Tnt Wnathnr V4> Waatktr UNH nwfl THE PONTIAC PRESS Homo Edition VGL# 124 — TO. 62 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1066 —TO PAGES 2 Found Slain in Detroit Bar DETROIT UP) — A man and a woman bound and shot to death in a near north day, 10 blocks from another bar where t a woman were found slain in February. The killer ojr killers bound and shot the victims ait both bars. Two unidentified men were reported the last patrons of both bars. In both instances the victims included the bar porters. Ann Slazenger, 45, night barmaid and daughter • of the owner, and Edmund Thompson, 48, p or ter, bpth of Detroit, were found slain today at the Verdi Bar. The bodies were discovered by the owner, Helen Bells, and an early morning patron. Mrs. Bells said alarmed when her (ailed to return werk and Abductors Shoot; Free Caterer County's Equalized Value Should Stand Vance* Feats, chairman of the equalisation committee el' the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, said today that the estimated county equalised value figure •( $2.(8 billion previously projected iu tji• county’s tentative 1M7 budget should stand up. A breakdown of the county’s equalised valuation per mu-nicipaiity will be ready Friday, Foots said. Current county equalised value is «LM billion. In Today's Press Snwnr Pact City gets revised agreement on Galloway system - PAGE B-0. Wings Win Triumph over Black Hawks puts Detroit in Stanley Cup finals—PAGE-E-l. Stain fishing New series examines industry’s fight for life — PAGE D-2. Area News .........A-4 Astrology ..........E4 Bridge .............E4 China Series ........ B4 Crossword Puzzle ... F-7 Comics ..............E-8 Editorials A-6 Food Section, 1M, D4, D-ll ...E-U ....F-l E-l—E-4 E4 99 Earl .......F-V The dead woman on the floor of a Thompson was found in a rest room. * * * Police said the bar safe was open, Thompson’s pockets were turned inside out and Mrs. tnger’s purse had been emptied. MONEY MISSING It was not immediately determined how much money was missing. * * * Police said the slayings were similar to the February murders of two men and a woman at the Miami Bar, also on the city’s near north side. ★ h dr Homicide Inspector Robert Grindall said police were working on the asumptkm that the same killer or killers pulled both Jobs. TWISTED NEIG view shows the Overland Put, Kan., neighborhood which was struck by a tornado yes-' terday. The funnel skipped by the toemen- Damage Tops $1.5 Million tary school at lett ana nit me the street. An estimated two were destroyed or damaged. Fierce Spring Storm Slackens By the Associated Press A cold and violent spring ,tSi storm-related auto crashes in Colorado and Wyoming and at tag Mjity after of the West, northern Plains and the midlands. It brought snow, frost and freezing temperatures, hail, rain, strong winds and tornadoes that caused damage in sees* of |1.5 million. Three men were killed in least five persons suffered mi- About six hours later, a ter nor Injuries in a tornado. A residential seetlua of Overhaul leak, Kan., a suburb Just ssuthwsst of Kansas City, Me., mi Ae Valley View sub-dfvlitieuef Lombard, HI., west of Cbfcafn, suffered extensive damage iron ft* tornadoes Showers Forecast for Tonight Showers and thundershowers forecast for tonight will give that new grass seed a good soaking, just right for sprouting. Rainfall is expected to end to-' morrow. Temperatures will (mikl with lows of 65 to M tonight and -highs of 65 to64 tomorrow, then become cooler. Showers durinir the daV and night yesterday measured .1 of minch. Friday’s outlook is partly cloudy and cooler. Southerly morning winds at 16, to 96 miles per hour will shift to northwest tomorrow. A balmy 60 was the low recording .prior to 6 a.m. in down-Pootiac. The mercury had zoomed ub to 75 bv 2 p.m. per cant damage and .16 others were destroyed. nado struck Lombard’s Valley View subdivision. There were no known injuries. Most of tim homes damaged or destroyed hi Overland Park and the Lombard area were valued at $25,000 to $00,600. Odter tornadoes touched d of north Iowa the damage at- over $1 million, said 35 bouses suffered up to 50 danger of staking. Freighter Is Aground South of Miami in rural areas of oorA Iowa. Thousands in the metropolitan rea of Kansas City, Mo. watched a slender funnel that dangled ominously from a dark, swift moving cloud and was brilliantly outlined by a sunny sky near the herison. There were ho deaths. Five persons suffered minor injuries. PoUoe Chief J«im Kenyon of -Overland who Wthtiatort men were aboard the ship or MIAMI (CPI) - Ar unidentified freighter, described as being. in the 417-feet Liberty class was bard aground on Ajax Reef1 23 miles South of Miami in heavy seas, the Coast Gttar ItacL Gum rpcm did not know how many crew- Ground breaking for the ♦2.1-million children’s hospital ai Pontiac State Hospital waa eld at 1:30 pm. today. The new facility, scheduled for completion in September 1967, will contain 60 beds. It wfil Be located west of the main hospital. To be known as Center, the new hospital will provide a comprehensive treatment program for emotionally disturbed children. The present children’s faculties in tiie main hospital complex, hospital officials said, are extremely crowded and fail to provide a suitable therapeutic environment. ■ * The new building will provide four 20-bed residential units for hoys and girls under age 17 as well as day care facilities for another 40 children. DAY CARE Day care facilities wiU essentially service the immediate Pontiac ahd Oakland County area as these children wiU be at the only during regular school hours. The administration wing of tho new facility will accommodate most of the profosiiou-al staff. Dr. Jamas W. Johnson, presently director of Pontiac State Hospital’s Child Psychiatry Dewill be director of the children's facility which wiU function as a division of the state hospital. ' ★ : Dr. Charles Hoyt wiU head the adolescent section of the new facUity and Dr. Lorraine Awes wiU d ir ect the day care pro-gram. EXISTING FACILITIES Fairlawn Center will complement existing dtikbea’e faculties at Pontiac Statu Hospital „ ■■MMI -r <* MPmM*m, whether it was in Immediate fbd tiiat Fairlawn Center Wffl | (Continued on Page % Cto;: mam Man'Serious' I* ROBERT B. ROSENBERG City Blames Waterford for Talk Delay Pontiac city officials claimed last night any delay in arranging a meeting between Waterford Township and the city to discuss pollution problems was the fault of the township. Mayor WilUam H. Taylor Jr. charged that meetings have been set up and twice delayed by the township. “We’re still waiting for them to indicate a time for a meeting. I’m sure we can work this out with the township,’’ said Taylor. A “we are avaUabto” letter was ordered sent to township officials by the City Com-misttee. The ’ com miss ton. action and Taylor’s comments came in reply to public comments by town-stop officials over the city’s request last week for a report on township efforts to combat pollution in the West End Storm Drain. ’>• a They got the report, but township officials let it be known they were Irked at the asking. Township Trustee William Dean Jr complained Monday, “They (city commishtoner*) haven’t found time to meet with us on mutual pkreiUema." The city had indicated concern over township pollution of (Continued on Page 2,425#4) After Surgery Loft by Kidna|»or» Near Ohio Border ERIE (AP) — Missing South-field caterer Robert, B. Roaen-berg, freed by abductors suer, pected of haying, robbed tom,, staggered into a motto near the Ohio border eaHy today with a gunshot wound in his back. State Police said Rosenberg, well-to-do 32-year-old father of four who vanished Good Friday, had been shot and dumped from his captors’ car. A 22-caliber revolver, which police said could have been used iu an attempt to kill Rosenberg, was found net far from the metel. Rosenberg, incoherent after collapsing at the motel, underwent surgery at Mercy Hospital in Monroe. Sr ■ ★ ‘ The operating surgeon, Dr. D. W. Douglas of Monroe, said Rosenberg had been shot only hours beforehand by a small-caliber gun. Roeehberg’s condition was described as “Serious but not critical.” Police organised an immediate search for abductors who, they said, may have into Ohio. The FBI kept in touch with state and local policed Rosenberg, last beard front in a mystifying telephone call tp Us home, walked dazedly to the Silver Blue Motto on Telegraph Road at 1:96 a.m. The motel contacted police, wg doubt Q& Edmund Burke of the Erie Stole Polka post said there wasn’t any doubt” that Rosenberg had been a victim of ab- Burke said Rosenberg had narks in Ms wrists aid J’a wife, Joyce, 96, from the family none to the Monroe hospital upon being Mqnatd by police. ' * « • Only yesterday Rrs. Rosenberg had expressed fear her husband had met with foul plly. (Continued oh Page 2, Col. 8) A portion of the Cranbrook Academy of Art buBdlnp can he seen at the extreme ritft. Cranbrook School, opened hi lMf, now has an enrollment of 300. With classes averaging IS students, u-annroox instructors stress mmviouni mw • tion gened to preparation for college. The Qrqggpook buildings were designed by the late Eliel Saarinen. r" A—2 THE P0N1IAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, U.S. Planes Bomb Closer to Key Port of Haiphong SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. Navy bombers edged closer to Haiphong Tuesday in the third straight day of raids on North Viet Nam's vital Red River Delta, blasting a railroad bridge 19 miles north of the country’s chief port A U.S. spokesman said one span of the bridge was destroyed. Four Soviet-built surface-to-air missiles were fired at the attackers but missed their ( marks, the spokesman reported today. Three other U.S. Jets were lost elsewhere over North. Viet Nam in the past 24 hours, raising the number of American planes shot down since the raids began IS months ago to 213. One of the pilots was rescued in a blase of enemy fire. The other two were presumed captured or dead. kkk In the south, Viet Cong raiders damaged two big U.S. Air Force Hercules troop transports in a hit-and-run attack on a More Political Strife in S. Viet Predicted Washington (ap) retary of Defense Robert S," McNamara predicted today that more internal political turmoil probably is ahead in South Viet Nam. He told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that Viet Nam, like other underdeveloped nations, is undergoing “a period of birth pains.” ' w\ * * “I can’t predict when Viet Nam will shift from an unstable set of political institutions to stable set,” he testified. But he said South Viet Nam took one step in that direction when the government and its critics agreed to hold elections. WON’T BE USED " McNamara said American troops would not be used to try to stop the Communist • Viet Cong if they seek peacefully to participate in the elections. But he said it was “not conceivable to me that the Viet Cong will try to participate.” ★ ★ When pressed by Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., about what action would be taken if the Viet Cong did seek to take part in the elections, he said: “I am sure the government of Viet Nam will welcome them as voters and we wifi do nothing to prevent that.’’ U.S. GOAL He added that the American goal in Viet Nam is to let the people choose the kind of political and economic institutions they want McNamara said Communist forces in South Viet Nam are taking their orders “not only day to day but hour to hour’’ from Hanoi. * y *' ★ The Vietnamese war, be said, stems from flagrant Communist aggression and intervention. He offered that description of the Asian struggle after Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., asked whether U.S. treaty commitments cover intervention in a civil war. STRONGLY DISSENT McNamara said if Fulbright was implying the Vietnamese struggle is a civil war “I strongly dissent.” “That is one of the most fla- grant cases of outside intervention and. outside aggression in the past decade,” he said. ★ _ * k McNamara said that before U.S. combat troops were sent into South Viet Nam thousands of Communist North Vietnamese had infiltrated Into the south. Today, McNamara said, 20, 000 or more North Vietnames fighting men are in South Viet Nam. McNAMARA TESTIFIES McNamara testified before television cameras and a capacity crowd in support of the administration’s $917-million military assistance program. The bilLdoes not include military aid for South Viet Nam. That is part of the defense budget McNamara told the committee the nation’s military strength is so great it has been possible to commit 325,000 men to the Viet Nam war without calling up reservists or controlling the economy. He added: ★ k k “No other nation in history has ever been so strong. McNamara’s appearance came a day after Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirk-said House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford “went pretty far” when Ford charged the administration with “shocking mismanagement” of the war. “In what respect is it shocking?” Dirksen asked at a news conference yesterday. “Who are the shocker*?” Dirksen also said “Yon don’t demean the chief magistrate of your country at a time like this when the war is on. You stand up and be counted.” Ford had no comment oi Dirksen’s statements, but told a newsman, he thinks “we’ve got McNamara on the run." McNamara did not elaborate in his testimony on the 325,000 figure. But he evidently meant the 240,000 U.S. servicemen ,in Viet Nam, some 60,000 with 7th Fleet ships operating off Viet Nam, some 13,000 in Thailand and thousands of others on Guam where B52 bombers are stationed. Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Showers and thunderstorms and continued mild today, highs <6 to 74. Occasional showers and thunderstorms tonight with little temperature change, lews 55 to 69. Thursday, showers ending and turning cooler, highs » to 64. Southerly winds 19 to 29 miles today and tonight shifting to northwest Thursday, Friday: partly doady and. cooler. small airfield In the central highlands but caused no casualties. Officials said the four-engine planes could be repaired. LITTLE CONTACT Allied forces reported little other contact with the Communists as the lull in the ground War. continued. Only South Korean forces reported a brush of * any significance, in a sweep on the central coast. A grenade thrown by a motorcyclist wounded a Vietnamese woman and two children on I" Saigon street tonight. Police said the target apparently was a small U.8. billet, but the grenade exploded in an alleyway instead, The terrorist escaped. rk , k k ■' Political turmoil continued in /the northern part of the country despite the truce between the government and Buddhist leaders. An estimated 3,000 Roman Catholics marched on the outskirts of Da Nang, charging the , Buddhist antigoverameat “struggle committee” in the northern city with responsibility for a grenade blast that wounded Mur persons Monday night. Two of the injured were -Catholics. In Quang Ngal, 99 miles south of Da Nang, a mysterious explosion Tuesday at the headquarters of the Viet Nam National People’s party killed three persons and wounded four after a clash between armed Buddhists and supporters of the Conservative party. The raid near Haiphong followed up an attack by Navy bombers on the Uong Bi power plant 14 miles northeast of the city Monday night. On Sunday Air Force fighter-bombers hit two missile sites, 15 and 17 miles sduth of Hanoi, and knocked out a major highway bridge linking Haiphong and Hanoi, 60 miles to the west. ★ k k ■ The Navy pilots returning from the new raids on the Hai- phong-Hanoi area reported that highway traffic between the cities had been virtually halted, . tin spokesman said. . * • k » * Other Air Force and Navy jets battered a wide range of communication targets up and down the North Vietnamese panhandle. Pilots reported butting roads in 19 places, cratering a river ford, destroying gn antiaircraft position and a highway bridge and blasting four truck parks. _______ Area Accidents Fatal to Two Man Killad in Troy, Boy Dios in Shalby A Royal Oak man was killed in a two-car collision yesterday on South Boulevard near Liver-nois in Troy. Virgil E. Laz- TAKE OVER CONSULATE -- Indonesian students, shown hauling away mattresses atop a car, yesterday ransacked and occupied the deserted Red Chinese consulate in Jakarta. They said the Jakarta military com- mand had given them permission to use the consulate as a headquarters. Seizure of the consulate building was the second anti-Chinese action in four dayd. The Chinese embassy was ransacked last Friday. Man Held in Attack on Woman A /43-year-old Pontiac Township woman was beaten, cut on face, and raped yesterday in her home, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s officers. Sheriff’s detectives said a suspect in the assault was appre-lended later yesterday and is being held for questioning gt the county jail. The victim, who lives alone and is unmarried, is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Detective Alphonse Anderson said, however, the woman was still in a state of shock and unable to give information other than her own name. * * - * Pontiac Patrolman Charles A. Lindeberg, who arrested the suspect at. North Perry and Walton about 4 p.m., said the man bore scratch marks on both arms. FINDS SHOTGUN In addition, Lindeberg said he found a 16-gauge shotgun underneath a blanket in the rear of the car and a 38-caliber starter’ pistol in the glove compartment. Deputies who answered the call said they found the back door window of the victim’s home broken out. Entering the home, they discovered the victim bound with clothes line, her face bloodied. Telephone wires to the home had been cut, and a butcher knife and pocket knife were lying on the floor near the victim, according to deputies. the county storm drain that feeds into the city’s Crystal Lake. Untreated waste water and septic tank effluent from a portion of the township is the target of the city. k . k k An existing agreement with the township calls for this era section in the township to have sanitary sewers and for the city to treat the sewage. 2 MILES OF SEWERS The township reported that plans for the roughly two miles of sewers are 70 per cent complete. Prompted by questions, City Engineer Joseph E. Neipling said sewers in the West End Drain area would complete work under an agreement that saw such work begin nearly 29 years ago, Neipling also said that the entire pollution problem of Crystal Lake would not be solved, but that the bulk of the problem would be. * * ★ “There are other elements," Hospital Drive to End Today The closing dinner and final report meeting of the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund Campaign will be at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pontiac Elks Temple.-More than 400 volunteers are expected to attend and hear the results of their efforts in behalf of the NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers will spread from the lower Mississippi Valley into New England tonight. It wifi be cooler in the central part of the nation and milder in the Southeast and in the Plateau statue and northern Plains. The campaign started nearly a year ago. Since then, more than 1,090 workers from the Pontiac area have participated in the drive by serving ea various committees. Presiding at tonight’s meeting will be E. M. Estes, a General Motors vice president and general manager of the Chevrolet Motor Division. He formerly hedded the Pontiac Motor Divi->ion. Estes, who will call upon committee chairmen for final reports, said he expected that the minimum goal of $3.25 million would be exceeded. Stall Blamed on Waterford (Continued From Page One) said Neipling, “but this will help isolate remaining problems.” STRONG STAND The city engineer added that there was every evidence that the township Was taking a strong stand on the need for sewers. Neipling also disclosed that the city has not yet initiated investigation of the separate problem of alleged pollution of the north side of Sylvan Lake He said the city was charged with the responsibility of investigating Sylvan Lake pollution from storm drain outlets from Pioneer Highlands subdivision, located west of Telegraph. '•* , * k Preliminary tests in the fall of 1964 and early 1965 showed some pollution from three drain outlets along James K at Tilden, Josephine and James K Court. The initial tests by the city showed the foreign matter in Sylvan Lake might be worse than those found in the city’s Crystal Lake. Work Is Begun Today on State Hospital Facility (Continued From Page One) provide a program in child psychiatry comparable to any in the nation when planned staff increases are realized. Participants in the brief ground-breaking ceremony were hospital officials, representatives. of various organizations devoted to helping children, city and county officials and representatives of the State Department of Mental Health. Waterford Girl Hit by Car Said Critical A 6-year-old Waterford Township girl was critically injured yesterday when struck by in front of her home at 777 Scott Lake. "■k ★ . ★ Scheduled to undergo surgery today in Pontiac General Hospital is Gwen Lewallen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walton Lewallen. ★ k k According to the driver of the car, Twylah J. Kugler, 35, of 1415 Hira, Waterford Township, the girl was standing alongside the road, then suddenly ran into the street. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The board of education last night awarded a $195,672 contract for 31 new school buses and paved the way for the letting of construction bids on a new elementary school. Birmingham Area News Pontiac Firm* Awarded Contract for 31 Buses arus, 69, died after his car collided .with driven by Hector M. Couvreuer, 68, of G r o s s e Pointe farms. Couvreuer is > fair condition and his passenger, Mrs. Elizabeth Cote, 49, of St. Clair Shores is in satisfactory condition at St. Joseph. Mercy Hospital. ■tyoy Police are still investigating the accident. In a Shelby Township accident last night one boy was killed and four others injured in a Arrival of the new buses, ex-two-car collision at 23 Mile and pec ted before the start of the Mound. ! 1966-67 school year, will raise -Mark Campagna, 13, of 3139 Bloomcrest died several hours after the car in which he- was riding collided with a car driven by George A. Hiveley of 50505 Shelby, Shelby Township. Township police said Mark’s father, Orazio P. Campagna, was driving a group of Boy Scouts home after a meeting when the accident occurred. Admitted to St. Joseph’s Hospital, Mount Clemens, where Joseph Fiore, 13, of 53910 Sophia, Utica, Randy Kush, 12, and his brother Philip, 11, both of Bruce Hill, Shelby Township. A fifth boy, Timothy Rohr, 11, of 3282 Lakeside, Shelby Township as treated and released. Hiveley, his daughter, Cindy and wife, Barbara were also treated and released. Police said the accident is still under investigation. 2 in City Head Penal Group Two Pontiac-based men have been named to head the Michi-g a n. Corrections Assocation, which concluded its annual three-day convention in Grand Rapids today. Theodore W. Bly, senior parole agent was elected association president last night, succeeding Joseph DeAgostine of Detroit Morris Shaw, district supervisor of probation in Pontiac, was named vice president. Both have offices at 5819 W. Huron. Bly lives in St. Clair Shores, and Shaw, at 6353 Canmoor, Troy. M e r W i n S. Kircher, deputy warden of Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson, was named secretary, and parole officer Theodore Koehler of Lansing was elected treasurer. The school buses , will be purchase d from Matthews-Har-greaves Chevrolet Co. of Pontiac, lowest of five bidders. Cost of th« vehicles will be carried on a title-retaining contract with one-quarter of thp total cost being paid each year for four yean. In purchasing the buses, the school board is replacing nearly one-half of its transportation fleet. The order includes 25 replacements and six additional buses. W. Bloomfield Firemen Stay on Their Jobs West Bloomfield Township firemen remained on the job today despite a threat to walk out at noon if their demands for higher wages were not met. * * * ■ The five full-time firemen and 11 volunteers who issued the ultimatum have scheduled meeting with the township fire committee at 7:30 p.m. next Tuesday, according to their attorney, Frederick Evans of Keego Harbor. They’ll remain at their posts at least until next Wednesday, Evans said. The firemen are asking a salary increase from $5,909 to $6, for men with two years’ service. Revision of the pension plan is also under discussion, according to Evans. k k k The attorney said the fire committee is scheduled to present the firemen’s demands to the full Township Board tonight. LESS THAN $6,009 These men don’t want to re-ji,” Evans said, “but yo can’t expect a man to raise a family on less than $6,009 in this day and age." k k k Evans was optimistic about the chances for a settlement, saying that he believes the committee is bargaining “in good faith.” * * * Township voters April 4 defeated a two-mill proposal which would have provided additional funds for the fire and police departments. Senate OKs Vehicle Check LANSING (UPIMpot motor vehicle checks by State Police troopers on Michigan tyghways may be in the offing if a bill authorizhjg such checks can pass the House and get approval of Gov. Romney. The measure cleared the Senate yesterday with unanimous, 29-0, approval Under provisions of the bill state policemen would be authorized to step aiy motor vehicle eo Michigan highways and make checks for working brakes, lights, flasher signals and safe tires. Sol Stanley Rozycki, D-De-troit, sponsor of the bill and chairman of the Senate Highway Committee, called the measure a “key to the traffic safety campaign." support for a compulsory motor vehicle inspection. However, such tests according, to some senators, would be too costly, about $19 for each inspection. Another bill, closer analysis of traffic accident reports, also passed. The bill would require all police agencies throughout- the state to report traffic accidents on a uniform reporting form to State Police headquarters in East Lansing. The Mil passed, 394, and went to the House. k k k' Another attempt was expected today to win approval for a measure to. protect motorists whose insurance .companies became insolvent by allowing them to draw on the uninsured motor vehicle accident claims fund. The protection would only be allowed until the motorists obtains insurance coverage with another firm.. The Senate also passed a bin, 36-1, makiag it a felony subject to a possible fear-year jail sentence to strike a policeman. The measure cleared the Senate over the objections of three lawmakers who argued the same penalty should be leveled i o protect a citizen ’ ‘rough-em-up" tactics by policemen. * * k "There’s nothing more reprehensible than striking a policeman,'’ said Sen. Basil Brown, D-Highland Park. He said such action was a “slap in the face” to law and order. AMENDMENT FAILS But, tye added, “it is equally reprehensible” for a policeman to strike a citizen. He offered an amendment to the bill to also make it a felony for a policeman to strike a citizen. The amendment failed. Preliminary approval also was given to a scries of bfib er system. One measure would abolish the elected county coroner system and require physicians be appointed to the posts as medical examiners. ★ k k Two bills exempting the Public Health Department from liable suits also were passed. r, the bills do not apply where “the damages were sustained as a result of negligence by the health officer” mid other health department riq-ployes. the school system's total number of vehicles to 64. FINAL PLANS The board last night also approved final plans for a new three-upit elementary school designed by Linn Smith Associates of Birmingham. With capacity for 159 youngsters, the school is to be built on the south side of Long Lake Road across from Kirk-in-the-Hills. Expected to cost $1,996,900, the unit is to be completed by June 1967. j *_______k______— Bidding information on the building will be released next week. BH)S EXPECTED are expected to be awarded in the near future on both the new elementary school and the district’s second high school, to bo constructed on Lahser. These two buildings, along with a new bus garage which is now on the drawing boards, will use up the last of the funds in a $7.6-million building package approved by district \ property owners in 1964. As those funds are used, school officials will begin to put to work portions of the 811-million bond issue approved earlier month. Man Turns Up Shot in Back (Continued From Page One) Her last word from him had been a telephone call from him! the night of his disappearance in which she said he told of being “held” but cautioned her not to call police. FOUR CHILDREN The Rosenbergs have four children. Tbe family lives in a $35,000 home in Southfield. Rosenberg owns Rosenborg's Holiday Catering of Oak Park, CpL Burke said Rosenberg was incoherent when police reached him at the motel. However, he told of being ‘kidnaped and shot and tied up and blindfolded,” Burke said. He collapsed upon entering the motel, Burke said. •* * * The motel is near Temperance and miles north of the Ohio line. The motel manager, Robert Kiermaier, said he was locking up for the night when Rosenberg staggered up the driveway. \ . "I thought he had been hit by a car,” IQarmaier said. “Then he mumbled that he thought he had been shot and asked us to call police.” \ A nurse at the hospital said Rosenberg appeared confused and told her he had been robbed by his kidnapers of a payroll of between $299 and $509 which he was carrying. . \ Mrs. Rosenberg said yesterday; she was breaking a pledge of secrecy to the FBI in disclosing details of her husband’s disappearance. * k k I Three days after the caterer’s disappearance, Detroit police found his convertible car near the downtown Detroit district. Rosenberg’s empty wallet and papers ware found strewn in the car. Municipal Employat Union Saaks Election City Manager Joseph A. Warren disclosed last night that the Pontiac Municipal Employes Association has filed with the State Labor Mediation Board for representative election. The association seeks is represent salaried employes. OneDay i a bargain so Simms is having a 12-hour ana-day sola. Sa taka advantage of those specials iriy tomorrow. No shopping trip downtown is complete without a visit to Simms. And wo lasorva Durable plastic pail with pouring spout for cars, etc. Bail handle. Limit 2. I BaH P®urt 15* Boys’ Short Sleeve Sport Shirts H First Mtrilihr 1rnltnn innrt skirts nrints strings nnrl rkorlt < P Electric Power Saw 'De-Welx' 7*power saw powered by General Electric motor, develops-up to 2 H.P. 5000 MM, 10 amps. Hardware—2nd floor Set of four, matchstik place mots and four coffee mugs. Blue design. Limited supply. Housewares—2nd Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS* WEDNESDAY, APEIL SO, 1986 WASHINGTON CAP) - Sen. Everett M. Dtrksen predicts victory in • Senate vote today on his reapportionmont proposal aimed at skirting the Supreme Court's one man, one vote ruling. But opponents predict defeat for the proposal. At stake is Dbrksen's proposed constitutional amendment under which one house of a state legislature could be apportioned on MARRYING KIND — Eric Tomb, 20, of Cleveland is one of 13 eager Harvard University students lined up for interviews with a Radcliffe coed who says she wants to got married for one year to escape dormitory Ufa. The coed nude the proposal in the classified section of the Harvard Crim- Coed Seeking Hubby for Year CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) The Harvard boys are lining up for interviews with a Radcliffe girl who says she wants to get married for one year to escape dormitory life. Only married students at Radcliffe College can live off campus, so to get around foe regulation she has placed this advertisement in the Harvard Crimsoo: "One-year marrige? Seems te be the only way far e Cliffie to get out of the dorm. I’ll share expenses, am a goad cook. Other details? We can work H sat. Coetact Crimson Boot 2MI.” So far 13 eager boys have snapped at the offer to try to work odt foe terms of foe proposed one-year marriage. Richard Appleby, 20, of Great Neck, N.Y., replied by mail, "You sound interesting; Maybe we can work something out.” WILL WAIT He said he would wait until he had a chance to meet her before deciding whether to accept foe offer. ' "Urn trouble with American marriages is that we deal lave enough practical experience. Maybe this sort of thing Is Just whet wo need,” he said. The Radcliffe girl declined to identify herself because she didn’t want “a whole bunch of nuts calling me.” “I Just want to live off campus and earn my degree in history,” die said, because it’s “quieter there and I can get more work done.” \ * v f. •,/ BLUE EYES She said she has blue eyes, auburn hair and is five feet tall. "I really unmt a roommate, lit a husband,’’ foe said, "but he’s get te marry m^ to satisfy Radcliffe.” Eric Tomb, 20, of Cleveland, Ohio, a Junior, also answered the ad in foe student newspaper, and commented: "I’d been planning to put an ad in myiewtor • female roommate. A girl who can cook and there might be other fringe benefits, like washing my socks.” V Wayne Jones, 21, of Wayne, Micky, said be answered foe ad because he wanted to meet e girl with “that kind of a sense of humor.” The Radcliffe student said today, "I really didn’t expect this great harvest. Now I’ll have to weed them out, eliminate those who don’t understand the point of ail this and then interview foe rest” \ She said she pieced foe ad as a "kind of joke" to protest the Radcliffe regulations. •« ASTHMA MokoYouSbortaf Breath? At th« flnt Oca of wbontnf, difficult hrctthiat or ncttituc frw nwrrt«e Bronchial Acthma or frcachltli, aggravated tar air contaminated tar caoUng. anteg, duct and pollone, take aulek act-lagHmiCO.hcfotoligp, rejoice bronchial Mag itn and hclpe remora thick, choking phlefa. Thlt usually cacao heealh tag fhet. aUarc ooagh-lng, thus promoting hotter deep. Oct MlNDACO at drnggMtc. l«t it help you. Out to Kill All Rats MEERUT, Indie « - « “kill rets” campaign has launched in this northern Butin area. It is estimated rodents eat or destroy 6 per cent of foe food grains in Uttar Pradesh state. On Districting BUI Dtrksen Predicts Win Pat Nugent Gets LB J Job Offer WASHINGTON (UPI)-With a prudent parental eye on the future, President Johnson has asked future son - in - lew Patrick ,J Nugent to work for the LBJ radio - television Interests after he weds Lud in August. Lud and her sister, Lynda Bird, will inherit the Johnson interests, including station KTBC-TV at Austin, Tex., Some day and the President is said to believe Nugent should begin to learn foe ropes. According to I ■ f armed sources, foe 22-year mid Nugent was rdectant at first He had lined ip a Job oe the staff af foe Senate Cem-merce Committee to go to when Ms tear of doty with the Air National Goard was completed. But apparently the President’s famous powers of persuasion won out. At least, Nugent has decided to turn down the Capitol Ifill post. When they arrived to spend Easter at foe LBJ Ranch in Texas, Pet end Lud told reporters he had a job. They wouldn’t say what it was, however, because he might not like it. NIGHT COURSE Nugent, a Marquette University graduate, has begun work toward c master’s degree. He is taking e night course in business administration at the American University here. Pat and Lad work art their big decisions together. made, they're law to Led. Johnson himself found that out during Ms recent trip to Mexico. The wife of Mexican Presided Gustavo Diaz Or-daz offered Lud her villa in Acapulco for a honeymoon, and foe President altowed as how he might like to come along, too. . “It’s up to Patrick foe basis of geography and political subdivisions, in addition to population. The high court ruled in IBM font both bouoes of state legislatures must be apportioned an e bests of population. With a two-thirds majority needed for approval, Diriuen claimed he was going to win his long fight. HAVE VOTES? However, Senate backers of foe court’s decision said after a recheck of their forces they have foe votes to block foe proposed amendment. Agreement was reached to Vote two hours after foe Senate’s noon meeting hour. ★ w « Dirksen, foe Senate Republican leader, battled for a similar amendment last year. But after two weeks of Senate debate, it fell seven votes short of the necessary two-thirds majority. The vote was $0 for and 37 against. Dirksen says his proposal would insure effective n. sentatlon “of foe various groups and interests making up the' electorate.” ALTERNATIVE any such plan of apportionment would have to be ap-proved by a majority of the voters in a statewide referendum and, simultaneously, an alternative plan based solely on population would have to be sub-mitted to foe people. Dirksen also provided this year that before any plan based factors other than population could be submitted to foe voters, it would have to be approved by both houses of a state legislature, and one of houses must have been apportioned on foe basis of subrtan-tial equality of population. Dirksen agreed Tuesday to a change in the ratifying clause of his amendment to require both houses of a legislature to be apportioned on a population bads before acting on ratification. Sen. Frank Church, D-Jdaho, said in offering this font it would clear away any possible legal challenge to the ratification process and also “take care of foe point urged by some senators that compliance with foe court's apportionment decisions must precede ratification of foe proposed amendment.” Constitutional amendm before becoming effective, must be approved by a two-thirds majority in both branches of Congress and also by three-fourths of foe state legislatures. Luci snapped, her blue eyes flashing fire. A discreet silence ansoed. Pontiac Pharmacist Namad to State Post Louis M. Sesti, 164 Erie, • registered pharmacist, has been appointed field secretary of foe Michigan State Pharmaceutical Association effective July l, with offices in the headquarters in Sesti is presently employed by a group of drugstores based Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. at SIMMS ... pf course! ‘Baa River Wriskl-shed’ aii cotton dresses sleevelets priced in other ttoret for $3.88 but look • alwayootoy froth with almost no cara dries much faxtor oasiertolron 'Wrinkl-shed' wrinkle resistant cotton will never shrink out of fit.. . fast colors, easier to wash tool Multi-plaid ton# color, below the waist back zipper, ric-rac trim, toped neck and sleSve^ pinked seams and wide hem. Comes in sizes 8 to 18. Sunttu.^B^ 98 N. Safiiraw^-MaWi floor Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SAVE on these DOOR-BUSTER VALUES COerM-r* " 20_fi*1’ Ca" 1 C0W Ml ** e5*vG Heavy galvanized garbage can with snug fitting cover. 20 gallon size mtwBI 39* # #. meets city approval. Limit 2. - Hardware—2nd Floor Mutt Wonderful* Hair Spray $1.50 value, 13-oz. aerosol can. The professional hair spray now In 2 types, for gentle or hard to hold. • Cosmetics—-Main Floor Paper-Mats Ball Pm and Refill $1.47 value, genuine Paper-Mate pen with medium point and blue Ink plus refill for only. Sundries—Main Floor Men’s Short Sleeve Brass Shirts Wash V wear 100% cotton, white dress shirts with several collar styles. Irregulars. Sizes 14Vh to 17. Limit 4. ‘Ingraham’ Alarm Clock $2.69 value, 40-hour. Meteor wind-up alarm clock in ivory case. Factory guarantee. Sundries—Main Floor Basketball Shoes-Men’s and Boys’ . jy tff American made basketball shoes, suction sole, cushion arch, full cushion 5* gfliU) rT insole, hi or low. Sizes 10-2,216-6,6Vt to 12. Irrs. -Basement F 2 for S.ll 500 Sheets Notebook Paper 98c value, 500 count 5-hole filler paper fits 2 or 3 ring binder. Sundrkrt—Main Floor I ‘Parke-Davis’ Vitamins Hld’l® _ Pkg. of 30, values to $2.55. Your choice of Geriplex, geriatric formula, * M0C A BOOL with minerals, food supplement. Paladec with minerals, children's SinuM MQ chewables. ( Drugs—Main Floor Ladies’ Seamed Nylon Hose Slight irregulars of 79c values. Nylon hose with dark or self seam. Beigetone only. Sizes 816 to 11. —Main Floor ‘Schick’ liSootor Blades $1.00 value, pkg. of 7 stainless steel blades with Krona edge plus 2 trial blades free. \ Drugs—Main Floor 20-Pc. Mohnoe Starter Sot Mel mac® — most honored namdTh plastic dishes. Starter set, service for 4 in assorted colors. Housewares—2nd Floor Ladies’ Raincoats Genuine. U.S. Rubber raincoats in .assorted styles, some with velvet collars. While, yellow or beige. Sizes S-XL. —Main Floor SIMMSS 98 N. Saginaw A—4 THE PONTlAOl’KKSS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 In W. Bloomfield School District $7-Million Issue on Ballot WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP— Requests for a 17-million building bond issue and a 7-mill Increase in the operating levy will appear on the June IS ballot in the West Bloomfield School District. Also to be sought is renewal of a 2-mill operating levy due to expire this year. School trustees plan to finance the building program with no increase in taxes by borrowing the money from the state at a low interest rate and extending the bond retirement ever a longer period of time. State funds can be borrowed in this manner by rapidly-growing school districts already collecting 7 mills for debt retirement. * * * West Bloomfield’s current levy of 26.8 mills includes 87.50 per 81,000 of state-equalized valuation for debt retirement. I-YEAR PROGRAM The proposed five-year build- ing program was. recommended by a citizens’ committee headed by Dr. Joe U. Davenport. The group, which has been studying curriculum and financial requirements of the district since October IMS, predicted that school enrollment would Jump 500. to 000 students annually for foe next five yean. A record jump this year took the enrollment figure from 2^17 in 1904-65 to the current 2,782. Committee members estimated the district will need 139 new classrooms by the 1970-71 'school year. Featured in the proposed building program is a new high school, expected to cost 83.5 million. The new high school.to house 1,000 students, would be built in .about three years on a 56-acre site the district owns on the east side of Orchard Lake Road south of Lone Pine. * Also proposed is a 24-classroom addition to foe district’s junior high school, which went into operation last fall. “We would want to start immediately on this addition,” said Schools Supt. Dr. Leif A. Hougen. With construction of a new high school, the present high school would be converted to a junior high. That building would be improved with an addition to its cafeteria. RAN OUT OF MONEY “This was in our present bond' issue, but we ran out of money,’1 Hougen said. One new elementary school is included in foe proposed package—a 14-room unit* on Walnut Lake Road' between Middle Belt and Orchard Lake roads. The school board now is. holding an option on a 13-acre site there. Also recommended is a six-room addition to an elementary school now under construction on Maple. The 14-room unit is scheduled to open in September. New classrooms also would be constructed in the Scotch Elementary School area. Board members are considering either a new unit there or an addition to the present school. NEW SCHOOL SITES The bond issue proposition also includes funds for foe purchase of new school sites. The citizens’ committee estimated four to six sites would be needed in the next fiye years, Hougen 1111111 HURON VALLEY’S NEWEST — Some 587 pupils now are attending' Clasbes in foe new Muir Junior High School in Milford while adult citizens of foe Huron Valley School District are worrying about foe need for more new classrooms. The junior high school was opened four weeks ago, a half-......... /__________:-----------------------------------;--- year after foe completion deadline. The unit was Included in-foe district’s last building bond issue of 82.2 oulUon, approved in December 1964. School board members now are. considering asking property owners to back another building package, which could cost 83.5 million to 871 million. / Students Get Taste of Government Duty FARftONGTON - Students from Farmington High School yesterday got some firsthand information on what it takes to keep a city and a schooPsys-/ tem running. The annual student government day in the city and school district found 26 young people in official posts. As mayor, Mike Gregory headed foe City Council composed of Kurt Dembeck, Mark Foster, Dennis Moore and Then Schwartz. Ron Lee was city manager, Lorrie Rhodes clerk, Coninie Aldrich treasurer and Jim Foulkrod assessor. Other officials included/Paul Bennett, municipal judge; Wayne Johnston, associate judge; Greg Kelch, attorney; Tom Ruelle, director of public safety; and Dick Bayer, director of public services. OTHER POSTS Also holding city posts for a day were Dan Bruce, building inspector; Ray Lardie, water and sewer foreman; Dian Sheridan, public works foreman; Marsha Smigielski, superintendent of public works; and Gary Walker, public safety sergeant. * * * / Board of education .members were Sandy Cossin, Sue Cossin, Beverly Lord, Tim Patrick, Mike Perry, Linda Taylor and Lynn Watzke. The youthful officials were treated tp lunch at foe Roman House and dinner at the Bots-ford Inn. Sweet Adelines Will Compete The Utica-Rochester Chapter of Sweet Adelines Will participate in chorus competition Saturday at Cass Technical High School, Detroit, The Chantones, a quartet from foe chapter Will compete with 13 other quartets during convention activities. / It h e New officers of foe chapter will be installed May 9 at Avon Township Hall. Officers include Mrs. Dean Evanson, 1167 Brewster, Avon Township, president; Mrs. Fred Neiger, 449 South Blvd., Avon Township, vice president; Mrs. Richard Bloomfield of Rose ville, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Douglas Mickelson, 4322 Kingmark, Shelby Township, recording secretary; and Mrs. Ronald Frank, Ferndale, treasurer. Final Voting Stage Broker, Coroner Bills Before Senate LANSING (AP) - The questions of bow to deal with money lenders and sudden death were to come up for Senate consideration today. A bill to license and regulate brokers in secondary mortgages and high interest installment loans ran'into trouble Tuesday, primarily .ova1 the issue of how much interest 'should be allowed. Senators also wanted to take another look at a which would abolish the coroner system and require medical examiners to look into any sudden «r unusual deaths. At Issue was whether counties folder 10,000 population should M required to make the change. MU, PACKAGE advanced to foe final votirfg stage Tuesday. They would provide for a state pathologist to assist local medical examiners, permit examiners to conduct an autopsy without the consent of relatives and prohibit hospital staff members from handling the investigation themselves of unusual deaths in foe hospital. ■ * * . The hospital provision, Levin said, stemmed from throe recent deaths at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. The deaths allegedly resulted from improper handling of anesthetic drugs. The lending measure would limit interest on secondary mortgages to a basic rate of 14 per cent and specify what other]] service fees could be charged. A rata of 18 per cent would he allowed for installment loans, with no other fees allowed. Sen. Basil Brown, D-Highland Park, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said foe bill resulted from an investigation by foe Corporation and Securities Commission and foe attorney general. It would prevent abuses found by foe Investigators, he said. Clqrkston PTA to Hear Court Case Worker CLARKSTON—Ralph Straum, probate court case worker/for the area, will be foe /guest speaker tomorrow at the 7:30 p.m. meeting of foe ClarkstOn Elementary PTA. He will speak on the “ftevention of Juvenile Delinquency." Election of officers will also be held and foe PTA Safety Committee will present a report of safety conditions around the Ask Changes in Estate Plans ' Modification of Avon Development Urged AVON TOWNSHIP - Several changes are to be made in the proposed development on foe Howard L. McGregor estate on Walton Boulevard before the Regional Planning Commission makes a recommendation on rezoning. Planning Commission members last night indicated that they feel the over-ail plan submitted by Slavik Builders, Inc., of Oak Park is good but that a few changes should be made. Slavik Builders propose to develop a nine-hole golf .coarse, a 900-unit apartment complex, a shopping mall and a residential area on the 417-acre estate. Planning consultant Robert) Shadduck of Viiican-Leman and Associates of Southfield suggested foot foe apartments be relocated so that some single-family homes would act as a buffer between them and another residential development nearby. ‘-'dr ★ * 1 - He also questioned the use of the entire 20 acres on Walton for professional offices. He said they are located across foe street from another 14 acres zoned for professional office. 417 ACRES Slavik is seeking rezoning for 300 acres in foe township and 117 acres in the Rochester village limits for, foe development. First to be developed win be foe nine-hole private golf course. McGregor’s home is to serve as the club house and a pool on bis estate will serve as foe clnb poel. The developers have estimated foa| the entire project will take from seven to 10 years to complete. The rezoning request will be pt-esented to foe Zoning Board tonight. / Area Club Sets Sale WALLED LAKE-The Walled Lake Business and Professional Women’s Club will hold a rummage and bake sale from 9 a.m. to S p.m. Saturday Stonecrest on Pontiac Trail at Barnston. Avon Business Booming Many Cry for Baby Sitters By JANICE KLOUSER AVON TOWNSHIP — What do you do if you are a young bride and your husband is pot on foe night shift and you’re afraid to stay alone? You call Mrs. Richard Al-byn and ask her to send a baby sitter to stay with you. Altjiongh Mrs. Albyn was enable to fill this request, 4 she has come to the rescue of many Rochester area mothers through her baby sitting service. The young mother of two has run the Rochester Babysitting Service since 1962 when she took it over from a friend. if ■ ★ ★ “It’s ideal for me,’’ she says, “because I can run it from home and be here when my children are hero. “I can work and not have to get a baby sitter," she added with a smile. TWO CHILDREN Mrs. Albyn, her architect husband and their, children, Keith, 13, and Lisa, 11, live at 1921 Washington. Mrs. Albyn employes 13 women and would hire more if she could find them. Most of her /sitters are “mature women’’ between the-ages of 48 and 88. She him no one under 21. She says she is very particular about the women she hires. She prefers that they have children of their own and have experience babysitting. She judges them on capability, experience and personality. “I interview them in their own homes,” she said, “because I can tell more about them that way. I wouldn’t send someone from a dirty home to take care of a sweet baby." . , SPECIAL TRAINING Her first criterion, however, is that she won’t biro someone she wouldn’t want to leave With her own children. A woman doesn’t have to be a nurse or have any special training in order to become a baby sitter. She .simply mast love children and enjoy taking care of Nancy Albyn Keeps 13 Baby Sitters Busy them, according to Mrs. Albyn. r Mrs. lAlbyn feels that her employes benefit in other than monetary ways. She says that for widows whose families are grown itj fills a void in their lives. I .it ★ * “The children grow to love their tetters and vice vena,” she said. ]“A sitter will remember foe childrens’ birthdays, and families have even invited their sitter for Thanksgiving dinner so she won’t be alone. UNUSUALBEQUESTS Mrs. Albyn’s service has b r o u g h j some unusual requests and situations. Once a! mother left instructions with the baby sitter and said her husband would pay her when he got home from work. When foe husband came home he had no idea where his wife Had gone. The baby sitter found out later that she had simply packed her bags and left home. Just last week a c 1 i e n t wanted a dog sitter while the family wu on vacation; SUMMER SEASON As summer approaches and many businesses prepare for their slack season, Mrs. Albyn’s business begins to' pick UP- " “People are beginning to go on vacation," she explained, “and want someone to stay with foe c h i 1-dren while they are away" The fall is also a busy period with football weekends and clubs and - committees starting up. She says she is swamped at Christmas time when mothers want to go shopping. Afternoon bowling leagues and church groups often employ Mrs. Albyn’s baby sitters to stay with the children in one part of the building while mothers attend to their activities in another room. MANY REQUESTS Mrs. Albyn often has more requests for sitters than she is able to fill. So far this week she has had 37 calls. She said the frequent calls often interrupt her homemaking chores and sometimes confine her to foe house when she would like to go out. “On the whole, I thoroughly enjoy it," she said, “although sometimes I feel like a combination pediatrician, child guidance expert and marriage counselor." 9 Seek Posts on New City Charter Unit j LAKE ORION — Nine residents filed nominating petitions! for foe nine-member city charter commission before yesterday’s deadline, according to Village Clerk Mary Parkinson. ★ dr W Candidates on foe June 6 city-hood ballot will be J. C. Armstrong of 630 Detroit; .Mrs. Charles Robbins, 622 Detroit; Mrs. Arthur Pagel, 28 Highland; and Frank Volant, 63 Park Island. Other* will be Arthur Pagel Sr., 28 Highland; Jessie Smith, 358 Newton; Mrs. Harold Roberts, 195 Lake; Alfred Kochanowski, 118 Highland; and Mrs. Roy McMorran, -288 Lakeview. . / A five-member village charter, commission, elected March 14,! is now working on a new home1 rule village charter. j '■it h ’'/'At Village Attorney Robert V. Parent! said if a new village charter is adopted, a new city charter could still be drafted and put to a vote. If the new/city charter were adopted, it-would supersede foe village chafer, Parenfi said. School Funds to 4 Districts/ if y j /Four area school districts have been allocated funds from the federal government’s Title I program to improve services for children from low-income families! Lapeer will get 883,097; Holly, 833,427; Oxford, 828,124; and West Bloomfield, 817,180. ★ ★ * The program was established under the Elementary aod Secondary Education Act of 1965 to encourage better study habits for students from families in the 82,000-a-year, or less, income bracket. m ; M ONTGOMERY WARD Our best 5-cycle fully automatic water softner Fully automatic — all you do it enjoy tba benefits. Handles water with 50 to 75 grains of hardness. New plastic brine tank can't rust, holds 280 lbs. This beauty is always on duty to soften, filter hard water effectively. 5 cycles: backwashes, recharges, rinses, rapid rinses, softens-filters ... removes up to 10 parts in a million dissolved iron. Reg. 249.99 9-inch size water softener. .........................$189 Factory Representatives and Words Engineering Staff will oe on hand to advise you on your individual water problems. FREE WATER ANALYSIS Bring In a sample of your water for hardness testing. Wards will test your water for its oxact minoral content, thon off or recommendations. No obligation, of course. Morton Salt Representative Will Also Be On Hand To Advise and Solve Your Individual Problems • INSTALLATION AVAILABLE # PELLENS GRANULATED ROCK Budget-priced, family *10 off! 30-gallon Plus *8 sayings size, manual softener low-priced gas heater 30-gallon gas *39 f® REG. $49.99 ksss-fined tank can't st or corrode ber glass ‘insulation tkls In tho hoot jfomatie tfwrmostat ■just sat and forgot Save *18 Wards best 30-gallon gas heater *521 REG. 59.99 • Glass-Tmod tank won't rust or corrode O fiber glass holds inthohoat • 7 00% Safsty pilot shuts off gas If Ham fads REG. 19.99 • Demand augmontion— it sansos your Mods • Porm-a-Pilot for total ' bumf, pilot regulation • GknsSnod tank can't STORE OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY unilDC. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HUUno! SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, I960 MM0 Signature The more hot water you we the faster it heats a new supply (437 GPH at 100* rise), fiber glass bnu-krted to hold in hoot 100% safely pfal. J f Reg. 89.99,49*fal. $91 Reg. 69.99,40-gal. $62 THE PONTIAC PRESS IWInM Pcnttoc, Mkh%M WEDNESDAY, APRILS, HU 1&&SSa— tartanKa i«; AC?re^bnTM»n»f»r °Ve«TA*w5lln«' Voters Show Faith in City Fathers Pontiac .voters Monday spoke their minds with ballots and re* elected all Incumbent city commissioners for a two-year term. The decisiveness of .the vote was dearly a vote of confidence for the dty officials who had given Pontiac two yean of effective government and civic progress. ★ ★ ★ Bat as mach as has been accomplished daring the short space of 34 months, much more remains to be done. It is, there* fore, gratifying to know that the reins of load government are to remain ia the same capable and experienced hands. Inevitably, there were other, well-intentioned candidates for the commission supported by substantial blocs bf voters. For them, the outcome held disappointment. But in true democratic tradition the majority prevails; and the losers may confidently be expected to accept the verdict In good spirit and join In support of the common goal of a bigger and better Pontiac. ★ ★ it ^ The Press congratulates ths commissioners on their victory an4 the electorate on its good judgment in retaining them. Dr. Joseph Maddy It is safe to say that no figurs In modem times contributed more to the Nation's culture than Dr. Jo-skph Maddy, the j maestro of inter- j lochen’s National I Music Camp and [ Arts Academy. Now deed at ?4, he established northwoods sum- ■topped short of high school completion, Dr. Maddy held several honorary academic degrees and served on college faculties for a number of yean. mer music campj in 1927 with anil Idea and a bor- maddy rowed $16,000. Its concept widened and its facilities expanded into the present $5-mlllk>n institution that now attracts 2,000 young musicians each summer. ★ ★ ’# : Although his formal education A native of Kansas, he joined the music department of the university of Michigan in 1924 and organized the first high school band in 1926. It was this interest that led to the innovation at Interlochen. From this beginning grew the year-round college preparatory•„ school for students gifted in the arts that opened in 1958. ★ it ★ Dr. Maddy's ranking place among the Nation’s music geniuses will not be dimmed by time nor the inspiration he gave to thousands of young artists. Authority Evaluates Man’s Mind Over Matter We worry a lot about the balance >f payments problem. The United Itates, like every other nation, keeps •aroful account of the inflow and jutflow of gold, the import and ex-xjrt of raw materials and manufactured goods, the status of national resources and manufactured facfli- In the opinion of Marion Hawk* a., president and chairman of the card of Interpublic, the import and xport of brains is looming as a mater of more serious concern than the low of gold or the Import or export if goods. ★ ★ ★ “The vital difference between nations," says Harper, “is fast becoming one of human capability.” We have traditionally thought of Ich and poor countries, of countries ndowed or not endowed with ma- terial resources or production skills. It may now he more accurate, he says, to think of the “capable nation” or the “less capable nation.” At the same time as there is a gap between rich and poor nations, there is a more truly widening gap between the capable and the less capable. The United States currently enjoys a surplus “balance of payments” In the brainpower department. ★ ★ ■ ★ In international dealings in currency,, notes Harper, we have mechanisms like the International Monetary Fund to correct imbalances. “Perhaps we should develop some kind of International Brain Bank to correct Imbalances in brains.” Or, say we, get more and more people of all nationalities to use the brains they have. Fulbrighfs Assumpti Dubious By JAMES MARIXiW ftlunlatad Pm* New* Analyst ASHINGTON — Sen. J. W. Fulbright that President Johnson •t nail down his facts. But he some-a operates on assump-j himself. Llbrisht, Arkansas locrat and chairman hs Senate’s Foreign tons Committee, has increasingly and per-ntly critical of John-i foreign policy, espe-y in Wat Nam and the token Republic. “marlOW foreign policy, of MARL0W ie, waiting to .nail down all the feds mate action too late to be useful 'resident uiwiiawu :ts. But he some- A i He revolt, after tee Ui. tad sent to imM. Hribrlghl criticised Johnson in t, saying the President got bed ister, Marshal Lin Piao, who is also deputy premier, outlined a program for Communist world conquest by which revolutionaries in underdeveloped countries could be used to encircle and defeat the capitalist nations. Lin called Viet Nam the testing ground. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara took the Red Chinese at their own say-so and Secretary of State Deaa Rusk later Indicated it may be a generation before the Chinese change their aggressive ways. But Fulbright proposed trying to make a deal with them: the United States would withdraw its forces from Southeast Asia if Red Chinn would lot its neighbors alone, dr,' .'it W Look nmgnrine says Fulbright would consider McNamara's view — that Red China wants to become the dominant farce in Asia, Africa and Latin America — “childish" — although Fulbright doesn’t have any more factual information about China's Intentions, and probably not as much, as Mc- But then Fuftright agreed that the Com-munlata ted triad to take coated of the wnk no proof that they *r*r actually got , •- ★ dr So, te said, the administration was mis-tatau i ante* 1the belief the Communists ted tsten ooMraL He called this a mistake HNili Lantfispt I Rad China’s Defease Min- MENACE IS ASSUMED In short, he ie assuming they are not the menace they aay they went to be, as he assumed the Communists in the Dominican Republic were not Hie menace Johnson said . he thought they were. He opposed Amartoon intervention In Viet Nam — again on an amumptioo—because, te said, he baUavad that even If it all went It WteM te a buffer statt agate Red Chim, which is aometeag hi can’t prove. Voice of the People: Readers State Opinions on Viet Nam Involvement I'm not sun whether it’s wiser to drop the bomb or go home—but either one Is better than what we’re moving cautiously on some fronts and boldly on others. Bombardment of enemy supply lines in Viet Nam is growing in intensity. But nothing is being done to restrain either the Soviet Union or the Red Chinese from carrying on their war against American forces. As long as there is such immtfhity, the American military effort ctn he agonizingly long. Yet trade between Red China and the United States in Dose of the Opera Spells Doze for This Columnist When M per cent of aQ casualties ere under » years of age and « per cent are under 33, it is no wonder wa have so much juvenile delinquency when all our young boys can look forward to Is to be sent to some jungle end get killed so some Democrat can be a war president. WAR WEARY NEW YORK - Spent the whole day in makeup having a lump put in my throat before heading for the big per formance at the Metropolitan Opera house. Tha lump came in handy now and . then. *‘W b a t b e a utiful . house!” Lao- CONSIDINE p o 1 d Stokowski exclaimed poignantly when te turned on the jammed opera buffs after conducting “Entrance of the Guests,” from Wagner’s Tann-hauser. “And splendid acoustics! Help us save tills magnificent building!” , We didn’t know whom to: boo. The name of the gay ikeup having a r throat before i wet with tears when Robert finished and left the stage. Cheers of frustration. We wanted to tear him sing “Soma Enchanted Evening,” or “Shortnin’ Bread.” The Viet Cong enemy requires daily 500 tons of supplies from North Viet Nam. Some 800 enemy trucks and thousands of porters and Minpain deliver these supplies via land and sea. The enemy now enjoys Washington-dictated sanctuaries; one Is around Hanoi with a 30-mile radius; another is around Haipong with a 10-mile radius. We were awakened ones again about 1:M a.m. by a tremendous crash in the tattle drums department The curtain swept back to reveal the full company bellowing and gesticulating against an Egyptian backdrop. MADE IT EASIER “Nasser must have been reelected," wa said sleepily to our host, Mr. Grist He was kind enough to explain that it was merely tha Triumphal Scene from Aida. Tha Washington-dictated war objective remains “restrained harassment" until the enemy agrees to unconditional discussions. This objective could be achieved, according to Air Force Chief of Staff General McConnell, “virtually overnight" if present restrictions an air and seapower were lifted: this is the only quick and humane way. CITIZENS FOREIGN AID COMMITTEE WASHINGTON, DC. That made It easier to go back to sleep. How does the interest Increase oa Saving* Bonds affect the older bonds which I own? What' happens to Mem? . Y. S. REPLY Outstanding K and S Bonds purchased prior to Dec. 1, 1966, will earn 4/10 of one per cent more interest for the remaining period to next maturity, starting with the first interest period of five months or more which begins on or after Dec. 1, 1965. Verbal Orchids ratty rid place wasn’t listed to the program. All through the long evening and.two hours into Sunday morning, there were repetitive mournful cries of “Save the Met!" from scattered parts of Hie house. One such cry awakened me from an overdose of the Immolation scene from Gotterdammerung. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Infinite Wisdom The Digest of World Reading dace “piffckasbf power” to Hie private sector and tins Milton H. Haselwerdt of Rochester; 84th birthday. Roy GaiHbie of Milford; 92nd birthday. Mrs. Sophie Ewald of Lake Orion; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George L. Bunker of 1008 Premont; 58th wedding anniversary. William B. Sovey of 66 Henderson; 84th birthday. Mrs. May Rasper of 6435 Pontiac Late Road; »0th birthday.. mciwhwfr » iw um Ur IB local WWW WtjgTy carrMr Mr a canti • wwkj nww* . Mi mho, LaMar —Alberto Sanchez pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of aecoad degree murder hi the death of two-year-old Eddie Montalvo. Sanchas was arraigned in Luces County Common Plena Court. DA# Eddie wee the soil of Miss Carolina Montalvo, 20, a friend of Sanchel The boy's body was found stuffed Into an outhouse on a deserted farm In Monroe County, Midi. Since Ida arrest in Texas Feb. 6, Sanchez has been In Jail in lieu of $10,090 bond. 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PRESIDENTIAL BOOST The program was given presidential boost last week when Johnson ordered the corps to extend its summer program to an additional 25,000 boys and girls as part of the government’s youth opportunity program. But getting more spots to All won’t solve all the problems, sources said. For example, at the time of the Watts riots in Los Angeles last summer, more than 1,000 Jobs were authorized, but unfilled. ★ * * “Part of die program is getting Jobs and part is getting them filled,” said one Job Corps aide- Tliis summer Job Corps officials hate arranged transportation to take the Watts youths to and from work •** a problem many of than cannot cope with in the sprawling Los Angeles area. Despite the unfilled Job Corps quota in Watts last summer, it has been classified as a potential crisis spot and will be given more Job Corps attention. More prosperous areas can expect smaller job authorisations this summer. Job Corps Director Jack Howard said die more than 700 youth projects across the nation have been surveyed since January and trimmed where possible to provide more funds for the massive summer program. The survey was known informally as “Operation Recapture.” Howard acknowledged that many communities have complained about the cutbacks in their year-round programs but added, “We’re not firing any kids — Just lowering the celling.” .★ * 1 ft It’s part of the Job Corps drive, said an aide, “to reach deep into the bowels of poverty, worked la their lives, the potential dropouts.” Included in this summer’s stepped-up will be the low-income areas of Appalachia. The Job Corps offers youths in the 16 to 21 age bracket whose families make $2,190 or less a find those kids who haven’t chance to work for $1.25 hourly, i r\»__________________. I in Jobs such as clerk-typists, | IS UI$IYH$S&Cl maintenance men and hospital orderlies. The government paysj Use of Wonder Drugs on Children Hit 90 per cent of their salaries. The program, autnorii NEW YORK UH - Bertram A. Powers, president of New York Typographical Local 6, announced a breakdown in contract negotiations today and expressed the'opinion that three merging newspapers would be unable to publish next Monday as scheduled. Asked If the breakdown in the talks meant a strike against Jhe new corporation on Its first day of scheduled publication, Powers NEW YORK (UPI) - State __ ___| ______tied by i Supreme Court Justice Samuel the 1964 Economic Opportunity |j. Silverman yesterday threw Act, began operating in January out Nobel Prise winner Linus 1MS> Pauling’s $l-milfion libel suit against William F. Buckley Jr:, editor of the magazine National Review. Pauling had based his suit on two articles in the National Review, one of which had reerr ed to him as a traveler.”; , Strike Likely at NY Papers said: “There'll be no compositors working in the composing room.” No publisher representative was available for comment at the office of the Newspaper Publishers Association of New York City, where Powers reported to newsmen. The newspapers | planning to merge are the Herald Tribune, Journal-American and World-Telegram & Sun. For 3 Animals Model's Mauler Traded WINFIELD, W. Va. (AP) — The West Virginia Zoo has traded a monkey, a bear and a baby llama for tike lion which mauled a model at the International Automobile Show in New York, “He Is net a mean animal,” said Zoo Director Bob Hatfield. “I thfafc bo is going to make a good exhibit.” Hatfield said the 225-pound Hon was bartered away from the Tote- ’Em-Ia Zoo, Wilmington, N.C. The model, Nell Theobald, 22, underwent plastic surgery after the lion with which she had posed scratched aad hit her April $. Powers talked with newsmen following a closed conference the printer chapel chairmen of the three newspapers. 8-HOUR TALK He reported to the chapel chairmen after an eight-hour session with publisher representatives. He told tiie newsmen that efforts to reach agreeement on a contract broke down over the union’s key demand for additional severance pay for printers who lose their Jobs in the merger. Hie printers’ current contract provides for three weeks severance pay. The six-week trial pat ia direct confroatathm two of the country’s leading exponents of the liberal aad conservative Pauling has been awarded No* bel Prizes for biochemistry and for peace. Buckley ran for mayor of New York City on the Conservative party ticket in 1965. f ★ a Silverman based his decision on a u. S. Supreme Court ruling which held that public officials are limited In recovering damages for libel unless they can prove actual malice .or reckless disregard of the truth. In effect, he extended the ruling to cover public figures as well as public officials. . PUBLIC FIGURE “It is clear that, if any private citizen has, by his conduct, made himself a public figure engaged voluntarily in public discussion of matters of grave public concern and controversy, Dr. Pauling has done so,” Silverman said in his 15-page decision. NEW YORK (AP) - A noted pediatrician who pioneered in the treatment of “blue-babies’ said today some doctors are abusing the use of antibiotics for children. “There is ifo denying that the introduction of wonder drugs has changed the practice of medicine,’7 Dr. Willis J. Potts said in an interview. “But there are too many instances where the administration of such drugs to children is being hbuaed.” it / ★ a Noting that a patient may build up an immunity to wonder drugs, he advised that they “should be used sparingly — or else, you will destroy their use- Westbury, N.Y., is an art student today at (be New York Institute of Technology. ''She was as blue as a blotter an I first saw her,” the doctor recalled. “Look at her today. She’s normal and would have died in a few weeks if we hadn’t operated on her.’ Miss Schnell plans to attend the launching this week of ai my NNHrifoPfeMJR new book by Dr. Potts entitled |7| pja||vUKIvl v such drugs that the case warrants it.” Dr. Potts was also critical of doctors and parents who “lie to children about what to expect when they have to undergo sup gery.” He said a CWM beyond the age of 3 or 4 should be told what to expect.” YOU 9IAY HAVE "Your Wonderful Baby.” “I answer most of the questions anxious mothers usually ask about their children,” Potts And I try and show them how foolish it is in many cases to get all waned up and call the doctor In the middle of the night when the child may be suffering Just some everyday ailment that will go away with primer care at heme/' Dr. Potts, a native of Sheboygan, Wis., who Is now retired, made medical history 29 years ago when hi; performed an operation on a 21-month-old “blue-baby” girt that allowed more blood to flow from her heart to the lungs. NOW A STUDENT The girl, Diane Schnell ofimake certain before prescribing On the subject of drugs, Dr. Potts said they “don’t do one bit of good in battling a common cold or a minor virus. The physician should AND NOT KNOW IT ndetthtt, sow pMrins.a tprmsntint rectal itch Itl often telltale (lfm of Pin-Worm*...twlyporwl too tlutmod- IobI expert* s»y Infest 1 oat of every S pereon* ex*mined. Entire families may be victims and eoc know H. To eet rid of Pin-Worm*. they most be killed in tbe large intestine where they live end multiply. Thnt’e exactly what Jayne's P-W tablets do... sad here's how they do it: first—a scientific coating carries the tablets into the bowel* before they dissolve. Then — Jayne's modern, medienlly-npprr foes right to work—I quickly and easily. Don’t taka chance. out, highly contagious Pin-Worm* which infect entire families. Oat swain* Jayne's P-W Vermlfoa* . . , small eaoy-to-tak* tablets... m>*eiel sixes for children and aduhs. Robber Runs Into Trouble WARREN (AP) — Generally, it pays to look where you’re going — even If you're robbing a store.' City police say a thief who robbed a discount house of $2,500 worth of jewelry didn’t follow that advice. While running full ttft from the scene of the crime, officers report, he looked back over his shoulder and crashed into the side of a house, knocking himself out. Police took the Jewelry back to the store and escorted the groggy robber to Jail. LOTS FOR SALK Lot* 100*196, Highland Township. Whit* Lake »d.. and Rosa Center Rd. Only $1,100 each. Builder available, sea ntadai Kama under construction, 4 2 ear swage- earner let. Na Lot owner, Dl 1-5060 (Do- DOWN GREAT WAREHOUSE SALE (wwstom) FIBER CONTENT RELATES TO PILE GROUP IV Corvnd scroll pattnm Space dyed nylon tweod Horculon*, random shear CUt and un-cut random Herhulon* random shaar Horculon* tweed pile Hi-lo Horculon* tweod Carved loop anck^Hear DOWNTOWN8 STORE 91 N. 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Rachel Heilpem, 51, was found stabbed Tuesday night In a dress shop she managed in a Manchester suburb, only 30 miles from the courtroom In Chester where two persons are on trial for the grisly murders that horrified the nation. There was no apparent connection between Mrs. Heilpern’s death and the moors murders, but the case has aroused strong feeling in the whole Manchester area and, sparked police fears of reprisals. The dead woman's brother-in-law, Godfrey Heilpem, is defending Myra Hlndley, a 23-year-old stenographer who is charged with her lover, Ian Brady, 28, of murdering two children and a teen-ager for thrills. Both have pleaded in- 3-piece Danish corner group Two 6' urethane foam lounges, big f A| bolsters, walnut finish arms and MJ matching mar-resistant table. Your w ' choice of smart solids or two-tone. (.10 CONTAINED MONEY Mrs. Heilpern’s tolly clothed body was discovered just before midnight. The cash register of her shop was open but still contained money. Detectives said they could not be certain what— if anything-was stolen. If robbery was the motive, investigators said the haul was small for business was slack after Easter. In Chester, Brady and Miss SPECIAL PRICE! Modern sofa by day*..bod for 2 at night Handsomely designed! Quality craftedl Exceptional- mm qa ly pricedl Urethane foam sofa with smart biscuit UllOQ back styling opens whh fingertip ease to a Tull size comfortable bod. Covered in strong vinyb colors.. ^LM Your choice! Correlated maple Bunk bed! Deski 4-dr. chest! All master crafts^ in fine O hardwood, finished In warm .. JRMci, Plymouth maple. Buy a set! .WWw# Dresser Mirror ...12.88 chargi it . Inside the courtroom, located M an ancient castle, the two defendants are protected by a bulletproof glass screen around the prisoners’ dock. NEW YORK (AP) - The luxury liner Michelangelo — battered last week m a North Atlantic storm — sets sail again today with 870 passengers in another transatlantic voyage. Temporary repairs ware made on the 48,088-ton vessel after she docked bore Saturday on a trip from Genoa, Italy, with a damaged superstructure. Final repairs are to be made when the Michelangelo reaches Genoa on the return trip. Three persona diod aboard the ship last week and 12 others were injured when gigantic waves pounded the liner. R#g. 129.88 Colonial sofa-bod til Look at the quality! Look at the sav- 0^m^m ingsi Authentically designed, smartly SKSBI coveted sofa bed that opens to sleep two plus comfortable matching chair. loth with strong maple finish frames. • s • • 'Little Black Sambo7 Wanted off Shelves COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — The Colorado Springs chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People wants the children’s classic, 'Tittle Black Sambo,” taken from the shelves of the nation’s school libraries. The chapter will introduce a resolution to die effect at the regional convention of the NAACP In Topeka, Kan., this month. 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W OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 ^ Monday through Saturday / I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL >0, 1966 Eliminating Night Work Helps Teachers, Students By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. A new teacher often is overwhelmed by such things as overcrowded classrooms, apathetic students, playground duties and a mountain of student home- to be^^H|H| She Ipts littlejHp%f*^ help (r o m her V | older c Kennedy and said the U J. should help Institute social reforms in South Viet Nam even if the country chooses a Communist government “This is not the time to disarm the American military or withdraw from our base abroad,” Cavanagh said in a position paper distributed at a news conference. “But we must recast our thinking about the size of our commitment and the strength of the peril we face. We must of; fer mainland China a seat among the great powers on the United Nations Security Council.” Cavanagh said his position was more realistic than that of ‘ former Gov. G. Mennen Williams, Cavanagh’s opponent in the Democratic primary face for the Senate. “Ho s ■ p P • r t s President Johnson’s policy,” Cavanagh Private Eyes Introduced iri Store Mix-Up DETROIT (AP) - Things at a discount department store have reached the stage where you can't tell the detectives from tiie shoplifters with a scorecard. Detroit police said the store hired several private police after being plagued by petty thefts, w 'a ★ Tuesday night, one of the private policemen saw a woman walking out of the store wearing a new pair of shoes he had seen her put on earlier. He grabbed her and called police, who discovered the woman was another secret agent from the same agency as the man who had nabbed her. The woman Said she put on her new shoes because her feet got tired as she walked about the store. said ef Williams. “I lave Indicate! whatl support. If that sen’s position, so Be it.” The mayor said he‘ did not think U.8. forces should puli out of Wet Nam. But he said the war should take a back seat to the war on poverty and other domestic projects. Cavanagh said the South Viet Nam cease-fire should be negotiated among Gie South Viet Nam government, North Viet Nam and the Viet Cong. A h A He said recognition of North Wet Nam would be no more damaging to the United States than its recognition of Yugoslavia. Williams said he saw “nothing of substance new in the mayor’s statement.” Boy, 6, Lands Uninjured in Fait From Bridge CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -‘Nothing hurts met Nothing hurts me!” exclaimed Timothy Weinberg, 6, who landed on his feet after falling 40 feet from a bridge. Timothy was trying to walk a railing on the bridge when he fell off Tuesday police reported. He was treated at a hospital for a scratch of the forehead and a slight abrasion on his left arm. Tobacco Exec Blasts Attacks Hoalth of the Industry Said 'Never Better' gp.j . ;|I Sg§| RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - The health of the tobacco industry never been better, says a tobacco company official, But “amazingly it is under more vicious and more unwarranted attack than ever before in its history," the official said. i ★ ★ ★ Speaking at the annual meeting of the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce, Addison Y. Yeaman said Tuesday night there are “forces in this country today who puritanically would deprive us Of our freedom of choice to smoke or not to smoke.” Yeaman, vice president and general counsel of Brown A Williamson Tobacco Carp., said, 'The thesis seems to be that anything you enjoy is either sinful or fatal or both." RELATED TO HEALTH’ The burden of the attack, he said, is that tile cigarette is “in-some undisclosed and unknown way casually related to human health.” “Who has the greatest possible interest in the truth, whatever the truth may be, about tobacco and human health?” he asked. “We do,” he said “It is our livelihood, our lives and our pride.” " A severe itching eruption covering most of tile body appeared suddenly in five members of a family. After considerable ing, a doctor found that the mother had washed a p of glass ft curtains in machine along with the family Minute bits of glass fiber thereby became imprenated in the family’s clothing and produced the itch which is said to be worse than that of woolen undergarments. That is what might be called learning about modern hazards the hard way. This should serve as a warning not to go and do likewise. 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Epsy cate printed vinyl pad arid ruffeled skirt about 31” high. *16.95 EARLY AMERICAN NURSERY CHAIR Complete with removable vinyl chambor and deflector. *8.98 UNDERWEAR npDumNisiamKss Sixes 1-3........S/S1.1 f Sixot 4-5......... 241.31 SHORTSLEEVE PULLOVER Sixes 14-3 ...WSMI Sises 4-5......... Iflt.1l RIS KNIT TWO-WAY STRCTON PANTS Sixes 1W-3........ S/II4I Sixes 4-5 ......Iftl.10 SLEEPWEAR Toddlntima Solid Knit Oown ... # * Mo Toddlotimo Solid Knit Kinrano .... Me Toddlotimo Printed BEDDING TsOdletiwe Thormsl Knit Crib Nsnkets Choose white or pastels, sixes 36”x50" nylon satin ' bound............JJH TODDLETIMK QANOY STRIPE RECEIVING BLANKETS These Ore 100% cotton woven. Choke ef several colors. Sixes 30"x40* 2 fer US BATH/FEEDING TODOLKTME DELUXE PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: ltdiing Is Traced to a Modern Hazard V BRANDSTADT sleep learning were published, commercial interests hare promoted the sale of a variety of reoords for this purpose. Although the process has its enthaslasts, most scientists believe that it is impractical. Any learning that is accomplished by this means occurs only when tbe subject is in a drowsy or half-waking state. Since this is true, authorities believe that the subject may suffer some of tbe effects of deprivation of deep sleep. One observer states that, before a subject can profit from sleep learning, be must first dergo a course of hypnotic i gestion. MOST DETERMINED This would eliminate all but the most determined candidates. The method has beea used along with hypnosis to help break children of sock habits as bed-wetting and nail biting but with questionable success. It has also been used to teach a foreign language and improve vocabulary but, if the inatruo-gets mixed up with dream state that often accompanies dropping off to sleep, what Is learned may be a confused Jumble of fact und fancy. * ★ * Some peraons art slow learners and others learn quickly by the conventional methods. If sleep learning is indeed pan* bln — and this is debatable-there is nothing in the tochnjrpis ' would make* quick learner out of a naturally slow h Purse Snatcher Polite to Finish MQUNT STERLING, Ky. (AP) — The purse snatcher fled empty-handed but be never forgot his manners. ★ ri ★ He attempted to grab Miss Minnie Newman’s purse; they struggled; she fell to the ground, breaking a finger. The thief helped Miss Newman to her feet, handed over the parcels she dropped, then he Iran, Q —I read recently that whan sauerkraut is cooksd in an Mum-sauerkraut is cooked In an aluminum utensil, ahmdnum chloride is formed and that this causes poisoning. Is this true? * +' ♦ A — False. Aluminum exposed to the air forms a thin layer of aluminum oxide which is not only harmless in itself hut does >hre when expoeud to sauerkraut or any other food. + * If this were not so there would be thousand! of dehths from tills cause every day. d« FALSE TEETH Rack. Slid, or Slip} rASTDCTH, an lmpro.ad powdar to ba aprlnkled on UPpar or loarw plate., hold. (.la. Math mora Dimly In plaoa. Do BAD allda, (Up or rook. add). Dot* not aour. Chock. 'pitta odor braath". Oat PAflTKKTa at Ordinary dog opens new ziptop New DASH it tht first and only dog food in an aluminum zip-top can. So easy to open even this dog can do it. And, for variety, new DASH now comas in thret distinctive flavors—beef, chicken, liver. Each is a complete balanced diet, with 30% more meat. Dogs iovs it. New zip-top DASH—front Armour, the meat people. 761 W. HURON STREET Downtown Pontiac — Clarktton — Drayton Plaint Rochester — Wallod Lake — Lako Orion — Milford THE PONTIACl’KKSS, WBfclNESDAV, APRIL 20, 1066 PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW’• FE3-7901 | OPEN MON DAY. AND FRIDAY TIL 9 | DRAYTON 4946 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 CENTER OF ATTENTION — President Johnson was the center of attention at a White House reception for hundreds of Democratic women yesterday. The gathering Bobby Lashes LBJ for Cuts Dem Women Mob LBJ at Big D.C. Reception KERHONKSON, N.Y. (AP- -Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., has criticized the Johnson administration for cutting some domestic programs because of the war in Viet Nam. In a speech Tuesday night at a human relations award dinner, the senator took exception to cuts in education funds for disadvantaged children, college aid, housing, poverty and neighborhood facilities. ★ ★ ★ “And time after time,” Kennedy said, “die cuts Will be felt most by those least able to afford them—the1 disadvantaged... “We have held out a hope and an expectation that we would act,” he added. “Those who are poor and disadvantaged will Inevitably and understandably lose faith in us and in the entire system if we fail to make good.” WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson was mobbed by hundreds of women trying to kiss him at one of the largest White House receptions of recent times. Mrs. Johnson had invited to the reception Tuesday 3,700 women attending a two-day Democratic campaign conference. She shook the hand of every woman she could reach and thanked them for coming to the conference. ★ it it But one woman, caught in the squealing, pushing crush when the President entered the room, remarked: "My husband's never going to believe I was at a convention. You should see my black and blue marks.” President Johnson, who visited each of the three shifts for about 10 minutes each, found himself surrounded'by women trying, to get close to the man of S-PIECC BUNTING PATIO GROUP INCLUDES L0VESEAT, 2 CHAIRS, CORNER TABLE AND END TABLE. 5 Pet Comply. *119 Featuring sturdy wrought iron frames with baked<^on rust resistant satin finish, fabric supported vinyl zippered cushions and, removable arms on' seating pieces for endless sectional arrangements. GONVENIENT CREDIT filled several rooms and overflowed on the south lawn. The women were grinding up a two-day campaign. their minute. But one woman, seeing the sharp elbows ahead of her, turned to kiss the presidential beagles instead. ★ * * Antique furnishings also fell before the surge. A bust of Henry Clay was pushed over and taken to safety by aides. An Empire torchere mounted on a mahogany base and nearly ISO years old was broken. White House spokesmen said it could be repaired. 4-PIECE BUNTIN0 PATIO CROUP INCLUDES SOFA, PATIO 0HAIR, COFFEE TABLE AND END TABLE 4 fta. Complete ^119 Featuring purdy wrought iron frames with baked on rust resistant satin finish, fabric supported vinyl zippered cushions and removable arm? on seating pieces for endless sectional arrangements. \ ■ ‘ ' * ■ / _ - p; AMPLE FREE PARKING First Overseas Visitor SOUTH HAVEN (AP) — For the second consecutive year, the freighter Caroline Smith, owned by the Swedish-Chicago Line, has become the first overseas visitor of the season at South Haven. The vessel from Stockholm, Sweden, docked Tuesday at South Haven with a cargo of paper pulp. OAKLAND When you put PEOPLE in it! Houses are put together with wood and brich and steel and concrete. They’re full of nails and wires and pipes ... all these things create a “house.” The metamorphosis occurs the moment you put people inside ... it la with a warm feeling of satisfaction we are able to pot “people” • •>. like yon and the neighbors around you, into houses to make them “homes.” OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST MORTGAGE LENDING INSTITUTION A HOUSE BECOMES A HOME.. • 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS POlfflAC, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1066 E. Stum of Chippewa Road, was taken with this flashing red and yellow railroad lantern, exhibited by H. Thayer Fletcher of Flint. Mrs. Stum is . the wifrt of they associate rector at AU Sants Episcopal Church. gpil | iipij I B—1 Mrs. Charles Despite a dismal April drizzle crowds thronged All Saints Episcopal Church Tuesday for the opening of its annual antique show. Dealers from throughout the state have numerous eye- catching and comprehensive exhibits arranged for the popular show which continues through Thursday from 11 a.m. to ill p.m. MrS. William H. Heller, East Hammond lakeJ)rioe, was bubbling with goadmatured curiosity when asked to pose with these peculiar objects. To Her laugh-, mg, "What on earth it it?" photographer Noble teased, “See tomorrow’s Pontiac Press." It’s a agar mold, Mrs. Heller, from the shop of Wanda MacKinnon of Royal Oak. Can you identify these? They’re kitchen items from the Detroit antique shop of former Pontiac resident Leonard Berry. In the center is a potato boiler basket which dates to' the late 18th Century. It is flanked by late 1800 utensils, a wire trivet (left) and a pot scrubber—an “1890 chore boy" as onS bemused antique buff commented. Mrs. George Eaton of Orchard Lake Road (right) was delighted to explain the iDorkings of this early Edison cylinder phonograph for a curious Mrs. Kenneth Scott, Pontiac Drive. With its quaint “morning glory horn" this two-minute waxed cylinder instrument was the first fom of entertainment that wasn’t “live," according to Frances Rape, deader from The Music Box. Pontiac AAUW Hears Talk on Jury System Joyces Group tier Yawn Sets Dote of Luncheon Tell Mother With Tact A luncheon is scheduled Saturday by 6m Waterford Jaycee Auxiliary at Sflverlake School for the state auxiliary jaroject competition. Mrs. Richard Gilchrist is the state chairman. : # * * Mrs. John Radenbaugh of Elsinore Drive opened her home for the.Monday meeting where Mrs. CUvin Kerr was a guest. Assisting Mrs. Radenbaugh were Mrs. Gary Krifeldt and Mrs. JohnTVuhi. ■. . * * a Announcements were made of the May $7 convention to be held in Laming and On mother-daughter banquet on May 21 at Ted’s Restaurant. ■fit * * The auxiliary has contributed funds far equipment for the new adolescent ward at Pontiac State Mrs. Tim Patterson was named chairman of the story hour program that win be held during the summer months at the WatarfOrd Township Li- By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have a puzzling problem. It’s my mother and her noisy yawn. She can yawn any time of night or day.i and when ah el does, she gives | out with LOUD, «dwlfa»g| kind of sigh that! sounds like! “HA - AAAAA-1 AAAAAH!” It just sends| odd chill* my body and sets my husband’s nerves o n edge. Mother probably doesn't even realise she’is doing fids. If I said something to her about it do you think it would hurt her feelings? And do yon think this is something she could control if she knew about it? Mother Uvea with us so it isn’t something we can overlook temporarily. COLD CHILLS DEAR GOLD: By all means, mention it. But when calling one’s attention to an annoying habit (especially when the offender is one’s own mother) the utmost in diplomacy is required. - And if she has a sense of humor, you are home free. ★ * ★ - ■ DEAR ABBY: What do you think tt a 44-year-old man who meets his girl (she is 37) on the street earners because he’s afraid if someone sees his car stop in front of her boose they might tell his mother? I have put up with fob for 10 yean and I am sick of it. Bud’S mother has a regular detective ring working for her to find out every move her son makes. If I want to call Bud at home I have to ask my brother or some other ' man to ask for him because his mother won’t call him to the phone if it's a woman’s voice. He is scared to death of her. He’i an only son and rim's a widow. It’s not that she doesn’t like me. She’s never even MET me. As I uwlarstand it, there is i kd of money there and Bud wiU get it aB when his mother dies. \ But she’s not yet 65 and is healthy as a horse. I love him, Abby, but I can’t take much more of this hiding. Any Ideas? BUDDY’S GIRL DEAR GIRL: A 44-year-old "boy” who meets his girl on street corners’ has a lot of i to do. And so has . the 37-year-old “girt” who meets him. Hide and seek is for children. Tell Bud either to present you to his mother as his fiancee, or find another playmate. Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Prow. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped self-addressed ^envelope. MSU Alums Vf It Dance The Michigan State University Alumni Chib of Oakland County will sponsor a dinner dance Saturday in Red Run Country Club. Walker Mayhew is chairman with committee members Robert Bogan, Mrs. Ned Bearden, Mrs. Done Dibble, George Cummings, Mrs. Richard Ens-worth and Mrs. Robert Mound. ♦ ♦ W Localities planning attendance. are the Richard McNarys, the Fred Bakers, the Orval Nutts, the Robert McDaniels and the William Mauers. Tell Engagement The Floyd Stuarts of Keego Harbor announce the engagement of their daughter, Sharon Sue, to Bruce E. Sprague, of Auburn Road, son of the’ Bruce W. Spragues of North Paddock Street. The wedding is planned for June 11. Ronald Covault, assistant prosecuting attorney, spoke on “The Jury System” before Pontiac bramh, American Association of University Women, Monday, in the Community Sendees Building. He holds a law degree from the University of Detroit, has been law clerk to a federal judge and was formerly with the Treasury Department in Washington. NEW OFFICERS Newly-elected officers are Mrs. Fred Grosstnaii, president; Mrs. Francis McDowell, second vice president; and Mrs. Jerry Conners, recording secretary. The group contributed $600 to the national AAUW fellowship program in thb name of Mrs. Donald McMillen, former branch president wbq k also active in state AAUW work. Donations of $25 each were approved’for foe Wlaner Foundation and the Pontiac Creative Arts Center. ★ * ' 'it-' Mrs. McDowell gave a progress report on the annua! three-day spring book sale which opens Thursday at The Pontiac Mall. DELEGATE Miss E. Grace Clark will be a delegate to the biannual regional conference May 6-7 in Chicago. More than 1,000 AAUW including Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Wtaconain, are expected to attend. ■ * ♦ An aH-day workshop May 11 foiled “Birmingham Broach on Display” with Or. Patrick Lanier, vice president from the Northeast Central Region AAUW as speaker was announced. The affair opens with coffee at 0:30 a.m. wifo luncheon tatertado at noan in the Community Hagai. Mra. DonSld La Vfre I annowaoed May 21 as the date for the annual luncheon In K / Palis Restaurant. . -/it. a # Lillian Davidson was hostaas with Bonnie Davidson coboetass. Committee members included Mrs. Lloyd Watt, Mrs, James Ramsey, Mrs. R. V. Thurston, Mary Heitsch, Mrs. Carroll Porrltt, Margaret Harths, Mrs. John Borsvold, Electa Schaeffer and Mrs. W. F. Tompkins. Mrs. William Hyry was a guest. Navy Mothers Meet The Navy Mothers’ Chib will meet at 7:10 p.m. Thureday in foe Pontiac Naval Reserve Training Center. There will be an election of officers. mSlnticfr nf SSehrnnmrf. Sorority to Host State Unit Beta Mu chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority wUl boat the l«fo annual state convention, Friday through Sunday, in the Klnjpiey Inn. Cohosts are Alpha Alpha and Beta CM chapters, both of Pontiac. * * * Officers for 1306-67 were elected Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Lawrence Hartman on Crosby Lake Road, Sterling Mrs. David Witt is incoming president; Mrs. Wayne Fran-cisco, vice president; Mrs. Fred VoOrafo, recording secretary; Mrs. Hartman, corresponding secretary and Mm. Joseph Men- A dinner-dance for members and husbands at the Elks temple in May will dose the chapter’s social events for foe sea- Iafd Chi Chapter Mrs. Jamas Vincent - installed officers for Beta Chi chapter in a candlelight ceremony, Monday at the borne of Mrs. Donald Murphy on Lock-lin Drive, West Bloomfield Township. The incoming president, Mn. James Stone, named committee heeds: Mrs. Robert Bolt, Mrs. Louie Schasr, Mrs. ftasd Mueller, Mrs. Jean Safford, Mrs. Vincent and Mrs. Lacey ScMefler. Others are Mrs. Murphy, Mrs. Ralph Alin, Mrs. Rudy Masza, lbs. Rex Parker, Mrs. James George, Mrs. William Leigh, Mrs. Dale GhtUer and Mrs. John Oepeey. ★ .* * Mrs. Harry Rhodes and Mrs. Carl Rose, bead the dance and bridge committees respectively. $ -n £ a . ♦ Mrs. Gordon Carkon who is moving to Jackaaq was presented wifo her lhyear' service pin and a gift from the group. Aariatiqg the hostess with refreshments wore Mrs. fields-fiar, Mrs. Rbodm aad Mrs. Salford. BROYHIIL-Oiled walnut, axtra long double dresser, plote gloss mirror, and pond bed. Solid top and side construction, solid oak drawers, dustproof, center drawer guided. SEAIY extra firm tuftless mattress and box spring included. Includes Ssdy MoWrass $100 and Box Spring IVY S34-4593 House of asm hrwwri quality bedroom furniture J TUJfi PONTIAC* PKKSS. WKDNJCSJDAV, APRIL 20, I960 Dots and Clocks Mark His Socks f Men's aockt an looking up And moving out of the erf of •olid black. Patterned locks an coming bade. Muted dots, clocks, haring bones, stripes and other subtle patterns an among new aock patterns for spring. But doni expect to see any on your banker or stock looker. Their dignified business uniform still calls for dark locks. Ever combine tomato juice and dam juice far a cocktail? Chill well! Open House Slated Mrs. Elwyn Tripp, president of the Northern Oakland County Girl Scout Council will officially open the newly, leased headquarters in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center at a ribbon-cutting ceremony at noon on April V. Pour scouts, one from each level of Girl Scouting, will conduct an opening flag ceremony. There will be an open house for the public from noon until 7 p.m. both Friday and Saturday Prior to the ribbon-cutting, there will be a buffet brunch in Holiday Inn for'Girl Scout board members and guests. Girl Scout adults with lengthy tenure in the movement will be honored during the open hekise. Easy on Thumbs Save your fingers when pushing in thumb tacks by using a thimble. Don't Lot Stain Dry on Clothes When you accidentally put a colored garment in the washer with whits clothes and it fades, never dry the stained clothes wihout removing the stain, as drying sets the dye. ★ ★ ★ Use a dye remover and follow directions on package. Wash the tips from your decorating set as soon as you have used them so the frosting .mixture won’t clog them. * PTAHeads Gather for Breakfast The annual "Preatdenta’ Breakfast,” given by the Pontiac Council PTA took place Tuesday morning in the First Congregational Church. + ' * *. Some M new presidents, principals and past presidents were honored. ★ ■:* * A musical program was presented by the Mh grade choir of Jefferson Junior High School under the direction of Phillip Carey. * .★ * Seated at the guests table were Gerald White, Victor Lindquist, William Lacy, Richard Fell, Mrs. William Wright, Mrs. Charles Neldrett and Mrs. William White. a ★ a Besides Mrs. White, other committee, members who worked on the breakfast included Mrs. Benjamin Shelton, Mrs. Vernon McFarland, Mrs. Thomas Bartle and Mrs. Robert Anderson. Booker T. Yancey, assistant principal at Whittier School, chats with Mrs. Charles Rounds (left) of South Astor Court and Mrs. Barton Schmuker of Rosewood Avenue at the annual Presidents’ Breakfast sponsored by the Pontiac PTA Council Tuesday in the First Congregational. Church., Polly's Pointers DEAR happen to forget those permanently pre clothes from the dryer and they are wrinkled when dryer shuts off, simply dampen:stretching a facecloth or small towel, re- out makin place in the dryer with the width. wrinkled clothes, run the for about* 10 minutes ai clothes come out with wrinkle.-4NNE All If Takes to Decorate a Room Is Imagination... and Interlaken ^^limfaunniiwiwii Different and refreshing new design Interlaken takes Hi inspiration from Swiss cultural and architectural forms Si. its name from the famous resort city. See it in tawny-toned pecan for casual good looks... or a brushed, s'.. off-white finish ... both with easy-care Formica tops and interesting hardware. The dual-purpose features and * space-saving makes decorating your bedrooms a joy and living a pteasurel Chair.-..., . ..... .$39.95 Drawer Unit $99.00 Triple Dresser.$169.50 Desk .. *. $129.50 Drawer Bookcase... $79.50 Mirror..........$39.95 Storage Chest.$99.50 Comer Unit ..r... ..$109.00 Double Drosser 137.00 Above unit* priced in Pecan, slightly less in l«v*hed-eff White TUDOR TIE—$15.00 Available in BLACK and BONE. Designed for your walking comfort. PAULIS» 35 N. Saginaw, Pontiac We Accept “Michigan-Bankard” Charge Plates! ^.........:.......1-t- Dear Eunice: So many of the new patterns have gathers around the entire l waistline instead of darts. The last ooe J have doesn’t even have a side seam and yet the drehs ls a sheath-style dress. I lam just plain not thin enough far fvetl this amount of gather-! big. Is there anything I can do to make the dress fast bulky at 'the waist? Mrs. C. B. • Dear Mrs. C. Et . 1 *'• * jf f' • Yaa eaa always remark your patten, (especially the skirt back) sad pat the back darta in year skirt. Then you eaa add a shaped dart at the rids tapering H from about eae iach at the waistttae to aothiag sevea inches below the waist This would be the same nape you would have if there were a side seam. Try keeping the ease la tfce skirt fraat; it shouldn’t be too mack and will look very new. Fitting skirts successfully is easy when yob fellow my stap-by-step instructions in my latest booklet “Your Pattern and Yon.’1 For your copy, send 25 osnts and a fang, self-addressed, stamped antelope wRb your request to Sew Simple, in care of this dap*. You’ll love the simplified patters alterations and the unity sketches. is bundled to placed in an a cover that ci table. I To bundle, place a napkin flat and the knife crosswise about | two inches from a corner, fold the small corner and lay the fork on top to prevent scarring 'and then fold the corner again for the spoon before tightly rolling the rest of the napkin. Four Hems are ready to bd passed or placed at each { plate, which uves time, con-! fusion and steps, r MRS. { E. S. B. ! DEAR POLLY - To keep! books from looking messy by being shoved back on a bookshelf, I put the rolls from paper towels, etc. behind the books.— DANILIE DEAR POLLY—I find that a stenographer’s notebook is an excellent reminder as to whether or not I have answered letters. At the top of the perpendicular line dividing the { page I put the month and to the left of the line I list IN mail, and to the right OUl\v . This way ' I can always check when I have received a letter and the date I answered it if I have done so. If not, ft is a reminder not to forget. -GRACE uw iui> bcvuuu of the form. Be sure and place the pins close [together to prevent points on the! bottom. My sweaters now fit] just right and the plastic pro-; tects my dress form. —MRS. J. H. S. and Mrs. Robert C. Anderson of Silverside Avenue, decorating and hospitality chairmen, respectively, check final detail* for the PTA council breakfast. Local Couple Honeymoons in Carribean ; Seaman 1.C,. and Mrs. Wayne Norbert Hanson (Lanie Marie Conley) left for a honeymoon in the Virgin Islands after recent vows In the San Juan Naval Base Chapel, Puerto Rico. Reception in the Flamboyan Hotel followed the ceremony performed by Chaplain Robert Schneck. Parents of the couple are the Fred Conleys of Lakeview Road, Oxford Township and the Norbert Hanson* of Fern-lock Drive, also in Oxford Township. Their attendants woe Maria J. Cantino of Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, and Robert Langbehn of Bethpage, N. Y. j SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice: I don’t know where to start the neckline zipper at the back of my dress or blouses. I can’t seem to get the facing turned under the neck edge without a thick lumpy fold of excess raate-ial, and there’s never a place for a hook and eye. Mrs. J. S. j Dear Mrs. J. Et\ * When placing your neckline zipper in position keep the key or tab of the zipper at least one-half inch below the ; SEAMLINE, or In other words, about ltt inches from the cut , edge et the garment I always prefer a lapped-type zipper to oae that has each side meeting at the center of the zipper. Turn each.end of the facing down over the tipper tape, mitering the ends. Gut out any excess fabric from this area beforehand whipping the ends down to the zipper tape. You will find ample room for toe hook and eye above toe tab of the zipper if you follow these instructions. TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. John Rohr, Lafayette, Ind., wins a new Tailor Trix Pressing Board for the following ideas. \ “I do alterations at home, so I have a lot of ripping to do. I keep a rubber and metal suede brush handy to remove all toe little threads that are hard to pull out from a ripped seam. Use the side of the brush bat suitable fo your fabric. \ "Another invaluable aid: Fold a large piece of wax paper several times until you have a six- or seven-inch square pad. This works perfectly! Just run over it with your iron and it will keep the Iron from sticking.’’ PECAN TRUNDLE BED (as shown right) $169.50 Drawer Unit. $99.00 Shelf Dusk, .$32.60 Doer-Drawer Unit.....$99.00 Drawer Bookcase. $79.50 Chair......$39.95 Above Unit* in Pnoan •mailed, Off-Whit* Finish: Tall Chest, $159.50 Desk......$119.00 Chair______$39.00 Studied, Off-White Finish: Vanity....... ,$149.50 Hollywood Mirror $69.00 Bench......... .$45.00 BUDGET TERMS Open Thursday, Friday, Monday Evenings Until 9 P.M. 1680 8. Telegraph Rd., 8. of Orchard Lake Rd. ' Free Peaking Front end Side of Store FE 2-8348 Decbrating ftUUflfoNTIAl , i,WEDNESDAY, APRIL >0, lPflfi Are you just five or 10 pounds sway tram a lovely figure? We are so likely to let that many pounds linger on because the situation doesn’t seem so terribly drastic. However, that much overweight can make the difference between a truly beautiful silhouette and one which has the stamp of mkl-dleage on it. This is the second day of my 0-Day Diet. It will help if you plan as little social life as possible during fills nine days. It seems unappreciative not to eat and enjoy the wonderful food your hostess has prepared for you. If you do accept an invitation during this or margarine and two level teaspoons of sugar to your daily intake without drastically changing the results you obtain. However, make the teaspoon measurements LEVEL, and do not take any other liberties with the menus. BREAKFAST One-half grapefruit One thin dry piece of whole wheat toast Black coffee MD MORNING Glass of skimmed milk or buttermilk LUNCHEON , One poached egg One thin dry piece of whole wheat toast One-half cup broccoli One glass skimmed milk DINNER Two crisp raw carrots Baked fish (medium portion) One-half cup green peas ' Shredded lettuce salad, lemon dressing Fresh fruit cup Annual Fair Is Scheduled Pancakes and music will he on the agenda at the Douglass Houghton School PTA "Family Fun” night Saturday from S to 7p.m. Charles Gauthier of Sandy Ridge Drive, White Lake Township, practices the drums for the talent portion of the evening while Mrs. Ted Lewis, Union Lake, who is in charge of the entertainment, hangs a poster. Rhonda Throndset, also of Union Lake, warms up OH the keys. Cochairmen of the event are Mrs. James McCutcheon and Mrs. Joseph Gauthier. h St. Benedict’s 10th annual .Carnival Capers will be held Saturday from 4 to I p.m. in the school on Lynn Street. St. Gertrude’s Auxiliary is sponsoring the gala with proceeds going to file school. Mrs. Thomas Carry and Mrs. Grant Browning are co-chairmen with assistants, Mrs. Robern Einheuser, Mrs. William ’Treanor, Mrs. August Boucher, Mrs. Frank Weger, Mrs. Louis Fairbrother, Mrs. Herman Steir and Mrs. Lionel Freiberg. \ Attractions will include a cake walk, plant room, dig Sister Theresa of St. Benedict’s School beams with pride as she watches two of her students make posters for the Saturday fair. Both Brian Carry of West Iroquois Road Four women were initiated into Xi chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma society at a dinner meeting Tuesday evening in the Haven Hill Lodge. New members are Mrs. Gordon T. Barr, Mrs. Robert D. Boyce, Mrs. Robert Madden and Mrs. George H. PUlnam. The state convention will take place at Shanty Creek Lodge tin May IMS. AWARD On May 18, the group will present an award to the editorial board of Origins, the Pontiac Central High School creative writing magazine. V :* * Mrs. Max Selle was assisted by Mrs. R. H. Kempf mid Mrs. Charles Wait for the initiation ceremonies. Hostesses were Florence Gullstram, Mrs. Walter Green-acre and Myrtle Huntley. Alpha Gamma Eugenia Keller will assume duties as president of Alpha Gamma chapter, next year. Bernard Mouseau and Ms. R. H. Matson, secretaries and Mrs. Harold Houck, treasurer. INITIATED New members initiated at this time were Mrs. Edward Bowen, Mrs. G. C. Dunn, Mrs. C,' A. Ellis, Mrs. Theodore Grabman, Mrs. B. A. Hill, Mrs. C. J. Johnson, Mrs. H. P. Martiny, Mrs. R. C. Pulley and Virginia Thrun. Alpha Bata Reports were given on the Dorothy Selle Future Teacher Grants in Aid at the Tuesday evening meeting of Alpha Beta chapter, held in the Don-elson School. Applications for the current grants will be received by Mrs. Chester Arnold, Helen Bulla and Jolene Nebeker. secretaries; and Mrs. Clare Hubbell parliamentarian. DELEGATES Delegates elected to the state convention were Miss Lukins, Mrs. Arnold, Mrs. and Chris Browning of Fembefry Drive put their artistic talents to work on colorful posters for the event. Start Rehearsals Early PRINTED PATTERN At lunch you can substitute any green leaty vegetable for the broccoli if you wish dr if it is not available at a restaurant. this meeting, assisted by Mrs. Stuart Choate, lias Bulla and Miss Nebeker. One Must Practice Tact More Women Insured today NEW YORK dm — Women own well over $120 billion in a variety of life insurance policies, the Institute of Life Insurance reports. This is double the amount ten years ago. Studies by the Life Insurance Agency Management Association indicate that approximately 60 per cent of *0 adult women own some form of life insurance, the moat If you would like to have my 9-Day Diet booklet which gives you all the menus, send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for It Address Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. Tonywrow: “Throw Out Your Bulges While Spring Cleaning.'’ “And her mother brought out their accumulated week’s laundry for us to do for her! “What is wrong with people when they are so selfish and tactless?’’ TACT AND MUSIC Tact is like skill at the piano keyboard for both must be But some families not only don’t teach unselfishness to', their children, but actually sat daily examples of greedy avariciousness. New officers elected at this meeting were Jean Lukins, president; Mary Lu Robertson, first vice president; Mrs. Donald Tick, second vice pres-dent; Mrs. Robert Elliott and Mrs. Gordon Earhart, This visiting family thus shows a perfect example of “like mother, like daughter,” for the daughter hid the soda pop to avoid sharing it! Imagine the dilemma of this girl’s future husband if she later marries? The election of officers took If these relatives who descended on Lois had been unable to play a piano, die would not have held it against them, would she? For the general public doesn’t feel that everybody must be a pianist. But there is a general opinion that at toast by the time we reach adulthood, we should be reasonably tactful. Alas, thousands of adults placb' at a recent dinner meeting in Greenfield’s Restaurant, Birmingham. Others elected are Mrs. Charles Bessolo, first vice president; Mrs. G. E. Meads, second vice president: Mrs. Several local, women are working on arrangements far the third annual dessert smorgasbord and fashion show of Wayne State University Home. Economics Alumni Association. It's Summer cites Pickin' Tima Which is why you young people better look into the background of your future mate, for good looks can disguise a selfish personality. * A * So be sure to send for the 200-point “Rating Scale for Sweethearts, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. It helps you shatter blind infatuations and analyze your sweetheart logically! (Alwtyt writ* to _Or. Cron* In Ibis takes place May 7 at Crowley’s in Detroit. Mrs. Tom Reese of Orchard Lake is president of the organization. * * ★ \ . Joining her in committed work are Mrs. Robert Hague, Mrs. William Ersthaler and Mrs. John Noraian of Birmingham; Mrs. Gerald Fre-ricks, Pontiac; Mrs. t Owen Goodrich, Troy and Mrs. Carl Carl Welti of Farmington. Women's1 Club Has Annual Party Mrs. Byron Cole of Sylvan Shores Drive opened her home Monday for the Sylvan Shorn Women’s dub annual card party. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Omer Lewis, Mrs. John C. Paddock and Mrs. Clyte R. Haskill. And they don’t even seem to realize how they appear to other people who have a more cultured training in etiquette. The usual in-laws of a young couple, struggling to make ends meet while the husband is in military service, will try to help out their budget by buying food or taking the Special! ‘TVtcfeasel For MOTHER'S DAY "‘-RojjaU Cofiewont* UNUSUALLY COMPLETE IVORY WHITE SERVICE FpR 12 k BEAUTIFULLY EMBOSSED Rarely can you find a large tervice the best! * when yotf remember, her birthday A with • *1 COMB ALIVE FOR SPRING! Sand for our new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog. 128 top shapes for sun, fun, dancing, dining, everyday! One free pattern — dip coupon In Catalog. JHeumode %TIP-TOE* Wgtk SEAMLESS ■ * SHEERS SUMMERETTES Gp Summerettes Pickin' Soon at, , We eeod Birthday flowers anywhere Open Monday and Friday Until 9 ■Open Thun., Fri.,Mon. Nighu’til9 559 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2 0127 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 PONTIAC TONIGHT Washington Irving E>TO; 7:90 p.m. Dr, Araold Embree ' to speak. Mrs Allen Henson will report on school (air set for MnylL McCnrroll; 7:90 p.m. film, “Cancer, the Inside Story.” Cub Scout drill team. Babysitting! SHOPS, INC, BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL Delicious Sausage Carry Out, -682-9811 ()|*N Evening* PONTIAC MALL Fun for Toddler For homemade pull toy. at* tach a string to a good size tin can that has a smooth top edge. Place a rubber jar ring on the end of the string. The tiddler will enjoy pulling B-* toy Exhibit l Area Couples Repeat Wedding Vowsr Being Shown * ^ at Cranbrook Cranbrook Academy of Art Gallariaa currently is featuring “Good Design in Toys,” an exhibition prepared by The .Creative Playthings Foundation. The exhibition shows toys collected from many lands and cultures, playthings not only of beauty, but designed to enlarge the horizons of a child, according to a spokesman from Cranbrook Institutions. A * * A one-man show of paintings and drawings by Zoltan Sepe-shy, retiring president of Cranbrqpk Academy of Art, is continuing in the gallerias. Both exhibitions does May S. CLOAK GALLERIES The galleries will be dosed May P-27 for setting up the Annual Summer Student Exhibition. The exhibition, highlight of tiie year’s program in which works by students to all eight art departments at Gran-brook are presented, opens .May 28 and remains all summer. ★ A * School tours, of the Young People’s Art Center Gallery will be offered while the galleries are closed. Gallery hours are 2 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through.Fridays and 1 to 5 p. m. weekends, except tor major holidays. There is an admission. The Daniel Eglintons of Galena Drive, Commerce Township, an: nounce the engagement of their daughter,. Dana Susan, to Seaman Ret. Steven Ardie Pitcher, son of the R. D. Pitchers of Walled Lake. Her fiance is stationed at the Naval Training Center, ’Great Lakes, III. MRS. D. L. ACKLEY MRS. J. G. PHILLIPS MRS. G. W. BLAYLOCK MRS. J. A. LANKFORD MRS. W. A. POTOCKI JR. The Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church in Clawson was the setting for the recent marriage of Diane Lynn Simpson to Donald Lee Ackley of Lapeer {load, Orion Township. Pastor Edwin C. Wagstaff performed the evening rite for. the couple whose parents are the Donald R. Beauchamps .of Lake Drive, Oxford Township and the Lee Ackleys of Whipple, Ohio. Peau de ange lace accented the bride's A-line gown and Watteau train of white silk organza worn with bubble veil of illusion. White roses and a white orchid rested on her lace-covered prayer book. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bonkow-ski attended the couple and Robert Sanderson and William Sanderson were ushers. The couple will reside on The Calvary Baptist Church was the setting for the recent marriage of Marjorie Ann Shedd to Joseph Charles Phillips. A ' A Sr The Harold Langevins of West Tennyson Avenue attended their daughter at the afternoon rite performed by Rev. Henry Wrobbel. AAA A corsage of pink and white carnations and a veiled pillbox complemented the bride’s two-piece suit of pale beige crocheted knit over silk. ■'» • * * A- The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Janet Nusbaum of South Edith Street. A it" it The newlyweds have returned from a brief honeymoon in Ontario and plan to live on Harriett Street. Off on a Florida honeymoon A recent evening ceremony are the Gary William Blay- and reception in the Water-locks (Annette Lucille R o f e) ford Township t Church of who exchanged recent vows Christ marked the vows of in St. Michael’s Catholic Paulette Hawkins and John Church. Their parents, the Donald Rofes of East Iroquios Road and the junior Galen A. Blaylocks of Voorheis Road, joined the newlyweds at the reception in the YWCA Building. WHITE ORCHIDS A bouquet of white Phalae-nopsis orchids and w h i t e roses was carried by the bride who was gowned in lace-appliqued white silk 'organza over taffeta. Arthur Lankford. Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Hawkins of Pine Knob Lane, Independence Township, and the Clyde R. Lankfords of Reynolds'Street are parents of the newlyweds. Brenda Sue Hawkins afe tended her sister who wore' rose pointe pattern white ChantlHy lace and silk organza over taffeta with court train. ' Instructions Are Helpful for Men's Clothes Care She wore an illusion veil with pearl and crystal tiara. Mrs. Robert Richmond of Oxford was honor matron san Blaylock. Karen Rindfusz and Timothy Davidson were flower-girl and ring-bearer. Re-embroidered Swedish lace accented a gown of white chiffon over satin for Jeanne Alice Hahn of Covert Road, at her recent marriage to Walter Anthony Potocki Jr. it A •' A Completing her ensemble for the rite in 8t. Lawrence Catholic Church, Utica, were a three-tiered illusion veil and bouquet of white carnations, Stephanotis and Ulies of the valley. !'-A, A ' A Parents of the couple are Mrs!' Henry W. Hahn of Romeo, the late Mr. Hahn, the senior Mr. Potocki of Utica and Mrs. June A. Potocki. With Emilie Hahn, her sister’s ^lunar, maid, were Karen Schiebel, Lake Orton, and Mrs. George Steelgrave of Group to See Special Film Mrs. George Goodwin will show slides of “Metamora Revisited” before the Bloomfield [ Hills branch, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, May 2, in tha Village Woman’s Club. • A A A The pictures Will show the members visiting the “working” areas of Mrs. John Q. Nagel’s unique, experimental farm. j Luncheon at the club will fol-j tow the program to brain promptly at 11:00. The annQal1 meetings will follow. I Tips from the American Institute of Men’s and Boys’ Wear: • A piece of rid terry towel will do a good job cleaning a hat. Just rub gently with the nap. a If you’re short of trouser clamp hangers and your trousers are damp and wrinkled, put the cuffs neatly across the top drawer of high dresser, then close drawer. The weight of the trousers Will pull them back into shape. • A little ammonia In the water used to wash knitted , sport shirts or sweaters will eradicate perspiration odors. • An occasional sprinkling of about V* teaspoon of Salt in your shoes will absorb moisture and keep feet drier. • A circle of. masking tape, with sticky side out, will make the trouser, bar .of a hanger skid-proof. Tape* pro- vides enough friction to keep pants from sliding, and does not leave a mark on fabric. • If a zipper in a washable garment jams on its return from laundering, probably due to starch, rub the teeth with waxed paper — and it’ll zip again. An illusion veil and bouquet of white carnations completed her ensemble. Bridesmaids were Faye Earls and Mrs. Richard D. . Irelan, both of Clarkston at ML----------------- along with bridesmaids Syl- the rite performed by Robert Utica, as bridesmaids, via Rofe, Donna Rofe_and Su- jj Cross, minister. A A A With Robert Tabor, best On the esquire side were man, were the ushers Theo- Gerald Blackett, best man, (tore Owen and David Gid- and ushers Gregory Schoen-cum. herr and George Steelgrave. The couple will reside at The reception was to the Cranberry Lake after a honey- social hall of St. John’s moon. Lutheran Church, in Romeo. With best man Robert j Richmond, were the ushers, ■ James Haskell, Richard Blough and David Wooster. A A A The bride was honored to showers given by Mrs. James Haskell, Camley Drive, Jill Anderson of Wenonah Drive and Mrs. Donald Davidson Oxford. Doctors Are Concerned 01 j About Earlobe Piercing BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Washington Site of DAR Congress WASHINGTON (UPD-The national society of the Daughters of the American Revolution opens its 75th Continental Congress tonight at its national headquarters here. A A A The congress, which meets annually during the week of April IS' — the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington, is expected to draw, about 4,000 officers and delegates representing its 185,000 members. Shower Is Pink V Blue Mis. Raymond Mazurek of Ann Arbor, the former Jeanette Cockle, was honored at a recent stork shower in the Shawnee Lane home of her parents, the Fredrick J. Cockles. Earlobe piercing as a do-it- i yourself bit has beetpe such | a fad among teen-age girls that doctors are beginning to ! feel concerned. Numerous methods are used: from the stapler (a device that shoots j a pin through the trip), a cutting needle with silver wire or Mack thread to the straight I needle or straight pin technique so, much favored by cri- Cohostesses were her sister iege girls. But earlobe pierc-Margaret and Mrs. L e 1 a n d fag, done any way, is no job Gannon of Warren. Other recent fetes for Mrs. Mazurek include a dinner in the Ypsilanti home of Mrs. Richard Schmidt and a party with former coworkers in the Covert Road home of Millie Robinson. Collegians Engage in Many Activities | for amateurs. 1 LOBE HEMORRHAGE j No method is foolproof. With any, premature closing of the hole or hemorrhaging into the lobe can occur. In such cases the task of inserting the ear-I rings and placing them sym-I metrically may be complicated. Secondary infection or Charles Schenck, junior at Albion College and son of Mr. and Mrs. William Schenck, Orchard Lake, will leave June 14 for a summer in Europe with the Albion College Summer Study-Travel Program. He is an economics major. AAA Some 80 students will participate to the program which includes a four-week tour of lectures at European centers of learning and five weeks of formal study at the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland. FERRIS STATE Dennis Hausker, son of Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Hausker of Scott Lake Road is a new initiate of Phi Eta Sigma, national scholastic honor society for male freshmen at Ferris State College. Requirement for membership is a grade-point average of 3.5 or better on a 4.0 scale. MICHIGAN STATE Recently elected secretary of the Associated Women Students to Michigan State Unt versity was Mary J. Doerr. Her parents art the Maxwell ft Doerrs of Ottawa Drive. Mias Doerr is a sophomore home economics major. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY A number of area students to Oakland University an members of this year’* 150-voice university chorus, directed by George V. Grippe, nmociate pnoferaor of music. They include: Norma A 4lrm set Manor Sir bet, sophomore alto; WUIM Bald- win, Canterbury Drive, fresh- man alto; Carol Draher, Mt. Clemens Street, junior soprano; iuid Susan Dunlap,'Sylvan Lake, senior soprano. Others are: Edward Gehres, Mark Avenue, senior bass; Nancy Lackey, Crooks Road, sophomore alto; Sandria La-vallis, Bondale Street, freshman soprano; Norma Linsen-man, North Cass Lake Road, junior soprano; and A1 Mann, Third Street, sophomore bass. The 1 I s t continues w i t h: Pamela Noren, East Pike Street, junior alto; Glen Rawing, Line rin Avenue, freshman tenor; Randolph Zieke, Lakeland Street freshman baritone; and Cheryl Savage, Tuttle Court, sophomore soprano. Completing the roster are: Orchard Lake residents, Edward Bur well, freshman bass; Carol Gederleaf and Kathleen Wood, freshmen sopranos. j STEPHENS COLLEGE j At Sephens College, Columbia, Mo., "Judith Nan Gordon, daughter of Dr. and Mrs, Irving E. Gordon, James K Boulevard, has been elected president of Dearing Hall. She is a freshman. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Susan Marsha Arnkoff, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Harry Arnkoff of Illinois Avenue, senior at the University of Michigan, has been initiated by Alpha chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. At the school’s recent Honors Convocation she was named a James B. An-gell Scholar and elected to Phi Kappa Phi and Pi Lambda Theta honor societies. Last year she was elected to Phi Sigma Iota, national romance language honor society. A A A Miss Arnkoff, who will be married in June, will live and teach in Chicago next year. WELLS COLLEGE Two area men will be among 200 fathers of Wells College students arriving on the Aurora, N.Y. campus Friday for the 16th annual Fathers’ weekend. They are Albert J. Jehle Jr. of Birmingham and Semon E. Knudsen, Bingham Farms, whose daughters are Deobrah A. Jehle and Kristine Knudsen, both in the class of *60. WESTERN MICHIGAN At Western Michigan University’s recent honor convo- cation Gary G. Gay nor of Simmons Drive received the Michigan Retailers Association Plaque, a Distributive Education departmental award. A ■ A A Recently admitted to the Honor’s College at Western was Paul Magnell. A sophomore, he is the son of Mrs-. Evelyn Magnell, Latimer Street. keloid formation (tumor-like ! growths) are also possibilities: In the method preferred by Drs. Leon Goldman and Kan j Kitzmiller, of the University I of Cincinnati School of Medi-cine, a straight needle and ; flexible w i r e are used. The sites chosen for puncture are SPECIAL BUDGET $£50 WAVE u Callies’ HI N. Perry 8t. tt I-OS1 Make Your Appointment Now! PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE. Tinting—Bleaching Catting BEAUTY SALON IftS Auburn Ave. Put Free ~ FI 4-SS78 Idffi S lee me. owner IMPERIAL'S 8 Sprint Tune-Up SKCUL Bring your tewing machine in and have I cleaned, oiled and tension ^ adjusted. Only .. . In home 05.00 ,■ ALL WORK GUARANTEED! NOW 7-Ft. VMINM All Cloth, No Flattie 1st tommy Exchange With Your Re-usable Hose Ends RICKMAN IMS. SEWING CENTER marked symmetrically on each ear by small brilliant green dots, and a local anesthetic is Injected into the toner lobes. AAA A hollow needle is that passed through from the toner side, emerging at the prev-ously marked spot. Next, flexible silver or gold wire is | inserted into the hollow nee- j die, drawn through, and left i to place after the needle is withdrawn. The ends are tied and left in place after the needle is withdrawn. The ends are tied loosely to form a crude earring. Ten days to two weeks later, the wire can he removed. During this time, it must be moved occasionally to keep the puncture open. The'patient must cleanse the area daily' and apply a mild antiseptic. Hairs may get tangled with the wire but this is no serious problem. A A., A. The straight needle and wire method, though simple | enough, is far from being a do-it-yourself trick. For earlobe I piercing, see your doctor. diamond splendor.., - Very Appropriate! nega diamond-set watch is one of die amt reasons a woman caa own, Every diamond is individually inspected for color, oat, elssity and brilliance. The high-precision Omega movement... cheeked to 1497 manufacturing stages...% one of the most accurate in the world. Models from $125 to ever 91000 F.T.L Redmond’s Jewelrr — 81 N. Saginaw St* Free Parking in Rear of Store tkt jAldm t*4 efQtJliim, Jtmtf Most masculine. The oil of West Indian limes, die with tropical woody spites. A robust cologne of distinction add character imported only to fine shops front the Virgin Islands Handsomely packaged in hand-woven palm frond jacket Four ounces, four dollars and fifty cents; eight ounces, seven doHanand fifty cents, plus tax. Request St. Johns West Indian lime Cologne. • lit JL SAGINAW • HUI0M SHEET Walgroee Agency • 4895 Dim 1WT, Neat te Sevan Hush Puppies* shoes look bettor then over this spring. This is Lonlei, one of the new styles from the exciting, colorful collection of Hush- Puppies'*%asuals. Here are just a few of the delicious color combinations: Camel/ Pecan, Desert Berry/Mountain Berry, White Grape/ Honey Dew and Linden/Laurel Green. Sound pretty? They are. Step in and see the whole collection, including all the new styleb in Breathin' Brushed Pigskin*. j% *12 HushfftPtippies* TuID BRAND CASUALS Security Charge Michigan Bankgftl jSecy*4 SHOES At Moms WE HAVE A IIS RANGE DP TO II AM AttOO SELECTION OF 1(101118 TH! TfttPOXUAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APfrlL 20, 19M B—5 WED., THURS., FRL, SAT. A Division of theS. S. Kreige Company whh ever 900 Kraege, K mart and Jupiter Store*. PERMANENT- PRESS SUPS, GOWNS Your Choice MATERNITY SEPARATES Our Reg. 2.97 All With Comfortable Roll-Up Sloovos Oar Reg. 2.97. Popular shirt shifts featuring stitch nloated and straight fronts, cotton Cannes in solids, pas* tds and prints. 8-18, ltlMilh Comfy tennia oxfords have foil cushion insole, soft cushioned lining, rubber soles and heels. Black, or white canvas, light or dark bine cotton denim. Sixes to 10. Charge It "Slacks, skirts, shirts, surfers, jaasaicas to mix and match. Easy* care fabrics. 7*15, 8* Gingham Checktf Calico Prints, Chock* Our Reg. 1.97 Ea. A. No-lron gown; ruffled bottom. S-M-L. B. No-iron aUps with shadow penal. 32 to 40. Onr Rag. 1.3a Sleertless, man* tailored shirts in a large assortment of eolon and patterns. Choose all' cotton, blonds of ATiilOams and cotton. Sipes 32 to 3a "MU.se* Repeat of a Sellout! Our Reg. 29.82 Your Choice i_ Men’s 25-jewel, self-winding calendar watches have stainless steel cases, are water resistant* Women’s 21-jewel watches are set with 2 diamonds. All watches have expansion bands. • Silk and wool sharkskin suits • Imported EnglUh wool and mohair • 1-Button, 2-Button and Continentals • 36 to 46, in regular, shorts, longs Eqjoy fantastic savings on “luxury” suits with, new “L” shaped lapels, notdfc lapels, semi-peak lapels; side Or center vents; stitched edges; extension waistbands. In oolora or gray, burgundy, bottle green, browns, goldtones mid Mack. ChatgaiL Ideal for summer leisure or play! Fully cushioned insole, rubber soles and heels. Crafted of canvas uppers for iopg wear, easy care. In sixes for boys and men. . Shimmering collection of necklaces, earrings, bracelets and pins ... set with colored stones, sparkling brilliants and imitation pearls. Colorful accents for your summer fashions. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD l|p V\ wffira ui \\ ; J 1 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1PM Color-Feel Theory Is Supported Junior Editor Quiz on— VIOLIN VARNISH By Science Service NEW YORK—A min cm stick his hand in a completely dark box and aenae the dlftoenN between a polished plate and one painted blade without ever touching either. In his theory of skin sensitivity, Dr. W. L. Makous of the Internatiohal Business Machines Corporation Research Center, Yorktown Heights, N. Y., was able to demonstrate that man can indeed tell the difference between light and dark colors, and between painted and polished surfaces, through his skin. The means is heat-net heat given off by objects in the The G-E COLOR Portable You've Waited For! ment . . . portable COLOR TV, smaller than any color set, total weight only 24 poundsl A trim 11" picture tube uses the new "rare earth" phosphors for color fidelity and brightness. More dazzling greens, reds, yellows, bluest "Magic Memory" color controls simplify tuning. Built-in antenna provides the finest reception. QUESTION: Did the varnish used by toe old-time violin makers really improve theta* tone? For instance, the black paint absorbs skin heat and the man’s hand cools slightly. But the polished surface rejects heat and his hand stays warm. So distinct are the different absorbtion rates that people can sense changes in warmth about 90 per cent of the time, explained Dr. Makous. - ANSWER: It is usually agreed that the wonderful violins made in toe 1500s to 1700s in the town of Cremona in Italy are the finest ever created. They possess that remarkable singing tone Milch seems able to express the performer’s Inmost feelings-* quality which has led to the description of the violin as the king Actually, color has very little to do with it Infrared wave lengths or heat do not determine hue, said Dr. Makous. Therefore; how do people sense col- Such makers as the three generations of the Amati family; Antonio Stradivari, the prince of ail violin makers; and Strad’s close rival, Giuseppe Guarnteri, used only the finest of woods in their instruments and worked over them with the most exacting care. It is generally believed that the varnish used on a violin has an effect on its tone. When exactly toe right varnish is used on wood which has seasesMd far axaetly toe right time, toe varnish will penetrate the pares of the weed and preserve its das-ticity, that is, Its ability to vibrate. Some think the old makers had a Secret varnish recipe which has been lost, but others feel that it was the warm sunny climate of Italy, in whim violin varnish could be slowly and evenly dried, which was responsible for the beautiful tone of the old violins. PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment Aril • 90 Days Same as Cash QmyHi • Up to 36 Months to Pay PARKPREE INWKC'S PRIVATE LOT AT REAR OF STORE claimed? SENSE DIFFERENCE They probably do not, Dr. Makous said, but if two colors are distinctly different, in lightness and darkness, and if they are very brightly illuminated— as by a 100-watt light bulb one foot away — skin could again sense the difference. In this case, the lighter color would be reflecting heat from! the bulb instead of from the hand, enough to raise akin temperature to a perceivable level. As for telling the difference between red and blue chips—it la doubtful. j4 ■A SilitfllfuL Sprikg TiwL FOR YOU TO DO: Try to color the scene of Strad working In his viefin shop to get the effect of sunlight pouring In, and theo get this golden glow on the Stradivarius violin the girije playing. OVER 20,000,000 STAMPS GIVEN AWAY IN MATCH THE STAMP! EVERYBODY'S FAVORITE FARM FRESH GRADE A FOR a delicious meal - CENTER CUT RIB Pork Chops SUCID PARM MAID OR JHuefc Hawk Bacon TENDER, LEAN FLAVORED WITH 7 SPICES Huai's Rich SPECIAL LABEL. 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Syrup 2 WAKE UP TO A GOOO CUR OF Maxwell House Coffee 3 IN 7 DELICIOUS FLAVORS Royal Pudding Desserts HALVES AND SLICES Del Monte Cling Peaches 1 make a PiRpacr Party click Regular Faygo Pop TOWN PRIDE LIGHT MEAT Chunk Pock Tana SPECIAL LABEL ... LIQUID Thrill Dish Detergent CALL 335-9462 f 26400 W. Eight Mile Rd. IK Ml* West of Telegraph Toledo | Petoskey, Mick L t-42411 34744*2 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER lyj if rri i mv ATi 1 imLamM l fill111ftf r iiyflifflwt Hjjjm SMUN’S THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1PM la ate- Tashkent Accord Puts Russia on Spot MACOMB GUN READY - Pfc. dark Richie checks his Add of fire In his bunker near Gt Chi, South Viet Nam. Richie sharsa A Week of War-~3 the bunker with two o NEW DELHI, India (A?) -The Soviet Union la on the spot these days In the tumultuous and unpredictable arfoa of South Asian politics. As spiritual godfather of the India-Paklstan Tashkent peace declaration, the Soviet Union now Is faced with making It work. This Is proving difficult. Neither India nor Pakistan has Implemented fully the Jan. 10 declaration and Moscow la busy behind the scenes, trying to get things rolling. The United States, though for once it does not carry the burden of making aomathtaf w In South Asia, la supporting the U.S.S.R. IN TOUCH A reliable source says the Soviet Union has been in touch Why Are We Fighting? For All People (EDITOR* NOTE - It tons now Wednesday and the.scuttlebutt said: Only two more days and than it's hit the Viet Cong. For Young Clark Richie U was a day of summing up: "We are fighting foil more than our own skins." Thi following is the story of the third of five agonising days in the life of a fighting American soldier in Viet Nam.) By JOHN NANCE CU cm, South Viet Nam (AP) - Propaganda loudspeakers blared in Vietnamese to- where the Viet Cong was fortified In decades-old tunnels and trenches: "Give up, you dooaaad. Turn yourself In, you won’t be harmed.” On the perimeter of an American camp, atop his bunker Jurt SAIGON UB - PfC. Clark Richie, tt, of Jay, Okie., whose story of five days In South Viet Nam Is bab« told this week In a series by the Associated Press, has been awarded the Air Modal with an Oak teat Cluster, the 25th Infantry Division announced yesterday. It was awarded for meritorious achtoSemcnt as an aerial door gunner while bo was on Mm-penny duty In Viet Nam In of the 2nd Brigade, 25th Division, had battled for every yard in establishing this base camp. In the dark, the chatter of too propaganda broadcasts made a strange background for the voice coming over the little radio. It was the President of the United States. Bis words faded from time to time and blasts from American artillery drowned them out every few minutes. Clark Richie, 22, of Jay, Okla., put his ear next to the radio. Bo caught the President saying the United States stands for the self-determination of all people — that is why Americans are in Viet Nam. Richie, unmarried, with n *• year-old widowed mother and 18-year-old girttriand at l lay silent when the * ended. Earlier this week he had said be figured America was here because if it didst fight In Viet Nam now It would someday have to fight closer to * Une. But with shells screaming overhead, loudspeakers calling, and the echo of Johnson’s words in his head, he thought it over. “It makas you aorta proud, i said. Me slapped at mosquitoes boring through the repellent he had a rifle shot: from the enemy plantation, a young soldier sot this Wednesday nfcht huddled over a _ Ba was near Ch CM, a town M mfias norfowtot of Saigon to fits t of a Communist strong- fighting for more than our own He remembered the . 1 little glrlo be bad in-' structed in their first.English, lemon the day before at Cu Chi The children bad looked up aft tho tall, red-haired Oklahoman and repeated after him: "Fine, “I guess we’re fighting for them, too,” Richie said. Richie had spent six months as a helicopter gunner in Viet Nam last year, but said ground fighting is “much rougher, messy.” ■ ★ At dawn this same Wednesday, the guerrillas had opened up on the 1st Battalion about 200 yards left of Richie and his three buddies in Bunker 14 of B company, 2nd Battalion. Rlchia was standing guard at tbs banker then, while tho others ate breakfast at the mem rea. As the sun rose behind them, is men embed and shaved under the bamboo that shrouded the bunker. It was starting to bo uncomfortably warm by o’clock. WWW Later Richie said tbs relations between the white and Negro boys in the company were first-rate. “We’ve got • close outfit,’* he said. “We’re together out here all tba time. We depend on each other. We get along fine.’* “ * it reached its near-10 peak about 2:10. Tho mm grumbled about the dust and ants and mosquitoes. But most talk about the operation coming up against the Viet Cong. It appeared set for Friday, two days away, according to the best to* formation they could get Official word was J ' The mm ta hold. The soldier and tba others thank you. How are yon.” foe propaganda speakers bawled out to Ctamrlia: “Give up, yon are * with Paklatan in an effort to hand off more trouble et foe type ftaft exploded into War last Prims Minister Indira Gsndbl of India told Parliament that Soviet PremMr Alexei N. Kosygin had aasured her the Soviet Union would take up with Palda-tan alleged violations of foe Taehkant agreement. * * * The Soviets also frequently contact Mia. Gandhi’s government on points of dispute along the India-Paklstan border. Uamant charged last Friday hi boldly. Tba Tashbmt declaration was claimed ta be a r*» sounding Soviet victory. ■pr, and Koaygin especially, got a boost in popularity. Now, it appears foe Soviet Un-tan will havs to work hard to it. New Delhi to settle quickly and quietly a dispute over N acne of frontier ground claimed by Pakistan. India finally pultad out its troops. Opposition members in Par pushed into ordering the withdrawal by foe United Nates and the Soviet Union. Defame Minister YJ, Chavan declared, however, that India had not surrendered its territory under pressure from foe United States or any other country. The SI acres belong-ta India “and than is no doubt about It,” ha added. Great pressure is on the 8a-vtat Union because their prestige is closely linked ta foe Tashkent declaration’s success — or lack of success. MOVED Of BOLDLY After watching foe United States try for more than a decade to solve foe India-Paid*-1 tan dispute, the U.S.S.R. moved fob would be conalforod quickly- ‘ jfrni, # . # — Bkch side meusm foe other of Intarfarmm to Martial affaire, although this ta banned These are the problems: - Aft foe Soviet insistence, India and Pakistan agreed at foe Thshkmt summit to con tin- meeting “at the highest and •r levels.” So far there has been only one ministerial level conforanee and both sides acknowledge fiat was • failure. * * # — Diplomatic, economic and cultural relations have not to normal despi pledge to the declaration that Tba sticking point for the So-iat Union — as tar the Assert-to the pant - is foe Indla- of the Himalayan atato of Kasb- Rat Control Grant WASHINGTON (AP) - A ILS-mlllion grant for a comprehensive rat control program ta Chicago baa hem approved by the Office of Eaconomtc Opportunity. Arrouf Vodka puts morning in yourdrink! You may not taata tho Arrow—but you'll know It's there. Arrow Vodka transforms t plain Martin), Bloody Mary, or Screwdriver into ajmzing-drink! What’s tho socret? Arrow Is filtered once to make it vodka-then whirled to perfection by a special process to make it Arrow. So always follow the Arrow to better drinks. ao and too moor, msnufto most own. aakow uoucum Charge! Why should we fight you? A charge account is for your convenience..« there doesn’t seem much point In making it a difficult thing. That’s why we have severe/ charge plans. Each qiaa tailored to you and your budget (Just the way our famous brand name men's suits are tailored to fit you.) Try it out Head for Osmun*t Take a look at the labels. Like ’Botany* 500, McGregor, Van Hausen, Dobbs, Petroctlli, etc. Select your suit or topcoat or sport cost or sweater or shirts or whatever, and show your charge card. (If you don't have one, come in and g«t one. It only tskea 3 minutes.) Then all you have to do is sign your name. It’s a case of the pen being mightier than the sword. 0 part of Ponftec since 1991 FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontlae H Ttl-Huren Contor In Pontiac HTi Open Fri. I Mon. 'til 9 Open Every Night ’lit t Warren TWW PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 80, 1066 fourth of Mankind *f H• ay• n by Don Oaklty Chong Cnerftemanohip— to piecroe+ha Living fiocrlffco— to Appeaae the Dead In the Shang era the first and most original element of (Chinese) culture was bom — a pictorial script. .. Chinese psychology shaped this strange structure and was shaped by it in its turn over thousands of years. —Amaury de Riencourt While no archekgical 'proof •Tints {Of dm Hsia, China’s first dynasty, the remains of the next, the Shang, indicate there must have been many centuries of previous develop' Shang skill in working bronze has never been surpassed. Pottery making was of a high order. Writing on shells and oracle bones was in an advanced script, showing many of the basic forms of modern Chinese. Inscriptions fennd on Shang tombs, excavated only in the tlth century, give an insight into the way af life of a people who flourished nearly f| centuries ago. The king was both king and priest, intermediary between the people and Heaven, rep- Little Surinam Has Big Problem LONDON (AP) - Three centuries ago, the Dutch gave Britain a hunk of North America in exchange for a slice of South America. The bit of North America the Dutch released became New York. .. ' * The land they took over from the British now is called Surinam, 82,500 square miles in area, population 350,000. But if you think that old 17th-century transaction is in the Umbo of forgotten things, read on. OLD HEADACHE The British Foreign Office has announced that Joseph Luns, foreign minister of Holland, la coining to London today to talk , about Surinam. He is going to make a new try to setup an old headache about Surinam’s disputed frontier with top7 colony of British Guiana. Surinam, like British Guiana, runs its own domestic affairs but foreign and defense matters still are vested in The Hague and Loodon. * * * The border dispute for years has baffled diplomats, lawyers and politicians of the two countries. They blame it all on those old-time British, Dutch, Spanish, French and Portuguese who, in searding for the legendary city of El Dorado in the 16th and 17th centuries, opened up the northeast shoulder of the South American continent. B* * * trailblazers sailed down! the courantyne River, which rises in Brazil and flows northward into the Atlantic. The mighty Courantyne for generations served as a natural frontier between Surinam and British Guiana. Not so very long age, it discovered that 250 miles or so from its month, the Courantyne forked in two directions — or southeast, the other southwest. ' * ★ * The British, on behalf of the Guianans, have been insisting that the eastern branch of the Courantyne is die true frontier. The Dutch assert the Western branch should be taken as Surinam’s frontier. * + ★ In between lies dense, unpopulated jungle. But it could be rich in minerals. Perhaps the El Dorado of olden-day dreams may be uncovered there. ★ '* * Luns, accompanied by. Suri-namian envoys, is hoping for a friendly settlement and he may haver a compromise up his sleeve. Lord Walston, a junior foreign office minister flanked by Guianan representatives, will talk with him. Both Surinam and British Guiana are heading toward statehood. resented by Shang Ti, the Supreme Lord. * ■: * * • The king, as Son of Heaven, led the rituals and sacrifices which insured that the behavior of men on earth was attuned to the rhythm <— the “Yang and Yin” — of the celestial order. INTERPRETATION Priests divined the will of Heaven by interpreting the cracks in the heated bones of Worship of ancestors was already a strong element in Chinese religion. Sacrifices — sometimes human — were, made to diem and to other potent spirits of native to insure success in mortal undertakings. Below and around the king were nobles, who lived in luxury and served as governmental functionaries. TOILING PEASANTS Below them were the ignorant and toiling peasants, upon whose bent backs the entire structure of Shang — as of later — society rested. There was as yet no nation that could be called Chin* (or as tike Chinese know it,, the Middle King-dom). The authority of the Shang was limited and challenged by rival city-states and shaken by frequent wars. ‘ As was to happen again and again in Chinese history, the ruling dynasty fell into decadence and was overthrown. VIOLENT UPHEAVAL * After six centuries, in 1122 B.C., the Shang succumbed in violent upheaval to the warlike Chou clan from the western frontiers. . * ' * * • Now began the third dynasty, the Chou, which was to be the longest — 900 years — in China’s history. NEXT: Hie Warring States Insects Win Struggle With Man Two Michigan Marines Killed in Viet Action WASHINGTON (AP) - Two Michigan Marines are among servicemen listed by the Defense Department Tuesday as killed in action in Viet Nam. They were Cpl. William H. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Johnson of Ann Arbor, and Lance Cpl. Gerald W. Engel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Engel, Detroit. Bv fcbi* Service ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N. J. —1Ihe triumphant Insects con-win many survival rounds in tbeir ancient struggle against man and nature. Their latest triumph is against chemical insecticides, developed during World War H and considered a promising weapon against the small six-legged pests that destroy man’s food, bring him sickness and death, tear down Ms buildings and devour his clothing. The amazing ability of houseflies and other insects to develop a resistance to DDT and other insecticides has sent scientists back again to the laboratories for more effective weapons, reports Dr. Ross E. Hutchins, entomologist with the Mississippi State Plant Board and department chairman at Mississippi Stale College. Man now finds himself haying to study and understand the varied life habits of these tiny creatures in order to keep them in line, Dr- Hutchins points out in his recent book, “Insects” (Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, N,J:> For the past 300 million years, insects have been winning many other battles against nature. They have been beset by and have overcome every conceivable calamity including massive Ice Ages, volcanic eruptions, upheaving mountains and submerging seas. M PER CENT These successful insects are now so populous that they constitute about 30 per cent of the ‘ j known animals and are found in almost every conceivable location in every continent, SINGAPORE (AP) - U.S. troops have landed fat another Asian land, on a peaceful mission. Despite fears of leftist pro-sts, a trickle of American servicemen have been coming to Singapore since the government’s recent decision to welcome about 80 a week for combat leaves from Viet Nam. Singapore GIs Stir Little Fuss So far the’program has hardly caused a ripple in this island state, which has the largest British garrison east of Suez. The GIs arrive quietly in civilian clothes by commercial airliner and are hardly distinguishable from other Western tourists or residents in Singapore. LIST OF CENTERS U.S. officials added Singapore to die list 'd! rest and recreation centers for American forces in Viet Nam because the American troop build-up has taxed facilities in Bangkok, Tokyo, Hong Kong and other leave cities. Some officials were concerned that the Communists might kick up demonstrations, but none has occurred. * * i Once Singapore’s Premier Lee Kuan Yew condemned U.S. intervention, not only in South Viet Nam but in the whole of Southeast Asia. Last week, re faring to the Viet Nam war, he ‘It is a crime against humanity. But to say whq, is committing the crime would be taking sides.” The economy of this 214-square-mile has been deteriorating since its separation from toe Malaysian Federation Aug. 9. Lee said shortly after separation that Singapore Is believed to be making rfiore than |2 million a month from U.S. troop rest-and-recreation visits and from U.S. government procurement purchases here. It expects to make more. Each GI is estimated by U.S. officials here is spend $50D-fl ,-000 in the five-dsy periods they spend In Singapore. Singapore is virtually a free port and is loaded with bargain buys in cameras, watches, tape recorders and other items. ★ * * U..S government procurement purchases here are estimated to be running at more than $1 million monthly. Post exchanges in South Viet Nkm stock up on a lot of tbeir foodstuffs from here. Beef from Australia is brought here, and other fresh foods are flown up to Saigon. 95 'M' Grads to Start Internships on July 1 ANN ARBOR (AP)-Some 95 spring graduates of the University of Michigan medical school will begin internship in Michigan hospitals July 1. Another 91 wiU intern in hospitals outside the state and four will work in Army hospitals, the school said. living at high altitudes, in desert Singapore would “trade with the sands, in Antarctic snow and ice devil” if it had to in order to and in tropical lushness. Isurvive. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER PLENTY OF FREE PARKING SIS store THE FOSTTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL*), 1966 Commission to Study Proposal Revised Galloway Creek Sewer Plan Pact Received Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. turned over the report to the tity'i minority group housing committee with little comment. He indicated the OEO statistics on Pontiac housing might be useful Generally, the sewer is to fok low the creek bed from a point on the north dify'limits to just below GaOoway Lake oh the east and. then southward to the sewage treatment plant TOTAL CITY COST Neipling estimated the total city cost of the Galloway Creek, sewer at $566,000. He said the 33-year bonds could be 'paid from proceeds from the aesra^l disposal fund. Revisions in the interceptor agreement have caused the delay. Each participating community must approve the agree- commission approved a contract amendment with the State Board of Alcoholism for an added $550 state appropriation to the Pontiac Alcoholism Information Center. The total State contribution for 1966 was hiked to $2,560. la a I to 1 vote, the eeaa> mission directed Cfty Manager INTERCEPTOR COST The total interceptor system is to cost $16,500,000, according , to Neipling. The newer currently is part was originally planned as a this year. However, he aaM it FIRST CAMPER - Although & Coach Division is a pioneer in the Held of heavy-duty recreational equipment, the division is offering for the first time this year this pickup specifically identified as a camp- Four Honorary Oil Degrees j to Be Given at Graduation At «s Saturday commence- They gained considerable at-daqraduate sal law degree ment, Oakland University w i 11 tenttod in the field of science f^! „ ,Yfte Un^*r8ity; * y* tL?a£u jti°° of the ultracentrifugation da* ja* Kennedy as direc- Itechnlque in research on ro-tor of the PenceCmpS! | ^ prdouction of the molecule. in Auguat 1164, he assumed Madsen a^ rran^ W. Ms* ^ m> ** is « honors a second pout, heading up Prtsi-Wol09r,»T Umverilty grdJmte of Harvard, resides at dent Johnson’s war on poverty and the UmVeraty of Oregon, ^ Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills.as director of the Office of Econ-respecuvmy; Roger M. Eyes, an Followitw a rising career wife,omic Opportunity. In January executive vice president for Gen- sev^rai companies, Ik joined of this year he relinquished die eral Motors Corp.,; and Sargent Qogorai Motors ip 1961, add be- post of Pence Corps director. Shriver, director of the OWASE a vice president la lpBO. * y * of Economic Opportunity. He was deputy secretary of ds- Ope hundred seveaty-eigbt stu-. Moarlisa. M: awd StafrK fenaefrom'MM-1964. dents will receive degrees at the 16 worked as a research team - NTWyt.0 > ♦ comnteDcemeat exercises, begin- at Califamia of Tech- I The commencement speaker, ning at f p m. hi the Sports and oology hi the late Ms. Shriver, M, earned both his ub-|'Recteatton BuHdtng; Special! RICHARDSON’S Whipping Cream 29i ENJOY LUXURY DESSERTS WITH OUR GRADE ‘A’CREAM ... WHIPS DETTER-EVERY TIME APRIL FLAVOR FEATURES: • Fudge Brownie • Black Raspberry • Caramel ICECREAM MC HALF GALLON Special Prices Effective Thru April 24,1966 DAIRY BAR SPECIAL m BAHAMA SHAKE or MALM9' ONLY AT RICHARDSON'S M4I PLAZA} DRAYTON PLNS; HURON AT ELIZ. UL SYLVAN LAKE EVERYDAY LOW PRICE BREAD 5»$| • WONDER or SILVERCUP Richardson 4142 DIXIE HWY. I 7350 Highland IM. DRAYTON PLAINS I M-59 PLAZA 5 FARM DAIRY STORES 3414 W. HURON at ELIZABETH LAKE MSI M-1B CLARKSTON 2466 ORCHARD LK. RD. SYLVAN LAKE FUDGESICLES ft OR l| POPSICLES V WITH PURCHASE OF HALF GALLON ICE CREAM! ; B—4T- ' Joseph A. Warrea to writs 0 letter Is oflHcers of the Pow-tiac Transit Corp. for a ineel-tig oa the bwt firm's ceofract with dw city, which expfrCS MayL Warren, who reported he had talked to the head of the bus company, said he would write the letter if directed to do so by the Commission. ! * * Commissioner Robert' C. Irwin cast the lone “no" vote on the motion. Irwin said Warren bad already indicated ha bad sought auch a meeting. . A dance permit was approved last night for Bud A Lou’s Tav- Requested rezoning to reei-dential-3 of property bn Yale, just west of Baldwin, was referred to the City Planning Commission. Proposed commercial rezoning for a 45-foot atrip of land at the northeast comer of Auburn and Tasmania was also referred to city planners. GM Truck Highlight: Camper Pickup A pickup engineered for campers and bearing a camper name is the center of attraction In GMC Truck 4 Coach Division’s big roundup of l$0f recreational trucks. Sharing the spotlight with this camper pickup are these GMC headliners:. • Handi-Van and HaaikBus trucks, each with 211 Cubic feet of spade and each boasting camper conversion units. • Suburban station wagons with GMC trade strength and passenger car comfort. ★ • * it t • Country-Qrtdaer Jr. Van with galley, bath and liiunge. • Tough truck chassis especially suited for frame- engines, three body lengths, add two body stylos. CAMPER WEIGHTS The three-quarter tan Camper Cruiser is engineered io handle camper body weights of from 2,000 to 3,000 pounds, while the one-ton Cruiser is big enough for campers up to 4,500 Munda, Equipment available te enhance the appearance la-dudes bucket seats with vinyl a Coachette Cruiser, a hotel on wheels featuring a GMC school boa chassis. it it ★ u | Although GMCfTruck 4 Coach Division was a pioneer in the field of heavy-duty recreational equipment, this is the first year the division has offered a pickup specifically Identified as a camplk vehicle. Prwrieuly, GMC offered enongh heavy components te convert any of Its pickups for camper aces now all of there components are e—hfeed In a single package called the Camper Cruiser. Camper Cruisers are available fe three-quarter or one-ton versions, either as Chassis mount fey campers or pickup boxes. They feature In-Line 6 or V6 •eats, deluxe air flow banter and defecator, and dated glass windshield for added safety. In addition to the Camper Cruiser, GMC also offers halfton pickups with components ideally suited for lighter weight per bodies — particularly the shell-type campers. ★ * * And if the camper enthusiast wishes, he can pick three-quarter ton or even one-ton els with heavier com-nta for a cab-over dr chassis-mounted camper without specifying the Camper Cruiser package. 4-WHEEL DRIVE One GMC heavy-duty feature which is especially suited for rugged camper usage is four wheel drive. Fear wheelers are available as GMC pfetaqps, Subur- maMparpeie cab and chassis vehicles. Unlike conventional passen- ger Car wagons that often require overload springs for heavy loads, the GMC Suburban takes heavy Fork hr stride because It features a truck chassis and beSVy-duty design. *\ * * * Seating up to eight passengers comfortably, It provides plenty of cargo space, and it call haul boat, utility and travel trai|*t with ease. SLEEPS TWO Seats can be easily repositioned or removed, thus providing room to sleep two adults comfortably. Together wft space for MM pounds cf gear, the sleeping accemma-datlons are Meal far camping. Properly equipped as a tow vehicle, the Suburban offers steady V6 pulling power and its interior la designed for comfort on long cross-country hauls. ★ * * Like GMC pickups ahd the Camper Cruiser, the Suburban features door locks that are engineered for safety, securing even when the door Is partly j closed. SAFETY GLASS Solid, safety sheet glass win-! dows in the lift gate and panel doors mean plenty of visibility! for parking or backing with a trailer. HaaflMfes and Handi-Van ! trucks, wkicy feature several Besides serving as versatile campers, the Handi-Bus is a smooth functioning personnel carrier and the Handi-Van has won wide acclaim for its dependability as a delivery van. dr A ♦ As a delivery van, the Handi-Van offers 211 cubic feet of cargo apace and a load capacity rallging up to 2,206 pounds. 16 COMBINATIONS It can be equipped optionally with up to 10 different door and window combinations. The tioual swing-out rear door to eight adults comfortably. It features a wide selection of luxurious optional appoint- ments including such attractions as foam-padded twin bucket seats, padded dash, bright metal exterior molding, large outside rear view mirrors and color-keyed interior trim-panels. ’ • * * Factory-installed camper conversions for either the Handi-Bus or the Handi-Van feature four variations including a unit that sleeps two adults and another that sleeps two adults and two children. GALLEY, BATH Installed by Highway Sleeper Corp. on husky GMC chassis, the Country Cruiser features a standard “L" shaped lounge that seats up to me' adults, a fully" equipped galley area, compact bath facilities, conve- nient storage areas, and a fold-away panel for easy access through the rear door. It also has a 26-galloa water storage tank, cotor crerdinat-ed draperies and vinyl covered wall and ceiling panels, a horizontal Stpeaad gas bottle, sad as 66M BTU space heater that is thermostatically controlled. Available optionally is a sec->nd foldaway dinette table, quality carpeting, porch type awnings and extra bunks, and pressure flushing marine toilet. Mounted on a GMC school bus chassis that features the famed Taro-Flow diesel engine, the Coachette Cruiser is the ultimate in elegant mobile living. Manufactured and installed by the Coachette Co., the body features an all-steel floor and one-piece bows which span the ceiling. The rid) body interior includes these standard features: • Four-cubic-foot gas or electric refrigerator.’ • Kitchen sink. • Lavatory with flush toilet, shower and 60-gaBon septic tank. • Resilient tile floor. •80-gallon water tank and pump system. • Built-in convertible dinette and seats. Still other features include Si. four-seat dinette that converts a three-quarter size bed, Scout Attains Eagle Rank Former Pontiac Press carrier. Steven M. Newton has bean elevated to Eagle rank in Boy-E^ Scout Troop 51. 1 The son of 1 Mr. and Mr>-| George M.i Newton, 20251 Woodbine, ,Wa-I terford Town-1 ship, Steven I ads Isaac E. Crary Junior High. He it 14. He is k) the prooton of building a full sire rowboat that convert to four berths, a swivd-seated armchair for the driver, and screened and curtained windows. Hunting wM turkeys ia a popular pastime In Florida. Gama there are 00,ON. turkeys roaming the fields. are available wife two proves high-torque engines. 5 To Servo You TIME'S THE RIGHT TIME FOR RICHARDSON'S DRINK OR SPECIALLY PRICED! 29* HALF GALLON B--10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. APBXL 80, 1M6 Famous for Dependability! A&P-Priced for Thrift! ' PILLSBURY’S LAYER ' Cake Mixes * IONA YELLOW CU|4G > Peaches Halve* or Sliced f 3s 98‘ V ) 3- 79 A • /' I / s . k A&P GRADE "A" g; Tomatoes 3-59' nomatter who makes it, i/PP sells it, Z‘ m / guarantees $tl For example. Your A&P may sell as many as ax or seven different brands of canned peas-national, regional and A&P’s own brands. Itdoesn’t matter what company cans them... if A*P sells them...A*P guarantees them. Unusual? Not for A*P...because WE CARE...about your complete satisfaction. v Is this a good reason for shopping A&P? It’s one of many! -/ / Good Buys on Fine Groceries! 00 AW GRAM "A" 2u M Apple Sauce... . 3 s 1 LADY BETTY 1% ■, Prune Juice..... " SULTANA FINE QUALITY 0% ■■ Salad Dressing.. f AW BRAND-OUR FINEST QUALITY • • e 4 Tuna Fish SULTANA FINE QUALITY Peanut Butter... SILVCR SKIU.lt Beef Stew ‘3 SILVER SKILLET Chill WHk Smm “ 79* 69* WHITE HOUSE INSTANT #X.U. 4 2/5-0*. Pk«. Dry Milk1 SUNNYFIELD Flour. w 67< 89* 5 39- Mayonnaise irmr crockir Bisquick .... 65* 45* 25* 95* r4r Ffa^r....... 3^ i°° marts dili.ht m 149* "SUPIR-RIGHT" N6R. Tiny Unk Sausage *79* "SUPIR-RIGHT" SKINLESS — ^ ' All-Meat Franks « 59 HONIYSUCKLI WITH GISLIT GRAVY Turkey Roast. . - 2" Perch, fillets «»49r CAP'N JOHN'S gfc NtrwT. AAi Scallep Dinner 2 ss 89 siapooo favorite ALMha Sea Scallops » . . .*69 DRESSED JT A, Whitefish . . , . > 69* Selected for Goodness—Fresh Fruits & Vegetables! A REAL VALUE BANANAS 1129 Dole Frozen lakes Fresln! Jane 0 Jka RMALO WASHED > . «*10 Fresh Spinach . . p>n> 24«SIZ8 Z .... >49* Pascai Ceiery . . ■wff S'L, YOUR CHOICE! Cucipiibers Green Peppers Boston lettuce MM Baked Foods! Quality You Can Trust—Dairy Foods! POTATO BREAD 9| LOAVlj .1*59* t SHERBET COVERED ICE CREAM BARS Creainsicles 12*49 CHOCOLATE OR VANILLA Marvel Ice Milk 39* 39* ACT GRAND, LARGE OR IMAU. CURD A M ^ Cottage Cheese 2^ 49* AGF BRAND OD M 40. Chocolate Milk 2 « 49* ADF BRAND FOR COFFEE ON CEREALS Half and Half . . AGP BRAND, URGE OR IMAU CURD ■ SPECIAL OFFER! A&P VACUUM PACK Coffee "mwV9 Plantation lawn Foods 6-4 dULA 59 20-10-5 FORMULA «99 I UWMFOODf 10-6-4 FORMULA Mt DETERGENT ferny UqM tt 57* FABRIG SOFTBNIR Downy /:®tf „ SAVl AT AGf Salvo Tobleh .* '7J% ' ’ SAVl AT AGO M Comet CkonsBr tM2f AUPURPOSI CLEANER Mr. Clean & 59 '*k: M OmiaBFtT Liquid Thrill $ 57* |L| AvtempltG Dlfthweahiig CiBcado ^ 60* $. WASHDAY FAVORITE NGfl* REGULAR SUM Lava Soap - 13* FOR RRtOHTM WASHES Stardust Bi«adi ■ 79 * 22-LB. BAG 50-LB. BAG PEAT From Michigan " 59 LB. BAG Canadian Peat 2" 6-CU. FT. BALE : GIANT SIZE BLUB ok WNltE NEW! Bright SaB Detergent 24B. 15-OZ. FKG. aright Sail BLEACH / GALLON FLASTK sas% UN (ODIUM NYPMNI.OMTI - . C Roman Bleach.... w 53 Aim (004UM NYMCNLONITi - K c Clerox (teach . . . . «•' 55 , bto_____________________________ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL MM OOO sums up suhmwr's elegance . . by looking for beyond the expected in fabric - and finding it in the most luxurious lightweights the world can offer: tropical worsteds, fine Dacron-worsteds, imported mohair. By choosing colors that continue the look of easy elegance: gentle stripings, subdued iridescents, muted plaids, soft patterns* rich solid shades. And by expressing v this well-bred opulence in styling . . that is deft, distinctive and beautifully detailed. These are the qualities that always distinguish GGG. Only more so this spring. $135 to $185. to 9 Pit i Open Than. mdi Fri. to 9; Sat. to 5:30 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1066 C-l it. That i> why wo invito you to writ# dl-roctly to us. Your comment* are always' Wards values your frisndship and your businees. Wa want you to like Wards. GOT A PROBLEM? ASK AN EXPERT! Utsegtyeyove complete edhsale on a aalo« kitchen or berth, a Mating or air conditioning system, svsn a chain-link fence! Shog-aMtomaPocoraHniloruki Our consultant will help you plan a "now" room...help you choose fsmlddngs, rugs, drapsristand occtttnrirs.,. show you sample •watch**... right in your hornet Ns.Haa»ilHd IppR—i Sendee t A/_ _ I U/jsmIo nnnUrwros ?nrHuf/_ vw con praoB many ifuiui apppamMy rawu-jngcofor TV, hi your honm fora free trial! h addition to our flsxlbls CHARG-dl credit plan Wards offers ssvsral other crsdlt sendees Wards Natfonwida Repair Service Should any Wards appliance need adjustment or repair, our service team Is at your disposal i PHONE YOUR NEAREST WARPS STORE! Sava *22! Our bast 6-pc. Modem lounge group serves you day and night A roomful of furniture—lounger, 2 4-ioch Ward-Foam*, reverse to a cot- chairs, 3 walnut-finish tablet—for one orfui plaid. Just remove bolsters to RIO. low priae I Solid color cudtfcons are convert lounger to a single bed. , 1M.9I W Save *501 Wards finest HT™ 3-pc. Colonial group crafted of solid maple Get dll three—sofa (or sofobsd), the bladrand seat cushions are Ward* choir, and rocker I Eoch hoe spindle Foam*. ..the fabric, texhuad tweed. RIO. ▼ .arms and graceful wood-wing styling. Reg 44.93 tables, now 39.11 each. I4M< AAoktgomery WARD TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9130 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 Ready-made or custom-made Save *2 to *6 on Wards tailored stretch covers BOUCUf OR SMOOTH PRINTS Wool-look- boude knits—smooth-fitting, long-wearing ... transform worn furniture with a bright new look! Drip-dry. Sofa cover, reg. 32.99. t......... 24.8S Sofa-bed cover, reg. 23.99....... 17.88 Stunning prfntsto revive "tirecTfomiture i Separate elastidzed fringes... reversible cushion covers. Drip or tumble-dry.. Sofa-covers, reg. 29.99...........24.88 Sofa-bed cove. reg.21.99 ..••••••.IT*8S Telephone 682-4940 Custom quilted slipcovers FITTED IN YOUR HOME Washable cotton prints in gay floral patterns SMOOTH-NTTINQ POPULAR SIZES Wards will custom-fit your chairs, sofas and sofa-beds with floral pattern quilted slipcovers. Scotch-gard* slain and water-repellent finish for longer wear, •luiiiee Cotton fabric so easy to core for I Choose from an eye-catching selection of fiord designs. Sofa cover.. 14.99 Sofa-bed cover..12.99 Save! Attractive floral bocfrast Special valuol Foam-back throw Tier-valance sets at an unbelievably low price Assorted sheer or opaque ■■ A A fabrics—some with shiffli embroidered trim—come I ™ in foil 30' pair with match- H , ing valance. Come in now H RKT to get the best selection I H fw Assorted knit fabric *1 throws give you non-j slip fit and machine-11 washable ease of care. m 72x90* size....3.64 J72x\Wte$.....4.U Flower-fresh cotton is comforf-shaped with kapok, tailored With self-fabric wdt and center button brim. on decorator bath towels Oil-burning lamp to light the night 1 CHAKMINO ON PORCH OR PATIO A soft glow the wind won't blow oufl lovely gloss, cast fjQQ from fine antique mold, burns 8K^A^ scented oil—5 fragrances in WCH 5 colors (qtiort bottle, 1.39). Brighten year bath dfcor with thick, thirsty cotton terry towels in spanking white or colors keyed to rich, decorator hues. Full-cut with pucker-proof woven dobby borders. Now, at stock-up savings at Words. Regular 79c hand fawals.. 58c Regular 39c wash doths. ...28 c Another example of Wards quality at low pricesl Trays won't stain. Rust-resistant, brass tono folding legs; one serves os oortand rack. ONTGOMERY (i) WHY WAIT TO BUY TUI THINGS YOU MID? SAVI NOW-JUST fAY "CHAROK IT \ THE PONTIAC PftBSS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1066 G-» At your call, Wards own daeorating consultant will coma to your homo and glva you all tha help you naad In planning a daeorating schsma that's right for you. Wards raprsssntativs Is skilled in tha scianca of dasign and coloir. You can ba sura you will racaiva tha but ad-vica on coordinating colors and stylos, planning custom work, choosing Stylo House1 furniture, draparias, carpeting • i..even a lampl Call today... your daeorating consultant Is waiting. Beautiful Style House* carpeting in DuPont nylon or Acrilan*—completely installed with sponge pad! CHOOSE FROM MANY LUXURIOUS TEXTURES IN A WIDE SELECTION OF EYE-PLEASING COLORS AND PATTERNS NYAUI DgMMT NYLON HI* CAKNT A magnificent value-darns hi-lo loop pile so heavy It exceeds DuPont 501* standards I Cobblestone, scroll or Iwsed in 23 hues. DYNASTY DuPONT NYLON 501* CARPET Deep luxurious pile unsurpassed for quality and long wear. 3 patterns: random sheared, hi-lo loop or tweed—choice of 16 colors. ESTRELLE ACRILAN* ACRYLIC CARKT Our heaviest acrylic pile in sheared loop or cut-and-Ioop pile. Has rich, warm appearance of wool—pile stays new and springy 1 Yfards Style House* broadloom offers you the finest in wear performance,hlflh-fashi on patterns, and colors that range from soft muted tones to sensational rosy rids. Colon are dyed in the yam in maivmade fibers, to stay bright and dear after, years of active family use. Dense pile shows unusual resistance to crushing, Is soil resistant and easy to clean because spills wipe up quickly. Alhcarpets shown are mothproof. SPONGE PAD INCLUDED! Our springy sponge rubbppqddihe adds yeeweHRsleyow earpNhgifWepMwg you truly luxurious comfort under-foot. 7.08 Nylbrook nylon carpet Wards budget-priced continuous filament nylon has a textured loop Square yard installed with pent pile. 4 solid colon and 3 rich-looking tweeds— suitable for any room I Special savings on Wards room-size nylon pile rug: Tweeds Ore so practical—they mask footprints. bide lint, pro slow to show soil. Handsome tex- tured loop pile gives long wear with ease of care—spills wipe up quickly. A colors. SAVII SCULPTURED DESIGN RUG Hi-lo loop pile has a lovely sculptured effect to give depth to the 6 jewel-tone colors. So fashionable and long wearing, you will find it ideal for use in any room in your hornet OUR BEST LOOP-N-PLUSH STYLE Glowing colors—8 of them—to bring life to your rooms. Hi-lo abstract design in loop and plush pile has an expensive look that far exceeds Wards modest price. See it today I pneel Denjer'pile of 50% Fortrel* polyester, 50% nylon in Morocco filigree design, 6 colors. Machine washable. 26x45'5.99 34x56*8.99 MAKE WARDS YOUR FLOOR COVERING HEADQUARTERS! M ONTGOMERY WARD S AV E NOm Pontiac Mai OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PltESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1W Wards offers 96 models from 2 to 18 cubic feet! mm AUTOMATIC ICE MAKER ALL-FROSTLESS Makes and stores Ice cubes auto- Refrigerator and freezer section matically. No more bothersome are completely frostless—you'll trays to pry loose, fill or spill— never have to defrost again I and you'll never run out of ice. 2 cu. ft. refrigerator Our "compact" refrigerator hat its own freezer compartment. Room for bottles, tool Juit 19% inches wide ... in walnut or teakwood finish. ADJUSTABLE SHELVES 7-DAY MEAT KEEFER Now you can tailor the shelves Keeps meat fresh for entire week to fit your food. Each one ad- without freezing. You'll never justs for the best use of space, have to wait for meat to thaw. SECURITY SECTION BUTTER CONDITIONER Handy storage compartment with Keeps butter at the spreading texi lock for medicines that must be lure you like. Just push a button kept from children's reach. to select soft, medium or hard. 1 Itstays "spreadable." Wards All-Frostless "French-Door” 18. cu. ft. refrigerator-freezer The Signature* "French Door" Is an . exciting new concept in home refrig- S Jk eration with every new food storage feature. Choice of 4 smart colors. m.m m WARDS IS YOUR "APPLIANCE HEADQUARTERS, U.S.A.' EXCLUSIVE! New “roll-about' compact freezer Wards All-Frostless refrigerator-freezer • Entirely frostless, top-to-bottom • 12.3 cu. ft. storage capacity • Roomy fruit-vegetable crisper e Handy adjustable cold control e Easy-clean, chip-proof interior • 57 cu.ft.-holds 200 lbs. food • Entire lining b of stainless steel e Fast-freeze control; one basket e Safety signal light; 4 casters o 3014 in. wide—fits anywhere inatod plastic top gives "furniture" 'JULUduuWvA. M ONTGOMERY WARD ■P s—* • Wash, rinse or spin at touch of button • Thoroughly wcuh a family-size load • Open the safety lid... spinning slept • Front panel removes for easy servidng • Powerful >4 HP motor; non-dog pump Signature* 30-in. electric range M ONTGOMERY WARD THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY; APRIL >0, 1966 C-i* jl | ngs. I i i ' i ST IOkMi features and prices on Wards top quality Signature* ranges! protection on «t many as 58 Wards major appliances for one nomlnil monthly paymentl Yel, Ward* exclusive, all-inclusive Golden Service Agreement assures you unlimltad professional service and replacement parte on all your Wards appliances. Or, If you are Just beginning to equip your home with Wards appliances, our Silver Service Agreements will give you the same protection on Individual Items, You'll Ilka Wards Service Agreements. Deluxe 30-inch electric range ‘178 PRE-SIT HEAT— OVEN-CLOCK-Just OUTLET-SmaHoppH- Thermal-eye element set the timer and forget «KM can bsptugged IOWFWCI Move up to modem cooking easel Deluxe features like infinite heat settings, easy deanability and dock controls save work and time ...* make the art of meal-making a pleasure 1 OVEN DOOR—Easy to remove, allowing you to dean every oven corner conveniently. COOKTOP-Lift, right off, making it a breeze to clean—right in your kitchen sink. ECONOMY PRICED yt 1 Ml* Wl IKaarla into outlet and led with timer BROILER-Smokeless broiler pulls out, cooking grease drains We lower pen. Feast-size 25-lnch oven and in-heat controls are but two of many features l LffMsp porcelain top and removable oven door make deaning a I NOW cut wash time 1/3! Signature* 16-lb. capadty washer does 3 loads in 2 EASY-MAL CONTROL Jet convenient dial for regular or gentle cycles plus CUTS IROMNO TIME Special cold rinse helps keep wrinkles out of your 17-INCH AGITATOR Giant slant-vane agitator will get your biggest washloads really cleat. 2-speed washer saves you time, work and money -fits *166 Pushbutton washer at amazing low price! \ »uv \ now Giant capacity lets you wash all your clothes in fewer loads; saves water and detergent, too. Easy-to-set controls give perfect care to every kind of fabric. MATCHMe 1*41. DRYER 2 heat setting* plus air-fluff. Handy 2- *109 hour electric timer, am. ness CTADC OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY OlUnt 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIt 20, 1966 Skilled chemist* develop new. advanced products In Wards own modem paint factorise. For example, they have developed a process In which alkyd oil is added to an acrylic latex bass to produce Aciyllc Latex 401—the only paint we know of that promises 1-coat coverage over any previously painted chalking surface—without priming! 401-on example of Wards continual quest to develop the besti through research.. • then better K. Faint Is like a doctor's prescription-- com-P°se^ a number of ingredients, each in-YjmmU tended to perform a specific job. Some give jfipjelW the paint hiding power, color stability, wash-* * ^ ability, adhesion. These are the quality ingredients—the ones that work for you I There Ore other ingredients—they work for the point. They give' it body, thickness, liquidity. Wards gives you more of the ingredients that work for you, the qudlity ingredients. Hew can we afford to give you more quality for your money? Well, there's a lot mors room in the can for quality when the middleman's profits are gone • • • and Words eliminates them. Ws formulate the paint ourselves, building in from the start the features you've caked for. We manufacture and test the paint in our four giant factories across the country. Ws distribute and toll it ourselves, thus removing the middleman's profit. The extra money goes where it belongs. paint for lower prices. For instance, our economy interior latex. It glides onto walls smoothly, odorlessly and then dries in just 30 minutes to a soft, washable matte finish. Find out today what extra quality looks like on your walls • • • try Wards interior latex at this special pricel Odorless on-one! dries fart I Trim brodv 77s Wards electric glue gun AN UNBREAKABLE BOND IN SO SECONDS I iber glass lantern ft. LINDS charm to any lawn Big capacity barrow STRONG, LIGHTWEIGHT, EASY TO HANDLE This all-purpose gun caulks, mends, gluesl Gives a 40 second bond that |ust won’t break I For oil materials. Lighting control dial EASICr REPLACES YOUR OLD SWITCH I All-purpose spreader Features micrometer-type control Indudes drill, 12 assorted sanding discs, 13 bits, policing bonnet, backing pad, paint mixer, and morel Tap It on—died any light level you desire from sere Ip full for dining, TV, nursery, mood lighting. U.L New! Ladder stabilizer MAKES OUTDOOR PAINTING SAFER, EASIER Acoustical ceiling tile ABSORBS UP TO MX OP HOME NOISES Single lever sink faucet PROVIDES QUICK, FINGER-TIP CONTROL /t/Vontgomery WARP SLASHED 50% TREMENDOUS SAVINGS SPECIAL SAVINGS MARKED DOWN EXTRA SAVINGS SUPER VALUE BARGAIN REDUCED r~~ \ Rn I GLOSS 1 koj THE PONTIAC PBBSS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 CtT, New at a low l introductory price! when you buy tint 6.50-13 fubeletc blackwall Riverside* Air Cushion nylon EACH tlA* Premium XLT-any size WHITIWMl OK HACKWMl—ONI IOW HUH O 0023* Indianapolis "500" racing champ—Words exclusive auto* motive adviser. o»m* r "■’’iswn * vitalizes, EjIVY DUTY otor alb 6.50-13,7.00-14, 7.35-14,7.50-14, 775-14, 8.00-14,875-14,8.50-14 or 8.55-14 Got great savings on a fine tirel Tested for 100 miles at over 100 mph by Mario Andretti. Built on a certified cord body to new-tire tread depth. 24-month tread wear, road hazard guarantee. •Urn udm tax-tarn dxa «rw is Mb. NO TRADC-IN MUCIINTHU SAunm IACHS4MM. sjo-ra i4.es tie* 7J0-U 470-15 is.es $11* •JO-U ,i7.es •ie* •«* Mb* fat Ami 1Mb-h Tim. WSSiwh ”★ ' * The plane’s central fuselage and wing roots already are being assembled in SUD Aviation’s Toulouse plant Britain’s Bristol Siddeley Co. began testing the engines nearly two years ago.' The first flight Is expected In February 1968. and delivery to airlines in 1971. DEVELOPMENT COSTS But since the project was begun, estimated development costs have Jumped from $420 million to $1.12 billion. The British government still is paying its share only because the French threatened legal action in 1964 when Britain tried to get out of the project, . Adding to the uncertainty here is speculation that the state-owned British Overseas Airways Corp. soon will order six Boeing 747s costing 1112 million. BOAC also is considering the purchase of long-range Boeing 797-S20C Cargo planes and 265-passenger Douglas DC8-63s. Air France says it also is studyjpg the Boeing 747. THORS. FRL SAT! jmSHOWERSofSHUKS Detergent-Proof NEW 1INMR PLASTICWARE Our Reg. 64c Pkg. of 72 SPRING CLOTHESPINS V/C Long hardwood pins with a smooth, snag-proof finish. Spring^ action bolds clothes securely"on" floe. Specially priced for this sale! 3 Days Only - Our Reg.1.37 IOO-ft.CLOTHESLINE ! 100 Feet guaranteed full length. White cotton tosh coed ... •withstands weather, wear and weight of i wet clothes. Specially priced! " Clothespin Bq| 5. #. 59* Lift* It? Charge It! Our 7.99 Teens* and women's white canvas oxfords with up-todate crescent toes and oh-so-comfortable sponge cushion insoles. Sizes 4 to 9. Save! 3 Days Only -Our Reg. 49c ■ SNEAKER SOCKS WbnYrixsw above sneakers or low-cut feotwasr. 70% Soft combed cotton, 30% stretch nylon. Folly auhtoried foot WMoa 7X9; $>1L muU?ChrnmItl DOWNTOWN TEL-HURON DRAYTON ROCHESTER BLOOMFIELD PONTIAC PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA MIRACLE MILE MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH - AT KRESGE’S THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY! AffftlL 20, 1960 Uncle Sam Plays Food Watchdog By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Feed Editor Some 75 area women heard Mrs. Diane Place, consumer consultant, Detroit District Food and Drug Administration, speak Tuesday on "Watchdogging Your Food Supply." The occasion was the annual meeting of the marketing council for the Oakland County- consumer marketing program in the Gold Room of Oakland University. With the advent of new types of food — unfamiliar textures, new shapes and ^different processes, the consumer is going to have to read and heed labels even more. The 1138 federal food, drug and cosmetic act protects the exactly what nutrients are restored to the food product and keep enrichment uniform. Thus, all enriched bread is In the past, it was not always safe to use the peel of Florida oranges, but it now is. And lipstick coloring, gals, is also a fopd color. Mrs. JPlace reviewed for her audience the "law of the label." Each label must: eTell toe whole truth and nothing but the truth. • Be exact aqd not mislead the buyer by vignette (that’s a sketch) or picture. e Use and list the common or useful name of the product. • If not genuine, must say the product is imitation. e List all ingredients in order of predominance in the product. The label must be in English or in English and any other language desired. opt for noo-alcohollc beverages. The labels on all cola and pepper drinks will contain information on the amount of caffein therein; It will be about what is contained in an average cup of coffee. OTt h e r beverages containing caffein must list it as an in* Consumers who would like to receive regular mailings on activities of the USFDA may be put on a mailing list. Send requests to U. S. Food and Drug Administration, 1560 East Jefferson, Detroit, Michigan 48207. These standards have been established after lengthy hearings during which time government representatives, home economists, nutritionists, medical men and consumers are heard. - At present, such a hearing is being held on peanut butter.. Standards are not to be confused with grades. Standards spell out the quality below which a product may not fall. ludieace that Home of Naturally Tender Meats! CMC# OUT WITH none Township, chairman of thd luncheon; and Mrs. Josephine Lawyer, Oakland County consumer marketing information agent. The event at Oakland Uinversity was attended by about 75. SEE MS (ME — Mrs. Diane Place (left) of tiie U.S. Food and Drug Administration spoke at a luncheon Tuesday on guarding today’s foods. With her are Mrs. Clarence Kroner, Marie Circle, West Bloomfield Excellent for g Bar-B-Q F., the former recommended internal temperature. Here are revised roasting directions that you might want to clip to keep your cookbooks up-to-date, FRESH PORK ROASTS The loin, leg (fresh ham) and shoulder cuts should be roasted. Sprinkle roast with salt and pepper. Place fat side up on a rack in an open roasting pan. Roast in a slow off 36 per cent—down to 240 calories from 377 calories previously. With these significent changes, it is not surprising that some cooking procedures need revision also. Studies reported by Dr. Agnes F. Carlin of Iowa State University revealed that pork loin roasts cooked to an internal temperature of 170 degrees F. require less cooking time, have less cooking losses and have better eating quality than those cooked to 185 degrees Pork has changed. Some people still have the image of pork as fat meat This is no longer true. Farmers have made tremendous strides in producing a new, meat-type hog which has more of the lean cuts of meat preferred by today’s1 diet-conscious homemaker. This new meat-type hog now favored by hog producers is a far cry from the {dump, jowly j hog of grandfather’s day, the' American Meat Institute reports.' Today the average serving of cooked pork has much more prototai, much Ins fat and for fewer calories than it did a dozen years ago. One hundred grains of cooked perk, abent three and one-half ounces, contain an average of 28.5 grams of protein, comp ared with 834 grams for the old pork. The protein content is np one-fifth. The fat content has dropped more than half, from 30.7 grams tor the old pork to only 13.1 grams for the new. Calories are Your Choice • Bologna . • Olivo Loaf • Voal Loaf • Pimonto Loaf • Plckla Loaf is well done. The use of a meat thermometer to recommended, Insert it into the center of the thickest muscle. Roast according to the following schedule: In the midst of all this change, there are some things that remain the same, fortunately. Pork still remains high in nutritional benefits. In- addition to providing high quality proteins, pork is an excellent source of essential vitamins and minerals. It is one of the best sources of thiamine and contains substantial amounts of riboflavin, niacin and iron—all necessary to continued good health. Pork ! continues to be good for you I and good eating, too. STEAK SALE • Ribs • Clubs • "Butcher Boys" Serve Over Ice Serve this fruit drink over ice . . . Dissolve V* cup sugar in % cup water; add unsweetened pineapple juice and unsweetened orange juice, (a 1 pt. 2 fl. oz. size can of each); chill. Just before serving time, add a 12 fl. ok. can or bottle of chilled lemon lime carbonated beverage. Garnish each glass with a slice of lime. Eight to nine servings. WILSON’S Thrift Brand SLICED BACON Boneless Cottaga Style PORK CHOPS OR PORK STEAK Beef in Salad Leftover cooked beef makes a good salad when it to combined with mayonnaise. Use leftover cooked vegetables if they are on hand, or cook a package of frozen mixed vegetables for this salad. Try dropping a few dill seed in the water for cooking shrimp. Add butter, curry powder, currants (washed and drained) and pine nuts to cooked rice; reheat. Delicious served with Lg. Calif Juicy -PONTIAC’S FINEST* SAY OUR CUSTOMERS FULL SIDES OF PARK FREE IN REAR HOFFMAN'S PONTIAC FREEZEN FOODS. Inc RETAIL DIVISION o< OAKLAND PACKING QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICE! Approx. Internal 1 Roasting Tern- I Cat Weight Time pert tore (lbs.) (hrt.) (degrees) Leg (fresh ham—whole) 8 4tt 185 10 5Vi 185 14 6ft 185 Leg (fresh bam—butt or ahank portion) 4 to 8 3 to 3>4 185 Loin, center 3 to 5 2% to 2% 170 Loin, half loin 4 to 8 2% to 3 Vi 170 Loin, aid 3 to 4 214 to 2% 170 Shoulder (butt portion), bone-in 4 to 6 3M to 4% 185 Shoulder (butt portion), boneless 4 to 8 3 to 4% 185 Shoulder (picnic), bone-in 4 to 8 3 to 444 185 •i TH1 PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, I0G6 Mashed Potato Hides Bit of Vienna Sausage Appetizers should be bite- packaged mashed potato flakes dad, designed topique the ap- are the two master ingredients ^te rather than satisfy. These m & use; and the only iny treats do Just that «d probiem you’ll have is keeping n°r*_5*Ch^Py *pher* J*-* enough on hand as these ar* r surprise filling - a phimp ££ itema (hat are used often fienna sausage encased in a for ^ party ind famlly asty mashed potato mixture. mea. Served piping hot to your piests, these are a perfect way Vienne Surprises o start a party. They’re un- 2 tablespoons butter isual enough to start converse- 2 tablespoons finely chopped ion buzzing, too, when every- onion me tries to discover how you've 1 cup water nade the Surprises. 44 teaspoon salt Satisfying to guests, these v< cup (nilk Interest Ih Old Recipe A small'amount of wine transforms a Cinderella salad into something very grand, indeed. As good cooks all over the country are discovering, molded s a 1 a d s are greatly Improved when some of the usual liquid in a gelatin recipe is replaced by an equal amount of wine. This Gingered Carrot Salad is the familiar Sunshine Salad, dressed up with California Sherry and c h o p p a d candled ginger. The sherry adds taag to the lemon-flavored gelatin and the 1% cups mashed potato flakes 5-ounce can Vienna sausages % cup mashed potato flakes 44 cup butter Saute onions in butter in saucepan. Add water and salt? bring to a boil. Remove from heat; add milk. Stir in 144 cups mashed potato flakes. Let stand until flakes are soft and moist, about 44 minute; whip lightly with fork. Stir in egg yolk; cool VIENNA SURPRISE*-Yo«’ll like these meat and potato appetizers. They're quickly and easily made with mashed potato flakes and canned Vienna sausages. Try them for yourself. / Use Salted Water ^ to Cover Potatoes | To save time, you canlpedl and cut raw potatoes several hours ahead, say U.S. Department of Agriculture home economists provided you cover the ready-to-cook spuds with salted water. Potatoes will-remain white this way for hours; but it is not recommended far longer storage times. Dill Pickle Juice, Seed Varies Braising Liquid When preparing a pot-roast, try the juice from dill pickles as the braising liquid just for Variety. With this, a bit of dill seed may also be used as a seasoning. Bake Pineapple With Macaroons Still another wine complements a fish dinner well — a white dinner wine—when it is served as the accompanying beverage. It should be chilled for two or three hours in the refrigerator to be most refresh- Cherries Add Color tiwe dessert. Pour off half flw juice from a number two can of pineapple chunks. Empty the fruit and the remaining juice tnjfl H hlHng dish. Add 44 cup of cognac; dot with 2 tablespoons of butter and sprinkle with the crumbs of S coconut macaroons. Heat in a preheated 360-degree oven until b u b b ly. Serve with whipped cream. Makes 4 to 6 servings. ring constantly, until thickened. (Do not bod) Fold in sour cream. Serve on Cherry Cottage Pudding. Makes 1% cups sauce. Some people might can this a. cake rather than a pudding, but by either name it's wonderful eating, topped with a light, bright Lemon Sauce. The quick, time-saving method of miring the batter results in a somewhat coarser texture than you’d have in a regular cake. Dairy sour cream is added along with the milk to give it extra moistness. Tart red 1 (Aot.) package lemon flavored gelatin 1% cups boiling water 1 (1344-os.) can pineapple tidbits Cold water 2 tablespoons lemon juice 44 cup California Sherry 2 mips grated carrots 3 tablespoons finely chopped candied ginger Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Drain syrup from pineapple into pint measuring cup. 1 cup dairy sour cream 44 cup milk Drain cherries, halva and pat dry with absorbent toweling. In a large mixing bowl cream together butter, sugar and almond extract until light and fluffy. Beat in egg. Sift together flour, baking powder, baking Seasoned with dill, leftover pot-roast may be sliced for tasty sandwiches, particularly good Celery salt is an excellent flavoring for stewed tomatoes. go right into the batter, with g portion reserved to brighten the top of the dessert. Pour into a buttered 9x9x3-inch square pan; top hatter with remaining cherries and press into batter. Bake in a preheated 375 degree oven 40-45 minutes. Serve warm with Lemon Sauce. Serves 9. Lemon Sauce 44 teaspoon grated lemon rind 3 tablespoons fresh lemon ' . juice 44 cup sugar 4 tablespoons (V4 stick) butter 1 egg, beaten ' 44 cup dairy sour cream In one-quart saucepan combine lemon rind and juke, sugar and butter; cook overflow heat until butter is melted and sugar dissolved. Remove from heat. Blend a little hot mixture Lemon Sauce to Just about perfect It’s not to# tart, net tee sweet; just right tor a homey dessert like Cherry Cottage Pudding. Yet the same sauce can go over ice cream for a parfait or sundae. It makes a delicate flavor accent for fresh or canned fruit, and an excellent topper for fruit cake or otter leftover cake slices. Cherry Cottage Pudding 1 can (I lb.) tart red cherries, water pack 44 cup(Mi stick) butter 44 cup sugar 44 teaspoon almond extract , ' legg 2 cups sifted regular all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda Olivcis Art Good To add a gourmet touch to peas or green beans add 2 tablespoons canned chopped ripe olives to Vi cup melted butter. Toss with cooked vegetables or pass separately. Enough for 9 servings. Cook over medium heat, stir- CHERRY PUDDING — Highlight this home-style cherry cottage pudding with an unusual, sprightly Lemon Sauce. Dairy sour Hollow in French Loaf Holds Tasty Mixture Let them eat bread — French 1 (214-ounce) can sliced ripe tread, that is—for weekend sup- drained ter or holiday lunch. Appetites } W diced Cheddar cheese "... 1 (Aounoa) can tomato sauce rill soar, chairs scrape closer j *** ^ o the table, and noses lift ap- j teaspoon prepared mustard Booklet Can Help You Eat Properly ''Your Age and Your'Diet” to title of an American Medical Association booklet available for 10c (100 for 12) from AMA, 535 North Dearborn St., Chicago, m. 00619. ■ Accept compliments gracefully and prepare to serve seconds as you shoe through the hot bread and the crust and rosy filling art laid open on the cutting board. Family and guests are your willing slaves as they put a fork to this intriguing dish, •tufted French Loaf foods most neglected are fruits, vegetables and raffle." (Various age levels are dealt with, from infancy to oM age.) / soned pepper. Slice bread ip half, lengthwise. Scoop oat part of the soft center of the loaf. (Save this for stuffings, bread crumbs, etc.) Spoon egg mixture into bread shell. Rearrange loaf. Wrap in foil Bake at 375 degrees for 39 to 39 minutes, or until cheese You Just know it's the cleanest wash you can get Dirt can't hide from Intensified Tide To test New Intensified Tide; a dirty T-shirt was hidden inside a child's dirty crawlers... Amazing! Even the hidden T-shirt—clean to the neckband. So naturally, your whole wash is cleaner-looking! with New intensified Tide—strongest Tide In detergent history! Results? Ever mix cream cheese with a little cream or/ milk and chopped dates and nuts to use as a filling far spice layer cake? Nice! , THB PONTIAC PKESS, WBDMMPA.T. APRIL M. 1»M SWEEPSTAKES HUES EACH WEEK Look at the fabulous prizes. Lucky Wriglay shoppers will be winning each week! You can be a winner, too—stop in and get acquainted at your nearby Wriglay Store . .. and enter the big Sweepstakes drawing! VISIT DISNEYLAND on a thrilling trip to Call* fomia. Includes tour of Hollywood, .movie studios, dining and dancing at the Coconut Grove... visit to San Francisco and famous Chinatown. Plus scenic tour ef giant redwoods -everythlng you ever wished to see in California! RCA EESB COLOR TV A complete 48 pc. set for as little os THE POMTIAC PMgg. yTKDMMDAY. APRIL 80,1M0 ITS EASY TO PLAY AND WIN Each Fret Lucky Bingo Numbtr Ticket hoi two portions. Ono port hoi your Lucky Bingo disc — which you punch out to reveal two Bingo numbers. Tho other half ii your Sweep-stakes Entry Blank — which you detach, fill out ,and deposit at Wrigley forbig Sweepstakes prises each week! 1. Get one FREE Lucky Bingo concealed number ticket every time you visit * Wrigley—no purchase necessary! ’ • 2. Punch out discs and Insert into slots on i.ucky-Bingo card with matching numbers. . p 3. Fill a line vertically, horizontally or diagonally — and you win $1,000 or $160 according to the amount at the top of your card. 4. Bring your card to Wrigley and claim your prize! If your disc shows the words “you win $1.00“ or a, picture of a Wrigley . Food Product—you may turn it in immediately for the prize indicated! i 'SimtSsi Mimoomr Over Va million prizes in all which mean an average of 3 out of 5 customers win some* thing. So hurry to your Wrigley store.and start today! I SUSSES*' 2® PCOLOR TV’s fig • contest with so i»»»y seakWpftaw bgfc,* . J1E “»*»» &*.«*-<)» _ E®K KH WASHBB game cards at Wrigley. This gives you the opportunity to play extra cards Over twice as many Chances for you to win,, because twice as many bingo number discs wll) be in circulation. Every game disc contains two playing numbers ... not just one. SPECIAL SWEEPSTAKES D—t TWTT. PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20,-1966 This week's Wriglty sale on Chuck Roasts will continue until Saturday, and will give you ample opportunity for savings on this fine meat. If you haven’t tried a Wrigley Chuck Roast now is rhe time. w , ''LJinBiidP"1.. Naturally Tender, Table Trimmed Mj ' ~ All Center Blade CaH LandoLakes Chink Roast Golden Saltines Pkg. Print offoctho tkn * 'urdey, AprU 23, fMS, Wt rtitnr# the rifkt to liaftfeeutities. 99* Sweet Snacks Pi?i. j0.roz' 47* 27* Aunt Jan*'* Pickles •*£}" 69* e Only sorted Bathroom Pink Doll mb. mm wt. Can Applesauce Heinz Condensed 10%-m. ^ fl. Can Tomato Soup Our Paverite Cut Green Beam South African BALINKA GRAPES 49*lk ^ UA Ne. 1 All Purpose Maine Potatoes New Crop Tender, Crisp Green Pascal Celery 25* Fresh Southern- . ' Salad Tomatoes pi* 29* Fresh' Southern Green Onions Bunch Red Button Radish si 6 °r ** CurloyParsley guneh 10 1069! ER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT Gets Clothes Whiter Pa Clean Fresher Washes All Purpoee! Detergent NMfltng Cl.Jfi! Hindi Lik. The Mild Detergent For Baby's Things Deodorant Soap TIDE OXYDOL DREFT IAVAS0AP IVORY FLAKES IVORY SNOW SAFEGUARD 74* i-o. ,t-ox. "yy* l-lb. 6-ox. Q At \*>x 04 2 ton 27* £ 81* £82* !£23* Bleaches Whiter STARDUST s-Vr-JV THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 80.1968 12 MINK STOLES FREE! DREAM VACATIONS Ws'll fly via American Airlines, non-stop to California, 12 Lucky Couples. All expanse* paid! One vacation given away every weekl 12 COLOR TV'S Wrigley Fryers Are Guaranteed For Quality . . . Always Grade A! i^pSzlWc pyuMwid 6-11 lb. Average flf{JgO Caro Sl^fB&rSP'SSlS Pork Sausage csieReR “*•7 Boiled Ham w». % Swift Sliced Bacon % Smoked, eft tke bene Sliced Ham u, Polish Soueefo, Kuekwuret, or Rings of Bologna. u, Fancy Center SUoee Salmon Steaks u. Country Kitchen, ell matt, (rede t 1 ijl Franks na. Country Kitchen, assorted varieties g.0I Luncheon Meats w». n*. Pre-eoaked, oven reedy Cod Fillets u. Precooked easy to \fln Cod Cakes it. Thick sUeed 2-lb Circle A Bacon hi !| Country Kitchon t| Sliced ft. I Bacon I Herdweed, Hickory Smoke/ I Cl Grade A, & I Roasters Colby tonghom Half Moon Kraft Cheese Vita-Lure Milk Kraft Porkay Margarine Soalteet Garden Soiod Cottage Cheese Mel-O-Cruet Angel Food Cake Mel-OCruet Cinnamon Swirl Bread Dip-N-Dressing Country Kitchen Biscuits Gigantic 10* Sale Whit* or Assorted, Pert Luncheon Napkins Hygrade Circle K | Potted Meat 3 Iodized, or Fret Running Colonial Salt Meadowdale Salad Mustard w Butterfield Potato Stix w 10-6-4 S2SUC 20-10-5 &ZrJlC Spaghetti Oxford Royal, Pieces and Stem 2-oi. wt. Can Mushrooms Fruit Drinks Liver and Beef Vets Dog Food Bath Size 15'/4-ox. Jergens Soap Fox'* Deluxe Large PIZZA Durkee Detergent Tablets Liquid Cleaner * Liquid Detergent Black Orange Pekoe More Flavorful'' Hekman Old Fashioned X Sunshine Hydro* TOP JOB THRILL UPTON TEA UPTON TEA BAGS SUGAR COOKIES COOKIES Pint 12-ox. £Oc FI. Bottle 0/ X . Pint 6-ax. CQ« FI. Bottle GY 8-ox. 7Q« wt. Pk*. / y lOO-ct. |10S Pk*. 1 ^ Tr£39V • FRYIR PARTS All Grade A. back* attache# Fryer Breasts U.W All Grade A, becke attached Fryer Legs u.*B- All Grade A Fryer Wings u.W ft-it ■ TM-PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 Border Patrol Men Are Toughl! junk cars (EDITOR’S NOTE - The course it 14 weeks and it makes boot camp look easy. Although thousands apply, only 1 per cent jgff | are chosen. This is the Border as* Patrol, guarding Amerigp’s fron- tiers, and the training center is in a place where trainees can practice what they are taught.) weeks. Native speakers, us-| MWe have people from all tag the latest teaching aids, turn over the world come here to out linguists able to hold their own in conversation or interrogation in a region where they need as much Spanish as English. * * * Students become crack pistol shots, but they also learn unarmed self-defense. They study I law, first aid, use of vehicles, security, By BOB M. GASS A WAY PORT'ISABEL, Tex. (AP)-They come from as far away asradio procedure, Maine and Washington. Some [smuggling control, history, his old job back, where he was are ex-policemen, others haveiethics, tracking, public relations making more- (than the $6,269 study our training technique — from almost every free country in the world, particularly from Central and South America," he said. START CLASS The class started with 90 men. Three or four dropped opt, Eager said, because of “wife and family situations. One wanted never held a gun. But, after 14 weeks, they have a lot in common — a handy knowledge of Spanish, a head Bill of law and the legend-backed badge of a border patrolman. PATROL TRAINEES - Two candidates for the U.S. Border Patrol practice unarmed self-defense at the Fatrol Academy at Port Isabel, Tex., during their 14-week training period. Only one per cent Of all those applying are chosen, and the elite few who finished the rigorous course Are added to the 1,500-man force charged with keeping out the thousands of persons who try to enter the U.S. illegally each year. They are drawn to the sou them, tip of Texas by the U.S. Boeder Patrol Academy, just a few ■miles from the Texas-Mexico boundary. Each year, the academy adds a handpicked group of men to the 1,500-man force charged with preventing illegal entry into the United States. NEAR RESORT The campus is an air base the Navy abandoned when it cutlquit. back pilot training. It is on the Gulf of Mexico near the resort and fishing community of Port Isabel. [and other skills. John E. Eager, chief patrol inspector, » 24-year veteran of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, is headmaster. ROUGH COURSE* “We have a rough course here," says Eager. “The men spend seven hours a day in classrooms, have an hour of physical training a day, spend several hours a night on home-and then on weekends they’re assigned to field duty with regular border patrolmen. “We accept less than 1 per cent of the men who take tests all over the nation. Then, during the first year, about 10 per cent of these men wash out or jyearly paid probationary patrol- men; one wna offered the job.W of police chief in his home town, ■ and one said he just didn’t like 5 tit." ■ Some of the recruits cornel ■ from nearby. J. A. Hinojosa, 27, ■ grew up speaking Spanish in Rio1 ■ Grande City, 75 miles west of J the academy. He resigned as a lieutenant tail the McAllen, Tex., police force to start at the academy, and the physical training program quickly took 17 pounds off his 5 feet 9 frame, bringing him down to 168 pounds. WANTED USED AUTO FARTS FOR SUE FE 2-0200 RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF -CLUBS ... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. DO YOU REALIZE THAT THOUSANDS OF MICHIGAN FAMILIES ARE MOWING THEIR LAWNS WITH FREE POWER MOWERS FROM WORLDWIDE?. 5-GALLON SIZE DELTA GLASS AQUARIUM, POMP, FILTER KIT Our Reg. 9,76 4 Day* Only A five-gallon glass Delta fish aquarium with steel frame; plus a kit that contains; 1 bottom filtchwith carbon filter floss, airline tubing, plus a vibrator -air pump, a box of fish food and booklet on proper care of your-fish. Charge it! \ Gravel (triple air-washed, sanitary), seed (only plump, millet, canary seeds), beil that’s a treat and exerciser, cuttlebone, treat cop. GLENWOOD PLAZA ■■ North Perry at Glenwood THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1 m D-rjI Need a quickie lunch lor the crowd? “Broiled Sandwich' Loaf” hits the spot. It’s the type that’s hearty, tasty and filling yet goes together in a jiffy. TTie seasoning is in the cheesi-butter that can be prepared ahead and kept rendy in the refrigerator. A hearty blend of Parmesaln and Cream cheeses, the mix is robustly seasoned with garlic and Oregano. Keep the toppers of ham and tomatoes close-by in the refrigerator, to be put together at the drop of a hat. This is a man-size sandwich that is perfect for an easy Sunday supper as well, served with a tossed green salad and fruit for dessert. Broiled Sandwich Loaf 1 long loaf French bread 1 pkg. (S os.) cream cheese % cup butter 8k cup shredded parmesan cheese 1 teaspoon paprika Mi teaspoon oregano 4 teaspoon garlic powder 1 slices boiled or baked ham 2 large tomatoes Slice French loaf through the middle lengthwise. Beat together cream cheese, butter, Parmesan cheese, paprika, oregano and. garlic powder until well-blended. Spread about % of butter thick slices. Place tomato slices over ham. Spoon remaining butter mixture into center of tomato slices. Place under broiler about 3 inches from source of heat 4 to 5 minutes until bread is ■warmed through and cheese mixture is bubbly and browned. Makes 6 servings. Brussel Sprouts SerVed With Dilled Sour Cream Brussels sprouts Hungarian style are served with dilled sour cream. To make 8 servings: Cover and cook I (10-ounce) packages of frozen brus-sels sprouts in 3 cups of beef bouillon 10 minutes. Cover and chill in liquid. Blend 1 pint of sour cream with 1 tablespoon of chopped fresh dill, adding white pepper, salt and onion juice to taste. Chill, then serve with drained sprouts. prepare-ahead butter can be kept in the refrigerator, making this one of the easiest meals to make in a hurry. LONG SANDWICH - A hearty lunch that can be made in a hurry, “Broiled Sandwich Loaf’ features an oregano-seasoned cheese butter, topped with ham and tomatoes. The mental frosting in a floral pattern. To prepare ornamental frosting: (Makes about % cup.) Beat 1 egg white until frothy; add 8k teaspoon, cream of tartar. Beat until almost stiff.. Gradually add 1% cups sifted confectioner’s sugar and 84 teaspoon vanilla, beating until stiff. CAKE FOR SPRING—Use two layers of yellow cake. Beat 8k cup smooth peanut butter with Ik cup marshmallow creme until smooth. Gradually add % cup evaporated mjlk; beat smooth. Gradually beat in 284 to 28k cups sifted confectioner’s sugar and 8k teaspoon cinnamon. Fill and frost cake layers; allow to set. Decorate cake with oraa- ONE-COAT GLOSS LATEX HOUSE PAINT • ONI-COAT COVERAGE ONE-COAT LATEX HOUSE PAINT • • YEARS DURABILITY • SELF PRIMING ON ALL SURFACES EXCEPT BARB WOOD • DRIBS IN SB MINUTES • FOR USE ON WOOD, BRICK, MASONRY, SHINGLES AND SHAKES • SOAP AND WATER CLEAN-UP • FORTIFIED WITH ALCOA'S FREE BONUS lj/a" NYLON TOUCH-UP BRUSH WITH COUPON ANO.^ ANY 2-GALLON PURCHASE YOUR CHOICE SELECT ONE You can make salad dressing with a third loss oil. One brand does. But they have to add extra starch and water to keep the volume up. ■ Starch and water don’t do o thing for flavor. Fine, delicate vegetable oil (the kind Kraft uses in Miracle Whip) does a lot Take out a third of the oil and you rain the delicate flavor balance, the spices begin to bite. ■ The brand that skimps on oil costs as much as America’s favorite. So why not go first class? Kraft never stints on oil—or anything else—in making the first class dressing, the one and only Miracle Whip. FREE BONUS PAN A ROLLER SET^ WITH COUPON AND ANY 2-GALLON PURCHASE V|| OP VICTOR BRAND PAINT. “ Get the first class dressing SAVE 22% AMTICO VINYL ASIESTOS TlLEiTXm FEATURING FAMOUS BRAND TlAMES AS ARMSTRONG R AMTICO ^ OVER IS* Wk PATTERNS a ML STYLES TO CHOOSE Trellis Comparison Test: VICTOR PAINT STORES ★ 3234 Auburn Rd. Utico ★ 158 N. Saginaw Jt9Q6 Watt Huron Noxtfo'Soars, Pontiac at Telegraph Rd., Pontiac GIGANTIC '1/iAit OUR COMPLETE FLOOR TILE DEPARTMENT SI FE 8-6544 FE 8-3738 r Point St*m Op*n 9 turn, to 6 p.m. T**s., W*d., Thors* Sit. 731-0625 Opon 9 ml to 9 pa. Monday « t( -Ml ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 20, 1966 —■ If you plan to invest in a new television set we strongly urge you to consider Zenith You don't have to bo an onginoor to m tho quality in Zonith handcrafted TV. Each week thousands of families who know quality chooso Zonith Color TV and black/whito TV. Quality is tho extra ingredient in Zonith. It is not one thing. It is many things. It is tho extra ingredient in engineering, design and manufacture. It assures tho Zonith buyer of tho highest performance standards. Each set is handwired for greater dependability and fewer servicing ' problems. Millions of ZeAlth owners who have experienced a high megsure or operating dependability and low operating costs recognize Zenith s emphasis on quality as the greatest value in homo entertainment instruments. All Zenith merchandise is the same high quality .. . Only the makes the difference! And wnat a difference there is! When you purchase your Zenith'from Highland you are buying it from Michigan s LARGEST ZENITH DEALER. Because Highland buys and sells more Zenith merchandise-more SAVINGS are put in your pocketl You will always find a BIGGER SELECTION to choose from at Highland ... And it's only natural that Highland should provide the best In expert service after the sale-to make Zenith's few service problems even fewer. As always, your complete satisfaction is assured at Highland. Yes, we urge you to consider buying Zenith. When you do, consider buying it at Highland. - 9 Lsj ZENITH 23" TV LOWBOY The Borgholm. From the ''Royalty* series. Superb contemporary cabinet in oiled finish walnut veneers pnd solid hardwoods with decorative carved wood inlay. Deluxe features include new "Fin- cooled" chassis for longer life and greater per- __ formance. Giant 6Vi" speaker. 22,000 volt picture V Q 8 8 power. Spotiite panels. All channel UHF/VHF tuning. I w w Handcrafted quality. m . ZENITH 12" PORTABLE Compactl Lightweight! Tote around everywhere! No skimping here. Top performance features—just like the big Zenith sets. All channel UHF/VHF reception. Perfect second set for sports minded families. Handcrafted, handwired chassis. Trim, slim 2 tone decorator stylod cabinet with front tuning controls. Carry handle, antenna, sound-out-front. Full warranty. 9988 ZENITH COLOR TV The Bedford. Authentic Early American styled cabinet in genuine maple veneers and solids—Beautiful Showcase for this 2l" color-TV. High-performance features include automatic color clarifier, automatic color level circuitry. 25,000 volts picture power. Handwired, handcrafted chassis. All channel UHF/VHF. Free delivery, set-up and 90-day service policy included. HIGHLAND LOW PRICED TO SELL ON SIGHT ZENITH 25" COLOR TV The Lawndale. Beautiful, contemporary styled furniture cabinetry in genuine walnut veneers and solid hardwoods. 25" rectangular picture tube. Twin High-fidelity speaker system. Zenith handcrafted chassis. 82-channel tuning. Automatic color clarifier. 25,000 volts .of picture power. Newest 1966 features provide the greatest color TV dependability and performance ever. Free delivery, setup in home and 90-day service policy. HIGHLAND LOW-PRICED TO SELL ON SIGHT NO MONEY DOWN 3 YEARS TO PAY THIS PONTIAC l’KKSS, WKDNESDAY, APRIL 80, 1966 gitfT Red Wings Nip Hawks, 3-2, to Reach Finals McLain, Sherry Cool Red Sox PAINFUL ENDING — Kenji Kimihara of Japan displays his blistered left foot in the dressing room after his victory yesterday in the Boston Athletic Association Marathon race. Kimihara and his three teammates took the first four places in the 26-mile, 385-yard event. Story on Page.E-2. BOSTON (AP) - Denny McLain and a touch of Sherry put the skids on a two-game Detroit Tigers losing streak Tuesday. The Tigers split a Patriot’s Day doubleheader with the Boston Red Sox, dropping the opener 7-0 as the Sox manhandled ex-teammate Bill Mohbou-quette, and winning the night cap M on a sharp relief performance by Larry Sherry. * a ★ Everyone in the American League figured the Tigers had outfoxed the Red Sox last winter in dealing off second string-es George Smith and George Thomas for Monbouquette, a veteran righthander who had labored tirelessly in the fruitless Red Sox vineyard. But Boston bats bombed Mon-bo for six hits and six runs in the first two innings for the first Olympic Site Decision Near Munich Hoping for '72 Games- Detroit Also Bidding ^ ^ to May Role of Hosftives of Salt Lake City, Utah, - seeking the 1972 Winter Olym- Salt Lake Worrying Over Missing Exhibit Boston victory of the year. Carl Yastrzemski’s three-run homerj in the second sealed the victory. FOUR DOUBLES McLain had a one-hit shutout; going until the eighth inning of' the nightcap when Boston ex-1 ploded for four doubles and three runs. Manager Charlie Dressen brought in Orlando Pena who served up a run-scoring single to Tony Conigliaro and a walk to keep the Red Sox rally going. In came Sherry to slam the door and preserve McLain’s second victory of the year. McLain drove in two runs with a single in the fifth and two more scored on Norm Cash’s bases-loaded single in the seventh. Dave Moorehead and Ken Sanders combined to blank Detroit on five hits in the opener. Dave Wickersham is expected to start today’s final game of: the Red Sox series. MTROtT BOSTON W»rt » J f f f C-Ofun ct 1 -----iff. B KoiBo » 4 4 f 0 f Ytrakl It 1 ! Iff laiBv rf 4 L______ 400 j jajtTib^ iin 1 • 2 OPotrocil * ! I I ' 4 t • 0 G.Smith 2b 4 0 I . ‘ • OMoroM p 2 12 | WINGS SCORE - Detroit Red Wings’ Andy Bathgate (21) sent his teammates into a W> lead in the first period last night when he slapped this loose puck into the net against goalie Glenn Hall (1) in the sixth game of the Stanley Cup semifinal series. No. 5 is Hawks Matt Ravlich. Chi- cago moved in front, 2-1, in the second period, but the Wings came back with two goals in the final period to take a 3-2 victory and win the series, 4-2. Detroit journeys to Montreal to open a best-of-seven final serifs Sunday. Dean Prentice Sinks Chicago With 2 Goals Detroit Nets Winning Tally Lata in Thtrdi Montreal Next Foe DETROIT (AP) - The last thing Dean Prentice expected when he suited up foe the start of the 1985-66 National Hockey League season was to be play-inf in die Stanley Cup finals. -——~ Prentice, acquired by Detroit HHS bum Boston in a late-season carried the Red Wings into the Stanley Cup finals with an assist and a pair of dramatic goals in the 3-2 victory over the CWcago Black Hawks Tuesday night Prentice tied the score with 3:35 remaining in the game and came back 63 seconds later to get the winner. “It was the biggest goal I have ever scored in my life,” Prentice said. “What made it more important was the feet that it puts me in die finals for the first time in my career. I don't have to tell you what a thrill that is.” Hdhm m in utt White Sox Trim Angels, 3-1 MUNICH, Germany (AP) -This city of beer and brass bands is hoping to be die host of Germany’s first summer Olympia since die elaborate 1936 games of Hitter’s Third Reich. Munich, with the full support of the West German government has bid for the 1972 Gama. * * ,# The International Olympic Committee, will choose the site at its Rome meeting beginning Thursday. Other cities bidding for the summer games are Detroit, Montreal and Madrid. Marick faces a stiff fight {da, were still hoping today that their missing exhibit would arrive here for fee site deliberations. 'It must come,” said J. W. Gallivan, publisher of fee Salt Lake City Tribune and a member of the city’s organising committee. The 1,000-pound exhibit was to have arrived in Naptes Monday and then brought here for the 72-member International Olympic Committee meeting at which time the site of fee 1972 Summer and Winter Gama will be Gallivan learned that plane carrying fee exhibit tieos already have vowed their opposition and the Latte delegates are expected to support Madrid. Canada and Spain have never played host to the summer Olympic Gama. The United States was host in 1904 1932. Germany had the Winter Gama in Garmisb-PartenUrcb-en in addition to the Summer Gama in Berlin in 1936. Munich’s problem With, the Communist could help Detroit. Reports indicate feat Madrid will Withdraw. BIG OUTLAY Munich is planning an outlay of about $140 million, to be shared evenly by the West German government, the state of Bavaria And fee city. Its (fcrmaa pteswers strew the fed feat the gomes would be centralised only Stt mites ---------------------tea fold. Building plea call far a atadium to hold 100,009; a multipurpose hall for gymnastia, boxing, basketball, tennis and equestrian events wife a seating capadty of 12,000; a hall sating 9,000 for wrestling and fencing; a swimming accommodating 10,000 spectators, a $ y c 1 e track, and a Olympic training village fo 9,000 athletes and officials. * * * Some 19,000 parking spaca will be provided. The site only a 30-minute walk from downtown and a subway system is expected to be completed by 1972. Only rowing would have to be held at a distance — either in Kiel, oo West Germany’s Baltic Sea coast, or on a Bavarian lake. Milford Golfers Win Milford's golfers battled hi the rain yesterday in downing West Bloomfield, 166-17$, at Highland H i 1 $« hi fee opener for both teams. Demis Weeks carded a 40 for the winners and fell Joy-aey matched feat score for the losers. . been grounded at fee U.S. Afr &SC&i (w/wT Force Base at Mildenhall, Eng-land, by engine trouble. Later, he was told a flight officer was arranging to fly the v . exhibit to Milan on a private aS^b* the ■ TODAY’S m ssutWf'd Chicago i California 1 A spokesman for the air base in Mildenhall said fee exhibit left fee base Tuesday night for a flight from Loodon Airport. But Gallivan said early today he still had no Word of its whereabouts, either from the officer who was to accompany the exhibit to Milan or from IOC officials in Rome. It was learned that fee exhibit had been sent to Rome Tuesday by a commercial carrier. Air National Guard pilot Don. Pihl, captain of fee carrier stalled in England wife the exhibit, had called his wife from London wife fee information. Chicago Outfielder Finds Range °BO$TON 2 t t 0 2 0 0 0 iSS a 4 1 j Bseoit ib 4 2 3 0 Potrocli : 4 0 2 f THorton tOJnimi 2b 2 0 0 0 awry p I • # 0 Jonoi 2b 2 1 1 * gra ’ ? H MgjB ooo p>iron ... Bo|^cAuin«e. LOB—OwS* 1 Demettr, Jc..— Ysstrstmskl. SR-W«rf. V.W, Booton 4. 2B—Frrehan, T—3:00. A—1L335. •off JjRT Should fee exhxibit not arrive in time, Salt Lake City would still prom its bid, Gallivan said. AH R)C officials have been sent a detailed book of fee city’s pro-‘ for conducting. fee gama. the IOC wiH decide by secret ballot next Tuesday fee sites for fee Gama. Along wife Salt Labe City, Banff, Canada; Sapporo, Japan; and Lahfi, Finland, are seeking fee Winter Gama. Banff 'is f»-! tairT their titles bi coming bouts. coiHomia vored. j Tiger, who is hi training for Boxing Champ looking Ahead RHINEBECK, N.lY. (UP!) -Light heavyweight champion Jose Torres said today be Is willing to risk his crown against middleweight champ Dick Tiger in fee fan if both of them re- By He Associated Proa Tommie Agee, whose head was fee target of a Venezuelan whisky bottle fete winter, may finally be xeroing in on major league pitching. Agee, making his fifth attempt at gaining 9 permanent spot in the majors, hit a home run and ignited the winning rally wife a single Tuesday night as fee Chicago White Sox defeated California 3-1 and spoiled the Anaheim debut of the Angels; The 23-year-old center fielder hit torridly in spring but then managed only one a homer—in Ida first 10 ah of fee seasti. / bin in Now be has three L____________ last seven trips, indicating he’s ready to stay in tip starting lineup. An overzealous 1 CBy mar* (Bunker B-l), night iHfe: M> * SSTSn jssbm NATIONAL LIABUI i SSr SSSr"..:::::: ft. Louie PQm'MI San Fronchco(thaw Hands l-O) ^ Atlanta (. Barons Take Track Opener Bloomfield Hills’ Barons opened fee 1091 track season yesterday wife a 63-49 victory over Milford 14) at Chicago ^sSThr. t on p rain-slowed an April 25 title fight in MadL son Square Garda against welter champ Emile Griffith, teas enthusiastic about fee possibility of mating Torres. / “I’ve been trying to get him to fight me for a par,” said fee Nigerian nriiddleweig champion, “but be wouldn’t, want to fight h}m for fee light I Jump - Griffin (B), Hall ft), 'cESl" — Garabrant (S), NoboUB), Elmore (M). Creach __ _■* Hurdlaa — Sill Kraati (B), :22.3. / . Aaa a Relay B Torres, whd has not defended his title sjtoce winning it from Willie P^rtrano on March 30 last year, tpscheduled to meet top-J Wayne Thornton a May H Shea Stadium. A loss Thornton would wipe out the possibility of- any title match wife Tiger. “I want to meet Tiger in the fall,” said the Puerto Rian light heavyweight champion. “If he agrees, I don’t tee any ream why the match can’t be made. other American League gama, Cleveland delated New York.3-1,Boetadowned Detroit 7-0 before toting' 44, Baltimore _ Washington Kansas City/edged Minnesota 3- 2. fan in Venezu- ela knocked Agerout of fee lineup this past winter. He was playfxfg for Magallana and in te let a grounder go through htelegs for an error. /fans are very enthusiastic,” he explained. “I was up againpt the fence when the ball walkthrough my legs. The next thihg I knew my bead was spin- land left-hander scattered seven hits and struck out 12 in winning his second game. e’s sii Agee’s sixth-inning homer was anjy fee second hit off Angel starter Marcelino Lopez. It brought the White Sox even wife the Angels, who had a second-homer from Rick Rdc-Theri in fee eighth Aga I, went to second on Reic-hardt’s error and raced home as Dof Buford tingled. Buford later scored on Floyd Robinson’s single. Fred Whitfield’s three-run homer in the forth gave Sam McDowell an the help he needed' t The goals were the third and fourth for Prentice in fee sola. He scored six goals and added nine assists in 19 regular season gama for fee Red Wings and entered the playoffs with a career record of two playoff goals and seva assists. PLAY SUNDAY He triumph gave fee Red Wings a 4-2 edge in fee semifinal series. Hey will meet Mon-New York. He Cleve-fral in fee tint gante 1<* best-of-seven final seria in Montreal Sunday afternoon. Goalie Roger Cruder, who Chicago Coach Billy Rasy said was the deckling factor in fee game, stopped Man Mlkita just before Prentice’s first marker and preserved the traamfe wife two quick aava on Kenny Wharram soon after the winning goal. Frank Robinson collected three hits, including a two-run homer, and Brooks Robinson drove in three runs wife two singles in Baltimore’s victory. Curt Blefary added four RBI, three on an eighth-inning homer. Da Blasingame knocked in three Washington runs wife a tingle and'a double. Rookie Chuck Dobson Lew Krausse stopped Minnesota on six hits while Kansu City took advantage of two dropped fly balls by right fielder Tony Oliva. The pair of two-haw errors led to two unearned runs I against Camilo Pascual. IG LUMP A Magallana fan wab so furious wife the error feat he fired a whisky bottle at Aga. 1 “For a log time I had a big imp,” he said. He.White Sox hope Agee now will place a few- lumps himself. Pontiac Press Hoh^n-Otm Club .J&.Ql^/ficbo/s........ is hereby admitted to The Pontiac 1 Proa HofaSMtoe Chfc a fete dear e2R/33^..lor havingoS hfo*,<*W*.sbot mt**SMvd bote tt/bnfiec Jjuntop*/... «feedayof^ar///Zi^..Hh soon was attested ufZ. Jir fee...w.....holes. Brother RicaTriumphs in Opening Golf Match Birmingham Brother Rice opened its Detroit Catholic season /Tuesday wife a 199-197 decision over De LaSalle st eighth straight National Basket- Chandler Park. Sophomore Bob Larkins, fee Warriors’ captain, ted all links-men wife a two-over-par 30 and freshman Tom Fortuna added a 39 to fee Brother Rice total. Celts Win, 129-109 Boston Squares Series BOSTON (AP) - He Boston Critics move on to Los Angeles for a meeting wife the Lakers League Central Division go If tonight te a determined bid to The Red Wings, who defeated the Black Hawks once in 14 regular season gama and were held to six power play goals in that span, got their 10th wife a man advantage in fee seria when Andy Bathgate scored at 2:01. Phil Esposito got feat one bade a a power play tally and Pat Stapleton shot Chicago ahead wife a 75-foot slap shot which skipped past Ouster. BOUNCED AWAY “I saw fee puck coming all fee way,” Crater said. “It took one bounce in front of me and skipped under city arm as I reached for It. I never touched 'll.” I The Black Hawks protected the lead and appeared to be w I their way back to home Ice for a deciding game before fee Prentice fireworks. Referee John Ashley handed at 17 pentalttes in the game, 12 of them in the first period. • ★ ■ ,#•>. ★ Chicago’s Bobby Hull and his shadow, Detroit’s Bryan Wit-Ison, went off together throe jtima in fee first period. After the game, Hull and Watson chatted briefly u fee players shook bands. ‘‘I just told him that I thought be was the greatest and was fore a sellout crowd of 13,000 at sorry I had fee job of checking fee Garda. regain the edge in quest of an ball Association championship The Celtics evened fee best-of-seven title series 1-1, overpowering fee Lakers 120-109 with a sharp-shooting attack and a tight defense Tuesday night be- GARY PLAYER'S GQLF CLASS: "I’m not happy yet,” Boston Coach Red Auerbach said. “They still have an edge a us because fee next two gama are in Los Angela. And we’re not going to be deluded into thinking things are going to he easy at there." The Celtics; who Mew an 13-Ipoint lead and lost 133-120 in him so dose,” Watson said. “He just wished us luck. What else could he sey?” SPEARING FINE Watsa was reminded feat a spearing penalty in the second period would cost him $25. “Is that all?" he asked- “1/ would have paid that mud) to see this game. He scalpel's rere getting $30.” / Manager-Coach Sid Abri said he was undecided as fe what D«t qait on the ^rok,!^. cue from Auerbach, but hopaj (were high. ■k Larry Siegfried, who scored 16 of his 20 points in 9% minutes of fee second period as Boston roared to a 71-47 halftime lead, called the Cdtia’ defense the against Montreal. ★ k . sm * 'We’ll take tomorrow off, then skate here Hursday,” Abri said. “I’U have a talk wife the (Sayers then and well know more about what wa think should be done against the Can- key in the Los Angela gama ] tonight and Friday. fSiMalbl tart , p j as to the outcome of fee finals • ".but Tommy Ivan, general man-» H i*lager of fee Black Hawks, 4 14 13 BJmm ifllBSr 4 3-5 15 50^4 $ 5-4. 15 Count* 2 0-14 BE 0 0-0 O rBo-MOA 2 M 4 Bonhom I - - - -------^ilK _«Miw 25 U 15 27—l4* . BBB1MB .. i picked the Canadiens. go k k k i m b1 » “Hey’ll be a their home ice ‘ * at Montreal and that is a hig Tom louii - Loo Amo Hi is. Booton advantage,” Ivan said. Ray predicted Matreal would wty in ten feaa seven gama. E-—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 80, IQM Homer Hight Preaidant of thia nntatandini *..W. dealenhlp for over 10 —n, mgm, “Far a Daal Tfcal’i hl-*M Wehtl Am! ha mu. T Mrl of it. Drop in ami Hi at Dm only ibawraam in Oakland County whore you can ana all throe . . , Chevrolet, Pontiac and Bnlrk. Homer Hight Motors, Inc. 160 S. Washington Oxford OA 8-2528 SpeeUMrimg In • Cylinder Block Boring • Hood Milling WOHLFEIL-DEE ENQ. FI2-4M7 BUY, SELL, TRADE---USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! In Waterford League Softball Rule Is Changed A significant rule change has been announced by the Water ford Township Recreation Department as It plans the 1M6 men’s softball program. Currently striving for a 14-team, two-league setup by Monday night’s second organizational meeting, the department has revealM a change in its roster requirments. Instead of the previses five Boo-resideat player limit, aH teams bow need only have six Waterford resident members. A resident is listed as any one living within the township school system, any employe of a firm paying township taxes or of the township or of the school system, or anyone paying property taxes to the township. No one living outside the county or below 14 Mile Road is eligible to participate unless he participated last season. MEETING AU teams desiring to play in die program should be represented at the meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday in Room 103 at School-aft Elementary School. The sponsor fee is $30 for 11 teams except those having ship. For those it is $$0. The player registration fee is $5 for residents, and $7 for nonresidents. The league season la set to open Monday May 9th. Additional information is available at the recreation office. Top Drag Racers in Sunday Match Motor City Dragway will have a best-of-five match race Sunday afternoon featuring two of drag racing’s top competitors. K. S. Pittman of Los Angeles will duel George Montgomery of Ohio — both of whom have national reputations ps National Hot Rod Association racers. Each will drive an A-Gas class car capable of reaching nearly ISO miles per hour from a standing start on a quarter-mile drag strip. The race series will begin at 3 p.m. Gridder Wilson to Toil for Dad on Miami Unit Cranes Down Kettering in Track (outdoor facilities in poor shape for high school athletics yester-MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - George d«y. “veral track meets werp Wilson, coach of the new Miami Md “ *q««is prepared tor big team in the American Football events later in the week. League, has acquired draft! 1 * * * righto to his son, George Jr., a| Waterford Kettering stumbled quarterback frond Xavier Uni- at Cranbrook while trying to get versity at Cincinnati. ready for Saturday’s Waterford Young George lost his signal-, Relays, dropping a 65-44 ver-calling job to Carroll Williams .dict to the Cranes, last season, but his father saidi walled Lake, which will meet Tuesday “he is quite a punter,Pontiac Northern in a big Inter-and I think he has the potential Lakes meet Thursday, finished of * good pro quarterback.” second in a triangular with De-* * * troit Thurston and Redford Un- Wilson added that he had told jon Thurston ran.away' with the assistant coaches not to give hi8|meet, posting 77 5/6 points, son a break, and said he would ViH«« in.t ninn-d Righto wdre obtained from the Although the weather left most both hurdles races (which were shorter than normal). TTiurston won nine events, Walled Lake and Redford Union two each in the triangular. Ken Spence to the pole vault and Don Colpltto in the mile run were the two winning Vikings. Thurston dominated the action by finishing one-two in six svento. Brother Rice took eight firsts ia remaining unbeaten at U. of D. High School’s expense. Toln Masson won both bardie races, setting a : 15.3-seconds school record in the Buffalo Bills. Young George was a future draft choice of both the Bills and the Detroit Lions of the National Football League. His father chose him as a Detroit future when he was head coach of the Lions in 1964. Club Elects President 89%. Brother Rice, meanwhile, readied itself for the defense of its own Relays Meet title title Saturday with a (6-43 conquest of University of Detroit High. Cranbrook won eight of the 13 events from Kettering. Ed Randle won both toe 100 and 320-yard dashes for the Cranes and ran a leg on the winning 880 relay team. BOSTON (JB - Scott D. Hamit dh of Anchorage, Alaska, wasiTHREE FIRSTS president of the Road The Captains’ Bill Penoza won Pole vaulter Bill Salko went: 13-1 to set a school mark in that event for the Warriors. Rob Zelinski (880 run) and Tom Kurkowski (440 run) had in-1 dividual firsts plus helping the mile relay team to a 3:31.8 winning time. Craatraak as. KrtNrtna M Shot Put - Clint Johoo 00, i :i, Brunnor (1C), dltlanea 47-MI. Hlah Juana — »«* Vimnuii in. (K>. T( sers Club of America. three events, including wins in|1966. Preseason Ticket Sales at New High for Reds CINCINNATI Ul - The Cincinnati Reds set a record in preseason ticket sales. Sales through April 18 were $858,306 compared to $835,686 through April 21 of last year, according to Reds’ Vice President John Murdough. • it' ★ *" Total sales for 1065 were $845,-362, about $13,000 short of the I mark already established for sum , era* (o, tbiM DM. •Low Hurdtoo - Sill Panoia Moboy no. CrslB |C), : 14.4. US OmS - M awil (C), Griffin 'nj£*r 1C), : 10.4. M0 Doth - U Ranaia (C), Oritlln R>wE®r 40,7 *• OH ,Bf|h - Bruco^Huntor (Cl, MltiaL •M (C), Blgtor (K), liu. NO Run - Don Mlnnlg (C). Craig —:-------— tion of the annual 26 mile, 385- -Auto Track Opens jjS'.lMSS . bj in contingent finished 144-4, cbal- 9f Mourn uemensien^ °n|y uw i final nine miles Tuesday in the 170th Hopkinton-to^Boston run. The Mount Clemens Race Kfcnji Kimihara faltered after Trick will open its 1980 stock, clearing ‘Heartbreak Hill,’’ the car season Sunday afternoon,! highest rise oq the route, and three .weeks ahead of schedule. I then turned on a fabulous All repairs and additions at i stretch sprint to overtake co-the track, North River road, leaders Seiichiro Sasaki and have been completed and pro- Tooru Terasawa with half mile moter Pete Magrie has decided'left and win by 100 yards, to begin the season now With a, * * ★ Vl 14-event program storting at Kimihara, a 25-year-old steel 2:30 p.m. Sunday. - -!mill clerk who was married last There will be Sunday showsjmonth, hit the wire in S:17:|l, this week end May 1st, then the i failing to break the record of Weekly Monday-Thursdav-Satur-j 2.16:33 set by Morio Shigemat-day night programs will com-jui, who led Japan to a 1-3444 mence May 9th. finish last year. ‘ There will be sports' cars on Shigematsu finished ninth and the track’s quarter-mile strip, failed with his four 1965 travel-and the superstpeks will use thejing companions to qualify for a return appearance. It Was un-derstandable as Kimihara, Sasaki, Terasawa and Kirokazu Okabe ran rivals into the 'ground.' ! Sasaki, a 20-year-old newcom-.ei appearing in only his second marathon finished second in 2:17:24, followed by Terasawa in 2:17:46 and Okabe in 2:11:11. Norman Higgins, a lanky 26-year-old junior college student from Santa Monica, Calif., was the firat American finisher, trailing Okabe in 2:18:26. Dave Ellis, a two-mile indoor track star from Toronto, was sixth in 2:19:47. half-mile course. NO MONEY 0ME-MLIFETIME mem UP TO 36 MOUTHS TO PAY HO MONEY DOWN Wm A* Low At 119" 18” Reel Power Mower..... 71" 139" 22” Roto Tillers...___ .72" 19" 20" lawn Spreaders......./14" 29" Lawn Sweepers........i.f 6"Lawn Food ............... 1" 389" Riding Mowers...... , .140" 130" 22" Power Mowers....... . 88" 8" Grass Catchers,.... .... 2" I ★ Don't Miss Out! Mi TIRES, /At Carry-Out Price*! . First Come...First Served ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Transistor Radios . . 9*1 Clock Radios ... v . 14“ Portable Stereos. j ... 48&., Table Radios ...... 112&w Hi Fi Phonographs . . 32SU Soma AM/FM incl. in above radios 140 H. Saginaw NBA FLAYOFFS CkimpNiwW fimI TaMBayt 127, Lot An ''Tabari « Angataa 117, Bwl-gf-7 DRIVING HAS CHANGED! Back in the summer of 1916—when the Auto Club was founded—a motor trip usually was a pioneering adventure. There were no mope or road sign* to show you the way. A guess wee your only guide. Today vie Auto Club hac helped to take the doubts and detours out of traveling with Me personalized travel planning. Exclusive AAA “Trip-tike" end accurate, up-to-date maps end Tour Books with guaranteed accommodation rates show how to go and where to sleep arid sot. YOU LEAD THE WAY WITH TRIPLE-A AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN Hew* 94 P.M, Mon., Thun., Fri., till 9 P.M. FE 5-4151 76 Willianra St. H. E. Huemann, Mgr. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1960 liw Dollars I 100% Nylon Tires Y FULL T TRANSISTOR CAR RADIO Blackwalls plus tax end the old tire off your ear ^Hfull 4-plit^H TUBELESS NYLON1 k70x1f 44M 21 MONTH OUARANTII *.00/6.50 X IS ^FIJLL 4-PLY^ TUBELESS NYLON 27 MONTH GUARANTEE 6.30x11 13.90 I'lASI SALES EVENT OF THE CENTURY 4 WHEEL BRAKE RELINE WHEEL * ALIGNMENT Original Bgaipnwt ' Mufflers 1D49-44 Fords and Chavye IDDATO i Giants' Slugger Near HR Milestone Mays Lowering Boom on Durocher Bulgaria Taom Triumphs Over Albania Five » TOKYO UR — Bulgaria’s Spar-ib a s k e t b a 11 championship tak team defeated the Dynamo of Communist countries at Po-team of Albania 7743 in the I king Tuesday. By The Associated Press Willie Mays is dosing the gap on Mel Ott and lowering the boom on Leo Durocher. Wondrous Willie crashed four hits — including his third borne run of the young season — as the San Francisco Giants outlasted Durocher's Chicago Cubs 1M9 Tuesday for their sixth victory in seven games. The home run — 808th of Mays’ 18-year career — left him three short of Ott, the late Giants slugger and National League record-holder. Mays, who belted 81 homers last year, should pass Ott, as well as Tad Williams, 811, and Jimmy Foes, 534, this season. That would put him in the No. 2 spot on the all- OVERHAULING MOTOR EXCHANGE 405 S. Saginaw St. FI 1-7412 time list behind Babe Ruth’s 714 total * * ★ All three of Willie’s 1M6 blasts have come off Chicago pitchers and two have helped beat Durocher, his former manager and biggest booster. Mays homered in the Giants’ 9-1 season-opening victory over the Cubs at San Francisco last week before Difrocher’s Chicago debut Tuesday. TIED FOR LEAD The Cube have dropped three of four to San Francisco and six of seven over-all * ★ * Pittsburgh remained tied with the Giants for the National League lead by pounding Cincinnati 74 for its fourth straight. Houston knocked out Don Drysdale and whipped Los I Angeles 98; Atlanta edged Philadelphia 44 and St. Louis trimmed New York 8-2. on Don Landrum’s twoout double — to pull it out. The Pirates rocked Cincinnati’s Sammy Ellis and two successors for 17 hits, Donn Clende-non leading the way with four singles. Winning pitcher Steve Blass, meanwhile, scattered seven hits, including rookie Tommy Helms’ first major league homer. Blass also snapped Veda Pinson’s carryover hitting streak at 31 game SECOND START Drysdale, making his second start for the Dodgers, departed in foe middle of Houston’s four-run fifth inning uprising that erased a 8-2 Los Angeles lead. Jim Wynn applied the clincher with a two-run homer off reliever Bob Miller in foe eighth. Atlanta starter Wade Blasin-game keyed a two-run rally in the third inning with a bunt single and reliever Clay Carroll! checked Philadelphia on one hitj ' over the last five innings. Bla-singame’s safe bunt, singles by Gary Geiger and Ferlipe Alou, a force play and Did Groat’s throwing error produced the1 deciding runs in foe third. i a ' a * ■ i Tim McCarver’s bases-loaded triple in a four-run fifth inning rally shot the Cardinals (test foe! Mets as rookie Larry Jaster outpltched New York’s Jack Fisher, who has lost 10 straight Ex-Cardinal Ken Boyer hit a bases-empty homer for foe Mets, who dropped back to the .800 mark with a 2-2 early-sea-son mark. SERVING OAKLAND COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS Lozollo Agency, lie. ALL FORMS OF ft* INSURANCE dft 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Phone FE 5-8172 OPEN DAILY 10 to 10 - SUNDAY 12 to 7 - MECHANIC ON DUTY UNTIL 10 P.M. DAILY The Gaints paraded eight pitchers against the Cubs—tying a league record-before Bob Bolin got foe last out with foe bases loaded in the ninth. Trailing 94 in the eighth, San Francisco struck for three runs—one on Mays’ third single and two Time to elean up Mils! Need Cash? Sports Calendar for prompt service Lot as show you how all your monthly install-meota can be combined in a single Associates loon...with jus* one convenient payment to make. Aandatei specializes in helping folks arrange their finances to suit individual needs, income and paydays. Please give ue a toy...we like to be of service. ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. *ON7MC SS4 Oakland Ava»*a.............FI 24)214 SB* North Telegraph Rond.......*92-2000 Pontiac MaN Shopping Cantor M DRAYTON PLAINS 4474 Dfado Highway..... ......OR 3-1207 12S1 MOST CARS Saif Adjusting Brakes $4 More See a first-round K.O. in the 6MC Truck showroom. Your CMC dealer hoe a one-two combination that's certain to flatten any contender. One, he's get the champ. A CMC. pickup. Coe few rounds with It It's |uet waiting to show you the kind of footwork and hard-hitting punch that make R foe all-time champion. Two, your dealer's ready to unleash hie Sunday punch—price. He wants you to pocket the title. Make him prove It You ought to go home with the champ in your comer, like today. TRUCKS GLENWOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry Street at Glenwood B-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 80. 1P68 NO TRADE-IN PRICE! CHIMNEY DUCK — Dim Guisbert, 913 Granger, Orton-ville, holds • hen wood duck he pulled out of the fireplace chimney at hie home last week. It ie believed the duck fell into die chimney while exploring the opening as a possible Sett site. Wood duck prefer to nest in hollow trees. Aktof the Outlet"frail Bush Lake New Site of Event Holly Canoe Races Scheduled Sunday The leading canoe racers in Canoe Racing Association’s of- pro class. They are A| and Michigan are expected to com-jficial contests last year, have Pat Widing and Ed Admaa pete Sunday in. the annual races entered. |at HoUy- Pour Holly men - all wia- There is a change of format nera of the TeXas Water Sa-this year. Instead of the race fori — may in the being from Holly to Fenton on ,----------------*----—-------- the Shiawassee River, the event! will be staged on Bush Lake. Expect Over 175 Entries for Dog Obedience Match Citizen Deer Groups Will Be Increased J «M l and Leroy Wldfog. Sponsored by the Hulet-Bra* vender Poet of the VFW, the races will start and end at the beach area. Adams, vice president of the MCRA, will direct the races. Major Clue to Noisy Flu JUNIOR CLASS There will be several junior will compete in non-racing fessionals. Adams ie attempting :auoes. to arrange for extra canoes So There will be mixed amateur persons without craft will class races for father and son, ^ •hie to enter, brother and sister and father Charles Swegles, commander and daughter in non-racing;0* the sponsoring VFW Post craft. Trophies and arm patch-|M«, i« co-ordinating the event, es will be awarded tor various ----——i,m Junior teams from as Jar) Soluhar Tables north as Alpena and from the! Rockford area have' entered. ! The schedule of Solunar Peri- Over ITS dogs are expected to compete for honors Sunday in the annual Southern Michigan Obedience Training Club’s sanctioned spring fun match. Judging will get under way at 11 a. m. in the Bloomfield Hills High School gym. “We could have as many as 200 entries," said Reg. Armstrong, president of SMOTC. “It’s difficult to say because registrations won’t dose until 10:45 am. the day of the show.’’ There will be nine obedience classes, including sub-novice and brace. The sub-novice dogs are those tost have never been shown in any obedience match or AKC show. AH will be shown on leash’. Mrs. Grace Williams will have charge of four rings on the gym floor. Judges and their assignments are as follows: ■ * ' *......* David Rigilot — N o vie e A; Eleanor Barnett—Novice B and Open B; Ray Chiasson—Open A, Graduate Novice and Brace; Bill Wells-Utility, Sub-Novice and Versatility. Braces will be judged after all' other classes. TROPHY LIST The dogs will be trying to win lone or more of the 97 trophies land special awards being offered. j The entries are grouped in the various classes according to how proficient a dbg is in obedience. \ . ' . . .. The 'more accomplished a ca- A major ]*rdi run is devel-' ^ ^ hi her ^ oping along Saginaw Bay in theLdvancement L'novgto open Port Austin area. L_j ' High water for the first time In several years has triggered: the big spawning runs intoj ' creeks, cuts and ditches. A good! COfTipQrOUncf Fee run has been in progress at! r9 cdbevHie, but is tapering off. Hike Scheduled Big Perch Run Starts at Bay I The first race will get under Webbed Feet ' A $25$ prize list has been, set LANSING W — The small)“d ronlor events, both ama-| The Holly firemen arid poiicejods, as printed below, has been for the professional class which' army of citizen advisors on deer *®Ur and professional. are tentatively scheduled • to taken from Richard Alden is limited to racing canoes. (shooting policy will be upped *n the Junior B class, boys match paddle strokes with the Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. | Ralph Sawyer, of Oscoda, six-!from 200 to 280. Jg year will compete talfjremen being rated a slight! f1T| r„_f_»;t)ir j time Au Sable River race win-! The (iopservation Commission racing canoes. Non-racing edge “because they know more .Today sm io:5 *:« n:w her and his partner, Stan HallJnow will appoint six additional canoes will be used by Junior about water,’’ according to one ^“dri'?*y will compete. Norm Rogers and {members and the Legislature A boys and Boy Scouts to the race official. Blain Brown of Roseville, first four more to each of the eight !s*me a8e range. j No entry fee will be charged {mw**/ “I knew it was a bird, but place winners to the Michigan! committees. i Girls and Girl Scoots, 9-11, amateurs. There is fee for pro-lwSSnMday really startled me when I; v ■ ..____.............. ; . " r-. t'l fiiirrrvll. :“Tfr. ..... saw these webbed feet aiming out..* /- This is how D a n e 'Guisbert describes the rescue of a hen wood duck that may have been stuck for a week in the fireplace chimney at to* home to Orton-ville. / Activity is now shifting to toe Port Austin area. Good-sized perch are being taken. The smelt run along Lake Huron north of Pinconning remains spotty. Results at the Whitney drain south of Tawas were only fair over the weekend. The largest crowd of netters to ever convene at the Singing Bridge over the drain appeared last Saturday night. Smelt being taken are above. use- to Start June ? Starting June 1, vacationers will pay 25 to 50 cents more a day to stay at modern-eqiflpped state park campgrounds Michigan. The exact increase to their camping fee will depend on the extent of electrical service available at campgrounds they 'We first heard a noise to the, chimney Easter Sunday,” said; Guisbert, 283 Granger. “Then! we didn’t hear it again' until Thursday. “Finally, John, my son, stuck a wire up in there and we heard, wings flapping so we thought! it was a bird. I took the damper off — it was closed and that’s what kept toe duck to the chimney and readied up to.” He extracted the duck and it was placed to a cage. Hunger and thirst overcame a captive wild duck’s normal inclination not to eat. The hen has been regaining her strength on a diet of cracked corn and will be released this week. { i Conservation Department waterfowl experts say wood ducks 1 falling; into chimneys isn’t as unusual as it may sound. These ducks nest to hollow trees and occasional one will investigate a chimney with disastrous results. Hew Trout Record Claimed in West average to size. The warm rain the last two days may trigger a major run. The sucker run is reaching its peak. Good catches are being taken from the lower Clinton River and its tributaries. Several streams that flow into Oakland County lakes also are producing. BluegUls are starting to move into shallow water on area lakes, but they aren't on the spawning beds. This will come next month. * nke fishing is fair to the cuts on Harsen’s Island. Large calico bass — many up to 14 inches are being taken. At aH first-class campgrounds where every site has HELENA, Mont (!) - A brown trout caught to Southwestern Montana may be a record breaker for North America, George.Holton of the Montana Fish and Game Depart-I ment said Monday. , 5 _____. . „ Based on a national sports etocWcity the current dafiy |magazine records up to 1961, **" Holton said, the 29-pound trout; be raised to a flat 32 fee. {caught last week byK H. Ba-1 The basic camping rate willlcon of Three Forks, Mont., tops; be increased only 25 cents atlby nearly three pounds toe these campgrounds; the other!known record holder. 25 cents is a built-in cost cov- The record brown trout listed! ertog the standard charge for!was 26 pounds, two ounces,! electrical service. __ caught from Dal Hollow near Hie new fee.for campgrounds [ Tail water. Tenn., in 1958. Bacon having modem facilities but caught his brown to Wade Lake.! ladung complete electrical serv- The lunker of Junkers, how-1 61.75 per day, also effec-|ever, was a browii trout weigh-tive June 1. As before, another; tog 39% pounds, caught to Loch 25 cents will be charged daily at Awe, Scotland, in 1866\The mag-i these campgrounds for toe use azine* lists this as toe. world’s lof electricity where it is offered.[largest brown. ___\ Work in Conservation State Aids School Dropouts LANSING (!) — When a youth community and are placed at] lives and works to the satfte the nearest conservation faclU-| community, he isn’t apt to get ty. into trouble. That’s the experience of the ^Conservation Department with school dropouts employed under the Neighborhood Youth Corps Program. RURAL AREAS The Conservation Department is geared more to rural communities than the larger cities, mostly because there are not many conservation facilities near toe urban areas. More than 50 per cent of the youths employed by the department are from tin Upper Peninsula. “We haven’t had any trouble with the youths In load communities, such as was experienced by the Job Corps," re-paled Merle Raber, assistant federal aid coordinator for the The Conservation Depart-program. ment feels the program has He opposite is tree, he ! beea a success, Raber said, said — the jabs help keep ! “The department has bene-thenr out of traable. fitted and the youths have ben- Tbe 16-21-year-old youths em- efitted,” he said. “A lot of them ployed by the department all h*ro received work experience are from low income families.Ith** haa enabled them to go on They have to be out of school U> better jobs or encouraged for at least three months to be •Ugtols for the Conservation De- nsity live within their local them to go back to school." Ibis is the entire idea of the program—not to give them permanent jobs.; x To date, Raber said, the I youths have contributed more than 84 man-years of labor to various projects and have earned 3279,920 in wages. The program is federally financed and is administered by the State Labor Department under, the Economic Opportunity Act. The program started to Michigan just last July. There have been 718 youths benefited by the work experience to date. Current employment of such youth woken by the department is about 250. The Youth Corps waters fill; a variety of jobs. They work on park, fishing site and picnic ground development and main-and help maintain buildings and light equipment They help conduct game surveys, work at fish hatcheries and at game research stations. Some girls are employed also, at clerical work, filing or whatever other light work position* A. 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ItM ts 4, Fit YE 7:34, Sat. 'til 2:30 R 1-0900 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1060 V B-4 Peatlaa'a POPULAR THEATER WMttayiiOML li ) It M. I* It Mk EAGLE NOW SNOWINO UR, G0LDF00T and Hit BIKINI MACHINE” —PLl/S— “HEROES OF TELMARK” ALL COLOR PROGRAM! Dorman's Old Mill TAVERN Serving INTERNATIONAL BUFFET Every Friday from 5 Til 9:30 P.M. Call for Reaervatioiu QL Doctor School Growth Cited LANSING (AP) - Michigan medical schools will jump their enrollment! by nearly half within three years, the State Board of Education was told Tuesday. Deans of Wayne State, Michigan and Michigan State Medical schools wrote the board the increase would be "one of the most significant expansions in medical education in the United States.” * * * Expansion plans are: Michigan State—open its new two-year medical school to 25 students this fall. The number I will eventually rise to M per class. After two years, students will transfer to other medical schools. WAYNE STATE Wayne—admit 190 freshmen in 1967 instead of the present 125 and increase to 200 by 1069 if plans for a new building proceed as scheduled. It would entually accomodate 250 per class. Michigan — Increase enrollment from 200 to 210. | The letter said the three schools, given financial support, j“could expand their efforts to help hospitals throughout the state strengthen their intern and residency programs.” Cil Satellite Relay Use Employed by First Ship HONOLULU (AP) - The Navy says the guided,missile cruiser Canberra has .become I JOINS NEW FAMILY - Actress Eleanor Parker (left) reaches up to pat the cheek of her new stepdaughter, Laurey, 15, daughter of Raymond N. Hirsch (center) in Chicago yesterday. Hirsch, a Chicago businessman, and Miss Parker were married Sunday in AP PhotoUx Nevada. The actress has three children by her first husband, the late Bert Friedlob, and one by her divorced husband, artist Paul Clemens. Hirsch is a widower and has two daughters. He's Vigorous at 70 Iturbi Likens Age to Sunset News* Popular Prices! pc;/ ROW EVERYONE CAM SEEl THE MOST LOVERLY MOTION PICTURE OF ALL TIME Winner of 8 JL ;ua( Academy W “ I TcllR th including f TQTWr m Beit Picture. ItlfMIflll B J| Ml sBH id**** •I 966 Dairy Ovmn National OavalapwH Ca.'Dtg. U.S. Pal. Off. Ait O. O., Carp. PETER'S DART QUEEN, Jeslya at Pint KELLER'S DAMY QUEEN, Mala St., Rachsstsr McMILLM'S DAIRY QUCBI, 4711 Dixie Hwy., Droyten Plains By BOB THOMAS AP Mevie-Television Writer | HOLLYWOOD — Jose Iturbi’s reflections at 70: I J'How do I feel? No different. It is like looking at the sun. You see it ‘ I the sky, and-it does not appear i I to be moving. But if you go away and cornel back to look ad you can seel that it ‘ sets, and you know for sure that it has moved." Iturbi at 70 is far from the sunset of his years. Despite a flu attack that had prompted him to cancel several concerts, the pianist-conductor appeared for an interview in his Beverly Hills home with his usual vij "It was rough,” he admitted, very bad flu. But every day I am getting stronger and I am able to do more. Once more ' am beginning to exercise, and that is important in my work. * . * * “Physical condition means a great deal In piano playing; so much of it is muscular. That’s why I have always prided myself in remaining in top shape.” Such a philosophy has preserved his position as one of the top attractions of the concert world for more than four decades. His achievements will be saluted text month by a 70th birthday concert with the Lot Angeles Music Festival, -which is celebrating its 20th year at UCLA. WORLDWIDE In addition, Iturbi will be displaying his muscular style at the keyboard and on the podium in concert halls ail over me world. ’ / T am a great believer in air travel,” he remarked. "I have piloted my own plane, afld I like nothing better than to be setting out in a jet for a far-0ff concert. My dog, whom I lorn, is now 8% years old — my age! — and he has accompanied me on 42 trips across the Atlantic, not to mention flights,/to South Africa, Booth America and wherever.” He an|f his dog have slowed their pace, he admitted. From a one-time high of 192 concerts in one year, the Spanish-born musician has dropped to 50 to 69, and that’s the way he would like to keep his schedule. “I would like now to enjoy my British Space Scientist Raps Furor on UFOs BOSTON ill - A leading Brit-ih space scientist, Sir Bernard Lovell, says the current furor in the United States over unidentified flying objects is "in- home,” said Iturbi, who for 20 years has lived in a Spanish-style house with paintings by Renoir, Braque, ModigUano, Utrillo, etc. “One year I was home only five days — five days! It was madness.” LITTLE LEISURE J His life at home, as on the road, permits little leisure. His passion for condition dictates a rigorous schedule of exercise, particularly at the punching bag. Piano practice is a never-ending discipline. work on technique for an hour and a half — two hours," he said. “Then I take up the work that is current. That cun mean two-three hours — whatever is required.”'He is constantly adding new works to his repertoire. How long will he continue to play? “I will playonly as long as I feel I can play. In that regard I have an artistic conscience.” “The UFOs,” he said last night, “are natural phenomena or hoaxes. The people who see them must be tremendous emotionalists.” Sir Bernard, director of the Jodren Bank Observatory and here on a speaking tour, added: “Besides, does it ever occur to them that we have front up a lot of things and that some of them might be coming back, such as nose cones and rock: ett? ‘Could anyone be seeing thqie?” ES3KEEGO ROSS HUNTER Production LANA TURNER Technicolor* THE 300 BOWL Invites You to SWING Into SPRING! Join a Spring League The 300 Bowl Has a League for Everyone FUN NIGHTERS MOONLIGHTERS SCOTCH DOUBLES the 300 Bowl Is Also Starting LEARN TO BOWL CLASSES Starting May 9 SIGN UP NOW Check In the , Swingingest Spot in Town the 300 Lounge Everything for the Perfect Night Out THE 300 bowl 100 S. Cass Lk. Rd. Phone 682-6300 the first U.S. ship to make operational use of a satellite communications relay. The circuit, between the Canberra and the naval communications station in Hawaii, uses the Syncom 3 satellite. 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Hmmm nU tm Uaalan. Copyright 1966. Tha Krogtr Cm. E—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, IBM Jacoby on Bridge 4J106S 4(61 V10T VKJI4I ♦ K101 ♦ A9| 4XIII *Q* SOUTH (D) 4AXQ ff ♦ »* + AJ10T432 North-South Tohmbh IM North Kart M 1* m IV Paw 3* Pu if Pub 3 N.T. Pub Paw Paw Opantaclud—4J. By JACOBY & SON Jim: “Would you define a ‘nothing play’ as a play I b a t just cannot win but may lose when triad in preference to ! the correct play?” Oswald: “That is. exactly right | Thus, it you | hold five spades to the JACOBY ace - queen-ten and dummy holds the jack-hine-eight the correct play is to try to pick up the king by means of finesse. “The play of the ace to try to drop the king is a bad play but it is not a nothing play. Every once'in awhile the singleton king will show up behind the ace and the bad play will gain a trick.” Jim: ‘in other words a bad play may actually gain a trick for you. It Just loses more often than It gains while a nothing play may lose but cannot possibly gain.” Oswald: “South had a chance to throw away game and rubber by means of a nothing play in clubs. He won the spade opening and played out ace and a low club. East won with the queen and led back a second spade. “Then South led his jack of clubs-and wound up with five clubs, thrOe spades and a heart for the necessary nine tricks.” Jim: “South’s nothing play would have been to play his jack of clubs ufter the ace. East would still have, won with the queen but West would have been left with two more club stoppers and South’s chib salt would have been worth one trick instead of five. .“It should be noted that if clubs broke 3-3 both the correct play and the nothing play would have worked. With dubs breaking 4-2, only 1 the correct play worked” V*CRRD Sense** Q—The Wool Nora mbs aw 1* pass 14 Pam 14 Pass It Pbsb T You, South, hold: 4KQJ7C VAX ft ♦AQIMS What do you do now? Punish Burners of Draft Cards ~Bishop Pike RENO, Nev. \(AP) - The Episcopal bishop of California says the act of burning a draft card is indefensible and should be punished. Speaking Tuesday night at the University of Nevada, the Rt. Rev. James A. Pike said, “This act strikes at the very roots of the principle of law and order." ♦ 4r ★ - • Bishop Pike said draft card burners should not be drafted'in retaliation because the “Selective Service ‘is not a judicial agency." “But I think these people should be cited for a misdemeanor at the very least and pay fine or the price of getting another draft card typed out,' he said. TODAY** QUKSTIOM Your partner nfaUa a no-tramp. What do you do now? Unicameral Insight TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Nebraska, the only state with a unicameral legislature, will send a three-man delegation to testify at New Jersey’s constitutional convention. Natural Gas Deaths WASHINGTON (AP> - Accidents involving natural gas pipelines have caused 64 deaths and 222 injuries in the last 15% years, according to a report released by the Senate Commerce Committee. BEN CASET THE BORN LOSER MXR IN MY POCKET WITH . pbm^ARUBB^BStsO/^l [Bn 111 lyfc ■ BMfll By Art Sansom Vou can obtain what yu -__________________ TAURUS (Apr. JO • May 20): Bxeat-lent tor Batting around, matting people. Thera la nothing halfway, pftcavertea UmatV'declalona.’ Condition* W(JSrB^Aug. 22): Attention —I nffocting carter, aiplra- Key la to TAKB ACTIOMI VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): Bt Ml at plana, aapadally Involving travel. not ad good tor direct actio duties CLOSE AT HAND. LIBRA (Sapt. 22 - Oct, a ment. Permit other* to ehe_ — j— . . . then read In mature manner. Some cancautona may be necessary H you BBjn .aatld tooting. Senate Worker Union Is Eyed LANSING (UPI) - About 5fl per cent of the state Senate employes, angered at working an average of <0 to 65 hours week without overtime pay, have indicated a wish to unionize, according to Assistant Sergeant at Arms William C. Hunter. * ★ dr The 50 per emit mark was the goal set early this month when Hunter, a former ganizer for the United Auto Workers, and others began distributing cards asking legislative employes if they wish to join the Michigan State Employes Union, Council 7. -' Hunter said it will be up to Jerry Kendziorski of the union to decide when the time is ripe for calling an election on bringing about 56 Senate employes Into the union. He may wait to see if the majority of the 75 employes in the House of Representatives also want to join the union, Hunter said. ' jpjr ★ ★ The basic complaint of Senate employes, according to Hunter, is “we are working terribly long hours.” OVERTIME WORK He estimated the average Senate employes, including sergeants-at-arms, secretaries to senators, committee clerks and document room employes, put in between 20 and 25 hours a week overtime. \ Most of tin employes earn under 66,000 a year. Iraq Fitted* Kill 8 TEHERAN, Iran (UPI) Flash floods in Iraq yetterday killed eight person and left hundreds homeless. A government spokesman said many cattle and sheep were killed and farmlands extensively damaged. E—9 « tllE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 All Excess Fat and Bona Is Romovod Before ;J i Weighing and Prirfngl I I This is the famous Velue-Woy tHmmln, I l VMr I «£&£* ** 11 fllllrS1**^^ Perm Freeh, Oev't. Inspected Hygrade's Brisket, Point Cut MORI MEAT FOR YOUR MONEY With Big 'D' Value-Way Trimming Round Bono Shoulder Cut LOBSTER TAILS... Se Freeh Presen Fish Steaks Garden's Spicy Pink—ted Pork Sausage... Smoked or Fresh Ihrer Sausage ., Garden's Pure Perk, little, Breakfast i US DA CHOICE Fish Sticks. Se Fresh,Presen Deep S Scallops., link Sausage aijJH fl MILK FED VEAL '^■fijfl w/Veol Shoulder Chops. 69* wJ Vtol Arm Cut Steaks u 89* a m rr-T«l| m Vtal Sirloin or Rib Chops e « # o ft* B mt 9 Mvtol Loin Chops . « CHECK & COMPARE BIG 'D' EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! [ffctYDAV .r HeWes , hS***"*- eftisiM resale lu» (lOWf **• °mnuieted CANE SUGAR *T. MG I Hunt's Sedd Peck — - . Kmf» Cresuny Smeeth pn. Hillside Pineet ^ 141. 1 A# 111 Tomatoes...... & 16 Mayonnaise.. .. 59 Cal Beets a w I H| Pew Pew Keheehirtf ^ Del Monte CoMemta ma Stver Pleee ba. ■ 1 Grape Juice.... *vl25 Fruit Cocktail.. ..;^21 Sauer Kraut.... Jtaltl * 1 Oranges. a 1" Pineapple & 22 Mushrooms.... .air g I r teal's II MIRACLE 1 jj[ wWP ?y?M) ft 48 I ■Hi 1 EVHYDAY U>W PRICE 1 Wonderful in Your Coffee . ^ CBFIEE S&JK3I mate.t^ .¥57 5] • «vi»HftAY low FWC* * min ^ IHflH 1 Pancake Mix . .1139* Purple Plums ,i~2V ‘ 1 Cake Mixes....H.22c Green Beans ...s21* 1 dmy Dlehweshlnf With m j|^ Pw laugh Jeb Washing ym 1 Dreft Detergent. «!»* JJ Cheer Detergent, /1 HHUdoPfamp, Tender 14L 1AC W1 Sweet Pees....«%,!/ r KuttorAeU WhoU l4^>z. Mr 1 Irish Potatoes .. a lz 1 Washday Miracle 14B. AAr 1 fide Detergent . .;»<30 1 ,4Biuidiud'M;Cheeii “nate-eo -■ sinner, ^s115 LM w fWkvoAY mi tmet • ; % • ,1. it5k. H H 1 HI, fl SMlBURN!2r;l3f ■ Per Dainty WosheMee 4*4* Per Automatic Washers __ . I Ivory Flakes ... a 33 Dash Detergent. 71 1 Deal Pack—Gets Colors Brighter A Wash Wads A Woodwork with ... . 1 Bold Detergent . j~ 26* Spic & Span £25' " 1 Fast Pein Relief AAAO. White, Bright Washes with ... 1 Anacin Tablets . ^99c Oxydol.... ..£,32* i?* Top Job £s85‘ Dry Ble«h ... a 39‘ SaRraTfobkls.. is.73‘ || Glesswere In Package of J4> ■■ am ^ ■ Premium Duz. . .^ #3 1 Kleenex Asserted Colors nm 1 Facial Tissues.. . a Id 1 Per SRks and Woolens WO Ivory Snow.. ....a/# %| HILLSIDE] butter ^wt.pwnt !t Unauet Prexen -le, Cherry er Peecn| FRUIT PIES U.S. Mo. 1, Crisp, Hand Picked Macintosh,-Jonathan er Delicious 3- 39 APPLES Hot Heuep0#»n Plump With Golden Goodness Cucumbers ... .3 m29 Golden Yams . . 3* 39 Fleverful A Nutritious . a Keyed Hawaiian Brand, large 9 Site r Mushrooms..... *49* Pineapple Halves. «.2r ted Mpe A Pul of Jutoe _ _ wawotme rete mpenee OOC Watermelon. .... JSC Emperor Grapes.. »z" , l JdansdOni WE® annum rooe hsttvai E—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1000 CHICAGO (UPI) - Th« Federal Bureau of Investigation has broken a ring of crime syndicate-connected road agents who specialised in hijacking silver bullion shipments. The thefts totaled more than $1 million. The FBI said Tuesday it had arrested 11 mm in die Chicago area and one in Staten Island, N.Y. The agents were armed with federal indictments naming 18 men—(he result of a painstaking two-year investigation. rlia W. Johnson, head of' the FBI office in Chicago, said none of the loot taken by the hijackers has been recov- The indictments, which charged kidnaping, theft and conspiracy, specifically involved the theft of $380,000 in silver SINGLE-HANDED CAPTURE — Pretty Mrs. Sue Im-boraooe, 24, of Metairie, La., looks over the pistol she used yesterday to capture a man accused of burglarizing a coin-operated machine outside her apartment Mrs. Imbomone, wife of a deputy sheriff, held die suspect at gunpoint until police arrived. Owners Roaring Notion Around, Says Town PIEDMONT, Calif. (AP) -Simba, Piedmont’s friendly neighborhood lion, has been outlawed by the (Sty Council. But not without a roar from his own- “He has never done any harm to anyone or any damage in the neighborhood/’ says Art Quaife, bouse with die big cat’s coowner, Pete Clay—and the lion. Quaife and Clay, young graduate students in mathematics at the nearby University of California Berkeley campus, dp-scribe the lion with such adjectives as “lovable,” “cod” and “lion-hearted.” The Piedmont City Council ascribes Simba as a potential danger. They passed an ordinance Monday night banning lions throughout Piedmont, a San Francisco East Bay area residential community of 11,000. Simba to the only lion in town. ‘BABE IN WOODS’ Simba’s owners said the beast is just a babe inihe woods—n a ferocious king df the jungle. “The lion has visited the park, but on a leash and we let no one touch it,” Quaife says. “It only runs loose in our house.” Believe Dead Jet Stowaway Fleeing Reds The students are retaining lawyer to fight the ordinance. Quaife says that Simba, kit months, “is too young for a full-throated roar, although he tries.” He was bom in the Seattle zoo. PARIS (UPI)-jSuspicion grew today die unidentified stowaway found dead in the wheel pit of a French airliner was a political refugee fleeing the Iron Curtain. The dark-haired lightly dad man apparentiy perished 30,000 feet over Eastern Europe in the freezing, cramped wheel compartment of an Air France jetliner. • Officials said the stowaway might have slipped abeard the Caraveie jetliner efth.ar to Moscow or Warsaw Sunday despite fee heavy guard mounted on it to both airports. FRISKY Although Simba is frisky and likes to chew up sofas and chair tegs, he has nothing else more savage cm his mind than gulping down 25 pounds of meat every day, his owners assert. The owners bought the lions six months ago from a Los Angeles animal supplier far films and circuses. Why? The tiny compartment where be was found k under the right wing of the plane and when the wheel was retracted shortly after takeoff forced Mm to bend - double to seated position. He was found wife Ms face buried in his knees and two earplugs tom from his shirt shirt stuffed into Ms ears. ‘SUFFERED TERRIBLY’ Pending publication of autopsy details, ft was believed he died of a combination of suffocation to his unpressurized prison and fee m i n u *45degree temperatures at high altitudes. “He must have suffered terribly before he died,” one medical source said. The body was found early Monday by an Air France chanic overhauling the plane after it returned from a busy weekend flying between Paria, Barcelona, Spain, and Munich, Germany as well as Moscow and Warsaw. Air India Jet Damaged BOMBAY, India (AP) - Air India said one of its Boeing 787 jetliners was slightly damaged white landing at Bombay’s Santa Crus Airport this morning. The airline said the undercarriage was damaged but no one was hurt to fee plane, which was on a practice flight. “It’s an experience living with a beast of the jungle and we’ll keep him as long as we can,'' Quaife says. “When we can’t we figure he’ll let us know.” • The matter came before the City Council after Police Chief Lou Guider reported Simba had jumped a fence and was caught by some high school boys. Quaife and Clay say their cub presents one large problem. “He scares all our girlfriends away—we have to meet them elsewhere,” Clay said. ^Massachusetts \nvestors ^Irust The Trujt b a mutual InvsNnwnt fond Watting, Lerchen & Co. MtmbertNtw York Slack Exchange 2 North Saginaw St Pontiac, Michigan Phone: FE 2-9274 Mmm «ad mm (UfeWba ftnpw- d—fldtl » »U*»A-CHusim invasions Ttutr. ARTHRITIS I Bl—arch at SPEARS baa opened fee door to haalfe for thonaanda of aofferen who had been l«d to believe (here waa ne help for thair a interested in the treat-let baa released ao many I bondage of pain and in- { . . write for our free litera- | haw; and eee your local chiropractor, j •pwars Chiropractic Hospital Hijack Ring Is bullion from • truck to La Grange, Ind., last Oct and the kidnap of the driver; fee theft of $330,000 to silver bars to suburban Hillside, DL; and the Mjscking of a truck containing $230,000 in silver in suburban Cicero, 1)1., April It, 1965, Also covered In the Indictments was the $104,000 theftf of photography equipment Aug. 24, 1984. from a truck in Melrose Park, HL ★ ★ h The indictments charged some of the accused with the actual stickups, others with aiding and abetting the Mjackers and or helping dispose of stolen goods. The indicted men included Willie (Potatoes) Daddano, 53, Riverside, the reputed syndicate boss for Chicago’s West Side; Ernest (Rocky) InfeUce, 47, Mel- rose Park, • reputed syndicate hoodlum; John (Johnny tha Bug) Varelll,«, River Forest, • suspected syndicate muscleman Morris (Mhshte Baer) Satetko, 51, Chicago and a reputed lieutenant of Daddano, Albert (Lupi) Cardenas; 38, of near Elgin. One Rockefeller Wears Pajamas to Reception ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Nelson A. Rockefeller Jr., wearing brightly colored pajamas, met with about 100 newswomen Tuesday night. Young Nelson, who will be 2 next month, ambled downstairs during an hour-long reception given by Gov. and Mrs. Rockefeller at the executive mansion. Says Sites Needed By Gov. gonwey WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Haalfe, Education and Welfare John W. Gardner says regional educational rawarch canters and laboratories are needed to permit “(bit class development of an idea.” “Until eight yean ago,” ha told a House Appropriations subcommittee in testimony made public today “fee mathematics curriculum was 300 yean old without a single change. A good idea will lie around far yean without being adequately tested.” Gardner said the research canton and laboratories sought in HEW’s proposed 19$7 budget of $8.2 billion “is an attempt to set up to this country the kin! of research and development that will permit first class development of an Idea.” Viet Bungling Charged PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -Gov. George Romijey of Michl-gan said Tuesday fee Johnson administration tote made mistakes in handling the war in Viet Nam. y, here to address a $l00-a-plate Republican fundraising dinner, told a news conference it is “morally right for us to assist people who are fighting communism.” legitimate reason for being there except to the extent that the peopla of South Viet Nam want us titelre.” Romney said, however, he would like to know with certainty “if the people of South Viet Nam really want us there. I also would Uke to know for sure to what extent the Viet Cong are outright Communists. 'I don’t believe we have any Romney said the Johnson administration’s handling of the' Viet Nam war and general dissatisfaction among the public with the war “could be a consideration” for the expected Re-' publican gains in Congress this fall. As for Ms own political intentions, Romney said “I have made no decision with respect to‘68.” . ^People of Ethiopia are a mixture of Hamltic, Semitic and Just Wonderful HAIR SPRAY REGULAR 770 - 30in. CAR WASH BRUSH Rtgslar, HarS-Te-HsM LIMIT-1 WITH COUPON ■UN SNBT-0FF limit-1 m m WITH M A COUPON Cunningham's Cunningham's POLISH REMOVER I-0Z. - REG. 218 19* LIMIT-1 WITH COUPON Graminghams HALF GALLON Mac Diarm id’s FAMILY PAK ICE CREAM VANILLA • CHOCOLATE • VANILLA FUDGE AND NEAPOLITAN LIMIT-1 - WITH THIS COUPON RIIBLAIMf SPONGE MITT 33< Cunningham's Cunningham's REGULAR HC PITCHER DECANTER GALLON SIZE CAN of 700 BUTTONS ■NILE THEY LAST LIMIT-1 WITH COUPON |44 CHINA TEACUPS LIMIT-6 WITN COUPON 6m77* Cunninghams Cunningham's H Cunningham’s COUPON EXPIRES SUN. 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UMITl -WITH THIS COUPON COUPON EXPIRES OUNOAV APRIL 34,1444 Graminghams DM WHITE CANVAS GLOVES limit-1 Mm m a with COUPON BSEB2SBEE01 ill 1 ma 4- THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 , / • -Healthy or Feverish? MARKETS The following art top price* :overing taka of locally grown induce by groweri and told by hem in wbojaaala package loti. Quotation* are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce Rail*, Industrial* in Gear Stock Mart Rallies Vigorously NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market mounted a vigorous rally early this afternoon. Trading was heavy. Ralls and industrials were in gear as the averages made a substantial gain. WWW Aside from the glamorous coir television-electronics-aero-lS space-airlines group there. “ better-than-usual action among the bread-and-butter stocks. All the leading motors were up even though most gain? were moderate. OUs posted a string Of fractional gains. Even the utilities, which have been sinking to new lows for the year, edged to the upside. COPPERS SCRAMBLED Investor Role Is Target of Bill of 80 stocks at noon was up 2.1 at 351.0 with industrials up 3.1, rails up 2.0 and utilities .2. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 6.41 at 948.05. Steels showed little change. and coppers were scrambled as ...„ they reacted to the further . ’JJ®" Je cross-currents following last 1 week’s boost in the export pricel^.^ • Slmro0M «f k„ Pkii. | Precision was up half a fever? The three big spenders — consumers, business and gov-WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presl- eminent - all LBJ Seeks to Boost Private Participation Economy Is All Aglow By SAM DAWSON . collections even at lower rates.;income will be clipped some-AP Business Mews Analyst "'And also the government debt what by larger tax withholding , . has risen, meaning Uncle Sam from pay checks of those in NEW YORK — Rising prices hgg ^ get the dollars higher Income brackets, are giving an unexpected glow^ larger expenditures, both at | WWW to the economy. Is it the glowlhome and in Viet Nam. | But few expect the rate of the | Efforts to curb spending an growth in the economy to be along the line may check the chilled much. Even »ro« areas economy’s faster pace a bit ini^hk*1 have been experiencing the current AprilJune quarter, their own private slowdown now renort an increased tempo, URGED TO GO SLOW SHtatai a revival of the dent Johnson today asked Congress to make it easier for private lenders to take over federal loans through pooling of of copper by Chile. _ - .... . ‘points and its when-issued 2. Boeing was outstandingly goijtron Devices rose nearly 4. weak in the aerospace group. | corporate bonds were mostly have been paying out more dollars. But; about a third ofl government credits and other ^ leased DAWSON (MM High LOW Lett CM-to 31 Vi NEW YORK (ArMMowlnt If ■ JM —A- OITROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prlco* paid per | ror No. 1 Rv* poultry: IMW tVP* nuuun km • roottort hoovy typo 3O-30V,; brollor} ABC Con JO ■nd fryori 3-4 lb*., whllet 19-M; BorrM ACP Ind 1 JO Rock *3k-*4; ducklings 11. IMMIHb 40* Detroit aees liSSSrSi 1,40 DETROIT (API—Egg prices ppld aer , M dozen by first rsceWen (including u.S.):|AM#g Corp CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange Rutter steady te firm; Whole-tele buying grlcse yndienagd; 91 score AA MTITA it *mi57 se C SO; cirt N I lb H ( It. Eggs steodyi whotsssts buying price* unchanged; 70 per cent or bettor Grede A White* 3TVi; mixed 37k; medium* 34; ■tenderdt Ml dirties unquoted; cheeks tt. . CHICAOO POULTRY . . CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA) - Llv* ROUL,— PW . J White Reck fryers WtMOk; lew heavy AmPPw 1.1s hens 23WI. lAHom* 1.S0s r”?iT ' Am Hesp AO AmlnvCo 1.10 Livwstock promising President Johnson has urgediboom. all hands, to go alow, to put off! The dollar figures for the na-some planned outlays, to shun tion’s boom are impressive. The products and services on which Gross National Product—the prices have been rising faster total spent far goods and serv-than the average. ices—was running at a season- - • • _ — •——— -—•—- I Top business executives have ally adjusted annual rate of steps to encourage investor par-|0utlayg fa due to higher price promised to cut back some of |714.l billkwTin the January-tidpation. .. tags and only two-thirds rep-; their record expansion plans for March quarter. This was $18.9 Johnson proposed to “"“‘"“resent buying of more units ofligge. The president has asked billion higher than in the final unchanged U S Treasury bonds 52* £?2 !SoutPut federal departmento and agen-three months of 1985 and the DMMMewflr •• w emygia-.- *m's : j&kss.'e; credit with private funds. jiarger than at any time since of it. Total consumer spendablel950. The measure would go Into 11950 when consumer panic buy-j—*-“■*-* “ * *“ - ’ ^ 1 effect in the current fiscal |ing at the outset of the Korean| year and also apply in the fis- Mr sent the economy soaring—! cal year beginning July I. jin terms of dollars if not of j In a letter accompanying theih®j}*hv_ __. SjSSScf^b^du;to ssrt market. The New York Stock Exchange 1 m si ’reeeert S 'ruehCp 1. l» n i I 30*i ! O Accept l. GenAnMF . Gen Clg I. 7 23% 23k 23k + « S* 5% g£ + SM 45% MW 45k +1% T1 112% )UW ipk +1 43 71V. 71% 73 -% 4 54V, J4V< 54k - Vk 133 92% 92k 92% + k 1 m Sk 59% + % 13 m Ik .4% —% 57 32k 31k 33k I 77 43k 45k 43k m 34k 33k 34 *Stttttzt . I 14 10% 7*k 79k I 31 »k 31k 32k + k I 14 4Mb 47k + k p ) M Ilk tik - k n si 53k 52k mtli 1 21 54k 55% 54 V. + % I ' If 72k 71k 72k - k 2 ilk 14k Uk - k 45 149% 147k 147% - k I 24 48k 42% 43k -t Vi I II 40k 44 44% + k —R_ * 95 40% 40k 40% + k « 7 ilk lik sik t % -“i 14% 17% + Residential Construction Shows Increase in County spend. MORE DOLLARS RapMon.% n m IT 44% tv many loans together and sell- Reodka Co 1 31 81 «. + k z— h> tko rwil” RelcftCh ,20e 19 14% 14k • — RepubSteel 3 1 41k 4ik —— J? | Residential construction per-„ mits in Oakland County during The legislation would: Consumers have more dollars ^ j^st quarter of this year in- • Provide for “pooling because there are more jobs cr€ased by 287 units, or 1W per cent,' over the same three-month this year than last, because ing participations in the pool’ rather than having the government make “a number of relatively rtwrH and uncoordinated offerings of loans in the market.” . f • Centralize sale of poo) participations in a single agency — the Federal National Mortgage Association — rather than have each agency sell ita own loans. • in cases where federal been soaring to record heights. ■ interest rates are below those I w w w ' - k of the private market, allow Government has more to % the government to “make spend because the larger in-;.."I supplementary payments to comes of individuals and corpo-S% + %| the trustee of the pool to cov- j rations have produced big tax 22% - ki er the interest insufficiency.” j ——-----------. —-------*- 2% a* ttk + %| This would be subject to ad- | % n jnt 77% 1 kj vance authorization by a p- , propriations Committees of 1 ^ many wage scales have risen, and because in 1964 and 1966 federal tax rates were cut with the aim of promoting prosperity and cutting unemployment. It worked. The nagging question now is if it worked too wen. Business has more to spt this year, partly because it too enjoys lower tax rates than a few years back, but mainly because sales and profits have enced an increase of 181 per .cent on 371 permits for the first quarter of 1965 and 1,044 this year. Wayne County with 2,399 permits issued during the first quarter this year had the highest gross total but demolitions amounting to 1,23? left a net of just 1,096. The other county in the region, Macomb, Issued 2,611 building permits and recorded 24 demolitions tor a net of 1,980. both houses; *i BUDGET RESOURCES 1 ■ Johnson said “the Farticipa-'m Stethem In <1911* Syntax Cp .40 184 lira 104k Tidwlcol .75 II 14k 15% Contelnr i.x» Cont Air JO 2.40 SSI CrowCol 1.8H Crown Xoi* Crown Z*)t 2 Cruc Stl 1.20 Cudohy Co Stocks of Local Interest Figures otter declmel points or* eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS I. Say. Prices Oo Diamond Crystel . Si«lrl 15.0 15J ...134' 14.1 84J 8SJ H3 23J . IJJ I4J r Printing ....... ........1M » North CoMraf%Mjno8 MUTUAL FUND* 3 H i Ik *ips.. jEEE=8 lifil 4 ss ss SSt M S% Ik S% +lk 7 1% M% M “ M 44% 44% 44k 1 2% S% 5% + % I m J4 1% •% 0% a uk u 1L M 14% 24k 24% ]* 30k 29% ^ ' Ok 4MV S% p lira hT ni% +ra p'S " a w* s OfSTlnd 1. ?] 225 aw t k Bansk1 DynomCo M *« 1*% 88 —E— «r nra lira 42 132% 1*1 iilk +1k ItOmOS^Tl EIPasoNG 1 CS&'B " 8 !P i«8 u 47. 44k 0 +2k Mai*. Investors Trust , Putnam OrMNE Ttlovlslon Electronics ., Wellington Fund Windsor Plind .......... 17J0 19.14 ithyl Cp It JO 11J4ifv(nsPo 10.03 n.W ivemhon 7J4 0.831 . 11 JO 12J4 _____ 17J1, 18J3 . 10.98 lOP .; .14.41 15.70 .. 19JO 21J1 mit us to conserve our h resources by substituting .. M vate for public credit while still a meeting urgent credit needs in k the most efficient and economic S manner possible.” » [L ■ “It will enable ns to make the c r e d 11 market stronger, more competitive, and better able to serve the needs of our lgrowtng economy,” he added. “But above all, the legisla-1 tion will benefit millions of tax-S payers and the many vital pro-U grams supported by federal a credit. The act will help us move this nation forward and k + % bring a better life to all the i sik 54% + % people.'' «k n% iSMsMt f ' I ^ yl '-Vta&a*' 1 Last year iiTtn^tu-st qu 1 per' fer Investing *4 1-983 construction permits budget ' <%&. ail issued and there were 75 d( ig ^ M Uons for a net of 1,908. period last year, w ★ Figures released today by the Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission indicate that multiple bousing continues to be a major factor in total construction activity. A total of 1,491 (ingle-family and 775 multiple family unit permits were israed in Oakland County during the first quarter of tab year. Hiis compares with 1,270 sin- Albertt Hensley, proprietor of gle-family and 713 multiple per- “* Birming-1 mits for the quarter a year ago.! "am ^"*1 * ★ |tar 1288 S.| A total of 2J70 permits were Woodward, Bib-1 issued the first quarter this mi"*"™!, has year in Oakland County. Taking!been f1 * ®c ® ®| into account 82 demolition per- “fr*tary "„e| Business Notes mits, the net total was 2,188. ***'| rine Dealers As-1 |,7I DEMOLITIONS j sociatioa Last year in the first quarter,. He has served I_ were! as treasurer the HENSLEY 75 demoli- past two years and la. a founder of the 125-member group. By ROGER E. SPEAR “I’m getting along in years, Own a few good stocks bat don’t wish to add to them. What is your opinion of good corporate bonds for income and reasonable stability?” AX. A) After a sharp decline inj price and rise in yield, following the Fed’s discount rate boost, rorporate bonds appear to have firmed up and I believe that they can be bought now for relatively high yield and reason-stability. Authorization* for new dwelling construction in the four-county metropolitan region showed a 25 per cent increase in the first quarter of this year over last year. Washtenaw County expert- News in Brief Theodore O. Yntema, 3960 Franklin, Bloomfield mis, has been elected to the board of directors of Encyclopaedia Britan-nica, Inc., Chicago. Yntema, a former Ford Motor Company vice president and — of Ford’s finance com- are investigating the theft of $111 from an office at Pierce Junior High School, 5145 Hatch- MtjnrT Vi* it con .50 :•«%% 1.20b m S N EngEI 1.21 NYCert 2.00a HlaoMP 1.18 Norm Wit 40 NA Avia 2.00 NorNGei 2.20 Citizens of Monaco are forbidden to gamble in the casinos of Monte Carte. f3£Ts.,» M*2 9 17% 17k 37k X8K88SSti: —F— ---19k 179k . .... s jik ^2 rim m m 31% 31% OMoHU 1.2 OtlnMatti U Outto Mar A Owenelll U k OxMFae 1J k Oxfrd P*b * t- _ .. T ,k % BWmiS JO 50% 49% 50k +1% 3 5% J* Mk + k 4 F fi f. + % 70% MM 74k T jf a »»ti; 1 S% Mk S% t k “7,11 Eli *4 Jbh Mk Mk —N-r « 100k 99k 99k - 0 Mk 57 Mk f 44 30k 29% 30k + 17 90 09k 90 - 43 70% 71 7|% + 34 Wt ft, 8 >« „4 T ^ g > 9 33% 33% 33% 31 47k 00% 07 f 15 Uk 54k BR + 9 15k 15 15 - 1 39k 39k 39k - >! r Is mt 41 23k 23k 23k f k 4 114% 134k 134% + k fill*! irFr 8l*r*r±.u 4 41k Ok 41 k + k sags Si,. —o - 24 S1% . 51% 51% 1 Mk Mk Mk M 43 Mk 8k lS*tra »k Mk 24 59k 39 19k ft 47k S| Johnson said the volume of! For your purposes; I suggest i% federal loans outstanding as of'American Telephone SKs of 2001 last June 38 exceeded $33 Wl-|selling at 100% to yield 5.05 per lion and involves programs to cent. I also like Commonwealth help f a r m 4r s, businessmen,;Edison 5Mw of 1996 offered on a home buyer,s, veterans, II 43k —W— 5 14% 14% ira + % 23 39% 39 Mk T .‘Si Si SS - . !! as S S»Mi 45 a% er M"Sk 47k fgtto 33 50k 49% Mk + k Sr » H » ® is SB «tr«. Hi * as « 1945. estimated cosh value on m-dfvl-JSid or ax-dlatritwltoo djt* 9—P«j«1 mmm DMWUbjl dtvldoody—Ex dlvl- rants, ww—With « trWmd. wl—Whei vj—In bankruptcy l III a|, ■ 73 ira ira ira 19 20% 20% Era J 47k Wk 1%. I 4 77k 77% 77k + W 9 00% 00% 05% + % 6 €- TSIram roorgogtaod u _ 22k 22% + k Act, or eocurltles at T" p |p*nl(«L m-rarelgii, R » SB*! Tirs Tz5 its 74% mi a% + k i Wi ira 85 11" §£*1-*8 w e C!5G&JS PacT^fjO Penh *9*1*40 PeremFIct 2 PerkeOev 1* p r »}ii PigitCi —- “ “ ta 140 \ If 01k I 5.01 per cent basis. Among ter dustrial issues, I recommend |Uirion Tank Car 5s of 1986 which would give you a 5.8 par cent return, and Beneficial Finance Ss of 1980 selling at 97% where the yield is 5.18 per cent. It is a great many years since bonds of good quality have offered such high returns and 1 believe you would be justified in acquiring some. ★ .* * Q) “We weald' appreciate your opinion on the common stock of Greyhound Corp. We bought a little stock la December for growth purposes but tt doesn’t seem to do anything.” 1*8. A) I like Greyhound and consider tt a desirable holding for long-term growth. The company has compiled an impressive record and has excellent management. In addition to its position as the biggest bus-line op8k*ator in the country thtough subsidiaries, Greyhound is a major supplier of food services and controls an important leasing company. The stock has acted indifferently in a market tint has largely focused on the glamor issues. You must exercise patience I! type of stock and believe that over a reasonable period of time your patience will be well rewarded. To order your copy of Roger . Spear’s 48-page Guide to Suc-■ - j cessful Investing, dip (Ms m- «t (nvmm* igetgroo ] tice and send, $1.18 with year 940.04+4.41 ' Roto riSo Recaro aw* name and address to Roger E. LifiSS1** >» id Sprar. f 1* l^dtae ;: X&WTr'-yJ™ a Press, Bra 1811, Graad Cea- •4.49+0J4!Arnowbdi^urite* *.w Stw 5-t ml ' Station, N.Y.C., N Y. 5llj.„brr,,JSf S t* t? (Copyright, 1188) ■ " ■ u7 ‘“^1 > | * dents, colleges qnd schools. > i s* —- Power Firm lists Revenue, Earnings Detroit Edison’s gross revenues were $370^49,051 for the 12 months ending March 31, 1966. For the corresponding period df 1984-65, they were $350,992,789. Net earnings Of the company for the 12 months ending March 31. 1988 were $58,006,868, or $2.01 per share. For the previous 12 months ending March 31,1965, net earnings were $54,453,346 or $1.89 per share. Federal Call Is Issued for Bank Statements WASHINGTON (AP) - The comptroller of the currency today issued a call for a statement of the condition of all national banks at the dose of business Tuesday, April 5. Similar ealh were issued by tiie Federal Reserve Board for member banks and by Ihe Federal Deposit Insnr-___ aace Qoirp. for insured state the Bankruptcy hank* which OK not meut- ' ftkaVT! ben of the federal reserve ___ system. Rummage Sale, Firat Christian Church, 858 W. Huron. April 22, 9 to 6:30 p.m. —adv. Birmingham Unitarian Church, Spring Rummage Sate. Friday, April 22, 9 a m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday, April 33, 9 a.m. to 12 noon. 851 Woodward, Bloomfield Hills. -Adv. Rummage Sale: April II, Fri. 9-5 p.m. St. Paul’s Methodist Church, 620 Romeo St., Rochester. x , -Adv. The Greater Detroit Paint & Wallpaper Dealers, Inc., recently held ita annual spring meat-teg and elected Patrick Lafiy, _ . . ____, 556 Sharon, Waterford Town- ItaMiaie ship, Varae-year term on the April 21,9 a.m. to $ p.m. and directl. mittee, is a visiting professor at Oakland Universtty. Ronald G. Balding, 584 Vine-Waterford Township oolteelwood, Birmingham, has tie an ............. - 3 ma—ummmm named to bead the executive staff responsible for business machine manufacture at Burroughs Corp., tt was announced today. He was form- eriy product BALDING planning manager for Burroughs international operations. Fri., April 22, 9 First Methodist Church of Birmingham, W. Maple at Pleasant. Snack Bar and free parking. —adv. Rummage Sale. Congregational Church, 1315 N. Pine, Rochester, Fri., Apr. 32,9-7 p.m. Sat., Apr. 23, 9-11 a.m. -adv. *65 Revenues Are Up for Allied Van Lines Gene P. Stanley, president of Gaukler Storage Co., local agent for Allied Van Lines, Inc., reported that Allied’s gross operating revenues were $11,269,393 last year. ♦ ★ Stanley said the nation’s largest household goods mover also set new records in line haul revenue, shipments booked, and' total tonnage test year. board of director*. Laliy is the owner of Pat Lally House of Color, 3139 W. Huron, Waterford Township. E. W. Quillin, 6840 Perham, Birmingham, has been appointed warranty a and customer I service manag-1 er for Dodge 1 D i v i s o n of I Chrysler Mo- f tors Corp- . I Prior to his 1 appointm e n t, Quillin was the division’s finan- cial administration manager. Reid Donaldson, 6605 Halyard, Birmingham, has been elected a vice president of RCA Victor Distributing Corp and general manager of the Detroit branch, jhrevteuaiy he was merchandising manager of the home Instrument department. BONO AVBI 8 % Ml W*4. 77.1 9M iv. Day 77.0 9C4 MJ ek ABO .77,1 Mj 04J nth Age 74.0 94J 04.0 k Age “• *** I High 5' Lew .. _ I High 7 %) Ml \. Og.0 i§ . _ _ 00.4 93J Year ; 794 IM.4 14.1 91.7 “ M Ml St B4 HH Hi 33 *** MJ H4i High I yffl 93.1 Year Ago ■ 90.7 1944 High MJ 1944 Law TS—-I2 THE POXTI Ar WEDNESDAY, APRIL : Meeting May Pick Director of Interlocked INTERLOCHEN (AP) - A meeting of the National Musici fjmp and Interiocben Arts Academy Board of Trustees is scheduled Thursday morning but its subject matter is not definitely known. The meeting precedes funeral services for Dr. Joseph Maddy, 74, founder-president of both world famed units, who died Monday. John Merrill, one of three vice presidents, said: “I can't) aay whether the trustees will consider naming a successor,) but It would be logical to Bank Holdup Action Packed Britton Gordon of Grand Rapids, a member of the > trustees' board, said be “would be greatly surprised if any successor is named immediately.” He expected operations of the Music, Camp and Arts Academy would* continue under direction of present officers. TAIL FITTINGS REPLACED - Jack Gilderoy, airplane overhaul manager, in San Francisco for United Airlines, shows a fitting that was replaced on a Boeing 730 after, small cracks were found in the bolt holes. The fitting is one of several that hold the vertical tail section of 707s and 720s to the fuselage. The checks were ordered by Boeing and the FAA after cracks were found in a 707 that crashed, killing 124, in Japan, Hie company said the cracks were not. responsible for the crash. MUSCLE SHOALS, Ala. Uft-ttie holdup of the Muscle Shoals National Bank yesterday contained all the ingredients of a movie script—a 40-minute gunfight, police commandeering a car, and a bandit who shot himself. Police Chief C. G. Ayers said Grover Laske Tidwell Jr., 26, Sheffield, Ala., and Johnny Wilson Holland, 27, Tuscumbia, Ala., are being held on federal bank robbery and state robbery charges. A bank teller started the chain of events by setting off a burglar alarm when one of the gunmen ordered, “Fork over the money." Ayers and officer H. N. Smith, about four miles from the bank, were alerted by police radio and began speeding toward town. But their car overheated and stalled. * * * The police chief flagged down Homer N. Longshore, an insurance man of nearby Florence, and commandeered his car — without explanation. EMERGED FROM BANK As the officers, approached the bank, lo- TAN • SUN SUITS • CRIB BLANKETS CH—. Caatiwrtm p—M wiled odewi WtdMhhl m WASH CLOTH m J Thick, Oaffy paatal calered wcnhdottul gp | SHOP SPUTM 9:30 ML to 10 PJL DULY... SUNDAY 12 NOON to t ML Conor of Dixie Highway and Telegraph Road-ii PONTIAC cated on the main street in this north Alabama city, the masked man started out. The policemen ran toward TMweQ, who shot himself in the hip while attempting to raise his gun. He was captured. Holland ducked back into the bank and held off officers during a fierce 40-minute gunfight. Bank employe! and customers huddled on the floor. ★ ★ ★ Ayers and Smith were joined by police from adjoining Florence, Sheffield and Tuscumbia during the battle. BULLETS IN CHEST During a lull in the shooting, the officers moved into the bank and found Holland with two bullets in his chest, Ayers said. ' ★ ★ ★ Next to him was a pillow case which the the police chief said contained 625,SCO in cash. ★ ★ ★ After returning the borrow car, Ayers praised the owner’s cooperation, saying, “We couldn’t have made it without his wsm mmcou^miD FAMOUS MAKER’S HI-TENACITY 100% NYLON TIRES REDUCED BELOW UST WEEKS LOW PRICES nnv SIZE LISTED GUARANTEED 18 MONTHS TUBE-TYPE BUCK 470x15 775x15 710x15 115x15 TUBELESS BLACK 400 x 13 450x13 750x14 775x14 5.0x15 135 x 3C0 NO TRADE-IN OF ANY KIND NEEDED IMILAR SAVINGS! TRIPLE PATTERN CONVERSION SHIFT KIT 3 shift patterns Rugged lifetime ceastractleB. Cemplete lastsllaties kit. ift77 ■io I Ilf# | Heavy defy barrel ceasects te eny the valve. Perfect far can «l bike*. * CARAYELLE TWIN MATO Heavy defy ■ 2" Nm Pair Pepvtar eders fa match cm InteHerp. Fits uHcars. n*i QUARTS cShfrcm cMefthe variii . ■---------— —- iii|vii tH|H pn ifimniBa NATIONALLY FAMOUS JOHNSONS KIT MUXE f OUNCE TERRY CLOTH SEAT COVER 07 Chalet a» celen. hntalls in 5 mtnaln. Medals far 2 A 4 deer ten._________ 8 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES! MOP SPARTAN 9t30 AJL TO If PJL BANT SUNDAY 12 NOON TO I PJf mw w Dixit Ntokwar n* mane* ami - mW;: ■m t I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEiJNESiMV. A r KjL 20. 1900, Ex-Mnyor i Castro Hails Cuba's Progress, Hits U.S.: v'ief Psris-Bonn of Pontiac Dies at 87 F. Homey Newton, 87, of Grand Rapids, a former Pontiac mayor, died Monday after a long Illness. Service will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Metcalfe Funeral Home, Grand Rapids. His body will be the Spargs-Griffin Home at 8 p.m. tomorrow for local service at ltH p.m. Friday with burial to Oak HM Cemetery. A graveside service will be conducted by the Grand Lodge! of Michigan and Pontiac Lodge No. 81. W ★ . it Surviving are a daughter,] Mrs. Everett C. Vallin of Birmingham, and five grandchil- HAVANA (AP) - Prime Minister Fidel Castro said today the United States has failed to make the Alliance for Progress work, while Cuba is making economic strides without U.S. aid. It is true thaj Cubans have ration books while other Latin-American countries do not, he said, “but this is sotecause we have taken care of ail the people, not fed a small, rich minority.*’ ★ ★ # Castro said the United States has been forced to admit its failure recently by telling Latin-American countries that rtfuch of its aid money had been squandered. LEADING COUNTRIES Speaking at a rally In Havana’s Chaplin Theater marking the fifth anniversary of the Bay of Pigs invasion, Castro claimed! Cuba is leading countries of the American continent, including the United States, in education and public health. Despite this, Cuba still faces many problems, Castro said. There is still poverty and many people are poorly housed. ’Tens of thousands” of miles of road have yet to be construct- ed, hundreds of thousands of bouses have to be built, many power installations are needed, water services have to be improved and industrial and agricultural problems have to be' overcome, he said. Pelt Yank Pacifists Nam Accord Seen Agreement on Troop! Stationing Predicted Snub to Hemingway Detailed in Article Castro said his regime was aiming for “the largest sugar harvest in the history of our country next year.”.This year’s crop will fall short of its original goal of 6 Mi million tons due to the .worst drought in 60 years, he continued, but next year “shall be without a doubt great agricultural year, possil . the best infoe eight years of the revolution." , ■ ’ILLUSIONS’ , Imperialism has “infantile | illusions" that Cuba’s Communist revolution is weak, Castro said, “buf never has the revolu- PARIS (UPI) - French For- Newton was elected to the City Commission in 1834 and served as mayor from April 1935 to November 1936 when he resigned to assume a high state Masonic post. the advisory board when he was a member from 1940 to 1953 and was influential later. Ackerman, who was secretary to the board from 1932 to 1964, confirmed Bendiner’s report that Ackerman had “lobbied vigorously from time to time." NEW YORK (AP) - The late Ernest Hemingway failed to win a PuUttzer Prize in 1941 for his novel “For Whom the Bell Tolls’ because foe president of Columbia University .vetoed the choice, says an article in the current issue of McCall’s magazine. | .The article, written by Robert! A nast Brand master and oast Bendiner, former managing ed-| One instance -was for “The Brand*wv-retarv of the Michiaan itor e Pulitzer Prize for fiction for Order of Eastern Star No. ^ ^ by ^ ,ate ^ Hemingway in 1954. MANY AREAS I Nicholas Murray Butler, who). Ackerman also confirmed that He had served in many, areas | branded the work as “lasciv-of the Masonic Lodge as past ious." high priest of Chapter No. 4 of the Royal and Select Masons, Detroit Consistory, Past Commander Knights Templar No. 2, and honorary leader of 19 Blue Lodges of Michigan. One of Ms official duties as grand marshall of foe Grand SAIGON, (South Viet______ (AP) A news conference, called by six American pacifists! wound up in pandemonium to- eign Minister Maurice Couve de day as angry Vietnamese MurvilIe said today he is con-; sfWsSS shouted, “Go home, go to North I "™ ®*nn on keeping French; Viet Nam!” troops in West Germany after < pacUM,. mtmbm ct|5£ *re to™ N*TO the U.S. Committee for>Nonvi-'Ju y ^ olent Action, had expressed! - . _____. „ ivief'N^rl^were^weriM00^ de Murvil,e told Charles quesUons when several qSf*^,^^ tioners demanded that they say ™P[e8®'°" JJJJ whether they were “South Vieti^,8 Nam’s friends or Communists.” c^ln Bonn U»t weekend. m«i, out never nas uie revoiu- Despite! half a .dozen answers, tion beev stronger or more unit- «»e youths kept repeating foe d« Gadle and hb ad- M.” question and then swarmed vl*er8 at *** cabinet meeting it * + around foe speakers’ table at! teday 88 an QMxwition cen- Contrary to belief abroad,the conference in the Saigon •uor* *5”"™ there h.,2 tan no gTMt pnojCW HU- £ in his regime,” he said. Antiwar posters hung by foe, *. rrr: \VQ,n ? | His government has “disci-pacifists were ripped from foe! P6* ^ plined a very few” and rid Itself wall and torn up. teat* of some undesirables, “and with a light bulb smashed against' The censure motion, signed by that the revolution gains in re- the wall and other missiles fol-spect and in confidence of the lowed. Eggs splattered foe shirt masses,” he asserted. |0f William Davidon, 39, a phys- * * * • lies professor at Haverford Col- There’s no truce, rest, ar- lege in Pennsylvania. A paper] other western allies, rangement Or ’recenciliation biul struck*Bradford l ittle, 38, * * possible” with Cuba’s enemies, of Voluntown, Conn. j However, all leftist hopes of J>e declared. " Fifty young Vietnamese men I overturning the Gaullist govern- “Imperialists will never setjwho said they were students at!ment on the issue disaopeared foot on fob soil,” he went on.jSaigon University shouted and last night when Communist par-“If they do. there will be no pounded on the desks, and sev- ty leaders announced they would prisoners taken. They will be eral threatened the pacifists. | abstain in foe crucial vote, puppets without heads.” - Death Notices newton, april ii, ip p. homer, 0mi tophi* Mfchldon, formerly at Pooiec; ope $71 iter ^-----of Mrt. Evoreft C. (Bor- i the Motcaite Fu-narai Home in Grand Rapids, on Thursday, April >1, at 10 ajn. attar which ha win lie In ttoto at Ihp Spark* • Griffin Funeral Home altar S p.m. Ttmraday attar-noon. GravaoMo service at Oak HIH Comatary, Friday, April 22 at 1:M p.m. with The Grand Lodge at Michigan and Pontiac Lodge No. 21 officiating. Mr. Newton will lie in date after 3 p.m. Thortday at the funeral home. (Suggoofod Witting four* 3 to S -pjm. and 7 to » p,m.) The family suggests memorial contribution* ago mi Olfver; d d wtft of Cyril D. 01 ....her of Robert an. Oliver; also survived by eight grandchildren and on* great-grandchild. Funeral service will be held Thursday. April 21 at 3 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery, Mr*. OHver will lie In elate at some 50 non-Communist leftwingers, condemned de Gaulle’s NATO action as harmful to France and America and the he made quick telephone calls that added Joshua Logan as cowinner of the drama prize in 1960 with Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II for “South Pacific.” This was after Rodgers had questioned a notice of an award only for himself and [Hammerstein, while Logan had I been coauthor, director and pro- CAN ^ ducer. In Bonn, the weekly West Castro derided exiles in the1 united States who talk of in-' vading Cuba again snd called them “cowards who have never sweated a shirt.” . 1 Deaths in Pontiac Area Hemingway won a Pulitzer Prize 13 years later for “The Old Man and foe Sea.’’ The McCall’s article deals with foe procedures behind the prizes___ ____ , and discusses the roles played b^IcOa!rthor directo^and rmv ‘CAN HIT U.S.’ LESTER HOCKEY „ .1 AUGUST F. SCHNTTKER ^ Butter, Carl W Ack^,^coauUw-di^randPro-| fa Boftn ^ week, Wegt tor former Pontiac PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv- Lodge was foe laying of foe «^Ljanlniof *??* n German magazine Bunte ‘ II- resident Lester Hockey, 58, of ice for August F. Schnitker, 72, cornerstone of foe Detroit Bin- SSTHSL °?>D i°B ____. hwtrierte said Castro told an Lansing wUl be 3 p.m. tomor- of 4188 Baldwin will be 1:30 ,and Arthur Krock of the New Regarding the prize procedure interviewer Cuba still has Soviet row in foe Huntoon Funeral p.m. Friday at St. Paul’s Lu- rockets capable of hitting the Home with burial in Oak Hill foeran Church, Pontiac. Burial shores qf the United States. He C*111®^1^-did not say whether they have Mr. Hockey, nuclear warheads. *1- k. ’nmes in general,~Ackarnan said: * When in Pontiac he serrea WAg had many disagreements, of davMSctu»r Gass First cepted.” will be in Perry Mount Park |_________\w, _ retired em- Cemetery by the Voortiees-Siple ploye of Fisher Body Plant, died Funeral Home. The magazine said Castro de- yesterday. ------------ Mr. Schnitker, a member of nied he held a grudge against Surviving are two sisters. St. Paul’s Lutheran and a re-MUt. S. Khrushchev hrpuHNj MRS. t. C. UMOREAUX Surviving are his wife,' Troy Man Accused in Warren Holdup DETROIT (AP)—A 36-year-old Troy man already awaiting examination on a burglary charge, was accused Tuesday in the 165,000 holdup of a credit union cashier in suburban’ Warren. Pair Is Denied New Trials Convicted of Murder in Hazel Park Killings Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore yesterday denied new trials for two men convicted of murder in 1963 for two slayings in Hazel [park. I The new trials were requested jby Harold Hummel, 35, and Mi- _ Ltka*il nieMuli W kntU aandfiis saS»»}55,-LS*« sue crisis m 1962. 1121 Prall was last night at Hun- .... . , .. ]toon Funeral Himie, with burial Castro said in place of those . wooHiawn Cemetery, Detroit. DU8s;!“' ‘h* Jviet Union had S Sunday su«>Ued him with economic aid £t innvss. she was a °(a^mere import.nl nature. Salats Eplaco|»l we^A. RuS'roS =52! “* Epto’"' a”m*' WJS- hj we atU1 ^ Surviving are two stepsons,! America s shores wifo them- ’ Ir^ of p *Uac and Lee of Roch-At foe nearest point, Cuba lies 90 miles from the U.S. main-”8" ' . MARK VINCENT CAMPAGNA SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Requiem Mass for Mark Vincent Cappagna, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Orazio Campag-na of 3139 Bloomcrest, will be 10 ajn. Friday at St. Kieran’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Resurrection Cemetery, Mount Clemens, by foe William land. Cape Strikers Limit Pickets to Single Gate CAPE KENNEDY Fin. (AP)jR Potere F^ineral Honle> B«*- British Ship Blacklisted fetST-1 boy for Trads With N Vi«t Tbev were focii sniltv in ^bel1" Plcketing today to one gate ^ g accident. A mem- for Trade With N. Viet pdlty^ln m spac€ center as foe spot- ber of Boy Scout Troop 90 and___________________________I _ The warrant for Robert Blaine WASHINGTON (UPI) - The er Vldos Vtookurow, IS, and lMght °" their strike shifted t0|St. Kieran’s Catholic Church, he and Mrs.* Nelson Scott of Holly. Coleman was issued after the U. S. government yesterday] Us son Joseph, 39, in August California. attended Shelby Junior Hi gh| Also surviving are one sister, cashier, Michael Scherb, identi-'blacklisted another British ship 19S2. " ■ During the first two days oflSchool. Mrs. Lena Schoonover of Attica; kNU, With North vmt! ^ M B1|11( the 52 momher, ot\ Emma; two sons, August F. Jr of Union Lake and Robert W. of Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs. Bert Colbefo and Mrs. Eileen Bishop, both of Pontiac; one brother; nine grandchildren; and five greatgrandchildren. MRS. LEWIS STUMPF ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Lewis (Flora) Stumpf, 75, of 330 Wesley will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. 1ire. Stumpf died yesterday of heart attack. She was a member of St. Paul’s Methodist Church. Surviving besides her husband are seven daughters, Mrs. John Davis, Mrs. Kenneth Crissman, Mrs. Joseph Kaan and Mrs. Earl Cargill, all of Rochester, Mrs. Gerald Kingsley of Wayne, Mrs. Kenneth King of Vassar Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICS TO ADVERTUSRS AOS RiCilVID BY S f i d*y following 1 -j notification __________ I ndo by that no, N will b* assumed tin I I* correct. Tin Prow os-mo* no responsibility for ror* othor than to cancel - -mrgei for thot portion I first insertion of > which |H tied Coleman from graph as the man who sluggedlNam. him and fled wifo the money I It was the seventh British-flag April 14 Coleman is under $1,660 bond and scheduled for examination April 27 on a Madison Heights burglary charge. vessel to be barred from hauling U.S. foreign aid cargoes since Jan. 25. Two Greek ships and one Cypriot ship have also been blacklisted. Kid because of the cowboy garb he wore, appealed on the claim that his confession was not made voluntarily and that he was detained a week before making it the International Union of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO, picketed all five entrances. More than 12,000 other union workers passed through the lines, but more than 400 construction men honored them. Surviving besides the parents are' two brothers, Paul and Robert, both at home; three sisters, Kathleen, Carol and Julie, also at home; and a- grand-jfoer. •' H JOSEPH R. CARPENTER ATTICA TOWNSHIP — Serv- 17 grandchildren; and 10 greatgrandchildren. puslic auction On April 32, lMt at 9:45 ajn. at 32 Elizabeth Lak* Rood, Pontiac, Mich.. 19*2 Pontiac. Sorfal No. SMP(34SI w People in the News _ . . *___ j. * » j ftiliyn ivnnisiMi Z?" .. : , , , . . ice for Joseph R. Carpenter, 84, Hie confession Implicated Gt The agreemen to march at { . peppermUl, will only foe south gate to Cape Ken-]- - v - ■. — sondi. SAID COURT ERRED By Ike Associated Press jonxy me sourn gate 10 Lape ^n- prfjay at Muir !nedy ^^b ed the cMstructioi p^neral Home, Lapeei ____„ . . . „ ■ ■ workers to return to their jobs, G^\ ^nt^ed that th e most of them at the Merritt Is-court had erred in allowing the voluntariness of Hummel’s con- i fession to be determined by the 1 A chef who worked three years far Princess Margaret and | jury foat convicted him. Lord Snowdon is under court orders not to divulge informa-tion about what he observed in Kensington Palace. The royal couple was granted temporary orders by a London court yesterday against the chef, Leo Groden, 52. The action was started after an article appeared last week about the royal oouple in a German magazine. An aide to the R Russel Holland princess said it could only have been written by somebody in giving him a separate trial. Groden’s position. No admission of the crime wan The aide said Groden had violated a contract which for- mad« by Gisondi. In recent years, because of a Supreme Court decision, the voluntariness of a confession is decided at a hearing prior to trial. Gisondi said that foe late Cir- bid hjm to reveal what he had seen or heard during his employment * The cafe if doe for another round in court next Tuesday. Sneezing Less Now, Enjoying It More Joe Clark is now sneezing only osfee every eight minutes. The 17-year-old firi from Carol City, Fla., ir making progress, her father believes. Before she left Florida last week for a change of cH-hiate, she was sneering once every five minutes. Miss dark hasn’t stopped sneezing, however, for ll weeks and doctors Mens to he at a loos to Mp her. “June’s nose ts starting to itch,” said her father. “We’re hoping that’s a good sign.H \ * ;iV The jury had been instructed by Holland to disregard that part of Hummel’s confession that tied Gisondi into the slayings. PLEADED INSANITY Hummel, who admitted the shootings, had pleaded insanity. ers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Bur-; ial will be in Stiles Cemetery, land moonport.^ t / ^MrCarpenter died yesterday The strikers, who work on the _illne88‘ He was 8 rtl1811 3irirket’1 Surviving are five daughters, a^eed to the one-gate poticy as,^ ^ Bernear of Flint, a temporaiy measure while foe^ ^ Warren Qf Attica I government series to mediate^uie^ d ImUiy city, their dispute with United Tech-jMrg Joscphine Farrington J ra divi8km ^Attica, and Mrs. Phyllis Hough-1 United Aircraft Corp. taling of Sylmar, Calif.; a son, Don of Lapeer; 33 grandchildren; and 21 great-grandchil- 2 From Area Reach **"■ . ■ ALVIN K. HODGES AffimLFl DRYDEN TOWNSHIP—Serv- rinaiS Of lontest Sice for Alvin K Hodges, 66, of 3230 Hodges will be 1:30 p.m^ Saturday at the Muir Brothers NOTICC OF PUBLIC SALE Holler IT hereby given by tM L___ Ignod that on Satuydoy, April 23, IN* .1 10:0* OJn. at 13R S. Woodward, Birmingham, Ooktond County, Mlchlgen public **le ot a 19*0 Oldtmobll* 4-Door tearing motor No. «07M«5553 —1 tor ca*h to th* highest bid se ot tloregt I* •Irmlnghoi I Bank, Birmingham, MlchH IN MEMORY OF Ftolftar who posted i ega, April 20, HU wW $50 CASH Death Notices BRANDIE. APRIL IS, 19**, GRORGE A.. 4*15 South Commerce Road, Commerco; ago 70; boioved husband ot Florence Brendlo. Funeral sorYlo* will be held Thurs- . OomT Owen. George. CharH A Birmingham youth and a Springfield Township girl are ampng 77 finalists in foe annual $65,000 educational fund awards program sponsored by Great Books of the Western World. Moore, in an 18 page opinion, noted that Gisondi and Hummel both were escapees from Michigan prisons when the murders were committed, and added that they were technically still i n state custody when they were Township, questioned about crime. Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Metamofa Cemetery. Mr. Hodges died yesterday of a heart attpek- He was a retired farmer. Surviving are four sons, Austin j _ * , * * , , of Imlay Clty, BUrton of Lapeer Competing In the final round ^ Jame8 and Victor, both of of the contest are Ronald C.jDrvden. a daughter, Mrs. Mary Fairchild, 1893 Humphrey, 81x^1^ Thompson of Lapeer; and mingham, and Carolyn R. C«p-22 grandchildren. er, 9960 Dixie, S p r.i n gf i eld RAYMOND G. LEIGHTON TROY ~ Raymond G. Leigh-j service will „ ...— . Eagles Lod^ Olto7,^tonigh^ Funeral Hem*. Funorol **rvkA Funeral service w » 3 p.m. wHh I > offklotlng. IR Hill Cemetery. The opinion came three weeks! Tliey have completed tests] ton, 43, of 1037 Larchwoqd died after their motion for a new and essays to foe competition,[yesterday. His body is. at-Price ; trial was heard tqf Moore. | whictt liste a $5,000 first prize. I Funeral Home. ■ * •! LAMOREAUX, APRIL 17. I9M. FLORENCE. 121 PrAll Street: ege , " dear ttepmotter ot Ron and -------------- --j, Mrvivod by ' April n. COUNSEL 01 Bat* BKIg ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, April 20, It**, I «■ Ml h » t«r any debts cotdr»cl»d 1 than myaoH. Robert ‘ t. PlillWM * band of Emm* A. Siode S.----------... door (other of Mrs. Bert Colteth. Mrs. EUoen Bishop, Robert W. and August F.< Schnitker Jrt; door brother of John Schnitker; also survived by nine grandchildren snd five grisat-grondptlldran. Funeral service' will be hold Friday, Foul' Lutheran Church with Pastor Maurice G. Shsckell officiating, lotormont In Perry Mount Park Cimotory. Mr. Schnitker win II* In slat* at th* Voorhooo-SIpl* In Memoriem 2 III LOVJNG MEMORY OF GERD Christensen, who ptiHf oway April ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DMT AID INC. oWcaTJI Rlksr Building, branch « MigR** wall known Debt Aid, Inc. to serve the Pontiac CotrwmmRy. _ OUT OUT OP OUT > AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY, R EPOSSE SS IONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. W* have helped and sated thousands peopto wlth credlt grab- with' o! i* oppolntmen* arranged anytime Hours t-7 Mon. thru Frl. Saturday f-S FE >4111 (BONDED AND LICSNSIO) Birmingham Unitarian Church . SPRING RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 9-4 SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 9-12 651 Woodward Bloomfiald Hills Dax-A-OM Tablets. Only N c BOX REPLIES At 18 a.m. today there! were replies at The! Press Office in the fol-| lowing boxes; 4, 5, 32, 35, $2, 46, 48, 58, 55, 60, 62, 19, 79, 71, II, 96, 184; 119,114 } Funeral Djiwcferi ’ 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME _ .... DRAYTON PLAINS W*8#1 c j. gODHarot funeral home Keepo Harbor, Ph. «P-0200 DONELSONJOHNs Funorol HORW "Designed tor Funeral*" ELTON BLACK FUNERAL HOME UNION LAKE - ---3*>H3t SPARKS-GRIFFIN j FUNERAL HOME. -'Thoughfful Sorvlco" Ft *-97*0 Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. FE 24378 Established Over sg Years Cwatory U4« ________4^ 5 GRAVE LOT IN FINE lake Cemetery. *52-4211.____ ANV GIRi OR WOMAN NEEOiNG a friendly adviser ohone FE >3121 before S p.m.. «r It no eh;, swer. cell FE 24734 ConMdenflat. 'GET OUT OF.DEBT ON A ‘l PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORO TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME Iff MICHIGAN CREDIT by any otti Lelghriey, 1 SPRING Is bursting out all owr ot UPLAND HILLS FARM, fnif 1h* whole tofrely tor a EMM Sun* day outing. EacHoniSlt ti everywhere with all of springe RSMiorM; over M lambs. Mis, chicks, rob- Molly mo Cow and to h*W ksmte. kids nil piglets. Sheep sheering at 2:30 p.m Farm admission 23c por person. Ado hors# drawn hay-rid*, pony rides and ham* peaked meal OPEN EVERY SUNDAY 11 FOUND - WHITE! AW) YELLOW long-haired cat, vicinity Herrington LOST: SMALL WHlVl RAStlf, Drayton Plains ore*, OR KEW.. J ‘ LOST AGAIN! LIVER AND WHITE pointer, mol*. VIcInRy at Tonnyson and Joslyn. OR 4-2979. LOST - ENOLISH POINTl* -. mol*, tag No. 1*23; near Holiday Perk. Reward. 482-4079. LOST: MAR SHAPED PENDANT. Greet sentimental value. Reward. *8X739. ________ LOST: SCOTTY 006. SLACK. ♦ veers old. Answers to Cindy. *51-4377, 1709 W. Avon ltd. RdWAkD — LOST CAT, ORANOl, while. Mack tong tor, blue harness vie, Baldwin and Walton. ME :;:;THB in* civil rights « LAW PROHIBITS, WITH v: CERTAIN EMRRTWtN. X; DISCRIMINATION EE- X; x : CAUSE Of SEX, swig X' SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE X X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X a TRACTIVE TO PERSONS » 4 OF ONR SIX THAN THE » A OTHER, A O V ■ E TIS B- X-»MINTS ABE PLACED X X- UNDER THE MALE OR ;X FEMALE COLUMNS FOR •X CONVENIENCE OF REAO- X; X; ERS. SUCH LISTINOS ARS X-X- NOT INTENDED TO UX- :X CLUDE PERSONS OF v: EITHER SIX, Help Wantsd Male 6 1 MAN, IS OR OVER FOR OELIV-ery and ail eround work, ttoadv. Custom Color, 23* W. Montcalm. j UIM; Iii Per evening oe-llvorlng advertising material. Car necessary. *31-2*41. 3 PORTERS WANTED Must hate drivers llcens*. Contact MOX Jackson service department, HoroM Turner Ford. 4*4 S. woodward, Birmingham, MfSL -. $600 MONTHLY GUARANTEED SAI^RY ATTENTION STUDENTS Ws hove som« openings for high school or colltgt students to work ooch afternoon approximatoty 5 hours starting at 12t15 p.m. Must b« 16 to 19 ysars of ags. Apply in Ptrson to* BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS ALL AROUND MACHINISTS 4*45 W. Huron. (M-39) All AhoUtoD service statI6n x-Jsus^ M Apply In parson, ns* w. silver- TECHNICIAN Exp. TV technician. 2310 S. TELE-graph, Pontiac. Test Drivers 5 MEN-NOW Good hoatth, 20-20 vision corrocraa, valid' drivers licenses, age ISM, company physical at no cost, earn transportation nocosoory, 40-hour week. CALL OR COME IN: MANPOWER-PONTIAC 13* Wide Track Drive W., PE Ml** TRUCK DhlVER AND MAN FI oading on gorb»E» rout*. C letween 7 * p.m. FI (-2345. TURRET LATHE SET UP AND OPERATOR HARDINGE OPERATOR TOOL LATHE HAND ' PURCHASING FOLLOW UP 3 rowing company, days, mi Ting* benefits, steady tmpl moot and ovorlltn*. M. C. MFG. CO. Fashion Dept. Manager We hav* a cornr opportunity for a mature woman who has suptr-vised a retail deportment in fash-ion accessories, lingerie, children's wear, ladies ready-to-wear. or related lines. Salary plus incentive. Excellent company benafits. Apply In person oy send complete resume to Personnel Manager at: Montgomery _________ — Ward ” WASH ROOM HELPERS, EXPERI-t ,*r. Zu’ZTS&mT&I <09 N. TELEGRAPH RD. eg**- _ • ...., r Pontiac Mall »feg ayff’A. msmmc » jEsas"e ssss: SfiSsj Coll batwoow 43. *53-3400.1 "I1*.*1*.."*1. (°°° ***J YOUNG MAN WANTED FOR MA-Apply: 14(2 Roctimtar Rd., Troy. I ro'UM# mem cwOr. 11, >uLl tim*. Apply In parson. Burger Chat. Drive In, ini N, P*rry. Drill Press Operators Truck Driver WANTED Part Time Help Retired man to work ot C Dining Room Waitresses H you lov* children and ponutnol woWrosoos. boy Md night shift available. Top tmp** bite tips Paid mauranc*, paid vocation 1* holidays. ApqpHn awtan only. SECRETARY Challenging position available for person cappble of dealing with top level management of local concern. Good public relations arid stenographic skills required. All replies handled in complete confidence. Write Pontiac Press Box 43, tHIRT PiNieUlft MllbIB PM — . teundry doaortmsnt. Rat. lino camntten* with now equip I. Ogg Claanars. 379 E. Plki i unlimited opportunity. Top Coll Michael Francis, 335-4145, SALESLADIES WAITRESS, OAKLANO CO U W T' Boat Club. 2330 FomdSl*. 4MS wAi+RBis, ro OnCOd, ov*r Club. UL 1 WAITRESS WANTED. DAYS, FULL time, and part Em*. II to 1 ar Fled Floor Roatouront, FE BW4I, WAITRESSES Noadod hrmodtotoly. Good wages. No Sundays or Holidays. Fsw E?TELLE'S FINE POODS .1® N, Woodward bruwlngham u**m Evao.4g.4r74 WAITRESS: MUST Ell NiAf. AP-pty in pgraan at th* Mlrocto — — Steno*. Tompco 405 Po Bank Eldo< PE 5^227. URGENTLY NBObib - “RIV ----1 mothar or young In It aasstote. 7D* ar sB-iBs. Grlnnall. 4*2-5704 01 TYPISTS Stenos - Secretaries Experienced — ox-working needed now — tor temporal signments — Pontiac ora*. CALL MANPOWER - PE H3®4 WAITRESS, bAV SHIFT, FULL tlmo-Gritt*» Drill—« N. Saginaw. WAITRESSES. SATURDAY NIGHTS. Apply In poroon attar 4. Doll's Inn. 3411 Ells*bath Lak* Rd. WAITRfcHl FOR DINING ROOM, day mitt. 10-5 p.m« alia fuB tjm* curb dirt, Rool's Drive In. EM 3-3344 ar OR V7173. — TjMEi Evg. rREsi, fUlT • work, Slh D s, Drayton Plain WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED. PAYS. ____________bath Lak* Rd. WAITRESS. NO EXPERIENCE NEC ry. 5 day weak, oloasent counwork. Sift's Cotta* Skew Tato-iph af Mapi*. OS Mite). WAITRESSES! Be Something Mora Bs A Johnson Girl Permanent position available at HOWARD JOHNSON TELEGRAPH-MAPLE RO. BIRMINGHAM . TIME, EX^ERI L Rochaatar Golf S3M S. Telegraph between CLERK TYPIST. MUST El ABLR lyp* 50 WPM. Heure: 12 neon HI 1:30 B*nt. Man. thraush Frl. 1 WAITRESSES Oining Room and Curt Pull or part-time. Pete vacatlana towFaitowlance. VSrtV toMpanatL BIG BOY RuTAURANT Tategraph A Huron ar Dfxla HwvTb iltvar Lake Rd. VANTEO EXPERIENCED DENTAL aaelatant to vtork In a pragraa mb attic*, wtertni a good future and feed salary. Call Mr, Prancle, 23S-414S __ WANTED dABY SITTER, 44»-Balboa. WOMAN ffM KltCHlN. APPLY Els Bay Drlva In. 24N Dixie Hwy.. between 43 pm. WOMAN FOR INSPfcCTION Dl-nnrtmant. Steady lob. GiilJMW, will Jraln. Apply Pax Dry d*an- DAY TIME POSltlON aVAIlAILE DETROIT NEWS MOTOR ROUti a. 71* W WOMAN Td CARk FOR QUADRO-training nacaesary. Some b pleasing personality. 5 Reply to Pontiac Pn WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK Bloom field Hills, with eum tea port at Ion, Thursdays, I WOMAN TO WORK IN LAUNDRY. 4y batwaan 4 and S p.m. Si? WOMEN OR GIRLS FOR FLSAt-ant telaphona work from our attl— full ar part tim*. Salary. Apt Broadmoor ilMrlatai Community National Bank Bldg. Ream 7(1. Y6uhb"LADY FOR GENERAL OF-Hca work, mutt b* II ar 75. Type 40 wgrds ptr Am>Iv YOUNG WOMEN OUII 1 ygK "TOl ^parson. Burger Chef 1 rPT BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED 4 N*gmv* S7 00, SH OO - lit! DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE___ Pontiac _ FE 4*947 1143 Wkte Track Or., W. Man. thru Frl., ( ajn.<4 p.m. 'Ii I' AMBITIOUS STUOIFm i «: S RQiriUtvo I manapo oummu ^,r. . SK. Cte^’oaESSd iTwV "YILLIll" - BHNIRffi >*r py- *-*• ----* — tint* bank taltera. Mate ar «nmm. Parian. Asaaclated Truck ftnaa, 141S Franklin Rd. 3345373, or FE 2-0*21. EXPERIENCED COOK, PAID VA-catlons, holiday pay, Ufa Insurance. Apply U4 Orchard Lake, Pantlac. GOOD OFF(R FOR LICENtSb BX-parlanced beautician. 3340*92. LOCAL FIRM EXPANDING. POSI- t AND HIS WiFB W Wblfk r trucking aarvto*. Llv* In. Man UN b* truck driver. Oead pay y tor right party. MA 4JHi. as apartment caretakers, parttk Give ratorancas i__ . Reply to Pontiac Praia El. — MULfl-Lidt OPERATOR PREFER; NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS luntlln girls. Wattrass, dteh-ITS, cooks, porter. Apply How-Johnaon's Restaurant. MM Hwy., Drayton Plains.____ TELEPHONE SALES RCA Ing tor part lima raiepnona ■*»■ people lo tollow up an artakUshad accounts. AH company bisnaflts, Including P*M hosplfsl-surglcal, malor medical, life Insurance plus paid halldaya and vacation. Salary attradte*. RCA SERVICE CO. A DIVISION OF RADiaCORMEATION OP AMERICA 2711 Elliabath Lak* Rd. An KU*I Oaportunlty Employar WANTED EXrtRlkNCBb CitW fANTED 5. Talagrao at 7 and* p. REPORTER 2 WAITRESSES FOR FULL TIME p.mr* Bloomfield Hlllt, (am* traveling. Rato. Reply Wnttoc Prase Bax 42. COUNTER GIRL. PAID HOLIDAYS and vacarten, toll lime. Deuptee C teeners, 534 B. WaodWard, Blr-; mtngham. ______ITER GlitL. R5I BSV Cleaning pmnl. Export--------* ramdrai. Apply Flesh CREDIT CASHIER Experienced In conaumar* finance ar bank tor aaw finance attic* to open In th* K-Mart (hupping Captor apprax. May W. Good salary, Uaual company bantttto. Calf Muamf Finance Ca., Mr. Davo. 171-570* tor • paraonal Intarvlaw. . (Detroit). Counter girl, oVer ii, fulI Gtenwopyplar*. CURB AND MILL GlEL. W DR ever. Super Chief. Ft 34*51. Tate-graah near Dixie: CURB GIRLS Par day riad ntpht ahttto. Tap wag**. Goad flea. Apply In r~~*~ SZSsuJto *■ pwnvi«c M owyti roi. part-tlma basis handling kTE OPENINGS FOR BUS D CONSTRUCTION PARKINO LOTS DRIVEWAYS Landscaping . Fraa Estlm *8-4310 _______OP«n HI * I ASPHALT PAVING Tog Asphalt Paving R**M«nttel A Commercial "E 5-1S73. PARKINO LOTS, TENNIS COURTS. net necessary Pontiac Lai S4» S. Yalihiraph. ________ PN and rixperimead. aid**. Atee 1-A 2 CAR GARAGES. MW **75. Camant war*. Fra* aatlmataa. Sprttflald SidldtopCa-MA W1M. 3CAR OARAGES, SOW, ,**75. Wfc ara local Btdldart and build any aim. Cement work. Fre* estimates. Pady-r------------------- ART TIME STENOGRAPHER tor correspondenca. Hours arranged to ault Individual dtalraa. OR S-12S4 4129 Highland Rd. POSITION AVAILABLE FOR BOTH - tm ar maid and a bar wr"— •r Intimate Cocktail L QUALIFIED LADY TO LIVE IN, RN'S AND LPN'S. 7 TO S AfID 11 to 7 shift, email general ham He Racheater, Mich. QL1-981. SECRETARY Wt hovt an opening for an ex* perienced secre-. tary, shorthand helpful# but not necessary. Good salary for the right person, excellent company benefits. Apply in person at Person* doily 9:30 a-m. to 9 p.m. Montgomery Ward 409 N. TELEGRAPH RD, Pontiac Mall te-lt-yourself. Superior. 13* Woe eerd. FE 43177 ArcbHectanriPrewhHi PLANS DRAWN. BACKHOE. FRONT END LOADER, dump trucking. Spectellxlng In drlvawayai pravel and qpmmi. OR: 30402, ' LARRY'S EXCAVAtlND. YrENCH- t Gar aga Ca. OR 35419. or »mi Ali Types of Remodeling Kttchan cupbearda, addtttona, aH rooms, recreation roams, garage*, aluminum aiding, roofing. Fra* a** tto down payment. 6 & M Construction Co. d N. Saplnaw,. ___FE 2-1211 CARPENTRY AND REMODELING ________ OL I-0214 HOUSE RAiSINO AND MOVING Floor lavallng. Camant ateffc R. McCelhim, FE 54S43-FE 40043 sllViCirCAllittlTS, auditions; concrete work, brick, block, four# SiaRM* -OR SEIM.____________. A-1 tetortar ais*}kri I Icon ted. Root. 4 CARPENTRY. I CEMENT WORK FE4MW. CEMENT CONTRA^ ■ 24213 Ctment and Block Work e A7^c~S^F FQUNoA^ Piwteriaf Servlet 1 PLASTERING. EXPERT PATCH •erfc. M year* exp. 332-9554. ARROW ■PLASTERING CO. REPAIR Excavating. RETAIL PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPin.Y ...pair Part* and ----------| 3* ooktenis Ava. Peodog WALL PAPIH STEAMEES RUG CLEANER - POWER IAWS 952 Jaelyn Opan Sun. PE 441*5 Fireplace mac la list Ftotr Sandiog NEW, REROQPS-RRPAIRS -II Jock. Save fhe lack. 3204113. CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, Insurance and awn. 4734297. ML LIKENS ROOFING Commercial Residential. 4134m iYINO. LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE OM floor* mad* Ska new Ftear Laying IS yra. axpOrlanci. 427-3773 Callact _ _ 3sw0951 425-1414. 473-2130. TREES RRMOVRD. 1330-3349__________ B7344W TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL. RilMMbla. 3340044._______________ MERION BLUE SOD, PICKUP OR delivered. 2401 Crooks. 4242000. YARD AND DRIVEWAY GRADING TALBOTT LUMBER !kntnd,nd E’TSls DololUfl----» HB»nom||mM \ PAINTING AND DECORATING wr .jst painting Guaranteed. FE S-4Q22 or 3M 0009._______ PAINTING, PAPERING. CAULKING rest, rates. Tam 18 144* or Roy. PicM TMlNg PIANO TUNING/AND REPAIRING Oscar ScMlMI A FE SNI7 t(M WwoHog StryksT i trIe service, tree work _____________L PE S-7443. LIGHT HAULING, GASEMENrS. geragaa cteenee, 4741142, FE 54004. id front-end leading. FE 1- Trucks to Rent ...^ Trucks — It_______ Pontiac Farm and idustrial Tractor Co. on s. WOOOWANO PE 40441 ' PE 4448 Open Belly Inehidlnp Sunday ” WILL DRILLING. WELL POteto T ----- Boot.________ WELL CflUJNd 4 _____ 4 AND 4 INCH i THft PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1906 T—8 trip* HMr Pontiac. Worth up M.OOO to I1UN In • yppr, #1 car as bonus. Air tttott W. I YORK ROOM AND BOAMk 92J A WEEK ROOM AND BOARD. FAMILY TAILORED HOMSi * m rsrtised on tho Today ond To-lit TV show* ROCHESTER —WE TRAP! In Rool Estate OL 1-9B1, UL fm TUCKER REALti dfi. t03 PONTIAC STATE SANK BLDO. Frushour NICHOLIE LAZENBY C^W#'”£nw^^eo!i^*No,aS Investment. Supplies, hostess gifts furnished. Overrldo on oil (toilers vou htro. Toy Buidanco. LI 61494. fcC CAN SHOW YOU HeBGHMa| "8 r A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, , Paaortott. FE 04214. NOW Ij TttE TIME FOR fAIISi . aa sbmt .iiurluii' uinliui MS AND BATH, 3 BED-adult family, ratoronc** Coll 4004414 after 7 pm. NC COZY ALL 43 S. Toomonlo sf Roa... 020 dap. YORK fS EUY WE TRADE R 44363 OR 4-0343 4713 Dlxto Hwy„ Drayton Flplns BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM TRI level In Joyno Heights. Hpt wots hoot, wot plaster, family roorr den, fireplace, tamo S cir geragi now camotlng, drapes and cut table Included. 2fS5 Shawnee Lent Witt trade. / ear garage. 1. $22,000. Terr IFRONT. itod geref th bullt-ir S’tonSSy0!—.» complete 2nd kitchen with bull bis. NUr with outside ariil.'Ui dergrouna, sprinkling iyefofl Fenced yird. $27,500. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor “ ‘ M 1073S Highland Rd. HIITER OVER ISO FT. WATERtNfRONTAGE -near M-23 and M4».\Wlth this 4 rooms and bam, large llvln room with tlroplpco, small ban Only WfOEL.Iorww NEAR PRAYTON/PLAINS - nai 3 bedroom and bath with fu basement,^gas heat, alum, atdlw on large tot. 114440, terms. ALB WE BUILD — 2 bedroom rancher with larga kitchen, vanity to baft fell baseman is for 1114X1 on you tot. To see- our modal coll B. ( HIITER, REALTOR. 3772 Ellz. LI Rd. FE/34177, offer I p.m. s and both down, 2 bet !%»■ Ft MOT.' ILAKE'iJI E ED EO 01 ieiidcontrect for quick poetess Ion, S0P4701 4 HAYDEN : NEW HOMES : 11740 .................homo jmm. 3 bedroom brick. Largo closets. Extra storage. Living and sleep'— area watt separated tor quiet 6 privacy—A desirable feature of < tri.uu«i. sliding glass patio door area easily gccamlblo '— —nlng out of doe atfachad garaga. kitchen I Waterford ANGELUS GOLF VIEW ESTATE Custon trl-toval. 3 specious rooms. Hi baths. Large I •led baaamant recreation room — of tho tooturoo of this hi H, 10 par can! down GIROUX So'». LAKE ORION, 3 BEDROOM, BRICK DOWNTOWN PONTIAC, 2 ROOMS, shore both, 120 weak *** **-“ No children. MY 24770 FURNISHED "AND UNFURNISHED i bedroom opts., »13S to Adults only FE 0-2221___ MIXED MOUSING. ! ROOMS, U111111 o s tomlahad. SM On Lake next to BEAUTIFUL 4 BEDROOM ranch (toko front) woikov.------ mont, fireplace, ctoat In, 01,750, 474-2711 ~ porch, 2 _ctr. gorpg*. Ges « GUAUTY WQRK Assumu, minima; papering, wall washing. 472- VraRsportutiBG IF YOU'RE[.GOING TO. CALI FOR- SMALL ^FURNISHED _*FT-_OQ ■ m$:.nd MAM Motor*, 1150 Oakland 3367361. Wanted" ~a ripe to church AyrtnlptE, UEfEwiifcsd M AND 2 BEDROOM, NBWjNEAR Mall. Air and sound cowdRIo—* disposal, fully carpeted, stove, Brar-ra BEDROOMS. HEATED APf EEAUtlFUL/3 BEDROOM BRICK ranch MM tmtoEMB — tolcluSlfe/ "'"mednoom — — - ____________k. mixed. FE 60610. BY /iWNEV - S lIbkoOM. ALU-mlnum tiding, gorago, Northern High area. FE 40654. BY OWNIR: 3000 SQUARE" itvlna area, wtth 2Vi be Slraford Knolls, RocMolof area. If totoroatod coll tor ippototmont. OL 10771 *35,750. Owner moving out of state. fumWurp. Coll Hod's Auction, j phonsMY»lgl or MY 30141. * WANTED—2 OR 4 OLD FASHIONED ICE CREAM PARLOUR CHAIRS. RHONE-FE 5-3253 AFTER S PAL \ AMERICAN /HERITAGE PROM 1145 A MONTH / 3365 WATKINS LAKE RD. 6762707, MORNINGS 4724727 Bloomfisld Townhous# BRASS, COFFER, RADIATORS AND hoWorlQL MA M071 COPPER, 40c AND bF; BRASS radiators, battortao, star*— orators. C. OUson, OR 2 Old lamps, hanging or table -stylo. Old lamp shades. FE 67074. WANTED: USED GO KAP“---------- condition. 6724H2, TO. . ^M»E* tt R—I Tl BACHELOR WANTS SMALL AFART- phono connect Ions. Control locale ■raforrolTRotoronBM. |— k From Box No. 11 complete i ottte. k S p.m., 1 I Thursday CLAWSON - 6 BEDROOM Older homo, 2 bathe, dlnlngr basement. 2-car garage, on TTxUr lot. walk to oeneefa and ahoopMo will trade tor imatter homo or sen on land cantrocf wtth *2400. chor-Powell Carp, 6367231 or Deluxe custom built ranch. whv ,Mvh, n.r,M 1 hArifMfflt. lam- . . ment. FE 66752. frtaerator, near Fisher FE626I6 bat. M PJH. LADY WITH 3 CHILDREN. OSS- ■i nNliy needs 3-badre—------ win psy Its or S70 s 7321 _______________ PROFESSIONAL MAN URGENTLY nesds 3 bodrpom homo, turn, preferred. Write Pontiac Prato box 2 BEDROOMS. ADULTS Oil otter 4. UL 2-13SS. NEW 2 BEDROOM OARDEN-TYPE apartments. Camptotoly alr-c—“ ttonait OE apoltoneas, aaund dltloned, carports avallabto, balconies, patios, no cMMran, no pats, $161 500 Scott Lafca Rd. FE 6S671 ,* REEt Hoesbs, UnfgnrisliEd 40 Forking. couFLE ^ANT^Nig up°to tt»oemmllvl4#04N attar | Sh— LWi ft»EHm 1 OR * LADIES. TO fHARE LIV- La6y WANTS REFINED MIDDLE-agad lady to aharg har homa. No smoking or drinking. ElIrLk. Estates area. Aoolv to Pontiac Press Box 77. OOUBlE ' OCCUPANCY, week. Mato service, teleot paled, TV. Woodward. n ww.mawyjj 1 TO 50 PLEASANT ROOM IN PRIVATE hama tor young man. r Lake Estates. FE-2-4614. I SLEEPING ROOM FOR RENT FOR WARREN STOUT, Rsoltor Mso N. Oodytn Rd. PtoSTjRf s MULTIFLELISTING SERVICE .0 V E L Y ROOM, NEAR TELOfU-ran, TV, shower bath and homo cooking. One ganttomon. FE 63330. ■“"-“SicSa-.'"" LAKE PRIVILEGES Sharp 3-bedroom brick ranch. Hot oloctrlc kitchen, corpotlng. drapes, full basement, patio, fenced yard. For inspection, coll 4S10SM. Shepard's Real [state LAKE PRIVILEGES — 61200 DOWN OR 23673 rip. Frushour 1 BRICK RANCHER 3 bedrooms. Largo family klrchen with bullt-lns. 1? by 20' living room over look tog a private **lj A quality built homo. In oxc. dltlon. West Suburban location. 750. Terms or trade. RETIREE SPECIAL Just right tor retired coup rooms all on 1 floor. Em back porch. Gas nost ond ---lot. With prlvltogas on Scott Lake. If ,500 cosh or terms. WATERFORD REALTY I. Bryson, Realtor OR M0 tSM* Hwy. Van Wott Itdr CLARK FURNISHED LAKE FRONT - C *— • bedroom bungaloi , gas hoot, enck>» Fenced lot. Sandy K^rlTRtdM.m^,nSi. Full baaamyt. Larga non room v —““ tached Swne! LL1 SMITH & WIDEMAN ____________j. COW o 6730454. MIXED AREA BARGAIN Bvely | bedroom bungalow mont, automatic hoot — street — 6350 down plus Cash in 41. hour* tor all kin —party. WRIGHT" REALTY 303 Oakland Ave. FE 27111 Mixed Neighborhood exposed y ttitch* iira* landscaped, 0 year* o - First month fraa MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-5 AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY 554 Bloomfield Near Luther FE 62743 afternoons. LI 2-4477 Evas. FIRST IN VALUE MODELS OPEN DAILY ..........2 TO OPEN SUNDAY ... 2 TO 8 Bloomfield Twp. you Buy B B«AUTY 11IRBIWfal — HATCHERY xpotfig! DIXIE HIGHWAY AREA. > b“-heat, large draoeo. Ivi — —— carport, tow tamo, TTxttT' lot, asking 013401 01 Mt* 000 down or assume existing land contract: YORK E EUY WE TRADE I 60363 OR 60)43 *713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains \ EARLY AMERICAN division tor savers! hundred (k teas than you would pay II. -comparable home built by anofhar builder? Because hundreds of hours of careful research by Beauty Crest's competent planning experts k—— that today's noma aacrlfjca quality Build On Your Lot Or I Office open 7-0 p.m. Mbdel open Sun. 2-4 p.m. At|mo Newts Struble W?<£ *b£teoo^N bu room. Kttchon, an sealed plan wIndoe illls, bullt-lns, lr dan bath, baaamant and attached garaga, aluminum exterior. Selling now tor 114,201 ptoo lot. If younti In the market far a now noma, your Inspection of our modal Is a muet. Our trade-in plan I* ±?rdc5r,,ryx,fltcs: tolls. • LUXURIOUS LIVING Let us show you this charming brick. It tooturoo o 4 toot frrint htll entrance. Sunken Wring ro— li baths. Ttta family room w.... stone flrsploco. 2Vi car ottachod .. garage. Selling tor 04400. Wg 5. will fake your house In trade. «VS0 wtth a 01000 dawn. DAVISBURG RO, AREA Two bedroom bungalow. nd.r "(SiJy NORTH SUBURBAN bedroom, large llvtngv roor wly ramodatod kitchen with an e cualjpard epsca. Full boa •tor haator. This home Is si .Jtod In a nice wooded lot. Go< fishing toko nagrtiy. Excellent fi retlrso couple. Priced to soil 6 only $4500. 11775 down. 040 P nomh on land contract. ROY LAZENBY, Realtor 4372 Dixie Hwy. QR 603 Muttlpilo Llotlne lorrico ee bedroom Pungeknv^ Living tv^noom. *Ses HA Iwat. * Vo-17Newly docoretad. About 01100 NICHOLIE-HAROER CO. IVi Huron St._____FE S-4 PRESTIGE BUEVEL AND BEAUTIFUL LAKE VIEW 3 ?BLAW°li0OM WITH STUDIO CEILING AND STONE FIRE- PLACE. 1 THREE SPACIOUS BEDROOMS, WARDROBE CLOSETS. heme an oast side. Has new wall to wall carpeting, 2 baths, tott bassmant, aluminum > storms X KITCHEN WITH BUILT - INS. * DISHWASHER, FORMICA CABINETS. 2 carMgaraga,POnly 9400* dawn BjfdT w"' ^ A TWO CERAMIC TILE BATHS WITH VANiTY. 'BUD" Spick and Span Ing room, 2 bedrooms and 1 bom downstairs, fully Insulati gas hast and hat water, stun and scream, lawn and shru Priced at 112,700, call today I Lake Front Lot r\ off US 10 on "plxto Lak. Springfield Township north of PariaHM Road; jfcs*4r-ing gamy toward ft Ing the loufhwoaf. down, ^balance on land contract, ( I NICHOLIE-HUDSON' ASSOCIATES, INC. 47 Mf. Clemens If, FE 5-1201, AFTER 6 P.M. FE 4-8773 WITH barbecue: 4. LARGE DECK OVER t C A HEATED GARAGE. ? 7. SUNKEN PATIO. ' I. GAS HOT WATER HEAT. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. SEE IT TODAY I SMITH & WIDEMAN Val-U-Way HERRINGTON HILLS4 ipletely redecorated 3 bedroon :k rancher with full basemenl lio celling, tllg bath, alum __ms and screens, gas hast, cat portA partially finished basemenl fenced tof. 6450 dawn. PONTIAC NORTHERN Is only a short wak from thl Ilka new 3 bedroom bunmlp* Features easy claan tils Hoori gas hast, alum, storms and scream urge utlltiy room, conveniently ai ranged kitchen end dining arai Only 1350 down on FHA terms. LINCOLN JR. HIGH Sharp 3 bedroom bungalow wit oak (leers, gas heat, tile bait large kitchen with bullt-ln eve ana range, alum, storms an scream, blown-ln insulation. Fu price 111401 6550 dawn PH terms. List With Us-We Sell a Home Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 t Ave. Open 67 KENT GILES i NORTH END — Claan 4 room home “ Tedrooms, gas heal, bullt-li 1 larga closets. Anchor toncat I. Quick possession Only Oil, ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES - SI DORRIS > LEADER - TOPS IN DEMAND AND RESALE ON TOftAY’i MAR-KIT — AWlPItfTO * bedroom brick ranch home In WSfMm Htttl, constructed of the bast material ImMe and out, oak tteors, plsatorsd walla,. marble sills, beeuttfuSy fbrtihad basement wtth gat hoot. Ceramic bath. Dandy garaga and braem-way. Larga wajHjgjOaaapal An- •bath Lake. 2 bad-one larga dorml-». Large paneled WragiNS. Ofa.baai 13.___________________ ^ a good buy gt 66450. Vacant. LISTINGS WANTED Cash avallabto far good S bedroom hornet. Call ue lor Informetlen as t MULTIPLE? LISTING SERVICE RHODES LAKE FRONT t LAKEFRONT — year around fireplace Included. 2 6 glassed-ln porch that lake. Fireplace In- living , nicely landscaped lot. Boot, and raft Included. S174S1 , Realtor • SYLVAN MANOR ~ 4 bedroom L ranch, built In 17S4, living room, dining room and 2 bedrooms carpeted, 1 Vi baths. 25 ft. patio. Cyclone fenced yard, carport. Price 516,779. GILES REALTY CO. $10,759. Terms. For Gl't—nothing down plus costs. . _ 76 ACRE FARM - HIHsdcto County, with complete tat of bulldlnet. Only IVi mllei from town. An ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER FE 62396 259 W. Wilton FB 56711 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IRWIN ARRH ’V&Smg' KINZLER ^A.XllLV-/ TT—ITT INDIAN VILLAGE CASH FOR EQUITY - LAND CONTRACT ws Build - we trade 6ROOM RANCH WITH 3 bedrooms, toads df closet space, pier--1 walls, full bailment, ail heat nation ream, storms and sc— spacious let. Only 615,000 cash to now mortgage. NOTHING DOWN, but dating costs. 9 rooms. Wall tc carpeting. Newly decorated an end bato. CouW^beused „ „. home but well kept. Paved street. Full price $10,20u. •neck bar between kitchen and farawr rdom, thenr—----- door in family roc appointment only. CLARKSTON AREA - Spacious tot MIGrs • n O'NEIL TRADE Lake Oakland Shores For the discriminating buyer, who It looking tor something to britor make*an appointment H*^eL« today. N«- * Small. Farm I ______ Cfifee dtottw 6- bst'h.' Basement ""with oil furnace. I Vi car garage. Let 90x362. Outdoor barbecue. $10,400 GJ. Terms. have buwxafa 1362 W. HURON "StT>E 67999 FE 54146 or FE 54679 Multtoto Listing Strvlci ANNETT Formica cabinets and be In dtohwashar. Divided i finished baaamant with i hat water heat. Carpeting i drapes Included. Priced only a fraction of raproduc- Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-21211 514) Cess-Eliubetti Road I Open Daily TIMES bOauNfri stone ' INDIAN VILLAGE On Mohawk. Close to Fontlec men and all tdmk. Snecleue 4 room, 2 story family heme, Atadenttnd kitchen iMjlOiim decorated. Fireplace and gas haaf. Il4,f00. 1kw,^erfqrd area Close to shoepf *- »ceotor a nd schools. Delightful 2 bedraOm brl?k and frame rancher. Gee heat. Carpeting and draperies. Fenced yard and 6cer garage A reel value. 611400 on lend contract or 10 ^nI^'home* project ■n a beautiful area of Clerkston-Orlon Rd. Aluminum or part brick -1—-- bedroom ram hams gamSjR end kitchen 5 scenic lots, 60x110, ___ —Jed at only I14M each Included In price. If intorestod dent delay at they are going ,"t' BRICK RANCH New modem design and Immaculately clean, 6 elegant room; snd recreation ream. Gat heat. 2 car garage. Flue carpeting and custom draperies. Extra large tweed lot, paved street. 193 Carr off Mt. Clamant. Batter mixed area. FHA, 91200 down or GI lean. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5217 Dixie Hwy. \ 6744235 Across from PSeksrs Store _ -Multiple LIsHno Sarrice Open 94 MT.I.RR AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR f. SYLVAN MANOR BRICK 4 bed- -----^HbaNw- l-ariH fam<» h beautiful teMrock New Plush carpet to living Team and hall. It outstanding v Pontiac Knolls Three bedroom, tlx ro ssraSSsEfe Priced at *12496 19 — — it $69 Par Month beautiful comer let with __________ privileges, features a large living room with todgorock flrapWcs, also family room, kitchen has electric built-in*, Hvtoii roam-carpeted, drapes and refrigerator neighbor-i Street. 4 MODELS garage ere |uet • few of the fine features. Owner will take cheaper home to Clarkrion school district to trade flfa wlTdlng.c medial ___j. a" sLctousbTMjaraT -""Mart — Colonial — 9 or 4 bedror— at only *16,150 (plua lot). Ms an Airport Road between M-Sf Williams Lake Road. RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3510 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD _________OR 62222_______ » bedroom, 3Vi bath Colonial. Large living ream, dining room, paneled library, modem Had kitchen and ievatory on first floor. Full divider basement with roe, room am game room. Extra larte let where you can kaap a r-'— horse, (mall building at a property tor g * 141496 term*. WILL Twupe Realtors 28 E. Huron St.i Open Evenings 6 Sundays 1-4 FE 8-0466 hones and truly enloy count living to a modem totting, tt listing Is as "sprite" as an penny, don't hesitate, call ns only 631,500. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES" Times Realty 39f0 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Waterford Hill) OR 4437* open 74 dally OPEN DAILY 2 TO 6 OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 8 Why can you buy • BEAUTY ; CREST hama at Huntoon Shores • SUbdlVlSi *------STKI3&—1 Ai . tors lass compere of carafui reeeeroh" by Bebuty Crest competent planning experts have discovered that today's home buyer will net sacrifice quality for price; he demands full meesur* for his dollar spent Bawdy OW hat cut building costs through vo. gw* ^ — -A matorlal BEDROOM BRICK COLONIAL Thermo windows, kitchen to '“ Ins, dlntog room, dinette, lVi ramie baths, slate toyar, 20 attached garage, full baetmj ass hast end much mere. J 12,700 on your let. II. Other qualities an a wetk- John K. Irwin AND SON, RIALTORS 3134V, Huron — Since 1725 Juydngar Salltoa Call - FE *4644 KAMPSEN Your Nolghbor Tradod Why Don't You ROSES ARE RED- Violets are blue— Ksmpsan haa found lust the house far you!! You must see thli levely throe bedroom brick rancher located In Pontiac's batter Waat Side that features a W living room, larga kitchen, lVi baths, gal heat, Rtoe mere, Priced at EL-000 with 62,100 dawn plua coeto. carpeting, (Vi bafhs, large family room wtth brick fireplace, oak floors, plastered walls, full base- FAMILY HOME- featurlng tour badeeame, brick and frame sidtog, a lTxir living roam and full eath down with two bedroom and full bath us. Family room with steak drill, w-tached garage, basement, nice 75' let. mrlcad at wily *24,450. Arrange easy terms or trade your rid heme to; JOIN THE KAMPSEN REBELLION Qet Into the ewtog by looking at this tap value home that you can bulldTl Only 114.109 en your fboM buyer!* Your ^motee^^* a* or 4 badreomi at only 914,150. (plus lot). Models okOMlw between MS7 end Williams Lake Road. Ray O'Neil, Realtor 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. Open 9 to 9 OR 4-2222 MLS 0L 1-6768 Model ______________i can be built qn your lot for as low as 914,750. Open Saturday and Sunday from 1. 4 p.m. Directions: Vi mile na GLENN M. WARD 4764324 Cute Dan andVl car garage. An eh gent home offered at *47409. R0LFE H. SMITH, Realtor 244 1 Telegraph _ FE 67949 EVES. FE 67302 FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $59 Md, udtog taxes and toturOncg , ONLY \ $10 Deposits WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOMS OMHBAT LARQE DINtNO AREA __L~ ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANT WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROS' LEMS AND tSTIRHSS ARE OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AM> SUN. QUICK SAlIb, 3 BEDROOM HOME vruosovumF iw cdr^gargg. M "— SCHRAM Now Doing Custom Building On Availabla Building Sit«s! Your Plans or Ours NEAR OAKLAND UNIVERSITY • 1 bedroom, targe lot, get On lend contract. TOM REAGAN Real Estate NEAR OAKLAND U. A cozy 2-bedroom ranch on If let. City water, sowar, gas h -ideal tor the young caudle or tjrees. 19.500 an land contract i WARDEN ON LAKE ORION: 2 BEDROOM • - 61400 down. Taka war con- OR COME TO 270 KENNETT 1 NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUfRBALTY For Immediat* Action Call -'Bid pi__. .. ROCHESTER ARBjV •rick ■ 3 BEOROOM FE 5-3676 626-9575 * ........... I take Front m»™dsr! Pontiac. Shown By eppoin Off Perry 3 bedroom ranch with M living ream.' irxll* kitchen area, full basement With gas heat, IV* car garage. UMf dawn and assume present mortgage gt 670 gar month. List With Schram and Call-the Van 11 JOSLYN AVE. FE 94471 "Buzz1 Bateman Says Trade Your Equity ECONOMY INCOME INVESTOR'S SPECIAL ] grim raggyj~~-- 11400. Britor check m IDEAL LOCATION CLOSE IN: Beautiful weeded area of fine homes. 6 bed room brie rancher with oversize 2-car garage. Leaded with extras includln Iwt-wster hast? full basement and beautiful condition. Priced ( IN THE CITY CLpdE TO: Pontiac General Hospital. 1 bedrooms end toll basemenl. Nice e WEST SUBURBAN THIS SHARP 5-yeer-old, 2-bedroom to toe heart of the lake region west of Fontlec. Aluminum awn Inge, automatic heeL. and fato privilege*. Includes sdlscent building site with foundstion already to. 61496takes ell with form*. Better hurry an this one. NEW MODEL HOMES d SUN. 1 y By appointment and Opdn SAT. can TRAdSTn ywr present smaller home; -Call tor aapototmant. PONTiAC BATEMAN REALTY ROCHESTER , FE 8-7161 M LS. Realtor 0L 1-851G 377 S. Telegraph Rd. * 730 S. Rochaster Rd, BROWN REALTORS & BUILDERS in Pontiac Sihce 1936 . CUSTOM BUILT LAKEFRONT t .ocated to exclusive Twin L much to after: A forge cm worn, three bedrooms, delui ireem kitchen with all bull) i brick fireplace and a scan wn, formal dining ROCHESTER-OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA \ This rsmbltog rancher has ever 1,500 square tori sf Hvtog area, three carpeted bedrooms, 26ft. carpeted living room wtth a natural brick fireplace, contemporary ceilings and a huge picture window giving a view of the beautiful trees snd landscape. Really a' charming home In an excellent area. Full Price 12X750 wtth 1X300 down. AN ARTISTICALLY DECORATED § I-level home wtth all the room you could possibly use: tour ex frets rgs bedrooms, a 26ft. csrpeted living room wtth a massive natural brick fireplace, pleasant chesry kitchen, two-car garage. IVi baths, and over W of an aero of professional landscape. 124,500. WATERFORD AREA-RANCHER Ocated Ml Pontiee Watkins Estates with A-1 condition lr LOTS and BUILDING SITES oht With 94 feet on • large scenic lake: plenty of towering id an exclusive area of all custom-built homss, 67,500. tka Woods, another exclusive area of alt beautttol homes, a privileges on Cass Lake, 62.250. Lake privileges an Brea-1, tot sins 74 x 135. $1,775. LES BROWN 509 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. ACROSS FROM PONTIAC LAKE RD. FE 2-4810 FE 4-3564 fi 1 F—4 THE I Srit MmM Property , 17 Central Business District Wmt«l Contracts-Mtg. 60-A CASH FOR LAND _ .CONTRACTS ONT1AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1066 By Kate Osann NrlnloMlecollanooas 17 FORD/JCKUR BOX TRAILER. Ad, IN QUItAR LESSONS. I Pulsnocfcl OR >4>>«. SporltRfl tads 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC «> a. wr$r dear EARLY SEED ROTATOIS. . COB- 7 HORSE WHEEL HORSE TRAC-lor, olT equipment; W" drill (n arjas -"h rlv. on Big Lake - Pli lot — 153' frontage. $750. $4,500-01000 di Maceday Lake s BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph FE 0-9641 j MAPLE SINGLE BEDS, M cabinet, dresser, roll-away a cellent condition. FE I 4:30 p.m. APACHE CHIEF'^CAMP TRAILER I . with aHH.a.pnom 8fMf timnlna MW eftfr 3 L Akfc MINI-TOY APRICOT POO-SMALL FARM SU ILDINO-EASlLY ,,ff1^ bnrtftL Os moved—for Information cell. Davon AKC MINIATURE MALE POODLES. Goblet mi 4-4100.___• ■_____J reaaenobia ma 4.3374.________| /LUbpr—mnnsrma CPREb-SATIN "paints;- WARWICK|AM FUFJ.. SLACK AND oil 59521" Supply. 2471 Orchaid Lakt. 402- silver, t wxt. 6«3-60H.___,------------------------------ 2020. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS. BOOTH CAMPER ch«J9.nd ten... 4 whs.. exc. pedl- Aluminum covert and comport lor • Will, .sell with or without ,ny plcl(Mp, ,347 LaFortst, Witor. 1. FE 0-4720. lord. OR 3-5524. ___* With SINGER IN CABINET zig-zagger. . lotos for. but WATER SOFTENERS. NEW, USED •nd rebuilt. Auto. Or manual. From |IMM|aW^aupply. Superior Wa- AKC POODLE PUPS - 4 For Sale Miscellaneous 67| MM and curtains, 149.50 value, 034.50. Lavatories complete; with fauctffc SU.95, toilets, 311.95. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake. FE 40443. modern facilities, McFeely Retort# 1140 MIS# Ortonville. CAMhikS AND TRAVEL TRAlL-ers. Sold priced, 232-4024. Family CorbwK'. 4-H REAL ESTATE ncome — vary sharp, wall ka 2 family brick and frame, $ heat, attached oarage, plenty parking and room for gardt... excellent neighborhood, has greet future possibilities, pr*“ Oil,SOIL 04,000 down 01 CLEAR ok WOODED PARCELS, 20 minutes Pontlsc, 2V5 acres aerr* 330,x330’ lot, 03395, S40 monl Bloch Bros., OR 5129S. COMMERCIAL LOT, CORNER C Ivy ACRES, SHINANGUAG LK. DE- ----ment. High and dry, -10 ml. I of Clarkston, 3344)971. W LOT ON LAKE LOUISE. ANCHOR BAY, 1 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty * LAKE FRONT HOME Oxbow Lake Vary nice 2 bedroom. Possibly 3. Large kitchen, dining ----. Full bdsemenl. OII furnace. Underwood Real Estate I44S Dixie Hwy., Clarkston — 625-4254 for traitors, dockage for boats, rspslr bldg., boats at equipment. Will take hou or Income property In tredo in Pontiac -area. <24,500, Annett Inc#, Realtors 21 E. Huron St. . 338-04 Open Evenings and Sundays 1-4 IS OPP. 59 343-0141. NORTH END LARGE WOODED LOT 173* FRONTAGE ON MANITOBA ST. AND 105' ON CALGARY ST. 1950. CASH. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR IS W. WALTON 33S-4044 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Suburban Homesites CLARKSTON x 120* lot with stream _____ ’ x 215' sloping tot, stream.. $3400 ' x 150' corner lot .....$33“ acre wooded hillside, lake prlv .. $3900 Basinets Opportunities 59 BRICK BUILDING 32x40' on busy street In Pontle , formerly occupied by used turr lure dealer, 2 apis., up, renting fi 0200 a mo. A steal for only $12,75 Terms or trade., J. J. Jolt Realty FE 2-3400 40202 $4950 wooded, .. 015,000 REME...d partly north of 1-75 and US 10 exchange . S450an acre ’« ACRES - 15 ml. NW of Pontiac, private lake, barn and 1 room cottage. $40,000 vylth EZ food service, now netting $2000 monthly. Seller will-- 0425 per month. Total price 030,000. "WIN WITH SHINN" 3340107 ESTABLISHED COLLISION ARb clean-up shop, presently gros-‘“ $4,0001 per mo. All equipped e ness. 01.000 Cash. FE '2-1077, 5-4411. NORTHERN BAR Clan A and SOM. straight ! no food, seating for 120. G 047,500 In 1945. Only $44,000 < 015,000 down. K. L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR 2339 Orchard Lake Rd., 442-0900 Everett Cummings, Realtor « 2503 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3200 ______________34 IfUNTOON LAKE — ON ROWLEY DRIVE; facing private lake, huge custom 4-room brick ranch, full t, hai 4th bedroom, ex-.1 kitchen, fireplace, com-i carpeting, ivy baths, 3-car died garage, countless other ■a. See It soon (or only $34,- YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0343 Ok 4-0343 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint . 22040 W. II M SPRINGTIME IN MICHIGAN PLAN YOUR FUTURE WITH ,200 down. If ACRES, 330 feet of blacktop roae slightly rolling lend near vllleg OTHER PARCELS AVAILABLE PONTIAC LK. — Sandy b 134. $ 0. $500 di LAKE COTTAGE [ 00x127. 01,995, $250 down. 'x40V New materiel. Needs pinGREE ST. - Elii. Lake 1 00x125. $1,795, $200 down. - .. °fF WATE.? CASS LAKE RO. - Commercial * Furn. 2-bedroom cottage, $5,500. 40x150* sewer, water—$1500. GRABLES REALTY | HAGSTR0M, Realtor ________484-2045 or 404-2401_j MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAKE FRONT HOMES — NEW AND 4900 W. HURON OR 4-035$ used J. L. Daily Co. EM, 3-7114. EVE. 402-0435 Lake LIVII4G ARBk, 20 MINUTES “TERRIFIC" . MMe so'xtso' i........... Also too'xisr tot, $1,995, $20 o mo. . Btoch Brei. OR 3-129$. ^ I 5L**! Lake Tots" in beaiAiful jav-i beauti no Heights Subdivision, nestled be- clous tween 3. natural lakes. City wfr | • down. avollebl*. Choose deyl* f about the OAKLAND COUNTY TAVERN WARDEN . W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 MALL NURSERY COMPLETE. ES-tabllshed customers. OA 4-2035. Village of Ortonville Store tor rant or purchase, mo store. Reasonable rent. C. Pangus Inc.. Realty OPEN 7 DAYS to M-1S Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015 PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE' THIS BAR IS ITt We mean it ties everything) Solid neighborhood business Top*»t«“ McNichols Avt. location. Beautit furnished livinB quarters end be ot all, , a $10,000 investment dov gets It fbr you. Hurry on this.., HAPPINESS & SECURITY WOW I Golden opportunity? At this e Kit. Grc g over .... us, it's G-r- l*v?,ooo.' $23,000 ----- HERE IT ISI We have over 500 Northern $ erties, resorts, and business .. porlunities tor you to pick exactly whet you want. Every price range and Income bracket. Ce|l ut right now! Our new catalog covering some of these Is lust o*t the press, Now that spring i effect. Terms If desired. Silver Lake Const. Co. OR 3-953) LAKE SHERWOOD LADD'S 3105 Lapeer Rd., (M24I, Pontiac 1053-4534 > PE 5-9291 100-ACRE FARM 11 or d, tPRINGPlELD TOWNSHIP - ON SUSIN LAKE. S4T of frontage.' ' 14 year aid 2-bedroom ranch, carpeting, paneled kitchen, 2vy-car garage, l deck, 1 beet, asking $19,900. NametoMM^toMato C. Pangus Inc.# Realty ____ OPEN ? 1bAVl term* 630 ^ ‘ COLLECT NA 7-2815 YORK WB BUY WI^JRAOE ° 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Sale Bvtineoi Property 57 1220 PBIT FRONTAGE, 500 P E E T deep an Mlo vy mile west of Milford Rd., Highland Two. Zoned commercial or multipto. Also Ideal — — Gas avslltble. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 474-7714 or KE 1450 N. Oedyke Rd. Salt HeaMheld Goads 65 ’y WHAT YOU’D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOM "OUTFIT— $31? 0 PIECE LIVING ROOM 10 PIECE BEDROOM * I piece eirant ' DISHES ^2 PC.^SET LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Baldwin ot Walton Prist Traffic light south Acres of Froa Parkli l-A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING Storm windows, ownings, gutters. Immediate installations of a NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC rig.«g I qu«lll7"g™r»nte«d' model. - embroiders, blind h*J's’"oid Reliable Pkmee,. m PUB buttonholes, etc. 1043 model. Take | over payments Ot^W.90 PER MO.|FB s.;^5 Joe vALLfLY OL 1-4423 UNIVERSAL CO. ’ FE 4-0905j* cffiWff,1,1-6"- PE i POWER MOWERS S2S EACH, 1 “ otary type S12S, hand mow, ... ...5049 Herb’s Mower Servlet, marred. Now S119, S3.down..MwK-l 135 5, Shirley. fs«EIE?i?-,«thREH0USE FE 3-7M1|3W> HOR'SEKWER GAROEN TRAC- THE SALVATION ARMY ^ RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. ' Everything to moat your n Clothing, Fumlturo, Appller TkAILER. STEEL FRAME, HKaW duty, airplane tires, S125, MA 5-037) USED CLOTHING, STORE DISMAY fables and mlsc. 204 Baldwin, yy— x fes— REFRIOERATOJl .050. ELECTRIC| g HORSE A berglas ■ontlec. 3. 54 N, Johnson. REFRIGERATOR — TV — DRESS- f FE 2 Sat. ’ REPOSSESSED SEWING MACHINE iressmaker hjad. 6 nK^W. ^, XUDOLY KITTEN inths old. Housebroken. PE 5-7159, attar 4.. - DOBERMAN PINSCH^k AND GEk- lfu5-5147, 4-2102. WANT TO BUY Tlftany-typa glass, lamps or del tors. FE 4-9094. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENU discount prices. Forbes Printing and Office Supplies, ^BT". OR 34747. attachments needed for, WATER SOFTENER, MARK V, Llkl i. blind hems, overcast- _____ .im , v. $300. 647-2042 al .3 PIECE BEDROOM COMPLETE Maytag wisher like r*“ • metal caplnets. 212, ing room couth 030, a age like new $79, nice big fraei-refrlgerator $77; table end buf-$10 ee. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-DEPARTMENT, 1440 Baldwin Walton, FE 2-6042. Easy **— 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-R00M OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly N6W LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-pitce (brand now) Bvlng ■oom 2-piece living room suits, two ate tables, matching coffss tsble, tw -Tcorator tamps. all tor 1109. Onl NEW BEDROOM BARGAINS l-plece (brand now) bedrooms: Double dresser, bookcase bed and cheat, box spring and kmeraprlna 1 Demonstrator Houseful $3 a week No Money Down Complete houseful furniture, and chair, 2 end tables, 1 table, 2 table lamps, 1 pole 1 9‘xl2* rug, 4 piece bedroon fit, I piece dinette, and refrigerator. PE rv?. i wide, (next te 2 DOOR REFRIGERATOR, « Apt. size range. $22.50. Michigan Appliance Co. 4202 Dixie Hwy. ________473-0011 BEDROOMS. BASEMENT, YOUR tot, 811,750. Ally - 673-0701. S BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, BRICK, $14,100. Ally 673-9701. Alice CHROME DINETTE SET, reasonable. Ml 4-2017. PIECE WALNUt DINING tEt. round I«M|, .4 extra toevet and pads, antique Pare mirror, walnut library tube, antique couch, ontioue kitchen cabinet, end 2 bn-storage chest. Call 335- ftajf _____ BitTafter 3: 9x12 Linoleum %ugs Calling tile PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 195! W HURON, FE 4-3541 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERA-tor, ^ excellent ^ wwklnj condition. Sale UM Contracts JW 1 TO 50 . LAND CONTRACTS jjkyewthr wented. S*e; u* before WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1451 N. Opdyke Rd. .Pi S414S Open Eves. *1111 p.m. BUNK BEDS Choice of is styles, trundle bads. WMB trundle beds and SMB beds came tote. $49.50 and up. Paanan’e Furniture. 210 E. Pika. BRONZE OR chROME OINBTTB sale. 1 BRAND NEW. Large and satoll/ size (round, drap-toat, rectangular) llotot in 3. 5 and 7 pc. eats. $24.95 and up. PEARSON'S PURNt TU R E 210 E. Pflto FE 57M1 ACTION SnSSr^Vtt ^Elhrato^LlM^RMd. CAM GPiRATkO ZIG-ZAGGER WEB Singer In cabinet. Makes but-tonhotos, designs, dtc« and all practical sewing. Mutt sacrifice for S4S.4S cosh or $4.45 monthly accepted. 5 year guarantee and lessons. Call credit manager at XS5 1412. CERTIFIED SEWING CEN- Wanted CentwcteeiH, 60-A X* ’ 1 TO 50 Cem°TEsh«t«etobto^^*am#, ili^Ss 6ESK, 111; CHINA CABINET, tsdt couch, o«S; 4 bedroom eats, S45 to till; dining mem eat,---------- refrigerator, Out stove S30; dl ... __cabinet. Zig-zagger designs, hems, ^ over«^sts^buljorj- ance'of only $43.43 cash or imall payments of 04.43 monthly accopt-able. 19 year guarantee and free lessons. Call credit • manager at 335-9213, RICHMAN BROS. SEW, ING CENTER. SINGER dial-a-maTic Zig-zag sewing machine - ments of $5.53 monthly. ERTIFIED _____I 343-3422. - HORSE BOLENS RIDi-A^Afl6l tractor and equipment. 451-33“* ■ ALUMINUM WINDOW W/ ....... 7-0542. EUM RUGS S3 Plastic Wall tlto 2 Celling tlto - wait paneling, c BAG Tlto. FE 4-9957. 1075 W. t YOUR WELDW00D HEADQUARTERS CANINE COUNTR YCLUe Introducing Canine photography. bV appointment. Clean. (BMllltaMi; convenient, bathing, grooming, boarding, collies available. 525 • E* S. Blvd.. Rochester. dbllv. IO-4740. FREE KITTENS TO GOOD HOME. - - PE MOB SHORT HAli POINTER, 5 weeks AK, ----------—... tall. Call 244-3533 attar S i Warren, Mich. * CANVAS BACK TRAILER BY MALLARD tMV ^0°TOW AND SET UP Prlcad from $895 . „ TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES 1091 W. Huron St.__FE 24921 FROLIC-BEE LINE-DRIFTWOOD SCAMPER 1944 Praotlgo BOLES AERO NORWEGIAN ELK HOUNDS. J rag. $150. FE S-3994 Sunday only OLD ENGLISH SHEEP DOG, ported; S373. mala,’3 if— ■ I C -"THE RED BARN" - Jacobson Trailer Sales , 5490 Williams l Hand Toals-Machinery 61 » S54 6 1958 RAMBLER FOR PARTS, IRON-rite Ironer $35. Aidmirel TV $20, apt. get stove $12. Dyncen Phyfe SPECIAL 10 A MON-H BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists ' 2-ptoco living room suite wi tables, t cocktail table an 7-pHece$ beoroom suite wlth ooobto 1943 FORD 3 YARD DUMP, SU50, complete coal conveyor $150,. 2 wheel traitor $50, 425-2715 a innerspring mattress ^ and Jrjj lamps. 5-piece dinette set, 4 chhome chair tormice tap table, I bookcase, 9‘xl2' rug Included. All tor $31 WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON , PE 5-1501 PIKE BRONZE SUMP PUMPS, SOLD aired, exchanged, rented. CONE'S ■ Sheffield FE $-6642 ALUMINUM 34' La6DER, ■ General Electric rafrigereter FE 2-0691, 167 S. Shirley. STOVES, REFRIGERATORS, NEW SEWING MACHINE ANO VACUUM ADDING MACHINE. $35. PORTABLE typewriter, $22.50. Standard typewriter, $20. Check protector, 020. Beverly's 7750 Auburn, Utica. 731-5410. APARTMENT SIZE HOT POINT Electric stove, $35. Buffet |U Dresser, $10. Extension ladde Kitchen cabinet, S12. Electric and pipe, $30. Writing desk. . Wardrobe dresser with mlrrer, 025. 682-4547. ________ BASEMENT RUMMAGE SALjt. Quarton Near Cranbraok Rd. BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL gas furnaces and boilers, auta..-r.— heaters, hardwKC and elec-supplies. Crock, soli, copper, and galvanized pipe end ftt-Senfry end Lowe Brother* Super ^Kem Tone—end HEIGHTS SUPPLY^ WASHER S25 GAS STOVE, —wetor with top, trie ir, $35. TV, (35. Elect V. Harris. PE»»M. '334-5677 “a WYMAN'S ‘ USED BARGAIN STORE At Our II W. Pika Stora Only SEND FOR FREE CATALOG WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR I4W cu. ft., auto, defrost, extra large bottom traoter. slightly creto marred. Now SIOClS dn„ $3 wk. PRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET I4SS S. Tltogreph U|| -fable. 451-0754. 45-A < PEDESTAL antique Walnut . chest. Old vases. Cr“ 442-4337. LOVE SEAT, CHAIRS, TABLES, lamps, dishes and colored glass. Old records ant music. 4B2dOM. U> PINNER -BELL. Igi (UjETUto WANTED: ANTIQUES AND < ^fumltura. Call Hally. A iy * WAY MOTOROLA BUBiNESS R T moHir ioned. Ui Mill •2L95 torn M 1 CAR, ■k Place. PE 5-3710. Meal Bottle Gas Installation Two 100 pound qyllndsrs and aqulp- COLEMAN SPACE HEATER, SS400 ---- $50; Pbttoa $75. 492-4341. COLORED BATH-------------- ------ quality, 1 piece construction, special purchase while R lasts, S27.9S. * A. Thompson, 7005 M59 “* CRAFTSMAN WOOO SHAPER, ,e power motor with 12 assort ers and spacers. On stand. S DEEP FREEZE. COMMERCIAL type upright, 22’. Can be sec anytime at 4401 Jeslyn. PE 5-2092. OINNER BELL, I Merlin house. 22. Child's $3. Building 4' storage cj ■“ DIVING BOARDS B'-10'-12' AND 14' FACtORY DEFECTS W PRICES Drayton Pool Supply Co. 4743 DIXIE HWY. 673-4734 . _.r.JDRY T1 FE 2-4179. (TSWoTTf! rIfriiTera ------ —“ Large c d up. Smith Me 371 E. Pike St. For the Finest in ^ Top-Quality Merchandise . Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL ' FOR DUSTY CONCRETE PLOOAI Use Liquid Floor Hordonor ujasras?**»«». POODLE. TOY. PAPER WHITE. Mato. 3 monthi. Paper trained. Ml #0211. __________ ■ POODLE CLIPPING. $3 AND UP PE $-1569 _____________ REGISTERED COCKER PUPPIES, peril-color. OR 3-7544. BEAMS-ANGLES-PIPES-PLATb All sizes new and mad Metal Iota boxes, 42x55-124.95 1 h.p. elec, motor—440 3 h.p.—063; m h to.—099 REGISTERED PEKINGESE, year-old male. $40. Inquire Progressive Oil Company. 477 S. Sag!-— Street REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER puppies. Chihuahua and fey Pox Terrier stud service. FE 2-1497. SHELTIES (MINIATURE c6lLIES) >Ibs. 850 up. 451-3993. SIAMESE KITTENS, H1>U BE. broken, Soalaolnt. SIS. PE 2-7724. SIAMESE KITTENS. 4 MONTHS good with children. 334-2272 BALDWIN ORGASONIC, BLEACHED mahogany, spinet with 2 manuals. Electric, guitar, chime, Hawaiian and harp with amplifier. 451-4444. CHICKERINO AbAvIGRAND, 1700; Schroetfer violin, >75. 402-2497, SIAMESE KITTENS - 2 MALES- TIGER'KiTfEN pREE TO GOOD COMPLETE LINE OF FENDER And Gibson Guitars and amps. DeRAE MUSIC 11 Dixie Hwy. 674-1700 EXPERT PIANO MOV I PIANOS WANTED ib's Van Service EM 57124 FENDER'S VIBRISQNIC AMPLIFI- •s and guitar. 330-9471 ■ GOOD USED SPINET PIANO $350. Tuned and delivered. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, Mich. PE 2-0567 Across from Tal-Hi LOWREY ORGANS rllt — walnut case .. S' itega -^meBegwy SU Combo portable organ ........ S' Manymore at bargain prices. Gallagher's Music 1710 5. Telegraph South of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 441544 - Open Eva*, 'til 9 p.m. dltlonod, lava many IMS. tmmond spinet organ, used, nut finish, model L-100, I LOWERY PIANOS French provincial console, I tiful frultwood, cast, ftoor pie, substentiareavlngs. alto r Gallagher's Music ">10 S. Tetoarar" Sf Orchard Li PR-40 Tone Cabinet for Hammond organ.. Excellent speaker with self contained reverberation. $475. Private owner. OR 3-9517. : ~ " sEfe' tHI WUAUTjtR aHitfAHs Leslie’Speaker, B1295. ma an alllnstrutnants. JACK HAGAN MUSIC GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN 27 S. SAGINAW PERSONALIZED GROOMING hBHI'---------IES ILES OR 3-0970 HEILITE CAMPING TRAILER—Of-luxe - many axtrat. OR 54113. HOBO PICK-UP CAMPERS THEY ARE QUALITY BUILT SUPPLIES ANO ACCESSORIES Open-Wad Thun. Pri. Sat IS e.m.-5 p.m. Sun-Noon te 5 p.m. pan 7 Nights a Week I p.m.-io p.m. HOBO MPG. SALES Rear 3342 Auburn Rd. 451-3357 Anytime stud service. 3354792. AUCTION YOUR» ESTATE FAST Auctioneers: Gary Barry, FE 44742 *“—Spak, FI 57S79 n 9Y SUNDAY .. 2:00 PJA. srasWAKisi Buy-Sail-Trade. Retell 7 ' rSTTuIti^ Little Manufacturing Liquidation Uh Gratiot (M-44) Saginaw achlna Shoe. Foundry, Shaat AAata PERK^l«|eRSV,Ce Swartz Croak Plarts-treet4lMwbs ERGREENS UPRIGHTS, SIS. YOU Big. lac. to ml. __________Cedar Lana Farm, 1970 Dixie Hwy. N. of 6251922;______________________ NURSERY CLEARANCE: EVER- greens, shade trees, shrubs. Dig your own. McNetto Nursery, May-hie Rd. at Olxto Hwy. 425-5534. HehWeg > Seppleb 81 Keego I 92-11917 Alto Wilton 1944 h BEAUTIFUL SHETLAND PWNY williAm' fUL. ALAlHY BA . ^ridln^. lumper, call attar I p.m., alfalfa brome and timothy ctnrar, 40c to 45c per bate. ST GOOD ALFALFA AND' nay. early cut and < first and second "•*' quantity .4X7-2545. Look Out WE ARE KICKING OFF OUR SPRING SEASON IN OUt NEW SHOWROOM. COM-PLETE APACHE CAMPING TRAILERS ON DISPLAY. SPECIAL OF %l WEEK IS A 1965 SILVER BUFFALO WITH DINETTE, STOVE, "SINK, ICE BOX ASSEMBLY, HEATER, SPARE TIRE, OVERSIZED TIRES AND BOTTLE GAS ASSEMBLY. WE HAVE 3 OF THESE LEFT IN STOCK. SPECIAL PRICE IS $975. __ EVANS EQUIPMENT to Hwy. C 6251711 MAKE YOUR CHOICI OP: Streamlines-Kenskills Franklins-Fans-Crees and Monitors Playmate Truck Campers Steward Truck Campers tide doer, 4 sleeper. Meal with PICK-UP COV1R:, a295 ■a chatali met ustom built a Pickup Camper Specials tram on ditpwy. i._______ toot cebover completely contained, weight tin Rw. n mean complete Including c cutottog ges only $1145. tr._- _________ peer. Buy new 1945 Apache camp traltora at. used traitor prices. SMib JWMML JbwiaMMiul. fatoi $349 up. Apache Factory hametown dealtr. Our new hours are Open dam • e.m. to Tin p.m., Sundays tl a.m. to I p m. BILL COLLER Camnbw and Ma- % : i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 - 1MI Tr^ WMliw , ft PIONEER CAMPER SALES PICKUP CAMPERS BY Travel WWI ■ Overland • Pvence-COn“MER*T^ii|R*LAM vS^r^T'sop STUTf CAMPERS AND CAMPING TRAILERS MUI *“ pi | waBJ seddle-begt, ipl light*. 2 front MM much mm. MSS. PC ri6Mt>A ilk^|uP|» U1WMB ism VaMaha trail Eld. sM rhu and Draw-tlla Ranlali. HOWLAND (ALII AND RENTALS SMS Dials Hwy. _ OR S-14M Oaan S im *111S (jn, - Vocation time Is Here Select your trawl traliar now froi our now Corsairs. Holly and A |os, Sizas from-IS to M ft. Ellsworth Traitor Solas tm Dixie Hwy. MA S-141 WAGON TRAIN ” ‘You should sas if, You'ro sura i " JOHNSON'S VACATION TRAVEL TRAILERS Ilf E. Walton ________PE 44SS3 ■ OSSA Is hora and shi's a bear 230?*MOTctc(KsS * Tnd fcArsmr&st TUXO SALES INC 171 E. AUBURN-ROCHESTER- BRIDGESTONE MOTORCYCLES From S23MS up PAUl'yOUN^5 MARINA 0)0 Dixie Hwjx Drayton Plains SEE US FORt CORRECT CRAFT SPEED BOATS TURBOCRAFT JET BOATS INTERCEPTOR ENGINES EVINRUDE MOTORS f7 New ond Used Tracks 103 CARNIVAL '4HIW W”ToH'^jrrek:OF. LUCKY AUTO 1440 W. Wldo Track FE AIMS or FE 3-7IS4 M £hMW FICIOUP . . , SI 150. Bp Dick Turner New mi Ihod Cm 101 [New mi tool Cm New md Usad Con Ml CHEVY EIBCAYNB. STICK, good condition, MSI IllteDttn Lake Rd FE 444fl. It«9 CORVAIR MONZA, GOOD CON-dll Ion, belt attar FE H342. 1442 CHEVROLET NOVA CONVERT- We Buy and Sell Used Boats and Motors Michigan Turbocraft 2527 Dlxla Highway—Ponttoc in-ua / ______FB I- FRIE - FREE With ovary Suiukl. 11 months 11,000 mbs warranty. Batter t anything you can wear. CUSTOM CQL0R sailboats y-20' wayfarer, windlass. MLS. lr CRUISING SLOOP, AQUACAT, B-LION, PACE SHIP DAY SAILORS, _ KITS. AVON SAIL BOATS 13)4431 1962 CORVAIR (95) Panel, red finish: This was a locally owned truck that has a lot loft in it. It's ready end priced to sail. Only $595 PATTERSON CHEVROLET, 1104 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 4-2735 iwTFORb Econ-o-linb PICK'llP. OR 3-447A rON FORD PICK-UP, LO , privits party. STOPS. ( WOLVERINE TRUCK campers and atoapara. New and usad 9343 up. Ana rantals. Jacks, Intercoms, j; telescoping, bumpers, 11S d a r I, n -----'•"-par Salas, Isa Union Lek~ *C*fc#VR^ 1942 10X30, 1 BEDROOM, lVi BATHS, an tot7l40P dawn, taka ay* manta. 4B-M01 or 6*4-2403. IQS) 10X10, ON LOT, 4034777. 1M3 COLONIAL, lO-XST, 1 1*43 10X50 MOBIL HOME, L____ rooms. Taka over payments. OR 4-1137 ptlar 4 p.m. 1944 RICHARDSON, I MONTHS aid, 1 bedroom, lVi baths, completely lumlshad. 1400 down and t. taka over payments of 117.90. UL 2-1412. / - AT COLONIAL "Never Knowllnoiy Undersold' _ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 19. OUR NEW ULTRA MODERN PARK 1 ^ JVinA DEPENDABLE 4 CYCLE HONDA!! World's biggsst seller Na mixer gadget needed Just s was bit of gas Over 300 machinal to choose Iran Including the tough new MS Scrambler EASYTERMS-:REE HELMET—HURRY Alia authorlied dealer tor BSA-TRlUMPH—NORTON MOTO-OUZ2IE -1 SPEED DUCAT I ANPERSON SALES A SERVICE 4S S. Telegraph .FE 3-7102 LOOKING for a usad Suzuki? Sun__ ara satisfied. they would rathar traliar, moatly Johnsons snd Evil rudss with full season's oua rants Each boat chackad out In the w r before delivery, 10 par Cf >wn at bank rataa. PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Dlxla Hwy. at Loan Lake Drayton Plains OR *0411 v -pan dally ( AM la a PM Sunday 10 AM la 4 PM 1964 Chevy Vi-Ton Pickup, radio, heater. sharp side. Full Price of Only - 31393. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY S. Woodward, Blrmlngh 444-4120 . WHY NOT OWN AN "OK" USED CAR? Shop the Big Lot at MATTHEWS HARGREAVES 631 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547 943 CHEVY II RED CONVCItl-Mo, 4-cyl. automatic, bhnoatllk* —— throughout! Full pries 1993. TEL MOTORS 131 Oakland I 4-DOOR. VERY McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL OL l-t3ia J INI N. Main ROCHESTER 1965 Chrysltrs 3 la chaam tram. Newport! and Mg'!, all still In factory warranty. From 92293. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH _4 Oakland Ava. 3324131 1942 DO0OB 440, 9-PAS3ENOER ditlon, or. r bad c 4-3732. REPOSSESSION Musi tall now. 1941 Dodge Dart 4 door, VI, automatic, poster r*“ Ing. No money down. Assume mania «4 pM. Sil^ * PE 2-9150. Oakland. ruse 1943 CHEVROLET EEL AIR ETA-— ----- with m-"'- SPECIAL haatar, whitewall tires. I139S. PATTERSON CHEVROLET "" * WoodwaVd, B' •. ,4-cylindar King chlng Into lie, neater traliar, toilet, like_____ ........................ $2,995 OWENS 16' Flbarglas, full top, 7S h.p. Bvlnrude, Oator trailer *•’** IOMPSON 20” pft-ehoro, hill l_________ wad, tnaerlng cover, spotlight. SUZUKI S4M Dixie Hwy. 474-2010 (W Mila South^ot Waterford) SUZUKI CYCLES. 30CC-______________ —Ibikes at low as $129.95. Taka .—1 la W. Highland. Right on Hltkbry Ridge Rd. to Oama" |d Lett and follow llgrts 9* MR SON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. “— toMm. PH l„ ________ r not running, T 20. 14, M INCH BOYS' AND C 'Trim. TrlftaM. Mmtss. used Bikes l ' SPEED SAVILLE ► Osmun ■ . I Boats — Accessories 32495 CHRI5-CRAFT 17' Inbbard utility, 95 lust raflnlshCd, sharp . 4P MANY OTHERS LAKE & SEA MARINA Authorised dealer OWENS CHRIS-CRAFT * ■Ivd. at Woodward PE *4307 Wantsd Core-Trucks__10 California Buytrs W sAles 1150 Oa*l f. ELGIN, FAMILY FISHING boat, 334-0071. m* alUma-craft BOAT. MOTOR >. MOTOR—TRAIL- ER 3-3900 !N^R[ V PAfeTEE BOAT WITH ELEC-trie 35 horse Evinrude Motor and trailer. All accessories In perfect condition. Best offer. 412-0370 P I" ftmit CRAFT INBOARD with tmBar. BiShEeIIHMM Phone OL 1-1343. STRILINER DAY CRUISER. ~t HP angkw, 2 to 1 reduction or, hydr. controls, plonty at mom It 4934344 or 493-1341. it. 23 horioaowar Scott ol or, SUP. OL 1-0414. ...___Y 73 ELECTRIC JOHH- motor. FE 94231. 4* FIBERGLAS. 30 HORSE-r Mercury. Allay traliar. Ex-OEWIlt DORSETTE CAB with head, 7S IW Johns liar. Call 4743714 attar 4 1943 SEARAY M 90 h.p. tngln* Open 9 to (—7 days •_ MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2237 Dlxla Hwy. 3314772 l block north at Tatagraph SPRING SALES SEE: NEW MOON, WINDSOR ANOSTAR DISCOUNT PRICES -LOT SPACE AVAILABLE J. C. Tolkington & Sons TELEGRAPH ROAD _ ACROSS MIRACLE MILE 3384044 Parkhurst Trailer Sales FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING M l SO tt. Fee.turlng New Moon -Buddy end Nomads. Located halt way Balwaan Orion an Oxford an M24, next to Alba country Guarantaad workmanahlp, service *nd parking space. 3 W. HIGHLAND a Boat work!, 135 Broad- BEAUTIFUL 1943 OWENS INBOARD CLEARANCE! 1965 Modols NowOn DHplev MERCURY-MERCkulKR DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. E. Walton Open 94 FE 6-4402 INDOOR SHOWROOM (out at the weather) MFG and Lone Star Chrysler, Glastron BOATS Llke-new quiet Mercury Ounoarde ai 3200 ...M*rNldNIONLY $169.50 CAR FHONO'S AND I TRACK TAPE stereot, Dalny TV, FE 44101, NEW FOUR-TRACK STEREO TAPE player far car. SS0 complet ■ 3-3341 after 4:38 p.m. I New RIVIERA CRUISER. JOHNSON MOTORS AND AUTO REPAIRS. REASONABL'E. 1457 LAMBRETTA, SI 1943 TRIUMPH TR-4. GOOD CON-ditlon. FE 2-3044. 1644 IM M8 tC. Llkf •NCS/sMo. canoaa. 3t yra. Repair Experience. TONY'S MARINE j »*»S Orchard Lake Rd. 6S1-3640 7 G-3 GLASSFAR ~SKI BOAT,. — - ^ nd traliar, call I - BM MSI 4. .JRSJl, Kbrit —af^ >)_________________ GLASSPAR — MIRRO CRAFT rEURY - GRUV EVINRUDE DEAL WITH" DAWSON'S SALEi AT TIFSICO LAKE. Phono AAA In 4-2170. fM4 HARLEY DAVISON Sprint axe, condition, call lass honda tog. sEt uP P6R racing. Indudet tires and many ax fra parts. Call attar 4, FE 14929. 1944 TRIUMPH VlOER CUB, TAKE i9«s HONDA 3M, 303 CC. 900 M $400. 424-3779 sttar 4. 1943 HONDA OCRAMBLER, condition, S40>. Call 3434141, 1945 HONDA SCRAMBLER. LIKE new condition, SSS0. FE 44337. 1943X9 SSHBaT-fclAMBLER, JPER HAWKE. < 1. 474-3945. s HARRINGTON BOATs WORKS ) "Your Evlnrudt Dealer" 1199 s. Tatadragh 33MES ‘ PINTER'S Sterlet!—MFG—Thomason Johnson Boats and MqMn SSST aa’a^^m^RmS' HELP! ham CM d Bylcki fop dollar 1965 DODGE tt-TON Pickup with Camper, with o 7,000 actual mllet, don't mlaa t at Only — 0170* OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava. FE XM» 1044 CHiVY Vy TON PICK-U actual mllea, radio, mirror: bumper, SH25, 493-4396. 1944 JEEP, GOOD CONbrflON, wheel drive, snow plow. 739-0776. 1943 JEEP PICK-UP, 4 WHEEL ■Ive. S92S. OR 34407.__ NEW TRUCK SPRING SALE. Nevt Trucks and Demos Discounted up to $800 1944 VW $1,000 3)0-7111 Ext. 2233 Dayi. After f PM, 33343c. " 1945 VOLVO, 0100 AND ASSUME payments. 4034700, between 10-3 p.m., a>k far Dave._____________ 1 PORSCHE 334 (. 1400 SUPER, 39, is, bait) art Immaculate cond It. Pull factory equipment. Bot * priced at S2995. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY S4 B, 1400 SUPER, 39,- . - .......- 31.200, 673-3179 efter 3. SPRITE 4900 MILES. NEW CAR ---------- —■» attar. 403-1IB att- REPOSSESSION, 34101, McAullffa. JEROME/ MOTOR SALES/ 9 1900 Wide Track Dr /Ft 371 >- 1944 CADILLAC. 4 DOOR HARD-* var windows’and air con- 1, 31400 mllet, 03400. FE Cadillacs. Fern _____________ —kks far aM«s> ittte market. Top Ballar r MANSFIELD AUTO SALES FE 04031 M0RE MONEY Paid lor Sharp Cars need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-state orders, and to stock my tot, that la “r:3: GM GALE AAcANNALLY'S Auto Saits KM Baldwin FE 1-4525 Across from Pontiac Stats Bank OP S FOR CLEAN CARS (J trudfca. Ecanomy Cars. 2333 Dlxl non -cLsnn- umu cnxi GLENN'S Jink Cars Trucki 101-A JUNK CARS-TRUCKS. nytlme. FE j-2444. l-i AND 10 JUHk CARS - TRUCK* Free tow. OR 3-2930. ______ ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS ■mpGsMM. am 9—u Fi44(4E. ■ ... .R 40 CiNTt AND UFl Bran radiators, batteries, stortora, gsnsrators. C. Dixon, OR 34049. JUNK CARS WANTED WE TOW 473-0(39 ihod Aft-Track Ports 101 CHEVY ENGINE AND TRANS- 1940 BUICK ELECTRA 223, GOOD mm" angina and transmission. Clwvy, $35. 1034 Cttavy, 350. 0 CHEVY IMPALA, COMPLETE 1944 FORD PICK-UP. HEVY - FORD - COMET • Fl t-cy;., factory rebuilt tnoto -w priced.'337-1 lit ‘ IT9< DU ice mr 1953 Butok Special tor parte II together. GM or Clwvy nltslan tor a 1454, S3 of 1934 FORO DUMF, ________ FE 4-7900________ 1034 CHEVROLET 1 TON WRECK-- tSOa. FE X70B. 1934 CHEVY WALK-IN VAHHj GMC ASK FOR Truck Dept. FE 5-4101 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm Ava. (I Block East of Oakland) 1966 GMC i-Ton Pickup Haatir, defrosters, backup tights, seat baits, 2-speed wipers, washers, inside rear view mirror $1779 including all taxas TRUCKS ARE OUR ONLY BUSINESS GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 FORD !9S7 W-TON picH-up vs big box, 3230. Cell 3334347. TWO 34* tANDRM FLATS, STEEL docks. 10x20 tirak (good). 3F brakea. Also equipped with vacuu pancakes and reasrvolr for use wli vacuum brakes. Beth traitors ai equipped with Holland hEcMe fl 4 or I wheeler Iwok-up. Reaap able. Cell Ypsllantt, Mich., 41 4724 weekdays. Holly. Mich. 43 et19 weekend!. Ask tor Garw a -Used Trucks-.. - Stakes ----- SPECIAL - 940 RENAULT Van, dandy _ _ penttrt, cleaners, painters, ate. IP9. y 43 VW‘S TO CHOOSE FROM) ALL models, all colors, all pricer-list's to 1944'a. Autobahn Motors, Iric. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER VS mile north of Miracle Mila 1745 S. Telegraph Ft 5-451 VOLKSWAGEN • with white top. *395 full prlc Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD / BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 MG AUSTIN HEAL/ TRIUMPH SUNBEAM FIAT MORGAN k complete selection tf 23 h condition. Gall FE 2-4944 1444 MONZA CONVERTIBLE, CA-IfORD] 1933, V4, EXCELLENT nary yellow With black vinyl top, ] motor, body rough, >40, 473-372*. mis‘Ppe4aSm‘ M °H*r 0V,r[K3* FORD 4 POOR, RUNS GOOD. TOK'Wt Ifeed Car / Listing I 1944XORVAIR 4 deer Menu . (11! - ---~-ianwa •.. llTi pickup . S13I 1943 SHEW Y door' sedan .! (1710 — Chevy sedan, 4 cyl slide (.7(5 ___olds "M" cenvartlbla 11495 1942 RAMSLER wagon, 4 cyL ( 4T 1962 OLDS "tt" 4 GMT, auto if “44 VW pickup, daubto cab ., fat 44 CHEVYTi 4 door ... S(l Hoskins Chei^Olds On US IP at MIS — Clerkiton MA 5-2604 1(45 CHEVY RISCAYNE 2-006R, cylinder, with stick shift, vmy< k ter lor, custom feature*. 13,01 miles. *1^30. S)UtO. $1095 7 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLRR-PLYMOUTH 1959 FORD GALAX I E 2 [ ' Top, VI with automatic, | •Ing. Vary clean. Only ■ROME FORD Radioator Ford Or. OL 1-0711, ■_______ 1960 FORD 2 DOOR, IMM ACTUAL „ ml., *323, OR 4-B47. attar 3 a.m. TWO FORD, AUTOMAtlC i.,cYL- 1965 CADILLAC . Coupe 9a Villa. Full power, factory alr./vlnyl roof, new-cer warranty. Tu/quolse, black top. / $4495 DOWNEY 0LDSM0BILE, INC. 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 CHEVVl 42 DOWN (43 UP 3 Pontleca 42 to 54 S43 up 7 Fords 43 to S3 SSS up. . 42 Renault 11(7. 4S Volkswagen. -----"era 2333 Dlxla 1943 CHEVELLE MALIBU SUPER Sport, nr cw. In., B0 h-apaed, pealtrac, 7JN actual -------4B4jN 1965 CHEVROLET ardtop with VI angina', rat heater, whitewall firs* a:_ - car warranty, only $40 down and-weakly payments of (15.44. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD A VIE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4.7300 (livery. 1 or alii Complete perta — service Grimaldi 1(57 CHEVY, EX< New End Usgd Cars 106 $ > CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, 341 nglne, 4 shift. Oecars. 333-2341. » CHEVY, FE. 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Ju*t out ol Oakland BANKRUPT?* SHORT EMPLOYMENT? 130 cash or equivalent trad* In can place you In a new 1(44 Ford of your chalet. T 1 Shew. Ml 4-3380. . 1940 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR HARD-top, Vi, automatic, radio, hat' black with bigek and while ter lor, dean S395 with ea lew S3 down. KING "AUTO SALES M59 at Eiizabsth Laka F FE 84088 1965. CHEVY convBrtlble. v-» automatic, I power, radio, haatar, whltav Rad with white top. $2295 Lloyd Motors Lincoln • Mercury - Comet 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 i 66ok, LUCKY AUTO I960 CHEVY edens and station wagon*, 4 to choose .from, priced a* law as *147, no money down and small weekly payments, we handle end arrange all financing. Call, Mr. ' FE 84071 rRFDTT Capitol Auto V-/1 LI ll y± 1 gin UJ MOKITTAIM I DOOR 4 CYCLIN-radio, heatof. whlto- ____________i claan. *373. t«2-22J3. *• 1940 CHEVY WAGON, DOUBLE Auto Seles ■ Rd FE Be 1941 CHEVY 4 BEL-AIR,. AUTO. metfc.ttrstt4B SSWITOpy SPECIAL* 1941 CORVAIR I h bled: Interior. I 1919 GMC Heavy Duly 430 15' platform, 3(2 engine, S speed-------------- mission 900x20(10 ply tlrw 1044 FORD F-tOt 11 chassis, takas 14'-Duty, VI angina. mere then right new, we specialize „ In frucka. ASK FOR TRUCK DEFT. FE 54101 John McAuliff# Ford 277 West Montcalm Avt. . H Mock B. of Oakland Aw«.I LUCKY AUTO 1945 W. Wide Track FE 4-1004 or FE 3-7M FISCHER BUICK 554 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 K SPECIAL 4 DOOlt SI man finish with fawn k I cylinder, automatic, ri ____tor, wMtowall tires, aim PATTERSON CHEVROLET 11 Woodward, Birmingham, mi 4 13 BUICK WILDCAT " l 'l laarf caupa, 3' owner. FE I I) CLEAN BUICK ELECTRA, 21S, 4*2-0143 1944 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, SPE-d^^rBtt. durra. SV & is tow as Is dawn King AUTO SALE** 44fS DIXIE Hwy. (2 blks. S. of MIS) Clorkston MA 5-2671. INI CHEVY BEL AIR 4 DOOR SELL or trade tor pick-up. 333-9772 1942 CHEVROLEt STATION WAGON WITH RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRE), ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of *6.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. t *795. lull price with a* low it 3 down. KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Laka Rd. FE 84088 1940 FORD GALAX IE 3-DOOR, wen at 4070VS Fen mo re bof. -____illy. I960 T-BIKD, SILVER WITH BLACK IMF 1964 Chevy Impala Hardtop 4 door with • saddle ton flnlah, matching Interior, full power, factory sir conditioning, this car must be seen l written guarantee. MS down, finance balance of only $1877 John McAuliff* Ford 430 Oakland Ava. FE S4I01 1943 CHEVELLE MALIBU 4-DOOR --- V-t, powergllde, pastor k tilt wnapL radio, factory fr. Ml MSB attar 4 r ~ CHEVROLET INS I!l 4 passenger Italian wagon, transmission, power st* brakes and rear window, axe ditlon. 332-3650. M C6Wai* 'MoNM' C6NVHT-ibie with 4 spaed. While " Sharp*end*new juft H0UGHTEN OLDS B N. Main. ROCHESTER OL 1-0741 CLEARANCE "OK" • Used Cor Solo 1943 CHEVY Impala convert 32499 ““FORD Galexle 500 2 door SI9M CORVAIR Monu 2 door *1395 OLDS "N" 4 door .. *1995 CHEVY Vi ton pickup . S144S 1944 CHEVY Vi ton pickup - 1964 VW sedan, 4 mead IN] RAMBLER Classic 4 f 194) FALCON 4 door, 4 or. whltowall tlras. Only B(S PATTERSON CHEVROLET IN S. . Waodwnrd. Birmingham. Ml 4-273S. ! 6hEVY II RBO CONVERT!- ' ■4m automr”‘ -■—* ■ ___ throughout! IE MARVEL MOTORS CUpT TOM 1962 CHEVROLET Ol JLJLli—l 1 Vw/lN Impala 4 deer hardtop, auf 104-A SI 30; 1(34 QMf cab and chassis, S343. 1457 Old* wagon, (1(5. If* deck aeml traitors, (100 each. 1 TIC Carp. Mr. (new, 4 FIND A GOOD CAR AND COM-Platt lha Deal with Pontiac Co-op Federal Credit Union. Fi SMB. ’ Foreign Con r — AUSTIN HEALEY. 194d BUICK RIVERA, AIR-CONDI-tlonlng, AM-FM radio. Highest btddar Call bafort noon, 363-6*83. 1939 CADILLAC. NO RUST. B6B baauttfui I_— ________■ terlor. This is Ilka New. B4 RATES. A real value only • $995 BIRMINGHAM - CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH F-60. FLATBED DUMP. f axle. Ready to go. First tttt ■ t. Ft 3-4711. 1 Call attar 5:31. condition. .FE 2-4*39. SPECIALS 1945 Ford Galaxie converHMl. all end brakes...... fl Clwvy 4-door hardtop Imp —dove top ..y,...... SI 1965 ChPvy Blscayn* >doer, ( 1943 CHEVY LUCKY AUTO 194B W. Wide-Track PE S-7134 Auto,, PE I- 1960 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE with hilt factory aqulpmant.. Thi to In wonderful condition. 31045. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY » *■ Wapdward.^Birmingham irii ’ Corvette convwlibte. REPOSSESSION, ltd] CADILLAC. 1 . No mangy dawn. SIS.S7 weekly —man tv Call Mr. Mason si FE H, MeAgttf*. DON'S USED CASS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM PORDf. ;to.. doubt* t 677 S. LAPEER RD. MY*I-M41 1993 eft. 4:30 p.m. Get * BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliff* Ford 4)0 Oakland Ava.______PE 3-4151 MUST blSPOSE OF THIS 1943 FORD Falrlan* hardtop. No money down. 0 FORD FAIRLANE, 1 OWNER, INI FORD WITH VG ENGINE, AUTOMATIC T1UUt(-MISSION, RAP I O A N O HEATER AND WHfTfWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Aaauma weekly aaymento ot SS.44. CALL CMDIT MGR. Mr. Parke at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 473M. INI FORD FALCON 4 WITH STICK, r|M> ihaatof, good tranaportallon, UN tt JEROME FORD, Roches-tor Ford Dealer, OL l-(71l. >62 FORb 2 DOOR, GALAX IE. RED flnlah with whtta top, radio, heater. whitewall tlrae and ajitom-SHARP. A steal at S49S full 9 with at low as S3 down. KING AUTO SALlS M59 at Elizabeth Laka f FE 8-4088 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Par Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. 3 BIRMINGHAM ‘ 1N3 FALCON STATION WA-GON WITH , AUTOMATIC TIUNSMIunbN, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, AVEpLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Aseum* weekly payments Pt S4.92. CALL CREOIT MGR. Mr. Paris *t HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-750D. * "dALAXif "cftNUEETT-Shape- 31145. EM 3-7314. REPOSSESSION, 1941 FORO ( FAS- aenger wagon. No mo tt.17 weekly payments. Meson at FE 3-4101. mo passenger, roe neater, auto., i r, Olf»70sl*7 TO CHOOSE FROM 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 MUST Dispose OF THIS 1361 MUS-tang hardtop. No monay doafn-$13.87 weekly. Call Mr. Murphy al 335-4101, McAullffe. FULLY EQUIPPED Naw CAR WARRANTY* AS LOW AS-$49 DOWN WHonw°goM wtth^tnyi rSS. Cryis-O-Mmc and ixooo actual miles. Lika Naw, 32277. HOUGHTEN OLDS I2S N. Main ^l ,^^i eOCHESTEfc Payments as low as ' " $11.95 HAROLD Mustang Coral TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. Woodward Ava. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7300 1043 MUSTANG 20*. AUTOMATIC traits. Still under warranty. *1600 FE 54*55. 7 REPOSSESSION - 1043 MUSTANG 2 plus 2 Fallback, No monay down, 313.87 weakly payments. Call Mr. Masoa at FE S4W1 McAullffe. Lively . Mustangs Transportation Specials In Our Corral for Your Choicel FULL WKLY. CAR PRICE ' PYMT 1041 FORD,-Auto .02*7 1273 1040 CHEVY, 0 cyl 1397 14.10 103* FORD, 2-door B»7 *2.75 1942 CORVAIR, Monza ..14*7 p.15 $49Dn. 1941 CHEVY, tonpala '.’.'. tm toils 1940 BUICK,-Hardtop ....0497 35.10 1942 DODGE, Dart 3497 37.15 1939 PONTIAC, Hardtop .1297 02.73 1942 RAMBLER, 4 cyl . ..3254 32.30 $58 Monthly 1050 CHEVY, 8 cyl «97 32.25 1942 TEMPEST, Wagon ..0397 14.05 ION CHEVY li . 3307 $4.05 1041 TRIUMPH, Herald' . 0497 $3.10 1039 CHEVY, stick .1 97 11.50 NO MONEY DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DILI VERY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE A9Uk ARRANGE ■ IMF John McAuliffe Ford 410 Oakland Ava. FBSdldl ALL FINANCING CALL R. DAN AT! FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just east of Oakland ESTATE- STORAGE We Finance! . $5 Dn. FE 3-7161 -$5 Dn. 1960 Buick I960 Corvair . $7.47 Weekly $297 Full Price • 1961 Dodge 1961 Valiant : $3.37 Weekly - $297 Full Price 1961 Ford Oalaxla 2-Door — Black 1960 Ford Wagon Automatic * Rtpossataien $6.89 Weekly Full Power $197 Full Price 1961 Chevy Convertible - Stick 1962 Comet. ; Wagon -r Automatic • , Repeaiefilon $5.94 Wnkly $697 Full Price All Credit Applications ' Accepted 109 S. East Blvd. j’ Pontiac FE 3-7161 New mi NCf INI FORD FAIRLANE WAGON. 1965 LINCOLN ■.........jsasv official car priced to Mil. TV Stamps with purchase. VAN CAMP CHEVY 334 MAIN Mu 4-1025 MILFORD 1258 MERCURY, V«AY NIC! COll- NOW IN* muiYAWo HARDTOP, toll factory equipment. II,M3 with SIRS down. Payments low at IM.N Mr. Inew, X I. C. Ml HM mat you are leaking tori ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 1060 MERCURY COLONY PARK. . passenger station wagon, black finish with chrome luggage reck, radio, heater, factory air cone" ttoning. A really nice car. tor on BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 331 I. Woodward, Birmingham SPECIAL mi MERCURY 4-door station whitewall tires a n wag-flnlsn. King AUTO SALES 4495 DIXIE Hwy. (2 blks. S of MIS) Clarkston MA 5-2671 ■ payments at 15.00. ' FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM TRANSMISSION, ______I AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of 13,92.. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, MI4-7500. REPOSSESSION, 1942 MERCURY. No money down, 11.17 weekly payments. Call Mr. Mason, at FE 5-4101, McAullffe, MERCURY 1941. 4 DOOR HARD- BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 320 $. woodward, Birmingham 444-453S COMET — 1945 CYCLOI condition. Will Mil or yi over payments. AAA 3-33, READ THIS!! I .on the N. E. edge of . ... Individually owned and op-, no high pressure — Mali salesmen, extremely lo I cast—ALL ADDS UP TO -FULL PRICE 1937 Chavy wagon .......... $ i 1939 Chevy wagon ........... t 1940 Chevy 2 drT.......... it INI Chevy 4 dr............ 3! 1942 Chevy 2 dr............. m 1940 Bulck LeSabre ........ 31 1930 Cadillac DeVllle ..... 21 1959 Pontiac Catalina ..... 19 1940 Pontiac Catalina ....., 31 1941 Pontiac Catalina ..... SI 1942 Pontiac. Convert...... 99 1943 Pontiac Catalina .... 109 Nnr ERd Used Cars 106 1034 OLDSMOBILE. REAL GOO No ptoney down, 03J7 wool Coll Mr. Murphy at 333-4101, i ’41 OLDS, 4-DR., W ... PONTIAC'S NEW and ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER 1961 OLDS "88" Four-door hardtop. Radio. I automatic, .power sloe ring brakes. $795 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 LUCKY AUTO 1963 OLDS Nbw and Usedtors 106 JOIN THE DODGE REBELLION steering, brakM. Nice!! HOMER HIGHT OA 0- I OLDS F05 SPORTS COUPE ith bucket seats and tu-tone Unto automatic transmits Ion. Real Ice 31395. H0UGHTEN OLDS N. Main ROCHESTER OL 1-9741 1964 OLDS 88 door hardtop, power iteerlng and iwer brakes, radio, heater, dark een finish with matching Interior, ip quality car that, was a 1 mar Birmingham trade. Only. $1895 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ML 7-3214 HAROLD TURNER * FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-731 1961 Valiant 4-door OAKLAND 1962 VALIANT Cygnet 2 door hardtop. Automatic, Beige with matching Interior, this is a real sharp car and art hard goodbwgMnly BIRMINGHAM . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MARMADUKE ' By Anderson and Ldeming 1S43 GRAND PR IX, 4 SPEED, P "I hope he's Just WAITING for someone . . because if he gets on that bus, I won’t!” ■sffMt affioft',1 1944 TEMPEST 2 OOC 1M2 PLYMOUTH FURY STATION -logon, tutono beige tlnlsto auto-latle, toll power, radio, heater, rhitewall tiros, sharp, S79S full rlca with as low as N down. KING AUTO SALES MS9 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 1943 PLYMOUTH PURY 9 PASSEN-M| Station wagon. Double power elr conditioning. ,'474-2014. *0 «pp%ciato.WBankn,R»lesUSWeekly Special. $1295 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 340 S. Woodward___Ml 944 AND 1943 VALIANTS. 2-OOORS end 4-doors. Standard end automatic. One of the host compacts made. From S79S. OAKLAND PONTIAC'S NEW and ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER 1964 PLYMOUTH ''Fury" two-door hardtop. V0, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, two-tone. , $1695 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. • 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 1944 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR, V-0 stick, radio, heater, whitewall tires, turquoise finish. Excellent condition. -Owner leaving tor Mrvlco. WILL ACCEPT. IN TRADE GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS Sunshine from a beanery Echo from • steamboat whistle Exhaust fumes from an outboard motor — or ALMOST ANYTHING MOVABLE BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixie Hwy. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT RAMBLER-JEEP :torkston AAA 3-2435 NEW: NEW: NEW Northwood finance Plan A FINANCE PLAN DESIGNED TO HELP THOSE WHO HAVE HAD TROUBLE WITH THEIR CREDIT. . Special Payment Plan A PAYMENT PLAN DESIGNED FOR THOSE WHO NEED I&YMENTS ON LONG TERM CONTRACTS. NewPre-Owned Trade-Ins WE HAVE A COMPLETE SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED ONE-OWNER TRADE-INS. OVER 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM. THIS DISCOUNT SALE HUNS THRU MAY 1st, 1966 I960 T-Bird, Sedan .. ..$895 $ 8.48 weekly 1961 Pontiac, 2-door . ..$ 695 $ 6.48 weekly 1961 Chevy, 2-door .. ..-$695 $ 6.48 weekly. 1964 Cadillac, Convt. . ^$3395 $33.48 weekly 1960 Falcon 2-door .. $ 395 $ 3.48 weekly 1958 Chevy,i(-door ... ..$ 395 $ 3.48 weekly 1959 Pontiac, 3-door . ..$ 195 $ 1.48 weekly 1961 Chevy, 4-door $495 $4.48 weekly 1960 Olds, Convt ...$695 $6.48 weekly 1958 Chrysler, Imperial .. ...$895 $8.48 weekly 1961 Ford, 2-door „:$295 $2.48* weekly 1959 Olds, 2-door ..... ...$195 $1.48 weekly 1963 Corvair, Monza .... ..$795 $7.48 weekly 1960 Pontiac, 4-door ... ..$495 $4.48 weekly ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED FE 8-9239 CALL CREDIT MGR. 2023 DIXIE HWY. Across From Averill's Just South of Telegraph Stop in or call today 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY III jjine, power steering^brakes, be OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 14 Oakland Ava. 332-9150 1965 Barracuda 2 door hardtop, VI .onglno malic, sharp with only 14,000 n Only 01195 Full Pric*. OAKLAND Haw ayl llsad -Cars 106 RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler On M24 In Lake Orton MY 3-6266 9 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-ertlble with new top, power *teer-iq and brakes. 335-7265. 960 PONTIAC - $275 -after 3:30, 332-1903. REPOSSESSION Another good buy, 1940 Station wagon. Must go down. Weekly payments c KEEGO Pontiac—GMC-i-T em pest "Same Location 50 Year*" —KEEGO HARBOR— KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake I FE 8-4088 1941 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, JMF John McAullffe Ford. ‘ New and (had Cars 106 1943 CATALINA CONVIRTIBLa, power steering and brakes, 30,006 miles, red. with Meek top. real ri condition. 01423. 4744090 of-1 pJn- • 1 Rwr mi liwl Cm 1161 PONTIAC'S NEW and ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER 1963r PONTIAC Catalina convertible. VI, automatic, power steering and brakes, white with red ulterior. $1695 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, seltont condition. 1X000 miles. dr staerlna. lino. tin, FE 5-1391 * Call Or. Dlcksteln, 9 1943 PONTIAC GRAND FRIX, TAN-Mack,vinyl tap. Pull.aswar, many extrei. Leaks, drives llkt new Can 402-1113. PONTIAC GTO. AUTOMATIC. power. 01300. OR 4-3470. 1944 PONTIAC 3 DOOR CATALHOA, I. Still 01193 Lucky auto 1944 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE doer hardtop, axe. condition, OIK Many extras. FE 3-7334. _ 1964 GRAND PRIX $2095 Lloyd Motors Lincoln - Mercury - Comet 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1944 TCmFEST LaMANS CONVERTI-ble. Exc., >1330. 433-7141. 1944 PONTIAC, 2 POOR HARDTOP, automatic, power brekei, steering, lew ml ley. OR 3-3090. 1914 BONNEVILLE 3 DOOR SPORT l tag. 031*3. OL 1-0441 attar 1943 P0NTIAC GRAND PRlk. REEF milts. Ms! r. Call Ml 4-1904 P Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 RAMBLER 770 SEDAN, V-0, 1944 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2 DOOR stick. 0498. OR Ml*l. Btrtnahfn. 1964 RAMBLER Slack beauty, VH li over-drlvs. Radio, irooo. inn run price, nans Many more to chooea from'. Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 1965 RAMBLER Classic "440" 4-door station wagon. V-» onglno, automatic transmission, air conditioning. An Excollent Bt ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 1965 RAMBLER Ambassador 9 passenger station wagon, automatic, radio, hooter, power titering and brakes, lost than ujWtwlaa. . ----—11 ’factory officials car. _. ranty. 32393 toll prlca. Bank Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD I BIRMINGHAM Ml 63900 HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 t. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7E TEMPEST BPbRT COUPE, . red-ring Jlres, -slick shift, CLEARANCE SALE Transportation Special Superior 1962 Pontiac Tempest LeMahs Coupe automatic, radio, whitewalls, cant apple red finish, $49 DOWN, F mance Balance of Only— $791 Get a BETTER DEAL" i 1262 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 t HAROLD TURNER 1965 PONTIAC# RED# 2 PLUS 2# LUCKY AUTO CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava' 332-9150 1962 TEMPEST LaMANS. 35.000 miles. 4 barrel. 682-3497. 1962 CATALINA 2-DOOR SEDAN. Power steering. Power brakes. Whitewalls. Good condition. Can be seen et 366 Nelson. Pontiac. 1050 PONTIAC 2 DOOR STICK. RE-possession. Assume payments of $3.35 per week. King Auto Sales. MS# at Elizabeth Laka Rd. FE KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 GO!!. HAUPT PONTIAC 1940 BONNEVILLE 2 door hardtop automatic /power steering, breket , sharp $49, down. 1940 CORVAIR Menu automatic 2 1943 TEMPEST Wagon, vinyl Inter. ' r, radio, whitewalls, *49 dawn. 1944 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Coupe, automatic, power, steering, brakes, whitewalls. 099 down- 944 CUSTOM Wagon, automatic, 4 cyl. radio, and only 099 down. 3 PONTIAC CATALINA—4 DOOR edan, palmetto green, auto. tr~~~ ower steering end brakes, nMImjrt. 10,700 miles, c 1945 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX. SOFT top. 12,000 miles. FE 49444 otter 3. COME TO •’ THE ' PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 -Top Quality, one-owntr naw car trades fa choosB from WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE . . . AND GET IT 65 Mt Clemens at wide Track FE 3-7954 Looking for a Pontiac? 1963 Tempest Custom 2-door with a green finish, radio, heater, automatic. Only — $1095 . 1963 Tempest LeMbns 2-door Sport Coup*, whitt finish# radio, “SET 1963 Pontiac ' Catalina 4-door heater, automatic power steering, brakes, whitewalls. Only $1395 1964 Pontiac Catalina 2-door Hardtop $1595 1966 Pontiac Catalina 4-door $2995 BEATTIE ORDDEALERSi of Service after tr OR 3-1291 v N WATERFORO 1944 V ON N, MAIN STREET dijfiiui BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1964 OLDS 98 4-dooj; hardtop. Full powtr. A sharp Birmingham trada ........$2195 1965 OLDS 98 Luxury sedan With full power. A sharp Birmingham trade.......$2895 1963 OLDS 98 Convertible with full power. Metalic blue with matching interior. owner. ___........... .$1795 1965 OLDS 98 2-door hardtop. Full power. Like mw. ........ — ........... ....$2895 1965 OLDSMOBILE- Station wbgon. Maroon finish, power steering/and brakes, automatic ........... . J..... . .------$1695 1962 0LDS 98 4-dool* .hardtop. Full power and , priced to -sell.J...... ............ $1295 ^YEAR WARRANTY 635 Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 Your Answer to QUALITY CARS WEEKLY SPECIALS 1965 FORD Convertible with full power. Mechanically perfect. A real buy with minimum down and payments of $12 per week. 1961 CHEVROLET 2-door with automatic, 6-cylinder engine. Full price $695. 1960 CADILLAC 4-door sedan DeVille. Full power. A luxury car with minimum down and payments of/$11 per week. 1963 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4-door, extra clean family car. Budget price $13,50 per week with minimufn down. 1966 FORD GV Convertible. 2500 mile car/Power steering and brakes. Stereo. $138 down, $23.35 per week. 1965 FORD ECONO-VAN, fully equipped for camping including water, cooking, and refrigeration. Original factory warranty. Full Price $289$. Autorama Motor*Sales 1 Mile West of Telegraph 2635 Orchard Laka Rd. 682-4410 WE/ SELL THE BEST USED CARS 1963 Ford Sedan, with a levalv navy blua finish, inappy VO, stan* ard transmission. Spot lass In-skta and aut. Only — $697 1964 Dodge $1397 1963 Chevy Chevy's famous thrtfty° six and Powarglldt. $797 1964 Pontiac ) whltt top, and matching $1597 1962 Pontiac A hard to find, 0-pasaangar, wagon, with lustrous blua finish, and toll factory equipment. $1097 1964 Olds matS radio! haator and h ctory aqulpmant. $1397 1965 Ford $1997 1964 Buick rtork hardtop. Lovely Bln Ith with V-0 automatic, pm clearing and brakes. $1697 FULL PRICK 1964 Dodge ' Dart 2-door autoi and haator. Soft $1197 1963 Plym. lalvadara Sadan. Tuxedo blat rlth rad vinyl and nylon trbi actory warranty to tore*, $1097 1965 Mustang $1697 855 Oakland FE 8-4528 V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 10 F—7 —Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed In this column ate subjoct to change without notice lIWv^'tv,"7-wxYi.TV, 6-cklw-tv. 30-wki6-tv, w-wm EVENING 9:99(2) («) News, Weather, Sports (7) (Color) Movie: “The Wings of Eagles” (1957) John Wayne, Maureen O’Hara, Dan Dailey (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Superman (56) Painting in America 0:90 (2) (4) (Color) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon (SO) little Rascals (SO) Managers in Action 7:11 (2) (Color) Sttngrky (4) Juvenile Court (I) Movie: “Hong Kong" (1952) Ronald Reagan, Rhonda Fleming (80) Soupy Sales (BO)UAA. * 7:10 (2) Dost in Space (4) (Color) Virginian -(7) (Color) Batman (50) Merv Griffin (56) Radical Americans 9:00 (7) Patty Duke (56) Great Books 8:20 (2) (Color) Beverly Hillbillies ■ (7) (Color) Blue Light (56) (Special) Intertel S:tl (9) News 9:00 (2) (Color) Green Acres (4) (Color special) Danny Thomas * (7) (Color) Big Valley (9) Musical Showcase (SO) Alfred Hitchcock 9:20 (2) Dick Van Dyke (9) Festival (SO) French Chef 19:00 (2) (Color) Kanny Kaye (4) (Color) News Special (7) Long Hot Summer (SO) Auto Classics 10:20 (9) Festival (80) Speedway Intematioal 11:00(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports‘ (SO) Wells Fargo 11:20(2) Movie: “For Whom * ' the BeU Tolls” (1943) Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman (4) (Color) Tonight (7) Movie: “The Return of Frank James” (1940) Henry Fonda, Gene Tier-ney, Jackie Cooper (9) Man of the World 12:42 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ 1:10 (7) News 1:20 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours 2: IS (7) Dragnet THURSDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 1:20 (2) News TV Features Test Your Ideology By United Pres* International BATMAN, 7:30 p.m. (7) “The Bookworm Turns” is first of two-parter starring Roddy McDowell as guest villain. RADICAL AMERICANS, 7:30 p.m. (SO) Report on one-industry towns in which factory owner exerts unusual influence on political- thinking of dtisenry. DANNY THOMAS, 9:00 p.m. (4) Danny, Bing Crosby and Claudine Auger star In. “The Road to Lebanon,” a spoof of the old Hope-Crooby road films. NEWS SPECIAL, 10:90 pan. (4) Hie third la the series of NBC audience-participation programs, “Test-lag: Right, Left or Center,” rates viewers on basis of ideology. FESTIVAL, 10:30 p.m. (9) Welsh poet Dylan Thomas is profiled. 0:25 (2) Sunrise Semester 0:20 (4) Classroom --(7) Funews 6:51. (2) Editorial, News , 7:99. (4) Today (7) (Johnny Ginger 7:95 (2) flews 7:29. (2) llappyland 9:90 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 0:90 (7) Movie: “Best Foot Forward” (1943) Lucille Ball, June Allyson. 8:45 (56) English VI 8:51 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00. (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:19.(86) Come, Let’s Read 0:90 (2) Dick Van Dyke (56) Spanish Lesson )0:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess .(9) Canadian Schools 10:19 (56) Our Scientific World 19:25.(4) News 19:99.(2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk 10:32.(56) French Lesson 10:80.(2) Divorce Court (4) Morning Star (7) Supermarket Sweep-stakes 11:30.(58) What’s New 11:90 (4) Paradise Bay (7) Dating Game (9) Window on the World New Yorkers Urged to Take Bus-Eye View of 'Country' By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—It’s sort of unusual for New York to admit that there’s any other place in the country but I notice that the New York Bus Riders’ Digest says that "the most interesting travel opportunity we’ve seen lately is the hosteling trip covering the Mid-Atlantic States.” “I’d have thought it would have been a bus trip in Manhattan). “Yea adventurous young people e spend four weeks ea this trip this sanu for a complete cost of |10S . .> the itinerary includes the Pennsylvania Dutch country, with dinner at a Meaaoaite farm, dm Gettysburg battlefield, paths aleag the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal with stops at Harper's Ferry and Senaca; Washington, D.C. (And nary a stop at Coney Island or Staten Island?) ★ ★ ★ Shirley Booth declined to follow Carol Charming into thttjphl-| cago of “Hello, Ddlly!” so Gower Champion resumed pleading with Bette Davis who’s being awfully lofty . . . Louis Prims’* nuwlHsn* met Frank Sinatra at the Las Vegas airport and serenaded him with “South of the Border" which is becoming Frank's nonfavorite Hit Parade number . . . Jade Waldron told fellow Lambs, “My girl is a light drinker. She keeps drinking till it gets Ught.” ik ★ ’ Ar Leslie Uggams opened at the Copacabana with talent equal to Barbra Streisand . . . (comic Bilfy Baxter was great, too) . . . Best Dressed Man Mark Goodson was there wearing one of those shirts he Imports from Singapore . . . Richard Adler, Micheline Lerner, Christina Paolozzi, Caterine Milinaire, Jolle Gabor. . There were a lot of divorcees there- (there always are anyplace nowaday*)—and I wondered what some of them thought when Leslie sang from Alaa Jay Laraer's “On A Clear Day” the song, “What Did I Have That I Don't Have Now?” If she changed it to “What Do I Have New That I Didn’t Have Then?” I guess the answer’d be “Alimony.”' * * ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... London papers are raving about Henny Yoangmaa’s comedy at the Palladium, especially his line, “You take nty wife please!” * Oh, those Metal They needed s pinch-singer for ailing gnarite Piazza for the home opendr, at the last minute wart to get Bobby Vinton ... A major European director already owes 20% of his next five films to various Riviera casinos. ★ ★ ★/ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A local fellow’s been at the Cope every night for a week, with different girls. But he says he’s not really fickle—he always has the same table. WISH n> SAID THAT: Jackie Kannon sent off his income tax forms: “It was a joint return—the government winds up with the whole joint. EARL'S PEARLS: A woman’s life Is spent straightening out her two most important possessions—her handbag and her husband. : V , . To people who use LSD, says comic Dave Madden, “Batman” Is a documentary. ... That’s aurii brother. (80) Dickory Doc 11:20 (9) News (66) Arithmetic for Teachers AFTERNOON 12:10 (2) News, Weather, Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Razzle Dazzle 12:20 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Post Office (7) Father Knows Best (9) Take 30 12:32.(56) Spanish Lesson 12:41 (2) Guiding Ught 12:10. (86) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:09 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “Last Days of Pompeii” (1935) Preston Foster, Basil Rath-bone (SO) Movie 1:19.(56) Sets and Symbols 1:29 (2) NeWs (4) Doctor’s House Call (SO) Geography 1:29 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:H.(4) News (50) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Confidential for Women 2:20 (50) Safety Circle 2:22 (56) Mathematics for Yon 2:39 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Conciliator 2:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:58 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50> Captain Detroit 3:20 (5g) Memo to Teachers 3:2542) (0) News 2:35 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (?) Never Too Young (50) Topper 4:25 (7) Arlene Dahl 4 JO (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House (50) Love That Bob 4:59 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Invitation to Art 8:20 (59) What’s New '5:41 (7) News 6:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall 'NYStudents Making Drug' DA Says Crackdown by Schools in Work* NEW YORK (UPI) — College and high school students in Brooklyn are making the hallucinogenic drug LSD ir chemistry classrooms, Brooklyn Dist. Atty. Aston Koota aaid yesterday. He said there .would be 9 crackdown by school officials. Koota would not reveal bow many schools or how many students were involved in the relatively simple manufacture of the consciousness-expanding drag, branded aa the “moat dangerous drug in the nation” by the New Yerk County Medical Society. He said student use of LSD.was on the upswing. the danger lies in the lack of knowledge f LSD’s ultimate effect on the user. The drug was dropped from production by its only commercial maker several days ago amid mounting pressure to curb its use. Legally, LSD has been used only in experiments in psychotherapy under close medical supervision. Koota made the charge at a news cnference attended by representatives of the board of education, board of higher education and the police narcotics squad. In Kingston, N.Y., yesterday, U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., called for federal legislation to deal not only with the question of narcotics but also “with all dangerous drugs.” Kennedy said ha would like to see laws enacted that would deal stiff penalties to those who import drugs and push them across state lines, and establish Coast Guard Cuttor Cited in Cuban Role KEY WEST, Fla. #i, t!lS-WWJ, Sport* til*—WXYZ, Alta briar CKLW. Nat**, Mule WWJ. Today bt Review WJR. New*. M______. i Newt. I part*. A 11:18—WCAR. Medical Journal Hi**—WCAR, Ran Roaa ttiM^WJR. Mu*le T WWJ, Naan. Rhone Opinion 7: twjR.^N^* (JSi* U’k »cSr WXYZ. Avar*, Muafc. r ‘ WCAR. Naa*. Defied CKLW, Haw*. Bud Devi whfi, Bill taTie WPON, New*. Sad WJR, New*. MMk 1 It i(8—WJR, New*. WXYZ. Slave *“ III** WWJ, Pepper Young'l Pemly lit** WWJ, Big Uttar tilB-CKLW, Ne« WJBK. Newt. Tola*. I WXYZ. Dave Mm* ---------— Link letter, Mu- 1t:«B—WJR. New*. Farm WWJ, Naan CKLW. New*, Joe Van Border Battle Claims Israeli SU JERUSALEM, Israel (UPI)-An Israeli soldier was killed and another wounded yesterday during a six-hour duel with automatic weapons and mortars. A A A Israeli and Jordan troops fought most of the day despite three cease-fires arranged by the United Nations. Each side accused the other of violating the cease-fires. There were conflicting rape r t * on how the fighting started. An Israeli spokesman said Jordanian forces opened fire on a routine Israeli patrol near the Mei-Ami settlement about 40 miles northeast of Tel Aviv. A A - A (The Jordanian spokesnman accused the Israeli forces of opening fire on the villages of Ummfrihan and Anin.) Both sides said the fight began with automatic wea. fin and that later, both force* used mortars. '67 Tour of For East Set for WSU Troupe Jury Plcktd to Hif -Hedy's Shoplifting Trial LOS ANGELES (AP) — A jury of five women and seven men have been selected to hear the trial of actress Hedy Lamarr, charged With shoplifting 286 worth of clothing and cosmetic* from a department store. A A A Miss Lamarr, 51, has pleaded innocent to the petty theft charge. Her attorney indicated her defense would bo a temporary mental lapse due to nervous strain. Prince Albert, son of Monaco’s Prince Rainier, has ihe title of Marquis de Lee Baux. TV SERVICE COLOR-BUCK 8 WHOI SWEET'S m w. Harm HOME IMPROVEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS Why Not dial Direct? and »MCt Supanritlan an Your Jab! xHucir No Salaoman’a Commis«ion-No MlddltwanProfHl | Free Expert Plan A Design Service | • KITCHENS 6 FAMILY ROOMS 6 REC ROOMS • ADD-A-R00M I WIPES YOU CAM AFFORD I NO MONEY DOWN - FHA A BANK RATES NO PAYMENT 'TIL SEPTEMBER FREE ESTIMATES (No Obligatioii) FE 8-9251 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC Drama of Danish Styling 1 li, J ■ r-n.- , NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Vacuum ruga with the thoroughness you expect. 7-pc. attachment set le'ta yon do everything from dusting to cleaning upholstery. 1-HP (input) motor is .packed with power. Fiber glass body. See this value today! Westinghouse Patio Light Kit A 5” 2-section spike with aluminum shade.. lSll-watl. PAR 'bulb, ■includes cord. \ . Electrical Dtp!., Main Humt. F—0 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, I960 Bias Blamed in School Unrest tried to Mode publication of an editorial criticizing academic standards at the predominately Negro high school, also testified at the hearing. • * f W . +' “Our basic problem is we can't communicate with him (Catty)... you get badgered, lectured,” said Colding. Golding testified Catty's banning of the editorial brought with it a veiled threat that "I would be kicked out of the National Honor Society.” DETROIT (AP) - A teacher testified Tuesday that Northern High School's academic standards problem “boils down” to the beUef by- many instructors that “Negro students are subhuman beings.” E> Jt Vanderline, a social •ciencC instructor and, representative of the Detroit Federa-tion of Teadiers (AFL-CIO) at Northern, testified at a board of education hearing. * ■ ★ Vanderline charged Northern Principal Arthur T. Gariy “kept a blacklist” of Northern teadiers and that “he.lied.in secret ed with less than human digni-:lun,ls* ty,” Vanderline said, adding tbit at an assembly, teachers _ence called the students “rats and bums” and “several teachers referred to Northern as blackboard jungle." STUDENT LEADER Charles Colding, student leader of the revolt whibh began April 7 when Carty allegedly North Pole’s post office is no ” ^ longer in North Pole, Alaska. been moved 800 yards Arms Charges Dropped for Two Hunting Suspect LIVONIA (AP) - Concealed weapons charges against two men shaking a Michigan man for trial in Texas have been dismissed, v n ** Livonia ^Municipal Judge Robert H. Lorion Monday dismissed the charges against Paul Anderson, 49, of Marshall, Tex., and Marion Darnell, 55, of Shreveport, La. \ The men were arreted on the charges last Friday while seeking William DaVls, a Livonia city employe, for allegedly failing to appear on a traffic dta-tion in Marshall, Tex. x AF to Launch Space Glider in CAPE KENNEDY (DPI) — The Air. Force plans to launch a miniature space glider 100 miles high in November for a soaring sweep back to earth in a preview of returns for manned' spaceships of the future. Four scientists took the wraps off the 80-inch, B9frpound deltashaped craft yesterday in a highly detailed paper presented to a . space conference of file American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The Martin Co. is building four of the gliders for an Air Force program called Prime. It is designed to lead the way. toward development of larger craft that one day may enable astronauts to land at jetports on return from space, t -“This program is eipected to produce technology that could be applicable to manned, maneuverable reentry," the scientists said. They pointed out that the glider’s flight will simulate conditions that would be encountered on a return from low earth orbit. Such craft, called “lifting bodies” because they are able to produce lift like an air-' plane In earth’a atmosphere, would do away with costly ocean recovery fleets like those now needed tor present manned spacecraft with tittle maneuvering ability. As a bonds, the paper said, “these vehicles are potentially reusable with minimum, refur-nishinent and . are economical, reliable' and have growth potential in payload capability and sise.’|r. ',,’rv ’ ★ t ■■■ The Air Force first disclosed general plans for the program last year, hut until yesterday specific details of the glider were classified. The paper was presented with Air Force approval by three . scientists from the Aerospace (tap. and one from ttif Martin Co. • v. - The Air Force, in reply to a ■ query, told UPI tile first ef the spacecraft Is scheduled for launch on an Atlas rocket in Nbvember from Vaaderberg Air Force Base, Calif. Subsequent flights are set for February, April and June of "Hext year. The glider, designated the SV5 is wingless with a flat bottom, rounded top and two beryllium paneled vortical tall fins. It is constructed of standard alumi-.. num. s k 1 n and framework covered with a silicon heat protective surface. You Can Count on Us... Quality Costs No More at Sears DOWN TOWN ranine furnished by the following Downtown Pontiac merchants 48 N. Saginaw St. BARNETTS CLOTHES SHOP 150 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN'S WEAR SI N. Sagihaw St. THE PONTIAC PRESS ■» 48 W. Huron St. 51 W. Huron St. Sears Ends Saturday! Timely Bays in Every Department SAVE ♦31.99-3-Pc. “Triple Dresser” Suite in a Rich Satin Walnut Finish . Regularly, $199.99 Includes Triple Dresser with Mirror 4-Drawer Chest and Panel Bed Here’s the sleek sculptured styling of famous Danish import furniture* now at a remarkable low price, A truly impressive bedroom with fine cabinetwork apparent in every dalasi. Rich walnut veneers are combined with solid walnut recessed pulls for a smooth uncluttered effect. Plate glass mirror tilted for full-length .viewing. Drawers are dustproofed. All this plus the abundant storage area of a 9-drawer triple • dresser. See this lovely suite now at big savings. $39.99 Matching Nite Stand 34.88 Reg. $69.95 Sears-O-Pedte Mattress or Box Springs 54“ each ■1-HP, Vacuum Cleaner With Attachments Stands on end for stair-cleaning* storage Plastic UF Cable With Ground Coach Sms Waul Brackett Reg. $4.15 g39 SO-ft. Our bed non-metalHe wire to me even outdoors underground. Resists rot, flame. 14.2. Rea. 85.97,12.2 wire.. .4.99 Re*. 89.99 7** V * Each Handsome doorside lights dispel darkness oq porch, steps and . walk. Black enameled copper, glass panels. TENT SALE! Portable Case INCLUDED! goat Reg. $99 10x12 Highwall 79s8 Reg. $89 8x10 Highwall Kenniore Zig-Zag Portable Sewing Machines *53 Deluxe-Style Kenmore Zig-Zag Sewing Machines For Fashionable Home Sewing Sift THE DIAL TO: Check Sears Low Price Reg. $159 Deluxe Ted Williams* 10x12 Tent. . .149.88 Screen Houses as low as....849 ' 12* Semi V-Boat, Re*. 8149,95 . .8159 7.5 HP Elep. start Motor.8269 ^Decg^FW Sporting Good* Dept., Perry Street Basement NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan "Sews on buttons, makes appliques, buttonholes* mends, darns, overcasts, monograms, embroider and blidd l^em. Sew the latest fashion with this lovely portable sewing machine . . . portable case Portable Case • Sew on buttons . Included • Overcast* blind hem o Sew saun stitches ADDED FEATURES! • Built-in sewing light • Buttonhole markings Auto. Zig-Zag Port, with Cams........... $99 NO MONEY DOWN an Sears Easy Payment Plan / included. Vote, ami Sewing Machine Dept., Main Floor “Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Dow ntown Pontiac Phone FE 5-1171 THREE COLORS SUPPLEMENT TO THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, I960 Over 100 Sale Items for the Homemaker and Her Husband to Make Their 101 Jobs, Easier, Faster, Better for TODAY'S Living ■BBrnlESi NO MONEY DOWN on Anything You Buy on Credit at Sears You Can Count. on Us... ' Quality Costs No More at Sears REJOIN YOUR QUESTS... Minutes after the Meat is Over! SAVE «3495 Sears Top-Loading Kenmore **600* Portable Dishwashers Regular $19&95 *165 Wouldn’t it be nice to give a party without worrying about washing all those dishes afterwards? The Kenmore “600” lets you stay with your guests while it washes, rinses and dries 14 table settings at once, ! quietly and thoroughly! Features include 4 cycles, a wetting agent to help prevent spots,. and an automatic cord return. Choice of white or coppertone. FREE HOME TRIAL See for yourself how easy dishwashiog can be! Try a Kenmore Portable dishwasher in yOur home for 10 days with noobligation. Shop at Sears and Save Downtown Pontiac PONTIAC, MICH. Phone 335-4171 Open Until 9:00 Monday, Thursday, Friday & Saturday Shop 9:00 AJ\f. Until 5:30 P.M. Tuesday and Wednesday Sears Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back \ 77----T~2 yAW ‘.'y, ONE COLOR Sears HpTeflon!. .The Easy Care Coating No-Stick Cooking...No-Scour Cleaning ■i'im * Handy-To-Have Kitchen Stools Your Choice 72* * Each SAVE $150 on $9.49 24-in. Slat-Back Stools Comfortable stool has hardwood (rack and swivel seat. Black steel frame, chromed foot rest. $9.95 30-in..7.99 SAVE $1.96 on $9.95 24-in. Wire-Back Stools Padded swivel seat. Chromed frame with Antique-white vinyl or bronzetone withIvory vinyl. $10.49 30-in....... .7.99 SAVE $150 on $9.49 Folding Step Stools So stylish .;. so compact! Chromed stool folds to mere 4 Vi in. White vinyl-covered seat, charcoal-color rubber step.. . . . .7.99 CHARGE! All Your Kite lien Needs on Sears Revolving Charge 2mw ■ / 1 COLOl Fry Pan er-Skillet Food Preparation Was Never Easier SAVE *2“ Foods Can’t Stick Even With No-Fat Cooking, Makes The Clean-up Easiest Ever! Regular $17.35 14" skillet' •RIDDLE Do a superb job of cooking without foods sticking . . only a suds and rinse for cleanup. Bake, fry, roast, make casserole dishes with even-heat distribution in 12-in. cast-aluminum pan. Full-range removable heat control. With high-dome cover ami control. Regular $19.95 Kenmore Crill-Wgffler With no-stick Teflon! Bakes T CiQQ 8% -in. waffle. Reverses to . grill sandwiches or fry foods. $19.25 2-Slice Automatic Toasters Our finest! Lowers bread, 1 £199 raises it when toasted to color you set. Chromed. Kenmore Can Opener-Sharpeners Smoothly opens any cans, ~1199 sharpens knives. Brass, chromed or copper fronts. Regular $16.25 12-Speed Hand Mixers Powerful! Big chromed beat- 1 099 ers, ejector. In turquoise or copper colors or white. ■ No-Stick Teflon-Lined Cooker-Fryers cooks and stews *| A99 with automatic control. 5VS -*-v/ qt. With cover, basket. GUARANTEE Immediate replacement upon return if any defect occurs g within 1 year of sale. mwbssw 3 Sears Sears rias Everything for Sparkling flashes, Effortless.Ironing Save on These Convenience-Designed Helpers ON SALE! SAVE 52 On Sears Vent-O-Top Ironing Tables Regular $949 *^99 the front foot adjusts to uneven flow for sturdy support. Table adjusts from 36 to 23 in. for sit-down ironing. Has blue enamel finish ... roll-or-stay wheels. ■P.'feffVW’ O nmwn mms an fggj HONNU 5E SAVE $1.11! $4.99 All-In-One Cover-Pads Teflon-coated no-bum cover has Q reinforced wear zone, tailored Jjoo construction for drum-tight fit. Sears VSC* Spray-Steam-Dry Irons Has beveled edge, polished alumi- . _QQ num sole-plate, 10-oz. tank. *Vari-able Steam control. UL Listed. SAVE $1! $4.99 Laundry Carts Multi-cotorad cotton denim bag has _ clothespin pocket, 2 casters and joo large 5M-h, rubber wheels. SAVE 61c! Sears $1.49 Laundry Baskets Flexible plastic basket has open-weave sides, solid bottom, handles, ww Has over 1-bushel capacity. SAVE $4.01! $1948 Outdoor Dryers Aluminized steel dryer has thirty . ^ 9f-in. plastic lines. Steel ground box. Easy to open and dose. SAVE $1! $549Extra Lo-Sudz Detergent A 25-lb box. Hu special whitcner . QQ KE-103, gentle deodorant. Effec- 4WW _ tive in hot, cold, hard or soft water. SAVE $4.01! $19.98 Disappearing Line Five 30-ft plastic-coated wire lines - - ^ qa snap back into rustproof case. lO*'* Mounting hardware included. SAVE $2! $949 Carpet Sweepers Low design goes under furniture _ qq Dial setting for any rug thickness. / W DuPont Herox® bristle brushes. / SALE! Regular $149 Mops and Brooms YOUR CHOICE 144 • 91.99 Sponge Mop has 20-aq .in. cleaning surface, cellulose sponge and b-piece handle. • 9149 Dust Mop holds dust securely... stays fluffy after many washings. Nylon head. • 91.99 Split-Tip Broom picks up even the finest dirt. The plastic bristles have flagged tip*. • 91.99 P'ado Broom tuts 100% Palmyra bristles. Stays stiff when wet... not harmed by oil. SAVE 41$! Upholstery Shampoo Kit Regular $219. 16 oz. shampoo . concentrate, applicator. Cleans fabric, vinyl without soaking. SAVE 86c! $2.79 No-Buff Floor Wax Dries to a hard finish-bright shine QQ without polishing. 1 gallon. A SAVE 31c! $1.19 Wax Applicator Easy-to-wash lamb's wool head for QQq best application. 1-pc. handle. OO** 4 MW SAVE *1.01 to *151 Matched “Golden Spray” Print Dress, Suit and Shoe-Shelf Bag Regular $4.06 Sale Priced Closets do sparkle with a 10-pr. scallop-rim shoe-shelf, 16-dress or 8-suit bag. AH of white, washable vinyl, bright with gidd-oolor printed quitting! Save on a twatdied set Have a total-look closet! $656 Notilt 20-Pr. Shoe Bag ... .5.47 $656 Jumbo 90-garment Bag ...5.97 16.96 Blanket Box................5.97 $858 Five-Shelf Storage Showcase. Shelves are Easily Adjusted .... .7.47 SAVE $2.18 Fold-up Portable Vinyl Wardrobes Regular $14.95 1077 Sale Priced Comes in a box, sets-up without tools! Light, glide-about tube-frame, quilt-embossed vinyl shell and Masonite Press-wood shelf add up to an instant extra closet. 32x 20x58 inches high. SAVE $151 48-in. Roll-About Wardrobe Baris Regular $0.98 ( Q47 Sale Priced U Put up an instant extra closet without nuts, bolts or screws! Clever, selflocking tube-steel rack, chrome-plated for lasting good looks, holds up to 45 garments plus hats, shoes, belts 'n ties. tier 1 SALE Mods Protection Para-moth products protect furs, wool KH1 larvae. Air out quickly. $1.79,3 to. Can of V4-in. Nuggets 2 for L78 $1.79,3 to. Can of W-ia. Crystals 2 for 1.79 $1.49 Crystal Packet Borns ... .2 for L40 39c Haag-up Moth Cake CartonaSfor 96c SAVE on Clever Closet Space-Savers, Practically Indispensable! $2.49 Sculptured Hardwood Suit Hanger with grooved pants-grip .........1.97 $1.39 Chrome-plated Wire. Skirt-Rack folds up. Clips adjust........«.99c 98c Deluxe Swing-arm Blouse Radk chrome-plated, plastic-tipped .... .77c $1.49, 3 Wooden Trouser Hangers., Space-saver hooks. Sean alone! .. 99c $2.39 Sturdy, self-locking Loop-Shoe-Rack, chromed. Holds 9 pr.~..... 1.97 ANTIQUING KITS A2A cm i SearsHas Everything for Your Z)ra?wl31R£E COLOR The Only Question is: When Do You Want It Instilled? Here’s How Sears Makes Kitchen Planning FREE Idea Rook, 20 pages of exciting new designs. FREE Color ' Sketch -shows your new Sears kitchen. FREE Plans scaled to your exact room dimensions. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND GO. *, . . -4 / Complete Kitchen Planning Assistance. Let Sears Experts Help You Plan ... Remodel.. Design • 1 would like a FREE Estimate on Complete Kitchen Remodeling NAME_________________J._______ ■ ■ • *' / \ ' , -ADDRESS—.________________PHONE____' . riTV ST ATP ________ZIP______. I understand I am under absolutely no obligation! 6 MWESPCABC / ' V ONE Contract for credit, materials, installation. PHONE SEARS or Mail this Coupon Today SAVE S6735 Spice Birch Veneer Cabinets in Shadow Line Design Sears Complete 10-ft. Kitchens Regular $566.35 *499 • Choice of built-in Kenmore electric or gas oven, matching surface unit • Includes appliances, eabinets shown, double-bowl sink, countertop The clean, uncluttered lines and warm spice birch finish of these cabinets create an eye-appealing, friendly atmosphere in your kitchen. The cabinets, countertop^ and porcelain-enamel sink are stain and mar-resistant, easy to keep clean. All cabinets have self-closing drawers, magnetic door catches. Complete installation, range hood and carpeting extra. Come in and visit our kitchen experts. 15% OFF ON ALL MATCHING WALL AND BASE CABINETS NO MONEY DOWN on Anything You Buy On Credit at Sears Sears Sears' Has the Right Style for Your Home's mXOLORS Save 17% to 34% on Sears Fashion-Right Lighting For the COUNTRY LOOK $29.95 3-Lt Wagon-Wheel Lighting Mellow ponderosa pine and . riph solid brass. 12-in. wheel Jy00 has 3 lights with 7 Vi-in. glass chimneys. Extends 18 to 31 in. $49.95 to $55 Decorative Oil Lamps Early-Americanfashion in rich _ „ aQ brass, with 14-in. shade of £30°° floral-on-white, or thumbprint glass in ruby or amber. For the CLASSIC LOOK Regular $60 5-Lt. Crystal Fixtures Dazzltngcrystal and glass chan- _ __ deliers have 5 hurricane-type etched-glass shades. Imported Crystal prisms. 22 in. diam,. $29.95 Graceful 5-Lt. Chandelier Spanish scroll-design looks like . _ a wrought iron. Matte black 1988 contrasts with white “candle” lights. 20-inch diameter. CHARGE! IT on Sears Revolving Charge For the CONTEMPORARY LOOK $29.95 1-Lt. Chain-Drape Lighting Colorful plastic chunks in tex- , • _ A tured, translucent 12-in. globe. One light, chain drape. In red-orange or blue-green colors: Regular $45 1-Lt. Cathedral Drop Designer fashioned! Amber, j. v blue, amethyst hammered- 36°° glass panels in die-cast antique-brass frame. 23x 10-in. diam. mw 7 Sears ead-Off wifh£Erra r Hoty Sticky Summer R CONDITION! SAVE *46 Sears Comfort Air Conditioning for 5 or 6-Room Homes 4 DAYS ONLY! 399 Installation Extra PRICE INCLUDES ALL THIS: “400" Outdoor Condenser* “400" Indoor Cooling Coil* 85 ft. of Refrigerant Tubing* Plus Heating and Cooling Thermostat! 'Refrigerant added at factory, no extra charge Regular Separate Prices Total $445 Cools at 20,000 BTITs Per Hour Don't wait until June or July to air condition your home! Do it now while the savings are big at Sears. Weil help you prepare for it today and make all the installation arrangements. When the first heat wave hits, your home will be fully air-conditioned! SAVE *61 Air Conditioning for Larger-Sized Homes Same outfit as above, except larger size. 32,000 BTU’s per hour. Cools and drives out stifling humidity! $ z a Count on Sears depend- “t“t y able, quality performance ina.n^ summer after summer. Extra Regular Separate Prices Total $510. Systems Rated Per A.R.I. Standard 210 SPRING FURNACE AND DUCTWORK SALE CALL DOES IT ALL ESTIMATE MATERIALS • INSTALLATION • FINANCING At Sean the Only Qyettion fa... When Do You Want It Installed? • All Sears “600” furnaces complete with Honeywell controls and large blowers sized for comfort air conditioning • Exclusive LIFE-CLAD ceramic-coated heat exchanger for long-life, resists burnout, rust for greater efficiency. $179.05 Sears “800" 75,000 BTU Space-Saver Furnaces 15-YEAR GUARANTEE: Free repair and replacement, at our option, if heal exchanger fails within 1 year of sale. Pay regular SAVE $20 159 95 •-----» — ,---- -----■ yww* vi oeaav. a mj ivguios current price during next 14 yean, subtracting Hath of price for each remaining full year on guarantee. After first year, installation extra. NO MONEY DOWN No Monthly Payment Until Oct. 1.1860 on Sean Modernizing Credit Plan You Can Count on Us...Quality Costs No More at Sears 8 MW Sears Has Everything for Easier Lawn Care 3-HP Rotary Mower with No-Pull Starter, Just'Turn the Handle and Away You Mow ON SALE! • Powerful 3-HP, 4-cyde engine handles tough mowing with ease • AD engine controls mounted on handle; choke, run, idle and off Mowing your lawn this summer will be a breeze with this rugged Craftsman lawn mower. Big 20-in. width-of-cut for fast, easy mowing. S quick-type height adjustments from Vi to 3 in. high. Steel housing with side discharge. 7 Vi xl Vi-in. rubber-tired wheels make pushing almost effortless. Come in Today and See Our Complete Selection of Power Mowers Priced as Low as $27.99 Speed Torque-Control Drills FREE! 7-pc. drill bit set and 3-pc. screwdriver bit set when you buy cither Craftsman Electric Drill at Seers regular km, low price. 1/4-in. Drill with 1/5-HP Motor, Speed Range 0 to 2400-RPM 19.99 3/8-fa. DrBIwS» 1/4-HP Motor, Speed Range 0 to I200-RPM 22.99 NO MONEY DOWN on Anything You Buy on Credit at Sears Craftsman 6-Pc. Torch Kits Sears Low Price Torch, extra cylinder, blow torch head, flame apreader,: paint scraper, soldering Up. 2-Heat Soldering Gob Kite Sean Low Price *7 Craftsman 100 and 130-watt heats. 3 soldering dps, 2 soldering aids, solder, and case. Top Your Home with Sears Smart, Rugged and Dependable Roofing Materials Only ... Installation Arranged, Guaranteed by. Sean 20% Off Pure asphalt (no fillers) is used over an extremely absorbent felt base for a heavier, stronger shingle. The pure asphalt also holds the mineral granules better to give superior resistance to weathering. Choose from many beautiful decorator colors at Sears. Call today for free estimate. ON SALE Sears Aluminum Siding for Years and Years of Beautiful Protection Materials Only ... Installation Arranged, Guaranteed by Sean 20% Off 10-Year Guarantee an Sean Aluminum Siding When installation is ar- , ranged through Sears, if any defect should occur in siding or workmanship within 10 years of application, we will, repair or replace, at our option and charge only for use received by prorating the regular price at time of replacement. 20-Year Guarantee an Sears Healing When installation is arranged through Sean, if roof leak should develop because of any defect in roofing shingles or workmanship within 10 yean of application, we will repair or replace, at our option, free. Pay regular current price for such repair or replacement during next 10 yean, subtracting l/240th of price for each month remaining on guarantee. Tired of cracking shingles, peeling paint, weather-scarred brick? Modernize your homewith Sears Aluminum Siding for long-term protection, beauty and economy. The insulating qualities of aluminum will help reduce fuel and air conditioning costs. Available in seven rich colors and white. SAVE on White-Finish Guttering Beauty and wcatherability that’s more than skin-deep: tough-acrylic enamel, bakcd-6n sturdy, rust-proof aluminum guttering for years of easy care use. $1.95 26 ga. Galvanized Guttering 1.38 $2.69 Natural-Finish Aluminum. .2.15 10-ft. Ea vest rough Regular $3.35 269 SAVE on Sears Iron Railings, Columns Here's decorative beauty that adds safety to your porch. Electrically welded for extra strength. Won’t sag or shift. Adjustable to stairs slope. Use them inside your home for decorative purposes. $12.99 8-fb Comer Columns... .11.44 Regular $7.19 \ icy fqr Foot in 6-Foot Lengths We Have a Complete Selection of Railing Accessories Like addtag another room to your houwl £tofcoots, outdoor ymHfrt plain htai^pftbtipoSkiilty^M or the Hazing hot can with tin attractive,: protective patio cover. In the winter you’ll have atm protection and ionfa tfUcc. ftapkr $134.95 ... Natnni FtoUh lQr »f (^*U^^ik|ppiTi- kepfcr tlSMJ.WNMHatt MH20- •u (17*:io^per^JL)«1340Q rs-yam am.iZd- _^a - _ —n.-- u a— a ^ -*• kOTP n^ni HHp WHD HWIHb mm iwwoq SAVE *12" Sears Aluminum Insulating Door with Extra-Strong Frame Regular $52.50 39" Natural FUdk $64.50 Fashionable White Finish 48.99 Add grace to your entrance way. A strong 114 -in. frame, shockproof welded corners, full-length piano binge are your assurance that this door will hang straight and true. Insulated to help reduce fuel and air conditioning costs. Complete with Fiberglas® screening, insulated kickplate, hydraulic closer, lock. $36.95 1-in. Aluminum Door.. .29.99 Other Doors as Low as 19.99 SAVE *3* Sears Aluminum Insulating Combination Windows Regular $13.95...Up to /^qq lOf Combined Indies M*'*' (Height phis Width) V , Natural Finish - $20.50 White-Finish Windows 16.44 These durable windows seem to take care of themselves. Aluminum frames can’t warp like wood, can’t rust Windows tilt inside for easy cleaning. Wool-pile weather stripping protects in summer and winter. Fiberglas®screening. Shade-N-ViewAwning8 trol the Amount of Sunlight teas,and the mwt, trim 1 364m Wide | m itojlwiim amnfags aJggpgpg NO MONEY DOWN, No Monthly Payment* Until October 11060 on flnarn many Pai~mnnt Plan frnrTnnilntlTa1*'*'"—" .. A MWBBSW 11 WOT RESISTANT no Mop, water or detergent merles, COMPLETELY WASHABLE wipes clean with damp sponge, has super wearabititi^^^ COLORFAST lovely colors won i nH9| MVp llwff Drlgru, SATIS _ SEMIGLOSS Hjfc, . _ Choose from Z7 Beautiful Qtmiiufhe Exclusive Se^W-fay GuaranleedH * m GUARANTEE!) latex flat Oil(‘i'i()f‘ fi'fdl j)(lOit ONE GALLON X875W mmuhimw » FEDERAL GOII GUARANTEE If one gallon fails to cover any color with just one coat when applied at a rate not to exceed 450 sq. ft. per gallon, or fails to. be colorfast or washable wrhen washed as directed, or.fiftls. to resist spotting from soap, water or detergent, we will furnish free additional paint to assure coverage or refund complete purchase price. Our 9-inch Goldcoat Latex Paint Roller Sets- Regular $3.69 2^^ Our recommended tools, for best application of this 4-way guaranteed interior Udex paint. Large tray holds 3< SAVE $1" Sears Best Latex Flat Interior Paint An exclusive acrylic formula, made just for Sears, is the secret to a beautiful decor that you’ll be proud of. It’s guaranteed, too. Contains 59% more hiding pigment (titanium dioxide) than our leading polyvinyl acetate latex paint. It flows on fast with hardly a splatter. Dries in M hour so you can use your rooms the same day. Lead free. Regular $6.98 Our 4«Wdy Guaranteed Satin Finish 2 Color match our latex flat for your trim and woodwork. Gives smooth, velvety finish. Takes many scrubbings. Siliconized for dirt resistance._____ 49 Quart charge: All Your Painting Needs on Sears Revolving Charge old Booth farm. It b adjacent to Harry D. Hoey Hall, the administration huilding named for the independent school’s immediate past headmaster. At the other end of the quad are thethree dormitories and,'on Lone Wnei the dining tall. A portion of the seen at the extri now has an em students, foanfal CEANBROOK SCHOOL -7 Fronting tone Pine in Bloom-field Hills, Cranbrook for Boys b one of the six institutes built on the former estate of George G. and Ellen Booth, the tower near the center of the picture originally was the Silo oh the Cranbrook Academy of Art buildings can ,bt pme right. Cranbrook School, opened in 1927, roiiment of 290. With classes averaging 1$ nook instructors stress individual instruc- The Weather THE PONTIAG ^PR VOL. m — NO. ★ ★ ★ ★ ir PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1066 —70 PAGES ;DA,PsScWDTW°MAt Missing Man Turns Up Vfoundedj Pontiac Blames Waterford for Delay on Poilution Talk Pontiac city: officials claimed last night any deli in arranging a meeting between Waterford Township and the city to' discuss pollutiqp problems was the fault of the township. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. charged that meetings have been set up and twice 2 found Slain in Detroit Bar DETROIT UR — The bodies of a man and woman, bath bound and shot, here found today hi the VerdkBar on Detroit's near North Side. Police identified the victims as Ann Slazenger, 45, night barmaid and Edmund Thompson, 4), a. porter. In Today's Press The commission action and Taylor’s comments came in reply, to public comments by township officials over the city’s request last week for a report township efforts to combat pollution in the West End Storm Drain. Sewer Pact City gets revised agreement on Galloway system — PAGE B-9. Wings Win Triumph over Black Hawks puts Detroit in Stanley Cup finals—PAGE E-l. State Fishing New series examines industry’s fight foe life — PAGED* Area News .......... A-4 Astrology ....,..4...,E4 Bridge ...............E-8 China Series .........B-8 ale ....F-7 ......JM ........ A4 Food Section, D-t, D-5, D-ll Markets .............E-H Obituaries ...........F-l Sports ......... E-l-E-4 Theaters 4...... E4 TV-Radio Programs ..F-7 Wilson, Earl........F-7 Women's Pages B-l—B-4 delayed by the township. "We’re still waiting for them to indicate a time for a meet- They got the report, but town-ship officials let It be known they were irked at the asking. NOTIME Township Trustee William Dean Jr complained Monday, "They (city commissioners) haven’t'found time to meet with us on mutual problems.’’ The city had indicated concern over township pollution of the county storm drain Bat feeds into Be city’s Crystal Lake. Untreated waste water and septic tank effluent from a portion of the township is Be target of the city. An existing agreement with the township calls for this eastern section in the township to have sanitary sewers and for the city to treat the sewage. 2 MILES OF SEWERS The township reported that plans for the roughly two miles of sewers are 70 per cent complete. , Prompted by questions, City Engineer Joseph E. NelpUag said sewers in the West. End Drain area would complete work under an agreement Bat (Continued on Page 2,'tJ5lT7) WASHINGTON UP) — Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara said today the nation’s' military strength is so great that it has been able to commit 325,000 men to the Viet Nam war without calling up Reserves or controlling the economy. "No other nation in his- TWISTED NEIGHBORHOOD-This aerial wwwm view shows the Overland Park, Kan., neigh- tary school at left and hit the homes across borhood which was struck by a tornado yes-.» the street. An estimated two dozen homes terday. The funnel skipped by the elemen- / were destroyed or damaged.; Damage Tops $1.5 Million Fierce Spring Storm Slackens By Be Associated Press A odd and violent spring storm showed signs of weakening today after lashing portions of the West, northern Rains and the midlands. It brought snow, frost and freezing temperatures, hall, rain, strong winds and tornadoes that caused damage in excess, of $1.5 million. Three men wore killed In storm-related auto crashes in (fofanfoeat Wyoming and at least five persons suffered minor fojuries fa a tornado. A residential section of Overland Park, Kan., a suburb Just southwest of Kansas City, Mo., and Be Valley View sub-division of Lombard, 10., west of Chicago, suffered exteusive damage from die tornadoes yesterday. Other tornadoes touched down in rural areas of north Iowa. Thousands in the metropolitan larea of Kansas City, Mo., watched a slender funnel that dangled ominously from a dark, swift' moving cloud qfol was brilliantly outlined by a sunny sky near the horizon. The funnel darted suddenly Into a housing development, brushing an elementary school. As it struck the homes. Emory Holland, who was driving home from work, said he saw “sparks fly from the snapped power lines and the air was filled wiB debris/' There were no deaths. Five persons suffered minor injuries. Police Chief John Kenyon of Overland Park, who estimated the damage at over $1 million, said 35 houses suffered up to 50 par cent damage and 15 others were destroyed. The Katherine Carpenter Elementary School suffered minor wind damage. six hours later, tornado struck Lombard’s Valley View subdivision. There were no known fojuries. Police said mere than 20 homes were damaged or destroyed. Most of the homes damaged or destroyed in Overland Parte and the Lombard .area were Valued at 125,000 to 130,000, News Flash Vance Fonts, chairman of Be equalization committee of Be Oakland Comity Bond df Supervisors, said today that the estimated county equalized value figure of 32.08 billion previously projected in tho county’s tentative 1367 budget should stand up. A breakdown of Be county’s equalized valuation per municipality will be ready Friday, Fonts said, (for* rent county equalized value is 32.44 bilUon. Military Might in Work Begins on Hospital Children's Unit Gding Up at Pontiac State Ground, breaking for the 32-1-miHion childrens’ hospital hospital at Pontiafe State Hospital was scheduled for 1:30 p.m. today. the new facility, scheduled for completion .in September 1967, will contain 80 beds. It will be located west of /the main hospital. | ' 11 To be known' as Fair lawn Center, the new hospital will provide a comprehensive treatment program for emotionally disturbed children. The present children’s facilities in the main hospital complex, hospital officials said, are extremely crowded and fail to provide a suitable therapeutic environment. . , ,.} \*../ it it' The new building will provide four 20-bed residential units for well as day care facilities for another 40 children. DAYCARE Day care facilities wifi essentially service the immediate Pontiac and Oakland County area as these children win be It Be hospital only during regular school hours. The administration wing et Be new facility will accommodate most of Be professioa-al staff. Dr. Janies W, Johnson, presently director of Pontiac State Hospital’s Child Psychiatry Department will be director of the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) tory has ever been so strong,” McNamara said. "In history, never has any other nation—and never has the United States — carried such great military strength with so little burden on its society.’’ McNamara made only brief mention of Viet Nam and SouBeast Asia fa a statement to Be Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He devoted the bulk of hjs statement to arguments in support of the administration’s 3917-million military aid program to allies and friends around the worid. But McNamara was certain > face tough qiiestkming on Viet Nam policy from members of the committee who have been critical ot the administration’s conduct qf the war. CRITICIZES FORD McNamara’s came a day alter Senate Republican Leader* Everett M. Dirk-said „, House Republican Leader Gerald A Ford “went pretty far” when Ford charged the administration with “shocking mismanagement” of the war. . ‘In what respect is . it shocking?” Dirksen asked at ERIE (AP) -.Missing Sou% field caterer Robert B. Rosen-, berg staggered into a mote] near the. Ohio border early to*, day with a gunshot wound in fas back. State Police said Rosenberg, welj-tordo 32-year-old father of four who disappeared Good Friday, had been kidnaped but that where and when he whs shot was unknown. boys andjft% under ageII as a news conference'yesterday. ’Who ate Be shockers?’ (Continued on Page 2, Gil. 1) Caterer Said Staggers Into Motet: • Near Ohio Border J • Incoherent after collapsing at the motel, Rosenberg was taken to Mercy Hospital in Monroe . and placed wider surgery. The hospital reported ( his condition “serious but not critical.” Police organized an tonne*, diate search for abductors who, they said, may have fled into (Bio. The FBI kept in touch wiB state and Heal police. Rosenberg, last heard from in a mystifying telephone cqtt to his home, walked dazedly to the Silver Blue Motel on Telegraph! Road at 1:20 a.m. The motel contacted police. ‘NO DOUBT’ Cpl. Edmund Burke of ihe Erie State,Police post said there “wasn’t any doubt” that Rosenberg had been a victim of abductors. Burke said Rosenberg had marks on 1 his wrists a a d ankles, indicating he had been trussed up, and also a growth efhfoira. Rosenberg’s wife,' Joyce, 30, went from the family home to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) * Showers Forecast for Tonight Showers and thundershowers forecast- for tonight wffi give Bat new grass sped a good soaking, just right for sprouting. Rainfall is expected to end to-morrow. Temperatures will continue mild with lows of 55 to 60 40-night and bigbs of 55 to 64 tomorrow, thim become cooler. Showers during the day and night yesterday measured 4 of ahfaoh. Friday’s outlook fa parity . cloudy and cooler. Southerly morning winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour will shift to northwest tomorrow. A balmy 69 was the low recording prior to • mm. in downtown- Pontiac. The mercury had roomed up to 72 fay 1p.m. tion geared to preparation for college. The Cranbrook build-fogs were desipiad by the foie Eliel Saarinen. - A-* THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, load U S Planes Bomb Closer to Key Port of Haiphong SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. Navy bombers edged closer to Haiphong Tuesday fa) the third straight day of raids on North Viet Nam’s vital Red River Delta, blasting a railroad bridge 10 miles north of the country’s chief port, A U.S. spokesman said one span of the bridge was destroyed. Four Soviet-built surface-to-air missiles were fired at the attackers but missed their marks, the spokesman reported* today. Three other UA jets were lost elsewhere over North Viet Nam in the past 24 hours, raising the number of American planes shot down since the raids began IS months ago to 21). One of the piiotk was rescrad in a blaze of enemy fire. The other two were presumed 'captured or dead. In the south, Viet Cong raiders damaged two big U.S. Air Force Hercules troop transports in a hit-and-run attack on a small airfield in the central highlands but caused no casualties. Officials said the four-engine planes could be repaired. LITTLE CONTACT AHied forces reported little other contact with the Communists as the lull in the ground war continued. Only South Ko-. rean forces reported a brush o£, i any. significance, in .a surfdep on 'The central coast.' A grenade thrown by a motorcyclist wounded a Vietnamese woman and two children on a Saigon street tonight. Police said the target apparently was a small U.S. billet, but the grenade exploded in an alleyway instead. The terrorist escaped. political turmoil continued in the northern part of the country despite the truce between the government and Buddhist leaders. An estimated 3,000 Roman Catholics marched on the outskirts of Da Nang, charging the Buddhist antigovemment ‘ 'U.S. Strengik Tops' (Continued From Page One) Dirksen also said “Yea don’t demean the chief magistrate of year country at a time like this when the war is on. Yea stand ap and be counted.” Man Turns Up Shot in Back Ford had no comment on Dirksen’s statements, but told newsman he thinks “we’ve got McNamara on the run.” McNamara did not elaborate in his testimony on the 325,000 figure. But he evidently meant the 240,000 U.S. servicemen in Viet Nam, some 60,000 with 7th Fleet ships operating off Viet Nam, some 13,000 in Thailand and thousands of others on Guam where BS2 bombers are stationed. (Continued From Page One) the Monroe hospital upon being informed by police. Only yesterday Mrs. Rosenberg had expressed fear her husband had met with foul play. Her last word from him had been a telephone call from him the night of his disappearance in which she said he toUTof being “held" but cautioned her not to call police. FOUR CHILDREN The Rosenbergs have four children. The family lives fa) a —*635000 home in Southfield. Rosenberg owns Rosenberg’s Holiday Catering of Oak Park. Cpl. Burke said Rosenberg was incoherent when police reached him at the motel. However, he tokl of being “kidnaped and shot and tied up and blindfolded,” Burke said. He collapsed upon entering the motel, Burke said. The motel is near Temperance and 2Vi miles north of the OMqUne. EXAMINATION Burke said that from hasty examination it was impossible to tell when Rosenberg had been shot but that the wound “didn’t appear to be new.” The kidnapers apparently dumped Rosenberg out of their car, Burke said. Mrs. Rosenberg said yesterday she was breaking a pledge of secrecy to the. FBI in disclosing details of her husband’s disappearance. , Three days after the caterer’s disappearance, Detroit police found his convertible car near the downtown Detroit district. Rosenberg’s empty wallet and papers were found strewn fa) the car. “We have increased our mobility, firepower and total strength to the point where now we can have 325,000 men assigned to combat operations in Southeast Asia without calling up the Reserves, without imposing wage-price controls, and without material allocations in the civilian, economy, and with military budget in relation to Gross National Product that lower than in any one of the five years 1M0-1964,” McNamara said. While citing U.S. military strength, McNamara said the United States needs the military power represented by its nllies and friends around the edge of the Iron Curtain and the Bamboo Curtain. “It would be unbearably costly to the United States in both money and human resources to maintain a credible force by itself along all of the great arc of forward positions to the west, south and east of the U.S.S.R. and Red China,” McNamara said. Testifying before television cameras in a crowded hearing room, he told the committee that U.S. military aid provides essential arms, training and related support to some five million men fa) allied and other friendly forces “who help us hold the line against aggression” in all forms. Municipql Employes Union Seeks Election City Manager Joseph A .Warren disclosed last night that the Pontiac Municipal Employes Association has filed with the State Labor Mediation Board for a representative election. The association seeks to represent salaried employes. The Weather Fall U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Showers and thunder- storms and continued mild today, highs 66 to 74. Occasional showers and thunderstorm* tonight with little temperatare change, lows 55 to 66. Thursday, showers ending and taming cooler, highs 55 to 64. Southerly winds 16 to 21 miles today and tonight shifting to northwest Thursday, Friday: partly clondy and cooler. WlnS Velocity It r One Year Aft la Pantiae Tueaday-t Temperature Chart Alpena 52 50 Fart Worth U Detroit 44 55 Jacksonville U • Eicanaba 47 40 Kansas City 7* ; Gr. RapMs 64 51 Los Angelas 45 | 44 13 Mutafflla 74 , 41 M Miami Saadi 7S .. .___ S3 47 Milwaukee M ‘. Muskegon 40 n New Orleans 71 i 70 54 s. Francises M 44 44 Seattle 41 14 H Tanya “struggle committee" in the northern city with responsibility for a grenade blast that wounded tour persons Monday night. Two of the injured were Catholics. In Quang Ngai, 80 miles south of Da Nang, a mysterious explosion Tuesday at the headquarters of the Viet Nam National People’s party killed three persons and wounded four after a clash'between armed Buddhists and supporters of the Conservative party. The raid near Haiphong followed up an attack by Navy bombers on the Uong Bi power plant 14 miles northeast of the city Monday night On Sunday Air Force fighter-bombers hit two missile sites, 15 and 17 miles south of Hand, and knocked out a major highway bridge linking Haiphong and Hanoi, 60 miles to the west. phong-Hanoi area reported that highway traffic between the cities had been virtually halted, the spokesman said. / The Navy pilots returning from the new raids on the Hai- other Air Force and Navy jets battered i wide range of communication targets up and down* the North Vietnamese panhandle. Pilots reported cutting roads In 10 places, cratering a river ford, destroying an antiaircraft position and a highway bridge and blasting four truck parks. , « . STUDENTS SACK EMBASSY - Indonesian students haul away mattresses atop a Red Chinese car preparatory to .burning them after sacking the Peking regime’s embassy in Jakarta. Yesterday, the students sacked and burned the Chinese consolate in Jakarta. jSome of the students were of Chinese descent and were demonstrating resentment with Peking's -antagonistic policy toward the new Jakarta government. Mon Held in Attack on Woman A 43-year-old Pontiac Township woman was beaten, cut on the face, and raped yesterday in her home' according to Oakland County Sheriff’s officers. Sheriffs detectives said a suspect in the assault was apprehended later yesterday and is being held for questioning at the county jail. The victim, who lives alone and is unmarried, is reported in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Detective Alphonse Anderson said, however, the woman was still in a state of shock and unable to give Information other than her own name. JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Indonesian students have occupied Communist China’s deserted consulate in Jakarta after ransacking it again. More than 10Q members of the snti-Communist student organization Kami took over the building Tuesday, burned remnants of furniture and bundles of papers in the yard and painted anti-Chinese slogans on the walls. Pontiac Patrolman Charles A. Lindeberg, who arrested the suspect at North Perry and East Walton about 4 p.m., said the man bore scratch marks on both arms. (Continued From Page One) children’s facility which will FINDS SHOTGUN In addition, Lindeberg said he found a 16-gauge shotgun underneath a blanket in the rear of the car and a 38-caliber starter’! pistol in the glove compartment. Deputies who answered the call said they found the back door window of the victim’s home broken out. Entering the home, they discovered the victim bound with a clothes line, her face bloodied. Telephone wires to the home had been cut, and a butcher knife and pocket knife were lying on the floor near' the victim, according to deputies. Hospital Drive to End Toddy The closing dinner and final report meetingof the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund Campaign will be at 6:30 p. m. today at the Pontiac Elks Temjfle. More than 400 volunteers are Expected to attend and hear the results of their efforts in behalf of the hospital. The campaign started nearly a year ago. Since then, more than 1,618 waiters from the Pontiac area have participated fat the drive by serving Presiding at tonight’s meeting will be E. M. Estes, a General Motors vice president and general manager of the Chevrolet Motor Division. He formerly headed the Pontiac Motor Dtvi- NATIONAL WEATHER •— Showers and thundershowers wiB spread from the lower Mississippi Valley into New England tonight It will be cooler in the central part of the nation and milder to the Southeast and in the Plateau states Estes, who will call Upon committee chairmen for final reports, said he expected that the minimum goal of |U5 million would bo exceeded. Indonesia Students Move Into Red Chinese Embassy Work Is Begun Today on State HospitalFacility They said the Jakarta military command had given them permission tb use the consulate as a headquarters. The Chinese left only servants in the building after a student mob sacked it for the first time a month ago. The students said the servants offered no resistance. SECOND ACTION The seizure of the consulate building was the second anti-Chinese action in the Indonesian capital in four days. About 2,000 Indonesians of Chinese descent ransacked the Chinese Embassy in another part of the city last Friday. The attack brought a stiff protest from Pelting. function as a division of the state hospital. Dr. Charles Hoyt will head the adolescent section of the new facility and Dr. Lorraine Awes will d ir ec t the day care program. EXISTING FACILITIES Fair lawn Center will complement existing children’s facilities at Pontiac State Hospital which serves a 10-county area. Officials of the state hospital feel that Fairlayvn Center will provide a program in child psychiatry comparable to any in the nation when planned staff Increases are realized. Scheduled to participate in the brief ground-breaking ceremony were hospital officials, representatives of various organizations devoted to helping children, city and county officials and representatives of the State Departmenfcof Mental Health. Area Accidents Fatal to Two Man Killed in Troy, Boy Dies in Shejby Oakland Highway Toll in ’66 42 A Royal Oak man was killed in a two-car collision yesterday on South Boulevard near Liver-noisinTrqy. Virgil E. Lazarus, 69, died after his car collided with one driven by Hector M. Couvreuer, 68, of Grosse Pointe farms. Couvreuer is in fair condition and his passenger, Mrs. Elizabeth Cote, 49, of St. Clair Shores is in satisfactory condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Troy Police are still investigating the accident. In a Shelby Township accident ast night one boy was killed and four others injured fat ' two-car collision at 23 Mile and Mound. Mark Campagna, 13, of 3139 Bloomcrest died several hours after the car in which he was riding collided with a car driven by George A. Hiveley of 50505 Shelby, Shelby Township. Township police said Mark’s father, Oraiio P. Campagna, was driving a group of Boy Scouts home after a meeting when the accident occurred. Admitted to St. Joseph’s Hospital, Mount Clemens, where Joseph Fiore, 13; of 53910 Sophia, Utica, Randy Kush, 12, and his brother Philip, 11, both of 53207 Bruce Hill, Shelby Township. A fifth boy, Timothy Rohr, 11, of 3282 Lakeside, Shelby Township was treated and released. Hiveley, his daughter, Cindy and wife, Barbara were also treated and released. board of education last night awarded a $195,672 contract for 31 new school buses and npaved the way for the letting of construction bids on a new elementary school. Hie school buses will be pur-chased from Matthews-Har-greaves Chevrolet Co. of Pontiac, lowest of five bidders. Cost of the vehicles will be carried on a title-retaining contract with one-quarter of the total cosf being paid end) year for four years In purchasing the buses, the school board is replacing nearly one-half of its transportation fleet. The order includes 25 replacements and six additional buses. Arrival of the new buses, expected before the start of the 1966-67 school year, will raise the school system’s total number of vehicles to 64. FINAL PLANS The board last night also approved final plans for a new three-unit elementary schoo* Police said the accident still under investigation. Strong anti-Cottununist and anti-Chinese sentiments have swept Indonesia since (he pro-Peking Indonesian Communist party backed an unsuccessful coup attempt last Oct. 1. Peking was accused of supplying arms | to some of the Communist rebels. Foreign Minister Adam Malik Said “an excess of the people’s wrath” was responsible for the anti-Chinese outbursts and the strained relations between Indonesia and China, the official news agency An tars reported today. ’This ,is natural if we relate these excesses to the present situation of Indonesian society,” Malik told representatives of Christian students. IMPLICATION Malik did not explain further but implied Communist activities in the country were responsible for the anti-Chinese outbursts. Chinese dominate much of Indonesia’s big business an most of its middle-class shops. 2 in City Head Penal Group Two Pontiac-based men have been named to head the Mteh(-g a n Corrections Assocation, which concluded its annual three-day convention in Grand Rapids today. Theodore W. Bly, senior parole agent was elected association president last night, succeeding Joseph DeAgostine of Detroit. Morris Shaw, district supervisor of probation in Pontiac, Was named vice president. Both have offices at 134k W. Bly lives in St. Clair Shores, and Shaw, at 6353 Canmoor, Troy. M e r w i n S. Kircher, deputy warden of Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson, was named secretary, and parole officer Theodore Koehler of Lansing was elected treasurer. Birmingham Area News Pontiac Firm Awarded Contract for 31 Buses BLOOMFIELD HILLS - The designed by Linn Smith Asso- Expected to cost $1,096,000, the unit is to be completed by June 1067. Bidding information on the building will be released next week dates of Birmingham. capacity for 159 young- sters, the school is to be Jtailt on the south side of Long Lake Road across from Kirk-in-the-Hilli. BIDS EXPECTED are expected to be ^warded in the near future on both the new elementary school and the district's second high school, to be constructed on Lahser. These two buildings, along with a new bus garage which is now on the drawing boards, will use up the last of the funds in a 67.6-million building package approved hy district property owners in 1964. As those funds are used, school officials will begin to put to work portions of the Ill-million bond issue approved earlier this month. Stall Blamed on Waterford (Continued From Page One) saw such work begin nearly 29 years ago. Neipling also said that the entire pollution problem of Crystal Lake would not be solved, but that the bulk of the problem would be. West Bloomfield Township firemen remained on the job today despite a threat to walk out at noon if their demands for higher wages were not met. ‘There are other elements,” said Neipling, “but this will help isolate remaining problems. STRONG STAND The city engineer added that there was every evidence that the township was taking a strong stand on the need for sewers. Neipling also disclosed that the city hat not yet initiated investigation of the separate problem of alleged pollution of tile north side of Sylvan Lake He said the city was charged with the responsibility of investigating Sylvan Lake pollution from storm drain outlets from Pioneer Highlands subdivision, located west of Telegraph. Hie firemen are asking a salary increase from $5,900 to $6,-500 for men with two years' service. Revision of the pension plan is.also under discussion, according to Evans. * Preliminary tests in the fall of 1964 and early 1965 showed some pollution from three storm drain outlets along James K at Tilden, Josephine and James K Court. - The initial tests by the city showed the foreign matter in tiylvan Lake might be worse than those found in the city’s Crystal Lake. Senate OKs Vehicle Check by State Police LANSING (UPT)—Spot motor vehicle checks by State Police troopers on Michigan highways may be in the offing if a bill authorizing such check* can pass the House and get approval of Gov. Romney. f The measure cleared the Sen-ate yesterday with unanimous, 29-0, approval Under provide** of the bill state policemen would be authorised to stop an/ motor vehicle on Michigan highways and make checks for working brake*, lights, flasher signals and safe tires. Sen. Stanley Rozycki, D-De-troit, sponsor of the bill Shad chairman of the Senate Highway Committee, called the mea-a “key to the traffic safety campaign.' jm support for a compulsory motor vehicle inspection. Itowever, such tests according, to some senators, would be too costly, about $10 for each inspection. Another hill, to provide closer analysis of traffic accident reports, also passed. The bill would require all police agencies throughout the state to report traffic accidents uniform reputing form to State Police headquarters in East Lansing. The bill passed, EH), and went to the House. . Romney has, expressed allowed until the motorists obtains insurance coverage with another firm. Another attempt was expected today to win approval for a to protect motorists whose insurance companies became insolvent by allowing them to draw on the .iminsured me vehicle accident claims fund. Hm protection would'only be The Senate also passed a bin, 994, making it a felony subject to a possible four-year jail sentence to strike a policeman. reprehensible” for a policeman to strike a citizen. He offered an amendment to the toll to also make it a felony for a policeman to strike a citizen. The amendment failed. * The measure cleared the Senate over the objections of three lawmakers who argued the same penalty should be leveled to protect a citizen from “rough-em-up” tactics by policemen. “There’s nothing more reprehensible than striking a po-" w said Sen. Basil D-Highland Park. He said such action was a “slap to the face” to law and order. AMENDMENT FAILS But, he added, “it is equally Preliminary approval also was given to a series of bills to modernize the county coroner system. One measure would abolish the elected county coroner system and require physicians be appointed to the posts as medical examiners. Two bills exempting the Public Health Department from liable suits also were passed. Howevek, the bills • do apply where “the damages were sustained as a result of negligence by the health officer” other rhaaltii department W. Bloomfield Firemen Stay on Their Jobs The five full-time firemen and 11 volunteers who issued the >atum have scheduled a meeting with the township fire committee at 7:39 p.m. next 1 Tuesday, according to their attorney, Frederick Evans of Keego Harbor. They’ll remain at their posts at least until next Wednesday, Evans safal. The attorney said the fire committee is scheduled to- present the firemen's demands to the full Township Board tonight LESS THAN $6499 “These men don’t want to resign,” Evans said, “but you can’t expect a man to raise a family on less than $6,000 in this day and age.” Evans was optimistic about the chances for a settlement, saying that he believes the committee is bargaining “in good faith.” Township voters April 4 defeated a two-mill proposal which would have provided additional funds for tne fire and police departments. Waterford Girl Hit by Car Said Critical A 6-year-old Waterford Township girl was critically injured yesterday when struck by a car in front of her home at 777 Scott Lake. Schedule to undergo surgery today in Pontiac General Hospital is Gwen Lewallen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walton Lewallen. * * According to the driver of the V, Twylah J. Kugler, 35, of IMS Hira, Waterford Township, the girl was standing alongside the road, then suddenly ran into the street "p m£ a ( J J 1 I j I THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, /HOOVER PAGES A—11 Urges Cavanagh 1Recognize N. DETROIT (UPI) - Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh, pushing his candidacy for the United States yesterday to recognise States Senate, urged the United the North Vietnamese government and help Red China get a seat on die United Nations Security Council. Cavanagh called for a , fire in South Viet Nam, creation of political parties under U.S. prodding if necessary, a free election and U.S. support of whatever government is chosen, even if it is dominated by the Viet Cong. He likened his position te that of former President John F. Kennedy end said the UJ. should help fautttnte social reforms in Sooth Viet Nun even if the country chooses n Communist government “This is not the time to disarm the American military or withdraw from our base abroad," Cavanagh said in a position paper distributed at a news conference. ★ •* .0 “But we must recast our thinking about the size of our commitment and the strength of the peril we face. We must offer m a i til a n d China a seat among the great powers on the United Nations Security Council.” Cavanagh said his position was more realistic than that of Gov. G. Mennen Williams, Gavanagh’s opponent in the Democratic primary race for the Senate. President Cavueugh “Hn supports JohnsOn’s policy,” Private Eyes * Introduced in Store M ij&ttp DETROIT (AP) — Things at discount department store tiave reached> the stage where you can’t tell the detectives from the shoplifters with a1 scorecard. Detroit police said the store hired several private police aft- ' being plagued by petty thefts. * * * Tuesday night, one of the private policemen saw a woman walking out of the store wearing a new pair of shoes he had seen tier put on earlier. He grabbed tier and called police, who discovered the woman was another secret agent from' the same agency as the man who had nabbed her. The woman said, she put on her new shoes because her 'feet got tired as she walked about the store. said ef WOUaus. “I have indicated what f support. If that makes me eppedte te Johnson’s position, so be it.” The mayor said he did not think U.S. forces should *pull out of Viet Nam. But he said the war should take a back seat to the war on poverty and other domestic projects. Cavanagh said the South Viet Nam cease-fire should be negotiated among the South Viet Nam government, North Viet Nam and the Viet Cong. ★ '.jr ★ He said recognition of North Viet Nam would be no more damaging to the United States than its recoghition of Yugoslavia. Williams said he saw “nothing of substance new in the mayor’s statement" Boy, 6, Lands Uninjured in Fall From Bridge CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) -‘Nothing hurts me! Nothing hurts me!” exclaimed Timothy Weinberg, 6, who landed on his feet after falling 40 feet from a bridge.* Timothy was trying to walk a railing on the bridge when he fell off Tuesday police reported. He was treated at a hospital for a scratch of the forehead and a slight abrasion on his left arm. Tobacco Exec Blasts Attacks Health of the Industry Sqid 'Never Better' RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - The health of’the , tobacco industry has never been better, says a tobacco company official. But “amaidngly it is under more vicious and more unwarranted attack than ever before in its Hfotory," the official said. ★ ★ W Speaking at the annual meeting of the Virginia State Cham* ber of Commerce, Addison Y. Yeaman said Tuesday night there are “forces in this country today who puritanically would deprive us of our freedom of choice to smoke or not to moke.” Yeaman, vice president and general counsel of Brown & Wjl-liamson Tobacco Corp., said, 'The thesis seems to be that anything you enjoy is either sinful or fatal or both.” RELATED TO HEALTH’ The burden of the attack, he said, is that the cigarette is “in-some undisclosed and unknown way casually related to human health.” “Whp has the greatest possible interest in the truth, whatever the truth may be, about tobacco and human health?" he asked. “We do,” he said “It is our livelihood, our lives and our pride.” A severe itching eruption covering moot of the body appeared suddenly in five members of a family. After considerable sleuthing, a doctor found that the mother had washed a pair i fiber. of glass curtains in a| machine along with the family BRAND9TADT i of glass fiber thereby became fanprenated in the family’s clothing and produced the itch which is said to be worse than that of woolen under garments. That is what might be called learning about modem hazards the hand way. This should serve as a warning not to go and do likewise. . Qlc Box Ol ££82* Bath OO* Size ZO ■ Bleaches'Whiter , STARDUST 79* :';U / ■ THE PONTIAC PfcKSS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1966 M MEJ IV El L PA| niiL i 1 V LI 1 1 HI E—II Trade* Brisk at Opening MARKETS The following art top prlcttl covering uta of locally grown) produce by growers had told by I than in whoieoalo package lots. | Quotations are furnished by the) .... Detroit Bureau of Markets as of g^epafly’'higher Mond*y- (at the opening today In active trading. ‘ Mart Moves Generally Higher NEW YORK (AP)-The- stock Product mum i. Delicious, GoMsn, bu Apples, Maclntoah, party, bu. ... Apples, Meclnteeh, CA, bu. . Apples, Werthem ley. bu Apples, wuffcejp Shy, CA, bu. Apples. Mw Eart m. ;.... ^®vmsas • Beets, tepees, bu. ..... SrBJVv:::::::::::: Celery, Mai, at. .. .... ::: Parsnips, Celle Pak, dx. . Potetees, H to. ............. Bfrfffrw------------------J Rhuberb, hothouse. (S. box ........ Rhubarb, hothouse. SL bchs. .I Squash. Hubbard, bu..... * Turnips, topped, bu...... /l Poultry and Eggs Fractional gains predomi- Boeing weakness, however, losing 5Vb at 168 on a Mock of 11,000 General Motors rose % to 02% on 4,400 shares. DsreoiT aees eJWBMU1USS U S ): Whites Grade A |umbo 42 ■ "• extra larpe 4144; lane 4Mi modi 34-3)*, Snell JO-31) Browns Or ad) large J»*-40; mediums Ml smell CHICAGO TAP)—CMcego exchange — Sutter steady) h e lit e *• unchSnged'a^(>pi A Whiles 37*) 1 prk r Ore DSTRoff^^^Ueb 23 25-23 71;me .lot t and 2 tsTE M. veaters ton net eltabHshsd at !1:IS *’ggyff»t Peer Vf-liie lb,, ihyw lambs 00-27.05) tew I I lb. ahem la od slaughter e New York Central opened on 16,700 shares, up 1% at 67%. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: Chrysler, up % at 40% on 5,000 shares; American Telephone, unchanged at 57 on 8,700; and Pan American World Airway*, up % at 73% on 3,800. On openers of 2,000 shares, United Aircraft roae% to 06%; Ford rose % t o61%; Douglas Stock Exchange. Aircraft gained % at 102V4, and Santa Fe added % at 38%. ’ 4k. * ★ LorriHard advanced % to 54% on 2,200 shares. General Dynamics rose % to 64%. International Telephone edged up % at 77 on 1,200 shares. Tuesday the Associated Press average of 00 Stocks rose .3 to 348.0. Prices rose on the American Hie New York Stock Exchange Hlyy YORK (API—Following li ABC Can M ACF ind 142 AddlPtt 1.42 Admiral - a!U*cUm AllagLud 2.30 Aliagpw 1.14 *‘lSdC 1.22b llpdSIr 3 JO liaChal .75 . ..um Ltd .21 AlUM 1.40 Amarafa 142 AmAIrNn 1.25 m GtA&P _. MJ 3? ,7*Vb J GtWSug 1.60a 4 41* 41 Grayhnd M 14 Mb i GrumnAlrc I * aim on i___ GuM SUt .71 22 124* 125* 124* . — ipr 7 52 K “ 11 24* M14__ - 17 44* 441b 44* — Vb -lamPap 1.42 Harris fid .20 AmCyp MR 2 JO ----illCl.# A Bnka l.lOa j 5404 54* 54* + 4,11 172b 172b — .. 4 272b 17 17 +14 2 4414 44 44* + Vi HawPack .20 Hoff Slactron Hoik) Inn JO Holly Sua 1.20 Honaywl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.30 Houtt LP 1 Ankan Ch* ArmcoSt 1 10 1014 10W 10V4 + s 44 a « I irrrt 45 7324 73 7324 + * 12 2024 20'/, 20'* 150 57M 57 57* 31 35 34M M 35 3* 22*ft* . .. IS M Mb 54*+3* M 12024 Mi 10024 1 23 11 S|S 2024 t 41* 41* 4114 t MW 4424 45V4 12 r “ “ CHICAGO LI VS STOCK ■ CHICAGO (AP}-(y5DA)- Hagi 4J00) *'*«o Carp 1 1-2 1*0-220 lb. 2275-M.OtJ mlxtd 14 322- Avnat J0b 400 lb. towt 1*.50-20 25 . , |Auon Prod I rasa mg’zKtojOTtejy ijt high chalet and prlma abaa-* — I map 120) not onouoh at X,3"U IngtrRand 1 inland Sll 1 InterHcSt 141 MiSMlWI 4 JZ4 M KlWRjCPtt 5 KemCLd 2.60 KarrMc 1.30 KlmbClark 2 Bachman JO BtachAr .70b idfi How M Bandlx 2.40 Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Tha ca»h position I Brlggi »r Jt of tha Traaaury compared with eorra- BrlatMy 1.20a ‘pood,'vs,v «r --u a m. ksTm **'*BCJ—2.11I4SW2I.11 5 54J54M454JO Sultord °J0 ^^1.21.3* W,W-,*TS&7Y»rr-W.7«J5442..«|,“rrOOBh‘ ’ X TO,*mH§!743,U* 43 311.123,255.M0 S3 Cal Pktatll Gold Aisoti— Cal rack .90 13.422,177,253.2* 14,413,054,225.53 Calum Hoc 1 (X) - Inaudw M7*|MMMJ1 ICarnpRL .45a tub (act M ttatutory limit. Camp Soup 1 54 3424 3424 1424 + 3 1424 Mb 3424 .. 3 5414 5324 S4W + 32 MWufi 44 + 10 35* 31* 31* + 14 M'lb M- 9 1 » Mb... 24 MM MW 3524 — * 1 Ml 9 #24 + 24 220 17014 14724 17*24 -224 1 TOW TOW TOW + W 1 Mb Mi MW - W 2 442b 4Mb Mb WWfi 2 4724 4724 4724 . - 144 1I0W lOOVk 10024 - W M 10* W* W* + * 12 7i 7424 7424 | 10 1024 1124 12W | 27W 27W 2724 LOFGli 2 50a EBB?? Llonal Corp Litton Ind .IvInoaO .431 LockhdA 2.20 Loews Theal LonaSCam 1 Lon* SO* 1.12 LonglaLt l.Ot .orlllard 2.50 S 514 514 JV4 2 2714 27W 27W + 173 56* S5V4 55* - .1 WW 1*24 1*24 . 22 3214 3124 1124- American Stock Exch. CprtorW .40* Cbm ji cStorTr 1.20 ColannaCp 2 • Cancan* .30 2 op* iM. „ Carl-lead .20 CBBIMA 1.40 d Champs 2.10 Aaralat 50a i 12 ■ 22 . . CMMII IIP 1 A|2'm5,.IOO T 1124 1124 1124 «U *' PtC a— natrafA 7 iu tu 914 ... ChrlsCfl 1.10V , 2* ,A Z>i\ A20b 43 ... Chrysler 2 4 4 7-14 4W+1-14 CITJIn 1.40 I 524 M + W CltiafSvc 1 JO 1 2'A 224 + 24!ClevEIIH l.M L «lC mE 1 UTAPATnlp t M n ■ 1 MW wib low J 9L 6 » -r 22 4444 4424 4424 - 14 2014 - SO 2014 + 11 45'/* 4JV* 4J'A - II 5424 5M4 5414 + 10 MV4 WW 1*14 - 1* 5*24 5JH MW + 17 Mi 7124 7324 +1 MacyRH 140 85d Fe, 2J2e. MaomaC 3.60 Mijnjuy 1.25 Marathn 2.20 Mar MM 130 Marqupr JSa “iro Cm! 1 ...jrtlnMar 1 McOonA 60b Me Kata 1.70 Merck 1J0» Merrill Chap MlnarCh 1.20 ArkLaGat 1J0 Aaamara jagg Brown Co .4 Campb Chib Canto Pat Cdn Javelin Ctnoramo Cant Tal A Coni Tal A 74 S|W 2M SJ24 +1W Ctrywlda Rlly 4 TW "K ,2W + W pan. Sid i li 1124 11+ W sS* Data Cant Equity" Fargo Felmt _ gyrlBir 54 jW!l In 7'A 724+ Gan Plywd i(r im 1224 WW +-.- Gldht Yel 60a 21 1124 11W 1IW - W Goldfield 73 224 Mk 224 — W Gt Bas Pat 10 4 K |W Gulf Am Ld V t«L IM. Boarnar Boxaa .22 1 24W MW M2I Hycon Mfg 1*4 tT 1774 1*4 l tram Cure |f *1*. «a «*. M iiw ii i 112a - V McCrory wt 4 Maid John .41 44 Midi Sugar .Wo I. Motybdan 14 New Pk Mng 41 7 Pane*! Pot 44 2 4W 424 - 14 MW 1SH-M 424 Til L.- *]» C +T^ s c+* Con Edit 1.20 ConElednd 1 CnNGai 2.70 ConsPow 1.10 Contalnr 1.20 Coni Air . J| ’ Coni Can 2.40 . Cent Mot JO Coni MJMI Control Data SMB Bl<4 CorngGWk 2a Coxhdcas JO Crown Cork Cruc Stl 1.20 Scurry Rato Sbd W Air Signal OIIA Sparry R w „ MW - V4 42 Mb gw 2424 + 14 I Ml__________+ w I ___________bw.svi Syntax Cp JO 101 ItlW 1I0W WK Technical .75 7 WW l+ Hi, 1 Un Control JO M 424 426 426 - 14 Copyrighted by The Associated Prow W54 DanRIv 1.30b DaycaCa .50b liweTae Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1.10 QatEdlO 1.40 Del Steal .60 DlamAlk l.lt Dlanay .40b OougAlrc lb Bpw Cham 1 Drapar 1.20a Drat* Ind 1 DukePowar 1 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points art eighths tentative inter-dealer prlcat of ap BaktAIrL .15* 62 11 I Track ..............IU IM _____ Engineering ........ 17.6 WJ Cltixans Utilities Class A .31.1 SU Monroe Aula E gulp nut .......14J 14J Diamond CryoMT ............. UJ 14.1 KuWr GW . ................. ...SU 25.4 Mohawk Rubber Cu. ...........22.7 23.3 Delrax Chemical ........... Pioneer Finance ........... Sarran Printing ........... Scrip* .................... vemor’s Ginger AM ..........,. — — North Contra) Alrllno* Units . .IU IU ■“E i Chemical . ... — MUTUAL FUNDI Chemical Plaid . Keyitona Incoma K-l .. Kaystona Growth K-2 .. Man. Investors Growth MND^Invetlort Trait . Putnam Growth " . 10.»7 11.24 -.1+4 12-72 .. IMS 21J5 ST&K Burry, *0 .....• 14 Sm -MW : MW tt i Gas 1, I PW J I Mb Mb MW — 24 i nw Iiw mi-' ■ I *524 4B24 Mb- * ± w iff i*L *4. M I 1526 1524 3526 SS Mb Mb — W Mb MW 22V4 li * 30. 2*W M 13 6124 4226 ML ■ M itfw in - i® +*w 1 21 MW MW 4 3IW Mb Mb i ’^y + —E— EGliG .20 JPasqNG 1 I mar El 1.32 |riaLaSk RR 12 4526 4524 4526 * r iw * FedDStr f.BO Ferro Cp 1.M FlltroKp 2.40 Flrestna 1.20 MM 1.171 Pllntkota 1 Fie PL IJt —Z Cp 1J2 , JMol 2.42 itbraDalr .20 FF« L50 Gen Clo IM “-npyrim l „.l Bloc 2.40 Gan Fds 2Jt GanMIlls 1.42 Gan Mot J5a GanProc 1.20 '.PubSVC JM J PubUt 1.40 15'^'i1 * ,. Getty Oil .1* GllleHe 1.20 satss Goodyr 1.25 GraesCs l.M GranHCl 1.40 17 14W MW 1424 - 13 3024 2024 M4 - i 77W 7744 77W + W 6 06V4 56W 0444 + 24 40 512b nw J1W + 20 24W MW 26W + . nw nw nw J 2324 MW 2324 20 72 72 71 .1 54W MW -Mb 'ft R St 8* ft «w its R isU> 14 jf i 14- 1424 1 I Mb 1 7 5SW 4 tR: HI 34 S3 South Ry 2 Sparry Rai tBS&i Stoll Cal' 88T% —H— 5 Sbb MW 54W f.C. 1 T T r r w 14 Mb MM fe V ! P r r. 4 gW gW gW? 55 7W 7W 7W ... Xt 14W 14W 24W + ' 4 IIW M I ■ i nw nw nw - Staunch 1.40 SMrIDrug .00 tlavansjp 2 Sfudabak«rft Sun ray Uo Co 2 ToxE?m TexGSul .40 SBMUMtm 1 TtxPLd .150 ^iwftwftwi3* S 85 85 mi M MW 34W Mb +Wb ' S ffil 14 1024 10V4 1024 + II MWil I 57W 57 Mb + 1 12W 1224 K + 1 7424 7424 74*4 + 5 SW 5W JW ... M M tifw f tit Carbide 2 W!£ Tank 1 Unoilcal'uo UnltAIrt 1.40 “nhCorp .40a „.)I»KS» .15a UGasCp 1.70 OMMM lib USGypsm la US Indst .12s US Linas 2b ■—'Ijwd \A USSmad 50a bds-l HJah Law Last Cba. 14 5*4 55 5524 + W 115 23Vi 2324 MW 1 7524 75W 7524 4 7124 71W 71V4 7* 4224 4126 4M 1 M4 -7fW f«4 . .. 50 M4 45W >4524 + W 24 TOW 75 7IW + “ 2 4224 #W 4tW 4 .. I 47W 47W 471b + W 1* M 3726 M ' “ » 7324 nw nw » Mb si si. fe 85 nw -fl- . 4 27 Ml P II Mb MW MW 51 Mb W4 7PW 1 22 M H * 11424 115W 11526 . . . 10 23226 23226 23224 +1W J 4124 4224 4Mb — « 27 42 1224 42W 3 MW MW MW 6 432b GW 4224 inn n ... * USW 138W 112W +224 J 54W 5424 MW .. 23 *624 *4W *424 +1 44 I0W 2*24 W& +1 32 5424 54 6 - * 3414 34 34W — 14 MW M Mb + _ 15 1IW W W24 + W * “ ** + W I 4224 #24 424 + 37 424 4724 4724 4 Investor Role Is Target of Bill Healthy or Feverish? Economy Is All Aglow By 8AM DAWSON AP Business News Auaiyst NEW YORK— Rising prices |are giving an unexpected glow to the economy. Is it the glow fevart. LBJ Seeks to Boost| The three big,. _ , . - ^ , .• spenders — con- Pflvote Participation gumerg ^ ness and government — all. have been pay-| ing out dollar*, about a third of I their increased DAWSON outlays is due to higher price tap and only two-thihis represent buying of more units of output. WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presi-dent Johnson today asked Congress to make it easier for private lenders to take over federal loans through pooling of government credits and other steps to encourage investor participation. Johnson proposed to send the House and Senate a “Participation Sales Act of 1966“ aimed at replacing 88 billion in. public credit with private funds. The measure would go into effect in the current fiscal year and also apply In the'fls-c*l year beginning July 1. In a letter accompanying the measure, the President‘ stressed the long-term importance of replacing public credit with private loans for reasons ranging from taxpayer savings to strengthening the credit market. r e a 4r The legislation would: • Provide for “pooling many loans together and selling participations in the pool" rather than having the government make “a number of relatively small and uncoordinated offerings of loans in the market.” • Centralize sale of pool participations in a single agency — the Federal National Mortgage Association — rather than have each agency sell its own loans. • In cases where federal interest rates are below {hose of the private market, allow unexpected glow y. Is it the glow • ;jK IU collections even at lower rates ! income will be dipped aome-And also the government debtjwhat by larger tax withholding has risen, meaning Unde Sam.from pay checks of, those in has borrowed to get the dollars higher income brackets, for larger expenditures, both at! * * * home and in Viet Nam. | But few expect the rate of A* Efforts to curb spending aBigrowtb hi toe economy to be along the line may check thejcWUed much. Even some areas economy's faster pace a bit injwhidi have been experiencing the current ApriUune quarter. I their own private slowdown now report an increased tempo, promising a revival of toe URGED TO GO SLOW President Johnson has urgedjboom. all hands to go slow, to put off The dollar figures for toe na-some planned outlays, to shun tion’s boom are impressive. The products and services on which Gross National Product—toe prices have been rising faster total spent for goods and serv-than the average. ices-was running at a season- Top business executives have)ally adjusted annual rat* of Still, the rate of increase is larger than at any time since 1958 when consumer panic buying at toe outset of toe Korean war sent the economy soaring-terms of dollars if not of health. The unexpected gain this year hasn’t been due to panic buying. It has been due more to affluence. The spenders—consumers, business and governmental! have had more dollars to spend. MORE DOLLARS Consumers haye more dollars because there are more jobs year than last, because many wage scales have risen, and because in 1964 and 1965 federal tax rates were cut with toe aim of promoting prosperity and cutting unemployment. It worked. The nagging question now is if it worked too well. Business has more to spend this year, partly because it too enjoys lower tax rates than a few years back, but mainly because sales and profits have been soaring to record heights. ★ ★ ★ Government has more to promised to 'cut back some of their record expansion plans for 1966. The president has asked federal departments and agencies to trim government spending, or at least to postpone some of it, Total consumer spendable I 3124 3124 3124 + 14 I 41 4024 4024 + 14 I 3724 3714 3724 + 24 I 41* 42* 42* — 24 p;: WUnTel 1.40 WMtgCI 1.40 Wuuorhr 1.40 Whirl <^> 1.60 ____n Co 7 WiimOIx 1.32 2 22* 2224 HR 5024 5 31 M ji t 10 4$ « 45 + M *124 4114 41* + 2* 54* 5424 54* 3 4224 42* 45* —M— 2 4724 4714 4714 7 22* 22* M4 - - ji ,85 ,851,5 ? sflsiss 85 - 25 5014 + BRIMS 5014 +1* 14* 75* — “ S5;£u 7 7424 .74 7424 + iisF-irl ’S 8* ft* fta I, NatOulrv 2.10 Nat Dial 140 Hal Qanl •» NatGyps » NatLead .7St :, tsKai 2.50 I wL W ...vadaP .14 hn»’S NorhkWJt 4a MX 13 Nor Pac 2.40. Northrop 1 NwjtAIrl LM BSS’iS OhtoEdll i7* OlinMath 1.40 SuihMar .20 Owenalll 1.35 OxWftP-J”, 2 33* 33* MM l 35 25* 25* 25* + I 4 M* 40* 4014 —X-Y-Z— Xarox cp .70 42»* 23224 2JM4 + YngstSht 1.M 4 ST* 37* 37* Zenith Rad 2 26 171* 14* 171* + Copyrighted by The Aieocleted Pre»i 1*44 Sales figurae ere unoKTIal. Unlexi otherwise noted, rat. dleSreernanh h3don thefai or seml-ennual dedaratlon. SpecTel’ or extra dividends or payments not detig-nated at regular are identified In the following footnote* a—Ain extra or extras. »-____— jMT mw^wS plus itodk dividend, e—Declared or paid n far this year. »—Payable In sleek during IMS. animated cosh value on ax-dlvl-dond or ex-dMribut&n data, g—Paid last year, h—Declared or paid after stock dividend or wilt up. k—pocMrad or paid this year, an accumulative Wtue with dividend* In arrears, n New iMua. p—Paid •hit year, dividend omitted, deterred or no action taken at last dMdOni meeting, r—Daelered or paid In 1M4 plus ttock dividend. t-Pald In »*ek <-- sbsskAjt— distribution date. x—Saw* In hill, cld—Called. x-Ex dividend rant*, ww—With warrwitt. „ ,...w ^ tributed. wi-Whan IuumI. nd-Next day ock during 19M) •x-dividend or ex f—Without war- rtcaivorthip _ &.SSrSF f • ■ 15* News in Brief toe government to “make spend because the larger in-supplementary payments to comes of individuals and corpo- ; s* «* m-4 + *: It 27* g* M* fj»! T?i85,lii|3i ! fS ISS + *! Waterford Township police — + - are investigating the theft of $111 from an office at Pierce Junkv High School, 5145 Hatch-ary. the trustee of the pool to cover the interest insufficiency.” This would be subject to advance authorization by appropriations committees of both houses. BUDGET RESOURCES Johnson said “the. Participation Sales Act of 1966 will permit us to conserve our budget resources by substituting private for public credit while still meeting urgent credit needs In toe most efficient and economic manner possible.” “It will enable ns to make toe c r a d i t market stronger, more competitive, and better able to serve toe needs of our growing economy,” he added. “But above all, the legislation will benefit millions of taxpayers and the many vital programs supported by federal credit. The act will help us move this nation forward and bring a better life to ail toe people.” Johnson said Jhe volume of federal loans outstanding aft of last June 39 exceeded |33 billion and involves programs to help farmers, businessmen, home buyers, veterans, students, colleges and schools. rations have produced big tax 1714.1 billion in the January-March -quarter. This was $16.9 billion higher than In toe Anal three months of 1965 and toe largest jump since the 817.7 billion spurt in toe third quarter of 1959. Residential Construction Shows Increase in County Residential construction permits in Oakland County during the first quarter of this year increased by 287 units, or14-4 per cent, over the same three-month period last year. Figures released today by the ■Hap ,.4o ParamPIct 2 rwLt’ft . jnnroll 'i+o Sp Phlllll 1.45 —o 14 51* |1* 2* ,J, 2* 85 85 = 92 22* 22* M* 10 52* 52* 1*.+ liSw^Swt —p— ? St 25* 25* + * >ji irT- ill 74* 73* 74* + 5 35* 35* 35* __ ,s» r § i= 14 42* 42* M4 . 1 33* 33* 13Vi , . ..... P« 2. Pltrwy Bow PiiPw* •* PpW m #* m +1* J R fe gti » rP *» IFi! 2.20 » n* aytheon .80 lelchCh .204 RtvIOH 1— In .30b R*yn fclsf .75 TUB i nM l.M M j RoyCCola .60 RoyDut 1.55b RyditrSy .Mo s.% * 47 I c m «* ■« *7 142* 1M 1«^ -m** 54 40* 60* 40* 3 51*51*51*.--40 34* 34* 14* — * 53 54* 54 . 54* +' 5 41* 41* 41* + II M 52* 52* + Rummage Sale, First Christian Church, 858 W. Huron. April 22, 9 to 6:39 p.m. —adv. Birmingham Unitarian Church, Spring Rummage Sale. Friday, April 22, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday, April 23, 9 a.m. 12 noon. 651 Woodward, Bloomfield Hills. -Adv. Rummage Sale: April 22, Fri. 9-5 p.m. St. Paul’s Methodist Church, 629 Romeo St., Rochester. —Adv. * t Yl b + * : R hi pSpoTT ^ 34* M* M* + * &}3 J'LfnLi* Sis V8 7i R R R 7 mb »i* yt* — * Detroit Edison’s gross revenues were 8370,249,051 for toe 12 months ending March 31, 1966*3 Berthe corresponding period 1984-65, they were 8350,992,789. Net earnings of the company for the 12 months ending March 31, 1966 were 858,006,868, or 82-01 per share. For tiie previous 12 months ending March 31, 1965, net earnings were 854,453,346 or 81-89 per share. Rummage Sale. April 21, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Fri., April 22, 9 a.m. to noon. First Methodist Church of Birmingham, W. Maple at Pleasant. Snack Bar and free parking. . —adv. Rummage Sale. Congregational Church, 1315 N. Pine, Rpchester, Fri:; Apr. 22,9-7 p.m. Sat., Apr. 23, 9-11 a.m. -adv. Crash Takes 2nd Life GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-Thomas D. Darting, 16, of suburban Belmont, died Tuesday at Buttqrworto, Hospital, the second victim of a Saturday auto crash. Police said he was the driver of a car which skidded on a Kent County road and struck av tree, 15-year-old Steven H. McConnell of Belmont, a passenger. Power Firm Lists Revenue, Earnings Federal Call Is Issued for Bank Statements WASHINGTON (AP) - The comptroller of toe currency today issued a call for a statement of the condition of all national banks at the done of business Tuesday, April 5. similar calls were issued by the Federal Reserve Board for member banks and by toe Federal Deposit Insurance Carp- f