The Whather u J. WMtlwr Butmh PncK ' Shower. Tonight Sunny Tomorrow (MM* m Pin t) THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn* Edition VOL. 124 —: M*. 58' PONTIAp/ MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966—56 PAGES LBJ Is for Latin Summit ^ M®fo0 Claim Disputed by McNamara MEXICO CITY (AP) - President Johnson endorsed today a proposal for him to meet with La tin-American chiefs of state to speed up work of the Alliance for Progress. . Johnson gave a broad review of U.S. policy toward Latin America m a speech prepared for delivery at tin unveiling of a statue «f Abraham Lincoln in a park in Mexico City’s Polanco residential section. Referring to the summit meeting proposed.by Argentine President Arturo Illia, ho “I will in the months ahead Join with La tin-American leaders in exploring the proposal for a new meeting at the .very highest level to examine our common problems and to give the Alliance for Progress increased momentum.”. Although warning that “any such conference should be prepared with utmost care, Johnson added that i1 preparation need not be the enemy of Imaginative action.” SUMMIT MEETING There has been speculation recently that the U.S. President may visit South America before the end of the summer, and a summit meeting could provide the occasion for his visit. The unveiling of the flM,-Ml bronze statue, which the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) BIG WELCOME -The motorcade hearing President Johnson and Gustavo Diaz Ordaz through Mexico City passes beneath an arch A? Wwtotaf of balloons en route from the airport to the presidential palace last night Firemen, City Near Accord State Labor Mediator Leonard Bennett announced yesterday that tentative agreement has been reached between the city and the Pontiac Firefighters Association (PFAJ. Terms of the potential settle: ment of .the wage dispute that dates back to last summer are being withheld pending ratification by both sides, said Bennett, even though they would involve expenditure of public funds. Seeking a written agreement, the PFA had listed amoag its demands a longevity pay plan, settlement of certain grievances and $41 more per year for fire fighters than the MSI pay hike granted by the commission 'last August. Jack Douglas, PFA president, said today that he plans membership meetings next Tuesday and Wednesday. City Manager Joseph A. Warren said a further meeting with PFA representatives is planned for Thursday to prepare a final draft of the PFA-city agreement Detroit Victories Tigers sweep double-header from Yankees; Wings humble Black Hawks. - PAGE D-l. MSU Mission Leader says university knew of CIA agents. — PAGE B-U. Area News ........A-4 C4 04 Crossword Puzzle .. ... V"« . D-15 Comics ... C4 Editorials ... A-4 1 Farm and Garden C-7—C-8 | High School | Markets . D*7 I Obituaries D4 srts ..... D-1-D4 j Theaters ...C-li-C-11 TV-Radio Programs IMS WtMi’i Pages . C4—04 Tigers, Tied for Open Play at Home DETROIT — Dave Wickersham and A1 Kaline, a pair of 31-year-old veterans, were prepared to "show off” here today when the Detroit Tigers opened their American League home schedule against Washington. The Tigers went into the game tied for first place with a 3-0 record. Wickersham, designated the Tigers’ top relief pitcher by Manager Charlie Dressen before spring training started, is getting Faces Quiz on Ford’ Allegations of Bomb Shortage, Port Snqrl WASHINGTON UB •—Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, who has spent more than 80 hours before congressional committees this year, faces more congressional questioning about bomb shortage charges and his readiness policies. Republican House leader Go-aid R. Ford said yesterday McNamara “will be asked many questions” after the House returns from its Easter recess, Ftrd showed every sign of boring ahead with his charge that the Johnson administration is guilty of “shocking mismanagement” of the war effort. He was unconvinced by McNamara’s assertion that “there isn’t any” shortage of bombs for the Viet Nara war and (hire is no truth to the mismanagement alle|ation. * * While Democrats, too, have challenged McNamara’s readiness policies, the Republican House leader’s volley had the sound of an official GOP position for the coming congressional election campaigns. Ford kicked off the latest skirmish over readiness when he called a news conference, made his “shocking mismanagement” charge, and: Spoke of reports that are running short of bombs despite uH a chance to show if he deserves a spot in the starting rotation. On the other hand, Kaline is out to show the home fans that he has regained the friskfims that Fas his trademark in for ner years. After pacing the Detroit pitching staff wtA It victories two seasons ago, Wickersham fell off to aa 8-14 record in INS. Strong showings by youngsters Deny McLain ami Joe Sparma plus the acquisition of Bill Mon-bouquette sent the strong righthander to the bullpen where the Tigers are weakest. ★ ★ And that’s where he stayed during, spring training. UNHAPPY Dressen, however, is unhappy with the recent performances of Sparma and Hank Aguirre and starting Wickersham they are ready.” Wickersham would Just as soon stay a starter and will be trying to prove it today. is being opposed by Washington righthander Jim Duckworth. Off-season surgery on a sore foot apparently has returned Kaline to toe form that once him a league batting ‘AI is like a kid again, ’Ha is ^ again as he should be. Being __ in the field and oo the bases is his biggest value. He lost some of that last year because of his foot injury.” ' ir~ * ♦ Kaline also is hustling more than ever in the outfield. He dived into the right-field stands in Yankee Stadium during the Tigers’ three-game sweep to try and head off a home run by Jake Gibbs. A crowd of 36,000 was expected to see the usual first-game ceremonies. Showers are forecast for this afternoon, but are not expected to hinder play. Declared “the back-up of shipping in Saigon harbor is almost a national scandaL” ■ ’’’ * 4 ★ Several hours later McNamara held a news conference of his own at the Pentagon. 'He replied: “I don’t think there is any basis whatever” for charges of mismanagement bomb shortages. “It Just isn’t trud,” he said. - MURDER SCENE - Investigating police officers stand near the blanket covered body of Carlaroy W. Henry, 28, of Caro, who ‘was shot and killed early this morning in Henry Ford Auto Safety Critics WOODHAVEN - Henry Ford II departed from a bland speech text today to laah out at safety critics of the auto industry. 4 4 * He warned Congress it could hurt the economy by imposing new burdens on car makers. G*v. Romney, foBowing Ford to the speaker’s rostrum at a factory dedication ceremony, also defended Me auto industry’s work an safety. Romney, former president of American Motors Carp., said the auto industry had pulled the United States out pf depressions in the past and the nation’s prosperity was closely linked with that of car makers. * * * Ford, chairman of Ford Motor Co., strongly criticized attorney Ralph Nader, author of 'Unsafe at Any Speed,1a book alleging cars as unsafe, and a star witness in Senate hearings on proposed auto safety legLs-istieo. QUESTIONS AUTHORITY Ford said he questioned Nader’s technical authority. He cited Nader’s allegation yesterday that the Volkswagen, a German car, it unsafe as an example of an attack noon. based on insufficient technical knowledge. He said congressmen considering legislation that would give the government the power to impoee safety rules on car makers were “men of will.” But he urged them to give more consideration to the economic harm their proposals might impose on the auto industry. Ford said it was not fair to blame car makers for traffic deaths. SHARED CONCERN He said the industry shared the nation’s concern over 50,-Ni traffic deaths a year was building safe cars now and making them safer every year. He said too many unqualified people were joining the chorus of criticism. Bridge Leap Fatal to Man Lawyer’s Car Found Near Port Huron Site DeLorean to Address City Luncheon Clubs John Z. DeLorean, n General Motors vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division, will address a c bined meeting of Pontiac area luncheon clubs June 1. The meeting will be held at the Elks Temple beginning at] Viet 'Lifeline' Huge Success ‘They have a bare minimum he wrote. By PAT McCARTY College kids do care. |of clothing to wear, The young men and women«1Tk_, . ... .. at Oakland University had more *7 ^^urished, dir than a ton of supplies which 1^’ destitute and have very little prove it. WttTKIWAIUI ANNUAL VANCAKU WNWol ill in M., April M. BOUND FOR VIET NAM - Two Oakland University coeds help a Marine load a trade with supplies collected to the “Thang Blnh Lifeline” campaign on the campus. Margaret O’Reilly (tap), a Waterford Township Junior, was chairman of the committee which collected 2,M3 pounds of goods to fend to the rural Vietnamese vUtage. Maimu Oja, a freshman from Leooia, N.J., was chairman of the committee that packed tba aMpment. to live for.1 Stier asked MrsiHope if she thought OU students could be interested in collecting supplies or money to help the villagers. Were they interested? “I can’t believe it,” he wrote to a recent letter to his wife, lives with their two small children at 716 Hamlet, Pontiac Township. EXPECTED FLOP “Dick said he thought it would be a big flop,” Mrs. Stier ^id yesterday. “He had heard about all the student demonstrations and he didn’t think there were 10 that felt the same way he did.” . “To say the tout I am (turned,” he wrote to a recent letter to Mrs. Hope. Whether they support or oppose the war to Viet Nap, the students responded as one to the humanitarian lifeline proj- ___. _ , . ___. ect, uniting to a group headed Stier, who graduated from OU by junior Margaret O’Reilly, to 16M, wrote his first letter tolas: oy Orchard, Waterford Mrs. HOpe in February. Iiwnship. With a heavy heart, he said, 1 The project which Marine Lt Richard Stier feared would be an ’‘embarrassing flop” has in fact become a colossal success. Involved students knew it yesterday as they helped Marines load the results of “Thang Btoh Lifeline” onto a track. ★ * * Transporting of the goods to the Grosse lie Naval Air Station is the first leg of a trip which eventually will get them to the rural Viet Nam village of Thang Btoh. RECEIVED PRAISE Oakland University administrators also knew of the students’ involvement and praised them yesterday for a Job well done. But the comments with the most impact came from Stier, via letters to Ms wife and to Mrs. Dorothy Hppe, OU alum- 1 Police Theorize Robbery Was Killer's Motive Single Bullet Wound Kills Father of Three;' Wallet J* Missing .A young truck driver and father of three children was shot and killed early today in a parking lot of a south-end Pontiac tavern. The victim was identified'by HHMBE Pontiac polic as Carlaroy W. Henry, 29, of Caro, Police said there were no sus-Pontiac. No suspects have been picked up p^« to the mung and in the murder of (he trade driver. Robbery theorised, the motive was rob-is believed to be the motive in the slaying, bery, since they • couldn’t find Henry’s wallet near or on his body.......... Henry, ea rente from Pontiac to Saginaw, died ef n stogie ballet wound from a 22-caliber automatic pktol, according to police. He was shot to the chest. * 4 Detective Sgt. John A. De-Pauw said Henry apparently was shot as he walked from a pay phone booth back to bis diesel cab after making a routine check-in with the Detroit office of tiie Central Transport Co. ;• ' BODY DISCOVERED The victim’s body was discovered by two GMC Truck A Coech Division employes at the side of the Jet Bar, 716 Woodward, just before 2:30 An. Henry was fenni Jast U minutes after calling kls si-flee at f :lf njn. • Gerald L. Bullock, ft, 8M1 Bridge Lake, Springfield Township, told police he canto upon the victim lying face down on the gravel next to Ms still-running diesel track. -k ★ A Police said they had been unable to find anyone who heard a shot, and believed that the sound of a small-caliber weapon would have-been drowned out by the loud running diesel engine. CALLED POLICE Bullock and his companion, Edward H. Friend Jr., MS Tower, then returned to the bar and notified a bartender who telephoned police. Three detectives, along with a half-dozen officers and patrolmen, responded to the call aad combed a wide parttott af the Woodward-South Boulevard area untfl daylight. Found to a field some 158 feet from the site of the shooting was a partially loaded clip of 22-caliber bullets, which police tagged as evidence along with a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) PORT HURON (AP)—A man leaped to his death from toe International Blue Water Bridge todxy, police reputed. Police said a car registered to Chase S. Osborn HI, St. Clair city attorney and grandson of former Gov. Chase S. Osborn, was found parked on the bridge near the spot where the leaped 1S3 feet into the water. A briefcase belonging to Osborn was found to the ear, officers said. The bridge spans toe St. Clair River and links Michigan and Ontario. Canada. * A Witnesses on toe Ontario aide said they saw a man get out of the car, walk to toe bridge rail-tog and Jump. They said be appeared to straggle for a moment and then sank beneath the surface of toe water. SEARCH RIVER State Police skin divers were searching the swift-flowing river for the body. Osborn is a former St. Clair prosecutor. His grandfather was governor from 1911 to I9i3. he wrote of the tragedy of war— of the women who luid become widows and the children left fatherless in toe hamlet of Thing Btoh, some 20 miles south of Da Nang. They hatched novel schemes to aid the drive — an “ugly man contest” which netted more than 840 and “soap dances” to which (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1) Sing Along: April Showers May Come Our Way A few light showers are expected to. dampen the Pontiac area tonight. Clouds will clear out tomorrow, leaving skies sunny and temperatures mild, says the forecaster. The mercury will slip dowa to 34 to 48 tonight, then sour to highs of 58 to M tomorrow. There’s a chance of showers again Sunday with tempera- Morning winds were 6 to 14 miles per hour east to northeast. ★ a •*- A chilly 36 was the low recording prior to 8 a.m. The 2 p.m. reading was 57. Metro Area Hit by Sonic Booms Sonic booms rolled across Oakland County and other parts of toe metropolitan area early this morning as Jets from Selfridge Air Base broke the sound barrier A spokesman at the Mount Clemens military installation said the planes, F106 all-weather interceptors, were on training exercise. ' : \v *1 The thunder-like blasts were heard at various times between and 3:45 a.m., and according to the spokesman, were concentrated to toe Mount Clemens-Warren area.* Im-PRESS-ive ‘Holy Church Page, Batin, The Pontine Press Is ast only interesting, reading it is a real education.” ‘True, Robin, a good newspaper is a veritable well ef information. Yon should rend every issue of The Press, Bey ‘You’re right, That’s what I’m going to do You don’t have to be young and impressionable to be haled with The Pontiac Press. Everyone agrees IPs “Zowie” “Smash.” Mirioni Plea Innocent in Tax Evasion Case DETROIT (UPI) — Fortner Mayor Louis C. Miriani pleaded pldaded innocent today to charges of evading $63,OM in federal income taxes. Miriani, now a city councilman, entered tonobent pleas to each of four income tax evasion He appeared before United States D1 s tr ic t Court Judge Thomas Thornton who freed him on $1,888 bond. jgiHI THE PQNTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1W Buddhists Call Off Demonstrations SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Buddhist leaders in Saigon today reaffirmed their sup> port of the military government's plane to hold elections in three to five months ami called1 off future demonstrations. But they threatened to’ send the demonstrators into the streets again if the elections are not -held as promised. There was no indication that the Buddhists in an all3ay policy session had decided whether to demand the resignation of ' Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s regime or to allow it to rule until the elections. A call, for an immediate change of leadership came from Ky’s military rival, Ii. Gen. Nguyen .Chanh Thi, whose ouster as 1st Corps commander a month ago set off the wave of unrest. Thi told a newsman in Da Nang: “We must have an immediate change of government. There must be a government of the people supported by the people. 1 don’t think the people have confidence in the government of Premier Ky." . MONKS MEET A council of 10 influential monks met at the Buddhist Institute in Saigon to thrash out the next move in a campaign that has so far forced the government to yield to most ofTthe Buddhist demands. f A spokesman denied that the council had already demanded Ky’s resignation. He said it still had not decided whether to seek the appointment of a caretaker regime to supervise the elections. pledges Thursday but added they did not erase all problems. PRESERVE HONOR “Many problems confront ui and the government and we must arrive at solutions that preserve honor and prestige for all concerned,” ha said. “For instance, ere want to be assured that no one who took part in the demonstrations will be punished.”- • “That is one of the matters to be discussed,” he said. Tran Quang Thuan, the council’s lay spokesman and a former welfare minister, said the monks were “generally satisfied” with the government's Thuan said that despite the government’s pledge of an amnesty to all demonstrators the monks feared reprisals in Da Nang, Hue and other northern Buddhist strongholds where the public agitation began. Viet 'Lifeline' Big Success (Continued From Page One) the admission was several bars of soap. SENT CONTRIBUTIONS Students from.Oakland Community College, Rochester High School and Marian High School in Bloomfield Township also sent contributions. Wrapped and ready to go, the supplies weighed 2,MS In the more than 100 boxes were 2,000 bars of soap, 026 undershorts, 290 play shwts, 300 polo shirts, six cases of plastic toys, four cases of powdered milk, two cases of paper towels, 176 toothbrush kits, assorted clothing, sewing materials, powdered food and 2,000 lollipops. There also is a 6250 check for CARE and plans to send treadle sewing machine. SHORT OF CASH *nie project was so successful that the students found themselves short of cash to (tover ^SUCha ncellor to GtYoJAajor Talk in Texas Oakland University Chancel lor Durward B. Varner will deliver a major address at the 50th annual meeting of the Association of Texas. Colleges and Universities this weekend. He will speak on “Educational Statesmanship in the 1060s” at the meeting in Arlington, Tex. The OU chancellor will be one of three Texans, now presidents of educational organizations, invited back totheirjwme as principal speakers for the anniversary meeting. The Declaration of Independence was not signed on July 4th. It was adopted on that date, but the first signature did not appear on the document until Aug. 2, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. He Army had agreed to ship tike supplies to Viet Nam from the West Coast, but getting them to California was the committee’s problem. Mrs. Hope, who served as adviser to the project, contacted Col. Robert L. Rathbun, commanding officer of the Marine Air Reserve Training Detachment at Grosse lie Naval Air Station. Rathbun agreed to airlift the supplies to San Diego and arrived yesterday with two Marines from his detachment to transport the goods to the stallion. BY ARMED CONVOY Eventually, the goods will be taken by armed convoy to Thang Binh, which is surrounded by Viet Cong-held territory. Stier will return to the U. S. in June and probably will be a civilian by the time the shipment arrives. However, a token shipment of three cases will be flown directly to. him, so that he can distribute some himself. His letter read yesterday by Mrs. Hope expressed Stier’: gratitude. “For the recipients Of these supplies, I thank you and everyone else Involved,” M wrote. ‘People like - you make the US-A. great” 3 Unexploded Bombs Found on SicUy^arm Italian national ROME un police at Pachino, near Sira cusa, said today they had found three unexploded smoke bombs dropped in a nearby farm three days ago from an airplane. Rome’s leftist Paese Sera said in a dispatch front Siracusa the bpmbs were dropped byTNATO plane from the American base at Sigonella in northeast Sicily, fept Pachino police- said they did not know what plane dropped -the bombs or Where they were based. They said the bombs caused no damage. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy this morning. Cloudy this afternoon and tonight with a few light showers. Highs today 55 to M. Lows tonight 34 to 46. Clearing Saturday becoming sunny and mild, highs 56 to 64. East to northeast winds 6 to 14* miles. Sunday’s outlook: mild with possible showers/ Wind Vtloclt* 4 1i Highest twnptratur* . Ttmp*r«tur*f Thursday la Pontiac . S2 Esconaba .. S3 Gr. Rapid! ...14 Houghton 56 It I si II L_ MH 51 20 Omaha \ j Bismarck tad and Lawaat Tamgaratoras Chicago This Data In N Yaars Cincinnati 142 21 hi 11311 Denver Dzendzel Quits Governor Race Support for Ferbncy It Growing in State By the Associated Press Senate Majority Leider Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, who earlier flirted with the idea of bidding for the Democratic nomination for governor, today said he has decided not .to enter the- race. Dzendzel bowed out of contention as support grew for state chairman Zolton Ferency, who ia expected to announce at a talk at Michigan State Univer-sity Tuesday that he will seek the nomination. Unlike many other party leaders, Dzendzel did not Climb on the Ferency bandwagon. In fact, he earlier expressed concern that Ferency might not be challenged for the Democratic nomination. Birmingham Area News 4 Exhibit to Include Work of Bloomfield Aft Group BIRMINGHAM - Hie work of Bloomfield Art Association students Will be incorporated into a varied exhibit to open Sunday at the. Birmingham Art Crater. All' students In the spring, summer and fall 1965 and winter 1966 classes have been invited to submit their work. Juror for the annual student exhibition is Lawrence Barker, head of the print department at Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills. The entire first floor of the art center will be used for the exhibition, with adult students’ work In the front and main galleries and the work of children's winter classes in the classroom area. youngsters win compete, with ?• and 6-year-olds to “do their stuff” at 1 p.m. The contest for boys and girls 9 through 12 years old Nrill be at S.:90 p.m. PRIZES SET Prises will be awarded for the high-flying kites and to those children who mads the moat beautiful and the most unusual kites. The contest, sponsored by the Birmingham Optimist Club and the recreation board, will be held April 24 in case of rain Sunday. The show will Indicate the We need somebody who is ajscope of courses now being of-drawing power,” he said at the f*r*d by the association—weav- time. “We have legislative and congressional races to worry abodt.” VOWS SUPPORT Today he merely said he would support the party’s gubernatorial nominee. ing and woven forms, sculpturing, oil painting, acrylic, water-color, portraiture, ceramics, metal pottery and fused glass. TIME OF RECEPTI ON The opening reception is scheduled for 2-5 p.m. Sunday. The Ferency got the blessings student exhibit will con-Thursday of James Hare, Sec- ^ue through May 1. NEW YORK MELEE - Police struggle to separate combatants on Broad Street opposite the New York Stock Exchange. The fight serupted when pickets demonstrating AP Ptetotax against the war in Viet Nam were attacked by youths who’take a sympathetic view of U.S. policy in Southeast Asia. Uncle Sam's Reminder: Today Is 'Pay' Day Sewer Plans Almost Drawn WASHINGTON (AP)—Failure to file anMncome tax return by tonight's midnight deadline could subject a taxpayer to payment of penalties ShriverBlawes 'ProfessionalsK in Demonstration WASHINGTON (AP) - Sargent Shriver. today blamed ‘professional demonstrators’ for a hooting, shouting demonstration that drowned out part of his speech and forced an abrupt end to a convention' of antipoverty workers. “It was quite obvious that ■ 30 people there organized themselves to create a disturbance and make trouble,” the director of the administration’ antipoverty program said in an interview. A group of dissidents, who said they were spokesmen for the nation’s poor, heckled Shriver as he evaluated the anti-poverty program for some 500 members of the independent, privately financed Citizens’ Crusade Against Poverty. Truck Driver Slain in I 29 Washington 19 . AP PBMfMr NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers are expect-ed tonight in the western Gulf of Florida. Some rafif is also due to meVpjenahore in the Pacific Northweft It should be i Gulf throughout the Plain and (Continued From Page One) spent shell picked up a short distance from the victim’s body. A State Police Crime Laboratory team of three special investigators arrived shortly after 6:30 a.m. from Lansing and examined the murder scene for approximately 90 minutes. PONTIAC POLICE a Their findings will be turned] over to Pontiac police. An autopsy was to have been performed this morning sit St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. and interest on the tax he still owes the government. ■. 6 '.“* ” it TT The Internal Revenue Service said today that in some cases — if a taxpayer is ill, involved in an accident or out of the country, for example— an exemption can be granted-permitting the late filing of a return if the taxpayer requests oneX ^.gtthaagh thfr would ex-, empt the taxpayer from payingpenalties, he would still be subjecHo an interest charge qf 6 per cent aaahql-ly on any tax doe beginning at midnight tonight. The penalty for failure to file a-return without such an e x e m p t i o n is 5 per cent monthly on the tax still owed the government up to a maximum.of 26 per cent. A 6 per cent interest charge is a 1 s o made. Lints in Waterford Will Curb Pollution Final construction plans for approximately two miles of IRS said it'would be better for a taxpayer to file his return before the deadline even if he can’t pay now what he still owes. In this way he might avoid the penalty and be required to pay only the 6 per cent interest charge for late payment. itary sewer lines for a portion of Waterford Township bordering Pontiac are about 70 per c e n t complete, according t< Johnson aiidAnderson, Inc. township engineering consultants. The area’s untreated w a s t water and septic tank effluent presently flow into the county’ West End storm drain which empties into Pontiac’s Crystal Lake, according to the Michigan Water Resources Commission. „ The problem received special ajtenjion at Tuesday night’! PobtiteCity Commission meet-ing. City Manager Joseph Warren was directed to obtain a report from township officials on what steps have been taken to eliminate poItotioiK i a this ares. The directive followed consideration of a township request for extension of city sewer services to another area near Marion and Scott Lake Road in the township. 2 Stand Mute in Dope Case Two Pontiac men stood mute this morning at their arraignment in federal district court on multiple charges of sale and possession of narcotics. A plea of not guilty was entered on behalf of the defendants—Roy White, 90, tA 173 Bag-ley and Lewis Cummings, 39, of 240 Wessen - by US. District Judge Thomas P. Thornton. The pair were indicted Tuesday by a grand jury on 16 counts of violating the federal narcotics statute. Company officials were unable to say if Henry was carrying a large sum of money, but added that it was necessary for him to have sufficient cash to Itey I el and meals Although trial date was not set, Asst. U. S. Atty. Howard E. O’Leary Jr. said he would seek o fry White and Cummings within a month.” The township requested that a 1958 city-township agreement be amended to provide for the extension, which is to serve a new elementary school — cherokee Hills — and 50 residential lots. COMPLETION DATE Johnson and Andqrson officials said yesterday that they have notiftodjhe Michigan Water Resources Commission that construction drawings and specifications will be completed b y June 1 for the project in the West End Drain area. In a letter received by township officials last Oct. 11, the Water Resources Commission originally proposed the following timetable for implementation of the program: • Complete construction mans, and specifications for faculties by March 1. • Complete financing of the facilities by June 1. Award construction contracts by June 15. 100th Orbit of Moon retary of state since 1654 and the top Democratic vote-getter in the 1964 state election.' Hare’s endorsement of Ferency to oppose Republican Gov. George Romney’s bid for a third term followed similar approvals from Speaker Joseph Kowalski of the House, Neil Stoebier, Democratic national committeeman, and Attorney General Frank JCel-ley; CAVAN AGH CAMPAIGN '> Detroit Mayor Jerome Cav-anagh took his campaign for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate Thursday night Chamber of Commerce banquet in heavily Republican Lenawee County. Meanwhile a Cavanagh ponent, former Gov. G. Mennen Williams, was principal speaker at f Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner for Ohio Democrats at Cincinnati. A third Democratic senatorial The ckiklrei’i exhibit will be ua display until April M Horn at the center, 1516 S. Cranbrook, are 2-5 p.m. daily except Monday. ________*,—H ,,, - A grand finale for spring va- Michigan cation wiii !,« . u»e ........ show tomorrow a( the Community House. Sunday will be the official day for flying kites in Birminghnn Children 5 through ttsyftas aspirant, James L. Elsman of! ef age See participate in the Featured ia the pregram will be televlsioa personality Jerry Booth and La Thom the Magician. Too performances are sched-uled — 10:30 a.m.-noon l:90-3p.m. Because the number-of seats is limited, parents are urged to pick up the free tickets in advance if possible. Detroit, challenged both Cavanagh and Williams to make their campaign finance records available for public inspection. annual kite-flying contest by registering at 2 p.m. at Derby Junior High School. At 2:30 p.m., 5- and 6-year-old Latin Summit OK'dbyLBl (Continued From Page One) U.8. Congress authorized as a gift to the Mexican people, was a high point of the President’s hastily arranged 24-hour visit to Mexico’s capital. Today is the 101st aiurivefsary of Lincoln’s assassination. The visit began with a thundering welcome list night which left Johnson a bit weary but exhilarated. PUBLIC APPEARANCES Today he mixed more public appearances and private talks with Mexican President Gustavo Din Ordaz at Loe Pinos, the Mexican White House. Johnson fat Ms speech declared, “We are eagaged ia a vast social revolution teach-tag the lives of millions sf peoples ea two eeattaeats. “Like Lincoln’s this is a tost of whether freedom can work. “It is a test of whether men ih liberty can overcome the weight of the past and lift from their brothers the blight df hunger, the blindness of ignorance and the burden of disease. We are in the midst of that tost.’’ Johnson said his administration “will not be deterred by those, whether hi the United States or in Latin America, who tenaciously or selfishly cling to the stultifying privileges from the past. Ws will not be deterred by those who say that risk change is to risk communion.” Mexico Welcome MEXICO CITY (AP) - Up- staged*but delighted by it all, Lady Bird Johnson described the tumultuous Mexican welcome for her husband in one Spanish word — “magnifico.” The U.S. First Lady said the f 1 a g-waving, band-playing, cheering, colorful outpouring of more than a million persons, amid a snowstorm of colored confetti, was the biggest turnout she’d ever experienced in years of travel the world .over with Lyndon B. Johnson. She didn't seem to mind that her own carefully- prepared China Embassy Hit in Jakarta JAKARTA (UPI) - Thousands of Indonesian students of Chinese descent today stormed the Chinese Communist embassy, battered down the doors with a truck, and shot an embassy employe in a wild dentonatration against the Peking regime. Indonesian troops guarded the students with armored care. Members of the embassy staff shouted curses from a balcony and fought back with long knivei and spears but the weight of number of the students prevailed. surged The demonstrators over the walls by troops — and battered through the massive teak portal of the embassy with a truck. Following arraiwunent, both were releaeed in continuance of &50I band set at their preliminary bearing. MOSCOW ill — The unmanned Soviet span station Lum It, which became on April 3 the first mtifllta to erbit the mem, is nearing its 161th lunar orbit, Tlss reported today. Ten theasaad youths had attended a rally ameanctag their support for Defense Chief Lt. Gen. Saharte epd then Army Imps and armored cars moved in to divert traffic. One armored ear parked ia (rant of toe gate with Ms cannon aimed at the courtyard. speech — in Spanish — was eliminated for lade of time. Daughters Lynda, 22, and Luci, 18, shared the spectacular occasion. Luci, briefly upset by Mexico City’s high altitude and a rough plane ride from Texas, dropped out briefly at the airport ceremony. But she wu back in fine spirits for the 2W-hour, 9-mile motorcade that was a triumph for her father. INCREDIBLE’ “Just incredible — like nothing I have ever seen in piy life,” said Lud, who had never been to a foreign capital before. Spe found herself the center of enthusiasm, too, reporting that ’hundreds and hundreds of people’’ shouted to her. There were cries of /Viva Luci! Happy wedding, Where’s your fiance?' Midway in her father’s response to the welcome of Mexican President Gustavo Dias Ordaz, Luci retired to the plane with the White House physician, Vice Adm. George Burkley. He administered s bit of oxygen to get her back on her feet. “We stood up a long time,” Lud said of the arrival ceremony. Lud is to marry Pat Nugent, 22, of Waukegan, 111., on Aug. 6. But he was left behind in Texas. It was to have been Mrs. Johnson’s show before the President moved in and took it over. He had named the First Lady and Secretary of State Dean Rusk cochairmen of a delegation to dedicate a statue ol Abraham Lincoln today as a gesture of American friendship with Mexico. m SPANISH CLASSES Mrs. Johnson had tanned up on her Spanish, resulting private classes with friends in Washington last January, then the President announced he was going along. His major speeches left Lady Bird with a few “brief remarks.’^ Among last-minute decisions was/the President’s idea to inrite his daughters along. * ★ p 'Come on, why don’t you go?” he urged Lud., She took him up on it Then he telephoned Lynda and she left her at the University of Tex- two-hour let plane rid* from San Antonio toMexico City fimtfJuna. caused Lud's initial discomfort. She said this, plus the effect of Mexico City’s high altitude — 7,-466 feet above sea level —> made her feel weak during the long airport ceremony that included 21-gun salutes and translation of all speeches. Drawings OK'd for Facilities Working drawings for Oakland County’s proposed courthouse addition and court tower remodeling asyweil as those for the South Oakland Health Center in Southfield were approved yester- The buildings and grounds committee of the County Board of Supervisors accepted the drawings which represent some |6 million in proposed construction. Cast of (he health center ia estimated at 9f71,M6 witii aa for fnnitare and equipment. A federal grant for one third ef this total east is seaght by tie county. Committee members called for some minor alterations in the design of the proposed east wing and must later approve the drawing changes. Bids will be taken on the estimated $3.3 million wing and the 6466,666 court tower attention reject hf mid-July. Bids on the health cantor era expected to be received early in THB flfrX'nAO PilKSS, FRIDAY,^ PRIL Ifl/lQgfl Legislative Conference Gels Dislricling I LANSING (AP)r-tba LegUla-| clear.It ha> upheld, by 4-4 ture wu agreed today on one] votes, two directly opposed low* marM>ne vote districts to court opinions on the one ty boards of aupervfaors, but the, JT proposal was headed for a mww,ne *ote concept. House-Senate conference com* * * mittee for agreement on da* In a compromise with Repub-t*il*- llicans, majority Democrats In Lawmakers hoped to have ^ senate have added t provi-everything worked out in time . . .. ..Tr’JV *7 to permit use of new districts I,k>n Mw the board* of w* for next faU's elections. ipervisors in counties under *70,- * * ‘ 1000 population 30.days in which The Senate voted 26-0 for]to do their own redistricting, equal population districts Thursday after inserting a provision to prohibit gerrymandering. Senators declined to insert a provision asking for an advisory opinion from the Michigan Supreme Court on constitutionality - of the bill. I Moose Had f Righf-of-Way HOVLAND, Minn. (AP) -School bus driver, Turie Wash* anen found himself stymied by IK road hog the other day as he ’ ' * if ' * • drove along a narrow road in Senators added a provision woodednortheastern Minnesota, allowing city, village or township officials to become supervisors without giving up their local posts. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac the board of supervisors and senior probate judge. . J The House version leaves the] board chairman and probate! judge off the apportionment! commission. This would apply to all but Wayne, Oakland, Macomb and Genesee Counties. OPEN TWITE ’til SATURDAY HOURS 9 AJI. to 10 PJL In the large counties, and after 30 days in the smaller counties, districts would he PoamnM mart wan ,dr*wn up by a commission com- POSrnON UNCLEAR posed of the county treasurer, The court’s position is un-clerk, prosecutor, chairman of The House and Senate versions also differ on how many members boards of supervisors should have, although both agree it should not be more than 36. The road bog, a moose, paced ahead of the bus, refusing to get out of the way. Waananen finally found passing room when they got to the intersection with U.S. Highway 61. WWW The setting was appropriate. It happened on Moose Valley Road. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. For Bottor Inyo At Biggor Savingt-Shop SIMMS Enlarged Camara Dept. CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS AHSCD S3 Films 50c roll*—oil weather film to take, block V white mop. under all weather condition*. 19! AG-1 Flaehbulbs-12s 'Sylvania' bulb* In carton of Popular white btHbt. for hot*, limit IO carton*. Mailed Direct to Your Home KODAK Color Film Processing 8mm roll. Super 8, 35mm, 20 exp., 127 super tlides or Intta-matic*. Mailed to pour heme, limit IQ. 430 8mm Magaziae Load Film..... 20 HSUS' ZOOM FI J Lem iSuper 8 Camera $15QAQ Value 14-Trs. FM-AM Radios Elevator -Tripod 1S65T SIMMS!* 10898 Model 820 electric eye, electric ’drive Super 8* movie, camera for larger, brighter movie making. Fully automatic, .built-in .pistol grip. $| holds in layaway. . By TENSOR ‘Princette’ Hi-lntensity Lamps I Newest 1966* model -7 mode and guaran-I tweed by 'Tenwts/ As shown in black, K beige or while finlsnLfotly 31 hold* In free 9 layaway. “ {5-Trs. Battery Tape Recorder With FREE A6 Adapter Plug-in *2298 ..... .reorder is a battery operated 5-transistpr pushbutton model 'Afisfo Tone' er with a ftee $6.98 1 AC converter. Only $1 holds. S $39.95 I Value I Extra hi-power 'Aldron' radio WHh e control, AFC lock-in, comes with I earphone and batteries at this price. |. A real portable Hi-fi ratMo. $1 holds. Spotting Scope with 50mm Lens x I for Brighter Image $59.9$ Value Spotting scope wMi .4 eye-pieqw- I6X-24X-36X-60X power. Ail coated fens, quaitly optics. Elevator style tripod, comet with i wood case. $1 holds. B5m sAMh Spec ills far TODAY and SATURDAY 5-Lb. Grass Seeds, S?;|rGold Prize' gross I seeds In 0 blended I'fctl mixture for hew or old | »i/ lawns. Limit 2 bogs I 50 'nee Edward’ Cigan t $3.00 value box of 50 6c I King . Edward Imperial R cigars. America's largest . seller. Limit 2 boxes.. 229 10-6-4 Fertilizer fer Lawn and Gardens The perfect food for growing lawns and pwdens. 10-4-4 formula in 50 pound bogs. Limit 4 bogs per person . Garden Hose-50-Ft Top quality vinyl construction. Ideal for lawn, garden J = 0; cor washing. Limit 100 feet._______________ Only Our ‘TOP MAN" Can Cut Prices This Low! Come to SIMMS Presidents Day Dele! Our President invites you to shop Simms these last 2 days of President's Day Sale and see what values we have found, for you. Quantity buying, and low overhead allows us to cut prices like this. Many unadvertised bargains too on each fleer. These prices good Friday and Saturday and we resolve the right to limit quantities. DiGGEST MONEY - SAV/NG VALUES MOM and DAD S Bring The Kids Down to Simms For FREE BATMAN RING TODAY S p.m. to 1U p.m. and SATURDAY 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. • I Absolutely FREE to ony child occomponied by a parent. Come to Batman Headquarters Friday nite or Saturday. We also have Bat-scope, walkie talkie, wrist radio, magic slate and coloring books.. Sundriea—Main Fleer ‘Baakars Choice’ Cigars )$3.00 value box of 50 6c cigars, dg9Q Bankers Choice with the hole in the head............. Cm Ronton Butane Fual 98c value. Clean burning, P odorless fuel for all butane agGIW gas lighters........ WW WW Ronson-Zippo Flints 7® 1 Sic value peck ef S •* limt 2. I Dills Hpo Cleaners 7® 10c value, pock ef 36 ftitlfl , i. 1 ’ Medico Pipe Fitters 7c 10cvalue-limit2............. I Seripta Vu Lightgr $3.95 value. Dependable g Scripto Lighter with visual m fuel supply. Sports emblem A inside. Limit 2.■ 133 Ronsonol’ Lighter Fluid 29° 59c value, lighter fluid for all Wick lighters. Limit 2. Tobacco—Main Floor 6iairt ‘Nershoy’ Sen I 49c value,' Giant six# 1 Hershey Bars, your choica I of Almond or milk chocolate. Limit 1. Hershey Cocoa Mix 49c value, 1-lb. can instant cocoa, mix. Makes delicious hot or cold chocolate. Limit 1. .Book Matches p 25c value, 50 books of matches 1 for 1000 lights. Limit 2. Candy—Main Floor fife Choice of 4 Garden Tools k/i » 14-Tooth lew Rakes • Long Handle SeniM Hee • Long Handle 2-Prong Hoe • 4-Prong Cultivator Choose from Nils assortment of 4 necessary gardan tools — limit of I each pur person. I $44.95 valve, shaves al-I most anywhere. Shaves ih cord or cordless. Re-Icharges In any AC outlet, PAdjustable roller combs, eideburn trimmer. Sprinkler-Soaker|Hose. Ramington 66 Man’s Electric Shaver $3.50 list peer 's hoods, adjustable roller combs. 348 cutting ‘''edges. Remington Lektronic V : Cord-Cordless Shaver - IT” Remington Auto Hone case Use in any 12 vels enr er in hern* IO Horslco Cordless Skmr Lady Sunbeam Shavdr Sundries—Mein fleer JUka Seltzer Tablets 50-Ft.1 Length J 'iw ’“LSI soaking kswns on<* 1 holes «* coned 0BaJ*®*° <0**r IO tool of lawn area Flower Border Fencing M® » 2" 39° 87* Mentholsfum Rub OS 63c value, 25s, gives relief from excess acidity, upset tummy; — Fnstnnth Denture Holder I $1.29 value, just sprinkle it on, dental plates hold fast. SI.S9 vote* tube, Iter nM Rotary m!m Clothes Dryer fencing 'acts ogoinst dogs i-r „_____X * te-lnch high galvanized 1 Tank Sprayer . tu-uL C44 Capacity fifi Compressed air sprayer to »p™r * flowers, plants, esc. With strops to fasten* or back for carrying. Sunbeam' Twin Blade Rntaryi ' Electric Lawn Mower f 30 Linns Simms Price r Sturdy galvanized pole, won't rusf, with 30 lines for drying clothes. Ground socket included. Can be token inside. Hardware—2nd Floor Mess Kit piece kit, approved (or boy and girl Scouts, ale. and cook • outs. Nads for storage. 5-Qt. Electric-Powered lee Cream Fraazar I BUB & ‘Lilt1 Home Permanent $2.00 value. Complete home per- 4 Q0 tnanent for any type of hair. 3 types. n 18 - Sleeping Hag d — air spaces I between layers of Dacron. I flop edge < zipper prevents drafts. I Drawstring canopy. 24-In. Barbecue Grill All metal with 24-inch adjustable grid rolls about on wheels. Be ready for summer cook-outs. ■ Housewares—2nd Floor 3“ 16-Po. Ditteenrere Set Aluminum Roast-Bake Fae JUgulor 97c seller, easy to minum 14x10x2 . Heats evenly far Heweevroroe-2nd Floor Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS. FEIPAY, APRIL 19M The gradual rise In fir market prices and land values and the trend toward urbanisation in Oakland County in the post five years are graphically illustrated in a U.S. Census Bureau report released yesterday. * * * Taken in the fall of 1664, the census lists 967 farmers in the to 1,370 in BEGINNING OF A COMMUNITY-Work is weD under way on the first buildings in the 6250-million Keatington community at Baldwin and Waldon roads in Orion Township. The development on the 3,200-acre former Scripps Estate is being built by Birmingham-Bloomfield developer Howard T. Keating. Signs of Progress Seen at Huge Development Site ORION TOWNSHIP - The proposed $2SO-miilion community near 1-75 and Baldwin is beginning to show signs of progress. Ground was broken for Keatington subdivision on the Scripps Estate in October 1964, but the construction company went bankrupt the following January and wort was halted. -----—~~ A new contractor, Michigan Sewer Construction Co. of Tree Seedlings to Be Distributed at Fairgrounds Some 150,000 pine tree seedlings purchased by die Oakland County Soil Conservation District will be distributed tomorrow in the block building at the 4-H Fairgrounds, Perry and Walton. Ellis Humphrey, work unit conservationist of the SoQ Conservation Service, said the entire lot of seedlings has been add in advance. Purchasers may pick them ■p between S a.m. and 5 p.m. The district provides the seedlings each year for farmers and others who wish to beautify their property and control erosion. The varieties include Scotch, white, Austrian and red pine and Colorado and Norway apince. Southfield, took over toe work last September. The vast development is to contain single-family homes, a high-rise apartment complex, town houses, office buildings, a private country club and golf course for residents, a number of marinas private beaches, schools pnd churches. ..... ... • * .★ ★. The development on Voorheis and Sixteen lakes is planned as a self-contained town, according to a spokesman of the Howard T. Keating development Co. of Birmingham. ★ ★ * The entire community is expected to take 10 to IS years to complete. Access to Link M24, School Site Despite the nearly 39 per cent decrease hi toe number of farms, the value of farm products sold in the county rose from 8,267,M6 in 1959 to $8,48,157 to 1964, an increase alt per cent. The spread of residential, commercial, industrial and road construction is reflected in the percentage of total land area '4 Exchange Students Will Join PTA Panel LAKE ORION — Four foreign exchange students fro Birmingham School District will participate in a panel discussion at the t p.m. meeting Monday of the Blanche Sims PTA. ] The students represent Belgium, Chile, Lebanon and the Philippines. Sixth Annual Show UTICA — The Greater Utica Coin Club will hold Its sixth annual coin show Sunday at American Legion Post No. 81, 46146 Cass. The coins will be on exhibit from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. LAKE ORION — A, new road will soon be constructed from toe Junior high school site to M24 to alleviate traffic problems on Scripps Road. Schools Supt. A. A. Reed estimates that the board of education will, have to pay about 625,000 for the second road to the school. He said that with M66 students attending toe high school end Junior high school, school buses tend to “pile up” at peak hours on Scripps. The new road will be at the north end of the school property. . ★ * * The board of education has also authorized a Head Start program for this summer. 66 PER CENT Project Head Start Is administered by toe Office of Economic Opportunity. The federal government contributes 90 per cent of toe funds for toe project while toe local district provides 10 per cent. ★ ♦ ★ It provides underprivileged children with right weeks of preschool training to ^epare them for entry into kindergarten in the fall. Details of the program for Lake Orion have not yet been worked out, according to Assistant Schools Supt. Lewis Mun-dy. Evaluation of School Services, Programs Set ORCHARD LAKE School services and programs will be evaluated at the final 1965-66 meeting of the Scotch School PTO at 8 p.m. Monday. A panel discussion entitled ‘To Have or Not to Have” will be conducted as part of the program. Huron-Clinton Record 120,000 Hear Nature Lectures Over 120,000 southeastern Michigan school-age youngsters and tort teachers head nature lectures conducted by Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority naturalists from Nov. 1, 1965 through Marqh 31. This figure-to the highest on record, surpassing the 86,800 youngsters who heard lectures during a comparable period last year. Six naturalists visited 267 schools this year, compared to 204 Iasi year, and provided 674 lectures compared to 465 last year. The lectures are accom-pantorf with slides or film on a -~Wtarningeof topics on natural The lecture* were presented fey Lee Curtis, Don Hoi-toms and Richard Mortemore from toe Nature Center at Kensington Metropolitan Part near Milford, and by naturalists Mias Patricia Etoing, Robert Kelly and Thomas H. Smith from toe Nature Center at Stony- Creek Metropolitan Park north of Rochester. School groups may now hear lectures at either of the nature centers during morning hours Tuesday through Friday. Advance appointments for this service may be obtained by contacting toe Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, 1750 Guardian Building, Detroit 48226. State Farmers Start Planting LANSING (AP)—Some Michigan farmers already have started their spring planting, the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service said Thursday. There was very little snow in the state. A few fields of oats have been planted in Lower Michigan. Farmers also had started fertilizing fields. ★ It h . Michigan’s winter wheat crop was reported in good condition. There was very little winter kin and moisture supplies were adequate to surplus. The 1966 winter wheat crop was forecast at 8.8 million bushels. This was four per cent above last year but 8 per cent below the 1960-64 average. March milk production wis estimated at 81 million pounds, six per cent below the month last year. Egg production, at 116 million for the month, was down four per cent from last year. Preliminary Budget Figures Nudging $1 Billion in State LANSING (AP)—The potential state general fund budget for 1966-07 nudged 81 billion today, legislative committee figures stowed. But fiscal experts in the House and Senate predicted it would decline to tame point below that mark before the last bill And House Ways and Means Committee their working figures will be subject to a great deal of revision before they are approved. The committee introduced dtocrettooary spending bills totaling 6366.1 million Thursday. Coupled with ifMJ million introduced by the Senate Appropriations Committee Tuesday and Wefrmfcy, *"7 brin* total in general ***** JmSL would push the budget past toe billion-dollar mart and wipe out toe estimated 8134 million surplus the state expects to have on hand at toe end of toe rent fiscal year. Gov. George Romney said earlier he expected his 668 million budget to eat up about half the surplus. ABOVE FIGURE Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flint, chairman of the appropriations committee, estimated tost with the school aid formula being contemplated by the House the potential budget stands at about 61.066 billion - 8114.2 million above Romney’s recommendations. With the aid formula bring contemplated by toe Senate, be arid, it stands at about an even 8 bate. “At what level Will It wind plFMri was asked. “Below 81 bilUon.” “How tyr below?” “Your guess to as good as mine.” QUITE CLOSE 4 Rep. Efor Erlandsen, Escanaba, chairman of 1 . and means, arid the House figures “are $dte close to the governor’s.” But they are only working flgures-developed by ip of subcommittees, to a group said. “They haven’t even been looked at by toe full committee yet,” to said. “And in many places we Just put in a tentative Ague to plug a gap In our information. There’s a lot of work to to done yet” it ■ h: ★ The bilb were referred back is committee as soon as they were introduced. Each chamber has untfi next Friday to pass all Of Its own bills. Illustrates Price Rise, Urbanization. Trend Farm Census Report Released classified! as farmland, which r the census I dropped from 8.4 to 8.1. ly 40 per cent from 146 farms in 1960 to 18 in 1664. HERDS LARGER The number of dairy cAwi In the county dropped less than 16 per cent, from 6,200 to 8,11#-“ —indicating that a it h o ugh the number Of herds to considerably lesa, they aro larger.. The decline in tjto leg psp* Elimination of smaller farms by urbanization and consolidation to shown in toe average farm size, which rose from 18.5 acres to 131.6 acres during the period. VALUE PER ACRE atkrn of submarginal farmland, together with the steady increase in real estate values, pushed the value per acre off farm land in toe county from 884.98 in 1160 to 868.66 in 1664. The average value of land and buildings rose from 846,-267 to 674^60 per farm during the fjve-year period. The average age of farmers in toe county rose from 52.2 in 1950 to 54.3 in 1964. ★ * * The most significant drop in the number of farms was in the dairy category, which foil 1,18 to 2,976, While the heal cattle population rote from 4,-382 to 1,38. Beef and hog farms, not count, ed separately, worn Included In the total of “livestock other than poultry and dairy (Arms.” . Although there waa no significant e h a n g e in n u m b e t of farms, poultry fanning to created about Id par cent, while sheep operations decreased about 8 per cent. EVERY! YEARS The U.S. Department of Commerce conducts an ggriculturo every five years in yean Arizona Indian School Missionaries to Spook LEONARD - Rev. and Mrs. Earl Newton, missionaries to the American Indiana at Southwest Indian School, Glendale, Arts., will be guest speakers at the Methodist Church of Leonard Sunday. The Newtons are with the World Gospel Mission, an interdenominational missionary or* The Department of Housing and Welfare to the first new cabinet to to established In 13 ending In “4“ and “6”. Tto series began in 188. Steadily broadened In scops* the latest report contains mors than 800 facts about agriculture in Oakland County.* *.. ★... ★ Single copies are available from the Bureau pf tto Census, Washington, D.C. 6038, or from the Detroit office of tto Depart* ment of Commerce. Work on Boys' Club Addition Is Slated to Begin This Summer Work is scheduled to begin tote summer on a $185,000 addition to the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club. Plans far the 12,500 square-foot addition were nude final this week. A meeting ef the Beys’ Club Board of Directon to scheduled far tomorrow to determine toe method of fhianc-fog the wort. Boys’ Club Director Sam Sbeehy said It to hoped that 68,000 can to raised in a com; munity pledge dirvo. He said two foundations have promised to match whatever amount can to raised in the community. COMMUNITY CENTER Sbeehy said tto addition to to be a community center building and serve all groups within tto community. * * * I It will contain a gymnasium, community meeting rooms, arts and crafts rooms, senior and Junior games rooms, a quiet room for choir practice and ■mill group meetings and a mart bar. SIMILE You’re About to Saw Hundreds of Dollars! Many Colon to Choose from Tweeded Pattern SPECIAL Many Colon to Choos* from pedal ACRILM Many Colon to Choose from •Acrylic Fiber by Chemstrand REDUCTIONS & MON IRoUOnly \ like 20% off. ..30% off...even 50% oft BRANDS like Mohawk, Banrick, Magee te name a few t, NEW 8KY8CRAPER — Workmen gather atop the 56-atory skyscraper of the Toronto-Domlnkm Centre in Toronto yesterday for a ceremony marking the “topping off" of steel on die tower. The building is the tallest in the British Commonwealth. A gold-painted bolt pinned the steel beam to the completed framework 740 feet above ground level. \YOUR CHOICE 8x5x6' or 6x7x6' All steel storage shed ** Frosad plywood foundation floor Daoonrtor door*, SyM right m Now gtda bar nyton roNtn i Wide 444nch Opening ........$125.00 10x7*. Shed $155.00 8x7* Shod ^xl5-Ft. Db. SIDEROOM UMBRELLA TENT ©NfcY $A088 Mfgs. Suggested WN \ O/ Price $110.50 gateway KING BROS. PS 4.1662 '*** s«vki ps 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. of Opdyke Mfgs. Suggested Price $110.50 e Thro* large nylon teraan windows • OuUkfo aluminum pole fmm# e Saw Up hi |wt mbwlM .. . • steal Voices and zippnr door EXTRA LARGE «xV8-FT. ......, ............ $79.88 Cottage TwiX...............*...........................• • • #0.00 TENTS... FIFTH ROOR . ■ : . . Film Halting Sale of LSD Storm-Lashed Liner Due in NY Tomorrow Claims Action Duo to Public Criticism ■ Hie action by Sandoz Pharmaceuticals was attributed to unforeseen public res against LSD, lysergic acid diethylamide, produced in 8wtt-zerland by the company's par ant Ann, Sandoz, Ltd. * * ★ , Dr. Qraif Burrell, medical director for Sandos, said last night, "we brought it In from Switasrlaad for experimental purposes and released It only to highly qualified clinical investigators. Our stuff hasn’t gone into foe black market but the impression does persist among soma people font it may have gone there.” hi Washington, Paul Sehuatte of thewderal Food and Drug Adnrinistration said the agency did not put any pressure on San-doz to stop selling the drug. Extensive use of LSD which has no cdor, taste or odor — has neon reported in New York. The New York County Medical Society has urged stiffer penalties for its illicit manufacture and sale. The drug is wald to produce extreme sensations of color, sight and taste, breaking down the sense of reality. Experts it can cause suicidal or hoj dal tendencies and mental damage. \ * ★ * ,\ In the recent murder of I# year-old woman teacher in Brooklyn, N.Y., her eonto-l charged with the slaying, allegedly told police ho had been "flying” on LSD for three days. NEW YORK (UPI) - The Italian luxury liner Michelangelo is expected to dock in New York tomorrow, tom days late because of a mighty Atlantic storm that buffeted the ship earlier in the week. Three persons aboard the Michelangelo died of injuries suffered when high winds and heavy seas hit the ship Tuesday. Twelve persons on the Italian lines were injured. The dead were identified as passengers, one of them insurance executive Mm Stein-bach, 58, of Chicago. Originally 18 persons were reported injured in the storm. But the line said yesterday two more reported to the Michelangelo's infirmary with broken ribs, raising the total to 11 They worn identified as an Italian steward and Wilbur Weeks, press attache at the American Embassy in Rome. The storm took a total of eight Uvea. Five British seamen were washed overboard from the refrigerator ship Chus-gal on Tuesday and lost at sea. mmf m AH 2-lnch tubing throughout. 2 *wings and trapez* bam Top bar la IT long, leftTS" long. 2 panengor lawn owing, deluxe glide air rid*. 7-fool hoe Wonding slide. Just say Charge It at Wabe*s. ! Toy Dipt.... Rfdt floor Fleetwing All Steel PLAY GYM $2/750 £. MCCULLOCH'S Spring SAW SALE Need a work savmg chain saw? Them was never a better time to buy than now—because Me-Culloch is offering it’s famous MAC 15 and 250 direct driye cham saws at savings up to $28.00. Each feature*.! full 19" guide bar that handies the big Jobs with ease, plus world famous McCullochdependability and value. Check and comparer-you can't find a better buy anywhere. SHOP MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY NITES TIL 9 Pinehurst 24-Inch Rotary RIDING MOWER SAVE $30 REG $229 $19900 Floating Wide Track Suspension h* Automotive Typo Differential E-Z Wind Up “MIcro-HIte* V* Rugged 4-HP. 4 eyde engine Of 12* Roar and 10” front Ttrea ✓ Forward, neutral, rauma Garden Shop... Lowar Level_________________ It's Time to ... THINK GREEN . v with SCOTTS ibossador 21" Rotary POWER MOWER Recoil starter and E-Z j height adjustment. 3-HP, 4 cycle Tacumsoh engine, steel housing. Charge yours at WaMa's. 19" Mower Reg. $42.. $38 21 * Mower Rag. 59.95 $54 Gordon Shop ... tower level Save *2 Turf Halts Builder $4»s $5»s America's favorite Honfo our host Halts Plus fcig. 9.95 *7VS preventer at e bar- ties lawn food gain. Coven 2/K)0 JGH) DBL MB CONSTRUCTION DE-A-RIDE DOOR |A WIDE 44* OPENING MH) FOUNDATION FLOOR / GATEWAY 20-10-5 /LAWN FOOD and FERTILIZER * y | hJ big covers 5,000 square foot of 3.99 ValtlO / skjw releasing lightweight vormiaHlly, C\ $Q87 / bate nan-burning nitrogen. Charge Zm b°9* O Shop THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 'Basing US Spain Not Due to Fren WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon says its decision to baae jet fighter squadrons in Spain is not the result of France ordering all foreign military forces and bases from its terrify. A Pentagon spokesman said Thursday there now are no UA air' squadrons in France. He said the decision to base three squadrons of Air Force F100 jet fighters at the Torrejou Air Base was made to lessen the strain on the U.S. Tactical Air Command. The command has been rotating three squadrons of jets from the United States to Italy and Turkey. The Spanish baas will permit Italy and Turkey to be served by U.8. Air Force units in Europe. About 800 Air Force men from the United States will be transferred to the Spanish base outside Madrid by thejad of this month. Torrejou Is^ooeYjf-three air bases used by the United States in Spain. The others are at Moron to southern Spain and Zaragoza in eastern Spain. Tbrrajon also is the base for KC135 jet tankers used to refuel B52 bombers. Spain now bars aerial refueling over its territory after a KC135 and a B52 collided last January. Four hydrogen bombs were lost, including one that was not recovered until last week in the Mediterranean 'County Road Tax | Can't Exceed Limit'] LANSING (APHAtiy. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled Thursday! that a local vqfa can not authorise taxes for local road purposes that might exceed the limit set by statute. * ★ * . "The amount of taxes for county road purposes which may be levied in each county is subject to the limitation prescribed by the statute," Kelley said. * ★ * “Such limitation is not subject to increase by vote 4f**ihe electors authorizing increase In the maximum millage limitation for the levy of taxes." The question was raised by Sen. Robert Richardson, R-Saginaw. AMBASSADOR SPECIAL 14 Top o' the Une "990* 4-DOOR SEDANS COMPUTRY EQUIPPEDI PRICE WAS *2,281 1 i NOW VILLAGE RAMBLER ■ Sales Inc., 666 S. Woodward Avo.f Birmingham Ml 6-3900 THE PONTIAC PRESS Eforon Street ■ ■>-' 1 FRIDAY, APRIL. IS, 1988 KMAactor O UoOvtLT freuUtkm U One Good Term Deserves Another Stour. years ago, Pontiac found itself with a city commission that soon after election split into factions. The effect was interference with the duties of the city manager , that hamstrung effective conduct of city affairs and eventually the loss of a highly-regarded city manager and a competent chief of police. Pontiac suffered widespread publicity as a city drifting, .without direction and a hazardous environment for potential industry. ★ ★ ★ Two years ago, the electorate rose up against the injury being done their city and cleaned house at City.Hall. The new commission, all men of high personal and business stature, have completely reversed the stalemate of confusion that characterized its predecessor. It appointed a city manager of demonstrated capability and has confined itself to the. proper sphere of counsel and cooperation. Today, the City’s affairs are in a state of exceptional stability. The citizenry can point with pride to realization of a program of debt-free capital Improvements, a bonded debt of inconsequential amount and one of the lowest tax rates in t h e State. As election day nears, there Js the inevitable last-minute sniping at the incumbent commission. Out issue — Pontiac's urban renewal program — is harped on by those who would break up the unity of the best governing body the City has had in many a day. But in advancing the administrar tion of urban renewal as weakness on the record of the commission, critics unwittingly point to its strength. By resisting the many opportunities to "fragmentize” the redevelopment of downtown Pontiac, the commission has preserved the entirety of Its area against the day — now seemingly at hand — when it could be undertaken as a grand total concept Fiscal Pontiac is analogous to a $10 million business. Let’s not jeopardize its well-being by handing over the reins of government to the inexperienced. Let’s keep a good thing when we’ve got it and vote Monday to continue in office able commissioners: T. Warren Fowler Robert C. Irwin William H. Taylor Jr. Leslie H. Hudson John A. Dugan Wesley W. Wood James H. Marshall New Bank Combines M oney With Magnificence If you’re harassed by modem heailring methods — photoelectron-Ics, automation, and other assorted robotry — relief is in sight. All you need is $25,000 and access to New York City, where today La Banque Continental Opens its doors. This is the long awaited experiment in luxury banking underwritten by the Franklin National Bank. The location is 60th Street and Fifth Avenue, and the decor is Louis Seize. The $25,000 is the balance required for ducking accounts for individuals—$50,000 for corporations. ■ f A 12-year-old boy stole a big interstate bus in Washington D. C„ the other day. That in itself was noteworthy, even in these days of expanding child precocity. / ★ • ^ v ★. But this kid was even more . unusual. He drove that big bus through tho midaftemoon traffic jam on Pennsylvania Avenue, out through historic Georgetown, across the Potomac River and along busy highways of Fairfax County until the police caught up with him. He must be punished, of course. But after he has atoned for hu act and is properly repentant, someone ought to take him in tow and make a driver instructor out of him. ★ ★ ★ But they’d better be quick about It, before he gets old enough to regard safe driving as kid stuff. 1 That usually happens around 16. UJS. Discord Useful to Buddhists Face To Foce! r David Lawrence Says: Viet Strife Jeopardizes U.S. Aid La Banque promises multilingual service and all the facilities of the best banks of today in an eighteenth century atmosphere. , It was to have opened last No-vember, bat its progress has been impeded by, among other things, jack of the proper woodwork. ★ ★ ★ Already several accounts in six figures have been established. This is one bank that may never be robbed. The bandits, if caught, would probably be guillotined. Youngster Takes Thing s-a Bus-Into Own Hands , By JAMES MARLOW / AP New* Analyst WASHINGTON — When the full story behind the Buddhists’ maneuvering in South Viet Nam comes out It may prove to be due of die slickest pieces of Machiavellianism in our time. The Buddhists are trying to oust their government The UB. government doesn’t seqm well-informed on what’s going on among the Buddhists and what’s driving them or, if it is, it’s keeping the information Itself. For that mason no say if ttae Buddhist’s leaden have a deal with the North Vietnamese Communists to seize the South Vietnamese government, ask the Americans to leave and let the Reds take over. It might appear at first, if this b what fae Bad* fats have la mind, that they •re sprraftog ea sheer gall since thta \ esaatry b hacking the geverameat of Pwhr Nguyen Cao Ky aad has enor-aneas lames la Viet Nam. Bufcslhay might be banking on something etoa to belp them carry the day: divided 1 ■ MARLOW appear as a strong factor in the Buddhists’ thinking. POLICY ATTACKED L A President Johnson’s policy on Viet Nam has been under attack from many quarters in this country — particularly fa the Senate and the academic world — and perhaps he can’t gauge its full effect on him. And the criticism here at home could leave an doubt in the minds of the Vietnamese, North aad Sooth, that American thinking was divided not n Verbal Orchids WASHINGTON— If the rival factions and groups In Saigon could understand what the current reaction to their quarrel has been throughout the United States, they would be much worriedg about theirf own survival. They might1 come to real- LAWRENCE be that they may be on the verge of committing suicide by turning South Met Nam over to the Communists. For ever since the new crisis begannhd threats were made to overthrow the existing regime in Saigon, there Nave, been misgivings here, together with concern as to whether the United States might be required to withdraw from Viet Nam altogether. The idea of “polling eat” has been widely dbaw«l, and some cynics have even suggested that maybe removal of the present regime might furnbh an excuse for the United States to extricate itaelf from a situation which has become politically menacing to toe administration. It b obvious that, if the mil-. itary forces of the United States left Viet Nam, the Communists would trice over through the Viet Cong, their puppets. Ail the effort to protect South Met Nam from acts of aggression would have proved to be in vain, and there would arise in Southeast Asia a worry as to which government or country would be the next victim of Communist deviltry. CONSIDERABLE PATIENCE Through the whole period of uncertainty, however, the high officiate of the American government have refused to believe that the rival parties in South Viet Nam would dare to do anything that would lose them the military assistance of the United States. Considerable patience has been .required to continue the military strngge hi the face of the dbcouraging circumstances that have emerged in the internal meat of a new government It Is, of course, recognized as desirable to arrange for a civilian government to preside over the destinies of the Vietnamese people. The demand for a constitutional assembly b logical — the premier has publicly promised to call one in five months. But the top Buddhist leader isn’t satisfied with thafr-interval and wants more immediate action. Unfortunately in a war-torn country like Met Nam, where changes in government have been accomplished before by a sudden coup d’etat, there is a fear of a complete breakdown tn the established gov- —This creates a serions dilemma far the United States, which has held to the view Oat its intervention la Viet Nam b Justified aadcr international law because the geverameat in power requested such aid aad participation to repelling aggreo-. sion. But if a new government begins to debate whether or not it wants American aid, it jeopardizes the whole situation. Clarification of the Vietnamese position would seem imperative if the whole structure of American aid b not to become shaky as a rising public opinion in the United States starts calling for a withdrawal (CssmsM, Two Bob Considine Says: What TerriblePressure Johnson Must Be Under NEW YORK — Say a prayer for LBJ. The decisions he must make in the next few days call for rtha aid of greater advisers than even Robert McNamara. i ride to B the history of these days b writ-is effect of whet haa happened bn field of one of America’s most prized Bans — freedom of fafaech — may For instance, Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., said tiie American people are going to “repudiate this administration and they should. You Just can’t justify our being in war over there.” \ * ★ ★ He called the U.S. position in Met Nam “shockingly immoral” and aald that if the South Vietnamese were ever to choose freely a Communist government, the United States should support it. END TO ILLUSIONS. . If you were a Vietnamese and heard that —and much more — you wouldn’t be under any illusion that Americans were 109 per cent behind Johnson to trying to crush the Communists or at least farce them to seek peace. And if you were a Vietnamese, American division might seem to yon a symbol of uncertainty aad hesitation and therefore an Inducement to action which otherwise might have seemed hopeieee to you. Roy Gillespie of Goodrich; S5th birthday. Mr. aad Mrs. George Foete of 765 Third; Mth wedding anniversary; Mrs Nina Kber of Romeo; 80th birthday. MS. aad Mrs. George W. BodeD of S24 Valencia; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Sorenson of Union Laka; golden wedding anniversary. Mr. aad Mrs. Fred B. Carpenter of Rochester; 59th wedding anniversary. MraadMrs..Hetaya St. Dennis Sr. of 132 Draper; list wedding anniversary. I suppose every mother and father to our land still hopes that their little boy CONSIDINE will grow up to be president of the United States, a sacred American ambition. Bat even the littiest boys must recognize by now tint the post their proud parents have hopefully assigned them can be a terrible kind of Job, filled with more heartaches than pomp and circumstance, acconmanied by more dirges than stirring renditions of “Hall to the Chief.” What terrible pressures the man in the White House must be under! Is there any parallel in our history to his dilemma? it h it Hera. we are, committed 300,000 strong to a turbulent country halfway around the world, fighting a war unlike any we’ve ever fought to our times, against a foa we know in our hearts b toe Bad Guy of modem life. The task of the American boy engaged there must become increasingly bewildering. For a time he was simply asked to be an adviser. Then may be battling against sternly regimented aad indoctrinated groups garnered by toe natty and chauvinistic Buddhbb of Met Nam. The U.S. is filled with speculation that Washington to about to say to our frienib to South Viet Nam, “Surry, chums, we did what we could for you; now you handle it yoqr own way." One wonders, one waits. One hopes. One prays for a right decision from the lonely man to the White House who must make it. Voice of the People: Tontide Press Gives Faithful Service? This is tq inform you that Greg Seaman ia the bdst paperboy we over bad ami is leaving our I route. He delivers in Clarkston Gardens! and we are his Peach Drive Route. This I boy deserves a citation or a bonus of! some kind. He comes rain or shine, snow V or sleet, and always puts the paper in-1 side the storm door. We never have had | a wet or torn naner. JOHN AND NANCY HARDING CLARKSTON Readers Discuss Gty Commission Election I thought The Pontiac Press would urge the reelection of the present City Commission. Tho Pontiac Press urged the election of Nixon, Bagwell, Goldwater, etc. Also, isn’t this the Commission that urged an income tax on the working people of Pontiac? CLAUDE STOGLIN 629 BALBOA The editorial to Monday’s paper about our present City Commbriooars leaves me with one thought and that b Just how stupid do you think wa are. Where did the present City Commto-sioners get experience if not at our commission table? I know of one candidate far the City Commbfam who has been working with another phase of our City government and manages a large business office. If this man were given half a chance he would put most present City Commissioners to shame. ■it- It: ” ' it Let’s be fafr aad have a few more epen-mtoded editorials. Many of toe men who are now challenging the present Commissioners are more than qualified. ♦ ★ ' * " America b based on toe fact that everyone haa an equal chance. These present Commissioners haven’t shown the working people too much and we would like representation. A THINKER AND HOPEFUL MRS. M. SHEBELLA 318 E. COLUMBIA Supports Bill Regulating Insurance Firm* Let’s hope the pending bin goes through to regulate insurance companies and prevent indiscriminate cancellation of policies. Insurace companies can now cancel because a person goes bankrupt. Bankruptcy has nothing to do with an accident The insurace company says a person who goes bankrupt is a poor risk. How come? FOR THE BILL ‘Fraudulent Works Blighting .Art Market’ An increasing flood of fraudulent art, particularly the works of famous living artists, has become a blight on the otherwise booming U.S. art market. Private collectors, museums and educational institutions are being victimized by frauds, forgeries and other deceptive practices. The situation haa led to demands for legislators reforms that would make traffic to fraudulent and forged art more difficult This pirt of our warning b a continuing effort to educate and protect toe public. THE NATIONAL BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU, NEW YORK ” r Writer Gives Details of Fire Fighters’ Pay The Pontiac Fire Fighter - the lowest rank — b now paid 97,060 per year. This b an increase of $1,010 to the past 18 months. He b on duty 24 hours and b off 24 hours with an extra day off every six calendar days. ^—¥ i . * This means the Fire Fighter b on doty only ten days oat of 10 aad he con trade days to extend his time-off period. Ha geta a vacation with fail pay to addition. After one year ha gets II days off; after five years he gets almost a month off,, aad after tea years he gets five weeks off. In addition to all fab, firemen get tea extra days’ pay a year for holidays whether they are ea doty or sot This b $271 a year for the beginning position. The City furnishes complete uniform and replacements. H pays half at the insurance premium on $7,000, and the entire Blue Cross-Blue Shield expense for the fireman and his family. In addition to all this, the City pays into the pension fund over $1,600 a year for each fireman toward his retirement, and gives him a very generous pension at age 55$ after 20 years of service. it it it His annual pension can be as much as 71 per cent of kb final salary. The Clty pays him while he fa skk op to nine months. When he b called back for a major fire he gets time and a half. Bat the picket line signs aroand City Hall say, “The City Just gives Os peanuts.” DENZH W. LOUGHEED 416 FOURTH Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Curfew to fight at the aide of the South Vietnamese to the hope of saving them from a Communist take-over. At a certain point, about the time Premier Ky came to, it was suggested that he fight on his own against the Met. Cong and North Metnamese regulars, as tough or tougher than the Japanese hto father may have faced to World War D. Now he fights both too Viet 01* Mi North VlsO-eotn It: The Saginaw News While confessing that crime and delinquency are not simple problems and do not lend themselves to simple solutions, Saginaw must ask itself why it has not been applying at least one tori immediately at hand to discourage some of the delinquency. As Prosecuting Attorney Robert B. Currie noted, Saginaw haa a 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. curfew law on the books restricting minors under the ago of 17. .v • : Applying Governor Bom-ley's own figures that beys and girls If years of age and a a d a r eanunit M per cent ef the reported Crimea to Michigan — why have law eafarceaaaat officers ignored toe ohvloai? A curfew never will solve • lone the sources of delinquency, but it. could remove from the streets and gathering points hundreds of youngsters whose fcfio nighttime wanderings and group-toga lead them into aecafiad “kick” activities. Tbore to enough leeway to the curfew tow to permit to- basis because of presumed general public , disapproval, then let the ordinance be challenged officially. Lot its Justification be proved or disproved. If crime is our ntonber^pne problem, we’d better use available tools at hand until better ones can be developed and applied. It b something to be discussed, now, to cooperation with township and county officials as well. A Common Tale... The Canadian (Ont.) Champion The average but rider’s complaint it one of long standing. police have tolled to impose the ordinance on a dtyiride Emphasizing Caution The Holland Evening Sentinel Every driver who has tried to beat the yellow caution light of a traffic signal will appreciate the efforts of James Hines. He b producing, and now has ready for sale, a traffic signal which allows • driver to know how kmg the caution lfaht Is going to stay on. Ho more guessing; n» more getting caught fa the fatortsotion juet an the red signal ti ‘ Mr. Hines’ light works tike this. A few seconds before the green signal is absat to go off a bright 9 (for • seconds) appears •• the caatioa light. Then It ticks down to sua at one second intervals — 1, 7, 4,1,4,1,2,1. Then the entfae caatioa tight tights * far three seconds. Thsa tiie red light comes on. Tib gives Ike motorist a good chasm to lodge whether ho can make it through the intersection safely or not. f. - it it >-dr Abilene, Texas, has tried the signal on one of its worst intersections far nine months and was so well satisfied with the results that it b buying another $6,000 worth to try on other bad corners. If it works for Abilene it’s likely to work anywhere. And if a new light can save lives, then we should investigate the Abilene, Texas, program then give tiie tight a trial nm. Th» AiHrtrts* new a mttm ••cfcwIvMy to KM dm tor rapuM-cijMow rt «ll teal n«y printed^ the Pontiac Prea h delivered Jjv carrier tar » cants a JOSfcj MH mailed h OaMwd. (Senate* Uj WeSSwew^CeSSw a'VsMJS a year; ateawhere In MUchtga* m* EhwtfcMurf osr-T&'S® Settee aTfUBa mumbm. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL IB, JOM A—7 Officials Doubt China Ready to Improve U S. Ties WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. authorities voiced doubt today that Communist China la ready to improve relations with the United States despite Washington’s gradually - opening - door policy toward the Chinese main* land. The State Department Thursday opened that door a bit further, saying that Communist Chinese scientists and scholars will be allowed to coma to American universities. ymJJF Press officer Robert J. Me-Cloekey said several U.S. universities have been by the State Department in recent weeks that they may invite visits by Red Chinese scientists .'and scholars. The Peking regime has been advised of this but he knows of no response, he added. The U.S. government eight years ago lifted its bars against American newsmen going to Red China. In recent months, with the personal approval of President Johnson, it has further lifted barriers for various types of experts. MEDICAL SPECIALISTS Last December the State De- partment said U.S. medical specialists could visit Communist China. Last month it said U.S. scientists and scholars could go. It also suggested trading weather Information with the Red But so far, U.S. officials reports, Peking has steadfastly rebuffed the UR. overtures bom publicly and in the periodic con- , fldential U.S.-Chinese ambassadorial meetings atvW*rsiw. ★ Red Chinese propaganda continues to berate the* United States as the NO. 1 capitalist- arch enemy. At Warsaw, the Peking anabases-. dor is said to have rejected any accommodation with the United; States on other matters until this country, quits supporting the Chinese Nationalists, which Washington refuses to de*.-U.8. authorities believe that the current Peking leadership is so wedded to its militant polity, which even Includes castigation of the Soviet Union’s “peaceful coexistence,” Oat no turnabout in Red China’s posture toward the United States is in the offing. POUR INJURED IN CRASH McMiillin, SI, of Wenatchee, Wat of tiie big rig shown here, was list condition by hospital authorities a lislon with a station wagon drlva PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE Little Judy Still Getting Lots of Mail It’s a Pleasure to Have You Here PRICE REDUCED TO Your favorite summer match mates gay checked ginghams COMBED COTTONS MAD FOR LACE! FLINT Funsch, S, heart five-hour ordeal ing table. The climbed to more pieces of mail. Doctors at the University of! Michigan Hospital in Ann Arbor removed an obstruction in i pulmonary vein bringing blood from the lungs to the heart. Without the operation, they said, Judy would have only a few years to live. Hie frail little Monde went home to Flint last wade NO visitors outside the family are to be allowed for a month, when she will return to the hospital tat a checkup. TOY WHITE POODLE Judy’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Funsch, bought her a toy white poodle for Easter. She has played with the dog around the yard outside their house. “But she tires easily,” Mrs. Funsch said. “And w‘ tires, she complains of chills.” At first, Judy was 1 for the hospital, where she virtually was adoptee mascot by nurses and the staff. The day after returning home, Judy developed a sore throat and high fever—but it did not last. “Judy’s not eating well,” her mother said worriedly. “She has a pretty good breakfast, but not much the rest of the day. “Some days are good—and same not eo good.” NOW OPEN AwuMinj -Hefatage APARTMENTS 3366 Welldm Lake Rd. 1 and 2 BEDROOMS prices atari at *145 MONTHLY This, beautiful modem apartment with “oil electrical appliances, heat, light, air condition ing are all included in rental price." Also 0 carport for each apartment. Form icq Kitchti — Largg Closat — Unusual Convenianco Features - Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday Saturday, Sunday: 1 te S and 6:30 te 8:10 Phene: 674-2959- Mornings 673-6927 $164 , $729 v/ 4/S quart ~ L* pint Indudaa 4% Michigan Salat Tax . HALF GALLONS AND QUARTS AVAILABLE ON SPECIAL ORDER First in Music Sines 1879 4-pc. Drum Set in sparkle finish Outstanding value in the very latest compact drum outfit. The all new "Star* lite" includas: 5Vi"xl4" Snare Drum, 14" x 22" Bass Drum, 9" x 13" Tom Tom, 16"x 16" Floor Tom, 1 Mounted Cymbal Holder, Mbunted Tom Holder, Drum . Sticks, and Brushes. Sparkle finish in gold or silver and colors. * . v Complete outfit 19950 UX-jjt* art. • Blf Cooling Capacity 'MOtTSPORTCOATS idim 1MNVH1 suMuai 'portable TV Mb (Mb included with some docks!), and authentic 6” rise. Black, blue. olive, wheat. 2-36. TISF ACT ION GUARANTEE fi£B INSTANT PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TELEGRAPH RD. % MILE 1 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 1MIU forth mf Miracle Milo Open Dolly. 10*9*-Open Sunday 10-7—FE 3-705) ■-BPIilSKWITBMr GLENWOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry Street at Glenwood SI” Norge Gas Range Fully Automatic Demo. *89” Easy Spin Dryer 20-lb. eapacHy ' This Unit Hat Sud* i Saving Features Only *98 Hot Water Tank 20-Gal. Capacity Olass Lined >59^5 $47 PRE-SEASON COOLING SALE CONSOLE JWDFO O w \jOO CArflNEl’ e 4-SPEAKER SOUND Solid-state amplifier e Multi-plex fm-am radio • Record storage space •for Admiral 26” COLOR TV •HMTlOW um nuuK-m ptn •A****N . THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1»M DUE FOR NEW TUNE — Hie home of 8igma C3ii fraternity at Albion, where the aong “Sweetheart of Sigma CM’' was written 52 years ago, is due for a new tune. The fraternity house is going to be demolished. Hie song was written by Byron D. Stokes, now a retired advertising executive in Pasadena, Caiif., and F. Dudleigh Vernon, organist at Metropolitan Methodist Church in Detroit. Up the Down Street Wrong-Way Bus System OK 'The Ringer' Is on FBI's List WASHINGTON (UPI)-Jamee Robert Ringrose, a fast-moving bad check artist and narcotics addict, was plaited today on the FBI’s list of 10 most-wanted criminals. The FBI warns thst the 23-year-old fugitive is armed and “extremely dangerous.” He has been sought since Feb. 26, IMS, when he passed a bad check' on a New York Bank. *' ★ * Known to the underworld asi “The Ringer,” Ringrose is credited with netting hundreds of thousands of dollars through his bad check exploits and is also suspected in a number of armed robberies throughput the United States. The range of his operations was demonstrated in September 1964, when he defrauded a bank in Minneapolis of 62,606 on one day and the following day was arrested after a gun battle in Seattle, Wash., where he attempted a similar scheme. REPEAT OF A SELLOUT! Floor Stand,' Hi-Hat Padal and Cymbals extra. GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422 Downtown, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 NEW YORK (UPI)—“Wrong-way buses,” presently being tried in Indianapolis, may play a significant part in solving the transit problems of big cities, the president of the American Transit Association said wday. Edgar A. Claffey, who also is p r • > i d e a t ' of Indianapolis Transit Co., said Indianapolis officials, including thfe police, and the public are enthusiastic about the wrong-way bus system which has been tried experimentally on one of the city’s main thoroughfares far the past nine months. It was suggested by Arthur Wake of the city traffic department. At the name implies, the wroag-way system means having the busses in one lane on the tide of a one-way street go in the direction opposite to the flaw of the traffic. No parking is allowed in this lane, so the buses never meet with any ob- structions. As used on College Avenue in Indianapolis, the buses move wrong-way only as they bring passengers into the heart of the city. The buses moving in the other direction move with the flow of the traffic and have no special lane. Carmen Not Interested in Army—She's a Girl WYOMING, Mich. (AP) -Carmen Sietsema is approaching draft age, and the U.S. Army wants Carmen to enlist, but Carmen doesn’t want to-She’s a girl. Carmen, 18, a high school sen-tr, found a letter from the Army in the mail Thursday saying that since she was approaching draft age, would she like to enlist? “Any motorist also can drive wrong-way on College Avenue so long as he stays behind thej bus until he turns off,” ex-jlained Claffey. “And the buses! n line; they can’t pass each other. LINE MARKER A double yellow line marks off the wrong-way lane and the no-parking rule in it is strictly enforced.” MODELS OPEN Daily 1-7 p.m.; Sun. 10-5 1 and 2-BEDROOM UNITS • Quiet • Luxurious • Convenient Call... FE 5-8585 or 682-2610 ARROWHEAD MALL ARTS. 2435 Elisabeth Lake Rd. (Minuter from Pomtime Mailt tilted prices ee evsry Itsm In stock. Westers, Dryers, Refrigerators, Ranges, TVs (pertsblM, isolts, snd color sets). Frtettrs, etc. If yse Med eny household appliance tfiis ie the time to r It. Seme are see of e kind, crate marred, repetieecienti but many arc 1966 medeli sttH ie ir original factory cartees. Net tH Hama at ad stores. Marchandlss subject to.prlsr sals. SALE SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 7 P.M. PONTIAC WAREHOUSE Telegraph Rd., Vi Mile South of Orchard Lake Rd. OKN DAILY 10-10 SUNDAY 12-7 It’s MOP, MOO. MODI What's more modem than "mod" • •. not o thing... unless, of course, it would be "tomorrow*! And -tomorrow • and for the two days following tomorrow, you'll find the newest in "mod" clothing for the young "in" crowd... all very specially priced to save you a pocketful of money at K mart! STOVE-PIPE cur Ann Arbor mrwmUmmd "MOD" SHIRTS "MOD" SLACKS 24.97 IWieek, Engl ishedpe belt with “mod” buckles. Cheese brown or black. Charge It. "AAOD" TIES Compare at $35 Very “mod”... very smart! 4-button front coat. . . with .boulder epaulet., big-over-aioed flap peeked, British aide rent, T deep. Brown, bine, gray. Stow 36-42, regular,long. , "MOD" HATS “Now at now* ... the m peaked "mod" style in 4 eocdnrOy with Mock. M braid trim! ® polka doll... and THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL IMW A—0 Oakland Schools Seekingldriid for Oakland Scboola officiate are seeking an additional 25 acres of land to house board offices, and n new state law Is expected to ease their task. Yesterday, the Oakland Schools Board of Education au-thorized Supt. Dr. WUUam J. Emerson to commence negotiations with county officials to obtain land at the Service Center. HO Wi law — sl| Gov. Romney this w permits tntjfoftite districts to award bends one-tenth of 1 yer eost coeaty’s total elate limits would not require a public p»«* Of a inf land. To issue bonds within I "Correction: Hygrade Beef Stew wot incorrectly priced in PEOPLE'S AND FOODTOWN SUPER MARKETS advertisement in The Pontiac Press Wednesday, April 13, 1966. This copy should have read: HYGRADE BEEF STEW 39‘ 1 Pound 8 Ounce Can The Pontiac Press The county’s estimated state equalised valuation this year la $2,568,750,000, which means that Oakland Schools could issue bonds totaling more than $2.5 million. WILL BE NEEDED Emerson and board members noted that more permanent buildings win be needed in the future for the library, staff development, administration, special education and date processing. Oakland Schools’ main facility off North Telegraph and breaches on Huron and Oakland Avenue presently consist of IMN square feet of space. In other business, the board approved a preliminary general budget of $635,251 for 196567-previously accepted by designates of local school districts— for submission to the C o u n t y Tax Allocation Board. .*• * ★ ★ Oakland Schools expects to receive .166 mills (11.6 cents per $1,000 state equalised valuation) which would produce about $410,000 In revenue, for general budget purposes. $N,6O0 INCREASE The budget is abou£ an $80,-000 increase over the current budget of $555,309. The board also an thorized Emerson to apply for two federal grants under Tide m of ary Education Act of 196$. Included is one of $37,290 for planning a mathematics project for nbn-college4>ound secondary students. ★ The other — for $300,000 — will be issued jointly from Detroit City Schools and possibly two other intermediate districts for engineering and program- ming a complex of teleprocessing systems. CENTRAL COMPUTERS Local districts would submit work directly to central computers at intermediate district faculties. In stffi etl beard approved transfer of $4,888 in the general budget from reading clinic trainees to Broxovich, who has BB. and M.A. degrees from the Univer-of Michigan and George Peabody College, respectively, will be paid $10,500 a year. He Two persons were hired yesterday. * * * Richard Brosovich, 26, will be an educational psychologist starting Sept. 5, while Claire Mautner, 27, was hired as a consultant for physically handicapped. Plot in Cairo Said Smashed BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) Egyptian authorities have smashed a plot by a group of army officers to overthrow the of U.A.R. President Gamal Abdel Nasser, diplomatic sources said today. They said 20 officers had been arrested in Cairo and would be given secret treason trials because of the. Nasser gpvem-ment’s reluctance to publicly idmit opposition within the irmy. The officers were reported to have decided to attempt to overthrow the regime because of opposition to Nasser’s Ye- ls presently a school psychologist for Dearborn schools. Miss Mautner, a graduate of Central Michigan University, start at $6,660. She is presently with Kalamazoo schools. BUY, SELL, TRADE---USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! STILL GOING STRONG! UP TO AND O MORE FURNITURE Ht-MK VONtMT The were said to be resentful over the financial drain and cost hi lives of the Yemen operation, and favored immediate withdrawal. ★ '• A : h Nasser recently announced his 70,000 troops in Yemen, who have been propping up the republican regime in three year of civil war against Saudi Arabia-backed Royalists, would tsay there until at least 1968. Stop trying to figure it out.... ‘The New 19"f Rectangular RCA VICTOR T V Sets I The TOWNSEND GH-560 Spscs soviet Color TV Is Contemporary design. Has RCA Hkito Cotar Tub* with ran eorth phosphor* for mwurpawad brijfctsoss. Is hard- V anywhara. Steak anrftri anywhere.. was GO anywhere! • TINY EFFICIENCY • SNUG HOME • COZY APARTMENT • MOBILE HOME Tho ALLEN FH-522E Prices Start $QQQ95 at Mo GH564 Nerdk-tsspirad Color TV aosaoi-itts. Mastercrafted cabinet da-signed for komai with Umitad spies. Has all-channel tuning, RCA Solid Coppor Circuits for grsstor dependability ssd s boot of other jfaluxa feature*. Tumi for footftor viewing! You Just don’t nond o lot of opoco with RCA Victor's sleek, apace-saving Swivel Color TV. It flts anywhara—tiny efficiency, snug honw, cozy apartment or mobile homo. And tho Scendinevien-style Felton swivels for bettor viow-te*. FELTON GH-5B4 ' tevenaot—t-MOeo.ia.ouunw, ' . steyicwnitr.cotr^o*at , \ SEE YOUR BCA VICTOR DEALER NOW 1 J Reg. Rea" <5 Reg. 50% SAVINGS on FINE FURNITURE ALL FLOOR SAMPlfS MUST GO..,BECAUSE OF IMPENDING URBAN RENEWAL PURCHASE OF OUR BUILDING!. . . Many one-of-a-kinds, some slightly soiled, yet all this fine furniture' is a giveaway at these huge savings! CHAIRS More Than 50% OFF Reg. $110.00 Ladies^ Tufted Back Swivel Chair., 39.50 Reg. 98.50 Colonial Wing Chair, Print Fabric... 39.50 ^ Reg. 89.50 Quilted Slipper Chair.... 39.50 Reg. 69.50 Selig Ladies’ Chair.... 34.50 Reg. 3Z50 White Enamel Desk-Vanity Chair . .9.95 Special Group of Smart OCCASIONAL CHAIRS Reg. 25.95 to 12.98 1 / New.., I/Opp 129#» 27“/<2 Group of RECLINER CHAIRS • Early American Whig Style • hatch Provtndol • Contemporary • Italian jr“l/oFF *93 » 61” /O BENCHES, TABLES up to 50% OFF! Reg. 29.95 Maple Cocktail Table, Formica Top... • 9.95 Reg. 19.95 MppleCobblersBencjyV....4.95 Reg. 59.50 White Decorated Deacons Bench..... 29.75 Reg. 29.95 Maple Night Table with Drawer.... 14.82 . Reg. 19.95 Mersman Coffee Table.......8.95 ta WnKirt end formica Top Reg. 49.50 Lane hHght Table*•••••• 19.95 18.95 m'r-Type Tote Table............... 4.95 29.50 Imported Slot Top 60-Inch Bench.... 12.95 With bMiy Walnut Finite 39.50 Group of 3 Nesting Tables...;..... 19.75 ----With Solid Walnut Top and Chroma Ugt ~ 19.75 Quaint and Lovely Upholstered Bench. .9.95 39.00 Group of 3 Stacking Tables.........18.95 9.75 Tile-Top Snack Table ................ 4.95 tug.3.00 Discontinued 27"xl8" CARPET SAMPLES Prated Your Group of Beautiful WALL PICTURES OFF Your Choice y2' BEDROOMS up fo 50% OFF! Reg. 169.00 White Enamel Bonnet Top Bed. _ _ ond motchiog 3-drawer chest In French Provincial i •. 88*00 Reg. 179.50 Conteipporary Walnut Bed and Chest 99.50 Reg. 725.00 Drexel French Walnut Bedroom with paper canopy bod, draerar, mirror, chow.495.00 Reg. 399.50 Contemporary Pecan 5-pc. Bedr'm 288.00 Reg. 299.00 Triple Dresser, Mirror, Chest, Panel SrfteMmetapBratyOSsd typn wolnd..........229.00 Deg. 315.00 Italian Provincial Cherrywood Bed, Dronar, Mbrar, Chaw, Mghr Table...239.50 Reg. 286.00 Princess dresser and large circular (tetamotchod).........T.?S!T...... 99.00 Reg. 74.50 Solid Maple Bunk Bed, * _____________joddnr. Guard M ond 2 Bod*........ 44.50 GROUP OF TABLE LAMPS voUm.teS3o.oo DINING ROOMS up to 50% OFF Reg. 301.50 Italian Provincial Pedestal Table and 4 matching chain............... 1 99.50 Reg. 507.50 Contemporary Pecan Dining Room SwUte Buffnt, Tablo and 4 Chain.................349.00 Reg. 170.00 Early American Maple Dining Room 48-tadi Hlgh-flramur. Top Tablo, 2 Captain Chain _ -------- -............ 85 CABINETS up to 50% OFFJ/ Reg. 164.00 Oak Bookcase Base and Hutch Tpp^. 69.50 Reg. 69.95 Maple Cabinet, s' I drawer, louvered doonx\...... 29.50 Reg. 124.50 Solid Maple Drawer Ctfbinet, Bookcase Top. . ./C........88.00 Reg. 15.00 Walnut Valet Stend ........9.95 Reg. *225 6-Piece RATTAN GROUP • 3-Piece Sectional Sofa <£“l / Cf\ • LoungOxCnair vj) 8 Corjm Table • End Table xHOSTESS SERVING. CART with CASTERS Regular 24.95 Brow Frame with f ( 17 O High Pressutn fop OUTDOOR FURNITURE Rug. 39.95 Chair*... 419.98 Reg. $64 Chaise lounge $32* Plenty of Free Parking FURNITURI TUE POiTOAC l*UKHStFftlDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 Even Dead Politicians Not Safe CoitimiiiloMrl Dfit. 6 INDEPENDENT *1,000 to *5,000 or Cash when rteeded! HOME 1 MORTGAGE Without obligation, see and talk with Mr. Mrrlt Voss or Mr. Bnelpoer. who have been loaning money to hnndreda of people in Pontiac during the past 40 yean. All borrow* en will testify to receiving fair, honest, and courteous treatment. (Do not take a chance Mealing with strangers or fly-by-night lenders.) SMALL MOSTHtY PAYMENTS! ★ CREDIT UFE INSURANCE ' When you deal here, yon receive the full amount of your lopn in cash at once. No papers to sign until the loan is closed. No charge for inspection, appraisal or surrey. No charge for abstract, title search or title insurance. | ATNOEXTRACOsm | Borrow from us to consolidate your debts, to pay off the balance yon owe on your contract. to pay taxes to make borne repairs or improvements, or for any other good purpose. See ns today- SPECIAL free Parking on county lot comer N. Sag- Free Parking whenever you apply for an inaw and W. Huron Sts. each Mane you bring approved loon or renewal. to oar office a full monthly payment. Bring us yoer parking ticket to be stamped. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NATIONAL BUILDING — 334-3267 CITY COMMISSION PLEASE GET OUT AND VOTE! ThU advertisement paid for by members of the Pontiac fire Fighters Assn, PONTIAC BELGIAN PRINCE IS SIX - Prince HiflHppe of Liege, son of Belgium’s Prince Albert, and his mother, Princess Paoia, sit , AP PksMaa for the prince’s official sixth birthday picture in Brussels. The prince’s birthday is today. WASHINGTON UP - The kidnaping of political party patriarchs was escalated yesterday when Rep. GeraldTord of Michigan remarked aloud that Thomas Jefferson “called himself a Republican." ft* ' it ★ Ford, House Republican leader, also told a news conference that Jefferson cut federal spending, reduced taxes, repaid part of the national debt and repealed the tax on whisky. “Whether he was the last Democrat or the first Repnblicaa to do this, I will leave far historians to argne," Ford added. House Speaker John McCormack, D-Mass., often has argued that if Abraham Uncoil) Uyed today the emancipator would be a Democrat. McCormack was out of Town when Ford spoke and couldn't answer. A* ★ ..Mr Jefferson's party, from which the present-day Democratic Party claims descent, was known as the Republican Party. It opposed the conservative group of the day, the Federalists. THEIR in Highway Unit Affirms 1-696 Rejection LANSING (AP) - The State] Highway Commission voted] Thursday to affirm a previous decision abandoning its pre* ferred location of 1-466 through - south Oakland and Macomb counties. But Highway Director How-aid Hill warned: “What it boils down to is tills route (the original) or no route at ail." ★ it ★ Commission Chairman Ardale Ferguson said negotiations on the project will continue for at least three months more in hopes the communities fighting Lost Dog? Just Dial DETROIT (AP) — Beginning today, if you k>se your dog in Detroit, just stick your finger in a telephone dial and flick off L-O-S-T-D-O-G. If you find a dog, do the same filing. _____________________ ---------------------— The letters translate to 567-1364, and that’s the number pFj the Michigan Humane Society's new lost and found infonrtation center. / In announcing/the new service, the society forgot one thing: What debs one do if he . loses a cat?/ ■ _________________■ the proposed route will withdraw objections. One of the serjes of meetings ] jwas scheduled Thursday night! at Madison Heights. CONSTRUCTION HALT Ferguson said if no agreement is readied “Construction will Bind to a halt.” Hill visioned worse possibilities. # * * “If we don’t proceed along this route, we’re dead?’ he said. can study alternate routes but this is the only one that can be completed by the 1972 deadline to qualify for 90 per cent federal assistance wi- lder the Interstate Highway Program." I Hill said failure to qualify for federal aid would leave only two alternatives. —"Absolute traffic ’Stagnation” in the fast-growing and populous areas of southern Macomb and Oakland Counties. —Construction of the 1150-million east-west highway with W cal funds. x * * * y The commission took a second vote on the routing after Mtty. Gen. Frank Kelley- ruled that a March 4 special meeting at which the coimnission first rescinding jts approval of the route wad illegal. FIREMEN Vermont to Buy Power yrxvm Canada to Resell MONTPELIER, Vt. UR - The Vermont Public Service Board has approved a plan to. create a corporation to 1 m p 0 r t Canadian power for resale to util-! ities. The power would come fro facility proposed for Churchill Falls in Labrador. Announcing A Consulting Service for Industrial and Commercial - Building Projects Why not l«t 28 ygara construction Taxporionco ^tiocltogo* your building problems end, insure /that the building you want is delivered at a price you can afford? ARCHITECTURE AMD ENGINEERING SELECTION SITE SELECTION COST ANALYSIS PROJECT CONSTRUCTION From $5,000 to $5,000,000 we offer a complete construction service — and you are spared the headaches! --/CA ■ f BUILDING CONSULTANTS DIVISION Vn/fly Schunwr Construction Company 2431 Pdntiac Read Pontiac, Michigan 48057 Talapheha: 395-9461 . ASK CITY VOTERS SUPPORT BACKING THE * v ... . ■ • ■■ / H p... LABOR CANDIDATES Tillt 1*UWTIAC l’HKSS, FRIDAY. APRIL M. 1W U. o( D. Will Honor Sukarno OKs Vole for New Congress Takes Husband's Place Robb! Posthumously’ DETROIT (UPI) - The Uid-versity of Detroit announced today that it will bestow a doctor of humane letters degree posthumously on die slain Rabbi ■ Morris Adler. “ ’ ■ ‘ The degree ‘will be conferred April 30 at commencement exercises at the Roman Catholic -school. Honorary degrees will , also be conferred upon the Rev. ,!John Courtney, S.J., Woodstock College in Maryland, and the j Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich, . bishop of die Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. SINGAPORE (AP) - Indonesian President 8ukamo has agreed to election at a people's Congress, Radio Jakarta said today. c_ The broadcast, monitored in Singapore, said Sukarno will address the present Parliament on the proposed elections at'a meeting May 12. The radio did not say when the elections would bis held, what powers the new Congress would have, or whether It would replace Indonesia’s present advisory parliamentary groups, 0 f ,+ Observers in Singapore said elections had already been decided on by the new reform Cabinet, led by military strong man Lt. Gen. Suharto, and Sukarno's approval was only a formality. GREENVILLE, OMo (AP) -Annie Oakley's home county has a woman sheriff but die doesn't pi an to tote ■■mmMMgim shootin’ irons. The new sher- County, a grand-ma and fanner shoe clerk, ures on leavlng.r^| to her menfolk chore of bearing Margaret arms in patrol- Howard ling the county’s 677 square mites and protecting Its 47,000 citiaens. She U Margaret Howard, born and raised here, and appointed interim successor to her late husband, Sheriff Robert How- The Democratic Central Committee picked her on its first ballot this week to serve until a November election can fill the final two years of her husband's unexpired term. Mrs. Howard’s husband died at SO, on March 90. The widow said she felt obligated to carry on her husband's work the fray she feels he would have wanted it done, and' Hint’s why she announced as a candidate for the appointment, FORGET IT As for any influence the !a- Howard’s career, forget it. "I haven’t read up too much” Mrs. Howard said about the Wild West dhow markswoman who became an expert shot in Darke County bagging game for a family left fatherless. “But my grandfather was quite a his- I mi have’pisntyto think about when youV^pIanning "a party. What to weaf. Who to htave. What to serve. ' With all that to think about who needs to worry over the whiskey! Just remember: More people prefer Seagrams 7 Crovyn than any brand of Scotch, bourbon, Canadian or any whiskey m you can name. f That’s why you can be sure when you serve it. •. Thai’s why Seagram’s 7 Crown is The Sure One. Ladies’ Goats Regular to $55 Thrat Michigan Men Killed in Viet Nam WASHINGTON (AP) - Three Michigan men were- among 41 American soldiers who died in recent fighting in Viet Nam. The names were released by the Defense Department Thurs- AU wool fully lined solids, breeds, boucles, in every wanted color. Choost from petit* junior*, Juniors, misses*, or half sixes. Killed in action were Pfc. Dennis A. Desco, son of Mr. and - Mrs. Art Desco of Flint ; Spec. 4 Randall B. Prinz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf Prim of Roseville; and Pfc. J. C. Leslie Short, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Short of Munith. Ladies’ Suits BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Two or threo-piec# all wools, wool knits, tissue fl annals. Also novelty fabrics in junior, misses*, or half sixes. Men’s All-Weather Coats Children’s Coats and Goat Sets Infants’ and Toddlers’ Regular to $20 ¥ Presents Durable with Dacron Wash on Monday;.. bi Laches’ Loafers Famous Make Shoes DiseMtimod Styles High, Mid, Caban, Stack Hsals DRESS CASUAL wilt or muss. Mochino wash, machine dry... never iron 65% Dacron polyester and 35% cotton. Sizes 8to 18. ■/ ab m/t /each *15 Pick a print! Pick a Colorl Happy flowers bloom on Sorbin's flared’ beauty . : . Flourished with lucks. Select your favorite floral print or-solid . .. Then choose your bast color. These dresses were ironed when they were made. They won't wrinkle or crush. Italian or Penny Styling Use a Convenient Lion Charge Plan with Option Terms • Patented freedom sleeve for livelier action e Sanitized* treated to resist germs and odors e Classic crew neck model in 6 colon You'd expect a sweatshirt to be sturdy... and Wards Is! Double rib knit cuffs and bottoms, heavyweight cotton I Choose navy, gray, white, cranberry, black Pr light blue for action or retadh’. S-M-L-XL Hurry in, save I wiri corlon 9x12’ rug of continuous filament nylon pile in 4 tweed colors. Tuf-Tred foammesh back, cushions. MO. 49.ee Durable Paneling 5 Shades first Quality PANELING Luan Mahogany stock coions Formerly »WeUOW For ell kinds of sewing... plain or fancy . . . from simple darning to m intricate monograms. Buttonholer. "OttMl ir» wear, moisture. WcteV cleans up, 8 colors. A Junior Editon Quit About WATER W0Y- KXCKPT KOK THAT ' -a—- SOUD CHUNK you're. Vw J ALL A . A.vT ■ werjJ Stock up on these synthetic shells at a new price! Many new styles and colors to pick from, In sizes S, M. Young Junior Dept. Come in and save at WasdsI SORRY. NO PHONE, C.0.0. or MAIL ORDERS ALL ITEMS ON SALE WHILE THEY LAST! M ONTGOMERY WARD SATURDAY I ONLY I 'if You Don’t Buy From Us,We Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 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 PONTIAC'S LARGEST TILE CENTER Per Own Installation Work Dona by Experts we m,w.wises ess.-w mmmmwnmn 1075 W. Huron St. d Phone f 334-9957 Pontiac SUSPENDED CEILINGS DISPLAYED AND SOLD THE PONTIAC PH3, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1006 VINYL ASBESTOS TILE - 1 at Quality UllaxstM Tea. Royal Bond Paint 2Bal*.5f° Laltx S»mi-Glo»* Enamel All Colors DISCONTINUED CEILING TILE 12x12 Fint Quality ACOUSTIC 12 V Mica Countar Top 29e»v QUESTION: How much water is in our bodies? dr ★Ik ANSWER: Our artist has used a fanciful way of Illustrating the remarkable fact that our bodies have more water in them than anything else. Jim (left) has found out that in reality his body is composed of about 70 per Cent water. The figure (right) la Us idea of what he would bo Ifte if U1 the nonwater parts were concentrated in one place to he conld compare them with the amoat of water In Us body. Actually, of course, the solid matter is not concentrated In one black area but is widely distributed, making strong bones, skin, tissue and a great many other structures which hold our bodies together and allow them to operate. Why la so much water needed? The body is composed of mhmfr cells inside of which is the mysterious living substance called protoplasm. Water makes up a large part of this. Scientists say this Is necessary for the Intricate chemical processes which art always taking place in our bodies. Water distributes food and takes away waste. It acts as a carrier for the many dissolved substance! which must be continually moved in and out of the many organs and cells. / * w /# ★ FOR YOU TO DO/ The picture shows that dogs need water too. Be sure you provide enodfeh to keep your pets healthy and hippy. MenV sweatshirts In tlx colon! Save now! Mont Skips group nro fully cushioned » 288 Spooled Purchase • Handsome oxfords fool cool and lightweight e Cotton dock uppers give tong and sturdy wear a Cork rubber solos odd ' to Dad's comfort Those Skips casuals have the good looks Dad wants and the comfort ho deserves! Brown cotton duck uppers fool comfortably cool and lightweight on the foot Fully cushioned molts soft*) tvtry sttpe Sim 6)6 loll, 12,t3M. Save a gigantic 18% Off! Slacks IN. S.99 ® ■ Tost approved by • Iowa* polyester- - O Brent aofboafic Ivy Wtar... wash ... 20, 30, times or more-end don’t oven touch them up! Choose black, tan or oliva ivy sizes 29-40. Continon* tall sizos 28-34. Save 45% Off Boys' or girls' jackets Jackets come in machine-washable V OP cotton poplin or nylon. Zip front, > ■ elasticized wrists, o to 6x. Sava! 2.99 Velee Bay Spring posies in pretty containers W.ihabl. plastic to tfwy’ll never ^R8S fade or wilt. Come, pick a bouquet 4m of your favorite flowers. In visa...! end o.ss Save! Loiivorsa pine shutters—all sixes Smoothly sanded, ready to paint or stain in the color of your choice. PffpF Use for attractive window. Savol Off per Fees! THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL !«, 1066 PNH Students to Purchase Organ 'With Candy Profits By ALICE TURNER Pontiac Northern vocal students are presently planning a "sweet” school project to provide the necessary funds for a school organ in tips for the baccalaureate service June 12. For the past seven years, Northern has borrowed an organ but students and several faculty members feel we should have our own organ for this very special occasion. Over 3SS vocal students and any after interested students , will sell candy to raise the meaty. Student Council will work closely with vocal students in this very special school project. ★ ■ * Approximately $3,500 is needed "Mb purchase the organ. Prises win be awarded to the top salesmen with a $50 savings band being presented to the highest salesman. 8TARTS APRIL *1 The candy will be on sale April 31 through May $. Juniors at The prom lg scheduled for May ? from 9-12 p.m. and will be held in the school cafeteria. Cochairmen for the danc Nancy Watkins and Scott Hudson claim progress for the prom is coming along at a good pace. Colors will play a very important part In the decorritens for this particular prom. Colors wiH be blended and designed especially to create the appearance of a truly "Magic Town." Various paper bnlldiags will also be constructed to add to the reality of the tyttie town. Tickets for the dance will go >n sale next week. Attire f< the dance will be semiformaL Juniors plan to have a popcorn sale today to raise funds tor the dance, and possibly a bake sale will be held later. Money was also collected in each of the Junior homerooms. CAMP TAMARACK Seniors have again decided to make Camp Tamarack the site for the class trip. Over 288 seniors are expected to gs as “ Brandon High Carnival Near By ROSE THERIOT "Step right this way folks,' Is a call seniors of Brandon High 8chool have been practicing this past week hi preparation for the two-day Senior CarttRWI Oils weekend in the 'high school gymnasium. The carnival will begin today at $ lasting till 11. Saturday hours are 1 p.i ' to midnight As always, there will be many different booths to catch visitors’ attention. * * *•' Included are the Sponge Toss, Wheel of Fortune, Shooting Gallery, Shave a Balloon and a Duck Pond. OTHER ATTRACTIONS Still other attractions are a Spook House, Dunk-the-Dope, and a cake merry-go-round which will be held in the cafeteria. The forsnattsu of the carnival queen will highlight Saturday night’s activities. The queea will be determined by the number of penny votes she has received throughout the week. ditto vying for the title of carnival queen are Christine Vermette, senior; Linda Terrill, Junior; Peggy Shepard, sophomore; and' Laura Ferris, freshman. Sr Ur * Immediately following the queen’s coronation and door price drawings at 9:30, there will' be a dance ending the weekend festivities. All the proceeds from the Carnival go into the Senior Trip Club fond to be,used for its May senior trip. Activities will include l football, volleyball, t archery, swimming, dancing and almost every other sport as well. One of the main highlights will be the traditional canoe race at which time each cabin competes against the other. A hootenanny and a song festival will also provide fun and enjoyment for the campers. Seniors chose Tamarack over a dude ranch near Gaylord and a boat trip to Mackinac Island. Payments for the trip will begin in May. Forewi# Sqy&d From Clarkston to Enter Regionals By CATHY RICHARDSON Clarkston High School speak-srs, who won five out of the eight categories in the Wayne-Oakland County League Forensics Tournament, will participate in the regional competition at Dearborn Tuesday. Clarkston’s Forensics a q u a d will include first-place winners Mary Ann Coraado, declamation; Terry Dutcher, extem-' i; Charlene Bachand, serious interpretation; tod Lucia Wllford, original oratory. dories Pearson, Kret Prto-be, Hugh Rose, Jobs Slade, Jodie Strother, Paul Taylor, and Brian Thorpe win present their awMftic reading af "Death of a Salesman.” la the league contest, Penny Cook to6k second place. in the humorous reading category Third-place winners were Jeff Fisher, extemporaneous; Brook-sie Newton, serious interpretation; end Neil Stalker, humorous reading. ★ * ★ The Joint Junior and high Student Governments are sponsoring a drive to collect paperback books. These books will be sent to United States soldiers in Viet Nam., Play Set at WLHS LARCENISTS LOOT—Fagin (right, Dave Swiatek of 4386 Middledale) shocks Oliver (Don Sanderson of 3458 Winterberry) by revealing his secret cache of stolen jewels. The boys, both of West Bloomfield Township, are rehearsing Walled Lake High School’s musical production, “Oliver.” Produced by the music department, the show will be presented April 21, 2$/and 23 in the school auditorium at t p.i By RON MOORHEAD The music department of Welled Lake High School will present ".Oliver,” based on “Oliver Twist" April II, 22, and 23, in the school auditorium at 8 p.m. > With the setting In London, the story revolves around Oliver, an orphan, who is sold to a caretaker. He escapes and is befriended by fte artful dodger, a member of Flgh'i establishment, the Thieves’ Kitchen. He has many adventures as he tries to survive in fte world of London pickpockets. Acting in major roles are Don Sanderson, (River; Dave Swai-tek. Fagin; Sue Woodward, Nancy; carl Grapentine, Bumble; Cheryl Fletcher, Mrs. Carney; Dennis Havel, Sykes; and Jim Monroe, the artful dodger. Other puts are played by Judy Granlund, John Higgins, Bruce Hermes, Jan Schliskey, Harold Sells, Margaret Stewart, Bob Lacey and Marilyn Fellows. The musical will be produced and directed by Alexander Zerban. The associate producer is Alexa Flattley. Assistant directors are Karen Bullock and Kathy Trudeau, i Helmut Holland-Moritt is the musical director and conductor. Lighting and sound are being handled by Oliver Rose. Cynthia Mokoey is fte choreographer. Tickets can be obtained at the senior high school bookstore. Tickets will also be sold at the door. Election of officers for next year’s Student Council were held campaign speeches before two assemblies on Tuesday. A Candidates for president were Dennis Birchard,- Dennis Fitzgerald, Gene Gossett, and Fitfl Welch. Cheryl Fletcher and Pat Mc-Fadden were candidates for vise ; Dora Farley, Charlotte Preston, and Janice Stafford, secretary; and Rae Lea Chabot and Becky Stewart, treasurer. Best Scholars Picked at Waterford High By JEAN PRIESTLEY Regan Rieth and Mary Burrell have been named valedictorian and sahitatorian respectively, of fte class of ’68 at Waterford Township High School. SCHOOL NEWS ' ftSto^ROUNDUP <&■ preparation for a career in music education. She majored in music and English, minored ia journalism, history, French, math and science. Coordinating extracurricular activities with her studies, Mary finds time to be a member of choir, Quill and Scroll, the National Honor Society and Student Council. Interested In dramatics, she studied for several years at WiU-O-Way Apprentice Theater, then became a member of the Waterford High Paymasters, playing Marion in “Cheaper By The Dozen” and Anne in “The Diary of Anne Frank.” Mary served as faculty editor of the Waterlog this year. She also enjoys music, dramatics and reading. Well-rounded in her activities she says, “I like to do everything.” Dance Set Tonight at West Bloomfield By MARGIT MISANGYI school library and is active in Students at West Bloomfield the C a 1 v a r y Baptist Church, High School vacationed Monday youth group (as an officer in and Tuesday of this week. but R. RIETH M. BURRELL Regan, with a perfect A-grade average, plans to put her Christian faith , to work as a church youth director after attending Cedarville College in Cedarville, Ohio. ------- la high school she has majors in English, French, history, math and business. A member of National Honor secretary at the office), Regan still finds time to assist in the St. Mike's By MIKE THORNBERRY Representing SL Michael’s enior government seminar in Washington this week were Pat English, Florence Henretty, Janis Harkins, Judy Crickon, Lynette Wade, Diene Sagan, Bob French Larry Bieri. Seniors on the third quarter honor roll are Larry Bieri, Mary Crickon, i Omans, l ench ahd 1 ABRACADABRA - Julia Westerby of 484 Edwards, Or-ttotoffie, and Robert Irwin of 828 Jossman, Groveland Township, transform fte Brandon High School gymnasium into • colorful midway for ttt Senior Carnival. The two-day fen feet will begin tonight at 5. Tomorrow’s hours are from Xpj&famkhlghL Emmanuel Names Top Scholars By LINDA WRIGHT Top honors at Emmanuel Christian High School go to Kenneth McMillan, valedictorian, and Patricia Gidcumb, salu-tatorian. K. McMILLAN p. GIDCUMB Ken maintained a 3.5 average In his high school career. He holds the office of chaplain in both the student body and his senior homeroom. In February he was topped for fte National Honor Society. After graduating, Ken plans to attend Moody Bible Institute. Having-spent a great deal of his life in the Congo, be hopes to return there as a doctor. Pat, having achieved a 3.4 average, will attend Michigan Christian College to major in ' ess administration. STUDENT LEADER Pat served as vice president of her sophomore class, chorister during her junior year and Student Body secretory for two years. 1. s . •%*’>. ft A fee otherof the National Honor Society, Pat has held the offices of #vfoe president and She baa bear ft varsity cheer-seder for time leega and was Cassabon, Jody Crickson, Christina Dunoy, Mar-garet Finnegan, Florence Henretty, Bob-bette Roselli and Judy Saxton. Jti a i e r s are Lyna Bauer, Carol Freiberg and Jean Lo» vteka. ^ Sophomores include Jo s e p h Cassabon, Harry Cook, Jane Heitjan, Richard Jamrik, Richard Land, Atwood Lynn, Joseph Nurek and Christine Stickle. Freni Switzerland, Esther Wunderly, a Holly High School student, will stay at the home of P«ggy Wier. Lyfln Muan and her fetidly will entertain Hujdri Savron, a student from Turkey visiting Or-tonviite: An five will attend seboel Friday and speak at aa assembly in fte afternoon. On the freshman roll are Nancy Adams, Marie Birch-meter, Frances Finnegan, Barbara Flanigan, Linda Guzman and Patricia Hoffman. Others are Sharon Hurren, Geriann Klinkhamer, R o s a 1 y n Liddy, Nanette Martinez, Sue Nordlun, Betty Putnam, Mary Stanton, Diane Valko, David Verline and Gerald Wade. St. Fred's A luncheon in hflHorwTheStU-dents and their hosts has Been planned for Saturday.. Dominican By DEBBIE VAN NATTER Dominican Academy seniors have planned their senior trip. The girls will charter a bus to Mackinac Islaftd where they cabins for four days and enjoy the many sites ft Mackinac City and surroundings. The excursion is scheduled May 18-21. ; |J Lake Qrion By MICK WOLF Lake Orion High,School senior government - economic classes are faking a field trip to Lansing Wednesday. They will tour the Capitol Top Seniors atOLL Are Announced By CECELIA PARKER w Achieving Our Lady of the^Jig ^ m the UgfatotoS DrM honnre oo valftrilrwAPiDVi . . grades 9,10 and 11). She helped out ia the physical education program at Laura S Havilland Elementary 8 c h o o near her home for,two years and lists drawing, printing and other handwork as bobbies. Mary Burrell has a 3.39 average and wDl enter Michigan University next fall ‘ “tf Wednesday started them off to school gain . Last minute preparations are being mads by fte cheerleading squads to decorate the gymnasium for the Sadie Hawltti Dance tonight at 8. - The Latin Club is (denning its initiation banquet which Am be % -— Avondale Group to Give 'The Egg and T on Stage By ERNESTINE MOORE Most students feel that once the student body leaves school, the doors are locked and no one enters until the vacation is over. At St. Frederick School this week, this assumption would be completely false, for floors ere being mopped and waxed, desks cleaned, and windows Washed. ★ ★ • w ] Besides the cleaning forces in! action, students are also gathering at the school to draw posters, paint scenery, build props, and practice for the upcoming senior play, “January Thaw." . A ★ ★ ft A pleasant interlude during the vacation was the junior-senior banquet which was held recently at Oakland University. Rochester Lakes honors as valedictorian and sahitatorian are Sandra Smith and Suzanne Livingston. in session. Rep. Robert Stinger-laid will meet them. _____ WWW Pam Hards and Carolyn Middleton are going to Cadillac this weekend as representatives to a Future Teachers’ Association Convention at Camp Kit. S. SMITH Election of state officers is on the schedule. The FTA also observed fte fourth,, fifth, | rixft grades at fte intermedi-R ate school this week. S. LIVINGSTON By MARGARET WEAVER Production committees < adding finishing touches to fte junior-senior play, “The Egg and I”, at Avondale High School. Written by Betty MacDonald, the comedy is directed by Margaret Rose of the AHS faculty. It wiH be presented April 21 and 22. Members of the cast are MaryAnn Racket (Betty MacDonald), Jim Dutton (Don MacDonald), Karen Burt (Anna), Leslie DeVille (Joan) and Merrill Rodman (Thad). Others include Cindy Bishop (Delicate Daisy}, Glean Had-field (Hi-Baby), Pam Stone (Co-rinne), Dennis Lambert (Fish-face), Glenn McCauley (Mr. Marie Depressive) and Brian Parent, (JJ). Still others are Greg Rice (Ross), Heidi Feuz (the Lingerie Lady), aery 11 Kasall (Milticent Ames), Del Halstead (Thermometer Tessie), Phyllis Augsbur-ger (Miss Lbidoti), Terry Vn-Gilder (Grady) and Dick Jones (Larson). Completing fte list are P«m Carlton (Pauli), Chris Ltoi (Toni), Carol Guy (Lolly) and Linda Bowen (MNpfe).\ Kathy Devereaux is the student director. Three members of the Future Homemakers Association of AHS will attend the state convention of the Michigan Association of Future Homemakers Association of America in Grand Rapids Wednesday through Friday. Attending are Jean Kirach, president of the FHA of Avondale; Sandy Gabert, who waa elected state treasurer at the 1985 convention; and DeAnna Parent. ‘ By KATHY MORGAN Five foreign exchange students will visit Rochester High School next week. The foreign exchange committee of the Student Council has Invited students who are living with families and attending high schools in Michigan to spend fte weekend in Rochester. Arriving Thursday night, Maximo Samaniego-Larrea of Ecuador will stay with Darrell Zink and his family. Maximo attends Fenton High School. Audrey Swfe Peck, a Me-layslaa stadent f r o m FIiat Ainsworth High Sc haol, Is staytag with Kathy Hritorty. Cinch Prather will host Isamu Ichikawa, a Japanese student attending Lake Fenton High 8CS0N, liWIBOO. Accomplishments on Sandra^s record include awards i a science, MathH and Latin H. She was an active member, of the sdmri’s constitutional committee ia her junior year.. Sandra has also been a member,of the Glee Club for four years, a leading Chorale-Bell for three and,has been on the honor roll every quarter all through high school. * She served as Senior Class treasurer, yearbook layout editor, and portrayed Terri in the senior play “Ask Any Girl”. __ After graduation, Sandra will attend Eastern Michigan University, where she plans on majoring in math for secondary was secretary-of her freshman clam. She is an active member WOlX’s Math Clubr Throughout high school, she has also maintained an honor roll record as well as participating ft Glee Club, Chorale-Bells, and tbeyearbook staff. Before making future plans tor education after graduation, Suzanne wtohee to first gain a little experience ft fte business COUNTRY COOKING - When a city-bred lam (Mary Ann Hackett of 1218 Ruby, Avon Townridp) meets a country-styled kitchen dominated by a double-doored monster, ftsWe bond to be trouble, torn and giggtoe galore. Playing the pert of Betty MacDonald in Avondale High School's production of "The Egg and L'' tuny Ann reheanee a kitchen scene. The comedy will be presented April 21 and 22. \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 1$, ltfjM .TEFLON COATED ^GRIDDLE for artistry in cooking... now drama in design! NOW YOU’RE COOKING WITH GAS 'WkUllfWdt GAS RANGES Mark 39 Model RKG095S TO SUIT EVERY TASTE AND EVERY SPACE come see the new Gold Star "WkUljteot Connoisseur gas range for hours'til you're ready to serve Pull-out cooktop has Bumer-with-a-firain** Connoitttur. The French word for “one who knows”. And lure, truly, is a range that knows its way around foreign recipes, as well aa your domestic favorites . . and knows the secret to “Gold Star” cooking. That's because its Lo-Temp Balanced-Heat oven ^'surrounds” foods with a uniform heat throughout for perfect results. You'll especially enjoy its automatic rotisserie. Another thing. The RCA whirlpool Connoisseur slips easily into any space just 39" wide. Looks like a built-in. 30* CONNOISSEUR* GAS RANGE HAS COOKS BEST! 'WiOallfWot CONNOISSEUR CAS RANGE • Eye-ievel oven • Pull-out cooktop This range dips into a space only 80' wide. . .looks built-in. Eye-level baking and broiling—no stooping! Tinted glass makes oven look spic 'n span, even when it isn’t. Auto-Hold* oven control automatically cooks meals, then keeps food warm for hours without overcooking. Cooktop includes Bumer-with-a-Brain** and slides out to put all burners within easy reach. n«k.**A.OA. M«k BURNER- WITH-* BRAIN** IN THIS DOUBLE-OVEN AND SEPARATE BROILER ROAST A TURKEY BAKE ROUS BROIL A STEAK • Prepare kingeiso mails all at onoa in two big ovens and a separate broiler e Auto-Hold* oven control lets ovea eook meals automatically, then keape them warn for hours e Lo-Temp Balanced-Heat ovens '‘surround" food with uniform heat e Matchless low oven with removable door (Rotisserje optional) CONNOISSEUR* 30* GAS RANGE e Big capacity plus eya-ievtl cooking aaao e Both ovens may bo set os low to 140* • MeaWnwr* dock with 4-hour timer • Fits a spaes 80* wide; looks built-in • Eaey-to-dean Spillguard* cooktop *IM 30-inch range features Teflon-coated griddle! UP TOM MONTHS TOPA1 WIDOOUR 1 TIL-NURON SHOPPINO ODITIR FE1-7179 1 OWN SERVICE f 9212 DOOLEY LAKE 00. ** UNION LANE 2214299 L appliances to get Soft Whiskey. Good businesssense preventsus from telling you more about how we make Soft Whiskey It’s our secret and we’re not about to give it away. You’ll never miss what’s missing from Soft Whiskey But if you haven't .tried it yet you're missing a lot Calvert Extra $10.85 $4.52 $2.85. BtENOEO WHISKEY-86 PROOF-6S*GRA1N NEUTRAL SPIRITS ® 1966CALVERT DtST CQ..N.Y.S Tflg PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 CLAIMS SUICIDE TRY - Com Nostra gangster Joseph Valachi, shown here when he testified before a Senate committee last year, “claims that he tried to hang himself with an electric cbrd” in Ids cell in the Fed* eral Prison at Milan, the Justice Dept. Mid yesterday. Prison officials "reported that the New York mobster sustained 1 in a fall in Ms cell. He is Mid to have expressed remorse over the incident. Foreign News Commentary ^Brazil Chief Solving Economic Woes By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Just two years ago V ,squat, bull-necked man named Humberto Castello Branco took office aa Brazil’s, president wi a progra guaranteed to] be tonpi6indar[ with many free • swinging] Brazilian to eight but ruinous] yearn under three previous' NEWSOM Caatello Branco was a former army chief of staff rated both as an intellectual knowledgeable in economics and a reformer. Inflation spiralling npward nt a rate of mere than 111 per cent per year. government could not Ion Freedom of speech was limited. The army which overthrew Castello Branco’s predecessor has a tradition of respect for civilian governments and democratic processes. But in succeeding weeks and months of the new regime, ite?1*"1 methods frequently seemed leas1,, than, democratic. ' 5 ' The GnMIe Branco government riimitated Communist leadership from the onions, ing undoubted In the first year, it cut the rate of inflation Just about in naif and teat year held it to More improvement fids year. persons of office. Polil ties were abolished ‘ SAME DECREE the same decree took the election of a 'presidential successor to CMtolo Branco out Hb Job to halt a plunge to- I of the voters hand and placed ward communism and reverse 'it in the congress where the ie had deprived 331 ffice. Political par olished by decree. LEE decree took thf \ * / I Foreign governments and in- By ihid-June, 1964, the •tTnyVvestoy* slowly regained confl-political purge had deprived 337 denpfe in the future of Brazil. "" The year 1965 showed a 9990 miHion trade surplus. But among the unions, there remained a smouldering suspi-| don that the government intend-: ed to deprive them of the bleas-l tags promised by Joao Goulart,1 the former president. Scouts Rule Subways NEW YORK (UPI) — A Boy Scout troop did yesterday what Massachusetts Institute of Technology students could not do, even with the aid of a computer. Hie Scouts broke all existing records by traveling the entire 237 mites of the city's subway system on one token apiece in 23 hours and 28 minutes. Nine Scents ftf Unit 299, Whites tone, Queens, end their leader, Edward M. Levine, began their nonstop journey Wednesday morning. Levine, a subway engineer, helped the teen-age boys pint their attack on the complex system of tracks. One boy, Steve Weber, 13, was done In by the ordeal and had to be carried off the train by his fellow Scouts. ★ fr ★ “He was Just sitting there in a daze and couldn’t get up,” aald a member of the troop. • The Scouts chopped 40 minutes off the old record. A group of students from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology planned their route with a computer recently but failed to break the record. Now tedashry alia is complaining. Satea, say industry spokesman, are 49 to 39 per cent below last year’s levels. Tight money la making it hard to meet payrolls and pay ia-| come taxes. Politically, there are charges that the military intend to perpetuate themselves in a dicta-] ] tors hip. . . ★ A # This is something only the future can show. Mrantime the ; Castello Branco regime continues to accomplish an economic miracle. Arizona Army School WASHINGTON (I) Hie Army will establish a brigade at Fort Huachuca, Arte,, in September to train men'in clericu, mechanical and other combat-support skills. « pj New 1966 BIG LOAD MAYTAG "Wasbpower" AUTOMATICS HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 101 N. SAQINAW _ Pi Ft S-7114 NO MONEY DOWN At Littlte As $900 JLmWeekly 1 WKG INCLUDES EVEmHING! MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASNKR • l-YR. CABINET WARRANTY Free repair or Mchanpa of cabinet If it mitt within 5 year*. • 2-YR. PARTS WARRANTY Free repair er exchange of defective parti on complete weaker. • I-YR. 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It’s still whiskey, doingwhatany other whiskey can do—only it does it softer. The first thing you’ll notice'is that,.; it goes down easy and stays smooth all the way down. That’s because we don’t make Soft Whiskey all at once. We do some distilling in small batches instead of large ones. Of course, it takes more time and effort, but hat’s one of the. things we have to do ex—........ 501 Nylon 9*95 Tweeds Save $2.00 a Sq. Yd See Our Large Selection of Armstrong Vinyl Floors Open Monday and Friday m 9 PJML -Lump-turn reporting of all expenditure! by lobbyists and the firm* that hire them; —The disclosure by thr“<£-' vilian” employer of a legislator of the salariiw and gratuities paid to the lawmaker if the firm also spends 1100 more a —Lobbyists to declare their dealings with members of other branches of government. Only legislators dealings are now covered. legislation before us this year.” Others callejf it unnecessary and Speaker Joseph Kowalski, D-Detroit, voted agahwt it Much of the cteeere that prompted draftiqt god pstsip of the bill was gymritad by two recent incidents, Q*e was Atty. Gen. Frank KeOegr’a charge that Virtually writidftffclll as it went alengi the Houaa finally approved « measure that would require lobbyists to mpprt <»iar-terly to tbs secretary of atato the total amount spent on lob* hying activities—excluding per- property for lobbying by Kenneth Gremore, lobbyist for the Peoples Community Health Authority. The other was « rumor that Majority Floor Leader Bob Trailer, D-Bay City, called It “one of the most yital pieces of THE PONTIAC PRESS. liMAY A PUTT, j* me LANSING (AP)«t« The House passed a beefed-up lobbying control bill Thursday after 3M hours of debate, delay and public soul-searching. The measure, approved 7-2® and sent to the Senate, toughens up present lobbying lews by requiring; Ex-LBJ Aide Suggests Sending Peace Plan to North Viet Nam MIDDLETOWN, Conn. (AP) .. — Richard N. Goodwin, who served as a key adviser to President Johnson until last September, suggests the administration should submit a peace plan to Communist North Viet Nam. Then, he said, the United States should follow up the plan by seeking a masting between a high-level North Vk and a top UK. official. In Washington, the State Department said it planned no comment on Goodwin’s marks. Goodwin, 34, now a staff Charge Coast Guard jes 11 as Homosexuals CAPE MAY, NJ. (AP)- The Coast Guard disclosed yesterday that 11 enlisted men stationed at the Coaat Guard Recruit Training Centers have bean charged as homosexuals and are being discharged from the service. The Cape May training center, one of two operated by the Coast Guard, has 1,300 recruits and about 400 permanent staff. A Coast Guard spokesman said none of tke accused were either trainees or instructors. Four of the men have already received general discharges, as ordered by a military board of investigation, and the remaining seven cases are being reviewed in Washington. -Capt. W. K. Thompson, chief of pid>lic information for t h e Coast Guard in Washington, strid the investigation into alleged homosexuality involved the entire training center and was not limited to the 11 men. member at the Center for Advanced Studies at Weal_ University here, was interviewed by the Associated F Thursday night COMPROMISE He proposed the appointment I of "some type of governmental structure” in South Viet Nam "that will have the trust of both sides.” But be acknowledged that it would be difficult to “find people to fit into a compromise interim government that will be | trusted by both sides.” He added, “I^am sure there I must be people like this, but I ] admit that it would be a tough I Job to find them.” Such an interim government, Goodwin said, might take the I of "an international trusteeship of some sort—possibly something undo1 the United Na- | tions.” “It must be such that it will I guarantee to all parties that I there will, in fact, be free dec- I tions and that the victors can take office. We must assure both sides that the results of the election—no matter who wins— | will be honored," he eaid. I Goodwin said that the 1954 | Geneva agreement that partitioned Viet Nam into North and I South failed because “it did not | provide any structure to guarantee that there would be free | elections in Viet Nam in 1956.” Goodwin said he was against I U.S. withdrawal from Viet Nam I “until we achieve a settlement that does not mean American [ defeat.” * * * . Goodwin, who Is regarded as I a “resident intdiectud” in the Johnson administration, quit his federal post for “compelling personal reasons.” However, hie pledged to continue to support administration policies and said “perhaps, in some way, I can continue to be of service,” SUSPENDED CEILING Bxl2 trzu CEDAR LINING 40 Ft. Bdl......7.M 50 Ft. Bdl......MS SPECIAL PRE- FINISHED B«l AIR CLASSIC LUAN 4x8 Va” 4H FLAKE WOOD % - 6.95 Deluxe W’ Doors BI-FOLD DOOR UNIT! 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TOHITE Matching sofa and chair in 100% nylon. chalrcaaiblnatl Authantlc atyHog. cheat, 2 boudoir lamp#. ’til 9 P.M.-Sundays 12 *til 6 P.M. DOWN! BUY ON TIE EDS 1 Egftiifc THB POKTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 19M All Stores Celebrate The SPECIAL! FAMOUS ORTHO LAWN PRODUCTS destroy operation in the Hb Bo woods. The area, frequently used as a hideout by the Cong, is about 25 miles northwest of Saigon. SAIGON, Softth Viet Nam (AP) — Allied ground operations against the Viet Cong remained at a near-standstill today, bttt spokesmen reported tJ.S. Air Force and Navy jets smashed deep into North Viet Nam, hitting troop bameks, oil dumps, ammunition stores, bridges and roads. While South Viet Nam’s generals pondered their political brought the total for those operations to 101. -U.S. war planes flew 5S missions against North Viet Nam Thursday, ranging far northwest of Hanoi and returning once more to the Mu Gia Pass, where B52e set off huge slides Tuesday. ORTHO IMPROVED WEED-WON South where a few weaks ago as many as five or she were In high gear. His governmental uncertainty kept South Vietnamese military activities at a minimum. fat frm* WeeVbnm. m r*“- Eerily «ppli»d wltk ORTHO Jmn tpreypr or ipriiilHiits Two U A B57 jet bombers collided over the water on returning from patrols to Da Nang. The four crewmen ejected safely and were picked up by helicopters. The planes were lost The U.S. military command reported that 906 American planes had been lost in the war up to last Tuesday. This was an Boy Vandals Blamed ‘ for Blackout of Town ' EASTON, Mass. If) t A power faflurs left the town of Eae- ] ton without electricity for two) hours ono night recently. I Officials of Brockton Edison i Co. said boys shoothig at 4e« I Insulators apparently cot a pof» i just In— your beat buy In a big ollm-atyled handcrafted Scotts Famous Lawn Care Products those Zenith features develop world's finest 1ST tv performance > Zenith Patented Custom "Formo-Set" VHF Fine Toning »3-stages of IF Amplificstion > Automatic "Fringe-lock" Circuit Horuontal Linearity Adjustment Frost Mounted Speaker “CapacHy-nm” Components unsurpassed picture brightness! ALSO ZENITH COLOR TV AD AM'S GARDEN MICHIGAN PEAT laB tops crabgrass infora it starts v«OfNriiMa THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. APRIL 15, 1966 Indonesian Travel Is Slow, Unreliable ‘FLYING WING’ — A parachutist glides from 5,000 feet in an experimental parachute being studied by the Flight Dynamics laboratory at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, for accurate aerial delivery of supplies and equipment to troops. Use “flying whig" has a 24-foot projected span. British Expedition Set to Trace Vinland Voyage LONDON (UPI)—A British expedition will set sail May S for Finland, that mysterious part of North America which the Vikings are said to have discovered long before Columbus sailed from Spain for the New World. the Guardian newspaper, sponsor of the expedition, said today the expedition will sail from the North Sea port of Scarborough and try ,to use the currents and tidal streams to reach this same landfalls the Vikings found. “It wfll make first for southwest Greenland and then attempt to reproduce Leif Eriksou's voyage to Vinland of about the year INI from such sailing directions as are recorded in die old Icelandic sagas,” die ___Guardian said..... If the expedition’s landfalls can be identified with the descriptions in the sagas, “it will be at least circumstantial evidence of the probable location of Vinland,” the paper said. Last year, Yale University published a map which supposedly proved that the Vikings sailed to America in die 11th and 12th centuries. MANY THEORIES The map, showing an island called Vinland, is said to have been produced before Cohmbus made his voyage in ms. The Guardian noted that “there have been many theories about Vinland, but no one knows precisely where it was.” Disclosure of the Yale map set off a controversy in the United States between those who would have Columbus as the discoverer of America, and those who want the Vikings to have that honor. JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Transportation in Indonei functions with luck, baling wire and the grace of Allah. With everything in short supply here, including luck and Wire,- people move from (me point to another largely by accident. Just by chance one gets on the bus or dump truck of his choice. Getting off as scheduled is a rare delight. w ■'%. ★ This is a city of three million, most of them desperately poor. They travel in everything from horse carts to embassy cars— when the embassy driver wants to make a few extra rupiahs on the side. Taxis are virtually nonexistent. The de luxe Hotel Indonesia operates its own fleet of taxis. Private cars, Including relics antedating World War II, provide additional1 taxis. TYPE OF TRAVEL Most of the city relies on buses; three-wheeled pedicabs called ' betjaks, and di rucks, or the people walk. The city operates which might loosely be called a bus system. Government and- private bus companies use buses from Australia, West Germany, Hungary and small ones from Japan. • *•.# ★ ★ Officials in'import departments saw to it that a variety of bus makes was imported. From many sellers they could figure on a handsome kickback for making the purchase and helping it through customs. Nobody thought to order spare parts, sp more than half the buses are sidelined. Most of them are being cannibalised to keep the others moving. BUSES SCARCE As buses grow scarce, betjak drivers make more rupiahs. Even so it barely keeps them alive. They recently formed a political front against the high rates they have to pay each day for foe betjaks—10 rupias, about 17 cents. ■ * w ■ ★ For long-distanee traveling, dump trucks or military convoys are recommended by seasoned travelers. The trucks are weil-ventilated and provide a splendid view of toe countryside., The government is talking •bout fixing the transportation system. No more passenger care. Only span parts will be Imported, says the government. But Indonesians, who_________ prices increase by 600 per coot last year, are understandably —s of toe world’s greatest cynics. Trucks and betjacks appear here to stay as transport. Medicare Said Bad for Nursing Homes DALLAS, Tex. Ill - Certain standards imposed on nursing homes by medicare could “inflate an already serious shortage of professional workers,” says, Charles Hoffman, a spokesman for the American Nursing Association. w it - * Hoffman fold a meeting of association members that “medicare will require one registered nurse and several licensed practical nurses to each shift at a nursing home.” Troy Resident HeadsHumah Relations Unit Daniel F. Monley, of 406 E. Square lake, Tray has been elected president of the Oakland County Human Relations Coordinating Council. He succeeds John Millhone who recently moved from Farmington to Detroit. An attorney employed la the personnel and arganbatton office of Ford Motor Co., Monley is married and has nine ckfl-dren. The coordinating council is comprised of delegates from M county human relations and civ-" rights organisations. ' i * ★. Its function Is to serve as a clearing house for ideas and action programs in civil rights matters. Job Corps Dining Hall NEW BEDFORD, Mass. IB -A dining hall accommodating 750 students will be built at toe Rodman Job Corps Center at a cost of 1282,000. Magnavox FM-AM Radios for great baseball listening! THIS MOTHER'S DAY and every day, dp the dishes the ^ Kitchen Aid Way SOUP STATE FM-AM TABLE RADIO Enjoy all the excitement of the games on this precision built spjid mta FM-AM radio. Has Automatic Frequency * no-drift Control, wood cabinet. \ 5995 FM-AM TRANSISTOR RAPIO Top performing 8 transistor Magnavox fits pocket or purse. Battery, •arphone & case included. Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 3 1995 GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682MM22 Use Your .Charge, 4-PayN^ldn (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan Trade your old dish washer for anewKitchenAid Toss out the dishpanl Throw in the toweil This month, we’re’wheeling and dealing on portables. Trade in your old dieh washer—your dish rag, your sponge, whatever. You’ll be surprised how much it'll be worth. So hurry. There’s never been a bettdtthme to trade “sink duty” for the modern, automatic way of doing dishes—a new Kitchen-Aid portable! Wide dmice of models for evWy kitchen and budget V KitchenAid DISHWASHERS Waynt Gabert Appliances 121 N. Saginaw PhonaFE.5-6189 . V RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUB8... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED . ADS. TO PLAGE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) Here are the FACTS! ' Signs Carried by Firemen Picketing the City Hall Read: “The City gives us just peanuts” V LET’S LOOK AT THE RECORD- THE PONTIAC FIRE DEPARTMENT BEGINNING RANK IS NOW *7059 PER YEAR! This Is An INCREASE of *1010 In the Past 18 Months! ■ / Only TWO Cities In the State Pay More! Detroit ($7335) and Wayne ($7091) Pontiac pays its firefighters MORE than: Pontiac Also PAYS MORE Than These:— Flint ... *6855 T .mining .... ...*6532 Dearborn... ... *6903 Warren ..... ... *6688 Royal Oak.. ... *7033 Birmingham • • • • ...•6917 Bay City • • .Y. . • .•5900 Fcrndalc........ Grand RapidsV.N.. • . *5902 Hazel Park. •. .. . ....•6900 Jackson • • • •. . .. .. Highland Park • •, ....•6791 Kalamazoo....... , Saginaw .... *6137 Battle Creek .•6396 Port Huron Muskegon •«. . . •.. .*5800 Mt. Clemens • •.. • Southfield«•...... ,*6537 Ann Arbor ..... Hamtramck •...... .•6989 Pontiac Is *257 Ahead of the Average, of These Cities! Remember These FACTS When Yon See Those Picket Signs! This Advertisement Paid for by a Group of Taxpayers Who Are Sick of Being Gouged, THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1066 Nowl A posture-type mattresf^ ^at a popular price^during our ffesERTA MATTRESS L- ANOTHER FAMOUS BROYHILL SPECIAL . The Entire FamihrWill Enjoy The Comfort of This ^ by Broyhill Premier 9-Pc. Co-ordinated Ensemble INCLUDING * 81" Long Cushioned Sofa • Mrs. Chair • High-back Mr. Chair • Largo Matching Ottoman • two Walnut Finish Stop Tablos • Cocktail Tablo • 2 Lamps. Dr. Wayne G. Bran^stadt Says: Diverticula IsIncreasingly Common Along with stroks, high blood pressure and emphysema — all primarily diseases' of parsons in their later years — there his been a steady increase in dlverttlcula (out-pouch-ingi) of the digestive tract, especially the! Jower bowel. This h-aal brought an in- BRANDSTADT crease in the number of questions about them. The surgical removal of these diverticula is sometimes necessary but is rarely advisable be- cause theft, are so many* of this disease felt {fetter for two “™*1 or thr# weeks after an X-ray examination with barium sulfate reasoned that this improvement was probably due to the fact that the inert barium .salt cented over the inflamed area and protected ittrom 'further irritating fermentation. The mere presence of a large number ef them (diver-Uculosis) dees net cause any symptoms but when they became inflamed (diverticulitis) the victim usually complains ef abdominal pula and in ab.eut *5 per cent there is seme rectal bleeding. In the acute stage there Is also a low grade fever. The inflammation is c a u a e d by fermentation of undigested food particles that become trapped in the outpouchings. w e ★ Dr. Louis Malow in Chicago, noting that many patients with He then started giving his tablespoonful of barium sulfate in half a glass of water or milk three or four times a week. If the patient had acute diverticulitis he did net give the barium until the acute phase hqd been controlled with a bland diet, antispannodies, in- testinal antiseptics and bejl west wMr hat applications to the abdomen. He .also warns that cancer and, other organic diseases of (he intestines must be ruled out before proceeding with the barium treatment. . .it | * The barium sulfate dill not cure the condition. Indeed, this is net to be expected but in Dr. r’a series 1t controlled the discomfort very well as long as his patients avoided such foods as peanuts, popcorn, pineapple and foods with seeds such as Ties and rasp- berries. Teens Save Gqods From Burning Store FLINT (UPI)~Firemen credited i group of teen-agers yesterday with saving merchandise from a building supply store which was heavily damaged by iflrOffinE^H ... 1S« *•. m • The one-Story “Builders Market" b) Flint Township sufferedl about |75,W8 damage in the blase. Firemen said a group of teen-aged bystanders saved hundreds of auto parts by forming a brigade to pass the merchandise! out of the building before the fire could destroy it. i ' W ‘ w - They estimated the yodths saved about $50,000 worth of auto parts. One end of the building had been leased for storage of the parts. BPIACI TOM 011 ANTENNA ALL CHANNEL T.V. ANTENNA DESIGNED AND TESTED IY ON EOS MAXIMUM *109* Call Today: OR 3-0111 3 Crete* for Prompt Service LAKELAND ELECTRONICS 7SBV HIDHLANO IMS*) PONTIAC, MICHIBAN 48004 OPEN NONDAY and FRIDAY HI 0 RJ. • No Money Down • FREE DELIVERY V o 24 Months To Pay \ • FREE PARKING o 90 Days Same At Cash • EXCELLENT SERVICE DEAL DIRECT—NO, FINANCE COMPANY MAKE YOUR PAYMENTS\DIRECT AT OUR STORE SDH A full house of fine furniture.. • So rrry practical ...to very comfortable • So handsome In smart patchwork quilt, tweed or print • So sturdily built... to last for years and years. Also available In Kina Size and Quean Size • NO MONEY DOWN $18 PER MONTH f-PIECE LIVING ROOM / • Nylon sofa and matching chair e2 stop and -1 ceftaa labia e 2 table lampe e 2 throw piNowe Separately $128.88 10-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE • Double draster and miner a Matching cheet a Bookcase Bed a timenpring mattress and box spring • 2 Boudoir Lampe Separately $138.88 5-PIECE DINETH FORMICA DOSNSION TAILS 4 waehahle plaetk chain Separately $48.88 Only $12,80 Par Month ORCHARD Phone FE 58)14-5 FURNITURE COMPANY 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 2 Blocks Wostof South WWoTrookDrtvo OPEN MON. and FRI. PROM • to • TUES-, WED., TMURS. and SAT. 9 to I1S8 o No Money Down . • Frew Dwlivwry o 24 Months to Pay • Frww Parking 0 90 Days Cash o Good Sorvico DEAL DIRECT-PAY AT THE STORE ND FMANCE GO. MVDLVR) thbpontiac ot Loon Lako near Howard Johnson Restaurant. Wft have one of the largest stocks of 501 Nylon carpet 1ft Oakland County arid It must be sold before wp make our irtbve. Karen'sprices are the lowest ever. Soto insure the best select tion, buy now; All sale prices are on existing inventory orily.. SPECIAL ^5i NY TWA T 10-TEAR (WRMMTEE Liquidation Price M8SSSH Rossett Rossett 20-YEAR WEAR GUARANTEE Liquidation Price j 20-YEAR WEAR 6BASAWTEE Liquidation Price \ I Liquidation Pi Due to the nrany thousands of yards of carpet sold in our recent inventory removal sale, we have accumulated a huge surplus of remnants. These remnants must bo eliminated from our inventory, the prices orb; the lowest Over. The selection the largest ever. All remnants listed are sub|ect to prior sale. All sales final. Alhwnnarttjun^ If Sq. Yd. I 3 ROOMS INSTALLED I WALL TO WALL 30 YARDS INSTALLED i OVER RUBBERIZED MB .lurt imagin.... 30 yard, of thi. your ham. for only $10.08 P.r Month. k gm «, Mmi Iff Sq. Yd. ROOMS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL 30 YARDS INSTALLED Iff Sq.Yd. 3 ROOMS INSTALLED •WALL TO WALL iJ 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RUDDERIZED PAD Just imagin* ... 30 yards of ♦his 100% DuPont Nylon In your home for only $12.53 Per 12x20-3 : i2ssll ?-T Bronze Gold 12tf 1-6 . Surf Green 112x11-5. . Mocha AHU*4 Burnished Gold 12x11-3 Orange 12x11 •' , Chestnut 12x11 Mocha Ji 12x11 Avocado : J2xll Olive Marsq. 12x1 i. Bronze Olive 12x10-10 Burnt Orange 15X10-7 Copper 12x10-7 Antique Gold 12x10-7 Blue Green .12x10-7 Blue Green 43*10-6 Bronze Gold 12x104 Pearl White 13x10-4 Surf Green 12x10-3 Blue 12x10-2 Geld Tone p.4y.. .JOB Bordeaux..... .......127 Acrilia ___........ .129 Quest...............149 -Acrilia...... T.... . . Ifl Triplett... .;______ Ill Prospect Park........ 111 Great Day* »»....... .‘Iff" Shooting Star....j. . Ill f. Mount (Missing Tufts) 99 Rhonda........V-4...197 S. Seas ....... .... 77 DC-8 -----------....199 S. Seas............ .. 77 S.Seas.............. 47, Camvett........;.. 94 Sweetwater Twist..... 99 MV.........._______. 84 Quest.......... S.Seas............. 74 Stoneway.......... * 89 Adornment....... ..,121 C. Causal...........120 Guest............... 110 S. Seas.............. 67 F. Mount (Untrimmed) 09 S. Seas..............59 F. Mount......... 99 Cameo Point......... 90 Mohawk Acrilan_____.79 TVA.*<^.,76 Colormate........... 74 Bar Harbor ••........ 88 C Casual.............107 Tua............______ 69 S. Seqs.... . . ........ 56 Cotton..... 49 Bar Harbor..,.*..... 77 Confetti.............102 Aldon Tweed..........70 Pebble Beach....... 109 Rastftt.... X ,.. .*... .109 a..,h Maytime. .. •Invitation'............ 79 Cotton............. 45 BOAC................70 Pebble Beach... r,,.. 76 S Seas.............. 52 Triplett............. 99 DOG..............,...17 Shooting Star........ 76 Pebble Beach . .___. 79 Tua.................. 69 Tonality............. 79 Wishing Well........ 66 Needle Star...i^.. 64 Quest.............. . 88 Adornment.... . .. IT Acrilics____........ 76 Shooting Star;...,... 76 Rhonda......________ 69 S. Seas... .......... 46 S.Seas...........*.. 46 S.Seas.............. 46 Pan Am............. 66 AAonticellia.......... 66 DC-B.............*...87 Great Day............ 66 S.- Seas................ 44' F.Mount..............55 Quest............... 59 F.Mount............ 49 S. Seas1 (Sides serged) ' 46 6T Carovell...... 80 6.6B................ #8 TWA (soiled)........26 DC-B49 S. Seas.............. 44 Wesley.....A........58; Bordeaux..,..iu.j.,, 66' 12x19-3 12x19-1 12x19 12x184 rmw 12x11. 12M9<> 12x1%U. 12x1** 42x16-10 12x16-7 12x16-6 12x16-6 12x16 * 12x15-10 12x15-6 12x15-3^ 12x15-7 12x15 IMM 12x14-10 12x14-7 12x14 15*f*-4 12x13-4 12x13-3 12x13-2 12x134 12x15*4 12x12-10 12x12-6 12x12-6 12x12-4 12x12 12x12 12x12 12x1140 15x11-8 Moss Odd Surf Green, Surf Green -Green MOrsq. . Green Tones Aqua Mahogany .Souffle Beige Beige Tones Sauteme Bronze Gold Bamboo Beige Fem Beige BurntOronge Beige Coco Gold Ruby Persian Blue Biscuit Beige BumtOrange . Avocado Sky Blue Aztec Gold Ute Blue Rosewood Bronze Gold Beige BumtOrange Gioytones Toast Blue Green BUmt Orange Sky Blue — Orange Brawn Tweed Jade Burnt Orange Wheat Jiftrt {moginr,.,30 yprdibf tigs 100% DuPont Nyfortn ydur home for only . $10.08 P4r Month. • H|§|| Just imagine . >. 30 yards of this super 100% DuPont Nylon in your home for only 11,44 Per Month. $l&fl7 $1453 $13.25 $12.39 $16.52 $13.12 $15,00 mum $18.41 $1475 $1476 $15.50 $20.19 $1641 $18,56 $17.04 $22.18 $18.03 $20.33 $22.11 Dane Sfoney Olive Fem Green Sea Green Sandalwood Royal Blue White Parchment Geld Souffle Beige /Spring Green Gandstbno Blue Green Rosewood Sandalwood Royal Blue Sandalwood Bedroom Carpat WALTON BLVD. ! PwwmufjSmJ> 100% ACRILAN PILE Liquidation Price. MON. and FRI. -• 10 to 9 TUES., WED., THURS. 10 to 6 SAT. lOto 5:30 :Tu+ureLocation of J&j&AJ C4RPB73 \ 37so Dixie rV/vy. * ^^sr^emrfBr Poach \ +7fa/ard Johnson SX TResfaurartTh just imagin# Free Parking In The Rear and Front of Our Store ITlio $13.83 MON. and FRI. - 10 fa 9 TUES., WED., THURS. 10 to 6 p ‘ SAT. 10 to 6:30. mm $15.56 OR 3-2100 OR 3-3311 $19.03 >830.75 : 60 $558 <1949 buPONT 501 NYLON TWIST $729 Tripplett by Coronet Mill* J Sq.Yd. 1501 NYLON-CAMEO POINTS L i HeavyRandomSheamd-Blege E50 j TONE ON TONE NYLON $ : Scroll, Rondo by Masland - Only •„ 499 IBJgyfc B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JtPEIL 15, 1W Hart Charges Antitrustlaxity Cites 'Largest Merger Tide in Our History' WASHINGTON' * - Sen. Philip A. Hart accused the government yesterday of laxity In antitrust law enforcement despite “the greatest merger tide in our history.” The Michigan Democrat, who Is chairman of the Senate Antitrust and ~ tee, said the current trend could produce a system of industrial cartels, with the government setting their prices and wages. * ; ★ ★ ' “Our economy today requires a tough, stringent and vigorous antitrust approach — not a lain-sez-fair antitrust policy,” Hart said in a speech prepared for American Bar Association meeting. He told the association’s antitrust section that enforcement of the anti-trust laws “is being carried on in a low key. "Major mergers are consummated without apparent challenge,” said Hart, “predatory practices often receive little attention, identical pricing patterns in concentrated industries aeem to be regarded with little concern.” He said identical pricing hi many major industries has been “practically ignored” by the government. Whan He Talks to Her, She Gats the Message DOS ANGELES (DPI) - University of Southern California students Paul Liles and Jan Feltz have a unique system for communicating between their on-campus apartments A teletype machines. Liles, a ham radio operator, built the machines from surplus parts when Ms late night telephone calls to Miss Feltz annoyed her sorority sisters. Culprit Had Pur Coat VERCELLI, Italy (DID - For eight months police have been investigating the steady theft of chickens arid turkeys from Giuseppe Albino’s poultry /arm. Hundreds of the birds had disappeared and yesterday the police finally discovered the culprit — a cat. Help Him 'Learn to Learn' F Problem Pupil Needs 1 By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. Dear Dr. Nason: We need advice as to the education of our 10-year-old, fourth-grade son. We recently moved to a new neighborhood in the same general area. Bill seems to be adjusting well except for his school-work. He maintaining approximately D average. When I try to: help. him with his work, he gives all sorts] of exc about the teach- DR. NASON er explaining it a certain way or she doesn’t give him enough time or some other, excuse. I am toying to find out bow he thinks, but I get nowhere when I question Mm and he starts crying. I am sure Ms teacher b also having thb problem. He would rather tell me why he can’t do the work than to just get busy and do it. I am undecided. as to what would be the best thing for him, keeping Mm bade a year, or getting a tutor and pushing him n the same gener-ems to be adjust- i ried on, will help him gain an understanding of past and present work and would" probably bring about some Improvement in grades. But It could weaken rather than strengthen Mm. The basic problem can be solved only by helping him to “lean to lean” la clan. Someone, preferably not a parent, should discus the materials and ideas with him ia advance of the time they are discussed in Ms classes. His cooperation In thb endeavor is essential. He must be striving to solve hb learning problems. Dear Dr. Nason: My daughter b a high school sophomore and an honor student. For* a long Philippines Fearing Volcanb Eruption on. Mrs.M. T., Indianapolis, Ind. ★ * ★ Your son b not learning in class. If be were, he would understand the teacher's explanation mid work out his. problems correctly. Holding him back a year pill not automatically solve hb problem. Tutoring, as it, fa usually car- time she has talked about becoming a high school teacher, which pleased us very much. However, lately, she has changed her mind. Her re*- j sou have te do with what j she hears about uandy st*> i dents and their lack af man* { ners and discipline. ' She b now interested in be-j coming a highly skilled IBM] operator in foriegn langauges.j Is thb a woman's job? Am I wrong to he disappointed in. thb] choice of occupation? Should I try to change her mind? i Mrs. ,L. N., Syracuse, N.Y.i Your daughter's goal is a very, satisfactory ohe. There are many opportunities for women in tMs field. Salary and Working condition ara usually excel- -lent. In thb type of work, she; would be associated with other; sucessful young people. - j The particular type of work -she finally enters will probably be determined only as she continues her participation. Encourage her in working toward thb new goal. For best results, the goal must be the MANILA (UPI) - Seismologists recorded slight tremors from Taal volcano about miles south of here today, raising fears of a new eruption. Taal exploded bet September, killing about 200 persons on Crater Island and neighboring! (You can wirte to Prof. Na- ental approval and encouragement must abo be present. son in care of The Pontiac] Press. Questions of general interest will be answered in hb! column.) areas. Volcanology Commissioner Arturo Alcaraz said the tremors were accompanied by slight rumbling nobes, indicating a! -------------'----------- | definite increase in underground] Asia covers 16.9 million square activity. He called the situation miles and fa the world’s largest] ‘critical.” continent. CITY COMMISSION'S H CLOSED DOOR POLICY BLOWS URBAN RENEWAL PROGRAM Last week the'Federal government officially rejected the City of, Pontiac proposal to do something oboutthe urban renewar*pNght faced by the citizens of Pontiac. This rejection was based on the failure of the present City Com* mission to establish a citizens participation Committee as required by me Federal government. . ’ - * Because the City Commission Nds’ refused to set up a citizens participation committee in accordance with Federal regulation, they have been turned down by the Federal government and thus have deprived Pontiac taxpayers of millions of dollars in available funds* to improve our city and increase the value of your property and bring in more taxes to the city. Why is the present City Commission afraid to involve the people of our city, in its planning as required, by the government? Don't’ they trust the people? Why is not .everything open and above board? ' ’ Do you like being cheated? Well, that's what is happening to you because to* dollars you are entitled to are not* being sent to Pontiac but ate being used by other cities who plan ana are moving ahead while we stand •Hlllt ------jfor*----r-r—-----—-----’------------......... — This turn down by the Federal government will: 1. Delay Pontiac urban renewal probably two yeors. . 2. Reduce your property values substantially. 3. Probably cause you to pay more taxes. 4. Deprive you of return of millions of tax dollars to the community. • ' . , . >]■• All because your "horse and buggy" City Commission had rather "drift" than to establish a bonafide citizens committee os required by your government. Toil can do something about this tragic situation! You can stop the secrecy! You cqn get real citizen participation! You can get Pontiac on the move! , You, the Voters, can do these things by electing a City Commission that trusts the people. Next Monday, April 18, Vote for Hit Following Candidates: at District No. 1 CHARLES M. TUCKER, JR. District No. 2 KENNETH H. CUMBERWORTH District No. 4 GEORGE GRBA District No. 5 WILLIAM HINE District No. 3 WILLIAM J. WINTERS District No. 6 WESLEY J. WOOD District No. 7 ROBERT A. LANDRY Smooths any drink in the housel Oakland County AFL-CIO Council and Affilistsd Local Unions In Internationol Union, UAW -V LET US PROGRESS TOGETHER IN PEACE, HARMONY AND BROTHERHOOD YOUR FELLOW CITIZENS IN INST. 1 ME CONCERNED ABOUT THEIR REPRESENTATION \ In tho'Gonaral Election two years ago, the present District l Incumbent was defeated inr his own\ district over 2 to 1 (1300 to 625). \ In the recent Primary Election, Dist. 1 showed its concern ot the polls when over 1,428‘voters cast bdllpts. Nearly-1,000 people voted against tho incumbent Commissioner. CHARLES M. TUCKER, JR. polled nearly 50% of tho total District 1 vote in tho Primary. WE ASK THAT OUR CHOICE WILL BE YOUR CHOICE THIS MON., APRIL 18th AT THE POLLS / V VOTE \ £ FOR PEACE, \ / PROGRESS AND Y El El CHARLES M. TUCKER, JR. TUCKER IS QUALIFIED HERE IS A RECORD OF PERFORMANCE-HOT PROMISES ' . \ #* An outstanding young Business Executive (33 yrs. old) CHARLES AA. TUCKER, JR. employs 20 parsons. Here I* his background: x ,t> Married: Joyce, two children; daughter 6 yrs., ten 3 yrs. Education: Detroit Public Schools; Highland Park Junior Collage; Wayne State University. Naval Air Reserve, U. S. Army Signal Corps, ICoron Veteran, Honorable Discharge. AAember, Newman A.M.E. Church! Business Organizations: Reolist, Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Downtown Pontiac Business Association, National Assn. Housing and Redevelopment Officials, National Real Estate Brokers Assn., Detroit Real Estate Brokers Assn., VA, FHA Approved Sales Broker. Present Civic Organkztions: President, ‘Oakland County Chapter NAACP, Vice Chrm. Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity (Anti-Poverty), Member, Oakland Community College Obarall Advisory Committee, Life AAember, Pontiac.Urban League, AAember, **CMy of Pontiac, Pontiac School District Human Relations Committees. Father, Vice President, Franklin Rd. School PTA, National Assn, for Community Development, Charter Member, Woodward Estates Homewoners Assn., Kappa Alpha Psi College Graduate Chapiter of Pontiac, 761 st Tank Battalion and Vat. Asms, of Pontiac, AAember, Oakland County Coordinating Committee on Human Relations. Previous Civic Organizations: Beard Member; Pentiac Area USO, Board Member, Camp Fire Girls of Oakland County, Board AAember, Community Organizations af Pontiac, Vico President, RBAAA Club of Pontiac, President, PLUS Club af Pontiac, Mayor's Advisory Committee, Bits, Trustee, CtfyWMfa Choir Union, Traffic Safety Committee of Pentiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Board AAember, Qaidand County Citizens League, Assistant Bey Scout AAastar, Big Brothers of Oaidand County. Other: Recipient af several awards from civic and social organizations for community walk and participation, last being, PONTIAC AREA COUNCIL OF CHURCHES in January, 1966. ft RECORD OF CONSTANT, CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE IN ALL ASPECTS OF OUN COMMUNITY ANQ CITY AFFAIRS. TUCKER PLEDGES “PROGRESS FOR PONTIAC l> my pludgu. TBit can only be aedampMskad by maximum citizen participation. Our City it etaprisud of people. Tba Commission Mat sincerely represent puople, net juut concrete and steel. In order te achieve progress, I reuumnund tho following: "A Citizens Advisory Committee reflective of the com petit ion of our CHy to Assist in the developing, planning and understanding of the benefits which can accrue from Urban Renewal. "A factual study to ascertain tiro present and projected future housing needs of Pentiac. “We must provide decent, lew cost housing for our elderly, lew incomt and middle income familie*. This should be done by private enterprise where passible and if not passible, the City must not negate their responsibility and provide this bask necessity for her citiaons. "Them must be community contort for our young people throughout the City. "We must provide for our munklpal, fire and polka employees a wage and security comparable to J-*itiy. *A study made by qualified persons as to financial problems of the CHy ef Panting snlutmn "Wie must together plan and work to make eur City tiro ^Coro CHy*. Net a City divided by racial friction, boslnsss mistrust and uninformed Citizens. "Pontine bine tiro bosk In gradients far progress* Progress con only bp accomplished by full participate of Mu cMtouns. Pontiac cannot progress in tiro darkness of Us poet misunderstandings and tiro sucluaian af afl bsrt a prtvUegsd few. Wo are living in a now day, we all must work together and meet tiro challenge af tiro future. We cannot succumb to the past. I sincerely and humbly ask for your veto this VOTE FOR TUCKER EffiSTSK CM Vtn MML, WML 1 Ml FOR CUBLES H.TVCKER, JR. HIT CMMISSMSER, HSTBICT1 m ENDORSED DY CHURCH, CIVIC, BUSINESS, PROFESSIONAL LEADERS, AFL-CIO COUNCIL TUCKER FOR CHY COMMISSION COMMITTEE y THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. APRIL 15,1966 B—II WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson will delay a decision on the use of an anti-inflation tax increase while key indicators are giving a mixed reading of the nation’s economic health. * * ★ This was the view yesterday from White House sources who gave their forecast shortly after the government announced both production and income for March rose to new highs. “If the economic indicators continue mixed,” the sources said, “we’re going to wait a while.” They said no deadline has been set on deciding whether a tax increase would WAR GAMES - Vietnamese children play around a mock antiaircraft position in the carter ef Da Nang yesterday. The dummy has a mock gun and ammunition and was plffd there by Buddhist students to scare off plana of the Vietnamese air force teat flew ova the town during recent disorders. Plan to Make Diplomat Book Secret Hit WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe chairman of the House Government Information subcommittee said today a reported plan to classify the biographical register of Whol Who In the UR. dlp- Noisy Reunion Held on Street Is Big'Bash' GADSDEN, Ala. (AP) - A mother and ha daughta left the same bouse at the same time Thursday and drove off in different directions. Minutes lata their cars collided at an intersection. Beetle Lorene Smith was uninjured, but ha daughta, Ann, 25, and three otha women suffered cuts and bruises. * * * Mrs. Smith was driving to work. The daughta told officers she “was Just riding around." Police aakl they haven’t decided whkh driver was at service would be incredibly stupid.” Rep. John E. Moes, D-Calif., added that he would demand a fell explanation from the State Depotment and, if it intends to go ahead with the classification, to caD for a public ficus, gives short summaries of birthplaces, dates, educations, rankings and careers of State Department officials. It is used as a reference by newspapers and libraries, as well as the State Department. Nearly 330,000 Americans spend about $170 million ly on ocean cruises, todndtag fees fa fares, the State Department clamped a secrecy veil ova Its plans Thursday shortly after fits Associated Press reported feat the publication of a new issue would bear security classification fa the first time. * * it State Department spokesman Robert J. McCloskey later 'confirmed feat there is a plan fa a, new issue of the register, but added it is “a bit premature” to ay it definitely will be kept cret. However, he noted ti “some consideration la being given to feat" CONCEAL IDENT1TT McCloskey refused to elaborate but otha sources said fee Central Intelligence Agency wants fee new edition kept from the public in ah effort to help conceal the identity of CIA attached to U.S. diplomatic missions abroad. It is understood feat ffie department now will take anotha look at fee {dans to withhold the book from public scrutiny. The biographic register, one of the The register does not list CIA man* a espionage agents as such but wife the information given it is sometimes possible to determine who is a career State Department office and who is an intelligence agent Moss was described by one associate as extremely upset by the reported move. He is autba of the so-called right of information bill, which gives citizens the right under certain conditions to inspect public records. A similar measure has cleared the Senate.* Frankie Avalon's Wife Gives Birth to Girt LOS ANGELES OR - The rife of actor-singer Frankie Avalon gave birth this morning to the couple’s third child, a •-pound, 8-ounce girt. The Infant, named Dina Mary, was born in St. Vincent’s hos-pital, and die and fee mother woe reported doing well The Avalons have two young eons, Frankie Jr. and Anthony. Johnson Delays Decision on Tax Boost turned around apd rose a little in March. And fee Labor Department has laid feat shortages of skilled werfcas to tool aad machine making Indus tries might dampen fee boom to Industrial expansion, a major ■agree of leflattoaery pressure. » - *, : It was these "mixed” indicators which gave Johnson and his top advisers pause about asking Congress as an anti-inflation The President has spM repeatedly feat ha does hot want to crack down too hard on file economy which is etfifying the longest peacetime boom in history. Ha fears this would turn the boom into a recession. NrvMnyWNf FALSE TEETH With Motw Contort comfort, juat sprinkle a lulls FAS-l'wra on your plates. No mamma, jpoosj. party lasts os fasUnr^feada "Plata odor" (dsntunbra?th). Oat fAiTHTH S* sea eras soontar. BUY, SELL, TRADE-USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI The Federal Reserve Board’s index of industrial production went up 1 pa cent to 152.9 per cent of its 1957-58 fa March. Commerce Department figures showed Americana’ pasonal income increased $3.8 billion to a record annual rata of $581 billion. ★ ■ it it But otha economic indicators fa last month — notably spending tor construction and wholesale prices — were down last month. LABOR shortages Unemployment, which had been dropping sharply and raising fears of labor shortages, City Man Named to Committee of Welfare League Tom Cbeavez, a member of the Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity, has been appointed to the Michigan Welfare League’s committee to plan file league’s annual conference Nov. 15 in Detroit. ir it it Chavez, of 133 W. Fairmount also is president of the Latin Americans United fa Political Action, a Pontiac organization. He was asked1 to serve on the planning committee by Welfare League President Ronald O. Warner. —...* - * ■ The committee will begin a series of meetings in Detroit next Friday. *21p9Q0(pteslaf) J & W BUILDERS 7—-----"-BS.wfcWlNri Tea can eitha spend loti of money on a car, or you can own an economical Chevy II. Epr starters it’s among America’s lowest priced can. From then on Chevy II is voy careful with your funds. Garage visits are rare. Gas station stops aren’t too frequent eitha, with Chevy II’s famous money-saving gas mileage. As if that weren’t enough, Chevy II (restyled Cknytl Novo Sport Cimm with 8 tiandari safety features including front and rear seat belts. Always buckle up for safety! for ’6$) is nioeto look at. Which helps explain why you’ll get so much fa it when you decide to trade. Chevy II makes driving good fun. And it’s , an especially good buy now during Double Dividend Days at your Chevrolet dealer’s! U kinds of good buys an !■ one placs...at your Chevrolet dealer*s-Clievrolet« Cbevelle • Gbevy n-Comlr* Corvette Who ever heard of guaranteed hot water? The people who buy electric water heaters! With an approved electric water heater, you get all the hot water yea need when you need it, or you get your money back... from Edison. Including any you may have spent on installation. And it doen’t matter where you bought your new electric water heater, if ifs an approved product the Edison full-year guarantee still applies. No strings attached. ’■ Does this guarantee cost you extra? Not a cent! Cost of operation? More good news! Average-size families with big 60-gallon electric water heaters may pay as little as $3.88 per month. And electric water heaters are backed by Edison’s no-charge repair service on electrical parts. To get aU the hot water you need—guaranteed—call your Edison Office or see the Qualified Retailer who displays the Edison Satisfaction Guaranteed sign. EDISON Iffl YOU ASKED THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 KiHers of Malcolm X Get Life NEW YORK (UPl) - Three reputed members of the reciat Black Muslim sect were sentenced to life imprisonment yesterday for the slaying of-breakaway blade national-ist leader Malcolm X. Justice Charles Marks handed down the mandatory (life sentences following an eight-week trial. New York state Ibw would not permit the death sentence in the case. . The three, Tehnadge Hayer, 24, of Paterson, NJ., and Norman SX Butler, 2C, and Thomas 1SX Johnson, M, both of Bronx, were convicted ef first-degree murder March 11. rmer Black Muslim leader who split with sect to found his own black nationalist _ gunned down Feb. 21, IMS as he began to * l the Audubon Ballroom in upper Man- ★ ★ ★' Betty Shabazz, Malcolm’s widow, arrived in court sar the judge pass sentence on ^Johnson, the last to be sentenced. She refused to talk to news- Etta 2X, and other court. None of But- |MTC CREDIT UNION Will Bo Closed TOMORROW Saturday, April 16th For The Michigan Credit Union League Annual Meeting! Employees Federal. \^yiedi£ U/tion MOVING UP THE LADDER - Pennsylvania State Sen. Robert P. Casey has at least eight strong supporters in his bid for the Democratic nomination for governor of the state. He and his wife, Ellen, have seven children. She holds Patrick, 5 months, and the others are (from left) Erin, ti Chris, 4; Robert Jr., 6; Kate, 7; Mary Ellen, •; and Margi, It' Scientists Slowing Up Psychology Testing SAN FRANCISCO,(UPD -America’s "brain watchers,’ awed bp powerful new mean of laying the human mind open and shaken by outcries from die public, are putting their foot gently on die brake. At a meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Association here yesterday, a collection of the top psychologists, psychiatrists and sociologists in the counfry took to “analyzing’ us do not like to reveal ourselves." READY TO CONCEDE Among psychologists and students of the mind, Brim said frankly, it has been thought that nothing could be more important than science — "individuals were there to be studied.’’ Now, he said, he and many of his colleagues were ready to concede that "scientific re- their own work in relation tol search has to take its place human privacy. along with other values, “We have a bear by toe tail," was the way Dr. Orville G. Brim of New York, pot It Psychological tests that ask a person intimate questions about his religious beliefs, his sex Ufe and inmost thoughts have become commonplace in schools, industry and government. A .★ .★ Last June both the U. S, Senate and House held bearings to Washington over the use of such tests on Peace Corps applicants. ‘PRETTY SILLY’ "We have made up some pretty silly tests,” Brim told Ms fellow psychologists yesterday. He added that toe profession would have to admit also that “we have made some irresponsible use” of test results. Brim said, however, that even if the sex questions are taken out of the tests, there would remain "a much more powerful source of resistance” to such psychological examinations. ★ ★ * This, he said, was the simple concept of privacy — "many of chiding privacy." The New York psychologist called on educators, sociologists and employers to take another look at their attitudq towards privacy too. Schools and agencies providing services to people on welfare have assumed that the services were more important than toe individuals’. privacy. Brim said a recheck of toe value system was needed, A BUT Fund Cutoff Is Threatened WASHINGTON (DPI) - Welfare Secretary John W. Gardner has reemphasized the federal government’s intention to deny funds to schools and hospitals that fail to comply with federal desegregation standards. Hie deadline for school system assurances of compliance with revised federal guidelines was today. 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That's this Saturday from 12 to 3 MttYIKiMft LARGEST FWNTURE CHAM WITH 21 GIGANTIC LOCATIONS r B—ir THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1066 State Senate Picks Hoffc/s Son for Post GET SET FOR BASEBAU! Magnavox 19" PORTABLE TV With Mobile Cart EAST LANSING (UP!) -The chief of > Michigan Statd University aid minion to South Viet Nam laid yesterday school officials vpere well aware five Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operatives were employed on the project. “There was no secret about said Prof. Wesley FWiel. He categorised as “a lets! LANSING Iff) - James R. Hof. fa Jr., 91 * year • old son of the Teamsters union president, has Wherever you are, see and enjoy the opening game! This new portable is light and compact to go where you go! Brilliant 172 sq. in. picture, uHF-VHF, automatic fine tuning, dipole antenna, with convenient tilt down handle. Warranty: I year on parts and 90 days carry-in service. ONLY 13990 Bootleggers Drop Dope for Tobacco Phone Order* Promptly Filled Fishel joined Denison In denying that the aid mission trained militia and palace guard person-nM for the late President Ngo Dinh Diem and bought ammunition ranging from pistols to rocker launchers, as the article CANNON. 15 X 26-INCH New fluff tip •weeping action. Wooden BALTIMORE (UPI) - Eastern gangsters who would rather switch than fight art giving up th# illicit narcotics, traffic to smuggle cigarettes, a conference til tobacco tax officials from 13 states was told yesterday. The bootlegging til cigarettes, primarily from North Carolina to New Yarik City, has become an organized, gangster-infiltrated racket that cost thfe State of New York $40 million in tax revenues the last fiscal year, the conference heard during the opening session of a two-day meeting. It is scheduled to wind up today. ‘There b a# doubt that the Mafia Is isvaived In the oper- as assistant director ef the Ceaaecticnt excise section. The cigarette tax In New York City Is 16 cents a pack. John Purcell, assistant director of the New York State Miscellaneous Tax Bureau, said New York lost an estimated NO million in taxes over a 11-month period because of smuggling. * .* * Other experts attending the meeting said in private that Purceli'i estimate was conservative. PHONE CONVERSATIONS Pur veil also told the conference that New York police knew of telephone conversations in which known dealers in narcotics said they were switching to the cigarette “business.” Law enforcement officials for ysara have considered traffic hi illegal narcotics one ef the backbones of organised crime in this coo try. Maryland Comptroller Louis Goldstein reported the Federal Bureau of Investigation in-fanned him several weeks ago that the smuggling operation in New York State amounts to $1 million worth of cigarettes day. ..,~w * _.....★_____ The cigarettes usually ar distributed by milkmen, housewives, service station attendants factory representatives and other persons having a wid range of contacts, it was reported. The Jenkins Act of 1949 prohibits interstate shipment of untaxed cigarettes by mail. An amendment currently ■itt Congress would extend the act to cover all types of transportation, and also require registration of large sales in tobacco-producing states! N Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 ” Use Your Charge, 4-Poy Plan (90 days samo as cash) or Budget Plan The university was hired by the State Department to train Diem's civil police fore* and set up a civil service organisation for South Viet Nam. The program ran from 1964 until 1913, Fishel said. BORROWED Fishel said the university hiftd former dty, state and federal law enforcement officials from many locations to conduct the police training. The OLA men were borrowed from the agency to conduct tee counterinsurgency portion of the training, be ■aid. S t a a I e y K. Sheinbaam, farmer MSU prslsseer wi worked on tee project stall, ■aid yesterday ha worked on the police kkrtag staff at MSU and was told “not to inveati-gate” tee five CIA agents. At the time they presented themselves as former depart- $1000 Bit Beneficial ICOM TAX PAYMENTS are just iround the comer... end it's mi for Spring clothes and finery, tool Phone Beneficial for the ish you went now. You pick the term* ... you pick the parents .., at Beneficial, where you get that BIG O.K. for cash etf Callup and see! KfNfFKXAL FINANCE SYSTEM *1600 OFFICES COAST-TOXGAST Loans up teiSlOOO on Signature, Furniture or Car PONTIAC—<2 Offices) Beneficial Finance Co. of Detroit__ ________:' • 10 N. Saginaw (Near attend Theatre)......332-9249 Benefidat Finance Co. of Waterford . ^ .... a 477 Elizabeth Lake Rd. ...,......,<*.....3944513 OPEN EVENINGS BY APfOINTllKIIT—PHONE FOB HOURS Legislator Raises Possibility of Probe EAST LANSING (AP) - The possibility has bean raised of a legislative investigation into a connection between Michigan State University and tee Central Intelligence Agency (OA) in South Viet Nam. ★ ★ ★ Rep. Jack Faxon, D-Detroit, says ha plans to discuss an investigation with fellow members of the House Ways and Means Committee. What authority tee Legislature wotdd have over Michigan State, governed by a constitutionally created board of trustees, was a question. SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS WALNUT TRIMMED MODERN EASY CHAIR muoiuB CREST TOOTHPASTE KOTEX, 48 s SAVE I THICK CUSHIONED UTILITY MATS SAU MfCIDf SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 AJL to 10 PJLDAHT — SUNDAY 12 NOON to 8 P.M. —===- 11111 ^ 1 " 1 inmr UI iiim nv>wi| mmm imgiapa nr W FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES ACRES OF FREE PARKING jfrkr THE PONTIAC PRESS; tttlpAY, APRIL 15> 1006 Cleric Charged in Tax Case Detroit Rights Leader Mute at Arraignment r (AP) lie Rev. e L. Franklin, organizer ' of Detroit’s 1963 civil rights . march, was charged Thursday with failure to file federal income tax returns for the years 1969 through 1962. The Rev. h/r. Franklin, pastor of the New Bethel Baptist Church, stood mute during his arraignment on four counts before U. S. District . Judge Thomas P., Thornton. Judge - Thornton entered an innocent plea and released the Rev. Mr. Franklin on $1,000 personal bond. No trial date was set. * * * Assistant U. S. Attorney William Merrill said Mr. Franklin had earned $76,043 during the four-year period and should We paid $9,759 in income taxes. , Mr. Franklin is chairman of tile Detroit Council for Human Rights. GOOD DEFENSE IQS attorney, former state representative Harold Ryan said his client had a goo defense that would be brought out at the trial. Each count carries a maximum penalty of one year in prison and a $10,000 foie. Boston Reaffirmation of Busing Ban Brings Aid Half BOSTON (AP) - The Boston School Committee has again voted to ban busing as a way to end racial imbalance in public schools, and the action cost the city $16 million in state education funds. — —*~rf The funds were cut off as of today by the Massachusetts Board of Education on recommendation of Education Commissioner Owen B. Kieman. ★ ‘Commissioner Kieman is using dictator tactics to force the Boston School Committee to betray the trust of thousands oflachool committee chairman, voters who elected foenf on the chief issue that there would be no busing of their children," William E. O’Connor, school committeeman, said before the- 5-0 vote was taken Thursday! “it can’t be done,” she said, night. A . | "Mr. Lee’s scatieration plants Who is still a committee member, said today there can be no suitable plan to ending racial imbalance in the schools. The 3-year-okf dispute involves the quality of schools in the predominantly Negro Rox-bury section. It has led to two one-day school boycotts and a civil rights protest march of some 10,000 persons. Louise Day Hicks, former the only hope." ■ * ■ * She referred to a proposal by committeeman Joseph Lee that 14,000 Boston Negro children be transported daily to schools in the suburbs as a means of compliance with the state’s new racial imbalance law. The Massachusetts Legisla- racial hire last year enacted a law requirin^-clties and towns to eliminate racial imbalance in their public, schools within a reasonable time or face a loss of state education aid. . NOT HARMFUL Before .Thursday night’s meeting Mrs. Hicks was "quoted as saying, "as I’ve said many times before, I don’t believe racial imbalance is educationally harmful,’’ Negro parents contend that imbalance and over crowding greatly Interfere with the educational process in the school of their district. The education commissioner said that as soon as Boston submits plans for compliance with tiie law, its state education funds will be restored. ♦ ★ " * Joseph Salerno, a member of the state board, said "busing is at the heart of the matter," and added that he doubted whether a revised plan that does not include some busing would be acceptable. How You Could Moke Money With Your Ideas Ever thought about how youlfirm evaluates your ideas, could make something better they have merit, they are than it is now? wluit about thatlveloped so the end results new product you’ve had in professionally designed, intrigu-mind? Maybe It’s Just an ideajlng products. These are then that, if properly worked out andjprqsented W pre-selected manu-marketed, could make money facturers for production and distribution on a guaranteed royalty basis. For information on how this l-ytar-old company can help you cash in on your ideas, write your name and address on e for you! Well, if you have, there is a company in Detroit that may be of considerable help to you. This firm, Research to Reality, Inc., is the largest, and oldest idea development and new product postcard ahd send it to Replacement organization of itssearch to Reality, Dept. PE, type in the world! 11260 Library Place, Detroit, The process is simple: The|Michigan 48226. Passersby Form Team fo Save Boy CINCINNATT, Ohio (AP) -Three doctors and a nurse happened to be passing by yesterday when Jack Baker, 5, was struck down by a car in rush hour traffic. “He was knocked at least four car lengths,” said Dr. Emilio Ferrara, a dentist. * ★ ★ - "He wasn’t breathing and was turning blue,” said Ferrara, who drove up with a nurse, Jean Carr. Ferrara administered heart massage and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation as two more physicians, Dr. Earl G. Solomon and his wife, Ann, came along. HEART SURGERY "When you see a person is not breathing, the procedure is a tracheotomy," Mrs. Solomon said. She started the operation with a pocket knife borrowed from a passerby but it was too dull. "We called again and someone gave me a large knife,” MrsrSolomoa said. “It worked.” INK PEN USED "We also wanted a straw but someone took a .ball point pen apart and handed me the hollow tube. “It worked nicely." Mrs. Solomon said ^he child started to breathe again when shej>lew air into the tube and Dr. Ferrara continued heart massage. . The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Baker, was hospitalized and was in critical condition today. William H. Taylor Mayor District No. 3 ‘A Better City Develops With a Progressive City Commission" Mayor, William H. Taylor RETAIN ALL YOUR PRESENT CITY COMMISSIONERS FOR CONTINUED PROGRESS! Laslia H. Hudson Mayor Pro-tom District No. 4 * T. Warren Fowler ’ District No. 1 Wesley J. Wood District No. 4 Jamos H. Marshall District No, 7 Robert C. Irwin District No. 2 John A. Dugan District No. 5 Re-Elect This Commission “WE STAND ON OUR RECORD.. * SECURED JOSEPH L WARREN AS CITY MANAGER .★ BOOSTED DOWNTOWN URBAN RENEWAL PUNS ★ SAVED THE INDUSTRIAL PARK PROJECT ★ CAPTURED COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE FOR PONTIAC ★ STRENGTHENED CODE ENFORCEMENT FR0RRAM ★ PLANNED CONSOLIDATION OF 3 CITY DEPARTMENTS VOTE-RE-ELECT ALL YOUR PRESENT CITY COMMISSIONERS Your present City Comission has worked as a team, rather than individual stars, to bring progressive, positive action fo Pontiac. -VOTE MONDAY- Tbit advertisement written ami paid for by a eoamittia af tha Ottfzant for a Batter Pontiac ★ RAISED MUNICIPAL WARES ADD SAURIES ★ ANNEXED 285 ACRES TO PONTIAC ★ IMPROVED STREET U6HTIH8 Take This Guide to the Poll* With You!- ™OWCANDlbATEs" | District No. 1... X | District No. 2 ... X | District No. 3 ... X j District No. 4,.. X j District No. 5 .. X 1 District No. 6.., ... Waste/J. Wood X 1 District Np. 7.., y 3 T = Mi JPUATilAC BKhSS, FRIDAY, At ML 15, lGGfl B—15 Science for You A helium-filled balloon and an automobile. do non Hold the balloon by the string in a closed automobile. Aik someone to drive the vehicle in « circle. Alt objects in the car will tend ti ward the outside of the circle •— except the balloon. It will fioat In the opposite direction. HERE’S WHY: The balloon tends to rise because its helium is lighter than air. As the automobile turns, the heavier air is inclined to move toward the outside of the circle, as do the people and other objects, the helium, which is lighter, tends to move in the opposite direction. AN ANALOGY: Float a table tennis ball on water in a fish bowl, and (urn around with the bowl in a hand. The water will move toward the outside of your circle, and the ball will move toward you. [ 378 Mystery Phone Calls VOS ANGELES (AP) - Louis E. DeWitt says 571 calls tha telephone company said he made are mysteries to him. DeWitt told the Public Utilities Commission he paid the General Telephone Co. (1,000 for 371 calls too many last year. ... * * ★ He said the calls — to bars, restaurants and residential and business establishments — were not made by either him or Us family. ' A PUC examiner completed his hearings on the complaint yesterday and laid a recommendation would be made to the commission on a possible settlement. YOUR “BEST BUY” IS A FRIGIDAIRE From WAYNE (MEETS JET ACTIIN WASIER1 l-YEAR PROTECTION FUN AT NG EXTRA GIST! JET ACTION FOR NEW -DEEP l| CLEANING! MATCHING DRYER for SOAKS, WASHES, BLEACHES, DYES AUTOMATICALLY! for Qnly *133 Big 13 Cu. Ft 2-Door AUTOMATIC DEFROST FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerator! With 100-lb. TOP FREEZER Automatic Dnfroct MrleiwtiH EggShuHtorEggil bdm Deep Deer ShaN tor W-Gol. 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APRIL 15, i960 Drunk Drivers Build Airports JUNK GARS AND TRUCKS WANTED HIGHIST PRICES PAID We Pick Up FE 2-0200 HELSINKI, Finland (AP) Foreign visitors Often admire Finland's modern airports, but few realise that many of them were built by drunken motorists. In the gangs working on airports and on other projects, you’ll find members, of Parliament, doctors, teachers and businessmen digging alongside unskilled laborers. I Finnish authorities nab about 6,000 drunken drivers, a year. For the past 10 years they have teen sentencing them to from three months to two years in lujMbiy police. i Penalty for escaping includes loss of time served, forfeiture of earnings and added imprison-i ment up to two yean. Theoretically all the prisoners are on the same .footing, but it does not work out that way. Those from the upper closes are usually segregated from the lower ranks, an arrangement that both groups prefer. Choose America’s No. 1 COLOR TV VALUE Inmatirg&velop a camaraderie; after they get out there are re* unions to recall experiences, much m the manner of artny veterans. .-The Finnish Government spends about $150;0d0 a year studying alcoholism, and private* organisations contribute heavily to special studies. New Visitors are limited to three hours each Sunday. In special cases, a relative may see a prisoner for 10 minutes on a weekday. RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES CARS, GOLF CLUBS... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIES ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 33X4181, * It’s also known that wealthy inmates often pay other prisoners to make their beds and brew > Prisoners are paid 60 cents an hour for their work but most of [ this goes fer such items a$ meals at SO cents each and work ■ clothes which they must buy or rent. The government also deducts about 25 per cent of the prisoners’ wages in taxes. If an inmate is single, he must save 10 to 20 per cent of his earnings. If he lias a family, up~Tcf5(j per i cent of his pay Is deducted for i family support. It probably would not te too, difficult to escape from one of; these work colonies. But the I work colonies. 'v'T About 80 per cent of these work gangs are alcoholic auto-ists. The rest are regular convicts. drivers. yiaSrjord COMPANY, INC THE HANDCRAFTED TV built better to last longer ‘40(f,0QOQdd Blue Objects in Universe NEW SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED ^ Fibergtas By Science Service HAMPTON, Va. - The universe holds some 400,000 “odd-bail’’ light sources known as “quasi-steliar blue objects,” the American Astronomical Society was told here. Hie first members of this new class of quasars which are the puzzling energy champions of the cosmos, were discovered less than a year ago by Dr. april SERVICE It Our BuoUsmoo , We. Also Sell LUMBER! < Allan Sandage, astronomer at ML Wilson and Palomar Observatories. Now, Dr. S1 d i e y van den Bergh of DKvfiT Dudap Ob- H TH# VERONA- 5424H $AAQ TJ from the decorator group ” " * Elegant Italian Provincial lo-boy styling with Carpathian Elm Burl Inlay. In genuine Chany Fruttwopd veneer* and select hardwood solids. Zenith quality twin-cons tario, Cauda, has carehDy searched a small part of the sky, conn ting die number of bine objects te coaid detect inside die selected patch. From the 33 spotted in a small area near Andromeda, Dr. van den Bergh calculates that 400,-OOOcould te detected Over the entire sky. Although 400,000 may seem like a large number, it Is actually a very small fraction of the billions upon billions of stars and other luminous objects in the universe. Quasi-steliar blue objects are related to quasars but do not emit radio waves as quasars do. Dr. van den Bergh said that the 33 he detected are * “mixed bunch,” som*being in the Milky Way galaxy or in halo surrounding it, others lying in far-distant galaxies. > 100% handwirod for grsatsr • Grsatsr plctur* brightness dependability with Zenith Sunshine* Color Picture Tube ■ No production shortcuts . No printed circuits fw Super Gold Vidoo Guard lewor sorvieo problem* 82-Channsl Tuning System • Patented Zenith Color with exclusive gold contacts Domoduletor Circultry tor longer TV life for color TV’s finest hues The EXTRA CAREof skilled craftmohship makes the Quality Difference in ZENITH COLOR TV • 90-Day Sarvica Warranty Easy Terms 24 Months to Pay Workers Strike Back COVENTRY, England (UPI> — About 700 auto industry workers went on strike yesterday — to protest strikes. They Called the token 24-hour walkouLto protest a series of “djdruptive” stoppages "and go-slows by 15 trade drivers. / IIJjH TV-RADIO PPSP SERVICE 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. Whan you're out hunting for a good used car, stay on familiar ground. Follow the trail to your local Ford Dealer's used car lot You'll find plenty to choose from. All makes, all models... and at today's prices you couldn't pick a better time to buy. Prime targets for bargain hunters are Ford Dealer A-1 Used Cars. They’re inspected, reconditioned when necessary, and road-tested for FOR A USED CAR your protection. Among top A-1 buys YOU CAN m look for late-model used Fords, in de- TRUST, mend for dependable performance mfl and extended service intervals. Many cJht, ] of these are one-owner trades for riKt/’ A new Fords. So don't you get lost In " the used car jungle. For a used car ■ Q/M6 you can trust, head for the A-1 sign at your Ford Dealer’s nowl YOUR FORD DEAL! Look for tlm A-1 sign— it tolls you where to find a used car you can trust. Only Ford Dealers sail A-1 Used Cars., JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, INC ^un Control \ i :y^ V- \^ - \ ; ..h. j • . ‘ . * B ¥ y THB POXTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 jC—I Expense d Prirpe Factor Arranging prizes and decorations for the Spring Carousel Card Party at 8 p.m., Tuesday in St. Michael’s parish haU are Mrs. George D. McCormick of Kemp Street (at left) and Mrs. Dennis J. Daugherty. Mrs. Warren Newton is chairman Let Him Blow Off Steam Schlicht, Mrs. Gordon Gillette, 1 ton Vaverick, Rose Griffin i William Breton. Dear Editor: I Protest By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: My husband is • compulsive letters-to-the-edit-or writer. Hector was an English major and ' was once thel editor of hisw He has something to say on every subject currently in the news. If President Johnson wants to know what to do about Viet Nam, the rising cost of living, taxes or unemployment, he should ask Hector. I. realise that this is a good safety valve for Hector’s steam, but every once in a while one of his letters gets published and he is the laughing stock of the community for months. ★. ★ £, Sr... His psychiatrist says it’s good for him, but Abby, I have to live in this town, too. What do you think? Please print tills because Hector reads your column and gets a big kick out of it, but he says you make up an the letters yourself. HECTOR'S WIFE DEAR WIFE: Tell Hector that I don’t make up any letters. With people like him around, I don't have to. And to answer your question, I agree with the psychiatrist Let Hector shoot his typewriter off. ■ ★ w ■ ★ DEAR ABBY: Is there such a thing as being too polite? I know a man who is so polite he makes evfifyone nervous. He is the one who races on ahead to open doors. And he jumps like a Jack-in-the-box whenever a woman (or even an rider person) enters the room. He beats all the other men ' when it, comes to helping ladies with their coats and pulling out, chairs. I don’t think this much courtesy is necessary. Should I be quiet? Or should I tell him he is overdoing the perfect gentleman routine? HIS FRIEND DEAR FRIEND: Be quiet. I suspect your "too polite” friend is merely weftbrdd and is behaving accordingly. Courtesy cannot be overdone. And he who Is made “nervous” by good manners probably needs to brush up on Ms I August voids are planned My Mary Louise Watson, daughter of the Maurice T. Watsons of Rochester, and Dale Richard Schuerger of Warren, son of Walter |j T. Schuerger £| of Monroe gf Street and m the late Mrs. * 3 Schuerger. H Miss Watson If, is an alumna I of Alma 1 College, MARY LOUISE WATSON DEAR ABBY: I have two very ctose friends who like me a lot, but they just hate each other. One will get very mad at me if I go with the other one. What should I (107- IN THE MIDDLE DEARs IN: Drop both of them! Everyone has the rigit to choose his own friend!.And so have you! * ★ DEAR ABBY: My wife, and I cannot agree on something that I think should be settled soon. Our diughter is nearly 17. She is pTetty, a good student, has a steady beau and she listens to reason. My wife says that hand-holding, hugging and kissing, and all signs of affection between young people should NOT be done at home, where others , might walk in at any moment. This came up when we had another couple in for bridge. The four of us were playing in the living room and my daughter and her boyfriend were in the kitchen.My wife went into the kitchen to get something and she caught them kissing. She was terribly upset. I say I’d rather have them at hone doing this than somewhere else. My wife says they have plenty of opportunity to snow affection elsewhere, and if one of our friends had walked in on than instead of her, she’d never have been able to face them. She lectUred bur daughter~fof~ an hour the next day and cut her dating down to one night a week instead of two. What do you think? DAD DEAR DAD: I think your wife is wrong. Normal and innocent displays of affection between a boy and a girt are natural and harmless. Tell your wife to get off your daughter’s back or she might feel she has to ask her boyfriend to rent a motel room to order to give her a goodnight kiss. ,w -" W ★ Problems? Write to Abby, in care The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed envel-ope. * * * ■ Hate to write totters? Send $1 to Abby, in care The Pontiac Press for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for AH Ooca- By MADELEINE DOEREN After the bride-to-be has set . the date and time of bar wedding and chosen the church, she decides what type reception she would like. There’s the church reception with cake,, sandwiches, punch and coffee, following the ceremony, or a reception in a halt with dancing, food and liquid refreshments. Then there is the home or garden reception which can fave •as much as haH of tile reception budget. Even an elegant one need not be too costly. FOLLOWS CEREMONY ___A ’breakfast,’ the term used for a reception that takes place before one o’clock in the afternoon, immediately following a morping ceremony, has many advantages. The newlyweds who may be leaving on a long motor trip or flying* to their destination receive a ’head start’ ... so do the out-of-town guests returning to their homes. The cost of an fevering reception in home or hallT-plus dinner for out-of-town guests, in addition to their-place setting at the breakfast can easily cost $500 more than the simple postceremony breakfast. The size of home or apartment for the home reception is important. If the rooms are small, some articles of furniture could perhaps be moved out for the day. — If tiir house is large enough to accommodate guests for the - reception, a catering service providing a buffet will save many a family headache. Roughly, the cost per person for this type reception is about $2.50. FLOWERS One large floral arrangement' is suggested for the reception rather than several small scattered bouquets. Place it where most effective, as on a mantel, foyer table or on the bride’s table. The bridesmaids may arrange their bouquets at one aid of the bridal table as part of the decor. It is an added use of lovely bouquets which the girls usually tire of holding during the reception. They can bp picked up later, of course. Many churches have fine halls available and the cost is normally much lower than a commercial.hall which rims from $35 to $\J6. Arrangements can sometimes be made with the church janitor to clean the hall after k the reception. Usually there is a women’s guild to take over full responsibility for the reception. They ' win-cut the sheet cakes, if any, mix and pour the punch ahd wash the dishes at a nominal cost per person, whether a luncheon, buffet supper, or cake-and-coffee affair. ★ . * \ ★ A 50-gallon coffee-maker is usually ’standard equipment’ in the Church kitchen, also china, silver, punch bowl and glasses. If not, there are agencies or caterers which specialize in renting candelabra, punch fountains, silver, china and crystal ... even carpeting or a platform for beneath the bride’s table. A few area caterers have dining rooms available where, a buffet or even a sit-down break-. last or luncheon is priced at from $3 to $3.35 Mr bead. This includes tax and tip. One Ibcal caterer serves what he calls a ‘foreign brunch’ in the home using paper plates at $2 per person or china for an extra charge. Many kinds of meat dishes and salads,- algo coffee, are offered. Some bakers and caterers will roast hams, turkeys or large beef roasts to be taken to the home or to * hall, with the family preparing foods to go with the main dish. . -OPERATION ’SANDWICH’ Other caterers prfepare sandwich fillings, bring these to the home or the scene of thf reception and spread tiie breads just before the guests arrive. Added to their hourly charge is the price of the materials. This still costs less than buying a given number ofsandwichesand AFS Slates Fund Raiser Mrs. Wilbur.Crawford, Mark Street isthe-local representative on the metropolitan board of the American Field Service. This group is completing plans for its annual fond raising event on April 23. Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians, Bud and Cece Robinson, dancers, and Steve De-Pass, a creative balladier, will present a program at the Masonic Temple Auditorium in Detroit. Proceeds from the event are given to the AFS general fond in New York to augment funds raised by local chapters who sponsor foreign students. These students attend 12th grade in American high schools and live with local families. Tickets are available from Mrs. Crawford or at toe Masonic Temple box office. SATURDAY Pon tiac Chapter 228, Order of the Easton Star, 4:30 to 7 p. m., smorgasbord at Masonic Temple on East Lawrence Street. MONDAY Women’s Association of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, 1 p. m., home of Mrs. Everett Peterson of West Iroquois Road. Pontiac Women’s Club, 1:30 p. m., YMCA. Mrs. Reba Netzler “Y” director will speak. Mrs. Henry Berry and Mrs. Ernest Huthwaite are tea chairman and program chairman, respectively. a reserve lor any ty ire servings. ;-2g* KEEP SIMPLE Refreshments should be simple, with enough to satisfy tbs guests but the variety of foods . held to a minimum*. On a summer day, a fresh, cooling salad is pleasani, with dainty sandwiches. Serve petit fours, if you wish, but remember that the wedding cake is . tiie Important sweet to be 'served.'' "W- - •’ ^ One of the molt memorable moments of the reception is toe toast to the new couple, Champagne is the proper beverage and the traditional tribute to the newlyweds. For a single toast, a case is iuffident for up to 100 guests, as one bottle serves six. If pundris to be served, the ca-terers usualy prepare the base or ‘mix’ on the scene, adding gingeralie and ice, as needed. Only through thorough planning of the reception can It he the normal and festive aftermath of'tfae wedding service it was meant to be. / Present Gift When Alone With Her By The Entity Past laattiate Q: My. husband and I along with two other couples, were invited to the new hoime of friends of ours. It was not a party; we were just asked to come and spend the evening. I brought a small gift for the house. Tfclle others brought nothing. When I arrived, I handed the gift to the hostess. My husband thought it was vfery tactless on my part (and c|mbar-rassing to the Other!) to have given it to her in their presence.' He said I should hive put it ' aside and waited until she was alone to present it to herl Was I wrong? , A: Even though there was no reason for the others to bring presents, I agree with your husband that your handing a gift to the hostess in thsir presence might have la It would have been more tactful if you had put the ( yOu had an opportunity, mention to the hostess that you had brought her a small gift. INVITATION Q: My girlfriend, who is iq college, is going to visit me in my parents’ home over tiie spring vacation. She asked me if my mother would write her . a note confirming my invitation so that she could show it to her mother. Is tots the correct thing to do, or would a letter from me be enough? A; Your girlfriend is perfectly right in wanting a note from your mother to show to her family, and they would be equally rfyht in not allowhw her to visit you if she didn’t hear from your parents. The Emily Post Institute booklet ''Clothes of the Bridal Party, as well as of their Attendants,” is available to readers of this column. - , • For a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press \ 2 Localites Feted in Romantic Tradition Club Activities Varied A post nuptial shower for the formerJdary A Backes, daughter of the Edwin J. Backeses of Oliver Street will take place Sunday afternoon The Milford home of M r s. Duane Priebe will be the setting for the buftet event with Mrs. Edward J. Backes as ce- The- bride and her new husband, Larry E. Fisher who will return from theirChicago’honeymoon later this week, will reside on SilveirsidfeDrive. Connie Mineweaser Saturday bride-elect Connie Jean Mineweaser of LeBaron Avenue was honored at a recent shower in the home of Mrs. Michael Samuilow on James K. Court. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Albert Amshay, Mrs. John SlaMnsU, IDs. Frank Lada and Mrs. Francis Lada. The daughter of the Robert W. Mineweasers wtil become Mrs. Joseph Anthony Lada, Saturday, in St. Michael’s Church. His parents are Mr. and. Mrs. Frank Lada of Valencia Drive. AROUND THE CLOCK; Mrs. Myron Lookhartof Po-tomac Street, Avon Township, gave an around-the-clock shewer with Mrs. Melvin Dories i hostess. Trousseau gifts woe , recently in the home of Mrs. ) Keith Brodkorb on Henry Clay Avenue. Mrs. James Smith assisted tiie hostess. Couple to Wed Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Schultz of Rattalee Lake Road, Springfield Township, announce the engagemoit of their daughter Kathleen Jeanne, to Timothy Ray Miller, sob of the Robert ft. Millers of Mark Road. ' Mid-July vows are being .planned. A 26th birthday tea was held in the Holiday Inn recently by the Dirt Gardeners Club. Mrs. Lewis Dibble of Birmingham, nationally accredited judge of landscapes and flower arrangements, talked' and_ showed slides of patio and-small garden areas. Mrs. Dibble is a past president of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. TJJ.I. Officers were installed when the T.B.I. (The Business Institute) Women’s Club met recently at Ted’s Restaurant. Assuming office for the group ^are: Mrs. Clayton Woodward, president; Grace Trapp, president; and Mrs. Sol Lotoerson, treasurer. / DELTA ZETA A 7\p.m. dinner April 26 at the Far, Hills Drive home of Mrs. Laurence E. Trevarrow Jr. will precede installation of Officers for me Oakland County Alumnae of Ddta Zeta sorority. Mrs. Forbes Hascall and Mrs. Edward Wirtfa are heading the dinner committee. Mrs. Russell T. Costello, past national president and current national PanheUeric delegate, ‘ will speak on “Where Are We Going?” MTs. Charles Flecken-stein is taking reservations. BOOK GROUP Waterford Township "Library Book Review Group will hear Mrs Ralplr Eaton discuss “Queen Victoria, Born to Succeed” by Elizabeth Longford at Monday’s meeting. Mrs- Lyndon Salathiel will open her Shore View Drive home for the 1 P-m. gathering. Assisting the hostess will be MTs. William Ladanyi, Mrs. William Miller and Mrs. Joseph Franz. Mrs. F r a n c 1 s Kinkle, president, reports that interested persons are invited, to the meet- Porty for Auxiliary The past president* of the Cook Nelson Unit No. 20. American Legion Auxiliary are*planning a card party on May 4. To be held at the Legion home on Auburn Avenue at 8 p.m., the event is open to the public. 5c-a THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1066 Lack of Exercise Just a Bad; Habit NEW YORK (UFI) - The lack of daily exercise, according to the American Heart Association, is nothing more than a “bad habit” usually begun in childhood “with living patterns learned from parents.*' * . Some studies, the Association reports, show that men. livihg sedentary lives run a higher risk of heart attacks than men who get regular exercise. royr Old ? ^ Projects His DWn Guilt By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE . CASE Y-4Q1: Alice B.. aged 1ft, la a pretty high schooler. "But, Dr. Crane,” she burst into tears, "Daddy has been Quarreling with Motherfor several weeks. "And last night, he accused me of doing awful things! "Wby, be said I was a tramp and having affairs with boys in my church Young People’s Society!, "How could he have even though such terrible things? "He knows I am president of that church group and have never done any of the bad things he mentioned!” PROJECTION : ’"T. . , :: What do you readers think is behind this man’s false charges? Remember, he is not an uneducated, uncouth male, for he is a very successful doctor, aged 50. Perhaps you recall the old adage that "It takes a thief to catch a thief.” Paraphrased a bit, we might say that it is often a guilty man (or wife) who makes wild charges about sexual immorality against his math or even his children. , And that Is exactly the case here. Alice’s daddy has been chasing around with several married women. * ★ ■‘ ★ For he is in the climacteric, which corresponds to a woman’s menopause. That is chiefly a psychological zone that troubles most people when they reach middle age and begin to grow panicky lest they lose their sexual vigor. Alsas, this sexual frenzy is not limited to illiterates or those who have .not graduated from high school. • Mrs. John R. Denihan, Judson Street (seated) shows her pupil, Mrs! Charles F. Colli-son of Lenox Street just how to stitch a seam. Mrs. Denihan instructs Bishop sewing classes two evenings a week for the McConnell Community School program. The classes are open to any interested woman; high school students are not accepted. Registration for a new class in Bishop I to be given on Saturdays from 1 to 3 p.m. are now being accepted. Qpan Tonight Until 9 (Uvtris We Are EXPANDING'" Our Ladies' Deportment Before We Ccpr^tart, We Must Clear Out All Our New Spring 1966 MEN'S WEAR This is an opportunity that seldom.comes at this or any time of the year — It's .oil brand new Spring 1966 merchandise, greatly reduced so that we may go ahead with our expansion program —Don't miss the savings. YOU'LL FIND SUCH OUTSTANDING BUYS AS MEN'S SUITS Regular to $ 1 SO *39. *119 SPORT COATS $q z $71 Regular to $90 O O to / | 14 Off Parker Alpaca Sweaters Sweaters 1 Swim Suits Sport Shirts Bermudas 72 Of f . PLUS Good Savings on All of Our Furnishings It is also typical of the most educated classes, including physicians, dental surgeons, engineers, editors and even clergymen, For colleges thus far have done very little to reduce the terrific divorce rate in America! And those few .which schedule classes on "Marriage Problems” are likely to focus on the, kitchen, ‘living room and nursery but ignore the boudoir. Yet most divorces start in. the bedroom! Visit your Court of Domestic Relations and see for your-’ self! Feuding husbands seldom accuse their mates of being poor cooks. And they may admit that their wives entertained creditably lor the husband’s clients and friends. Indeed, the angry husband may even confess that his wife to their een. an lua top mark in the Install Officers Officers were installed when Women’s Society of Bethany Baptist Church met Thursday in the church’s Tra-ver Parlor. Mrs. Walter Widton is the group’s new president. Naomi Group served a dessert luncheon preceding a vocal solo by: Mrs. Victor Lindquist. Elda Sutter was accompanist. An open house in their Rochester home Sunday will mark Vyt 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. William Eckert. The gala will will take place from 2 until S p. m. The pair was married in-Pontiac on April 15, 1916. Their children are Mrs. Harvey Beach of Pottsville, Md., William Jr., and Mrs- John Smith. There are 15 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. . i . Strange Order for Milkman MILWAUKEE, Wis. (HI — Mrs. George Hammer’s milkman was puzzled by the note he found in her milk box. It was in his customer’s handwriting but was a far cry ffom the usual order for dairy products. It read: "You are being followed. Use . your secret ray gun. Do not kill person — just put him to sleep.” /An embarrassed Mrs. Hammer explained: “That's something I fixed up for my daughter and her friends who were playing ‘Man From Uncle.’ I can’t imagine why they hid it in the milk box.” A suspicion of caramel ayrup (made by melting and browning granulated sugar) is fine to use in gravies. ^ Open Tonight until 9 AjMn's CQMS-SUITS ENSEMBLES Regular to *70 *29 - *59 Now is the time to pick on* of your choice. A wide selection of all wool Spring Coot* in whit*, pos-tels, or navy. The suits are oil wool, silk* and bleqds. Or you'll , find a nice array of coat and dress ensembles. Petite, junior or misses si***. SHOE SPECIALS A selected group of Spring styles in high and mid heels. Were to $21.00 DeLiso Debs Were to $16.00 ..... _ _ _ - Caressa 1290 Were to $16.00 : * -C—. Mr.. Easton 129si Weneto St500, _ ToWtk& Country 990 Extra Special — Italian Made Loafers - Ties X-St Q90 Slack or Tan. ■ w w CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES Hundreds of feb-rics, patterns end colors. Sheers, antique satins, prints* McCANDLESS You Can Be Sure If It's From McCandlet* I OPEN I FRIDAY I EVENINGS \T1L 9 P.M. BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Ooan Toniaht Until Many one of a kind dresses for, those Important proms ahead. Whether you wont a dress that pensive or better, you'll find range at Alvin's. Petite juniors 3 to 13, juniors 5- to . 15, and misses 8 to 16. You Choose the Color. . . Alvin's has the pump Sizes 4 to 10 AAAA to B widths/" Match the tintable ’ pumps with any dress in your wardrobe. The matched look is Hie right look. Tinting is free of charge—choose high, mid or new jet heel. HURON at TELEGRAPH r C~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1M6 . Tiny Rhonda Sjusan Sutton sits upon her great-great-grandmother’s knee, Mrs. Charles* Sharp of Al-mont for this 5th generation picture. Behind them stands Mrs. Clarence E. Sutton of Ramona Ter- race, her grandson, Ronald E. Sutton of St. Anne, III. (Rhondals ' father) and next to him, his father, Robert*JL Sutton Jr. of Williams Lake Road. Discipline, Love Create Happy Child WASHINGTON—When parents set clear rules of conduct which they, expect their children to obey, and when they enforce these rules with respect and affection, they are * likely to rear successful and happy children. This is one conclusion from a seven-year study completed by the National I n s t i t u t e of Mental Health. HIGH STANDARDS The most successful youngsters in school and at play, the study showed, were those with the highest self-esteem. They come from homes with the strictest parents. The parents of these children were likely to feel it more important that their children meet high standards than that they enjoy themselves. They were also apt to' regard "achievement” as more important thhn sociability.” Strict parents, the study shows, granted their children more responsibility, listened to them more closely, gave them a say in making family plans, know virtually all their friends, and tolerated sharp disagreements more than permissive parents. Although toe stricter parents did not necessarily spend more time with their children, they were more deeply interested in them and enjoyed being with them. The firm parents, toe study indicates, respect themselves, are independent and less conforming, and are interested in community affairs. The mother frequently had worked for a long time, had enjoyed her work, and had drawn self-confidence from it. Shq welcomed, child-rearing and did not let it cut her off from her other interests. Such women were satisfied with their marriages, husbands and toe way the latter helped to raise the children. The strict father was' usually successful, self-confident and toe family disciplinarian. “W *...... ★ Both parents were direct, and realistic and expected and usually got the best out* of life. Pretty Mom Has License for Trapping PORT UVE, Pa. - Gail Svetz, pretty young mother of three, is a rabbit trapper. Early every morning during trapping season Mrs. Svets, with her three children and three dogs tagging along, heads for toe brush-covered hills on the outskirts of Port Vue to empty, move and bait her traps. it ' it - * - - - ■ “It's fun. Any woman could do it,” says Gail, a young woman who prefers heavy leather hiking boots to high heels, and her husband’s old hunting jacket to silks and laces. As a trapper licensed by the Pennsylvania Game Commission, Mrs. Svets baits her long, wooden traps with., fresh apples. ★ ★ n Her youngsters, son Steven, 8, and twins, JoAnne and Joseph, 5, like to help with this chore. APPLES LURE" ~ The fragrance of the fresh apple lures the rabbit into the trap. But sometimes attracts rats and squirrels,-too! Each morning, and again each evening when she checks the traps, Gail empties the rabbits into a canvas bag, and then into carrying cases. it . it - it Every other day, toe carrying cases full of rabbits are picked up bjAtoe Game Commission and transported to more remote areas of the state. “Rabbits are pests around the town. I try to put my traps near homes, where there’s evidence of rabbit damage,” she says. ★ . it- ■ n . s In the fall, Gail Svetz meets up with her rabbits again when she hunts with husband Bill, a bricklayer. “I love toe out-of-doors. And/ I think other women would, too, 4 they’d only dress more warmly.” 'Go-Togethers' The total look is as important in the house as in fashion, these days. For a real go-together look in a dining room or eating area, why not make table settings to match the decor. Place mats, cloths, and napkins might be made of the same fabric as emtains br upholstery. Or, trimmings might match or coordinate. It’s great fun to do. and adds a really personal touch to your table. Onlsr New iron Enggass For Mother's Day May 8th Every Mother wants to own Recalling the tale of Cornelia, mother of ancient Rpma, who described her most valuable worldly possessions by pointing to her children end saying, "These ore my jewels,” we present this modem day symbol . . . the mother's birth-stone ring. Beautifully fashioned in elegant style with textured Florentine finish, each ring has synthetic birthstones delicately set on a circlet of 14K gold .. . one for each child. A most exquisite gift for either Mother or Orandmother, it is personalized with, toe birthstones of your choice. A BIRTHSTON FOR EACH CHILD JCWtUY C». M OOWWTOWM PONTIAC 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET PEGGY’S MIRACLE MILE For the Girl Who Knows Clothes WC Perfect blending of Dacron and cotton for a spring flowered voile... in a little slip of a dress that is “in” without being “wsy-ont.” Stitching on yoke and cuff. To belt or not to belt... is yours to decide. Ibrquoise or lilac.. An August wedding is planned by Diana Lynn Covert, daughter of the Walter L. Coverts, Pavisburg Road, and Collin Wayne Walls, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norris Walls of Warfield Street, also in Springfield Township. She attended Flint Junior College. Her fiance, an alumnus of Western Michigan University, is enrolled in graduate school at the university. The Clifford Hetch-lers of Hartline Street, Avon Township, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Fern Arm, to Pot. James W. -Wetherell, son of the Otis Wetherells of Midland. Her fiance is star tibned at Fort Sam Houston, Tepos. Late September vows are being planned by Lynne Elizabeth Anderson, daughter of the William, H. Andersons ofOstmm Drive, and John J. Kent, son of the George Kents of Oxford. The bride-elect is a junior at Adrian College. -Enroll1 NOW! Enrollments Taken Dolly at Your Convonionco PONTIAC BEAUTY OOLLEQE 16% E. Huron Phono FE 4-1854 .Study tho latest techniques and hair fashions. Call Miss Wilson for further information KINNEY'S SHOES FertkiWheUFmmllr PONTIAC MALI MIRACLE MILE She Brings Clear Proof MT. STERLING, Ky. tiff — This community has a rule requiring a |7 windshield sticker for toot dr cars. Whenever drivers change cars, however, they pay only E for i new sticker U they bring with them a portion of their old sticker. Rebehtly a' woman came to the/Clty hall carrying a large chunk of a car windshield. She skid her old car had been in k wreck and she coukta’t '{get the sticker off — do she brought in the windshield. Slippers of Glass* Will Fit Any Girl Cinderella’s glass dippers have made toe scene again. A. little more up-to-date, they are-made of glass fiber. Unfortunately, a prince doesn’t come with every pair; you’ll have to work that angle on your own. SWIVEL ROCKERS and FOOT STOOLS Patchwork and Brown cover reversible foam cushion, solid maple trim. CttAIR ......... $74.95 STOOL ..........IlfcSR Limited to supply on hand — careful, free delivery; Remember—you always get the most for your money at MILLERS - One of Oakland Countjfs Largest Selection ofChairsl 144 OAKLAND FURNITURE Park Free — LotJust Around the Comer on Clark Street PEGGY'S MIRACLE MILL AFTER EASTER Suits, Ensembles Costumes Were *30 to *11(1 /Now *22 - *88 Come early . . take your pick ... 2 piece suite, 3 piece costume suits, wool or crepe costumes, new spring knit ensembles, silks, worsted, .tweeds and pottipointe .. . all the newest in spring colors and silhouettes.. USE YOUR PERSONAL CHARGE - SECURITY CHARGE - MICHIGAN BAN KARO China is a puzzle, a riddle to most people. Yet the future of the . United States, if not the world, may depend on how we respond to her actions . . . actions which we can comprehend only if we study her history. As. a public service, in die interests of greater understanding, The Pontiac Press will present a 24-part story-strip series which examines China’s ancient past, her turbulent present and potential future. Watch For “ONE-FOURTH OF MANKIND’ An Informative and Educational Feature of Timely Significance. Starts Monday, April 18th In THE PONTIAC PRESS Oakland County’s IM * PBKSS - IVE Newspaper For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 ■v ;sal *gt i Cr*. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL Jacoby on Bridge ic , VAQ ♦ AK J104 ♦XQSt BAST 41 CKMI «m CH4 ♦ •7532 >▲914 ♦ J10 7 9 COUTH (D) ♦ AQJ 1064 WKJ1085 04 ♦I Both vulnerable l Norik Saot Sooth 14 I ♦ Pan If FM 30 FW 40 Fan 4N.T. fan 54 Pan f 4 Fan Pan Pan Opanfcv load—4 A. was the late Sidney Silo-dor and North Wanted to let Sidney handle as many dummies as possible. 8b no-trump weald have been a cinch. Against any lead bat a spade, North weald haae knocked oat the ace el dabs and made 12 top trleka. Against a spade lead Narth would have had to finesse. The finesse would work and North weald make a grand dam. West opened the ace of chiha and shifted to n heart. Sidney won in dummy and led the nine of spades for a finesse.,When It held, things looked fine. He continued with the eight of spades. That held also and West showed By JACOBY ft SON One of the penalties for being an expert Is that you frequently find moods and proceeded to fun cards from dummy. East could trump any time he wished but Sidney was ready to overtrump any time. * * * ^dually East held out until the bitter end but since Sidney had reduced to the same number of trumps as East, he was able to hold out with him. This left East with king and one trump and Sidney didn't have any more trumps to lead through him. A little tiring like that never disturbed Sidney. He proceeded to make die hand by means of a coup. His next play was a low chib which he raffed. Then he entered dummy with thequeen of hearts and raffed a high club. This left Sidney with He went to dummy once more by overtaking hisqueen-of dia- JggS.f.M »_ ssr ZaK *sr- j»rf PWOJCCT FAY off. Dtoptey •>- TAURUS (Apr. M - M»Y »>•’ fa rwponsIM*, maturt In Mht with frtandi. You coukl gat "carried away" by until— Thta la Mt baMflUsl. Raaltza danpara - dwelt ralni. Than vlawa3tyMiiws.«July nil o«w«t m don’t pe too far 'T^RICcSKt (Dee, a-----Jen. If): NetpMwrv wsMShrafattMttu ■ of attention, li r - But St— by ever MUAMW f SATURDAY IS YOUR PIRTHPAY "in _____ a distance. • ___ urn — ) eepebli ef achieving efenoet eny-Hj. Secret le taMbw wie end ad- VIROO (Aug. B -Sept. SSli Hlghngtd beauty. If yeu laugh . . . trjanda, family laugh with you. If yeu .breed . . . you Woe prestige. Study LBO meeeeae. Check partnership angles. Ohm attention \fpRA (Sept. a~- Qd. snt jmpwm \ ★ ★ . ★ GENERAL TRNDINCIRS: Cyde high tar PISCES, ARIES. TAURUS. Special weri to SAGITTARIUS: Highlight--- tuny. Kaep poal in eight, but alao tain tenee of humor. general Pea ferae Carp.) Q—Tht bidding baa been: Waal North bat South 14 Pass 1N.T. Pass 24 Paw 3* Bui 9¥ Prm 34 Pus t You, South, hold: 4KQJ7C WAS 45 4AQ1SS2 What do you doT A—Thta a » toagh saw. Our preference to far four epedpe Instead at bidding three ■pedw your partner goes to four dubs. Whet do you do nowT Canada fleet to.Be Biggest of Great Lakes BEN CASEY CLEVELAND (AP)-Soon the Canadians will have more shipe hauling cargo on the Great Lakes than die United . State* the chief counsel of the House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries said Thursday. John Drewry told the Lake Carriers Association stockholders and directors in, their annual meeting that Canada already operating three times many ships over 24,000 tons, “a significant advantage economy is a function of size," ★ * * Half of the ,U.S. lakes fleet is illore than 50 years old, and the fleet has declined 90 per cent in numbers and 17 per cent in tonnage in the last decade, Drewry said. The Canadian fleet declined 26 per cent in numbers, but because of larger replacements increased in tonnage by 52 per cent, he added. The number of vessel employes in the U-S. fleet fell from 14,000 to 9,000 since 1953, Drewry said. BERRY'S WORLD , XMU-J • ltd by NEA, “In what sizes do your hipbugger bell bottoms come?1 BOARDING HOLSE Ways Found to Aid Memory By Science Service WASHINGTON - Memory in senile indlvldaals is apparently lmpoved by carbon dioxide inhalation and vitamin B3. 4r ★ 4r------------- This could well mean that metabolism and the production of new protein are central to memory storage — a highly current topic of debate among scientists searching for the physical traces of memory. fa reporting his experiment before an international assem- Dr. HeSf Lehmann of McGill University, Montreal, Canada, added one more bit of evidence in rapport of the protein theory. Dr. Lehmann tested drugs on both senile patients — those with organic brain damage — and schizophrenic pat}ents„mentally ill but showing no organic dis-! He found that while the C02 and vitamin Bs or nicotinic acid approach worked with the first type of patient, tranquiiiiers improved memory in the achlzo-phrenics. * f . • If tiie trefftment was switched, neither group of patients pro-flted, at least in their ability to ranembff. WOO KNOW HOW IT IS WITH / VtSuy WHo Keeps an eye ON EVERYONE ELSE-! -50MEONS COULD SAW THE > fiORCH OFF HIS HOUSE AND, . HE'D NEVER MISS IT/ , y EEtdUSOWED( f ME 5 DOLLARS FDR J VOUITE AWHILE 1 J XlWDMTDO K V AMVTHING ABOUT .S f IT VET BECAUSE HE $ ) Vw MY GOOD FRIEND J /amd aooodX ( FRIEND IS HARD J FIND "jr l SSftCIALLY f WHEN HE OWES ) V YOU 5 POLlARSlJ e? C? • mihy NBA, hb 4-IS Court Aflorovss Law /Districting Nebraska LINCOLN, Neb'lAP) - A three-judge federal ctat panel has approved Nebraska’s latest legislative reapporttoomentlaw. It has a population variance of Hearer * per cent between tM The court opacified that the 20 # C^r • Introductions Hit Garden Market Spring Must Ripen Avoid Springtime Woes Keep Mower Engine Purring Tbe life of null engines like thoro on lawn mowers — can be ‘‘materially shortened” if they are not correctly cared (Or nun being put back Into service aftar storage, contends a Michigan State University agricultural engineer. following suggestions for lawn mower spring tape-up: i • Remove the spark (dug and pour two tablespoons of a half-and-half mixture of gasoline and lubricating oil into tee cylinder. Replace spark plug and crank engine steady once. Do not con- Robert 0. White says bours nect spark plug wire, of “headache and trouble” can • Again remove spark plug be avoided by giving a little and crank engine rapidly sev-more attention to putting the en-leral times to blow excess fuel gine into service. Heofferst he and mixture out the spark Sure, It's Springtime and the "mower (over" le upon us. There are deals to be made. And we have as good aa you’ll find anywhere. PLUS, wo have the new YARD-MAN line of mowers ... Reels, Rotary Mowers and Lawn Tractors'. Npne better. And we prove 111 Which is' why we want you to drop by and see them BEFORE you ■ decide. Find out why YARD-MAN has halped build the trend to reel mowers .,. the only mower for fine lawns. , why is it ^BLrD-M AN * SELLS MORE l REELS? *124” Bean Stock Is Improved Spring catalogs have poured ; ' .... in; offering many, new items, ™®w ®°P Landscape architects and nurserymen will draw individual properties. [ draw plans for lag Hie plants are purchased from them. I In addition to the home property, streets and the neighborhood can be beautified. * * * • .. I How does one go about this? The street, neighborhood or community group makes a survey of what is needed to beauti-; *y- If presently beautiful, per-1 haps ealy a few tenches wOl 1 make all the difference. If there are ugly areas, perhaps they can be cleaned up and planted with something perinan-, ent and beautiful that requires the least amount of maintenance. ■ i Examples of commuhity projects include street trees, small i parks and recreation areas, waterfront landscaping fapliiding [ Use let Teaspoons as Plant Supports Use plastic ice teaspoons as supports for your potted plants. They are colorful, do not rot and are easy to transfer from one crock to another. We DON'T Sell Them All but We DO Sell the Best! Coma in and See the Complete BOLENS Line! No optional equipment ...it's alt standard with BOLENS HUSKYS • Bolens Husky tractors have standard equip- * ment features other compacts don’t even offer OS optional. • Each handles over 25 different lawn end, garden attachments. • Each has Bolens exclusive Fast-Switch Power-lack Hitch for changing powered attachments quickly and easily without belts. :>. v- • Geared transmission and differential deliver more power to thf wheels. FULL RANGE OF ATTACHMENTS AVAILABLE |. snow suoa:{ sNodr, castss § umrrv cant MODELS ^ppWtOHSgPOWe^ ^ _____ Bslena—Pint la pswwed equipment, since 1B1M TILLERS - TRACTORS - RIDERS - MOWERS TOP TRADES-EASY TERMS-LOW PRIDES MANUS POWER MOWERS 311$ M. Woodward LIB-2440 Bty*l 0*k (2 Blocks South af IB Mile RA>, Open Weekdays 8-8 — Sunday 10 *o 4 whan your I bathroom walla havathabluaa radacorata with thaeatere th* fancy finish** Hi# latool in lasting SaiuloA ^QQOVO. WOVEN FABRIC WALLCOVERING Beauty and the bath go together. Santtas is stain resistant, washable and not affected by steaming showers. Coordinated chower end cafe window curtains of heavy-gauge vinyl. NOW IN OUR STORE Becor By Ashton Opm 9 to 7 54BS Dixie Hwy. 674-22*3 Heard about the new Toro' trouble-free Whirlwind*? IHISMOSTBETORObNEW HEAVY-DUTY CUPPINGS BAG. SE^ NO ZIPPERS TO CLOG. IF I WERE A LITTLE BIGGER I'D SHOW YOU HOW YOU CAN CLAMP IT ON WITH ONE HAND f TAKE A LOOK AT THIS ^ SAFETY-SPIN START. YOU WlNPrrUP HERE AND TVIEN PUSH A LEVER ON THE HANDLE .CHOKES AUTOMATICALLY. HEY CHARLIE, THIS OUTFIT IS AN AUTOMATIC (Ml FILLER. YOU JUST PUSH THE BUTTON AND YOU RE SURE THE CRANKCASE : IS FULLI1 SURE BEATS MESSING WITH PLUGS, FUNNELS AND OIL CANS DOESNYfT? ) HERES THAT NEW CLEAN-OUT PORT. I GUESS YOU JUST STICK THE HOSE IN HERE WITH THE ENGINE RUNNING AND IT WASHES ALL THE CLIPPINGS OUTA THERE! r IT$ STILL GOT THAT V SHAPED CUTTING BLADE TO PULL THE GRASS UP FOR A MORE EVEN CUT. WHERE iCAN I BUY A WHIRLWIND? 23455 Telegraph Rd. DISTRIBUTOR C. E. ANDERSON CO. THIS TRIMIT+ DEVICE IS A A HANDYUTTLEOEAL.IT PROPS UP THE GRASS AL0N6 THE SIDEWALKS AND STUFF SO THE MOWER BLADE CAN CUT IT OFF. PInm 353-5300 * EVANS BQtHPMflrr <307 N. Dixie Highway Clerkate*, 625-1711 SEE YOUR NIARBT TORO DEALER FOB lALISAND IIRYICI HARP'S SALES l SERVICE 1060S. Leaner Ad. DIXIE TRACTOR EQUrMENT 4777 Dixie Highway Mb #74-3351 IBS MANUFACTURING 105 HigMaad Read FAY BARKER HARDWARE 650 Auburn Rd. Pontiac, FC 2-3721 KMG BROTHERS 23*1 Fantiac Rd. Fentiac, FI 4-0734 WAITTS DEPARTMENT STORE WATERFORD FUEL «i SUPPLY REGAL KwRUm McClellan Ball Co. KYUtYTMIMB FOR TNI 805 S. Woodward BirminalNNn—MI4-4133 REID’S FLOWKR A BARDEN 2925S Southfield Rood Southfiold-EL 6-3921 JACOBSEN’S Cardan Town Nurtary 545 S. Broadway (M Tm (ator Uk. SriM) —. AAvaooar— Rochester Elevator 303 E. University Dr. Rochester OL1-771T ‘ Thompson’s Garden Land 6380 East Highland Rd. Mtifoed—887-5486 BETTER BLOOMS RoehoaferRd. WATERFORD FUEL A SUPPLY 3943 Akpott Road 673-1329 / a ' A AUBURN DAKS NURSERY ft LANDSCAPE SBtl W. Aafeani Rd. TIGERS AND LIONS ARE ROUGH ON TURF AGRICO-FED TURF AT TIGER STADIUM CAN REALLY, TAKE IT Lei Year Lien Aid Tiger* Play Reagh ea Year* Next time you're at Tiger Stadium, take a look at the turf. It's Agrico-"Greon . . . danse, deep-rooted, vigorous . . made to take all the season-long punishment our Tigers and Lions can give it. The secret: regular application of Agrico Grass Food Vvith Urea-Form. It's the grass food made for lawns that take pun-’ ishment. Stadium Maiager Jess Walls Says: "We have used Agrico Grass Food at Tlgar Stadium for ten years. It has produced for us a rugged turf that can stand punishment and maintain beauty.ell season. Exports say Tiger Stadium has the best turf In the League.” . Agrico Grass Food has been a sales leader for years. The reason Is simple, It works! Treat yourself to the greenest spring ever. Apply Agrico Grass Food with Urta-Form this weekend and you will have a healthy vigorous lawn before the first Robin perches on your window sill. This premium grade lawn food actually stores nitrogen In your soil and doles It dirt bit by bit all season, as your lawn needs it. Agrico Grass Food is 60% organic and non-burning, so even your little leaguer can apply It. Ideal for both cool and warm season grasses. Don't, wait another year — start your championship lawn now and be a winner One bag feeds 5,300 sq. ft. . $4.95 AGRICO* Chemical Co. Division of CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY Box 1228, Saginaw, Michigan i c—» THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. APRIL 15,1PM fT House of Seafoods • Liv* Lobster Tank r it FROG LIOS Roodhou** Sty)* ★ Branch Fn.d Gulf SHRIMP it Galdan triad Maryland SCALLOPS " , ★ Broilad LOBSTER TAILS it Broilad WHITEFISH ■it LOBSTER Nawborg ★ OYSTERS an »ha Half Shall Try Our Special Steak Dinner Also Selections Ffbm Our Regular Menu,, 2/Championship Golf Holes, A reaP golfers dream. Not exaggerated yardage or a putt-putt course. ROBEY'S SS CLUB 22S0 Union Lake Road off Commerce Read Phone SBJ-4111 COMMERCE All-Color Show Show Starta at Dtitk Electric in-Car Heaters UNION LAKE and HAGGERTY 363-0661 NOW THRU SUNDAY Suburbanites Need Great By HAL BOYLE ' 4 Life Is getting too tough for NEW YORK I* - One of the jem "* ,f“22 ■ . .. *-• . i „ . rim of civilization, out there unsolved problems of the Greet where ^ b^m ^ Society is what to do about sub- the Sidewalks end. UrbaniteS- FLED^TO SUBURBS * They fled to the suburbs originally to escape the poisoned air and crowded clutter of.the cities. They thought they would find health of body and peace of mind away from the human Johnson Signs New Time Law Bill Ends Confusion on Daylight Saving SAN ANTONIO, Tex.-{UPI)-President Johnson signed into law yesterday legislation to end the confusion generated by the annual summer switch to daylight saving time. The Texas White House announced that Johnson, in a farewell to the hodgepodge times of yesteryear, had signed the measure shortly before he left on his trip to Mexico City. The immediate effect-of the law is that every community in die' country going on day-light time this year must start at 2 a.m. (local time) April 24, just It days from now. Under the new law, clocks will be turned ahead one hour on the last Sunday in April and turned back one hour on the last Sunday in October. Hie idea is to make the time change uniform throughout the country. * ★ ★ Starting, next year, the entire nation still go on daylight time for the six-month period, with this exception: A state legislature may vote to exempt the entire State from the requirement and thus stay on standard time for the. entire six months. tAUTOMIC MOVE Any state that does nothing Automatically goes on daylight time. Expectations are that fe states,will vote to exempt themselves. Last year, 36 states went l “fast time” to some extent. Sixteen already observed the dates set by the new law, while 20 others used different dates. |Of the 36, only 18 observed daylight time statewide. Bat it hasn’t worked eat that way. Show me a suburbanite and I’ll show yon li ambulant neurosis, ■ man overwhelmed by an environment beyond his ability to cope with. Let us consider Ronald Halfacre, a typical suburbanite. He is a horizontal yo-yo who rides a train five mornings a week to his job in the qity, and rides home-five evenings a week to a mortgage-covered cottage in the suburbs that looks like it had | been cut out of cardboard by a child with a rusty pair of scissors. * . * w Ronald is 35 arid looks 50. His thinning hair is whitening fast, his eyes are feverish, his face twitches, and he. smokes four packs pf cigarettes a day. He is popular with his office pals but they prefer to sit to leeward of him at lunch because his entire system seems to have been infiltrated with lawn fertilizer. BEST SLEEP It isn’t his job, or his journeying back and forth, that are aging Ronald. As a matter of faqt he gets his best sleep on the train and during quick,naps in government' is big enough to deal with it. But unless it does something, American auhurban- his swivel chair. What has made Roaald aid before his time are those long weekeads ia the suburbs. They lire simply more thaa human flesh can bear. Ronald never stops going from the time he' steps off his train Friday night until his weary wife shovels his limp frame aboard the 8:12 express Monday morning. What does he dp? Ronald parties until nearly dawn, then gets; up and paints and scrapes walls and plants beans and fights crab-| grass and asphyxiates himself burning hot dogs in a'back yard! pit and parties some more and stays up Until dawn again and drives foe kids to -the beach and parties at foe Country Chib and parties at the neighbors; paints foe eftbgrase and fights the walls, and parties some more, and yackety-yackety-yaks,. and before he knows it, Monday dawn is shining and he is lying there in bed sweating and silently screaming. LONG NIGHTMARE Where did foe weekend go? He doesn'i remember it except as one long nightmare. His head rings like a temple gong and his stomach feels like it had been blown up and used in a football game. It isn’t until Wednesday that Ronald returns “ i normal. Multiply his problem 30 million times and you can see why this is a problem that requites government action. Only foe ties probably will go foe way of fosdodo and foe dinosaur Notfaa’S POPULAR THEATER ~ AllMMinia -MtlMhlitFpk pAT.7(Mliu«.”l« JiTj •KIDS 25s T! NOW SHOWING CUDDLL.CURVESOME and DEADLY eagle; Hold Ovor 2,d WMk! SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT | POPULAR PRICES! | NOW EVERYONE CAR SEE THE MWT LOYERiY MOTION PICTURE OF ALL HMEI ■Winner of 8l [Academy Awards tt —Ml RMMm wmJBBKMiwii',:_ _ GEORGE CUHRI —--------- mNMmt-MlMKINR. TDNIOHTatOiMP.il. Only SATURDAY at TtM and 10lM P.M. SUNDAY at SlM-OM-IlM P.M. ami FIRST RUN !JM- | ■Hi and Hopor^j Ml-M TECMttlM* COLOR , • IlllllllllllltllllllllflS FE 2 1000 | (LECTNIC HOUR aunts Bii MlH ABLE MILE ataMtaavHMm arwomm D It I V i • I N SO. TELCO IA PM AT SO. IAKI10. II 1 Mill W. WOODWAIP America's Playboy Hero! 20th CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS, Couldn't Washington use LEEJ.C0BB GILA GOLAN EDWARD MULHARE Heat Secret Agent OOva (he’s i fraction stupid)^ on the trail of an appalling apparatus [ HeetOiane...she’s note girl it’s a machine (nett pert by pert in the secret BUTTON and a : KILL-BUTTON i pres the riftit tW - «V» , \ I I cAU^ „ — ^ spired bY*h" IHI iiiiiiieimiiiiiiiiei BLUE SKY oconcc *D._AT IffiH'l PttwOM, nil THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. APRH* U, IPM \C~H Girl Dealers in Vegas to Lose Shirts LAS VEGAS, dfov. (AP) The odds on blackjack might be Riskey-Whiskey A-Go-Go 7 Nights “The Conti ntntals" Featuring Sylvia Summers Fri., Sot., Sun. t >;M. to 2 A. M. , Keg & Anchor «M DIXIE HWT. DRAYTON PLAINS getting worse around here. | "No comment," said Robert Nevada Atty. Gen. Harvey | Mlllerflssistant general man-Dickeraon says at least one ager of the Silver Nugget, casino is planning a new distraction—topless dealers. ■f * * * As eager as visiting card players might be to lose their money so pleasantly, natives took a dlmmjer view. "It's, lewd,” said the Rev. Glenn Tudor, member of the Clark. County (Las Vegas) Ministerial Association. CHAIRMAN [ “I don't know. I don't know, said Milton Keefer, chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission. ' “I think It's Indecent expo, sure," said Pete Bommarito, day shift manager at another casino. 1 Atom# Lewuje j FRANK DUTT0 1 NmmmM Organ 1 FLOYD RANA 1 Dram. I MON. THRU SAT. ' -1 ! 1 TV. lwiP..pl. Com 1 AIM Higfcl.n. SS. M-H | Hmw STI-SAH ’ 1 SEE THE STARS OF THE GRAND OLE OPRY SUNDAY, APRIL 17th Dlrtct Fran Nashville •JIM EDWARD BROWN • ARCHIE CAMPBELL — PLUS- ARIZONA WESTON and THE WESTERNERS TWO BIG SHOWS 2:30 ML FAMILY MATINEE (Children Welcome) 7s30 P.M. ADULTS ONLY 0»QW LAKE DANCE RAHCH where Dickerson said the women dealers, stripped to 'the waist, would begin work next Tuesday. * * * Topless chorus,girls are okl hat in Las Vegas. They made their debut in IMS. They vived an attempt to outlaw them. And they , were introduced In Reno in INI. WEEK OF TRAINING Dickerson said Thursday learned that the Sliver Nugget, in suburban North Las Vegas, has hired new women dealers who are willing to work dressed. He said the new girlg were getting s week of training. “My office has had several calls from the women dealers presently employed by the casino,’’ Dickerson said. “They have complained that unless they shed their top garments, they would lose their jobs. .* ★ ★ "If the Nugget carries out this plan, I’ll seek a court injunction to halt this affront to the ' and law-abiding citizens of No- FrapHinatra'sJet Damaged by Blaze ^KEEGO WICHITA, Kan. (AP) ~ Fire ! damaged Frank Sinatra’s jot * plane Thursday night at the * Lear Aircraft factory where it • was being modified. • The amount of loss was not • disclosed. • ★ * * *’ The two-engine 1600,000 plane was delivered to Sintra last fall and was returned to the factory last week for overhaul and installation of more instruments. Workmen said the'fire started when an electric drill aedden-j NULAN tally plerced^o oxyxgen line. A0U(W^ 1F0RD STEM WM dm Iwwh jomesmV LtOfD ’ GESUNDHEIT! — Sneezing June dark bad hoped to catch aa airplane for Mesa, Ariz., from Miami yesterday. Miami Mayor Chuck Hall (left) hdped so, too. June’s father (right) hoped the change* of climate would AV PhMn ease the condition for the girl, who has been sneezing a number of months. However, due to a comedy of errors, she missed her flight. Officials managed to book passage on later flight. on Ivonlng of hm and DANCING i«My Filthy <4 latwrdwy Might The Blum Angrh 10-HI BAR 1711 Stat. Hwy. it M-ll MAS-7111 intcoKj GARY CLARKE • CHRIS NOEL meui «kit *7 ' is taken by r by any o George Peppard, Liz Ashley the strongest language that a close look bC token by the gambit control board at the licensing, authorizing ‘21’ (blackjack) game* in that place of buai- •OUT OF LINE’ “I personally think that this Is n little out of line,” said W. E.. Leypoldt, gaining board mem- £ ber. 'Carpetbaggers' Stars to Wed irated the 'otion by By BOB THOMAS AP Mevie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD .• *:••• • CMy St*fe ......IC. Phone ........ Employed fy ............................•••••••*••» Employer's Addrnsi ...................................... 24 NORTH SAGINAW ST., PONTIAC STATS BANK BLM., IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC! THE PONTIAC PRE33, FRIDAY. APRIL 13, 1966 Washington Foe at Tiger Stadium First Place Tigers Get Home Opener Welcome Today DETROIT (UPI)A horse-•hoe, the Gout Guard and • pair at politicians. .And, oh yes.a thtee-game winning streak. Mix them a]] with a crowd of >8,000 people, 08-degree temperatures and the ■ Washington Senator^ and you have .the season opener of the Detroit Tigers — on tap today in Tiger Stadium. The Tigers go into the gan tied for first place after beating New York 3-3 and 8-2 yesterday. The horseshoe is h floral Job, customarily presented to the Tiger manager, Charlie Dressen. The Coast Guard Color performed opnntog flag-raising ceremonies. Aad Republican Governor George Romany aad Democratic Mayor of Detroit Jerome Cavanagh have t|» 1 tossing oat But the-expected crowd of 35,-000 had one thing hi mind and that was to get a first-hand look at the team which a majority of the experts are picking to win the American League title.’ ‘ If .they could do it, it will be first time in 21 years that a Detroit 'team finished atop , of the heap in the Junior Circuit, ;.* * * The Tigers got off to a fast start against New York in the first three games of the season. Besides a rejuvenated A1 Ka-Une, a hlghly-hoped-for rookie Mickey Stanley and the assorted hit-productions of Norm Cash, Willie Horton and Dick McAul-iffe, fans today were to get the season’s first look at ace of the bullpen, Dave Wtokersham. Bat Wickersbam has torn- ‘see of title to pan a starting Job sites Dressen wants t# see J*e Sparma and Hank Aguirre advance lit a better form before sending them onto the hill. “We’re off to a great start and the pitching staff loot! like itImub stonai^itened out,” chip-per Tiger manager Charlie Dressen beamed Thursday. “Now we’ll just .have to keep it up.” * The Tigers,put it ail together Thursday — good starting pitch- ing, sharp reUoLwork, timely hitting, and k«y^ contributions from its strong bench. 'r$m- * . * ★ But probably the most important factor of the Tiger sweep was mat they took advantage of Yankee mistakes. This was the way It used to be with the old winning Yankee, teams who always took advantage of the misenes In the first game, Mel Stotte-myer out-pitched Detroit’s Denny McLain and deserved to win. But McLain, who was' shaky| during his eight-inning stint but always came up with the Mg out when he needed it, eras helped out of several jams -by brilliant Tiger fielding.* w w 'it Meanwhile, the Yankees banded Detroit three tainted runs and that was enough for the Tigers. In the ninth with the score tied 3-2, big Gates Brown walked and McAuliffe hit a dribbler down the first base line. Elston Howard's throw was off-target and McAuliffe was cred- ited with a hit, sending Brown racing to third. * •*' * After Willie Horton walked to load the bases, Norm Cash tried to check his swing and hit a weak roller to shortstop Horace Clark, who had replaced starter Rueben Amaro. It might have been an inning ending double play but Clark booted the ball and Brown raced home with the winning run. New York tried to get by with National League retread Bob Friend in the second game but Detroit tagged him for seven1 hits and four runs, as hf was knocked out In the fifth. A1 Ka-Une’s third single seat him to the showers. ' 'or * * - Second-string catcher Orlando MacFarlane hit a solo homer in the fourth inning for what proved to be the winning rua. it . ★ . if ~ -— Making his tint start as a Tiger, Billy Monbouquette pitched A strong six-hitter to chalk up the win. He was never in trouble after Jake Gibbs touched him for a two-run homer in the second. Red Wings Even Stanley Cup Series With Hawks, 5-1 Watson's Play Against Hull Is Big Factor Three Power Playi Net Detroit Goals at Olympia DETROIT (AP) - Sudden success with the power play against Chicago and the continued spirited play of Bryan Watson hasgtven the Detroit Red Wings new hope in their Stanley Cup semifinal series with the Black Hawks. The Red Wings scored three goals in the third period on their way to a 5-1 victory Thursday night to even their best-of-seven series at two games each. Watson, spelled at times by Gordie Howe, continued his effective shadowing of Chicago’s Bobby Hull and added insult to injury by acoring his second goal of the series. Boh has scored once and got only two shots on the Detroit goal Thursday. "I kept telling everyone that my goals came in bunches,” said Watson, who scored but two times in 7* regular season games. BROKEN STICK "But darn it, I broke my favorite stick,” he added, recalling a bruising check by Hull in front of the Red Wings’. I which splintered the stick. Paul Henderson scored two goals and Andy Bathgate, Watson and Howe added the three in the final period. Stan Mikita got Chicago's lone marker in the firsAperiod. Three of the Detroit _ came on power plays, giving them eight such markers in the series. They had six in 14 regular season games with the Black Hawks. HOWE MOVES IN - Gordie Howe (9) of the Detroit Red Wings moves in front of Chicago Black Hawks’ Pierre Pilote (3) to get a shot at the net, but he failed to score when goalie Glenn Hall made the save. The Wings evened the Stanley Cup playoff aeries with the Hawks at 2-1 by winning 5-1. treal Canadiens — victors in one of hockey’s shortest and most savage wars — plotted defense of ttie Stanley Cup today while Toronto’s scattered Maple Leafs licked their wounds. The Canadiens capped a four-game sweep of their National Hockey League semifinal playoff series against arch-rival Toronto Thursday nigfa& by crushing the Leafs 4-1 in a pitched battle that set eight penalty records. Detroit Manager-Coach Sid Abel said the only difference with the paw# play was that "we are starting to clicks” Chicago Coach Billy Reay, forced t* play ..without the services of Doug Mobns, Chico Maid and Elmer Vasko, conceded his team had taken the worst lumps but insisted the series was far from oVer. EXPECTED BACK “I said when this began that the aeries would go seven games and I have not changed my mind,” Reay said. * He added he expected Mofans and Vasko to be ready for Sunday’s gams In Chicago. Bible Schools Compete for 'Spirit Jug' Midwestern Baptist Seminary and Detroit Bible College will initiate a rivalry Saturday that they hope will become an annual competition. The two schools will compete at Wisner Stadium and Jaycee Park in five events with the over-all winner gaining possession of the Spirit Jug. A 10 a. m. track meet at Wisner will begin the festivities. Following a potluck lunch, there will be boys’ and girls’ softball games, horseshoe competition and towlty a rope-pulling event all in the afternoon at Jaycee Park. The jug presentation to the bettor school will bo made at approximately 3:39 p. m. at the park. Montreal go# after its 12th . ostaeason title since 1037, when the Stanley CUp became the NHL’s symbol of supremacy, against the survivor of the other semifinal set between Chicago and Detroit. \ “I'd like to start the finals] right away — toe way we're1 Canadiens Sweep Maple Leaf Series TORONTO (AP) — The Mon- going,” said Montreal Coach Toe Blake after his club’s third come-from-behind victor the Leafs. "But than,” be added, "some of our players have aches and pains. Maybe the rest will do us all good.” More than a few of the aches and pains are the result of a first period donnybrook that delayed Thursday night’s game 27 minutes and Insulted in 124 penalty minutes — more than double the previous record for a single period in playoff competi-"w. Fights Moke out all over toe ice after only 3% minutes of May and six main eventers shared in the penalty parade. NAriONAL LEAOUS fir‘ &SS r: ,? 8IWU"::: "lahlngton is 3 Detroit 5, Chicago 1 Tebay'i «a« wt acheduM. Satvrday'i 01 ** scheduled. Detroit >t Chicago, afternoon Las Vegas Scores High Four Champions Break Par ISXV-5L "14 8 * WMW WMortn if ill QMerl* r» lot b-™ .. » f t I Troll M X 4 t | Cornet? ph t 0 # 0 Ehiowrd c 4 0 1 *I t f jWlff I S l rmln c. lit iSSR'Et ! • ill ■* ______. Mortlto V »}r TOIOl IS S I 1 Total SI t « LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) It’s called the Tournament of Champions, but to be honest, very few played like one. That was the picture today as the 26 professional golfers in the Las Vegas springtime classic fired away In' the second round of the $100,000 tournament, w * ★ In the first round Thursday, only four players Moke par 72 at the Desert Inn Country Club. Eighteen did if in the same round a year ago. And for the first time in the 14-year history of the event, no one penetrated the 60s. 1 Casper Jr. and Gay Brewer were the co-leaders teeing off today with first-round 70s and one shot back were PGA champion Dave Marr and Dudley Wysong. Bruce Crampton of Australia was the lone man even with par and fans had to look further down the list for the other stars to goff. . Doug Sanders and. ex-PGA champion Bobby Nichols were tied at 78, and Arnold Palmer was in a group of seven deadlocked at 74. Masters king Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player were in the 76s, and Tony Lema reposed at 77. Explanations varied regarding the high scoring. Palmer said there was possi- Bruce Crampton ..................3404—73 Doug Sanders .................. 3*09—73 Booby Nichols ................ 39-34—73 'fltll Rodgers ................. 40-34-74 Lionel Hebert ................ .37-37—74 At|Md Pointer ..................34-30—74 Ray Floyd .................37-37—741 Jack Rule .Jr.a-tf.i.** ,. g,iTPMrfB Don Massengale ............. ... 39-39—74* Joe ChmpbeU .....................3*34-74 Frank Oieard ................. 39-34-75 BtftClT BUTd .................. 30-37—75 ‘ Hiskey ................. 39-34-75 ywWn ......................31-37-75 Ntcklbua ................. efcjl'igl Gary P|ayer\....................41-35-7* B 10-37-71 .......... 37-39—74 M ...................4*47-77 Dick Mayer 3*31-77 ----rnr. ^ » ■ ' IF# ....... A.......... 41-41-42 bly a letdown after last week-end’s Masters Tournament. But Brewer, who folded in the playoff at Augusta, was anything but let down. Many of the pros complained about the greens and Nicklaus said perhaps they were not mature at this time of year. mDved up If to, the pros can Mame the PGA because It was their own organization which forced Tournament Director Allard Roen and host professional Bo Win-inger to move the tournament up several weeks ahead of its usual date in the* spring schedule. Looking back one year, Palmer had a first-round 66, Casper a 68 and Sanders a 69 among the par-busters. Palmer went on to win with a 72-hole total of 277. The consensus this year Was that something more than 277 would win the $20,600 first prise. Unhappiest of the current cast of players was Gene Littler, who won the. tournament three straight years starting in 1065. Little typified the high scoring when he shot a nine on the par-four ninth. IP - H R ER BB SO iii|i latttamyru ...7 « f l j f amltton I* r i o 1'S enlff (L, 0-1) ... 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—?49~By RamM CMBrt). WP—McLain. 3 o StJSST jTlno "rf 3(3 ji^d 1 o * Monb'qt p 4 0 1 0 Friend p 10 I ■iiiil Raindo p oil Murcar ph 1 0 I “■*'11! Wom'ck Whit. al. Culltfi p TtM 3S IIB I .Total York W „ miitmr Monb'qt (W, 14) f Friend (L,0-1) .... 4 Wdmack 3 H R ER IBM 1 IT" I Ij ? ! ? t s 1 Rec Volleyball Team Slates League Contest The Waterford Township Recreation Department’s thir.d women’s volleyball league race will begin Monday, 8 p. m. at the Mason Junior High School gymnasium. All teams aad individuals interested in participating should report at that time or call the recreation office. The department’s- tournament team will travel to Lansing for the state tournament tomorrow. ORD TOWNSH CREATION ** VoHtybaH U Standings) (Wickerehem 04) Detroit H* Calltomla 1, Chicago 1 Mlnnasota4,KaniasClty] ** MILWAUKEE (AP) - One M1 *' battle over, baseball is appar- XUSSaSSS M) •* D,tnn ently moving toward an ap- M) at cigwdiaM peals court ctaah with Wiscohqin in its continuing legal tug-of-war over the Braves. Wisconsin not only expects another fight but says it will help get the case priority status before the State Supreme Court '‘If baseball appeals, we would ask the State Supreme Court to take up the case right away,” said Atty. Gen. Bronson La Fol: lette Thursday. “We have a twiday'i »wHti state statute that gives priority to cases like tiris.- Braves Plan to Appeal v York (Patanon 04 ounker 04) Only gamaa ichodulad. laMOtyi Gama* California at Mkuwarta Kanaao City at Chicago York at Baltimore NATHMtAL'LEAGUB' Clilcao. _____.. PMMeipMa 5, 31. Louis 4 Hotnfon 4, Loo Angoltt J Only faMM. IChidulM. Atlanta (UmSSCr tST'at NaW -WMr M) •- —_ Cincinnati (ERk *4) at .PliMglHSte ■MrSd t. Louts (Gibson thaw *4). ^ ‘‘I suppose we would be extremely fortunate if we had a Supreme Court decision by the end of May.” Circuit Judge Elmer W. Roller Wednesday found baseball in violation of Wisconsin antitrust law far allowing the transfer of the Bravos from Milwaukee to Atlanta without supplying Milwaukee with a replacement team, Roller ordered the National League to agree by May 16 to qdd an expansion team in Milwaukee in 1967. If baseball faUs to comply, the Braves must return to Milwaukee this season, the judge said. WILL APPEAL Warren Giles, league president, and William Bartholomay, Braves' board chairman, both said Thursday that baseball would immediately appeal the1 decision. Baseball Commissioner William D. Eckerts has voiced disapproval with the ruling\bift has offered no plan of action. \ La FoUette said ha anticipated that baseball would ap-‘ peal os soon as possible. He said an appeal must he aside not ‘00 days after the HAGGERTY HAS IT! Don’t Fence with poor quality Use Redwood Jwel ww ef Hw Rwnr < l» this hubdbgmb i________________ w»ova design. TMa law price include* I 4“»4" past In CeA* mcHhi. bull* par sactiea up ond atamed. And Up PIER-KIT tha "Do-it-Yourtalf“ dock a«*ambly that's naby to install . . . storut away in tha winter. 9-FT. DOCK SECTION 22M K.D. WITH 1 SIT OF 4-FT. SHEL LEGS SAME SIZE BUILT-UP My ^ 4 . . ... .... 2IA6 6/4”x4" Blear Fir Deeking, Zincol Treated 2x1 Stringers Bat la Fit-Hot Dipped Galvanized steal lag sapperts. CALIFORNIA RANCH TYPE AE0WS00 RAIL FENCE tape tied or* nMiOtaad to occnpt 5/4“ taOi. 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With 2 S'tdn Bnnchn* Sturdy Knotty Grainsd Rndvyood Stock ONLY *21U Cedar Posts Bright Nnw Stock 3” Top 7» long 59c ea. 4” Tap V long tSo ea. 3n Tap r long 7to ea. 4” Top r long 95c ea. 47* REDWOOD TABLE 36” WIDE 2 Side leaches. Adult Stas, law Up, Ideal for Patie, Apt., Batosoy nr lee. Rtnob ■14" Metal Clothes Pests With X Aim and Hooks *41 b. CASH AND CARRY RAILROAD TIES _IRAND NEW 1*2.98 W Folding Stairway ONLY* *16“' HAGGERTY 2NHU66ERTY M). WALLED LAKE Lumber A Supply Co. ■as «. Mafia aad PsaUos TroB HA 44MI «r a S4MI p-rD THE PONTIAC PRF^S, FRIDAY, APRIL IS, 1966 i ru + IN STYLE GOLF SHOES for Mon. Rugged, handsome stylos with orator repellent uppors of lightwoight brushed pig; Sizes 7-12 «^GARY PLAYER'S GOLF CLASS: Follow through for niximum power! MB TV® AOCH N MY back ? IP YOU WVM ID UBAD TO MY WOWT POOTi YOUOUA^A BOWtHO^ At&OWfWITH YOOWfO WkVN NOWtHGf jjj PCH Thindads Edged; Waterford Easy Victor Flint Sbuthwestern sprinted In another track meet, Oxford away from Pontiac Central in a triangular track meet at Wianer Field yesterday. Waterford did the same thing to D e a r b o r a Fordson. won over Brandon and Imlay City. Southwestern piled up an 18-4 edge in the 100 and 220 and this was enough to, give the Colts a to 62^ win. Bay City Central was a distant third with 9. BUI Tipton tled< Hayes J o a e s’ Wlsner Field high-bar dies 'mark with a M4 clocking. Jones set the mark in 1950. Tipton, a Junior, also won the low hardies. Waterford won all but one event while leaving Fordson in its wake, 82-22. Dave Farris won the high jump, shot put and 100 for the Skippers and placed 'second In the 220. Dick McDowell took the long, jump and 440, was second in the pole vault to teammate Larry Biskner and ran a leg on the winning mile relay team. Mike Lantry was a triple winner for Oxford ns the Wildcats piled np MV9 points to 33 Unknowns in Lead at Azalea SPE0UL 40-Horse Elaotrio JOHNSON and 14-Ft. Runabout Only $1848 TONY’S MARINE 2IM Orchard Lika M. Kongo Harbor 6M-3680 for Brandon and 9% for 1m-• ' 1 Lantry won the shot with' a toss of 96-244, and both hurdle; races. Tom Hoard took the long. jump arid 220 and Mickey Cum- uTwr-mN n r iapi mings won the high jump and WILMINGTON, N.G (AP) 4^ Each year the Professional Golfers’ Association of Ameri- haljjht 5-4 ^ ca distributes to newsmen tournament player catalogue. In its more than 100 pages are SutMa* (W), tmmi , :1M IN Low HvrdMa — Daw Kilns (W), omal (DI, NatH) (D), :3U at Dash — Oaw Maks (W). Barm V). Mata (D), :».t . MM ROMO — watirtard (Grahl, Thom-I, Tutor, McOawsH), 3:44.1 \ A Perfect Business ROUSH SAWN REDWOOD Perfect Material For r * "T ir r ir IDEAL FOR BARBER SHOP NEW BEAUTY SALONS recently leased an area in this modern building 1 a natural complimentary service to enhance the Barber Shop. Move in nexf.door — air conditioned — will decorate to' lease specification!. CONVENIENT LOCATION-BIG PARKING AREA IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE WEINBERGER HOMES 3901 Highland Road, Pofitiac-Phone332-9l21 It takes two pages to detail accomplishments of Jack Nick-, laus and Arnold Palmer and a , foil page for other top players. But to find the listings for Tom Weiskopf and Gary Bauer, (pleaders, and Jay Dolan, No. S man, going into today’s second round of the $20,000 Azalea Open Tournament, you have to turn to the “thumbnail sketches” section at the end of the book. > ★ w ★ There, five or six players of lesser renown are grouped on a single page, in smaller type. 'Eight or 10 lines tell the story. Idawn patrol I These are basically the young I end hungry players, the members of the ‘‘dawn patrol” that starts early and seldom gets the [headlines, or semi-retired veter-jana who rarely play tournament golf any more. i Warns Yataa .... iJarry B.rbar .... Kel Nag la ...... Claud. Kins . ... Dick Hart ....... Nine Main xBIII flafWV -... iCoblt Lagranga . 'Gana Brlgga Hampton Ault ... mx. ema ......... Larry Bach haul donation .. Loo Graham . . At Bauallnk ..... Jim Fatrsa .... lay Sam ... T stop guessing. f/0...f/Affa SEVEN STAR america’s lightest whiskey SCOTCH U6HTNBH CANADIAN QUALITY' A Kin (Mills American Blend ■I m mummy Having price #2« ff 14a ***' S10& 3*44-70 33- 37-70 . 3*44—70 34- 34-78 34- 34-70 35- 35—70 SS2R . 3744—31 ■ 3445-7) ■ 1344—71 3545-71 Basketball Buys! laakaHMil Backboards Ooaiplata *18“ Doubla lamina tad, eil tempo rad, solid anterior maae-nlta, H“ thick. Official 18" diameter goal. %" steel. Basketballs *8" J taring caver. Official aim fZf&Royebi 24 C. Lawrattoa Ft t-8881 ■wna3*47-73 own...................“ Bm’ttSaS:::::::::::::::::::: 3*s-t? |55 jSfcu iI Harold Knaaca ...... 3745-3 Kan Warthtnitan ... 3*34-73 Skippers Fail at Nets Waterford felled to win a set and took a 7-0 lacing at the hands of the Rochaater tennis team. Rochester’s No. 1 player Rick Watson, the Oakland County 'Junior tennis champion, defeat-edvMike McIntyre, 6-0 and f-1. nba ftAveen UuCT-tSTTmti oui» at lo« Angataa. bat i Laa AnoCaaw5tr"Leui»"at'lBaatsn, lat gams of wafr1"—c“ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN BOWLING 3 Games $1 355-7822 II N. PERRY PONTIAC Taeatett Mae triad WvaTan OMH"lAILV'Bd-aid he would be on .the field with his team Friday for spring thrills. Dobbs, 41, who played football at Wert Point under Earl “Rad" Blake in IttMS, was approached by Army as a possible replacement for Paul INetael, who resigned to take the . South Carolina bead coaching job. BREAKFAST CLUBBERS LEAGUE andGet One FREE! STARTING MAY 3rd TUESOAYt AT 10:00 A.M. SIGN UP NOW! 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Saginaw Street Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 333-9611 DAVIS' STANDARD SERVICE 2411 Orchard Lake ltd. Pontiac, Michigan Phona: 682-9906 DIX-A-TEL STANDARD SERVICENTER 1795 N. Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan Phona: 133-9835 FRED C. WILKINS CO. 4093 Orchard Lake ltd. Orchard Laka, Michigan Phona: 682-3311 HOSKINSON STANDARD 559 Aufcam Pontiac, Michigan Phono: 933-9252 JIM'S OAK LAND-BALDWIN STANDARD 220 Oakland Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 333-9129 KENNERLY'SSTANDARD SERVICE 378 W. Heron Pontiac, Michigan Phono: 335-5444 MORRIS' STANDARD SERVICE 3419 Elizabeth Lake ltd. Pontiac, 'Michigan Phona: 338-2348 REX'S STANDARD SERVICE 4289 Walton at Sasha haw Pontiac, Michigan J Phono: OL 3-9993 ROY BROS- STANDARD SERVICE 6756 Ohio Hwy. fir M-15 Ciarkston, Michigan Phona: MA 5-5731 ROY BROS. STANDARD 205 N. Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan Phono: 332-5080 SLADE'S STANDARD 1365 W. Huron Pontiac, Michigan Phono: 333-9189 SMITH'S STANDARD SERVICE 1430 Joclyn at Walton Pontiac, Mkhigan Phona: PI 2-5776 TEL-SQUARE STANDARD S 2481 S. Telegraph b Square Pontiac, Mkhigaa Phono: 335-0311 THE FUM1AC PKKSS, FRIDA V, APRIL 16, 1996 J>^4 By JERE CRAIG The best scoring bowlers in the Pontiac'area once again have an official 700 Club of America chapter. A charter was presented to some of their represents-tives last Saturday night in an impressive, short ceremony at the Hotel Waldron. Chapter 90’s first slate of officers was installed by Ernie Dieterle of Ann Ar-l bor, the director of th.e ... . .. it _— Upper Central region fe™* “““ ■* die national organization. Pontiac becomes the fourth 700 club in the state affiliated with the national group. Muskegon, Flint aid Aim Arbor, also, are; while Grand Rapids has an active 700 club hut isn’t nationally oriented. Actually, Pontiac was a member several years ags hot the members let the or- or aot the current effort wifi last ba*t apparent. Some of the most active bowlers in the county are charter members of Chapter 90. A1 Piets (King Pin), Joe foster (Pin Buoy) and LouiKoprlnce (Scorer) hm* three of tee most tmperfamt positions and can he expected to work bard. But of tee mere than six ben already enrolled la tea (with 1 wives) at the installation. A previous attempt at holding a singles touhmtoent to help stir interest in tee new club was cancelled due to wo many conflicts that would limit participa- ed sports group to compliment the Pontiac Woman’s Bowling Association. Good hick, men. .SPARE TINS The annual Frank Jennings Trophy bowloff will begin 11 *.m. Sunday at Orchard Lanes with Cooley Lanes meeting West Side Lanes. They are tee survivors in tifft season’s Oakland County Travelling Classic League comoetttkm. Cooley eliminated regular son leader Sylvan Lanes, i West Side knocked out Wonderland in the semifinals. Three weekends remain ia BIG TEN PRIZE WINNER-'-John Bennett, 18, of Waterford Township, has a big trophy to show off after bow,ling 1824 for nine games to win tee Big Ten All-Events championship. The Michigan State team member had a 658 to finish second in the singles action, he teamed with Jerry Briney of Benton Harbor to finish second in the doubles (Bennett having a 600), and the MSU team was sixth behind Minnesota. A Waterford Kettering graduate, Bennett carries a 103 average in campus competition. hies Tournament at Fair* grounds Bowling. The action hat been extremely dose to date, with mij four pirn acp- Stm, the sufficient number of charter Memhara includes enough serious, dedlcatedfbowl-ers to develop tee strong, active organization necessary to iK-wimpHA deeds and promote the sport. This wifi come with the proper motivation and desire. The area More ftan 500 duos have entered tea tournament, creating a $3,000-plus prim fond which i n c 1 a d a s a 81,000 guaranteed first prize. It takes a UM handicap total currently to win the top prise since Detroiters George Phillips aad Clyde Otdkam are now No. 1 with 1S23. A Warren duo has 1321, and two Motor City pairs have 1310 each to tie for third. Glen Hopkins and Dick Hummel of Pontiac aro fifth with 1312. Dale (Skip) Seavoy of Birm- Greater Detroit Bowling Assod-ation’s City Tournament Clam A Singles, throwing a 088 actual last weekend for a 713 total, five pins behind winner Jim ThcluS' Local Entries Compete in AAU Swim Meet mm* Tight battles for tee Individual honors featured this week’s West Side Classic bowling; while the Huron Bowl Classic race was deadlocked last Friday. Eight-point sweeps by Gorman Golf Products and West Side Lanes kept them one-two in the West Side title chase. Don P«-nell Just managed to edge Bill Kirkland for high series honors , mm. wesTiiea can» f Mmray Fame MWwMbwd High own** Baity Sam*, eara** Party Stun. M*i Sap min, WeefageJ, Ufa sTAiewrar inwranoa, Wr mr K*«th. oiann**. m*i Pay CamaniM. MFi Km Inglar, M. PrMay PmIIm MMar • sack. Axia ana cam High oanw* ana lariia IS Pranatu Baagl**. Don Plumb. Baa. ■lair to WW Pablo RcxtriguM, Point* r*. IlS-aoi—aO«> Nlak Truvlno. Point#,*. 22*> Bun Bamum, Poodi**, mi charm Morrl*. Bulldog*, milT. Taam Point*— Bngl**, lb Bblldogt, 17. MtWAY.UUtto High Oima—Ray Kru*g*r, >40. miRON^gowL w ★ ★. PenneU had a S4M21 duo and Kirkland 243-223. However, high game laurels* were shared by Harold Fennell and Mitch Stepp with 267s apiece. Joe Marys had 257-210—668, Pennell 665 and High iSam# and SarMa Margarat Ro-manalll, Hottman'* Quality Matt*. IIO-IN. MMday PMtlac Blind MoU Pin* 'Abov# Awraei Polo Vae-N*U 004 avarae*). UM»T» Irina NHe (104). 1M-100) John McCormick (lit). i»m. ■ mi YOUR CAR WAXED FREE! EviryHmt You Havt It Cleaned and Washed at AUTO WASH Stepp 643. Bull of Mooce Lodge No.1 183 rolled a 868 but tee team still lost two points and slipped into a tie with Herk’s Supply, which swept eight to gab a| share of the lead. HMl OMN IIMIS—Mt> Cl __i and swt—avwyn Dav* Mn, Taylor** 5 A ifc m-Mi .Dolly ^Oraiwy** SSar, fi-StNancy lorry Drug. 530> Norma Oakloy, Sllhouotto, »; UuelHo Myofi Philip'* j Chuck', I Wfc BARTLESVILLE, Okl*. (AP) — Seven defensive champions headed an impressive field as tee Senior Women’s National AAU Swimming Championships got under way today with prediction from meet director Ken Treadway of record-setting performances in all 15 events. . Three of the defending champs — Patty Caretto, Cathy Ferguson and Cynthia Goyette — feach won two titles last year. Miss Caretto, lS-year-old swimmer for the City of Commerce, CaUf., Swim Club, is defending in the 500-yard and 1,080-yard free-style races. Miss Ferguson, 17, of tee Los Angeles Athletic Chib, won the 100- and 200-yard backstroke. MIm Goyette, 19-year-old ref*-resentative of Detroit’s Motor City Swim Club Is defending champion in the 100- and 200- clnde Sue Smite of Bloomfield and diver Mieki King of SAVOY LANES CONSTRUCTION “FAIT” “FAIT” “FAST” ^ “GOLD CROWN” DINING ROOM Will Remain Open as Uaual-Serving eCHARBROHED STEAKS eLOBSTER e DINNERS NOW BOWLIN# AU.IY PROGRESSING ON SCHIDULEI Sc rib's SAVOY LANES andLOUME IMS, Telegraph M. acnar. cnampiun uk A Huron Bow! women’s team (yard breastroke. teat indudes Shirley Potato;, hit ^ entries to tee Wt to-a 1001 game this winter at South-. ^ field Bowl, afid that stands as the sixth best Women’i * ‘ national Bowling^CongrasB sanctioned score of the aeason. Dorothy Aldred had 246, Pat Pdl 233, Pat Lisowdft227, Mrs. Pointer 193 and Helen Baker 192 in tee big game. Mrs. Pointer finished with 619 as the had a 2929 total. ftflss Smite Is swimming for tee Motor City Chib and Miss King is With tee Am Arbor Swim Club. Othe/r defending champions are Sue Pitt, 17, East Bruns-wide, N. J. Scarlet Jets, 200-ytrd butterfly ; Penny Estes, 16, Miami Springs, Fla., Recreation Club, 200-yard {restyle; Sharon Stotider, 17, City of Commerce, 100-yard butterfly, and Sharon Fmneran, 20, Santa Clara, Calif., Swim Club, 400-yard individual medley. HDU> RECORDS M!rr Finneran, Miss Caretto, Miss Ferguson and Martha Randall, 17, Philadelphia Vespers Swim Qub, also hold world marks. No world records are to danger this weekend since the meet is being held to a 25-yard pod. BUILD A GARAGE-do-it-yourself! GOLFERS-Pre-Season Sale! Gat A BETTER USED CAR at KING AUTO SALES PONTIAC . M-59 at Elisabeth LalfRd. CLARKSTON •001 Dixie Hwy. (US It) New Mufflers S1M TbeffbupeeBiwI MOO Dixie Hwy. 129-9122 sN^esm Slight Change in ABC Field ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UFI) -Franklin Maniace ami Joe Grasso of Batavia, N.Y., combined for games of 465, 429 and 428 and a total of 1,322 to take over third place to the regular division pairs of the 63rd American Bowling Congress tournament Thursday. The 1,322 total left the pair one pto ahead of the fourth-place duo of Bill Mrozek and Mickey Spiezio of Joliet, 111. | Tony Loiacano aad Bah Kwiecien of Detroit lead the competition at 1,351 with Chicago’s Ray Johnson and Gordy Baer bolding second at MM. In earlier competition, Mario Allenzo, a bowling alley proprietor from Hillside, N.J., rolled, 624-613-601-1,838 to move into fifth place to classic all-events. The leaders of Rochester, N.Y., shot 2,701 to settle for a, sixth place tie to the booster, division. Ridge Bowl of Odca-i go, last year’s champions, lead, the booster division again with! a 2,765. / BUY NOW AND SAVE Raff Clubs - Bags - Show Thu propur uqulpmunt can hulp you improv* your gamul jbi uU'Ulp youchoouu thu [Conuct »hoft, tjia camel FINE SSLEOTIOH OF ISM CLOIIOUTI AVAILABLE Golf Instruction by Appointment Golf Course Now openl • PONTIAC COUNTRY CLUB Mil Elizabeth Lake lid. 992-9S1S 3 WEEKENBS LEFT TO ENTER Milford Doubles TouraanMiit MjOOO Guaranteed 1st Prize! Entry Blanks in Moet All Bowling Alleys or CONTACT; / Dorothy Been, Sto.-PhoiM 990-2299 Fairgrounds Bowling—Milford, Mich. BUILDER’S SUPPLIES - All tbs Material for Building Low Price on All Size Garages NIC 20’x20’| 2-CAN GARAGE ,$2I900I MATERIALS MCUIOOt All Stado IdP OjC. • Ffote# - tWIe • Amtiolt Shingia* • Oarage Sadi • No. 1 Dewglee Hr • M r*\V Haodan • No. 10ft Hr Skiing er D. V. I •TWr Raflorg • All bclerior Trim Above Price* Do Net Indude Cement er Deora Get Our Price Before You Buy! LUMBER Mon. thru Fri., I to 5:30 - Sat. I to 1 PM, s p SPRING SPORT CAR SALE c n D *GG CORVETTE SPORTS COUPE 4-on-fioor, Tinfod Glass, AM-FM A R R T Authorised Deafer Fors M.8., Austin Neeley, Triumph, Sunbeam, Fiat, Morgan, Jaguar 11 S COMPLETE STOCK OF ft NIW SPORT CARS Cjumddi Isipoted Css Ct. , < oaiaaKuaBAviiiuc - raoaai Shelton’s Tradin’High on all nas( ’66 Pontiacs and Buicks! GET 0UR PRICE TODAY! YOU’LL BE GLAD YOU DID! Save up to *1000 during our ’66 Pontiacs and Buicks WE’VE SOT BIO OKS! BoeesviHes-WiMeats WE’VE GOT LITTLE ONES! Tempests - Specials WE’VE 60T SPORTY OffES! Oread Friz-Hardtop*-Wagons PICK YOURS TODAY--MD SAVE! SHELTON Pontiac Buickg Inc. 866 S. Rochester Rd., Rochester 661-0611 Open AApn.,Tu—.qndThuru. until 9 THE P0NTIACPRKS3, FRIDAY, APRIL Ifl, I Mg D-rT MARKETS Trading' Volume High Case Against^Quideposts See Controls as Threat ?Tha following art top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by Oem in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Mpnday. ‘ Produce Dtlkloui, GoMan, tow, Dtltctoui, C.A. Awtei, Mthn, Rad, bo. , Mletow Rad, C.A., Aral#*, Jonathan, bu. .. X.... Aj»lt«, Jonathan, C.A., bu. ... Applai, Macintoih, early, bu. . A«aiai, Macinteah, c>, bu. ... Anpln. Nartharn Spy, bu. VaiSrTACSLlf ■ mi u Ahippad.bU. Celery, Root, Hi. ElmS’ takt. .... Onlonl, dry, ji'lb. bao ' Partnlpa, M bu . Parmlpa. Calla Pak. di. . NEW YORK (AP) - Coppers again provided the stock market with solid group leadership as the roily continued early - this afternoon In heavy trading. The copper stocks were con* tinuing to respond to a M per cent increase In the export price of copper by Chile. Other non-ferrous stocks strung slong with the coppers. Some of the outstanding copper issues were long delayed b opening due to accumulations of buy orders. Following yesterday’s 13-million-share session — third biggest in New York Stock Ex- bbubu-kv Rhubarb, hethouaa, 5-lb. I »hM\u*\I Turnip*, lapped. bu. Poultry and Eggs tyra 11 whit** • paultry: roaslari heavy LW4mi'brafim"aH osmoiTTOrV"* dean by «rr----- While* Grade ________________ “ large 48-42; medium, 34-37; a (API—Egg price* ax&hrt CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange aui“- N—*—■ jsn—-; buying prkaa wwww Egg* about tlaadyi wholesale bu-prices unchanged; ra par cant ar b* “-“la A wfmm —13 tandards ill Hi* itfeadsi; .mblhwi Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DSTROn (API - (UtOA): Cattle 100; net enough ilaughlir steers and f“— ' h>r market test. Vaalers 23; not anougS la test (heap li» not anauah ta test ft Hogs Hi not enough to. aat W 7,500; 14 WMfs'lb buictar* '23.75-2+3?* ■ -K*s W3M8.J8; 408988 lbs 19.25-S 1 Iba 1775-11.75; boars llJG . mm _ __ Cattle 1.500; eaMp' nenei Mah d and prime 14501430 lb im/mr a ISaW* SBafawfli Treasury Position April it, mo April It 1*05 I 2401.430,177.20 I 5,727,447443.52 ivnmsnt Fiscal Year July I— _ 75.20347*,155.15 **,130,135.743 73 Withdrawals Fiscal Year- 11041 3440404.3* 774*5.524.272.M x—Total’pabi- I" - 321,000.373.027 35 311,100,7*4.200.42 OoM Assets- I343A1074S2.77 14,5*1,251,11 x-lndUd*em7444430.7S debt l»t i lad to itetutory limit. Coppers Lead Mart change history — some profit taking was Inevitable. This affected selected aerospace, airline, office equipment and others in the glamor group. TAX DEADLINE, The April IS tax deadline had arrived and stocks had largely ignored it. Meanwhile sentiment was boosted by record highs reported for Industrial production and personal Income In March. The Associated Press average of 40 stocks at noon was up 1.1 at 350.8 with industrials up 2.4, rails unchanged and utilities up J. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up B.w at 560.55. ★ . ★ ★ General Motors traded unchanged after erasing an early fractional loss. Prices were Irregularly higher on the American Stock Exchange. Conduction rose about 314,- Baker Industries and Circuit Foil about 2 each. Flying Tiger and TWA warrants more than 2. A ★ ★ Corporate and U.S. Treasury bonds were generally changed. The New York Stock Exchange NSW YORK (API—Following It 0 lilt , —E—-7- ----‘frgpagctlc-- •£. i-ang* will —A— E 12 »Vb 2*H 3474 ... 5 3ftft&±8 I 8 747* 75*4 74M-M r Rad 2.50 ajhn AlllodC 1.70b AIIMMr 3.30 Aimcnar 75 aS2Y«'' Amerada .W. AmBdctt 1.40 Am Cm no SSffl JlfilsS 14 SIM 51'A 51M + M V**-* 14 MM 34 24 ,.,.i 99CH 37 44M 44M 447* 3 I1M |1M I1M + M 74 4014 40 40 + M 21 W*4 MM WM 4- M usts ft mil 11 mm 13 MM 4t 54’4 557* 557* GomlkS 1.20 G Accept 1.20 GanOynam 1 Gan elac 2 40 1 i*» ml ill Tlra .00 GaPadflc 1b Qmtrpi .to gm.i0* Ghn AM .500 Goodrcb 2.20 AmMPw A Enka :y §2 + 7 14M 14M MM -37 4574 44M 45M +1 *3 30 27»* »**- 27 47M 4*7* 47M + _ = P J* MorraflC* i Sm Sm 8M;?!i« II 277* 27'4 IM* (hdt.) High Law La*t Chg. 33 244k 24'4 2*7* — M • BVb NM Bji 43 3Mb 10M 30M xl 32M 327* 327* + 7k 4 217* 2174 217* ..... 44 257* 2IM 25M — M 4 MM 27M 2»M - “ tm im Am tw +’ 40 11074 110M DOT* . 44 73*4 7174 72M + I S4M 537* 537* M Wi M 017* + 50 OOM 57) J074 ... 14 32M 32A 32M !!! 71 JJM 347* 347* -I *774 477* 47M — M M Mb M --10 «M 4174 42M + ._ 4 34M 3414 34M — M 1} 137b Wlb IDEM + M II 44 43M 437* + M M 4*7* 4* ’ 15 52 (Hi f M 31% Bib + i* 14 7577 747* 727b + M I r n i 4 42 42 42 - 45'9*4 MM 107* -M ^4M 547* 54W +2^ 10 5174 MM MM tV* 7 27 247* 27 + M —H— lamPap 1.40 ^ 4074 4074 R* +'m i l c Eii ~ « 307* Mb 307b “ 23 nib 53M S3M I 7* 23 05 ’ 327* 327* KM - >1 151 140M 14074 - —R— 101 41M4l ii nfb 1 ■ igiDkj- 7* k 407* — ;M M STM i 34M + 74 1 527* ... Sm t m 1 1474 + M Striking Miners Rebuff Pleas (EDITOR’S ROTE ~ Thtf it te third in « four-part series i the government, economic guideposts, written by business writer John T. Cunni//.;* centralized economies,” he told* Reprisal by government a Nebraska audience. [stockpile release helped enforce “A farce and a fraud on the! guideposts in the battle with American worker,” said Paul aluminum. And, says Sen. Ever-. Hall, president of the Seafarers! ett M. Dtrksen: International Union. ‘‘If the threat can be made in By JOHN T. CUNNIFF , * ★ * 'aluminum, it can be made in AP finilnrii News Writer Businessmen often argue that'any commodity from critical Union Charges Police; NEW VORK art unjustiyBwtertol» to «rJr ” T “*e | plied—that they are applied to products.’ 'Intimidated' Pickets r?*JL teuJLrS aliumt^” ra,or*•ber producers, glass makers, At Uhiontown, Pa., about 300 ! 2- Enforcement of the guide-Iporate profit statements in Alchemical companies, striking miners jeered, shouted P03*1 carries the threat of pun- financial sections of the newspa-j * :.3k nauan naiw, maoe oemre strgctjoo in ^ich pay fa toe American Petroleum Insti- ^ 5 fand tute, is the classic defense of ^^ free enterprise.. It is also perhaps the most ^ commonly used .argument against enforcement of guide- i posts — or areas of permissible c advances for prices Mid wages— “ in this instance. Its 8 proponents see guideporis as a n threat to free enterprise. OTHER DENUNCIATIONS Rak Carp 1 RoyCCola .40 ‘ RoyOut 1 JSg RyderSy .20* Sofowa* SI 1 SMosLd 2.40 |L SanFran 2 SIRegP 1.40b San D Imper "— 4ft vm S8+ 47 7M 7 7 + M IngerRand 2 inland $11 2 lnt*fbSf"l.40 if 6 K + 7b Pap 130a nr i.3s ___aPSv 1.20 ITS CktBrfc 1 J 34M 347* 34M 33 m H B" #M + M Ipirfe 30 542 557 557 -37b *1 WM •** I ■i*tr r. _ ’IM 117* 127b + 74 [ 30M 30 SOM + M ’ 74M TPt 74M + M 32= « 4 SaarlGD 1.10 iMn Rot la (Mburg -40 torvti SbaronStl M Stall Oil 1.M itaUTra .43* Star Win MS Sinclair 2.30 SlngarCo 2.20 Smith K 1.80a SouP^ Sugar -----IE 1725 «i M SouNGat 1.30 SouinPac 1.50 Sperry Rand SquartD 1.00 SBrandt i.40 Kataman I Cal 250 '& Jon Logan .10 Jmi'L Era. Jay Mtg In KayaarRe .40 USKEST 2*40 KarrMc 1.30 KwiBwiij Koppor* Ml Lah Val Ind Lehman i.«* LOFGI* MOa LibbMcN .141 w hRW.431 LoneSGa 1.11 LenglaLt 1.01 LorllMrd 2.50 LuckySt l.40b t 5374 53V, 5374 + 2 WM 1MM 1MM ... * 47 4*4* 4474 — 15 MM 44 M. .... 30 447* 44 44 .>• —K— 24 SIM 40M SOM — 3 41M 41M 41M — 74 I34M 135 11Mb +1 ♦ 74V* 74 74 12 74 7S7b 74 ... SterlDrug .00 Studtaatar Sunray 1.40 Texaco 2.40* tfitCTm 1.05 TokGSwI .40 TG&MpEl TaxPLd .35* li 24 2*7* : 113 14M 33M 317b S 15M U 14M . .. 40 1074 ifV* 107* — V* 1 IL ** S. + J* * fS* m* SwTm 7* 74M 74 Mb — ______i35 Marquar .25* SUM? \ SSSTA* Sh 1.25 t + ' A +1' ’ll IM Mb ... 15 P P74 2274 + 15 M74 PM MM - M 20 517* SIM PM — 2 457* 45*4 4J74 ... 44 40M 4IM 4IM — —M— 7* 117* S0H 5174 +174 f «M 47M 47M ■ MM 22 35 4474 43 -IT1 Sm« 1» M74 23M IS* I sft «s ata 143 44 43 4374 +17* If 55M IS 55M 7 ST 8 8T t 17 7*7* 71V* 717* + ill It % 'sf ir ' | S 3474 34M 2474 + 40 7*7* 717b 717* . TwentCtn lb Un Carbid* 2 Un Elac 1.12 UnOIICal 1.20 ■“SSk’f UnAIrL 1.50a UnltAlrc 1.40 UMKOn* .40a Kp3( -IS* UGaaCpl.70 Unit AAM 1.20 li Ltal* 2b JSPlywd .1.40 UE Rg 1.20 \ USSmelt .50a TT UnMatch M VanadCp 1.40 VSrlaa A* Von* Co .51 VtEIPw 1.20 T’lL s€,p*i| ii P74 PM 8* + ^ if lii 111 15M 15 ISM x —E~- CtamlJ Eynd . CemmonwnolWt S 3n . ilp m* &mca 1M» 1J3 Pri ...V mm u _ POEM ONE! AVERAGES 10 Second g 10 Public u< :$m :»as : SStS F anneal Mai 1 SOM 37M « MM Sm ... ?? as 8*ia 5 Jm K ft.21 -Jf-m liiliil 7 23M 237* J 73 417b 41M I 2* 22 217b J S- - 15 3074 Mr* l « 4474 447b 4 4 487* 40 4 It PM P 3 25 J*b 4W 27 4774 4 xn 417* t... 1 0474 04V, 1 J 41 4774 4j^ IP- IM TIM P 54 3474 3474 MM IP SIM MM — M 32 Mb JIM PM + V* 47 5974 MM PM IP 1? 1074 3074 . P JSt 7m jjg.v» 15 mi P7* 2774 + M 11 427* 42M 42M 1 i? ftfii 7 M TOM 707* + » fi. E»-: 2 25M 25V* 257* + 13 1774 347. 377* + 27 327* 3274 3274 + 14 317* 31M JIM and booed at a meeting caHed!lsh,ncnt without * le#*! last night by UMW District 4' 3- Guideposts are not com-Preskient John Cassidy at which'effective, was road to them the entire con-j * * '■ ■ tract proposed by the UMW and] Businessmen, union leaders *®ruity to the front because the hinge pillar is narrow in the line of sight but wide as it enters the cab “Air and hydraulic gauges are body. theft of |46 from her home. Pontiac Opti-Mrs. Rummage Sale, Friday and Saturday, April 15 and 16,9 a.m.-5 p.m. 358 Oakland, South of Wisner School. —Adv. Rummage Sale: Omega Mu Sigma, C.A'I. Bldg., Waterford. Sat 16 from 9 to 1 p.m. —Adv. Rummage Sale, Auburn Heights. Fire Hall, Sat., April 16,9-3. Y -Adv, Gain Auction: Saturday 4 p.m., 14 N. Saginaw. V —Adv, Rummage Sale. .Sat., April If from 8 a.m. to 1 pm. at The Congregational Church, E. Hur-—Adv. Two OCC Officials Will Present Paper Two Oakland Community College officials will present a paper tomorrow at a meeting of the National Society of Programmed Instruction in St. Louis. w ★ •# 'A Learner-Centered Instruction! Systems Approach” is the title of the paper to be presented by Walter J. Fightmas-tor, director of continuing education, and Alvin G. Ugekra, for * Successful« * lrtyw0mif development of GMC -Duck 4 most comf^ble poritton. j Coach'Division’s truck cabs for m dash instead of the toe board said his staff experimented with many different interior and exterior designs for more than two years before making the final selection. “In addition to the safety, comfort and convenience factors, other important considerations fa| development of the new 92-inch and 114-inch robs included performance characteristics and maintenance considerations,” he ndded. there is plenty of room for toe driver’s font” < ■ / HEADLIGHT DIMMER Flynn said the headlight dimmer switch was located in Ihto with, the hinge pillar so that It can serve as a foot guide when reaching for the Witch. The rob floor Is Det and uncluttered. that aggregate health business plained, is relatively high. The stock hyor^uuc GAUGES has acted quite poorly and has recently dropped to a l965-’66 low. This may or may not be due to Medicare, since the life insurance group as a whole has been one of the poorest acting in the entire list for ova- a year. I believe you. should not have all your investment in one company. I advise you to sell 1,000 shares, add 315,000 to yout savings a& a resem aL thisJ^urt^'v^tocte condition, stage of the market and invest * * *- the balance In Plough Inc.,| The new cab models have a Owens-Corning Fiberglass and lamp mounted in toe instrument Consolidated Foods. panel to provide light for both positioned in thO left portion of the panel” Flynn noted that aB electrical gauges in the new cabs utilize AC Spark Plug Divi-sion’s new “Afr Core” movement, which increases torque, teroitivity and accuracy. With these instruments, the I driver has a more accurate ac- Still another feature is the easy fntrance and exit made possible by the cab running boards and the wider angle door ford Motor Co. Mokes Area Man Executive Veep Q) ‘ Election of Robert Stevenson, the cab interior and the glove 740 Kennebec, Bloomfield Hills, would like your opin- compartment, he said. as an executive vice president FUSE BLOCK This lamp also provides light for the fuse block — conveniently located inside the glove box for easy accessibility: Other interior convenience features are adjustable deer-tag wheel and toe location of the hand brake. Aj Benguet is a speculative gold mining situation operating in the Philippine Islands. The stock has periodically had a big play on the slim hope Out the price of gold wiil. be raised. Recently it has been active on reports that it had bought claims ^lUp^indL^dn^”n«e,nant R«rnt*U vertical tion rights to a Japanese com-| pany. In addition to the usual risks involved In mining stocks,) * 0,¥,0#N%.0,l5?rf^ government regulation is a re- incrbasso* ***** *** draining factor. I would l«ve JgT Benguet to the long-shot pity- fimTr eiK "**%**Q H “The tilting steering wheel ar- of Ford Motor Go. was nounced today by Henry Ford II, chairman of the board. \ A vice president since 1964, Stevenson will be a nominee for election to the board of directors at the annual meeting May Tt order Roger Spetr’i 48-page Uveatmeut Guide aend 81-69 to Reger E. War, in cure ef The Pontiac Press, Bex Mil, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 19917. (Cafyrigkt, 19M) 77.8 M4 UM BOND AVERAGES _ • _ j wM||||MNi Font alio announced toe ad-•Y if Byer* Shall Sor- chlgon, public Ml* n» ivnvwing oeicrlbed good* will MM, tor cash at auction: mt Chovaila Mollku IDoor Sport Caupwoartaf jwmkai 4MVk imam. Tho undarilpnod rooorvoo tho right to Doted: April 13, IN* Notional Rank at Detrol Mt Main St root MfchMm L J. BAILEY Mletant CaaM* . April, IS, IN unnij viuv/ii — oci vivc ivi i —* _ . * , j« # - Mrs. Charles A. (Beulah) Kitch- i 78 nf 120 Flnmnre will ife 400 Children throughout i ^ j-* r ^ neral Home. Burial will be\in ®ecen*er|l^» ara°a°|1 Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. h»us‘decision of the General Mrs. Kitchen 'died yesterday |Asscmb»y-after a abort illness. She was a member of the Senior Citizens Club eg Lake Orion. , traffic between Dublin and the the office of U.S. Rep. William northern capital of Belfast wiUjD. Ford D-Mich. sssisssan **>*******1 Satuid^ and Su^ni^it ■iag8ured by DiStefano’s drift move without precedent in the ^ ta 7Brooklyn ,Ry‘it JT;! Mid. weight IOC hair-long- -----*^- —■ —1- ‘)(** aye*. m, wtight i John Millar MIS T6 mV PRIENDR ANO FELLOW cltlian*. 'Monday J* election day. II le tbna tar a change. Far a mar* iwnecretlc form rf city rvl*. M»'a rid Pontiac $ Taylor and ' Taylor failed la: 1. Failed to demonItrott leadership and ambition a* Mayor. S. PelMd .t* take action on dawn- 3. Ballad M after cltlian* dawntewn far* gf fireman __ Hudaon Failed to: 1. Felled M euppert tM Mtarait of clibWW I" hie are*. I. Failed to correct railroad craee-> Ing cangeation. '.. 3. Palhdto luppprt *b*l*m*nt of TM* . *dv*rt5*m*iS *** prepared, mailed and paid far by Mlk* Spak V Kemp Street ' PWOdc, Michigan wibt - ita per cent Human heir. tafVl and up. Hauee af wja. TW NT Parry. POUND: BEAGLE, MALE, BLACK, whlta and tan, aboul iW-l yr*. •Id. vtclnrty af W. Columbia *#c- tlon. sss-iart. ^oUnD - imAll".6LaCk maLi Bog PS AdB3. found M. C, MFC. CO., LAKE ORION Fhona MY 2-3711 *1CTOME ^ ________ Sam, Inc. art looking Mr a rteentetlve Mr IM Pontla*. •—r, Ho should hay* *n *mtrlc»l and/ or mgehanlc*l kdswiwni; Draft •MamStand balwaan th* ega* af SSTwa gWW^^ghJggeh Srvjoafnln? cSnSr RSm 9 441*494 Mr intarvlow. / -- opportunity «i—-- ‘OrSFStarSf! Loborotory Tschnician Salary 15,795-14.79*. Educatlonel KcHpdund *Muid ktciudt coijaga l*v*l chemistry court**. Previous fib MpariMMI praMmd. Apply -P*r*onn*l, City Hall. 4SG WldM track Pr. Beat. Collection man wiTHuipili-eng* ta work in * credit union. Box 100.) , 'DIB DESIGNER AND PETAILfR r- with lamination and .S9kEf99BW* DISHWASHER WAtfhb. ANTED." MS A 9M C1I Ml AdIW. I___________ Ail MakIIs and tool r machinist*. Aga no ImR. Fsm, Mtchlna and Mtg., 4711 Dixie Hwy.i Drayton Ptatna, near Weiton BMd. DISHWASHERS. DAY AND NIGHT ___iSStfii. Reward. LOST—4 WALKER FOXHOUNDS an Mactdgy Lake Rd.. aoma with collar* and aoma without. OR 5-5441, er OR 4 GGal. LOSt; SCOTTY DOG. DlaCV. 9 yaara aid. Anawara to Cindy. 41 v-4377. 1749 “* 1--- ^ DESIGN EhlGINECR AM* M dorign, install and traukl* shoot metal fabricating aqwp. Ena, opportunity wHt) pragraail** knd Tub* Dlv:, HJgtol* Man. Cp« Roch-«*tar, MtA. on-*47T ELEVATOR OPERATOR Dependable retired gentlemen, good haalth, 3 M 11 SmT PM»»-llec O»toopethlc Hoepltal. 339-7371, ext. 30. ‘ ELECTRICAL DESIGNER and DRAFTSMAN jpntHgn with Mtebllshed Cali D. Martin, 349-5210 ROAD COMMISSION JTNI m* CIVIL RIGHTS law sBbnHilK with *C S R T A I H RXCBPTIOHS. SjOISCRIMIHATION BB->:CAUSfl OF SIX. SINCB »HM OCCUPATIONS ARI S CGNSIDRRRD MORR AT-S TRACTIVI TO PBXSMS OP ONR sax THAN THB ■5: OTHER, ADVERTISE-I ENTS AM P1ACHO 43S Oeklend Aye. 3 MEN ACQUAINTED WITH LOCKE mow*re, UL 1-1491 after « eve- ■ MONTHLY GUARANTEBO SALARY PLUS MNWAHO CO. CAR Par RIrM Man „ tawAS*?' AndereMtSaMe, 1443 S. TaMgraph. AUTO SALESMAN NEW OR USED, A PART-TIME JOB S married man, 31-34, ta wort 4 Mura par avenlna. Call <74-3333. 3 p.m.-; p.m. ttnlfM. $200 PER MONTH ATTENTION STUDENTS Wa hare soma openings far high school or coltaga students to work Each afternoon approximdttly 5 hours storting at 12*95 p.m. Must bo 16 to 19 years of ag«. Apply th Parson to* BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS B^YiwAtgW.^DETRPit FREE for ,mw^n^t'route**'nfl|mirSSet* UeM^areelr CMpI SS73 mp3 SRICK LAVEIM StEAOY wMR, . aaad—A ow aaiB. . .. ■ kltlCK LAYERS WANTED. ItfOU- “CARFENtejli AND HEIpERL afv 09* MD^ftSc Sswogs Plont Opsrotors EXPERIENCEO ROOFERS, INiX-perlenced bundle carrier*, must M 1 IS year*. Ft i-Hdl EXPERIENCED TRACER LATHE EXPEhlENCED GARAGE BUILD-*a»ty"MH.ttdinpwfMr.Ely*. ** exferUncep Upholsterers *"d trimmer*, top wage*, paid >., and vacation*. FE LOSS*. OR EXPERIENCED^^ItAL^ lUrtAtlj yM^^Var'mpiiinLMf MT end llubt m Must be e* f. 4*3-9984. FIXTURE builders PiM Helldey^Vacatiwi* and tkw Croat PROGRESSIVE WELDERS *13 OAKLAND (US-W) PONTIAC FE 4-9518 GUARDS L part Hm*. SI .45 M 91 Af M 7-7134. . Galley-Broiler Experienced or unexperienced. Wa win Irate. Far iFWWiFiiRBt| plica In Pentlac arae. Cema in paraan. Mr. Steak 2299 Elizabeth Lake Road ■ J.IX. afacirlcal _____[required. GemceElectric CO- 1313 N. Crook* Rd., Clewten. OAS STATION ATTENDAltt AND 3-4133. Pom Rembier, SMt Cam- , HaS%^ ATto*"tl'n^fcgUWTIW Ing eervlcd man wHh tame in- ea ahs-' JgWfeSjSfiSsi GUARDI BLUE UNIFORM AND ------------^-htV TOOTS- ‘“"jl nSAN. 30B k R. 4BOOO No physical deMcta. Lang Good pay, usually «1J0-*1* R^By .fefiS® ******** ♦ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIPAYt APRIL If, I960 D—• c5SKBW‘Q3,nFl Bridgeport MW. L0«Mat m N. Cr«*i Rd.. da I IMMEDIATE' OPENINGS 'in Tin Pontiac and Royal Oak ortas - \ ton - LINEMEN and INSTALLERS America's soundist industry offirs you study work, now lino, year in - yoar out, NOT JUST IN "BOOM" PERIODS. High School Education Required ENJOY GOOD PAY • N«Ni higher starting salary • On-th#-|ob training at full -pay • Pan vacation and holiday, • Group haalth and madlcsl feu EXPERIENCE NOT NECESSARY Jut Mochonical or Eiactricol Background Hoipful APPLY IN PERSONi Between l:J0 a.m. and l:W p.m at 1341 Cau Avanua, Datralt. OPENi Saturday, April 16, 8>30 a.m. to 5t00 p.m. at tho Pontiac 6arago, 90 Laki Strut, Pontiac OPEN SAT., APRIL 16 FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE MICHIGAN BELL l to Part Ik arvlaat.____ i l Stop*. Laborer! ' and wsktori. in uSkrm Macron# Operators willing to toafn. Naw factory, ml • MvanM low, Troy, between 14 and \» Mila off CaoDdga. Phono MACHINIST PraeMgn parti manufacturer, catad In Wallad taka, haa ti mad lata jMM|l tor mail operators. with too following < parlancoi. f ? ■ . E.D.M. MACHINING VERTICAL MULING | SURFACE GRINDING - . | jj®n - goed^wa %AIC0MATIC 275d W. Maplo »d. . An aoual opportunity amployar MAT Uli i^TTlifBWiqwie MANAGtR TrAINS...... 1 •fflBKnggyjj or/?roun■ Jw MACHINE BUILDERS amptoymant# good fringae. ACME MFG. CO/ MW laat» Mill Pd. MEN FOR RESTAURANT W 6 k I ltd*. Ploomflold..... M£N WANTED TO. WORK 6n of K m .AtMIf l waak part Mm*. 135-MM. d'Neil nlALTr MAf »INi tor axaartonead salesman. W* pact IfW wlaa to surpaa* all i A, Wlw- man agar r* PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION , CLERKS' Mu* ba High tchoal graduatai ar ba abi* to typa jg WPM. Apply ar land raiuma la SALARIID PBRSONNiL DEPT. Slanwaod Ava. at Kannott Rd. STAtioN ATTENDANTS AND MANAGERS •SSFEisMi® Niw, canfiaf au> camp"— — ■wafss*1 rniftta n aftWirmllfe I sHHSS?1 MMur r-- -- «nntri/^pi ,N SERVICE %aWfflrc«Ki CLERICALS Ifrt tlma. Union Laka Drug,4M* Coolay Laka Rd.. Unton Lika. EM KIM. DETAILERS DRAFTSMEN PROCESS AND TOOL ENGINEER MACHINE DESIGNER SSBIB 5STSmWaJ'W Permanent POSITION Far YOUNG MAN 'TWarn sas,™us —High School Education •Hovt Mechanical Ability -Agsi 18 to 25 yoors Good Opportunity—Excellent Working Conditions-Usual Employee Benefits. Apply in parson to BERT FALKNER - CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS - Afculuro ni» il—s ALUMINUM SIDINO — COMRIN- KAISER. ALCOA ALUMINUM SID-Ing, doer*, window*. Inataltad or daft yauraalt. Svpartor. M wood- 3 D CONSTRUCTION PARKING LOTS DRIVEWAYS Landtcaplne Prat Shaatrecklng, finishing, plaator id- -NS1L-. iowrtroaJIH^^ MAS GUTTSR CO. COMPLETE isvosfrsugblne service. Prta aah-m*toa.«7SdBM ASPHALT PAVING Tag Asphalt Paving PEtyOWAV jPOcULLMT tad new. Prgp a SAAKitM'rarr _.™ ^.-TWpruBin, driveway*. ASPHALT APPLICA-TORS ASSOC.. PE M4t4. JOHNSTONE WALL MPM* • m ss— ■■ » > - - MHMIltf MMII MZIVIM R. O.. SNYDER, ,FLOOR" FM M I CAP .... Camant work. Praa aattmatoa. SprlgflaM Building Co. MA HUB. -------------- nor. ms. Wi ■ oaraoa Co. OR S-M19. 2-CAR OARAGE. Ntt ADOmOHS ._ siwie AH Typos of RsmodoHng"- ________fmxrs no doom payment. GAM Construction Co. pg sin __________JCLING plums Carpsalry tsmn ...IStiff CarpXntRy, new AMB'MPXnL Free saHwtotoa. Bum.________ fABiNits, AACrSation room* L 0+asa. AoR cOASoaros ano ilV-tdH« MWlancaa. «JTpI WB. intrrIor pTtMitt; KtTCHiNi WORK, THOMP^. Eat. AAH Solta. MA HWI Nt i a i udii m m.*- nmani| jgrvicv A-l PLASTERING. EXP*RT PATCH AkROW PUWTOEIWB CO. RIAaIR ----------asi- —' Oy wall. iMAtrs GASOIL FURNACES. HEAT I DAY. H «atoa. AHA MIM-jMtP. 7 RETAIL PLUMRING ANO HEAT IIW Ml PPL V ...pair Parra and *—---- » Oakland Ava. GACKHOE, FRONT ENO LOADER, — - . sptmtiii jn *1 and camant. OR “*■ *•* rrr.* A*1 NIW, REROOPS-REPAIRS -Call deck. Savo tha lack. »»di». CLAR KSTON^JOOFIHO^CbMpAffY. Sraii*— I Ito BULLDOZING FINIS H GRADE. Tax Sorvke A-l COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, sodding, issdlne. grading, Brfkan Cone rata. ratatokM walla. Prat Eatlmataa. FE S4B1A WALL PAPER STBAMIL. RUG CLKANRR - POWER SAWS IM Jaatyn Ogan Sun. Pj 4 N TV TBCHNIClAh $ want's Radio and Appllanca.^Jnc, Sawd Grovel A Dirt Lakes traa Co., trimming Plantings - ramcvala - flraplKa wood. MS-1414. «7MHg, TREE TRIMMINO AND REMOVAL. Trodi ttoNl______ Trucks to Rent Ton gtekuna tVVTan IN TRUCKS — TRACTORS, m AND EQUIPMENT \ Dump Trucks — SdmMTrallgra Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Cd. n m A WOODWARD t PE 4-1442 aiBt PeEV Ekr wm PFRMANCNT POSITION You ,aro traa to ga to work I mddlatoty it you fera ovar 21, yau art not afraid at work, „ read amiraiiatt an aMatliinity SUeWSTpar waak. Phono FE Witt, ____________ PRODUCTION GRINDER HARDING OPERATOR . TOOL LATHE HAND r JANITOR TOOL CRIB ATTENDANT WrnSirs andovortlmo. PUtt-PUTT GOLF. MANAGER •toa and mtnatt Drayton ar Sauthflald Couraa. taw ■Hi plus bonus. Apply Chuck. ----Malt Hwy.. Watorford. Mich. PRODUCTION WORKERS dlao Millwrights Electricians Pipefitters Maintenance Welders Machine Repair Toolmakers rt Corporation, c, Mkh. ' REAL ESTATE SALES S4M TO IMW PER MO. OUARANTCCD tain to tJMtt yaarly- Man or -------a card la rSF Restaurant Asst. Manager tpod aarvka. pood ratogr torrecL tut • trantpbrtSton!^ Join a company rwSm day-Frlday. KIM AWrliltgTar Ctorkatan, IBM Dtada Hary. tost I. atMtt * : SiS ----S0FWBT SU^emTi LM»Xr Sand rtauma to DETROIT BROACH AND MACHINE CO. ItuHWEoi'vision VM I. Rachaaiar Rd. RachtaNr, Mich, ar Can MI-MU, ait. tat ■ TEACHERS Start avanlnea now, work toll tlma totranar.^agty 7-3:00 earn. 42tao telephon’i JpWijr aMB. ply Oanarai Tdaphona Co. 217 Union Stroot, Milford, Midi. Mgilil Opporiunlty amployor Turret Lathe Operatori . NANO ANO AUTOMATIC DrHI Press Operators Help WoMtoiliEwlo jIBD WOMAN, |U—b-J UMtornDm o' Of I____ woj^N ,09ii,.~inRSr:ijwiP Si CUSTOMER Dining Room Waitresses If .you tovo chlldran and B*nUlnat an lay WtckS wilff lha public, w will tram yau tar dMnE raw waltraaaaa. Day and nlSbt ahlfl. avallabla. Top. wagoa and tips. Paid Inturanca, paid vacation and holldayi. Apphi^|n pK»on only. WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK RD DOMESTIC, GENERAL HOUSE-work, Tuaaday, t hnuri. awn Inn. porlatlon. att-IOM. EMERGENCY ROOM' CtlfK. Soma axnarlanea naoaaaarv. Call " jfSVn SaSif4 wsmSm Rfw "tiT. tar. IGpl|i i p.m. to 2 ar NRkM ] III atora tor wo- ramM R«»taurant, mg N. Rtchai Rd., Rochaator. Ftt l^^iRiRNCib" GIRL FOR diN- Experii Pull tlma. Apply In __... A Counfry Inn, wf S. Taltaraph. experienced silk finisher. banaflta. Ward- TRUCK DRIVERS YARD MEN Pravtoua bxparlanca prttorabto -Surka Lumbar c*. i*1*" .JJSEB&i EXPERIENCED ALES Oikli, - —“ml op-Bobattc TELEVItiON TECHNICIANS RCA EXPERIENCED WAITRESS—oAlLL cooking, aftornaons. CailOR 3Mtt. EXPERIENCED BAR WAlfRBSi. • KhooHne, ------ - racMtenaC parlancad technicians will mntRfjMjtrtoa vent RCA offera an outstanding banaflt cal tnauranca plan t through Friday ■ b to f p m. and Saturday-» gjn. to S pin. • PONTIAC BRANCH 1711 fniiVitti Lk. Rd., Pontiac RCA SERVICE CO. A DIVISION OP _ RADIO CORP..OF AMERICA ..A* wgitftw Jaiv wt. Hnm vicinity at Caas Laka. «dB^7H. iMeiiieee itrvlcE S82m Credit AMeers OUT AID. INC. m RMM GLEG. YOUNO WOMIN OVER IS, PULL «ei>LR«19? >W*r aWt IPRING CLEAN-UP, PLOWER malntananca. lawn CRMrw BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive _ t4 — Nag. S7.ML sia.ta - ail. nETROtTEMOO WlyKa|_ whit yau My afftat as. Your homo N. MM MMwr ax-c^t^Mneeaea. Gaarga 1. Lvto. as LONG FORM PRlPARJp. MlffBilfLV “WOMAN FOR^ULL charga hauadklipmi. Must llva In. matortTmim. parson. Aaaocldtod Truck (mat, M Franklin Rd. NIGHT COOK, ALSO DISHWASHER. to StogiW JMMWeWrt RlWrtilHH msnt. Ctoaad Sundays {£?’!»» nSUSS "* CouWry COOKS, DISH WASHERS, WAIT- iniy 1737 5. ywyapn._____j rMMS KUt airi., aDD|v in Btraon: URSES AIDE-MATURED LADY.i Machus Resturanl, IM W. Maple. NURSES ATTENTION. LOCATED autHis of MtK convalaacant home torn., ftp smifl jhlklraiv no oafs, information MB U liM. -WIUTCaWb FOR 2 OR XILDBRLY s&urajr sstssB NURSES AIDES : Will train, attameon shift. EM 3-4123 tar appointment. N0K|df'L.ICENIEO FOR GRN-tral duty In^Royal Oak area. Part NdUfeS AIDE AND reli4p~cd6k tor amall nursing home, day mtt. S7WMI. ■£- EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER. Cooklna and gtnaral, Llva M. Prival* room. Ml 4-1117. full Time help, "PfeMALft, must have high schaol aducatlon, and qualify an accuracy tool. S day weak, guarantied 31 hr*. Ap- ply Tut*, through Thurs. only, * to 11 *.m. and! tod Mi. |J! Krasga Co., Mirada MH* Shopping Cantor. taurant. Experienced pratorrad. Immadtota opening. Call Mr. Griffin batwaan f-5 pjn. Ml 4 MBS. FULLY EXPERIENCED DiktAL asalstant tor pragwslvp. efttoa, with unlimited opportunity. Top pay. Call MtehaalPrands, 33P4UL PENSIONED WOMAN, ROOM AND beard tor part tktM child gang tip vary light dutlas, small wagg, MM Saaoakn, 4734094. ;| ■ MANAGE M€TT*L, — •riij mm a month Blue 1 x TRAINEES ! Manufactwsr tacatod In Walled, SirSSsrfe! No exp, nacaasary tor tap will vaOTiSk 'pSducts'| mi W. Maple Rd. with the latest ‘---------* “* — work ranges f trucks Wlm I contKt Hartsy fion. 15-3 irrad. Stas y-jrrm________. . MreeiMMi SSi”! k middle-aged woman tb LiVi ATTENTION UN's AND LRN's Openings. Call 121-7154 AU. PURPOSE GIRL FOR MAM ssrWrdWu&r- i^nSF^^TOTQroRngwN ton-Ctaikaton__________ — tlon. Call after 5:30, 4742H7. IaIV ‘.IlfTI*, 'Umhi House. EAR AND FOOO WAITREUk l mKiRL'Mr'Hn, ire S days.esm beautician, excellent op-imjiilirr tSSSmMan, BUS GIRL A Dept. Manager We have a career opportunity -for a mature woman who has supor-vised a retail department in fash-la n accessories, lingerie, children's wear, ladies ready-to-wear or related lines^-Salary plus incentive. Excellent company benefits. Apply^in person Or send, complete resUhit to Personnel Manager aft Montgomery Ward 409 N. TELEGRAPH RD. Pontiac Mali GikdRAL OFFICE HKLP. -PHONE SSWUMKtKr1" dlAL ro AsSist hairdresser care tor I schaol aged cMMnn — Write PimHac PraaaTwK «4> refined woman to live in. Mora tor hama than wages. . Raf- arsl duty to Repel Oik 2 nights a waak. Good pay working conditions. CMt S41J14 PEPENDAeLE RAEV i child, days, apply at 73 SALESLADIES Experienced to baftar ready la FairHmi or ,LowFpMm » SALESLADY POR WtHTIAC. MALL Mull TruIN n AA MOVING experience naoissaryT Caii "tor am *#*> pomtmant. SttSHS. — jaad CLEANING WOMAN To grapara ■ mtrmmm tar pancy. FulFtlma, aarmanant Bans. Soma iifirtoiti nacas—.. Start JMM> -Ijbmadiaiaii. P. E. gaanyiTKx. HWa.Apartment and iMOmK^Uw-’ Thurt- :rom 3 to »- Sat. momln ___.___pgr mmr 3M-2W1 er EH7N SALESLADY. VfORK and shampoo, no aNMiMR.'JM S. Woodward, Birmingham. M445I3 GI*L TO GABY SIT IN MY HOME. days, yfcblffy 1-3955 attar -before 4 p.m. nap 111 id with work. Need 1 i "me to taka < i aas toned I i. S2-M par b FOR A LADY WtMl ■■Qlimant the family • may ba oyer 35 year* I to ba trotoN* — —*—nt. Tnt Pontl nd sea ielf" your W Miller, SHIRT FINISHER NEEDED FOR Hi touindry depertment. Inc. Ing conditions with new aqtop-I. OBI Cleaners. S79 E. Pike LAUNORY WORKERS FOR DAYS ar attornaawa. Pravtoua aw. desirable but nat nacessary. Custom Service Latoidry, HMf k. A^------- Rd., Birmingham. Ml 40225. mmmrm FACTORY work DRILL PRtne - Tapping m totwa writ, aswartonca _ r^,__ .^PK’ymant. all totfto. Call Mill JOMI Mtwun 1-4 IBaMKa LI uSv UNb*fc'li, out*O^S4154U LlVj IN. 1 _ptlLD. GENERAL MILLINERY Saleswoman FOR PART TIME HOURS ao hats and wautd ilka to «all wlga and hatrgtocaa. TBL-HURON » Winkelman’s SECRETARY Wt Hava on opening for an ax-paritnead secre-tary, shorthand halpfvl, but not k necessary. Good salary far tha right parson, ax-cedent company banafits. Apply in person bt Personnel department, daily 9t30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Montgomery Ward 409 N. TELEGRAPH RD. Pontiac Mall i sales pgapto to follow tstabfWtad Kcounts. All > kgnattj, totk ----------------d tomdaya —- ■ vbcatisn, Salary attrocm*. plus cenunlsslon, For pbnanal in-tsrvlew, totoptllbS: Mr. R. #■ Mc-Crecksr atPE 54111. RCA SERVICE CO. '< 'A DIVISION OF RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA 2711 ifgalaili Lafco Rd. m tRudl OwartoPRy Emplaytr SALESLADY Part-tlnw, ready to wbar e ence pratfrrad, many dnr -c ^ hr a Clothes, * TEMPORARY Of PICR^tOBS-TypMi G ST “ ' y shift, M4 p.m« WAITRESSES. SATURDAY NIGHTS. Aaafr M- ijarajp attar 4. Doll's ... 5TJ. c?,f WAITRESS, In5. | _ Ll PenMMMR. MA MITT. WAITRESS ‘ * ' "" SMrffi WAITRESSES 21 AND OVER. MUST *«r&jsjals WAITRESSES Dining Room and CaH) Pad ar mMtraa. Puli vacations ItomEiMlilin. AeMt baur ana (Hr jm|mMto mPy Ip pawn. BIG BOY RKSTAURANT WANT BLOCRLY WOMAH~Vyi1 safclyHErs eaantoG, mea raam Mr ENG M «. 452 7291 Wonted ManorWomai\ ’> Oft MOTOR ROUTE; ■ ' , IN ■Vt.ci ^ Sbuthflcjd Farmi: at Once Apply ta Mr. Stitr PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPT. tYPIS :on ■ravtoui sxperlsnce In hast doctor's dHlca completing In REAL ESTATE APPRAISERS ^RK-R^ALnrrOrmlS! Plains, atomy at leads and floor tbna. ctoaad Sundays. Do nat MMy unless bpgraatod m . sttWI yadrty ar more. SALESLADIES Pull tlma and part tlma adiad. uto^^mlniiham nt shoe, ID light HAULjtra^ pmrij|i»rigiff ______ _____JNGy' RUNS WANTED jtXTBRIOR AND INTEy Work WtEted FetMle bin to ran. IRONINGS 'AND ALTERATIONS dene In my I IRONINGS. ONE DAY SIRVICR LADY DESUtdS IRONING ---sifiiiTAlVVfrAYt— |AUTt BOB'S VAN SERVICE ----16 STORAGi 3a* BS«rK M Wfc *iwt >iraT.{gg. TfiSKiaas MGWS1. Ml—373 ■■----H.'-Sj W-. «- M svaniea nuusenoia eeu ev cash POE FURNITURE ANO Ato Bit Auction R 4 OLD FASHIONED amm WANTED—2 OR 4 OLD PASHIOI CRMM irmTi cSr hWCH fAr houMYrAILIIT. K2S? »t»)n|m« .«»»<' *lnk< west aadton af P__ ausa.S4&t' _b"e'6room' iInfuRnishK l>bV WlTti 2 CHILDREN. OES-parataly needs SGadraam house. Will pay SSI ar CM a month. 325- MiAL MAN NEEDS 3-home, furnished pratorrad. ____it Ik Press Box U. ^p£ ;b-|sin#s 2 g^i^P^pS?"^ WORKING COUPLE, TEEN-age son, 9-yr.-old daughter, desire 3-bed room unfurnished home in Independence Twp. References given. Home owner care. * Call OR 34992 after 6 p.m. 5y. Ry 1X?%1 k HOME ________ TamisMe e Clean mg aSk No er1-— ply to Port Ik Press Re 1 TO 50 WARREN STOUT, Realtor n^ttiUMMligu nuui MULTlPL^t^TlHO SERVtCR P—IO jSij ALL CAM II MINUTES •nm IMM hi payments or in . ly torectoaur*. Agam. m-mi ALL CASH YORK EXPANDING COMPANY NEEDS PftOPBBTY NOW IN DRAYTON j PLAINS, WATGRPORD, ANp lOR-ROUNOING AREAS, PROMPT. MO „ OBLIGATION APPRAISERS. WE BUY OUTRIGHT, NO PERI, NO UlTINO. FOR FURTHER DETAILS OF OUR UN DUE GUAR- THE PONTIAC PlLESS. JHnUY, APRIL 13, I98g OFFICE SPACE TO RENT OR kteM. Nw bulWng. V* ml. eP of Pontiac Airport on MM. Fr CHANDLER HEATING CO. qm itfNnur por RENt •moll shopping ontor. CM To Bateman or Jack Ralph at I mw;_____________________ AREAS, PROMPT, NO AUBURN HEIGHTS, II S. NUIR-„~isn...aa —3 rol Rd., MxM.mw building, npw contor. Mo of parttlna area. (ary-tea typo buelnpeereqrired In ana. -----—.J UNMIS . ANTRED SALES PLAN C . OK 40813 ' ALL CASH OR S-SM7. •V 6WNSR: MS* SQUADS FOOT living ana. with 3Vy bathe * straferd Knaiit, Rochester ana it kitanatap A tor appaintinanl OL 14773. nuts Ownar movlni CAPAC, ^MODERN R 4 IC i natural Nnptaca, baths, tuli bs» manta, 3 car brkfc gar ago on i.3 acre*.^ Priced to aML Roehetlar, CABIN, I____.. Cranberry Lain SkTSti Tad McCullough Sr. armreaany 1 5143 Cass-E Ilia bath Laka Rd 1 Rlyar. Trade thto and cash lar t or s bidrarn homa with take Bridgaa 434-3100. 434-377 m, tana foyar and fermal din am, knchan with man man i a anting spaca. Family room aR aa rac. roam, m Who, I ir gar ago. Wat plastarad, Tt jopana windows. SI* pool. nrSm. mmmmt.______________ a m«5h.”ME Mot.ikii Contsmporciry Hum House Am. hnnttna and Nth Inn . __L. . V... 2.___ CASH BUYERS ^J»nw» analorm_ ELWOOO REALTY SSS-MtS J CASH 41 NOW'S LAND CONTRACTS — HOMES WRIGHT 1 Oakland Ava. FE S414I HAVE CASH BUYERS WAITING tar farms or acraaga. 40 acras or man within M mllas at Pon-• tlac. Mr. Lawla. k ; fil Roy O'Neil. Realtor 3520 Panttac Lk. Rd. -----IHHR4«M ! FAMILY INCOME ON NORTH Saginaw St. by ownar, 4124m after S.___________ I POSSIBLY 2 BEDROOM FRAME homo, completely newly fun. I Vi oarage, paved drive, let MkSSA no baaamant, OR 24(70. rBFDROdMS.'BASEMENT, ItTfiR-tonvllta, OA MilS. A. Sanders, ra.KWBaea. ——----------Zi 2 ACRES LAKE PRIVILEGES, Includes a flna mobile home 50x1* plua • S4xio add on, 2 car m- land, contract with S24M doi WARDEN _ 222-7W with mewar up, Mu* 1* a Converted from bam In 1 l HAROLD R. FRANKS, hdolty - HOME—INCOME Thk lovaty large 4 badnem la Immaculata Tnslda and aul fleere, wall decorated, fuH -manfT gas heat, garage. Carpeted . living ream. Bnpiaca. All updated and dwrmbto throughput, Cleat -schools and mopping Waited Lak Also attractive Steams unit at raa Only S2X7M. Shown by appoln mant only. Evsnstt Cummings, Realtor ON PARI ■ ^BHlLl^fH. OP IHJt. ■ g caun In AAA-1 condition. This krtek front rent* Mi t bad- rooms, t aa pa rate -*™1-== gas heat, carpatlr yffiaato laWaUtniltS,»»ar'PHA-Sank term* or assume extetlng mertgaga. (SI par month Includ-■ng taxaa and Insurance. YORK “ROCHESTER You will leva the sacHn— Bdrgaoua hilltop homa on 12 iconic USSl dan, mm porch, utility roam, i car uttacmd girtte*. Acreage tains marly tlria Pina, Oak and treat. Shaiati by- appotntmant Far enmnlate UmmHm. gall 7524271. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP AREA -11 Mjgr f |td> aluminum aided ranch, 2 bedrooms, gas neat, •Ofcaaauma axlstlng mortgN YORK nsolxla Hsry- Orayton Plan GILES I Sail Nmseb *' ^ IRWIN OPEN fay. h* "frontage ~«T'Franklin Laka, artth rushing waterfall and rlvar through propafiy1, tennis court, t harsa stabla, play MuqA Bteim-flatd JtlHi^schwl dMrtct. Parted CLAWSON - 5 BEDROOM Older Homo, 2 bathe, dining rao baaamant. 2-car garage, on 77’xh lot. walk to schools and ahoppli WE TRADE LAKE ORlWi' i BEDROOM ranch, 415,500. Land aaMrtct. — 2-2772.________ LOTUS LAKE — I car " Wx REALTY ■ ITICA AREA. CHARMING 2 BEI room ranch, attached garaga, lari (amity ream with bulfrin aactlsn and TV, all birch.kltchan, Ian 100x300“ lot With fruit tries, carps Ing. 114,708, 7214*ai ’ Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-SILT RUSSELL YOUNG. Sfti W. HURON VON^ VETERANS AFTER 1955 Congratulations! You art new all glbte to purchase a hems with n. money down. You are Invited la visit our "Dtaptay if Hamat" the Mall, —T Immediate Possession 2- bedroom aluminum ranch, er »M,nd.r,WS^a?U,TWi%Tmi PRIVATE PARTY WOULD I POR YDUR iSoTty? VA, PHA, OR OTHER. FOE QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAOSTROM REALTOR, OR 4WM EVENINGS mum. VACANT LOTS AND. HOUSES Wamd fo fimm «nd watarto. Immediate cteaktg. REAL VALUE REALTY, 4247575, Mr. Pavla. We NEED NORTHERN MICHIGAN I BEDROOMS, CRAWL SPACE, S moves you In. S71 par MM It. Brooklyn, 4M-143I. BEDROOMS, Siam DOWN, NEW-ly decorated, gai hast, an Russell off Auburn. Full price 45750, 450 par me. Sava Aula. FI 5427S or FE 5-2277. 2-BEDROOM hunttep land, any alas scroops and Ska and rlvar tetk Hava Apartmtnti, FvrRishtd si Cell 22MML _ BEDROOMS. "MR. BIG," BASE-menf, built—your tel—Tt days. SHr 750, alaa 2 badroomi, basement, ■BMLmNW-4nRTY»-SI4im, Ally Realty ___________4724701 3 BEDROOMS t Ranch. Let 44x1 IP, .... nant, gaa heat, city atwers, I itraat. 414,735-10 par COM 74 NORTH SANFORD ■dreams. lVi story, gas baaamant. SIM moves you In. par manthTta-lSN, Villa chor-Ppwell Cam. 424-7211 or 147- DMT "0 DOWN" TO VETERANS - wide rl ISM aq. tt. of living area -2 .car garaga — Lower si Laka pnvlkiai lust across strati. TERRIFIC EUY AT pet. . J. L DAILY CO. EM 3-7114 DRAYTON PLAINS Mixed Neighborhood MOOEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-f AND SUNDAY WEST0WN REALTY FIRST IN VAH MIXED AREA BARGAIN Lovaty I bedroom bungalow, baa nwnt. automatic hear — .paw In the Mi 443-5002 cuiifaiy maWtelnad. Lam . .. let. beautifully landscas— . car garaga. S bedrooms, ivy baths, ■'“■tg ream, large living —-mad porch, outoMt pall aqua, breakfast arae.Fv appointmenY Ssl'f. pSTwsts TUCKER REALTY CO. DAILY 1 TO 7 SAT. AND SUN., 1 TO 6 Anytime by appointment TAYLOR MODEL Sts This OUTSTANDING VALUE 772P Highland Road I ml tea waal at city Altpert 3-BEDR00M TRI-LEVEL ALSO medroom. pull BASEMENT. ranch plans PRICED FROM $12,500 an your let er aura WE ACCEPT TgAOI-INS ——TAYLOR AGENCY Real Estate — Building — Insurance — Highland Road (M47) OR 44304 Ivan Inga call EM MW7 >en Sunday 2-5 LAI R0NT TWIN LAKES OPP BALDWIN . home, bull! In nice cupboards, range, ITnwijF quick sale. (ORTH INI MM JtTM and Hal. ____________ _ m car paraga. Cali ter turthar Information. NORTHERN HIGH ARIA - Brick Md akimlBWn, 2 Bttlmsmi floors, ill hMt. lull haa mealy tsndacipiid. Only M4I laka over payments. GILES REALTY CO. II Baldwin >PR 54173 MULtrPLE LISTING SERVICE pat haat, twa car paraOa. Rtc-raatlon roam In basamant. Can an with breakfast nook. Pull xnsfaKtXr- m*ny John K. Irwin Val-U-Way^^^ tt WEST SUBURBAN TWO bedroom bungalow, msm. Kitchen and dbtibg Utility ream. Hardwood floei HA Mat. Gamga. Terms. NORTH (IDE Twa bedroom bungalow, I f roam. Kltchan and utlHty ____ Oil haat. Hardwood floors. Only (B..JISTN lb 43300 doi WRIGHT REALTY 3*3 Oakland Ava. FB >4141 1 ROOMS AND BATH. COUPLE : only. 472-1777. 2 ROOMS, 2 ADULTS, S3S; COUPLE W, SM P E S4>Pt IATH, MS W____ . 41 .Auguste. I ROOMS OP FURNITURE COM- BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LEVEL, lW bath, S car attached gar~ large lot, carpeting, family it Golf Manor, SM.75D. 343-7837. _. This house It stall kept .... __ 30W garaga. Prlcadto tall, 111.- AL PAULY 45ia Divia Hwy., rear EVEt. OR S-17M MODELS OPEN DAILY . . . 2 TO 6 OPEN SUNDAY ...2 TO 8 WEAVER H AT ROCHESTER 2 BEDROOM HOME having carpeting. gas haat, family ram, attached I car garaga, paved drive. |!3.m terms. SMALLER HOME IN TWE VILLAGE ROOMS UP FURNITURE COM- ___ _____________ SIX' * 441 RE$L ESTATE MM can *74-22t5, urn tor Mr. vyATEKpou^Z^ uuy o« LakH, * -am ranch, torga family k|— aluminum aiding, country ... on 1 ACRE PARCEL, close-price PIMM.. <1.100 down decorated^ I rooms' Attb iAtH. tHilft WlL-come, 435 par waik wtth_a jl» Inquire at ill 330-4054. AAcNIlSI, Auikt. MaIn fL6< cjujated^lvato. --------- PURNISttio' AND UNFURNISHED Admitem»FEBMSi ~ AylESEEtSe BlfErEhM 31 S ROOMS AND RATH, STOVE AND rmHpomtor, Mutts, 5144 Cooley Lahald. 4 ROOMS AND BATH, GARAGE. 22 CARLTON CT. 2 apartments. Incomt tIM mat Itr, MMd commercial. Fries mead ter quick salt with I down pnym«nt. Your Impact and appraisal Invited. Sat or caU Wm. B. Mitchell at- BREWER REAL ESTATE 74 E. Huron FI 4-5 FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $59 Mo. Excluding taxat and Inaurancd $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 2-BEDROOM HOME GAS heaY" ’ LARGE DINING ARIA WILL AOn FT ALL ^PLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCERS. I CREDIT PROR- comparabl* Mmd buttt by another Crest twa cut bulldlns through veluma purchases « material—and pa and the s< on to IM buyer. Your cBm a apadaua tri-Laval EUU - Colonial — 2 ^ or 4 bad rooms at only SM.IM (plus lot). Madalt on Airport Read between M-57 a~* wllllama^aka Read. RAY tPNEIL, REALTOR OPEN DAILY ANDSI AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENT MODEL OMN TyE|.jrHRU SUN. f it I AND 4:3# TO 4:30 FROM 1145 A MONTH IMWATKmLAKiRD. ttSmm. MORNINGS *734427 BLOOMFIELD HILLS WILUIWAY ESTATES — the ultimata In gracious living. Featuring: kltchan with tabJa apaca, alshwadwr, 14 Cu. tt, ratrlgaratar, stove. CiMril air candtttonRIg. covered porktog at no aitfra cost. Haat and hat water Included. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, 5200 par jND SAT. AND SUN R COME to 270 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN -REAL VALUIRIALTY For Imimdiats Action Coll FE 5-3676 626-9575 GAYLORD c \ 11 hSS: VACANT. 72 acral In Brandon ■“T- Township. 115,000 dOwn payment, . pood tend. - FIVE ACRES, 11 room home, tour txcdltent aoll,'’ small , . i Mat, 2 car Baraga. Priced to (ill. Terms. LowrincE W. Gaylord Broadway and Flint St. like Orton 4Y HR1 FE 04*71 HILL TOP CONTEMPORARY HOME LAKE ORION, 3 BEDROOM, BRICK ranch: 2 baths, family ram with fireplace In baaamant. Glass patio perch; 2 car Bnmge. Gaa haat, water softener and carat. On nyxiTS* fenced yard. MY ^lies. Model of Walton Blvd. on M-24. GLENN M. WARD Builder 4724224 ROSUTN - NRAR wb- Bas haat. 2 car tteraga, OPxWj’ let, extra law taxaa, only 27.700, Gl ZERO 0*4 ’ Down, or bank Lake Dr., test of Font. Call Ml 4QM7 MODERN 5 ROOM TERRACE stove, ratrlgarator, *135 ■aa Mar, 2421 jamaa K. blvd. ■ • FE 24P07 _______________ tlEW 2 BEDROOM GARDEN-TYPE AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA 2 bedroom brick, full baaamai large kltchan with lota of cabin —~j», 23 ft. carpeted living res i fireplace and picture wl . Finished stairway to fleer —far > mart bedrooms, n nation ram, t car garaga wl paved drive, chain linked torn ' On S beautifully landscaped____________ Y and redwood exterior with dance of lira window- *— rment of scenic views. < living ram and family room, mod’ ant kltchan. DaalgMd and custom built for Ihte particular setting. *34,500. Terms. REAGAN real Estate Opdyke 332415* BY OWNER. 5 ROOMS. 510,250. 473-1751 weekday* after 5:10 weekends m aeartmanfi. fi conditioning, sw I 4514000 or 451-31 mlngpooj. Cal^ room, itova, refrigerator carpeting, Hr conditioned, *130. Call Ml-0M4. Attar I PJn, SEMI-FURNISHED APARTMENT, 2 month. Saa caretaker at 115 Hen-daman Street or phone K. O. Hampstead, PE 4«2I4. Rem! Hegses, Firslshsi 39 S ROOM COTTAGE, 047 A MONTH, phte 125 daipMtt. I01M Dixie Hwy. 4254657. ____________■ bgeMoom, CHILDREN AL- S BEDROOMS NEAR AUBURN rs&t. Jn*SchooI-, .... HR . wvner. $54,700. By appolnt-A 4-7723. Phone Set., Sun., H0USESI HOUSES! ALL NEW S BEDROOM RANCHES TRI-LEVEIS__ 4 BEDROOM RANCHES COLONIALS SUBURBAN LIVING ill war Lots VILLA HOMES, INC. RED BARN VILLAGE NO. 1 Woof of M-24 butwsan Lake Or ... and Oxford behind Alban's Country * Modal phone 4MIS45 BEAUTIFUL 1 BEDROOM BRICK ____„ __________I, lanced yard and garage, nil mo., fill ae-curify. Across from Mali. r-N Pliistf. _______________ ReeI Rooms ^................42 * PLUS KITCH- BY OWNER, KEEGO HARBOR, bedroom, garage, tenet on C c tract 334-5547,_______ BY OWNER — PIONEER HlGH-lands. ivy story, 1 be dram frame fenced yard, large family kltcher >14,700. 33Q437I,_________________ BRAND SPANKING NEW Immediate possession alterdoting V with this lovely I bedroom trf level home. Located an a 75x290 wooded tot with canal frontage to Ieke12x21 tt. carpeted living m— family style kitchen with race lighting, ceramic tile bath _____ k bam. 12x21 tt. paiiated family gom with fireplace. ■ Gaa Mat, _ Ity water. Attached 2 car garage, k eautiful mitt fact pink brlS and n Ideal home. Pull price OtUUS. an IM Today and To-As Law Aa SMMI ' , . - MU Taka Commerce Rd. to S. Commerce, toft to Owngary, (t mr.. D'Lorah Building Co HIITER YORK WE GUY WE TRADE OR 441*3 OR 44101 4713 Dlxlo Hwy., Drayton PteRi* NEARLY NEW 3 BEDROOM BRICK saa* full btoomwt, fenced —• Baldwin, Mar now Ka ON THE WATER Indian Wooda Manor, TrMtvat. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, liy^rgeraga. OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO I P-M. 1765 DECKER RD. blocks N. of Pontiac --- 4k ranch with 2 bedrooms, largo Jalousie windows, Mg patio, large attached 2 car garage. Cyclone fenced, 104x114* tot. 11,100 dawn Dan Edmonds Realtor 325 Pontiac Trail, Waited Lk. • MA 4-4811 ORION TWP. Naaf I bedroom Mme «H B Ave. Speclout lot, gas haat. try kttdten, alum, sliding, at >1138..with only oik Reas, monthly gaymants. QUICK POSSESSION Nlea 1 bedroom hams near . __ >anf, large living k gaa haat, neatly . ---jn with dining all, sMP9 praiant awwar * morfgaga. vm wv r i ft STOUTS Brown Rtettara 4 RuHdare Sine* 1737 RAMBUNO RANCHER situated at a targe VfbadM lot Mar OAK LAND UNIVERSITY. This apt k ttrepteca^n TLearpated xa faalurea and an axcah location. *23400 wtth 0.1*7 PONTIAC TRAIL. Thto artlatlcally' decorated M'tovdl Mmd haa tour large bed rooms, a 24 tt. aaraated living room with a feeauNM brick fireplace and over V* df an acre SMALL FARM Located In tt» Mate-more area wNtt badutltuI retqng counfryalda. Large oM farm tfyta homa an Mira acres, Mtla ham* U|wJn bajlcally sound canG^i mant, ntw gaa furnace, aluminum storms and icreans ate., but need Interior daceralkid. 114. UE. ORION AREA. Cute three acraani, hot wotar heat an geed location. Stifle with Lss BrGwn, Rtaltor ?S.y,ntt - ALBERT J. RHODES, BROKER FE (-206 20 W. WOlM FR 5-6713 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE MILLER Best Buys Today . List With Schrom and Cm\ ths Van 111 JOSLVN AYE. FE 54471 ANIETT Near Wisnsr Stadium rSKlSJ^h^s ► AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. 3 Colonial Brick. ^alTbJSdWS, ^ter^B.HS.to2. W’-3 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. Thar. IX“dlXrSm'«r5r^t Inets, full baimt., ga> haaf phi* ,[W'more-Only 1144* on yaur WEST SURURRAN ACREAGE with II baamf maiBrirt car awaga kit terga work mop. Potential omlng houaa or now multiple issn Good Valu* — West Owner moved to Callfwnto. 1 bedroom ranch on tot 100x150, *] separate dining room, largt, cle- I m gtaiaad In hai* porch, t car aerate- Only SIMM wtth term*. Convenient — Ta Panttac Motor and Northern High, apactous 3 badreem ranch hams with 27 tt. lMng roam, -family kltchan with dMna area, MamMI, pH haat, looxioo lot, garden ipoce. Only tILMS with Lake Cottag# — ''-‘mvllle Recreation area, naat summer homa, comptotafy ilshtd. beautiful thadad tot, i privilege! [wet across afreet, r* for only *475* with easy np. SEE (hi* SMI $8,500- Tetel prtea anJhte tora 5 ream home now wlsner School with separata dining room, M*amant, pas Mat, paved- street, city water and aawtr. Terms available. Warren Stout Rtaltor I. Till I P.M. ,390! WE BUILD . ■ cabinet nitty In at naat; working man, rw dr taker. 3 DOUBLE OCCUPANCY, i taidk. Mate r~— —— twted,. TV. *■ DOUBLE ROOM. PRIVATE in- tepnea. 14* Itate 9t. A. Johnson & Sons, Rsaltors HAYDEN 1704 S. TELEGRAPH immediate possession, now FE 4-2533 L NEAR M.S.U.O . “ Cod. Alum. Ndht|. . _____________ Won room wtth fireplace. Gas Mat - -------- ' tenc»d*m£*%nTO** W l#,*“ ttd, IV* cw garaga, ^ ittd. mao*, ate-uu, BEST 0FFERI QUICK SALE, 3 BEDROOM HOME with iv* car Bbragt, (79* ' Take aver peymenti. ini MEN ONLY AND UNFUR-■(■RHB S nCaTgBnIRal iLJWL,“a- 5- ItaSvED IMMEDIATELY. Brand mw atetartor (Mint, in-ctodea bath and kttchwi fix-turaa. If* a real bargain ... sSe^F^MWL Bxt. J35.Mr- I Mdr|iwv carattdc ttta ka« tea, gijte dttdtar an om cava ruin and decorating, mant dMdad tar rec. ra* pR Ute priritljii. i tttr MUR. 243-3129. Hanr J. C HAYDEN, Realtor 343-4444 1*735 Mlghtond Rd. (M9 PLACE A PRESS WANT AD- Phone 332-8181 PONTIAC AREA - ON STANLEY STREET, 3 bedroom ranch, only . Tv* yaari old, tell baser—1 gas Mat, largo kltchan, i extras, asking S134M, as: existing mortgage with I down. *70 month lndudtan,f and Inauranct. Make yaur YORK IR 44343 Plaint 4713 DIxto Hwy., Drayton PONTIAC LAKE FR0NT 3 bedroom, modem cottag*. 1 extra tot, 125* frontage. Only 11145*. (. L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR NO Discount Trade HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP usf aft MM. Older Mme with e droom down and 1 up, llr smtty IMttMWt basamanf. nl over lock ing L Inside dud * wooded tot, |WK xnm rear yard, awall tor IM kid: •t only *17,500. W1I arre AUBURN HEIGHTS SiSrW5SS.*5X nice living ream with a*pa< Ing ream. Full tliwniftt, a air hmm. IV* car garpgi Brick Tri-Level Custom buttt 3 bedroom_ near Silver Lake Golf Course. Carpeted Living room ttreitoB*. > bedrooms, < k batti, plus B hair Overs Ira att. 2 car g Largt. professionally scaped tot. *31.750, tern- J WE WILL' TRADE J Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings A Bunder* 1-4 :FE 8-04661 RAEBURN AT S. MARSHALL Near Murphy Park. Taka your •..scream add ns dsw«v atatr-Ithad attic, tell Pud Bauman*. 1 car ga-, extra tot, ante (4N - sauiJdefs-wyatt *4 AUBURN INCL. BUN. PI WATERFORD VRUGE V LAKE FRONT LOT McCullough realty LAKE PRIVILEGES Sharp I ream toagJRL _ land Lak*. Large carpeted living MODELS OPEN DAILY 2 to 6 OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 8 cttrr“WteU Subdivision ter ftinif jiirired dot- ar^rSrS Ri DORRIS URO DOWN TO QUAUPIED 4 on Rite MmI S Bidream homo tu "Buzz" Bateman Says SOLD - SOU) - SOLD by BATEMAN EVERYWHERE YOU GO NO. IS G.I. TERMS ONLY CLOSING COSTS needed tor this substantial 3-b*droom, dost to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Basamant, nearly ntw gas turnac* and X •'»' "»*< ON’the WATER ACCESS TO SYLVAN LAKE, With 101 tt. Of wlllow-shadod w.,..-tront wtth 14x30' B*|liwq**- Cantemporary style, lust 11 years old. Larga living ram, flraeteo* aaparate dMna ram and attachad a j SWIMMING wwt mu iwt froot/W-NvfI on ^ *jS»te"boaSr,wHh' pan!nSrta |uftC^CMt much oesired ir assumption of axtalteg LOCATION: Schools, shopping and ream far everyone I__ ■■M —her buttt In Ite* teTyMkbtePonttac Estates. Largt srett SSI TOWSlfe. * ** **** good toctttttn on dotd and terete. NVanfhly pdymonta of *42 which In- duitea taata and bteurancB. APARTMENT HOUSE. Exctetont tgtef 88 tocteNn jjr ftto It tom AS LOW AS (11,75* 0 O'Noil, Rtaltor ifwNacllc.jM. Jpan 9 ts f OR 4-2222 MLS FE 44S76 MODEL. HOMES i your to*. A type and price tar ava ryot .. _k ana aluminum, tote-te extra teatwrea • many bulW-tn*. ULTRA HOMES SUB. OMb SAT, A SUH., S4 u Guurgg&srvh.ma&Sfm’M as-jnra - -w •. »* w. a: PONTIAC BATEMAN REALTY ROCHESTER FI 1-7161 M.L.S. Realtor 01 14S1I, 377 S. Talagroph Rd. 730 S. Rochester Rd. ife&iA THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. APRIL 13, IMG mmm ''BUD" fear Fisher Body OeeiEt RrgpErty _ ^ FLORIDA PROPERTY wSMB*** w- fmX»p *ss bss*r dS5 ■*« SB Rffijjfc1 flffiif1 'SSLg%i ” MeNorthirtiPemtepment Cat pony, Harrtton. Office on buitno g>jjW£M from Wltoon Bril- (MoniborCKImbor of Com-morao), tiAntwi frmmff i> 4VL ACRES form homo, i STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE M« *• Lopw*^ Lake Orton LoH-AtrutT^ I ■mis ■wWFj 'Iwgg^ *' payments of PI por mom Ideal Spot ftef your country huntej • 'iMw te tgitei ___l _____ teostten & Springfield TewruMo, btdroam* down.1 UP. mot «*r*p*. fjlSSIPj saGM* NICHOUE-HUDSON ASSOCIATES, INC 0 Ml. CtomoM M. FE 5-1201, AFTER 6 PJA. FI 44773 CLARK UKO PRIVILEGES - Price Ur duead lelllJOQ with epp. MM down and no doth- =n-COM lo Whlto Lot 2 bedroom bungalow room ond 2 onebMd mlnum tiding, otormo__ no^bBrevomont*'? tota'wlltnjl It. trontooo. Carpeting, -- ronso 0 dryor Included. POR YOUR ■(_ i ho vo mony to o DETAILS ON LIE Ml — Cuctomoro ■ J bedroom homos. CLARK RIAL ISTATE 1*61 W. HURON ST. RE S-IME FI 5-5140 or RE MM Multiple Listing Service TIMES S-BEDROOM • Aluminum sided ranch, full merit. Mod ilzed lo( wltl ^ otor. cSo $3jpmui M TO MS ACRE PARCELS -residential or oommordoT — Wi hove • MR selection of homo OEM for your consideration — mom lecoNone In Oakland, Genesee one Lapeer counties This Includes Mu front end lake prtriiosod lots. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE bs-miT* 10 ACREI !yps* bulldlno~sits. Op Said if sole , JE- Rood. Vk mile cost at Wild- mJg3mr» nKdratr—“ of tralli *nno_ toemtv Reel Eototo, F (BS WC hunting end Kalkaska, > O' CAN1 nice subdivision with privet* i privileges. *3300. JACK LOVELAND ld» w Rwfcwyi^ COAST ' TO COAST TRADES PKO. LIQUOR poor AtNM, grocery. Illnooo A tgtfprc* tste.Sem* ownsr s£*3S Stack. LAKE RRONT ARTS. . . S unfit plus S rooms tOr owner. Your hemp or other property accepted in trade. MONEY MAKER . . Well ostobllthod rootouront In BATEMAN COMME^RCIAly MPARTMENT IIMsMy to Lege II TJiZY By Kate Ounn For Sold MIiiiBmsew IP'ZS'J&S&T'rZ J. J. Joll, Realty W MOM “ LOANS . TO $1*000- To contoildoto HIM into one monthly goyniooi. Quick pnm with HOME & AUiO LOAN CO. k Rorry St. RR S41SI Oto » doltv. «0. Me tt LOANS TO $1,000 (Jlueltyep first ririt. Quick, Rte * FE 2-9026 to the number to coil oaklaRB TOanco. 303 Ron rise Mote bonk Bldg. *ito-te Site — S0Tt:2O toT. HOLLY ALUMINUM trailer, aall or swop tor ■ truck. Coll Joecy at :love F Ing, RE 5-3100, sorlos, will pay difference. OR - WM. toit CHRYSLER 300 • WITH Aik condWyjw. two ^1--------------fi work. FE 1-7173. > cor or PIS' _ ? ROE SALE OR TRADE FOR LAND. DIVING BOARDS r-TO'-ir ant T4; RACTORY OERRCTS' to PRICES . Mon Pool Supply Co. IE HWY. aw BALDWIN OROASONIC. BLEACHED Y ■MMeWomjiBtr. mBSl * SB9E DRAFT I NO Tl ME rWgt^V LQWREY ORQANS Storm — walnut com . w. Huron. v6 M6WTHI.>11 1 FWPOT imti iLECVRld Llditf RtkYURiirfSR Oil rooms, not designs; pull ■*—“ balloon*, stars. Esdrsom porches. II Jl. Irrsgulerts, soi Ewssrwr**- RE MM, -ICTRIC a(?Tm1nIX "I knew he was after my hometroHc the way he v plying me with chocolate milk shakes!” FOR BTY _ Lustre carpet 'cjponpr lKd ,pto trie stwn^&r^M. Hudson's Hon For the Finest in Top-Quolity Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD . RONTIAC MALL DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS use Lim — jA FREE Gallagher's Music . 3St~ . INSTRUMENT?ORKpLEASURi ^ "MMs&a: ™ Hammond spinet oraoiv used, walnut Olnlatl, modal L-IOtk levs many MS. TORL * ui____ It poll. CSMS1. LOWERY PIANOS ■ench provmcM console, b ul frultwood, COM, ftoor s i, substantial sovbwerme Itl XRTWV *@@%rsgza EQUIPPED FOR CORN WAGON HAVE ltM COM#T- SEDASTj L l SHINN REALTOR BEDROOM SIT, CMROMI 1ST, HAVE A 3-5 TON ROLLER. acres oiMnInE for the little a ■ strost, cammum rwsffss awsuffWijews isfp.r^.% iw ’■win With sninTP8 SEtir OOOO iLEAti j U S I N E S S FOR young or old. FE WWO. GOOD APPLEL .ORCHARb FOR —‘ Sole Neosefceld Pools H SEWING MACHINE AND VACUUM SlHnpr^MBmnidw* — to chooM from. Wo Euoraiims ye. .. r.,. 9 shop boforo you buy. Curls Ap-w...tAs Wllttomr — IRRiQt I sSJB.'T SSb. GARAGE DOORS ■aun^Ti&cS^ slzn. Gorago front romoj— Gallagher's Music TK,-' ‘ PEdSiS- 1710 S. Tologroph or QraiBraLoke R _ — Open Evas. 'HI Sot. 5:30 PM. 0 E. Pike. L OR TO MANAGE ot on Mil -opposlto i oo Applo-Und. lamps, shades or chant dWt. UTILITY TltAILER WITH LIGHTS, *msll slM (round. wvnw Terms. OM-itts. dsrsd walls, oos host, alu- offices, harbor shop, ole. SO’xIM’. ---CaiTRE WWt HAPPINESS____ 7 am, Pivsd streets. KENT Establlshsd In HIS ‘ W* WEST SIDE RANCH 3 bsdroam with aluminum sidi lot fronting an bioclitoBBid sir m cor attadwd garage, ho sharp as a pin folks, no w .when you mevt Into thn o only ItioM WO Wilt tit tho tor WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH 6P TIMES" Times Realty .syixm HiayAV. ** PARTRI ST “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" LAKESIDE VILLA !0 FOR ofc ^ __ .^fifVVcE W . cl Joes almost one p u ll T°HFE ^inte rlochen* WMbYu»l TINS l»°AN I^E/STbUSINEW FOR vi SnIPHw%L hTLAC^e"e°?.m« THE SUMMER. PURCHASE PRICE, SSAN. WRITE ROST OPPTCI BOX -saj aidMIUGHAM. MICH. MARINA7 ST. CUIR RIVER IN tt. frontage, 35,000 ig. R- L side storage. Machine ond point shop, other bultdln— •*- — for future tsponslor Box HI, AlOOnti, M —. manufacVurer EXRANDINO We Need Distributor n, |H; also Doberman Plnchtr id Gorman SboMord mtnoO. J oo. oM, housobroken. 0K> can bo Od loty Ntr —m ill 335-5107, BRONZC OR CHROMI OftlBTTR tala, BRAND NEW. Lares and —-■a' '■—^ irop-leat, roc _________, J end 7 pc. .. 534.05 and up. PEARSON'S RURNITURE as e. i I dRB USED AND REBUILT PORTABLE televisions lor Nh. Tubes ehoetod c tree. Floras Radio 5 Television n Service. 13 Myra, S3B4ES4, USED TV'S «MS end up 1 Used wringer wstbsr S30JH «. ^Huron *0d ER 535. OM STOVE, S35. RE- _ CAM OPERATED ZIG-ZAOOER rv. ei s. RE 5-PI Montgomery Wandt 3W ILp. gordsn tractor with cultivator and »«,(i«i,'R,ia.,3S: iiiii or Kfiy AnrioncBji fur-^mm coll after 7 p.m. 474- I lot, north of SiSRT prod leal sowing. Must sacrtflca 545.45 cash or S4JS monthly .. srci’sirsak'Sfta 2432. CERTIFIED SEWING CRN- — CHINA CABIliiT, «N| WESTINGHOU5E RERRIGERATOk , ■ ? „ rfe. "JnSof,, mS * loro* poTTom fTMnn ‘“Irti WITLHT Sole CMMi 64 BRIDESMAID DRESSES, SIZE It accessories. 435-0337. BlJS 6 A’LLE gi N A LENGTH .j ifttl dining room refrigerator, 535; stovt 1— |—— . 125; other Items ktoot for «#■ A *--- cheap. M.C. Llpperd, SSt H. --7V. _ ^ .... DINETTE SET, TABLE AND 4 airs, buffet and corner cabinet. ond, 5100. MA ddSTS. Ddi/BLE SINK, LIKE NEW. ■ Coll334-1147. DUNCAN HYRE50RA AND C6R- ED BARGAIN STORE rSW. Rico Mm Only i temp* .. Prom $ 2.1 435-1431 Guar. elec, rafriserator BE Your Credit Is Owd et Wymon*. EASY TEEMS____________RE MISS Atlguii ANTIQUE BRASS BED AND COUCH I wagon wk bIBIe HIGH SCENIC LOT H ZONED M»1 -r lot E Mloctlon of summer and sprin* sr<«j. a.?; seem ^miasRrvB HOMt AND S LOTS Near white. Lake with lake arhr i.“w* gjrgM-'WSWT ROXFORD STREET HOME Floyd Kant Inc., Rsaltor ngais^yisgr NORTH END CLARENCE C RIDGEWAY REALTOR B W. WALTON SIB 4104 MULTIPLE LIITINO SERVICE Suburban Homssltes t SKSmiBom end ptnoDng used oxtonslvoly h beauty mm easy dooniw. 3/tSfr!SWSm* frSd dm!m **** * PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE sss %aana.,«argura;k JOin** grists, PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" McNICHOLS AVE. BAR r Clean, dwra noUhhortiogd and woti 1 legmen's bar. EooutEl, furnlslH living guorttra. EOT Buy of your e IHoVonty 510.000 down. » MT. CLEMENS yorMngmon't bar framing oau. with no Ooad. Rentals shove poy g£gjwsra.% ROCHESTER AREA “%S6By St3sS least on largo building.JMmH MEN'S SUITS - SIZES 30, 40, 41. 37 Allison. FE 2-5510. WANTED CUE SCOUT UNIFORM * g^jrevr^MLrwr^ ^Yllt AM ITO'. -- stove. FE B4006. dlttomStO. PLUMBING SAR0AIN3. ' K vpibet I mna I PLUMBING i!NDavlson, 2 , .3 » X 1S -OR 3-0747. PLAYER PIANO lc Grand with Due1 ■ A r .plays vury wall w**h s: on. Samp rolls Included. MORRIS MUSK 14 S. Tologroph Across from Tot-Huron PE 3dS47 SAVE ON NEW PIANOS p. USED ONLY ONCE AT THE I MICHIGAN BAND AND OR- « CHESTRA FESTIVAL Pricti Greatly Raducgd , • Pmm $445 Low, Easy Tgrms GRINNELL'S EAGLE PUP, A4ALE FREE. PAY tor advertising. 334-002. 052-4740 or 051-0000- _ COLLIES-POODLES ora ana n agryko. Elm Try^ClubV>C* rSwA~ooi DLB SUPPLIES 2 OP^L^ f , itfiifvrts - m______J pupa. PE Adi20- REGISTERED 'TOY P6k TgREjlii ■ araarwi nLVkn and' elacIc GARAGE SALE. ---------. toys, epwbig equipment, olpdrlc hot wo tor hooter, noortmord refrigerator, furniture, ftreplace and/ hunt.olootrle1--- ToSnSLAS. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE____ 0 W. Huron, PE PE 4GH1 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG , 3 ROOM OUTFIT* $317 f PIECE LIVING ROOM _____REFRIGERATOR, G I condition. OR 3-1334. GENERAL E|-lCT0jC UNOE^EX- H-F1, TV > Raiw 66- CITLPONR CE RADIOS,.BASE and moblte antennas. SMS. 474-MM. *MNCN UiiP TV ........ tffff -----hWiiiM . OoiTr ri, corner ot Joslyn I" SYLVAMIA- PICTURE TUBE, 1 yr. Ouor. Johnson TV — T MHO, 41 E. Walton near Bar ' SCONDlfl rs _. JIM'S 3301 Dixie Hwy. has a now. pui JACK HAGAN MUSK WEI^RAN^S,^ JxKC^^Rq OM IL ‘ SPRdb-SAtlh PAINTS. VAhlbflif, ■ Supply- 2670 Orchoii Coho. 402- A 71-A NBV. rr'ttS& tmmmr n M ACRES, SNINANGUAO LK. DE-vslopmtnt. HWl and dry, 10 ml. north ot CNnSion. MMS71. hEAUTlPUL SLOPING LAKE LOT on Dovte Lake, OR MHS. MTYaM mw ^FUbpAMICAt- PINTER'S MARINE SALEL OP- prIcLd at oois —LfeSJ. PUR- iSmmw SPRINGTIME IN MICHIGAN 10 ROLLING SCBNIj IjC^ACRES, n outdohOIng opportunity .. solid KomoOi investment. LET US SNOW YOU, 545,0M on terms Includes root estate. WARDEN 1 ___W. Huron, Pontine 333-71571 SMALL XURSERY COMPLETE. Established customers. OA 0-3035. SHORT ORDEk LEASE. FUL-ly squlppsd. Lake front, tocor" 15 mjlsslirof Pontloc OP-4044. SORT ICE CREAM DAIRY IN GOG location. Ixc. forme. Por oppok hooking beaut Kk^ngVtfS). I H ACRES, wonderful Jocotlon ty tamj, yordon^horsos, flowing wofl. OTHER PARCBLf AVAILABLE ___■ H■■ C. Panaus Inc., R«alty priced tram S14IS to SOJISS. Terms1 OPEN 2 DAYS on Land Con track. Bo one o< Iho 430 M-1S Orton villa first to pick your lot. Clark Real I CALL COLLECT NA 7-2013 , hmmfemim, pe"*^. ” *\ SUMMER BUILDING SPOTS i Lake front in millinoton -1 °tf £.L5£?-F*1" t*0* lW»' «**“■ DISHES 22 PC- SET K TERMS LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Mi Baldwin at Wolton . PE, M042 Frist Traffic light south of 1-71 fmmm_ Woo Poriajg. No Mlllng'jeguellfy you ignm Mg teWrancos, 5400 1 too cash. Sovon to twohra ..... weekly eon not txeollont monthly Income. Mora full lime. Porjwr-aonol Intorvlow write WINDSOR ?'*TS!ByTINO COMPANY. 4 “ uBk 1 Village of Ortonvillt PRlNTiS StT - eii*. Ul prtv. 50x127. 51,905, 0250 down. •UARER ST. - Knz. L 125. 51,7*1 5200 down. BUOQl tiouM Mr your frtondt. Lovely HAGSTRUM, Realtor 1 MORE TIME (AND NEW FURNITURE 3-R00M OUTFITS $278 (Good) $150 Watkly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 WMkiy NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-piece (brand naw) Bring roojr 2 pl*c* living room ouHo. Two Sts. Double ‘driisori t»ok«ss t ». *i jo weakly. PEARSON'S PURNIT^RB^ Soiwom Paddock ydj:ity_Hjn 12*2 W. Huron St. FE B-TSia, PE Silver Lake Const. Co. For Inn map cMSfS-S4Si7 Schuett Realty. -----,-V— OAKLAND LAKE ment, bom. OA- B-S013. A. Senders, H. wilsan. IMMCftf FAKM~ ___tfsrtsbM 4 bodresm horn largo bom, nice rolling ocro L COLLECT NA 7-2HI i Sato Ibe4 Ceatracts 6 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS STtt*-* - w ^ WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 n. Opdyko Rd. . p« sens Open Evas. “HI S pjn. ACTION On year land contract, taro smallcsll Mr. MMar. FE 1 Broker, 27*2 Elliobeth Lake I ^OE^lR.rtulTY.jEA 1 Demonstrator Houseful . $3 a week No Money Down 2».WJSsrT,«& table. 2 tobt* lamp*, 1 pot 1 t'xir rug, 4 piece bathe (tt, 5 piece dmHlIr lM. and ratrtaarator. PE S-2S1S. Mr. ». World w ------ — HOUSE OF APPLIANCES it*fi SINGER IN CABINET 83* mamMy -»--a==^— RKjHMAN* Bl ' -ke . PE 4S4M. ___ TALBOTT LUMBER . Martin at 04- LIN0L8UM RUGS, MOST aizfci STEREO TAPE~REC6RbEhTv lanaek ISSh BSIRRlir "— display, Cuatarnam p Highland Rd. ttSS-_____ For Sob MIltoNnneeai 67 MAffkpB, euuiia.jrLurre f vrrBppIngs, sacrifice, S2*JD. ~ MEDICINE CABINETS, URGE, 2J‘ mirror, riwily marred, lama BhWn of aaMa*la « without lights,,aMHI doors rifle buy*. Michigan Fluor 313 Orchard Lake PE 44443 NYLON CARPETING, MANV ilZdS _J cetera, ml^cut, ; ____ Starting at ELIS par yard. O 474-2M5, ask ter Mr. Martin. NEW 1944 DETROIT JEWEL 3*" damn* ga» range, al*m evs.. door, Instent - on oven, slightly marred. New Slip, » down, M Wk. FRETER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET I4SB S. Temranti PE S-7BS1 ol6 oak table, and tv, go6o PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG cash baL, S year guarantee. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 44)905 buttonholes, blind hama, euaraari-ing, etc. Must catlMt balance 0 «■«» cash or will accmRj|H| manta 0 HAS monthly. 10 •UfranjH_B|d lessons Ind-- Cell CBRTIPIBD SEWING CRN-“"I 0 24SGBB by IS" IM&Jnih mum FE S-730S. ________ Pxir LINOLEUM RUGS S3.0S EACH “|Rs W«Bllam— W **■ „i"Sl!e!*FE ZwhI^w"^. L apt. gas Slav* OIL Duncan w"- ‘-dlnlng room 540. FE 2-1277. 2J00 RECLAIMED BRICK-75* Tractors SIMPUCITY- BOLENS 6i.HP ....$408 10 HP ......-$755 MOWERS Nam# Brands -JUDERSL 24" 4 HP ....$209 30" 6 HP..$435 PUSHERS .$79.95 .$79.95 Lawn Boy Jacobson AJIBN sill EXTRA LONG MAf. T~s and box Brings, I1-—— onths old. 5125: MA 441 AIR CONDITIONER ____KVStiOn temar! «*• W 24 W. Huron. REPOSSESSED SEWING MACHINE Orassmekar heed, 4 months < ALL BRONZE SUMP puMps, soLb repaired, exehenged,^ rented. 71 W. Sheffield_______PI ANCHOR FENCES , NO MONEY DOWN PR W47I A Record Collection ngRCj 08. callHS Wanted CetractedWH. 664 j 1 TO SO LAND CONTRACTS Sltlock 4 but, Inc. ~tli 1 ** **— $1*15, I?* 3-12H. 1220 FEET FRONTAGE, «W.PE SfunfrcYsl \ eommerclelj bTwl f^r—| _____Jm avaHabia, dawn. 474-7714 air Ri 473-00111 payments of 54J3 monthly accept- j-ebie. If year guarantee and fi— -lessons. Call credit manager .. 33S-f2|L RICHMAN BROS- SEW-iNO CENTER. OVER IS YEARS OLD jdlo-reeerd player cembkiett FE 5-3453 between »- 4-PC. METAL MASTER I set. Cell Ml 4-2317. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. OadyjelUL, . PE M145 II S Bin. CJtlTRACTS. E4BDM* Hwy. i. aim leawsr 10. Unusupl Contemporary Kk^f^ second. SIAIS^ sg- W.^ Ptm rW-^enV eRehHv. land veto*. LESLIE R. TRIPP, REALTOR-APPRAISER IS W*0 Hruon Straw PESSir "S®r £^yTtD«5S ass. 5142 Caae-EHiOBam-- NEED LAND CONTI 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . .$3.89 Catting III* .... n*e “ SEvrAaba*lo* III* .J 5 «xT: mi Etabaih LekJ ‘Across From the Moll" “•-“gaa^'gaar™1 i. BjvI Gerrale. PACTS. IN rral*. EM 5 } Approximately 35 Square yards of brown tweed carpeting with rubber pad. $70. 336-3690. — - - -0 *S.' Yv »ney te Lean 61 ^eesSLSmJMgL LOANS works goad, Mt 10" B*» flh dm dryor. mj air conditioner. Mi Gnbw suite, 025; antique cheat, 510; pump organ, S4St hand cawed i aim iMm E. Pike. FE 4-4*14. SPECIAL H A MONTH BUYS J ROGMS OF PURNiTURE - Coralstf of: -place living room suite wEh 11 table*, 1 cocktail table and 2 te dresser, dieah full stxs BummEiE mattreee ___ spring te match with 2 vanity -0ece*iltnette art, 4 chrome chairs, wtnke top tebls, 1 bookcase, l rxir rag included- All ter 52**. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 7 E. HURON F| M»l 5 Wi PIKE PE 3-21 C*"! nt. Super°d KenvTen* ***NiiOHTI SUPPLY REELS Yardman ......$39.95 Jacobson ...$119.95 Hahn-Eclipse GARDEN TILLERS Pricod from ...$129 McCulloch--- . Chain Saws.....$110 Houghten & Son 528 N. Main 01 1-9761 ROCHESTER ~ I RH J12T50 GE if BSirTOj.-Ain^» i*4s el — ----------YOUR--- Bottle Gas Installation WELDWOOD HEADQUARTERS ACCORDION. GUITAR LESSONS. 3 SPECIAL AUCTIONS April 15, at 7 KM. April 16* at 7 PJi April 17, at 2 PJN. 'rackloads 0 new cM Band fumL * ISmV 10th ANNUAL 1G MY •• SALE-A-RAMA April 8th Some Antiques 3sar: B & B AUCTION UA ff |S Dtxle Hwyu< FSS FURNITURE-ANTIQUE AUCTION Sat., April 16,7 pjn. AUCTI0NLAND sar.srat jaaienjA'a tSSS'S.’WSXSS s*vs up to 40 per cam. Johnson meter*,—- big earn-(ran an naw HH models, most sbas.ta chooss from, lav* up to *22*. 10 BIG DAYS-Fri-day, April 8th through Sunday, April 17th. Everything for the camper and boater all at Sale-A-Rama prices. Open doily ’til 7i$0 p.m. Sun: days 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. BILL C0LLER CAMPING AND MARINE SUPPLIES I Whipple 39 rocker phw much Bam, , Come eerty and enloy ri Itig with your ntighten. Doors opan MT pj*. • wi Lyon.Trvlctorlsn "l bed, aommjdeA. Pfi wtepe. . phones) ~popul»r ^acoiti!**' piano s&dT^TsasL?: gvi»v PfcibA?—-y-HTia: EVERY SATURMY .... 7:3* PjC EVERY tUNOAY ......, *:« PM. PUBLIC AUCTION UNCLAIMED IMPOUNDED CARS BY PONTIAC POLICE DEPT, nr Lake St* Pontiac, MtaMaae tat. April 14.1*44, llHjMIL 1 _.,„_^JpjL __HALL'S AUCTION BALE STi attorm reefcara, m ■ -•—■ —.. aiactrlc atove, C et drawers, drsiitrt, Mt « Plata, lawn mowers. . REPOSSESSED B piece eecNenaL^aw. a a a-f pSat Delivered, or load- Jack W. Haft • *0. Lenny EnG . MV S-1B71. Saturday, April farm adrigmaH euetl trailer. Located t m___ Lapeer an M-B4 to Daley fl SINGER ZIG ZAG Sewing macMaa. Cabinet model, SilS’'mSto, “f&lgi^tUo-™ ” UNIVERSAL CQ. FE 4Q90S STOVES, REFRIGERATORS, I linoleum, aid goad yeod fund Stoney'e, IBS/NT Ceos 0 1 Tradu PE 4011 SOLID WALNUT DUNCAN PH TUSdUtV* CAR 6a6rIER POR RENAULT ok VW. $12. 334-0871. Hgh4 Tteh Ihdtoiry 61 eULLBDilNo. driveway! AH6 finish pradta our specieNy. 03- \ n mil* aari llp mag Rd. Parm-all Super H tractor; Royal M*. housetraller complete; OlMar 13 CLEARANCE op useo office furniture and mdchlnoa. Forbes , Printing and Office Supplies, 4500 I Dixie Hwy. OR 3970. We also Buy- r* BENCH SAW WITH MOTOR. Jigsaw. Micrometer GI. 14 Depth Micrometer. OR 3-1171 after s. GOOD RKiH TOP SOIL AND SLAtK dirt. Dal. PE 44M. \ PONTIAC-LAKE BUILDERS iuP< | disc grain drtH; onvar P aami-mounted mow01 Naw Holland No. , 0 be ter with meter; OOvtr 3 bel-ton 13" plow; 1 weetem aadWee COLORED BATH TUIVpIMt sxraasgMg G. A. Thompson, 7M M0 W. DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RING. A 1 R C O ACETYLENE wElDhW end eMta|) s0^ never^ y*ed.^05. z \SwSry wegeni ckaln_ edWi$Ka MS. PE GMt! f All ataea new and uaed None, melon sand. BriWaatej, *■-caviling. OR 3-5S50. • much more. Metemer* Ganft Ctefk Marvin Titbit*, prop.; Bud Hkk-mott. General Auctioneer. Oxterd, 3 Metal tote box at, Ox55-*34.N Ht-Lo 7JM lb.—M0 SATURDAY. APRIL W-ISrill AML Garth Them* Surbvrten Fwm \ Uto* A-l—#H0i ’taRffEr™™** V "v' \ D—12 tedh* ■ SATURDAY, APRIL M. I PM. . 1 Exc. Spood Qaaon waehen amaral ! rmmmTmm new riMnMn.f^ I tebtoTVi modem leather occasion*! chair; sever*) nice rockers; photo ayaaraSi.’gs.'Bs Mining room ontf hodroom himlsh- Proulx. aucttonear at Oxtord Community Mutton, on hwy. M-S4. t ml. W. ot Oxtord. 470-2513 Pt—te-Trawlhrabe II-A EVERGREEN, SHADE TREES ALCl' MM*. SSI South Blvd. 1. FE | MM TrtBon APACHE CHIEF WITH' ADDA-mom. exc. condition. **** " Allison. FE 2-3171. lOOTHCAMPBI Aluminum cowon ond cam*____.„ ony pickup, mt LoForoot. Motor- ton. DRWm r 1 CAMPING SITES tot »cr»», prlvoto loko. toto b modorn fadlltie*. Uemm.ii IMS MIS. < d It" Rotary loom _____________0-3530. . t t_______j I CAMPERS AND TRAVEL TraIl- ________ „ r* Hh priced, 332-0031. Family rai? h, g*%*kYu ft c*m^AT,>-¥fmue N. ot 1% Intorooctlon. cedar tano FROLIC—BSE LINE— Ewgoon Farm, l»« Dixie Hwy.j DRIFTWOOD kURSikV , CLEARANCE: ^EVER-j SCAMPER . DU1 two Prestige siMPfBw rh BOLES AERO P«N- KEEGO COINS, All aluminum conotructlon S^ ^ Tk^Rd.^l**1*’ “ "THE*R^ l??ARN"'"*U"**** Jacobson Trailer Soles WO Wlltlamo Lk. Rd. OR 3-SPS1 HOBO PICK-UP CAMPERS THEY ARE DUALITY BUILT HOBO MFG. SALES RaarlM AuBum Ri. REGIS-j SaL and Sun. noon .... . *51-3357 anytime 14' FROLIC, Like NEW, GAS. . etoctrto, axtrao. OA---- j I___________E PHOENIX ». Handing. MSS WjNNEBAGE aA-*S«M..' _ EAbiL WOLVERINE ,0100 EACH breeding. Ni for guide «e Appal66sa1 half Itiorouahuvu — rwt iwmper prospect. Also - if *ud ~ II AppBtooao-a, tjUntat and.. MQpora 0 typo, except tonal confirmation, wlnneri at Mltor and perform anca, too US Laxy M Appaioosa's, 4000 Hough Rd., Drydan. Mich. - 7948*47. ....... ■' • • V, ATTitoTION HORSEMEN) 1 WANT TRAILER? WANT TO TRAVEL? StT A JEsTmILBY HORSETRAILER S7»5 UP. EX TERMS. MERRIE ACRES. 1457 N. liverHois, OL 1 1 L SORRELL MARE taco- 1 teem at way haraaa, 1 black and 2 My marex. circle c Ranch 435-3430; GOOD LOOKING WELSH W)NY. winner at many ribbons. "—1 lumper. S200. Coll 3*3-75*4. convomuto. wo eon and I * Reoeo and Drew-ttte Rental*. HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 3243 Dixie Hwy- - OR 3-T'" Open------------- PRE-SPRING CLEARANCE ' SALEt Last Call For Low Winter Prices SEC THESE TYPICAL BARGAINS: I lee INI I bedroom, w wide, -fumithod, .full Flea S3M3. lit 1< V ALUMINUM BOATS OH. TRAIL-eft 0110- IS* cenoes 0100. 000 lb. traitors Slit. Naw IS* fttwrgtai boat, 40 H.P. Jdhnton electric, 000 lb. trailer, battery-box 11199. BUCHANAN'S ... - CARNIVAL , By Diek Tumor 044? H^htond_Rd,_^ ete, 1 owner ^402*3105. glastAon ski-i poyr motor. SOAt, 73 •w 1HA I bedroom. II* wli*.1 ______ fumWtod, Pull Flee *4095, 143 14' ClDAR STRIP HULL, FIBlSF-per month glee. Windshield, running Itahts. Other extras. 1950-33 horto Evln- IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 5jT*3Spa?n^Se*orv *r*"*'' • ■ • •• IS* FIBEROLAS. BOAT MOTOR,- River Bank traitor, ss hA. Etoe. sost. sssmoo. . Mebile’ Village J} ^ PHONE 338-6583 ‘ p^'mITsaohi -.SOS S.• Telegraph—Pontiac . 15' FIBEROLAS AERO CRAFT - OPEN: Mon-Tues-Thurs, II ta 0 convertible top, tki bar, 40 h.p. CLOSED WEDNESDAY Johnson, Little Duda tllt-utf trailer OPiBiTtoMiSteb Mta 0 with dolly, PE S-3303. e 115VV, 1*43 DURATECH NO. S00, 35 Mercury, 1945 used 5 hr.., controls, In S different decors. Open .9 to 9—7 days a weak MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2237 Dixie Hwy. 330-0772 th ot Telegraph ,. P»ckup Camper Specials ' tr 20 different models MHHM from on display. Naw 1044 10 foot caboyar comp lately s a contained, weight 1000 lbs. Y( we mean comptoto Including c culotlng got heater and folt only *1045, freight Included to L peer. Buy nor'*" ‘~Jr-trsltocs at t Chlefw Raves —to 030? up. __netown dealer ere Open dally p,m., Sundays 10 e.m. to s i •ILL COLLER Comping and Waterford Mobile Homes RRRo^mSP^,lc%^, Eicon*, In many styles and decors. Guaranteed workmanship, service S73-2M0 SPRING SALfS SEE: NEW MOON, WINDSOR 14' THOMPSON LAPSTRAKE, 40 Jphnion, SS50. 402-1901 alt. S p.m. 14' CHRISCAaAT, TRAILER AND-,' 40 h.p. wood toot with Flborgles bottom. 0450. FE0-I043.___|f 14' CARVER BOAT. 40 H:P.' JOHN-1L ton electric. Controls and lights. ' All like now, oral ssmiii i' FIBERGLASS Hue CUtr|A;| ' Sliding hardtop. 40 hone Evlnrude, _ Foreign Cm m IMS 19*1 ItktJ Auto.. I 1 MCA, RUNS 'iUS«7f m OOOO, ISO. 19*2 BW BUS, 2400 MILES n weds 1*44 vw. MANY HVtRaL cAlL OF"m IfCV CAl lilac smr Fay 4 JOF hatitaL manay down. ott-07 waakiy pay-Mia. CaNiMr. Murphy at PE 1944 vrf, H 1963 RENAULt » R0, 4 door aadan. 4 speed, brokas, rod with oil vinyl ti tor If. S53S full orlco, hank ral Village j Rambler 666 WOODWARD | BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 Iom vw OllW I ■jg’.KL'BlB;- JEROME MOTOR SALES 1900 WlAi Track Or . PE S-FOtl GLENN'S 10^^11 black Cadillac convertible. L C. Williams, Salesman fit W. Huron M. REPOSSESSION JV mi Coptoir > Ator, ktol »Hi* the p«ym«nti ovtr, MffBffni.nl lugkT'autq ^»4S w. WJdo Tfo^g ioos^chAvy impala. 4 . aqft hardtop. A^jtojwr •tofrlna dhd Fakat fb 14*11 'Of FE v?}0i r ntr Klrhy- IMF John McAulitto Paid ^ 1964 VW 1964 CADILLAC. arM'K the car tor a family- Coma and set us about »^|n*t dead 10-Passenger Bus ! Deluxe throughout, mint graeil Iktlih. arid all Mia goodies! Only — 14* down, finance balance Hi "JS1333 II HORSE JOHNSON ELECTRIC. ‘ - DISCOUNT PRICES -LOT SPACE AVAIUUA.E j. C. Talkington & Sons TELEORAPH ROAD ACROSS MIRACLE MILE. 338-3044 ’ prices. 91! ELGIN (MCCULLOUGH) ELEC-tric, alternator, naw In 1f*4. Single towel control, 15 N. cables, long shaft. Exc condition, S300. Phene _ . Holly. *37-31*4. I itofa - Accwserit 97 INI If WOLVERINE PIllAOLAii---------—— --------— ------^— run-about. 25 twrsepower SCO?t SAILBOAT, 29' FIBERGLASJCOLUM-oloctrie motor. t*SS. ,taB OL l-t*l?. | pio. Priced right. Stored bay Harbor Marina. Bay City, Mich. Call |. 3I7-44AHS*. caSIn! ‘'Oh, no! I don’t want to speak with herl I Just want to be sure she’s not off somewhere running up bills!” New and Used Tracks 103 ford Pickup, sharp. USED BOATS OWENS 19' Flberglas cr y,gc«gB.'w iraa.T>,,i 1 i960 CHEVY Vi TON FlC J owner, OR S-M17. • , . _________ ?mi~ ayg' Fttktje, sair eawpi-itw s. woodward *■“ “* u «s| 1964 VOLKSWAGEN Sharp. AknaM naw, bldck Mr Priced below markH pricoi. I rata*. Weekly Special. BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLIR-PLYMOUTH WILSON CADILLAC OF BIRMINGHAM MI 4-1930 GLENN'S 1944 Cadillac^ convertible, real she ri rad with whito tom lull power. L C. Williams, Salesman fit W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 Ft 4-1797 i Meny mere to choeea from GM GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Soles 19*3 Cadillac ’ convertible, ONtclal' ! £ir, ^WMrwcS.to"lSS dm—r-T- Fc ■■Vl'9- . r luergias, mil top* ■yinroei; 'G«tor trailer' X ei.i*S| OAKLAND- DATSUNAND >0TUS^^!,^^Am^-^5-|^tyvY 044210 or 4444729. Daaler. j 3.7u«.^ CHiVRbLltt. 11^4, IMPALA SUl America_______ way, Lake Orton. 09S44M t lima, FE 47430, CHRIS-CRAFT IP l» h. p. |ust retlnleheo, tnarp . a vrs MANY OTHERS .LAKE S sea MARINA Authorised dealer OWENS CHRIS-CRAFT r PORSCHE 250 B, 1*6 SUPER, Mr 1 WO mil**. 01.80. 0742079 BIG DISCOUNTS Wnrted Can-Tracks 3 -----rt——----------- '* Californio Buyers 101 Zw. VOLKSWAGEN t with whito ta*. 9395 full Village Rambler IC CONViFtt-Dies, ootn are immaculate canr" tton. Full factory equipment. Be tow prlcad at 0195. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward,^Birmingham GM GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Soles Sports cenvarilbto, radio. Pc I glide, power steering, power bri < 327 engine, private owner, arrange financing Ml *-9549. 1944 MONZA CONVERTfilLE, nary yallow wit" 110 h.p., 4tpaai SI330. FE 494M. GLENN'S tng^andlrtks-_ L C. V^illiams, Salesman 9S2 W. Huron St. FE 47171 v FI 41797 r Ihrvslei fridges new duo boats 1 CLEARANCE I 1965 Models Now On Display MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. iiataly ■Ri„_____________/wt f Steury fiberglass lepstrake _ I, 71*' beam, J yr. war- ranty, 1944 40 hG- E---H controls, Min I— EMI Pamco traitor. AM for 01350. SEE THE EVINRUDE 10' SPORTSMAN BOAT WITH 120 OM.C. I.O.. LOADED WITH EXTRAS. Gleet-1 par, Steury, Mirra Craft boats, Evlnruda boats 4 motors, Grumman and Tamarac canoes. Glass-lint sail beats, Kayot and Geneva pontoons, Pamco traitors. Taka MSS to W. Highland. Right an Hickory RIM* RT To Daifeda R d . U” and follow signs to DAWSON'S Phono Main 41179 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check Hu jmI. Mien gel th* beet" at Averill AUTO SALES 9179 IMS Olxto FE HELP! tiaca, C_______________ _ stale market. Tap dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1964 ChevyVI] j Vi-Ton Stepside ’ n with VS, radio, haator. cuttoi ■ trim, almost Ilka naw, whltowalli | Y*urs tor only - , $1395 HOMER HIGHT INC. On M24 In Oxtord 0A 8-2528 ; 1*44 GMC TRUCK, . V* to TO 1666 WOODWARD TWO 19*S Cadillac*, a convertible impala hardtop A— _____ BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900; ujl"Sl*.nffiff8. BTlti VW 1941. BLUE, PERFECT EN- lory air candtttonlng, both have, tires, only S4S down 'and 113.99 vglna. peed body, ctotn. PL 1-15391 1 year warrenfta*. weekly x^» mt *mi Cm 1*4 1304 iaIJwS? ,U*S A-45251 HAROLD TURNER JOIN THE^OOE^REGELUON ISMU tiffttolam^o^SSSs!1 REPOSSESSIONS FE 3-7521, 47347S1. 4 CHEVYS 02 DOWN *45 UP 5 Pontiac* 02 to 54 S4S up 7 Pond* 43 to 55 OSS "• 01 Renault 1197. S 'olkswaqen. 2335 Dix ie [ ■») SHARP 19»_CHMvV, & 4SPitb,| automatic! CORRECT CRAFT SPEED BOATS Turgocraft JET BOATS SFICO SILVERLINE SKY BARGE SYLVAN PONTOONS EVINRUDE MOTORS INTERCEPTOR ENGINES -------ORAGE-SERVr" T HAULING Michigan Turbo Craft Sales, Inc. 2527 Dixie Hlghwey-Pontlec MONEY iarp Cars 1944 CHEVY I private. 025-3345. lSy^PANELJ! TOlri MKAVV DUTY.; r'a.m. 974 Emarsen.______________ IS 1004 DODGE 'A TON WITH BIGL. — box; bright blut 4 cylinder with I standard trensmleelon. Ready to work $1095 PATTERSON CHEV- ti ROLET I1S4 S. Woodward Ava.i Birmingham Ml FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM i Just east.el Oakland 5 1950 BUICK SPECIAL, AUTOMAT-•- eahdltlon. nos, OR 3-54*2 Paid For Shi ned hundred* fill out-stat* ^1*640? Capitol Atito - 312 W. MONTCALM X Juet aeet a* Oakland *59 CHEVY A 3-DOOR, VERY i, that is a full diy black'. 19*5 FORD FI00 * CYLINDER — tomatlc. Like new S1S95 JEROME FORD Rochester Ford-deal* " 1959 BUICK Assume^ E lliahtfh Caka Rd FE GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales __________________________ 1304 Baldwin FE 44525 19*5 FORD FMB WITH V-0 ENGINE! -Open House — j— Tolna On nd Outdoor WILL PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR - FREE - MERCURY OUTBOARD Just Ragttlar—Drawing — FREE — COFFEE and DONUTS . — FREC — DOOR PRIZES MGF and Lone Star Chrysler^ Glastron boats CUE Dreyer (Marine Division) 15210 Nelly Rd. Nelly ME 44771 Used Aete-Track Parts 182 21 1959 P ONTI AC ENGINE. transmission, 352 19(2 For' gina, FE 5-09*9.________ FIFERGLAS 17Vi FOOT 1 __ tprila, custom hull, 1M horn pc tr Inboard-outboard, Chrysler, us 5 hours, loaded. Cast SUM. a for *2.775. Ft 3-7430 _____________ 17' Skier with 427 Ford, Birch deck. IS toot Silhouette with 421-Pontiac. IS* Ski King outboard, 40 horsepower 1940 Century Its* Chris Craft * Cass Lake, «*2-l»25 Sava on IMS 14 foot boat. i clutch In " CUSTOM COLOR id 77 W. * Track) _________________Exit) SAILBOATS 9'-20' WAYFARER, WING LASS, 545 W CRUISING SLOOP, AQUACAT. D-LION, FACE SHIP OAV SAILORS. KITS. AVON SAIL BOATS USED BIKES • SPEEO SAVILLI _. JnmBI Sr S-Wt!" SAILING CATAMARANS WSiL GM Autobahn Motors, Inc. i AUTHORIZED VW DEALER * - — "wipibv FE 8-&31 run vLCAN UoCU UAK9 GLENLTS 1*44 FORD PICKUP, CUSTOM CAB vt. r box —*— *** “ 1-4139---- Junk Cars-Trucks IovJl < CARS-TRUCKS, t. FE 2-2444. CARS - TRUCKS JUNK CARS WANTED WE TOW 473-0039 9 MOTOR, l1 CHEVELLE 4-SPEED; 1957 CHEVY front and> transmission, - - -housing. FE 49175. CHEVY - FORD COMI r>~ Itclory rebuilt i Install. Term. 1 ------------- 527-1117. ENGINES, TRANSMISSIONS AND ***“r parts. H. A H. AUTO SALES SERVICE. OR 3-5200. Or- t m* Used Tracks 1M 1950 GMC to TON PICK-UP, GOOD —tor, good that, new paint, erica to. 22 Carlton Court off N. Sagl- 1953 FORD V> TON PICKUP- GOOD 1953 CHEVY V4TON, NEW TIRES) 1954 DODGE to TON STAKE PICK- 1955 CHEVY to-TON PICK-UP, 4 1954 FORD WRECKER 350. FULLY -lUippOd. SLIM. UL 2-9730. 1954 CHEVY to TON PICKUF OR 3-7314 1911 CHEVY WALK-IN VANNETTE. 0150; 1954 GMC CA oSTjSsmC 9245. tf$7 OWt wagon, S195 2 fli* dock stml traitors. SMO each. 2 wbaal Gl traitors, ««. 171 B. Pike 5t. FE 44044. Smith Maying Ce. 371 E. Ftoa, FE 44S54. 0S« FORP. to TON.PtCKUF.~FSw. I 080d. l*ob7 0. OR 3-M01. i. PICKUP, y i6f I6X, Drayton FISCHER • BUICK 554 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 LUCKY AUTO 1*41 W. Wide Track gray, S2200, FE 1-7M9. 1965 DODGE Vs-TON Pickup with Camper, With « 7,000 actual mil**, don't miss « at Only — 81795 Oakland i pj pTvjM'q CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I V-7J_j£-jIN IN O « Oakund Ava. FE 29150 1944 Buick Special cohvertibto, xrtth wWto ----- steering, " GLENN'S i M4 Chevy Eal Air wagon, newer1 , steering and brakes, rack an top. L C. Williams, Salesman ! 952 W. Huron St. I FE 4-7371 PE 4-1797' s' ■ Many mere to choeta tram !:i~~ PONTIAC'S : R! NEW AND ONLY AUTHORIZED [I OLDS DEALER 1965 CHEVROLET impale 1 dapr hardtop. V*. auSo-mallc. power tnoring, radio, heel-. ar, air conditioning. \ $2295 DiS^NEY Oldsmobile ________ ’ tnc. DR AFT EDI MUST SELL 1959’ceft ».v,.un K4P1AV Chevy CenuartibtaTFE HS15_ 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101. mm chUVrolAY .1 Bo6i ha46- i9«4 Chevrolet bbl air i-door ; ■“ — »- —»- **r, white With red kdijrtar. Radla,, KING i AUTO SALES j M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 ' ’ I9MT CHEVY IMPALA CONVERT!-bit, rad, power steer Inn- auto.. V-9, goad condition. MY 3- 1959 CHEVY (WE HAVI 1 3 f6 heater, Vt, pawerglkto, 1 REPOSSESSION. 1 I CHEVY COR- 1966 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, inside rear view mirror $1779 Including all taxes GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 BEAUTIFUL 19*4 BUICK ELECTRA convertible. Pen Fewer. Tip with copper Interior. Exc.------- Original owner. Pi Phone Rachaator *** 1966 FORD MOO Pickup FIND A OOOO CAR AN^OSS--- = . — Pontiac at. PE Feral|B Cets I VW'S TO CHOOSE PROM; ALL model*, an catori, all prK-1 ItSS's to I9*t'(. Autobahn Motors, Inc. Wmt^riWtoMIto 15 S. Telegraph FE *45 .power brake* and! C C.'Williams, Salesman 952 w. Huron St HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AYE. BIRMINGHAM i Ml 4*7550 1944 BUICK SPECIAL CONVERTI-bto, good condition. SIMS. OR >61 CHEVY IMPALA. TAKE OVER paymant*. Call S5S-217S. *• 1943 CHEVROLET BEL AIR HAR6- PONTIAC'S NEW AND ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER 1964 BUICK 19*2 CokVEfTI CONVERT IBL* -4&t4flSrb 3 *pCm. Anytima Sat. ' . $2195 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. 550 OAKUND , Ft 2-8101 GLENN'S 19(4 Wildcat, t door hardtop L C. Williams, Salesman MW. HutW St. ^ _ FE 4-7171 ; FE 41797 £SST' GM GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales 19*1 chovrotot Brook wood Station ; gan with whna lMtoh and U. quoit* kriaflji, V cylinder with automatic, power brakes and ■Saerlng, ! yedr warranty. SEE B0B8URKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 REPOSSESSION 1*44 CHEVY II 4 door, 4 cylinder, take over payments, S3* per mo. LUCKY AUTO; 194* w. wide Track 1944 CHEVROLET IMPALASPORT 12 CORVAIR MONZA, $595. 19(1 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RAOIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weakly payments at *74*. CALL "CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7SM. 1962 CHEVY II sedan with stick Wim.tranu— pries *117, amy SMS aown _ Dan at: FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Jeet eeit *» Oakland 19(1 CORVAIR MONZA. BEST OF- e CHEVY BEL AIR WAOON, VS, wto. Power siaartng. Brake* MBR law, radio; ate. OR 44041 BOB BORST UNCaiFMHKUtt IMF 1964- Chevy Impala Hardtop 4 dear with a saddle tan hnli metohjng kitorjsr/1 n, nnuncs aeisnc* or only $1877 John McAuliffe Ford 43B Oakland Ay*. ' FE 54191 19*4 CORVAIR MONZA CONVeRTl- l igiSr^ i *1.2*5. FB 24455 al 1965 CHEVY cenvarilbto. V-l automatic »fu (I power, radio, haator, whRawalla. Rad with whito tap. $2295 Lloyd Motors 1941 CORVAIR MONZA CONVRRTt-bto. Spotless white tlntoh with rad bucket eaats. 4 spaed, raifto, whlto-wpll tires, 12AM actual iwlwa. New Car Warranty. Only S199L Hou(p- 1-97*1. CLEARANCE . "OK" Und Cor So l, 1*45 CHEVY Impale convert $2495 1944 CpRVAiR M 1944 OLD* ~yr* 19*5 CHEVY 4% ( Wm. Crissman Chevrolet Rdchaqtor OL %»rai THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL IS, 1966 ft—10 (law irt UaoJ tee 1M 1HS BLACK MONZA CONVIKTIBLB km™*10' ______-£?&. GLENN7S ttM CHiV. IMPALA LOADED, eludes factory-air. NMM i *p.m. HM CHIVY ll,t660R,t 1964 CHRYSLER Newport Moor hardtop. Paw ST^BS.-Sr* ninrsrsrsrT, will buy it. Bank rates, $1795 BIRMINGHAM _ chrysler-plymouth 108 I. Woodward_Ml 7-M 1W5 Chryiler* 1#62 CHRYSLER togT^'pewer bretes' "beige "with ■s $895 BIRMINGHAM" . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 545 s, WtedWPrtT^ "mi 7-3214 Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE PROM ' CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Par,, Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 444 S. WOODWARD AVI, ■IRMINOHAM Ml ”A7IM I 10 E__ „™ , __ SOS's, oil still In factory warranty, "row Ulti. OAKLAND CHRYSLH-PtYMOOTH 34 Poll Hod Aye. m 1965 CHRYSLER Newport «poor hordtop. R heater, power steering, ■ p brakes, Beautiful rod with m ino interior. TMs • car Is al now. TranstorraMa now-cor ranty. Only $2495 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLlRFLYMOUTH 140.S, Woodward Ml 7-SI14 McCorrib CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL OL 1-4531 1141 N. Main ROCHESTER beSOTO, STiOOOD TRANSP 343-7311 iW KM! p«URA Ms C6M- Instant Delivery Crodit Man (hi Duty At All Timas , No Application Refused 1959 CHEVROLET 4-door hardtop “6" . ......$195 1961 PLYMOUTH 2-door V8 Automatic .$395 1961 COMET 4-door wagon, automatic.$395 1963 CORVAIR Monza 2-door ........ $795 1960 CHEVROLET 4-door, stick .*... .$195 1960 FORD Convertible, stick . .$495 100 MORE TO CHOOSE FROM \ Prices marked on all-cars HUM mm sums Clarkston TV Lot . MICHIGAN'S LARGEST USED CAR DEALER eegSDixie Hwy. *•*- DAILY SAT. 9-6 PHONE MA 5-2671 ifHwr mi lyi ftw KESSLER'S -- : IW4 fORg^S bdOR, ^V-S^tTICt^ g£Hr»e*it.*s KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 i960 FALCON W«n Moor, rodlo, heetoi try eloon - lb root, 'too. No cash needed. $395 BIRMINGHAM . CriRVILER-PLYMOUTH Ml PORD PALCON 4 WITH STICK. IMi FbRb 1 booiC dALAyife. Rto woO. met WWW top, radio, heet-^ tlroo and automatic, SijARP. A ataol at 4445 full price w«i aa lowaoHdawn. , KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4086 “as MARMADUKE lemon end Leeming New wd Heed tee WM) W5 MU4TAN0 HARDTOP, WH factory equipment. 11,443 with 1135 down. Ppymoido low po 451.44 Mr. Insw. T. T C. Ml 4-II4*. “He’s not afraid of water! It’s Just that only port of him wonts to go irading!" New end Used Cars 186 Near and Used Can 186 1*43 FORD GALAX IE 544, AUTO* maHc, axe. condition, MS4C57. 1*44 POND LTD 4-DOOR'WITH V* automatic, radla, teator, pawar (Marine, aratea, many axtraa (aa tow aa NM. JEROME FORD Rechaator FORD DaatarTOL 1-4711. 1*43 FORD, HARDTOP WITH AUTOMATIC RADIO AND , MUTTER, whitewall . TIRES, AtfOLUTBLY NO MONEY. DOWN AND AS. SUME' waakly paymantt ef • 17jl call credit^wC Mr. Parte aTHAROlD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7M0! 1*44 HIGH PRRFORMANCR -MUS-kmto 4 ipaad, full camoto. FE •Y OWNER 14SI MUSTANG CON* vatwto f nt 4 Ipaad. toMatr (towing. Radio. Haator and WMto-walla. Call 4434S3S. r.O RP XL' CQNViRflOll, n. Ft GLENN'S MM T-aird. loot Hko now, full powi L C. Williams, Salesman ._ hwwi »»• ■ *7571 , , FE 4-1747 1441 ttkb UUtUNt PoRbo-‘ walte, * tribidw1, t‘- ——t-— 4700. 434-3343. "t'lr-a'a* ■great t443 ford cgNviktibLt, RgB; gjsnaarusg - DON'S useo CAM SMALL AD-BIG LOT 74 CARS TO CHOOSE PROM ms MIRCURY arson. 1444 CHRYSLER 1441 XL ,3 dr-, hordtop. 4 spaed, on ditlon, rod. Mock Inferior. 1441 PONNEVILLE rd Interior. ' -------- « 677 5. LAPEER RD. Late Orion MY 2-2041 WE FINANCE WHEN OTHERS CANNOT EVEN IF YOU: ; -HAVE BEEN BANKRUPT -—HAVE BEEN GARNISHEED -ARE NEW IN T0WN\ -H^Ve HAD A REPOSSESSION -HAVE BEEN IN RECEIVERSHIP -HAVE BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS OVER 50 .CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Estate Storage 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 GLENN'S 1411 Ford 1 door hardtop, MA real L C. Williams, Salosman Ml w. Huron St. GM GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Salas M to 144 car*, to cteooa from, popular makes and medal* win ~ fflw^ranrwiranMnwamp ■A4. oil carry warranties. SEE BOB BURKE 13Q4f«aldwin FE M$25 Across from Pontiac State bank 1441 FORD FALCON BUS 4 CYL- *nd 3rd m “ 4 JEROME d Dealer. OL JMF John McAuiifto Ford 1961 Mustang Convertible $895 "aasiig-yttMar: ... MERCURY, GOOD CONDITION, jin Coll 143-3340. __________ mercury, i»*t, 4 Poor mon- taroy, rooaonoblo, FE S-4D53. 144* MERCURY MONTCLAIR -W hardtop, auto., double por__ w 41,000 mlloo, eaceptlonal con-twn. You muat aaa Itl 444-0433. 1*4* mircurV C0C6NV BAIIK * BOB BORST UNCOLNMERCURY Get TSifT John McAuliffo Ford Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 t4*i; FORD CONVERTIBLE OAL- I Cruise-O-Metlc* Thunderblrd *Bt v-4 tpaclal. Lika new. Mrs. Clark. Fenton. MA M174. KL4f5. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC FALCON, 1443, 4 DOOR, AUT6MAT- a** ! 1443 T-BIRD, PuLl. POWER, EX-* client shape. 363-4435. vi with automatic, power (tearing and powar bratea. Lika now at JEROME PORO, Rochaator Fate Dealer. OL 1-4711. IMF John McAuiifto Ford REPOSSESSION, 1441 FORD PAIR-lane 504 4 Boar VS, no money . down, 4M7 weekly paymenti, call Mr. Maaan at PE 54101 McAuHffa. t ,f4m0JEROME°^ORDlTReS«Mw Ford Dealer, OL 1-4711. 1963 Ford raSa.^haalaS ^w^iftowal 1965 Mustang Beautiful 2 Plus 2 ■;V $1395 Lloyd Motors Llncata - Mercury - Comet 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 wRh 4 ipaad, V4, and a twilight flnMi, full pawar, axtra sharp. Only 414 down, finance balance af " $1988 1965 FORDS 17 TO CHOOSE FROM ! "It only takas a mlnuto to Oat a BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava. FE Kiel FULLY EQUIPPED \ Haw CAR WARRANTY* ’ AS L0W\AS 1465 FORD FALCON 3-DOOR HARD-top.^sharp, tote over payments. $49 DOWN FORD 1445 FAIRLANE 500 WAGON VS, power, auto. 47A4S40, Payments as low as $49 m 1445 FORD GALAXIE 4 DOOR SE-don, auto., powar stoartng, *175*. 443-174*. HAROLD REPOSSESSION - 1465 MUSTANB 1 p*ia rpiHtbodi, Ne manay down. S13J7 weekly pawmnts. Call Mr. Maaan at FE 5-4101 McAutttto. TURNER FORD, INCl 444 4. Woodward Ava. i BIRMINGHAM " Ml 4-75SB "OK" ' Used Car Listing 1 : 1*44 FORD FAIRLANI 4 DOOR Uke new?’«1 SmTTeROME mFORO,' Rochester Ford Detor. CL 1-4711. mi CORVAIR’ 4 deor Mena . SINS 1444 OLDS "IT' convertible .. *1745 1444 CHEVY to ton pickup . (1345 1*44 FORD GALAX IE 544 HARO-t top. lota af extrai. Ft 4-3734. ml BUICK LeSabrt 4 door . s 445 1445 CHEVY 3 doer sadwi ... 41754 1443 Chevy sedan, 4 cyl stick 1 745 11*44 FORD XL CONVERTIBLE, ALL power. Immaculate condition. Mint tee to appraclato. (Mate an altor, { 647-7431. . 1464 FORD FASTIACK, 437 4 1443 OLDS "NT convertible $1445 1441 RAMBLER wagon, 4 cyl. S 445 mi OL DS "4*" 4 door, 1444 VW pickup, deukto cab .. 11375 14M CHEVY fi 4 door $445 444 FALCON CONVERTIBLE, V-4, 4 opood, good condition. 44iSS47. GLENNS' Haskins Chevy-Olds On us It at M15 - Clarkston MA 5-2604 1965 Mustang, poppy nd hardtop. Full console, automatic transmission, low mileage, radio, heater, defroster, bock: up lights, outside mir-r 0 r, whitewalls, 4 standard plus 2 snow tires. $1,875. Phone 546-1880 evenings or Ebrl Jones, FE 2-8181 daytime. >wr mi Ini <■» 'm* Estate Storage *109 S. East Blvd, FE3*mi •w/ ixceiiefiT r . 4-wtwol drl I looking fori AMBLER-JE m olds, RUtts '6666,' 0060 condition. Fi 5-OfOf. it*" <33* M 1 bdomiAhbtop. esc. wodHlia, 4145, private owner. dSnir. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 GLENN'S 1965 JEEP, 4 WHEEL DftlVE 5,000 ACTUAL MILES, CLOSE IN CAB, SNOW PLOW, FULLY EQUIPPED. L C. Williams, Salesman PONtlAC'S NEW AND ONLY AUTHORIZED OLDS DEALER 1962,0L0S "Storflro" I door hardtop. FuN Fewer, two lone. One owner, new car trade, excellent cindltwn.^^^ DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. 550 0AKl^WD 2-8101 root map car, no' money LUCKY AUTO ifirpLYMbutH couw. Vi'i 1965 LINCOLN Wmwm n Cloi cor Brited to toll, moo Stamp, with purchaw. VAN CAMP CHEVY 4-1434 MILFORD Wfr c6mj.t station wagon. —od condition. 4344. OR 4-1740. COMiV. RUNS GOOD. LOOKS A *444. FI M444. i*M MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, oxcollont condition. F« S-1447. 14*3 MERCURY CUIJ SEDAN WITH FULL POWER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AUTOMATIC TRANSMIT SION, RADIO AND HEATER AMD WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY ■ LwoorEj— ALL CRE ttttjjOMTIAC CotalMo Sadan. auto- 14*3 TE^PE^TfWo^nyMnMr-1444 PONTIAC Catalina Sport Coupe, Comet m red 4 door sedan. Radio aafteiBi, wwjjBtK Tbd3 od wlhddiMd.T owner. 11.444 ml. Vary daanl 11343. MA 44135. 1*41 MERCURY MONTEREY 4-door. Rodlo and hoMor. Ottwr extra.. Mr oondWteHnp. JU 4-3415, Trffi 1445 MERCURY 4-DOOR. VINYL k^PoWtr. 13,500 ML- 52,300. OR aowonpor a Chrwrio lug JuOt You”bld Car Dawn.' BOB BORST IINC0LN-MERCURY 1445 MERCURY MONTEREY 4-door, power .tearing, power broket, power roar window. Full price. Sir 745, 45 down. LUCKY AUTO HEW THIS I I I Low ovartiOod moon, low l,___ located on the N. E. odd* of Fan-tlac Individually owned and ~~ arated, no’ high piwoourp — I *ot!ngMCM^L^ADDSy Up' TO LOW-LOW PRICES TO YOU. Slop In, browM around, all car prkw^jlelnly marked for your NO CASH NEEDSD-^BANK I^ATBS FULL PRICE mi Chevy oUto. ............S444 1443 Chevy stick ........., 4444 1440 Clwvy Imps la hardtop ... 4444 1444 (Uick LiScbro .. .... *444 144* Codllloc Coupe DoVIIIO... 4344 1442 Cadillac Do Villa, air cond.. 41444 1444 Ford Wagon ...........4144 1442 Fotd OMaxlO 444 ..... 4*44 1444 Ford Goloxle SS4 ....41144 mi T-OIrd .................1444 1443 Falcon Auto. ........ 4744 14S4 Pontiac Catalina .... 4344 144* Pontiac Catalina hardtop . *444 1441 Ponllac .................~ 0PDYKE MOTORS 32M PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE FE 4-4337 FE 4433 In md condition, Jterp, See at Goodlson Garage, 4311 Terrltorle Rd. ar coH 44UM3. 1961 Valiant 4-door ellh radio, Motor, automatic, po •cond cor and ie Only 1245 I OAKLAND GO!!' HAUPT PONTIAC 1443 BONNEVILLE Convertible, I NO MONEY DOWN-WS FINANCE cmxT 44i>LYM60fi waeon,towna matiL tun po gR 'JTATIBn STriSaS •hmv, 4745 full fas tod— KING AUTO SALES M59 of Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 rift plVm6

5 1959 LINCOLN ... REAL OOOO RUNNERI . $597 $ 6.06 1960 MERCURY .... CLEANI ..$29\ mS $3.03 1965 FORD Lloyd Motofe -IMMEDIATE DELIVERY - WALK IN-DRIVE 0UT- ACR0SS FROM TEL-HUR0N SHOPPING CENTER Specials' CAR - FRK 1441 FORD, Aato ... », 1444 CHEVY, * cyl ....4# 1*54 FORD, M*ar .r— 1*41 cowaiJljHmiI 1441 VALIANT, Aato ..J 1*41 CitevY, Impala „8H . mi fiyiOL HgjSB ,. .4447 1441 DODGE, Patf ...WO 1454 PONTIAC, Hardtop *247 mi RAMBLER, Tapi 5254 145* CHEVY, Kyi. *147 1441 TEMPEST. Wagon 4947 m 1442 CHEVY II ..4*47 f 14*1 TRIUMPH, HarpW 9)7 I 14N CHEVY, atkk .....4 47 I NO MONEY DOWN I SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY f OLIVER BUICK ^ i 1964 CHEVY Impala $1845 l-Ooor Hardtop with radio, haatar. whitawalltr doubla powar. A 1962 FORD Galaxie $995! Convortiblo. V1. urtomitlc rodto. ' hufgr. whitewalls, dooblo ? " black beauty that it ready to go. 1964 FORD XL • $1895 ■\ 1964 TjUIGK*EHecrtra $2195 "1U" 4-Oeer sadan with radio, haator, wtiltowalls, doubla power, L alactrlc windows, burgundy finish, silver trim. 1964 BUICK LoSobre $1895 4-Ooor. Radio, Malar, whltowalta, doubla pawar, beige flqleh. r. ZMg car la Ite new throughout! 1 1963 BUICK LoSobre $1595 ■■ 4-Ooor Hardtop. Radio, Malar. wMtowaMa. double pawar, black jg finish with rad vinyl trim. A eharple. | 1963 RENAULT 4-Door $595 5 Sedan. Haator, wMtowaPt. A good aaaand car far Meat who g Ilka to save gas. ^ 1963*PONTIAC 2-Dr. $1295 Sedan with automatic transmission, radla. haator, whltowalto and 1959~BUICK 2-Door' $345 Sadan with radio, haator, rad flnleh, transportation spadal. j 1964 BUICK LoSobre $2295 4-Paaaennar station Wagon. Radla, haator, daubto pawar, bronze ! 1963 BUICK LeSabre $1545 l *-Door Sedan with radla. haator, whItowaNs. daubto power, and : decor group. Blue with a white top. 1964 BUICK Deluxe $1395; Special 6-Door Sadan. Automatic radio, haator, wtiltowalls. pawar staffing and Mates, now 6-ply teas. ta OLIVER BUICK 196*210 Orchard Lake . Pontiac FE 2-9165 UWE"' SOX THE BEST USED CARS 1963 Ford $697 J964 Dodge "4to" Sadan, torquafllto with Of C8P8fr88 WWIRO. $1397 1963 Chevy $797 1964 Pontioo ail vtopT trim. $597 1962 Pontiac tev and kdl.faairy aautomint. $1097. 1961 Corvair sadan. In ancallant candition, full factory aquIMnanf, Includlnp daap traad whltoatolU. Only— $287 1965 Chevy IMPALA BOaar Hardtop wltti tha "2*3" V-L automatic, powar aiaarlna and Brahaw OM war, $2197 1964 Dodge t-Oaar Sadan wltb arctic whlto nnU, rad totortor. aptomwto. $1297 1961 Comet Glowing rad ftotah, with cu» tom trim, and eat aavlng Kyi. acanemy. $287 I960, T-Bird Tha etoaale ona In ihlning rad $497 1964 Chevy impala 3-Oeor Hardtop, navy ----------Tt jw, aland- $1297 S P A R D T O A D N G E 855 Oakland FE 84528 ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS; FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1965 .161 Now aiMCm ININwj^ Used Cm 16ft $1995 BIRMINGHAM CHKVM.IR#LV«MMITH w t.Woodwanl- 1965 Plymouth Buryi I t>Wiiil Warn. 30 engine w automatic transmission and pov itaartaa. Don’t Matthew at 03M. OAKLAND MOUTH m OoWaad Avs. Win Ml VALIANT. Most SACRIFICE. 6»WiMi --------- Bn fLVMOUTH SPOUTS fury. Btt MNYiac WITH M PONTIAC angina. nK 1957 Pontiac Stor Cluaf. good tires, UTS. Both —' KS2 PONTIAC 4 DOOR, HYDRA- WjrjsxJrSr light,, MOM ftl ail 444-3293. If57 PONTIAC 5-DOOR, V-l AUTOMATIC UII FOR PART*. CAR RUNS. AS f* bm p6M*tiac.i poor stick. ee: pbssesslon. Assume payment, ot &*5 par ~ " Elizabeth Late Rd. FE KING AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Laka Rd. FE 64088 I* CATALINA CONVMTIBU BSSS£ nSr^..blacli^to^j rw be aaan atMairCMI 03-1113- IMS CATALINA 4 DOOR HARDTOP. ^rikM‘ Cxc' GLENN'S iv hydramatle, waiter. radio, ir steering. brakes, whltawaiii. SHELTON IM4 PONTIAC iONNEVILLi Mar, hardtop, 1"“** M • ~— HtDO. 3359971. 4 CUSTOM 4 DOOR, ______J, brakes,' radio- Ml mllai. OP3-9I44. 1966*GTO •paad, S5M0. FI S-5MI 1044 GTO ,HARDTOP, P0Wl R 1964 \ GRAND PRIX It* MITROPOLITAN. TIRES, 1959 PONTIAC' 'j *OS CM altor Aj3l*M4S4. I Lincoln • Marcury - Comet W Aontiac white'wi-rtf bluejl 250 OAKLAND 333-7863 $2095 Lloyd Motors 1943 NASH AMERtCAN COMVlRTI-bla. Exc. condition. New nttf*. 51 ShtHdan. Off Howard it. REAL SHARPS KING M4 BONNEVILLE, DOUBLE POW- AUTO SALES M59 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 ' MMPONtlAC4bOOR.S5»S. 19M PONTIAC, CATALINA CON-vertlble, power steering, brake,, •harp, Ora rad, white top, t Peer's PE M541. laUST DISPOSk Mtf~9 tlac hardtop, na money dawn, I weakly payment*, call Mr. 1 phy at 335-4101 McAulHfe. 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA 3 DOOR hardtop, bucket agaMaaajHMHM $1795. FE 4-5319. 1945 RED PONTIAC TEMPEST -CONVERTIBLE, *o»5, low ml. 4051 Chap lot. 4S3-5341. 1943 PONTIAC I DOOR 6MLWA. low mlteugu, • dWR» oil power, on. < p-m/b* RUSS JOHNSON 1945 GRAND PRIX, EXTRAS, LOW Pontiac-Rambler On M34 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 1942 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE —Attrectlv* blaa h like is a new one. Spring Special ■ Houghtan Old*. 53t N Rochester. OL 1-9741. 1941 TEMPEST STATION WAGON, GM GALE Me ANN ALLY'S Auto Sales 150 Pontiac,, a choice of almost every modal, 4 doors, convertible*, station wagon, hardtapa, all srttn 2 veer warranty. - SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 Across tram Pontiac Stata eanfc GLENN'S. 190 Tempest convertible, real aha L. C. Williams, Salesman 90 W. Huron St. PE 4-7371 PE 4-1797 1*63 PONTIAC CAtAUlGri ,1th low mlMS. V-4 with full pow-r S1495. Houghton Olds. 01 N. Aaln, Rochester. OL 1-9741. 1 PONTIAC CAYALINA, 3 TONE, 190 TEMPEST COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TEAMS. MISSION, RADIO AND HEATER MID WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, aaiume weekly payments of *9.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Park* at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4*7500. 1*0 TlMPEST CONVERTIBLE GLENN'S r low mi lea go. Roe a KEEGO Pontiac-GMC-Tempest Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 —KEEGO HARBOR— PE 4-1301 *Wtr 5:30. 1. FE 54443, after HAROLD TURNER -FORD, 1NC----- 444 S. WOODWARD AVB. BIRMINGHAM_______Ml 4-75M LUCKY AUTO FACTORY WARRANTY ON USED LINCOLNS 1963 TO 1965 After original warranty has expired ENGINE BLOCK, . HEAD, INTERNAL PARTS, WATER PUMP, INTAKE MANIFOLD, OIL PAN. REAR AXLE CASE, INTERNAL PARTS " DIFFERENTIAL CASE. INTERNAL PARTS DRIVE SHAFT AND . UNIVERSAL JOINTS TRANSMISSION CASE, INTERNAL PARTS TORQUE CONVERTER CASE, INTERNAL PARTS . REAR WHEEL BEARINGS Lloyd Motors Lincoln Merci 125Q OAKLAND $19> SPECIALS 1 Good traneportetton cars to choaaa from, sflett shm and auk*- as ipw as 0.00 dawn and_| p#r was* Credit no problem, via handle and ar/Mge all " nanclng. Call Mr. Dan at: K B4C71 Capitol Auto 4 312 W. MONTCALM GM GALE McANNAlltS * Auto Sales whlta bucket seats, I cylinder angina, automatic, ^seeToTburke 1304 Baldwin FE B4S2S Across i W Wad Cara 166 RAMBLER AMiRKAN ■ ' wagon, |||| is, cafpattog. racBntag ~l brake system, luggage aroon exterior, Sl.lfiT *33-7215. RAMtLIR AMERICAN, AUTO W ml.. Mt. 4*3-3749. 1965 .RAMBLER ■ Ambessedor * * passenger station wagon, automalic, radio, heater, thtm^nJoSTmilesTlkn except tone! factory officials car. New ear warranty. 95391 toll price. Bank rates. Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 WILL ACCEPT IN TRADE GUNS, BOATS, MOTORS * .....Sf ALMOST ANrrHIRO MOVABLE BILL SPENCE 6673 Dixie Hwy. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT RAMBLER JEEP »r end priced to sell. RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 . 1964 RAMBLER American 4 door station s low mltopqo ana-----— trad*. Tu-tone I 1964 RAMBLER Clastic 940. Black beauty, ard shift with avar-drtva. Radio, heater, whitewall tires, axcaptlon-ally dean one owner new car trad*. 11095 full price, bank rates'. Many mors to choose from. Village Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 25 New 1966 M U -j s T A ■ N -G ' s/ In SfKk Ready Por- Delivery ary Us First-Try Us Last- Beattie ON DIXfe HWY. IN WATERFORD, "Your FORD DEALER SIM*------ "Homo of Service after the Si OR 3-1291 dmonlng. C. Williams, Salesman 1*0 CATALINA, SHARP, S**i Pf GM GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sales / 190 Tempter LeMens ^ coupe/wit t*3s? aTve'englne, automatic! I yupr warranty- J SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin A 84525 GOME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 Top Quality, ana-owner new car trades to choose from WHEftE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT M ■: BIRMINGHAM TRADES ‘ 1964 OLDS 98 4-door hardtop. Full power. A sharp Birmingham trade...............$2195 1965 OLDS 98 Luxury -sedan with hill power. A sharp Birmingham trade........... $2895 1965 0LDSM0BILE Storfire 2-door hardtop. Full • ----. power, tike niw; Transferable new-car . , warranty ........., r............... $2895 1963 fUHCK Electro 225 hardtpp. Full pgwer, factory air conditioning. The ona you've been (poking for ,.. ........... ..........$1795 1963 0LDSM0BILE Station wagon. Maroon finish, power steering .and brakas, .automatic .......... .$1695 1965 OLDS Star 88 hardtop. Power steering, power brakes, only4000 milts. Trans-' ferable new car warranty. ....................SAVE 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 NOW- NOW: NOW: North wood Finance Plan i FINANCE PLAN DESIGNED TO HEL> THOSE WHO HAVE HAD TR0UBLI FITN THEM CREDIT. . Special Payment Plan 1 PAYMENT PLAN DESIGNED FOR THOSE WHO NEED PAYMENTS ON L0N( Et{M CONTRACTS. New Pre-Owned Trade-Ins WE HAVE A COMPLETE SELECTION OF PRE-OWNED -ONE-OWNER TRADE-INS. OVER 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM. THIS DISCOUNT SALE RUNS' THRU MAY 1st 1966 I960'T-Blrd, Sedan ... , $ 895 $ 8.48 weekly 1961 .Pontiac, 2-door ., 1961 - Chevy 2-door— ,.$ 695 .$^89S $ 6.48 weekly ’ t A Aft uiaaUu 1964 Cadillac, Convt. .. .$3395 v o#*o wiiKiy $33.48 weekly 1961 Ford, Wagon .* ... ..$595 $ 5.48 weekly 1958 Chevy, 23oor . ... .. % 395 $ 3.4$ weekly 1959 Pontiac, 2-door. . . /$ 295 * % 2.48 weekly 1961 Chevy, 4-dOor ..$495 $4.48 weekly 1960 Olds, Canvt. ..$695 $6.48 weekly 1961 Pontiac, Convt. ,.. ..$795 $7.48 weekly 1961 Ford, 2-door ...... ..$295 $2.48 weekly 1959 Olds, 2-door . $195 $1.48 weekly 1962 Ford, 2-door ..... ..$895 $8.48 weekly 1960 Pontiac, 4-door ... ..4495 $4.48 weekly ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED FE'8-9239 CALL CREDIT MGR. v p ? rvv nrm n v«< .TUB.lj0WTi.AC PKKSS. FRIDAY, APRIL 15, I960 l*4§t —Television Programs— fofraiM furnished by stations listed in thto column are subject to change without notice ;' OwnwL i-WJiK.1V, 4-WW-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, T-CKIW-TV, SO-WKHMV, — -Wivfc EVENING ' 6:||. (2) (4). News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: "At Gunpoint’ (In Progress) (9) Dennis the Menace . (M) Superman : (56) Americans at Work 9:19 (89) Social Security in Action Y:98 (7) News, WeatHer, , Sports. 9:99 (2) (4) (Color) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon (50) Little Rascals (56) Big Picture 9:49 (7) Network News 7:99 (2) (Color ) Mr. Magoo (4) Traffic Court* (7) Millionaire (9) Movie: "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein” (1949) Bud Abbott. LAi Costello. (50) Soupy‘Sales (56) Swedish.Scene . 7:29 (2) Wiki, Wild West (4) (Color) Camp * Runamuck , . (7) (Color) Flintstones (56) Math for Parents 11:99 (4) (Color) Hank \ (7) (Color) Tammy ; .456) Continental Comment * 1:29 (2) (Color) Hogan’s Heroes (4) (Color) Sammy Davis Jr. (7) Addams Family (59) Doctors Only 9:99 (9) News 9:99 (2) (Color) Gomer Pyle (7) (Special) The Big Guy (9) Telescope (50) Alfred Hitchcock 9:29 (2) Smothers Brothers (4) (Color) Mr. Roberts (9) Star Route (56) Festival of the Arts 19:99 (2) Trials of O’Brien (4) (Color) Man From U.N.CJJS. (7) Court-Martial. (9) Tommy Hunter (50) Wrestling ;i9:29 (9) Nation’s Business ’10:49 (9) Peggy Neville TV SERVICE COUM-BUCK a WHltl SWEET'S U W. Hum TV Features First Tiger Telecast By United Press Iatenutiabal THE mo GUY, 9:00 p.m. (7) Profile of two young heavyweight boxers. FE8TIVAL OF THE ARTS, 9:30 p.m. (56) Theatrical classic, "Lower Depths," by Russian writer Maxim Gorky, contains prediction of Russian Revolution! * SATURDAY BASEBALL, 2:00 p.m. (4) First of NBC’s 29 regular-season colorcasts pits Orioles, Yankees at Baltimore. BASEBALL, 2:00 p.m. (2) First of 49 regular-season telecasts of Tiger games pits Detroit, Washington at Tiger Stadium. . TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS, 3:30 p.m. (7) Action in third round of $100,000 Las Vegas tourney is telecast. Live Pokey Continues Cavorting U,:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Whether, Sports (50) Wells Fargo 11:99 (2) Movies: 1. "Calling Nofthslde 777" (1949) James Stewart, Richard Conte. 2. "The Last Outpost” (1935) Gary Grant, Claude Rains. (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Movies: "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo” (1942) Spencer Tracy, Van Johnson. 2. “She-Wolf of London” (1949) June Lockhart, Don Porter. (9) Movie: "Home Before Dark” (1997) Jean Simmons, Dan O’Herlihy. 1:90 (4) Beat the Champ 1:90 (4) News, Weather 2:99 (2) News, Weather (7) All-Night Show SATURDAY MORNING 9:10 (2) News 9:11 (2) Farm Scene 9:99 (2) Sunrise Semester (7) Americans at Work 9:45 (7) Wheelsville, U.S.A. 7:09 (2) Captain Kangaroo (4) Country Living " (7) Everybody’s Business 7:29 (4) (Color) Boso (7) Junior Sports Chib 9:99 (2) Happyland (4) Milky’s Party Time • (7) Starlit Stairway 9:99 (7) Three Stooges S IS DO-IT-YOURSELF SERVICE | AS DAMEMUS AS TREY SAY7 ■ The total failure at many a good TV sat caa ba tracad | 1 Yaur TV Mt la the aaaat eawallcataS Osaka you aura — far more cinplpx than (van yaur automobile. Whan you Mad TV oarvka. call an expert technician — yaur fully trained and experienced T9SA af OAKLAND COUNTY Service Dollar. IMPROVE YOUR HOME $ DEAL DIRECT "SST FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen SOCC COMPLETE ( Ft. Kitchen $OQC COMPLETE INCLUDES Upper c CALL FE 8-8173 CALL DAY OR NIGHT * ADDITIONS* FAMILY BOOMS ALUMINUM SIDING NEC. BOOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS - NO CHARGE I5W.LAWWNC9 CALL FES-9179 Brat Payment ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING liSfe (2) (Color) Heckle and Jeckie (4) (Color) Jetsons 9:99 (2) (Color) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) (Color) Atom Ant 19:99 (2) (Color) Mighty Mouse (4) (Color) Secret (7) (Coler) Porky Pig (!) YVlxard of Os 19:29 (2) Lassie (4) (Coke) Underdog (7) (Color) Beatles (9) Hawkeye 11:99 (2) (Color) Tom and Jerry (4) (Color) Top Cat (7) (Color) Casper (9) Tides and Trails 11:99 (2) (Color) Quick Draw McGraw (4) Fury (7) Magilla Gorilla (9) Physics AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Sky King (4) Beat, the Champ (7) (Color) Bugs Bunny • (9) Umbrella (50) Western Theater 12:99 (2) (Color) Unus (7) (Color) Milton the Monster (9) Country Calendar 1:19 (2) Sea Hunt (4) Telesports Digest (7) (Color) Hoppity Hooper (9) Championship Series 1:99 (2) Detroit Speaks (4) (Color) 8am Snead .... (7) American Bandstand 2:19 (2) Amateur Hour (4) (Color) Baseball: . Baltimore vs. New York (9) Wrestling (50) Wrestling 2:29 (2) Voice of the Fans (7) Club 1270 2:45 (2) Tiger Warmup 2:99 (2) Baseball: Detroit Yi. Washington (9) Music Hop (50) Roller Derby 2:99 (7) (fecial) Tournament of Champions 4:19 (9) Outlaws (SO) Captain Detroit 5:99 (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Wide World of Sports (9) Lieutenant (50) Movie: “The Red Drigon” (1945) Sidney Toler. 5:29 (2) Baseball Scoreboard (lime Approximate) 5:29 (2) News, Weather, Sports XOi (4) S.L.A. Marshall Thief Takes Apt Jape RICHMOND, Va. (AP) —The Rev. David Thomas Lowman of the Muprii Presbyterian Church hm. recently taped r sermon baaed on one of the Ten Commandments. Thursday he reported the tape was stolen. Topic of the sermon: "Thou shalt not atari.” CHARLES CITY, Va. (AP) -A young whale named Pokeyj continues to cavort in his James River playground, apparently! none, the worm from his Joust with man. • * A , - * ", After surviving a hail of bri> lata-from a 3M0-rifle, Pokey resumed his peaceful mean ‘ ing around a mud bank, aoma 79 miles upstream from his natural Atlantic pcean habitat. The question of what to do with* the 3,000-pound whale ro- Hb finder, fisherman Norman C. 'Haynes, tried to dispose of him on two occasions,, but without success. IN HUDDLE The Deportment of the Interior, the Army Corps yof Engineers and the^ Coast Guard huddle today in Washington to a solution to the problem. Some Virginians think he should be killed. Haynes’ son, Bernard, has already tried that. Wednesday night he drilled Pokey with a dozen bullets from 30-30 .rifle. When Haynes tried > tow the “dead” whale away the next morning, Pokey thrashed arounid, ‘‘breaking three nylon lines like they were shoestrings,” * t The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to AnL men be prosecuted for their actions. State officials checked Virginia statutes end laid it appeared that “legally a whale is fair game for anybody.” ♦ ★ When Pokey was discovered, he already had between 25 and 30 bullet wounds plus lacerations riL over Ms body. In all, he' has been riddled with some 40; bullets. WOULD SAVE POKEY Rep. Howard W. Smith, IV Va., appeared to side with those who want to save Pokey. “They ought -to be honored to have a whale,” Smith said. "I don’t know of any other place in Virginia that has a whale. What are they fussin’ about?” D1 24 fl 4s S" ■r I B "»7- B B 4ft 42 48 w W *7 w M E" II U IB M U7 Was Ha Drunk? Driver Left Trail of Debris MUSKEGON (UPI) - Hie police blotter listed the infraction as drunken driving. But the officers making the arrest on James Cairo! North Muskegon said that was an overaimpUfication.. . a * ★ . / According to the officers, they saw CarrMivtag in a reckless manner but, before they could catch him, he drove down four streets. ; ;*'! : On the way, they said, he sftieswiped a car. ran a atop sign, struck another car in the rear after skidding more than 100 feet, spun around, Jumped ».curb, knocked down two trees, ran another stop sign, Jumped the curb again, ran across a lawn, backed into the street, rim another stop sign, Jumped the curb a£ain, almost hit two pedestrians, tore up another lawn; Mt another tree And finally parked his car on the street where police arrested him. r- n-» -V —t Radio Programs— Romo wxYipamaawcoo) wwj(4to) wcauqieetwFdwtieee)wJadtigQH wwixiiitadl FRIDAY *:IB—WJR. Newt WWJ.Nmrt.Spo CKLW, _____ ____ WJBK, Tlw Orem I WCAR. Nm, Joe B WXYZ. Newt WPON, Newt, Sportl WHFI, Unci* Jay Sb «:J*-WJBK, Newt WJR, awMi WWJ. Today In Rov WXYZ. Alex Dreier • :4S—WXYZ. NOW*. It WJR. Noon, Sportl 7:10—WXYZ, Ed MOT WCAR. Ron Am* WPON. Now*, Johnn WWJ, Now*. PIMM WHPI. Dinner Conce III*-WXYZ, LOO AlO Mi M—WXYZ, Danny Taylor 11:00—WWJ, Now’ Final WJR, Noon, sport! 11:10—WCAR, Rx. HOOlttl 11:1*—WCAR, Rm Rom BA1UROAV MORNiNS XYZ, M*rc A ISK, Bob LM car, Nona i 'PON, Noon. Bob Lawrence 11:00—WJR, Noon. • WCAR, Noon. Bll whpi, am a x< WJBK, fleer* T WHPI, Jl CKLW, » *:0B—WPC WXYZ, O Metropolitan Oporo USSttmJJk SEE THE HOCKEY PLAY-OFFS to your present TV with these QUALITY CiiMttl HASTEi’ PRODUCTS hbm. * oconomy modal UNF CONVERTER INSTANTLY AMS UHF STATIONS TO ANY VHP TV SIT! FJOR USE WITH INDOOR M OR OUTDOOR ANTENNAS NOW ONLY/ • eeo battiriisi \ • AX. OPIKATtON • INSTANT WAtM-Uf TUo BoooHfoNr RyM ee> CHAN NIL* N TOS RWTBOPOUTAN ASIr ^VbS*^ * fr*7 N Intelh/Nriilf fa Mlaetes! TV-RADIO SERVICE OpoA Friday Evas, 'til 9 770 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. o a d o odd do q, d S O NY MODEL 123* a a THE NE W VAT Tf WIITB □ p a ... AUTOMATICALLY! Q Don’t taka up that pen — The Sony 128 Tap* Record* O obsolete! Al yw have la O do is take microphone in hand and talk to a friend □ or loved ona. No thrM sdnota tfana O limit! You can have up to a 2-hour, on ana real. □, nttawte "vittr J ...aaayasl-23toaperata...mlyS39JK q ‘ pontiac Music d AND SOUND t“" W-“ 0 -d o o o Q P O Q OOP XIUMilAiU a d □ O O 0 HEADQUARTERS BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION COMPANY NO MONEY DOWN S Up to T Yoirt to Pay i in FE 3-7833 BLESSING IN DISGUISE! TV ANTEHNA DAMAGED BY THE STORM? Thtt could be tlw bed thing theft hep* pened to your TV reception In yews! BILL PETRUSHA & SONS y ------- Ft 3-7171 Hf-gtH RENT, T-KAStt, SRII. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS ... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CAU* 3329191. i ' i . 4 i THE POYTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1M6 jPeop/e in News j By The Associated Press Nearly SI years ago, George H. Weyerhaeuser was abducted and held for ransom In a sensational kidnaping case In Tacoma, Wash. 1 Be was released a week later after his parents paid $200,-000 ransom. Three persons were convicted of the crime.- Weyerhaeuser was 9 years old then. k Yesterday he was elected president of die Weyerhaeuser Co.va big lumber and wood products ffirm. ' Anti-Vief War Protest Proves Taxing. George R. Rosenblatt of New York is against the war hi Viet Nam aad wants his view to fX counted. So when he went to pay die balance doe on his income tax yesterday he stuffed each of ,174 dollar bills in separate, eavclopea each marked “not to be used for war." Internal Revenae Service agents at the Brooklyn office took'45 minutes to opea the lot and asrara. the count But patience ran out when Rosenblatt began an Informal speech to his fellow taxpaye^. Six marshals rashed _•- him out. __'' _’ . '-•% 1 'j :.J, 8*ld Rosenblatt, "They were Very serious, and they told me not to come back." Scot Turn* Yank Before Vief Service Staff Sgt. John McCamley, a native of Scotland, has been in the U. S. Army for eight years. Now he’s headed for Viet Nam in less than three weeks. Before he gets there though, he will become an American citizen. McCamley was naturalized yesterday at Baton Rouge, La. He has also served in the British and Australian armies. Oldest Man in Utah Has 102nd Birthday William J. Dermody, believed to be die oldest man in Utah, celebrates his 112nd birthday today at Ogden where be has lived since lttl. Dermody is listed as the oldest pensioner of the Western Union Telegraph Co. Be went to work for Western Union as a boy in Mount Vernon, Ohio, his home town. He became a telegraph operator before deciding to head for Saa Francisco to catch a ship for the South African mines. He got as far as Ogdea. Hidla Erickson, 117, of Grsntsville is listed as the oldest woman in Utah. NASTY DISPOSITION — Despite an earlier legal dispute, bloodless.bullfight? were introduced to a small audience Of about 1,500 persons last night in Philadelphia. The Pennsyl vania Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals sough Bullfights Bow-in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA OB Phil-, adelphis, the shrine of Quakerism, the Liberty Bell, and main line aHstocracy, resounded to the thud of hoofs and roars ot“ole!” last night as bloodless bullfighting made its much-debated debut here. Whether the dar 1 ng matadors, twirling capes, and 700-pound blade bulls would be seen here again, however, depended on the outcome of a judicial hearing today. The Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is still seeking to' block the bullfights. ' The society had asked for , a preliminary injunction which was refused earlier this week by Common Pleas Court Judge Edward J. Griffiths. He left the door ope*"-to further action, however, by scheduling the second hearing. Judge Griffiths, accom- p a n i e d by Administrative Judge Vincent A. Carrol, was among toe 1,500 spectators at last night's ,first of four performances scheduled by Bravo Enterprises, Jnc. ■ ir : ★ ★ Griffiths, who said he had read two books on bullfighting in preparation for the show, took notes by the light of a flashlight. TAKING NOTES Also taking notes were members of the SPGA who had been authorized by the judge to examine the condition of the bulls before .and after the fights, or “displays.” Robert G. Hudson, director of operations for the society, after a preperform-' ance examination of the tint bull, said the animal appeared in good condition. He declined to comment, however, after a second examination following the display. Jeff Ramsey, 22, an American • born bullfighter who performs to Mexico City and who was technical adviser for the bullfights here, said that unlike the Spanish and Mexican tradition, the bloodless bullfight is conducted without to-- jury to the bull. ■ ft ft ★,__________ Banderillas] the b a r b spears jabbed into the bull to traditional bullfighting, were simulated by blunt wooden stick Which could not pierce the skin. FALSE SWORDS The matadors carried false swords, and even those were thrown away before the final maneuver, in which the traditional. kUl. was replaced by a tap on the bull’s shoulder, by the matador’s empty hand. * ★ * V .What remained the same was the daring capework, and the danger to the matadors from is’s sharp hor y said had Ramsey said had not been bhtoted or capped. No horses were used In the ring with the bulls. ' Gustavo Caktilk), 24, of Mixi-co City was thrown twice by a bull, but escaped serious injury. $wiss~MedicafTeam--Arrives in S. Viet Nam SAIGON UB — A Swiss medical team arrived today to join similar groups"* from 10 other nations serving in -South Vietnamese, hospitals. The two- doctors, an x-ray technician, an administrator and five nurses will be assigned to Kontum, in the highlands, replacing a Filipino team that is moving to the Mekong Delta. Two more Swiss doctors and an extra nurse will arrive next ■week. UP SPRINGS THE DASHMG HIGH TWO4UTT0N M A NEW SILKEN SHARKSKIN CREPE Silken shorkikin aglow for spring In n— refreshing new crepe weave. The cosmopolitan high two-buttdh is handsomely detailed with stitched edges and fabric covered buttons... notch lapels, side vents; the trousers are trim with quarter top pockets, 49.50. I e rest of foe day. “Some days are good-end some not so good.” WARREN (AP)—A credit unit cleric reported a robber clouted him on the head with a pistol and escaped with 165,174 from a Warren parking lot Thursday. Cashier Michael Scherb, 23, said he was taking the money from a bank to the Tek-Ni-Kal Credit Union, which serves the General Motors Technical Center, to cash pay checks when he was accosted by an armed man in a parking lot. It h 'it Scherb told police he attempted to out walk the man to his office, but the man hit him over the head with the gun and grabbed the suitcase in which he was carrying the money. Police said a man burning trash at the rear of the credit union reported he was attracted by the commotion and saw the robber jump into a car driven by a confederate. Police said he gpt a partial license number. * * * Scherb described the robber as white, between 20 and 30 years of age, who called Scherb by his last name. He said the gunman was about 5-feet-S and weighed 180 to 220 pounds. NOW OPEN Amticm He/uieuje/ APARTMENTS [J AS 3365 Watkins Lake Rd. 1 and 2 BEDROOMS prices start at *145 MONTHLY DM* Hithway to Scott Lake Rd., turn south to Watkins LakoRd.,wost to 1165 Watkins Laka This beautiful modem apartment with "all electrical appliances, heat, light, air conditioning are all included in rental price." Alio a carport for each apartment. Formica Kitchan — Large Closet — Unusual Convenience Features Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday Saturday, Sunday: 1 to 5 and 6:30 to 8:30 Phone: 674-2959-Mornings 673-6927 Officials Doubt China Read WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.* authorities voiced doubt today that Communist China is ready Jo improve relations with the United States despite Washington’s gradually-opening-door policy toward the Chinese mainland. The State Department Thursday opened that door a bit further, saying that Commuglst Chinese scientists and scholars will be allowed to come to American universities. Press officer Robert J. Mo Closkey said several inquiring U.S. universities have been told by the State Department in recent weeks that they may invite visits by Red Chinese scientists and scholars. The Peking regime has been advised of this but he kndwa of no response, he added. The U.S. government eight years ago lifted its bars against American newsmen going to Red China. In recent months, with the personal approval of President Johnson, it has further lifted barriers for various types of experts. MEDICAL SPECIALISTS List December the State De- partment said U.S, medical specialists could visit Communist China. Last month it said U.S. scientists and scholars could go. It Mao suggested trading weather information with the Red Chinese. But so far, U.S. officials reports, Peking has steadfastly rebuffed the U.S. overtures both publicly ahd in the periodic confidential U.S.-Chinese ambassadorial meetings at Warsaw. * ★ ★ Red Chinese propaganda continues to berate the United States as the No. 1 capitalist- imperialist arch enemy. At Warsaw, the Peking ambassador is said to have rejected any accommodation with the United States on other matters until this country quits supporting the Chinese Nationalists, which Washington refuses, to do. U.S. authorities believe that the current Peking leadership is .so wedded to its militant policy, which even includes castigation of the Soviet Union’s “peaceful coexistence,” that no turnabout in Red China’s posture toward the United States is in the offing. -CtQHTV PROOF • 71MX CRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS • 600DERKAM t WORTS, PEORIA, IU. HELLO PEN It’S a Pleasure to Have You Here PRICE REDUCED TO $m $729 J 4/5 quart t* put Indudas 4% Michigan Salat Tax HALF GALLONS AND QUARTS AVAILABLE ON SPECIAL ORDER ennetff WAYS FIRST QUALITY * Your favorite summer match mates gay checked ginghams COMBED COTTONS MAD FOR LACE! fully lined ankle pants .......3.98 Go, ginghams, go fa all longfhs 7i stylos... tha bast sport to ovar hit Ilia fabric world! Ponno/s prosants a pant-astk now collection of leggy looks ... ankle pants, jamaicas 'n knee pants, all fully lined 'n back zippadl Above all... pant tops, middies, shells banditd about with loco, plus a modem-classic button-down. Pinkl Blue or orange! Got up-'n-go ginghams that machine wash! Save now) Sizes 8 to 18. PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. t THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 Indonesian Travel Is Slow, Unreliable JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -icompanies use buses from Aus-j about fixing the transportation ‘' *k *'■' — . - " system. No more passenger can. Only span parts will be imported, says the government. * ★ ★ ' ♦ But lndoneglgm, whq saw Transportation in Indonesia tralia, West Germany. Hungary functions with hick, baling win and small ones from Japan, and th* grace of Allah. * ★ ★ With tiverythiag in short sup- officials in import depart-ply here, including luck and ments saw to i,t that a variety of] jw|re, people movet fropn one ‘FLYING WING’ — A parachutist glides from 5,000 feet in an experimental parachute being studied by the Flight Dynamics laboratory at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, for accurate aerial delivery bf supplies and equipment to troops. The “flying sting” has a 24-foot projected span. British Expedition Set to Trace Vinland Voyage LONDON (DPI)—A British expedition still set sail May 3 for Vinland, that mysterious part of North America which the Vikings an said to have discovered long before Columbus sailed from Spain for the New World. The Guardian newspaper, sponsor of the expedition, said today the expedition will sail from the North Sea port of Scarborough and try to use the currents and tidal streams to reach the same landfalls the Vikings found. ‘It still make first for southwest Greenland and ‘ then atteppt to reproduce Leif Erikson’s voyage to Vinland/bf about (he year 1001 from such sailing directions as are recorded in the old Icelandic sagas,” the Guardian said. - If the expedition’s landfalls can be identified with the descriptions in the sagas, “it still be at least circumstantial evidence of the probable location of Vinland,” the paper said. Last year, Yale University published a map stiiich supposedly proved that the Vikings sailed to America in the 11th and 12th centuries. MANY THEORIES The map, showing an island called Vinland, is said to have been produced before Columbus made his voyage in 1492. The Guardian noted that “there have been many theories about Vinland, but no one knows precisely where it was.” Disclosure of the Yale map set off a controversy in the United States between those who would have Columbus as the discoverer of America, and those who want the Vikings to have, that honor. point to another largely by accident. Just by chance one gets on the bus or dump truck of his choice. Getting off as scheduled is a rare delight. This is a city of three million, most of them desperately poor. They travel in everything from ■Mi o it I , _ bus makes Was imported. From I prices increase by 600 per cent many sellers they could figure last year, are understandably on a handsome kickback for some of the world’s greatest making the purchase and help- cynics. Trucks and betjacks aping it through customs. pear here to stay as transport. Nobody thought to order spare parts, so more than half the buses are sidelined. Most of them are being cannibalized to keep the others moving. horse carts to embassy cars-j BUSES when the embassy driver wants , . . ______ l * ^ .rSr. -L^yrjrijas Tolls are -virtually ■» Utoly^to; at. The de luxe Hotel Indonesia lltey recently l.«ned _. operates its own Heel ot taxis. P1*™1 tr“t J* Private cars including relics rates ^ have to Pay each.day Sung WorKrn, H!" Maks-10 ruplss, about vide additional taxis. 17 cents- * . * * TYPE OF TRAVEL For long-distance traveling, Most of the city relies on dump trucks or military con-buses,. three-wheeled pedicabs voys are recommended by ~~~ called betjaks, and dump trucks, or the people walk. The city .operates which might loosely be called a bus system. Government and private bus soned travelers. The trucks are well-ventilated and provide a splendid view of the countryside. The government is talking Medicare Said Bad for Nursing Homes DALLAS, Tex. Iff) — Certain standards imposed on nursing homes by medicare could “inflate an already serious shortage of professional workers,” says, Charles Hoffman, a spokesman'for the American Nursing Association. *» A * Hoffman told a meeting of association members that “medicare will require one registered nurse and several licensed practical nurses to each shift at a nursing home. ' Troy Resident Heads Human Relations Unit Daniel F. Monley, of 405 E. Square Lake, Troy has been elected president Of the Oakland County Human Relations Coordinating Council. ' He succeeds John Millhone ho recently moved from Farmington to Detroit. An attorney employed in the personnel and organisation office of Ford Motor Co., Monley is married and has nine children. The coordinating council is comprised of delegates from 21 county human relations and civil rights organizations. * ★ * Its function is to serve as a clearing house for ideas- and action programs in civil rights matters. Job Corps Dining Hall NEW BEDFORD, Mass, » -A. d i n i n g ball accommodating 750 students will be built at the Rodman Job Corps Center at a cost of (282,000. Magnavox FM-AM Radios for great baseball listening! THIS MOTHER'S DAY and every day, do the* dishes Hie Kitchen Aid Way SOLID STATE FM-AM TABLE RADIO Enjoy all the excitement of the games on this precision built solid state FM-AM radio. Has Automatic Frequency no-drift Control, wood cabinet. 5995 FM-AM TRANSISTOR RADIO Top performing 8 trans-istor Magnavox fits in 1095 pocket or purse. Battery, I 7 earphone & case included. GRINNELL'S, Pontioc Moll, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 ddys same as cash) or Budget Plan Trade your old dish washer for a new KitchenAid Tots out the dishpan! Throw in the towed This month, we’re wheeling and dealing on portables. Trade In your odd dish washer—your dish rag, your . sponge, whatever. You’d be surprised how much it’ll be worth. So hurry. There’s never been a better time to trade “sink duty’’ for the modem, automatic way of doing dishes-a new Kitchen-Aid portable! Wide choice of models for every kitchen and budget KitchenAid DISHWASHERS Wayne Gabert Appliances 121 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-6189 RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES. PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS ... USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL S32-8181. (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) Here are the^FACTS! Signs Carried by Firemen Picketing the City Hall Read: “The City gives us just peanuts” LET’S LOOK AT THE HECORD- THE PONTIAC FIRE DEPARTMENT BEGINING RANK IS NOW *7059 PER YEAR! This Is An INCREASE of *1010 In the Past 18 Months! Only TWO Cities In the State Pay More! Detroit ($7335) and Wayne ($7091) Pontiac pays its firefighters MORE than: Flint.......... *6855 Lansing ....... *6532 Dearborn ...... *6903 Warren ........ *6688 Royal Oak..... *7033 Pontiac Is *257 Ahead-of the Average, of These Cities! Pontiac Also PAYS MORE Than These:— Birmingham • • • • Bay City...... ..,...•5900 Ferndale........ Grand Rapids.. ......5902 Hazel Park * ...•6900 Jackson...... Highland Park •. • ... *6791 Kalamazoo.... Saginaw ••••••.. f: Bdttle Creek •«. Port Huron • •... Muskegon ....< Mu Clemens.... . ...•6370 Southfield. ... Ann Arbor . ... .. • ...•6110 Hamtramck ... *6989 Remember These FACTS When Yon See Those Picket Signs! . ' - 'hi* 'This Advertisement Paid for by a Group of Taxpayers Who Are Sick of Being Gouged, / A wm. YOU ASKED FOR IT!!! clerks office workers! m FUTURE? Want to escape from a dull “blind alley” job? You can-easily and qpickly-when you learn... Speedwiitirw ■ m ABC SHORTHAND an interesting Secretary - in TV, radio, advertising, publishing, public relations...where you meat exciting people. Enjoy fascinating, stimulating duties. Speedwriting shorthand is taught exclusively in this area at this school. Visit or phone us. Without cost or obligation, discover how easily and quickly you can qualify fora well-paid career as a Secretary. Start on the way to a DAY AND E> FREE LIFETIME NATIONWIDE PLACEMENT SERVICE VISIT OR RHONE Oil WRITE FOR FREE CAREER ROOKLET NEW CUSS BEGINS APRIL 2$ Day School or Evening Division PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE IB W. Lawranca —FE 3-7028 USE TOUR CREDIT POWER USE YOUR CREDIT POWER USE YOUR CREDIT POWER 329. HO WHET DOWN 339. 359. thu THE PONTIAC PRESS. FBIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 Killers of Malcolm X Gel Life NEW YORK (UFI) - Three reputed members of the racist Black Muslim sect vara sentenced to life imprisonment yesterday for the slaying of breakaway black nationalist leader Malcolm X. Justice Charles Marks handed' down the mandatory life sentences following an sight-week trial. New York state law would not permit the death sentence in the case. ■ The three, Tabnadge Hayer, 24, ef Paterson, N.J., and Norman 3X Butler, 21, and Thomas 1IX Johnson, 3D, both of Bronx, were convicted of jirstdegree murder March H. Malcolm, a former Black Muslim leader who split with the Chicago-based sect to (bond his own black nationalist organization, was gunned down Feb. 21,1965 as he began to address a rally in the Audubon Ballroom in upper Man- dr Ar ★ Mrs. Betty Shabazz, Malcolm's widow, arrived in court tence on Johnson, the last refused to talk to news- wife, Etta 2X, and other were in court. None of But- GMTC CREDIT UNION Win Bo ClMMl TOMORROW Saturday, April 10th For The Michigan Credit Union League Annual Meeting! Emp^^es Federal. Union MOVING UP THE LADDER - Pennsylvania State Sen. Robert P. Casey has at least eight strong supporter! in his bid for the Democratic nomination for governor of the state. He and his wife, Ellen, have seven children. She holds Patrick, 5 months, and the others are (from left) Erin, 3; Chris, 4; Robert Jr., 6; Kate, 7; Mary Ellen, ft; and Margi, 12. SdentistsSlowing Uf Psychology Testing 7-PIECE ROOM OUTFIT SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -America's "brain watchers,” awed by powerful new means of laying the human mind open and shaken by outcries from the public, are putting their foot gently on the brake. At a meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Association here yesterday, a collection of the top psychologists, psychiatrists and sociologists in the country took to "analyzing” their owp work in relation to human privacy. "We have a bear by the tail,” was the way Dr. Orville G. Brim of New York, pat h. Psychological tests that ask a person intimate questions about his religious beliefs, his sex life and inmost thoughts have become commonplace in schools, industry and government. 0 it it Last June both the U. S. Senate and House held hearings in Washington over the use of such tests on Peace Corps applicants. 'PRETTY SILLY’ “We have made up some pretty silly tests,” Brim told his fellow psychologists yesterday. He added that the profession would have to admit also that “wo have made some h-responsible use” of test results. Brim said, however, that even If the sex questions are taken out of the tests, there would remain “a much more powerful source of resistance” to such psychological examinations. ★ w * This, he said, was the simple concept of privacy — “many of • SOFA • CHAIR • JULES • 2 LAMPS HO MOHET 00WH Fund Cutoff Is Threatened WASHINGTON by, I have to live in this town, too. What do you think? Please print this because Hector reads your column and gets a big kick out of it, but he says you make up all the letters yourself. HECTOR’S WIFE DEAR WIFE: Tell Hector that I don’t make up any letters. With people like him around, I don’t have to. And to answer your question, I agree with the psychiatrist/ Let Hector shoot his typewriter off. . * ' * * DEAR ABBY: Is there such a thing as being too polite?. I know a man who is so polite he makes everyone nervous. He is the one who races on ahead to open doors. And he jumps like a jack-in-the-box whenever a woman (or even an older person) enters the room. He beats all the other men when it comes to helping ladies with their coats and pulling out chairs. I don’t think this much courtesy is necessary. Should I be quiet? Or should I tell him he is overdoing the perfect gentleman routine? HIS FRIEND DEAR FRIEND: Re quiet. I suspect your “too polite" friend is merely well-bred and is behaving accordingly. Courtesy cannot be overdone. And he who is made “nervous’’ by good manners probably needs to brush up oh his own. August vows are planned by Mary Louise Watson, daughter of the Maurice T. Watsons of Rochester, and Dale Richard Schuerger Warren, son of Walter T. Schuerger , of Monroe Street and the late Mrs. Schuerger. Miss Watson is an alumna of Alma College. Expense a Prime Factor in Reception Choice By Madeleine doeren After the bride-to-be has set the date and time of her wedding and chosen the church, she decides what type reception she would like. There’s the church reception with cake, sandwiches, punch and coffee, following the ceremony, or a reception in a hall with dancing, food and liquid refreshments. Then there is the home or garden reception which can save as much as half of the reception budget Even an elegant one need not be too costly. FOLLOWS CEREMONY A ‘breakfast,’ the term used for a reception that takes place before one o’clock in the afternoon, immediately following a morning ceremony, has |many advantages. The newlyweds who may be leaving on a long motor trip or' flying to their destination. receive a ‘head start’ ... so do the out-of-town guests returning to their homes. The cost of an evening reception in home or hall, plus din-her for out-of-town guests, in addition to their place setting at the breakfast can easily cost $500 more than the simple postceremony breakfast. The size of home or apartment for the home reception is important, If the rooms are small, some articles of furniture could perhaps be moved out for the day. If the house is large enough to accommodate guests for the reception, a catering service providing a buffet will save many a. family headache. Roughly, the cost per person for this type reception is about $2.50. FLOWERS One large floral arrangement is suggested for the reception rather than several small scattered bouquets. Place it where most effective, as on a mantel, foyer table or on the bride’s table- The bridesmaids may arrange their bouquets at one end of the ftridal table as part of the decor. It is an added use of lovely bouquets which the girls usually tire of holding during the reception. They can be picked up later, of course. * * * Many churches haye fine halls available and the cost is normally much lower than a commercial hall which runs from $35 to $125. Arrangements can sometimes be made with the church janitor to clean the hall after the reception. DEAR ABBY: I have two very close friends who like me a lot, but they just hate each other. One will get very mad at me if I go with the other one. What should I do? IN THE MIDDLE - DEAR IN: Drop both of them! Everyone has the right to choose his own friends. And . so have you! ★ ★ ★ • DEAR ABBY: My wife and I cannot agree on something that I think should be settled soon. Our daughter is nearly 17. She is pretty, a good student, has a steady beau and she listens to reason. My wife says that hand-holding, hugging and kissing, and all signs of affection between young people should NOT be done at home, where others might walk in at any moment. This came up when we had another couple in for bridge. The four of us were playing in the living room and my daughter and her boyfriend were in the kitchen. My wife went into the kitchen to. get something and she caught them kissing. She was terribly upset. I say I’d rather have them at home doing this than somewhere else. My wife says they have plenty of opportunity to show affection elsewhere, mid if one of our friends had walked in on them instead of her, she’d never have been able to face them. She lectured our daughter for an hour the next day and cut her dating down to One night - a week instead of two. \ What do you think? DAD DEAR DAD: I think your wife is wrong. Normal and innocent displays of affection between a boy and a girl are natural and harmless. Tell your wife to get off your daughter’s back or she might fetel she has to ask her boyfriend to rent a motel room in order to give her a goodnight kiss. * * * ★ ; Problems? Write to Abby, in care The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. * * Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby, in cans The Pontiac Press for Abby’s booklet, “How . to Write Letters for All Occasions.” •-;/ '■** 'Ww <>■ Usually there is a women’s guild to take over full responsibility for the reception. They will cut the sheet cakes, if any, mix and pour the punch and wash the dishes at a nominal cost per person, whether a luncheon, buffet supper, or cake-and-coffee affair. ★ ★ * A 50-gallon coffee-maker is usually ‘‘standard equipment’ in the ctyirch kitchen, also china, silver, punch bowl and glasses. If not, there are agencies or caterers which specialize in renting candelabra, punch fountains, silver, china and crystal . . even carpeting or a platform for beneath the bride’s table. A few area caterers hnve dining rooms available where a buffet or even a sit-down breakfast or luncheon is priced at jp from IS to $3.25 par head. This includes tax and tip. One local caterer serves what he calls a ‘foreign brunch* In the home using paper plates at $2 per person or china for an extra charge. Many kinds of meat dishes and salads, also coffee, are offered. Some bakers and caterers will roast hams, turkeys or large beef roasts to be taken to the home or to a hall, with the family preparing foods to go with the main dish. OPERATION ‘SANDWICH’ Other caterers prepare sandwich fillings, bring these to the home or the scene of the reception and spread the breads just before the guests arrive. Added to their hourly charge is the price of the materials. This still costs less than buying a given number of sandwiches and AFS Slates Fund Raiser TAMARA LYNNE SEAY Mrs. Wilbur Crawford, Mark Street is the local representative on the metropolitan board of the American Field Service. This group is completing plans for its annual fund raising event on April 23. Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians, Bud and Cece Robinson, dancers, and Steve De-Pass, a creative balladier, will August vows are planned by Tamara Lynne Seay, daughter of the W. P. Seays of Roseville, and Gregory G. Arakelian, son of the George Arakelians of Zrocus Street. She is a senior at Central Michigan University md an alumna f Ferris State Zollege where her fiance is a senior. present a program at the Masonic Temple Auditorium in Detroit. Proceeds from the event are given to the AFS general fund in New York to augment funds raised by local chapters who sponsor foreign students. These students attend 12th grade in American high schools and live with local families. Tickets are available from Mrs. Crawford or at the Masonic Temple box office. Calendar 'SATURDAY Pontiac Chapter 228, Order of the Eastern Star, 4:90 to 7 p. m., smorgasbord at Masonic Temple on East Lawrence Street. MONDAY Women’s Association of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra, 1 p. m., home of Mrs. Everett Peterson of West Iroquois Road. Pontiac Women’s Chib, 1:30 p.m., YMCA. Mrs. Reba Netzler “Y” director will speak. Mrs. Henry Berry and Mrs. Ernest Huthwdite are tea chairman and program man, respectively. a reserve for any extra servings. KEEP AMPLE Refreshments should be simple, with enough to satisfy the guests but the variety of foods' held to a minimum. - On a summer day, a. fresh, .cooling salad is pleasant, with dainty sandwiches. Serve petit fours, if you wish, but remember that the wedding cake is the important sweet to be served. * * * One of the most memorable moments of the reception is the toast to the new couple. Champagne is the proper beverage and the traditiond tribute to the newlyweds. For a single toast, a case is sufficient for up to 100 guests, as one bottle serves six. If punch is to be served, the caterers usuaiy prepare the base or ‘mix’ on the scene, adding gingerale and ice, as needed. Only through thorough planning of the reception can it be the normal and festive after-math of the wedding service it was meant to be. Present Gift When Alone With Her By The EmOy Pest Institute Q: My husband and I along with two other couples, were invited to the new house of friends of ours. It was not a party; we were just asked to come and spend the evening. . I brought a small gift for the house. The others brought nothing. When I arrived, I handed the gift to the hostess. My husband thought it was very tactless on my part (and embarrassing to the others) to have given it to her in their presence. He said I should have put it aside and waited until she was alone to present it to her. Was I wrong? A: Even though there was no reason for the others to bring presents, I agree with your husband that your handing a gift to the hostess in their presence might have been embarrassing. It would have been more tactful if you had put the present down inconspicuously and when you had an opportunity, mention to the hostess that you had Jtrought her a small gift. INVITATION Q: My girlfriend, who is in college, , is going to visit me in my parents’ home over the spring vacation. She asked me if my mother would write her a note confirming my invitation so that she could show it to her mother. Is this the correct thing to do, or would a letter from me be enough? A: Your girifrierx^is perfectly right in wanting a note from your mother to show to her family, and they would be equally right in not allowing her to visit you if sbeididn’t hear from your parents. The Emily Post Institute booklet “Clothes of the Bridal Party, as well as of their Attendants,” is available to readers of this column. For a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press 2 Localites Are Feted in Romantic Tradition Club Activities Varied A post nuptial shower for the former Mary A Backes, daughter of the Edwin J. Backeses of Oliver Street will take place Sunday afternoon The Milford borne of Mrs. Duane Priebe will be the setting for the buffet evoit with Mrs. Edward J. Backes as co* The bride and her new husband, Larry E. Fisher who will return from their Chicago honeymoon later this week, will reside on SUverside Drive. Connie Mineweaser Saturday bride-elect Connie Jean Mineweaser of LeBaron Avenue was honored at a recent shower in the home of Mrs. Michael Samuilow on James K. Court. Assisting tiie hostess were Mrs. Albert Amshay, Mrs. John... Siabinski, Ifrs. Prank Lada and -Mrs. Francis Lada. The daughter of the Robert W. Mineweasers will become Mrs. Joseph Anthony Lada, Saturday, in St. Michael’s Church. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lada of Valencia Drive. AROUND THE CLOCK Mrs. Myron Lockhart of Potomac Street,, Avon Township, gave an around-the-clock shower with Mrs. Melvin Dorries as cohostess. Trousseau gifts were opened recently in the home of Mrs. Keith Brodkorb on Henry Clay * Avenue. Mrs. James Smith assisted the hostess. Couple to Wed Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Schultz of Rattalee Lake Road, Springfield Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Kathleen Jeanne, to Timothy Ray Miller, son of the Robert R. Millers of Mark Road. Mid -July vows are being planned. A 26th birthday tea was held in the Holiday Inn recently by the Dirt Gardeners Chib. Mrs. Lewis Dibble of Birmingham, nationally accredited juidge of landscapes and flower arrangements, talked and showed slides of patio and small garden areas, Mrs. Dibble is a past president of the Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. T.B.I. Officers were installed when the T.B.I. (The Business Institute) Women’s Club met recently at Ted’s Restaurant. Assuming office for the group are: Mrs. Clayton Woodward, president; Grace Trapp, vice president; and Mrs. Sol Lomerson, treasurer. DELTA ZETA A 7 pm. dinner April 21 at the Far Hills Drive home of Mrs. Laurence E. Trevarrow Jr. will precede installation of officers for the Oakland County Alumnae of DelU Zeta sorority. Mrs. Forbes HascaD and Mrs. Edward Wirth are heading the Mrs. Russell T. Costello, past national president and current national PanheDenic delegate, will speak on “Where Are We Going?” Mrs. Charles Flecken-stein is taking reservations. BOOK GROUP Waterford Township, Library Book Review Group wjll hear Mrs Ralph Eaton discuss “Queen Victoria, Born to Succeed” by Elizabeth Longford St Monday’s meeting. Mrs. Lyndon Salathiel will open her Shore View Drive borne for the 1 p.m. gathering. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. William Ladanyi, Mrs. William Miller and Mrs. Joseph Franz. Mrs. Francis Kinkle, president, reports that interested persons are invited to the ffleet- Party for Auxiliary The past presidents of the Cook Nelson Unit No. 20, American Legion Auxiliary are planning a card party on May 4. To be held at the Legion home on Auburn Avenue at I pm., the event is open to the public. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1066 C~3 Father Hurls Wide Charges Jm mf-:. Projects His OwnH3uilt By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE v CASE Y-401: Alice B., aged IS, is a pretty high schooler. “But, Dr. Crane," She burst Into tears, “Daddy has been quarreling with Mot h e-r for several weeks. “And last night, he accused me of doing awful things! “Why, he said I was a tramp and having affairs with , boys in my church Young People’s Society! • “How could he have even though such terrible things? “He knows I am president of that church group and have neve{ done any of the bad things he mentioned!" PROJECTION What do you readers think is behind this man’s false charges? Remember, ha is not ad uneducated, uncouth male, for he is a very successful doctor, aged SO. Perhaps you recall the old adage that “It takes a thief to catch a thief." Paraphrased a bit, we might say that it is often a guilty man (or wife) who makes wild charges about sexual immorality against his mate or even his children. And that is exactly the case here. Alice’s daddy has been chasing around with several married women., . ■..ll * * ■ For he is in the climacteric, which corresponds to a woman’s menopause. That is chiefly a psychological zone that troubles most people when they reach middle age and begin to grow panicky lest they lose their sexual vigor. Alsas, this sexual frenzy is not limited to illiterates or those who have not graduated from high school. Mrs. John R. Denihan, Judson Street (seated) shows her pupil, Mrs. Charles F. Colli-jon of Lenox Street just how to stitch a seam. Mrs. Denihan instructs Bishop sewing classes two evenings a week for the McConnell Community School program. The classes are open ■ to any interested woman; high school students are not accepted. Registration for a new class in Bishop l to be given on Saturdays from 1 to 3 p.m. are now being accepted. Opwn Tonight Until 9 We Are EXPANDING Our Ladies' Department Befpre We Can Start, We Must Clear Out All Our Ne^/ Spring 1966 MEN'S WEAR This is an opportunity that seldom comes at this or any time of the year —it's all brand new Spring 1966 merchandise, greatly reduced so that we may go ahead with our expansion program—Don't miss the savings. YOU'LL FIND SUCH OUTSTANDING BUYS AS men’s surrs $QO $11Q Regular to $150 ^ to | | jT, MEN'S *.... v;•• * ■?* \ SPQRT COATS $OZ $71 Regular to $90 OU1# / I V* Off Parker Alpaca Sweaters Sweaters SwimSuits Sport Shirts Bermudas V2 off plus ; Good Savings on All- of Our Furnishings It is also typical of the most educated classes, including physicians, dental surgeons, engineers, editors and even clergymen. For colleges thus far have done very little to reduce the terrific divorce rate in America! ' And those few which schedule classes on “Marriage Problems" are likely to focus on the kitchen, living room and nursery but ignore the boudoir. Yet most divorces start in the bedroom! Visit your Court of Domestic Relations and see for yourself! Feuding husbands seldom accuse their mates of being poor cooks. And they may admit that , their wives entertained creditably for the husband’s clients and friends. - Indeed, the angry husband may even confess that his wife was a better parent to their children than he has been. So he may thus grant her an -“A” grade in the kitchen, plus a similar top mark in the living room and nursery. But he gives her only a “D” grade (often a mere “E” or “F") in the bedroom. Install Officers Officers were installed when the Women's Society of Bethany Baptist Church met Thursday in the church’s Trover Parlor. Mm. Walter Willson is the group's new president. Naomi Group served a dessert luncheon preceding a vocal solo by Mrs. Victor Lindquist. Elda Sutter was accompanist. An open house in their Rochester home Sunday will mark the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. William Eckert. The gala will ipill take place from 2 until 5 p. m. The pair was married in Pontiac on April 15, 1916. Their children are Mrs. Harvey Beach of Pottsville, Md., William Jr., and Mrs. John Smith. There are 15 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Strange Order for- Milkman MILWAUKEE, Wls. Cl) -Mrs. George Hammer’s milkman was puzzled by the note he found in her milk box. It was in his customer's handwriting but was a far cry from the usual order for dairy products. It read: “You are being followed. Use your secret ray gun. Do not kill person — just put him to sleep." An embarrassed Mrs. Hammer explained: “That’s something I fixed up for my daughter and her friends who were playing ‘Mah From Uncle.’ I can’t imagine why they hid it in the milk box.” A suspicion of caramel syrup (made by melting and browning granulated sugar) is fine to use in gravies. Open Tonight ui CCATS-SUITS ENSEMBLES Regular to *70 $29 - *59 Now is the time to pick one of your choice. A wide selection of all wool Spring Coats in white, pastels, or novy. The suits are all wool, silks and blends. Or ypull find a nice array of coat and , dress ensembles. Petite, junior . SHOE SPECIALS A selected group of Spring stylet in high and mid heels. Were to $21.00 DeLiso Debs Were to $16.00 Caressa Were 10 $16.00 Mr. Easton Were to $15.00- V* f\Qf\ Town & Country 7 'Extra Special — Italian Made Loafers — Ties 890 HURON at TELEGRAPH OPEN I FRIDAY I EVENINGS \TIL 9 P.M. BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Op«n Tonight Until 9 Afom’s 1% Prom Dresses $26to *90, Many one of a kind dresses for those important proms ahead.' Whether you want a dress that is inexpensive or' something better, you'll find the range at. Alvin's. Petite juniors 3 to 13, juriiors 5 to 15, and misses'8 to 16. You Choose the Color. . . Alvin's has the pump Sizes 4 to 10 AAAA to B widths Match the tintable pumps with any dress in’ your wardrobe. The matched - _ look is the right look. Tinting is free* of charge—choose high, V mid or new jet heel. HURON at TELEGRAPH THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1P66 4 for the price of 3...Charge! Now's the time to buy AMOCO. 120 Super Tires and ATLAS PLYCRONS, "The Round Tiros." TTSTri til SIB 8bl 11B 8 ROBERT S COLE 1330 S CHESTER JkUE OB **»*»• FARE RIDGE ILL 67 «* Get 4 tires now at your dealer’s list .price of 3 during this limited time offer. Other special prices on all our other tires, too, starting at $8.95. Buying tires during this offer is as easy as showing your Standard Oil credit card. No money down. Up to 12 months to pay. (Or we’ll even accept cash.) So hurry in. We’re open longer hours—weekends, too.The, better to serve you .You expect more from Standard and you get itl* Use your credit card or ask about Instant Credit. ——-------------------------AVAILABLE AT •The American Oil Company, 1966 • World’* largest distributor of Atlas tiro* •Trademark Trademarks "Atlas"—1'iPlycron"—Rag. THESE PARTICIPATING STANDARD OIL DEALERS----------------------------- , Pat. Off., Atlas Supply C» CRISP & SONS 427 S. Saginaw Street Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 333-9611 DAVIS- STANDARD SERVICE 2411 Orchard Lake ltd. Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 682-9906 DIX-A-TEL STANDARD SERVICENTER 1795 N. Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 333-9$35 FRED C. WILKINS CO. 4093 Orchard Lake Rd. Orchard Lake, Michigan Phono: 682-3311 HOSKINSON STANDARD 559 Auburn Pontiac, Michigan Phone:333-9252 JIM'S OAKLAND-BALDWIN STANDARD 220 Oakland / Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 333-9129 KENNERLY'S STANDARD SERVICE 378 W. Huron Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 335-5444 MORRIS' STANDARD SERVICE 3419 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 338-2348 REX'S STANDARD SERVICE 4289 Walton at Sashabaw Pontiac, Michigan^ Phone: OL 3-9493 ROY BROS. STANDARD SERVICE 6756 Dixie Hwy. fir M-15 Clarkston, Michigan / Phone: MA 5-5731 ROY BROS. STANDARD ^ 205 N. Telegraph Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 332-5080 SLADE'S STANDARD 1365 W. Huron Pontiac, Michigan Phone: 333-9189 SMITH'S STANDARD SERVICE 1430 Jaelyn at Walton Pontiac, Michigan Phone: FE 2-5776 • .r TEL-SQUARE STANDARD SERVICE 2481 S. Telegraph flr Square Lake Poptiac, Michigan Phone: 335-0311 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966 j li I IfJ M il irn L, n li IE £j 1 l : : , ■ ( Case Against^ fti 7UI< ti n r cn i r Pa iE 8 i' —. deposts I, i lllllil mm [ MARKETS t The Mowing art top prices Covering sale* of locally grown produce by growers and sold by (hem in wholesale package lota. eons are furnished by the Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce MUM. Apples, Dtlkieua, MMn, bu, . MiK DaUctous, OoMan, CX, Applet, Dtllctout, Rad. bu. ......... Applet, Dtllctout Rad, c.a., bu... 1.00 Applet, Jonathan, bu.............2.50 /Slot, Jonathan, C.Aw bu. * “ Applet. Maelntoah, aarty, b A octal, Maelntoah, ca, bu. Applet, Northern Spy, bu. ... ........ Seats, tapped, bu........ Cabbapo, Std., bu........ Carrots, toppad, bu. ..... Calory, Rom, dx. ........ . Chlvoi, dr bch. MaraaradWb ok. bakt, .... Leaks, di. bcha. ........ On Iona, dry, 50-lb. bap . Rafonfc qmS pak, d*::::..........I Potato#., 50 iba, ............ 1.W Potatoes, 25 Iba. ............. Radbdiaa, Hack, M bu. ......... Rhubarb, hothouao, 5-lb. Mt ....... Rhubarb, hothouao, dz. .bcha. . Squaah, Hubbard, bu............ Turnips, toppad, bu. ........... Poultry and Eggs DRTROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prlcaa paid par pound tor No. I llva poultry: Itaavy typo hana 33-23; llpht typaT&O lll realtor# haavy typo 31; brollara and tlYpra 34 Iba., whites MVMItb; tarred Rock 239V24. DITROIT SMS DSTROIT (API—Epo prlcaa paid par doxan by first racalvara (Including U.S.I: Whites Grade A |umbo 4347; axtra largo RlMb Bmp dMf mim 34-37; amall 30; Brown. Grada A largo 40; tnadluma 35-34: amall 30. chicam girrreR, imp CHICAGO (API Chicago Mar___________ Exchange—Butter aaayi wholaaala buying prlcaa W tower; »3 acara AA 4194; 03 A 419*; M S <1; t» C 40; care N B 4114; .00 C 41. Egga Irregular; wholaaala buying prlcaa 1 lower to 1 higher; 71 per cant — batter Grada A whltaa 31; mixed medluma 34; tlandarda 34; dlrtlai quoted; check. 30. Livestock DITROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API - (USDA): Cattle 100; not enough Uauphter .tear, one* — Vaalan 35; not enough to to Sheep 35; not tneugh to teat Mega 35; not enough to eat tat Iona. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—00; package ch pg lb. wealed .laughter NEW YORK (AP) - Coppers and other metals continued higher as the stock market resumed its advance at the opening today. Trading was active. Kennecott rose 1% to 135 on 1,600 shares. American Smelting advanced % to 78% on 1,800 shares. It was the third straight day of gains by coppers on the basis of higher export prices from Chile for the red metal. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included:1 A^”cai?bJ0 ACF Ind 1.80 Addreaa 1.4# “'-ilral .... Wad 2.50 AMjn AltopPw 1.14 *‘"idC i.Mb AmCrySup 1 «J,.S AHoma 1.80a Sigalt 2.40a m TAT 2.20 . .m Tob US AmZInc 1.40a 3 Armour 14* ArmaCk 1.30 Atchison 1.40 Alt Rat LM Aha. Cp *»CS' Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API-Tht cash poaltlon of the Tree wry compared with con*. rar •••kpc *, m. j 2435,244,741.71 I 5,9*4473435.41 D#P**,,*PLm!buIu2 J# V»05.3I04444 W"^TOg2iWS,r-.7457JtbS7LJ X T***«IjMU77,7f5JS 311477,7144*0.54 °#W A*n!tttl3t.204.35 m^mum*** IX) - includes I17*.544,34l7» debt net I___SIM.J0 Sip# lowS 141 s’lnp 2l ___>0 Cl. .40 BoHoCaac wl Borden 1.30 BorpWar 2.30 ArlgotStr 2a irlmwy !**- American Stock Exch. NOON AMRRKAN NEW YORK (AP) - (hd>.) High L 15 S2W 31 Berne. Eng 35 3394 33V4 3314.;. Data Cant OToft-1 Falmt Oil ,li pjjr ntfij I 37'4 37*4 3794 con Mtg am Cora Her Mir ickey Air *FUX a I 100 47M 449* 470k +19# 43 B 1 » T li im MM if'+ ■ i 54 me n mk+ m 25 294 24* 314... Ill 41b 4 4 — 31 13M 1*9* 12M. r 1394 13M 1314 + > .40 its MM MS ism -MM Sperry Syntax Cp .41 Technical .75 Un Central Jl .. . -............ Copyrighted by The Auoclated Pres. 1PM Stocks of Local Interest Figure, after decimal pointa are elghtha OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS QuotsHSko bam the NASO ere rt^ tentative Inter dealer prlcaa of approximately 11 pjn. Inter-dealer marfc— changa throughout the day. Prlcaa not include retail markup, markdown commission. Bid Aal AMT Cara, ......................54 Associated Truck ............ 12.1 1 Braun Engineering ......... ,..lp4 1 Citizens Utilities Clast A ......31.4 3 Monro* Aula Equipment ........13.3 1 Diamond Cryetel ....... ...... 134 1 Kelly Okf..................... 344 l Mohawk Rubber Co..............23.2 3 Pat rax Chemical ..............154 I Pioneer Fbtancl ................ fj So Iran Printing .............35.4 I Scrlpto ....................... 14 Vernor's Ginger Ala ............14 I Airline* Unlit .114 10.4 .Mtikal ...........334 144 MUTUAL FUNDS Bid i Affiliated Fund ........... *.1f Cham leal Fund .............. VJf Commonwealth Slack ..........11.17 Keystone Income K-1 .........1i.fl Keystone Growth K-1 ........ 7.50 Mata, lava atari Growth .....1141 Meat. Inuddtert Treat ......17.13" Dutaam Ooinigi»6l 1|.M ...M4* 11.lt ,..144P 1541 ...19.93 3144 B MNSthll . 33 Ralls ..... 15 ufUfftaa .... 10 Higher grada rate / tl Second grade rgBa . la Public uMmt ZJ... Mart Resumes Advance Coppers, Metals Stay High Pan American World Airways, up % at 71 on 6,500 shares; Douglas Aircraft, unchanged at 101% on 2,500; Boeing, off 1% at 170 on 5,100. American Telephone opened on 12,000 shares, unchanged at 57%. Chrysler also was unchanged, opening at 48% on 4,500 shares. General Electric was , unchanged at 110% on 3,100 shares. WWW Westinghouse Electric rose % to 61% on 3,560 shares. Sears, Roebuck gained % at 50 on 2,000 shares. Standard Oil (New Jersey) lost % at 77% on 2,100 shares. General Motors, which is recalling some 16,QOO cars with faulty door latches, eased % to 91% on 10,800 shares. * * ★ Thursday, the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose 1.3 to 340.7. Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NSW YORK (API—Following to a I selected stuck tranaactlona on tba ork Sleek Exchange with 10:30 prl —A— (hJto*) Nish Law Laat ' }$»2h8» 15 1309b 1311 Giayhnd .90 MWMK 1 Gulf Oil 2 Gulf SUt .73 HamNp t.to Harris(nt JO " :iaMn .25a icPdr Mo 1 dh m ^ 3 M9b Mtb 549b 34 779b 7414 77Vb Vi ■ CD Cp 1.3» i 34 1Mb Stef I 29V» 219b Bib + I Bib MM MU .. 7 22Vb 22Vb 229b- 1* 279b 27V* JTVb * ' InterlkSt 1.40 IntBuaMch 4 lowaPSv 1.30 lidMpyY l.oo IntMlnar 1.20 • tNkk 2.10a I' Pap^i'Soa I *39* 139b 139 I 34 339b 14 l&bSSft iStb r Su........ 1 39b 39b 39b f 1b I 359b 359b 359b + M » M'b 451b 4|M " b 179 lMlb Joy1*®? 1- 17 74 4 17Vi [ It 74 I 37V, 4 Lear Sieg j LehPorCem Bocy Er 2.10 Ww-STTi . Tin -1'4 .... SO 10M 101b IMb + M 14 TaM 74 H 4 Vb 15 llVb tlVb 1Mb - 7 3Mb 1Mb 211b + 3 449b 449b 449b .. Cal FMani Cal Rack .90 CampRL .45a CempSoup 1 {Sjifl CdnPac 1.50a CaraPLt 1.3* Smr 1.40 CartarW .40a CaSarTr 1.29 CblanaeaCp l Ctnco In* .30 Cant SW 1.50 Sm ]4b —b 14* UggaftAM 5 Lionel Corp Litton Ind LlvingaO .431 LockhdA 2.20 Loew* Theat LonaS Cam 1 LonaSGa 1.12 LonglaU 1.00 Lorulard 2.50 LuckySt 1.40b 14 55M 55Vb 55Vb 7 179b 179b i 591b +194 i StVb 4 M 43 4 1b i 171b 4 fb i mb 4 vb , |*+« Marathn 2.20 ‘larauar .25# ..lartinMar 1 MayDStr 1.50 McDonA .40b MaadCp 1.70 Merck 1.20b Merritt Chap MGM t-40 MidSoUtil .40 MSwrai t.20 CiT Bln ids ematsve i.50 ‘lavEitii t.54 :ocaCo<4 1.90 Colg Pal .10 CoinnRad .50 CBS 1.20b Col GO* 1.34 Col PICt .541 ComICra 1 JO a&vi1 im&'i.» CanltoclndJ CnNGaa 2.70 ContPow 1.90 Contalnr 1.20 CmJ* ML ContCan 2.40 Cwit In* MS Cont Mot .40 Cant Oil 2-40 Control Data SkNil CoxBtjca* .40 xt 39H 399b |?9b + 13 82Va 82 V, MVi + a s8 b fc? x23 3 » S | ft 2% 552 8S + 23 4MB 46'A 43 3% 3MB + 91 44 Vs 44 44 — A 4MB 4MB 4MB + ?sa«ss- 2,729b 719b 7m 4 I tin iIS tew — i 44Vb 44Vb 441b+ 44 30 *994 299b- M 479b 449b 4<9b + 1 i 8 ft — tf 449b 441b 4m 4 4 59 S3 *9-! 55Vb S39b 559b ^ DltmAlk MS Disney .40b &SUT^a Doe? Chwn'b 19 299b J— . 4 194 09b | 15 129b 13M ' 71 S49b 339b —D— 43 STM 37 12 49'b 4iM 76 Mb 42H 1 3446 54% 3 371b S% VW-,* a 3t » 241b +11b -Vb tftbb — BBV" l«?y|JCp .50 EvansPd .40b Cvanharp l FalrCam 50g Falrch Hlltor t^anstaat Mat FadDStr 1.40 mra 1M Flrastna i.S) FatChrt t.ITt F.llntkot* l Fla Pow 1.20 efiiJT »‘:S 4 2049b 20414 74 151b 159b —E— 40 11Mb 1099b 24 13094 13014 3? Sib % 3! s&fe «M 5 3TA 3714 27 §94 —P— now -im 13094 ... 391b 4 M 301b — 1b 159b..... sr/> + v, gw 4 m L (Mb 3Mb - 9b \ ifit ITS I 7 4*Vb 44W 4 * 79 8. 1 " 999b 1Mb ' ’8 SStSw 34 309b SOW Sib^ _ . 2194 2194 11M — 1 Kd| Tiffin 8r&ru CaKn S B8 Bw-Bit* »= 8'pSKT ifto 13 4m 4 32 - ft...... Oteatta'Viio* M 34Vb 141 Gian Aid Jlk 7:139b 119 5 ml lasn Kw’,1 PacHT 1.20 *4 sftb M9b 3 24W 24 W Laat Cha. 439b + 9b Sjb 4 Vb IP- Sarval SharonStl Shell Oil ,.** ShellTra .43a 4 2494 2494 : —H— : (hda ) High Law Last Chg. ___AL U0 ,3 52 51W 52 + 9b Saarl GO 1.30 io 58 57V, 58 + M Start Roe la 23 599b 59Vb 591b ' " Seeburg M 51 30 MM 30 1 79b 714 7M 2 2794 2794 2794 9 429b UW 42W irkS tnNthK 1 JOa 3 00 7994 7994 ?S5SmSm SouCalE 1 25 2 «»- South Co .94 SouNGaa 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.10 4 53V, 53V, | 549b 549b A VHf VS/f 39 429b 471b MVb + 42Vb..... 45 4 M 9494 4 M ireD 1.90 anda 2.40 Kolltman ....Cal 2.5# StOIIInd 1.70 1*011 N J JOB StdOII Ohio 2 St Packaging StauffCh 1.40 ItartDrug .80 Studr1-1--- Iwift I 391b 39 391b + 15 542 IM 541 H 49'b 49<4 49V, 4 9 12 MM 98 W t*M 4 1 11* 129b 119b 129b + 9 144 Bib 30 30 .... 15 74 759# 7SM — ' 4 719b 719b 719b + 1 TaxOSul .40 TtxatiMftn' Textron* l-35* —,-K— 31 1349b 135 13 3 4IV, 4|Vb 4 | 741b 741b 3 13 541b 551b 1 9 24 nib j 3 7094 MM ] 4 2994 2»M 5 UnltCorp .4 Un Fruit .1 , 341b 341b -f M 4 57M 57 W ! t Tim mb 1 3# 74M 749b 3 19 4 m 44 I4W 04Vb I 12 994 9M 51 7014 70 3 1 341b 341b 3 14 )7 149b j 4 229b 2294 3 11 20M 20M : 14 511b 519b 3 2 45M 45M 4 I 49 409b 4 —hi- st 509b SOM 3 3 47M 47M ‘ 5 221b 22M 3 i V USIndtt .12e US Linas 2b USSmelt 50e A f 9B IB *r % 22V» + % i»fth 43 43W 43 ’a0 Hi ftft 29*32 32 14 22M 22M II 35 349b 19 741b 7Mb 1 im mi 7 24V, 249b JB + i* fi+iH WarnLam .90 WaihWat l.oe WaMnAlrLyi WnBanc 1.10 WUnTal MO I I# 259b MM 259b . I 12 409* 399*. 40M 4 —^X-Y-Z— Xerox Cp .70 23 3411b 340 240 4 YngstSM 1 “ " “ ± MM 4 119b ... tsav 3Mb ... 33M 4 9b 4 2291b 2291b 23 3 2414 241b 3 —N— / >alry 2JO .... OW MO Nat Fuat 1.40 Nat Gant .20 NatOypa 2b NatLaad .75e Itael 2.50 Tea JO ....terry JJ N EngEI 1.2a ’ 11 rm h a 35 35 1 8 /» • * ft./ w. 4 3394 3394 3 47M 47W 21 MW 55M 2 15W ISM 15 579* 5714 4 55V* 551b ’1 8m 9K h t \B 16 + V< B tf % IB + VB Si* — 2 ParkaDav Ip Path Coal 1 PannOIxto .40 Parinty 1.50# PaPwU 1.4P Pa nTldte Pantapli i.4o JBfiifi fss?°E.*a PhllRdg 1.20 PhllMor 4.20 Phlll Pat 2.20 sn 2 suss Si* 1 Sib Sm 3m 4 11 M 319b 21 - —P— xt 24 2594 2* ‘ 4 200 139* 1Mb 139b 4 " 2414 24W 24W .. 125 TIM TOM 719* 4 29 359b 35M 359b 4 29 7394 72V, 73 V, _ £ MM 3Mb 199b 4 10 34 fi 34 .. 1 129b 12M 12M . t 1« B m jirf Ci « m + f I 37 5494 54 : 7 73M 73W | 3 IS IS ! 50 lim 149M lj }Xt 4! —H— Raytheon .90 SJIS5R JOa RoyCcSto^ .40 fa’s S5Scar,v SLSanFran 2 24 5394 539* J 27 441b 45M 4 17 4294 42M I ’I M9* 2#W ! 32 44M 44M 4 Jssss! imjgr jr’j-W / i 1 J# j 301* Si# MM 4 "3 41b 41b 49b . I mi 47M 4 1 TIM 7 t 349b 1 7 32M 329* 329* + 10 319b 31M 31M 4 M im sm 3Mb 4 7 5594 559* 5594 . M9 22M 22V, r' Striking Miners Rebuff Pleas Union. Charges Police 'Intimidated7 Pickets PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Rebellious soft coal miners in central Appalachia states rebuffed new appeals from the United Mine Workers (UMW) today to end their five-day wildcat strike negotiations continued for a new wage contract. * ★ ★ In Kentucky, the union accused state police of “intimidat-pickets. The state police denied the charge. About 32,588 miners, most of them in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky, con tinned to thwart efforts by the UMW leadership to end the strike while the union negotiated for a nw contract with file Bituminous Coni Operators Association (BCOA) in Washington. The association’s member companies employ 48,888 UMW members. 1 Mb 73V, 74 .... 1 719b 719b 71M 4 ! 13 39Vb 399b 391b — ■ 3 759b 759* 751* — 1 13 45M 45V4 4514 ... •' 771b 771b 771b ... HOE 4294 4294 - i 1 54Vi 1 > 301* .. —T— 3 271b 27Vb 27W 4 14 nib 23'/, 239* .. 42 70 77M 7794 .. 24 219* 219* 2194 4 94 1129* 112 JUM 4 I 341M 2419* 2419* 4 3 18 179b 179b . M MVb 21W 2 17 5394 53M 5 4 44 MM 4 37 959b 9SW 9 10 349* 34M 3 28 21 20M 2. 12 241b 24M 24M 4 W 31 35 . 349* 349b 4 V# —u— *!& f B • ..... 17 Sli 42V* 42 W - Vi . 1 73 73 73 .. . 1.60 Ml *994 991b/991b 43M 5 IM 09w JM .. 11 309* 30W 30W 4 m'SS^4 * 411b 3 TIM 711b 711b — M 7 1214 or* 02V4 ■ " f*nde o laEIPw /—w— 17 15 IS IS .. 4 3m sm 38M .. 16 1739* 17294 173 t dejlg- or semi-annual declaration. Special extra dMdandi or Ptymento —* “*-•lad aa regular art Manttf iltowing footnotes e—Alio extra or extra*, rate Plu* stock dividend. dtyVdendT d—Declared or , _ eo'fer>thto yoerM^ey^^n'ltock dur^ accumulative issue with dlvl-arreers. n—New haua. P—Paid denvery. being raorganbad under the Bankruptcy Act, or aacurltles assumed by such cam-pan iat. tn ftealgn Istue sublect to In- 1 BL4 157.0 350.3 ) 213.9 170.5 349.7 Thursdays 1st DWMtnda Declared BORD AVERAGES IMS by Tba AaeacHtaS Pratt M W M N 10 Ralh Ind. UNI. Ppe. L.Yd — SLO MJ B2 Ago 77J 94J 14.3 *11 Ago 83.5 102.1 83 90 __.llgh 794 101.4 #1 9?J C a?MM!5:1 1945 Low 79.3 99J IL4 9U 901 British CO for Ghana GEORGETOWN, British Gtil-ana UF) — A British army officer will command British Guiana’s defense force after the nation gains independence May 26, Prime Minister Forbes Burnham announced. See Controls as Threat (EDITOR’S NOTE — Thit is the third in a four-part series on ‘the government economic guideposts, written by business writer John T. Cunniff.) - By JOHN T. CUNNIFF AP Business News Writer NEW YORK - During the height of the clash last November between the aluminum industry and the Johnson administration, David Rockefeller, a critic of economic guideposts. said: “The fact is that free market forces work in the general public interest when there is least interference in the area of decision-making.” The statement, which Rockefeller, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank, made before the American Petroleum Institute, is the classic defense of free enterprise. It is also perhaps the most commonly used argument against'enforcement of guide-posts — or areas of permissible advances for prices and wages-as it was in this instance. Its" proponents see guideposts as a threat to free enterprise^ OTHER DENUNCIATIONS Among the other widely heard denunciations are these: 1. The guideposts are unjustly applied. At Uniontown, Pa., about 388 ! 2. Enforcement of the guide-striking miners jeered, shouted iP°sts carries the threat of pun-and booed at a meeting called j ishment without a legal hearing, last night by UMW District 4| 3- Guideposts are not com-President John Cassidy at which jptetely .effective, was read to them the entire con-j * * . * tract proposed by the UMW and Businessmen, union leaders submitted to the BCOA negotia-iand educators sound similar in tors. * jtheir criticism. ' dt. # ★ | The executive vice president The contract was patterned |°f fj*e American Banking Asso-after one signed last week with c*a^on' Ctarlas Walker, is the Peabody Coal Co. of St Lou-|amon8 0,086 who fear govem-is, the leading independent soft ment is usurping business’ right coal producers, and some small-1*0 BcWoni. er companies. APPEAL IGNORED Cassidy appealed to the strikers: “Let (UMW President Tony) Boyle carry out these negotiations. Please follow his request and go to work.” The miners ignored the appeal. In eastern Kentucky, C. Bean, president of UMW Di$- apparent immunity, mine field, they say, you might get through but you might get blasted. A spokesman for George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, expressed labor’s argument about guideposts befog unjust: “Our people can read the corporate profit statements in the financial sections of the newspapers. If the administration thinks workers who make 63 or $4 an hour should pay for the war in Viet Nam, we don’t agree. STEP AWAY “Guideposts and guidelines, if effectively implemented, only a step away from the direct controls which are used in trict 38, said the district's 16, 888 miners would have been back to work Wednesday “if it had not been for the action of the Kentucky state police.” ft ft ft “If they will-quit intimidating our people, threatening to tear gas them and so forth, I think we can get our people back to work,” Bean said. ‘NO FEELINGS’ Kentucky State Police Major Leslie Pyles said, “We have no feelings one way or the other in this. We are there just to keep the peace and to keep the roads open.” It was learned the proposed contract submitted to the BCOA had been signed by top UMW officers and the presidents of the union’s 25 districts. News in Brief Donna Shaw, 1612 LaSalle, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the theft of $46 from her home. Pontiac Opti-Mrs. Sale, Friday and Saturday, April 15 and 16,9 a.m.-5 p.m. 358 Oakland, South of Wisner School. —Adv. Rummage Sale: Omega Mu Sigma, C.A.I. Bldg., Waterford. Sat. 16 from 9 to 1 p.m. —Adv. Rummagy Sale,, Auburn Heights. Fire Hall, Sat., April 16,8-3. -Adv. Coin Auction: Saturday 4 p.m., 14 N. Saginaw. —Adv. Rummage Sale. Sat, April 16 from 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. at The Congregational Church, E. Hur-—Adv. Two OCC Officials Will Present Paper Two Oakland Community College officials wUl present a paper tomorrow at a meeting of file National Society of Pro* grammed Instruction in Louis. ft ft ft 'A Learner-Centered Instructional Systems Approach” is the title of the paper to be presented by Walter J. Fightmas-ter, director of continuing, education, qnd Alvin G. Ugelow, coordinator for programmed By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “We are middle aged and have two children in college, one in graduate school, and three more who will be entering college later. Our savings amount to only 62,-661. We have 1,366 shares of Washington National Insurance. We wonder if we should sell some of this stock, because of Medicare, or if it would be wise to diversify in any case.” E. S. A) Washington National is a good, relatively small company and — together with .life and accident—sells health insurance. I do not know what proportion of the total operation consists of health policies, but I,believe that aggregate health business relatively high. The stock has acted quite poorly and has recently dropped to a 1965-’66 low. Ibis may or may not be due to Medicare, since the life insurance group as a whole has been one of the poorest acting in the entire list for over a year. believe you should not have all your investment in one company. I advise you to sell 1,686 shares, add 615,888 to your savings as a reserve at this stage of the market and invest the balance in Plough Inc., Owens-Coming Fiberglass and Consolidated Foods. ft..-ft ft Q) “I would like your opinion of Benguet, selling at 2%.” R.P. A) Benguet is a speculative gold mining situation operating in the Philippine Islands. The stock has periodically had a big play on the slim hope that the price of gold will be raised. Recently it has been active ports that it had bought claims copper ore body in the Philippines and had sokl production • rights to a Japanese com-1 pany. In addition to the usual risks involved in mining stocks,: government regulation is a restraining factor,-1 would leave Benguet to the long-shot play-WL To order Roger Spear’s 46-page Investment Guide send 61.66 to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York City, N.Y. 10617. / (Copyright, 1666) A Reprisal by government stockpile release helped enforce guideposts in the battle with aluminum. And, says Seii. Everett M. Dirksen: Tf the threat can be made in aluminum, it can be made in any commodity from critical strategic materials to dairy products.” •8 MATERIALS The government stockpiles some 98 materials. * Any large disposal of a commodity could reduce prices because of the sudden availability of the product. And more than one-half the values of stockpiles is considered excess, and con-For the company involved there is no court or committee or commission to present publicly its cake or seek a hearing. Much of the criticism has come centralized economies,” he told a Nebraska audience. “A farce and a fraud on the American worker,” said Raul Hall, president of the Seafarers International Union. ft * ft Businessmen often argue that the guideposts are unjustly applied—that they are applied to business more often than to labor, that labor sometimes escapes censure, that some businesses are berated for raising prices and others go uncriti- cized, that guideposts put a lid on inflationary price increases but that government spending puts too much inflationary pressure on the lid. They point to Labor Department figures showing 16 recent major wage settlements in struction in which pay increases «• otwiAii ____c i ..j I*« _ muen ai me criticism w» emue ranged between 5.1 and 8.3 perL the freedom « ^emic n1, circles. APPARENT IMMUNITY ft ft ft - They argue also that some One criticism heard frequent-Industrie s—food, men’s ly from professional -and cam- clothing, shoes, tires, chemicals pus economists is that guide-—have increased prices with posts are ineffective, that unions have frequently leaped the posts, and business has averted them. They cite also that numerous industries have raised prices, although not necessarily in vk>- -lation of guideposts, among them: brewers, paper and lumber producers, glass makers, chemical companies. But guideposts have defenders, too, and the defense presents a strong argument. (Next: Hie defense.) Safety, Comfort Featured in New GMC Truck Cabs Driver safety, comfort and convenience were key factors in the development of GMC Truck & Coach Division’s truck cabs for 1966 models, ft Chief Engineer H. O. Flynn said his staff experimented with many different interior and exterior designs for more than two years before making the Final selection. “Il addition to the safety, comfort and convenience factor*, other Important coaaid-erations in development of file new 62-inch and 114-inch cabs included performance characteristics and maintenance considerations,” he added. A typical result of this development program is the instrument panel which permits the driver to reach controls and to read instruments quickly and easily. “After considerable ritudy, we concluded that grouping of electrical instruments on the right side of the steering column was particularly advantageous because it greatly improved driver convenience,” Flynn ex-Proved driver visibility to thp plains^ front because the hinge pillar HYDRAULIC GAUGES ,** ){"* JL*igh1J , „ . Ibut wide as it enters the cab “Air and hydraulic gauges are body. movement of four to five inches. Any driver can select his cam most comfortable position. "ft ★ ft The new wheel reduces a lot of arm fatigue, and because the steeripg shaft comes through the dash instead of file toe board there is plenty of room for the driver’s feet.” HEADLIGHT DIMMER Flynn said the headlight dim- . mer switch was located in lifoe with file hinge pillar so that it can serve as a foot guide when reaching for the switch. The cab floor is flat and uncluttered. Another convenience permits the driver to clean file windshield easily from the cab floor when the vehicle is parked, ft ★ ★ Exterior design also offers driver convenience. In addition to the cab’s dean, lean appearance, its tapered contour keeps the doo/s and side windows cleaner because the air flow is carried away from the sides of the cab. . . ★ ★ ★. . / This design also provides tin- positioned in the left portion of file panel’’ Flynn noted that all electrical gauges in the new cabs utilise AC Spark Pbg Division’s new “Air Care” movement, which increases torque, sensitivity and accuracy. With these instruments, the driver has a more accurate account of vehicle condition. * * ft The new cab models have a lamp mounted in the instrument panel to provide light for both the cab interior and the glove compartment, he ^aid. FUSE BLOCK This lamp also provides light for the fuse Mock — conveniently located inside the glove box for easy accessibility. Other interior convenience features are adjustable steering wheel and the location of the hand brake. “The tilting steering wheel arrangement permits vertical Still another feature is the easy entrance and exit made possible by the cab running boards and the wider angle door openings. Ford Motor Co. Makes Area Man Executive Veep Election of Robert Stevenson, 749 Kennebec, Bloomfield Hills, as an executive vice president of Ford Motor Co. was announced today by Henry iWti H, chairman of the board. A vice president since 1164, Stevenson will be a nominee for election to the board at directors at the annual meeting May 19. Doctor's Estate Leaves $200,000 to Harvard BOSTON UB — The estate of 2SS 5 aSSSToT stevsmon warns tal School, had given the school Ford also announced the ad-6288,886 for a scholarship fund, vanegment of Robert C. White, * * * >32742 Friar Tuck Lane, Bir- Dr. Vaughan, a faculty mem- mingham, to assistant treasur-ber at tMi School for 33 years, er. retired in 1848. He died at the He has been with the Ford' age of 68 in 18W Motor Credit Co. since 1914.