The Weather U. S. WMttwr BurMU Ferauit Showers Likely (Dattlls Pa»* 1) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 126 NO. 150 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Tl ESDAV. .H LV 60, 1068 —40 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL IOC Texas Heart Switch 1st Between Women HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — A 49-year-old grandmother is the world’s newest heart transplant patient, and she was reported in satisfactory condition today at St, Luke’s Episcopal Hospital. first talked with Dr. Cooley Friday, Mrs. Smith said. Beth White Brunk, a Houston housewife, received the heart of a Corsicana, Tex., woman, last night in the first woman-to-woman heart transplarvt. The donor was Betty O’Neal, 40, who entered the hospital yesterday after suffering a brain hemorrhage. The donor’s physician, Dr. Robert D. Bone of Corsicana, said Mr.s”. O’Neal had a brain tumor. She was in a coma 24 hours before a three-man team of doctors declared her dead about 8 p.m., a .spokesman said. The operation began minutes later. Surgeons led by Dr. Denton A. Cooley performed the operation in about two hours, a spokesman said. Cooley has supervised eight human heart transplants here. WIFE OF PILOT ANOTHtl&PATlENT DISMISSED Louis John Fierro, 54, of Elmont, N.Y., who received a new heart May 21 at the hospital, was dismissed yesterday. He will move to Houston for checkups, the spokesman said. Mrs. Brunk, wife . of a commercial pilot, was admitted to St. Luke’s July 22. She had a blood clot in her lungs that would have killed her in 24 hours, said a daughter, Gladys Smith of Bryan, Tex. The first heart recipient here, Everett C. Thomas, 47, of Phoenix, Ariz., left St. Luke’s July 19 and took a job as a trust consultant at a Houston bank. Thomas underwent surgery May 3. Mrs. Brunk has four children, four stepchildren and nine grandchildren. She Three dther recipients continue to progress at the hospital. GOP Platform Writers Applaud Pbint By Sen. Hruska Of Nebraska Mystery Woman Found Dead; Czech Enemy Ike Sets Moderate Tone State Helps Troy Launch Probe of Regime Talks to Soviet Army The nude body of an unidentified woman was found yesterday near the southbound exit of 1-75 at Crooks Road in Troy. but details were not immediately available, according to Troy police. for GOP's Vietnam Plank An unidentified truck driver reported the body to Troy police. The rhah said he spotted the body while passing the exit at 4 p.m. A coroner was unable to determine the cause of death immediately but said the woman, who was 35 to 40 years old, had been dead at least two days. An autopsy was performed last night WEDDING BAND They said the 5-foot-2, 110-pound white woman was wearing a gold wedding band. Investigators at the Michigan State Police Crime Laboratory, East Lansing, have been called to help on the case. They are aiding in identifying and determining the circumstances of the death. Troy police would say only that they are continuing their investigation of the case. PRAGUE (AP) — A Czechoslovak general opposed to the country’s new democratic reforms today ^lvas reported in contact with Soviet Army officers as the leaders of the Soviet and Czechoslovak Communist parties resumed their showdown meeting close to the Soviet border. Prague Radio reported that the two party delegations had gone back into session at Ciema but gave no details. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Chances for a dramatic Republican platform proposal to end the Vietnam war dimmed today as former President Dwight D. Eisenhower opposed any “camouflaged surrender.’’ Eisenhower's special message to the platform committee accompanied the Sen. Roman L. Hruska of Nebraska opened the day’s session with a slashing attack on what he termed the Johnson-Humphrey administration. In a statement in behalf of the Senate GOP leadership, Hruska said: . “Yet, each of.us has the uneasy feeling that despit? the expenditure of vast resources we have not. gained the security or gained the results we feel we should fiave achieved.’’ HIGHEST PRIORITY Related Stories, Page A-3 Search for Murphy May Be Given Up Coast Guard officers at Charlevoix said today they will abandon the search for Oakland County Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Murphy if he is not found by nightfall. Hope faded yesterday when a land, sea •and air hunt failed to turn up a trace of the 54-year-old Murphy in the Beaver Island area, where the 14-foot boat he had rented Saturday was found overturned in Lake Michigan Sunday. Budget Deficit Tops Estimates The summit meeting between the Soviet Politburo and the Czechoslovak party's Presidium was expected to conclude today after a thorough debate on the liberalization program launched by Prague’s new leaders. But so far there ha.s been no word on the likely outcome of the talks. “We haven’t found a thing and we’re feducing the search to a single patrol boat today,’’ said Coast Guard Lt. Don Luedke. Meanwhile, county Democratic party officials began preparing for the possibility that they will have to choose a nomiiiee to replace Murphy in the Nov. 5 general election. WASHINGTON (AP) - Top government officials reported today the budget deficit in the fiscal year that closed June 30 was $25.4 billion — $5.6 billion above the administration’s estimate in January and $3.1 billion above the revised estimate of March 31. Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler and Charles J. Zwick, director of the Bureau of the Budget, said congressional delays in enacting the 10 per cent income tax surcharge were partly responsible. Meanwhile, the trade union newspaper Prace reported that (’ten. Samuel Kodaj, who warned early this month against “counterrevolutionary” tendencies in the country, met at Strecno, in Slovakia, with the “Soviet Army staff which is operating on our territory.” testimony of a nonpartisan committee, of which he is a member, ruling out both pullout and massive escalation of the fighting. It strengthened the sentiment apparently already held )>y a majority of the committee for a broadly worded statement that would leave the party’s presidential candidate free to develop his position during the campaign. Such a plank fits the mood of supporters of Richard M. Nixon, who are saying their man will be nominated on the first or second ballot. “No nation at war ha.s a right to expect men to die—-to suffer wounds of battle—unless the cause for which they sacrifice has the highest priority the nation can give it. On the domestic front, Hruska labeled law and order as the gravest issue before the country. And if the United States continues to follow “the blue print of bankruptcy,” the nation will destroy itself. Aug. 6 Road Millage Vote Could Up County Program ‘EXCHANGE VIEWS’ Receipts fell $2.3 billion short of what had been estimated in January because the surcharge did not go onto the books in time to bring in the revenue anticipated, they said. Prace said Kodaj and other Czechoslovak officers met with the chief of the Soviet Army staff, a Gen. Mayorov, and other Soviet officers “to exchange views on the present situation.” But even some sympathizers of New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller agreed that the -plank on the overriding international issue cannot be too specific. (EDITOR’S NOTE—This is the second in a three-part series about the upcoming Aug. 6 election in which Oakland County voters will be asked to raise the properly tax by one mill for better roads.) $I per $1,000 as assessed, or $12.50 per year for five years on a home with a market value of $25,000. CXIMPARED TO CAR MAKE IT CLEAR’ Eisenhower urged the campaign docu- NAME ON BALLOT Murphy is unopposed for the party nomination in the Aug. 6 primary. “ Authorities saM Msioamr pbobably^ w appear on the Tuesday ballot regardless of the result of the Charlevoix searth, pending a ruling by the state attorney general. Should he be declared dead or his body found, the executive committee of the (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3i Spending was $3.3 billion higher than estimated in January, they said. 'iTiey noted, JoWever,i^^^^^^^^ Viet- nam was only $866 million above what President Johnson outlined when he spelled out the revisions on March 31. “Counterrevolutionary” was the chief charge made against the Czechoslovak party leadership by the Soviet Union, East Germany, P’oland, Bulgaria and Hungary at a meeting in Warsaw early this month. There was no new word today on the talks between the Soviet and Czechoslovak political leaders which began yesterday close to the Soviet border. ment writers to “make it clear to Hanoi that we do not seek nor will we accept a camouflaged surrender which would inevitably result in the United States writing off Southeast Asia for the foreseeable future.” Eisenhower’s appeal—addres.sed t o both parties—was taken to the Republican platform hearings by representatives of the Citzens Committee for Peace with Freedom in Vietnam. Sen Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, a Rockefeller supporter on the platform committee, told a reporter he expects the Ei.senhower statement to have considerable weight in the drafting. By ED BLUNDEN While most recent millage campaigns in Oakland County have either failed to pass or were passed—apparently grudgingly—by small margins, the one-mill request for road improvement may have an advantage. This $12.50 average cost can be compared to what an average car-owner pays just to acquire and maintain his car—about $750 a year. This figure comes from considering about $500 depreciation and adding about $250 a year for tires, repairs, insurance, etc. Most millage requests have been for schools. Better education is a rather intangible thing, but better roads will be something the taxpayer will be able to see and use directly. ............, The $750 does not include cost of gasoline or licenses. The state gasoline tax and license fee are at present almost the only support for road maintenance or construction. Voter Guide on Friday And the one-mill tax increase could be looked upon as a real bargain by taxpayers. It would cost the average home owner In Today's Press No-Hitter Cincinnati hurler stops Phillies cold - PAGE B-1. fs It Harmful? Army, FDA differ on safety of irradiated bacon-T^PAGE A-5. 'Heated Issue' Wounded GIs swelter while brass keeps cool, says congressman — PAGE A-7. Area News ........./....A4 Astrology ...............B-6 Bridge B-« Crossword Puzzle........C-11 Comics . . . ............B-« Editorials ..............A-6 Markets B-11 Obituaries .............C-10 s Picture Page .............. C-1 Sports .......B-1—B-4 Theaters B-8 TV and Radio Programs . .C-11 LVietnam War News :. A-2' Wilson. Earl C-10 Women’s Pages .....A-10, A-11 Confused about what candidates are running for which offices in the Aug. 6 primary? Then read The Pontiac Press Friday for information on all the races in Oakland County. Background sketches and maps showing the boundaries of congressional, legislative, judicial and supervisor districts will be included in the special 16-page section. Sporadic Showers Possible Tonight Increasing cloudiness, warmer temperatures and a chance of occasional showers and thundershowers tonight and tomorrow is the forecast for the Pontiac area. Tonight’s low is expected to be 57 to 63, and highs tomorrow will remain in the high 7«s and, low 80s. South to southeast winds will increase to 10 to 18 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: tonight 30, tomorrow 40. Thursday promises to be partly sunny -and a little cooler. V The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a rfi. was 56. By 2 p m. the temperature was 79. ; Each gallon is taxed at 11 cents, with four cents. goinfe. fQr_ tbe....ifidfiM program (1-75, 1-696) and seven for the ■state (M59, M24), Of the state’s seven cents, about 2,5 goes to the County Road Commission and about 1,4 tb cities. 'Thus, gn average motorist driving 15,000 miles per year at 15 miles per gallon is contributing about $25.00 per year for county roads through gasoline purchases. ACCELERATED PROGRAM With the $12.50 one-mill levy the road commission could carry on a program approximately 50 per cent accelerated from present levels. The one-mill levy figures to bring in about $3.5 million yearly, based on the county’s entire valuation. Of the $9.5 million in recent yearly budgets, only about $1.5 million has been left for major and local road improvements. The road commission figures it will have at least $5 million per year to carry on a road modernization program providing the millage passes. Plans have already been made. The projects are mapped out and reach into every community. SERIOUS ALTERNATE The alternative is a serious thing to contemplate. It could mean a stdadily deteriorating road system. Some loci' roads have been patched and scraped so many times the original roadbed ho longer exists. Some of the main arteries will have to remaid two-lanes with an ever-increasing traffic jam. For those roads which cause urgent problems, some other method, of funding would have to be found—which would mean the funds would have to come from other sources, other programs. Damaged Long Lake Road, One Mile East Of Woodward Just ds county residents hhve to pay (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) A~2 THE .PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDA\\ JULY 30, 1968 Mexican Troops Invade School, Arrest 300 MEXICO CITY (AP) , - Mexican paratroopers fired a bazooka shell through the heavy wooden doors of a preparatory school early today and dragged out hundreds of young demonstrators after Mexico City’s worst student disorders in 20 years. Nearly 400 persons were injured, 100 seriously, in the SVi-hour rampage by thjousands of teen-age students. Nearly 300 persons were arrested. Some sources reported one youth was killed, but this could not be confirmed. The students, ranging from 14 to 18 years, were demanding the removal of the chief of police and die ccunmander of riot troops, charging their forces with brutality in putting down pro-CastrO demonstrations last weekend. Some of the mob shouted anti-American slogans and called for another Vietnam in Latin America. photographer from New Zealand was beaten and bis camera stolen. Soon a mob of 1,500 to 2,000 youths surged toward th^ city’s m a i ’ h-but riot po square—the Zocalo—but riot police were waiting for them a block from the National Palace. tional university off the main square. They took possession of^ rooftops and pejted police with stones and gaspline-filied bottles. Down rn the street, they tried breaking Into some gun shops and set buses ablaze. BUSES STOLEN The evening of violence began with the theft of several buses and the disruption of traffic throughout the city. A news The club-wielding police turned back the students in quick order, and about 50 young demonstrators were injured within five minutes. About an hour later, several thousand youngsters regrouped near the old na- CONVERGE ON SCHOOL Shortly before 1 a.m., federal paratroopers in full combat gear and with drawn bayonets converged on the national university preparatory school where many demonstrators had holed up. Foreign Aid Bill Trimmed of All Faf, Senate Told WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has been told there’s no fat left to trim from President Johnson’s foreign-aid requOsts, now more than $1 billion under what he asked and the lowest in the program’s 21-year history. Acting Chairman Jcrfin Sparkman, D-Ala., of the Fweign Relations Committee said the |1.94-billion level set by the committee “represents the absolute minimum necessary if we are to sustain our over-all foreign policy.” point, Sparkman said “the simple fact is that there is just no fat left for us to trim from the foreign assistance bill.” In an apparent effort to anticipate ob-jecticMis to the measure, Sparkman said one critic had estimated that U.S. foreign aid since World War II totaled •$170 billion. He termed that a mythical total. The actual figure is about $40.5 billion, Sparkman said. Johnson’s original request for $2.96 billion was slashed repeatedly in its progress through the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the House and the Senate foreign relations committees. The aid bill was called up in the Senate Monday night, with developments limited to Sparkman’s opening statement. Ray Trial Probe Panel Convened FRIDAY COMRLETION SEEN The Senate timetable calls for completing action on the authorization measure by Friday, when Confess will adjourn for the national political conventions. Reviewing decreases made up to this Woman Is Killed as 5 Are Thrown From Car on 1-75 MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Criminal Court Judge W. Preston Battle convenes his court today to hear a report from a panel of attorneys on whether his edict limiting statements to newsmen by those involved in the James Earl Ray case has been violated. Battle named the committee of eight Memphis lawyers Sunday after a weekend statement by Artfur Hanes, Birmingham attorney, that the man charged in the death of Dr: Martin Luther, King Jr. is the victim of a “Communist left-wing conspiracy.” Protesting Student Gets Rifle Butt From Mexican Paratrooper Volcano Erupts, 12 Dead One Detroit woman died yesterday and two youngsters were seriously injured when a Volkswagen rolled over on 1-75 north of North Holly Road in Genesee County. Officials at McLaren Hospital, Flint, said Elsie Fleming, 24, died about 8:45. The car driven by Benoit Hicks, 35, of Detroit, went out of control about 7:15 p.m. Hicks told State Police of the Pontiac post he had fallen asleep. All five of his passengers were thrown from the car. Hanes has said several times he fears for his safety because he is defending Ray, who goes on trial Nov. 12, charged with murder in the slaying of King. Hanes met with Ray Saturday, then held a news conference at which he told of the “Communist conspiracy” and promised to reveal full details at the trial. Aid Rushed to Gosta Ricans Road Millage Vote Could Up Program e One) Listed in fair condition at McLaren Hospital this morning were Robert Shobe, 6, and Carol Shobe, 12, both passengers in the car. Louis Shobe, 11, and Regina Shobe, 10, were treated and released from the Flint I (Continued From for other services, such as police protection, public health, land transactions, etc., they will have to pay for a modem road system. A direct tax—within the county, spent in the countv. for the county—is the road commission s recommended solution. (Next: You get what you pay for.) SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - The U. S. Army rushed helicopters and other aid to Costa Rica today after a volcano silent for five centuries erupted and killed at least 12 persons, injured hundreds and threatened a number of villages. The government ordered the evacuation of some 4,000 persons from the villages of Pueblo Nuevo and Tabacon after nearby Mt. Arenal began erupting Monday. Many of those driven from their homes were badly burned. Heavy rains hampered rescue operations. Refugees were taken to churches, schools and private homes outside the danger zone. A state of emergency was declared by the legislative assembly. It authorized emergency expenditures to help those affected. The Weather Cavanagh Divorce OK Gives Flim Four Boys T Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY SUnny this morning with increasing cloudiness and warmer this afternoon. Highs 76 to 83. Chance of occasional showers and thundershowers tonight and Wednesday. Warmer tonight, lows 57 to 63. Not much - temperatuce change Wednesday. Winds becoming soutb to southwest this morning and increasing to eight to 15 miles this afternoon and to 10 to 18 miles tonight. Thursday outlook: partly sunny and a little cooler. Precipitation probabiiities: 30 per cent tonight and 40 per cent Wednesday. DETROIT (J’l—Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh was granted a divorce and custody of the four older boys today. His wife, Mary Helen, was granted custody today of the four younger children. The decision was handed down by Cir^ cuit Judge Charles S. Farmer, who said the..-four older hoysv had expressed a strong preference for their father. Today In Pontiac ..mperature preceding i .m.: Wind Velocity 3 m.i One Year Age In Pontiac Highest temperature ............. Lowest temperature .............. riesday at 6:2S a.i _____y,at 11:32 p.m. >s Wednesday at 1:05 p. 12:30 p.m.........75 HIgliatt and Lowest Tamporaturas This Date in fi Years « In 19W SI In 19i Duluth -- -Fort Worth 85 74 Jacksonvlllo 97 75 Kansas City 12 M Los Angelas 87 as LoulsvIlTa 80 «0 Miami Beach 87 82 Milwaukee 72 41 New Orleans 94 73 New York 82 40 Omaha 85 45 Phoenix 100 82 Pittsburgh 74 50 St. Louis 80 41 Tampa 94 si S. Lake City 9i (CJontinued From F e One) party would select a candidate for the November ballot. The search for Murphy was intensified Sunday when the rented aluminum craft was found near Garden Island. Hope was sparked when one Ufe jacket was found missing and three patrol boats, a helicopter and land parties took up the hunt. However, no further trace of the Clawson father of six was uncovered. FISHING PLANNED Murphy, travelled to C h a r 1 e v o i x Thursday from a state convention of Liquor Sale by Glass Is Up for City Action Unta WwItiBidoy Morning kptwtpd Pn«ipil>Koii Np» IndicatP#- Csnsidt local fafocast i \ Wjrsphoto NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are predicted for the eastern Rockies and the western. Great Lakes region tonight. It will be warmer from the Central Plains through the Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes regions to the New England states and cooler in the northern anc) central Rocky Mountain City commissioners are scheduled to consider a revised ordinance governing the sale of liquor by the glass at their weekly meeting at 8 tonight in City HalL 'The ordinance has been prepared by the city law department after consultations with Pontiac police and enforcement divisions and with tavern and bar owners. In the ordinance will be guidelines for upgrading \the city’s, tavern licenses to Class C status. Taverns sell beer and wine while Class C bars^re allowed to sell all alcoholic drinks. Commissioners also will handle variety of routine items' WOULD YOU BELIEVE? MINK CAPE FOR $125... “The very first person who responded to our Press Want Ad, and there were several, bought the cape.” —Mrs. J.J. : CAPE, EXCELLENT CONDITION, PRESS, WANT ADS will sell most anything and everything usable and there is always a ready market waiting . . # even^ for mink capes. Dial— 7?I^2.8181 or 334-4981 The troopers fired a bazooka shell through the heavy wooden doors of the school building and began dragging o^t students. Some students were slashed bj bayonets. The preparatory school is part of the national university which is supposed to be off limits to police and federal troops. The troops’ invasion of the school could have political repercussions. President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz was out of the city, but a spokesman said he was being kept informed of developments. Birmingham Park Hours Approvedby Commission BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission, at last night’s meeting, added a new section to the city’s ordinance pertaining to parks and playgrounds. The new section will close the parks to unauthorized persons between midnight 24 Yanks Die in 2 Ambushes Sprung by Reds and 6 a.m. each day. According to the commission the ordinance was not aimed at any specific issue or problem, but comes as a result of a request a year ago from city officials seeking restrictions in the parks at night. SAIGON (AP) - U.S. forces suffered setbacks in two ground battles reported today in which 24 Americans were killed and only five enemy bodies were found. In the air a U.S. Navy pilot downed an enemy MIG17 jet fighter in a five-minute dogfight over North Vietnam. One of the setbacks was dealt U.S. Marines from the 7th Regiment in a daylong battle about 25 miles south of Da Nang, one of several areas in which enemy troops have been reported massing, presumably for the countrywide Communist offensive expected in the next two months. About 200 North Vietnamese troops cut into the Marines with heavy machine-gun fire in what appeared to be an ambush. When the North Vietnamese finally pulled back under heavy air and artillery attack 20 Marines were dead and another 40 were wounded. The battle took place Sunday, but was not reported until today. The Marines swept the battlefield Monday and found only five North Vietnamese bodies. Possibly others were carried off by the enemy. The ordinance makes provisions for special events in the parks after the closing hours, provided they have been authorized by the commission. The commission also received a petition from residents of Pleasant Street requesting a zoning ordinance revision to prohibit cluster housing in that area. PRESENT ORDINANCE According to Assistant City Manager John Saefke, the present ordinance stipulates that a single unit may be built on a 9,000-square-foot lot but that on a 36,000 square-foot-lot more than one unit per 9,000 square feet may be, constructed. The commission referred the petition to the city’s planning board for further study. ANOTHER AMBUSH In what appeared to be another am- bush Monday, North Vietnamese troops hiding in a wooded area opened up with heavy machine guns, small arms and mortars on U.S. air cavalrymen probing enemy base camps deep in the mountains 35 miles northwest of Hue. The fighting at times was at grenade range. Helicopter gunships swooped in to help drive off the enemy. Four air cavalrymen were reported killed and 25 wounded. Enemy casualties so far were not known. The commission set Aug., 12 as the date for formal discussion on the agreement between the .city and the Southeastern Oakland County Incinerator Authority for the establishment of a refuse transfer station on Coolidge. The agreement, drawn up by the city attorney’s office, would lease the land to the firm for 25 years. It also would provide various restrictions pertaining to operation of the transfer station. EXPENDITURE OKAYED In other action the commission approved the expenditure of $600 for the improvement of Jebcing around the tennis courts at Eton park. When the fence improvements are completed the commission will act on the proposed resurfacing of the parks tennis courts. Also approved was the allocation of $27,0000 for the purchase of office equipment from the Addressograph-Multigraph Corp., the low bidder for the equipment. LAND, CROPS RUINED Huge quantities of lava and rock spewed from the volcano’s cone, and eight inches of volcanic ash covered the central part of the rich ranching region 45 miles nortl^est of San Jose. Grazing land, rice and cotton crops were ruined. The volcano, which is 5,249 feet high, continued to throw out burning stones and lava through the night. The ashes, rock and lava dammed rivers and brooks in the area, and many of these overflowed, |dding to the damage. Although experts said Mt. Arenal had been quiet for approximately 500 years, Mt. Irazu, 30 miles east of San Jose, erupted for several months in 1963, ruined millions Of dollars worth of coffee and other-crops and. killed hundreds of cattk;. Hope Faides in Murphy Hunt county clerks in Marquette. He reportedly planned to do sortie fishing and see some land he owned on Beaver Island. He rented the boat Saturday afternoon at St. James on the island, authorities His 23-year-old daughter, Sheila, today described Murphy as a good swimmer. However, Coast Guardsmen said lake currents in certain spots would be difficult even for experts. In 1965, Murphy became the first Democrat in history to be elected clerk in Oakland County. PONTIAC CITY VOTERS Our Municipal Court has been reorganized under a new State law. The new District Court will have 3 judges, 2 of whom will be nominated by your votes on Tuesday, August 6th. It is important that you vote in the Primary. Your New District Judge d be experienced in law. He must have served his ■ munity. He must be respected in his profession. He must pledge to importiolly serve Ihe people. Fer the Record I have been practicing law in Pontiac and Oakland County Courts for over 38 years. I om o trial lawyer. My Civic duties and volunteer work ore a matter of commendable record. I con stand up and be counted in any company. YOU CAN check my integrity. I know it is spotless. The Court Must Serve Wisely and Justly Our community needs a judge with on appreciation of the complex problems which inHy confront eqeh of'us, with the rnofure experience to handle these problems as they arise, and with the expert knowledge of our laws to judge those edge ...' These qualities I have. Vote for DAVID E. UTLEY Pontiac Distrret Court Judge TUESDAY, AUGUST 6 Tbii ad p«td by UM«y tor Judge CommiMeo, Choi lev Jdcot U llK 1H>.\ 1 I Ac . I I I \ . .) I 1 / \ iiO. J!)(i8 Rocky Backers Pitchy Camp in Miami Beach Museum Gets LBJ Brdnd MIAMI'BEACH, I'la. (AP) Supporters of Nelson A. Rockefeller pitched the New York governor’s politic^al tent at the Republican presidential nohii-nating site with go-go girls dancing in the streets and a baby elephant that munched marshmallows. The sidewalk sideshow Monday night on Collins avenue, this resort citys’ main drag, stopped! traffic and stunned a few hun-' dred passersby with blaring “rock” music. Goy. John Chafee of Rhode Island stood up to plug Rockefeller as the best man for the presidency, but most of his words were'lost when the public address system promptly shut olf when the music stopped. About the only remark of Chafee's that reached the snyall crowd was a scarcely flattering comparison of Rockefeller with Wendell Willkie, the 1940 Republican presidential candidate who was soundly trounced by Franklin D. Roosevelt. Lionel Hampton, musician, got little response to his appeal to the crowd for cheers for Rockefeller. Most of the cheers came from the dancing girls and the long-haired, goateed rock ’n' roll musicians Hampton led. The only clear benefactor of the official opening of Rockefel-. ler’s convention headquarters was “Rocky Baby,” the small elephant who gobbled up marshmallows shoved through the bars of his cage by children. ® Even that wasn't an upalloyed success. 'Vich'pl'l, ^iichael, please leave that elephant alone," said, one harried tnothcr, leading oft her son who clutched two ■■Rocky" balloons in one hand and the remains of a sticky marshmallow in the other. A little girl wept when she let go of the string on her balloon and it soared hundreds of feet in the air. A Rockefeller aide hustled to get her another one, * * * ■ th^ sh^jw in front of Rockefeller's new headquarters spilled into the street, creating a traffic-jam of cars, beer trucks and bu.ses. It slowed passing cars enough for fleet-footed Rockefeller youths to jump out into the street and slap ‘ Rocky” stickers on rear bumpers. Other youngsters solicited signatures for a 'People’s Parade for Rocky" with indifferent success. * ii * "Hock,^' Grooves,” "Rocky Power" and ‘The Rocky Rebellion Wants You” signs! emphasized Rockefeller's pitch 'for the youth vote. .. ★ ★ ★ A Florida note was added by a sign that proclaimed "Rocky is Sunkist," presumably like an orange. Dem National Convention to Become on Armed Comp CHICAGO (API - Fitfeen thousand soldiers, police and federal agents will turn the site of the Democratic National Convention into an armed camp next month in a giant security operation. The security arrangements could turn the convention—normally a horn-blowing spectacular—into an austere exerci.se in martial order. * * * Racial tensions in the city and! the crowds of demonstrators and hippies who plan to come to Chicago will compound the job of keeping order and protecting President Johnson and the candidates. Deployed round-the-clock at Chicago International Amphitheatre, and at hotels and motels housing delegates, will be some 8,000 uniformed and undercover policemen, 5,500 riot-trained National Guardsmen and at least 1,000 federal agents. MORE MEN Available , More men will be available on short notice from the Cook County sheriff’s office, state police, the Coast Guard and the FBI. The remainder of Chicago’s 12,000-man police department. including a mobile 600-man task force, will be on standby. All security procedures are being coordinated by the Secret Service, charged w'ith protecting the president, vice president and political candidates. * * ★ The Secret Service has 580 agents across the country, and most,will be in Chicago during convention week, Aug. 25-30. Though plans are under tight wraps, it presumably was the Secret Service which ordered two Air Force reconnai.ssance jets to make low passes over Chicago last week to photograph the Amphitheatre and surrounding terrain. SECURITY MEASURES Security measures are being taken on the Amphitheatre grounds, which sprawl across the eastern edge of the Union Stockyard^ dn the racially tense South Side, Fences are going up and heliports being constructed, reportediv lor airlift mg candidates to and from the hall. ' The Amphitheatre, with iS'Kk ■lljF^ R. OCR STl FFEl) PADDY MELD Call il a f;iant hainburiier >luffe(l with \inprican cIipp?? and oiiiotu . . . served on loa^ted li;;lit r\e (with french fries) . . . and \ou"re close. Artufdh. it's 1 Sl)\ (dion e Colorado (4)rn-Fed Beef, tender aged ground sirloin ihrn and thru . . . aiul it's iiierelv ftreitl . . . iin-helie\ahly popular at J^l.l't. Harry’. ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE THE PONTIAC MALL AtnetiedS '^Votih FAMILY 585,000 square feet of floor space under a single roof, will be sealed off within roughly an eight-square-block buffer zone. * ★ ★ To penetrate the perimeter, both pedestrians and vehicles will be required to displav Democratic National Committee credentials. Inside, checkpoints will be established where guards reportedly will tear off perforated sections of the passes, good for only one day. Traffic court yvill be closed Aug. 17-30. freeing 23 magistrate# to process large numbers of prisoners in the event of a disturbance. MII.ITARY MOVEMENT Each magistrate could hear well ove.r 200 civil disorder cases a day. The whole operation, both in scope and magnitude, appears to have taken on the aspect of a military movement. Said one high police department source, “The security is the most elaborate ever devised for a convention anywhere.” * ★ ★ The number of persons expected to converge on the city for antiwar and civil rights demonstrations ranges in the thousands The National Mobilization Committee, organizer of a march on the Pentagon by war protestors, has promised “the I largest demonstrations in American history” at the Amphitheatre Aug. 27, President Johnson’s birthday, and Aug. 28, the day of the nomination. They also plan a march through the Loop on the 28lh. The Free City Survival Committee, a hippie group, hopes to bring .50.00<) youths to the city for a pop-music festival and "unconvention. ’ They say they will live in the parks, but have not received permission for the camp-in. Allard Lowenstein, an engineer of the dump-Johnpon movement last fall, said his Coalition for an Open Convention will stage a mass rally on convention eve. So far, however, the city has refused to grant him a rneeting place. Also planning to come are the Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, with a small delegation of the poor, and the Mississippi Freedom party. They will be seeking con-, vention seats. All the groups guarantee orderly, nonviolent demonstrations.“Jfs foolish we^e going to break police fines . . or disrupt the convention." said Rennie Davis of the National .Mobilization Committee: • ^ SAN ANTONIO, Tex i.APi The LBJ brand is on its way to the Smithsonian Sherriflc Siroud of Devine, Tex,j. a .south T-xas blacksmith, made the branding iron that will become th^ first such presiden-tial“device to find its vvay into the -Smilksonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Stroud was in Washington July 4 for the American Folklife Festival on the Smithsonian mall. The LBJ iron caught the e\'c of a Smithsonian director, who asked Stroud to make one for the institution. 'o 111" la.^l :!n to to Vr-ars, llw di"l of .\moric,an,s has ch.'in'o'd National consomotion of refined carbohydrates has increas"d and that of natural carbohydrates has decreased. Dairy and meat products con sumption has also risen greatly. QUALITY REPAIRS ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loaners Available PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARING AID CENTER Phone 682-1113 psm% S' . HEARING AID DEALER . KENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! POSSIBLE RUNNING MATES - Sen. Charles Percy (left) of Illinois, who has been mentioned as a Republican vice presidential possibility, introduces Gol-. and Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller of Ncvl York to a gathering vesL'rday in Chicago. Rockefeller said AP Wirephoto Percy meets his requirements for a vice presidential candidate, but he didn't comment on the possibility that Percy might be his running male. Percy announced'support for Rockefeller last week. Symbol Becom'^s Grmnmq Imo Transition for GOP Elephant MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — time, toe-dancing pixies popular In eight years the symbolic Re- now only with the ladies, publican elephant has evolved ★ * ★ from an angry trumpeting tusk- ,,r(.ations of William cr into a grinning imp with lop art dir ctor of the hat. b-ating on a drum. Republican National Commit- * * * . tee During the transition the (!OP Fleishcll. 46. is a former com- Icphant split into twins for a mercial illustrator His job is to Republican Sidelights MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Through two hours of testimony Monday, the 15 members of the GOP platform subcommittee on economic affairs sweltered under a bank of television lights. When the chairman. Sen. Roman L. Hruska of Nebraska, finally suggested the hot lights be turned, off a while he discovered there had been no televising and no TV man was there. Hruska had aides locate a technician to switch the lights off. MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (APi -Cuban exiles are lobbying at the Republican national convention with matchbooks. Printed on the covers of bonks being distributed even before the Aug. 4 start of the convention are the words: ‘Oust Castro in ’69.” MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Unembarrassed but feeling an explanation due, Paul H. Douglas, former long-tim,e Dernwrat-ic senator from Illinois, told Tuesday why he happened to be at Republican platform committee hearings. He is chairman of the Citizens Committee for Peace with Freedom in Vietnam, and Mrs. Oswald R Lord is vice chairman. .She is a Republican. Together they presented a statement and a special message from former President Dwight I). ELsenhow-er asking, patient determination in prosecuting the War in Vietnam. MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) -An orange-colored elephant 40 feet long will hover over Convention Hall to point the way to the Republican national meeting site. The rubber and nylon elephant filled with 1,200 cubic feet of helium will be released by the Florida Citrus Cprnmission. draw party ideas into a printable image. At the convention Fleishell’s work includes the cover for the report of the platforn]^ committee. a ghostlike image>of Abraham Lincoln with an overprint that will be either "Republicans R-allv Care” or a quotation from Lincoln's second inaugural address, “We' must think anew and act anew.” The Platform Committee will choose. Rut it is the broad-stroked red, white and blue cartoon posters that draw attention to Flei-shell. “This was a stable, Eisenhower. middlg-of-the-road elephant," said Fleishell, holding up the huge poster of his 1960 elephant waving its trunk like a rogue bull. “This one is the young approach, the new approach to Re piiblicanism, " the artist said of his fanciful 1968 elephant drummer with bow tie, red blazer and Uncle Sam hat. HOW TO MAKE YOUR FRKNDS ENWYOU! It's easy. 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All taxes Included t ■UNOEO WHISKEY,» nOOf, 40% SIIAICHT WHtSKEY—«* (illAIN NEUTUAL SWRITS. COOOEKHAM & WORTS LTD., PEORIA, W. Farmers Fight Subsidy Plan LANSING (API- The Michigan Farm Bureau has asked the state's representatives in Congress to vote against extension of the present program of subsidies to farmers. “Farmafs and consumers are becoming increasingly concerned about the large amounts of tax money being paid out-under the food and agriculture act." said Dan Reed, Farm Bureau secretary-manager. "Both consumers and farmers," Reed said, "are aware that food prices continue to climb while farm prices drop. " UNITED STATES \ HENRY FORD Stamp Salutes Birth of Henry Ford DEARBORN (^) — The 105th anniversary of the birth of Henry Ford was commemorated today with issuance of a Henry Ford stamp by the U.S. Post Office. The 12-cent stamp, phrt of the "prominent Americans” series, was issued in a ceremony at Greenfield Village in Dearborn. The black-and-white stamp carries a portrait of Ford-and a silhouette of his historic Model T. Greenfield Village is an open-air museum of American history founded by Ford in 1929. It features a number of historic buildings which were moved tp the site. today’s first-day-of-issue ceremony included a parade of vehicles ranging from a Connestoga wagon to the Lincoln convertible used by Presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy and John.son. Participants in the ceremony included IJ.S. Pcistmast^er ('leneral Marvin Wat.son, Ford Co board chairman Henrv-Ford II. grandson of the founder, Deputy Post-masier ’General P'redenck Belcn and F'nrd director William Clay Fo'rd. another grand.son. Cadillac Woman Is Set Ablaze by a Gang of Youths THE PONTIAC PRESS TI KSDAY, JriA' HO. 1908 hoJUem CADILLAC (AP) — A young Cadillac woman was hospitalized today with serious burns after a carload of youths dous^ her with an inflammable liquid and set her clotfies afire last night, police said. Avondale Campaign Progressing Mrs. Larry Titus told police that four young men touched a flame to her sheer garments while they were talking on the front porch of her home. Students Join MHIage Drive She said they drove off in a light blue car which police said avoided overnight roadblocks set up by local, and state police assisted by sheriffs deputies. Authorities at Cadillac Mercy Hospital today refused to reveal her condition. SEVERE BURNS It was learned, however, that Mrs. Titus suffered severe burns to the upper part of her body and police said she was under sedation overnight. Her husband, Larry, told police he heard her screams from the porch and he found her aflame. The millage-support committee of the Avondale Schools presented its first progress report to the Avondale Board of Education meeting last night. James Hunt, subcommittee chairman, reported that in additionvto the many things done to inform the public, the committee has initiated student involvement in the campaign. purchase of two portable classrooms did not come from the district and would "in no way effect the operational millage.” OTHER SOURCES Funds for the new high school, the portable classrooms, and the elementary counseling came from previous, bond ^sues or federal, state Or county funds. The Sept. 7 issue provides for $273,300 operational funds to enable full-day classes, complete physical-education and sports programs, playground supervision, and additional .staffing and other items. ThO board asked the millage support committee to present a progress report at each regular board meeting. “They are showing great interest and enthusiasm,” said Hunt. The students are planning a millage-support car wash to raise funds for a parade Sept. 7, the day the issue is voted RURAL CHARM IN CITY — This seemingly remote scene is located near the center of Birmingham in the northwestern section of the city. It overlooks the dam at Quarton Lake. Police said Mrs. Titus told them she did not know her assailants, and officers were unable to determine a motive for the attack. GREAT CONCERN Board Picks New Supplier for 2 Portable Classrooms Extension of the act, Reed said, "could saddle farmers with up to five years more of a program which has failed." Gorlock Approves 5c Dividend Hike "The students are so greatly concerned about their education they are doing all they can to get his millage passed,” said Thomas Galloway, committee spokesman. The Avondale school system is asking a 7.7 operational millage increase in the Sept. 7 election. "Seldom have real, operating farmers been as unified in opposition to a proposed congressional act as they are to any extension of this act." Reed said. The Farm Bureau has suggested, he said, that the proper approach to wheat and feed, grain programs would be repeal of the current programs of subsidies and allotments, returning management ol farms to farmers. Directors of Garlock Inc, voted to increase the regular dividend ye.sterday from 15 to 20 cents per share effective with the third quarter dividend, payable Aug. 20 to shareholders of record Aug. 7. The sales and engineering headquarters of (Jarlock's Precision Seal Division is at 2175 W. Maple in West Bloomfield Township. Hunt also reported that posters and bumper stickers are being printed for distribution throughout the community. In addition "coffee klatches" are being organized with meihbers of the voluntary millage support committee as featured speakers. Sales of $32,880,554 for the first .six months of the year are the highest in ttie company’s 80-year history. Comparable sales for 1967 were $30,175,136. "I’m very pleased with the enthusiasm people are showing,” said John W. Dickey, school superintendent. “I know a lot of people who put in much of their time and will continue to do so. " He pointed out that funds for construction of the new high school and At a special meeting last night the Avondale • Board of Education rescinded its July 15 decision on the supplier of two portable classrooms, "It appeal's the McFadden Co. of Lansing sold the two classrooms to the Mount Clemens School District prior to our bidding,” said John W. Dickey, school superintendent. The board decided instead to purcha.se the two rooms from Educator Sales, Inc., of Jackson. The classrooms will cost about $13,000 each. The district will be reimbursed fully for their cost by the state and the county, according to Dickey. MORE COSTLY The relocatable rooms supplied by Educator Sales cost about $2,000 more than those from McFadden, Dickey pointed out, but "they include a number of things we would have had to buifd info the McFadden models. In addition the new rooms are larger than those originally "bid on. Each measures about 800 square feet. The board viewed blueprints for the new high school to be built next to the junior high school on Waukegan. Architect William Adams of Lynn Smith, Demiene, Adams, Inc., reported that the plans were almost the same as the original ones, but included changes suggested by the board. CHANGES LISTED The blueprints featured a more centrally-located library and student lockers placed in the hallway walls. Corridor and nonusable space around the Cafeteria and kitchen were reduced to make the plans fit the allocated budget. Adams reported that site borings were favorable and no extra cost is anticipated for the foundation. He estimated that the building would be completed by February 1970. "That’s a semester later than planned, but it is largely because of the i Walled Lake's Board of Education Approves Boundary for High Schools " struction strike,” Adams said. FROM BOND ISSUE Dickey pointed out that the funds for the high school came from the $3.1 million bond issue of June 1966. The board called a special meeting for Aug. 5 to mdet with rep- WALLED LAKE - The board of education, at last night's special meeting, approved a boundary dividing enrollment between the present Walled Lake High School and the future Walled Lake Western High School. The new high school presently under construction is .scheduled to open by the fall of 1969, said George Garver, school superintendent. The board authorized the planning to open a new elementry school by 1970 pending more discussion. Injured Spectator Suing Raceway GRAND RAPIDS' (API- One of the spectators injured July 13 when a race car went out of control at the Berlin Raceway at/Marne has filed a $150,000 suit in Kedt Circuit Court against the raceway Owners. Walt^ A. Runstrom of Grand Rapids was seated in the grandstand when the accident occurred and claims he suffered severe and permanent injufies.' Three persons were kiiled and 25 injured in the crash. He added that the western boundry is greater' than that of central and the Western High School will have about 1.709 students enrolled and Walled Lake Central High School will have 1,352. The approved boundary, which roughly goes along Commerce to Wise down south Commerce to Haggerty remaining north of the Grand Trunk Line, is structured to avoid going through subdivisions and provide adequate transportation facilities, Garver said. VOTE TO OFFER CONTRACT It was voted unanimously by the board to offer a contract to Gerald M. Wallace as principal-elect of Walled Lake Central High School. ' The board also approved an increase in cafeteria lunch prices for the Junior High School from 35 to 40 cents and a hike in adult lunches from 50 to 55 cents. resentatives from the gas and electric companies in order to decide which utility to use. The board passed a resolution favcH-ing the rezoning of land in Bloomfield Township south of South Boulevard, east of 1-75 and west of the Hampton Hills subdivision, from single family residential to multiple family residential. One .board member explained that apartments in the area would provide a large amount of tax money. OTHER ACTION MAP RECOMMENDATION Runstrom was one of four per.sons in-)ured still in a Grand Rapids hospital Monday. Runstrom and James Bowers, 12. of Big Rapids, were in fair condition, while FredeftCITShepafd, 37: of Grand Rapidsj and .lames' Brother, Kenneth Jr., 15. were in critical condition. The board recommended that a map illustrating the enrollment division be made public as soon as possible, with hopes that any problems will resolve themselves in the future. In other action the board approved a revised budget, subject to an August public hearing. The budget that was originally submitted for 1968-69 showed a $230,000 deficit, which was balanced by using all of the reserve monies left over from last year, Garver said. Five Youths Receive on-the-Job" Training Five Detroit-Pontiac area youths have been hired by the Kinney Shoe Co. as part of a national policy of sponsoring on-the-job training for youth. The trainees are learning the shoe business under the eye of store managers. Their wages are not added to the individual manager’s payroll budget, but are part of the New York office's responsibility. In other action the board passed a resolution supporting an elementary counseling program costing $23,425. The cost for that program, which includes the salary for two elementary counselors, will be paid by federal funds, according to Dickey. Prince Takes to the Air He. added Ih^..further reduction^were made by reducing the-proposed teaching staff., The program has been endorsed by the Ottice of Economic Opportunity. LONDON JPi —Prince Charles took to the air today and may follow in his father's footsteps as a pilot. The 19-year-o)d future king had a half-hour air experience flight, his first, in a • Royal Air Force single-engine Chipmunk trainer with Squadron,/Leader P. G. Pinney.,...' . v' ' State Road Dept. Picks Urban Envoy LANSING (API - The State Highway Department has appointed Ralph Bonner, executive director of the Greater Lansing Urban League, to the newly created post of urban programs oRicer. Bonner, whose backgrd&nd includes experience in social work and community organizations, will supervise the department’s program of assistance to families and businesses relocated by highway construction. Police Isolate Kalamazoo Street KALAMAZOO lUPU - Police closed several blocks of a street in the city’s predominantly Negro north side last night when small groups of Negro youths stoned passing cars. The youths hurled rocks, bottles and "at least one Molotov cocktail” at white motorists, police said. Typical These Summer Days No one- whs ipjured. There were no arrests. Police closed several blocks of North Burdick .Street to traffic during the disturbance but removed the roadblocks about midnight. The Western Michigan city of about 82,000 is 50 miles south of Grand Rapids, where weekend disturbances prompted, Gov George Romney to impose a curfew and state of emergency order for two nights. . AT COUNTIES’ CONPab - Seri’. Eugene,McCarthy. D-Minn,, is deep In thought prior to speaking to the 33rd annual Conference of the National-Association of Cwin- • ties ip Washington, D.C., yesterday. About 40 top leaders in OaklMd County govern- i ment are attending the conference this week. . • THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JIJLY 30, 1968 A—5 Army, FDA Differ on Safety of Irradiated Bacon WASHINGTON (AP) - The Army insists that irradiated canned bacon is safe for human consumption despite the Food and torug Administration’s decision to stop the military services from feeding it to the troops. Gol. Edward L. Johnson of the Army’s food-irradiation labora- tories at Natick, Mass., said ani- the data from the tests," said mal tests of the bacon were Johnson. “We’re hoping to remade prior to the Army’s peti- solve this.” tion to feed it to some troops, Johnson made the comments and the tests showed “no evi- on published reports, confirmed dence of any adverse effects j by an FDA scientist, that: from the irradiation.” • The FDA has turned down a * * * ;new Army petition to begin “There seems to be a differ-(serving irradiated ham to science of opinion in interpreting idiers. • The FDA has taken a second look’at its 1966 approval of irradiated bacon, and ordered it out of the mess halls pending further study. The FDA contends there is evidence that irradiated bacon can cause adverse effects on the reproductive process in rats. Daniel Banes, an associate FDA commissioner for science, said the animal tests were sponsored by the Army before it petitioned his Agency for approval, but he said the FDA obtained full details on the tests only a few months ago. O'Hara Asks Fast Action on Dunes Bills fed irradiated bacon, and a similar reduction in the number of offspring surviving the weaning period. Banes said the Army originally stated “that there were no indications that radiation caused adverse effects” in animals fed irradiated bacon. He also said that when the Army—in 1966 and 1967—began to petition for an okay on irra- WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. James G. O’Hara, D - Mich., called today for quick action on proposals to establish a Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lake-■hore on Lake Michigan. “We can still save Sleeping Bear,” O’Hara told a House interior subcoimnittee. But, he said, “we must act quickly. Time is running out. Every day of delay takes its toll of the park.” O’Hara, sponsor of one bill to create the national lakeshore, was joined at the witness table by Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Mich., and l^n. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. “ dialed ham, it submitted some ORIGINAL PROPOSAL Vander Jagt is the author of another lakeshore bill, and Hart sponsored the original proposal for establishment of the lake-shore nine years ago. The Senate has twice, in prev- ious congresses, passed bills to create Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore and the House Interior Committee approved a bill two years ago. But the Senate has not acted on the legislation in this Congress. owners in the area. He said his O’Hara’s bill is identical to the bill approved by the interior cominittee two years ago. It would include 70,968 acres and would cost an estimated $31.8 million for acquisition of lands and development of the lakeshore. The bill by Vander Jagt, whose district includes the area of the proposed lakeshore, would authorize a park of 30,800 acres. proposal would also reimburse the local governments for revenue lost when property came off the tax rolls. Vander Jagt said Michigan law would require the state to sell and not donate the two state forests within the proposed lakeshore area to the federal government. PROPERTY INTEREST Vander Jagt said he wants to preserve the dunes for the pub: lie, but he also wants to protect the interests of property of the National Park Service, Hart said establishment of Sleeping Bear Dunes was recommended by President John F. Kennedy and President Johnson and the O’Hara bill is similar to those passed twice by the Senate. Rep. Roy A. Taylor, D-N.C. chairman of the national parks subcommittee, said the federal government wiH not buy state park lands. PRIVATE USES George B. Hartzog, director recommended establishment of the lakeshore and said the bill recognizes that many private uses can compatibly coexist with public recreation in a national lakeshore. The proposal, he said, would permit owners of improved property to remain indefinitely on their lands as long as they complied with regulations. With growing pressure for development of land, on the shore of Lake Michigan, O’Hara said, land prices are soaring—a de- velopment which could be fatal per cent reduction in the num-|revealed “deficiencies in design to the proposed lakeshore. ber of live-bom offspring ofi^ts and execution of experiments,’ Urban League Searches for Ghetto Power NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Delegates to the 58th annual National Urban League Convention, armed with the complaints of slum dwellers who “told it like it is,” today turn to two prominent Americans for waysj to build “ghetto power.” John W. Gardner, former secretary of health, education and welfare, and .Stanley Marcus of the world-famed N e i man-Marcus department store chain in Texas head today’s convention program. Delegates traveled to four separate Negro schools Monday for a face-to-face confrontation with the people on economic,, social and educational problems. The complaints were not new — poor schools, lack of jobs,! housing discrimination. ( SUMMARY MADE League official Adolph Holmes summed up thej workshops like this: j “We’ve heard all these stories before. What are we going to do about them? Are we going to continue to moan over our plight or start acting?” DONT EXPECT GIMMICKS-JUST CLEAR HEARING! The BELTONE Name Has Always Meant Quality! • Quality Construction t< Provide Clear Quality Hearing Beltoiie’s Free Electronic test Certified Hearing Service Plan plus the exclusive Beltone are your assurance of Clear Hear- You Deserve the Best. . Don’t Settle for Less! Earl II. t.laapie Certified Hearing Aid Audiologist Hearing Aid Center 450 W. Huron St. Pontiac, Mich. - Ph. 334-7711 Opposite Pontiac General Hospital — Free Parking **If Hearing Is Your Problem Beltone Is Your Answer!'* raw data (»i use of irradiated baCon in animals to support its contentions that irradiated ham was safe. QUESTIONS RAISED But, Banes said, the animal data on the bacon raised questions in the minds of FDA scientists, and they asked for further details. It was after these additional details were furnished that the FDA concluded the data showed a reproductive-process hazard to rats, he said. Banes said the FDA scientists We have had second thoughts on the original bacon petition approval,” he said, ‘and the FDA is taking action to rescind it.” Col. Johnson said that after the FDA’s original approval, the army procured only a single consignment of irradiated bacon December 1966—approximately 30,000 pounds—and that this “was all fed within a month —half to army troops and haff to Air Force men—and was only used for testing purposes.” He said the bacon had never been supplied “for general use.”' MORE TESTS He said the Army, in the wake of questions raised by the FDA both on irradiated ham and bacon, plans additional tests. ELECT RICHARD D. KUHN Republican PROSECUTOR • Praetieing Alloraay a Oraduata of MSU a Family Man - 4 OhUdrah a Mambar of Mothodiit Chui a A Man of Infagrify a Lawlaatnaaa will not ba tolaralad.’’ ELECT A FICHTINQ Banes had said in testimony prepared for the joint Senat^ House Atomic Energy Commit-^ tee that the Army’s petition for concluded the data showed a 25(approval of irradiated ham had IF YOU DONT DRINK ask me about Low Rates Extra Protection For NON-Drinkers auto LIFE HOME HEMPSTEAD*, OARREH and ASSOC. Main Office Branch Office Michigan E 4-4T24 39 Peninsula Lakeville. Michigan Phone: OA 8-3^4 Earlier, League Directorj /hitney M. Young Jr. pledged! 0 double league efforts to ridge the gap between whites! nd blacks by “putting to good se the grooving number of oncerned white people.” On the political front, Young sked the major candidates to ban all appeals to the backlash Save a second. I^flalife.. I “li is about time for race toi e taken out of the political j rena,” he said. 4 Injured as Plane Crashes at Monroe JONROE (AP) - A four-seat vate plane developed engine uble and crashed shortly er takeoff Monday at the mroe Municipal Airport, in-ing four Detroit-area in—one of them critically. Uchard Fehling, 45, of Lin-n Park, a student pilot, was critical coriditiop, and nsferred to Oakwood General spital in Dearborn. ’homas BajkiewiCz, 32, of 'andotte, a certified flight; tructor, was listed as in :ious conditiwi at Oakwood. ) Car theft is often the first offense that later turns a boy into a full-time criminal. A lot of the fault is yours. You make car theft so easy. (Last year 76% of stolen cars were left unlocked; nearly half also had ignition keys in them.) Quite a temptation. You realize how great this temptation is when you know that 64% of people arrested for car theft are under 18. When you carelessly walk away from your unlocked car, you may be avoiding a 10-second job, but starting someone on a 10-year sentence. ENJOY CHICKEN Baked? ■PAAMtrri BAKED CHICKEN RA6U' iV Brown chickan pieep la aH casserole. Pour over chickM Don’t help a boy go bad. When you park, take your kiey*. contents of » 15V4 or. jar of Ragu' Spaghetti Sauce. Bake in- moderate oven. Ten minutes before done add slices of mozzarella cheese. Advertising contributed for the public good in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the International Newspaper Advertising Executives. SPAGHETTI SAUCE The Pontiac Press SALK SAVINGS ON TOP BRAND WASHKRS A FREEZERS FREE. DELIVERY, INSTALUTION, SERVICE. Never before so many deluxe features at so low a price! Whirlpool FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER +lTTtpxrin±: FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER BUY! laty to oparat* . . . _________ finish. On* knob control. High von* agitator goto out doop-down dirt, family six* capacity- Sofoty lid twitch stops th* spin action when tho lid is openod. All porcolain — won't rust or stain ovorl Heavy duty transmission. Handios big loads soioly. Prov. yrs. models. *117 < .cold wash), tpsciol nsw Supar-Soak cycis, oxcluttv* Magic-mix filtsr, 3 wash cycloi for propor fabric cors and fros - flow draining thol droini dirty wotor away from wachod clothoi. Autometicoily fill* wotor to fuTi load lovol. Surgilotor ogifoter ond ^47 Free delivery, installation and service. WESTINGHOUSE 10 CU. FT. FREEZER STORES 300 LRS. VERY SPECIAL! > 4Hhotpotn±r PORTABLE, AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER Hot mony of ths conysnfsncs fsotuios of hlghw oricod Top loading.^ Big fomily capacity. Cuihier^coatod raclu. Simpio rolling totobioondoink. lie ^clso foi iro bookot. I $99 Free delivery, service. Select from hundreds of upright and chest freezerSs A style, size and price to suit your needs. Ovar 300 pounds, frozon food ot your fingortips. foods oro oosy to sters, SOS ond foach. Fost froszsr sholvos. Bulk pockogo stofogo. rro-cioton tsmpsroturo control. Full width doer sKolvos. ' ADMIRAL 13'/aCU.FT. FREEZER FOR 460 LBS. Giant 460 lbs. of storogs convonionco. Now ^irculoting Cold-Air" dosign. Full width fraozing sholvoo,,odiustoblo tomporoturo contr^e ^ockogo-Doop** door Ebsfvosy wotor-droin ond hoso^ TOP BRAND 13 CU. FT. FtlEEZER HOLDS 437 LBS. to ond closo. Built-in lock. Compart, *137 *179 *129 INSTANT CREDIT Highland makes credit buying oosior than evor. All moior credit cords, bonk cords o> store chorge plates honored at Highlond for . immodiot* credit. . THE PONTIAC PRESS ■^8 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1968 Stephen Maynard Dudley Few men have so well served their fellows and communities as had Stephen Maynard Dudley whose death at 95 brought sorrow to a multitude of friends of two generations. Mr. Dudley was a dedicated educator in the old tradition, having served for 30 years as principal and faculty member of Pontiac High School and dean of the junior college at the high school. ★ ★ „ ★ A lifelong interest in music led to his formation and direction of the first local school band, which within a few years won top honors in State competition. A warm and outgoing personality that found outlet in participation in a wide range of civic, social and ecclesiastic interests kept “Sam” busy as an able public speaker and interpreter of the shifting scene of the times. Although retired from the local school system since 1941, he kept activfe by engaging in private tutoring until five years ago. Mr. Dudley abundantly fulfilled his mortal mission, and in passing to his reward leaves an indelible record of outstanding accomplishment and personal rectitude. Fisher Body Division Observes 60th Birthday A significant industrial milestone was recently observed when the Fisher Body Division of General Motors Corp. chalked up 60 years of operation. Congress gave the anniversary national recognition by a resolution commemorating it. Founded in Detroit in 1908, the Division has imprinted its quality trademark on more than 100 million bodies. It now operates in 11 states, employing more than 95,000 men and women. ★ ★ ★ The local facility was the outgrowth of the old Beaudette body factory at Wessen and Dems Convention Delegates Double the OOP’s If numerical size counts, the Democrats will be putting on a bigger show than the Republicans. That is in the number of actual participants. As recently as 1960, the two major parties had roughly the same number of voting participants in the national convention. But in this decade, the Democratic Party has followed a policy of rewarding good Democratic states with additional votes without a similar scale of punishment for going Republican. ★ ★ ★ The result has been a doubling of Democratic delegate allocations, while the Republican Party has retained its relatively stable number of delegates. If you think the first of the two shows is big, just wait till you see the number of delegates on the floor at the Democratic convention. The Republicans will have 1,333 delegates and a similar number of alternates on the floor at the convention in Miami Beach—a grand total of 2,666, with 667 delegate votes necessary for nomination. ★ ★ ★ But hold your hats. The Democrats will have a total of 5,611 with credentials for the floor in Chicago; 2,989 delegates, 2,512 alternates and the 110 members of the Democratic National Committee. They will cast 2,622 votes, some in fractions, with 1,311-plus required for nomination. It will be interesting to observe which convention operates in the most orderly fashion. The permanent chairman, the man with the gavel, will be the ring New N.Y. Party Rates GOP Support MOLEY By RAYMOND MOLEV Many-tbousands^~ Repub-- -lican Voters in NeW York state face a serious dilemma. Should they, because they believe in a two -party system, support c a n d i-dates whom they do not admire and whose principles they do not share? Or should they reject such candidates and vote for the candidates of the new Conservative party? After very considerable deliberation based upon my observation of the behavior of the major Republican leaders in this state, my answer to the second question is “yes.” And I base this conclusion on the proposition that such "support for a minority party for the next few years is the best means of restoring real two-party politics in the state. ★ ★ ★ For the actions of these leaders since 1960, specifically Nelson F^kefeller, Jacob Javits and 'John Lindsay — and in 1964 Kenneth Keating — have in effect made the New York Republican party a “splinter” party Jn revolt against the national GOP. |n 1936,a Labor party was formed in New York state. In , 1946 powerful leaders of that party abandoned it and formed the Liberal party. * PfUESSURFJD DEMS Thereafter, that “splinter” party forced the Democratic party tb~accept ifs prirtci^es and to rely upon Liberal en-' dor^sernent for the margin of victory of many of its can-dididates. This corruption of the Democratic party might not have injured the two-party system in the state if the Republican leaders had pulled their, party together and had offered a real alternative to the Democrati c - Liberal alliance. ★ ★ * But the four Republican leaders named above chose another course. Instead of opposing Liberal policies, they adopted them and by wheeling and dealing sought to steal the Liberal party from the Democrats. Their slogan has been that the GOP can win only by winning Democratic and independent Liberals, an argument currently used by Rockefeller in his quest for the presidential nomination. As early as 1961 Rockefeller sought an alliance with the Liberals in the contest for mayor of New York City. Earlier, in 1960, his support of the Richard Nixon-Henry Cabot Lodge ticket was substaptially nonexistent. REFUSED SUPPORT In 1964; as we all know, the “big three,” Rockefeller, Javits and Keating, refused to support the national GOP ticket. And Rockefeller sa| the pattern of “extremism” against Barry Goldwater which Lyndon Johnson so effectively Whose Job Is This, Anyway? Walnut, purchased by the Fisher brothers in 1922. In 1923, the Baldwin Avenue plant was erected. It was remodeled in 1959, and substantial increases in size and scope of operations were effected in 1961 and 1965. With its 4,500 employes and the magnitude of the local business activity it generates, the Fisher plant is a strong member of General Motors Pontiac Big Thtee. ★ ★ ★ The Press congratulates the Fisher Body Division on its noteworthy record of growth and progress. David Lawrence Says: Silence on Czech Plight Evident WASHINGTON-Paradoxes are numerous these days, but none is taore conspicuous than the ab- The crisis is bound to affect the future of the satellite states in eastern Europe. Yugoslavia under Tito long ago broke away from Soviet domination, but does have friendly relations with Moscow. Romania, too, has in recent years asserted more and more independence. * ★ ★ It is understandable that the American government would. for diplomatic reasons, choose to be silent. Washington has kept a hands-off policy in the C z e c hoslovak controversy because of a belief that nothing should be done that would give Moscow a chance to blame Western governments for what is happening in Czechoslovakia. (CopyrIyM, WM, PuWijh«r«- used in the national campaign? The effect of this was'' Thar the Repubtican party of New York virtually withdrew from the national ,party. In 1965 Lindsay openly created an alliance with the Liberals in the campai^jn for mayor. ★ * * And so to create a coun-terforpe to the Liberal party and to offbr an ideological choice for abandoned Republicans, the Conservative party was formed in 1962. Its founders were two young lawyers, J. Daniel Mahoney and Kieran O’Doherty. (The exciting story of the long labors and high principles which attended the growth of that party is told in a new book by Mahoney: “Actions Speak Louder”) The new party made surprising gains. Until 1966 its vote surpassed that of the Liberal party and thus won for itself the irf^rtant Row C on the ballot. ENDORSEMENT In local campaigns the Conservative party gives its endorsement to Republican candidates whom it believes to be sympathetic with its principles. In statewide contests it offers candidates on its line in the ballot. Its primary objective is to force the Republican party in the state to return to its role as a real opposition to the. Democratic-Liberal coalition. And this is an abjective to w^ich all true believers in a two-party system might well subscribe. and others in America who zealously expound the doctrine that people have a right to determine their own form of government. No such silence prevailed when Rhodesia, for example, tried to solve its internal problems with respect to racial relations. In fact, the United States has joined with other members of the United Nations in imposing almost total sanctions on trade with Rhodesia. ‘ ★ "A" ★ But here is Czechoslovakia threatened by military intervention by the Soviet government if something in line with Moscow-style communism is not adopted. Yet no voices are rais^ anywhere in Europe or in this country even to express sympathy with the democratic elements in Czechoslovakia which are trying to modify their form of government. MIUTARY THREATS Meanwhile, the Soviets are making military threats and have actually j m o b i 1 i z e d troops on the border of Czechoslovakia to coerce the - latter -4nto acceptance- of 'Moscow’s dictatorial policies. The Czech leaders are not trying to abolish communism, but seeking to modify it so that it will be more democratic. They already are permitting considerable freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and freedom of the press. ★ * * The Soviet government, however, apparently feels it has the right to dictate to the leaders in Prague what they may or may not do in domestic policies. Members of the 11-man Communist body ruling Czechoslovakia are conferring with top Soviet leaders who have come from Moscow to a meeting on Czech territory near the Soviet border. Bob Considine Says; Yisit to Russia Prompts Inevitable Comparisons Voice of the People: ‘Agree With Suggestion of Contacting Delegates’ I commend you for your good editorial with the list of County delegates to the GOP convention. I am not advocating a presidential primary as other states have. They don’t mean that much and most primaries are not binding on the delegates. ★ ★ ★ , James Hare recently stated it would cost the taxpayers $700,000 to have a presidential primary in Michigan. This would be a huge sum of money that would have little value in the end. However, we can have the same results for the price of a six-cent letter which is upholding the true t^dition of representative government that this republic was founded upon, R. A. YOKEY, PRESIDENT WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP REPUBLICAN CLUB Two Discuss Millag;e for County Roads I have lived on this street for 29 years, with little or no road repair. What guarantee do I have that if I pay more taxes our road would be brought up to proper standards? That $10 a year is just as good in my pocket as someone else’s. No thank you, no more taxes for me. MRS. GRACE FOURN 2751 MARLINGTON, DRAYTON PLAINS The Waterford Township Board should be commended for failure to support the County Road Commission for millage support. Those who use the roads should repair and maintain them. Increase the gas and weight tax and return the monies to the proper places to take care of the roads. Increasing millage can give us the same results we get from our Oakland County Schools: a $5 million building complex for what?; an increase in the superintendent’s pay to $30,000 a year, for what?; placing instructors on a college or university level with pay hikes accordingly. What do they do on a university level? ■k * * A half mill, then a mill at various coimty or township requests and the results are more-taxes. The increase in valuation plus income taxes should have given the road commission enough. Possibly a reduction in the cost of the $7 million jail might help. D M. LEMAUX 488 SHOREVIEW ‘Coiiiiiieml The Press for Printing: Our Flag;* It has come to my attention that you prepared a special ad in four-color that appeared on the back pag^ of the July 4th issue. I commend you on the effort, and hope more people like you help to instill in the American people the importance and meaning of our flag. E. A. SCHROEDER VICE PRESIDENT CAMPBELL-EWALD COMPANY MOSCOW (Delayed) - It’s perfectly okay and legal to write anything you want about Russia, | Verbal Orchids Mrs. Fannie Specs of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.; 82nd birthday. August Kent of Rochester; 86th birthday. Andrew Barton of Union Lake; 80th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Chiappelli of Port Huron, formerly of Pontiac; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Eloise Coe of Union Lake, fonnerly of Walled Lake; 88th birthday. Mrs. Jennie Bidelmain of 168 Beadi; »Wh birthday. officially accredited, is that you can’t send the story out of the country by cable, wireless or telephone. So you write it here, while it’s fresh, and send it later from some point beyond the curtain called Iron. By then the chances are that it will be about as topical as Tom Dewey’s 1948 campaign prom* ises.- '■ -.-........—' _ ★ ★ ★ Flew here and on to Leningrad on Pam Am’s inaugural jet. We took off from Kennedy International several hours after the arrival there of Aeroflot’s impressive jet, the IL62. President Johnsdh’s quittraveling-abroad plea notwithstanding, there are lots of Americans in Moscow and Leningrad this summer. Russia is as easy to enter as Switzerland, much cheaper to travel In than France, and quite frankly in favor of the American dollar — and to hell with what Charles de Gaulle says about it. This is my seventh trip to the People’s Paradise so comparisons are as inevitable as displays of the Hammer and. Sickle. The results of the redent building boom are more noticeable in Moscow than in Leningrad. The capital of the Communist world and the largest country in the world now has skyscrapers almost as jail as those in Omaha. ir A "A ■ ■ Girls’ skirts are shorter than they were the last time I was here but more modest than America’s and downright puritanical when stacked against England's. But Russian legs remain the same, the envy of every lineman in pro football. Their cosmonauts may beat our astronauts to the moon:' One reason for that is they can’t stagd Russian cooking. King Kong would break his best fangs on a Russian filet mignon. But there are wonderful soups, borsch, of course, and shchi (cabbage soup.) The ice cream is excellent. People by the tens of thousands can be seen everywhere in the streets, lapping away at cones and cups of it. Fresh caviar, curiously enough, is hard to buy in Moscow and next to impossible to find in Leningrad. In Washj^ngton; Question and Answer My husband and I need help managing our money. Can you suggest a book or two on budgeting? It just gets harder by the month. H. S. B. REPLY We suggest you write your Congressman and have him check on any such books the Government printing office offers^n this subject. He should be able to send you some at no cost to you. You will also find articles and booklets available through womens and home magazines. The Reader's Guide at City-library can provide you with | an index to articles on that topic. Liberals Promising Too Much By BRUCE BIOSSAT ...WASHmCTpN (NEA) - Some of the nation’s ctjjier liberals recognize that, as promoters of major .social legislation over No new, all-embracing faith militants are not much bet- has arisen to replace the old. ter. Talk of a “black nation” -Some liberals sim^-de not—within this-.country .is- never ■know vimat to propose. Some OTpported’ by practical pro^ spai of years, they have 0 f t e r been guilty of' promising too much. They sawl programs like] public welfare, r public housing ■ and aid to eco- BIOSSAT nomically distressed areas as virtually final solutions of great American problems. By investing too much emotion in their public clamor for these programs, the liberals successfully conveyed to the 'people the idea that solutions could be final, that society could be perfected little by little. Today thty know better. They have seen public housing become a long-range failure which sometimes breeds high-rise slums. The welfare system has crumbled before their eyes, snarling-itself in a tangle of complex rules, dam-' aging human dignity, creating a permanent sense of dependency in some families. * * ' * So the older liberals, and many of their younger cwn-terparts, have lost faith in the idea that, by stitching together a kind of grand patch-work quilt of social programs, America could , rid itself of> its great problems. ' Many are quite lost today. think that the answer may lie in far more massive programs ffalling for the outlay of hundreds of billions, ★ I , ★ ★ Others, however, ha°ve chosen to join rebellious students, militant black Americans and antiwar groups in a heavy assault upon the whole establishment of government and society. The underlying notion seem,s to be that a “system” which will not quickly transform itself into the perfected structure they desire is just not worth keeping. But it may very well be that the liberals who are pursuing this course are falling into the old liberal trap. In their high-pitched cries for a new system which they clearly imply will be more perfect than the one we have, they are promising too much^, ★ 'g* ★ So, too, are the student rebels, the black militants and the antiwar types whose shorthand slogans usually include the urgent word “now” and really represent a demand that a sort of instant perfection be introduced into American life while they are still marching in protest against the old ways. The most extreme students are the Worst in this regard, since they busy themselves trying to destroy what is here and leave the promise for the future largely unspoken.' Some of the white liberals and the more extreme black posals indicating how it could be achieved and maintained. Nor is it ever made plain how a new “system” could avoid anarchy on the one hand or dictatorship on the other. ★ ★ ★ The promoters of these notions like to comfort themselves with the argument that their talk of “revolution” holds out the only real hope for a troubled, problem-ridden American society. But they ere making extravagant promises which they cannot support with substance. They do not make clear and cannot make clear what a black nation or any other kind of new system would be like. It may not be unfair to'say' that in their clamor for a perfection that cannot be realized these promoters have made themselves specialists “Tn false hope, As such, they are ■ far crueler men than those moderates who fight for change with hard realism and make more limited promises which can in fact THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESpAV, JULY 30, 19«8 A—7 Wounded Swelter, Brass Keeps Cool—Congressman Thieves Angle for Fur Catch Package Turns 'Em On WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep., Elford Cederberg, R-Mich., told! Congress Monday that while I admirals were living in air-eon-ditioned quarters provided by the government, some wounded GIs from Vietnam were lying in local hospital wards where the heat was “unbearable." • Cederberg said that if no other way could be found to promptly remedy the situation,! the military should take the air^ conditioning units from the flag' officers’ quarters and install them in the needy hospitals. | ★ ★ ★ I Cederberg, ranking Republi-i can member of the House Military Construction Appropriations subcommittee, noted that last week in the Washington area temperatures hovered in the mid 90s and that the humidity was equally uncomfortable. He said he had received reports that some of the wards in which Vietnam wounded were recuperating at Walter Reed Army Medical Center and Be-thesda Naval Center were not air-conditioned. ASSUMES OTHERS Cederberg said he a.ssumed military hospitals in other parts LONDON (APt -- Someone BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) — It transported to Pier 2 in Balti- of the United States were equal-,reation, is not entirely air-jsaid the hospital had put in re- Bethesda, completed in 1942, is went fishing from a London roof ticked. It buzzed. It was a plain- more harbor, ly deprived. jeonditioned, though the spokes-iquests for “the past several not centrally air-conditioned. Monday and hooked $25,000 l.v wrapped package at the Cen- Thepolicebombsquadexam- A spokesman for Walter Reed man said it was to be centrally (years’' to air-condition ' the But certain areas, including worth of mink and other furs. h'al Post Office in downtown ined the package and then be- said all of the hospital’s wards air-conditioned next year. areas but the Navy did not in-suites such as those used by The furs were in the store-Baltimore this morning. gan to open it delicately, and clinics were air-conditioned.' A spokesman at Bethesda said elude them in its requests to members of Congress and high room of a company in the West ★ * . * j( turned out to be a battery A Red Cross fJuilding, which there were “spme wards" that Congress,. government officials, have been End. Detectives found a fishing It was placed gently in a po- operated electric fan that some- amblilatory patients use for rec-were not air-conditioned. He The main hospital building at air-gonditioned. rod by an open skylight. lice patrol wagon and carefully how got turned op. Dem Stands By' His Daughter Expect No Favors in Drug Case—Senator RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) -Sen, George McGovern, D-S.D.,: who hurried home to be with his daughter when she was arraigned on a narcotics charge,' says he expects no special consideration of the case by authorities. “I have full confidence in thC; courts and the legal process of South Dakota," McGovern said Monday after the arraignment of Teresa Jane McGovern, 19, and two other, young persons. “No further comment about the facts of the case would.be appropriate tor me. * * * “Each of the young people involved in this case is entitled to a fair and impartial consideration without the pressure of political considerations from my office or from anyone else." Miss McGovern, a student at Dakota Wesleyan University at Mitchell, S.D., was arrested Friday night at a motel room she shared here with Mary Shanely, 24, of Evan.ston, 111., a graduate student at Harvard University.' Also arrested was Barry A. Mo-! gin, 19, a Dakota Wesleyan student from Silver Spring, Md. ^ NOT PRESENT | Miss Shanley was not present at the room but came to the sheriff’s office the next morn-j ing. The three were charged with f)ossession of narcotics. Municipal Judge Harold E.! Shaw Monday granted a week’S| continuance for Miss McGoven’i -and Mogin. Counsel for Missj Shanley requested a prelimi-l nary hearing. j McGovern, his wife and an-| other daughter flew here fromi California Sunday 'To be witffj' Teresa in court. The Democrat-' ic senator, a critic of the Johnson administration’s Vietnam policy, had been asked by California Democrats to give themj his views prior to the Democrat-1 ic National Convention. The senator told a reporter here that Teresa “has first claim on my time,” and that all members of the family were concerned for her. “We believe that she has the capacity to emerge from this painful experience a stronger and better member of society,” he said. SAondoy's News at a Glance From the State Capitol THE SECRETARY OF STATE The fatality rate for motorcycle accidCTts dropped last year for the first time in six years, the National Ssafety CbBncil reports — from 2,050 in , 1966 to 1,950 in 1967. The one-destination airline. r ' Ji Don’t get us wrong. Delta’s the fifth largest airline in the country. Obviously, we didn’t g^Ffhat way by flying to only one place. We serve 60 cities in the U.S. and Caribbean. Our timetable is sixty-four pages thick, with listing after listing of all the cities we fly to. And from. All of which might be very interesting, if you’re the kind of person who likes to read airline timetables. But most likely, you just want to get where you’re going and back, with as few problems as possible. Of all the destinations we could offer, you’re only interested in one. If we get off-schedule, even thru no fault of ours, you still blame Delta. We expect it. Our business is to get you there. After all, you didn’t buy a ticket because you enjoy airplane interiors; you bought it because you wanted to go someplace. And if we couldn’t get you there properly...well, we had our chance and missed iF That’s why we call ourselves the one-destination airline. We want to give you the distinct impression that the city we’re flying you to is the only one we’re flying to. We want to have such an impressive schedule of flights, at such ideal times, that you’ll think of us as the airline to that city. We’d like nothing better than for you to never know or care that we ever fly anywhere except where you want us to. In fact, if you’re ever flying somewhere with us, and happen to see another Delta plane heading in another direction, we’d appreciate it if you’d just try not to notice. The one destination that matters is yours. Atlanta The only non-stops...95 min...at 8:00a, l:50p. 10 other thru-Jets. Jetourist, only $40. Houston 5 services, including 2 Night Coach jets, only $56. Day Jetourist, $72. Dallas Super-8 thru-jet at l:50p, plus 3 other services. Jetourist fare, only $64. V New Orleans 6 jet services between 8:00a and 12:20a. Night Coach, only $50. Day Jetourist fare, $60. Tampa/St. Pete 5 jet services daily with 3 1;hru-flights. Jetourist fares:'Day, $63; Night, $50. Miami Up to 8 jet services, the . most,2 Non-stops. 10:00p Night Coach, $57. Day Jetourist, $73. Orlando 3 jet services. 10:00p Night Coach fare, only ^50. Day Jetourist, $61. Add tax to fares. For reservations, call Delta or see your Travel Agent. Ask about Delta’s wide variety of special low fares. '■'■f ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1968 Chicken Comes First—in Legislation in- WASHINGTON (UPI) — To-reggs in huge tank cars for use day, the chicken. Tomorrow, in st^nt cake mixes and other possibly, the egg. prepared foods. Sen. Walter F. Mondale, D- The poultry inspection bill Minn., fresh from a successful!passed 73 to 0 yesterday and drive to upgrade state poultry I was Sent to a joint conference inspfection standards, says hejcommittee to iron out minor plans to push next year foridifferenc^es with a House-ap-legislation to extend similar proved version before it is sent protection to eggs. to the White House. I ★ * ★ I WITHOUT APPROVAL Mondale said he wouldj The bill was designed to resubmit legislation to crack | upgrade inspection standards down on intrastate egg opera-|for,,1.6 billion pounds of poultry tions — particularly “broken I now sold in the United States egg” processors who ship liquid each year without a federal seal of approval. It would apply to poultry products which are not transported across state lines — 13 per cent of the nation’s total production. States would be given two years to bring inspection up to federal standards. Federal inspection would be imposed on any failing |to do so. dirty poultry at the super-fnarket. The two senators also led last year’s drive which extended similar controls over state-inspected beef, pork and other nonpoultry meats. Similar bills are pending to : cover eg^p and fish produced Jfoi' sale within estate’s borders. * * * I House and Senate Agriculture Mondale and Sen. Joseph committees did not take up the Montoya, D.-N.M., said the bill measures this year, would substantially reduce Mondale said he chances that families might particularly concerned about unwittingly pick up diseased on processing of raw, broken which are shipped in liquid forms thus . raising possibility of salmonella testation. He said there were adequate controls over interstate shipments, but not intrastate processing. The senator’s office said federal inspection of some plants had uncovered such abuses as the mixing of' incubator rejects — unborn fetuses — with regular liquid eggs, and the presence of dead flies in liquid egg-processing plants. Air Controllers Ask GOP Vow to End Jam “Obviously expenditures of this amount ^ould put a severe strain on the federal budget, and means should be explored and found whereby the necessary cost can be borne, in whole or in part, by the users of the system,” Kriske said. His prepared testimony did HOTEL FOR SECURITY AGENTS—The Navy attack transport USS Fremont (foreground) is tied up at the docks in Miami Beach, Fla., and is serving as a hotel for more than 200 federal security agents that AP Wirephoto have been brought into the area for the Republican National Convention, scheduled to open Aug. 5. An unidentified freighter is tied up at opposite side of the pier. MIAMI BEACH, Fla, (AP) -Air traffic controllers asked the Republican party Tuesday to pledge the men, money and laws needed to correct a nationwide air traffic jam and travel slowdown, “The air traffic system is coming apart at the seams; it is literally breaking down because of congestion,” the GOP plat-1not deal with reports that delays form committee was told. |of several hours on main air I George W. Kriske, executive!routes can be attributed partly I director of the Air Traffic Con- to a decision of the organized trol Association, Inc., estiamted;controllers to adhere strictly to I in testimony it will cost morejthe rule book, ithan $1 billion in facilities and! Kriske said the government’s I equipment to expand airport I failure to recruit and train con-;and airways plus $200 million ajtrollers has brought overwork year in added operating costs to land six-day weeks to many of| man and maintain them. the country’s 19,000 controllers. YOU. HAM. IM.. ★ The Bank On The GROW Main Office Saginaw at Lawtehce Open Daily 9 A.M. Mpmber Federal Deponit hmuranre C.vrpordlion With Depositt Iiuured To $15,000.00 1 ■ ' ■ : ^ • ■ ' ' ^ Kci SAAausi; hhzl THEy^ONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1968 A—9 \ Hudson's PontiaCf Northland, Eastland, Westland and Oakland open Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings till 9 P.M. Downtown open Monday, Wednesday till 9=30 P.M.; and just during the Summer, Saturday till 5 P.M. Summer Shoe Clearance Now’s the time to save on great clearance collections in our women’s shoe shops. Many different styles, colors and sizes—so hurry in. Wonderful values! Hudson’s Miss Detroiter Shoes, Young Fashion Shoes, Women’s,Casual, Fashion and Salon Shoes. From Women's Shoesi tailored and walking shoes. Lois of colors including basic white and bone. Group includes calfskin and bright patent assortment. 10.90 and 13.90. From Young Fashion Shoes, a wide variety of young styles and colors in sporty flats and little heels from our regular summer stock. Save now! Just 7.90 and 9.90. From Casual Shoes, many styles and colors in spring and summer casual shoes. Included are little heels, flats and some wedgies at super-duper savings. 8.90 and 12.90. From Miss Detroiter Shoes, entire stock of spring arid summer shoes now at greatly reduced prices. A big, big selection of patents, calf s, in many beautiful colors. Just 8.90. From Fashion Shoes, wide assortment of shoes including names like Mademoiselle, Paramount, 14.90, Downtown only. Naturalizer, Protege, Rhythm Step, DeMura, 10.90. Frpm Salon Shoes, designer names such as Andrew Gei- ler, Palizzio, Margaret Jerrold 16.90, Downtovm only! T- ,' : We've the luxurious mink hat you've been looking for at a price you'll just love. Hurry in and see our wonderful sale collection of natural mink berets, profiles, turbans and toques. You'll find each beau-tifuiiy designed in the finest black, ranch or pastel All are in Hudson's Millinery. Fur products labeled to show the country of origin of imported furs. ^ilBi iiiii H XJ D S O IST ’ S DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ava. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER. 8 Mile and Northwestern EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Kelly Roads WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads PONTIAC MALL Telegraph^nd BiZjSbeth LaKa Road OAKLAND MALL 1-75 and 14 Mile Road Womeni SeSm Susan Jean Da we and Spec. 5 Kenneth R. Jacobson, USA, alumni of Central Michigan University, are planning late November vows. An affiliate of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, she is the daughter of Mrs. Ralph Dawe of Osceola Drive and the late Mr. Dawe. Her fiance is the son of the Raymond Jacobsons of Coventry Street. He is stationed with the instructional ROTC unit at Temple University: Pittsburg. Pa. Barrys Travel to Mackinac Isle Robert James Barry and his bride (nee Cathy Diane Van Gilder) departed for Mackinac Island following a reception Saturday evening at the American Legion Hall, Auburn Heights. The daughter of the Arthur VV, Van Gilders of Dill Road and son of the James W. Barrys of York Street, Pontiac Township, spoke vows earlier that afternoon in Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Aurburn Heights. SISTER Attended by her sister, Cheryl Ann, the bride wore a traditionally fashioned wedding gown of silk organza with lace accents. A pillbox secured her bouffant veil and she held a bouquet of pink and white carnations. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Ronald Van Gordon, Mary McAllister and Mrs. Eric Eldridge with Heather Barry as flower girl. * * ★ Patrick W. Barry led the esquire side as best man with ushers Gene Lam-phero, Donald Mack, Eric Eldridge, Ronald Van Gordon and Michael Tebeau. Birthday, Anniversary Occasions for Gatherings (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is Mrs. Karl-Strom's* last column. Our fine correspondent . has accepted a position as a resident director in Ann Arbor.) By SIGNE KARLSTROM Sunda5^ numerous families traveled from 'this area as well as from other points for a reunion with Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. McKnight at Cdldwater Lake to celebrate Mr. McKnight’s 70th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sylvester iMr. McKnight is Mrs. Sylvester’s brother) together with Mr. Sylve.ster’s daughter and son-in-law, the William BeresfordS' and their children, and Mrs. Sylvester’s son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Parker of Milwaukee with their two children, made the trip. ★ ★ ★ Others were Mr. and Mrs. John Touscany and Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. McKnight and their children of Birmingham. Also present were Mrs. Irvin McKnight from Lansing, Lt. Commander and Mrs. Kent McKnight from Maine and Mr. and Mrs. James Clavel, of New York. At the Glen A. Carlsons home on Country Club Drive, another family gathering took place. The Carlsons children, daughter Jane, Mr. and Mrs. Glen A. Carlson Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Don Carlson and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fell of Kokomo, Ind. gave a dinner party honoring their parents on their 35th wedding anniversary. Mr's. Carlson’s sister, Mrs. Lowell Givenchy's Line Gets Lavish Praise By LUCIE NOEL ' AP Fashion Writer PARIS (AP) — The buyers who have seen Givenchy this season, and most of them have, are ecstatic about the beauty, the elegance, and quality of the clothes. Plaudits came from Irene Satz, vice president of Ohrbach’s, New York. "I always see Givenchy’s collection twice, and I have discovered the clothes look better on real people than they do on his lovely models. We buy well from him. and have always been very successful. I find there is a type of woman who looks perfect in his styles.” “He has excellent „ sport . and ski clothes, new ideas, and his evening range is just fabulous,” she added. Janet Sloane of Madcaps is another well-known fashion expert. She adors Givenchy’s hats and finds that certain ones reflect Balenciaga's style.- She finds his collection young in spirit with lots qf beautifuT clothes/in every range withi)Ut having to go way out or offbeat. Information from other dependable sources says that Givenchy shows glove-fitted tights and plays up woman’s charms not only ih fireside models but for sportswear. Black leotards are shown for the ski slopes, worn under belted fingertips “Canadiennes” and trench and duffle coats. One is treated to a sleeveless white lamb jerkin. Sports outfits are three-piece. Big news is seen in the importance given'to velvet, featured throughout for day and evening. Capes for daytime arc in wools and predous furs. Blouses in suits are tuck-in. , Heath and daughter Carolyn, came from Indianapolis for the occasion. Jimmy and Jane F’ell, grandchildren from Kokomo, were present, together with the five grandchildren from this area. Mr. and Mrs. Carl-Gunnar Karlstrom arrived at the party after spending a few days in New York city where Mr. Karlstrom attended a legal conference. It was also an opportunity for some of the family members to meet the bride-to-be of their cousin, George Carlson Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George Carlson of Cran brook Road. His marriage to Barbara Druhot, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Druhot of Napoleon, Ohio, will take place Saturday at Redeemer Lutheran Church. There have been several parties honoring the young couple. A miscellaneous shower and luncheon was given by Mesdames Clifford Nelson and William Riley at Oakland Hills Countrv Club. Mrs. John Hubert entertained for luncheon and a linen .shower in her home and Mr, and Mrs. James Whaley and Mr. and Mrs. George Findley had honored the couple at an evening affair. The rehearsal dinner will be given Fri-, ^ay by Mr. and Mrs. Carlson at Oakland Hills Country Club. Wedding vows on Aug. 31 are planned' by Jan Sibson and Timothy Pickard as announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sibson of Adrian. Timothy is the son of the Paul Pickards of ■ Franklin. The couple are both recent graduates of- Michigan State University. Two New Daughters Arrive at Area Hbmes :Dr. and Mrs. Hormoz Saber inee Mercedes Iglesias) of Isl|ind Park Drive announce the birth of a daughter, Michelle, on July 16. .Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Mohamed H. Saber of Teheran, Iran and Dr. and Mrs, Vicente Iglesias of La Salud, Cuba, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Palare of Sylvan Lake (nee Paula Williams) announce Uie recent birth of a daughter, Tanya Theresa. ‘Tanyq'% grandparents are Paul Palare of Howard * Street and Dr and Mrs. John P.. Williams of Commerce Road, West Blqhmfield Town,ship., Preparing for tonight's debut of the American of the stage to accommodate the large cast of Ballet Theatre in Oakland Unice swy j Meadow dancers. The Detroit Symphony Crehestra will pro-Brook Parillon, workmen re:.tore ii:e Mastic v" e musi'- or the performances from the Pavilion acoustical panels as part of a general , eorganization 'PTA Program Clinic' at Oil hr Area Officers A "PTA Program Planning Clinic” for local PTA officers and chairmen from southeastern Michigan is scheduled at Oakland University Aug. 9. The clinic is one of 10 to be sponsored by the Michigan Congress of Parents in cooperation with 10 state colleges and the Adult Education Association of Michigan. Three programming workshops will be featured in the afternoon, covering sex education, crime prevention, and school-parent relationships. The morning keynote discussion will be led by Dr. Melvin Buschman, director of the Michigan Stale University Continuing Education Service. Interested PTA members from local units and councils may register by writing the Michigan PTA, 1011 N. Washington, Lansing, Mich. 'Flowers for Everyday' ‘ Everyday Flower Arranging” is the topic scheduled for presentation at Thursday’s meeting of Waterford, branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. The meeting will open at noon with a cooperative salad luncheon in the home of Mrs. Arthur Arnold of Desmond .Street. * ★ Members will construct arrangements from their own grown or collected, fresh or dried materials and supplies. Workshop on Thursday The regular meeting of Oakland Writers’ Workshop will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. at the YWCA. The stage is set but where are the dancers'^ James Hicks, manager of the Meadow Brook Festival, looks in vain down the lonely road for the troupe to arrive. When they finally did reach the Festival grounds last evening it was well past the appointed hour. Fol-lowinn rchearsa,ls' today, the show will go on at the scheduled hour of 8:30 tonight. ■ . . Stepbrother Needs Extra Attention as He Joins His New Family By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: l am 11 years old and my (brother is eight. Our mother, and father are split up, and Dad is married to another lady now. Mom is going to marry another man in September. Her new husband W-.. ’ has a boy who is nine ' years old. After Mom marries this man his kid is going to live with us and be our “brother” because his own Mom is dead. He doesn’t know how to hold a fork, he ABBV walks like a girl and talks like a baby and we don’t like him at all. What should we do? TWO BOYS DEAR BOYS: You and your brother should be extra nice to this motherless nine-year-old boy. Maybe he is a slow-learner, but he has feelings. Be patient with him, and try to teach him. People who are the “hardest” to Jove, usually need love the most. ★ * * DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are planning to /go to his hometown hext month to attend his sister’s wedding. We would stay with his parents, which i^ the problem. His mother is a thrice - committed paranoid schizophrenic, and sudden violent outbursts are symptomatic of her condition My husband and I can look after ourselves, but should we take our six-months’ old baby? I have seen my mother-in-law turn on innocent people with everything from golf clubs to knives She has been normal for over a year (with constant medication) but that doesn’t mean .she might not have another outburst. . We could leave our I^aby at home with mv mollier, hut 1 hate to deprive my molhcr-in-law ol her grandmotherly pleasures But il she asked to bathe the baby, for example, I would climb the walls. Maybe 1 am a natural worry wart, but 1 can’t help it. I’ve lost sleep worrying about this problem ever since the wedding date was set two weeks ago. Please tell me what to do. My husband agrees to go along with your advice. WORRY WART DEAR W . W . : Under the circumstances, as long as ySu can’t take your baby with a free and untroubled mind, you’d be better off to leave it at home with your mother. t- * * DEAR ABBY: Every now and then, some troubled Mom writes to complain that Pop has been showing signs of creeping senility. (He smiles, at lovely young things, and imagines himself to be a swinger.) “What,” asks the anguished wife, “can I do to bring the old fool to his senses?” The columnist, (usually a female with more mileage that she cares to admit) takes Mom’s part and proceeds to explain that "when'^ a ' man gets past 'middle-age he is apt to develop strange symptom^, often stemming from the knowledge that youth is no longer with him.” This inaccuracy has been repeated so often that many people actually believe it. If we lay aside the psychological gibberish and check the facts, we will see that the old man is acting as he always lias, though in some cases, his wife is not I am past 60. and am as ready to look at a pretty face as is my 20-year-old grandson. I don’t perform ih any role with, zest and vigor I once possessed, but my instincts are the same. If Mom has lost pace in an effort to maintain a youthful .state of mind, she might try accepting this fact, instead of trying to transfer her problem to Pop. Up to now. someone has be"n pre.scrib-ing the right treatment for the wrong patient. Couple Set for Life With Square Reception ESCANABA (fP — Blue jeans, plaid shirts and cotton print dresses were ■ forma'” attire for the r^c-nt wedding reception of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Mitchell of Escanaba And the 400 guests squai e danced long into the night, turning the reception into a good old country hoedown. * ★ * Mitchell, a 55-year-old. widower, and Ida Cholger, a 48-year-old widow, met each other as members of a square dance club. After deciding to becqme partners in marriage as well as dancing, they ordered a .square dance reception. They invited friends from the Promenaders and the Merry Mixers, two square dance clubs to which they belong in Escanaba. * -It * Other square dance clubsters came .from throughout the Upper Peninsula and northeastern Wisconsin. A Well-known caller, Vern Bero of Green Bay. Wis., brought along a band and they set the guests to some fancy foot-stomping and do-si-do’ing. * * ♦ Callers Steve Baltie and Maryoii Vanderville of Escanaba took turns with -Bero in making shre there wasn’t an interruption in the marathon square dancing. Return Presents With Note of Explanation By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: 1 was recently married for the second time to a widower. After 11 days of married life, he walked out on me. We received a number of gifts and cash, but as yet I have not written any thank-you notes. Please advise me as to what I should do with everything. —Anne Dear Anne: This situation calls for an exception to an old rule which states that no wedding present is ever returned after the marriage takes place. Since your marriage was very brief, you should return all presents that have not been used. Enclose a short note of thanks and explanation. If any were monogrammed or have been used you cannot, of course, return them, so you must write the donor a note expressing your thanks. To those whose presents were used, explain the reason that you are not returning them. DINING ON THE HOUSE’ Dear Mrs. Post: I am a waitress in a small-town cafe. I have been given orders by my employer not to give dinner checks to patrons she wishes to treat. There has been no invitation previously and I find the guests are embarrassed and try to pay anyway. Don’t you think a special dinner invitation to the selected guests should be given before they are seated, and not as an afterthought? I am embarrassed also, but do not want to say so to my employer. — Agnes Dear Agnes: If a restaurant owner issued an invitation to friends in advance to dine “on the house,” there would, of course, be no problem. But the situation arises when patrons he would like to “treat” come in unexpectedly and he instructs you not to present a check. Ideally, those patrons should not argue with you but should graciously accept the compliment. If they do insist on paying, you must be equally firm, and, if necessary, tell them that you will be in trouble if you allow them to pay. SINGING AT WEDDING Dear Mrs. Post: Our .son who is in the Air F’orce met a girl, they fell in love and became engaged. The girl is sweet and lovely and we’ve come to love her dearly. Our problem is this: Today we received a letter from her asking my husband, to sing at their wedding. Is this proper? — Mr?. P. Dear Mrs. P.: It’s so nice to hear from someone who is happy about her future daughter-in-law and to hear of a girl who is so considerate. I recently stated that a bride should not sing at her own wedding. But, your husband has no official position in your son's wedding. Therefore, he, as an honored guest, should not hesitate to sing at the ceremony. The Only drawback might be that he would not be seated with you, but if you do not mind that. b,j„ all means tell him to accept her in/ vitation happily. September Vows for Three Couples Dianne E. Williamson and Michael J. (’lymer have set Sept. 7 as their wedding date as announced by her parents, Mrs. Margaret A. Seagull of Fernbarry Court and James C. Williamson of Huntington Beach, Calif. Michael is the son of the Donald J. Clymers of Birmingham. ROSE BECHLER Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bechler of Adams Road, - Dakland Township, announce the engagement and September wedding plans of their daughter. Rose Ann, to Peter D. I^k. The son of the senior Mr and Mrs. Harold J. Houk of Flint, Peter is a graduate of Wayne Stain- University where he and his fiancee are now seniors in law school. Miss Bechler completed her undergraduate studies at University of Michigan. ROSALIE SCHERTZERS Announcing the engagement and September wedding plans of their daughter, Rosalie, to Donald J. Hund, are her parents, the Stephen Schertzers of Pelton Road, Independence Township, Donald is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hund of Ubley. Pair Exchange Vows David R. Blank, son of the Joseph Blanks of Berkley Street, took as his bride. Saturday, Linda Van Sickle of Rahway, N.J. The marriage was performed in Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church i n Rahway. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Van Sickle of that city. Following a trip to the Laurentian Mountains, the couple will reside in Avenbl, N. J. Guest Day for Golfers It was annual gue,st day at ■ the Fairway Golf League's recent meeting in Pontiac Country Club, Arrangements for the social event were olann»d by Mesdames: Richard Kinkaid. Richard Childress, Bradley Smitin Charles Barker. Filon Simpson and James CYeig. ' f: THE PONTIAC PRESS. TXJESDAY, JULY 30. I0r,8 /" We Have MOVED! ’ We are now relocated at our new, » larger, more convenient offices ’ to better serve you. See us now at ; 11 WEST LAWRENCE ! Downtown Pontiac We Specialise In GROUP TOURS : HIRLINGER CENTER 11 West Lawrence **Ppnii”c" Phone 338-4048 A—11 YOU WIPE AWAY CRACKS FOREVER lUFFKOn AND TUFF-KOTE GLAS'S FABRIC Just Wipe On, Apply Fabric, and Coat! • Cures Cracks • Saves Window Sills • Waterproofs Joints • Stops Paint Problems SAVES TIME! SAVES MONEY! CLEAN AND EASY TO USE! Don’t fill cracks-bridge them with a thin, strong patch olTuff-Kote and glass PAT LALLY House of Color 3139 W. Huron St. oiv..,pauc.. 681-0427 Couples Exchange Wedding Vows ROJAS-DELGADO LUVISCH-YOUNG St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church was chosen by Amelia M, Delgado and David Rojas II for their marriage Saturday morning. receiving line by their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Augustine Delgado of Ojista Road and Mrs. Eloisa Rojas of Judson Street and David Rojas of Portland Street. They greeted guests at a r^p-tion in Knights of Columbus Hall. Music Groups Slate Events in Michigan A three day meeting at Interlochen of the Michigan Federation of Music Clubs will honor the national president, Mrs. Maurice Honigman of New York City. * * * Mrs. Honigman will address the gathering twice during the August 2 — 4 assembly; at the board meeting and following the Saturday luncheon. Reservations may be made through MFMC W e e k e n dj Reservations, Stone Student Center, Interlochen. NATIONAL National Federation Day willj be held at Meadow Brook; August 10. Mrs. Vernon L. Honeymooning at Niagara Venman and Mrs. Frank W. Falls and New York are new- Coolidge have been appointed to lyweds Mr. and Mrs. Giles represent Mrs. Honigman at Richard Kandt (nee Sharon!that meeting. Ann Abney). The pair, wed * * * ' ■ " ■' — Mrs. Raymond Reece, presi-| dent of the Michigan Federation! of Music Clubs, will be one ofj MRS. GILES R. KANDT "ELECTROLYSIS" The Newest and Easiest Permanent Way to Remove Unwarited Hair by THE "SHORT WAVE" METHOD For FREE Consultation Contatc REBECCA BUNNER On Main Street in Rpchester National Bank of Detroit Bldg. Second Floor Call 651-1539 KANDT-ABNEY tion service, we maintain a complete personal record of all prescription drugs supplied to you. In this way, we can quickly provide your physicien with any Information he may require, and give you a yearend report of your prescription costs for tax purposes. Let us be your specialist for prescriptions and other health needs. TODAY’S PRESCRIPTON IS THE BIQOEST BAROAIN IN HISTORY PLAZA PHARMACY Jorry and Joanna Dunimoro, RPH I ««3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd.| Pontiac, Mich. Phono 6T3-1267 Houn A Day Service' FREE DELIVERY Monny Ordtrt Ittutd tre r'eature Sander$ Candy You May Pay AH UtHHy Billi at Plata Pharnacy . Norah Gail Young became the bride of Donald Alan Luvisch during an evening ceremony Saturday in Paul’s Lutheran Church. A reception at the Holiday Inn, Pontiac, followed the Saturday in a candlelight cere-_ , • • . • iu vows mony in Marimont Baptist The couple was joined in the sole i Church, was feted at a recep- and Alencon lace, the bride’s I tion at Guinn’s Banquet Hall the featured speakers dress featured a boat neckline that evening. 'luncheon in the Gold Room at and Empire waist. Her should-1 The bride chose a gown of Oakland Center, er train was trimmed with I candlelight organza over taf-matching lace. A bow of peau|feta with long bell sleeves and de soie and lace secured her | lace appliques. Her cowl collar illusion veil. Phalaenopsis|of French lace was trimmed orchids and Stephanatis were with seed pearls. , carried. * * . , Reservations for the luncheon,' The. bride chose a gown of attendants for the A Watteau tram of organza _ Rochelle lace with a bqteau^^.pjg Loren L. was accented with matching ^ ^ neckline and fitted bodice. A wucox and James Russell. Mr. lace. A headpiece of petals w'th; 2020^ Noble Road^ Ox- double-tiered seed pearl crown Richard J. Lakosky, pearl and crystal accents se-|^“ ’ isecured her lace-edged mantilla. j,-.-jprtck Jewel and Edwin B. cured her bouffant veil of illu- • WE'RE PROUD OF THE WAY OUR CUSTOMERS LOOK! That's why we take professional care in the alterations and repairs of the clothes they bring us. We will alter and repair most anything in men's or women's opparrel! ^duireClean^r^ - ' DAILY 623-0906. Supper will be served ini. Trumbull Terrace, after which! participants may attend the| Festival Concert. of I secured her lace-edged mantilla. Jewel and Edwin B. cured her bouffant * * * Young completed the bridal sion. Maid of honor for ttie bride;party. Sue Collins was maid was Christine Roitts with matronj parents of the newlyweds ar'e;honor. Mrs. Gerald Kandt and of honor Mrs. Olivia Jackson, j^rs. Jewell H. Young of West j Susan Killen assisted. Carmelo Rosario served thejpike street and Everette F. | * * * bridegroom as best man in the'young of North Lynn Street! On the esquire side, Bruce wedding party of 20 |and the Seymour Luvischs of Mann served the bridegroom * * * I Plymouth. as best man with the bride’s The couple is honeymooning The couple is honeymooning brothers, Radney Tucker and in Washington, D C. ,in Canada. Gerald Kandt ushering. Parents of the couple are Mr. JOHN BULIGA Barbering Now KINGSLEY INN 64T-3T41 or Ml 4-1400 and Mrs. Jesse Abney of North u Telegraph Road and Mrs. Elmer Kandt of Palmer Drive and the late Mr. Kandt. The couple will be at home In Ypsilanti where the bridegroom attends Eastern Michigan University. Picnic Reunion for Former Hlini j Former residents of Harrisburg, 111. may be taking vacation trips back home in August. The annual Ledford, 111. comminuty reunion is set for Planned for East and West Side communities, the 1 p.m. pot luck picnic will be held at the^ Harrisburg Township Park, a mile west of the city on “state highway 13. W/PG Off Phone l^rom Jess Dennis, 410 West ' Lincoln. Ha More information may be had om Jess Dennis, 410 W( Lincoln, Harrisburg, 111. 62946. Q. How can I remove makeup height, palms facing forward, without using soap and water Move the arms forward at the or an expensive cream? same height and cross tbenn in Make it a habit to wipe your T havp dav skin and do notl front of you. Return arms to telephone occasionally with a MSP snan pxcent occasionallv sideward, shoulder height posi-sudsy sponge - giving special [introduction of mascara . P . ’ tion. Continue with straight attention to the mouthpiece if [fashionable spas, such as New- Th« M*adow Brook School of Mu*ic Pr««nt» THE CLEVELAND PIANO TRIO Tuesday, July 30, at 8:30 P.M. , and THE MEADOW BROOK ORCHESTRA James Levine, Conducting Wednesday, July 31 at 8:30 P.M. Wilson Theatre, Oakland University, Rochester Admission-$1.00 Post-Civil War period saw the A. Try a baby oil. I think you will find this effective. * * ★ Q. When one is trying to lose! weight can she eat fresh.fruit! late in the evening, as a snack,! without putting on weight, or| will she have to count these! calories too? A. It doesn’t matter WHEN you eat ANYTHING. It is just a question of holding your daily! (every 24 hours) intake to the allowable number of calories,! in order to lose pounds. Many women like to save a glass of milk or juice or a por-j tion of fresh fruit which is in-j eluded in one of the three meals i to enjoy as a bedtime Tir an in-between-iheal snack. You do not have to count the calories, in this instance because the! items have already been in-, eluded in the three menus. However; aiiy additional fruit or snack of any kind must be; counted, no matter when it is[ eaten. This seems to confuse many women. ■k * * I Q. What about weight lifting! for breast development? | ★ ★ ★ i A. This is helpful. .Exercises! for developing the underlying! chest muscles (which is the onlyl i way to increase the bust meas- j !urement) are more strenuous I with a weight in each hand. I ! Begin with light weights and {gradually increase the weight. ! For instance, stand tall. Takp I a weight in each hand and raise I your arms sideward, shoulder lisa Lee Here Mr. and Mrs. Barry Heiple; (nee Frances Gregory) of Muskingum Street announce the birth of a daughter, Lisa Lee on June 2tt. Grandparents are Mrs. James Stragea of Southfield, D. H. Gregory of Hatchery Road and Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Heiple of Mapleleaf Road. SCISSOR HAIRCUTTING Prepare for your vacation with a new permanent and/or hair coloring designed foryon. elbows. I think most women can someone in the family has a port and Saratoga. This was ac- begin with three-pound weightiS. summer cold. credited to Empress Eugenie. summmHe 40%»50% -■ Off Sportsweijr • Sleepwear • Accessories • Ensembles • Dresses • Knits • Shoes PONTIAC Telegraph at Huron Do.ily 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Mon., Thurs., and FrivAjl 9 P.M. ROCHESTER 303 Main Street Doily 9 A.M. tq 5:30 P.M. Fridays 'til 9 P.M, Shoes Available in Pontiac Store Only WIQQ! ^nnuaX JUlid'SwmmeT “Fruit Sampler,” Jolinson Brothers’ dinner-ware now at special savings. Open stock. 42-piece set includes 8'each; dinnerplates, soups, bread and butters, cups and saucers plus 1 vegetable dish and, 1 meat platter. 42-pc., reg. 37.95 ..................Now 29.9S. Electric bun warmer by Salton, styled vdth a woven wood fiber basket and tinted gold metal interior with a paisley fabric cover or avocado, gold or orange print in Scotchgarded fabric, Reg. 9.95 . . . Now 7.95. Carbone crinkle glass, casual and sparkling in topaz, amethyst, green, blue and moss gold. (Sli|gtly higher in mby). Reg. 1.90 goblets . . . Now 1.50. R^ 1.75 sherbeu . . . Now 1.40. Reg. 1.25 tumblers, 1.00. R«^. 9Sc juices ;. . Now 75c. FE 4.1234 PONTIAC 24 West Huron Street • In Downtown Pontiac Daily’til 5:30 Chinn, Cryttal, Gifts and Ethan Alien F urnitur. BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 Telegraph Road • At lonj Lake Road - 644-7370 Mon., ThnrS. and Fri; til 9 P.M. China, Crystal, Gifttand^ompUte Furniture A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY Call for Fund Probe Angers Rep. Dingell WASHINGTON (LJP1» - In a rare and explosive break with congressional courtesy, Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich , Monday accu.sed Rep. Fred Sohw'engel, R-Iowa, of being a “polecat," “not too bright,” and something less than a gentleman. Most of Dingell's harsh words came on the House floor, but a Have You Seen the DIPPITYGLAS for Flower Making? Many Colors. Lois of Other NEW HOBBIES end CRAFTS, TOO! Closod teturdays July 20 and V HANDCRAFT SHOP 366 Oakland Ave. FE 8-3361 CLEO’S few stronger and less printable! terms were, directed at' Schwengel \Vhile talking with a reporter afterwards * * ■* Dingell's ire was prompted byj Schwengel's call for an in-; vestigation of the trucking in-i dustry s contributions to mem--teers of Congress, ★ * ★ Nick Kotz, a correspondent of : the Des Moines, Iowa, Registerj : in Washington, has reported ; that about $40,000 was given by ; the-industry in campaign con-j : tribution within the past two : years, with most of the money! I going to lawmakers who sit onj I committees w'hich consider ; trucking legislation. : walked in Late Monday Schwengel was in a process of delivering a speech to an almost empty; chamber when Dingell walked ' in. Schwengel was trying to| [make the point that the truck-i ling industry issue pointed up ithe need for House approval of a Senate-passed congressional | reform bill. * * * ; Dingell interrupted and told Schwengel he resented what he! said was Schwengel’s accusation of improper conduct by some of his colleagues. LANSING (AP) ■— A compu-|men can make the same claim, ter, which is supposed to be sex-1 The computei^ cross - section less and impartial, says worhen.^gjj^ jj involved both accident driers are better than men in L ranging Mmhigan. . , , back through a six-year period. The Department of State com-' puter pulled the files of 27,( TRANSPORTATION PROBLEM-Casey, a gorilla at the St. Paul (Minn.I Como Park Zoo, sits in his cage . , . alone. Officials are trying to find a way to move Casey to the Henry Doorly Zoo in Omaha, Neb., for marriage with two female gorillas. Casey's t.'iO pounds makes moving difficult and speed necessary, but his cage won't fit aboard a plane. He may be tranquilized and moved without the cage. 23 Is the Most Hazardous Age Computer Calls State Women Best Drivers drivers from a cross-section of those under the letter A. It showee^ that seven out of 10 women have perfect driving records while less than five of 10 23 WORST AGE The computer found 23 is the| worst age as far as driving rec-' ords go for motorists of both; sexes. There were 60 of 100 fe-; male drivers with perfect I records at the age of 23. Only 23 of 100 male drivers had perfect records at the same age. The study further showed that men start getting accident-piline at an earlier age. The male drivers started collecting Violations at an average age of 18. The women didn’t start getting into driving trouble until they were an average of 20 years old. , After the age of 23, records were better for both sexes. The records of the men, however, never became as good as those of the women. ★ ★ Violations were much more prevalent than accidents on the records of both the men and women. About 88 per cent of the drivers in the study had no accidents on their records. Presidential Jets Getting New Help LOS ANGELES (AP) - Airj Force One, the presidential jet, is getting some new help. Nineteen Air Force noncommissioned officers begin training today at Los Angeles Inter- j national Airport to become; stewards on the presidential jet and other executive planes. The men will train at the Con-1 tinental Airlines school under an [ Air Force contract. j 6 Detroit Negroes Quit Police-Recruiting Unit The Michigan Democrat said later he had recently received $1,500 from a trucking industry source without solicitation, with no strings attached, and as far; as he was concerned it had absolutely no effect on the way he would vote on legislation. Dingell kept pressing Schwengel on the point, barely giving him a chance to answer. Schwengel finally was able to say that he was not accusing anyone but thought the ethics i committee should determine if there were "any undue influences” on members as a result, of the contributions. t’s a cheap, partisan trick to further his own political ambitions,” was Dingell’s explanations of Schwengel’s motive. DETROIT (AP) - All six Ne-^ gro members of an 11-man May-, or’s task force created to recruit more Negroes for the 94 per cent white Detroit Police Department resigned Monday. The resignations came as a result of a feud which began when Cavanagh signed a stop-and-frisk ordinance recently. Last week, the members of the Mayor’s Task Force on Police Recruiting wrote to Cavanagh to reiterate demands that he immediately establish a civilian police review board,! promote five black policemen to the rank of inspector in the five black districtsi and issue a police order against racism in the department. i I Cavanagh agreed to meet only! the last demand. | About 260 of Detroit’s 4,500 policemen are Negroes. Fine for Overload Is Scaled Down ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) -Herb’s Feed Service of Bray-. . mer. Mo., was fined $10 for car- Ihe Rev. Roy A. Allen, head j.ying an 870-pound overload on of the Detroit Council of Organ- izations, said the resignations! igvied were tentative pending a meet-;jyjgnjgy Magistrate Margar-ing they have asked Cavanagh I gg^^ gf^gp the to attend Wednesday. Cavanagh! g^plained that part of the was out of town and could weight included in the overload ;be reached for comment. |^gg g 325-pound friend who had * * * ! asked for a ride. State Sen. Coleman A. Young, i...- -----"----------- D-Detroit, one of the members | ^ ^ who resigned Monday, said the enactment of the stop-and-frisk ordinance made the committee’s; job virtually impossible. ^ % SUPPORT ... VOTE rOR ... ELECT FRANK FORTINO PONTIAC DISTRICT COURT JIOCF EXPERIENCED - UNDERSTANDING - CAPABLE TUESDAY AUGUST 6 Practicing attorney in Pontiac since 1931 Represented for many years U.A.W. Pontiac Local 653, U.A.W. Truck and Coach Local 594, U. A.W. Fisher Body Local 596 and the problems of their members. > Devoted 37 years to the problems of the working man. Has the experience and understanding to serve you as Judge of the Pontiac District Court. _ If Paid for by Frank Fortino “The signing of stop-and-frisk j ljust cuts the ground out from; [under this committee and indi-i 'cates a capitulation on the part! of the mayor to the ‘get tough’ j policy of the Detroit Police Of-| ficers Association,” Young said.] "It is in direct contradiction what has to be done.” INTRODUCING A FRESH EXPERIENCE (a totally iiew bodypowda) At Hudson's new Oakland beauty salon you'll hnd everything from haircuts to manicures, permanents to pedicures We'll make the most df your beauty in our ultra-modern Coiffures Americana Beauty Salori, Lower Level, Come in or call for an appointment on our pri- .;. ,yale line; ■585-3291.. Remember too, you can use your Hudson's charge account. Relax and enjoy a manicure with your favorite shade of Revlon or Kenneth polish, done by an expert majiirunst and with a nail strength-etier to help nails grow long. Strong. ;;otal .Deauty Pamper youiscli with a facial, or Hudson’s wonderful wigs and hair-other little luxury services, like arch- pieces will crown your locks with ing or a pedicure—by expert oper- new glory. Experts fit and style them ators in beautiful surroundings, Trv for you in privacy. Hudson’s Salon It soon—see how prettv vnu fed. offers professional wig care service. XJ TD S O nST ’ s Hudson's new Oaklsnd store m the Oakland ‘Mall al 1 75 and 14 Mile Road, , come see ns sooa or etop"in at anv ol oni nthei oomplete CoiHures Americana Beauty Salons Bengals Hol(j Ground Despife Loss No Kayo Punch for Tigers as Yanks Win By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Like a boxer who can jab but who is without a knockout punch, the Detroit Tigers just couldn’t deliver the kayo last night in the first game of a short home stand against the New York Yankees. Joe Sparma went into the ring for the 24th time this season but lost a 7-2 decision to righthander Joe Verbanic. Sparma, called the “Yankee killer” prior to this season because of , his lifetime record of 7-1, took his second straight defeat at the hands of the New Yorkers this season. Even though he gave up only four hits Verbanic was on the ropes from the start when leadoff batter Dick McAuliffe walked. * ★' * Mickey Stanley also walked and manager Ralph Houk made a fast trip to the mound. Jim Northrop hit into a dou- ble play and Norm Cash grounded out to end the first inning, DOUBLE PLAY The Tigers started the second inning with the first two men on base but another double play by Dick Tracewski saved Verbanic, and in the third inning a triple by Northrup sending home McAuliffe who walked, accounted for the first run. Again in the fourth inning, the Tigers put two runners on base and in the fifth, they loaded the bases but Verbanic managed to exit slightly bruised bul as the winner. Cash’s 14th' home run off Lindy McDaniel in the 7th accounted for the other run. * ★ * The Yankees chalked up one in the second on a single by long-haired Joe Pepitone, a double by Tom Tresh and an infield scratch single by Jake Gibbs, in the 5th, Verbanic, Horace Clarke and Roy White singled consecutively and after Mickey Mantle struck out, one of four times in the game, Pepitone laced a two-run single into center field to make it ,1-1. When Tresh started the 6th inning with a walk and Gibbs hit his second homer of the season to make it 5-1, Sparma went to the showers with his 10th defeat against eight wins this season, lake Sparma, none of the other Pro-Am Event Filled by Ties ' It was all tied up in the Pro Am Tournament at Edgewood Country Club here Monday as every event came up with multiple winners. Four teams stroked 65s for a 6-under-par 71 to share honors in the pro-am division. They were Jack Clark and Bill Hyde of Gowanie, John Jawor and Don Bower of Bonnie Brook, Alex Redmond and Tom McCormick of Lochmoor and Joe Lopez Sr., and Wayne Fordham of Burning Tree. * ★ * In the pro-pro division, four teams again racked up a 67 4-under-par to tie for the No. 1 spot. Teamed up were Clark and Cass Jawor, Ben Lula and Redmond, Bob Clark and Larry Wilkinson and Tom Cosmos and Gerald Prieskprn. Sharing first place in the low pro event were Bob Panasiuk of Knollwood with a 34-36—70 and Bob McGillen from Western with a 35-35—70. LARGE TURNOUT It was the largest state tournament of the year with 288 teams participating. Nine teams tied for second in the pro-am and 24 tied for third. The names were thrown into a hat and Alex Redmond was considered the win- Clark took the most money of the day, tying for first in the pro-am, tying for first with Jawor in pro-pro and finished second in low pro with even par 71. earning himself $250 for his 18 holes of play. THE PONTIAC PRESS TrESDA^’. JI LY BO. Ilttis Reds Take Doubleheader Culver Pitches No-Hit Game GEORGE CULVER SECOND SAME CtNCINNATI Ro»« cf 5 2 S 0 TT«ylor : Helms 2b 5 12 0 Pena ss AJohnson If 4 2 3 2 Calltaon r LMay rf 4 0 10 RAIIen If Perez 3b 4 10 0 White 1b Pavletich 1b 4 0 2 2 Lock cf Corrales c 5 0 2 2 Rofas 2b Wpodwrd ss 5 0 0 0 Dairmple Culver p 4 0 0 0 CShort p PHILADELPHIA T.Taylor, Philadelphia 4 PHILADELPHIA (API - George Culver found a new way to get rid of an upset stomach — pitch a no-hitter. The 25-year-old right-hander of the Cincinnati Reds held the Philadelphia Phillies without a hit Monday night in the second game of a t w i - n i g h t doubleheader. “I had an upset stomach and had nothing to eat all day but some eggs and toast.” said the 6-foot-2 Californian after his 6-1 victory. Culvgr walked five, struck out three and one batter reached base on a catcher’s interference call as he evened his season record at 9-9. The Reds scored three runs in the third and three more in the fourth to give him a comfortable working margin. * * * Philadelphia scored a run in the second when Rich Allen hit a shot at Tony Perez which bounced in and out of the third baseman’s glove. Shortstop Woody Woodward picked the ball up and threw it over first base, allowing Allen to go to .second. DOUBLE ERROR The official scorer riilert a double er- Lions May Lose John Gordy By Bruno L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press John Gordy, the all - pro offensive guard of the Detroit Lions, expects to come up with a decision toni^t of a question he has been thinking about for the past three weeks — “To retire from pro football or not to retire?” * “It's not a matter of contract, or disagreement, or anything involving the team,” said Gordy, “it’s a matter of considering a very good job offer and some consideration for my family.” ★ * ★ Gordy. who left camp last Friday prior to the Lions’ intra-squad game, denied it had anything to do with a contract dispute nor any repercussions as result . of his role in the summer-long NFL contract dispute between players and owners, in which he was the players’ leading bargainer. “Sure, the mental pre.ssure of all the ' meetings and travel tired me, but I'm in good physical condition and have one or two good years left in pro Detroit Needs Sweeton ' at Quarterback Post It's good to feel wanted, even though it might only be ^ temporary feeling for quarterback Karl Sweetan of the Detroit Lions. it it Sweetan, who last week stated he wanted to be “traded or released” because he thought the Lions’ quraterback situation was in the solid grip of veteran Bill Munson and two bright rookie prospects, now finds himself back in a probable starting role for the start of the exhibition season. Munson, who had to undergo surgery yesterday for removal of a small blood tumdT"3«ilch was, aggravating the shin of the right leg, is now expected to miss the Monday exhibition opener in Buffalo and possibly the second game against the Eagles in Mexico City. * ★ ★ With red shirt quarterback Tim Jones in military service. No. 1 draft choice Greg Landry in the All-Star camp, Sweetan and rookie Greg Barton will have to carry the duties in Buffalo. CHANGES MIND Sweetan reportedly was preparing to leave Lions’ camp yesterday but after 'a meeting with the coaches he was back on the practice field. The 25-year-old signal-caller hardly threw a pass during last week’s drills at Cranbrook and did not get into last Friday’s scrimmage for a single play. It was-reported out of New Orleans that the Saints had made a bid on waivers for Sweetan, but the waivers were then withdrawn by the Lions. New Orleans is where Sweetan would like to go and he indicated-that if tho Lions would not trade him he would play out his) option this season and then be frca to deal for himself next year. ' NO ROOM Munson and Barton have both been impressive in trailing camp and with Landry expected to return Saturday, Sweetan has felt there was no room for him. However, in view of Munson’s problem at this time, the speculation now is that the Lions may decide to try to taxi either Barton or Landry and hold on to Sweetan. However, here again lies, a problem since it Ls doubtful that any of the trio would get past waivers. ror. Allen took third on an infield out and scored on a .sacrifice fly, giving the hitless Phillies a 1-0 lead. Perez agreed with the ruling. “It was a lough play but I should have made it," he said after the game. The close.st Ihe Phillies came to a hil was in the first and eighth innings. In the first, lead off baiter Tony Taylor smashed one into the hole at shortstop. Woodwaid moved quickly to his right, grabbed the ball, spun around and threw him out. In the eighth, Allen ripped one toward right that Tommy Helms knocked down “and made the play at first. “I was just trying to keep the ball in the infield,” said Helms. “I was lucky it stayed in front of me and I was able to throw him out.” Culver joined an elite group of Cincinnati pitchers who have recorded no^ hitters. They include .Johnny Van""' dcrmeer, who threw two in a row in 1938, Flwell Blackwell (1947), and Jim Maloney of the current Reds’ staff who has two, one of which he'lost. SORE TOENAII, Not only did Culver have an upset stomach, but he also had to have a shot of novacaine in an ingrown toenail before he could put on a shoe to go out and warm up. He didn’t come to the ball park with the team and wasn’t around for the first gam^ won by the Reds 7-6. Pete Rose tripled and scored on a sacrifice fly for the winning run. In the last of Ihe ninth, Ro.se threw Allen out al Ihe plate for the third out after fielding a single in fight field. Culver disclosed that he came to Ihe ball park in a taxi after resting in his hotel room. He said he tried to eat dinner but "1 just couldn't.” After the Phillies scored their run. Culver retired the next 11 batters. With two out in the sixth, he walked John Callison and Allen, but fanned Bill White to ease out of the jam. He pitched to three batters in the seventh. In the eighth, he walked pinch-hitter Tony Gonzalez and Taylor, before Roberto Pena hit into a force play. Callison popped out and Helms made his fine play on Allen to end that- inning. 'easy inNing The ninth was easy for the 183-piunder. who calls Oildale, Calif., his home. He needed only five pitches to complete his nohitter and place his name in baseball’s record book. White grounded nut, Don Lock hit back to Culver, and Cookie Rojas sent a high pop to first baseman Don Pavletich. (Continued on Page B-2, Col. 5i starting rotation pitchers except for Denny McLain has a winning record. Earl Wilson who pitches tonight against Mel Stottlemyre is 8-8, while Mickey Lolich, whom manager Mayo Smith plans to pul into the bullpen for a few days, is ,7-7. The Yankees collecteij their final two runs off reliefer Don McMahon, recently obtained from the White Sox, when Clarke singled and White followed with a homer to start the ninth inning. McMahon proceeded to strike out the next three batters, bul all the damage was complete. The Tigers continued to be plagued with minor injuries and ran short of in-ficlders and pinch hitting yesterday. Tom M'alchick is on military leave, Ray Oyler is out with an Injured heel and Fred Lasher is missing for an abscessed tooth. Wilson, who will pitch tonight, must wear an elastic brace on his left knee which is strained. MORE PAINS Catcher Bill Freehan isn’t on the injured list but has a few more pains today after being hit for the 14th and 15th time this season. Another time, he was sent to the ground with a pitch by Verbanic which missed his head. Despite the defeat, the Tigers managed to gain a half game on the Orioles who lost twice to the Red Sox. Cleveland also lost and thus the Bengals kept their seven game margin on the two closest challengers. * * ■ * The Red Sox however gained a game and a half and are now 8tti behind. Manager Smith said he pianned to move Pal Dobson into Lolich’s pitching rotation temporarily because the big lefty “hasn’t been as effective in his last two or three starts.” NEW YORK DETROIT Clarke 2b 5 2 2 0 MAuliHa 2b 3 ^1 0 0 While II 4 12 2 Stanley cf 4 0 0 0 Mantle lb 5 0 0 0 Northrup rt 4 0 11 Pepitone **cf 4 12 2 WHO t** It 4 0 1 ’ WRobnsn rt 0 Vo 0 Wwt'3b ^ 3 0 10 Tresh sa .1110 Treevifski ss 2 0 0 0 Gibbs c 4 12 3 GBrown ph 10 0 0 Cox 3b 4 0 0 0 Campbell 2b 1 0 0 0 Gordy, "but I must thmk of how this decision will affect my future.” ON TITLE TEAM Gordy, who reached his 33rd birthday July 17, was the No. 2 draft choice in 1957, and As the lone veteran on the present roster who was with the Lions’ championship team that year. Gordy was impressive in the early practice session at Cranbrook. However, he did admit that he was bothered with hamstring muscle pulls. "The team appears vastly improved this year,” said Gordy, “and I'd hate to leave Joe (coach Schmidt) with a problem, but that's why I’ve stayed away for a few days to seriously think about The business offer which Gordy is contemplating is with a nationally franchized food establishment with main offices in Nashville where Gordy is from? Gordy said that the owner of the franchi^ did not insist that a decision be made between the job and pro football. "I can still take the job,” Gordy said, “but after being away from my family all spring and summer, and for another six months now, along with the time I should honestly devote to the job, it makes it a very difficult situation.” An All-American lineman at the University of Tennessee, Gordy was out-, standing in several post-season games after his college career. ASSISTANT COACH He once made a decision to give up a pro career after his rookie year when he accepted a coaching post at Nebraska in 19,58. In 1959 he was back with the Lions and has been an all-pro selection three times. He has been the offensive team captain of the l.„ions. along with his road roommate Alex Karras who has captained the defense. Gordy has long excelled as a strong pullout guard in the NFL and coach ^hmidt admits that if the 64 and 240 pounder should decide on retirement, it would leave a big gap in what Schmidt has felt “could be our best offen.sive line in many years.” Trevino in Top Form IOWA CITY,' Iowa Uf) - U.S. Open champion Lee Trevino birdied eight holes and bogeyed one tb set a course record and take the top mooeiy with a sizzling 64 in the Arnkna VIP Open Golf Tournament Motjday. who can really move PONTIACS All'68's Special Trode-in Prices During Our Close-Outf Frank B. Audette THE GIANT By The Faiteit Growing Auto Daalar in the World 1968 CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop Hydramatic transmission. 400 co. in., 290 H.P. engine, heater, deluxe wheel CQvers. Deluxe 8.55x14 tires, power steering, retractable seat belts, outside mirror, washers and wipers, full carpeting, 121" wheelbase. 1968 CATALINA 4-DOOR SE0AN ’ Hydramatic. Full Decor Group. Deluxe steering wheel. Deluxe wheel covers. Retractable seat belts. Deluxe foam cushions. 121" wheelbase. *2744* 1968 TEMPEST 2-Door Sport Conpo Automatic transmission. PB radio. Large heater. Foam cushions. 2-speed washers and wipers. Back- $2410** AUDETTE PONTIAC, INC. 1850 MAPLE ROAD, TROY, MICH. (Across from Berz Airport) 3 Minutes East of Woodward 2’/2 Minutes West of 1-75 — Out of Town Buyers Accepted LOCATiD IN THE TROY MOTOR MALL S42-MM THK I’ON'I'IAC' I’1{KSS. ri KSnAW .H L\ ;i(). im>8 Boston Beats Orioles Twice Red Still Hope in AL Chase MEDALIST — Leading the way in the qualifying round of the Women's District Golf Association match-play tournament yesterday was Emily Gail with a 78. The first round of match play opened today at Western Golf & Country Club. ! BOSTON lAP) - The Boston [Red Sox, whose fortunes have I fluctuated on almost a daily ba-isis since Jim Lonborg's skiing i accident last December, refuse to quit in the 1968 American 'League pennat race. I "There’s still a long way to jgo." Bo.ston Manager Dick Wil-'iiams warned Monday night aft-jer the Red Sox tightened the i flag chase with 3-2 and 8-3 victories over the Baltimore Orioles : in a day-night doubleheader. After winning the pennant at 100-1 odds with a healthy squad last year, the Red Sox are seek-„ing another Impossible Dream as an injury-plagued club. ; Maybe they'rewhistling in the dark—but they're also shooting! for the stars. And they're proving tough to discpLrage. Williams was lifrced to do some more patchwork in the line-up against the Orioles. And the Red Sox let the baseball world know they're still alive; while dealing Baltimore hopes another severe jolt RIGHT RESPONSE With Reggie Smith, a hardhitting center fielder sidelined with an ankle bruise, Williams inserted veteran Jose Tartabull in the line-up. Tartabull responded with two doubles and scored two runs, including the tie-breaker on Mike Andrews' two-bagger in the 10th inning of the first game. Tartabull came back in the WDGA in Match Play Event ___ BALTIMC Medal Honors Oxford Slowpitch Team Does ||||“ to Miss Gail Turnabout in Second Half i;T 47th Annual Tourney Oxford Merchants, who by blanking the winle.ss Eagles, had a roundtripper for the win-, ^ at Western GC fould win only one game in the n-o, r.ary Metz drove in three ners. Bolt'oT'’* first half race, closed out a scored three times Local 594 scored five times in| e—o.john „ rn T, !‘umabout second half with a .ju, trinles and a single the«lsixth to overcome a 7-3 fs-Tar.'abi Emily Gail of Grosse He may ^ower hitting 19-12 victory over Consecutive have the inside track on the! the Riggers Monday night. Oxfords trophv clinching Dewalt, 1968 Women’s District Golf * * * barhilVT an l8lit offLs^ Association match play Cham- The triumph clinched the j^gd two singles and pionship. team trophy for the merchants homers to account for six MGM was outhit, 14-8, buti^°”‘- Last vear Mrs. John Hume a® men's -slowpitchTuns. Bob Ream also figured in tallied twice each in the fifth cai-ded 'a 78 to take medalist softball National League leader six runs, belting a dquble, tri- and sixth innings to down CIO honors in the qualifying round "’th a 6T mark. pie and home run. 596., Chuck Masons three and went on to victory in the MGM tleaners and Local 594 Bill Welch's three-run circuit singles and a homer pacedjvajer match event at Pine Lake deadlocked for the runner-up clout in the opening inning ig- Wagon Wheel’s win. Jim PolanjOrad, Country Club. berth. MGM trimmed CIO 596, nited a nine-run outburst for the also homered, and Jerry wooc 6-4, and Loc'al 594 rallied for an merchants. Dick Macey also Johnson had three singles. broS conquest of the Chieftain second game and scored two more runs after walking and beating out an infield hit. I * * * Williams, who gambled often, and won often, as a rookie man-1 ager in 1967, called upon two-National League castoffs in the important twinbill with the Orioles, Ray Culp, obtained from the Philadelphia P'hillies last winter, and Juan Pizarro,. pur-cha.sed from Pittsburgh a month ago, came through. LEADOFF BLAS'T Culp allowed only seven hits, including a game leadoff homer to Don Buford and two infield singles, in hiking his record to 7-4. The veteran right-hander; overcame temporary wildness | and fanned 12, including danger-ious Brooks Robinson three straight times. Pizarro gave up 10 hits, in-i eluding solo homers to Boog Powell, Paul Blair and Dave Johnson, but breezed after An- drews put Boston in front toj stay with his fourth home run ini the nightcap. I * ★ ★ Joe Foy drove in three ninsj with a homer and double, while! Carl A’astrzemski, nursing a painful wrist, cracked three! doubles in support of Pizarro’S! third Red Sox triumph. "Every one that goes into the: loss column hurts, but there’s still a lot of time,” Baltimore: Manager Earl Weaver said.: “This daynight doubleheader after our series with Detroit was tough to take. "We had plenty of chances in the first game and I knew we had to come up with a lot of energy to win tonight.” TTie Orioles fell seven games behind league-leading Detroit and into a virtual second-place tie with Celveland. The Red Sox moved to within 8*i games of the the Tigers, who bowed to New "Vork. AP WIrtphota . DOWN THE LINE - Bud Harrelson of the New York Mets races for first base in the 6th inning after lacing a hit down the line past Orlando Cepeda of the St. Louis Cardinals in their game in New York last night. Harrelson made it to. second and came home on a single by Cleon Jones; however, the Mets still lost a 5-1 decision to the National League leaders. No-Hit Victory Excites' Redlegs' Right Hander ‘hAngJs (Continued from Page B-1) volved in a collision at first with' ‘T really got nervous in the Houston’s Bob Watson. ANAHEIM (API Roger ^seventh,” the Cincinnati pitcher! Gaylord Perry won only his run-scoring single in the ERBBso!said. „ third game in two months for;Sixth inning gave the California I 2 J "Actually after the game I San Francisco, stopping the Angels’ Sammy Ellis a 2-1 vic-' » was crying,” he said. "Winning Cubs on two hits. The GiantS[to'-y',o'''er Minnesota Monday ■2:52. A--is important but doing it by clinched it for Perry, 9-9, with aT“8ht m a beanball war with the pitching a no-hitter, that’s the three-run sixth. i Twin.’n«=,n rh.ncp MEDAUST HONOR In the qualifying round Sportsmen. yesterday. Miss Gail checked in as medalist with a 78 to: * * * establish herself as the favorite I tilt was an easy In the 47th annual championship^ t2-2 romp for Wagon Wheel being held for the first time at Tavern over Captain Nemo s. Western Golf & Country Club. LEAGUE WRAPUP * * In the concluding Interna-1 The low 15 scorers along with tional League slowpitch outing,: Mrs. Hume headed into the first Dog 'n Suds Drive-In (4-2i round of the match phase of the ^ second place tournament todav. . city men-s softball Single rounds are set for the '**"’’'*[ siowpoch ^ ^ next three days with the finals \ !, Th^^Rig^S"' 3 1 slated for Friday. ‘ mgm ciea^^rs s 2 lomi 2 s SECOND PLACE W«dnesday'i G»m« Three shots back of Miss Gail ^eaudette 'pArK-oxiord vs cio was Nancy Patch with a 39- 42—81; while former champion ^aln^Srortsmen,^ 7^ p.m^,^ Wj^on Wh«el Joyce Kazmierski, also 0 f Grosse He, was in at 82 along with Mrs. Rodney Thompson of Pine Lake and Mrs. H. G. Marquardt of Gowanie. After a so-so front nine (41), Miss Gail found her chipping and putting touch and matched par 37 to close with her three-over-par 78 over the 6,335-yard League squad trimmed Birm-course ingham National, 11-1, Monday -1 u j V, « a o foe ihe District IV Little League Miss Gail had a bogey and a g. «/ivom birdie on the back nine, the bird' coming on the par-5. 422-yard ^ + ★ * 17th. A two-run homer by Rick Mrs. Hume, exempt from the FerrelHin the second inning qualifying, toured the course sent Matt Smith, who struck out with Miss Kasmierski, playing, 13, on to an easy triumph, as she termed it. “not very The Birmingham unit, winner well.” of four straight in district play, In the opening round of match will meet the District V champ play today. Miss Gail was from Garden City 2 p.m. slated to meet Mrs. Keith Saturday at Wixom in regional LeClair, Barton Hills; while play. Mrs. Hume faced Mrs. Paul ’ Keller, Oakland Hills. Another ex-champion, Mrs. LeClair posted an 87 yesterday. Three-time champion Mrs, T. M. (Sally) Werner of In-dianwood bowed out wljen she Continental Nine Captures Crown The Birmingham Continental, HARD AT WORK-Doug Holcomb, former Purdue University quarterback is busy this summer as a member of the grounds department at Oakland University. This fall, he’ll still be busy, as head coach of the Lake Orion football team. greatest.” draws'2b 3311 St. Louis beat the New York rVTilon'ri 3 0 0 1 Mets 5-1, Pittsburgh edged At-uocNi js 4ooo*^"f^ 3-2, Houston blanked Los! 5 0 ? S Angeles 2-0 and San Francisco; Ion c 4 0 0 0 topped the Chicago Cubs 4-1 in ” " other National League action. ; St. Ivouis’ Ray Washburnj boosted his record to 10-3 with Dial seventh straight victory, a I 0 1 0 0 0 1 - 3 seven-hit, eight strikeout, JiOr . 3-B\rnmor*~8* performance against the Detroit iKi 3, Bia°r? Foy! Mets. He hasn t lost since May DJohns^on'"m':21. ’ H R Tr B B °so: TIE-BREAKER ; c^liTfon lB?ab2nder'^'*'^’ ?l1 0 0 0 ) 1 LoU BrOCk, who SCOrcd OncejOiTcagi lDr°abowsk — 1 2 3 2 0 0 1 ° ^^d drove In two runs, broke a I WP-aJ^bender Drabowsky ^ Ba^lk ^ Cardinals ill the BOSK Adamson.* t--2'!44. a-!^28,°3"8.*' eighth With a sacHfice fly. '"wa|r _ ---------------- Pittsburgh earned its victory; .. I I I over Atlanta on a homer by Bill cbic< Kemmer Leads Giris^™'^:; ciendenon s b ,n, 1 sacrifice fly and a single by Ro- ® chieg i ■ u i« IT “ berto Clemente. I in National Tennis * * * ~ ! Mike Cuellar drove in the first land u ! run with a squeeze bunt and I LAKE BLUFF, 111. (AP) — pitched a four-hitter in Hous-; chica I Defending champion Kris Kem- ton’s victory ovef Los Angeles., Bami mer of Ivos Angeles led a Cali-1 First baseman Ken Boyer of caTn fornia contingent Monday!Los Angeles was taken to a hos-through the second round of the pital for X rays after being in-Nalional girls’ 16-and-under Naii.naiL.anu. Tennis Championships. san Francisco Ten of the surviving 16 are from California. Feiske i9). w * * * Atlanta Pittsburgh .. Mi.ss Kemmer defeated Anni^^^'^'y^Jp^Ba Templeton, Birmingham, Ala,,iHR--pmsburgh 6-4, 6-0 and second-seeded Nan- L«^Angties Drnstein of Washington,! °Kekkh,^Gran D.C., ousted Janet Thomas, Tul-lTekich,* f-T.*"' sa, Okla., 6-3, 6-2. si. Louis All but three of the seeded girls advanced Monday with the Ryan, 6-». biggest upset coming when Car-; ol Gfocrer, Fort Lauderdale, Phwadatphia ;Fla., ranked sixth, lost to>Susanjs 'Warfield, San Marino, Calif., 7- J 9, 6-2, 6-3. |T rork^ (SloUlemyre 13 James scheduled.** Wednesday's Gair I Twins’ Dean Chance. Ellis, 8-6, pitched a four-hitter in snapping the Angels’ losing streak at five games. The Angels right-hander hit Chance with a pitch in the fifth ,, inning. Chance hit Don Mincher 4 in the Angels’ fifth before nick-^ mg Ellis with another delivery ^ to open the decisive sixth, Ellis took second on a sacrifice bunt by Vic Davalillo and scoTetf ion Kepoz’ single, breaking a 1-1 ^ , tie. ; j SUCCESSIVE HITS i I Chance, 9-10, lost a 1-6 lead in !the second when Mincher, Leo Rodriguez and Tom Satriano stroked Successive singles. The Twins had scored in the first, when Cesar Tovar singled, stole .second and came in on a single "■ by Ted Uhlaender. * The Angels stranded 12 base • runners against Chance, who allowed 11 hits before being lifted for a pinch hitter in the eighth. MINNESOTA CALIFORNIA I Philadelphia Today'i Uhlaender, Reese, d»y'r Gamei ■CInctnnali- (Clbnimjer 2 Srn.'* d Bench; John- Tide Beginning to Turn for Ex-Purdue QB Rec9Keeps Playoff Hopes Day's Service Winner Over Clarkston couldn't make arrangements with a babysitter. 'pok; Miss Emily Ga les. Keith LeClair, Ba lenberg, Knoilwood; I First Flight Mrs. F. E. Richart, Barton Hills, Mrs. Vaughn Nesbit. Gowanie; Mrs. . •Conway, Orchard Lak^^^vs. Mrs. L^ , SchwaiTz, Tam O'Shanter, vs. Mrs. R. jVerthure, Indianwood; Miss Arl Prieto, Dearborn, vs. Mrs. H. T. f Plum Hollow; Mrs. Wm. Anderson, L. tends, vs. Mrs. RIcherd Cordtz, Wesh Mrs. Phillip DeGuere, Indianwood, Mrs. H. J. Sanborn, Western; Mrs. Ell ----- .. ..—.— ...J Ntrs. Donald ^ Farlane, Country Club o. Ahorton Wholmon, t»m O'Shanter, ‘-s. Ramge, Gowanie. Detroit GC; Mrs, V. G. Cnnverse II Western, vs. Miss Helen Hanley, Oaklar Hills; Mrs. Jack Hooper, Lochmoor, v Mrs; Donald Martins, WeWern; Mrs. Wr Deity, Ocirelt DC hit bye. By FLETCHER/SPEARS Ability, luck and such things aside, it sometimes paysjo be in the right place at the right time. That’s the sort of thing that happened to young Doug Holcomb, but in a reverse way. He was in the right place, apparently, but, at the wrong time. COACH AT ORION Holcomb, 23, is the son of Stuart Holcomb,, former athletic director at Northwestern University, This summer he’s working with the grounds department at Oakland University, but come fall, he’ll turn to teaching and duties as' head football coach at Lake Orion High School. Holcomb is a 1966 graduate of Purdue University, where he was a quarterback on the Boilermakers football team. But he showed up at the wrong time. "It was a frustrating experience.” says Holcomb of his three years on the varsity at Purdue. SECOND-STRING When ■’Holcomb, a high school All-American foothalk player, arrived at Purdue, the quarterbacking was in the capable hands of another All-American, Ron DiGravio, who was the total offense leader in the Big Ten Conference in 1964. Holcomb was an understudy and knew it, but he also knew that DiGravio would be gone when he was a junior and, in all probability, the quarterbacking j o b would be his. SHARP NEWCOMER But the next year, with Holcomb now a sophomore, among the freshmen football prospects was another high school AH-American—Bob Griese, who is now the 1 No. 1 signal-caller with the Miami Dolphins of the American Football League. ★ * * DiGravio was graduated the next year so there loomed a battle between Holcomb and sophomore Griese for the-quarterback job. ■ In a preseason scrimmage, Griese’s team beat one Jed by Holcomb, 8-7, although "neither of us whs in the game when the points came,” said Holcomb. STARTS FAST . "Griese .started the first game, .scored 17 points and that was it,”^said*Holcomb who came through the entire affair with only praise for Griese. "Griese was good. Maybe if I had been better than him I might have been bitter about it,” said Holcomb, "but he was a good quarterback.” When Griese made good as a .sophomore, Holcomb remained on the bench as he had behind DiGravio. Holcomb was an excellent prospect, but he was unfortunate .enough to get caught between two who were just a shade better. BRIGHT SPOTS - There were some bright spots, though, admits Holcomb, a muscular, 6-foot 200-pounder. “The one I’ll always remember was , my first game as a sophomore. We were pla’ying Wisconsin and we’re down 32-10 or something like that. * * * “Our spotter saw something and he called down and asked for Holcomb to run a rollout. We were on the Wisconsin 30-yard line and I took the ball 30 yards on the rollout tor a touchdown.” TTiat was the first time he had touched a football in game competition in the Big Ten.. . Holcomb’s playing time was limited by the game situation. "We were way ahead or behind so when I went in there was no pressure on me. Another play I’ll remember came at South Bend against Notre Dame when I threw a touchdown pass.” ★ ★ * .iDoug and his wife, Pam, have two children, Doug Jr., 4, and Amy, four months. His wife,is the daughter of Richard Brace of Lake Orion, vyho Jor the past three years served as chairman Of the history department at Oakland University. He has taken a leave at OU to teach French History at the University of California—San Diego branch—this coming year. Holcomb just returned from California where he was working on his master’s degree at the Santa Barbara hfanch of u.ofc: “I’m anxious,” , says Doug aljout .the 1968 high school football .season. ■- * *t , * - ’ Doug served as freshman coach at Santa Barbara for the past two years, and he's eager to get startffl in his first head coaching post. This tihfie he gets to call all the signals. j Day's Sanitary Service kept j alive its hopes for a first-place : playoff with Spencer Floor Cov-jering by coasting past Clarfe jston Appliance, 9-1, last nig% I in Waterford Township menl/s softball. j The win followed a 7-0 forf^ j victory for Spencer’s (214) lover Huron Bowl (6-17). Day!* _ triumph left it with a 20-3 mafS and one game (against Spe*C-cer's) remaining in the regullr I campaign. - ★ * * j Jerry Thomas tossed a foifi^ I hitter and had it easy after IJis I mates belted six hits and scor^ I five runs in the second. Diek I Ryan’s two-run triple capp^ ithe outburst. I Dick Cooper had three hitt for Day’s. Clarkston Appliane# lii? now 7-15, irb«r Shop 4, Piylslon Prig 4IOR BASEtALL WWogt Rt« , Lakeland Pharmacy II f # II F Inlcrnitionil % (Flay*«) TllE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 30. 1968 B—B Tigers' Farm Clubs Have Rosy Outlook Van Brocklin Wants Healthy A 14-game winning streak by Class AA Montgomery and the steady pennant push by AAA Toledo have put a rosy hue over-all in the Detroit Tigers minor ieague program. Slender right-hander J i m Brown hurled his second no-hitter in less than three weeks for Montgomery last Thursday to highlight the most recent report on the farm hands’ achievements. The round up; INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Bob Christian, an outfieider, continues to lead the league in hits for Toledo: pitcher Mike Marshall is tops in strikeouts and Dick Drago has 10 wins. TOLEDO (SM4)—1st Plies Pes H HR RBI Av« contention for first place with outfielder Wayne Redmond’s league-leading 21 homers giving him a good chance to break the loop record of 32. MONTGOMERY (S4-4I)—Isf PI Wayne Redmond .. George AAackenzIe Martlng . Pitchers Bob Reed McRae Don Pepper ....... Dave Campbell . Junior Lopez ...... Lenny Green . Marty Richardson lb 79 11 43 .272 64 14 36 .251 33 0 8 .226 IP W L SO ERA 4-0 39 18.3 Mike Marshall 78 8 38 .270 78 1 24 .264 3b 59 *10 34 .263 82 2 20 .255 2b 75 8 29 .253 39 1 15 !202 IP W.L SO ERA I SO 3-b 41 ].4 George Korince . Ron Chandler .. . Bill Butler ..... John Gregory .. 7-6 56 3.58 62 3-2 31 3.77 CAROLINA LEAGUE The Class A Rocky Mount Leafs are struggling to reach .500 but welcomed the return of catcher Carl Solarek, a .308 hitter, after a month’s Idleness with a broken finger. ROCKY MOUNT (' . 3b 79 2 32 .284 of 79 2 32 .284 5-6 22 3.41 Jack DiLauro 117 10-5 87 3.4 7-1 33 3.58 41 0^2 31 5.93 Daryl Cousins George Kalafatis .1b 18 2 -------- Spatz * ' 26 0 15 .255 . 2b 16 1 6 .208 SOUTHERN LEAGUE Montgomery’s big winning streak pushed the Rebels into Carol Mann Boosts Lead Golf Earnings GO Up in LPGA Tour ; 122 6-7 98 2.8 73 2-7 55 3.58 Team of Stars Annual Grid Clash Pits Collegians After Green Bay Friday CHICAGO (AP) - Coach Norm 'Van Brocklin isn’t called the Dutchman for nothing. He calls the shots and makes his own decisions. As a result, when Van Brocklin takes his College All-Stars up against the Green Bay Packers in Soldier Field Friday night, not a single member of the 58-man squad will be suffering from anything as much as a hangnail. FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE Pitcher Marr Hoar has an 8-1 record and league-leading 1.27 ERA while ex-Hamtramck prep star Ike Blessitt is maintaining a .290 average while playing the outfield for the Class A Lakeland club. CINCINNATI (AP) - Carol Mann’s victory Saturday in the Canadian Open has boosted her into almost a $3,000 lead in money winnings on the 1968 Ladies Professional Golf Association Tournament tour. Miss Mann, winning her sec-straight tournament, now has finished fir^t in seven of the LPGA events and has won ^,770, the LPGA headquarters here announced today. LAKELAND (41-54)—4th Plici Pot H HRRBIAvg Grayson .. 3b 31 2 8 Elliot Maddox Mik« Baker . Tim Hosley . John Hetrick . The victory at Toronto was worth $3,000 to Miss Mann. Kathy Whitworth, who finished in a tie for third at Toronto and won $1,650, held to second place in total winnings with $25,940. She has won three tournaments. The only major change in the top 10 money winners involved Judy Kimball, who finished second at Toronto, winning $2,300. That boosted her from 17th to 10th with a total of $7,499. The top 10 money winners with the number of tournaments won in parentheses: Carol Mann (7) $28,770; Kathy Whitworth (3) $25,940; Mickey Wright (4) $17,(i04; Sandra Hay-nie (0) $14,621; Clifford Ann Creed (0) $11,997; Marilynn Smith (1) $11,408; Sandra Spuz-ich (0) $10,633; Sandra Post (1) $8,866; Sandra Palmer (0) $8,295, and Judy Kimball (0) $7,499. 12 0 2 .176 6-0 27 2.70 Mark Helwig . Dennis Saunders . Tim Grisdale .. Darrell Schneller Sonny Smith ........ no 6-6 87 3.1 23 3.41 31 3.96 17 4.50 NEW YORK-PENN. LEAGUE The Batavia Trojans are halfway through their two-month season with catchers Mike Murray hitting .347 and outfielder 'Tom Breving .338 to support the hurling of Steve Cushmore whose 0.38 ERA is| tops in the Class A circuit. Throughout the previous years, coaches have attacked the task of putting a team together in three weeks with work, work and more work. Contact and scrimmages used to be the byword. Not so under the Dutchman. From the very outset it was apparent the Stars would not be involved in numerous scrimmages. In the last several years, the All-Stars would pack up the week before the game and journey to Rensselaer, Ind., to scrimmage the Chicago Bears, Van Brocklin ruled out the scrimmage, explaining he Was preparing his team to meet the Packers and nothing else was important. ON REVIEW In the past, the All-Stars have held their final full-scale scrimmage on the Monday before the game. On Monday, the Dutchman put them through a limited contact session and announced “that concludes the rough whrk. The rest of time will be spent in review.” The Dutchman then really capped it all by calling off the usual light workout which always was held in Soldier Field two nights before the game to give the players a feet of things. Van Brocklin’s reasoning: "It is of no benefit to the players.” Van Brocklin, who starred for the Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles before coaching the Minnesota Vikings, recently announced he will call even^ play in the game from the bench. “We can pinpoint our attack lot better by sending in the plays,” he said. “It will take the mental pressure off the quarterbacks. After all, I know the Packers much better than they do.” Class E Junior Hurler Shows Heart on Mound Pitcher Dennis Gallardo of Alger Black’s entry in the Gass E city junior baseball league reportedly has a bad ticker, but the youngster showed a lot of heart last night. Scheduled to enter th e hospital for treatment of his heart ailment, Dennis delayed long enough to pitch the third place squad past the fifth-standing Hawks, 13-5, striking out eight rivals in the process. But it wasn’t easy. Given a 4-0 lead after one inning, Dennis was ripped for three runs in the second inning when he yielded four of his seven hits and two walks. EASES PRESSURE Teammate Ed Lake, who had two doubles and a single, added two runs to the Alger Black total with a two-bagger in the last of the second. Despite the two singles and a double by the losers’ Harry McCreary, Etennis and h i s mates were able to pull away in the late going. The young hurler also walked twice and stole two bases in his evening’s work. Two Class F American Leaguers came through in the clutch with the bat yesterday morning. Greg Gilbert’s grand slam homer in the 10th inning earned the Pontiac Police an 11 win over the Auburn Heights Boys Club. The Optimist team a 1 s emerged with a victory, 10-8 over the Yafikees, when Mel Holmer’ grand slam highlighted a six-run decisive third inning. -------- , 2 Arnold Drugs ( Felice's Mkl. I 3 PontlRC P.O.A. I - 0. Police 7 4 Bloomfield H. Our Ledy of Likes . Christ Lutheran Elizabeth Church ot Christ . Clau E W L Lakeland AC 10 I Tha Hawk. - ■ iton » 1 Aub. Hts. BC 3 7 Black a 3 The Mayas * * Cranbrook II, Clawson 5 Felice's Merkel 3, F.O.P. Yankees 3* •Game Under Protest Clau E Alger Black 13, The Hawks 5 (10 innnigs) Optimist III ... ----------- Clau F Natlenal 13, Columbia Ave. Dodgers 11, --------- ----------- Northside Merchants 3, Whli Kids 0 Optimist IV 10, Firebirds 9 Rochester Merchants 12, Sam Saints' Halo Burning Hot Church of God SAN DIEGO (AP) — Kevin Hardy, the New Orleans Saints No. 1 di'aft pick who was dealt to the San Francisco 49ers as compensation for split end Dave Parks, says he has obtained the services of a lawyer. Hardy has been unhappy about going to the 49ers. T’ll have no comment until my lawyer tells me what to say,” Hardy told newsmen Monday at the Saints’ National Foot-11 ball League training camp here. onaldson Baptist .... Mandairt Raauns Crescent Lake 5, Union Lake 4 Lady ot Lakes 22, St. Paul's 4 Sunnyvala 7, Stephen'- ' —— • -ke 7, Si Meanwhile, the former Notre Dam6 star, packed his bags and left camp. Sources said he would remain in the San Diego area to huddle with his attor- ney. Steve Smith . Pltchws Allen Diggs Steve Cushmore Dave Baldwin . Local Racer Claims Mark BATAVIA (12-2»>-6rh Pl«c« Pos H I Mike Murray , . ,c 17 Howard Johnson ..3b 13 0 24 12 3-1 22 ‘0.38 2-0 17 3. 0-1 18 3. ■ 14 3.79 7 0-2 14 4.00 12 17 1-3 15 8.^5 CULF COAST LEAGUE Tigers’ second pick in this summer’s free agent draft, flychaser Bob Molinaro, is batting v36i and outfield mate Mike Hastings has a .417 mark in the rookie league. The Tigers Sarasota entry is flirting with the .500 level after four weeks of play. The A experimentar Ford| Mustang stock car owned by Pontiac’s Jerry Sidocks and driven by Floyd Williams of Ortonville set new elapsed time and speed records Sunday at Lapeer Dragway. Williams was substituting for Sidocks who is sidelined with a shoulder injury. He drove the, car to street eliminator honors for the day. SARASOTA (11-13)—«h P Po> H HR RBI Al 4 0 2 .344 3 0 2 .250 3 0 2 .231 Dave Mellars 7 0-1 5 6.00 AERIAL ATTACK Van Brocklin has promised a wide-open game with plenty of passing in an effort to get the; first All-Star triumph over the professional champions since the 20-17 victory over Green | Bay in 1963. i Since then, the All-Stars have i lost to the Chicago Bears, Cleve-j land Browns and have been blanked by the Packers the last two seasons. The professionals lead the ser-: ies 23-9 with two tie games, I OAKLAND COUNH VOTERS ARE YOU INTERESTED IN 1. The safety of your family? 2. fairly and equally enforced for all citizens? 3. 4. 5. The future of the community’s youth? In having trained, efficiant Sheriff’s department designed to save your tax ddllars? If you (ire . . . Vote for . . . Elect Sgt. Herbert (Herb) COOLEY OAKLAND COUNTY REPUBLICAN SHERIFF This Adv. pofd for b> 2 0-1 5 9.00 TIRE DISCOUNTS Tubeless Whitewalls 2 for ^19®® 650x 13 735 X 14 775 X 14 825 x 14 855x 14 Fed. Tax . 37-65C . ________ Price Includes Mounting andAFuP ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE NO TRADE-IN,NEEDED OPEM DAILY: 8 A.II.-8 P.M.; Sat. 8 A.M.-8 P;M. TRUCK TIRE ROAB SERVICE Tire Service Company 190 West Walton Blvd. PONTIAC Phone: 332-5888 Meet Your New Buick Dealer > In The Pontiac Area NOW! ANTNONY GRIMALDI President RICHARD NAVARRE GetUfral Manager GRIMALDI BUICK-OPEL, INC. if you knovy either of these members of the Grimaldi Buick-Opel manbge-ment staff, drop in and wish them "Good Luck" in their exciting, new venture. If you haven't met them, but like thousands pf smart people, would really rather own a Buick, or an Opel, drop in, meet them, and discover how much more car they can give you in either a Buick or an Opel for your dollar. See how smoothly they, or any one of their hond-pi|;kad soles staff of qualified, courteous men con put you in the right car at the right price. It's a rewarding experience! GRIMALDI BUICK-OPEL, INC. 210 Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac ^ ‘ 332-9101 - l: see us foraloiv-costVacation Loan Why settle for an ordinary Vacation when you can easily have the vacation you really want — the one you’ll remember for a lifetime. We fan furnish the extra money you need, or finance the whole trip. Low bank rates... fast, confidential service... convenient payment schedule. Inquire! CREDIT DEPT. HOURS: 8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M, including ALL DAY SATURDAY Phon*: 689-1092 4 Convenient Locations to Serve Yoij M«mb«r Fadtrol Dapotit Inturonc* Corporation Hours: 9:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M. Daily Including Saturday - Friday to 6:00 P.M. Ph.: 689-4200 Troy National bank %u can tilm alitUe bitofydlowintoalot of green! Just &sk Henry K* Schafer... Henry K. Schafer of the Schafer Dry Cleaning Co. in Jackson says, “For new and referral business, Yellow Pages has proven to be invaluable to our firm’s growth." By being prominent In the Yellow Pages, he explains, "We’ve been easy toflnd and as nearto customers and prospects as a telephone." A display ad In the Yellow Pages catches a customer's eye when he wants to buy. Try it. Give yourself room to present the important facts about your business. It’s the final touch that makes your other advertising payoff. Make it big In the Yellow Pages. That’s the way to make it big. Michigan Bell BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Pf*. : THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 30, 1968 Difficult Safari Senators Pull Ambush AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (250 at bats)-n^il,ko; Bost.; 9-'4, :m. "------ ’ sinplp and trinlp ' strikeouts—McOoweii, cieve., 201; single ana inpie. ^^3. ^^^ain, Det., 173; D.Chance, Minn., 151; Phoebus, Balt., 135. nAvi AMn * - * v , i , loj. NATIONAL LEAGUE Aparlclo ss 6 14 2 Cmpnerls ss 7 0 2 0] BATTING (250 at bats)—M.Alou, Pitt. Alomar 2b 5 0 0 0 Cater lb 60 10.334; Rose, On., .329; A.Johnson, Cln. McCraw lb 6 111 Monday cf 5 0 0 0 .3I6; Helms, Cln., .312; Flood, St.L., — Wagnei 1 RJackson rf 5 0 2 1, Held rf Davis If .................. Berry cf 6 10 0 Duncar , _ - Kenwrthy 3b 3 0 0 0 Donaldsn 2b 2 0 Hopkins ph 1 0 0 0 DGreen 2b “ * Cullen 2b 2 110 Gosger ph MNrtney c 4 2 2 0 Pagllarni c 0 DGreen 2b 3 0 1 Ijcin., 57; 3 0 2 0 Odom p 0 0 M.u., 00. 0 0 HITS—Flood, St.L., 132; A.Johnson ** 124; Brock. St.L., 124; F.Alou, All. 1 0 0 0 Rudi 01120; Beckert, Chic., 119. BAIIen 2b Casanova c ^■ans,en ss 4 0 0 0 Klmchok ph 10 0 0 Hannan p 2 10 0 Sair DOUBLES—Brock, iHoust., 26; Bench, Clf ------122; Rose. Cln., 22. Total 48.2 10 21 TRIPLES—Clemente, 001 010 000 000 5— 7 St.L , 9; Kessinger “ St.L., 33; Staub, JHa?t*p THorton ph 10 0 32 4 7 4 Total ,i E—Alomar, Donaldson 2, OP—Oaki 1. LOB—Chicago 8. Oakland IS. : 11 Cullen. 3B—Aparlclo, McCraw, Da I SB—Davis, Monday. S—J Hershberger, Alomar. HOME RUNS-McCovey, S.F., 24; E—Cardenal, Fuller. DP—Washington 1, F.Howard (29). SB-Unser, Fuller. SF- iJohn Locker Wood (W,7-5) Odom {L,9-7) *'?B-Dunc«n. PITCHING (9 Decisions)—Abernathy, lal, S.F., 19-4, .826; Hannan (W3-2) . H R ER BB SO Romo (L.1-2) jp_Hannan (Fuller). Tim Kinne Leading CarriersJournev 2-3 3 3 3 2 :_3;54. A- 5,413. ,769; Gibson, St.L ; Washburn. St.L Horse Racing Post 4-0 Victory Clippers Remain in Baseball Race UNITED TIRE SERVICE CLASS A BASEBALL W L M. G. Coins. 13 3 Pass E * 13 4 Talb. I____ 12 5 Local 653 Talb. Lmb. .. . ... . Local 653 Local 594 1 0 8 Un. C. Pets , Tonight's Gamas JAYCEE PARK —Uncle Charlie's Shop vs. Teamsters 614, 6 p.m ccavating vs. M. G. CoMIson, 1:30 p. The Clippers remained in the race for the top spot in the city men’s recreation baseball race with a 4“0 two-hit victory by Ed Sparkman Monday night Jaycee Park. The win brought the Clippers within IMt games of the lead and the picture could be even brighter for them after tonight’s scheduled twinbill. The runner-up Teamsters meet Uncle Charlie’s Pet Shop in the early tilt, and pacesetting G. Collision has an 8:30 p.m. encounter with Pass Excavating. Both of the contenders lost to these rivals in their last meetings with them. OTHER GAME Also Monday, CIO 594 was a 7-0 forfeit victor over UAW 653. Sparkman whiffed nine and didn’t allow a hit for the final 3 2-3 innings. A bases loaded walk to Dave Houck in the second inning produced the only run the left-hander needed. WeiskopfTops Earnings List The .Vikings, champions in women, and Carol’s husband 1965, regained their laurelsjJim was second to the Vikings’ Sunday in the a n n u a Uerry Moon. Metropolitan Detroit Ski Council SCORES Water Ski Tournament at Ox-| i . ■ ■ , u fnrH T atp General Motors’ ski club .. A af •) *^hird, the Skiniks were! crowd estimated at 3,000 l ,, . ’ „„ fourth and the Tech Center en- Northville Results DRC Results MONDAY RESULTS MONDAY RESULTS Tim Kinne shot 123 yesterday to lead the first round of the Mark Land P(Mitiac Press Carriers Putt- Lady omard s Putt Tournament at t h e .ES"'’, Drayton layout. twinkle Queen The competitors played 54;wyidwood° Laura holes and the field was cut to Spindletop Joan the low 18 scores for today’s Sel second round. Action will con-tinue tomorrow and Thursday. IV*!*®.Jj*/' -S1.500; Conditioned Trot; 1st—S2,700; Claiming; 4 Furlongs; „ Sun Jet 8.20 3.60 .... glVjlla-s Bold Gal 3.80 _3.60 ; 6 Furlongs; giOo It Shadow n All American Boy X; Shutout Dream 2.80 90.40 2.80 PALM BEACH GARDENS, la. (AP) — Tom Weiskopf, who finished third in last week’s Minnesota Golf Classic, vaulted past idle Billy Casper and into the top spot on the list of money winners on the PGA tour. Weiskopf picked up a check of $7,500 for his third place finish for a total of $137,561.80. Casper, who did not play in the tourney, remained at $135,935.90 and dropped to second. watched the Vikings overcome a strong showing by the defending two-time champions of the National Ski Patrol. 4tli—$3,000; Maldtn Allowanct, $ Fur-4 20 longs: 3!oo Encanto Gent 17.00 7.20 6 20 Western Saddle 5.40 • • Kentucky Royaty Sfh—$2,000; Claiming; 4 Furlongs; 6.80 3.80 I's 0 Texas 16.40 8.8 2.60 Halterman n,;n,;e5s Cc--- Optional Twin (9-2) 17.20 8.20 3. 10.20 8.60 Dan Sikes’ first-place check of $20,000 put his name in the elite list, seventh at $76,464.90. Following Weiskopf and Casper and their winnings are: Lee Trevino, $97,645.27; George Archer, $96041.25; Dave Stocks-ton, $M,436.66; Julius Boros, $82,701.36; Sikes; MilleiJ^rber, $75,142.90; Jack NicklaTis, $69,428.10; Arnold Palmer, $68,883.00. Bettor Wins $23,728 DENVER (AP) - Some lucky bettor Monday night wagered ^ on a twin-quinela at the Mile High Kennel Club and won $23,728.60—the highest twin-quin ever paid in the United States, track officials said. Monday's Fights SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Bob Fc__________ 179, Washington, D.C.,, stopped Charlie Politer 199, Springfield, 3, nontitle. NEW ORLEANS — Billy Backus, 147, lestota, N.Y., outpointed Jerry Pelleg* I, 147, New Orleans, 10. Sanchez leads the circuit with. 17RBI’s. I The Clippers sewed up the verdict with three markers in the third, the first one scoring on a single by Santos Sanchez. CLIPPERS (4) Clancy 2b Suit ss VIpond rf 3 0 0 Greig if 2 0 0 Fischer 1 0 0 Bartkow'k 3b 3 ( 3 0 0 Miceli lb Keziarian cf 2 0 •he Clippers 013 000 x—4 7 » TRIPLE-Bartkowlak. RUNS BATTEOI S—Houck,, Sanchez. PITCHING—Gr^-’-^ T 7 IP. 2 H, 9 Regain Water Ski Laurels WHITEWALLS! m FULL 4 PLY! AMY SIZE 650x13 775x14 825x14 855x14 NO EXCHANGE NEEDED 775x15 $12.00 815x15 19 Rn 845x15.......• 'IVS 900x15...........Id.aU Ym faTonb »4»rtii.d Pric ri United Tir, United Tira. '' INSTANT CREDIT - NO MONEY DOWN VISIT UNITED TIRE TODAY ... AND SAVE! PLUS F.E.T. .43 tb .73 WIDE WHITE RETREADS OPEN MON. THRU FBI. 8 to 9 - SAT. 8-6 - CLOSED SUMDAl^ UNITED TIRE SERVICE "WHERE PRICES ARE OISCOUNTED-NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Winners in 1966 and 1967, the try took fifth place among thej g 15 seven-member teams en-! a tering. The top five scorers ■ comprised the team total. ■ A strong breeze was a factor! I TteTiME Has COME Tor NSP unit had the top ’ two'‘he slalom competition, women and the second-best ^ ★ ★ ★ | male skier yesterday but still I The'new MDSC Beauty Queen i fell five points shy of the new is Terri Hothem of the Skiniks. titlist. I Another phase of the'program Carol Ferguson of Pontiac was an exhibition of trick skiing and Jo Ann Blaine of Pontiac i and jumping by the Oxford finished one-two among the!Lake Ski Club. Doift let corrosion steal your new car* ( Ziebart rustproofing guarantoos 100% protection!) We INNERCOAT ill 22 Rust-prone areis... seel out rust for good. Rust can shorten your new /car’s life and take hundreds of dollars' from its trade-in value, But Ziebarting fights rust so effectively it’s guaranteed for 5 years or 50,000 miles! We innercoat fender wells. rocker panels, doors ... all the rust-prone areas of your car, with Ziebart rust preventive. We use patented Ziebart tools and methods. Result: 100% protection against the ravages of rust. Don’t let corrosion steal your new car. See us now! 821 Oakland Ave. Phone FE 4-0502 KEEP YOUR CAR TUNED Chevy II Nova 2-Door Sedan Gr«of ,^oyt for on«-th*-rood fraval ora Kara and ---------- ... ,— -- only oi Mofa o« your tirat. Wa carry a complata lina of tha ba«t in quolity ond ore aquippad wtlh tha finfit tira cora tarvica from trua-boionca and ^rdetienixing t« whaal olignmant. Compora...our prica* ara os good os our famous quality sarvica NEW FULL 4-PLY WHITEWALLS 7.35x14 - $21.50 7.75x14-$22.50 8.25x14 - $25.50 8.55x14 - $26.50 Prices Include Federal Tax Y8 power with a 307 cu. in. engine. Automatic transmission. A.M. radio. Seafrost green with Gold cloth plus sales tax and plates Al Hanonte’s Chevrolet-Buick-Opel, Inc., • Sciantifically maasured and xotract caster ond camber r • Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief couse of tire wear) Road ‘ 209 N. Park Blvd. (Lapeer Rd.,) Lake Orion MY 2-2411 BRAKE LIIVIIVGS “NOW” IS THE TIME FOR HOME IMPROVEMENT COMPARE! If You Drive A 1968 Pontiac 2-Door »|, ; Catarina Hardtop; ^ Bodily Injury " $so,oeo/$ioo,ooo...$ie Y Properhr Damage $10,090....... Comprohonsive.....$12 Collision - $100 Doduetible........$21 Medical $2,000 ....$4 Road Service.......$2 Uninsured Motorist . . .$ 1 TOTAL $69 6 MONTHS PREMIUM Only $^0 For 2 Cars I OUT-CITY RESIDENTS MAY PAY EVEN LEST] Call Today AasTSee If You Qualify H.R.NICH0LIE ei Mt. Clamans PONTIAC Phone 333-T858 WE DO EVERYTHIHG IM HOME IMPROVEMENTS .70!! Free Estimates - Cheerfully Given Plumbing Awnings Tiling Plastering Custom Cabinets Aluminum siding Custom Aluminum Trim Combination Windows INTERIORS BURGET TERMS No Down Payment ^ CALL FE 4-2575 24 Hour Phone Service BATHROOMS MIDWEST BUILDERS. SUPPLY c 118 W. Huron St, Eicensed Builder “Member Chamber of Commerce" Established 1936 PONTIAC B«$t grad*, high quality lining. 1,000 mil* adju$tnn*nt fr**. At low at $1.25 a w**k. 1 y*ar — I 20,000 mil* guaran- SOC95/C^ monr5e : SHOCKS t 6 s MOTOR MART 123 East Montcalm FE 3-7845 Poll Today Decides Sen. Fulbright's Fate THE PONTIAC TRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 30. 1968 B—5 LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AR) -Sen. J. William Fulbright has been stumping Arkansas in a campaign for renomination to convince the voters that he is just as concerned aboujt domestic matters as he is peace. The state’s Democrats decide today whether to renominate one of the Senate’s leading doves to a fifth term or to send one of his three challengers into the November general election against a well-financed Republican, farmer-businessman Charles Bernard of Earle. ★ * ★ The casually attired Fplbright —his favorite campaign has been a sports shirt and •Jacks — has been campaigning fince Memorial Day, often disappearing for several days in Arkansas’ back country in fearch of votes. Fulbright, who is robust at 63, discusses his opposition to the Vietnam war. But the thrust of bis campaign is whqt he has done to improve Arkansas in his 26 years in Washingotn and that the war effort is diverting the nation’s energy — and dollars — ffom pressing domestic problems, TOUGHEST BATTLE His opponents concentrate on Ftilbright’s Vietnam stand, and political observers believe they are giving him one of the' toughest battles of his political life. Fulbright maintains, however, that he will receive 65 per''cent of the vote in the primary. He needs a majority of the votes to avoid a runoff election. Fulbright’s opponents are Jim Johnson, a self-styled segregationist whose wife Virginia is running for governor; Bobby K. Hayes, a Calico Rock flooring manufacturer, and Foster Johnson of Little «^lock, who tried unsuccessfully to unseat Sen. John L. MeClellan, D-Ark., in J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT Jim Johnson was the Democrat’s nominee for governor in 1966, but lost in the general election to Winthrop Rockefeller, the state’s first Republican governor since Reconstruction. Johnson and his wife led the effort to get George Wallace’s name on the Arkansas presidential ballot this year. Jim Johnson and Hayes are Fulbright’s most vociferous critics. Johnson has called the senator the “pin-up bpy of Hanoi. Hayes says Fulbright toastt Russians in Washington while Soviet-made guns kill Ameri- Like To Whistle? I TmkeaDoodIt _________ MACARONI ^ Nt cooked eKwir macaroni in a casserole. Add Itagu' Spa-(hetti Sauce and mu well. Cover with a layer of American cheese slices and bake imlil the cheese is melted. 3S0 degree oven for about 20 minutes. SPAGHETTI SAUCE (Adverllscment) WAKE UP YOUR PERISTALSIS And Ba Your Smiling Best Large Payoff for a Divorce CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) took 10 minutes and a $500,000 check Monday for Eugene Zeller Frerichs to be granted a divorce. * ★ ★ St. Louis County Circuit Court Judge George W. Cloyd granted the divorce in the St. Louis suburb of Clayton. He said after the 10-minute hearing it was the largest lump sum settlement he knew of. Reagan^Has He a Chqnce? SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)-Ronald Reagan’s strategists say the California governor has 200 Republican National Convention delegates pledged to him. They also say he has a bright chance for the presidential nomination, but other California Republicans are skeptical. The Reagan skeptics predict former vice president Richard Nixon has the nomination sewed up, * ★ * That’s the situation as the California GOP, led by Reagan, prepares to head for the convention in Miami Beach next week. Reagan, 57, has served almost two controversial years as chief executive of the most populous state after a long acting career. Just back from talking to delegates in Alabama. Arkansas, Texas, Kentucky, Marylargj and Virginia, Reagan said he made no direct solicitation of support. But he adds: -^There were people who voluntarily expressed themselves for my point of view.’’ : APPARENTLY OPEN’ He said Nixon “has not approached the magic number” of 677 votes needed for the nomination, “Apparently, it is an open convention,” he said. He keeps repeating, “I will not solicit” the nomination, but Frerichs gave his wife title to . cans in Vietnam. their home and agreed to payi"^^" will accept it if offered. UTTER TRASH’ ^ a month for support of ^e has made up h.s iivAan „f thp Irnind not to announce his candi- Fulbright largely, has ignored The FrerS^wer^ marr^^^^ “"i” the accusations. In the waning ‘ married >n noj^jnation, days of the campaign, however-s president of Ameri-he called Johnson’s charges “ut-|^^" ® ter trash and hogwash. s name is placed in with California’s 86 and a few more from other states, will give Reagan a bigger-than-ex-pected total on the first ballot. WILL BE ENOUGH Those voles, combined with New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's, he said, will be enough to stop Nixon. Afterward, the aide estimated, Nixon will begin slipping and the delegates will turn to Reagan instead of Rockefeller. Clifton White, the Reagan political adviser who helped Barry Goldwater to the nomination four years ago, estimateci that 50 to W per cent of the delegates will be former Goldwater backers — people who’d rather vote for Reagan than Rockefeller. * * * T think Gov. Reagan is going to be drafted by this convention,” said . Thomas L. Reed, one of the young Californians who have been soliciting support for the governor. ★ * ★ “There is a distinct possibility that the Republican nominee won’t be one of the present candidates,” said another Reagan aide. publicly discuss any other Republican presidential possibility. Another Republican leader who Is not a member of the delegation talked more openly. Leslie Gehres, chairman of the San Diego County Republican Central Committee, said the Californians will all vote' for Reagan on the first ballot as a favorite son. Koupal needs 780,414 signatures by a Wednesday deadline, but political observers say that experience indicates that up to 30 per cent of the signatures on such petitions are tossed out by county clerks as invalid. Koupal wants at least 1.2 mil-A GOOD GOVERNOR? signatures to be sure, and “But I think Richard Nixon f will come in so strong that aft-,r U.e firs. ball.,. delegaLs from all the states will be try- }»r, uncomlortubl* and reel ett_____ Carter’u PlUa with lU unique lax-atlve formula wakei up the alowed down muaelea of the lower digestive tract and stimulates Pertstalsts, glv- Irregu- stuSed. larlty. _ tag best. Millions of satisfied users take Carter's Pills, Why don't you. 49< Pause from Your Shopping and Relax in Our Quiet and Congenial Atmosphere LUe;dy Oocklail LoDDjie In the Heart of Downtown Pontiac 85 N. Saginaw Fulbright says his wife Betty tried to keep him from seeking reelection this year and that friends and advisers had suggested that perhaps he had been in the Senate long enough. ★ ★ * But Fulbright says that with his length of service—he would be seventh in seniority in the Senate next year — he can do much for Arkansas. The scholarly Fulbright’s image is international, but he has I turned on a folksy campaign attack. He is shown whittling in one television commercial while a country jig tune sounds in the background. JUST PLAIN BILL This isn’t lost on his opponents. Jim Johnson complains that the Senator is “Mr. Chairman” in Washington and “Sen. J. William Fulbright” in Arkansas during a nonelection year, jbut “just plain Bill with a checkered shirt on” during an election year when he has opposition. Fulbright is a former Rhodes Victim of Crash BRUCE CROSSING (AP) -Cheryl Sain, 18, of Bruce Crossing died Sunday from injuries suffered Wednesday when she was struck by a car while crossing M-28 in Ewen. NOT SO SURE Some Californians, however, are not so sure. A California convention delegate who met with Nixon this month said, “I laugh, reading all the headlines about the progress Reagan is making in the South. He ought to worry about At the same time, Reagan’s jhis own delegation, strategists — mostly the men who planned his gubernatorial campaign — freely talk in private conversations with newsmen about counting delegates. One aide said Reagan picked up more than 50 votes in his swing through the South. In his (view, these votes, combined. This delegate declined the us* of his name. So do other delegates who talk favorably of the former vice president. They are bound by two pledges to Reagan. One is that they will vote for him until he releases them. The other is that they will not his supporters aie quitting, and that claims are exaggerated. ing to get on the bandwagon,” he said. "I think Californians want Reagan to stay on as governor, anyway. He’s a good governor and we want to keep him.” The Field poll this month said Nixon led Rockefeller 56 per cent to 26 per cent in Cali-I fornia, with Reagan receiving! 11 per cent. That showed a drop i for Nixon from a May sampling i that had him leading Rockefeller 63 per cent to 22 per cent with Reagan 9 per cent. Back home, there is potential | troublfe for Reagan from another direction. A group of Californians is gathering signatures to force a recall election in hopes of ousting Reagan as governor. Edward Koupal, a former used car salesman running the recall drive, claims more than 850,000 signatures, but there have been reports that some of But if it falls on Us face,” the aide said, “it will have a beneficial effect.” Let the Profile Bread Plan help prolong your Slender Years. KEEP UP YOUR SPEED RENT A TYPEWRITER, inilial Rental Paid-Allowed on PurchoMO of Now Typowritor 39 YEARS IN PONTIAC l23NirHiSiginwSl F>y- After the vehicle shifts back its predecessor, the Polaris A3.i^ t^e straight-in angle of attack, a small motor attached to ALL-OUT PLANS jthe rear ignites to restore the -—The-Air Fciree-plans Aa^ go all- original speed. -- - --. out on the first Minuteman 3 Minuteman 3 also will be creasing speed, adjusting spin rates and maneuvering. Poseidon Will be a more advanced racket over the Polaris A3 than Minuteman 3 will be over Minuteman 2. PRANK IRONS (REPUBLICAN) Retain your present sheriff in office. He understands the low enforcement problems of Oakland County. His record merits his re-election. VOTE for FRANK IRONS-Sheriff Primary Election Aug. 6,1968 He rose to chairman of the j launching, firing all three capable of carrying the Mark 11 Senate Foreign Relations Com-stages and testing the new reentry vehicle with a single niiitee with the help of then Sen. i^fark 12 reentry vehicle over an warhead that packs more punch Lyndon B. Johnson, a friend‘"fcrcontinental range. T h e than the Mark 12. Mark 11 pres- since the 1940s. -Fulbright has been at the center of controversy ever since and his opposition to President Johnson’s Viet-!nam war policies has cooled his I relations with Johnson. launch will be from an under- ently is a .s s i g n e d to Minute-ground silo. man 2 for use on cities and The Navy plans first to launch hardened targets such as rein- TAKE YOUR CHOICE .. • IN OAKLAND COUNTY • SINCE 1925 • ALL CREDIT TERMS • BURNER SERVICE ClARKE-GEE FUEL Oil FE 2-9181 DOUBLE STAMPS IWED. ONLYi at Thrifty-Cloonan Drug Stores Get double Holden Red Stamps on Wednesday only atony Thrifty-Cloonan Drug Store with any purchase. T*bMM sra*iet>, Wint, S(*r, Liqmr boluM • 140 N. Saginaw St. e Huron Street Corner of Telegraph • 4898 Bixif Highway \ ' ' ■ ■ . B—6 THE rONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 30. 1908 jJacoby on Bridge NORTH 4kK96S 30 A32 ♦ AQ'4 ♦ AJ7 WEST EAST 4 8 4 2 4 Void VKQJ109654V 7 48 4J109752 42 4Q986S3 SOUTH (D) 4 AQJ1073 48 4 K63 4K104 North-South vulnerable West North East South 1 4 4 4 4 N. T. Pass 5 4 5 4 5 N. T. Pass 6 4 7 4 Pass Pass 7 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 K By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY According to John Ruskin, j the work of science is to sub-1 sUtute facts for appearances.! The equivalent! ■bridge expres-Ision is “Qnej ■ peek is worth! [two finesses.” West would lhave been down ■six at his seven ■heart bid, butj (it would havej JACOBY been a very cheap save. West didn’t get doubled. North passed the bid around to South who went on to seven spades. ★ ★ ★ Dummy’s ace of hearts held the first trick and South re- laxed. That ace might have been ruffed, Then South looked everything over and saw that he had to take care of the queen of clubs to make his grand slam. Based on appearances, th^ queen was probably going to show up in the East hand. West had bid up to seven hearts and certainly held at least seven cards in that suit. On the other hand, appearances can be deceptive but facts can’t be. South managed to perform the equiva-: lent of peeking in West’s hand. ★ ★ ★ j At trick two he ruffed a heart and noted that East failed to follow. West had an eight card heart suit. At trick three a spade was led and East showed out. West had started with three spades. South ran off a few rounds of trumps for good measure and; led a diamond. West followed! and South had accounted for 12 of West’s cards. ★ ★ ★ South played dummy’s ace of dubs and when West followed suit South knew every one of his cards. East had the queen of clubs and South finessed against it with total security. Voters OK Levy for School District MONROE (AP) — Voters the Summer field School District Monday approved a 9.'’4 - mill, one-year operating levy by a vote of 287-262. It was the third time since May 20 the proposal was put to the voters. ---------------- U- Two states, Michigan and Nebraska, adopted new personal income taxes in 1967. ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbera thI: better half 44CnRDJ’ea««4 34 Pass Dble Rdble 4 4 Pass Dble Pass You, South, hold: 4KQJ108 7 6 43 3 2 44 3 47 What do you do now? A—Pass. You have announced no tricks except apadeg as trump and it turns out that the combination of a singleton ^ub and two diamonds mar well be a trick. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of doubling four diamonds, your partner jumps to five spades. What do you do Answer Tomorrow THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom “The estimate on a new roof is free just as the newspaper ad said . . . However, there's a small five-dollar charge for my anecdotes, jokes and humorous stories.” BERRY S WORLD—By Jim Berry By V. T. Hamlip " - .si-' ' 'W ■«. 4 ^ ” V 4c Astrological Forecast ^ By SYDNEY OMARR For Wtdnosdiy Th* wiM moil eonfroU Ml Oosthiy . . . Aitrotosy pointt tho wiy." 4Ri^^ fMar 21 • ADf. 19): Accent on fear chanoe. Realiie that versatility Is great ally today. Display J«0 d."V .^ec-tmr^in^liiiai euritv Needness delay *hakes confidence rdmTrr?i«r^”Ser?Si"nSti^“‘t.'n'’tinu'i*"tX get fine example. GEMINI (May 21 - June JO): stances billiatlvt. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Get to heart of m»*ter. Reallie some restrictions ere only temporary. Don t Mss judgment without thorough investigation. Look beyond superl Greater freedom due. LEO (July 23-Aug. If you check details ' something of value. Day prises — of pleasant var owieoge as resun o> ir planning ahead. Don', uc „.th short-range goals. Adopt pn.,™u,-.iy of sky is the limit. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 -attention to requests by Concentrate on area of fii._ o( residence. Plan budget SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 Stress on public relations. Ings clear. Some tend to mism your actions. Start mending trie fences. It you fake first step, respond. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19 cere of minor matters — the bi( Will taka care of themselves, this Is day to keep on even ka« Racing Driver Counsels on Saving Fuel NEW YORK (UPI) Gasoline prices being what they are, racing driver Mario Andretti offers some tips to motorists on how to save on fuel. Writing in the American Petroleum Institute’s magazine '‘Petroleum Today,” Andretti says the careful motorist can increase his gasoline mileage 10 to 20 per cent by observing a few rules. * ★ For ordinary driving, Andretti thinks tire pressure extremely Importsmt in preventing fuel, wast. The “soft ride” of 24 to 26 pounds pressure wastes a lot of; fuel, he says, while the more bumpy ride of over 30 pounds! . saves fuel. ! Tbose ads about changing or , cleaning and adjusting spark | plugs at least every 10,000 miles tell the truth, Andretti states. Weak firing plugs can waste 10 per cent of your fuel, he advises. Engines should be tuned every 8,000 miles at least, says Andretti, , and . cleaning c (hanging tne engine air filter very important. Failure to do so, he writes, can cost you another 10 per cent |of your gas.'' ; Andretti' name^ speed as the biggest gasoline fiiief. He warns that driving unnecessarily fast can run yoiir4|ueI bill ilp 25 per cent' Ml top of all other^ wastages. I THE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY. JULY ;i0. 19»i8 When Money Means Nothing ... You Can Ignore Pontiac Press Advertising. BUT Until That Time Arrives This Newspaper Is The liigist Mmiy Sim In Your Existence All the News of all the Best Bargains in all the Best Stores Every Day! THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 B-8 THE PONTIAC rUESDAY, JULY ; Hemingway House Is Visited tEDITOR'S h'OTE~It is seren At "the height of the season pears since Ernest Hemingioay one tour begins just as one died, and in Key West, Fla., ends. And on this particular day where he lived and worked, a the dollar-lecture did not inminor boom of sorts has de- dude a single suggestion that in veloped in HeminguKiv rnemori- The Hemingway Home" there bila. The tours through the lived a man who lighted words Hemingway house are fast ond like candles in a cathedral and quick, but there are others on became a giant in the literature the island who remember the of the world. writer as a giant in .American * ■* •* literature.) Xhe facts are few, but the ----- tour buzzes right along, up to By SAUL PETT 'he second floor studio w'here AP Special Correspondent Hemingway worked in the little house near the pool. Here, the KEY WEST, Fla. — "He had tgUg the folks that Hem-four wives," the wiry li"le j^gway wrote at the round little guide said, in a nasal montone Spanish table, 'sitting on a which somehow managed an -cigar-maker's chair brought edge of indifference, a touch of f,,om Cuba,” and that the room mockery and a hint of sin. s,jn lo^ks as it was, except, "of "First, there was Hadley, and course, when he was here it Hadley introduced him t o so full of' junk you had to Pauline and he left Hadley, fjght your way in ” Then he ran off with the blonde the to Spam. Pauhne was kind of narrow minded about that so she divorced him. Later he d | come here with the fourth wife, * * * set bricks from "Mr. Hem- "There vou see a nicture" - ‘"Sway’s yards for 50 cents plus *1. , tax." tiles from the garage for the guide pointed to a ^ newspaper photograph- of the, J paperback books, wximan who became the nurse ^ In 'A Farewell to Arms.’ You ^ „,v.u may've seen Helen Hayes or Jennifer Jones in that. .And here ,, „ j __________ , . , . , Home stamped on them. Is a picture — another ^ newspaper photograph — of the GRACEFUL COLONIAL House Seats Sought After 443 Will Run for no Openings in State LANSING (AP) - SomeUmes when the Legislature is meeting, and a night session drones on near the end of a long, muggy week, lawmakers are apt to wish they’d gone into some other line of work.' Then there's nut mail to put up with, and a cwistant barrage of telephone calls—not all of them polite. Some days the party leaders pull a legislator one way while important constituents are tugging him the other. But there must be something attractive about the job. TTie 110 openings in the House of Representatives have drawn 443 applicants this year — including 103 of the 109 men and women who hold down House seats now. The field of 443 candidates will be trimmed by better than half — to 216 — in next Tuesday’s primary election. The survivors will slug it out in the general election Nov. 5. NO OPPOSITION The lucky ones this week are the 98 candidates, including 42 incumbent House members, ! who find themselves without pri-jmary opposition. The unluckyj pages scattered all around the formidable, Hemingway put a 345 have just nine days more AP N\ COlOllkyDElUXE AStVlHARISHAMMOt-, PROOUCTIOH JiH 8 ★ PONTIAC ★ THURS. AUG. PONTIAC MALL AUS.: DRAYtOn PL. LIONS CLUB WORLDS LARGEST CLYDE Pfc. William L. Griffin is stationed in ASCOM (Asian Communications Center), Korea. He took his basic training at Ft. Knox, Ky., and cable splicing training at Sheppard AFB, Tex. Griffin’s wife, Susan, lives Luckiest of all are Reps. Frederic Marshall, R-Allen, and Roy Spencer, R-Attica, who have no opposition from either party this yean. Both are certain to return to the House in January. Not returning, however^ will be six retiring lawmakers. Republicans, with a total of 76 years of service in the House, Among them is Rep. Ajmell Engstrom of Traverse City, appropriations chairman and dean of the Legislature with 28 years’ seniority. Republicans have candidates in 109 of the 110 House districts and Democr^ats^are rjresenM| CARACAS (UPI) “Okay" neither party even remotely ex- Venezuelans Take to English GRIFFIN CARRIGER | Sgt, Paul D. Carriger is in' charge of the teletype center in Nha Trang, Vietnam. He received training at Ft. Hood, Tex., and Ft, Ord, Calif. * .★ * His wife, Corrine E., lives at 6465 Rowley, Waterford Township. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Allen R. Carriger of 1725 Inverness, Sylvan Lake. ! Marine Pfc. Michael W. j Reeds has been selected the oustanding recruit in his training cycle at the Marine Corps Rkruit Depot in San Diego, Calif. Judging was based on skill, I professional and military knowl-edge, conduct, attitude, bearing and leadership potential. 1 ★ ★ ★ j He was awarded a Marine! dress blue uniform by Leather-j neck Magazine for his achievement. Reeds is the son of Mr. and ~ ~ Mrs. Merlin K. Reeds of 1375 RENT, SET,!., TRADE---USE North Cass Lake, Waterford, poNTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Township. pects to capture all the contested seats. okay in Venezuelan Spanish and so are many other English words that cannot be found in Spanish dictionaries. Caracas is just over hours by air from Florida and words, whether slang. North American expressions, or the king’s English, don’t have much trouble reaching Venezuela. GOHNG BY DEFAULT In addition to the districts of Marshal and Spencer, the Democrats are letting Engstrom’s northwest Michigan 104th District go to the GOP by default. Two Republicans are entered in the primary, with the winner guaranteed a House seat. Republicans, on the other hand, didn’t put a candidate in vocabulary over the heavily Democratic district - - of Rep. Matthew McNeely, D-Detroit, who faces two primary challengers fom Ecorse. In addition to the 103 incumbents seeking re-election, there Some English words, many of them sports or technical terms, have entered the Spanish period of years, but lately a flood of advertising terms right out of Madison Avenue have been adopted by Venezuelans. A new lipstick may be “sexy” in Kansas City, but in Caracas REEDS 15ELEPHANTS15 TWICE DAILY 2-8 P.M. ^ ty- POPULAR PRICES RESERVED AND ADMISSION tickets on SALE CIRCUS DAY AT Smiley Bros. Music Co. tl9 N. Saginaw St. HELD OVER mow AT POPULAR PRICES' UNCUT! DIRECT FROM ITS ROADSHOM/ ENGAGEMENT! ACADEMY AWARD WINNER HURON 60c I Good Monday 60c ■ - Thru Thursday Valuf iC^KEEGO “THE PRIVATE ARMY OF SGT. O’FARRELL” also “FITZWILLY” Starts WEDNESDAY! The Mirisch Corporate SteveMcQueen FayeDunawayw. "ih <' Restoring twice-a-day deliveries and expanding Saturday services could create jobs for many thousand^ of the unemployed. It doesn’t make sense to spend money on all sorts of relief programs for the unemployed when an expanded mail service could create decent jobs, providing dignity and a regular paycheck for people now on the unemployment rolls. Everybody will benefit'through faster mail service. ,-4 And tile mails aren’t the only area of public service The Bruces knew Hemingway j that’s starved. Hospital aidministrators are constantly com-his Key West days and thej plaining about the need for more attendants, nurses aides ■ ............ ■ ' and other staff. Here is an area where unemployed men and women Can be put to work, doing various important jobs which require only a moderate amount of training. days that followed in Cuba and Idaho. Toby Bruce, a short, thin| man of great reserve, now runs an appliance store. In other days, he drank and fished with Hemingway, looked after his boat, the ‘Pilar,’ his cars and the odd jobs that needed doing' at the house. “There were no drinking bouts when he was working,” Toby Bruce recalls. “He took his work very seriously. He began early in, the day and worked standing up. ! * * * ■ I I ‘’’A bad day was when hel wrote 320 words. A good dayj I was 750. He wouldn't push it ; i after several bad days. He’d| I just chop it off and go fishing.j’ j One day Hemingway forgot to: I close the windows of his work [room. The next morning Toby I Bruce said he found manuscript Pollution is yet another area which 'need.s manpower. We always hear a lot of talk about water pollution. Streams that people used to fish just a few years ago are now foul and polluted. Ending pollution will require massive sewer-building and pipe-laying programs. Sdeh programs could put many thousands of men to work, men who would need no special skills or training. And everyone would benefit from clean water. The schols are finding that enrollment is growing while there is a teacher shortage. But teachers could be helped by nonprofessional assistants in the classroom—neighborhood mothers, who may not have teaching degrees but who know kids and could take a lot of the pressure off teachers in overcrowded classrooms. The .schools would benefit, and many jobs would be created. s.'. 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN OOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:45 A.M. Show Starts 1 2:00 Noon Continuous—334-4436 AIR CONDITIONED YOU MUST BE 18-PROOF IS REQUIRED HUBR 2nd BIG HIT "GIRLS ON “P STREET" Y! ENDS TUESDAY COMMERCE FIRST RUN DRIVE-IN THEATER Union Lk. at Haggerty Rd. EM 3-0661 SHOWTIME: DUSK Report Points to Problems are 17 former representatives- and one former senator in thejcigarettes are race this year. | “king-size” here as they are in [the states, but usually a “filter” is a “filtro” although the term ‘filter-tip” Is begininning to be used. FULL EQUIPO’ “Full equipo” in a car advertisement means that the automobile beipg sold has all the accessories. When you need, gaS, “fill her up” becomesj full” pronounced i which it isn’t since gas costs ^viJie Andres ^feIy^yle^Moo^e Carol Cliaiming' Janies tty- ROSS HUNTER'S THOROUgHLM M0P™Mi»-ue <2; JbhnCavin B^triCoIjlliO El. . A UNIVERSAL. PICTUI PRICES This Enfagement Only Adults WED.-SAT.-SUN. 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00 THUBS.-FRI.-MON.-TUES. 1:00 & 9:22 BALTIMORE (AP) - According to a report written for Baltimore’s Department of Social Services, modern frxiubles can come in fractions. * * * 'less than 25 cents a gallon in A group of welfare recipients the worlds’ largest who participated in a year-long producer, federally financed rent subsidy! Baseball is the national sport program were found to have an here and the same terms from average of 2.70 major psychosocial problems, or those which required “community intervention.” * * * The report, written by Dr. Harris Chaiklin of the University of Maryland, School of Social Work, said social workers identified .87 new problems per family and eliminated .^8 problems per family. play ball” to “no-hit, no-run” used in Caracas 0 r Mara&ibo as in St. Louis or Other, sports also use English words. In soccer the “arquero”: is just as likely to be called the 1 goalkeeper and ^ boxing knockout in the main events iS| ‘naucout” in the “main [event.” 1 YoY family a Dairq Queen jSUNDAESTOP The world's most delicious sundaes in a variety of flavors. Enjoy one today! FX- ‘vr CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE ft 5-4SOO , 1 pOHWMt 1 DRIVt-IN THEATIRl M{pae£tMi^\ DRIVE-IN THEATER | 1 2935 DIXIE HIDUWAY (U.S. 10) 1 BLOCK N. TUEGRAPH 60. 1 CHIIOHN UNOES 12 fSEE | SO UUGRAPH AT SQ LAKE RD l| 1 MILE W WOODWARD. 1 CKilDRlN UNDER 1? mn II FIRST RUN "BEST AMERICAN, FILM OF ^1 a ep^TS .JV SHELLY WINTER:, ^ DENNIS HOFPER 'GLORY SSTOMPERS' FIRST ★ ★ W V itUA UPROAROUS” ■ \ ^“1 Cooi^ -ALSO » CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREEl THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JULY 30, 1968 No Rash of Biracial Marriages Since Bans Lifted (EDITOR’S NOTE: The U.S. Supreme Court handed down a decision in 1967 that had the ef-feet of voiding state laws against interracial marriages. An Associated Press survey was made of affected states to see what happened.) By DON MCKEE Associated Press Writer ATLANTA, Ga. — A year ago a man and a woman walked Into the Fulton County courthouse in Atlanta and wrote history simply by getting a Georgia marriage license. She was a Negro. He was white. ★ ★ * It was the first time the clerk had issued a legal license for the marriage of a white and a Negro. Since then, more than a dozen such licenses have been Issued in the same office. A ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court had in effect removed Georgia’s prohibition against interracial marriages. The tribunal struck down Virginia’s law June 12, 1967, thereby nullifying similar statutes or constitutional provisions in 16 other states. NO STAMPEDE Lifting of the legal barrier, however, has not resulted in a stampede of marrying across the color line in the states affected by the decision. On the basis of records and estimates, it is likely that the number of interracial marriages in these states during the first year of freedom to marry falls below 100. ■k -k -k In North Carolina, the State Board of Health reported 15 marriages of whites and Negroes in 1967. Georgia has had upwards of 12 since Jhe ruling. niere have been^ee interracial marriages in Tennessee, half a dozen in Virginia and a few in several other states. Louisiana issued its first license for an interracial marriage soon after the high court ruling. Alabama and Mississippi apparently had no Negro-white marriages in the first year after the decision. There are several reasons, including racial polarization, figuring in the lack of interracial weddings, a sociologist said. ETHNIC GROUPS “The polarization of the ethnic groups is actually stronger today than 20 years ago,” said Dr. Fred R. Crawford, 43, professor of sociology at Emory University in Atlanta and director of Emory’s Center for Research in Social Change. The center is studying racial relations, poverty and violence. “A second aspect of the small number of marriages between races,” Crawford said, “is that the common law, nonlegal or casual relations evident 30 or 40 years ago have almost disappeared in terms of offspring. ★ ★ ★ “Now we’ve got the pill.” Crawford said the mere opening up of the possibility for marriage across color lines “is now going to influence a great many to cross over.” A controlling factor in marriage,'Crawford said, is what sociologists call propinquity, or nearness, closeness of association. MORE UKELY “It is entirely possible that the number of interracial marriages will become greater as young people get to know each other,” Crawford said. “There has been such a total kind of segregation in our society. Until young people have the opportunity to know each other, there won’t be much marriage.” ★ ★ As definitions and attitudes change permitting more racial integration, more marriages will occur across racial lines, he said. There were few prosecutions Let the Profile Bread Plan help prolong your Slender Years. tests—under the so-called miscegenation laws prior to the Supreme Court ruling. Mississippi only had one prosecution in recent decades and the State Supreme Court in that case reversed the conviction on t h e ground the state had failed to prove beyond a 11 reasonable doubt that the convicted man was one-eighth or more Negro— 3 the law spelled out. Some cases have involved questions of inheritance. On the basis of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling, the Oklahoma Supreme Court held valid the marriage of a Negro and a Chickasaw Indian. A bill to repeal the miscegenation law in Oklahoma died in committee in the 1968 legislature. Native Americans, the Indians, were included in some of the old laws against interracial marriage that date to 1661 when Maryland colonists imposed the first ban. Singled out in a North Carolina statute of the mid-1800s were “a Cherokee Indian of Robeson County and a person of Negro descent . . .” Indian-white marriages also were banned, but that section of the law was repealed in 1961. There had been some winking at the laws also prior to the Supreme Court ruling. The miscegenation statutes^were disre- garded for years with no attempt at enforcement in Missouri, for example. Since June 12, 1967, there have been few efforts to enforce the old laws. A county judge in Miami, Fla., refused to issue a license last January but was reversed by the Florida Supreme Court 5 to 2. States which had miscegenation laws a year ago were: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, FlWida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississip-I pi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. EVER TRIED IT? mlm IRAGU' PICKLE RELISH Simn\er two or three tablespoons of sweet pickle relish in Ragu' Spaghetti Sauce. Add slices of pot roast or roast beef. Spread heated mixture dike gravy) over meat on buns. SPAGHETTI SAUCE CHARGE IT •FRANK'S NURSERY SALES SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED Frank's guarantees that every Scott product must do what we say it will or you get every cent of your money back from Frank's -- right at the store — no questions asked. This unconditional guarantee applies to any Scott product: seed, chemical or mechanical. You are the judge, you must be satisfied. SAVE i.00 on Turf Builder Plus 2 KILLS LAWN WEEDS AND FEEDS AU YOUR GRASS TO CARPET THICKNESS GROWING CR^RASS! NOW IS AN IDBAL | TIME TO KILL CRAB- | GRASS IN YOUR LAWN I|TurfBujlder| plus 2 10,000 SQ. FT. Was $12.95 SAVE 50< 5,000 SQ. FT. Was $6.95 m.95 $6.45 Isj ItAScotts. Gives your lawn a full Turi Builder feeding to multiply grass thru the roots to make it thick and beautiful . . . plus kills many kinds of lawn weeds. Spread it on, be rid of: Black Medic, Buckhom, Chickweed, Cl0veE,..Dandclion, English Daisy, Ground Ivy, Heal All, Henbit, Knotweed, Lambsquarters, Plantain, Shepherd’s Purse and many more. And, yoWsave! SAVE «7.00!,^ WHEN YOU TRADE IN OLD SPREADER scons MODEL 35 Regular S19.95 ^195: Deluxe features include handle shutoS, accurate spreading control, rubber tires, extra rust resistance. SAVE ON WINDSOR BLUEGRASS SEED WHEN YOU BUY ANY SIZE SCOTTS TURF BUILDER! TURF BUILDER MAKES GRASS MULTIPLY ITSELF FOR A THICKER, MORE BEAUTIFUL, DEEPER GREEN, HEALTHY LAWN $5.45 scons WINDSOR 2,500 SQ. FT. 1,000 SQ. FT. REG. $tJ.95 REG. $4.95 $10.95 $4.45 w/Turf Builder w/Turf.Builder WINDSOR BLEKD 70 2,500 SQ. FT. 1,000 SQ. FT. REG. $9.95 REG. $4.45 $8.95 $3.95 w/Turf Builder w/Tuff Builder 1.45 IS :{ lilder I FRANK'S NURSERY SALE! 5919 HIGHLAND RD. iM-59) at AIRPORT RD. il590 GRAND RIVER, FAyRMINGTON 657$ TELEGRAPH AT A4APLE 14 MILE AT CROOKS RDk B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1968 Farpily Bparc/s Train After 7 Weeks on Bikes ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A Princeton, N.J., family has ended a bicycle trip that brought them some 2,000 miles In seven weeks from New York. Brando Given His Annulment Township Honored on Water System An unusually light docket ofi ibusiness at last night’s iWaterford Township Board SANTA MONICA, Calif, meeting was highlighted by' thej t (UPI) - Marlon Brando has formal presentation of a na-| s won an annulment of his 8-year tional award honoring t h e i [.marriage to Mexican actress [township’s water supply system. I Fred Bauer, a magazine writ-;Movita Castenada on grounds Vernon B. Spalding, president: er and pditor, said “the wind she is still married to a;ot the Michigan chapter of thCjCorporated in the township last and the hills and the heat", previous husband. Consulting Engineers Council of year, “reflects innovative ex- forced his family to call off their; Superior Judge Edward America, awarded the townsl^iggljg^pg jjj engineering design. Mqws of Woterfoi’cl. cross-country trip Saturday in Brand granted the annulment ^ ‘^^^tmcate which cited Springer, N.M. Friday, it was learned, and Waterford’s water system as an “We held a family council and awarded the actress custody of outstanding engineering decided to go the rest of the way [the couple’s two children, achievement, to I^s Angeles by train,’’ Bauer sergio, 7, and Rebecca, 2. . presented gaid - * ★ * jointly to the township and to Bauer, his wife, his l,t-year- grando and Miss Castenada I old daughter Laraine, and his carried secretly in 1960. At that|^°^i*']^„ „f„"Sineeis, which 11-year-old son, Steve, have P.^d-u “7;;;7„;^-;/‘ha7band ^ ^be died from town to town seeing: , bp Tack liovle an^ certiiicate also siaiea me i.voar.piH PhriQ. ^oyie, ";,yater system, which was in- America, while 3-year-old Chris- Irish crooner-boxer once threat- [. SYSTEMS INCORPORATED The project, which cost an estimated $8 million, incorporated 11 independent systems which formerly operated in the township, according to Philip Hampton, Johnson and Anderson vice president who was on hand for the presentation. Scientists Say UFOs : topher rc^e on the back of his deportaUon from the father s bike. United States for violation of; immigration laws. I Chnncfi A/lppfinn Brand is the same judge who; v-nunte /vieenny < ^ ^be bitteri visitation rights suits between' for Lawyer, W/fe p^ando and his former wife, k I I I • k A LI. VIRGINIA. Minn. 'AP. --LQUQMinQ AAOlTBr Mrs. Tom Carey, on a drive to7°"’^ ^ W Duluth from the family’s Lake „. .. . , | Eshquaguma home with her ^he Mexican actress, known| ^VASHINGTON (UPIl — In surveilance, we should explore five children, met her husband ^0 moviegoers as “Movita, northern California, two it.’’ on the road. Their cars collided sued Brando for divorce in highway patrolmen report * * * not far from the lake home. No June, 1967, charging nientalj^gjgbing a glowing cigar-[ McDonald said if the earth one was hurt. cruelty, but the suit never gpt;shaped craft with red and white; was being watched, it was being Carey, a director of the to trial. lights drop from the sky, swiftly done by a society so advanced Minnesota Defen.se Trial Law- reverse its direction, hover, that its technology “would be yers Association, said there 'The great age of Hebrew fjnaUy jjjsappgaf indistinguishable from magic,“ The system features 135 miles of water main piping, on. ground-level six million-gallon reservoir, two elevated storage tanks, and a telemetering trol system which oversees the supply of water for the entire township. ★ ★ The ^Township Boa night also tabled a request for extra funds from acting Fire Chief Russel See until Township j Supervisor Elmer Johnson could be present to answer questions. Johnson was not able to attend last night’s meeting because he was at a national conference for township officials Washington, D.C. OFF-DAY WORK See requested last week that the board appropriate the funds to the' fire department to com- would be no legal action. (Political Advertittmcnl) prophecy began in the 700s B.C. RALPH HUDSON Tuesday, August 6th lOTEFOR Ralph Hudson Waterford Township Representative to the Oakland County Board of Supervisors District 25 VOTE FOR YOUR VOICE IN REPRESENTATION Vot6 Democratic Paid for by Ralph Hudson From around the world in to earthmen. He also said many recent years come reports of UFO sightings were reported up similar sightings of disc-shaped and down the Eastern Seaboard or elongated objects - around the time of the including some that seem to Northeast power blackout late respond^ to lights flashed from in 1965 — precipitated by pensate firemen for working on their off days. See, who is acting chief while Chief Lewis Goff recovers from an illness, said increased sick leaves and vacatiwi have created a personnel shortage in the department. See said it has been necessary for him to ask men to work on their off days in order to keep at least one man on duty at each station at all times. The board is expected to make a- recommendation as to the amount of funds allotted to the department next week, when Superyisor Johnson is present to answer budgetary questions. OUTSIDE SERVICE In other action last night, the EAR WAX? Don’t use pointed objects that may puncture eardrums. KERID ‘Drops help soften and loosen hard wax plugs. Put KERIO Drops in, wash earwax out. Ask the Pharmacist for KERID Drops. BOB-LO FUN CRUISES Daily at I0-1I-2-4 & 6 o’clock MOONLIGHT Friday-Saturday—Sunday 9 P.M. 10 P.M. MOONLIGHT CRUISE SATURDAY Fun starts as soon as you step aboard the Bob-Lo boat —you can dance, sightsee or just relax in your deck chair. At Bob-Lo island more fun awaits you—the greatest array of new thrill rides and fun attractions you’ve ever seen—picnic groves and playgrounds—even 12 baseball diamonds. Round trip $2.00. Children OOi;:, Moonlights $2.00. Island Admission 10(t. Dance band on every cruise. DOCK FOOT OF WOODWARD-WO 2-9622 CHILDREN FREE MONDAYS - Children under 12 ride free Monday* fwm Detroit if accompanied by a parent. WYANDOTTE SAILINGS - Every Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, 11:45 A.M. Bishop Park Dock, foot of Superior Boulevard. CHILDREN FREE from Wyandotte every Tuesday. the ground by flashing back in the same pattern. ★ ★ A group of prominent scientists told Congress Monday these unidentified flying objects (UFOs) may be visitors from other worlds, natural pheno^ mena such as electrical disturbances or hallucinations, j Whatever they are, the six scientists at a power pulse the cause of which has never been identified. “rhere is a puzzling and slightly disturbing’’ coincidence here,” he said. Like Rice? gAGU A biochemist reports that he has developed a milky synthetic substitute for blood. The substance has kept rats alive and ... . in apparent good health for ^ [scientists at a s y m p o s i u m j,lood. sponsored by the House Science; _________________ ______ Committee agreed it is time to stop laughing off he “hardcore” group of unexplained UFOs and start long-term, government-backed programs to understand them. beef. Add one cup Ragu' Spaghetti Sauce, one cup cooked rice and stir until thoroughly heated. SPAGHETTI SAUCE t Political Advertiumant) board tabled a request from the Pontiac Lake Inn to serve liquor outside the inn on the premises. Trustee Robert Richmond expressed concern that the request would allow curb service for boats on Pontiac Lake, and all the trustees agreed that might cause problems. The board tabled the request until next Monday, when proprietors of the inn would be invited to explain\heir intentions. ★ ★ * Also, Township Clerk Arthur Salley tpld board members no response has been made to the township’s call to fill the post of director of recreation i n Waterford. The post was left vacant when Director Thomas Simons died April 30. RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSl BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP RESIDENTS VOTE AUGUST 6th For Better PUBLIC SAFETY IN BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP 34 men to protect 40,000 residents in 25 square miles is not adequate. VOTE ★ PROPOSED ★ MILUGE 2.7 ADDITIONAL PUBLIC SAFETY VOTE Bloomfield Township Board Published Pontiac Press July 30, Aug. 1 & Aug. 5, 1968 [DEFY ANALYSIS I Those appearing at the sym-Iposium included Dr. J. Allen iHynek, director of Northwestern !Universk4ty’s Dearborn [Observatory; Dr. James E. 'McDonald, senior physicist with I the Institute of Atmospheric I Physics at the University of Arizona: and Dr. Robert M. L. [Baker Jr., from the Computer [Sciences Corp., El Segundo, jCalif. j The scientists agreed that too many sightings have dified analysis to rule out the possibility of surveillance by I beings from outer space. I 1 “This is a possibility I take [very seriously,” McDonald said. “If there is even a chance of M Surcharge makes tax-exempt bonds even more attractive Send’for free bond table showing possible savings Now that the 10% surcharge on Federal Incofne Tax is a certainty, tax-exempt bonds make more attractive investments than ever. ■With interest on these state and local government securities free of aU federal, state and local income-taxes, they give Michigan residents a worthwhile tax break. And you can benefit even if your income tax bracket is as low as $14,000 (for married persons filing a joint return). You can check the possible savings with our special new table, “Tax-free Bonds versus Taxable Securities.” It tells you what yield you would have to obtain from stocks and other taxable investments to equal the after-taxes income of tax-exempt municipal bonds. Come in, phone, or write today for your free copy. First of Michigan CoRPOlRATipN FoM MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE flTmii Please First of Michigan Corporation “ North Woodward, Dept. K ingham, Michigan 48011 'lease send me your Tax-Free Bond Table. Phone 647-1400 Keep the gavel in good hands ★★★★★ Attorney, 12 years. Admitted to practice before the UnitecI States supreme Court, 1964. ----Just fee of - the^’Peace, Bloomfifeld, 8 years. Term ends December, 1968. Acting Justice, City of Bloomfield Hills, 2 years. Committee on Court Administration. Michigan State Bar Association. Chairman, Law Day, Oakland County Bar Ass'n. Chairman of Committee on Judicial Administration. National Association of Women Lawyers. Chairman of the Legislative Committee. Oakland County Judicial Association. Consultant on Civil and Political Rights to Governor’s Commission. Chairman. Bloomfield Youth Guidance of Oakland County Probate Court. Co-Chairman, Oakland County Traffic School Committee- Graduate of Northwestern University Law School, LL.B. Undergraduate studies •at Wellesley College. Additional studies at University of Detroit Law School, Wayne State University Law School, Harvard Graduate 'School of Public Administration, University of Michigan. ELECT ikucE GILBERT to 48*^ District Court District includes cities of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Sylvan Lake, Keego Harbor, Orchard Lake Village; Bloomfield Twp. and W. BloiimfielcbTwp. VOTE TUESDAY,AUG 6 ; - This ad paid for by Alica L. Gilbtrf THE PONTIAC PRESS,. TUESDAY. JUEV 80. 1908 B—11 usmess Helping Hand Goes Out Negroes Push Retailing I MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by thej Detroit Bureau of Markets as; of Monday. Mart Irregularly Higher . Ford Reveals Steels, Motors Improve Gains Earnings Rise By PHIL THOMAS AP Business Writer industry, and the best way to do and executive levels initially this was to utilize those people and then working down to tl|e NEW YORK — A er UD d both—Negroes in re- middle supervisory and basic ® ^ tailing.” sales jobs, finding job openings and finding the people to fit 'there were three them, interesting young people NEW YORK (AP) — Steelsjtos tagged along. Leading! The Dow Jones industrial av- Produce FRUITS Apples, Duchess, bu. Apples, Red, Astrachen, bu, . Apples, Red, Bird, bu. Apples, transparent, 12-ql. crt Blackberries, 1J-pl. cri. Blueberries, IJ-qt. crt... Cherries, Spur, 8-qt. crt. Cherries, Sweet, U-qt. crt. , VECETABLES Beans, Green Round, bu.... Beans, Wax, bu............ Cabbape, Red, bu................. Cabbage, Sprouts, bu Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu. Carrots, bch. .................. Carrots, topped, bu.............. Celery, Pascal Hearts, cello pk dz. bags...................... Corn, Sweet, S-dz. bag Cucumbers, dill size, Vj bu. Cucumber, pickle size, 'b bu. Cucumbers, dill size, Vz bu. Dill. oz. bch. Eggplant, Long Type, pk. bskt. Kohlrabi, dz. bch. jand motors improved gains in!stocks in both groups advanced an irregularly higher stock mar-1 fractions to about a point. Iket early this afternoon. Trad-!®^UE CHIPS BOOSTED I ing was moderate. | Selective buying boosted some js.soj Gains had a slight margin! blue chips and higher-quality jjjiover losses on the New York!glamor-growth issues in scat-*5“(J Stock Exchange. itered sections of the list as the The Associated Press average|market tested the ground for a 6'.5o of 60 stocks at noon was up .3 at' possible recovery more. 331.7, with industrials up **75j rails up .7, and utilities off .3. voted to helping Negroes move upward into managemerit and executive jobs has been formed , , , . . , , u . i ' ' ' i- by Negroes who won top jobs in Pf°P'® meeting las in |ob.s m retailing counseling the retail industrv November. Now there are about retailers on how to develop com- 46 Pet. Gain Made , ■ ■ . 75. They are all Negroes and munications with the black com- If f w Twenty years ago It was con-respon.sible jobs munity in which they have a in 1st Half of Year Sidered beneath the Negro m a „ responsible position to extend a major with the hard-epre' unemployed nTTTRnTT tAPt _ Fnrd Mo-goals. These include "getting program.s to bring about an in- -- ■■’V a'-------1 — 'f r M i!fiq hPfamo ttiA the retail industrv to opeii jobs crea.se in the upgrading of change. Trading was flower,tor Co. Monday became d^e "This is no longer true.” ;.^g^ 33, g„ ,g than on Monday. Bow Valley In-third of the Big Three auto Rrant'ord is a Neem in a rz'. .1?.... dustries was the volume leader, I maker* to announce major in- sponsible position who not onlv' i.nagimtn METHODS adding a point or so. Also very!creases in earnings for the first dggjgied jq extend his own hand active. Reliance Insurance and half of the year with a 46 per ggj others Ip extend erage at noon was Up .24 at 883.60. j Prices were irregularly higher on the American Stock Ex- 3,! Wall Street, however, was still!Stylon advanced more than 2 cent increase. theirs as well. in a watch-and-wait mood, as-each, while California Computer Chrysler Corp. previously re- ,.jf,g happening to- cpccino fV»o nrnfife Aifiira inlanri U7\rlo T ahnrafnrioc u;orp 1. nnrtoH ronr^rrl fir«:t-half Parn-.........- 3^5o1 Steels responded to a report j sessing the profits future inland Wyle Laboratories were 1-'ported record first-half earn- ^ 40-year-old foun- 3 “!that settlement of the steel la- view of the income surtax and j point losers. British Petroleum fionorQi Mntnr« . ’ . . . ’ 2.75 bor contract might be immi-1 keeping an eye cocked on the climbed nearly a point, Gulf i.5o|nent, thus averting a strike. Au-SCzechoslovak crisis. 'American a fraction. The New York Stock Exchange earnings and General Motors g^^ chairman of the Nation-Corp. reported profits $48 mil- g, ^ j^gjgjj Advisory Group lion ahead of last year s first Ford reported profits of $390.5 ‘NOT HIS STICK’ million, or $3.57 per share of A marine engineer who common stock for the period, moved into business after decid-Sales totaled $7.6 billion. ing “engineering wasn’t my In the first half of 1967, Ford stick,” Branford is assistant ‘reported earnings of $267.1 mil- public relations director for lion, or $2.44 a share, on sales W.T. Grant Co., a junior depart-of $6.0 billion. ment store chain with about PROFIT REDUCED 1,100 outlets across the nation. . . , Branford said he decided to The 10 per cent income tax surcharge, retroactive to last . obvious to me that Jan. 1 tor corporations, reduced Ford’s first-half profit bv $35.2 was a need tor a line oi million, or 23 cents a share. ‘^onimunication between he The report was not issued un- black community ami the retail til after the New York Stock Exchange closed Monday. Ford common closed at 49’h, off "h. The company’s 1968 first - half .. ^ 1)1 earnings fell short of the record I set in 1965, the most profitable year in automotive history. In the first six months of that year. Ford reported profits of $438.1 million, equal to $3.95 a share, on sales of $5.9 billion. WALTER W. BRANEOHI) Currency-Control Plates Nov/ Used by Army i n Viet Hraiiforfl said the group used word of moulh, lectures, and brochure.s to deliver it.s message. "The ’brochures highlight Negroes in the industry,” he .said. "We are .saving to those who read them that these are people who have made it in the retail industry, that the companies are sincere when they say they want you, and that this is the kind of money \ou can make.” Branford said Itie group wanted to "develop a positive image of the retail industry. "We make no attempt to intimidate. All enlightened management, if made aware of the siliialion, will do something about it. If nothing happens, then we try to bring our person to the attention of someone who will recognize his abilities. GOALS THE SAME "What it boils down to is tl;.is: The American black man wants the same things the American white man wants.” WASHINGTON (AP) — Theiforced to .progressively tighten ^ ^ ^ U.S. Command has introduced j controls over American curren-i TM * ♦ a ^something like a credit card aslcy in South Vietnam to curb r- * U f tnco°*^ uv ^ newest weapon against black black market activities, first-half profit of $968 million , t . ’ on sales of $11.7 billion. Chry- marketing and. dollar profiteer- * a * u sler’s first-half profits of $148.8 ‘"J. ^«“^b Vietnam, Pentagon One of the latest restrictions, million topped the 1965 mark of . Pentagon officials say, went 'z Jjjg 3 Currency control plates must into effect la.st May; A $200 lim- Ford worldwide sales of cars, be used when a serviceman it on the amount of scrip a serv-trucks and tractors in the first ‘^'onverts his military script to iceman can convert into ca.sh 'Hanoi Must Act to Earn Booming Half' iiucNs diiu uciviuij, ... uio ........... WA.SHINGTON (AP) - Secre- ha^lP()f t*his veaMo^a!eV2 6 mil- he spends it on when he is about to return to the of State Dean Rusk said to- lion units, up 300,000 from the certain high-priced ... . a.,, th.i fh« imitoa <;fqtpq ,.qn. first half of last year. USW Taking Talks Down to the Wire DETROIT LIVESTOCK | DETROIT (AP)—(USDAl- Cattle 400,; -'sughter steer- —."-i I9.00-20.— _________ Hogs zou, narrows and gills U.S, 2 andjCaroPU i .ue 3 200-230 pounds 20.50-20.75; 2 and 4 220-,CaroT&T .76 2<0 pounds 20.00-20.50; sows U.S. 1 and 3 Carrier Cp 1 300-400 pounds 17.00-17.75. ' ........... CHICAGO LIVESTOCK I CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - Hogs' 3,500; butchers 35 to 75 lower; 1-2 sdrted 210-220 lbs 2t.50-21.75 ; 2-3 210-230 lbs 20.50-21 00; sows 1-3 340-400 lb sows 17.00-18.00. Cattle -1,000; choice 950 - 1,250 lb slaughter steers yield grade 2 to 4 27.00-28.00; mixed good and choice 26.5027.M; th^TM Sheep 300; , ________ 27.50. u juu, several lots choice and 90-105 lb spring slaughter lambs good and choice 24.00-25.50. American Stock Exch. azilLtPw 1 ■it Pet .4e impbl Chib (hds.) High LOW Lest Chg. 5 15’z I5Z. -15''z -t- '/. 2 42Ss 42% 42% — ■'8 285 22% 21% 21% — Ve . 18 39% 38Vz 38% 38 7% 7% 7% .. 122 7'/. 7 7Vi -E % 14 3', 3 3 . . . 21 2834 28'e 28'/z -E Vz 123 W'% 16-14 16Z/t + Vi 130 13% 13'-z 13% + 7% 20 7% 7% 7%-EM4 30 13% 13Vz 13Vz lE 143 9% 9 9% -E 7 397/i 394/4 397/4 5 U" 31 28'. 44 16 z 18% 18'/4 . , 1 28 28 - 15% 16 -E '. I .33t 330 9% 9'/4 9% .. 89 9'4 9 9',. -E 5 50 55 19% ... .... - B 66V% 6SV% —■ X't . 4 53 52?/« 52'/* — ’A 16 383/4 38^ 383/4 - I 2 24 24 24 .... 5 37^i 372M» 37% 186 62V2 (60% 61% +2 70 43’/4 42% 43 . 102 58Va 58Vti 56V4 + ’/. 23 273/e 26% 27Vb +1% 7 39 V4 38% 38% I 70% 70% 70% .J 46% 46 V4 46% 29 56Vi 55Va 55V» 17 54% 54% 54% 57 50Va 50% 50% 18 28% 28‘‘ 130 583/4 56^ 22 26% 253_ .. 15 473.4 47% 473.7i 218 6% 6% -w,. - 88 15% 15V4 153/4 f% .70 25% 24Va 243,'4 18 18»/4 H 18% 8 65’ '' 7% 7% + ’ 19 19 - ’ I 11% 11% 11% — ’ 1 1 AAohwkDS wl Molybden NewPark Wn Ormand Ind RIC Group Saxon Indust Scurry >Rain Statham lust Syntax Cp .40 k 35% 35% 16 9 8% 13 14'/« 133/4 1334 - CorGW 2.50a Cowtas .50 CoxBdeas .50 crow Coll Crown Cork CrownZe 2,20 Cruc StI 1.20 Cudahy Co Curtiss Wr 1 Dan Riv 1.20 DaycoCp 1.60 Day PL 1.52 Deere Co 2 DelMnte 1.10 DeltaAIr .40 DenRGr 1.10 DetEdis 1.40 Det Steel .60 DiaSh^ft) 1.40 38% 38% - 3 ...J 70% 70% 12 46% 46 V4 46% + ’ 29 56Va 55Va 55V» - ' 17 54% 54% 54% rf ' 57 50Va 50% 50% 18 28% 28% 28%-+ ’ 130 583/4 56% ,58% +1' 22 26% 253/4 26 15 473,4 47% 473.7i 18 513s 50% 5Ui - 39 343e 34’* 34V4 + ’ 32 36'”2 36 36 -3 n 613^ 60% 61 — ’ 28 30 .293% 30 + 3 .......I'41% 4l3i ■ ’ I 373% 37Va 173/4 mi I 54Va 5434 + 39 94% 94 94 - 4 20 20 20 .. 33 68Va 68 68% + 204 145% 143% 144% + 4 45 44% 44Va - 37 40% 40% 40% - - 5 297 296Va 296Va - % 14 13% 13% 13% + Vi 1 53% 53% 53% — % 11 36% 36V 17 77 76V- . 30 473% 463/4 46% 23 40% 40’ 39 24% 24’ ............... Va unOIICal 78 75 73% 743/4 + %,UnlonPaclf 2 20 10% 10% 10% I f % uniroval 120 19 503/4 50% 50’/i - % unitAlrLIn 1 73 77% 76 77% + %iy^ 20 22% 22% 223/4 - ’/Biynlt Cp .60e 23 24% 24% 24% + % prult 1 40 wv 1!?: If T ‘J”" ^ 'i Borax la TO 32zi 31W 32^ + ivl USGypsm 3a —]Vl------ US Lines .50p 18 242/. 24'/z 24'/z - Vz ............. 3 34H 34H 34" ,,07 /. oil,. 915* 95* O’is Elev 2 ’4 iral 375* 37%“^^ ' 17’ Im 3m ir* + v.!Owenslll 1/15 2 30., ??’■ ■‘t!- PacGEI 1 5 23" 4' 20% 72 35% 34V« 35' 4 22% 9 41% Fedders .60 FedDStr n.95 Flitrol 1.40 FIrestne 1.50 FstChrt 1.24f Flintkote 1 Fla Pow 1.44 FlaPwLt 1.76 FMC Cp FoodFafr FordMot 44iForMcK -.4. 1 FrelieSul T40 OllFruehCp 1.70 27 15Va 15 15% _F— 61 61% 59% 60’^a 38 16%** 16'/a 16’/a 36 31 30% 30% 31 39V* 38 383>4 . _ 17 37Vt 36% 36% — % ,23 30% 30i% 30% ‘ 37 57V* 56% 56% 19 33’.''2 33V* 33V* 35 29 28% 28% 67 42Vi 26% 26% + ' % 41% 41% — % ,60 36 35% 35% — % —G— 214 47V» 46'/* 47'/» +1 32 22'% 22’/4 22% + Vi 90 591 —P. 15 34% 34% 23 27% 27% 27% + - Fund. Now after 4 years my’"^ustry has been in the dol-investment shows a $3,500 paper drums for about four years, Reloss. My broker says not to'’•ecently come to me worry because insurance Stocksredemptions are going have been in a slump. Would ‘1°'''’’ fd sales are going up in u . . r .*■ z advise me to take this loss three leading insurance unds Howfd Block of 5660 Dixie ( j^to something els■-« ■‘•vaopea to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. —Adv. STOCK AVERAGES —2 Deposits Fisc 8,500,032,212.63 Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock 8 94 9 67 Compllad by The Asseciated Press 19.06 20.831 “ 8.25 9.02! . , ^ 14.65 15.99 Net Change 40 56V* S4'/2 - 687. 68>% 70% 70’/. 30V* 30 12 54 53% in the management company which distributes your fund’s shares. Earnings declined sharply for 9 pionths ended inj A. A quarterly dividend of 40 cents a share was paid on these dates during 196T; March 10. June 9, Sept. 8 and Dec. 8. A 2 per cent stock dividend was distributed Dec. 20. The cor- 22 68’ 6 70' IS 30', 13 54 183 6?' 10,366,919,739,39 13,108,654,211.22- Growth ____on Electromes •llington Fund (Windsor Fund i*Nomlnal Quotations 9.88 10.7711968 High ,13.34 14.5011968 LOW 20.21 21.97 1967 High = R L nS^^c™ f^:^-Pond7 ..Tstr-th^.^ln« US?MnvP.Rfmpnt- in the in.surance in-!^’?.'"^^ (Copyright, 1968) In*. Roll. util. Stocks -EJ +.7 -.3 +.3 472.4 194.2 149.2 33,1.7 472.1 193.5 149.5 331.4 480.4 197.2 151.5 337.2i 479.1 205.0 1S1.9 340.8' 478.2 208.8 150.7 340." 435® 165.6 135.* wiiiinvestment in the insurance in-; 413.4 159.4 1M.5 ^2.0 dus'try should be undertaken asi f B—11 I'HE PONTIAC PRESS, TI ESDAV. JCLV 30. 1908 Students Are Increasingly Important Political Force (EDITOR'S NOTE ~ This ntu-1emr'geiic journeymen in cam-;Vietnam War probably con-j deni generation is n deeply in- paign worl^rooms, performing!tributed to what President^ volved one. And with its oppo.st- the unglamorous but essential'.I nhnson callecj the! tion to the Vietnam war coin-chores that are necessary to “divisiveness" in American life! ctding w i i h a presidential win elections. which he said was a prime fac-j election year, it has channeled 'TARGET PUBLIC decision not to seek d good deal of this involvement „ " .. .. reelection. into the uxirld of politics. e M ! .s e r s Many students also feel they are providing a solid and influ- . ‘ have ac a have opened the wav for what ' ential political force. I target Sc ■ ~ « dynamic re- ------ Their numbers.- savs Dr. of the ■‘American By GARVEN HUDGINS Kdward Joseph Shoben ‘ Jr. of ^reani by opposing the policies AP Education Writer ,hp American rouncil o n **"d practices of government BLOOMINGTON, Ind. In Education "give them a '^^e Establishment, this presidential year, it would significant corporate identity ^ ^or every student attracted seem, the road to the White and imply potential power.” ^y the glamor of the national House winds through the na- * ★ ★ presidential election, there are tion's college campuses. others who have forgone vaca- .Speaking engagements a t **ie ranks behind them are {jons this year to work on local colleges, big or small, iden- h'gh school students, in- and state issues, tification with the younger «'dive as campaign "students volunteers generation, enrollment of .youth envelope-stuffers, doorbell registered between 3,000 and in their causes - all these have ^’"gdrs and canvassers. ^ voters right here in become part of the election In this campaign year of 1968, Bloomington,” said James campaign. students are courted politically Wood, a .sociology professor at * * * despite the fact that the ma-Indiana University. ”A school The reason: Six million col-jority are still not of voting age. reorganization measure pa.ssed lege students, many of whom But through extensive news overwhelmingly as a result of have attained a .solidarity which media coverage of their ac- heavy student involvement. I politicians cannot ignore. tivities and views the students think this is a true measure of Motivated by an emotional can, and do, exert an influence student political influence.” reaction to such major issues as »n events. Vietnam, the racial crisis and In fact the vociferous op- poverty they have become position of many students to the government major fromjso Involved, he plans to con-|has actively worked in Bloom-1 ‘‘It created a student com-Louisville, Ky., c a n v a s s e d|tinue political activity after he ington politics since sophomoreImittment,” .she said. "There’s voters for the late Sen. Robert; graduates. days, said the Vietnam War is|an awful lot of reforming that F. Kennedy in the Indiana! Pam Mitchell, a raven-haired responsible for the surge ofihas to be done. Kids are tired of primary and like many others,21-year-old Indiana senior whojstudent interest in politics. parties which nominate can- c Junior Editors Quiz on- MOON CRATERS QUESTION: Why are there craters on the moon? ANSW'ER: Elver since telescopes capable of giving us a close look at the moon’s surface have been perfected, astronomers have been pondering this question. There are two main theories. One is that the craters are caused by meteorites, or fragments of rock from space, which, attracted by the moon’s gravity, hurtle toward it, throwing out debris in a circular shape around the point of impact. Many thousands of meteors are attracted to our earth each day, hut our atmosphere burns almost all of them by friction. Another theory about moon craters is that they caused by volcanic eruptions of hot material from below the surface. In 1966, a number of space probes from earth landed on the moon's surface and took some remarkable photographs. The picture above is based on one of these taken by Lunar Orbiter II. It .showk the crater Copernicus, with peaks in its center said to be 1,000 feet high. From a study of the evidence, scientists have concluded that most craters were formed by meteorites but that some have definitely resulted from volcanic action.' (You can win $10 cash plus AP's handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to .Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) REPRESENTATIVE Because of their intense involvement in the recent presidential primary in their state, Indiana Universit y students appear to be representative of the politically committed youth of today. Yet their views do not differ fundamentally from those expressed on the quiet, green campuses of some colleges considered the citadels of the apathetic .student, ★ ★ ★ I Students vary widely in the; depth of their commitment to' politics, but they share a con-j iViction that they are exercising; genuine political influence in' this election year in which IIH; million people will reach voting! I I "Students are becoming increasingly involved,” said Jerry; Abramson, 22-year-old senior at Indiana. | "Vietnam is what has thrown! them into this kind of activism.; Students really feel now they! have a stake in what the nominating conventions decide.; They want to do something! [about it, through canvassing,! telephoning, giving dormitory; speeches. But this TTind of ac-] tivism has to be constructive. Not like Columbia.” Abramson, an economics and ri.s. "In several years we may even be able to work inside the party to support reforms.” REGISTRATION DRIVE didates who are no different' Harris said he registered from other candidates.” i student voters at Indiana, then ★ * ★ !carried his registration drive off Pam an English major from campus to the citizens of Hollywood, I'la., b e 11 e v e s; Bloomington, students will grow into a major "I was surprised,” he said, political force. So does her "at the number of people in friend, 21-year-old journalism Bloomington who told me they major Jcrrv Harris of Kentland, I didn’t vote. There’s nothing you Ind. ' ican say to that. You just have "It’s going to act as a to figure "O.K. buddy, thats permanent magnet,” said Har- your bag.’ ” ^ (PBlIticil AdvTtliemi liticil Adv«rU»»m»ntl Youth MEETING THE MIGHTY - Today, the young people of America are .some of the busiest and most dedicated workers in the campaigns of the leading candidates, including (clockw'ise from lower left) Sen. rirnrc ELECT Non-Partisan ROBERT E. CUNNINGHAM Exparienced Pontiac Attorna/ CITY OF PONTIAC DISTRICT 50 DISTRICT JUDGE Eugene McCarthy, D-Minn.; former Vice President Hichard Nixon; Vice President Hubert H, Humphrey and New York's Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. Laiv . . . Order . . . Ktjuid Juslicel ALLEN EK WON $2,000. KARL ZUZEL WON $2,000. m* EDITH A. CHASE WON $100. JOSEPH J.CHETOCK WON $100. SPAGHETTI SAUCE DON'T MISS THE BlGS"MADE-FOR-MICHIGAr CUliVI I model CA12D 11.6 cu. ft. Economy Food Freezer Tremendous appliance savings direct from factory tg_v 0^ HERE’S JUST ONE OF THE MANY STORE-WlOE SPECIALS . . • Upright Convenience • Holds up to 406 lbs. of food • FREE food spoilage warranty • FREE Delivery • FREE Factory branch service limited time offer buy now and save During This Sale 0#i/v $10900 BNGMiHlllinERS tUMBHIDSIIIOGO FMYEIIPPLIXHCE 589 Orchard Lake Ave. 1108 W. Hi Win up to^2,000 Win a great '68 Camaro Sunny Dollars Plus At Sunoco...where the big game is rch«>c nerc»»>ry.'Llc*nMd driver* only. Void whdre prohibitod. More big game winners; Bert H. Brandenburg, Jr., won a Camaro. Donna Mayis WeatheHord won $100. Willis A. McGowan won $100. Louis C. Gable won $100. Carl Dull won $100. Howard Hoffman won $100. George C. Schwark won $100. ^ Margaret O’Leary won $100. Laurence E. Monk won $10Q. WATTING WHILE VILLAGE IS SEARCHED—South Vietnamese villagers out so they would not be in the way in case of a fire-fight. The soldiers sit in a group waiting while troops of the U.S. 199th Light Infantry Brigade found nothing suspicious and the villagers were allowed to retui-n to then- search their hamlet southwest of Saigon. The Americans moved the people homes. Soldier, Civilian, Enemy Varied Faces of War... SHORT-TIMER-Staff Sgt. Richard Trot- wirepho... ter of Buffalo, N. Y., smokes a cigarette gnn. Trotter has so few days left in South during a sweep through suspected Vietcong Vietnam that he can keep track by number- areas in streams and paddies south of Sai- ing the segments of his hatband. BRIDGING SAIGON WITH MEKONG DELTA-Givilian and military traffic flows across a pontoon bridge constructed by U.S. and Vietnamese engineers to span the Vaico Oriental River, a tributary of the Saigon River, at Ben Luc southwest of Saigon. The temporary bridge is under heavy guard after the original bridgC'^was destroyed by the Vietcong-.—The bridge carries traffic of Route 4 linking Saigon with the Mekong Delta. / / HOT DAY ALONG THE DMZ-A Marine taking part in a sweep of a North Vietnamese staging area in the central demilitarized zone sweats profusely from the over-100- degree temperatures. There were no contacts with the enemy during this operation and the only casualties were some cases of heat exhaustion and a twisted ankle. TOO YOUNG TO DIE' This North Vietnamese .soldier,, captured by members of the U.S. 101st Airborne Division in Son Tung village, approximately 25 miles from Hue, lies in the sand with his hands raised in the sign of surrender. Paratroopers found him and two other North Vietnamese in the village. He told the Americans: “I thought I was too young to die and I wanted to surrender.'^’ He was interrogated and then sent to a POW center. THE PROFESSIONAL -Marine Capt. Tom Eagen, 26, of Tteaneck, N. J., relaxes outside his bunker at Khe Sanh, South Vietnam. He is the commanding officer of Echo Company, Second Battalion, First Marines. He is a professional Marine with three Purple Hearts. ( _1 ilE rOXTl ACMyiKSS. 1 rKSDAY, J_l_ L V 3 State GIs Listed as Killed in War WASHINGTON (APt- Three Springs: Spec. 4 Jack R. San-, Michigan soldiers were among t>orn, husband of Mrs. Joyce t. AC IT c Sanborn of Detroit; and Spec 46 U.S. servicemen killed in re- , _ ■ , r i i * , 4 Dennis J. Speck, son of Mr cent fighting in 'Vietnam, the Douglas R. Speck of Defense Department reported Liyonia. Monday. ★ ★ ★ Killed were Sjwc. 4 Terry A. Speck previously had been re-hrechette, son of Mr. and Mrs. missing in action. Willard A. Frechette of Cedar ^ In p,.„ band of Mrs. Essie -M. Lee, of , Oakland/Detroit, was reported dead not! nc«rn- 3S 8 TeSUlt Of hOStile aCtion. I Tax AccounforTf Failed to File COLUMBIA, S.C lAPi - H. Harry Elfland, an accountant in Florence who prepares income tax returns for others, pleaded guiltv Monday to charges of failing to file a 1%5 federal income tax return for himself. Federal Judge Charles Simons sentenced Elfland to six months in jail and five years probation and ordered him to pay the 1965 tax owed. thinking about improving your home? 3^' House Okays] Exemption Bill on Postal Cuts Death Notices The Hill Cumorah Pageant More than 450 persons will participate in the 31st annual religious pageant at Palmyra, N.Y. The outdoor spectacle depicts the rise and fall of an ancient American civilization according to the Book of Mormon. It will be presented July 29-Aug. 3 on the broad slope of Hill Cumorah. Then shouldn't you see us soon? Loons ore ovoil-obfe up to 36 months. Take advantage of our services —after all they're for you. Call 335-949:i CHIEF PONTIAC EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION 790 Joslyn Ave.-Pontiac (Political Advortiscmontl “VOTE TO ELECT A MAN WHO’LL PROTECT!" lOlR fHILDRE.\ for Prosecuting Attorney - Democrat LOilfSX FAIRBROTNER '"LViiT AUGUST 6 ELECT Non-Partisan Robert Cunningham Experienced Pontile Attorney DISTRICT JUDGE CITY OF PONTIAC DISTRICT 50 1 Propose; • A Full-Time Diitrict Judge e A Night Court for Day Worker* e Weekend Arraignment* e A Court Dedicated to Low, Order and Equal Juitice Paid Far By Kobrrt Cunninthnm WASHINGTON (API - A bill I exempt the Post Office from •nment manpower cut-, has. been sent to a House-j ; conference committee must act before Friday to ; [avert the first in a series of-I!postal service reductions. > HoPse approved the bill lay while the Senate was ig more exemptions to the manpower cutbacks mandated by the recently passed 10 per income surtax bill. * * ■-* empted by. the Senate were agents and assistant U.S. ys. John D. McClellan, D-lArk , proposed exemption of the iFBI saying the country was de-Ipending on it for security during: la period of turbulence. iwiLL BE NEEDED Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., tacked on the attorney's exemp-Ition, arguing that more prosecutors will be needed to handle leases brought by the FBI, I Postmaster Gen. W. Marvin Watson has said that if Congress does not approve an exemption for the Post Office by CLARK, CECIL J,; July 29, 1968; 19'^ Ellwood; Age 70; beloved husband of Sybil Clark; dear father of Mrs. Charles (Laura) Lowe, Mrs. Thomas (Mary) H addon, Jack, Joseph and James Clark; dear brother of Mrs. Mabel Durham and Mrs. C. M. Baxter; also survived by 13 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 31 at 2 p.m. at Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with Mr. George Willis officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Mr. Clark will lie in state at the funeral home. DITCH, ROBERT L.; July 28, 1968 ; 5,380 Marvin Road, Independence Township; age 54; beloved husband of Rosalie F. (Gagne) Ditch; dear father of Mrs. David Hill, Robert J., Leon M., Richard V. and Raymond L. Ditch; dear brother of Mrs. Eugene MeWhinney, Mrs. Ira Scott, John L. and George Ditch; also survived by 12 g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 31, at 11 a.m. at the Lewis E. Wint T'uneral Home, Clarkston. Interment in Lakeview Cemetery. Mr. Ditch will lie in state at the funeral home. this weekend he will put into ef- ^LLIS, ANNIE BELL; July 27, feet reduced weekend window-service hours and street-corner, collections. 1968; 555 Elliott S t r e e t, Detroit; Age 58; dear mother of George E. Howard; dear sister of George Green and Sadie Mae Abram; also survived by nine g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held August 1, at 1 p.m. at Frank Carruthers Funeral Home with Rev.' Chester R. Trice, officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Ellis will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. Wednesday. As part of this all govern-^ , ment agencies must cut bacl^tO| iges; 199 Ogemaw; These are the first of a series of proposed postal cutbacks that eventually could lead to the shuttfering of 12,000 small branches. To get congressional approval of his 10 per cent income sur-: charge. President Johnson had to agree to a cut of $6 billion in federal spending. their 1966 personnel levels. For] the Post Office, this would mean a loss of 83,000 employes. CHRIST ARRESTED by Roman soldiers in the Hill Cumorah Pageant. According to Mormon belief, Jesus appeared In the New World after His crucifixion. Thousands arc expccicd lo view the spectacle July 29-Aug. 3 in Palmyra, N.Y. House Gives Okay on Missile Defense dear f|ther of Mrs. Alice Holley, Allan R. and James W. Housekeeper,, dear step father of Mrs. Francis Bearss,, Mrs. Verletta Belik and Mrs. Fern Thompson; dear brother of Mrs. Mary Buckwalter; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 31, at 11 a.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Housekeeper will lie in state at the funeral home. (Sug-I gested visiting hours 3 to 5 Waterford Township Director' and 7 to 9.) of Inspections E. R. Lawson ^p^- ADELAIDE; July 28, told the township board last irwindale; age 71; night ,his department cssued; Margaret 2,278 building permits this year from Jan. 1 to June 30. The figure compares with 1,957 permits issued for the same period last year, Lawson said. Building Is Up in Waterford | 2,278 Permits Issued in First Six Months j 4-BEDROOM RANCH ' “ WEST SUBURBAN 9 rooms with 4 bedrooms, brick and aluminum sided, 3 zone hot water heating system, 1 Vz baths, raised hearth fireplace, new wall-jo-wall carpeting. 2-car garage, large lot 225x300. This is a fine spot to raise a family or^ if you are sports minded, a wonderful place for horses or dogs. Reduced to $25,800, terms. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST.. PONTIAC 338-0466 Office Open Evenings & Sunday 1 to 4 Whiteside, Mrs. June Oxley Howard Keech and Phillip Klemm. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 31, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Horne, Drayton Plains. Inter-» ^ " ment in Lakeview Cemetery. The number of permits issued ^rs. Lipe will lie in state at WASHINGTON (I'PI) — The Russian or Chinese intercom spur anothi'r round in the arms floor manager of the bill, esti- for additional buildings and ex- funeral home. (Suggested House, ga‘ve the Pentagon a go- ,inental ballistic missiles. ' with Russia. mated that, all told, about $1 pansion of buildings was 647^ visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 lo ahead yesterday for its $5-billinn * * * "There is no assurance here Pinion was scheduled to be ap- This compared with 624 for the ;^ ^ ^ ^ . “thin" antiballistic missile rv a nonrecord vote of lOfi nronriated this vear for the^^™ •, • aOSCENDOSKY STANLEY S.; lfwal\hfst^rt of'r$lo»S The rest of the money ^//brokenJuly 29, 1968; 1089 Ortonville windfall for defense contractors, ‘ompt by Rep. Jeffer> Cohelan, contractors that with the would go for „procurement of foUo^ving categories, with com-] TT, n iminn mainriiv H-Calif., to delete from a $17- war in Vietnam possibly about the mi.ssiles and related 0Q“'P‘: parative 1967 figures: ] of memtoT pS ™k ,he billion mililarv Mostrpef,on ap-'to be ended, IheieTl be $100 me"l and coolloued , plumbing. Ml .468 in l%7i ploilo S ife aecunlrl;! Ihe propria.ion $263 million act b,11,00 or so co„li„„,„6 to How »^4evHopme„. on the pro-; ..................- I rniinirv demanded Dronint dc- aside to prepare facilities for into Ihcir pockets. gram, rnment Sikes, D-Fla , Known as the Sentinel the, u lopnunt of a defense against , .... ^ ^,3, d o; ^ The bill pas,sed by a roll call ' t ‘he relatively uuSophisH-, no | ^ ---- — • ‘ r-. I , . cated and limited threat posed speciions were maue uy umn tlQnt 0©rV/C6m©n by Chinese missiles'expected to ship officials, in the first six / IX-II I ready in the 1970s. But both months of 1968. Reported Killed proponents and opponents agree roll call 'ote of 349 to 32 and was sent lo the Senate. WILL BE OUTDATED Opponents said the 'thin" system would be outdated before it vvas finished, that there was doubt that it would work at all and that it would probably that it could very wi^ll serve as in Vieif Cnmhnt 'Pp "fi'st step" toward building cer ol III V iKil y^uiiiuui a s4(i.biiijon to $100-billion de-rate as the Pap .smear examim against the advanced tion administered by doctors, *8SB We are equipped to, serve you and your needs in any part of our natiori. SPARKS-GRIFFIN " Kl NEHAI; H()MK 46 Williams St. I’hone KE Sr»2FS ' WASHINGTON (AIM - Eight Russian ICBMs. servicemen killed in action in two-year study indicates. Road, Ortonville; age 59; beloved husband of Ella Oscendosky; dear father of Mrs. Jackie Lange, Linda, Bonnie and Dennis Oscendosky; dear stepfather of Arnold McGechy; dear brother of Mrs. Bernard Hanson, Mrs. Clark Wheaton, Will, lueo, John and Joseph Oscendosky. Funeral service will be held Thursday, August 1, at 2 p.m. at C. F, Sherman Funerai Home, with Rev, Gerald Mitchell officiating. Mr. Oscendosky will lie in state at the funeral home, 135 South Street. Ortonville. They S- Olson, Ele,. Changed from missing to where she'll Theater Cash Need Prompts Telethon SAN FRANCISCO The American Co lubd-raising drive lo keep it ^People in the News< By The Associated Press Lynda .Johnson Robb’s baby doctor is the chief of obstetrics and gynecology at Bethesda Naval Hospital outside Washington — supporting speculation that's have her first child, the Washington Post reports. Lynda, whose husband, Marine Capt. Charles S. Robb, is serving in Vietnam is receiving prenatal care from Capt. Walter M. Lonergan at Bethesda, the newspaper said. As a Marine wife she would have lo pay $1.75 a day for her room at the hospital. As President Johnson's daughter, shPs entitled to use of the presidential suite. / .-L- 1.YNDA BIRD Berlin Guards Detain Louisiana Governor Gov. John J. McKeithen of Louisiana was detained hy border guards for 25 minutes yesterday when he visited East Berlin. “I guess they just wanted to annoy me," McKeithen said on his return. He was accompanied by his tyife, Louisiana State Treasurer Mary Evelyn Parker, and two Louisiana State policemen. The border gu^s recognized McKeithen from a frontpage picture in a newspaper his wife was carrying. He was not questioned. Presumafaly. the guards were following orders to clear with their superiors when anyone out of the ordinary appears #»sely controlled Checkpoint Chprlie crossover. I PAYNE. PAUL S.; July 28, 1968; Denver, Colorado (Formerly of Pontiac); Age 65; dear father of Clarence P. Payne; dear brother of Julian Payne and Melissa Fauser. Funeral service will be held Thursday in Denver, Colorado. 4 h REEyj, BETTY SUE; July 27, 1968; Memphis, Tennessee (formerly of Pontiac); age 9; beloved daughter of Carl and Myrtle Reed; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar C. Reed; dear sister ol Barbara and Donald Reed. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Huntoon Funeral Home. SHEMWELL, RICHARD L.; July 29, 1968; 17966 Ruth Street; Melvindale. (Formerly of Milford); Age 64; beloved husband of Myrtle Shemwell; dear brother of James, George, Thelbert, and Delbert Shemwell. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July I 31 at 10 am. at the I Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Interment in Gants Cemetery. Shahon I Grove, K e n t u c k y . Mr. 1 Shemwell will he in state at I the funeral home. Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BY 5 P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. g*t your "KILLNUM- •gulor ogot* »yp« it 12 o'clock n casI7want AD^RATES 1-Doy 3-Dov» 6-Doyi »2,00 $ 2 57 $ 3.99 12.77 14.59 16.42 The Pontiac Press Funeral Directors 4 SPARKS-GRIFFIN _ funeral home Thoughtful Service' FF iLosas VoorheesSiple F-DNERAL home. 332-8378 Established Over 40 Years HelpJ^nted Mole 6 BODY MAN, EXPERIENCED on collision repair. Must have own tools. Guaranteed wage. Steady work, year around, apply In person. Judge's Collision. 165 W, 14 Mile Rd. Clawson. 585-9220. CARPENTER CREW 673-1291 332-9647 * Cmi^ry Lots 4-A 1 AT WHITE CHAPEL, $95 EACH. 1 Ml 2-3534. '"^l'o754f."lS?"3^',3^, COLLEGE STUDENTS. HIGH school seniors. Change over men. Earn cash tor balance of summer and take lob with you In fall. New subsidiary of Alcoa. Car necessary. 391-1700. THE yONTlAC PRESS. Tt ESDAY, JULY 30, 19>^8 / C-8 Help Wanted Male FOREMAN n area. Call M4-S872 between » a.m. and * p.m._____________________ FOREMAN, DAYS, MUST b e familiar with tube fabrlcatloi\, fringe benefits. Apply 1260 Scott Lake Rd. Trans Tube, Inc. _ FACILITIES PLANNER 6|Hei|^Wanted Mole __j ' LMHE MILL DRILL PRESS OPERATORS Help Wanted Mole ^ Hel^ Wanted Male FOrIsERVICE station attendant 6:Help Wanted Female 7|Help Wanted Female plant at wixom. laboratory facilities, arrangement and maintenance. Duties Will also] Include making drawings and writing specifications. Pleass send roughers for apartment Personals 4-B 'Ti.'— — ' job or^all A74-i9«, after S p.m. j ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING CARPENTERS AND CARPENTER'. A pg helpers, 25 years of egs or older,! friendly at we _5 p. AVOID GARNISHMENTS Get out of debt with our plan Debt Consultants 814 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 8-0333 state Licensed—Bonded FREE FACIAL. EDITH Rehnb Cosmetics. 332 W. Huron, FE GET OUT OF DEBT ON *, PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME COMPUTER PROGRAMMER | Excellent opportunity available In data processing department of ex-| pending metropolitan hospital. We, are seeking a person who hasi either hospital experience or extensive work with IBM equipment, in salary and fringe benefit program. Contact SI. Joseph Hospital, 900 Woodward, Pontiac. FE 8-911K PERSONNEL DIRECTOR BENDIX RESEARCH LABORATORIES :QUAL OPPORTUNITY ______EMPLOYER TOP RATES ALL FRINGES lady, non-seasonal opportunlti fast growing middle-sized c Pyles ' Inciustries Inc. WWWWX.W...W.. candidate must t unusual Individual. He mui repair of heating, plumbing, electrical and other related trades. We prefer family man. He must be able to furnish strong current references, show a reasonable lob stability and be willing to work longer hours when the |ob requires It. A man possessing these attributes will be amply re- nvestment plan ava - ‘^’-k you e- *' his oppo writing t reply I SHEET METAL LAYOUT MEN s BAR MAID, EXPERIENCED or will I.' /train. Morey's (Soil and Country J Club - —----- ■ WIG PARTIES, wigs by Calderone, DEMONSTRATIONS guaranteed 100 per cent hunmar. hair. Kuttkuhn wigs. Wigland, 332 W. Huron. FE 5-2953. Con You Fill This Order? NEAT AND AGGRESSIVE WILLING TO MEET PEOPLE, ENJOY WORK WITH SPORTS CARS: CONTACT Richard at: Grimaldi Imported Car Co. 900 Oakland Ave. j COMPOSITOR ' Journeyman tor composition and form makeup, steady work, LI 5-; FACTORY WORKERS 8990 Wixom Rd., Wixom. See Mr.l Berkaw 8 A.M.-5 P.M. Equal opportunity employer._______________ Bssemblers; machina WOULD ANYONE witnessing the train and car accident at Johnson Street crossing, Saturday, July 20, approximatley 6:30 PM, call 482- Card of Tjianks 1 WE WISH TO THANK all of ourilOSt OOd FoUnd 5 friends, relatives and neighbors for)^•— -------- " *200 REWARD FOR INFORMATION .... "oX Po'^fiac to 4:30 p.m. doily except consolation during the ____ _. husband, son and father, Gerald Lee Frick. Also many thanks to the Rev. Henry Powell for his! comforting words. Coals Funeral. Home ana the Mount Bethel United i Methodist Church. His loving wife; and Children, Parents, Earle and! Pearl Frick and - ■ DIE REPAIR AND PRESS MAINTENANCE ing 2 rolls of carpet, stolen OVERTIME — PROFIT-SHARING Coleman's Furniture Mart, .PROGRESSIVE STAMPING COM-" Perry, kitty-corner-- ....... Employers Temporary Service Clawson 65 S. f__ Radford 26117 Grand River Ferndala__________2320 Hilton Rd. FURNITURE MOVERS For long distonce hauling, must have experience in handling household effects and a valid chaffeur's license, apply In person only, Stevens Van Lines, 3565 Ellz. Lake Rd., Pontiac. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, full t I. They y roll is 12x31 uiue, the other Is 12x34 avutmiu., add Contact D. J. Coleman, FE 4-9615. j tel- PANY 2725 NAKOTA ROYAL OAK ling of 7-1 (14 MILE-COOLIDGE AREA)_ CAMERA SALESMAN tor counter. .—... person at Camera Mart, driving exp. 29030 I MEN NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED $193.60 includes expenses per 6-day _ ujoy* __ REAL ESTATE ....rain 2 more sales people to handle large volume ol business in sales, trades, new and used houses and commercial property. Full time only. Guaranteed draw, bonus, and commissions. For confidential Interview call Mr. Cross or Mr. Bashore. CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. | OR 4-3105 MLS We' pay cash for used homes _ Real Estate Salesmen Experienced full time salesmen toi building jobs, used | equipment. Woi well-equipped SterHng Heiql 1 SHORT ORDER COOK, OUtlan Restaurant. 23175 W. 14 Mile R 642-9469. _ _ _ 10 Women Needed PUNCH PRESS OPERATORS j Medium and light punch press ex-| transportation. Call perience preferred. Day and night appointment, shifts. Apply between 6 a.m..6 p.m. c L~E A N Tn g“l A D Employers Temp. Service > au^^«%42-79M.'^ Waterford area. 623-02 beautician7~^^oth f^'TenT. Near downtown. 673-0247 or OR 3-BEAUTICIAN^EXPERIENCED. Part BOOKKEE^PER :harge through P 4 CALL M. H. CONRAD, JE 6-8200 FOR Rd Fm INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT 124117 Grand River Re< ' ' $1,000 GUARANTEED !ll toys and Gifts, Aug.-Dec. jpplies and hostess gilts. Nc ays on night shift. Apply: ELIAS BROS. week. Opportunities for h l7,0«F*9,m'^ Immediate'Vun lobs avilable near your home, w train you to teach driving an provide you with the customer and a complelely dual contr: training car to use for you very own and for the customer: Plus company pays Blue Cros Life Insurance; sick and acclder insurance. Requirements: 1. Must be 24 or over. 2. Married. 3. Good driving record. 4. Excel'' character. 5. Full time only. FOR INTERVIEW PHONE: FE 8-9444 EXECUTIVE OFFICES 15032 GRAND RIVER AVE. OPEN 7 A.“ " “ RETIRED MAN TO v - apply between 4 and to build simple fixtures and d variety of set-up work " manuficturing plant TRAINERS. SHARP YOUNG MEN OVER 18 Tremendaus Future NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED Call Grace Hodges 693-8127 or writ "SANDRA PARTIES" 2707 E. Mile, Detroit, Mich. 48212. ATTENTION LADIES. A wonderfi odportunity to work 16 hours an e BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 6. Huron “ CAMERA^ SALESLADY for^'coun Apply li CURB WAITRESSES WANTED, ti ith Sarah Coven- Per^V across trom maoison nent call Georgia, ......... - - COUnVeR AND MARKING girl, DEPENDABLE,; 7lV W H’i’ron n COOK. SHORT ORDER/nighls, { ' Me- Blue Cr 90 day Executiv Program Ih E Analysis, Office TO 10 P.M. In Membriom _ DOG, LOST IN CLARKSTON^aref 2 PTOdle^*6»-3^.^ln t Shopping Center. GENERAL RESTAURANT HELP,[ :__ 1 Apply 432 Orchard Lake Ave. DUMP TRUCK DRIVER, some t black and white clutch bag. Please ' return all papers and cards. No Is fondly ^ questions asked. Call Judy Kelly, ____ _______ vacation and holiday benellts. Call us collect. Bonded MEN 18-26 YEARS Retired Teachers Mare than $7200 imlly Grown? Do you still have ; $600 Q training program. ' before? Are you 40 CALL MR. BAILEY 962-4346 ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY munlty CoMege working at Jardon Vocational Center in Ferndale, mo., paiej^ bene?its. Apply Personnel Dept., 647-6200. ATTENTION . MOTHERS! EVENINGS FREE’ THE PLAYHOUSE I ^°'f' m‘‘d t lb I CASHIERJYPIST opportunity for soi fll loan company itioned office, cor Clerk Typists Average typing si National Corp., will train 6 single, men in Interview and personal control to procure management positions. Must be intelligent, sharp and neat appearing, Onlyl those who can start work Im-: mediately need apply. Guard Services, 441 mories 363-6884. ., Detroit. LO 8-4150. Grand LOST: WHITE (JERMAN Shepherd, 1 death lust the Sadly missed by mother, t and sisters.____________ Fn loving memory of Sanl Hawthorne who passed away one year ago today: The angels came when early morn Before the dawn of day. To bear you to your heavenly home In God's land far away. We mist you so, but we couldn't leday i ____ _j with _____ Sadly missed, by Woodrow, Wanda, Gall, Judy and Jerry._____________ and suburbs, some light office | work. Apply in person. Detroit i . -. ....-------- ---- Towing, 14211 W. 11 Mile Rd., Oak for fast food DISPATCHER and miss her very 8. to 8 A.M Dally ion. thro Fri. ilnistrative Duties .... .. conscientious and dependable. Opportunity to earn SlOO monthly without Interfering with LOST: TUESDAY, LARGE White Malemute, Joslyn area, FE 5-1711. LOST: 2 BRITTAINYS — Male and .........., ---------------- female. Near Fisher Body. FE 5- regular lob. Call Miss Brooks for __: 8362. ._______________ appointment. 3 LOST: JULY 3. Female German ^3®'“38 642-9650 short hair pointer. FE 8-6894.__ t ‘‘rE4°2V"'-'- I ‘^vT°aV7/ iJrt: KELLY LABOR 4-zz»B.------------------- I Inward,* FE 4-1639. -..... . END WORRIES ------------------- Announcements GRILL MAN jst have experience —J operaUon. GoodJ, Hospltallzatioit? Vacation, and other benefits. Ar-'"' Bros. Big Boy Restau $145 WEEKLY SALARY To start offer tc REWARD $100 CASH REWARD IN ONLY ^0 DAYS W« will pay to the wife of ' mechanic we hire $100 If he pro' satisfactroy and remains in ( employ 90 days after Dec. Mr. Giui 4-1930. HOUSEMAN-CHAFFEUR Highest wages, experienced, city references. UN 4-3944.__i Machus Bakery 1450 Souter Blvd., Troy. .D.O.D. GRINDER HAND. Must be experienced. Reply .. DEPT., PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL. Competitive salaries, Blue < paid Vacations, Registry 433 SOUTH ADAMS BIRMINGHAM ______644-1031 ROUGH CARPENTE>S Union only, see- Wayne on |o block north 14 Mile, 1 block Crooks Rd., Clawson. SALES EXPLOSION "NEED HELP” Weinberger Homes needs perlenced salesmen. Call / Realty, OL 1-0226._ SERVICE TE'CHNICTAN For Pontiac area. Electrics ---'---kground itlc !lOST: male (3ERMAN Shepherd,! ' black and tan, vicinity ol 12 Mllel __ _________ _____________ credit ’ and Middlebelt. counselors provide you with con- Reward, $100 or »i'<«ntlal money management Shepherd puppy. , Ice that has helped thousands! An Equal Opporlunity Employe; ' If Yau Can Fill This Order j Foreign Car Mechanics Get the h discussing your problems; DEBT-AID, Inc. 104 Community Nat'l. Bnk., Bldg. FE 2-0181 ______Licensed 8. Bonded HALL FOR RENT. 37“w, Yale St. Pontiac, Michigan. FE 2-0072, after 6 p.m. FE 5-0316. .»__________ English Pointer. Named Dandy.! ital Lab., 512 Pontiac State Ik Bldg. ______^ ELECTRICAL PANEL WIREMAN X . LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY with Dex-' A-Diet Tablets. Only 98 -- Simms Bros. Drugs.___ REWARD OF $1000 FOR in of the parties responsible breaking, entering and 3836 Sashabaw Rd. July 26 ding to the ^ktic- - • theft _. ____________ - . at 10:30 p.m. Items stolen 21’ Westinghouse portable TV, 4" Sony Home and Auto TV, 32 Remington revolver, and sport clothes. Damage to property estimated at $800. If one of the parties that was involved will come forward and testify Mr. Clason will see to it that he Is not prosecuted and will receive the reward. Mr. Clason pledges that he will catch the parties responsible if he has to form a citizens committee of other homeowners In the Twp. that have been vandalized end up the reward to $10,000 if necessary. 1 PART TIME MAN ■nts at We need a dependable married m over 21, to work mornings or ev Call 674-0520, 5 p.m.-7 p.m._____ 30~ MEN TO ASSIST in erecting several regular men that are tret to travel. Apply Big City Shows Oakland County Fairgrounds, I a m. Monday, A’- ' ACCOUNTANT Expanding medium size CPA firm with diversified industrial clientele.; the partners invite applicants; lo discuss with us, or any member; If our staff, the opportunities m ■■ 'id specifically' _ le to: JANZ &;'»P R* 2545 Indusllral Row INGINEERS ELECTRICAL MECHANICAL PLANT LAY-OUT CONVEYOR SPRAY BOOTH PLANT EQUIPMENT STRUCTURAL MATERIAL HANDLING CLERKS / Sewer, water, and street con-. structlon Inspection. High school graduate, with some construction HAVE TOOLS 900 Oakland Ave. INSPECTORS CITY OF TROY $3.25 to $3.65 per h( pert-clerks. Hourly rate. Must be able to work any shift. Apply at KEEGO SALES i SERVICE, 3080 Orchard^Lake Road, Keego Harbor. ______ MAINTENANCE MECHANIC, over 30, sieedy work, days only, apply at 217 Central, V2 bik. of Saginaw St., Pontiac.________________ MECHANICS, BUMPERS AND S. of City H call B83-5504, TOOL DESIGN Immediate Openings for LAYOUT MEN DETAILERS CHECKERS With experience on body fixtures. Long program, overtime, full I fringe benefits. Koltanbar Engi-! neering Co. 950 Maple Rd., Troy. Mich. Phone Mr. _Brown._566-2211. THEATRE MANAGER Excellent opportunity, pleasant surroundings, Detrolt-Metro area, experlenoed preferred, but not necessary. Send resume I o _POJ4TI^ PRE^^BOX C-M.____ WANTED, TRIM carpenters for west side work, year round employment for the right men. Contact Floyd Bcaudelle, after 6 p.m. at 293-3708. Equal Opportunity Ejnployi ........ --- -------- , No For collecting —, No delivery. EXCELLENT COMMISSION PLUS VALUABLE BONUS GIFTS. BETH WEBER FE 3-7377 OR 682-1774 BABY SITTER lor days BABYSITTER, 2 small boys, FE 5;4638, 5-7_ p.m._ BABY SITTER for 3 children from dally. ALEXANDER HAMILTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA 12 Mile and Farmington Rd. Farmington beginning Sept. 3. Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. 1 child ..... ,--- TIAC M^L. _ _________ COUNTER SALESLADY, air cor ditloned plant, good salary and Ir surance program. Age 25 or oldei Birmingham Cleaners, 1253 ! avaiiabre’.'ca'iraft'er's _ .'V'l --------- iCOUNTER GIRL FOR dry cleanin WANTED WATCHMAN, ters, 338-0375. 5 days weekly, near Welerlord 21. Apply 534 S. Woodv Hill, with or without transporta- Ingharn. _.............. ^ tion,J23-0179. _ _ , I COMPANION FOR recently widowed BABY SITTER, older woman, 2 lady, not oxa^ *5 yr?. ol age. Call .. Contact! CaM ’ Tommy Thompson, Sales boys, days, 6:30 a.m.-4 p.m, Own bet. S p.m. FE 8-9011. manager, 646-7727. I Manager, SHELTON PONTIAC- Iransp. Oil Baldwin. 335-0782. COMBINED DISHWASHER a tr d k T I 0 N NIGHT BUICK-OPEL. 651-5500. BARMAID AND WAITRESS. Apply salad flirl, full lime, uniforms and Royal Oak. Top w^tED: YOUNG MAN'with desire; S;?9ecMc- — "..... ».h n.iH Bin. Cross. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT.____________________________________ Must be dependable, reliable, and WANTED: USED CAR PORTER, experienced. Company benefits, 42- or over, regular 5Vi days p hour work week, good pay plusj week, no layoffs, fringe benefi NEED STEADY RELIABLE mala help. On the |ob training In the silk screen profession. ExcellenI hours. Translgn Corporation, 34 W. Sheffield, Pontiac^ _ ___ NEEb SERVICE man tor local vending company, will train. FE 3-'18 call .......— - - ■ - - between 8 a. opportunity In recreation area. Call 614-723-6551 collect or write, P.O. Mrsonnel dt Beaver Rd., g OFFSET PRESSMAN Experlenct Automatic, Parts. 346 S. BlvC East. Pontiac.____________________ LONG PROGRAM 0 1100 N. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM, MICH. 48011. Replies will ' absolute confidence. BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: C-»6, C-17, C-19, C-48, C-52, C-57, C-60, C-66, C-fi9, C-71, C-72, C-94. Funeral Directors ______4 ,COATS I FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS___________; C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME ; ____Keego Harbor, Ph. 682-0200. DONELSON-JOHNS ! ________funeral HOME ! HUntoon | funeral home Contact the LI 8-^205 United Industrial Engineering 29330 Stevenson Hwy. Hgts., Mich. OIL ! prr'kefnoT'?:^""'’''- '"""i rnuPANY I rJkRPENTERSJ .t XX >1 X LOOKING FOR A GENERAL SALESMAN Full Benefits JANITOR, FULL TIME day s Motor Co., Troi JAZZ PIANIST. BETWEEN 18 AND first and second shifts. 4555 Dixit ALUMINUM SIDING, experienced A MAN WITH MECHANICAL € perience on a Friden Flexowrit has good opportunity Appraisers Background In real property ap praisal or building constructior estimating essential Two wor8 in Equalization Department. PERSONNELL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 21. Experience necessary. 673-2223. _____LATHE HAND w ! Day and night shift, lourneyman ‘Piravmn^lain^s required, overtime, lop Dr^yjon Plains.----- , benefits, JERED INDUSTRY, INC. T-I . TN . • o 1299 AXTELL TROY Enjoy Driving? Mn-E-epouDGE area Preferably over 40 yrs Mill consider younger Cooper. 549-8221 o Salesmen MEN'S CLOTHING AND SHOES FULL TIME OR PART TIME Career opportunity for the aggressive person who Is planning a fine future. Experience preferred but not essential. Excellent employe benefits include: MAXIMUM EARNINGS PURCHASE DISCOUNTS HOSPITALIZATION LIFE INSURANCE LIBERAL VACATION POLICY PAID VACATIONS RETIREMENT PLAN Apply in Person Employment Office Basement Huedson's Pontiac Mall ing. Apply Sta 175 S.JagInaw. * WANTEDU! lAAN - FOR Dependable mature leciric Co. -erford. referred but n Westerner Beef Buffet. 4108 W. Maple Rd., Birmingham, 626-4^67. CLEANING WOMAN MUST HAVE OWN CAR, TOP PAY FOR RIGHT GAL, FULL TIME, SOME WEEK-ENDS, EM 3- dispatching and telephone;' Plck up and deliver orders for the acia Therao Fnll.r Rr.iAh Fn M SO aaa hr tr> ' ' DIETICIAN ceptlonelly high It established insur r Brush Co. $2.50 per of M-59 - phone 334-6401 S. of M-59 - Phone GR 7-9^1 ^ I BOOK K E E PER' FOR SMAU. offi< '.\ good wages, steady position t ®j responsible person, must be i J assist you to t I tral with fi progressive accredited hospital. Liberal fringe benefits, i Sick leave, hospital and life In-surance programs, 8 paid holidays and paid vacation. Monthly salary range, $744.80-$893,76. Contact the : Personnel Director, Pontiac i General Hospital, Seminole at- W. erience and ri •ress Box C-8. iuccessful. Previous safes experience helpful, but not necessary. Call Mr. Jim] Coomes for interview, 363-7259. . ■ i aa | YOUNG MEN INfERESTED in Help WOnted Mdle learning f- —---------- Starting r j perienr* ^ I A0ply ..........„---- . _ . - j 1675 East Maple Rd.,JTroy. ' young" MAN 'who CAN TYPE well for private secretary to own-I er. Opportunity to learn business, I Permanent. Good starting salary. ‘ Exc. opportunity for bright person. 6 Help Wanted Male rience, and r Help Wanted Female service station IPONTIAC PRESS salesman'FOR Large lawn and 'rden distributor to cover Detrolt- -A,-- --- 'Istabllshed territory ■nin^s. Send ^resume id complete' f'^ess Box SH'e ETMeYa^Da YO^^^ men and helpers. Hospitalization, paid vacation and holiday. Call 566-0775. „ ----------- experienced preferredl &An4jar are but not essential. We will also! _ Pxcelleni consider gas station managers for; Pontif thls position. rnmnlM» resume: 1st I C-641 OTHER FOLKS ARC WELDERS Structural Lay-Out Men Flat welders $3.33 per hour 3 position welders $3.48 per hour. 9 paid holidays, vacations. Blue Cross, Blue Shield, other fringe benefits, reply Paragon Bridge A.—. --------- A,h,)o Grand R' -- Assemblers-Mechanical ^ ^ ^ Electric-Cantral Panel Wireman Other folks make money; Qgn-,£.o Electric Company from Pontiac Press iioeo n. crooks Rd. ciawson WANT AOS ASSISTANT FOREMAN I Experienced In sheet metal If unit hnvpn't trv: fabrication, welding, machine shop, IT you naven T . . • "7. inventory, cost and production one. Hundreds of others! cm^roL^and »n functions rejat^ed to do . . . daily! Ventllat; ' 1 Rochest p operations. Allen Cooler It pays ... It's quick, simple and productive. just loo|i around your home, garage and basement and list the many items that you no longer, Hundreds of readers Motor route opening in Southwest section orea of, Birmingham. A p p r 0 x i-mately 3 hours daily. (3 to 6 p.f’'-) APPLY before noon Don Delong., CIRCULATION DEPT. THE PONTIAC PRESS ENGINEERS' Plant Layout Conveyors Equipment Material Handling LONG PROGRAM TOP RATES FRINGE BENEFITS Pioneer Engineering & Mtg. Co. 2500 E. 9 Mile Rd. Warren LIFE INSURANCE Brokerage Supervisor 11 Lift Assurance if our new Detroit-north branch in Southfield. This is one ol several new branches opened In the U.S.A. in the past year by The Imperial Life as part of its planned program of expansion. With over 75 branches in 7 countries, this 7t-year-gld company now has over 2.4 billion dollars of insurance In force and 450 million dollars In assets. Call Mr. Gaunt, 353-8901. PAINTER 1 Should have electrostatic experience on aluminum extrusions. full time, $135 a week, part time $2.00 per hr. Experience only, 4016 S. Telegraph - cor. Long Industries Inc. 26051 Michigan Ave., Inkster or call $65-9200. Service Manager Lloyd Bridges Dodge Walled Lake, 624-1572 See Mr. Bridges, top. Salary and Incentives, for good experiencec PIN JUMPER OR mechanic for bowling lanes, night work. FE 5-2513 after 12 noon. P'ART-TiME HELP WANTED. Warehouseman. 852-1811. PpRTER FOR dry" CLEANING la Davis Cleaners MODERN UP TO date largi shop needs « foreman. Exc opportunity for qualified perst reply state age, training an perience. Reply Box C-7, R; MAN MECHANICALLY INCLINED for heating, air conditioning, pipe fitting and duct work. Liberal benrfits, hospital, and steady. 682- MANAGER, THEATER. Experience preferred, not necessary. Will train. Reply to Pontiac Press, Box For cleaning restaurant. We are looking for a reliable and sober man that Is looking for a steady lob. The -...... — *- right man. 21 and over, married PORTER, EVENING 626-4767. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANTS Drive way salesmen with mar potential. Previous exper helpful but not necessary. S. starts at $105,per week. BEVERLY HILLS SERVICE CENTER 14 Mile at Southfield - Birmingham ______ 647-2124 _ SERVICE STATION _______ ______ ,J, wro will sell and work drive as needed. First rate man will start at $175 per week,: plus paid vacation and hospitalization. BEVERLY HILLS SERVICE CENTER 14 Mile at Southfield Birmingham 647-2124 20 COMPTOMETER OPERATORS DAY SHIFT PONTIAC AREA Starting July 29 HIGH RATES t to 2 weeks Coll Miss Brooks 338-0338 Kelly. Girl of Kelly Services 125 N. SAGINAW :n Equal •Opporfunily-Eroployer 30 JUNIOR AND 0 SENIOR TYPISTS Experienced on the manual fypawriler. Assignment approx. 1 wk. beginning July 3'- Day shift, pleasant working conditions, high rate. Kelly Girl Of Kelly Services 125 N. Saginaw 338-0338 642-9650 An Equal Opportunity Employer COMPUTER PROGRAMMER Immediate vacancy exists in our Controller's office for 0 Computer Programmer with a minimum of one year experience using autocoder language with random access equipment. The individual selected will be responsible for mointoining existing computer programs and will initiate ond develop new opplicotions. Salary commensurate with education and experience and on outstanding benefit package. All interseted applicants should submit a resume including a salary history and requirements, or coll 468-2681, Ext. 279 Paint and. Vinyl XJperntions 400 Groesbeck Highway Ml. Clemens, Michigan 48043 An Equal Opporlunity Employer Help Wanted Male 6Help WantH Male Pharmacist Wanted Ideal north central Michigan com-; munity. Compidta recreation area. Situated on 2 freeways. Contact E. A. Anderson. Anderson Drug Store Inc. 518 McEwan, Clare, Mich. Help Wanted Male 6Help Wanted Male j ASPHALT ’ FINISH RAKER, ! perlenced ast^lt help- 476-1213. i A TRUCK MECHANIC, own tools,; good wages, 554 Franklin Rd. AUTO MECHANICS WANTED NOW! Highest flat rate In area ^ all fringes Including paid vacations and yearly bonus 673^797. — hoist and s EXPERIENCED CABINET finisher". Beauty-Rite Cabinets. 673-1198. FACTORY WORK for man over 30, must know, simple arithmetic, steady work, days only. Apply at mechanical experience desirable,! 217 Central W bIk. off Safllnaw St.,, Pontiac. ' Mr. Paul Mlhalic at Bill Fox Chevrolet, Rochester, 651'- are seorching The Press's bartender, experienced tor classified columns daily forj A^iy lu* oScherd u. just such articles Perhap^ _|^nt^NEW drug .tore n^i the piggy bank itself would ® part-time pharmacist. Top pay, bring more than the change* '^'”‘"tate‘’drug center that it holds! Try it! YOU'LL BE N. GiAD YOU DID! Phone V 332-8181 FURNITURE STORE n 1192 wesf Maple, walled Lake W8-AS5*___________ BROILEI^ MAN. WUS'T' experienced and dependable. No^ .BARTENDER, MUST perlenced, neet and d Apply in person, good ' Sun. or holidays. B Restaurant, 3295 Woode Squara Laka Rd. Pontiac Press Want Ads ARE FAMOUS .FOR "ACTION" TEXACO HAS SALES AND ENGINEERING POSitlONS AVAILABLE College grods are offered the chance to develop and advance, with the leaders in the oil industry. - BENEFITS ARE - • Training Prbgram • Company Car • Insurance Plan ’ • Savings and, Pension 'Plan, etcr • Vocation Applicants are now being Interviewed for i Industrial sales, i Please Send Resume to: Pontiac Press Box C-77 ' ENGINEERS (With Imagination) We ore looking for an industrial or material handling engineer (or two) interested in a position leading to 9 rewarding career in material handling equipment SYSTEM sales. Rapistan is on international corporation with fine benefits and depth training programs. Contact: Rapistan Incorporated 23223 Telegraph Rd. Southfield, Mich. 48075 Phone 444-4355 , Rapidly expandiing Paint and Vinyl Operations result in immediate need for: maintenance FOREMEN Experience In maintenance of vinyl, paint or chemical processlni quipment preferred. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS k standards appll- PRODUCTION EQUIPMENT DESIGNERS ce required In chemical processing equipment design, or mechanical englrwers preferred. PROCESS ENGINEERS or mechanical engineers preferred with experience in vinyl, bber or plastics Industry. PRODUCTION FOREMEN ce preferred in vinyl manufacturing; calenderi, lamlnatort, COLOR MATCHERS OR TECHNICIANS ‘ RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES " (chanical, elettrical engineers or chemistry ensurate with education and a ----- ---'.age. All * rcludlng i an zjutslandlng benefit package. All Interested yplicant should submit a resume -Inclu " requirements, or can ‘ience and . applicants history and (313) 468-2681, Ext. 279 Paint, ond Vinyl Operotions 400 Grosbeck Highway Mt. Clemens, Michigan 48043 An Equal Opportunity Employer 334-2477 OFFICE Party Chief Survey Crew TO $750 FEE PAID MAN, WOMEN, SALES " NO "night work opportunity for big young man WANT THAT COLLEGE? ALL CASH YORK LOVELAND LISTINGS WANTED ^ 'i^:i =,„^r wur.^, musi D« ,ru5,wu,,„y ORTHO lYlM I I PC: “.(ATIVE-SAtESMAN- , , ............. SISLOCK & KENT, INC. 3^'- S... ^3^ APARTMENTS LOTS WANTED yffi"'"""...''“^1 ■P®PR RAY . Bggs TRUEMAN INC. Keypunch Operator BUTING ’^68^9-^o76J^ RAY ^5^3S!^PoF Your Dream Come True MALE t’HrS:; r.r!;x;!..%-a£' ■ B & G SERVICE Telephone Sales t ramee fHiSS S£r.£Vs-S’ 'r-- , INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL' ,880 S. woodward B'dam 6«.388 •SYS _I ^ ^ E R NAT ION A L_P N N E Your Dream Come True FEMALE f'E.Sr'i^o Permanent woIen Part Time Position secreZrT isTyIars : 4 QQ to 8:00 p.m. Doily j pT^^ron'ce"”' Public Relations ilftfe, S S'’Iel, roi office work. ; General Office Wanted to Rent - ---------—------------------------------------------------- BOAT 5932 BEACHES CLEANED :L BEACHES CLEAN SAND" cOADING DAILY tjKj3,;5;io''n^v^Kt“M:''rAr3; _ FE_A-3535F^ iaSSStYSF ant Ads >r Action $TERNATIONAL HAS A BETTER IDEA CHANGE NOW MALt FEMALE START 1 ■YHE PONTIAU PRESS , ; All Fee Paid^ rlS'”™"'™ SISLOCK c‘ COLLEGE GRADS ^ l=;-S3=,C -■i:ssis‘~ ??????H0T SHOT ^- ii Several MUMred Other Open Position! ■rnational Personnel '^344971 ,rir. Trucks to Rent TllK PONTIAC I’RESS. TUESDAY, JULY 30. 19 C—5 AVON GILES FE 5-8183 NOW ON DISPLAY •^v;ru3w;;.?s--s"i- " VACATION'AT HOME NORTH SIDE "BUD” , ^ Wideman ' irLifsiMs-t HJ5SJB0W, R,„l,„, I NO MONEY DOWN ,L1U.T.,„ ,,,.: i?YES™?GiH '" ”"d^ngi HAGSTROM, ____ TA'„,"lI.’.'E' > VALUE AREA '~. S£;g| IMMEDJim TO ^,'1“'“!;, ,.„ 'G ;i ig:=^p;> g RAY WARDEN near- G,M. S. hio’^ CIOS, proving grounds .......IV. After 6 P.M, FE 2-3370 JACK 398-7760 Cash For Your Equity RAY :HACKETT 363-6703 ^ rSV' fcil^lflSCHRAM JF^OFEICE -- total down “C*nl =s£" •"■•■■ ■"•-•■ s, REALTOR ' VALUET REALTY and ICDT TCLJr^T TTD .7 W^HUPON ST. 33A-A»6 HUbHOUR FE 4-3531 REALTOR WE TRADE ,'<■-! - FE 4-3531 l CLARK —■ .„ EASTHAM ~¥§s= Vn'iv '''^yALTER'S^^TAKE AREA List With SCHRAM And Call the Van ray Waterford GIROUX Realty g-l atpd In Waterford Twob Crestbrook kx MODEL OPEN ’ DAILY 2-6 "'^IaKE PRIVILEGES ,n RAC W .... ___ ______________________________ . . «.*"! FLATTLEY REALTY KnTnrX^n'’.^ V.Ii s.otv Bill Eastham, Realtor gf.SH=:3 I.S3-'™’ HSk".............tS- ■". P" smrn YORK , SM-SHINN "S OOUBLE YOUR MONEY ^ ,„.22is -'Y/T~YT TTNff bum "hous. S. 0. Lake S730 WILL lAMJ LAKE RD. BUD if^llpsTOUT^ BEST BUYS 07.-0,AO I TODAY OR 33.37 -- -.->,c£^^ a Lange Realty i "iS mm RAY COUNTRY ,.;TJ;l^“^:;':.; :DT HOME T>R^T0N AND REALTY LITTLE SILVER SNYDER ' c. PANGUS INC, Realtors ! l^rpeting'' mca^ bunding si,a. »13,300. OiN i I, ^open7davsawee^^^^^^^ ^ WATERFORD "KINNEY &rrSf'S^;L, :~!^~^ '.. 3SC- giaiT RAY R.»7Mu.*....r 4S COUNTF '•S.S r.“Giavr..-S .»■ HOME sviAcffiG” ;2s:£:S£r . .. „ i:?o“na^r ‘bletr n^v T^'iCMVnTDD i r OAA.7M.C .A.,- . “ After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 '|fj:£§Ss!«BENNETT =» ■ EUa Howard “V",:::'' CROSS 'sK,~: ......y RENTING ... -. rS Beauty Rite ; YORK ART LANGE 363-2511 KINZLER .ri”... K£"G!GS: S.'SJS.H' “ $78 Mo. L" RAY SUMMER HOME ~ i()TfOT" L^ I ‘4uVEdil)k"^0N^PRICT'" HALL O'mi Si'%ates®=“= RAY 6569"DrRt.^S*W-lriS'in6 Byc)rk ,.vo_s,bry bo'u'se 'p,'. REAL ESTATE WE BUY WE TRADE - FE B-7176 OR 4-0363 BENJAMIN & i 'ami ™ BISHOP, INC. ___ nriMrC mODEL GAYLORD ■ HOME Bh “£r —-I ANYTIME BY APPL OPEN SAJ.,_SUN. J_-5 „__________ JF=:4S1IS: l»i: IT COSTS NO f 2536 Dixie HWy.-Mulptiple Listing Service- 674-0324 ,RAY.i .. C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 80, 19i Good! 65 H WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY SINGER TOUCH AND SEW llant ntedlt gor drive, 600 etrlei. Auto bobdin, wliidt directly trom needle. Zlz-zegger, makee buttonholes, fancy stitches, overcasts, etc. Pay small balance of sss.io cash or $5 month. Call credit dept., 335-9283, Household Ap-pl lance. W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 $2.50 per week LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1661 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6843 Acres of Free Parking III »; Sat, 'til 6. EZ terms Eves. 'I Notional Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new Posture Mattress and Bov Springs. Regular $139—Our Price, $68. 38 Sets to see 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Repossessed -^Fashion Dial" modal In Walnut cabinet. Taka over payments of $5.50 per mo, for 18 mos. Or $44 Cash Bal. still under guarantee Upiversal Sewing Center Hwy. ________FE 4^)905 National Unclaimed FURNITURE S new plu|h^back^^Recllners-$58 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 •1ft * ^ ” ^ iriK-K-paaoea cnairs »30, 4 drawer maple chest |15. 3* ?!«?, *'75- f-Plece chest ™ $150, Wurlltzer small baby grand piano $450. 338 TkE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 80, 1968 C—7 65, Sol^me^^oodt 65 SETEE AND SWIVEL CHAIR, arm chairs. 332-6104, SIGNATURE VACUUM, TANK type, excellent condition. $25, 363-9919. SOFA AND RECMNER chalT, gdod condition. 6744)047. ® P'Abogany, $100. Oval dining table, 6 chairs, mahogativ, 2 extra leaves, com- BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE fmt'ii new. Large and small size (round, droi>leaf, rectangular) tables In 3-, 5- and 7-pc sets, $24.95 un ' 1-YEAR-OLD GAS DRYER and washer. $80. 4430 Sunbu'-' Waterford. After 4 p.m. I PIECE LIVING room set, $75. 682- FdOOR refrigerator, double oven 40" electric stove, dinette set. causes tale, 31 Monroe St., Apt. _________________________________ SrOOM — (Brand new furniture) $289. Cdsh. terms, I a y - a w a y . Pearson's Furnitura, 2)0 E. Pike - FE 4-7881. 4-DRAWER chest, $23; bedroom tuite, $55; couch, $35; 2 pc. living room, $75; refrigerator, $39; atove, $75; dinette, $20; corner desk, $15; dining room, $49; china cabinet, piano, $50, 673-2063. ______ CHINA CABINET, antlqua~WhiS; «(io. ISH3U2"'- ^l3l°7^4\%^p°;!a°c°^,tfll-.5ynr'»"" 5 piece bedroom suite mahogany mattress and soring, 4 piece cllninj, set blond drop leaf. 3 Heywood Wakefield fables, sewing machine group of fabrics. Call 335-1700. Coml. Upholstery Co._________ davenport AND chair, good coS'. Items. 673-9463. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile ..........7c e Vinyl Asbestos tile .......7c a Inlaid Tile, 9x9 ....... 7c e Floor Shoo—2255 Elizabeth Lake "Across From the Malt" to IN. CROWN GAS range, pertone, automatic oven, perfect condition, $75. Call 338-6719. fo" RANGE, DOUBLE SINK, follet with teat, roM-away, no mattrass; misc. OR 3-6418.________________________ National Uncloimed FURNITURE Brand new 4-plecc Bedroom Suite 1968 SINGER Zlg-Zagger loles, hems ATTENTION NEW FURNITURE LEFT IN LAYAWAY DANISH MODERN 94" SOFA AND CHAIR. SOLD FOR $369, BAL. DUE, $219. SAVE UP TO 40% WAREHOUSE SALE 2 pc. Early American Living Room, reg. $249 now lust $159. 3 pc. Maple bedroom aulte, rag. $189, now $125. ,A|| French Provenclal, Modern end Early American living room, j»droon^and dining room priced Unclaimed Layaway bedroom) from $89, living room sofas, $99. KAY FURNITURE K-MART SHOPPING CENTER US^E^D^HmE-A-BED, FE $-0244 ot lonyuiarj Taoica sets, $24.95 up. FE 4-7881 BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 stylet, trundia beds, triple trundle beds and bunk beds complete, $49.50 and up. Peertor.'a Furniture, 210 E. Pike._______ :HAIRS REUPHOLSTERED, save with toll end materials. 335-1700. Coml. UpholstGry Co. :ARPET — PALE OLIVE, tl'Xiy, Bound' *130. Brand naw half prict. For Solo MiscoHonoeus 67 ALUMINUM DOOR, 36' , .... . ... Ing room tables, TV, 2 chairs baby dressing table-chest, 682-8588. IaBY CLOTHES, EXCELLEtlT condition. Girl's Infants to tizs 3. Boy's Infants to size 6. Baby furnishings, very good condition. 625-4579. Used TV'f $19.95 led Refrigerators, $39.95 SWEETS USED furniture living room suite, I tote, 2 cheli.. FE 4-0558, 673-3878. Willlem Wright BIG SAVINGS MCCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS SEE NEW POWER MAC. 6 It's a Tough 6 Lb. Power House HOUGHTENS POWER CENTER 112 W. UNIVERSITY DRIVE 651-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER WASHER AND DRYER for Reasonable, good condition, liter 7 p.m. weekdayi. 852-1656. WAREHOUSE DISCOUNT lale '(brand new) 2 pc. living room _ $67.50 up, 4 pc. bedroom set $79.50 up. Sofa bads $49.50 u--- Ing room sectional reclining chairs $39.50 i apt. gas range, $79.50, 4 burner elec, range $99.50, 2 step tables, 1 coffee table $14.95 for set. Mattresses for most everything, bunk beds, roll away beds, hide away beds and etc. Loads of other furniture. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 2)0 E. PIKE FE 4-78BI Open til '--' • ■■■ - BRIDES - BUY YOUR WEDDING WAREHOUSE SALE; Open to public. Entire inventory of new refrigerators, ranges, washers, etc. must be sold. Every Item discounted. Scratched Items priced accordingly. Terms. Sale: Today and tomorrow 10-9. H"' "------ CHAIRS UPHOLSTERED, save with CAR-TOP CARRIER AND tarp. Both 7416 - Rd. be w Mile Rd. b e t w WHITE GENERAL Electric Stove, good condition. $20.00. 3270 shire, Berkley, Mich, or LI room set, 651-5822. ELECTRIC WATER HEATER, never used, auto, washer $25, dryer $35, refrigerator $35. Misc. G. f—-FE 5-2766. A-l ANTIQUES, estates, art glass ELECTRIC STOVE, $25; GAS stove, $35; Refrigerator with top freezer, - $49; Wringer washer. $40. G. Har- ELECTRIC STOVE, 2 years old, $75. dryer, electric hand sweeper, 12 in. floor polisher, 16mm movie camera, 8 lea cream chairs, wrought Iron by 30.06 gun. GE STOVE AND refrigerator, bronze tone, $100 each, or $175 for both. Frigidaire refrigerator with 150 lb. freezer, $125. All In cxc. condition. 673-8644. ________________________ mily leaving country. Must si HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of; 8-piece living room outfit with 2-i; living room suite, 2 step tables, cocktail table, 2 table lamps^a 1) 9'xt2' rug included. -piece bedroom suite with < 5-piece dinette set with 4 ct- chairs and table. All for $399. Your credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. ' E. HURON___________FE 5- 1928 FRANKLIN SEDAN Specializing In furnitura rtfinishing and repairs of all types. 363-9361, LARGE CHEST Of woodworking tools, (primitives)' zither, many other misc. Items. 651-5346. 1304 N. Main St., Rochestei PROPERTIES SOLD SALE per cent off on everything, rgaret Trimble Antiques, 10680 lie, corner ot Holly Rd. PINE CORNER CUPBOARD Knot Antiques In Davisburg. Open 6 days Fi, TV & Radios 21" USED TV ..... '•'Blton TV, FE 2-225 515 E Walton, c- - $400 SONY STEREO tape recorder, -econdltkmed and guaranteed, $125-PONTIAC MUSIC 8i SOUND 3101 WEST HURON 682-3350 COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV, FE 8^9 45 E. Walton near Baldwin COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House. FE 2-6842. E Tv, WITH remote ’ controls, portable with stand, like new. Ideal for bedroom or hospital, $149. 363-0235. _________________ stalled and fully guaranteed. Crandall Electronics, 930 LaSalle, TRADITIONAL o« . 1 .................. ... ' National Unclaimed FURNITURE I double DRESSER. MIRROR, 4I i ^o"okc'11sVbed:soII'for%i59'! 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200! BAL. DUE $97. ^____________________ j DELUXE TRADITIONAL^ SOFA ^AC°HErmlLOWBACK,*DELUXE c ush 0 N S^COTCHGARDED. excellent condition. 682-7264. R-CONDITION.ER, 5406 BTU, 3 mos. old. 335-1685. harness. Ph. Hadley, 797-4205. BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STUMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS I. storm doors. Som ,10 house Items lust like t being wrecked, very Also 10 good houses to __ ______ reasonable price. Must move at once. Located in Royal Oak and ' Madison Heights. Office at 428 Guthroe and 423 Kenneth, Madison Heights. Phone Teselsky Wrecking, 1-517-865-9711. COMMERCIAL WINDOW W--------- Approximately 48" x 96", 125. $35 vented. TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland ________FE »4595 DOG HOUSES MOST sizts. 74$ Orchard Lake Rd. DUE TO ILLNESS — going out of business. Sailing equlomer* —' supplies tor Beauty Shop. 687-1069. Dayt FE 2-6361 ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA IN its own bookcase; 2 dictionaries; Atlas and 3 yearbooks, $85. Portable sewing machine, good condition, ell Attachments like new. Never used. $30. Call after 5 or before 8. 682-4253._____________, ____ ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over the ^-Ihtub with a beautiful glass tub :losure, aluminum frame, with Id blasted Swan design, $28.95. A. Thompson, 7005 M-S9 W.__________ FANS, ELECTRIC, used, 12"-i6‘'-20'' to 30", H.D. Industrial type. 150 Branch St. 335-4054. GE DRYER. Gwd condition. 628.426'a. ^ Berwick, near Telegraph end GARAGE SALE, 5? Ormsby, ot Elizabeth Lk. Rd., west of AIrpor Rd. stove, refrigerator, bad Ironer, pictures, misc.__________________ 1ARAGE SALE: MIsoellaneous Items. 3128 St. Claira Driva, ^ east of Auburn Haights. Rd , 673-5948, aft, 1 Consumers approved i ----- " ----- mi _ - - he;-------- terrific values In quality heaters. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk. FE 4^462 offer refused. Phone SUBMERSIBLE _____ PUMP, ......_ Rented ane repairad. Cone's Rental. FE 8-6642. LAVATORIES COMPLETE $24.50 value, $14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars, terrific values. Mlchkjdn Fluorescent, 393 _ Orchard Lk. FE 4-8462. — I._________ LAWN MOWER, 18" reel type, firestone, $30; 22" rotary, $25. 673-2825^__________' lestlnghouia color TV color TV. leitlng repossessed! Rent ectric Bv Kate Osaiui PatB-Hanting Pa|Bt FREE TO GOOD home kittens, 673- 0584,___________________________ FREE, ’VY-VR-^SIILVER^ 33^4012.'^ GREAT DANE PUPPY. Fawn, female, 5'/S months. Housebroken. Gentle with children. $200. 628- FORD JUBILEB tractor. Dearborn front loader, rear bladt, 81475. erguson 20 tractor, rear blade ant John Deere 414 plows, $245. Lawn end garden tractors also. Loaders end backhoes. 825 S. Woodward PONTIAC FARM AND INDUSTRIAL TRACTOR CO. FE 4-046t FE 4-144; quality. Woodlands, 673-0475. GREAT DANE PUPPIES, It weeks, ars crapped, shots and wormed, 'ondertut with children, 398-8577. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC, lovely, good temperament. $50. 628-1566. Stud service. _ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC beauties, also adults. UL 2-1657. GERMAN SHEPHERD At registered black and tan males, 4-year-old end 1 1-yeer-old. 3; __W6;___________________________ GOOD HOME ONLY, 1 German Shepherd, 2 v 8X35' MARLETTE, full I bedrooms, $1500. 685-2428. 18' SELF-CONTAINED CAMP-ovei 'ler, good condition. 852-2415. DANE PUPPIES, AKC ‘‘Kendall is so Intellectual he’s practically nuts!’ MIXED TERRIER PUPPIES. $5. 625-1922______ PART BASSETT PUPPIES, $‘l6. _____________682-7088._________ PEKINGESE, 11 MONTHS, AKI male, silver and blacky houn broken, good with <....... children, will J POODLE CLIPPING AND groorn'lng For Sale Miscellaneous 67 Store Equipment WANTED MODEL JEt ENGINE.' WASHED WIPING RAGS, as low as .24 per lb. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales. Used Office Furniture — desks, chairs,, etc. Priced to sell, ew 5 hp, 3 phase air compressor, $550. , ______________ -- New and used steel, angles, channel. HOBART ELECTRIC SLICER ISO end 8" Hobart electric sllcer, 45. Chrome National Cash egister $350. Town Pump 118 N. _l\aJn,JValled Leke._______ MIXER, FRENCH FRYER, retriger'-ntor, air-condllloner, warmer, dish-vasher, etc. 342-5484. Used metal garage doors. Ideal for signs, temp, sheds, etc. BOULEVARD SUPPLY •* S. Blvd. E.________333-7161 WHITE ELEPHANT SALE Christ Housa Society, Wed., Ju 31, 10 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Lah» and 13 Mile, Christ Child School. matching wedding band. S2 After 6:00 at 13 Chamberlain, li value $46.95 while they last. Ter Hand Tools—Mochinary 68 2 CHIEF 1 8400, 6335 MA 5-2161. M4-4769 or OR 4.^571^_________ 24*X32' CONVEYOR. MOTOR DRIVE. $500. 6335 Sashabaw. Clarkston, MA 5-2161. 295 AMP ARC welder. 1968 5 HORSEPOWER Mono-chain AIR COMPRESSORS, cleaners. Welding equipment, e Pontiac Motor Parts, 1 0 University Drive. FE 2-0106. CLARK FORK LIFT _____________ . pneumatic tires, 400 pound capec ty, excellent. Sacrifice. Tecurttse Plywood Co., Tecumseh, Mich JOHN DEERE MODEL 810. No. s'572 REGISTERED TOY FOX terrier) SHELTIES, 2 MALE, sable, 1 tri-color, char Wormed, shots, end A' n Machine, Used GrI Sporting Goods D, 22 bolt action with scope, 825; 2 POOL HALL Tables. Solid slate, 4 cues, Belgium balls. $225 -each. Delivery evallable. 353-2235. 5V GUNS. EVERYTHING for the shooter. 720 W. Huron SI. PRINGER SPANIEL PUPPIES, AKC, liver end white, black anC white. 633 Nichols Dr ■ ■- - shots. 268-7768. ., best stock, t imeni, also stud tei •d tamale. 651-6747. TEENAGE MOTHER cat < homes for self and her c_...... mini-cats. Call after 6 p.m. FE 5- 25 BROWNING AuToMAtTc pistol. Like new. 585^292.____________ 1968 SNOWMOBILE Panfhar Arctic Cat, 20 h.p. electric starter, trailer, ---- tank, cover, extra parts, less - " -----1, $100. 651-5346. UKC FOX TERRIERS OR 3-7944__________ Pet Supplies-Service 79-A GOING OUT OF builness, telling i hrs. running, $100. 651 Majn^ St., Rochester. BRUNSWICK POOL HALL table, solid slate, $ cues, Belgian balls, $225. Dellvtrtry available. Dealer. J53-22M^______________________________ CLEARANCE SALE - MoVIng. Save up to 30% on rifles, hand guns, ammunition, accessories. Everything must go. Troy Gun Exchange, HIGH WILSON FOOTBALL Auction Soles 80 B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ...... 7:00 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY ....7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY ......2:00 P.M. WE BUY — SELL — TRADE Retell 7 Days Weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 WE ARE NOW TAKING gun Hall's Auction. 693-1871, Sand-Gravel-Dirt 76 t^A SAND AND gravel, all areas delivered. 673-5516,_Watertord. 1-A BLACK DIRT State tested; also topsoil, sand and gravel fill. Builders supplies. Bud Ballard, .......... _6M-I338. 623-1410; Lee Beardslee OLIVER LOADER, V4 yard t on tracks. OL 6-6565.____________ VAN NORAAAN BORING bar No. 777-5-4, boring capacity It 2.6" to 5.343", call 674-1266.___________ WANTED parts' FOR f-340 In-ternattonal for dozer and loader, 338^2^2._ _ Ids 71 SOLO FOR $349, BAL. DUE $239. KENMORE 40" ELECTRIC range. Good condition. 624-2382. BASSETT BEDROOM SUITE VIDOV Q\A/CCPFD DOUBLE DRESSER, MIRROR, 4 KIKBY bWttrtK ------ Dcn excellent CONDITION — $50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY___________674-2234 MAPLE BEDROOM SUITE, DOUBLE DRESSER, MIRROR, 4 DRAWER CHEST E-Z TERMS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 457 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 335-92 LINOLEUM RUGS, MOST SIZES, $349 up. Pearson's Furniture, 310 E. Pike St„ FE 4-7B81. Attention Housewives and appliances. Ask for Mr. at Wyman^s Furniture FE 5-1501. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new Sofa, Mr. S. Mrs. Chairs ONLY 1158 45116 Cass (Utica) 73,1-0200 A ~ plenty OF USED washers staves, refrigerators, and trade-in f^Frnifure bargain' ' Trade-in store, 6a _BIv^FE 2-6842.____ AIR CONDITIONER CLEARANCE SALE Special prices from $99. Quantities limited in some sizes. All models are genuine Frigidaire air con- washers, WHIRLPOOL, GE) HOT- LIKE, NEW Kenmo're wringer wash- National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand n#W Nylon Sofa—$68 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 MUST SELL ALL house! combination, kitchen chairs. Reasonable. 363-8021. aedroom end dineftes. 20-40 per cent off. Tyler's Auction, 7605 Highland Rd. 673-9534. nice contemporary custom made black couch. Large hassock, bookcase, and table. $100. Apartment size electric stove, $10. OR 3-0415. 1910 Airport Rd. _ $137. $2 down $2 week. ABC WAREHOUSE 8. SI.,,.™ 48825 Van Dyke 1 block south ot 22 Mile Ullce 739- Dally 10-9 ATTENTION NEW FURNITURE LEFT IN LAYAWAY „u.. table and'6 chair*, white yellow upholstery, $50. 682-9576. " Public notice HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION forces warehouse to unload refrigerators, at ridculous costs. 2-door auto, defrost models, $141. (In cratM). ROUND DINING labile, 4 cl buffet, used once M20 *00 com-■ • ‘^ ■'room set, $130. Call 626- RANgIT"^' M", EXCELLENT condition, 651-9753. ___ R^NABLE.JLECTm^^^ Walnut bedroom suite, double ------------ _ dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chesf| Euclid. AH day. and bed, «old for $159, bal. <*“»• !reprigERATORS, $96. Hrvars. ranoes. Scratenea mooei: ' Fu'^ly guaranteed. 674-1101. Curt Vinyl 3-way recllner, sold for $89,, zee, vutNIam* Lk. Rd. bal. due. $65. Sofa with Mr. and Mrs. chair) zippered cushions, scotchguardec told for $269, bal. due. $187. 5 piece dinette, sold tor $69, be due. $49. Traditional sofa and irialchln^a chair, zipoered cushlor- roarded. Sold for $269. I7r Bassett bedroom suite, triple dresseft mirror, 4 drawer chest and panel bed. Sold for $279, bal. due. $168. 7 piece dinette, *old for $99, bal. due. $69. Deluxe Tradltionel sola anfl matching Chair, • . < . , n . n ..ASHERS, mges. Scratched models. Irenteed. 674-1101.. Curt'. Annilance. 6884 WtlllamA Lk, Rd. 6 NEWLY Ing chairs. Glass top dinette fable end A wrought Iron chairs. r:»t 1______ west "of - 1 upholstery a I 28' Troian Voyager Exp. TS 10 hp. „ ■ USED CRUISERS 1965 25' Owens Exp. hardtop, 40 miles?*$8?5.'69^liiB a’ (966 BRIDGESTONE, 175 CC, sfts' 674.3550.____________________ (966" BSA ,441. Must sell. $685. 338- 2449._______________ 1966 SUZUKI X-6 Hustler, excellent condition. 363-9891. f966 HONDA, EXCELLENT condition. Green metallic paint |ob. $495. Call Goodyear, 335-6167.____ 1966 20' Badger 1-0 160 hp, $3595. SKI BOATS 1964 17' CC 185 hp Ski tow, $2795. 1962 17' CC 18i*p Ski tow $1695. lany other ba ^ a SEA / I. Chry; s^«306 Wonted Coj^-Trucks I . FOR CLEAN CARS 01 j. Econoihv Cars. 2335 Dixie. WANTED JUNK CAR~ ditlon, free lowina. D 73M1B1 or 652-4838. _ w 0 u I d like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by '”i today. -FISCHER . BUICK ^ 4 9587 544 S. WOODWARD iTH-iso:__647-5600_ s Boals Junk Cors-Trucks 101-A 105 CARNIVAL f966 HONDA SCRAMBLER. helriiet Incl. Make offer. 647-16 (967 305 HONDA Scrambler, BEST BOAT BUY — 70 horsepower 'Aercury, electric start, tilt trailer. 5' Whitehouse flberglas acritice. $850. Aft. 5 p. CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON Boats and Motors OPEN DAILY 9 TO condition. FE 2-(967 SUZUKI, XS condition, rnlist _ _____^____, T967 HONDA, 305 Scrambler, ex-i cellent condition, $625. 651-1335. _ ! ^ Qp 4.0411 T967 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE. Ex- |^-|77'^-^-YT'^18*Scofr60“$2! cellent condition Low mileage. Boat, trailer, Johnson 35 elec. 53 1967 MOTO OUZZl, \ cellent condition. 3 5 "hOR^EPOWE R cellent conditior Do-It-Yourself •| DOCKS ,1 Aluminum or Wood ’ i Larsen Boats t Grumman Canoes . HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evlnruda Dealer" 1899 S. Telegraph_____.32£-_M?3 By Dick TurnerjNQW ond jistd Cars 106 SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVY. TWO W. Ml 4-2753^ 1966 DART ' (top. V8 autoniatlc. radiOe tawallSr rose, with vinyl (RTAN DODGE Ave. FE 8-m2 1966“DODGE -POLARA loor hardtop. VB automatic, Ills, lovely red fl iterlor, full price $1795 New and Used Can 106 $239^. Over 75 other cars to select from. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, 5-5071^ _......... 964 FORD HARDTOP, $795. "O'' 8 YAAAAHA 125CC, 400 lellent condition, must CHEVROLET PARTS. ) FORD STARLINER7\ ANNOUNCING THE NEW 1968 Hodaka 100 cc. S-SPEED trail BIKE. The' Bronco 50 cc. 4-speed bike. MG SALES 667 Dixie Hwy., Draytpn 673-64i $1495 SPARTAN DODGE SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland Ave.___FE 8-9222 1967 DODGE CORONET R/T, 440 1967 DODGE" MONACO $2695 LRTAN DOI 1967 MONACOl "Oh, I wouldn’t say Jimmy’s father is coming between' ^ "' "T exactly, but he does get between us and the | interior^end a r«k on top, ' -keys!’’ '“““ ’$2795 $1495 Bob Bofst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 950 W‘: Maple________MI 6-22I 964 FORD WAGON, $685. "^'..OOWl payments, $6.92 week. Call Mi Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turni Ford, Brimingham._____ 964 FORD GALAXIE 500 hardtop, with beautiful artlc white w'"" “ John McAuliffe Ford 0 Oakland A New and Used Cars^ 106 IRD 10 PASSE N G E R <1, 1 owner, power steering, exc. oondltlort. 674-2656. ;_ t965““FbRb GALAX^E^ MO^ com llh^he iharoeil little convertible town, V-8, automatic, radio, ■eler, power steering, brakes, two choise from, at *1MB full erlce^ jsl $188 down, and $48.65 par °John McAuliffe Ford 1630 Oakland_Av«-______FE 5-4101 I 1965 Fairlane h..i.r,^^w^^^ewa s. $1095 SPARTAN DODGE skland Ave.___ FEEL Io"YEARS younger in a llke- S iwUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, 1965 FALCON, 289 V-8, stick, $ha Keego Sales Service.____________ 1965 MUSTANG, convertible, ' automatic, radio, healer, beauti ....i.iim hi.,1. with black t MERCURY HURRICANE AND CYCLE SEE THE NEWj 8 CORTINA GT. DRAK GREEf I. MGB, iRAND NEW 1 II FE 2 I REWARD STOLEN BOATS! j ALMOST NEW PONTIAC Lahser Rd., 357- New and .11963 CORVAIR MONZA hardtop, with radio, heater, stick shift, like new! $488 full price, no money “John McAuliffe Ford 0 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 s"erV1CE. 1963 Chevy Impala : DUNE BUGGY: 1963 CORVETTE, 3 103 ANNUAL SUMMER SALE __ _ __ _________ _____________________________ ALL 1968 MODELS ^ S''°7h“i85"h'I ,*t?iiier" “"** Used Trucks RCA tPiumph*"^* HONDA i IraTle"- ?h)1en fromli . TON CHEVROLET FleetsideJAGUA^ NORTON^^ MONTESA;' PIN'TERS marine I t"on,"^bo^" wver^Mo^^^^^ SlTbef H370 Opdyke 9-8 Sat 9-6: helpers, 7C0 6-ply transport tires, -Vc H-75 at University Exit) snow tires and wheels. $650. FE 2- am-fm PARTS AND ACCESSORIE FRAME SHORTENING BY BILLY DOYLE AND MOTO-GUZZI. condition, S1300. 3 CUSTOM HONDA 305, $33Q. HONDA 300 SCRAMBLER, excellent MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE s K JOHNSON AGENCY E 4-2533 MONTESSA SCORPION, months old, A-1 condit sell, ** SPECIAL 63 Owens 1-0, 110 h.p. Merc uiser, convertible top, side and i t curtains, with Gator tandem' 5-YARD DUMP - 1956 Chev., Motorcycle Insurance Anderson & Associates f044 Joslyn 3535 (Citing, 30SCC, MERC CRUISER DEALER CRUISE OUT INC. 13 E. Walton FE 8-440i Hours: dally 9-8, Sat. 9-6 ___________Closed Sun.________ Tony's- Marioe Service JOHNSON MOTORS Geneva GW Invader, Shell Lake, Aerocrett alum, boats and canoes. Also pontoons. Terriflej dlsc--‘-on all 1067 motors and floats. Orchard Lake Rd„ Syl' 1950 FORD TRUCK fc 1952 1-TON CHEVROLET moving^arg' 2695 er;uSED 15' FIBERGLAS GLASSi hour, oil InWcllon, 12 monm or; MASTER boat with 1965 40 12.000 mile warranty. Other models' horsepower Johnson electric shift; 50CC to 500CC, Rupp Mini-bikes as' wMh generator and trailer ... $695.1 low as $144.50. ;USED 15' SEA KING FIBERGLASS] _ __ [ boat, 1962 40 horsepower ' ----- Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right; motor . ....... to Hickory Ridge Rd., to Demode; Rd., left^ end follow signs to GLASPAR STEURY, GW DAWSON'S SALES AT TieSICOj ------ li good tires. Original r $27!. "calT°EM 3-6^7 1953 CHEVY W TON, $ I Motors, 251 Oakiar Phone 629-2179. ^MAHA CYCLE SALE now Bloomfield Spor* ' YAMAHA $525. CC YAMAHA; take M-59 to W. Hlghlaf Hickory Ridge Rd„ 1 Rd., left and follow DAWSON'S SALES A1 1957 A-CAR TANDEM. 220 Cum 10 speed. R-Ranger. 674-1259. 1956 3-5 YARD CHEVY dump. May be seen at 3694 Bald A "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer" OFFERS A FINE SELECTION OF 100 PER CENT WARRANTEED USED CARS BillGolling' VW Inc. 1821 Moplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Road (15 Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT "MILOSCH 4 CHEVY STATION wagon. New and Used Cars 106 MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE 855 0 RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin. ^^f^^CHEVROLET"" Malibu Convertible ' 396 engine, automatic, po steering, power brakes, ye ‘’$1895 SPARTAN DODGE $1188. Full '‘jVhn^mcauTiffe ford 30 Oakland d'jl965 t-BIRD convertiblej^ beauntul- e top, factory air conditioning, radio, I neater, automatic, power steering, brakes, power windows, summer special only $2188 full price. Just $188 down and $69.86 per month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 12'630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1966 BEAUtUFUL midnight blue and •vhlle top Mustang convertible, xc. running condition, 1 women iwner, new tires, $1,600. 682-2513. (fFXrR'LANE GT 390, AutornaUc. DODGE DART GT CONVERTIBLE, ---1, power brakes, tinted glass, ’ car warranty, whitewalls, list e $3200, will sacrifice, going _____servlce_$9i9n 642-8737. | MUST SACRIFICE, GoTng Into pniine, ^^w^^brSes 'Snd j, 3700 miles, best offer FE 2-8357 between 9 a.m. t, Chevy powered 5^8 SEDAN, good“tlres , payments $ Harold Turner Ford, It MIS, Clarkston, The "oor lo-ioor carpellnj the red vinyl Interior. “ for class). Deluxe wti Music floats from thi powerful cylinder! ow's 1h« spinner! about you? Only 13,000 rt 33JJI44 etter 5:30. ___ 766 T-BIRD, private, al COUPE, $1195, i $11.72 week. 4-7500. Harold 3-speed, slick shift, solid white with a black interior wide oval tires, mint con-■ ditlon. Only $1588 full price, lust $188 down and $50.58 per month. This car carries a 50,006 mile or 5- '' John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._________FE 5-4101 jmatic. h black V I metallic 964 CHEVELLE MALIBU convertible, V-8, auto., good condition, 332-7025. 1965 CHEVY Impala super sport, door, hardtop, sensational value OAKLAND Suburban Olds 4e/'^Vy?!?MF^'irL 860 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM >4 Ford Gal. THUNDERBIRD RUNS ’ ...7 CHEVY WAGON, $125, 9383 call after 4 p.m.___ 1967 TECH CENTER Chevre door hardtop, Impala, 1 FORD STATION WAGON. 6, $3600, 673-8105. 1967 CHEVY IMPALA SS Con- STARLINER, 2-dO( ito. Perfect ,mechanlce best offer. 682-0181 ( Bonnevilli : IV64 Catalina «-uuur ........ 1964 Chev. Van ............... 11963 hardtop ^"kee6o‘”pontiac Keego Harbor ._______________6f T-BIRD CONVERTIlBLE, rXr^.V TOM RADEMACH^R CHEVY-OLDS 1967 Chevy BIscayne 2-door, cylinder —‘-—"■ * Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-751)0. Harolif Turner Ford, r'—’— I top. 1965 T-BIRD LANDAU, beaulif arctic white with black nylon to automatic, radio, heater, powi steering, brakes, power window Ford's finest creation for ^a Special. Only'^SlBee full price. Ju $88 down. Si53.53 per month. JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD Jand Ave. I. Really . _ ,>eciai at only I price, lust $188 down, mo $64.19 per month. This car :arries a 5-year or 50,000 mile new John McAuliffe Ford 5*630 Oakland Aue^ _FE 5-4101 Pretty Ponies 5 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS S MANY TO CHOOSE FROM 5 Priced from $1295 As Low as $39 Down HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. iBIRMINGHAM "' o select, On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 i CHEVY IMPALA convertIbK III power, excellent condition, ----------5, 65M 669. 1965 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERTI-ble, 396 cu. In. High lift cam, 411 posi tract., turbo Hydro transmission, exc. condition, $1595, 673- Bicycles A-l repaired BIKES, I ........... .........jr — Hwy., Clarkston._______________________ 0 h.p. Call F. Clark, 338-|]960 CHEVY PICKUP, RUNS good, . 2163 weekdays. 651-1303 $275, Save Auto. FE 5-3278. INTERNATIONAL Boats-Accessories >< Airplanes 1965 .LAKE 1 ,9251. t le 673-3392. 12' ALUMINUM BOATS .......... $108 Trailers $120, 15' canoes ....$196 Big Coho boats/ 14', $289j 15' $359; Big fiberglass runabout $595: 1,000 lb. boat trailers .....$169; Save $$$ of Buchanons' ’ j - .9 Highland Rd. 4 WHEEL di )62 FORD per cent off. FERRY SERVICE, condition. S 6129 Highland Road (M-59).__ 762L PRIVATE PILOT LICENSE ^1962JEEP^ $665 I "etlent^ibbel? priced'low' CAN BE COMPLETED IN JUST trade. ROSE RAMBLER- 30 DAYS. i llnin„ 1 .y. PM 6.4155 COMAAANDER FLIGHT SERVICE 673-1238 DEAjJ^R Dixie I New and Used Cars 10 Been GMC'GAI^OOp "l^d 'packer.' Bankrupt? Need a Car? FE 8-4521 Ask for Mr. Wyatt OAKLAND INTERNATIO; 3;jAL htion, ' 1965 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 4 door, 19,000 ml., double power, extras, exc. condition, $1475, 626-4711._ 1965 CHEVROLET IMPALA SS hardtop, with V-8, automatic, console, radio, heater, power steering, BISCAYNE CHEVY 2-door ountaln green with black vinyl' Im. Power glide, brakes and; eering, radio, and ound, whitewall illent condition, icritice. FE 5-8047. 1962 FORD CLUB COUPE, $350. "0"'i965 FORD FALCON, -■-- payments, $3.97 week. Call j t--------- ‘ ■ Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold, , r Ford, Birmingham. . $897 f i LUCKY AUTO CHEV ». 335-2916. Bel. t6. 375 / magsr 1962 FALCON 2-DOOR, ^MUSTANG hardtop, 1967 FORDS OFFICIAL CITY CARS 8 cylinder) power steering, full' prI'cI $1395 Harold Turner Ford , BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500_ i ’ FORD 'cdUNTRY SEDAN, \AOK i.'lO Hewn, navm^nts $13,fl8 (I 4-7500, Call ^ WE ARE SORRY For the Inconvenience caused by our street being repaved. After completion Je Wh“aTo'n“cHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Walled Lake.__ ____^24-3192 f962 IMPERIAL j Crown I 1963 fairlane 2-dOOr, 3 FORD wagon, $■ ayments $4.88 wei , 'Birmingham, 3 FORD STATION WAGON, v lean, $495. Call 673-8017.__________ ^_____STANDARD A ; Repossessed? • .3 ECONOLINE V, T MOONEY 673-1238_______ h Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 f4' SPEEDBOAT, 11, 40 noTie moior, j -ailer, Reasj 674-1521. j I. OR 3-5200 I' CHEROKEE RUNABOUT, i work, best offer, OR 4-1957. f4' ALUMINUM BOAT and ti extras. 62^58.________ 14' . FIBERGLAS 15' RUNABOUT, 1964, 40 horsep 15' CENTURY CEDAR Boat and fnt-; trailer $150. FE 5-5829. T6' DUNTHY, 50 A LATE MODEL CAR Wi darnaged '’151°'' ' H. & H.’ Auto Sales.___________ BUICKS, CHEVY'S PONTIACS, and more. H. G. Van Welt, OR 3-\355| .EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Especially 4 speeds andftbrvettcs. Check the rest, Jhen i8t the bes AveriH's RANCHERO 6 CYLIND ick shitt. 673-9735. ___ JEEP TUXEDO PARK be iva'te owner, $1500. ^9791. _ 1965 FORD tractor $2595'or equ.pm 1966 FORD '/2 Ton icK^’llight' g STANDARD AUTG PONTIAC 109 Ea!t BLVD., S. _ 338-4033 _ 960 BuYcK INViCTA, VVHTT GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. $695 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales KESSLER'S $1495 1966 CHEVY V: Ton $1595 -TA-YLOR'S CHEVY-OIDS LYAAAN, 35 ELECTRIC snd controls, tilt Ha"'— reas. 130 Lockhave 16' CHRIS-CRAFT, i S'! Mansfield Aii AUTO SALES ^ ^ 300 65^1-65611 Wallpd, Lake _ •966 FORD F-600"’d 900x20 tires, exc. nance, $2395. 624-5 ?6 LeSABRE TdOOR, doubl Jovver, 25,000 fniles. OR 3-3870, i4 CADILLAC COUPE DeviTl! ip^ruce Blu^^A-t, $1995, private, FI pj^CA3lLLAcU:'6¥PErs^i^blac8 .ondition. Wi sell pnva e nai i CADILLAC BROUGHAM. 1965!_ 11-2557 ~ THOMPSON,^ Includ^ng^ 17' CHRIS CRAFT horsepower. $850. \ $1150. 391-1565._______ irp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and cks for out-of-state market. Top! ’’"‘MANSFIELD i AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. i-5900_________FE LUCKY AUTO 6 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, all The goodies plus air. White on _white,_$3M0^33^663._ __ late’ MODEL CADILLACS ON hand at all TIMES JEROME CADILLAC CO. 1965 CHEVY • Impala Wagon with the 327 V-8, eutomatic, pow( steering, cherry red finish, re vinyl Interior. Ortly — $1595 Matthew s-Hargreaves 631 q^Wand Ave^ ._FE 4-45- 19'65 ^C'ORVAfR MON ZA, ""MILcicH"" CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 9 passenger station: seen at 3694 Bald $688, full price. No Money Down. I John McAuliffe Ford '630 Oakland Ave.__________FE 5-4 HARDTOP, $49' j *^(L7500.** Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham.____ __ 1964 FORD COUNTRY Squire 9 Suto!"®*r'adio“‘’"r'ed, °sharp. ’’“$795! Private owner. 363-5008._______ 4 FORD RANCHERO, 8 cylinder, lUtomalic transmission, $725. 651- 'F5CHRYSLER 4-door, hardtop, V8, I fo/y*Vrr***WhTtewa^^ one 5"" $1695 ^ automa^lic, (964 T-BIRD LANDAU beautiful metallic champagne with black, power*°*'steerlng, brakes,’ poyrer ru'mm'er' special Only $1588 tuli price. Just $88 down, end $65.04 Uoh’n‘’mcauliffe ford 630 Oakland Ave.________ EE 1964 FORD FAIRLANE Station wagon, with V8, automatic, radio. _______FE 8-9222 heater, summer special only |C crip c Al F $488 full price, no money down, passenger senL bus for , , Johd McAuliffe Jord 6 $350. Ph. UL 2-2379. 630 Oakland Ave, * 964 FA'i'RLANE SEJ5AN, ---- payments $7.““ E 5-4101 r Ford, Blrmlngharr 4-7500. Harol ensporfation, mjyr mm i 0900 during our 1968 MODEL PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER EXAMPLE: NOW YOU CAN BUY A BRAND NEW 1968 RAMBLER FOR JUST WITH ONLY $1888 $88 DOWN AND $13.56 PER WEEK ALSO CHECK OUR SELECTION OF Factory Official Cars FROM $1795 WITH SAME LOW PAYMENTS MANY WITH FACTORY AIR SPEND SOME TIME TO STOP IN AT —....- YOU COtite-^AVE AH.OT Of MONEY.-^ 666 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM 646-3900 18' BOAT, 75 ELECTRIC E THOMPSON CABIN 20' COHO BOAT, frafier Horsepower motor. 693-6652 23' CRUISER. SACRIFICE'Ts ________ 682-5543 STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Ye pay" more°tor"sharp, "late model ’ FORD RANGE R, bucket seats, e 5 CORVAIR MONZA 4 st oor hardtop, radio, h e /hitewalls, $895. RONEY'S I FORD F-600 d MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ^ 1957 CHEVY. '2-DbOR hardtop, $250.'- CHEVROLET, I Supi 2983. TOP $ PAID I for all sharp Pontiacs «^p’rete‘rr'eiiSd,'^^^^^^^ CADILLACS. We are ______^__________prepared to make you a better offer!! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON DERBALL by Buehler Jet. 290 h.&. Chrysler marine engine, 'turbo-power let 3 stage unit, all gauges — ammeter,^ gas, ^temfKrMure, all’ running lights, plus spot-li^t, bilga pump, mooring cover. Wialtes an excellent ski boat. Original cost was $7795. A real buy at only $3675./' MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main, Rochester 651-9761 EVES. CALL 6734478 1967 17' Deep V Wno?thii43 CRISSMAN 1350 N. Woodward 'TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S. FOR "CLEAN” USED CAP* Fareigw Cars WANTED Mercury electric start, 3 props, 2 gas tanks Rnd battery JncI,, erica (ncteSes trpller. 693-6172. •OAf trailer Late Model GM Cars TOP $ PAID FOR EXTRA CLEAN CARS Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM "COMPLETE SERVICE ON 1 . . Starters,. . . Altinators. . Generators i’ OPEN 24 HOURS Monday thru Friday GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS ________FE 5-9485____ good condition, $100. ' 9 CHEVY STATION V io CORVETTE 283 4-SPEED. Good ) CORVAIR, AUTOMATIC, r I960 VW, BODY and engint Tr MARKET TIRE s 1966 CHEVY ision and double power GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. toOade'maTher 1965 IMPERIAL Crown 4-door^ hardtop,^ sky blua wnlh Sows,'' FACTORY*^'*Am*'CONDITIONING. $2195 SEE THIS OUTO AT OUR NEW LOCATION AT THE Troy Motor Mall, on Maple BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth MILOSCH MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH lulomaiic,'' double power, rad vhitewalls, dark blue, very nl ;ar, 677 M-24, Lake Orion, MY 5.11967 CHRYSLER -2 door. CHEVY IMPALA SS con-! OAKLAND 961 CHEVY NOMAD, 9-passenger wagon, excellent second car, clear and sharp. Starts anct runs very g(»d power steerini^, black, ! CORVETTE PERFECT shape "• -‘‘?r 682-4708, after 5:30 12 CHEVY II Hardtop, 4 c » u 10 m a 11 c , radio, heat l^ransporiation ^peciai^at Only t; John McAuli.ffe Ford _____kJV63 CMtrVY U con* I don- _ condition, 6 cyl., ! '00. AAA 4,4259. ______„..Jt963“ CHEVY II 2 FOR DUNE BUGGY,| down, payments nt end, $145, 626-2092. Mr. Parks, )yil ^1-61W. I >r,, $3SP. "0"i '7 week. Call! 1966 CHEVY Impala Convertible with a maroon finish, white t( 327 engine, V-B, autonia $1995 .Matthews- Hargreaves 1963 DODGE WITH Ic 1965 DODGE CORONET with V8, automatic t r.ain heater, power beautiful Robins Interior, summ I hardtop, ismisslon. ,» matchln|^^li down, and $48.65 pet ifiontfi. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 OAKLAND Wouldn't You Really Rather Drive A NEW BUICK or OPEL From Your New LOCAL DEALER No Need to Drive Any Further! BUICK OPEL STOP IN- -MEET OUR QUALITY STAFF TODAY: Richord Navorre Ed Schou Hank Schlaefer (New Car Manager) (Salesman)^ (Salesman) Frank Ridge Bill Buechler (Salesman) Wilbur Flinley (Salesman) Jack Brennan Byron Davidson Tony Grimoldi (Salesman) (Salesman) (Owner) 1968 BUICK SPECIAL-4 Door Deluxe 0, t^ater, whitewalls, stick, 6 ■'"'$2499 -1968 OPELS A Large Selection of 1968 OPELS-AWAITS YOU! I WeAWjll Not Be Undersold - Immediate delivery - Boosting—The finest Service we believe in Oakland County, on any GM cars. We welcome and invite you to visit our large, fine staff of factory trained mechanics, service manager, and parts people. Courtesy is our motto. Please Stop By. Service — Satisfaction — A Guarantee. -HONESTLY-WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD- BUICK-OPEL 210 Orchard Lake Pontiac New Radio. Power steering. New tires. $2095. Must sell. Caii atter i, 425- Wl. ____ij,_____ fOR SALE, 1967 MUSTANG, 390 cij. In automatic. Caii 082-3171 after 5 THE PONTE\C PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1968 Florida cart E-Z-l glass, i heater, power windows, exc__________ condition. Best offer by 7-31-68 takes. May be seen at ' Sunoco, Corner of Silver Laki Tflo COMET STATIC running condition, 6 1961 COMET DEMO-DEMO All Demos Must Go! Take Advantage of the Great Savings Now! Many to Choose From Get First Choice! HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURy 1250 Oakland Ave. _FE 3-7863 1961 COMET 2-door, $265. "0" , i Used Cart 106 ------ CONVERTIBLE, WMk* r?ii ‘!g!'*"''„P»vmenfs $16.92 HaL^^d'Tu'Ine^^^Fn':r'‘g^,r;y,Lff_«>■ NEW NEWl^EW 1968 Montego Now Is the Time to Make Extra Good Deal I Many Many Cars to Sell Now! See Us Today BEFORE YOU DEODE- See Hillside New end Cu^. NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHED WAGES, WE TAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE-iSlABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT :an be purchased, with NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME N AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO 1967 COUGAR Hardtop, XR7, radio and heater. V8 automa.,^, Alcapoco Blue, terlor. Thli ’ $2295 SPARTAN DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. _ FE 8-9222 1966 MERCURY Monterey Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales COMET ■■ -89 en :''«-0159." NEW NEW NEW 1968 COUGAR Now Is the Time to Moke Extra Good Deal Many Many Cors to Sell Now! See Us Today BEFORE YOU DECIDE- See Hillside Lincoln-Mercury MARMADUKE NEW NEW NEW 1968 MERCURY Now Is the Time to Moke Extra Good Deal MANY MANY CARS TO SELL NOW! See Us Today BEFORE YOU DECIDE- See Hillside^ hardtop, n 682-9223, Riggins, Dealer. A OLDS DYNAMIC SB, p By Anderson and Leeming New end Used Cort 106 '64 PONTIAC GRAND Prix, $995. "0" down, paymentja M.92 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner Forda Birmingham.______ 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2 door hardtop. Exc. condition. 682-1368. “Cheer up, Marmaduke, it’s only 'til Pop gets our net fixed!’’ New and Used Cart SAVE MONEY AT MIKE CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple, A 1965 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan Loaded with all the ext condlt?oning! PHce'd to lelL $1995 Suburban Olds 1963 PLYMOUTH Fury door hr-“— China \ imalfc, >09*1 he TROY MOTOR Maple Rd. 05 miles East of BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth New and Uted Cars 67PLYMOUTH FURY III $2195 SPARTAN DODGE Vou/i Center whItewaUs, let black 1966 Mercury Montclair, V Telegraph Rd. just North of Square Lake Rd. PHONE m-mm The Heart of our Business IS THE SATISFACTION OF OUR CUSTOMERS 1966 MERCURY Montclair Hardtop 2-door all white beauty, with blue vinyi Interior, V-l automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heatef whitewalls. Hurry on this one. 1965 MERCURY Porklone Breezewa^sedan, wUh ^vinyl lop,^ automalic.^^powe 1967 COUGAR 2 Door Hardtop with 289 super V-8, automatic, power steering, powe disc brakes, vinyl top, stereo type system, mai wheels, wide oval whitewalls. Must see to appreciate 1963 MERCURY Colony Pork Wagon 9 passenger, V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes need lots of room—here It isl Only— 1966 CHRYSLER New Yorker Hardtop, with factory . ing, brakes, windows, 13,000 a-*-*' 1968 CHEVELLE Sport Coupe 307 V-8, with radio, heater, premium red beautyl Only— ,1964 PONTIAC LeMons Convertible with V-8, automatic, buckets, radio, hea 1962 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille with power steering, brakes, w vhitewalls, i idows, crus-control ,.- r : :H&LSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333- $1695 $1495 $2695 $995 $2295 $2195 $1095 $1195 7863 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 65 Olds Dynamic 68 2-door irdtop, automatic, power steering. BY OWRER, T^7 Valiant, stUT imc warranty. MY 3-633B._ 1967 FURY III Wagon, 8 P^NT^Ac!^Vacatton^Vp eYi a OAKLAND ), console automatic, p 1966 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan Full power, factory air ditioning, vinyl top. 2 to Choose from, both priced at only; $2495 Suburban Olds 1967 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan Suburban Olds MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN Clearance Sale All remaining '68 Oldsmo-biles and "Youngmobiles", and demos now for the buy of your life. DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 1963 PLYMOUTH FURY '8 automatic, radio, heater, powe teering, whitewalls, midnight blu( """'"$795 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury Convertible automatic,^ radio, h e a f a t location at miles East of Woodward. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth OAKLAND OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH V v-8 Commando, h Whitt top, $700. New and Uted Cary 106 1967 PONTIAC 4 - DOOR, power Steering and brakes, formerly municipal car. $1497 full price. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track ^65 TEMPEST, 4-dpor, 326, i 36,000 actual miles, looks and ------ good, $1100. 673-1784. SHELTON 967 PONTIAC CATALINA, double power, auto., 2-door, vinyl 21,000 miles. 6e^3677._ 67 PONTIAC, TEMPEST, sharp 2-door hardtop, 6 cylinder engine, automatic transmission, power tires, wilt sell wholesale, $1795 ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union 968 TEMPEST, CUSTOM 6 auto. $2,100. 363-6357. ..8 CATALINA STATION WAGON, $2975. 628-4187. PONTIAC CATALINA 2-door 1 RAMBLER Station V STAR AUTO EASY CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN 1965 Chevalia 1964 Grand PrIx 1963 Pontiac 2-dr. 1962 Monza 1965 Bal-Alr Wgn. 1964 Olds Starfira 1963 Impala 2-door hardtop 1960 Dodge 2-door hardtop , 1963 Grand Prix Price Pymts. ||63 Pontiac h^top $695 t 7.20 1964 Olds convertible 995 10.18 1964 Ford wagon 595 6.05 1964 Pontiac convert, ?95. 10.18 1962 Cadillac 895 9.1$ 1963 Plymouth 595 r 2 dr. 63 Olds 2-door 2-door 595 6.05 CALL FE 8-9661 STAR AUTO 962 OAKLAND 1965 PONTIAC 2-DOOR needi motor work, $57 Lehser Rd. 357-9888. performance equipment. 1966 PONTIAC LeMons Hardtop with V-8 automatic, $2050 Matthews- Hargreaves MILOSCH GTO RED CONVERTIBLE, > TEMPEST 2-DOOR. 1959 PONtlAC BONNEVILLE 4-door ■---‘top. Take as is. Needs wor*' or be«t nffar 48B H6rDer i FE 4-6659. I960 PONTiAC CATALiNA good 'ONTIAC; When yoi MARKET tiRE gi aatefy check. 2635 PONTiAC TEMPEST station wagon. Good tires in good s'" $246. Must sell. Leaving slate 'BONNEVILLE VINYL • r payments. 682-9307. 1967 GTO Convertible Turquoise with white top, select shift automatic, power steering power brakes, ail new red llni tires. All this for lust; $2595 AUDETTE JULY IS A RECORD BREAKING MONTH AT -COME SEE--COME TRADE--COME SAVE- Low Down Payments-Quick Financing We desperately need - FORD - OM -CHRYSLER or AMERICAN MOTORS CARS For Our Used Car Customers! TOP TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES . a "WHERE THE HUNT ENDS" 499 S. Hunter Birmingham MI 7-0955 ,2 PONTIAC Catalina , PONTIAC CATALINA cor rtible, best otter. Call after < Oakland Ave. FE 8-4079.____________ 1962 PONTIAC 4-DOOR Catall Excellent condition. 332-3317. 1962 PONTIAC 2 962 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE, $445. "0" down, payments $4^4 week. Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold Turner, Birmingham. 963 PONTIAC convertible, $700. Econom^_Car^£^33^Jx|e,_^_^ 1965 Plymouth = URY II 2 door, hardtop VI vhitewalls,^ bea^utiful ^Hawiian, $1495 1963 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, I: exc. condition, no rust. £^E 5^73. 11963 PONTIAC STATION WAGON. I _Ney^ires^ $6?2._ 651-1853._ |l96*3 TEMPEST STATION WAGON,. ‘iDEALER JI238 LOOKING FOR BARGAIN? try the PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 ______ MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE EVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-273S. 1967 OLDS 442 4-speed, power steering, factory air cor^ltlonlng, A $2795 Suburban Olds 11965 Ply mouths ■P OFFICIAL CITY CARS ' FULL PRICE ! $795 Harold Turner Ford VALIANT, 2-door, $351 iwn, payments $3.97 weel r. Prks, Ml 4-7500. r Ford, Birmingham. 1963 VALIANT, 4 OAKLAND BIRMINGHAM A/(vl//a CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Wants You To On Any New 1968 Model In Stock GIGANTIC "Sm? Mai (SteammmS CHOOSE FROM A SELECTION OF OVER 300 Road Runners Imperials Valiants Barracudas Chryslers Furys ALL MODELS AND COLORS—OVER 100 WITH FACTORY AIR Troy } Motor Mall On W. Maple (15 Mile) I i6 PLYMOUTH, 383 Cu. In., I "op, double power, 29,00 mi., $1600. FE 2-^670. ' S PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE. , CATALINA 4-DOOR TEMPEST 4-door, $795. 0 wn, payments, $7.88 week. Call r. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Harold | irner Ford, Birmingham.____ pj^YMOUTH BELVEDERE II wflh^^'^’black, vi%'l top streak Interior, V8 aytor "'""$2295 ’irt9l top and silver, . V8 automatic, radio, steering, whitewalls, 1967 BARRACUDA CONVERTIBLE, blue with black top, 12.000 miles, OAKLAND GO! HAUPT PONTIAC toiOademacher CHEVY-OLDS 1964 Pontiac Catalina 7< hardtop, automatic, |X)we^ steer whitewali tires, very'low mile 964 PONTIAC autometic, doubli after 5,'^JU (Formerly Kessler Hahn) Chrysler-Plymouth Rambler-Ieep TODAYS SPECIAL 1965 VALIANT 4 DOOR V-200 Automatic, low mileage, special priced at Only $1150 1965 CHRYSLER 300 2 door hardtop, with V-8, automatic, factory air, buckets, low mileage. Only $1695 1967 JEEP Universal 4 wbael drive, with 3100 actual miles, special at Only $1995 1964 CHEVY 9 Pass. “ with V-8, power steering. Ideal vacation car. Only — „ $1095 1968 PLYMOUTH FURY III ” 2 door hardtop, executive car, air conditioning, full factory warranty Only ~ $2695 1965 GMC % Ton heavy duty, that is ready » to go to work. Only — $1195 , 1964 PONTIAC Hardtop Bonneville 2 door hardtop, with double power. Only — $1195 ON DIXIE HWY. - NEAR M15 CLARKSTON ‘ WA 5-2635 ‘2883 1968 LEMANS 2-Door Hardtop with decor group, 2-barrel 350 engine, automatic, heater, push button radio, console, power steering, whitewolis. GOODWILL USED CARS We Need Your Car on Our Lot! Top Dollar Paid for Your Trade-In! 1965 DODGE Pickup 2-door, 6-cyl., stick, economy 6-cyl. engine, radio, heater, whitewalls, blue exterior. Only $1095 1965 CHEVY SS 2-door herdtop, autometic, power steering, brakes, wide oval tires. Only— $1595 1965 FORD '/2 Ton Pickup, with belga finish, 6-cyllnder, stick. $1295 1966 MUSTANG Nice! with V-8, radio, heater, whitewalls, buckets, and vinyl top. Only— $1695 1963 TEMPEST 2-Door Sport coupe, with V-8, automatic, power; radio, heater, whitewalls. $895 1963 CHEVY Impald SS with power steering, brakes, automatic V-8, with whitewalls. Only— $995 1965 TEMPEST Wagon 6-cyl. automatic, with radio, heater, white-walls. Burgundy. $1395 1965 OLDS Sports Cutlass coupe, V-8, automatic, power, radio, heater, whitewalls. $1595 1964 RAMBLER 440 2 door hardtop, American, 6 cyl., automatic, buckets, console, radio, heater, whitewall*. '$995 ,, WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD k PONTIAC-TEMPEST Ask for*^Ken lohnson, Stub Graves, jim Barnows]|y, \R6ck Lund, Joe FlumerfelJ On M-24-Lake Orion .MY 3-6266 C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1968 By County Citizens League Candidates Are Rated Ratings of candidates in the Aug. 6 primary have been released by the Oakland Citizens League, a Birmingham-based nonpartisan organization. The ratings are compiled by a candidate investigation committee, and are based Briney Jr., 65, Edward R. Bigger, 55, and Paul D. Jeffrey, no rating. 64th District: Democrat: Aldo agnozzi, 89, and Leonard P. Baruch, no rating. 65th District: Republican, incumbent William P. Hampton, I Martin Er Clements, William C. Kern, 55; Democrat, Monte R. Geralds, 89, incumbent Bill S. Huffman, 86, Jon E. Daniels, 78, Sam Panzica, 71, and Lanson J. education, 10 points; business,jge, and Timothy P. Pickard, 65. political and civil experience, 15j 66th Di s tr ic t: Republican,! points; and a personal in-ijy^hard N. Sanderson, 88, terview, 75 points. ■ ★ * ★ Two incumbent state! representatives in souths Oakland County failed t o receive the top rating of the league. Carrothers, 59. In the 66th District Demo-____________________:_ cratic Rep. Bill S. Huffman fell short of the top rating given to Monte R. Geralds, while in the 68th District, Republican Rep. Wi l l i a m Hayward was edged by Daniel Gillespie. PRIMARY RACES The following is the leagues's list of candidates and ratings A house fire in Pontiac! where there are primaries. yesterday caused an estimated Congress $700 damage and took firemen | 191h District: Democrat: ^our to extinguish. Gery R. Frink, 89, and Ron Mardiros, 73. 68th District: Republican, Daniel Gillespie, 82, incumbent William Hayward, 81, David H-Gabler, 79, and John R. Duncan, 76. 69th District: Democrat, incumbent Daniel S. Cooper, and William S. Dahlerup, no rating. County Offices Prosecutor: Republican, John N. O’Brien, 92, and Richard D. Kuhn, 87; Democrat, Thomas G. Plunkett, 93, and Louis E. Fairbrother, 80. Sheriff: Republican, in-Icumbent Frank Irons, 88, and Herbert C. Cooley, $700 Damage in House Fire^ Democrat, Robert G. Phillips, 81, Ruel E. McPherson, 69, and! Milton C. Jones, 65. Clerk-Register of Deeds:, Republican, Lynn D. Allen, 81,! and Thomas R. McWilliams, 56. [ Treasurer: Republican, C.j Hugh Dohany, 79, and Lloyd M. j Sibley, 72. i Pontiac Man Is Bound Over in City Killing A Pontiac man charged with the killing of a 25-year-old woman July 20 faces ar-raignmet in Oakland County Circuit Court Aug. 8 on a charge of second-degree murder. Bcmnd over at his preliminary examination yesterday before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum was Ervin Bradley, 27, of 467 Moore. AP Wlrephoto RECEIVES AWARD — Mayor Richard Daley (left) presents Chicago’s Medal of Merit yesterday to Sidney Bennett, 35, a karate teacher who rescued a Chicago Sun-Times photographer from a gang of youths during a racial disturbance last week. Watching the presentation is Bennett’s wife, Barbara. He is in Oakland County Jail in lieu of $2,000 bond. Bradley is accused of the fatal shooting of Mrs. Willie Smoot during an alleged argument at a party at the Bradley home. Nationwide Police Strike Eyed in Bid for Support SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) -A national two-day police walkout has been proposed by police leaders embittered by what they consider lack of support in dealing with racial violence'. riot when they’re hot happy with housing. When they get poor pay they riot, too—and they don’t work for us. ★ ★ ★ “The people have to make ‘When police are being shot (heir minds up—do they want us like fish in a barrel, it’s time wejto protect them or don’t they?’’ do something,’’ said John Her-| Herrington said the date for rington of Philadelphia, national the “seminar” on the proposed president of the 137,000-member I walkout will be set at the meet -Fraternal Order of Police. ;mg of the Fraternal Order of A conference will be held in| Police national boards in St. September to consider the walk- Louts Aug. 18-20. out, Herrington said today. No| represented at the Witnesses said ; ensued during the reported argument and that a shot was fired into Mrs. Smoot’s head. Police said they impounded a 22-caliber rifle at the scene. date or place has been set. Delegates will include representatives of the order and such city police groups as New York’s Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association and the Detroit Po-Association, Herrington scufflei^ai'l-. Cleveland meeting included New York, Boston, Detroit, Philadelphia, Birmingham, Ala., and Gary, Ind., he said. The blaze at 209 S. East Blvd. „ „ . . broke out shortly after 1 p.m. in! State Representative kitchen of the two-story 60th District: Republican, in* frame home owned and oc-cumbent Clifford H. Smart, 96, cupied by Mrs. Marie Pomery, and N. Paul Forsberg, 67; fire officials said. Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Lana Turner Misses Glamor MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Lana LEADER PROPOSAL The walkout was first pro-j posed, he said, at a meeting of[ police leaders from several! large cities after they attended the funeral for three Cleveland officers slain by snipers. They think people ought to find out what it would be like if there were no police departments,” said Herrington. You take Cleveland,” he said. “Nobody’s cpncemed Sherriff-Goslin Co. Pontiac's Oldest Roofing and Siding Company Free Estimates 332-5231 HOWARD L DELL is my choice tor STATE REPRESENTATIVE Paid for by; Solon Spears 204 Florence, Pontiac Cecil J. Clark Turner misses the good old about the man lying there para-days when actresses had “It,” lyzed with a bullet in his spine, the Odd Fellows Lodge of Novi, I Yesterday. Surviving are his glamor ruled Hollywood, and Nobody’s concerned about three the Royal Arch Masonic Lodge!wile, Ella; three daughters, movies built a dream world. iofficers in their graves. No-Democrats, Earl F. J. St. Aubin * * • * ' Service for Cecil J. Clark, 70,;71 of Milford, Walled LakeiMrs. Jackie Lange of Pontiac, in Mexico City where she was body’s concerned about their ^ and William E. Todd, no £jj.g vehicles responded of 19*2 Ellwood will be 2 p.m. Rotarians and Walled Lake!and Linda and Bonnie, both at filming “The Big Cube,” heriwidows and orphans. What they | ratings. Ijjg alarm and were at the tomorrow at Pursley - Gilbert Masonic Lodge 528. home; a son, Dennis at home; a fij-st picture in three years, the^^^ concerned about is the civil; 61st District; Republican,'scene until 2 p'.m. Funeral Home with burial ini Surviving are his wife, Sylvia; stepson, Arnold McGechy of 48.year-old former “Sweater rights of Evans.” incumbent Loren D. Anderson,I pirgmen said the b 1 a z e Perry Mount Park Cemetery. |a son, Charles of Livonia; threeiBad Axe; two sisters, including Girl” complained “there’s no He referred to Fred Ahmed 86, Donald J. von Rase, 69, andisfarted when food in a pah on' Mr. Clark, a retired employe! daughters, Violet Bridges ofiMrs. Clark Wheaton of Pontiac; I glamor any more.” jEvans, a black nationalistquot- Donald T. Mason Jr., 65. ! the stove overheated They said of Pontiac Motor Division, died'Farmington, Jeanette Bohen of and four brothers; including! * * * I that $500 of the total damage! yesterday. jPort Charlotte and Lillian 62nd District: Republican, was done to the building, the’ Surviving are his wife, Sybil; JenMns of Union Lake; s Howard Lr^, 81, James W.! remainder to contents. three sons. Jack and Joseph,! brother; and 12 grandchildren. -------------- jboth of Pennsylvania, and| James of Pontiac; t w o! Stanley S. Oscendosky Safecrackers Get T/^^/.U/^K!^^Cl;Ic Tnd Mrf Thols! Monday night that the police Haddon of Lansing; 13 Oscendosky, 59, ot p.m. 1 nursaay toe Burns , ^ ^ grandchildren; two g r e a t - with buripl al“^omph'’ and “Sweater Girls’’ civil rights complaints.’’ ^ahdehiidre„ia„dtwoaiatera.|^™»;P.,,,i>,,^,^,P^ Cehietery, at.^™e, Lan^^ iaehSl-t“aa? ... . . „ r-ll- Funeral Home. idequoit, N.Y. CARBON COPY KIDS thpre are civil riehf, Pk . I . W'^bam McCallum different. The only one I’ve seen \innC ^ D^^^loome along in years who may jIUID L/CjI I UYUU grandchildren; and one great-L that little ‘extra’ is Julie 3 ' grandchild. Christie.” ——- - - —„------------- ---------, I grandchild. He said the firm’s safe and ajMrs. Griffith died of an illness! Surviving are a son, George! cigarette machine had been in Cheyenne, %o , en route to!e, of Pontiac; nine grandchil- Robert E. Richmond of 3119 Richard L. Shemwell taken to a rear office an^ forced la new teaching position in San dren a brother; and a sister, open. iFrancisco, Calif. Mrs Sadie Mae Abram of Pon- Identification officers were' she is survived by her fiac' called to the scene to check for'daughter. Martha Griffith of N. Koreans, Yanks Clash; 1 Each Killed fingerprints, police said. jLos Angeles, Calif. Schoolhouse Waterford " , | Miss Turner, who was, cequl (UPI) - U S troonsl Township, told township police MILFORD TOWNSHIP -Hollywood’s reigning sex god-i. this morning four more cam-'Service for fbrmer resident dess for many years paign signs of his have been Richard L. Shemwell, ,64, of responsible for the wave of girls Mississippi Thrush Scorns Idea That She's a Hillbilly By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — “If the idea exists that I’m a hillbilly I’m not sure that it does — I am NOT! ” Miss Bobbie (Jentry from (Thickasaw County, Miss., sat in the opulent Plaza Oak Room. She was ordering about ^ $50 in luncheon vittles for a few friends. The slickly turned-out song genius who was purportedly sndtched out of the bayou, raggedly 1 and barefooted, and made rich and famous~with “Ode to Billie Joe,” had to laugh. Elegance becomes her. In England where she just did six TV specials for BBC, she was almost as fancy as Douglas Fairbanks. j ' ^ I Richmond, who is presently ' Service for former Pontiac!the only Democrat on the Funeral Home, Milford, with resident Paul S. Payne, 65, of|Waterford Township Board, is burial at Gants Cemetery Denver, Colo., will be Thursday!opposing three other Democratic Sharon Grove, Ky. in Denver. ' hopefuls in the race for the Mr. Shemwell, a retired job Mr. Payne, a machinist, died I County Board of Supervisors setter for Ford Motor Co., died Sunday. scat in the reapportioned 25th yesterday. Surviving are a s o n ,’District. | Surviving are his wife, Myr- Clarence P. of Bloomfield Hills,I * * , tie, and four brothers, including J fought North Korean Corn-! “imunist infiltrators today in two! iclashes along the demilitarized and a brother; and a sister. Mrs. Wesley Asch said. “I >just bought a basketball team,” Bobbie WILSON At first I thought she said she’d bought a basketball which would be more in my bracket. “The Phoenix Suns,” Bobbie explained. “Ed Ames, Henry Mancini, Tony Curtis, Andy Williams and me. About $50,000 each, I think. We own the league franchise. If we don’t do well in Phoenix, we can move it somewhere else.” Bobbie — here for a concert at Forest Hills Stadium — is so sophisticated that while here she was composing a new song called “Casket Vignette” about a casket salesman who made all the wrong corny remarks to the bereaved fiancee of a man just being buried. She rang two sisters, Jessye, 17, and Linda, 15, touring the country with her, into the song—which the casket won’t like. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Josephine Baker would like to come back to the U.S. and do “Hello, Dolly!” on B’way if Pdarl Bailey should go on tour or take a rest . . . Jerome Hines’ voice is said to be almost twice as powerful as the late Ezio Pinza’s — and his high note shattered a mike during “South Pacific” at Jones Beach . . . Jack E. Leonard intro’d Jan Baker Conn to Jack Lemmon at Danny’s as “my future wife.” Donna Lee Hickey May Wynn Kelly, the movie beauty who split with actor Jdck Kelly, visited the Copa and said: “I used to dance right over there!” (She was a Copa Gal) . . . Eddie Davis & wife Clementine will celebrate their 50th anniversary Nov. 15 in Fort Lauderdale. They were married four days after the World Wat I armistice. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: “The new tax is a sir tax-it’s the man who winds up paying it.*’—Jack Delany. REMEMBERED QUOTE: The man who has no secrets from his wife either has no secrets or has no wife.—Gilbert Wells. EARL’S PEARLS: Joan Rivers knows a gorgeous midget who wants to jJose for the Reader’? Digest centerfold. Harknv’s discotheifue keeps out weird people. The other 1 as four seedy characters were being turned away, they toid ownw Joey CSiiWs, “But we’re the ro^k group opening here I. ' ''! : Richmond valued the four ; signs at $75. Earlier this month, I he filed a complaint with ! Waterford police for seven other COMMERCE TOWNSHIP —i signs valued at $175 that were Service for Mrs. W,e s 1 e y destroyed. (Onalee)“Asch, 57, of 122 Col- Richmond is opposed in the mont will be 1p.m. Thursday at Democratic primary for the Casterline Funeral H o"in e ,[C(yufitr Seat br-Edwin Adler; Northville, with burial ' a t Ralph Hudson and Leaun Har-Oakland Hills Cemetery. jrelson. Mrs. Asch, a member of the! ~ VFW Post 3952 Auxiliary of Walled Lake, died Sunday. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Glen Gooch of Northville; one sister; one brother; and seven grandchildren. destroyed in the past two days. Melvindale will be 10 a.m_;bearing the name ‘‘La^^^^ separates North and! .................. tomorrow at Richardson Bird day, associates the lack of ^_________________________________ i ! glamor” with the realistic trend in films. “The public wants to see pictures which are entertaining and not films concerning problems that could almost be their own — or are close to it — and are being played out by James Shemwell of Milford. Arthur Weaver Sr. IMLAY CiTY — Service for Arthur Weaver Sr., 59, of 465 N. Main will be 1 p.m, torhorrow at the Muir Brothers Funeral South Korea. U.S. spokesmen! said one American and one North Korean were killed. separate incident. South Korean police hunted down and killed two North Korean government agents on South Korea’s southwest coast. actors who are practically no different than they are. SHOULD BE ILLUSIONS’ “Motion pictures should be illusions like they used to be — a dream world.' According to Lana, she’s been 7 in State Family Injured in Crash Charles Cornell SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. i(AP) — Seven members of . ja Pinckney, Mich., family are in serious condition in a hos- IMLAY CITY - Service for Charles Cornell, 47, of 1844 S. Van Dyke will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home with burial ?.t Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. Cornell, owner of a machine shop in Imlay City, died Sunday. He was a member of the Imlay City American Legion Post 135 and a life member of the Lapeer County VFW Post!not hurt. 2942. Surviving are his wife, Wan- a giant ape’s jaw bone found home; da; three daughters, Sylvia, in the Himalayan foothills south j George brother, Ernest of Imlay City: two sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Secsou of Lapeer, and Mrs. Evelyn Johnson o f Birm-ngham; and eight grandchildren. pital following a car - truck collision Monday at Haviland Bay, 30 miles north of here. George Cook, his wife, Sandy, and their five children, ranging in age from 11 months to 11 years, received head injuries when their car collided with a two-ton truck owned by Bell Fisheries of Mackinaw City, Mich. The truck driver, Richard Dale Cook, 26, no relation, was Home with burial--at ImlayJjpeading-books, plays, and^cripts Township Cemetery. - jfor the Jast three yedrs, looking Mr. Weaver, a carpenter, died toT something to do that would Saturday. be dignified. Surviving are his w i f e, j * * * I Mildred; three sons, Arthur Jr. “This was the first one I of Lake Orion, Dean of Romeo'read,” she said, referring to and William of Utica; onei“The Big Cube. If U R Seeking Peace of Mind in This Restless Age Dial 335-0700 PONTIAO’S F-r-R-S-T Wide-Oval RETREAD • RACING SLICKS • CHROME WHEELS • RED LINES Gerald C. Whitsitt ROCHESTER - Service for Gerald C. Whitsitt, 59, of 1585 nothing. Crooks will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the First Methodist Church, Berkley, with burial at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Whitsitt, who died Monday, was employed at Ex-Cell-0 Oakman Plant. Surviving are his wife, Mildred; a son, William, at two daughters, Mrs. Carley and Mrs tertaining, although it deals with a realistic situation of today. But it’s also a part that is dramatic and has dignity. And that’s important to me. “Acting has been my life. I don’t know anything else and I’d die if I couldn’t act. But if the part is not what I want. I’ll just twiddle my thumbs and do (Political Advertiitmentl Judy and Jo Ann, ^11 at home; of Kashmir may be more than William Stanwick of ..Warren: one son, Clare at homfe; his lo million years old. ! and one sister, father, Fred of Attica; five brothers, including Oscar of Metamora, Herbert and Frank, 1x)th of Attica, and Elmer of Lapeer; and three sisters, including Mrs. Nancy Klein of Rochester. Carl L. Gordon Service for former Walled Lpke resident Carl L. Gordon of; Port Charlotte, Fla., vvill be tomorrow at Kay’s Funeral! Home, Port Charlotte. i Mr. Gordon was a member of| Remember — Vote For JAMES R. 8TELT FOR DISTRICT JUDGE NON-PARTISAN CITY OF PONTIAC South Korea said the North Koreans were suspected of kill-| ing a man on the island of! Hosa-Do, 195 miles south of! Seoul. A U.S 2nd Infantry Division patrol encountered several Nwth Korean- infiltrators, near demilitarized zone and opened fire, a U.S. spokesman said. One American was killed! and three wounded. Officials said the U.S. patrol |" said four North Koreans were!2 carried back to the north of the!* ' ^ yUUl DMZ on stretchers. The U.S.iM hoUSe Ogoin) j Spend two ; glorious ; weeksin i the sun: patrol captured some North Korean military equipment and supplies, a spokesman said. The second border incident ’occurred along the western part of the DMZ. Two North Koreans opened fire on a 2nd Infantry Division patrol. Officials said one of the Communists was fatally wounded. KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen SOi^QOO COMPLETE j-Ft. Kitchen SQQQOO COMPLETE £99 INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Faucets, Formica or Wilson Art M Or, stop blistering, cracking, 2 peeling . . . give it a coot B of Kaiser Aluminum M Sculptured Siding. ; iGusEft ■ ALUMINUM ■SCULPTURED SIOINil j Let Marcel I's Experienced I Craftsmen Moke Your House I Attractive And I Maintenance-Freel \ForFREE I No Obligation Estimate I CALI NOW! I MEMBER PONTIAC AREA I CHAMBER OF COMMERCE L MARCELL ; CONSTRUCTION CO. I 328 North Perry ; FE 8-9251 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 30, 1968 C—11 •—Television Programs-— Pregrams fumishod by stations listod in this column aro subjoet to chango without notico TUESDAY NIGHT «:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports {9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Misterogers 6:30 (2) C, — News — Kuralt (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R^ — F Troop (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News — Reynolds (9) R — Movie: “Seven Days Leave” (1942) In order to inherit a fortune, a buck private must wed a certain heiress by the end of his s e V e n - d a y leave. Victor Mature, Lucille Ball, Harold Peary (50) R — My Favorite Martian (56) Real Revolution 7:30 (2) R C — Daktari (4) R C — I Dream of Jeannie — Tony gets his just deserts when he tests Jeannie’s fidelity. (7) R C — Garrison’s Gorillas — Casino employs his talents to help the Gorillas, who have run out of gas in Yugoslavia. (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Playing the Guitar 8:00 (4) C — Showcase ’68 — Carlos Montoya is guest. (50) R C — Hazel (56) Summer Sampler — Music 8:30 (2) C — Showtime — British comedian Dave Allen hosts an international sampler. (4) R — Movie: “Freud” (1962) This film focuses on Freud's revolutionary use of hypnosis to probe the psyche of a semiparalyzed young woman. (7) C — (Special) — ■iOO Yards To Glory” — The story of Grambling College (La.), an all-Negro school with 4.200 students. (50) R — Honeymooners (56) Puppet Master 8:55 (9) C-News-Daly 9:00 (9) R - Lock Up - A fancy suit of clothes aids lawyer Maris in his attempt to clear a GI of a murder charge. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) Creative Person 9:25 (2) Political Talk -Humphrey 9:30 (2) R C - Good Morning World (7) R C- N.Y.P.D. -An ex-private eye enters an office at night and is slugged and robbed. He claims someone stole $200,000 but his story has holes in it. 19) C — Good Company (56) Actor’s Company 10:00 (2) C - (Special) -Of Black America This program shows Negroes in sports and music. (7) R C — Invaders — Forging an uneasy alliance with drug runners, David searches for cargo stolen by the invaders. (9) Newsmagazine (50) C — Les Crane 10:30(9-) Evelyn Wood’s Reading Dynamics School (56) Eric Hoffer 10:45 (9) They Come to Hu-ronia 1 1 :00 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50) R - Alfred Hitchcock 11:30 (2) R C- Mo vie : “The Sundowners” (1960) Deborah Kerr, Robert Mitchum, Peter Usitnov. (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop — ment — Vice President Humphrey heads guest list. ( 9 ) R — Movie : “Laughing Anne” (English-American, ,1954) Wendell Corey, Margaret Lockwood, Forrrest Tucker, Ronald Shiner (50) R — Movie: “Sleep, My Love’’ ( 1 94 8) Claudette Colbert, Robert Cummings, Dpn Ameche 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News (9) Window on the World 1:30(2) C-Capture (4) C-PDQ 2:00 (2)R - Highway Patrol 2:30 (2) C - News, Weather WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C-News 6:00 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Ciassroom 6:30 (2) C — Gospel Singing Caravan (4) C-Ed Allen 7:00 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C — Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round • 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “This Happy Feeling” (1958) Susan Strasberg, Jimmy Dean (9) Upside Town 9:00 (2) C - Merv Griffin (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C— Bozo 10:00 (4) C - Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R — Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) R C - Be verly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C - Dick Cavett (9) Friendly Giant (50) C — Jack La Lanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R - Andy of Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) R —Mr. Dressup (50) C — Kimba 11:25 (9) Pick of the Week 11:30 (2) R - Dick Van Dyke (4) C — Hollywood Squares (50) R — Little Rascals 11:55 (9) News WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) (4) C - News. Weather, Sports , (7) R - Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date 12:25 (2) C - Fashio..s 12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Eye Guess (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) R - Movie: “The Purple Gang” ( 1 9 5 9 ) Barry Sullivan, Robert Blake (50) R - Movie: “Father Was a Fullback” (1949) Fred MacMurray, Maureen O’Hara, Natalie Wood, Rudy Vallee 12:45 (2) C - Guiding Light 12:55 (4) C - News -. Newman 1:00 (2) C - Love of Life (4) C —Match Game * (7) C — Dream House 1:25 (2J C-News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C— Let’s Make a Deal (7) C — It’s Happening 1:55 (7) C ~ Children’s Doctor 2:00 (2) C — Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C - House Party (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room For Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Route 66 (50) R C - To Tell the Truth 3:25 (50) C - News 3:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C— You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Swingin’ Time 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (7) R — Movie: “Meet Danny Wilson” (19 51) Frank Sinatra, Shelley Winters (50) R - ’”hree Stooges 5:00 (9) C — Bozo t h e Clown (50) R — Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C — George Pierrot (9) C — Fun House (50) R — Superman 5:45 ( 56) Friendly Giant TV Features SHOWCASE ’68, 8 p.m, || SHOWTIME, 8:30 p.m. ^ (2) 100 YARDS TO GLORY, 8:30 p.m. (7) OF BLACK AMERICA, 10 p.m. (2) JOEY BISHOP. 11 30 p.m. (7) Medley to trcviom Puizio 'Racism Fight Must Be Like Anti-Reds'i LOS ANGELES (AP) - To avoid riots, whites must engage in antiracism with as much conviction as some Americans en-| gage in anticommunism, says a University of California psychiatrist. * * * Dr, Price Cobbs, said Monday that whites “must ask themselves questions like: Are there any blacks in my neighborhood, my church, my place of business, my union? * “They must make racism-reducing activities as important as anti-Red activities,” said Cobbs, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at UC’s San Francisco Medical Center. He is a Negro. ACROSS 1 Hodgepodge 5 Camel’s hair ' cloth 8 Woody plant 12 For fear that 13 WitUcism 14 Uncommon 15 Within (comb, form) 16 East (Fr.) 17 Ellipsoidal 18 Residue of bone tissue 20 Craft societies 22 Idolize 24 Archfiend 28 Book of psalms 33 Russian river 34 Mutual amitv 35 Showed anew, as a movie 37 Fastidious 38 Corpulency 41 Sauntered lazily 42 Ohio town 44 Ohio city 48 Passes around 53 Mountain (comb, form) 54 Snooze 56 Wainscot 57 Meadows City in the Netherlands 59 Grafted (her.) 60 Pinnacles 61 Put on 62 Cruqifix DOWN 1 Bread spread 2 Camera’s "eye” 3 Devotees 4 Siouan Indian 5 Improve 6 Genus of quadrupeds 7 Perfumes 8 Horse’s gait 9 Rant 10 Epochal 11 Lampreys 19 John (Gaelic) 21 Harvest 23 Opus (ab.) 24 Breaking sea swell 25 Region 26 Pastry 27 Wolfhound 29 Grant use temporarily 30 Terminal appendage 31 Lo! (Latin) 32 Organ part 36 Glade (comb, form) 39 Transgressed 40 In its place (ab.) 41 Writing fluid 43 Tremulous 44 Blockhead 45 Martian (comb, form) 46 Period of time 47 Fling 49 Froster, as . of cakes 50 Nevada city 51 Yugoslav _ big wig 52 Winter vehicle 55 Bustle 2 3 A 5 □ 7 8~ 9 10 11 ir~ IT ■ iT“ 16 ■ 17“ w 19 w il F m 1 IT 27 _1 m t 29 30 31 33“ ““ ■ w~ ■I w~ 38“ B 1 42 ! 1 aT 7T aT wt\ 49 50 51 52 W 54“ 55 56“ St“ 58“ 5ST W sr §5“ mmMm .. wmmw'TM CLARINET • SAX FLUTE • DRUM KITS [ TRUMPET • TROMBONE POimAC MUSIC t SOUND 3101 West Huron PHONE 682-3350 WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE 481 N. S^naw Sears As Fttrniia**e Only 1 and 2. of a idft^ UP TO .50% OFF Sofas • Chairs • Divan Beds ; Recliners • Chests f Dressers ; Odd Beds • Box Springs Mattresses • Dinette Sets ^ and Many Other Miscellaneous Items! HOURS SAME AS STORE BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! A Look at TV Some Unhurt by Flops By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer HOLLYWOOD — Actors, like producers, writers and directors in network television, worry jbout critical notices and — even more — about ratings. But while a short-lived series may be an embarrassing footnote to a career, there is considerable evidence that even an unmitigated disaster can help rather than hurt the victims trapped in the wreckage. A magnificent example of this is the impending debut of a young actor named Wayne Maunder in a new CBS series, “Lancer.” A year ago. Maunder, a complete unknown, was about to emerge as a star, paying the title role in ABC's “Legend of Custer.” The Custer show, as it turned out, was the earliest and most spectacular derailment of the season. It outraged Irldian organizations and historian?, was lambasted by critics and tuned out by the audience. But Maunder walked away unscathed and will return to liv- ing rooms , in another Western series with costar status. Similarly, Tony Franciosa had one unhappy season as d playboy in a limp comedy series a few years back but healed hisj scars quickly enough to WYonT-j ing back as one of three costars of NBC’s 90-minute “Name of the Game.” Phyllis Diller tried a situation comedy that didn’t work. She returns this season as star of an NBC variety show. That i? the TV trail blazed by | the Smothers Brothers; their one-season comedy-fantasy series didn’t work, but their CBS variety hour has been a sensation. Jack Lord’s series about a rodeo rider didn’t last long, but he will be the star of CBS’ “Hawaii Five-0,” a police story. Will Hutchins had a bad time with “Hey, Landlord” a couple of years back, but returns as Dag-wood of CBS’ “Blondie.” His wife will be played by Patricia Harty whose “Occasional Wife” series was dropped after one season. W2 ends the Late News Curfew! — Ro(dio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPON(1460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) WHFI, I-------- WCAR, News, Ron Rose WXYZ, Newscope WJBK, News, Hank O'Neil *:15—WJR, Sporls *^JO-WWJ, Today In Review, Emphasis WJR, Business, Time Trav-'eler «:4S-WJR, Lowell Thomas, Autoscope >:0»_WWJ, Neves, SportsLine WJBK, News, Tom Dean WCAR, News, Rick Stewart WJR, World Tonight *»:'S-yvjR, Business, Sports Tt»-WXYZ, News, Dave WPON, Music TUI MIdnIte WJR, Reasoner Report, Fanfare _ , 7:45-WJR, Tiger Beat 7:5S-WJR, Tiger Base^tall l:0»_WPON, Pontiac City ISSlon . Tom Coleman 10:34—WJR, Scores CKLW, Scott Regen 10:45—WJR, Music For Motf-erns . 1I:00-WJR, News, Sports 11:30—WWJ, Death Notices, Overnight WJR, Music Till Dawn i/taw-WJBK, Nighttime WXYZ, News Jim Davis CKLW, Frank BroOie WCAR, News, Wayne P)tn-lips V»6DNES0AY morning 4:00-WJR, Music Half . TaWs, Bill Dalxell WXYZ, News, Martin I, Howard CKLW, Chuck Morgan WJBK, News, Marc Avery WPON. News, Arizona Wes-' tan 4:30-WWJ, Morrle Carlson 7:0O-WHFt, Gary Purece WPON, News, Chuck Warren 0:00-WJR, News 4:15—WJR, Sunnyside 0;30-WJR, News, Music Hell 0:0O-WJR, News y;15-WJR, Jack Harris CKLW, Mark Richards WHFI, Uncia Jay WWJ, Neviis. Ask Yoor Neighbor 10:00—WXYZ, News, Johnny. ‘Itahdall WJBK, News, Conrad Patrick WJR, News, Music WCAR, Rod Miller WPON, News, Jerry Whlt- I1:00-WJR, Newt, Kaleidoscope WHFI, Jim Zhtser WEDNESDAY (tFTERNOON li:0O-WJR, News, Farm WWJ, News, Review CKLW, Jim Edwards 12:15-WJR, Fdcus 12:30-WWJ, Marty McNeeley WXYZ, News, Don McNeill 1:00-WJR, News, Arthur l:J0-*WXY?J Johnny Rt. . ZrOO-WPON, News, Pat Appolson WHFI, Bill Lynch WJR, News, Dimension I.IS-WJR, Music Hall 1:00-WCAR, News, Ron Rose CKLW, Mike Rivers WJBK, Hank O'Neil WXYZ, News, Dick Purtap S:1$-WPON, Lum 'n' Abner 5:10-WPONi Pat Appolson The 11 O’CLOCK REPORT on TV2 doesn’t end just because it’s 11:30 P.M.! There’s too much going on in the worid. Everywhere. And it doesn’t happen by the clock. The 11 O’CLOCK REPORT is Detroit’s only late evening newscast that regularly takes all the time the news needs. It starts at 11 P.M. and ends when the important news of the day has been fully reported. You have a right to know. Watch at 11 P.M. Detroit’s First News Team E¥erynight 11 P.M. TV2 C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY 30. 31J-30 Night stand 31M9 Oden Panel Bed 3/3 Headboard Onty 311r-23 Open Panel Bed 5/0or 4/6 Headboard Onij Rhythm:*Classic Contemporary add-to furniture. It's made to go with Colonial, Oriental, Primitive, Spanish and every other Period. Snppose your prized possession is an Early American chair. Yet you love Japanese carvings, too. And pre-Columbian pottery. And Spanish bedspreads. How in the world do you mix a roomful of furniture with furnishings of a different Period without the whole thing looking like a mistake? (And even if you don't have a mixture of tastes, how can you introduce a new group of furniture into your current design scheme without botching it up?) See Lane furniture at the following stores: Here's the answer. Lane's remarkable collection of Versatile add-to furniture (as well as regular dining and bedroom furniture and tables) called Rhythni. It's designed to go with every Period. Yet look like no particular one. Yet look great. Actually, almost everything good we can tell you about Rhythm is negative. There's no hardware, for example. So there's nothing to tarnish or break. Drawer pulls are built right into drawers. And drawers won't stick. Won't fall out, either. They glide on steel ball-bearing guides, with adjustable stops. Chest and desk tops are as no-mar as chest and desk tops can be. They're walnut-grained Formica* laminated plastic which is practically indestructible. Yet looks like walnut. The walnut veneers’^ are not shiny. Not too dark. Not dull. Now how much do all these negative advantages cost? Not too much. Surprisingly. , , Stop at any store below and see. T Khythrh by You can't go wrong. T Rhythrn by Lane *and hardwood solidi Pontiac Detroit Clayton’s AppL & Furn. 2133 Orchard Lake Rd. Preuss Furn. 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High 1288 EIGHT mum HE PONTIAC PRESS. JULY 1908 ■’Gunni DRUG STORES The Weather U. S. Weithar Bureiu Foracatt Showers Likely (Detalli Pag* 2) THE PONTIAC PRE VOL. 12B r- XO. 150 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, IT KSDA\ . .HTA’ ,{(), I'.ios m T>Ar"'Ti’C ASSOCIATED PRESS —I UNITED PRESS INTEliNATIONAL Texas Heart Switch 1st Between Women HOUSTON, Tex. (AF) - A 49-year-old grandmother is the world’s newest heart transplant patient, and she was reported in satisfactory condition today at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital. supervised eight transplants here. human heart WIFE OF PILOT Beth White Brunk, a Houston housewife^ received the heart of a Corsicana, Tex., woman, last night in the first woman-to-woman heart transplarvt. The donor was Betty O’Neal, 40, who entered the hospital yesterday after suffering a brain hemorrhage. Surgeons led by Dr. Denton A. Cooley performed the operation in about two hours, a spokesman said. Cooley has Mrs. Brunk, wife of a commercial pilot, was admitted to St. Luke’s July 22. She had a blood clot in her lungs that would have killed her in 24 hours, said a daughter, Gladys Smith of Bryan, Te,\. Mrs. Brunk has four children, four stepchildren and nine grandchildren. She first talked with Dr. Cooley Friday, Mrs. Smith said. • The donor’s physician. Dr. Robert D. Bone of Corsicana, said Mrs. O’Neal had a brain tumor. She was in a coma 24 hours before a three-man team of doc- tors declared her dead about 8 p.m. ,a spokesman said TTie operation began minutes later. ANOTkER PATIENT DISMISSED Louis John Fierro, 54, of Elmbnt, N.Y., who received a new heart May 21 at the hospital, was dismissed yesterday. He . will move to Houston for checkups, the spokesman said The first heart recipient here, Everett C. Thomas, 47, of Phoenix, Ariz., left St. Luke’s July 19 and took a job as a trust consultant at a Houston bank. Thomas underwent surgery May 3. Tluee other recipients continue to progress at the hospital. Threat of Strike by USW Fading Long Lake Road One Mile East Of Woodward Road Millage a Bargain' (EDITOR'S NOTE—Tim is the second in a three-part series about the upcoming Aug. $ election in which Oakland County voters will be asked to raise the property tax by one mill for better roads.) year for five years on a home with a market value of $25,000. COMPARED TO CAR gallon is contributing about $25.00 per year for county roads through gasoline purchases. PITTSBURGH (AP) - With the threat of a nationwide steel strike fading before a reported 78-cent Offer, the stage is set today for the first big test of new power given the United Steelworkers Union rank and file. It was reported the wage and benefits package, for three years, still is being negotiated and may be worth another 10 cents an hour before it is wrapped up. ByEDBLUNDEN While most recent millage campaigns in Oakland County have either failed to pass or were passed-^apparently grudgingly—by small margins, the one-mill request for road improvement may have ’ Most millage requests have been for schools. Better education is a rather intangible thing, but better roads will be something the taxpayer will be able to see and use directly. This $12.50 average cost can be compared to what an average car-owner pays just to acquire and maintain his car—about $750 a year. This figure comes from considering about $500 depreciation and adding about $250 a year for tires, repairs, insurance, etc. The $750 does not include cost of gasoline or licenses. The state gasoline tax and license fee are at present j^ost the only support for road maintenance or construction. ACCELERATED PROGRAM With the $12.50 one-mill levy the road commission could carry on a program approximately 50 per cent accelerated from present levels. The one-mill levy figures to bring in about $3.5 million yearly, based on the county’s entire valuation; Of the $9.5 million in recent yearly budgets, only about $1.5 million has been left for major and local road improvements. "They have an agreement,” said AnthMiy Torriko. president of a 5,000-man local at McKeesport, Pa, "The problem now seems to be whether the union leaders can sell it to the members,” For the first time, the 600 local presidents have the power to ratify or reject a contract, or call a strike when the current agreement runs out at midnight Wednesday. They are organized into a group called the basic steel industry conference, meeting this afternoon.- Czech Enemy of Regime Talks to Soviet Army BETH BRUNK ^lAGUE (API — A Czechoslovak general opposed to the country’s new democratic reforms today was reported in contact with Soviet Army officers as the leaders of the Soviet and Czechoslovak Communist parties resumed their showdown meeting close to the Soviet border. Prague Radio reported that the two party delegations had gone back into session at Cierna but gave no details. Search for Murphy May Be Given Up And the one-mill tax increase could be looked upon as a real bargain by taxpayers. It would cost the average home owner $l per $1,000 as assessed, or $12.50 per Each gallon is taxed at 11 cents, with four cents going for the federal road program (1-75, 1-696) and seven for the state (M59, M24). Of the state’s seven cents, about 2.5 goes to the County Road Commission and about 1.4 to cities. Thus, an average motorist driving 15,000 miles per year at 15 miles per The road commission figures it will have at least $5 million per year to carry on a road modernization program providing the millage passes. Plans have already been made. The projects are mapped out and reach into every community. NO ADMISSION Nude Woman Found Dead; Troy Police Seek Identify The. nude body of ah unidentified woman was found yesterday near the southbound exit of 1-75 at Crooks Road in Troy. An unidentified truck driver reported the body to Troy police. The man said he spotted the body while passing the exit at 4 p.m. A coroner was unable to determine the cause of death immediately but said the woman, who was 35 to 40 years old, had been dead at least two days. An autopsy was performed last night but details were not immediately available, according to Troy police. SERIOUS ALTERNATE The alternative is a serious thing to contemplate. “It could mean a steadily deteriorating road system. Some local roads have been patched and scraped so many times the original roadbed no longer exists. Some of the main arteries will have to remain two-lanes with an ever-increasing traffic jam. For those roads which cause urgent problems, some other method of funding would have to be found—which would mean the funds would have to come from other sources, other programs. Officially, the union wasn’t even admitting Monday that a new offer from the industry was on the table, much less that it was acceptable to top negotiators, Biit union sources passed the word that the industry had offered a 20-cent hourly wage increase immediately, with raises of 12 and IS cents to follow in the second and third year of the contract—a total of 45 cents. All workers not covered by incentive pay—the biggest issue in some plants—would get a 5 per cent bonus. Pensions would be raised from $5 to $6.50 a month per year of service for men with 30 years service. Coast Guard officers at Charlevoix said today they will abandon the search for Oakland County Clerk-Register of Deeds John D. Murphy if he is not found by nightfall. Hope faded yesterday when a land, sea and air hunt failed to turn up a trace of the 54-year old Murphy in the Beaver Island area, where the 14-foot boat he had rented Saturday was found overturned in Lake Michigan Sunday. The summit n^eeting between the Soviet Politburo and the Czechoslovak party’s Presidium was expected to conclude today after a thorough debate on the liberalization program launched by Prague’s new leaders. But so far there has been no word on the likely outcome of the. talks. Meanwhile, the trade union newspaper Prace reported that Gen. Samuel Kodaj, who warned early this month against "counterrevolutionary” tendencies in the country, met at Strecno, in Slovakia, with the “Soviet Army staffs which is operating on our territory.” Voter Guide on Friday "We haven’t found a thing and we’re reducing the search to a single patrol boat today,” said Coast Guard Lt. Don Luedke. Meanwhile, county Democratic party officials began preparing for t h e possibility that they will have to choose a nominee to replace Murphy in the Nov. 5 general election. •EXCHANGE VIEWS’ Prace said Kodaj and other Czechoslovak officers met with the chief of the Soviet Army staff, a Gen. Mayorov, and other Soviet officers “to exchange views on the present situation.” ••Counterrevolutionary” was the chief charge made against the Czechoslovak party leadership by the Soviet Union, East Germany, Poland, Bulgaria and Hurgary at a meeting in Warsaw early this month. Thais to Move Refugees BANGKOK, Thailand dPt - The Thai goverriment will move some of its 40,000 North Vietnamese refugees from (Communist-infiltrated northeast provinces to southern Thailand as a result,^of Friday’s raid on Udorn air base, from where U.S. planes fly missions against North Vietnam. WEDDING BAND . They said the 5-foot-2, 110-pound white wonian was wearing a gold wedding band. Investigators at the Michigan State Police Crime Laboratory, East Lansing, have been called to help on the case. Theji are aiding in identifying and determining the circumstances of the death. Troy police would say only that they are continuing their investigation of the case. Just as county residents have to pay for other services, such as police protection, public health, land transactions, etc., they will have to pay for a modern road system. A direct tax—within the county, spent in the county, for the county—is the road commission’s recommended solbtion. (Next; You get what you pay for.) Confused about what candidates are running for which offices in the Aug. 6 primary? Then read The Pontiac Press Friday for information on all the races in Oakland County. Background sketches and maps shoeing the boundaries of congressional, legislative, judicial and supervisor districts will be included in the special 16-page section. NAME ON BALLOT Murphy is unopposed for the party nomination in the Aug, 6 primary. Authorities said his name probably will appear on the Tuesday ballot regardless of the result of the Charlevoix search, pending a ruling by the state attorney general. Should he be declared dead or his body found, the executive committee of the (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) There was no new word today on the talks between the Soviet and Czechoslovak political leaders which began yesterday close to the Soviet border. Czechoslovak radio stations broadcast reports quoting a Soviet army leader as saying the Russian maneuvers going on in the Soviet Union,,, Poland and East signed editorial warning the Soviet Union Germany were “among the biggest” ever staged. Ike Oppbses a 'Camoufloged Surrender In Today's Press Sporadic Showers Possible Tonight No-Hitter Cincinnati hurler stops Phillies cold - PAGE B-1. 'Gut Issue' Increasing cloudiness, warmer temperatures and a chance of occasional showers and thundershowers tonight and tomorrow is the forecast for the Pontiac area. Tonight’s low is expected to be 57 to 63, and highs tomorrow will remain in the high 70s and low 80s. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Chances for a dramatic Republican platform proposal to end the Vietnam war dimmed today as former President Dwight D. Eisenhower opposed any "camouflaged surrender. " Eisenhower’s special message to the platform committee accompanied the Republican platform hearings b y representatives of the Citzens Commitl,ipe for Peace with Freedom in Vietnam. Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, a Rockefeller supporter on the platform compiittee, told a reporter he expects the Eisenhower statement to have considerable weight in the drafting Sen. John G. Tower of Texas, a Nixon stalwart serving on the committee, said a majority of the group is “Nixon-disposed.” He added: “It is logical to expect that the platfown will reflect that sentiment.” he ma^ave more to say later in the week by way of statements in his behalf to the platform committee. Rockefeller has proposed a four-stage peace plan featuring use of an international military force as a buffer. However, Rockefeller backer Gov. John H. Chafee of Rhode Island said he expects no plan so specific. NOT SPELLED OUT Nixon has not spelled out his proposals for handling the Vietnam problem, but Related Stories, Page A-3 Army, FDA differ on safety of irradiated bacon—PAGE A-5. 'Heated Issue' Wounded GIs swelter while brass keeps cool, says congress- man — PAGE A-7 South to southeast winds will increase to 10 to 18 miles tonight. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: tonight 30, tomorrow W. " ' Thursday promises to be partly sunny and a little cooler. Area News ....... Astrology Bridge Crossword Puzzle Comics .......... Editorials Markets Obituaries Picture Page .......... Sports ............ . B TTieaters ....... TV and Radio Programs VietnamlWar News ....... Wilson. Earl Women’s Pages The tow in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 56. By 12:30 p.m. the temperature was 75. 6 Dead in Mine Fire testimony of a nonpartisan committ^, of which he is a member, ruling out both pullout and massive escalation of the fighting. It strengthened the sentiment apparently already held by a majority of the committee for a broadly worded statement that would leave the party’s presidential candidate free to develop his position during the campaign. Such a plank fits the mood of supporters of Richard M. Nixon, who are saying their man will be nominated on the first of second ballot. . , nominated on the first or second ballot But even some sympathizers of New York Gov- Nelson A. Rockefeller agreed that the plank on -the overriding international issue cannot be too specific. 1-B C-11 A-2 C-IO A-10, A ll TOKYO (4’) —At least six miners were killed and another 25 trapped some 3,280 feet underground today by a fire at a coal mine entrance in northern Japan, police reported. Rescue teams extinguished the fire four hours after it began early today, but further rescue efforts were hampered by lingering smoke and rock slides. ' ■ •MAKE IT CLEAR’ Eisenhower ufged the campaign docu- ment writers to “make it clear to Hanoi that we do not seek nor will we accept a camouflaged surrender which would inevitably result in the United States writing off Southeast Asia for the foreseeable future.” Eisenhower’s appeal—addressed I o both par ties->^was takfen to the Republican Platform Writers Hear First-Day Testimony . .Md THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JULY i Mexican Troops Invade School, Arrest 300 MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexican paratroopers fired a bazooka she'll through the heavy wooden doors of a preparatory school early today and dragged out hundreds of young demonstrators after Mexico City’s worst student disorders in 20 years. * ★ ★ Nearly 400 persons were injured, 100 seriously, in the 5Vi-hour rampage by thousands of teen-age students. Nearly 300 persons were arrested. Some sources reported one youth was killed, but this could not be confirmed. The students, ranging from 14 to 18 years, were demanding the removal of the chief of police and the commander of riot troops, oharpng their forces with brutality in putting down pro-Castro demonstrations last weekend. Some of the mob shouted anti-American slogans and called for another Vietnam in Latin America. BUSES STOLEN The evening of violence began with the theft of several buses and the disruption of traffic throughout the city. A news Foreign Aid Bill Trimmed of All Fat, Senate Told WASHINGTON (API - The Senate has been told there’s no fat left to trim from President Johnson’s foreign-aid requests, now more than $1 billion under what he asked and the lowest in the program’s 21-year history. Acting Chairman John Sparkman, D-Ala., of the Foreign Relations Committee said the $1.94-billion level set by the committee “represents the absolute minimum necessary if we are to sustain our over-all foreign policy.” ★ Johnson’s original request for $2.% billion was slashed repeatedly in its progress through the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the Hcxise and the Senate foreign relations committees. The aid bill was called up in the Senate Monday night, with developments limited to Sparkman’s opening statement. FRIDAY COMPLETION SEEN The Senate timetable calls for completing action on the authorization measure by Friday, when Congress will adjourn for the national political con-ventions. Reviewing decreases made up to this Ray Trial Probe Panel Convened Woman Is Killed as 5 Are Thrown From Car on 1-75 One Detroit woman died yesterday and two youngsters were seriously injured when a Volkswagen rolled over on 1-75 north of North Holly Road in Genesee County. Officials at McLaren Hospital, Flint, said Elsie Fleming, 24, died about 8:45. The car driven by Benoit Hicks, 35, of Detroit, went out of control about 7:15 p.m. Hicks told State Police of the Pontiac post he had fallen asleep. All five of his passengers were thrown from the Listed in fair condition at McLaren Hospital this morning were Robert Shobe, 6, and Carol Shobe, 12, both passengers in the car. Louis Shobe, 11, and Regina Shobe, 10, were treated and released from the Flint hospital. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Criminal Court Judge W. Preston Battle convenes his court today to hear a report from a panel of attorneys on whether his edict limiting statements to newsmen by those involved in the James Earl Ray case has been violated. Battle named the committee of eight Memphis lawyers Sunday after a weekend statement by Arthur Hanes, Birmingham attorney, that the man charged in the death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is the victim of a “Communist left-wing conspiracy.” ★ ★ ★ Hanes has said several times he fearS for his safety because he is defending Ray, who goes on trial Nov. 12, charged with murder in the slaying of King. Hanes met with Ray Saturday, then held a news conference at which he told of the “Communist conspiracy” and promised to reveal full details at the trial. CARRIED PISTOL Hanes confirmed yesterday that he carried a pistol while in Memphis. He has also been assigned a city police plainclothes bodyguard on Memphis visits. “I had a gun on me,” he said. He said he made no secret of the gun being in his possession and willingly gave it up before visting Ray’s cell, then took custody of the weapon when he left. Hanes said yesterday he did not know what the committee of attorneys was doing: “As far as I know, the committee may be checking on somebody else. I haven’t heard any names mentioned. ” The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny this morning with increasing cloudiness and warmer this afternoon. Highs 76 to 83. Chance of occasional showers and thundershowers tonight and Wednesday. Warmer tonight, lows 57 to 63. Not much temperature change Wednesday. Winds becoming south to southwest this morning and increasing to eight to 15 miles this afternoon and to 10 to 18 miles tonight. Thursday outlook: partly sunny and a little cooler. Precipitation probabilities: 30 per cent tonight and 40 per cent Wednesday. NATICWAL WEATHER — lowers and thundershowers are predicted for the eastern Rockids and the western Great Lakes region tonight. It will be warmer from the Central Plains through the CHiio Valley and eastern Great Lakes fegions to the New England states and cooler in the northern and central Rocky Mountoin areas., - . = ' , - .' ' . photographer from New Zealand was beaten and his camera stolen. Soon a mob of 1,500 to 2,000 youths sprged toward the city’s main square—the Zocalo—but riot police were waiting for them a block from the National Palace. ★ * ★ The club-wielding police turned back the students in quick order, and about 50 young demonstrators were injured within five minutes. About*^n hour later, several thousand youngsters regrouped near the old na- tional university off the main square. They took possession of rooftops and peltea police with stones- and gasoline-filled bottles. Down nn the street, they tried breaking into some gun shops and set buses ablaze. CONVERGE ON SCHOOL Shortly before 1 a.m., federal paratroopers in full combat gear and with drawn bayonets converged on the national university preparatory school where many demonstrators had holed up. point, Sparkman said “the simple fact is that there is just no fat left for us to trim from the foreign assistance bill.” In an apparent effort to anticipate objections to the measure, Sparkman said one critic had estimated that U.S. foreign aid since World War II totaled $170 billion. He termed that a mythical total. The actual figure is about $40.5 billion, Sparkman said. Protesting Student Gets Rifle Butt From Mexican Paratrooper Volcano Erupts, 12 Dead Aid Rushed to Costa Ricans SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - The U. S. Army rushed helieopters and other aid to Costa Rica today after a volcano silent for Hvb centuries erupted and killed at least 12 persons, injured hundreds and threatened a number of villages. The government ordered the evacuation of some 4,000 persons from the villages of Pueblo Nuevo and Tabacon after nearby Mt. Arenal began erupting Monday. * ■*■ + A state of emergency was declared by the legislative assembly. It authoried emergency expenditures to help those affected. Many of those driven from their homes were badly burned. Heavy rains hampered rescue operations- Refugees were taken to churches, schools and private homes outside the danger zone LAND, CROPS RUINED Huge quantities of lava and rock spewed from the volcano’s cone, and eight inches of volcanic ash covered the central part of the rich ranching region 45 miles northwest of San Jose. Grazing land, rice and cotton crops were ruined. Cavanagh Divorce OK Gives Him Four Boys DETROIT lifi—Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh was granted a divorce and custody of the four older boys today. His wife, Mary Helen, was granted custody today of the four younger children. TKhe decision was handed down by Cir-cuirJMge Charles S. Farmer, who said the f^ older boys, had expressed a strong preference for their father. The volcano, which is 5,249 feet high, continued to throw out burning stones and lava through the night. The ashes, rock and lava dammed rivers and brooks in the area, and many of these overflowed, adding to the damage. Although experts .said Mt. Arenal had been quiet for approximately 500 years, Mt Irazu, 30 miles east of San Jose, erupted for several months in 1963, ruined millions of dollars worth of coffee and other crops and killed hundreds of cattle. Hope Fades in Murphy Hunt (Continued From Page One) party would select a candidate for the November ballot. The search for Murphy was intensified Sunday when the rented aluminum craft was found near Garden Island. Hope was sparked when one life jacket was found missing and three patrol boats, a helicopter and land parties took up the hunt. However, no further trace (St the Clawson father of six was uncovered. FISHING PLANNED Murphy travelled to Charlevoix Thursday from a state convention of Liquor Sale by Glass Is Up for City Action City commissibners are scheduled to consider a revised ordinance governing the sale of liquor by the glass at their weekly meeting at 8 tonight in City Hall.' The ^ordinance has been prepared by the city law department after consultations with Pontiac police and enforcement divisions and with tavern and bar owners. In the ordinance will be guidelines for upgrading the city’s tavern licenses to Class C status. Taverns sell beer and wine while Class C bars are allowed to sell all alcoholic drinks. ConimisSioners also will handle a county clerks in Marquette. He reportedly planned to do some fishing and see some land he owned on Beaver Island. He rented the boat Saturday afternoon at St. James on the island, authorities His 23-year-old daughter, Sheila, today described Murphy as a good swimmer. However, Coast Guardsmen said lake currents in certain spots would be difficult even for experts. In 1965,. Murphy became the first Democrat in history to be elected clerk in Oakland County. imissi Variety of'routine items. WOULD YOU BELIEVE?MINK CAPE FOR $125... “The very first person who responded to our Press Want Ad, and there were several, bought the cape.” —Mrs. J J. ^Nk~CA>E,~EXCELtEN~C^^ PRESS WANT ADS will sell most anything and everything usable and there is always a ready market waiting ... dven for mink capes. Dial— 332-8181 or 334^981 The troopers fired a bazooka shell through the heavy wooden doors of the school building and began dragging out students. Some students were slashed by bayonets. ★ ★ The preparatopr school is part of the national university which is supposed to be off limits to police and federal troops. The troops’ invasion of the school could have political repercussions. President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz was out of the city, but a spokesman said he was being kept informed of developments. 24 Yanks Die in 2 Ambushes Sprung by Recis SAIGON (AP) - U.S. forces suffered setbacks in two ground battles reported today in which 24 Americans were killed and only five enemy bodies were found. In the air a U.S. Navy pilot downed an enemy MIG17 jet fighter in a five-minute dogfight over North Vietnam. One of the setbacks was dealt U.S. Marines from the 7th Regiment in a daylong battle about 25 miles south of Da Nang, one of several areas in which enemy troops have been reported massing, presumably for the countrywide Communist offensive expected in the next two months. About 200 North Vietnamese troops cut into the Marines with heavy machine-gun fire in what appeared to be an ambush. When the North Vietnamese finally pulled back under heavy air and artillery attack 20 Marines were dead and another 40 were wounded. The battle took place Sunday, but was not reported until today. The Marines swept the battlefield Monday and found only five North Vietnamese bodies. Possibly others were carried off by the enemy. ANOTHER AMBUSH In what appeared to be another ambush, Monday, North Vietnamese troops hiding in a wooded area opened up with heavy machine guns, small arms, and mortars on U.S. air cavalrymen probing enemy base camps deep in the mountains 35 miles northwest of Hue. The fighting at times was at grenade range. Helicopter gunships swooped in to help drive off the enemy. ' Four air cavalrymen were reported killed and 25 wounded. Enemy casualties so far were not known. Birmingham Park Hours Approved by Commission BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission, at last night’s meeting, added a new section to the city’s ordinance pertaining to parks and playgrounds. The new section will close the parks to unauthorized persons between midnight and 6 a.m. each day. According to the commission the ordinance was not aimed at any specific issue or problem, but comes as a result of a request a year ago from city officials seeking restrictions in the parks at night. The ordinance makes provisions for special events in the parks after the closing hours, provided they have been authorized by the commission. The commission also received a petition from residents of Pleasant Street requesting a zoning ordinance revision to prohibit cluster housing in that area. PRESENT ORDINANCE According to Assistarit City Manager John Saefke, the present ordinance stipulates that a single unit may be built on a 9,000-square-foot lot but toat on a 36,000 square-foot-lot more than one unit per 9,000 square feet may be constructed. The commission referred the petition .to the city’s planning board for further study. * * The commission set Aug. 12 as the date for formal discussion on the agreement between the city and the Southeastern Oakland County Incinerator Authority for the establishment of a refuse transfer station on Coolidge. The agreement, drawn up by the city attorney’s office, would lease the land to the firm for 25 years. It also w()uld provide various restrictions pertaining to operation of the transfer station. EXPENDITURE OKAYED In other action the commission approved the expenditure of $600 for the improvement of fencing around the tennis courts at Eton Park. When the fence improvements are completed the commission will act on the -proposed resurfacing of the parks tennis coprts. Also approved was the allocation of $27,0000 for the purchase of office equipment from the Addressograph-Multigraph Corp., the low bidder for the equipment. PONTIAC CITY VOTERS Our Municipal Court has been reorganized under a new Slate law. The new District Court will have 3 judges, 2 of whom will be nominated by yOur votes on Tuesday, August 6th. It is important that you vote in the Primary. Your New District Judge should be experienced in law. He must have served his community. He must be respected in his profession. He must pledge to impartially serve the people. For the Record I hove been practicing low in Pontiac ond Ookland County Courts for over 38 yeors. I am a trial lovrytor. My Civic duties ond volunteer work ore o matter of commendable record. I con stand up and be counted in any company. YOU CAN check my integrity. I know it is spotless. The Court Must Serve Wisely and Justly Our community needs a judge with an appreciation of the complex problems which may confront eoch of u$, with the ' mature experience to handle these problems as they orise, and with the expert knowledge' of our lows to judge these problems fairly. Appreciation, experience, and legal knowledge . . .’ These qualities I hove. Vote for DAVID E. UTLEY Pontiac District Court Judge TUESDAY, AUGUST 6 Barrys Travel to Mackinac Isle Robert James Barry and his bride (nee Cathy Diane Van Gilder) departed for Mackinac Island following a fecep-tion Saturday evening at the American Legion Hall, Auburn Heights. The daughter of the Arthur W. Van Gilders of Dill Road and son of the James W. Barrys of York Street, Pontiac Township, spoke vows earlier that afternoon in Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Aurbum Heights. Susan Jean Dawe and Spec. 5 Kenneth R. Jacobson, USA, alumni of Central Michigan University, are planning late November vows. An affiliate of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, she is the daughter of Mrs.. Ralph Dawe of Osceola Drive and the late Mr. Dawe. Her fiance is the son of the Raymond Jacobsons of Coventry Street. He is stationed with the instructional ROTC unit at Temple University, Pittsburg, Pa. Attended by her sister, Ca«ryl Ann, the l»ide wore a traditiraially' fash-icmed wedding gown of silk organza with lace accents. A pillbox secured her bouffant' veil and she held a bouquet of pink and white carnations. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Ronald Van Gordon, Mary McAllister and Nfcs. Eric Eldridge with Heather Barry a$ flower girl. ★ ★ w Patrick W. Barry led the esquire side as best man with ushers Gene Lam-phere, Donald Mack, Eric Eldridge, Ronald Van Gordon and Michael Tebeau. Birthday, Anniversary Occasions for Gatherings (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is Mrs. Karl-Strom’s last column. Our fine correspondent has accepted a position as a resident director in Ann Arbor.) By SIGNE KARLSTROM Sunday numerous families traveled from this area as well as from other points for a reunion with Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. McKnight at Coldwater Lake to celebrate Mr. McKnight’s 70th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sylvester (Mr. McKnight is Mrs. Sylvester’s brother) together with Mr. Sylvester’s daughter and s'ankces. Joe Sparma went into the ring for the 24th time this season but lost a 7-2 decision to righthander Joe Verbanic. Sparma, called the "Yankee killer''' Pro-Am Event Filled by Ties It w'Hs all lied up m llie I’m Am Tournament al Edgcwfiod ('ountry Club here Mondav as every event came up with multiple winners. Four teams sti'oked fi5s for a 6-under-par 71 to share honors in the pro-am division They were Jack Clark and Bill Hyde of Gowanic, John Jawor and Don Bower of Bonnie Brook, .Alex Redmond and Tom McCormick o'f Lochmoor and Joe Lope?. -Sr, and Wayne Fordhdm of Burning Tree, In the pnvprn division, four teams again racked up a 67 4-under-par to tie for the No. I spot. Teamed up were Clark and Cass Jawor, Ben Lula and Redmond, Bob Clark and Larry Wilkinson and Tom Cosmos and Gerald , Prieskorn. Sharing firsi place in the low pro event were Bob Panasiuk of Knollwood with a J4-36—'70 and Bob McGillen from Western with a 35-35—70. LARGE f URNOUT If was the largest state tournament of the year wdth 288 teams participating. .Nine teams tied for second in the pro-am and 24 tied for third. • The nafihes were thrown info a hat and Alex Redmond was considered the win- . ner. Clark tofdjphe most money of the day, tying for first in the pro-am. tying for first with Jawor in pro-pro and finished second in low pro with even par 71, earning him.self $250 lor his')J8 holes of Holcomb Now in Front Seat prior to tliis season because of his lifetime record of 7-1, took his second straight defeat at the hands of the New? Yorkers this season. , Even though he gave up only four hits Verbanic was on the ropes from the start when leadoff batter Dick McAuliffe walked. Mickey , Stanley also walked and manager Ralph Houk made a fast trip to the mound, Jim Northrop hit into a dou- ble play and Norm Cash grounded out to end the first inning. DOUBLE PLAY The Tigers started the second inning with the first two men on base but another double play by Dick Tracewski saved Verbanic, and in the third inning a triple by Northrup sending home McAuliffe who walked, accounted for the first run. Again in the fourth inning, the Tigers put two runners on base and in the fifth, they loaded the bases but Verbanic managed to exit slightly bruised but as the winner. Cash’s 14th home run off Lindy McDaniel in the 7th accounted for the other run. The Yankees chalked up one in the second on a single by long-haired Joe Pepitone, a double by Tom Tresh and an infield scratch single by Jake Gibbs. In the 5th, Verbanic, Horace Clarke and Roy White singled consecutively and after Mickey Mantle struck out, one of four times in the game, Pepitone laced a two-run single into center .field to make it 3-1. When Tresh started the 6th inning with a walk and Gibbs hit his second homer of the season to make it 5-1, Sparma went to the showers with his 10th defeat against eight wins .this season. Like Sparma, none of the other THE PONTIAC PRESS IT ESI)AY. JI’LV 30, 1908 Mm Reds Take Doubleheader Culver Pitches No-Hit Game GEORGE CULVER SECOND GAME escort sward< PHILADELPHIA (AP) - George Culver found a new way to get rid of an upset stomach — pitch a no-hitter. The 25-year-old right-hander of the Cincinnati Reds held the Philadelphia Phillies without a hit Monday night in the second game of a twi-night doubleheader. “I had an upset stomach and had nothing to eat all day but some eggs and toast,” said the 6-foot-2 Californian after his 6-1 victory. Culver walked five, struck out three and one batter reached base on a catcher’s interference call as he evened his season record at 9-9. The Reds scored three runs in the third and three more in the fourth to give him a comfortable working margin. * ★ * Philadelphia scored a run in the second when Rich Allen hit a shot at Tony Perez which bounceij in and out of the third baseman’s glove. Shortstop Woody Woodward picked the ball up and threw it over first base, allowing Allen to go to second, DOUBLE ERROR The official scorer ruled a double er-, ror, Allen took third on an infield out and scored on a sacrifice fly, giving the hitless Phillies a 1-0 lead. Perez agreed with the ruling. “It was a tough play but I should have made it,” he said after the game. The closest the Phillies came to a hit was in the first and eighth innings. ■k * * In the first, lead off batter Tony Taylor smashed one into the hole at shortstop. Woodward moved quickly to his right, grabbed the ball, spun around and threw him out. In the eighth, Allen ripped one toward right that Tommy Helms knocked down and made the play at first. “1 was just trying to keep the ball in the infield,” said Helms. “I was lucky it stayed in front of me and I was able to throw him out.” Culver joined an elite group of Cincinnati pitchers who have recorded nohitters. They include Johnny Van-dermeer, who threw two in a row in 1938, Ewell Blackwell (1947), and Jim Maloney of the current Reds’ staff who has two. one of which he lost. SORE TOENAIL Not only did Culver have an upset stomach, but he also had to have a shot of novacaine in an ingrown toenail before he could put on a shoe to go out Tide Turns for Ex-Purdue QB By KLETCHER SPEARS Ability, lurk and such things a.sicle. it sometimes pays to be in the right place al the right time. That's the sort of thing that happened to Wung Doug Holcomb, but in a reverse way. He was in the right place, apparently. but, at the wTong time. COACH AT ORION Holcomb, 23, is the son of Stuart Holcomb, former athletic director al N’orthwestern 'l^niversily. This summer he's working with the grounds department at Oakland University, but come fall, he’ll turn lo teaching and duties as head football coach at Lake Orion High School. * * * .. Holcomb i,s a 1966 graduate of Purdue University. where he w'as a quarterback on the Boilermakers football team But he showed up at the wrong time. "ll^was a frustrating experience," says Holcomb of his three years on the varsity at Purdue. SECOND-STRING When Hojgomb. a high school All-American football player, arrived at Purdue, the' quarterbacking was in the capable hands of another All-American, Ron DiGravio, who was hhe total offense leader in the,Big Ten Conference in 1964.' Holcomb was an understudy and knew it. but he also knew that DiGravio would be gone when he was a junior and, in all probability, the quarterbacking job would be his, SHARP NEWCOMER But the next'year. with Holcomb now a sophomore, among the freshmen football prospects was another high school All-American—Bob Griese, who is now the No. 1 signal-caller with the Miami Dolphins of the American Football League. A ★ * DiGravio was graduated the next year so there loomed a battle between Holcomb and sophomore Griese for the quarterback job. In a preseason scrimmage, Griese’s team beat one led by Holcomb, 8-7, although "neither of us was in the game when the points came,” said Holcomb, Pontiac Pres& Photo HARD AT WOftK - Doug Holcomb, former Purdue Universityf quarterback, is bu.sy this summer as a member of the grounds department at Oaklind ypiversity. TIjjs fall, hell stillijje busy, as .head coach of thq,Lake Orion focftball team. STARTS FAST ^ “Griese started the first game, scored 17 points and that Was it,” said Holcomb who came through the entire affair with only praise for Griese. ★ ★ * “Griese was good. Maybe if I had been better than him I might have been bitter about it, ” said Holcomb, “but he was a good quarterback.” When Griese made good as a sophomore, Holcomb remained on the bench as he had behind DiGravio. Holcomb was an excellent prospect, but-he was unfortunate enough to get caught between two who were just a shade better. BRIGHT SPOTS There were some bright spots, though, admits Holcomb, a muscular, 6-foot 200-pounder. “The one I’ll always remember was . my first game as a sophomore. We were playing Wisconsin and we’re down 32-10 or something like that. ★ ★ * “Our .spotter saw something and he called down and asked for Holcomb to run a rollout. We were on the Wisconsin 30-yard line and I took the ball 30 yards on the rollout for a touchdown.” That was the first time he had touched a football in game competition in the Big Ten. PLAYING LIMITED Holcomb’s playing time was limited by the game situation. “We were way ahead or behind so when I went in there was no pressure on me. Another play. I’ll remember came at South Bend against Notre Dame when I threw 'a touchdown pass.” Doug and his wife, Pam, have two children, Doug Jr., 4, and Amy, four months. His wife is the daughter of , Richard Brace of Lake Orion, whp for the p?st three years served as chairman of the history department at Oakland ‘ (Ckintinued on Page B-2, Col. 5) and warm up. He didn’t come to the ball park,with the team and wasn’t around for the first game won by the Reds 7-6. Pete Rose tripled and scored on a sacrifice- fly for the winning run. In the last of the ninth, Rose threw Allen out at the plate for the third out after fielding a single in right field. Culver disclosed that he came to the ball park in a taxi after resting in his hotel room. He said he tried to eat dinner but “I just couldn’t.’’ After the Phillies scored their run, . Culver retired the next 11 batters. With two out in the sixth, he walked John Callison and Allen, but fanned Bill White to ease out of the jam. He pitched to three batters in the seventh. In the eighth, he walked pinch-hitter Tony Gonzalez and Taylor, before Roberto Pena hit into a force play. Callison popped out and Helms made his fine play on Allen to end that inning. EASY INNING The ninth was easy for the 183-pounder, who calls Oildale, Calif., his home. He needed only five pitches to complete his nohitter and place his name in baseball’s record book. White grounded out, Don Lock hit back to Culver, and Cookie Rojas sent a high pop to first baseman Don Pavletich. (Continued on Page B-2, Col. 5) starting rotation pitchers except for Denny. McLain has a winning record. Earl Wilson who pitches tonight against Mel Stottlelnyre is 8-8, while Mickey Lolich, whom manager Mayo Smith plans to put into the bullpen for a few days, is 7-7. The Yankees collected their final two runs off reliefer Don McMahon, recently obtained from the White -Sox, when Clarke singled and White followed with a homer to start the ninth inning. k k -k McMahon proceeded to strike out the next three batters, but all the damage was complete. The Tigers continued to be plagued with minor injuries hnd ran short of infielders and pinch hitting yesterday. Tom Matchick is on military leave, Ray Oyler is out with an Injured heel and F’red Lasher is missing for an abscessed tooth. Wilson, who will pitch tonight, must wear an elastic brace on his left knee which is strained. A MORE PAINS Catcher Bill Freehan isn’t on Uje injured list but has a few more pains today after being hit for the 14th and 15th time this season. Another time, he was sent to the ground with a pitch by Verbanic which missed his head. Despite the defeat, the Tigers managed to gain a half game on the Orioles who lost twice to the Red Sox. Cleveland also lost and thus the Bengals kept their seven game margin on the two closest challengers. * * * The Red Sox however gained a game and a half and are now 8% behind. Manager Smith said he planned to move Pat Dobson into Lolich’s pitching rotation temporarily because the big lefty “hasn’t been as effective in his last two or three starts. ” NEW YORK DETROIT ab r h bi ab r h bi Clarke 2b 5 2 2 0 MAullffe 2b 3 10 0 White If 4 12 2 Stanley cf 4 0 0 0 7 Total 0 1 0 0 2 2 I. lob—Ne,w Tresh. 3B—Nbrthr ER BB SO Frank B. Audette THE GIANT who con really move POHTIACSi All '68's Special Trode-in Prices During Our Close-Out f By The Fastest Growing Auto Deoler in the World 1968 CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop Hydramatic transmission. 400 cu. in., 290 H.P. engine, heater, deluxe wheel covers. Deluxe 8.55x14 tires, , power steering, retractable seat belts, outside mirror, washers and 'ipers, full carpeting, 121" wheel- base. »as50 lOO 1968 CATALINA 4-DOOR SEDAN Hydramatic. Full Decor Group. Deluxe, steering wheel. Deluxe wheel covets. Retractable seat belts. Deluxe foam cushions. 121" wheelbase. $27440 1968 TEMPEST 2-Door Sport Coupo Automatic transmission. RB radio. Large heater. Foam cushions. 2-speed washers and wipers. Backup lights.' $24I0<» AllDETTE PONTIAC, INC. 1850 MAPLE ROAD, TROY, MICH. (Across from Berz Airport) 642-8600 3 Minutes East of Woodward — 2V* Minutes West of 1-75 — Out of Town Buyers Aeceptfd LOCATfD IN THE TROY MOTOR MAIL IHE POXTIAC PKESS, TrKSDAV. JI LV ,](), 1908 Goes Out ■■ :B,. Negroes Push Ref ailing The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown proiduce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets of Friday. Produce Ford Reveals Steels, Motors Steady to Higheri Earnings Rise NEW YORK (AP) — Steelsimade by U.S. S^teel, Bethlehemial losses were shown by Stand-' I and motors were steady to high-and Republic. -ard Oil (New Jersey) , Liggett 'erina mixed stock market Chrysler advanced about aA'Myers and General Foods. 'early today. [point. Ford and General Motors Gains and losses were run-leaned to the upside. VEGETABLES $3.50'ning about even on the New 5 m! York Stock Exchange. Trading J 75 was fairly active in advance of ^jjianother Wednesday closedown of the markets for paper-work ; catchup. Wall Street was reported in another watch - and- wait peri-The over - all list, however, joj, assessing the probable effect was a scramble of gains and Lj, stock prices of earnings relosses. Among very active is- ports trimmed by the income sues, Del E. Webb dropped a surtax, and keeping an eye fraction, Murphy Industries and cocked on the potentially explo-Texas Gulf Sulphur about a give situation involving Czech- Cabbage, curly, h Cabbage, Red, bi Cabbage, Sprouts, ^ ^ ★ I point each and Anken Chemical 3.m| The major steelmakers posted [more than a point, while Con-225 gains amid unofficial reports itrol Data advanced more than 175 that a strike - averting labor a Point and Dreyfus Corp. and J.isi settlement might be imminent, j Mobil Oil gained fractions. 3 2? Jones & Laughlin picked up a| Boeing and Zenith improved point. Fractional gains w e r ejby about a point each. Fraction- oslovakia, Soviet Union, and the other satellite Soviet nations. Prices were irregular on the American Stock Exchange. On Monday the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks fell 2.1 to 331.4. The New York Stock Exchange PROFIT REDUCED Travel Sprees Add to U.S. By PHIL THOMAS industry, and the best way to do and executive levels initially AP Business Writer this was to utilize those people,and then working do\tm to the NEW YORK - A group de- both-Negroes in re- middle supervisory and basic voted to helping Negroes move , .*..*,* sales jobs, finding job opening upward into management andj „ . finding the people to fit executive jobs has been formed ‘^em mterest.npoung people by Negroes who won top jobs in ^ meeting last in jobs in retailing, counseling . the retail industry November. Now there are about retailers on how to develop com- 46 Pet. Gam Made ' . 75. They are all Negroes andmunicationswiththeblackcom- • 1 . Li ir £ V ' ./'"ftyy^fs agoi wascon- j^ „ responsible jobs munity in which they have a in 1st Half of Year l^-^ered beneath the Negro in a,and working hSfSlnJ'f r Z ^ The group has several major with the hard-core unemployed DETROIT (API - Ford Mo-Lte.” Waiter W. Branford siiS'f°"‘^-f “getting programs to bring about an in-tor Co. Monday became the,-This is no longer true.” The retai industry to open jobs to in the upgrading of third of the Big Three auto; granford is a Neero in a re makers to announce major -in- .p— po^itfon^w^^^^^ "ot onT;management METHODS creases in earnings for the first half of Uie year with a 46 per ^ut to get others to extend cent increase. Chrysler Corp^ previously re- happening to- ported record first-half earn- ^3^ ,, ^3,, 4o_year-old foun- earnings and General ors 3^^ chairman of the Nation-Corp. reported profits $48 mil- 3, hon ahead of last years fust 33^^ 3^ easy smill Ford reported profits of $390.5 ‘NOT HIS STICK’ million, or $3.57 per share of; A marine engineer who common stock for the period, moved into business alter decid-Sales totaled $7.6 billion. ing “engineering- wa.sn't my In the first half of 1967, Ford stick,” Branford is assistant reported earnings of $267.1 mil- public relations director lor Ijon, or $2.44 a share, on sales W.T. Grant Co., a junior depart-of $6.0 billion. ment store chain with about ,100 outlets across the nation. Branford said he decided to 34^4 , . i- 4 1 » lonii me auvisoiy group aiier „ surcharge l:l™^ctw« to ast obvious to me that , there was a need for a line of -’Ij °r.. ® **^*91^ * harp communication between the Imilhon, or 23 cents a share. .0. o m n, toil t Tr The report was not issued un- community and the retail + til aftei* the New York Stock Ex-11; change closed Monday. Ford common closed at 49’», bff ^s. j - '4 The company’s 1968 first - half | earnings fell short of the record | set in 1965, the most profitable' ' Branford said the group used word of mouth, lectures, and brochures to deliver its message i “The brochures highlight Negroes in the industry,” he said. ”We are saying to those who read them that these are people who have made it in the !retail industry, that the companies are sincere when they say they want you, and that this is the kind of money you can make. ' WALTER W. BRANFORD Currency-Control Plates Branford said the group wanted to "develop a positive image of the retail industry. “We make no attempt to in-timidate. An enlightened man-agement, if made aware of the [situation, will do something 1 about it. If nothing happens, then we try to bring our person to the attention of someone who will recognize his abilities. GOALS THE SAME i “What it boils down to is this: The American black man wants thf same things the American white man wants ” t rm-h/ol'SU'li Now Used by Army in Viet- 333* + j^lFord reported profits of $438.11 ,0 4,v. Ill + ^ **'*'^^' WASHINGTON (AP) - The forced to progressively tighten! Bt m, 88'! +3'.i°"LasrVeek GM reported a Command has introduced controls over American curren-i 15^3??! Till first-half profit of $968 million a credit card as[cy in South Vietnam to curb 20 ii!' IS!' -V Ion. sales of $117 billion chry-’’*-® activities. 3J' 2%' ^ 3?': = Ulster’s first-half profits of $148.8[marketing and dollar profiteer-; * * * ........ + :;jlmillion topped the 1965 mark of >ng ‘n South Vietnam, Pentagon one of the latest restrictions,; 3/43 officials*report. Pentagon officials say, went' t- '^l Ford worldwide sales of cars, Currency control plates must into effect last May. A $200 lim-j 'i - ’*41 trucks and tractors in the first now be used when a serviceman it on the amountof scrip a serv- 0 n v i half of this year totaled 2.6 mil-converts his military script to iceman can convert into cash, ' . , lion units, up 300,000 from the [cash or when he spends it on when he is about to return to the' Jy-gf ^ '’'first half of last year. 'certain high-priced post ex-1 United States, change goods. Right to Nome NY Senator Is Challenged lAP) whether the late Robert F. Ken-Hrcan"exLd this limit only!"fdy’\U.S. Senate seat may be * A * I in the case of personal emergen- ^y Gov. Nelson A. Rock- Troops stationed in Vietnam ides and then only with special,!fhZ ZZZ, are paid in scrip, or Military [permission. Payment Certificates 'MPC),|(jugy^-p DEMAND The stage lor the decision was set Monday by Judge John . , I------- ---------- O. Henderson of U.S. District ‘ Ti!f ini The Pentagon says currency [court, who acted on a challenge , f. . The plastic cards a ^“controls are needed because the; of Rockefeller’s right to appoint imae UeULU lled through computers to ^ive!g^^3, ^^^33^,, 3^^ ^ ^ ^ sought after through both legal ^y Dr. Joseph A.F. Valenti, a dean fed through computers to ^ive U.S. officials in Saigon a con-WASHINGTON lAP) - The slant watch on the volume of j ;,;,;;U.S. foreign trade balance [converted scrip as well as - Ijjshows Americans are on an in-|PX buying. [Communist nations lacking nor-jp .“"""‘h‘‘HaimrVhat" if Iternational spending spree, andjiDENTIFICA-nON [mal trade relations with the' '/■‘•the Commerce Department say “This is especially true of [at St. John Fisher College in [Rochester. He claims that, if 4, 4, L f f Por example, if a man con- free world, particularly Northlg'JJ^^®^ he ouUook IS far from reas-^,,,^^ than the authorized,Vietnam and Red China.” mh^AmendmeTt d the ?he deoartment reported'‘"u"I ,0 * * • ! • . “U.S. Constitution, which calls The ^partincnt reponea|orders, the computer! The $200 limit is designed toij j:.. t election of a senator. Monday the value of >mporIs,^^t a card identifying him,“reinforce the effectiveness” of; The amendment savs a eover-topped exports in June, the 33^, showing all his recent [ the scrip system, which, in the I third month this year in which L„3.„„4j.„® [r:n„, -nalvsis is sunnosed to ^ appoint a senator to the nation has .bought more 31,3 ^^^d in re- help pro£ L A^rkaf dol ^ goods from foreigners thaW itjcording all purchases of goodsilar, the Pentagon said. [‘NOT TEMPORARY has sold to them. ' ......... ..'sought by black marketers: 'The June deficit was ^7.2 mil-television sets, tape' on on a seasonally adjusted recorders, stereo systems, ra-basis. For government oHicia^s jjgs jj^^ets and other luxury items. Ma$'s $32.2 million deficit. With the year half over, the ^ , , , department said, imports fig-, Jhe Pentagon acknowledges ured on an annual rate are run- servicemen have been ning 20 per cent above the 1967 bribed into converting scrip into level while exports are showing dollars for money manipulators a 6 per cent increase. Saigon; some have l^en us- The January-to-June exports, '"g d>eg«»y obtained scrip to adjusted for seasonal variation, [*^“y marke- totaled $16.4 billion and imports . . , . - , $16.1 billion. The difference. Scrip was introduced in Viet- $318 million, goes on the “good’ nam in 1965 as a means of hitep- Thcre will be no market page in The Pontiac Press tomorrow. The stock exchanges will be closed to enable workers to catch up on paper work. The market page will be resumed Thursday. Valenti claims that, since Kennedy’s term would have expired Jan. 3, 1971, the appointment could not be considered temporary and a state law allowing the governor to delay a senatorial election was unconstitutional. Henderson ordered that the three-court judge be formed by Chief Justice Edward J. Lombard of the Second U.S. Circuit Court in New York City. No date was set for the court report. side of the ledger but leaves vir- '"g. U.S. doll^ars off the market tually no hope that the year as a easing the impact of Amen- ^ whole will produce another $4.l[^^" ‘^e country’s jt billion surplus to match 1967. ,‘Elated economy. What pains government offi- CONTINUING PROBLEM ^ cials most is that the Johnson But illicit money manipulation administration looked on that [and illegal sales of American 1967 surplus as a springboard to I goods are a continuing problem, i Q. In 1964 an even better 1968. The admin- The U.S. Command has been [ Insurance Securities Successfuhinvesting liliiiiiiliiW By ROGER E. SPEAR a long-terrfi c 0 m m 11 n istration was shooting for a $500- I nut $10 000 into I “P years, to LSes Trust ‘he most out of it. _The en million improvement over last^ year but is now faced with an | uphill fight just to match thei 1967 performance. 15 Inn. Rails Util. Stock! 473.2 193.6 150.3 332.2 4?4.9 194.7, 150.7 ' 482.3 197.0 1 51.6 477 » 203.8 150.6 206.6 150.2 3387 t 154.8 350.1 i 135.1 299.-i 159.1 342.( BONO AVERAGES ‘ By The Aisaciatad Rresa 20 10 10 10 10 ...........UfM. Ffh. L. Yd. News in Brief Howard Block of 5660 Dixie told Waterford Township police yesterday that vandals broke into a small building at his Putt-Putt golf course over the weekend and stole 20 cases of soft drinks. Block’s Putt-Putt is at 3580 Dixie. Garage Sale—Wednesday only. 10c to $1.00. 5947 Southward off Airport Rd. —Adv. Mom’s Rummage: Thurs., 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldw'in Rds. -Adv. Monday'! It* Oividondi boclarod/ .249.85-.1.61 .. 132.00-hO.iy 318.60-1.25 ., 76.52-1-0.06 ,. 64.32+O.r 76.55—O.C 81.20 84.024-0.1 Bofst Cascade .0625 FischbliAAoora Lacleda Sti Lindl5crg Corp .325 Q 8-16 t-3 ii? J of* , 8 mv industry has been in the dol- los.. My bmker say. a«> » E’3 ISS worry because insurance stocks ‘ P . g .g have been in a slump, would g°‘"8“P‘" aad sel into »>m.fbiDg el»? ^ ^ A. I’m inclined to go along better and I would exercise the with your broker and not take [patience to hold it for another tbb loig loss confronting you at year if you can afford to do so. the present time. There is a ★ t* * distinctly better investment at- Q. My investment club holds titude developing toward in-a number of shares of Columbia surance stocks in general and I ^Broadcasting System. What dividends were paid during 1H7 and when?—H.L. A. A quarterly dividend of 40 cents a share was paid on these dates during 19W: March 10, June 9, Sept. 8 and Dec. 8. ,A 2 per cent stock' dividend was distributed Dec. 20. The corresponding ex-dividend dates in case these might concern you — were Feb. 20, May 23,-Ai%1 21 and Nov. 20 for both the cash . payment and s t o c k distribution. ' believe you should wait to see how this change may possibly affect your fund’s portfolio. f also note that some corT, porate problems have developed in the management company which distributes your fund’s shares. Earnings d e c.l i n e d sharply for 9 months ended in March. It is not uncommon for such problems to, temporarily affect share values. However, I have repeatedly stated in 4he column that any investment in the insurance industry should be undeajtaken as (Copyright, l$tt) r < It X K ^ \ ' By County Citizens League Candidates Are Rated Ratings of candidates In the Aug. 6 primely have beat released hy the Oakland atisens League, a B&ming^am-based nonpartisan osipuiteation. The ratings are com{dled by a cand^te investigation corn- education, 10 points; business, p^tlcal and civil experience, IS pdnts; and a perscoial interview, 7S points. ★ ★ ★ Two incumbent state re|»«sentat[ves in south Oakland County failed receive the top rating of the league. In the 66th District Democratic Rep. Bill S. Huffman fell shmi of the top rating given to Monte R. Geralds, whUe in the 68th District, Republican Rep. William Hayward was e^ed by Daniel GiUesi»e. PRIMARY RACES The following is the leagues’s list of candidates and ratings where there are primaries. Congress 19th District: Democrat: Gery R. FYink, 89, and Ron Mardiros, 73. State Representative 60th District: RepubUcan, incumbent Clifford H. Smart, M, and N. Paul Forsberg, Democrats, Earl F. J. St. Aubin and William E. Todd, ratings. 61st District: Republican, incumb«it Loren D. Anderson, 86, Donald J. von Rase, a, and Donald T. Mason Jr., 65. Briney Jr., 85, Edward R. Bigger, 55, and Paul D. Jeffrey, no rating. 64th District: Democrat! Ahto Vagnoszi, 89, and Leonard P. Baruch, no rating. 65th District: RepubUcan, incumbent WilUam P. Hamptmi, 96, and Timothy P. Pickard, 65. 66th District: R^blloan, Richard N. Sanderson, 8 8 Martin E. Clements, 76, and WilUam C. Kern, 55; Democrat, Monte R. Geralds, 89, incumbent. Bill S. Huffman, 86, Jon E. Daniels, 78, Sam Panzica, 71, and Lanson Carrothers, 59. $/00 Damage in House Fire 62nd District: RepubUcan, Howard L. DeU, 81, James W. Safecrackers Get $400 Haul From Oil Firm in City Safecra<^ers stole about $400 from a Pmtiac firm in a break-in discovered early today. A poUceman temba' 1968 until her resignation in June, Mrs. Griffith died of an illness in Cheyenne, Wyo., ien route to a new teaching position in San Francisco, Calif. is survived by her daughter, Martha Griffith of Los Angeles, CaUf. Mississippi Thrush Scorns Ic^ea That She's a By EARL WILSON NEW YORK - the idea exists that I’m a hiUbilly - and I'm not sure that it does — I am NOT!” Miss Bobbie Gentry from Chickasaw County, Miss., sat in the opulent Plaza Oak Room. She was or|dering about $S0 in luncheon vittles fw a few friends. The slickly turaed-ont song genius who was purportedly snatched out of the bayou, raggedly ^ and barefooted, and made rich and famous with ’’Ode to Billie Joe,” had to lau|^ Eleganm becomes her. In England where she Just d"' TV specials for BBC, she was almost as as Dou^s Fairbanks. i ★ ★ ★ “I Just bought a basketball team,” Bobbie mrjinnj said. At first I thought she said she’d bought a basketball which would be more in my bracket. “The Phoenix Suns,” Bobbie explained. “Ed Ames, Henry Mancini, Tcmy Curtis, Andy Williams and me. About $50,0()0 each, I think. We own the league franchise. If we don’t do well in Phoenix, we can move it somewhere else.” Bobbie — here for a concert at iForest Hills Stadium is so sophisficated that while here she was composing a new song called “Casket Vignette” about a casket Salesman who made all the wr<»ig corny remaiks to the bereaved fiancee of a man just being buried. She rang two sisters, Jessye, 17, and Linda, 15, touring the country with her, into the song—which the casket salesmen won’t like. THE MIDNIGHT EARL Josqriiine Baker would like to come back to the U.S. and do “Hello, Dolly!” on B’way if Pearl Bailor-should go fit wifii iMripr Jm^ Keify, visited the Copa and said: “I used to dance right over tbefe!” (She was a Copa Gal) . . . Eddie Davis A wife Clementfne will celetoate their SOth anniversary Nov. 15 In Fort Lauderdatb. They were married four days after the World War I armistice. TODAYS BEST LAUGH; “The new tax is a sir tax-it’s the man who winds paying it.”—Jack Delany. BEMOiSNBRlD (HIOTE: The man who has no secrets from bis wife eifiilr has no secrets or has no wife.—Gilbert Wells. EARL’S PEARLS: Joan Rivers knows a gwgeous midget who wants to pose for the Reader’s IBgtot coit^U. Hariow*a discotheque keeps out weird pem 11 months to 11 years, received head injuries when their car collided with a two-ton truck owned by Bell Fisheries of Mackinaw City, Mich. The truck driver, Richard Dale Cook, 26, no relation, was not hurt. A giant ape’s jaw bone found I the HimOlayan foothills south of Kashmir may be more than 10 million years old. vesterday. Surviving are his wife, Ella; three daughters, Mrs. Jackie Lange of Pontiac, and Linda and Bonnie, both at home; a son, Dennis at home; a stepson, Arnold McGechy of Bad Axe; two sisters, including Mrs. Clark Wheaton of Pontiac; and four brothers; including Joseph of Waterford Township. Mrs. Clyde G. Peabody BIRMINGHAM - Sendee for Mrs. Clyde G. (Ida) Peabody, 71, of 1440 Shipman will be 1 p.m. 'Thursday at the Bums-Hanna Funeral Home Rochester, N.Y., with burial at Irondequoit Cemetery, Iron-dequoit, N.Y. Local arrangements are by Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Mrs. Peabody died yesterday. Surviving are her husband; two daughters, Mrs. Douglas Rines of, Saudi Arabia and Mrs. Walter Baechle of Rochester, N.Y.; three sisters, including Mrs. William McCallum of Birmingham; a brother; six grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild. Richard L. Shemwell MILFORD TOWNSHIP — Service for former resident Richard L. Shemwell, 64, of Melvindale will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Richardson Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial at Gants Cemetery Sharon Grove, Ky. Mr. Shemwelli a retired job setter for Ford Motor Co., died yesterday. Surviving me his wife. Myrtle, and four brothers, including James Shemwell of Milford. Arthur Weaver Sr. IMLAY CITY - Service for Arthur Weaver Sr., 59, of 465 N. Main will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home with burial at Imlay Township Cemetery. Mr. Weaver, a carpenter, dM Saturday. Surviving are his wife, MUdred; three sons, Arthur Jr. of Lake Orion, Dean of Romeo and William of Utica; one brother, Ernest of Imlay City; two sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Secsou of Lapeer and Mrs. Evelyn Johnson of Birmingham ; and eigh grandchildren. Gerald C. Whitsitt ROCHESTER — Service for Gerald C. Whitsitt, 59, of 1585 Croo^ will be 1 p.m. Thursday at the First Methodist Church, Berkleyt with burial at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Whitsitt, who died Monday, was employed at Ex-Cell-0 Oakman Plant. Surviving are his wife Mildred; a son, William, at home; two daughters, Mrs. George Carley and Mrs. William Stanwick of Warren; and one sister. Remember — Vote For JAMES R. STELT FOR DISTRICT JUDGE NOH.PARTISAN CITY DF POimAC Prim«rl«»,'TuMdo)r, Aiifluct 6 JaiMA It lor OlfWet jwdeo Committoo Lana Turner Misses Glamor MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Lana Turner misses the good old days when actresses had “It,” glamor ruled Hollywood, and movies built a dream world. In Mexico City Where she was filming “The Big Cube,” her first picture in three years, the 48-year-old former “Sweater Girl” complained “there’s no glamor any more.” ★ ★ ★ ‘The days when an actor or actress had to work in picture after picture befwe reaching star status are gone. Nowaday an actor makes one movie and suddenly he’s a star,” she aid. The days of “It,” and ■oomph” and “Sweater Girls’ are gone, Lana said. CARBON COPY KIDS ‘So many of the kids who come up today are so much alike you can’t tell them apart. They wear the same hairdos, miniskirts, smiles and makeup. They copy each other. “■They don’t have that whatever-it-is that makes them different. The only one I’ve seen come alOTg in years who may have that little ‘extra’ is Julie Christie.” k k k Miss Turner, who Hollywood’s reigning sex goddess for many years and responsible for the wave of girls bearing the name “Lana” today, associates the “lack of glamor” with the realistic trend in films. “The public wants to see pictures which are entertaining and not films concerning problems that could almost be their own — or are close to it and are being played out by actors who are practically no different than they are. ‘SHOULD BE ILLUSION^ “Motion pictures should be illusiOTs like they used to be — a dream world.” According to Lana, she’s been reading books, plays and scripts for the last three years, looking for something to do that would be dignified. k k k “This was the first one read,” she said, referring to “The Big Cube.” “It’s tertaining, although it deals with a realistic situatiem of today. But it’s also a part that is dramatic and has dignity. And that’s important to me. “Acting has been my life, don’t know anything else and I’d die if I coiddn’t act. But if the part is not what I want. I’ll just twiddle my thumbs and do nothing.” Nationwide Police Strike Eyed in Bid for Support SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) -A national two-day police walkout has been propos^ by police leaders embittered by what they dOTsider lack of suiqwrt in dealing with racial violence. “When police are being shot like fish in a barrel, it’s time we do something,” said John Herrington of Philadelphia, national president of the 137,000-member Fraternal Order of Police. A conference will be held in September to consider the walkout, Herrington said today. No date or place has been set. Delegates will include representatives of the order and such city police groups as New York’s Patrolmen’s Benevolent riot when they’re not happy with housing. When they get p6or pay they riot, to How in the world do you mix tables with mixed tastes in furnishings, without the whole thing looking like a mistake? (And even if you don't have a mixture of tastes, how can you introduce new tables into your current design scheme without botching it up?) Here's the answer. Lane's remarkable collection of tables (dining, bedroom and Versatile furniture, too) called Rhythm. , They're designed to go with every Period. Yet look like no pairtieular one. Yet look great. Actually, almost everything good Rhythm is negative. tell you about There are no cfevices to catch dust. Legs won't wobble. Lane's construction sees to that. The walnut veneers* Lane uses are not shiny. Not too dark. Not dull. (How do we describe color and depth and grain?) Now how much do all these negative advantages cost? Not too much. Surprisingly. i Rhythm by „ Stop at any store below and see. ■ You can't go wron^. T ' Rhythm by Lane. o 9p-ko R( See Lane furnitute at the following stores: *and hardwood soiid$ Detroit Pr^uss Furil. Co. 16200 Harper Ave. St. Clair Shores Price Furn. & Appl. 23200 Mack Ave. rt Chests, tables, _________ inineand llvini ro— iffnituri!, record cabinets and va.i maxes bMroom, d f Jniture, r