Romney Lifts Detroit Curfew
DETROIT (AP) — Calm came to Detroit today, and Gov. Romney rescinded some of the restrictions that were imposed to quell four <kys of vioienee that PLAYS GOLF swelled into the costliest racial explosion in the nation’s history.
Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh said, “I think it’s over.”
area and took a good look. Things i approaching normal.”
“The law has never been applied to a situation like Detroit,” he told newsmen.
Lt. Gen. John Throckmorton, military chief of federal forces in the city, told his troops, “Sheathe' your bayonets.”
Romney, alldr four days of keeping pace with the developing violence, apparently was getting back to normal, also. He played golf before touring the city!	..	,
lilting “an apparent continuing improvement in the over-all situation,” Cavanagh urged businesses in the riot-blitzed city to resume normal operations.
In the showery darkness before dawn, helicopters gave troops guidance as their searchlights ]H-obed rooftops to betray hidden gunmen.	________
The last four hours before sunup passed with only two reports of snipers.
Romney withdrew the 9 p.m. curfew and lifted stringent regulations on gasoline sales with one exception, pumping gasoline into portable containers remained forbidden.
“It looks^reatly improved,” Romney said. “I went put to the main trouble
The governor told a news Conference that he and Cavanagh had sent'a telegram to President Johnson asking him to declare the battered city a disaster area to make it eligible for federal funds for rebuilding.
^Romney said, however, that there might be some legal question about whether the President could make such a declaration.
He was joined in the statement by Gov. George Romney and Cyrus,, R. Vance, special assistant to Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara.
Soldiers afoot and in tanks, armored cars and helicopters maintained guard on areas where violence has been fiercest. But the city appeared to be bustling back to normal
Tranquility came to the disheveled city after another night of military siege on stubborn, last-ditch nests of snipers.
Arrests, mostly for curfew violation, mounted to 3,100. But between midnight and 6 a.m. they increased by only 199, small by comparison with other periods ' since the riot erupted.
The death toll reached 36 during the night.
Among the latest casualties was a white man trying to break into a store outside the main Negro-populated riot area that centered oh 12tji Street.
The Weather
—UJ, WMlhtr nurttv F»rtc|tt
Cloudy, Chance of Rain
(Ditdlt on Pago 1)
THE
Home
Edition
PONTIAC PRESS
VOL. 12.5
XO. 147
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THl RSDAV, JLLV 27, 19(17
■A"	ASSOCIATED PR6S>:	.	-n, * -n r-.
^ ^ ^ -K	UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL	--64 PAGES
House Panel May Hold Own Probe of Riots
WASHINGTON (Jl — The subv^rsives-hunting House Committee on Un-American Activities may launch public hearings next week on the Detroit and Newark riots, beating to the punch a proposed Senate-House probe.
Chairman Edwin E. Willis, D-La., said the committee — best known for its often stormy investigations of alleged domestic communism — expects to meet next week to consider a preliminary staff report on supposed subversive influ-
ences in the riots.
Willis said he felt committeemen would agree with him “the information developed to date will justify public hearings.” And it was learned the committee is poised to begin public hearings a day after it approves recommendations in the preliminary report.
SHOPPERS — Area citizens enter t|ie new full-line J. L.	pomuc pr«i pnoto by rok wimtr
Hudson store which opened today at the Pontiac Mall. The	opened. The new corridor, decorated in Florentine design,
Mali’s new fashion corridor and Winkelman’s store also	is caljed the Fashion Mall.
Wednesday’s call by four Negro leaders for an end to rioting drew praise from Senate leaders, plus a bipartisan leadership pledge that the Senate will pass legislation aimed at alleviating disorder-causing slum conditions.
Pontiac Fashion Mall, 2 Stores Open
Pontiac Mall’s new fashion corridor and two adjoining stores opened today. The 6ther seven stores lining the new south corridor hope to open for business by mid-September or earlier, according to. Mrs. 'Ruth McCarthy, the Mall resident manager.
A long-stem red rose is being given to every woman entering the new Winkelman’s store on this opening day.
also constructing a Singer Center Lesson Shop in the new corridor.
J. L. Hudson’s Co.’s new full-line store, with services and departments comparable to Hudson's Northland, opened this morning. An expanded budget store has been doing business on the basement level throughout the two-year construction of the new three-story building.
Hadley’s, a women’s clothing shop at the end of the south ;Corridor^ will open Aug. 3. Burt’s Shoes, Lane Bryant and the new Marianne expect to open about Sept. 1. The existing Marianne Store in the main corridor will be renamed Marianne’s Casual Shop when the new store opens, according to Mrs. McCarthy.
Several stores along the main corridor are remodeling to coincide with the look of the new Mall, according to the resident manager.
Skies to Stay Cloudy
Montgomery Ward and Co., at the north end of the main Mall, is building a new addition totaling 35 per cent of the space in the existing store.
House of Fabrics, and Lady Orva Hosiery, have not yet announced opening dates. The existing Singer Store is
“The planned grand opening is Sept. 14, although departments will be open for business as they are relocated in the new store,” said Charles Alford, store manager.
Patrolman Santiago Serna Examines His Squad Car
A Veteran' Is Born
Santiago Serna is lucky to be alive and he knows it
The 23-year-old Pontiac Patrolman is the city’s newest police officer, but his baptism under fire in the civil disturbance Tuesday morning made him a veteran rather quickly.
Serna, an officer since March 3, waj riding north on Lake near Orchard Lake about 4 a.m. when a blast from a shotgun ripped into the patrol car from his side.
“At first I thought I’d been hit by a bottle sornebody threw,” he sajd-“Then, I felt the back of my neck and got a handful of blood.”
Patrolman R. William Blower, who was at the wheel of the squad car, rushed Serna to Pontiac General Hospital.
During those anxious moments, Serna said “I thought 1 was going to die.”
No one knew how serious the wounds were and the question of summoning a priest to the hospital was raised by Serna himself.
However, it was soon determihed that five shotgun pellets actually had penetrated his neck.
Yesterday, Serna was released from ’ the hospital and he stopped at police headquarters to examine his protective gear and the car.
Numerous holes in the windshield showed that many pellets had deflected from his pocked helmet. A heavy pattern of, shot marked the window frame, which, he said, probably saved his life.
As one senior patrolman put it: “Serna’s been through something some of Us haven’t experienced after 10 or 20 years.”
City Quiet Again; Emergency Still On
By MEL NEWMAN Peace reigned for the second straight night in Pontiac after the outbreak of violence which claimed two lives Monday evening and Tuesday morning.
Those taken into custody during the disturbance and subsequently arraigned are now in Oakland County Jail.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6)
Police officials made it clear that emergency conditions and a high state of preparedness will continue indefinitely.
Although the curfew has been lifted in Detroit, the 9 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. curfew will remain in force in Pontiac.
Negro Youths, Taylor to Confer
In separate interviews. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen applauded the statement by Martin Luther King Jr., A. Philip Randolph, Roy Wilkins and Whitn^ M. Young Jr. saying, “No one benefits under mob law. Let’s end it now!”
The ban on the sale of alcoholic beverages and restrictions on the sale of gasoline also continue in effect in the city.
Some 20 arrests were made in Pontiac last night, most for violating the curfew, and at least one for carrying a Concealed weapon.
After meeting this morning with spokesmen of a group working to keep peace in troubled neighborhoods. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said an afternoon meeting will be- held to discuss three topics presumably disturbing Negro youths.
No intentionally set fires were reporU ed in the city.
Taylor said the afternoon meeting will be attended by himself, about 15 “youths” and Marie Johnson, a bondswoman, and Albert Shaw, a Pontiac teacher.
The topics as related to Taylor are:
Skies will continue partly overcast through tonight and tomorrow.
No important temperature changes are expected the weatherman said.
Temperatures will fall to 57 to 64 tonight, and rise to 77 to 84 tomorrow. Fair and a little cooler is the outlook for Saturday.^
Precipitation p^abilities in per cent are: today 40, tonight 20, tomorrow 20.
REMAIN ON CMl.
City Police Chief William K. Hanger directed yesterday that leaves and vacations for ail department personnel be postponed and that officers not on duty remain on call.
Reinforcements from outside law enforcement agencies such as the Michigan State Police and the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department will stay on the scene.
In Today's Press
Housing Aims, Core-City Status Tied
•	Release of all youths (presumably arrested Monday and Tuesday) on their personal recognizance.
•	Some immediate prefabricated houses to relocate people in Crystal Beach housing developmoit.
•	R«anoval' of State Rep. Arthur J. Law’s store, 200 Earlmoor, from the neighborhood.
★ ★ ★
Taylor said the topics were presented as proposals and he would hope that there are not going to be demands or threats.
LEGAL CONSULTA'nON
He said there are legal points he would have to have legal consultation on.
Troy Schools Board moves to solve money problems — PAGE A-4.
(EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the last of a two-part series).
Scrimmage Canceled Lions ;tilt at Wisner Stadium is called off -.PAGE E-1.
f Youth group changihg its ways PAGE D-1.
Area News..'...............A-4
Astrology ................C-10
Bridge ...................C-10
Crossword Pn&Ie ..........F-ll
Comics ................   C-10
Editorials ................A-6
Food Section	F-2, F-3
Markets .................: .F-4
Obituaries ............... C-3
Sports	....E-1—E-7
Theaters .................D-12
TV and Radio Programs	F-ll
Wilson, Earl .............F-ll
sn’s Pages ......B-1—B-4
By BOB WISLER
Pontiac occupiesraneKhas occupied, a unique position in Oakland County.
Because of its early development as the county seat and an important industrial community, it filled up earlier and faster than the surrounding areas, and consequently has little room left for residential development.
These factors are discouraging and at the same time encouraging.
Pontiac Housing Study Committee, an organization of private citizens, business,, civic, social and labor leaders, headed by Howard H. Fitzgerald II, publisher of The Pontiac Press.
8-MEMBER PANEL An eight-member subcommittee headed by Kpn Morris, UAW regional 1-B director, has been asked to study it with the idea of determining methods of financing various types of housing.
should delve to find the significance behind the statistics.
In order to fully develop as the core for a fast growing surrounding area, the Smith Co. recommended the following as minimal goals for new housing:	‘
• $5,000 and under family income level. By 1975, some 1,000 units. Another 750 by 1985.
similar programs with heavy emphasis on two- and three-bedroom units.
The report indicates the greatest need Is for units for the $5,000 to $7,000 income level,, particularly profepional persons such as teachers, government workers.
The mayor declined to predict the outcome of the meeting but said future meetings with the youths would probably be held in keeping with his pledge “to set up lines of communication so that action instead of promises are dccom-plished.”
9 kKor
RENTAL UNITS
According to the report prepared by the Larry Smith & Co. real estate consultant firm, “Pontiac is fortunate in that it has an opportunity to occupy a Centra] location as an important urban core within the growing complex of Detroit.”
The report also states- that Pontiac should continue to be a self-sustaining area and, with continued planning, maintain itself as the commercial core for Oakland County.
The housing survey report was dispersed this week to members of the
Also on the executive committee are Fitzgerald, Bruce J. Annett of Annett, Inc. Realtors; John Niggeman, vice president of Community National Bank; Harold Goldberg of Thomas Jewelry Co.; Charles Brown, division manager of Consumers Power Co.; Earl Maxwell, personnel director of GMC Truck & Coach Division; and Charles Tucker of Tucker Real Estate and an NAACP official.
• $5,000 ^ $7,50(1 kicome level. Up to 2,600 units by 1975. Another 3,200 by
The recommendations are mostly (70 percent) for rental units, with emphasis, again, on two- and three-bedroom units, some efficiencies and one-bedroom units.
• $7,500 to $10,000 level. By 1975, some 1,800 units. Another 2,550 by 1985.
•	$10,000 to $15,000 ihcome level. Some 450 units by 1975, another 600 by 1985.
•	$15,000 and up income. By 1975, some 100 units, another 350 by 1985.
In the $7,500 to $10,000 level the economists recommend 65 to 70 per cent rental units and only 30 to 35 per cent housing. There should be a few one-bedroom units and a balanced distribution between two- and three-bedroom units, some four-bedroom units, they say.
Annett said he was much in favor of the study by an “impartial organizatibn such as the Larry Smith Co.”
He indicated that it is a good job statistically but there are a number of areas in which the committee membefs
For income levels below $10,000 the firm recommends constructioft of predominantly rental units, apartment houses, row houses, etc.. With little housing construction.
Needs for the lowest income group would be filled primarily by public housing, rent! supplement housing and
The next income level, $10,000 to $15,-000, is made up mainly of families with two or three children, aqd constniction here, the report indicates, should be primarily (60 per cent until 1975) housing. Both rental and occupant^wped units should concentrate on three-bedroom units, it says. i ii (Continued on Pag'rf Ar2, Col. 3)
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I
A—2
THE rONTIAC Pllte, THUHSDAr. J0LY 27,

Riot May Have Started '68 Campaign
DETROIT (AP) — A police raid m a blind pig in Detroit may have launch^ tiie 1968 presldaitial campaign a year ahead of sdiedule.
■ Hie raid apparently provided the q>ark whigh ignited t h e flames of violence which led to a confrontation between President Johnson, Democrat, and Michigan Gpv. George Romney, Republican.
er» 4nto Detroit 4o put down riots because of what he called Romney's demonstrated "inability to restore order.”
SEVEN TIMES
Johnson is virtually certain to run for reelection next year, and Romney Is a top contender for the OOP nomination.
The President struck the first blow when he told a nationwide television audience Monday that he was sending paratroop-
Romney’s name w a s mentioned seven times in Johnson’s brief speech.
The governor’s turn to retalr iate may come next Monday when he is scheduled to make a speech before the National Association of County Officials at Detroit’s Cobo Hali.
Indications are that Romney will uncork a stem-winder, for the organization provides a logical forum at which to tell gov-wnment. officials about federal-state cooperat^_________	(
There are public denials from all, sides that politics played a roie in the dispatching of crack federal troops to put down this week’s near-insurrection in the nation’s fifth largest city.
But President Johnson came close to being denounced by a
Michigan congressman from his own Democratic party, Rep. Charles Diggs of Detroit, , jbr playing politics by withholding the use of troops for 11 hours while burning, looting and sniping ragod through the city.
The Republican Coordinating Committee has been strongly criticized for saying that the President might have contributed to the Detroit violence by vetoing a crinie control bill.
out the incipient flames while thfey were still just a small spark.
Gov. George Romney, an unannounced contender for the Republican presidential nomination, also was criticized by inference because he was to have attended the GOP Coordinating Committee’s meeting last Sunday at which the blast was unleashed against Johnson.
And Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh was the target of complaints that he didn’t move fast enough with police tt stomp
Romney reportedly still is smoldering over Johnson’s televised explanation to the nation of why hp %ent troops to Detroit.
Flights to U.S. Offered
to Injured Viet Children
NEW YORK m - The U.S.
government has offered free air transportation to this country for war-injured South Vietnamese children needing specialized medical treatnient available in the United States.
Two members of the Committee of Resp(»isibility, an organization of Anterican physicians, told the Associated Press that William Bundy, assistant secretary of state for the Far East, made the offer in a letter tp-^e group earlier this
evacuation. They range in age from 10 to 14 and have injuries too severe or of a nature that cannot be dealt with in Vietnam.
“We approached him earlier this year on ^e matter,” Said Dr. Herbert Needleman, a Philadelphia physician. "In early Jniy we got a letter that said the State DepaDt-meat was prepared to offer air evacuation, for the children if the South Vietnamese government approves.” Npedleman and Dr. Frank Ervfc pf Boston left New York for Saigon yesterday afternoon to get tliat apiM-oval.
The committee has estimated that 30,000 South Vietnamese children will be injured in the war this year by one side or the other. A third of thlfee children never will reach the medical facilities of the South Vietnamese Ministry of Health, the doctors said.
"We’re going with an open mind about the problem,” Nee-dleman said. “We expect that the children will be released to us. You might say we’re cautiously optimistic.”
The program would start with
SNCC Leader Is Out on Bail
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -H. Rap Brown, Negro leader of the militant Stujlent Nonviolent Coordinating Conunittee, is free on $10,000 bail after spending about nine hours in the jail of this Washington suburb.
An Uproarious sequence wound up with him booked under Virginia law as a fugitive frwn a Maryland warrant charging he incited a riot Monday night in Cambridge, Md.
four children already chosen for
Two require facial plastic surgery, one had a groin in-J u r y and the fourth was severely burned on his face and neck by napalm, the doctors
Of those who do receive help, only about 200 meet the evacuation program’s criteria — that they are too severely hurt to be treated in their homeland or that they have injuries for which cures are not available.
FIRST MEETINGS Needleman and Ervin said one of their first m«tlngs Jn Saigon would be with Dr. Tran Lu-Y, minister of health, but that a final decision on the program might come from higher sources in the government.
"We have been given reason to believe that the source might be higher than the minister,” Needleman said, -“but just how high, we^on’t know.” The committee/while declining to get Juto-j^at it calls a numbers war, has said as many
150,000 civilians could be injured this yeah by the war.
Dr. Howard Rusk, president of the World Rehabilitation Fund, estimates total casualties at 30,000 a year. One college professor who spent six weeks studying the situation reported that casualties are as high as 300,000 a year.
The Saigon government puts the total at 12,000.
Queen Mary to Become
'a Rival to Disneyland'
GEORGE W. KUHN
Senate Probe of Riot Sought
Area Republican Asks Four Main Questions
The Weather
Full Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Considerable cloudiness with
chance of thundershowers today. High 77 to 84. Partly cloudy with no important temperature changes tonight and Friday. Low tonight 57 to 64. Winds southeast 8 to 15 miles per hour late today and tonight. Saturday outlook: fair and a little cooler. Precipitation probabiiiUes in per cent: Today 40, tonight 20, tomorrow 20.
At ( a.m.; Wind Dlrtctlen: Souttitatt '$ Thuriday al
Sun riiea Friday «t 6:22 a.m. Atoon leta Thursday at 1:22 p. Atooo risat Friday at t:02 a.m
Oawntawn Tamparaturaa
Ona Yaar A§» in Fantlac
Hlghast tan^ratura LoWaat tamparatura Maan .tamparatura . Waathar; Muppy
Hlghast and Lawast Tamparaturas This Data in n Yaars 0 In 1»41	,r
nasday's Tamparatura Chart BO S6 Fort Worth 9t .............. s City 94
orsa C. B3 S3 Miami
Marquetta
Muskegon

75 54 New Orleans 7S SI New York 71 SS Omaha 19 S5
79 49 .........
92	SB	Phoenix
as	S9	Pittsburgh
77	S7	Tampa	...
as 67 Salt Lake C. 99 SO BO	SB	S. Francisco	73	55
........-	„ jj
NATIONAL WEATHER — Widely scattered showers and thundershowtti ire expected tonight in New England, the
. sMiuie Atlantic states, the Ohio Valley, the south and central ^ Hockiee. the oeatral Plains and the central Mississippi Val-lor. it wii hi oeol in the nortbrnti quarter of the nation daft
of fw^llaoiasippi Valley.
State Sen. George W. Kuhn of West Bloomfield Towaship will ask for a full-scale Senate investigation of what he termed “the nation’s worst riot” in Detroit.
Thfe Senate probe, the 'Republican legislator said yesterday, should seek answers to four main questions.
Said Kuhn:
“It is unbelievable and shocking to find that a city such as Detroit,,rated with the highest standarc^ of racial rapport and harmony, can become, in a few short hours, captive of a hardcore criminal group causing massive damage and destruction of over $300 million in public and private property, let alone the hundreds of injuries and many deaths that already have been reported.”
Kuhn said the people oC^ichi-gan need the answers m the following questions;
Lack of leadership and action by political leaders. A quick end to the rioting and looting was possible all day Sunday had they chosen to employ a “Get tough’ policy. On the contrary, the situation was treated lightly from the police enforcement standpoint and rapidly deteriorated until It was completely out of control, necessitating the use of State Police, National Guam and eventually federal troops.
INFLUENCES QUESTIONED It is essential to determine whether or not there were any known agitators or outside influence in the rioting,” Kuhfi added.
“Why was the news suppressed for 12 hours before the public was informed of the trag-events? Is it not the public’s right to know of civil unrest, for its own personal safety and welfare? ,
“Lastly, I personally believe there is a great need for an agonizing appraisal of both our national and state policies as to how best cope with this entire civil rights sltu^ition. It has been abundantly clear to me, for some time, now, that our present policies have not been effective and need considerable revision”
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) -The Queen Mary, venerable lady of the Atlantic, will find a permanent home on the waterfront of Ixjng Beach and rival Disneyland as a lure for tourists.
The ocean liner, now too old for travel as a luxury ship, is being sold by Cunard Lines to the city of Long Beach for $3, 444,000.
The city, whose Wd t,. others, plans to spend $3 milliwj to $5 million to make the Queen Mary into a maritime museum, hotel and convention center.
The news Wednesday from London, where the sale nounced, created excitement among Long Beach citizens. DISNEYLAND RIVAL’
“She’ll rival Disneyland,’ said Mayor Edwin Wade.
He predicted that the luxury liner will attract two million persons a year. She will rival Disneyland, Marineland and other Southern California facilities as a tourist attraction,” he said.
Wade, discounting comment in London that the proud old ship would become “an unfair
Another Quake Strikes Turkey
ANKARA (AP) - Another violent earthquake struck Turkey Wednesday night in an area where 23,000 persons were killed In 1939 in one of history’s most disastrous quakes. The government radio said by noon today known death toll had reached 70, but many villages had not been heard from.
The quake occurred in eastern Turkey, south of the city of Er-zincan. Erzincan was the site of the disastrous quake of Dec. 27, 1939, when 23,000 persons were killed.
The local Fisher Body plant will shut down today for model changedver, a spokesman a n-nbunced this morning.
“Production on the 1968 models wljl begin on Aug. 10 with a small number of people working on subassemblies in the body shop,” he added.
The quake Wednesday night was Turkey’s second suth
six days. On Saturday in western Turkey nearly 100 persons were killed at Adapazari.
The state radio said an uncounted number of injured had been hospitalized from the latest quake.
HARDEST HIT
The Pulumur region was reported hardest hit, with only 2 put of the 70 villages abipw communicate with the provincial authorities.
Unofficial reports reaching the provincial capital, Kalan, said several villages had been flattened. Authorities feared the death toll would go higher sinde most of the villages are built of mud.
The seismological observatory at Kandili said the quake was recorded at 8:50 p.m., an hour and a half after Pope Paul VI left western Turkey to return Italy. The center of the quake was some 500 miles northeast of Izmir and Ephesus, which the Pop* visited Wednesday.
spectacle,” said it would retain Its dignity in Long Beach harbor.
The oil-rich California city of 380,000 beat out New York City, an Atlanta, Ga., group and scrap dealers all over the world for the ship that carried millions of persons across the Atlantic with a stint as transporter of 765,000 allied troops during World War II.
OIL REVENUE
New York’s plan was to use the Queen Mary as a high school.
The purchase money promised by Long Beach comes from a tideland oil revenue fund which may be used only for shoreline Improvements. Other oil funds have financed a massive marina and other facilities.
The nonprofit California Mu. seum Foundation plans to establish the maritime museum in the 12-deck liner. Hotel rooms, eating places and shops are also planned on board the l,(»0-foot vessel.
Martin F. Rummel, director of purchasing and production control for- Pontiac Motor Division, will retire Aug. Ij it announced today. He joined the Oakland Motor Car Co. 40 years
Upon graduation from Michigan State University in 1927, Rummel joined the Oakland Co., which later became Pontiac Motor Division, working on the assembly line. He became a buyer in 1932, assistant purchasing agent in 1941 and in 1946 was named director of purchasing.
Rummel of 1168 LyonhursOr Birmingham, assumed his most recent appointment in 1961.
He is a member of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce, Luthei'an Laymen’s League, the board of control at Concordia Lutheran College in Ann Arbor, the Pontiac City Club and Pine Lake Country Club.
City GtA Plants Will Shut Down for Changeover
Pontiac Motor Division has announced plans to begin changeover tomorrow.,
GMC Truck and Coach Division will also shut down tomorrow for production inventory an model changeover. Assembly will begin again on Aug. 14.
Shopping Areas to Close by 8
Local shopping areas which normally close at 9 p.m. have agreed to close at 8 p.m. while the curfew is in effect, a Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce-spokesman announced to-day.
" The temporary hours will allow shoppers and employes time to reach home before the curfew.
Stores normally closing before 9 p.m. will continue to keep their regular hours.
The Chamber of Commerce asks nil businesses not directly contacted to al^o observe the 8 p.m. closing time.
Those areas agreeing to early closing include downtown Pontiac stores, Pontiac Mall, Tel-Huron, Miracle Mile, Glenwood Plaza and several surrounding area shopping centers and chain grocery stores.
The Chamber u r g e d aH citizens to cooperdte ^th the police in observing the curfew.
IN F. RUMMEL
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-The “good roads package” to be considered by the State Legislature next month is given a strong recommendation by township officials.
Money for improvement ■ of Telegraph, the township’s main artery, is in the legislation and this road is not only vital to the township; ^ut to the surrounding community, local officials stressed.	I,
Pontiac Div.
Exec to Retire
Birmingham Area News
Bloomfield T wp. Officials Back 'Good Roads' Bill
Homer Case, supervisor, said "Pm a strong backer of the package.^’ He pointed out traffic is getting heavier
On July 8 in the Houise, Rep. L. D. Anderson of Pontiac Ybt-
“No” and Rep! Arthur Law of Pontiac did not vote.
■ro pay for the road improvements the following tax increases are recommended by supporters of the bill:
•	Fuel tax up one cent.
•	Motorcycle and bike licenses hiked 50 per cent.
•	Car tax put at 55 cents per hundred pounds. ;(■;
•	Truck, trailer, tractor and commercial vehicles up 10 per dent.
every day on the state road.
He also explained county roads would be in for funds from the law also and it would give the county a 20 per cent monetary boost, he said,
Lt. Richard Reuther of the police traffic bureau said he doubted any further improvements would be made on the oad unless the bill passed. POLICING THE STRIP Reuther has responsibility for policing the strip, labeled one of the most dangerous anywhere. Six miles of the road are in the township and last year six deaths occurred in the small area — one per mile.
Numerous crashes, many of them involving muitiple chain-reaction accidents are • common occurrence, he pointed out. “It’s hard to caiculflter the huge amount of money lost to property damage, insurance and doctor bills, not to mention the loss of lifoAhiv.
Both officials pointed out that county representatives in Lansing have not been unanimous in supporting the measure.
City Quiet for 2nd Night-Emergency Continues
(Continued From Page One)
Larry Adams, 18, charged ty prosecutor’s office have indi-
with assault with attempt to
murder in the shotgun shooting “ nhi “
of city Patrolman Santiago Serna faces preliminary examination Aug. 1 before Municipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum.
$30,000 BOND
He is held under $30,000 bond.
cated maximum penalties will be asked for those bound, over for t^l on any charges.
Penalties carry* maximum sentences ranging from 90 days in jail plus a fine on lesser charges to JO to 15 years in prison on major violations.
Some 23 others face examination either Aug. 1 or 2 on felony charges, including carrying concealed weapons, larceny, breaking and entering and ar-
Most are held under $20,000 bond.
At least 25 others face examination on misdemeanws involving state law statutes such as receiving stolen property, possession of loaded firearms and conspiracy to manufacture explosives.
Officials of the Oakland Coun-
The Areas Still Under Curfew
Sf///| Few I
Areas continuing the 9 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. curfew tonight are Pontiac, Waterford Township, Farmington, Farmington Township, Keego Harbor, Milford, Novi, 'walled Lake, West Bloomfield Townslup, Wbcom and Wolverine Lake.
Also Birmingham, Bloomfield Township, Holly. Township, Holly, Ortonville, Brandon Township, Clarkston, Independence Township, Avon Township, Rochester, Lake Orion, Pontiac Township, Oxford and Oxford Township.
U.S. corporations and private citizens have claims in excess of $2.7 billion ^against Castro’s Cuba.
Housing Goals Linked fo Core-City Status
(Coq^ed Fron>/page One)
In the over $15,000 level, There is likely to be a need for a balanced distribution of two to four-bedroom units with rental needs (25 per cent by 1979)’ fulfilled by luxurious apartments and sales needs fulfilled by housing priced at $30,000 and
able resources, the economists say that Pontiac can create a new image which will go a long way toward allowing it to attract its proper share of the upper-middle and upper income levels, and to offer a broad spectrum of suitable housing for all income levels.
, \ lA
|r pursuing i (iefinito I taking advanta^ of avail-
I reestablishment of the commercial dominance of Pontiac’s central area.”
To accomplish this they also icoQiiiieiMl and fdresMi habilitation, redevelopsiient
They believe that there has been in the immediate past in Pontiac and Oakland County a noticable trend toward apartment living and this will continue tb^ey say.
factors should encour-

,fv
beginning with the downtown area and development in the northern fringes of the city of both higher priced single family homes on sizable lots, and attractive multiple housing featuring swiiilming pools, tennis courts, patios, etc. for upper-middle income families.
Other housing should be dis^ tributed throughout the oom-
lerable redevelopment munity th^ say. ^
Soviets Urged to Enter Any Mideast Fight
By United Press International Algerian President H.o u a r i Boumedienne favors direct Soviet military intervention in any renewed Middle East conflict, even at risk of a world war, diplomatic sources, said today in Belgrade. The Russians refused, the sources said.
Boumedienne, pictured in some reports as acting as a spokesman in Moscow for the Arab nations, was reported to have outlined his position to Yugoslav President Uto in a Belgrade meeting on a stopover from a Kremlin conference.
The reports said Boumedi-enne urged Russia to abandon its policy of peaceful co-existence with the West but that the Russians refused and counseled the Arabs to try to 01 d further conflict with
Israel, at least for the time being.
Boumedienne is one of the more militant Arab leaders. Yesterday, he ordered a general mobilization of Algierians to battle Israel with whom Algeria is sjiirofficially at war. He also
■eported to have urged Pres-int Gamal Abdel Nasser of 'pt to wage guerrilla warfare against Israel.
Observers outside Algeria said the rallying of old “free Algeria” fighters and other army elements could be linked with Nasser’s recent speech calling for such guerrilla warfare if '^necessary.
Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St.
INOW! KILL I INSECTS 'LECTRONICALLYI
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....
AvV''■ ... ^
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All New ‘FEDTRO’ Electro-Mite
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0»5
Wonderful, ootomatic electronic in-t exterminator with omozlng henomenal Actinic -Lite’“which _ generates short wave length ultra violet rays that draws all phototropic insects to their electronic exttrminftion. No mess, ho fun—works continuously anywhere—indoors or outdoors. No Chemicals, no sprays, no fumes, no refills. Kills flying insects without insecticides. Costs less then 3c a day to operate—just plug in and fit back and enjoy bug free living.
We Sold Hundreds at $2.9S, No«r You’ll Save $t.00 On ’FEDTRO’
Electric Shaver Power Booster
^guarantees a closer more comfortable
shave ~twice as fast
For use with all popular *AC)PC shavers Inctudingi Remington, Shtek, Sunbeam, Norelco, Ronson, etc. Gives new life to old shavers, makes now shoyers outperform themselvel end olio lengthens the life of yi5Ur present shaver.
—Main Floor Values
Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THtJRSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
nrw%i-m
Main Floor
We Don't Have to Shout... everyone knows when it's a Sale here at SIAAMS
Our Low prices Talk for Themselves
All MpeeUth for Today-Frl. and Sat. — We rO»erve the right to Limit all Quantitiea.	' I,.:
SUNDRY DEPTS.
Half Price Sale on Swim Needs.
Shatter Proof Swim Mask
98c list, woler fight, shcrttar proof plastic	jM An
Ions. Modal K700.
Monoco Blue Pro Mask
$2.69 list. Modal K 753 matol bound	135
scopic lens.,	1
Miami Pro Blue Mask
$1.29 volue. Model 747 wide ongla	05*
Small Swim Fins
$2.00 list, fill sizes 2-W-5.	99«
Large Swim Fins
2nd FLOOR SPECIALS
Heqvy duty professional model clipper with 0-000 odjustobie cut. New improved model gives better performance and longer wear. With blade	and
free can of oil.
‘Wahl’ Super 89 Taper Clipper
$ 16.50 list, heal resistant clippar with 0-000 cut, clipper guard	V
7-Pc. ‘Wahl’ Electric Barher Kit
f^.95 lisf, Inctudas 000 dipper, blade guard, oil, comb, 3	yfl88
butch aMochmenls ond directions.	“ft
‘Wahl’ Royal Electric Clipper
$32.50 list, oil metal case, professional style.	18«
____________________________________________Sundries-I Mail* floor ’
and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS
Cold Water Wash
89°
St 29 volue 20«x. size Your choice el Colgales lOOorlovorii^hwaih.	#
You Can Buy These Items at These LOW PRICES Only At SIMMS -Check *em Anywhere You Want
$2.98 list. Sizes to 13.
Minium Swim Fins
$2 JO lilt, sizes 6-7-8.....	P*
Twin Snorkel Mask
$3.00 list, Scopic lens, safety valve.	j[
Nose Clips ......................25*
Sundriet—Main Floor
Security Entrance Front & Back Door
Boor Lock Set
Simma
Price
Jmt
4»»
Regular $7.00 value. Model S-800. Security door lock fit$ front doors, back doors, etc. Polished brass set has 2 keys. ■ Hardwor«-2nd Floor
‘Rubbermaid' 'smlu? Drawers |
In Kitchens
81.98 OroHterQ 66
$5.50 Drawer 3"

New storage convenience brinjfs hord-tOKeoch items from bock I of cupboards out front. Easy to install in wood or metal cabinets. I -------fo|. cleoning. Speciol plostic moteriol.
Save on Naireiits Do H Yourseff WHh Famous ‘Wahl’ Cfipper Sah
‘Wahl’ Senior AdjUstabje
Electric Qlipper
‘TEFLON’ Cake Layer Pans
<MIRRC’ 9-lneh
97*
No stick, no scour pan with DuPOnt Teflon for better baking of I layer cokes ond eosier cleaning. Limit 2 p	"
BIG
42-Qt. Capacily
SPCRTSMAN
Cooler.Chest
$1.95
Vaiua
Oft
Look ot the big savings on this Styrofoam cooler chest for those picnics and Vacations still to coihe. It has twin steel handles and lock
Coloroast iBourmot By 'Club Aluminum’ f
10” TEFLON Fiypans
$10.95 seller — cost Iron core with bonded porcelain finish out* m MMMMM side-iizjivhjje and 'Durabond'	aVmV,
non-stick Tefloff'-Hnsi^ Heat
nese T^wood V V
resistont Siamese
Bayer Aspirin Tablets
$1.63 voluo bottio of 200, fost octing Boyer ospirin	ft 09
won't upsol itomoch.	JL
Absorblne Jr.
$2.49 volue. I2«z. Ittlieves sore aching •
|59
MacLeans Tooth Paste
e, family size lube Macleans tooth poile	fif Ae
•Ih. freihens breath.
Congestald Room Vaporizer
S9 value, 16<a. Room vaporizer medlcoilon le-	m
n Huffy heads and sinus congeition.	1-
Lavorls or Colgate 100
Woodbury Shampoo
***'*°"* 59* Sageants Flea & Tick Spray
1.50 value 8.0Z. size relieves veur pete Itching 109 n to fleas. ,	1
Medicine Cabinets
$22.95 Value
Varnished
Oars &
Paddles
Smooth ond vornished oors ond paddles for canoes or row bpots. Save on Simms prices.
Sports-2nd Floor
'Slant Front' medicine cabinet with surface or recessed mount, I white enamel finish, stainless trim, turn switch and outlet, 2 mirror^ I doors slide on steel trocks. Uses 4 bdibt (not Included). 24Vix I 20x5% inches.	"
EUECTRIC Table-Clock Radio
Sturdy Folding Wooden
5-Ft. Stepladder
Brylcreem Hair Groom
$1.09 value, king size lube. Jfeeps heir neat oN	A Ae
doy. Isn't greasy.	Off
BIsodol Antacid Mints
49°
Senitan Laimtive
$1.89 value, 7-01. size. Your choke of cOMMitraiid 186
powder or granular type.	J,
Pacquin’s Hand Cream
$1.69 «alue.'9m oi. |ar. Your choice of oN $ AQo fonlllor lyppt.	tf 5f
Sudden Beputy Hair Spray
97c value, 124’ei. eeroset con. Holds end holds MOO yet Isn't ttkky or Sill.	~kO
Woodbury Diy Skin Lotion 43'
Drugs—Moin Floor
Famous‘AMT
Lotus Car Kit
Fa1«.
4 for t.N
Scalo model cor kits of sturdy plastic for your young hobbyist to put togothor. It will keep them busy for hours ond give them a feeling of ac>
Sporto—2nd Floor.
Famous 'INDEST^Q’ 24-Pieee
V* & '/a Drive Socket Sets
Sot hot six 8-pt. % dr. sockets, three 6 pt. %, spinner hondl*, I spark -plug sockot, 2 oxlonsions. rovorsiblo rotehot, Vi Inch drive I sockets. See our complott solection of our socket sets — ono to fit | your'meeds and pockoibook.
Simms Bros.~98 N. Saginaw St„-Downtown Pontiac



A—4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
MorePcojecfs Will Be Needed in Huron Valley
The Huron Valley School District can boast seven school construction and building i|nprovement projects in progress. But when these projects reach ompletion, school administrators must-initiate yet unplanned expansions to keep up with the continually increasing needs.
The East and Northwest elementary schools are the chief construction projects now.
% Northvrest school is about half-completed and expected to be open in December. Ihe ZO-dassroom school is located in Highland Township on North Milford near Wardlow, north of M59 on about 20 acres.
Construction has bedn finished on the foundation, walls, floors and plumbing. Workmen are now doing the ceiling.
The East school, or second elementary, will be completed in spring, 1968. It is on Elizabeth Lake Road and Oxbow, White Lake Township.
THIRD ELEMENTARY Final preliminary plans for a third
elmentai7 school received approval of »the school board recently. Completion date for the $1.1 million project is set fw Sept. 1, 1968. This school will be built on land southeast of the Watson Builder Supply store, IlOO E. Commerce.
Although the hoard has no definite Idans yet, it intends to build a fourth dementary school shortly.
The two schools now under construction are iimovating a unique structure for the Huron Valley district. Each grade will have three adjacent classrooms whose walls can easily be drawn
★ *
This architecture suggests ungraded classes and team teaching, said Gerald Kratz, administrative assistant. Both the Northwest and East schools are using the same plans.
\
TEACHERS’ SUGGESTIONS
A first step in planning the schools was a week of meetings of 15 to 20 teachers. They compiled specifications on how they’d like to see the new schools. Architects Richard Prince and Associates of Kalamazoo have put most of the teachers’ desires on blueprints.
Thus, the teachers themselves were instrumental in* initiating the unique features of the new schools. Besides movable walls, the buildings will have libraries as large as gyms, conference centers, speech and reading rooms, music practice rooms, and special project areas open for public use.
The completion of the Norghwest El-emantary will alleviate a definitely overcrowded condition. The problem was so serious that an emergency plan of halfday sessions for junior high students will go into effect this fall.
The youngsters scheduled to occupy the Northwest Elementary will attend classes in the Highland Junior High building. Highland students will go to classes at Muir/Junior High for five hours each school day. Regular Muir students will also Attend school for five hours, but in another shift.
ENROLLMENT TTUPLED
Elementary school enrollment has tripled in the last 15 years, Kratz said. An Increase of 300 young students is expected next fall. This will bring the enrollment figure to 3,822.
As for the district as a,whole, its enrollment has doubled since 19501.Figures compiled by the University ofMich-igan Bureau of School Services estimate about a 550-student increase this fall. Last year’s enrollment was 5,876.
Other construction projects are expected to accommodate the increase. The high school will get a new library, science facilities, an industrial arts room, art room and several classrooms. Plans have been drawn, bids will be let in
September, and construction will begin ~	.... ! toT)c i
in October. The additions are to'bc completed by Fall, 1968.
Next summer, remodeling and extension work will be begun at Highland ^Junior High school.
Landscape work is now being done at all schoolk except Highland and the high school.
Orfonville Lovelies Vie for Beauty Jitle
ORTONVILLE — Miss Ortonville will be selected from among 11 lovely can; didates at ceremonies at 8 p.m. tomorrow on Mill Street, downtown.
The annual event is sponsored by the Ortonville Jaycee Auxiliary and is held in conjunction with the village’s “Carnival Days.*’
Cash and prizes for the new queen win he supplied by local merchants.
The hew titleholder will be crownedi by last year’s winner, Marva Lee Peath-
Troy School Board Moves to Solve Money Problems
mill levy for Sept. li.
ByEDBLUNDEN
TROY - The School District here, crippled by a lack of funds, is taking „ ^	by 233 pe-
two inajor steps to solve its problems. nnoners, the board reluctant to do so In itttmpttag t. the prtaiarj »• b«w detait In j™. prpblem of money, the school board A meeting has been set for 8 p.m. has set a second election for a seven- Monday at the board offices, 120 Hart,
for all those interested in taking part in the millage campaign.
Controversy has come from the handling of the “modular’’ scheduling system at the high school. The system Is under study:
TAPED INTERVIEWS
Holly District Millage Drive WentWrong Way for Board
The Michigan Education Association
HOLLY TOWNSHIP - It’s “back to the drawing board’’ for the Holly School District board of trustebs.
Their attempt to get a 10-mill levy passed was soundly defeated for the second time by voters Monday, 528 to
reported to the board that it has taken 25 taped interviews with teachers, administrators, citizens and students.
This material is to be studied by top state educators and will be used as a basis for an investigation and evaluation of the system, according to officials.
wouldn’t buy it,’’ said RusseU Haddon, schools superintendent.
407.
nontlae Prtii piimo
NEW ADMINISTRATORS — Hobart Jenkins, new Avondale assistant superintendent, reviews the upcoming school agenda with William Brook, 34, former principal of Stiles Elementary School, recently named administrative assistant, replacing Lawrence Sharer who resigned.
The June Vote was closer, 377-^. After that defeat the board blamed it partly on apathy and ^launched election campaign.
He pointed put millage questions in general have been losing across the state, mostly due to the Impending state income tax and tiie threat of increased federal taxes making voters millage-shy.
Criticism of the scheduling procedures came from teachers and parents who complained students had too much free time and that a chaotic situation existed at the school.
Josejgi Bechard, high school principal, wa blamed for the system’s apparent failure. He was almost fired by the board and is on probation.
Sheriffs to.Aid Trouble Spots
/ Literature was mailed out and meetings called to tell voters the school’s portion.
The 10-mill request represented a 3-mill ($3 per $1,000 assessed) increase for a three-year period. The other 7 mills were for renewal of expiring operating levy.
MODIFIED SYSTEM He has defended the system and, in a 4-8 vote, the board decided to keep it with momfications.	"
The campaign succeeded in arousing interest, all right, and the district experienced the biggest turnout in its history, some 936 voters, about 40 per cent of those eligible.
Involved is one-fifth of the schools’ total funds.
Haddon said the board will now study a third election, tentatively set for Aug. 31.
.. The entire situation in the district hinges on a fund shortage, however. A $465,000 deficit by next year is expected, unless some added millage is supplied.
LANSING (UPI) - ^iffs of 33 Michigan counties have responded to a call for help by making 62 cars and 155 men available immediately for duty in riot-tom areas.
‘WOULDN’T BUY ir
The board request of seven mills, $7 per $1,000 assessed, would be for one year and supply about half the debt
But it went the wrong way as far as the board was concerned. “They just
Boat-Control | Hearing Reset
More cars and deputies were expected to be volunteered for the pool last night and today.
OWEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -
SHIP — The public hearing on boat control on Gerundegut Bay in : Cass Lake has been rescheduled I?- for Aug. 23.
James Hadley, administrator -in y •T the boat and water safety division | ' of the Michigan Department of ’ Conservation, notified township of- ^ ficials of the postponement by | telegram. Hadley did not give a i : : reason for the postponement.
Richard Weiler, sheriff of Grand Trav-» erse County and president of the Michigan Sheriffs’ Association, Tuesday wired his fellow sheriffs to ask. them how much help they could pledge.
Jaycee Unit Joins child Aid Program
Avondale Gives Post to Former Principal, Chooses School Site
In the not-too^tant future, Troy’s school money problem could be solved. In the rapidly growing city, industries, businesses and homes Are being put up at a remarkable pace, claim local educators.	,
They responded yesterday from all sections of-the state, from Menominee County on the Wisconsin border to. tiny Montmorency County in the state’s northeastern deer and elk country.
ORION TOWNSHIP - In an effort to provide greater protection for the community’s schoolchildren, the Ch-ion Area Jaycee Auxiliary has announced its participation in the nationwide “Helping Hand’’ program.
The “Hands” are appearing in windows throughout the township.
The appointment of J. William Brook, former principal of Stiles Elementary School, as administrative assistant to Avondale Schools Supt. John W. Dickey. has been approved by the board of education.
‘DOLLAR GAP’
Brook replaces Lawrence W. Sharer, who resigned for personal reasons.
However, these do not get placed on tax rolls for at least a year later. This creates a "dollar gap” with the district obliged to educate tte children as soon as they arrive while tax collections have to wait.
The hearing had been slated for ^ i today.
The West Bloomfield and Water- : ?? ford township boards had request-‘ ed the hearing. A County Sheriff's Department Official had cited wa-^ ter skiers and speedboats as chief i problems of the 13-acre bay. The township, he said, has the power to regulate speedboats.
'The only sheriffs who said they could not help were those in counties where there is actual or potential trouble. isOME ALREADY HELPING
Printed on an eight-inch square of fcardboard they signify a haven fw children who need help.
Some others, in counties bordering trouble zones, said they were already helping out or had committed their manpower to coyer for State Police pulled out of their areas for riot duty.
Homes showing the hands have been inypstigated by the group. The auxiliary reports that persons displaying the emblem are instructed to assist a child in need by summoning parents and the proper emergency agency. They have been advised against giving any medication.
The board has also named the Avondale Junior High School site as the site of the proposed new Avondale Senior High School, due for completion in 1970.
Dickey was instructed to seek options on land between the site and 1-75 in an effort at expansion. Hie Junior High School is located at 2900 Waukegan, Pontiac Township.
*1110 board has modified its austerity program for faH, allowing some music and art programs. Spwts, cut in wigl-nal plans, will be carried on by a volunteer group of coaches and citizens.
Dr. Rex- Smith, schools superintendent, said some music classes had to he provided to insure the schools’ accreditation.
Communiiy Centers
Metro Beach Plans Senior Citizens Day
Most-counties pledged only a car and two men, but others offered more. Livingston County freed four cars and 14 men; Ottawa, six and 18. Nine of the 15 Upper Peninsula counties, hundreds of miles from riot areas, pledged
Several events will be held during Senior Citizens Day which will take
A spokesman for the Sheriffs’ Association said once final figures were in they would be presented to Gov. George Romney so he could order the deputies where needed.
For children who have been injuftd, bullied, lost or threatened by a molester, the homes are designed as an area of safety.
The project has been endorsed by the Oakland County Sheriffs Department, the Lake Orion Police Department and the community schools, according to Mrs. Sherman Ellis, chairman.
GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - The United Community Services board of directors announced yesterday it has approved a recommendation to build two community centers to house health, welfare and educational services.
Art classes will be supported by extra fees to be charged, he announced.
Fees are to be hiked to help carry on, the community school program.

The locations are the Shelding Complex area and the vicinity of Sibley Elementary School.
SITE PURCHASE PROGRAM
Dr. Smith also reported on the school site purchase program in the $2%-mil-lion bond issue approved last year.
Sites purchased are for nine elementary schools, four junior highs and four senior highs. Dr. Smith said the land cost between $1,250 and $4,900 per acre, depending on location.
1-Mill Cut for Two Sections
place at Metropolitan Beach a
I Lake
Clair near Mount Clemens on Saturday.
The program .includes registration of guests at the dance pavilion at 11 a.m.; lunch, with box lunches available for $1, from noon through 1 p.m.; contests and activities, such as shuffleboard, horseshoes, badminton, croquet and a golf hole-in-one contest at 1 p.m.; dance contest at 1:45 p.m.; and sing-along session at 2:30 p.m.
Counties pledging aid are_Alcona, Alger, .Alpena, Arenac, Baraga, Barry,
Branch and Charlevoix, Chippewa, Clare, Eaton, Enunet, Gogebic, Grand Trav-
Avon Lowers Levy for Firej?
erse, Gratiot, Houghton, Ionia, Lapeer, Leelanau, Livingston, Luce, Marquette and Mecosta.
Other counties promising aid are Menominee, Montcalm, Montmorency, Oge-
AVON TOWNSHIP - The Township Board last night approved a 1-mill re-ductioh in fire taxes for residents of the Brooklands and Avondale areas. The rest of the township was reduced by five-tenths of a mill.
Even with the redaction in levy she said there would be no reduction in the actual cash amoont toward upkeep of township fire services.
Special half-hour excursion boat tours are available for senior citizens from 11 a.m. through 4:15 p. m.
maw, Ottawa, Prekgue Isle, Rosconh-
" • ■ aft, A
mon, Schoolcraft, ^ Clair, Tuscola, Wexford. Refusing are Berien, Genesee, Ingham, Kent, Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, Newaygo, Wayne.
Clerk Thelma Spencer-said such action was possible because of this year’s doubling of the township’s assessed valuation.
The special fire millage was voted on the township in 1941. Avondale’s extra levy was voted in 1954 and Brook-lands in 1957. The rate had been 1 mill over the entire township and 2.5 mills In the special districts.
The board voted $$i500 to be ntet
by matching county funds for the purpose of repairing some of the worst spots in township, roads. The severe winter and the age of the roads was blamed for the n^d for emergency repair.
DRIVER UCENSING
Supervisor Cyril Miller reported on the possibility of offering a township-sponsored driver licensing bureau.
Judging the event will be a panel^ made up of; Swxfoa Patterson of Water-font Township, Mrs. Lee Formlcola of Rochester, Ron IwaazUewicz of Auburh Haifhts, Dan Bkxnquist of itam Arbor iHiUB O^w of Lake Orion.	>,
Plea for Blood Donors Stirs q Big Response at 2 Sites in County
FERNDALE. (A - The gunfire and flames are too distant to hear or see in Detroit’s northern suburbs, but when the plea for emergency blood donations came, it was evi^t suburbanites felt deeply involved with Detroit’s violence.
He said he had been informed by Lonis Berklich, branch manager of the Rochester Secretary of State’s office, ■ that space for such an operation conid be provided if the township were willing to provied the manpower.
Rochest^ aihdsMon 1
rently wthout th^
ice since the city gave i^^^this month.
The city cited acwomica M Its reason for discontinuingjSe s^ice.

A long line of whites and Negrd^ ringed the ^Zion Lutheran Church in Femdale yesterday as a team of nurses and doctors | from the National Red
In other business, ^>encer was authorized to seek equipment bids enabling the township to do Its own tap-ins and repair on water lines. The cost was estimated at under $12,000.
LEASED OUT
Cross took
) I from th IRood for
The equipment would be purchased by
rioting.
Some 250 offered; 200 qualified.
victims of the~^ System No. 1 and leased out to
The previous day 512 donors appeared at Birmingham’s Torry El^entary School. Of these, 377 were accepted.
the other systems as necessary.
The board approved the $23,000 bid of Stolaruk Asphalt Co. of Detroit for the paving of Tlenken Road from Rochester to Livemois. The project is due for completibn in October.

Doftors Jam Ferndalm Blood Confer At Zion Luthkran Church
Blood banks In the Detroit area had been depleted by Tuesday afternoon and hospitals were desperately In need ot more blood, said Dr. H.F. Raynor» director ot the Red Croai team.
In reply to a request for sidewalks on the inile roads from the RochesUr Board of Education, thh Township Board reported tiiat agreements now exist
ed to Install them.


THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
A"—6
50 Neighborfiood Youth Corpsmen Start Training
The Oakland County Office Economic Opportunity yester-
of day
began a four^week training program for 50 members of the Neighborhood Youth Corps.
2-Spoe« niene/llMlie . . |iS.M
ROraONE..........$6.76
QUITAR CA6ES . . $10.98 RBCORD TOP HITS COUNTRY and WESTERN
The pl^graifts Ve being conducted on consecutive Wednesdays and Thursdays through Aug. 17 at the North Oakland Opportunity Center, 7 W. Lawrence, and the South Oakland Oi^tunity Center, Royal Oak Jownship.
Hie 3:30-5 p.m. sessions are designed to acquaint Uie youths, 16-21 years of age, with national and local company employment practices,
as well as Uieir personal iwep-aratiqn for employment.
Included in the seminars are discussions on prerequisites for positions, application forms, personnel testi^, labor laws, dress and grobming.
j Richard Craig, principal of Jefferson Junior High Sdiocd,

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conducted the first session with subsequent sessions being led by Gordon Keller, director of Edu-cation at Camp Oakland, and William Sexton, manager of the Federal’s Department Store in Pontiac.
Future programs will include r^esentatives from Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., Coca Cola Co.,
Consumers Power, General Motors PhdtograpMc, Michidan Bell Telephone, Michigan Em-ploymmit Security Commission and Sears Roebuck and Co.
Tree - farming acreage Increased 27 per cent last year In the 15 county redwood region of northern CaUftnnia.
nsplred New Beauty
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THE PONTUC PRESS
48 West Huron Stfeet •	Pontiac, Michigan 48058
THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
BAIOU) A. IWloilua.#	Howuw H. Bmonuu, El	*	’ *■
---	...	----- PreiidMt M4 Pu^Uihw
Cbatrmui ot tl» Board
|Ad Editor^
. BAair J. Rns
3omtt A. Barr , B^rrta^^and ^Ttrtiiint
BiOHAn M. Bimmu Treasurer' and jnnanca Ofltcer ,
Scieifce No Match for Nature’s Ironies
People tend to get wrapped up In the power and importance of modem man In his self-made environment of advanced technology. Then, along comes something like a rainstorm to shatter our super image.
We are learning to master the atom. We are building spaceships and rockets for travel to the moon and beyond. We have learned to master open heart surgery and are on the threshold Of a whole new field; or-* gan transplants.
★ ★ ★
We have modern means of transportation and high-speed, multimillion-dollar freewrays. Still, everything grinds to a standstill when we experience a downpour such as the otte that hit South Oakland County last week.
All our modem advances couldn’t get a 19-month-old girl visiting relatives in Troy to a hospital in time to save her life. The girl had been accidently |k)isoned when she swallowed some-weed killer.
The hospital is normally only minutes away.
But the combined efforts of a fire' vehicle, police, an ambulance and finally a helicopter, weren’t enough to win the grim race with death. The storm water made travel Impossible. She was dead on arrival at the hospital.
★ ★ ★
This tragic event makes all the flooded basements pretty insignificant. It also serves to remind us that our technological “superiority” is still no match for the forces of nature.
Voice of the People:
Pontiac’s Postal ^&pvice Apprecwted by Customer
How miny times do any of us take the time to thank our postmaster and staff for their kindness?
1 would like to say that I am deeply grateful to them for the nice people they have on our delivery route and for the courtesy shown us at the Pontiac Post Office.
. MRS. FREDERICK G. MOORE 883 S. WINDING
Says State Income Tax Js Not Necessary
Like Mr.-Dehner, I feel we wouldn’t need an incditie ta^t if the money were handled right. Get the deadbeats off the state payroll. Give the welfare to those who need it.
R. R. MEACHAM 33 FroEUS
Resents Ticket for Passing on Shoulder
we do not need's state income tax, The hhchigan State Police have come up with a new gimmick to fill the coffers.
Sit
They are now issuing tickets for cautiously passing on the shoulder of West Walton Blvd. a car that has stopped to make a left turn. Meanwhile, if you wait behind that car, yon are holding up a long line of traffic, thereby setting yourself or others up for a rear end collision.
NOT VERY FILLING!
These petty tickets are making yoiir insurance rates go higher, which are nearly out of sight how.
MIKE JENKINSON 3373 SHAW, DRAYTON PLAINS
Federal Bureau ‘Butts’ Cigarette Advertising David Lawrence Soys:
The Federal Ccnnmunlcations Commission’s concrofc of the “equal time” principle in jbiroadcasting hasr moved from the absurd to the ridiculous.
It was bad enough to regulate broadcasting tb a degree that prevented normal ’TV and radio coverage of a political campaign in order to ensure “equal time” for marginal
★ ★ ★
But it is time for Congress to take Iegislative:;j|iction when the FCC conceives it as its right and duty to order that stations that air cigarette commercials must give a significant amount of time to the presentation of contrasting
views on the advisability of smoking.
Where is such silly bureaucratic meddling to end? Is automobile advertising to be balanced by government fiat with lectures on the lethal potential of automobiles? Is every mention of hamburger on the air to be countered by a word from a vegetarian? The prospects of such folly are infinite.
★ ★ ★
The FCC’s cigarette ruling confirms an iihmutable rule of any government, demot^atic or otherwise; Unless restrained from doing so, it will impose its will on the people in every particular. ^
P^ublic Feels Riots Organized
Sign Lack Trapped Motorist in Wrong Lane
WASHINGTON - Prominent Negro leaders now are
home towns loaded down with riches from Detroit and leav-
issuing statements condemn-	nothing but de-
struction.,,
“A great many of the cars I saw cruising the area during the height of the looting Sunday had Ohio and Illinois plates.”
Sooner dr later the instiga-
tors of these disturbances wiU have to be brought to the bar of justice and punished. But this wili not happen until Congress passes laws permitting the federal government to use its full power to support the states in prosecuting individuals who go from one state to another to incite violence.
Out Baldwin, Walton is a left turn only for the left hand lane. I was in that lane the other day and when I got there I saw the little tiny sign fen* the first time. I couldn’t get Into the right hand lane, which was 30 cars long.
If that means what they say, why isn’t there a warning sign a quarter of a mile away with several follow ups?
FUNTClTEEN
Student Appreciated Journalism Workshop
I am grateful to the Pontiad Press for sending me to the Journalism Workshop at the University (4 Michigan.
Kremlin Scene of Hawk-Dove Tug of War
ing the riots and disorders i n American cities and expressing the belief that the “o V erwhOlpi-ing majority of the Negro I c ommunity” is opposed td
violence. LAWRENCE _____________________________________
time, however, other Negro Visit With a Livina Saint Praises Officers for Outstanding Work
ers, such as Adam Clay-	^ p p^y^ Department for their out-
standing work in recoding property stolen from the Donut Center and for their apprehension of toose persons responsible.
Bob Considine Says:
I learned a great deal and found it to be a very worthwhile experience.
PETE EVANS
WATERFORD-KETTERING HIGH SCHOOL
Just as there are Americans Who hunt for Communists tmder every bed, there are apparently Russians who can only explain setbacks to Soviet foreign policy in terms of a capitalist conspiracy.
According to a competent Russia watcher, a fierce hawk vs. dove battle ' Is rocking the walls of the Kremlin.
It has been building up for months, he says, and was finally triggered by the war in the Middle East.
★ ★ ★
The doves, led by Premier Kosygin, Party Secretary Brezhnev and President. Podgorny, who hope to achieve an accommodation with the United States, so far seem to have prevailed. But the hawks — lesser party officials and some generals — have not given up on their demand
that the U.S.S.R. respond to the Arab defeat by creating a new military crisis in some other area of the world.
Our homegrown extremists are bad enough, but the democratic process, coupled with the good sense of the electorate' keeps them from doing too much mischief.
But who is so optimistic about the way things are done in post-SrALiN Russia that he is sure one of these mad Russians could not suddenly leap into power? ,	.
★ ★ ★
The Kremlin’s internal struggle is one more reason the United States must keep open, and well-traveled, every avenue of communication with the more reasonable men who fortunately still have the final say in Russia.
leaders, such as Adam Clayton Powell, say that “black rebellions are a necessary phase of the black revolution.”
While the ousted Harlem congressman says he doesn’t approve of riots, his view is that the “rebellions” are natural developments.
He declares that “all America will go up in flames” unless Negro congressmen are elected from 12 areas around the country.
The fact is that for the last four years some of these same civil-rights leaders have been organizing street demonstrations and marches.
Is Quite an Experience
DROGHEDA, Ireland - I saw a living saint here todky in this town whose entire population Oliver Cromwell once put to the sword.
She is mother Ma^ Mar-
tin.
When local officials or law-enforcement agencies have intervened to forestall violence or after it has erupted, there have been accusatiims of police brutality or racism.
Hoover Made FBI an Institution
High officials continue to say they have had no evidence of outside agitators. But the public is beginning to suspect* that the riots could not have emerged simultaneously in different parts of the country without some kind of organization behind them.
She founded the Order of the Medical Missionaries of Mary 30 years ago af- CONSIDINE ter 20 years of pleading and argumentation with thicl^ead-ed bishops.
She remains in active charge, presiding over what has grown into a remarkable group of more than 400 nuns operating hospitals and clinics in Africa, Spain, Italy, Ireland and Formosa.
the relationship with the governments involved, the daily difficulty of gathering enough money to make the whole effort tick, the terrible needs of patients who are seldom Catholic — which never matters to Mother Mary Martin.
Mary Martin had been up since dawn, working, and a long afternoon lay ahead of her. .She kissed Sister Bernard goodby as we climbed into our car.
A special tribute to Detective Irwin for this good work and bis efforts. Also, we appreciate flie alertness of the patrolmen on the mldni^t shift
MORTON STERN PRESIDENT
Question and Answer I’d like to write shows for TV when I finish school. Can you give me an idea of what I can earn at a job like that?
LONG WAY TO GO
REPLY
“When are you going to take a vacation?” I asked her.
She thought a moment and then pointed upward at the Irish sky. “Provided I make it, of course,” the saint said.
That depends on how many shows you sell and where you sell them. For an hour show, average payment to writers in the U.S. is $4,500. Rates vary widely in other countries. The International Writers Guild gives $300 as the going rate for an hour show in Australia, ranging to $4,000 to $6,000 in Canada. Good luck.
In Washington:
They are surgeons, physicians, dentists, dermatologists, researchers—all nnns. She is 79.
Reserve Plan Misses the Point
At first glance, one might fear to sneeze loudly at her
By RAY CROMLEY WASHINGTON (NEA) - De-
By JAMES MARLOW AP News Andlyst WASHINGTON - The FBI was a pretty crummy outfit when he took it over, full of poUtkal pets and incompetents. He quickly built it into an American institution.
It’s been tiiat^ way since.
In three years he had cleaned out the mhrfits and i put	itsi
feet. Thii^lias., MARLOW been a great satisfacticxi to J. Edgar Hoover but peace of mind doesn’t always accompany satisfactimi.
He has been picked and pecked at almost from the beginning. Sometimes he has reacted with heat Mach of tile criticism has been
43 years. In the government, retirement is mandatory at 70 but in his case President Johnson waived that requirement.
SET COURSE He set the course the FBI has followed from the day the then attoTiey general, Harlan Fiske Stone, offered him the job. He said he would accept only on these conditions;
He would ran the agdncy. Piditicians couldn’t tell him what to do or whom to hire. Appointments would be by merit and so would advancement. He staffed the FBI with young lawyers and acconntaats as agents whose nnmber has risen from 441 to 6,625.
Before they are accepted they must survive an investigation of their conduct, common sense and loyalty. They have to go throu^ a 14-week training course.
Use threats or inducements to get confessions. You never hear of FBI agents Using third-degree.
It has been a rather stylish tradition among some liberals to criticize Hoover as a dictator. There is no doubt he runs the FBI with an iron hand. But anyone who objects to that can try to answer this question:
If you were running an agency Uke the FBI, and did not invoke rigid discipline, how would you keep the politicians’ paws off it and keep your agents free of outside discipline and Inside corruption?
‘SOME KIND OF PATTERN’ f ^®** f«a** of launching fense Secretary Robert McNa-
Former President Eisenhower, in a news conference this week, declared that “it does look like there must be some kind of a pattern” to the riots because of the way they have been breaking out in one city after another in similar ways and presumably over minor incidents He arirleH-'
minor incidents. He added: ‘A lot of people think
there is definitely a national planning system because they seem to follow snch a definite pattern.”
Hoover bad ^n a lawyer with the Dqiafiroent of Justice heven yedn when he was chosen at ,^ to head the Bureau of mvestigation, which wasn^t called the Feda-al Bureau of InvestigatiiMi until US5.
He is 78 now and today is tile SOth anidvovaiy of the start of his government service. He hu bemied the FBI
The year after he took the Job Hoover laid down a rule, which still is in effect: an agent must by his conduct eliminate criticism. Even in their clotiiing the agents are inconspicuous.
NO HHRO-DEOREE , Hoover put the FBI ahead of most of the nation’s police departments—probably all of them — to 1926 when he warned lu agents never to
What has been overlooked or forgotten is that Hoover has never sou^t to extend his powm- Obt, on the other hand, o[^)osed its extonsiim. FEDERAL PROBES He opposed President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s idea that the FBI should take over all federal investigations.
In the 1930s, when the country was shaken by spreading gangsterism and killings and demands were being* made to federalize the nation’s police, he opposed that, too.
her heavenward. But I am mara’s reorganization plap for assured by a younger nun, the Army re-Sister Bernard of the Order serve forces of Notre Dame da Namur, misses the who brought me here today point, for the good of my liver, that The chief Mother Mary Martin is as value of a ready strong as a nail and a woman reserve is that of great determination.	there are in ci-i
•k ★	★	vilian life many
the living saint entered wearing a neat gray habit	which the
which she herself designed	eslob- CROMLEY
when she finaUy convinced the “““ent cannot afford to carry CathoUc Church that there	permanent roster in the
'TV. «i, iu *	was a crying need, particu-	9iat are need^ in time
The theory that the riots In im-jy Africa for medical	war—or as a possible contin-
Detroit are local was criti- services ’	gency for varying types of war.
ci^ by Sandra A. West, a »would you have Irish coffee?” the saint sU^ested. It was a joke, of course.
A pretty, smiling nun from Malta came in eventnaUy with coffee and sandwiches.
In the confusion, I didn’t notice Mother Mary Martin slip oat. But pi«f|entiy she returned with a silver tray. On the stiver fray w|u a bottle of 16-yeaivoId Irish
needed skills in school, in their work and in their hobbies. Other skills, peculiar to the military, are developed by civilians during periods of military service.
Civilians can also develop certain military skills by evening and vacation attendance at military technical and staff and command schools.
UPI reporter who happens to be a Negro living in the neighborhood where., violence occurred. She said :
“Many Negroes in the Detroit area now beUeve the riot was instigated by out-of-town forces.
A war with the Soviet Union would require different numbers of different types of skills than a war with Red China. ’That war in tarn would have different requirements than a war witii the Vietcong or the North Koreans or Cuba.
The most difficult task in/expanding a military force for a war — limited or total — is the securing of specialists. A specialist can be an electronic expert, intelligence man, truck mechanic, psydiological warfare ofticer, or simply a squad, platoon, company or battalion
‘KEPT IT GOING’
“Some said that if the out-staters did not actually start the riot, they kept It going and have now j-eturned to flieir
He has insisted from the beginning that local problems fit law and order are the jurisdiction of the local authcaiUes, not the FBI.
Verbal Orchjds
Robert Cascaddan of Rochester; 86th birthday.
Mrs. Olive Underwood of Rodiester; 90th birthday.
To have all the skills permanently in the military pqrvlces in the quantities needed for any possible contingency would be She miied'us an Irish cof- Prohibitive in cost and in the fee. Sister Bernard’s first	silled men it would
(and probably last).	*rom the civilian economy.
* if k	In addition, men with unique
She talked over her ®ro willing to serve when missing nuns in Nigeria, the *bere is a war that^ requires fear of trying to get in touch *belr skills. They are not In-with JJiem and the fear of terested in permanent military not ttying. She talked about c®roers. the job of ruiming a now enor- Many men and women in mous hunuuiltatjan effort, their civilian ^ devdiqi these
Men with thesp skills and abilities exist in civilian life. Many others are able to att^ these skills with part-time training.
The pity is tiiat there are in the U.S. military reserve forces more than 460,060 officers and men who at the present time are not receiving
adequate training or review to fit key slots that need filling.
Many are not receiving any training at all. Others are receiving routine make-work training which does not keep them up-to-date. Many officers who have been In the reserves for 10 or 15 years are so out-of-date that they could not serve adequately in the rank which they have attained.
Many more reservists have not been put into the slots for which they would be best fitted in time of war. ’They’re still In the specialty in which they served a decade ago.
Meanwhile, their civilian specialty has made tiiem much more valuable in some other military role.
Many reservists with the civflian skills needed by the military in an emergency are not receiving the “conversion” trnining — the training necessary for them to he able to convert these skills to military
Tlw Pontiac Ptoia It « -	• tor 50 cairtt a
In Oakland, C
--------- jn Michigan
... .Jhar glakaa In tha Ui Slalat tauo a yaar. All man — avMlont payaMa In advanea. Po^ga haa baan paU at tha and ciaaa raM at Papl*“ — Mambar af ASC
Jl
Whether they’re called for' Vietnam or not, the sfiiole purpose of a reseat is to serve or be capable of serving when he is needed.
Reservijts know they have this obligation. Most reservists with an obligation despise being idle. 2^y have complained to this n^Mrter that they ^e not being fitted for what they’d be 'e)(-pected to do In war. They want i to do something. Sincere and || able men, they resent this

s
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967






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A.;^ 8
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
Losers in Riof Face Insurance Snarl
DETROIT (UPI)-Long after the worst riot in modern U.S. history is put to rest, the people who lost tangible property in the fires, looting and sniping will still be battling — with insurance companies.
The best word that could be offered by David Dykhouse,
commissioner of insurance in Michigan, “I’ve had no indication that insurance companies will use ‘Insurrection’ as a cause for refusing claims.”
day when it became apparent that federal troops would be involved.
Use of the “insurrection” claims in most home owners’ policies and other property insurance was first feared Mon-
Would-be claimants also faced another problem.
Dykhouse considered it necessary yesterday to advise the losers in the riot to take steps against signing away rights to
recovery under their claims since the repair companies would collect all^ the money from the insurance.
’There are some 33,000 post offices throughout the U.S. and
71 billion pieces of mail in 1965.
7 Killed in Bus
MEXICO CITY W -tension wires fell on Wednesday when it knocked down a tpower pole on the outskirts of Mexico City. The bus burst into flames, killing seven persms inside and injuring 24 other passengers.
A good set of first line tires on the averslige automobile, driven properly, should yield a good 30,000 miles.
Seattle Juries "Boxed In'
SEATTLE (AP) — An economy move on the part of county commissioners ihay have provided Seattleites with a reason for being excused from jury duty—claustrophobia.
The commissioners have approved a plan to brick up the windows in the courthouse to save 37,200 a year in maintenance costs.
Superior Court Judge Lloyd Shorett said Wednesday, “I certainly would feel that a juror’s being subject to claustrophobia would be grounds for excusii^ him from service in a walled-in courtroom.”	"
Montana is bounded on the north by three Canadian provinces — Alberta, British Columbia and 'Saskatchewan.



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By HAL BOYLE
NEW YOI« (AP) - The busbess ef making American men smell nicer is skyrocketing. So is the business of making American women spwtQ nicef.
“Only 10 ye^ ago most m^ thought Celebes were sissy, but (hey doh’t any more,” said Alvin Welzel, a director of the T(^et Goods Association and
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Men's Cologne Is Historical Trend
BOYLE
vice president of the House of Houbigant.
“Men spent $120 million on fragrances in 1966, up 20 per cent from ,the year before. Women spent $440 million, which also represents a 20 per cent increase.”
The masculine trend toward heavier and stronger scents leads many experts in the industry to predict that the U.S. male soon will go all the way and start wearing perfume, as men did in past ci\^zations. ‘IT’S COMING'
“It’s coming,” said Welzel, a s 1 e a d e r, intellectual-looking
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man of 51 who switched to cosmetics merchandising after studying genetics and breeding in college.
“In many homes scents are already interchangeable, and husbands and wives use the same fragrances and deodorants.”
To Welzel this is only a matter of history repeating itself. His company, founded in France in 1775, lists among its past clients not only Queen Victoria, Marie Antoinette and the Empress Eugenie, but also Napoleon Bonaparte and French author Gi^ de Maunpassant.
Napoleon was so enamored of the sweet smell of success that he used 54 bottles of cologne a month and carried them with him to his battlefields. One would think that on a windy day the odor would have alert^ the enemy to his presence. TRIBUTE TO GODS
elzel is full of odd tidbits of the lore of perfumes which, he says, originated as tributes the gods', then were restricted to kings and nobles. Only in recent times have they reached the purse level of the common people.
“The Greek physician Hippoc-
prescribed perfumes for patients suffering from nervous
disorders,” he said. “During the banquets of ancient Greek aristocrats, doves were soaked in perfume and then let loose to fly around the room.
“The Romans even waged wars to bring home perfumes and spices. Nero often had perfume showered from the celling of his dining salon.
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“The household of Mme. de Pompadour spent $l(jo,o6o year on perfume, and Cardinal Richelieu used a perfumed bellows to sweeten the air of his apartment.”
INDSX OF CIVIUZA-nON Perfume is one index of a civilization’s condition.
“When a nation is at war,” said Welzri, “women instinctively seek heavy animal-like scents. But when life is peaceful and there is time for romance and leisure, they turn to light floral scents.
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Project Analyzes Earth s Mantle
LOS ANGELES (U>I) - The sea floor of the Atlantic is increasing, and somewhere on earth land is shrinking simultane^ly. But where?
Also, was the crust of the earth — like tile races of man — formed differently in different parts of the world?
Hiese and otiieir questiwis relating to the ground beneath our feet — inner space — are being investigated by scien-ti^tsJrqiA^ nations. They represent the international Upper Mantle Project, ip-formerly UMP.
From headquarters at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), the prqjept is investigating the thick layer of earth called the mantle which starts just beneath the thin surface crust.
Dr. Leon Knopoff, project secretary from UCLA< Mys geophysicists are concentrating studies to the upper part of the mantle which extends atxmt 400 miles down from the surface, a depth at which • earthquakes have been detected.
•Spurring the Id-year international venture were recent f^ngs indicating the mantle and crust were coupled. What happens in the upper mantle is believed to directly affect the composition of the crust.
Knopoff says American, Russian and British scientists have revised, since 1960, some earlier themies, only to complicate the picture of tiie earth by two major findings.
Chie is that the sea floor of. the Atlantic has appvently been increasing in area during millions of years. $ince the earth’s total surface is constant, sdentists are trying to learn what area is contracting.
The secwid finding is that the mantle laterally heterogenous, meaning that the composition of earth dififers not only up and down but also sideways. This led to the deductim thpt the processes by which the crust was fmmed may differ in different parts of the world.
When these theories are verified, Knopoff believes, scientists will have a better understanding of tile mechanism of earthquakes^ volcanic eruptions and tidal waves.
They also will learn how minerals are concentrated in certain regions of the crust, which may lead to discoveries of hew pockets of mineral resoprces.
The mantle is 1,750 miles d«p and the biggest layer of the globe by volume when measured against the 4,000 mile radius of earth.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
A—11
Simple 'Pilot Blast' Technique PatentecI
Bv SdMon ScrviCB WASHmOTON - Hinging the Nitlonal Aeronautloa and Space Administratlon’a Miuinalppi taat facility is a five-mile barrier of dense forest, intended to protect nearby areas from damage caused by the noise of rocket engine firings.
tancesy often focusing it to break windows or do other structural damage.
Five miles is not always enough margin, and test Brings are sometimes canceled on the bais of weather re-
Peculiar combinations of winds and temperatures can re-flegt the sound for great dis-
Tbe same problem exists for surface pit mining, in which hundreds of tiiousands of pounds of explosives are often deton-
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ated at once; but noiners seem to have a solution.
Recently one system was developed which used an elaborate array of balloons, meteorological instruments, telemetry equipment and mathematical formulas. Now a simple technique Jias been patented that could make such complicated metiiods obsolete.
‘PEA)T BLAST’
As little as 20 pounds of TNT can serve as a “pilot blast” to show whether there is likely to be a sound-focusing effect during the main blast, says mining
With oil-company-sised„ sums of money at stake, Slusser and the company are saying little, but in essence the paWnt is for a way of forcing the shale oil up well after first surrounding ft with a virtual wall of cement or some other sealant .
engineer Wallace G. Feteer, who assigned rights to his patent to Oglebay Norton Co. of Cleveland.
♦★ ★ ★
A few persons equipped with sound meters can radio reports from remote points without the need for any weather data, Fetzer says, and the main blast can be set off immediately if no focusing ANOTHER FIELD
Another field In which patents are playing an important role deals with oil comnanles’ tempts to get at the oil-bearing rock called oil shale.
Oil* shale promises to become one of the most import-tant sources of petroleum products in the future, as soon as an economical way can be found to get the oil out of the ground.
One such method has just been patented, almost three years after the application, by Marion L. Slussser, an engineer with Mobil Oil Corp’s field research laboratories in Dallas.
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A—12
ONE COIOR
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
Moi|ntain Reseller Risks Life 'for Fun'
SIERRA MADRE, CaUf. (AP) —At 3 a m. CD a Moiaiay Use
telQ:^^ awakens Miner Haric-; less. It Is
ness. It Is no surprise.
He rolls out of bed and 15 minutes later — as most ei greater Los Angeles’ other millions snooze safely — is scrambling through the inky i^t across crumbling granite hunthig a lost hiker.
This, folks, is his hobby.
Harkness is president of the 22-man Sierra Madre Search and Rescue Team, one of the older and more inventive of 31 teams across the country in the Mountain Rescue Associatiwi.
Membership in such a group is more than just a way to kiU spare time. It’s almo^ a way of Ufe.
AT FOOT OF MOUNTAINS
plain, a magnet that offers escape in summer from heat and smog and in winter becomes a giant ski and snow sports , colter.
Sierra Madre, a pleasant suburb of 10,000, is 12 miles east of downtown , Los Angeles at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains, whose peaks soar nearly two miles high.
The team’s back yard is Angeles National Forest, second oldest and most heavily visited of 154 national forests, a wild area the size of Rhode Island. It looms over the Los Angeles
It is deadly as well as lovely. Each year it claims, on the average, 20 lives.
’The team’s goal is to cut that toU.
BECOME AN EXPERT To join is simple: Just become an expert mountaineer, be recommended by a member, agree to train most weekends, be on call 24 hours daily when possible, be, willing to lose three
$1000?
Sfates wants to set up a 120-mile-long scientific instrument in southern Norway to listen to earthquakes and perfect techniques for separation of under-ground atomic blasts from natural quakes.
The plans, not yet approved by Norway, are being criticized in neighboring Sweden.
The station would be sim-
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weeks or so a year from work. And it’s handy to keep a few bloodhounds around the house.
Members are engineers, pho-tt^aphers, factory foremen — animne with the will and skill. In 47 years they have made nearly 1,000 search-rescue missions in four states and Mexico. All but 40 of the 1,200 persons they sought were found aliYe.
Norway Site Eyed for U.S. Seismometers
They serve without pay. They make ends meet by passing the hat around Sierra Madre, netting $6,000 to $8,000 yearly.
Officials have estimated that Southern California’s| five search and rescue teams save taxpayers $500,000 yearly by rising their necks for the “fun’" of it.
Science Service OSLO, Norway — The United
24 HOURS A DAY Members say they wouldn’t do what they do for money.
“How much,’’ asks a team founder, Earl LaLone,,. “could they pay a man to be on call 24 hours a day? I’d quit if I was forced to take money.’’
How do most hikers prepare for the mountains’ challenge? They don’t, says Harkness, 38, a stocky Insurance broker. “’Ihese people have no respect for the mountain, and by-God the mountain is going to gobble them up sooner or later.'
When a fretful relative of a missing hiker calls police, the Sierra Madre sheriff’s substa-
Oar to the giant Montana Large Aperture Seismic Array station, though smaUer, consisting of 10 subrays each with 21 seismometers and covering an area some 120 mUes in diameter. The Montana array contains more than 600 instruments.
The problem is that there are at least two other seismic projects planned in Scandinavia, including Finland. The Swedes want to set up a medium-sized station with 16 seismometers, while there is a Nordic project fw a statiwi in Finland.
Prof. Marcus Bath of Uppsala University, a Scandinavian expert in ^ field, has asserted that, first, the multiplicity of projects is a waste of money (American, fortunately, he adds), and, secondly, that Norway is the worst area in Scandinavia to site a seismic station, partly because of proximity to the Atlantic and paii^ because of the complex terrain. Re-search in Scandinavia has shown, says Bath, that Sweden is a better site, while Finland is clearly best.
Dr. Harry Sonnemann, assistant director of the U S. Advanced Research Projects Agency, recently in Norway, claims that the station is necessary to complement the Montana station It will cover the same area, so that results can be compared. He believes the terrain problems can be overcome. .
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tion ph(M>es a team member who is wi call. He calls the others. Then ancient i^enuity, long experience and modern technolo^ combine.
THEY’D GQ UP
Thirty-five years ago, wdien Earl LaLone and his fiiree older brothers were growing up in Sierra Madre and making a few dollars trapping in the forest, they became a de facto mountain rescue team.
“If somebody got lost, the people would get hold of the La-Lone bbys, and they’d go up and bring them out,” said Harkness.
Recalls Earl LaLone, now hefty and mustachioed at 41: “Years ago we went up there with a rope and a flash^ht. There was no calculated search-map work. It was all guesswork.”
By 1950, as suburbs crept up the foothills to join Sierra Madre, the increasing demand for rescues became too much one-family team. “Ibat year, when a boy was los . small army of inexperienced types went looking for him. The boy turn^ up after two days, but some of the rescuers didn’t show up for three more days. The present team was formed that year.
Today each rescuer carries a rope and a flashlight and $600 worth of other equipment.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS >
PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
B-1
New Winkelman's Features the Latest for Elegance and Sport this Autumn ^
By JEANNE NELSON Designer inspired “look through me" giass closets in the new Winkeiman’s store at The Pontiac Mall beckon shoppers into the world of fashion.
Located on the new “Fashion Mall," this newest store within the Winkelman chain keeps the tradition of selling from a concealed stock atmosphere.
Smallwear and intimate apparel displays greet milady as she enters.
The “Pacesetter" corner featuring all the new trends for the younger set can also be found in this area.
EFFECTIVE PROPS Touches of elegance are evidenced in the dramatic gold boutique trees. These
PmllK Pm, PlM»M ky Etf VanPtrworit
"From Ryssia With Love" might well describe thi$ pastel blue wool suit that Winkeiman’s Carol Book models in the elegant new Fashion Mall of The Pontiac Mall. The lines of this finely tailored ensemble are deliberately understated affecting total concentration on the blue dyed rabbit Russian-type collar and cuffs. Following the trend of this fall’s leggy legion, she dons white net hose. Her smartly styled umbrella is a color-toned print.
hold one-of-a-kind “happenings." The shoe salon Is located at the furthest end of the fashion aisle.
Irv Protetch, Mall store manager, and Robert Alexander, store maitager for Winkeiman’s northwest district, agree that this season’s styles and colors are “smashers."
COSTUME, WINNERS '
The coat costume plays a starring role this fall where total elegance prevdHs.
Great impact is found In the belted api»oach. Sometimes it’s only a half back belt, often the mood changes to fully encircM waists.
With precision and grace, perfect for evening is seen in romantic fabrics. Chiffon is a leader this, year often teamed with a metal brocade evening coat.
★ ★ ★
The versatility of fur is stealing the show with its important “Russian” feeling. This mood is found in both coats and suits.
One pewter grey tunic suit is trimmed at the, collar and hemline with glossy curls of black Persian Lamb.
The latest rage, blc^ng, is met head on with a huge variety of pantsuits, culottes and mini-pants dresses. ,
Brilliant colored tights w stockings are part of the total look for these sporting costumes.
Smooth black calf highlighted with the new “hardware" look is evident in handbags which are getting smaller all the
For school or office, the sweater dress is a must. ,Most follow the stripe dictate.
Along with this are smooth knit sweaters, long, long with matching sell belts over short kicky kilts and A liners in bold plaids.
Shapes are decidedly more defined in all fashions — most with the eased — in silhouette, but fast moving toward the definite female figure.
The ^peaUng diMce of colors in everything ranges fr<Hn ginger through ill the browns and back again to herb
Any Method Ok to Eat Spaghetti If It's Efficient
By EUZABETH L. POST
The following letter has been chosen as the prize-winning’ one for this week. A copy of Emily Post’s Etiquette has been sent to Mrs. David Evans of Delaware.
* ★ *
Dear Mrs. Post: I wish to take exception to one statement in your column on how to,eat spaghetti, i.e., “since it is originally an Italian dish . . . " According to World Book Encyclopedia, “Historians believe the Chinese probably developed the food and they generally credit the Germans and .Italians with introducing it into Europe.”
If true, Why- not instruct Mrs. Kelly to use chopsticks?
’The children are taught in school that Marco Polo discovered macaroni or spaghetti (he didn’t differentiate) in China, enjoyed it so much he took it back to Italy with him and it became a national dish.
But why in the name of etiquette and decency, should we as Americans adopt a habit which 1 find disgusting and distasteful at the table just because Italians prefer that method?—Marian Evans ★ ★ ★
Dear Mrs. Evans: Thanks for setting me straight about the origin of spaghetti. But since most Ammeans are more skillful with a fOrk than they are with chq>sticks, I don’t think I’ll r^ommend the latter as a means of eating it;
Spaghetti and its relatives have come to be recognized (as you said) as the national dish of Italy, and -I therefore approve the Italian method of wrapping it around'the fork.
It loses its character when cut into little pieces, but if that’s the way you prefer it, it’s perfectly acc^table to eat it in any manner that’s neat and efficient.
HUSBAND’S SECRETARY
Dear Mrs. Post: Will you please explain how a woman should speak to, dr a b 0 u t, her husband’s secretary? My husband always refers to his secretary by her first name, but I’m not sure if I should or not.—"Ctonfused"	•
"★ ★ ★
Dear Confused: In speaking to her husband’s secretary, a wifd uses the same name that her husband uses. If, however, the secretary is much older than the wife, it would be courteous to speak to her as Miss or Mrs. Jones until requested to use her fisst name.
Crisp white top,ches on collar and cuffs of this black tweed coatdress takes its wearer .to a business conference or afternoon luncheon. Carol’s high-crowned^ hat is black with an irregular white stripe. The "Total Effect" loolc is achieved with her black calf bag and the dress’ matching lowered belt. All fashions shown are available at this new Winkeiman’s Mall store.
Lynda Bird Hobnobs With Stars, Str^ger in Popular London Pub
Richard Harris were among the movie stars I who mingled with micro-skirted starlets, long-haired pop singers and a grab-bag of assorted hippies in the “Duke of Kent"
London’s newest “in” director, 28-year-old Peter Collinson, renfed the pub for the night to throw a party for the cast of his picture “Up the Junction” apd friends.
Downstairs, a fat lady pianist was ‘nearly knocked off her stool in the crush to obtain a '“pint of bitter” at the bar.
Upstairs, a psychedelic pop band slammed out a throbbing rhythm while whirling lights flashed across the ceiling-
Lyndal.Bird Johnson chirped and bug-alooed tte wee hours away today vrtth other “birds" at a Hollywood-type crawl through a workingmen’s pub that almost floored the fat lady piano player.
Michael and Shirley and Richard were there. So was a handsome young man whom nobody but President Johnson’s elder daughter seemed to. know. He wae her escort.
“Friend of deorgq Hamilton'^,” ventured the host.
“Name’s Augusto Manolini or something like that," confided a guest, ’“rhink he’s from South America but don’t really know who ha Is.^’
Michael Caine, Shirley Maclaine and
This stark white sheath is just made for ^ appears again at neckline. Carol’s gold chain eve-evenings on the town. Banded along the hemline ning purse reflects the sparkling effect once more, with glittering beads and sequins, the same motif
Don't Be Afraid 4o Complain to Neighbor, Handicapped Can Be Considerate, Too
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY: We have a next door neighbor who is almost totally blind. He earns his living by etching out names and designs on wood and polished metal. He seems to be a very nice person.
Our problem is this: [Whenever he uses his I etching machine, the power is drained out of I (HIT television set. This can get maddening at times when one wants to see something special and suddenly finds it impossible. What do you suggest?
GOOD NEIGHBOR
DEAR NEIGHBOR: I suggest that you hot foot it right over to your neighbor and state your complaint. Don’t assume that because he is “nearly totally blind" he expects charity, pity, or special consideration.
*	★	*
A handicapped person can be every bit as self-respecting and thoughtful of his neighbor as one who isn’t. Give him a chance to s<dve the problem with you.
★	*	★
DEAR ABBY: I am 20 and engaged to a great guy who is 29. We are to be married in January. My fiance (I’ll call him Jack) lives a great distance from me, so we get together only on weekends. About a year ago I saved up enough to buy a snudl cabin on the beach. TTtis summer Jack and I planned to take our vacations at the sapne time and would like to spend them together up at my cabin.
★ ★ *
Tliere would be nothing stopping us except that we don’t want to do anything wrong. Do you think it would be okay? It has two bedrooms. I could invite my best friend and her boy friend to go with us if you think it wouldn’t be right for Jack and me to go up there alone.
JACK’S GIRL
DEAR GIRL: I don’t know what you consider “wrong," but if you are saving the most intimate relationship for marriage, forget the cabin vacation until you and Jack can go up there as Mr. and Mrs. The presence of the other couple wouldn’t help much.
CONFIDENTTAL TO “FRECKLE-HEAD": You need more help than I can give ydttJn one letter. Let me put it this way: ^ woman who is reafiy in love doesnft cook up phony stories in order to make her man jealous; She is concerned only with making him
* * . •
Problems? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a per-. sonal reply, inclose a stamped, self-addressed epvelppe.
For Abby’s new booklet “What Teen- by, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept, agers Want to Know” send $1.00 to Ab- E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
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I Plans May Change J
TTiis evening performance at the Meadow Brook Music Festival will take place as planned if curfew for this area Is lifted. If the. curfew Is still In effect the. Thursday performance will lake place Monday.
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■ Monday, Thursdoy, Fridi^Y'tii 9
B—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THtJRSDAY, JULY 27, ,1967
Charles Munch will conduct the Meadow Brook Festival concerts at Oakland University tonight, Friday and Saturday at 8:30 p.m., and Sunday at 7:30, with Nichole Henriot-Schweitzer the soloist Saturday'and Sunday.
Munch’s orchestral program this evening and Friday will include Handd’s “Water Music Suite,” Schumann’s l^w-phony No. 4 in D xninor, and Franck’s Symphony in D minor.
PEGGY’S
MIRACLE MILE
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While They Last
Sleeveless Cotton
Tee-Tops
Sensational Values At
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199

Tank Tops — Tnrtle Necks — Square Necks — Round Necks Yellow-White - Navy - Turquoise Small • Medium - Large
PEGGY’S
MIRACLE MILE
what ever happened to the basic sheath?
Peggy’s Has It!
•	Black
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Use Yourpersonal Charge - Security Charge or jUichigan Bankard
Children have more fun playing indoors with their modeling clay if you give each child a handful of toothpicks. This will keep them busy for hours. By using them they can add legs, arms, or a neck to hold the head of a figure they model.
This makes their play more realistic, because with the aid of the toothpicks toeir clay creations will also stand.
Quality nraining by
Lopez
Pablo’s
School of Beauty
4823 Dixie Hwy. Drayion Plain,
OR 3-0222
Richards
Boys’ and Girls’Wear Summer Play Wear The Pontiac Mall
6465 Williams Lake Rd.
Two Blocks Ws»t of Wotorford Drivs-ln
Unusual and Distinctiva, Handmad* Gifts on Consignment
Saturday and Sunday Mme. Henriot-S^weititer will play Ravel’s Concerto in G major on a program which will include Mozart’s Divertimento for Strings in D m a j o r (K. 138), Beethoven’8 Symphony No. 4 in B flat major, and R a V e 1 ’ 8 “Daphnis et Chloe” Suite No. 2.
MRS. R. A. SHELTON
Dear Eunice Farmer,
Do you have any suggestions as to how one can renwve the dressmakers carbon paper markings from a, white wool dress? The little tracing dots show through to the right side and look terrible. I have tried several spot removers but none rf them have worked. Can you help me?	Mrs. D. F.
Dear Mrs. D. F.;
Sorry, but I don’t have any solution for yon. I have often suggested taking the garment to a professional deanm and let them remove it, sometimes this still doem’lwork. If any of you readers have any suggestions, |dease send them on to me, Eunice Farmer, in care of The Pontiac Press.
In the meantime, don’t use a tracing wheel on anything except the underlining of your garment. This is just one more example of an asset becoming a liability. If you want to use short cuts of any kind, think first about the end results, and you might find you didn’t save any time at all.
During Munch’d Detroit Symphony appearances at Meadow Brook, Ehrling wljl guest conduct the New York Philharmonic with pianist Andre Watts as soloist. Hie concerts are being held in Central Park, at Gove Lakes Fark on Staten Island, and at the Botanical Gardens in the Bronx.
A Lace Cage Is Chosen for Wedding
Culinary Skills Run in Family
CENTERVILLE, Iowa (AF) - Mrs. J. Keith Fhilllps, wife of a f^er, has won 1,612 blue ribbons and uncounted red and udiite ribbons for her food entries in state, county and town fairs.
A full-length cape of Alen-con lace over a taffeta sheath was worn by Saturday bride, Mrs. Ronald Allen Shelton.
A train of matching lace, attaching at the shoulders was a feature of the ensemble worn by the former Janet Gail Reyno^, for the First Baptist Church rite.
Her waist-length veil fell from a crown of lace, seed pearls and rhinestones. Daisy pom poms centered with a white wchid were carried as e bouquet.
“Almost every year you say to.yourself, T think Ml ^p it this year’,” says Mrs. FhUlips, “and then, as the fairs draw closer, you find the bug has got you.”
Barbara Manlove was maid of honor with bridesmaids Carol ^Iton, Glenda Reynolds and M a r lean Kilmer, flower girl.
Gerald Asher was best man for the bridegroom, Ffc. Ronald Allen Shelton, USA, of Ft. Meade, Md.
Ushers were Michael Marian, Douglas Shelton, Alan Dohner and Steve Collins.
Dear Eunice Farmer:
I found a pattern that is exactly what I have been looking for but on checking the pattern size, I found it only in half-size patterns. Can a half-size pattern be adjusted to fit a regular misses size?	Mrs. D. W.
Dear Mrs. D. W.:
Today, with practically no emphasis placed on the waistline, you can easily adjust this pattern to fit you. Buy the one dosest to your regular size, usually it would be one half size smaller. Example: If you need a size 14 pattern, possibly a 12^ would be best for you. Be sure to check all the measurements and add where needed.
The main difference in the patterns is the length from shoulder to waistline. A half-size pattern is cut much shorter waisted and usualiy cut for a more mature figure. We have used them before, and they work out beautifully.
TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. John J. Williams, Fairfield, 111., is this week’s
Tailor Trix pressing board winner for HOr leather trim suggestion.
I love to trim sportswear with touches of leather but found it impossible to make loop buttonholes or cover small buttons with the heavier suede I was using. I found that I could peel away the back layer of the suede, working . slowly and carefully so as not to damage the skin. You will haye a nice thin layw of leatho* left which is perfect for making small details.
Sav* ovan moro by buying right nowl Oor c_________________________
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Her greatest competition comes from her daughter, Mrs. Olive Jean Tarbell, who has more than 1,300 ribbons. And now Mrs. Tarbell’s six-year-old daughter, who recently received a small electric stove for a present, insists she is going to bake cookies for the next fair.
Parents of the newlyweds who greeted guests in the church parlors are Mr. and Mrsj Harry W. Reynolds of South Ascot Road and the CecU Sheltons of Berkley K,
The couple are t a k 1 n g a honeymoon tour to Ft. Meade. Md., Cedar Point, Ohio, and Expo ’67.
Polly's Pointers .
Outfits in Bags
DEAR POLLY-It is time for children to be starting off camp and, having been camp counsellor, I want to pass a Pointer on to their mothers.
No matter how many clean clothes they have on arrival at camp, toward the end of the session most girls run out of clean socks, underwear and blouses. This usually is due to their wearing the wrong blouse with the wrong shorts or just changing clothes too often.
They also have trouble getting all their fliings together when time comes to go home. Own motiHif aidyid ^ jrob-lem hy packing one day’s complete outfit in a plastic bag. In the bag were socks, blouse, shorts ai^ so on.
At the end of the day the girl put aU those soiled clothes twek in the same plastic bag so tbQP were all together when it was dme to packr This made everything come out even and there were no forgotten clothes.
-SUE
blank sheets of paper inside. Every time I write to him I include a couple more of these envelopes and, needtess to say, I hear from him more often than I would otherwise.—MRS. J. W. M.
DEAR POLLY — General housecleaning is something most of us dread and put off as long as possible. I have found a painless way. Plan a party.
How long has it been since you got together with the people on your block? We never had so I went around and introduced myself to the ones I did not bto%^imd inritedL4hem a “get acquainted party.” Then I knew I had to clean the house from top to bottom so as to make a good impression.
I allowed myself two weeks, so did not have to rush too much. My spirits were so high I even saw the bottom of my ironing basket for the first time in months.—SHARON
DEAR POLLY—What can be done about a metal bed that squeaks? Just turning over in it causes a resounding racket that can be heard all over the house. This is very annoying to other people in the house who are trying to sleep. — FERN
DEAR POLLY-B e f o r e my son lc^t for the service I gave him several stamped envelopes
addressed to me with folded a machine.
You will receive a dollkr If Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Polly’s Problem or to a problem. Write ■ Polly in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac,Michigan 48056
A new kidney machine that can be used at home will be available in (A few months at a cost of only about $200, as compared to present costs of $14,000
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
Even Wedding Gowns Are Paper Now
B—8
By SALLY AVAN NEW YORK (AP) ^ The fun’s in the bag — the paper bag ~ 'this suinmer.
Papef bikinis, paper surf jackets, paper bras, paper
Carnival M^ri Is Charged With Bigamy
MANISTEE - (AP) Mrs. Jean Martope says she still loves her carnival worker husband John C. Bence Jr., though she has been told he has six> aliases and possibly as many wives.
She filed a bigamy charge against the husky Bence, explaining that while ‘T still love him. You know the saying — Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.”
Bence pleaded guilty to the bigamy charge when arraign^ Monday in Manistee Circuit Court in northwestern \ Lower Michigan.
Michigan State Police said Bence has six ^ives. The Manistee County prosecutor said he has three. Mrs. Martone, who said she married Bence « under his alias of John Mar-tone on July 5, 1063, said she believed he has four wives., But oftly one coupt of bigamy was contained in the charge.
Bence, who will be sentenced July 24, faces a maximum penalty of five years In Jail.
Mrs. Martone, 26, said she and Bence traveled the cami-Val circuit for a while and then she heard rumors.
Someone gave her a name, she said, and she wrote to a woman in Maryland.
‘‘We exchanged pictures, and found we were married to the same man,” said Mrs. Martone.
culottes, paper sandals—even' paper 'wedding gowns and paper gray flannel suits. Temporary fashion has sent the nation on a wastebasket binge.
‘‘Paper is in now,” said Melvin E. Dawley, president of Lord & Taylor, the New
York-based department store
‘‘Only time will tell if it is a fad. If designing keeps good,^ it will be lasting.” AREA EXPANDING The whole area has begun to expand tike crazy,” saldi a spokesmap for Kimberly-
With the wide range of paper apparel now available, it’s a possibility a modern miss will meet her man in a paper bikini and then marry him in a paper wedding dress. Americans spent $3.5 million on the cheap cellulose clothing last year and industry spokesmen say a billion-dollar year isn’t far off. Both the “Wild Animal Mini Bikini’’ and “Poly-coated Wedding Dress” shown above ar^ by James Sterling Paper Fashions of New York.
Stevens Corp., a major sup--plier of paper-type material which is 83 per cent cellulose and 7 per cent nylon.
Americans spent $3.5 million' on paper clothes last year when the first paper toggery Was introduced. This summer die ^per caper is biggo* than ever. Desi^ are more elabwate, prints are colorful.
‘‘We’re doing fantastically,” said William Guggenheim III, 28, a Yale gradfiate and former stockbroker who opened in Dispensable Disposables, a paper shop, on New York’s Upper East Side last month.
He predicts it soon will be a $1 billion a year industry.
25 PER CE^
By 1980, paper will account for 25 per cent of the apparel business, predicts Oliver James Sterling, 30, a former Texas oilman.
Sterling set up shop just this past year and now hks six plants turning out 15,000 to 20,000 items a day — items like cowl-collared caftans, ruffle - skirted mini - dresses, pant suits, evening culottes and tortoise shell - strapped evening dresses — all made from paper.
His newest item is a double breasted suit for men, to sell for about $12. ‘‘It looks like gray flannel,” he says. “It should be great for businessmen and conventions.”
Guggenheim stocks many of Sterling’s items ih his narrow shop, where paper sunglasses, paper bows, paper bracelets, paper jumpsuits and paper raincoats are pinned to the walls.
“Paper has become high fashion,” Guggenheim says. “I see it as a forerunner of a disposable apparel industry.”
Children Imitate Their Elders
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE D-508: Lila G., aged 5, is a kindergartener.
“Dr. Crane,” her teacher began, “Lila
uses very vile language.
“She will employ profanity and ap-I	parent^ hot
I	even realize
I that she is yi-I plating good J taste.
t.	CRANE	“And she
tells	tales	about her parents
that th^y may not believe are being broadca^t^ to all the youngsters in my class.
Why don’t parents realize that we kindergarten teachers get uncensored views of what
they are doing in their own homes?”
Parents should realize that they have a serious job of teaching their youngsters correct speech and proper social habits.
But children imitate their human surroundings.
Conradi, /l famous scientist, found that Engliih sparrows would even mimic canaries, if reared by canaries.
For example, Conradi took sparrow eggs and placed them in the nests of canaries.
When these eggs hatched, the canary mothers looked after the young sparrows, apparently not realizing that their awkward Anglings were “foster” children.
Remember, the young sparrows never saw or heard their own kind!
The only bird sounds they experienced were the songs of canaries.
When the sparrows were 3 months old, they begin to trill, like their canary foster parents.
“None,” said Conradi, “ever had the characteristic call note of .the sparrow species but by and by adopted those of the canary.”
It now costs an average of $500 per year per child to give him public schooling.
Celebrating their golden wedding anniversary Sunday are former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. James, Chiappelli. An open house in Port Huron will follow their repetition of marriage vows in the Pilgrim Holiness Church there. The Chiappellis have 10 children including Mrs. Bill Sects, Mrs. Carl L. Bills, Mrs. Walter Dun-son, Mrs. Don Dell and David Chiappelli of Pontiac, 41 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.
Preschool Play Tools
The l&zy, hazy days of summer bring with them everyday opportunities for outdoor play for the preschoolers who have spent most of the long wlntei;- inside the house. For inother, too, it’s a welcome change.
Certainly active play in out-of-doors fresh air is as important for the preschooler as it is for his school-age brothers and sisters.
But particularly for the preschooler who is learning while playing, it is equally important that the playtools which help develop his imagination, creativity, and physical dexterity not be neglected during the long summer season.
For the wise parent, guiding the preschooler’s learning is a vear-round responsibility. The question for many parents, though, is one of evaluation. Determining the playtools which will help their preschoolers develop their senses, digest their experiences, master themselves and their problems is often a difficult decision.
To help parent-s in this evaluations, Playskoll Research suggests these guidelines;
If raucous sparrows can learn to sing and trill like canaries, just imagine how much more expertly smart human tdts can mimic the speech and social outlook of their parents!	J
Bloomneld Hills. WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD.
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EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 5 P.M. fo 10 PM.
Miss Gee demonstrates hairpiece styling Friday at Pontiac Mall
Miss Gee has a world of hairpiece tricks to show W you Friday.
Meet her, from 12 noon until 9.	—
She'll demonstrate wiglet styling, give tips on their wear and care, help with your selection.
special
human hairpieces , both Pontiac stores
wiglet 4 11.90 -t*. 29.90 fall, 64.90
Wig, vytiglet are pre- curled and ready for styling; black, off-black, brown tones. Fall is rnade^in Italy, can be adjusted, for height. Stock, off-tlack, brown. Light, frosted shades, 74.90.
shop every night until 9
Pontiac Mall
Telegraph at EtizaBeth Lake Road
—Choose toys with multiple play values—those with which the preschooler himself can “do” something.
■ —If a child has outgrown a toy, put it away. If it is too simple for him, he‘will be bor^ a^nd the toy will hamper development of new skills.
A Complete Deleetable Menu! Plan a Party for
Neaisajit Dining
— the family will enjoy it!
iKoiuttila Couttii^ Inn
3230 PINE LAKE ROAD
Phone 682-0600
	liunTrji	Famous Smorgasbord
		Sunday Brunch
	InM	Wedding - Banquet Facilities F. Ward Ouradnik, Host
Dine Out Tonight In Our New Beautiful Dining Room Also Enjoy Our ftelective .Salad Bar Luncheon Buffet Daily 11:30 — 2 P.M.

300 N. Perry — FE Sri 545 — Closed Sundoyt
Due to Circumstances BeyondJDur Control . .
Our Merchandise Was Delayed!
Our Carpeting Was Delayed!
Our Fixtures Were Delayed!
Therefore Our Grand Opening Must Be Delayed for One Week . . .
GRAND OPENING THURSDAY, AUG. 3rd Watch for Opening Ad!
New Fashion Mall in the Pontiac Malt
V ^ a'
\ ^
B—4

THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27. 1967
Sandra Sue Hawkins unit wed A/2C. Gary G. Moore, USAF, 'Sept. 30. Her engagement is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hawkins of Birmingham. Her fiance is the son of Mrs. Frederick Moore of Birrriingham and the late Mr. Moore.
Vows Sept. 29 are planned by Margaret June Sofko and John Louis Schudlich. He is a student at Oakland University. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Sofko of Honeysuckle Road, West Bloomfield Township, Mrs. Robert Goer-mer of Southfield and the late Mr. Carl Schudlich.
The engagement of Susan Carol Peterson to Michael Dean Mitchell was announced recently at a family dinner given by the A. C. Petersons of Birmingham. Parents of the future bridegroom are the Gus T. Mitchells of North Hammond Lake Drive, West Bloomfield Township. She is a graduate of Pontiac Business Institute and he is a senior at Ferris State College.
Planninjg Sept 23 vows are Sharon Marie Krupa and Stephen Ervin Sc hi Ike. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ben Krupa of Pinconning and the Ervin Schilkes of Rochester. The bride-elect attended Central Michigan University where her fiance is a senior.
Actress Favors Scrubbed Look
Born to greasepaint through two generations of theatrical fore-b ears, Vanessa Redgrave’s personal beauty philosophy, off stage, is summed up in three words—soap and ■ water.
“Beauty should be completely natural,” she says. “I am a firm believer in the old-fashioned method of simple washing one’s face with water and a good soap.
Clips Mark Treated Hair
Women with lightened hair often end up with unsightly clip marks after setting their hair. Lightened hair tends to be more porous and, therefore, bends easily. If too many clips are ruining your set you can always solve it by using tape to keep hairs in place.
JACOBSON'S
CLOSED
ALL DAY SATURDAY through August 12
SUMMER STORE HOURS,
9,30 A.M. to 5,30 P.M. MONDAY, JUESDAY, WEDNESDAY OpEN"^hursday and Friday to 9 P.M. CLOSED SATURDAYS THRU AUG. T2
Jacobsons
BIRMINGHAM
Resident Has Returned
From Five-Month Tour
By aCNE KARLSTROM Mrs. V; C. G«m of Stratford Lane has returned home after five months of traveling. Iri February Mrs. Genn started out in her own car motoring to California.
There she visited her sons, Mr- and Mrs. V. C. Genn, Jr. in Berkley and Mr. and Mrs. John Genn in Saratoga. She also spent time with friends in San Diego and Los Angeles.
From there Mrs. Genn proceeded to Tahiti. There she visited with Mr. and Mrs. Karl Richards who formerly lived in this community. Mr. Richards is president of the French Polynesian Missions of the Mormon Church.
INTAHm
In Tahiti Mrs. Genn joined
the Circle Pacific travel for one month. She spent ten days in Hong Kong and she spent a month in Tokyo. Years ago Mrs. Genn and the late Mr. Genn resided in Tokyo and there were many
86-Year-Old Is Librarian
RICHMOND, Va. OB - Because ‘‘they neded somebody to get the show on the road,” an 86-year-old resident of an apartment complex for senior citizens has become librarian for the tenants’ new library.
Though he has never done that type of work before, A. C. Jenvey declares, “It’s just a matter of horse sense” and spends his spare time sorting the donated volumes into various classifications and shelving them.
Decorative Bibs for Party Favors
Simple-to-m a k e “balloon” bibs are practical party favors for very young children.
To make bibs, use any washable cotton . . . from dressy organdy to absorbent terry cloth.
friends to visit with as well as the many friends who in late years had received Mrs. Genn’s hospitality.
A very special occasion was the wedding of Shoichi Kaji-mi, who after graduating from H^ard, lived in this community a short timdi
Mra. Genn was one of the 450 wedding guests and with a smile she tells -about a group of young architects, who had studied in Michigan, escorting her to the formal banquet.
On her return trip from California her son, John, accompanied her. Together they made a quick visit to the third son in the family, Gerald Y. Genn and his family who are presently at theii’ Summer home in Chatham, Cape Cod. Mr. Genn who is an executive with General Motors leaves late this month to take up residence in Ko-nigstein, Germany where he will be assistant Ralph Mason at the Opel factory.
His wife and four children will join him later in the Summer. In the meantime they will have a visit next montii by the V. C. Genn Jr. and family who also will be headed for Expo 67.
Mrs. Genn speaks about the many modem interests in Japan today. With enthusiasm she talks about the very spectacular event that will take place in Tokyo on Nov. 3 this year. It is a benefit for the International Children’s Fund of the United Nations.
Ten homes and gardens will be open that day to people interested to support this worthy cause. Anyone who contemplates being in Tokyo on Nov. 3 may contact Mrs. Genn.
Dishwasher
Washes Self
The Interior of automatic dishwashers are self-cleaning, but occasionally will need extra attention if used in an area where hard water causes a lime deposit.
For a pattern, cut an oval shape out of brown paper, making it long enough lo reach from a child’s neck to his waist. At one end of the oval, cut out a round neckline. ~
Edge the bibs with cotton bias tape, and use tape for neckline'ties.
Write each child’s name on his bib with a felt marker. Decorate bibs with colorful balloons made from circles of cotton iron-on tape.
The recommended treatment: let the dishwasher go through a complete wash cycle without any ’dishes but with a cup of vinegar added. 'Then put the dishwasher through a second complete cycle, using the usual amount of detergent — but still no dishes.
$3.3 Million Program
WASHINGTON (UPD-The war on poverty’s foster grandparents program for fiscal 1967 includes 34 projects financed by $3.3 million in federal funds.
The Luminor,.\an: electronically lighted screen, paints pictures in light arid color. Created by Earl M. Reiback, a nuclear physicist, inventor and avant-garde artist, it produces a play of colored images in response to music when attached to any high fidelity sound system.. It is designed for use in the home to enhance the pleasure of listening to any type music by providing an automatically synchronized, abstract visual expression of the music.
New London Fashion
Spells Quiet Elegance
LONDON (AP) — London’s high fashion week coincided with the first sonic booms over the capital, but the clothes themselves hardly made a bang.
“Elegant” was the word most fashion editors used to describe them.
For women over 25 they looked like good news, but the youngsters will have to continue to look to Carnaby Street, Mary Quant and the far-out boutiques for sartorial fireworks.
ABOVE THE KNEE
The hemline stayed for the inost part just above the knee, where women akeady are wearing it, with slightly longer coats nearly covering the kneecap. Brown is the big color favorite, wth orange and green as ruim»s-up, and black made a considerable comeback.
Trouser suits have virtually faded from the picture, with only a few midcalf knickerbockers to remind us they ever existed.
Norman Hartnell, the queen’s conservative, dressmaker, for onoe seemM to be right in the groove with semi-fi^tted sheaths. Waists were either wide-belted at the natural place, or seamed high under the bust and curved low behind.
Fur trimmings and jeweled embroidery were used only in
discreet amounts, prompting one London fashion editor, just return^ from the Rome collections, to complain that the English clothes look poverty stricken by comparison. NEARLY MARCHED Boots have nearly marched out of the high fashion scene, though Ronald Paterson, the Scottish designer, used them with a group of suits that looked more Uke knickerbockers. Wildly patterned and garishly colored.. stockings have vanished, too, with Hardy Amies’ black and dark brown ones about the most extreme to be seen.

Paterson also showed the shortest skirts, about four inches above the knee, but still a far cry from the real miniskirt as London sees it on the streets.
In general, the English dressmakers refused to jump overboard about anything. Everything looked handsomely wearable but hardly oi nal.
For the London designers the pendulum has swung back to sensible and wearable styles, but nobody imagines that their influence leads the world.
, r
The articlmcke is the flower bud of a large thistlelike herb. If the^tti^ are left to develop fully, (^ey produce a violet
MissJ
Perforated wingtip ojcford tie flat makes campus news.
10.00
Broad toe buckle flat with new wide T-strap styling.
10.00
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THE PpyTlAC PRjEjSS, THURSDAY, JULY 27^ :

Discovery Boosts Potential for Rockets
Jiy Science Service i WASHINGTON -^ ATOdWt many times more efficient than' any n6w to existence may have been made ^possible by an unexpected discovery just reported here.	■ .-i
For more than 10 y^ra, scientists have been nuking their brains in search of wdys to build' rockets around itticlear reactors, Which would be much mwe efficient than the «hSmi; cally powered rockets in use today.	.
The most efficient of the nuclear rockets'’would be thoee using reactors with the radioactive material in their cores in gaseous form.
In fact, the only kind of rocket that would be more efficient — a fusion rocket, based on control of tjie in-in-ciples of a hydrogen bomb— is so far in the future that no one even has an idea of how to draw one.
There has been a mighty ob-, Stacie facing gas-core rocket desipers, however, and it has kept them from getting even close to reality., The obstacle is simply that the pseous nuclear fuel in all the rocket designs proposed so far would be thrust right out through the rocket nozzle with the propellant.
This would use up the toel so fast as to make such an engine almost ciHnpletely unworkable, and would also prohibit the rocket from being fired anywhere but in outer space, since the radioactivity could poison the atmosphere.
Now, Dr. C. C. Chang and a team of researchers from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D. C. have niade a discovery that could make the "impossible” rocket possible.
During experiments with a simulated model of a gas-core rocket, the scientists noticed a doughnut - shaped zone in which the pses moved so slowly that they stayed almost entirely within the doughnut
and Interacted very little with It is as if a doughnut of one mixing, in another— the core, the main flow of the propel- gas-the fuel-swirls. in on it-Nothing separates the two gases tent throtigh the engine. self, while floating, and not but the swirl in one of than.

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Now thru this Saturday I nita, racaiva a tan par-cant discount on tha I wig of your choica.
I Valid only on wigs.
^ WIQPR^ESS^RTI|iaAT.AiOW89.9S j
10%«ffi
AU
pwom:
J 6H2.J9K)
A
Ladies' - Men's - Children
, ' V' ■ . ' "	, V
Swimwear Vs TO V2 OFF
V2 Off
GIRLS’-PRE-TEENS
Dresses Skirts ' Coats Sportswear Pajamas Blouses Knit Tops Shifts Jackets
All Weather Coats Slacks Swim Suits Bermudas
LADIES'
Skirts Blouses Slacks Coordinates Suits T-Tops Swim Suits Bermudas Dusters Sweaters SpringCoats Summer Suits Spring Suits Robes Sleepwear
568 Ladies'
MEN'S-BOYS'
Slacks Knit Shirts Bormudas Dross Shirts ' Sport Coats Men's Suits Infants' and Toddlers' Wear Swim Suits Sport Shirts

Summer Dresses
Petite Juniors, juniors, misses, half sizes
>/j Off
I
CASUALS
American Girl Life Stride Naturalizer
reg. to 10.00 reg. to 12.00 rog, to IS.OO
290	^90	^90
ITALIAN SANDALS
regular to 10.00
2’»4”
Hush Puppies
Discontinued styles or colors
CHILDREN'S UDIES'ond MEN'S
300 590
MEN'S PORTO PEDS
Discontinued styles
15«>
regular to 24.00
iMEN’S PORTAGE - PEDWIN
Discontinued styles
regular to IS.OO
MEN'S SANDALS
Discontinued styles
tegular to 12.00
2” 1,6’®
DRESS
American Girl	Lite Strid. and
Naturalizart
reg. to 12.00	reg. to 18.00
090	g90
LADIES’ CANVAS SHOES
by Boll Bond
regular	088
to 6.00	Mm
BUSTER BROWN.
Girii'
EXTRA SPECIAL
Select ftylos for dress and ploy
Le
' THE PONTIAC ?RESS, ^gURSjPAY,	2T,
• ••
PAinrs
35 N. Saginaw
17-19 S. Saginaw, St. decorate within your budget and get your fair share of fashion, too
vely Living
COORDINATED ROOMS byKROEHLER
Free Delivery No Money Down^
Op«n Men., Thun., Fri. til 9 P.M.
For you who wont a fashionable decorator look in your home without spending a fortune . . . 3> Piece Lively Living rooms in bright prints ond smart solid fabrics make even hard-to<lecorate rooms fresh and new looking. Just pick the sofa and t>vo companion chairs you like best in Modern, Early American or Traditional Styling.
Ask about convenient credit terms that allow yod to enjoy this beautiful furniture on easy monthly payments.
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH HO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO PAY
SAHIURIN
All 1967 Model Pontlacs - Tempests - Firebirds.
Yes, It's Clean-Up Time and the Savings Are Big! Choose Your New '67 Pontiac, Tempest or Firebird Now. Selection Is Great - Air Conditioned Models.
PokSm (kbuf,
Mt. Clemens at Wide Track, Downtown Pontiac
Three Piece Group
Only $299^^
17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. Downtown Pontiac
must 6« aatitfied-thU tre guarantee**
FE 2-4231
"^“Air Conditioned for Yonr Comfort”^ ' ALI, YQU CAN EAT SMORGASBORD
nils I
Saturday A ^ 0 ChUdren		■ IN 4
^ FRIDAY V	,n	SPONDS!
|L Complete Menu from Seafood to Chopa ^		n anfy an
vAJui. run. nKSCKy A fluids V_y
Pm PoodA Mdi Lujium
Catering to Banquets, Parties and Private Meetings of All l>pes P^tmgJnemdmmt mm Duty Thurt^ FrL mud Sat,
0 Ibwck at W. Huron FE 2-1170^
New Manager Special |
8x10
Pliol«griqi]i
i ^
]|2o«.n|
;*6“1
Now with world’s finMt Insulation.
^ Unbaatobla for 7 kaapini bavaragas 9 frosty fraah. Innar i / lid cup.	t
I Unbraakabla linar, |
^NEW|
Flex-Aire |
TENTS
Watarars
Sertsntd w----- ..
,i|l from ImMs.
*99"'
Only one offer each 9 months. Groups, costumes and' persons over 12 years slightly addltionaL
Kendale’s...
»124“
47 V. Huron
Photographers
335-0322
JOE'S mvf SURPLUS
Safinaw Downtown Pontine FE 2-0022
Hourat For July and Angnat Only Mon.; Tuea., Thnra. 12:00 to 8t30 Wedneaday and Friday 9t00 to 5t30 ktBIS OFFER ENDS IN 7 DAYS Phone for AppoliitmeBtd
LEADIMBUDY date kind
SliOUAWiek 21 Jewels lUewele Saa Oyr Extenaiva Coiiaqtion ^ Bulovo Wotehaa
WHitCROFT EASY CREDIT TERAAS Jewelers ’’ fe e-4391
7 N. SAGINAW
THE PONTIAC 3PRESS> THURSDAY, JULY 2r. 1967

OFFER BETTER VAIUES ".iSS*
MAKE YQUR DOLLARS DO MORE FOR YOU!
GREAT SAYINGS ON THESE AND MANY MORE GREAT
CARPET VALUES!
SHOP NOW and SAVE!
DhPONT	HIAVYTIXTURID
501 NYLON	ACRYLIC
Only
§Ht S. S. KRESSE CO. fK DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY!
ALILADIES’
and
CHILDREN’S SPORTSWEAR
$795
# sq.yd.
11 Beautiful Colors
$795
# sq. yd.
roiyt/
McCANDLESS CARPET
11 N. Perry St.
These and Many, Many More to Choose Front!
Downtown Pontiac
FE 4-2'

ANNUAL RATE OOMPOUNDEO AND PAID QUARTERiy
FLEXIBILITY
It CipNol SfvfRii ttin'i NO sot soooRt n* qulnd to opoe yoor aoeouRt... yoH cm odd to your lecdoRt Id siiy saouRt... at loy tint. Wbat't nort, dividiodi arc ctnpooodtd aad paid ftar tinot a ytar. To tpiH ytiir Capitol ae> coHflt or to traaafar yiRr priatat fONdt itop to at any Capitol ofllca tontmw.
Remember your $aving$ earn 4%% currently and are paid every three monthe.
Bakilt-^M^SUta atrMt (Wtihlniion Blvd. PnNm—7S Wttt Karan Straat aattihlltM OINai—27215 teuthDald Rd. (NIar
JUST SAY CHARGE IT!
a Milt Road)
c/uwoi mm & iom associatioh
iNCoapoiATii lift • umim, hicniian Mtnktri Ftdtral Ntmt Ltaa Bitk aytttm
VACATION CLOTHES from CONN’S
Lightweight
JACKETS .
$395t^$995
Perma Preaa
SHIRTS
' ” ' '	$099. $A95
Swim Suits ^	^
and
Bermuda Shorts
$299	$g95
All Styles 9Rd Colors
CONN’S CLOTHES
The All New Line Of
HandLay-Brjamn AUTOMATIC GAS
WATER HEATERS
Featuring the new WATER WONDER with exclusive DEAAAND-O-STAT and CONTROL CONE HEATS WATER FAST when YOU NEED TUBSFUL-HEATS SLOWER
WHEN YOU USE ONLY A LITTLE! FOUR DIFFERENT TYPES
One **Juat right** for your home.
Now you con enjoy the benefits of at muth hot water as you wont.. juit wheiryou want iti D*mond-O^tat "figures" out your hot water nooda. Shifts to HIGH when demand for hot water goes up. When peak demand is over, it shifts back to NORA^L .. . automatteally. e SupnrQlot LInnd e Protnetivn mognetium anode e looutihiT cepportene and white flntoh . . . Fully Fiborglot intulotod ... Exclutivo CONTROL CONE, covurs and protnet* ordinarily expoted control linot, tkormottot and top from domogo and cotuoi tompoilrig, putt tho Domond-O-Stot control noor oyO Uvol and out of roach of tmoll ckildron. Lowor pondl twingt out for ooty convoniont torvicing.
Taitphon* 33MR12
B—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 2r, 1967
LAST 3 DAYS
SAVI ON DRESS & SPORT SHIRTS
PERMANINTLY-PRESSID Dacron* -cotton batiste dress shirts in, white and solids. Regular and tab collars................. ..........I for $11
SUMMER DRESS SHIRTS; Permanently-pressed Dacron*-cotton oxford cloth. Traditional button-down model In white and solids ... .3 for 13.50
MISCELLANEOUS SHIRTS; some famous narne and some our own label; alJ styles, fabrics and colors  .........................3.99 - 5.99
SHORT SLEEVI SPORT SHIRTS in regular and button down collar; some permanent press; solids and assorted fancies ....................3.99
BETTER SPORT SHIRTS in assorted styles; some Italian wools are Included......4.99 to 29.99
SAVE ON SPORT COATS
DACRON BLEND SUMMER SPORT COATS: cool and lightweight. In • large assortment of patterns, models, and colors. Tattersall checks, plaids and stripes; medium torw muted checks and plaids and solid shade Amel oxford weaves.........29.85
DACRON AND WOOL SUMMER SPORT COATS In one-button, two-button and natural shoulder models. New light black-apd-white checks, Glen plaids end medium-tone muted patterns.*^ Many colors and sizes.......................34.75
Other fine sport coats tailored by such famous makers at Eagle, Hart Schaffner & Marx, Ham-monton Park, Delton, H. Freeman, and Petrocelli,
sale priced from...............39.75 to 89.75
NO CHAROI FOR ALTERATIONS
SAVE ON FURNISHINGS ^
NECKWEAR; all silks. Including twills, foulards, repps, and imported fabrics . , . .1.69, 2.69, 3.29
HOSIERY; Ben-Uons, crews,■ over-the-calf nylons ...............................69e, 9Be, I,$9
BOXER SHORTS; 3-pack broadcloth . .3 for 3.89 3-pack Dacron*-cotton .............3	for	4.49
UNDERSHIRTS; all cotton Swiss rib, 3-pack ....
...................................3	for	2.89
Dacron*-cotton Swiss rib, 3-pack .. .3 for 3.59
TEE SHIRTS; Dacron*-cotton 3-pack, 3 for 4.39
SUMMER PA|AMASr fancy cotton, coat style and knit shirt style..........................3,69
DISCONTINUED TOILErdfllk colognes, soaps, after shaves, hair creams and talcs . . 1.99 to 4.99
SHAVE COATS: all cotton In colorful shades. 3.69 BELTS: assorted leathers and elastic sport belts .................................. 1.99	-	3.99
SAVE FOR ROYS AND STUDENTS
SUMMER SPORT COATS In many styles and patterns. 2- and 3-button models in cottons, Avrils and rayons. Sizes 6-12, 6.99 to 9.99; 13 to 20,
11.99 to 17.99; 35-42 reg„ 36 to 42 large . . .
..........17.99 to 28.99
FAMOUS MAKER |ACKETS: assorted colors In pullovers and zipper fronts. Nylons. Sizes 16 to 24	......................................3.99
BOYS' WALK SHORTS In plaids and solids; sizes 8-20 .....................................2.99
BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS; famous maker crew models;' sizes 14-20 ..............................1.79
BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE sport shirts; sizes 8-20
................................1.94 to 2.49
BOYS' SWIM SUITS, sizes 8 to 20..........2.99
SAVE ON SLACKS AND BERMUDAS
DACRON* AND WOOL summer slacks in a " pleatless, belt-loop model. Solid shades in benga-line weave; tattersall checks and plaids. Good selection of colors and sizes............10.85
EAGLE SLACKS in a cool, wrinkle-resistant blend of Dacron* and wool, plain-front model with belt loops. Black, blue, brown, grey and olive shades ..............*.......................'.15.85
Other men's summer slacks, many by our finest makers', now sale priced from . . . 12.85 to 29.85
\.|AMOUS MAKE BERMUDA SHORTS .of Dacron* afsd cotton and all cotton'; plaids and solids; plain-front and side-tab models; most permanent press .........................................  4.79
BERMUDAS In Arnel weaves, Mexican prints,
shantung weaves, some famous makes ......
......	....5.99 to 9.99
SWIMWEAR; good selection of styles, colors, and sizes ...........................3.99 - 4.99,
SAVE ON HATS AND SHOES
JOHNSON D MURPHY SHOES; a large group that includes wing tip, moccasin toe, and slip-bn styles. Black or brown smooth calf or grained leathers.
6 to 12 .....,---------------------- ..,27.99
ENTIRE STOCK OF WRIGHT ARCH PRESERVER SHOES: smooth dr grained leathers; black or brown .........................21.21 - ,30.60
BOSTONIAN AND MANSFIELD SHOES for summer; choose from clip-ons, lace-ons, woven leath-ert, nylefn mesh; black/white and brown/white
..........10.99 to 23.96
STRAW HATS'iy a famous maker,, J.99 fa 10.99
SPECIAL GROUP of famous maker -casual''shoes; tfip-on and lace-on styles, now .......... ,7.88


There's still lots to choose from — and at substantial saving. Naturally, not every suit is available in a complete range of colors and sizes; but the selection in every category Is good. Hurry in'for these Big Savings. ^
CHARTER CLUB, MONTCLAIR, KINGSWOOD AND BELVEDERE 1- S 2-TROUSER SUMMER SUITS
46.90 ’ 69.75
Sizeable mork-downs on suits in tropical worsteds. Dacron® -wools, Dacron®-wool-mohair blends. They're tailored by outstanding makers — in one-, two- and three-button styles, including three-button natural shoulders. Many are two-trouser models, and you'll find them all in a big selection of shades, patterns, and proportioned sizes.
HART SCHAFFNER A MARX, EAGLE, AUSTIN LEEDS, HAMMONTON PARK, H. FREEMAN, AMD FROST & FROST SUMMER SUITS IN FINE FABRICS.
74.75 • 99.75
Luxurious summer suits in rich mohairs, fine Dacron®-wools, Docron®-wool-mohairs, and tropical worsteds— toilored by the country's leading makers. Virtually every style is represented — from high foihion to conservative to natural “Shoulder — in a good selection of shades, patterns and sizes.
LOUIS ROTH, GGG, JOHN MILFORD, AllID PETROCELLI SUMMER SUITS IN LUXURIOUS FABRICS ... SALE PRICED
t 109.75 to 179.76
NO CHARGE FOR ALTKATIONS
PONTIAC MALL


Libraries Have New Books
Rocent Additions in Pontiac Are Listed
ADAH tHILLY ■RANCH “ RIcngn-BBrlwr, UttI* World Apacli ■Hty> Sword of Honour; Garflaid. TM Laif BrMjio; GUbort. Tho Crack In Taacup; Griffin, A Lait Lamp Burn..... Hall, Tht Quillar AAamorandum; Holland, Tha Firtdraka; Hopkliw, Ratraat and Rtcall; Hublar, Tlta Seldlar and tha
key; DavMwm, Tha Crlckaft All ______________
Alikt; Draka, SImpla Pottary; Dunitan, Startlngg to Paint Porlralti; Durrall,
Wapiti ly; lYa
Taaiia Amadon, Bird* Around , -World; Baum, Tha Worif Placa In lha Worlil; Blum, Tha Promlia "
.	------ J Ruth; _____________
All Exeapf Samrny; Davit, Hobby Horta Hill; Martin, Tht Pumpkin Patch; Plata, Tha Frontlartman; Scholaflald, TIgar
Rookla; Staphanion, How to *---------- ~
Lion; Waltbargar, Captalni of __________
Woollay, GInnIa and tha Cooklno Contatt; Zaffo, Tha Big Book of Raal Trtlni.
■AST IIDR BRANCH Flctlao—Bowlat, Up Abova tha World; Gardner, WIdowi Wear Waadt; Grubb, Shadow of My Brethar; Pattarton, Tha ■ ‘T Country; RIchtar, A Country of
Wild Aoola
-	..........Church,'Mary Maada'.
AAodarn Homamakar Cookbook; Complata Gulda to Madlcart; Proit, Salactad Proto of Robert Frott; Homant, Education by Undat; Hublar, Tha Crixtianit; Ltvanton, Rvarythlng but Monay; Pad-flald, Tha Titanic and tha CalHwnlani Mtona and Evening Star; I Photograph Children.
I Draadng; Dixon, Tha
Complata Told by
CMMran't-Balch, Keeping Horta; ton. Water Fit to Uia; Colby, Secret Service; Colby, The Signal Corpt Today; --------- -------------
DeLage, 1 HIrtHbarg,

Johnton, Tha Cabinet; Kaatt, _______ ..
In tha ASountaIn; Kingman, Tha Year of the Raccoon; Lehr, Stormt; Lovelace, The Valentina Box; AAacGragor, Mist Pickarell Goat on a Dig; Peat, Capy-boppy; Trettelt, Follow tha Wind; Wright, A Gift From tha l^onely Doll.
Unknown Fifteen; _________ ______ __________
Through Time; Emery, DInny Gordon, Senior; Gorton, Give Me Liberty; Toap-
Picnic; Carpenter, Penntylvania; Carpenter, DIttrIct of Columbie; Carpenter, Wyoming; Carrick, The Old Barn; Chrlt-lophar. The Reluctant Pitcher; Coatallo, The world of the Porcupina; Du Bolt, Lazy Tommy Pumpkinhead; Forttiutid, Tha Tomten and tha Fox; Friandllch,
Houston, Eagleinatk; Kllmowl^ Frad, Fred, Uta Your Head; LIpkInd, Nubbar Bear; Lindquist, The Crystal Tree; Lo-deatan, I, the Airline Pilot; Mar~*— Sandora, Pater and the Phklat; A
jUrten
w
nndiWng
last
biger?

CHRYSLER ENQINEERINQ. For BxampiB. moitef tha met*l pstts In Airtemp air oonditlonBrs ara bondirlzed to prBvtnt rust and corrosion, and add to the life of the units. Monomatal (all-alumi* num, non-corrasiva) condenser colls are anotiior Chrysler-engl-neered rxcIubIvb that enables Airtamp products to serve you longer. Whan you buy Alrtemp, you’re asaurad of getting quality ■Ir conditioning that will keep your family comfortably cool year after year aflpr year.
For more information or ■ free 1 survey contact —
CALL; FE 4-1S04 RBIMNTIAL KAST HTO. A COOLINO m S. Talegraph Rd. CALL; 3»flSS OAKLAND AUTOMATIC 113 Orchard Uka Rd. CALL; FE 3-ttM
^irtemp
\ V'"'	'	" ■	'	^ VV \ •	■ ' '■	•
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
™tlMa®K10©R!l
iKgU|
C—1
mm
AT WINKELMAN*S
I IVI
V
J
SWEATERS WITH A BELT!
Fall head over heels for the sweater that packs a punch^the belted sweater Ever-so-lightly nipped in. a cinch to be the ‘ look of year counter-balancing skirts or pulled over trim pants. Lively ways to flaunt newest colors, this is the look of now in full swing at Winkelman's.
Four from our belted-sweater collection, including pimento.) gold or ink navy. 36-40:
Far left wool turtle neck lacy pullover. 14.00.
Next flip tor the Wondamere shirt look, wool, 14.00. Up in arms shoulder-buttoned pullover wool. 9.00. Far right cheers for the belted cardigan, wool. 10.00


Winlo,(tn
LEGS LOOK SOCK-0
CasuaL hosiery gives the famous American leg the larkiest look in years. Cobr punch with casuals, newest when you combine fish-nets over opaquesi Nylon opaque, pimento, navy, gold, ivOlY, brown in 91/2 to II, pair, 1.15 Nylon fish-nets, pimento, navy, white, ivory, brown, black, green gold; one size pair, 1.15.

FASHION IS OUR SPECIALTY
‘ )•
-t-li
THE TON riAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 2?:, 1967
Apollo Moon Project Starts Moving Again
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI) — Exactly six months ago, in 17 seconds of fire that kiHed three of the nation’s top astronauts at Cape Kennedy, the multibiiiion dollar Apollo effort to land two Americans on the mooli stepped short.
Today Apollo is moving again, haltingly, toward its first flight since the tragedy. But the program is so changed as a result of the fire that it hardly resembles the old Apollo which greeted the new year with high hopes.
The ultimate goal — a pair of astronauts to the moon’s surface and back by 1970 — remains the sanie. « Gone, however, are'the old spacecraft, the old .timetable, all plans for a manned spice flight in 1967, two tOp managers in the spacecraft program and — less visible, perhaps, but just as important — any thoughts that space flight is either safe or routine.
nar rocket engine was not work-ng ^d had to be replaced.
The Saturn 5 flight Is still set for laie September. Unless new problems crop up for It, a second Saturn 5 is Kfieduled.. to fly before the end ol the year.
Should Apollo lick its problems, space center sources say, the next two years could includa about 200 days of manned space flight and at least one lunar mls-slom The Mercury and Gemini programs totaled only some 41 days of space flight.
Apollo was to have mtjde its first manned flight last February. In preparation for that flight, the first Apollo crew Virgil Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee — climbed into their craft on Jan. 27 for make-believe launching.
BURST OF FIRE Locked inside the cone-shaped Apollo command module some 200 feet above the launch pad, they died in a burst of fire that turned the inside of their aaft into a furnace.
Throughout the nation Apollo activity halted. One spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) said the 123 biliion program entered “Umbo.” Everythli^ focused on the tragedy and on what caused it. Four months of intensive inves* tigations followed -- to find the cause, to cure it, to make as sure as possible it could never happen again.
-Space agency investlgatOTs t^ok the ApoUo 1 death ship
>art nut-by-bolt and pinpointed the likely cause as some frayed insulation wWch allowed an elec-tfical short circuit and a spark. Workmanship was found to be Iwlow par in many cases. l^UBLE CHECKED Congressional investigations which ended in May double-checked the agency’s probe and the actions taken by NASA to correct the trouble.
Although critical of NASA’s lack of safety procedures and jibe agency’s failure to report workmanship quality problems to congress earlier, the congress voted full funds for Apollo for fiscal 1968.
NASA made its first major ApoUo change — an alteration of spacecraft program leadership — shortly after the fire. l)r. Joseph Shea, who had head-eid the spacecraft program office sit the Manned^Spacecraft Cen-tw, was removW from-.|iis post aind sent to NASA headquarters ih Washington.
'Just this week Shea resigned —hr becomr-a vitr president of the Polaroid Corp. in Cambridge, Mass.
A total of 17 manned and unmanned flights, including the lunar module and Saturn 5
this year, are tentatively scheduled before the end of 1969.
Spurces point out, however, that this includes both the Apollo mp^n-flight program and the fqlllJw-on Apollo applications program (AAP) to set up an earth-orbiting space station with Apllo equipment. Apollo has a full-speed go-ahead, but AAP could get slowed down in the budget squeeze, sources say.
Changes in the spacecraft.
THERM08 WING TENT
0x9.......
TNERMOSWINGSNELTER
f2x12..........
With Polw - Stakbs - Rope*
VACUUM BUniE
Quart Sixe
FLASNLIGNT CELLS
Size “D”.....
89""
38"" 1" •29' 555
388
088
ICE SKATES. . 2
CNOQUET SET
4 Player.......
ccleMan picnic jug
1 Qallon with Spout.
METAL CAHTOP CANNIER
Gray Enamel-Basket Typo
95
Pair
COME IN ANU BROWSE OUR '/zOFFtable	CORNING WARE A PYREX WARE 30% OFF
1 ELECTRIC COFFEE POTS 10% OFF	
	1 WITH THIS COUPON g| HOUSINGS HOME & i AUTO GLAZE J| 11 g With Mirad* DR 26 qf ||l
primarily the removal of all materials that burn easily and
I the addition of a quick-opening 1 I hatch, have delayed the first j
manned Apollo untit late next
Car Kills 7, From Kingsley
KINGSLEY (AP)-A 7-year-old Kingsley boy wis killed when he was ^struck by a car Wednesday. Police said Dennis Rhea yms hlR when he ran out
into the street in front of his home.
Kingsley is about 15 miles south of Traverse City.
BIG SUMMERTIME SAYINGS FROM CITY SIDE!
SWIFTENING-SHOI
\Spartan Frozen Strawberries
^lO-Oi. Pkg. Mi-too
MR.GFREN(»ir-------
FRIES 23
SUPER MARKEf
DANI
3</2-lb.Jar
14-01.
DRL MONTE CATSUP .T. S/l**
DEL MONTE TOMATO JUKE..
1>qt. 14-oz.can 3/89<
SPARTAN MAROARINE
1-Lb. Packages 6/l~
FRESH HEAD LETTUCE.... 19*
338-0377 1716 Joslyn
3 Blocks Norlh of Walton Blvd.
FRESH
PEACHES
19« ra
‘ Into this vacancy moved deorge Low, forme'rly deputy director of the Houston Space (J e n t e n Today Low can say . ^pollo is “under control,” and he works up to 100 hours a week to keep it that way. hlEW DUn^
‘ At the North American Aviation Plant in Downey, Calif., where the basic Apollo craft in vthich the astronaut died is built, ^ea’s industry counterpart also was shifted to new duties.
[ Harrison Storms, who headed the spacecraft program for Korth Ainerican, was removed from this job although he re-)naiaed in the corporate structure. William R. Bergen; former president of the Martin jco., replaced him. j U n 111 last w-e e k, two un-maifiied ApoUo flights had been dchedifled before the end of Sep-t^ber.
I One wu the fiiyt test flight of the bugHthaped lunir module, the part of the spacecraft which ifiU aet two a8ti*onauts on the
Kand return them to the
t
Apollo mothib- ship. The other ^as the maiden voyage of the T^S-miUloh pottod-thrust Saturn 6 ifioon rockdt.
iBut ApoUo has a long histdry . 11 m e-eonauming problems dther than tha fire, and last ifeek NASA aaid a new hitch would delay the lunar jnoduiG fllgitt into the Octoh#-Da(pam-ber period. A valve on one lu,-

THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 2T> 1967
C“—8
Negro Leaders, Taylor Confer
Group Is Continuing \ Work for City Peoce
An infomal group of 30 concerned Negro ministers and citizens are continuing to work in the community and wiUi city officials to “keep the peace” in Pontiac.
Two members of the group— Albert Shaw, a Pontiac teacher, >t^d Mrs. Marie Johnson, a bondswoman — were to meet with Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. today on causes of Monday night’s disturbances, according to one of the leaders.
“I think it is remarkable that we had'only one night of disturbances in Pontiac,” E. Eugene Russell, president of the city Urban League, com-
He comnxended the local police for controlling the situation and Taylor for a “willingness and concern to meet with these people.”
★	★	★
The Negro leaders talked and pleaded with disorderly persons Monday night and since then have held various meetings work for order,” according to Russell.
*	★	★
Among the group leaders are Rev. Matthew M. Scott, president of the Oakland County 'Min-isterial Fellowship; Ularence Barnes, executive director of the Urban League; James Matthews, president of the local NAAGP chapter; Charles TUclj-er of the NAACP; and Rev. Jesse L. Jones, besides Mrs. Johnson, Shaw and Russell.
Disturbance Delays Trial in Area Death
The preliminary examination of a Waterford Township man, charged with second - degree Iriurder in the shooting of a Bloomfield Township youth last month, has been adjourned for the second time, this time because of the recent disturbances | in Pontiac.
* * *
Waterford Township Justice Patrick K. Daly postponed the hearing for Leo Placencia, 47, of 1030 Menominee to 1:30 p.m. Aug. 9. The examination was scheduled yesterday.
Placencia is accused of shooting John Turton, 18, of 844 Fairfax June 24 as t h e victim raised the hood of his mother’s car parked outside the suspect’s house.
Turton died from the stomach wound June 28 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
' ★	*	*
The examination originally was scheduled for July 12, but was adjourned then because of the unavailability of witnesses. ★	★	★
Yesterday, Daly adjourned all hearings to allow township policemen—who have helped Pontiac police cope with the disturbances—to get some rest.
HEADING FOR ASSAULT-U.S. Marines on their way to board a helicopter follow a Navy man (white shirt) to tho flight line of the U.S.S. Okinawa off the South Vietnamese coast in the South China Sea. The Marines were bound for an assualt about 12
Death Claims Market Owner
Joseph Pema, owner and operator of the Joslyn Super Market for 20 years, died yesterday. He was 72.
Requiem Mass will be 9:M a.m. Saturday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church with burial Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Donelson« Johns Funeral Home.
★ ★ ★
Surviving are his wife, Teresa;, a daughter, Mrs. Donald G. Finelli of Cleveland, Ohio; four grandchildren; and three sisters including Mrs. Concetta Felice of Pontiac.
Pema was a member of St. Michael’s 'Church, the Italian-American Club and grocery store associations in both Pontiac and Detroit.
“Is there something I can do to help the D e t r o i t victims?”
‘Where can I give food, clothing and other needed articles?” These are calls received at The Pontiac Press from iiKli-viduals and churches around tiie county.
The Rev. William S. Logan,
AP wirtphMo
miles south of the DMZ. They made an amphibious landing with helicopter support in I the operation designed to clear the area of r suspected Vietcong and North Vietnamese | Army troops,
Riot Victifn Donation Centers
Riot Scene Across U.S. at a Glance
Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas
Mrs, George Conklin
Service for Mrs. George (Harriet E.) Conklin, 85, of 128 Lincoln will be 11 a.m. tomorrow Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial in Oakwood Cemetery, near Gaines.
Mrs. Conklin died Monday.
Surviving is a brother.
Carl S. Grantors
Service for Carl S. Graqfors, 75, of 660 Scott Lake, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Ottawa Park Cem-' etery. Independence Township.
Mr. Granfors died yesterday. He was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division and a member of Bethlehem Lutheran Church.
Surviving are his wife, Olga; a daughter, Mrs. David McMan-of Union Lake; a son, Carl E. of Waterford Township; eight grandchildren; three sisters, and three brothers.
Hubert G. Hill
Service for Robert G. Hill, 160 Auburn, will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial in South Lyons Cemetery.
An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 7:30 tonight in the funeral Home.
Mr. Hill, a retired employe of Community National Bank, died Tuesday.
Hofold McDonnell
Requiem Mass for Harold McDonnell, 75, of 3703 Brookdale, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Saturday at St. Benedict’s Catholic Church with burial in Sunset Hills Cemetery, Flint.
The Rosary will be re'cited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 7:%p.m, tomorrow.
Mr. McDonnell died yesterday. A member of St. Benedict’s Church, he was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach
Division and member of Elks Lodge 810.
Surviving are his wife, Pau-linen and two sisters.
Bobby R. Reeves
Service for Bobby R. Reeves, 25, of 236 Crystal Lake will be 1 p.m. Monday at St. John Methodist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home.
Mr. Reeves, fatally shot, died Tuesday. He was an employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division.
Surviving are his wife, Selma; his m 01 h e r, Mrs. Harden Reeves: three brothers, Daniel S., Charles and Jackie Reeves; and five sisters, Shirley, Carlyn Annie, Pearl and Maylin.
George W. Smith
Service for George W. Smith, 74, of 885 Northfield wiU be 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Donelson'Johns Funeral Home with burial in the Ortonviile Cemetery, Ortonviiie.
Mr. Smith, a maintenance engineer, died yesterday.
Surviving are two sons, Ralph K. of Davison and George W. Jr. with the Army; 11 grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; three brothers, including Luke of Oxford; six sisters, eluding Mrs. Blanche Jones of Clarkston and Mrs. Thelma Horton of Pontiac.
, Alfred Taylor
Service for Alfred Taylor, 17, of 281 Branch will be 1 p.i tomorrow at Trinity Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home.
The youth died Tuesday. He
was fatally shot.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs.l^-Y. L. Taylor, and a brother and |^ sister, Charles and Patrice, bothlLji, atho^.
Neil D. Mclnally
70 to Represent Oakland at National County Parley
Oakland County will have . sonie 70 representatives attending the 32nd annual National Association of Counties (NACO) Conference beginning ir) Detroit Monday.
In all, 3,200 delegates from all 50 states are expected to participate in the three-day conference, which this year centers around the theme of county organization and mapagement.
President Johnson is planning to address the delegates in Cobo Hall on Wednesday, the last day of the conference. On Monday, delegates will be welcomed by Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh, general conference chairman, and co-chairman Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, and Mel Ravitz, Detroit coundilman.
* ir *
The main speaker on the opening day will be GOv. George Romney.
COUNTY DELEGATION Elected County officials, township supervisors, and department beads will make up the Oakland County delegation.
Detroit was host to the conference once before, in 1959n Last year it was held in New Orleans and attracted 3,200 per-
WEST BUXIMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Neil D. Mclnally, 54, of 4141 Walnut Lake will be 3 p.m. Saturday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be at Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi.
Mr. Mclnally, senior tool- engineer at CadiHac Motor Division, died yesterday.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George G. Mclnally of Pontiac; four sons, Donald, Bruce and Steven at home and Michael in the United States Coast Guard and one brother, George F. o Rochester.
JOSEPH PERNA
By the Associated Press
DETROIT — The costliest riot in the nation’s history abated with 36 persons counted dead and damage assessed at IfSOO million.
★ ★
NEW YORK - Negro teenagers ran wild over a stretch of Fifth Avenue breaking shop windows and looting.
[Harlem was quiet.
I CAMBRIDGE, Md.-National Guardsmen moved into Eastern shore city, chasing crowds from the streets with “riot” gas.
* *
PHOENIX, Ariz. — Snipers and looters fought with police in a four-hour outbreak.
' ★	★ i
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - NaUon-al Guardsmen entered the home city of Notre Dame University put down a disturbance. A general curfew was imposed.
director of Interfatih Emergency Center, 4800 Woodward, Detroit, said the most important function churches in the suburbs can perform is to act as clearing houses.
They need to serve as posts where volunteers can offer themselves or fiieir goods, he said.
All clothing vnll be distributed by the Salvation Army and the “I Vincent de Paul Society, Detroit.
CHURCH UST Churches serving as collection centers in the Pontiac area include:
St. Michael’s Catholic Church, 120 Lewis.
St. Benedict’s Catholic Church, 40 S. Lynn.
St. Vincent de Paul Catholic, 150 E. Wide Track.
Joseph Catholic, 400 W. South Blvd.
Sacred Heart Catholic, Auburn Heights.
Our Lady of the Lakes, 5481 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township.
St. Perpetua Catholic, 134 Airport, Waterford Township.
Our Lady of Refuge, 3750 Commerce, Orchard Lake.
Yesterday's Capital News at a Glance
*THE GOVERNOR Remained in riot-torn Detroit.
THE SENATE LABOR COMMITTEE hearing oi
Thursday ii. _____
SEN GEORGE KUHN, R-BLOOMFIELD HILLS ■" wogid call for a fu
ZOLTON FERENCY
CHICAGO — Firebombing, window breaking and looting broke out in the predominantly Negro South and West sides. OTHER CmES There were also reports of scattered outbreaks in Toledo and Cincinnati, Ohio, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Los Angeles,- and two New York City suburbs in Westchester county — Mount Vernon and New Rochelle.
Jail Terms Given in City Bar Fight
Two Pontiac men convicted of assault with intent to do great bodily harm have each been sentenced by- Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem to 3tk to 10 years in the state prison at Jackson,
The men, C i a ii d e Burnette Jr., 23, no known address, and Eugene Jones, 24, of 224 Ferry, were found guilty by Ziem following a nonjury trial two weeks ago.
The charge stemmed from a fight oytside a Pontiac bar Feb. 10 in which four men suffered knife wounds.
EVERY WEDNESDAY andlllURSDAYMTE
SPECIAL
BEGINNING
4 P.M.
Char-Broiled, Western Cot
SIRLOIN STEAK
INCLUDING POTATOES, $4 AA SALAD, ROLL aim BUTTER ^ | gQ9
wrai OPEN FOR BREAKFAST
FOR LUNCH
FOR DINNER
Hugo of the HiUs, 2215 Opdyke, Bloomfield Hills.
Christ Church Cranbrook, Lone Pine at Church, Bloom-^, field Hiils. ’	^
St. James Epi^opal, 355 .W/^ Maple, Birmingham.
Westminster Presbyterian/'- n 36333 W. Big Beaver, Troy.	v
Hoiy Name Catholic, 645 Woodland, Birmingham.
First Ccmgregational, 1319' Pipe, Rochester.
★ it it	4
The Rev. Jon Joyce, pastor of Redemption Lutheran Church will accept nonperishable food ' and clothing at the parsiHiage, 5644 Dunmore, West Bloomfield n s h i p. His congregation meets in one of the Orchard Lake schools.
According to the Rev. David A. Britz, assistant pastor of St. Michael’s, nonperishable foods are the most important items requested by the Detroit head-' quarters for the relief of the disaster victims.
Many of the baby turtles on sale in variety stores come from Reelfoot Lake in Tennessee, where as many as 20,000 turtles have been ciight and shipped to market in a six-month period.
Riot May Add $5 Million to Wayne County's Debt
DETROIT (AP)-Delroit’s riot is expected to send Wayne County at least $5 million further into debt.
* ★ ★
County officials broke down the expense! this way Wednesday afternoon:
$1.5 million for feeding and housing prisoners.
—$1.5 million for court costs.
—$1 million for welfare in-
—$500,000 for treatment of injured poor.
—$500,000 for incidentals like overtime for county employes
POLAR POWERHOUSE — The Navy’s nuclear power plant at the U.S. scientific base at McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, has set a new performance record. It has surpassed the 3,355:30-hour continuous power production mark set last" August by the Air Force’s reactor at a mountaintop radar station at Sundance, Wyo. Built by the Martin Co. of Baltimore Md., the Navy reactor supplies 1,500 kilowatts of el^-tricity to the MeMurdo ■base*' -------------------—*-----— -—
Caravelle' gives yon time to
hang aromid... with CHARM WATCHES
EASY CREDIT TERMS
PARK JEWELERS
anti OPTICIANS 1N.SIGINAW
(Corner Pike St.)
FE 4-1889
of property tax valua-^ tion.
A county spokesman said the
ipenses would not only wipe out the county’s $2.4-million savings fund, but also will kill plans to begin repaying the $14 million it owes Detroit.
The spokesman said the county will apply to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for federal relief money^
Federal relief coordinator for the county, Daniel B. Skeen, Wedne^ay afternoon with Detroit officials to plan thq city’s relief applications.
Summer Sole Speciol
THESE HANDSOME EARLY AMERICAN ACCENT PIECES from the fomous
GEORGE B. BENT COLLECTION
blend beautifully with any setting, lend a delightful accent of warmth and| charm to every room.
----------------1
SPECIAL OFFER
Deacon's Bench .. $24.8t Round Floor Lamp..$24.88 Oblong Combo .... $24.88 Round Pedestal
Table .... $14.88
'’Slnoker.$ ♦.48
"Rousseau" Platform Rocker in attractive print material, famous "Scotchgard" sfiPf repeller. Versatile, Lamp-Table Combo, exclusive "Protectolac" mar-proof finish, 3-way switch, swivel and handsome shantung shade.	x
BOTH FOR ONLY
$58-00
2133 ORCHARD LAKE RD., 333-7052
C—4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
Ciimttrg
SUMMER CLEARANCE OF COMPLETE STOCK OF
BOYS’ WEAR
SAVE AT LEAST
20%
BLOOMFIELD MIOACLE MILE
BUY, SELL, TRADEI USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I
Time Capsule' on 1929 Calls Year a Humdinger
By DICK WEST WASfflNGTON (UPI) - When I was* 8 years old, it was a ■very good year.
Which is rather surprising Because the year
Soft Whiskey a k mode.
It’ll get you through the summer.
$10.84 $4 68 $2.96 Calvert Extra
'/> eai.	Fifth	Pint
Cod* #9474 Cod* #9* Code #99 Includes All Taxes
86 PaftDF- BLENDED WHISKEY. 66% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRIIS C1967 CALVERT DiST. CO., t
the stock market crash. If so, you do it a gross injustice.
★ ★ ★
And in saying that. I’m not relying on my own memory, have enough trouble remember-ng things that happenerf in 1966.
The reason I happen to be familiar with my 8th year is because I’ve just opened a 1929 “time capsule.”
This is a little book, being published next month by Time Magazine, which reviews the events of the year.
★ ★ ★
The capsule, a sort of minihistory, indicates that in mosl respects, contrary to widespread belief, 1929 was a humdinger. „
PUBUC FIGURES It was a very good year for memorable utterances by public figures.
In 1929, Henry Foed coined the Immortal line ‘Nobody wants to fly with a drunken aviator.”
It was a very good year for golf.
* ★ ★
In 1929, a golfer in Waxa-hachie, Tex., hit a 158,400-yard drive. His ball landed in an airplane.
NO FEARS’
It was a very good year for fearless prognostications. In March of 1929, Herbert Hoover said, “I have no fears for the future of our country. It is bight with hope.”
The next November, after Wall Street laid an egg, he probably sent his crystal ball out for repairs.
Nevertheless, Hoover was involved that year in an event that proved in the long run to be far more significant than Uie economic collapse.
★ ★ *
According to the “time capsule,” he was the first U.S. President to have a telephone installed at his desk. Previously, the chief executives had gone down the hall to use the phone, boarding house style.
GOOD THING
Before his term was over, Hoover may have wished he had left the phone in the hail. By that time, however, the precedent was established.
UinRDS/
17-19
S. SAGINAW ST. Our Annual
JULY
&
IN DOWNTOWN’PONTIAC
4 Complete Floors of Home Furnishings
’"'i
1
• Traditional Elevator Service to All Floors • Provincial • Colonial • Modern — All by ^merico's Leading Manufacturers!
I HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION I FREE DELIVERY
SAVE
1/2
LAST
THREE
DAYS
THURS., FRI. & SAT. JULY 27-28-29
UP TO
On Many Items Throughout the Store
MANY ITEMS ARE ONE OF A KIND

..'
OUR
greatest
furniture
Sofas Chairs Dining and Bedrooms Mattresses Lamps
Occasional Tables j Accessories
YOUU SEE SAVINGS
galore throughout
THE STORE
“Fou Mtut Bm SatUfied ^ ThU We Gumrfntee'

AND BUILDING SUPPLIES AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Durable plastic panels have many uses indoora and outdoors. Choose from three popular decorator colors: White, Green, or Yellow.
Aluminum
Combination
Storm and Screen
Window
20»x12 ft....
Charge it at Kmart
Save *23^” On Famous
EASTERN MWN.BUILDINGS |
GIANT !
8V65IZE I
Reg. •119” I
i9S.6Sl
Charge It at Kmart |
P	(Model No 7918)?
10] combined Eij:
maniifactured|$ ___________________________________________________________________________
to your reqnired kizeP beauty. The industiy’s finest features: Rugged, double-ribbed construction; jam-free sliding doors;
— Storm and screen in- K 42-lb*./*q. ft snow-load strength, and many other*. This is the perfect opportunity lofet that extra ^ '
Now! Tremendous savings on famoua Eastern lawn buildings. Eastern’s are the only lawn buildinga firsr'latvaniied, then multi<oatedXor iinsni^saed rust resistance and a lifetime of service »ttd
storage you’ve always wanted. Get an Eastern lawn building NOW!
7-foot JCedar
FENCE POSTS
S3*
...
LODGE POLEPINE
g^ Our reg. clean, bright, fresh stock Lodgepole
I pine. Ideal for recreation room, family rooms or additions.
Charge It!
4”x4”x8’ CAUFORNIA REDWOOD DECAY RESISTANT PATIO POSTS
PLAIN WHITE 12"xl2"
CEILING TILES
Adda to th^ value, appearance and comfdrt of your home. Ceil-
Our Reg. $4.00 each 3 Daye Only
1x6 Clear Redwood *...
ing tiles are sound-absorbing, smooth-surfaced, easy to inatall . eaay to paint. For added
shopping eonveniencoJust say. Charge It
Aoootiieal Tile\VA'»a,
GLENWOOD PLAZA . . . Perry at Glenwood
THE PQyTlAC PRESS. THURSltAY. JULY 27, 1967
C—5
A Divition of MwS. S. KiotgoCeiwpiiywtHi Stem throughout Mm UnHodStatos, Conaila omituoito Rice
Dollar-Rama Discount Days f ;
COSTUME
JEWELRY
SAVINGS
Discount Price
2,.*t
3 Days Only
Horo’s a lovely collection to choose from, all styled to complement every fashion look. Just Charge It!
GOLD-FRAME WALL MIRRORS IN 3 SIZES
Our Reg. 3.88
3.00
3 Day* Only 17x22Vi’* keyhole, Florentine design; 18x25Vi” keyhole, Rococo design; 18x24” oval, Florentine design. Charge It!
ORGANIZE WITH HANDY PLASTIC SHOE BOXES
Our Reg. 48c
Ea.
-45-PIECE MELAMINE SET
Our Reg. 11.97 3 Day* Only
45-Pc.
Set
fOeOO
Lenora 45-Pc. Melamine dinnerware set in choice of 4 paiterni: FairHeld, RoMUCf Vineland* Greenleaf. Chip-and stain-resistante diibwashereafe. Colon suy bright, clear. Charge It!
Eaay-Care^ No Ironing Needed!
BOYS' PERAAANENT-PRESS WALK SHORTS
Compare at 3,49 Charge It
2.27
GE WALKIE-TALKIE
Guaranteed by Good Homekeepingl
WOMEN'S EIDERLON* ELASTIC-LEG BRIEF
NEW CORDUROY T-STRAPS
Our Reg. 2.97 3 Day* Only
Women’s high-riding T-strap casuals with adjustable hidden gores. Broad crescent toes, flexible soles. Cotton corduroy uppen in black, beige, olive, summer bronze. Sises to 10. Charge iti
3.00
Ducount Price Charge It
13.00
2’~74*
Our Reg. 2 For 94c 3 Days Only
Fully cut, white EiiderlonA panties in 56% cotton and 44% rayon fabric. Shrink resistant, styled for lasting comfort and guarantoM by Good Housekeeping. 2 panties per package. In women’s sizes 5 to 8. Shop Kmart where yon can Charge Ik • SpiUHLoEMsriMTM
CHAIR REPLACEMENT KITS
4^*3
OurReg.2.97 *et 3 Day* Only
Your
Choic«
Do-ikyonrself chair seat and back replaoement kits At Bk” or I” aermr-on or slip-on ebalra. Mother of Pearl pattern In gray; Dawn In grey-white, Ian, bine, yellow, red. Charge III
8'6"xll'6"
VISCOSE RUG
Our Reg. 13.88
*11
3 Days Only!
Nassau 100% viscose loop pile with cushioned back. Brown/black/white, beige/-brown/white, candystripe, avocado, pump- : kin, hlue/green. It’s serged all around! j
Uwllsd qraUlrrMeo* 8*M to Dsalm
COVERED UTILITY “SHOW-THRU" PANS
2ror*l
SUPER AEROSAL EPOXY ENAMEL 2 Fur *3
OurR.g.77eEiu,soar.	*,Pv
colors. 13-ot.* size.
SAVEI FOAM COOLER CHEST
|OurReR./.97 p ,	SDuytOnly]
; All lightweight foam ... will not riiwl...	A
: koefiM.r<Hul unddrinkMcollier longitr. Has i rugged aluminum haiiille. Shop Kinarl jjy i and save on this special. Liniil
THE “6IAHT TUFFY” 1-PC. PUY POOL
I Our Reg. 4.88
3 Day* Only
: Hcrc’a u huge (60** dia., 12** deep) pool for your youngster! Formed of tough linear polyethylene, it does away with the prohlenis of inflatable |>ools. Built to hold appaox. 140 gallons of water.
09.88
Anseoniatie S-8S first-class Su|ter K movie euniera features reflex viewing, 4 to I simuii lens, CDS electric eye, pistol grip^ Instant I'ooiling with new Kodak Super it eartridge. Charge It!
SAVE ON EXPERT WHER BALANCING 2«o
Our Reg. 2.58. 3 Days 2 wheels liulaneed (ttff ear) for tlijs low Kliiun price.
jmiNSON’S J-WAX KIT u
joo
I OurKvi-47,3 0.7.
GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD
:vl'

WATER JKB
Reg. 34.95 LUND "Chuck Stems” SULOMSKI
■lom cooco tltl, folly lamlnatad pf mh « gonjr, daor nctforal fintoli. C '
giifc
NOW 29**
Reg. 21.50 "LUND” SULOM SKI
Banana dyfo, loe-tip conttnictien,, whitn finish.
14”
ONE OF MIOMGM’S liRGEST SELECTIONS OF I WATER SKIS
Th
MoteMiMc
Reg. 34.95 VOrr«Lohis'’ COMPETITION SLALOM SKI
f Reg. 329.95
I Sahwl wliR» oriv natarel finl.lv • "w pnfoMloaal tapsr. 2 plus jlntew alwa for conlnl pnd
"Marlin" ; COMBI tz SKI SET 1%
NOW 24**
CYPRUS GARDEN “Trfatlei"
OonoM slyfo, fcD I Innath cprvp. fy/ngpipn*
4T“
19"
Rad Marina P anamal, whita || •hfoao, white vinyl ^
-- g
LUNDD^XE
"Capri" Combi SU
f M laminated cansliucltoa of ash . and mahc«^.
Wtew Eiiispis ipiriM
34" m
KLYSHRENE PADDLE BOARD
Reg. $50 3433
ADULT LIFE VEST............2.99
Rag. 6.95 SKI TOW ROPE .... 5.99 Rag. 8.95 SKI TOW HARNESS ... 6.99 Ra^ 10.95 SKI MASTER BELTS .. 8.99 PROFESSIONAL SKI MASTER VEST
Man's........15J9
Ladias* .....19.99 FOAM SKI BELTS...........3.99

3399
warns.	■Mteitaol
	HyoMrikMi UMtoSai
|S7nSisnsi	
IjLapwM	
	tlMMmSs
*1 M7Fri.*IUI	0^11!?% hN
Breeze through the sun life, the home life in our free and easy “matchbox” shift. They’re light, bright and ready for leisure. Ideal for patio or beach. Poplin blend with piping and 'pockets of contrasting colors. Strawberry and Green. Snrie Bine and Green. Lemondrop and Strawbeny. SJif.L.
Plenty of Free Parking at All R, B. Shape
m NIITMC. TEk-HUSON B SOqHEmS, BOSTH NIU PUU
^T'^ouse''of^^
MID-SUMMER CLEARANCE
CiflKt ViitiuA
FABRICS
ISuiDATWI
vauES
TO *2.99 ROW ORLY
Dratt
goods.
fabrics.
suitings, ate., etc. I LAST CALL coma and > gat'am at
SORW^HOMAILORDEKO^^
^ QcUdcH
FARRIOS I FIT TO • SEW
NATURAUZERS	PEDWINS
NOW *9*® Discontinued Styles Only	Men*s and Boys* NOW *6*®
Reg. $18.00	Discoiitinued Styles Only
MEN^S	American Girls*
FLORSHEIMS	HEELS
316*V18®®	$^88
Discontinued Styles Only	Values to $10.99
Valuee to $27.95	Discontinued Styles Only
Women*a	Special Bonus
Canvas Casuals	Women’s Slip On amis
$288	97* eih Wdh AUR %#
FolMslo3g.99	dl£E5 1Q-1Z UNLYf Nairow and Medium
OOLDEN
i needle
•FE 4-0266 Opan 61M to I Mon.,Thurs.,Fi1.,laL tussdayand WadnasdaytilO ^
TEL-BURON SHOPPING CENTER
Phon. 335.5471

Final $1
20" BREEZE BOX FANS
Finest Qualify, Full One Year Guarantee. Regularly $14.99.
Savings
Up To
NOWl
f]|88
MuBiMoltB
Back-t».SdioolWfid
SPECIAL EARIi
Savw now on Bov^ « Jackets and Wlnlo|' putehaseg made i n> of our loading iio n< ore includod.
flpCM. 6iM4tHPjL
UrElls Monday4alaid«^
CHARGE OR I TEL-HURON ^
GhilbB-J
a baa Your SaeurHyOliarte 1^^ erMiehicanBaakaidi
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WHAT’S UP
our prices are down
At the compact
SHOPPING CENTEI
si
on Tdeg
at W. Hnr o

(J-
^ 3M Color Film Processing Included
No Other Cost
Raaulcfr SiMctal
2* t. T.lt.r.ph Soyiil Oik ni.f'.au.
Sapor 6 H	3"
iashmatio 126	3"
RagularOmn	3**	1 a>*
136 20EIP	2"
135 20EIPASA64	3"	V
Color Film "So Good" You will Forget "It Cost less"
Tliefiameui Mont
TELpHURON SHOPPINQ I
55 S. TELEORAPH
FE 4-S567.

THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
BftpomFdr d Fall Marchandita
L¥ BIRD SALE
and Gills* Sno^uits, rCQCitt.10%Ofron hrough July 31. All ma brand garments
lAY-AWAY
FE 5^955 __
ENJ
■wnbM
weX.
JidjUS BKU lliEKS
Bit ItY
20 S. Ttlsgraph	Silver Lake Rd. and
Aoross from Tel-Huron	Dixie Highway
Hib Pile* Good Only at 71i*m Two Big Boy*
little dark crepe, sneb a pretty value
10’®

IK.......
*	Cmmingham’s
*	Winkelman^s
*	Csmnn’e	*
*	Kresge's
*	Sander's
*	1 Hour Valet
*	Jayson Jewelers
*	Cldldren's Slu^
*	Griswold Sporting
*	R. B. Shops
*	Beekwith-ETans
*	Shoe Box
*	Wrigley’s
*	Camera Mart
*	Petrusha & Sons
*	Golden Thimble
graph on Street
A
Ali^ninum and Crystal GUm

il
CAKE
SAVER
• IT'SBEAUnFUL ■	• And It's Exframel/
LOW PRICEDI •1M"TRAY
JAYSOH JEWELERS
FE 4-886T	Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. mi 9
Charge Accounts Invited - Easy Credit Terms
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C—8
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
10 A.M. to 9 P.M.
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Adoption Eases for Unmarried
Illegitimacy has trebled in the U.S. since 1940 - to 275, 000 a year — and to meet the problem, agencies are easing former policies governing adop-fions. They are aggressively seeking qu^ied ^ents.
Of s(»ne 2.5 miilicm illegitimate chiidren ot adoptable age, «iiy about 1 per cent have been adc^ted. Many of the hard-to-place children are nonwhite.
Occasionally now an agency will allow adoption by a single person, says a report in Today’s Health, a publication of the American Medical Association. Though that practice is still a rarity, some 25 children were recently placed with single parents across the
David S. Franklin, director of research at the Children’s Home Society of California says agencies now place as many as six children in one family. Fifteen years agq, the maximum was tiyo.
TTie rate of illegitimacy in the United States is . now nearly twice the rate of adoption, making present shortage a major problem to adoption agencies.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
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Viet Reds Master Ambush
C-9
SAIGON (AP) - Millenniums ago a caveman crouched behind a bmilder, stone ax in hand, and waited for his unwary enemy to t r u d g e up the trail. The enemy arrived, the ax swished through the air, and the ambush was born.
Today in Vietham the ambush has been raised to its hi^iest level of cunning and effectiveness by the Communists, vdio otherwise might have been defeated long ago by II. S. firepower in conventional battle.
It is the enemy’s most successful tactic by far and has given the Communists their most clear-cut victories over American and other allied troops.
Typical of these operations was a recent attack on a company of the U. S. 4th Infantry Division in the central highlands.
‘We were just sitUng. on the trail, taking a break, you know, and then old Charlie opens up vrith those damned AK47 assault rifled, and, whammo, we were really in the hurt iocker ,(trouble),” a corporal recalled.
In a way we were lucky. The Old Man (the company commander) wouldn’t let us bunch up, even though we figured we were almost home free.”	|
Lucky is a relative term u. Vietnam. Half the men of the corporal’s cwnpany were killed or wounded in three hours of savage fighting.
The Infantry company probably had been trailed by the North Vietnamese for days. When the troops took a rest break before the final climb up a mountain, Charlie, as American troops have dubbed their foe, saw his chance, sent snipers up trees and positioned assault troops for attack. The sudden burst of fire caught the Americans sprawled on the ground. Many didn’t moVe after the first volley, Courage and leadership got the Americans out of^what could have been a disastef.
A group of Marines near the demilitarized zone weren’t lucky.
Two companies saw a number of North Vietnamese trocqjs scurry across the open. They gave chase and wound up in the jaws of an ambush that cost them about 85 killed and 170 wounded. That acconnted for nearly every man involved.
It was three days before the Marines could fight their way back to recover some of their dead. The Communists had ambushed the battlefield and beat back the first attempt to get the bodies out.
Ambushes can be in dozens of categories. Tbree classics involve the “U,” the ‘‘Open U,” and the ‘‘L.”
WALK INTO ZONE In each case, an unwary adversary is allowed to walk into the kill zone where cross fire and terrain allow no place to hide, then is hit With everything available. Most of the damage in a well-executed ambush is done in the first five minutes.
’The Americans use the ambush, too. One night south of the Da Nang air base a Marine unit on ambush patrol began hearing Vietnamese voices and suddenly highted between 100 and 200 Vietcong bent on attacking the base. The Marines ignored the axiom that discretion is sometimes the better part of valor and opened fire. The patrol was badly cut up, but the shots alerted the big base to the impending attack.
The Americans also have de-velc^ed and refined a tactic called the artillery ambush. Long-range reconnaissance patrols filter through the jungle and mountains seeking out infiltrating units.
When they*spot one, they radio for artillery, and from vantage points adjust the fire as the enemy tries to escape.
L AMBUSH
Trees and Jungle
THE ‘L’ AMBUSH - This is the layout for nn ”L” ambush in Vietnam. As advancing forces draw near the base of the L, the guerrillas spring the trap. Those that try to
Rice ■ • :| ■■ Paddies j j";:;51'
AP wirtphoto
flee across the rice paddy can be cut down easily, while the remaining forces at the mercy of dug-in troops.
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OPEN U AMBUSH
Aufomatic Weapons VC Well Dug In	x
VC Units Pin Down Head of Column
I r

VC Well Dug In Aufomatic Weapons
■III
AssoufI Troops Poised To Close 'LT|

Machine Guns
VC Fires Down on U S. rroopT
VC riioj Ouwn on U.s'rroop, '
® ® © © ©	f■©
U AMBUSH
© © ©
Automatic Weapons
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THE ‘U’ AMBUSHES - These are the classic Vietcong ambushes — the Open “U” and the “U.” As U.S. forces enter the Open U, guerrillas open up with automatic weapons from well-dug-in positions. Special assault forces then move in to hit the head of
AP WIriphMi
the column. In the Closed U ambush the guerrillas simply wait until the troops enter the trap, then fire downward from elevated positions, thus avoiding the danger of hitting their comrades.
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C—10
THE
poVtia^
PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27. 1967
I Jacoby on Bridge
KOKTH	Zf
4 A82 V632 4 752 4AK74
VmST	EAST
4QJ109S	4754
4P1((7	4KJ94
4 96	4 1084
4Q1083	4J96
SOUTH (D>
4K6 4AQ85 4 AKQJS 452
North-South vulnerable North Eaat South 14
Pan 24 Pan 3 4 Pan 5 4 Pan 64 Fan
Opening lead—4 Q
Pan Pass 4 NT. Pass 5 NT. Pan Pan
By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY
Waldemar von Zedtwitz of New York has been one of the best bridge players in the world for 40 years.
■	You can’t be a ■great bridge I player and be
rstitiousbut I Waldy. has an I almost super-Istitious feeling
■	about the dialmond suit. If
JACOBY you pin *1*™ down, he will admit that he tends to bid doubtful diamond slams because be is lucky with them.
Of course, Waldy does a lot about making his own luck. He sat South and while the final contract of six diamonds wa optimistic indeed, we can’t find that he overbid at all.
His partner did hold ace-king-ace hut his two-club response shewed a good hand and We ml that North’s rebid to three diamond^ was a decidedly poor choice. With 4-3-M distribution he should merely have bid two no-tmmp over two hearts.
Waldy looked over dummy carefully and, with Waldy, fiiat means very carefully. He that tie needed a lot of^ luck to make his contract but that it would be a cinch if East held the king at the top of a three-card heart suit. Then he looked about for other winning ities and finally came up with a successful play.
He won the first trick with the king of spades and led out his five of hearts. East over-his partner’s seven with the nine and led the suit right back in an effort to make Waldy think that West held the king but Waldy had planned to finesse in any event and did
Then Waldy played two rounds of trumps and the ace of hearts. West could do nothing except discard.
Waldy ruffed his last heart. He cashed dummy’s ace of spades, ruffed a spade, drew the last trump and olaimed the rest of the tricks.
Lucky, but try to make the hand any other way!
Show Canceled
The Saturday perfwmance of ■‘El Teatro Campesino" in Dearborn has been canceled until further notice. Pontiac area persons holding tickets will be able t(M'Use them at later perfonp-anbes, to be announced when scheduled.
★ ★ * .
The show was a fund-raising event to help migrant workers in Michigan and California.
The Post Office Department has over 595,000 employes.
ROBIN MALONE
^ iKUoyvyoj AWSTTHWKrjM lbavims R7Reve/?,
PUMpy—I USUALLY &BTBhJOU0HISITOOUe RAS FORA MONTH
By Bob Lubbers
THE BERRYS
By Carl Gniber(

1 4
Pass	1	4	Pass	2 N.T.
Pass	3	4	Pass	4 4
Pass	5	4	Pass	5 4
Pass	54-	Pass	?
You, South, hold;
4AQ2 4K94 4AQ 4KJ976 What do you do?
A—Bid she hearts. This shows the kina of hearts and not a desire to play in hearts. Be-number yon have suppwted spades already.
TODAY’S (QUESTION You bid six hearts and your partner bids six no-trump. What do you do now?

AstroIosi(cal Forecast
By SYDNEY OMARR For FrMsy
"The wiM man controli hli i
suggestions. Recent t
ARIES (Atar. 21 - Apr. 1*); pressure Is relieved. Later you ca —-----------^s of anhancing Incoma pofan-
|se. Income potential
mind to do somathing,
j-.—	do no ___________ ____
host wtw do usually rtmain loyal.
a lavorabit,
GEMINI (May 21
bar resolutions ct-------
basic tasics accomplished, grandiose plans may only no irymi Imprtss you. Key Is to bo realistic.
CANCER (Juno 21 - July 22): with those who Inspire |ou. Avoid per-
Taka Initlativa. GENERAL TENDENCIES; Cycle hi for TAURUS, GEMINI. Special word CAPRICORN: chock home, real asti values.
Get (Copyright 1»«7, OanartI Faafurts Corp.)
YEAH,THAT'S IT—JUST KEEP PASSIKl' OUT HOT WATER TILL THESE PAWS ARE FULL AND I'LL WASH OUT HERE / I DON'T WANT TO BE LATE FQR. WORK ASAIN/
I'M TRYIN' TO BREAK THE SIRLS’^ HABIT OF CAMPIN' INTHE BATH- ^ room so LOhi<3,SO DON’T INTERFERE,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Doc. . , Favorable lunar aspect coincldts with change, opportunity far travol. Gain Indicated through wrltton word. Absorb knowledge. Stick to principles. Utlllzt Innate abllltlss.
CAPRICORN (Dap. 22 - Jan, 19): One who appeari ultra-practical rtally looks up to you. Rtspond accordingly. Reward due {or past efforts. DonT bo childish. If mature, your chances tor hspplnoss Increase.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Fab. 10)
V of activities. You fool b
CMOU, FREAKY^ I'a RACE VOU /fJTD THE ^ u;ater I ^			AH. ALOfJE 1 AT LASTl J
• IMT hr NU. Ui. TM. ks«. UI M Off.		7-27	
By Eruie Bushmiller
'Black Market in Viet Slowed'
. WASHINGTON (AP) - State Department probers report progress against black marketing in South Vietnam — but stress the fight is' far from over.
Deputy Inspector General Howard E. Haugerud of the State Department made the progress report in a letter to Oiairman John L McClellan, IL Aric., of the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations. ★	★	4
Haugerud said his recent inspection trip to Vietnam showed “there is still a black market, and I expect there Will always be one; but the level of operations is greatly reduced.*’
4	★	★-
He credited such measures as limiting items available in military post exchanges for cutting down the black market. Curtailment of illegal currency exchange operations also was reported by Haugerud.
General aviation accidents (nooconumrcial) accounted for ao per cent or 1,069 of the 1,340 civfl aviation deaths reported in 1966.
Mao Foes, Backers in
fierce Fight
SONG KONG (UPI) Hong Kong newspapers today said lundreds of persons have been killed and thousands injured- since- Sunday in fierce ifiasnes in Canton between ele-menw tJM- asdTigatnst Jdao Tsi-tun^.
Canton, South China’s largest city, was reported wracked by terror and confusion as nu-Oierousr amall clashes erupted round the clock. Pprts of the cUy were said to be under mar-ttpl law and curfews with liberation army troops having tsvubie containing rampaging fted Guard youths.
In another development in Communist China’s worsening inner turmoil, Peking radio euumed regional military commands were rallying to ^e support of Chairman Mao, whose shaky regime has been challenged by a rebellious military garrison in Wuhan, prsrfincial capital of Hupeh in central China.
Quoting arrivals from the China mainland, the Hong Kong newspapers said Red Guards, army troops and railway workers were involved in the Canton fighting that left streets littered with corpses.
The reports said the trouble began Sunday when hundreds anti-Mao Red Guards held memorial service for a sugar refinery manager and several compatriots killed recently by pro-Maro Red Guards..
HALL SURROUNPED Travelers were quoted as saying several thousand Maoist where the service was in progress and tried to storm it. Thousands of anO-Maoist reinforcements dashed to the scene and a four-hour battle raged through Canton’s streets. Armed troops quelled the fitting.
Reports said bodies still littered the streets as .late as Tuesday and were strewn throughout the subway station beneath the hall.
According to the arrivals, the pro-Mao youths later vented their wrath against railway workers and triggered a two-day disruption of train service between Canton and Hong Kong ’The Maoists also reportedly attacked army troops trying to restore order and repair damage to rail facilities.
In London, diplomatic sources said the prospect' of the collapse of Mao’s regime foreshadowed new and Serious problems for the West. One of the most, worrisome possibilities was said to be realignment of Moscow and Peking.
GROWING DISSENSION Diplomatic reports from behind the bamboo curtain have indicated growing dissension in the Peking hierarchy and a waning role for the army.
There were warnings Mao’s regime might collapse, if he failed to bring the cultural revolution under quick control and rebellious provinces back into line with Peking. The next two months were said to be crucial.
’The Hongkong arrivals were quoted as sayhtg the army had Imposed martial^w and curfews in several sectors of Canton and put all railways under military control.
Some said police stations in Canton also were blitzed during the height of the tunnoll. CONTINUED CLASHES Sunday’s major outburst was followed by continuing day and night clashes despite strong military pressure to keep order, the arrivals reported. They said an air of terror and confu^on reigned.
’The Mao - controlled Pel^g radio broadcast included accounts of army-led rallies in many areas which vowed the “resolute overthrow’’ of Mao’a chief rival. President Liu Shao-chi, and of army rebels.
*	* t.
The broadcast charged the anti-Mao defiance in Wuhan was the work of liu.
One Briton in 10 can expect to be serloualy injured or killed in a road acciident this year. VO p» cent of. serious injuries to drivers and passengers could be avoided by effective seat belts, it is believed.
THE POI^TIAC jPKESS. THURSBAY. JULY 27, 1667^
C—11
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I , ' ■;	-'r
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
Urbanization Alters Image of 4-H Youth
By JEAN SAILE Not so long ago you could bet that a 4-H Club member either kept a pig or grew com or fed a calf or did some other farm-related activity.
★ ★ ★
Now. it’s not so easy to spot one of the young people dedicated to service through Neart, Head, Health and Hands.
The image is changing, along with the character of ’tiie land7 . .Where once Oakland County was' largely agrlcnltural, it dally becomes more and more suburban. The decrease in farm children has caused a reevaluation of the traditional rural activity.
Today’s 4-H’er rides a horse, shoots a bow and arrow, drives a car, canes chairs, creates
fashion wardrobes, shoots a gun, d(^ exciting things on the trampoline and becomes quite knowledgeable about government. -
★ ★ ★
There are still animals and there are still garden and cooking activities, but the pr<^rtion of:Jroungsters Involved with such projects is declining.
NEW AREAS
TOe pn^arti, sponfebred by the Cooperative Extension Service of Michigan State University, has added such items as career exploration, decisionmaking, science, and public and international affairs at the request of the young people themselves.
Other areas covered are
conversation, family living, clothing, food-nutrition, entomology, personal management, photography,^ poultry, small enghtes, weather, safety and Junior leadership.
The programs are family af-. fairs, involving the parents as well as tljp youngsters. Mahy parents are among the state’s volunteer leaders who participate each year.
* ★ *
.A look at the widening world of 4-H will be granted Oakland County residents during the ^up’s annual fair Aug. 1 to 5 at its fairgrounds on Perry Street.
Young people between 8 and 18 interested in joining will be welcomed, according to Emil Fimbinger and Richard Brown, extension agents here.
CAN SHE BAKE A CHERRY PIE -Brenda Long, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Long, 284S Sleeth, Milford, can.
She turns out a mouth-watering delicacy during a foods preparation demonstration.
BACK-UP TEST — Automotive project drivers test their skills under the watchful eye of Ws. M. B. Norlin of Bloomfield Hills and Emil Fimbinger, county extension 4-H youth agent. This particular feat requires backing to stop as closely as possible on a white line.
BUSY GIRLS - Marlene Miller (left), 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Miller, 13375 Hess, Holly, and Bonnie Peace; 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Peace.
13327 Fagan, Holly Township, cooperate on a fashion project which produced the attrac-tive sheaths they wear. Marlane canes chairs in her free time.
Nancy Meinke (Left) And Joanne Davis Are Horse Lovers
Claudia Long, 14, Does A High Split On The Trampoline
JUNIOR MARKSMEN r- lYaining in the Oakleys of the county line, up for a skil) proper use of firearms is provided throu^	contest under careful supervision. The pro-
4-H. The young Dead^ Dicks and Annie	jeqt is a part of the club’s safety training.
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
D—1
Vance'slfeesponsibility for Army Moves in Detroit Questioned
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon is hard-pressed to'say whether Cyrus R. Vance has a legal basis in claiming “ultimate responsibility’’ for Army operations in Detroit.
★ ★ *
Under the military chain of
role in less clear-cut terms.'
Throckmorton, as commander of the special 'Task Force Detroit, “is directly re^nsible to the chief of staff of the Army," Gen. Harold,. K. Johnson, the Pentagon said.
d, Lt. Gen. John L. Throckmort<Mi is in charge id paratroopers ordered by President Johnson into the beseiged city and federaliaed National Guardsmen.
' ,	★ -k
But Vance, former deputy defense secretaiy who is*6n the scene as Secretary of Drfense Robert S. McNamara’s special assistant, said Wednesday that while Throckmorton is the military leader, “ultimate responsibility for hi# actions resides in
The Pentagon, questioned about this, described Vance’s
Six Lose Lives in Washtenaw Auto Crack-Up
ANN ARBOR <UP» - Six persons were kiiled and a seventh critically injured yesterday when their speeding car ran off a county road about IS miies northeast of here and rolled over.
★ * ♦ Washtenaw County Sheriff Douglas Harvey si|i<l rolled over at least seven times and struck a coil of underground cable in a field. The coil weighed about 8,000 pounds and almost split the car in two, he
Killed were Williaoi S. Cebul-sky, 22, Garden City, driver of the car; Gerald W. Buckraeir, 22, Plymouth; Buckmeir’s wife, Joanne, 17, and their daughter, Una, 2; Charles F. Bums, 22, Detroit, and Bonnie Lee Chase, 19, Brighton.
The only survivpr was Robert E. Wolf, 20, Novi. He was hospitalized in critical condition.
Pickup Points
LANSING (AP)—Secretary of State James Hare Wednesday designated all license plate offices as collection points for food and clothing .donated for victims of Detroit’s riots.
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Throckmorton is under instructions, the Pentagon added, to “be responsive to Mr. Vance’s instructions, keeping the chief of staff of the Army informed."
Ihere is no indication that Vance and Throckmorton have had any disputes, over the de-ploymlnt of troops during Detroit’s rioting.
★ ★ ★
But the ill-defined line of au-
thority raised doubts about whethm* in any-, disagremnent 'Du'oekmorton rightfully could refuse to go along with an instruction from Vance, a civilian holding no appointed or elected office. “"
He could, but it would be like suicide as far as his career is concerned,” one officer observed. “All Vance has to do is pick up the teiephone to get the President — the commander-ln-chief. Gen. Throckmorton would
be arguing his case with the Army chief of staff.”
* ★ ★
- Michigan Gov. George Romney said the situatimi passed from his control when the Army units entered Detroit Mimday
ni^t and Michigan’s Natiimal Guard was federalized.
Romney said Vance and Hu-ockmo^ “have not been consulting me’^ <m troop operations in the ciiy, but add^ he wasn’t disappointed.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27 J967
Dispute Ovet Israel Recognition Bars Refugee Repatriation
AMMAN, Jordan (AP) -dispute over three little words— State of Israel—is blocking the repatriation of up to 200,000 Arab refugees who fled across the Jordan River during and after the Arab-Israeli war.
With only 14 days to go, no applications have been fllled out for the refugees to return to &e west bank of the Jordan, which Israel occupied in the June war.
The Jordanian government has been urging the refugees to go bomb but it is not yet known hoW many want to.
The Israelis announced! that refugees could begin retuirning Au*. 10 provided their apppea-tlons were approved after secur* ity and health screening. SUPPLIED FORMS
Israeli authorities supplied 7, 000 printed application forms to Roland Troyon, a representative of the InternatiMial Red Cross committee in Jordan.
The Jwdanian auAorlties re> fused to accept the forms because they were headed in English “State of Israel—Ministry of the Interior.’’ The Jordanians considered this an attempt to squeeze out recognition of Israel as a nation, something the Arab countries have refused to do since the Jewish state was es-toblished in 1048.
All but a few of the forms were returned to the Israelis.
Jordan earlier drew up its own form for would-be repatriates but Israel rejected fliem without explanation. The Jordanians are reported insisting on a form headed by the Red Cross symbol and some such noncommittal wording as “application for repatriation.”
NO DIRECT NEGOTIATION
The Israelis have indicated privately they would accept such a form if Jordanian officials negotiate directly with them. But the Jordanians feel this also would imply recognition of Israel and open them certain criticism from the other Arab states.
families separated by the ceasefire line. But so far only 1,322 replies have been receiv^.
The repKes were on forms ilso unacceptable to the Jor-
danians because they bore the Jewish Star of David. The forms were returned—but after the messages were copied.
There was speculation that U.N. intervention might be in-
voked to break the deadlock. Nils G. Gussing, touring the Middle East as Secretary General U Thant’s special representative, was r^rted aware of the situation.
Hundreds of refugees continue to- move east every day from the occupied territory, but only 50 families—classified as hardship cases—have gone west officially.
The refugees in the Jordanian camps also are threatened by a food shortage if Lebanese dock workers continue to refuse to unload an American freighter
due in Beirut today with 4,700
tons of flour given by the U.S. government. The dock workers
are insisting Uiat the Arab ban on American and British ships be maintained.
“If that flour is not unloaded,” said a U.N. relief official in Amman, “it means no bread for the refugees here, and without bread many of the refugees will go hungry.”
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The Red Cross transmitted 65, 000 messages from Jordan the west bank for members of
Allegan Group Fighting Sale of Power Plant
ALLEGAN (UPI) - A group of residents has organized in an attempt to block the sale of Allegan’s electric plant to Consumers Power Co.
The group, headed by former Allegan Mayor Joseph F. Mosi-er, has filed a petition for leave to Intervene In the proceedings pending before the federal power dommission which must approve the sale.
Voters approved the sale of the plant in an election last January. The city is opp the intervention of the group known as “The Citizens of Allegan County, Inc.”
The group claims no provision was made in the sale terms for the preservation of Lake Allegan, an artificial lake formed by the city and said it organized to obtain fair and equitable rates and to preserve the lake.
COURAGEOUS BEAUTY -Linda McGlone, 23-year-old Farmingdale, Long Island, housewife, was crowned “Miss Day in the Sun” during the 88th annual Hudson River cruiM, sponsored by the Institute hr the Cri|q>]ed and Disabled in New York. About M08 bsuadlcapiped In^vlduals tM( jMTt in cruise. Mrs. MoCHomi wai jpm oI them, iMvtW dM m utiidal leg aincie tbs age of 9.
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--S —_____________________ -_____________PONTIAC.PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967	rx -
^	^	^	■'X	"	^	-------—---------—.'
B52s Hit Camp, Infiltration Areas Along West Viet Border
AIGON	R!t2 hnmh. hv TI R Smith ViAtnnmAsit nr mhnrt that tha Snviot'TTninn te	aI^ : xt rr • .	.
SAIGON (A|P) ~ B52 bombers, sweeping five miles in the sky along the Laotian and Cambodian lwrd#s, jpoured tons of bombs on Conununist camp and Infiltratlwi areas in two raids early today.
' * * ■
Medium-size bombs in saturation patterns blasted an enemy camp area In the central highlands ne»Pleiku end anothe^ jungle gathering point near the hard-hit A Shau valley farther NorUi.
the strikes by the eight-engine jets were the most significant war activity reported early today as heavy weather continued over North Vietnam, and the ground war again was marked by only scattered fights and Communist shellings.
★ ★ ★
Cloudy weather also restricted air raids over North Vietnam Wednesday, but military headquarters reported coastal strikes from Haiphong south to the border by Air Force planes and Navy jets from the carriers Oriskany, Bon Homme Richard and Forrestal. Pilots claimed widespread damage to trucks, bridges, barges, roads and rail lines.
GUERRILLA ATTACK In South Vietnam, guerrilla mortarmen lobbed 32 rounds on the town of Tan Uyen, about 20 miles northeast of Saigon, early today. First reports said three civilians were Idlled and 13 injured.
Five Americans were wounded lata Wednesday when a burst of Conununist artillery fire hit a U.S. base camp 11 miles south of the demilitarized zone.
In Saigon, Premier Nguyen Cao Ky announced South Vietnam’s armed forces would be increased by 65,000 men total of 700,000 and said the United States has agreed to equip them. This is 10,000 more than an Increase announced by Ky on July 21, and the revision appeared to result from the visit earlier this week by President Johnson’s special envoys. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and Clark Clifford.
★ ★ *
As he had before, the premier said most of the new troops would be militiamen of the regional and popular forces. He said the number of Revolutionary Development workers who operate the pacification program may be doubled frqm 29,000 to 60,000. But this will depend on the increase in the militia since they are supposed to provide protection for the paci fication program.
SUMMIT AGREED Ky said he also had agreed during his conferences with Taylor and Clifford to an allied summit conference in October in either Bangkok or Seoul.
Lt. Gen. Stanley R. Larsen, outgoing conunander of U.S. troops in the central sector of South Vietnam, told a news conference in Saigon he did not expect any more big battles In the coastal part of his area but predicted “mhny major battles to come” inland in the highlands ” along the Cambodian border.
★	* w
Larsen, who will become deputy commander of the Continental Army Command in Virginia, said the allies “have strong control’’ of the coastal area, which includes the -key cities of Nha ’Trang, Qui Nhoh and Bong Son.
He said he did not believe the Communists would find it worthwhile lo strengthen weakened units along the coast but would take advantage of the jungled border area.
VIET PROGRESS Larsen reported optimistically on progress in central Vietnam, in the past two years. He said 89 per cent of the roads are open, whereas most were insecure 6r in enemy hands two years ago. He said 200 miles of railway are open now, compared to 4o or 50 two years ago.
“Eighty-five to 90 per cent of the rice-growing area is now under government control, as opposed to 20 to 30 per cent two years ago,” Larsen said. He added that 90 per 'cent of the area’s population is controlled
by U.S., South Vietnamese or Korean troops but said he di<i not mean that that much of fbg sector is pacified.
A new development in peace prospects appeared today with a
report that the Soviet Union is ready to risk a brepk with Red China to brii^ peace to Vietnam with the condition that the United States stops bombing North Vietnam. The Tokyo newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun said Soviet
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin gave that word to visiting Japanese Foreign Minister Takeo Mild Miki went on to Poland for further talks on the subject with Foreign Minister Adam Ra-packK
The Japanese report said Kosygin told Miki last Saturday that the Russians would seek peace if the United States called an unconditional and indefinite halt to its bombing of the north.
but otherwise they would do.their meeting last month atlWarsaw that Rapacki told Miki their utmost to help Hanoi.	Glassboro, N.J., and Johnson the war is hampering East-West
’SAME OFFER’	reacted favoraWy, But the pre- reomciliation on other fronts
^	...	Ner added that the United but that prosnects for neace
told States bad made no concrete talks are fairly bright
fairly b^t
tion to President Johnson at| Japanese informants said in^unc^itkmally!^
?!	.	.... lUnited States stops the bombing
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D-4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
D%GauUes Canadian Venture Will Severely Test His Regime
By DAVID MASON PARIS (AP) - President CSuffles de Gaulle’s abortive Canadian venture vdll put trying test the loyalties of his Cabinet and his tissue^^thin ma-j<Hity in the French National
lie opinion is strongly pro-Is> rael.
De Gaulle also held that the United States was at the bottom of the world’s troubles — including the Middle East crisis —
because of tbe Vietnam war. Most Frenchmen are opposed to the U.S. intervention in Vietnam, but this broad condemnation was too much for even some Gaullists.
De Gaulle bad clashed earlier with some of his supporters when he demanded, and finaliy got; special powers to bypass Parliament in the economic and social domains. The new assem-
bly was in effect shelved for six pionths just after its election in March.
Despite tbe president’s 4 a.m. arrival hour today. Premier
Georges Pompidou, 16 Cabinet I fallout as he Stepped from the ministers and a dozen other offi- plane with a broad smilO beartl-cials loyally turned out at Orly ly shook hands with the welcont-airport to welc(Hne,Um home, ers and talked for five minut^ l^e president seemed not the arotmd a potted plant in 4he least perturbed by tbe critical! greeting salon, speaking rapidly
with expressive hand gestures, nodding, cocking his head, shifting his shoulders from side to side and several times drawing ripples of laughter frenn the attentive officials.
An accident of the calendar • It is vacation time in France ■ may save the 76-year-old presi-
lOs attorney, Charles Moon, said the 21-ye^ld Osborn was told Tuesday that his two Jyear sentences on burglary and stealing charges had been OHnmuted by Gov. Warren E. Heames.
An Investigation later revealed a Riafu in the records at tbe penitentiary. Osborn should not have been released.
When be found out, Osborn tiedded to return votuntarlly. i fie made pins today to take a bus back to Jefforsoo City.
Analysis j
dent from an immediate political confrontation.
But it appears certain to come, not ordy as a resuird fais conduct in Canada but also because of other actions which have aroused public (pinion.
De GauUe was elected to a second seven-year term in 1965 and assembly elections vrtiich come every five years were held last March. Thus the Gaullists face no major test at the polls in the immediate future, although there will be a handful of assembly by-electi(ms and local elections in the coming months.
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But when the assembly goes back to work in early October,
the sparks may begin to fly.
The Canadian crisis, which grew out of what appeal^ to be a deliberately charted effort by de Gaulle to boost French Canadian separatism, stunned opinion in France. But so far there has been no concerted riposte by de Gaulle’s political opposition.
Most pditicians and many officials have left the capital for the beadles and the mountains. Political and business activity is grinding to a near halt as it traditionally does in late July and August.
Newspapers remain one of the few sminding boards at .this time of the year. Almost unanimously — with the marked ex-ceptim of the Communist party’s Humanite — they have sharpfy rebuked De Gaulle for his behavior in Canada. RALLYING CRY
Ordinary Frenchmen, including many firmly in de Gaulle’s camp, can make no sense out of his trumpeting the French Canadian separatist rallying cry of “Long live free Quebec.’’ Frenchmen couldn’t care less about French Canadian separatism. The iM'esident’s espwsal of the separatist Cause was widely interpreted as a violation of an often-voiced Gaullist tenet on Interference in^ the affairs of another coantryv
Lesser French officials left behind when de Gaulle went to Canada would make no effort to explain away what happened there. “You can understand our position,’’ one told a reporter.
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' There is some speculation that de Gaulle was trying to take a cut at both Britain and the United States by encouraging the French Canadians to go their own way. This would, it was suggested, swing a segnient of the North American continent toward Paris and away • from Britain, Ottawa and the United States.
When de Gaulle steamed off for Canada on a French warship on July 15, he left behind a nation already upset by his recent moves in the international araia.
ARAB CAMP
The president pinned the blame for tbe opening shots of the Arab-Israeli war on Israel, swinging from a neutral position to the Arab camp. French pub-
Freed Convict Didn't Say No
> SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -f '* John Monroe Osborn says he was very puzzled when authorities at the state prison in'Jefferson City released him.
He didn’t ask questions and returned to his parents’ home in ^iringfield.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1»67
D—5
Bone-Weary Detroit Firemen Called BraVest in City History
DETROIT (AP) - Firemen straggled out of the seemingly endless smoke.
Some were choking, many were burned and all 1,^ were grimy. They plodded, heavy-footed, hone-weary as they Returned home to families for the first time in three days.
nently, by ,, electricity that sear^ his face and head.
Heart attacks felled four fire-
They Idt behind one coitu-ade slain by a sniper arid 89 hijured comrales. They left 1,^ piles of water-soaked rubble or smoldering embvs, en route to rest on their first six-hour leaves before returning to quell iqore fires.
They barely heard" Chief Charles Quinlan proclaim that “never in the 100-year history of the Detroit Fire Department have we seen the equal to this.' COURAGE LAUDED He said the men displayed “exceptional courage and devotion to duty under the most adverse conditions.”
From 8 a.m. Sunday to 12:39 a.m. Wednesday, fires erupted almost continuously and spread quiddy. .
Palls of polluting smoke expanded ovd* vast areas of metropolitan Detroit.
In the black fog the firemen attacked the inferno with hose and water, chemicals and chopping blows of their axes.
SILENT RIOTERS But silent rioters on rooftops assaulted'them with a kind of fire they were powerless to combat — gunfire.
Friday, if arsonists and fire-bombers halt their activities, the firemen will mass in uniform for the funeral of fireman Carl E. Smith, 30.
' A sniper shot Smith, who had cut short an emergency sick leave to help battle rioters’ flames, as he stood in front of a fire station Monday. Smith, father of a 4-year-old boy, will be buried in the fireman’s plot of Mount Elliott Cemetery.
The unarmed firemen often became easy sniper targets and “the men had to crawl under the trucks to escape the gunshots,” abandoning some fires temporarily, Quinlan said. National Guardsmen rode shotgun with each truck.
80 HOSPITALIZED
Of the 30 firemen hospitalized, most suffered burns. Fireman John Ashby, 24, was in critical condition after his metal helmet struck a high-voltage line. He was blinded, perhaps perma-
Senator Will Hold Probe of Blood Banks
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., yesterday picked Sen. Edward V. Long, D-Mo., to conduct a hearing on operation of the nation’s blood banks.
Long is author of a bill to exempt community blood banks m relation by the Federal id^TOmmisston.
-Tra(
Hart is chairman of the Senate Antitrust and Monopoiy suhconunittee.
« The Missourian filed his bill as a result of a complicated case involving private and community blood banks in Kansas City.
“This proceeding stems from an ill-conceived conclusion by the FTC that human blood is an article of commerce and is subject to the antitrust laws. From a legal standpoint, this is the same as equating blood and tomato juice.”
Pills that could take the edge off destructive, aggressive emotions may be available in the 1980s.
Working from three locations,
where all equipment was assembled, firemen covered crazy built of blazes.
Many blazes burned unattended at thd peak of arson activity. On ordinary summer. days.
there would have been no more than 12 or 13 fires and rarely at the same time.
One fire official said Wednesday the men “have just gottoi to the point where they feel they
tfan’t do it any more — but if the alarm bell rings they go. All th^ were getting were catnaps, sleeping on the concrete floor, on the streets and on the trucks.”
intw-urban help. °
There was internaticxial and I u rban conununities dispatched firemen
and machines to help. Buhets cut iuto much of the The Windsor, Ont., fire de- equipment, and Quinlan esti-partment sent men and equip- mated the damage to machin-ment from Canada. And 35 sub-lery at $100,000.
Bowes more fires txroke out Wednesday. But Robert Ti^, secretary ipf the Detroit Fire Commission, said the men were sUll “lining up like S formatiOD of tanks ready to go.”
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D--6
. TllE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
Viet Toll Slightly Lower on Both Sides Lost Week
SAIGON (AP) - CasualUes were slightly lower on both sides in the Vietnam war last week, with the decrease reflecting another lull in majOT ground fighting.
SNIPER VICTIM - Mrs. Helen Hall, 45, of Chester* field. Conn., was one of 10 killed Tuesday in Detroit rioting. Mn, Hall was slain by a sniper’s bullet while in her motel.
Riot Means Extra Work for Morgue
DETROIT (AP) — For some, the trouble is over, the worry is past.
They have been listed in flie record book, their card is cross-filed and indexed, they have been tagged.
★ ★ ★
Their bodies — about SO of them —lie inside the W a y n e Copnty morgue.
Some are frozen.
COVERED WITH PAPER Some, from hospitals, are washed and covered neatly with white paper.
Some rest on metal autopsy carts, waiting to be identified and examined.
★ ★
Tied to each right wrist is a paper identification tag about four inches long: Name, address, morgue number. In 10 cases the name is: “Jdm Doe.
Each body has its morgue number scrawled on the bottom of one foot.
MOSTLY RIOT VICTIMS “About 30 to 35 of them are riot victims,” said Dr. John F. Burton, acting medical examin-er.
Tbe two - story, gray brick building with gray metal shutters, gray cement trim and a gray metal lightning rod appears calm from the outside.
★ ★ ★
But inside, “We’re Jumping like Mexican jumping beans," an attendant said.
Morgue workers surrendered to the tumult of Monday’s rioting in Detroit and gave up attempts to notify survivors of the victims.
niREE CLERKS In the main lobby, behind an Orange counter, three clerks fill out the record book and file the cards.
Inquirers stand Sround uneasily. Some peer intently for several minutes at the handful of Polaroid pictures of the John Does. Could it be he? Could it be she? They aren’t sure;
In its weekly summary today, the U.S. Command said 164 Americans were killed and 1,442 were wounded, compared with 175 killed and 1,443 wounded the week before.
The number of Americans missing or captured last week Was not immediately available. ★ ★ ★
South Vietnamese military headquarters said 183 govern-
ment troops were killed, 523 were wounded and 33 were missing or captured last week. In the previous week, Vietnamese casualties were 202 killed,
543 wounded and 3 captured.
ENEMY TOU,
missing or I week compared with 1,995 the I In the i>revIous week these to-week before.	tals Were 25 killed, 46 wounded
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of the enemy were killed last I missing or captured last week. I in 1846.
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PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
D—7
Nation s Editors VHw Riots as Biracial Crime, Back Trooii Use
By the Associated Press America’s newspaper editors almost to a man view Deb^it’s riot as an outbreak of biracial hoodlumism and endorse the use of federal troops to quell it.
Jower appropriate to such a basic task, the supremacy of law and order in the cities of this nation. The young hotheada< have had their day—and nigb^ —and have made an intolerable
mess of them. It is time for oMerf wiser and mqre decent : p^ple to force the hotheads to idool off.
SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER
•What happened in Newark, arid now in Detroit, is far more than a simple protest reaction. Such riots are eruptions of utter lawlessness that cannot be con-!d in any way. They are
almost purely criminal Outbursts. They have absolutely no social excuse, arid they can and must be contained by whatever measures are necessary. If continuing anarchy requires the
counterforce of the U.S. Army (based and ecumenical protests I to learn from toe two days of —so be it.	of Selma and other communities buniing, looting and killing in
-—^	- where there was an absence of Detroit. What took place in De-
MIAMI HERALD: This na-meaningful communications be- troit Was plain and simple crim-tion had some important les- tween while and Negro people... inalify totally divorced from toe sons to learn from toe broadly iBut there are no such less<»s IciviTrights movement.
Some, including the New York Times, were critical of political maneuvering by Republicans and Democrats during the early hours of the outbreak.
But for toe most part the editors, according to a nationwide survey by the Associated Press, call^ for firmer leadership by — as toe Denver Post
SIZZLEB
wote—“older, wiser and
decent people to force the heads to cool pff.’'
Here are some sam^s of toe nation’s editorial opMont NEW YORK ITMES - The nation has cau^ for deep concern if toe leajfers of both political parties aire unable to forget political Considerations when murder^ arson and looting are sweeping some of its major cities ... It is no disgrace to either toe governor, a Republican, or to Mayor Cavanagh, a Democrat, that the situation in Detroit slipped out of local and state control. The fact that Gov. Ronuiey may be toe Republican presidential candidate next year may explain but not excuse President Johnscm’s nervous political posturing at this critical time ... but ... the statement issued by the Republican coordinating committee is a flagrant outrage. .. This shabby statement insults toe nation’s intelligence when it asserts that President Johnson’s veto of a loosely drafted “crime control bill’’ for the District of Columbia contributed to an upheaval a thousand miles away in Detroit.
WASHINGTON EVENING STAR—The rioting in ftetroit, which is just this side of anarchy, apparently is being brought under some semblance of control. But it has exacted a fearful toll. Gov. Romney and Mayor Cavanagh acted firmly on Sunday when the rioting be-pn over a trivial incident. But it soon became evident that this was not enough and the governor asked toe White House for help. The President acted quickly. ’The President’s response was toe right one.
NEWARK EVENING NEWS-To a Negro minister standing in a burning street and to President Johnson, reluctantly ordering out federal troops the situation in Detroit looked the same. In almost the same words both agreed “It’s not a matter of civil rights; it’s out-and-out lawlessness.’’
In the case of Detroit, as in Newark and other American cities wracked by rioting, burning and looting, there is ample evidence of destructiveness to support this melancholy conchi-
This kind of destruction now being practiced cannot build a better life for Negroes in America.
CHICAGO DAILY NEWS-’The contest for leadership of America’s Negroes, and ofjtoe civil rights movement, has gone into a critical stage. The extreinists "are at least temporarily in control; They’re having their try at smashing their way to racial equaUty. Except to satisfy the blood lust of the instigators, it serves no purpose, pf course. But who is to '^persuade the Negroes that there is another way except their own responsible leaders?
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MINNEAPOLIS STAR - ’The smoke drifting above Detroit and Nriw York’s Spanish Harlem should be a si^al for a concerted, bipartisan, no-holds-barred attack on toe evils of slums and the lack’of employment and education opportunities ... toe blame must be spread nationwide, from the craft unions which have ignored demands for equal employment opportunities to the school boards which have condoned second-class citizenship status citizenship status for minority children and finally to lawmakers at all levels who have tried to make the slums Jnvis-Brie, h(g>ing the festering {nob-lems would disappear.
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D—«
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
2 San Francisco Publishers Back Tailing News(>aper Bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - Edi; tor and Publisher Charles Thi-€^ot of the San Francisco Ou-on-icle said today either his newspaper or the rival San Francisco Examiner eventually would have failed but for an agreement which made them partners in all but editorial operations.
Thieriot said the commercial agreement ended “the type destructive competiticm” that has killed newspapers in some American cities.
★ ★ ★
“I believe the realignment has served the best interests of
employes, readers, advertisers and the community as a whole,” said Charles L. Gould, publisher of the San Francisco Examiner.
G. 0. Markuson, executive vice president of the Hearst
Cost of Living Jumps Again
Boo^t Lends Support to LBJ Tax Hike Bid
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The cost of living jumped three-tenths of 1 per cent in June — for the third straight month lending support to President Johnsm’s arguments for a tax increase.
The Labor Department reported yesterday that the Consumer Price Index rose to 116 per cent of its 1957-59 average from 115.6 per cent in May. Looking at it another way, a housewife June had to pay $11.60 for the same market basket of goods and services that cost her $10 nine years ago.
Higher prices for fruits, vegetables, meats and other food caused a large part of last month’s rise in living costs. Leaving out food prices, which tend to fluctuate sharply from season to season, the cost of living advanced two-tenths of 1 per cent:
Wholesale prices, meantime, rose five-ten^ of 1 per cent, matching May’s Increase foreshadowing further advances in retail prices later on this year.
★ ★ ★
Johnson can be expected \ cite tUs spring’s jump in living costs as aMtional evidence that higher taxes are needed to fight Inflation. ’The President is believed readf to send Congress a tax message any day now. SHARP RE’PORT But Johnson’s emphasis on inflation as one reason for a tax hike — paying for Uie war in Vietnam is another — drew sharp retort Tuesday from Sen. William ProxAlre, D-Wis. chairman of the Senate-House Economic Committee. He said that higher taxes would stop prices from rising and might throw the economy into a recession.
Administration economists concede that some price increases can be expected in the-m 0 n t h s ahead, even if taxes go up. Where they part company vdth Proxmire is on thequestionof how much slack there is in the U.S. economy.
‘Grogg National Product (GNP) — A dollar measure of the nation’s total output of goods and services — grew only $4.5 billion in the first quarter of 1967, and $9 billion in the second. The President’s Council of Economic Advisers figures that the economy’s productive capacity growing enough to absorb GNP increases averaging about $12 billion a quarter without inflation.
• ★ ★ ★
But in the absence of a tai Increase Jdinson’s ec ««wmic advisers figure t h a GNP would surge ahead by $15 billion in the last quarter of 1967 and on into 1968. And since the ecMKHny can produce only $12 billion worth of goods each quarter, $3 billion of that $15 billion would be in the form of . higher prices, they argue. RAISETAXES Tlieir prescription: Raise taxes to take that $3 biUion out of file hands of consumers and businessmen; then there’ll be no
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Corp. and general Hearst Newspapers, joined them irt urging congressional approval of a proposed antitrust exemption which would permit the merger or joint commercial
opei^ation q| a newspaper, deemed to* be failing. The Examiner is a Hearst newspaper. PRIOR APPROVAL Thieriot said the Justice Department approved the joint
operation in San Francisco before it went into effect Sept. 12, 1965.
He said the bill is needed because the government has taken a different position in challeng-
ing the joinf operation of thelfrom nnorning to evening pub-iical, circulation, advertising, Tucs(»i, Ariz., Citizen and the lication and the two papers accounting and bustoess opera-Arizona Star of Tucson.	merged tiieir Sunday editions tions for both newspapers. The
^	^	^	into the Ekaminer 6^ Chronicle, two papers equal amounts
In the San Francisco agree- San Francisco Newspaper of stock in that firm and spUt its ment,, the. Examiner switched I Printing Co. took over mechan-1 revenues.	■
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
D—»
Supplying Needs of Riot Refugees Is Big Problem for Detroit
DETROrSr (AP)—The massive task of {Ht>viding riot refugees with gopm rangiiig from tomato soup to toilet tlssue>-and providing it fast ^ faces Mayor Jerome Cavanagh’s beleaguered Committee on Human Resources Development today.
“Housing’s not the problm," said Ralph Rosenfeld, an assistant to Director Philip Rutledgej “Food is.”
Rosenfeld said a hotel taken over by the city for the purpose of finding places for refugees to live had attracted only eight families.
*	*	*
’"Apparently, they’ra moving In with friends,” he said.
Offers of places to stay from neat, peaceful and nearly all* white neighborhoods went almost unheeded.
★	★	★
But Mrs. Genevieve Ross and her four children, whose home was destroyed by fire, found themselves living with the six members of the Arthur Bush family, miles from the wholesale destruction of the major Viot area.
'ALL RESPONSIBLE’
“We’re all responsible for these, things happening now,”
' said Bush, a manager for the Detroit Edison Electric Co. think there are lots of good people in this area and this type of action may help improve their understanding ... and improve their acceptance of their own responsibilities.”
Across the Detroit River, police in Windsor reported many displaced persons had sou^t refuge in Canada. Many Negroes, police said, had crossed the river in boats and were staying with friends.'
★ ★ *
Border restrictions, eased for i the first time since the rioting broke out, made it “easier to get out of Detroit than to get in,” a U. S. immigration official
County AFlrCIO Council set up a motor transpwt pool to deliver the goods, the spokesman Ided.
Other than milk, the committee sou^t only staple foods.
Understaffed medical clinics on both the east and west sides were kept in operation.
★ ★ ★
“We’ll just have to tell everyone they’re open and take our
lumps if we don’t have the doctors to man them,” Rosenfeld said. He added the conunis-,sion would have to find ways of transporting people needing medical attention from clinics
with m medical personnel to better staffed clinics in other parts of the city.
Food distribution centers were set up in diusches throughout the city.
Many were giving out food on I cases of price gouging on hard-1 as being sold for a dollar a a tneal-to-meal basis. Others to-get food. The boosts were 100 quart, were m’ovidihg it on a daily per cent in some cases, Rosen- “I cmi’t imagine anycme being basis. “Hoarding could become feld said.	as insane as that,” he said,
a inroblem,” Rosenfeld said.	★	★	★	“It’s a perfect way to get
The committee also reportedi Milk was reported in one case|bombed out of bu^ess.”
■\
M
ONTGOMERY

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But back in the riot-ripped areas of the nation’s fifth larg- . est city, the problem was not s much finding a place to live. It was finding a way to live. ' Incomplete estimates by the committee indicated thousands of people vrould be out of Jobs > after the mess is cleaned up— because their places of work have been destroyed, left as -twisted steel girders growing a strange weeds from beds o nibbled brick.
STORES BURNED Mothers with dependent children on welfare had no sure way of getting tlieir checks every two weeks. And even if , they did they had tipuble cashing them—most of the supermarkets and grocery stores which customarily had performed the service had been looted and burned.
How to get the food to the uncounted thousands was major problem. But where < get the food to give them was a bigger one.
★ * ★
A vanload of cold cereal had been donated by the Kellogg Co. of Battle Creek, the Interfaith Emergency Center which was established to meet the crisis, reported. A spokesman fw the center said the Borden Co. i Detroit came through with 5t, half-gallon containers of much needed milk. And the Wayne
Blame Women for Lower Pay
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Employers are increasingly more willing to accept whoever is best qualified for a job, regardless of sex, the college placement director of Ohio State University's College of Commerce and Administration has found.
Miss Jean Francis, first woman to hold this position, notes, however, that the salary range of the jobs women get is lower than for men. “But that’s not the employer’s fault,” she says.
“Women often accept Jobs for nonbnsiness reasons . for their glamour or because of geographical location.” . The mature woman, the director points out, shpuld be realistic about her employer’s needs. r She shouldn’t expect special privileges so she can be home at a certain time for her children or take days off to accompany her husband on bdsi-ness trips.
Five millioD women in the U, S. today use wal contraceptives.

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D—10
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
Soviets Lead U.S. in Most Space Programs Soys NASA Chief
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Soviet Union leads the United States in most major space programs, U.S. space chief James E. Webb has told Congress.
Sen. Spessard L. Holland, D-Fla., a memter of the Senate Space Committee, said he was amazed at Webb’s assertions of Soviet space superiority.
“That’s far different from his testimony on Uie space autbor-izatiotl,’’ Holland told the Senate Appropriations Committee before which Webb
Wednesday.
Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, warned senators they will have great con-
cern if the Soviets “are putting very heavy payloads overhead eveiy hour and a half.”
* 4	★	★
He indicated the Soviet pay-
loads might involve missiles or other weapons.
Webb appeared before the panel to battle for the full $5,1 billion in space funds sought by
President Johnson. The House earlier voted to cut $123 million from the space authorization, while the Senate chopped out $249 mUUon.
Ridt Caused AutQ Output Slowdowns
DETROIT (UPI) - The Motor City turned out few new cars this week. Four days of rioting hit the auto industry just as it was gearing up for tte new 1968 model runs.
No plants have been damaged and only three are located near the central section of the city.
Chrysler Corp., which accounts for three of the six passenger car assembly plants located in Detroit and its suburbs, suffered heavy absenteeism when it began 1968 model production Monday. Chrysler plans to introduce Its new cars to the public a week ahead of its competitors. But only 5,550 new cars will be produced this week.
★ * *
The riots in the city, along witii the state of emergency and a 9 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. curfew created a hesitancy among plant workers to venture onto the streets. A restriction on the sale of gasoline Monday has been eased, allowing motorists to fill up their tanks. .
Ford Motor Co.’s assembly plants are located in suburban Dearborn and Wayne, but absenteeism was high. Ford ending its 1967 model production this week and most of the cars are rolling off assembly lines in other states.
The car companies, like most other major employers in the Detroit area, have gone radio and television and advertized in local newspapers to tell their employes when to report for work.
General Meters Corp. has only one final assembly plant in Detroit - the CadiUac Division operation, which is in the midst of model changeover.
Special Tactics Against Snipers Urged by FBI
NEW YORK (UPI) -An FBI manual on riot control has advised police officials all over the United States that snipers should be controlled by specially trained policemen using special weapons, it was disclosed yesterday.
The manual, entitled “Prevention and Control of Mobs and Riots,” has reached most of the nation’s 40,000 police agencies since distribution began last April.
Its..recommendations are
believed to have influenced police activity in suppressing current racial uprisings.
The FBI said countersnipers ahould be used to handle snipers instead of police officers using their service revolvers and shotguns in aimless firing at buildings and rooftops.
The trained countersniper should be equipped with high-powered rifles with telescopic sights, the manual said.
MIGHT INCITE MOB The manual warned against shooting over the heads of a threatening mob because might incite the mob to further violence.
It said the premature use of any kind of excessive force “will only contribute to the ' danger, aggravate the mob and instill in the individual a deep-rooted hatred of pplicet” The book said one of the basic causes of racial unrest in the United States was “lack of confidence and even anhno-lity” regarding police on the part of substantial numbers of minority group members.
★ * ★
It said where lack of confidence was justified “police should be quick to make whatever changes may be. appropriate.”
Tlie manual said tactical s|teps la handling a riot should indode containment and isolation of the mob, dispersal, arrest of leaders add others ate have loanuaitted ci&lnal acta, and prevention of regrouping.
#\Aontgomery
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the PONTIAC PRES^, THITBSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
D—11
Treasury's Borrowing Plan Expected to Boost Interest Rates
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Treasury Department’s plan to borrow |15 billion in new cash < durfng the 8l|t-month period which ends in December is expected to boost interest rates.
It also could give a sense of urgency to President Johnson’s proposal for a six per cent surcharge on individual and corporate income taxes which thus far has gotten a cool reception In Congress.
demand” on the money market.
But Frederick L. Deming, undersecretary of the Treasury for monetary affairs, told a news conference the borrowing shouldn’t have a tremendous impact on interest rates^ which
One reason for the surcharge would be to hold down interest rates and help stem inflation.
Some, officials are convinced that without increased taxes the natioha will suffer serious inflation late this year and earl^ next year.
Treasury officials conceded Wednesday their plans for borrowing new money would represent an ‘‘obviously substantial
Tankers for Oil
Getting Bigger
Disaster Off England Not Forgotten, Though
LONDON (UPI)-The Torrey Canyon disaster notwithstanding, oil tankers are getting bigger.
The Torrey Canyon, about 118,000 deadweight tons, last spring cracked in two on Seven Stones reef off southwest,England and spilled roughly 100,000 tons of oil into the water. Beaches were spoiled, marine life and wildlife suffered.
But oil must be shipped.
Romiya Izuta, chairman of the Japan Tanker Owners’ Association, predicted in Mexico that 500,000-ton tankers would be operating by 1980.
The increasing demand for supertankers has been phenomenal.
AT END OF 1968
At the end of 1966, Lloyd’s Register of Shipping reported that of 249 tankers on order, 85 were as large or larger than the Torrey Canyon.
Hie men who design the supertankers and the firms that operate them know that the growth in size of the vessels raises the serious problem of what would happen should there be another giant .freighter accident.
Ways and means of avoiding such disasters already are under Intensive discussion.
Izuta’s forecast was nothing new.
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGNS Japan and Norway have been making experimental designs of 500,000-ton tankers.
Other studies have been made of ships which would be 1,500 feet long.
The Torrey Canyon's length was 970 feet. Estimates are that a half-rniUipn-ton tanker would be about i,300 feet*
The touchiness of the public and the awareness of oil officials of public worry since the Torrey Canyon’s loss was illustrated with the recent opening of Gulf Oil Co.’s new terminal at Bantry Bay in southwest Ireland.
Dr. J. McAfee, senior vice president of Gulf Eastern, in opening the terminal on Whiddy Island said, ‘‘We are keenty aware of and most sympathetic with the concern of governments, local authorities and private individuals in such cases and have pledged ... to do all in our power to prevent any such' incident arising from this project.”
Met Twosome in Reserve Talk
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Shortstop Bud Harrelson and pitcher Don Shaw of the New York Mets were ordered to report to their Army Reserve Boards today-.
Harrelson was scheduled for a meeting here, while Shaw flew to New York for his conference.
They rejoin the Mets in Los Angeles Friday.
already have increased substan-fially in recent months.
He said the money market had anticipated an evmi l^her figure.
The assessment of new cash needs. Denting said, was based
on estimates of spending and tax receipts.
It indicated a slightly higher level of spending than Johnson proposed in his budget for the fiscal year which began July 1,
and slightly lower tax collections as previously reported by Treasury officials.
‘The new mmiey would supple-m«it regular tax collections and would be designed to make ends
Several months ago, officials I Some of the 815 billion already i through December to carr/ the estimated the need for new caSh has been borrowed. Some will government over periods of rel-from July 1 through December be borrowed during the last five atively light tax collections.
31 at $12 billion. Even-this was months of the year.	Deming said much of the new
82 billion higher than the new	★	★	★	borrowing would be repaid dur-
m^y raised durhig the samel The Treasury normally bor- mg the heavy periods of tax dol-period of 1966.	irows new money from July I lections next spring.
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D—la
THE PONTIAC ?RESS, THURSDAY. JtTLY 27. 1967
Defense Dept. Identifies 56 Yanks Killed in Viet
WASfflNGTON (AP) - The Pentagon has issued a list of 66 American servicemen kill«l in action in Vietnam.
Another 23 men were li as musing or captured.
Here is the defense department’s list of Vietnam casualties.
Killed in action;
;. WIMIt L. Davis, Lu-
CALIFORNIA - Spec. 4 Charles V. Aylor, Rialto; Sot. Rockwell G. Jaajlson, Torrance; Spec. 4 Philip A. Ferro, Aorth-riaoe: Spec. 4 Daniel R. Flaneaas,
INDIANA — PIC. Freddy R. Gore, Mlchlflan City; Pfc. Floyd R. Noe, Hun-llngtxjrg.
KENTUCKY — Pfc. Milford G. McKee, Sloans ValMy.
NORTH CAROLINA — Pfc. I
OHIO — 1st Lt. Fred G. Bragg Jr.. Neark; Spec. 5 Tyrone Combs, Dayton; CpI. Jerry R. Spitler, FredrIcksburg; Pfc. Steve B. Fenko, Cleveland; Ptc, Eddie C. Gibson, Cleves; Pfc. Francis A, Hughes, Dayton; Pfc. Michael J. Shehl, Akron.
/ZZ9KEEGO
TONIQHTTtlS and 9:IS P.M.
PENNSYLVANIA - Platoon Sgf., Kenneth L. Colvey, Mill Hall; Spec. 5 Ronald E. Meckley, Denver; Pfc. Gerald E. Davis, Bethlehem.
SOUTH CAROLINA - Spec. 4 F _. Horlback, Mount Pleasant; Sl Patrick D. Lucas, Lancaster.
TENNESSEE - Capt. Brian W.
; Spec. .
food III, Memphis; Pfc. Dan VI r., Memphis.
TEXAS - Sgt. ,
Archer
len, Houston; Pfc. Dallas; Pfc * Ar-'aso; Spec. 4 Eddie S.
Sprin«r,
___. ...j, El Pas
Williams, Houston.
NAVY
WISCONSIN - Pfc. Donald R.
Oshkosh.
CALIFORNIA -Union City.
Hospital Corpsman l.C.
FLORIDA	____
lohn J. VanVIeck, Clearwater.
MICHIGAN — Gunner's Mate I.C. Oliver P. Damrow. Kinde.
MARINE CORPS
_MICHIGAN _ Lanpe CpI. Dennis D.
WASHINGTON - Lancs CpI. Michael
C. Jones, Seattle.
AIR FORCE
ALABAMA - Airtnan l.C. Ronald F. Poole, Montgomery.
ARKANSAS - Airman 2.C. Charles R. Humble, De VallS Bluff,
HAWAII - Airman 2.C. Jerald K. Sumida, Kahulul.
MICHIGAN — Airman 2.C. Charles F. Boss, Ann Arbor.
MINNESOTA - Staff Sgt. David A.
Fasnacht, Janesville.
MISSOURI -‘rice, Florissant.
NEW JERSEY - Airman l.C. John ,
TEXAS — Airman 2.C. Charles D. 'ard, Portland.
Missing to dead—hostile: army
ARKANSAS — Spec. 4 Ronald E. Crain, Jonesboro.
CALIFORNIA - Sgt. Elmer F. Kenney,
Cottonwood.
NEW MEXICO Cabrera, Gallup.
Ptc. Guiller
Pic. Edward A.
Missing as a result of hostile action:
Sgt. Cordlne McMurray Sgt. Owen R. Montgomery Spec. 4 Pernell R. Claud Spec. 4 James M. Haider Spec. 4 Charles M. Judge Jr. Spec. 4 Jerry D. Lanier Spec. 4 James F. Schiele Pfc. Gary T. Coleman Pfc. Willie K. Fullllove Pfc. John A. Harlan
Pfc. Joseph L. Miller Pfc. Stanley A. Newell Pfc. Richard R. Perricone Pfc. Salvatore F. Polizzi Pfc. Roger D. Segers Pfc. Troy L. Sexton Pfc. Robert A. Strange Pfc. James. L. VanBendegom
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S.. .. .
FAMILY STYLE FUGHT Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Twellman and their 12 children of Anaheim, Calif., set a new single-family record for the St. Louis, Mo., operations of American Airlines. The 14-member family is pictured at the Lambert-St. Louis Airport
AP WIrepheta
after spending three weeks visiting relatives in eastern Missouri. The children range in age from 2 to 17 years. Twellman, 36, said the round-trip fare under a family plan cost $1,149.54.
News of Area Service Personnel
A request from Lance Cpl. Robert E. Lapish serving on a “Sniper Platoon” in Vietnam: At the present time I am a Marine serving in Vietnam. It came to be known that you might be able to put me in touch with persons interested in writing servicemen in Vietnam. Any help that you could give me would be greatly appreciated.”
L/Cpl. Robert )); Lapish 2311382-USMC
Headquarter Co. — 3rd. Marines “Sniper Platoon” F.P.O. San Francisco, Calif.
Marine Staff Sgt. M. .A. Hawes, stationed at the Marine Corps Recruiting Substation, El Cajon, Calif., has been named “Recruiter of the Year” for the Southern California and Southern Nevada area.
Hawes, the son of Mrs. Martha Carmean of 22 N. Tasmania, has also received a special award from the El Cajon Chapter of the Veterans of Foreign Wars for instilling patriotism in the youth of his community.
Hood, Tex., as a tank mechanic.
Pfc. Gordon Doyon recently received the Navy Commendation medal and the right to wear the combat “V” for heroic achievement while in service as a scout sniper in Vietnam.
Doyon, son of- Mrs. I. Doyon of 54 Dakota, voliuiteered to assist in disarming and recovering the enemy wounded after a raid last January. While working, Pfc. Doyon was wounded by an explosive device which detonated as he attempted to cross a wire barricade.
James D. McKay, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. McKay (rf
HAWES	MAIN
WO Milford L. Main received
the Purple Heart for wounds received when his helicopter was shot down in Vietnam.
Main, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Main of Hartline, Avon Township, has just, returned to his unit after spending a month in the hospital.
Brothers Clark and Jack Hobby, sons of Mr. and Mrs. John Hobby of 3749 Percy King, Waterford Township, have been promoted to specialist 4th class.
Jack, 21, is currently with the 297(h Transportation Co. in Vietnam. He left for Vietnam last September and he will be discharged in October.
His brother, Clark, 20, left
entered. He is stationed at Fort ' Kelly of San Diego, Calif., en-
tered the service in 1942. He has served in World War II and in Korea.
Sgt: Michael N. Davis, son of ir. and Mrs. William Davis of )98 Beacham, Waterford Township, was' recently discharged from the Army. He entered the Army in 1964.
The past 2% years were spent on an Army base in Munich, Germany.
He attended Waterford Kettering High School.
LETTER-LINE Raymond ^riano U.S. 55895389 Co. B 3rd Bn. 39th Inf.
A.P.O. San Francisco, Calif.
96371
WO 1 Milford L. Main W 3156271 174th A.V.N. Co.
A.P.O. San Francisco, Calif. 96355.
007 to Continue Capers Without Sean Connery
AS\ ■
1 Writer
By BOB THOMAS^
AP Movie-Television LONDON - Q. Wither James Bond?
A. He is headed for more sex-charged film adventures — without Sean Connery.
The word; cqmes from A.
R. (Cubby)
Broccoli, who with coproducer Harry Saltz-man discovered^ the unparalleled THOMAS •gold in the supergimmicked spy travesties, from "Dr. No’’ "You Only Live Twice.” The disaffection of star Cohnei^ from the series is well known and apparently final. The Broc-coli-Suiltzman decirion is apparently final, too.
“We are going ahead with the Ties without Sean/’ says roccoli. “We. don’t want an actor to appear in films he not enthusiastic about. Even if changes his mind, that will not affect our decision. We are looking for a new , James Bond.”
NO SOUR GRAPES Sour grapes, anyone? Not for Broccoli, a big, friendly ‘ man who has nothing but pleasant thoughts about the entire 007 caper. Thie films have mdde him many times a millionaire, and he is likely to glean more millions from the Ian Fleming stories. He and Saltzman own seven more of the novels. "Our next one will be ‘On Her Majesty’s Secret Service,’ and we will shoot it in Switzerland, England and France, said the producer. “We won’t start filming until August of 1968,' so that will give us plenty of time to find a new James
“I think the audience is ready for a new one. Sean Connery has been a great James Bond, but it is time to move on.
“We’re getting lots of applicants; in fact, I get phone calls every day. Just yesterday I heard from a man in Vancouver
who , looks pretty good. One thing is certain; Whoever he is, he’ll have to be British. That is i^ecessity.”
The public already has been confused by a proliferation of Is; Columbia’s “Casino Royale” featured the spy in a variety of guises, none of them Connery. Yet the fifth of the official Bond entries, “You Only Live Twice,” followed soon after and is doing the usual smash
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New York, he is scheduled to leave for Vietnam in September.
134 W. Beverly, was recently promoted to captain. Currently stationed at Plattsburgh A i r
As a KC-135 pilot, McKay conducts air refueling operations to help maintain the Strategic Air Command. He joined the Air Force in 1964.
Spec. 4 Raymond Soriano, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Soriano, is currently stationed in Vietnam. He went there last December.
Soriano; who was drafted in April 1966, took basic training _ at Fort Knox, Ky. He worked S-at Pontiac. Motor Division be- " fore entering the Army.
Col. William D. Kelly recently visited his mother, Mrs. Rosella Kelly of 3461 Squirrel, Pontiac Township, after retiring from 25 years of service in the Marine Air Force.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
E—1
at Wisner Called Off
Lack of Interest
Cited as Reaspn for Cancellation
• By BRUNO L'KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press The seventh annual Detroit Lions’ Ih-tra-squad scrimmage scheduled Saturday for Wisner Stadium has been cancelled.
The. decision was reached following a discussion of all parties involved.
“In view of the apparent lack of advance public interest, if has been decided by all parties involved to call it off,” said one of the sponsoring officials.
FIRST IN 1961
UNIQUE S(X)RING
Th^ offensive unit “won” H-8 and 14-13 In 1956-57 and the defense “won” 15-14, 8-0, 15-14 and 15-6 in the years 1958-61.
In 1962 before 6,200 at Wisner, the offense won 21-12 and before 7,300 in 1963, the defense was again beaten, 21-12.
In 1964 a regulation game was played for the Scooter McLean fund at U. of D. Stadium and 18,000 watched the; Blues under quarterback Milt Plum defeat the Whites under Earl Morrall, 10-0.
The following year back at Wisner, 8.300 saw Plum’s Blues again defeat Morrall’s Whites, 28-6.
Last year, back to the offen.se versus defense plan, 7,000 witnessed the defensive unit’s 17-12 “victOTy.”
In view of the cancellation, the Community National Bank, sponsors of the event, have decided to donate $2,000 to the Salvation Army in lieu of the loss of proceeds which annually went to a local charity.
AT TRAINING CAMP
Softball Garnet Slated
Two games are on tap this evening for teams In the city st^all recreation program. Both are set for 6:30 p.m.
Ron’s Roost (13-3) takes on Local No. 594 (11-8) in an American League game at Beaudette Park, while Timberlanes-2 (HM) meets Huron Bowl (7-7) at North-side.
City W Teams to Play
Tonii^f’s Junior baseball game at Jaycee Park has been cancelled and instead, the Teamsters No. 614 class A baseball team will neet CIO Ko. 594 at 6;00p.m.
Swimmers Reap Medals
U S. Trackmen Set to Join 'Harvest'
People who have purchased tickets can obtain their refunds at any branch of the Community National Bank.
churning TO RECORD - Nfark Spitz, 17, of Santa Clara, churns his way through the water toward a world mark of 2:06.42 in the men’s 200-meter butterfly in the Pan-American Games at Winnipeg, Canada, last night.
The first sponsorship of the intrasquad session began in 1961 at Wisner Stadium after five full dress scrim-magea at Cranbrook.
In 1960 at Cranbrook, an estimated 4,000 people jammed the practice field area to watch the scrimmage when a sudden thunderstorm hit the area and produced a quagmire of mud and damaged lawns from cars and people rushing from the storm.
WINNIPEG, Canada W The United States entered the fourth day of Pan-American Games action today with 11 of 15 possible gold medals bundled up and its powerful track and field team yet to explode opto the scene.
The talented U.S. swimming team Wednesday night accounted for five gold medals in an opening six-event program which produced two world records — hy a couple of phenomenal kids.
Mark Spitz, 17-year-old wonder from Santa Clara, Calif., won the 200-meter butterfly in 2:06.42, shattering the world mark of 2:06.6 set by Australia’s Kevin Berry in the 1964 Olympics.
Canada’s 16-year-old Elaine Tanner snapped a string of five straight U.S. triumphs with a superb women’s 200 meter backstroke effort of 2:24.44 smashing the world record of 2:26.4 set by South Africa’s Karen Muir in 1966.
In 1961, another storm hit Wisner Stadium shattering lights. About 2,000 braved the weather to watch the defense whip the offense 15-0.
Bengals' Al Kaline
During the scrimmages at Cranbrook, a unique scoring system was .set up awarding the defense points for such things as stopping first downs, recovering fumbles, intercepting passes, blocking kicks, etc.
From 1956 when the first such scrimmage was scored at Cranbrook the defense held the upper hand, having “won” three of (he first five.
Ready for Return
BAL-nMORE (ff) - When the action starts, the American League’s two top hitters Al Kaline of the" Tigers and Frank Robinson of Baltimore — step off the field and out of uniform.
That’s the way it’s been since the two stars were injured exactly one month ago today.
L«ague rules say that once a game begins, a player on the disabled list cannot remain in uniform.
With the Tigers in Baltimore for a fame tonight, Kaline is expected to start for the first time since he'-broke his hand ramming a bat in the rack.
Robinson isn’t so fortunate. He damaged some optic muscles when he smashed into Chicago's Al Weis trying to break up a double play. The nerves controlling Robinson’s vision were shaken up in the coiiision and now he sees everything in double, vertical vision.
But he’s hopefui.
long as six weeks and its only been four.”
He can reduce the double vision to one image by closing his right eye, but then he loses his depth perception and still can’t play. Hitting in batting practice, he must dip his hedd as if he were looking at the ball by gazing into a viewer.
With his head in that position, it is aimost impossibie for him to hit well— although this, too, is improving.
State Mat Champ From P. Northern in Tryout Bid
POSSIBLE SURGERY
If Robinson's sight still hasn’t cleared up in six weeks, there is the possibiiity of surgery, which is successful. in three out of four cases.
Even tiwugh he’s been sidelined for a month,^binson stiil leads the league in hitting and is among the top five in home runs and runs batted in.
“It’s coming back to me, said Robinson. “I can see it getting better with every week. They said it could take as
“We lose two runs a game when he is out,” said manager Hank Bauer, “ono he drives in and one he scores.”
Frank Lafferty, a June graduate of Pontiac Northern and the state 180-pound ciass A prep wrestling champion, will face his next hurdle this weekend in his bid for a spot on the U.S. junior wrestling team which will compete in Europe next month.
Along with four other Michigan boys, Lafferty Will'compete in a sectional elimination test Friday and Saturday in a bid for one of 12 berths available at a training and selection camp that opens Aug. 6 at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center.
Meanwhile in training camp yesterday, the Lions went through a brisk head tramping sesshm which the coaches termed the “best we’ve had yet.”
To boost their offensive line prospects, the Lions obtained Robert Ziolkowski, a 6-foot-5 and 270 pound tackle from the Green Bay Packers for an undisclosed draft, choice.
A former University of Iowa lineman, Ziolkowski was the seventh choice of the Packers.
There were 56 players in uniform yesterday. Missing were Nick Eddy, Mel Farr and Paul Naumoff who are in the college All-Star camp; Lou Slaby and Jim Gatzke out with injuries; Tom Myers and Bob Kowalkowski in Army Reserve camp and Dick LeBeau who is a holdout on his contract.
LeBeau’s absence h^s now reached the $1,100 figure in fines for the II days he has missed under the rule of $100 per day.
In yesterday’s scrimmage, quarter-, backs Karl Sweetan, Milt Plum and rookie Tim Jones alternated on offensive plays, with Amos Marsh and>Tom Nowatzke doing most of the ball carryings
In their 27 games without him, the Orioles have been held, to two runs or less 15 times.
“It’s tough missing a chance for another triple crown,” said Robinson, “but right now I’m more concerned about just playing again.”
Lafferty, wrestling in the 192-pound division, earned the trip to Normal, lU., by winning along with 11 others last weekend in regional competition at Ad-rian.
Kimball-Ehret Team. Set to Defend Title at Flint Course
The 12 survivors at Chicago will Join those still on hand from three other sectionals in the training camp. From those 48 boys in the camp, two teams of 10 wrestlers each will selected to compete starting Aug. 22, in Bulgaria, the Junior World Wrestling Championships.
Judy Kimball of Sioux City, la., ranked eighth last year on the LPGA’s list of money winners and a sizable share of her earnings came in the Yankee Women’s Open at Flint.
,The JWWC program in the United States is conducted by the AAU and Olympic personnel. Heading the Michigan delegation to Chicago is John Rollins, coach at Lansing Everett High School.
Miss Kimball, who teamed with Gloria Ehret in winning the Yankee championship, finished last season with earnings of $17,468.
Losing Matnrjan Puts Bite on Pan-Am Foe
Tomorrow, Miss Kimball and Miss Ehret will start defense of their Yankee Best-Bail crown in play at Willowood Country Club, located on Maple Road two miles east of Dort Highway.
MRS. MAX EVANS
The Kimball-Ehret duo posted a 199 score, last year to win by five strokes over the teams of Gail Davis-Sandra Haynie and Clifford Ann Creed-Margie Master.
Other rounds of the $^,006 tourney are slated for Saturday and Sunday.
WINNIPEG, Canada (fl — You might say wrestler Alejandro Zawadski of Argentina is a hard loser.
The Argentine lightweight was dis^ qualified in Wednesday’s Pan-American competition for biting the left index finger of his opponent, Ray Lougheed of Canada.
“He just about bit my finger off,” said Lougheed, 34, a railway brakeman from Moose Jaw, Sask. Zawadski refused to leave the mat until he was dragged off by teammates.
Mrs. Evans Adds Medal Title
■ \ '
It was a lirst for Mrs. Max Evahs of Southfield in this .year’s Women’s Metropolitan Golf Asjteiation medal play tournament which came to a close yesterday at Partridge Country Club near Mount Qemens.
Mrs. Evans, who won eight weekly WMGA events last year, had never won one of the two major titles the group awards each year — the medal play and the match play — but she moved into the winner’s circle yesterday by finishing 14 strokes ahead of the pack.
The new champion put together rounds of 90-86-87 for a 263. Taking the runner-up spot was Mrs. G. F. Langford of Dearhorn Heighto with a 277.
Mrs. Henry Prandek of Dearborn carded a 281 for third place.
Mrs. Evans started the final round yesterday with an 11-stroke advantage and added to the margin despite problems off the tee and in the fairways.
Rut on the green, she was almost
flawless. Mrs. Evans had five one-putt greens on the froqt nine and added three more one-putters on the final nine.
. Defending champion Mrs. Nick Panasiuk of Elmstead, Ont., was forced to bypass the .tournament b^ause,of the rioting in Detroit.
Pacing the first flight was Ms. Peter McAlpine of Southfield with a 279. Mrs. Douglass Denton of Detroit carded a 301 to lead the second flight and Mrs. Wesley. Freeman posted a 315 In winning the third flight crown.
flexing its muscles in Saturday’s opening finals including the 10,000-meter run, javelin and shot put is tabbed to take at least 18 gold medals on the men’s 24-event program.
The U.S. basketball team Wednesday continued to make a walkaway of its quest for a fifth straight Pan-Am title by whomping Peru 93-37 with five players hitting double figures.
The U.S, cagers now stand 2-0 after opening Tuesday with a 131-43 clouting of Colombia.
feat came |n a 4-3 opening loss to defending champion Cuba which Wednesday downed Mexico 4-1 to stand 2-0.
Other U.S. aquatic victories Wednesday — all on Pan-Am record-breaking performances — Were scored by . Don Havens, 19, Granada Hills, Calif., in the 100-meter free style; 15-year-old Catie Ball, Jacksonville, Fla., in the women’s -200-meter breast-stroke; Pam Kruse, Pompano Beach, Fla., in the women’s 200-meter free style, and spring-board diver Sue Gossick of Tarzana, Calif.
In baseball, the U.S. squad won its second straight game 8-3 over Puerto Rico and stands 2-1. The Only Yank de-
Miss Tanner also may dent U.S. aquatic superiority in tonight’s five-event program which includes the women’s 100-meter backstroke.
Also on tap are the lOO-meter back-stroke, 200-meter individual medley and 400 free style relay for men and women’s 400-meter free style.
Uncle Sam’s wrestlers could come close to sweeping all eight gold medals in tonight's closing competitipn, with Oklahoma City’s Wayne Baughman already owning the 191-pound crown.
Before the swimming winds up next Tuesday, the United States may have grabbed all except two or three of the 33 gold medals.
The Yank track team which begins
Flyweight King Retains Crown
BANGKOK (41 — Scotland’s Walter Me- * Gowan loomed today as the next title opponent for flyweight champion Char-tchai Chionoi of Thailand following the latter’s impressive victory over countryman Puntip Keosuriya.
Chartchai retained his 112-pound crown Wednesday night by scoring a third-round knockout over Puntip in their scheduled 15-round title bout.
McGowan, who lost the crown to Chartchai last December, was among the estimated 4,000 spectators who saw the Thai titleholder win the opening two rounds, putting on a dazzling display of combination punches.
Chartchai’s next defense is likely to be against McGowan in September,
Heading U. S. Squad
WORLD MARK - Elaine Tanner of Vancouver has reason to smile. She set a women’s 200-meter world back-stroke reewd in the Pan-Am games yesterday. Elaine, 16, took the eveijt in 2:24.44.
east LANSING (41 - Michigan State coach John Benington has been named coach of the U. S. team to compete in the World University Basketball Games Aug. 26-Sept. 5 at Tokyo.
Benington will hold preliminary workouts Aug. 8-17 at the University of San Francisco. He will take a 12-man team and three officials to Japan.
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E—2
Skiers at Tn
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 27. 1267
ify Camp Enjoy Snow
TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) — Traverse City has snow — regardless of v^at the thermom-etef la trying to tell natives and resorters.
Michigan winter resort operator who lost their flannel shirts
in 1965 because of the lack of snow — but got part of them back I^st winter--aren’t quite ready to thumb their hoses at the weatherman.
interest an experiment at the Traverse City Holiday Ski Hill, where the Unit^ States Ski Association is conducting a summer skiing camp.
*	The snow here, valued at
But, they are watching viith $5,000 and weighing m«e than
ANNOUNCEMENT!
Notice to Pontiac Motor Local 653 U.A.W. Members and Retired Members. Due to the present condition which is beyond our control the Annual Picnic which is scheduled for Sunday, July 30, 1967 has been canceled.
Announcement will follow regarding a future date.
Local 653, UAW Pontiac Motors Wayne Annabel-Pres. Bert Hanson-Sec.
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9,000 pounds, is plastic and may start a trend.
Hie plastic snow is a product of HoUey Plastic Co., of Warren, headed by Dan Hooley, who invented the “snow.”
HoUey is on the board of directors of the USSA, He started working 15 years ago tql develop aids to faster and bett^ skiing. He was the first to develop skis with an “L” shaped edge and was first to msJce fiberglass skis and introudce wood on metal skis.
Several ski camps in the U.! operate in the summer but their main course is to provide a conditioning program, .training films and coaching without actual practice.
* ★ ★
Here, the youth get actual practice.
Vojin Baic, competition coordinator for the central division of the USSA, said the ski camp here is Uie first of its kind in the country and for the first time skiers can practice while they learn in the summer^
Baic said that to cover a hiU completely would cost from $40,000 to $50,000 at p r e s e n rates. When the demand becomes greater the cost wiU be cut accordingly, a company spokesman said.
Curfew Violations Imposed on Twins
NEW YORK (AP) - Manager Carl Ermer of Minnesota Twins ,said Wednesday night he had fined eight players for violating curfew.
Ermer said that after Tuesday night’s game here he established a 1:30 a.m., EDT, curfew and then pulled a bedcheck which found the players ■ ig-
The names of the players and the amount of the fines were not disclosed by Ermer.
Lands Prep Star
MILWAUKEE (UPI)-Coach A1 McGuire of Marquette, whose basketbaU team is made up primarily of former New York City schoolboy stars, said Wednesday that New Yorker Terry' McQuade of Bishop Reilly High School, has accepted a scholarship to Marquette.
McQuade, 6-4, averaged 21 points and 22 rebounds a game in high school.
NEW YORK (AP) - Ralph Houk managed a smUe despite another defeat and gave BiU Monbouquette a wave: “Long two innings, eh, boy?”
Was it ever!
Monbouquette, a pitching retread from Boston and Detroit, once again showed the Yankees and Manager Houk his appreciation for giving him a chance at avoiding early retirement.
★ ★ ★
The 30-year-oTd right-hander stopped Minnesota Wednesday night on three hits without a run for nine innings—the first seven perfect innings—before leaving for a pinch hitter in the 16th.
The Twins finally beat the Yankees 3-2 in the 18th, gaining split in the twi-night double-header and ending their seven-game losing streak. Rod Carew singled with two out off Thad Tillotson, reached third catcher Jake Gibbs’ wild throw an attempted stesl aqd scored on an infield bouncer by Rich Rollins that went for a hit.
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LONG STRETCH—Minnesota Twins’ Cesar Tovar makes a futile slide toward second base as New York Yankees’ Ruben Amaro awaits the toss from catcher Jake Gibbs, a toss that arrived in time to halt the attempted steal In the
second inning of the first of two games last night in New Y(»:k. The Yanks took this game, 5-1, but the Twins bounced back to win the nightcap in 18 innings, 3-2.
Ex-Tiger Loses Turn on Hill
Joe Pepitone slammed two homers for three runs and Steve Whitaker singled and homered for two more as the Yankees grabbed the opener 6-1 behind Steve Barber and Steve Hamilton.
★ * *
“Ralph told me he was only going to use me two innings because I was supposed to start Saturiday,” Monbo said, “But he
FIRST GAME
MINNESOTA	NEW YORK
«brhbl
Alliion If VarsallM » Klllabraw 1b Oliva rf Tovar cf Rollins 3b Ztmrman e Kostro ph Nixon c QuIlicI 2b
Boswell pr Grant p Caraw pb
____	. NawYork 3. 2B-Clarka
(2), Tovar. SB-Carew.. HR-Alllson (U),
------- - — Whitaker (9). SB-Ollva,
- - .Robinson. , SF-
Tovar, Hagan.
Miami Archer Leading Women at World Meet
AMERSFOORT, Netherlands (AP) — Mrs. Nancy Myrick of Miami, Fla. took the lead in the women’s world archery championships Wednesday with a score of 133 points after the first round at four distances.
•R ★	★
With Maureen Bechdolt of Cincinnati compiling a score of
,108 for third place, the U.S. women also took the lead for the team title with a total of 3,304 points.
Ame hingquist of Sweden paced the lA men with 1,144 pcunts, four more than runner-up Ray Rogers of Muskogee, Okla. Sweden also led for the men’s team title with 3,355 points.
.J!irednesday!s called for each male contestant sihoot 144 arrows, 36 each at 90, 70, 50 and 30 meters. The 56 women competitors shot at 70 60 50 and 30 meters.
0 0 0 Whitt 3b
asked me after the ninth if I felt okay and I told him I did, so I went on.”
★ * ★
'I had you ali set up, didn’t I?” Houk said as he left the clubhouse after the ?7 innings that came within two of the longest doubleheader in history and was the longest in Twins’ history.
“I needed the victory, had to leave him in,” Houk said earlier, showing his confidence in the veteran. “He’s pitched good his last seven games.” WON’T START Monbouquette, fll-1, didn’t get his first victory with the Yankees and now he won’t start Saturday, but he had to be mighty pleased with his performance.
.19 9 19 1 tlx
irsallM » 7 9 3 0 Clark* 2b 9 0 0
Tovar 3b 9 0 0 0 Whit* 3b r----------
Caraw 2b 7 110 Manila 1b i ‘b 4 1 0 0 EHoward e 4
0	0 0 0 Varbanic p 0______
1	0 0 0 Trash ph 10 0 0
0 0 0 0 Tlllotion p 0-----
0 1 1 WRobnm rf 7 0 0 0 0 Papllon* cl 7 12 0 7 110 Whitakar If 7 ' * * 3 0 0 0 Amaro ts i . -
"W^h-ph ^oV
Oliva rf Allison If ValdSDlno Nixon c
0 0 0 0 A
Uhlaandr cf -7 0 1
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Brundage in Moscow
MOSCOW (AP) - Avery Brundage, the American presi-mmpetitiw denfnf thrlntenmtiomit ^yi|j-" r pic Committee, has arrived here to attend the Moscow Spartak-iad Sports Meet and to hold talks with Soviet sports officials.
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“That’s the longest I’ve, pitched since June, 1966,” said the nine-year veteran, who was a free agent for three Weeks trying to hook on somewhere before the Yankees picked him up June 2. He had pitched only two innings this season for Detroit before the Tigers released him.
Series Players on Yearn
WINNIPEG, Canada (API-Two regulars on the U.S. base-, ball team in the Pan-American Games here played in the College World ^ries last month. They are second baseman Mike Lisetski of Rider College and first baseman Mark Marquess of Stanford.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
E—3
WMntrtay't RtMilh YorK (>2. AUnnnota 1-3, 2nd llinningi
■M<on 2, California t Washingtan <, Kanua City I aiavatand at Chlcaoo, rain only 8*ma» ^^oKd.
TMty't OMntt
^Callfomla (McGlothlln 9-2) at i
bMrolt (McLain U-11)
(Dlllman M), night Kantai City (Nash 10-10) at Washington (Piscual »-n, night '
. Clavaland (TIant at Chicago (Hor-‘ Ian 12-3), night	i
' ■ ’;m
'V.A'?-'

inA
Mtrolt at Chic iaitimora at C
California at Washington, night
-----,-u.. -* York, night
in, night
It. L
Chica.. .,. Cincinnati .

San I PIttst Phllaaan Los Ang Naw Yo Houston
Naw York 11, San'Francisco S Houston 3, Phlladalpr * Cincinnati 7, Atlanta .
St. Louis 4, Chicago 2
gama>_caln
Todays ........
Phlladalphia (Boosar 2-1) at San Fran-alsco (McCormick 13-4)
Cincinnati (Ellis 4-7) at son «-4), night Pittsburgh (Fryman 1-3) at Houston (OlustI 7-f), night
Naw York (Bannatt 1-1) at Los Angelas (Drysdala S-11), night Only gamas schddulad.
It. Louis at Atlanta n
II Fransicco, night
____ _______________latl, night
Pittsburgh at Houston, night Now York at Loa Angalas, night
Major League I =Leaderfr—J
ttUNS-McAullffa, Oat. 6ii B.Roblnson,

■nrwriiKiF oOiTso pO} Tovirs Minn.s RUNS ratted IN-YastrzamskI, Bost. ‘'Illabraw, Minn., 70; Conigllaro. Bost. F.RoMnson, Balt., »i F.Howard
DOUBLES-Tovar, Minn., 23 Campanarls, K.C., 22 YastriamskI, Bost. 1*; Agaa, Chic., 17i Alvis, Cleva., 17. Johnson, Balt., 17; MlnchSr, Callt., 17.
TRIPLES-^nday, K.C.,	4; Scott,
R6st., 5; Conigllaro, Boat., Si Knoog,
Callf„ S; Butort, Chle., 5; - - " ‘
Varsallas, Minn., 5.
HOME RUNS-Klllabraw, Minn., 2f;
P.Howard. Wash. *' ---------- ■—
^4; F.Roblnson,
STOLEN BASeS-Campanaris, K.C., Mi Agaa. Chic., 22; Bulord, Chic., 22; McCraw, Chic., Ur Lawls, IC.C., 14.
PITCHING <9 Decisions)—Lonboi Bost., 14-3, .124^ McGlothlin. Call!., « . U1I; Horlan, Chic., 12-3, .M»; Sparma. Bat., 10-3, .74»; Patars, Chic., 1^5, .704.
STRIKEOUTS-Lonborg. Bost., IS McOossall. Cleva., 44; J.Nash, K.C., 134; Patars, Chic., 133; Boswell. Minn.. 132. NATIONAL LRAOUE BATTIN(» (22S at bata)-Staub, Housi JS3; Clainanta, Pitt., .352 Capada, SI.L jM3; OMtaIaz, Phil., .335; McCarvar
RUNS-Aaron, AIL, 74-----
Phil., 71; Wynn, Houst.,
I. St.L., 44; Hart. ! NS BATTED IN-y
Chic., 44; Perez, Cin., 45.
HITS — Cepeda, St.L., 123; Clamer ,, Pitt.	172; Brock. St I , 172:	Staub.
• Dust., 113; Perez, CIn.
DOlf“'	—■■
DOUBLES-Staub, I
, 27; I
ust., 71; Capada. II., 24; T.(5avls.
7; Phillips,
Chic., 7; Gonzalez, Phil., 7.
HOME RUNS—Aaron, AtL, 35; Wyi HouM., 25; Hart, S.F., 24; Santo, Chi 20; Banks. Chic., IS; Pirn. Cin., II.
STOLEN BASES-Brock, St.L., Phillips. Chic., If; Wills, Pitl.
W.DavIs, L.A., 14; R.AIIan....
PITCHING (f Declslons)-Jarvl 11-3, .704; McCormick, S.F., 13-Vaala. Pitt., 12-4, .750; Hughes, St.L., 0-3, .777; Nolan, Cin., 4-3, .727.
STRI KEOUTS-BunnIng,
Parry, S.F., 130; Jankins, Chic., 12f.
Reds' Outfielder on Disabled List
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The -.CinciRPati Re(is placed outfielder Floyd Robinson on the ditP T abled list Wednesday and restored outfielder Tommy Hardier, sidelined since May 26, to active duty.
1'. Robinson reinjured his right ^ee Tuesday night against the Atlanta Braves while chasing a fly ball. Reds’ manager Dave Bristol said, “Robinson has a eprtilage floating around in his faiee.”
■Nebraska Five ' Posts 80-49 Win
■GUADALAJARA, Mex. (AP) The touring Wildcats from (he University of Nebraska werwhelmed the local Universi-W of Guadalajara 80-49 in the $st of a series of basketball games throughout Mexico.
' The first half ended with the liters leading 39^26. Stuart I^tz and Robert Wagner, with ^ points, topped the Nebraska ■coring.
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E—4
THE PONTIAC PRES8 THURSDAY^ JULY JT, 1967
Pontiac Consumers Co-Op
OPTICAL
Eye Exams • Contact Lenses Industrial Safety Glasses Sun Glasses DR. SIDNEY GILBERT Optometriti
1111 SOUTH TELEGRAPH ROAD PHONE 333-1811
Vi Mila South of Orchard Loko Rood
Idle Junior Squad Gains as Contender Falls, 9-7
While the city’s emergency curfew leaves the adult softball and baseball programs in an unsettled state, the T-Bu'ds are effectively shaking up the Gass “ National junior baseball league in their own way.
*§«iiiONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER*
LAST 4 DAYS
of our
SEMI ANNUAL
J!UmUN6 SALE
Still a Good Selection At Substantial Savings! Sale Ends July 31st.
What appeared . a red-hot three-team battle for first place entering the final week of the campaign now has the Russell Sundquist squad in command of the situation without lifting a bat.
Although the uneasy civil situation caused cancellation of some junior games (in addition to the men’s contests), the T-Birds yesterday trimmed Lake Oakland, 9-7, with a four-run rally in the last inning.
’The win was the second over a contending team this week for the T-Birds (4-5-2) and assured Sundquist’s (7-2) of the top seeding in its postseason playoffs.
Another key game yesterday found the'^'Colurnbia Avenue Recreation Association’s Widget National nine completing an unbeaten regular season with a 6-2 triumph over the Optirnii No. 2 team, the winn«-s’ 10th straight victim.
* ★ *
Greg Hipsher tqs^d a two-hit-ter in the conquest.
CITY* JUNIOR BASEBALL CltM D
Cranbrook 7, Arnold Drugs 3
272 WEST MAPLE BIRMINGHAM Open Fri. *Hl 9
SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE Downtown Pontiac Open Fri. *Hl 9
« Closed WDd. P.M.
Through August
We Pay Your Parkiitfi
«Ili«THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC
Clan F NatloiMl Optimist ♦, Columbia Ave. RA 4 Sam Allan 13, Oakland Angalt 3 Northsida Huikin 5, AHBC Praps 0
Class F Intarnatlsnal AHBC Chiefs 15, St. Georg# 5 Hustlers 23, Braves 2
Widget National
Columbia Ava. RA 6, Optimisl-ll Unc. Chas. Pat Shop 8, AHBC I
Optimist Mats 127whlte Sox 7
WEDNESDAY'S FIGHTS By The Sssoclattd Press SAN ANTONIO, Tex.-Jesus Pimentel, 18, Mexico, stopped MImun Ben AkII, 18, Spain, ».
BANKOK, Thailand—Chartchal Chlonol.
AWAIX RING DATE - Ismael Uguna (left) of Panama looks over the contract for his title fight with lightweight champion Carlos Ortiz (right), a bout slated for Aug. 16 at
Shea Stadium in New York. The middleman Is James P.'Fusscas, counsel for the New York State BoTdng Conunission, who was on hand fw the contract signing yesterday.
Soccer League Leads Boosted
By the Associated Press
The Baltimore Bays and the (hikland Clippers, tiie division leaders, strengthened their hold on the top rungs in the National Professional Soccer League Wednesday night.
The Boys on top in the Elast-ern Division, pulled out a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Toros on Fernando Azev^o’s goal from 10 yards out in the ■ ist 40 seconds of play.	’
★ ★ ★
The Clippers, the Western Division pace-setters, walloped the runner-up St. Louis Stars W(. A honie tp\Vn Oakland turnout of 9,465 gave the Clippers a standing ovation at the end.
Ed Marin and EUja Djukic each got two goals to pacet he Clippers. It was Djukie’s first game of the year.
Touring PGA Field in Minnesota
MINNEAPOLIS (AP). - Thejat the old Keller course in St.
$100,000 Minnesota Golf Classic opens today with defending champ Bobby Nichols and PGA champ Don January favored to top the field of 144 pros on the new Hazdtine golf course.
First prize money for the 72-hole event over the 7,220-yard course is $20,000.
★ ★
Following Wednesday’s pro-am tuneup, clubhouse consensus ruled it will take a 280-282 to win the classic over the par 72 course.
Main challenge will be the undulating greens.
Nichols said after shooting a 73 in the pro-am event, going to miss some short putts here, but I also know that everybody else will be missing them, too.”
Previous classics were played
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Paul, noted for its short fairways and table top greens.
Julis Boros, another favored golfer at the classic, said, “At Keller a man would shoot 68 and feel bad. Here you can get a 68, three 71s and run away with first prize money.”
★	★ A
Nichols three putted three times Wednesday, on the third, fifth and seventh holes.
Boros still hasn’t shaken this season’s erratic putting.
The full field tees off today and Friday. Saturday the field will be cut to the low 60 and ties. The tourney winds up Sunday.
Pro-am winners Wednesday were amateur Bob Barbarossa of St. Cloud, Minn., Howard
Johnson of Palm Springs, Calif, and R.H. Sikes of Cleveland, all with three-under-par 69s.
l«.and-Un«ar Prlattly Excavation 4, McCullough 2 ------- -	- 8. Watarford Eagles 4
.O.H.A. 13, Savol
18-and-Undar
414 25, Lakeland Pharmacy 4
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THE P0NTI4C PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 87, 1967
Phafe Re^ljefer Helps Protect Wins for Faltering Starters
By the Asaoclated fte»
Bob Veale, weary from havlQg struggled through a c(Hnplete b game just, five days ago. discovered Wednesday night that he : just couldn’t turn the trick twice in succession.
With Juan Pizanto waiting In the wings, it couldn’t have mattered less.
Township Planning One Game for Sure
One game remains in doubt as teams fa) Waterford Township prepare to open the soft-baU league playoffs tonight at Drayton Plains park.
Clarkston Appliance is slated to take on Day’s Sanitary at 7 p.m. and Waterford Merchants and Clyde’s Wheel & Frame have an 8:30 date.
If the present 9 p.m. curfew remains in effect, the second i game will be postponed until 1 p.m. Sunday.
Veale, sUU relishing his first complete game in 16 starts on July 21, held Los Angeles at bay for 7 1-3 innings in jfae Pirates’ 4-2 victory Wednesday. But then the familiar signs of non-com-pleQdn set in and in came Pi-zarro to protect the big left-hander’s 12th victory against four defeats.
Pizarro should go into the j>ro-tection business. He came in with one man on and two balls on Ron Fairly. After completing the walk, he got down to business. A1 Ferrara and Jim Le-febvre went down swinging, ending that particular threat, mild as it was.
Tigers Delaying Toledo Tryouts
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers announced Wednesday that a tryout camp set for this weekend at Toledo has been postponed indefinitely because of the rioting there.
’Three other tryout camps will be held as scheduled, a Tiger at Bay City Aug. 2, Sault Ste. Marie Aug. 4 and 5 and Peterborough, Ont., Aug. 5.
tie in the sixth and Maury WQls walked, stole secoiul, went to third bn an error and scored on a forceout for the final rim.
And in the ninth? First there was Bob Bailey: He took a third strike. Then there was Wes Parker. He swung at a third one. And last there was Jeff Torborg a swinger, but not a hitter*
OTHER GAMES In other National League action, St. Louis beat Chicago 4-2, Cincinnati bounced Atlanta 7-1 and rained washed out the second game of a scheduled dou-bieheader, Houston edged Philadelphia 3-2 and New York bombarded San Francisco 11-5.
Willie Stargell homered for the Pirates in the fourth inning, but the Dodgers came back to tie the score 2-2. Manny Mota singled In the run that broke the
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The Cardinals extended their
league lead to two games by downing the Cubs. Julian Javier drove in three runs, \two with a homer, and Lou Brock stole two bases and scored twice. Nelson Briles, 5-4, was the winner, but
needed ninth inning help from Jack Lamabe and Joe Hoanter.
Deron Johnson crai^ed a two-run homer, sparking the Reds’ victory after Phil Niekro had held Cincinnati tp ;gie bunt sin-
gle through the first six innings. Mel Queen, 10-5, was the
Joe Morgan’s single drove in the second run in a ninth inning
rally that sent the Astros past the Phils. Jackie Brandt’s single earlier had tied the game after singles by Dave Adlesh and Bob Asprom^nte.
Cleon Jones, who has been
having a terrible time hitting the ball all year, broke loose for a homer and Bve runs batted in against the Giants and Bud Har-relscm had four hits and two rbia for the Mets.
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E—6
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 27. 1967
\
UNITED TIRE SERVICE
IBELESS WHITEWALLS
4 for^37w»^
Tax
8:00-14
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Detroit Keglers in Local Match
Exhibition Duel Set for Airway Lanes
Two of the top bowling teams ki the Detroit All-Star Classic will collide 7:30 p.m. M(»iday at Airway Lanes in an exhibition match.
★	* ■ A
Meeting on the lanes will be the Stroh’s and Goebel, beer squads,	and	there are local
names on both	teams.
Jim Rutkowski of Airway and Waterford Township high graduate Frank Miceli are on the Goebel	team	along with Lou
lu, George Nastas, Steve Vargo and Dick Turf.
★	★ ★
Heading the StrNis unit is Mike Samardzja of Huron-Airway, who’ll join John Ruggier-ro. Bob Crawford, Dale Seavoy (of Birmingham) and Mike Totsky.
DIDCj Owem
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PONTIAC
FINISH ONE-TWO - Sue Gossick (left) of Tarzana, Calif., and Air Force Lt. Micki King of Pontiac, took the one-two positions, respectively, in the women’s three-meter
diving event at the Pan-American Games in Winnipeg, Canada, i^esterday. Miss Gossick was awarded the gold medal and Miss King a silver medal.
Diving Champ Eyes New Challefige
Australian Natters Out of Penn Meet
HAVERFORD, Pa. (AP) The women’s division winner of the 68th annual Pennsylvania lawn tennis championships will be an American.
That was assured Wednesday as two highly rated Australian girls were upset, leaving only Americans in the quarterfinal round.
*, ,W-	A,
Vicky Rodgers, 17, of Rye, N. Y. t<H)pled defaiding title holder Karen Krantzeke, 6-1, 6-4, in one major upset, while Lynne .Abbes of Orinda, Calif., surprised top-seeded foreigner Kerry Melville, 11-13, 6-4, and 6-3.
*	★	*
In yet another upset, Patti Hogan, No. 4 ranking U.S. junior, brought down fellow Californian Tory Fretz, 0-6, 6-4, 10-8.
In the men’s division, defending champion Clark Graebner of Beechwood, Ohio, ousted Baltimore’s Lenny l^hlo^s, 6-3, 6-1. Schloss knocked Graebner out of the U.S. clay court title round last week.
WINNIPEG, Canada WV-Sue Gossick,' 19-year-old blonde from Tarzana, Calif., won the women’s springboard diving championship at the Pan-American Games Wednesday with a total of 752.05 points.
Her teammate, Micki King of Pontiac was second with 736.70.
Kathy McDonald, the Canadian champion, took the bronze medal for third with 712.00.
She was followed by Nancy Robinson, another Canadian, 634.75; Bertha Beraldi, Mexico, 15; Dora Hilda Hernandez, 507.10; and Martha Lucia Man-zano, Columbia, 474.95.
This was the fifth straight time the United States has won the title in the Pan-American Games.
Miss Gossick led from the first of the ten dives and did not flub a single dive.
Her teammate, Miss King, i second lieutenant in the All Force, who celebrated her 23rd birthday Wednesday, score 92.60, the highest mark of the meet on her last dive but could not overcome her teammate’ lead.
Miss Gossick has set her hazel eyes on an unprecedented Olympic goal.
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“I want to concentrate on winning the springboard diving medal at Mexico City and then I want to take up skiing on a serious scale,” the 5-4Mi, 105-pound queen of the boards said today. “I’d love to compete in the Winter Olympics.
“I’ve only been skiing three years but I think it is a fan-
tastic sport. I plan to spend all. my Christmas holidays on the slopes at Vail Colorado Squaw Valley California.”
“Someday — maybe 1972 — I’ll be on the United States' Alpine team.”
No one has ever won a gold medal in both the Summer and Winter Games.
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By the Associated Pr£ss The case of the five holdouts of the Cleveland Browns, which has stirred the interest of most everyone in pro football, may switch from an all-for-one and one-for-all to a not-for-me situation Friday.
The case pits Art Modell, owner of the Browns, against John Wootena, guard from Colorado, Leroy Qelly, a running back from Morgan State, John Brown, a tackle from Syracuse, Mike Howell, a defensive back from Grambling and Sid Williams, a linebacker from South-•n University.
Their attorney is scheduled to meet Friday with counsel for Modell in a second attempt to reach a settlement. The five were scheduled to report to training camp last Satuiday, but didn’t show. They face $100-a-day fines until they report.
The key issue appears to be the demand of the five that all Of them must be traded if one i. Modell has said he would hot a^ee to such a stipulation of vital concern to every front office.
FIRST TIME
Meantime, halfback Donny Anderson, a bonus baby from Texas Tech, worked out with the champion Green Bay Packers for the first time since being released from Army "reserve training. He is expected to challenge-®^^	Ira'*
back post vacation by the de-pature of Paul Hornung.
The Philadelphia Eagles reported quarterback Norm Snead will miss two exhibitions cause of military training and that tackle Bob Brown strained a chest muscle.
Jim Nance, the Most Valuable Player in the AFL last year, signed his contract with the Boston Patriots for what Mike Holovak, coach and general manager, said was a substantial increase.
Harness Driver Dies
CHICAGO (UPI) - Leonard Charette, 28, a harness driver, died Wednesday from head injuries sustained Monday night at Sportsman’s Park after he fell from his sulky and was trampled by a following horse.
Ex-Champ Falls in Trans-Miss
ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) Pamela Michaeloff of Minneapolis, upset defending champion Roberta Albers of Tampa, Fla.
3 and 2 Wednesday in the,37tb annual Womens Trans Mississippi Golf Tournament.
J^s Michaeloff was in charge all the way, winning four of the first five holes, then closing things out with a birdie on No. 13 and a par on No. 14.
Miss michaeloff goes against unheralded Jan Crow of Santa Barbara, Cahf., a 2-up victor over Marcia Bailey of Littleton, Colo., in Thursday’s quarter-roun(l..	„
The meet’s medalist, Martha Wilkinson -of Yorba Linda, Calif,, eliminated Janice Elias of Grand Rapids, Mich., and 5.
Miss Wilkinson will meet Lynn Mistowski, West Palm Bach, Fla.
Mrs. Mistowski eliminated Nicky Nordstrom of Excelsior, Minn., 3 and 2 Wednesday.

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THE	PRESS. THtTRSDAY, JHLY 27, 1967
B—7.
Pontiac Press Holo-in-One Club Admits i
7"
William W. Dye
for acing No. 7, 165 yards, at Morey’s Golf Club He shot a 53 for the round.
WESTMINSTER, Md. (AP)— Without being asked, Coach Don SOiuIa tells you the offense of hhs Baltimore Colts "seemed to go downhill" at the end of last season.
And again withcpt being
Wednesday, Shula said “It was
Bosox' Rookie Puts Squeeze on Angels
not a good offensive sl^ow. The devil out of
defense licked the < the offense."
BOSTON (AP) - Mike Andrews doesn’t get the acclaim accorded to his more publicized teanunates, but when it comes to the little things that keep a team Gf the pennant race he doesn’t take a back seat to anyone.
The rookie second baseman’s latest contribution was a perfect squeeze bunt which sent the tying run across and kept aUve a six-run seventh inning rally as the Boston Red Sox snapped the California Angels’ seven-game winning streak with a »-6 victory Wednesday night.
squeeze. Joe Foy followed with . an infield hit, and Carl Yas-trzeqiski lashed a bas^s-loaded double to climax the rally.
“It was my own idea,” Andrews said. "I started.thinking about It as soon as the runner got to third. It was the first time I’ve squeezed home a run in the majors, but I’ve done it before in the minors.”
The Red Sox, t r a 11 i n g 4-1 going into the seventh, had scored two runs and had men on first and third with , two out when Andrews pulled off his
Somebody in the noisy Boston dressing room suggested that if Andrews had popped up his, bunt instead of laying it down beautifully to handcuff third baseman Woodie Held he might not be quite such a hero.
“If I’d popped it up I’d have just kept running," he said. GOOD SHOT
Manager Dick Williams agreed that it was Andrews’ idea "and a hell of an idea." Even if it hadn’t worked, the manager said, "it would have been a good shot."
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CAUIPOaNIA	SOSTON
C«rd«n«l ci *J 2 3 J <Andrcwi 2b*2 5
Knoop 2b	4 2	1
Brunit p	2 0	1
Roiu p	0 0	0
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0 00 0 10 0 • 00
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Yattrxomtkl, Froi.-., 3B-Scetl. HR-ConItnal (5),
Hew (3). Conigllare, (l|i seott (11),
Coifs Need More Kick on Offense

So it looks like the Colts may miss for the third strai^t time winning their division of the National Football League? Not so quick, Shula tells you.
Starting with the trade of the experienced back-up quarterback Gary Cuozzo, to the New (Means Saints for Bill Curry, Shula ticked off some reasons for Improvement to the Colts:
1.	"I can’t say how pleased I am with the two other quarterbacks besides John Unitas, Jiih Ward and Terry Southall."
2.	"I haven’t found a negative on Curry who is Fighting it out with Dennis Gaubatz for middle linebacker."
GOOD REPORTS
“I have heard nothing but good reports on defensive lineman Bubba Smith, defensive back Richie Volk and offensive guard Norm Davis with the College All-Stars.”
4. "Halfback Jim DetwUer second draft choice from Michigan is a big strong back. He also can block and catch pass-
5.	"End Ray Perkins is all the receiver they said he was."
6.	“Jim Parker reported in the best shape he has in several years, and is working-real hard."
7. "Sam Ball is back at offensive tackle after being out most of last season with a knee Injury."
'Glenn Ressler is ready to replace Alex Sandusky, who has retired, at offensive guard."
Rides 'Double' Winners
Ro|a> Clmlm Brandon LandU ' OsInskI
LandU (W,1-W
STANTON, Del. (AP)-Jockey Jill Passmore rode bo>& ends R ER BBbolof the winning daily double at " Delaware Park Wednesday for the second time in four racing days. He brought in a $24 DD last Saturday. Wednesday’s DD was worth $12.20.
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HEADQUARTERS FOR U.S. ROYAL TIRES
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National Box Scores
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Senators Whip A'son Homers
WASHINGTON «) - Home runs by Frank Howard and Ken McMullen helped Washington to a 6-3 triumph over Kansas (Sty Wednesday night.
Howard’s 26th h(Hner led off the third inning and McMullen hit his 10th of the season in the fifth.
V WASHINGTON
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..Oil 010 1 Ox
_____________wVj?isss;'N .s
Kansas city 5, WashlngjiNi '
Nossek. 3B-Stroud. HR-f McMullen (10). SB-“
SF—Stroud, Harralson.
IP H RERBBSO (L,5-13)	’	.	.	.	.	.
Coleman (W.S.4) '.
1-3 1	0 0 t
PRE-FINI8H^D
PANELING
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT
4x7
V-GROOVE
Sheet S
CEILING TILE
■	E acoustical
Hundreds of Usee!
SflHSh Doors SI** . . . 4.W S Nooontto 4xixl4 .... IJT ■ Pog Boord V%-4xl.... 1.N B8llolviBg1x12.......T2o
FUSTIC
COVERED
WHITE TILE I
9*-i
RAILROAD TIES ■ 6x6x8’	S4.T0 ■
Redwood ■ 4x6	$2.10 S

Sjj--1^300,
1x2 Furring Strip .... 20 ! ,1x2 Furring Strip .... So 5 iQodorLining|xtxV4..tJi Z
READY MADE WEAVE FENCE:
8-FT. LENGTH REDWOOD FENCE
4’ High $10.40 5’ High $12.95 6’ High $13.15
■ Fence Post M [fionic Table
iRtady illx Camwiit ■ ■ ♦l**
■PAINT
62**
PLYWOOD
SHEATHINO
■ VV-4H....4.16
0 M-4xl ...... 6.16
; M-*«6 ..., . 626,
ft"-6x6lxt..l»-f
%-4xlFluifod ......T.S. 4JC
Flakeboard
%-4xt....2.2l
%-4xl....2.Hj
%-4xi.

FREE OELIVERY I	•:M-S:30, MT. mL 5
ALLEN
T iPMBgHCOe i
^ ' V;'
1314 MIQHLANO RD. AT WILLIAMS UKE RO.
B On# Mil# Watt of Pontiac Airport	■
8 0R44S1S inM-soHoi. OPEN SUN. TO-3 !
•■■■■■■■■■■■•IpMI--------------------------
■MM.MMMMMMMMMMMMB8
WASHOUT
SALE I
Wo AAmt Cloar Oat All '67 Mastangs - ealcndos Thanderbirds - Pairlonos - Falcons
SAVmeS ARE
TERRinC
SAVE
JIM mUUKE Flu
630 Oakland Ave.
FE 6-4101
THOROUGHRRCD RACING DAILY, JULY 31 TO NOVEMRER 4 AT...
onB MMIH!
FABULOUSjrWlN^^	_ „
P-.-1. MU0.Ent«1rtW School-Como oirly. Lu"®** •'	* "** hrtds «t DRCl Finoly condition^ ■	osr ar 6(^
S3 million Clubhouio. NO	LiKsSpoeHtetromOoontoo*.
inlmum.t“T«OWoJlrodHorso	,«t.GM.filAdmls»ioo$l.i6
Puh’’orTo90lthoTurt.	_
Every Saturday te.
uper
E«,WH»B«WdpW-“
... sutwi IS w
Siturdoyi v
aturdsy
i.Como

SCHOOl-CltAP'T AT
1
\v
!'
E-«
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
[Aiiin^ Feels Riot Effects
DETROIT (AP) - As rioting ripped Detroit for the fourth straight day, a 15-year-old girl lay in Wayne County Geniral Hospital, badlv in need of blood.
“There is a stidden serfage of blood because of the rioting," said the girl’s father, Marshall Criswell. “And my daughter needs up to 24 units of ‘O posi-' I live’ blood a day "
Carol Criswell had nothing to Criswell and his wife main-do with the violence in the tain an around-the-clock vigil at
streets.
★ * ★
The Alma girl has been in critical condition at the hospital for nine weeks, suffering-from complete kidney fmlure.
But Carol feels Uie effects of the violence. .
Carol’s bedside.
★ *
During the violence, Criswell has made frantic calls to Alma. He drove the nearly 130 miles from the hospital to the mid -Michigan city and back Monday —seeking blood for his daughter
‘T asked a neighbor and she] got friends together who donated 10 units of blood Sunday night,” Criswell said. “That was flown here.”	,
LONG TRIP
Monday he made the long trip to bring back four more units.
And Monday night still more Mood arrived frwn Chicago.
T don’t know what will ha^ pen next,” he said wearily.
We’re running out of dMiws in Alma and with ttie rioting.”
Carol , has suffered from the kidney ailment for six years and hhs been in and out of both University Hospital at Ann 'Arbor and Wayne County General the whole time.
Today, too weak for surgery to probe for hemmorhaged spots, Carol,lies in the hospital bed, miles from the troubled reas of Detroit.
And her parents pray.
Sigma Delta Chi, the professional journalism fraternity, was founded in 190 9in Chicago.
Detroit Starts Utility Repair
DETROIT (AP)-Detroit Edi son repbrted Wednesday it has restored electric service to all but a few homes in Detroit’s riot areas.
The company said it had a task force of about 250 men working in the riot area under protection.
Michigan Bell said it had r^ stored services to 1,500 phon^ in the area, but added at least 12,500 more will have to remain out until military authorities permit work crews to step up repair operations.
Canoe Tragedy tq FeTPrdbed
SHEBOYGAN, Wis. (UPI)' - Cpast Guard patrols watched yesterday for any "of siurvlvors from a Lake Michigan _ ;<tragedy feared to have claimed the lives of six toys. Four bodtes have been recovered; ’
'★ * ★ .
District Warden Thomas Albers of the State Gonsarvation D^rtment said an in-veatigatiMi was being conducted into the deaths of the youths, who were from Norris Foundation farm for disturbed and disadvantaged to^S near Big Bend.
Sli of the toys vient out in canoes With two counselor on Monday. The canoeS were swamped. The counselors were rescued by the Coast Guard.
YANKEE
DOLLAR
SELLOUT
Still beini sought were Milo Burr, 17, Milwaukee, and Wade Hanson, 17, Franklin.
The bodies ■ of f'Darrell ,.Lhuer,<;T7, Milwaukee; Bruce 'Wilteifurj! 16s > West Milwaukee: Donald Weldon, l4, West |Ah*s, and Ru.ssel Unicicum, 16. Madison, were recovered. They had been wearing life jackets as were the bth^. two toys.
Albers Said he wanted to iknow how the boys could drown vdiile wearing life jackets. Two jackets were recovered, those belbnging to the missing boyS.
The accident occurred about two miles off Terry Andrea State Park. Small craft warnings were flying’ at th«^ Sheboygan Coast Guard station, but were not postpd at the park.	^
W ' m
IN fUKEBriailUWfi J
: HERTS HOW YOU CAN WM |
About forty lady pro golfor* will toko throe »hot« each on tho lOlh holo at Willowood. Before eoch >hdt the will draw-o, name from' thoto regiitered at Vonkeet. If your notno is drowned sf with that shot, you i'
MIMI IKUl SIRTS
In FLAT or FIHED STYLES
Snowy white muslin. 100% cotton. Famous Cannon quality in flat or fitted styles at summer white sale prices.
81 X 108 or FULL flHED 1.74 cAiirtO'RHow Cases 84’
:
Cannon BATH TOWELS
KING SIZE PILLOWS
Mix or« match bold ttripa or solid colors. Thick, thirsty 24 X '46. Extra largo six*.
NANO TOWELS WASNCLOTNS 5F(4l$t
2 a	a I	cbt^'fizoi^ 50%	I	A J|
0	’SI	feathor Cind*50%	H	MM
M ufl	H
n	Jumbo cord wolf	H
9 os I	I ^
4 rllll #1	■	Extra finp printed	H
5 FCAI si	H	cotton ticking.	B
TEEN andLAOIES’ SUMMER
FLATS ANO PLAYSHOES
RES.2.n4.n
100
■ and 1.97
Children’s, Ladies’ Biris’
Tennis and S9< Fabric Shoes
and
$1.39
s, Cool ond Broozy
COOL FABRIC SUMMER SHOES
REaUUR3.n
245

BOYS' COnON SLACKS
100% rnercorizod cot- ^ mm ton twill- sanforized 1 shrunk. Sizes 6 to 16.	|
LADIES'SUMMER
HESUIE
Find coftons, jerlWyt and dacrons in prints, solids, plaids and a wide range of styles. 3 to 11, 5 to 15; 8 to 20; MVato 24V2.
MEN’S SHORT PAJAMAS		|97	JOCKEYS LAWN FIGURE.. ..	098
MEN’S SWIMMING TRUNKS....	-|96	Penguin .iSL LAWN FIGURE ....	299
MEN’S CUT-OFF JEANS				99‘	MALLARD DUCK LAWN FIGURE..	299
MEN’S S SWEATSHIRTS......	1^” REDWDDD .LureuM LAWN CHAIRS .		497
MEN’S POCKET “T” SHIRTS....	89«	HALF GALLON FOAM JUG .....	53*
BOYS’ KNIT SPORT SHIRTS...	96*	^ 34 QUART FOAM CHEST......	67*
BOYS’.S^Si MT SUMS _	1” 1B”^LDIHG TABU GRILL ..,.		67*
METAL TACKLE BOX WITH TRAY	STEEL GARDEN HDSE HANGER ..		37‘
16” BOAT LANDING NET		DELUXE GRASS SHEARS 				99*
6 Ft. X15” SWIMMING POOL..	044	' RD. PT. GARDEN SHOVEL		j29
AMF12” Deluxe TRICYCLE....	088	STEEL GARDEN BOW RAKE ....	99*
P^Y at MONTCALM ... OPEN Nips UNTIL 9. SUNDAY UNTIL 7.. . USE YOUR MICHIGAN BA^IKARO

THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 1967
F^l
STOy RIGHT UP...TO THE STORE ^TH THE SPARTAN ON THE DOOR...FOR ISHti SPARTAN’S I
SPARTAN - ALL VARIETIES
LUNCH
Pkg.
SHANK PORTION
6 to 7 lbs.
SPARTAN-RINR
BOLOGNA 5ft
Honeysuektf Qiblat Qravy
siloed
TURKEY
Spartan
Smoked
Short Shank Wall Trimmad
HAM
WHOLE..... BUTT Portion CENTER CUT
^CINNAMOM
ROLLS
mdPoek
<'s«.29'
’ \ Lumber Jack
I il BREAD
18 to IS lbs.
6 to
1	lbs.
2	to
3	lbs.
$169
USDS SHADE “A” WHOLE
FRYING

'^Prido Of Miohigan
"Boneless HAM
Whole or

Sib.
Peaches	\
mm....
Spartan Crushed	iiEr
PlNEimE a a 4Vboi.can 2v '
Spartan Dark Rad	•#
KIDNEy BEANS S. lO*" 1QC

SAlti
Bin
«««
0
Wt,
SAUCfi

$P4or4Ar
•ss-ssr
Spartan
PORK’.BEANS
toartan Plain or lodiiad
Snartan I
SALT
Pieklos....
TUHA 22®
evi ez. Can
iiiisucEs... . 39’
PRESERVES
banDooAiaartad	G4|
iSJBUES ‘LL'SJI
S%ui.a3.25’
toartan New Instant	ilAe
CeMoo Creamer » 49 AJAX or FAB
Detergent

lbr<
‘'’toSif**"'
JUICE
..a.
,.a.
DUNCAN
HINES CAKE MIXES
Seedless Blackberry Strawberiy
SPARTAN SALAD
DRESSING « 39 V
»Fi5ifr‘'’'	1IA.10
PUCES	««•> 19
KLEENEX ~ FACIAL
“•‘"•CAM BUT
U.S..«.1CrtRonii»	EBA^
POTATOES Rfll’
SINE n RAfi
SPARTAN
G FROZEN POODS g
Spartan Wniatara	.
, Marshmallows
Spartan Instant
DRY MILK.i,
19* 59*
llruPAPER.... V! 19*
llApi(irsT:?.^25*
AJAXCLEANSER 10*
KalaxSanHanr	il G4
NAPKINS "Air 3v^l
TISSUES*" I?	\SHORTENINfi
• DAIRT DEPT. •
10-LB. BAG
Croon Poppers
Gueumbon
Radlladishos
Your Choice
SFAIWAR
N«gariiii^/f *
Half
Tin
COrMfiE
GNEESE.^!^
MR. "O’’Krinkle Out
FRENCH
SPARTAN SLICED
AMERICAN I
CHEESE lb- 59*
pnilaoClpnia	^	A||e
CREAM CHEESE	>	Z8
L L r L A V 0 a <	_ i Ag
-AtloA
ikidiOl;
1
F—2
THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
Vegetables Are a Tasty Part of Summers Bounty
By JANET ODELL * Pontiac Prea* Food Editor When vegetable ar^ at the peak of their pei'fection, one wonders bow anyone could dislike them. .
f	★	★	★
- “The only trouble at our house Is choosing which vegetable to prepare. We like most all of them.
Zucchini squash has become a popular squash. It is so mild in flavor that even people who don't like squash m ig h t change their minds if they tried zucchini.
This recipe serves it with spaghetti sauce which makes it Italian style all the way around.
Zucchini Supper Casserole, Italicnne
3 tablespoons salad oil 1 pound ground beef, or 2 cups ground left-over cooked beef 1 medium-sized onion, thinly sliced
3 8-ounce cans tomato sauce 1 cup Burgundy, Claret or other red dinner wine
mixed Italian-style
seasoning
Dash of garlic powder or salt
1	tablespoon sugar M teaspoon salt Pepper to taste
2	pounds zucchini (6 ‘or 7 m< ium-sized)
Grated Parmesan ch«
Heat oil in large, heavy skillet or a Dutch oven; iidd onion
1 teef and cook, stirring frequency, until meat is nicely browned. A^d tomato sauce, wine, Italian-style seasoning, garlic powder, , sugar, salt and pepper; cdver and simmer very genOy for 1 hour, stirring occasionally.
While sauce is cooking, wash zucchini and trim off ends; cook whole in boiling salted water for about IS minutes, or just until tender; drain.	■	-
When cool enough to handle, cut lengthwise in halves and arrange, cut side up, in a single
tJSyer in a greased shallow baking dish. Pour sauce over zucchini; bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 45 minutes.
Serve with grated Parmesan cheese. Makes &-6 servings.
Green pej^rs are handy food cases to staff and bake wlft almost any meat, sea-' •	•	“ Of cheese mix-
_ sen pepnert. I In shallow baking pan; small amount of water.
Bake in intsheated oven (350 degrees F.) abouftO minutes . or unto peelers are tender. Makes 8 servings.
For sauce, melt butter. Stir in flour and pepper; cook uhtll bubbly. Add milk gradually, stirring to make a smooth sauce.
COok until thickened, stirring frequently. Stir in cheese. Serve over baked stuffed peppers.
If and when you are tfred of
The following ones have a ground beef and cheese filling. SAUCY STUFFED PEPPERS Peppers:	^ ’
- 6 medium-sized green peppers 1^ lb. ground beef 84 cup rolted oats (quick or old fashioned, uncooked)
V* cup chopped onion 84 lb. fresh mushrooms, sliced 1 teaspoon salt 84 cup milk Sancet
84 cup butter or margarine 8(4-cup all-purpose flour Dash white pepper 184 cups milk
'’84 cup crumbled Roquefort cheese Heat oven degrees F.),t Cut green peppers in half lengthwise; remove seeds. Cook green peppers in enough boiling salted water to cover about 6 minutes; drain,
Conbine remaining Ingredi-
t moderate (350
com on the cob, fix some com off the cob. Cooked with yellow summer squath and fresh tomatoes, it becomes a
COUCHS
(Summer Squash and Con, Mexican Style)
4 medium ears fresh com 4 medium (184 pounds) summer squash
3 medium fresh tomatqes 84 cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons butter or margarine
84 teaspoon sugar 284 teaspoons salt 84 teaspoon ground black pepr per
84 teaspoui ground oregano leaves
Remove husks from corn and cut kernels off the cobs. Wash and slice squash 84-inch thick. Dice tomatoes. Saute onions in butter or margarine in a skillet or saucepan. Add Vegetables, su gar, salt, black pepper and ore-gand.
Cover aad cook slowly 20
natU thifil|Med.
Sorvrhot. Yield: Iserrugs.
And finally,/buy a few more psippers to frefitdb fry.
" ' French Fried Peppers
Cut peppers In half and re-nmve seeds and membrane. Cut In 84-i|)ch strips lengthwise, or thin circles. Blanch in boiling water for 8 minutes. Drain on paper towel. Heat oil. Beat one egg with 1 tablespoon water.
Dip in egg then id fine drack-er or bread crumbs. Put In hot oil and fry till crisp and |«^n.
Ml U.S. CHOIOE MEAT 8UMIMITEED
300“*^
6M0KTHS
MEAT SUPPLY
TOTAL n05
BEEF
(Som« Pork if you wish)
NO MONEY DOWN - UP TO 6 MONTHS TO PAY-SAME AS CASH
All USDA Choice Meat Ouaranteed
Porterhouse Cuhe Sirloin	Rump
Tenderloin Sirloin Tip t-Bone	Ronelits ‘
Round 100-150 pounds
SPARERiBS . PORK LOINS . STEER LIVER..
■^GrossWoight
491
Rib	Club
Rib Eye	Blade
Delmonieo	Round	Bone
T-Bone 1st Cut Boneless iN-lNpomuit
391
29L
397.
29°.
WATERFORD MEAT
4990 Highland Rd.	674-1440
Across from Waterford Nigh STORE HOURS: 9 a.m. - 7:30 p.mt Daily
O S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN-NEW CROP
POtptnflfi 50 m
HOME
GROWN
POTATOES
MICH.
ALLPURPOSE
25
BAG
PEACHES
CALIFORNIA SUGAR SWEET FREESTONE
lb.
25<
CAUFORNIA
SWEH
19<
MBisHrjy-rpuis________________________
0inWS>:r!39^.l£l^ WATERMELONS ^ 1.49
gel .............
CABBAGE-s. grapefruits
FLORIDA . 9 ORc INDIAN RIVER A
Gr.Lb.
LETTUCE
CALIFORNIA
FIffSH
SAUCY STUFFED PEPPERS
Cooked Celery Goes in Salad
There is lots of crispy tender celery in the market. Enjoy it. Try it In new ways, such as this Celery Vinai^te. It makes an interesting and certainly' different salad.
. Fresh Celery Vinaigrette 0 ribs celery Ml teaspoons salt yinaigretUKCnper Sauce ,Wash celery, cut off tops and save for soups, sauces or sal-a(la. Cut celery into 3-lnch «. Code covered, only crlsp-tendler, about 10 3. in l-lnchj^iling salted
Add Viaaigrette-Caper Sauce
and serye hot or cold. This will keep several days in refrigerator.
VUtalgretfe-Csper Saqce 84 cup 0)1
3 tablespdons wine Vinegar 2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh puirsley
2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh onloh 2 teaspoons capers 84 teaspoon salt 1-16 teaspoon ground black pepper
Combine oil, vinegar and beat Vigorously with rotary biater. Add^ remaliiitig Ihgradienu had ml* well. Cnlll, Serve over cooked celery ribs. Six servings.
Removal for Wine Stains
■ ,f	•	*'•	■"
How can you remove wine stalni from table linen?
As soon as possible, soak the stains in hot milk that has been brought to the boiling pojilt until they disappear sufficiently to be washed out with- soap and water. If this.can’t be managed soon after the accident, soak the linen in cold water until yc can gpt around to It.
If the stain is unusually stubborn, sprinkle with salt ahd rub with half of a lemon, fhlt should do the trick. Equally af-ftjctive on Upstifck qtains.
HAMBURGER	FRESH GRODNO	». 49«l
FRYERS	FRESH DRESSED	27°;
HOT DOGS	GR.1 SKINLESS	3 98°/
BOLOGNA	GR.1 CHUNK	‘•35°;
LUNCH MEATS	GR.1/- ASSORTED	fc 59*/
LIVER > 29	Beef	».39«L
Fetersj
S/icetf
^ACON
31b.
SUPER
AAARKET
Open Weekly 9 to 9 Friday, Saturday 9 to 9
mielS tUUIOT TO MARKET OHANBE
608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School

THE PONTIAC t*RESS, THURSDAY, JULY ‘27, 1967

SALMON SUPPER SALAD - Suitable either for the summer buffet or for casual
family dining, thiis sturdy stick-to-the-ribs Salmon Supper Salad nourishes and satisfies.
Mix Salmon and Potatoes in Hearty Supper Salad
When warm currents of air{ encircle our country, the salad moves upstage. It demands and! gets attention from heat-fat-j igued appetites, no longer ap-l peased by heavy rich foods.
It plays no maid-in-waiting to the meat course, but takes over as the star of many a summer repast. It becomes a cool, but satisfying luncheon or supper, needing little else to round out the menu.
But such a sununer time salad needs substiince and vitality. It needs protein supplied by cheese, meat or fish, in addition to other elements that add u^ to good nutrition.
Today’s homemaker knows the value of good nutrition in planning her family menus; she also knows the value of canned salmon as a pantry-shelf staple with right - from - the - can convenience.
It needs no elaborate prepara-
1	tablespoon chopped fresh basil
cups mayonnaise % cup sour cream Vi teaspoon pepper I 1 teaspoon salt
2	tablespoons lemon juice or vinegar
Combine potatoes, celery, cucumber, Onions, salmon basil.
Combine mayonnaise, sour cream, pepper, salt and lemon juice or vinegar. Stir into potato-salmon mixture. Pack into a 10-cup mold and chill.
.. !:'■ '%
When ready to serve, unmold onto cold serving platter and garnish with parsley clusters and tomato “roses.” Serve with mayonnaise dressing.
It stands on its own merits, yet combines perfectly With other salad ingredients, with crisp greens and vegetables, with rice, macaroni or potatoes to make sturdy salads that satisfy.
Such a salad which stars at any med and needs no cue other than “Salad’s On!” is this Salmon Supper Salad, a medley of delicate coral-colored salmon flakes, creamy potatoes and crisp vegetables. Make it early in thJ day, or the day before for that matter, and keep it well chilled until time to serve.
Salmon Supper Salad ” « cups“cb61red diced potatoes 1V4 cups minced celery 1 cup diced cucumber cup sliced green onions 1 pound can salmon, drained and flaked
Red, Gold Relish Has Sharp Flavor
It’s a pantryshelf recipe that will win raves.
Kidney Bean and Com Relish Vz cup olive oil
•	2 tablespoons cider vinegar
1 teaspoon salt V4 teaspoon curry powder ^ teaspoon bottled horseradish
^- 4 “tan (16 ounces) very young I whole-kernel golden sweet com drained and rinsed with cold water
Vz cup chopped green pepper In a medium bowl, with a fork, beat together the oil, vinegar, salt, curry powder and horseradish. Add l^ns, com and .green pepper; mix carefully to avoid breaking beans.
Cover and chill until serving time. Makes 8 scjrvings.
Try Two Racks
It’s helpful to have two wire cooling racks in a kitchen. After a baked product is inverted on ono rack and the pan removed, the swwd rpek may be used to turn th(B product (usually cake or bread) ri^t side up.
Ham Salad Rates High
You may want to use up leftover baked ham in this version of a top-favorite salad.
Ham Salad % cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons* yellow mustard 1 tablespoon finely grated onion, pulp and juice 4 cups diced baked ham, inch cubes
1 cup thin celery crescents y* cup undrained India-type sweet pickle relish Salt and white pepper to taste
Salad greens and two to: matoes
Stir tc^ether the mayonnaise, mustard, onion; mix with ham, celery, pickle relish, salt and pepper. Arrange on salad greens; garnish with tomatoes, each cut into sixths. Makes 6 servings.
.frit}
t FINER FWK;
11IMNRTS
• Special GERMAN RVE and PUMPERNICKEL BREAD
1 GERMAN Pastries and Rolls
Fresh Every Friday
Open DaUr 9-6, Fri. 941, Closed Sun., 682-2640 3425 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor
Cet The Beit For Lea At
SWEET GEORGIA
PEACHES
3 Lbs.
$|00
	POTATOES
69^	
llBlh	LETTUCE
	2 ~ 29'
CELERY	Stalk 29^
CARROTS	29®
CABBAGE	Lb. 8®
Corner of Clarkstdn and Sashabaw Itbads
'A Mils North of Ssthohow ExH
Opth Daily, Exoapt Monday, 1t;M to 1:30; Sun.^il 1:00
cow**
M k. $4'*'*
^ can 1
buys:
FROM THE STORE THAT SAVES YOU MORE
FELICE
QUALin MARKET
specMt
orFEK
48f
tSmucker's Strawberry
^RESERVES
6a//on •Waioep
SAAUCKER'S Smooth or Crunchy
Peanut Butter
VAN CAMP'S
PORK and
BEARS
Mb.
15*oz.
can
U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN
POTATOES
10 59‘
SALADA
TEA BAGS
100 ct. "VOC ^
pk.. in I
DEL MONTE TROPICAL
FRUIT PURCH
Homo Groviin
CAB®^®*
101
4mz.$|00
CUT-RITE	ASSORTED FLAVORS ,
WAX PAPER	Hawaiian PUNCH
	12-fl.ez. Ot
	can Xt


$|Ot^
BONUS UETERGENT PILLSBURY SWEET-1U	49i
BRUADCAST VIENNAS 5..........i.«1«*
>0VEN FRESH BREAKFAST R0LLSr.T,T,!;...33«

SPECIAL OFFER
YELLOW </4

KEYKO Margarine
Mb.
ctn.
Sealtest Mb. ctn.
Cottage Cheese
Kroft
Sliced Cheese
American or Pim*nto
FRESH GRADE “A”
CHICKBMIE
WHOLE FRYING CHICKENS

Fresh Frozen
TREESWEET
LEMONADE
6-fl. OL
can
8«
Gorton's New
Fish and Chips
Chef Choice 9 qj,
French Fries
48'
8‘
GRADE "A" CHICKEN PARTS with portion of rib attached
LEGS or BREASTS
59
ARMOUR’S STAR or SWIFTS CANNEB HAMS HYGRABE’S SWEETENIZED SLICEO BACON GRADE A HOMEMADE PORK SAUSAGE HYGRADE’S RALLPARK FRARKS LEAN MEATY BEEF SNORT RIBS ^
6-lb. can *4” pkS- 69* 1-lb.pkj. 39*
lb. 69*^
J
lb. 49<

1116 W. HURON STREET
Nationally Advertised Brands at Money-Saving Prices
^	RIGHTS RESERVED TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
^ ^ _	SALE DATES: THURS., JULY 27 THRU WED., AUG. 2 .

THE IPONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967

the following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thm in wholesale package lots Quotat''ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday.
Produce
FRUITS '
Apples, Delicious, Red, tw. ...
Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., bu.
Apples, Nonlliern Spy, bu. .
Apples, .Nortbem Spy, C.A., bu.
AppieK-'Steele Red, bu..........
Apples, Steele Red, C.A„ bu. .
Strawberries, 1«^t. Cnt. .......
VROETABLeS
Beets, topped, bu...............
Broccoli, dz. bch. 2.50 ........
Cabbege, Curly, bu..............
Onions, Green, dz. bch..........
Caullflowrr, dz. bch. ..........
Celery, Pascal, dn bch..........
Dill, dz. bch...................
Kohlrabi, dz. bch. .............
Onions. Green, dz. bch..........
Persia, Curly, dz. bch..........
Parsley, Root, dz. bch..........
Peas, Green, bu.................
Radish^, Red. dr. bch. .................
Radishes, white, dz. bch..........:. 1.25
Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch. ......... 1
Squash, Italian, ’/5 bu.............3.
Squash, Summer, Vj bu............... 3,
Turnips, dz. bch. ...................1.
Turnips, Topped, bu................. *■
GREENS
Cabbage, bu........................... '
Collard^ bu......................, J
Mustard, ’ bu......................... '
Sorrel, ■ bu..........................J
Spinach, bu................rrr?....... 3.
Tuitllps, bu.	'•
LETTUCE AND GREENS
Endive, I bu........................ 1-
Endive, Bleached, bu.................. 3.
Escarole, Bu........................ >•
Escarde, Bleached, bu.	3.
Lettuce, Bibb, pK. bsM............ . . 1.
Lettuce, Boston, dz. ............I'S
Lettuce, Head, bU...............
Lettuce, Head, dz............. 3.50
Lettuce, Leaf, bu............
Lettuce, Romalne, bu.........
NEW YORK (AP) - Strength in General Motors and Chrysler helped point the stock market higher early Thursday afternoon. Trading was active.
The market made upsid progress for the second straight session but it was not entirely clear sailing as profits were still being taken in some recent gainers.
The ratio of gains to losses was a little less than 2 to 1.
The Dow Jones industrial av-•age at noon was up 3.47 at 906.61.
Although GM and Chrysler both reported lower profits than
Poultry and Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY
PETRojT^	k.">w»
^	J	,	ll...	—k..,. »uu
brollqrz
r No. 1 Hva poultry; heavy
DETROIT EGGS
DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)-Egg , . paid par dozen by first receivers (including iTs.): White Grade A lumbo, 4^; extra large, 37-40; largj, 35-37; medium, smalla ^2-1-

X"«; oTb"*m.-’w-'C W',
--“90 B 45; M C «B4.
I mixed; wholesale buying prices
b;5e?"& a“ Whirls' ■32.wi,-mi;^ 32W-34; mediums 27; standards 25: checks II.
CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)-(U8DA) - Live try: wholesale buying prICM unchanged; roasters 27-29: special fed white rock
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USOA)- Cattle 1M:
carried over'from earlier . trading on slaughter st^ri slow, general-’'Ll***,?"	M5ol
good to choice 25.50-24.00; good 24.50-25.50; standard end low 22.75-24.25.
Hogs 25, calves 25, sheep 25, not enough of any for market test.
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)-Hogs 4,000; butchers 25 to mostly 5(1 lower, 92 head
19.50;
steady; several --------- .	------ -
prime 1,000-1,350 lbs slaughter rteers 24:50; choice 900-1,300 lbs 25.50-24.25;
rgl^e*? h^etrs'^S'S;
Sheep 300; spring slaughter larnbs . steady; a tew lots choice and 90-105 lb spring lambs 24.00-27.00;
10-110 lbs 25.00-24.00.
''GM, Chrysler Boost Market
a year ago for the second quarz ter, Wall Street was 'pleased
with the reports as indicating a turnabout based on increasing sales.
GM was up a solid 2 points and Chrysler more than a point.
Steels and rubbers, closely allied to the automotive industry, moved generally higher.
The Associated Press average of M stocks at noon was up .5 at 338.9 with industrials up 1.5, rails off .2 and utilities up .1.
Ford and American Motors each took fractional losses.
Gains of about 2 were made by United Air Lines, ^neral Electric and United Aircraft.
Prices )r>se on the American Stock Exchange. Sperry Rand warrants were active and up 1 Menasco gained more than a point. Fractional gains were made by Greer- Hydraulics, Transcontinental Investing, Syntex, Great Basins Petroleum Rusco Industries and H&B American.
Archaeologists iq the Georgian republic, Soviet Union, have discovered the ruins of an ancient temple believed to date from the fourth or fifth century B.C. It is the largest preChristian building ever discovered in the area.
New disturbances flared in Kalamazoo and Albion as police and citizen peace squads calmed the streets of seven other outstate Michigan cities Wednesday night.
A gang of more than 40 Negro youths joined smaller groups in passing cars and smashing house and store windows at K^amazoo. They se^,one fire in station.
The New York Slock Exchange
(hds.) High Low Last C^.
—A—
32 4454 43>/i 44H -I-9 27',k 27	27	+
7 .33V4 33V4 *31/4-
17 59 Sm 59
AirRedtn 1.50
1 26V4 25'A ■+ '
AlcahAlum .
A'!«.CP..10g
AllagPw 1.20	33 24Vk S
59	27k4	274k	^41	-
2	ll'/i	llVk	11'/k	..
12	771^	77'A	77'A	-
Alcoa t.80
25V4 254k -I- 'A
I 04Vk 84Vk —<A
AmAIrlln .00 Am Boach .40 AmBdcat 1.40 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 AmCyan 1.25
,.	,	445k -H
50	704k	775k	70Vk	...
35	50	57'A	575k	-I-	»
140	i?''’‘3(^k 31WA	+	=
12	375k	3744	375k
! 22Vi 224k 22Vi ..
42Vj 42'k - :
15 395k 394k 39'k - 4k
I 734k 73	731A -t
Corp lOl .70
52H 52 >	....
56 35’A 34Vi 35>A +1’ M 37
50 40	48% i
Asid OG 1.60
10 53'/4 Mva	-1-1 J
54 31H 31% 31H *1* %
117 58H57»/i 57%-
' 31% 31»/H 31% + %
54 13% 13% 1
Bendix 1
77 35% 34% 35
lenoutt lethStl 1.
Joelng ,1.U	—	------ --------
BolseCasc .25	182 36% 35	36% +1%
Borden............... ““
BorgWar 2.
BrlggsS 2.40 My 80 jrvnswick BucyEr 1.60
> 33% 33% 33% -f- %
I 16% 16% 16% +
30 141% 132% 132% •
American Stock Exch.
AerolatG .! AlaxMag ,1.. AmPetro .35g
(hdi.) High Law Latl Chg.
10 2944 2944 J
, 51'k Sl'/i -I- V4 I l6Vk 144k -I- H ....	.. .. J 304k 39	-I- Vk
Asamera Oil * -»7	4'k 4 5-14 4W-I-M4
1.40	10 39>/k :
I 344k 334. 344» -4
424k 424k -
I	22V2	234k
474k	475k
I	595k	40<k	.
■	55’/a	57 V. -HV.
I 474k 474k 47Vi 4
ChIMII StP 1 ChPneu 1.00b Chi Rl Pac Chrysler 2
I 43'/t 434k 434k ..
1 20'A 20'/j -
CItiesSvc 1.00.,
ilg Palm I .jllInRad .00 ColoInlG 1.40
4 125	124'k 124'k -
139 35Vj 35	35'/j -
FlyTIgdr .1 Frontier 1j
107 43Vj 424k *
I 42</> 444k 424k:
ComICre 1.00
ComSolv 1.20
GutfReirc A Hycon Mfg

I Ind
Panco«$t Pet RiC Group Scurry Rain Signal OIIA I Sperry R wl Statham Inst Syntax Cp .40 Technicol .40 UnControl .20 WnNuclr .20 Copyrighted by
31'k-I 7'k I 50V. 41'/i I lOO'k 4 I 4Vk —
I 14k ... 15k ,.
90 305'. 3S4k ;
4144 41V
OV. 844	044
10 3444 34Vi 3444 4
The Associated Press 1967
20 504k 50V. i
40 71V. 7(P/4 ;
. 52'k 52’/i -
Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CoxBdeas .50
20 334k 3244 3244 -74 35Va 35	35V.	4
20 .40	594/4 5944 —
43 81 OOW OOW 4 . 57 49V. 4044 49>/4 4C’/k I13'A llO'A 113'A 434k 4544 43<,k 45</k 415k 44Vk 43Vk 4344 ' "
495
7 340	338	340	41
5 535k 53V.
r'A 17'/i 4 Vk IV. A3V4 — 'A l'/4'3444 4 Vk
I 44'A 64'/a 4 44
Stocks of Local Inleresf
OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are repri aantatlva inter-dealer prices of tpprox
markup, markdown i
Citizans Ulimiaa C Dalrax Chemical . Diamond Crystal .
duPont 2.500 Duq Lt 1.40 DynamCp .40
Kelly Sarvkcs .. ...........32.0	J
ASohawk Rubber Co...........28.4	3
Monroe Auto Equipment ......27.2	3
MUTUAL FUNDI
9.24 toil . . .10.43 20.47 . 11.35 12.40 .15.21 14.40
Kayslona Growth K-8 .. Mats. Investors Growth . Maaa. investors Trust ..
...1A00 UJO
....11.05 ILM
.. 13.44 14.71 ...20.19------
244	174k	17'A	17'A
142	27<A	244k	245k	-r
—D—
13	22JA	22Vi	224k	—	'
38	39'A	384k	39'A	4	:
10	295't	297A	29'/s	4	'
399	5744	57'A	574k	-	'
3	32'/j	32'A	32'A	...
4	1234k	1275k	I23V4	—	’
12	T9'/k	19'/k	19Vk	—	'
7 3844 38<A ' 38>/k 4
24	39<A
20 37Vk 37 31 154Vk 155
40 lOVk ll'A 1
_E—
10 SO’/k 5544 I 49 13144 13044 K 25 3244 37'/i 3
4 Vk 4 'A ..	- >A
155V0 ^ W
EmarEI 1.40 End Johnton ErlaLack RR EthylCorp .40 EvansPd .40b
I l2Vk 02Vk 02Vk .'.
I 30'A 30Vk 30'A .
109 44	45'/k 4
FedDStr .... Ferro Cpi 1.20 Fllfrol 1.40
10 245's 2444 245k
' —h’—
110 10444 1031k 1034k —
■37 20Vk 28Vk 281k 39 4744 47	4744	41>A
07 30'A 2944 30
18 I
FIrestne ..™ FlrsfChrt .5It Flintkota 1 Fla-Fow 1.M Fla P'Lt 1.^
I 357/0 354k 354k .	.
S ,3244 32'/i 3244 + 'A I 50	404k 50	-i-1'A
FMC
■K'# s ja at iL ts
’tfr .90	9 16% 16% 16% ...
(hds.) High Law Last Chg.,
FordMot 2.40	2l0	54%	53%	53%	-	V«	Pa PwLt
For McKass	25'24%	24%	24%	-f	%	“‘	—
FreepSul 1.25	65	65	65
FruehCp 1.70	ms	35%	ZSVa	35%	~	%
Pa RR 2.401 Pannzoil 1.40 PapsICo .90
28%	28	28%	f	%
30%	30%	30%	+	%
23	22%	22%	+	V»
22%	22%	22%	-I-	*■
SanDynam 1	46 75% 74% 75% +
Gan	Elac	2.60	193 105% 102%	105%	+:
Gan	Fds	2.40	36	80%	79%	79%	-1
'““	84	82%	84
74	72	74	-i-1
(3anPrac GPubSvc G PubUt
105 46% 46% 4
Gian ALD .%? (Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr 1.35
32	37%	37	0V/»	-f- %
16	71	70%	71	—
X17	56	55%	55%	+
%%? %-% 18% 67%	66%	67	-H
I 45	+
GtWSug 1.6 GreenGnt .
xl6	32%
28	66%	66%	66'/4	-i-	'
60	15%	15%	15%	-I-	'
5	50%	50%	50%	-f	'
12	37%	36%	36%	-	<
447	25%	24V2	25	+	'
38	43%	43V4	43%	—	’
83	70	69%	70	-•
25	24%	24%	24%	...
-H-
27 82'/k MVi 42Vk - '

ollySug 1 omestk .1
15 «7/k 45'A 457/. + H
^Ivk ^ —I—
IngarRand 2 Inland StI 2 InsNoAm 2.40
17 18% 18% 18%	'
8	69%	M%	69Ve	...
66	8%	8%	8%	...
71	47%	46%	47	— '
19	37%	37%	37%	...
*6	30Vk	30'A	30'k
33 500'A 499	500,	-I- '
42	409k	40'A	40'A	...
82 139k 1
I Pap 1.35	130 5
13'/k -
SIngerCo 2.20 SmithK l.lOB SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Sparry R .lOg '----a D .70
John John .60	13 7294 72'A 1
Mfg 1.25	152	3/7/.	369,	IV/j	-F
—K—
.ar Al 1	13	53%	52%	52%
KayserRo .60	679	24%	23	23%	-
KernCLd 2.60 Kerr Me 1.40 KimbClk 2.20 Koppejs ^MO
Studebak ,75g	272 66% 643,ii
) 22% 22% 22% - ’
LehPCtm .60 Lehman 2.01g
8% 8% 8% +
LOFGIS 2.60. LIbbMcN .23f Llggett&M 5 Llffonln 1.54t Livingstn Oil
34% 35	-I- %
13 13% 13% 13% — % 3 74% TiW 74% -f % 28 101 100% 101
LockhdA 2.20
LoneSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.16 Loritlard 2.50 ‘ -'ey
23 84% 84% 84V3
42 18	.........
167 26%
33 38%
61 65%
17% 17% -26% 263/4 -27Va 28% + 64% 65% -f

.	.,/3 -H3,4
22 17% 17V. 17% + ■
8 61	60%	61 -F
16 24% 24V2 24% -F 15 59	58%	58% —
167 47% 46% 46%
18 79Va 78% 79% —
Marquar 25g MartlnMar I MayDStr 1.60 Maytag l.60a McCall .40b

» 29% -
350 25% 25	25% ~ %
1	31V2	31%	31%	+ %
933	57%	55%	56%	+1%
13	44%	44	44%	..
^	62Vi	62%	62%	-t-	.
53	87%	86%	87%	|+1%
MldSoU^I .75 MlnerCh 1.30
MInnMM 1.30
Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.601 MonlDUt 1.5 MontPow 1.3 Montward i
64	57Vk	537/k
33 23'A 23	-	......
63	449k	439k	43H	-1-	Vk
204	00	T9'/i	799k	+	'■
170	45<A	44'A	449k	..
55	199/4	19'k	199k	-FI
288 459k .............
I 31	+
It Can ,50b
__________________
35	39	38'A	30'A	’
108 125'A 123	123'/k —
6	24<A	24	24	—
—N~,
11	83	829k	83	-f1
45'/s	4S1k	451k	-I
Dairy 1.40 DIst 1.80 _ Fuel 1.60 Nat GenI .20 -
K*le°ar2.l5q
Nat Steel 2.50 ■ Tea JO rda P .92 brry .30g
----gEI 1.36
NYOnt 3.12a NIagMP 1.10 NortlkWat 6a
.. ., !)79k 379k .	-
105	104'/i	105 -t-lH
39	38'/>	38'/i -P ■
NorNGai 2.40
NSta Pi
c 2.60
1.52 -
- _____ _____ _____— 9k
9-	14	14	14	—	'
7	42'A	42'A	42'A	— '
I	23	22H	23	. .
34	2M	26	26'A	+ '
T6	03'A	B29k	02U	...
43	21W	209k	21Vk	-(• '
37 1069k 1051k lOSVk —1 33	459k	45'A,	459k	...
6	499k	49'A	49'A	— '
39	44	639k	64	-f '
;rthrop 1 »kt Afrl .70
13 114'/k 114'/k 1147,k .,
__________________  5	53'A	53'A	53'A	+
Norton 1,50	t	29	45Vs	449k	44'/k	+	_
Norwich .1.30	21	03	I2W>	KV4
142 567/t 54'A 569k 22 2794 27'/k 2794 172 7594 7394 75 28 46'/k 459k .46
Occident .• Ohlo»ls 1. OlinMath 1. Otis Eltv '
b Mdr .80	202 ;
Fac Ltd 1.50
73 329k 32Vk 329k -t- ill
—P-
17 349k 349k 349k -t-.-Vk 24 279k 27'A 279k + Vk
PacTAT, t.zu PanASUI .60 Pan Am .40 PanhEP 1.60
25 259k 25'/k 25>/k 15 27'A 27 27Vk 09 31	3094 31
________	21 359k 35	35'A
ParkaOav la 161 29Vk 2894 2090
--------------
9	&i
PennDIxia .60
(hdt.) High Lew Last Chg. 8 31% 31% 31% + ^ 22 69Vi 68% 68% 4 % 3 116	115Vj 115% -1
123 43% 42% 42% -h %
Phits El 1.64 Phil Rdg 1.60 PhllMorr 1.40
Phlll Pet 2.40 Pitney B 1.20 PitPlate 2.60 Pitts Steel Polaroid .40
ProcterG 2.20 PubSveColo 1 Pubikind .34t PogSPL 1.60 Pullman 2.80
63 59Vj 58Vi 59% +1 2 12% 12% 12% — ^ 98 209% 206% 207Va 25 9S^/$ 94% 95% + 4
I 36% 36% 36% - %
Raytheon .60 Reading Co Reich Ch .40b RepubStI 2.50
20 26% 26Va 26% - % 12 33*/a 33% 33% + % 75 89% 17% ‘ 89% -1-2%
Rexal

RheemM 1.40 RoanSel .35g Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 Royal Dut Ig RyderSys .60
1 37% 37% 37% .
Police arrested 20 persons in the Southwest Michigan city. All were Negroes, including four girls. Mayor Raymond Higbtow-e/, who is white, and Negro leaders poured into the North Side trouble scene, imploring persons to get off the streets. Ten per cent of Kalamazoo’s 82,000 population is Negro.
Albion police said at least two gangs, each containing about 50 Negro youth^, threw rocks at motorists and firebomb-ed a vacant house and store. WHITE ARRESTED
Officials clamped a curfew on the 12,700 residents of Albion, a central Lower Michigan city containing a heavy Negro population. Police said none of the Negroes was arrested but a white youth was taken into custody for his own protection after being found carrying a gun.
All reinforcements today left Saginaw as police ended beefed up patrols. But firemen quelled 22 blazes they said were set by firebombers and arsonists Wednesday, mainly in vacant buildings.
Safeway 1. SUosLd 2.1
84 23% 23% 23% — %
Charing 1.2 dent Data
132	64%	63	63%	..
26	66%	66%	66^t	4-
213	81%	78%	80%	-f
48	62%	61%	62
69	2r/»	27%	27%	-
I 67% 66% 67>/» -
33% 33% -nvt 72% -4
28	26%	26%	26%	..
22	39%	38%	38%	—	%
69	34%	m	33%	-	%
7	53%	53%	53%	-1-	‘
76	19	18%	18%	4-	-
104	37%	35%	37V4	4-1%
27
% - %
Std Kolls .50	37 36	35% 35^/i 4- .
’ill!
1.60g %8% -1-	----
^NJ 1.60g	193 64%
StdOilOh 2.50	33 69% 69
St Packaging Stan War- ’ Stauft Ch
16%‘ 16% - '
Swift Co 1.20
46«/2 4- %
+2
Thiokol .40 TImRB' 1.8Qa TransWAir 1
91	75%	73%	74%
75	22%	22%	22%	.
169 145	141% 143% 4-2%
87 124	120% 120% — '
1	19%	19%	19%	—
69	7r	76%	78	4-2
43	24%	23%	24	4-
67 44% i
672 1
18	27%	27%	27%	..
25	75%	75	75V4	. .
,	75 86%	+
28	24Va	24%	24%	4
206	53%	52%	53%	4

206	46	43%	45%	4-1%
151	83V4	81%	82%	4-2%
101	98%	97	98
US Ind .70 US Lines 2t USPIyCh 1.5(
9	81%	81Vt	81%
19	26%	26	26%
26	32V2	31%	32%
144	77%	76%	76%
117	26	25%	25%
8	34%	34%	34% .	..
20	54%	53%	53% -	%
153	75Va	73%	73% -	'
m 47V	. .........
95	55	54%	54%	-
_V—
«	3»k	3»'A	3«'A	4
/	rz	39'A	3>'/k	39	4
VaEIPw 1.34
21 UVt 43Vk 44'/k 4 Vk
—w—
r
WnUnTel 1. 'VeitgEI 1. /tyarhr 1. thirl Cp 1.
41	ZZ'A	«Vk	_
9	33Vk	23H	23V4
X3Z	M'A	52'/»	S4'A	+1H
48	30Vk	30'k	30r/i	...
42	39	3IH	383A	-
145 42V	■
i 42'A 41Vk 41Vk 4
H 40'A	.........
,24 4S'A '21 5?'A .
20 29% 3
th 1 xllT 31'A 30'/7 31	, -
I 1.50	77 tP/t 47'A 47'A 41'A
—X—Y—.Z—
A 275'A 27IVk '44'A
Salai figure! are ulnotticlal.
Unless otharwita noted, rates of dlvF lands In the foraging table art annual llsbursamants bated on the last quarterly _ -------------- ^ ------------ "
•emi-annual declal-atlon. -'vidends or payments not ; regular are Identified li fooThotas.
> plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating Idend. d—Daclarad or paid In 1947 I slock dividend. e-Peld ‘ ‘ -------
stock during 1947, estl-on ex.dlvMcnd or ex-|—Declared or Mid »o
ate. g—C . h—DecI
lock dividend r paid this year, nth dividendk In . i-Pald this year.
k-Deciared jiafive ‘— arrears. r>—New
meeting, r—Declared or .............. ^
slock dividend. t-PeM In (lock during 1944, estimated cash value on ex4llvlderi3 or ex-dlstrlbutlon date. z-Sqles ■- * ■' cld^all
led. X—Ex dividend. y—Ei sales In 'full. xHlIs—Ex do xr-Ex rights, xw—Without
----- ww—With warrants, wd—Whe..
tributed. wl-Whan Issued, nd—Next'day
being raorganlzad under the Bankruptcy
x ';a	!ee«rltles aeeuma^  ------- -—
+ Vk penies. tn-Forelgn issue
— VAHerest
Disturbances Flare Outstate
Kalamazoo, Albion U(»et by Teen Gangs
But Black Power Aid Is Small

firms Got Negro
ByJOHNCUNf^F AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - A general attitude of enmity toward the so-called white power structure did not prevent, the recent National Conference on Black Power from seeking support of some of the nation’s largest corporations.
Among those] solicited for' funds and delegates were U.S. Steel, Humble Oil and Mobil Oil. None contributed, nor did the other seven companies that make up the 10 largest industrial corporations in America.
ties were (jontacted by thb fe* porter.
Prudential Life Insurance, based in Newark, said it had received a letter seeking funds but that it had declined to contribute largely on the basis tiiat thd meeting was segregated.
‘We discussed it and decided we wouldn’t make a contrlbu^]] tion,” a spokesman said.
General Electric received a request for funds, but hot through its executive office. The mimeographed invitation came to a community relations man and asked for a $250 contribution.
This contribution, the letter said, would entitle GE to be lis-'
The 50 corporations that Dr. Nathan Wright, chairman of the Newark conference, claims did contribute apparently did so only to a small extent. Contacted this week, Wright said the maximum contribution was $250 and the minimum $25.
Such sums are small for or-ganizgitions which included, as Wright said, “some of the largest corporations in the world.” Based on his figures, the total contribution could have have been more than $12,275.
NOT IDENTIFIED
Wright declines to identify the companies because. “We don’t want to give the names of any white people who contributed to Black Power.” To do so, he said, “whuld put them in the position of defending Black Power, and we do not wish to put whites in the position of
More than 60 Negro “peace patrolmen,” saying* turbulent youths “can be talked to and possibly be reached,” fanned into Negro areas telling persons on the streets to “cool it.”
Five persons had been wound-1 during the night before in Saginaw, a city of 98,000 about 100 miles northwest of Detroit.
The peace patrol idea caught on, too, in Grand Rapids, Mount Clemens and other cities.
RAIN HELPED Youths tossed rocks and bottles sporadically Wednesday in Grand Rapids, the state’s second largest city. Eight fires broke out, but rainfall during much of the day dampened spirits of any rioters in the West Michigan city of 202,000. As police kept tight control over downtown and southeast actions of Grand Rrapids, members of a racial task force continued urging residents to stay home.
Pontiac police turned oveic two unmarked scout cars equipped with loudspeakers to Negro community leaders Wednesday night. With four or more in each car, the patrols fanned out through Negro districts of the city of 82,000 northwest of Detroit.
The reason? “It would be offensive to black people to have whites defending Black Power.” He did say that corporations were not singled out for donations but were merely part of a vast campaign for funds and delegates from organizations such as police departments, antipoverty units and self-styled revolutionary groups.
Though Wright declined to name the companies which contributed, some obvious possibili-
WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Department policy siguing enlisted men to Vietnam varies among the services and, for instance, permits the Army to send to the war front a soldier with as few as 90 days left in his tour of duty.
On the other hand, the Pentagon said Wednesday Navy enlisted men are eligible for Vietnam duty only if they still have 16 months remaining in their tour. Naval officers, however, can be sent to Vietnam with just 12 months left in their tour.
Treasury Position
2*, I947 ■’■juiy
D.po5.?sV1!?'r''?i’ar'‘j!ly''Tl!'”''*“'‘
(-Total "’o'Jgt??''"”
331^1,115,122.57	319,348,541,929.45
C^-JONES AVERAGES
45 Stocks BONDS 40 Bonds
12 SHJ?; [
I Second grade rads i
. 71.17—0.10
. 81.14.....
. 81.91—0.02
BONO AVERAGES ComplM by Th# Associated P 20 10 10 10
—. ago	74.4	91.9	81.9	92.3
1947 High	7S.0	95.4	14.9	9l4
1947 LOW	70.1	91.0	80.9	90.5
1944 High	79.5	101.4	14.1	93.1
’“'-.ow	70.1	88.9	79.2	90.4
STOCK AIVBRAOES M by Tht AtiMiqM F
IS
St^
Noon'thurs. . . '. . .474.1 207.0 ISoii -3319 ................
..... ...........452.7 1 94.5 148J 323J
Year ago ....... 447.7 147.5 145.5 307.7
,.4,	20SJ MOa 339.4
44.14 laax 444'. AM-a
1947 Le« . . . . 413.4 1J9.4 144,'9 292;
............ 537.9 213.9 170.$ 349.
143.9 130,2 249.
1944 Low .
Fa- Stk. al Pay-rioA B——< INCRPASBO
Ogden Corp	.20	8-25	9-29
REGULAR ChelnBCbl	.40	O
—.. ,’Sler Corp ...50	Q
Cluett Peebody ... .20	Q	.	_
ElPeio Net Gei .. .25	Q	8-18	9-3y
Gen Foods .........40	Q	8-9	95-
' Ludlow Cwp.........44	Q	9-4	9-20
• Hat DMItllCh .....45	Q	S-1V	9-1
South Hat Oat J2S	Q	*	•
Std Brandt Inc	'•	"
.35 Q. BIS 9-15
DETROIT (AP) - The giant General Motors Corp. Wednesday reported a decline in earnings for the second quarter and the first half of 1967, compared with 1966.
Sales, however, were up for the second quarter, compared with the second quarter of 1966.
Net ^income for the second quarter was $522 million, equal to $1.82 per share. This compares with $546 million or $1.90 a share for the second quarter last year.
Earnings for the six months equaled $9.2 million or $3.17 a share, compared with $1.1 billion of $3.90 a share in 1966. SALES REPORTS
Sales for the second quarter, however, hit $5.6 billion, up from $5.5 billion for the first three months of last year. For the first six months of this year, they totaled $10.4 billion, down
Policy Varies for Services
on Viet Duty
Although an individual usually will not be transferred from his statestoe unit to Vietnam unless he has more than si* months of his enlistment to serve, the Army will permit transfer of soldier with 90 days left if his unit is ordered to Southeast
Asia.
The Air Force will send an airman to Vietnam if he has at least nine months remaining. It also will send airmen with as little as seven months left to serve if his unit is ordered there.
MARINE POUCY
A spokesman said the Marines have a nine-month minimunl arrangement applying whether a man goes singly or with a unit.
Except for Marines, Whose basic tour in Vietnam is 13 months, other servicemen are assigned to Southeast Asia for basic 12-month periods.
Business Notes
John R. Meddaugh of 4461 Mdtorway, Waterford Township, was inducted into the International Fellowship of Certified Collections of the American Collectors Association, Inc., at its annual convention in Mnneap-olis, Minn. The award represents acknowledgment of meritorious service,,,.
News in Brief
Lynn Sheffer now ^srbering at 6512 Hatchery Rpad. —Adv.
David Belisle Auxiliary lOW. Rummage sale. Sat., July 29, 6 a.m.-2 p.m., 206 Auburn Ave.
-Adv.
GM Reports Earnings Drop
Second Quarter Sales Higher Than in '66
as a patron and send, % ‘^thinking Wack American” the (^inference as a delegate. ^ NO CONTRIBimON “T
GE did not make a contribution, although the matter nevjSf came before a decision-making body in (time for action to be taken because the communtty relatiims man failed to forwq;^ the invitation;
Others in the big 10, such m International Business Km-chines, Ford, General Mot^ and Texaco were neither $b-licited nor did they contribute, spokesmen for these companies said.
Just becauie none of the toj) 10 industrial corporations supported the conference does not diminish Wright’s claim (U as-sistance from industry. Hundreds more corpwatlons can be called major or giant.
However, the suggestion that there was broad or general sup:, port from industry is misleading. These corporations, which give millions of dollars each year to various charities, gave only a relative pittance, to the Black Bower conference, and some, presumably, only because they were solicited.
On the other hand, it must be. said that those companies that ; declined to contribute or to send* slegate .may not have done; out of animosity toward" Black Power. Most corporations, have strict policies on accepta-' ble charities.
In general, corporate policy, usually dictates that a recipient’ be associated with the community in which the company operates. Generally such contributions involve only hospitals,, schools and major charitable funds.
Tv/o CNB Execs Elected Senior Vice Presidents
„ L-.,- Executive changes at the slightly from the $11.2 billion in Community National Bank were"
the first six months of last year.
However, Board Chairman Frederic Donner and President James M. Roche told stockholders the picture was encouraging. They said the monthly sales trend for new GM trucks and cars was rising, with sales in each month exceeding those of the previous month by a margin greater than the normal seasonal increase.
“Car buyers in increasing numbers are recognizing the extra value of GM products,” the two officials said. “In the second quarter General Motors
announced recently by the bank’s board of directors.
Two general vice presidents, Warren H. Eierman and John P.
Niggeman, were elected senior of the North Amencan-type pas-l„:
North American-type pas-I .Vf^ senger cars sold by all dealers	★ a
in the United States. This figure was up slightly over last year’s 51.7 per cent.
Donner and Roche said sales of personalized cars — the Ca-maro. Firebird, Toronado, Riviera and Eldorado—continued show the fastest growth. FOREIGN DECLINE
They said car and truck sales in this country and Canada are improving, but that overseas a general decline in business activity has hurt sales.
Neither executive gave an explanation as to why earnings dipped, despite an increase in sales.
Eierman will be adminlstra- -tor of commercial loans along with other executive, and administrative responsibilities. He join^ CNB in March 1966, with considerable banking experience in the Blast. Eierman lives at 860 Harsdale, Bloomfield Town-; ship.
Niggeman was elected in recognition of a career that has. spanned 30 years, during which time he became a leading arek mortgage authority and has ap' proved and processed several hundred million dollars in mort-. gage loans. He lives at 1986; Lakeland, Sylvan Lake.	;
* Successfuhlnvesttng f
IMiliiilliiBllliillliiii
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “For retired people, would you recommend anything other than savings and loans paying 5-5V4 per cent? No risk can be involved as capital Is our protection against old age. Many stocks yield 5V4 per cent but what is to prevent these stocks from declining below their purchase price?” S. S.
A) There is nothing whatsoever to prevent stocks from selling at times below their purchase price. All shares fluctuate, sometimes widely. I think you should realize, though, that they can also sell up in price and that in some situations such as utilities -r- dividend pdyments are trendings teadily higher.
What you don’t appreciate, I think, is that there are certain risks in fixed-income investments that have nothing tq do with safety of principal. There is mainly the danger that the real ^Talue of shvings may be seriously eroded by inflatinn, now on the move again. If I were j/ou, I would balance the risks sami extent I would place half
my funds in savings institutions* and half in such stocks as Du/ quesne Light which yields 5V4, per cent and has lifted its dividend rate In nine consecutive years.
*	* if	f,
Q) “I am in the 53 per cent income tax bracket and have ; a substantial stock list, sav- ! ings and insurance. I am considering tax-exempt nmnici- , pals for an investment of $25,- ; 000. Would you make recom- '• mendations?” K. M.	I
A) The yield on tax-exempt J municipals has been rising and/ is again at relatively attractive, levels. An investment of $25,-’ 000 would provide a backlog for* your stock list and afford a high/ taxable equivalent return. I sug-t gest San Francisco Bay Area’ Rapid Transit Dist, 4.20s of 1996 ; at par, rated AA, taxable equiv-'l alent yield 8.94 per cent. Also.J Dallas Independent School Dis*-; trict 3.80s of 1981 at par, rated* AA, taxable equivaleht yield*' 8.09 per cent. I like also Newt Britain, Conn., 3.85s of 1987,;; offered to yield 3.95 per cent,; rated AA, taxable equivalent re-t turn 8.40 phr cent.	>
(Copyright, 1967)
Ail:
;.v
.-t
It you’d like fine “new” 200-year-old hardwood floors to give distinction to that new house yqou’re building, there are contractors who can fill such orders occasitmally. Hiey salvage them from historic old razed buildings, and the floors are in wonderful condition.
MAJESTIC BEAUTY—Half Dome towers 4,500 feet above the floor of the valley in Yosemite National Park. Ilie California area is one of the scenic wonders of the world.
ADVCRTISEMeNT
1 Dr»In
......1 fo Bradford, will _ ____________
It fho offlco of fh# City Clork, 4» WIdo
A chorg* of t10.M « ich uf which will b tha raturn of tha plant
a cartlfltd check or a
price. Plant and tpaclflcatlont may ba oWalnad at tha office of tha Ctty Bn-Olntar, 4M WIda Track Drive, Bait, Pontiac, Michigan.
Tha City ratervat tha right to accept
right to waive a
i J4, 1947
City of Pontiac '
' OLGA BARKELEY City Clerk
Hardwood Floor Has Fine Grade
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THtfRSDAY, JULY 27. 1967
SECTION 1 Beglnnine tt tha propoiad Hamlin Drain at futlraad Strait and Highland Ava. In Mhm 3 (TIN - RISE) (ttkiand County, Miehlgant fhanca touthweafarty along Highland Av«. to WlntlVop Rd.; thence Wattarly and .Sootht^cT' -	—
WInthrop Rd. to Woodward Ava northwetterly along Woddward a point approximately 300 tt. i
F—5
But if your b^et ai^ your ----------’“j more
taste are along	______
tional lines, lumber dedim say, you can aseure yourself of quality hardwood floors by specifying flooring which bears the let-tolng “NOFMA” on the underside.
The letters stand for National Association. Only qualified producers are admitted to the association and allowed to use the trademark.
The letters thus are your assurance that the flooring has been manufactured in accordance with the association’s high standards and is of the grade stated.
land County, Michigan
to tha provlilon* of Chaplar 20 o
dod, a petition wai flTed wl County Drain Commlnloner of 0 County, Michigan, patltlonlng ft following prolect, to wit;
Location, ettabllshment and afructlon of Intra-county relief d to be located subitantlally as toll
. WInthrop Rd. point of terr-*— SECTION 3
Wr 74 and 73'to Kaneingfon Road* thehM ——daily along Kensington Road *-of terminus at Dover Road. SECTION 5
A branch of tl«s proposed NIch... OraM, beginning on Talegraph Road at Nichols Oralr -	— ~ '•~-
............ 34 and R of
Heights NO'. S Subdivision In Section 3« (T2N - RICE) Oakland County, Michigan; thence westerly between lots 34 —■ “•
thence westerly between Lot 2S_______ ____
“	—• SO) thence southwesterly be-
r Court; thence westerly elong
-/ Court to McEwan Or.; thanM________
westerly along McEwen Dr. to Pina Tree Trail; thanoe wa^ly along Pina Tree Trail to a polnt^iirterminus on the —* side of Franklin Road.
SECTION 3
Beginning at tha open drain along .._ ssterly boundary of Hickory Heights .ubdlvlslon No. I between lots 145 and 147 In section 13 (T2N - R10B) Oakland
along Telegraph Read 4m VI less to Orchard Way; thei— northwMterly along Orchard Way to Crabtree Rd.; thence northerly along CraWrea Rd. to the northerly boundary of Foxcrofi Subdivision No. 3; thence
—V------Crabtree^Rd. In pox-
--.jn No. 3 to Valley Forge northerly along Crabtree Rd. boundary of FoxcToft Subdivision No. 3; thdnce northerly along
----'-ea Rd. In Foxcroft Subdivision No.
a point of- terminus at Meadow
Far I
I Dr.;
Dr., 120 ft. mors or less; thence westerly between lots 142 and 143; thence —-- -n lot 172 and lots 143
thenca northwesterly along said drain acrOu lots 12, 11, 10, r and 3 to tha westerly boundary of the Braes of Bloom-Subdivision; thence westerly
161,
t 114 a
West Orchard Hill Dr.; thence southerly
along West Orchard Hill Dr., 340 ft.-----
or less; thence westerly between ________
124 and 127 to the westerly boundary Of Hickory Heights Sub. No. 1; thenca northerly along the easterly boundary Of Charing Cross Highlands Subdivision No, 2, 40 ft. more or lass; thenca west*
sriy between lots 32 and 34 to Ch--------
Cross Road; thence northerly along i Ing Cross Road 510 ft. more or thence westerly 70 ft. more or less point of terminus at the existing
divtiten storm drains;
SECTION 4
betwaan lots 70 and 71 at the Rouge River along tha
4 (T2N
Estates ______________
RlOE) Oakland County, northwesterly between lois yu ana ti to the Northwest side of Burnley Drive; ' !nce westerly between lots 61 and 02, i between lot 71 end lots 62 and 70 Tullamore Drive; thence westerly be-ten lots 47 and 48, and between lots and 47 to Haddington Drive; thence sterly between lots 40 and 41 to tha ...sterly boundary of Charing Cross Es-Ifates Subdivision; thence westerly ------
(T2N - R10E) Oakland County, Michigan;
northeasterly along said watercourse 1200 “ more or less to a point of terminus Walnut Lake Rd., 300 ft. (nore - - "
It of Westmoor Road.
SECTION 7 :
Beginning at tha outlet to Wing Lake of an existing .open drain In the vicinity of Lot 13 of Forman's Wing Lake Sub-' ' Ion In Section 27 (T2N - R10E) Oak-County, Michigan; thenca northerly westerly along said drain 450 ft.
.... or less to Forman Drive; thence
northerly along Forman Driva 750 ft.
I Rd.; I
northerly along Franklin
Rd. to a point of terminus at Lakewood
...„ ja Qaarton
- . at Forman Drive thenca easterly along Quar-lo. lo a point of termin'- -* ■ Drive.
SECTION 6 An extension of the proposed Nichols Drain, beginning on Maple Road at said Nichols Drain In Section 27 (T2N - RIDE) Oakland County, Michigan; thenca n< " erly across Maple Road and along entrance road of Foxcroft SubdIvI No. 1 to a point of terminus at Surrey Cross.'
SECTION V	i
Beginning at an existing open drain . . .. .. ----- ^
fhenga norttiwsalafly along saM opan drain af the rear of lots », 40, 41 and
itton to ciwntrir Club Estatas’MbdIvI____
..—.-._w ... .	northerly along
t of terminus
Stoneleigh Rdr to a point
SECTION to An. extension of the proposed Nichols Drain, beginning at Telegraph Rd. and
Michigan; thenca easterly along Lincoln ''-■•I 1400 ft. iTwre or less; thehce north-between lots 34 and 35 to the northboundary of Berkshire Glens Sub.
the western boundary of Oakland Hilts Country Club Sub. No. 1 1730 ft. more “ ‘tss; thenca westerly along the soUtn-boundary of Oakland Hills Country
Estates, 230 ft. more .	.............
northerly along Country Club Drive and Country Club Drive extended, 700 ft. more or less to the point of terminus.
SECTION 11
Beginning at the Intersection ol ■anch (ft the Rouge River and the t drain from Orange Ldke, near .... .juth line of Sec. No. 7 (T2N - R10E1 Oakland County, Michigan, and 250 ft.
-----T less west of Brookside DHve;
northwesterly along said branch Rouge River through Kuschells
Canterbury f
Brook Subdivision 2500 ft. more Telegraph Road, 1050 tt. mori ' Hickory Grove Rd. northwesterly, westerly.
' along said branch of the Rouge River
ory GroVe Rd.; thence westerly .
northwesterly along said branch of
"----- River through replat of Forest
Country Club Estates Subdivision 1, 2400 ft. more or less to Ayrshire
Drive, 375 ft. ______
“ ■ Court, thenca ___________ .... ______
y through Forest Lake Country “	■■	■ point of
"Lake In the V
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, that the Drainage Board for said project has considered the said petition and has made
sufficient _ _	____
project IS practical; has given "CLAUDE H. STEVENS DRAINS" as the name ol si Drains and the name "CLAUDE H^ STE-
, croins ano me name v-LAUUt n. a IVENS RELIEF DRAINS DRAINAGE C
' Road 1
TRICT" .
therefor; and tive determination
lake TiiePoirtiiic Press WHh Vira on Vocotion!
Have The Pontiac Press mailed to you while you are on your vacation. Mo matter where you may go the Pontiac Press will keep you up to date on all the news that’s happening in Your World!
The Cost by Mail Is So Little
55^
Per
Week
Per Month
Dial 332-8181
The Pontiac Press Circulation Department
,//A.
public corporations for tha cost of said
of Michigan — on account of
tty of C_________
sinaga to county h Township of BloomfleIC NQTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, t

Daylight
----	_ -----iship Hall,
graph Road, Bloomflald Hills, ___________
for the purpose of hearing any objections fb said project, lo the petition thi— and to tha mattar of assessing th thereof to the public corporations
named. At said hearing any public_______
ration to be assessed or any taxpayer thereof, will ba entitled to be heard.
This notice is given by order of the said Drainage Board for the Claude H. «t vans Relief Drains.
DANIEL W. BARRY Chairman of	‘
Oakland County C
Death 'Notices
BRANNSTROM, BARBARA M.; July 24, 1947; 1012 Lakevlew, Waterford Township; age 35; beloved daugh-
at the Donelson - ______ .
Home. Miss Brannsirom w In state at . the funeral (Suggested visiting hours 3
BYRD, LILLHs MAY; July 24, 1747; 508 East McMlIleftii^^Drive, Tucson, Arizona (formerly of Pontiac); age 71; beloved wife of George M. Byrd; dear mother of Mrs. Earl (Gladys) Moore, AArs. Duane (Fern) Byford, Mrs. Ralph (GiS-neva) Donaghy and Fred Byrd; dear sister of Mrs. Ida Kelly, Mrs. Rosie King, James end Ivon Starling; also survived by 13 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be
y 28, a
the Voorhees - Siple Funeral ime with Rev. Gilbert Adams iciating. Interment In Perry )unt Park Cemetery. Mrs. Byrd
COLDEN, LEO; July 24,	1947;
547 Washington Boulevard, Marysville; age 44; beloved husband of Virginia Colden; dear brother of
two nieces and two nephews. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 28, at 2 p.m. at the Court Street Baptist Church, Port Huron.
Cemetery, Goodells, Michigan. Arrangements by the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford.________
CONKLIN, HARRIET E.) July 24, 1747; 128 Lincoln; age 85; dear sister of Cecil Novinger; alsd sue-
In Oakwood
. _______ Mrs. Conklin
In state at tha funeral ’*	■ ■ visiting hours
I, GLENN; July 25, 1747;
........ Gora Ball	____
Rosella Kelly. Funeral service will be held Saturday, July 27, at 2
tica Cemetery. I
7; beloved .	_______
and Dorothy Gerber; dear brother of Ricky, Robert and James Gerber. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 28, at 1:30 p.m. at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Steven will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours
GRANFORS, CARL S.; July 24,1747; 440 Scott Lake Road; age 75; ba-.—j	Qijj Grantors;
brothers and el
Funeral service _____
day, Jg^ 28, af 11
Sparks - Griffin Funeral ----------
Interment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Grantors will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 7
, HUBERT G.; July 25, 1747; Auburn Avenue; age 74; be-Kl husband of Belva Hill; dear I. Bernol Soutar, Hud-
son G., Robert Stuart R. Hill; also survived by I grandchildren. Elks Lodge of
—......."1 he held tonight at 7:30
I. a? tna Sparks-Griffin Funeral ne. Funeral service will be I Friday. July 28, at 3 p.m. at

the funeral I
MCDONNELL, HAROLD; July 24, 1747; 3703 Brookdale Lane, Waterford Township; age 75; beloved ' husband of Pauline McDonnell? dear brother of Mrs. James B.
ressey. Elks Lod^ of Sorrow will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. ;at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Recfiaflon of tha Rotary will ba held Friday at 8 p.m. af tha
s held Saturday, July 27, i
Church. _____
Cemetery, Flint, mr, will lie In state at me lunerai home after 2 p.m. today. (Sug-----1 visiting- hours 3 to 5 and
4141" Walnut Lake Roa'd, ________
Bloomfield Township; age. 54; beloved husband of Ruth G. Mc-Inally; beloved ton of AArs. George G. Mclnally; '	' •*	" “
Mclnally; dear brother ol George F. Mclnally. Funeral service will be held Saturday, July 27, at 3 p.m. at the Donalton-Johnt Funeral Home. Interment In Oakland Hills AAemorlal Cemetery, Novi. Mr. Mclnally will lie in state at tha funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5
d 7 to 7 p m
PERNA, JOSEPH; July 24, 1747; 455 Lenox; age 72; beloved husband of Teresa Perna; dear father of Mrs. Donald G. FInelll; dear brother of Mrs. Concatta Felice. Mrs. Sera Occhluto and Mrs. Amelia DePaola; alto survived by four grandchildren. Recitation of tha Rosary will ba held Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Donalton-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service Will be held Saturday, July 27,
Wl<;hael's Catholic Church. Interment In Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Perna
REEVES, BOBBY R.; July 25, 1747; 234 Crystal Lake Drive; age 25; beloved husband of Selma Reeves; beloved ton Of JSssle Lee Reeves;
Charles, Jackie, Shirley M Carlyn, Annie, Pearl and M lln Reeves, Funeral service « ba held AAonday, July 31,
Cemetery. ............ ....... .
state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home Saturday.

Ima Horton, Mark, John and alto survived by ■ tlx grtat-
-------------------------
I. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral ...ne. Intwment In Ortonvilte Cemetery, Oiionville. Mr. Smith will lie In state al the funeral hon\^after 7 p.m. tonight. (Sug-
I visiting li
tAYLOR, ALFRED; July 25, 1747; 281 Branch	Street;	age	17;	be-
loved ton of Mrs. Y. Taylor; dear brother of	Charles	and	Pafrice
Taylor. Funeral saryjee will' be . held Friday, July 28, at 1 p.m. at tha Trinity	Baptist	Church	with
Rev. Lee A. Gragg .officiating. Intarmant In Oak 44UII Cemetery. Alfred will	lie In	state	at	the
Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 p.m. tonight.
roftme ptBji,
CLASSIFIED ADVBUSMa
Itavistd Jmw 28, IHS
NOTICES
Cord of Thanks..............1
In Memoriom ...............2
Announcements .............3
Florists..................3-A
Funeral Directors..........4
Cemetery lots ............4-A
Personals ................4-B
Lost and Found.............5
EMPLOYMENT
Help Wonted Mole........... 6
Help Wanted Female.........7
Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A
Employment Agencies........9
Employment Information ...9-A
Instructions-Schools.......10
Work Wanted Male...........11
Work Wanted Female.........12
Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A
SERVICES OFFERED
Building Services>SuppI!es...13
Veterinary .................14
Business service............15
Bookkeeping end Taxes......16
Credit Advisors...........16-A
Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17
Gardening .............. ,..18
Landscaping..............18-A
Garden Plowing...........18-B
Income Tax Service.........19
Laundry Service ............20
Convalescent-Nursing ......21
Moving and Trucking........22
Painting and Decorating....23
Television-Radio Service...24
Upholstering..............24-A
Tronsportation .............25
Insurance..................26
Deer Processing............v27
WANTED
Wanted Children to Board. .28 Wanted Household Goo&...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.	.30
Wanted Money...............31
Wanted to Rent .............32
Share Living Quarters......33
Wanted Real Estate.........36
RENTALS OFFERED Apartments-Furnished ..... 37 Apartments-Unfurnished ...38 Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished...40 Property Management... .40-A
Rent Lake Cottages.........41
Hunting Accommodations 41-A
Rent Rooms .................42
Rooms With Board...........43
Rent Farm Property .........44
Hotel-Motel Rooms ..........45
Rent Stores ................46
Rent Officn Space..........47
Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellanemis ........48
REAL ESTATE
Sale Houses ..............  49
Income Property ...........50
Loke Property..............51
Northern Property ........51-A
Resort Property............52
Suburbon Property..........53
Lots-^Acreqge ..............54
Sole Forms .................56
Sole Business Property ....57 Sole or Exchange............58
FINANCIAL
Business Opportunities.....59
Sole Land Contracts........60
Wanted Controcts-Mtges...60-A
Money to Lend..............61
Mortgage Loons..............62
MERCHANDISE
Swops ......................63
Sole Clothing ..............64
Sole Household Goods .....65 ^
Antiques................  6S-A
Hi-Fi, TV & Radios.........66
Water Softeners......... .66-A
For Sole Miscellaneous .^.67 Chrlslmns-Treisi,,'.:;.:..", „67-A
Christmas Gifts ..........67-B
Hand Tools—Machinery..... 68
Do It Yourself.............69
Comeros-Service ...........70
Musical Goods..............71
Music Lessons............71-A
Office Equipment...........72
Store Equipment............73
Sporting Goods.........'...74
Fishing Supplies-Boits.....75
Sond-Grovel-Dirt ..........76
Wood-Cool-Coke-Fuei ....77
Pets-Huntipg Dogs .........79
Pet Supplies-Servica.....79-1^ --
Auction Soles...............80
Nurseries..................81
Plants—Trees-Shrubs ....81-A Hobbies and Supplies........82
FARM MERCHANDISE j
livestock ...............   83
Meats ...................83-A
Hoy-Groln-Feed ............84
Poultry ...................85
Form Produce..........»..86
Form Equipment ............87
AUTOMOTIVE
Travel Trailers............88
Housetroilers..............89
Rent Trailer Space........90
Commercial Trailers... *. .90-A
Auto. Accessories....-....91
Tires-Auto-Truck ..........92
Auto Service..............93
Motor Scooters.............94
Motorcycles................95
Bicycles —..................96
Boqts-Accessbries ........97
Airplanes.............4...99
Wanted Cors-Trucks .......101
Junk Cors-Trucks).......lOI-A
Used Auto-Trucic Ports ...102
and Used Tracks.......103
Auto^orine Insurance ...104
Forc^n Cots...............105
New and Used Cere .4....106
F—6
THE PONllAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ^ULY 2l, 1967


w
A
N
T
FAST
R E 5 U L T S
USE
PRESS
W
A
N
T
A
D
S
3^2
8.
1
8
1
To Buy, Rent’ Sell or Trade
Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hoursj 8 cum. to 5 p.m. Gincellation Deadline 9 Q.m. Day Following First Insertion
Wonted Mole 6 \ A PART-TIME JOB
A'”marrled man. Jl-34 to vi_-
hours per evening. Call <74-0S20 4 p.m. to I p.m. tonight.
$200 PER MONTH
.1 MECHANIC, TOP PAY FOR good man. benefits, Lloyd Bridges Dodge. Walled Lake. Gall
ACCOUNTANT, ABLE TO S
N CHERISHED MEMORY OF MY beloved Grandson, Jerry L. Schemel who was killed In VUrtnam July 27, 19M. My loss was surely “■ Grandmother,
IN LOVING MEMORY OF 0 loved son, Jerry L. Schemei, w was killed In Vietnam July : 19&6.
Our darling

you had suffered have felt alone
- ----- Jiea with such honor
Nine thousand miles from home Life has no meaning Without the love we've known ' May God watch over you
And to

missed by motner.
Announcements
iCIO INDIGESTION? PAINFUL gas? Get new PH5 tablets. Fast
as liquids. OBIy W cents. "*-
Bros. Drugs.
DEBT Alp, INC., 711 RIKER BLDG FE 2-om, Refer to Credit Ad-visors. 16-A
____ FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS,
^es, church. OR 3-5202, FE 2-
RAINBOW OF FASHIONS BY Baum. Aug. 2 at 7:30 p.nr. _. Lake Orion Bogi Hut. Admission of 50c. Door prizei and refreshments. .Sponsored by The Lake
Help Wanted Mple
-.. ... ----------concession help.
Aiwiy Miracle Mile Drive-ln theater, 2103 S. Telegraph Rd. Be-P-m. and O-IO p.m.
ASSISTANT MANAGER
S12S starting salary. Alto fu-__
part time wanted. Apply to Henry Walker, 510 S. Saginaw ^, pr-*'— Clark Super 100,
AUTO-MECHANIC WITH GM Experience, Plenty of work. Paid 'Holidays and vacation. Plus many other beni-' fits. NO Saturdays. Apply In person to Del Wankel. Service manager. SHELTON-PONTIAC-BUICK, Roches-ter, Michigan.
PER WANTED FOR Bioover new tavern West of Pontiac, t nights, 7 p.m. till closlnq. Contact Don Suter 5e2-»e35 after 8. OY, 15, STOCK AND STORE work. Russ' Country Store, — Elizabeth Lake Rd., Pontiac.
Franks Restaurant, Keego Harbor.
BUMP AND BODY MAN
Needed for, CM dealership, mutt have experience. Fringe Benefits, Apply In person to Haupt Pontiac Safes, Clarkston.
CARPENTERS AND
— experiihc*. -*
try. High school seniors
____________ Phone 353-0620. Sub-
sldlary of Alcoa.
.RECT SALESMEN I..........
Leads furnished _ FE 5-5130.
BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. toda) there were replies at The Press Office in the foi-iowing boxes:
1, 2, 3, 13, 17, 19, 20, 21, 26, 28, 29, 32, 37, 35,
Funeral Directors COATS
FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS	574 0451
Evenings Part-Time
3	men needed Immediately for part-time evening work. Mutt be neat, mature, married and have good work record. Call 574-0520,
4	p.m. — 8 p.m. tonight. fiSTATE GARDENER HANDYMAN,
OONBLSJN-JOHNS Funeral Home -"Designed tor Funerals”
Huntoon
FUNERAL HOME
DRAFTSMAN FOR ESTIWIATING department, high school graduate, strong on Math. Reply P. O. Box 185, Rochester, Mich. 48053. lUCT INSTALLERS AND BENCH lay-out man, top wages and steady work. O'Brien Heating, 371 Voor-helt.__________________.
EXPERIENCED ROUTE MAN FOR ......	cleaning route.
Cleaners. 5700 Dixie
, Berg C ., Claricstc
Halp Wanted Female
---------------ening
10 except Sat. 9-3.
e to maintain a neat _____
' e appearance and able to !. 3 day training program, 1142.50 wk. Call Mr. Miller,
- 2:00 p.m. 3384W59.
lEW AND USED CAR SALESAAAN needed now to fill a vacer ■ our sales, staff. Must be i enced. Call or apply. In pen Ken Johnson, Russ Johnson, , tiac Rambler Sales, 89 M24, Lake 523-5M5.
OPPORTUNITY,
PLUS
the Clark Oil and Refining Corp. hat available In Walled Lake a service station management. Oeajer Franchise.	^
BABY SITTER WANTED, GENER-al housework, own transp. 574-3928. BABYSITTER, 4 CHILDREN, \itP der 8, S15 weekly. 335-8524.
BEAUTY OPERATOR WANTED Alberts Suburban Hair Fashion 3984 W. Walton, 5734)177, betwet
tirament program 5'
For additional li terview Call LI 8-7222, at Call FE 2-2017.
latlon. Life and re-
bookKeeper. through trial
bel. Experience only. Exr ----
tunity 523-13M Waterford.
BOOKKEEPER AND RECEPTION-*-r professlorfel n«ica mi for Interview.
BOOKKEEPER, TOP KNOTCH GAL to grow with company. Lovely office. location, benefits. 8500. Call Helen Adams, 334-2471. Snetling 8. SnelHng.
PARTS MAN AND MECHANIC Must have own tools. Good pay plan. Excellent working conditions
....-TIME HELP WTD. MORN-
Ings or evenings, married, over 21, guaranteed $200. Easy hours.
PLANT SUPERINTENDENT - EX-
equlvalent.
Mon.-Frl., 9 ...... ,
City Hall, 49045 Pontiac T
om, Michigan.__________________
R6aL ESTATE SALESMEN
RECRUITS FOR WATERpORD TWP. FIRE AND POLICE DEPTS. Resident of Waterford Twp: 1 year prior to date of application. Age 21-31 — high school diploma or GED. papers.
Police ^^deot. height and weight
ire dept, height and weight Ip accordance with acceptable medical standards.
Applications received until 12 Aug. 2,._. 1957, Waterford
Real Estate Salesman
Due to hte expansion at tha Ms I need 3 more energetic salt
In tt
MLS
n 110
EXPERIENCED BRAKE At shock installer wanted. Libe starting solory, full benellls, portunify for advancement. Apply Mr. Graves. 334-4555.
SPARKS-GRIFFIF
FUNERAL HOME " Service" FE
Voorhees-Siple
FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Established Over 40 Years
Cemetery Lofi
200 SQUARE FEET IN PERRY •• int Park. 582-5858.
WHITE CHAPEL CEMETERY, . spaces. Garden of Resurrection,
a plan you can ttford. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC 814 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 841333
STATE LICENSED-BONDED '•—Ti Saturday 9 "
1 FULL ..COLOR WEDDING AL-bum at the cost of black and white. Free brochure. 338-9079 any
AN - GIRL DR WOMAN NEEDING ' lendly adviser, phone FE ‘ — re 5 p.m. Contldentlal.
: 2-0181, Refer' to Credit i
GET bUT OP DEBT ON A
TAILORED TO Y
St A11T PLANNING NOW _ . your scout group, church, club FALL HAY RIDES, Enloy a ' drawn ride through tields, v Followed by a home cooked Spaghetti dinner. For reservations, U8-
UPLAND HILLS FARM
FOUND; 5 MONTHS OLD GERMAN shepherd, male, leather collar, v'
Santord°"*'“	”
“	ibUARl
—........... BULOVA
tace watch, vicinity of Fi______
Oakland County Farm
1. 573-7359 or 852-4109.
epileptic seizures -
Htlp Wanted Mate < 3 YOUNG MEN-19 TO 29
ste^ year-around wo month. Call 574-0520 9 a.m. to 12 Friday----------
I. with my growing
' $500 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE
---21-30 Soma College
^ INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 080 W. Huron ■	334-4971
JAS , STATION ATTENDANT, EX-jieHmced, ^ inecharUcaJly inclined. Telegraph
STATION ATTENDANT ■u, ^experience ‘
Shell, 5495 ' Orchard Maple Rds.
guards"
Full and part-time Immediate City and Suburban |ob openings. 5“ Clemens, Utica and Briminghi Included. Bonded Guard Servlct-441 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit — LO
TRAINEE YOUNG MAN, EXCEL-lent opportunity 85,500. Call Kathy King. 334-2471. Snelling 8, Snelling. TRUCK DRIVER AND WARE"-
IIGI1 VOLUME SERVICE S1A-tion, Pontiac west side, now Interviewing for assistant manager, top hourly rate for experienced mature dependable man, many fringe benefits. 4399 Highland Rd.
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
supervisors ,
(PRODUCTION MACHINE SHOP) Also
SET-UP MEN
APPLY 9 A.M.-5 P.M. WEEKDAYS ONLY
CURTIS INDUSTRIES Of Michigan, Inc.
2)545 Telegraph Rd. near 8 Aiilo Southfield
INSURANCE INVESTIGATOR Work In metropolitan - Oakland County area, must have own car expenses ' paid, no typing re quited. Insurance package pale
-----'d holidays. Experience pre-
______ but will -Consid~~ —
Send replys to Pontiac-. ,
Box C-20, Pontiac, Michigan.
IG GRINDER HAND WANTED, top rate, 58 hrs. year-round, all fringes. 334-4523.________________
RETIRED .......... ................
t In laundry and dry cleaning.
Joslyn. 338-2785.____________
SERVICE STATtON 'MANAGER TO operate Texaco station In Lake Orion. Must be experienced In sta-tidn management. Prefer 25 or old->er and married. Must be dependable and like to talk to people. Salary and commission plus other fringe benefits. Call or apply Ken Johnson, Russ Johnson Pnntiar Rambler Sales. 8'
SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVE
TRAINEE
Nationally known corporation looking for young men 21 to Interested In building a can and enloy public contact w out selling. Mechanical aptituuc, basic electronics. Car necessary, many trihga benefits, full - -while training. 333-7048 — 9
Help Wnntwl Faftiolg
RECEPTIONIST - DOCTOR'S OP-, experience preferred but not tssary. Send summary In wrlt-to Pontiac Press Box C-8. RECEPTIONIST FOR VET E R I tl-ary clinic In Oxford. Ability to ^necessary. Single preferred.
days, call after 5 p.m. 338-1413.
BEAUTICIAN
Modern ^^.^5()^^r^ cent, e
SECRETARY-RECEPTIONIST FOR
professional office —*--- *
type. Knowledge
BURROUGHS SENSIMATIC OPERATORS
weeks assignment beginning Aug. Please apply Immediately.
“ KELLY SERVICES
125 N. Saginaw
54^9550	338:0338
An equal opportunity employ BEAUTY OPERATOR, .... guaranteed, transportation needad.
CASHIER
Previous experience an NCR 2Q00 class posting machine desired. Soma typing and use of adding machine. Good starting salary. Ins., and other Incen-57 N. Telegraph at
{Tv‘?i! >ipply 3 Pontiac Mall.
CHRISTIAN LADY TO LOVE AND t lor 2 pre-schoolers 5 days a 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Water-
EX CAREER GIRLS busy season lust slarting. ister now for profitable tempo-’ work — Pontiac area. Need — etaries, stenos, typists.
CALL MANPOWER	FE 2-8385
EXPERiENCED WAiTRESS, DE-llsa's Restaurant, 5980 N. Onrhst. ter Rd. Rochester. 551-78C
EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR FILING Insurance forms. Blue Cross and various others. Only experienced need apply. Send resume anr* ■'* sired salary to Pontiac I Box C-14, Pontiac. '
Interview. Call MY 3-5331.
FOR ^ 2 WE^EKS ‘^fTl^lAN^TO ^ DO
friendly Office “ wants ver-
satile gal for light typing and greeting clients $250. Call Pam Fox, 334-2471. Snelling 8. Snelling. ULL - TIME, QUICK MATURE 1 ^ woman for shop work. Apply Geri-, era! Lock, 244 W. Sheffield, be-,
tween 9 and l^.rrr only._______j
‘ NURSING!
______COUNSELLOR. IF YO
have tha ability and desire work with people, we will tra you. Call Angle, 334-2471. Snellli
SALES LADY FOR PARTY STORE
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PAINT-R.a. rate.
SHIRT PRESSER, SLEEVE FOLD and package, high wages, .new plant. Douglas Claaners Inc. 900 North____Woodward, Birmingham.
TYPIST must B graduate, posit! not interested I tion please, d Highland Rd.
HIGH SCHOOL I has future, if permanent posl-
Work WnnlMi Mala
Work Wwrtad Famla 12|l
. -....guarai_________________ _____
estimates. 624-20M8 ask for Herb
F*E*^l^.°
HAULING, BASEMENT wall washlr-FE MW5.
/ALL PAPERING, PAINTING, and all typey remodeling done. Custom Home Service, 332-44?5.
Work Wanted Female 12
WAITRESS
- Good tip 19 Woodward.
CAREER-MINDED YOUNG WOAIiAN
relatlons'J*sales? Kbllc”ervlc»'*and promotion, seeks challenging position in related work In Pontiac area. Agreable to limited travel. Resume'! and referances available. Please write Phyllis Meyers, P.r Box 415, Waterford, Michigan.
HbUSECLEANING. NEED TRANS-irtatlon. 573-8515.
ROFESSIONAL .......	..
Call 879-0370
^GET OUT OF DEBT
AVOID, GARNISHMENTS, REPOS-SESSrONS, BAD CREDIT, HAR^ RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS OF JOB. Wa have helped thousands of people with editor problems by . providing a plani^ managad, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit aa *-amount owed and number of ere tors. For those who roallra, "Y( CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF 01 OF DEBT . . ."
LICENSED AND BONDED
Home Appointment Gladly Arrang..
No Cost or Obligation for Interviews
HOURS 9-7 P.M.—SAT. 9-5 p.m.
DEBT AID
718 RIker t
Dressmaking & Tailoring 17
KATHERINE MOORE ALTERA-
landscnping
YARD WORK, PLOWING, GRAD-Ing, top SOIL gravtl and manure. OR 3-5121.
PalntlHg nnd Decorating 23
A LAOr INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE 85214.	,
HOUSE PAINTING I
________fuppar. OR 3
PAiNTiMo IMD P / You're next, brval i
, SSe!""
P/klNTIN6-INTERlbR-EXTEblOR — free ytlmatos. 3325807, Mr. AAorrli
lUALITY WORK ASSURED. P/kINt* 1^ papering, wall washing. eTS*
Upholitering
Wanted Children to Board 28
WANTED; AAATURE LADY WHO
r Invalid. LIva in.
ning hours Demonstrating toys YOU CAN. Sea tor yoursaft Toy Chest, 58M833..
dLOOD DONORS urgently NEEDED
factors -neg.' ' 0-neg.
10 COMPLETE ADVERTISINS SERV-‘	' e for your business — Large or
nail. Brochures,
graphic - service.

ENJOY DRIVING
We have a motor route opening In Oxford, Lake Orton area—Mileage plus commission. Apply to:
MR. STIER
PONTIAC PRESS r^c“«n,“ we'"; CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
iAlR D^SsERS, ■ CLIElffELE
1-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING Awnings — Storm Windows FHA - Joe Vallely — OL 1-5523 ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING Immediate Installation — LIcenMd "-"-4. Marcell Construction,
ALUMINUM SIDING, ROOFING IN-
-authorlted Kaliar dealer:
SIDING-STORMB Alto
STATION attendant FULL TIME ~ *lmee Roy Walton Bl>
Summer Work College Students
No experience necessary. We f nish air equipment and train y High earnings. Call 574-0520 tor tervlews, Friday only 9 a.m.
WANTED!
Wa need • new and used car salesman with experience to. sell Dodge products. Fringe benefits. Apply In person to Sam Rotunda, SPARTAN DODGE INC., 855 Oakland
WE NEED BUMP AND PAINT Man to fill our staff, call or see Mr. , Ernst, at ' Homer Height Chevrolet-Pontlac-Buick Ir	—'
Welders-Arc and Gas
Interview. 5 a..... . ^...
Employers Temporary Service Clawson, 55 S. Main Radford, 27320 Grand River
FITTERS AND PRESS BRAKE OPERATOR EXPERIENCED
Excellent fringe benelfifs. Arfc., Inc. 3020 Indianwood,'Lake Orion, 592-2531.
$240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE
Filing, phoning, light ty
> r	,	:	Filing, phoning, light typing
Manaejement 1,0,1,%"^°'^"'-Trainee
latlonel retail organization has sual opportuiUty tor recent col
le to Box c-4, Pontiac Press.
Mechanics
$5,000 FEE PAID FINANCE TRAINEE
1^ 21-28, High School Gr8d. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL -180 W. Huron	3345971
$6500 AND CAR SALES TRAINEE
%iTERNATONAL KBSONNKL 1M0 S. WeodWerd B'ham. 5^8258
Journeymen
Mechanics
Automotive
Electricians
Bumper-
Painters
tood pay, year round work, sc :ure future, benefits. Apply In per-, on or write;
EDWARD C. I LEVY CO. 8800 Dix Ave., Detroit, Mich. 48209 ^
$325-$400 GENERAL OFFICE
Receptlonl|t, typists, accounting clerks. Many varied positions. '■‘-paid. Mrs. Nichols.
early In tha day, typing skills ra-qulrad. 887-4118, Milford.____________
Assistant
Payroll
Manager
Excellent opportunity tor mature woman to assist In supervision of payroll dept. Must have strong payroll or accounting axperltnce. Send complata rtsume or apply at Parit nel Office.
Montgomery
Ward
PONTIAC MALL , ATTENTION MOTHEI^ Evenings Free?
The Playhouse Co., Jnc.
--	r-, -	1r»l" you.
i)tc?^mmlMSnPLUS vlSImb^
FES-7377 or 5SMT74
- _____________ - ... -....5. Call
332-1822 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Ask for Mr. Book or inquire at Sally Brent One Hour Marlinizing, Miracle Mile Shopping Center FULL TIME. EVENINGS.
or older. No experlepce _______. .
Will train to become manager. Plz-
za Inn. 4708 Walton.______
GENERAL OFFICE. BORED ............
Routine? Train* with variety 8350.
9 YRS,
and typing. Pleasant ______________
hospitalization available. Legel — ------------ experience helpful but
Doctors Office—Pontiac, fast ______
accurate typist, good at spelling dnd grammar, |ob Incl. Ins., bilf-
GIRL TO DO CLERICAL AND SEC-
HOUSEWIVES
Earn $2 to S3 par. hour In yc spare time. Pick up and delh Fuller Brush orders. For interview
HOUSEKEEPER-LIVE-IN
626-9152
HOUSEWIVES
HUDSONS Pontiac Mall
a few openings left working
In working part time days, time evenings, visit our E ployment Office now.
Apply In Person Employment Office Basement
HUDSON'S
Pontiac Mall
SALES POSITIONS AVAILABLE mediately In our men's fu ' dept., boys' and students' dies' fashions. Pull time time. LIberbI company
= OPENINGS F'b R I and students, to .t '
SHORT ORDER 1 Restaurant. 5980 Rochester. 551-78
INSURANCE CLERK WITH L cense preferable. $400 to sla to right applicant. Send resume ' experience to Pontiac Press Be C-35, Pontiac, /
y FOR CAFETERIA WORK, 3rd
». O. Box 41
LEGAL SECRETARY $120 PER week. Includes some Saturday work Send.resume to Pontiac Pretr ““
C-55. Pontiac, Michigan.__
LIVE-IN BABYSITTER, 2 i dren, exc. wages, plus roort board. FE 2-5321.
LPN'S
Charge Nurse positions available tor skilled nursing home In ““
MIDOLEAGED WOMAN WISHING to work part time and exptritn Real Estate sacretaHal work. 1 ommendatlons necessary. Ask Mrs. MeVaan In person plai between 9/30 - 12:30 or 2 4:30 except Saturday.
Warren Stout, Realtor
1450 N. opdyke Rd. FE 54155
MOTHERS
<tra rttniey In epar. ..
o Dacembar, sailing Name
Augui....................
Brqnd TOYS and GIFTS through Party Plan. 20 per cant CommTi-slon. No Delivering. No Collecting. No Experience nedessary. No Cash Inveatment. Write, "SANDRA PARTIES/' 7207 E. AACNtchOli, Da-——
NURSES
NURSE AIDES
All shifts. Good working conditions. Experienced and -Hnexperlanced.
Semlnola'Hills Nursing Home, 532 Orchard Lake Avenue, Pontiac. OFFICE GIRL OVER 21 FOR GEN-oral office worK, must be able to
ment. FE 54571.
PART Tlft/|E CLERK
. .-----homemeki
ty^, take ______
inlay figureo. 25 end 2 mornings, oni girl offi^

HFLP WANTED, - OFFICE. WELL known local rel'all store n ‘
liable clerk-typist-cashler, -----
some similar office, experience and retail or credit operation. Over Box C-T, Ponttoc.
ISOTOPE "TECHNlCiAN "
Regtslerfd Technologist preferred but will consider graduate of AMA approved school of X ray. Technology with experience. Position Is In Isotope Laboratory at modern expanding 400-bad fully, accredited hospital with latest equipment. Excellent fringe benefits. Salary: 8500 monthly to start with p—-----------
ASPHALT AND SE AL-COAT ING, Free Estimates. FE_4-1238. _ ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. Residential or commercial, —
LIGHT FACTORY WORK
Men and women needed. Unskilled and semiskilled lobs. Report 5 —
CLAWSON
REDFORD
FERNDALE
rs Temporary Service Ir
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
Immediate openings for ASCP rt. Istered mcd. technologist, salary range: $650 to 8812 per me—-Exc. fringe benefits. Apply Pei__ . nel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital — Seminole at West Huron Pon-tlac, MIchigat
MR. AND MRS. AMBITION
jmprove your status In life. Age
SEE US NOW
We will train you
We have I openings available to complete the staff of our newly enlarged main office In Oxford.
Call Mr. Deaver Now Royer Realty, Inc.
lings 1 la-
impan^^ ban:
SJlOUtD TOIL. ,
an employment change? NOW tS-THE TlMCt " '
Michigan Bell
1365 Cass Ave„ Detroit Phone; 393-2815
Dry Wall Service
Eavestroughing
M4S GUTTER CO. COMPLETE eavMtrou^hln^ service tree astl-
A-1 SEAL, COATING ..SERVICE, quality work, reas. price. FE 5-1573 ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND roadways. Same location since 1920. Also selling asphalt and sealer. Ann Arbor Construction Co. MAple
Excavating
l-A BACK HOE AND DOZER SVC.
Sewer and Septic Installation Basement Excavation—PE 8-2555
basaments. back tilling, tin c sand-graval-ctc. Shelby^t <—
4462.__________________
ND LOADING, BACK HOE, i dozing and trucking. For estimate phone 332-^5. 777
JACKS DRIVE INN
Cor. Baldwin & Montcalm FE 4-7882 ' Jeanette -------------■-
at prices. FE 5-7459.
. Sommer dls-
clarkston roofTng co ’
On* of the "Best." - 573-9297 CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCE HOT TAR 'F6ol=TN^5HlNGi:iNO, contracting. 338-3785. 1-week terv- R. Price. FE 4-1024.
CUTLER CONTRACTING
Licensed-Bonded	FE 5-4844
FENCES-FENCES-FENCES 'mmedlate Installation
PONTIAC
ASPHALT PAVING
Feat action, 502 S. Paddock. FE
TAG ASPHALT PAVING.
Aoto Repair
E SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, rebuilding, reselling automatic and standard transmissions. Band ad-lustments. Fluid and titter changes. All makes. All models.
Rochester Transmission
Boots and Accessories
BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquartei Starcraft aluminum and fibergh
Brick & Biock Service
334-6205.______________________________
BRICK, BLOCK. STONE, CEMENT tiraplaces specialty- 335-4470
BuildingJAo^^
2-CAR GARAGES, 20'x21T, 8875. WE
C-OMPLETE REMODELING . Sarvica
Quality work slijca 1945 Now Is the best time to plan or remodel — prices are lowest I Additions—recreation rooms attic rooms — aluminum storm windows — siding and trim.
N. Saginaw G 8, M FE 2-1211
FOR GARAGES, HOME IMPROVE-menls .additions, residential building, call. Drummond Construction
ONCE - DEALER TO supply Rawlaigh Household necessities to consumers In Oakland County or districts In Pontiac. No experience or Investment necessary. Write: Rawleigh Dept.
Soi«i Heip, Mob-Fnmnie 8-A
2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE
replace 2 who ere
CARPENTRY
flee In the area. Many p
tlonal opportunities. Call EM_________
—Hackett Realty tor Interview. EM,
CAN YOU SELL?
If so, we have an opening ... 2 people Interested In maKIng
money. Real Estate exp*H---------
helpful but not necessary. We I - —building pro^ra
attractiva commlislOT tehi For Intarvlew call — Mr. Ta OR 4-8305, evas. EM 3-7545.
CAREER IN REAL ESTATE
. Class now forming for Real Estate, ^^in^ to
Ing monsy. Bonus plan advantages In on# at
a tiitorastad In mak-
In on# at 1hi| fasti
REAL ESTATE SALESAAAN, GOOD opportunity tor aggrasslva ptrson, *“■* *'— thna. Exparlsnead pra-wlll train. TOM REA-
REAL ESTATE
Work WontMi Malt
11
ALUMINUM HOUSES AND TRAIL-srs cleansd, window and wall washing, painting. Interior and exta-rier, garages and be ^aned. You call. We'll m d-7327.
astlmato!^
Want Ads Pay Off Fast
Carpet Cienning
A-l Interior and axtarlor — Family rooms, rough or tlnlshadt dormers, porches, recreation rooms, kitchens bathrooms. State licensed. Reas.
Call eftsr 5 p.m. 582454S.______
PAINTING.
= 5-1331.
CARPENTRY. NEW AND REPAIR.
Free estimates. 335-9981.
INTERIOR FINISH, KITCK ^analin^ 40 ysars axperlani
: CEMENT WORK.
ANDY FOR PATIOS, DRIVES,
Cement and Block Work
Guinn's Construction Co.
PE 4-7577________Eves. FE 54122
MULTI-COLORED PAT IDS, r-LOORS, — drlvtways. Tod Elwood Enter-prlses, 582-3373 or FE 4-8474. PAtlOS, DRIVES, GARAGE SLABS, 40 conts sq. ft. FE 4-2875, dayi.
; Drwmnking^nllo^l^
ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, KNIT dresses, leather coats OR 3-7193. DRESSMAKING AND ALTERA-tlons. FE 44139.
BETTY JO's’oRiSSMAKi Iteifetlohs. 04
Driven Training
SEPTIC FIELDS, DRY WELLS, TRENCHING, diggings. S. Luo.. Watartord Sewer Const. 573-0240
Fencing
Piu.mbing & Heating
ONDRA PLUMBiNG 8. HEATING
Rentai Equipment
BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS
a Joilyn __________
RENT ROTOTILLERS, ROT O R rakes, powsr sod cutter, trenchers, backhoes. Jackson's, 332^9271.
Roofing
QUALITY ROOFING. NEW AND RE-—t. Bonded material. Free estl-las. Reasonable. 582-7514. SPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF.
___Spltzer Fence Co., FE 8-
WOMACK ROOFING, REROOF. Complete Ins. coverage. Fret es-tlmates, 338-4545.
Fioor Sanding
Fioor Tiiing
GRAVEL, BLACK DIRT,
_________also Qradinp. 33S"6792.
PROCESSED GRAVEU ANALYZED
......... ■■■■ ■
A-1 COMPCETE LANDSCAPING -clalizing In broken concrete, lining walla. Free estimates. J. Waltmen. 33S-8314.
EXPERT SODDING,.. BEDS
AND, GRAVEL, SEPTIC STONl, 50-40 top soli, 5 yards 815. Reas. _priMS. 5^00«.______
Septic Tank instniiotion
HOLMES EXCAVATING. FB 4-9451.
PILL, SAND AND GRAVEL P
Ing. Also
grading. FE
MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR , delivered. 4543 Sherwood. 528-2000. MERION BLUB SOD, WHOLESALE and retail, black dirt-oeat, Tam arack Farm, 750 LoChavan Rd. Union Lake. 582-5500.
MERION OR KENTUCKY SC ' aid or Del. No money dowt BREECE LANDSCAPING FE 5-3302	or	FE 2-472?
MERION BLUE AND KENTUCKY sod laid or delivered, new and used railroad ties, grating. tree estimate phone 332-5585.
Scott Lake Rd.
B8iB TREE SERVICE, INSURED, "-■-nmlng, removal. Free esfP tes. 574-1281 or 724-2595.'
LAWN CUTTINO, small. Work guaranteed. FE 4-9545. VILLAGE GREEN LAWN AND '	336-0582.
Lawn Sprinkiing
LAWfr''SPR1NKL11W PUMPS'*WilD .upJleA..4885 DIxIa. Hwy. OR 3.
FE 5-3005 Mosquito Spray F
Lumber
»luMiiei FB 4^
Moving and Storage
SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 10
Painting and Decorating
A-1 PAINTING AND .______^„2>APER HANGINC^^
A-1 PAINTING. WORK GUARAN-
PAINTING AND DECORATING Free estimates. UL 2-1398 COLLEGE SENIOR WILL P4
II Herbla, 6734790.

'removal. B. T.
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING Oocar Schmidt________ FB M217
Plottoring Servict
PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES.
D. Meyera, 353-9593._______
PLASTERING AND REPAIR, fe. ----- 332-8578.
^ Son^—Grnvei—Dirt
k-t BULLDOZING. FINISH ^Ntoa. Topsoil, Max Cook.
Swimming Poois
Tree Trimming Service j;
1-1 TREE TRIMMING BY * BSL Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 574-3510.
Trucking
MOVING, TRASH
____________inable. FE 4-13"
HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAMB
----price. Any time. FE 8-0095.
LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS.
garages cleaned. 574-1242.___
LIGHT MOVING-HAULING

( AND HEAVY TRUCKING. |h, fill dirt, grading and grav< w front-end loading. FE'2-0508
Trucks to Rent
W-Ton Pickups	tW-Ton Stoks
TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Saml-Tralltrs
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
SALES AND RENTALS
BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. “‘alM cleaned. Reas. Satlsfactloii larantoed. Insursd. FB M531.
IITORIAL SERVICE M -------------------
ishlng^ommsrclal ai Satisfaction gusrantot
Wanted Hemaliold ffeodi 29
ApniUnente, UnfiHiihlied 3t Sale Hemti
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
CASH FOR GOOD CLEAN USED furnlturt. C«ll	*—■“
Phom, MY MP1.
COMPLETE-HOUiSHdLD WAI^tBb
-------- qJ,
2 BEDROOMS, LAKE PRIVILEOES. 2 children welcpnw. OR 2 ***"
BEDROOM DUPLEX, t1)__________
OT IMM. For dotallt call FE B
3 ROOM AND _______ ______
giio. Economy U(0d Cam. i Ixit ----
CYLINDER INDIAN REGARD-
Wanted to Rent
32
1 SLEEPING ROOM WITH USB OF phone. Auburn Heights area. FE 4-83<4.__________________
T VounG'marrieo couple ur-gently needs small apartment or small house FURNISHED,


I FE, S-18M.
0 to S2S
^ILY MOVING
ViANTED 3 BEDROOM HOUSE IN
or near Pr---	**-----
at K-Mart.
Wanted Real Estate
1 TO 50
HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS
WARt<cN STOUT, ReoltDt
-
Sal^
>r immediate Said'
„ after 5.00 p.......
anytime Sat., Sun.___
LAKE VISTA APARTMENT
MULTIPLE
LltTING
SERVICE
ACTION
( have many good buyers tc^ <omes In Pontiac. Call us tor quick esults. courteous service.
SCHRAM REALTY
I Joslyn	FE S-»471
MEMBER OP MLS_______
ALL CASH
County, money in 24 t»
a In Oakland
WEST SIDE, 3 ROOMS AND BATH,
..... I, heat and hot
Sac. Dap., no chll-
YORK
WE TRADE OR 44)343 Drayton Plains
ALL CASH to MINUTES even It behind In payments or un-der forciosum. Agent. 527-4400.
302 Oakland Ave.
EXECUTIVE MUST HAVE 4 BED-
lot or acreage within 15 miles of Pontiac. Ask for Mr. Dorris Sr. DORRIS 0, SON, REALTORS
2534 Dixie Hwy._________OR 4B324
FAMILV. 2 CHILDREN WANTS TO buy 2---------- ----
2 BEDROOM HOME, LAKE FRONT privileged lot SlOO plus tecurHy dep. OR 3^4»4.________________
MEDROOMnrMTcTTTERRACE,
------- West Side location. Ideal
- marrleds or retirees, ROLFE H. SMITH CO.
. Waterford Twp.
. Good
II 474-2103 afternoons.___
HAI^E A PURCHASER “H CASH FOR A START-
FE 4-4474.__________________________
3 BEDROOM HOME, IN PONTIAC, $150 monthly, deposit,, mfarences.
YORK AT 474-1698
LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. RBW VALU REALTY. 424-9575.
3BEDROOM ON BEAUTIFUL lake. Highland Twp., ref. anc* dep. required. $140 mo. Ava
REAL ESTATE SERVI#
FOR AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT THE ROLFE H. SMITH CO.
Ub. Write BILL JENNINGS, j/411 Grand River, Fipi-'--**-Mlchlgan or call 474;SM0.
SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOB QUICK ACT^ION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 44)358 OR EVENINGS OR 3-422$.
WANT TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY?
o obligation appral-
LAWYERS
Wish to purchase hous^,
ApartmaiitB, fyjl^ihBd
Seen $-12. 37 Mechanic, Pontiac.
2 ROOMS AND BATH, ,CHIU3 welcome. $25 per W dep.. Inquire at 273 Pontiac, Call 338-4054.
2 ROOMS AND BATH, NICELY decorated, all utilities turn, no
children or pets, 335-7»42._______
ROOMS, ALL PRIVATE, • ■■	-----\ 13 Pine Grove.
. ROOMS, MARRIED COUPLE
only, 1 #1- -------- ~
473-0497.
i ROOMS"AND BATH. PRIVATE eptrance $2$ a wk. $20 Baldwin. S-ROOM APARTMENT, UTILITIES
fum. Adults. 75 Clark.
S~ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-
^ ROOM^ AND BATH,	-
rooms, S20. Adults. Dap. required.
FE 2-0443._____________'
f“ROOM APARTMENT ON wEST
Froom efficiency, new CON-
riitinn. «notless, doD- and refs, re-Y 3-2810.
3 ROOMS BY FISHER BODY 3 ROOM!
BATH, PRIVATE, ^.v— to downtown, no children or pets, 335-7942._______
baby welcoma — no Pt $f00 dap. Inqu Baldwin, call 33»^-
Call after S p.m. FE 2-2042.
apartments
Furnished or unfurnished, two am three room apartmanta furnished, : -----------Ffe m74.
. tOUPLE, 1 CHI Lb UNDER year, wekiomed. 338-2343.
Lake orion, modern, bacSI-
lor Apt., suitable for 2. MY 31809. MOTEL EFFICIEtlCY APARTMENT 1 bedroom FE 32241 or FE 2-4393.
MODERN, CLEAN, APXRTMENT, adults, ref. FE M105.
If I CELY FURNISHED UPPER 4-and-bath, quiet nelghbafhood, $135 per mo. Includes utilities. FE $4)090
. IfPPER 3 RQOMO AMb bAtH, baby walcama. 194 Ooing Strsal
> corner of Whittemore.____________
lUPPBlt, 3 ROOMS A>fb path, ^eff North Johnson $1S oar wk.

4-BEOROOM TRILEVEL,'NEW, 2W baths, 2V$par garage, full tasa-
rGom. plImaMT. |t E 0 n t toMmanh Refrigerator and stove Included. Reas, rent. FE 3414$.
flelBSi
stad, single adults prafarrad. [las. fumishM, Wasf Bloom-School District. 012S. mam.
e^anca, ready by Aug. 1,
----- available due to lOsses ....
ning out. $145 and up. No children or pels. 4735148 aftar 5:30 p or weekends. Managers apt, i
BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS
Ideally situated
bedroom apartments a
per mot Hotpoint,
month including
from $155
K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor
REALTOR
2339 ORCHARD LAKE RP. 482-0900
pllances, larga family kitchens, swimming poo) end larga siih deck - All utilities except electric, of luxury has been »
In Bloomfield Orchard Af
________________ ../JSf,',;
Rd.), between bpdyke and' 1-75 ex-^essway. Open dally and Sunday,
NEW LUXURIOUS APT.
2 bedroom apt. $145. No children
3BEDR00M RANCH —Tt, 2-car garage, $15,700 plus lol
peting,	..
furnished, plus all utilities ai
electricity. In Drayton Plains________
on West Walton Blvd. Call OR
3BEDR00M BRICK TRILEVEL, IVi baths, 2-car garage, large kitchen and dining area. $18,500
I Hoaios, Forabbad 39
, BEDROOMS FOR LEASE, onear Highland. Adults. No pets drinkers. $145'par mo. plus U ties. 332-0479.
BREWER Real Estote'
724 RIker Bldg.__________FE 4-5181
BEDROOM, 1 INFANT WEL-
----d under 4 mos. No pats. $30
$90 dep. 482G477.
511,190
BRAND NEW. 3bedrm., ranch, (
u...r	Jyi, I
lly kitchen, l DEL.
2 BEDROOMS. $100 A MO.
FE 4-7829
YOUNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT Russell Young, 334-3830
_______53W W. Huron St.____
$2,000 FOR MY EQUITY ' It bedroom older home o
)0.ThT?
333784$.
BEDROOMS, PARTLY FUR-
REDECORATED 1 B E D R O 0 A basement, gas heat, larga lot, coi pla only. 4232190, 44 p.m. or ca be seen at 8149 Pina St., Cooi rich, 38 p.m.___________
$3,950 cAsH for this 1
_	»«t- deposit. 8437427.
WALLED LAKE. 4 ROOM HOUSE.
" ------ 1 child --------- *—
Rent Lake Cottars
End> L
I 24. 473-9444 (
, Mich.
house-
grayling, LEWISTON, _______
keeping, sandy beach. 398-3757. HARRISVILLE, MICHIGAN—VACA-
■ furnished housa trailer, si-
I Lake Huron. EM 30091. LAKE-FRONT COTTAGES IN Northern .Michigan — FE 5*1325
after i
GENTLEMANa $11 A WEEK FE 4>0751
NICE AND CLEAN, FOR GENTLE-—3. No drinkars. 25$ State. 333
--ROOM-FCR REIiUU_
_________. 51 Center______
SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-
, TV, talaphona. 789 S. Wood-
SLEEPING ROOM IN PRIVATE
WOMEN
3-2534.
SHARE OWN LIVING
bath, TV, cooking. EM
Rottffls With Board
Rent BwtIiieMi Property Wk
BEDROOM HOME. 3435 JoSilYN Rd. For sale or trade equity for 2 to 5 acres of land.
3 Bedrooms
LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS
MODEL OPEN
579 COLORADO 1:30 to 5 p.m. — 4 day week
WESTOWN REALTY
FE 32743 days ---. ..	-n. _ Ll T —
Full basement, 3car peled living ro«- ■ lake privileges.
"wtSf^fM;
niy $21,5i)0 -
STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE
2441 S. Lapaar Rd.,;_ Lake Orion
391-2880
3 i^EDROOM MUST BE SOLD, —V transferred, SIAStO, usuma contract, si$s monthly. Cash my aquRy. Cair after 4:38
3 models open DAILY AND SUNDAY
Drive out M-59 Just wait of Caai Lake Rd. to Candalstick. Directly behind lha Dan Mattingly Bi“‘—'
DAN A4ATTINGLY
OL t-8922
441 REALESTATC
Bic uded esitntrv rneH. vmt
2-FAMILY INCOME 1
handy east side location, good condition) five (5) rooms and bath down, carpatlng and drapes; tour (4) rooms and bath — 2 stoves, .2 rafrlgarators
onos tiwn 1-757Lovely remodalad 7 rooms, basement, 2 bathe, sleep out on ancloiad .front pordi (Ilka
born? ^ wf^lidliW3 *pl%
rE'ii?‘^A?r*"‘'*'
9 Acres—White Lake Twp.
. 24' living
----- ----- ----- corral, AOS' .......
age on blacktop ro«d. Only 831,500 to mortgage. Will trade.
uiiei o p.m, re h-o BY OWNER — MILFOIL level, 3 bedrooms, l'/4 ball .. family room, larga lot with enclosed back yard. Priced to sail. 839 Birdsong St. 584-3585.____
IV AuuMWP _
10% DOWN
NEW HOMES
ijrege,^ paneled family room, 529,-
J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor
Vi mile west of Oxbow Lake 1-4404	10735 Highland Rd. (M3
72 MARK STREET
3badroom, modern, 2-car garage, living and dining room earpr*— Priced to, sail with terms.
DUCK LK. PRIVILEGES
Venr neat 2-bad room olumlu... s^^dlng homo on a larga lot, Youngstown kitchen csblnats, O.E.
1. MODEL
SSpoB
rsciated. Call 3339401
MIDDLEBELT ROAD —
*----1 brick with large llvl...
-------- ■ • d kltch-
I, good si c tilt toi
garage, spa m sun roon
Is In estate. Selling s
. building Is struc-
turally sound but It Plastering and paint, a bargain *"'*	'— price available --------
In order to settle estate.
KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD Realtor FE 4-8284 - 185 ELIZABETH LK.
A VILLAGE HOME
ledroom home with 21x12 living

proud to ante^n your . Attached garage *
acreage available. 515.900.
C. PANGUS INC, Realtors
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 M-15	Ortonvil
CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 ARCHITE^ OWNED: 3BEDROOM
I. Liv-
ing, dining, kitchen area complal3 hr remodeled. Fenced-Inback yard. Screened by flowering shruba and trees. Walk to Birmingham Schools and Summerset Shopping. Asking 124,900 Including drapery, carpeting, garbage disposal, ran«, refrigerator and dishwasher, for ap-porntment phene 447-1075.
AT ROCHESTER
I ACRES	—3badroom older
itory horqe, basement, ' ' ' garden apbt. f-
e, cMisemenr, it. 124,900.
Y $23,900 )- 3_______..... „
ly room, fireplace, gas I bed garage, good
W. universit.
AUBURN HEIGHTS
3room home tor retirees, $12,400.
SHEPARD REAL ESTATE
AUBURN HEIGHTS. 4-BEDROOM,
AVON TOWNSHIP
tory home i
-—— —... beths) brCwMwa 2-car garage, axcallant condition on farms at only 118,500.
CALL 451-4020 A4AURICE WATSON, REALTOR 321 W. University Dr., ~ ^ '
I of closet space. Full
Mors, gas heat, panalad and heat-d breazeway to 2-car garage. Alu-nlnum siding. Bsautllully land-capad tOCxITS' lot on pavad road.
TOM
REAGAN
REAL ESTATE 2251 N. Opdyka_________332-0155
Beauty-Rite
Homes
Trade your uatd homo on a new Boauty-Rlta Home
"Buy Direct from o Builder and Save"
Brown
Realtors 3 Builders Sines 1939
3BEDROOM BRICK homO In . tiac. Very attractive and Iwpt home with nice yard. Larga ■ living room with bride r—■— formal dining roo- "
age. Mixbd nelghbar hood. Tha terms avallabta witl
iMuiW*
FE 2-4SI0 or FB 4-3544
'BUD'
49 Sale Haiim	49. Sale Hohsm	49
LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS
v.;n't miss this extra.-, sharp brick ranch homo. This has a flnlshad hardwood floars, 3-potlng In the living ,	lenchlng, larga piflo.
mealy landscaped yard cling syttam, lake prlvll^s Oakland. Can ba bought un
sprinkling Lake r FHA h
mwfiiviii,	riwrn, tollat I
Shower, gaa heat and hot water 2 car garage. Only *	'
m'PHA mortgage.
NICHOLIE-HUDSON
49 Mt. Clemens St.
FE 5-1201 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773
WATERFORD TWP.
This 3 bedroom brick rancher Is Ilka rtew. Full ^	......
BY OWNER - 3 BEDROOMI CAfe-petlng, graga, large fenced ' ' Drayton Plains. $13,950. 10 cent down on land contract • costs. 5731840 ----
BY OWNER 3BE0R00M BRICK, Format dining area, 2 baths, walnut panalad family room with ..matching walnut bar — fenced — 2W car attached garage. Aut garage opener. $24,700, $5,000 dov lefora 9 a.m. or after 9 p.
BY OWNER 4 VEARS OLD, CAlt-
S^nc^“£or8Sf*«5f.j:i''Ura
?u.y“g'5',5'’?p^A^»
cage Wf Baldwin north of Walton.
BY OWNER Immediate Possession
$27,950. OR 30100.
COMMERCIAL
Located at 3435 Orchard Lake A 2-bedroom on prime proper tsrxw deep, only $21,000.
JACK LOVELAND
- A Cass Uka Rd.
brick and aluminum, 2-car garai and lot on a new street. Priced i $10,500. Location 5 blocks north i
Crestbrook MODEL OPEN
DAILY 12-8
) badreom, family room and 2 car only $15,990 plus lot. Located In new tub with pavad
—Drhi* out M99
GIROUX
DRAYTON AREA
FINE HOMES ARE BY: Beauty-Rite HOMES 3538 Pontiac Lake Road 673-1717
FIRST IN VALUl
RENTING
$78 Mo.
Ekcludlng taxes
$10 Deposit
WITH APPLICATION
3BEOROOM HOME GAS HEAT
-AR6E DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APFLICA TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES.
PEOPLE WITH CREdIt ______
LEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US.
OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY
For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575
. balanct on 4 par land contract.
C. A. WEBSTER REALTOR
4932291___________________4232515
HANDYMAN SPECIAL Vacant, 3 bedroom ranch, full I ment, double lot, make an i owner's agent, 473159S.
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 26-ACRE ESTATE
Country elegance, main homa Is .. brick, 7-room, Engllsti^la with 3 basement, 1V$ bathh fireplaca, ale. fr
well-kept. A grand spot to live and land to devalopt with l.oixr " of lake frontage. Located edge of Highland. Priced at only KG,000, land contract farms, 29 par cant
2503 UNION LAKE RpAD
-, partically vroodad.
HOWELL
TOWN & COUNTRY, INC.
Highland.Branch Office
Phone: 313-685-1585
HIITER
$14,000,
MANDON LAKE FRONT - neat * bedroom part basamant, fenced 1. $12,900, terms.
ACRES - close in. To sail or ado on homo. $3,300,--------
V> ACRES - beautiful tx.___________ ....
$5,700. Also we have several 10 acre parcels from $4,700	'
$11,750 we BUILD -
On your lot. To tat call B. C. HIIT"“ 3792 ,Ellz. Uka
3 bedroom ior$; vanity
;titVl“3
immediate _____________
Baybrook Dr„ 3 btdroom I ronrtj^.90B TantM. By v
SCHRAM
epUNTRY LIVING
INCOME
2 family duplex In axcallant condition, 2 now gai\ furnaces, large dry basement, occupants pay own utllltlai, excellent '~ vestment, land contract,
OPEN M0N.-FRI. 9r8
List With SCHRaM And Call The Van
ROCHESTER ~ 4 ACRES WIT twawlng view, sp ranch, dinliw roo rage, S35>0ft. N1 0221, 0535375.
YORK
ROSS ’
Buy at today's prices — save
LAZENBY
The larga living room____________ ..
the bedrooms are newly carpeted. Beautiful kitchn with Dlshmastar. Lake privileges on Lake Oakland. Priced to tall at only $21,750.
ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor
n Daily from 9 a.m. to 0:30 p Sundays, 1-5 p.m.
Z5 W. WALTON — OR 4-0301
Pottery
M59
AIRPORT RD. AREA
Owner must tell this beautiful alu-
IW car attached garage, »l 140' fancatf 'lot. Newly decorated Inside and out. First showing, this one won't last. Hurryl Call York
Ross Homes Model: 623-0670
1941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 30591
Save $500 This Week
See this beautiful Walled Lake 05' ranch now. 9 rooms, 2 baths, Uxc. assumption, $22,400. 5232104.
YORK
MODEL
Pomaroy Street.
OPEN
Mon. through FrI. 4-5 Sat. and^Sun. 1-5
PRESTON
MR.-N-MRS. FIXIT
You could have a real cute home, It yw-re willing to do e littia
bedroom homo Is lust right for _ small family, quiet friendly neighborhood, close to grade scr— 1',^-car garage, S0'x148' site.
250. No Aiwn to Gl.
RETIREE'S DELIGHT
Ing room, kitchen and i
space, basement, shade trees......
too big and not too small — Keeoa
LAKE OAKLAND PRIVILEGES
(our bedroom home, m baths, spacious kitchen, carpeted living room.
4-BEDROOM COLONIAL
First floor laundry, ceramic tile bath, roomy kitchen and i formal jdining room, full ' ment, naturaf fireplace In 19 -family room with 10 x 16 patio, formica counter and vanity ‘ *
ir aft. garage, larga well -
—,-J lot. U4,9S0 terms. Call tor appointment.
MILFORD
OWNER LEAVING STATE, hrilavtl
featuring IVk___ ____
r«:. room, 14' kHchon, plenty of cupboard area, garbage disposal, 3 Iwdroomfc path) and a biiauntulty iBM^ped Yard, cyclona - fanosd. ONLY $1,500 DOWN - CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. IMMEDIATE ^POSSESSION,	-
kitchen built-in3 gat Incinerator Total house Including laki privilege lot $29,400.
4-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL
I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR
412 W. HURON ST.	333452.
Ew. Cell________________473-5060
carpeflhg,' ■SheTed‘weito,**alf*e----------
----------IK.	$14,700
LAKELAND ESTATES
LAKE PRIVILEGES
All aluminum 3badroom home near] 'rescent Lake. Has 1-acra lot with joutllul shade trees, attached 2-carl garage, separate dining room, out-patio. Fairly priced at $24,000
SYLVAN VILLaW 3 bedroom, don, summer porch____
d tot. Camting a ipointmant call 4
Warden Realty
SHADE
Huge trees provids a park like setting for outdoor living In the summmer, also a beach tor your
at only $18,900. Terms p
GIROUX
SUBURBAN INCOME
Large corner lot, Waterford Twp. See this and make offer. Asking $15,800. Terms.
Lauinger
YEAR AROUND LAKE LIVING, m
REALTY
674-0319
SYLVAN LAKE VILLAGE
. Sam Warwick hot
modernistic tri-level..........
wood facing, baths, custom built, Iqaulotad Alumavue windows, real plaster, all city services, lake privileges. 1908 Stratford, $29,900. Open Sunday 2-5 or call anytime
SYLVAN VILLAGE - 3 BEDROOMS living, dining rms., winterized ~ porch fireplace, recreation rm„ lot, city services, lake prlvl-
leges, $18,500. Owner. 482-4113.
TAYLOR
HAGSTROM, Realtor
Multiple Listing Service 0 W. Huron	OR 3(
OR 33229
GET READY FOR SCHOOL THESE IMMEDIATE POSSESS!! PROPERTIES.
WATERFORD TWP. -
Possession Sept. 1. Handy to_
-nd Elementary. 3
NEAR GM T & C
Walk to Work from this 2 nice bedrooms, dining re plastered walls, gas hast i basement. Garage and com., backyard. $10,700 full price, available.
Sislock & Kent, Inc.
1309 Pontiac State Bank Bkto.
^	3339291
NEW 3-BEDROOM RANCH, ... baths, 2V3car garage, full basement st Grovatand Valley. Take U.S. 10 to Mt- Holly to sfgn.
NICE LOCATION
2-bedroom home, large living room, gas host, largo tot, on blacktop road. $8500. Terms.
FLATTLEY REALTY
420 Commerce Rd.
WATERFORD TWP. —
30 day possession. Williams Lake
privileges. Dandy 3 bed--------
ranch. Extra large co
OAK VISTA OFF SASHABAW
sharp ranch-type
2 bedrooms and attached
. Let your coll bo the fl
YORK
4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton____
-E BUY	WE TRADE
OR 4-0343	--------
PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE"
CITY convenience WITH COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE 4 B.R. V/i both brick home, nastli
acres of state land. Lots of trses. Ideal spot for chlldran, lust 1 block
---- grade school. Sits back away
the busy highway, yet only . ...Inutes from 1-75, 5 minutes trom downtown Pontiac. Yours tor
PARTRIDGE REALTORS )50 W. HURON	FE 33551
OPEN WK. NITES TIL 9:00
PONTIAC LAKE
Beautiful Island home, close-in, yet secluded. Stone's throw, from the beach. Vear-around living for I ' ing, fishing and swimming thuslasts. $9,000 land contrac Terms available.
TYRONE HILLS
Golf Club adlacent to 8
wooded, some pines, 3 _______
ranch home. $57,500. CAR RIGAN QUALITY HOMES, INC., 232-4922 or 429-8415.____________
TUCKER REALTY CO.
903 Pontiac State Bank 3331545 UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES beach. 3 bd. brick, new c decor, overlooks '
>mant. 8^7427-
UNION
3-bedraom homo on large shaded
Gl 0 DOWN
ivu-story home ni Paneled living re garage. Fenced y to lake f-----
C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288
RHODES
SWISS CHALET, Scenic location, . rooms, cut stone exterior, natural fireplace, wall to wall carpet, modal kitchen, full baaemant, tacra^ _ ---------- garage.
LAKk ORION. Larga Broom homo, basamant, oil heat, 40 x 2417 lot, Ctosa to shopping. Ideal tor Income. Only $18,000, 85,000 down, bslanco
SYLVAN VILLAGE. S-tPOm ho 2 badrooms, gaa hot water hi attached garage. Only t15,5oa •-------TON. 3IU0I------	■>
:larksto
stairrtse.
axcallant corner. M -Only $27,950. Terms.
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR
ROYER
Richard S. Royer, Realtor . LAKE FRONT ,
In Oxford, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, samiiw rnMn. vnuntrY kltchqn — andT In axcallant
Only 1
COMMERCIAL SITE
In Oxford, e
peted, full dinir kitchen wl" ' rage, alurt tra large
Ining room, bulTt-lns, 2
I? Only l‘l7,5S; **0
750 on land _________
closing costs only to Gl veterans
JOHN KINZLER, Realtor
)19 Dixie Hwy,	423B335
Across from Packers Store Multiple Listing Service Open 9-8
PONTIAC ■-nme'
. m baths, lars III, country kitchen wil
....... modern to the mlnut
A real bargain at only 814,95
PLEASANT LAKE FRONT — Possession Sept. 1. 2 large b rooms with third available, h modern, large llv
rooffi, 10 and dInIr 10 pet. I land com
available. Hurry.
r DOWN. SEE
HOME AT 7919
prIvMei
Lake. Near St. Patricks Church. $15,500, terms.
The Rolfe H. Smith Co.
244 S, TELEGRAPH ...... EVES. 391-3242
UNUSUAL - DIFFERENT
THE COMPLETE HOME
Timberlihe
5242 and 5230 White Lake Road
VON
CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE J. L. HUDSON ON THEIR GRAND OPEI In coplunctlon with the ope Hudson's at the Mall, w authorlzstton from several i
CO.
ling price ol with us by $; SAVE $300 -
27, 2$, 29 ONLY.
VON REALTY
GEORGE VONDERHAI^, Realtor In tha Mall MLS Room 110 .............. 4a2-3l06
482-5802 If busy 41
Waterford
FOX BAY
2 story colonial with family and fireplace, W bath dov large bedrooms up. *Attach__ _ car garage. Paved drive. Priced $29,000. ,Occupancy — September.
SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS
WATERFORD REALTY
“ Dixie Hwy.,	47?’“
Multiple Listing Service
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
down to Gl on this'sharp 2-bad-
.................
rage, located on a hug home has a very- nice t« gas hast. Owner says
YORK
49S«IbHo«mb
Wideman
WILL GO Gl OR FHA
GILES
RASTWDE: Clean sharp Bbadroom
basemmt,' 'twi^'r MtoSladwr larga front screened pordi.
Claude McGruder
Realtor
uittoto Lifting Sarytoe-Optn 93 1 Baldwin Ava. ,	FE 34175
MILLER
AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR
WEST SUBURBAN ESTATE HOME
1.	-------:5<x22-
Ireplace,
15'x22' carpeted formal dining n
New 2'/i-car (
— _________ garage, setting ... _
SSO'xSS?' lot. Just $28,500. Make appointment todayl
0 with $1,000 down on land o
$250 DOWN PLUS COSTS. 3bed-room ranch. This home Is only *" years old and has carpeted llv
x> ansvror call 335-1190
WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVILEGES
This Is an extra sharp home. Everything a person can want In a hpnrie. This Is a 3-bedroom with a full basement, wet plastered walls, with hardwood flooring, carpeted living room. This has a huge lot, 68' x 318 ft., with fruit trees. Oh yes, a 2',ti car garage, and concrete driveway. Asking $16,900. 0 down to Gl. Call York on this listing.
NORTH OF C._____________
newly carpeted 11
----- ,—leled dining are* R
newly t^. All recently Atumlndn^ storms and screen " community water. Ju $400 down plus costs.
YORK
4113 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Pimns
raway and garage, on 2 K ih to mortgage. OR 33337.
KINZLER
4-BEDROOM COLONIAL
oven, range, paneled family with fireplace and glass doo rear patio. Formal dining plus breakfast area. Fenced yard and dwarf fruit tree:
Lake Oakland Shores and privileges. Better sea this home today.
FAMILY ROOM
with fireplace In this new large 3-bedroom, l’/4 baths ranch homr walk-out basement and rec-
1W t
I. $13,
STRUBLE^
Herrington Hills Brick
3-bedroom ranch In go< dltlon, 1W baitu, lull
NEAT 3-BEDROOM
$15,950, FHA N
Close to' Gen. Hos|).
family kitchen________________
room with shower. North' of , tIac In Orion TWp. Save on taxes and still be a short distance from the shops. Easy terms. Priced at
In 24' living room with Inside
place, 1-car garage ...............
tor bathers, nicely landscaped lot ....... ...J-----J sprinkling ■ -
tern close to Waterford Schools.
MILO STRUBLE
REALTOR
HALL
SUBURBAN - Walled Lake S bedroom, Bstory older hon.. ... good condition, newly carpeted living room, 2 full baths, full Msa-ment, 100x150 ft. lot on bla—* -street. $18,500 total price.
$0 DOWN — to •
shaded lot. $11,500 total price.
DIXIE HWY. — 253 ft. frontage with party store. Including a 11 equipment and Inventory, building
Val-U-Way
2 FAMILY INCOME
This homo on east mMm )• in condition. Live I
_____ ...- .-. ____ upstairs make
your payments. Separata baths, kitchens, entrances, basement, ga-
ls 511,950.
OFF BALDWIN
Ueat 2 bedroom homa with new )o$ furnace, spacious carpeted llv-
I. Payments I d at $10,850, v
NEAR OAKLAND AVE.
OSS furnace, conveniently Eitehan with plenty of
carpeted living room, storms _______
screens. Only $12,400. Low, low
R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR	FE 4-3531
345 Oakland Ava. Open 9 to 9
Frushour
r, gas heat, new alum. _______
itsd on a larga lot. $14,700 — down on FHA forms.
Gl SPECIAL
Oldar 4 bedroom homo, large Ing and dining room, country style kitohen, gas hast and altustad
closing cosh. Price $10,900i
ALUMINUM RANCHER
Deluxe model features 3 bMrodms a main bath with ceramic
1 extra V5-bath, <
CLARK
J«V!I!5S51
beaamanL fared walli Ideal for youn achoota. (Jnly price; $15,5M.
a Tioorsy
n down. Full
flraplan. 4 Moomt. Basamant. ApproxImMly 1 acre of land, fr^aga. Cal? today.'^ IttivM?
CLARK REAL ESTATE 1342 W. HURON. FE>3-788I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
FE 5-8183
EAST SIDE
Three-bedroom bungolow. Living end dining area. Kitchen. FuH basement, gas FHA heat, garage. irmnedlata possession —
. Easy te
INCOME

MATTINGLY
$19,400
This 3-bedroom ranch at ______
Ion has a large living room
carpeting and drapes, ft..........,
kitchen, painted basement, 2-csr garage. With 1204:180' -...........
KAMPSEN
$24,900
You'll have privileges .........
Lake^lthjhjs spacious 3-tedroqm
—•, brick a , ^2Vi ^r I
$17,500
Bbedroom ranch with IW baths, family room, attached garage — near 1-75 and Oakland University. FHA terms or trade.
$32,500
privll^s on \^lfe?i Lake. H steel construction and' full bri plus a large lot. Many extras. V!
ANNETT
ion W. Huron St., . FE 43921,^ AFTER t F.M. CALL Pg 33457	.
TIMES
High, Wide ond Handsoine
■ the way you will live wh„. i_^pureha»,_1hli hn^ Wck
ter hast, 27'x27' alla^ garage. Blacktop atrsot, protosaloMliy landteapad corner lot and many other fine appolnimsnh that your paraenal Inapairtlan wfll rs-vial, so why nrt call now for
Lake Privileges
On Scol^aka-twlfig-ol
s Broom raiwh charmer «
law' well traid tot «iat"'?ii fenced, also IW-car garage, closo
sin'TS’,jr.iijsir
call tor your choice o
- .ullding L.... ... .. _______
you get to the country swing of things by sailing you one of thasa parcala for 10 par pant down, 4 par cant land contfict
WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE
"JOIN THE MARCH OF TIMES"
Time^ Realty
DORRIS
NEW ONE AND HOT. Sltustsd on acre at ground In Orton Twp. outsida lha city llmlh of
Brick......................
sltuatad high on a hill overlooking the surrounding countryside, full Walk-oof basamant, 2 flraplaota'—-'
.reezeway t..... ... „
apartment. Baruln priced on Gl ca"h*boy r*'*''	**'*“*'"*
PRICE REDUCED FOR family
and a nitahly 11
"tha*? spSdmli
....s hikurloua L_ _______________
rontlng on Silver Lake Golf Course, taking R an SMoaplIiwsI buy st 24,m are lha 2 ceramic baths, he mammoth log burning flrn-iiaca and tha 2W car^.pfMtad
BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED HOME, SISJOO. This home compMlaly fur-nishad Including new color TV, homa 24WX3$W on toundalton vdth full basement, also family room 11WX2I. A kitchen you will admire. Also 4 car garage. Home la neat, clean and sttraettva. Located In Pontiac.
WEST SIDE
Three-bedroom, two-story home.
Carpeted living and dining n;-
- Modem kitchen, den
.................... .....
Early possasslon
WEST SUBURBAN
ad living an. ......................
jjos^Jieat, patio, garage. Easy
u. Carpet-eo. Utility,
. ALTON, 673-4130.
"IT'S TRADING TIME"
UPPER STRAITS LAKE PRIVILEGES
<:orner setting — excellent location — Needs repairs. Seven-room rancher with carport ter $13,500. TERMS — LET'S LOOK
LOTUS LAKE FRONT
ronta^. I .
— -------- front^. Six-room bl-
lavel homa featuring ——-basamant to la-------®
places. Paneled living room — Price to include draperies, car-patlna washer and dryer. Im-jwssesalon. Asking $32,-
000. TERM!
$13,950 - $2,000 DOWN
land contract buys this nice “-•'“'‘'“im, well cared tor NEW KITCHENI -
«d porch, fu.. ____________
lat, two-car garage. Paved 1. Located on north si-*-
THINKING OF SELLING
OR TRADING HOMES - GET OUR ESTIA4ATE BEFORE YOUR DEAL - Call Lea Karr, Kanwaan, Hilda Stewart, nan Witt, E——	—
I
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
1 FOOT IN THE COUNTRY-
1 and yet so far ine nustto bustlo. A gan-parcal of land tofaling
— ... .... ....iplementad b. an attractive 5 room 5. bath -----------'"s 20x22 garage. Car-
>1 system. $13,500 tor a hard
WHY NOT S-P-R-E-A-D-O-U-T!
This should bo exactly what you are looking tor being built In 1964 tta 4 bedroom ranch house has 2 baths, all adequate size rooms. Many extras. Giant 24x24 anachad garage with loads of storage apace, big price reduo-
OXFORD VILLAGE -
Your opportunity to buy on ract, this larga 7 room
hdma Is convanisnt to school I shopping area. Basement, flred^hol water heat, large
?:"k«*B?l3&)0-'"i'!ll
WALK TO OAKLAND UNIVERSITY -
Immediate possession
bedroom m story built In 195$. -Ipal water & sdWer. Gas & hot wafer. Pavad drive ,
to IVb car garage. For lots of
Warren Stoat, Realtar
SO N. Opdyke Rd. FB 5-S14i5 Multipto Ustiny tarvica
TED'S
New
Listings
COUNTRY LIVING CLOSE IN
$ ACRES With lake frontage, large homa with aluminum aiding, storma and Kraans, large lamlly kitchen rambled, large bam a# stalls- In an Ideal Price, $27,500 with 10
AWAY FROM TOWN
Attractive home, 3 bedrooms, faml-R room with llraplaca, tormal dln-
prtca $31,900. Trade
HALF ACRE
Lot wllh I badroom brick rancho heat and Indnarator, garbage die-petal, petto, clean end neel teroi^hout, S1SJM. Ewy terma of
FAMILY Rome WITH PERSONALITY
kMT'wm?
I living m ull b^ n
raga and a bonus to at $275oa"cl^fe.*“
SAVE
■T
3 bedroom ri ctoset apace, num sterma 4tU,990.
h, bathe, tote Of
' FHA
Nothing down,
EAST SIDE It----
SujM onof'or tel
McCullough realty
34 C?xy***^^»g»4li44> HjgMeite UML (M») MLS
multiply listinq iiRviar toil	attefT7 p-m. , m-tssi
\,
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1«67
AUaiON SALE
fmtM. T« cIbM th* •sti
, Leroy
:	i' .'•’S!*	ef *ho
••♦o. Pr*4, J. SlovoTr-MlIlnB ontiro fJvo room homo, incMing mlturo, electrical appHancao, • walnut drattar, commode,
teredo ot itami. Term* ea*h. John A. Cox Auctioneer. Lloyd Youna AdmlnlitretOr. SATURDAY, JULV »,T5jXSr C. FIlMk, Sn Tujwle, Wand
Outitandlno tr-'-	-----------
Electriclani
itAN PERKINS-SALES-SERVIce Auctioneer
k_______ 63H40B
Hobbiw A Supplies 83
1 ROLL 5SS LINCOLN PENNIES. BjjM|ley-unclrcUI*ted. Best after.
Llvaittck	83
1 RIOINO LESSON FREE. KLENT-
ApPALOOSASf quarter HORSES. Reg. Also »tud lervlce. tas-jOIS.
APPALOOSA CoLT - Mol tired uddle-bred mare — Reg. A.Q.tO. palomino itelllon. 349-5077.
ARABIAN, WbLSH, SHETLAND,
>PQA at itud. KenLo. ---*
BAY MARE, t
kRIENDLY S-VEAR-OLD CHfeST-nut gelding. Part Arabian end Quarter tior»e, IMP. 634-3433._
Gentle i-yearold geuSIno
Plnto.^ <73-3111, attar S or anytime
Saturday. 3RSE TRI Ing. CallSSi
IMMINO ANb Shb£-
KLENTNER RIDING ACADEMY, boarding, and ranting ava"
EM SdOOf. _____________________
^RS 5 VRS. old. 3440 VtALDON
EW BALD MOUNTAIN RIDING Stable. 4 mt. north of Pontiac on M24. Special role* weekdays. ti-50. Also horses boarded >nH I. Open 34 hours. 391-1704.
SHETLAND PONIES, SADDLE ANB
BALED HAY IN FIELD, CLARKS-1 ton-OrtonvIlla arr- ""
5-3203, before 1:30
’, INFIELD, ON WAG-
Clarkston. 435-3»43.
OPEN 'TIL I, MON. TO FRI. SAT. I TO 5. CLOSED SUN.
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
3771 Highland --- -------
BLADE, tl,4*5.
4140 Foley Watertord
KING BROS.
FE 4-1443	FE 4-0734
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka ~ ‘
liO^OZER AND TRAILER, fU Ford tractor, loader andLbackh *1,075. Will trade for houfc or^«iJ*jw'#ar. Clark'
flPhl'r';
1»47 ALLIS-CHALMERS HJ^aTa-plllar with fork lift, ' h. 334-1047.
B^ENNING piston pump 3"x3'“^ shallow wall. OR 3-3743, rNTERNATIONAL MODEL B TRAC-■	-	■ s. OR 3-3743.
JOHN DEERE AND NEW IDEA parts galora. Your Homaitta chain saw dealer. DAVIS MACHINERY
Ortonvilla. NA	__
MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE 1 TRAC ter. i:W.^hroop* Salas and Sarv-
fclcCORMfCK"
........ ......TTNE, 74,
wiin motor,, cut less than 100 acres. Ilk* new, liilarnallonal FasI Hllcli mower, 7' cut. 1 pair 12x31 tires and sehaals, will fit DC Casa or I-ternatlonal Carl Dobat ann 3440 Dutton Rd. Rochester.
SPECIAL SALE ON WHEELHORSE TR&tTORS
Get a new mower attachment free with the purchase ot any 1*47 Whacihorsa tractor during our special Whaathors* tractor sal*. Savings up to *195. Limitad time
KING BROS.
'FE 4-1442	FE 4-0734
»he Rd. at Opdyka Rd.
TRACTOR SALE
The new tractor you have bean looking for Is now at
EVAN'S
-EQUIPMENT
13' CftEE, GAS AND ELECTRIC lights, elec, brakes, *5*5. 55 Han-
ry Clay. FE 3-1311.________________
ISW CREk SELF • CONTAINED, ---------u.^430-1»*1.
\r OENL SELF-COtiTAINED steep* 7, $1.450. EM 3-3000.
1*44 14' Travel trailer. slIBp
■ ■ aw. 333-7---
fwin
. SteLF-CONTAINEO fROL-c. Call OR 3-33*0.
$!$$$
July Clearance Sale
Phoenix convertible campers, Winnebago and Phoanix pick-up campers, 14', 17', 1*' vacation trailer*. Pick-up covers.
REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold hnd Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 3355 Dixie Hwy.	OR 3-1454
$$$$
AIRSTREAM LiGHTWEKiHT
fr fnna*r
APACHE CAM<* TRAILERS
lava up to 3400 on . brand new 1 camp trailer*, over 15 modal*
-	new and used camp trailer*
-	display at all time*. *«« Open dally until 7 p.m.,' and Sunday until 5 p.m. e FactoiY Hometown Dealer. COLLER, 1 mile oast of I
BILL
hARGAIN 1*44 ’ 15' ST. CLAIliE trallar. Sleeps 4. Stove, Icebox, heater. Carpeting, Saaly mattress. ***5. 443-334».	.
iRADLEY CAMPEk, PICKUP sleepers and covers. 325* Seebaldt, Drayton. OR " *“•
43H704.
CAMPING
Private lake, safe sandy bbach, 14 flush toilets, hot and coht showers, fishing. Half mlla south of Orton-. vlll*.
McFaely Raaort	1140 M15
CENTURY
TRAVEL TRAILERS Inspect 34 year* oi quality dlied Aluminum, rounded comers, sealed frame and under belly, tettary system, lined' '
floors, fr
■lad frame ,
“—-.system, lined'drapes, vinyl 1—, - -'■-igs, 30 lb. bottles, Ith many othqr luxuries, nan to loin the Century Caravan.
OPEN 'TILL 0, Mon to Frl.
SAT I to 5. CLOSED SUN.
STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC.
(AA5*)
HAWtHORNE WiyiplR WitH A'dB-
----- ~n«l boat carrier. 437-5531.
CABOVER sleeps 4 — eat
OAKLAND CAMPER
Opan for your. Inspection
KARIBOU KA/^ER Tour-A-ilome.—Sleeps 6
Only 33*5,
AUa •iiimlnum cover* >■
Baldwin at Colgate
PICKUP COVERS, 3345 U O'*" cabcovars, 31,2*5 and T Si R CAMPER MFG. C( 1110 Auburn Rd.______________t
ruck campers. - --------
if cabcivar pick-up truck in display to choose from. Opan ... p.m. Saturdays ‘' ^
BILL COLLER
Vi mils east of Lspaar City Limits

PROTEST
If you are going to be put oA the spot (your favorite camping spot' without a 1*47 Apache Rsmadi When set up, tha Ramada Is 21 long with over 125	*q. f<
living area. It sleeps O #aopl comfortably. Turn the_ crajik an
a of 12'
oe in s oecor*. we nr "*	"
40x13', brand new, fo ‘1 saving*. ...
' undersold. Free 300 miles. Free bis parking.
HOLLYPARK ion T-T	7 days a wei'
MIDLAND TRAILER SALES
3357 Dixie Hwy._________ 33841773
' EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
4507 Dixie Hwy.
MARLETTES
50'-<3' long, >2' fo TV wide. Early American, Traditional “	—
pace available In 4 Stu.	...
^h* vmlghf^lnnak^ TWnSr?^*
OXFORD TRAILS SALES
OPEN *-*, CLOSED SUNDAYS mile south of Lake Orion on M24 “*'34)721 ..............
PIONEER CAMPER SALES
BARTH TRAILERS & CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN Hampers MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (*!'-27"-35" covers)
ALSO OVERLAND S COLEMAN
Rent Wag-N-Master
- — — *55 weekly Cliff Dreyer's Holly Travel (!oach Inc.
15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME A4771 Open Dally — Sundays
Rent Trailer Space
kRGE LOTS, NATURAL G
SPECIAL CLEARANCE WHEEL CAMPER
Tent Campers — * 3. 3 sleepi Tha ultra In tent campers, e
YELLOWSTONE
(Travel Trailers)
Capri models, 1*, Tl and 25	.
models. En|oy all tha conveniences with automatic water si- * ‘
VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE Yew and diffarant, 3235 Brown Near 1-75 and M-24. 3354)155.
THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM
Motercyclee	9
5-SPEED ducati
Scrambler,-30 hji., 240 lbs. An'dE r’sOiS' SAL*fes*B'^SE r vk:e
MS S. Teteoraph_______FE 3-7102
300 CC TRIUMPH TIGER CUB, *300.
TRAILER SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES AT JOHNSON'S
Walton at Joslyn
FE 4 5*53
travel With Quality Line Travel Trailers
BOLES-AE RO-TRAVELA4ASTE R FROLIC-SKAMPER SALES—SERVICE-RENTALS Completa t.T.S. parts center.
Jacobson Troiler Soles
54*0 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-SMl
1*44 HONDA DREAM : shield, s**'-*-—	--
435-45*4 al
1*45 HONDA SUPER HAWK. *0 h
WE CARRY THE FAMWS~
Fronklins-Crees Funs—Monitor Travel Trailers
WAG-MASTZR
Sleeps 4 or I 13' and 15' on harfd
Holly Travel Cooch
TRAVEL TRAILERS
Ynur dealer tor -LAYTON, CORSAIR
robinhood, tally ho
taller* in stock NEW SERVICE DEPT.
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
' Dixie Hwv._________‘i^fOO
——----■ ________________™
WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS nd sleepers. New and used, *3*5 p. Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms,
Llbarfy-Hampton
COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES
FE 3-1457	423-1310
25 Opdyke	5430 Dixie
-n Haights So. of" Watt ' *
n. *3.*00. 353-3205.
13'X40' NEW MOON. COMPLETELY (urn. Carpeting, awning and t --enclosed. Exc. condition. Lake 4*319*3._______________
storage shed, 33,700. 3384314,
In 3vy yrs., *2,500. 435-4454._
1*43 MARLETTE, 10'X50', TWO BE rooms fully carpeted. Washer am dryer. Call after 5. 428-31*1.
1*45 40'X12' NEW MOON, 5 ROOMS,
carpeted, and furnished.

BEST MOBILE HOME SALES OPEN DAILY 12 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
SEE THE ALL NEW MARLETTE AND CHAMPIONS.
Includli
luding ; iNDOl.
DETROITER-KROPF Vacation Homes
prices.
ind large expanding Ih >hly S2995.00. Free ri Michigan. Also 3 ft.. .. 12 f^ wide* at bargain
Ye* wa dallvar
BOB HUTCHINSON, INC.
4301 DIxIa Hwy. (U.S. 10) ayton Plains	OR 31202
32350 Telegraph Rd. twean ( 3. * Mila EL 4-1444
LOOK!
THIS WEEKEND ONLY
Custom Blaze demo, 40'xl2', I
WATERFORD MOBILE HpMES
4333 Highland Rd.
Across From Pontiac Airport
rl MOBtUI SERVICE, WINTER-
ausT'aeSs? tSsr"TSpa;“T?f|
d^m^^vte.^ 243472, after^S
Town & Country Mobile Hornes
PROUDLY
PRESENTS
"The
Westchester"
ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50 HOMECRAFT-AT $3,995
DELIVERED AND SET UP
delivery*™
PARKWMD
14 1^. FIBERGLAS BOAT, 80 H Johnson, power steering, full ci J?*’*' September 1*4*. / coirtition, ean_ be seen In 1 water, 312*5. Call 1-3437715.
13' CHRISCRAFT, BEST OFFER OR 3*03*	\
McDonald mobile homes
See our complete line of 12' wide*.
daily. Model* on * display at
new Cranberry Lake Mobile He-------
Village. "Country Club living at Its best.’’ *420 Highland Rd. (NIW, two miles west of Williams Laka Rd.) 3437511. Hours; Weekdays 13 to • - “ Sunday 13 to 5 - -
1**7 MERCURY- 3*, 3.* HORSE-regular *313. Now *175. »f* 3. Motors, Lake Orion,
BEAT THE SUMMER HEAT! JOIN THE WET SET!
LARSON BOATS
GRUMMAN CAlSoES FISHING BOATS
We also handle aluminum and wood docks; Do It yourself
harringtonToat works
(Your Evinrude Dealer)
13*9 S. Telegraph__FE 3-3C33
1H5 HONDA 45 CC — SWAP FOR Corvair or eco^mlcal car of ---------
.333-3733;_____________________
1*45 YAA4AHA 250 CC *2
1,44 BRIDGESTONE 17SCC, 2 hBL-

1*44 HONDA SUPER HAWK, EX-- el lent condition, ItOO ml., helmet icluded. *525.	335-0370.
1*44 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, helmets, *500. 4*341052.
I*4i HONDA SUPER MAWK )05 — good condition, new tire, also 2 helmets. 4372 Clarkston Rd. — Clarkston, 3*4-0334.
1*44 SUZUKI 250 4733341
1*44 YAMAHA "305". REASONABLE 3333474 or OR 33*05.
1*44 YAMAHA 305, ADULT OWNED, ■ new, 750 ml., *425. 71*5 Cooley
1**7 TRIUMPH, BONI_________
•" St. Joseph behind Sylvm, Canter. Between 5 p.m.
100. 2413 St.
Sh^Ing^Cs
HARLEY 74-1*5*, SHIELD AND tW5*' S*”'**!*!^
HONDA ^UPER *0, 1*44. -ASK FOR
HONDA IN LAPEER FULL SELECTION OF BIKES, parts, accessories, small town deal-—.......h Irlendly personnel.
INTRODUCING! I THE NEW lOOcc Suzuki Sierra, rotary valve high performance cycle, 12 mo. or 12,-000-mlle warranty.' FREE. HELMET WITH THE PURCHASE OF EACH NEW SUZUKI CYCLE, 50cc to 250CC. Rupp Mlnl-BIkes as low as *14*.*5, cycle accessories. Take M5* to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Dairwde Rd.
Phone: 42,-317*.__________
MINI CYCLES; GO-CARTS hodaka ace 90
HELMETS AND ACCESSORIES.
MG SALES & SERVICE
4447 Dixie Hwy.,	Drayton Plain
103 E. Montcalm,_______Pontia
OSSA
Mid-Summer Introduction Sale WAS NOV
175 CCS ......... *4*5	*43
35** Orchard Lake Rd.____
SALE - SALEl
kll used motorcycles marked down Buy now, and save. Easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 1445 S, Telegraph	FE 37102
SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER
A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW
Suzuki Cycles & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE
4447 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains
YAMAHAS
K. & W. CYCLE
SALES 3, SERVICE ■rea pickup on ell ma|or
(E. of Pontiac nr, Dequindre)
bicycles
BICYCLES, MONARK.

F—»
S-®'S	»W. RECOIL
Starter. Herb's "" *—•
12' ALUMINUM,
i HORSE _____
■I ann iraiier. 307 Inglewood. ALUMINUM EOATS,
---- electric,
*400 OR 3*757.-'
4' ARISTCFCRAR gONAlOUf with ^trols, 40 hj). Mercury mb-' tor, trailer, *kla, IPS. OL 1-3300. 4' YELLOW JAtKET RUNABOUT,
14'' sPEBtt ibAT, io HOksfepbw-3330772.
FIW and Orchgrd Lake.
14^“8i>ARAY SdAt, *5 H.Pr
4' I PIBERGLAS, 35 HP, vunnson electric start, Exc. Cond. priced to sell, Call 335-5*73,
15' figergLas boAt, trailer
and torn. 50 HP Electric Mercury motor, Exc. Cond. 34*5. 482-0173.
5' DELUXE FIBikGLAS STAR-*735733***' **	W>'®0-
CENTURY RESORTER (1*5 J34 h.p. OR 37541. After 7 P.
I FT. CHRIS CRAFT, EXCELLEl.. condition, 40 h.p. Inboard. 432-7122. 14' CHRIS-CRAFT, 233 CHEVY EN-tteller, *750 or ibest offer;
extra*. Sharp, **00.''<25-S4M a
Boats — Acmsories SPECIAL
Carver boat with top-ski bar-covar and gages. 75 h.p. son Motor with 13 gal.
Heavy duty trailer vvlth wheel and tire. Only $14'
CRUISE-OUT, INC.
43 E. Walton Open * 3 FE 3-4402
BIG SALE of the Summer!
„ Big Deals-On The Big Lot!
•" Chrysler Lone Star, Glastron, MFG boats, and sail ^t*. Riviera cruiser pontoons, Jon Boats, Alum. Fishing Boats! 12 to 14' In stock. Complete service of outboards — Mercury oul-^r«l* 3-» to .110 h.p. and Merc-Crulser authorized dealer. Cypress skis (all sWIes)
..... ,-.\kOK DE
GRUMMAN CANC
S DEALER
RIVIERA CRUISER Up to $100 Discount Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center
15210 Holly Rd.	ME 447
Open p—■- —■ '-———
CHRIS CRAFT SALE
CRUISERS "■ “Iberplai "
), full
*3,7*5.
171k' Fibarglas Corsair. V4 1 niw *3 3*5
DEAL NOW
LAKE AND SEA MARINE
South Blyd. FE
By Dick Turner
1*45 MG. midgIt,, (io<26 CoNPi'-
tlon. Must sella*,**. FE 37472.
(»<5 FIAT. 150b Sf*lbKk: REb with Black Interior. Black epnuert-Ible top. 13,500 ml. Mich. K tire*. Good condition. *1300 - taka over payments, call 4^-4315 after 5:30
‘You’re right, Mom! Fighting is stupid, especially before you learn how!”
Used AutfrTmck Parts 102
CONVERT YOUR ENGINE T
WILL ACCEPT TRADE
7 Stevens, 17'2" drag boat, .... ance boat trailer, custom built
for . 1,0(X
life. Engine is 424 cu in., 01 Starfire equipped with two 4 bi rel carburetors and cam develi Ing at 4,000 rpm's, 500 h.p. a
------ p,,. p|. Engfn, ^

mr SpbrtfSf** , ....
.p. With 1*44 Trail
Mariner ury 4!
trailer. _... .. new condition,
.....
1*42 Troian 25' soft top" cruiser, equipped with 135 h.p. engine, speeds to 35 mi. per hr., boat and engine has 113 hrs. and has not been In water for 2 yrs. Completely equipped and painted. Price new, *7,34(7. Delivery price ■
27' at ■Klein at OL
Please contact 1-3470 or JItn mins ai r Boat Sales. 420-9743, Fenton.
F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL - LE ■ ■ Instructors teach you to fl I Inc., Pontiac Airport. OR
WMtsd C«rs-Tmks 101
mRA/
EXTRA Dollars Pa d
FOR THAT
EXTRA Shorp Car
, '"Check the r* in get the best''et
"Averill
1*4*. FORD PICKUP Vi TON, l6vV ARMY ^EF>;'awheel DRIVE, 5
Gale
McAnnally's'
i — SCHOOL, 1*54 FORD V-3, tremel^l^od mechanical condi-
flNKLES AUTO SALES
5*2 OAKLAND 61 Chevy % pickup 42 GMC M pickup . 43 GMC M DirkiiB FE 54373
DAWSON SPECIALS - uS1gb - Ci
plywood boat. Top dollar paldl 1*54 30 h.p. Evinrude elec, and get th* best deal trailer, 31*5. USED 14' Cadillac 1304 BALDWIN
. runabout with trailer, 3175.
son motor, 31*5. CLOSE OUT PRICES on Glasspar end Steury FIberglas boats — MIrro Craft
...	jiji	_ Qi-gm-
Kayot elum. and " rinrudf '
- ... ------- Take .
W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE ‘ 42*-217*.
FIBERGLAS~BOAt, 15', 50
;e new. FE 5-4543.
GLASSPAR G-3 SKI BOAT -"1 Glri*. Republic Hit tr »50. FE-0-**37._______________
JULY BOAT CLEARANCE
New 1*47 boats drastically reduced by hundreds ot dollars.
Including outboards and ah' I
Johnion ai
I Chrysler M
PAUL A. YOUNG, INC.
4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 4-0411	4» i~.n 1 .1,
Open dally *
Mon. and -fhu Sun., 10 r
thur*. 'Ml , p.m.
JUST RECEIVED
The famous Al Sport boi Grumman. While they last -
GRAND RIVER BOAT .SALES
20*20 Grand River	GR 4-7320
' ^locks east of Middle Beit Rd. MEMBER OP MMDA
MONICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020
5250 AUBURN RD. (M59)
NEW ISVi' FIBER GLASS boat end trailer. FB A2*y OWENS 24' FLAGSHIP,
PINTER'S
-----Cardens Water
1370 Opdyke	Open *-*
.. Oakland Unlversltv
, .J' ARROWCRAFT, „ trailer, 342S also Hydro ’ mlnimax, steering,
SEA RAY BOATS
Factory to you^prlces
LAKE ORION MARINA
M24 NORTH ot PorttlBC
Only $1,.. ..
31 YEARS REPAIR EXPERIENCE -	nnui TONY'S MARINE SERVICE
reduced at much l6*S (w^srd Lk. Rd. 0pen*:30.7 p.m,
---------------J available. B. F. 2W ORCHARD LAKE RD.
Goodrlch-111 N, Perry. FE 2-0121.	OPEN *:30 TO 7 P.M.
HELP! ■
We need 300 sharp Cadillacs, P Macs, Olds and Buicks for out state market. Top deller paid.
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES
HELP! WE WILL BUY Late Model Used Cors
"Top Dollar Paid"
Haskins
.	SALES
STOP
HERE LAST
u&u
MOTOR SALES
Now at our newTocatlon
^*can S/rvetlSi eM It '*** tl'so Oakland at viaduct. 333A*24t
“TOP DOLLAR PAID''
GLENN'S
FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS *52 W. Huron St.
E 4-7371____FE *.17*,
We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will oc-cept trade-downs. Stop by today.
FISCHER BUICK ■
544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600
k Car^^Tnieks - 101-A
ALWAYS BUYING JUNK 1
aiid scrap '	------
COP-PER,'
SIDE BOXES FOR PICKUP -FInfles Auto Sales, 5*2 Oakland, '•‘•'S.4373 or 333-7403.
1*43 PONTIAC ENGINE, 32S0
_______ 335-5423
BORG-WARNER 4-SPEIED, TRANS-
mlstlon with
Chevy angina, betore 1 ----
competition ,13V. Z4O h.p. 283 350. Call 428-3020
I MAGS, UNI-LUG DESIGN,
.....— -ll-LUO
of 4, tires, lu(te, "dust caps and locks; 3120. Traction bars for
I* chevy 312. UL 2-2511.
____________makes. Termt, 537-11]
FORD .^3*0 ENGINE AND QTH-ers. 327 Chevy Bell nouelng, misc. frlpowert-sllckt. H8.H Sales, OR 3-5200.
MUNCIE 4-SPEED ' process, Schiefer a for Chevy, 352-4780.
NwjM^sedJFi^
5-YARD DUMP, 1*50 DODGE, speed axle, f»i>' i"* ""»h mkh, S375. 33B-204*.
1*32 ford B model pickup. 233 Chevy engine, original $400 or best offer. 052-3573
1*53 FORD, KOtFOALLON" SEPtiC
tank truck, 474l(«7.___________
1*55 FORD PICKUP, BODY AND engine In go-" -*•— ............
LUCKY AUTO
1*40 W. Wide Trai
CHEVY W-TON PICK-UP, 3**5.
_______________427-2551____________
1*65 CHEVY VAN, STICK SHIFT,
5 CHEVROLET W-TON PICKUP, ampar't special, VS 4-tpecd, an vizona truck, no rust, 31,5*5, at
llllsld* LIncoln-Mer-...
d JVve. 333-7843.
1*45 FORD ECONO-VAN. GpOD condition, low mileage, —
~ ,300. 473-817* ettes 5:30
1*45 JEEP PICKUP - 4 WHE drive. Exc. condition.
BILL GOLLING VW INC.
' 15 Mile (Maple Rd.) Across from Berz Airport 1.8 Miles E. of Woodward Birmlngh^m-Troy
TON PICKUP. 4 krimoer rieeislde Fully Equipped, like new. 313*5. BILL FOX CHEVROLET, Rochester's Newest Chevy
5. FE 3.*724.
t SALE 1*44 CORVAN IN EX-
Cell F
JACK LONG FORD
Michigan's Fastest Growing Truck Dealer Ih-ton, «i-ton, pick-ups, nd camper specials. Get .. . L-O-N-G Oeel. Call Jim Smith at OL 1-*711, 215 Mein Sf “ "
SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP
EM 3^155 or	EM >4154
SPECIAL
rhevrolet 3' pick-up.
$395
GMC
Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485
Auto Insui^e Marine 104
Mini-Cost
. .	.. ... (Budget)
BRUMMETT AGENCY
Miracle Mile____ FE 44)58*
F^gn Cars
1*5* VW, COMPLETELY REBUILT factory Installed — “— USt, 34»S. 33S9424.
CINTUI
*00 Oakland
Foroign Con
BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth
J. woodward_______Ml 7-3274
1*43 TR-3, WITH TR-4 ENGINE, good cond. *73-7440.
1*45 CORTINA 4-SPEED l**S At

SAimiE CHEVROLET, Blr-
4-273S.
heater,	______
conditioning, beautiful _______ ______
------*-T topi Electric ^buck-
million ^ tdday's
"It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at:
John McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland	----
146 iF I AT 1500 SPYDER, RADIO, 2 tops, exc. 42S-4W4 after 4.
1*44 )(KE JAdUAR HARb-tOP. NEw --lltlon. 4,000 ml. Ca" ““ ‘
^	. FE M404.______________
1*4* vbLKSWAGBN 2-DQOR BUS. Radio, heater, whitewall tires — ■:rlmson red with all vinyl Interior 10 MPG of gasoline. How can you )0 wrong tor only $1,108. full price. 188 down and 334.37 Mr month.
John McAuliffe Ford
I Oakland	FE 5-4101
- Full _______ ..
buy today. Only 31 .
383 down and 3S3.41 per month,
John McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland	FE 5-4101
GLENN'S
1*64 Cadillac 4-door sedan DeVille. ■=ull power. With fectory air.
L. C. Williams, Salesman
PRDCHE, 1*44. C RED CONV. I J. Extras. <2-400. 402-0143.
VW'S
You'll be happy at th "BUG HOUSE" Fine selection of new V!
Across from Ben Airport ’ • Miles E. of woodr— m-Troy__
VW CENTER
85 To Choose From -All Models--A1I Colors-—All Reconditioned—
Autobahn
New and Used Cars 106
BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You—
Just Call
p. Murphy at FE 54101
BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS
Payments Arranged To Fit Your Budget
WE FINANCE
GLENN'S
steering, brakes.
L. C. Williams, Salesman
*52 W. Huron St.
FE 4-7371	FE 4-17*7
Many More to Choose From
1*43 BUICK LeSABRE 4-DDOR, ALL
electric. 3*75. <73-**1S._______
1*43 BUICK LESABRE 4-DOOR, 8,
....--... ------ steering, radio,
new car trade.
heater, whitewalls.
1*43 BUICK LESABRE CONVERTI-bis. A real sharp car. Can be purchased with 3100 down.
LUCKY AUTO
1*40 W. Wide Track
1004_____or______FE *.7054
BUICK LESABRE 2-DOOR
---Itop. Automatic, radio, heater,
power steering, power brakes. Spot-
.--------------------mi,
buy. It's
IS condition. Only $1

d 335.40
. only I
GLENN'S
*44 Specie! Buick S
rr«ms.
Buick Skylark. Power
Salesman
Huron St.
lo Choose From
GLENN'S
----- air. 4-door herc.-^.
L. C. Williams, Salesman
*52 W. Huron Sf.
FB 4-7371	' - . FE 4-17*7
Many More To Choose ~
NEWEST DEALER IN PONTIAC
VANDEPUTTE
BUICK-OPEL
1*4-210 Orchard Lake
GLENN'S
irs^ino^'bl
L C. Williams, Salesman
*52 W. Huron St.
E 4-7371	FE 4-17*7
“—■ More to Choose From
1**5 BUICK SPECIAL DELUXE 4-
......... IJJsMid-i
250 Oakland Ava.
GLENN'S
1*44 Skylark Buick wagon. *-pas. senger. Power steering, brakes, tinted glass, rack.
L. C. Williams, Salesman
*52 W. Huron St.
E 4-7371	FE 4-17T
Many More to Choose From
HAND AT A
___TIMES °
lEROME
Brand New 1967
MERCURY SPORT COUPES
Equipped with—
Heater, washers, backup lights, white sidewalls. Deluxe wheel covers. Two-tone finish. Vinyl interior. Full carpeting ... and many other extros.
M)ZUyO DELIVERED
LINCOLN-MERCURY
125G Oakland 333-7863
^ BHd Deed Can 106
DON'S^USED CARS Small Ad-3ig Lot
^ -J CARS TO CHOOSE FRC..
W# buy or will adlusF your pay-menis to less exMnsi— —
477 M-K. Lk. Orion
1*43 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE -
1*43 CADILLAC 4-bR. JET BLACK.
-	factory ■»■“<
*1i438
Buick
On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-24W
Now Is The Time To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave.
FE 4-4547
Weak Credit?
Help — Try tha No. I Team I in put you In a new or use< todayl CALL
BILL FOX CHEVY
Rochester, Michigan
chevy” AUTOMATIC, RUNS
1*56 CHEVY NOMAD, RESTORA-
3175. 426-33*4.	______________
CHEVY WITH PONTIAC EN-e, also '54 Chevy, tiger gold h tiger upholstery. Sale or trade 6B2-**70._____
— SELL
________________ FB 4-8*43.
1*53 CHEVY HOTROD, BEST OF-*" FE 4-*8>5.
, Body good, 3125. 332-
CHEVY BEL A -uto. Radio, h€-sldewalis. One c
1*41 CHEVY 4 STICK
352-2878.___________________
1*61 CHEVY 2-DbOR, REAL GOOD,
Save Auto. FE______________
1*42 CORVAIR SPYDER CONVERT —ns good, body clean, net nd battery, top exc., 4 343-3**4 after 6 p.m
TOM RADEMAC'hE^
CHEVY-OLDS
>^UTO-
WOULD YOU BELIEVE
0 GI/AMICKS-NO GIVE-AWAY*
?:;.'?2"FWarr.
* . '62 Pontiac Sta. Wagon *...'42 Chavy Sta. Wagon *...'S* Bonnavlllt Hardtop *’ "'63 vw"^'*’'
«»»:::;43 Oodga Dart
Half-dozen cars at **» ea.
OPDYKE MOTORS
__M30 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke
FE *->237 _____________F,fe 3-*2M
'42 CHEVY, one OWNER, 43,'OM
ml., clean, <525. 352-243*.___
1943 CHEVY WAGON. V8, GOOD condition. 3*1-1*35, alter 4.
*43 CHEVROLET WAGON, BEAU-TI^FUL CONDITION, GOOD TIRES
COOPER'S
„	<74.2257
4278 Dixie_________Drayton	Plalni
1*63 CORVAIR CLUB SEDAN, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE 35*5, ABSOLUTE-
I V kir. k.nucTk,	---
Parks
TURNER FORD, I
1*43 CHEVY BEL AIR 4, AUTO-
-------------75 at MIKE SAVOII
CHEVROLET, Birmingham.
743 CHEVROCm-DOOR AUTO-matlc, radio, heater, see this one for sure, 33*5. M Hillside Llncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland Ave. 333-
New and Used Cm
J!!
TOM RADEMACHER
t*<3 CHEvioLET'?felS>R, * CYL-Inder station wagon, rad% Matar. ^itdwallt, parft^ family car., ^^.$.ieatM1S.cLk.ten.
$5
Down
Sale
» g;ll
157 Chevrolet VITT-Dr. 12*7	*3.12
'41 Corvair stick .... 31*7	32.05
141 Rambler 2-door ... s *7	31 J)2
Falcon 2-dr stick *3*7	*4.10
fS S'*®!!',*'’’® .. W" »•<»
M Ford full Mwer ... *2*7	*3.12
MTerwst Mr .... *8*7	3*.24
>41 Pontiac Auto .... 34*7	$5.15
143 Dodgt Dart . *5*7	*4.1|
Buy Here-Pay Here
WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT
Capitol Auto
312 W. MONTCALM
Just East of Oakland
FE 84071 ,
19*4 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON- . vartible. V8 automatic, power steering, radio, heater, garage-kept beauty, *1,2*5 at Hilltida Llncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland Ava. 333-
Wagon, I
1964 BELAIR
iwar steering and brakes,
$1295
HAUPT PONTIAC
On M15 at 1-75 intarchanga Clark*ton ____________MA 5-5500
1*44 CORVETTE, RED FASTBACK, AM-FM radio. 852-1*75.
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS 1*64 CHEVROLET IMPALA *-PAS-lenger station wagon, V-3 automatic, power steering end brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, like new $1,4*5. On U.S. to at MIS, Clarks-
ton. MA 5-5071.	_________
IMPALA WAGON 8, AUT(5-—ler steering, 315*5 at „ -DIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.
MATIC,
SHARP 1*44 CHEVY IMPALA CON-vertlble 4 speed, 327 300 horse, new tires, <73-3553.
GLENN'S
t*<4 Chevella wagon. I
ly Mora to Chooaa From
TOM RADEMACHER
1**4 CHEVROL^ tomatic. radio
ready for tha.roao. **»5. u.s. lo at M15. Clarkston. MA 5-5071.
764 CHEVROLET WAGON, STICK, 3' 31W5 »*	SAVOIE CHEV-
ROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735.
1*44 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, NEW
---- 327, Exc. Cond. *1200
FEW744.
*44 CORVETTfcdNVfeRTikLa _ Black with black Interior, oranga
rims, fair condition. FB 5-4774.
1*44 BEL AIR WAGON, 8 AUTO-
LET, Birmingham. Ml *^»3S.
7*4 FORD ' CO^OM ^66^, 4 MIKE* SAvStE^CHEVrISEe^^'bI*!
^2735,
w ml. *r»X'MY
1*45 CHEVV IMPALA 2-b6'oA
1*45 IMPALA Wt^N, * AUTO-matlc, p^r ataarlna, radio, hooter; whittwalls, 3IM at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng-
*45 BEL AIR 4-DOOR AU^bMAflC. radio, heater, i owner, new car trade, S1,1*S at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-
I after 5________________
I CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, .
....-,t. ----;. gs^rlng, 314*5
iCHEVROLET,
at MIKE SAVOIE I
Daxtar Rd., 334-2848, at
t»4S CORVAIR ^DOOR HARDTOP, 4-spead, *8*5. 473-3034.____
1965 CHEVROLET
Carry-All Suburban. Automatic trani-mlulon, radio, heatar, with chroma roof rack.
$1595
PONTIAC RETAIL STORE
LUCKY AUTO

I-^ALA	IJIfiOR - MARO-....
1*44 IMPALA 2-DOOR HARbtOP,
1*44 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERT-
Ible, 31,167.31). Beautiful c ...
473-4341 before 3 p~
For People Who Want to Go!
Come on over to the big Dodge Lot . . . See and drive one of these outstanding cars. You'll find it's easy to deal with ...
Spartan Dodge
-	1965 CHEVY 2-Door
BIscayht with economy *-eyI., down. ASKING -
$1095
1963 OLDS “88”
2-door hardtop, with ml*f blue, power. No money down. ASKING-
$897
1962	PONTIAC Hardtop
with full power. Ntad* miner' body repair. No money down. ASKING
$575
. 1963 MERCURY Monterey
2-door, automatic, V-l, und atone beige. No money down. ASKING
$795
1963	PLYMOUTH Wagon
with gold finish, V-3, automatic, power. Be r vacation. No money down. ASKING—
$795
SPARTAN DODGE «
855 . Oakland FE 8-1122
r—10
the PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. JUtt ii, 1067
BEATTJE FORD
1965 Falcon
Wjq||on. *<yllnd«r, standard
$U95
1965 Ford
$1395
'65 Mustang
$1595
1963 Ford
ixia 500 4-door sadan. V-«, matlc.
$1095
1963 Falcon
Wagon.' *<yllnder,
$795
1963 T-Bird
— On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford-Your Ford Deoler Since 1930 623-0900
vmw
1964	CATALINA 4-door sedan .........................$1295
Powar slaaring, brakatt Hydramatic; whitewalls; radio.	,, ,
1966 BOr^NEVILLE Convertible ........................$2695
Hydramatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls.
1963	CHEVY II............	  $895
Nova 2-door hardtop. 4 cylinder, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. A Real Sharp Carl
1965	CHEVY 4-door sedan ... ........................$1395
Automatic; 4-cyl.t whitewalls; radio; heater. Clean car.
1964	CADILLAC Hardtop .............................$2695
4-door with power steering,, brakes, windows; auto. temp, control, and air-conditioning. AM-FM radio, power antenna, whitewalls, Hydra-
1964	CHEVY Impala Convertible ...................  $1395
Autmatic; power steering, brakes; V-l;. radio. New premium white-
1962	BUICK Convertible .............................$995
Invlcta with powar steering, brakes; automatic; radio; heater; whitewalls. Black with rad Interior.
1966	GTO SPORTS COUPE................... ...... .$2495
Hydramatic, console, radio, heater, whitewalls. 11,000 actual tnllas.
1962	FORD Golaxie 500 ..................................$795
2-Door	Hardtop. V-l, automatic, powar	steering,	power brakes,
radio, heater, whitewall tires. Beautiful white with red leather Interior.
1963	RAMBLER Classic ................................$595
4-Door. 640 sarlas with radio, heater, whitewall tires, standard transmission, and 4 cylinders,, A real economy-spaclal folksi
1963	PONTIAC Star Chief ...........................$1095
Radio,	heater, Hydramatlc>^power steering.	If	you'ra looking
for comfort, don't miss thispne, dr you'll be sorry! 11
1963	VOLKSWAGEN Karman	Ghia ..................$995
4-spaad, radio, heater, whitewall tires.
1964	OLDS Dynamic '88' 2-Door Hardtop.............$1295
V-8, standard transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires, and luxurious leather Interior.
1966	CHEVELLE 2-Door Hardtop .........................$1795
Radio, heater, 13,000 miles, actual. Whitewall tires.
wmiil
PONTIAC-RAMBLER
Ask for Chuck Moriorty, Joe Flumerfelt,
Open Daily 'Til 9 P.M.
On M24 In Orion MY 3-6266
1965	GTO
Convertible. Black with black top end Interior. 3«9 engine with trl-power, 4-speed, tachometer, radio, heater, a tone and whitewall tires. 1 Only ......................
1962 PONTIAC Bonneville
2-door hardtop. Mauroon with black bucket teats, tinted glass, automatic, power steering, power brakes, wonder ainoc . bar radio, heater, whitewall tires. Immaculate.. ^1 aaD
1964 CORVAIR Coupe	- .
Light turquoise with matching vinyl trim. Radio, heater, a ,nr whitewalls, standard shift. Guaranteed.......... $ 695
1961 MERCURY 4-Door Sedan
Black with black and white trim, V-B, automatic, power ^ .-r steering, powar brakes, ^,000 mllesi Immaculate .... B 625
1966	BUICK Wildcat	/
--- g-dtsM- hordtop.' Oork’ green-with black vinyl top, tinted glass, V-e, automatic, power steerln# and brakes, power windows, custom Interior, FM radio with stereo, white- eocne wall tires, wire wheels. Like new ....................^ b2q25
1966	PONTIAC Catalina,
Convertible. 2 plus 2 option, 4-speed, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, maroon with annni-black Interior and a white top. Sharp .......... $2395
1956 MERCURY Montclair
2-Door Hardtop. Salmon and white. V-|, automatic, power staring, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires, wheal covers. Plastic seat covers since newl	.nc
1964	BUICK WILDCAT
Convertible. Yellow with black bucket seats and black top. Automatic, power steering, power brakes, console #i,nr and custom Interior. Only 30,000 miles ......... $1695
1967	FIREBIRD
2-Door ttardtop. Dark green with white vinyl top and green vinyl Interior, V-0, autortfatic, power steering, c^ole, radio, heater, whitewall liras, whqel covers. ^2995
1966 VOLKSWAGEN
Sunroof Sedan. Glossy black with red vinyl seats. F« radio, heater, whitewalls, sliding top. . 14,000 m\M. tune AAonday Special ..........................$1475
1965	PONTIAC Catalina
4-Door Sedan. Green with matching trim. Automatic,
.power staarlng, power brakes, 25/000 miles, Towner.
•peclal at only .............. $1695
1966	PONTIAC Bonneville
Convertible. White with rad leather bucket seats.
Power steering, powar brakes, 4-spead, console, radio, tnnnr
“■......" *—1, 1 owner ........................... $2295
WARRANTY
I personally guarantee that the mileage on these ^ automobiles is the actual mileage registered when wo received it frpnj the


Audette
1.	30-day 50-50 should ony repairs be needed.
2.	Plus a ?-year warranty. If any repairs are required, a 15% discount on parts and labor will be extend-ed.
1850 Maple Rd., Troy 642-8600 2 Minutes East of Woodward
On 15 Mile Road
Nfw god Used Cart 1^6
1*44 CORVETTE FAST BACK, 4 speed 350 h.p., red black Interior,
TAYLOR'S
1*44 CHEVY I^ALA SPORT coupe, yellow with Week landau top, body and engine In exc. cond. Must sell, will sacrifice, $1^.
Pried S229S. BiCl FDX CHEVRO-LETj^^ RK^hs^r's Newest Chevy
t*42 CHEVY“BeL AIR 4"1b
V-l powergllde, $22*5.
TAYLOR'S
CHEVY-OLDS 424-4501 WALLED LAKE
MIKE SAVOIE
Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735
1*41 IMPERIAL LE8ARON 4-DOOR
KING. 754 Oakland, f
FORD, INC.
. _ 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_________Ml 4-7500
I. White - 430 Oakland!
1963 CHRYSLER
New Yorker, 4-door hardtop, i dio, heater, automatic with powi 1 owner priced to save
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymoiith
i. Woodward - Ml 7-31
1*64 CHRYSLER hardtop, full pove
want a rare buy? .........
LIncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland
2-DOOR ...natlc — at Hillside
1*41 DODGE 4-DOOR SEDAN, AU-TOMATIC VI, POWER STEERT'" AND BRAKES, VERY CLEAnT $2
prlcel Only ,1444 full price, down and $24.54 per month, choqse from. 50,000 mile or y warranty avallabla.
John McAuliffe Ford
630 Oakland______________FE 5,.,.
1*44 FORD CUSTOM 2-DOOR, I automatic, radio, heater, $2*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-
COOPER'S
AUTO SALES	, 474-2257
4271 Dixie_________Drayton Plalns
1941 DODGE WAGON, .
1C, POWE RSTEERING, $4*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mlngham. jWI 4-2735.
DODGE POLARA HARDTOP, itic, power steering, "313" - honey, $1,5*5. Hillside Lin-coln-Mercury, 1250, Oakland, —
KESSLER'S
Oxford________________ OA 1-14110
1*45 DODGE POLARA CONVERTI-ble, loaded with extras, pvt. owner, must sell. Would you balleve $11*5? Ml 4-*2ll tor details.
1*2* FORD ROADSTER, Cl powered. $700. 423-12*8 aft.
1*34
I COUPLE BODY
good, needs Interior i______
r best offer. 875 Scott Lake
l'*6i FALCON BLUE. EXC. CONDI-
tier' an? brakes. 'tSIoM mu' «2s' Call after 4 p-m. 338-3043.
1*41 FALCON
excellent, auto.
WAGON ., $225. C
FORD, GALAXIE, 1*42, 4-DOOR A tomatic, radio, heater, 1 owni $400. 338-0*05._________________________
STAR AUTO WE FINANCE
LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS '62 Ford Convertible . .$497 '63 Comet Convertible $597
'59 T-Bird ............ $497
'62 Pontiac Hardtop . $697 '63 Chevy V-8 Stick . .$697 '63 Chevy Convertible $497 rw'FORD fairlane
New god Uswi Cgn 106
1*44 FORD CUSTOM 500, V8, AUTO-matic, radio, heater,..real savings, $7*5. Hlllsid* Lincoln MerCury,..1»0 Oakland Ave. 333-7863.
Pretty Ponies
1965 8. 1966 MUSTANGS
SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CH0O5E»FiROM
CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month
HAROLD
TURNER
1*M GALAXIE 500 CONVERTIBLE, 289, auto., dark blua, whita top, •claan, 2*,000 ml., radio, haatar, whitewalls. $12*5, FE 4-3*75.
automatic, radio.
4-DOOR. V8,
________________4-2735.___________
1*45 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE. VB,
radio and heater, -■-------" —
a bteck nylon top ______ .
teats. This week's special. -Only $1,388 -full price. $88 down $46.97 per month. 50,000 mile 5-year warranty available.
John McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland _____________FE 5-4101
1*4i MUSTANG TWO-DOOR HARD-top. V8, automatic, power steering, power brakes, one owner. Immaculate, $1,4*5, Hillside Llncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 333-7B4t.
Club s
whitewalls, full
weexiy paymenis or SI4./S.
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC.
444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM	Ml 4-7500
MUST MAKE ROOM
3 '65 Cart Ford-Dodde-VW 5 Pontlacs '57 to '41 3 Cadillacs '57 to '58 Most other cars and
ECONOMY CARS	2335 Dixie
' conditioned, automatic, heajer, whjtewalls. $12* or
»n^ ral
HAROLD
TURNER
FORD, INC
WOatjWARf AVE.
BIRMINGHAM
FORD GALAXIE 500 CONVERT-a "3*0" angina, automatic pow-ttaerlng. This Is a dandy I $l,**5 Hillside LIncoln-Mercury, 1250
'63 Pontiac Wagon ...$897 '61 Mercury Sedan .. $297 '62 Rambler Sedan . . . $297
'64 Corvair .........$597
EASY CREDIT ARRANGEMENTS 962 OAKLAND AVE.
FE 8-9661
1*63 FORD FAfRLANE 500 2-DOOR
1*43^ FORD GALMdE ^DOOR, 8 SAVOIE
FORD, INC.
444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_________MI
1*43 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR
STANDARD AUTO. 1
South. FE 8-4033.
vinyl Interior. You must see this onell $8*5. BOB BORST Lincoln Mercury Sales 47*. S. Woodward. "■ 4-4538 -------------
1*44 FORD FAIRLANE "500" FOUR-door. Automatic, V8, radio, heat-ar. A nice on*. $**5. Hillside LIncoln-Mercury, 1250 * ' ‘	‘ *“
7843.
... FALCON CLUB SEDAN, AUTO-MATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE $7*5. ABSOLUTELY NO MQMEY DOWN, Assume weekly •	...... .... CREDIT

l«ntt of M.92. C
4-7500.
no tv
TURNER FOI|D,
1*44 FORD 8 GALAXIE 500, V§i^ —- 363-0081.
steering, power __________ ...
$1,8*5. Hillside Llncoln-Mercur 1250 Oakland, 333-7843.
'500" STA-
______JtIc, power
brakes. Roomy,
1966 FORD
Galaxie 500 2-door hardtop, all
ditloned, power equipped, ______
matic, radio, heater, whitewalls, full price $1**5 only $4* dov weekly payments of $14.*5.
HAROLD
TURNER
MARMADUEE By Andergon and Leeming
1966 LeMANS
2-door hardtop, automatic, | steering, radio, vinyl roof
$2195
HAUPT 'PONTIAC
On M15 at 1-75 In Clarkston
“C’mon, Marmaduke! Try to remember where you dug it up!”
New and Used Cart 106
NEW; 8*5.
New and Used Cart 106
*40 MERCURY, LIKE Save Auto. FE 5-3278.
1*40 MERCURY $150
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1 MERCURY STATION WAGON,
482-4315 after 5
U R-Y MONTEREY .ithlta with Black In-I condition. $750. Call
I MERCURY MONTCLAIR MA-;der. Automatic, power steering [1 brakes. A real beauty, $1,2*5. Iside LIncoln-MefcUry, 1250 Oak-
1245 MERCURY HARDTOP. 4-DOOR — Auto., power. Low mile*. Best oHer. Owner will finance. Call 343-
et re-established again V finance plan, and let a car with no money
LUCKY AUTO
1*40 W. Wide Track
PE 4-1004_______or________FE 3-7854
1*57 PONTIAC IN EXC.
Call 42S 4**7 —	■
1*5* PONTIAC,.TRIPOWER, AUTO-
125* PONTIAC STATION WAGON.
Radio, heater, $125, FE 2-751*.
1*61 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertlble. Radio, Heater. Full Price
i?i-NSXRrA*i;T»^iVti5'“*‘
South FE 8-4033.
1*45 MERCURY COLONY PARK •"-gon. Factory Air, Power Steer-and brakes. Power Windows. Vacation Special. Don't miss I on* telksi BOB BORST Lln-1 Mercury Sales 47* S. Wo~^ " — 4-4538 BIRMINGHAM.
1*44 CYCLONE COMET, DOUBLE power, whitewallsi V-8, 282, cellent condition, must aacrl 447-4557 after 4:30 p.m.
1*44 MERCURY BREEZEWAY. ) tomatic, power steering and bra*
V8, gorgeous, garage-kept, $1.
— Hillside LIncoln-Mercury, 1 Oakland, 333-7843.
SO S. Woodward	Ml 7-3214
GLENN'S
%
L. C. Williams, Salesman
*52 W. Huron St.
FE 4-7371	FE 4-17*7
any More to Choose From
i. offer. OL
1*42 OLDSMOGILE 28T4-DOOR. tomaticy radlOr heater, full po Ready to go. $688 full price, down and $35.40 per month.
* John McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland_______ ^ FE 5-4101
3 OLDS "
Full p
■' CONVERTIBLE
VOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham.
1 Cond., $4*5. 343-0771.
1*64 OLDS VISTA-CRUISER, ALL -■-'■ixe and povwir, exc. A-1 '
W, $2,400. EM 3-3748.
GLENN'S
Opdyke Hardware. FE 8-4484.
1*44 FORD GALAXIE 500 CONVERT-
ull price. _	.59.86 per
r 5-yaar —
1966 FAIRLANE
hardtop. Power steering and kes, automatic, radio, f—*—
OTiy ■ $4* ante of ,8
ana weexiy payrpann OT,,aix.7
HAROLl)
TURNER
BIRMINGHAM
Oustanding '67 Trades
1963 FORD
Country Sedan J*t blacK with chrome luggage rack, Vte, automatic, powBr* steering, radio and/Whltewalls.
ewalls.
$795
1963 BUICK (f
LeSabre 2-Door HOrdtop. Blue frith a whita top, V-«, automatic, power steering, radio, whiltwalls. Only—
$995 •
i,963 OLDS
4-Door Sedan. V-8, power steering. Showroom
$795
Only-
$1045
1963 T-BIRD
^Door Hardtop Landau with powar staering, brakes, seats and windows.' Air conditioning.
$1295
Only —
1965 DODGE
Polara ^Door Hardtop with let black finish, whit* top, power *'—■— —brakes, V-8, auto-
ills. Only-
$1495
1965 PLYMOUTH
Sport Fury Convertible. V-B, 383 engine, automatic, powar steering. Beautiful white finish, blue
$1645
1965 DODGE
Polara Cohvertible. V-8, automatic, power steering, brake* and windows, low mileage, ^nly
lack vinyl
$1695
1963 VALIANT
Wagon, 4-DooT with stldc shift, beautiful rad finish, radio, white-walls. Brand new tlras. Only—
$695
$995
OAKLAND Chrysler - /Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE.
FE 5-9436
MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE
528 N. Main
ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN
1*44 OLDS CONVERTIBLE, AUTOMATIC With power, $2,0*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mlngham.
PLYMOUTH FLOOR SHIFT,
SOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $*.82 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.
- V> L1 A N T. -a,0i» ACTUAL, mites. Full price $2*7. MARVEL MOTORS, 251 Oakland: FE 8-407*.
PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY
hardtop, V8 automatic,
*r, power steering, ne..___________
ranty, $2,1*5 at Hillside LIncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland Ave. 333-
1*64 PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY.
Exc. condition. Priv. 425-44*5.
$1788
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymoufh
THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING
B'l'mlngham Area 1850 Maple, across from Bar* AIrpor
1842 PONTIAC. 2-DOOR HARDTOP. Can ba purchased with no tnoney
LUCKY AUTO
mileage, ide. OR
1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA, AUTO-
matlc, radio, he '"^ ----
Ing, priced right .	...........
Hillside LIncoln-Mercury 1250 Oak-Jan5LAye 333;’"’
Niw and Uitd Can lOi
L. C. Williams, Salesman
W- Huron St.
Fi 4-7371	FB 4-17f
Many More fa Choose From
hardtop, _________
$2150, OR 3-570B.
GLENN'S
. Radio, heater
144 LeMans ^*r staerl
L. C. Williams, Salesman
*52 W. Huron St.
FE,4-7371	FB 4-17*
Many Mart to Choose From
1*44 LEMANS CONVERTIBLE 1 *"•-"-ft seats, auto., console,-13J00 ml. Ml 4-351*.
1966 GRAND PRIX
$2595
HAUPT PONTIAC
On M15 at 1-75 Interchange Clarkston ___________MA 5-5
	
ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER - VALU-RATED USED CARS	
' 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door HT 		 Power Steering and Brakes.	.$1295
\ 1965 BUICK Special 4-Door		.$1595"
1964 OLDS F-85 6rPassenger Wogon ...	 Ecanomy Special.	.$1195
1964 OLDS VISTA CRUISER Wagon	 Turqvoht with ,whltt Inttrlor. Like ntwii	
’ 1965 OLDS '98' 4-Door 			 Full Powar, Air.	.$2395
r 1967 OLDS Cutlass Convertible 		 Lass than ISM Milas.	42995
1965 OLDS Starfire Coupe 	 Full powar. Factory air.	$2395
1965 OLDS Dynamic 88 4-door HT	 Power Staarlng and Brakes	
^ miBmiMB mM	
635 S. Woodward Ave. , Birmingham 647-5111	
iVER 30	1*47 RAMBLERS In
stock, PETERSON 8, SON RAMBLER In Lapeer, large selection—
d parts. 444-4511.
1*43 RAMBLER. CLASSIC STATION
Cylinder, Automatic, Radio, Reclining seats, this Is a cream puff Priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER
UNION LAKE. EM 3-4155._________
1*43 RAMBLER WAGON, AUTO-
PRICE $4*5. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly paymenis of $5.22. CALL CREDIT
TURNER FORD, A
1*44 RAMBLER CLASSIC WAGON. 4 Cylinder, Standard shift. Radio, Heater, Whitewall Tires. Metallic Blue. Priced to Sell. ROSE RAMBLER SALES Union Lake EM 3-4155.______________________■
Ramblerville
USA
1965 AMBASSADOR
4-door sedan, automatic *r steering, radio .
1*43 PONTIAC TEMPEST STATION wagon, custom vinyl trim, " automatic transmission, p ( steering, naw tires, excelten ning condition. MA 4-1*44.
1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-■■■la. Robin's agg -	—
nylon top. V8, i
Ik at this for only $888 full t down and $35.40 per mon
John McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland_____________FE 5-4101
1*43 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, POWER EQUIPPED, automatic TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE $*»5 absolutely no money DOWN Assume weekly payments of $*.82. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD,
LUCKY AUTO
FE 4-1004_________________
1*44 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertlble. White with a Black top, PoWer Steering, Power Brakes, $12*5. HOMER HEIGHT MOTORS 140 S. Washington Oxf— -■
8-2528.
1*44 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, AIR
---iltloned, power steering, radio,
er, bargain hunters special, 5 at Hillside Lincoln-Marcur -Oakland Ava. 333-7843.
1*44 BLUE TEMPEST LeAAANS
473-2204, after
T?n
condition, $750.
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS 144 TEMPEST CUSTOM STATION wagon, V-8 automatic, power Ing and brakes, radio, heater.
car trade. $1,2*5. On U.S. 10 M15, Clarkston. AAA 5-5071.
1*45 PONTIAC CATALINA CONVER-
II power, $1450. Phone OR
1*45 LEAAANS HARDTOP, V8, 4-sneed, do"ble power, AM-FM, radial tires, other extras, warranty /good. 25 E. Beverly. FE 5,2432.
1965 EeMANS
hardtop, radio, heater, 4-s — 324 engine only
$13*5
BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth
1*44 CATALINA i
1966 CATALINA
1*55 PONTIAC V-8, OUTO., EXt. De, Will sell as unit, must see, Teelln, Rad Barn Subdivision,
ering and brakes.
$2395
HAUPT PONTIAC
On M15 at 1-75 Interchange Clarkston	“* "
w mileage; 423-1270.
Chrysler - Plymouth - Jeep Rambler
FASTEST GROWING ______^EAliR________
1965- Dodge
$1195
1966 Chrysler
$2395
1965 Chevy
W-Ton Pickup, with i-ft, Fleet-
1962 Cadillac
$775
^ 1966 Valiant
1 miles. Only—
$1495
1964 VW Bus
$1195
ON DIXIE HWY.-NEAR Ml5 CLARKSTON	MA 5-2635
$395
$950
$1095
VILLAGE
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward Ave.
BIRMINGHAM
What Price Comfort?
Naturolly an air conditioned car costs a little ” more ... but it gives you a lot more. It gives you driving comfort all summer long, and it gives you 0 better cor with a higher trade-in value next time you trade. Come in today to see these air conditioned beauties. One test drive on a hot day will convince you. And we work out financiol arrangements so the price of comfort fits your
budget.	
1965 Cadillac Hurdtop Ssdso, Spotl#M dirk	1967 Buick
mafalllc turquoise finish. Powir windows, 4-way seat, factory air conditioned. Full Price Only $2999	finish with (^0X0*"^^ vinyl Inferior. V-8. automatic, power staarlng and brakes. Lots of . new car warranty. $2399
1966 Ford Country Squire. A 18-passen-gar modal with ‘»V V-8 angina, Crulsa-O-Mallc, powar steering and brakes, roof rack. Red finish with ill-vInyl Interior.	1965 Lincoln Continental Sedan. Black vinyl roof, turquoise body. Full power Including vent windows, 4-way seat, power door locks, factory
$2599	, $2999
1964 Cadillac DeVllle ConvertlMa. Has every conceivable Cadillac accessory.	1963 Cadillac Coups DaVllla. Basslton grsan. Full power and all the standard
and factory air conditioning. Must bs seen to bs appreclaicd. $2499 '	Cadillac luxury options. Full Price Only— $1799
CADILLAC of Birmingham
/ Ask For Rich Kroll '
1350ilORTH WOODWARD	PHONE Ml 4-1930
HEAP BIG SAVINGS
1965 GTO
2-door hardtop, standard shift transmission, radio, heater, power. 24,000 actual miles. It is almost like new.
$1895
1*45 CHEVROLET Impala 2-Door Hardtop. Has powar staarlng, V-8 angina, automatic transmission.
1*43 CHEVY Impala 2-Door Hardtop with powar staarlng and brakes, automatic, beautiful one-owner. Only ................ $ll*$
1*47 TOYOTA 4-Door Sadan with automatic. Yas folks, you have a compact with automatic tranw mission ................... $14*5
5 BU^CK ELE rdtop, factory
ELECTRA 225 44loor
1*43 CHEVY BIscayna 3-door, with 4 eyi., automatic, radio, beater. Perfect lacond’ car at
1*47 BUICK, RIvlara. Factory air " tenlni, full powar, loadad. Shelton's personal damen-
1*44 PONTIAC 3 -f 3. Yas fc
1*45 HONDA ■
This littte baby has lots and lots of "go" powar. Do a "whbella" out fo Shelton's and buy toitay....$2*5
other goodlts. Only
1*42 RAMBLER. Folk*, this Is a hot rod Spacisl wite a buliblg on the hood. Act fasti . $1*5
1*47 VOLKSWAGEN,
1*44 TEMPEST LaMsns Convar-
1*43 CHEVROLET Wagon, 8-Pas sangar. Beautiful dark aqua fin Ith, ana owner and locally owned
1*45 CHEVY Impala Coflvtrtibte.
Folks, this Is lust as new aa tx
wlib f,
powir, I
staarlng, brakes, ai
I PR^X «
1*44 PONTIAt,. Bonnavllla 1-Door Hardtop with >niy 13,000 guwan-toad miles. Still Ilka brand naw.
<<*43, BUICK Special 2-Door \ automatic, most, aebnomy i big car ride. Only ........... j
Pot Jarvis, Rusty Shelton, Temmy Thoispson, Sales Mgr.
PONTIAC-BUICK , ‘ 651-5500
OPEJI. MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M.
855 S. Rochester Rd„ Vi Mile South of Downtown Rochester

THE PONTIAC PRESa THUESDAY, JULY 27, IftgT
F—11

-Television Programs-—
programs fumiihod by stations listod in this column arf subjoct to chango withoutnotico
ChunmUi 2--WJBK-tV, 4-wWj-TV, 7-W)^W, O-CKIW-TV, 30-WKBD-TV, 56~WTVS
TONIGHT ’
6:00 (2) (4) News (C)
(7) Movie: “Duel of Fire’’ ^Italian, 1960) Feraaq-do Lamas, Liana Orfei. (C)
(50) Superman (R)
(66) Misterogers 6:30 (2) News — Reasoner (C) (A) News — Huntley, Brinkley (C)
(9) Twilight Zone (R)
(50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C)
(4) Michigan Outdooifa (C) (9) Movie: “Spy Smariier Returns” (1942 Returns’ (1942) Kane Richmond.
(R)
(50) MunstersfR)
(M) Struggle for Peace 7:30 (2) Lucy-Desl Comedy Hour — Lucy hunts for uranium when Ricky’i band plays in Las Vegas (R)
(4) Daniel Boone — The commander of Ft. West Point wants to turn the fort over to the British. (RHC)
(7) Batman — ’Tut plans to boil Robin in oil. (R) (C)
(50) Make Room for DMldy (R)
(56) b My Opinion 1:00 (7) FTr^—Agam resigns to become manager of a musical group way ahead Ot its time. (R) (C)
(50) New Breed -- ’The syndicate, as well as the police, search or the mur-derer of a policeman. Second of two parts. (R)
8:30 (21 My Three Sons — Steve visits his old home town. (I\) (C)
(4) Star Trek- Kirk discovers an unusual socie-, ty which either absorbs or destroys visitors. (R) (C) (7) Bewitched — Endora puts Darrin under spell to rub everyone the wrong way. (R) (C)
(56) What’s in a Word? 9:00 (2) Movie; “Toys in the Attic” (1963) A ne’er-do-well returns home to his two spinster sisters, touching the match to a smoldering psychological conflict. Dean Martin, Geraldine Page, Yvette Mimieux. (R)
(7) That Girl - Just be-for Ann is to appear at a banquet, she gets a bowling bail caught on her toe. (R) (C)
(9) Profiles in Courage — President Grant’s Cabinet is divided on the question of U.S. policy during the Cuban rebellion of 1869. (R)
(50) Movie: “Two Guys From Milwaukee” (1946) A Balkan prince visiting the U.S. spends a day incognito. Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson. (R)
(56) Lehman Master Class 9:30 (4) Dragnet — An ex-Ma-
TV Features
STAR 'TREK, 8:30 p.m. (4)
PROFILES IN COUR. AGE, 9 p.m. (9)
VIC DAMONE, 10 p.m.
(4)
rine flashes a medal to sell fraudulent maga^e , subscrlptiwa. (R)- (C)'
(7) Love on a Rooftop Juliets father wants to move the newlyweds into luxury, rent-free lodgings. (R)(C)
(56) African Writers 10:60 (4) Vic Damone - Sandy - Baron, Qiff (Charlie Weaver) Arquette, and the Frivolous Five are guests. (C)
(7) Summer Focus — A report on the swinging music of today. (R) (C)
(9) Telescope — French-Canadian mime Cfaude St. Denis is guest. (R) (C)
(56) Creative Person 10:30 (9) Pan American Games (C)
(56) Eric Hoffer 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C)
(9) News
(50) David Susskind (C) lltW (2) Movie: 1. “The Rest Is Silence” (Gernian, 1960) Hardy Kruger, Peter Van Eyck. (R) 2. “Zori-kan the Barbarian” (Italian, 1960) Don Vadis, Wal-
Husband Leaves With Lame Lion
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A circus animal trainer says her husband has disappeared with a 300-pound Hon.
★ ' ★ ★
Adela Sneija, a trainer for Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey circus, told police that her husband Blasjak and the lion, Stanislaus, were gone when she awoke Wednesday.
. ★ * *
Mrs. Sneija said the 7-year-old lion, property of the government of Poland, was lame.
Enlarge Room With Pastels
You don’t have to knock down a wall to enlarge a small room pastel shades and steer clear brightly colored paint and the room will grow.
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ter Brandi. (R) (C)
(4) Johnny Carson (C)
(7) Joey Bishop (C)
(9) Gideon’s Way 12 30 (9) Window on the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R)
2:30 (2) Highway Patrol (R) TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C)
6:30 (2)' Spectrum (4) Classroom (7) Seven Seas (C)
7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C)
(4) Today (C)
(7):Morning Show 7:55 (0) Morgan’s Merry Go-Round
8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Movie: “The Yearling” (1946) Gregory Peck, Jane Wyman. Part 2. (R) (9) Take 30 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C)
(9) Romper Room 9:55 (4) News (C)
10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk 10:00 (0) Hawkeye 10:25 (4) News (C)
10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C)
(7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C)
(7) Honeymoon Race (C)
(9) Sunshine Canada (50) Ellckory Don (C)
11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R)
(4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game'
(9) Luncheon Date
TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C)
(4) Jeopardy (C)
(7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicate (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (2) News (C)
12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C)
(4) Eye Guess (C)
(7) Donna Reed (R)
(9) Movie: “Cow Country” (1953) Edmond O’Brien, Helen Westcott. (R)
(50) Movie: “Rings on Her Fingers” (1942) Henry Fonda, Gene Tierney.
12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C)
12:55 (4) News (C)
1:00 (2) Love,of Life (C)
(4) Match Game (C)
(7) Fugitive (R)
1:26 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C)
(4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (4) News (C)
2:00 (2) Password (C)
, (4) Days of Our Lives (C)
.	(7) Newlywed Game (C)
2:30 (2) House Party (C)
(4) Doctors (C)
(7) Dream Girl (C)
(50) Love That Bob (R)
2:56 (7) News (C) ’ '
(9) News
3:00 (2) To TeU the Truth (C)
(4) Another World (C)
' (7) General Hospital (9) Matches and Mates (C)
(50) Topper (R)
3:25 (2) News (C)
3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (C)
(7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Capt. Detroit (C)
4:00 (2) Secret Storm
(4) Bozo the Clown (C)
(7) Dating Game (C)
4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) -(7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C)
4:55 (4) EUot’s Almapac (C)
5:00 (4) George Pierrot, “Canoeing to Hudson Bay” (C)
(7) News (C>
(9) Supercar (50) Alyin (C>	^
5:30 (7) News — Jennings (C) (9) Stagecoach West (R) (50) Little Rascals (R) 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant 5:55 (4) Feature Story (C)
HIGH S’TEPPER —, A patio table serves as a floor for singer-daheer Carol LaWr«t& ip her Hollywood hmne as she rehearses dances for summer television appearances.
Pearl, Cab Seen Teamed in ah All Negro 'Hello, Dolly!'
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — Pearl Bailey’s indicated she’d like Cab Calloway as her leading man in the all-Negro version of “Hello, Dolly!” Sugar Ray Robinson’s also mentional . . . Julie Wilson and producer Mike McAloney will divorce. It’s a tragedy that these two who love each other can’t make it married.
Julie Harris’s husband Manning Gurian didn’t go to see her in “Streetcar Named Desire” in Nyack when word got out that she insisted that tall, handsome James Murdock (of “Rawhide”) be cast with her in the play . .. Are topless swimmers next? LiMa McGill of Australia claims she’ll swim ue English Channel nude from the waist up.
WILSON
, ★ ★ ★
Dear "Oil:” I turn my bedlight off at midnight and try to go to sleep because I have to get up early, but my wife reads on her side of the bed till 2 a.m. Don’t you as a husband agree that she’s unfair? How can I make her quit reading in 1^? (Peter Gunning, Milwaukee.)
Dear Peter: Give her my column.
Richard Burton and Liz go to the Taormina (Sicily) Film Festival to accept “the Davids,” the Donatello awards, for “Taming of the Shrew” . . . Singer A1 Martino, the ex-bricklayer who’s now at the Royal Box, is building a motel, A1 Martino’ Continental, at Cherry Hill, N.Y.
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ...
At the sanle time he bought the Las Vegas Hotel Sands for 315,000,000 Howard Hughes also bought a small private airport near McCarran Airport. Hughes is now said to be the biggest individual land owner in Nevada, and the neighbors can’t wait to see what he’s going to do with all that desert property he also owns. 'ITiey’re fairly sure of one thing: hn’s going to make money with it.
Pvt. Gary^Lewis, Jerry’s son, will get a three-day pass from Ft. Ord to appear with the Playboys on his pop’s Muscular Dystrophy telethon in N.Y., Sept. 3-4 . . . The Crystal Room’s topless all-gal orchestra went to court to answer the first of their 45 summonses . . . Freddie Brisson’s “Coco” may be the biggest Broadway musical yet, with a 60G budget and cast of 60.
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: JoSnna Pettet talks of London’s miniskirts, and its socialized medicine: “A man has plenty to
— and free glasses to see it with.”
WISH I’D SAID THAT: Miniskirts will show you the lengths to which some girls will go to attract attention.
EARL’^ PEARLS; Some kids want to become doctors til they learn doctors have to wash their hands all the way up ‘ the elbow.
Edie Adams, who talked to Rod Serling about a TV version of “Rain,” says it’s still indefinite: “As of now, ‘Rain’ is merely Possible Showers’.” . . . That’s earl, brother.


POPCORN,PARTY—Popcorn in the lur^h the lawn of the William Baltes home in Sandusky, Ohid; as young Elisa together, with her lamb and duck pets.
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Weekly Record List
Sons Land 'Boat' in First
What young people think are the top records of the week as compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Inc.
1	Come On Down to My Boat ........... Every Mother’s Son
2	Up-Up and Away .........................Fifth Dimension
3	Can’t Take My Eyes off You ..... ......... Frankie Valli
4	Light My Fire ................................. Doors
5	I Was Made to Love Her .............!..... Stevie Wonder
6	A Little Bit of Soul ....... .......... Music Explosion
7	A Whiter Shade of Pale .................. Procul Harum
6 White Rabbit ..........................Jefferson Airplane
9	son Franctoco-Flowers In Your Hair ......Scott McKenzie
10	Don’t Sle^ in the Subway ....... ...........Petula Clark
11	Society's Child ...............................Janis Ian
12	C’mon, Marianne ........ ..................Four Seasons
13	Don’t Go Out Into the Rain.............Herman’s Hermits
14	Windy .......................................Association
15	Jackson ...... .............Nancy Sinatra/Lee Hazlbwood
10	Carrie,Anne ....................................Hollies
17	Mercy, Mercy,	Mercy .........................Buckinghams
18 I Take It Back .............................Sandy Posey
19 Here We Go Again ...........................Ray Charles
20	Silence Is Golden .............................Tremeloes
Bathroom Is Relaxing Arena
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tHE PONTIAC^PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
CJunior Iditort Quiz on-^
MARCONI
Firsf Look af Living Brain Cell Is Nof Far Off
By Science Service WASHINGTON - Scientists expect to be able to see the living, working brain cell, thanks to a new microscq>e under devdk^ent at Yale University Medical Scbool.
If it woiii;^, the instrumoit will permit scientista their first view of active teain tissue. Now
QUESTION: Was Marconi the first to discover radio waves?
ANSWER: By 1844, the first electric message had been sent over a wire. But sending electrical messages without wires (wireless) did not come until later.
In 1864, British physicist Maxwell had concluded that electric impulses could travel through the air. German physicist Hertz proved the truth of this idea between 1886 and 1888.
It was not until 1895; however, that the Italian, Gnglielmo Marconi, developed an apparatus which actually sent an electric message through the air. We can say that while Marconi was not the first to discover radio waves, he was the first to put diis knowledge into actual operation.
Marconi’s first message only travelled a little over a mile, and did not carry a human voice. It employed a dot-dash code. The first transmission of the voice through wireless was by the American Fessenden in 1900.
But Marconi had more contributions to make. He sent messages from high up, like the tops of lighthouses and in 1901 recdved the first transatlantic wireless signal. Later, he made many useful experiments on his electrically equipped yacht Elettra.
Lab Gets Pact to Perfect Gas-Driven Heart Pump
By Science Service
EVERETT, Mass. — Aid to heart-failure victims may soon be available in the form of a gas-driven “balloon pump” that can be inserted into the main artery, the a<xia, after ttveading through the femoral artery in the upper thi^.
Ihe National Heart Institute has contracted with the Avco-Everett Research Laboratory here to perfect the device. Called the Intra-^mtic Pump (lAP), the Instrument would lessen the heart’s work load by lowering the arterial pressure against which the heart must pump.	^
’The lAP consists a balioon, 10 inches Imig and three quarters of an inch in diameter with a thin gas tube running ^on^ the center. It is controlled in its pulsations by an automatic unit outside the body activated by the natural electric pulses of the patient’s heart. The baliotm expands to push hlo^ through die body as the heart relaxes and contracts to get out ^ the way when the heart pumps.
Research on experimental animals has been promising; the device has not yet been inserted in humans.
Dr. Arthur Kantrowitz, directs of the laboratory, with his brother, Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz, a principal developer pf artificial heart aids, said the work wUl continue in a program conducted in collaboration with Dr. W. Gerald Austen and Mortimer J. Buckley of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical i^hool.
A second contract has been awarded to the laboratory by NHI, calling for an iqtensive study of blood flow and its relation to clotting and red cell demage. The total amount of the two contracts-is |365,118.
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the^ ’get secondary views Uirough the electrical output of brain cells.
’The microscope wiU be fitted with a needlelike prism for insertions into cells and shonld he ready to test, in a working animal brain, in about six months, Dr. Af. David Eggor, assistant pro-
fessor of anatomy at Yale, said in *
Dr. Egger Is. developing the instrummt with Czechoslovak-|ian scientist Mojmir Petran, head of the Institute of Bio-{diysics in Pozen.
Until a year ago, the extraordinarily thin, translucmit brain cells could not be seen undo*
a microscope at all unless they were flrat steined—Which elint inated the possibility of studying liidng cells.
UNSTAINED CELLS But tiie transatlantic team built a microscope ndiich allowed them to see unstained cells, whidh means living cells, fdr the first time.
“We know how,” said Dr. Ito observe changes occuring in Eggm-, “fliat the twincipal of the working cell, even if they the microscope is sound for La^	itself,
studying the hraln tissue.”	^^pes the new mi,
He said the current task is to roscope will offer some evidence modify the new Instrument so Un a question central to neuro-that it can be used to see inside logy; Are connections between the Closed brain. . cells laid down befdre birth or No one kno ws, however, are they, constantly growing and whether scientists will be ableldianging?
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^ THE PONTIAC PRESS
V.' ■ '
VOL. 125 . NO. 147	'★★★★★
Curfews in Detroit
Lifted by
DETROIT W — Gov. George Romney announced today that he was withdrawing the curfew imposed on riot-torn De-troit.
The governor said he would ask that the city be declared a disaster area.
, .As trouble abated affter four days of riots that sweiied into the costiiest raciai expiosion in the nation’s history, Romney also said a ban on gasoiine sales was . being sharpiy softened. ^
He said gasoiine sales could return to ^lormal with one exception, pumping gasoiine into portable containers remained forbidden.
..their searchlights probed rooftops to betray hidden gunmen.
outside the main Negro-populated riot area that centered on 12th Street.
■n>e last fouf hours before siinup passed with only two reports of snipers.
Arrests, mostly for curfew violation, mounted to 3,100. But between midnight and 6 a.m. they increased by only 199, small by comparison with other periods since the riot erupted,
Elsewhere, racial disturbances were reported in Cincinnati, South Bend, Ind., Cambridge, !Md., Phoenix, Ariz. and New.York City.
EXCEEDS WATTS RIOT
DETROIT W — Day came peacefully today over Detroit and the costliest racial explosion in the nation’s history.
Soldiers afoot and in tanks, armored cars and helicopters enforced' strict military control of the disheveled city ♦after several hours of siege On stubborn, last-ditch nests of snipers.
“With the exception of pockets of snipers, we have the city under control,” said Lt. Gen. John Throckmorton, military commander in this city of 1.7 million, after four agaonizing days of terror.
‘IT TAKES TIME’
“It takes time to root-out these snipers,” Throckmorton added. “And we will root them out.”
The appalling count of death and destruction in Detroit exceeded -even that of the 1965 Watts riot in Los Angeles, where 35 were kiUed, 860 injured and $50. million in damage resulted. More than 1,000 were injured here. Damage in Detroit was assessed at $500 inilUon and expected to mount.
The death toll reached 36 during the
Reckoned in the thousands were those burned from their homes and jobs in pillaging and arsefl that reached a peak Monday. .
In the showery darkness before dawn. Among the latest casualties was a helicopters gave troops guidance as white man trying to break into a store
Rooftop gunmen unleashed treacherous fire with the sun still high yesterday afternoon. It was the worst daylight sniping of the riot.i
SHOPPERS — Area citizens enter the new full-line J. L.	eontuc Pr«« Photo by roii wimop
Hudson store from the fashion corridor which opens today at	in a Florentine design, is being called the Fashion Mall. The
the south end of the Pontiac ^all. The new corri^r, decorated	new Winkelman’s store also opened today at the MalL
House Panel May Hold Own Probe of Riots
WASHINGTON (J1 - The subversiveshunting House Committee on 'Un-Ameri--can Activities may launch public hearings next week on the Detroit and Newark riots, beating to the punch a proposed Senate-House probe.
Chairman Edwin E. Willis, D-La., said the committee — best known for its often stormy invesUgatiotB of alleged domestic communism — expects to meet next week to consider a preliminary staff report on supposed subversive influences in the riots.
Willis said he felt committeemen would agree with him “the information developed to date will justify public hearings.” And it was learned the committee is poised to begin public hearings a day after it approves recommendations in the preliminary r
Wednesday’s call by ers for an end to rioting drew praise from Senate leaders, plUs a bipartisan leadership pledge that the Senate will pass legislation aimed at alleviating disorder-causing slum conditions.
City Quiet Again;
Pontiac Mall Fashion Area,
Emergency Still On Stores Open
By MEL NEWMAN
Peace reigned for the second straight night in Pontiac after the outbreak of violence which.claimed two lives Monday evening and Tuesday morning.
The 9 p.m. to'5:30 a.m. curfew, the ban On sales of alcoholic beverages and the restrictions on sales of gasoline will be enforced.
Police officials made it clear that emergency conditions and a high state of preparedness will continue indefinitely.
Some 20 arrests were made in Pontiac last night, .most for violating the curfew, and at least one for carrying a concealed Weapon.
No intentionally set fires were reported in the city.
Curfew Areas"
REMAIN ON CALL City Police Chief William K. Hanger
Pontiac Mali’s new fashion corridoW and two adjoining stores opened today. The other seven stores lining the new south corridor hope to open for business by mid-Septeihber or earlier, 'according to Mrs. Ruth McCarthy, the Mall resident manager.	'
J. L. Hudson’s Co.’s new full-line store, with services and departments comparable to Judson’s Northland, opened this morning. An expanded budget store has been doing business on toe basement level throughout toe two-year construction of toe new three-story building.
Patrolman Santiago Serna Examines His Squad Car
Areas continuing the 9 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. curfew tonight are Pontiac, Waterford Township,' Farmington, Farming-ton Township, .Keego Harbor, Milford, Novi, -Walled Lake, West Bloomfield Township, Wixom and Wolverine Lake.
directed yesterday that leaves and cations for all department personnel be postponed and that officers not on duty remain on call.
A long-stem red lose Is being given to every woman entering the new Winkelman’s store on this opening day.
A Veteran' Is Born
In separate interviews. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen applauded the statement by Martin Luther King Jr., A. Philip Randolph, Roy Wilkins
oivl WhitriAv M Yniiiiir .Tr snvincr “Nn
t alive
and Whitney M. Young Jr. saying, “No one benefits under mob law. Let’s end |t now!”
NEGROES HURY MOST’
Dirksen said it demonstrated that responsible Negroes “realize what the situation is — that toe Negro people are going to be hurt most by this rioting.”
Mansfield said he’s confident a proposed congressional investigation of civil disorders will produce recommendations that go beyond punitive measures and get into the field of preventive action.
Santiago Serna is lucky to and he knows it.
The 23-year-old Pontiac Patrolman is toe city’s newest police officer, but his baptism under fire in the civil disturbance Tuesday morning made him a veteran rather quickly.
Serna, an officer since March 3, was riding north on Lake near Orchard Lake about 4 a.m. when a blast from a shotgun ripped into the patrol car from his side.
“At first I thought I’d been hit by a bottle somebody threw,” he said. “Then, I felt the back of my neck and got a handful of blood.”
Patrolman R. William Blower, who was at the wheel of the squad car, rushed Serna to Pontiac General Hospital.
During those anxious moments, Serna said, he “thought he was going to die.”
No one knew how serious the wounds -clwerd and the question of summoning a priest to the hospital was raised by Serna himself.
Also Birmingham, Bloomfield Township, Holly Township, Holly, Ortonville, Brandon Township, Clarkston, Independence Township, Avon Township, Rochester, Lake (h-ion, Pontiac Township, Oxford and Oxford Township.
Reinforcements from outside law enforcement agencies such as the Michigan State Police and the Oakland County. Sheriff’s Department will stay on the scene.
The 12,800 square-foot public concourse in the south mall has a Florentine design different than the design of toe main mall.
Those taken into custody during the disturbance and subsequently arraigned are now in Oakland County Jail.
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6)
Hadley’s, a women’s clothing shop at the end of toe south corridor, will open Aug. 3. Burt’s Shoes, Lane Bryant and the new Marianne expect to open about Sept. 1. The existing Marianne Store in the main corridor will be renamed Marianne’s Casual Shop when the new store opens, according to Mrs. McCarthy.
However, it was soon determined that but five shotgun pellets actually had penetrated his neck.	^
Yesterday, Serna was released from the hospital and he stopped at police headquarters to examine his protective gear and the car.
Numerous holes in the widshield showed that many pellets had deflected from his pocked helmqt A heavy pattern of shot marked the window frame, which, he said, probably saved his life.
As one senior patrolman put it: “Serna’s been through something some of Us haven’t experienced after 10 or 20 years.”
Vief Children Offered Aid
House of. Fabrics, and Lady Orva Hosiery, have not yet announced opening dates. The existing Singer Store is also constructing a Singer Center Lesson Shop in the new corridor..
NEW YORK UP) - The U.S. government has offered free air transportation to this country for war-injured South Vietnamese children needing specialized medical treatment available in the United States. ,	^
Two members of the Committee of Responsibility, an organization of American physicians, told toe Associated Press that William Bundy, assistant secretary of state for the Far East, made the offer in a letter to the group earlier this month.
on toe matter,” said Dr. Herbert Needle-man, a Philadelphia physician. “In early July we got a letter that said the State Department was prepared to offer air evacuation’ for the children if the South Vietnamese government approves.”
Several stores along the main corridor are re-modeling to coincide with the look of the new Mali, according to the resident manager.
Needleman and Dr. Frank Ervin of Boston left New York for Saigon yesterday afternoon to get that approval.
“We're going with an open mind about the problem,” Needleman said.
“We approached him earlier this year
(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1)
Montgomery Ward and Co., at the north end of the main Mall, is building a new addition totaling 35 per cent of the space in toe existing store.
“The planned grand operang is Sept. 14, although departments will be open for business as they are relocated In toe new store,” said Charles Alford, store manager.
In Today's Press
Housing Aims, Core-City Status Tied
Skies to Stay Cloudy
Troy Schools , Board moves to solve money problems — PAGE A-4.
(EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the last of a two-part series).
Scrimmage Canceled Lions tilt at Wisner Stadium is called off - PAGE E-1.
4-H
Youth group changing its ways
- PAGE D-1.
Area News.........,.......A-4
Astrology ................C-10
Bridge .................. C-10
Crossword Puasle .........F-11
Comics ...................C-10
Editorials ..............  A-6
*Food Section .........F*2, F-3
Markets ...................F-4
Obituaries .............   C-3
Sport^................E-1—E-7
Theaters ........'....... D-12
TV'and Radio Programs ..F-11
Wilson, Earl ....... . . F-11
Women’s Pages ........B-1—B-4
By BOB VflSLER
Pontiac occupies, and has occupied, a unique position in Oakland County.
Because of its early development as the county seat and an important industrial community. It filled up earlier and faster toan toe surrounding areas, and con$equdntly,has little room left for residential dev^oprttont.
These factors are discouraging and at .the same time encouraging.
Pontiac Housing Study (fcmmittee, an organization of private citizens, business, civic, social and labor leaders, headed by‘Howard H. Fitzgerald II,‘publisher of The Pontiac Press.
8-MEMBER PANEL An eight-member subcommittee headed by Ken Morris, UAW regional 1-B director, has been asked to study it with the idea of determining methods of financing various types of housing.
shoUld'delve to find the significance be-»hind the statistics.
In order-to fully develop as the core for a fast growing surrounding arfea, the Smith Co. recommended the following as minimal goals for new housing:
• $5,000 and under family income lev-' el. By 1975, some 1,000 ^units. Another 750 by 1985.
similar programs with heavy emphasis on two- and three-bedroom units.
The report indicates toe greatest need is for units foi' the $5,000 tp $7,000 in-’■come level, particularly professional i persons such as teachers, government workers.
Skies will continue partly overcast through tonight^and tomorrow.'
No important temperature changes are ^ expected the weatherman said.	, '
Temperatures will fall to 57 to 64 tonight, and rise to 77 to 84 tomorrow. Fair and a little' cooler is toe outlook for Saturday.
Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 40, tonight 20, tomorrow 20.
RENTAL UNITS The reconunendations are mostly <70
55,000 to $7,500 income level. Up to I units by 1975. Another 3,200 by
5-
According to the re^rt prepared by the Larry Smith & Co. real estate consultant firm, “Pontiac is fortunate in that |t has an opportunity to occupy a central ition as an important urban core lin the growing complex of Detroit.”
The report also states that Pdhfeat should continue to be a selLsustaining area and, with continued planning, maintain itself as the commercial core for Oakland County.'
The housing survey .report was dispersed tWs to.4iembers |f the
Also on the executive committee are Fitzgerald, Bruce J, Annett of Annctt, Inc. Realtors; John Niggeman, vice president of Community National Bank; Harold (toldberg of Thomas Jewelry Co.; Charles Brown, division manager of Consumers Power Co.; Earl Maxwell, personnel director of GMC Truck & Coach Division; and Charles Tucker of Tucker Real Estate and an NAACP official.
per cent) for rental units, with emphasis, again, on two- and three-bedroom units, some efficiencies and.one-bedroom units.
• $7,500 to $10,000 level. By 1975, some 1,800 units. Another 2,550 by 1985.
*	jll0,000 to $15,000 income level, gome 450,units' by 1975, another 600 by 1<)85.
•	$15,000 and up income. By 1975, some 100 units, another 350 by 1985.
In the $7,500 to $10,000 level the economists rmommend 65 to 70 per cent rental units and only 30 to 35 per cent housiiig. There should be a few one-bedroom units and a balanced distribution between two- and three-bedroom units, some four-bedroom unite, they say.


AnneTt ipaid he was much in favor of the study by an“impartial organization such as the Larry Smith Co.”
He indicated that it is a good job statistically but there are a nqmber of areas in which the committee members
For income levels below $10,000'the firm recommends construction of predominantly rental unite, apartment houses, row houses, etc., with little housing construction.
Needs fpV the lowest income group would be filled primarily by. public housinf^ rent supplement housing and
The next incomfe level, $10,000 to $15,-000, is madfe up mainly of families with two or three children, and construction here, the report indicates, should be' primarily (60 per cent-until 1975) .housing. Both rental - and occupant-ownetf units should concentrate on three-bedroom units, it says> .
(Continued on f age A-2, CoL 3)
' - '
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1967
Riot May Have Started '68 Campaign
DETROIT (AP) — A police raid on a blind pig in Detroit may have launched the 1968 presidential campaign a year ahead of schedule.
liie raid apparently provided the spailc which ignited the flames of violence which led to a confrontation between President Johnson, Democrat, and Michigan Gov. George Romney, Reput)Iican.
ers*into Detroit to put ^own riots because what he called Romney’s demonstrated “inability to rest9re order.’’
SEVEN. TIMES
Johnson is virtually certain to run for reelectiai next year, and Romney is a top contender for the GOP nomination.
The President struck the first blow when he told a nationwide television audience Monday that he was sending paratroop-
Romney’s name was men-U6ned seven times in Johnson’s brief speech.
The governor’s turn to retaliate may come next Monday when he is scheduled to make speech before the National isociation of County Officials at Detroit’s Cobo Hall.
Indications are that Romney will uncork a stem-winder, for the organizatipn provides a logical forum at which to tell government officials about federal-state cooperation.
There are public denials from all sidOs that politics played a role in the dispatching of crack federal troops to put down this week’s near-irisurrection in the nation’s fifth largest city.,
But President Johnson came close to being denounced by a
Michigan congresstpan from his own Democratic party. Rep. Charles Diggs of Detroit, for playing politics by Withholding the use of troops for 11 hours while burning, looting and snip-' ing raged through the city.
The Republican Coordinating Committee has been strongly criticized for saying that the President might have contributed to the Detroit violence by vetoing a crime control bill.
out the incipient flames while they were’ Still just a small spark.
Gov. George ROmney, an unannounced contender for the Republican presidential nomination, also was criticized by inference because he was to hsive attended the GOP Coordinating Committee’s meeting last SuHt day at which the biast was un-ieashed against Johnson.
And Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh was the target of complaints that he didn’t move fast enough with police tt stomp
Romney reportedly still i& smoldering over Johnson’s televised explanation to the nation of why he sent troops to Detroit.
Flights to U.S. Offered
to Injured Viet Cbildre^
(Continued From Page One)
“We expect that the children will be released to us. You might say we’re cautiously optimistic.”
FOUR ALREADY CHOSEN The program would s|art with
four children already choden for evacuation. They range in age
SNCC Leader Is Out on Bail
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -H. Rap Brown, Negro leader of the militant Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, is free on $10,000 bail after spending about nine hours in the jail of this Washington suburb.
The conunittee has estimated that 30,000 South Vietnamese children will be injured in the war this year by nne side or the other. A third of those children never will reach the medical facilities of the South Vietnamese Ministry of Health, the doctors said.
An uproarious sequence wound up with him IxK^ed under Virginia law as a fugitive from a Maryland warrant charging he incited a riot Monday night in Cambridge, Md.
★	★ i
Brown received lusty cheers when he walked out of the jail early today and faced a crowd of some 300 — mostly youthful Negroes who live in the area.
With his hand raised in defiant elation, Rrown, 23, tempted to speak to the crowd but was hustled down the steps of the building by eight SNCC members-to a waiting car. COULDNT’ SPEAK
He again tried to speak but was pulled into the vehicle and his words were drowned out by cheers of the youngsters screaming “Black Power.
Of those who do receive help, only about 200 meet the evacuation program’s criteria — that they are too severely hurt to be treated in their homeland that they have injuries for which cures are hot available.
Brown’s Black Power speech in Cambridge Monday preceded a disturbance which ended with the burning of about a dozen buildings including a school and a church in the heart of the city’s Negro area.
from 10 to l4 and have injuries too severe or of a nature that cannot be dealt with in Viet-
Two require facial plastic surgery, one had a groin in-j n r y and the fourth was severely burned on his face and neck by napalm, the doctors said. .
FIRST MEETINGS Needleman and Ervin said one of their first meetings in Saigon would be with Dn Tran Lu-Y, minister of healfh, but that a final decision on the program might come from higher sources in the government.
“We have been given reason to believe that the source might be higher than the minister,” Needleman said, “but just how Ugh, we don’t Know.” The committee, whiie declining to get into what it calls a numbers war, has said as many,
150,000 civilians could be injured this year by the war.
Dr. Howard Rusk, president of the World Rehabilitation Fund, estimates total casualties at 30,000 a year. One college professor who spent six weeks studying the situation reported that casuaities are as high as 300,000 a year.
The Saigon government puts the total at 12,000.
The Weather
- '..rsf j. .
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report , PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Considerable cloudiness with chuce of thundershowers today. High 77 to 84. Partly cloudy with no important temperature changes tonight and Friday. Low
tonight 57 to 64. Winds southeast 8 to 15 miles per hour late today and tonight. Saturday outlook: fair and a little cooler. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 40, tonight 20, tomorrow 20.
.Wind Velocity I r
m rlies Friday at . non sell Thursday at 1 Don rises Friday at 1:0i
Downtown Tsmparatures
Hlgliest and Lowest Temperatures
_____ This Date In »5 Years .
1“ IMI	52 In l*t)r<nt,hith
Highest temperal
Lowest temperature .......
,Mean temperature .........
Weather: Mostly sunny
Wednesday's Temperature Chart Alpena	80 56 Fort Worth 98 77
83 '59 Kansas City “
Marqu^te
Muskegon
78	65	Los Angeles	90
83 ' 63	Miami Beach	86
82	64	Milwaukee	82
75	56	New Orleans	91
78	68	New York	86	72
78	56	Omaha	89	65
I 72
92	68	Phoenix	96	85
86	69	Pittsburgh	84	61
77	47	Tampa	8V	79
I	S. Francisco	73	55
-'	S. S. Marie	79	52
88	57	Seattle	69	60
83 65 Washington 89 71
NATIONAL WEATHER — Widely scattered showers and -----------1 are expected tonight to New England, the
Middle Atlantic states, the (toio VaUey, the south and oentoal /1l th^centrid and tl^ central Misslssi^i m/ i tton ieasl
lay. It will be cool to the northern quarter of the imtinn of the Hiaalsaippi Valley.
.....
- 1

GEORGE W. KUHN
Queen Mary to Become 'a Rival to Disneyland'
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) The Queen Mary, venerable lady of the Atlantic, will find a permanent home on the waterfront of long Beach and rival Disneyland as a lure Jor tour-
The ocean liner, now too old for travel as a luxury ship, being sold by Cunard Lines to the city of Long Beach for $3,-444,000.
Senate Probe of Riot Sought
Area Republican Asks Four Main Questions
' state Sen. Gera-ge W. Kuhn of West Bloomfield Township will ask for a full-scale Senate investigation of what he termed, the nation’s worst riot’’ in Detroit.
The Senate probe, the Republican legislator said yesterday, should seek answers to four main questions.
Said Kuhn:
the situation was treat^ lightly from the police enforcement standpoint and rapidly deteriorated until it was completely out of control, necessitating the use of State Police, National Guard and eventually federal troops.
INFLUENCES QUESTIONED “It is esesntial .to determine whether or not there were any known agitators or outside influence in the rioting,’^ Kuhn
“Why was the news suppressed for 12 hours before the public was informed of the trag-* [3 ic events? Is it not the public’s right to know of civil unrest, for its own personal safety and welfare?
“Lastly, I personally believe there is a great need for an agonizing appraisal of both our national and -state policies as to how best cope with this entire civil rights situation. It has been abundantly clear to me, for some time, "now, ,that our present policies have not been effective and need considerable revision’’
The city, whose bid topped 17 others, plans to spend $3 million to $5 million to make the Queen Mary into a maritime museum, hotel and convention center.
The news Wednesday from London, where the sale was nounced, created excitement among Long Beach citizens, ‘DISNEYLAND RIVAL’
“She’ll rival Disneyland,’ said Mayor Edwin Wade.
He predicted that the luxury liner will attract two million persons a year. She will rival Disneyland, Marinelapd and other Southern California facilities as a tourist attraction, said.
Wade, discounting comment jn London that the proud old ship would become “an unfair
spectacle,’’ said it would retain its dignity in Long Beach harbor.
The oil-rich California city of 10,000 beat out New York City, an Atlanta, Ga., group and scrap dealers all over the world for the ship that carried millions of persons across the Atlantic with a stint as transporter of 765,000 allied troops during World War II.
OIL REVENUE New York’s plan was to use the Queen Mary as a high school.
The purchase money promised by Long Beach comes from a tideiand oil revenue fund which may be used only for shoreline improvements. Other oil funds have financed a massive mafina and other facilities.
Another Quake Strikes Turkey
“It is unbelievable and shocking to find that a city such as I^troit, rated with the highest standard of racial rapfoort and harmony, can become, In a few short hours, captive of a hardcore criminal group causing massive damage and destruction of over $300 million ip public and private property, let alone the hundreds of injuries and many deaths that already have been reported.”
Kuhn said the people of Michigan need the answers to the following questions:
“Lack of leadership and action by political leaders. A quick end to the rioting and looting was possible all day Sunday had they chosen to employ a “Get
policy. On the contraryf-»The quake Wednesday night
ANKARA (AP) — Another violent earthquake struck Turkey Wednesday night in an area where 23,000 persons were kiljied 1939 in one of history’s most disastrous quakes. The government radio said by noon today known death toll had reached 70, but many villaj^es had not been heard from.
The quake occurred in eastern Turkey, south of the city of Er-zincan. Erzincan was the site of the disastrous quake of Dec. 27, 1939, when 23,()00 persons were killed.
was Turkey’s second such
six days. On Saturday in western Turkey nearly 100 persons were killed at Adapazari.
The state radio said an uncounted number of injured h^d been hospitalized from the latest quake.
HARDEST HIT The Pulumur region was ported hardest hit, with only 7 out' of the 70 villages able to communicate with the provincial authorities.
Unofficial reports reaching the provincial capital, Kalan, said several villages had been flattened. Authorities feared the death toll would go higher since most of the villages are built of mud.
The seismological observatory at Kaiidili said the quake was recorded at 8:50 p.m., an hour and a half after Pope Paul VI left western Turkey to return to Italy. The center of the qua)ce was some 500 miles northeast of Izmir.-and Ephesus, which the Pope visited Wednesday.
The nonprofit Caiifomia Mii-" Ida
seum Foundation plans to establish the inaritime museum in the 1,^-deck liner. Hotel rooms, eating places and shops are also planned on board the 1,020-foot
City GA4 Plants Will Shut Down
MARTIN F. RUMMEL
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-The “good roads package” to be considered by the State Leg-islnture next month is given a strong recommendation by township officials.
“iMjey for improvement of Telegraph, the township’s-main artery, is in the legislation and this road is not only vital to the township, but to the surrounding community, local officials stressed.
Pontiac Qiv.
Exec to Retire
Martin F. Rummel, director : purchasing and production control for Pontiac Motor Division, will retfre Aug. 1, it was announced today. He joined the Oakland Motor Car Co. 40 years
Upon graduation from Michi-_in State University in 1927, Rummel joined the Oakland Co., which later became Pontiac Motor Division, working on the assembly line. He became a buyer in 1932, aissistant purchasing agent in 1941 and in 1946 was named director of purchasing.
Rummel of li68 Lyonhurst, Birmtogham, assumed his most recent appointment in 1961.
He is a member of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Cbm-merce, Lutheran Laymen’s League, the board of control at Concordia Lutheran College in Ann Arbor, the Pontiac City Club and Pine Lake Country Club.
Bfitrxj'nghqm Area News
BloomfieldT wp. Officials Back 'Good Roads' Bill
Homer Case, supervisor, said “I’m a strong backer of the package.” He pointed
On July 8 in the House, Rep. L. D. Anderson of Pontiac vot-^ ed “No” and Rep. Arthur Law' of Pdhtiac did not vote.
To pay for the road improvements the following tax increases are recommended by supporters of the bill:
•	Fuel tax up one cent.-
•	Motorcycle and bike licenses hiked 50 per cent.
•	Car tax put at 55 cents per hundred pounds.
•	Truck, trailer, tractor and commercial vehicles up 10 per cent.
traffic is getting heavier every day on the state road.
He also explained county roads would be to for funds from the law also and it would give the county a 20 per cent monetary boost, he said.
Lt. Richard Reuther of the police traffic bureau said he doubted any further improvements woqld be made on the road unless the bill passed. POUCING the STRIP Reuther has responsibility for policing the strip, labeled one of the most dangerous anywhere. Six miles of the road are in the township and last year six deaths occurred in the small area — one per mile.
Numerous crashes, many of them involving multiple chain-reaction accidents are a common occurrence, he pointed out. “It’s hard to calculate the huge amount of money lost to property damage, insurance and doctor bills, not to mention the loss of life,” he said.
Both I officials pointed out that county y^presentatives in Lansing have not been unanimous in supporting the measure.
City Quiet for 2nd Night-Emergency Continues
Mayor Taylor, Negro Youths Confer Today
After meeting this morning with spokesmen of a group working to keep peace in troubled neighborhoods. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said an afternoon meeting will be held to discuss three topics presumably disturbing Negro youths.
Taylor said the afternoon meeting will be attended by himself, about 15 “youths” and Marie Johnson, a bondswoman, and Albert Shaw, a Pontiac teacher.
The topics as related to Taylor are:
•	Release of all youths (presumably arrested Monday and Tuesday) on their personal recognizance.
•	Some immediate prefabricated houses to relocate people in Crystal Beach housing development.
■ • Removal of State Rep' Arthur J. Law’s store, 200 Earlmoor, from the neighborhood.
for Changeover
(Continued From Page One)
Taylor said the topics were presented as proposals and he would hope that there are not going to be demands or threats. LEGAL CONSULTATION
I Larry Adams, 18, charged
He said there are legal points
The local Fisher Body plant will shut down today for model changeover, a spokesman a n-nounced this morning.
“Production on the 1968 models will begin on Aug. 10 with a smail number of people working orf subassemblies in the body shop,” he added. -
ty prosecutor’s office have indi-jhe would have to have legal
with assault with attempt to murder in the shotgun shooting of city Patroiman Santiago na faces preliminary examination Aug. 1 before Municipal Judge B. McCallum. ^ “ $30,000 BOND
He is heid under $30,000 bond.
cated maximum penalties will be asked for those bound over!	declined to predict
for trial on any charges.
Penalties carry maximum sentences ranging from 90 days jail plus a fine on lesser charges to 10 to 15 years in prison on major violations.
Pontiac Motor Division has announced plans, to begin changeover tomorrow.
GMC Truck:>and Coach Division will also shut down tomorrow for production inventory an model changeover. Assembly will begin again on Aug. 14.
Some 23 others face examination either Aiig. 1 or 2 on felony charges, including carrying concealed '^weapons, larceny, breaking and .^ntering and ar-
Shopping Areas to Close by 8
Local shopping areas which normally close at 9 p.m. have agreed to close at 8 p.m. while the curfew is in effect, a F tiac Area Chamber of Commerce spokesmen announced today.	*
The temporary hours will al-iw shoppers and employes time to reach home before the curfew.
At least 25 others face examination on misdemeanors involving slate law statutes such as receiving stolen prcq)erty, ession of loaded firearms and conspiracy to manufacture explosives.
Officials of the Oakland Coun-
Stores normally closing before 9 p.m. will continue to keep their regitlar hours.
The Chamber of Commerce asks ali businesses not directly contacted to also observe the 8 p.m. closing time.
Those areas agreeing to early closing include downtown Pontiac stores, Pontiac Mall, Tel-Huron, Miracle Mile, Glenwood Plaza and several surrounding shopping centers and chain grqebry stores.
The Chamber u r g e d all citizens to cooperate with the police in observing the curfew.
Most are held under $20,000
State Lawyer Hits Co-Op Trucking Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Interstate Commerce Commission has ample authority to < with cooperatives which violate trucking laws, attorney EdWin F. Steffen, Lansing, Mich.,, said yesterday.
Testifyingj.beford the Senate Surface Transportation subcommittee in opposition to an ICC-propoised bill limiting back-haul goods co-ops may truck for nonmembers, Steffen appeared in behalf of Farm Bureau Services Inc., Lftosing, and Cherry Growers, Inc., Traverse City,; Mich.
Housing Goals Linked to CQre-Cify Status
(Continued From Page One)
In the over $15,000 level There is likely to be a need for a balanced disteibution of two to four-hedrqom units with rental needs (25 per cent by 19u5) fulfilled by luxurious apart nents and sales needs fulfilled by bousing priced at $30,000 and
able resources, the economists say that Pontiac can create a new image which wili go a Ibng way toward aliowing it to attract its proper share of the upper-middle and upper income levelsn ajnd to offer a broad spectrum of suitable bousing for all income levels.
Ry pursuing definite goals aito taking advantage of avil-
Tq acaomplish this they also recommend and foresee “the re-' lUtatioa, redevelopipent
reestablishment of the commercial dominance of Pontiac’s central area.’’, i.-.
They believe that there has been to the immediate past in Pontiac qnd Oakland County a noticable trend toward apartment liviag and this will con-' ttoue,t hey say.
These factors should encourage considerable redevelopment
beginning 2ith the downtown area ahd development to tHe northern fringes of the city of both higher priced single family homes bn sizable lots, and attractive multiple housing featuring swimming pools, tennis courts, patiosn etc. for upper-middle income families.
Other housing should be distributed thfdiighout the community they say. i
the outcome of the meeting but said future meetings with the youths would probably be held in keeping with his .pledge “to set up lines of communication so that action instead of promises are accomplished.”«
Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Si.
INOW! KILL INSECTS •LECTRONICALLYJ.
NEW! Here At SIMMS ^ s
Hangs like a <;A pretty garden Ck., lantern( m
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1067
' More Proj^s Will Be Need&d
in Huron Valley
The Huron Valley School District can bbast s even school construction and building improvemeiit projects in progress. But when these projects reach completion, school administrators must initiate yet unplanned expansions to keep
usapaoiufcu CApaU51UU5 LU KCCp
up with the continuail;^ncreasing needs. The East and Nowhwest elementary
-S are the cUef constmction projects now.
Northwest school is about half-completed and expected to be open in December. The 20-classroom school is located in Highland Township on NorQi Milford near Wardlow, north of M59 on about 20 acres.
Construction has been finished on the foundation, walls, floors and plumbing. Workmen are now doing the ceiling.
The East school, or secoid elementary, will bef completed in spring, 1968. It is on Elizabeth I>ake Road and Oxbow, White Lake Township.
THIRD ELEMENTARY , Final -preliminary plans for a third elementary school received approval of the school board recently. Completion date for the $1.1 million project is set for Sept. 1, 1968. This school will be built on land southeast of the Watson Builder Supply store, 1100 E. Commerce.
Troy School Board Moves
to Solve Money Problems
ByEDBLUNDBN
troy — Hie School District here, crippled by a lack of fluids, is taking two major steps to solve its problems.
^ In attempjtog to solve the primary problem of money, the school board has set a second election for a seven-
mill levy for Sept. 11.
The election was requested by 233 petitioners, the board reluctant to do so after its heavy defeat in June.
A meeting has been set for 8 p.m. Monday at t|ie board, offices, 120 Hart,
for all those interested in taking part in the millage campaign.
Controversy has come from the handling of the “modular” scheduling system at the high school. The system is understudy.
TAPED INTERVIEWS
Holly District Millage Drive Went Wrong Way for Board
The Michigan' Education Association reported to the board that it has taken is taped interviews with teachers, administrators, citizens and students.
HOLLY TOWNSHU* -- It’s “back -to the drawing board” for the HoHy School District board of trustees.
Their attempt to get a lO^mill levy passed was soundly defeated for the second time by voters Monday, 528 to’
This material is to be studied by top state educators and wiU be used as a basis for an investigation and evaluation of the system, according to officials.
wouldn’t buy it,” said Russell Haddon, schools superintendent.
NEW ADMUNISTHATORS -- Hobart Jenkins, new Avondale assistant superintendent, reviews the upcoming school agenda with William Brook, 34, former principal of Stiles Elementary School, recently named administrative assistant, replacing Lawrence Sharer who resigned.
The June vote was closer, 377-328. After that defeat the board blamed it partly on apathy and launched a vigorous election campaign.
He pointed out millage questions in gbnerid have been losing across the state, mostly due to the impending state income tax jand the threat of increased federjd taxes, making voters millage-shy. *
Criticism of the scheduling procedUm came from teachers and parents who complained students had too much free time and that a .chaotic situation existed at the school.
Joseph Bechard, high school principal, was blamed for the system’s apparent failure. He was almost fired by the board and is on probation.
Although the board has no definite plans yet. It intends to elementary school shortly.
The two schools now under construction are innovating a unique structure for the Huron Valfey district. Each grade will have three adjacent classrooms .whose walls can easily be drawn aside.

Sheriffs to Aid Trouble Spots
Literature was mailed out and meetings called to tell voters the school’s po-
sition.
The! 10-mill request represented a 3-mlll |$3 per $1,006 .Assessed) increase for a| three-year peifiodt The other 7 were for renewal of expiring op-l levy.
MODIFIED SYSTEM
He has defended the system and, iii a 4-3 vote, the board decided to keep it with modifications.
NEWS
The campaign succeeded in arous'mg interest, all right, and the district experienced the biggest turnout in its history, some 936 voters, about 40 per cent of those eligible.
of the schools’
This architecture suggests ungraded classes and team teaching, said Gerald Kratz, admlnislrative assistant. Both the Northwest and East schools are using the same plans. >
LANSING (UPI) - Sheriffs of 33 Michigan counties have responded to a call for help by niaking 62 cars and 155 men available immediately for duty in riot-tom areas.
Hadwn said the'lmhrd will now study a third! election, teritJjtively set for Aug.
The entire situation in the district hinges on a fund shortage, however. A $465,000 deficit by next year is expected, Unless some added millage is supplied.
‘WOULDN’T BUY IT’
But'it went the wrong way as far as the board was concerned. “They just
The board request of seven mills, $7 per $1,000 assessed, would be for one year and supply about half the dri>t
Avondale Gives Post
r
TEACHERS’ SUGGESTIONS
A first step in planning the schools was a week of meetings of 15 to 20 teachers. They compiled specifications on how they’d like to see the new schools. Architects Richard PHnce and Associates of Kalamazoo have put most of the teachers’ desires on blueprints.
Hearing on Rule hr Boats Delay
More cars and deputies were expected to be volunteered for the pool last night and today.
Thus, the teachers themselves were instrumental in initiating the unique features of the new schools. Besides movable walls, the buildings will have libraries as large as gyms, conference centers, speech and reading rooms, mui sic pract^ rooms, and special project areas open for public use.
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-. SHIP — The public hearing on boat control oil Gerundept Bay in Cass Lake has been rescheduled for Aug. 23.
James Hadley, administrator m the boat and water safety division ' of the Michigan Department of Conservation, notified township officials of the postponement by telegram. Hadley did not give a , reason for the postponement.
Richard Welter, sheriff of Grand Traverse County and president of the Michigan Sheriffs’ Assodatiim, Tuesday wired his fellow sheriffs to ask fiiem how much help they could pledge;
Joyces Unit Joins Child Aid Program
to ^rmer Pfincipal,
Chooses* School Site
In the not-tooKlistant future, Troy’s school money problem could be solved. In the rapidly growing city, industries, businesses and homes are being put up at a remarkable pace, claim local educators.
They responded yesterday from all sections of the state, from Menominee County on the Wisconsin border to tiny Montmorency County in the state’s northeastern deer and elk country.
The only sheriffs who said they could not help were those in counties where there is actual or potential trouble.
ORION TOWNSHIP - In an effort to provide greater protection for the community’s schoolchildren, the Orion Area Jaycee Auxiliary has announced its participation in the nationwide “Helping Hand” program.
The “Hands” are appeamg in windows throughout the township.
Printed on an eight-inch'square of cardboard they signify a haven for children who need help.
The appointment of J. William Bro(*, former principal of fetiles Elementary School, as admini|itrmive assistant to Avondale Schools Supj. John W. Dickey has been approved bjf the board of education.	,1
Brook replaces Wrence W. Sharer, who resign^ for personal reasons.
DOLLAR GAP’
However, these do not get placed on tax rolls for at least a year later. This creates a “dollar gap” with the district obliged to educate tte children as soon as they arrive white tax collections have to wait.
The completion of the Norghwest Elementary will alleviate a definitely overcrowded condition. The problem was so serious that an emergency plan of halfday sessions for junior high students will go into effect this fall.

The youngsters scheduled to occupy the Northwest E^entary will attend "tlakses in the Ui|hland. Junior High building. Highland students will go to classes at Muir Junior High for five hours each school day. Regular Muir students will also attend school for five hours, but in another shift.
The hearing had beeji slated for | today.	I
The West Bloomfield and Water- j ford township boards had requested the hearing. A County Sheriff’s | Department official had cited water skiers and speedboats as chief problems of the 13-acre bay. ’The | township, he said, has the power I to regulate speedboats.
SOME ALREADY HELPING Some others, in counties bordering trouble zones, said they were already helping out or had committed their manpower to cover for State Police pulled out of their areas for riot duty.
Homes showing the hands have been investigated by the group. The auxiliary reports that persons displaying the emblem are instructed to assist a child in need by summoning parents and the. proper emergency agency. They have been advised against giving any medica-tiori.
The board has also named the Avondale Junior High School site as the site of the proposed new Avondale Senior High School, due for completion in 1970.
Dickey was instructed to seek options on land between the site and 1-75 in an effortl at expwsion. The Junior, High Schcwl is located at 2900 Waukegan, Pontiac ’fowpship.
The board has modified Its austerity program for f^, allowiiig some music and art programs, i^rarts, cot in original plans, wiU be carried on by a volunteer group of coaches and citizens.
Dr. Rex Smith, schools superintendent, said some music classes had to be provided to insure the schools’ accreditation.
Co|nmunity Centers
ENROLLMENT TRIPLED Elementary school enrollment has
AAetro Beach Plans Senior Citizens Day
Most counties, pledged only a car and two men, hut others offered more. Livingston County freed four cars and 14 men; Ottawa, six and 18. Nine of the IS U^ier Peninsula counties, hundreds of miles from riot areas, pledged
aid.
tripled in the last 15 years, Kratz said. An increase of 300 young studen^ is
expected ^xt faii. TTiis will bring*^ the enrollment figui ' ----
Several events will be held during Senior Citizens Day which will take
A spokesman for the Sheriffs’ Association said once final figures were in they would be presented to Gov. George Romney so he could order the deputies where needed.
For children who have been injured, bullied; lost or threatened by a molester, the homes are designed as an area of safety.
The project has been endorsed by the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department, the Lake Orion Police Department and the community schools, according to Mrs. Sherman Ellis, chairman.
■ RAPIDS (UPI) - The United y Services board of directors I yesterday it has approved a idation to build two community house health, welfare and edu-ffvices.
The locations are the Sh^lding Complex area and the vicinity of Sibley Elementary School.
Art classes will be supportfd’by eortrA fees to be charged, he annniin<»ed Fees are to be hiked to help carry on the community school program.
SITE PURCHASE PROGRAM Dr. Smith also reported on the school site purchase program in the $2%-mll-lion bond issue approved last year.
Sites purchased are for nine elementary schools, four junior hi^ and four senior highs. Dr. Smith said the land cost between $1^50 and $4,900 per acre, depending on location.
I-Mill Cut for Two Sections
It figure to 3,822.
As for the district as a whole, its enrollment has doubted since 19$(- Figures compiled by the University of Michigan Bureau of School Services estimate about a 550-student increase this fall. Last year’s enrollment was 5,876.
Other construction projects are expected to accommodate the increase. The high school will get a new library, science facilities, an industrial arts room, "irt room and several classrooms. Plans have been drawn, bids will be let in September, and construction will begin in October. The additions are to be completed by Fall, 1968.
Next suttimer, remodeling and extension work will be begun at Highland Junior High school.
Landscape work is now being done at all schools except Highland and the high school.
place at Metri^ipolitan Beach along Lake St. Clair near Mount Clemens on Saturday.
The program includes registration of guests at the dance pavilion at 11 a.m.; lunch, with box lunches available for $1, from noon through 1 p.m.; contests and activities, such as shuffleboard, horseshoes, badminton, croquet and a golf hole-in-one contest at 1 p.m.; dance contest at 1:45 p.m.; and sing-along session at 2:30 p.m.
Counties pledging atd are Alcona, Alger, Alpena, Arenac, Baraga, Barry, Branch and Charlevoix, Chippewa, Clare, Eaton, Emmet, Gogebic, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Houghton, Ionia, Lapeer, Leelanau, Livingston, Luce,. Marquette dnd Mecosta.
Avon Lowers Levy for Fires
Special half-hour excursion boat tours are available for senior citizens from 11 a.m. through 4:15 p. m.
Other counties promising aid are Menominee, Montcalm, Montmorency, Ogemaw, Ottawa, Presque Isle, Roscom-'mon, Schoolcraft, St. Qair, Tuscola, Wexford. Refusing are Bmen, Genesee, Ingham, Kent, Macomb,^ Monroe, Oak-lahd, Newaygo, Wayne.
AVON TOWNSHIP - The Township Board last n^ht approved a 1-mill reduction in fire taxes for residents of the Brooklands and Avohdale areas. The rest of the township was reduced by, five-tenths of a mill.
Even with the . reduction in levy she said there would no reduction in the actual cash amount toward upkeep of township fire services.
Clerk Thelma Spencer said such action was possible because of this year’s doubling of the township’s assessed valuation.
The special fire millage was voted on the township in 1941. Avondale’s extra levy was voted in 1954 and Brook-lands in 1957. The rate had been 1 mill over the entire township and 2.5 mills in the special districts.
The board voted $5,500 to be met
by matching county funds for the purpose of repairing some of the wM-st spots in township roads. Ibe severe winter and the age of the roads was blamed for the need fqr emergency repair.
DRIVER UCENSING
Supervisor Clyril Miller reported on the possibility of offering a township-sponsored driver licensing bureau.
Ortonville Lovelies Vie for Beauty Title
Plea for Blood Donors Stirs a Big Response at 2 Sites in County
He said he had been informed by Louis Berklich, Iwainch manager of the Rochester Secretary of State’s office, that space for such an operation could be provided if the township were willing to prbvied the manpower.
OR’TONVILLE — Miss Ortonville will be selected from among 11 lovely candidates at ceremonies at 8 p.m. tomorrow on Mill Street, downtown.
FERNDALE 1^ - ffir gunfire and flames are too distant to hear or see in Detroit’s northei^i suburbs, but when the plea for emergency blood donations came, it was evident suburbanites felt deeply involved with Detroit’s violence.
Rochester and Avon Township are currently vrithout the driver licensing service since the city gave it up this month; The city cited economics as its reason for discontinulhg the service.
The annual event is sponsored by tiie Ortonville Jaycee Auxiliary and is held in conjunction with the village’s “Carnival Days.”

Gash and prizes for the new queen will be supplied by local merchants.
'Die new tltleholder will be crowned by last year’s winner, Marva Lee Feath-erstpn.
i ^ i
A long line of whites and Negroes ringed the Zion Lutheran Church in Ferndale yesterday as a team of nurses and doctors from the National Red Cross took blood for victims of the rioting.	7*
In other business. Clerk Spencer was authorized to seek equipment bids enabling the township to do its own tap-ins and repair <m water liims. The c6st was estimated at under $12,000.
Some 250 offered; 200 qualified.
The previous day 512 donors appeared at Birmingham’s Torry Elementary School. Of these, 377 Were accepted.
LEASED OUT
The equipment would be purchased by Water System No. 1 and leased out to the other systems as necessary.
The board approved the $23,000 bid of Stolaruk Asphalt Co. of Detroit for the paving of Henken Road from Rochester to Livemois. The project is due for completion in October.
Judging the event will be a panel made up of: Sandra Patterson of Waterford Township) Mrs. Lee Formicola of Bochester, Ron Iwaszkiewicz of Auburn Heights, Dan Blomquist of Ann Arbor and Len DePaw of LakeOriim.
Blood banks in the Detroit area had
In reply to-’a request for sidewalks on the mUe roads from the Rochorter
Donors Jarn Fjsrndah Bipod CBnfor Af Zion Lutheran Church
been depleted by Tuesday afternoon and Board of Education, the 'fownship Board hospitals were desperately in need of reported that agreemeiits now exist more blood, said Dr. H.F. Raynor, where feasible develiqiers are request-director of the Red Cross te^.	y ed to install them.

THE Ipqntiac press, THURSDAY^JUIA^ 27/^^
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Modeling Clay for Indoor Play
Children have more fun playing indoors with their modeling clay if you give each child a handful of toothpicks. This will keep them busy for hours. By using them they can add legs, arms, or a neck to hold the head of a ^ure they model.
TTiis makes their play more realistic, because with the aid of the toothpicks their ciay creations will also stand.
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Unusual and Distinctiva Handmada Gifts on Consignmant
Charles Munch will conduct the Festival codcerts tonight, Friday, and Saturday at 8:30 p.m., and Sunday at 7:30, with Nichole Henriot-Schweitzer the soloist Saturday and Sunday.
Munch’s orchestral program this evening and Friday will Include Handel’s “Water Music Suite,” Schumann’s Symphony No. 4 in D minor, and Franck’s Symphony in D minor.
Saturday and Sunday Mme. Henriot-Schweitzer will play Ravel’s Concerto In G-major on a program which will include Mozart’s Divertimento for Strings in D major (Kv 136), Beethoven’s S y m-phony No. 4 in B flat major, and R^avelfs “Daphnis et Chloe” Suite No. 2.
NICOLE HENRIOT-SCHWEITZER
SEW SIMPLE
By Eunice Farmer
Dear Eunite Farmer,
Do you have any suggestions as to how one can remove the dressmakers carbon paper markings from a white wooh dress? The little tracing dots show through to the right side and look terrible. I have tried severai spot removers but none of them I worked. Can you help me?
Mrs. D. F.
Dear Mrs. D. F.:
Sorry, but I don’t have any solution for you. I have often suggested taking the garment to a professional cleaners and let them remove it, sometimes this still doesn’t work. If any of you readers have any suggestions, please send them on to me, Eunice Farmer, in care of The Pontiac Press.
In the meantime, don’t use a tracing wheel on anything except the underlining of your garment. This is just one more example of an asset-becoming a liability. If you want to use short cuts of any kind, think first about the end results, and you might find you didn’t save any time at all.
ha\
Dear Eunice Farmer:
I found a pattern that is exactly wh
for but oh checking the pattern size, I______
half-si^e patterns. Can a half-size pattern be a regular misses size?
e been looking : only came in adjusted to fit Mrs. D. W.
During Munch’s Detroit Symphony appearances at Meadow Brook, Ehrling will guest conduct the New York Philharmonic with pianist Andre Watts as soloist. The concerts are being held in Central Park,-at Clove Lakes Park on Staten Island, and at the Botanical Gardens in the Bronx.
Culinary Skills Run in Family
CENTERVILLE, Iowa (AP) r- Mrs. J. Keith Phillips, wife of a fwmer, has won 1,612 blue ribbons hnd uncounted red and white ribbons for her food entries in state, county and town fairs.'
“Almost every year you hay to yourself, ‘I think I’ll skip it this year’.” says Mrs. PhilUps, “and then, as the fairs draw closer, you find the bug has got you."
Dear Mrs. D. W.: .
Today, with practically no emphasis placed on the waistline, you can easily adjust this pattern to fit you. Buy the one closest to your regular size, usually it would be one half size smaller. Example: If you need a size 14 pattern, possibly a \2'k would be best for you. Be sure to check all the measurements and add where needed.	/
The main difference in the patterns is the length from shottldfr to waistline. A half-size pattern is cut much shorter waisted and usually cut for a more mature figure. We have used them before, and they work out beautifully.
TAILOR TRIX WINNER
Mrs. John J. WilUams, Fairfield, 111., is this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner for her leather trim suggestion.
I love to trim sportswear with touches of leather but found it impossible to make loop buttonholes or cover small buttons with the heavier suede I was using. I found that I could peel away the back layer of the suede, working slowly and carefully so as not to damage the skin/ You will have a nice thin layer of leather left which is perfect for making small details.
■ ■ ^ \.


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DEAR POLLY-lt is,time for children to be starting off to camp and, having been a camp counsellor, I want to pass Pointer on to their mothers. No matter how many clean clothes they have on arrival at camp, toward the end, of .the session most girls run out of clean socks, underwear and blouses. This usually is due to their wearing the wrong blouse with the wrong shorts or just changing clothes too often.
Her greatest competition comes from her daughter, Mrs. Olive Jean Tarbell, who has more than 1,300 ribbons. And now Mrs. Tarbell’s six-year-old daughter, who recently received a small electric stove for a present, insists she is going to bake cookies for the next fair.
MRS. R. A. SHELTON
A Lace Cage Is Chosen for Weddirfg
A full-length cape of Alen-con lace over a taffeta sheath was worn by Saturday bride, Mrs. Ronald Allen Shelton.
A train of matching lace, attaching at the shoulders was a feature of the ensemble worn by the former Janet Gail Reynolds, for the First Baptist Church rite.
Her waist-length veil fell from a crown of lace, seed pearls and rhinestones. Daisy pom poms centered with a white orchid were carried as a bouquet. _
Barbara Manlove was maid of honor with bridesmaids Carol Shelton, Glenda Reynolds and M a r 1 e e n Kilmer,. flower girl.
Gerald Asher was best man for the bridegroom, Pfc. Rons aid Allen Shelton, USA, of Ft. Meade, Md.
Ushers were Michael Marian, Douglas Shelton, Alan Dohner and Steve Collins.
Parents of Uie newlyweds who greeted guests in the church parlors are Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Reynolds of South Ascot Road and the Cecil Sheltons of Berkley Street.
The couple are t a k i n g a honeymoon tour to Ft. Meade. Md., Cedar Point, Ohio, and Expo ’67.
8
Polly's Pointers
Outfits in Bags
They also have trouble getting all their things together when time comes to go home. One mother solved the problem by packing one day’s complete outfit in a plastic bag. In the bag were socks, blouse, shorts and so on.
blank sheets of paper inside. Every time I write to him I include a couple more of these envelopes and, needless to say,
I hear from him more often than I would otherwise.—MRS. J. W. M.
DEAR POLLY - General, housecleanirrg is something most of us dread and:put off as long as possible. I have found a painless wpy. Plan a party.
How long has it been since you got together with the people on your block? We never had
so I went around and introduced
% 1
At the end of the day the girl put all those soiled clothes back in the same plastic bag so they were all together when it was time to pack. This made everything come out even and there were no forgotten clothes.
-SUE
DEAR POLLY-Wtaat can be done about a . metal bed that squeaks? Just turning over in it causes a resounding racket that can be heard all over the house. This is very annoying to other people in the house who are trying to sleep. — FERN
DEAR FOLlJV-B e f o-r e my son left Aur the service I gave
him several stamped envelopes addressed to. me with
myself to the ones I did not know and invited them all to a “get acquainted party.” Then I knew I had to' clean the house from top to bottom so ; to make a good impression. I allowed myself two weeks so did not have to rush too much. My spirits were so high even saw the bottom of my ironing basket for the first time in months.—SHARON
You will* receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Polly’s Problem or solution to a problem. Write Polly in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac,Michigan 48056	'
A new kidney machine that can be used at home will be available in a few months at a cost of only about $200, as compared tD present costs of $14,000
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THE PQNTIAC PRESS,
Even Wedding G6wns Are Paper Now
By SALLY RYAN - NEW YORK“'(AP) - The fun’s in the bag — the paper ^ bag — this summer. '
Paper bikinis, paper surf , jackets, paper bras, paper
Carnival Man Is Charged With Bigamy
MANISTEE - (AP) Mrs. Jean Martone says she still loves her carnival worker husband John C. Bence Jr., though she has been toid he has six aliases and possibly as many wives.
She filed a bigamy charge against the husky Bence, explaining that while still love him. You know the saying — Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.”
Bence pleaded guilty to the bigamy charge when arraigned Monday in Manistee Circuit Court in northwestern Lower Michigan.
Michigan State Police said BenceiiSS SIX wives. The Manistee County prosecutor said he has three. Mrs. Martone, who said she married Bence under his alias of John-Mar-tone on July 5. 19^3, said she believed he has four wives. But only one count of bigamy was contained in the charge.
Bence, who will be sentenced July 24, faces a maximum penalty of five years in jail.	^
Mrs. Martone, 26, said she and Bence traveled the carnival circuit for a while and then she heard rumors.
Someone gave her a name, she said, and she wrote to a woman in Maryland.
“We exchanged pictures, and found we were married to the same man,” said Mrs.' Martone.
culotfes, paper sandals—even paper weddit^ gowns and paper gray flannpl suits. Temporary fashion has sent the nation on a wastebasket binge.
“Paper
in now,’’ said
of Lord & Taylor, the New
York-based department store chain.
“Only time will tell if H is a fad. -If designing keeps good, itiWill be lasting.” AREA EXPANDING The whole area has begun
Melvin E. Dawley, president sto- expand like crazy,” said a
spokesman for Kimberly-
With the wide range of paper apparel now available, it’s a possibility a modern miss will meet her man in a paper bikini and then marry him ‘in a paper wedding dress. Americans spent $3.5 million on the cheap cellulose clothing last year and industry spokesmen say a billion-dollar year isn’t far off. Both the “Wild Animal Mini ^Bikini” and “Poly-coated Wedding Qress” shown above are by James Sterling Paper Fashions of New York.	*	-
Stevens Corp., a major supplier of paper-type material vHtich is 93 per cent cellulose and 7 per cent nylon.
. ■'•k 'if
Americans spent $3.5 mil-' lion on paper clothes last year when the first ’ paper toggery was introduced. ’Hiis summer the paper caper is bigger, than ever. Desi^ are more elaborate, prints are colorful.
“We’re doing fantastically,” said William Guggenheim III, 58, a Yale graduate and former stockbroker who opened in Dispensable Disposables, a paper shop, on New York’s Upper East Side last month.
He predicts it soon Ml be a $1 billion a year industry.
25 PER CENT By 1980, paper will account for 25 per cent of the apparel business, predicts Oliver James Sterling, 30, a former Texas oilman.
Sterling set up shop just this past year and now has six plants turning out 15,000 to .20,000 items a day — items like cowl-collared caftans, ruffle - skirted mini - dresses, pant suits, evening culottes and tortoise shell - strapped evening dresses — all made from paper.
His newest item is a double breasted suit for men, to sell for about $12. “It looks like gray flannel,” he says. “It should be great for businessmen and conventions.”
Guggenheim stocks many of Sterling’s items in his narrow shop, where paper sunglasses, paper bows, paper bracelets, paper jumpsuits and paper raincoats are pinned to the walls.
“Paper has become high fashion,” Guggenheim says. “I see it as a forerunner of a disposable apparel industry.”
Case No. D-508
A Complete Selectable Menu!
Plan a Party for^^
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IRofuttJia Countrsi iim
.1230 PlISE LAKE ROAD
Celebrating their golden wedding anniversary Sunday are former Pontiac residents, Mr. and Mrs. Janies Chiappelli. An open house in Port Huron will follow their repetition of marriage vows in the Pilgrim Holiness Church there. The Chiappellis have 10 children including Mrs. Bill Seets, Mrs. Carl 1. Bills, Mrs. Walter Dun-son, Mrs. Don Dell and David Chiappelli of Pontiac, 41 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.
Phon^ 682-0600
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Preschool Play Tools
The lazy, hazy da^s of summer bring with them everyday opportunities for outdoor play for the preschoolers who have spent most of the long winter inside the house. For mother, too, it’s a welcome change.
Certainly active play in out-of-doors fresh air is as important for the preschooler as it is for his school-age brothers and sisters.
Children Imil-ate Their Elders
But particularly for the preschooler who is learning while playing, it. is equally important that the playtools which help develop his imagination, creativity, and physical dexterity not be neglected during the long summer season. '
For the wise parent, guiding the preschooler’s learning is a year-round responsibility. The question for many parents, though, is one of evaluation. Determining t h e playtools which will help their preschoolers develop their senses, digest their experiences, master themselves and their problems is often a difficult deci-
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE D-508: Lila G., aged
5, is a kindergartener.
“Dr. Crane,” her teacher began, “Lila
DR. CRANE
tells tales about her parents that they may not believe are being broadcast to all the youngsters in my class.
Why don’t parents realize that we kindergarten teachers get uncensored views of what they are doing in their own homes?”
Parents should realize that they have a serious job of leaching their youngsters correct speech and proper social habits.
But children imitate their human surroundings.
Conradi, a famous scientist, found that English sparrows would even mimic canaries, if reared by canaries.
For example, Conradi took sparrow eggs and placed them in the nests of canaries.
When these eggs hatched, the canary mothers looked after the young sparrows, apparently not realizing that their awkward fledglings were “foster” children.
Remember, the young sparrows never saw or heard their own kind!
The only bird sounds they experienced were the songs of canaries.
When the sparrows were 3 months old, they begin to trill, like their canary foster parents.
“None.” said Conradi, “ever had the characteristic call note of the sparrow species but by and by adopted those of the canary.”
If raucous sparrows can
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learn to sing and trill like canaries, just imagine how much more expertly smart human tots can mimic the speech and social outlook of their parents!
It now costs an average of $500 per year per child to give him public schooling.
Taxes aie constantly rising to meet this charge, which doesn’t include the costs of the school buses or the buildings!
Yet many parents fail to cooperate with the English teachers!
The latter diligently try to givo their pupils correct lang-
But as soon as those youngsters arrive home, they hear slang, vulgarity, profanity and all the most common errors in speech.
If a child spends 50 minutes in an English class, but is with his parents for 10 waking hours, just think of the havoc those parents can produce.
‘Tt ain’t me,” they can say OT. “Her and I went to town.” “Raise up the window.” “Wait on me at the corner.” “She was dark complected.” “Who did they elect queen?” “His noise aggravate me.” “It was the consensus of opinion."
To help parents in this evaluations, Playskoll Research suggests these guidelines:
—Choose toys with multiple play values—those with which the preschooler himself can “do” something.
—If a child has outgrown a toy, put it away. If it is too simple for him, he will be bored and the toy Will hamper development of new skills.
—If the toy is too difficult for the child, put it away for another day two or three months from now.
—Watch your child at play. Is his eye-hand coordination well-developed? Can he discriminate shapes, sizes, and colors?
A guidebook outlining fur-
Night!
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Evmr
FRIDAY NIGHT 5 P.M. to 10 P.M.
ther information for parents on the creative environment and proper toy selection is available from Playskoll Research, P.O. Box 3342, Merchandise Mart, Chicago 6065|, free on request.
Dine Out Tonight in Our New Kcautifi|l Dining Room ,4lso h^njoy Our Selfctivp Sahtd Bar Luncheon Buffet Daily 1 H30 — -2 P.M.
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Wt
Apologia
Due to Circumstances Beyond Our Control .
^ur Merchandise Was Delayed!
Our Carpeting Was Delayed!
Our Fixtures Were Delayed!
Therefore Our Grand Opening Must Be Delayed for One Weok .	.
GRAND OPENING THURSDAY, AUG. 3rd
Watch for Opening Ad!
New Fashion Mall in the Pontiac Mall
I-':
^ {’
p
THt: POIVTIAC PRESS, T^URgDAY; JULY 27. 1Q67
Discovery Boosts Potential for Rockets
By Science Service
WASHINGTON - A rocket many times mbre efficient thap any now iii existence may have been made poiisible by an unexpected discovery just reported here.
For more than 10 ye^rs, scientists have been racking" their brains in search (rf ways to build rockets around nuclear reactors, which would be much more efficient than the cbemi; cally poWered rockets today.
-The most efficient of the nuclear rockets would be those using reactors with the radioactive material in thfeir cores in i form.
and interacted very little with i It is aS if a doughnut of oiiejmi^ng, in another —the core, the main flow of the propel- gas—the fuel—swirls in on it-Nothing separates the two gases' tont through the engthc. iself, while floating, and not!but the swirl in one of than.
In fact, the only kind of rocket that would be more efficient — a fusion rocket, based on control of the (nrin-ciples of a ‘ ■
is so far in the future that no one even has an idea of how to draw one.
There has been a mighty obstacle facing gas-core rocket designers, however, and it has ■kept them from getting even close to reality. The obstacle is simply that the gaseous nuclear fuel in all the rocket designs proposed so far-would be thrust right out through fhe rocket nozzle with the propellant.
This would use up the fuel so fast as to make such an engine almost completely unworkable, and would also prohibit the rocket from being fired anywhere but in outer space, since the radioactivity could poison the atmosphere.
Now, Dr. C. C. Chang and a team of researchers from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D. C. have made a discovery that could make the “impossible” rocket
During experiments with a ■simulated model of a gas-core rocket, the scientists noticed a doughnut - shaped zone in which the gases moved so slowly that they stayed almost entirely within the doughnut*

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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY,
Negro Leaders, Taylor Confer
Group is Continuing! ^^ork for City Peace
An infwmal group of 30, con-cferned Negro ministers and citizens .aj-e, continuing to Work in the cwnmunity^d with city officials to “keep the peace" in Pontiac.
Two members of the group— Albert Shaw, a Pontine teacher, " and Mrs. Marie Johnson, a botjdswoman -x- were to' meet with Pontiac Mayor William H. 'Taylor Jr. today on causes of Monday night’s disturbances, ac-r ' cording to one of the leaders.
“I think it is remarkable that we had only /me night of disturbances in Pontiac,” E. Eugene Russell, president of ' the city Urban League, com-; mented.
Death Claims Market Owner
Joseph Pema, owner and q>-erator ofHhe Joslyn Super Mar-' et for 20 years,, died yesterday. tewas72.
Pequiem Mass will be 9:30 a.m. Saturday at St. Michael’s Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Ro-
Ts there something I can do to help the D e t r 0 i t r ’ ' * vdetims?”
“Where can Igive food, clothing and othef needed articles?” These are calls received at The Pontiac Press from individuals and churches around the county.
The Rev. William S. Logan
sary will be recited at 7:3 p.m. tomorrow m tl
p.m. tomorrow ill the Donelson-Johns Funeral Horne. '
Surviving are his wife, Teresa; a daughter, Mrs. Donald G. Finelli of Cleveland, Ohio; four grandchildren; and three sisters including Mrs. Concetta Felice of Pontiac.^
Perna was a member of St. Michael’s Church, the Italian-^erican C l u b and grocery store associations in both Pon-‘tiac and Detroit.
Riot Victim Donation Centers
Riot Scene Across U.S. at a Glance
He commended the local police for controlling the situation and Taylor for a “willingness and concern to meet with thes/e people.”
HEADING FOR ASSAULT-U. S. Marines on their way to board a helicopter follow a Navy man (white shirt) to the flight line of the U.S.S. Okinawa off the South Vietnamese coast in the South China Sea. Hie Marines were bound for an assualt about 12
miles south of the DMZ. They made an amphibious landing with helicopter support in the operation designed to clear the arek of suspected Vietcong and North Vietnamese Army troops.
The Negro leaders talked and pleaded with disorderly persons Monday night arid s i n c e then have held various meetings ‘
■ work for order,’^ according to * Russell.
Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas
Mrs. George Conklin
Among the group leaders are Rev. Matthew M. Scott, president of the Oakland County Ministerial Fellowship; Clarence Barnes, executive director of the Urban League; James Matthews, president of the local NAACP chapter; Charles Tucker of the NAACP; and Rev. Jesse L. Jones, besides Mrs. Johnson, Shaw and Russell.
■ Disturbance ' Delays Trial in Area Death
Service for Mrs. George (Harriet E.)^onklin, 85, of 128 Lincoln will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial in Oakwood Cemetery, near Gaines.
Mrs. Conklin died Monday.
Surviving is a brother.
Carl S. Gronfors
Service for Carl S. Granfors, 75, of 660 .Scott Lake, Waterford Township, wilt be 11 a.m. tomorrow at ■ Sparks-Griffin Chapel with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Independence Township.
, Mr. Granfors died yesterday. He was a retired employe of GMC Truok & Coach Division and a member of Bethlehem Lutheran Church.
Surviving are his wife, Olga; a daughter, Mrs. David McMan-
Service for Bobby R. Reeves, 25, of 236 Crystal Lake will be 1 p.m. Monday at St. John Methodist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home.
Ml*. Reeves, fatally shot, died Tuesday; He was an employe of GMC TYuck & Coach Division.
Surviving are his wife, Selma; his mother, Mrs. Harden Reeves; three brothers, Daniel S., Charles and Jackie R^ves; and five sisters, Shirley, Carlyn Annie, Pearl and Maylki.
The preliminary examination of a Waterford Township man, charged with second - degree!us Union Lake; a son, Carl murder in the shooting of a|E. of Waterford Township; eight Bloomfield Township youth last grandchildren; three sisters, and month, has been adjourned for three brothers, the second time, fhis time be-! c&use of the recent disturbances ' Hubert G. Hill in Pontiac.
Waterford Township Justice i Patrick K. Daly postponed the hearing for Leo Placencia, 47, of 1030 Metipmihee to 1:30 p.m. Aug. 9. The examination was scheduled yesterday.
Placencia is accused of shooting John Turton, 18, of 844 Fairfax June 24 as the victim raised the hood of his mother's car parked outside I the suspect’s house.
Turton died from the stomach wound June 28 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
The examination originally was scheduled for July 12, but was adjourned then because of the unavailability of witnesses.
Yesterday, Daly adjourned all hearings to allow township policemen—who have helped Pontiac police cope with the dis-tiy-bances-to get some rest.
Service for Robert G. Hill, 160 Auburn, will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffiii Funeral Home with burial in South Lyons Cemetery.
An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 7:30 tonight in the funeral Home.
Mr. Hill, a retired employe of Community National Bank, died Tuesday.
Harold McDonnell
Requiem Mass for Harold McDonnell, 75, of 3703 Brookdale, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Saturday at St. Benedict’s Catholic Church with burial in Sunset Hills Cemetery, Flint.
The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be conducted at 7: 30 p.m. tomorrow.
Mr. McDonnell died yesterday. A member of St. Benedict’s Church, he was a retired employe of GMC Truck & Coach
70 to Represent OaklJrid at National County Parley
Oakland County will have
some 70 representatives attending the 32nd annual National Association of Counties (NACO) Conference beginning in Detroit Monday.
^ In all, 3,200 delegates from all 50 states are expected ticipate in the three-day conference, which this year centers around the theme of county organization and management.
President Johnson is pian-> ning to address the deiegates in Coho Hail on Wednesday, the last day of the Conference.
ference once before, in Last year it was held in New Orleans and attracted 3,200 persons.
Monday, delegates will be
welco
■welcomed , by Ejetroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh^ general conference chairman, and co-chairman Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, and Mel Ravitz, Detroit councilman.
The' main speaker on the opening day will be -Gov. George Romney.
COUNTY DELEGATION Elected county officials, township supervisors, and department heads will make up the Oakland* County delegation.
Detroit was host to the con-
Division and member of Elks Lodge 810.	'
Surviving are his wife, Pau-linen and two sisters.
i Bobby R. Reeves
was fatally shot.
Surviving-are his mother, Mrs. Y. L. Taylor, and a brother and sister, Charles and Patrice, both at home.
George W. Smith
Service for George W. Smith, 74, of 885 Northfield Will be 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Donelson-Johns
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Neil D. Mc-Inally, 54, of 4141 Walnut lake wilP be 3 p.m. Saturday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be at Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery, Novi.
Mr. Mclnally, senior tool engineer at Cadillac Motor Division,- died yesterday.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George G. Mclnally of Pontiac; four sons, Donald, Bruce and Steven at home and Michael in the United States Coast Guard; and one brother, George F. of Rochester.
Funeral Home with burial in the Ortonville Cemetery, Ortonville.
Mr. Smith, a maintenance engineer, died yesterday.
Surviving are two sons, Ralph K. of Davison and George W. Jr. with the Army; 11 grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; three brothers, including Luke of Oxford; six sisters, including Mrs. Blanche Jones of Clarkston and Mrs. Thelma Horton of Pontiac.
Alfred Taylor
Service for Alfred Taylor, 17, of 281 Branch will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Trinity Baptist Church with buriarl in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home.
The youth died Tuesday. He
Jail Terms Given in City Bar Fight
Two Pontiac men convicted of assault with intent to do great bodily harpi have each beeri sentenced by Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem to 3Mj to 10 years in the state prison at Jackson.
The men, Claude Burnette Jr., 23, no known address, and Eugene Jones, 24, of 224 Ferry, were found guilty by Ziem following a nonjury trial two weeks
The charge stemmed from a fight outside a Pontiac bar Feb. 10 in which four men suffered knife wounds.
EVERY WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY MTE
SPECIAL
BEGINNING
4 P.M.
Char-Broiled, Wettfrn Cut
SIRLOIN SYEAK
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M.89
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Neil Mclnally
By the Associated Press DETROIT — The costliest riot in the nation’s history abated with 36 persons {counted dead and damage assessed at $500 million.
NEW YORK - Negro teenagers ran wild over a stretch of Fifth Avenue breaking shop windows and looting. Spanish Harlem was quiet.
CAMBRIDGE, Md .-National Guardsmen moved into the Extern shore city, chasing crowds from the streets with “riot” gas.
PHOPNIX, 'Ariz. - Snipers and looters fought with police in a four-hour outbreak.
JOSEPH PERNA
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - National Guardsmen entered the home city of Notre Dame University to put down a disturbance. A general curfew was imposed.
Yesterday's Capital News at a Glance
CHICAGO — Firebombing, window breaking and looting broke out ih the predominantly Negro South and Wpst sides. OTHER CITIES
'THE GOVERNOR Remained in riot-lorn Detroit.
THE SENATE LABOR COMMITTEE Postponed indetiniteiy a hearing oi
legislature to control __________
by public employes, scheduled to be held Thursday in Dearborn.
SEN GEORGE KUHN, R-BLOOMFIELD HILLS Said he would call tor a full-scale investigation of the Detroit riots.
■•There wefe also reports of scattered outbreaks in Toledo and Cincinnati, Ohio, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and two New York City suburbs in Westchester county — Mount Vernon arid -New Rochelle.

director of Interfatih Emergency Center, 4800 Woodward, Detroit, said the most imi hnt fnnetion churches in the ; suburbs can perform is to act as clearing honses.
. They need to serve as posts where volunteers can <rf-fer themselves or their goods, he said.
All clothing will be disbqbuted by the Salvation Army and the St. Vincent de Paul Society, Detroit.
St. Hugo of the Hills, 2215 Opdyke, Bloomfield IBlls.
hrist Church Cranbroc*. Lone Pine at Churdh, Bloom--field Hills.
St. James Episcopal, 355 W. Maple; Birmingham.
Vfestminster Presbyterian, JW333 W. Big Beaver, Troy.
Holy N a m e Catholic, 645 Woodlahd, Birmingham.
First Congregational, 1315 Pine, Rochester.
CHURCH UST
Churches serving as collection centers in the Poptiac area in-
clude
St. Michael’s Catholic Church* 120 Lewis.
Benedict’s Catholic (Church, 40 S. Lynn.
St. Vincent de Paul Catholic, 150 E. Wide Track.	,
St. Joseph Catholic, 400 W. South Blvd.	'
Sacred Heart Catholic, Auburn Heights.
Our Lady of the Lakes, 5481 Dixie Highway, Waterford Township.
St. Perpetua Catholic, 134 Airport, Waterford Township.
Our Lady of Refuge, 3750 Commerce, Orchard Lake.
The Rev. Jori Joyce, pastor of Redemption Lutheran Church will accept nonperishable forid and clothing at the parsonage, 5644 Dunmore, West Bloomfield Township. His congregation meets in one of the Orchard Lake schools.	‘	’ ,
According to the Rev, David A. Britz, assistant pastor of St. Michael’s, nonperishable foods are the most important items requested by the Detroit head-
3uarters for the relief of the isaster victims.
Many of the baby turtles on sale in variety stores come from Reelfoot Lake in Tennessee, "Where as many as 20,(X)0 turtles have been cught and shipped to market in a six-month period.
Riot May Add $5 Million
to Wayne County's Debt
DETROIT (AP)—Detroit!s riot ; expected to send Wayne County at least $5 million further into debt.
County off^ials broke down the expenses this .way Wednesday afternoon:
$1.5 million for feeding and housing prisoners.
—$1.5 million for court 'costs.
—$1 million for welfare increases.
and loss of property tax . valuation.
A county spokesman said the expenses would not only wipe out the county’s $2.4-miIlion savings fund, but also will kill plans to begin repaying the $14 million it owes Detroit.
—$500,000 for treatment of injured poor.
—$500,000 for incidentals like overtime for county employes
The spokesman said the coun-ral a““'— •' "	^
Miss Ged demonstrates hairpiece styling Friday at Pontiac Mall
Miss Gee has a , world of hairpiece tricks fo show you Friday.
Meet .her from 12 noon until 9.
She'll demonstrate ' wiglet styling,
^ive tips oh their wear and care, help with your selection.
special
human hairpieces, both Pontiac stores
wiglet, 1X*90 wig, 29*90 64.90
fall.
Wig, wiglet pre pre-curled and ready for styling; black, off-black, brown tones. Foil is mode in ItolJ, con be adjusted for height. Block, off-b)^k, brown. Light, frosted shades, 74.90.


sho|v every night until 9
Pontiac Mall
Trlegi-aph at Elizabeth Lake Road
ty wfll apply to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for federal relief money.
Federal relief coordinator for the county, Daniel B. Skeen, met Wednesday afternoon with I^troit officials to plan the city’s relief applications.
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■/.


Sim 0A8 ]
■ ■'f' '	‘-v''--	■.:	^
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY 27, 1967
■Rie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thim in wholesale package lots Quotat'ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday.
US. General Warns N. Koreans
Produce
$, Norttum s, Narthim
Strawterries,	Ciit............6.00
VSGeTABLEt
Beetst topped, bu. ..........
Broccoli, di. bch. 2.50 ............
Cabbage, Curly, bu..................3.50
Onions, Green, di. bch.......	' “
Cauliflower, dz. bch. .......
Celery, Pascal, di. bch......
cabbage, bu. Collard^bu.
LBTTUCe AND GREENS
Endive, Bleached, bu. Escarole, Vi tm. .■■■ Escarde, Bleached, bu.
tSCarae/ oicavncw# ..................... r*z?
Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bsM.................... -K
Lettuce, Boston, di...................... '•»
Lettuce, Head, bu. .....................
Lettuce, Head, di......................
Lettuce, Leal, bu. ..........
Poultry and Eggs
2*^i*b
___________n/-
s whites, l»'/4-21.
AlcanAlum 1 AHegCp .lOg Ali^ Pw 1.2C
DETROIT EGGS
DETROIT (AP)-(OSDA)- Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (itw'ud-Ing u!s.l: White Grade A iunebos, 4^47; extra large, 37-39; large, 35-37; medium, 25-27; small, 14-15.
CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchange-Butter steady; wholesale buy-
Msr’66;“"ig'ns? is ”
WC 99U; cars 90 B 65; 09 CitM. , Eggs steady.; wholSale buying prices unchanged; 75 per cent or better Gra^ A whites 36; mixed 34; mediums 27; standards 25; checks 18
RY
i poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged; roasters 27-29; special fed white rock fryers '20-22.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USDAI- CaHle 100 salable supply largely »'e«Bhtrf steer: carried over from earlier this week trading on slaughter steers slow, general ly steWl choice 900-1200 lb. 26.iS>-27.M. good to choice 25.50-26.00; gp<^ 24.50-
CHICAOO LIVESTOCK
CHICAGO lAP)—(USDA)-Hogs 4,000; butchers 25 to mostly .50 lower, 92 head at 215 lbs 23.65; 1-2 190-230 lbs 22.75-43.25; 1-3 290-350 lb sows 19.25-20.25; 1-3 350-450 lbs 18.75-19.50;	1-3 400-450 lbs
10.00-19.00.
Cattle 1,000; slaughter Steers about steady; several loads high choice and prime 1,000-1,350 lbs slaughter steers 26.50; choice 900-1,300 lbs 25.50-26.25; part load high choice and prime 900 lb slaughter heifers 26.25; choice 25.00,25.50.
Sheep 300; spring slaughter lambs steady; a few lots choice and prime
90-105 lb spring lambs 26.1»-27.00; r“-----
80-110 lbs 25'.eO-26.00.
American Stock Exch.
NEW YORK (AP) • American Stoc
Asamera 01 AssdOil & ( AtlasCorp vk
Ctrywide RIt	5
Creole 2.60a	11
Data Cont	..U
EquityCp .16f	228
Fargo Oils	35 •
Felmont Oil	1
FfyTiger .lOh	46
Frontier l.61f	1
Gen PlVwood	5
Giant Yel .40	5
5>16 4 3-16 4 5-16+3-16
^1
56 15Vz 154k 1
Scurry Rain Signal OilA 1 Sperry R wl Slathanri Inst Synlex Cp .40
110 3B4k 37'/k 3B4a -I-
0 M>/r 34'/. 34','. — V, le ASsoclal« Press 196:
PANMUNJOM, Korea (UPI) —U.S. Air Force Maj. »Gen. Marvin C. Dernier told North Korean Communists today the United N a t i o a s Command UUNC) is "prepared to defeat your aggression at any place, at any time and at any level of intensity.”
■ * ★ ★
Dernier, UNC senior adviser to the Korean Armistice Com-)n, issued the warning at of a 6%-hour meeti^ ot the commission in this village where the Korean armistice was signed lA years ago today.
Demler was warning against the stepped-up North Korean incursions into the demilitarized zone <DMZ) and into South Korea itself.
He’ said since last Oct. 15 the Communists committed 351 violations which cost them 160 killed and some captured. About dozen Americans were killed I the attacks.
★ # *
Demler told his Communist counterpart, North Korean Army Maj. Gen. - Pak Chung Kuk the UNC intends to abide by the armis|ice agreement but he said, ‘‘I pimnise, ymir side is going to pay an ever-increas-price for its crimes.”
TAKE STEPS Demlex said the U.N. command “will protect its personnel and the Republic of Korea from your side’s aggression and will take whatever steps are necessary to assure this protection.”
Demler said North Korean border violations have increased since last October when North Korean Premier Kim n Sung called for an ex-pansion of preparations for war and the adoption of more aggressive tactics in gueirilla activities.
Demler told North s Korean soldiers, agents or other maur-auders who cross into South Korea o^ land on South Korean shores ‘‘will be hunted down and killed or captured.”
* t *
“Your side’s subversive efforts are in no way weakening the United Nations Command the government of the Republic of Korea^” Demler said.
CUNNIFF
The New York Stock Exchange
-A—
16 4416 431k 44>/4 + 4 27Vk 27Vk 27Vk -1-
28	39'/>	39V.	394k	-
3	34'/.	34	34'A	..
19	254k	25>A	254k	..
17	83'/.	83	83	-
22	424k	42</k	42W	..
Gen- CIg 1.21 GenDynam Gen Elec 2.61 Gen Fds 2.41
Gen/Mot f*.70g GenPrec 1.50 GPubSvc .46g -1 PubUt 1.50 JTil El T.28 Gen Tire .80 GaPecific 1b Gerber Pd 1 Getty on .lOg Gillelte 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40
AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AmCrySug 1 *-iCyan 1.25 lElP 1.44b ..Jnka 1.30a AmF^ 1.16
AMP I ‘ >pex Corp ...iphenol .70 Anaconda
BabcokW 1.36 Balt GE 1.52 Beat Fds 1.65
7	371k	3744	3744	—
I	30'/k	30Vk	30'/k	+
16	22'/k	22'/k	22’^	...
4	59	59	59	...
4	63	63	63	-H </k
Gt West ^Inl GtWSug 1.60a GreenGnt .80
8	361k	364k	361k	—
51	38'k	371's	38'/k	+
9	25'/.	2544	25'/.	-I-
36 4to ,49'	49
34 WS 40-	15'/k -1-
4	954k	55	554k	-f-
51	374k	374k	374k	-I-
GrumnAIr .60 Gulf Oil 2.60 GuifStaUt .80
HollySug 1.21 Homestk .801
) 31H ZV/2 ZV/3 +
InterlkSt 1.80
John John Joy*Mfg 1
—K—
'	6 S3W 53V4
15' 24*/%
KernCLd 2.60	8 nVk 92^/2 92'/^ +
14 125	124’/^ 124»/i — ’
27 35V4 35	35’/^ + 1
34 106'/ii 105, 105’/^ —1
34‘/i 34V4 34‘/a +
S9^/»	59^/a	59?%	....
81	80'/k	80%	+	%
69V4	69	69	+	Va
„ m% 110V4 111% +1%
13	43% 43% 43% ‘
14	44%	43%	44V4
' 338	338	338
I, 53% i
Stocks of Local Inferesf
Figures after deSImal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are repre* tentalivt Inter-deeler prices of approxl-1, . _	--------- markets
DenRGW 1.10
DomeMin .80 DowChm 2.20
Duke Pw L20 duPonf 2.50g Dug Lt 1.60 DynamCp .40
9.6 10.2 19.6 20.2 15.0 15.6
Diamond Crystal . Frank's Nursery' . Kelly Servicet ...
....15.0
....#32.0 32A
/ North Ctntral Airllnat Units
Salran Printing .............
Serlpto ....................
Wyandotta Clwmical-..........
...27J.2I.2 .. 9.3	9.6
.14.2 15J
MUTUAL FUNDS
.....9.26 10J1 ....10.6*	20.47
:!.’.’,!s.2I----
----------------------------   ...921	10L14
Keystone	Growth K4 ..............7.71	»M
Mess.	Investors	Growth ,.........11N	14.19
s	Trust ........17.10	11.69
....14.00 1S20 ....112S 12.04
.13.44 14.71
1 53'/s 4 t 36'/j 4 65
9	24'A	241k	7*V,	—
78	12'/k	12'/j	12Vx	4	'
175	17'/j	17'A	17'/k	4	i
87	27'/4	27	7VA	4	'
—D—
7	2214	22%	22%	...
16	39'k	38%	39'/k	4	'
11 37'/k 37 30 18% 18
_E—
EGBG .20 ElBondS 1.72 Electron Sp EIPetoNG 1 Enter El 1.68 End Johnson EthylCorp .60 EventPd
18 32% 37</i 3^ 4 %
I 20'/k 20	20'/k ..
—P—
Patrch Cam 39 104% 104 Fair Hill ;lSg	.'lO	28%	28V
Fensleel nS	26	67%	67
Fedders .80	26	30%	30
FedDStr 1 7B	5	Mii	Ml
.-...Co Ftitrol 1, FIrettne FlrsfChrt Flintkote Fie Row Fie PLt FMC Cp
2	34	33% 34	....
11 ss
56 49% 48% 49% +i 30 21% 28% 2IVk -W
FerdMol 120
---- For McKett
20.10 ll.OSFruehCp 1.70
7	16%	16%	16V6	....
00	54%	SMfe	04%	4-	%
2	24%	24%	24%
14	35%	35%	15%
Ihds.) High Lew Last Chg.
——G—
36 “23^	tT* 4 V
2 22 % 22'4 22'.J 4 '/x 7 74% 74',k 74'/i — %
45	103% 102% 103% 4 % 29 00% 79% 79% -1%
U3 84	82% S3Vk +1%
17	72Vk 72	72	— V
9	6%	6%	6</k — V
18	29% 29% 29'% — V
46	46'% 46'% 46'% 4 V
52 29% 29'% 29'% — V 31, 56'% 55% 56% 41V 20 37	37	37	+1
12 71	70'% 70'% — 1
x9 55'% 55% 55'% 4 V 269 18% ir% 11% 4. V„
4 66% 66% 66% + V%
PitPlate 2.60 Pitts Steel Polaroid .40 ProctcrG 2.20 PubSvcCok) 1 Pubtkind .34t PugSPL 1.60 Pullman 2.80
36 4S'% 45'% 45% +■%
x12 32% 32% 32% — 1
I 43% 43'% 43% + V
12 24'% 24'% 24% ...
—H—
19	62%	62%	62%	+	%
7	61	60=?a	61	—	%
6	55V4	S4%	55
3	46	45%	46	+	%
7	84%	84V4	84%	+1%
12	13%	13V4	13%	+	*
2	76%	76%	76%	—
13	34%	34%	34%	+
10	45%	45 V4	45%	+
Raynier 1.40b Raytheon .80 °!Mdlng Co ItIchCh .40b .iepubsti 2.50 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b ^ Reyn Met .90 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.40 RoanSel .35g Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCofa .72 Royal Dut Ig RydarSys .60
StJosLd 2.80
Schering 1.20 Sclent Data SCM Cp .40b Scott Paper 1 SbdCstL 2.20
1 32% 32% 32% — %
I 37% 37% 37% ..
irIGD 1.30	26 57% 57	57V4 +
Servel
Sharon $tl 1 Shell OU 2.10 Shell Trn .58g Sinclair 2.66	_
'lngerC;o 2.20	105	73%	73%	73%	+	%
ImithK 1.80a	29	56%	56%	56%.+	%
-	39%	39%	.........
12 40V3 40% 40% +
28% 2 1088^ 10
SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1.02 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartap Ind Sperry R .lOg Square 0 .70 Staley 1.35 StdBrand 1.40 Std Koils .50
n 2.20	13 59% I
StauH Ch
SterlDrug .	_	...______
StevenJP 2.25	35 46% 46%	.
Studebak .75g	197 66% 64% 65% +1%
I 65Va 65% 65Va + I 22% 22% 22% ..
_,arSleg .80 LehPCem .60
Lehman 2.01g LOFGIs 2.80a LIbbMcN .23f Liggatt&M 5 LIttonIn 1.54t Living$tn Oil LocKhdA 2.20 Loews Theat	o
LoneS Cem 1	9
LoneSGa 1.12	103
LonglsLl 1.16	5
Loriilard 2.50	8
• TV .50	3 6
ucky Str
Tektronix
Teledyne
Tenneco
Teledyne Inc 102 108% 1]
35	35	155
51% 51% 51% — % 13% 13% 13%
74% 74% 74%
100% 100% lOOSb 8% 8%
y 64% 64% - ’ /4 192% 193% — '
S StI 1
—M—
Macke Co .30 MacyRH 1.60 Mad Fd 2.23g MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox .80 Marquar .25g MartlnMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a McDonD .40b MeadCp 1.90 Sh 1.60
MerrChap* le MGM 1b MidSoUtil .76
69Va	70
12	17V4	17%	IfVt
8	61	60%	^
5	243/4	24%	24%
4	583/4	563/4	58%
67	47%	463/4	47
2	13%	13%	13%
139	25%	25%	25%	—	%
30	34	33%	34	‘	'
3	38%	38,	36%
339	56%	55%	56%
1	44%	44V4	44%
1	62%	62%	62»/a	,
34	%m	86V7	87%	+1%
1	25	25	25	-	%
18	54%	53%	54%	+IV4
14	23	28	23	-	%
30	433A	43%	43%	+	%
27 44%	...
21 19% 19% 19% + % 57 45% 45	.......
2 30% 30% 3
t 24% ..
NatCash 1.2$ NatDalry 1.40 Nat Dlst 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.68 “ It Gen I .20 it Gyps 2 Lead 2.25g * Steal “
—N—
1	82Vk	82H	82Vk	+	1
t	45'/k	45'/x	45'/k	+	1
3	37Vk	37H	37H	+
5 104VS t04'/k 104H +1 *	38VS	3F>/4	38Vk	+	-I
5	46'A	47%	48'/.	+	1
3	30Vk	30Vk	30%	+	V
53	17'/k	17'/z	17’/z,....
> «2Vk
I Tta .1
ay» t
50% S
.30g
Pac 2.50
----PW 1.52
Northrop .1
----Alrl .70
;n 1.50 I Norwich 1.30
5 22% 22% 22% -
Eltv 2
____Mar .M
Owentlll .1.35
Psc^ri** PacPwLt 1J0 PscTBT 1J0 Pan A Sul
»n"h^lSo
ParfcaDav 1o Pasb C^al 1 PtnnDrkla .50 Penney 1.50a Pi PvAt 1.52 Pa RR 2.40a PepsiCo .90 PtrtFllm .41f HlisrC l.2et Ptialpp 3.40a Phlla ll 1.54
88	55%	551/4	54'A	+	V4
IS	27%	27%	27%	■'
157	75%	73%	74'A	. ...
8	45%	45	55%	+	Vk
105	23	22%	23	+	Vk
9	54%	54	54	-	%
43	33%	32’/k	32%	+	%
—
10	35%	34%	34%	+	H
13	27%	27V4	27',-
55	15%	15V4	151
0	23'%	23%	231.	.	..
17	25%	Svk	25%	+	Vk
54	27<A	27%	27%	^	%
212	31	30%	31
11	35%	35	35
101	29	21%	'29	-T
5	43%	43%	43%	...
40	25%	25%	25%	+
15 49%' 4*% 09% -f
35 40% 40 39 07	15%
33 75% 75
hds.) High LOW Last Chg.
34	47% 57	47'.4 -f Vx
22	51'/.	51'%	51'%	+	'%
29	45%	55%	45%	-	%
15	48%	47'/j	47'%	—	%
39	59'/x	58'%	59'*	+	%
1	12'%	12'%	12'%	—	%
83 209% 204% 208	+:'■
24	95'/.	94%	95%	+
3	22'%	22Vk	22'%	+
35	10	9%	10	+
2	34%	35%	35%	+
13	51%	51Vx	51%	-
51 89% 87% 89	+1'%
21 47% 47'% 47>% + '
59 9'% 9'* 9% + '* 25 31% 30% 31	'%
Nqw disturbances flared in Kalamazoo and Albion as police and c i t i-z e n peace squads calmed the streets of seven other oytstate, Michigan cities Wednesday liight.
A gang of more than 40 Negro youths joined stnaller groups in stoning passing cars and smash-house and store windows at Kalamazoo. They set one fire in a gasoline station.
* ★ ★
Police arrested 20 persons in the Southwest Michigan city.
All were Negroes, including four girls. Mayor Raymond Hightow-CT, who is white, and Negro leaders poured into the North Side trouble scene, imploring persons to g?t off the streets. Ten per cent of Kalamamo’s 82,000 population is Negro.
Albion police said at least two gangs, each containing about 50 Negro youths, threw Tocks at motorists and fmebomh-ed a vacant house and store.
WHITE ARRESTED
Officials clamped a curfew on the 12,700 residents of Albion, a central Lower Michigah city containing a heavy Negro population. Police said none of the Negroes was arrested but a white youth was taken into custody for his own protection after being found carrying a gun.
All reinforcements today left Saginaw as police ended beefed	-	-
up patrols. But firemen quelled defending Black Pow^. 22 blazes they said were set by
81 25% 25'% 25% -t-
firebombers and arsonists Wednesday, mainly in vacant build-
0 31% 78% 80% +3%
> 25% 25% ..
1 39'% 38% 39% — %
525	35%	35'%	35%	+
4	27	27	27	+
9	38%	38	38	+
15	37%	37'%	37%	+
27	34	35'*	35	+
81	58	57%	51	+
Packaging 25 1
W/» 17 ! 46'/k 46*4% -
29 S0V4 50% 50H +
> 2.60a	48 75'/y 1
Texasinst .60 Textron 1.20 Thiokol .40 TImRB 1.80a TransWAir 1
r 41% — 3
UniV4royal 1.20 UiiltAIrLIn 1 UnltAlrc 1.60 Unit Cp .50g
UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la USGyptm 3a "S Ind .70 I
476	18%	17%	17%	+	%
8	27'/2	27%	2m	*	*'
10	75%	75%	75V4
56	54%	53%	54%
—u—
13	24'/z	24'*	24'/j
84	53	52%	52'/.
3	14 24	24 24
25 50% 50%	50%
21 43% 43<* 43 30 44% 43% 441^ . 107	83'*	BliVk	83	+2'%
90 98'* 97	.........
53	11'/>	11'/x
14 25 21 32'. _ .
85 77'%
18 25 '* 1, „	.
7 34% 34% 34%
32'/i 31% 32'A +1 • “ I 75'% 77	+
25'% 25»A — ..._ 34+	•
54% 54
137 47'* 45'/. 47'% +
10 99V4 98%99'/x +1% 1 8 55 54% 55
Varlan Ajso Vendo Co .50 VaEIPw 1.35
WnrnPIc .50a WarnLamb 1 WashWaf 1.15 WestnAIrL 1 x! WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTal 1.40 WntgEI 1.50 Wayarhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.50 ■■■—iMof 2b Dix 1.50 Woolworth 1 Worthing 1.50
I 47'% 45'% 45%
55 S% +.%
I 30'% 30'% —
7	45	44'%	45	+	%
>	52'*	52Vk
1320% 29'*
X57	3l'%	30Vk	„„	,	..
-	57%	57 5'*7%	+1%
_x—Y—Z—
:orp 1	114 280'* 275Vk 279V% +5
If 1.80	. -
following* ftwlnirta*.*’'
plus stock dlvktand: a-Pald last year.
button data. ^Declared or 'paid ... .his ytar. h—Declared or paid at-,
:s"icc“L«w.rsi2
with dividends In arrears, n—Ntw Issue. ^Pald_ll^ year;
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Disturbances Flare Outstate
Kalamazoo, Albion Upset by Teen Gangs
But Black Power Aid Is Small
Firms Got Negro Prod
ByjgltNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - A general attitude of enmity toward the so-called white power structure; did not prevent, the recent N^ tional Conference on Black j Power from] seeking support of some of thej nation’s larg corporations.
Among" those! solicited for* funcls and delegates were U.S. Steel, Humble Oil and Mobil Oil. None contributed, nor .did the other seven companies that make up the 10 largest industrial corporations in America.
★ ★ *
The 50 corporations that Dr. Natljan Wright, chairman of the Newark conference, claims did contribute apparently did so only to a sm^l extent. Contacted this week, Wright said the maximum contribution was $250 and the minimum $25.
Such sums are small for organizations which included, as Wright said, “some of the largest corporations in the world.” Based on his figures, the total contribution could have have been more than $12,275.
NOT IDENTIFIED
Wright declines to identify the companies because “We don’t want to give the names of any white people who contributed to Black Power.” To do so, he said, “would put them in the position of defending Black Power, and we do not wish to put whites in the position of doing so.”
The reason? “It would be offensive to black people to have
— J in Newark,' said it had received a letter seeking funds but that it had declined to contribute largely oq the basis that the mee^g was segregated.
“We discussed it and decided we wouldn’t make a contribution,” a spokesman said,
★ ★ ★
General Electric received a request for funds, but not through its executive nffice. The mimeqgraphed invitation came to a community relations man and asked for a $250 contribution.
This contribution, the . letter said, would entitle GE to be lis-
More than 60 Negro “peace patrolmen,” saying turbulent youths “can be talked to and possibly be reached,” fanned into Negro areas telling persons |»n the streets to “cool it.”
Five persons had been wound-1 during the night before in Saginaw, a city of 98,000 about 100 miles northwest of Detroilj.
The peace patrol idea caught on, too, in Grand Rapids, Mount Clemens and other cities.
RAIN HELPED Youths tossed rocks and bottles sporadically Wednesday in Grand Rapids, the state’s second largest city. Eight fires broke out, but rainfall during much of the day dampened spirits of any rioters in the West Michigan city of 202,000. As police kept tight control over downtown and southeast sections of Grand Rrapids, members of a racial task force continued urging residents to stay home.
Pontiac police turned over two unmarked scout cars equipped with loudspeakers . to Negro community leaders Wednesday night. With four or more in each car, the patrols fanned out through Negro districts ,of the city of 82,000 northwest of Detroit.
He did say that corporatiohs were not singled out for donations but were merely part of a ivast campaign for funds and delegates Rom organizations such as police departments, antipoverty units and self-styled revolutionary groups.
Though' Wright declined to name the companies which contributed, some obvious possibilities were contacted by this reporter.
Prudential Life Insurance,
DETROIT (APX - The giant General Motors Corp. Wednesday reported a decline in earnings for the second quarter and the first half of 1967,' compared with 1966.
Sales, however, wpre up for the second quarter, compared with the second quarter of 1966.
★ ★
Net income for the second j, quarter was $522 million, equal to $1.82 per share. This com- „ pares with $546 milliori or $1.90 share for the second quarter „ last year.
Earnings for the six months t equaled $9.2 million or $3.17 a ^ share compared with $1.1 bil- | lion of $3.90 a share in 1966.
SALES REPORTS Sales for the secMid quarter, however, hit $5.6 billion, up from $5.5 billion for the first three months of last year. For the first six months of this year, they totaled $10.4 billion, down| slightly from the $11.2 billion in- Executive changes at the the first six months of last year. Community National Bank were However, Board Chairman• announced recently by the Frederic Donner and President [bank's board of directors.
Treasury Position
WASHINGTON (AP)-The cash I the Treasury compared svlth corret-ondlng data a year ago;
July 2t, W........Jut
Balance—
:	a 8,545,845,521.45 8 8,212,598,235.45
Deposits Fiscal Year July 1-
7,407,490,505.19	5,515,028,504.53
Withdrawals Fiscal Year— .
I 10,008,350,277.99	9,792,007,
X-Tofal Debt-
331,231,115,122.57	3I9,348.54I,92»M5
Gold Assets—
“.108,80em90	13,434,000,414.M
-----------1 8251,«J,178.72 debt net sub-
■act to statutory limit.
g^^NES AVERAGES
30 Industrials	......
20 Ralls	!.....
■' ■•tllitles ......
15 Utllll 55 Stock BONDS
50 Bonds .........
to Higher grade ri 10 Second orade r;
. 331.37—054
. oe.oe+0.03
. 71.20 ..
. 81.21+0.1
BOND AVERAGES '■led by The Assaciatsd Press . 20 10 10 10 . 10 ' Ralls Ind. Util. Fgn. L. Yd.
Prev. Day Weak Ago Month ago Year Ago 1957 High 1957 Low High
70.8	91.9	810	91.7	83.3
74.9	92.4	81.7	92.3	V.T
73.0	95.4	84.9	92.4	19.
70.1	91.2	80.9	90.5	83.:
Policy Varies for Services on Viet Dufy
WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Department policy in assigning enlisted men to Vietnam varies among the services and, for instance, permits the Army to send to the war front a soldier with as few as 90 days left in his tour of duty.
On the other hand, the Pentagon said Wednesday Navy er+ listed men are eligible for Vietnam duty only if they still have 16 months remaining in their tour. Naval officers, however, can be sent to Vietnam with just 12 months left in their tour.
•A-	★	*
Although an individual usually will not be transferred from his stateside unit to Vietnam unless he hqs more than six months of his enlistment to serve, the Army will permit transfer of a soldier with 90 days left if his unit is ordered to Southeast Asia.
The Air Force will send an airman to Vietnam if he has at least nine months remaining. It also- will send airmen with as little as seven months left to serve if his iinit is ordered there.
MARINE POUCY A spokesman said the Marines have a nine-month mlnibmm arrangement appily-Ing whether a man goes singly or with a unit.
Except for Marines, whose basic tour in Vietnam is 13 months, other servicemen are assigned to Southeast Asia for basic 12-month periods.
i by The AaMctaM Prm
Change- (to	come
----- (to come)
Prev. Day ....... 473.2
veer'*i8“.;.:;!	449'.o	i«:9	iisj
•*" High ....... 474.3	208,5	159.1	339.v
^ow ....... 413.4	159.4	145.9	292.8
1955 High	537.9	213.9	170.5	359.-
1955 Low	3S8.0	143.9	130.2	259,
Tuatlayd itt Dividends Dtclartd
Pa- Stk. of Pay-Rale ried Record eMe INITIAL
ReYereCop Br n .375	8-10	9-4
REGULAR
Note ... .25 Q 9-5	10-1
... .....Arms .	.15	Q	9-8	9-2)
Burlington Indust	.30	Q	8-4 - 9-1
Cons Edison NY .	145	Q	8-4	9-11
§	tfo	V
Rockower Bros . . .	.10	8	8-1	8-11
Sche^ Corp .......30	Q	14	a-21
Business Notes
John R. Meddaugh of 4451 Motorway, Waterford Township, was inducted into the Intema-
___tional Fellowship of Certified
iS:i iilj sis Cotl®ctions of the American Col-'■	'lectors Association, Inc., at its
annual convention in Minneapolis, Minn. ’The award represents acknowledgment of meritorious service.
GM Reports Earnings Drop
Second Quarter Sales Higher Than in '66
ted as a patron and send a,; ‘‘thinking black American” the conference as a delegate.
NO CONTRJBUTIGN	^
GE did not make a contribu-r;;;:, tion, although the matter never* came before i decision-making body in time for action to be"* taken because the communit:^, relations man failed tq forward the invitation.	♦
Others in the big 10, such asl International Buriness Ma-. chines, Ford, General Motors;; and Texaco were neither so- * liciteci |i(>r did they contributes^ spokesmw for these companies said.
Just because none of the. top 10 industrial corporations supported the conference does not diminish Wright’s claim of as-sistance from industry. ■ Hundreds more corporations can be called major or giant. |
However, the suggestion that there was broad or general support from industry, is mislead- . ing. These corporations, which give millions of dollars each year to various charities, gave only a relative pittance, to the Black Power conference, and some, presumably, only because they were solicited.
On the other hand, it must be said that those companies that . declined to contribute or to send a delegate may not have done so out of animosity toward Black Power. Most corporations have strict policies on acceptable charities.	•
In general, corporate policy usually dictates that a recipient -be associated with the community in which the company operates. Gmerally such contributions involve only hospitals, schools |nd major charitable funds.
Two CN6 Execs Elected Senior Vice Presidents
James M. Roche told stockholders the picture was encouraging. They said the monthly sales trend for new GM trucks and cars was rising, with sales in each month exceeding those of the previous month by margin greater than the normal seasonal increase.
* ♦ ★
Car buyers in increasing numbers are recognizing the extra value of GM products,” the two ,officials said. “In the second quarter General Motors dealers delivered 53.3 per cent of the North American-type passenger cars sold by all dealers in the United States. This figure was up slightly over last year’s 51.7 per cent.
Donner and Roche said sales of personalized cars — the Ca-maro. Firebird, Toronado, Riviera and Eldorado—continued to show the fastest growth. FOREIGN DECLINE
They said car and truck sales in this country and Canada are improving, but that overseas a general decline iii business activity has hurt sales.
Neither executive gave explanation as to why earnings dipped, despite an increase in sales.
Two general vice presidents, Warren H. Eierman and John P.
EIERMAN NIGGEMAN Niggeman, were elected senior
vice presidents.
u
Eierman will be administrator of commercial loans along with other executive and administrative responsibilities. He joined CBN in March 1966, with considerable banking experience in the Blast. Eierman lives at 860 Harsdale, Bloomfield Township.
Niggeman was elected in recognition of a career that has spanned 30 years, during which time he became a leading area mortgage authority and has approved and processed several hundred million dollars in mortgage loans. He lives at 1986 Lakeland, Sylvan Lake.
Successfuhfnvestlng
News in Brief
Lynh^ Sbeffer now Barberlng at 6512 Ha|bhery Road. —Adv.
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “For retired people, would you recommend anything other than savings and loans paying 5-5V4 per cent? No risk can be involved as capital is our protection against old age. Many stocks yield 5V4 per cent but what is to prevent these stocks from declining Mow their, purchase price?” S, S.
A) There is nothing whatsoever to prevent stocks from sellihg at times below their purchase price. All shares fluctuate, sometimes widely. I think you should realize, though, that they can also sell up in price and'that in some situations — such cis utilities — dividend payments are trendings teadily higher.
w '	'
What you don’t appreciate, think, is that there are certain risk? in fixed-income invest-mente that have nothing to do with safety of principal. There is mainly the danger that the real Value of Mvlngs may b6. seriously eroded by ihflatinn, now on the move again. If I were you, I would bajapee the risks to some extentrl- would place half
my funds in savings institutions and half in such stocks as Du-quesne Light which yields 5Vi per cent and has lifted its dividend rate in nine consecutive years. ,	•
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Q) “I am in the 53 per cent income tax bracket and have a substantial stock list, savings and insurance. I am coq-sidering tax-exempt municipals for an investment of $25,-000. Would you make recommendations?” K. M.
A) The yield on tax-exempt municipals has been rising and -is again at relatively attractive levels. An investment of $25,-000 would provide a backlog for your stock list and afford a high taxable equivalent return. I suggest San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit Dist. 4.20s of 1996 at par, rated AA, taxable equivalent yield 8.94 per cent. Also, Dallas Independent School District 3.80s of 1981 at par, ratetf AAj taxable equivalent yield 8.09 per cent. I like also New Britain, Conn., 3.85s of 1987, offered to yield 3.95 per cent, rated AA, taxable equivalent return 8.40 per cent.
(Copyright, 19871