Infants’ Double Knit Sets S-M-L Were 5.99. Then 2.99 1.66 23 Infants’ Sun Suits Were 1.99 ........................... 1.33 21 Girls’ Stretch Denim Knee Knockers 3-6x Were 1.69 1.00 6 Boys’ Dacron and Cotton Walk Shorts Ware 1.99 ... 1.33 1 5 Boys’ Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 1.69........ .84 50 Girls’ Toddler Short Sets Size 2-4 Were 3.99, Then 2.18 ..................................................... 1.46 6 Novelty Polo Shirts Were 1.19 ..............................52 1 I Girls’ Plisse Coveralls Were 4.99...................... 2.50 3 Cotton Knit Rib Shirts Were 1.69 ........................ 1.00 36 Boys' Sta-Press Walk Shorts Size 4-8 Were 2.99___________ 2.00 19 Girls’ Novelty Sun Dresses 3-6x Were 2.99................ 2.00 16 Girls’ Shifts Sizes 3-6x Were 4.00....................... 2.68 25 Boys’ Sport-Shirts Size 4-8, Were 2.99.................. 2.00 .3 Plisse Short Sets Broken Sizes Were 1.99................ 1.00 3 Girls’ Flannel Lined jackets 8-10-12, Were 3.99 .... 2.00 2 Subteen All Weather Coats Were 12.99..................... 7.00 1 Girts’ Mohair and Wool Coat. Size 7 Was 15.00............ 5.87 3 Girls' Subteen Dresses and jackets Sets Were 14,99 , . 7.50 7 Subteen Dresses, Sizes 6-8-10, Were 10.99............Vi OFF 7 Subteen Seersucker Skirts Were 5.99..................... 3.00 1 Subteen Seersucker jumper Was 7.99...................... 4.00 20 Girls’ Sleeveless Dresses Were 2.99 to 7,99...........Vi OFF I 5 Girls’ Sleeveless Dresses Were 2.99 to 8.99..........'/i OFF 19 Boys’ Plaid Sport Shirts 6-16 Broken Were 2.29----------- 1.54 7 Boys’ Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 2.29, Then 1.67 .83 2 Boys’ Plaid Walk Shorts Were 2.29, Then 1.77................50 10 Boys’ Red Flapnel Lined jackets Were 2.99............... 2.00 I 2 Little Boys' Flannel Lined jackets 3-7, Were 1.99 ... 1.00 18 Boys’ Sport Shirts Were 2.99 ........................... 2.00 6 Boys' Assorted jackets Were 5 99 to 6.99................. 1.42 10 Boys’ Plaid Walk Shorts Were 2.99 and 3.99............... 2.00 6 Boys’ Denim Jeans Size 6 Were 1.99, Then 1.50 .... 1.00 25 Boys’ Polished Cotton Slacks Were 3.99, Then 2.37 . . 1.41 13 Boys’ Colored Denim jeans Were 2.99, Then 2.50 . . . 1.66 6 Boys’ Shorty Pajamas Were 2.99 .......................... 1.66 30 Boys' Cotton Underwear Were 3/1.45 .............■ • . . . .3/.88 FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second Floor 19*Famous Make Girdles, Irr. Sizes S-M Were 7.00, Then 3.97 ............................................ 2.00 16 Bandue Bras Irr. Were 2.00 ..................97’ 22 Assorted Dusters, Popins, Shifts Were 6.00............ 4.00 8 Novelty Print Shifts S-M Were 6.00, Then 3.97.......... 2.00 7 Misses’ Denim Pop-ins Were 6.00....................... 3.4J ) 1 Misses' Plaid Shorty jump Suits Were 4.00............. 2.00 4 Misses' Cottbn Shorty Pajamas Were 4.00................ 2.00 26 Misses' Zipper Closing jump Suits Were 5.00............ 3.35 14 Misses' Long Cotton Gowns Were 5.00 ................... 3.25 4 Misses' Solid Shorty Gowns Sizes S-M Were 5.00 .. 3.35 6 Misses' Red and White Check Shifts Were 3.00........... 3.35 4 Misses' 2-Piece Shift Sets Were 10.00 ................. 7.70 5 Misses' Imported Hand Made Cotton Gowns Were 8.98 ................................................ 6.00 7 Misses' Imported Hand Made Cotton Gowns Were 12.98 ............................................... 8.70 5 Misses' Imported Hand Made Cotton Pajamas Were 14.99 .............................................. 10.00 43 Misses' Assorted Cotton Pehtiei^ Were 62c.................10 34 Yds. Cotton Seersucker Were 1.49 .....................75 YA 32 Yds. Cotton Playknits Were 1.29 ..................... 65 Yd. 44 Yds. Cotton Oxford Cloth Were 1.19 ................. .60 Yd. 68 Yds. Nysife Were 1.99 ............................. 1.00 Yd. 4 Yds. Neverbend Were 1.99 ............ ............ 1.00 Yd. 14 Yds. 10 East Fabrics Were 1.49 ...................... 75 VA 3 Yds. Sunkist Were 1.19...............................60 Yd. 43 Yds. Frostop Solid Colors Were 1.00 .................50 Yd. 57 Yejs. Frostop Dots Were 1,19........................ 60 Yd. 26 Yds. Lingary Dots Were 1.49 .................... 75 Yd. 6 Yds Hi Sign Were 1.49 ...............................75 Yd. 20 Yds. X Ply Cottons Were 1.89 ..................... 1.00 Yd. 39 Slight Irregular Bath Towels Were 2.99................ 1.47 11 Slight Irregular Hand Towels Were 1.79...................'77 45 Slight Irregular Washcloths Were 69c......................37 39 Rug Runners Were 3.99 and 4.99 ..................... 2.00 9 Checkmate Vinyl Tablecloths 52x52" Were 2.99 .... I.OO 31 Checkmate Vinyl Tablecloths 52x70" Were 3 99 .... 2.00 10 Checkmate Vinyl Tablecloths 60x88" Were 5.99 .... 3.00 6 Dural Damask Vinyl Tablecloths 52x90" Were 4.99 . . 2.50 12 Damask Rose Vinyl Tablecloths 52x70" Were 3.99 . . . 2.00 3 Damask Rose Vinyl Tablecloths 60” Round Were 4.99 2.50 2 Damask Rosa Vinyl Tablecloths 60x88” Were 6.99 , . 3.50 1 Festivil Vinyl Tablecloth 52*52” Ware 3.99............. 2.00 2 Festival Vinyl Tablecloths 52x70" Were 5.98............ 1.00 3 Classic Tablecloths 52x52” Were 3.99................ 2.00 3 Classic Tablecloths 52x70” Were 5.99................ 3.00 13 Classic Tablecloths 60x90” Were 7.99 .................. 4.00 5 Classic Tablecloths 60x108” Were 8.99.................. 4.50 15 Famous Make Beth Towels Were 2.99...................... 1.50 45 Famous Make Hand Towels Were 1.79..........................90 24 Famous Make Washcloths Were 69c....................... .35 31 Famous Make Fingertip Towels Were 79c.....................40 2 Royalty Rugs 27” Octagon Were 3.99 ............... 2.00 5 Royalty Rugs 24x42" Were 4.99......................... 2.50 6 Castilian Bath Towels Were 1.99 ................... 1.00 17 Castilian Hand Towels Were 1.29...........................65 71 Castilian Washcloths Were 59c ............................30 36 Castilian Fingertip Towels Were 69c.......................35 8 Chenille Twin Size Bedspreads Were 14.99............... 7.00 I Pageant Twin Size Bedspread Was 7.99................... 4.00 I Cotton Twin Size Bedspread Was 9.99................... 5.00 I Frosty Tempo Twin Size Bedspread Was 14.99.......... 7.00 I Chenille Twin Size Bedspread Was 10.99............. 5.00 ^6Topo^Momin^Curtain^0nncl^Wer^!9^^^^^^2!00 8 Top of Morning Curtains 36-irtch Were 4.49 ...... 2.25 10 Top of Morning Curtains 45-inch Were 4.99........... 2.50 1 Top of Morning Valence Wes 2,49...........................75 5 Paula Curtains 24-inch Were 3.^.................... 2.00 11 Paula Curtains 36-inch Were 4.99.................... 2.50 4 Paula Valances Were 2.49..................................75 4 Paula Swags Werg, 4.99 ............................... 2.50 4 Tropicana Curtains 36-inch Were 4.99.................. 2.50 STropicene Valences Were 1.99 ..............................50 4 Tropicana Canopy Were 2.99 ........................... 1.50 . 1 I Bon Curtains 24-inch Wiere 2.99....................... 1.50 20 Bon Curtains 36-inch Were 3.99 ......................... 2.00 2 Bon Valences Were 1.99 ...................................50 I Drape Wes 3.99........................................ 1.00 3 Assorted Drapes Were 4.99 ............................ 2.00 1 Drape Wes 5.99........................................ 2.50 2 Assorted Drapes Were 8.99 ............................ 3.00 4 Assorted Drapes Were 9.99 ............................ 3.50 5 Assorted Drapes Were 10.99 ............................ 4.00 2 Assorted Drapes Wefe 11.99 ............................ 4.50 1 Drape Was 12.99 ...................................... 5.00 2 Twin Size Bedspreads Were 12.99 ...................... 8.66 2 Full Size Bedspreads Were 14.99 ...................... 9.97 Assorted Soiled Display Curtains......................Vk Off BETTER HATS REDUCED •t.00"*3.00 2.98 fo 12.98 ValuM Millinery Dept. . HOUSEWARES, CHINA, ETC.—Lo I 10-Piece West Bend Cook Set Wes 29.95. Then 16.88 ............... .................................10.88 1 6-Quart Stainless Saucepot Was 14.65.................. 9.22 2 8-inch Stainless Skillets Were 7.85 .................. 4.22 I 1-Quart Stainless Saucepot Was 11.50.................. 7.44 I 2-(juart Stainless Saucepot Was 8.85.................. 5.88 I 7-inch Stainless Steel. Skillet Was 8.75.............. 5.88 5 Electric Spray and Dry Irons Were 8.88, Then 4.88 . . 3.22 1 lO'/z-inch Electric Frypen Wes 22.88, Then 14,22 .. 9.44 1 Brass and White Breadbox Was 12.88.................... 8.22 2 Food Strainers Were 2.50 ............................. 1.44 Assorted Group of Table Lamps With Shades............V» OFF 3 Ceramic Planters Were 4.98< Then 2.88................. 1.88 I Ceramic Fruit Bowl Was 7.98. Then 5.12................ 3.22 8 Clear Crystaline Fruit Bowls Were 2.98 ............... 1.88 31 Clear Crystaline Round Treys Were 1.00, Then 66c . . .44 3 Wood Cookie jars Were 4.00, Then 2.44................. 1.44 14 Wood Style Cookie jars Were 2.98, Then 2.55........... 1.44 1 Service for 6 Stainless Flatware Wes 24.95, Then 16.95 .................................................11.33 2 West Bend Buffet Servers Were 9.98. Then 5.44_________ 3.88 9 Service for 8 English Mugs Were 7.98, Then 4.22 . . . 3.22 20 Colored Coffee Mugs Were 1.75, Then 1.12.................66 94 Brass Wind Chimes Were 1.69. Then 1.09....................74 6 Soap or Candy Dishes Were 1.00...........................^6 5 Floral Hurricane Lamps With Candles Were 4.98. Then 2.22 ......................... . ................ 1.66 10 Chrome Ash Triys Were 2.50 ........................... 1.66 1 Incomplete Set of Bavarian China Was 68.00. Then 46.00 . ............................................. 30.33 2 Chrome Sugar and Cream Sets Were 4.32, Then 2.88 1.88 1 36-Inch wTiite Nautilus Range Hood Was 69.95 __________44.44 3 Brass Andirons Sets Were 4,98 ......................... 1.88 7 Oval Back of Door Mirrors Were 2.98.................... 1.88 3 38x31-inch Fireplace Sets Were 19.95...................13.33 2 Shetland Deluxe Polishers Were 49.95 ..................27.88 Assorted Flowers end Giftware ................... 'A OFF 8 Decorator Wall Plaques Were 1.00, Then 66c................44 2G. E. Transistor Portable Radios Were 16.98............lO.tt 5 22x34-inch Hooked Rugs Were 5.98 ...................... 3.88 2 48-inch Round Extend-e-Teble Tops Were 9.98 .... 5.88 ) Aluminum and Redwood Pichie Table Was 29.95 ___________19.88 4 Green Patio Chairs Were 10.98 ......................... 7.32 I 30-ineh Overseas Bag Was 49.95 ........................33.00 1 4x6-Foot Rayon Striped Rug Was 14.98................... f.ll 2 12x12-Foot Room Size Rugs Were 89.95 ................. 59.44 1 6x9-Foot Nylon Foam Back Rug Was 39.95 ................23.66 17 Plastic Beach or Travel Bags Were 2.25....................88 4 27x48-inch Nylon end Cotton Rugs Ware 7.98..............4.88 18 27x48-inch Cotton Scatter Rugs Were 3.97, Then 2.22 1.51 2 7.Foot Patio Umbrellas Were 24.95 ...............• •.. 16,18 4 Cowgirl Play Outfits Were 4,98 ...................... 2.22 1 jr. Cornpoppers Set Wes 7.98 ......................, 4.11 2 102x138-incb Oval Braid Rugs Were 29.95 ............ .19.88 6 Fireball Express Toys Were 9.98....................... 6.44 11 30x40 Telescope and Tripo* Were 7.98, Then 4.44 2.18 1 2 Speaker Stereophonic Portable Record Player Wes 75.00 ...............................................55.00 2 Easel Style Blackboards Were 3.99...................... 1.22 All Petite Princess Fantasy Furniture................Vt OFF I Floor Semple 9x14 Tent Wes 67.00 .....................40.00 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TO^SDAY. JQLt 27, 1^65 Cooperation Vowed by State Unit GAYLORD (AP) - Planners for state government reorganization have received a promise of cooperation from the State Civil Service Commission, meeting Monday at Gaylord. Gov. George Romney last week signed into law a measure lumping the state’s some 130 state agencies into 19 principal departments. Tlie conunission said it would act on requests for exemption of policy-making positions from civil service upon receipt of detailed organization plan from the heads of the new principal departments or dal task forces appointed by the governor to create them. The State Constitution permits each new department three positions exempt from civil service, if the commission approves. ASKS FOR PLANS Romney Friday asked for such plans from 14 of the new agencies by Sept. 1 and asked that five more be set up by task forces by December. Under the former constitution 91 departments employing < sified civil service personnel were allowed two exempt positions each. The commission agreed to hold special meetings, as needed, to expedite reorganization. , ★ ★ ★ The commission approved f timetable for a state agencywide suggestion award program for the state’s 32,500 classified workers. CASH AWARDS The legislature has approved a $20,000 appropriation for cash awards for time- and moneysaving suggestions during the fiscal year. Also approved was a new sAfety position to coordinate state agency ef^forts to reduce* on - the - job accidents among state workers. A commission stifdy showed medical and compensation payments for job-incurred accidents among state workers added up to almost $1 million last year. Marriage licenses Arthur S. Huntley, Troy and Shirlay A Rowley. Rochattar. Stavan B. Woollard, 37 Elk Lake Ri and Judith S. Keller, Ortonville. James E. Sova, Troy and Beatrice I KotInskI, Troy. Sn*^ Jimmy 5. Cox, 675 Fined with a faulty sound system to make King’s speech a mere brackle of sound, but his listeners applauded and cheered. The biracial march evoked curious stares from some white bystanders. ★ ★ ■ “I think it’s silly,’’'said Raymond E. Parks, 34, on his way to a hospital where his wife gave birth to a baby Saturday, have no sympathy for them.’’ George T. Quebbeman, 39, of suburban Oaklawn, said, “I’ve been watching all the marches, and in this one the peq>le seem better dressed and — for lack of a better word — of a higher class.” •k -k -k It was the first freedom demonstration he had witnessed, said William M. Ward of North Canton, Ohio, “and I’m rather impressed. If I were Mayor Daley, I think I’d take heed of the chant, ‘Mayor Daley must go’.” Daley was in Detroit at the National League of Cities conference. U N. Crisis First Task —Goldberg WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation’s new ambassador to the United Nations says the first — and probably rate of the most formidable — of his tasks will be an effort to resolve the financial deadlock which has paraiyzed the organization for nearly a year. Former Supreme C|ourt Justice Arthur J. Goldbqrg planned to present his credentials formally to U.N. Secretary General Thant tomorrow. Goldberg, who was sworn in yesterday at a White House ceremony, said, “The immediate task at hand is to resolve the constitutional crisis at the United Nations.” He said that the United Nations money trqubles “hover like a spectre over the arena of international politics.” General Strike Call a Failure in Greece ATHENS (AP) - Greece’s leftist General Confederation qf Labor tried to take a hand ih the nation’s political crisis with a general strike today. ’The government cracked down, and the strike was an almost total fall-U|:e. The Greater Athens area showed almost no signs of slowdown. Soldiers and .police were on the alert throughout the Factories and dock installations reported they were operating without interruption. All public utilities and communications were normal. Most city buses — union officials said 70 per cent — were on schedule, and there were taxis on the streets. OPEN AS USUAL Almost all hotels, stores, n . u jj J .u , • • J cafes and restaurants in the But he added that in a period, tourist-crowded Greek capital of disagreement within t h e ^„e open as usual, world organization there should Th^ ^ign of the not be undue pessimism but rec- strike was an occasional army ognition of the numerous U.N. truck supplementing bus serv-achievements in Iran, Korea, Suez, the Congo and Cyprus. i Denouncing the 24-hour strike In addition to the financial In the Athens-Piraeus area as deadlock, the 56-year-old one- j an illegal move that “indicates would show support in various ways. But even before the government acted, many individual unions in the confederation said the strike was a political maneuver and they would not go along. Confederation General Secretary Nicholas Papageorgiou declared the strike was not called in support of ousted Premier George Papandreou, but because “extreme right-wing elements have been mobilized by the government to attadc us and to take over the leadership of our confederation. “We took the initiative because the constitution and the political freedoms and rights of the workers are endangered,” he said. On the eve of the strike, Athanasiadis Novas had said workers would not be forced to stay on the job. He said soldiers and police would take over to keep vital services going. As the strike ileadline neared, he apparently decided it could not go unchallenged by his government, which has been the target of demonstrations and riote since King Constantine fired Papandreou July 15. it -k * The political spotlight switched from Papandreou to Stephanos Stephanopoulos, a member of his Center Union party who had served him as a deputy premier. Most Center Union deputies in Parliament appeared^ ready to support Stephanopoulos in hopes he could form a worka-; ble coaUtion government. Stephanopoulos, a 6S-year-old economist, said he would accept;, the premiership if assured the, support of the majority of the-Center Union members of Par-i liament. About 100 were report-;! ed behind him, leaving Papandreou with about 40. The other 30 are backing Athanasiadis Novas. time labor lawyer also may be called upon in the near future to explain and defend a new and intensified U.S. effort in the Viet Nam War. Because of this, Goldberg has been included among the participants in the recent series of top-level strategy meetings President Johnson To Have Time on His Hands SELMA, Ala. (|)—The official town clock winder soon will find himself with time on his hands. The clock won’t need winding. ★ ★ ★ Since 1857, the city has been paying someone to climb the tower stairs at the First Presbyterian Church every week to wind and adjust the town clock. The Cfty Council voted yesterday to install an electrically powered gear system. The changeover will cost the city about $1,000—exactly double the amount paid 118 years ago for the original clock. ★ ★ ★ The city at first paid $75 per year to keep the clock wound. The present clock winder, George Bewig, gets $150 a year. a revolutionary action,” the new government of Premier George Athanasiadis Novas conscripted workers in key utilities. It ordered them to stay on the job or face legal charges. Electridty, gas, water and telecommunication services continued without interruption after the start of the strike at midnight. I Private employers were au-As for U.N. finances, it was ^ thorized to fire anyone who did i expected that Goldberg’s views not report for work. The govern-! on the stalemate probably wUl I ment said such workers could I be heard Aug. 16 when the Unit- be dismissed for breach of coned Nation’s 33-menpber finance tract without payment of the ‘‘ usual compensation. The government also offered, armed protection to any workers defying the strike call. Police and troops were ordered to crush any disorders in Athens and the nearby port of Piraeus, an area with a combined population of about two million. The confederation had said it would pull out 110,000 key workers and that another 150,000 Insurance Policy! . SIMHY A PltOMBI TO PAYI TSat'i why you'ra wlia to buy tniuronca from aid, tima-taitad ' nponiat with an honerobla racord for paying cloimi -f up by a local, indapondanl agont, you hava g thol'i hard to boat. Wl WOUIO UKE TO SE YOUR AGENTI HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 185 Elizabeth Lake Road ar at Murphy SI.. 4 Blacks East af Panliac committee meets. At present, the United States maintains that under the provisions of the U.N. Charter Russia, France and several other nations owe the world organization $108 million as their share of the cost of peace-keeping efforts in the Congo and elsewhere. The charter says that nations in arrears for two years lose their voting rights. : CLatSME SALE ; Quantity HIM p^^lCE 2 4-Buttofi Electric Dryer *79“ 1 1 Automotic Washer—Whirlpool *149“ 1 Electric Ronge — Stoinless Steel Built-In *189“ 1 Gas Range — Stainless Steel Built-in *179“ 1 Electric Range — 30" White *179“ 1 Gos Range — 30" *179“ i 3 Gas Rongos—30" White with 5 Burner, Ctr. Grill *159“ i HAMPTON ELECTR ; I2S W. Horen St. Terms Avnitoble eco. i FI 4-252S ; “C’est fantastique!” ‘ What did he say?” “He said, What a fantastic statement.’ “Je ne peux pas y croire.” “What did he say this time?’’ “He said,’i simply can’t beiieveit.’” Believable or not, ifs true. 95 out of every 100 times the Yellow Pages are opened here in Michigan, a phone call, letter or visit results. This 95^ figure is from a survey conducted by one of America's largest independent research organizations.* Why do so many of the people who look in their Yellow Pages phone, write or visit the dealers they find there? Because people who look for your ad in the Yellow Pages are ready to buy. That’s why they’re looking in their Yellow Pages. Make sure your Yellow Pages advertising tells these ready-to-buy prospects enough about you to make them your customers. •Audits & Surveys Oi., Inc., 640 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, New York ADVERTISE FOR ACTION...Call our Yellow Pages office Yellow Pages ► M OPfl Michigan Bank SQUARE LAKE RD. AND TELEGRAPH The Areas Newest and Most Beautiful Bank OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY 9:30 to 4:30 ◄ • Doily Hours: 9:30 t6^0, Friday fo 6:00 • Comploto Control Loon Sorvico • Drivo-ln Banking • Full Bank Sorvicoi • Froo Portonal Chocking Accounts Whon $300 Balance Is AAointoinod Como in and got acquainted with a bank dosignod for the family "on-the-go." We are open all day Saturday for your weekend banking convenience. Our complete Control Loon Sorvico is eager to servo you in one prompt centralized transaction. Alt Depotitt intured up to $10,000 by thm Federal Deposit Inturunco Corporatlom ruf^ -t wni THE PONTIAC PRBSS. TUESDAV, JULV 27, 1985 A—T SEE AND HEAR BELTONE'S WONDERFUL NEW GOLDEN AGE EMPIRE NOW YOU CAN HEAR FOR LESS MONEY THAN EVER BEFORE COMPLETE HEARING EVALUATION NO OBLIGATION—NO CHARGE B ELTON E 138 N. Saginaw - Pontioc 334-7711 PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS • SHERWOOD •CARLTON • ROYAL •VOSS • UNDERWOOD • SMITH CORONA • ADLER // 44* from Midwest Typewriter Mart FE 4-5788 88 N. Soginow St. (NaxP to Simms) Washington News Briefs Senate Confirms Coleman as Judge WASHINGTON W - The Senate has confirmed President Johnson’s nomination of James P. Coleman to be a judge in the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. The former Mississippi governor, opposed by some civil rights groups, was approved by a 76-8 vote. ★ ★ A Against the nomination were Republicans Jacob K. Javits of New York, Clifford P. Case of New Jersey and John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Democrats Philip A. Hart of Michigan, Wayne Morse of Oregon, Paul H. Douglas of Illinois and Gaylord Nelson and William Proxmire, both of Wisconsin. WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department has acknowledged that it is picking up the tab for Ambassador W. Averell Hardman’s “vacation tour’’ to Moscow and other European capitals. / Hardman supplied the vacation tag before leaving, and President Johnsdn later added: “I think that the governor has best explained that trip himself by saying it is a vacation. It is not an official government trip. He was not sent there by the President.” ★ ★ * A State Department spokesman said Monday that although the government is paying Harri-man’s expenses,' the ambassador is paying for those indirred by his wife and a personal friend. Among the Harrfahan talks thus far were two with Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson has nominated Rep. Oren Harris to be a federal judge for the eastern and western district of Arkansas. The Arkansas Democrat, El, has been a member of the^ House since IMl. He is chairman of the House Commerce Committee. * . ★ ' ★ White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said Monday that Harris is expected to remain in Congress until the present session adjourns. The appointment must be approved by the Senate. WASHINGTON (AP) - Washington attorney Abe Fortas, a close friend of President Johnson, apparently isn’t going to take any government job. ★ ★ * Fortas had been mentioned as a possible Supreme Court successor to United Nations Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, but White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers scotched that Monday. ★ * * Moyers said Fortas has repeatedly told President Johnson that he isn’t interested in any government job, from president on down. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson has called for an investigation into the factors surrounding cancellation of Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. plans to build a $50-million synthetic rubber plant for Romania. Pj-ess secretary Bill D- Moyers said Monday that “this gov-considers that Fire- emmeil| < stone’s original Intentions were In the national interest." If * '* Sen. J. W. Fulbrlght, D-Ark., has charged in a Senate speech that Firestone dropped its plans because of “unusual competitive pressures” and “a nuisance boycott campaign by an extremist political organisation." He said the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. distributed right-wing material to its salesmen in’ a campaign against Firestone, and that the Young Americans for Freedom inspired the boycott. A 'Capitol' Solution CONCORD, N.H., (UPl) -In an attempt to solve the water shortage here, the state is digging deep — right in the basement of the State House. The current drought d i-minished this city’s water supply to the point where there isn’t enough water to keep Capitol lawns and shrubs green. State Purchasing Director Richard Peale said yesterday the state will tap its own water supply — an artisan well in the Capitol basement. Sniper in NY Hits Children in Playground NEW YORK (AP) - A sniper aimed from the roof of a five-story apartment building at a group of about 100 children in a Bronx playground, police said, and wounded a young girl and her brother, Angelina Argentine. 9, and Carlos, 7, were felled at 5 p m. Monday near where their mother, Mrs. Carmen Argentine, was sitting with other mothers in the Claremont Village housing project. ★ * ★ The two children may have been hit by the same bullet, police said. Angelina was struck in the chest by a small-caliber bullet. Carlos was hit in the head, but the bullet did not penetrate his scalp. ASSAILANT SEEN A police, (jescription said the as'sailant was about 18 and had been seen firing from the roof at construction workers nearby before the children were wound- Police found a number of spent 22-ca!iber shells on the roof. I Marquette Man Killed MARQUETTE (AP) - Ralph H. Lynch, 64, of Marquette was struck and killed by a car Monday night while walking on U.S. 41 in Marquette County. Prohibitionists to Meet | KALAMAZOO (AP) - The annual Conference and Workers’ Training Program of the Prohibition party will ..be held here August 3-5. Scheduled speakers included E. Harold Munn of Hillsdale, the party’s 1964 presidential candidate. li lakes more than a Krona* to conaondate bills (Git thi Mamy yoa ■Hd-rijht now-it Amciitwl) At Aaaociatea, you may borrow the cash it will take to pay your bills in full. Get extra cash for present needs, too! 'This way, you’ll have only one monthly payment—a payment you choose! •The Krona it a mm u*ed in Siueden. A Unmmthtf PImn for mrorf UooA ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. IN PONTIAC 125-127 N. Saginaw Street...FE 2-0214 389 North Telegraph Road....682-2000 Pontiac Mall Shopping Center IN DMAYTON PLAINS 4476 Dixie Highway.........OR 3-1207 BUY, SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. McMattar'i—Michigan’i largeat-Bclling Scotch, baaed on actual sales for 1965. Nomf-McMaster^ istlielaii^st-selling Scotch in Michigan! Introduced less than 3 years ago, McMaster’s now outsells any of the other 67 Scotches in the State, This is the fastest growth of any Scotch in Michigan. Here’s why: McMaster’s is agetd in the barrel, imported in the barrel, and taxed in the barrel. We save handsomely on taxes and other costs that way, and pass these savings on to you. So instead of the $7.00 you’d expect to pay for a Scotch this smooth and mellow, you pay only $4.97 (tax included). Or $2.50 for a tenth. $12.95 per half gallon. Sorry, they won’t let us sell it by the barrel. . SCOTCH WHISKY. A BLENT). 80 PROOF. IMPORTED IN ORIGINAL CASKS BY McMASTER IX4PORT CO, DETROIT MICHIGAN. 'T* THE PONTIAC paE8S, TUESDAY, JULY 27. 1»6» ONE COLOR How ;li) Protect Vourself—II donstanf Vigil Is Price of Security in and Around the Home (EDITOR’S NOTE: This if Ikt tecond part of a 12‘part series fwtn the new book "How to Protect Yourself m (he Streets and in Your Home” by Gene Accas and John H. Eckstein.) By GENE ACCAS and JOHN H. ECKSTEIN Here are more tips on keeping the home secure: • If your home or apartment has screen or storm doors, make sure that they are in good repair and that their latches or hooks work properly! When you are at home, keep those “outside doors” closed and locked. • If you have a d6or that has glass panels, a good idea is to WtHOPFTO ISEI^E OUR \0NE MILLIONTH CUSTOMER \TH1S WEEK...I \W£ONLYNEB)| ^000 MORE M0LUNC41 DOWNSTAIRS . . TONTIAT Be modern with PERSONALIZE YOUR GIFTS IN GOLD STAMPING • Napkins • Convention Guest Tagrs " • Gift Ribbon Gold Embossed JSnmes on • Bibles • Books • Leather Goods CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 install a double cylinder lock, which is locked with a key from both aides. Even if the glass were broken, no one could get in. • Terrace, patio and porch (and other) doors ... The building and remodeling trend “to bring the outdoors in” has produced many more means of entry to houses. While attractive and gracious, they are added hazards In our crime-ridden era. Here are some rules to help reduce their potential danger: Make sure that all such doors are equipped with latches or other means for securing them. This precaution sbonM aiso appiy to the screen doors which nsnaliy “cover” these extra doors. The glass of the doors should be tempered, Herculite, or even wire-mesh glass, so as to minimize chance of entry by breaking the glass and unlocking the door. ★ ★ ★ • If your front or back door has its hinge plates on the outside, you can get t a m p e r-resistant screws to replace existing ones. These screws can be screwed in but not out, thus effectively preventing anyone from breaking in by unscrewing the hinges and removing the door. A GOOD HABIT: Just as you have a bedtime routine — preparing for bed, washing, laying out clothes, etc. —develop a “safety routine.” Make a quick tour of your home, checking to see that all |- etc.) properly locked barred? 4. In private home—is the fire ladder in working order? 5. Are garage doors locked? Is ladder under lock and key? ♦ ★ 6. If you have a basement — are doors to the outside locked? What about access door into house from basehient itself? 7. Is night light (visible from outside as a “glow,” but not in direct view through a window) Ut? J. Are shades (curtains, Venetians, etc.) drawn? 9. Are flafhlight, and 'weapon” handy by M? 10. Is the telephone in working order? Is emergency list of numbers handy? erly locked and in every way making certain—every night— that your home is break-ln-proof. To start with, make up a list and a route. Write it down. Use this check list faithfully, until such time as your “safety routine” becomes as much of a habit as your bedtime routine. Here is a simple, sample “safety routine” sheet. Make up your own, to meet your own needs and problems, and use it every night, until the complete safety check-up becomes automatic for you. 1. For each of my outside doors . . . (a) Is screen (storm) door secured from inside? (b) Is spring latch lock “button” pressed in “lock” position? (c) Are both locks on door double-locked? (d) Is chain (or other “short - stop” device) In place? 2. If you have a burglar (fire) alarm, is It connected and In order? * * ★ 3. Are all windows (and don’t forget floor-length sliding door-windows) properly secur^? Are all accessible windows (ground level, upper story, overlooking porch or overhead, adjacent to fire - escape, trellis, drainpipe. Reunion Is Set by OU Alumni Oakland University alumni will return to the campus Saturday for their second reunion. Focused on a Detroit Symphony Orchestra concert in the Meadow Brook Music Festival Series, the homecoming will Include a “state of the university” address by Chancellor Dr. Dur-ward B. Varner. Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, founder of the university and an honorary graduate of the charter class of 1963, has invited returning graduates to Meadow Brook Hall for a buffet supper prior to the concert. ★ ★ ★ Serving on the committee planning the encore are Mrs. Wilfred Schultz, chairman, of 6074 Livemols, Troy; Use Wer-zer of 291 Reltman, Avon Township; Edmund L. Windeler Jr. of 5601 Hatchery, Waterford Township; and Phillip Williams of 96 S. East Blvd. identifiable by the sloping face of the part of the lock which engages the door frame), the first thing you should do Is change this type of lock for a dead bolt (with a square shape) or a deadfall lode. . POUCE LOCKS Police locks are available in two forms, one of which Is used from the inside only (when you are home). The other may be used from both inside and outside. whether it is connected to a protective organization. The criminal may find the alarm, but he cannot turn it off — that requires a special key, which only you have. A 4r ♦ Look into this type of protective device. For a nominal to-vestment, it could save your valuables, perhaps your life! (NSXTt Th* T*I«»Iwm.) Every outside door should have a second tumbler lock installed. The cost can run from twenty to forty dollars, but it is well worth it. You should insist on a “deadfall” lock. With a second lock, anyone who tries to enter your home has more than double trouble. A second lock is a most effective discourager to hoodlums, because it shows them that you are alert. WARNING: You are never safe if your door has a “spring latch” form of lock. This can be opened from the outside by depressing the latch with a strip XURN IT ON of flexible eteel, a piece of plas-' tic or celluloid, or even a playing card! breaks into your home, a mo- * * * nient after entry the device Both forms employ a steely bar, which nests in a fhNW plate and fits into a special socket on the inside oil the door. There are several burglar alarm systems on the market — and they need not be wired in (connected) to the Pinkerton, Holmes, or other private protection organizations. * * * One, the DADCO alarm, is a mo^t effective antiburglar device. It is attached to front and back (and other) doors. Mother, 4 Children Drown on Outing ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (AP) — A young mother and her four children, on a family fishing outing, drowned Monday night when their car went over a steep embankment into lake. The father was fishing just a few feet from the car when the tragedy occurred at Lake Shawn near the Ohio River community of Powhatan Point. The Ohio Highway Patrol said , the mother, Mrs. William Wil-When you go out or retire, 1 liams, 25, apparently was trying you turn it on. If s o m e o n e j to turn the car around to play the headlights on her husband’s If your doors are equipped I with the spring latch form of ‘ lock only (it is immediately fishing line. She yelled that the a piercing, long-lasting handbrake wouldn’t hold just »una. before the car toppled into the The criminal cannot know lake. SUMMER CLEARANCE! typewriters Racondifionad Undarwood or L C. Smith with 90 Day COJM Guarantaa Whila Thay Last! Compora ot $50.00 _ N«w Roll«r —Niw Ribbon —N«w Cov«r Only 10 ot This Prico! 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WWW “We as a state, historically, have had a tremendous volume of water and have been complacent about it and allowed this pollution which by the way, is not primarily industrial |wliu-tion but is municipal pollution,” he said. “It’s just straight sewage coming out of the communities.” ★ ★ ★ Rockefeller made his statement on a national television program, NBC’s “Today,” which he shared with Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California. Rockefeller met Monday with Govs. Richard J. Hughes of New Jersey, William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania and Charles L. Terry Jr. of Delaware to lay plans for a middle Atlantic states governors’ conference. whiskey reduce its price to 53.75 without reducing its quality? Over 75,000 new fans say, “You bet!” HIU»‘HIU. t*l( NIU « MIU OIWILUlir COMPANY, lOUISVILU. ttNTOOKY, SO FHOOf, OONIAIMS 8WBTMAI6MT WNISKEYl tWGRAIN NCUIRAL gPMtlB. ojy/ harmful impurities (before they can stop you cold!) What does the American FINAL/FILTER* really do? Automotive engineers know~they asked for it and American Oil Research developed it to stand between yop and trouble. You see, all gasolines pick up tiny impurities in transit and In storage. These impurities, should they get in your gasoline tank, could clog up the fuel line filter and stop you cold. The American FINAL/FILTER screens out contaminants right at the pump nozzle. If you use your car on the job (and even if you don’t) you stay out of trouble when you ’*flll ’or up filtered" with American, Regular or American, Super-Premium. Voif exueci mfire from Standard and you get It!* THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN B—1 To Explain Plans for Sewer Arm WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — New plans for a Walnut Lake «ewer.arm will be explained to township residents tomorrow ni^t. The project developed by the Township Board and Oakland County Department of Public Works is similar to the one abandoned last year in the face of hearty opposiUon. There is one major difference — the proposal now under consideration calls for fl-nancing the arm on a use basis. Property owners would pay for the facility as they took advantage, of it. I 'w ' w * , i If they never used it, the arm wouldn’t cost them a cent. NEW PROPOSAL Officials believe the new proposal will answer most of those residents originally opposed to the arm. While agreeing that the facility was needed, objectors last year were more than reluctant to back establishment of a special assessment district. Enough of them signed writ- I ten protests to halt action on i tension of the Farmington in- the program. ★ * ★ An informational meeting ( terce^F, would be constructed in the area between 14 Mile and Pine Lake from east of Inkster to just east of Orchard Lake Road. West Bloomfield’s share of the |1,727,6M cost would be |1,SM,772, with Bloomfield and Farmington townships splitting the rest. I Financing in West Bloomfield Township would be done through the new plans will be held at 8 tw® types of fees to be paid p.m. at West Bloomfield High by property owners as they made use of the arm. The Walnut Lake arm, an ex- A unit capital charge would For Diabetic Children Visit to Doctor Begins Day at Camp LEONARD - Every day 120 youngsters at Camp Medicha happily splash about in the lake, participate in a fast game of tennis, go on overnight hikes, or work on arts and crafts. However, before this normal camping routine can begin, the children must line up each morning for their insulin shots. They are diabetic patients. Ranging in age from 8 to 16, these youn|[sters are given a chance at this camp, located north of Leonard, to be with others with the same problem. ★ ★ ★ They also find out they can participate in the same activities as normal children. DON’T REALIZE “Many of these children don’t realize they can take part in normal activities because they have been told all their lives they must be careful,” said Mrs. Katherine Claus of the Oakland County Health Department. “Often this changes their outlook on life,” she commented. The camp is staffed by three doctors, four nurses, two dieticians and other camping personnel such as counselors. The facility for diabetic youngsters was started in 1925 when a doctor from Grace Hospital in Detroit took some of his young patients out camping. WAS UNKNOWN “Of course, this was something unheard of at that time,” said Mrs. Claus. "It was thought then that diabetic youngsters just weren’t long for this world ” ★ w ★ The ladies auxiliary of the hospital then took on the camp as a project but dropped it when it became too much. It was reactivated when the Michigan Diabetes Association was formed about 10 years ago. Wafer Deal Extension Is OK'd in Troy TROY—The City Commission last night approved an agreement with the city of Birmingham to purchase water from the Walker Well for one month, ending Aug. 30. This is an extension of an agreement which Birmingham wanted to terminate July 31. In 1962, Troy agreed to purchase water from the well to service an area on Maple east of Coolidge. The five-year contract gave either party the right to terminate the agreement with six months notice. ★ ★ ★ In January, Birmingham notified Troy it intended to withdraw as of July 31. The two commissions will meet Aug. 12 to discuss the situation. be paid by all users, whether served directly by the trunk or by a lateral extending from it. ISM FIRST YEAR This charge would be $350 the first year and would increase $25 a year to a maximum of $650. The rate hikes reflect the amount of interest necessary to finance the program over 13 years. The other connection fee would be paid only by those property owners tapping directly into the trunkline. In addition to the unit charge, they would pay $300 to $510. The maximum rate, effective after 14 years, would be reached in $15 steps. PROPERTY SERVED The property to be served by the Walnut Lake arm constitutes the only area in that portion of the township which does not have access to either the Farmington or Evergreen sanitary sewer systems. Township Supervisor John C. Rehard said. However, he noted that lateral lines have not been constructed in all areas where they might be. The supervisor said development in the Walnut Lake area has been slowed by the lack of* sewer lines. ★ ★ * Meanwhile, homes are going up at a rapid rate west of there, he noted. AVAILABILITY OF SEWERS “All of that building can be directly attributed to the availability of sewers,” he said. Rehard last year labeled abandonment of the project “the most severe setback this township has had in years in its program of progressive planning.” CHOW TIME — Hungry young campers eagerly look forward to meal time at Camp Medicha. Margaret Mary Harm of Detroit doles out sandwiches, potato chips and bananas to (from'left) Mary Sue Harm, Tom Barbieri and Bob Shapiro, all of Detroit. The youngsters are hearty eaters, according to camp dieticians. In addition to regular meals, they must have two snacks a day instead of one usually provided at other camps. • a JUST DUCKY-The 12 families who live on the Huron River west of- Benstein Road in Commerce Township aren’t too happy about the dam that's keeping the level of Commerce Lake up and the level of the river down. Here 10-year-old Danny Norman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nor- man, 1806 Morgan, stands in the center of the river once plied by canoes. The Oakland County Drain Office, legally bound to maintain the lake level, notes there’s been a lack of precipitation recently and things are dry all over. Can Board Decide? Zone Appeal Pending Glenn Miller Orchestra Will Play at Beach The Glenn Miller Orchestra will play for a special dance at Metropolitan Beach west of Mount Gemens Sunday. * * * Trumpeteer Bobby Hackett will replace Ray McKialey as band leader. The 8:30 p.m.-mid-night dance is free, although there is a charge for parking at the Lake St. Clair beach. GETTING THE NEEDLE—Every morning, before they can start the day’s activities, diabetic children at Camp Medicha, near Leonard, must get their insulin shots. Lining up for the shots administered by Sue Fogarty, a nurse from Muskegon, are Romayne Schoen and Daniel Frantz, both of Detroit. This procedure is about the only one that differs from an otherwise normal camping routine. Utica School Board Adopts New Budget UTICA - A $6.4-million budget which includes a number of restorations in the school program was adopted by the board of education last night. The new budget represents a $1.7-million increase over last year’s “austerity" budget which included a number of cutbacks in the school program. The austerity budget was adopted after a four-mill operational levy increase and a $7.5-million bond issue were turned down hy voters in January 1964. A bond issue and millage and proposal subsequently were approved in December 1964. ★ -k, ♦ Under the n^ budget, as many first and second graders as possible will be put ^k on full-day sessions. They have been on half-days. The junior high school will go from a five- to six-hour day, and transporation will be restored throughout the district. School bug transportation had been eliminated by the board within the I'^-mile limit set by the state for reimbursement of operating costs. The largest budgetary increase is in instruction. This allotment will amount to $4,444,000 as compared to $3,346,000 last year. Schools Supt. Phillip E. Run-kel said the increase represents new teachers, teachers for the restored programs and raises and will bring the district nearly back to the average for a district of its size. OTHER SPENDING Other areas of expenditure include administration, $195,000; plant operation, $645,000; plant maintenance, $136,000; transpor- tation, $382,000; capital outlay, $96,000; community services, $16,000; student services, $28, 000; and fixed charges, $158,000. Main areas of revenue will include $3,156,000 from local sources, $2,934,000 from the state and $164,000 from federal sources. In other action, the board approved the high school planning concept which gives more attention to the noncollege-bound student. The architect now can go ahead with plans for the new high school which will be based on three basic conce^ — dignity. discovery and dispersion. A large proportion of Utica High School graduates doq’t go on to college, and official decided that a new high school should be built around this premise to give more “dignity" to a noncoliegiate program. Hope Five School Jobs to Be Done FARMINGTON-School officials are hopeful that all five of the system’s construction projects will be completed in September—but they stand ready to make adjustments if the building program lags. ★ w * A report last night to the school board -by architects for the building program indicated the situation is “touch and go” whether all five projects can be finished by Sept. 9 'when classes begin. The main problem now, according to the three architectural firms, is keeping sufficient skilled tradesmen on the job. Many construction workers, particularly masons, are in short supply due to the exten- i sive amount of building in the I area, the architects explained. { ★ ★ ★ Last night’s progress report indicated students can be placed at North Farmington High School and East Junior High School even if additions to these buildings are not entirely ready. CHANGING PLANS However, failure to complete the new Larkshire Elementary School and additions to Bond and Middle Belt elementary schools would require changing pupil placing plans. School administrators will prepare adjustments next month if it appears that the elementary schools will not be ready. In other business last night, the board opened bids on a budgeted $70,000 addition to Farmington High School and rejected all six proposals. * ★ ★ The bids ranged from $109,000 to $117,000. Board members took no action to reschedule bids on the addition project. HOLLY TOWNSHIP - With plenty of legal opinion to use in its deliberations, the Holly Township Zoning Board of Appeals is attempting to decide how far its jurisdiction extends. James F. Shea, Detroit attorney representing Holiy industrialist Fred D. Barton, claims the board can rule on Barton’s request to establish a mobile home park in the northwest portion of the township. After being turned down by | the Township Board, Barton took to the appeals board his plans to create a mobile home retirement village on a 160-aerp site at the corner of Fish Lake and Kurtz roads. Township Attorney Robert A. McKenney has said the appeals board has no authority in the Sharing McKenney’s opinion is Harry B. McAra of Flint, the attorney hired by township residents opposed to Barton’s plans. SOUGHT REZONING In order to build the trailer park. Barton had sought rezon- ing which would change the classification of the property from agricultural-residential to commercial. Some 200 residents signed petitions against the request and the Oakland County Coordinating, Zoning and Planning Conftnittee recommended that it not be granted. The Township Board therefore declined approval. ★ * k McKenney noted that a quasijudicial body the appeals board can act only In c which call for variances. NOT A VARIANCE “What is required here is not a variance but rezoning,” he said. “The property owner does not face an unusual hardship. He could develop the property under the present zoning.” Rezoning is a form of legislation and does not fall under the board’s jurisdiction, Mc-Kenny added. Shea said he bases his claim on the practices and history of the board, which has granted permits allowing house trailers to be parked ip the neighborhood. QUESTIONS RUUNG The argument that the ruling is outside the board’s jurisdiction “is no more applicable to our situation than to that acroaa the street," he saW. According to his attoracy, Barteo sees, thp freperty Is village." “We feel it’s the best possible use of the property,” Shea said. k k k Expected to make a decisiaa on the matter this week, the appeals board is headed by Stanley Hanson, who is also a towP-ship trustee. NOT SO CERTAIN Hanson is not so certain the appeals board could overrule the Township Board. “I don’t think the appeals board is going to have much strength there,” he said. "Why it was brought up before us 1 don’t know.” OES in Ortonville Slates Annual Bazaar ORTONVILLE - Ortonville! Chapter 286, OES, will hold ite | annual bazaar Saturday at the' Masonic Tjemple. Booths lining the sidewalks will open at 10 a.m. The day will end with a smorgasbord starting at 4:30 p.m. DAWW DONVIS 804 NORTH PERRY Pontiac, Michigan Phone 334-9041 Every Sunrise Everywhere 7. . . THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL* BISMARKS Cherry, Lemon, Blueberry, Strawberry, Red A Black Raspberry Try Our 101 Varieties A Delightful Way to Start Your Day! On Th« Way To Work Or Homo From A Party, You'll Enjoy Dawn's Famous Flavor Browod Coffoo DAWil DONOIi B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 Street Crews Finishing Job Roadways in Pontiac Art Being Sealcoated city - crews are nearing the end of the city's 1965 street se^coating program, a form of, maintenance work for residential streets. Only three streets remain to be done in this year’s program of 14 local streets. ayde Christian, saperin-tendent of the Department of Pnblk Works, said that sealcoating is not resnrfacing and does not prodnce the same long-lasting surface. However, he added that the process is widely used and accepted as a form of preventive maintenance, serving to prolong the life of an asphaltic concrete street surface. ★ w ★ Relatively inexpensive (25 cents per square yard), sealcoating is a two-step process. City DPW crews do the labor. NO CHARGE Since sealcoating is considered maintenance .work, like patching pot holes, there is no charge to property owners. The cost is borne by the city. Christian said $15,060 was budgeted this year for the sealcoat program. The funds came from the street maintenance fund, which is supported principally from gasoline and weight tax monies returned to the city by the state. While sealcoating is not always the answet to a deteriorating street, Christian said that each year the city conducts a survey to determine wheire sealcoating is to be applied for that year. ★ A ★ Residents receive word of the sealcoating when a DPW employe distributes a handbill a few days in advance of the work. NO PARKING Temporary "no parking” signs are posted on the street the day preceding the work. The process Itself consists of: • Swe^ing and flushing the street. • Application of two layers of asphalt emulsion «id small size crushed slag. • Rolling the street with a 10-ton pneumatic-tired roller. • Leaving the asphalt emulsion to “cure” or dry for about a day. Christian said that the use of new sealcoating methods, im-, provements in Equipment and more rigid control of materials has solved many of the old problems, such as dust and “bleeding,” which makes the new surface appear sticky in the early hours of the curing process. ★ A W The DPW superintendent noted that traffic controUs still a problem. Car tires, he said, will damage the surface in ihe early hours after the curing process begins. STREETS CLOSED To solve this, the street is barricaded and closed to traffic until nightfall. ★ A ★ Christian said a policeman is with the sealcoating crew at all times. Violators are ticketed and illegally parked cars have been hauled away. After the curing takes place, city crews return a few days later to sweep up the loose slag, leaviqg a nonskid surface which prolongs the life of the pavement for several years. STREAMUNER DERAILED - Eight cars of the westbound Union Pacific City of Denver train were derailed 11 miles southwest of Sterling, Colo., yesterday. Fifty-three AP PMMtx of the 303 passengers were injured. One woman died after the accident of an apparent heart attack. Spends 116th Birthday Watching Cars Go By LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tat-zumbie Du Pea marked what she lists as her 116th birthday by sitting on the front porch oil her home, counting the passing cars. It’s her favodte hobby. Mrs. Du Pea, a widow, says she is now the oldest living Piute Indian and the oldest native Californian. She lives on Social Security earned in years of playing bit parts, usually as a' squaw, in Hollywood movies. Physician Calls Sale 'Unethical' WASHINGTON (AP) - Dr. CSiristopher Wood, a Myrtle Beach, S.C, eye physician, denounce today the practice of many doctors of selling the things they prescribe for patients. In testimony prepared for the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly iubcommittee. Wood called the practice unethical and a sign of avarice by doctors. He urged Congress to consider passing laws to forbid it. AAA He aimed his statement mainly at doctors who sell the eye-ses they prescribe, but said it applied to other fields of medicine as well. He said most ophthalmologists are selling glasses in addition to treating and prescribing for patients' eye troubles. Eugene J. Lane, Tucson, Ariz., lawyer fpr opticians who produce glasses prescribed by doctors, charged in prepared testimony that patients have complained of coercive tactics by doctors trying to sell what they prescribe. ‘I feel that if the conduct of doctors exploiting the public is allowed to continue unabated,” Lane said, ‘‘either by the medical society Itself or by legisla-tl^ action, in the long run the public as a whole will suffer drastic consequences.” ‘ He said eye doctors could freeze opticians out of the market, and charge what they pleased for glasses. Lane said that if that happens “the captive patient of the future will be financially at his doctor’s mercy.” He told of patients who, he said, claim to have been overcharged for ' glasses they got from their eye doctors. Lane said he had complained "to no avail” to the Justicp Department and Federal Trade Commission, and feels it is time now. for Congress to “rectify this apparent wrong being done to the dispensing opticians’ trade.” The subcommittee’s chairman, Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., keyed the hearing to a statement he had made public Monday that the American Medical Association seemingly “does not care to — or is unable to — assume the policemen’s role” in stopping dwtors from peddling the things they prescribe. Koreans Line Streets During Rhee Funeral SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -Half a million Koreans lined streets of Seoul today as the body of former President Syng-man Rhee was carried to a grave in the National (Cemetery on the southern bank of the Han River. Funeral service was held In the (^ungdoog Methodist church which Rhee used to attend. Nearby City Hall Plaza was jammed, and the half-mile-long procession was stalled for 20 minutes there after it left the church. A memorial program had been planned at the plaza, with recordings of some of, Rhee’s speeches to be played. It was called off because of the confusion. The former president, who was overthrown by a student-led revolt in 1960, died Jufy 19 Ui Honolulu. He was 90. Apparent Heart Attack Woman Dies After Derailment STERLING, Colo. (AP) - An •autopsy was scheduled today for a South Dakota woman who died after the derailment of a Chicago-to-Denver passenger train. Alma Conlpn, 77, of Wagner, S.D., died Monday night of an an>arent heart attack. She had suffered a fractured spine in the accident. AAA Logan County authorities said die autopsy would be performed to determine whether Mrs. Con-Ion died as a result of the derailment. persons remained hospitalized. They were ipvng ^ injured when the westbound .City of Denver, operated by the Union Pacific Railroad, left the tracks early Monday morning. 303 PASSENGERS A railroad spokesman said 303 passengers were on the 18-car train, when the last nine cars jumped the rails at a spot crossed by other trains only a short while before. weakened tracks in the mountains some 40 miles west of Denver. The Denver, Rio Grande & Western Zephyr carried 305 passengers, none of whom were injured. Airman Breathes Life Back Into Tot After Rescue . TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - A 19-year-bld airman who heard a baby girl’s parents calling her Monday night rescued the child from nearby Elk Lake and breathed life back into her body, police said. Michael Bbuch, a medic on leave from Gunner Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala., told officers he came out onto the porch when he heard the cries of Mr. and Mrs. Ned Carnail of Bluffton, Ind. Bouch said he saw toys float- A ingin the lake and ran to thej_______________ The accident was the second spot, where he found 20-month- j small explosion near midnight, passenger train derailment in i old Diane Camall face down in I The FBI said it was also check- Bomb Hits the Office of 3 CORE Lawyers NEW ORLEANS, U. (AP) -A fire bomb exploded late^Mon-day night outside the office # three civil rights attorneys pleading federal court con^pt proceedings here against Bogu-lusa police officials. The incendiary device punctured an automobile radiator and broke the glass in the front door of the law office of Robert Collins, Nils Douglass and Lolis Hie three attorneys represented the Congress of Racial Equality in federal court Monday as chief U.S. Dist. Judge Herbert W. Christenberry began hearing the contempt proceedings launched by the civil rights organization and the Department of Justice. At one point, after watching moVies of racial turmoil at Bo-galusa. Judge Christenberry told government lawyers to bring before him two more police officers for criminal and contempt action. HEARING CONTINUES The hearing continued today Pnd there were indications that it might last all week. Bogalusa’s Police Commissioner Arnold Spiers ai^ Police (3ilef Claxton Knight hwe been accused by the Justice Department and CORE of failing to obey Judge Christenberry’s July 10 ruling that demonstrators be protected from angry whites. AAA CORE also wants Washington Parish Sheriff Dorman Crowe and other law officers convicted of civil contempt. ■ Judge Christenberry has placed criminal contempt proceedings against Spiers and itnight on his regular docket. They will be heard later. CONTEMPT CASES Criminal contempt can be described as like a father whipping his son for having stolen a watermelon. In civil contempt, it’s the father taking the boy to the woodshed for failure to stop stealing the melons. Police sped to the Collins, Douglass and Elie office, located in a predominantly Negro commercial section, after the (Colorado within 12 hours. AAA Late Sunday, the California Zephyr, eastbound for Denver from San Francisco and Salt Lake City, skidded off rain- two feet of water. ing the incident. The airman said he applied mouth - to - mouth resuscitation and the child revived. She was reported in good condition at a hospital here. The CORE regional offices in New Orleans are next door to (he law office. A spokesman for CORE said a witness saw the explosive tossed from a slowly moving car. Judge Christenberry looked at an FBI film strip showing two policemen in a crowd of whites who laughed and Jeered as a barber hosed down two white civil rights pickets outside establishntent in center at Bogaiusa July 17. WANTS NAMES “I want the department to determine the names of those two officers and have them in court sometime this week to determine if they should be held in contempt,” snapped the grayhaired judge. “Which officers?” asked Robert Owens, a Justice Department lawyer. A A “The ones who stood there and did nothing. You can determine easily their identifications,” replied Christenberry. “Apparently some people must be shown. This court intends that its orders be obeyed,” he continued. “Bring them in.” SAW PICTURES Several hours later. Judge Christenberry, after looking at still pictures and hearing the testimony of one of the pickets, remarked, “As far as I can s^ the two city police officers did nothing but assist the bystanders in blocking the sidewalk.” The picket, Victor Levine, a CORE worker from Oakland, Calif., said the barber told him, “ ’I have to dean this trash off the sidewalk. This is my property.’ And other things like that.” HOUSE FALLS-This house in Santiago, Chile, already weakened by the earthquake of last March, collapsed yesterday under the weight of four straight days of heavy rain. The rains have caused the worst floods to hit Chile in 12 years and have brought misery, heavy damage and isolation to central and southern parts of the country. Plans Private School in Selma for Whites Refusing to Integrate 52 Waterford Youths Enter Fitness Meet Fifty-two Waterford T o w n-ship youths will compete in a physical fitness meet at Detroit Metropolitan Beach at 10 a.m. Thursday. The Waterford Township Rec-r e a t i 0 n departments will be represented at the meet. An arts and crafts exhibit will be staged by Waterford Township youth from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Aug. 26 at Pontiac Mall. Other events scheduled by the Waterford Township Recreation Departement include the Junior Olympics at Pierce Junior High School at 1 p.m. Aug. 10; a championship softball game at Drayton Park at 9:30 a.m. Aug. 11 and a checker-chess-4-square-knock hockey tournament at Drayton ply^ound at 1 p m. Aug. 11. Teams from 13 playgrounds will compete for a traveling trophy in the Junior Olympic meet. A sun-powered clock gets all its energy from solar radiation and stores enough to carry it through dark days. SELMA, Ala. (AP) - A private school for white pupils unwilling to go to Cla$s with Negroes is being established in the city where the current civil rights struggle in Alabama began. Leaders of a newly formed private school foundation in Selma have promised to start classes in September in a white-columned mansion once occu-pi^ by a Confederate Civil War general. They hope the state will foot the bill with tuition grants. But the foundation president, Robert D. Wilkinson, says, “Wq’re going to have a school whether we get the money or not.” A bill to authorize the use of public funds in any city or county for'pupils attending private school is pending in the legislature. $185 A YEAR It would make up to $185 a year available for a child whose assignment to public school would, in the judgment of his parents, be “detrimental to (his) physical or emotional health” or subject the child to “hazards to personal safety.” The bill makes no mention of race or color. AAA Alabama has a tuition-grant law now, but a three-judge federal court has prohibited its use. Unlike the pending new measure, the law provides for grants only when public schools have been ordered Integrated. AAA Sponsors of the new bill are hopeful the federal courts will approve the tuition grant plan where no mention is made of segregation. The private school foundation was organized after the Selma School Board had agreed to desegregate the first four grades this fall. THE INTERNATIONAL WHISKY. I., Every drop ol the 40% sirtight whisky m SirJohrt is 12 ytrs or more old tr)d blended with 60% ot the choicest Grein Neutrel Spirits. Eighty proof, Schenley Distillers Co., N.Y.C. AP PMMIX HAPPY BRIDE AND GROOM - New York’s Mayor Robert F. Wagner, 56, and his newly acquired bride, the former Barbara Joan Cavanagh, 36, are a picture of happiness shortly after their wedding in New York, yestei^ay. They were married by Francis Cardinal Spellman. The couple will spend a 10-day honeymoon in Florida. featuring GAS Quality FURNACE w tWr teminenee d TWm»-Pita»'i h/if meymurit (ft«M> »ldni •!< Wifh LIFETIME GUARANTEE HEAT EXCHANGER • iHt cooo lusnms m *Exclu»irm Greater Oakland Ceunty Dealer CHANDLER HEATING CO. G480 HIGHLAND ROAD Vi Mila East af Pantiaor Airpart mn IT444II FHA TERMt NIQHT tEWYlOI 0RI4MI ’ijm to ^sjwo i s- r Irtortnd’i HOME I mortgage I "SSS’’' I i I CRED''*' M INSVRANCE ^ I at NO extra cosyri • Cash when needed! Tithout oblisation. lee and ulk with Mr. Merle You or Mr. Buckner, who have been loaning money to hundreds of people in Pontiac during the past 40 years. .411 borrower* will testify to receiving fair, honest, and coorteous treatment. (Uo not take a chance dealing with strangers or fly-by-night lenders.) Ml hen you deal here, you .receive the full amount of your loan in caili at once.'No papers to sign until the loan is closed. No charge for inspection, appraisal or survey. No charge for abstract, tide search or title Borrow from ua to consolidate your debts, to pay off the balance yon owe on your contract. to pay taxes to make home repairs or improvements, or for any other good pm^ pose. See us today. SPEOAL froo Parking on county lot eomor N. Sag- froo Parking whonovor you apply for on inow and W. Huron Sts. ooch tima you bring opprovod lean or ranawol. to our offieo a full monthly poymont. Rring us your parking tickot to bo stampod. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING - FE 4-4729_ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JULY 27, 196.5 B-8 fW t 1 ^ “ ^4. 4&<» • i INNOCENT PLEA—Candace Mossier was smiling on arrival at a Miami court yesterday where she and her nephew, Melvin Lane Powers, pleaded innocent to first degree Hospital Releases 'Puncher' DETROIT (UPI)-Police Sgt. Robert M. Robertson, 37, was discharged yesterdiay from Herman Keifer Hospital where he was under observation since Saturday when he slugged his lieutenant at the scene of a civil rights demonstration. AP PhoWax murder charges in the slaying of her husband, Texas banker Jacques Mossier. At right is Dade County Lt. Hank Selskey. Suspects Claim Innocence in Death ol Millionaire Moy Put 'Gas Stations' in Space for Astronauts f An “engineering analysis” of the first Titan-3C lannching last Jane 18 “shows that n payload of nearly 27^ pounds could have bMn orbited.” SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Within 15 years or so, astronauts headed outward for the planets Mars or Venus may stop by orbiting “service stations” to gas up fw the long trip, a U.S. space engineer suggested today. L. Morgan, staff engineer for Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., Sunnyvale, Calif., said space-going tankers carrying huge quantities of rocket fuel ‘may be a requirement of future interplanetary missions.” Morgan put his idea before more than 5,000 U.S. scientists and engineers at today’s second session of the four-day annual meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and denied he tried Astronautics (AIAA). German rock# experts working Earlier, the groep waa toKI In the United'Arab Republic^ that, in the race to shoot heavy- Lotz, who is on tnal with his weight satellites into Earth or-, wife and Franz William Kiesow, bit the United States can still an employe of a West German do better than the Soviet Union steel company, pleaded innocent - by at least 130 pound. ! a state security court to four W. German Admits Spying for Israel CAIRO (A» — West German horse breeder Johann Wolfgang Sigmund Lotz pleaded guilty today to six charges of spying for Israel’s intelligence service but The exact figure, informed sources said, was 26,970 pounds 130 pounds more than Pro-ton-1. ★ ★ ★ Bleymaier revealed that Titan-3C, a triple-barreled space machine developing more than 2Vi million pounds of thrust, is scheduled for its sec«id flight Sept. 30 from Cape Kennedy an attempt to orbit a payload with 19 separate experiments. If all goes well, scientists will turn the rocket’s upper stage on and off at least 10 times —- a space record. Four more Titan-3C rockets will be launched by next June, Bleymaier said. Each will carry “working payloads” — per-haps as many as eight satellites at a time. But Bleymaier declined to discuss Titan-SC’s biggest potential job — that of lifting the Air Force’s Manned Orbital I tory (MOL) into space starting in 1968. MOL has yet to win official Pentagon approval. ★ w ★ “Our work is completed," he said. “I understand the proposals were favorably received. I say favoraUy, because- we did not get thrown out. WWW “I think we are in excellent condition” to get a go-ahead, said Bleymaier. FEderol 3-7628 / Associate in Accounting / Associate in Commerce / Associote in Secretarial Science jcharges of attempted terrorism; ^ « MIAMI (UPI) - Candace Mossier and her nephew, Melvin Lane Powers, denied killing Texas millionaire Jacques Mossier yesterday during arraignment and were returned to jail to await legal efforts to free them on bond. was taking pictures of the Messier children, was hospitalized with a broken nose, cuts and bruises. TRIAL NOV. 15 Schulz set trial for Mrs. Mossier and Powers for Nov. 15 after denying a motion from Attorneys for the pair filed ^sst. State Atty. Arthur Huttoe writs following a six-minute ar- „,Qye the date up to avoid a ,, _ „ ... raignment before Circuit Judge possible conflict with the Lt. Gwrge Rose 38, said he Qg^rge E. Schulz in which they Thanksgiving holidays, was ordered to the scene to; innocent to first degree ★ ★ * make sure the demonstration charges. or intelligence service ... propellants such ^ ox^- gen, hydrogen and high-grade kerosene “appears to be a feas- January^jaoL_____________ ible method of operation.” | microwave INITIAL SUPPLY j oven may be brought within the Under this arrangement, as- j homeowners range by the use tronauts could use their initial j of a newly-developed magne-fuel supply simply to get into ^ tron tube, orbit. There, they would gas up again for the hop across interplanetary space. The technique Is one possible way to sidestep the building of prohibitively costly superrockets bigger than the U.S. Saturn-5 moonrocket. U.S. sdentists already are studying ways to develop rocket “muscles” that could lift a 1-million - pound satellite space. ffi* nancy fay for Secretarial Finishing Course PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 W. Lawrence Street, Pontiac, Mich. was orderly. He said he found everything peaceful and talked with picket leaders who assured him there would be no disturbance. He said that while he was talking with the demonstrators, Robertson, who left his post at the station house against Rose’s orders that he remain in charge there drove up, jumped out of his cruiser and began yelling to the pickets, ^‘Get out of here. You can’t do that.'* It was the first face-to-face meeting in more than a year for Powers, 23, and his 46-year old Aunt Candace. The meeting caused no apparent reaction from the two. America’s charge of its heavyweight booster brigade into the , . cosmos was revealed in detail Following the arraignrnent, _ Powers, Mrs. Mossier and their * * ★ attorneys huddl^ behind closed | doors for nearly half an hour to plan strategy in the case. Harvey St. Jean, one of Powers’ three-man defense team. Ih. me «... allege, killed St Mossier because he was interfering with their love affair. ★ ★ ★ Texan Clyde Woody, Mrs. Mossler’s attorney, also filed motions to view all the state’s evidence in the case and to get ness, was discussed other than “strategy- Rose said he feared the agita-: a complete list of state wit-tion might set off a melee; nesses, among the demonstrators and | baDLY BEATEN ordered Robertson back into the Slnp* hWkfncr *hlm ^from'^thp his financial deal- while blocking him from the .__________ *>o anA pickets. Then, Rose said, Robertson slugged him. Rose required no hospital treatment. MODEL SERGEANT Rose, who has been on the force since 1945 and has held supervisory posts since 1956, described RolKrtson as a model sergeant with “nerves of steel.” Robertson has been a policeman since 1950. He formerly Nev/ Calhoun Sheriff BATTLE CREEK (AP)-State Police Lt. Joseph Liebherr Monday was named Calhoun County sheriff effective Sept. 1. Liebherr succeeds Richard F. Zinn, who resigned the post due to ill health. heaviest satellite, its 26,840-pound Proton-1, into orbit 11 days ago — but the Soviets failed to wrest the booster power leadership from America. SAME POSSIBLE “I think we could have done the same thing,” with the new Titan-3C superrocket. Brig. Gen. Joseph S. Bleymaier, Air Force deputy commander for manned systems, said. William G. Purdy, general manager of launch vehicles for Martin Co., Denver, Colo., provided statistics to prove it. ings, was stabbed 39 times and beaten in his $170-a month Key Biscayne apartment here in 1964. Powers and Candace exchanged only two quick glances, a nod and a smile during the formal arraignment in a downtown courtroom jammed to capacity with newsmen and spectators. Following the hearing, Mrs. was a detective and was pro- Mossler’s son-in-law, Gary Wild-moted in 1961 to uniform ser- er, 27, became embroiled in a geant. He holds six citations. street fight with UPI Florida Whether Robertson will face | Newspictures manager Hugo L. trial board action depends onj Wessels. results of his medical examina-1 Wessels, 27, swore out a war-tion, police officials said. He rant charging Wilder with as-was suspended from the force sault and battery. The veteran pending official action in the! UPI photographer, who said case. Wilder attacked him whiie he REDUCE EAT cind LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and moie effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including (lapsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP II OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OHicti in Onklind nnd Wiynn Countidi - Ont in Mirncid Mild THROW AWAY THE PAIHT BRUSH! Our entire aluminum siding stock must be mm Hurry! Givd your houto a bdoutiful n«w look at soll-out lold pricod. You don't nood daih •^with Budmon'i spocial homo improvomont crodit torvico... NO PAYMENTS ‘TIL ’66 ALUMINUM PATIO LIMITED TIME ONLY NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! ANT SIZE UP TO AND INCLUDING Gigantic 10’x16’ ALUMINUM SIDING ^354 Complete 6-Room House 22 X 24 X 8 COMPLETELY INSTALLED COMPLETELY INSTALLED CALL TODAY VALUE CONST. CO., Alamiiimi & Potie I 24315 Weedword FE 4-4418 Opdrdldn d« Doty M Hdurt iiKiodioi SMiedy W More Time for Fun-Ends Painting Worries Wookondi and vacation! will bo yourt to onjoy Indtoad of boing dpont in novdr-onding mointonanco chorot. Can't rust, rot er pool. Budman' •iding wilt moko your homo tho dhowplaco of your noighberhood. 'ArEnjoy Cooler Summers and Warmer Winters Fully intulotod for cooler tummort—warmer wintord. Adds yoard of corofroo beauty and ploaturo. Keeps sporkling fresh year after year with a twiih of your garden hote. a IMPORTANT a When you deal with Budman's you are assured 100% guaranteed installation by a 58-year-old family firm. Since 1907 is your Full Guarantee I Pre-Season Price Break-Beat the Fall Rush!| ^ GAS HEAT SALE ALUMINUM Screen and Storm WINDOWS Fantastic Prica Slash! $088 *17“ Sava double nowl New furnace and burner priced cut to pre-teasen rock bottom and trade-in allowances or# boosted sl^-high. 1e down installs it now . 1 . NO PAYMENTS mL ’SS GAS FURNACE Oatee Cenvarsion Law, Law Frica! aa Wiialt Haett *66 AIR CONDITIONING RUDMAN'S m/Um ^ I f ,4,1 m'i f r iini.iLiiwfijri Budman Do4« It AU-Fr«a Ertiwate! • KITCHEN i BATH MODERNIZATION • ALUMINUM AWNINGS AND PATIOS • ROOFING • GUTTERS • GARAGES PHONE 682-4910 ^B^E^ Or dial Operetar, etk lor Intsrpfiie *767 end ceN ■ ■ an direct - No dieige to yswl Ws seew to iilylil 10p.eL.SlSS. TUESDAY. JULY 27j 1965 He Needs His Mother More Than He Needs You GAY LEE MIRBACH Women s Section traat yourself to a Marvelous VautionI 5-Day ••• 2000-mile GREAT LAKES CRUISE fl|M trttfIcT .... .... whHiT Wky u*k fM iml i....— S.t. SOUTH AMIRICAN tloni? Com* tloni OR nil SDiy CruiHl Slit OvoM tf Hit OrM* laktt Hm Detroit ipy Sundllf, 5i30 *.«. Enjoy lolitf WHOM or mo wow imu reliMtion' tint *ood, lijlitMiini. Viiit ' *164** •PPliw MtCkinjiC ^lllind,^Hou|hton-HinciK:^ Du^ iMtudMtrimpor IrOUTSIDEciMii SrACI AVAILAILI AUGUST 1, • AND IS Coll NOW! FE 8-4048 Hiilingai Tiavel Center 25 East Pike Street Pentioc, Michigan By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend's mother has spent the past 30 years convincing him th^ she has a serious heart condition. I am sure she is just putting on an act to get attention from Gene. She’s been a .widow for years,, and Gene ABBY is her only “child." (A 40-year-old cWld!) She shovels coal for the furnace, can out-shout anyone in an argument, and runs up and down stairs like a teenager. I have dated Gene for three years, but have been invited to his mother’s home only once. ★ A ★ I tried to make her like me, but when she and her son are together they act like there’s nobody else in the room. I love this guy enough to accept her for a mother-in-law, but first I have to convince Gene that he and his mother don’t really need each other. He says when she goes, he’ll get everything, which I understand is quite a lot. She’s only 61 biit will probably live to be 100. From this letter I guess I sound as bad as she is, but believe me. I’ve made a “hit” witih the mothers of every other fellow I'Ve dated. I’m domestic, sincere, intelligent, mature and good-looking. I know Gene loves me, but what about his mother problem? OHIO * * A DEAR OHIO: You’ll never convince Gene that he and his mother don’t “need” each other. They do. Let his mother have him ^ Newlyweds Cruising on Lake Huron Cruising Lake Huron on a 28-foot sloop are End. and Mrs. Kendrick Wayne Wentzel (Sheila Ramey) yvho were wed recently in St. Mark’s Lutheran (hurch. Rev. William C. Grafe performed the double-ring ceremony for the couple whose parents are the Camess Rameys of Allegan and the William J. Wentzels of Westacres. ARCH OF SWORDS Leaving the church for the reception in Westacres Club House, the newlyweds passed beneath an arch of swords held by Cadet Eric Wentzel, USAF Academy, his brother’s best man, along with their father Maj. Wentzel; Lt. Richard Bayer USAF; Cmdr. Alvin Isselhardt; Ens. William Newlon and Maj. Norbert Fox USAF. AAA Alencon lace motifs accent-e. Ft te*17 Miss Agnes Blomquist, president of Newport Balboa Savings and Loan, Newport Beach, Calif., wears what she calls a "harmonious" dress of a type which virtually all her feminine employes wear. She began the practice 11 years ago, paying half the cost, in an effort to inspire confidence among customers and employes. A, number of other California financial instituticgis gupply their girls loith clothing. I AT LAST. . invisible HEARING AID for those that hear but do not understand • TMi It t(w cwnitlaW 11 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-9257 I Better Hearing Service 103 N. Saginaw- Ph. FI 2-0292 I* I" WiHi Po«*i«c Opiitol. Acn». Jram Smwu lV Nome.................. I iWAaw...............................Z.." 1° _______________ I JWonlfurthwiiib^ casual with the business I’m bringing them?’ “And, I’ve seen that getting into the suits inspires confidence within the ^rls,” Miss Blomquist said. “The neat ones become just a little bit neater.” Of 50 women workers, only 2 don’t subscribe to the uniform dress plan, option for all but the 15 female executives. TWO EACH YEAR “We have two suits, and buy a new one each six months, footing .half the cost,” Miss Blomquist said. “The employes pay the other half, by payroll deduction if they like. It costs them about $12 per month.” Another firm, with 45 employes in its five branches, supplies two suits and pays for dry-cleaning. “We estimate it costs $12,-000 a year to clothe the women,” said Marion Brant, purchasing agent at Belmont Savings. Long Beach. “We’ve been doing this for four years, and all are very happy with the plan.” At Belmont the employes attend a small fashion show when it’s time to choose a new outfit. Another firm, Van Nuys Savings, provides 10 changes a year. ’ SOME DONT Chain banks generally do not s u b s c r 1 b e to the idea, mainly because of the number and turnover rate of their personnel. Said a Bank of America spokesman: “We thought of putting lobby hostesses in uniform, but decided not to. The idea is for the girl to recognize the customer, not for the customer to have to recognize the girl." A Beverly Hills savings and loan association got this reaction when it proposed special garb: “Who wants to become a blob?” Nurses Residence in Taipei, Taiwan (Formosa). A .. A A The late Dr. Maffett was national president of the Federation in 1941 when the fund was set up through the Federation’s Chinese Nurses project to train nurses of the Free Chinese Army. Some 5,000 BPW’s from across the country are attending a five-day business-packed agenda which ends on Thurs-day. SPEAKER Miss Allan is the keynote speaker today at the Federation Promotion Forum on “The Challenge of Change” in the Sheraton Park Hotel. She appeared on Monday's evening panel on “Challenges Facing Our Nation,” along with other past national Federation presidents. ★ ★ ★ Back by popular demand for the second year will be Laurence J. 'Taylor, vice president for Leadership Development at Hillsdale College. He will address the Wednesday afternoon membership workshop on “Growth on Purpose.” Bride-Elect Ruth A. Kramp Is Honored A recent pantry shower in the home of Judy Kent at Lake Angelus, honored bride-elect Ruth Ann Kramp, daughter of the Louis S. Kramps of Cutler Street. Mrs. John Longhurst was cohostess. The home of Mrs. Rose Smith on Indian View Drive was also the setting for a recent bridal shower, with Mrs. Albert Karchon assisting the Miss Kramp’s Chi Omega sorority sisters and her dormitory mates at Western Michigan University honored her at a shower in Kalamazoo. Her fiance, Donald J. Maxim, is the son of the Max Max-imsj)f Shawnee Court. Big Mystery Is Slated It’s all a mystery,, but for those who enjoy adventure, the Pontiac chapter of the National Business and Professional Women’s Club has a surprise in store on Saturday afternoon. Bus transportation will be provided to the picnic site and back from t h e departing point. Haves Jones Center, AAA The trip starts at 2:.10 p.m. and will return about 7 p.m. Food will be provided. Casual dress is called for .so that anyone may participate in the scheduled games. Proceeds will be used for the scholarship fund. A A A ■ Tickets may be obtained from any club member. October vows are planned by Carolyn Ann Rouse, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ceylon Rouse of West Square Lake Road, and Lt. Ronald Mecum, son of the Paul Mecums of Carmi, III. Her fiance, presently stationed at Fort Knox, Ky., is an alumnus of Michigan State University where Miss Rouse was a former student. Sorority Picnics at Tinney Home Members and their families of Alpha chapter, Bota Theta Phi sorority gathered at t h e Elizabeth Lake Road home of the Homer Unneys for a picnic recently. Announcement was made concerning the first meeting in the fall, a cooperative dinner Sept. 21 at the Auburn Heights home of Mrs. C. F. WS9I7SSMS Dig into as many golden buttermilk pancakes as you can eat for just... - i There's a demand for Graduate Operatora! ‘‘learn a professional service” Faculty ft iBstmcton V ORA RANDAL ★ 20TA JAYNES GRACE COLLINS ★ MARY ANN LEATHERBERRY 1S. SAGINAW - PHONE: FE 4-2352 t SANDWICHES R STEAKS • SALADS BIRMINGHAM •IW I4W MU* ■«. WOODWARD AVE. 15325 W. a Mila J*A SMt M UrwwHiW 10001 Telegraph Rd. ; filE PONTIAC l»KKSS. TyKSDAV. JULY 27, 19M The newlywed Mr. and Mrs. James R. Goodrich (Joanne Sue Bloecker) chose the First Baptist Church, Oxford, for their recent marriage and reception. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Poli of Or-tonville, Mrs. Glenn Goodrich of Oxford and the late Mr. Goodrich. Miniature yellow roses centered a bouquet of ivy and stephanotis for the bride who was gowned in white Chantilly lace over taffeta, worn with illusion veil. ChoM* from more than 2.S00 baautiful patlarnt of iptcial Mlactad iteck. WALLPAfERS Trimmtd-Pasted—WoihabU ,r^29\.r. Room Lots —$1.98 and up ACME PAINT Reception in the Bingham-tofi Drive home of the William C. Hardens followed th^ recent marriage of their daughter Mary Jane to Ronald Bruce Comstock in the ChurchC of the Nazarerw. Wearing white Chantilly lace with organza overlay, the bride held white carnations arranged to form a cross for the rite performed by Rev. Russell Stanley. The bridegroom is the son of the Almon F. Comstocks of Flint. When They Quality Training: by Lopez Slerlinjy Beauty School Walton Blvd. at Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains OR 3-0222 PERMANENTS Prices $10 and Up HAIRCUTTING AND COLOR TINTING Scissor Haircutting Beauty Shop RIktr aWf. FE J-71M Fra* PaiKina sn CaurthauM Lai . 3; - ■ O^eumode •FIBEeLOCI^''" SALE! 77* 2 pairs $1.50 RUN-LESS SEAMLESS for lonser wear. Reinforced toes and heels. 82 N. Saginow St. Stay, After the Party By the Emily Post Institute Q; Will you please tell me what, if anything, a host and hostess can do when some of the guests at a cocktail party stay on and on after the hour stated on the invitations? A: Cocktail parties rarely end on time and a hostess must expect some of her guests to linger a half hour or so beyond the indicated time, but that is as much as she should be expected to endure. After that she may take steps to hurry the last survivors off. She and her husband could put on their coats, saying, “I’m so sorry, but we are expected for dinner in ten minutes,” even though it may be the neighborhood restaurant that is expecting them. Or they mav simply remove the liquor and close the bar. Once the guests finish the drinks in their hands and find no more being .served, the party will soon be over. BELATED ANNIVERSARY Q: Our 2,5th wedding anniversary was six months ago but, as my husband was in the hospital at that time, we could not give a party. He is completely well again and we would still like to celebrate the occasion. Would it be proper, at this late date to give a belated silver anniversary party? ★ ' * * A; Under the circumstances you de.scribe, it will be quite all right to have a belated anniversary party now that your husband is well again. TELEPHONE Q: When lunching in someone’s house, and during the course of the meal the telephone rings and the hostess leaves the table to answer it, does a guest go on eating, or does she wait until the hostess returns to the table before continuing? A: Unless the hostess tells her to go on eating, she should wait. The Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Formal Wedding Procedure,” includes details on the wedding procession, the receiving line and other helpful information. To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self - addres,sed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this column. Area Couple Honeymoon at the Falls The Eugene Paul Murrays fShirlie Ann Snyder) left for a honeymoon In Niagara Falls and northern Michigan after their recent marriage in the First Methodist Church, Romeo. * ★ ★ Parents of the couple wed before Rev..J. Charles Dibley are the Donald K.. Snyders of Romeo and the Emmanuel H. Murrays of GaAlen City. ★ * ★ The br|de wore a gown and chapel train of white satin with an illusion veil. She carried white orchids, carnations and Stephanotis. ★ * ★ With Diane Jarrett, honor maid, were bridesmaids, Mrs. Donald A. Snyder, Royal Oak, and Joyce Thomas, Marlette. Donna May Jarrett was flower-girl. ★ ★ *, Eugene Ramain was best man with Donald A. Snyder and James Razek, groomsmen. Sigman Harless ushered. ★ * ★ The couple will reside in Romeo. This Is Typical Example, Forced Love By MURIEL LAWRENCE I Dear Mrs. Lawrence: Our son is in some deep trouble over a girl. When he first met her, he wanted the family to meet her but now he won’t discuss her with any of us. I know she dbean't care for him because of his nervousness. This past month he has been calling dp on Fridays to say he’s coming home for the weekend; but when he gets here,! he’s restless and impatient. Then he’ll put in a long-distance call to this girl and leave without staying the night. She is leading him on. . . Answer: She couldn’t do It if he didn’t want to keep the ring in his nose. We are mistaken, I think, to allow sympathy for a painfully infatuated child to blind us to the fact that vindictiveness has become the mainspring of his continuing attachment to his tormentor. At this point of painful infatuation the secret feeling is; I “I’ll bring you to heel if it, I kills me.” I Though our dear child appears I to be the victim of his tormen-i tor — that bad girl who “leads” I him on — the truth is that he is [ the victim of his own insistence I on compelling her to acknowl-i edge his irresistible charm. Hiat is why, when he comes home for a weekend’s relief from battle, he can’t stay there. The drive to break the tormentor into surrender to his charm takes him over again. The problem, of course, is that our infatuated child glorifies his demands for vengeance on the person who has hurt and humiliated him. He calls it “love” — one of those special world-shaking passions which change maps. It is only by seeing himself as the hero of epic romance that the poor lamb can account for ; his willingness to put up with its heroine’s caprices, betrayals, lies and cruelties. Anger at the girl is a waste of our time. She's really not to blame because our child refuses to know when he’s licked. ' M««t FritMt ffr ■RliMIFUTaiidLUIIOII RIKER FOUNTAIN 8lkofgl<|.-.UNy ^ He, not she, is our business. We may be able to point out to i him, “It’s actually a little cruel! ^ ______ to try to force love from people | Need a crib? Use a who haven’t got it to give." j Press Classified Ad. Easy to do And it is, you know. L . . just phone 33M1I1. /iiemSs Siai^ July Sale SUMMER SLACKS regular to 25.00 6” . 14” SUITS Year 'round and lightweight regula 54 00 SPORT COATS Year 'round and lightweight regular to 55.00 OU SPORT and DRESS SHIRTS Short and Long Sleeve 25.o50% off STAPP'S... first arrivals for back-to-school . ^trideRite SHOE Mrs. John B. Wilson, Fernbarry Street, is Waterford Township chairman of Pontiac Area United Fund women's residential campaign. She is responsible Jor recruiting some 500 women who will also canvass small businesses. New in United Fund work, Mrs. Wilson has been active in PTA, her church, Pi Omicron sorority, the County Bar Association auxiliary and a Camp Fire Girls' group. She has two children, Karen, 14, and Mark, 7. Don’t Throw It Away . . . REBUILD IT TODAY! Our axpert* will raitara naw comfort, highor quality into your proiant mat-trots or box spring . . . compara bofero you buy! ONE DAY SERVICE I Guaranteed in IT ritiri/if 7 Years : OXFORD MAHRESS CO. ! 497 North Perry St., Pontiac FE 2>1711 ■ SERVING THE .PONTIAC AREA OVER 41 YEARS willy-nilly she wants a CM CThi, /This season, it’s a tie. Fashion and fit share Tween-Age honors in this soft, supple, new shoe. With Stride Rite construction and our expert .fitting service, ever yarn's a winner. Choose your favorite too! Brilliant Red jet Black. Full range of widths fool Girls lO's - 3's Growing Girls to size 7. priced from $899 Available At All 3 Stapp Stores STAPP'S JUNlOa SHOES 928 W. Huron St. o< Talagropli (Open FrI. to 9, Sol. to 8.30) JUNIOI SHOES ^ 418 N. Main St.. Rocktdar (Opon Fri to 9) Aim Entire Summer Stock Swim Suits Jamaicas Bermudas Blouses Slacks Coordinates Dresses Sleepwear PLUS .. many year ’round ifamt Up to 70% off Speciol Group 4 4% nil DoL'ISO DEBS Ix®® regular 19.95...................... tim ITALIAN SANDALS (discontinued styles) regular to 5.99..................... TOWN & COUNTRY CASUALS KOO regular to 9.95.................... W TOWN & COUNTRY DRESS regular to 15.95................... CARESSA - MR. EASTON 1 000 regular to 16.95.................. I w DeLtSO DEBS and ^ 4% All ANDREW GELLER 1 HURON at TELEGRAPH THE PONTjAC i*KKSS, TLESlJAY, JULY 27, 196.5 B—7 * Supervisors' Proceedings re IConllnuMl From Prtctdlnfl Ptf«) ttM tdwolt and laxpaytrt of Otk-.—. -—raeommaodad atni > o> Hi1,74S and a dacrtaM ■ of mlKollanaoua t>on-lax rar-.M'*"* f Tha ateva raductlan netad Includat a Ort-bM In ttia amounli lolitllv racom-mandad by nia Salarlat Committaa and jHia board of *vd»or« lor n%« iom ki. arlaa portion of ring malor factori OTTO account; 1. Tha sola of tha ______________________ torlum and proianl raooluthmt of tha Board calling far caro of tubarcular jpa--Itonta at tha AAadkal Cara Facility. TMi propowd program affocting tha rocalpti and expanditum of taveral County bud-gats Including tha Haalth Oapartmant, Oanaral Rallef, Hospitallaatlon. Madical Cara and Tubarcul^lt Sanatorium havo ^aan Incorporatad In our budgat rocom-mandatlans. This mattor In vkw of now davalopmants It to, again, ba consid-arad by tha Board. In tha avant of ro--Vartal of proiont policy by tho Board, your committao will offor tha nacataary *omandmant to tha budgat rollacting such 'ehangad program. , 2. An axpandad Social Wallaro Program calling for moro Intansivo social guldanca and pottibla family rahablllta-flons; Improvod food budgots and tha anticipation of Incroatad nursing horrw 'and hospital rat«. ____ _________rf dacitlont. Racelpts astimatad for lOM ara I30t,41< > tho actual racalpto collactad lor . — of batfor raporting ai bacauio Ibay ara more proparly an i luaimant to axpandllurot rathar than racolpt. tha partonnol tumovar savin tor Itaa hava In Nils budgat boon troat at an adlustmant of axponditurtt. Funds for tho oparatton of tha CWl Dafanao Oapartmant hava btan IrKludad Ml our Tontativo Budgat Rtcommonda-llont. Your CommIttN hat had undtr study tor soma turn tha advisability of tha raorganli^lon of this dapartmani undar tha SharHt's Dopartmanf and a ............program In light mads tor County I Is oxpactad that . bahaM of tha Ways and Moans Committaa, tha Salarlat Com-County Board “ - this honoral^ _______to tha adoption of .... mnmawa budgot In tho amodnt of tiy,4a,osr for alloMtIon purpotas. WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEB DAVID LEVINSON, FRANK J. VOLL Sr. C. HUGH DOHANY FRANK F. WEBBER FRED L. YOCKEY HARRY W. HORTON SALARIES COMMITTEE BOARD OF AUDITORS DANIEL T. MURPHY, Chairman JOHN C. AUSTIN, Vico Chairman ROBERT E. LILLY, Sacratary Mambar N RE; SALARIES COMMITTEE REPORT ro tha Honerabit Board of Suparvlsort ha fallowing Ih F 440,073 For II Now potl 47,101 For offlorgoncy “ — ~ir pottibla SI By Mr. Ingraham IN RE; PEPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS ON THE FEASIBILITY OP ESTABLISHING A PUBLIC DEFENDER SYSTEM To tho Oakland County Board of Supar- Mr. Chairman, Ladles and Gantloman; On February 14, IMS, your LagMallvo Committoa hold a public hearing to ra-calve tha viaws of Intorostad parsons an tho foasIMIIty of ostabllshing a Public potandar Sytlom tor tha purpoaa of w Dosittont providing IomI countal to Indigent por-rstad by tha sons accuaad of crime and coming bafera *ho courts within Oakland County. Appoarkig at the hearing wars the Oakland County Board af Suparvlaoro, of a rOgulor aattlan on April 27. IMS, that a Cortlfkato of Merit ba awarded to J. Watlay Duncan, farmer Suparvltor from Roaa Township, tor hit tong years of distingulthad tarvka M his •--------- and to OMiand County aubstai exeats of tha IS years raquirod racognltlr-' Mr. Ct .............. .............- In the Final S Budgat coat |IM,tSt. ThoaO of IM4 cost UI3,H0. On tho toUowing pags yw» will tMid a summary shaat showliiB tha distribution of tha total salarlat amount to tho various dapaHmantal budgets. Tho potitlont budgated for each do-partmant, their classlflcatlont and pras-ant salary ranges ara shown on tha blue oolerod pages of the budget docummt. Tho raasons tor racommendino ^ new potitlont and amargancy salarlat •mounts are on th« leH hand paot/ facing each dapartmantal budget page. AA. 4->tomi.».OTm | movc ths acceplanco I the oMIclal recommen-Sataries Committee salaries committee CURTIS H. HALL, Chairman MARVIN M. ALWARD WALLACE B. HUDSON CLARENCE A. DURBIN ELMER KEPHART VIRGIL C. KNOWLES A. TAYLOR MENZIES BOARD OF AUDITORS DANIEL T. MURPHY, Chalriran JOHN C. AUSTIN, Vice Chairman ROBERT E. LILLY, Sacratary SALARY PORTION OF ISM TENTATIVE BUDGET It Racommandation—Salarlat Committaa and Board of Audit Budgats For 34,9Sa 2S#,5J4 20,303 40,220 Admin. . mmli ■ -Probata Court Probata -Probata -iprdbata - Sheriff **Soc. WaH.-M. C. Facility Soc. Walt.—Rallaf Adm. Suprv.—Committee Clark Talaphona Exchange Telatypa Service . Treasurer ...... Veterans Affairs TOTAL 'tAI Tha actus It $104,045 but . , receive $1(10,445 from prolact! 35450 3,425 31,225 .45,850 31,225 217,047 140,300 244,000 27,001 200,002 4S475 "$7,44'3,S42 itlclpatad cost of tl leal Cara Facility and T. B .. , _ .J In Departmental Budgets tTotal Departmental Appropriations and a»i»riri 1044 PROPOSED TENTATIVE BUDGET SUMMARY Non.Departmental Approprialiont Oapartmant and Institution 0 Salaries Budget - Positions Lass; Estimated Personal Turnover Adlustmar Estimated Receipts Less: Allocation of one-tenth mill from Miscellaneous Non-Tax Revenue tor Building Amount to be raised by Tax Levy PROPOSED 1044 TENTATIVE BUDGET NON-DEPARTMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS Ambulance ......................... Apiary Inspections ............. Births and Deaths ....................... Building Fund ...... Buildings and Grounds Maintenance ....... Capital Outlay ........................... Care of Mentally III ............... Temporary A Compensation Insuran Contagious Cases Contingent Coroners Functions Retirement Administration . Retirement Fund . Premiums Marine Law Entorcemenl Oakland University Oakland Child Guidance Clinic Oakland County Pioneer & Histor Society Regional Planning Commission Soil Conservation Southeastern Michigan Tourist Association Supervisors Inter-County Committee Tax Allocation T. B. Cases—Outside Township and City Tax Rolls Clerk-Ragister Cooperative Extension Corporation Counsel Friend ot the Court ...................... Health Department — Maintenance Department Administration Camp Oakland ........ Chlldran't Home Juvenile Mainlananca Prosecuting Attorney Talaplim Exchange Tt^pa Sarvica Treasurer Tuberculosis Sanatorium Veterans AHaIrs Bnlary Reseroe end Sick L e Salaries portion of tha Bu "*AY«f*Allaiion, A I ward, Ba< Beecher, Bloa, Carey, Case, Casey, Char-tens, Chayi, Damute, Dewan, Dohany, .i) u n c a n, Edward, Edwards, Ewart, >orbes. Fouls, Caodspeed, Grisdale, Hag- bton. Kannady, Kaphart, Knowles, Lahti, ■laurle, LassRer, Levinson, LInley, Mac-bonald. Mainland, Marshall, Mastin, Mc-Avoy, Malehert, Meniles, Mercer, Mlch-■>ina, Millar, Mitchell, Nelson, O'Dono- ................ Simson, Salvens, Smith "Tapp, Terry, Tiley, TInsman, Travis, •Turner, Valentine, Volt, Wilcox. Woods Yockey. (45) ' NAYS: None. (81 ’ A sufficient malorlty having voted Therefor, tha 1044 Tentative Budget was Oautt, 5 To tha Oakland County Board of Supor- for tha traafmant c _____ _ provMa Oakland County ---------- ------- in the Oakland Mr. Chairman, on behalf of tha Ways and Means Committee, I move the adoption of the foregoing resolution. WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE DAVID LEVINSON, THOMAS H. O'OONOGHUE FRANK J. VOLL Sr. FRED L. YOCKEY Moved by Levinson supported by Re-hard the resolution be adopted. A sufficient majority having v o t a d therelor, the resolution was adopted. By Mr. Ingraham IN RE. REPORT ON REFERRED LEGISLATIVE ITEMS To the Oakland County Board of Super- the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, there were received, and referred to your Legislative Committee for consideration, several resolutions and other Items requesting concurrence and legislative action. One of the referred Items was from tha Supervisors Inler-County Committee's 1045 legislative program which proposes to amend Act 288 of the Public Acts of 1030, allowing the probate court to charge a schedule of graduated fees as an expense of administration of tha gross estate of deceased persons. Your Legislative Committee wishes to report that it has considered this item with concurrence of Judge Donald E. Adams of the Probate Court, and recommends that the proposed legislative Item providing for a graduated lee sched- be included In the Corporation Counsel— Robert P. Allan Richard Condit, Attorney Wallace D. McLay, Attomoy along with other intoraatad citliana. With tha excapfloa ef Mr. Wallaoa 0. McLay, who favored a Public Datonder Si^em, all others tastiflad that. In lhair opinion, tha peasant system of appointing ------— —,^1 ,, indlgont par- cartaln mpdHicatlons Your Legislative Committaa met on March 14, 1045 to review and evaluate barahip of «.......................... tian of the foregoing raaoluttan. WELFARE COfMMITTM R. W. LAHTI, Chairman HUGH CHARTERIS VERNON B. EDWARD ELIZABETH W. MITCHELL LEONARD TERRY Tha raaolutlon was unanbnovsly adopt-ad. ' Moved by O'Donaghua aupportod by Von reading ot ttw minutes atitha pra-vlout maating ba waived. V A sutticlant majority having voted therefor, the motion carried. Tha Clerk read tha request tor this meeting which woe filed witti him on April 2, 1045. Said request was ordered tiled with tha Clerk. A true Cl^ of tho same appears In tha notice or meeting hereafter set torth. The Clerk presented Msa notice at Nils meeting together with his affidavit at to the malltng of said notice, svhich natict —. —.^vlt---------------- recommended 1 t the Legislative NOTICE OF regular' MEETING To the AAembert pf tha Board of Super gf vlKirt of tha County of Oakland, Mat) ot Michigan „ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I ;om- 'toular meeting of the-^ Board of Super legislation to establish a System, costs ot : .......------g. system to be _____________basis, stale and county, ..._ contributions by raspenslble relatives, with Indigency being determined by suitable bodies In criminal cases. Your Legislative Committee turther recommends the fallowing: 1. That tha Ways and Means Committee and Board of Auditors should consider budgetary provisions lor «ia present defender system I- * ■ development. view of t Bar Association to Implement the Bar Association, r Investigative fa- to the Dak land County nd Circuit Court Bench recommendations ' willingness to accept s ! following I regular meeting ot tha Bo ..........'‘e County o* “ Supervisors of the C It that time. Signed: DELOS HAMLIN, Chairman Oakland County Boi Supervisors" the third meeting if the Oakland Cou ---------^rs. The previous adjourned to April 27, 1045. a list of V «n scroeneo ov me com- : '7- '**5 CommiSe) OF MICHIGAN Association commmeei BOUNTY OF navi aur STATE SEAL PROOF OF MAILING --- ------_ - 0. Murphy, 1 compensation should --------- -------- - COUNTY OF OAKLAND Association Committee —nmanded fees to «tk)n ihould Irv deposes and says that he Is the for Investigation county Clerk and Register of Deeds of ilstrator. Soard of Supervisors of Oakland County, d be directed to law Michigan by enclosing the some In an to. EAii4-i» th» as- envelope properly sealedr sufficiently . J plainly addressed to such ............ . . behalf of the Legislative Committee, I move the adoption of tho foregoing report end tho rocom-mondatlons contained thoroln. LEGISLATIVE CDMMITTEE CARL F. INGRAHAM, VeS?ION*B, EDWARD WILLIAM A. EWART CYRIL E. MILLER JOHN S. SLAVENS AINLAND therelor, the report was adopted. Moved by Cheyi aupportod by Miller the Board adjourn until April 27, 1045. A sulficieni malorlty having voted therelor, the motion carried. DELOS HAMLIN Chairman JOHN D. MURPHY Clerk APRIL 27, 1045 Meeting called to order by Chairman Delos Hamlin. Invocation given by Homer Case, Bloomfield Township Supervisor. PRESENT: Allerton, Alward, Bacherf, Beecher, Bloe, Carey, Case, Charterls, Cheyz, Clarkson, Demute, Dewan, Do- ter. Levinson, LInley, Macdonald, Mainland, Mastin, McAvoy, McKInlay, Melch-ert, Menzies, Mercer, Miller, Mitchell, Nelson, O'Donoghue, Oldenburg, Patnales, Peterson, Potter, PotthoH, Rehard, Re-mer, Rhinevault, Simson, Slavens, Smith, Tapp, Terry, They, TInsman, Travis, Turner, Valentine, Voll, Wilcox, Woods, Oakland County, Michigan Mr commission expires October 24, 1041 Clerk reed the following appoint--- CITY OF LATHRUP VILLAGE beth W. Mitchell MADISON HEIGHTS CITY — Herbert A. Smith, John C. Mills. Virginia M Sol-berg, Lee Walker (Replaces Charles B. Edwards Jr„ Richard W. Marshall, John MIchrIna, Thaddeus Wrobel), John (ad resignation ot Hugh Aller-s a member of the Board of ____ ...rks. (PI .......... The Chairman _______________ ... pointment of Howard 0. Powers as a member ot the Board of Public Works to fill tha vacancy caused by the reilg-netlon ot Hugh G. Allerton Jr., tor the term expiring at 12:00 o'clock Noon on January 1, 1048. There were no objections. The eppolnt- The Chairman appointed the following Committees: STANDING COMMITTEES FOR 1045-1044 AUDITOR GENERAL - Grisdale, Casey, Dewan, Kennedy, Terry AVIATION — Hudson, Johnston, Lahti, Laurie, Maler, Rehard, Turner, Robert O. Felt, ex-o(flcioj Ralph A. Main, ex- BOUNDARIES OF CITIES AND VIL- D GROUNDS - Heacock, AWS — Clarkson, Beecher, Kin lay. Turner L DEFENSE - Woods, Foots, Mills, . t, Solberg COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE —Demute, Bachert, Leislter, Mainland, ABSENT; Brlckner,^ Ca^ey, |Ewart, > Edward Laird, Allernat# (Citizen , Wrobel (1.4) Quorum ppreclatlon (or his DRAIN -of the T. B. Board Smith, V 5l twenty years. ......... .C.C. 1045 leglsla-Commiltee wishes to urther report on oiner reTorm ivgisia ive items considered and action taker Your Committee recommends concur Your Committee r By Mr. Kephart IN RE: MERITORIOUS AWARD -albert WEBER To the Oakland County Board of Super Mr. Chairman, Ladles FLOWERS — Mitchell, Simson, HEALTH - Miller, puncar Gentlemen: e Tuberculosis 1 had Its trying | Du?bln, ......................... ...... Tiley INTER-COUNTY - Levinson, Chairman, Demute (Government Research!, Maler (Government Research), Rehard (Physical Planning), Travis (Physical Planning), Webber (Legislative) VE.N" seing Chairman ot this Com- LEGISLATIVE --Edwj — , C.rls-dy, Mitchell, Pat- raham, Clarkson, I sonal satisfaction in hav ■ porlunity to work with i lor over 15 years. I ( • ] Weber, former member r cose, I loc/^L taxes - Oldenburg, Les; LInley, POtthoff, Walker * “P; I MARKETS - Mainland, Bachert, Smith - M'SCEILANFOHS Fharteris, Me Osgood, Peterson, Tapp In October e ot State e e this y eats. SubSL,___ Commissiwjyhas deciding values :tion by the St _ . . -suited In relief modificatton of ' Your Committee recon Miscellaneous Committee ..vY.YYs 'i'mriiedTalely el*«ted •''f" 1 ^^j^^^KepnarT, ivnowi lan, and he served as Chairman wptfdans 1 Edwr t Board continuously until his re-1 Tur„,f, o°T 1, Case, Cheyz, I jy. Nelson Alward, Durbin, I . WAYS AND MEANS - Levin-ton, Carey, Dohany, Horton ue, Seelerlln, Voll, Yockey . WELFARE - i, Charte ending December 31, 10- d*'ot’'s!lS^r^rs"to?”eve” SPEaAL'cOMMITTEES s resignation on December . AIRPORT ZONING BOARD - Hurstall, of (ox hounds from July 15 to gy this B< 15 as opposed to previous date ot term until St 15 to April 15. ....... ' following resolutions received from .... County Boards of Supervisors and referred to your Legislative Committee a^lnlstratlve touch, were received and tiled by your Cottv mittee without recommendation: SANILAC COUNTY. Proposes consti- in’admJnlstrativc unc. — - -- ....... - •» r,-,;----- tutional amendment to reverse Supreme ability of minimizing another person's; Dr. Otis Ferguson (Democrat), Thomas ■ ruling that both houses ot all state faults and maximizing his good points, Fowler (Republican), Arthur W. Sallz- ... ______ STUDY - Osgood, Case, ..aurle. Mainland, Webber, John H. King (Republican) Harriet Phillips >rS distinguish that (Democrat) policy matter and , HUMAN RELATIONS - McKInlay, Slm-................... — J. Russell Bright (Democrat), leratlon ot our Tuber-; HOME ( . apportioned population basis. 4 BUREN COUNTY. Adoption ot anabllng legislation under tha Stafa Constitution, sutticlently broad and flexible enough to permit any county ot tha State, electing to do so, and with tha approval ot the electorate of said county, to Incorporate es a charter county, — to retain the constitution!" - • form gt government It now KENT COUNTY. Urges Vehicle Code ' -nnyal a- *---- **G^"b TRAVERSE COUNTY. Requests legislative action to establish a -----ste department of government tor ... .romotlon end development ot tourist business. Your Committee recommends that this Board of Supervisors oppose House Bill No. 2054, which provides that any town->r vlllagt Clark shall make, deliver to any perton, within which establishes that desired atmosphere D Is always willing h culoils Sanatorium Committee .. .... Oakland County Board ot Supervisors, I move the adoption of the foregoing resotution ot appreciation, and that a copy of said resolution be elfixed with the Seal ot the County ot Oakland and operated forwarded to Albert Weber. TUBERCULOSIS SANATORIUM COMMITTEE ELMER KEPHART, Chairman RAY R. LINLEY MARGUERITE SIMSON JOHN S. SLAVENS ROBERT J. TURNER OAKLAND COUNTY - CAUCA VALLEY nitarlan, ] ALLIANCE — Delos Hamlin, Chalr-hlmselfj man; Vincent McAvoy, James Seeter-I lin, Clark J. Adams, Circuit Judge; because George B. Cetlln, Detroit Edison Com-! pony; James Clarkson, First Federal - Tuber-1 Savings of Oakland; E. M. Estes, Pon-of the tlac Motor Division; John Fitzgerald, The Pgntiac Press; A. C, Girard, Community National Bank; Walter Reuther, United Automobile Workers; James M. Robbins, Jim Robbins Company; D. B. . supporting Senate _ . .provides for an Increase ........... monies available to local pnits for library County Horn# Rule t space to be utillied tor S't„, ,.k- '5. •** Madical Cara Fa mendatlons contained th LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE CARL F. INGRAHAM. Chairman VERNON B. EDWARD WILLIAM A. EWART WILLIAM L. mainland CYRIL E. MILLER JOHN $. SLAVENS y Ingraham supported by Sle-.... .... . jsolutnn be adopted. A suNictont malarliy having Mr. Lahti praeanled a Certificate ot Merit to J. Wesley Duncen, former Rose Township Supervisor. MIsc. 4438 By Mr. Lahti IN RE: CERTIFICATE OF MERIT -J. WESLEY DUNCAN To tha Oakland County Board of Super- Mr. Chairman, Ladles and Gentlemen: WHEREAS Mr. J. Wesley Duncan has served long end talthfully the people ■ Oakland County tor over 10 years as -------■— -* ' If Supervisors, Agrtcultural _________ micicvs ana mambarship on the Ways and AAaans, Buildings and Grounds, Civil Dafensa, County Coordinating Zoning a Planning and Drain Committees and tha Special Cammittee on Use of Downtown WHAEAS attar theta many years ot public service he hvs not -oug-l re-election as Suparvltor of Rosa Toson- "’^OW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED «iat «NOGHUE Moved by Levinson supported by Voll the resolution be adopted. _____(or flnal at.,.---- Chairman, on behaW ot Ih and Grounds Committee, —----------W foregoing rr-' tile Liaouel ^ sufficient malorl e Boardrt strucicd to cast the u the Board for Edward Maier. A suNIclent majority having v o t a d therefor, the motlin carried. Edward Maler declared elected a mam-ber ot the Planning *' “ turn subject to the call ot DELOS HAMLIN Chairman JOHN D. MURPHY _ Ot tha Whole at 2:00 p.m. m tne Veterans Memorial Building, Dalreit, Michigan. Meeting called to order by Chairman Delos Hamlin. Roll called. PRESENT: Allerton, Alward, Baachar, Carey, Case, Cheyz, Dohany, Duncan, Edward, Fouls, Goodsptod, Criadala, Hamlin, Horton, Huhn, Hurstall, Johnston, Lahti, Lauria, Lassitar, Lavlnton, LInley, Macdonald, Mainland, McAvoy, McKInlay, Manzias, Marcar, Mills, MKcti-ell. Nelson, O'Donoghue, Osgood, Psl-nales, Peterson, Poltar, Rahard, Ramar, Simson, Slavens, H. Smith, W. Smith, Tapp, Tllty, TInsman, Travis, Turnar, Valentine, Walker, Webber, Wilcox, Woods, Yockey. (S3) ABSENT; Bachert, Bloe, Brickner, Case, Charterls, Clarkson, Damute, Dewan, Durbin, Ewart, Forbes, Hagstrom, Hall, Haacock, Houghton. Hudson, Ingraham, Kannady, Kaphart, Knowles, Malar, Mastin, Malchart, Millar, Oldenburg, PotthoH, Powers, Rhinevault, Saa-tarlln, Solbarg, Tarry, Veil. (32) Quorum Praaont. Tha Clark prasanted tha notice of this meeting togathor with his affidavit as to tha mailing ot said notlot, which notice and affidavit ara as follows: NOTICE OP SUPERVISORS INTERCOUNTY MEETING To the Members of the Board ot Supervisors ot tha County ot Oakland, State of Michigan NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Oakland County Board ot Supdrvlsors' Clark read appointment of the toHow-Ing supdrvlsors: BLOOMFIELD HILLS CITY R«bdr* A. Frye (raplacas Elmer Kepnarl) PONTIAC CITY -- James E. KOBhart Jr. (replaces Edward C. Blod), MiNIb July 1, loaSt replaces OAK PARK CITY - Josaah Cattoil (rto Places Paul W. McOovath) MIsc. 444S By Mr, Lavinson IN RE; APPROPRIATION FOR TRANS. PORTATION AND LAND USE STUDY To ^Hto Oakland County Board af tupor- Mr. Chairman, Ladles and Gantlamon; WHEREAS ttw Administrativa Pater-mlnatlon by tha Bureau ot Public Rbada undar tha Federal Highway Act of 1N2 lEREAS tha Michigan Slate High-Oapartmant and the Oatrolt Metro. OT Area Raotonal Planning Commls-art undertaking a traniportatton land use study tor ttw slx-cdUnty 'islarn Michigan Raglan, which in->.-vw> Oakland County, in order to comply with tha said Fadaral Highway Act of 1*42, and WHEREAS tha Michigan State Highway Department has raquestod tha Planning Commission, Rood Commission and Board ot Supervisors to anlar Into such a Mamorandum at Undarslandlng. and WHEREAS tha Oakland County Road Commission and ------ D^'i^a^and WHEREAS thi ■ ling V • OakI a Oakland pasaod a rlzlng tho of (tedar. State Hl^way said Mamorandum of •s duly axocutod ho-uid County Board of WHEREAS ttto Transbortatlon and Land Us# Study Body sponaorod by thg said Matrooolltan Area Ragtonal Plan-ning Commission has eomputod the total study cost on a par capita baste and has datignatad the sum of I2*,400.M aa Oakland County's share of such coat of Hto propoaod Comprahanslvs TranapoHs-tlon and Land Usa Study ol Hw six-county Southaastam Michigan Raglen to ba made In compllsnca with ths aald Fadaral Highway Act at 1*42, and WHEREAS tha Ways and Means Com-mittaa at Hw Oakland County Board of Suparvlsort by rasolutlon patted In a moating of tha Committoa held on June 2, 1*45, racemmandsd approval ot tho poy-mant ef tha uid sum of S2«,40P.M to tha Transpertatlon and Land Usa Study body ter Oakland County's designstad share of ths above diKrIM study coat Involved In tha six-eounly Southasatarn Michigan Region, and ratelvad that a rasolutlon to that affect be prasanted at tha maating at tha Commlffaddf-th*- NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED iiat the County of Oakland shall particl-In the six-county Soulhaattorn Mlch------------- prgpotad Comprahpntlva Igan Raglor Trantporfatii ) Study bo^ sponsored by tl E IT FURTHER RESOLVED that n «ia Oakland County Board o< Audl-shail racaivs assurance that tha >r municipal units Involved In tha re dascribad Transportation and Land Study hava agrand to participa*' larticipato In 's dasigiwtad poHatlon and Land (Jaa Study Body, which sum hat boen officially dasigtwtod at Oakland County's propartionato Wiara ot such Study cost. ot tha Ways WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEB DAVID LEVINSON. Chairman HUGH G. ALLERTON Jr. JOHN L. CAREY C. HUGH DOHANY HARRY W. HORTON THOAAAS H. O'OONOGHUB FRED L. YOCKEY Moved by Lavlnton tuoporlsd by Alter-on tha resolution bo adopted. A ' sufflclant malorlty having v o I a B Moved by Wabbsr supporlad by Altar-ton tha Commltlea ot the Whole grisa and tha nrwatlng stand adjourned. A sufficleni majorllv having v p 11B tharaler, tha motion carriad. DELOS HA^IN JOHN D. MURPHY Recommended t |.t "A nwetlng ef visors, at a Coir....— -. .... ------- It haraby called to ba held on Thurv day, tha 10th day ot June 1*45 at 2:80 P.M., EST, in tha First Floor Banquet Hall ol tha Veterans Memorial Building, City ot Detroit. Michigan. Signed: DELOS HAMLIN, Chairman Oakland County Board ot Suparvlsers" Signed: JOHN D. MURPHY, Oakland County Clarfc-Raglslar of Deeds Dated: May 27, l*4S STATE OF MICHIGAN COUNTY OF OAKLAND STATE SEAL PROOF OF MAILING John 0. Murphy, being llrst duty, fwem, dopotas and says Ntat ha la the' County Clark and Ragitter ot Oaadt of ' County and Clark ot the Board ■ ’ Oakland Caur.ty, and true Lopy ot the tera- that he si BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS COMMITTEE LUTHER HEACOCK. Chairman HUGH G. ALLERTON Jr, EDWARD CHEYZ DUANE HURSFALl LOUIS F. OLDENBURG Moved by Heacock supported by Dohany the rasolutlon ba adopted. Moved by Lavlnton supported by Fouts tha raiolutten ba amended to change tha cancaffaflan clausa tram one ysor to -1 HANK DIDN’T CONNECT - Henry Hank (right) of Detroit failed to connect on many of his punches last night as he took a beating from Bob Foster in their 12-round light ^ AP PhoMtx heavyweight fight in New Orleans. Foster scored a unanimous decision. See story on page C-4. Tigers Within Dressen's 'Goal' of '63 Wes Parker Adds Punch to LA Speed By The Associated Press Swift Maury Wills, leading performer in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Au Go Go, suddenly has found some swinging help. And from a bridge player named Maurice Wesley Parker III, no less. ★ * ★ Wills stole his 68th and 69th bases of the season Monday night as the National Leagueleading Dodgers stretched their margin to two games with a 5-4 victory over runner-up Cincinnati. Twins 'Killer' Is Back in Old Spot Homers Beat Orioles, 8-2 Minnesota Extends Lead in AL By The Associated Press Harmon Killebrew is back where he .started 11 years ago and big Don Mincher is doing his best to keep the Killer there. ★ ★ ★ Mincher, who reverted to the odd man in Minnesota’s power structure last spring when Manager Sam Mele decided to convert Killebrew into a first base-man, made another bid for steady work Monday night. Mincher laced a three-run first-inning homer that sparked the "rwins to an 8-2 victory over Baltimore. Killebrew, back at third base, where he played as a rookie with the old Washington Senators in 1954, added his 20th homer as the iSvins stretched their America League lead to 4 Me games over the second-place Orioles. The Los Angeles Angels whipped Boston 6-2 behind George Brunet's six-hit pitching and a four-run eighth-inning rally in the only other AL action! NOT OFFERED Friendly Home Course Fine for Leader in WMGA Meef There’s no place like home. Playing the friendly fairways at Bob O’Link Golf Club, Mrs. Midge Cova fired a 38-37—75 yesterday to take a seven-stroke lead in the Women's Metropolitan Golf Association 54-hole medal play tournament. Mrs. Cova and her husband own the course and she played like she owned it yesterday in easily topping the 12-player field. She posted seven pars on the front side and added four pars and a birdie on the back side over the 6,000-yard course. Mrs. Douglas Graham held Cookie Feuding Again With AFL Denver Team From Our News Wires DENVER, Colo. - Cookie Gilchrist, All - Star American Football League fullbatk and a key in the rebuilding plans for the Denver Broncos, now says, despite signing a contract, he never intended to play in Den- The 250-pounder, acquired by the Broncos from the AFL champion Buffalo Bills last winter, arrived five days late at the Denver training camp and was met with a threatened $400,000 Mincher, who had hit 40 home breach of contract suit. runs over the past two seasons while backing up Vic Power and Bob Allison at first base, was sought by several clubs when the Twins tried to trade for pitching and infield help early this year. Mele, however, kept the bespectacled, 6-foot-3 slugger as, insurance should Killebrew fail to make the grade as a first baseman. When Killebrew, who had done a good job at first, volunteered to plug a gap at third last month, Mincher was available. ★ ★ ★ He has hit eight of his 12 homers this month and accounted for 16 of his 23 runs batted in. Mincher’s three-run shot off Milt Pappas rattled the Orioles at the start and they never recovered. After Killebrew’s solo homer in the sixth, the Twins picked up four unearned runs, the result of three errors and a passed ball. ^ ★ ★ ★ Jim Grant picked up his 11th victory in 14 decisions but needed help from reliever Gary Roggenburk, who worked out of a bases-loaded jam in the seventh and blanked Baltimore the rest of the way. In addition. Coach Mac Speedie said unless Gilchrist made a public apology to the Bronco team, Cookie wouldn’t be permitted to join the team. “I’m sorry if people bought season tickets thinking I was going to play with the Broncos,” Franklin Hills Pro in Festival Event DALMAHOY, Scotland UR -Ted Kroli of Franklin Hills fired a two-over-par 74 this morning in the Dalmahoy Festival of Golf that left him five strokes behind the leaders. In the competition, 11 two-man teams representing 13 countries play morning and afternoon rounds on the 6,677-yard Dalmahoy course. KroH’s partner, Fred Hawkins of New Orleans, was slated to play his round this afternoon. John Panton of Scotland and Raymond Sota of Spain led the fidd after the morning round with 69s. Pontiac Press Hole-in^One Club is hereby admitted to The Pontiac Club on this day on the day of ... His score was attested as...T^...for the../^.... holes. $500 a day each day after July 1 that he had not signed. He a^eed to terms June 23. Gilchrist said Monday. “I never intended to play for Denver.” 1500 FINE He said the Bronco management intimidated him into signing a reported $37,500-a-year contract with threats to fine him Steve Stonebreaker of the NFL’s Baltimore Colts escaped lightly compared to the fate of Gilchrist and Sample. The linebacker ended a one-day self-imposed retirement Monday because he said he oould not afford the $100 a day fine imposed on him until he settled his contract. second place with 41-41—82 as the ladies started their second round today. The final round will be played tomorrow. TIED FOR 3RD Mrs. Floyd Cocklin of Birmingham and Mrs. George Schade of Detroit were deadlocked for third place with 84s. Defending champion Mrs. C. J. (Bobbie) Miller, who is also a former Pontiac city champion, was 11 strokes off the pace after earding a 47-40—87. Mrj. Midge Cova ........... 3*-37-75 Mrs. Douglas Grahm ......... ei-41—«3 Mrs. Floyd Cocklin ..........43-4t-»4 Mrs. George Schade ..........44-3l-t4 Mrs. Nick Panasiuk .......... 42-43—«5 Trims Jacks ................. 45-41—M Mrs. C. J. Miller ......... 47-4IV-I7 Mrs. Harold Weil ............ 45-42—«7 Mrs. Charles Zahm .......... 40-42-»l Mrs. Henry Pramick .......... 43-45—H Mrs. Frank Langford ......... 45-43—W Mrs. John Menef^ ........... 50-44—»4 First Flighf-Mrs. Harold Wlalton 42-42—*4; Mrs. William Pate, 44-3»—«5; Mrs. Andrew Lelshman, 40-39—05; Mrs. JoMph^J^B^ 40-41-17; Mrs. Sidney Second Flight-Mrs. Eugene WIelock, 47-41-80; Mrs. Walter Shipton, 51-41-92; Mrs. Vaslle Cova, 48-47-95; Mrs. Oon-aW^rguson, 30-45-95; Evelyn Schwartz, Third Flight—Mrs. Anthony Wines. 50-49—99; Mrs. William Vogus, 53-48—101; Gertrude Schwartz, 50-52-102; Mrs. John PItuskIn, 53-50-103; Mrs. King Syming- British Chosd Captain Parker, who patrols first base for the Dodgers when he isn’t playing bridge, kicked in with a two-run homer as did Willie Davis, one of Wills’ running mates in the Dodger attack that ordinarily features speed rather than strength. AHEAD OF PACE The steals put Wills 28 games ahead of the pace he maintained in 1962 when he swiped 104 bases. He was on base three times with a single and two walks and raised his average to .301. He has hit safely in 19 consecutive games. Maury singled in the first inning and came around on Davis’ fifth home run of the season. Parker made it 4-0 in the second and then Wills’ speed produced the final Dodger fun. ★ ★ ★ The Dodger swifty walked and stole second for his 68th steal of the year. After Jim Gilliam walked. Wills and Gilliam worked a double steal and when Reds’ catcher John Edwards threw the ball into left field, Maury Scored. Edwards caught Wills trying for number 70 in the seventh so Maury batted two for three against the Cincinnati catcher. ★ w ★ Elsewhere in the National League, young Wade Blasin-game limited Houston to. five singles as Milwaukee snapped a three-game losing string with a 6-0 victory against Houston. Bob Gibson won his 12th game as Louis defeated San Francisco 7-4 in the only other ^ame played. BRIDGES GAP Parker, a tournament bridge player, seems to have solved Manager Walt Alston’s first base problem for the moment. ★ ★ * Wes skipped a trip to Honolu- lu for an international bridge tournament with his dad last winter, preferring to do his playing instead in the Arizona Instructional League. The home run was his fourth and helped the Dodgers beat Jim Maloney, 11-4. Johnny Podres, 4-5, with relief help from Bob Miller and Ron Perra-noski, was the winner. ★ w ★ Blasingame, a 21-year-old lefthander, won his 12th against seven setbacks and got all the help he needed from battery-mate Joe Torre, who drove in four runs with three hits includ- LONDON (UPI) - Joe Carr was named Monday as the cap- his 19th homer, tain of the 10-man British Walk- er Cup golf team which will meet the United States at the Five Farms Course in Balti more, Md., Sept. 3-4. Torre connected with two Braves on base in the first inning after Felipe Alou had opened the game with his 16th homer. The All-Star catcher then drove in another run with a triple in the fifth. HITLESS REUEF Dave Giusti, working in relief of Houston starter Bob Bruce, hurled 4 1-3 innings of hitless relief for the Astros. Bill White walloped a two-run homer and Dick Groat doubled in two more to help Gibson beat the Giants. The fireballing right-hander needed relief help from rookie Don Dennis though. * ★ ★ Dennis came on in the eighth inning after San Francisco had scored twice and ended the inning by retiring pinch hitter Willie Mays on a fly ball. Juan M^richal, 15-8, took the 3rd Mackinac Race Win for Gypsy Sets Record MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. I mainsail less than four miles (AP) - The 54-foot sloop Gypsy from fh* finish line. A record became the first three-time over-all winner Monday in the | gyp^y skippered by Milwau-41-year history of the Port Hu-1 ket auto dealer Charles Koto- ron-to-Mackinac yacht race with a six-minute, 52-second victory over her nearest rival. ★ * A The second-place Winsome lost 10 minutes because of a broken boom fitting on her IN SURGERY - Former golfing great Walter Hagen underwent a throat operation today for Cancer in New York’s St. Vincent Hospital. Hagen, 72, has been hospitalized since July 15. He retired from golf in the middle 1930s. Par Posing Challenge in Western Am BENTON HARBOR (AP) Point O’Woods golf course is posing another par challenge for the Western Amateur tournament. Only one man, Tim Leslie of Whiting, Ind., 20-year-old University of Houston sophomore, matched par 71 in preequalifica-tion^ Monday. * * ★ No one broke par in the entire tournament when the Western Amateur was held here in 1963. The 1965 tournament, with a field of 180, begins a 72-hole stretch of qualifying Wednesday. The low 50 will continue medal play Friday which leads to match play Saturday and Sunday. The finals will be Sunday. Entries played practice rounds today. Leslie topped a field of 72 Monday as 46 entries survived for the action Wednesday. He fired three birdies on the approximately 7,000-yard course, he had rounds of 36-35 against par 35-36. * * ■a Michigan golfers picked up the first five places iMhind Leslie. Steve Erickson of GrossO He and David Cameron of Detroit tied at 73. Bob Meyer of Niles shot 74, and Nap Chinidc of Benton Harbor and Jack Van Elss of Grand Rapids tied at *75. ', -1 Browns Polish Offense HIRAM, Ohio (AP) - From Thursday on, the Cleveland Browns’ preparations for their game with the College All-Stars in Chicago Aug. 6 “will be a matter of polishing,” Coach Blanton Collier said. “We’ve picked the package of plays we thought might go well against the Stars,” Collier said, and by Wednesday afternoon all of these plays will have been introduced into practice. ★ ★ ★ Collier and Otto Graham, the All-Stars’ coach, have been studying one another’s methods through movies. Graham has received film of some of last season’s Browns’ contest, and Collier has been examining celluloid action of previous All-Star games. The Browns’ mentor said selection of plays for the National Football I.«ague champs to use against the Collegians has been difficult “because this is an unusual game — personnel is different each year.” “I’m sure that Otto changes Mofor I Leaguel STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland Detroit Chtcago New Ygik Los Angeles 6, Boston 2 Minnesota 8, Baltimore 2 Tdtfiiy's Games Minnesota (Perry 7-1 and K. Washington (RIchert 8-8 and D 2, twlHiighr NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati ...... San Francisco Milwaukee Philadelphia . Pittsburgh ...... St. Louis Chicago Houston .448 13'/l .330 25 vie, turned in a corrected time of 42 hours, 44 minutes and 13 seconds, against 42:51:05 for Winsome, piloted by Carter Sales and Skip Grew of Detroit. Gypsy and Winsome hugged the Michigan shore througl^t the raoe as the boats battled winds of up to; 25 miles an hour and waves as much as eight feet high. The other class winners also chose to stick to the Michigan side. DAMAGE REPORTED Twelve boats were forced to drop out, and nearly every craft reported damaged gear aboard. Guy McNaron’s sloop, Vashti, won its first Ouising B long distance test. Vashti, the seventh boat to complete the course, edged Hank Burkhard’i Meteor III by 42 minutes. The sloop Rhapsody, piloted by Jacob Brown of the Great Lakes Yacht Club, sailed (rff with Cruising C honors. Salmagal, skippered by Peter O’Neil of Toledo, was the first Cruising D boat to finish. Vessels of the smaller Cruising E Class still were straggling toward the finish line, with the entire fleet expected here by midnight Tuesday. It (SMrn York (Fi AMnBiy’i RtsuKi IS AngeWs 5, ClfKlnnatl 4 llwiukag 8. Houston B . Louis 7, San Francisco -sly gamts scheduM. Taday's Gamas aw York (Flslwr 7-111 at Clilcago I 18-7) Kansas City (Sheldon 4-4 and Talbot 8-8) at Boston Lonborg 8-11 and Sta- ^*Los*An^tos*'(NMr'Sa G3 or May A8) at Baltimora (Bunkar 8-S), nIgM Chicago (Horton 8-8) at ClovtIanG (Tar- Los Angalas a* Bamnwra, night Minnesota at Washtogton, night ________ _________ 4-5 and Short 11- . .. Pittsburgh (Friand 5-7 and Sisk 3-0) 2, twi-nighi Mllwaukea (Cloningar 12-8) at Houston (Dterker 4-4), night Cincinnati (Jay 8-2) at Los Angalas *'s7?Lools’(Purka^-7) at San Francisco (Spahn 4-12), night * York at Chicago. 2 ClTKlnnatl at Lot Angeles, n his offense and defense according to available material,” Collier added. SCRIMMAGES Paul Bixler, Browns’ talent scout, will watch the Collegians against the Chicago Bears at Rensselaer, Ind. on Thursday, and Graham will send a staff member to watch the Browns scrimmage Saturday when the Cleveland, Touchdown Club makes its annual visit to the training camp. The All-Stars resumed two-a-day drills Monday. ' After enjoying an off day Sunday, they worked hard on pass defense with a goal of keeping the Browns’ air attack under 50 per cent in completions and no touchdown passes. ★ ★ ★ Defensive backfield coach John Sauer said “instead of facing one good receiver and one good passer every once in a while as they did in college, now they’re facing a number of good receivers and passers on every team.” St. Louis Signs Hagan ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Cliff Hagan, nine-year veteran in the National Basketball Association, has signed his 1965-66 contract with the St. liouis Hawks, ending rumors that he would follow Bob Pettit into retirement. Hills 'Series' in 5th Game The East Hills team posted a 9-7 verdict over Vau^n All-Stars last night to take a 3-1 lead in the Bloomfield Continental League World Series. The two squads will battle in the fifth game tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. at Bloomfield Hills High School. Outfielder Curt Leithauser sparked the victory last night as he collected three hits and stole four bases. Current Mark Is Best Since '61 Season Sparma, Aguirre Face Yankees in Twi-Night Pair Today NEW YORK (AP) - Detroit Tigers manager Charlie Dres-sen, given a team six games over the .500 mark when he recovered from his heart attack, has directed it to within a game of the goal he set when he took over in 1963. ★ A A The Tigers, who moved Into fourth place by taking three of four games with the Chicago White Sox this past weekend, were 24-18 under coach Bob Swift. They are 29-22 under Dressen as they face New York for a four-game series starting tonight. Joe Sparma (8-3) and Hank Aguirre (10^) are scheduled to meet Whitey Ford (ll-l) and Jim Boutin (4-11) in the t«ri-night doubleheader tonight. AAA “This team was 14 games under the .500 mark when I took over,” Dressen said. “We finished eight over last year and I want to get t«: that 14 over mark and letter if I can.” BEST SINCE INI The Tigers slipped below the break even point only once this year and their 53-40 record is the best since IMl when they went on to finish in second place. For the most part, the team’s success can bis laid to the younger players. AAA Willie Horton leads the league in home runs and runs batted in and has been above the .300 mark in hitting for all but a few days. All Star shortstop Dick McAuliffe is having his best season and leads the team in .hits, runs and trip^es. WeRSED RECORD Hank Aguirre, the oldest player on the team, already has reversed his 5-10 pitching record of 1964. Mickey Lolich, an 18-game winner last year, is KMl. AAA Denny McLain, at 21 the youngest player on the team, has won eight straight games to bring his record to 9-3 and Joe Sparma, 23, is 6-3. While individual records can be used to explain the team’s success, Dressen feels overall balance has made it a contender. A A A “When one man is down somebody else always seems to come through to pick him up,” Dressen observes. “You have got to have that to remain in tho pennant race.” One indication of this team balance is broqght out in the statistics which show nine different players hitting the 19 home runs the Tigers have collected in their last seven games. AAA Dressen, still somewhat softer spdten and seemingly not as spry, continues to walk three miles every day under doctors’ orders. He gives no indication of losing his alertness or zest for the game. 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The winner will then advance to tournament play. 300 Bowl was scheduled to play Elks No. 810 tonight, but the Elks’ squad was dropped from the league last week after forfeiting its second game. Under league rules, two forfeits and the team is dropped. In action last night, Francis Coal & Oil (5-12) knocked off Orchard Lanes, 2-0, to toss the National League race into a two-way tie. Orchard Lanes (i2-4) is now deadlocked with the Pontiac Merchants (12-4) for the lead. ■ . ★ 1t_ A A r r In a second game,-Idle Time Bar (M) turned in a 7-1 decision over L & S Standard. • Dwight Butler struck out six and scattered foor hits in taming Orchard Lanes. Francis scored once in the fourth on a sacrifice fly that sent Chuck Schneider across and J e r r y Langdon clouded a leadoff homer in the sixth for the final marker. Jim Smith set L & S down on only two hits. Mkhlgaii Btll IN MS I- I . . AAMcrcar Tranwart .. MS m x— 1 7 1 WInnar—St. Amour. Loiar—Carry. ... 3N SM I- I IS LAS StaiMarS . Losar—Manzit*. Canada House saso —DMonff. ^ IP H R aa ■■ so Brunei v/, /■» .,. 9 4 1 2 J ' Moreh'd L, Ml 7 l-J 7 J 3 4 DuMba 1-3010) Eerley 1 1-3 3 0 0 0 HBP-Oy MorehomI, W. Smith. WF Brunei, Moreheed. T—3:52. A—17,^. “At his age, any such opera- ‘ tion has to be considered seri-' A«rw ous,” Dr. La Motte said. i^-re'*’ " Stengel, the field boss and mihVm ; o i guiding spirit of the New York Mets, will be hospitalized for at east three weeks. Presumably, a longer convalescent period will follow at his home in Glendale, CaUf. Boys' Net Meet Opens; Favorite Starts Strong SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) -Top-seeded players followed form Mbnday in first-day play at the Western Open Junior and Boys’ Tennis Championships. Play began at 8 a.m., and 12 hours later five matches had to be called because of darkness. Through the day, 148 matches were completed by the 232 entrants. * ★ ★ Bill Harris of West Palm Beach, Fla., winner of the boys’ 16-and-under title the past three years, moved up to the jupior 17 and 18-year-old class and drew the top seed. He had a first-round bye, then won handily in the second round over Larry Eichekbaum of Austin, Tex., 6-2, 6-2. ■k * h The No. 2 seed in the junior division, Armistead Neely of Tampa, Fla., drew a first-day bye. 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Pistons' Cage Ace Inducted Into Army DETROIT (AP) - Terry Dis-chinger, a star of the Detroit Pistons basketball team, was called up for two years of Army duty Monday. Executive Manager Don Wat-trick, announcing Dischinger’s call-up order, termed it a great blow to the National Basketball Association team. Dischinger, former Purdue two-time All-America, U.S. Olympic team member and an All-Star selection in all of his three years in the NBA, was a mainstay of the Pistons last season. He played one year with Detroit and previously played with Chicago and Baltimore. Toronto at Jacfctonvillo, postponed, riln Pinson d 4 S S I Ki ReMnson rf 3 4 11''- (emwdy t lavls w ' xs.* 4 11 • Ros'bWb c 3 4 i t S L.J.'nsan H 3 s 4 I 3 I Lefebert 3b I 3SS S Pnrlibr lb h 1 S I 0 PodTM p 4 1 S « MHMR p 314? 4 TttPte 344 IP N a etas to 13-3 1 4 4 3 I. T - 2:24. A - 31 KING EDWARD^ Am$rie*'$ Iprgbtl SpWng Cigpr UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. Air CoiditioH Your Car! 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JULY 27. .1965 C—“8 Woklau^ *GOLF • f}^crfea • T* SuImbS^ iSe^Y^p of' Cue-fOMARV ONg, ^ IP -rHie Pt-Aar OA ^X*ag fUg AAi^ yjtAAOUerH ryM^j^ggze. Little League All-Stars Open Tournament Action The 14 District No. 4 Little League all-star teams will battle this week in the playoffs beginning today at four sites. Today’s action will find six of the teams going to the sidelines in the single-elimination tournament. The roster of teams includes four from Birmingham, three from Southfield, two from North Farmington and one each from Walled Lake, Farmington, Fenton, Novi and Milford. The six games today list double-headers for North Farming-ton and Birmingham's Eton Park at 5 p.m., and single contests at Fenton and Walled Lake at 5 o’clock. ’The latter is entertaining Milford at Riley Field. Fenton is host to Birmingham’s Federal team. TWIN BILLS The twin bills have North Farmington American playing Southfield American and North Farmington National meeting Novi at North Farmington, and (Eton Park) Southfield National vs. Birmingham National and Birmingham Continental vs. Birmingham American. Tomorrow, four quarter -final contests are slated for 5 p.m. at North Farmipgton, the Multi-Lake 8 Conacrvation Onb diamond and two for Eton Park? The semifinals will be 5 p.m. Thursday at Eton Park and the Multi-Lakes field; and the district final is set for 2:30 p.m. Saturday at Birmingham. The championship clash once gain will be attended by Governor George Romney. Big Take at Hazel Park HAZEL PARK (AP)-A lone, unidentified bettor in a crowd of 13,200 at Hazel Park Race Track Monday won $63,277.40 on the twin double. A track spokesman said it was the second-highest twin double payoff in Michigan history, topp^ only by the $103,-987.20 taken at Hazel Park July BOATING TIPS 1. Know your boot 2. Don't overload 3. Obsorvo the rulolTof the waterways 4. Operate at safe speeds 5. Know the weather flags 6. Take sufficient fuel 7. Keep your boat in shape AUSTIN NORVELL Agency 70 W. Lawrence ot W. Widetrock Grace Earns Jaycee Berth Qualifies for Houston Golf Tournament BENTON HARBOR (AP) -Sixteen-yearK)ld Dick Riel of St. Joaqih fired a 3-over-par 74 to become medalist of the Michigan Jaycee Junior Golf ’Fouma-ment Monday. Riel and three other boys in the tournament won trips to Houston, Tex., to compete In the international Jaycee junior tournament Aug. 9-13. ★ ★ * Rich Brenneman of Alma scored a 38^37—75 for second place. John Grace of Grosse Pointe Shores and Terry Noble of Detroit won the other two places. ’They scored birdies on the first extra hole to win a sudden death playoff among seven youths who had finished the regulation 18 holes with 76’s. '★ ★ ★ Jan' Steffe of Reese lost out the playoff after scoring a 76 but took the state Jaycee championship with that score in the 14-15-years-old group. Three Pontiac golfers were among the non-qualifiers. Gary Balliet posted a 39-39— 78, Rod Skelton a 39-44—83 and Joe Kopeikin posted a 46- Skelton, Balliet, Kopeikin and Grace qualified in a sect! tournament, July 15 at Pontiac Country Club. U. S. Team to Travel ST(XlKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) —The United States Olympic basketball team, which won the gold medal at the Tokyo games last year, has scheduled tvyo games here before going to the university world championships in Budapest, Aug. 20-29. Three-Team Race in Class A Loop Selected '65 Queen UNCOLN, Neb. (UPI)-Mary Lynn Owens, 17, • hazel-eyed blonde from Clearwater, Fla., ’The three-team battle for first place in the city men’s baseball race continues to go down to the wire but Huron-Airway 'bf» put Cranbrook in the driver’s seat. ’The defending city champion Huron-Airway nine (11-5) rode one big inning to a 5-2 triumph over Pemtiac Business Institute (10-5) last night at Jaycee Park I take over second place. ★ ★ ★ ’The win dropped PBI from a tie for first into third place, a half-game behind Cranbrook (10-4) and 21 percentage points behind H-A. The Cranbrook squad, though, has one less loss and would finish first if it can avoid a loss in the next eight days. Monday night, Huron-A i r-way rapped out all four of its hits and used two walks for five runs in the second inning. Les Stone’s single plated the first run. Mike Dodge and Bob Rabaja then delivered two-run safeties to pad the lead. Lefty Tom Walters had all the margin he needed for his eighth straight win without a loss. Pontiac Business Institute scored twice in the sbith on a walk, Dan G r e i g ’ s double, Morey LaPratt’s sacrifice fly and a two-out error. Tonight, the fourth-place Clippers (8-5) can climb into the thick of the race by beating Talbott Lumber (4-10) and clinching the final playoff spot. However, the Lumbermen have upset each of the three leading contenders in their last three starts. JUNIOR PLAY Yesterday’s junior baseball results found pace-setting deadlocked in Class D. ’The former rapped Cranbrook, 12-2, and Franklin dumped Bloomfield mils 8-2. Randy Hines tossed a four-hitter and rapped out two stogies and a tripe for Rochester. Joel Smith’s three-ron homer carried Franklin to its win. Class E play saw Auburn Heights Boys Club manage only one hit off two Clarkston pitchers in a 10-3 loss and Oxford Birmingham Golfer Wins JuniorlEvenl Sixteen-year-old Dave Cook of Birmingham Country Club fired a 38-36—74 yesterday to pace a UG-pIayer field in the weekly Junior District Golf Association tournament at Farmington Country Club. Dave Harris of Red Run was a stroke back at 75. Chuck Gu-lash captured third place with a 75. Dave Cook» Birmingham C.C. 3B-36—74 Dave Harris, Red Run 3f-36—y Chuck Gutash, Fox Hills 4<^^6—76 Russ Streeter, Farmington ^ 41.36-77 Jim Andrews, Birmingham C.C. ^37—77 Daryl Slewert, Farmington 3f-3S—77 Dick Wyatt, Orchard Lake ^37—77 Butch --------- was held to four safeties by two Police moundsmen. Caven Campbell tossed a one-hitter and whiffed 14 for the Auburn Heights Class F team against St. Mike, and Derrold McConner yielded two hits and fanned 13 for the Yankees against McDonald’s Drive-In. PONTIAC SUt. HURON-AIRWAY INSTITOT^CU ^ (SI ^ ^ P«nk*vp-u I I I Mwcum si 4 0 i Gr*lg ifrt 3 I I Rabtli » I 0 McDonIdft 1 0 0 FItMr If 10 Sparkman- p 0 0 0 Barktley rl 1 I LaPralt lb I 0 0 Johnson c 1 1 < Robartirl-« 1 0 1 Slone d 3 I Heaton lb 3 0 0 Dodge 3b 1 1 Totals 14 1 1 Tall Penllac tus'is Inslllirta MO » Hunan-AIrway OM I Doubles—Pankey. Grelg. I In—LaPraH; Dodge 1, Rebe Pitching—Penkey 4 H, 5-J S S W, Sparkman I SO. 1 W; V M R-ER. 13 SO. 3 W. WIni (1-0). Loser—Pankey (l-ll JUNIOR _____n Heights B. C. 0. SI. MIcI Yankees II. McDonald's Driye-li I. Lakeland 7 (I) WIdgal American Auburn Heights Boys Club M. Pontiac Retail 0 Malkim 4. Optimist 2 Talbott Construction 3. Hawks 1 WMgat Natlanal Bart's Drugs 13. Moose 0 LeBaron Giants 10. Auburn Heights Bi Club 7 Yellow Jackets 14. Columbia Avenue R. ; Doug Robinson. Barton Hills Second Flight—Tom Serklilan. Edge-wood 43-3,-02) Tom Maksym. Farming-ton 41-43-04) Bill Love. Grosse lie 44-40-(4. Low Net—George Nelich. Meadow-brook 04-1»-S7. 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It could be the start of a brand-new hobby for you... saving money on a Plymouth I Get a deatt-iip deal now at your Plymoiith Dealer^ pury/ belvedere / valiant/ barracuda OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 OAKLAND AVE. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN THE PONTIAC: FRKSS. TUESDAY, JULY 87, 196J \ WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl............’95°° V-8's......’115°° This incluoitt ... Rings, Rod Boor-ings, Mafh Boaring, Grind Volvos, Fit Pins, Doglazo Cyiindor Walls, Gaskots, Oil and Laborl STiWDARD EN6INE REBUILOERS (95 AUBURN RU. • 338-W71-33(-((72 Jim Butcher Says, “I’m Sever Satisfied Witl Oir Service Work tJtvt'' ytte By thit, I mfean that you mnit be happy about the job on your ear, and the price yon paid for it, or I’m not. My Service Manager knowa that, ao he pvec all oat to make sure that every job is right the first time. If not, he makes it right before either yon or I see it. That’s the sort of work that brings folks back again. If not for service, for another car, new or used. That's why better aerviee is so important in building our sales volume. It’s an iron clad rale with ns and it’s working. So, the next time your car needs service, drive it in here. Get an esti> mate. Then let us show you how much better service at reasonable prices can mean to you. Jim Butcher** Oakland Chiysler-Plymontli, Inc. 724 Oakland Ave., Pontiac Phone .13S-9436 Where Better Service Bringt 'Em Back Detroit Boxer Is Loser on Solid Decision Henry Hank Handed Severe Punishment by Bob Foster WBA Dubious of Plan Discuss Heavyweight Twinbill NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Bob Foster toyed with aging Henry Hank for 12 rounds, inflictincf brutal punishment to Hank’s face to score a unanimous decision in their light-heavyweight fight Monday nif^t. Foster, the fifth-ranking contender, set his sights on a title bout with champion Joap Torres after defeating Hank, ranked sixth, f6r the second time nine months. ★ ♦ w The fight drew a paid crowd of 7,805 but there wasn’t an empty seat in the 9.500 Municipal Auditorium. Promoters Lou Mesikina and Oirley Gagiiano said they grossed 509. Fostor. five inches taller than Hank and with a longer reach, b“«an vabbine at his opponent’s left eye in the opening round and it began to swell at once. Poster, a 170-pounder fighting out of Washington, D.C., continued to work on Hank’s left eye with his left jabs and backhand left punches. suffered cut Hank was cut under the left eye in the third round but in the fourth, he became more aggressive and started to jab. Hank, a 30-year-old Detroit fighter, who weighed 174, continued to absorb terrific punishment to his face although he pursued Foster. Foster backpedaled until the final round. Tlien he had Hank bewildered with his switch to aggressiveness and the 26-year-old boxer started showing his right. w w *■ The Associated Press gave nine rounds to Foster, two to Hank and called one even. Referee Pete Giarrusso had it 9-1-2; judge Herman Dutreix 10-1-1, and judge Roland Brown 10-2-0. It was Foster’s 21st victory against three defeats and no draws. Hank’s record is now 57-21-4. NEW YORK (AP) - Madison Square Garden has some inter-eetinf plana about a heavyweight doubleheader, including a Cassius Clay-Floyd Patterson bout, only Clay hasn’t agreed to it and the Wvnld Boxing Association is pretty dubious. “If they don’t get Clay, It won’t be much of anything,” frankly admitted Ernie Terrell in Chicago. Terrell owns the WBA version of the world heavyweight- title and, according to the Madison Square Garden plans, would fight Canadian George Chuvalo as a cton-panion bwt to the Clay-Pat-terson affair. ’The winners, according to Garden managing director Harry Markson, then would be matched for the undisputed world championship. Markson said Monday that Patterson, Terrell and Chuvalo ha^ agreed in principle to the proposed twin bill in the Garden in late October. SANCTION NEEDED But Merv McKenzie of Toronto, president of the WBA, had sonie second thoughts. “I’m pretty certain the WBA would be against the card,” he said in Toronto. “Even if it were accepted by the 'managers of Chuvalo and Terrell, it would need WBA sanction and we would have to have an executive committee vote on it ^ “We must remember that Clay is still suspended by the wBA and is not recognized as the champion. Therefore, the WBA would be reluctant to have Clay fight on the same card as Terrell, the recognized champ.” Clay was stripped of WBA recognition as chamfdon when be signed fw the return bout with Sonny Ltoton, and Terrell won the vacant title. Clay’s return with Liston ended in the controversial one-punch knockout in Lewiston, Maine. SMNMV'S rWNTS Sr TM AsssduM erws Golf Cycle Goes 1 -2-3 on Indionwood's 17th The scores went 1-2-3 on the 183 yard 17th hole at Indian-wood Country Club yesterday. Kent Rosenquist of Rochester sent his 2-iron shot into the cup for an ace. Milt Weaver followed with a birdie-2 and Lloyd Christianson, also of Rochester, took a par-3 to complete the cycle fw the threesome. Rosenquist had a 44 for the nine. GLEN NIGHT Tiro Oopartmont Manaior . y w MOTOR MART SAFEH CENTER Romombor, wh«i you'ro driving, you or* only at tofo at yaor ti^t. If you oro tooklng in a quality tii», wo carry only tho finotti And, our torvicot include ovary madam tciontifie facility from tfva batanca and tractionliing to whooi alignmonl. Y I WHITES $1 EXTRA n i 8s00x14 wiimilirM ^ We Honor All Approved ® | I MOTOR MART f SAFETY CENTER H23 East Montcalm FE 3-7845 300 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM CtLt^ UP VACATION SPECIM. HAVE YOUR NEW CAR AND VACATION CASH TOO! GET »100 to *300 IN CASH! IF YOU TRADE NOW*— generous salesmen for details. Occas«ont xr Bermudas ®^^rtsWrts BRAND NEW BIG FORDS From free I SWUmiNG POOL Be Given Away ^ Complete with Filter M991 bait With $291 Cash or Trade WE ALSO HAVE DEMOS & FAaORY OFFICIAL CARS CLOSEOUT PRICES AXD DEALS NOW VAOATION TIME USED CAR SPECIALS 1961 Ford 2-Or.............$ 396 Good Transportation 1960 Pontiac Catalina .. $ 795 Powor Stoering and Biakos, Extra Special 1663 Cadillac Convert. . *2995 All the extras — Your car down! 1961 Chevy StatioR Wagon $795 Vacation Special. No Money Down 1966 6lds88................$995 Hardtop, Power, Extra Sharp 1994 Ford, EN6USH Type s 895 Showroom Condition, No Money Down 1965 6T9 ................$2695 Full Factory Equipment, Piua Padded Top. Sext to If me ★ FUN! ir PRIZES! ★ Rring the kids along for a 930 OAKUMO AVL FORD, INC. FE 6-4101 i- THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAV, JULY 27, 19H3 C— 5 Vief Wounded Find Hospital a Step Away BEN CASEY SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — The emergency call flashed over the radio at Saigon’s Airport tower; “We’re bringing in three, two wounded in the head and the other hit in the arm. They look in bad shape.’’ The voice came from an evacuation helicopter. A central office in the capital replied: “Land in the soccer field.’’ Within 15 minutes, the chopper set down on the big lot. Ambulances were waiting lor the ' casualties. ’The drive to a U.S. Navy hospital took five minutes. Almost every day somewhere in Viet Nam, the procedure is repeated as U.S. battlefield casualties in the Vietnamese war mount. NAVY FACILITY The hospital, a converted five-story apartment building, is the only Navy facility that treats combat casualties directly from the field. It also provides medical care for thousands of Americans, including U.S. govemmbnt employes. Two additional hospitals handle the bulk of other combat cases. ’These are Army hospitals have been able to handle Amerl- W AJS ♦ K7 ♦ AQSSS EAST 4S65S2 AQJIO WS742 W10 83 ♦ BS43 OIOSS ♦ K1075 SOUTH (D) A A4 WKQ5 0 AQJ2 AJ843 Both vulnerable Smith Weat North East IN.T. Pass 8N.T. Pass Pass Pass Openins lead—A 3 .lACtlBY By JACOBY & SON North was one of those unfortunate people who can’t behave properly when dummy. As soon as he put his cards on the table, he leaped from his seat to look at his partner’s band. What he saw pleased him. He could count 12 or 13 tricks, depending on whether or not his partner had to lose a club. He returned to his seat happily, but was startled to see his partner lead the jack of clubs at trick two. West showed out and South’s gold had turned to dross. Instead scoring game, slam and he had to see 100 points written on his opponents’ side of the score. “Blank, blank, blank,’’ yelled North. “Where did you learn to play bridge" “I just read in the Jacoby coiumn that the jack play is correct when you miss king-ten-small,’’ ^plied poor South. frotogicaL A For^qS ^ Sy SYDNKY OMARR South had read the cidumn correctly, but he had overlooked the fact that king-ten smnll and King-ten nnd two small are entirely different card combinations. Missing king-ten-small, there is no way to lose more than one trick jn the suit and declarer can afford the jack lead as a guard against finding all three cards in front of the ace, but when yon miss four of the suit, you must lead low to guard against finding all four in back of the ace-queen. Note that a low club lead would have guarded against any and all possible divisions of the club suit and guaranteed the contract. in Saigon and in the coastal city of Nha Trang, 200 miles northeast. With a capacity of nearly 400 beds, and skilled doctors and the hospitals provide relatively modem care not available elsewhere in the country. Many of the wounded undergo major surgery for complicated injuries. In most cases, those who require hospitalization for more than SO days are flown to the Philippines or Okinawa. Some go directly to the United States for treatment. Routine medical evacuation fli|^ts leave four times a week. STAY AHEAD “Hie object is to treat as many patients as possible and also try to keep our case load down,” said Lt. Cmdr. Philip E. Jones, La Mesa, Calif., administrator of the Navy hospital. “That way we are ready with enough beds at any time in the event of an emergen^.” A * * Regardless of his branch of service, a man is entitled to treatment at any of the U.S. military hospitals in Viet Nam. Medical sources say they can battle casualties with rela-ease. Some 2,800 U.S. serv-icenten have been wounded in combat since 1961, according to the latest figures. If the United States greatly increases its troop commitment there will be an obvious need for more and better medical services. A new Navy hospital is being buUt in Da Nang, 380 miles north of Saigon. Q—The bidding has been: aat South Weat North W Pass 1 N.T. Pass Pasa Dble 2 4 Pass Pass 2 A Pass 3 A Pass 7 You, South, hoid: AAQTS VKJ86 AS AK84Z What do you do? A—Paaa. Your partner unable to bid over two diamonds and you only have thirteen high eard points and a (our eard suit. Apply experience Situation. TAURUS (Apr. JO to Me obstacles Indicated. Adlusti...... ■ - - - necessary In order to oo ahead. Accept challenge. Finish prev Make decisions GEMINI (May 21 to ein~ bo praetlcariUliare money It (CapyrliM IMS, Gonaral Poatara* Carp. c~« THE PONTIAC PBESa^ TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growm and sold by thein in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce Apples, AAcIntosh, C.A., Applet, Red Blrpl. bu. Apples, Trensperent, bu. VaOBTASLES Beent, green, ................ Beens, wex, bo...................... Beets, di. bche..................... l-W Beets, lopped, bo. Broccoli, C«‘ dozen by flrs» Whiles Grade A lw"P» iJUS 32-35; lerga 31-33; medium 25-M; small M-21; Browns Grade A large 31-32; medium IS; checks II. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS Syr'»rSS*l.“T3r'w^-57;cars "peferor Wr S^^Se’ mixed mediums 25'/ii dirties unquoted; checM A Whites 30; CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)-.«■ Iliad C l.Mb IlSharoJ Alum Ltd .W Alcoa 1.60 Amerada 2.60 AmAlriln I.B Can 2 AmEli^w"l.36 r Enka 1 PPow 1 31 66% 66% 66% ... - 3 75 767% 75 31 21% 21% 21% + 3 51% 51% 51% -I- V» 111 21 20% 21 -fl 6 55 56% 55 -f % X7S 6»'% mVt ‘ » 72% 72 .. 26 62% 61% 62VU -1- % “ 37% 37% -1 17% 17% • 21 30% 27% 27 27% -f ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.60b ArmstCk l.io AshI on 1.60 AMd DG 1.M Atchlwn 1.60 AtICLIne 2a Atl Ref 2.60 Atlas Cp 12 66% 66% 66% -f % 13 35% 35% 35% -I- 56 63% 63 63% -I- 2 GE 1.32 Kwilt 1.60 American Stocks (Hds.) HMi Law Last Chg. Aerolet .50a 70 m 31% 12 + % Alax Magneth .lOr 5 11% 11% 11V4+% Am Petrol A .15 13 6% 6% 6 -I- % ArkLa Gas 1.36 4 42 41% 62 -f- % Asamera a 1%1M6 1%-l-1-16 Assd Oil A Gas 3 4% 4% 4% . . . Brai Trac 4% 6 6%-f % Brit Pet ,22g 7 6 13-16 6% 613-16. Brown Co .60 2 12% 12% 12%..... Campb Chib a 4% 4% 4%...... Can So Pat Cdn Javelin Cinerama CraohT p"2*6 Data Coni Draper 1 Equity Cp . 14~l% 1% 1%-Vb 15 3% 3% 3%.... 6 31 4% 6% . 14Vk— % 5 Z»V1 ZSVS 25%-t- % 3 3% 3% 3% . . 5 2% 2% 2%-t- V* 36 14% 14% 14%-!- % 7 6% 4% 6% 11 14% 14% 14%-t- % IS 1% Its 1% . 7%+ % 5 1% 1 67% 4 1%-t- V 2 4% 4% 4%.— VS Moiybden 2 33% 33% 33%-f % New Pk Mng 35 4% 4% 4% . Panes! Pet 3 1% 1% 1% RIC Group 3.25t 4 2'6r 2% 2% . Scurry R^ 10 17% 17% 17%-V % Sbd W Air 56 1% 1% 1%-!- % Signal Oil A la 13 26 25% 26 -I- % Sparry R wt 62 6% 4% . 4% ... Syotok C« .3Si 141 12% 11% lf%-6 % TidinlC^.7S 10 17% 16% 16%-t- % un Control JO 27 6% 4% 6%+ V, 06 1% 1% 1% .. 110 34% 34% 34% ... 5 33% U% 33% -t- ' 242 77'/4 75% 74% — ’ 17 61'/(i 61% 61% — I y 11% II II 4 7 67% 67% 67% - 2 33% 33% 33% . 24 32'/ii 32% a% - .„ 357% 35 35% 3 15% 15% 15% a 33% 33 33% -t- % I 46% 66 66% -t- % 7 47% 47% 47% + \4 » BV4 a% » -I- V4 6 35% 35% 35% - % 4 23% 23% 23% - % * 13 12% 13 -I- % 45% 45% 45% -4 % 23 32% 32% 32% - % 104 7»% a% 7»'/4 + % I 3»7% 31% »% - % 21 76% 76% 76% 41% I 32% 32% 32% - % 231 »% a »% 4 % 51 34Vk 34 34 34 31% 31% 31% > 36% : I a% 4 . -... ..»% — 1 26 , 45% 44% . - ♦0 43% 43% 43% OolHud Mo DeltaAlc 1.60 8IM1* Olsnoy .41b DomoMn .100 ~ OougAIr AOb Xl42 43% 42% 42% Dow^b 1.Mb M 66% 66% 66% 4 v« ,3 ^ 3W4 60 4 % 15 233V6 ni% 2a% -f % 5 32 32% 31% 4 % 21 »% » » — % _E— 7Ti 57 56% 56% 4 % 2 13% W% M% ... 60 04% n% 43% - % I 50 41% 41% - % a 23% a% a% 4 % _p_ FeIrCem .SOt J9J 55 M% S4% -Feirch Hiller “■ - ' Fansleel 6Ael Fedd Corp I FedOStr 1.50 Fed Mog IJO FerroCorp t ---- Cp 2 Fla POW 1.20 21 66% 65% 64% -4 % . . 76% 75% + % V 21% 31 21% 4 V* 17 66% 66% 66% -f % Froept S 1.60 FruehCp 1.50 GAccMt 1.10 Mam’? GanElac 2.20 Gen Foods 2 GmMills 1.40 GonMot 2.25g GenPrec 1.30 GPubSvc .5lg G PubUI 1.36 GanTal&EI I OenTIra .60 GaPKillc 1b GeltyOII .lOg Gillette 1.10a QlenAld .50a Goodreh 2.20 Howe Sd .40 HuntFds ,50b Hupp Cp .251 IdMl Cam 1 meant Ind 2 IngerRand 2 Inlarid StI 2 I 34% 134% 34% 4 f 3m »% »% ) 23% 21% 33% 4 % I S6Vi 56% 56% 4 % 42 50% G% 50% 4 x7 27 2S% 27 4 f 23% a% 237/b 4 n 35% 35% 35% 9 54% 53% 54 4 23 a% 217% im _ H 246 31% 30% 30% n 33% 53% 53% - % 16 25% 23% 25% 4 % —R— 12 37% 37% 37% 4 % 4 43% 43 43% 4 V% 10 a% a% 33% . 75 30% 30 M 4 % 14 3t% 3»% 39Vb — % a 36% 34% 34% ... 56 29% a% B% 4 % 6 7% 7% 7% ... 6 35% 35 35 10 51% 51% 51% — % 17 61% 6M 61 4 % a 43% 43% 43% 4 % 4 62% 62% 62% ... 4 53 52% 52% - % 1 13% 13% v)3% - % I 25% M% 45% ... 10 4% 4% S% - % » 19 11% 10% - % 3 47% 47% 47% 4 % IntarlkSt .... intBus^ 6 IntHirv 1.50 bitMlnerals I 5 13% 12% 13% 4 % 10 34% 34% 36% 4 % 26 667% 666% 666 4 % 13 11% M% 10% - % 144 a% a% 29% — % 65 SOVi 50% 50% JoneNkL" 2.50 Joy Mtg 2 3 36 35% 36 1 21% a% a% 4 42 104 103 104 4 3 57% 57% 57% 21 57>A 547% J7% 4 Krogor 1.M Slag .60 ___jrCam 1 Len Vol Ind Lehman 1.7K LOFGIs 2J0 LIbbMcN .29f .■-isnrw _ .nin UTI LivIngsO .761 toh.) High U a 14% 1 PapilCo 1.60 PtIzerCha la PhalpsD 3.40 PItPlale 2.40 Pit Stgel Polaroid .10 ProetBG 1.15 Pubikind .361, RCA .600 RalstonPur 1 Rayette M ading Co ichCli ,20a Reyn Mat .60 ReyTob 1.00 Rheem Mtg T • RIchfOII 1.10 Rohr Corp 1 RoyCCola .41 RoyDut I.OIg Ryder Syst Setewey SI 1 StJot Lead 2 SL SenF 1.50 StRegP 1.40b SanDImp .461 SCMCorp .isr ScottPsp .90 Saab AL 1.60 SeerIGO 1.30 Seers Roe 1 Seeburg ,6g Servel Shell Oil 1.70 ShellTre .51g SharWm 1.» Sinclair 2 Slnge/6; oats Vo lower to V4 higher, September 68 cents; soybeans IVi lower to % higher, August 82.79V6-90. 17 16% 16 16% - a 71% 70% 71 . 66 47% 467/1 47% 91 76 75% — 6 54% 54 9 1% I'/U a 33% a% 13 51% 51% 51% - 11 30% 30% 30% 12 41% 61% 41% 4 —T— 59 22% a% a% 4 47 79% 71% 79 17 19% 19% 19% 76 56% 55% 55% 4 26 1207/6 119% 119% 4 - 45 62% 61% 62% 4L ia 16% 16 16% 4 ' 10 35% 35—Oaciartd or mM attar stock < dand or split up. k-Daclarad or paM year, an accumulatlva Issue wim 1 dands In arraart. n—Naw Issue, p—I... tbli year, dlvMand omitted, datorrad or no octlon takon at Ur' - — ----------- r-Oeclarad or paM dlvMand. t—PaM In z-Salea In full. cM-Callad. x-Ex dlvMand. y—Ex I and and sales in full. x-dls-Ex disti Ion. xr-Ex rlglits. xw-Wllliout ants. «n»—WHb warrants, wd—Whan btl^ raorgpnitad under the Bbnkruptcy ‘r* V lacurlttas aaautnad by such eonv . In—Foreign Issue sitotact to in- Treasury Position Withdrawals FIkoI Year-7,354,313416 47 X—Total Debt- 317,510,710,353.13 Com Asiets- Sfocks of Local Interest OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from tha NASD are rc... sentative Inter-daalar prices of approxL maUly 11 a.m. Inler-daaler rnark-*-changa throughout the day. Pi>lces not Includo retail markup, markdown commission. EID ASKED AMT Corp.....................6.3 Associotad Truck ........... 16J Braun Engineering .......... 11.4 Cltlzahs Utllltlei Clast A ... 31.3 Diamond . Crystal .......... 14.2 Ethyl Corp..................35,6 ____ Kolly Girl .................22.2 B.2 Mohawk Rubber Co............21.0 21.4 Michigan Seamiest Tuba Co. 26.2 Pioneer Finance ............. 6.5 Satran Printing .............16.0 VUrnor's Ginger Alt'. !..! 7.* Wahr Corp. ..................13.4 wyandotta Chemical .,....... 37.0 MUTUAL FUNDS giD ASKED AHIIIated Fond .............1.76 ‘ ‘ Chamlctl Fund ,........... 14.71 CommonwOalth Stock ......... 9.19 Keystone Incotna K-l .......9.95 Keystone Growth K-2 ........ 5.16 Man. InvOstors Growth .... 941 AAan. Investors Trust ......16.11 Putnam Growth ..............1A07 Teuvislon Electronics ......1.42 ... Wtllingipn Fund A........ windigr.Fund i«r> — ■OHD AVERAGES Compltog ^ Tbo AtM|^ Rads *k«. Util. Fga. L^Yd It ^anga 4.1 4.1 »n Tuat. ttJ 100.1 H.4 92.1 -tv. Day M.1 100J M.3 91J Snto^iSw Sii ioo!ir 8j nl lar Ago n.4 1U.I M.O 90J .... U High 13.7 1«.4 M.9. 9S.0 ,94.3 U Low UJ 100.1 n.O 91.1 " - M High 02.9 103.5 M.6 92.3 M LOW MJ 100.1 07.2 90.1 _ Yoar Agi I 136.2 161.1 310J _______J 157.1 1M.1 110.4 . . .437.2 152.0 161.9 311.9 .. 44SJ 114.2 in.2 117.7 ...505.2 177J 171.2 141.7 ...451.4 149.3 1624 311.0 ...475.1 1I9J M7.2 WJ ...406J 1527 141.9 3U.I Tuatdairs Is! DUMtndi Daclartd CamEdUon NY Magma Copper .50 Q l-M 9-15 in goods and dol-ler. nations are i lowered its| earlier timates of the I total of U.S. ex- F ports while in-" creasing its DAWSON prediction for imports. ★ ★ ★ At the same time it has drastically cut its earlier predictions of the U.S. balance of payments deficit, because of the greater than expected drop in the outflow of American private capital. Other observers of international trade trends think America’s export markets may shrink still further next year. , BIG BOOM I Some blame a slowdown in demand in West Europe, as its big boom levels off and monetary restrictions tighten in its fight against inflation. Others see a cramping of available funds in other parts of the world where prices cd the raw materi- still others think that U.S. export prices will rise because of increasing production costs, so that Americans may be priced out of some markets. All bets are hedged, however, against what could happen to international trade and domestic economices if the Viet Nam war grows info a bigger conflict. 'Some 40 financial specialists of U.S. corporations and banks engaged in international transactions reported today a sharp revision of the estimates they prepared in January for the National Foreign Trade Council. They anticipated then that the outflow of American dollars this year would top the return flow by |2 billion. Today they see this balance of payments deficit as around 1800 million, which would be the smallest in eight years. Since 1967 the annual deficit has ranged between $2 billion and 84 billion. And intermittently this has caused a troublesome drain of U.S. gold reserves. ADVISORY GROUP The council’s advisory group now sees conunercial exports coming to 826 billion this year, a dri^ of 8300 million from their January prediction. They see imports rising to 820.4 billion, up 8500 million from the earlier estimate. Private capital investments overseas are now estimated at 83.6 billion, down from 85.8 billion six months ago. Government grants, miHtary expenditures and other capital outflows are regarded as a bit higher now. 4 4 r^4 All types of U.S. spehding is put at 848.5 billion, and all return flows at 139.7 billion. The relatively small 8800 mil-liwi deficit, however, could be a passing improvement. The group says this year’s showing will be largely due to “the sizable shift in corporate short-term funds.’’ This is regarded as probably temporary, hi the future, if a “balance as favorable as this is to be maintained or there is to be still further Improvement’’, the group says the United States must look elsewhere in the factors making up the balance of payments. 4 4 4 A dimmer view of the future of exports is taken by Fortune magazine. It doubts if the surplus of exports over imports will be regaining its former size. Part of the trouble, it says, could come from the very reduction in American overseas investments. This could reduce demand for American goods, machinery and materials. Waterford Rezoning In matters concerning the ad-als for sale are dropping. Andj ministrative procedure for han-dling township rezoning petitions, Waterford Township Attorney Paul Mandel and Oakland County Corporation Counsel Robert Allen have reached agreement—but not with Waterford Township Board members. % I * Inviting » $ 4 % $ 4 * By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “We are retired and have invested in American Telephone, General Motors and Dow Chemical. Can you tell me what yields we get from these stocks and how these are figured? We have a loss in Dow. Do you think it will recover?’’ M. M. (A) It is unfortunate that you have a loss in Dow Chemical, But I don’t think you need to be seriously concerned about this. When you suffer a decline in a really high-grade stock which Dow is — you can be reasonably sure of ultimate recovery. Dow’s profits have been relatively static for some time — until 1984, a boom year — but the management and financial structure are thoroughly Sound. I wouldn’t buy Dow, but neither would I sell at present depressed levels. To figure current yield on your stocks, divide the annual dividend rate by the market price. 4 4 4 (Q) “Do my series E savings bonds bought in 1941 keep on drawing interest? I am S8-years-ohi and will retire in nine years. Would it he wiser to hold the bonds nn-I retire and then turn them in?” L.O. .. .. „ (A) Your Series E bonds RUM utu. Hg^ 4)ought in 1941 have been auto-.... .... matieally extended twice, without miy need for action on your part. Interest on these Ixmds is accrued and not actually received until redemption or maturity. The way this works out, your redemption value is constantly increasing and will continue to increase until your retirement. At that time — since you will probably need current income — you may wish to exchange ydur Series E bonds for Series H which will bring you an interest check from the Government semi-annually. If you make this exchange, reporting your E bond interest for tax purposes may be deferred as long as you hold the Series H Two Agree on Petitions Vernon Wiggins contends the county should be concerned with rezoning petition requests only when property borders another township. Final action on all rezoning petitions is taken by the various township boards. In a letter to the Waterford Township Board last night. Man-del stated he and Allen agree that all re zoning petitions, whether approved or denied, should be sent to the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning Committee for review following recommendation by the Township Planning Commission. NeverthelcBS, township board members expressed opposition to the zoning procedure; at last night’s meeting. Av/ard Four Wafer Job Contracts Contracts for construction of the four-section Pontiac Township water system were awarded yesterday to low bid- Supervisor Jan\es E. Seeterlin ders on each part of the project, indicated he may go to Lansing | * ★ * in an attempt to seek an amend- j The contract awards were ment to the existing statute reg- made by the Oakland County ulating zoning procedure. Board of Public Works after re- *44 viewing recommendations of The amendment would estab-' lish autonomy for townships in | of bids opened July 15. zoning matters. Work on the project could APPROVFn PFimONS begin by late August, accord- APPROVED PETITIONS | i„g to Donald W. RIngler, dep-Until recently, only approved] uty director of the Departzoning petitions had been sub-1 ment of Public Works, mitted to the Coordinating Zon-' „ ing Committee. i Township Planning Director I^ ® 8510,000 was __________________I awarded the Section 1 contract. ranged to 8542,000. (Copyright, 1965) Jones Motor Reports Rise in Revenues Jones Motor Co., Inc., Spring City, Pa. with local offices at 124 Franklin Road, reports consolidated operating revenues for the first half of 1965 totaled 818,294,000, up 18 per cent from 815,562,000 in the same period of last year. During the quarter ended June 30, 1965, revenues totaled 89.379.000 compared with 88, 240.000 during the same period in 1964. ★ ★ 1 Earnings after taxes for-the six-month period in 1965 were 8354,123 and represented 63 cents per common shares outstanding. In the same period in 1964 earnings totaled 8367,218, or 66 cents per share. Directors have declared a regular quarterly dividend of 15 cents per share on common stock payable on Aug. 16, 1965 to shareholders of record July 30, 1965. News in Brief Pontiac police are looUng for two youths who yesterday robbed Ray Bayhard, 64, of 645 Jackson of 860. MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. . —adv. The Section 2 contract was awarded to Harbedian Co. whose bid of 8363,420 was the only one of the original bids opened in June that was accepted. REBIDDING ORDERED Rebidding was ordered on the of balance of the work and the new proposals were opened by the DPW July 15. The Section 3 contract was awarded to Sterling Construction Co. with a bid of 8175,006. The high bid was 8188,000. Bay Construction Co. with a bid of 8264,000 was awarded the Section 4 contract. Bids ranged to a high of 8269,000. 4 4 4 Leonard Terry, Pontiac Township supervisor, said the project should be completed by late spring next year. Water will be supplied by the City of Detroit. PRESENT SOURCE Individual wells, except for one subdivision water system, are the present source of water. Residents will have the option to tie4n to the Detroit water supply or continue using their present well water source, Terry said. ■4 4 4 The DPW is acting as agent for the township in the watmr system project. A cargo vessel that carries small loaded barges on its deck is being design^. It can be raised or lowo-ed by pumping water ballast so that the baiges can float on or off. Business Notes William D. Decker, 4139 Runyon, Shelby Township, has been appointed cashier of the National Bank of Rochester by the board of directors. Decker joined the bank as assistant cashitf in May 19(85. He was formerly with Peoples State Bank in Fort Huron and the National Bank of Detroit. TUE PQNTIAC PKH^SS, TUJSSDAY, JULV 27, 1965 e~ 7 Deaths in Pontiac Area MR3. LEWIS A. BIRKLE Service for Mrs. Lewis A. (Emma M.) Birkle, 59, of 321 Reymont, Waterford Township, will be II a.m. Thursday at Don-elson-Johns Fuseral Home with burial in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Birkle died yesterday after a two-month illness. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Thomas L. of Waterford Township and Kenneth L. (d Pontiac; four grandchildren; and two sisters. . MRS. DENNIS OYER Requiem Mass for former Pontiac resident, Mrs. Dennis (Mariar^) Oyer, 35, of Yakima, Wash., will be said 3 p. m. Thursday at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic (Church in Yakima. Mrs. Oyer died Sunday after a lengthy illness. She had been a member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church in Pontiac and was employed as a technician at St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Deborah, at home; and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Allen of Pontiac. Also surviving are seven sis- NOTICa Th« City o( Pontlic. acting by and through lha PontlaC l^alng Commlijlon will open btdt at /:00 p m. Friday, August 13. 1W1 on Aa tallowing: 77 to 102 1SJ1 WSH KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOjrS: (70-23) AA, /5) AC, and (4) SR, 7.6 eg. It., 1.1 cu. It., 1.6 cu. tl. ratpdetlvtly **%«ltiac°Houilno Commission 535 Branch St. Pontiac, Michigan ROY B. MacAFEE ExKUtIva DIractor July. 16, 27, 21, If. 30 and 31, IWJ NOTICE OF PuiuC SALE Tho followlf^ proparty has bear covtrad In Oakland County by . 20S. P.A. 1»37 (Sac. ______ Propartles o( a similar catogor' ■ ■ (her counllas will also b at this public salt. Tha sola wil haM at Stala Polica Haadquartari Complaint No. 12-I3774S 1-Boy‘s 26" Schwinn bicycia .......0. 21-171063 laathar lackal with cloth i_Tool box 1—Claw tiamma 1-Palr pllars Complaint N.. 1-Pontiac tachomatsr Complaint No. 27-3123-66 . 1—Bay's 26" Evans bIcycIa Caimplaint No. 35-5661-64 Recording li. 2—Lila praservars Gogglat Child's swim fins Canvas folding stool INVITATION TO BID i proposals will ba received by rd of Education, Avondale School Auburn Heights. Michigan until Tl., E.S.T., August 16, 1*65, lor ious Items of equipment outlined below spacHIcatlon; School-Job No. 64-61EO Proposal No. 1: Shop Equipment Proposal No. 2: Homemaklng and Science Equipment Proposal No. 3: Library Equipment r>u,ina< and speclllcatRins will be the office of the Architect, *50 North Hunter Boulevard, Birmingham, Michigan on and after July It, 1*45. ir each Proposal, „,.JI be submitted In dupll-is provided by the Architect, >aled envelopes marked with oHlce of tha Board date School District, 1435 West Auburn Road, Auburn Heights, Michigan. Board Of Education Avondale School District RAY ISANHART, President THOMAS F. GALLOWAY, Secretary July 27 and August 2, 1265 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given of a pub hearing to be held by the White La -----Planning Commission at t g Mag. sidentlal c following changes In 1 to Commercial DIs-st 'A of Northwest Va 2 FT. OF S. 112 FT. ,, ...... >A, EXCEPT S. 50 r.. .W-St HIGHWAY. 0.40 Acre. This property Is 170 fl. East of Lake Lana Dr. formerly known as the White Lake Center School Site. Also known as 11,000 Highland Rd. ParsOTS Interested are requested to be aresant. A coov of lha Zoning Map lo-of tha proposed chanM ----' “-e Township ■ f those OF $W Vs OF N gather with a It is on file at tl Clerk I • CHARLES HARRIS Planning Commission STANLEY FREVILLE Secretary July 27 and August 12, 1965 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Rochester, Oakland County, Michigan, public sale of a i960 Ford Dump Truck bearing serial number COH 46920, held, for cash at auction. Ini Iheradf may be made it 205 Main--------- Rochester, Oakland Ceunly> Mldilgan, the ters, Mrs. Kay Soder, Mrs. Patricia York, Mrs. Ann A^ld, Mrs. Alk» Biskner, Mrs.^ Bert Doyon, Mrs. Rita Wagner and Mrs. Unore Otto, ail of Pontiac; and five brothers, William, James, Robert, Joseph and Thomas Leahy, also of Pontiac. MRS. IRENE PETERSON Service for Mrs. Irene Peterson, 67, of 108 Stout will be 1:80 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, Mrs. Peterson died yesterday following an automobile accident. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Aaron Middleton of Keego Harbor, Mrs. Richard Robertson of Pontiac and Mrs. Lynn Huckabey of Arizona; a son, Orley of Pontiac; one sister; and one brother. JEFFERY M. SHELTON Graveside prayers were to have been offered at II a'.m. today at Ottawa Park Cemetery for Jeffery M. Shelton. The infant died yesterday. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth 0. Shelton of Waterford Township; a sister, Diane C. at home; a brother, Richard A. of Clincinnati; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. H. 0. Shelton of Ft. Dodge, Iowa,' and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Witzel of (Sneinnati. Arrangements were by Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home. MRS. M. C. WHITESIDE Service for Mrs. M. C. (Irene) Whiteside, 76, of 75 E. Iroquois will be II a. m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Whiteside died Wednesday. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Pontiac. Surviving are a niece and nephew. MRS. FREDERICK GREAL R(X:HESTER - Service for Mrs. Frederick (Cena) Greal, 84, of 922 Roselawn will be 11 a m. tomorrow at William R. P-otere Funeral Home. Burial will be in Prestonville Cemetery. , Mrs. Greal died Sunday after a long illness. She was a member of the (3iurch of the Naz-arene. Surviving are a d a u g h t e r, Mrs. Ethel Singles of Rochester; a son, Fred of Rochester; two sisters, Mrs. Harry Smith of Disco and Mrs. Emma Bromley of Rochester; four grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. REV. FRANK S. HEMINGWAY LAPEER — Service for Rev. Frank S. Hemingway, 70, of 827 Liberty will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Liberty Street Gospel Church. Burial will follow in Hollenbeck Cemetery near Co-lumbiaville. Retired pastor of the Liberty Street Gospel Church, the Rev, Mr. Hemingway died Sunday after a brief illness. His body is at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Coming here in 1918, the Rev. Mr. Hemingway eight years later established WMBC, t h e church’s radio station which was one of the first in the area. He was active as manager of the station at the time of his j death. Surviving are a son, Frank Jr. of Las Cruces. N.M ; a daughter, Mrs. Harold Simons of Detroit;' five grandchildren; three brothers; and two sisters. MRS. GEORGE WISER LAPEER — Service for Mrs. George (Maltilda M.) Wiser, 92, of 558 S. Main will be 3:30 p.m. Thursday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Oxford. Mrs. Wiser died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. Lela Marr, with whom she made her home. ROYAL LAUGH-portunlty li yn. 338-2714. Call ROUTE salesman, EXPERI-enc^ tor establish^ soft drink route. Apply 10 to 4. Palgo DIs- trlbutlng Co.. 930 Faafherstona._ SALES MANAGEMENT TRAIttEE Nationally advertised load and drug company will interview In Pontiac tor management trainees. Age 25 to 45. Our men average over *500 combined monthly salary and commission. Unlimited opportunity. All replies confidential. Pontiac Pre^s Box 24. WLESMAN TO^ SELL" PUNCHING ; Pontin Ing lull details to Pontiac I Box 13. . , SALESMAN, PART ' Ply to t Dixie Hw SHEET M e benefits. Ap- I Clothes, 4440 xanT'experT- 40-08*4. _ __________ SALESMAN-JtTsOO TO *12,000 DE-pendlng on quamicetlons. r .n hospitals . . . it mult ^ have 3 ye lurdeys Hospital Suppl) Carp. 12 S. Mill Street, Pontiac Michigan. ____ SHOE SALESMAN Evenings and Saturdays, good pay lor oualllied person. BECKER SHOES Pontiac Mall excellent le benelits. Call^Mrs. _Johnston, Walled Lake, Michigan TRAINEE - GRILL A neat, willing. Big Boy Drive Ins, 20 S. Telegraph and 2490 Dixie. No phone calls acceptecL________ VENDING MACHINE SERVICE- c Press Box 53. , Reply Pon- WANTED: FULL TIME BUTCHER. Experienced. Apply Peabody's Market, 154 Hunter Blvd., Blr- mlngham. Ml 4-5222. _____ WANTED: MOTOR ROUTE MAN lor Detroit Free Press morning route, Washington - Romeo area. Early morning delivery, good pay. 731-«290 or 542-2*00. ______ program. Call Must be mechanically Inclined, v train. Apply 1100 Oakland Av Pontiac._______________ ___ Help Wanted Female Anthon, 7445 character. Send photograph ...I information to Pontiac I . Box 59. You will be contacted ir mediately tor Ir-------- TO Chevrolet, 11-25, WANTED: REAL ESTATE SALES- misslon i... . ____________ portunity *10,000 year, up. Pontiac Press Box 22._______________ YOUNG MAN FOR MAINTENANCE a' NATIONALLY KNOWN RES-teurant chain needs attractive girls, age 21-M to learn cockteil- ATTENTION RN'S and LPN'S » competitive with ai ATTENTION, MOTHERS! SANTA'S TOYLAND 1 dIscMnt party plan Is hiring demonstrators to sell top i after 4, FE S-JW. ID, days! SOME EXPERl- " rtAUTY'SCH6bL INSTiruCTOR' • ____ OR 3-0222 BEAUTY OPERATOR — PREFER one Rxptrlanctd In wig *al«i and larvlea. 473B7I2 or 473-4521 after 4 p.m. Ceitfeur Par-Ai 2397 Elizabeth Lake OUTBOARD MECHANIC, EXPERI- POLICE WORK, PATROLLING AND selllng.J73-«343. _ PORTER. STEADY WORK, LAKE and Sea Marina, 245 S. Blvd., East. RELfABLEt PHYSICALLY FIT MAN ------—. -------- —^pply I. Pery.'^ gifts at discount prices. No I —nt. Call Plane, 473-054*.___________ f SITTER TO LIVE IN. SUN-* an. Vic. Walton and Joslyn. BEAUTY OPERATOR WANTED ..._________/lUamSoo *L 4-M7B and MA 4-2M7._____ BbOKKEEPfeR -"CASHIEir MU^ havt exparltnea as a typtet ^ the apwatian of BurreuglM VmU malic Boakkeepmg machkit. Call Cashiir-Food ChBcktr Experianced Over 25. 4 day*. Sunday f. Call ___________ CLERK-RECEPTIONIST FOR OOC-lor'i ottict. Who Is personable, alert and Merettad In rowtina ol- llca wofjt. Capable of ------- pbant, making appts., • cat ouallfy, pleasa reply to Pontiac Frees Box 57. _____ __ COUNTER GIRL. PERMANENt position. No exparlanct necessary. u,iii ...1- u.„t be over 25 years ----- -Irmlng- dward. ham Cleaners, I DAY C^K. UNION LAKE AREA EM 3-9H2 DESIRE LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER, wages, Sylvan Manor area. 4*2- bining Room Mjnager Night shift. Older person. Good opportunity for the right person, plus benatits. Apply In person. Big Boy Orive-ln. Telegraph and EXPERIENCED WAITRESS - COOK end dishwather, morning and et-terneen shift. 577 Auburn Ave. EXPERIENCED PREFERRED FOR purchasing dapartment. Must have knowledge of accounting, accurate with llgurei and typing. Work m medtrn plants. Congenial associates. 5-day week, necessary to I transportation. Oxic ad. Call OA 1-'25M Mr. McRae. EXPERIENCED GROOM WITH horses at public jt^bles. JEn^3-9171. EXPERIENCED MAID76wN RIJOM bath, TV, live In, 5 days, *40. 424-5*70. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. APPLY Court Htwse ^eck Bar. EXECUfiVE secretary' ipeny located .1 Pontiec I I. Experience nece-.s'ry. < 5 Bommarito at 474 M55, FULLERETTES I additional Income serving General office with typing and accounts payable, preferably with experience in general contractor's office in Pontiac. Mail resume to Pontiac Pres^ '^ox 73. GIRL TO WORK IN BOOKKEEPING Service. Some experience necessary. Bookkeeping, typing end oper--■ bookkeeping machine. -----------------ic Press. — " Reply to Pontiac and state age, ekperlence starting wage expected._ have" OPENING FOR EXPERI-enced chocolate dipper. Full or part time. Also saleslady. Alter-noons, full time. Apply in parson, Crocker Candy, 2740 Woodward. HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, CARE et Invalid. Call FE 2-944*. HOUSEKEtPER TO LIVE IN, 2 . 343-215*. INSURANCE , Girl with lire underwriting experience lor ' general agency In Pontiac area. Press Box 14, _ IRONING, l-DAY SERVICE. DONNA Halcomb. FE 5-7917. kitcheYi "help, 1* or over. KITCHEN HELP, FULL"TIME E nliig iMrk,^ steMy^. 517l^ D LADIES money? Pleasant end profitable work near your own home. Avon otters this opoortunlty. Phone rd 4-450* or write Orayton Plains PO Box 91. _ LADY TO CARE FOR CHILDREN, Rochester area, *^‘- * ■'“ ------* I. 451-3005. LADY TO DO DOMESTIC WORK II LAUNDRY HELP EXPERIENCE not neccessary. Pontiac Laundry. 54^^Telegraph. LIVE IN, CHILD CARE AND LIGHf housekeeping, ref., start Auo. 23. 473-4559, alter 4 p.m. MATURE WOMAN FOR OlVERSI-tied general office work. Must be adept with figures. Write to Pontiac Press Box Number 4*. giving age, lamlly situation end working MANAGER FOR SNACK BAR. EX-parlance desired, but will train. Excellent working conditions. Pon- MIDDLE AGED WOMAN, LIVE I Own apt. Help mother with be Ight housekeeping. M< than wages. 412-29*9. UirODLE-AGED HOUSEKEEPER, child wairome. Live In, more (or wages. 2 men In family, ic Press, Box 51. Write Pontiac 1______ NURSE'S AIDE, PART - TIME day shift, must be 21 years old. Call 451-4377. Stoneycrol NURSING HOME SUPERVISOR, must be experienced, live on premises, will provide own room, utilities end meals. For more Information call 451-4377. Stoney-crotl, Rochester. __________________ PERSONS INTERESTED I Monday - Friday. Must bi PONTIAC GIRLS NEED VACATION MONEYII WE lllEED 9 BURR-SENSI OPER'S (ALL SHIFTS) KELLY GIRLS SERVICE INC. U W. HURON-No. 10 PythUn Bldg. RECEPTIONIST FOR DOCTOR’S OFFICE, EXPERIENCED. SEND RESUME TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX NO. 72.____ ________ 4-03H._________ RECEPTIOnTsT FOR BEAlJtY SA’ Ion. Mature woman, adapt at figures, tend complete resume to _ Pontiac Press Box . REGISTERED NURSES-FOR ALL services, including operating room Situated close to the cultural center ot Detroit, providing opportunities for advanced study. Starting salary 5450-S490 with shift dlNcrentials, and Incrcasa* every t^vT; I Ruth A. Warner, R.N., Director of II Atorosi Road, Datrelt. t ORlIcal. FB sal6*la6V,“itVuir'To 'JILL store; MIraeta Mila.___ SALESLADY, DiPENOAbLB PIR-•an for Flewarland In lha Mall, nacattary. 1*3-1991 lor Inlarvtaw SALES WOMAN PART TIME SOME axptrlanct. Apply Young Land Chlldran Shop, MIracIa Mile ‘ SEARS R0E8UCK AND CO. 4ply"l^ a.m. fo f? noon, SEARS Oakland Mall 14 MILE AND JOHN R. (Cornar 14 Mila and 1-75) SECRETARY FOR GENERAL 0<-tlce work In local music store. Call FE r-— ■ •* — select your own HOURS! Pert time—lull time typists needed. Excellent typing skills naedad. Only Iho'.e experienced In medical and legal terminology need apply. Cell Mrs. Slocks^ 9:30 to 5. 444 4134. THE SINGER ca K opening new slotres In Oakland County area requiring lull lime help. Previous experience not re-guired but knowiedM end Interest in home sewing helplul. Excellent employee benefits. Apply fo Dill. Mgr. mornings et \Ol N. Saginaw WAITRESS, FULL TIME. DAY! Apply In person only. No student) 3450 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains. —pttSflMrtton; Big Bw Res- Dlxla Hway. and Sllvar Laka WAITRESS. MUST HAVE SOMfe experiance. I^o'Sunday or tioNday virork. 5*5 Oakland Ava. WAltRESS, 4 NIGHTS PER WEEK. Apply Ricky's Pizza Houst, 119 Woodward. WAITRESSES BARMAIDS-CLERKS tn transportation. wl?l g WAITRESS. NICE. PART TIM¥. Apply In parson attar 4. OtII'i Inn, 3411 Elizabeth Lake Rd. WAITRESS' FULL TIME EVENlh work, Rocco's, 5171 ' ■* EN|yG WAITRESS, ii OR OVER. BOB'S Rejteurant. Keego_Hartor^^*2-9M7. APPLY IN Restaurant, WAITRESS JiCTw'. WANTED; TO LIVE IN AND prepare meals lor scml-InvalM. Call between 10 a.m. end 3:30 p.m. WANTED WOMAN^TO WORK nights In bar, capable ol handling alone. Good pay. Call FE 1-9437 (or eppointm^t. _ _ WANTED" AT ONCE, "AN EXPERL In a newly oponad rastaurant. Rat. ol^st employment required. iO- WIDOW "LADY~fb"“Ovl~rN Wl+W elderly lady “ d needs assistance. Cooking a It housework. OR 3-1930. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED Unusual opportunity 3-5220, Dalrolt. M J ACT NOW TO GET . -tl Infactlon-Englna Ovtrli CRANES Oraolint-Bti^ Hoa Oparate Speclailzad iquipmeni "World's Lsrgast Trada School" GREER TE(:h. ca................. Work WurtBd Mdi AI CARPENTER WANTS WORK ot all kinds. 474-107A_____ CARPENTER W#iK. FEMtOB__________ CEMENT CONTRACTbi, DRIVE- M, DRIVE- ______ , . FE 1-4975. T M^K, IcOMMERCIaL ana rmMntl*l, cMI attar 5. FE s-1447. ______ HANO"~OiOOING, LAWN WORK, IlghI haulliw- FE 4-73M. HIGH SCHOOL ORAbijATl, 23 wants 5 day a weak lob, ne commis^, ia-om.__________ MAN wFth new pickup waNtI " FE M399._ YOU CALL - WE COMB - WALLS, floors, aluminum tiding. Curlay'a Window Claaning. FE BtMS. CIEANJNG AND WALL WASHINO. 4*2-4453 or 4*2-5534 f^ench~tutorino available »“ •=■——— tralnad taaehar*. by Europaan tralnad MY 2-4*71 attar 5 p.m : «xrrr,-. -—.-Si IRONINGS WANTED, WEBSTBR-Crotoot area. FE 5-71M. ___ _ wanted ironings to do in my homa. Baby sitting. Mrs. WII-son. FE 4-*5*3. 125 Omar. •usiiitM ^rvkt DroBBimiUi^ & Titltriai 17 DRESSAAAKINO, TAILORING AND alterations, Mrs. Bodell. FE A9B53. sEwnSb aTn¥ alteration* ------ MA 5-1293. ComralBSCMrt'llMifail . 11 LOVELY ROOM IN NURSES' HOME lor ambulatary aMarly My. Homay atmoiphart. -------------------- abla. M4-542 STONIEYCR6fT NURSINb 940MSS 451-0092_____________451-4377 Moving wM TracUni M WOMAN FOR GENERAL HOUSE-cleanlng, half day a waak, own IraiporTatlon. FEJ-0412._______ WOMAN WANTED AGE 30 fO '40', child care, 2 to 9 p.m., 2 to 4 on Sunday, *25 a weak, own Irani. FE 2-^2^Befor# 2. WOMEN r* TO 40," LIGHT FACTORY work, must hava been employed pest 12 months. Apply between 10 a m. end 2 p.m. only. Northlend Indusirlel Plestics, 1955 Steptwnson Hwy., Troy, MIrtIgan. _________ WORKING MinHER OESPERATEj armlnglwi housekeeping, ^lary. Fermi area. After 4 p.m. *4A ^4L_____ YOUNG LADY TO WOhK ON CASH register. Apply 7940 Cooley Laka Rd, Unloojjke. _______ Hslp WantBd M. or F. 8 Openings in all departments. Part-time and full-time. Apply In person, Elies Bros. B>0 Boy Drive-Ins., 20 S. Telagr^ end 2400 EXPERTeNCED cook, FULL TIME Immediate openings lor ASCP technicians. Minimum starting salary ol *474.00 to maximum ot *545.20. Apply Personnel Dept., Pontiec BOB'S VAN SERVICE FRBR BSTIWATPS _, ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 1-7HI LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING, :haap. Any kind. Ft S 93P3. LIGHT HAULING, ANY KINO. 335-1922 Pdiittiig * DtcwyHig 21 PAINTING DONE NOWI PA THOMPSON Ing, large or small |obt. F matas-OR >9547.______ PAINTING, PAPERING _________Tuppar. OR 3-70*1 PAINTINO AND DECORATING, l¥-tarlor and axt^lor, btackto patching, and coattn^raasonabit rates, I astimatas. Ft «*S3. QUALITY,WORK ASSURBI^^ RAINT- 471- tramgBrtatiM rOU'RE GOING TO CAUFOl , delivtr a late madtl car li M Motors, 2725 OIxGThwv., 0 WANfElT"RIOE OR 6XCI1aNM rides from Dravtan Plalm ar Pontiac te Utica Ford Starting planl, * to 4 p.m. shWt. 474-3957. 15 PER CENT SAVINGS ARE POS- sibla on ■ ------- - AA-plus n Realtor.____________________ HOME OWNERS INSURANCT. Scales. FB S-5011 ar PE »**(». Wantad ChildrBR t« B«ard 21 RELIABLE, LICENSED' DAY CARE WsHltd HBvstiiBld 6o#di 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND Appliances. I piece or houseful. Pear-son's. FE 4-7MI.__________ or 8 & B Auction 5009 Dixie OR 3-2717 PEbESTAL-TYPE • ROUNb D A K dining leble. Want small size laavts, must ba ra»-daalars. 4BBZ17*. WILL BUY ANTIOUES, FORNi-ture and estatas. Bluebird Auction. OR 3-«*3. ME 7-5193._________ rTwiJJie handy. Call FE 4B35*. iviAN" a’nd wife team For cleaning dining room, hours ) a.m. to 4.30 a.m. Apply at Big Boy NEED EXTRA MONEY FOR VACA-tian? Start earning now. For further detatts call Mr. Laggatt, FE OPERATING ROOM SUPERVISOR, full time, RN, some on call, salary based on experience, liberal ptr-sonnel pollclas, contact Director ol Nurses, Community Hospital, WLESPEOPLE EXPERIENCED lull- or part-llma n^ Or^r^LalEe*Stnca. F^ opportunity to loin an eld as-tablishad firm. Call Ed Douglas or Bowtn Broock tor Interview. MAX BROOCK INC. Ml 4-4700 SHOE SALES, EXPERTIRCE PRF- Salts Htig, Mak-Ftawli t*A $140 Per Week WantBd MitCBllBBBBMt 30 antique GLASS AND CHINA. ' . 4*2-2174. Pri- tabies, ale. Forbes, OR 3-9747. V also sail same.______________ CASH FOR PIANOS, FURNITURE WantBd MoMy WantBd ta laat 32 3-BEDR(X)M^ HOUSE,^ RENT WITH HOUSINfe NBEDEb~B"'iT'SEFtlM: bar 1 tor Mort term. Fumishad or unfumlihad. Clar^ton scheol dlslricf 3 adults. 51BB11S aftw 4 OWrKf. J OTVITO. mnwr m respSHsible EbfsbN sypIlfw’T*-or and wMa, xrlshas la rant clean tq rqpt Clean ------ Best of i*f 41M377.__________- TEACHER DESIR'ES iTlgOaoOM •ni In Walled Lake-Orchard Laka "Wanted to rinTi Goraga on Sunwnit Stmt FE 2-8181, EXT. 234 ThE PONTIAC PRgSS. TUESDAY. JULY 27. 1965 WANTVD TO I MtiR^OKO CASH BUYERS JVt CM Mil y*uf proRtrt EjwwdReaHv_______ ' Shm •ACHfLOR a WILL SHAM LWX-urlm Mulront wlA tMW. FOR FAST ACTION CALL OR S^MTS 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS. ACREAGE PARCELS. FARMl BUSINEU PROPERTY'S AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgtnlly need lor limnedlatc Salel Warren Stout, Realtor I4» N. Opdyk* Rd. FE S4ISS Oelly III 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ASK OUR "SELLERS" WE'VE SOLD THEIRSI Pt our "prlvilt rinonct plan' W. H. BASS REALTOR FE I-WI8 BUILDER ANNETT NEEDS LISTINGS M to our rocenl boomlnp »al« airy dlscusi ulllng your prop PlaaM call lor porional apt Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. FE 8-0466 open Evonlnat and Sundayt 1- ALL CASH FHA AND Gl EQUITY land COMTRiU:T|-HOMES wS8IOHT > OAKLAND AVi. K)M$ AND BATH. Xlwsbi’^ Coll 01 Ww APARTMENT^ I- ond ^bodrootn oportmon.. ^ catad |u»t oH W. Huron ot W Monroo SL. porfact locotiM. tool from city Bui. walking tanco to churchai. iBoppIng ten and bankt. Excaplionallv larn comtortabla rooms ttiroughout. 1012 aquaro feet In l-hadroom apart-manl. CarportQ, alr-conditlonad, garbage disposal. GE rafrloars-tors and stoves, beautifully land-" No eWIdr NOTICE I II you have acraagi parcels lor sale — small or large — we hatha buyers, call us todayl Clarkston Real Estate VACANT LOTS WANTED we pay mere. Immed REAL VALUE REAI In Pontiac we ate cl^g. R TY. t2S-9575. * kjimImnU, f3? 2 ROOMS AND BATH. QUIET couple only. FE S-082»._____ 2“R00MS and BATH, CHILD welcome, 824 per week with a SSO deposit. Inquire at ITS Baldwin ^ Ave. Call 33B.40S4._____ 2 ROOMS, BATH, MIXED NEIGH-borhood FE 5-04»4. TROOMS, EVERYTHING>ttlVATE 118------------------ . IbOM'S, BATH. UPPERL ON Lake Orion, adults, refs., pvt. entrance. 4fW447 after_3. _ _ 3 ROOMS, BATH, UTlIlflES, adults, lot Center Street. MY 3-2M5. 3' ROOMS, ALL PRIVATE, NEAR downtown. Inquire al 233S Dixie Hwy. ^Economy _Cars. 3 ROOMS AND BATH,' CHILD WEL- come, $30 per week, with a 87S deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwir Ave., Can 338-4054.________ 4 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL BASEMENT QUARTERS. Fi men. Reasonable. FE 3-7308. ELDERLY LADY OR BACHELOR no drinkers, FE 2-87SS or FE 2-4647.______________________ Apartmtiitt, Unfurnlshitd 38 1 ROOMS. KITCHENETTE, VERY MODERN 2 BEDROOMS, 18 MILES north of Pontiac, OR 3-7227. IN MISSAUKEE LAKE, MODArN. MA S708« or MA S-4841, 8140. 2-badroom . .. comparlsM. May be Inspactad My> time. Phone FE S2M7 or OR r 282S. DORRIS S SON REALTORS. :. Blvd. FE 2-40B7. RiEt Mohses, Fonilsliod 3-BEDROOM YEAR-AROUND HOME Watkins Laka, 2-car garage, min. to Pontiac, 2S min. to oil, near schools—shopping. . 1st till end of June. 8150 per . — OR 3-S810. ATTRACTIVE LAKE FRONT YEAR-around, private road. Mandon Lake, available S^., to AAay. Lease adults. EM 3-2183. COOLEY LAKE PRONt 3-Bib-room, 1',3 baths, *“*—'— ‘— 8125. 8431 Coolev Septamber-J Drive. Rent Hoos^^n^ishod 40 2-BEDROOM, WILLIAMS LAKE, 3-BEDROOM, COMPLATBLV MOl^- ----- *— home. SISO a • ■ H420. 3 BEDROOM, GAS H^T, 8125 PGR mo., securlly deposit, t»7-8155 - EM 3-4094.________________ 3-BEDRObM HOUSE IN ROCHES-ler, $125 per month, plus security deposit. 33S1084. BOULEVARD HEIGHTS HOUSE IN BIR'MINGHAM. 682-N54, 3 p.m. to 6 p.n\.___________ VERY CLEAN 3-BEDROOM HOME AVAILABLE AUGUST 21 - CLEAN 2-bedroom, tiled bath, fire—“ waterfront on sand point Casevllle. By week or mori 2-2342. M, PRIVATE HATH, COL-and Airport afoa. tTMSit. PRIVATE HOME-MAN OA WOM- an-meal8 optlonaLFE S4181._ PliVAtE ROOM IN (HRtltlAN heme. No drinktrs ^ase. ** Flerenco St. ____________ iLfedAlNG^^OO^KlttHtA AAlV- Rwit MMos Sfca CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE — -* ““ Street pi R CONDITIONED DESIRABLE , NEW AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICES, lecatad at 4511 Huron Street. OR 34031 or 363-747A__________ OFFICE'SWtCE'ON WEST HURON Street. Oft streel parktng, *7«,3S3«, WIDE TRACK DRIVE WEST, NEAR Huron St. ------ eupaney. Cair'LMlIe rT fripp. Realtor, FE 54161. Rsnt BhsImss PrspsTty 47-A ! FOOT GAS HEATED, 2 1^ •vyir openings suitable tor bur— »r storage, 554 Franklin Rd. LOCATE YOUR BUSINESS WHAAE 1600 sq. ft. g avallabla. Ray O'Nell Realtor no Pontiac ----------- room. Many 513S_tor appl.__________________ 2 - BEDROOM, BLOCK FROi beach, lake privileges, Maceday Lake. $8,500. FE H781. 2-BEOROOM, CARPETED LlVIt^ Ae'droom tri- KEEGO HARBOR BY OWNER CLARKSTON 3-bedraem Capq Cod on large shai ed let, lamlly room. All the exfrai S27JOO. MA im3. BY OWNER, RANCH CLARKSTON, spacious llv^ ram ms, targe kltdton a r 1-75, 8160B dosm. fV 6wNER- >BEDROOM BRICK, BY OWNER-MEDROOM COLON-lal, 2W baths, panelad racreatton Drayton Woods area. OR BY OWNER - AUBURN HEIL area. Nice 2-badroom home, large living room, new carpet, ceramic bath, convenient kitchen, larga Mt, IW-car garaga, fenced back yard, water Softener. $12,500, $2500 down. BY 6WNER, 3-4feDROO««, «*WqH. BIRMINGHAM CLOSE TO TOWN on quiet, treed a on 1st kitchen. ShIh H-m ;________________« CLARKSTON - 11 ROOM HOME-'—‘sd xrim charm and appeal -reomar lof. SiAtaTssooi V, ACRE WITH MOOEENltED DRAYTON PLAINS, DROOM Undtrwood Real Estate ________ dbilng " closet space. SmA, ............ phis tax and bis. HAGSTROM REALTOR, 4900 W. HURON, '''* 44)358. EVENINGS 682-0435. It, fenced yard. FE 27874. 0 DOWN PAYMENT BELAIRE HOME BU'"''RS E 8-2763 1:30 TOSP.M. EVENINGS, LI 2-2327 WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 298 S. Woodward, Birmingham district. Hawthorne, Kennedy A Northern schools. School bus stops on corner. Asking $13,000 10 per cent down. Best offer takes It. Cell 2BE0R00M, NEWLY DECORATED, gas heat, mixed neighborhood, 86,-500, $1,000 down. FE 4-7270. 2-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT Cottage on Round Lake, needs ruS*tod“'ai;d'^iss 'arsiois: $1500 down on land contract. 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW City of Walled Lake lOO'xlOO' lot. RANCH TYPE HOME, 2-BEOROOM, LOT 60'x330, vicinity of Y------- and Joslyn. 88000 cash o' completely furnished. FE 4- DRAYTON AREA with basemar.--- n. Carpeted living room, urepes, cyclona fencing with garage, paved drive and r $15,500. Terms.. North Point Realty 1904 S. Main Clarkston WA 5-2341______If no ans. MA 5-1582 DRAYTON WOODS 3-bedroom home owner. Large carpeted I Aluminum Bld(|, Items ALUMINUM SIDI*NG, GUTTERS and roofs. We cover dnythlng at the right prJee^OR 3-0179._ 1-A ALUMINUM SlfalNG-jTORMS FE 5-9S45. Joe Vallely, OL 1-6623. KAISER 4l»A aluminum'siding, GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS - DOORS, CEILINGS, AWNINGS. SUPERIOR. FE 4-3177. SHfRRIFfiGOSLIN SIDING ROOFING SI S. Casa Lake_____FE S-5231 Architectural Drawing EW HOUSE AND REMODELING plans Urawn. 3634508.____ Asphalt Paving DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, FE 5-4980 Free Estimates. DUREN ASPHALT . ^AVlIfG CO. Get our bM first, free estimates on driveways and asphalt seal coating. OR 3-1957 or FE t-7371. TAG ASPHALT PAVItfG ________d. CHy FE 5-1573 _ Eavestruughing esllmafes. 673-6866. Piastering Service A-1 PLASTERING AND REPAIR. Reasonable. George Lee, FE 2-7922 plasterincTIf'ree estimates. D. Meyers, 363-9595, 674-2448. Excavating Fiherglas Repairs CORVETTES^ fiberglasi I Works Rapalred, all phases < Basemiht Waterpreofing Bieck Laying Boots-Accessories STOP DREAMING Let Us Help You Save BOATS-MOTORS-TRAILERS DOCKS Discount prices now In effect Harrington Boat Works "YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER" — * Tetsgraph ------ Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND _;^ltoor sanding. FE 2-5789. JOHN TAYLORT FLOOR LAYING. Sanding and finishing. 25 years Mperience. 332 6975. _ . g: SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sanding and flnlshl^. FE 5-0592. Furnoct Rtpair OIL AND GAS SERVICE. FURNACE FrM Building Modernization AR GARAGES. 20'X20', MTS. WE ulid any sbe. Cement work — _______Irngto. Pedy-Bullt Garage Co., OR 3-56ir______________ 2«“ I MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD, 0 money down. Breece Landscape ig, FE 2-0141 or FE 5-3302. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, sodding, seeding, discing, plowing, grading, back hoe and Iron) end loading, retaining w a11 s. Broken 4-Inch sidewalk, sold by load. Free estimates. FE 4-337I. PAVING BRICKS FOR PATIOS, garden borders, outside gril'- —' firepisces. OAKLAND FUEL _______ PAINT, 45 Thomas St. FE 5-6I59. THE COMPLETE SERVICE TALBOTT LUMBER !5 Oakland Ave. FE A4595 Meving ami Storage Painting and Decorating l-A PAINTING - INTERIOR - E) •erlor - FE 5-5734. 1 INTERIOR AkD ilCfERlOR INTER-LAKES PAINTING decorating. Work can't be OR 4-3g9l._______ PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING PAINTING AND CAULKING large lOO'xISO' lol. I TUNING AND REPAIRING Schmidt ________FE 2 52171 WIEGANO PIANO TUNING 30 years In Pontiac, FE 2-4W^ In *^ar chest, ’’l^e'S.-lns-^.X ntracl. Call OR 4-1238. 3 BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BASi-menl, ceramic bath, screens, storms, curbs, FHA approved. In _ Milford. 68^1736. 3BEDROOMS t. Ceramic tile bath, b $14,000. OR 3-2810. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty OAKLAND community COLLEGE AREA Walking ' ‘ RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLY Repair Peris and Replacements Rental Equi| lipS^t WALL PAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 52 Joslyn 0pm Sun. FE 4-6101 1 GIROUX 7 I REAL estate 4511 Highland Rd. ' 673-7037 2 BEDROOMS, FAMILY ROOM, fireplace, garage, porch, large lot and trees. All dtv conveniences. on land aontraef. FE 4-79Sr 4-BEDROOM BRICK I location. heat and 2-car garaga. Bu land contract or FHA. J. J. JOLL, Realty FE 2-34H 6824)282 Ml 6-5573 9 RdOMS, MIXED ARIa,' I iment. excellenf c Rooftr NEW. REROOES -:all Jack. Sava tht i »a rrpair. mauranca m m Wavr>*, Oakland WJ 2300 ----- Cmmtiat. 6n »2»7. If no ans. 33M222 NEW ROOFS, REPArRS. INSURED 47-49 CHAPMAN AVE. guar^eed. Ca|l Tom. 682-6563. i 5 .^ms each Gas heat ROOFING AND REPAIR. private. Basement. Terms to sul 682-4790^ OL 1-6661 purcheSfr. Positively the best bar ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR ®*'" uiinSv nu rule nun. General Malntenanca 682-6440 SEA ROOFING - COMPLETELY | BREWER REAL ESTATE .----^ ... —.------ Vllllamj. Mitchell, Selesmanager E. HurSn St._________FE 4-518 . DOWN >uts you In 0 nico homo li Pontiac or Suburban F or 3-bodroom homos. Smal nonthly paymonts. MIchaal't. 363 18a. ^-4685. Dotrolt WE S4288. antead. 682-a47. Tree Trimming Service BliL TREE TRIMMING, REMOVAL Froo esilmeto. FE S-44q, 676-3510. EXPERT TREE SERVICE, TUM- > E N E R A L MOVING, HAULING furniture, trailers, traih. 24 hour service. Aleo Sunday. 33»8795. $9,990 'lySeo homo! lupboardt, LATED. D tTi^b LIGHT TRUCKING AND ,HAULING _el and Iront-and loading. FE 2-0603. LIGHT HAULING. GARAGES AND basements deaned. 674-1262.____________ AUBURN HEIGHTS - 3-BEOROOM ranch, brick lot S7x300. 30M Adame Road at Auburn. HE IGHTS, 3 BiDRbOMS, track Rantul Trucks to Rent W-Ton pickups IVb-Ton Staka TRUCKS TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Tralleri Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. 025 S. WOODWARD ^ ^ ___Open Dally Including SjinOay _ Hindargroaod Sj^nklar* INSTALLATION AND SERVICE t^MF^^D ^WALL ^CJjEANERS taction guaranteed. FE S-1631. WALLS AND WINDOW CLEANING. WEED CUTTING, LOTS. PE 4-1197. WEED CUTTING. AL'S LANbSCAP- FULLY INSULI better living. No monoy oown. WE TRADE YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, S3W W. HURON im-5i^'l______________ _ BRICK RANCH, FAMILY R06m, BLC50MFIELD NEW RANCH MODELS OPEN NOW . ___ basemeni, 2-car garage, londtcaped. Cloaa to ichoolt r— churches, etc. 2 blocks cost Ted's on Squire Lake ■ * north el church to '— 82S,500S2S.900. mont. ImmedI RORABMJGH BASGtm - TSADE (IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - IB B. BLVD. NORTH - BEAUTIFUL 2-BEOROOM HOME-LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM — WRIGHT REALTY - - 382 Ooklend Avo. - WELL ev8- altor 8____________ 814,250-81,425 down. SIM per Including taxes and Insurance piui cloeing costs. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-32M_________ 343-7181 HIITER NORTHSlOe 3-bedroom end beth, North End~$750 Down 2-bedroom rtnehar, 2-car garagi now aluminum tiding, oak floori gat boat, locatad 3 blocki fror Baldwin Branch-Pontlac Slat Bank. 89,750. No doting costs. 4 BEDROOMS Rancher localed 8 miles Was! 0. Pontiac, built In 1954. Full bqia-mant all paneled made Into living quertors. Oak floors, large tot. 115,-9M terms, no dosing cetl. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 28 W. WALTON ' 338-41 MULTIPLE LISTING MRVICE OXFORD AREA Beautiful colonial home on 33 act ’• minutes from —*■ - " LAZENBY NEW RANCH aluminum ond brld. ...... custom crafted _______ II7,9S8. Tormi. SILVER LAKE AREA 6-reom trFlovol, 1 bodroonsi, IW r r I box tIOMs and grain tlortgt Bbova. 83S.0M. C. A. WEBSTER, Reoltor MY ^2291 OA 8-251S ROCHESTER AREA-WILL TRADE NIX REALTY. UL 2-2121, UL 2-537S ROCHESTER-LAKEVILLE AI txcluilvo 5-btdroom Colonial _ 19 acroa, rttaonaMy pricad, torma, e. P. WqHO. brolwr, 1530 Rochtttor Rd. 62M135.______________ ROCHESTER AREA Cute Madroom homo. W Appllanctt. Carpatad. Sacrifica _126f____________________ ROCHESTER VACANT 629 RiwoM Dr. — Extra iharp 3-bedroom brkk ranch. Ceramic Hie belh, glase wall door, batemeni with aulomallc w settenar. Real nice lawn, axcti neighborhood. 8I6,9M. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Ponliac Slate Bank Bldg. 338-9294 _____________W ROOMING HOUSE ON NORTON Ave. Good Inconne. 8IS,M0. Terms "®*fR REAL ESTATE siparata dtnlng Inum tlMmg wli tllo both, ftoert. oxtri 1^" trH... Ilvtog I srpothig roaimn room ir— . and bar, patio with iMrboeuo, car iHachod gartgt, shower lower leval, brkk and alumlm a beautifully landscopt^ to !!‘prir.t*Sl1.«"tor’S»! "WE ACCEPT YOUR HOME, LOT, OR EQUITY IN TRADE." ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4393 DIxli Hwy. OR 4-(B01 __ MultIpIo Listing Service Income West Side Nke living room, dining ._.... 2 bodroemt end bath plus a three-room apartmani up tor Incamo. Walking dleltnct to the Moll ond TeLHuron. Price S12,8M. Terms. Hurry on this onel First Class Quality and Workmanship At a price you con alf bedroom colonlal with I of living space. Brkk a num exterior and 2-cat garage ae wall at a lull hr only SI7.9M on your lol. Union Lake Acreage This Ihroo-bodroom home has e dining room, kitchen, ceramic tile bath and lull basamont. Gat haal and V/y-car garage. NIca slit barn. Many othar extras. lohn K. Irwin SoleHaaeae ^______♦ SMITH 1461 OAKWOOD DRIVE SYLVAN'LAKB ComfortaMa 3-r^- ... Sole HoueH 49 Mixed Area EAST SIDE - Largo Wory fromo. ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 1U S. Ttligroph ____ E 3-78a_______lyesjyrjFT* GAYLORD LAKI ORION — 6-room I tiumlnum tiding, axcalltnt kll ivy-car garage. I IM forms. Call II MY 2-2821 or FE BEAUTIFUL WALTERS LAKE ----TO with 8 lofa. Soil I .. atparato. Call M FE 8-9M3. 2*1 or FE 8 NICHOLIE HERRINGTON HILLS ■nMES Coloniol Gaorgltn stylo 6-bedroem, t manl, large etalely trees ... round the Irani lawn. Spacious 2.car aar»tm, horse and Iteder too big 16 maintain I on thir sharp I you kno I likt to II Leads of largo Irsas, I 2S7 Oellweod. Buy this contract, ^Ith^Jew dowr^ itay^t away. VACANT — 34Mdroom S-stery homa, full battmeni, garaUt. 38* Parry. Vary tew down paymant ond only 8S0 per nwnth on land contract. BEDROOMS - On land c^rwT ftoncM yard.^tnehad District I. * ** HERRINGTON HILLS - And boau-... . ------- — to choota from. I3S8. inlly homo at 301 only 8150 down. ...............Jl. SEVERAL - Hemat In District I, with paymtnlt under 8M ptr month. Lika new Insidt and out, move In for about 82M. TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PE 60780____________ CLARK STEP SAVER, WIPE SAVER -Easy on tha heart with no staps to climb. Easy on tho eyas with tots ot appool, tpotins and dacerated In lha bast at tasto. Carpeted living room with (Iroplice leges an 922,9S0. NIFTY THRIFTY - 2 ... rancher built In I9S7 with large living ream, entrance ctotaf, eating space In kllchen, .------------ o*nly*813 School Time •he homa le one of listed for tho money. 3 KAMPSEN Your Neighbor Traded Why Don'f You? Clarkston _____________________________ SMALL HOME, ON I ACRE. ............Twp., Ally Roolfy. 4»- 1 NEAR UNION LAKE. Lik. 3-bodroom rancher with et-d oarage, paved drive, large nrhiines. Sea this one. __ . .. HIITER, REALTOR. 3792 Elliabelh Lake Rd 2-0179, after 8 p.m., 683-aS3. CALL B. near Clyde. Full basement sliding door wall to future p Delco oil lurnace, 3-pc. I ^ntled ’ HAGSTROM REALTOR Evtt. Call Mr. CetleM. FE 3 7273 NICHOLIE HARDER CO. IW W. Huran ^ FE MI83 lOHNSON BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, this It tachad 3-car garaga matk door opanar. L tcapad lol. Will toko In WEST BLOOMFIELD V I wnar living up north I loll Ihit house at c r 34iadroom brick i WALDON AT ALMOND LANE, CLARKSTON. Brkk. 13S0 tq. ft. 818,490. ARISTOCRAT BUILDERS. wauled lake area - 9-ROOM bi-level. Garage. Petki. Many Ires. MuxI see to eppreclele. V ket 4-2749. WHITE LAKEFRONT. 5 ROOMS nt furnace, needs sor repairs 2210 Duck ith large fireplace . Also gas heal irpeled living roor Large lot. t2l,0M Alto large lot. S5.t Bolanco c' inp&tely^lurnl&od. OR 3-3000^_EVES. FE_ 3-7444 WEAVER AT ROCHESTER ;ret with 3-itory tarmhouio. . 2W-car garage. On )M I MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In the Village of Rochotfor lit W. Univortity_____________651-8141 JACK PRESTON (iUSTOM-BUILT HOMES R INJ=OR/^mN CALL LAKE PRIVILEGES To WaInJt Lake go wHh this dor 3 bedroomor with full bosomi Walking distance to beach. Pena living room. Very attractive kit en and bath. NIca clean nalghb hood In Bloomfield Tosmthip. J tl,2M plue costs down. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, PonllK__ 333-7IS7 LAKE FRONT, WHITE LAKE, porch, many largo >n«ub owner will tacrilka for qukk sole. Asking t14,SM. Wilton Real Estate. 54f N. - SI., Milford, 684^ anytima. Less Than Rent $175. Moves You In At low ae 897 par month. Includf principal, Intoroit, taxot and li suranca. Taka Orchard Lafci Rd. to Cor AMERICANA HOMI rWit at G OT*' 887 56 'WATERFORD A Thrto bodroemi, f y flrtplace darn kitoh- «'LY- baauttful modem kitchen. Larga family room, liroplaco, full t -manl, 3Vy baths, 2-car gar corner lot ISOxIM. Best of In e wonderful nalghborhbod. A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 CUSTOM-BUILT RANCH IN BEAUTIFUL SETTING INDIAN LAKE FRONT with a ------- -ree. Large cerpi spaclout bedroome, 3 baths, parquet floors. Cuitom-bulll kllchen, Den. AlteChod solarium. Base hoi water heel. Allached 2-car heeled garage, plus workelwp. Water sol-toner. 40' Hied petlo wllh barbecue. Exterior brkk and stone. 3 boel docks. Boelhouse, plus many mors feafures. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. PRIVILEGES ON ELIZABETH LAKE 4-BEDROOM Colonial, family din-Ing room and 23' living room, 2 full bathi. Ponolod 10^x20' rear RENTING $59 Mo. Excluding taxes snd Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3 BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH J)S. For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 OPEN DAlur and SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY GILES LAKE-PRIVILEGED INCOME - 8-room brkk, oak floors, plar*—-■ walls, basamont/ new gat 2-car garaga, 8 40' tots. LIVE ON UKE ORION Ramodotod 3Hamlly homa wm badroomt up and 2 badroo down. Room to build 1 unHs. li SHEPARD _______OL 1-8S03 __ Mixed 1 Neighborhood / HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level S models on Frombos botweon Ob ie Hwy. and Hatchery Rd. A. C. COMPTON & SONS MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-S AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY Over 1,350 tq. I Mddql As ImrrMtote I THE ECON-O-TRI wm duplketo on your M MODEL OP(N: 4-7, Sat. Sun. 2-0 OFFICE t)PEN 9 to SllO trats. ONLY 112,900 ON TERMS. SMITH (Sc , WIDEMAN’ REALTORS FE 4-4526 Times Realty S090 DIXIE HIGHWAY South of Watertord Hill OR 44096 ___ Open 9-9 dally Val-U-Way Government Representative BRICK RANCH In Kennedy Jr. High area -- 3 bedrooms. Full bosemont. LaroO living room. Ceramk Hie both. Family kitchen. Lendecaped land. R^lrei decorating. Only 1600 HERRINGTON HILLS Gas heal. Utility room. Only 870 per month. 8350 ^n. WE TRADE EQUITIES Over $1,250,000 sold to lar ln'65 List Here-All Cosh for Your Home I R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 j^er°«FE_M4,.orF°E’*:51*6; ' KENT store space, plus ellrtcHve Bsm'l., gat heel. Owner h slate, quick possession. He $13,500. iVER 4 ACRES - Ranch, 2-bedrm. home. 21-11. carpeted liv. rm. wllh fireplace. Tile bath. Heated porch, on heal. Garage. Pine Knob eref. Floyd Kent Inc.,'Reoltor 2200 Dixie Hsey. rt Ttlwj^ FE 2-0123 or FE 2-7342 t featurei. Pricod i itlKh(rt cotIt or we will Herrington Hills the liner homes In H» three genereut elied bed. toll basemeni, beouHlully _____.sad lot. This home can f purchased on FHA farms - THINKING OF SELLING? WAN1 CASH? We will gel » for you Give us a try. Cell Emory Butler Hilda Stewart, Fred Roseveer Dave Bradley, Lee Kampson, Re chel Levely, Byron Regere oi w oil furnace, . Garage icrei only $12,800. I. Plenty of parking || down on contract. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 'BUD' For the Thrifty t sMo tocoHon: ‘ng room, toll "Bud" Nicholie, Reoltor 49 Ml. Clamens SI. FE 5-1201 After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 RHODES LAKEFRONT HOME. V young ..... tIJWO imm, contract. SOUTH END Nice S extra clean and «•>< enclottd porch, LAKE ORION. Nkt rnoca, 2-car garaga. Only I bedrooms, gee 1»l400,’8i,siB i" lend contract. imm™i»ix INDIANWOOO SHORES NO. Meal localton for your nev. ........ well reetrlcled; reasonabto priced. Cell today tor appointmanl. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 1-3306 2SS W. Walton fa 5M712 _^yLTmLE listing service Frushour 1 Struble SHARP BUNGALOW BEST DESCRIBES num sMad 2-badroom luring a larga living room, dining room, toll baeomont, largo front porch, got hoot ond — ----------^ tondeeapod catod lust a--------- sarvke. S10.9SO. IDEAL LOCATION ^ ON A BLACKTOP STREET Watfrterd Twp. west of tos This Stoedroom brkk iwatts a an, full brkk, firaplaca. carpel-■Ing, baiomtnt, gat haaf garaga. Trade In your homo and move right In. JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE REALTORS ____ FE 1-4023 OR 3-2S4I haal, geragi —. peted living room wllh fireplace, 3 bedrooms end good kitchen. Only $15,400. We consider trede- CLARK REAL ESTATE 01 W. HURON ST. FE 3 ?Stt LISTINGS APPRECIATED MILLER carpeted -----ice, _________________________________ 2-car garage. IMyxegO' lot. Sio tt UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES. 4 rooms ' -elh, ledgerock fireplace, bultt-ige and refrigerator. Breai*-0 S'/T-cer garage. Two fenced 14.500. Terms. CLARKSTON HIGH AREA RANCH In excellent condition. Well to well cerpel In'every room except bath kitchen. New 2>/i-car oarage, fallout shelter IS feet under-td. A lovely lOO'xISO' lol. Priced fesi sale el $11,950. AUBURN HEIGHTS BARGAIN. 4 - basement, new *ton***L payment on lend cenirecl. IRWIN LAKE-FRONT INCOME - AlumL num and Permaitone rancher. ? leroe rooms end bath for owner. 2 3-room apartments with 4 baths on leki lovol. Fincod lot. Attochod 1. Priced at $35,000. L I- end possibly 5-vlth 2 toll baths, irpeting In leroe LARGE FAMILY HOME — Good t side locetlon. Large living n with fireplace, famtly dining annett $750 Down 6-room home with 4 roi S bath on 1st floor, 2 m on 2nd. Baiamant, gas fi ace. Garage. Lew to; Toltl price $?3S0. public echoelt, and cll^ Used as apit. now. down. West Side-Zoned R-3 3 hornet on 161x391 f ovtr 47,900 tq. ft. 1 - 7 e ^ per WE WILL TRADE Reoltors 28 E. Huron S.t. Open Evenings I. Sundays 1-4 FE 8-0466 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 27, 1965 D—« Brown ■•ttMiihwl Sloe* ItM BUILDERS OWN HOME -^ buy of ttw yoor bodroom TrI-ItvtI. througfwut. -•go. FInlihtd r thingi In IHo. Eorly Ranchor. With a full ARRO WE BUILD-WE TRADE WHY TAKE CHANCES? ONE-YEAR W R I T T E N OUARAN- convenlant living with towards Konomical me Very attractiva exterior num siding. Only a Hml amount of this model will .. built as this Is our general practice. Let us show — “•'* charming house. Price ... lot only lis,9fs. Wa can arrange easy financing. LIST WITH US -*—de. Over I e Real E: itom Bulldli... ... le Listing Service. L. H. BROWN, Realtor 50f Elizabeth Laka Road' Ph. FE 4-3Saa or FE BWO KINZLER OAKLAND LAKE FRONT Appealing large 3-bedroom bu galow with breezeway and garage, walkout 30-toot paneled recreation room with bar. Carpeting and draperies. Shade trees. Boat dock. $15,500. Terms. 2-FAMILY Near General Hospital, t large rooms and bath on each side, exterior newly painted, gas furnaces, garage, big shade trees, t13,yso on easy FHA or Gl tarms. SUSIN LAKE-WATER FRONT Unique 3-bedroom tri-level In area of new homes near Clarkston. Model kitchen, 25' living room with Roman brick fireplace and family --- ---- . ... Spacious grounds and big Now too Targe for widow owns I17,»50. Terms. JOHN KI|4ZLER, Realtor 471? Dixie Hwy. O'NEIL MODELS Open Doily 1 to 9 Westridge of Waterford FOR EVEN GREATER CONVENI- grouplng. Namely, the "Elegante' our gracious Colonial, the "Triests'. a charming and spacious raised ranch, the "LeGrande,, a rambllnr ultra modern ranch styled and las last the "Optimum" the most attractive design f to Cambrook Lane, TRADING IS TERRIFIC ELIZABETH LAKE FRONTAGE Spacious ranch style home ovi looking the lake, spacious well Ian scaped yard, all fenced with nt shade trees. 3 baths, fireplace, re room In basement. 3-bedrooms ( WEST SUBURBAN 3bedroom aluminum ranch den, separate dining room family room. Attached twt „ oarage, cyclone fenced yard. t1450 1 plus closing costs. Immediate a 3-car garage. Real sharp 2-bed-room aluminum sided house. Both houses located on large fenced-'- house. All aluminum siding. lull basemen t real comfortable 3-1 RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lk Rd. Open » . OR z-3333 MLS FE 4-170« by local rapsrtabla cuatom bulldar, any size, any style, your present horn, lot or Unc^ contract^ iiMjf nMsei^'^arrMgMTcaP^ LAKE PRIVILEOES. Williams Laka, neat and clean 3-badroom home on corner let, wall-lo-wall car-bating In living room and I-badroom, drapes and cornices, ledgarock fireplaca with slate hearth In living room, knotty pine kitchen, vestibule and entry closet, new gas furnace and pump, attached garage, fenced yard. SI JOO down phis coats. SHARP ^BEDROOM HOME, wall-to-ill carpeting In living room Id 1-bedraom ledgarock flre- High. FHA terms, quick p PHONE 682-2211 5143 Cass-Elizabeth Road MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEH DAILY » TO * STOUTS Best Buys Today Hi-Hill Sub. Area of distinctive homes, lovt ly 3-bedroom rancher with oa floors, plastered walls, V/i baths natural finish cup-— '--“1, basei—• I, IW-cai h terms. West Side ^ Near General t bedroom older street. Only $( Small Form furnace, quiet paved WARREN STOUT, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph FE 5-8145 Open Eves, til 8 p.m. Multiple Listing Service DORraS POSITIVELY-YesI We mean ev word of It, the lot with this qua brick ranch home Is the nic Lake Front we have ever se over '3 acres of heavily woo< land with 110 feet of natural si and gravel beach on Lake An lus, 5 extra large rooms with BARGAIN HUNTERS you^nnust se this Inrsmaculate 7 room brick col< nial located in Seminole Hills pric lust reduced for quick sale, $15,9! will put you Into this outstandin home and you can almost nam your own terms. Sales features Ir elude 1'/i baths, 3 spacious be< rooms and possibility of 3 other gas heat, solid concrete drive an 3-car garage. PRICES ARE NOT TOO HIGH, llste to thisi! 3-bedroom brick ranc home located In outstanding wei suburban area has full basemen gas heat, 13x14 finished first floe family room, carpeted, living roon spacious kitchen with eating spaci attached 3Vj-car garage and priv leges on Lotus Lake. $17,950. h this custom built home for the^par foundation wl IS Lake. $19,950. I °D1x5'*Hw iultipLe L SON, REALTORS GUARANTEED TRADE-IN PLAN No. 66 LAKEFRONT clous, approximately 1900 sq. ft. i wonderful place to live. Seller has slon is Immediate upon closing, with terms to suit. CALL TODAY. No. 54 JAYNO HEIGHTS LAKE FRONT BRICK RANCHER tifully finished. 3 bedrooms, 2 flrei features. Wall-to-wall carpeting, bu side patio, 3-car garage and nicely ^exl?a n 5n*'bar^ In recreation rooi ___________ ____________ ____, ndscaped. This Is one yo Owner transferred out-of-state and priced for quick i Don't No. 17 4-BEDROOM BRICK Credit must No. 47 JUST THE HOUSE IN THE ,CITY _______ _.id carpeting. Pontiac I__________ axes. The lot Is big and the house Is spacious d at $23,900 with $3,000 down andvlW 6iH-SI58; kitchon lol, S4B; aowbig mo-kn lit, $175; OE rafrlgsrator, tWno, SS. MIsc. toBfaa. Ml 44839. ,'CRIB. CHIPFenOEE. AND MAT-tross. Good cdndlflon. Slerkllno. Vfhlto. 848. S35-W40. _ DELUXE EASY SPIN-DRY WAIh- EURBKA VACUUM AND ATTACH- FEDOERS AIR CONDITIONER' uttd ono sooson, $348. GE elfctrlc HOME FREEZER ?RE^ER'S WAREHOUSE WTL^T Household Furnishings; Light ook dlnotto sot I Chrome tabN, chairs I Light ook bedroom sulte-venity, chest, double bad. mattress, springs All gless ~ TV set ______ _____ mattress, < springs Meytag wringer washer. Electrolui FE 5-5007 AFTER 5 ^.M. (ELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR MAHOGANY For Sda MbeeHaneew 47 COMPRESSOR, ELiCHMC CONE'S ______________ lor Nealing, OR 3-S833. BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIITaND gat tumacao and bellora. outosnaflc water hoafert, hardware and etac-trical auppMaa. Crock, soH, copper. Super Kem-Tono Bottle Gas Installotion Two lOPpound cylinders and agulp-n^,,3. Greet PUIn. Oa. Co. CASH AND CARRY 4x1 Mahogany V-Grooved S3.95 4x7 Mahogany V-Groevad 13.49 Open MON. and FRI. Em. 'til I O'claek DRAYTON PLYWOOD 4112 W. WaNon __ OR 34913 CERAMIC TILE, 1", 3" AN6~4V?"', JIM'S OUTLET CHILDREN'S AND ADULT CLOTH- able, WtdneKley July5Wl*^ld Orchard Trail, corner of.. CLEARANCE OF USED OFFICE tumHuro ano machinas. Forbes, 4S08 Dixie Hwy. OR 34747. We alto buy_____________________ COAL FURNACE. FORCED AIR, 34" firepot. Beat offar. 1794909^ COMPLETE STOCK OF PIPE AND fittings, plastic, coppar and cast Iron lor drains. Plastic, copper I for wtler. Block ter sottner. like new. Coat t-Sell for S2S8. Novi, 474-4338 I 45-Acre Camp Just north of Pontiac ... .. Ion Twp. off main county road, largely wooded, scenic acreege already devalopad as a day camp with permanent bldgs. ----- Wilson, Broker._______________________ 80 ACRE FARM NEAR METAMORA ■■ - Club, ASy Realty, 473-9701. Annett Inc. Realtors 30 E. Huron St. FE S4444 ..............." Sundays 1-4 American soil. $1,395 ( SEND FOR FREE NEW "MICHIGAN BUSINESS GUIDE' ACREAGE-HOMESITES 2 LARGE FARMS IN OXFORD. iLLY REALTY._______ 473-9701 ACRES, 3 BEDR00/iAs7GARAGE, for details. H. C. Newingham REALTOR UL 2-3310 WEAVER Older 2-story home with 4 bedrooms, den, 2 baths and part basement. 3 older barns. Terms. MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR 'VrI1“ genSV'Sran^d^^S^^ei S-'* Busines* Property * 57 • ------ potential. $6750 ----A ".ROOM +IOUSE NEAR WALTON and Opdyke. ISO-foot frontage, 687* ft. deep. Comnnerclal property, FE 8>6845. wooded. $59504 1( Lake, suitable for subdividing, $13,-500, $2100 down. I 45-FOOT BUILDING d, suitable tor storage 0. 554 Franklin Rd. FACE BRICK STORE, “ OSS from Pontiac dealei m r Harbor. Will sacrifice tor c terms. FE 3-0047. ________ Businesi Opportunities 59 sale. ;a|l ?' "Michigan Business ___________________Sept. 13. to p.m. FUR COAT, BLACK HUDSON SEAL, 14 length, size 14 to 14, worn 4 tlmos, $50. 43S-79II.__________ WEDDING WltH_TRAIN, Sola Hottithold Goods 65 ' 1 GREAT JULY SALE ’’“Warden'-kealty 434 W. Huron, Pontiac____333-7157,4-pc. bedroom oroup S 1 STATEWIDE REAL ESTAlE ipc'dinelt* *tormlce*’top°** S( FRIGIDAIRE _____ ___ refrlgtralor, porch jet, den lurnltw^FEjh^. MAP'lE bunk BEDS. EXCELLENT condition, $45. Cornice boards. Other imsc. FE 4-379S, 3 Utjea Road. MUST SELL, MOVING. EXTRA long double bed. springs, chest, dresser, mirror, etc. Other household goods, rummage. Mon.-FrI., 1415 WInthrop Rd. (East off Wood- btlga. S100. 4350 Sashabaw, Clark- jtof^ ____ __________________ NICE GAS STOVE AND REFRIG-arator, $35 each. V. Harris — FE 5-3744.____________ PLASTIC WALL TILE BI.G Outlet, 1075 W. Huron REFRIGERATOR OSi ELECTRIC wator haatar, S3S, Electric range GE deluxa, S7S. Water soltaner, 850. No money down. 83 watk. V. Schick Appl. 8934711. I BAR AND DINING ROOM Underwood Real Estate 8445 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston _ Call 435-3415_________.. .... ___________ ..________ BLOOMFIELD - WEST, OAKLANdI Locate in s^^^^ Community College, Union Lake n?«itv neighborhood, 4 big lots together, -- _percol.tion._water gu.r.nt;^^,| . Comptois. FE 5-6863. I, $1600 e. 1 ACRE L 1. Cali a ». PON i t by right p public schools. Li 0 minutes fi itgniana Lampus. Like privfti )n Cedar Island Lake. ORTONVILLE Priced at S23( 51 ^RES^of^v at only S385 s Increased i $19,00u Geo, Ally, broker. 7433 Highland Rd., Pontiac. 473-1391 My~IAND I bike and'hobby shop in pon- DUT LMIXU I equipment, good jeasJ>oV OfUce Box 453. / A S H and ' 5-BEDROOM ^ly Realty, 473-9701. CLASS'C ^ lake front liquor bar, no ’^^-biS’r'-, 500, $5,000 down. ... - boM .^an^ today. 3M-0000. TAKE A LOOK At this busy restaurant In close by resort area, intersection of two main roads, completely equipped and doing nice gross. Year round. 4- room house adloining, good setup tor man and wife. Price Including business, home and everything S20,000. '/> down. Rest easy. HAGSTROM Realtor 1900 W. HURON OR 4-0358 EVENINGS CALL 483-0435_____ WALTON BLVD. Commercial — 264' frontage, 336' deep, alley on one side good location, going kind of location, 5- room modern house, f ' ment, 2-car garage, me< down, imrr>ediate possession. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY Realtor Walton Including projj- Reg. $39 chest ol drawers $23.95 EsllS’S?; MICHIGAN'S GREATEST BUY 3 Rooms New Furniture fITH NICE RANGE ANO REFRIG. $317 NO MONEY DOWN VISIT OUR BARGAIN BASEMENT ALSO FACTORY SECONDS BEDROOMS AND LIVING ROOMS AND OTHER FURNITURE, SAVE PLENTY. LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin at Walton. FE 3-4S42 First traffic light south of 1-75 Acres of Frea Parking Open Eves, 'til 9—Sat, 'til 4_ REFRIGERATOR, CROSS TOP fraazar, S4S. Michigan Appliance. OR 34011.________________ ,00 REFRIGERATOR, S3S. DRYER, S3S. Gas stove. S3S. Rofrlgaratof with lop freezer, $49. 3t-lnch TV, $25. Wisher, 135. Electric stove, 135. V. Harris, 2E 5-2744.___________ Repossessed Kirby WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS, ONE YEAR OLD, CALL AFTER 5. — U1-S434. ___ RUG: OIN'ETTE SET: REFRIGER-itor; stove, wringer washer; porch set; misc. FE 5-7933. SINGLE AND FULL-'SIZE' BE6S, desks, gossip bench, playMh, dropleof table, misc. OR 3-9444. BO ACRES of rolling end v MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ITfl •kitchan, basemi Income Property Lake Property ' COTTAGES ON 5 LOTS, CEDAR Island Lk. Ally Realty. 473-9701. 1 NICE LITTLE HOUSE ON CRAN-berry Lake, M59. Beautiful lot. 114,500. Phone FE 5-4417 after 4 front, all built-in GE kitchen, two HOME SITES, SO' x 100', SUNNY overlooking beautiful Wal-.aka privileges. 2 sandy I, docking, STOOO, $10 down. Owner. MY 3-0940. LAKE LIVING. PONTIAC-15 MIN-utes. Lots, $995, $10 down, $10 month. Swim, fish, boat docks. FE 4-4509, OR 3-1395. Bloch Bros. LAKE OAKLAND FRONT and drapes, full tiled basement h knotty pine recreation room— ich level. Cedqr closets, Therm-ane picture windows, scenic ws. Birch paneled living and Ing rooms, 2-car garage. Easy NEW 3-BEDROOM, PLEASANT Lake canal front. Aluminum sided house. $13,500. 483-C340. __ TAYLOR MACEDAY LAKE 1, kitchen-dinette, utility. laundry L.. Beautifully la PONTIAC LAKE WHITE LAKE FRONTAGE Beautiful sandy beach with doci 3-badroom executive home. 2 ci ramie tile baths, bosutiful cai potad living room, fireplaca, Pl( tura window evorleeking lok< « site. I 145x440, $3495, $350 h $2400 down. Addition total : time ottered. $45, ,. ,_ Including real estate. NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKERS FE 3-7841 DAILY Sale Land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND'CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See us before terior home with living room, ( Ing area, kitchen with bullt-ins full baths, full basement and 3-< garage. Located on 3 large ac with fruit trees and evergree $19,950, $2500 down. Just off Ba win Rd„ C. PANGUS, Realtor 30 MI5 Ortonv CALL COLLECT NA 7-3SI5 Choice building sites on paved streets. Many on cellent drainage. Some w Low as $3,450 with $350 do equipment. Larc •ge . ------------------------------------- - liilams MUST SELL VERY (K)OD GREEN -----------act, 15 per cent ------------ handle. 474-1493. DRAYTON PLAINS 82x82 brick building annexing to Pontiac State Bank, ideal location ears. Fast growing area, excellent opportunity I o r couple. $5,000 will handle. GROCERY with SOM. Watkins Lake area. Lot lOO'xISO'. Only $3,000 down p' -stock lor^real estate and all. Gc BATEMAN Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor 50 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-SI Open Eves, 'tiI 8 p.m. 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNirURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-plece (brand new) living room: 3-plece living room suite, two step -tables, matching coffee table, two , USED , > ^ decorator lamps, all for $109. Only Hotpolnt electric SPECIAL S20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of: 2-pleca living room suits with 3 step tablM, 1 cocktail tabla and 2 table 5-plece dinatta s< 4 chroma cl . 1 b >r $399. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 4-49S1 IS W. PIKE ______FE 231S0 SINGER AUTOAAATIC ZIG ZAG SEWING MACHINE - CONSOLE CABINET MODEL, p-— buttonholes, ate. Taka SINGER DIAL-O-AAATIC, ZIG ZAG console. $54.50, terms. CURTS APPLIANCES_______ OR_4:1101 TWIN HOLLYWOOD bIBS AND mattresses, I overstutfad chair, 338-3313. ________________ UNCLAIMED LAY-AWAY TAKE OVER PAYMENTS Complete houseful of furniture, llv. ing room, bedroom, dinette, range and refrigerator. FE 2-0231 — Ask Hubbord. 1 windows. FE 5-9110 _______ _____ Bedroom, 19*5, 81.19. Porch, 11.55. Irregulars, samples. Prices only lactory can Sive. Michigan Fluorescent, 191 rchard Lake — 19.__________ ENCYCLOPEblAS. 1944. COST Slil'. Must sail S3S. S43-35I5. RENT; ALUMINUM LAOgfli II sizes $5 a day. 4821751. For tlie Finest in Top Quolity Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL GARAGE DOORS steel ono placa, aoctlonal, wodB and llborglaa. Foctery rolact* In some sizes. Garage front romodet-Ing. Free astlmotai. Borry Door Sales Co., 3100 Colt Street, Blr-mlnohom^ FE 34^or_Mj^ ♦KOI. GARAGE SALE, BABY FURNI-ture. clothing, toys, AAattago-A-Balt, 3 Danlth chalra. antique!, much miscellanaous. 'S4 Buick. July 30, 31. 18 to 8. Or 4-0737. 3313 Loon Lake Shores. Drayton Plains. _____________ GOOD 20x30 3 CAR ALL STEEL OA-raga, with 3 overhead doors and flooring, S150. 10S04 Big Lake Road, GLEAMING WHITE METAL SHOW-or cablnatt. S13.S0. B-toitotS, St9.9S. Hand basins from SI.9S. 6. A. Thompson, 70M MS9 W. Gb-CART-GOOO CONDitlON HAGGERTY HAS IT! tISl.lS, claaronct SI10.IM. HAGGERTY LUMBER 3055 Haggerty H'way MA 4-4551 HOT WATER HEATER, 30 GAL- INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE-U4ad and now fypawrlta^ b^J"B machinas, dasks, cha^ , fitos, mimaographs, etc. Forbai, 4508 6lxla Hwy. (next to Pontiac Slate Bank). Of call OR 29787.__ IT'S INEXPENSIVE TO CLE'AN NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS itract. Small- • PIECE ._______ __________. Mortga available. Call Ted McCullough 4 BAR STCjOLS, KITCHEN SET with 4 chairs, green frieze chair, rocker. OR 21355, OR 3 9180. 9x12 Linoleiim Rugs $3.89 Celling tile . 7'/»c ft, vinyl Asbestos tile 7c ea. ■ilBid tile 9x9" 4c ea. Floor Shop - 3255 Elizabeth Lake “Across From ths Mall'' d'iWng _______________________ 839.95 Frigidaire ralrigarator $39.95 sweat's Radio 2 Appliance Inc. 432 W.Jfuron______ 334-5477 WHITE ESTATE GAi RANGE, good condition. 334-4855. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At our 18 W. Pika Store Only Armless sola .............. 8)9.95 Apt. size gas stove 839.95 34" Electric range ........ 839.95 7-pc. living room suite ... 849.95 riathai drvar .... $49.95 ..... 5*9.95 99S.00 kl Wyman's GE *............. I Yoor Credit It EASY TERMS ARRO REALTY I __ 5143 Cass-EliZdbeth Road ' CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS'. AHOGA.NY 0. 42S-2M3. 13' frigidaire. EXC. CONDITION. CUBIC FOOT WIZARD I 2/4 i Open 9-5 discounts. Earl Garrets. EM 22511, EMpire 3J084.__ _ SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS APPLIANCE CLOSE-OUTS Clarkston Real Estate 5854 S. Main____ OWNER transferred. t It Bloch Brothers, FE 4-4509-OR Church — M-59 — li ROCHESTER, 4Vi ACRES ON PAINT Creak, one of the finest In Twp. 451-3933. n music syaiotn, ni-----■. ------------------- 3095 Garland, FEAULE WMifi colori, FE M450. Akc chihuahua;--t“MOinH8, housabroka, wltll* and balga, all shots. Ml. FE 4-3SS4. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. Stu6 SOfVlca. IMATOOO'S, 13^7llf. 9 RASPBERRIES, B . 4IIS Clintonvilla Rd S H SPRINGER, ala, raas. 4M-433I AKC LABRADOR RETRIEVER^; < dogs. ESTELHEIMS, FE imW. AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER SPAN-lala pups, raasonable, cham- ilrad, 473-1345._ _ NORWEGIAN ELKHOUNb Champion sirad, 1300. 474- akc^poodle^pupsTHmiW^ Mack, ITS up. 331-1131. AKC mALE tOY brown, 1 black, mus attar 4 p.m. OL 1-3750. AKC POODLE CHOCOLAtE, MALE, iKC registered BRITTAIN spanlals, 175, champion sirad, by Lakasida Sacral King Pin. OA I- 50. FE ^i; 1 TAG BULLDOZER TRAILERS, aac. condltton. SOS-4131. FERGUSON TRACTORTT'' CYCLE oric'a. 43l'-3wSr '________ OOOb FORD FERGUSON TRAC-ter, hast rebuIN and paintad, has Jha^^^tr^jn^^a^ INTERNATIONAL NO. 340 TRA£-ter sylth Hanry loadar and back- Inftmatlonal No. 44, P.T.O, baiar, Farmall Cub tractor and rotary mowar, I70S. MANY OTHERS KING BROS. FE 44734 Ft 4-1443 Pontiac Read at Qpdyka jW blEEE model E••tRAc- ________________* SiXiSo* JOHN DEERE TRACTOR ^ FE 14431 MISCiLLANEOTJS' BTI^EQUTP-"’•"L lanca <*argar. Call MAy- falr 4-3343 or 434-3341._ THE LARGEST "REaT^TTTm sarvica star* In Michigan. John **•* ^^*9 0< (^W Ball stamp* with all 8 CARNIVAL 1st, prassur* watar systam, ..... and ovan, sinta bulH-ln lacks. Cam- trailer. 1*43 APACHE EAGLE. Ekcallant condition, uaad vary llt-tl*. Has bullt-ln cupboard, spar* tlra, and aM-a-room. 404 Stanlay Av*„ 3nd hbus* on right sMs aH ___________3-1441 ___________ VACATION SPECIAU NEW 14-FOOT eampar. Sift. Call 4S1-31S7._____ WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPilS and sMapars, Naw and usad OlM up. Also rantals. Jacks, Intareoms, lalascoping, bumpers, laddars, racks. Lowry Camper Salas, 1333 S. Hospital Road, Union Lake. EM 3-3401.___________________________ MARY'S cXmPERS Rant or Buy - FE S4*ll 3491 N. Joslyn 3 Mila* N. ot 1-71 PICK-UP CAMPElsTioaS AND UP TSiR CAMPER MFG. CO. 11*0 Auburn Rd.____________ IS3-1334 iw 1945 WHdwood lir cabo pickup campers, complal aqulppad Including gas circu Ing heater, *035. Over 15 (erent nwdals ot pickup c*i ers on display at all times I to $3,900. !w 1945 14' Coachman trav coaches, *4*5 up. Open dally ‘ ~ ‘0 * p.m., Sundays 10 a Travel! Hartllna Trailers trom i»93. Kany Highland Rd. Ph: 4753491, _ r PALACE, S L E'E PS 5, GOOD i condition, *435. 44*5 L a V __________________________1 Drayton. OR 51144. ... Orlhard Lk , Kw 4*3-4070 W SHASTA. 14rwrBEVlRLY, A':.'-. "rs. .^'SH .ANO^ SUPPWS | i,«^bLKSWAG-EN-ClLMPER^ dio, healer. Icebox, stova; trash water; screens; paneled Interior; awnlng-tent combination. 13,000 actual miles. Just Ilk* naw. *1,9*5. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1105 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINGHAM. Ml 4-3735. ; 945 FROLIC 14' SELF-CONTAINED condition. 435-9751. BRITTANY PUPS hunting stock. Papci I, *35. FE 53047._ CANINE COUNTRY CLUB FREE KITTENS ___________OL 1-1451 PERSONALIZED POODLE ( LE GROOMING - CLIPPING, . . Ityla, 4*3-5317, 4*3-45*0. POODLES, SMALL MINIATURES, brad tar g^ disposition. *50 up. PUREBRED 3-YEAR-OLD MALE Boston Bull, shots. FE 54434. PUREBRED SIAMESE KITtSlS, All elactric. no pumping, tamatic at only S349.M. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron____ ' TeIdom used TRlSr iW Thomas spinet *3*5 Thomas spinet, lass than a y *15. FE 3-710*. Diaver POODLE PUPPIES, ALSO' iHy *u- males tor lease, 334-9309. REGISTERED BLACK AND TAN Coon hound. 13 mos. 434-7339. RichwaT^oodle Solon P6 *:®*471 OAKLAND _ FE 50424 SPRINGER SPANiEL PUPS, AKC. Champion sir*, 10 wks. *35. Ml ____ splnat. Ilk* naw, 44 rboard, U*5. .SO*?AviNG*s”N“^?LOOR Ou^l MODELS^a'nO 'llfHE'R' -mTaDE INS Jock Hogon Music Conter 44* Ellzabath Lak* R FE 34900 Summir ^ptciols Lovaly Lowray Harltag* Organ-built "now is the time to buy At GalloghEr's-18 E. Huron --------------- - - -y. FE 44544 USED ORGANS CHOOSE FROM HAMMOND, LOWERY, WURLITZER, SILVER-TONE, ETC. PRICED FROM $250 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) 37 s. Saginaw_______FE 5714* UPRIGHT PIANO, *40; CLARINET, SIS. CoMt WId* Van Linas. 371 E PIk* ^**L_ __ ____ USED PIANOS CHOOSE FROM SPINETS, CON SOLES. UPRIGHTS, GRANDS AND REBUILT PIANOS. UPRIGHTS PRICED FROM $49 GRINNELL'S (Downtown) ACCORDION GUItAr lessons. Salas-Service PulanackI OR 555*4. LEARN TO PLAY GUITAR, ROCK and roll Styl*. 331-4143, 333-4411 or 3351130._________________________I OfflcB Equipm^^^ 72 j KODAK VERI-FAX COPIER ABCtioii SbIbs EVERY FRIDAY ........, 7;M P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ...... 7;*0 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 3:00 P.M. Sporting Goods—All Types Door Prizas Every Auction W* Buy-Sell-Trada, Retail 7 days Consignments Walcoma bIb auction --- _. .- .. .. OR 3-3717 NO SALES AT OXFORD COMMUN-Ity Auction until further notice. VACATION TIME.________ . OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 Naw and usad furnllur* ot all kinds. W* boy, sail, trade. 7 days. Consignments accepted. We finance. HALL'S AUCTION SALES 705 W. Clarkston Rd. Lake Orion MY 51*71 or MY 54141____ PERKINS SALE S^RVICl. SWARTZ Creak. Phone 415*400. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1*33. Guaranteed tor life. ?lon at*Warne* ■f**l|* U’"®"*''’*' W. Huron (plan to loin one ot Wally Byam's exciting caravans), APACHE CAMP TRAILERS k taw new 1*44 models left at usad trailer prices. Factory demon-stratars and used trailers on display at all times. Open dally 9 a m. ta * p.m., Sundays 10 a.m. m Mil. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS" JULY SPECIAL 1965 RAVEN REGULAR PRICE - *535 SALE PRICE $475 EVANS EQUIPMENT 435-1711 4507 Dixie Hwy. (Just north ofJWatertord Will BOOTH CAMPER Aluminum covers and campers f any pickup. 4347 LsForest, Walt ford. OR^3-U^._ Century—Trovelmoster Garwoy-Sage Announcing THE MEW Century''18" S«t wh«t 33 ye«ri of quoMty building has come up with to fit your famlty needSr TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES CAMPING SITES ning, sat* beach. F McFdaly Resort, 1140 MIS, Public Auction BANKRUPT ASSETS OF EXPERTS CAMERA SHOP ......— Straat (near Saginaw) Trailers WINNEBAGO PHOENIX ,545 MERCHANDISE: (Motion and still cameras, Kodak, Kawa, Petri, Zeiss Ikon, Kallmar, Argus, T.D.C. Ravere, Agfa, Sankyo, Eumlg Electric. Also a complete assorf-mant el tins, flllars, talephota and wId* angle, rings, hoods, sdaptars. etc. tor same. Light meters, (lash attachments, camera cases, tote scopes, tripods, prolector Kreens, albums, slid* vlavyers, timers, movie lights. Pi tachmants, flood and tl, Campers WINNEBAGO PHOENIX WOLVERINE From *1,095 From Phoenix convartibl* camper .... Cady pick-up cabs. We sail an Install Raac* and Drallt* hitches HOWLAND SALES and RENTALS 3355 DIsla Highway __________OR 30;«__________ CRUSADER CAMPERS July spaclal. List price *095. sail price *4*5. Campers to rent, *3, and up per week. Newcomb's, 3113 Lapeer Road (M34). 330-3514. DODGE HOME CAMPER BRAND NEW 1945 $3975 - Rentals- We use all brand naw Craas, our rentals, and they slaap up 7 people, and you may hav* standard or sell-contalnad mod Make your reservation now — t tare It Is too late—Sea Us- Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15310 Holly Rd., Holly_ME 44) Streamline for 1965 All 24' 26' and 31' NOW ON DISPLAY -The Twin Bad Modals-—Luxury—Quality- Holly Travel Coach Inc. 15310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 __ -Open Dally and Sundays- GOODELL TRAILER 3100 S. Rochester Rd. UL GREAt LAK^S, 10X50, i-BED- m, aj complata. 4851533._ 10x51 ROYCRAFfT 5BED-ms, spaclal gun furnace, — ffijRRY! money you save . DETROITERS S te now at Bob an early bird at YES, all Detroiter products ir or exceed th* rigid Blu* B •- heating, --------------------- Mtw wi8 liBBd Tmk$ m Ml FORD F-m TRACTOR, FULL ale brabas, 33* Cu. in. angina, V-O, Sapaad tranamlaaian, lipaad axl*. 90S» liras, complat* and road ready *30*5. JEROME-FERGUtON Inc. Rochastar FORD Daalar, OL 1-97I1._____________________ 1*43 KONOLtNE FlCKUF-«HOW truck, 40 mitos. naw condition, loadod. Must so* ta b* approclatad 01,39$. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Rochcslor FORD Daalar, OL 5*711. 1*44 JEEP V5TON PICKUP. 144 ■ Bavarly Of 334*93*. _____ FORD M-TOM FICiWP, V-O, y tiros, tow mItoMs, Ilk* new. SI tor eampar. tU95. JEROME-RGUSON Inc., RoGhaslar FORD 1*44 FORD P'ICKUFT . wm, Caoar taulld^ai teT onl>»1**5. JEROME. SON Inc. Roctiastar FORD OL 1-9711 Is yours 'sS;: 1965 FORD 5775x15, 4 ply tirt. -------- 1-year warrantyl Only -v- $1,795 Plus Taxes and License John McAuliffe 430 Oakland Ava.°"° FE 54101 CHEVROLET PICKUP, APACHE 10, — -------.i.i_ _ii trada t~- r. 451-aOH- “You’re absolutely right! I don’t understand it -I’d be worried to death if I did!" Motorcycles K & W CYCLE YAMAHAS 95 BoEto—AccoMorios ! CENTURY SUN SLED DEMO. *3 I MAZUREK MARINE SALES I Woodward at S. B]^^_FE 4-95*7 EVINRUDE, la^mRSE. TANK. *145. | __»a King 3 H.P. |35._ rw5 SUZUKI OMEGA and WHITE BIG BAD BULTACO LIL' INDIAN MINI BIKES CUSTOM COLOR 23* W. MONTCALM kae boats, Kayot ----------------- ------ rude motors. Pamco trailers. Takei ,M59 to W. HMIand. Right on Hickory Ridge Road to Demode Road.latt and foltow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phon* MAIn 53179. Bicycles irything f uotbNS MARI 96 394 Orchard L«k> Boots—Accoiieriof 97 in' ALUMINUM PRAM WITH OARS ; 13-FOOT CHEROKEE, (MARK 25'MO- | tor, and trailer, *350. 474-3344. _ ' 13-FOOT OPNEVA runabout, 30 h.p. Mercury, trailer. 3353344. 13' FISHING BOAT AND TRAILER, I INE SUPPLY ____________I______FE 3-*t Must Liquidate Stock of All Bqats, Motors and* Trailers to Make Room for Our New Building Lone Star-Glasstron MFG Boats-Canoes-Pontoons GMC FACTORY BRANCH New and Used Trucks FE 5*4*5_ 475 Oakland SPECrAL 1965 Chevy Demo VS-Ton pickup truck, hat long box, tu-ton* paint, haavy duty rear springs, raar bumpar, deluxe haatar, gauges, two-spaad wipers, Jr. Watt Coast mirrors, radto, *1.1*0 plus tax and llcenta plates. Mail ews-Hargreaves. Inc. TRUCK DEPARTMENT 431 Oakland Ave. ai Cast FE 5-4161 ! Auto-Morine tnsuronco 104 . AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE STOP IN TODAY A idersen & Associates E ,4-3535 1044 Joslyn Myy M Biod Cwf 108 We Bet You Can't Beat Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth'i Price on o New or Used Cor FE 2-9150 ___ 1*41 aulCK specif paeo«- *-cyllndar, poaier ato^ng, power brakat. extra n^. »t,»*5._ BOB BORST te* w. Runeaii.________ FISCHER BUICK 1*43 Bonnavilto ... »1*g- t«41 Pontiac 4doer ..|WH 1*41 ThundarWrd ......Ot* 1*43 Skylirk 3-door .|l*|l 1*43 Wildcat Adoer nm' 1*44 TampMt convartibl* .. Sl4ie FISCHER BUICK S44 S. Woodward____447-5400 REPOSSESSION -, 1*4S BUICK hardtop, only 111 .07 waakly, no OLIVER BUICK Double Checked Used Cars 141 MONZA Coupe, 4-1 radio, black, rad Inti )4I BUICK LaSabr* 4- |$w —d Uied Cmt 1B6 1*57 CHBVRCtLlT 5D00R HARD- CHEVY^^OOOO TRAM#^tT. tton. run* wtH, Ft 5HI7. 1*5* CHiW'BlSCAYNB, ^ *0 S. Marrimac attar 13 noon, )*5i"CHEVROLeT, V-0 ENGINE, standard thlft, radto and haai-tr, runt and leaks raal - good, nortUw^^o sales i*i* chi9y~*~bbl air, very ^rPB 57543. H. RlgglM, dMiar. T*5*~CHtVY IMP ALA, 50OOR tardtop. V-0, stick, txtris. Afitr StlO waakdays 451-3300. _ __ i*5T“CHEVY, 5000R, WICK, 5 cyllndar, radto and haatar beautiful 1-tona llnish, runt flood, no mony down, *1.1* per week. Cell ESTATE STORAGE. CnBVm-PL.B I innrPMWFR •wi CREDIT imTchevy, A-1 shape, 1 owner: ' Til-Huron Auto 3153 W. Huron________FB 5*973 iMOlfHEVY, 5D00R, «YLINDER, 1944 BUICK Soeclel VI. 4-d ----------, "IT' hardtop, 5 r AUTO-RITE BUY AETNA casualty Modern hl^ir^ 20% TO 40% NO DUES OR FEES CALL US FOR NO OBLIGATION DETAILS BRUMMETT AGENCY Mlrecle Mile_______FE 44>50» BUICK adin. V4 enain*. 1*43 BUICK LaSebre, tour-door ‘ hardtop, automatic, blue, with while top .................. lt,3*S BUICK LtSa^o ^ttartjble, *2,5*5 n. 5400. OL 1-3034. 14-FOOT WAGE/MAKER, RUNNING lights, spotlight. 15 H.P. Evinruds , elec., trailer, *475. OR 3-44*3. 14' Lyman boat, 4o h.p. mer- cury and trailer. $450. 473-0343. | 15' WOLVIr'INE, 45HORSE (MER-I ■ ■■ . extras. FE | 0 stael Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15310 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 _____Open Qslly and Sunday NEW BTg FIBERGLAS RUN-sbouts, Ispttrake. 4S electric motor, WIb. trailer, battery, speedometer, fire extinguisher, 01,39*. Aluminum boats, $99. Trailers, 1105. BUCHANAN'S ^9 Highland Rd.___________ WYMAN 13' RUNABOUT, ALL trols, windthicldt Irslltr; n 817.4731. 944 CHAMPION 10X55. TWO BED-rooms, appliances, comb, washer end dryer, carpeting. Like new. FE 50743. 944 ChTeP~"ONTlAi, 50x10 ON lot. No children. FE 57413. MARLETTE at us put you In e new In our court. We have the lot. |g 0, 13 AND 30 WIDES AND UP to 40-tt. long. Deluxe and stenderd. STEWARTS 13 wides, 3 stories, ell lengths with new foem-a-wall Mbiital'd 0 0 r s. YELLOWSTONE AND WINNEBAGO, the best In travel unit, finest built. Truck campers, I.IO-IOVs-ft. at clearance WE RENT TRAVEL TRAILERS, MAKE reservations NOWI Oxford Trailer Sales Opfn f-9. Closed Sun. 1 mile 5. _________OA M266. ________ I5POOT 500 5EA RAY,~ 75 EVIN-rude, tap, terp, trailer, extras, 44, cost 13000 lyw, 51^. 4M-401I. 4' INBOARD AND TRAILER', *400. ______ 413-347*. ?' hurricane'SAILBOAT, DAC-_^"473‘f!”i ’»«■ ) FOOT THOMPSON CRUISER. 75 h.p. Johnson. Tandem trailer. 335- 1957 ERCOUPE. 4I5C, 3793. ____^ new Fourney glass, ne i-FooT Owens" crT(iser~AND ' trailer. Ready for ..... FE 57*34. 747_ N. J^„ „„ 34-FT. 1943 O^ENS'CABrN CRUfSER WoBtSd CorS-TrUcks in water^ully equipped, 45 actual hours, *4*00. Inr' ------- age. 3350009. ! Includes automatic, fresh elr hea big engine, federal lax, and I other eccestorles plus 5 Year Factory Warranty Wlira trainiU, wX niovTe ?!LL .**215** « >=6 .'"•'’V' 7,"AJ5IV^3 ELLSWORTH AUTO Store ^itijWiiBiit MEAT'equipment, NEW BAND taw, scales, grindtr, cuber end meat caaa. also '/7-ton easament ----------------•, raat. 5*54139. L 335Jm. * Spirting Goode 315-77*0.______________________ Oowi, ARROWS. SU'PPLllil " Gana't Archary, 714 W. Huron CLIFF ORtYER'S OF H 0 L L hava tha most complata line gunt-pistalt, 15310 Hetty P- OUHS: BUY sell-trade Burt ’^eU. 375 S Telegraph SEY of SPALDING TOP FLiOHT golf clubs: to Irons, 4 woods, like iwv^jCall t03-«3S. scuBA^oWt=Tf. U.S.' Divers. 1150. '"ueEO'TENT, 3 SLEEPING BAGS. ___________.ft 2-4055________ Sand - Grovel • Dirt 76 TOP SOIL ANC) PEAT, 370* f^S3»ss.“^ BEST IN SAND, GRAVEL, FILL togre^ lighted _________ _____________ shelving. Burroughs cash register, tele. Royal typewriter, filing cabinets, desk, fen, Rem. Rend 4-key adding machine, price ticket (na-chlne. Metal island display units, steno chair, etc. A 35 per cent de-posit rtqulred at time of bidding. Cash or certified checks only. NELSON AUCTIONEERS APPRAISERS __DETROIT____ _ SATURDAY, JULY 31, LIQUIDATORS & TRAILER SALES Open Sundays ot 1 p.m. See the ell new Avellers* Berths. Tewes Breves. Holly end Cortein. 14 fo 3$ ft. We eiso hevt rtnfelt. A577 Dixie Hwy.___________MA $-1400 Plonts-Treei-Skrubs DAYLILIES Livestock 1 SHETLAND PONIES. _______ . tO-YEAR- oio geioing winto. 17*^7. buckskin gelding, EXCCELLENT pisasurs. 5145. 453.5011^ GENTLE MARE 'WITH COLt BY side. 453-0703.__________________ GELDING, WELL TR'AINEO, IN exc. condition. May be seen at Outland's Riding Stables - 14 --------- 1040. ONY AND SADDLE. 5YEA'R-OrD Very gentle. *131. 079-0343. QUARTER TYPE SORREL ^RE, '—1 to ton of Del Tommy. t*5 quarter heriet. 2-' $65. New saddles, i Tsrmt. Evaningt. ^ Road at Taggardina. H. l REGISTERED AND (3RADE laa. Saddlas. 7S3Gfl*7._ sow's AND FIGS '45 GMC pickups. *100 waak a “sCOTT 'r'eNTAL SERVICE 1*4 W. Walton FE 54141 INTRODUCING First time In this area YUKON DELTA Frash naw styling New luxuiy — new comtort Also - FRCSLIC, TRorwooo BEE LINE. SCAMPER TRAVEL FOR LESS JACOBSON TRAILER SALES A RENTALS 54*0 Williams Leke Rd. OR 53**1 Specializing in One Good Brand of Travel Trailers PLAYMATE Saveral modals on display JOHNSON'S 517 e. Walton at Joslyn FE 4-5153 Of_______FE 44HI0 MY 3-0731 OPEN 7 DAYS-9 to 9 SEE THE NEW 1*44 MODELS WOOD AND PARK ESTATES LOW overhead — save reel money MIDLAND TRAILER SALE^ 257 Dixie Hwy. 33B0772 one btock north of Telegraoh (ANTED TO BUY, GOOO USED Used Truck Tires All Sizes Budget terms avsilabir. FIRESTONE STORE 333-7*17 13' DUNDEE PLYWOOBT 31 ,~rsa Scoll. tiKiric start genera- , tar. Excellent condition. Fully equipped. Call FE 4-3017 after 5. 744 rs' FIBERGLAS, 75 EVINRUDE 1250 Cherrylawn attar 4 p.m. FE California Buyers tor shirp cars. Coll . . . M & M MOTOR SALES 3537 Dixie H«>y. OR 5030* Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER >eys more tor ANY make used ca Call to Foreign Con 17 JAGUAR XK 4734175 aner j p.m. 1*5* DPEiriTATietrWA'GON 105 I SELL. ___________ 3345791 1940 VAUXALL, GOOD CONDITION, FE 4-5749.___________ _ 1943 VW, SUN ROOF, R'ifolb, MUST tha^army. FE 53311. 1941 TR-l B, EXCELLENT'CONDi- i --------------- - equipped. One Year Warranty That goes with each carl OLIVER BUICK A BETTER USED CART See This One At LLOYD'S I960 CHE'iiY I m tomette trenimlGilonr power iteer-ifw end .brakesz radio, htaterp whitewalls. $47 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1960 Chevy Bel Air 3-door with tconomicel 5 cyl. and powergllde. Mint condition, and- just what you havo been looking for. AAavIng Sale Special. $497 Full Friea Call 3354530 Additional Location SS5 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge . 0^995 ' 11,995 ’ '11.395 lion, low mileage, tully ( ell white with Wk top terlor, lady owned. Bloor-''-priced right. FE 44301. 943 RENAULT, HAS RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES. LOW MILEAGE, NO MONEY DOWN, ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF *33.17 PER MONTH. VILLAGE RAMBLER, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMING- __HAM, Ml 53*0*. 944 VW 2-OOOR, RAblO.^HEATER, whitewalls, solid blue finish. *1,395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4.3735. 944 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE RED convertible. In excellent condition. 333- 5509, after 4. _________ 19M VW, RADIO. HEATER, WHITE- walls. $1,400 or bett eftar. Must sel^333JM3. ______ 1945 VW, WHITE, 5,000 MILES. *1435. OL 1-0407._______________ FIAT l'*43, 1100 EXPORT, 14,000 miles, excellent condition, 1450. 334- 0404, 3347 Hempstead, Pontiac. Repossession Big discounts on Boats and canoes at TONY'S MARINE JOHNSON MOTORS ars repair expcriance. Opan 9 . 3495 Orchard LajM Road. BEFORE YOU MAKE ANY DEAL, W. Clarkston Rd.,"Laka^rkIn,'. 3.1400. ' Mercury Outboards, Shell Lake MANSFIELD AUTO SALES buying sharp, lali . NOWI Sat us today 1104 Baldwin Ave. FE 5-5900 AVERILL'S BEAT THE HEAT BUY NOW - UP TO 30% OFF ON BOATS NOW IN STOCK Pontiac's Only Mercury MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marine end Sporting Goods CRUISE OUT INC. ri 74. d condition Davids *575. 6 __________________ 1944 TRIUMPHANT BONNEVILLE 450 CC. 403-4430 etter 4. 1944 triumph 450 C6. BONltl villa 110. Excellent condition. Low mileage. New Bell helmet. Exirt pipes. 474-3953. KENSKILL me Greatest Name In Quality Travel Trailers" 16' 17' W/i' and 23' KENSKILL CHOICE BLACK DIRT, 4 YARDS ter lit dal, FE 4-4510. PONTIAC LAKE 8UILDERS~*UP-Otjl^Sand, gravel, till dirt. OR I**"'. GKaVeL, "fill DIRT, TOP ! --^-------------------------- “tjnt'oRww.*"''*’''^^^ •«•'i M •XnO, 0'RAVETrFTLL''DfRf,~RlA. ' baled HAY IN FIELD, TILE-tn small bull , "grAh and E.iziSeth like'Rd! Fw dozing. OR 55730._____ mingten 6R 4-1393. •op. PEAT, GRAVEL, TOP SOIL,! e_______Z w—mm, VM dirt, tialdslona. 0^*27. | rronnct M »IL,' Black OIIt, gravel, ,, uir-ui icr. ----- „ J —. _ «,esri BLUEBERRIES, HIGHLAND. PICK I own or buy Ot stand, 7777 Fantlac Lakt 6r 5M1 ar OR BpRpS FARM -PRODUCE, 315* Dlxla Hwy. naar Tatograph. Naw , ■ “"K ' Fatataas, 10 — *5c. Naw cabbaga. 5c a lb. Black sweet charrics. 2 qts. 95c. I Twin or Ooubla Bad Avallabla FRANKLIN Truck Compers l*'.*'x7',y' with hot V-- 1944 HONO'A"SCRAMBLER: 350 CC exc. condition. OR 3-1903. 1945 HONDA DREAM, 700 MILES *575. OR 59704. eves. 4-9 p.m IW TRIUMPH 'TR 4, PERFECT condition. Please cell liter 4 p.m 451-0474. 'B S A-NORYON-DUCATf SALES *1 SERVICE 330 E. Pike__________FE 44079 COMPLETE LINE OF BRIDGE-stoM tnotor^cles *"pA*urA. 'YOUNGriNC ■ 4030 Dixie'Hsvy., Drayton Plaint CORRECT CRAFT Fiberglas Inboard |-prlced from *3,095. See an these quality boats at OAKLAND MARINE 391 S. Saginaw FE 'fli 6, Sun. 'tn t p.m ~“chrTs~craft “ OWENS HARLEY-OAVIDSON 1940 74 F.L.H. excel lent condition, axtras. 434 _4477;_____________________ )944 HARLEY DAVIDSON 74, LOACL OIL, B( —,Ji sand, . ar FE 504*4. CREE 13'/i', 15'/3', 17' and 20' Travel Trailers All Medals on Display FRANKLIN Truck ComoBrs I0'4X7W t -- ...- ------ Holly Travtl Cooch 1531* Hally Rd., Holly ME 44771 -Opan Dally and Sundays- You Meet the Nicest People On A HONDA WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER OVER too MOTORCYCLES IN STOCK PRICES START AT $215, F.O.B. LOW DOWN PAYMENT ANOERS^^LfsSlERVICE ------- ,*.,at.«^*l’-"" 30' X *' pontoons. Trade your rig . as down payment on 31' Starcreft 1-0 110 h.p.; ir Thompson Lancer 1 with top. Keyakt, canoes with pad- ’ "e, only $14*.S0. FE 3-94T* 2030 Dixie_FE 4-4*941 j HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR SHARP CARS | I COAST-TO-COAST MARKET , Gale McAnnaily't i NATIONWIDE !, AUTO SALES i 1304 Baldwin 7^45251, SPECIAL PRICES " i, Feld tor 1959-1945 cert 11 VAN'S AUTO SALES 4540 Dixie Hwy.__OR 51355 , ''TOPDOLLARPAID'' FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S VOLKSWAGEN SHARP 1964 $1495 ROSE i RAMBLER 8145 Commerce Rood Union Lake EM 54155 EM 3-4154 Volks'wagen Center >40 VW convertible Ruby red tin- LOOK 1943 Buick LaSabre 2-door, straight stick Irensmlsslon, radio, heater, [uit like new. 11495 full price, *5 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-3314 or FE 3-7154 1944 BUICK RIVIERA. BLU¥, 03750 ____ 474-1501 4 radio, w t cenvartibla. Beautiful I YOU CAN SAVE HERE 1964 BUICK Riviere. NEW CAR WARRANTY -Has power brakes and power sleering, eutomatlc trinsmlsiion, radio end healer and whitewall tires, 1149 or yaur old car down. Peymtnts ot *30.95 per week. Turner Ford 444 S. WCX30WARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM _ MI 4-7500 AffENTIONl! 0 have had credit problems, end uM like a good used car. Wa ilure spot dali^ry. FE 3-7863 LLOYDS _ _ 1250 Oakland Ave. I957"CADILLAC~C0UPE DeVILLE, 43,000 eclual miles, 1*95. A • s Auto tales, Rochester. 053-1 r959 CADILLAC, 4-OOOR, ERMINE whit«, spotiMs conditiena exctilent tirts. I1.2f5. LbOK » Chavroltt Impala 3-door h appraclated. *0*5 lull price, 15 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO IH1 CHEVROLET IMPaCa 3-D66r hardtop. Powergllde, radio, heater, whitewallv light green finish. Only *995. Eity terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., It04 S. WOOD-WARD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-3735. 1941 CHEVY 3-DOOR HAILBtOP, Bel Air. Clean. By Owner. FE Repossession LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track 1941 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE All power, buckar seals, new tli... Perfect, riki over payments. 330- Call Mr. Mason, at FE 54101, Dealer. LOOK 1941 Cadillac convertible, white tt , with black top, a raal nice car. *- *1*95 full price, *5 down. CREDIT 15 NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE LUCKY AUTO T"iT'M*T'Tr’'D ±”!L___________FE 5^1797 r \I r.n TOP » FDR CLEAN CARS OR ■L AX V i J—IX L NwJ I trucks. Economy Cqrt. 3335 Dixie. WE NEED CARS! 17* Opdyke 9 to 9 Sal. ta 4 (1-75 at Oakland UnIvarsIty axit) BOATS - BOATS Our annual July clearance tele It —' Runabouts, fishing boats, s and pontoon beats. Over --------------*----- ta choose 941 VW convertible. Ruby red fir ih, radio .... *109 Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mile north of MIrtcIo Mil* 1745 S. Talagraph_FE 0-4S3 TOP DOLLAR FOR G(X>D CLEAN CARS Motthews-Hargreoves 431 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547 NEED I and Used Can 106 1965 TEMPESTS Al/makes and nxxlels Averill Auto Sales 2020 Dixie Highway FE 3-917*___________FE 4-4 I Junk Can-Truck* 101-A Century SALES AND SERVICE ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS-FREE TOWS TOP l**-CALL FE 5*143 SAMJXLEN B SONS. INC. JUNK CARS HAULED'AWAY~ ______ , ___________________ PE 4-95*4 . WRECKSJUNKS. 1*59 DR NEWER --------Plying mar* ttwn tank prlr— ROYAL AUTO FARTS FE 4-9580 Uwd Antn-Twek Porte 102 __ '“**• CHEVY . FORD - COMET • FALCON CASS LAKE MARINE I -------- Cas5Elliabath Rd. 4(34*51 tow pricid. 537-1117._ OB*n7Day« USED AUTO FARTS, OF '57 FbOU C(3MPLETE LINE OF DORSETTS- ,_________‘‘g _________. 'Tl^ 103j TON PICKUP. 5 CALL MR. DAN WE FINANCE FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 WEST MONTCALM SKE USLAST KEEGO PONTIAC SALES Si SERVICE 682-3400 1*5* bOick' har5tDI'~ CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at WMa Track FE 2-9214 1*5* BUICK ^bOOR WITH AUTO- plus ppwtr tquipmant. (Choica i 3). Full price only 13*5. WE FINANCE King Auto cyctot. Johnson bi I. Many axcelten? o outfits of beat, mi... s. GUARANTEED and e me^ycli ly through 5 Sundw 1 1*51 FORD Sell or .....______.... _______ *>7-4413, anytime. 1*5* INTERNAT'lO'NAL TANOiMj *4* FORD DUMP. F-4**. t*4* FORD, Repossession This ear can ba i._ at 3334 Clan Iris Drive, etf Bensttin Road 1 mllai watt 1*41 GReeNBRIBR I ^ BUICK LESABRE CONVERTI. ust saa'taTiippfecl«if*4M?«31?*' $3095 SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL * WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC I block south of 14 Mile Birmingham Ml 4-1*: COME IN AND TEST DRIVE THE "HOT" 44-2 JEROME $395 DOWN New Car Financing on Balanca SEE FRANK.STUBBLEFIELD OFIN THURSDAY 'TIL * WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC « c H e V Y STTck7T)5.nfO»* *UTO ___________FE 53371 1*54 CHE1- - '-- ----------- 1*55 CHEVROLET CALL AFTER 5 P.M. __ FE 444E7 1*^4 c Hrvwirrf—sWfibN I CORVAIR MONZA 2 143 CORVAIR M0N2A ' «7»i CREDIT AUTO SALES 135 Oakl4nd el Wide Track FE 2-9214 '42 MONZA 4-SFEEb, VERY nice, t*00. Call 4352311 after I 1943 MONZA STATION WAGON, 33,0** mitot, 5l,t5*. 731-9394, 1953 (THEVY, 1957 OLDS, BOTH 1943 CHEVY WAGON, 4-DbOR, 1943 CHEVY GREENBRIAR. GOOD condition. t595. EM 53514- 1962 CHEVY 2-Door with 4-eallant condition, 51,4*0. Bl^5317*. W CHEVY, IMPALA (TONVERTI-jw, Auto.a powar itaartna, brakat. Exc. Cdodttlon. S1*M0. Cali aftar 4$ Repossession 1943 CHEVY Impelt 4ctoof Hardtop, No Atonay Down. CaH Mr. Johnson, MA 534*4. Dealer. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 N*w md UMd D—5 rtHiVBOLET IMPAla;- rTERl 4.ip»«d. M»ny tKtrii;^«74-Mj7 :hevrou?i WARD, SIR fCONVERTi tKtrii. <74-3 miLTOP AUTO SALES, INC. WHERE YOU CAN BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN M Bukk RItctri 125, solid white “ Si 13 Ch^ ^Impale 1-dr. hardtop, • ^ angina, 4 R^jjnamlc M 2-dr. hardtop, itlac Catalina convarlibla, rad h white top, sharp. M Slda^ Ntw EEd IM tan ’*<* T.'»I«P .,mRDT N, RA-dh) and heater, power brakes and power steering, full price 13*7. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES FE l-*23*_________ AIR-CONTlbNED. R ■'h'*' lE-FERGUSON "'RD Dealer. -CON cbui ulomafic, r Ills, beige er . . , ,ce $4*5. WE FINANCE King Auto 3275 W. HuriJO St. FE 8-4088 YOU CAN SAVE HERB 1963 FORD Convertible w wall tires, M* or your old down. Payments of 113.*$ Turner Ford 464 S WOODWARD AVE. /rrtlblev ( credit problems,' FE 541 Dealer. AUTO SALES I 125 Oakland al Wide Track I FE 2-9214 i*S* FORD 2-DOOR, FIRST $200 _ lalw^MMllO. i 1*5* FORD, V-l,XutOMATIC, FOOD ' cond. 1^. 1*5* country SEDAN 4 PASSEN j Bis *or®®Ii'Hl'*Iia‘'*av#n"°l?r OA 1-325** **'*” I 1*40 FORD GALAXIE 4-DOOR. RA 1 dlo and heater, automatic, V-1 ' angina, 1 owner, excellent condition, 1597. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES I _ ____ FE M239 ' '•“.PJLCON, 2-OOOR, ST4CK, $297 marvel 251 Oakland Ave. iwg T'BIRO hardtop WITH power brakes and POWER STEER- : ING, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE- ' Ji*?.?.'. *®SOLUTELY NO ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" "Home of Service after the sale" OR 3-1291 1963 Ford Fairlane 500 4*0oor 8fd6n, with V-8 engine, rndi h p 6 t e r, automatic, whitewall Only- $1295 BEATTIE MONEY DOWN. ___________ ___ per month. CALL CREDIT MGF Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNE FORD, Ml 4 7500. MBMMi (BUM VACATION SPECIALS VAL-U-RATED 100% Written Every car listed carries this guerantee. lake Ihe guesswork Guarantee out ol buying Usod Carol Ciodll No Problemi 1964 JEEP Wogoneer, 4-Wheel Drive, Yours for Only . . $1995 1963 0LD5 Cutlass Coupe, V-8 Automatic, Power 5teering, Brakes......... $1895 1963 COMET Custom 4-Door, Automotic, Rodio, Heater, Whitewalls ...................... $1395 1961 0LD5 “98" 4-Door, Luxury Sedan. All Power. Shorp Birmingham Trade.....$1395 1964 OLDS "98" Custom Coupe, Full Power, Sharp Birmingham Trade................... $2795 1963 OLDS "98" Luxury Sedan, (3 to choose from) with full power $2395 1962 CHEVY 9-Possenger Wogonr V-8, Stondord Transmission, Speciol ................... $1495 1964 OLDS "88" Hardtop (2) Power Steering, Brakes, 30-Doy Unconditional Guarantee $2495 1963 OLDS 2-door hardtop "88", power steering, automatic, radio. (We hove Three) $1995 1962 OLDS "98" Hardtop, Full Power, Factory Air Conditioning ........................ $1895 1962 OLDS "98" Luxury sedon, power. A Voco- tion Speciol at ......................... $1695 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 $1495 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1*44 FORD GALAXIE SOO^DOOR, V-* angina, Crulia-O-Matic trani-mlsslon, power steering, radio, low mileage, factory otiiclal. 11*95. JE-ROME-FERGU50N Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer. OL I *711. 1944 FORD CUSTOM 4-DOOR, !>■ cyl. stick shill, economy plus, low mileagel 11,4*5. J^OME-FERGUSON Inc. Rochester FORD _Deeler. OL 1*711. 1*44 CORVAIR MONZA, 2-'bobR, '4-speed, 110 h.p. engine, radio, like 11,375. Call alter 5 p.m. 454- 1*44 FALCbtTTbNvTRtTBLET 2*» engine, power steering, brakes, low mileage- Ford Exec. car. 12,0*5. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Ro- JEROME FERGUSON li 1*45 MUSTANG, POWER STEERING and braj»s. 11,9*5. 474 0S42. Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustongs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT AS LOW AS $79 DOWN PAYMENTS OF 115*5 PER WEEK Turner Ford woodward 1*40 OLDS full power. t**5. FInkle'i auto Sales, 5*2 O^lwid. FE $-4071. *40 OLDS M 4-DOOR. HYDRAMAT-Ic, power stoering and brakes, lawn beige finish. Only 15*5. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET, 1104 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-273S. *40 OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE, a California car, 1 owner, loaded 11097. 4 THE MOOD FOR LLOYD'S $47 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND ^337863 Repossession M«w and Uud Can 106 IfSf PLYMOUTH 4000 Pa straight stick, V-l, 114*. MAJ^ylL____251 Oakland Ava. 1*40 PLYMOUTH, AUTOAAATIC 13*7 CREDIT AUTO SALES I2S Oakland at Wide Track FE 2-9214 1*41 VALIANT, ADbOR, WHITE Nm» Md IM Cm 104 mi PONTIAC HARDTOP WITH POWER BRAKIt AND POWIR ITMRINO. R A D I 0 AND HEAT-ER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TiMIl ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PoyiMnti ol tftW, por mgiiRi. CALL CREDIT MOR. (Mr. Pgrka, gl HAROLD TURNER PORO, Ml 4-7ISS. Repossession to monay ditoM. Can ,1 MA S-im. Bo^. toitti gtrtom«t» King Auto "k'ImoTs”' I Usd Cm 104 YT-i after 4, 424-4*27. June Stevens. Transportation Specials $5.00 DOWN 1*42 PbNTIAC CONVERTIBLETlilj-tomatk, radle, healtr, powtr r* casaorlet, aatra sharp. I1,4*S. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY S30 S. Woodward Birmifighi _________Ml 4-4S3I______ 1*62 PONTIAC 4-OOOR CATALINA, power, I owner, 11,375. Call M2- 1425._________________ 1**2 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, spotless, 1179S. 1*42 LcMans T*m-past, 17*5, 25.0M miles, call lis- 1*42 T E M tMTsT^TON VilTlFLl WITH AUTOAAATIC TRANSMISSION RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments ol 132.IS per month. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks, at HAROLD TURNER FOR^ Ml 4-7m. _____ 1962 Pontioe A 100 per cent brand new i d It Ion BBnnevllla hardtop. i guaranteed 22,000 milts, powei course, royal blue finish, i matching morrokida Inferior. $1797 Call 330 4520 NOW OPEN Additional Locotion 855 Ookland Ave. ^ lOutdoor Showre^l ^ Spartan Dodge Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 $. WOODWARD, grRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735._ 1*42 PONTIAC TEMPEST COUPE, HAUPT PONTIAC l*M VW f-door, M> down. 1*M PONTIAC Adaor, auto., 14* dn. CORVAIR Adaar auta., tm dn. RJkMBLER wagon, 14* dn. TEMPEST Cuitam l-door, auto., ' dn. 1*43 CATALINA Adoor. Auto., pew-ar, S4* dn. 1*44 BEL AIR VI. Auto., SH dn. 1*44 GRAND PRIX. Auto., powtr, ■mdn. N. Makillrtal iftialen. MMi. AAA 5-SS44 1964 Pontiac LoMons 2-Door Hardtop $2095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER SInco 1*30" "Home of Service attar tha aalo" OR 3-1291 _ l^ GRAND PRI)?rSUNFIRi RED, power brakes, steering. Hydra., 13,-000 miles. Warranty. M2-34S4. 1*44 I TEMPE5T 1»S* FORD, i..„ 1*40 RAMBLER 1*S* PONTIAC, full po 1*40 PLYMOUTH, 4-do. 1*40 BUICK, Invicia 1*54 CADILLAC, real « 1*43 RENAULT, 4 on ALL FINANCING HANDLED AND arranged by us CALL MR. DAN FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. Montcalm PONTIAC WAGON er, top rack, very clean, 333-43M. IS* PONTIAC CONVERflBLi. FE 2^32^tore 5:30 p.m. 1*S* PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 14*7; CREDIT ' AUTO SALES 125 Oakland al Wide Track ____FE 2-9214__ 1*5* PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN. I BOB BORST 4-4531 1*43 PONTIAC 4-DOOR STARCHIEF. Power. I owner. Exc. I1**5. FE 8-4402 or FE 4-9370. 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-DOOR hardtop. 3** automatic, 11,700. 4*3-4M3. i**3 PONTL^ G R A I^D PRiX YOU ' ;a"r'.n^ iTtwtfi Tires, M9 or down. Ptyn>ents power steerlijijjCordoven too. $245 DOWN 34 months on balanct SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL * WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC I block south ol 14 Milo Birmingham Ml 4-1*: New tmi Usd Cm_________106 mi RAMBLER CLASSIC 4-OOOR, aglamalic, radio, kaaiar. Entra clatn. Onlr SIM. PATTERSON CHEVROLrr CO., tW4 S. WOOD-WARD. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-273S. INI RAMBLER STATION WAGON WITH AUTOAAATIC TRANSMISSION RADIO AND HEATRR AND WHITEWALL TIRES. ARSOLUELY NO AAONBY down. Paymanit of IMJS aularnallc, aln&t'*'i!i!r' iifii’ RH'Alv!*lr«w»"' ** '* '****' ESTATE STORAGE lit $. ENt Rlvd. 3SS-b*l LOOK >p.*?Ms' la |i full prict, SS down. CRI^IT NO PROfiLEM, WE finance BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO DON'S USED CARS 5MALL AD-8IG LOT SI CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 43 LaMana. auto. S, maroon, , whila 677 S. LAPEER RD. LAKE ORION MY 2-2041 Now Md Usd Cm 186 4.000R. BClTLr .“siiaiNi CMiVROUIT ioward ave.. Pontioc'i Bsst 8uys SUPERIoT ^BIER FE 5-9421 CADILLAC. PONTIAC. RAAABLERS FORD and CHIVY You Can't Siiy BaHtr 550 Ookland Avs. RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Romblsr USED CAR STRIP *44 PONTIAC a-door hardtop 43,43* *44 PONTIAC 4-doer hardtop M.49S *44 PONTIAC 4-door tadan .. S3,3N *44 VW sadtn, S.SSd mlitt .. *1,3(1 *43 PONTIAC Star ChW h'ttp S1I9S N3 PONTIAC 2-deer hardtop S1.NS *42 PONTIAC B'vllH eonw. .. *I,NI *43 FORD Galtklo "5«0" .. II,J*S N2 PONTIAC Bonntvill* ... Sl.Tfl *42 PONTIAC Wagon, power Sl.7*| N2 RAMBLER 44eer, nke . Simi RUSS JOHNSON Poniitc-Remtoier M24 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 1*44 LE MANS, dbwlR BRAKES and steering, 4-ipted Irant., extras. 482-173*, alter 4 p.m. _ 1*44 TEMPEST LEMANS COUPE, V-* engine, lots ol power' and loll laclory equlpmenl. Moving Sal# Speclitl. $1997 Full Price Call FE 338-4S2I Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Oudoor Showroom) (Just Vd mile north of Cost Avo.) Spartan Dodge BIRMINGHAM _ Ml 4-7500 I REPOSSESSION - 1943 PONTIAC I hardtop, only $11.87 weekly, no I CAN FINANCE YOU I you are 21 years of age or oldei and have 4 months on the |o Call Mr. Dan. Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 8-4071 SALES AND SERVICING OF JEEPS DOC'S JEEPLANO Buy-Renl-Lease-Sell 77 W. Huron at Wide Track 332 *1*4 JEEP, 1*44, 4-WHEEL DRIVE, NEW paint and loo, less than S.SOO actual miles, perfect condition, MA A7150. _ _ ________ LINCOLN "CONTINENTAL HAS EV-er^th^, good condition, $1300. Call 1^ 8^RcWYni:6bbR“lt'AR^t^^^ 34.000 miles, S3S0. FE 2-7230. MERCURY, 4D6oH, GOOD condition. MA 5-87»6._________ YOU CAN SAVE HERE 1962 MERCURY Colony Perk * passenger statio ileering, automatic radio and heale- -*7* or your oli ments ol 110.95 . Turner Ford 464 s. WOODWARD AVE. Bt^INGHAM MM_4-7I SEI Uf FIRST ' BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 $. Woodward BIrmIngha MI 6-4538 Pay- Action Sale 1965 Model Clearonce OLDS-GMC RAMBLERS "Rock Bottom Prices" — SEE us NOW - Houghten & Son GMC-Rombler-Olds 528 N. Main Street ROCHESTER OL 1-9741 Repossession 1962 Olds F-85 Cutlass Convertible aulomallc. whflewalls. Only — $1295 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WA "Your FORD DEALER "Home of Service after OR 3-1291 1963 CLUB COUPE, F WATERFORD 1959 PONTIAC,'4_______ Catalina, automatic, double power, radio, $400. 6^^- 1960 PONTIAC", clean! TRI-POWER Inquire at FE I i. ORIGINAL ownpr, Desi orrer, aai 2300 or 625- . 1886. . )t44 OLDS STARFIRE CONVERTI-ble. Fully equipped. Cost 14,580, leii S3795. No money down, lake -trade. MV 3-104*. No Dealers. 1*44 OLDS 442. 4-SPEED, BUCKET jeals, a beauty. 42S-2M7. mrPLVMOUTH 4-DOOR WITH A sparkling green finish, 4-cyl., automatic, radio, healer, and whlte- WE FINANCE King Auto CLEAN I960' CATALINA, POWER ateerlng - brakes, ^4-1860. | i960 BONNEVILLE,' FULL POWER, ' SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK IS5 Rochester Road 451-9*11 1940 PONTIAC 2 DOOR HARDTOP: State Wide Auto Outlet 98 Elliabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 your home. No credit problems. Call Mr. Mason al FE 5-4181, Dealer. ____ 1941 PbNTIAC CATALINA" HARD-top. Very good condlllon, 4 new tires, 11,288. FE A595S. _ ImI BONNEVILLE, 4-DOOR HARO lop. full power, Crulu-O-Malic setting, all the extras, must sell. ^E S-19J4. 9 a m. to 4 p.m. Autobahn Specials Pontiac Catalina convarilbla. sparkling Sunset red finish, lull power, new liras, s'-- —" lion spotless condllloo NEW CAR TRADES MOSTLY 1 OWNER CARS IS MUSTANG. 4-sp*«d, V-8, 289, power pac, ' 1*«S TEMPEST, 2-Daor Hardtop, 4-spa«d, b 1*42 CHEVY Impala, Convertible, automat 1*44 rambler, Cenvertible. twin stick, bu 1*44 SUNBEAM. GT Cwp*. ramovabit hard EASY TERMS - BANK RATES - FAST DELIVERY riving FUNI Excalliot^a ---------Automatic ------ mission, radio and heater, double power. Full pric* only 1*95. BILL SMITH'S Used Cars 462 N. PERRY ST. FE 4-4241 1963 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertibir, white with white top. Call after 6 p.m. 674 M56. 1963 CATALINA, 4-DOOR, POWER, Repossession 1944 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop. No money down. Call Mr. Johnson at _MA 5-2404. Dealer. ATTENTION! 1944 BONNEVILLE CONVERTI-ble, like new, best offer over 13475. Call alter 4 p.m. FE 2-2489._ "Wagon Ho" 1962 Chevy Bel Air Wagon 4-door with 4-cyl. aulomallc transmission, only— $1395 1961 Falcon Station Wogon with 4-cyl. angina, automatic Irons- “$695 1964 Willys Jeep Wogon with 445 BONNEVILLE, 3-bOOR, AIR conditioned, power steering, brekts. 482-5075 ___________ VACATION SPECIALS’ Wagons Superior Rambler 1960 Pontipc C«t«lin« c 1 bMvtHul Sunset 3 Corvair 4-boor ixceilent condition Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER '/! mile north of Miracle Mila 1745 S. TelOBreph Pf B4S3I $1195 1962 Ford Ronch Wagbn V-l engine, automatic. Only— $1095 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWV. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1*3B" "Heme ef Sarvlca otter the teig" OR 3-1291 *2,3*5. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 530 3. Woodward Birmingham Ml 4-4538 1*45 TEMPEST CUSTOM 4-SPEED, - s views on integration kept him in the national limelight. Some members of his student audience got. out of hand. They made noise. * ★ ★ Heyns, using a gently-applied football-style block, eased Barnett from the rostrum loud- “All jight, cool it off,” he told the demonstrators. They obeyed. AT ODDS A group of Michigan legislators visit^ the U. of M. campus last week. Some legislators and university officials have been at odds recently over university spending and policy. They said afterwards they, were impressed by Heyns’ quick, concise answers under interrogation. ★ * ★ Heyns was at his Lake Michigan cottage in Holland when his California appointment was announced. He takes office Oct. 1. With Berkeley’s 35,000 students, heHermed the chancellor job an “imposing challenge.” He said he had no particular ideas at this time what to do about student unrest though declaring “we’re going to have to do something abwt this.” “Big universities are all pretty complicated places,” he said. He said Berkeley’s troubles probably were the result In part of student feelings of “anonymity and depersonalization.” He said the same conditions were found on other campuses. nT:3Q MA4-I1II NOW thfw TUIS. Fir«t Run “SEASIDE SWINGERS” wHH liz Fraior Tony O’Sullivanj ~ Froddio t tiM Droamart HMMfPMMla _ uwrwlaeal ^ CAT BALLOU t mCM WIND IM JtlUlM Starts Wednesday jERmrlEWis PLAYS WACKY ROLES ■BIMILY UiWEIS TCMiMiMiina* RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Fraturing Our Famous Kosher Cemod Boof SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY trMMail - OlniM. Carry-Out S«rvic« SIS Ooliloaa fnm Mint Ft 3-401) -LAST day- starts WEDNESDAY AT 1:00 PM. UIB HMD JM NOUINCIIIiSNIlIf "FLUFFY* Starts at 1:00-5:00-8:50 "CIRCUS WORLD" at 2:37-6:32-10:27 !sV THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1963 D—7 —Television Programs— Programa fumIshMl by stations llstad In this column art sub|«ct to chongo without noKco. ^hniwhi2-WJSK.TV,4.-WWJ.TV, 7~WXYZ.TV,»-CKLW-TV. SO-WKIP-TV.SS-WTVS "" TONIGHT •:N (2) (4) Newt, Weather, Sports (9) Woody Woodpecker (7) Movie: “Masterson of Kansas” (In Progress) (50) People Are Funny (56) International Magazine 6:25 (7) Sports 6:36 (2) (4) (7) News (9) Bat Masterson 7:66 (2) Leave It to Beaver (4) Weekend (7) Rifleman (9) Detectives (50) Little Rascals (56) Spectrum 7:81 (2) TV2 Reports (4) Mr. Novak (7) Ck)mbat (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Creative Person 8:06 (2) Password (9) Outlaws (56) Silver Wings 6:36 (2) Talent Scouts (4) Moment of Fear (7) McHale’sNavy (50) Swimming Meet (56) Heritage 9:00 (4) Ciloak of Mystery (7) Tycoon (9) Musical Showcase 9:30 (2) Petticoat Junction (7) Peyton Place (9) Newsmagazine 10:00 (2) Doctors, Nurses (4) Hullabaloo (7) Fugitive (9) Great War (50) To Be Announced 10:30 (9) Swingding 11;00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports 11:15 (7) Nightlife 11:30 (2) Movie: “A Certain Smile” (1958) Rossano Brazzi, Joan Fontaine, Christine Carere. (4) Tonight (9) Movie: “The Hideout” ; (English, 1956) Dermot Walsh, Rona Anderson. 1:00 (4) Thin Man ! (9) Pierre Berton }:36 (2) Highway Patrol (4) (7) News, Weather : WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:19 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:26 (2) Operation Alphabet 6:30 (4) Gassroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News, Editorial 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Fractured Flickers 8:30 (7) Movie: “Another Thin Man” (1939) William Powell, Myrna Loy 3:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Kiddy Corner 9:55 14) News 10:00 (4) Truth or Consequences (9) Vacation Time 10:30 (2) I I^ve Lucy (4) What’s This Song? 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Film Feature 11:30 (2) McCoys (4) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Hawkeye AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Call My Bluff (7) Donna Reed (9) Cannonball 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) I’ll Bet (7) Father Knows Best (9) Across Canada 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 1:00 (2) Scene 2 (4) News TV Features Problems of 4 Cities TV2 REPORTS, 7:30 p.m, (2) Mayors of lour major cities, including l^troit’s Jerome Cavanagh, compare problems. . CREA’nVE PERSON, 7:30 p.m. (56) Director King Vidor discusses techniques with critic Arthur Knight. TALENT SCOUTS, 8:30 p.m. (2) First of two programs from Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas. Guest celebrities are Hedda Hopper, Abbe Lane, Louis Prima, Nancy Wilson and Rhonda Fleming. GREAT WAR, 10:00 p.m. (9) Films show how civilians I adapted to prolonged war effort. (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “Pillow to Post” (1945) Ida Lupino, Sydney Greenstreet 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Where the Action Is 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Long John Silver 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Forest Rangers 4:30 (2) Movie: “In the Money” (1958) Huntz Hall, Stanley Clements (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Swingin’ Summertime 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “The Jungle” (1952) Rod Cameron, Cesar Romero (50) Movie (56) On Hearing Music 5:30 (2) News (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) What’s New 5:45 (2) Editorial (9) Bugs Bunny 5:50 (2) Weather 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Here’s Carol Duvall (5) Scores Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Qerk’s Office (by name of father): John M. Bilaird, 7210 Idea Chorin L. Coopor, Hl*l*nd Frank 6. Krufltr, MIHord NIloa e. Shaltoo, Union Laka Cana J. Sny^, JMO Pontiac Uaka Rd. MKAmI J. Talbot, Oxford Claranoa Holmaa. 4M woromlng Kannalb L. Wllaon. 215 Or^en Rabart B. Phinor, 33* East Blvd. 3. Carl L. Sanaa Jr., 22t Ediaon Chartoa B. Wyant, K. Saga, ‘------ fck iTirownlnB, *13 -----ton. Roc—— a, 415 O aa W. Hi )t, 51* $. Garald V«»Kuran, Auburn Heights Danlal D. OlgtlnUil, *14 E. Madison Raacoa MIracIa, 17f Chamtarlain Vaughn B. Doharty, 120 Collier la^r S. Illadaa, 115 S. Tllden r*wrlat E. Uva, 210 Proipacf Jack B. Wair, Rochaatar Mkhaal D. Kau. Union Lake Mkhal L. McCormack, Union Lake Willard Pellylahn, Clarkslon Donald R. Coon, Rochatler Elwaod K. Hosaa, 1*5 W. Vale Gualav J. Malhai, 1014 Inglewood Platto CauMy, 513 S. Jaatla Matihaw Garriion, 115 Palmar RaM L. Jonaa, 430 Highland Chai K. York, 540 Granada Jaaagh i. Green, 1« W. Princatw RanaW J. Brown, *3* Pairwiaw Jarry L. Stattord, 13* V WILSON Miss Nude Pageant Details Bared by Your Columnist By EARL WILSON NEW YORK - “The Miss Nude Universe Pageant,” at the Oakdale Nude Ranch, at San Bernardino, Cal., graciously invited me to cover the inspecting, observing and judging of nude girl candidates on Sunday, Aug. 1 ... but I had to decline . . . since Sunday’s the day I always get dressed up. Clothing would be somewhat in the way at a nudist beauty contest ... I sent my regrets . . and they were real regrets. ★ ★ ★ The rules for this nudie contest are quite fascinating: “High heels must be worn . . . Wearing of earrings and/or anklet are permissible ... Sun tan will not be considered in the judging except in case of a tie .. . This is not a talent contest.” There were also some rules given for relaxation hours at the Miss Nude Universe Pageant. “SWIMMING: All girls and ladies regardless of age must wear a bathing cap " . . . “DRESS: There is only one standing rule: Dancing in the nude is not permitted.” Guess that just about — uh — “covers” . . . everything? ★ ★ ★ Kaye Stevens, celebrating a birthday while performing her wondrous act at the Plaza Persian Room, saluted ringsider Jackie Cooper, the TV exec who’s putting her on the tube in the fall. Tve received three requests this evening — two having to do with singing,” Kaye said. Perle Mesta didn’t make the Bubble Gum Art Exhibit for P.A.L. at the Sheraton-East but Killer Joe Piro did. (Gag: Killer Joe will open an after-hours stag place called the “Riscotheque” with a dapee called the ’’Double Entendre” —Si Seadler) . . . The new fashion in men’s suits will be a jacket with a “cigar pocket.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . The Red Buttons are expecting . . . Frank Sinatra and a few cronies leave July 30 on a four-week vacation cruise . . . Ben Novak, the Fountainbleau proprietor, and his wife Bernice reconciled suddenly just as divorce proceedings were to start in Miami Beach; they’ll second honeymoon on a yacht in the Mediterranean. Mayor Elliott Roosevelt of Miami Beach was a big figure at the Miss Universe Pageant in his red-striped swrsucker dinner jacket, extending hospitality to all visitors . . . Bob Eberle, who was unable to complete a singing engagement due to illness, is recuperating at an agent’s home in Belmar, N. J.; he resumes working in a few weeks. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Anybody who thinks talk is cheap never told a baby-sitter she should feel free to use the phone. REMEMBERED QUOTE: ‘”rhe lies people tell about each other hurt almost as much as the truth.” — Sy Kogan. EARL’S PEARLS: If Jack and Jill went up the hill these days and fell, they’d be arrested for wasting water. Joey Adams admits hia role in the film, "Don’t Worry, We’ll Think of a Title.” was small: “I posed longer for my bar mitzvah picture.” . . . Thai’s earl, brother. Presbyterians, Catholics Talk Two Churches Initiate Seriei on Theology WASHINGTON (UPI) - Official delegations representing the Rmnan Catholid church and the United Presbyterian church met here today to initiate a continuing dialog on theological differences. The day-long cloeed meeting was held at Georgetown Presbyterian Church. A joint press conference was scheduled for late afternoon to report on results. Similar confer^ces were held here last month by Cadi-oUc and Episcopalian theo-I 0 g i a n s, and in Baltimore earlier this month by Cathplic and Lutheran scholars. Today’s meeting was the first to include women. In the Catholic delegation was Miss Margaret Mealey of Washington, executive director of the National Council of Catholic Women. Among the Presbyterian delegates were Mrs. Walter R. Clvde of Pittsburgh, chairman of Ecumenical Relations for U n 11 e d Presbyterian Women, and Dr. Margaret Shannon of New York, associate general secretary of the Presbyterian Commission on Ecumenical Relations. HEAD OF GROUP Heading the two delegations were the Most Rev. Ernest L. Unterkoefler, Catholic bishop of Charleston, S.C., and Richard L. Davies, Washjngton layman who is chairman of the Presbyterian Commission on Ecumenical Relations. Prominent theologians of both churches were also present. The theological conversations with reformations churches are the first major project undertaken by the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Commission on Ecumenical Affairs. The commission wag organized after the Vatican council adopted its historic decree on Christian unity last fall. The decree calls for Interconfessional talks that will “promote justice and truth, concord and collaboration, as well as the spirit of brotherly love and unity.” At its general assembly in Columbus, Ohio, in May, the United Presbyterian church adopted a policy statement calling for closer association with Catholics so that “God’s will for His church may be sought together.” The Presbyterian - Catholic talks, like the Catholic-Episcopalian and Catholic - Lutheran meetings, are expected to continue intermittently for years. 2 r r- r* r r r- TT TT nr 19 \i ir \T \) ir ii 2T M" B" fr 5T ■jjpt 42 5T 4T 47 4T 49 52 $4 W 27 S Leave oat OWentby 7 Abstract being 0 Sheaves OMale bovine 10 Small island 11 Soap-frame bar 17 Befitting a bard 19 Barter 23 Ocean movements 24 Dress edges 25 Cry of bacchanals 26 Malicious burniiu 27 Birthrights 28 Transactions 29 One who (suffix) 31 Seniors 33 Chest rattle (pi.) 38 Grater 40 Buckles 41 Calliope, Clio, Erato, etc. 42 Feminine name 43Footpath (dial.) 44 Robust 46Gudrun’s husband (myth.) 47 Open space 48 Assam silkworm 50 Dutch city Answer ta Prevtons Pule AUTO AIR OOHOmONINO CetH less Than Yea Think *199" Now Only MASTEB RADUTOR 2291 IMubtHi UkR M. Ft 2-6017 ACROSS 1 Monolithic column 4 Opiate (slang) 8 Japanese girdles 12 Grow old 13 Muscat is its capital 14 Meditate 15 Precious stone 16 Spells incorrectly 18 Sets of seven singers 20 Shield bearings 21 Bitter vetch 22 Frenchman’s “summers” 24 Olympian goddess 26 Mine entrance 30 Eluder 32 To the point 34 Motorists’ havens 35 Card game (Fr.) 36 View 37 Drone bees 39 Falsifier 40 Vetlver 41 Encountered 42 Anesthetic 45 Spicy foodstuff 49 Parts of churches 51 Fish 52 Related 53Remove (print.) 54 Roof finial 55 Fruit drinks 56 Goddess 57 “The deep" DOWN 1 Ixiiters 2 Awry 3 Restrained 4 Cupolas KC Negroes Demand Jobs KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -Ten civil rights leaders have threatened to seek withdrawal of $50 million in federal funds from this city unless the city commissoners hire more Negroes. ’The leaders held a three-hour conference with Mayor Joseph H. McDowell Monday, then issued a 48-hour ultimatuhi. Carl A. Randolph, president of the local chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality, said if the city did not show a willingness to cooperate within 48 hours, the federal government would be asked to withdraw its grants and loans to the city. Commission meetings were picketed last week in protest to appointment of a white man as chief clerk in the water pollution department. A Negro applicant had scored .8 of a point higher on the civil service examination than the white man. ★ * ★ “At least one of our demands should be met immediately,” Randolph said. “But we’re fighting for more than that one job ■— we want Negroes in all the city departments.” Former Envoy Expires OTTAWA (* — Thomas Archibald Stone, 64, former Canadian envoy to the Netherlands and Mexico, died Monday while vacationing with hi? wife in Fontainebleau, Francb, the Foreign Office announced. Moody's Son Will Run for Circuit Court DETROIT (UPI) - Blair Moody Jr., son of former Michigan Sen. Biatr Moody, Monday announced his candidacy for a seat on the Wayne County Circuit Cdurt bench. Moody, like his father, is a former newspaper reporter. He has practiced law for the past 13 years. A Democrat, he has aided in the political campaigns ol former President John F. Kennedy, former Gov. John B. Swainson and former Congressman Neil Staebler. Moody’s father served 18 months as an appointed senator before being unseated by Charles E. Potter in the 1952 Elsenhower landslide. The 37-year-old attorney said he was seeking a seat on the Circuit Court bench as a means of making “a significant contribution’’ to society. He was graduated in 1952 from the University of Michigan Law School. SALES & SERVICE FE 4-4945 OREL TV 3480 Eliiobotk Lok« Rd. 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Mwtic, Newt ItitB-WXVZ, Medcag Murphy KilB-WJR, Newt, MutK I .tP-wwj. Newt PMel WJR. Newt. Spent llil^WCAR) Cemmentary llitV-WCAR. Moyp Leronper IIiSB~Cklw, Miitic 'in Down WJR, Mutk WWJ, Spent Line WBONflSPAT MORNING WCAR. Newt. RiM OelZCN WXVZ, MutK. Newt. WPON, Newt, Arliene Wetl CKLW, Newt. Bud Devlet WHFI, Newt. Almanac I:I»-WJR, Newt, Gweti WCAR, Newt, Senders WJBK. Newt, Bob Leyne WJR, Newt, Keel Heat WPON, Newt, Ben Johnien ■■ " ----- Newt, Oedtrev ll;IB-WJA. -WXYZ, W»H, CKLW, Perm, Bye Oi«ntf WBDNBSOAV APTBBNOON WCAR, Newt, T. Kellint WHPl, Newt WXYZ. Avery, Mutk, Newt CKLW, Newt, Joe Van WJBK, Newt, Cder, Leyne l:t*-WJR. Newt I:IB-WjV? Newt, Billot PieW Getctte CKLW, Spent, Den Shafer Newt WJBK, Newe, Lae WPON, N.WL WXYZ, WHPl, __________ SilB-WCAR. Newt. Becerelle WJR, Newt, Mutk 4:1B-WP0N, Mufuel Spent l:l»-WJR. OelreH New Veit We’ve Got The Men To Garry The Load ... A Co-Op«rativ« Orgonization of Export Craftomen NO JOB TOO BIG OR TOO SAMLL! SatUfaetioH Gmmmnteed ntieiimM. e eOmUlieiAL FHA TERAAS We Do Everythingl Licensed lullding Centrecter PAV"WAY Gmttmdion/ Gbs 4llt Dixie Hithway MaeanSGINerniWBM e ADDITIONS e AHICS e DORMERS e PORCHES e RED. ROOMS e KITCHENS e lATNROOMS eALUM. SIDINQ e ROOFINe e ALTERATIONS Futty Insured k 4 I Jbl. THE POKTIAC PBESS, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 HCOUIIl IT Ewe in sot B5 OIDSMOBIIES AT Bie SAVINBS! t965 OLDS m DELTA i DYNAMICS • All Models and Colors to Choose From • Immediate Delivery Extra Special Savings During Our JUMBO Year End Sale! North Oakland County^ 4-4-2 Dealer 4-4-2's ALL MODELS-ALL COLORS IMMEDIATE DaiVERY FANTASTIC SAVINGS, n Al np’ NbRB w ' FREE GIFTS FOR ALU f K T. iiiPi From Ballot to .Reality: Scene Now Set icmmm, (EDITOR’S NOTE: This k the first of two articles on Oakland County’s projected ■ community college.) By L. GARY THORNE Hou^ in a remodeled Nike missile base and a converted TB hospital, Oakland Community College (OCC) opens this fail just 13 months after voters approved the project. ^ The two-year college has, in just over a year, progressed front a ballot proposition to the threshold of reality. Claasreom facilities have been acquired and are in preparation, equipment is being purchased and students are being admitted. Hopes for Oakland Community College were conceived by a countywide citizens committee with a noticeable push from pro-fessioml educates end the' County Sdiool Board. her college board of trustees to govern the new Institution. A Birmingham attorney, George R. Mosher of, HI Mo- ignated; terminal (two-year) job training, adult education and the first two years of a four-year college degree program. sit in. Temporary (rffices were also established. Electoral support came on the ' second ballot. Establishment of the college won voter favor in June 1963, but it took a second election last year to secure approval for the college’s one-mill , tax levy. Voters also elected a six-mem- man. He admits the baiird had little to start with ether than a dream of a miiiticanipas, Curriculum had been proposed by a dtizens study coiiunittee. Three critical areas were des- . Tlrst task of the new college board was to hire Dr. John E. a Hrrell of St. Louis as president of the conununity college. TEMPORARY OFFICES The second task was to rent a chair for the new president to Initiai expenses were borne by the college tmstees. Established in June M last year, the college didn’t receive its -first tax receipts until early this year. In fact, first board-tmeetiogs were held at the homes of the trustees. Dr. Tintll, after board members lad caucused in the living room, was formally offered his college post in the kitchen of the Mosher home. It was only last October that the cigar-chiomphig Tyrrell assumed the top administrative post at.the college. nUST CHORE His first chore was to borrow funds in anticipation of tax 90!-(Continued on Page 2, Ck>l. 4) The Weather U.f. WNthar Sumii FarKaM Sunny (Dtlllll P«l« 1) THE PONITIAC PRESS VOL. 123 NO. 146 it it it it it PONTIAC,' MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965—32 PAGES Celebrezze Quits Cabinet Congressmen to Be Briefed on Vietnam? Mansfield Indicates Meeting May Occur Today or Tomorrow WASHINGTON (JV-A flight of 46 Air Force fighter bombers today knocked out one antiaircraft missile site and damaged another i n North Viet Nam. ; Romney, Rocky Hit ^ GOP Splinter Units LBJ Names Carnegie Exec Welfare Head MINNEAPOLIS — Govs. George Romney of Michigan and Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York joined yesterday in denouncing conservation splinter activity in the Republican party. Rockefeller, who has bowed out of contention for the 1968 GOP presidential nomination, and _________ Romney, who remains very much in it, assailed in separate news conferences at this 57th annual meeting of the nation’s Post to Republican; Secretary to Take Federal Judgeship County Driver III PC in I governors, outside organ- I/IGj III V^IujII izations such as that of izations such as that Barry Goldwater. Romney said Rockefeller’s WASHINGTON — Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said he expects President Johnson to call congressional leaders of both parties to the White House later today for a briefing on the Viet Nam situation. “I would assume it will be today, but if not today, tomorrow,” Mansfield said after he and other Democratic consjr, s-sional leaders had their .t^oekly breakfast conference with Johnson. Ponliac Prnt PiMt* HELLO .. DOWN THERE - If Rex could talk ... and he does seem to say, "I want One” when offered a cookie . . .he might likely challeuige neighborhood cats to a climbing contest. The two-year-old German shepherd-collie owned by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kimmins, of 3765 Green Lake, West Bloomfield Township, often bolts up the tree in front of the Kimmins’ house in pursuit of an imaginary squirrel. A Beverly Hills man was '"killed last night in Birmingham when his car struck the rear withdrawal from thfe presiden-of another auto, tial contest “doesn’t affect me went over a any way.” curb and hit a . tpee. Then, in a long exposition Dead on a r- views on international „ and domestic matters he prorival at Be^u- sharpen the sort of mont Hospital differences with President following the Johnson’s policies that a Re- WASHINGTON — President Johnson announced today that Anthony J. Celebrezze is resigning" as secretary of welfare to take.a federal judgeship. John W. Gardner, a Republican and president of the Carnegie Corp., will be named to the Cabinet post. CHITCHAT-Lt. Gov. WilUam G. Milllken talks to a private citizen during a visit to the Oakland County Courthouse yesterday. During liis two-hour stay, the 43-year-old Miiliken met with local residents who wanted to discuss problems involving state government. ’The practice of holding office hours in different counties was started by Miiliken in February. ' Oakland Highway Toll in ’6.5 89 9:10 p.n dent was Donald F. Gollwitzer, 37, of 17175 W. 14 Mile. publican nominee might find valuable. Mean/ Complacent, Reuther Is Quoted Police said Gollwitzer’s car was traveling west on East Maple when it struck a car driven by Joan Sullivan, 20, of 26106 Wyoming, Huntington Woods. The Michigan governor was asked ■specifically about Gold-water’s organization. Bill D. Moyers, White House press secretary, had said earlier the Republican and Democratic leaders would be called to the White House today o' tomorrow. Since last Wednesday, the President has been holding lengthy conferences with top aides — discussions that point toward an inJreased American commitment of manpower and equipment. NEW YORK (iP) — Walter Reuther' thinks the basic problem of AFL-CIO President George Meany is that “he’s too damn comfortable,’’^^according to Look Magazine. In the same article, the formejr CIO president says Teamster President James Hoffa never should be allowed back in the ---------- labor group. labor’s participation in the Reuther, United Auto Workers i%3 civil rights march "I believe it is essential Republican leaders carry out their Miss Sullivan, who was driv- complete political objective ing ahead of Gollwitzer’s car in within the Republican party, thejame direction, escaped in- he said. Johnson announced his fourth cabinet appointment at a special ceremony in the flower garden outside his office. Celebrezze and Gardner, who was chairman of a special presidential task force on education last year, stood by. Celebrezze, an Italian immigrant who was a long-time mayor of Cleveland, is being nominated for a vacancy on the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth District. The court has headquarters in Cincinnati. S7.5-Billion Housing Bill Set tor Congressional OK jury. • Police said Gollwitzer’s car jumped the curb after hitting FUTURE COURSE the other car and struck a tree five feet north of Maple just west of Columbia. City Comhiissioners' Meeting Is Canceled Officials have indicated the final decisions could involve the mustering of some reserves and National Guard units and an increase in draft calls. president who headed the CIO Washington, thinks "Meany has before the merger of the two learned a lot. giant labor federations and is “if there were a march on now No. 2 man in the AFL-CIO, Washington next week;” he is said in an interview that he quoted, “I think he’d be in the prefers “to get along with front of the parade.” Meany. Reuther also is quoted as see- “But when there are things (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) get done,” he is quoted as __________________________________ There will not be a Pontiac City Commission meeting tonight. This week’s regular meeting has been canceled sg that commissioners may attend the National League of Cities convention in Detroit. The next regular meeting of the commission will be at 8 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 3. Rockefeller said it would be “disastrous” for splinter groups to influence the party’s future course. Romney, who took the view that Goldwater always had worked for the party, said “I’ll be very disappointed if Barry Goldwater doesn’t give full support to the Republican party.” Romney and Rockefeller had differences of opinion also over President Johnson’s handling of the international affairs, particularly the Viet Nam situation. In announcing this, Johnson said: “I have both a feeling of pride in Celebrezze’s accession to this high court — and a reluctance in seeing him depart the department he has guided so skillfully.” „ KNOWLEDGEABLE Speaking of Gardner, Johnson said: “He is regarded by his peers as one of the most knowledgeable men in the field of U.S. education.” WASHINGTON (AP) - A |7.5-billion housing bill containing a rent subsidy provision for low-income families was ready for final congressional approval today. Passed yesterday by the Senate, the compromise measure backed by the Johnson administration was scheduled for a midafternoon House vote ex-pecied to send it to the President. The bill would authorize creation of new programs and continuance of major existing housing programs for the next four years. Gardner, besides heading the task force that helped prepare Johnson’s 1965 legislative proposals in the field of education, was described by the President as having inspired last week’s White House Conference on Education. Its most controversial provision is the rent subsidy plan which would cost |350 million over the next four years. Sponsors claim the plan would make 375,(XXI apartment units available for needy families during the next four years. The subsidies would be limited to families eligible for publii^ housing under existing standards. To qualify for a subsidy, a family would have to pay 25 per cent of its income for housing. , The government would pdt up the difference between this amount and the normal rent required to finance an apartment project. The federal payment would go to nonprofit-type landlords such as churches, unions, cooperatives or limited dividend corporations. None of the subsidies would go to private landlords. Tenants would lose their eligibility for subsidies if their income increased substantially. In addition to persons qualU lying under present standards, elderly or handicapped persons, persons displaced from their homes by government action, and persons whose homes have been destroyed by a natural dh-aster would be eligible for subsidy payments. saying, “I’m going to do them. If the only things you are going to do are convenient and comfortable, the great things lUUU/ ^ will not get done. "This is the problem as the I 1 CdO ■ labor movement gets higher and higher levels of material Viet Fighting comfort.” • U. S. said now aiming * * * for 8-to-l manpower edge Look, says Reuther, referring — PAGE A-4. to his disagreement with Meany Fill 'er Up ---------- May put fuel stations in : ' Sunny Days ' Will Continue versity of California chan- cellor — PAGE D-6. Warm, sunny weather will re- AreaNews ...........B-1 I J"ain with Pontiac residents at Astrology . ........C-5 *' leas until Thursday the Bridge C-5 weatherman has promised. Crossword Puzzle W temperature today, with a \ high near 84. Tonight will be fair . and cooler, low 54 to 62. cTi *• ***' ‘®- „ . YI i marrow with a high of 77 to 82. Protection Senes A-8 I northwest to north. Sports I 8 to 15 miles per hour. ’Theaters ....D4 w ★ « TV-Radio Programs D-7 sixty-six was the low jmercury Wilson, Earl ^ reading preceding 8 a m. in Women’s Pages B-4-B-5 ^ Pontiac today. By 1 p.m. the ^ ’< temperature had reached 82. How to Gel Passport to Health Benefits Gardner, who was born in Los Angeles in 1912, has been president of the Carnegie Corp. for the past 10 years. He also heads the Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Teaching. Hospital Fund Reveal $100,000 Gift (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the third in a 14-part series on the new health care and Social Security bill by John Troan, special writer for Newspaper Enterprise Asso-ciation.) By JOHN TROAN Your passport to Medicare will be a wallet-sized card resembling the kind Blue Cross subscribers carry. It will signify you are eligible for basic Medicare benefits provided under Social Security. It also wilj show whether you have bought supplemental health insurance entitling you to additional benefits. The cards will be mailed by the Social Security administration before July 1, 1966-when such 'uenefits become available. If you’re eligible for Medicare and already getting monthly Social Security checks, you’ll automatically get a form on which you may sign up for supplemental insurance. card showing whether you have taken out supplemental coverage or can draw only the basic Medicare benefits. SIMILAR PROCEDURE A similar procedure will be followed with persons receiving monthly Railroad Retirement or Civil Service retirement benefits. Eligible persons on regular welfare rolls also will be advised by mail. What about other folks who may be entitled to Medicare benefits? If you’re past 65 and have worked long enough under Social Security to rate monthly retirement checks but you (Continued on Page 2, (3ol. 8) The Carnegie Corp. is a foundation that administers the philanthropies initiated by steel baron Andrew Carnegie. PASSING NOTE You then will receive a health Johnson took passing note of Gardner’s Republican allegiances in talking about him before a small audience of reporters. “He’s a Ph.D., an ex-Ma-rine, a former intelligence officer, an author and a Republican, though not necessarily in this order of importance or proportion of significance,” Johnson said. The first major gift from an individual to the ' St; Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund was announced today by ♦Ernest A. Jones, cochairman of the memorial gifts committee, when he revealed that Edward F. Fisher had pledged $100,000 toward the $3,250,000 minimum objective. Fisher is one of two surviving brothers who established the Fisher Body Co. and is a member of the board of directors The President said Gardner, educated at Stanford University and the University of California, “has been all his adult life an explorer In search of excel-ence.” Holder of honorary degrees from a dozen colleges and universities in the United States and Canada, Gardner taught psychology at Mount Holyoke College and Connecticut College for Women before World War II. of General Motors Corp. E. M. Estes, chairman of the hospital campaign, expre^ssed his appreciation for the gift, noting, “As one of Michigan's leading citizens, Mr. Fisher has once again demonstrated his sincere interest in voluntary community projects. “This interest,” Estes continued, “as expressed by this very generous gift should provide inspiration for all of us who are working hard to ensure the success of the campaign. "’ITtis is concrete evidence that the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital campaign has hem accepted as one of the most im-(Continued op Page 2, Col. 5) EDWARD F. FISHER r. if /V / JHE PONT|AC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 27,^1965 of Arms Stall GENEVA (AP); - Soviet negotiator Semyon K. llEBripIcin accused Western powers today of deliberately deadlocking disarmament negotiations and adopting policfes “directly opposed to disarmamfot and the relaxation of international ten- sion.” Tsarapkin said in his opening address as chairman of the reconvened 17-nation disarmament conference that the talks were resuming in difficult circumstances because of ‘‘imperialist aggression in such places as Viet Nam, the Congo and Latin America. ” UJ4. Secretary-General U Thant said the major nuclear powers wUl have to act swiftly to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. In a message to the conference read by his special representative, Dragon Pro- Law Is Signed for Warning on Cigarettes WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson today signed into law-the bill requiring a health hazard warning on cigarette packages. ‘Ttie White House said Johnson believed the bill, criticized by some congressmen as not going far enough, woul^ have benefits that outweighed any deficiencies The warning — “Caution: cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health”‘*— will be required on cigarette packages, starting next Jan. 1. The legislation passed Congress foUowing publication of a U.S. Public Health Service report saying that cjgarette smoking may be a cause of cancer and other diseases. The final bill was criticized by opponents because it did not require a similar Warning in cigarette advertising. Some congressmen urged Johnson to veto the bill for that reason. The signing of the bill Was announced by White House Press Secretary~Bill D. Moyers, who flicked ashes from a long thin cigar while he read the White House statement. Pies in Cor Mishap MIDLAND (JH - Mrs. Hilda B. Cronberger, 63, of Sanford was killed Monday in a mishap with her car two miles northwest of here. Midland County sheriff’s men said she was thrown out when she swerved to the right as another motorist was passing her. tltch, Thant expressed concern over the increasing danger of a general race toward nuclear armament. Recent political crises have ‘‘considerably eroded the ^irit of detente between East and West” which was symbolized in the agreements on a partial ban on nuclear testing, he said. SIGNiPiCANT CONTRIBUTION ‘‘A most significant contribution could be made to a renewal of hope and pi^ress toward peace by the r^iscovery of that area of mutual interest.” TTiant’s message appeared to be addressed not only to the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union, but also to France and Communist Qiina, who have both developed their own atomic arms. France has boycotted the conference. China never has been ibvited. “Those who have already em- barked upon nuclear weapons development continue to perfect and increase their stockpile of nudear weapons,” Thant said. ‘‘On the other hand, a growing number of states capable of nuclear weapons development wiU be faced with extremely grave decisions in this area which will-have profound repercussions. RBSPONSIBIUTY NEEDED “Responsibility and restraint are needed on the part of both.” The talks had long been deadlocked when th^ recessed last Sept. 17. Recent statements from East and West indicated that the deadlock may be as rigid as ever, despite a new Britidi plan to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. NO PLACI^ FOR A CHILD-A U.S. Marine shoos a Vietnamese boy away from heli-^ copters about to carry suspected Communist Viet Cong from Tam Loc, southeast of Da Nang yesterday. The boy, apparently the son of one of the csqitives, followed the Maciqes and their prisoneri to the helicopter landlng^^rea.' Award Four Wafer Job Contracts In contrast to previous resumptions of the talks, delegates of the major powers carefully avoided any hopeful predictions. Diplomatic sources said they expected a repetition of the speechmaking which has become a standard feature of the three-year-old conference. TWO ABSENT Of the five nations who now possess! nuclear weapons, two were absent. France is boycotting the talks, and Red China has never been invited. Britain’s disarmament minister. Lord Chalfont, and the U.S. disarmament negotiator, William C. Foster, arrived together from Paris after telling the North Atlantic Treaty Council about the British proposal for a treaty to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. They told newsmen details of the draft would be worked out with the two other Western delegates, Gen. E.L.M. Burns of Canada and Francesco Caval-letii of Italy. However, the British plan was virtually rejected in advance by the Soviet negotiator, Semyon K. Tsarapkin. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy today, not much change in temperature, high 78 to 84. Fair and cooler tonight, low 54 to <2. Wednesday sunny, high 77 to 82. Northwest to north winds 8 to IS miles per hour. Outlook for ‘Thursday: fair. wind Velocity » m.p.h m rites Wednesdey e« 5:07 a.m Downtown Tomporoturet Ono voor Ago In Pontiac Wean temperature Monday’s Tomperotiire Chart Alpena “ '* ' " Gr. Rapidi Jacksonville 1. .. Kanut City 17 12 Lanting 17 61 Lot Angeles r " Marquette 77 51 Miami Beach I Muskegon 03 02 Milwaukee I e c. : Weather: Sunny, v Albuquerque 17 60 Phoenix Atlanta 17 70 Pittsburgh 14 05 Bismarck 01 55 Salt Lake C. 00 ‘ Boston M 45 $. Prancitco Chicago 71 23 S. S. Marie 72 Cmclnnati 04 44 Seattle 03 Denver 04 44 Tampa 00 Detroit 01 40 Duluth 70 40 NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers are pre-dictad tonight over the central plains and southern plateau eastward into the Ohio Valley and the Carolinas. Showers are also predict over the northern Rockies and Pacific Northwest. It will be cooler over the Great Lakes and upper New England with little change elsewhere. Contracts for construction of the four-section Pontiac Township water system' were awarded yesterday to low bidders on each part of the project. The contract awards were made by the Oakland County Board of Public Works after reviewing recommendations of consulting engineers on a second set of bids opened July 15. Work on the project could begin by late August, according to Donald W. Ringler, dep-ty director of the Department of Public Works. Greenfield Construction Co. w i t h a bid of $510,000 w a s awarded the Section 1 contract. Bids ranged to $542,000. The Section 2 contract was awarded to Harbedian Co. whose bid of $363,420 was the only one of the original bids opened in June that was accepted. REBIDDING ORDERED Rebidding was ordered on the balance of the work and the new proposals were opened by the DPW July 15. The Section 3 contract was awarded to Sterling Construction Co. with a bid of $175,000. The high bid was $18,000. Bay Construction Co. with a bid of $264,000 was awarded the Section 4 contract. Bids ranged to a high of $269,000. Leonard Terry, Pontiac Township supervisor, said th project should be completed by late spring next year. Water will be supplied by the City of Detroit... PRESENT SOURCE Individual wells, except for one subdivision water system, are the present source of water. Residents will have the option to tie-in to the Detroit water supply or continue using their present well water source, Terry said. The DPW is acting its agent for the township in the water system project. Prominent City Resident Dies A prominent Pontiac resident, Thomas J. Whitfield, 56, of 1466 Oakwood died yestertay following a lengthy illness. Service will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at AH Saints Episcopal Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. A tax consultant, Whitfield was a charter member of the Pontiac City Chib and a member of AH Saints Episcopal Church. He also was active in the Ki-wanis Club, Pontiac Elks BPOE No. 810. a former board member of Pontiac Boys Club, and the Huron River Hunting and Fishing Club. Surviving are his wife, Eileen; lour daughters, Mary Jo at home, Kay of Kalamazoo, Mrs. I^hard Harris of Pasadena, Calif., and Mrs. Charles Wait-man of £1 Toro, Calif; and five grandchildren. OCC Dream Now Reality (Continued From Page One) lections, giving the new school its initial operating funds. Tirrell, who had helped establish three St. Loiiis junior colleges, brought another thinly defined dream to add to Oakland County’s hopes for more higher education. His dream was more sophisticated than the singular creation of more college classrooms, and it, too, is to become a reality this fall. Prior to coming here, the 38-year-old coUege administrator had demonstrated an interest the application of data proce: ing and computer technology to the college classroom. A visible outgrowth of Tirrell’s interest will be Oakland Community College’s pioneering tutorial program. , SEPARATE STORY For the most part, OCC classes will depart, considerably from the traditional method of an instructor lecturing 30 students while the latter feverishly take Will Quiz Foster on '63 Killing Twenty - nine - year - old Carl Foster, already convicted of killing two young Oakland County women, was scheduled to be given a lie detector test today in connectioi^ with a third killing.- Detective Charles Whitlock of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department said Foster would be questioned in connection with the 1963 death of 14-year-old Connie Crossland. The former Pontiae factory worker will be taken from a cell at the Oakland County Jail to the Detroit State Police post ^to undergo the polygraph quiz. Foster, convicted last Wednesday of the February 1964 slaying of his wife Angela, 25, is awaiting pronouncement of a mandatory life sentence. Earlier this year, he was tenced to 10-15 years in prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter in the Dec. 12 strangulation of Mrs. Maurice Crook, 20, a Bloomfield Township divorcee. ^ 'SIMILARITIES’ Whitlock said Foster had agreed to take the test. He added there were definite “similari-f s” between the Crossland killing and the deaths of Angela Foster and Mrs. Crpok. AH three victims had been strangled. In addition, there are indications that Foster frequented the drive-in. strip on Woodward in Birmingham, an area in which Ckmnie Crossland had been seen several occasions prior to her death. The Crossiand girl was found in a water filled ditch July 18, 1963, southeast of Lake Orion. She had been liit on the head and strangled. Togo Frontier Opened LOME, Togo (AP) - Togo reopened its frontier with Ghana today. It bad been closed since January 1964. notes. But, this is a separate story. Tirrell, while stiU a commuter from St. Louis, began his tenure here by first recruiting an administrative staff. Recmitmenf of a teaching staff has be^ nearly accomplished. / The college board has acquired three campus sites with a total investment of about $1.64 million. Two sites — Auburn Hills (the former Nike base in Pontiac Township) and Highland Lakes (the former TB hospital in Waterford Township) — have facilities to be converted to College officials estimate the total cost to convert these facilities at $684,000. They are to accommodate 3,000 students this fall. The two campuses will begin with a total instructional staff of about 150 persons. > The third campus — Orchard Ridge — is located south of I-8N and west of Orchard Lake Road in Farming-ton Township. The 135-acre site is to have buildings by the fall of me. Progress on the development of the college surprises even some of the school’s trustees. “I thought that evening classes in some area high school looked like the only prospect for classes to begin with this year,” comments Mosher. CUT RED TAPE However, Mosher credits the Nike base acquisition with speeding development. The Army virtually eliminated proverbial red tape for the college to take over the Nike base. Heath Leads in Tory Vote Fails to Gist Majority; Second Ballot Is Set LONDON (AP) - Edward Heath piled up the most votes today for Ipader of the Conservative party, but failed of a majority and a second ballot was ordered for Thursday. Conservatives who are mem-bei^ of the House of Commons gave 150 out of the 298 votes cast to Heath, 49, the party spokesnun on economic affairs. Reginald Maudling, 48, former chancellor of the exchequer, w{^ close behind with 133 votes. Enoch Powell, 53, former minister of health, got 15. Under the rules prevailing for the first baUot, a candidate needed an over-all majority plus 15 per cent more votes than his nearest rival to win. ' On the second ballot straight over-all majority will be sufficient. However, other candidates now may enter if they krish and a further deadlock would be possible. 1ST FORMAL ELECTION It was the first -formal election of a leader in the party’s two centuries. Previous party leaders were chosen in private discussions in which Britain’s t(^ Tory famiUes had the dominant vdee. The secret baUot took place behind closed doors in a committee room of Parliament’s lower house. Newspaper pundits and opinion polls put Maudling sli^tly ahead of Heath. A third candidate, Enoch Powell, 55, was given no chance of winning, but some thought he might take enough votes to make a second ballot necessary. Many Conservatives were reported impatient at the intervention of Powell, an advocate of unbridled capitalism. They wanted a quick decision biH tween Heath and Maudling, both committed to their party’s modern mixture of free enterprise and welfare state, and both free of the taint of aristocracy which may have cost the Conservatives the 1964 national election. Meony Is Hit by Reuter in Interview (Continued From Page One) ing “marked improvement” in his relationship, with Meany in recent months. Concerning specniation that he will succeed Meany as AFL-CIO president, Reuther reportedly said: “That job could be a very exciting job if you don’t get it under circumstances of spinning your wheels.” Nevertheless, Mosher remembers that in June 1964, he was chairman of a dream. That dream will become a reality Sept. 7. . (NCXT-WMt CM th* MW < $100,000 Pledged to Hospital Fund (Continued From Page One) portent endeavors ever under- taken in our area.” The memorial gifts committee is composed of 66 volunteers who are offering individuals in the hospital’s service area the opportunity to provide specific rooms in the St. Joseph expansion program. EXPANSION The committee is in the proc-e^ of expanding its membership, according to Jones. He noted that memorials start at $2,189 for a super- patients’ rooms from $5,499 to $7,299; examination and treatment rooms from $2,499 to $4,899; child and parents’ rooms at $8,999; operating rooms at $21,999 and others up to $318,899 for the Clinical Laboratory Department. Alt<%ether there are 405 different units available, with 37 already reserved or subscribed. The memorial plan provides for tablets to be mounted on the rooms given with a .suitable inscription according to the wishes of the donor. Pledges may be paid over a period of three years. Reutheh, Look says, expressed disdain for what he termed greedy labor leaders who want to “get mine and still be respectable. Reuther is quoted as saying that readmission of the Teamsters to the AFlrClO is “not possible as long as J i m m y Hoffa, is president of that union.” Birmingham Area News Board Sets 2nd Hearing on Blackfdpping District BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The Township Board last night declared its intent to proceed on a special assessment blacktopping district on Glengarry and Whiteleigh. Following a public hearing on the proposed $10,840 project involving 35 sites, the bom-d set a second hearing for Aug. 9. Petitions for the blacktopping project have been signed by over 89 per cent of the area’s property owners. In other business last night, the board upheld prior action by the township’s zoning board in denying rezoning of property owned by Bloomfield Chapel. In other business, the board passed a resolution confirming the (Thelmsleigh water main deficiency roU following a public hearing. Rezoning from single-family residential to general business district had been sought for the parcel on the north side of Square Lake Road west of Telegraph. TO ASSIST ASSOOATION Also last night, board members agreed to assist the Fox HHls Home Owners Association in an attempt to control excess speed and heavy traffic in their subdivision. ^The board will ask the Oakland County Road Commission io install speed limit signs in the subdivision. Hunt Rapist in Area Attack Housewife Is Victinr in Bedroom at Home Michigan State Police from the Pontiac post are searching for a young man who yesterday morning raped a West Bloomfield Township housewife in her bedroom. Troopers are maintaining an around-the-clock patrol throughout the neighborhood near Inkster Road and Maple in which the incident took place. Yesterday, Trooper Richard Chartier ’’and his tracking dog Hans went over the area, but failed to find a good track. Several suspects have been questioned, officers said, b u t nothing definite has turned up. The rapist broke Into the home just before dawn by prying off screen on a b^room dow. The woman, who was alone at the time, awoke to find the man in her bedroom. The house wife said her attacker was naked and wore a white cloth around his head. She described him as being a young white male, about 5-foot-8 with medium build. A Lightning Escape NORWICH, England (UP ) -Lightning struck a woman’s umbrella yesterday and split it down to the handle. But Mrs. Minnie Joyce C^bbold, who was holding it, was uninjured. County Free of Polio Since June of 1964 There have been no cases of polio reported in Oakland County in more than a year, according to Dr. B. D. Berman, director of the Oakland County Department of Health. The last case was reported June 18, 1964, just prior to completion of the mass sugar cube immunization program. The victim had not been immunized. However, it was a light case and he fully recovered. The last serious year in the county was in 1959 when 37 cases were rtported and two deaths resulted. Dr. Berman said. ★ ★ ★ There were eight cases reported in 1960 and only five since then, with no deaths in the county as a result of the disease since 1959. SECURE SHOTS Dr, Berman advised that immunization shots (nay be obtained through private physicians, for those who have not previously been immunized against polio. While tae disease is not common among adnlts, they can be carriers and can infect fehildren with whom they come in contact, he said. A total of 455,000 persons, representing nearly half the population of Oakland County, received oral vaccine in April and June of 1964 in an effort to wipe out the disease. The special program was initiated by the Oakland County Medical Society. ’The Birmingham City (Commission meeting was cancelled last night because of a lack of a quorum. Most of the commissioners were attending the National League of Cities conference in Detroit. Obtaining Passport to Benefits (Continued From Page One) haven’t applied for them (because, for example, you’re still working), go now to your Social Security district office and file an application to establish your eligibility for Medicare, ENROLUNG’ Other persons past 65 may register for Medicare when Social Security offices start ‘enrolling” people for supplementary insurance. The first such “enrollment” —for persons who will be 65 before Jan. 1, 1966-will start Sept. 1 (or Oct. 1 if the Medicare bill isn’t signed into law before Aug. 1). This enrollment period will end March 31, 1966. Should you fail to sign up for supplemental insurance by then, you won’t have another chance until Oct. 1, 1967. Others may enroll during a seven-month period starting with the third month before the 65th birthday. BASIC BENEFITS For example, take a person who will be 65 on May 10, 1966. He could enroll for the supplemental insurance from Feb. 1, 1966, through Aug. 31, 1966. Basic benefits (except for nursing-home care) begin July 1, 1966. The supplemental insurance takes effect the third month after you sign up for it—but in no case will it go into force before July 1, 1966. So hang on to any health protection you may have in the meantime.) lliefe also will be general enrollment periods for people who want to buy supplemental insurance after having missed chance to do so,- or who want to reenroll after dropping out. These will be held the last three months of every odd-numbered year starting with 1967. GRACE period You may drop your supplemental insurance at the end of any calendar year. Or the government can drop you after a 90!«» CoInPnrMt 2 for 19c value, assorted colors in slipper coin purse o^d key chain. 31 Green Mint Mmith Wash 59c volue, 7-oz. A chlorophyll mouth wash for a fresh, sweet breath. 31 FlMtiagTeb $4.00 value styrofoam tub that Hoots for pool or beach fun for the children. 331 SIMMSifS 98 N. Saginaw Stmnt- BROTWFRS THE FONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 MAKE mmsf Warns of Cost on Uneducated Univarsify Official R«neWs Fund .Pitas PANMUNJOM, Korea (APY — the United Nations Com* mand in Korea charged the Norlfa Korean Coinmunists today with a series of armistice violations including a clash 500 yards south of the demilitarized LANSING (AP)-A university policy-maker warned Monday that future costs of dealing with uneducated persona will far exceed the expense of providing the education. Warren Huff, chairman of the Michigan State University trustees and the Michigan Coordinating Council of Higher Education, renewed the universities' fund plea at a hearing of a House taxation subcommittee. ★ ★ # Referring to predictions by Gov. George Romney that, without new taxes, Michigan could be in the budgetary red in two years. Huff said: “We would have red figures in this fiscal year if education needs were being met.” LOW PERCENTAGE He declared that 75 .per cent of the high school graduates should be receiving public higher education instead of the 30-35 per cent now getting it. “Michigan youngsters airts forfeiting their right to training and ^ucatioh for the world in which they live,” he declared. “We win have to bear that cost —and this far exceeds the cost of an adequate education pro-gfam. “Only when parefits and the public realize this will we get adequate support.” Huff said student fees and the property tax portion of education support are at the saturation point; BONDING PROGRAM He again asked—as the universities have done for years— that permission be granted for classroom and facilities construction via a bonding program. He said the state’s colleges and universities are three years behind in their building pro-ams. ^ said Michigan State could not take care of an esti-niated 42,500 enrollment in two years “without^ a crash building program.” He quoted Romney as telling him Feb. 5 that Romney woul(^ not support bonding because “it would take away a reason for tax reform. Huff said Romney saw tax reform as a better route than bonding to solving Michigan financial problems. Huff said the dollar problem is denying an education to youngsters who would have been admitted to school four years ago. “We tell them to go to a community college where there is none," he said. “We say their grades are not good enough when we know a certain percentage of them would succeed.” Robert Turner, president of Macomb County Community College and the Michigan council of conununity college administrators, said the two-year schools don’t get the support . necessary to build technical prqgrams. The subcommittee headed by Rep. H. James Starr, D-Lan-sing, was beginning a series of summer hearings around the state aimed at securing information on tax reform. Starr, like Ronmey, favors tax reform. U S. Maj. Gen. William P. Yarborough told the joint Military Armistice Commission that North Korea sent “an armed killer patrol across the military demarcation line’’ July 19 and the patrol “threw hand grenades at our soldiers in direct and flagrant violation of the cease-fire.” •k it -k Yarborough, the senior-UiN. Conunand delegate to the truce talks, also said that four armed men from North Korea opened fire on South Korean police agents and killed two of them July 18 in the Songchu resort area 5 miles north of Seoul. ★ ★ * "Two of your armed thugs were captur^ in the incident," North Kprea Is Charged With Cease-Fire Violations he told North Korean Maj. ^en. Psrk Chung-kook . ibfIES CHARGE Park denied the charges and said the United States had manufactured the incidents. Yarborough also charged iSSC the two-man midget su Protect the Poor Cat From Big, Mean Bird SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) -A sign posted on the office door at the Forest Farms Camp by owner Harold Gregg reads, ^‘please keep door closed so bird won’t eat our cat.’f ’Hie bird is a turkey vulture. found on the bed of the Hgn River about 30 miles northwest of Seoul on July 4 was from North K(vea. X* * ♦ The crew of the 15-foot sub escaped before the craft was dis^ered by a South Korean army patrol, the American general said. The sub was exhibited outside the meeting to a large crowd that included tourists from South Korea and military personnel and reporters from Communist North Kor^. ’The sub- marine had a North Koreai^flag and the name of North Korean Premier Kim Il-sung written on U in adiite paint. ♦ w a The U.N. Command delegate demanded severe punishment to those responsible for the alleged incidents. S«v0re Drought Ends on Processional Note MANAGUA, Nicaragua broidered Linen Pant Tops Were 9.99, Then 6.00 . 4.88 7 Misses’ Shifts Were lO.OO and 10.99.................... 7.88 17 Misses' Culottes Size 8-l6i Were 7.99-9.99 ............ 5.88 7 Misses* L. S. and'^SIeeveless Dresses Were 14.99 .... 10.00 24 Sleeveless Blouses Size 10-16. Were 3.99 ............... 2.88 6 Sleeveless Blouses Were 2.99 ......................... 1.44 IQ Sleeveless Blouses Were 2.99 to 4.99 .................. 1.88 20 Maternity Blouses Were 3.99 and 4.99 .. . . •.......... 2.88 12 Maternity Blouses Were 5.99 ..... ..................... 3.88 8 Maternity Swim Suits Were 8.99 dnd 9.99................ 6.88 18 Maternity jamaica Shorts Were 3.99 and 4.99 ........... 2.88 12 Maternity Pedal Pushers Were 3.99 ..................... 2.88 1 5 Maternity Skirts Were 3.99.........■ *................ 2,88 36 Sleeveless Dresses Were 6.99........................ 4.00 20 Misses’ and Half Size Culottes Were, 3.99 ........ 1.88 28 Misses' and H^lf Size Street Dresses We)^ to 12.99 . . 6.00 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Streef Floor I Wallet Was 5.00, Then 2.22 ......................... 1.48 1 Cigarette Case Was 3.95. Then 1.32.....................88 3 Pill Boxes Were 3.00, Then 89c..............\..........59 2 Cigarette Lighters Were 2.95, Then 88c .... \..........59 I Leather Handbag Was 13.99, Then 6.22 ........... 4.15 I Leather Handbag Was 10.99,'Then 2.44 ............... 1.53 3 Handbags Were 6.99, Then 4.66 .....................• 3.11 1 Handbag Was 5.00, Then 1.48 ...................... 1.01 1 Handbag Was 3.00, Then 1.34 ...........................89 6 Summer Handbags Were 8.99, Then 5.97................ 3.98 7 Summer Handbags Were 5.99, Then 3.97............ 2.64 1 Handbag Was 9.99, Then 6.97.........• .............. 4.64 1 Handbag Was 11.99, Then 6.97 .............i. •...... 4.64 5 Straw Handbags Were 3.00 .......................... 1.50 14 Straw Handbags Were 6.00 ......................... 3,00 ■ 3 Straw Handbags Were 12.00 .........................• 4.00 6 Sleeveless Overblouses Were 3.00, Then 1.50......... 1.00 8 Dacron and Cotton Roll Sleeve Blouses Were 1.99 .... 1.00 2 Flowered Triangles Were 2.00 ....................... 1.22 10 Scooped Nfcck Sleeveless Sweaters Were 6.99, Then 4.97 ............ ............... ...... 3.31 19 V-Neck Sleeveless Sweaters Were 5.99, Then 3.97 . . 2.64 3 Cardigan Sweaters Were 5.99, Then 2.66.............. 1.77 1 Chanel Cardigan Sweater Was 7.99, Then 3.55........ 2.39 1 Chanel Cardigan Sweater Was 8.98, Then 4.00........ 2.66 1 1 Slipover Shell Sweaters Were 7.99, Then 3.55....... 2.39 32 Pr. Gloves Were 4.00, Then 1.90..................... 1.27 41 Pr. Gloves Were 3.00, Then 1.44........................96 2Pr. Kid Gloves Were 12.00 ........................... 8.00 1 Pr, Kid Gloves Were 7.00 ........................... 4.66 . I Pr. Kid Gloves Were 8.00..........• ■. ........... . . 5.33 ' 16 Pr.’Nylon^Stretch Gloves Were 4.00, Then 1.18...........79 3 Pr. Cotton Gloves Were 4.50, Then 1.33..................89 1 Pr. Cotton Gloves Were 2.00, Then 88c...................59 1 Pr. Cottpn Gloves Were 2.00.......................... 1.33 40 Pr. Double Woven Cotton Gloves Were 4.00, Then 1,97 1.30 1 Watch Was 39.95, Then 26.63 ..................... • .17.75 3 Pr. Earrings Were 1.00, Then 33c................. . .22 4 Necklaces Were 2.00, Then 60c .................... .40 7 Pins Were 2.00, Then 40c...............................26 13 Pr. Earrings Were 2.00, Then 60c ........ ..............40 1 Pearl Necklace Was 5.00....................... 3.33 1 Silver Pendant Was 1.00 ...............................66 37 Pr. Earrings Wer# 1.00, Then 33c........................22 13 Necklaces Were 1.00, Then 33c .............■............22 MEN'S WEAR—Sfreef Floor Shop 9:30 'til 5:30 P.M. Sorry No Moil or Phone Orders. No Deliveries. Ull salis final FINAL SUMMER SHOE CLEARANCE CHOOSE FROM THESE FAMOUS ORAHDS... Life Stride, DeRoose, Joyce and Town Square . . . SAVIIIIiS ol 'k and lore Regularly 8.99 fo 16.99 Come in early, you'll find o nice selection of foshion-right dress and casual shoes. Choose from the season's most popular materials and colors. Savings of up to 9,99. Shop early for the best selection. Charge yours at Waite's. Women’s Shoes . . . Street Floor 9 Men’s Leather Belts Were 3.50-7.50, Then 1.33..........89 21 Men’s Leather Belts Were 1.50-3,00, .Then 66c..........44 22 Men’s White Dress Shirts Were 4.50-5.95. Then 2.65 1.87 3 Men’s Support Briefs Were 5.95, Then 2.97........... 1.98 20 Men’s S. S. Knee Length Pajamas Were 2.99, Then 2.50 .. ................................... 1.67 6 Men’s S. S. Knee Length Pajamas Were 4.00 2.67 6 Men's Pajama Bottoms We.rfe 2.99 and 3.99 . .'...... 1.97 59 Short Sleeve Dress Shirts Were 3.39 ................ 2.26 , 1 5 Short Sleeve Dre?s Shirts Were 4.00-............... 2.67 / 18 Cotton Summer Robes Were 4.99....................... 3.33 12 Men’s S. S. Sport Shirts Were 5.00, Then 2.44....... 1.63 3 Men’s All Weather Coets Were 19.95, Then 8.43 . . . 5.62 10 Men’s Summer Sport Coats Were 19.95, Then 12.00 8.00 27 Men’s Summer Dress Slacks Were 6.95, Then 4,22 . . 2.81 6 Men’s Long Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 3.99, Then 1.00 .66 30 Men’s Swim Trunks Were 5.00 end 6.95, Then 3.00 2.00 22 Short Sleeve Shirt jacs Were 3.99.................. 2.66 20 Short Sleeve Shirt lacs Were 6.98-8.98, Then 6.00 . . 4.00 ^5Shorf^leeveShirl|acsWere1^95^TI^^ I Tissue Box Was 2.00................... ............ 1.00 8 Hair Setting Gels Were 1.50, Then 44c..................22 I Make Up Set Was 5XX). Then'2,22.................... 1.11 1 Cologne Set Was 6.50, Then 2.99.................... 1.93 5 Compacts Ware 50c, Then 25c ...........................12 7 Lipstick Cases Were 3.50, Then 1.17..................78 9 Lipstick Cases Were 2.75, Then 90c...................60 6 Cream and Liquid Make Ups Were 1.50 f............ 1.00 4 Cream Rouges Were 1.25 ................................83 9 Compacts Were 1.50 ....................• •......... 1.00 1 Perfume Refill Was 3.75, Then 1.70...................85 3 Ciro Perfumes Were 7.00, Then 3.11 .............. 2.07 2 CIro Perfumes Were 12.50, Then 5.56.............. 3.71 . 1 Ciro Perfume Was 25.00, Then 11.11 7.41 7 Aloe Shampoos Were 1.50............... ............ 1.00 8 Aloe Lipsticks Were 2.00..... ..................... 1.34 6 Aloe Make Ups Were 2.00................. . . 1.34 9 Aloe First Aid Ointments Were 1.50................ . 1.00 I Aloe Leg Cream Was 1.50............................ 1.00 I Aloe Hand Cream Was 1.75 . . . . •................. 1.17 1 Aloe After Tan Was 2.25 ......................... 1.50 20 Pump Type Moth Sprayers Were 95e, Then 42c.............28 7 Handbag Caddy's Were 2.29 ......................... 1.53 3 Terry Auto Seat Covers Were 5.98, Then 3.97......... 2.65 4 Dynatron Lights Were 6.60, Then 4.40................ 2.94 7 Dynatron Lights Were 3.27, Then 2.18................ 1.45 1 Dynatron Light'Was 7.83. Then 5.52 ................. 3.68 1 Dynatron Light Was H.25i Then 7.50 ................. 5.00 5 Dress Shields Were 2.00 ............................ 1.34 1 Dress Shield Was 1.59............................. 1.06 ' 6 Sanitary, Briefs Were 1.00 ............................ 66 4 Sanitary Briefs We're 1.75* ......-................. 1.17 3 Waist in Garter Belts Were 3.^ .................... 2.34 6 Air Fresheners Were 89c ...............................60 10 Spray Fumitura Polisjies Were 1.29, Then 43c...........22 6 Dress.and Coat StoraBe Bags Were 3.99............... 2.66 2 Book Ends Ware 10.00, Then 6.00..................... 4.00 6 Candles Were 30c to 69c ........................... .15 4 Candles Were 1.25 to 1.75, Then 75c ................ .50 3 Candles Were 2.69, Thtn 1.33 ......................... 68 2 Corduroy Overalls, Were 2.99, Then 2.00............. 1.00 CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor 5 Infants’ Corduroy Crawlers, Were 1.99, Then 77c . . .52 ’ 3 Baby Bonnets, Winter, Were 2.99, Then 1,33.................52 2 Baby Buntings Lined, Were 5.99, Then 3.00.............. 2.00 46 Baby Anklets Dark Colors Were 39c .........................20 6 Baby Dresses. 12-18-24 Months Were 5.99................ 3.00 4 Infants’ Blankets 36x50-inch Were 3.99 ...................2,68 7 Infants,’ Summer Bonnets Were 2.00 ...................... 1.00 5 Infants' Mismatched-Terry Loungers Were 2.99 .... .50 3 Infants’ Topper Sets Were 4.00, Then 2.00.............. 1.00 8 Famous Make Diapers Were 1.99 . ....................... 1.00 1 5 Infants’ Double Knit Sets S-M-L Were 5.99, Then 2.99 1.66 23 Infants’ Sun Suits Were 1.99 ........................... 1.33 21 Girls’ Stretch Denim Knee Knockers‘3-6* Were 1.69 1.00 6 Boys’ Dacron and Cotton Walk Shorts Ware 1.99 ... 1.33 I 5 Boys' Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 1,69.................84 50 Girls’ Toddler Short Sets Size 2-4 Were 3.99, Then 2.18 .................................................... 1.46 6 Novelty Polo Shirts Were 1.19...............................52 II Girls’ Plisse Coveralls Were 4.99.................... 2.50 3 Cotton Knit Rib Shirts Were 1.69 ........................ 1.00 36 Boys’ Sta-Press Walk Shorts Size 4-8 Were 2,99----------- 2.00 19 Girls’ Novelty Sun Dresses 3-6x Were.2.99................ 2.00 16 Girls’ Shifts Sizes 3-6x Were 4.00....................... 2.68 25 Boys’ Sport Shirts Size 4-8, Were 2,99................... 2.00 3 Plisse Short Sets Broken Sizes Were 1.99................. 1.00 3 Girls' Flannel Lined Jackets 8-10-12, Were 3.99 .... 2.00 2 Subteen All Weather Coats Were 12.99 .................... 7.00 1 Girls’ Mohair and Wool Coat Size 7 Was 15.00............ 5.87 •* 3 Girls’ Subteen Dresses and jackets Sets Were 14.99 . . 7.50 7 Subteen Dresses, Sizes 6-8-10, Were 10.99............Vi OFF 7 Subteen Seersucker Skirts Were 5.99 ..................... 3.00 1 Subteen Seersucker jumper Was 7.99 ..................... 4.00 20 Girls’ Sleeveless Dresses Were 2.99 to 7.99...........Vi OFF 1 5 Girls’ Sleeveless Dresses Were 2.99 to 8.99.........Vi OFF 19 Boys’ Plaid Sport Shirts 6-16 Broken Were 2.29 .... 1.54 7 Boys’ Short Sleeve Sport Shirts Were 2.29, Then 1.67 .83 2 Boys' Plaid Walk Shorts Were 2.29, Then 1.77................50 10 Boys’ Red Flannel Lined jackets Were 2.99................ 2.00 I 2 Little Boys' Flannel Lined jackets 3-7, Were 1.99 . . . 1.00 18 Boys’ Sport Shirts Were 2.99 . 2.00 6 Boys’ Assorted jackets Were 5.99^ 6.99 .................. 3.42 10 Boys’ Plaid Walk Shorts Were 2.99 and 3.99............... 2.00 6 Boys’ Denim jeans Size 6 Were 1.99, Then 1.50 .... 1.00 25 Boys’ Polished Cotton Slacks Were 3.99, Then 2.37 . . 1,43 13 Boys' Colored Denim jeans Were 2.99, Then 2.50 . . . 1.66 , 6 Boys’ Shorty Pajamas Were 2.99 .......................... 1.’66 30 Boys’ Cotton Underwear Were 3/1.45 ..................... 3/.8S 3 Yds. Sunkist Wara 1.19...................................60 Yd. .43 Yds. Frostop Solid Colors Wart 1.00 .................50 Yd. 57 Yds. Frostop Dots Wer# 1.19...........................60 Yd. 26 Vds. LinSary Dots Were 1.49 ...................... 75 Yd. 6 Yds. Hi Sign Were 1.49 ..............................75 Td. 20 Yds. X Ply Cottons Were 1.89 .. .’............... 1.00 Yd. 39 Slight Irregula) Bath Towels Were 2.99............... 1.47 11 Slight Irregular Hand Towels Were 1.79............... ,77 45 Slight Irregular Washcloths Wert 69c.....................37 39 Rug Runners Were 3.99 and 4.99..................... 2.00 9 Checkmate Vinyl Tablecloths 52x52” Were 2.99 .... 1.00 31 Checkmate Vinyl Tablecloths 52x70" Were 3.99___________2.00 10 Checkmate Vinyl Tablecloths 6dx88” Were 5.99__________ 3.00 6 Dural Damask Vinyl Tablecloths 52x90” Were 4.99 .. 2.50 12 Damask Rose Vinyl Tablecloths 52x70” Were 3.99 ... 2.00 3 Damask Rose Vinyl Tablecloths 60” Round Were 4.99 2.50 2 Damask Rose Vinyl Tablecloths 60x88” Were 6.99 .. 3.50 1 Festival Vinyl Tablecloth 52X52” Were 3.99............ 2.00 2 Festival Vinyl Tablecloths 52x70” Were 5.98.......... 3.00 3 Classic Tablecloths 52x52” Were 3.99.................. 2.00 3 Classic Tablecloths 52x70” Were 5.99.................. 3.00 13 Classic Tablecloths 60x90” Were 7.99 j............... 4.00 5 Classic Tablecloths 60x108” Were 8.99................. 4,50 15 Famous Make Bath Towels Were 2.99............... ... 1.60 45 Famous Make Hand Towels Were 1.79.......................90 24 Famous Make Washcloths Were 69c.........................35 31 Famous Make Fingertip Towels Were 79c...................40 2 Royalty Rugs 27” Octagon Were 3.99................... 2.00 5 Royalty Rugs 24x42” Were 4.99..........•............. 2.50 6 Castilian Bath Towels Were 1.99...................... 3.00 17 Castilian Hand Towels Were 1.29 ........... i.... .65 71 Castilian Washcloths Were 59c...........................30 36 Castilian Fingertip Towels Ware 69c.....................35 8 Chenille Twin Size Bedspreads Were 14.99.............7.00 I Pageant Twin Size Bedspread Wes 7.99.................. 4.00 I Cotton Twin Size Bedspread Was 9.9(9................. 5.00 1 Froity Tempo Twin Size Bedspread Wes 14.99........7.00 I Chenille Twin Size Bedspread Was 10.99 . ■ 5.00 6 Top of Morning'Curtains 30-Inch Were 3.99...........2,00 8 Top of Morning Curtains 3,6-inch Were 4.49 2.25 . 10 Top of Morning Curtains 45-inch Ware 4.99.......... 2.50 1 Top of Morning Valance Was 2.49..........................75 5 Paula Curtains 24-inch Were 3.99...................... 2.00 11 Paula Curtains 36-inch Were 4.99...................... 2.50 4 Paula Valances Were 2.49.................................7* 4.Paula Swags Were 4.99 ............................... 2.50 4 Tropicana Curtains 36-inch Were 4.99................. 2.50 STropicana Valances Were 1.99........................... .50 4 Tropicana Canopy Were 2.99........................... 1.50 . 11 Bon Curtains 24-inCh Were 2.99...................... 1.50 20 Bon Curtains 36-inch Were 3.99........................ 2.00 2 Bon Valances Were 1.99 ..................................50 1 Drape Was 3.99 ..................................... '1.00 3 Assorted Drapes Were 4.99 ............................ 2.00 1 Drape Was 5.99........................................ 2.50 2 Assorted Drapes Were 8,99 ......................... 3.00 4 Assorted Drapes Were 9.99 .......................... 3.50 5 Assorted Drapes Were 10.99......................... 4.00 2 Assorted Drapes Were 11.99 ......................... 4.50 1 Drape Was 12.99....................................... 5.00 2 Twin Size Bedspreads Were 12.99..................... 8.66 2 Full Size Bedspreads Were 14.99 ...................... 9.97 Assorted Soiled Display Curtains.....................Vi Off :URTAINS, DRAPERIES, ETC—Fourth Floo. BETTER HATS REDUCED •1.00 "*3.00 2.98 to 12.98 Voluot Millinery Dept. .. . Third Floor FOUNDATIONS, LINGERIE—Second FI 19 Famous Make Girdles, Irr. Sizes S-M Were 7.00, Then 3.97 ............................................ 2.00 16 Bandue Bras Irr. Were 2.00 ....•■.......................97 22 Assorted Dusters, Popins, Shifts Were 6.00............ 4.00 8 Novelty Print Shifts S-M Were 6.00, Then 3.97....... 2,00 7 Misses’ Denim Pop-ins Were 6JX) ....................... 3.42 1 1 Misses’ Plaid Shorty jump Suits Were 4.00............. 2.00 4 Misses’ Cotton Shorty Pajamas Were 4.00................ 2.00 26 Misses’ Zipper Closing jump Suits Were 5.00............ 3.35 t4 Misses’ Long Cotton Gowns Were 5.00.................... 3.35 4 Misses’ Solid Shorty Gowns Sizes S-M Were 5.00 .. 3.35 6 Misses’ Red and White Check Shifts Were 5.00....... 3*35 4 Misses’ 2-Piece Shift Sets Were 10.00 ................. 7.70 5 Misses’ Imported Hand Made Cotton Gowns Were 8.98 .............................................. 6.00 7 Misses’ Imported Hand Made Cotton Gowns Were 12.98 ................................................8.70 5 Misses' Impbrted Hand Made Cotton Pajamas Were 14.99 ...............................................10.00 43 Misses’ Asiorted Cotton Panties, Were 62c ...........30 34 Yds. Cotton Seersucker Were 1.49 .................. .75 Yd. 32 Yds. Cotton Playknits Were 1.29 ......................65 Yd. 44 Yds. Cotton Oxford Cloth Were 1.19........................60 Yd. 68 Yds. Nytila Were 1.99 ............................. 1.00 Yd. 4 Yds. Neverbend Were 1.99 ......................... 1.00 Yd. 14 Yds. to East Fabrics Were 1.49 .......................75 Td. HOUSEWARES, CHINA, ETC.- I 10-Piece West Bend Cook Set Was 29.95. Then 1(5,88 .............. .................................10.81 1 6-Quart Stainless Saucepot Was 14.65 .................. 9.22 2 8-inch Stainless Skillets Were 7.85 ................... 4.22 1 1-Quart Stainless Saucepot Was 11.50................... 7.44 1 2-Quart Stainless Saucepot Wes 8.85 ................... 5.18 1 7-ihch Stainless Steel Skillet Was 8.75 ............... 5.11 5 Electric Spray and Dry Irons Were 8.88, Then 4.88 ..' 3.22 1 lO'/z-inch Electric Frypan Was 22.88, Then 14.22 .. 9.44 1 Brass and White Breedbox.Was 12.88..................... 8.22 2 Food Strainers Were 2.50 ............................ 1.44 Assorted Group of Table Lamps With Shades............V5 OFF 3 Ceramic Planters Were 4.98, Then 2.88.................. t.lf I Ceramic Fruit Bowl Was 7.98,-Then 5.12 ................ 3.22 8 Clear Crystaline Fruit ^otvls Were 2.98............... 1.88 31 Clear Crystaline Round Trays Were 1.00, Then 66c .. .44 3 Wood Cookie jen Were 4.00, Then 2,44................... 1.44 14 Wood Style Cookie jars Were 2.98, Then 2.55............ 1.44 1 Service for 6 Stainless Flatware Was 24.95, Then 16.95 ...................................... .........11.33 2 West Bend Buffet Servers Were 9.98, Then 5.44 .... 3.88 9 Service for 8 English Mugs Were 7.98, Then 4.22 ... 3.22 20 Colored Coffee Mugs Were 1.75, Then 1.12..................66 94 Brass Wind Chimes Were 1.69. Then 1.09....................74 6 Soap or Candy Dishes Were 1.00........................ .66 5 Floral Hurricane Lamps With Candles Were 4.98, Then 2.22 ............................................ 1.66 10 Chrome Ash Trays Were 2,50 ........................... 1.66 1 l.ncomplete Set of Bavarian China Was 68.00, Then 46.00 .............................................. 30.33 2 Chrome Sugar and Cream Sets Wart 4.32, Then 2.88 1.88 1 36-inch White Neutilus Range Hood Was 69.95 ___________44.44 3 Brass Andirons Sets Were 4.98 ......................... 1.88 7 Oval Back of Door Mirrors ^era 2.98................... 1.81 3 38x31-inch Fireplace Sets Were 19.95...................13.33 2 Shetland Deluxe Polishers Were 49.95 ..................27.88 Assorted Flowers and Giftware........... ............Va OFF 8 Decorator Wall Plaques Were 1.00, Then 66c ..............44 RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth FI 2 6. E. Transistor Portable Radios Were 16.98..... lO.St 5 22x34-inch Hooked Rugs Were 5.98 . .. ............... 3.88 , 2 48-inch Round Extend-a-Table Tops Were 9.98 .... 5.tf' ' Aluminum and Redwood Picnic Table Was 29.95 .... 19.88 4 Green Patio Chairs Were 10.98.................... 7.32 1 30-inch Overseas Bag Was 49.95 ..................... 33.00 1 4x6-Foot Rayon Striped Rug Was 14.98............. 8.88 2 12x12-Foot Room Size Rugs Were 89.95 ................59.44 1 6x9-Foot Nylon Foam Back Rug Wis 39.95 ...............23.66 17 Plastic Beach or Travel Bags Ware 2.25..................18 4 27x48-inch. Nylon artd Cotton Rugs Were 7.98 . . . 4.18 18 27x48-irtch Cotton Scatter Rugs Were'3.97, Than'2.22 1.51 2 7-Foot Patio Umbrellas Were 24.95 ................. 16.88 4 Cowgirl Play OuHits Were 4.98 ...................... XJtJ 1 jr. Cornpoppers Set Wes 7.98........................ 4.8t 2 102x138-inch Oval Braid Rugs Ware 29.95 .............19L8t 6 Fireball Express Toy» Wete 9.98'..................... 6^44 11 30x40 Telescope and Tripods Were 7.98, Then 4.44 2.8t 1 2 Speaker Stereophonic Portablo Record Player Was 75.00 ..............................................55.00 2 Easel Style Blackboards Were 3.99.......... ........ IJl All Petite Princes# Fantasy Furniture .............Vi OFF 1 Floor Sample 9x14 Tent Was 67.00 ...................40.00 GAYLORD (AP) - Planners for state government rewgani-xation have received a promise of cooperation from the State Civil Service Commission, meeting Monday at Gaylord. Gov. George Romney last week signed into law a measure lumping the state’s some 130 state agencies Into 19 principal departments. The commission said it would act on requests for exemption of policy-making positions from civil service upm receipt of detailed organization p I from the heads of the new principal departments or special task forces appointed by the governor to create them. The State Constitution permits each new department three positions exempt from civil service, if the commission approves. ASKS FOR PLANS Romney Friday asked lor such plans from 14 of the new agencies by Sept. 1 and asked that five more be set up by task forces by December. Under the former constitution 91 departments employing classified civil service personnel were allowed two exempt positions each- The conunission agreed hold special meetings, needed, to expedite reorganization. ★ ♦ ★ The conunission approved timetable for a sfate agency-wide suggestion award program for the state’s 32,500 classified workers. CASH AWARDS The legislature has approved a 120,000 appropriation for cash awards for time- and money-saving suggestions during the fiscal year. Also approved was a new job safety potion to coordinate state agoicy efforts to reduce on-the-job accidents among state workers. A commission study showed medical and compensation payments for job-mcurred accidents among state workers added up to almost |1 million last year. Marriage licenses Amur $. HMilty, Trey and SMrIty M. Rowley, Rechttler. StewMi B. Woellard, V and Judith $. Keller, Ortc... Jemea E. tova,.Trdy and Beatrice E. Kotlnik!, Troy. Jack 6. AMIer, 3N Ci . tmlth,_F^ale. DoomT'}. ------------------- JImnhr D. Cox, Hi Fourth and Sheila A. Stewart, IW E. Edith. Raymond S. Maiurek, Ann Arbo Jeanette A. Cockle, N4] Shawnee. Martin C. Jacobion, Birmingham and Sharon A. Jaoobion, Birmingham. Dale F. Wolfgram. HemiKk, Ml and Karon B. iSomei, Birmingham. John H. Miller, Bloomfield Hllli Sharon L. Andrews, Birmingham. Roiiart W. Brown, Blmilnghm Sherrie L. Martin, Ml Third. OavM L. Wyman, Royal Oak Judith L. Lowry, S» Roland. , Richard A. Lusky, Farminglon M Claudia J. Waite, Birmingham. Conley T. Day. 1H Ldkeilda an ale M. Mardll. 104 W. Fairmount. OavM O. Ooft, 130 S. TIM*" anO Mary lllades, H S. ------- ------1. carhey, 3J» w, Yale and juoiih E. Groei. Royal Oak. Claude T. McAllitor, 10S Bei Patty R. Herron, 740 E. Beverly. Roger W. Duff, Union Lake and Rote M. Ruttell, Highland. John w. Pittaway. Carol L. LaniottI, 000 ... ..... — Lawrence J. Servello. Walled Lake and Vickie F. Jwwt, unk ' ' Theodore P. Bloch, . — I Percy I, potroH and u. uoimer, jm reiKy-KIhg. Robert R. Bernard. Berkley and Catherine L. Campbell, Troy. Forrett G. Vydick, BloomfleM Hint an Sharon L. Thome, Birmingham. AnPMny W. Chamberlain. Aubur.. Heightt and Henrietta R. Lamp!, Clark- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 27. 1965 KING LEADS MARCH - Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. walks In a crowd estimated at downtown Chicago yesterday to protest aL moire than 10,000 persons who gathered in leged segregation in the city’s schools. Biracial Rights Rally 10,000 March With King in Chicago CHICAGO (AP) - The civil rights anthem “We Shall Overcome” thundered from an estimated 10,000 persons Monday as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., climaxed his three-day Chicago visit with a march to City Hall. Whites and Negroes jammed 1 La Salle Street to hear the integration leader from Atlanta, Ga. The big parade’s rear guard never got past State and Madison streets, four blocks from City Hall. ★ ★» * King arranged to fly to Cleveland, Ohio, today to start a two-day round of appearances similar to the more than 18 street rallies, luncheons, marches and church services at which he appeared from Friday night through Monday in Chicago. The Cleveland visit is the second in a swing of four Northern cities. Philadelphia and Washington will follow Cleveland. DAR.Y MARCHES Monday’s parade 'began in Grant Park on the lake shore, where almost daily marches to City Hall have originated since June 10. The purpose '^of the marches has b^n to demand ouster of Benjamin C. Willis frmn his post as schools superintendent and to force Mayor Richard J. Daley to step into a schools situation which marchers claim is plagued by de facto segregation. The purpose of the march 'Ben Willis must go!” as the marchers shouted it — was the same. But there werd many more than the usual 100-odd dai- nuirchers. King, 36, estimat-^ the marchers at double to triple the 10,000 in a police estimate. ★ w > The police estimate did include the four- and five-deep throngs that lined either side of the broad Loop streets as para-ders filed past 25 abreast. Police said the line stretched eight blocks along the 14-block parade route. Police said the rush-hour parade did not delay traffic seriously and required only one extra detail of policemen on motorcycles. “This march will go down in history as one of the _ marches in our nation,”’ King told the crowd in front of City Hall. The acoustics in the La Salle Street canyon combined with a faulty sound system to make King’s speech a mere crackle of sound, but his listeners applauded and cheered. The biracial march eyojied curious stares from some white bystanders. * 1 “I think it’s silly,” said Raymond E. Parks, 34, on his way to a hospital where his wife gave birth to a baby Saturday. ‘‘I have no sympathy for them.” greatest fHSeorge T. Quebbeman, 39, of suburban Oaklawn, said, *Tve been watching ail the marches, and in this one the people seem better dressed and — for lack of a better word — of a higher class.” ■ * * * It was the first freedom demonstration he had witnessed, said William M. Ward of North Canton, Ohio, “and I’m rather impressed. If I were Mayor Daley, I think I’d take heed of the chant, ‘Mayor Daley must go’.” Daley was in Detroit at the National League of Cities conference. To Have Time on His Hands SELMA, Ala. (iB—TTie official town clock winder soon will find himself with time bn his hands. The clock won’t need winding. ★ ★ ★ , Since 1857, the city has been paying someone to climb the tower stairs at the First Presbyterian Church every week to wind and adjust the town clock. The City Council voted yesterday to install an electrically powered gear system. ’The changeover will cost the city about $1,000—exactly double the amount paid 118 years ago for the original clock. ★ ★ ★ The city at first paid $75 per year to keep the clock wound. The present clock winder, George Bewig, gets $150 a year. U.N. Crisis First Task —Goldberg WASHINGTON (UP!) - The .natkm’l new ambassador to the United NaUons says the first -and probably one of the most formidable — of his tasks will be an effort to resolve the flnancial deadlock which has paralyzed the organization lor nearly a year. Former Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg planned to present his credentiids formally to U.N. Secretary General Thant tomorrow. Goldberg, who was sworn in yesterday at a White House ceremony, said, “The immediate (ask at hand is to resolve me constitutioBal crisis at the United Nations.” He said that the United Na-tifflis money troubles “hover like a spectre over the arena of international politics.” But he added that in a period of disagreement within the world organization there should not be undue pessimism but recognition of the numerous U,N. achievements in Iran, Korea, Suez, the Congo and Cyprus. In addition to the financial deadlock, the 50-year-old onetime labor lawyer also may be called upon in the near future to explain and defend a new and intensified U.S. effort in the Viet Nam War. Because of this, Goldberg has been included among the participants in the recent series of top-level strategy meetings President Johnson has held. As for U.N. finances, it was eltpected that Goldberg’s views on the stalemate probably will be heard Aug. 16 when the United Nation’s 33-member finance committee meets. At present, the United States maintains that under the provisions, of the U.N. Charter Russia, FYance and several other nations owe the world organization $108 million as their share of the cost of peace-keeping efforts in the Congo and elsewhere. The charter says that nations in arrears for two years lose their voting rights. Insurance Policy! i.iSIfftYAniOMBETOPAYl Thot'» why yetTr* wIm to buy IniuronM from oM, tiiM-toitod -smponiti with on henorobb rowrd for paying antiago, Chile, already weakened by the earthquake of last' March, collapsed yesterday under the weight of four straight days of heavy rain. The rains have caused the worst floods to hit Chile in 12 years and have brought misery, heavy damage and isolation to central and southern parts of the country. ” Plans Private School in Selma for Whites Refusing to Integrate SELMA, Ala. (AP) - A private school for white pupils unwilling to go to class with Negroes is being established in the city where the current civil rights struggle in Alabama began. Leaders of a newly formed private school foundation iii Selma have promised to start classes in September in a white-columrted mansion once occu'^ pied by a Confederate Civil War general. They hope the state will foot the bill with tuition grants. But the foundation president, Robert D. Wilkinson, says, “We’re going to have a school whether we get the money or not.” A bill to authorize the use of public funds in any city or county for pupils attending private school is pending in the legislature. $185 A YEAR It would make up to $185 a year available for a child whose assignment to public school would, in the judgment of his parents, be “detrimental io (his) physical or emotional health” or subject the child to “hazards to personal safety.” 'The bill makes no mention of race or color. ★ ★ * Alabama has a tuition-grant law now, but a three-judge federal court has prohibited its u$e. Unlike the pending new measure, the law provides for grants only when public schools have been ordered integrated. k k I Sponsors of the new bill are hopeful the federal .courts will approve the tuition grant plan where no mention is made of segregation. The private school foundation was organized after the Selma School Board had agreed to desegregate the first four grades this fall. THE INTERNATIONAL WHISKY. ___________k drop of the 40% straight whisky in Sir John is 12 years or more old and blended with 60% of the choicest Gram -Neutral Spirits. Eighty proof, Schtinley Distillers Co., N.Y.C, 10-day honeymoon Florida. featuring GAS Quality FURNACE With LIFETIME GUARANTEE HEAT EXCHANGER 71i5ii-Frwkdi,fcK,(| *‘fNI OOOD BU1 *Exciu*ive Greater Oakland County pealer CHANDLER HEATING CO. DC HIGHUND ROAD V2 Mile East of Pontiac Airport SALES IT44411 FHA TERMS NIGHT SERVICE OR S-S0I2 njno to >5,000 IstorZiMl* HOME mortgage I SMALL MONJHIY I ★ CRLDI'T LUL ^ •y.- iNsi’RANCL at NO extra COM ^ Cash tvhen needed! Wilhout oblij!.iliun. and talk with 5lr. Merli: Vo^s or Mr. Kiirknrr. whii liav* bern loaninf; munry t» hundreds of propte in I’onliar during tin- {ui»l JO years. ,kll btsnipw-er» will lesiify i eiMtcfax heavyweight fight in New Orieans. Foster scored a unanitpous decision. See story on page C-4. \ By The Associated Press Swift Maury Wills, leading performer in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Au Go Go, suddenly has found some swinging help. And from a bridge player named Maurice Wesley Parker Hi, no less. ★ ★ ★ Wills stole his 68th and 69th bases of the season Monday night as the National Leagueleading Dodgers stretched their margin to two games with h 5-4 victory over runner-up Cincinnati. Twins 'Killer' Is Back in Old Spot Homers Beat Orioles, 8-2 , Minnesota Extends Ledd in AL By The Associated Press Harmon Kiliebrew is back where he started 11 years ago and big Don Mincher is doing his best to keep the Killer there, w ★ ★ ' Mincher, who reverted to the odd man in Minnesota’s power structure last spring when Manager Sam Mele decided to con-<'ert Kiliebrew into a first base-man, made another bid for steady work Monday night. Mincher laced a three-run first-inning homer that sparked the Twins to an 8-2 victory over Baltimore. f. Kiliebrew, back at third h^se, ' where he played as a rookie with the old Washington Senators in 1954, added his 20th horn- Friendly Home Course Fine for Leader in WMGA Meet There’s no place like home. Playing th^ friendly fairways at Bob O’Link Golf Club, Mrs. Midge Cova fired a 38-37-75 yesterday to take a seven-stroke lead in the Women’s Metropoli-tah Golf Association 54-hole medal play tournament. Mrs. Cova and her husband own the course and she played like she owned it yesterday in easily topping the 12-player field. She posted seven pars on the front side and added four pars and a birdie on the back side over the 6,000-yard course. Mrs. Douglas Graham held Cookie Feuding Again With AFL Denver Team second place with 41-41—82 as the ladies started their second round today. The final round will be played tomorrow. TIED FOR 3RD Mrs. Floyd Cocklin of Birmingham and Mrs. George Schade of Detroit were deadlocked for third place with 84s. Defending champion Mrs. C. ,J. (Bobbie) Miller, who is also a former Pontiac city champion, was 11 strokes off the pace after carding a 47-40—87. Mrs! MIdgt Cova ........... M-37-75 Mrs: Douglas Crahm ........ 41-41—<3 Mrs. Floyd Cocklin 43-41-14 Mrs- George Schade 46-31—14 Mrs Nick Panasluk ........ 43-43-15 From Our News Wires | $500 a day each day after July DENVER, Colo. - Cookie | 1 that he had not signed. He ei as the TTwins stretched their Gilchrist, Afh-Star American j agreed to terms June 23. 1 America League lead to 4M: i Football League fullback and a j Another prominent player to games over the second-place (key in the rebuilding plans for | ’’’to early trouble was John- Orioles. , the Denver Brdncos, now says, j ny Sample, defensive back of ★ ★ * despite signing a contract, he i the Washington Redskins, who The Los Angeles Angels never intended to play in Den-1 was suspended indefinitely by whipped Boston 6-2 behind ver. the National League Club for a George Brunet’s six-hit pitching i The 250-pounder, acquired by senes of training camp viola- . and a four-run eighth-inning the Broncos from the AFL tions. ! rally in the only other AL ac-1 champion Buffalo Bills last win- J e^ stonebreaker of . the tion, i ter, arrived five days late at the ! NFL, s Baltimore Colts escaped j wn-r ncE'E'Dcn Denver training camp and whs | ligDtly compared to the, fate of iNOi unNight Pair Today - NEW YORK (AP) - Detroit Tigers manager Charlie Dres-sen, given ,a team six games over the .500 mark when he recovered from his heart attack, has directed it to within a game of the goal he set when he took over in 1963. The Tigers, who moved into fourth place by taking threl of four games with the Chicago / White Sox this past weekend, were 24-18 under coach Bob Swift. They are 29-22 under Dressen as they face New York for a four-game series starting tonight. Joe Sparma (64) and Hank Aguirre (10-5) are scheduled to meet Whitey Ford (11-8) and Jim Boutin (4-11) in thb twi-night doubleheader tonight. ★ ★ ★ “This team was 14 games under the .500 mark when I took over,” Dressen said. “We finished eight over last year and I want to get to that 14 over mark and tetter If I can.” BEST SINCE 1961 'The Tigers slipped below the ifreak even point only oncesthis year and their 53-40 record is the best since 1961 when they went on to finish in second place. ' * For the most part, the team’s success can be laid to the younger players. ★ ★ ★ Willie Horton leads the league in home rtins and runs batted in and has teen above the .300 mark in hitting lor all but a few days. All Star shortstop Dick McAuliffe is having his test season and leads the team in hits, runs and triples. REVERSED RECORD Hank Aguiire, the oldest player ■ on the team, already has reversed his 5-10 pitching record of 1964. Mickey Lolich, an 18-game winner last year, is 104. Denny McLain, at 21 youngest player on the team,-has won eight straight games to bring his record to 9-3 and Joe Sparma, 23, is 6-3. While individual records be used to explain tte tehm’s success, Dressen feeft overall balance has mhde it a con* tender. When one man is down somebody else always seems to c(nne through to pick him up,” Dressen observes. “You have got to have that to remain in the pennant race.” One indication of this team balance is brought out in the statistics which show nine different players hitting the’ 19 home runs the Tigers have collected in their last seven games. ■k h h Dressen, still somewhat softer spoken and seemingly not as spry, continues to Walk three ndles every day qpder doctors’ orders. He gives no indication of losing his alertness or zest for the game. The Graceful Gliding STAR CAMP niAILER *795 tr ith AU Thete Features . , . • Coppertone sink • Coppertone Ice Box • Built-In CoppGiHine Stove • Foam Mattresses and Cuthiohs • Vinyl Inlaid Throughout • Pre-finished Plywood Interfer • Dinette • Water with“'Galley Pump • Wired for 110 Volts • Sleeps 6 People . - . 4*. tSfc- • ■ Visit Our Factoiy Showroom GOODWILL ‘rr 3491 W. Huron (Just Wost of EHi.ik. M.) Phono FE I-MI4 S«jl3»03W»l THE I^NTIAC PRBSS, ttlRSPAY, JULY 27. 1963 I MARKETS The following are lop prices covering salei of locals grown produce by growow and sold by them in silioiesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of • Monday. Produce MUITI Apples, Dwclieu, bti.,y • Appm, Red Bird, Bw. ■*■■■ Apples, Mclnloeh, C>., txj. Ap^ Red r— Applw, Trem Bleckberritt, IS I. bu. . RupBerrlet, buck, o RupberrUs, red, crt, vioarAOLH ■cera. Breen, tfi....... Beens, Romen, bo........ Beent, wex, bu..... Beets, di- bdis. ....... Beets, tapped, bu....... Broccoli, ds. Cebbege, Curly, bo...... Cebbege, red, bu. S'dS wWU, di. slelks Corn, steeet, 5^i. bu. ....... Cucumbers, dill size, bu. .... Cucumbers, pickle Size, bu. • Ko^reffi' 5!^*’bdtt.. ...... Onions, Breen, di. W.......... Persley, Cwhr. dz. ^s......... Persley, root, di. betis...... pJSpersI'ceyenne, pk. bekt. Pepperv hot, v> bo. .......... Peppers, sweet, t^bu........... Potatoes, new, ................ "i ■J Redlsliee. wnite, )U. belts. Squesn. OelUn, t* bo. ...... Squesh, Summer, Vi bu....... Tomatoes, bskf.............. Turidps, dz. belts. ^....... Turnips, lOBped, bu..... BRatNS cebbege. bo....................»'•“ CoUerdT bu.............. KeU, ................... Mustard, bu............. Sorrel, bu. ............ Spinach, bo; . .... ,« n^ss Chord, bo................. ■« Turnip, bu. ................... Larruca „„ CoUry Cebbeae, dz.............. indIve, bu. ............. Endive, bleached, bu...........z.o Eicerole, bleeched ............ UoPuce, Bibb, pk. bskt, j-g Lettuce, Heef dz. ............ ';S Poultry and Eggs OBTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlces Mid tor No. 1 live poultry; roesters -j5vi-MVi; broKers end Iryers^ Whites »-»Vi. DiTRoirao^ ^ whotos^ *5!yH2 ?rlS T&rS IXeTi; %nSJ5!;s®^ 51 dimes unquoted; checks Jt. CHICAOO POULTRY .♦5risi:iss.u45Q IDI Ibi 1I.7H».7$; l»ars UMWIAQS CattU 10,500; calves »; *l»^*»r ‘•jjr* im SokrtSO-UlO lbs M.25-1LH;,^ M.7S-14.7S; standard and low good 11.00-n.O0^ three kteds high chotee s"d K'lS tco-l/OSO lb »'“V:l«r oackaoe priirte 1,000 lbs 10.00. 7«teep 100; spring slaughter li iteedy to 50 hlglter; few lots choice pi^ tO-lM lb spring slaujahler I; &J0: choice 00-110 lbs 10«-J5“i to good shorn sleughler ewes 5:(XW ORTROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)^USDA)-CeWU 2^ most choice tOO-IMO pound steers 15.00- TS;MrUr's.S?rS'5^1?f5* • «2Sl,’iSf’'i5»;’'^i*^"'u"»;’ lOO-MO pounds U >' 300-400 tbs sows M.50-13.15. 1|!oO-*M.W; ”good'^JMB.?0;"™* stenderd **iSi^^0O0i choice and prime spring lambs 05-100 pounds good e^ choice sprlnB^ambe ^50-11.50; cull

I S $ 5 - 15 3IVO 3010 MW .. 5 1510 1510 1510 -1 lO'O M<0 MVO -3 310 310 3Vb - 13 1410 )4'0 I4'« . Mead'John .40 it itlo itw itie .. Mich Sugar .lOg I 4<0 410 4o 4>0 Peneat Pet It I'o 11* 1’* - V Scurry Rem 4 I«0 14S* 1«» - 1. Sbd W Air 3S no IVi IVO -I- VO ggul OIIA la 7 ^ in* 15Vi -I- 1* Ary R art IN MO «0 41* -h 10 Stmtex cp JOe 14 TMO 77'* 7710 -I- Tachnioel .75 If 171* 17 17 _ On Control jg 1 MO MO 410 .. ........**^'*''*tS 15 uSilT i54'”i«5 *5 Stocks ...................M0AS-«.« rBSid. .................... l< Higher grade reUs ...... M.lt-O.n II Second grade relle .... !l-fS-t r 10 Public otHHIee ........ S StriL M induatrUle ............ *l.»l+gjl Irregularly Higher Trend Defense Stocks Move Ahead NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market showed an Irregularly higher trend in slack early trading today. Gains of fractions to a point among key stocks outnumbered losers in the same range. Defense - oriented stocks continued to move up, but progress was uneven as some profits were taken on their rise of Monday. As expectations of a tougher policy on Viet Nam continued to dominate Wall Street, AVCO spurted 1% to 23% on an opening block of 18,000 shves. AVCO, which makes helicopter engines, was the most acitive stock Monday. AVCO trimmed its price in active later dealings. Defense-oriented Fairchild Camera also was briskly traded and gained a fraction. General Dynamics rose % to 43% on a block of 10,000 shares. Douglas Aircraft (ex dividend) rose nearly a point and United Aircraft was unchanged while Boeing was off about a point as traders tixdc profits on recent strength. ★ ★ w Ahead about a point were Anaconda, Kennecott, Xerox, U.S. Smelting, Zenith and Jones & Laaghlin. Motors and steels were a little higher on balanoe. Rails improved slightly. Little change was diown by oils, airlines, farm implements and tobaccos. Building materials declined. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: Chrysler, up % at 45% on 4,800 shares; Fairchild Camera, up % at 54% on 2,000; and Standard Oil (New Jersey,j^ unchanged at 75% on 1,500. w ★ ★ Monday, the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks rose .2 to 319.3. ^ Prices were irregularly higher on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API-FOttOWlng la U. iSS!) High Luw Lktl cm! Abbott Lab 1 2 «« 43V* 431*-(-ft ABC Con .70 1 JO » 50 . ■ ■ ACF ind 3* 5 74 74 74 V* laa 1.40 I 4414 441* 4414 ral 21 271* 27W 371* lad 5.50 3 401* 40V* 4» , Pw“?.ol I ni* ^ SiS ... 1 741* 741* 741* — V* 10 511* 51V* 511* 25 25H 55V* 531* ..... j f??k 4?i* j 2; IntNtek 5.50d —lapor 1.50 T5.T 1.20 jonLo^n ^.W WL. - BrMMy 1.20 BinnawICk --- Erlo 2 Co .M I .4tt nd L60 ftit I I* -I- 1* * -r V* 30 11* IH 1** . 34 341* 34V* 341* + 2 33'* 33'* 331* - 137 7r* 7«* 7M* - —- 411* 411* - 5 r Cal Pock .W CotlotiM .311 ColumH .W CtmpRL .45a Comp Sp .00 ^rnPoT'l.Joo CaroPLt 1.W Corrior 1.30 CortarW .40o Cafor Trac 1 _____*fn«'’.30 l:S Cart-taad .70 CaianaA 1.30 CblMIl SIP 1 CbRIPac 5Sp ChrlaCrft .Ut Chryslar 1b CIT pm 1.40 emoa Sv 2.10 ClavEMII 1.44 -oeaCola 1.70 :olg Pal .00 :oinnRad .50 :BS 1.20b :ol Gas 1.20 Jol Picl .001 ComlCra 1.H C^Solv 1.50 ComwEd 1.10 CofTEdla 1.10 ConElacInd 1 CnNGas 2.M ConiPow 1.N Containr 1.20 Cont Air .M -ContCan 2.40 Ins 2.40 ____OH 5.40 Control Data t ft I* + '* 10 53 251* 251* .. 34 34'/* 331* 331*- 1 201* 501* 201* .. 2 531* 531* 531* -I- 24 ao M1*30- - 3 I0<* WV* 001* -f 1* 5 251* 281* 2I1* - ft x3 41 48 M - V 40 35'* 35 35'* -1-1 1 111* 151* 151* ... 15 33 33 U + V 4 30'* 20'* 20'* -I- V. 1 23H 231* 23H - Ml 1 13 13 13 ■ 00 451* 451* 451* 2 321* 321* 331* 13 70 701* 70 5 301* 301* 30'* 2 7«V4 7*'* 7*'* 7 321* 32'* 321* 00 201* 20V* 201* . 4 341* 341* 34'* -P 1* II ^ 441* 4 15 431* 43V* 4 13 Ml* 28H 2 2 721* 721* ) 52’* 52'* - ' 31 341* 341* : I SC* 501* i 1 23<* 22V4 2 32 35 341* 2 5 411* 411* 4 2 401* 40H 4 I 24<* 24<* 2 12 171* 171* 1 I 25'* 2SV* 2 ■ : : fSin I 341* - V* . MV, -I- V* OtltaAIr LM DanRioGW 1 DatEdls 1.30 Dat Staal .48 DIM. Aik J ------1.80b Drasaar liO duPont 2.50d OynamCp .M East Ah’ LIn EastGF 2.47t l:SnWi.-5 EdgeGG .Ita ElBondS 1.SS I 35H 35% 35H . X5I gH 2% 7 3m im i 333 231% 4 9% 9% —E— #» 57 54% 1 93% 93% ErieLack RR ^vansPd .45d St! I 401* - 1* I 221* -f 1* I. MV) + V*, I 01* + 1* I 441* -t-U FaIrCam .500 17 55 541* 541* 1 Fairch Hlllar 77 ll* II* M* -f V Fantlael Mat 2 14 14 14 -I- 1 Fadd Corp I S 101* lOH 10.1* .... FadDStr 1.50 10 711* 711* 7IH FadMoglOO 11 34 351* 351* . .. =-----— > 5 2)1* 51V* 51MT-V 5 11'* 18V* 111* 3 101* 10 •"" ■ ■ - 741* 74H . 51H 51 511*/-l- 1 ______ 5 101* low 10V* -♦■ 1 Ford Mot 2 31 55H 55>* 524* + 1 Fdro Dolr .50 2 151* 111* IM* -F 1 FarroCorp 1 FalChrt 1 " Fraapt $ i FruahCp 1 8Sd^’? GanEtK 3.30 Gen Foods 3 GonMltti 1,40 s Wt rji GanTalLEI I GonTIra .40 GaFacMIc lb Glllatta 1.10a GtaiAld .58a Goadrch IM 1 401* «M* 401* f W M 051* 051* 051* -f 1* 2 20H 201* 201* -f \* 7 « 50* 4 -0 1* 3 341* 341* 341* - W 33 301* M