Th$ W§gth§r . V; Go Id water to Fight 1 'mi Antipoverty Bill Clash Due FBI Probing Red Effect in Harlem Riots Dozen GOP Politicians Can't Support Barry 'Now' By The Afisut-iiilcd l*r(tSH Rescue Workers Hunt Victims In Ohio 'Hole Swallows Three A dozen Kepubllcmi pollli« Violence Continues iwlutllng New York's two , . seriBlors, suy ihey cun'l support Throughout Night in OOP nominee Barry .(iolijlwHier ^ Ilk.. k , for president as of now. Brooklyn Negro Area * # # None bolted the party, Nt»ne said he would eampalfin for PrekIdenI .Johnson, Most said yesterdoy they might hack the Arizona sena-tor If lie elarifles or revises his views. A, Itoclu'ltdler of-New York for the OOP . nomination'’, and switched , til (iov. William W, Scranton of fJennsylvanla when Hockeleller withdrew, Barry Claims Measure Only Aims for Votes AKHON, Ohio lAPi A ywing girl, a iwllce-man and a college boy who both tried to res-I cue her wert; presunu'd droWned yesterday in a 40 rooi deep mud hole gouged In a four-lane highway when a sewer line eollapsed during a heavy thui\derstorm More than 100 policemen, firemen ami volunteer workers tolled through the night trying to recover bodies of the three and the car In which the girl had been riding. Their jh>b was complicaled when soil on the iMrs of the crater kept crumbling. A sheet metal easing was constructed at the .scene to be lower^ into the hole by a cran4. Wa.s founded t^y his grmidfather, William O’Neil, Missing were Claudia Shidler, 10; Ronald D, Kotrwck, 28, an Akron policeman for five yeiys; and Hugh M. O’Neil, 19, a Omirgetown University sophomore and .summer employe at Oeneral Tire & Rublier Co, which OTIIKB8 KR.HCUKi> , Re.scued jrom the hole before it enlarged and deejxTied were Claudia’s mother, Velma Shidler. and a nelghlarr girl, ..Janet I„ewis, 1.1, 'Hiey were hospitalized with Injuries. Mrs. .Shidler tokl police she had taken the girls swimming and was driving down the steep hill during the rain, She said she saw the hole in fhe pavement, tried to swerve her compact car, but more pavement caved in under her. O’Neil apparently wa.s on his way to work and stopped to help. His wallet was found near the cave-in artd his car was parked nearby with keys In the Ignition, Rotrudk, first policeman on the iicene, had climbed into the hole on a ladder but along with Q’Nell was sucked under when more Water surged into the cavity gnd caused additional caveln. * NKW YOKK The FBI j.s probing po.ssible ('omnuinisl infliicncc in I ho city'.s , racial violence, which conlinuoil throughout the night in llrook-lyh’.s Negro .section and resulted in the critical wounding of two Negroe.s ' by police. ' Acting. Mayor Paul, H, Scre-vane said the Harlem disorders had been incited In part by "fringe groups, Including / the Communist parly," .Soii.s, .lacob Iv .lavll.s and Kenneth B. Ki'aliitg of New S'l’ATK I'KATI-’ORM York announced their .stands In .Javlts, who Is not up for re-'^ .separalc news conferencos, election Ihls year, said lie Would * * * , work for a slate platform along Boll) supported (iov. Nelson llic lines proposed by Scranton Johnson Is Pushing Legislation as Part of War on Poverty WAlSiiJNGTON (^1*)- A He suggested (hut the FBI agents might investigate the . source of money for some street rallies and for some of the “very {nflammatory . . anti-American . . . ami seditious statements.’’ the FBI investigation began ' on orders from President .John- Saigon Steps Up Pressure Saboteurs Enter N. Viet Nam SAICA)I^Viel Nam igV-Soulh Vietnamese Air Force planes are dropping sabotage teams over Communist North Viet . .Nam and are training to extend their combat operations, the air force commandier said tmay. namese "have radar and very good antiaircraft." Air Commodore Nguyen Cao Ky told reporters at Bie,n Hoa Sw Stories, Pages B‘12, D-5. Ky said he has personally piloted a plane over North Viet Nam and that the raids continue. "We keep very low and they can’t hit us,’’he said. FIRST STATEMENT The remarks were the first ofRcial statement that military operations are being conducted by the Saigon government directly, against North Viet Nam. ’The Conununist Radio Ha- Airfield that Russian-made jets were attrnnpting interception of theflights. He i^eported the North Viet- of trials of “spy commandos" captured iu Bus Service Is Extended Hot Weather Will Continue ' Pontiac Transit Will Stay Throilgh Aug, 31 Downtown Temperatures 6 a.m. .73 11 a.m.. .90 7 a.m. .75 12 m. 90 8 a.m.. .78 1p.m.. .92 9a.m^ 83 2p,m...93 North Viet Nam. The latest trial reported was in April. There have been unconfirmed reports during the past week of stepped-up sabotage activity by vSouth Vietnamese agents in the form of mines and bombing-around the North Vietnamese cities of Hanoi, Vinh, Thanh Hoa and Haiphong. t ★ w ' “I heard of a demolition team that blew up a bridge in the north last week," Ky , said. "They could have gone in by land, .sea or air. Which do you think is the quickest way pf.get-jting them in?” NOT ANOTHER COUNTRY A U.S. advisor at the airpoft said: "Remember, to a lot of these young guys, North Viet Nam isn’t another country. .The border doesn't mean anything to them. It’s more like northern Viet Nam.” , Meanwhile Hslrlcm, * where rioting started .Saturday night iollowing protest rallies over the fatal shwting of a Negro . boy by an off-duty policy ptficer, was relatively,<|uie| last night. FIRE AT iXfO'TER.S In Brooklyn’s Bedford - Stuy-vesant section police fired at looters. Dozens of store windows were broken. About two dozen persons were^ arrested. Mayor Robert F. Wagner cut short a Eufopean vacation -1 because of the violence. loi;ce,s lor a naihaiHl platform at $9(52.5-milHon antipoverly the San Francisco eonvention, i,in j ' He .said he hopes (loldwater will ^ poinU fI t 0 W a r (I d do fK.nienihig to enable him to licacl-on (;JaHh in the Sen-.supporiihe naiionnl llekel. ate today between the KeiiBiiK said he hasn’i de- .lohn.son administration 4'lded If he Will seek ree|e<‘-(lon tliite year, but if he does it will he us oil independent Repiihllenn. . and Sen, Barry *^(Joldwa-trr, tlio Republican pre.si-deiilial nominee. , ftockefeller ha.s .sajd he would niany-sided mea.sure, de- .supiairt the COP llekel. But he iPouneM by (loldwater as de- ^ .sharply crilldzed the statement signed chiefly. to get votes in t-epllng the j,y |>|.i,Hideqt Johnson «s in his spliech presidential nomination. . , ,, j ^ One prominent New York Re *”*’ '* ' * » publiean. State Senate Majority poverty, i.ender Walter J. Mahoney, said ’ a» .Senate Demoeratie l.ead-he expected that "all Republl-cans will.be able to support the Goldwaler-Miller ticket as the campaign unfolds.’’ y HOl.DINO OFF Other Republicans said they are holding off, support of Cold- er Mike Mansfield of Montana called the bill up for action In the Senate, the House Rules Committee planned to resume hearings on a eompaniim measure. Administration leaders were water. They included Gov. John confident the committee would H. He^'d of Maine, Rep. Silvio 0. clear tl* bill for action by the Conte of Massacliuselt.s, Slate B"use.-iit several days of hear-Mv,lty Uader Wim,m POUTICALI.Y SPEAKING ... Senate minority leader F,v«»g»tt l)irk.s'cn, H-Ill,, has a word with Sen. Kenneth Keating, R-N.V. (right), on Capitol Hill yesterday. Keating said he cannot .support Sen. Barry Gofdwater "at this time," but hopes he can do so in the fulufe, Dirksen made Goldwater’s nominating .speech. „ hill reaches the ffouse floor, It E. Uzzard of New Jgrsey. Sen. will face stiff GOP opflositlon. , J. Glenn Beall of Maryland, . i, Mayor Theodore R, McKeldin of Among other thing.s, the Sen-Ballimore, a former governor;' ate bill would establish a job and Hep. James G. Fulton of ‘-‘‘’•’Ps .help, unemployed Pennsylvania. Districting Causes Asks Action Wagner seid he would loqk into Vie report of Communist in- fluence. He said he did not believe federal troops or the Na-tiohal Guard woujd be needed to Flood of Candidates A dapper, nmstachioed officer in his mid40s, Ky advocated immediate limbing of North Viet Nam. Redistricting plans which doubled Oakland County’s'state preserve order. legislative and U.S. congressional representation yesterday Police reportech-a numbbr of brought a flood of candidates to run for. the new posts. ' . burglaries in Harlem, the big Nine candidates of both parties are in the race for the 18th Negro neighborhood in Manhat- and 19th congressional districts, while 78 more will be on the tan, . ' ’ , ballot for the county’s 10 House and four Senate seats. DISPERSE GATHERINGS County ejection officials say they h«ve never seen such a A few shots were fired by large candidate field. - ^ • police to disperse unruly gath- . wiiHe filing tabulations are stlTl being verified. It appears erings, Butihere were no large eyery contest wiR be represented by both major parties in the crowds, demonstrations or any- Sept. 1 primary. , . thing like the weekend rioting ‘ in which one man was killed Competition is keen in the new I9lh Congressional District, A ^ -which was annroved bv the and more than 100 injured. • ' "w^ne^ount^^^^ extends into north- Analysts, Page A-4. In Brooklyn, the trouble start- County, ' / . . .. jiilv 7 bv a 13-2 vote ed after a Blaclc Nationalist Announced Repubhean Candida,/ rtulor L T . . street rally that drew about 500 University staff aide and Pontiac attorney Richard D. try’s/appeal for strong action Coldwater and Tower termed Kuhn,, will face, newcomer William W. Brashear who served acainst the rommimist ^evime measure “a hodgepodge of three terms as mayor of Livonia. • against tne tommumst regime pro|;rams treating only the re- youths obtain new skills and work experience, finance most of the'cok of community programs in such fields as health, welfai^e and vocational rehabilitation, set up a new Volunteers for America Corps to help operate various projects, provide loans and grants to low-income rural families and assist migrant farm families. / Minister criticizes bill Gold water criticized the bill yesterday as "an attempt to / reap political rewards from the WASHlNG-rDN m - Foreign American people^'s natural and i\yt 1 r, i o t ohumane desire to improve the Minister Ign|gio Iribarren Borges of Venezuela presented izens.” - ■” today to the foreign ministers of * ★ ★ the American ^publics his coun- jo|„ed by' Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., in filing a minority report on the bill, Venezuela Cites Terror Acts The Pontiac City Commission last night extended the city’s agreement with Pontiac Transit Corp, through Aug. 31. Under the annual contract-agreement, Pontiac T^ankit provides bus service In thexcitv-The firm announced in May that it didn't plan to remain in Pontiac after the most recent agreement expired at midnight June 30 After seven days of this hot sticky stuff, the weatherman says we have to last until Friday or Saturday before relief comes. Tonight’s predicted low is 65 to 70 degrees. Tomorrow will be a steamer with the mercury hovering around 9j. The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. in the downtown area was 73. “The time is ripe," he said. "We could strike the first day, at least. The second day they would have , their defenses ready, perhapf'I > His air force recently received from the United States an infusion of single-engine, propeller-driven AIE fighter-ambers, whose renge Is»approbate to bombing North Vietnamese tar-(Continued 6n Page 2, Col. 3) Firecrackers exploded in the crowd and many people scattered in panic. More than iOO police moved in to quell, the disturbance. T^ey ■fired more than 150 shots in the air. Bottles were thrown. Store windows were broken. Subways were ordered to skip the Franklin and Nostrahd street stops for a time. (Continued on Page 2, Col, 4) suits, not the causes of poverty.” ’ ; Beat the Clock in Race that agreement was extended once already, for a month. Last night’s notion was the second extension. “We are doing this so that our new city.manager (Joseph A. Warren) will have a chance to study the situation, and talk with bus company officials,” said Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. In Today's Press Pneumoiiia Fells Prince Venezuela contends that guerrilla, terrorist 'and espionage And they said that “whatever agents of the Fidel Castro re- its professed purposes, it seems gime^ have carried out numerous designed to achieve the single acts jif • aggression against the objective of securing votes.” government of Venekela. MAJORITY REPORT Venezuela’s accusations were ^ *u • •< u s .. .. m contrast, the maionty re- diiite? Of L Iribarren told the conference selves to the elimination of that despite all inter-American rivation and dependency im Singapore Island Curfew restores order after racial rioting — PAGE A-9. Warren is not slated to officially assume his post until Aug. "'■3.' declines RENEWAL Pontiac lYansU- declined from . renewing the agreement for another year-dn the basis of operating losses in the past few State Economy . * I How well has Michigan-recovered from 1959 slump? - I Page B-6. ‘ *'1 ■ ■ ■ . , ■ Candidates. File Office-seekers in 24 area townships file petitions — J ;^Page B-18. By ALLEN PHILLIPS Today the sun shone brightly and Reno "Varahi’s faith was rekindled over the prospect of being a politician. Yesterday he looked like a man liit over the head with a voting machine. His calm was shattered when he strolled into the Oakland treaties and other agreements land County Clerk’s office. He stopped to chat and ask directions. “ nothing will have been achieved “I even stopp^ in Mrugstore on the way do4i and killed X ABERDEEN, Scotland (UPI) minutes. I thought! had until 4:30 to ^ / (the foreigf ministers confer- — -prince .--Charles, 15-year-old • But when Re{)ublican Varani ambled over to the election ence) does not decide^.tp apply heir to the British throne, was clerk’s office to file nomination petitions for the State Senate a collective rupture of diplo- ^ricken today with pndumonia, bearing 400 signaturfes, he stared at a closed door. matic and consular regulations it was. announced. It was slammed shut at the lawful filing deadline of 4 p m with the government of Cuba The prince was admitted to a Varani’s watch showed one minute after the, hour. , • and the interruption of all qom- nursing home here. Officials merdal and communication with described his condition as not . <.0,,* t.„„ ........ that country ” / serious. campaign/staff lined up and all my print:^^ ^ x / The prince,' eldest, son* of ‘But I’ve got my campaign/staff lined up and all my print-‘laest son of ^^00 t6 run in this campaign,” mourned - , „ Queen Elizabeth ?nd Since 191K»^Nadol, Southfield, who hoped to. run in the 15th ^usk, U.S. Secretary yueen liiizaDein and Fr nee District. / " of State, is to address an afti Area News ..... B-10 Astrology . ... .. C-10 Bridge ...........C-10 Comics .......... C-19 Editorials .. I.. A-8 Markets’ll..I,D-5 .................. D-8 Short Story ...........B-8 Sports ............D-2-D-4, Theaters........R-12, B-13 j TV & Radio Programs D-13 \ Wilson,Earl ........LjD-W | 'Wblnen’i noon session. wtaien’s Pages .1 Philip,' was camping with other, . boys from his school, Gordon- Elections officials/listened sympathetically, saiS they stoun, on the Balrtioral royiil do nothing, an^ advised him to see a lawyer. .-onnection with the meet- estate when he was stricken. “i may have beeri late,” pleaded Varani,“but I actually was ing, some 5,000 Curtin exiles Notic».^*rty u known that pickad up' the Clerk’s (outcr) officcf at 4 o,’clock. We’ll see about thisl’t came here and stajsra a march . ’' ®®ck he came today, clutching ai^ affidavit of what time he -yesterday as a /demonstration Return to.'nddrtjs » on driver'* license, attived- in the /Clerk’S Office along with his - petitions. Clerk- in favqr of afctiqi/against Castro. Register David R. Calhouft/accepted Varani’s story And! ordered Some of Ihem^dt into a 1 clash' I^is name ]|l^ed on the primary ballot. ; ^ with police. / ~TeMRtlN ter, PROSECUTOR /- Ettfrerience.i— Integrity . I ' ' I/./; ■A/ /.r. M m A kPt ‘-V' ^ 1 T"f| . I \ > / V - "II ,IMI' n' ‘ ;/7 ivi' ' ■' TIIK. rONTlAC IMIKSS. WKDNKSIVAV. *M'I V HJW Festival Entrancf OAKLANd) UKilVIRSITY IXIT NOJf. C«A|k| li«m lh« i*uih, iht 0«M«n<| Uni«*«ii)y tiil« m>. X' I II f ,|«||„ •tit tint #.11 mtilitit RtthtHii Appel latejCouli Draws Hopefuls 'Whsi l§ b^liig t<«lN lh# for.I hn unoffiolal tiibul«(loi) (MimPNi III iliii -inll pliti' «f c'amlltlHlttti Wlln« lo l•llf).ll1 'll' Hilt nilw Kliiln ('fiiirl ' uiKili of II... • li..l.i.. tioiiN, fill' Hut nitw iSlniit Court ot A|)|ittii)N, wtittii'i ovorlookitd itf/ ihimu HiiukiiiK Jti(lt{('Hlit|iN. Many Entered for Fall Vote it’onlinueil Kroni I’ant* ()1iim iHudlnK aiu'ii of tlio I'oiirt'ii ^iiroe a jiuttitt dlNtrictjR aa. Hier - Tuscola Circuit Judge Timothy Quinn; William Ross, St, Clair Shores; Donald Sergeant of Pleasant Ridge, and ^Thomas Kivanaijigfi of Birmingham. both atiotneys, and Monroe Circuit Commissioner Wil- After midnight tomorrow, no | one will have “exclusive" right.s i to develop any available urban renewal lands In Pontiac. proval of local ami federal urban renewal ufficluls and city eommissioners to buy a parcel hounded by Wide Track - Orchard Lake Avenue Land In the city’s R20 and; and .South .Saginaw. R44 renewal projects will be up for sale to any interested developers. iial standpoint,’’ be said, “the A&P plan for parking space Is wa.sleful,” Land will be sold , to whoever offers the best price and submits the most suitable development plan for any given site. That .sale was. contingent on Langs building an A&l* .Supermarket and shopping ceiilef complex as proposed in plans he submitted for the center early this year. •NO SUBSIDY’ Langs addtHl, “i don’t think Hie city or myself should be expected to subsidize A&P.” Langs referred to the super-■ market officials demanding that 4,000 stfuare feet of space be reserved for future building expansion. Democratic Assistant Seere-i lary of Slate Frank J. Sleraw-^1 ski will take on the prij winner. SENATE DISTRK In the four courtly State Senate districts, cjmdidates are: 14TH DISfRICT Republi- ('andldatei (or the nonpartisan Vourt will face a primary jiinoff Sept. I, •ylth the. field In fneh of the three • judge' districts ciiHo six eandldater (or the Nov. 3 general election. / ' TO IIOUNK UltnARY-~Now taking Sha|)0 on the west side Xtf ’t'elograph south of Mmg Lake Road is the Peterson Building which Will contain the new Hlwimfleld Township Library. 'I’he facility, covering the ehttre first level of the building, Is expected to be 0|>ened by (all. The Im-atlon will be used* until a library can be built on the site’at the curler of Echo and-Long I.4ke. Known Names in County Vote Many Incumbents for September Ballot l,lsts of candidates filing yesterday for Oakland County offices included familiar Incumbent names but also mime sure to puzzle voters in the .Sept I primary. nmr rninru j i - Re|itfer TOe election will be the first W history for (he court, which fGt?Hlgh Prescott and WagOnsc Langff.has sined .submillod In a reiolutiom adopted unani- ''®''''**'** development plan for mously last night, the City Com- which urban renewal mission gave notice that the official.s both find un- city’s agreement with Charles I fweptable, according to George L. Langs of Waterford Township expires at midnight tomorrow and won’t renewed. Under the contract adopted July 23,1963, Langs was given exclusive rights to purchase urban renewal lands for which he could subnUt Suitable construction plans during a. one-year period. LAND PURCHASED During that fime, the developer purchased land on East Pike at Douglas and Parkhurst on which he soon expects to begin construction of m^els for a proposed 65-unit town hpuse-typr development. / He also had been givj ri. Wilhelmi, assistant urban renewal director. Mayor William H, Taylor told Lahgs that “this land wds optioned to you on thp-'^basis of the plan already approved by urban renewal dnd us uiider your present agreement with the city. 'agonschultz; Demi seph F. Mullaney, earthy and-A. E^allier. ISTH, DISTRICT Republi: can — C^Ray Ballard, RoWt Maxw^/George W. Kuhn and Tom Rowley; Democrat ~ San-dep'M. Levin, Charles T. Nolan ' I J' tv by the new Slate Cort- L, WpsHund. Paul M. Chandler, jditutlon. .' y and X a r I lOcw — Jo--James Me- At the same lime only candidate, Pmbate Court Judge Norman R. Barnard, c.a m through without opposition an will not have hla name entered In the primary, inenmbent Clerk I David R. Calhoun filed, Ax did j Daniel T. Berry on Republican tide, along/Witli Demo--' I rratx John D>' Murphy and I DoVis M, ^ck who all seek h|s offkiA.^ ’, The/finmes Berry and Barry ir twice more. Seeking rejection Is Republican Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry, unopposed within his parly. Nine candidates filed petitions for the huge, 66-county 'Third District, and the Kim District, which is composed of Wayne P|ttractcd seven ^ m'mo dates (or the office. ‘“^force a primary, Birmingham Ar«a News Two Veteran Politicians Vie in Bloomfield Twp. olltlcal veterans -i- Amo /. Abbott and John B, Rum- BLuloui purehoM-go lb covaring •Uabliihmant ond you'll SM thii covering priced ol $1.29. per yard and more. No. »kid, liet. Oat, vre'H c^f lice up to 25 yord*'-you'lt find to mony uMi. procti-colly litoime weoring gual-ity loo. No Itntit.' . Heavy v^nyl floor covecingi hove io many uMS: oi car mpti, tiair runners, counter, lops, shelf liners, hollvyoy runnersi door mots', ond yoo'lf find hundreds of otl|ier uses. Choice of 11 briliiOnl colors. Soveiet Simms. S!MfAS25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE ' 11 LI.....liL TIIK l’ONTIAC I’llKSS. WHIINKSDAV, ,)I'),V aa. nidi , ^ ,1,;. ' it' ^ NO SHOPPING TRIP IS C O rVI P L E T E WITHOUT A VISIT TO SIMM’S Be At SIMMS TOMORROW 12 NOON til SL fir Bifgest Sole of the Year TIIK- I‘0NT1A_C rRl|SS. WKDNKSDAV. iUlT n, IHO^ MOMENT OF REVERENCE - With tourists looking on. President Johnson stands before the grave of John F. Kennedy for a moment of private prayer yesterday In Arlington National Cemetery, The President made the atop \yhile driving back to tbe While Hcaise from ^ Pentagon ceremony. Flanking the ^ave, topped by the eternal flame, are the graves^ ,of an infant aon and daughter. Proposed at OAS Meeting Hoffa Attorneys Ridi in Attempt for Fraud Conviction (UPl) — Defense |2IPmtlllon WlrirJlS'' prosecutor as "overaealoui" ....... Itfed." gnd "rtfldgult T h r e «• ittomeyi presented their cbsing artpimenta yest«r< day and the four others were expected to wind up their arguments today. The marathtm case appearwl to l»e heading /Till' 1.1m* jury lomorrow, , The” seven defendants arc eharged with fraudulently obtaining the Its mUIliMi from I'eunste^ union pension funds and divertiiif |l.7 mllllott ef the nmount Into their own | P«K?keto. Clitof government prosecutor William 0. BIttman, who replaced ChariM Z. Smith Oiree weeks after the case opened iaai April, was aharply crltlclxed .by defense illon»ey Frank Ra->n,no. ilfji type of case cannot he Erosecutod by a gentleman," agano told the Jurdrs. "Mr, Smith is a gentleman, WHdt they needed here was someone ag. gresitve who could place a featluMr In hts cap and becroma knos^ nationwide and go all the way to Washington to the Jue-ttce Department.'^ ' Ragano, representing defendant Benjamin Dranow, said BIttman was an "oventoilmis" and "misguided prosociflor," "ft requires morul fiber, couruge and |>rliiclple to htok Mr. lilUman In the eye and . return a not gullly verdict," Rugano told the Jurors. Alao giving their closing ar- guments yesterday wera attor-my» for defendants Samuel Hy- man and Zachary Strata. Attorney George Cotslrlloa described Hymen as "a poor man — not a poor man financially ™ but a poor man to have to sit In this eoui:troflm three months and be dragged by the out net the government threw out In an attompl to drag everyone Inlo it." Sanctions Would Cripple Cuba Economy (EmOWS NOTE-Forelm minintm oJ the member notions of the Organization of American States are meeiiim here this week to consider economic action against Communist Cuba. The possible effects and the reasons and background for such action are discussed in depth by John M. Hightower, the AP's Pidit-zer Prize-winning reporter of world affairs.) y. By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (AP)-The Organization of American Statea Is expected to ask all non-Communist nations this week to Join In a new crackdown on trade with Cuba. Should the bid be even partially successful, Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s creaky econo- fott the products of European cmintries trading with Cuba. And since they need to buy many of the satinet) things that the Cubans reqiilre. those companies Interested to Cuban tfade might be faced with the loss of rnni kets more Important-than those they could gain by opening up commerce with Cuba. ADD DIFFICULTIES * U S. officials say that their policy of trying to Isolate! Cuba from, the supplies of non-Com-munlst industrial countries Is responsible for some of the severe difficulties which Castro now has to deal with. They estl- ws Ahalysm my undpubledly would suffer serious new damage through the denial of badly needed imports. Cuba’s railway system Is reported to be In a crippliftg state of disrepair. Trucks and buses are urgently required to replace worn-out highway - transport. People stand in long, slow-moving lines to buy food at the stores. The price of gasoline,, which Cuba reportedly gets only from Soviet sources, is up to 60 cents a gallon as against 34 cents a ' year ago. Production of sugar, Cuba’s big export crop,, is, off ' more than 25 per cent. -VUNERABLE FRONT In the judgment of Secretary of State Dean Rusk and some of>. the other Western Hemisphere foreign meeting here this week, the Castro regime is vulnerable Ott its economic front. To them it makes sense to seek to apply new pressures among the punitive measures proposed for adoption because of Castro’s ' support of terrorist activities in Venezuela last year. But the trend in Cuban trade with non-Corrlmunist countries is now upward, after declihing for four years. Britain and France have broken with Washington’s policy of economic boycott in order to sell transportation equipment. Other European alltos may fallow this lead. CASTRO’S BROTHEIJl-Ilaul Castro, Cuba armed forces minister spoke 'at a funeral yesterday for a Cuban killed by U.S. Marines at the Guan- tanamo base bo^er. He said the U.S. wfS trymg to provoke Cuba into attacking the base. The first question faced by the United States and other Western Hemisphere nations, therefore, is whether they can arrest this Upward trend in Cuba’s Non-Communist trade and start it declining again. ITie proposed new move to tighten the economic n around the , Castro regime would not mean any change in U.S. policy. This country has had a total embargo on trade with Cuba- since February 1962 except for food and medicine. The Unital States also has pressed a dlplomatil^ cahipaign to get alii^ and friendly; countries around the world to cut their Ck:ban trade to the bone, This .effort has been only partially successful. NEW PROPOSAL ; ’The' new proposal, however, woirfd put an inter-American sanction behind what has been primarily a; United States drive no far, and Washington officials, believe this could ha^ve one IMWctkal result. It could Burning Ship Is Under Tow 25 Crewmen Safe After Ditching Vessel NEW YORK (AP)-A French ore carrier towed a burning French freighter toward the Azores Islands today after rescuing the 25 crewmen from lifeboats in the Atlantic. The Coast Guard said, there was no report of injury to any of the men on the freighter Marquette. - " Fire broke out Tuesday on the Marquette,^ the Coast Guard said, and was still burning to- tfey. The t,800-ton freighter was 795 miles east-southeast of Cape Race, Nfld., when it radioed: "Fire aboard, abandoning ship.’’ «> The ore carrier Pentellina i^ped to the burning ship and radioed that all the crewmen were safe qboard the rescue ship.' .....♦ The Marquette was enroute from'^Montreal to Lisbon with a cargo of calcium.i phosphate, wood pulp and aluminum ingots. ’The freighter, owned by the Fabre Lines, was operating out of Marseilles. The Coast Guard said the 544-. foot Pentellina was en route to from mole that the level of Cubw\ economic- activity Is about 20 per cent below that of 1958, the year before Castro took power: They .say studies of living standards in iHiba also show a 18, per cent drop In the Cuban food diet, . ' ■ *, No one here claims, however, that, the boycott policy is wholly responsible for Castro’s Ills. Officials put a considerable' share of the blame on what they call Castro’s mismanagement of Cu-, ban affairs ahd bis determined effo'rt to remake the country along Communist lines with highly organized central planning and elimination of Individ-uallnctoitlvea. Nor does any responsible offh Clal In the U.S. government, claim that economic stresses; alone have created any ifcrlou.s threat to Castro's contml of! Cuba. Those most fa’mlllar with conditions Inside Cubk say that hi.s power appears to be solidly entrenched and strongly supported by an elaborate network of police and Informers so that he is able to deal ruthlessly with | any Incipient opposition. I OLLIE FREHER HAS THE DEAL ^^FRETTER NEEDS YOUR BUSINESS? Because EVERY Customer Gets a transiStOf radio free!* ■ OLLIE FRETTER PLUS PLUS PLUS PLUS PLUS 217 New Lower Discount Prices Now! 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WI<:i)NM'.snAV. .m'LV al |(MI| Al* PIiMMik UV1N(i IliOII - A painter in IndianapollN, Ind., John Arnold, getH “high dollar" for hla painting Job on the 8tato (Wlea Muilding, and every day ho llvoa It up, Scouts Enjoy Rainy Japanese Dance VAUJCV Komii':, p»«, (Ai>)™ We didn't moan to do n rnin dance," HidesHburn KuruHhima, a Doy Scout from Tokyo, Japan, aatd aa Ihunderahowers soaked some 1)2,000 boy^s watching a world talent show at the sixth NntlonnI Hoy Scout Jambohe, Kiirushlmu and 17 oUut Jopo-nesa scouts dressed^ In shoe-length kimonos danced and iHiwed on the .lOO-pKtt grass' stage at historic Valley Pdrge ns the rains came down "Don't worry," Karh8unnnr Krldmnn, of Stockholm, ,Swo-don, Interjuctcd, "wo like It," The riine scouts he brought put) on a life-saving demonstrations. . - ALMOST UNMOVlNd A Canadian troop, attending the show, put 'on by 7110 scouts froth 42 foreign (.'(tunirles, ^at almost upihovlng In the big open air arena tmd let the rain soak Iheir clothoM laic Tuesday, "Why slHMdd wo move and run for cover?" asked Tom Tltompson of Cdhtnirg, Ontario. "We were watting for this i for six days," It was a real inlernalional gathering—A "Jolly good show," sold one of England's Iti scouts, Boys of all notions, of all races,' of -all rellglphs, of all shapes mixed- atid swapped, |)artlculnriy, handshakes. TIut 'Spoke of frleodshlps, not polj. tics, NAN(I .SUNOS ■ Two scouts frtan Jordan sang a song,,and t'wo boys from ls> rael llslened and applauded, Taly Sllher, 17, Jerusalem, Jhen sang, too. I r ■ There was a habbth of strange sounds as scout's across the world scnghl to find the words each could understand, Joe Dobccker, 211, Zavenlcni, Helgliun, said, "Tlie frlohdllness and hospllnllly of America 'is tremendous, We like the (lutd(s)r cooking nnd the icf crenm host," , ('omiherclul production of leal It was first imad# Iq Baltijnore, ‘n*am (lutes hack to IflBi when \ Md,, In a hand-eranked fraaaer. l.asi year 1,521) leslaut'anh, Ip IhiH country went liaiiknipl. JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARfS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 Marine's $10,000 Blast Penalized for Party PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Marine Pvt. Daniel Chldester was #n route back to Camp Lejeune, N.C., today with a warning to mend his ways — and his parents' tlQ.OOO rug. Chldester was arrested Sunday and charged with keeping a ' disorderly house after neighbors complained that a continuous. Ihree.OR 3^1207 ‘f. a .'/'a 'i'. to Osmunds! He can't afford to miss the Savings during our great annual JULY CLEARANCE Sale! Once every summer we adjust our large inventory of clothing and accessories to, make ready for the next seasonal change. What does this mean to you? M-O-NiE-Y! Plus the Osmun's extras... like NO CHARGE for alteratipns... Our flexible Charge Plan... LOTS of FREE PARKING... America's greatest name brands. Hurry! Sale is on right now. 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'TIL 9 . • Tel-He^fii Ijtonler EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9 • TECH PLAZA in Worrgn ,4-4541 gyERY NIITE 'TIL 9. 755-1400 THE PONTIIC rililSS . 4IWflU Maw««» N. tf pMutlVt Viet i>r«»ldan auilnita WKDtvtr H»»«T J, Bi»» WieONKSDAY, JULY n, IM4 «d.ior ■ run tHam-ww aU’«itlntlQi» Mdi\a«r , Pontlic, Michlgin John A, HiiiT Hit-and-Run Drivcre a Menace to Society lilt run driver s always been eoi^sldi^rpd (’owards, ftiul ,a dangfrous menare to socbMy. ll'»w Ihpy can U?ave ihc scene of an ac cident without knowing whether they could be of assistance Is hard for US to understand Just such an accUlcnt happened over the I weekend at Pontiac Lake when a water skier w^is run down by a,hit-and-run power craft. The man was badly hurt with both arms aevet'ely cut, yet th_e boat operator who passed over him stopped about ued on. The Innocent vlelim could well not believe In evolution. have drowned without the use of I his arms. Also, fast assistance by the boat operator In aettini; him ashtVe and Id a doctor or hospiliil might well have lieeii the difference between life and death. 1964 Campaign Will Reflect Era Apparently the skipper of the boat was afraid to face the fact that he had hit someone In water. Fortunately, the water skier, who was waiting to be plcJced up when he was hU,. is recovering In a Detroit hospital.* , * » Lt. Donald KRATT^of the Oakland County sheriff’s office water safety division, Is conducting a full-scale investigation. Anyone with Information concerning the hltrrun craft should report It immediately to the sheriff’s office. Everyone enjoying our lakes has a right to be protected. Undoubtedly the accident was unintentional, yet at* the same time assistance should have l>een offered promptly. Hit-run drivers on water or the highways should be apprehehded and * punished. Who knows? You may be their next victim. By .lAMRS MAtd.OW A»i«K‘l»led PrcHtt NewA Analyst WASHINGTON - This year’s election campaign -■ including the candidates and the Issues - reflects the peculiar period In which Americans are living. There has been nothing like it for Dfi years. Compared willi years gone by, this is a pros-, pepous and franqnil period, Because it is. Americans now have the luxury of lime ftrr .self-examination, .si'lf-crilicism and internal hostilities. Tliere has been no such time since liefore llie ira markel cru.sh. Then came ttie year.s of depres- MAUI.OW .slon, despair and fright, the nt*,w programs Of President Franklin 1). Roosevelt and the gratitude for his leadership as expressed in the 19.16 election which gave him every, .state but two. liefore the depression was over, and before Roosevelt’s third eleetlon, the United Stales had moved into the anxiety and the preparations of the years Just before World War If, Then .there were the war years. Americans, Russians, Plan Dual Track Meet After thepi—the years of reconversion to peace, the stunning realization that theua-lion had only moved from a hot war Ho a cold one, the reported crises created by communism,«the Mar.shan Plan, the Berlin blockade, the Commuhist takeover in dhina, the formation of NATO, the Korean war,* the nucleaiirace with the Soviet Unjon and the agony of internal ^suspicion in the Mc-qarthy *‘Thls Is not going |to be a friendly joust," advises the coach who will guide the U.i^. track and field team In a dual meet with the Russians at Los Angeles this Saturday. According to Sam Bell, both squads will be- "going all out’’ at the sixth American-Soviet track meet. The ^?oviet - American dual track meet.s began in 19,58. No meet was held in I960, an Olympic year, and one can wonder about the logic of holding such an event only 11 wjeeks before the start of the 1964 Summer Olympics at Tokyo. But the Los Angeles affair is a final tune-up for the big event, and scouting expedition by both adversaries, y Our men’s team never lost to the Russians in a dual event. But the margin in last yearns confrontation at Moscow was a narrow one—119 to il4. The Soviet’s women’s team, The years that fc^llowed the years of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, were not tran-, quil. These were the years of the missile race, of the probings of Nikita Khrushchev, of new nations emerging, All of them were uneasy years. NOT EASIER FOR KENNEDY They did not become easier when Presii dent John F. Kennedy took over. Khrushchev tried him out, too, with the Berlin wall, nuclear' testing, missiles in Cuba, It was only after Kennedy forced a showdown with him in Cuba that some tranquility began.^ . ■ - ;" , ■ This coincided with the disintegration ' of unity in the Communist world. The keds turned their energies and hostilities inwards, criticizing one another. It was then that a comparatively peaceful period for this country began. True, there is still Castro’s^ communism in Cuba' and. the war in 'Viet Nanj is going anything but well. But neither directly menaces the safety of thie United States, which at last isf beginning to feel secure, behind an armed strength greater than anything the Communist world can muster. ★ ★ ★ Now, with crisis absent and tension eased and the country fairly prosperous,/Americans have more time to examine themselves, criticize themselves, express their discontent with themselves. of course, has won decisively over cug^opiAN OF* PROGRAMS its American counterpart ea,ch time. ★ ★ ★ For home consumption, the Russians certainly will be able to claim victory by combining the men’s and women’s scores. By fostering mass participation in athletic programs, the Soviet Union is developing an ever-expanding wealth of top-flight athletic talent. The Russians are working doggedly to catch up with America in the few remaining phases of international athletics where they trail. What it boils down to is this: I To be a sports hejo in the “army ! of Soviet sportsmen” is one of the highest honors a Russian can ^' achieve. Outside of a few sports, iMiiRg a fine athlete,in America *'cdkfers little iitatus. T^^re ha.Sif President Johnson ip a very real sense is the custodian of the program, at home and abroad, built up since 1929 and he is intent oh adding new ones, particularly in the social welfare field. Sen. Barry ’ Goldwater, the Republican ,,nominee, represents the forces which have long been discontent with those programs particularly the enormously enlarged role of the federal government in life of the nation over these past 35 years. Much of the campaign may be concentrated in that area. * - •’ . I ★ ★ • V But it is only ba^au.se the country is now’ rich, and at last trianquil, if only temporarily, that those whd.,share and oppose Gold-water’s view of America and the world have a chance to express their feelings. V^irbal Orchids to- Mrs. Sarah Eaton of 1200 N. Telegraph; 85th birthday. Mrs. Blanche O’Neil ; of 12(10 I^/TJpIegrapH; 82nd/birthday. >'■*' IV ' \ / "loico of the People; . ’ 1 ■ ■// hfcii no niilloiuil rqmmiimenl tp alhiHic excellenre harc. Homo Hpoi'ta orfl(*lal« would m(hcr tlio Uiiilcd HlalcN »l,ap|it*(Uout Of in* tmuiUoiiul compelillou Uuin aca Mu* (lovi'-miupul taka ii luincl in luilJdmg amutnii' KporLs. ★ ★ ' * Fair cnougli, but it should sui-prtsa no one if America’s traditional dominance of trftclft and field slips away forever at Los Angeles or Tokyo, We h0{>a not. '1 /■, Readers Praise Support of Goldwater Nomination It Is difficult to understand how a person can watch the doings at .......................nomlntiMiig conventions, on the a 100 feet away and then contln-^ scene or via television, and still Thanks for the big thrill from the editorial on the nomination of Goldwater In The Pontige Press. It is the first break in the murky overcast that has oin scured the real Issues In the present campaign. Lwlsh there was a way that this editorial could bo reprinted in every newspaper In the United States. We admire the courage jind penetrating analysis of the true situation. Thanks again. F. W, STEEHE 4230 SOUTH SHORE RD YpUr 8 u p p 0 r t. of Sen, Barry M Goldwuler’s candidacy for President of tlje United States is in the American tradition and the finest and most positive, statement I have read on this great and most Impor-V I ant Issue of our times. PAUL A. KERN JR. ORCHARD LAKE The afnsi amazing thing about Goldwater'a support Is the fact R. comes from the hitherio silenl aiul uiwpoken grasa-rooU «et*lor*, Hie "common people’' want Goldwater m tlicy never wanted any pregidentiai candidate in lialf a century. He truly rcpretenlx tliem flrsl. He put.s t)lg bu»ine»«, unlona, Isms and everything else l)ehlnd the needs of this great and unapoken sector that has no champion. RAYMONDS. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages ‘Romney Will Be Loser If He Bolts’ And Aivay ^ It Goes Th$ Cherryvale (Kan j Republican { (or their' (avor. Republicans under Lincoln gave the Negro his (reedom, and now the Demiierats have put him back Into pert.v with •signs in front. However, we still have'bicycles, scooters, motorbikes, and on one oeeaslon a forelp car. (Pontlacs,. okay, but no foreign Jobs!* My wife has been cussed and insulted, my kids abused and chased, toys are u>ken. litter and trash are thrown about. If I'm to be known sS a nice fellow. Pm supposed to continue ,to. endure this, Well, peoplil! can call mo an "old crab” We shouldn't (ao(bphan’t) have to endure this from anyow. RONALD E. FRICK WATERFORD Wants to Outlaw Interest on lAians The Government should help people by outlawing interest on loans and house.f It's Just a racket, and I will .vote (or the man who does something about it. . ' . ' . , . J. S. • " 13 WILLIAMS ’ Bfdances Ticket The Chicago American 2. The persistent move away from constitutional government. For 10 years the,,Su-"preme Court has been making its own laws in disregard of rather than in protection of the Constitution of the United Slates. The once highly regarded checks and balances now fail to function. Neither the Presl-dent nor the Congress has made any serioUs move to curb the out-of-balance pow-, er of the judiciary. . And the rights of states to handle many of their own problems, Is being utterly destroyed by the high court’s repeal of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. 3. The rapid rpove to completely centralize government. Tlie civil rights bill does smash the door to .private enterprise '^nd allows, the federal government to tell a small business hojv to operate. With the harpers down other restrictions will, follow. The nomination of Rep. William E. Miller Jr., N.Y, as Republican Vice Presidential candidate completes the Assurance that the coming presidential campaign will be excltlrtg. Miller, a political fighter, will comidement Barry Goldwater, a political fighter. Healthy Situation Say Majority of Voters Want Tqw^r The, Craig (Colo.) , Empire-Courier Seems like the only way to kepp healthy iq fo cof what you dod't want, drink what you don't like, and do what you'd rather Why is only a small minority making so much noise over the water tower if it is the monstrous injustice they would have us believe? The niass of township voters are'strongly in favor of thp tower. Is this minority going to,(Mitshout the rest? , The petition to recall Mr. Seeterlin and Mr; Coleman indicates this has become a personal matter. The township board is to W commended for the fine job it is doing amidst the heckling. May they continue to do as well in the future. - R. FRANCIS SIES JAMES E. SHELTON WATERFORD — Apologi2es for Behavior qf Delegates Bob Considine Says: Barry Faces Joblessness If He Loses to Johnson I was ashamed of Republican delegates during much of the convention, but especially of the total lack of good manners and self-control when Governor Rockefeller spoke, there was no excuse for such behavior, whether or not one agrees. More display of the Golden Rule would not be amiss. Rockefeller spoke in good faith and I’m sure many Republicans would like to join me in saying: “I’m sorry for the incident." • MARION C. HARCOURT 491 JORDAN ROAD WASHINGTON - John F. Kennedy once laughingly com- 1 he left presi- plained that ^ dential office he would be "too young to write my memoirs, and too old to start a new career.” Rarfy M. i Goldwater may ] find himseif in i a similar f i x, cONSIDINE ed: "And to tell you the truth, that might be the sheriff’s job. I’ve always sorts’ hankered for that.’’ A World War If flyer who still pilots everything from private planes to big military transports, his age would .rule Out a pilot’s job with a commercial airline. He could presumably return Deplores Damage by Gravd Trucks Why is the law so' lax about uncovered sand and gravel trucks? Many of these use Sashabaw Road every day. ■ it. ★ ■ Four times my car has been damaged by flying stones, even forcing me off the road. Mmage the last time consisted of two broken headlights, pits all over Ithe windshield and ; chipped paint. And I was driving,in the opposite direction, not behind the truck. ★ ■ ★ I wonder ho!w many others have reported this offense and retd jhe Goldwater stores which eeived no help, as I have, even with license number and name, he once managed, but' his Let’s do something about this. Not long ago the/high court told a county in Virginia to levy taxes to run public schools, not because there was one iota of constitutional authority, but because a majority of nine ap-p 0 i n t e d, be-robed justices thought it was the right (hing to do. This makes ours a government of men,..not laws. It took generations of blood and sweat and tears to establish a government of laws. if he loses the presidential election to Lyndon B. Johnson in November. For the first time since he younger brother, Bob Goldwa- ” ter, now has that job since they were sold to a big chain. MRS. NEIL J. STALKER DRAYTON PLAINS .-....V. »—.... Barry’s a real camera bug quit college at the end of his who delights in snapping photofreshman year to work in the graphs of unsuspecting friends Pontiac Traffic Deaths Alarm Reader ★ ★ ft is too much to expect • that Barry Goldwater or any one could reverse these dangerous trends in one campaign, but Senator Goldwater can remind the bewitched citizens that these trends do not create or protect individual rights^ but destroy the hard-to-«ome-by rights of individ-'^ uals and the vitality of a nation. If the Goldwater campaign should stop the frantic efforts ,by the two parties to buy N^o voters of this nation by outbidding lehch other ^ ■ r i: iV’/' A;v;; 74 /7 family . owned Goldwater department-stores, he .would be unemployed. The Arizona senator has already pledged not to do las LBJ did four years ago: run for two offices simultaneously.. He has bowed out of the con-•test for senatorial reelection, to concentrate on the presidential race. In explaining why he considers it “dishonest” to seek both national and state office at the same time, he once told this writer; “If I did that, what would prevent me from also running for sheriff? Then, if I got elected to all three, I could accept whichever one I wanted most J’ LOPSIDED GRIN With -a lopsided grjn he ad^ and taking pictures of the wild, craggy scenery of his beloved Arizona, his artistic shots of mountains, desert and Indians were recently collected into a handsome book which sold for $1,500 each, to raise campaign funds. Perhaps his best bet for, a, second- career would be in photography. ^ I’m alarmed at the 53 traffic deaths in Pontiac for the 5-year period ending in 1963. Comparable Michigan cities don’t approach this number. The answer is either poor drivers or poor traffic control, , or both. Pontiac could get rich quick. by issuing tickets, at Huron, and Saginaw and at Huron and Perry. No one thinks ' enough of our lives and property to have a policeman on 24-hour duty at these corners. • Your apathy will turn to indignation and disgust when you’re hit. Mine did. More people are killed at 8 p.m. Saturday night than any other time. «. A JONES BOY The Associated Press Is entaieU exclusively to the use for republication of all local news printed in this newspaper as well as ell AP news dispat^es. The Pontiac Press Is delivered by carrier for SO cents e week; where mailed in Oakland, Genesee, L,iv-ingston, Macomb, • LSpeer and ....................t If IS $18.09 » Washtenaw C all / other pieces In the United States moo af year. All mail subscriptions payabid In advance. Postage has been paid at the Zitd ‘Religious Sermon Is Important Factor’ * We are sorry anyone felt we were only looking for new friends instead of a church that worships God. The Voice of the People did not print all we had to say. We had also added each sermon comes from God, This to .us is worship in spirit and truth. Our point was to let anyone interested in a church that serves God and is friendly at the same time to feef free to visit the General Baptist Church. , / ' i ^ .^M.A.HEcirr,I,|]i' I' > Jr'-uyA.: .4x.- ffk-ky'^y M' f^ortday Was Aiiniv0ndry • ’ . . ^ ^ ;.v TIIK I'ONTrAC VVKI)NKSI;AV. Plot Against Hitler Recalled lly PimL NEWSOM UIH Fwroign Newt Aiwl;yiit At M|)t)rn)(im«t«ly I3i40 p,m, oit .tiily 80, IWM, ClNtM (Nnint HHii'iik Voti m«Hffpnl»erK, fJurmnn ,g«t!-| prnl MtAff ('iilo ! OH. PXtMIAPd himMPlf from n I) r i 0 f i n K In Adolf inilor’x KiMt I'riiHNlnn "Wolf’s ,l.«lr.' osioiiHlItly to] a teIo-| phmii* ciill. At 12 42 tho NEWSOM iio|nb which Vcm Stauffonborg hod niuniod Hoso tO; Hitler's knee exploded. It.kllM (our per* sons but Hitler eecnped with only an Injury to hti right hand, It U an anniversary seldom rechlled outside West Germany, and III signifteanee Is known to • surprising few even there. Among Germans up to 20 years of age, a recent suirey showed that only 46.7 per cent knc# the spwlal significance of July 80. Two years after thgt attempt that failed, Winston Churchill paid special tribute In the British House of Commons to, the n resistance movemenf.\ (TIURCIlia TRIBUTE "In Germany." he said, "there lived an opposition . . . which belongs to noblest and greatest that has ever been produced In the political history of any people . . We hope for the time In Which tht? heroic chapter of German domestic history will find lu Just valuation." On this anniversary tf years alter. West German PretIdenI Heinrich Lubke cniled upon young Germans to ,*‘lenm more about the devotion and the willingness to sacrifice themselves that marked the agaliut Hitler." I,ubke's' call refled«I first a fear among responsible Germans Ibat a dynamlf ,German people, rich In nmterlal things, might succumb again to nation-. aUsm and the spiritual bankruptcy of another /Hiller, > In the West Germany of today there Is a continuing soul-searching as the (krmans seek theii' thdlvldual responsibility for Hitlerism and ways to .prevent its return. There are thosn who regret the pasisage of the Hitler days. It shows occasionally, in Oer-many’s new aririy despite the fa^t that It was in the highest echelons of the army that there rose the determination to rid the. nation of Hitler. ANTISEMITISM It shows , in occasional, but strictly limited, outbursts of anli^mlUsm. And it shews ato demiuids for the return of, Czechoslovukia’s SudetaiW land or the lost eastern territories. ® But overriding the* are the ^emotions of the young German who wondered aloud to this ccar- respondent, "Maybe w too soon.” I got rich Or of tlio iHHtpIfl of Frankfurt whose contrlhutlons rebuilt Frankfurt's largcijit synagogue. NA-nONAI. PRIDE Tlwre Is In Germany vast notional prkla, the wt>rst of whose emotions la kept alive by Germany's enforced division and by the Soviet Union's edn-slant harping upon German '■revanchists," tha revenga seekers. Rut al|o to be remembered ere those who fiwght against Hitler, even lliough to the outside world' their voices were silent. Among the earliest of tliese were Hans Scholl and his. sister, Sophie. ■ fp their "leaflets of the while rose," these young . sludents Wioto: "His might Is roUcm to tho core." litEIIKADEp For Ihelr pains, they were arrested, tried and beheadwl. But .Inly '20 proved that Ihelr spirit lived, on, SPORTSWEAR SALE 20 TO 33(^0 Driving With a 2-Voar-Old R«g. 2.99 playtogg Reg. 3.99 playfogs *3 R.g. 4.99 playtogs Travel 'Torture Test' Endured R.g. 7.99 playfogg Reg. 8.99 iwim suits 6.66 Reg. 10.99 $ swim suits 8 By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UP|)-I have ’just returned from my summer vacation and I think I have a fairly clear Idea now of what hell is like, The most dreadful fate that can Imagine — . do mean roughly. Every ^•rd bf It waa torment in the Old Testament tradition. The main trouble was that the 2-year-old covered approximately 6,000 miles on the same trip. He logged an extra 2,000 miles Crawling from the front seat to the rear acat and back again. 38 MOVES 1 clocked him for one 100-mile stretch and found tliat during peak periods he oscillated between the front and rear seats at the rate of 38 times per hour. On every third move, going from rear to front, the toe of his left shoe would strike me In the neighborhood of the medulla oblongata, producing a minor concussion. ' In some respects, however, traveling with a l^year-oid boy has advantages over fire and brimstone. In an emergency, for instance, he can be us^ as a jasoline gauge. , TIME FOR CAS Any time that he drops off to sleep, leading the other'occupants to believe they are getting an hour’s respite, you can be sure that the car is about Out of gas. Almost as soon as his eyea are closed it becomes necessary to stop at a service station. Which, of coarse, wakes him up again. , On the 01 her hand, when he announces that ife needs to go to the bathroom, you can be certain that the car has plenty of gas. SPECIAL SALE *248®® WHb Trade ' Copper-Tone or ' Colors same price Le/k hand door'$ avail. Mod.l.TB305y M IrMMr hold* up to 137 lb*, o 2 MINI-CUBE ieo tray* 3.1 cu.a.Mn>< with wiro wck covor thot ol«o *otvot o* convonlont pockogo *__ out *holf o Buttor comportmont o PoKolain vogotOblo drawer* o No coil* on bock • No door clooraiK* noodod et *ido • Gloamino whilo oirtorior • 04" high. 30%" wido, 25%" doopdo** hondlo). While or Mix-or-Motch Colon. Terms Available A passenger of that age alltfllhe window, you know you are will help you Identify the type on a Ireeway and wlH have to of highway you are on. ‘ drive 75 miles to get back to When he throws a shoe out 1 pick it up, Great sportswear spreel Every new '64 style and corefree fabric imaglnablel Blouses, ikirls, 2-pc. skirt itis. Slacks, Jamaicas, pedal pushers , . . many in sets. T-tops galorel 8-16. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS fCEEf=»S F^FUCUBS DOVi/^Af Sdeefion is at* its best! LAYAWAY SALE $^1 holds your choice! FABULOUS PURCHASE Fre-season savings on girls' zip-lined coats $1 HOLDS We made this exceptional purchase In advance to bring you terrific savingsl Classic casuals, $5-$6 more In rag. stock. Water repellent fabrics. Warm zip-out liner. Bright or deep-tone plaids, solids in the group. Sizes 7-14. DRAMA AFTER 5 REPEAT OF A SELLOUT ,,Jet black velvet ^ and white brocade Ndtural mink trims on cashmere coats 12 99 $ 58 $1 HOLDS $1 HOLDS Jet black rayon velvet bod-, ice plunges deeply at back. White acetate brocade skirt swings away from a tiny waist. . . lining shapes 'n holds iti Slices 7 to 15.; FREE ALTERATIONS Unsurpassed elegance at pre-season savings. Natural mink collars, so luxurious on fine cashmere. Thermo Ray* insulated acetate lining. 8 to 16 in the group. : FREE ALTERATIONS Saucy sailor dresses for now-through-fall Infants', boys', girls' prams and toddlers' warm cuddly snowsuits 99 'CHARGE ir 8 44 $1 HOLDS Nautical 'n new for the sprightly set! Middy top, |gll-skirted drew, sparked with' white braid, red bow.-Cotton; Bright blue. 7.-14. Little 'ais' copy, 3-6x ... 2.99 A terrific group selling at much less than you'd expect to pay! Many styles, fabrics^ Single, double-zip prams with detachable or attached hoods, mittens, booties. 12-18-24 mo., M-L-Xt. 1, 2-pc. snow-suits. All lined. Plaids, jiolids. Sizes 2-3-4. F^EDERAI. DEF*rr‘-.: STTORI DOWNTOWN DRAYTON PL -'in', »II* :V; .M. ; '! At City Commission Meeting City Policeman Try to Air Wage Hopes TJJK rONTIAC IMIKSH WKDNM^SnAV. .IVfX U, 10(U I, _ A group af aonio 25 Pontiac pnlicn'mert appeared at last nidhi's Oty t’onuTUission muet-jniiS with hopes ot spettkina with {.•omtniNNlonors mi liip subjeol ol wage liikcs. niey did most ot their talking outside (Uly .Hall, . , Sittlog iiinimg the groiip o( hoUi piitroliMi'it and nlljcerN, iiuTnI id whom were not In nnltorm,, I'nti'olinnn .lames It, l.alnoilii' was the only one to speak lit the regular piddle meeting. I.olpear, who said he was ".speaking as a PoiiUae las-payer,’ asked eomnussionei ll a survey ol the niiieid wage scale for Pmiliae polieemeii had lieen completed by admin-istralor.s, replied, "Vou are out of order, You must handle' this matter Itu’ough die Jfily manager ” IlMW ('oMtvntNT thMl ended eommeiit dtiring this meeliiig liowexer, the grmip of p«. lieemen were waiting (or eommIsslonerN oulNhle City liall niter the meetlifg and remiitned nl the s'eene talking witli elly olllelnis tor an hoar. .Several polieeiuen, who pre-lerred to remain aiiohymoua, strongly nbieeled that’ the elty had not nierea.sed their wagim lor three vears " Conimtssioners explainiHl they were amable to provide pay hikea for employes m alt de-poi’tinenta tills year due to a lack of ti|H*rnllng* revenue ere-tiled by the present Clly ('hnr, le'r limitation on tax mlllage. ♦ w , , A ballot pr«|H»sal for a I* will tax InereaNe whieh would have’ eased ihe Nlliiullun was defeated by, voters at the April 20'eleellhn. The policemen said iheir deel* slon to iilleiul llie meeting "won enilrely HfamlunemisS and they represenled only IheniNelves, flvp months ago, according to City Manager John P, Reineck. Reineek said the survey is due for completion Aug. 19; Venerable Name Is Carried by Center for Aged NPAV YORK lipi The (ddesi Mayor William 1.1 Tdylor Jr. Tliey indieaied Unit poliee-men would "attend eommiNNioti meetings In torce" until Hueh time that .some action was taken tp raise their salaries. , I 'Hie policemeh were Inquiring about a Michigan Municipal League survey of city enqiloyp wages In Pontlkc which was te.. quested by commissioners ahmil pi'lvale inslltidlon lor the elderly iii New York Stale, estahlished in IIU4, lias the yeneralile pahie of "The Asswiallon Iqr flie Relief of Rdsjiectobje^ Aged Indigent Pemales in1he City of New York," il now hoiiNes I12 women agml to Wl at Us quarters between I0.1rd and 104th streets and Amsterdam Avenue. Urge Price Control by Milk Industry LANSING ( APy—Gov. George W' Romney Tuesday told repre-.sentatives of the Michigan Milk industry that unless the voluiv tartly control the selling of milk below cost they prhbably will face state regulations. Unless the industry Itself cleans up the situation, Romney said. It will face some type of regulation, cither under state antltjrusi laws or other regulatory legislation. The principal objection ,is again'st those who sel| milk below cost as a "loss-leader" item, the goverrtor reported'. Mount Clemens Man Osteo(>ath President CHICAGO (AP)^Dr. Cgmp-. bell A. Ward of Mount Clemens, Mich., was elected president Tuesday of the American Osteo-\ pathic Association. «v Dr. Ward succeeds Or. 'V Wallace M. Pearson, of Kirks-ville. Mo. from Edinburg 108 NORTH SAGINAW NEW! FRENCH PROVINCIAL NI-CHEST SERVES MANY USES IN YOUR NOME Com* in and ••• thik •(•gant 6 drqwar lingari* Hl-chait in Fruitwood or Antiqu* Whit* and Gold. It fits a snug corner or narrow wall b*itw**n windows. It's o wonderful storage place ■>- really orgonixed—. for iewelry, scarfs, gloves, lingerie and stockings. Edinburg uses - only choice woods, authentic styling. You'll wont SPECIAL ‘59 l*«r>on to tVrton * No Money Down ^ * 3^ Yoon le Pay e 90 Doyt Sam* oi Cash it Our Attendint Park Your Oar Fraa In Our Privata Lot Raar of WKC OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAy, MONDAY -NIQHTS UNTIL • P.M. ANYTIME IS SAVINGS TIME AT on these and-'hundreds of other CASH and CARRY BUILDING MATERIAL ITEMS ELECTRICAL ENTRANCE PANEL . .$12.05 PUSTIC COVERED WIRE 12/2 .................... (250 ft. coil) 1-2/2 W/Ground ....... (250 ft. coil) I 14/2 .....250ft.coil) 14/2 W/Ground.....\.... (250 ft. cbil) OUILDING WIRE $ 9.35 10.80 6.95 8.05 12 TW ..............2c ft. (500 ft. coil) $6.75 14 TW ............ .2c ft (500 ft, coil) 4.55 100 amps. H Up le 24 cir CIRCUIT BREAKERS » Twin Breakers . $3.15 Double 'Pole Breakers .... /X,.!......... 3.4$ PLASTIC TAPE ^ Wide, 60 ft. roll ............/V • • • - $1-30 FAKQ DItUXE AM-FM RADIO TRANSISTOR INTERCOM e 10 Station Capacity, e Automltic Remote Control—^Tums ‘^Stand-By’’ Remotes on-off ; e Transistorized Intercom e .Single Dial Radio Operation e Velvet Smooth Vernier Tuning e Tone Control-r-Cuts Treble, Boosts , e AFC Circuit Prevents Drlfti Radio and Intercom Power • Separate Radio and Intercom Volume Controls * Transformer Powered #” Choice of Anddized Copper o Satin Finish Aluminum MODEL S407 ELECTRIC KIT *91.50 MODEl 8400 HOI^SINO KIT 18,00 ETLING aluminum SIDING .020 Horizontal ............ $20.85 per square .025 Horizontal and Vcrjtical . .. 24.25 pet square Styrofoam Backer ............ 4.90 per square GARAGE SIDING Hjj^tter 106, No, 2 & Btr., Spruce \M27.50™« FIBERGjLAS INSULATION 3" Full Thick ..... . .$49.00 per M 3" Full Thick, Foil i:Side' 61.50 per M a" Full Thick, Foil 2 Sides 73.50 per M. 6" Blanket Batts ........ 86.7S per M SLIUINN PATIO ODORS insulated gists with Thermal Barrier.' Reduces, condensation. Equipped with keyed lock. ,In Stock 8' (2-Llte) ....... ,S111.10 Screen .j....... 14.80 Op Order Only 8' (2-Llte) .......... 141.80 Screen ........ 16,00 0' (3-Llte) ......... m.65 Screen ............ 1S.60 12' (4-Lite) 2 Screens ______ 27.20 3 large panels plain or w panel glazed (toxic treat 0x6-8XlTr. ' $23.50 CERJAINTEED Asphalt Shingles U24 I Osa 235-lb. , . Super-Tuf Tabs .... $2.08 Bdl. ®Sq. 235-lb. «35 Super5ealdon gdl. » $q._ 15-30 lb. Felt ... .Roll $1.99' FINANCING AND DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE ON HIGHWAY M-53 1' 2 MILES SOUTH OF Your Complete SUILDING SUPPLY CENTER 2nd FIRESTONE De Luxe Champioa Buy 1st the at price listed below and get 2nd tire 50% off that price!. Tirestoile De Luxe Champions Give you up to Kf.OOO EXT^A MILIt ikM «Oh OupRTut luUm etitawe eUwr leedOig bwsei Wm 2,000 le 10,000 miM imt Itre. OuMendtnf saiSiiieiiiee Ms IMe iMi eei^ Ftmalona DeLuM Chomptona M* aemler *m NO LIMIT OUARANTll CUUD Til I Q Opwi7M.m.-fp.m. onur IILLel fiocospt$irt.tiHei Car Wash CREME Air-Cooleij I Car CAR CUSHION I Wash Brush Two-Gallon GAS CAN I Vinyl PLASTIC GARDEN HOSE Only 88' tftKeddndyelloir . bottom and inU * Pleitic flip-mp vent permito fast, easy pouring 50-jFt Length ^ only 88' ful green vinyl plastic. Solid braea ooupiinga. Spalding GOLF BALLS | everain lawn sprinkler 146 W. HURON 1140 N. SAGINAW 333-7917 FE 4-9970 /i A - ]/ ’ 1, 2L ... ‘ILW^K;- I II ^ ^ ,|.,, , Iv--- , 4 " ■ » ' ' ' ' ' I '*'■•■■ *' TIIK I’ONTIjV'’. VHKSS. \VW)VI'',.S|)A V, .M'l.V SS. I'lmi. A- »_ Daytime Curfew Quiets Race Rjots on Singapore Islancl SINClAPOHK fAPl A Aciu. IfllAla I limmiM silUa Ikfalaai I mi .....I..... ...HI. 'II • . ^ * .. . .. . " . I 8W(JAP0RK (AP) - A day-tlm« eurfaw enrorc<.eldre Downs, js. daughter of irievision (sersonallty Hugh Downg, Lsicl and Xeldra were schoolmates at Washington. Deldrc la a dramaXnajor Interlochen. \ U.S. OAR HIT During Tuesday night's fighting rioters attacked a U.8. con-.sulate car In which Charles J. Rogers of Santa Crux, Calif , a diptomatic courier, was riding with p Malay driver. Rogers said the mob,,, which he believed was composed mainly of Chinese, smashed the ('ar‘8 windows and iieadllghts with clubs and bottles. The Ma-lay driver was cut by flying glass; Nearly too riot police armed Were flown from Kuala l,umi)ur today to join 5,000 police and two baUallons of troops )n tlie effort lo keep the violence from spreading up the. Mahty I'coin-BUla. A curfew, ordered. ’I’tiemlay mlghl after hlofsly flgliliiig Im-' tween the two groups hroke out on the predomlnaiiily (tilnese Island, was lifted hi. tl ;un. ,lt was reliniMmed -four ami a luilf hours later, after reporls tiuil a mob was surging Ihroiigli the elly overlurning vehicles, CI,ASI|KS INCRKASK ’ Clashes which Imd flared Ihroiighoul the night appeared to increase after daylight. Siiign-(tlie racial OMlhrenk stemmed' pore’s General Hospital said .from Comnumlsl or ItKioneslan four, mote injured were admit-’ ted after the night curfew was llfied, and that 41 persons injured in Tuesday night's violence were In ei'lth'al emididoti In (Hie Chinese quar'ler hundreds of (.Jilhese mass'ed in the sireels. Troops wllh fixed hayonels manned hartied wire nmdbhs'ks at major Inlersec tloriH, Tile riot came nine days after a miirkel (dace Heuflle.al Hukll atlempls to stir up trouble. In-donfisian,,President Sukarno has vowed to crush the Malaysian federalion, labeling H a ruse to per))etuate Hrillsh colonial ndCi The rioling began Tuesday durliig a proeessliMi oi 25,00(1 ||„ birth .......... ............ 1 kSi;;tLi3. AITA.CKMD IIY MAI,AVS lielweim Mala,VH and CliliieNe iu Olfieial reporls said a politr eldeli iWo persons were killed uin wild ordered slragglers (o end l.'l Injlired ‘join Hie pi'oeessloo was al ( liluese Wim poured in during lacked by (lie Malays, Hnolli liriiisli colonial ruh) tnake up W , ,ei(,d Informants said ilie police- per cent ot.Malayslals 10 millloa John.son, expressed shock over : man was Chinese. pt-ople, the Malays 40 per eeni the riots, Ije said lie believed I Unofficial reports placed the The Malays resent' the strong 'doalh eoii'iu al .seven, four of Chinese hold on the economy. The Chinese 1*^8601 tlje Marys' predominance in, the federal government, lhqt||cChine.se, but a federal pO-liee^sjjhke.sman in Kuala l.um-pur said^tlie offleial death toll was five, Ue said 150 persons had lieeti ar’hs^led, Prime Minlsler ’1‘iinlpi Alidiil J Itahmiin, lii AVilliamshiirg, Va, prior do talks \vlth Pre.sideni;, VANTAGE WATCHES . Man'i and Lhdlti' i«wti. 114,95 Neisnefs Watch Repair N EISNER’S 42 North Saginaw, i^Downtqiyn Pontiac PENNEY’3 miracle MIE5 X' ‘pv'tX >''/ K W ' -:V- ‘‘ i 7- ^ ‘J - > S ^ g~ '-.L if V TIIK PON PriAt’ I'HKSS. WKliXKl I ^ I •; I ''I ri. si)AV, .rrjT a-2. ms% Today's News From WdshingfQ,n Bill to Increase Social Security Cleared lor House Debate WASHINGTON (API The lldiise Jtid^is Commiiidt* hns <'l«nrr(ri(ii’ tliKH' Hornd fiittp iipxi wtit'k II bill to m-Sik'IhI Smirily liciu’fl^ anil (fxtciul nivmiiiti! to Hiiim* HddilimmI n'lli'i;d |x lbi> .luhtimin adiiuijiN Irnlian'N |>ni|)ONiil to «sol up u lioallli cart‘ plan lor llio ai^od with Sm-lal Si'cuniy laxt-a CdrninilU'o ' i'o|tH‘lod the health | WASHINGTON lAP) ' The plan hut It provided a 5 per, Hmiae has given overwhelming cent tP'itihtHlHohoard tnet'eaae inj appi’oval to a hill thal would lei Soi'Uil, Seeiii'lly piiymeulh iiiui, home uwnera hhn'k "mui'ally ol I'Hiixcd covertige m|ult'einenta feimlve" ititill, Opponenlil mild for< dtnaftter gen eral he wauls futiu'e mallliig.s Ifom that source slopped, The .sender would have :iii days lo ’oniply with the postmaater I general's order. I If the mailings contlniMKl, the i sender would he subject to contempt of court iuTlon.. msilIllliKt) i'AIlKNl'S The hill's chief aismsor, Hep. Dr. Wayne G* Brandstadt Says: The House Woys find McaH.s Heavy Eaters Endangering Their Health Glenn Cunningham, R-Neb., said "millions of ftarenls are. (jlsiiiriiod at having this trash dumiMsii in Uiotr malltMixes," Leading th« flgtil against it, Hep. John V. Lindsay, H|Mi«n Space. Research Organization have signed a Joint satellite agreement that calls for launching of two satellites in 1967. "tun " sport. He would ’ imANIWTAOT then demonstrate tiiu enlarged tired old heart with the re-sullhig hardening of the arteries. Being overweight not only slioricn.s life; It also makes it harder for your doctor lo detect cancer and other tumors under the thick layers of fat.' PROTESTS BKAhT Itoberl Svvitzer. 22, pickets the IJ.S, courthouse ui Chicago ye.ster-day, protesting the military draft. On .July .31 he plans to burn his draft card on the steps oL the building. New Leader for Women's Organization DETROIT (AP)-Mrs. Dorothy M.' Ford, business consultant lo the Los Angeles (Calif.) County .school system, is new president of the National h'eder-ation oif Busines.M anil Professional yVomen’s Clubs. Whpt leads .some people to eat more food than they nw'd day afU'r day Is a .subject sclent 1st .s are still studying. PROBLEM EATER.S ‘One authority has classified problem eaters Into several groups. The obese person who eoines from a famtly of overeaters usually does not have any guilt feelings about his size. He enjoys eating and sees no reason for wanting to reduce. A child brought up In such an atmosphere merely follows the example of those, about him. The next group includes the true gourmet who eats slowly and rarely .snacks between meals. His problem is not acute, and his chances for reducing are usually good. Mrs. Ford, whose husband. Clyde, is a ealil'ornia school teacher, was elevated lo the post from first vice president at the annual convention Tuesday. Mrs. Ford succeed!; Virginia R. Allan of Wyandotte, Mich. The federation has 170,000 members in 3,555 affiliated clubs. , The Icebox raider'who gels up at night for a little snack so he can go to sleep again and the compulsive atl-day-long nibbler are usually victims of emotional ten.sl6ns. Trying to get them lo reduce IS a'nard job. . 300 AND OVER Helen Krauss of St. Petersburg, Fla., and Sarah Jane Cunningham of Me Cook, Neb., were ' promoted to first and second vice president!?, respectively. Winners fn three elective contests were Mrs. Mabel McClan-ahan, Appleton, Wis., third vice president: Burnette Y. Henning-ton, Jackson, Miss,, recording secretary, andj Katherine T. King, Web.ster, N.Y / trea.surer. B’inally, there arc those who weigh 300 pounds or more. They probably have emotional problems too. But they refuse to air them and they .stubbornly resist reducing. Studies have shown-that if a fai person is allowed to eat all he wants, he will not gain weight but will maintain himself at a certain leyel. This is becau,se, although he eats more than enough to supply his physiologic needs, he feels compelled to satisfy, his psy-ghologically motivated appetite. Until his appetite i;si satisfied, he honestly believes that he has eaten like a bird. Hof Weather Special! KRESOE'S Save Feeff Hose, Shoes! Fit snu|[ly. Can't slip, bind. Cushion the feet. Protect the ')shoe. Absorb perspiration. -HW»« Rocn*stcr Bloomfield ^CHARGE tv AT KRESGE’S Tile European organlzitlon will provide \lhe apeoemft, scientific instruments and tracking stations, wjiile the U.S. National Aeronautics gnd Space Administration will train per- sonnel, provide launch rockets and conduct the laumjliing at Vai)d«nl>«rg Air K«rce'’.BasV, Calif. - 'The Jtluropenn orgiinlzatlon. formed last March, Includes Belgium, Denmark, France, •West Germany, tl>e Nellie^ lands. Sweden, Spain, Hwllxei’-land and the Unllwl Kingdom. Italy Is expodetl to Join Hhorlly. ■EW to W> E mOEl ~ JOB HUNTING? TRY INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL SERVICE of BIRMINGHAM, INC. Wd rtpreoint »n unlimUdd number of locet And nition»l firmi leeklng nuelihed epplirenu in ell fleldv of employmsnt, StArHni . tiUrlti tor ihete potiiiono renge from $1,000 lo $15,000 It. you ill mi»r*«ied in invetiigeiing iKtit opporluniliei — csll u* pr welk in lo your neeretl It’S ottiee 690 Eoit Mopk Birminghom — Ml 4-3692 17S44 W. McNicholt, Datroit, KE 7-3004 "Olhcei in Ma/oi Ciltei ol U.S. " 3 Days Only-Reg. 69^lb. HERSHEY-ETS 3-Day Sale - Reg. 1.39 CEILING FIXTURE 3-Day Sale-Reg, 10.99 9 TRANS. RADIO 3-Day Sale-Reg *3/$l RIB CREW SOCKS Fill up your candy dishes and save a pound now on these delicious bits df candy-' coated chocolate. ■ 43t .Plastic cty«al-cut light fixture in clear crystaj. Easy to install ' —just screws into the socket. ^. Specially priced for this sale! Nine powerful transistors give clear Jong-range reception. , With case, earphones and ?-volt battery. , >99 Genuine Englisjt ,' rib, white Durene mercerized cotton. _ Sizes 61/2-IJ. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC '.vl TEL-HURON CENTER I DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER PUZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE .MILE PONTIAC MALL SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARGE tr" AT KRESGE’S r;. ‘it- i/Ayi ■ ■ y .‘a ‘"i/1 ^ -'rrr ___THK I'ON'Jj AC IMtKSS, WIODNI^SDAV. .Ij^LV A-n Crime Picture Worsens as State Stays Above US, Average BctHOI'J’ crliiM) inice of crlmo r«tK»rted notion- rovoalwl In flfliiroo BunpUed by In MlchlUBn. this r(fi)i*(rtKpniwi w robhAiv Miinip.- a.«i _.. SkTHOIT (Al")-*nie crlmo pIctujTo In' MIcliliian bommo worHO In 1963 and the rate of gejrlouB crime remained above the nptionai'average, iThe oloaeBl tiling to a bright apot In a nnlional <‘rltno report waa that a akyrockeling irid- leiice of crime reported nationally — to per cent — waan’t whollji reflected in Michigan. The rate of aertoua crime occurrences In Michigan rose only S,9 |)«r cent In ItWS over 1962. 'Hie state's . ■ Illinois Mah Drowns in Stato Lake UIDINUTON, 141 - Alfred Michigan commnnify. Police 8lumll)ei’g, 0(1, of Chicago said (he victim fell out of a lldgids. 111, (({’owned Tuesday Imat Into nliout six feet of wain Hamlin lutko near tids Loku ter. Auto theft! ixm 19 per dent, thb hlghebt Increase in any rious crime classifl(ui(io#,^. ’ The only decline was ■ 4.1 {mr cent drop in aggravated ai> smilt ensoa repurUsl in Uta slate. BMomtay ihrouffh iiii 9:00 m • pteniy ot it*w pnrkiny €mrMm mni0m» with Kmkfputrd§ took for thii dainty row of sdichas at the top and toa of our own ftshion-hosa. They help pnvaiit HUM fron entarinf lha shaer lag. Plain idtch #f Bsicto-inash; Solu Glow, Dawn and Btequa shadw; dk|aa 9 la 11. €90l mmd gtimmimg eotiom pmeker patUie§ Keep comfortable in Summer's heat with these Mtatchy pandes. Detachable gsrtars. Pink, mah# M blue on white. Small, med., large. Not tboum: Om Corliss oettato tricot Ms^s, hsssd or rsshkor tiottU Ugi, box of tsuhitt or poittISf SiMts f toS........« pnfr hox SM STAR SALE, seconds women’s lu^^a^e SALE.. nationally-ksown Sninmerettes How cxdtingf Right at mid-Summet you can save on one of your favorite brands of fashion-fabric caaualsl The reason? Slight style siienges planned in next yeer’a line. Black, mocha, gold-color, red, beige, multi-stripes; sixes 5 lo 9. (Not every color or the in every sQrle.) All have rubber soles that cushion your active steps. A. Joy-Time with bow. B. Coronado with stripe trim. C. Axtec with rope-Miinmed sole. D. Skimmerette stripe. STAR SALE SAVING! u% SftUrOl TM htttw Wiow Watfwif’t Ba4|«t Stwt—reiNM MaR Now you can have a whole set of sturdy, good-looking luggage .. . at sale-prices that will fit easily into a travel budget! Wood veneer frames are lightweight yet durable. Vinyl plaedc coverings and bindinj^ clean easily. Rayon linings with pockets for efficient packing; quilted bottoms. Nickel-plated locks and hinges^ Blue, dark green, white, charcoal, but not every Color in every site. A. Train case with mirror. B. 21” weekender. Q, l3-i»ch pullmars......-9,8S 0. 28-inch pssj^an • ■ laiKaf* —Rndinn't MuAxet Mora—fontlwi Moll i ) ihh ii/j iii TIM-’ PONTIAC PllfKSS. WKDNKSDAV. .iri.V 22. lUUl SJGNS UNITY PLKIXiK I’result'nl Jomo of Kenya (left> signs the finnl protocol paper pledging furiher step! toward Afrlpan unliy ycMierday at the second African summit conference held in (,'alro, Next to him is Ivory Const delegate P. Yat’o. i ' . Future of Ranger Program May Ride on Shot • itmrom mm no foi- •hu'inff (iMtmtch t>y Ralph Dighion, fKwcIf on an t'a’clasiue fnfproww, osscsses file sfofiis of the Ranger moonahot pro-‘gram and Piwodemjis Jet Pro-ptiislon laboratory, m the. light of the pkimml ammth Iminolo mg next week,) hy llAUMt UKillTON PASAI>KNA, ■ Vallf tAP)-‘ Hunger 7 will carry more than cameras when It is launched at the nusm next week on It will he riding the hopes mid jierhaps the future ol the men who made It . After Hanger 11 hit the moon last l•’ebruary hut failed for the fourth straight time to return closemp pictures of the lunar surface, scientists at lt,s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) birthplace came under severe cHtlclsm from the parent U.S, space agency and in Congress. We, are more confident about Hnngiir 7-we give It one chance In two—because we jliiive one more'shot behltul us and somi changes have been made^ to improve tjie reliability ol the craft,” Pickering said in an exclusive Inlervlew. "I believe the Nallonai Aeronautics iind Sjmee AdmlnlHlra-lion is now convinced that this is a complex and difficult Job, hut that we will be able to get pictures of fbe nasm from at leasL one, t»f the ncxl llu’ee slvols!^ ' JPL operations since then have been over' ‘ ger 7 has been Snub ol Congo's Tstiombe Hinders Goal of Africans Whelber Hanger 7 succeeds not, Pickering said, there will be no more launchings this year dm to other commiUnents at the Atlantic range, But we fully expect to fly two more Hangers early next year," he said. "Ranger II Is already assembled and work has begun on Ranger 9." After t,he Ranger 6 failure NASA Administrator James E prior to h pit) in residence, looking over otir shoulder at wery part, observing tests ana making themselves available foj consultation \ design changes,'” Pickering said the morale of the ialM»ratory‘s 4,000 woskers "has recovered from the com-billed blow of failure mid public Sunken Ship Scare Started by Buoy MALIKAX. N.S, (AP)^ A half-submerged sulifng vessel sighted 500 miles southeast of Capl Race, Nfid., turned out today to lie a marker buoy, A Canadian Royal Air Force patrol plane reported sighting the submerged vessel Tuesday. The U.S. Coast Guard weather ship Delta and a Panamanian freighter were diverted to the * 1 HCAF 8 ’ORT other patrol plane flew over the given us strong area today and discovered the criticism," and Interest Is running high throughout the huge complex. Television monitors and s|)eakers have been IniWllid throughout the plant to keep workers informed of Raiigdl* 7'i progress during the three-day, 23()i000 nille flight to the moon. 'It means more to us,’’ Pickering said, "than any World So- SlidULATKI) FLKJIIT All day Thursday some** 300 scientists and engineers here will go Ihrmigit a full-dress simulation of the flight In the laboratory's new 1140 - mlllfon tracking center, which will control the spacecraft after launch. Working with them In the 12-hour drill, os they did in a similar rehearsal Monday, will be 500 technicians at tracking stations around the world plus another 100 at Cape Kennedy. Gen. Alvin H. Luodecke, to come here next mopth, rejwrt-ediy as a condition for renewal December of its contract with the laboratory. CIIANGER IN CRAPr IfWustry sources lime expect Imedmtke to tie ruthless if Ranger 7 falls, Ranger project manager Harris .*k*httrmeier said these thahges have iieen cranked Into the now craft; The television system, which reportedly turned Itself on too early and burned,out during ibe launcliing of iCanger $, has lieen Ihstrumenled so It danrtot opeP ate prematurely. After severe vibration lehts, wiring was more heavily insulated to prevent tlie possibility sof a short. - . 'Hie pattern of sunllglit hlwk-Ing pamt on the craft has hecn 'banged to reduce Interior tern- p-erallon, has, been beefed up so the conlciil center will have a belter chance of knowing, what went wrong* In case of failure. [ OMN fviay NIOHT •m f io AMCmCA’S UAWOKbV fAMlUV CUOTMIN® CHAIN What will happen If, despite ni. Ranger 7 falls ly's guess, out .>d a new deputy Air Force Moj. OPEN DAILY 10-10 and SAT. SALE (EDITOR'S NOTt-Veieran AP cormpondknt Lynn Heim-erling iwn the Whl Pulitzer Prize for pmeer reporting of the Congo criaia. Now chief of AP’a African operationa, he attended the African aummit conference irt Cairq this week ) By, LYISl]!4 JIEINZERLING CAIRO (AP)-jifrica's king.s. presidents and premiers probably did; nothing more significant in their five days of , oratory here than their snub of Premier Molse Tshombe of the Congo. By that single act, the African leaders who finished their sec-ond summit meeting Tuesday threw their program for overthrowing the Portuguese rulers of Angola into Jeopardy. , • It is difficult to assess the accomplishments of the second summit meeting of the Organization of African Unity. The final communique was so vague that it is difficult to pinpoint anythihg. The government heads were so shielded from newsmen and conference sources were meager with real information that it was impossible to determine how deep the discussions went. Roberto, It Is a'staging ground for guerrillas who have Infiltrated northern Ahgola, the Congo's .southern neighbor, Whatever Tshombe did as leader of the Katanga secession, he has become one of the Congo’s anJheniic lenders, and will have to he reckoned with. The Congo Is the most sti gically plactxl nation In Al for any move against Anjp and the Congo does not much by alicnatlhg its ncigi ORE SHIPMENTS Only about half of Katanga’s rich copper exports, can" be shipped abroad over the Congo’s own transportation system, rest must move through Ai and Mozambique. Tshombe ami Kasavubu not be enchanted by the idea of: cutting out these export cl.ian-, nels for a group of African ers who humiliated them. UNMISTAKABLE But the rejection of Tshombe was unmistakable. Prodded by President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and President Ahined Ben Bella of Algeria, the preparatory session of foreign ministers declared the Congolese premier’s presence was undesirable, Congolese President Joseph K^vubu boycotted the confertenp in retaliation. The. Opngo is the seat of the revolutionary Angolan government-in-exile headed by Holden If the Congo ever succeeds in quieting its- - spear-throwing tribes and bringing a degree of sophistication to its belligerent politicians, it will become one of the two or three richest states in |, Africa. It will not have to submit to the intervention in its po- j litical life to which it has been ; subjected in the past. | The fact that Roberto is turn-i Ing to Moscow, Prague and Peking in .search of money and wea-! pons may also have a sobering I effect on the Congolese and olh-i er Africans. Roberto’s campaign in ern Angola is reported tically stalled in recent m< At a news conference during Cairo meeting, Roberto chi that this was partly due to of the support promised hit last year’s Addis Ababa suii last year’s Addis Ababa sun meeting. , entire stock of these tropical suits reduced! COMPLETE ALTERATIONS INCLUDED Starched-iook gingham in a 2-piece outfit. Jewel neck blouson or pop-over cardigan top with a pleated skirt, 7-14, 3-6x. For .3 days only! Precious little jumper dress can be worn with or without its solid color blouse. Anothet Mooresvilie easy-care cotton fabric. 7-14/ 4^x. 2-piece Mooresvilie plaid dress includes scoop-neck jumper with fully shirred skirt topped by t solid color blouse. 7-14.4^x. SIZES FOR REGULARS, SHORTS, LONGS Reg. T.M. DuPont's polyester fiber AP Phololax ' d6wT nag ME! —. Snowball, a kitten who lives at Lpng-adt«9 race track.n^rlSesRtle, Wash., is off and-runni'ng when iMiwilerf by the race horse Gary Gale. TJie thoroughbred was Jiist.,,^sing around and is usually mor^ stable. | \ / "7 /. Plenty of Free Parking NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD 'll' i' f ] . I' '‘j'f '/v Sw .y I ■'' 'I',’, ’ .; /':qi r ' >' i\ t ' ■ * • ' ■ ii ■ .1 i'" ( '■ 15W’ X lOVi” Camp Grill has S'potition grid. Legs form handle. AC Champion and Auto Lite Spark plup are re-tnanufacttired and guaranteed for 10,000 miles. Sets of U only! Roomy l2V4xl8xlO” picnic basket '^ith cover and two handles. For leisure wear! Comfy foam sock and knit uppers with foam backed matching Marshmallow® collar and center vamp strip. Vinyl padded sole. Pink, light blue, black or red- 9x18” and 9x24” black or maroon rubber treads with safely edge. Fre«formcd, easy to install. 14-oz. spray for house and garden bugs. Save! Nut mix in 13-oz. i|:i vacuum sealed can. i;!;::: Huy now - Save! i:;.';:: Sensational Value! ^ 7-PIECE f MATCHED I GOLF SET ! COOLER BUCKET 12-INCH LONG PLAY ALBUMS dVs-Quait Polyfoam backet keeps a supply of ice cubes cold. Real holding power with a soft touch! 13 ounces. Limit Tmt Cam ti Uh (fumutlx iMtU *plui red. I». ' ^ ,5 irons, 2 woods. Step-down steel shafts and “Golf || Pride” all-weath-er grips. Men’s R;H. only. I;:;::;: DUcount l)oHar DaytV 2fl 50-F00T 7/16" GARDEN HOSE POLYFOAM COOLER CHEST Ditcount Dollar Day$! *1 1" Monaural and stereo albums by famous artists. I ’ Light-weight, green vinyl with brass couplings. Light polyfoam chest keeps food hot or cold 24 hours. Has §:ii two metal handles. Charge It! ■ GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD ^ I /t L / I .) -- /' i 31'. ' A ^*11 ' JV:.*'?/'' "v l7^ ' ,!h • ■ , X* ■ -l|, . , ; , ■]: :f ,f i" 'I. , t|Vi. / — i-* ^ « '' r7“ri^Pi^ ; . .-1 ii> , * '* '- ‘ ‘ '„ ’■ i , . ’ Ji 1 'm ♦ 1 .i'. '.'■■» 1" '. TJIK I-ONTIAC IMtl^ WK,I)N!B80AV, Jl>l,Y aa, fOM a very large group of famous-maker summer suits by Hart Schaffri(^& Marx, Hammohton Park, Eagle, and Austin Leeds, now reduced to just It's like finding a treasure chest —for this choice group includes suits by some of the country's leading makers, in some of the most luxurious summer fabrics — reduced to just 73.70 for this cleoraiice sale. There are lUstij-ous mohair-worsteds, lightweight Dacron-worsteds, pure wool tropical worsteds, crisp Docron-worsted-mohairs, and fine silk blends — beautiful fabrics, handsomely tailored by pace-setting /nokers. You'll find both conventional and natural shoulder styles, in one-, two-, and three-button models; with pleated and plain-front trousers. It's a splendid selection of sonie of the best summer suits we I carry—i-nbw at very substantial reductions. I And there's no charge for alterations. Jr 'i OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE 1$ OPEN EVERY NICNT TO 9 P. M. ■ . ’ - ' 1 1 ,^f. . iir I t. Ut; (IM /THE POlStTIAC PRESS ", _)L / J |wp| " ^’.ii '■ ^ ‘ ^,l ■ ^ •f VyKIlNKSDAV. J»fLV 22. HMJ4 » Modem abstract with 07i Orimtal flavor is created i» this c^ontemporart/ desipn from Regal's new collection of area rugs. Created by Marie tCreamer in 100 per cent cotton, it's called “mochi, ’ a Japanese word meaning "rice cake." Coloring is dranmfic m smart contrast to the utter simplicity of the rug's’styling. Used here tp define mi area^resermd for private study and letter writing, "mochi" is available in five skx» arid four color combmdiwns. '' the Westerp look in this playrioom reflects a casual sophistication. A custonvtufted area rug is placed over solid-color wall-to-wall carpeting, both by Bigelpw, in d room that sports rattan furniture and bleached cypress wood whlls. ThC carpet and ri^g are made of all-wool yarns, ideally suited for the combination of smartness and hardy practicality. Area rugs have become increasingly important in contemporary decoration. Here, one used to mark off a conversation area is done.in rich tones of olive greens, bronze and gold in a contemporary block design. The wall-to-to-wall carpeting is a subtle gold. Both rug and carpeting by Lees. r’ONtlAC, MK^llKJAN. V, Colors and Fabrics Creafe , ’ /?tof of Carpets Underfoot WOMEN'S SECTION By JANICT OIMCU. I'ontitto I'rcti WoiiMn'd Editor Wtirltrer you MiHtnd just 9 tm diillors or sovorol thoim» and tor ruK*. you can linvo Hlu^inK color uruiorfoot. Tho new lino of carpoU and ruga Hoort In autnmor homo rurniahing shows contal;ia otUHigh huoa..ahadoa and tonea lo aatlafy ovon Ute most luir-llcular cuatomor. ITtere aro aeveral Ironda In tho now flodr eovoringi. One roflocta tho current Intorosl in Meditorruneari stylos, Rich sapphire bluo, omor> aid green and )owet-tono rods are seen. Gold is always a ^>pular color. Floral carpets are shown in Increasing num- Not only can she fliiii tho (Hilor ahc wants, hul she can find carpeting ami rugs U'«C go with and complement any styld of furniture. AHKA lUJttS Area ruga naaiime mure Im-inirlance than ever In provid ing a a|N)l of colur In a room. They go farther than thal. They may be used lo accent a bare woml iloor‘ur warm a floor of vinyl tile. Hiey may tie pliieed on top of a carpetetl floor to define a ftirnllure grouping or add a converaatlon piece to the room, < Their leKiure may be softly ailken, deeply shdggv or sculp- tured In a third dimcnslorml pattern. ' ()aIU^I5T *TAI.K’ Ttiey aay"welcome" al the door; "drop down and drijam" In front of the fireplace; or a|lell luxury next lo a bed. When madu of notion or manmade yarnH, they are easy to clean nnd a cinch to handle. All the leading carpet manufacturers are producing these area rugs. Du Pont has perfeeled a new fiber, Orion 311, especial-' ly designed lor usU Innar-’pets. Hcully two acrylic II- Informalily lo He lu>slivnl Keynoto Informalily wlllTie the kev mile al the Meadow Hrook Music Kestlvnl, Although Iho music Is produced hy a full • symptwiny orchestra, the hh. ling Is In sharp contrast lo an Indoor auditoiinm. hers fused tog(mi«r, u, offers luxurious texture, excel! teAllTII TONKfl By contrast, there are what the American CarptH Institute calls the "earth" tone.s, These have a ".natural look." Their very names - honey, bark, thatch, oyster, pewter, hiek-ory ~ sug^esl Ihelr neutral shading, Summer Is Trip Time Locally ..........., -jeller cleanablflty and freedom from ‘ static electricity, t' Ucs Is using this new fl-her. Feiiilnine concerjl goel's will be morh eotnforlahle II they wear low heeled shoes, The walk from parking ureas lo, the, Baldwiiv Pavilion is on grass and dirt paths, hoih iin-suited to spike heels. Inlomial clothing Will be In order, Hlgelow has a new mclhdd by which thdy can make, a tufted pur()ct - with a tweed ' Imik, The ynrn,u.sed is aci'i-' lam Those who mlmid lo |nii’. V cha,se' senis lor Uie grassy areas surroimdiiig the eoneert .shell should lake blankets v»r other kinds of .soaling fuelll-l,ies, . . But Mrs, America wants • color. And It Is to the credit ol the American manuiactur-ers ttiat she is able to find it In every price rangL An aefial viCw of Paris inspired this allcotton area rug by Wun-da Weve. The rug comes in various hues, each one reflecting a particu-lar time of day. By SIGNE KAIU-STItOM . Mrs, Basil W. Denning of Siirrey, England, and children David, Wendy and Jennifer, are spending a month with her pnrents, the William T, Gossetts. Mr. Denning will join the family Aug; 2. Before, returning to their home they, wth visit with Mrs. Denning’s sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fad! .Sabi Karaman Jr., In New’ York. Mr. and Mrs, Womis PretO' tor and their children Tommy and David'^ are home after two weeks at Mullett Take and a visit with her mother, Mrs,, G. Tenllouten In- Traverse City. -Dtiring their ‘stay, Dr. and Mrs. Hoy Ilawkinson ami daughter, Lysannt* visited the Proctors. Nearby were friends Mr and Mrs. Harry Peterson Jr., who had as their gue.sts Mr, and Mrs, David Moss. I'NDYKD FI.EECE .Some wo()| carpels n r 0 made from undyi'd fleece o| sheep. Color rnnge,s from pal-e.st Ivory to near-black. At the carpet; mill, these vari-eolored wool flheti; are blended Into a subtle mixturt?; then spun Into yarn. Wool lujs never lost Its fKip-ularlly. Nylon txirforms creditably hi Ihe rug and carpet line. Acrilan is excellent. And cot,ton rugs have never gone out t}f style since the time of. the plbneer, women and their Till-nnd-mlss rag .rugs., if redecorating is on your mind, jierhaps a new area rug Is Ihe answer. AHTIST.S Violinist Gordon .Siaples nnd ellist Halo Uahini will he soloists at all ihitM' coiicerbs I'tM* col this week, playing the Brahms Double Concerto in A minor. Thursday and Friday the program ‘ will include Wagner's Overtun- lo "Die Mels-terslnger" and .Sibelius’ Symphony No, 2 In D major. On .Saturday Ihe program will eoiikist of Dvorak’s Overture "Carnival,": four excerpts from Mendels.sohn’.s "A Mld-.summer Night's preani”: and Alfveli!s' .Swedish'Hhapsody No. ■1, All concerts start at 11:30 p.nv, Sixten Ehrling, conductor of the Detroit ‘ Syrnphoriy Orchestra Hdd his first look at the newly completed Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion last weekend. Ehrling who will open the Meadow Brook Musk Festival Thursday evening hnd n one word comment about the new structure, ''Fabulous!" . ' ; Sister Rejects Marital Advice People Coming and Going on 1.0BSTEU BAKE All Birmingham f r I e n d s joined' in .a lobster bake. The llawkinsons continiled. on to Drummond Island for their vacation. Summer Trips . Mr.s. Richard H. DcWilt, a former Pontiac resident, and her children. Richard Jr,, Jerry and Kathleen recently completed a visit with her. father and- stepmother, Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Hansen of East Hammond Lake Road. Friends of Mrs. De Witt, now of Hbrerside, Calif, met her at Devon Gables for a Tuesday luncheon. Mrs. De Witt left ton Cali-fornia today. Mrs. Carl Clifford of North Telegraph Road and Elda Sutter of West Iroquois Road left early this morning to attend the benefit concert at In-terlochen tomorrow. Luci Baines Jbhnson, 16-year-old daughter of the President, will narrate Prokofielf’s “Peter and the Wolf.’’ Mrs. Richard BeGole With daughter, Jean Ellen is here from Toronto spending time with her mother, Mrs, Ira Snader of Clarksttm and her husband’s parents, the Ari Be-Coles. I, • This week-end R Ic hard BeGole will join his family and Janet Snader will also arrive from Boston. There will be a family reunion at the Ari M. BeGoleS Saturday evening. FROM BUFFALO Mrs. F. vonWrangel of Buff falo is visiting her son-in-law, Charles Marsh of Cranbrook Road and grandchildren, Patricia and Jay. Patricia Marsh, who loaves this week for San ,Franoi.sco, wiir return Aug% 1. By ABIGAII. VANBUREN DEAR A H H Y( My hu.s-hand's "iMiby" sister <,some baby, .she Ls 44!) is getting mnmed again for Ihe fourth lime. '■. .She lost one ■ h ii s I) a n d at, Pearl Harbor and iWo in the. divorce court.* She is plari-n i n g a b' i g church wed-„ding.‘ , Her excu.se is that Calvin (her fiance) has never been married before apd HE deserves a‘lovely wedding. DEAR SIS: If she doesn't listen to anybody, she is not about lo listen to nie. friend should use the riwks in his head to fill in the holes in yours! . Slop .wasting you(‘ energy. .She is three times seven (doubled!) and doesn't want your .advice or mine. ; CONFIDENTIAI. TO I.AII-HA AND TH:X: Your boy For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, .self-addressed envelope.* Phony names and phony ages would sinly make lor a phony marriag)i.- Troubled’? Write lo ARBY, care of The Pontiac Press, For Abby’s booklet. "Mow To. Have A Lovely Wedding, " send !)0 cents to Abby, care . of The Pontiac Press. ABBY The truth of the matter is that all of hers were hurry-up affairs and. SHE wants a lovely wedding. Besides, Calvin’s people resent his marrying a divorcee and I hear they aren’t even oomliig to the wedding. ' jl^oiist of Pebrooms Annual Mid-Sumnner . Sale We are reducing many of pur sets'from 10% to 50%. Some sets are floor, samples, discontinued style^ and on'e^pf-d-kin'd, but fhe majority of the saie --- t------ ----------1__ .-.-.I, ^ ---- r------.„.l ^ M . VIMVJ wu V ttv I "VI-fvniu, I MC I MU |UI M / U I MIC dU'C itenis ore from our regular stock,or fine furniture. Special ordbrs are included in the sole priced ' ' 1, Cuslimon Colomal/Bedroom Set , . . Today, Mrs. Paul R. Mc-Kenny and Mrs. Carl Moe leave for a few days at the Colonial Inn at Harbor P.oint, And you can just imagine how all our relatives feet, about h a v i n g ■ to buy a FOURTH wedding present for the same person! How can I stop her? She doesn’t listen to anybody. SISTER-IN-LAW 2: Thomasville 4-piece.French Prot'incial ■' ■■ Bedroom set m Cherry— Was SiO.pO . . . " 3. Tell City Solid Moprle Colonial Triple Dresser-, Mirr.or, Chest and bed -Was 539.00 ................ ■ 4. J piece Walnut set, formica Top— Solid Construction . 6. Modern 4 piece ,youngster's correlated bedroom set. Colorful Blue green drowers—was $1 96................. . 7. Blue ar>d-.gLfeeii Bunk Beds, Was 59,95 ............... 10% Off $ 199,00 ...... $399,00 ..... $118.00 ..... 25% Off ■' $99,00 .. $29.95 • 8. Lane 5 piece'Walnut Bedroom set. Triple drawer, iChesi on Che,St, Bed and Nite Table —WaS'503.85 . 9, Boy's Solid Oak Bedroom Set............ 10, DiScounlinued Solid Mople Chest a.nd Beds . 1 I. Oiled Walnut Bedroom Set’by Founders , ., . 12 Girls White Bedroom Suite Colonial or French . $299.p0 10% 6ff 33 Va Off 10% Off ' Provincial Style, FormicaVops, Both Sets, Reduced . . 10%’O4f- SEALY SALE ' - 13. Seoly Golden Sleep Mattress, Tuftless, Twin or full... 1 4. Seoly Golden Sleep Supreme Extra Firm, Twin or Full . ... 15. Seoly Rest-Gord Mattress Deeply Quihed-To-Foam Twin or Full...................... 16. Sealy King Size Set Tufted, lOnYeairs Guaranteed.* Firm . . . . ]7. Sealy €xtra Firm King Size, id^Year Guarontee, Button fre^ , 18, Seoly Luxury Firm, Coil on Coil - Construction, 15 Year Guoranlee, King Size, Button Free . . 19. Seoly King. Size Posturepedic, Guaranteed 20 Years, Gently Frrjxi or Extra Firm,, Button Free . $39,88 $49.88 $59.88 . $139.00 Set . $199.00 Set is? Bolcl in design and romantic in mood is this area rug by Callaway. Made in ido per cent yarn j dj/ejd cotton cujt pile, the rug has a star-burst, ^ ^ shtbm-like design overlay in an attractive range ^ of cqlors — and it is machine washable. This fierce, new "Polar- Bear” rug, by Regal, sets the scene for a winter weekend of fun in a sPti-lodge yxhibit by^feU City (IndJ Chair Com- pany at the New York World's Fair. The rug, created by, Marie Creamer \ I ' ^ i ^ - II ) 7:. of Regal especially for this exhibit for Tell City/ is on display r in the Fair's Pavilion of American Interiors, Ol plush Zefrhn acrylic, and nylon, it's available in' white only and in three sizes. Open Daily ■" ' IJ;;- 9 to 5:30' Ip Mon. thru Fri.*'*ti| ,9 jl^ouSe of Pebrooms S. TEIl1M;RAPH RD., PONTIAC ^>eeklP^harin.ake Roart i'l;/ '/f*. ‘i A. >4 )■ -1 r-L Vf|> I / - t . [ ,JJ , • 1 . '1 / 'i-R;.; 4' n-a ' I I ^ p ! « 'f , TIIK l»ONf|AC rilKSS. WKIi'NKSnAV, JULY 82, 10fl4 ROSES W« |i0ll«v« onr In baauly, lUa anil lailini abll« lly. ThU IuspIoui, tU«p, r0)i roii0t whan np^ii liH>i lli0 tPKifira Ilf vrN V0l anil ilifl pHiirhi iitay on anil on. I•'llr lliriliila)'ii,.. nnatinl* vpi'nai'ip* , . . niaka/imina* Dill* liMppy wiili riiii0« ... llicy ar« 10 roaminalily |irio0ii. r Mk Jacobsen^s FLOWERS for 4H l> Dimiilovtii Stora I (I I N. Ponllar l‘hi.ne H-; 3-7I6S (;ri>i diers and Just about the tastiest finger food ever. Gerber Meat Sticks are ihade from special cuts of pork and beef selected by Armour plus nonfat dry milk for extra protein and other nutrients. Important: Gerber Meat Sticks are ever so mildly seasoned and extra low in fat. For a wonderful change .of taste do , try the hew Gerber Chicken Sticks. Gerber, MEAT sticks Parents of the couple are the Vincent A. Bondys of Troy and Mr. and Mrfl'. Menno J. Horsch of Birmingham.' 'Lynne Bondy, Joyce Moors, Ortonvllle; and Bernadette De-Much of Warren, attended the bride. Dr. Louis LnBcrge of Montreal, Que., was best man. John Horsch, Birmingham and Robert Horsch, Columbu.s, Ohio, were their brother'll ushers.' ’ Odor Absorber A half lemon on the shelf of the refrigerator helpb absorb odors. Ahtn's annual sale OUR ENTIRE STOCK COLE OF/CALIFORNIA , • ROSE MARIE REID • ROXANNE • JANTZEN .•DARLENE • PETTI • BEACH PARTY sale of shoes UP TO 50% REDUCTIONS Selected group of Casuals by O'omphies and BaJI Band reg. to 5.95 Casuals and Italian Sandals by Town & Country and Fiorello reg. to 9.95 Dress-high, mid and stack-heels by Town & Country . reg. to 14.95 Dress Shoes ’ by Coressa and Mr. Easton reg. to 16.95 Dress Shoes by Andrew Geller and DeLiso Debs reg. to' 26.00- 300 500 900 noo 13°° ' HURON o^tl-EGRAPH Members Enrolled Dr. and Mrs. Richard Paul Horsch (Carol Elizabeth Bondy) left for a honeymoon in the British Virgin Islrtnds after recent vows In St. Vincent de Paul Church. Mrs. Herman Van Heck of Grand Rapids was * guest s|>eaker at the Monday after- the gathering, noon nteetlng of Pontiac Chap terftJo, 300 at the Moose Hull. Mrs. Richard U>e Smith, I ,m!^. Robert Johnson and Mrs. I Nick Serdyn were enrolled at La Bairs Traveling inMichigan Chanel Bows, Longer Hairdos at Convention (■'halrman for the day was Richard Rohrer, ! Th« l-orry Vincent UBalrs Local college members help- (Linda Cierry Letwln) left (or Ing were: Mrs. George Vail- « honeymoon In Upper Mlchl-lancourt, Mrs. Vernon Taylor, j gan after their recent mar-Mrs. Francis Smith, Mrs. L riage-In the Waterford Com-Ferman Huston, Mrs, Hat^ald J munlty Church. Finn, Mrs. Clarenc^ Cavalier, I Mrs. Floyd Yeaman. . Daughter of the Qeorge H, The Chanel-typc'bow which has become the rage In New York .seems to'be fighting the good fight at least among Republicans. When the . TV ' camera flashed on Mrs. Barry Cold-water In her box at San Francisco, the potential first lady wa.s sporting a black Chanel bow on the back of her head. Claire Booth Luce who gave a ringing seconding speech for Goldwalcr wa.s looking cool, serene and charming as always, even when she, was am-bas.sadrcss to Ualy and eating arsenic. Wearing her hair longer and fluffy, she too had a Chanel bow In a shade almo.st matching her hair. Her dress was a simple “little black" idetl ‘ fled as a Maurice Rcntr Mrs. Lloyd La Bhrge, Mrs. Wally Crolnefand Mrs. Houston Tally served the luncheon. Church Site for Nuptials, Reception All .,r>airdo8 pe that of Mary ScrantomAfiere sleek and longer. Onp^f the positive ■come out of the I is that all the can-seemed to have ex-emely attractive families. ij^eumode In Niagara Falls for their honeymoofi are the James A}-' (on Ttiompsons (Carol Jean St. Amant) who chose the. Oxford Methodist Church for their recent marriage and re-WpUon. ' . Rev. Fred G. Clark per-' formed the double-ring candlelight ceremony. Their parents are the Robert Brauers of First Street and Mr. and Mrs. James W. Stltes of Ora Drive, all of Oxford Township. MADONNA VEIL A inadonna lace veil and bouquet of orchids complemented the bride's four-tiered gown styled with chapel train. Mrs;. William Thompson of Lake Orion Was honor matron with bridesmaids Mrs. Scott Pevault and Mrs. Robert Woolcojf. V MRS. L. V. LaBAIR Letwins of CJIlntori River Drive, the brkle chose a chapel-length gown of white silk o^ ganza, over taffeta with Chantilly lace bodice. A full-length "veil trimmed with French lace' and bouquet of white roses completed her ensemble. With honor ^matron, Mrs. Larry Healey were Andrea La Bair and Priscilla Feole yrho attended as bridesmaids. On .the esquire side were William Thompson, hfs brother’s best ihan, with ush^ John Lantz and Edward Sayre. The newlyweds will make their home on Lake George Road. , On the esquire side were best man Larry Healey and' ushera Jan Anderson and John Millerwlse. The brjklegroom's parents ore the Lawrence LaBalrs of Clayton Street. Twin Sons Arrive 82 N. SAGINAW ST. The birth of . twin sons, Alan Culver and Stephen Cote, is announced by Mr. and Mrs. John Gibson of Silverside Drive. Mr. and Mrs, D. V. Cote of AIco Drive are grandparents of the boys. KOEPPLINGER’S --Famous breads Leather Ttiifi' Is Sometimes Just Rhsfic Ladles, be careful. Many cotton fashions this summer have, the popular leather trim. But the National Institute of Drycleaning warns that what appears to be leather is sometimes plastic. This can make a difference to the dry cleaner. But then the Cleaner has to be sure the fabric Itself can also be be wet cleaned. Institute members have received a technical bulletin advising how to h and! e thii$ tricky summer fashion. The Institute offers ttiis tip for you to keep in miiid when shopping. Get a guarantee that the su^e or leather trim is dry cleahable. Make st^re you know^ whether the trim is real or imitation leather. This Information will help you to help the dry cleaner. The AU New Modem IMPERIAl "SSS? Hair Styling as You Like it! 158 Auburn Ave. OppnIM Parkhurtl SI. INSIST ON KOEPPLINGER^S QUALITY BUNS li DIFFERENT TEXTURE-TASTES DELICIOUS Cuftinsr—Styling—TiuUng PARK FREE I FE 4-2878 . J Dear Eunice Farmer; Help I I have an emergency^ I made a drawatring dreaa thal haa two biiUonhoiea in the front for the belt to come througti the casing. After completing It. I found it is too long-wa|at«d; It bceutiful hanging on a hanger hut me, ho|iel«aa. Mra. A. M. « . \ A, dr ‘ Dear Mra. A., M.: For the benefit of all of you who will have (Ida type of pattern, be sure to check the placing of titead buttonholes before you make them. Try your dresi on, tie a belt very tightly around the waist, push up me amount of ease, or bloiisOn you would like, and mark the correct place for the huttonholei For you, Mrs. A M., 1 can only suggest that you make a tuck In your bodice ao that the seam will be exactly on the top edge of (he buttonhole. When your casing Is made and the draw-string inserted. I’m sure it fyon't be noticeable, also, because of the blouson styling of this type of dress, 1 don't think it will bo too bulky at the waistline. Good lucki Dear Eunice; la 100 per cent pure Irish linen ever made In other than 30 inch widths? Mrs. I) 8. Dear Airs. D. 8.; Irish linen made for the homo sewer Is always 36 Inches to my knowledge. Pure linen used for tablecloths Is usually SO Inches wide. Also, I have seen linen drapery fabric that Is SO Inches wide. Many times you can purchase fabric that haa l>een left over from a manufacturer. Ilils width will vary kiso, in this case, wider (al>ric is mbCe economical in cutting many garments. . One last word on Unen for the home sewer. If you Intend washing your garment Instead of having it cleaned, especOally white, you would be using hoi water, be sure to pre-shrInk your linen first.. Place It in hot water, dry and then press. TAILOR TRIX WINNER "To avoid bulk on shoulders, particularly when worklijg with heav)i coatings aqd suitings. Incorporate back and front facings at the shoulder lines, pinning pattern pieces together through the seamlines. Add a H Inch, seam allqw ^ Slice si the center back where the new Joining will he’ (“Cut fronts and facings in one piece to of a bulky seam on a coat or iacket front (if lUdoesn’t have lapels), Just remember to be extra car^i that the center front Is on the exact straight of goodfer {ralnline." Mrs. Darrell Sibley, Webite^Pkrk, Spring Valley, III,, is this week’s winner of, a T»tm Trlx r this suggestion. [ Pressing Board for Dear EunicerT Whenever I have S blouse or dress with a “V" neckline. | hive trouble making the interfacing and facing lay flat at the point of the “V". 1 either have a pucker, or else the seam tears Into a hole. Mrs. B. H. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. B. R.; When you machine stitch to the point of the ’’V" take one stitch across the “V" and then stitch back up and finish neckline. When you have finished, shorten the machine stitch, and reinforce the "V" by beginning W inch from the "V", take your stitch straight across the point, and then stitch 'W inch further on the previous stitching line. Yon may now clip to the last stitch with confidence. It will make the facing lay flat and also, by reinforcing, will not pull out at (he point. ★ ★ ★ YOUR SEWING GLasSARY; gore: This Is 4he term used for a section of a skirt. If there are six sections, or whatever, each sectimi Is called a “gore", such as a six-gore skirt. , Please send your questions concerning your fall sewing to Sew Simple so that I may answer them In'time. Send all questions and sewing tips to Sew Simple, in care of the Pontiac Press. What makes our Bitter Lemon better? (We tbrow out the seeds and skin) Q OMEGA YOU’LL SAY “off with the old and on with the new" when you see those exceptional Omega watches. The ladies' Sapphette watch features a ■ facet edged jewel-crystal; the Constellation Chronometer never need.s winding, has a . date-telling dial, is triple sealed against water, dust and shocks See our collection of Omega timepieces , one *' of the largest in this area REDMOMI’S Jewelers - Optometrists 81 North Saginaw St.-Phone: EE 2-3612 < ajuiXorlwa Om*ifm Agoney Jh* Watrh jTp,| «tXltrllm* if ProtMl !>•«••••<« " -I ‘'Hk y “"'t ' "J . 11 « \ ' . 1 ^ TIIK PONTIAC PIIKSS, \VI’J)NPSI)AV. .M’LV I fudenf Up in Air Over Boarding Costs iiy MAnv FRisysv CuniiuKiinl In iWonny MnnHKttmi^nt l)««r MIh8 Kotdey; 1 urn u college sludent living away from home beeauae of parental diffi t'liltlea. My father la ngalnal thy goh>K h* col lege, Hrcauae of Ihlft fact, I wan > living with 0 tnmily, na r live In hahy nil ter. Thin Niliin-tion waa plenN-' anl but tlme-conMiiinlng, and 1 found Uwi I couldn't give illdrei enough time to the children and atm have the neccasary time to live my own life. . . 1 am now living with my girl friend'i family until 1 cun flial permanent living quartern, Hie liroblem In the amount of inoru'y t Nhould pay them for Hying in their home. Her mother i|ugge8t-ed I write to you. ahoul fH a week, This dependH on the Ntsale of living In thatpar-llcidar liouHohold, and liow many people In the family. I base the above figure« on a liouttehold of four... I think yoM might aak your frlend'a mother it die feeiN that *7 lot your fowl Nouiidu reanonable. In relation to Iter iinubI IihhI biHlgel for the week. fhen you nIiouIiI coiiHlder laundry, the extra electricity, the fact that you will he ipilng b«| lIueoH. lowelM. etc. And ll they pay a water bill. Hum Ihorc’H a hll extra there, tiKi. I think »U or flfi a week would be atuMit (he minimum .vmi Nhould coiwlder, DlsciiM IhlN frankly with your hoHlcNs and get her reaction, IIKM* FAMII.V lull# help uiduuil (he houHe for actual caah payment: hel|>lng in the kitchen, with tho laundry or housec,leaning. Naturally you’ll aasume the respunaihillly for keeping the room you share in gocHl order, i There are many little wa,VN ot mnklag yourNelf uxe-lul arounil Ihe hoiiNe. aad even If you aren’t cominllted to eer-lain JohH, do HN much au you can to make yourNelf wel- You’re lucky lu have II1I.1 pleasant living arrungenuml, and l^opa It continues Hi work oid/Top have a lot of tmul'oge Ifr liislsl on getting an education the hard way, .1,11,, but the rewards wHlrhe many and certain. , PerhaiM you might (nule a Tliey are perfectly wiling to let me shaw wie of the rwmis, but they feel that I should contribute toward my board ex-pf'nses, 1 agree, but neltlwr vl UN knowl wliat In a fair price. I am preNcntiy working at the- College to defray the coit of tuition, iMMikN, and all personal, neceNsiileN.^ I rrcflvf mi financial aimiKUince from my father. Therefore 1 canaoi at-lord to pay I90 extravagant a price, hut I want to be fair to IhcNc people. C'oiiUi ytHi please suggest ail am'iunt ihat would* be fair In them*and to nie',' Tluink you very much for yopf aiwlslMiu;e I J H , Cleveland Dear J.H.: If you have all ydur meala in yoUr friends honie, the adiial co.st of feeding you could range from $5 50 to ’ MRS. R, L, KNlCKKRBOCKKR ll Lace Bible Carried Dear Miss Keeley; Am I correct in asNumliig that 11 1 buy a tl.iKKt H luind one per month for 12 months — I would receive inlerCsl of $4«0 per year on the ,|1?.(K)0’' I iirwlerslond that the first two *years the inld'csl Is low, but after two ylpir^s I would be re-reiving Iwd' separate Interest clieck.s amounting to about $40 liicom*' |mr month. ‘OF., New Yorfe City Dear O F': You are certainly correct in as.sundiig you will receive intcrc.st of $480 per year on )2 $l,(MHi it bonrfs, |lut Ibis plan will not start until you tmve had the last liond for two years, If you’rj- selling up a retire-hieni plan requiring this monthly income, you are wise In stnrl-mg this three year.s in advance, llcre'sjiow Ihe M hcdule of Interest slia()e.s up In dollars and •ents. liderest received from first year ownership of one bond of ownerslilt) $8 for cacti bond .or $00 for ,12 bonds. , Interest received from flrsl-$14.60 or $174 for 12 bonds. Interest, reeetved after one and oimimlf years for one Imnd $10 and fur 12 bonds $102. Tlie next 17 checks (flVk years) $20 tor each bond or $240 semlan-nimlly for 12 lihnils, ’I'lils Inter-esi for fhe 8% years of course totals $4110 a year. (You oan write to Mary Fee-ley In cure of 'I’lio I'onllae l’reHN,i Fait Clothes Need Jewelry 'Hie Increased emphasis on femininity in full clothes makes this season’s jewelry more imporfant than ever, nie new jewelry fashions complemenl and add sparkle lo Hie overall feminine picture by flallering (he wearer and giving tier an allure that only Hie magic of Jewels can achieve. No mailer whaf hep taste or^ budget, there are many exciting Jewelry creations this fall that will add the jierfect accent to Ijpr personality and wardrobe. Activities Keep Jaycettes Busy _,The Waterford .laycee Auxiliary Uiel MoiHlay in Hie |i!li/:a’ belli bake Hoad home of Mrs. .hilm Uadeiihniigli. Mrs. Uudenbaugh reported" on plans for llie .Jaycee-.Iay-Hlle family picnic to-be held duly 2(1 at Wildwood l.alm Mrs, Kadeiihaiigh, Mrs, Hicluird Hcitwah, and Mrs. Mike l:*uUerHim were hoslesses when 'me .Jiiyeees held a dls- ti’lcl ol'ticers nuwting hero on July IS. A trip lo Noi'lhland Play-houHe Is planned hy the group for August It. Old Jewelry Is in Style l.ook for a reiuiissaiu-e of miliiliie jewelry or cop|i>s of It, I One jnanufaclurer, predicting its big fulure in the cos-(iiiiie flHf), shows tor fall heat an gold link cliaiiia llial miglil have heeii hammered out ceii-turli'H ago, golden bangle’ii, i peiiilani earrings and pins' in Hie sami‘ aacleni mood (•’rest plus show (or pnuiliig lo blazer jat-keis, And Hier,e are »ew irealmenls (or the Malle,se (.'ross. copied ai gold hackgi'oiiiid with sl.one.s added. 1 ' Oil Key, Not Lock Don’t try to oil the lock of a disir or cur. Oil the key ami liiserl It. Turn key back and forth a few times.' by Bride A candlelight ceremony In fhe First A.s.sembly of God Church marked tjie recent vows of Judy Ann Shafer to Huger I,.ee Knickerbocker 11. Their parents are Mrs, John M(Cormick of Pontiac luike Hoad. Glenn I). Shafer of Maurer Sliwt and the Hoger b. KnickermH’kcr.s of Brook-dale H(Mid. FISCHER DeVtTA ... 4 r>^eptim in Nkks Hall. Highland, followed the Saturday evening maniage of An-tonetta tkVUa ahd Rietjuird Fincher in Christ of the Lakes Lutheratf Church. Rev, Robert Shade performed the cati-dlelight ceremony. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip . DeVita of Sashabaw Road was goumed l|a a floor-length dress of < white silli organsa and Chantilly lace over taffeta with a lace panel down the back. Her bouqyet- was . of .white carnations, roses, and ivy. Mrs. Gordon Xrmstead attended the bride as matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Yvonne Beauregard and Marie DeViia. Performing the} duties of best man was Gordon Armstead. Bart Montarde and Baft DeViti ushered. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fischer of Heath Road, Independence Twp., and his new bride . are honeymooning at Niagara Falls, relating vow.s lo luld liashmaii, the While Hcv. Arnol bride was wearing whijte .silk organzA wlthl Chantilly lace bodice and Watteau train of lace and organza. LACE BiftLE A white lace Bible topped with while orchids. Ivy and Stephanotis and a silk Illusion veil completed her ensemble. With maid of honor Mary Cadwallader, wePe the bridesmaids Debbie Newton, Sherry and Susan Johnson. ; Paula Kay Godfrey was flower girl. Joe M. Knick^erbocker attended his cousin best-man. Larry Newton. Jerry k'ields, and Thomas Roberts ushered. Brian Knickerbocker carried their rings. After a northern honeymexm Ihe couple will reside on Hazel Smdet. TWO DAILY DELIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS I Sp*ciaU * BUDGET WAVE ■ ^ ;■ : CALLIE’S BEAUTt'sHOP 116 North Perry „ . . FE 2-6.’161 Swivel Rocker by Conovek - . is ideal for TV viewinfc.. .Tufted back, pleated V , t T SUMMER SALE ///f/f/^Av/£viYy>/ 4 Ihv Pricc-BsUihUshcd hems ' \ IL Bninuitifi rosfudlon* on all fine furnlihlngt. . , I \' I'' V IfeiM* ... CoUmlal Gontmnimrnr ■ •L ?' hxtlrontnn, dining room*, tabloi, lamp*, hodding, t C V"1 (. f«f ordor* nro imiudod at iporial lainpriCo$. ovorylhtng Inrludml oxcopt n fom f and Traditional... *ofa*, chatr$i avcotiorie*, picture* and draperies, J'it; »239** nylons, tweeds, frioaei and taticslries, • Choice of Tweed*, Prinl«,\^Decorator ColoninI Fabric* Upholstery Event!!! One of America’* foremost manufaeturers of up-holslered colonial furniture . .Conover Chair Company . . wilh a prjzed reputation for true quality... are the maker* of iIi|b outstanding values in this Mid-Summer .Sale! AH pieces have T-eu*h-ioh, with genuine latex foam rubber 01^ Dacron/ foam filling. Back cushions are' form-f)tted fttr proper relaxing support.'We guarantee the quality of this furniture because we know it represents a full measure ofqualityb , Sofa with three cnahlona and win* itylin* meaimrea 74” wide A-« .75" back height; Choici;,or V \ Scat by Conover i« ,54" *-■ m* OlbPINO CENTER baml, Marco, A, Robles, 58, Is sworn 'in as president for a l'niir‘ycar term, she must ■lake an Indefinite leave from licr job, ‘ ^ “Bui this won’t afi'cct my Icacliing career at all," .s|ic .says. 'Til li5oep|ln loach with our educational problems, and every leacher will find in me a sister wlio will strive for the improvemenis and rights to which the t|nclilng profession is entitled.’’ POOR CIIII.DREN The now Ffrjst Lady campaigned actively for her husband, principally through the party’s feminine centers and by frequent appearances on television and radio pro-' grams. She also contributed newspapers articles, urging women to vote for her husband. The thick of the poliilcal campaign came during t h e months of February, March and April (election day was May 10), during which the schools are closed for the dry season. But she never let political activities interfere with her first concern — looking after her husband and their three daughters, Raquel Aracolll, ,13; Lia Gisela, 11, and Roxana Quefube, 31. One of her goals as First Lady, she says, will be the construction of a "Children’s Town" as a state project. "If everyone works together Remove That Silly Puffy \ , MIRACLE M[ILE-FE 8-96.T9 Even parents have become frantic over the new play item, silly putty. But it’s not the same excitement children enjoy with it. Numerous phorie calls and a number of, items being received by the National Institute of Drycleaning indicate parents are finding the soft plastice smeared on lamp shades, ground into rugs and left in pockets. Some kids can’t bear to part with the stuff and even take it'Ho bed with them. Thus it becomes a part of the sheets. But the *dry cleaning Institute has come up with a remedy and has advised member dry cleaners hdw to cope with ^lly putty problems,. TThe solution: See your dry cleaner. He, can dissolve silly putty from a fabric. He uses the same method with which he removes hail polish staink. STAPP'S . . .value priced . FINAl. WEEK Shoe CLEARANCE Quality, name brand shoes from our regular stock. Dresi-shoes. Way shoes. Cesuals. Broken size Tanges, but come in and see it the size you'want is among these outstanding INFANTS GIRLS BOYS many, m^any pairs to choose , from. \ GIRLS TEENS ’ BOYS School, dress, casuals. Over 60 pairs a , GiRLS MISSES YOUTHS $2|99 $J99 $599 STAPP'S JUVENILE BOOTERIE JUNIOR SHG^ES 418 Ni. Main; Sh:, « ' R'oehester (Open Fri. to' 9) 28 E, Lawrence St., Downtown (Open Mon. to 8:30 and Fri. to 9) ■ . Jl/NIOR SHOES 928 'W. J-luron at Telegraph ' (Open'Fri. to 9.ahd S,at, to 8 301 ' to help Panama’s poor ehil-(Iren," says Mrs. Rohlei, "Ihen ilic newspjipcrs. tlu» radio ami television will have im stories about juvenile de-liiiquoney." , Mrs. Hobles feels (hat I'jm-fiitta’s women are Incronslng-ly aware of their ".‘tuprenjely linportanl’’ role in the nation’s aoeial development. As l'’irsl Lady, Mrs, Hollies aL-io mil-he president of the Nallonal Ued Criws. One (If her |)roj(K'ls Is to ral.se funds fer a new Hed Cro.s.s liead* quarler.s building, .ludglog from ih(> drive'she dlsplayyil in canijmlgnlng (or her luislKind. most people agrc'e, .she will achieve all of lier goals as First Lady of tlu! Ue|)ublic. ■ THK I'UKSS, A<^FI)XKSpAV,-.nT|,V 2i. IIHIL ‘ Home Rites in Troy for New Couple The Beueli Road homo of Mr. amt Mrs, Wilbur II, Walsh in Troy was the selling for Ihe reeoiil vows of tlmir dmighler, Helsirah Brailford, to Clnreiu'e Albert Hlchard- Hev; Tracy Pullman of the Hniversalist Unliarlan Cluircli In imtroli iierformed the cere numy, fidhiwisd by a recepllon. SATIN GOWN (Team lace ai'centeil the bride’s gown of Ivory eamlfe-' light aatlh, styled with off-shoulder bodice nod full cathedral train. A eoronot of Ivory satin held her calhedral-lenglh veil of J''r1>^8 ,. .now 8,.99 were 17.98-19.98 .. now 11.99 were 22^98;28:00 ... now 14,99 were 29.98-3l00 .. now 1 9.99 were 39.98-49,98 , . . now 24.99 SPECIAL - were 14.98-17.98 . . . ^now 10.90-6.90 SKIRTS, WIMPS, A4INES were 5.98 ... now 3.99 were 6.98-7.98 ... now 4.99 were 8:98-9.98 ... now 5.99 BLOUSES, T-SHIRTS and TOPS wer,e 4.98 . . . , , , now 2.99 were 5.98 . now 3.99 Swim Suit8, Famous Brands were 10.98-12.98 .. . now 7.99 were 13.98-15.98 .. now 9.99 were 16.98-19.98,... now 11.99 were 22.98-29.98 .. now 1 5.99 T7r f w/ Cabin Boys, Capris,7Jamaicas, etc. '^ere 4.98'.....now 2.99 \^ere 6.98 '. . . now 4.49 ^ were 5,?^^. . now 3.9^ wer^ 7.^f8-8.98 .. . now 5.49. SALE iRtiitt Ilieli NMit «•( isr Lets o V«wr ijUn«. New lave Qn All Yeu VhillPil For , . . ENTIRE STOCK SWIM SUITS so % OFF YOUR CHOICI Of • CATALINA • PITIN PAN • OLIO CASSINI • BCAONFARTY • COLONY IB.00 Now 7.49 11.00 New^^ 8.97 20.00 Now 9.97 24.00| Now 11.97 Hurry hot Hr»l .St-lei'liun LADIES’ DRESSES l2.nLA0llt' . ONKStlS i/k OFF 50% OFF! T.I9 LADIES' DNEtSES */t OFF 3.88 l.n LADIES ESSES i/k 01 5.88 I.SI Li ESSES 7.1 LA MALS 9.88 1.09 WHITE OHMS V> D 4.88 19.99 LADIES’ FORMALS OFF 1.99 WHITE UNIFORMS V> OFF LADIES’ GOATS 50% OFF 5.00 19.91 COATS-SUITS '/i OFF 9.88 29.99 CO'ATS-SUITS (/t OFF 14.88 49.99 COATS-SUITS '/k OFF 24418 19.00 FUR TRIM COATS OFF 39.88 SPORTSWEAR ' Lingerie, hose FOUNDATIONS 50% OFF 1.99 BLOUSES-SHORTS, ViOFF 99” 3.90 SLACKS-BLOUSES, */k OFF I, , V / World Nevys Woundup ‘Ihh. ~ /'• 1 ,5 " s niKSS. WKDNKSUAV. .n I-V w. mmh. It A British Slate Pullout of Aden Troops ItoR W)NDON (APj-Britain' is Hrilitili fortes had reached fheiriAden garrison May 1 when llie withdrawing some of the 2,0«0 j ithme^liafe objecilves In the South Arabian g^^vernmonl Iroops it sent to Aden last May clusier of sheililtdoms encircling | asked for help against (lie to stamp out tribal upriainga^; Aden TIte ministry said the | ti|la’*‘kd a thousand books in my , wifti on Ihili, he really doesn’t imaginative, | library whose pages I have yet deserve r(Miremenl, When the. world removes them to turn ,jfrom Ihe harness of the. dally i KKAI, FUN GAMF, ' ' plwldlng. they take revenge by j i Tiu-n I'm going to get 10,(M)0 dying, j-mks and a thou.sand tin cans. * * * I'm going to put the tin cans on C puritanical „ fence and then.peg the wks i awsING (AIM Ken tiilb.«rl ooys K ill/nq, “'i, “ r'" '* ' v7 , 0 keep him out of ., nied mmmuiling petitions as a Without work they feel Buy; tIusv I am going down to the Kepuhlicun candidate for the have no ml8.sl(m in life, ' Bowery and get an artist-to tat- pith Senalorial District taking I have just the opposite then- ,.^,es( a giant eagle, p, w'ashianaw Coimlv and 'he ry, r think the only purpose of „„ American flag.and the mot- Eastern half of Lenawee County. Dallas tU PI I — Jack Rubv ** ***'^* *J)”d<-y,U), "Liberty or DeathBursiey filed 1,400 signatures, said during a lie deter tor test - . * > ♦ n bj 'Jack Ruby Sfafe Legislator Files Nominating Petitions Planned' 0 spend the rest of your 1 JMiiu uuniiit « lit- wnwiur >esi , , j M « .»ir given him by the FBI Saturday m»“^hief atwt "J'*'; L..*. ______ aence 1 believe that any kind of that he dedd;5 the ‘moVnihi , . .. of Nov, 24 to kill l-ee Harvey ‘’*"P'«yf««'d th(> legal maximum and four Tlien 1 am going to start limes the number ,re(|uired. 4,^ lu iklii lari' „iiui vi’v ' ' . i Oswald, the Dallas News naid •-n «nd any man who subnait.-. ,o(jgy to it an hour longer than he has. Two FBI agents gave the ttst ‘*> I* «" unenlightened fool, ; to the S3-year-old condemned (jivKS SI’KE(TI slayer In the county jail In the ^ Every morning I make a presence of a Warren Comtnis-;, Sion invesUgator. Ruby had re- rebellion in good] quested the test. i grace. ! The paper said the agents | "Just hold on to your job until { found nothing indicating Ruby j you're 65, Rover,"' she says, lied during the but that i ‘-An'd then you can do anything; analysis of polygraph tracings you want. You'll be absolutely; of bis breathing and pulse i free. But frankly, I don’t think. were not complete: ' you’ll know what to do with Oswald, the "accused assassin youtself ." ' / of President Kennedy, was shot . * in the basement of the Dalia.s That just goes to show how a poUce staUon Nov. 24. * woman can live with a man nearly 30 years and jtnow «bso- Queen Unperturbed Torrenfs at a Tea Party Ruby said he decided .to kill Oswald, "if the opportunity presented itself,” to spare Mrs. Kennedy the anguish of returning to Dallas to testify at Os-wrald’s trial. CONSPIRACY He also said the test would prove he did not know Oswald previously and was not involved In any conspiracy to kill Kennedy Defense attorneys said at the Ruby murder trial that he had decided to kUl Oswald on the spur of the moment. lutely nothing abbuL him ' 1 know exactly what I’m going to do with myself when I’m 65. Planned retirement has been my constant daydreap ever since I started sweeping out a grocery store at the age of 10 Areas Cleaned Up Where Radium Fell 'Ll}NDON A -r The Queen’s garden party began at 4 p m. the rain bt?gan at 5. Most of the 7.000 gue.sts at Buckingham Palace ignored the first trickle. But when it turned into a downpour, the rush for the gates hefcame a torrent. Queen Elizabeth II and her husband. Prince Philip,, Were unperturbed Protocol demanded their presence until 6. . They strollt*d to the lea lcn(, and beneath its shelter carried on with the royal prc.scntations. 4)$iPTEMIIR DAY AND EVENING PROGRAMS • Btchelor ol Science depree courses day or evening • Pre College Progronv day or evening I Firm coiligi, * Msociale in Engineering degree evenings only in Technical InSl'ilule Bulltfinu Conitruclion ' EKitrlot a. E(*ctron(c Induilrltl SuMrvitlon AAKhanIcal 7w;hi)o(9»i^ Visit or Telephone Coiinselor for Appointment LAWRENCE Ruby was later i^eported to AMERlCUS, Ga. UP - Tech- have said that he decided to kill Oswald Friday, the day of the assassination and two days before Oswald died. 'ClaimCream Cakes Cause Food Illness niciansrTrtm - the estate- Health Department today were cleaning up areas of a hospital where a radium container was broken. Terry Diers Jr., administrator of the Americus-Sumter County Hospital, said the accident last weekend posed no" danger to anyone in the hospital. BUDAPEST, Hungary (#», -Cream cakes, apparently spoiled by Budapest’s lOtWegree heat, are blamed for a wave of food poisoning in the Hungarian capital. Fifty acute cases have been hospitalised and 35-i^who were less seriously i ill were treated at home, the newspaper Neps-| zabadsag reported. The paper said a number of confectionery and cake shops were closed pending a government medical inquiry. Technicians were sent to the hospital,after it was discovered that some radium salt spilled when a needle broke in a la-^boratory. Hiers said the needle ' itained radium salt used in treatment of canper. Huge Lawsuit Is Filed Against Desi Arnaz INDIO, Calif. — Desi Arnaz, retired television actor-pro-Jucer, has been sued for $36.75 million by a Cathedral City, i Calif., couple. The suit, filed- yesterday in - ( Superior Court by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Young, charged assault, battery, slander and false imprisonment. They claimed that, , Amaz chased them around/*■"' Thpnderbird Country Cl . , / where they w^p' employed/ as ! janitorsrlast Jan. 1. ^ \k- - . How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly in Place Ooroui t«U« teetb annoy and e... barraaa by sUpplng, dropping or wobbling When you eat, igugb or talk? pagTEr-"’ - sprinkle puwder hi gooey, pasty taste or feeling sour. Checks "plate odor" breath). Get ^81 mure itrmiy gummy. . . Does not odor" (denture drug counura everywhere. Riehman .Bros. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER Open Daily 9:30 a.m..io 9 p.m. PONTIAC MAU Optical center prrj.mtMtrrrfMn DOWlVrOWlY poivnAC Offers PARKING DOWNTOWN furnished by die foUowiuiJ^ mrrehauts ARTHUR’S 48 N. Sagindva St.^ BARNETTS CLOTHES SHOP 150 N. Saginaw St., BOBEHE SHOP 16 N, Saginaw Sit. McCANJILESS CARPETS 11 N. Perry St. OSMUN'S MEN'S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St, FRED N. PAULI JEWELERS ® ■' 28 W Huron St. ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS 48W.HironSt. CLOONAN bRUG CO. 72 N.. Sogipaw/St. SHAW'S JEWELERS 24 N. Sogtnaw St. . WARD'S HOME OUTFITTING CO.-, 1 7-19-5. Saginow„ St. EntirO Stock LADIES’ - MEN’S^ CHILDREN’S ROSE MARIE REID JARTZER COLE OF CALIFORRIA REACH PARH ROXAHRE PEni DARLERE Ladies' Famous Name Sportswear "T I . , ' ■ SHORTS - T-SKIRTS - KNEE CAPPER 'A Off Girls' Famous Name Sportswear SHORTS - BLOUSES KNEE CAPPERS Regular $2.98 „ M*n't Short Sloovo Men's Boys' SPORT SHIRTS BERMUDA BERMUDA Reg. to $6.95 SHORTS SHORTS Reg. to $6,95 , Reg. to $5.9H 399.,499 399.599 19* . 319 More Shoe Reductibns 1 '|- II Ladles' .Naturalizer Shoes Ditcontinuwd Styl«t HIGH, MIO, CUBAN, STACK, WEDGE Regular to $15.99 Ladies' American Girl Shoes Regular to $9.99 DRESS CASUALS 500 ^00 1 ^ Entire Stock' of Selected Group of 1 Summer Sandals Ladies’ Canvas Shoes ■ ‘ Reg. to $7,99 - Sizes 4Vi to 10, N apd M widths J 200:50b Reg. to $3.99 288 Men’s Porto Peds Men’s Pedwins AAen's-Boyg'-White i Tennis Shoes Slip-ons Oxfords Slip-ons R»((. to Cl $12.95 II ir 00 ;g:|: Ai Charge uriith option t€ijrms , & . ............. v..... j —....................................... li 0 TJIK |»(>y v6 arltclea on Miehiffari’s evonowir recat^-oru J My «a;NK HOIIKM I’N Ih'lroM WriU-r UltiTKOIT II wiiN IllflII mill you cimlil I'olor Mlcliiijmi Kiim. <1 :OT. tlioy liHiluiil Hull miy ' A piiyloNH piiydiiy lor Mliiil fimi Hliih* «‘i!i|)lovt'N ' (lonl Ihiil tlieir omumilon of the surplus ure "very eliise l.ook at the auto liutustry wliere the Mustang, the newest niemher ot the auurfimtily, not only n r«i (ml a syuiho). The luilimli'v lA ^ticking up its heels, Aiilo pi'iMiui;lliui soured to 7.(1 million In Ul(i:i, pmt a nilte he- year, pi'oilueium is still higher. was sharply down'from 1850 Sueh Intensified efforts sliu c' this, of course, 'ITie buttle had the ItM.'l riot have also helped to been raging for more than a provide Michigan with aome ofidecaile; but after, 1965 when the outstanding leadership in the ■ auto production peakeil and be-couiilry in matters of t’achll eon I gai' h' plumme/, the tax argu-epru, I tneiil look on new intensity and A a * I urgetii'y^Wilh employincni down hi Detroit's ii'oiipiudhmn gov i«f dwindling auto pro-iinienl. Mayor I’avaimgh luis | * , " , IlHiv (lift MInIm Ufiiy /wtllM^sUnii slopped up iiitograllon in eltyji**”’' •'^•hle, was eolleeling eoveromerii in oeoerui ui.d ihe I l''SN revenue from Its chief tas government in general ,and ihe| ,, , school lionrd has mnd«» much when 8.5 per . cent (one, out of I every, 12 workers t of the Micht-: gah work /orce was without a I job, ' , » ‘ The rape "problem?" Mlelil« ■ gall Is not wil(iout Its tensions, ' ibul It, has I steered tree pf the raCfally baseil liirmoil \yiiieh In 1 rfcent months has shaken New ■ York, ('levelaiid. Wasliington • * * I Mild the, South. ■ ' , Look at (he industrial stalls I ' The United Auto Workers j progress in Inlegi atlng schooL lUiSiNKSS VII'IW licM The Michigan Keonomie | Union, which from lIs lnee|illoii ‘ laeullles, j Many Itepnhlleans hnd busj- Ksp.oe.iou Deimilnieni sm'.s II liml au liilegraled iiiemher.slilp, j ' i„ iiki;», n„. pitii year lies,snieii said the,limes (frieil oul iiuluNii ti's iiitived lo Michigan I now has a Ncgi o on Its liiiei'iia* j foe whiidi strike slaiisiies are lor curbs and ciilhacks In slate . .■ , , „ Jla,st year from oilier slaies, tional executive board, I'onner-j available. Michigan lost only U spending mid for lax relief on \ "''""“‘I Michigan people, using Miehlgmi Ily all-white bnikllng Inide.s mi'! „f ,.,ml of Its nvall'ahle, iiulic'.irlal plants lo get the ceoiv ' ? ! n nimihours a.s a resdlt of strikes omy inov(ng again, d.numlo Mi. higin VV.llim pue oiiee-deluncl irulu.i-1 riyrs wlllumi llie pressure of work stoppages a record' In general, Demoerals mid mail ami was iieiuig lor im (heu- d.sirs imllsegregutioii deni.iiislndions, ,i,j„ compiled hv, trade inilhnlsts -leil by Demo- '•'Id" Mieliigan nulnsliy eX'l After a llH:i laee not in Do- such slides as Wuslimglon; t'oi’1 •'i'«h<’(hiv, U Mennen (Soupy i IIAl'N't'INti .lOKU ' panded with 2MI iiew iilaais and ,,j|y (.^tiihiodied (he, orado, Unllfornla. Montana, New ' Williams called for the adop* A hauiiimg loke In wliieli a hmldings. The'ioial value o| ihe nrsf Commimily llelnlions Com-1 Mexico and Vernmnl. , 1 lion of a grmlmded Income (ax. lipplei .strolls mio a har mid de. new plmils: $'i;i0 milllim, ' mission Ip the couiilr'y, The .state' | They said It would allow the fminded MlchigaiHtiithiv rocks, j This year'’ In the first four, „i>,„ ^loved bi Improve race re-1 „ '* . ' . , i stale to meet Its financial ob- I'hls Is 1 Wit and you can color '""'**^'* "* 19('L indinsliy made m(|,,|,g during the administra-'l, A study made by the iigHiions, redistribute the tax Michigan green, like money I last year's spending look nil.ser-i non* of Democratic Uovs n,''’"h*"’''*', ^ h J •’V," Insiiliite. ,.oniinue improving The reporfs of iis deaili. IlkeilV' I' ahnonneed It will spend, Mennen Wlllinms Ilnil John I),! ll'nt Michigan labor ■ ,,dueuUoh and Ihnse of Mark Twain's w-re i •' “"HI"'" I Swaliison, costs, oiushle the miio industry. The slnle^was greatly exnggernted , for new iilanls and c(|ulpmoul^l^|,^ CONSTITUTION i i •'•'•f 1* wtllioul an In- constant elinrges lhal Mieiii gan leelered on Ihe lirllik nl liankriipley. Why, Ihe les were Ihe oblhiar-* things as bad 11(11 iMit ntiiM,'It I..... .......■ ------- Uif-any major Indiislrlal slate, i ,.ome tux HOUND t OUNL^ I | , ^ , (onu lax. Melrotsdilaii Delroll. which wtu'ii, under Mining h'adershi|) gmi today, Inil what ahont 19511 les written'- Were tilings* ns had wiis k.'sitm'tiomihuion'five yem^^ 17'i?,Zn! wriai ,amnu ihiih; Uupuhlleans iHdntixl mil tliat IIS thev seemed " How miieli '’■''‘•'h t»'l'*' ••' '»>«u s py u,.„ub|inm <,uv, Uomney, wlicn (he Stale eolleetmt a ton slid,, vm-ndinu had doubled In h' . iere MItiTs K Ive I n th e ■ f *V ’’”‘"1 i i" lu ’' ", of puhlimly - almost all of it had, ,Sde S Sv Wim Tr ..r:‘ ‘ i-'-ovidi'-'K <'•••' •• nvii I'ook at'19511.., ■ struelmn and reemistnietion of ,.^^,^1^^,, pp^mUs for eonstrucl-Mjehlgan's "image'-" .lust how |„g 77 more homos and prosja'i'oiis Is Michigan now ," | apartments than In lOtl.'l which. First, a look id present day (yp„ was up over 1962. New MIehigah, Look at state finatiees, (4st Tuo.sduy, the state closed out fiscal year enmplelely free of a, (i-year-old deficit that once had totaled $110 million. $40-MIUJON SUUPLUS Last Wedtie.sday. il launched a new fiscal year with a surplus estimated at $40 million. Al- though final figures will not he available until after an audit, slate budge! officials m‘e eonfi- homes and apartments are now going up at a 2«,0(K)-a*yeur elip. In downtown Detroit, modern luxury apartmenta ring the bush ne.ss district. A new hotel fronts a stilhnew $55 million conven-Hon center, New office bulldlng|t' are revamping Ihe skyline. JOB PKTURE Unemployment? It was S.,? per cent of the work force in Michl-j gan lust year, below the nation- j al average of 5.7 per cent,' It HiglUs romrnisslon, the first (diislitntmnally aiithonml such group mmmg the 50 states. Look at 1969, . . , [ Dt-nuH'rats quoted from the bus- pemocruts and Repubileans messorleoted U S. News and ere sera|iping over taxes, | W(,p|d Ruporj to siuiw that There was nollimg new in, spending by all atiiles bad In-' creased five times smee World War H ,and that. In comparison, SHORTY A 2-Minute Short Story Copyright 1^64 I7 Nowipiperi l^nterpriii Ann. 'The.Bonewinner' REAL COOL CAT — This Siberian tiger Is not'chicken when it comes to wetting his whiskers. Whdn the temperature hit 90 at the Milwaukee County Zoo, he didn"t grdwl about it, and being a different breed of cat than most, took the plunge. Police Start Laundry and Clean Up Town By .STEVE APRIL ; down to a sftt'ond job of book-I wasn't shy but I had Utile 1 time for any .social life or ^irls, i FIRST NIGHT even, If I was pa.st 30. - j when I asked her to marry All day I worked a.i a book- ,tie we had our fir.st real fight! keeper, a dull Job I hated, and , .. . , most nighl,s when my eyes | *““*• .“» weren't too tired 1 worked on W >«“■ stay home a different kind of book, trying! to write the great American both.” novel. True, I WHS lonely but not unhappy, for writing was my life. But my w.lioLe life was "shook up" on Cliristmas when my grandmother, instead of sending me her usual check, which I could certainly use, sent me Flo---which I needed like another hole in 'my worn suit. Flo, I must hasten to' add, was a tiny* very cutei bluehaired dbg. It was a ridiculous, situation, being stuck with a dog, although shd did help the lonely atmosphere of my room*. But it took time from my writing, getting up early to feed and take Flo for a walk, rushing home after work to take her out again, taking Flo to the vet for shots, and all the rest of the dog-gone bother. Qne day the veterinarian told me, "This is a rare breed of dog but it happens I know somebody who has a male and you ought to see about mating the dogs." “Wail a minute, Jartc, honey, you'll give up your job and devote all your time to painting, I"II get a part-time job at night to take/care of the expensel" "Nonsen.Se, I cried when I read your first chapter. I just dabble with paiHts but you.,have real talenl.’’ TRUE ART “Darling, your pointing is true art. My writing is a jumble of words.’\ “Oh, no! You have the cre-t'Stlve talent of the famUy. If you give up your writing you’ll always bold that against me. It might ruin our marriage." "The same goes for your art," I told her. NE\\f ORI.EANS, La, (AP)-1 Other officers handcuffed the The police gave a party Tues- i guest, who stood staring urthap-day night and a crowd of crooks ;pily at the refrd^sKments as a was taken to the cleaners. , j phonograph blared. The party-goers included a ig SHOWED UP number of persons wanted on charges of shoplifting* narcotics sales and burglaries. The party—It was actually ^ca-tered with food and refrei^h-ments costing $104—capped a three-month undercover investigation,; - The hosts were detectives Robert N. Frey and George J. .Hughes, who three months ago opened a laundry shop just four blocks off busy Canal Street in the heart of the city’s commercial district.. PASSED THE WORD Informers passed word to the underworld that Frey, posing as Harry Long, the laundry operator, was a fence—criminal jap-gon for a man who buys stolen goods. / Police Supt. Joseph }■: Giar-russo said Frey and Hdghes actually bought $47,00d in stolen Sixteen of Fi;ey’s customers-showed up. Another 14 uninvited guests came along and police said many were wanted in-connection with other ciases. Then Giarrusso ordered sweeping raids on the homes of 10 known fences, where a num ber .of' other persons w^re arrested and a large .amount of stolen property wa.s recovered. By early today, a total of 32 arrests had been made. And so we went, .rbund and round; There seemed to be no solution for op/problem, but j w« knew ^ere was—some-I where. Wp-loved each other and idoesn'tyKive always find a way? -'Doc, are you kidding? That’s i ANGRY WORDS need-pups! |/Jane wouldn’t give in and 1 the yet grinned. 'Are you gOrXcertainly wasn’t going to be any ing to fight nature? 111 have the kj,pt \ad some other dog here when Flo comes for her last .shot, next month. {yj, g ,yhole miserable OWNED HARRY j month. That was how T met Jane, | Then I found out Flo was who wasn't a dog in anyi sense, goi„g to have pups and I had She owned Harry who Was also a iilue-haired terrier! Jane was about 28, of average looks, and on the quiet and sensitive, side-She vrorked as a sales clerk all day and painted nights and over the weekends. Naturally, before you can mate dogs you have to let them know each other and so Jane and I began spending Saturdays vyalking our dogs. ' Flo and Harry hit il off just “We di^’t do too good in the j fine, romping iilT^he park and laundry^rtiusiness,” said Deputy hiding in the bushes. After two Chief Alfred Theriot. "We lost about $900 the first month.’’ FUNNY CHARACTERS Frey said his laundry business was good at the start but "it dropped off after people saw all the characters eoiming here. What’s funny, though, nobody made a complaint to the police property- at a cost of $11,0001 about it.” from 53 persons;' including sev- Frey said some of his custom-eral real fenced. I ers brazenly brought large sto- ★/ ★ ★ j len articles such as lawn mow- Giarrussd, Mayor Victor Schi-1 ers, stereo sets, and televisions ro, Chief Asst. Dist. Atty. Frank j to him in broad daylight. Klein .{thd newsmen gathered at | ' ^ jr three wieeks I couldn’t write, I could barely work, all I could think about was Jane. VISITEDHER ' i visited her place and she showed me her paintings, which were very good. I let her read a chapter^ my^ novel and she unden ' the theme I was tryinf^to get over. / to call Jane. She was to get part of the litter! In fact, she could have all the pups. My room was too crowded as it was. She brought Harry over and we took the dogs for a walk. Jane and I just looked at each other and tried to talk. Then we Jane and I have beej/happily married now for foujKyearS. We have a modest^usc' in the country, even ^little car. Jade aniLIf she hdsn’t sold mu^of Jrer work" that' matter, she’s ^ng wh^-!^he loves best—paipting. "niSHED NOVEL y ^ As^ for me, I ilnished my npVel and that ^dsn’t sold yet, -either, but 1/don’t care. My writing is /ifnproving and I’m working^.dIl day on a second book. Miciiigan's apemling was by no means excessive. TAX PROPOSAl-S Meniiwlille, Gov, Williams ami die HcpubllcatH'«nlrolle from already ear-markei) iRuie (uiuls Iq meet (he payroll, Gov Williams said, however, that Ihe lime had come for (he legislature lo overhaul its lax siruelure nrul provide morp money 'Hie legislature voiced a loud no. State employes went paylesM .STIRHE6 TO ACTION Out III stale eilllorlul writers, who 'had iHieii cocking aa ear to the Michigan tax dehate. wi'ie slim'd lo action by the pay less payday. ^ "So lhe< liubble of the welfare slate burtitN,’’ cried (he Kansas (.'Ity Star, "ami as It does, we see n polnicil lessim (or tlie nation." In Phoenix, the Arizona Republic said Michigan industry was fleeing the slatp liecause of an MtilibusinesH chmate. And the . l-os Angeles Times concluded -1 h a I Michigan'* trouble,H came "liccause the stffte has greatly' increased Its supjxirt of welfare programs and taken over the responsihllltles of local government.^." ilKilllER BITE Almost no one listened when Michigan leaders iMiinted out that the average California citizen eohtrlbuled more to .welfare citlian* mo^ than Michigan. Even when amlijy to pay taxes was disregarded and the tax bite meastirmi splely on a per-canita basis Michigan eillserm silll payed less than taxpayers in 10 other states. In taxes on industry, however,, Mlehigan did not edma off ao well comparatively. Illgii local profwrly taxes In iiome Micb igan clllee ami counties pushmi costs on Imliislrlal plmils up word Michigan, citizen. Tlie tax bite for welfare was. in fact, higher in 34 states thaii It was in Michigan. Almost no one lisicned, either, lo comparative slate tax statistics. Figure taxes one way -percentage of. .personal income going into state and local coffers-and 31 states taxi'd their One impartial sliiily of more than lOO'communtttes In 10 Mid western states, showeit that combinulion liK'al-state taxes were highest on industrial planl.s in five Michigan com-munilies. DemiK'rata said aq in (iotne (ax would ease the Industrial (ax bite: Republican legts lators said Jt wouldn’t. Hut the industrial lax picture was not retarding Michigan'4 growth (0 the extent claimed by the slate“x critics, Although it was true thpt 23. plants left Michigan in 1959 and aimibcr 27 closed their dmirs, Michigan's critics overlookwl the (act (bat 18 new plants moved into the State, 50 new plants were built with Michigan capital and 225 ‘9 X i B 11 n g industries expanded their plant facilities. Today, when > Michigan Is booming, industrial plant*' are still leaving HI left in 196$ and 18 closi«)d their doors l; but this Is written off generally as mirmal industrial attrition and is more than offset - just as it was in 1959 — by new Industrial arri-. vals and by expansion of existing Industry, What’s more, the state has learned that many disaffected industries return to Michigan after tasting life in other stales. Three plant.s that fled in 1959 re- turned to Michigan w i t h i b an eight-month span in 1901. . Uul-of-slate critics a|su overlooked the fact that neitlier poll-Ileal liberals nor ihiIiiu'sI con-Becvailves have their way in Michigan. It was true that executive ami jiidii’ltil doclslons grow increasitigly liberal under the Democratic administrations; it was also (rue Hint conserva* 11 v a Kepiibtlcan legislators blockml virtually every major Demm'ratic legislative program. For example. Democratic judges broadened the Mii|i« of slate workmen's comiienaation and unemplijyment Insurance coverage, but the Hepubllcan.-conlrolled legislature. refused lor the most part lo increase paj^ments. Today, Michigan's workmen's compensation benefits for In- ■ jur(>d workers are among the lowest In Ihe 'nation and are " 'illci oncernlng some Republicani as Well as Demw'rals. And the legislature has since siaitbed many iiKiustrlallsts — and, angered labor - by revers-Ing the Ford-Canton court dei’l-Sion. ThF dei'islon granted State . unemployment benefits (b non- I ,striking workers who were idled by 'a strike within their corporal I6n. , Today,. Ilvp struggle between Democrats and ItetHiblicana is continuing in Michigan, but, for the most part, j|'s trim of the dee,p bitterneiiN that helped darken the state's image five years ago. ! One of the current political issues in fact, is one of the most pbiasaal ever to fair the .Stale Just who or W'hat ■ is re-s|)utislhle for the stale’s present prosperity. . Tomorrow: Some of the an- Assails Nomination of Goldwater WARSAW (AP)-"Clean our weapons, always keep our vigilance and stay on full alert," Soviet Premier Khrushchev told, thi?^' Communist bloc Tuesday night after attacking Sen. Barry Goldwater and the Republican platform. "" Khrushchev spoke at. a celebration of Poland’s 20th anniversary as a Communist nation, after the U.S. and British ambassadors walked out in protest against attacks on U.S. (wlicy by Polish Communist party chief, Wladyslaw Gomulka. „ j of unbridled atiticotnmunism and war threats. , I Assailing the Republican platform as warlike, Khrushchev said it was adopted in San Francisco "in an atmosphere reminiscent of the fascist (Nazi)) gaUi-erlngs in Nuernberg.” “The candidate put forward for the presidency," Khrushchev continued without calling Goldwater by name, "made it clear that he wants to enter the White House under the slogans VARIOUS MADMEN "The Soviet Union * ha.H already existed for 47 years. During this period we have .seen various mad and half-mad men.. We have never been afraid nor are we afraid of threats. We cannot be Indifferent, however, toward threats." - Gomulka also attacked Gold-water. He said it was doubtful the Republican candidate would be elected,. "but the very fact that a man of his caliber has been nominated illustrates by itself the dapger threatening peace in the world' on the part of aggressive imperialist circles in the United States and their West German allies, who demand nuclear weapons." U.S. Ambassador John Moore Cabot walked out after Gomulkr declared that the United States and West Germany have "a common platlofm of militant anticommunism and of pushing the world to the brink of war ” British Ambassador ' Sir George Lisle CluUon, the dean of the Warsaw diplomatic corps, left after Gomulka finished. Eritiah source.s said he considered Uie speech rough and dis-tastoful. ' With Romania apparently and Poland possibly In mind, Khrushchev warned against Western efforts to woo Com- ^ munist governments into Independent policies. = Western countries, he said, “by .means such as promoting nationalism, using economic contocts for pollUcal aims attempt to |dt 6ne Socialist country against the other. All this is intended ,to undennine our unity,, td divide our countries." A group of unidficial advisers to President Jackson was called.,/' the Kitchen Cabinet. FORECAST: Clear...Crisp... H. A. C. ANDERSON Named Head of Fund Drive Money ^llected tp Aid piegr6 Colleges C. Anderson, 5301 %ay- v,w.„. c.v. ,.v Bloomfield Hills,,has been were in each others arms, both ... rAQlirxirirr. hmi; eillt; niti* nri/iar ..... ^ .. . /iiaiiien-ruiiiuu; chatpftian of the realizing how silly our pri^ united Negro .jCbllege Fund drive, it was ^nbunced yesterday by Robdrt C; McLaughlin, UNCF gerieral campaign chairman. / Anderson is reliability direc- tin’" for Pontiac Motor Division. 'He le will be assisted by Earl A. Maxwell, personnel director for GMC Truck & Coach Divtoidn, and Alger Conner, direetdr/df industrial relations Fisher Body Division. / / The UNCF cqjfi^gn, which is currentlyydnder way, has a statewide goal of $230,000. headquarters Tuesday night to listen over the police ■ ram to the party. It started, at 8 p.m. Frey met 'Ihis first guest at the door and . lishwed, himi-to ^a back.i'oom. Using a /wo-waj/ mirror, police technifcians filmed each ot Frey’s transactions and record: ed. the'/Conversations on tape. About 26,^.^eet of film—nearly five.mile^’was u$6d. / Well, I knew qt' long last L was in love and^.vVhen I told Jane jl loved her shd cried a little as^ ......................... we kissed/said she’d always ;are. Every year Flo has a liRer i dreamt pf meeting a manlike ipf five or six pups and asj5lue-me. / • . ;/ | haired terriers are so yej;y rafej. / * A * , [when the pdps are old"^enough, 0t course, I realized that J they sell for $800 ejtob ,and .sup-’ M/hen we fnarfied/f’d have to j port us all, in fii^tyle. ,{|j ■ ,| forget' toy 'writing and buckle 1 ^ (The EiW) UNCF-'iujnds are used in the support of. 32 c 011 e g e s in ,11 see Hpry and Flo solved | Southern states to improve aca- our money problems because | ^xnic standards and to provide ey are as muchjn tove as j^^scholarships for students who c t-1. u 1.,* _' could not continue theto education. ^ - V'. i I / £t Anderson said contributions, which are taje deductible, may be" sent direAly .to UNCF, 312 Penobscot Buil'ding* Ddroit. tllear...crisp...dry... that’s the taste you get ^ith FLEISCHMANN'S GIN and VODKA fitiseMMUNN-i siii-^,|>m. FiEiscHMimrs ii|ii>m-w moor ■ ioth distiued fmm iaeueia smin • jint fumchiunn asnumteow.. .''.Al If I 'I ^ » . 'I 'll-' " ■ . : „s*' I 'll ,, V ' • A)n'H i’hkAs, vvii|)NKspAy. in-v'tf.', J-L ■ I WH AT 1$ A , 1 - / GETTER? A Dust Catching Cash Getter is a very common species, but even though it sounds like on interesting subject, you will not fipd it listed in the bird watcher's handbook. It seldom has feathers, does not chirp or sing, and, it comes in an endless variety of sizes, shapes and colors. You can find'at least one, and sometimes dozens, in almost every home. Bird watchers do find them interesting to cQhtemplate, byt then,' so does almost everyone else; This is because when properly handled a Dust Catching Cash Getter puts money in people's pockets. Chances are there are some Dust Catching Cash Getters irt your house—some useful but idle items which could be putting ifioney in vour pockets instead of catching dust. Here is how to handle them. First dust them off, then decide what they would be worth to someone else\ Then you pick up your phone and dial 332-8181 and place a low cost Pontiac Press Want Ad. When you call the Pontiac Press, a friendly Ad-Visor will help you word your ad. ; 6oon your phorts^will be tinging, and your Dust Catching Cash Getters will be leaving your house, leaving behind only the money in your pocket. Just Dial 332-8181 to reach the Pontiac Press Want Ad Department. Be Sure To Order the Thrifty 6-Time Rate! Poiitiae Press; Want .\'J 7jr <7:mi'u "'VdiJui \,mAuk " -V ■i'.r ‘ .1. li H . ‘ • -I' / ^7’"" ■■’ '7' '/ \M ---) I- TIIK l‘()N rui IMililSN WK1)NKSI)AV. IWUl New Buildings Dot Area's Sky line 7 Ni'w Niriit'luroH aii' bt'Kinnlng to (lot till' t‘ontUK‘ arofl akyllne. Tlieso hoHow I rainy works are products of a midsumnier con-strum ion seiuion, ■ To lire east of l*onliuc, work Is proceeding rapidly on Hill House, the fourth dorniltory to be built for Oakland University students (left). Ity late fall, the work of Nil.... will hnii; new hiillil- liigN tin* tnark of a progreNS> lag eoinnuiitlty. itislng like It beacon from tia< dynomic cainpua. Hill House will, be a shining, five-story structure,, a 17118,511 dormitory to house about 200 students. It Is slated' for completion in Septeifiber. dlMILAn HULWAKK Whild the pillars of hlgluo' education are Inking shape out side t'lmllac, a bulwark of secv ondary education is springing from the dust of this changing city (fight). A “dorniltory" for profes-nIoiioI educoiors llie new l•olUine dchoof IHstrtel Ad* inlnlNtration Huildlng -» Is going up III I'oiitiuc'a efvtc , The slfe of* this stnicture Is a l39,3»2-8quore-foot plot of urban renewal land at the northeast corner of Auburn and Wide Track Brlve, It Is eslimateid Id cost some ‘♦51)5,000, and scImhiI officials hope to begin the move from Ibeir present offlines m I'lStter-son around Nov. 1, While brick, mortar gnd steel stretch toward the sky, men like Glisah Dowling, of Petroit, (center) work quietly bqlow the surface of a city. concrete below the central btisl* neSs district. Tliey will put a river In It, He and otlnirs are bulldln|| a huge, hollow snake of steel and The 12 million Clinton iRiver Drain will provhie relief from flocKled Htrebts, busemenfs and parking Idts. Board Member Slatement Draws Replyin Waterford A n'ccnt stateincnt by Wdlcr-ford Township Trustee. John Coleman, answering charges by a grtoup of residents seeking hi,s recall, Uxlay drew the criticism of a fellow township board member. I . ' Tnistee I>oren Anderson referred to Coleman’s statement th^t the charges by a group of l.ake Oakland Heights residents “stemmed, from a fearful and neurotic minority.” Coleman’s statement also said that Anderson was biding and abetting the l,ake Oak-la'nd group and tj^at Anderson. Iqckvd the slightest semblance of courage and conviction in public policy matters. “Mr. Coleman can say anything he wants about me," An* derson said. “But it is ab.solutely irresponsible to call people neurotic. The Lake Oakland Heights residents are anything but this.” FKillTING FOR BELIEF Referring to the Lake Oakland group's efforts againsb erection of a wafer tower near Ih'eir subdivision, Andersiim said they are fighting for what they beUeve is right. Township Supervisor Jamys E. Seeterlln al5o Is an object of the recall campaign. ■ Teen Is Killed onMotorcycle Avon Twp. Youth Hit Back of Truck ' y ■'' V. An Avort Township teen-ager was killed yesterday afternoon when his motorcycle smashfed Into the reqr of . a truck in Fon- NAACP Warns City on Schools Pohfioc City Affairs Loan Notes Sold tor Renewal Project City Commissioners last nlglit lures which arc not ready for , awarded the sale of $1,390,000 in demolition as yet and authorlaed, In' f f i< f o l<\ ^n/l iiWMrQvQ 111^ Sulv 01 vI iiIim**'""' Hi ’ / Lfforts to end d< fk'*'' payment of $62,000 for 8ch(X)l segreghtlon" In Pontiac A ‘ work completed. have failed andf could lead to mass protests this fall, city NAACP leaders warned today! A Statement of the Pontiac NAACP chapter also declared a new cititeus advisory committee is “behind the times.” ' operations in the U44 urban re-, nal paymcnl ot l«ro d,.mol,lion „„ .iruciures contracts totaling about $16.5,000, maJe available to him before the expiration date At indicated possible protests when the schools open again in September, including use of a pupil boycott. Criticism over school officials' handling of alleg|ed de facto segregation came 'with a report to the NAACP executive board this week by Dr. Rlgoberto Guzman, chairman of, the chapter's edte cation Committee. such as the WKC Warehouse ahd present Pontiac Schnof District Administration Building, will be tyrecked under a separate contract. The preliminary loan note.. , , . , . ^ „ were sold lo Solomon Bros, & H. Wilhelm . assistant urban re-Hutzler. a' New York firm, which won the notes by a slim ACTION DELAYED An agreement between the city and Sam Allen & Sons, lnc„ 22 Congress, a local scrap enl-................... wall- on l)oih contracts, said George er. was treated With and-listen attitude. TOKILL SOUND margin of $41 Of six bids submitted, the Ihwest Interest rate was 2.19 per cent offered by the low bidder and The Chase Manhattan Bank, of New York. Solomon Bros. & Hutzler won The R44 tontract expired in February, and the H20 in April. Action was delayed on final payment until work underway at that time was completed. Local urban renewal officials expressed satisfaction on the strength of their offer with p'llondt’s performance to pay a premium of $06 for Uie contracts, notes. Chase Manhattan offered Structures yet to be vacated, a $45 premium. ’ tllales this and other similar i been charged for sewer exton-improvements. | sions within the township area| Appm.1 ol ’**• wat delayed 30 daya laat nlghi '***'o'*)*' until commissioners can get| * * audible v pnwf that the noise | The Initiation of sewer tap-tn problenr has been solved. | fees in the city last March The first sewer Upin fee to means Hint fees will also be a customer in an area of Water- In the future for ^ a j a., s«wer connections in the sec- ford Township already n®*ng ^r^^rford served by Pon-•Pontiac sewage treatment eerv- tlac. I Ice was also okayed last night. I f * * Much of the agreenwqt cen-j amounts , to Developers of a proptMed •bhut $H0IMlouble the amount Dawn Donut Shop on the north-'vwiulred for an Identical bud-west comer opBoston,and Tele-1 be** establishment inside the graph had requested a sewer cRy •I'nH-extension to their property. Commissioners also okayed a $2,290 contract with Anchor Post They win pay for coMlnK- pi^oducts, Inc., of Detroit; for tton of the sewer exteMloa construction of a fence between plus the taprin fee require^.. i pedestrian and taxiway areas In the past, no tap-in tee has at Pontiac Municipal Airport. ters around Alien's having an' effective sound-deadciUng structure built to eliminate noise from new machinery In his scrap yard. Commissioners have held up rezoning part of ^lira's property for use as a scrap yard and have withheld his annnal license to operate, until he in- CHARLES NELSON County Group on Retarded Gets Director. 1 tiac Township, i Dead on air-j rival at St. Jo-iseph Mercy Hospital was Bruce C. King, fS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Har-'vey G. King. • ' 5975 Cobb Creek. He suffered a fractured skull in the 5 p.m. accident. King was eastbound on Pontiac Road when he collided with the’truck, which was making a left turn onto Mattie. The truck driver, James F, Grappin, 29, of 1461 N. Perry, told sheriff’s deputies that he had his turn sisals on. A witness, Mrs. Mary pavis, ;t8, of 2369 Walnut toldi riieriff’s deputies tijat she was (Jriving behind Bie boy. She said he. turned around to look at her car and did not see the truck Charles Nelson, 36, ha§ been named executive director of New Horizons of Oakland (ioim-ty, it was announced today. New Horizons was organized four months ago by a group of Oakland County-residents interested in expanding opportunities for the mentally retarded. Its temporary headquarters are at 2191 Cole, Birmingham. Nelson and his famil.y have moved to 10844 Elgin, Hunting-ton Woods, from Grand Rapids, where he was an instructor and assistant co-ordinator of the Michigan State University experimental student teaching program. Road Toll Now 1,059 •EAST LANSING (AP)-Traf-fic accidents have killed 1,()5S persons in Michigan so far this year> provisional figures compile by state police showed t,o-day. The highway death toll at I date last ye^E^ was 910. Dr. Guzman, told the board that no progress had been made, due to an alleged uncompromising stand on the part of the Board of Education toward .equalizing Negro qnd white en-Aliments in city schools. ONLY RESULT. Although Guzman has been aimed to the citizen study group,, an NAACP spokesman said the group’s only move was 'to offer a teacher exchange program that has been unsuc- stop in front of him. She and another witness, Lester Rathburn, 51, of 2555 Pontiac Road, told police King was speeding/ - / Sheriffs deputies saW King had no operator’s license. King, who would have been a junior at Rochester High School next fall, was a mem-her of the/vqrsity basketball team. He also was a member of St. John Lutheran Church, Rochester, the Walther League of his church and the Walther Softball League. . His body is at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Service will be 2 p.m. Friday at St. John Lutheran Church with interment in White, Chapel Memorial Cemetery; Troy. ' Money from the sale of those notes will retire $1,430,000 iq loan notes sold last summer and finance R44 operations for the next 12 months. RANGE OF BIDS Bids ranged up to 2.26 per cent Interest. No bids were received from local banking firms., The demolition contracts were both with Louis D’Hondt & Son Wrecking Co., of Mount Clemens. . One was lor structures in the R20 urban renewal project and originally amounted to $82,000. “Our freedom inarch here Iasi spring was successful in terms of ifumbers, but not in results. Hits fall will see action that will bring about positive resnits as weU." The join t leadership statement. went on to say, a boycott was being considered. ■ Clarence Barnes, executive director of Pontiac Area Urban League, said group was making a separate study of school integration, but that he agreed in essentee with the NAACP position. CRITIglZES BOARD . “They (school board) havdn'l moved off dead center,” said Barnes. '‘Dr. Guiman may be a little harsh, but the board isn’t showing good faith."-Barnes said7the Urban League is preparing its Own study of racial problems in the school system and will soon make it public. The NAACP has been meeting periodically with school board members sinoe last year over charges that Negro students are restricted to . certain schools and Negro teachers are not evenly distributed in th system.. However, structures deleted from a previous demolition contract were added later arid the totalled $106,096. DELETE STRUCTURES . Action last night deleted several structures from the-'contract which are not yet available for wrecking and authorized a final, payment of $103,000 to D’Kondt for work in the R20 project. The second contract covered demolition in the R44 project. It-Was originally a i.$69,800 contract.*. Commissioners deleted struc- Claim Cong Guerrillas Train Castro Troops 1 KEEP COOL WASHINGTON iSh- Ah anti-Castro organization said today Viet Cong guerrilla groups from Communist North Vifet Nam are in Cuba to help train pro-Com-munists for revolutions in Latin American countries. Surviving besides his parents are three brothers, Barry, Cal-;vin and Joseph^ all at home; and .grandparents,' Mrs. George H. King of Rochester and Francis Weaver of Tiroy. ,/* it. ^ t The.s c h 0 0 1 board's position has been that it is concerned over de facto segregation, but feels it is the result of the city’s housing pattern, rather than a matter open to school soluti ^ / The Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba, an organization of anti-Castro U.S. citizens, said the arrival of the* Viet Nam guerrilla groups to work witlr Fidek Castro’s regime shows “the falseness of Castro’s words” in asserting a//willlng-ness to discontinue suoversive action against Latip American nations. , ■' I /mtmmrim NoOuUide Financing NeceM$ary NOWh SPECIAL Summer Sale Starts Now! No Mo,re Sleepless Nights . . . and Just In Time To Beat The Heat! Ctioose From Among The Finest Names In Air Conditioning . . . And All Budget Priced With No Outside Financing Required! Don’t Miss ^These Terrific Home-Air Conditioner Buys! FREE DELIVERY!^^ NO DOWN PAYMENT F.ren DMvery---Frae-Sarvice 90 Days Same As Cash OPEN FRIDAY aad MONDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. GOOD HOU^EKEEPIN' 5X West Huron of PONTIAC _ FE 4-1555 ' M4 ijr rm*; i'oIntiVc; imikss. \vi.'eaceful profesMlon has become* one of the rno«t dnoKeroua Jobs on the troubled Island. ISventy-one ihepherd# have lxH»n wmimled or kilted since near-civil war erupts b«*tween Greek #nd Turklidi Cypriot#. Do*en» more have been fired at. At least 10 have vanished or been kidnaped, NO PBOTKCTION "To find graxlng fqr the sboep oimI goats, we have to go a long way from the village#, and there Is no one out there to pro* tect us," explained liassan Hus- sein, a 3ft year old shepherd from Jhe Turklsli village of Uuinit Mundres. "I never know when I go out In the morning If I will ever gel home again." ."iroriy-flvp days ago \ was wilh my sheep over there," |m said, iMilntlng beyond the bar reti, dtisl'Coiored hills wfiere nothing grows. "I heard hIiouIh and simxl up and there wore four Greeks ruimlng toward me. They fired, iheir guns and 1 ran —I ran ,HO fast I left my hmit# hehiml. I hid In a dry rlverlxMl." * * * ISvery year when the sun-searT AntAII) "lam not afraid, hul my wlN* Is, and she doesn't wont me lo go to Ihe fields at all." Ue was hauling a drl|iplng leather bucket from a well ami watering his 60 sheep. "f have had no trouble so far," he added. He waved his arm at a shepherd across Ihe valley and said; "Talk to Petri over there- he has seen fftar." Kyriaco# Peirl Is a M-year-old Greek Cypriot In baggy bhuk trouser# and high, homemade boots, with 72 sheep, a donkey Hie sheep. 1 have six sons two daughters, and 1 put ihelii all tliroiigli Hcli(M)l will! sheep,' a Shaltpsiienre has fHs King Henry Vl wamlerhig over Hie hatllefleld musing ittsml shepherds ami sayldg "Melhlnk# H. were a happy life," Imi for a Turkish woman named >ntlma Alt, It is a IlfeUif dread. "I haven't seen my husband for more than 4ft days now," she said "He was heyoml (hoHo hills wllh. Hic sheep, and Ihe dog.-« came runnhig home alone one day. 1 knew' something was wrong BO I came here and the. other shepheids lold me- 'Wn Hiink All Ahmed has been kidnaped'," N'l’li,!. IIOPK Him leaned on her slick and IHiInled to Hie place.. Her baiid-sftme lad worn lace was wrapped in a imled pink scan, and her feel simllleil in the dust. In a jialr ol ragged Icnnls shoes: "'lliey saw a Iniiil rover dnv liijf near him, and he disap imnred 1 Ihluk he has Imen klllml and hurled, but I don’t wnni to believe it I still hope he will cojne home. "Now I lend Hie sheep imself. 'ihe la'H I <|on'l know how lo do ii; have never lell Hie house bdol" - and sonm 01 the vmmg ones; have diet! already hocanse they i didn't .have enough fond ' ' "Lamafraid mil hare wilh Ihe' sheefi Kven Ihe men are' afraid," she said i "I have Iwo dniighicrs hiil limy are onlyil|l and 2ii yenr. old. and I cannol send llmm out e tilime wilh Hie flock,^ : semi guards with i 't’hc I'liileit Nalions should^ wiaitd he safer." piSivatb lo Wornon Tlimtuknill lit wom»t( Sml •|»«l¥ f«* Hal Oiim m» iihuli-il (!ii.in.»i>»! iiffs. *ii«r, •»«nw, «i wama iiji'it***, »ui» t(> fiiii«tlon»l SliortUri l>» utklns HOMCKaHV# "U"-«|inU#, noiiOiflf TOILETS! fully ounrwiOtsd. ptrUe) quOllly ifireuah eul Sum* tllghi luHiict lili•m'lih•l, mat ara hardly naliraabta.,/ tomeu* Nam* ftraml lucantlenally tiard alait oult whilt Imith, •ail««iS and all l«t»S oo'rti Of# Hnt guoliiy k A E sur lerriflo valU## In r w ■’*)* ihawtri, bsihlulii, V«hltery, l■v•lorl•l, hot wsifr lanki. Michigan Fluorescent Light Co. 393 Orchard Lake Ave«i Pontiac s's'f on rsouMKoi or i E —more? I ............ \\\ I '( I ^ 'I ' '\iryw II* . "y, i’ 1 It 10 ' , ' TIIK IM^NTIAt’ IMIj’SS/W|.;n>(il.\ShAV. Ji l,V a>>. lU(]f Candidates File Petitions in 24 Townships Cumlldares for publlr olfuv Wayiii* llolmun iHi, Hr, Wil TrusU'c InaimluMit WIIUhiu Doly (D), Clerk: Iricumbenl in 24 area lownahips, boaideij > bapi hi. Hennelt iHi, Clareru’e iMeFeely iHi. Honald 1! Siillon llarry 11. llelvey (R). Treaa*' Waterford and RIoomfield, filed: h; Shaw |Hi, Hi' h’dward lien- iHi, A William Solley iDi. nrer. ineiimbeiU Blanche iwliiinna by yeslerday's 4 pm jbei t|>) ami i.eimaid |•aaal^( l‘’!'anh 1. TowW (Hi add Mi’N, deadline, ■ ! (|M Tnisiee I vie Knapp hna Cliai'lepe M tlaledfi Ibma Tiiwnaltlp remaltw the I clinaeii imf In weeK'iwlet'llon In! * * * only lowTiMblp where* parly enti I onh’r in nin lor mipervluor, i •IiihIUt nl llie I'ean , No com eiiaei Will bn alaKwl Au«, 2111 ' * * * didalnH have Hied petlllons (or lo pfi'k atandard be^arni'H lorj JiwIut of Ihe I'eme Samuel lliisofflee » I A, llowlelliK I ! (VtnNlableN (2i: lnemid>eiti t'OfiNlHhlea ill huaiiiilieni (j ,1,1 A, jclartleld .1, h‘rmikllii illi, Sid .snyder tile dniinraJ olnetion thti* hell KollewleiK la a hat ot (he, idHen aenkera la naeh tnwa aldp ami pro|Mmula Hint will ulao appeur on the Sept. I primary nlnellmi Itidlul; Glen Savory (R) and William J. A.WoodlR). l.ibrary Board (3): lneum> bnnU Mildred Montgomery (it) and Uhv. I William l.anklon (U). I'eirk ComnilaalAii (2); innim' bent Theodorn Owatm (It) and l.oran llonilllon (It). With no eompetiilon for any eumbent Robert K, Anderson! R) and Frank J. Mobarak (R)' Com stables (4): incumbent Kaon U. Ikubot (H), incumimnt Charles ID Stewart (It) and Bernard C. MHielielll(R). l-llirnry Bonrd Mli (lyear terms ‘ incumbent Vincent A, ney Soimenber« (It), Itolierl H I.ewiM lit), .lolm 1'm‘ldubiiy iDi mill William K. Benmm (Di Addison Supervisor Fnmk h’ Webber CleiK Itoberl A MeCnllum TreaNiirer Donald lliekmoii Trilslee: Mlmer I’owell, Jiistlee of the Peace; Rob* ert C. Iiiwmai. Conslublea |4l; Franels B, Westphul, Milwurd ||iear on Hie Sept, l Bykydal (It) 4-yenr ternis - iic Dryden NEWS OF THE AREA, j liam tS, Kay, Mrs. Charlene M, Hale and .ioltn Snyder, Bruce * .Supervisor: Incumbcnl Still-man J, Rlwell. Clerk: Lawrenee Wilson, Trea.surcr: incumbent „ , , „ o 1 f i Hilllker, .Supervisor; .lerome 6,. Se mof. whsal; Jus- c 1 c r k ^ Mdward sStiHt^.r an Treasurer; Ini'ambent Mrs. Goldie It. Mallahii (R) and Mrs. Julia T. Ilaiiley (D). Trustees (2); Inciimbenti Lloyd Ludy (R) and Kenneth GIdley (R), Also Clement J. Cleveland (it), William T. Pauley (It), Claude I), Arneit Jr, iD), Ronald K Drake (D), Arthur L'. PeU-rsen (D) msl Ward Itowdeu(D), Supervisor: Incumbent Frank J. Voll (R) and Ray A Cornett (D), Clerk: Incumbent Mrs, Lucy Alt (D). Treasurer; In eumbent Robert W, “ (D), trustee: Incumbent George Lyon (R). Justice of the Peace: Bill Jenkins (D). incumbent Justice of the Peace Mrs. Gertrude Crane has chosen not to seek reelecUon. Justice of the Peace; Ineum-lamt R. Grant Gruliain (H). Constables (4); Incumltents, Cbarles W, Wilson (R), Isteii-ard I). ITiompson (It), Ramon C. Block (it), Harold Van liousen (H), Melvin A. Jurvn ,(D)i and Bennie L. Burnett (D). Two township propositions will also appear on the primary Barkham ballot. Township voters will ‘ asked to okay a half mill ta)t to pay for chloride for all public gravel roads In the township Constables (2): Incumbents Lester Robbins (D), and Robert N-WllUamstD). ThoM casting ballots Sept, will also decide whether to abolish the annual township nn^t-‘lug. ^ ' I Shelby (D), Trustees ('21: Incumbent Tliomn.s A, Duke- (R), Incumbent Earl C. Opperlhauser (R), Bernard S. Kahn (D) and Martin E. Glucksteln (D). Justice of the Peace (1): Byron Walter (R), Gerald Freedman (D) and James P. Ijiwson (D), Constables (4); incumbent Ralph Evert (K), FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - figure for l%4-65 Is up .some for in (ho budget would be used A 11,584,443 bperatlng budget $209,000 over that for last year, j for Instruction. chieHy the hiring ^ incumbent IStty Hicks (R),' bolstered by a newly approved tax increase will be considered at a Clarenceville Board of Education hearing tomorrow night. The anticipated expeiidilure .Supervisor; Incumbent William K. Smith (R). Clerk: Incumbent F. Lyman Joslin (R). Treasurer: Incumbent Alfred W. 'llaack(R). Trustee; tneumbent Allen McCrwy (R). Justices of the Peace; 4-year term — Incumbent Edward C. Bourns (R) 2-year term — Incumbent Charles T. Roby (R). No candidates have filed tltlons for vacancies on thej^^ Kvans H)). (^rge Ku^ township party committees, The primary ballot will not. J”' show the names of local can- Mrs*. Mae didates because there are no Intraparty races In the town ship.' Supervisor: bent Jack B. Millard ID) ..Trustees (2): Incum-bents Waller B. Oshinsky (D) and Robert Koncs (D). Also (TIftoa Pemberton ID), Bertram J. Hill (D)- and Mrs. Incumbent ' John' Edna Brown (Rl. Orion Washington Supervisor; Incumbent R, Eu-genu luwoisl. Clerk: tncumhent Allon J, Donaklsoii, Treasurer; Incumbent Charles A- Curtis. Trustee: Incumhent Mrs. liu/el M. Stone, Justice of the Peace! Ineum-Imnl Charles R. Hw k Jf. Vm-stables (4)i Ercd C. llaMe-mnn and Incumbents t Jerald Alsvnrd, Harold Frits and Paul II. FaulkerJr. AH of the candidates are Republicans, No local candidates' names will appear on the primary ballot because there Is no Intraparty race for any office, W. Bloomfield ,Supervisor: Incumhent John C. Rehard (It), John N. Ikihcr-ly IIV. Clerk: lncumt)cnl Mrs, Dorothy M. (,'hamberlaln (It). Treasurer: Incumlient Mrs, Lillian S. Warner (R). Trustees (2): incumbent Emmett DeConick (R), Ihcumbent John F. Warreh (R). Arthur A.,-Hosner (H), John V. Nahabe-dlah (D)' and John A. Marble (D), Justice of the Peace (ID In-rumbeni Elmer C. IMelerle (R). Censtabies (2); iacam-ben( Joseph hlepbew (R). IJbarary Board (4); 8-year , lerms Incumbents, Mrs. Helene H. Freund (R) and Mrs. Carol H. .*ladcc (Citlsens Pa^ ly), 4 • year lerm: Incumbent Glenn R. Johnson (CP). 2-year term: Incumbent W. Roy Hawkins (R). White lake Supervisor: lnrt|mbent Ed-ward Cheys (D), James F. Brcndcl Jr. (D). William R, Hrendcl (R) and Walter Sneddon (R). Clerk: incumbirnt Ferdinand C. Vetter (D) and Marie M. Cooley (Ri. Treasurer; incumbent Ronald However, school officials of 11 new teachers, added to the district’s income * * # a 2-mlll levy aproved by the An expected 8 pc'r cent enroll- : electorate In June. (nent increase will require more Most of the Increases called 'o-'*fui''ors and the board wants ,to add some in special areas ‘such as art, music, physical edu ■ation, classes for gifted children and special activities. SEEK LIBRARIAN Also being sought is a second elementary librarian for the dis trict. With the total iastructlonal figure at 11,177,948, board of education members have planned to raise the teaching supply allocation by at least' $1 per pupil. A $5,000 item IS designated to bqy books apd materials for the various school libraries. Extra funds also are earmarked for the purchase of documentary films. • ineumbent Hugh Owen (it), Morris llarmount (R), Terrence J. McManus (R) and Thomas Williams (K). Republican Committee (3): incumbent Paul H. Button, Eld-ward J. P Cunningham and Jo- ^ ^ seph T. Brennan. ^Democratic Committee (3): Harry E. Zuch-linski, Janet M. Sucher and Harold E. Shiece. Usslter (D) and Clarence Rms- ; justice of the Peace: Kenneth r ‘ vSei's (R7aiid Constables (2): Ineumbcnt.s '"“i"J.*;', '1)1, Tnwtee (if: in- r, 1 M \ M InH Thn ^^a'•8aret Sfepheh (R) and Wil-(ash HI^ Sehwickert (D). Treas- Groveland ' Some noninstrtlctional employ-; es are due for raises under the budget. Other money will be used for replacement of furni- ture in about five cla.ssrooras | Mr^. Helen Titsworth, and repair of_a porUon of the j^^^ert Mills and George Gray. Supervisor: incumbeht Earl Rhinevault (R). Clerk: ineum-ment Donald Titsworth (R) and Arnold Waltbn (R). Treasurer: incumbept Gedrge Gray;(R): .Trustee (1): incumbent. Carl ‘ Lozier (R) and Lloyd Betts (R). justice of the Peace (1); Allan Brown (E), Leonard Boyler (R) and Mrs. Irene Rurek (D). Contsables (2): Fred Hauer (R), James AI-goe (R), Theodore Schmidt (R) andJBernard Burek (D). Repu^can Committee* (3); ip- No names wilt appear September 1 primary ballot be-ause none of the candidates is Metamora ,^upervlsor : Incumbent Harold Best. Clerk: incumbent Mrs. Doris Hobbims. Treasurer: incumbent Mrs. Mary Kurek. Trustee: appointee Frank Best. Justice of the Peace: Mark Russell. Constable: po candidate filed. Republican Committee: Mrs. Anne G. Salu-fert, Mrs. Patricia Bedford and incumbent Paul A. Tripp. - liam A. Schwickert (D). Treasurer: incumbent WHIiam D., .. O’Brien (R) and Mrs. Myrie C. l^igpre (D). ' Trustees (2)s Incumbenli Daniel Abbey (R) and Harold Gingell (D). Also, W. Dale Spear (D) and James Por-rltt (R). Justice (rf the Peace: Frank Volant (R) and Floyd Fater (R). Incumbent Justice of the Peace W. Dale Spear is not seeking reelection in order to run for trustee. Alt candidates are Republicans. With no cpntests for local offices, this siate will not appear ort the primary election ballot. MilforU the Peace Donald H McDonald wjUpp u weinman is not seeking reelectlon. ;(D), llerbert J. Kleehammer Constables (4): tombents (R) and George R, Chapel (R)i. Joseph Moore (D),' Dragon (Carl) Drca (D), Harold How- croft (D) and (Ihkriey Wallace (D). Also Edward White (D), Clyde lihrush (D), FU^ Gate* (D) and Prank Slmonis (D). Pontlic Pr«» Photo MOST BECOMING -- Lucy Krankel of Almont likes how she looks in a nurse’s cap being held in place by Diane Upleger of Imlay City. Holding the mirror is Dorothy Kott at Washington. ’The three girls, all 18, are winners of nursing scholarships given by the, Women’s Auxiliary of the Community Hospital near Almont. Three Girls From Area Three area girls are recipi- ents of nurse’s training scholarships awarded by the Women’s Auxiliary of the Community Hospital near Almont.' ' , Two of the girls Will train to become registered nurses. They will get $500 each or 80 per cent of their tuition and books during training. They are Dorothy M. Kott of Washington and Lucy Krankel of Almont, both 18. The third scholarship winner is Diane J. Upleger, 18, or fmlay City who plans.to become a licensed practical nurse. Her scholarship is for $250 or 80 per cent of her tuition- and books-during training. D(^thy is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Norbert J. Kott, 6990 26 Mile, Washington. A June graduate of Utica High School, .she has been accepted by Grace Hospital School oT Nursing, Detroit:— ^ ALMONT GRADUATE Lucy, who graduated from Almont High School, last month, will entei| St. Mary’s School of Nursings ,l§aginaw, in September. Her parents are Mr.- and Mrs. Conrad Krankel, 5481 ■ Scotch Settlement, Almont. Diane, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Upleger, 7631 Crowe, Imlay City, received her diploma from Dryden High School in June. She will attend-Port Hitfon .School of Practical Nursing- in Port Huron this-fall.. ' . ' junior high school roof. Di.strict property owners will pay $32.95 for each $1,000 of assessed valuation to support the school program next year. This includes 22.9 mills for operations and 10.05 for debt retirement. Stands Mute in Incident at Area Lake A Holly man accused of menacing a Negro family at Holly Recreation Area on July 4, Monday stood mute at his arraignment in Oakland County Circuit Court, ' Edwprd E. Senter, 29, of 17042 Margaret was freed on $1,500 bond after appearing before Judge Philip Pratt on a charge of felonious assault. No trial date was set. Police say Senter fired three shots from^ a rifle afteis warning James A. Beard, his-wife and. 14-year-old daughter to drive away from Crystal ^ake,. where they were fishing. . /★. '( -The Detroit; NAACP later en--tered the case, charging 4hat a state police trooper should have, arrested Senter imqiediately icident. * ' • after the incident. Highland Supervisor: Incdmbent Louis F. Oldenburg (R), Chester G. Burton (R) and C. William Prince (D). Clerk: incumbent Mrs. Normajean. Waters (!R) and Elizabeth E. Veresh (D). Treasurer: incumbent Roy J. Carl (R) and Betty J. (jlhyz (D). Trustee (1): incumbent George A, Volkert (R) and James P. O’Grady (Dj. Justice of the Peace (1) : incumbent John G. Naimish (R) and Earl Ike (R). Constables (4); incumbent Charles L. Cooper (R), incumbent Homer W. , Supervisor: incunibent W. L. , Mainland (D); appoihtqd in Feb-! ruary to fill the vacancy created by the resignation -of -Mayon Hoard, will seek election to the post. Opposing him will be David W. Young (R). Oerk: Incumbent Mrs. Elizabeth S. HubbeR (R) and Elaine Dndzinski (D). Treasurer; incumbent Beatrice P. Heiberg (D) and Norma Tres-sler (R). Trustee (1): Stanley 0: Cook (R) and A. James Stevens (D); . Justice of the Peace (1); bWl lett Smith (R) and Archie Noon (D). Constables (2): incumbents Charles E. Rosse (R) and Aeie E. Ray (D). Library Board (2): Cl \iv;, iiiijumuciu iAuui2;i „ ... i tn • Hay (R), incumbent Clarenge - Mitchell (R). Carlson - (R) and Herbert Majdr (RI. Library Board (2): • Kathryn E. Lancaster (R), Myrtle, M. Clark (D) and Florence A. O’Grady. Also on the Sept. 1 ballot will be a proposed gas and oil-burner code and building code.' Holly Supervisor;, incumbent Seeley Tinsman (R). Clerk: incumbent Jess E. Furbush (R). Treasurer:-incumbent Madeline Lock-Wood (R). ’ Trustee: incumbent/ Russell Barrett (R). Constableo (4): incumbents Mrs. Frances Pei* )4ing (R), Franklin Allen (R), With no intraparty competition for offices, no candidates’ names will appear on the Sept. 1 primary ballot. Novi Supervisor: incumbent Hadley J. Bachert (R), Herbert Koes-ter (D) and Leo Harrawdod (R). Clerk: H. Floyd George (R), .Nancy T. Smith (R) and Richard P. Bingham (R). ' Treasurer: incumbent Duane E. Bell (R) and Charles A. Smith (R). Trustee (1): Ralph E. Lnckett (R), Charles G. Goers (R) and James M. Hdas (D)-. - , Justice of the PCace (1): in- Constables (4): Incumbents Fred W. Favre (R) and Lee L. SwMt (R). Also, Alfred A. Crandall (D), Lynn Poole (D), Evert Vennstrom (D), William G. Greene (D) and James B. Stuart (R). Incumbent constables Wilson Church (R) and Neal Leonard (R) are not seeking reelectlon. tiibrary Board (2): ineum-* bents Mrs. Marguerite Slater (R) and Mrs. Helen Chapin (R). Also, Mrs. Eleanor M. pison (D) and Mrs. Dorothy H. Tyrrell (D). Democratic Committee: Francis Gingell, James T. Haddrill and William Bailey. Voters will also decide the outcome of a reqqest for renewal of a 1-mill levy to pay for fire protection. Voted In five years ago, the tax runs out this year. The township b($ard is asking for continuance of the millage for another five years. Oxford Supervisor: Lee B. Valentine and Stanley C. Schlicht. Incumbent Supervisor Harold Campbell is not seeking reelection after one term in office. Clerk: incumbent IVbs. Nina Chamberlain. Treasurer: in-- eumbent Mrs. Luella Francis. ThiBtee: appointee WUliam C. Offer* who was chosen to replace Stanley Allen when Allen left the township in May 1963. Justice of the Peace; incumbent George E. Meads Sr. Constables (4): incumbents Albert Roberts, LaVern N. Robinson and Edward LaDouceur. Also, Elwyn B. McPherson. Incum-benf^Constable Henry Paddub-ny (D) has chosen not to seek reelectidn. . - '•i,l T ,'l' ■„" / f 4^ Library Board: incumbent Mrs. Florence R. Oberg> Supervisor: ihcumbent J(dm »L. Carey (R). Clerk: ineumbent Oscar R. Walz (R). Trahsurer: incumbent Eva M. Walters (R). Truster, incumbent Lloyd E. Miller (R). Justice of' the Peace; incumbent Emmett J. Lelb (RV. Constable: incumbent El win Hilbnan (R). Because none of the Incumbents is opposed, their names will hot appear on the Sept. 1 primary ballot. Justice of the peieo (I): Incumbent Martin C. Fitzgerald (R) and David J. Wood (D), Consteblet (4): Incumbent Jerry A. .Opdyrke (D), incumbent Thompt P. Carl (R), John L. Barnett (D). Jimmie G. Weeks (ft), Clarence W. Beers (R) and Harry R. Pendred (R). ; Republican Committee (3); Nick S. I*up, Ronald C. Voor^ heis and Jimmie G. Weeks. Democratic' Committee (3): Edward (^eyz, Ferdinand C. Vetter and Everett G. Gillow. Candidates who filed petitions for primary election in Water- ■ ford and Bloomfield townships are listed on Page D4I and Page A-2, respectively. 1 Stands, Then Pool for Rochester Area I RfXIIHESTER - The Rochester Corhmunity School Board is getting ready to provide sejits for stadium spectators and a pool for swimmers, The seats will come first. I The board has completed preparation for the $40,345 concrete bleachers to be installed at the high school’s football stadium. At Monday’s reg-Jlar meeting, members resolved to advance funds for the project, to be repaid by gate collections. So, in effect, spectators will pay for the new facilities. Construction is to be completed ih time for the school’s first home football game, Oct. 2. Some 1,900 viewers will be able to. sit in the stands. Still in the early planning stages is the proposed Rochester community pool, PRELIMINARY STUDY The boar^ has given approval to a preliminary study .completed thus far by the joint Rochester Y.M.C.A. and board ^ edu- . { cation pool committee, Now the group will proceed " with a five-step program to-1 ward construction of the water-fun facility. First the comrnittee will let lip a schedule of proposed use '/('"S ,',/erator at art automotille dealership said she received tlie culls Tuesday morninit, The second came as |M)llco were IhUiih told of the first, Dullos Polke fllilef Jesse (iur-ry said he had alerted W»MhluK ton, l).(^ |a)llce to the calls. LiQhtning Hit Glasiei* and Killad Engliihman KINiiSTON UPON TUAMI'IS, Kiii;(jlMiid i/1'i oner declded/today ilmi a liaht-nmp hotl'wluch struck ilie steel Dropped Out of Fourth Tory plunderers supporting ilionary' War were’calM cow*' ) Itevolu ihoya, ■ ‘ ’ s :ilic lirlli'ili (luring Ilia Now Seeks Only 3 Offices rims of James Ileywood's spe tacles killed him inslantly ns he was fishing In^ilie Tliames Uiver. I ley wood was hfi Ills nepliaw, who was fishing willi him, was till hy the same tlaMl) liiil suf fcicd only minor liuriu* The average American uses the contents of M tneial cans every year, the (Ian Maniifac-t.urcrs Instilule reports Ith’iNO, Nev. (API Daniel Miller is now running for only three offices in the 10114 elections, Me said he duln'l want lo gum up the hallnl prinling ’ Miller <|uil the race for lleno Township conslahle aflt;,r Ally den Harvey Dlckeriom said he could run tor only one salaried Joh al a time. Miller Is still In the raci's f(0' Nevada asscmlilyipan, the t.lniverslly of Nevada regcnls pnd Washia' County school hoard The former schoid teaclier said he considered tesiing Dickerson's opinion In Hie Supreme Court, hui decided lo drop opt when eminly ottlclals said his case W(Sild hold up' hallol printing, , c VITALITY SHOES Up to 50% Off ALSO ON SALE AP PIMMMx RKMOVKS BAD MARK Arrie Hall of Copper Hill, Va . use* an abrasive pad and cleaning solution to remove 02 feci , of skid marks hts car left on the Blue Ridge Parkway near Roanoke. A U.S. commissioner suspended a ^ay jail sentence after the 17 ycar-old promised, lo clear the highway of the tire skid marks. Clues Still at a Minimum in Slaying of Oefroif Boys DKTROIT (.UPl) Tlie playground Is quiet now. The bJoodstalns have been removed. Most of the fear Is gone. But at ajght, ‘women returning from shopping or some other errand will drft a nervous glance at thir spot where the two'bodies were found and their pare wilt quicken, anxious to return to the safety of Iheir homes. ' * And at the 16th Precinct sta-tldn, the patient methodical search for a vicious killer con-ttaucs. * ; * \ As ,a prelude to what was to have been a fine and glorious Fourth (rf July, Francis Pj Brown and his life-long friend, Sheldon R. Miller, bought some firecrackers the day before. Concealing thePr eagerness, they waited until nightfall to go to the playground and set ,off the firecrackers., ' They were dead a short time later. , , They died In a hall of bullets In what was termed an "execution - like" ilayiag about II: IS p.m. Friday night, July Residents,, later said they didn’t realize shots were being fired from a gun because firecrackers had been shot off continuously In the neighborhood the whole weekend. . The brutal slaying rocked the pleasant, trw-lined rc.sidenlial area oh the' city's west side bounded by West 7 Mile and Evergreen. WEAPON LOST ' The murder weapon, believed to be a nine-slfot 22lniiim goat’s. He presents resumed talking in hl.s riiiii | "I’eople like this gel-up of 'em, something pf the old West, bhng, nonstop manner. | mine, It nieiins something to They like to t^lk to me. * "It makes me feel giHid to be around people, I’m 72 years old and I never foil better In my life. Thai's because I like people and I take care of myself. Teat good, sleep g(K)d and get loads of exercise,’’ •ITIOMAS I m p 0 8 mg, j figure as he I strides d o w n ’Hollywood Boulevard dally id Western-style I a h gabni'dine suit, yellow silk shirt, black cowboy boots and Stetson hat. He resembles everyone’s com cetilion of Buffalo Hill, yet for Cof. Cody he has scant regard, "Talked to him (oiee m San Kran<'is(s) at ihe World's l'’oir, ’ said Wild Hill. "He was all right. Drank,a lot In his Ipter years. He was a good-politician, ! I'll say Hull lor him," : He was standing on a corner I as a bus disgorged some I ravel I era, IhcgroeU’d several of them Umd they .said, "Hello, Hill," ^ and continued on their way. He DiNODEUiiW ornS^"' ppoductfon ^Ifciedte Sord/iT®ll®*" ^Junior Editors Quiz on QliKSTION: Where and how did Irrigation originate? ANSWKIt: About (UKXI H.C., according to .student of history. man made u.revohilionory dl.scovery. Up to that time he had becn^a wwnderimj’hunter, never certain of being able* to provide enough fomt’Tor his family. • 'He demonstrated some of Ids calisthenics. One consisted of flexing his arms and moving them rapidly from side to sliie. Another he admitted was nolli* tng more or less than Ihe shimmy—"It’s great for getting Ihe bloixl to the liraln nnd .olher vl-I tal organs." I He was iHirn John William I Tucker In Healrlcc. Neb., I where, he not«*d. Wild Bill Hick-■ ok shot It out with the McCan-dles. Bill's father was a frontier lodge who was born in the same I Missouri county where Daniel I Botme dieen increased fpom 37.5 Ions In 1921 to more than 50 tons today. Hut rertain trihesHit the highlands of Mesopotamia, in the Middle East, discovered that it was possible to plant the seed of wild grain and raise enough food to lOst the year around. These first farmers built villages i^f mud hills and started to (lome.stlcate animals. Later—exactly why we do not know ■“they moved down to the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. There, contlitions were harsh; the rivers either flooded the land, or the land baked hard in the fierce sun. But these energetic peoples made a great discovery: Irrigation. They banked up the river edges In flood time aiid dug ditches to carry the water when it was dry; Plows were invented for their newly domesticated animals draw. Our picture shows these euiiditions about 4000 B.C. The villages grew into cities and by 3000 B.C. the brilliant Sumerian eivilizatibn was underway. Meanwhile, on the Nile River, the early Egyptians were making similar discoveries. Writing and the arts, machinery, law and government, all got started after the farmef had Other .Aslan nnliims were making plans to send help to South Viel Nam, ^ | (iovernment sources lu Swiuli said South Korea was consldei'- ^ log dispiileh v( a medical com-1 pniiy and 10 karate extH-rts t.»: train the Vietnamese in luiiid lo-I hand combat . SKiN BILL Htlira UK^, wlWn Swadan la* auad tha first postage stamp to' promote Hie fight against cancer, 45 other nnlltuis have Issued similar stam|»s. President Diosdado MacH|»a-| Igutd a I gal of the Philippines xigni for movfO cartoons. "1. chn make any sound you name: here’s a hurricane," he Said, "Shucks, T wasn’t ho movie star or anyUdng like that," he remarked. "But 1 can make more money now than I ever (lid lieforci. Don't want to work, ttiough. I got my Army (wnsion and my Social Security. Thai's all I neixl." i MAIN THEATRE , II Mil* and Main St. Royal Oak. Michigan ONE FULL WEEK Storting' Wodnotdoy EUlS PRESLEY ANN-MARGARET “Viva Lai Vtfai" also GLENN FORD “Advance lo the leaf" NOW thru THURS. 't SUPERSONIC THRILUR' Peter Sellers-George C. Scott limit* KWrlck t Dr.Strangelove Or:HwllMrMiTiSli»Wirryiii| AiMLniTiNRNM (PLUS) it is unlikely that you vyIII experience in i lifetime all that you will see in... loscru r irvmi pr*r IHCIUIKIIIIICIBS lECHnoir pwin' ' UST nw MVI Tlirougk Sunday,July SA In tha iaat AmarltM *Mr. Roberts' « AcMptud New I I EL 3-SlSO J| TIAAES ond PRICES $3.90~$3.90-$1.90 • aifi„ ti]t) iti, tiN a.m. M-40-|3.40-$2.4e Ail Sfoti $1.10-$1.A9 TICKETS NOW ATi a NltyMuM Ortv* la •*> OKia* J'l a Rait Miitic, •*tu*M a (.afetii't aatat. airmMifaani MAH ORDERS PROMPTLY niLEO latMMia. Mica. ettoM **• clot* MN-aa*r*w*a Uamaai NEXT WEEKi •*MT FAIR ^DY" COMINOt KATHRYN CROSIY lARBARAlid’GEODES *iOVI AND*"AHARRIAGT' xars»icV*of"a CELO" "SOUND OF MUSK” AM* It-N JUNE ALLYSON "THE AAATING DANCE” JAYNE^MANSFiaD "lUS STOr 1/ ^iV' 1 ' f, K h. itii.:■/ ,■ .. ui l/l .r! I'' 'X, 111. I <'' TrrK i*oN'nA(' iMn-ss, wkdnk.midav. .in.v «■,*. H la FIRST RIRTIIDAY — Th« LTlussler trip- yesterday. Tl»e tots arc all girls (|rom left) lets of Nashua, N:H„ venture a few, teetering Carol, Debbie and C'alhy. They are the steps as they ct'lebrote their first birthday daughters of Mr. and Mrs, Roger L’HuSsler. Repaired Rig Will Unity Pair NI':WI'()IIT. IM (Al'i With a 1)11 of Irish luck mid a sturdy Newport lamp )iosl, true love Is sure ]o find ii way to unlto Michael' Kllison and .iaiii' I'cr-kliis. Michael HO, is on Huh side of the Atlanlic ocean after sailing alone from ICuglaud in a .'lit f(Hd boat rigged Ilka a Cldiicsc Junk, ■' . .lane, Ids Itelrollicd, Is waiting lor him III l,elcestcr, Kiig- >Mlchaid IS one of' l.'^i doughty Nkl|ipers who sailed s i u g | c liaiidcd from Idytiioiilli May *20. Several ol lliciu cliallc)igcd the mighlly Atlantic In craft smaller than the longlRiat the Ihl-grima carriod on tlio duck of the Mayflower After hallling head winds, Mike lost his foreiiiaNi in iiiid-ocean June .It, Ho-sailed the rest of the way on a mast made from an our and a prayer, and reached Newport .luly 8, after 40 days at sea, MA.ST EXPENSIVE "I priced a new mast when 1 got ashore, they wanted $:i50, far more tlian I mild pay. NowfKirt people are nice b u t everything Is Kki expensive over here. Why even a haircut costs Elections Officials Swa/nped Petitions Flood State Office l^NSING (AP) - State elec- and Uie Michigan Stale Uni-tions officials said today, It will take them at least a full day, perlui|>s longer, to get out from under what probably Is the biggest Hood of nominating pe- tiUun.s for public ofRce in Michigan’s history: The office, a branch of the. secretary of state's office, was virtually swamped Tuesday by candidates for various offices ahead of the 4 p.m. deadline. Hunareds of petitions ifor offices ranging from governor to the House of Representatives were turned in, and the recordkeeping process fell behind. Nominees also Hied petitions verslty Board of Trustees, • i expect It will take ‘ Wednesday befpre we ki actly how many candidates have lied and for what," said Ber- nard Apdl, the assistant director of elections. Although the records were far from complete, the filing deadline Indicated several things. One was that one incumbent congressman, UiS. Rep, Elford Cederberg, R-Mlch., of Bay I Cit^, apparently will be. unop- Offldals said they never had posed In this year's election, seen as many petitions filed by| OPPOSITION In the Second, U,S, Rep, (’.(jorge Mcader, It-Mlch,, of Ann Arbor, facys two Republican opponents. In addition to the three Ile-publlcan.s. two Democrats are in the Second District primary. In the 11th, Incumbent GOP t'ongressmen Victor Knox of Sault Sle, Marie and John Ben- weeks, capped by/ Tuesday's candidates as have been accum-, .. ... who filed to oppose Cederberg. The same may be true, they said, of US. Ilep. James O’Hara, P-Mlch„ of Utica. IX'mocrals, meanwhiWt ap- Even at that, the petitions filed In Lansing weren't all. (bounty clerks were receiving from candidates filing in Hoitse, for the Sti^ Court of Appeals, | Senate and , congressional dls-the State Ward of Education tricts contained entirely within and posts on the Wayne Stale county borders. University Board of Governors' All signatures (m petitions 1 must be validated before the ^rently will have candidates all 148 legislative districts this year, possibly tor the first time in history. CROWDED CONTESTS The most crowded congres- I Drowned! Or Did He? | candidates' names are listed on sional primary . races -- out-I Ohj ballots for the Sept. 1 prl-j state, anyway—will be in the COLUMBIA. S.C. (AP) -A man who was thought to have drowned In Ihe'Congnree River strolled into Columbia and demanded the clothes he had left on the river bank. The river had been dragged for Jacob S.i Reese, S3, who was last seen Sunday banging on to the back of a boat. He had been poUed from the rlv«r earlier Sunday when water began rising around a dock from which be was fishing. Reese told police l^e spent Sunday night in the woods near the river. Road Ad Meeting Set LANSING (AP) - Sen. Kent Lundgren, R-Menominee, chair- man of ,a' Senate committee lying rogdside advertising, studyl today announced a committee ' meeting will be held Aug. 3 at the Schoolcraft County Court House at Manistique. INTERNATIONAL BUFFET FRIDAY, , 5to9:eOP.M. SUNDAY, Complete Dinner Menu 1P, M.'to 8 A. M. * DORMAN’S Old Mill Tavern OR «-1907 Watetford', Michigan against eacli otlier with tiiree Democrats vying for the other ballot slut. I Second and 11th Districts. Gov. George W. Romney got his petitions in on lime Tuesday, but another candidate for governor didn’t make It. Fred^ eric Whiling of Jackson arrived too late. Asked why he wa,s late, Whiting, who was .seeking to get on the ballot as a Republican, told newsmen: “Cat’s got my tongue.” $1.70. i can wait until I gel l)ack home U) gel a haircut'for .K) cents, but I had to gel a now mast’V Walking down eoliblestuned Thames siree) on Hie.Newport waterfront Mike found an idenl mast, a knocked down Iniiip |H>s(. lilglit company ofilclals sold the lamp [sisi In Mike tor. |I<1, Mike promptly iiioiml.ed it <)<) Uie Iriw of the llgin The former nicrctmut seaman luiH been nipalrlng rigging nrtd hopes to HlMi't the lung sail home within a few days. Jane v<. v’T, T 7T- ■ •■ ■- -- . , ■ • ^ J tium'()ntia('I'HIWS. M!ia)S’i.;si)AV, .M'i,v».j, 1IIIU Barry |S Hart) Radio Hobby Has Many , Hard-Core /Adherents irii TT r-,' , lly MAItTIIA i’Ol.l': u, pAoii i\ t'oth' hihI (wlmh-wl WAStllN(STON lAj'i l•'o^ HiimiMir rmlio op’iHior lUiny lli' iH'loniin lt» « dwIk'Blwl (lol(lwAt(r liiinw in the Unilwi Slutes i lluil such wull-knowti llwe’s no regulation against 1 namtV as Gen I’urlia E. l-«- (Ijacussing iwiltics when thcen a ham operalor yivirs ago, but bad dropped tbc bobby for a, while. 'Hie Freedom Uemocrals campaigning to unseat the n „, lar alKwblte delegation at next monili's Uemwraiie National Convention, Veteran Soidns Face Contests HO8TON (AP) House Speak-twrest (be Itepubllcan nomiba-ick, D- C ' " ................ Like other op«*raiors, Dr. King flew lo Mississippi yesterday to start a five-day tour to boost the drive, After a brief stop nt the air isn't licre, he flew on to Green worn!, scene (if reiientcd racial trouble over Ihe last 'Id inonihs, A low-flying airplane dropis'd Kill Klux Klan leaflets around a meeting hall at GrecnwiMKl last night while Ur, King was sisraklng. Tlie while teaflels. sigm-d liy er John W MeCmtnack, 1^ tion from Martin, said the "time Mass., who Is 72, and former [requires a more energetic Speaker Joseph W. Marlin, R- course than a 7» year-old pollll-Mass., who will be 80 in Novem-1 cal veteran can follow." tier, face reelection challen^s. | McCormack, next In line for Noel A. Day, a Negro civil J the presidency, is completing rights leader, filed Tuesday as his iwih conseciillve term. Mar-an liKlepemldil candidate for; tin has reprekeiiled his district McCormack’s seal, ami said he for 20 conseciillve terms orders from leaders of the national Demmsfallc party, "This present mission Is no different front any others the Hlot King* has condneted In Ihe Mnie that it li designed to bring riot, strife ond turmoil to Greenwood," the leaflet said. "'Hie l(H*al Negroes have failed tiHis far lo realise that the lalk? Itigs can qosi from lo WO.OOO.jlf IPs homemade, U’l a lioine bl ew job; No one has an authurltatlve explanation for Uie ^rd •ham" Home say IPs from a cockney Englishman’s version of. "amaleur.'' ttegiilallons ar« pieily broad on whal the hams can say over the air, the KCC official said. An amateur ofierator Is "a |H»r-son Interested m radio technique solely with a t>erHonnl aim ami wtihmit |M - ..M., .■•'”■■ ■■•■ ■■■'• Pure Granuhted ;;:j c 1 5-lBBAe With Coupon Bolow and $10.00 Vwcha$0 II FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS 1 1MM«mU*«M. I, PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS ■OWNIWOOYl B OMWSUWPAY «nui I «S I. HRE IT. I 7N AUIUMI IT. I Ml MClURD UKI ME. - ......f W<»ti I I 0»«»A.M.'K(»C.M. I CtOHO lUMOAYl g OWN tW>loA< »l» t J ■Qii.» f btf,« Wwlt [ OMN lUNDAY t ^ S SALE DATES: WED., JULY 22, thru SUN., JULY 26,1964 REDEEM STAMP COUPON No. 8 THIS WEEK IN THE GOLD BELL CONTEST! Tender! Juicy! Delicious! ROUND STEAK lb. MICH. POTATOES 10-59f Daliciout BEEFUVER... Toity ^ RING BOLOGNA tor only Meadowdqie . . . Fresh Frozen STRAWBERRIES m lO-bz. Pkg. Medium Grade ^'A” EGGS Fresh From Fqrm JKM. M dozen Armour SEMI-BONELESS^ HAMS Economical GIANT TIDE The Washday eT Miracle! Treesweet... Refreshing Frozen LEMONADE Delicious Paw Paw GRAPE JUICE 24-oz. Bottle. 6!19t 5 25t J' / iW> pi*' U'' '■ ' t ‘ t‘ h'il /MlM ' n/.- Ms /, A ii||‘ Fr r ('ll /„ « '(II ''il'V r G+9"' '^rilE PONTIAC PUKSd. iVRT^NRSDAY. JUl|v 22. \M4_ 'V' Tips <0 Help You Make Ice/Creatn llpfti Hi't* N(itut« hlntit llmt will gUHniiiU!»> iMTfocr i(>t< rrnnm iiiuklnij tlmi< i U«o t| lo , ■ c- -a J\ NOBODY BEATS A&P For Top Quality at Low, Low Prices!!! "Super-Right" 10 to 12 Pound Semi-Boneless FULLY COOKED "^up«r-Right" Fully Cooked Stml-Bontlets Hams . Guarantee You Extra Value,., HAMS NO CENTER SUCES REMOVED FRYERS WHOLE FRYERS Cut-Up, Split or Quartered.........lb. LESS COOKING SHRINKAGE ALL SKIN REMOVED . NO EXCESS FAT FULLY COOKED ... NOT JUST SMOKED HYGRADE'S OVEN-BROWN Sliced MEDIUM SIZE—SHELL-ON FROZEN SHRIMP 5-LB. BOX Frbien Cod or Ocean Perch Fillets Hun^ PRICES coop IN ALL.A&P SUPER MARKETS••• There's One Neai^ You ^ neor Telegroph|i # Berry Sf/.nedlMfoltopt BlvA/# Bike*St. neor Soginow • Dixie H wy: in Drdyton^Ploint Dixie Hwy. ot M-15 in Clei*rkston • Rochester •! Wolled I Loke ■r. -sv/ . / II 4'j'Mi, ^ \ iiw. I' ^Sv) ■,''.vj;''*: ' ; r;v^H‘'r''» ,"«1' ' ^''‘ f ‘'|,, ^ •' L 'I i ; » ' % ' ” ^4lvI/ /' ‘i‘Ui ', -i'ii-’,. ^ _jni _,| ,|^___‘1^__../rit^i^1H)NTTA0,mi^.SS.^WKDNKSl)iY/,^ ■ , „ '‘1" j- I .^-y- EVERYONE CLAIMS THEY HAVE THE Pricti Good Wod., July 22nd thru Sat., July iSth In All iattorn MIeh. AAP Storot »$Um-W6HT" SKIMliSS All-Meat franks >79 1-LI. fM 4 Lf. 43* { fm> GRADE "A"—"Super-RigM" pualHy YOUNG TURKEYS mST OF THE SEASON—CiALIFORNIA T BARTLETT PEARS" 19 SOUTHERN, SWEET FRESH PEACHES -19 FRESH-T65 SIZE LEMONS... DOZEN ]N CELLO PKG. APPLE SAUCE 7^1 00 ANN PAGE-I>URE CORN OIL 59 GAllON CAN ANN PAGE or Oa MONTE • • • PINEAPPLE.GRAPEFRUIT AjU a&pdrink4^99 10^ OFF CHOICI •-14 WHOLE WHEAT MNi PARKIR SAVi U 1-U. LOAF SAVE 10«—JANI PARKIR Chorry Pil • Inch Site 49* ANGa SOFT, PAPER TOWELS i 29* RKG. ■■■ J/T', \mn. SOFT ^ ^ , Paciol Tissues..... 349* AftP PREMIUM QUALITY INSTANT COFFEE |» I Instwit Tea........... 39* IfrOZ. JAR ANN PAGE QUALITY Sffawberry • PR0ERVE$ 2 - 69* V ,• '>;■ I r^GI CREAMY OR KRUNCNY ^ | Peanut Butter...’ Vt “ 59* 11 til DAILY REG.. FISH or LIVER or KOTEX 12 “ 35 Giant TIDE DOG FOOD 3-LB, 1V4 OZ. PKG, 64‘ 12199 J'"» COMPARE "SupahRight" Quality BONEUESS BRISKET CORNED Point Cut 49 c lb. Flat Cut ........ ........lb. 65' GRADE "A" "SUPER-RIGHr 9UALITY OVEN-II5ADY Ducks 4 TO 5 POUND SIZES lb. *'$upm>^Righf" Quality PORK ROAST BOSTON STYLE BUH lb. 39 CUT raOM BOSTON STYH BUTTS PORK StlAKS. .. lb. 49* Sliced Beef liver 39^ "SUM«-ei8HT' QUALITY sultana frozen • • • • • • • • 3"29 ANGEL SOFT-TABLE NAPKINS 200 a PKG. • 0 0 0 25 UB TEST ASPIRIN 100 a BTl^ 0 0 t oo 17 5* VARIETIES-2 PKGS: OF 6 CANDY BARS • • 0 O • • 0 1249 SULTANA CALIFORNIA FRUIT COCKTAIL • • 0 0 3*95' ALPHA BITS, ' CRISPY CRITHRS, SUGAR CRISP, -. POSTS Your Choice 27 SUPER-RIGHT CANNED LUNCHEON MEAT • • • • • • • • • • 3 mi. % cm I 00 SALAD DRESSING MIRACLE QT. JAR O O O O O O O 0 0 0 o 45 A&P WHOLE OR SLICED SUNNYFIELD ANN PAGE POTATOES FLOUR Lb. 39 m SPAGHETTI 3 ~ 49‘ •iiiW '1 f'f, i i;i PONTIAr imik-sh!,. WK^KSiyVV/‘il iw J ^ '■''' • w': Canned Goqds Passed Severe Test in Alaskan TIiHj ia U\«» aPftNon of fun ttiui w«t«r, of Informal living In aon* alda cottagaa, mountain lixtgoi and lakeaMe tanta, of plcnloa, (•(M)koula, and clambakes. But tho homemaker fannot relax com-pleieiy. She muat still keep a 24’hour eye open Inf emergencies . . , s|)eclal iummertime A aerloua situation can result from fwwer failure which, In our mechanical civilization,* will pul refrigerators and sieves to* tally otit of operation Cherry Salad in Wine Mold _ The fresh cheiry seiV^on Is mu('h too short to suit most |H*r-sons, Often, the cherries disappear from the refrigerator before there's tinte to include them in recipes! But here’s a salad that makes hoarding tliem Worthwhile. Cullfornui Bose, a pleasantly fruity wine, and lemon Juice flavor the gelatin base whlcn Is generously rilled with fresh cherries and orange segments. ’A cheese omelet or souffle and tiny biscuits would round out an unusually good summer menu along with chilled glasses of the same Rose as the accompanying beverage. Rose rruit Salad I envelope'plain gelatin U cup cold water cup sugar Few grains salt 1 cup boiling water t il <^up lemon Juice / ta cup Rose wine 114 cups fresh cherries 1 cup orange sections Lettuce Dairy sour cream Softeii gelatid In cold water. Dissolve softened gelatin, sugar and salt in boiling water. Blend In lemon juice and Rose wine. Cool until slightly thickened. Meanwhile wash, stem and pit cherries. Fold cherries and orange sections into thickened gelatin. Turn into incHvi-duai molds and chill until firm. Unmold onto crisp lettuce. Top with sour cream. Make 5 (6 oz.) molds. Tluoi liungry children and aduIlN turn to reserve cans of vegetabh's, meats, fmlls and Juices, safely sealed and always ready. Thus supplied, any household can outlast any disaster, A brave nod I’esourcofiil woman In Just this way recently ritet •alaslrophe of mnjttr proportions the Alaska tRartltt|unk'>. Mrs, Mary Taggart watf con I,fronted with the task of feeding a record mimla»r of Infants, en trusted t«t her liospital hy dis* tiaught parents whose ha were wrecked. Hundreds of tie Jur^ pt'rsonSx evacuated front another hospital Which had been knocked out of commission also were brought to her care Wlili the bahles overflowing the wards and the injured overlhiwlng the corrhjurs, Mrs. Taggart did nut lose her head; she fell baek on her supply of conned fdods like any fore mother, "We Just opened t^ans of Juices, milk, eanned fruits and vegetables," she said simply. "Everj^lhlng wetit smodthly .WWW - ' William :K. McBride, prominent Sealtle fmid broker.' in a recent letter to the,National Uaie net's AssiKdatIdn, praised the i^clacular rolo illpved by canned fmtds In the Alaskn or-deal; KUY TO SURVIVAL "Canned foods and the can o|tener were the key to survival first days followhig tlie catastrophic earthquake. "Tliere Is still no agbstitute at all for completely proceased or cooked foods In a hermetically sealed steel container In the event of B real emergency.. tnilhllngi collapsed on food sltues, canned foods were W per t^t er hotter reeovor- sBle of Alaska, the stflte's largest ftHHl distributor, had its warehouse damaged in excess of $1,280,000 as the bul|{iing completely collapsed; under the debris the canned foods were relatively good with only alM)ut 19 pr ceiU loss,,, "Canned fwids, In a national emergency, are Indispensable." Ed Fortier, Ancitorage news-paperman. reported on those disaster days In this way; "Short o( war, I doubt If metal cans and canned foods will get a ircatcr test." Fortier said cans not only fed the< populace when other rmn-talners and fresh foods were s|s)||ed beyond use hut cartons of canned foods w«ro so strong they held Uf> roofs in wrecked Warehopses where steoi beams collaieed. ★ ♦ “ w More than 80 i>er cent of the stored canned hKxl was usable dfler IIm» quake subsldwl Canned feeds in America are still the most popular packaging. The canning Industry produces tf billion pounds of food snnuaily. or about 180 I for every person in Ibe nw lolal retail value of these processed f<»ods Is inofe than $5 billion, and the metal that goes Into the containers makes the canning industry the third largest user of st^el In the na- Booklet on Pork Now Available CHICAGO - "Pocket Guide to Pork" is a new booklet developed by the American Meat Institute to aid consumers with their pork purchases. The booklet has a wealth of Information, yet it is small enough to fit in a woman’s purse with her shopping list. The attractive 36-page booklet , contains more than a score bf actual color photographs and explanations of the principal pork cuts and processed pork produces. There is detailed information on cookery of each pork cut. Illustrated ./ instructions for carving as well as information on meat storage and the nutritive values of pork are also included. copies of« the booklet may b^ obtained for 15 cents each from the American Meat Institute, 59 E. Van Buren St., Chicago 60605. Do you know that standard cream-puff paste, or pate a chou as the French call it, may, be covered and stored in' the refrigerator up to three d a-y s before it is baked. Cleans better than old-fashioned granular cleaners I SN© li®i, Tho modem liquid boiwl oleaner CLEANS )1 BECAUSE lOliJI ITS UQUIDI Fresh, U. S. Gov't Inspected, Tender, Plump, Whole FRYERS ' Mel-O-Crust H6t Dog or frk* Country Kitchen •— Creamed « HlHihn Mr* Mendey, fufy 27. Ki/kh reserved ft limit ^mitHht. Seoltest Laddie Bars, Fudgesicles or HAMBURGER BUHS con ACE CHEKE ROCKET BARS 8-ct. Save lie Mb. 1 Save Ctn. 1 12*" 49* Qmm & Sonbortvt—Special Label liBlani (oHee Campijeiri Sove Sc >0'A-oz, 99* 10* 13* 4 . 23* Luncheon Meet SwHI Prem 'S 3V Twnalo Soup Special Label ijax (leanser “Tj' Personol Size hofySoap'S' Cornflakes ,’’^'33* White Economy Size—-Sove 8c ; Kleenex Tewels 2 "£ 59* Iwf Slew ”r39* M Nilk 8 »1®® StoleTPeate3^co;:'^89' 2 No. 303 ^ (A< ■ Con* Air Elno Temalees 'Tj' •‘i gireak O' ®aa /i , B » and Big Valu 8 Own Michigan s Best .. . ,,, y.,„ we. wii«"9 w xpe"** “ SWEET COBM 12 3? treat your 5 ; family I 1 tonighl GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS ' ti iiU y, // ■; ',>■! Ill, , ' If ^ 1^.'. , ' , , • •. ' u • ^ I - P'/ '/■> ;V, *l| . ^ -jO: / >1 ' -I * k i ; Milt ^ ; v' '■ f.hfKr'- 'Ju£Mx£ M tJ'j 'L.Ec gMM/A mk Spunky $pr»od For Informal aummor ente^ lalning, hava a apimky Npraoil lo Morva guaalM. in howl, mix I cnn (A oimrox) I'hh^kan aproml 'I («; Spend Less Time in Kitch w! A'\A_ 2: :hSn f'H,- lly JANRT OIH'11,1. ronttae ITexa F«nmI Rdltor N# one wnniH to ap prepared t(arlv In the cool of the diiy and kept refrlgcriilcd until healing JuhI hci'on< .Ncrving time, TO TASTE BEnER than any spread available in grocery stores We think you will agree with. ui that Shedd't Safflower Margarine taatei better than any spread you are now using. We guarantee your complete satisfaction. Try one pound of this * delicious spiread and If ybu don't agree that this Is the finest tasting spread you've ever used, elmply sand the empty carton to us and wo will refund the full purchase price. SAVES* If,,von fed unusuolly nm* hlliouH, you; might moke n douhio batch of some ihgln dish atui freeze pap of It for another meal, Just remember hhat pota> toes sometimes do hot freeze too well when cooked and that pasta (macaroni, noodles, spaghetti i should be slightly underdone. First Is a meal and rice ring. Wheal germ added to rice and a yround meat layer makes this t|inh extra nutritious. Bake It In a loaf pan or ring mold. JhaWsJ SAFFLOWER ... MARGARINE __JL sAmom oil Enter the Star-Kist Color TV Sweepstakes! WIN AN RCA COLOR TV! WHEAT MEAT RICE RINC Rice Ijiyers 2 cups cooked rice 2 eggs, well beaten 'a cup wheat genii 'i cup milk 2* lablespiwns melted butter or . margarine ’*4 teaspoon salt teaspoon blaek pepper 2 tablespoons finely dlcc4 pound round steak, ground 2 tablesp(M)ns milk 1 egg, beaten slightly Vi teaspoon salt H teaspoon dry mustard U teaspoon black pepper 2 tablespoons finely diced oh-Ion . , Vi cup wheat germ Mix meat and all ingredients together. Pack half of rice mixture in bottom of well greased V eup ring mold (pr txSx3" loaf pan). Pack meat mixture on top evenly. Press remaining rke mixture on top. Bake at 32K degrees for 1 hour. Let stand out of oven for 3 to 4 minutes. I^sen with spatula; unmold on serving plate. Fill center of ring mold with broccoli or mixed vegetabla. Serve plain or with tomato sauce or tomato catsup. Makes 6 ■ 8 servings. WT.en the food budget Is slightly strained, it's tiine for an economy dish. A 2V4-ounce jar of dried sliced beef will serve four to six people when used in the following casserole. CHIPPED BEEF AND SUCCOTASH CASSEROLE 12‘A-ounce jar dried sliced beef ■. 1 10 or l2-ounQf package frozen ' lima beans* 1 cup whole kernel com (7 or ■ 8-ounce can) 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons finely chopped ^ onion' 1 tablespoon flour 1 bouillon cube 1 cup boiling water 1 cup evaporated milk 3 or 4 tablespoons fine dry bread crumbs 1 cup shredded Cheddbr cheese Place beef in sieve and run warm water through to remove exchss salt. Drain thor- ' oughly, or pat dgy with paper towel. SWEEPSTAKES RULES: 1. Print your name and ad-diets on the back of any Star-Kist Tuna labeUf you have one, or on a plain sheet of paper on which you have hand igrittin in plain letters the words "Star-KIstTuna." 2. Mail entries to Star-Kist Tuna Sweepstakes, BOX 2880, St. Paul 12, Minn. Enter as often as you like. Each entry must be submitted according to all rules, and mailed in a separate envelope. 3. Forty separate drawings-one each Cook beans in saucepan ac-; I cording to package directions •' except omit salt. Drain well, weekday June 17 thru August 1, 1964. Winners will receive ond' RCA 21" color TV set. Winners will be notified by mail. 4. Offer not open to employees and their families of Star-Kist Foods, Inc., its advertising agency, and Spotts-Corporation-judges. Entries froni Wisconsin must be on a plain sheet of paper only. Offer is void in any locality or State where a sweepstakes is contrary .to law. Federal, > State and local govern-meniregulationsapply. Star-Kist TUNA Easy to Fix Meal Is Well Planned Try this menu the next time you feel a cooking strike comr ing on: For proteins, serve sliced boiled ham or sliced roast beef and a big Italian, slice-it-yourself salami. Vitamins are covered by raw^ cArrot sticks, ripe tomatoes,’ green pepper rings aind several kinds of greens, all Combined in a glorious mixed salpd, Hopped with your favorite bottled salad dressing. ^ ★ w ★ ^ Bread and butter, ice ©ream, coffee and. milk complete the Nflving |l(|iii(l for Hoiip or gruvy, Drain corn well. Having lk|uid for soup or gravy. Add corn to beans and mix well. Turn Into a well buttered I 'i quart cas-aerole. Moll butler In Ilia .same saijco-pan In which hean» were ewked, Tear hcid inio hito size pieces. Add with onion to hut-(er. Cook gently ahout 8 min-iile« until beef Is nif'ely frl7,« zied, Ilemove Irom heat and blend In flour. Dissolve bmiillon cohe In (he Indlhig wafer. Add gniduallv n» herf a ii d (lour mixture, €eek iinfll mlxliire thickens sllghlly. .Sill- hs milk. Pour OV4T veg4Hahlen In iuHNeroIe end nils llghll.v,. Sprinkle crumbs and cheese on (op. Bake In moderal(» oven (.TW degrees) until bubbly, about 20 minutes. Miikes 4 to (I servings. NOTE: Frozen corn may Im used. Add abqut a half package of frozen corn, not lhawed, to iHians about 5 minutes before Ijednl finish cooking. Instead of the same o|d tuna ■ iHMidle casserole, be during niid make a noodle casserole Utpped with tuna palUes. T|is one's really different, Noodle and TUNA PATTY UA.S.SEHOLE 3 quarts boiling wal(‘r 8 oz, nusilum nomllcs .3 lablespiMtns bijtler or margarine '3 tnbles|«»ons flour Htr cups niilk •ii cup dill pickle liquid Ml cup chili sauce 1 I e a 8 p 0 0 n Woreestersliire sauce . Ml (eas|asm salt Vi cup chlipped dill pickles 2 cans, (7-oz.) solid packed tuna, drained 3 eggs, beaten , Ml cup fine'dry bread crumbs 1 tables|Kion minced onion .salt lo tasle Add ^ I tablespoon salt fa rapidlv. boiling wider, (iraduol ly add noddles so iliiit water continues to boil, ‘Cimk, uncovered, stirring .occusionqlly, until tender. Drain, Turn Into greased IMi-qunrt casserole. JMelt butter or margarine and blend Ip flour; griidiinlly ndd milk and cook'until thickened and imooth, stirring constantly. Add pickle liquid, chill sauce, AVorijestershlre sauce, tk teaspoon salt and dill pickles. Mix well and pour over noodles. Break tuna Into pieces with fork: add eggs, bread crumbs, minced onion and salt to taste. Mix well and shape Into 8 patties; place on top of noodles, (larnlsh patties with cheese rounds, if desired. Bake at 330 degrees for .30 minutes. Makes 0 servings. 'll'' id m', I 11 "■ C,'/, ' WAtM^N WHEEL BREAKFAST' ~ Today's chuck wagon — the station wagon, that is — can quickly become a mealtime headquarters. If you're on the road early without stopping for breakfast, here is a meal designed for on-the-trail eating. Slop at the firs! supcrmarkei that Is open for fruit, raisin bread, brown 'n' serve sausage, eggs, doughnuts and a Hhaker of clnuainon and sugar. Wbeh you stop, make coffee and raisin bread frciicb loiisl. lleiit the sausage and you're ready to eat. Honey Rice Pudding Layer 2 cups cooked rice and 1 cup dark seedless, raisins In greased l-quart baking dish. Four '/k cup honey over all, then mixture of 2 woU-bcatch eggs, 1 cup milk and Vk teaspoon vanilla. Bake in moderate oven 1350 degrees F.) for 45 minutes. It's delicious served warm or chilled. Raisin Dressing fo Stuff Veal e a I (live an economical breast a savory stuffing. Stuffed Veal ' V4 cup blitter or margarine 2 tahlespisms flmily chopped onion 3 cups wtfi bread crumbs Vk cup finely diced celery >/k cup raisins 2 (ahles|NM>ns chopped parsley 1 (ens|MHin salt Mt leasiNMin IHippor "k cup water 2>k pounds boned hrimsl of veal, with poi’kel Mell hiiUer, add oniim and cook imtil onion is limdcr hut ' not brown. Add ertmihs^ celery, raisins, parsley and HctiHonlngs. Cook and sllr coiislnntly over medium heal for abmU 5 minutes, Add water, ' Fill 'veiil isxfket with stuffing and sew or skewer together tho edges, Flaco fat side up on a ruck In an open pan. Roast In slow (325 degrees) oven for about 40 minutes per pound. Mokes 0 servings. Mocha Flavor Raisin lonst mocha glamorizes the breakfast hour on bright summer mornings. Mix together Vk cup sugar, ^ teaspoon nut» meg and 1 teaspoon Instant coffee powder, Put in shaker tci sprinkle over “ fragrant raisin toast which has bwn briisthed lightly with butler, Only Mazola Margarine is made with Mazola* Corn Oil...gives you these 3 most important benefits! Mazola Margarine help.s cut down saturated fat in your family’.s diet. INfazola Margarine gives you active polyunsaturates. 1 3,p. For people on low-saturated fat diets, IMazola is rated “.special” by a leading Medical As.sociation. Also special about Mazola Marj^arine, it ha.s -flavor delicious abundance. Makes rolls, vegetables, everything /, you serve real good eating! Remember... good nutrition is important to all ages. That’s why your childrettare , never loo young to benefit from Mazola Margarine’s com oil nutrition. ^ ' J",. . 'V '.i. I' a '(■h.'r Ijv'* T|BE i‘<)NTL\|triMIKS8^v|WF,Sl)AV, .IIII.V ,, ' . T- '-----------------------'I , ( -'I. SIMNK PORTION SMOKED CENTER CUT RIR THRIFTY BEEF CHUCK ROAST I ham 39! I3S ROAST FLAVOR-SEAL-PAC CROUNO BEEF/ -- --- ■ SMOKED ........... HAM SLICES, ^ . SLICED PORK CHOPS 69* LB. t LB. I BOLOGNA COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS . .. SERVE N'SAVE „ SLICED BACON ...49;. . • t • • • *• SKINLESS ^ _ GLENDALE WIENERS MRDS lYI FROZEN CHOPPED BROCCOLI ROSE CROIX BRAND 39* 1. t«k« Mn«Mw«l 1i«» liWB wmIIWW I* l»rli*t y«» »l CNOPffO OR UAP-PROZIN BIRDS BYE SPINACH Ic 49* A* IBM* an4 IM mIumI viMmlM ait4 mlaafak. • If Vm a>a aal tamalaMv ■alMia4 wlHi aay P^M«a 3t ham Kra«at, wa wMiaplafa ll m *tlvn4 yawr manay-phit SO Fraa Tail Valaa Slam^i lit yaai tiauMa. GOODNESS GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK! PROZIN-BIRDS RYR ONION RINGS Z-OZ. PKOI. 69 FREESTONE C [i/; fOR TUM OR SINKS DUTCH ; CLEANSER 233' iATH.SiZI-.ASSORTIO COLORS WRISLEY SOAP *6"” 39* fOR OISNIS AND NNR PABRKS TREND DETERGENT 13«OZ. BTLS. 59* AMAZING AU-FABRIC FORMUU BEADS O' BLEACH |c 49* REGULAR SIZE-1* SALE SWEETHEART SOAP fc 4"37* CUTS GREASI PAST UTTLl BO-PEEP AMMONIA : c PEACHESor SEEDLESS DRAPES BARIUn K/Ut$rr 3-T CHUNK STYLE ” STAR KIST TUNA » • 3-79^ KROGER CREAMED LARGE OR SMALL CURD COTTAGE CHEESE. 1^19* SAVE 19*-2 PKGS. OF 6 BORDEN'S ELSIE TWIN POPS or FUDGEES12- 39* |i ■ ■ 1 ■■■■■■■■ ■YfTrtriiHa./4ii ■ ■ ■ ■ P WITH THIS COUPON ft $5 PURCHASf OR MORI | WITH THIS COUPON ft $5 PURCHASi OR MORI SAVE TO' -KROGER 6-OZ. FROZEN BORDEN'S LOW CALORIE LEMONADJ : ICE MILK k«: 3 POUND BASKET 6->i9.CI1 SAVI 10* ^ C*9pM valid at Krogar in Dalrail and Imlani Mkhlgnii Ihiv m Cowpan vaUd at Kragar In Dntrait and lattam Michigan-Hmw Saturday, July 33, I9D4. Limit on# caupan par family. ■ Saturday, July 3S, 1944. Umit ana caupan Mr ' mmmmmmr-“---------------------------------'-------------- KROGER HOMcIgeNIZED FRESH MILK GRADE A'................. h GAL CTN SAVE 1 l*-KROGER FRESH SLICED 39* OUARTITL 25^ FBLS NAPTHA lAUNDRY SOAP^ 2-35' FRESH CRISP BIBB LETTUCE VINE-RIPENED . tomatoes. 3-^ 69' CALIFORNIA REt) RIPE , STRAWBERRIES SANDWICH BREAD ■ SAVE 11‘-KRCX5ER FRESH SLICED^ HAMBURG or WIENER BUNS GOLDEN MARGARINE 37* 4 20 OZ. 9A l X LOAVES 2 39* 5 "’«■ 79' SPOTLIGHT COFFEE r: KIND TO YOUR HANDS GENTLE FELS OIIART 3 HOMESTEAD BRAHD ... ON ANYBOmE ■ HEINZ : VINEGAR: 1-Lb. Rag, Only....... 73‘ WITH THIS COUPON VALUABLE COUPON .. VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON .. VALUABLE COUPON “ VALUABLE COUPON .. VALUABLE COUPON $5 PURCHASE OR MORE fXCEPT BEER, WINE OR CIGARETTES 51 EXTRA vAiDi STAMPS ! WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE ~ OF 2 PKGS. CUT-UP FRYERS, I I. 3 PKGS FRYER PARTS OR . I 3 ROASTING CHICKENS | I Caupan vaM nl Kragar in Dtirail ,y'ia 50 EXTRA JSux STAMPS I SO EXTRA STAMPS • 50 EXTRA vuu. STAMPS! WITH COUPC.r _^AND W ! WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE " WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE ! 'BUTe liOII »KcL * OP I4.QUART PKO. KROGER . | . OP TWO l-U. PRGS | mmt tRESH CROVND REEF I INSTANT ART MIIK I RROGER SAITINES I cJitr <-rr'*■_ \^I SraS'iXSTtoYS ■ ‘ aa» A .a m . ■ .Mi. . aa. d .1 m . I ^ la.la. llaialD E $131 WITH THIS COUPON " aQ K«fpa JOf, ' cvaudc I WAU RACK jW VAIUEI WITH | KAIKA VALUE MAIWPS | ICHASE OP STAINUSf STEEL ■ WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF | I STAINLESS STEEL BLUE CORNFLOWER' J lASTING SPOOK ■ ' ONLY 77*. ■ UNIT f # . ■ ICwupwfi v«H4 «t Krwgt» in Owttfwit I a!.J.C4imGina.n ftftimk olan.. m & •TVS ' ' rYf‘ sijSilm jJE..,.m Mkh. dTru Sarur-ny. QJ rsTaa'*"'’ ’"T fX* STy^TursTO *"u:..-.Ta J ::d!?.;mVkkX 14- ’ i Tjl ^V l*()N .I'IA(’^ l»H I<:ss, W KUN l<:si) A ,11' I A* Hit. IIKI^ I, ^ 'v*i • 1 C II If WIN _ ^ CUp§ndfav9» m ^ you c»n ph^ njorp ^"nmm ■!>■■■ — ^' thtn ono aartf. iWWlA THOUSANDS OF WINNERS! WHOLE CLIANED thrifty beef ' V STEAK IIS' ■ Wrrr Im Fm 1 CARD PI 1 1 C,w pE5^— !Z “Ti 'l^'l fe ■¥■ irvMon, ’ » 'rlMr i,mn Ml 1 1 jS‘- 1 * rCNl CAM £^' 1 WIBI M m • M i )!f'™JilB ATTACHED CHICKEN BREASTS . . 594 CHICKEN LEGS .. . 49,, fresh • ROASTING chickens. .. 394 bulk * PORK SAUSAGE . . . 4'‘• 99' LB. thrifty BEEF . . TO! .round STEAK.............794 LcUBE STEAK..........994 LtHRIFTY BEEF_ -5. ►t-BONE STEAK ..........99,. 'thrifty beef >io. CHUCK STEAK........... .49» 33* ’’’wTfW RICH ElAVORFUl PELS NAPTHA CLEANER CAMPBELL'S tomato soup. y?. 10' KROGER BRAND PORK and BEANS. ...JO* SWANCE WHITE OR COLORED FACIAL TISSUE 69* CANNED LUNCH MEAT SPAMorPREM . . . .1^ 39* KROGER BRAND ■ WITH THIS COUPON A $S PURCHASE-KROGER ■ GRADE 'A' ALL WHITE : LARGE eggs; 39'' ■ C«M|MinAFolkl «t Kittpr in pDirail and l«s|«m Mithifan thru ■ Satwrilny, July 35, ‘1004. limit an* <«wp«n' ptr family. PIONEER GRANUIATEO BEET * SUGAR........ FRENCH BRAND COFFEE SAVE 10‘ 24B. BAG $ 1,29-SAVE 16* KRAFT SALAD DRESSING, 5 *49* MIRACLE WHIP . 45* KANOU BRAND GALLON BLEACH . »» '<>» 39* ORANGE, GRAPE OR ORANGE-PJNEAPPLE Hl-C DRINKS r 3t£89« >S» VALUE 4-PIECE PLACE SETTING MELMAC CAKE mixes:. .a'27< NEW CROP MICHIGAN RED-PIE ' . * *, CHERRIES. ...6£89< FOR WHITER CLOTHES ROMAN BLEACH. .. .sx49‘ OINTY MOORE BKF STEW..............,_43' ^CKER'S LABEL cream STYLE SWEET CORN . . . slo< KROGER CREAMY [MAYONNAISE . ...Sy. KROGER GOLDEN SHORTENING.. .3 ^ 55- KROGER NUTRITIOUS TOMATO JUICE.., 4 ViXi 99* COUNTRY CLUB CANNED' LUNCH MEAT . . .31 EASY TO PREPARE BISCUIT MIX BISQOICK . . .. . » WASHDAY MIRACLE / TIDE king size. ..... KROGER BRAND FRUIT COCKTAIL. . . 4 TASTY BREAKFAST CEREAL CHEERH». broadcast' brand CORNED BEEF HASH 13-ox. JAR KEEPS FOODS FRESH SNAP OFF BAGS lO'COUNT PKO. WHITE OR COLORED NORTHERN TQIIET TISSUE A SOFT AND ABSORBENT NORTHERN TOWELS PKO. OB 2 39* KEEP FOODS FRESH LONGER WAXTEX WAX PAPER •100-FT. ROll 23* PROCRESSO BRAND BREAD CRUMBS •-OZ. PKO. 29' I dry BREAKFAST CEREAL TREAT WHEATIIS_ FOR YOUR CHOP SUEY LA CHOY SAUCE .T. I 'Oc DINNERWARE BUY ONE..GET ONE QUILTED STRONG ALUMINUM KAISER FOIL....... ..;.......J5 FT toil 29‘ EXPAND OR COMPLETE YOUR DINNERWARE NOW SAVINGS UP TO OF ORIGINAL PRICE! W* rVBttV* rht right to limir. quonlititB Prictt and ir«m> afteMiv* at ' Krogar ip Dalroit and Eoitarn'Michigon thru Saturday, July 7i, 1964 Nona talcl to dtalara. Cd)iyright 1964 . Tht Krogar Company VALUABLE COUPON ,, VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON 7i VALUABLE COUPON ,, VALUABLE COUPON 'pmLse'op I 100 EXTRA vmue STAMPS ■ 50 EXTRA vaiue STAM1»S | 25 EXTRA vTiui STAMPS 1100 EXTRA KNOT ROSS DINNERWARE i '^th this cwpon and purchase J WITH THIS COUFoN AND PURCHASE .■ WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE.■ WITH THIS COUl I SAVE 5( , I NOMMAm''fRMD]NNE'RW^^^^ with this cwpoh * iiOULAi PIICI i139l Or ANT rivi luss . .so! NORMANDY ROSE GLASSES I WITH THIS COUPON ...$1.491 5 fOt 'I ■ - n dalid al Kr^»r In Otimil “ ‘ .... TOP I HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS | I Caupon volid at Kngtt iif Otiroit a ( ati4:Eaiiam Mkh. thru • f COUPON J OF 13-OZ JAR CANDIED STIX VLASIC PICKLES DtIWIt VAIUE STAMPS I COUPON AND PURCHASE ■ OF CHOCOLATE MOUND OR BANANA I KROGER LATER CAKE | ICaupan valid at Kroger in Dqtroii a and Eaittrn Mich thru Saturday I ■ and latmrn Mich thro Saltlrday. ■ .and latltm Mich.^ro Saturday Mk. and Eoilam Mkh. thru Saturday.|SL I and E«t«m Mkh thru Soiurdoy and €«t#rn Mich thru Soturday ■ ^ July 35, 1964 J July 35 1*64 ff ^July 3S. 1964 July 35. 1^64 A^J^uly 35 1964 — ^ --- ..0.- , iii / -I, /I MmmmZ I GIT THI SOFt TOUCH WITH INSTANT FELS SMOOTH SPREADING VELVET PEANUT BUTTER 39^ FOR QUICK MEAtS-STAR KIST TUNA CASSEROLE\>^^ 89^ College AcceptonCe Not End of Story Hv I.I'ISMK ,1 NANON, Kill) nn'iiMii'tihk hv |uMU'lhmil |m|mr' lo ri^mtml him timl h ri'porl iii , loK. hn.i Ih. Khillty l« m.cn.iKl n,«| brinrah 1 JIvoh! Irn^J I' (’olk'Kc iidmiNNloiiH olfu-ers im- ,jjp roHuliirlv mri'plfd anpli **lurtent is expec>U*d to iifiportant for men and women ................... >anlH It should he, no surprise, |' students. These goals can be ................. ' ’ I of his own education. i ■ - poslte Is true for 'the sliideni working toward a goal, (ionhmlndedness Is equally Iheretore, that a large percenl- NASON i.'ollegp .vcHim willMrt'edlt, l''urlheniMire, these are aUl> ' tildes mill npitroaelies about I wlileli only the stiiilents them* : selves eiin do soihetlihig, A Mudeiit.who jii'iwnls himself hi I h«l‘> eers at'ee|>i exprtrimeiilal group.s, It'afn, ' is due lor a sad awaken from applleanls who fail to meet mg. dl of the enirnnee criteria, fliey *. * * lake into aeeouni nlliliides not . College in-sfruclors Jacoby on Bridge age of the experimental students I NOT AltOUND i|o siaretsi and eomplein their! Mtilher ui' lalhor are no' irimnd to he the driving force A student should enter eol-fege knowing that It Is up lo him lo plan out his work uihI eomplele It satlstaetorjiy and oil lime. Ity OHWAM) JACOIIY use the noi'mnl safely play with The pretlle.st false eard I have! ten trumps and lo lake two seen this year was made by fines,seM with nine, lienee. It tvas up lo diurtey to do something ahmil thiil j normal play and. he proeoeded I to drop the queen of eluhs on dummy's king. South led the ten of .spades j from dummy, Charley played the deuce. South thought for a while and finally di'cldiid that he could not afford the trump safety play. ' West might win and return clubs, lie went up with his ace false card had I permanent, temporary or changing, just so long as there IS a goqj, •" ^ ..... '. ■ , My advice lo sindciita is ■"Don't \valt to he, ahsitlulely .sure, pick ' a goal and' Jtart working!!'i ‘ ® l''or example, three yeurs ago, a boy we shall aall Frapk . : ilarled college as an engineer- a college with the attl-' tt Is up to him to perfect hlsljng slialent primarily heemtse 'Cm here. Make ^ me learning skills, his fniher was" an engineer * * * . I Kiank wjj|s not Us. sure he It Is up’ lo him lo seek out i wniUed lo he aii euglueer, bul j coiinsellug and lo get help at decided lo give It a good try, nol a|)l (he first sign that Ills efforts are h'rank'.s goiil dimmed 'In one not' succeeding, semester, and he InriUHl hl.s , . (JOAl. NKKDKI) energies lo making physics his ’ ......... . . , „ tiiaior, Hie haekgrolind he had , lo gel the mosi oiii o( college, , („vyard engineering ap-, he must work as intelligen ly as , „,, ,,, , I possible toward .some goal. 'phy.sics ■ ' The college istiident without I (You can get Prof. Nason's ' a fairly specific vm-ational helpful bonkel by pending $l to | ; : goal has no personal interest j Heller tirades for You,. Box lo bring meaning to the |2l(iil, (ieueraj Post Office, New | courses he Is tnknig. 'Ilie o|»- York, N.Y plays low al.M(> lo guard against j ^Charley’ the possibility that all three P**d off, trumps will be In the East hand. ' Now see what happened lo Chwley’s unfortunate opponent. West opened the four of eluhs. The king was pliiyeu from dummy a n d^ Chartej^-dropped the queen. (Charley had heard the bidding and had noted that Houth' had tried lo get to a grand .slam. Hence, it was apparent to him that South would have no losers out.side the trump .suit. It also happened that South wjus* a good enobgh player to Q—The bidding has been: Nortli East Honth West 14> Pass 1V Pass ^Paw Fara 2 N.T. Pass 7 You, South, hold: 4)Ajr«8 ¥QJ65 >32 4A28 What do ,vou do? A—Bid three no-tnimis. Tour IMiintr has shown at least eite diamond stopper. WEST > None > jaa-st ♦ J 8 4 3 NORTH (D) >\0 8&3 V7IF' . , ♦ A2 >AKJ8 5 EA.ST >Kq2 V Q 10 3 2 ♦ to a 8 5 TODAY'.S QPESTION : Inotead of bidding two no-trump, your partner has gone to three henrU over your two spadea. What do ydu do now? Answer Tomorrow . 4 10 7.6 4! 4Q2 -..SOUTH, 4 A ja71.4 ¥AK ♦ KQ7 4 a 3 Both vulnerable Nortli East Sontli Weat 14 PaM 14 Pam 2 4 Pam 4 N T. Pam 5 V Pass 8 N.T. Pam 6 ♦ " Pass 6 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 4 xh Astrological * If. -it * . forecast By SYDNEY OMARR f or ThuriSoy "THo wiM men control* hi* . . . Astrology .point* Iho way." ARIES (Mar. : 21 lo Apr. I»); harmony where You arc employed where people congregate -------------- TAURUS (Apr. 20 GEMINI (May 21 .. -------- I may want to believe what is not true In conriecllon with an investment. Best tio ,be cautious. You have something questions., If you ilepp at lo be a. hew opportunity . . likely to. "trip.", Be thorough LEO (July 23 lo Aug. 22): commodate those who make _____________ .. quests. May meen slight inconvenience. But you will leel sense of accomplish-menl. Day to GIVE rather than receive. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22): You can now '’get.to bottom" ol Important questions. Yoor„.^cre2live resources pau r>» Day tor vital changes,, decision -daily those concerning opposite ■ — ^UBRA^(SeOt.^23 to^Oct. 22j^ ^ front. Day To be .versatile. Doi calm and cool — study, tacts SCORPIO (Oct. 23 have [recently had harmohy. Make, concessions' . . . display maturity. Realize energy utilized for *"l?AGiTTAR’lUs' (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21); New' Ideas can result In money making decisions. .Key is being willing lo — ' press Inner teelings. No hay (or re: tions,' holding back, or groundless ti CAPRICORN (Dec. ,22 to'jan .......... continut/s high. s obstacles. ■ charm fc abititles. AQUARIUS. (Jan. 20 tc you had confidence m................... appoint you. Be practical. Avoid "pipe dreams.'^ Face tacts as they exist. The ■ sooner you set practical policy 5 YOUtt 'birthday . . . you are ..attractive li ---------'— ■“ VubMshtnfl. IF THURSDAY I « uttracteckr to general TENDENCIES- Cycle con-Gnues high for CAPR.ICORN AQUARIUS .and PISCES. Spep-al y-ord to LIBRA. / ' ' i'SIM l« T M «„ t Be deliberate . Whit lor 'onswers batore -coming to anY conclusions, »• (C«pyrlgltf IMi,w4lenaral>Fealuras Corp^' ,,' -/<- 'll; .. I’ 'I'." '.«■" V--' '''% ■' ' , i' , ii ^ ** . ■ ),■ ;'■ ‘ , /• i ^ ^ ^ ■ " . —.——j................. roNTiAC i>Hnss. WKpyksj)Ayi .Ini.v if,2. nMti. \ . iblL • ^i2s Thousands of Shoppors Agrot • •. It'i Extra Holden Red Stamps With Coupons in This Ad! VALUABLE COUPON ■ FREE WITH THIS COUPON SI : 50 EXTRA : niR (onomonEDFOR vour [orifort m HOLDINRIO STAMPS U.S. (ifliRiM. Crw-PmI T«r4m ■ n Rontlm for Roliiitrif, Uoan Boston Butt MM stMks Pork Roast .49 H Wllii $5.00 Purchast or Mor# ^ m yAtUI-WAY ^ ’v>mtkALAm»^ TRIMMIO LB. IMi Tsir IMr In Mom Alt Boy With Aqua Net Spray 1S.W. Cm Ban RoH-On lVi.fl. • Shw 78 75 U.I. Ck«lM V«lM.WRr TriM««4 ChiMkSlMk »• 59- C«ni.Ptf U.S. CliRitt VRl*«-W«y Trimmtf Standing Rib Roast IMr Cm la ■ CMfwiliat Tala Scon Hair Cream TiSf 69; (toNof sf' MhMBdsRbss rmI I^sIsr Bufferin Tablets ft too 99* NaHtRaPi U.S. CiialM, CwR-r«f ImI, VrIwi Way ^ TtlwMaf — "Ta^ Ktiia" a# RaaaHu Mahat aay inaal g X / 691 Pin Raa4y< Sfatontd, Curtd Michigan Orada 1 Beef Sausage A traat for any mull... Sa aaiy ta fix, a» good fa aal . , , PM-PiTf Broil ar lar|.QI ^ Lb. H Buy Your Favorite Frifer Parts National Cuts All Fryar Faita by Hand for Your Eating Plaaaural Bruits uS Ed$C LEOS . . 49c lb. Mdis.. ^ Y» THIGHS . . 65c lb. AR/SdUR'S CIRCUS of VALUES Armour Sliced Bacon . . u>. 65‘ Natlanal'i Own laay-Sliea Boneless Ham 7^. Unittd Dairies Creamed Vita Fresh Crisp retzels 11.0L Pbs. 29 Lily, 9.inch White, Picnic Pbg. d 100 69 Armour*! Star, iust Heat Gr Eat Bar-B-Q Back Ribs . Armour's Star, Ovan-Ready Stuffed Turkeys . . Armour's Star, Vacuum Packagad Sl^ii^less Franks . . Arrndur'i Star, Summar Tasta Treat Braunschweiger . * Amrwur's Star, Chunk Style Biologna . . . . . 2'/x-lb. SO’’ Can / Lb 39! Hillsida Hiqk'ory Smoked Sugar Cured Sliced Bacon . . . . .b.49' Shrimp Vt . le Crtih Pre Ceekaa 59^1 Fish Sticks 89' National's U.S. Choice, Corn Fed Beef, Lean Cube Steak . . . u. 99*^ Hygrade's New Taste Sensation, Sjtate Fair Polish Sausage . . lb.65^ New From Hygrade, Try This One Too, Black Forest Smoked Sausage . . tb.65 Petit's Fully Cooked, Serve Cold or Heat & Eat Bar-B-Q Fryers . . . Lb.59‘ Shank Half SIlea It Lika A Loaf of Bread •ardu Fresh, Taadsr Cat Green Beans 4 £69* Orchard Flash, Tasty Tangy Applesauce 4H69* Gordan Fresh, Cr. Style or Wh. Kernel Golden Com 2^29 Whita or Aitf’d Colors, S»ro|nf and Abaorbant Scot Towels Soft Facial Tlatuas, Whita or Colort Scotties Jumbo Roll 29 2;^'^49* 2»25‘ Now, Sparkling Cloan Joy Liquid • • • • Soft. Bathroom Tisaua, Whita or Colors Soft-Weve .. Keep Foods Frsther Longer with Scott Plastic Wrap Aunt Jana's Deliclovi, Crispy Sandwich Pickles ... . Top Taste Crunchy or Creamy Peanut Butter Fmm Chickon, Boof, Turkey or Salisbury Morton Dinner 2"^ 89‘ Fine Quality, Hove Plenty for Indoors or Out^^ Scott Napkins 2 29* Pleasing Colort, Attractive Designs, Scott Placemats . tcatfs Cirt-Rito, Extra Strong, Finest Quality yt»x Paper Deal Pack 180x. Sin 59' Gerber's Strained Baby Food 10-99 The Washday Miracle Giant Tide Deal Pack Rad, Ripa ’n Juicy, Prash, Full of Flavor Nectarines PRSI WITH THIS COUPON 80 EXTRA";r STAMPS ■ with Th* hurchiM of Any I “ irkay At Natl Turkf, RaOaam Thli Cou|H>n At National Staraa. PARS WITH THIS COUPON 60 EXTRA'".'^'’STAMPS I with Tha Pwrehata of an ll.Oi. Jar Tap Taafa Peanut Butter . . I RaOaam Thia Coupon At National food Sto>w>- . Coupon ■apirao Saturday, July Itth.. 60 EXTRA"£;;''STAMPS With Tha Purchaoa of WKIal. Btl. Uaay Ufa Fabric Softanar Radaam Thit Coupon At Notional rood ttaraa. . Coupon Sapiroa Saturday, J....... * PRIR WITH THIS COUPON 50 EXTRA";*," STAMPS ■ With Tha Purchato'of a Roll of •oiy Ufa | Heavy>Duty Aluminum Foil . __L AA Aa.Ai.__a __ ■ FfRiE WITH THIS COUPON 5G EXTRA";:;'STAMPS with Tha Purchaoa of Any 1 Pkat. Top Treat Cake Mix . RadOOhi This Co I Coupor « txplroi Pood staraO. i PRBl WITH THIS COUPON 25 EXTRA"^;" STAMPS ' ipana i ournpaaie _ RoUaOm Thli Coupon At National Pood Steroa. I coupon Sxpirat Soturdoy, July asth. FRRI WITH .THIS COUPON 60 EXTRA";::'STAMPS WRh Tha PuKhito of Any Gulf InMctieida Rodoom This Coupon At National Pood ttaraa. , Coupon Ixplrot Saturday, July 35th. 50 EXTRA";*.," STAMPS ! with Tha Purehaaa of a ■ Whole Watarmelen I „.Jaom Thli Coupon At National Pood Atom. ^ ' . . Coupon Expirai Saturday, July 3St(i. ' J lb.i California Golden-Ripe 'n Juicy Fresh Peaches Firm,/Rod-Ripe Slieort Friash ToRipditoes... ">■ 39* ; ■' I.' / ‘I' -I -u'/iV' Risdon Craamy Rich Fudgesicles 12 39' , « UI I' F'/'M ''‘"I, ii’ii^|nv i ' si\. '/‘VJiri -^yU/ . ■ ; -^^^77 : 1 , ‘. 1<•' i ^ ^ ^ V fey ” '■ i f ''' 1“ ‘ I . I ' ’ ' : '7 / . ' TirV. IH^N riACirilKHS. WEDNKHI)A\S .yill^V H2, lOlU » >'7 iM||;. i| ’ . '7 "'i;.;j' i' California Luscious Red Fresh Strawberries Red Ripe and Luscious. More flavor than any berry on the market. Get the season’s best at Wrigley, this week! While Supply Lasts. 00 r Amounts_________39c each Food Club BallOrd or PilUbury Biscuits 8-oz. Tube CAKE MIXES Ar-Koy Gelatin Salads Cheeso Burger Cheese 6 oz. OQc Pkg. Z7 Luncheon Meat Swift Prem 12-oz. Can t ,— ------Save f lOc ^ if Devilsfood. Chocolate. Yellow or White Swift Beef Stew 24-0?. Can Food Club Canned Milk • 15c Q Tall $100 n 8 OCans I Speciol Label A|ax Cleanser , Refreehlng Metri Cola . special Label Ivory Soap . Kellogg'* Corn Flakes . Save 3c Reg. .] Oc 0" 2 Can IO Zion Fig Bars Save I 8c Mb. Ctn. I 12«oz. "Tc Can / ■Personol, J Size . ZJ. Bars jCO 18-oz. O O c Pkg. 00 Quick Toasted' Post Toasties 18-oz. QOc Pkgi 00 Economy Size Kleenex Towels Rolls * 2-lb. Dutch Apple Cookies . Pkg. 47 f Wctf effactiva fhrw Saferrfoy, i»(y 25. Special Label Instant CHASE A SANBORN COFiEE Grap« Drink At*ort*4 Fruit Flovort Ringo Drinks Bratwell Assorted Fruit Drinks . SoVelBcil 32-oz. $100 . on4 4 -Cans I 3 57-oz. $100, Bottles I Wogner Orange Drink 32-OZ; oric Bottle Z7 ' -m z. " We rMfft th$ right to limit qu0utiti0$. Elna ^ Tomato Juice . . Von Comp's . 7 ■ Pork & Beans . . Golden Cookies ■— Save 17c on 3 Almond Windmills "c,77'9= 314-pz. $100 ' Pkgs. I Pioneer Pur* Grenuloted SUGAR 39* Pioneer Pure Granulated^ t one with coupon at left. Hershey end Other Popular Brandt Assorted- CANDY BARS , b. 49: T«U« THm«m#-U.1D.A. CMm ' ■mI dwell Rpatt S9it Boneless Cluck 791 MB SfEAKS Naturally Tandar Tabla Trlmmad Glandala Michigan Grada 1 Sklnlata riichka Laan Sugar Curad Slicad HOT DOGS 2-79* BACON All Liquid . Sfwciol Lobal Berth Praise Soap . . Both Siio Lifebuoy Soap\ $Ptdal Lobol Spry Shortening . B?,,. 79' .2b„35' ,2 b., 35' 42-oz. / •7c Can 0/ Swan Detergent For Dlihot ^ Liquid W»k . . Spoeiol liobol Rinso Blue . Campbtirs. TOmATO SOUP Save 5c on 4 Sour Lomoh, ».Oronoe or Cherry Bonomo Candy ^ Auorted Fruit Flovori Dum Dum Suckers Top Froit Frozen Sliced j Strawberries . 4 Plnoapplo-Oronae, Plnoapple'Gropefruit _ Fruit Juices . . F^zeV ^ ^an$ GOylo Saltines . . . ^ Hoir Sproy Aqua Net ... Special Lobel Vaseline . . . . Sun Ton Lotion *• ' Goppertone . . . Groose-ptf Household Cleaner 6 ox. 19' 77' H»oi. Can Plus F.E.T. Yellow Cling-—Sliced or Halvog STOKELY PEACHES Oronot Slloet or Biqi^Ben Spice Dropi Lucy Ellen Jellies . Hot Dog, Hamburger or Sweet Relishes . . . Kroft , Barbecue Sauce Butterfield Potato Sticks EIno Tomatoes SealtfBh—Laddie Bara, fudgeiicles or ROCKET BARS c Limit >ix with coupon of right. GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS \,1, -,i, I r -■■ Avocado, $hftmp, Pineapple Make Colorful Sandwich ii'i- '•/ Tlim' |io|Hilm’ milfid «*niH nr») romblnod 'tor Iho itt' tritfuinK niliiiK iixi't! I>< Ix'utly •‘Av(H!Hdo Salad Sandwich ” The colorful mixture of diced Culifor- nia aviH'adn, ahrinip ami piiteap-Ide iKlhita la lici'Kcd ii|) with chill xmice mid mayominiM^, Summer varlelles of t'nllfor nla nvocadoN are now In local markela Since ilicir akiMa are thii'ker than llio.ic' of ihe winter vnricllex, ii|»|)ly firm Iml penile prcNMure when eniiplnk the nvn (kJdoN heiw«'4in the palma ot your himdii fo ionI the fruit for eatlnu-rlpeneiiH Avocado Salad 1 can (4'u oz) deveined ahrimp J ean 111% OS5.) plneaiiiilo ijd> ■ hlin " I (‘allfdrnlu avocado 1 fahlcHpiHin chill Nauce 2 lalileiiiptMine inayonnaiae 1 dinner rolh or hurger huns Water ci'cmn Itlane and driiia Nhrlinp. Hraln pineapple, reNervliig I tat)|«M|MHMi iiyrup, ' (?ut avocado lenKlhwiae inlw halvea; remove aeed and akin. | Dice uvoemloi comiune with ahrimp and pineapple. Mix chill 'V’' 'I Tiii^ i*()N'i1A(‘ i*hkss. \vKi)\Ksi)vyv. I ^ \\,\ I I ii' ■ I 111 -<1 Groats Are Change i ONE Over low heat ailr gr4tM "rttll dry ami hrowmal allghtl|. Add > ciipa atiH'k aid bring to a tKdl; mivor tightly pmd aim-mer tinlll (NMiked through ami iKlitid ahaorhed •• SIO U) 30 min’ iitea, If U(|iiid la ahaurhad b«' From Potatoes aaiK'o, r<»Nerved ayrup and may-endo onnalae; atir gontly into avot mixture. Cut thin slice off top of each roll; remove part of soft center. Fill with avocado mixture, He-' turn tops to rollk and garnish with water cresa, Makes 4 serv" Ings, Old-world meal nccom|>anl ment! . Herbs, spices and grated orange or lemon rimi lift many sandwich fillings mil of the or dInary. adding nolliing Iml fin vor to the aandwieh. Buckwheat (iroats 1 cup coarse brown buckwheat groats * ' 1 egg, slightly beaten 2 cups (alHiiit) latlliiig hot chicken stock' ' Salt to taste 2 tables|Nions butter or miirga' rine ■ , i 'A # In n buttered KMiicIc ,s||illel stir Ingellicr the groats mid egg Stir in salt (amount will t. pend on seasoning in stock) and butter. Serve at once or r heat over iHtiiing water. Male 4 servings. (‘omhkie ecpial |>arta of < cold atock 'Summer-Garileii' MICHIGAN GROWN Sweet Corn 39« Ooz. :v; TIIK rONTIA( I'lU'iSS. \Vlll)'\ h’ySI)A VV .M dV ^pace iqck Turning Away Thousands of College Applicant. T IIMIl. 1) 1 CI(K;A(U)' (Al»)-M«iiy fol niuj u))lv«rMltt«it «r«i oliMn-miriK thplf doDm on thouHiindu of applieunlR becauHe of a lack of apace, >' Bui a survey by I he Aaanclal'’ ed Press showed today there' still Is room m many other liisth tutloiia of hliiher edm'atioii, eapiM'lally In less iMipuhitvd Hlutea. had to cease consideration of new uppllcatlooN In tho spring. ★ _ * e Providence (III.) College rejected more than 1,000 requests ^or admission, "In all divisions of Butgers (alANT CAP Conventloning Shrinera put a giant ft* over the head of the 'statue of Promettieus in New York’s Bockefeller Plasa early this week. At top, a center employe tries to dislodge the topi>er, Krands Miller, a friend of a Slirlner, rescued the replica from the |xh)I (below). Lightning Kills Outside of Aiito WEST PLAINS, Mo, (AP)-I.ightnlng struck and killed a boy after he had stepped from a car stopped by a blinding cloudburst Tuesday. grandmother and two brothers and a sister. All were treated for sbwk. « Mrs. Walker had stopped the car because of the sturnf on U.K, , The survey Indlcnlexl the schmd rush isn't os heavy aa It avorns. In some'ifistunces pros-peiTive students aro playing (^rt of an academic* parlay -l^plytng, say, to lliree different colleges In the hope of getting Into one of them. A high school graduate seeking admtaslun to the University of Massachusetts' or to one of the 10 state alleges In the Bay Htnte came up against odds of almost M. ELOODEI) BY APPLICATIONS The university received 12,000 applications for 2,(i00 openings Ip tl)e freshman class entering in 8epteml»er. The state col-, leges, primarily for teacher training, admlUtsI 3,700 of 18,(K)0 applicants. (Jeorgla Tech has closed Its registration books. The University of Georgia did likewise May 4, thi> earliest cutoff dote In Its history. Emory University took similar action March 10. The victim, David Eugene j Iffi east of West Plains. David Walker, 12, was riding with his; stepped outside and the holt ‘ T, Mrs. Halph Walker, his i struck him. Vlllanova University, for the first time, hml to put a lid on applications for the freshman ciass. The University of Rhode Ls-land and Khode Island College (New Brunswick, Newark, Camdon) l»y Eel), 12 we had re-ceived 14,0W appHcnilons from fully qualified students," a spokesman sold, "and yet have room for only in the next freshman class, The men's'col- leges In New Brunswick cut o(f| Dartnioulh Is rejecting appli appUdhllons Feb, 15," ' j cants l)y the platoon. The University of Illinois has w w w announced It may have to tiirnj In some stxhools, such as the away 2,600 woiild-be students al i University of Missouri, enroll-ils Ui liana and Chicago cam-l ment will be limited by a sliort-puses ] age of housing hi others, lack of mleipint'e classroom facUUIei Is a big factor, Exiles Glaim U.S. Thwarted Cuba Raids MIAMI, Fla, (AIM Cuban exiles today m-eused the Utiited Hlates "who should he our best nllles" of Ihwortliig anti-CuN-tro raids Iwlee wllliiii I Wo days. An arms laden Do toot hoot was seized Tuesday at Sugar Loaf Key, soiitli of lierxt. Two days ago a plane with four bombs apparently destined for Cuba was confiscated near West PaHn Beach, "win* comrtniniqne'' from the Itcvoltitloriory Heeovery Insur-recllmial Movement and Com-numdoN I,. "W# energeliciilly proteNl this new attack and spoilage hy lliose who should he ‘our best allies," The*nnll-Caslrollcs said the lioal had been attacked by Com-munislH off tlie norih coast of Matunzas Province early Tuesday and had tied iiiio iLs wa-★ w ' i let's, Eour Cuhmis ami an Anier-"Taking our planen. bouts and 1 i‘’«H l|'>n Baker ol Fort l,mider-arms will not disarm us," said adalc, Fla,, were aboard. Turkey Bonus Not Obligatory PHILADEH’IIIA (41-A Cltrlslmas turkey Imnus for employes is Just a custom, riot an olillgallon, a U, S, District judge has ruled. Gobblers were given to employes of the Vcrlol Division of the Boeing Co. every Christmas from 19.54 Ihrougli 1062. Last year the company gave up the practice and a lalior union took Ihc case (o court, demanding that the company arbitrate the issue Judge Allen K, Grim ruled that the turkeys were not subject to arbilralion. , A dozen aniomaJic rilles, homemade 'lamilm, liand gre mules and grenade Imiiieliers. a eaniion and nmmiinllIon clips were fouiul nhoard the lioal. A .Slate Deparlmeiil otlielal said an exile claim lhat the boat had been to Ciilia and wa.s rti-tiirning wax being invcsilgated for po.sslhle violation of U S, nciitrnlily laws, Release Soon for Astronaut in Hospital June Allyson Obtains Child Support Increase LOS ANGEI.F.S (AIM -Actress Juen Ally,son, widow of Dick Powell, has olKiilned a $000 monthly incrca.se In her 'liilil support nllowmici* from llie actor's estali!. HOUSTON (UI’I), Asirommi M, ,Scott (larpcnter, who orhll ed the earth Without difficulty lull lound a motor scooter too rnucli to handle, will be released from a Houston hospital wilhin the nex( ICw days H«« broke (he arm aud n («a-and bunged up a knee lust week in Bermuda when he lust eonlrnl of Als motor scooter while trying to dodge an oneoming enr. Superior Court y»>slerdny granted a |)ciition boosting the allowance lo $2,506 a month. Mi.ss Allyson said slic needed the extra money liecmise the illness o( her. second husband prevents her Irom socking etii' ployment, Her children arc Pamela. 16, and jllchard, 14. The (| whether It was healing p r o p (> r I y. There find Ik'cii .some fl-ar tliat it might be neces.sary U> relireiik Hie Ixmes and set lliem again. Carpenter, w h o orbited th(> eartli three times in 1962, was In Ih'i'imiila to take part In a proj-c(!t to send astroanuts tHmealli Itie sea tor long jieriods of time. BABY BOOM STUDENTS But the biggest factor is that ehildren born early in the postwar baby boom now are kno!*-log on eollage gates. The .Stale Utilverslly Of Now York, coiii|>rlsliig 58 units scat-lercil across the state has had lo turn away siudeiils In roeeiil years It pointed out that It receives applicaiiooH from young folks who apply simiiHunoously lo several sciiools ....New York Stale Ediica- Mon Department r«'ported tliat appilealioiis this year to the 147 private eolleg«'M and universities ill llie hImIo are riiniiiiig about 33, per cent higher tlinn ladt year. Hut high school graduating clahses are only 26 per cent lai -ger, This Indicates a rise in miilllple aptilieallmiH, Italy Paper Stfilces End With New Pad IU)W[J*] Wl - Ilnly’s long ke-rles of iiewspH|)er strikes ended Inst nighi with the signink of a new Iwo-yenr conirael for lum-edllorla! empfoyes. The contract provides a g<>ri-eral 12 per cent wage boost over the next two years, Prior to the latest round of negotiations, the unions hod held out for 25 per (!cnt and the publish" ors had refused to go beyond 7 per cent. ^ . Plenty of Free JParking"" la Pantiac, 20^ Nor^ Siaginaw Street I ■ - ■'■J'-. ft• lll- 4^ •r '■(kkil'ij'J: Ih Ciarktteii>Waterfor(i j pn Dixie HlgHway, North of Wgterford Hill 't . 'i:" ., > ",.r ^ . i , }i% Mh I ' , -■ ■ i ' 4> I' hk new! Pepsi in one way'S-packs no deposit-no return-same great taste! \ if di ■ Now Pepsi-Cola introduces‘the One-Way 8 Pack . . . convenient no-rdeposit, norreturn bottles. What could be better for the vacation season? It’s the perfect way to take Pepsj camping, fishing, or on any outing. Great for busy shoppers, too. And with all the extra convenience, you get sixteen servings of that same great P’epsi-Cola taste . . , icy-light and sparkling bright. Next time, try Pepsi in.the handy, theifty One-Way 8 P^acks! ; now it’s PepsMdr those who think young ’ . BY PlPSI.CMA^OT/umC, COMM«JfOF IStTROIT, |ne UNDtlt *W-0INIMl,NT tUCfS^PSI 1 I , / Im Tiff \ i-i.r ^U.'d I ^'1 -i t' II I / '"1 II 'll .1'^" l'-'. ll' riiK lurN riAt’hM*u/isH, n, r- Blue, Hut.. . Qreen, Hut, Hut... Red ... Some More Huts Lions Offensive Calls Get Colors liy lIHUNO l<. KKAIINS SpoHi Editor, Ifoittlac I'mi 'rtie Detroit Lions are putUtig a little color Into their foffensive signals. ■ Quarterbaoks Earl Mofrall awl MIH Pliim never did major In mathemntlca at Michigan State and Penrt State respectively sd the change of /ilgnals from numbers to colors may be wel-corned. . Instead of using the double digit numbers at the Hue of scrimmage, the code for the .snap of the ball wljl sound like. a rna.ster sergeant's cadence in boot camp, "Hlue , . . hut, hut, . . hut , . . hut, hut. hut , . . grren, . hut . . . hut. hut . . . red . . . hut, hut (and somewhere | along the line, on one of the | huts, everybody moves)," j demonstrated eoaeh Oeorge Wllsofi after the opening day I of drills yesterday Mt t'rau" brook. count system, very often pulling o|>poshtg linemen offside. Wilson has Installed the new sy.stem of signal calling almllar to that used by the Bears last year, . "They mircVoirfuscd a lot of defcn.se8. They pidled us off.sldc several times," said Wilson. Quarterback Billy Wade of the Benr.i was known to use a long ('AI.LED IN IIIIDDLE In the huddle, the Lions’ quarterback will give the play awd number and at the line of the scrimmage the color and "hut" will Indicnie to the offettse when the hall will he snapped. i%, for the first day of camp It wasn’t uncommon to hear I,Ions players mumbling to themselves. Hlue . , . hut, hut Failure Follows Tigers on Road Trip . ,, green, hut. hut. hut, hut,,, etc. . red, "When we start* using lavender, hut, hut . . . chartreuse, hut . . . aqua, hut, hut . . . we’ll really he tricky," Jested one uffenilve lineman. , Coach Wilson wai satisfied with some of the rookies In oiK'itlng day of camp, especially at defensive halfback where some rookies were pot to a test against the passing of MorralL and Plum. Red Sox Halt Detroiters, 7-5^ Stuart's 3-Run Blast Decisive in Seventh BOSTON {AP)~Pallure to win on fhe road may cost thp Detroit Tigers their American League first diviston berth before they get back home. The Tigers won a home run battle with the Boston Bed Sox 'Tuesday night, 4 to 3, but lost the ball game, 7-5, in dropping below the .500 mark again as Dave Wlckersham missed a try for hifS 13th victory. Dick Stuart’s three-run homer in the seventh inning for Boston broke a 4-4 tie and carried the Red Sox to their triumph over a pair of homers each by Norm Cash and GeOrge Thomas. 2 HOMERS Home runs al.s6 were smashed by Felix ^ Mantilla and Frank Malzone in a Sox power display that meant au t'arly exit for Wickersham, He left in the third Inning, The defeat lowered Detroit to Packer Camp Shows Old Winning Spark Bobby ’Thompson, Wayne Rasmussen and Bruce Zollmer all received defensive backfield trials and performed adequately according to Wilson. POSITION SWITCH j In a line chapge made yesterday. Dan fjiRose former offen-slve linemen twk a pwlllon as defensive end and former defen-' slve end Jim Simon was used briefly as offensive guard. ! Gary Lowe, highly regarded defen.stve halfback who missed a large part of the season last year and had to undergo an operation on his Achilles tendon, worked at his old position without any trouble. had to (ell him to (ahe a 46 won-4| lost record in the this AL standings. So far on road trip the Tigers' have lost six games and won three. The Tigers and Red Sox meet again tonight with Ed Rakoiv (5-6) slated to pitch against Earl Wilson (10-4)'. Stuart's homer, his 24th of the year, came off Mickey Lolich after sophomore right-hander Denny McLain, reliever of Wickersham, had allowed a single pnd a walk. Up to then McLain had looked good. •"An.early power display, including Mantilla’s and Mal-zone’s homers,'had given Bill Monbouquette (6-8) a 4-0 lead in two innings, enough to see him through with the help of relief in the ninth. The homers were Nos. for Mantilla and 10 for Malzone. ■ Gash rapped his 12th in the fourth inning and ’ 13th in the sixth. Cash also got a single as top hitter of the night. 'Die first Thomas homer followed' Cash’s clout in the sixth and tied the score at -4-4. Thom-■ as got his second in the ninth. The two were his eighth and ninth. KICKER KICKS - Don Chandler of the NFL New York Giants wants a part time job to be the team’s kicker on weekends but coach Allie Sherman says there’s no room in pro football for part timers. Chandler hasn’t reported to caipp- By United Press International It seems like old times at the Green Bay Packers’ camp at West De Pere, Wis. Coach Vince Lombardi is smiling but the rest of the Western Division teams had better watch out. Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor who led the Green Bay, Packers to three successive National Football League Western Division championships and two NFL crowns, ran together during two stiff drills in 90 degree weather’Tuesday. The two Packer dread-naughts drew raves from, the ' coaching staff for the way they executed running' plays, especially on wide sweeps. Hornung Is attempting a comeback after being suspended last season while Taylor, hobbled by ihjurles anrf a bout with hepatitis last year, is trying to regain his old fortp, CONDinONINO St. Louis Cardinals coach Wally Lemm is whipping his team into condition for a go at the Eastern Division title by conducting 45 . minute sessions for offensive dnd d e f e n s 1 v e units at night in addition to extra classwork. On other fronts: The pass receiving of Willie Richardson ahd the running of rookie fullback SHEADING POUNDS - A squad of 24 veterins Joined the. 26 rookies in Detroit Lions’ training at CTanbrook yesterday and the wind sprints in 90 degree temperatur«i took some pounds off the hulk,y linemen. Of- fensive tackle John Gordy gets "weighed out" by defensive tackle Alex Karras at^ as the scale indlcatos, Q the straggle for fourth place; the final playoff berth. The Lumbermen, who lost ou last year on a late"season slump ; now arp 6-9. They hold fourth by percentage points over CIO No. 594 ( 5-8) while CranbrooL-also is in good position at 4-8. | AI Barkeley’s double with th bases loaded in the third infting sparked” a four-run rally tha ctecided last night’s tilt, ' ; ,v» UNEARNED RUNS The winners pounded eut 10 hits led by Bob Rabaja’s three •singles; and four Talbott errors made four of the five Huron-Airway runs unearned. Don Sackett hurled one - hiti. ball through the \’first five innings to earn hii\ seventh vic-| tory against One loss 'for thd^j pacesetters. . ■■ I Talbott scored in the seventh off left-hander Don Piemann. The run was the first this season by Talbott in 21 innings against the league leaders. Tonight the battle for second place honors continues with the Clippers meeting Pontiac BuSi-' ness Institute. Game time is 8 o’clock at Jaycep Park. TALBOTT LUMBER HURON-AIRWAY ABR H ©reflory 3b 3 0 0 I______ Crawford If 2 I 0 Kabaja 21 300 Johnson g arpemer 2b-ss .ohnson c ............. Pickett p-lb 1 0 0 PIcmann p ftuch c‘ . - w ich Pit aritBn 2b TTie Chicago Bears’ place kickers, Roger Leclere and Bpb Jencks, worked on their specialty while the rest of the' squad tried to block kicks. < The Los Angeles Rams blamed discouragement over a series of injuries for the departure Tuesday of rookie guard Rex Benson from the National Footbatl League club’s training camp. . A Rani' spokesman s a 1 d Benson; from the University of Miami gave no formal notice that he was leaving but took along his personal possessions. Jerry Burton,, a defensive halfback f r o m Northwestern State of Louisiana, left earlier. Club officials theorized that Burton was jiist homesick. Tffard - r u n n i n g Pittsburgh' Steeler fullback John Henry Johnson-ran into some interference on Connecticut Turnpike Tuesday. State Police stopped him on a spfeeding charge. Totals 24 I 3 25 5 10 I A few minutes later they also stopped Steeler lineman Joe Womack. ' Drills contihue at 10:00 a m. and 3:00^p.m. daily. Hie nine unsigned veterans Were still not linfier extract, although director of player personnel Russ Utomas has been talking terms with several in earjy camp. Defensive end Sam Williams, among those unsigned, reported in late yesterday. SQUAD GAME The first big contact day for the Lions will come Saturday night August 1st in the full-dress scrimmage at U. of D. Stadium. TBe squa^ game will be played this year for the benefit of the family of the late Lions’ backfield coach Scooter Mc-j Lean. ' ' , ■ . It was played in Pontiac’s | Wisner Stadium the |)ast three; years, but jtrloyed to U. of D. I to accommodate ihore seating (or the. McLean benefit. Ticket offices in the Pontiac area will be set up and tickets j are expected to go on sale this weekend. * By The Aifoclated Press The New York Yankees have a couple of new helpers—- a catcher who liiat his job and $ guy who hasn't had one for 10 days. ■nie le Yankees trimmed Washington 7-1 ’Tuesday night — and wound up oil top of the American League when John Romano powered Cleveland to a 4-f, 8-5 «leheader sweep over Baltl-and Vic Power came through with the big hit in the LOs Angeles Angels’ 2-0, 3-2 sweep over thA Chicago White YANKS nRST When Romano — the catcha* without a mask—and Power— the returning vacationer—had completed their night’s work, New Yprk was in first place and the Orioles and White Sox were—temporarily at least—in left field. That’s where Romano was until his third homer of the evening triggered an elgh^|r^n Indian uprising in the eighth inning ct the' Cleveland-BalU- The big Inning sent the Orioles reeling into second place, five percentage points behind New Ywk. Power w(ps back at first base in the White Sox-Angels second game after ao enforced 104ay layoff—the ^ult of a run-lh with umpire Jim Honochick in Los Angeles. Curtain Falls on '64 Race toMackinbe • pomr AT TMeer Af -top OP- -fug '©ACKswiNiei'_______ p<5l IN A gTRAI^HT- NA/HgTHER you -rAXg -TMg CLU& 10 OR/ Ae» i VO, e'H<0K'r op rarau,bi____ —1 : Huron-Airway 004 001 x—5 10 1 Doubles, — Berkeley, Fleser. Runs Batted In Davidson; Barkeley 2, Marcum, Weekerley. Pitching — Pickett 3 SO, I W, 4-1 R-ER, Foraker 2 W, Augus-ten 2 SO, 1-0 R-ER; Sackett 5 SO,,Pic- . -.... . .1, M R-ER. Winner Sackett (7-1). Loser-Pickett (0-1). Er----- Pickett, Auguston, Davidson, Carpenter; Sackett. Tie for Golf Honors Mrs,'Jean Looney and Mrs. Jerri Daniel tied for low gross honors with 47s yesterday in the Women’s Tuesday Golf League at Silver Lake Golf Cotuise; Mrs. Daniel captured the low net with a 32. ' Mickey Hotchkiss was second with 37. Both were en route to the- National Football League team’s training camp at Kingston, R.I. Meet \i) Birmingham The annual playground Olympics will be held at Pierce Field Thursday for youngsters participating in the Birmingham. Recreation program. J Winners in the-Olympics will compete-pt-Port Huron in the, ” ■ ...... Jsl 'A Uli llUlUli 111 UJI MetropoUt^lfi Youth Fitoes meet July 30. ^ - - -THg^ PURPOSer I-& ■fO MAIN-TAIN A ReCIPROCA-riMISJ ' « Ing's drill, Tha injury Is not ballavad to be Horlous, bul will keep him from throwing hr several days, OTIIKII INJUIliFS Al least eight nihar cripples, with Injuries ranging f r o m pulled muHi-las lo serious bruises, also may miss .several days of hard work. Pontiac Glass COMPANY 23 W. Lewrtneo St. Pontiac ~ PE 5-6441 We Need You! If you oro o mechonic ond Esporienced in working on Ford Con or Trucks ond oro intoros^d in Hit best poy plon in tho oroo, P 0 i d Vocotions, Hospitolisution ond lots of work, Contact Mr. Tol-longer, OR 3-1291, Sorv-ico Ooportmont. BtaMit Motof Solos, lac. ■ • M«nM $4 $«rvtc« AH*r Nw Salt • Sloe Otii* Kwy. OR 1-120? Wotorford Tliese Include ends Mel Profit of UCLA, Sam Parks of Texas Tech and Matt Snurton of Michigan State; backs Matt Snell of. Ohio State. Ode Burell of Mis-sissippi State, Joe Don bwiney of Oklahoma arxl Charley Taylor of Arizona State and, linebacker Tommy Crutcher of Texas Christian. Five ailing players continued to drill. Including flanker back Paul Martha of Pltisburgh, end Chuck Logan of Northwestern, fuHback Tony Urlck of Arizona Stale and quahcrbacks Mira and Jack Concannon of Bo.st6n College. The injured reduced the squad to two running backs. Willi.s Crenshaw of Kansas State and the hobbled Lorlck. 111K rON'i’iM' Vhk.s.s, Wl;:nNK.SIIA V' .1 \^. Cubs Win 2-1 ^ lY ’J-J, I Hill. , 1 > ]lj\ 1) n 1 i Homers HihGionfs Retry Oaylord Perry hasn't broken a bal ifi nine days, but Billy Williams cerlalnly took a ealcu. laied risk when he kdl hi# lying around, Williams shoved lemidatlon Just (g) feet from Perry Tuesday night when he dropjied his bat at home plate and trotted around (he bases after hilling a iwo-sirlke pilch lor a IwO-ruti homer Hint provided (lie Chicago Cubs with the runs they needed to whip Sun Kranylsco 2-1 Tuesday nlghl. HAT IlitKAKKIt P e r r y, hoWever, remained Wolkd Lake Tops Milford In Disfrief Tilt Walled Lake pitcher Jerry T)eschamp fanned 13 baiters In pib’hing the host team to a 7-1 victory over Milford in the DIs-lri(?t, 4 I.iule League baseball tournament yesterday, lie was touched for two hits while Ills Icamnvatcs pounded out 10, They will meet North Farmington this afternoon. ' The tournament Is being held Jointly at Walled laike, Farmington and Birmingham. The championship contest is slated for 4:30 p.in. at the lat-ter'i Kton Park. (lov,* (ieorge Bomney will toss out the first ball al the game. Other re.sults from yester-day’.s first round .saw Birmingham Continental defeat South field American. 4-2, Birmingham Federal top Birmingham American, 6-2, and SouUifleld National whip Lathrop, 7-0. ' Birmingham's t w o winning teams will meet this aftemwin while Southfield will play Birmingham National, which'had a bye yesterday. j In Farmington division play, | North Farmington nipp^' Southfield-Lathrop, 8-6, and Birmingham nudged Southfield, 3*1. calm, earning his fourth merit badge In BaWreakerg Anony. mous, The 26-yeoN)ld Shiv Francisco right-hander liiis kept hii Jiands off'cjicmy bats for two successive gamek now, Imi liOs beim unalile to do life siime wllli the bal). Since he smashed Nellie. Fox' ball In a rage oiler losing lo Houslon and was billed'for llie ilamage, I'erry has been In two games and allowed, five runs-all on honier.H, Hank Aaron, Jiw Torre aiuj Denis Menke of Mil wuukee previously tested Perry. Williams' homer. Ids 23i11, made ihe Cubs the latest entry In Ibe Nnllonal League jiennant sweepstakes as I h e y ellmbed (iver the .filM) level wllh Ihelr fwirtti straight victory, and FIghth In 10 games, movltig into r-onlending position 7'a games off Hie pace, , The (llniils, ftieuiiwhile, con-llpued Ihelr .skki, lo.siiig Ihelr seventh In the last nine games aijd falling a full-game hetiind fronl-running I‘hl1hdelphla. The Phillies, also struggling, defeated Milwaukee 6-3 for only their fifth victory In the last 14 games. Ehsewhere, Hie Now York Mets dropped third-place (.'in-cimiatl 3>fi games by beating the Beds 4-i I'lftsburgh rode Jerry Lynch’s grand slam hom-T to an 8-4 victory over St. Louis and Hoivslon edged the 1.08 Angeles Dodgers 10 on Al Spangler’s homer, Bobby Wine drtive In two runs with a homer and single, Tony Taylor also homeriKi and rookie Ulchie Allen .stroki'd three hits as the Phillies slowed tho Braves, who had won eight of 10 and 16 of their last 22. * 1^ ,# The Met,s m a d e it four .straight victories over the Beds os Larry Elliot hit a bases-' empty homer off Joey Jay, 4-8, in the second and walked before .Jesse Gonder homerled.ln the fourth. The victory went to Bill Wakefield, who pitched 5 1-3 Innings of two-hit relief after the Beds chased Tracy Stallard with two it»qo 0-1 Onglon t CI«v»l*nd~.Donovm 4-t $ PappM 14, nlotil, ■ WaUilnaloo -koth J-J at Oo«mlng a-3 Lo* AnoaMt-Nawnian J-J Hortaa J.J, night, i 4«w York,; It Chicago I ......., ^ ^ MlnnoMla; Wloman 54. night. Ottrolt-Sakow M ot BMIoni Wilton 10-4, night. THUaSDAY'ieAMBt Kantai Cttv at Mlnnaiota at Chicago Clavaland c _ Washington at Na«t Datrott at Boiton, . NATIOHAL ■.■AOUI Go To Orion For Your GTO and SAVE at., a MOTdR SALES 39 M24, Lak* Orion 693-32S6 PUTT-PUTT 54 Hole Golf OPEN 24 HOURS Dixia Hwy„. Drayton Plaint . .on Loon Lako OR 3-9383 San Pranclaco Cincinnati ..... Pllttburgh Mllwaukaa ..... Chlf :ago ....... 44 45 .505 ___Ahgalat .... 45 47 ,4tt Houston ........ 43 52 .451 Now York 21 44 :2t( TuasoAY’f aasuus I, St. . Louis 4 Clficlnnotl 2 Chicago 2, San Francisco ' TODAY'S OAMBS Phlladalohla-Culp 7-7 al Mllwaukaa; Spahn; 4-tO,. night. . Chicago—Jackson 12-7 at San Fran-cIko;Mortal 7-5. . .. MouMon-Johnton i Ahgalat; ’'p’t'nibu'rgh-Vaart 10-4 or Schwall M at St. Louis; Craig S4, nlghl Now York-Jackson SI I at C Ttrtourit 4-4, nlghl. THUaSDAY'S GAMES .........Cincinnati, night It Cincinnati; TUESDAY'S PIOHTS NEW YORK-Bobby Bartels, 151, .... York, atoppad Juan Rambi, l44'm, Puerto Rico, 5. HOUSTON, Tex.-Claveland Williams, “’7, Houston, stopped Sonny Banks, m'/i. I Oatrolt, 4.' IRRESISTIBLE Values at‘Unbeatable Priees! Large Selection of Late Model Used Cars Manshe^ Managtr Rudy Forslund 1104; Baldwin lutiSilii FC‘5-|5900 Only thing our Quinine cures: " Thirst. Johmi lulling runs on a pair of . And singles by Derpn lin nnd (lopilyColemAii, -Lyiibh HiiiAMliPd jils’ gr a rid sIaiii 0^ Bon 'I'iiylor In A flvti-t’uii flfllrv liming Hint gave Hie Pli'Ates liWo Hmn enough lo beat the (-'mlifinlH, Taylor hiok' over for sliiiXer aiid loser Bay .Smleckl, HMI, lyier ruin delayed Hie gAthefll'iniiibieN, Joe (illtliooi 7-3, iieedod ridlol help to win il fifier Mike .Slmn. non hii A thre^run homer for ilie (!nrdjimls in (he eighth, HiMiiigier's lemlolf liomer In Hie eigliHi liroKe up a pltcliers' duel lietweeii the .CoHh' Bob Bruce and Don Dryiiilide of thi* DiKlgers. Bruce kept nine, hits weM spnet-d and stranded four/ Dodg> I'l'M on Hiji'd Imse iih he lirmigiit Ills record to il-4 wUh Ills foiiflh Hlralglit victor,v, Dr,VNdiilt>, 12-li, allowed only five tills, GAM Titles Shared Two (wosomes sliared Hie IlL le in Hic annutil Golfi AshocIu-tlon of Michigan Father-Son tourney held yesterday at Loch- TIOBR AVSRAOES By Tbi Associalid.Prtss ' Individual Batting AB R a hr RB PHIIIIrs ,. Kalina . Bruton McAulItt* Damatar ■ 174 34 55 . 373 ;i5 H.5 40 13 15 moor Country (:iuh In Delrolt, Heading the pack' In the pro-^ip division were Chick Bittan, pV at Lochmoor, and his son lUhjf, along wlHi Tommy .Shaiv non ot Orchard |.ake and his III ('hiry, BotlMa c .sniru* lallier-Noii leanui jKisled ' 30-311-75 Hi'ore.s. 194 34 55 . JJO .55-55 374 40 73 Lumpa J43 43 VO Rnarka 70' J 14 Cash . 3«5 ,'i5 45 Wood .94 9 19 X-Tgtals I llh |0I lOi Wlckarsham . In the (Tam member-,son lour-nament Sptmeer Maurer and son Boberl of VWilnul Hills and F E, Bichart on^soii John of Barton Hills share^i medal honors with 72 each, Tile loiiriiamc'bi drew 3iil pla.vers, with hholmiiji starts at l,o(’limoor and Country Club of Dclroll, ' Aguirra Oiadding McLain HANOICAI' 10 15, llriiea Writal Jr., Pina l nka 77; | uw Nal A iJ'ala. ijnkloml Millt 75'I8\ . Siolm BoO, Blrmlngham\cc, -................ tA5 VSOA|, Nbv. -Danny Valdai, 154, i HONOI Ul U UddV Pa4a,.l4IW, l.ai An. n* AnualM, oulpfilnlad Oanny Valilai, italaa niitiifiinlad Jamai lllllty) Ihgllun, 3IU, ManiniiCity, to. I l»g,*lan Anlonlo, Ta«„ 10, YOUR OONVINIUNT BaF.aOOpRICM RTORK III NORTH FIRRY STREET. FONTIA,... ^3 3 3 3 0 Oatoweod, W, 14) 5,1-3 5 0 0 1 Peter*, U, 11-5 . Wilhelm 1-3 0 0 0 0 . T-8;53,\ A-31,I15. Night a*M* . HOUITON LOS\ ANORtRt •brbM V Spangler If 4 I 1 l Will* \** 5 0 3 Fo* 3b 4 0 10 Griffith, 3b-------- Gain** rf 4 0 0 0 GllllamX 3b Robert* 1b 0 0 0 0 Fair White cf 4 n « * - ■ Ullll* 3b 4 1 K*«ko •* 3 t . . ----- — Grot* c 3 0 0 0 Camllll c , Bruce p 3 0 10 Parker _ ph_ Total* 33 1 I 1 _____ ____________ euiton ................. 000 000 oio-i at Angel** . 000 DOT ,E-Ga|no«, White, Oliver. DP-1 , LOB-Hou«ton 6, Lo* Angela* 3B-WIII*. HR-Spangler (3). S-Falrly. ■ RBBSO Bruce, W, 11-4 .,.'3 ,3 0 0 - Dryjdale, L, 13*3 3 5 1 1 WP-Dry*dale. T-2;04. Ar-21,073. Class D Baseball Loser Blows Fat Lead Prosperity was too much for Rochestier last night in the city’s Class D junior baseball program. Trailing 4-1, Rochester scored seven times in the top of the sixth inning for an M lead, but stiil lost a' 9-6 decision to the Pontiac Boys Club. Jerry Murphy’s ofae-out double in the bottom of the seventh plated the winning run. The winners had narrowed the gap wMh three tallies in the Lynn Thorpe (the winner) and Dfenny Acker collaborated on one-hitter as Auburn Heights Boys dub blanked Franklin, 4-0; and Bloomfield Hills’ big early lead downed Cranbrook, 9-4, in other “D” games. Have^eebe had three singles and Paul Augusten hurled a strong five innings in the Bloomfield Hills win. Acker and Dick Reddaway both had singles and key doubles in the Auburn Heights’ triumph. State Woman FastSwirhmer ATLANTIC CITY ,N.J. (AP) — Marty Sinn of Ann Arbor, Mich., finishing seventh, turned in the fastest time ever i»sted by a woman in Ijhe 26 - mite swim around Absecon Island on the southwest Jersey coast Tiwsddy* Miss Sinn, 21, Winning $1,000, swam the distance) in 10 hours, 37 minutes, 15 seconds. She won $200 for seventh place and $800 for being the first woman to finish. Herman Wilierrise of Holland, 8&-yearJold school • teacher, won the rade ,and $5,000 in prize ■ In other top individual efforts, Henry Kem whiffed 13 and permitted one hit as the Eagles topped the Cardinals, 3-0, in Class ip,; and Joe Talbott hurled a no-hitter as Johnson’s Barber Shop whipped' the X-15s, 19-0, in. “F.” . V ' , ■ In Waterford Township’s class £ League last night, Rod Kennedy hurled a no-hitter as the Waterford Boy’s Club tripped Benson Lumber, 4-1. Y JUNIOR BASEBALL Ponfiac Bovs' Clubi 15, T-Johnson's Barber Shop 19, Widget* Titans 5, Malkim Cubs ft Moose 25. Columbia RA 4 APPlJCATIONS ItEADY-Applicatlons for elk hunting permits are ndw callable at regional, district and Lansing offices of the ConservatiQn Department. In Southeastern Michigan, the forms can be obtained from Imlay City and Detroit district offices. Area 2 in the map above Is open ti;i antlerless elk only. Bulls will be protected in this area during the Dec. 6-13 season. A draw'lng will determine the 300 permit holders. A.L Soffboll Showdown Near Arro Realtjj and 3(10 Bowl are nearing a showdown for the title in . the American Softball League. Arro (11-2) roiited Bob-Ken’< In.st night, 14-2,' while 300 Bow] (11-3) posted a 9-1 decision over Sam Reeves. In a third game Elks No. 810 (8-8) downed UAW No. 594 ( 6-9). 5-1. Arro ha.s two games remaining -- Sam Reeves on 'Iliursday 'and the title battle with 300 Bowl next ’Tue.sday. The league leader disposed of Bob-Keii’s in easy fashion, srorlng eight times In the opening frame and six times in the secemd. ,’The 10-niti rule ended the game after four innings. Bud Hayward, Roiger Nosek and Bill Buck collected two hits apiece to pace the attack. Harry Avesian fanned seveh in picking up the decision. Second baseman Jim Long cracked a two-run homer and. added two singles to provi(te 300 Bowl with a hitting punch. Tom Studt and JOrry Hesse ca m e through with two safeties each. 300 jumped off to A 2-0 lead in the opening frame, added two in the second and broke the game Open with four in the third. John Herrington and Doug Hall limited the losers to two hits.' ■ ; ; ' ■ The Elks scored three times . in the fifth to'break up a tight game with the union squad. < ' Morie Stack picked up three hits in three trips and Bob Sherman collected two to lead the Elks. : ’ , In Waterford Township action. Lakeland Pharmacy' (134) clinched a share of the Class C title with a 10-3 triumph over Dixie Bar (6-10), and Haskins Chevrolet (13-5) closed the season with a 4-0 verdict over Pink Poodle (4-13). In the Lakeland attack, Ho Pink Poodle, Jim Shoile and stroked three hits, scored twice and drove in one run. Algle Black fanned nine and, scattered lour hits in blanking Set Change foij Certain Game Limits WASinNtiTQfi (fl - The In-parimt terior Department announced ifXH 66 hunting seasop d a t a h and Img ilmiti for dove#, hand* tailed pigeons, rails, galliniiles, wihhIcih'Ie and snipe. Hecausfl of 'art increase In mourning dove populations across ihe naliop, llmlti on them were Increased, Mmleriile Im’reascs We're made In length season aiul possession limit for wllsonA snipe. A reduction was made in the dally bag limit ,on sorg rails, from 28 to 15. ' Other regulations cohfojrmed generally to those of last year, State game departments use the frameworks aniwnmced by the Interior Department Pi work out reconmiendatluns for tlic actual luintfng regulations in their own states. Tile Interior Ih'parlment also gave framework for migratory game bird seasons In Alaska and set a special season for scoter, elder and old^uaw ed States, It also announced a four-day" s(‘a.s«n on white-winged doves in 21 south Texas counties, Hunting of these birds was prohibited in Texas In 1963, but their population has Increased, Duck Increase Noted in U.S. Survey Report WASHINGTON (AP) - About 14 per cent moire ducks than last year were sighted in nesting areas during this Spring’s waterfowl survey but water conditions generally were below average, the Bureau of Sport FAilwrIes and Wildlife said Monday. Detroit's Banks Loser on TKO Speedy Heojvyweight Stops Sonny in 6th HOUSTON (AP) - aovoland Williams, Urn fourth ranked heavyweight, poUiidad young Sonny Hanks of Detroit for five rounds Tuesday night awl slopiJod him with a letihnlcal knockout at ‘i'69 of the sixth round of tlielr sclwdulwl ID-round heavyweight fight. Williams relentlessly stalked Ihe Delrollor and ktuK'ked him down once eacit In llio fourth fifth rounds. ^ In the fourth Williams jabbed and hooked Banks into the ropes and wore him down. Willi Banks stunned, referee Jimmy Webb (XHinted it as a knockdown, , Cuming out quickly in the sixth WllliainB pressured Banks into a corner where he soddenly unleashed a vicldus right hook, fiiliowed by a left and right (o Um? headv Banks sagged to Ihe canvas mid referee Webb stopped the fight. IM"e North™. A crbWd-<9,000 saw the fight card. It wa|N«m|iams’ 49th knockout. He now roami 60-5-1 rword. . inVbsnational lragur Was L**6 eti, it •onvIlM 33 3* 4Mt rut* . . >4 40 .174" *»l*r M 41 143 no 4* 43 .Rl Worldwide bog S/ipw in January '66 NASSAU, Bahamas - The first international show for all breeds of dogs will be 4held in ■lanuary 1066. Tile announcement was made May by Capl, Hhemtan F, (IM) Urlse, rlialrman of t It e show. 11)0 H|N)nsor will he the Bahamas Ministry of Hmrlsm. Hie shows - scheduled Jap. 9 through 17 - of 1066 will he held on the grounds of Nassau's maior iHiteli. Two International all-nreed sluiws will be held on two weekends. Specialty shows of various breeds will be lieki during Uie week. TrOphlei lies and prize money of more than $5,000 will be offered with $1,000 going to the inter-national best - In - show winner. The Bahamas Kennel Club will seek entries qn an invitational only basis, It is expected (hat entries accepted wlll n umber between 1,500 and 3,000 dog.<( of all breeds, Socetr Star Kiiltd RNFIKLD, England fUPD-The British soccer world is still ia a state It shock today after John White, t4-yenr-o|d Inside forward' with the Tottenham lloupnrs, was killed by lightning on ■ golf ciMrsr while he attempted'’^ to take shelter under a tree. A good rule of thumb for catching btg hlu>gtUjii js'^lo fish deep in hot weather, ahdalia^llow in cool orealher, accordlnjc tq^ the Conservation Department. ' ENGINE Mrs. Gawne Gets 1st Win .......owt".'?'! 4 Bight depends on nesting winnar-Muga* Lo»*rwRo«tfi I sucoess. and Said somc field ’sSIt' m u“{ )3 1 ‘ received indicate OVERHAULING GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS 1 LOW PRICES 1 EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC TRANSMIStlONt OUR SPECIALTY IV Innar- Harrington serious deterioration of water Conditiohs in a number of nest ing areas. MOTOR EXCHANGE f05 S. Sogtnaw S»r««» p| j.7432 Mrs. Samuel Gawnq of Bloom-ekl) field Hills won the weekly Women’s District event held yesterday at Warwick Hills Ountry Club in Grand Blanc by posting 8 4042-62. It was her first win of the season even though, she tied In an event ehrller and lodt in a playoff. She had six one-putt greens ; and birdies on No. 7 and No. 16. ! One stroke behind was Mrs. ! Jone Hume who carded 4240-83 followed by Mrs. Don I Weiss and Mrs. Charles Fox I with 85s. CHAMFIONSHie KLIGUT I. JMm Hum* ....... . j. Donald Wal** ... Mr*. CHariM Fox ...... Mr*. Dorothy Thompion . ------------ watkin* . .....rrr.......... Mr*. VIclor Rydan .................. , *1rs. 0. E. Finout Jr, . ... 51-44-35 , FIRST FLIGHT: Mr*. David A. BarboUT . ' 42—13; Mr*. Mathod Oavur* 41-43.L3ft; A win in the season finale would give Lakeland the title! A loss would force the squad tp settle for a tie with Haskins. John Strong was the big man Slapchlnsxas 47-45-32, SECOND FLIGHT; Mri. Walter Forest 44.4I-32; A/fn. William D. Anderson ' 44-53-34; « rs. R. D. Young - ..nOruban 47-5J-a3; Carmlcbaal SI-5B-10I; mr*. morn* B. Dao 43-52—101. FOURTH PLIGHT: Mr*. Georg* Fohav 52-47—33; Mr*. F*rd Broock »r43—103; Mr*. Arthur J. - — — Hofe-in-One Recorded Dick Kraft of Detroit/rapped a 6-iron into the 172-yard, No. 9 hole for a hole-ln-one Monday at Waterford Hills Country Club. It was the second ace of the season on the course. Playing with Kraft were Dean Parmenter, Dave CoIIon and A1 Dinatale, all members of the GMC league. 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OUAIWNTEK llmit ia to tpaad • For tho ontiro lit* ot th* traad ■ ALL OOOIK c«n»L wii? ‘•aalara In tha Unitad Statai and YtAnAUTO-TiaESAREGUARANTpOagamstdritouS S:p7lf^::nrg’‘;n’:rrrnt GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 S. CASS FE 5-6123 CITY TIRE 508 N. PERRY FE 8-0900 4 , O^n Friddy 9 Open Friday ^^i| ,9 y i.'' ; ' 7t4 llu’l- ■/ 4 • ' ' ' ‘4 , i‘;jx ‘ ■ 4' ’ "1 / , ^1 ii, P 'L 'I'MK rONTlAC. I'MKSS. W Kl )\KSI )A V, .M ' p' ifiiU } -'I ^♦ Markets, Business and Finance -I ' ' ■ In Business Planning I ^ ,1 .'1. it I 1 See New Uncertainties MARKETS The following are top prloei wiverlng ealeR of locally jjrown produce by grttwera and sold by them III wholeaate iwckage loti. (juotaUofO) afe lurnitthed by th^ Detroit llureau of Markeli «»of Tueeday, Produco eauiTl Awll*. T»»n»p#rfm, (H •lutMrrl**, cr) t Owrrlps, tour, tr«l« Ctorrl**, tolMl e*«|)lMirri»t, hl4(ii, (r|. I ’ vtetrelkai i, IoihmM, t Mil, ttl IM. I'ulilwu*, tpruuli Downward Trend Continues Mart Follows Pattern of Week NKW Y()HK,(AI't Stork market prlcea diipllruted the palirrn of the laat two aeaHtoriN by hemlliig downward early thla aflerniHin Aetivlly eontiniied at a Hub’il rnlllton Mhui'e |)oee. I’rlrea o|M«ned narrowly Irregular and were atendy numl ol the inoriiing Shortly before malday more and more minua aigna api>eared All major groupa were lower or no better than mixed. (luarter jtrofit failed lo equal Hie arllfiraliji high le.vel ol a year ago. , (Ihryaler, veHlenlay'N volume leader with a gam of more tlian 1, was down more than tk from ItM hiahuir high, lUreriora take up the dlvidemkloinonow, (IM i waa U|i a Hinall tno llon hul FAU. A I'OINT i ii’iHil foil hark a little U. 8, .Steel fell ahoiil a |Hdnt' Ameriran MoIoi n and Slude iia did .lonea and l.aughlin Ite , baker were., unrhangrd down ,(i, ralla up and ulillllea unrhanged ^ . Once again there wna no ape etfle n«wa to eauae tl'ie price allde. The huaineaH newa back-ground^jemainud brigh) with Hiiveral major comitanlea re-IHirtlng record aet’ond quarter reaulta. Food Shortage in Cong threat Civilian Traffic Halts for Foar of Mines Hy >SAM DAWSttN iioiial cycle, if any excessesi lnlionsarealfected inanumher ' Al* fiuaineaa Newa Aaalyal I hliuuld develop to Il'iggCl a o| induatl’iea NFW YtillK 1‘olitical till'- ' downlurn, The conal ruction induilry, llul Ihe economic aigi|« on Ihe, capecially ila reaidenlial ahg» moll and racial remarka. inenf, la aludylhg Ihe problem added, lo the inicertalntlCH ol j |j|y |,„„„|n,|jy |„ piedlclhig i (doaely, And ao are public offl-buHineaa planning i conllniiing good iiinct, i ciala and alore owuera in many liiialiieaamen have lo idan! . i romiiuo.niea ' Np;W DNCFIITAINTIKS , (ominnimiea, PObmCAI. FONFI.HTS SAIOON, Viet Nam lUlM Saigim markela ripi abort of freah meat and grei'ii vegelnblea today becmiae of a ('omnuiniHf Ibrca^t to blow up civilian traffic and along the main highway winding llu'ough Hie Mekong Delta lo the j aigna adll poinl-cupllal, I ck average waa oft a min-1 improved firal half earninga al- Ian Oil loal more lhah 1, ! Highway No, 4 aince Monday, | imiim I ai .Hfl H with indnatriala' though in two caaea aecdnd Hond pricea were irregular, The bellwelliei.s Hie big i » For many liiiaineaH phimiera,^ liowever, Hiere are now aome^ The eltecia tif Hie aiimmer'a new iiiicei'lainliea lo deal willi i polH,lt'al coiifllela are leaa vlal-Whal could racial alrilc dn lo hic aa ycl Hul huajnea.ameu na production III aouic localiltca, lo ! well aa volcra /ire pondering coiiHiinier Inlying here mid wlinl economic and governmeni, (here, lo .......hold' of locidlllca cliangca might alcm from the > lor new plania? Kloliiig can i cicclioli onicomc in vaiioua re-mean properlv damages and gloiia, In the nation aa u whole loHN ol gooda IF can ulao i And Ihe campaign turmoil, Irighlcii away ahoiipcra, or even ; .some fear, may affect conaumer keep lactor;, woikcra away j aiiiiudea, either |n general or in from Iheir JoIih, .Some loiiriMla | regard lo apecific producta of are reported nervoiia. Travel to i corporallona whoae officlula Ink-.some trouble .spots has dropped, en or decline lo lake, political Hacial alrilc goes even deeper sides. A Hiimmcr lhai lookqd like an The New York Stock Exchange The InterillcHim wna pro-('Inlined on Mmulay, l(l{Hi nn-iiiveranry of The algntng of the (ienevii ngreeinenia on Indo-chlnu. >, No unusual (.’mpinuni.sl acliv-Ity was reimrted along the highway, Hut the threat alone was enough to atop traffic. It had two alma; to dem-onatrale Communist strength and demoralise thi 2 million people of Saigon,, KxVfXTEI) TO EASK 'Hu* Communlata were expect-' ed to ease off the threat eventually, rather than further alienate the populace, I They claim that their was is with the South Vietnamese governmeni and its army. similar n<'tiiNi last year, I Ihe Viet Cong virtually panicked ! Huakes could hit some indnsi .llhe cupilnl by halting the now] The always tin- ■vend weeks running. •hangc from his preseqt slate of i,:alm coiifideacc' to one of doubt r: ''' Houle 4 is considered grisalc 1 , :* for travel al nighl. but during, W"uld fall, and .so would bu.si-wii I I daylight hours it u.sually is | f™* '’“''•'"'k-''’ "»;< ' I I •- :v '-v i) 0 SpaceaafI Tests Matter tor Future Manned Ships CAPK KKNNKDY, Fla. HPi - - about 25 minutea after launch-A ’aiiat'ecraft with rtelta-abaped ing. winga rra-ho!wl akywanl, i.Mlay rem'li iiiure llimi 12,ttM intleN I an limir liiirliig ibe fiery (live liiii'k to earth. TTackiiig ahlita , and plaiteN' near Joalyn, on an inbnnled scnrchtng ballia-Ik' fllKlil In leal ritnierlala for tnaneuvernirir innnned a|tn(>e velilcIt'M ' A two alage Thor l>ella roekel propelled the aleck hlack (my^ load aloft at 10 ;il» am KST The winged reaenirh null was.'•«''« l '"•K"' lo aoail more than 10 miles high "< ''«l«‘ Kennedy, . and then plummel hack through * * *• ihe alnumphere lo a paraehule' divera we Car Hits Bike; Girl, 9, Listed as Satisfactory A fl-yeglp-old Pontiac girl la W aatlafactory condiUcin at Pontiac Ueneraj Hoapital after being hit by a ear while riding her bleyele laat night Maraha Kay (towerl, 445 Ph’ Walton, auffered M coneuaaion In Ihe fl;20, p rn ac/cldent on Walton THK P()N'|''I.V(' I’HKSS. WKDXKSDA Area Realtor ' lenned. ^The driver of the ear. FIohnIc n,. a member (.1 the Whiii 'ven llarboi'H nubdlvlfdon andj''^ Walton la unop|HMed In the member of a pioneer Oakland! piTn>«ry while two Hepubileans Counly family, died yealerday wil,l vie for tlw nomlnailhn lo after an lllneaN <»f alx monlhH.'^ "PP"«r Meeferlln In Ihe Novem* lie wax 1111, her election, Mr lleaumonl, a broker and | -||„.v ,,re farmer NiipervUor reallnr, lived at I'KK) Duck l,ake I |,;inrier It. Johnaon, SS2o .See- lomliiig in liie Aila/iue (H ean parachule Into Ihe sea In an j'*; **^”’*'*’J*'J*'^' AlbeiiK, | Preabylerian Church and elTori to Neeure Ihe. Npaceerafl Waterford Townahlp, told Pon* i nip Huron valley Uona Cluh, s hiv. to. sr ' i ........ Oxford Twp, Man Hurl as Car Flips SIXTH IN PIUMliCT The launching wa» |he third I Commandery i I, e a I n g I n n i of m planned in Ihe Air l-’oree n | Maraha told poilce lhal ahe I Sill! I Projeci Aaael, which alwjda for did not a#e the car ..‘TP''’ ■ Aerolhernuxlynamlc ■ Klan An Oxford Township man wak ^ adrhilled to litpecr Counly Gen- eral Hospital after his,car bver- ‘be program ha* turned on Seymour Lake ftoad| bad only partial aneceia. The near Granger laal night, Listed In snllalaclory condl lliui la Mallhew fl Polovlch, SIl, of 495 SanderH, Polovlch wiis unahle lo make a .statement to sheriffs depu- first Axaei vehicle eurvlved a halllsllc (light and radioed giHMl data, but sank In the At- I lantic when flotation gear ' failed. The second shot failed t)e*| Judges Weigh Rights Verdict Shrine. Hefrolt line Chapter No. 145, R.A.M, Mr. Beaumonl also held ihe huldl, amp George K. Smith, 3751 A(iuarliui. Coiiicsia for trustee nomina-tioiis looln on both ticket?. Four Hepidilicana and (our Demo-crals )seek numlnafion, Two 4-year lerm Irustoeships are at stake in the NoverfAer election, Democratic cailldntes for Iriistee are Incumbent Chai;lwi, Ivans, 370 Riviera; Roger John- 32rid degree In Ihe Detroit Con-rson, 3719 Mariner; Carl McMa-sislory and was a member of ban, 301 Highgate; and l.ewls Laurel Chapl(^r No,. 145, Order H Ituelle, §150 Farm, of the Plaslerh Star In Morris,! The Hepubllean primary iriis- lies, hot three wilne.sses told 'euuse of trouble with Ihe second them Polovich's car rolled over stage of the Thor-Deltn booster, three times, lieputles said the, * * * car skidded 231 feet after leav-' (jonl of the Asset series Is to To Rule ori Teiti of Accotnmodations Title ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)-A In December, Mr, Beaumonl received a Masonic plaque from the P'enton Muster Mason Lodge He was also a member of the Historical Sox’lety of Michigan and Clyde Oddfellows, LIFE MEMBER log Ihe road and then rolled y,,,.j|y atrucmral soundness of | Iipra^J He was voted a life member ^ Ibe spacecraft and to determine| St lets Portor Fails to File After District Is Split I how well various protective mft-1 od Civil Rights Act. Iterlals withstand atmospheric! . „ . j , , ! The tests Involve a restaurant .buffeting and reentry heal up to„|„^npr who contends the law is j 4,(KK) degrees Fahrenheit. j„egB, 8,,^ ^oi apply to ADRIAN (API After 28j 'Dm As8(*t craft arc miniature owner who years In the Michigan SenaU’, I''f’^ms of what future a*tro* jo bar Ihe government 75-year*old Sen. Elmer Porter, velilcles might look like. f,.om enforcing It, PAGE t, 2 Tliyy weigh l.KXI pounds, are' . . ' Ing his opponents finally had « fP<’t ««<* have a wing-span stopped him bv splitting his 5 Fp^L .senatorial district into three ,' They have a cone-shaped fuse, pleecvs. I lage with a flat bottom and Porter lei Tue.sdliy's 4 p m, during" flight glide through the deadline for filing nominating atmosphere like an upwarld-tllt-petitions slide by, ed flatiron. Deaths in Pontiac Area 1 MILS. HARRY B. DICKIE Service for Mrs. Harry B. (Beatrice K.i Dickie. 71, of 570 W. Huron will bt* 1:30 p.m. Friday at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery Troy. , • A member of Central Methodist Church, Mrs. Dickie died yesterday. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. George Llndbloom of Farmington and Mrs. William Rick of PonUac; two sons,* Robert L, of Pontiac and MaJ. Harrison B. of U.S. ' Air Force, Germany; 11 grand--children; and one' great-grand- HUBERT E. EVANS . Service for Hubert E. Evans, 60, of 336 Dover, Waterford Township, will be 11 a.m. Friday at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial Acacia Park Cemetery. Mr. Evans died Mionday. .A field salq^^ihan for West Detroit Glass Co., he was a charter member of Areme chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. Mr. Evans dlso belonged to Roosevelt Lodge, F&AM. Miss Leland - died yesterday following an illness of several years, A retired schoolteacher, she taught in the Pontiac school system. MRS. THEODORE H. HABER AUBURN HEIGHTS - Service for former resident Mrs. Theodore Hi (Jessie M.) Haber, 49, of Silver Springs, Md., Will be 3 p.m. Friday at Sawyer Funeral Home, Berkley, Burial will follow in Roseiahd Park temetery, Berkley. Mrs. Haber died yesterday after an illness of six weeks. Surviving besides her huifband Two separate suits are Involved. They were heard by the same three-judge panel, Tlic. suit against restaurant owner Lester Maddox was filed by three Negroes who were White and Duck Lake Assoclu. tlon, and was a member of the Pontiac, Michigan and National real estate boards. Water Skier Found Guilty Youth Appeaii Caw in Boator'i Death tee candidates are incumbdnt^ Loren R. Anderson, 2.161 Bdln-' burgh; B, Frank Richardson, 8592 Rowley; William J, Green. 6881 Aylesbury; and Fred L. Morttlngslar, 2918 W. Huron, Hie (purth primary contest Is for eonslable on (he Demo- cratle lickel. Three eandMoirs seek Ihe two nominations. The^ are Robert L. Iteynolds, .1423 Norris; Donald F, Coffey, 1160 Tet*»Coe; and Gerald C, Carjer, 104.1 llira, UnopposiHt candidates on Ihe Republican ticket are Clo’rk, David S, Smith, 3791 Aquarlna; Treasurer, Lillian A, ^Weber, 4171 Wliidiale;, Justice of Ihe Peace (2-year-term) Kenneth H. Hempstead; 2860 W. Walton; Justice of Ihe Peace (4-year-term) David C. Heriler, 6252 Waking. UNOPPOSED Also unopposed on the Republican ticket are Constable, James L. Smith, HI, 9634 Breaker; and Township Committee, Leon R. Grogg, 4481 Parnell; Laura C. Wolters, 4248' Wood- Democrati, bekidei Seeter-iia. whe are nnoppeied in (bf RImary are Clfrk Elmer R, lilglHMier, 39*7 MeliwMli Treasarer, Disrolliy Olson, 3119 Shoals I and Jusileo of Ihe Peace <4-year-(erml, Pah-Fk K. Daly 4830 Irwindale. All are Other unopposed Democrats are Justice of the Peace (2-yimr-term Robert G. SlikH'k, 363 Tilmor; andi the three candl dates for Parly Committee. Tfiey are Soeterlln, Daly and Mprlann Hampton, 6888 Terrell. FIUNG DEADLINE Candidate filing deadline for the primary election was 4 p m. yesterday. Dpetor’In Wyoming Wai Jutt Attoniihing COPY. Wyo (AP) -- Patients ami attendants at a Cody hospital Were a little pslonlshed when Dr. DeWItt Dominick rushed In to deliver a baby. Coventry Lake Claims Victim Conitruction Worker Pifi on Lun«h Hour A young construction worker drowned yesterdajr while swim* ming In a Farmington "Township lake during hl| lunch hour, Inkster roads, In 16 ftwl of water by slielfFi office skin divers, deputies Henry Hansen and l.yle Wilcox, ' Delaney had been working on a project in the eubdivUion whbre the lake Is located, Dr. D(milnlck was on etap at Slock} and Hope Campbell. 4204 ‘he Cody Rotary Club minstrel Soulb'Shore. High-Riw Apartmtnti on Ag4incla in Troy show when Ihe emergency call «ame from the hoepital. He didn’t bother to remove his bisckface makeup before rushing to (he hospital. l4is( year, he was given a citisensbip award by the White laike CIHsens League. Surviving are two cousins. ...... . .................. Seryicc will he 1 p.m. Friday!the conviction to Circuit Courtwas recent- Home, Milford. Burial} will fol- ,,, low 1„ Hlshl.nd ^;,r« Lowt Aro Btfttr Now; Flu Moiki Toicon Off grnvo.sldo au.splft'.s of the Fenton Ma.sonlc turned away from the reslau-! Lodge, rant. Memorial contributions may NOTIFIED PHESS TROY - The City Commlsr slon is expected to adopt an ordinance permitting hlgh-r 11 e b-i ka-,api ini>Ar«.i reckless operollon of water skis, day’s meeting, , -.auirea ! lY^dStlrvmuh has'^r/rlll was first given them lo wear flu masks when a Wyandotte youth has ap^aled the code when a ISO-mllllon out in public. the conviction to Clmilt Couh ------------------ :-------|council passed the 10, ISM ly proposen tor consirucuon on ordinance during the flu epidem- 1 1 ^ . on Cwlldge between 15 and 16 Mtle Ic of 1918 Now, 46 years later,| otrUCK DV COt / ; road.s, 1 the law has been repealed ,1 ' Michael Specs, 25. of 5144 Pon-I' tiac Lake. Waterford Twonship, _ , ^ Shrine’s Crip- Before Maddox turned the Ne- pied childrens’ Ho.splial. groes away July 3. he notified, . , newspapers qnd televisibn ,sta-1 tions lhal something was about to happen. Thus, the government was able to introduce film and sound tapes at the hearing. The film showed Maddox brandishing a pistol as other white persons stood, by with ax handles.' Surviving are his wife, Bea- Service for Mrs. Henry C. (Eva (rice L; a son, Rodney E. of , M!) Horton, 95, of 7083 Grange East Lansing; a sister; and a Hall will be 2 p.m. Friday at grandson. | the Dryer Funeral Home. Burial MRS. G. E. FISflER ’ !!‘ll in Lakeside Cemetery, are a son, Theodore M. Jr, and a daughter, Mrs. Mary Ann Pruner, both of Silver Springs; and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ford Stuart of Rochester. , Also two sisters, Mrs. Josephine Dellowe of .Rochester and Mrs. Dorothy Metzler of Auburn Heights; four brothers, Charles of Mount Clemens and James, Russell and Edgar, all of Pon- Attorneys for Maddox contend tiac; and two grandchildren.: ; the public accommodations seC- i lion of the law is illegal and that MRS. HENRY C. HORTON 1 the restaurant- is, in any event, GROVELAND TOWNSHIP -| excluded. The ('ourt has beeh asked to enjoin Maddox against refusing service to Negroes. Interstate commerce is the crux of the i?sue In the suit against Maddox. The civil rights law applies to businesses serving or offering to serve: interstate travelers and having, received a substantial portion of their goods through iitterstate commerce. OUT OF STATE Thirteen wholesale grocery and meat dealers testified at the Maddox hearing completed Monday. They said that betweep 50 and 92 per eent of their goods came from other states. Maddox, who did not testify, said earlier that it is his policy not to serve Negroes and that his policy will continue, since he considers this to be his constitutional right. Service for Mrs, G.;E. (Elena) Fisher, 85. of 3162'Warringham, Waterford Tovtmship, will ,be at 130 p.m. tomorrow at Sfitirks-Griffin Funeral» Home with burial ip Union Corners fceme-tery. ^ Mrs. Fisher, who formerly liyed at 497 S. Paddock, died yesterday after an illness of several years. She was a member of St; ” Paul Methodist Church. ■ Surviving are two^sons, George H. of Waterford Township and Roy E. of Lake Orion, Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Myrtle Thomson of Birmingham; orie grandson; and two great-grandchildren. Holly: Mrs. Horton died yesterday after a long illness. She was a life member pf the Groveland Grange and the Pomona Grange. Surviving are a niece, Mrs. Pearl (Gordon of Holly, with whom she recently made her home, and a grandniee'e. The three-judge panel also has under consWeration an $11-million suit against the U S, government brought by the Heart of Atlanta Motel Corp., seeking an injunction against enforcement of the law. The government filed a countersuit to force compliance. Recruiting Office Lists New Hours Warning: 'Drive' tianger to Bikes HOWARD M. LALLY Service for Howard M. Lally, Ji 75, of 25 Monroe will be tomor \row at Jackson Funeral Home, ^peming. with burial in Ish-peming Cetpetery. Mr. Lally died Monday follow-j a yebr-long illness. ■ , [ <1 bodyxis at C. J. Godhardt d Home,,Keego Harbor., i ^LELAND Service foKMiss Ethel Leland, i ^ day ‘o take a spin on the 79, formerly oYwaterford Town- ’ newly opened portion of ship, will be 3 V™- Friday at Donelson-Johns .Funeral Home with burial in Oak Y^ll Ceme- City Manager John F. Reineck today urged parents to keep their children off Wide Track Drive on bicycles. “This is a major, multilane highway,” Reineck noted, “and a dangerous place to be riding a bicycle. We don’t want anyone killed.” Reineck said that numerous youngsters on bicycles turned out yestCr- New office hours have been established for the U.S. Air Force Recruiting office,, 53V^ W. Huron, it was announced today. . The hours are 8 a m. to 9 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday; 8 a.m. to 5"p.m. ’Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday; and 8 a.m, to noon on Sunday. .,:4:- Each Monday morning,, the Air Force aptitude test is gfven, with no obligation on the part of the interested party, according to recruiters, T-Sgts. Warren J. Smith and Russell E. Vollett. ■ ‘^fy- il I 'There are about 165l midsbip-I men to each company officer at < 1 the United/States Naval Acad-Wide Track Dnve from 'emyi The/ratio at West Point is South Saginaw to Mvu^t , one officer t'6 100 cadets, and at Clemens. .......‘ ^ ./I ■f I ,r-' , 11 the Air For,ce Academy two of-jeers^ per JOO ?adets,, Spain Takes Over Air Defense Duties At hil trial before Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. DIeterle, Deters had been sentenced to 96 days in the county Jail, and ordered lo pay a $100 fine. l’)eter.s was charged following the drowning of a Detroit ' fisherman. William H. Hlckmott, ; 68, on Upper Straits Lake, West MADRID ()Pi - The U, S. 65th Towashlp, on July 6, Air Division in Spain announced w ★ ★ today it had reverted to a train-! ,Lt. Donald Kratl, director of ing ahd advisory status a n d ^ the Sheriff’s Water Safety Dl-turned over operative air de- vision, said the wake created fense duties to the Spanish air I by Deters* skis and the power command under Lt. Gen, Julian i (jraft towing him was respon-Rubio Lopez. i sible for Hickmott Iqsing his The division, first established balance and falling from his to provide air defense for the boat, three American air bases in Eu-I The operator of the motorboat rope, began a outback early towing the skier, Timothy Kets-this year in connection with the ter, 16, of 1388 Omega is await-economy drive of U. S. Secre- ing a hearing in Juvenile Court tary of Defense Robert S. Me- Aug. 11 on a negligent homi-Namara. ' cide complaint. A fellow worker, David Haddock of 5700 Pontiac Trail. WmI Bloomfield Township, aecom-panl(»d Delaney lo the lake but did not go swimming. Delaney borrowed Haddock's bathing suit. HaddiX'k said he observed Delaney floating op his back ■bout 300 feet from shore when It appeared he suddenly went under the water never Came up. Area Resident Injured When With Huge Inherltanct Cats Lead Life of Leisure LA JOLLA. Calif. (APV-J- A couple of cool cats are living the lifif of puBS-and-booU, modern style, in a $35,000 home today • - their future spedre. Tliey were assured of the continuing income from a $4^,000 trust when the will of the late Dr. William W. Grier was given final approval in San Diego Superior Court Tue.sday. The dats are old as cats go. Brownie is 15 and Hellcat is 14. Dr. Grier who died June 2, 1903, named four rats as heirs In his will, but two died before be dM. Mrs. Avila Horn, a retainer in the Grier household for 14 years, is taking care of Brownie and Hellcat. They eat the best; but at that it only costs about $16 a week. There is an occasional visit to tlie veterinarian to pay (<«. I That's about all .\ Brownie and Hellcat are rich enough for all sorts of high oat nfe, but they are too old. “Mostly,’’ said Mrs. Horn, “they Just eit and sleep a kft.’’ Izvestia Blames the Bureaucrats' Soviets Have a Surplus Problem, Too MOSCOW (UPlH^^ The Soviet town of Lida has beCh flooded with boots its citizens can’t wear, candy they can't eat, and potatoes they can’t, sell, , - Cucumbers are cheaper on the free marklbt than in the price-controlled state stores. Another glut of potatoes is expected this season-. Who Is to blame? Soviet ' bureaucrats, says the government newspaper Izvcs-, tia, which yesterday printed a long account of the foul-ups in Lida, a town of 20,-000 citizens on the Polish border. First, “the newspaper said, Lida’s stores were “drowned" in huge shipments of boots. Citizens soon had all the hoots they needed, but still the shipments came. When officials begged factories not to send any more, they were told: ‘.‘You must try to sell them, can’t upset the production plans of the factory .” CARAMEL GLU’I' Then Lida was swamped with caramels frdm a nearby candy factory. Customers bought eagerly at first, but soon they were sick of caramels. This time, officials succeeded in unloading the surplus on a neighboring town. It was the town in . which the candy factory is located. Cucumbers were selling in the state stores for about 40 per cent more than: thCy cost on the free market, where collective. farmers sell food, raised otf, their private plots./* “'The clerks in the; state kt^rC?" tried to attract 4custq-i mel’s,” Izvestia said. “Then they hurried to the free market to buy (Cucumbers for themselves.” JOB IN JEOPARDY An official named Kozlov, deputy direct(?r of the town’s trading system, nearly lost his job because of the potato mix-up. He ordered 1,500 tons of potatoes but discoveiPed there was no place to store them all. Towns in other parts of the Soviet Union, short of potatoes, heard., abpnt Kozlov’s surplus and tried to* buy it. But a bureaucrat ordered Kozlov not to sell. His only alternative was to have the potatoes buried. Half of them rotted and Koztoy nar-' rowly escaped being fired. Now another potato glut threatens,. Izvestia said, .qnd Kozlov, still without warehouse space, has asked his bureaucratic superiors what to do. In Respect To Our Beloved Son Bruce H. King who was suddenly taken away from us Tuesday^ July 21st WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY Thursday and Friday July 23rd and 24th King Bros. 239Pontiac Rd. Opdyke “Decide for yourself,” was told. “What familiar words!” Iz-' vestla commented. “How responsible people love to take recourse to this formula in order to escape responsibility.” IS in serious condition at PopUac General Hospital with Injuries suffered when he was struck toy a car at 10 4o p.m. yesterday. Police said Specs was walking on M6I near Williams l.«ke Road when he was hit by an eastbonnd car on Mil driven by John MIcallef. 17, of 121 Cbarlton. Milford. ' MIcallef told police that Spees ran in front of his car. MIcallef was not held. MIcallef was uninjured, but a passenger in his caf, Gayle Hal-llday, 17, of 3432 Lakeview, Milford Township, was treaty for injuries at thto hospital and releas^. : NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? ...CALL « 2-9274 Watling, Lcrchen & Go. 2 N. SAMNAW ST. PONTUC MICHIGAN Ntw Yprk Stock gjaWony Serving Investors for over 70 Years More than 70 years of experienc« helpo Goodbody 6^ Co. to provide sound guidance „ for beginners and seasoned investors alike. ° Supplanenting these years of experience are; 2200 skilled employees, including topFlevel rep-resentatives; 7^ offices in key cities acrosO^ the country; membership in L8 stock and com-modfty exchanges in the U. S. and C^ada; a Research Department which provides scores of resrarch stuaics and reports to keep custrxners continually abreast of the market; specialized departments to serve investors in listed stodks, ovcr'the-xxnjntcr securities, bonds, and mutual funds and commodities. Goodbody Co. invites you to , visit any office for an investment consultation and im' partial investment recommendations, or to write tor our current Weekly Market Letter which includes a detailed discussion of the outlook for capital expenditures. The stocb of 4 capital equipment manuhteturers arerecewnmended. Just mail the caupon below. Name ..................................... bI-10 Address ............... ..y/........Tel'. .... (PleUa Print) ■ GOODBODY & CO. . ISTAnUSHID tM1 ‘ Mimbtn tif hadmg Stotk aiHi Commodity Cxchangm , • ■IRMINWHAM' . 'i'" ' IM MOWN STMKKT (CORNEK OPf eitNon ' , • ■ MlT^asoo- i Jo«-*ao4-. • Tf, /y ovif je oci^tois rHK4u«HO(jT YMi NAyioif !^ -• Austria Wants to Get Missiles \ VU5NNA, Austria (UPI) AustHa wants to umend Its treaty of independence so it can acipiire missiles for its armed forces, l»efense Miiilsler , airmlnahAm AiH«r»w VAKAiMfine, Oi*ord «nd Judy I. Sorymtn. r«ii* Orton ' Oonny T. Soor, toko Orton mh) J«n#y ' l,|yon, ^a«<.nOyt*r AMtl* J , anrnoiltr *nd •VtVi' ?*”t. IKIktr*. Sronklln a»«Mi. M StoInMugti t •“ ■ uoniBS . w euciid I DykI, atrmtriBhkm »* Orcnord Ukk * akhmond »nd odd Joy<« 'M, *« C . oSroll I M. DohwMrit. kW> 0 • e B*n«ord. MM > ClAvklond ______ _____ ______ tWrr, M WAlnul wmitm S Scnnwwtnokr. WkIMd ukt nd Lor*no 0 Srhnuorinokr. W«tl*d I nk* ' ' ------- MM Okvon Brook .................................... J(Kk D Turrwr, Wkllod Loko ond Pkymi tnouM. WtlM Lok* H*rm*n Jr, Ml S JOMlo •nd eilitto Tkornkt, Ml $ Jotiio Oovtd 0 WIlllAm*, ItW Choyonnr *nd Artotw K Woll. MS florofK* Srodorick N Sandor, Oatord and Barbara J Duncan, Oatdrd Bdward a Browna. San 0 TowmjJnp ol Bloom- .1*64, ara allgibla Io r*g|.ji NOTICE ,1$ FURTHER GIVEN, Thai iy par«on who I* not alraady regidarad — ragidral.lon book* »hlp may ragOlar on o. 1*64,-during. regulAT olllc* hoi ■ Friday ol each week, I Augu»l 3 >, Monda' 1 Io Ihd regular olllc* houTS fh» olllc* Ih* Township Clack wlli ba opan lor purpoia ol receiving regltlrallont during the tallowing hours; ....... ■ ■ 25, 1*64, Irom 10.00 Saturday, . Monday, July 3 Saturday, August 1, 1*64, Irom *:04 l.m. to 12 noun. d on tha LAST DAY, Monday, August 1*64, Irom 8:00 o'clock a.m. Io S.Ott TO transfer' a regljtratlon Irom TRAVERSE CITY W — Is- .. ................................. rnpl Mnrtinpy u,aa arrcofnrl *"*' •‘•'•''•‘s to another WITHIN THB rvmmo/Mm « ^ ™ MarunCZ, M, W3S arreStCU TOWNSHIP OF BLOOMFIELD, land a DETROIT (44 — Chrysler-PIy-: Tuesday for investigation In the oiiica oi in* Town- mouth Division of Chrysler Corp. tavern rest room shooting and (orm*> addr«**’%nd da%*’oi"’moving* w announced an expansion of its kilUng of Harry Wheelock, 49, m7dT^i?r^?rSi loTnT Kdi^S field sales force Tuesday. Mort Monday. Police said Martinez than 160 persons will be added had a gun which fired bullets. ♦«>'«* pwmanant^ registration to U19 force and a new Southern similar to the one that killeif two*yw Hare mild Hml iiew' legiHlallmi passed by l|i<’ last scHHion ol Ihe ieglXlalure, which goes Inlo ef feel Aug, 29, will draHlIt'ally cut such o|icralions under Hie Commercial Ctsle, Many of the regulallons of the flllnga will re vert hack to Hie registers of deeds in the various counlles, he said, Stis Plane Record FORT WORTH, Tex. (Al'i -Phil Klintworlh of Birmingham, Mich,, set a national indoor record Tuesday in the National Mwlel Airplane (iJhnmpionshIps, Kliniworih, 40, was credited with IJi tninutes, 41 seepnds In the pujH'r stick model (open) event, His was one of seven Aeronautics Is sistn.sor, records, The Academy of Model Death Notices BEAUMONT, JULY 21, 1*64, HARRY 8., 4400 Ourk l,6k« Rhhil, Highlkml TownUiini «g» dV; rt«ar cousin of Mr*, Ollv* ^lark omJ John Lock, wood, Funt>f*l lervle* will b* Imld PtldAv July 'J4 «l I p m. ai Ih* RIchardHin • Bird Chitpal, Milford. Inl*rm*nl In Highland Camalary. blCklfe.' JULY 2i, 1*64, BEATRICi IKNI6HTI, 570 W»*l Huron Slr«*0 ag«'7li balavad wit* ot Harry B. OTiikl*/. daar riiothar «l Mr*. Onarda Llndbthom'; Mr* William' Rick, R(ib*rt L„ and Malor HarrUon B. Dliki*i alto lurvivad by M grand-chlidrtin and. on* gr*af,arand*(in. funeral »*rvk* wIM Iw held Friday. July 24 al 1:30 p.m, al Ih* Di)n*l*on.Jotm* Puhcral Horn*. In-‘ .... — ip*l C*m*l*ry. rltRind I I *v*n>ng. ISuggailffd HuneRYl.^ . Wat*rlord Town, b*lav*d hutband of iVAfiS, JULY J0rt*64, 336 Dov*r Road, Wa tdlpi ag* 60; bafov*. B*afrlc* L, Evan*; il........... Rodney E, Evan*; daar brofner of Mr*. L**lle Gealhoixf; *1*0 «ur-vivad by on* grand*on, Funeral »ervlce will ti* hald Friday, July 24 al 11 am. al Ih* OoneUan-.lohni Funaral Horn*, inlermeni In Acacia Park Cemalery. (Suggested vl*lf-log hour* 3 Io 5 p.m.-and 7 Io * siSHIR, ■“ lULY 21, “1*64,....BlBNA; — .......ringnam Drive, formerly of 4*7 Soulh Paddock Sfreel; aga 05; daar molhar of Oaorge H. and Roy E. FUhar; dear jliler ol Mr*. MyrII* Thomson; aUo survived by onn orandsoh and two grtwl-qrand- .r^dT^Jul?^i** M "l:1S h»ld Thursday, July 23 al l; M p.r^ af ^tha Sparkt-orlflln Funeral Cemeiary, Troy, log hours 3 to 5 , JULY 20, l*64rMARY Sands Road, Orlonvllle; lieloved wile ol Mitchell ., Minnie ................. ....... Rose, Mr*, Rebecca Oultlerei, Rudy, Moses,' Charles, Eiequlel. and. Rubin Reyas; also turvivad by on* grandchild. Funeral service will b« held Friday, July 24 al ' 1 p.m.' al the C, F. Sherman Funeral Home, Orlonvllle wllh Rev John Meliun officiating, Interment In Orlonvllle Cemetery/ Orlonvllle, LALLY, JULY 20, 1*64, HOWARD M., 25 Monroe; age 75; beloved, husband ol Irene E. Lally; dear father of. Mrs. Irving (Mary). Menucci and Rojiert K. Lally; ........ Robert ... dear brother ol Mrs. Mae Dowd; ■■ ■■■ oraijdchlld. Funeral service will be held Thurs-dey, July -23 al the Jackaon Funeral Home, Ishpeming, Michigan. Oodhardt Funeral Hgme, Keego sales area with, headquarters at ; W h e e 1 o c k. Martinez Atlanta has b^n created, the! charged with carrying i division saM. 'cealed weapon. Cadillac Convertible, 63F101*67 sold el public sale at 22500 Woodward, ... Ferndale, Michigan. / Thai address being where the vehicle -:-:-3ins stored ano may be , Inipecled. :;::y July 22 and 23, 1*64 Racy and rarin' to gb-an authantic raproduction of the famous Ford-LotuB. Full 3V4 H.P. Clinton 4-cycle engine gets up to 20 MPH. Mounted on pneumatic tirer. Easy to start, easy to drive, easy to service. The Pedwin-Lotus— o beauty. DELORIS V. LITTLE Jtily 22 and 21 At »;00 a.m. on filly 24, T*64, ( Ford Thunderblrd Conv., LY73-H2424/ will ba sold at public sale at 22500 Woodward, Ferndale, Michigan. That ,-iddress being where the vehicle Is stored and may be Inspected, July 22'and 23, PUBLIC SALE Chev. Imp,, 2 Or. HT, ,t1837E 116*7* will be sold at public sale at 22500 Woodward, ferndale, .... That address being where the vehicle Is stored and may be Inspected. July 22 and 23, 1*65 PUBLIC Si Olds 4 I, 1*64, a 632M05837 .... „ .. at 22500 Woodward, Ferndale, Michigan. That address being where the vehicle i stored anef may be Inspected. July 22 and 23 a 1*63 PUBLIC SALE 3t26*F124180 Wlll|' I Chevrolet . ............. ..........., „ old at public sale at 22500 Woodward, erndale, Michigan. That address being yvhere the vehicle I stored and may be Inspected. July 22 and 23, 1*64 ORDINANCE NO. 110 ^ ORDINANCE TD AMEND DRDI-NANCE ND. 63, KNOWN AS THE PLAT ORDINANCE. The Township of Bloomfield Ordains; ....- ■ " ' of. Ordl- Sectlon 1.01. That 'Section 5 lance No. 63, t Section S.a ( division street-storm drains vi.. . „ gutter, (rolled type a curb to curb may be either concr or bituminous aggregate surface. All construction shall therefore be In accordance to the specifications and materials of the Oakland County Road Commission. Section 2.01. The provisions of this Ordinance shall take' Immediate effect upon the pubileatiort tnej-eot.' Made and passed by *>” Tnu,*.*, Board of the Township of 13th da* of Julv. A.o. LtLAND, JULY 21, ,1*64, ETHEL, formerly of Waterford Township; age 7*; dear cousin ol John Carey, Richard S. and Karl R. Jackson. Funaral service wllf be held Frl- Donelsbn-Johns Funerel Home. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Miss Leland will Me In state alter 7 p.m. this evening. (Suggested vlsltlog hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7- LEMMON, JULY 20, 1*64, IVA D., .134 West l.lvlngston Street, High-’ land; age 80; beloved wile of Jo- Mrs. Owen Nacker and Mrs. Bur-chard Hair; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday. July 23 al 1;30 p.m. al the RIcIwirdson-Bird Funeral Home, MIhorA with. Rev.. O. W. Stucky otticlatlng. interment In WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY friends and neighbors for their acts of kindness during our cecent bereavement in the loss of our husband and father, Amie Ray Prudhomme. Wife, Bert, < • , MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. FE 0-0^56 Pontiac's oldest and largest budget assistance company. LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Oe^^Dlet^Tablets. ^Only *8 cents Pay Off Your Bills Payments low as $10 week Protect your |ob and credit . Home'or Office Appointments City Adjustment Service '32 W. Huron FE 5-*281 Licensed and»adnded by State -BOX REPLIES-At io a. m. today | there were replies at | The Press Office in the | following boxes:; j 10, 13, 15, 17, 20, 23, | 26, 28, 34, 36, 50, 61, 71, | 72, 73* 81, 83, 89, 01. | Funiral Diroctori . IIUNTOON fllNbNAI ttriMB /« Oakieml Ave ft 3 018* “ SPARKS-QRiniN FUNtRAt- HOMh "Thmighttul Service" FB 3 .5841 VOORHEES-SIPIE FUNERAI. HOME FE 3 8378 Established Over 40 Veais Camelery Loti 4-A 0'6BAVPLOT4 tl4i)rt ' ANY NFEDINfi )5I3V7Ki( *'nm'; ur'ifmi $iV n^^kUPPI IB#, p* -I'tANING PHon Loit and! Found mal Hnspllal FE 3 0370. LOOT 4 MONTH# KITTEN, fiBEV anil DIaik anuoia lluer, Herring-Ion Mill* vl( Indy I F } 1171 Lost HUSKY UOO.wLAST OEFN on llvernnU Roan. Mil (>y tar. LOST - MANCHESTp TERRIER, Ian and wniie, oghlied, tail, last span Walton Blvd„ or lawhorn* Park, pi 41905, Lest Rf,0 kHArf POR TRAf tur on Atidarsonville Nd, nr While Lake Nuad Newaid. OR 3'4805. Sal mnnilnu, LOST UPPER Pi ATf,' IfINDiR (.0'8T; WOMAN'S FVEOLASSBS. brawn frame*. In or leaving cab 8un. west *l(fe, Reward, FB 2 5055. Hsip WaniBd Mato 3 MECHANICS, OR WILL TRAIN BILL SPENCE . OUla Hwy. ’lympulh-RamblerjM^^ Clarktto ' $120 to $130 WEEKLY, ES EXPBRIBNCB type roula work. Must b* rrled, under 48 and hava de-dabla car. Wrillen guaranlees ................~1 up during appolnlmenl. S II 6n-8565 l( a part II 3 real estate sales people. home*®'^ w7m TrTin, A Coreer in Management I General Public Loan Corp. will aci cap! two men 3t to 20 years old Inlo III managemanl training pro- school graduala, some college pre-lerred, (trail exempt, good salary. Regular Idcreaie* based on' merjl, ouliianding employe benelll*. --22948 woodward, Farndala, Mr, __Taylor, PART-TIME JOB " " It you are Ire* evenings, over 21, r 50 hours I, 651- Arc Welders flat weld position EVANS PRODUCTS*CO. 13101 ECkles Rd. Plymouth, Mich. Between Schoolcrall and Plymouth Rd5. ARC WELDERS $2.78 PER HOUR Structural Steel Layout Men $3.15 Per Hour PAID VACATIONS AND HOLIDAYS GROUP INSURANCE PARAGON -BRIDGE AND STEEL CO. attention Firemen, Policemen, Postmen, A Force and Army Servicemen, woi pact time, flexible hours, earn $4 6-8052. AUTOMATION MACHINE BUILDERS for PRESS ROOM EQUIPMENT, FRINGE BENEFITS, OVERTIME, LONG PROGRAM, APPLY IN ' PERSON, SAHLINE SUPPLY* CO., 75ft W. MAPLE,- AUTO MECHANIC, MUST BE good, plenty of work, fringe bene-> fits, 50-50 and guarantee; Ask for Jack Warner LI 1-4080 - Kaverley Mercury, 420 Main St., Rochester.' 14 Mile; Birmingham. ___________ B. i. GOODRiCH STORE It AS“ IM-medlate openings, available for qualified brake and wheel mechanic and an experienced truck-tire serviceman. Permanent, full time positions, offering steady employment and excellent employe benefits — including company paid hospitalization, life Insurance and _ paid vacations. Call FE 2-0121. BUCKNEff FINANCE COMPANY ' has an opening for an aggressive young man, interested In a career In the consumer finance field. QUALIFICATIONS Age 21 to 25 High school graduate College desirable Military service completed Good .starting- salary .... tunity ‘ fringe o sharing j advancement, liberal including prof;t '5r. Baker, _ -. appointment. cabinet MAKER 'WANTEOrjOB with a future. Year-round with Good opportunity for Ext. 10. ______________________________ CARPENTERS ^~T0UGH * UNION only. Carpenter foreman with crew and carpenters for residential work. LaVere after 7 p.m. 338-8*56. COOKWARE MEN experienced * .Ing^ ................... factory representative, , unm 10 p.m. at "the Ritz Motel, 1000 South Woodward, Wednesday, July 1 H«I|3 Wantad M(h'heil Ruule #6l6i,y, i.(unmi*sliins, Ixinu* turnished, ym; keen il al t DRUMMER WANTEO FOR I tKeERieNceu (HAurreuR atib yard' man Apiillinnl *liuuld give all pertinent InhiMtiallun, name, addre** and lelephnne numher. he Kimplele li p Hnx irPhnlTa^lii***, kki -WITH RB- BKPgRIifiCBO tall backunmnd ana nikiuuni op eiallnn capahle qt *upHivl*lno and ' a**umlng retpontibihly. Apply 171 N Saginaw * II a.m. EXPeRIENCED RAfilO SERVICE benth man, mu*l knpw laperacord-er* and reiord rhanger*, *i«ady emiiluymenl, paid vaialion, 6i»- BKegMIBNCeO TREE TRIMMER Slaady employment lor right n 4 6630. EXPERIENCED WEIDER FOR IRON WORK. Empire Welding, *537 Commerce Road, Union Lake, EM 3'3«3I. FULL OR PART TUME W()RK FOR high sihool gradual**. My ,1 6376, FULL TIME BARTENDER, EX-................Tt II a.m. BTift 3- furniture' STORE' DESi'llBi naal appearing young man I o r tales work, 3135 DIxIa Hwy. FE 5 8134. FULL-TIME JANITOR WANTED Apply In parson. Town and Country Inn, 1737 S. Telegraph. FULL OR PART TIME REAL ES^ lale »aleipeopla, HUMPHRIES REALTY. FE 3 *336. Call lor OaIs STATION ATTENDANT, DAYS, sleadv work, good pay. Apply Shall Slallon. Soulhfleld and 13 Mila Rd. G U N a R A L MECHANIC, 3 CAR dealerihlp, nenellts, Experlenca nerenary.. Ask lor Marie. OA 8-3530. GOOD YEAR 'a'ROUND JOB.'REA-soneble hours, plenty overtime. Opportunity lor good tulure lor experienced cabinet maker. Ml 4 8330, extension ID. GRILL MAN, GOOD WAGES, HOS-pltallzallon, vacation wllh pay, musl have hrenkla*l experience. Apply at Big Boy Drive-lh, Telegraph -at Huron St. or Dixie Hwy. INSULATION Applicators, Blown In. Top wages, steady work. EL 6-3636 anytime. machinist . OPPORTUNITY TO Work Into tool* and dies. Steady work. Days only. Small shop. Apply 317 Central Ave., Pontiac, ba-tween S. Saginaw and railroad. i MAJOR CORPORATION HIRING IN 3. DEPARTMENTS I-Interview trainee public relations field, chance for advancement (nht selllpg). , 3—Markellng trainee* f o r career tales. Leads. Weekly salary, 3—Managemont trainees toward administration and personnel -supef-Requires high r-"—‘ ?lon®o'r be’tier With sincere detiri (or permanent employment. For confidential Interview call Mr. Johnson, I13-353-2551. »;30 a.m. till 1 Majiagement Position Due to opening ol new store an ambitious and neat appearing man Is needed to learn business. $.500 per month. Experience not necessary but helpfuJ, ages 31 to 35. Phone Mr. Dale. OR 3-0*22 tonight MECHANICALLY INCLINED 6 5 With . references t softener Installation ance repair, lull llWie FE 4-3573 for appolntmi . _____J apply 4701 White L Road; Clarkston, Mich. MEN 1* TO'40 YEARS OLD Information call OR 3-0* 660DERNIZATI0N -- CARPENTERS and men wanting to learn modernization Call oiler 7 p m., 682-1*71 MR. hill'IS BACK'IN TOWN AND ........3 port time .. ‘ ' „v1 OVF MAhFP, DYE REPAIR (;iM small iiiiiiuteikive dyes, full lln'ie, MY 3 376L AultlmalK; p"e** ULl5, IH5 Bll/alwlh, I ake Urion ELECTROLUX ’ Need* men tor tale* and saruica, 31*7 Eliiabelh I ake Rd , Fontiet.. EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER iwik, tnh wage*, Harvey'* Coiq, niai Itiluse, ,59*6 Dixie Hwy,, Wa- FAN I time, RKfERieNCBD it| gin* lalhF hanii Dl 11741, , ROUIf S6IKMAN iw" , Migle. Apply in n*r*hn af tlrsK hiuhed dry ..... Apply (n par*““ **• f laapei., 61)8 Oakiai ISI ' PNOOFINO 'ARf-TlME" 7-35. call on established customers, 15 to 20 hours weeMt. Average $3 hourly. We train. FE 4-6538. ' ■ PART" TIME ' -HONEST WORK — CALL Permanent Part Time or Summer Work Teachers, married students a r employed married men our bi PHARMACIST, 'PART Blue Cross, disability Insurance and retirement - plan, and paid vacation, and other fringe benefits. CALLS, 630 Oakland Ave. issary. We will ti 1st be able to get along or 0 per month salary to start II FE 5 *243, ask lor Mr. Pace WILL TRAIN FOR SALES CAREER, over $400 per month, plus commissions to start. Paid, Insurance benefits, Paid 2 weeks vacation "............. 332-8528,■ ' YARD MAN "WANTED For lumber yard, experience nec ----, apply 7*40 Cooley Lak* R Union Li _ ________________ Help Want6d Feisiole 7 A TELEPHONE GIRL LADIES, PART- rly. pay. Mr. Ue, 625-4282. /"siftER'Ya'live in, sat- ■ id Sunda^oH, 6M-6^15^______ ■“ m'and do BABY SITTER TO LIVE 11...... gen^^ housework. 731-*S3*._ ____ BABY STt'tE'R,' ‘mYdDLE" AcTeD,' care of 2 boys, light housework. BAR MAID, AGE 21 TO 45, MUST be dependable. Good' wages — good opportunity. Orlonvllle Hotel, phone NA 7-3*35. Please ask for ■ Ivan or Beltie. BARMAID FOR EVENINGS; APPLY In person after 5 p.m., no phone ' calls, Avon Bar, 3*82 Auburn Road, 1a"RMaID,"“STEA'BY, ALSO PA'R't 'time, days and eves. Morey's Golf and Country Club, 2280'Union ^ake BAR WAITRESS, EXPERIENCED. ’ BEWARE TOY DEMONSTRATORS There are many ads with fantastic . .................t of that percentage. Be fair to yourselye* and fvithout obligation call the: THE TOY CHEST 682-4734 The original Toy Party P .ply at 1320 Auburn:Rskad. , C6 6-157 SOME EXPER'fENCE, days. Union Lake am. EM:^II2. I M ]tZ iZZZ ® lUI i''... J) » H«l|» W«nto4 I ■ TIM lloN'riAC li i ■ !" 1 ■f ‘ lu(iir COi)KI WANTBh,'«00|-) ........... uDlil viM.atliHi Iimi liuuiilallMliiH ipVly in iMtiMHi lirtiLni HArii nrlyo-in WM UnlAO i Akt Mil. « _ C^mmvKA Mil ' ' CUUNlIrM lilHI : ruimt. AI.W riuriin hfrutil CUNH fll|iU.», m ON Ol.ntH llliiv (.luiii And (ilh«i Iring# Iwiw III*, good «Ki; llp» AimlV In iiHiuin univ. Blue Slef Orivu In Opdyke and Hnnllec Roail* r PBf»tN(MBI.e Wt>WAN TO CAMS inr 4 ihildien, liuhl hoiiiewnrk, m4y like in, havii own iranMinrA' iwi ni^lWAsMpB, Flin Tli^p, f='vE NjNo^Wn^Km^, tl/l UIMI6 MWV„ lioMim 1C liNi r>, IIV* iM OH 71 H*lp Wnntod ftniflU I fl IIOllitrKEEOEH FOB PI geniwniAn, live In. FF 4 ilii HOUSEKEEPFR condilinn, relnreme required ■ Af ply WIei Qreen, Mii:liigen Eul Emplpymanl Service, ?41 Oemeiw IM nFNiPHAI III Millie ImnSlil Awe IV III 41 EKPPNIP'NCKD llOllStkPfl'PH ' H*lp W««t«d F*m«l* ,7 1 PBNSONNPI ANB rpl PPIIONP iiilaivleweis, liqiirly rele, lielliliil. ISSI AM4 HfeUllirENPDkJHsP wiioiTsuit mh1')|(... eiilweiil, Fnnllei IIA.M44 iOMP'EWppHlfiNCP, ......... SC K^l PS /fee'liiriiiS'K , Secretary to President .Medium Ilia manulecliiiina ci panv in N. Wnndwerd lubuiHen eras,^ reqiiirei llittieiiylily ai^ieri e'laiinllnu eepeiifenie IwliJui leng leller In Pimliei Plan *i|V *ll, SI :h VICE IS CCX)K led'* Tien' i WAITNptS WANT*!) FOB FUl I time Binpleyinwil Apply in pei 4>i tmly F.ienk * NetlHiiieiil Urdienl I eke Nd. ke*«u MerUei, Nii pliune lelU niieiilud. WANTPB HAbV«ITT*h'TO 1 |VP In, wiinieii will! 1 cljilrt iveiKiine, kik e week l|S4 iMlM ’’ . WANTPl* -HO TAKP fAHP OF PI' deny ledy eiid lighl Mnukewnrk. live In. IB) •' week. leU OH lun. , . NJfip_^ N*AT OeftNDABI . fmFpHIFNfPP ASSISTANI mr, lemiine kleling hue. ii inn«, leleienieii emi pi> lei Pre«k Hue el. I4IFN( Fit AAIINFMi i 1.F0AL SECkFTARY | Xjwll 'l^ronen^m , MIIHHFAOHO woman 10 (AHF ' Apply 111 MfPFM. ANO r..T er'iX.irucKiii'N:! EXPEBIENCfen WAITBPSS, APFll TED'S yoiKlweril el kqueie I el.. __ iihfUIs.ano cook*. NIOHTI ............................... 1 lap end dining r««m, oomi lu.iiih Ilian wages I F 13M/ wage* and ll|)*. Cell OH 4-fn». lietween II a m :i p.m | ] tu 1 p m tor interview. ViniHi AOBD WOMAN, TO l ive SAI AH OH PAI>ITHV WOMAN, m. Nurne elde in Rest Home. All Bpud wurkei, miikl IM WiiDM’iSDAV 7 (lAUNIVAI. ^ I----------- 1. deys e niie»,' Mi'’l'fl3* Kellyi Pei’iv'tlme; Ke^ Harbjir » dev, ne ea. Od i» eiiy ledy. OH ] M»0 VIIMAN 10 CAN* KOH, J t ilren. in e iiiAinerleii Tiome, eller .1 p m H3k '/IV/ '^neykOmi elTe m5i WOMAN VyANIPIT TO C A kmell iniidien, » day* ' mOpdlnu kelwrilayk and i| Sipidaya' Help Wonted (HOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED M'FOB HFPFAT 0 POklllVH fxPEHiENCfcO WOMAN, irPNEH priyele" 'iwn, "nalli^ and^tv ''llliie'r I JVS, I MOTmEHI ESS HOME, 4 iry. ANO GOOD BARN-I B^Vcralii II WMI I 'Bo« VI, Prey- IRONING FOR PAMII Y YOURS IF IN THE DHAV TON AREA OR .T3VVV AF-1FM A PM- ONtV, , l-UU f MANGE nOOXXPEPEH , kj e yy la/lin xiliir In, V ... WAIT HESS. ^^EVENINOS, STj^AO’ aninll’y' tluir'7J»o’'^l)ni "Hevi..„, Ul aeplie* runlldentlel. ......... iiime to Pontiac Prec» Boa' 4H OIRC FOR HOUSE WORK. ««il40.SI aVfHNBSS ■ HOUSBKEEP Nl|HHFS A*>^ES. MUSI III ex-I nnnwHed, Ml 4.S0IS twlwten VS 1 II 111 only. : Office ASSISTANT VITH AIM ■ Illy 10 type ana tile, age* }l i» SO, I Policy'*Phermai(y,'*'lIsV 'e*! 'Juva, I Real Estate Salesman I 1 H E SS I/VM7, WAITRESS WITH ORILL,’ COOK «K pel lance, no Sunday or holiday work. Mlnll lunch, V R, Pika. WAITRESS wini managing car. rani In Pontiac area. To ouallly Individual muil be neat, covr' lonaliiy. and of materiBli. Quality ....... N! SVS4.S VAUECV OL 1 M3 At COA,'KAISER Si'DING STURM WINDOWS, POORS REMOOKUNO and ADDITIONS Kraft Siding & Roofing !REE ESTIMATES FE 4-34< .FREE >AISER ALCOA ALUMINUM SID. ING, AWNINGS. GUTTERS, STORM WINDOWS DOORS, PA TIOS, ROOFING. SUPERIOR FE Architectural Drawing A«Dhalt Paving 3 D'» CONSTRUCTION Pree EeHmatae, Drlvewayi. park. Ing lotk.JISl-4310. Open '111 V. ASPHALT PAVING IS'OUR'BUS'I. 334.273J ' OR 3-3475 ASPHALT SEAL COATED’ FREE eillmale. FE 5-3024.___________ DR fVEWAY SPECIaLIFT FREE,ESTIMATES TetcTWy DRIVEWAYS, COUF.... _ »lie, contractor, FE 2-2S14._ FREE ES’flMAflS PARKINOTOTS ..........-y. OR 3 — Auto l^holitering CONVERTIBLE TOPS, t4V.V5 ANO up, complete Interior trim. Auto Trim Shop, 478 Ml. Clemens St. FE _ 4.'024V.^ ___________ Engine Repair IR COOLED engines REPAIRED, EM 3.7M4. Pickup end Delivery. . Motor EXCHANGE co.' ENGINE REBUILDING. ALL CARS AND TRUCKS EXPERT TUNE UPS 13 S, SAOINAW FE 5-7432 Floor SondlHS -I FLOOR SANDING ANO FIN-Ikhlng. Varnlih or Febukw. Fret eitimetei. Tvier 4-og47;_________ carl i.', bills Sft7, FLOOR SAN'b- Ing, FE 2-S78V. ____________ JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING lendint and llnlshlng, 25 yean experience. 427-3V34. ______ ."O.’ SNYOER, ■|FLO^dR~DiYiM, sanding and llQlkhlng. FE 5-0W2. iR-LIFB BATTERY CO. Generators—Regulaton—Starters Botteries $5.95 Exchange , Home Improvements Porchet, addlllont, steps, -general remodeling and cement work. Oulhn Construction Co. FE 5-9122 FEISTAMMEL ENGINEERlTiO Co. Roofing, sheet metal. Sanitation OR a-3155, »2 5. Washington, Oxford. Gorogei MITCHELL'S BUMP SHOP, St>E-claMzIng In rusty spots. Ona^tay delivery. 25S Oakland, Pontiac. Block laying ; _ ■BLOCK- LAYING AND CEMENT . work, FE 4-8521. ___ , ___ BLOCk7~'CARPENTRY AND" CE-ment work, FE 5-0782. Building fAodernizotion \-l DOZING - EXCAVATING, TOP soli, black dirt, tree removals. Free estirViaies - Prices reas. FE 5-V851 RION OR KENTUCKY SOD laio or delivered. Seeding or ,re-. dressing old lawns. Free estimates Broece LandscaRlng, , FE 2 - OMI e Floors PAUL GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates ________OR 4-1511 "all TYPES"5FC0NSfRUdtT0N“ Peaso gilders, FE 8-8B45__ ALL TYPES ©F HOME' REPAIR, roofing, siding, palming, and guttering, no lob too small. Will go anywhere. 644-1700. 1 CONTRACTOR'’ FOR EVERY-thlng. Ellis Lumber & Modernlza- I building. .n'co. Is licensed and- insured to do all types of residentlal-1 merclal remodeling — Garages, roofing anu nium. *iuiny. Free designing and estimating. Best refs. Easy terms. F E 2-2671. . HOutl RAISING AND MOVING, ■ '• ........i, general cement work. R, McCaltum. FE 5-6543. _ Carpentry CARPENTER 20 YRS. EXPERI-on«' big £^mtle )obs4 427-0654, INTERIOR' FINISH, ifkiTCHENS paneling, 40 years experlenca. FE Corpet^ SyvIra—ClennLg iCHWEITZEl cleaning, r way shlftlni SCHWEITZER CARPET SERVICE, ---- repairing, laying, stalr- —- -E 8-3r“ Cement Work CEMENT WORK ...... PATIOS Cement Work Licensed cement contractor. FE 5-9122 % CEMENT WOR|T^REASONABCb7 Free -estimates. OR 3-4460 after 6. EUBANKS CONSTl2UC'flON C©.' Poured walts-basements, FE 2-3551 FLOORS AND DRIVEWAYS, WORK that cannot be beat, - *• —' * Commlns. FE «- FE 4-M74, OR SV2I7. Drenittoklngi Tailorinjf DAN & LARRY'S SODDING AND Seeding. FE 2-8449 or FE 2-9024. GLEN‘ and bob, ll'ULLDOZINOi grading and backfill, UL 2-4606. L AN DSC A>i NG, TR UCkI NG,'~B r6- ____ ^FE 4-3371._____ MERiON*'BLUB SOb,''pTCk UP OR _aelivered. 2401 Crooks. UL 2-4443. PRUNING, /iaULC’HING, SPRAYltia. Stonegafe Landscaping. 6734XIV4 , 'sb66l^4G, 'SE'EbrNG, R'ETAINER , wails, patlosy basement ceiling FE 4‘9147. SODDING-SEEDINb-GkADINb Gib Kluesner Free Estimates Licensed Buildehi 12-1224 NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE at Home, Garage, Cabinets, Additions. FHA TERAIS. FE 4-6V09. TALBOTT LUMBER Moving and Storage J^i^ng and Decorating i-r INTERlbR AND EXTERIOR . painting, free estimates, work guaranteed. Reasonable rates. MS- AAA PAINTING AND DECORA-Mng, 26 years, exp;. Reas. Frse as-_ timates. Ph:,UL 2-13V8. _ PAINTING INSIDE ■■-ee Esf., work gi p. FE 2-2853. ________ Photographic Servi^ Free Esf., work guaranteed. 15 yrs. FE — AAA PIANO TUNING WIEGAND-5___________FE 2-4924 A-1 TUNING AND REPAIRING . Oscar .Schmidt FE 2-52j)> PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. D. Mayan EM 3-0163 PLA,STERlNb, NiW AND REPAiR wall removal, calling lowarad. FE Rental Eqolpment 8. Can (V a COUPLE 10 ‘ rai',r‘: «A MONEY HART tlMi ill your wiuk huun. f-fi 2 30 mi 3 to 5 p.in, t RED ftASI'BEHHY PICKfRS .. Johnsfon. Narlhwait corner ley- Soles Help, Molc-Pemole B-A $475 Monthly Solary Sales Trainee ^klllon 0 EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Thii li mananl position olfar-mg laiua vompspy banallli. If Immadialaly avallaiila apiily 123 South Mem. Hoorn lO. Royal Oak, II e.m, iharp, office OIiIl WANtVb, FINANCE axpariancv ^praiarrtd, 160 a waak to Stan. World Wide Furniture in th* Drayton Plains Shopping Cfn-tar, cohiaci Mr. branch. EmpleymEOt Aginclei 9 Y 22, 10(14 Hv Dit'k Tiirnoi REnt Ukt l!e«toy«i iirTiii 1 ^ coriAotts n "He wuii(.s protection from a lynch mob! He says he Just nIioI up hla mother's bridge party!" Moving and Trucking 27 Wanted Real Estate I lOMT MAbl jNG ^ANIt ^^MOVINO. Pointing A Decorating 23 A 'LADY Papal mg. ' PAPER HANGING THOMPSON PE 4 8364 ERNIE'S SCRYiCI painting, dacmaling and rumoriallng 662 4134 PAINTING AND Decorating' AUGUST JOHNSON . RIALtOR. 1704 S. Talagiaph FE 4-2533 NOTICE! “XrnJr. 41 fodsy l' EVELYN EDWARDS PAiNtING, I'AFERING, WALl WASHING, MlNUK REPAIRS. .. REASONAEir PRICES. FE. 5-240} PAINTING, PAPERING, WALL washing. Tuppar, OR 2-7061. PAINTING AND WALL WASHING. No lob Ino small, FE 3 60M luioyiSiAn-Kudio SErvicE 24 Clorkston Real Estote 5826 8. Main MA 5 LIStlNGS wanted," ' EUVIRt 7/50 COOLEY LAKE I . 3 6703 or EM 2 7706,-I SELL TRADE ( WANT TO SELl? ‘ i *>>> HAVE YOUR RADIO ANO tFlFVlSlON REPAIR WUHK DONE WHILE YOU SHOP 1 ". Trained laivica man, reasonable yy "—...........laiimg, 4T HitUSGKEEPiNn rArtiNl, fit pEE f:r4 s';ii;.’'*MX% tin {.ruia,' HUBBARO Naallor *1 LAKE ORION, 4 BEDROOM LAKE front, raasonable. OL I BVSO. MOPiERN I EftROOM fOnAftEI Ml 1 (dig I aSa near «ll♦bf^y»s^ Roellng. iwliniiiiAa, luiilTiy, waakiy Write Himllayi Fines, I 2. Chelxiygan. MKili. Rtnt Rtoms 41 ROOM ANDrOR |(3ARP till-, Oakland Ave. F* 4ls54. UEBRiNO room for gentie- man, 85/ 4919. klEEPiNri ROOM With BaTm, on Sylvan I, aka FR 2 8590 Rooms With Beord 43 BOARD AND OR ROOM. PACK*© I urn he*. Ffi 191X15 ROOM AND BOARD, DAV WGRk-FE 8-4995, , Rent Sleres 44 2#‘»66', >453 M89 AT WII LIAMS ■ ‘ “ led, has ittllce ()R J1391. . .jfGRB Plus RA5EMENT In Fnniiai' 875 mo. OR t a4l5. NkW, ' 5 daki. t I E U L, modern I. 20 X 29, NEW modern iTOhf 0 ....... Rent Office Space 2«b SGUARI PEBT AtTRAlTlVE iiitice spate, ii 8195 per menm on I veer leese, on W, Huron 2i. lusi aasi ai * tenter K. 0 - Hempsleed^ Realloi, NEW mGoebn stdre or of- lice on Oakland Ava., near Cass-Moniialm. I4'i<29'. raasonaMe. -Ft 5 9411 . . I - -,|l, iM Hhuies BEONOGMi, (ANPETING, CV-iiine lani err yard, IO‘k26‘ iiarMa, ........lines, hasemenr. OB ’iVivi. EuiOMFiEm mill sfMhmi. 3 ‘ ■ .......... OLia, uvaritwk , 8tl.N0. MA Udiutiin taiitli in^^MaAtiow L woialed, leni lEID TOWNSHIP, 18 MIN fly acres, .. thidr brick bediooms, pa^neiad BiOOMFIBLD TOWNSHik OWN ai iranstarrad, inusi sail lovaly 4 rAnge. diswmal, naipals, I', (nr gaiage >/4W 5HU6I* toap IkMIl eiOOMPIBUtUPEEE lONO LAKE Waterfront Bi level ibadtiaim ronletniHiiaiy, lupaHa I livt yaai ruimil leslganra Jis liaiiis, sun diamhad living room. ideies. lurmal dining tiwm plus biaqktasl riMHTi, tllteterl plr -haal, lumplsite Ihetma glass Price le dured^ yi\l t«i aMIkiiHlinanl, Wil J.T Mooney KE 3-1600 BRAND NEW The big 3 Oedreom home w welk in cloMtk oek Vioors ' kitchen, luily' insuleti 5tto.down ai OFF lOSlYN BRAND NEW and*''SinIn ■-'*** blf637 BUILlrRHI SPACIOUS SkEDRODM Mr BY OWN'tE' Rent Bttflnets Property 47-A Vary reasonable down payment 11.758 and up meuire 2315 Oi»l Highway Rionomy Cars tY OWNtR'3 BEDROOM ' lAtiCH drlvewat { Monigomery Ward I Iransporfatlon JAMES A. TAYLOR, Reoltor 7732 HIdtiland Hd. iMVVi OH 4 8206 « * TID 2 ' bedroom WltMi ^ ; PAUL'‘‘jONi®l*^RtALTY°FB*Vl430i 2S Apnrtmenti'Furnlshed RAY O'NEIL, Realtor . 1 7183 0* 40427 FOR LkAtH iN 'nIW IHOPFINO tenter in Flint 75 square teal ottupjncy, Ida lloor, Mlloning und, planty M irkino, Ideal lor any lypa iSS DL 2 54» WAREHOUSE OR S £ R V 1C E * two bedroGMI. BUSINESS 6,000-FT.. NEAR I ''l':far^i.S.'"oR DOWNTOWN, FE 2 -8388.1 . 4» ***' s.i- b.mi\,i^*2S; er/T,;„r,.................. only. OR 18802 AN rWAttlNOLY.’”Ti 28482, 3 bedroom, full basamant, ttsK.asl-ln yard, norm side Fail advanci Suitable tor srore II leese ell or divide. DEN. realtor i l-ROOM EFFICIENCY ment, Kltchenetle, i balh, lake privileges. Lxated v I Eliiebclh L 2BEOROOM RANCH, L ke area. Aii piasterad w sriachad garaga. lot 138 DOdi 01 axiras. lu.ssg, t BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS ........ WALL PAPER L______ DRILLS ■ POWER $AV '52 Joilyn ANDERS - POLISHERS PAPER steamers .. -------- Wallpaper Steamer InEtractlEnirScheoU w rwNi 05 rnint, #, Lflkf Av«. FE ,S6^50, Reitaurant* "'sfh 3 RESTAURANT, 10 FE 3-9811 'SOY'DIRVEdt PROTECT YOUR'DRIVEWAY — '■-iling by- Machine. Fraa asl. OLD Mil....... ....... _ HAROLD MILTON, OL 1 0653' Televitien, Radio ond Hi-Fi Service -T'E. bALBV'rREE iBRVlc'E Tree-stump removal. Mosquito _spraylng. FE 5-3005, FE 5-3025. D A N 8.1A R R Y' S T r1 E'T R1 MM ING 8. Removal FE 2 8449 orFE 2 9024. General Tree Service' Any size lob. FE 5-9994^493-2997. "mONTROS'S tree SERVICl Tree -removal-trimming.. 335-7850 tree' trimming "aNcTL a LIG'HT AND HEAV'y TRUCKING, rt, grading a d Ibading. Fl Truck Rental Trucks to Rent s-Ton pickups '/3-Ton Stakes EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks Seml-Trallers Pontiac Farm and IndustriaL Tractor Co. 825 S. WObDWARD E 8-0461 „ FB 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday Ugholsterlng THOMAS UPHOLSTERING- ROCHESTER WINDOW WASHING Co., OL 2-2821. Commarclal-Rasl-dentlal, Janllor service. Weed Mowing WEED CUTTING, POWER EQUIP-ment. By hour or job. FE 4-1897. WEED MOWING LOWES WELL DRILLING, 2", 3“ well, pumps, screens repaired. AAA - 4-4762. WELL SERVICE, DRILLING, RE V'/ 'V4.A ■x" V'^ 'r'kAMDil.._________ 684 10751 Highland Rd. (MM) Heuies 49 CALIFORNIA DRIVE-AWAY ......... I’lannlng to go west 7 Drive ant our sharp lair model cars. Wa win i cats Eliiabein Last Rd do Arrol •here expenses. Heal Esiala olllce, leil on Tecum M & M MOTOR SALES I .en.io losi 6a/4}}3 ' ^ | I 3537 , 01x18 Hsyy, OR 6-0208 >W|2 BEDROOM HOUSE WITH PRIVI 5 9902 ” *xb«ni6. FE | FB 2-1718, )-BBOROOM HOU8E on ». aero.,} 18 4', „ I 2' I AROB' ROOMI, PrTvATE EN- rasenlinT’o^l^'/'m 810**112 Iniaranca. 26 l I'onte and_bain, no drinkers, ap ' »**•">»'"■ “"'f J yn- oig, 112,loo lU ! .............. I ply 1,54 N Parry,...... lOREDROOM HOUSE on Woodhull i HOMEOWNERS III 55 ANNUALLY;? ROOMS NEWLY DECORATED j C ak*. completely lurnlshad. lanced | ' - ■ -- .... ' near General MoipHei, no drink i yard. 58.500. art. Fi 2-9 7 55 or FE 2.4447, ' - , s'ROOMS AND BATH, FOR GWItI -TWO S BEDROOM homes on small COUPI., FE L8929,,219 N , Saginaw j ' .lAN^MqpeRN.,EABvj .ISO 522-I08, ^ 49 KETTBRINO urwi'i, num. FasliiHlssatflpn, mump pBAMY 675 8»4 Low Down Payment !ES;y*lS down. Fuit liaxenwnt, gas naac .1 car gaiage 8S.900 wllb low duwn payinanl. Leslie R. Tripp, Reoltor 75 Wail Huron siraal FE MI6I lEvanings FE 64171) Mixed Area New Homei realtor PARTRipOE ‘ "II IHB BIRD TO lli" MODEL TrMavKi, 2 OPBH 4-2 PAHY • badrooms. carpaM lly. .. . ... ih bams, p atga i6xlE tanilly mum and ulliamoUMrn kiblien. Uuielda Is hilik and aht-mlnum siding. Pfltaid at aniy III,-998 un yqui lot Or1y« out Ul lO lo Mil. )i ilgtil Hi mat strati, iiglil lo kiiimydalf. latl h> modfi. DON WHIVe, INC. Ml DIXIB HWY. OR 6 0494 NEW xlm,, Irl laY*l, oarpat im, larM Itatl famlh Ihi pnW modprn hltcl —, p2 ttsa many taalum. ,, side Is brkk and aluminum. Wt bava only ana prl^ al wlih ll.sim down plus martaae# DON WHITE, INC. I Dixie Hwy, OR 6 NO DOWN pAyMIWT, PAYMENT PIEIT MONTH It, I tamiiy ......-™.M •- BLAINE. tTmaJ^^6»'*tlNNS^ iiNE. 0^ I IP I daily mi BELAIRE home BUILDERS WRIGHT i?r,*; Evas attar | PE M8H Mixofd Neighborhood PtriA m ?.V.08S*c*Ji.’C'ag^?:.C;t''*V; «odbli open APTERNOONI !-• 5 s224 or 187 5370 Ragim Construe a,nd imhoat I 'rnrsirnTnutkir ‘ ~ ' WESTOWN REALTY ' COUNTRY LIVING | aw irwm on east eivd. I Hi acres, I bedroems, den. living FE IT7S3 eHemoans. Li 8-4477 Evdd , north side IBM TRAINING , j ,-,,- ......................- ...........- Learn IBM, Ktypunen, macnina operation and wirino, 1401 com- Wanted Children to Beard 28 putar programming. Mich. 8tatt eT , Board ol Education approved. Fraa i ,v,-bi i aur nan' ana run placemeni service. Fret parking. ; *5®fLLBNT CARE FOR CHIL-Comp/ela llnancino, n * ..... ..... .... IIA200 STILWELL & THEISEN Rorhesler,. Mkh, OL Idll ' cReicIbt i.AKl ' ■ 2 bed<«om, basemeni, large let F garden spot, smell compect, b,Ke«' --- ■* -- . wim 18 8 targe llvHig ream canvargei into dining room, tanopd backyard, paved stfaat. 89,81* arltli George Bloir, Real Ettofe OR 3-t7«l ONLY 1441.64 DOWN* I ROOMS. CLE; FE 4 7253 Dan Edmonds 333-7433. WAfIT CHIL&REN TO BOARD POLL SYSTEMS INSTITUTE FE 4-4200 _ _ ■ A FUTURE BY LEA'RNING FE'8-4397. IBM MACHINES | Wanted Household Geod* 29 Learn IBM key punch, machine op-1 .. oration and wiring, computer pro-1 AUCTION SALE EVERY SATUR-gramlng. 4 waak eoursai. Fraa daY al Blue Bird Auction, wa'II •placemant larvict. No money - buy furniture, tools and appllancas. down. . ! OR 3-6847 or MEIrosa 7 5191 GENERAL INSTITUTE I cash for'furniture an© 'aP- 22925 Woodward Ftrndale' plUnces. 1 piece or housatul. CALL COLLECT ^F**/*®?:*- FE _________ 543-9737 I i-et us buy or sell iY f^r ................................ YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY DIESEL engine MECMAnlieIr ' AUCTION. 6?8-2523 WAN-t'eO: ‘ GAS AN&" ElBliTRl© 17581 James Couiens^ UN 4-6604. „oves. Hloneit prices. LITTLE bOZBRI. ORAbERS JOES BARGAIN HOUSE, FE......................... ’ CHILDREN I UNOERWPOD REAL ESTATE ' rooms'] ANO ,BATH -- 326 42*sl6l5°dnt ^•^''•ves .............. ■ 0 R b 6 M BUNGALOW, 8980 '3 Baldwin Ava. cranes. Held I;*'"ph®in.''*’'864.MM! Wanted Miscellnneou* ~ 30 SEMI - DIESEL TRUCK DRIVER . training school. Truck, 16S33 Liver- ■ CASH PAID FOR YOUR USED nols, Detroit, Call UN 6-6406. - lurpllure and appllancas. FE 4-1864 ...........................- ...........days only, ask batwaan 9 and 12. ■ ______ 6~NICE ■RbOMS''AN6“'uf1UTTf5. FE 4-4666 4~ ROOMS, BAfH AND OARAGE, imagratad. FB 6-41W. . 4-'rOOm " UPPER, PRIVATE 'BN-trance, newly decorated. 8100 par moptn inclvdai utllltlas. FB 2-9522. CLEAN,' ■ 2 - BFDROOM..UPPER partly (urnlshed, ulllitlat, S70 a month, FE 4-2432. E F F'i C l E N'crY"' APARTMBN'T' everything turnli' • utilities, 815,- ELATfLEY REALTY 9169 COMMERCE 2614WI ' "2-BEDROOM -I'bc'Hl'SflR Brick ranch with lamlly raom, i’5 baths, basamant, patio, *iraga, nice area. Only 114.980. IX MULTI LIST RLTR, Work Wanted Male n 4341. _ I. FE 5- 32 I /yiiXED~NeiOHBORHOOO, 2 - r©5m 1-1 CARPENTER AND ALUMINUM '■ 3-BEDROOM HOUSE UN- i SMALL FURNISHED APARTMEnY, carpenter^ WORK. REASON-I . (^urnlshad tor young couple. 873-j___________________ ... ^ CIO'hT I ■2r“6R“3:BEbROOM “HOMf'YWit'h I ..*~*fl*j___________I 25U2.____ Moving and frucWnV 22> between Pontiac 8-1369. Call any tli ■3' BEDROOMS, WITH GARAGCT' — North of Pontiac. Family with I child from out of state. Pontiac Press Box 21. Pontiac Lake. EM 3-7376 I bS'CHARD COURT APARTMENTS ! MODERN ----------- Only _ FONTAInBBLEA'U ' APARt- ming Mwn.^takt over paymtnit. 316 29051 ^FAMILY'INCOME ‘ DRAYTON WOODS ad IM. aarlv Amaricar lth"^rgi quick laia, 3-btdroem t bains. I FBEDROOM;"l'i;-i:iie "garage - '“j'ca?*”ari ■ carpeih^ and* (trapes, built-1 Id meny exires, US.580. 82.-iwn. OR 2-5714. __ ___ EAST PIKE * ■ I Best el Junior schaoi Lerge neet; -peted ilvlpg room,' lurnace, aluminum attached gerege, comer. brick ran-basement, OR 441241. REALTOOARtRrDOE _ "II THE BIRD TO SEE" rochiiter-arba'" Ranch home, Lerge carpeted llv-tng raom. Fireplace. * ---- 2-bedroi Quick possession. In betement. Inclosed breemwtv. Oerage.. I acre meaty laniheapad. Owner "sell -tor 8tM«0" with It-MO i/own. Tetmi. ATTENTION RETIREES 2 BEDROOM -MODERN Paneled S-sedroom” rrIck," OCN. 2 bAthi. 2car parao*> Dr«»i»woVe I ecre landscaped, c.irpeling, Clerkilon aret. M£H933, ^'be'droom'brick “Ianch, fw baths, carpeting. Cyclone fence, tl2,7M. il.OM down, 8 per cent' interest, or 2-oi». 3-bedroom, iw-bath; j^aiT oa- --- ,— Clerkston Gardens. 693-2967. Will-be iVali-; Lake privllci^. Near a PONTIAC REALTY ' 227 Baldwin■ Ft 54271 SaST SlDE -fWO FAMILV: ' ' ' [ Brkk 2 family Income — te set. It# eilate S rooms and bath 334 2I17 n>-saoa ai7 mi7 RocME'iTldrtBlbiWJirFRiOd ranch, paneiad braeipwav, tear i transportation able A . 13, m 3-BEOROOM BRICK BY OWHIK, — Anoka. Basamant, naar. school, lake Oakland, Dill Road oft JOHN K. IRWIN Bi SONS Elizabeth Lake Esfotes prlvllagas. lovaty. tbadroam, .jtlon room, carpating. IV--* garaga. SltfM. 6134171 t __S. Rotlyn. ______ ELl'lABBTH""LA'Kil 'BST'ATBS, I . . aluminum tiding, gat'MILTON WEAVER ItK., .RMitort V. Unlyertlly OL 14141 heat, bawment, good baai lake privilegaa. 115.000. FE COT l2Mr MOVE INTO A HOME ELDERLY COUPLE, lower flat or sinni* tiac, FE 2-9261. WISHES A ■'ONi CHILD wo'OCb Ilka 2- or 3-bedroom houie, furnished or unfurnished near Auburn 52-2322, MINISTER AND' FAMI'LY NE^Sl 3- or 4-^room house. 4934429. NO FEE RE'nTAL SERVi(ig7HAVi ' selected tenants willing to tign ....- ■■■’"• security deposits. Any T. PInskl, 424- suburban location, f 9575. Sjmre Living Quarters 33 Wanted Real Estbte ito^sF HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE, PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently need for Immediate talel WARREN STUUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FB 5-816$ Daily'III 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BUILDER Needs lots lit Pontiac, Immediate offer, no commission, Mr. Davit 626-9575. Real yaloe Realty. CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 1 Oakland Ave. ' FE 2-9141 REALTOR" PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" COrtiitiercial Property-Cash Apartment buildings", stores, etc. - ROOM HOME, NEEDS WORK Next to Dodge Park. S400 down on land contract. Total 13,600. FE space, gleaming oek tl bath, lull basemeni. s of city conveniences, i ’WHERE ELSE IN BIRMINGHAM ASSIGNED CARPORT SPACE FRIGIDAIRE DISHWASHER ' HOMESiZE RANGE AND REFR1G. FRIGIDAIRE AIR-CONDITIONER FULL SOUND CONDITIONING SPACIOUS CLOSETS-CABINETS . SLIDING SHOWER POORS LOCKED BASEMENT STORAGE ' INSIDE DELIVERIES I OCKFd'enTRY-CALL .SYSTEM locked'entry-call system CARPETING ' FROM I135, INCLUDING HEAT AND HOT WATER KINGSWOOD APARTMENTS 3S5 W. 14 Mile Road near Pierce Open Dally and Sunday MAPLEWOOD APARTMENTS ---.. . -----— coolldge 3-BEDROOM HOME, LAKE PRIVI- leges, 8200. MA 6-2919. __ ATTRACTIVE LAKE FRONTS, M66- hfter Labor Day. EM 3-2193. .AKE' front 2 OR 3 AbULfi. September 1 to June T" “** lease. And deposit., 363-7624. 3 - BEDROOM, SYLVAN MANOR, gas heat, yaarly lease, 1130 per month. 482-3744. . ’ ALTiiiOST NEW SINGLE HOMd IN ......., - ....aomo, gai — REAL VALUED 6264575. ~ BOULEVARD HEIGHTS' CLARKSTON AREA, SBEDROOM, secluded surroundings, $160. 67S JEFFERSON SCHOOL AREA, IN . . city of Pontiac. Modern 3-bedroom single home, . heat, large dining area, ciLlldren welcome. ■ REAL VALUE. 62M575^ NICE BRICK HOME ON IVj-ACRE Rent Lake Coftagei to buy. Call MY 2-2821. Lawrence W. Gaylord Raalt— " “' Stceet, Lake Orion. COTTAGE ON CEDAR ISLAND Lake In Union Lake Village, Aug. 1 through Labor day, 855 a week. EM 34090. ,■ ; ! ' 811,( 5 4BEOROOM^OMES -to 814,400, on your lot or _Nelson_BI^„ Co. OR 34191. tbOM AND BA'TH7'FU1l'BSMT. Murti. siding. Oarage, privlitgta on .ake Geneva. 86,000. 4*2-4273. - ROdM''H5Mi7"S"BlbROdMt fu'i basement, oil h I, 2'n-car - :aplnd mornings, FE ; E *4B5*.-After 5 PE *425 I ROOMS School. FE 4 19,088. FB 2-D958 after 6, 7-ROOM BARGAIN I, rees. 6AA 4050 CASSELIZABETH RD. 2 LOTS. .......... ......*Tit, wooded. , Terms. 6U- 63M wa'bbN'lbA©; urn siding, rough plumbing, I complete, lull basemanT. inch style home, inuatwl on S rolling acres, full b*i*ment, baths, ,l-«ar earage. 819,80* terms. i COMFORTABLa . __________ HOME IN THE VILLAGE OF OR-TONVILLB. The Spirit Ol small community living with alt t. 88,950, 81,950 down. C- PAN6US, Realty " 422 Mill-St., Ortonville :ALL COLLECT NA 7-2415 A COMFORTABLE 5-B B D R O 0 M living ' lit community odarn convents heat. $6,958, $1,950 down. C. PANGUS, Realty ■'422 Mill St., Ortonville CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 AVON TOWNSHIP/ COMFORTABLI 2-bedroom home, Clinton River view, t ear garage,/S^,500. 651-3068. plus taxes end Insurance, h STROM REALTOR, 4980 Huron, OR 443581 evfs. HANDY Only 16,950 TModerh 3-bi car attached oarage on 100x29*-tool lot In good eection of Auburn Heights. If you want a bargain, this It III Call W. H. BASS REALTOR FE S-TIt* REALTOR HIITER IdO-FOOT LAKE FRONT - 27-IOOt llvlno room with tirepleet, large wall-to-wall carpet. UNION LAKE AREA — 7 I and both, torga carpeted living room, full bosoment, large lot. lly room, brick wall and paneling. Waikin* disiaoca fa Rocnaaltr High school, *22,90*. PONTIAC BLOOMPIELD HILLS M wtiutive Forosf Loko- Country ■»*•••. A botutwul bulidino M, s'Aii'sa'i.sr"”’* Shepard Real Estote ni N. Main Roch**t*r Pt 84473 ilAM^WARWldK HA» IN SVlVAN Lake 5 housas on Warwkk and , ;M: i , FB 3-7*61 SYiVAN VILlSoi;..........illlliilbdM brkk, 3W<*r flaraga. Watt Bloom-flaid School District, Vk block from lake, *14,500. 612436*. Templeton LAKE FRONT K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lake Road 6*2-1190* TRI-LEVEL ON JOY ROAD, CLPsE ..............School. UL 24151. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY JUDSON STREET 6 rooms, modem, gas heat, 2-car garage, close to schools and bus. AL PAULY, Realtor KETTERING 3 bedrooms, finished basement, 2-car garage. $13,900, 10 par cant AGE I. adrodm, 2 ......... brick, .. els eatdk Finished ............ ..... manf,.,buMf-lns, 3 baths, ceramic tila.c 2 Rr4finMS. Andarsoh Insulated windows throughout,.......altachad 24 X 24 garage. *29,500. CaH 363-. 6234 or 887;4370. , , f‘ . j TWO-BEOHOOM, LARGE LIVING raom with fireplace, samlw hatch EM 3-2619. UNibN LAKE New 3badroom, piasterad, Kar attached garaga. Loads of axtras.' $13,450. Built by T. E. Lahay, UNION LAKE Located In excellent suburb, brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, family room wim 2 large picture windows. Hying room with flreolaca, dinotta, kitchen with butit-ln oven and range, IVk baths, blacktop straats, extra big lot with patloc 2-ear ga-74*0, many, other feature*, *2S,*oo fMBREE^ 3-4393 ~ Eves. EM 3-3705 WATERFRONT AT CASS LAKE with this 3-bad-room year-round homo, basement, gas heat, -encif—------------- closb to bus { 11,450 ed h>t,'4aka privileges,-It mprtg8db^,*ll,950 full J. J. JOLL. Reolty 2-348*,. '6* * 1-y ■Mi / /, i 1 I ll ' A iV( ^ ^ .X Vi X IT-// / i *Ci! llfVSZ VSS. (I IWMHI, u*nm»' In » •duo f I urn H)*vu«»*nil. ii«« (»ll UMM." MU«M WATfRFORO MIOM ■ V*«*nt, n««y. i iMwIronm, «*H ,< ullllty, l<«i HIUJOI* HBALTY «1-M34 WEST BlOOMFiEuD • NO P9WN PAYMENT ©:ii=SirS RORABAUGH WEST SIDE Ttoom, • hiMht, llnv*, >i«r ||•rAuy, ov»rti*iii| d«ir, •umnnijiin ^ ^ In on* oi ^ Pujv P*ul J«n«i Nt«liy, fB 4 itW WILL BUILD •NICK i ntONOOM. Pull hi||h b««i • mwil. •lUrnfH Utr buck a»r*M ONI V »U,tM On youi l«l o* MILU lUH J OAiuY on cues C*NL UAHi BOAO, 'y miK N. ■ MM Or will OBilON PPIIK a IMIM your oi«n *i duni |nira C. SCHUETT Ml 6-0500 V|A« ABOUND SftBDBOOM, prlvll#^ I Dan Edmonds ?,rz. I’inllM Tr»M Vy»jl4l*^^'“ Immvdiatf PofiBiiio'n OP OOkP MANON MOeil. HOMPI CAUPtfTIN^.^p^PAPtl lANOICAPINO INCLUDRO I pile* I NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME $29.00 DOWN (With Mi*fl«l piM lor w»rli*ri) "EVERYONE CAN BUY" , WlOtWI, OlVOPfIKI, PVPN^ PBOPli WHO MAVI MAO CBBOlT PNOBLlMt ARI OKiWiTH Ul •plict, polio., «pr Ink lint'*'iVt- j }.«*r ooiAO*. FEATURING. C«0'£!»‘-«j*T.ONI ALUMINUM WINDOW! buiiMn ov*o Uif,riy.fj)J!’',.Ma *e*‘ r»'t* K»' IM.MI, CALL ANYTIMi DAILY !ATUPOAY AND SUNDAY REAL VA^.Ut *a«(PS7 Rl ' IIVBL: Ibwirodm, IW b*IM. P«n«i*ith fireplace, nIca barn and gar mllllon-dollar view Irom an __________ sized living room wllh window-wall that bring* beauty Irom oul-side rldht lo your chair-side. A formal dining room lhal put* pro clousne** Inie entertaining. A dan ------------------ that;* the perlect olllce. at home | 345 Oakland tor busy executive*. Finished In - ■ - - warm cheilnut paneling with n cheerful Mreplace, walk-out basement with practically all glass/ lacing baaulllul Porejl Lake Cbun- Mon room, large lol. Homi be sold on land contract h down and monthly payments R. J. (Dick) VALUE! REALTOR FE 4-3531 Over an acre o' lawn prolesslonally landscaped. ) property BEAUTIFl d. 532,500, te 'AUTIFUL 0-room brick bonne. :lo*et iPBce, separate dining Ivinp room 15x21, sewing 'ull basement, 3-car gariHie, 2 wells, beautiful landscapM gr GILES loma, carpeted living ' dining room, p — It/ 2-car oarage. I equity. Full pri bedrooms. Excellent h well landscaped M‘ only $7,950. proved exterior. Recently decorate Inside. Only $7,950, 51,000 down. GILES REALTY CO. FE 30375 221 Baldwin Ave. LTIPLE LISTING SERVICE STOUTS Best Buys VTodaY $950 Down - d contract, solid rat* DisplaoBd? — convenfenf*to* Pontiac and Ffaher Body, plastered walls, oak flciors. ja^,afenced Droyton- 3room bungalow style home with 2 large bedrooms, separate dining room, basement, new gas furnace and water heater, recreation room, new root, walking Lake Front — Bke Orion, newly •droom with 2 extrb kB*h .uUh ekMu,«r fttTwrr EV^S. FE 3-7302 i;7 h Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rdr Ph. FE 3>145 Open Eves, TIM |. p.m. MULTIPLE LISTING SEIfVICH A BEAUTIFUL. BRICK AND FRAME TRI-LEVEL. $23,900. Built by one of qur best custom builders. You win admire the excellent work- manship and design. Situated ../Ion. ........- ... ;h I* typical ot tha iborhood. All the It dlserlml- 4-bedroom lake front, 5»I,. 500 — A home designed'lor lamlly anioyment situated on a beautiful well landscaped lot with excellent beach ahd a good dock. All your friends will admire the beautiful family rodm (12'xl2') wllb lalousle windows and fireplace. Kitchen wllh bulll-lgi. Massive brick barbecue grill by lake with electric spit, Comparabi* ' surrounding OUTSTANDING BRICK BUNGALOW. 513,950. This eye/appeallng bungalow with heatalstor fireplace, select oak floors, plastered rnll'"?2'x'a''’gt^'-; td investigate just a im to private peach. INCOME PROPERTY, III, off North Perry St. In a spectable neighborhood. acoustic Id drive Will pay you. DORRIS (, SON, REALTOR 6 DIxJjs Hwy. OR 4-0324 MULTII----------------- tiPLE LISTING SERVICE JOHNSON IAN VILLAGE - 7-room brick r)\ I bedroom and bath down 2-sfori Large ------ ------ basement — garage. Walking distance to l_. ...... Oy^ng,. yylll good purchaser. land contract WEST SIDE, 7 rooms. 2-story brick and framaj 2 bedrooms end bath down, 1«'x24' room up. Full base- ment with finished recreation room, IVy-car garaga.' Priced at $12,500. ----- - this ' ■ • • , call Sonny Johnson . JOHNSON 8, SONS FE 4-2533 1704 8. Teleoraph TIMES LAKE OAKLAND Privileges and ths most house for the money that we have seen. Nearly new 3bedroom ranch home with attached 2-car garage. Extra large rooms, 24-foot living room, 24-foot family room, dining room and kitchen teach 16 feet) and bedrooms (14 feet each). Lot (I44'x-' 224') and nice shade. A buy at ' S16.S00, $1,650 down. THIS MAY BE THE HOUSE FOR YOU! DRAYTON AREA Extra nice 3bedroom rancher with crawl basement, gas heat^ carpeting and draperies'stay. 3car„ garage. Lot, 100'x200'. $10,950. %400 40 ACRES n Ortonville area. Good level farm land, 6-room farm home and barn. 1)0,000. Terms. < ONLY $250 DOWN All brick 3bedroom rancher. Vacant and newly, decorated. Lbt, lOO-xISO-. 110,500. About/ 579 |!er month, includes taxes and/tnsur- '■ TIMES realty' ' >IXtE HWY. MLS 6) —N 9,Tar '1 O'NEIL MODEL 9 EVENINGS 6 TO 5/M 4260 LEDOeSTONE . .1 . Here's your chance lo beat rising .costs ot building. At the present duplication price on this 'Beauty Rile' model, you'll have paid only 51,-300 tor your lot ' In biautllul Westrldge ot Waterford. The glamorous kitchen and ultra-'■ 'Beauty Riles' ous sunken llv-I her*. A laundry St level Is a won- s luxurious SI e 52,000 on this hi TRADING IS TERRIFIC One of the nicest home* In Pon- • Mac Watkins Estates. B-room, 4-bedroom Bi-level, 2 lull ceramic baths, family room. Recreation room, beauMIul kitchen. Electric bullf-lns, all aluminum storms siding, bungalow withi a full i basement and a 90x150 lot w<*h two car garage. M's iully Insulated. As a bonus, the carpeting In the living room aid dining ----- —. grgpg, eluded 59,500 g WATKINS LAKE FRONT. The view Is really breathtaking; 50' of excellent beach frontage. 5 rooms and screened eating porch. Bosement, gas heat, Mie-place, paneled family room end $17,000, ?erms. ° “ ?' CLARKSTON. One of the tine aspects of home ownership I the Clarkston area Is the ou . standing educational facilities c the Clarkston School Districi This lovely 3' '.......... a beautiful tree, s walk to all Clarkston Schools. Spacious gold carpeted living room. Island fireplace, dining room, cheerful kitchen with adjoining breakfast room. Priced to sell fast at only $17,900. It's never been easier to buy than Npw—Call today for details. SUBURBAN*TWO - BEDROOM FRAME RANCH, oil heat, wood floors, lake privileges. Good neighborhood, fenced yard and nice trees. Only $6,950. Total price. 10‘S, down, plus mortgage costs, moves you In. Ray D'Neil Realtor 3520 PONTIAC LK. RD. OPEN 9'to 9 OR 4-0427 M. L. S. , OR 3-2028 Brick Beauty with attached 2-car garage, ■ approximately. one acre grounds, and featuring big 26' living rgom, 2 fireplaces, carpeting and ......1, Immaculate kitchen with juUt-in ....... ________________ ator, IW baths) lull basement, paneled recreation room. Priced at $22,900.00. Close-In west suburban l-bedroom bri home with lerge unfinished c "BUD" Nicholie, Realtor .49 Ml. Clemens.St. FE,5-1201 AFTER 6 P.M, FE 5-0198 Bloomfield Schools Rembling I hedroom ri landscaped acre lol. room fireplace, 2''j bal m, Florida room, breeze, / wflh nllached 2-car ga e and IB x 24 workshop ■esi lake Country Club a. $26,500, terms. American Colonial-' Loke Front This large brick pnj) frame home Is located on pne ol Oakland County's best lakes, spring led, keeps level up and has 120 It. ot sand beach. MoorB, « , pegged i ... separate laundry Nicely tarpeled, Mied bast and complelely lenced rear Midway between Jr, Immaculate ■IHEDROOM, wllh beeuMIul ' shaded and Cyclone-lenced van) Aeroi* iireel Irom lake-privilege lol Only I yean old and has new garage. You will love -this lltlle dream home lor summer ihot)plng lail ai Only I large 25-M„ walkout - Ilh natural lire ,land«caped and lamlly room, place. Nicely tenceid rear yaro. Dum-in tmiu" and oven and alec.lronic air guiltier ^ hiFlj** I, doiyn plu* costs. North End Special ONLY $700 DOWN’, $73,50 per month and no morigage C4>*ts, ConvanlenI north end location, close lo bus, stores and schools. M your credit Is gbbd and you can afloi'd $72,50 per month don't fasi, ( L. TODAY. ' OPEN 7't At HP lAMHINO tllB NEAR Haiiid Hiver, mtide the Au Baubit Slate Purest bortiar. Only 1295' wllh BIO down and 510 par monlh, ADAM# NBAI.TY | PE 1-4095 AlPFNA nillNDER BAY ARXA. iTillaue and Irallar ill#*, N'kIW Bloch Bros. 9 OAYIORO SMALL TRACTS OE land, all pIna, liordari slala land. Walk la lake. Naar *Maarn, Prom 5295 Wllh 510 down. PK i-4641. LOCATED AT HT, lIPI BN, MICH,, . immadlata pos- seiiinn. OR 3-Otl TWO BEDROOM C0TTA0E,""NEW- ly decorated, a .............. Paradlte. 57,900. IwaulltuI Lake S2 I CONDITION, Ingps, 7 Uhli Ml shed, benu... boats, playground. Ill----------- III health brice, Wl arxi. Room t possession. I. Raaionaoia ilfaT u............ r»Rort ••parfitds roioTt. *^TT'S Wsort! Houghton Lake, Michigan, ELIZABETH LAKE "MO&llNntDT-tage, 6-room, lurnlshad, privata beach, sacrilica, LI !-03»2, nights. LAKE FRONT, 2 BEDRODMi, MOD^ ern, naar Union Laka — boat. 9443 Mandon. 363 7649 - 427-7577. NEW C O f T A o' i ANb'WdOOED LOT - Full prica $2,995 w'“-down. Prlv»t» i«nd ‘ lokft/ Plihina «nd t ^ F lining and boatlhg. Deer e-"rldge hunting. Laava US-Fraaway at Harrison- GHidwIn Exit. ... ...„ ..... left one block lo our office. NORTH E R N DEVELOPMENT CO., HARRISON. Open 7 days a week. (Member, Chamber ot Conr Daily 6;3D to 8i30 D.m. FURNISHED MODELS al price* yo atlordi starling at $10,500. o TRADE THE BATEMAN WAY . S. Telegraph Realtor FE 5-7161 Open 9-9__M.L.S...Sunday J-5 ..............”'si ) bedrooms and bath . Basemenl, hew )as.furnace, 16x30 I; I Lake Property WE WILL TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St, Open Evenings and Sunday I - 4 FE 8-0466 SCHRAM 2 LOTS IN SYLVAN LAKE Sewer, water, blacktop streets. BREWER REAL ESTATE FE 4-5181 94 E. Huron 5 ACRES, 7-RbOM HOME. 3 BED- lake privilege*. Shown by appoint A BEAUTiFUL“M6MRN~LAK,E bar and properly, Fenton area, good gross, run by hired help. 525,000 down. Call collect, Roy Stewart. VE 35900. Detroit. . BEAUfYTifiHdM 343-4910 CALL' US FOR LAKE SUBURBAN AND FARM PROPERTY CRAWFORD AGENCY ‘'DOUBLE COTTAGE FURNISHED, ' Woodhull Lake, Best oiler 331 704B EXCELLENT WATER 230 S, PONTIAC TRAIL -~ OVER-Inoklng Walled Lake, modernized older home. 3 bedrooms, family low SACRIFICE ' PRICf,""b8WN payment reduced lo 5750, Walled Lake trontag*. 3 bedrooms, gas lurnace, extra bath, Inspact al 330 South Pontiac Trail, Phona Holly 634-9666. Lots s AcraagB II Improvements, 3'/2 ACRiS^ LOCATED NEAr PINE KNOB SKI LODGE - BEAUTIFUL ROLLING LAND ~ LOW DOWN PAYMENT. $15.00 PER MONTH. WRIGHT Eves, after 0 ___ *OR 3065S 70x410 ADAMS,"BIO BIAVER, (JYTL-Trees, FE 5-1695, S pjw. 147 Acres .. Sdghtly^i^img^^ lend _and large trees. OVER 2,000 FT. FRONTAGE, OVER 1,: ROAD FRONTAGE, subdivision.-- ----- * or recreation purpos-. minutes from F>ontlac, about 3 miles from T-75 Expressway. REASONABLE TERMS; Brand New SEE OUR FINISHED MODEL _______ Beautiful 3-bedrOom . ranch home | waters with 14' X M'.llvlng room designed! iiy ex for family coiVitort, 10' x: 15' step-1 Haren' saving kitchen and dinette, full I nights. ■ ““ ss.'; West... ** ... MV 2*0940. ' .f?T i",;'Bldg.'Lot/ . UU7 ..u„ ,vhlle opporlun-1 ^ ^ . s, South Channel ivicinlly,'I 100x200 lof - wllh 20x30 block - Island. Owner LI 8-0302,1 pudding. Lake privileges on Scott ' ' *>'• Good Building site. Only duplicate gn y Big T nance-tree brick front. Also, 1 recreation room designed for h of family pleasure, sliding c ... ___________ oubof-doors activities — thrilty gas heat — Priced at only $11,950 plus closing I beaches, docking. "*,5 I $10 month. Owner. N LAKE FRONTS Humphries D\ran9«. Lot 110x128. S PONTIAC LAKE - payment. WHI duplicate o VE HAVE SEVERAL , TWO. AND THREE - BEDROOM HOMES available WITH LOW DOWN; Near Eastern Jr. Three bedrooms, 12' x 14' x,H'dining room, 9’ kitchen, garage ii. . repair, but cheapnes! If - Only 55.000. Near General Hospital Has a 12' x 13' living room, 12' dining room,«j9' x 12' kit . Only $9,000. IVAN W. SCHRAM REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE 7732 Highland Road (M591 i ________- - OR 4-0306 i UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE >-iyiNG._- 15--MINUTES! 8645 Dixie, Clarkston 625-2615 days and eves. ■ REALTOR FE 5-9471 942 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD MULTIPLE -LISTING SERVICE OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY BEAUTY RITE MODELS Open Every Evening 6 to 8:30 SUNDAY 3 untiTir CoJoniat Z ihedroom 2V: ______ A -targe Deluxe Ranch A White Colonial Ranch All ready and available for immediate occupancy; 10 per cent plus closings down or trade -your equity for a brand Tlf RAY O'NEIL. REALTOR' Rd. Open 9 W-“ 3710 lo belt. Located landscaped lot. Features full I ment, fireplace, full dining r . ACRES "mis' near Tt's ONLY ■LEASANT LAKE - Cozy log cabin featuring 2 bedrgoms; screened porch, diving float, dock and boat. Being sold furnished for only $7,950, terms to suit. Immediate posses- PONTIAC LAKE - Cozy Island cottage, located on large shady' lot. Features 2 bedrooms, living room with fireplace. Large storage-shed. This property is being sold furnished for only $7,950. Terms fo suit. Immediate possession. jliMES A. TAYLOR, Agency ACRE WOOD'ED ROCHESTER AREA ,■ beautiful building site among nany huge trees, city water on roperfy. In a good area. Only LADD'Si INC. 15 Lapeer Roa^ ^ (M24) Open dally 11-8, Sunday .1 OME ON OUT—WE WOULD LIKE to give you a tour ot beaufitui Upland - Downs, good restrictions, surrounded by recreation, transportation and shopping facilities, Clarkston telephone and schools, 2'h to 10 acres wooded or cleared. FE 4 ) OR 3-1295,' Bloch Lake Froht Wooded Lots t; Just released for sale by owner st Scotch Union Lake; Only 51,500 ea., with easy terms. LAKELAND AGENCY VA and FHA approved brokers 314 N. Pontiac Trail , WALLED LAKE MA 4-1292 ___ OR_____ 624-1554 ■ ■ LAKE SHERWOOD You don't have to be a Yniltionalfe to live like one in this custom planned community Visit with us Land, uf Plenty acres with 1154' corner frontage, excellent-for truck farming, (well - Including from $24,500 i e Sherwood See It 3 judge fc OR,J4-pj42|f i w . _____ • yourself. benefits it otters in ng tor the entire family es from Pontlac.. C. 0. BALES ► REALTOR I 8210 Commerce Rd. • _ EM 3-4109 AAIDDLe' straits □rKE,“2BEO- ----lake front, huge Hving room ,. t7-ff. picture, window, w%lk-basement, attached.. 2-car ga- 14 JWooded Acres ■ -hlf* Pine) with nice ad 2 small modern uoriies, lust off the black top and near schools and shopping, $15,000 and $2,000 down. , ,80 Acre Farm North of Ortonville, good modern home and 30x90 barn with base-‘ ment, other outbuildings, $27,800 FE CTo’l EM*3-^59! i7064;Calony Oj;^lve. ' K $25,000. C. PANGUS. Realty . I CALL Co”l'eCT®’^' °7^''"na 7-2815 r • r\" \ l> 10 l»ti • AtrMft I OWMPR. 11 nwi»*'iiMd*^i*)i***'*'*i'**‘*y ^ "SMITH" faltut fct*¥, HA( hn*i, wi fill* tliuk •wtln»«i OpportuNitiat 99 Monty Lipn 91 (J WM«»y i ' T£AGUl FINANCE GO. 202 N. MAIN ROCHBIFR ROMEO 214 I, ST. ClAIR UJANS I'M to tlilHtO AU.T0I , HOuWlfdu^^OOOl TllK mN'I’IAd IMIKS.S. WKI.)NK.S|)AV. .M'l.V 2‘J. IIMU )- III - I Houithold Oaodi AS A1 VAIUES "'X: MAHATl ION 94 ACRES ' Wilt) Mowiiio iilr8.tm iinil imitldi sn » (ii*y6i1 lOkMh. s.l|iirafi| ^iirtwfloM Araa ItlWMlhlM UffMk itVB on OfHtyka IM]4I corner Hemp eleeO. (abuloue polenhel lor me itieniciliy inclined per »in eleo Irene UMU Incetion, ns Oeliland Conlaci 7 ACRES , Near 17S arnl Hime, very ti.«ii anil luiiinu, ii.'iiA i«im« Rolfe M, Smith, Radlloi i-p i/aae^^^'* 'pvjli'n‘'"'V|s ini WATERIRONF ' a iMK. tdiiei I I ivnnia t/i iiHu MiftgHM JBAV SirnOfO BtAIION lor ipiil l-inaniliig enailalli# lel». ^ , PL 3 3510 'Friendly Service" WHEN YOU NEED m to $1,000 Ttati^inan^TVo!'' , 5IW Pimiini male Hitnk niiiti, FI 4-1S74 MorlRng* Loi^ni A2 MtCMICAN ‘lliisiirtlss Solos, lor CASH I '.cH.'ins lo $3',one JACK IOVHANI) 3110 ' t'l WATTS REAl ESTATE I ANIIMhliSPN, il.f I igiKtR S' iiiun pi.dll ealeb'»litfl,(lftrlell 'X' , P^'V*' ,.e,hmu lid, Kneieii in MiiU.i Foiiiily Accaptonco Carp, Open III e p nvi Mon;, f'li. 'iii y p.n BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE HWY. Dr^oyton Plains 673 9441 A BEAUTIFUr SINGER SWING neeille nineple beyying IVlnClime lie» iMdIl 111 HU aau fill iiinking l.piltinhuleri. IriiMil Ireinn, . Ui diflk, anti' all filliei tevriri pinlliinii try yetllnu ulal Pull lel.lO or 15 31 jier miinlh I GERA 5 OR. I Mavliimiii, iirieiiitti I ii . 4l'3a N.'woodwaiii! APPLIANCE SPECIALS 56 , HASEMGNI AGE . 13!.,00(1. 04 ACRES W3TH 700' lake In on bemiptivale lake, rjtind lial tnr iranei pan.' |4ti ikio SEVEHAI 1 ARGE. tAWMk li UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE .iARKSTON IIONT . SUPER LAKE,FRONT Ruin by the buMUer (or hlmnell, i I pul evrylblno into II On a hi kide n onmlnaleii llni |i>«yai ol Pallo and Bar R Q Vreiaiiln'a ” Beaullljl rooib wil^ lull liraplace,' Cgnurloufly car palad Ilyins room and 3 i bad roonrii. ' A man'* Some li his (ablle aiid IHiii ca*lla li yogi* •or IW.500, WOODHULL LAKE burnar Oladrlc ilove, 3 binii OvenC, larae relrlgeralor, i ln> In (IMip Ireererv elefiric d waiher arrd tyoj* 3^*' |V''u v 130,000 makei n a real pri. Salt Bviintfi Proptrty 57 24 X 60 Etift Clear Span Commercial Building growitrg communlly. tv.500, l Partridge lomctY Owners I "Is The B id To Son' nenlliir i^ilh :|7,yeerb i GIFT SHOP blljan'^li riiosl eleoanl^ 3 be merchanrtiSB bpiuLj''tiirii, n;rui'':r NEIO CASH NOW? < Al I ANY TIME LOAN BY.PHONE sYsteMS WinoWk.^MENSIONiRS CAN "VhK LOWEST RATES |,S«’5 clS- ■ ' \Xi imbdlnldle Billr? New Cars Nr.* I III nllura Hiinre repnii and mndernliolinn FE 8 2657 I you I an'i ( all . . , Mall Coupon Loan-By-Phone Ru Ir'^ letadTuT'' *1" lelube M„|'riii large heeler SI7I FRETTER'S APPLIANCE WARIHOUSf, ' toinplalel >fy rCe.rrtir I ONE acre up. dH*** dolmalary ior the girli you lo let them work ....... ... they can enloy the boallng.i Kwimmtng, iitning,' hiking and! t4«S 1. V yy 0 0 D BOAT WITH arlible lop 3! bp, oulboard ......... Ill (ompifia lor BILL SPENCE MfM HAMTRIOOe t AM(7C„ INC I o|,i, INTiRNAS^ONA\’’TRADE'R's CLUB ' tiaVkXT j''Pa*i ... COAST .«,0 COAST TRAOES. COAST in COA 1050 W HurAn $1 PARTY STORE im HAi vn 74, dro' P. S73 «4 DAVIDSON MODtl iS^nc'eTaaJj OIxI^hX '"ciatkirlon" OSf NEW » HP WHEEL■ Illy PObUMIIon. .50,000. working Only 133.500 1140,000 ---- mLr'SPENCE . No llciuor b •‘■tdow can't .......... I III.000 dovyn loi, STATEWIDE - LAKE ORION i OR 'OM.CIar ClrrYble PETOSKPV 5 5041 RESTAURANT UP tO'daie ;'?^.r"on rr'."%urJ.“'roc.."«»''isi ;Ar:.;;’7nJd,'''‘;;n7y““;-? r.'r It vf.tr,?'rw r7i'.?ing,*raV u'?T. eilale, boklnei, and equipmeni,; «r *'5• r a c t in hade 110,000 down. 1300 a month. El WOOD REALTY *03 3410, COFFEE SHOP chair Web located lb Ponllec doing (I bUklne,, Full 13,500 T C. PANGUS, Realtor 423 Mill St., Ortonvilla CALL COLLKCT NA 7-3S15. 30,000 SQUARE FEBT >OR' WARE-houM or will divida. In Pontiac. _Sun., Mon. " REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRO TO SEE" Business Opportunities 59 CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR 331 W, WALTON 338 4C MULTI-PLE LISTING SERVICE RESTAURANT FOR SALE AT 81 Coolay ■ ■ ' ---- ' " 7 FE 8-t ".NEW - USED LAWNMOWERS. Wf i ted "--------- ' AUBURN HOME FURNISHINGS dal group at new labia lamp, V bwivel rockeib -13 >n daily 13 Mb « I Aiiburri Meigib, CLEARANCE SALE 196,4 Floor • .Models ^ All Must Go To Make Way for 1965 Models This Week! blrigaralorb. r wakbaik and dun K FOR JOE CRONIN MAUMAIX'KI*! lly Anilurtioii Hk IbCamliur --------------------------------------- "Our pU'iilc's in Mnrnimluke’s slomai'li!' 5ole.Household Goods 65 P PklABI.ISH VOUR CHROIT « Why d'> wbbowl iba ihlngi you neei lor your homar Tbrnllura, latnaiii'ig and npplinrbe, »I0 down cou^l| give you a leforid rhancar Dime Inwy., cor , nl'Telegrafhi REFRIOGHATOB. TWIN BED COM RETfi GERATORS, 8 .1 Wide van I li 111 fi Hike I FE 0 4275 UP ).'?iirJir Renewed Appliances rlrlgaialoib, renewed, guaranlaad (rUANANTeeO. INSTALLI SET OP BUNK BEOS - S35. 5/J 037I INOER AU10MATIC 71ft 7AO bewing matnirra dial a malic 'gn,, '^bubonhi ' payrnanl, ( univartal Co, odof SPECIAL Make, Taka ar^monlh 70 A MONTH . „ .. _____ rURNiTURF CoMiblb ol •pbHa living room kuba wbb 3 tlap, labie*. I cockiail table and 3 tdbia For SuIb MiscellonBout 67 MOST NEW, d F BILL SPENCE Thryblar Plyrnoulh Rambler .lean 1^1011 MA llMI HBIGMTS SUPPLY P AND 3(185 Bert AND PORK HA quarlari. Opdyka Mki, I BIRCH WEEK 105 PIECES 4'«3'»'4" ANTIQUE BIRCH, PANEI ING I 4 30 3.5 PllitS 4'«0«'4" NOT(jnE BIRCH PANitINO 14 75 04 PlBCES 4'«7'«aU" NU-TONE PANEI INO , r S 4 05 4',l'x4. " 7 0000 SIDES 113 85 PONTIAC PLYWOOD 1488 BALDWIN PE I3M3' BLUE LUSTRE NOT ONLY RIOS carpaii «l Mil but laava, pile II, V Rani a ibCo Bottle Gos InsTollation Two lOO'Pound tyllndar, and equip ... 4.. . . , FB marj' BURROUGHS'AObiNO 'MACHiRE, *’* "... ...... ■ adding mathina, 875, Bavarly,, 7751 a Road. compibte stock or pipe (Und lining, Cuttom Ihraadinq. immadi ale ,arvlca. Montcalm Supply. ' ire,bar chatl, lull ,1. nnariprlng mathaM^ S'Pieia dlnalla «ei. 4 Formica tup labia. ■broma ehalri, WYMAN FURNITURE CO. B. HURON OR 3 5335 I DOWN OR WHAT HAVE YOU 10 TRADE’ Modern 3 bedroom Tlloor ranch, dining coom, lull '’eb-mem, «u|omallC I------ ----- s aL Real. Etlab r. Mr, Clark, THE, PURE OIL COMPANY 3,Bay Service Siailon at Lake and Woodward lor Ifoxe. ,«.T,iwr,,r,e re ••xcj. in-our SPOM "irainlH, *X*r"ami'"X^gj, available lo lho,a who qualBv Sub-j .,7''!'’' alanllal Invajlment required lor ln-|WILL TRADE I^UELLER FUR-ventory. Cab Jack Anderwn 483- nace for lurnbure or what have 3.344 or allfir 4:00 4B2 I448. | 473-2872. ‘ ground, small Invmiment, reply 3 aervica In Delrol Ing ». ..... 0314 alter 4 p Sale. Land Contracts WEDDING DRESS, VEIL AND hoop,. ,lie 8 334.^344, Sale Household Goods 65 30,000 SQUARE FEET MANUFAC-turlng In Ponllac, parking apace. FE 2-4443, ' AGGRESSIVE MAn7“SELL fd3lS and equipment from rolling »lora, profits S8,000 lo tIS.OOO yearly. Call Mr. Landsmesser 2-5 p.m.. A GOING BUSINESS NEEDS Silent or active partner and 520,000. Pertaining to car, and truck,. Confidential, Reply Pontiac Preii, Box A GOOD RIBsTAURANT Beautiful modern place dolly, and Increasing, ditlonad, paved pg.rklng, rt A HIGH GROSS LIQUOR BAR, MT. Clemens area, $15,000 down. Roy Stewart Assoc., VE 5-5900,. Oetroil, CaII rnllarl • * A dandy WaYled I building, oorklng 000 monthly. T TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently wanted. See ui betore WARREN STOUT, Realtor Wanted Controcts-Mtg. 1 TO 50 LANb CONTRACTS Urqently wanted.- See u, befor wVrREN STOUT, Realtor T BIG STORE TO .SAVE YOU MORE! V GRAND OPENING Just moved across the street to 1461 Baldwin at Walton PHONE FE 2-6842, FIrit Iralllc light south ol 1-75. ’ I Lots ol (roe parking. Bargain Basement Specials bedroom, ,new second .. 559 --- second . . $24 b Mvmy luum group, 2nd $69 refrIg. guaranteed $19 to $99t ranges, guaranteed $14 lo $79 5-plece dinette, r (imefle 1450 F MAIN FLOOR ROOMS OF BRAND new furnbun (21 pieces) with nice range am provincial suites at tike savings. Innerspring mattresses, $187 Box " ' ...... tables. 'springs, $ Attractive Northern ' garage, illness orces jale. 473-9707, “AUTO PARTS STORE Owner reports 5.16,000 net pr ■ CASH • For land contracts, equities mortgages. Don't lose that hi Simab mortgages available. ■Ted McCullough, Sr. 682-1820. : ARRO REALTY j 51 CASS-ELIZABETH RD, ! CASH' FOR LAND" CONTRACTS' - i H, J, Van Welt, 4540 Dixie Hwy.,i OR 3-1355. _______ _ I l' NEED La¥d, CONTRA'‘c'fS,' REA-.. sonable discounts. Earl Garrets, ’ Realtor, 4617 Commerce Read. rc a-ivx/. EMpire 3-2511 EMpire 3-4084 J-^—gaS'^ANGIs^lTk REALTOR PARTRIDGE , "partment sUe. FE 8-4442 _ _"ISTHEBIRPJ0SEE"___, I ' ' warnei? Gft°ou"Tal?elo"r? HduSE'FU'LL' OF. FURmfljR 1' CAPITOL SAVINGS & L07 .LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE E Z TERMS - BUY-SELL,-TRADE Mon. -th^u Fri. 'til 9 p.m.; Jat. 'til 6 ■' RED B'a'RCALOUNGER, GREEN, davenport, with slip cover. Twin beds, tables.' lamps, mirror, misc. NEW ASSN., 7! 1..FE 4-0561, BEER-PARTY STORE WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, 'Pontiac 333-7157-■feOAT-LIVERY, SNACK“'BAR',~'PiL- 2-bedroom home, 4-bedroom f u r-nished apartment. OR 3-5532. building' and' equipment suitable rentals 500' frontage on Clinton River. Plenty of parking. Inquire Clinton Valley Inn, 42700 Utica ~ ' ------ "in Dyke, Ufieg. Road east of_______ __________ "DON'T BE AFRAID OF THIS ONE"' The owner can show you lots of profits. Should net 52,000 a mo. this year. Drive-in restaurant, in- See It BATEMAN ?riL After 5 00 .F5 ,,4-3718 D SCAPER EXPERIENCED wanted to take over operation of landscaping business. Need 54,000. __for trqcks and tra£toj;s^MI 4-7374. LIQUOR" BAR-SDB-SDM' This ( up-to-ctete hi wnerS $erv hotel showing better than * occupancy. Present ______ _ only sandwiches, how- ____ the fully equipped kitchen can serve complete meals, nice 4-room oiyneets apartment.. 535,000 down — roof# rent will handle payments. MationaLBusiness Brokers -if k; ' •!// ^ ■/. iL'Aa, LOANS ■ '525 tc . COMMUNITY LOAN CO. E: LAWRENCE FE 8. LOANS $25 to 51,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER'S. ' "-- .LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. • . 401 Pontiac State Bank * . FE 4-1538-9 RUGS, FE 3-3278 _ ! 12, 1 pads, I cabinet radio, 1 9705. . FE : BUCKNER GROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE ' ONLY $.3. WEEKLY 7- piece living room, davenport and chair, foam cushions, 2 step tables and 1 coffee table, 2 dec- 8- plece bedroom, double dresser, bookcase bed, chest of drawers,-large milror, box spring end Inner spring, 2 vanity lamps. 5-piece chrome or bronze dinette formica tops. All for $288 CASH, LAYAWAY, E-Z TERMS Visit our trade-in dept.| , For more bargains. 5. F, Goodrich Store I. Parry , FE 20121 COLONIAL FURNITURr, LARGE Family Home Furnishings, 2)35 Dixie Hwy., cor. Telegraph COTTAGE SPECIAL-FRIOIDAIHE leliigeralor, 545. MA 4 2419, DRYKR, ELECTRIC RANGE, 21-Inch TV, 21 cubic-tool Ireezer, chavt type. OR 4 1235. DUNCAN PMYFE T A B L E, Chairs, bullet, excellent condition. PIKE TV's Washer 6,. Dryer I E 2-2I50 COMPLETELY SATISFIED ' Customers Are! MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC M^LL STORES Most Voluoble Asset FE 8-1743. ELECTRIC AND GAS RANGES, RE-frigerators, automatic washers. TV, chroma breakfast set, mIsc. items. Coast Wide van Lines, 371 E. = 1 ECTRIC 'NORGE LUXURY LINE dryer, $75.,OR 3-8940. electric STOVE AND DRYER, 7plece blond mahogany dining desk. Clothes dryer, Schwini small baby's crib, misc. , . all day Saturday, 4S45 Colby Lane west of Talagraph, south Maple Road. 0. e, refrigerator ' wn Ireezer. 4 years old, pertKt com lion, while, First $100, FE 3-7437, GE “refrigerator,''' S ■ CUBIC loot, $35, FE 5-1301,-GOOD NEW “and "OS'iD'“FUR'NI-ture of all kinds — we finance. 9.'!?'’. AvFtlok l^‘3-'414f. GREEN FRIEZE PLATFO'RM rocker, $20. FE ' hide ’- a - BED (cellent, .JUST ARRIVED NEW 1965| TV' gef-out, close-out prices on 194 TV's, terms available. KELVINATOR DOUBLE electric range, yellow, lul mafic, excellent conditio Kirby'vAcuuMi late 'models. portable typewriter ... hi console .............. Singer console auto, zig-zag . Console chord 01, Sinqe,r portable Curt's jAppMance l'arge'co“m''m boy chest. Child's tractor, maple roll top desk and 682-5375._ MAPL^ "CHE'sf AND' bottom chairs; pink _______ _______ ment gas stove; wringer washer; chair. '2“'RUSH t table, dresser, chroma s MOVING TO CALIFORNIA—HOl FULL OF FURNITURE F_ SALE. TUESDAY THROUGH SAT- URDAY. ,303 OTTAWA DR. FE 2-534l._ MOi/iNG, '210 E Pike Pearson's Furniture FE 4 Between Paddock ai PIECE WALNUT BEDROOM suite, chrome dinette set, boy's summer and winter clothing. shoes, FE 4-8104. 5-year'baby cri'b ' er baby chest, $5, ' FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN . Pontiac—Drayfpn Plains-^Utica Watled_Lake—Birmlnqham_ LOANS ' “'9x12'r'UG. TO $1,000 1 _ To consolidate bills Into one J*)3 LINOCEU^ RUGS , . ,. morvthiy payment. Quick service,'PLAST|C TU.E .. with- coi/rteous experienced coun-iVINYL ASBESTOS. (Random) sellersf Credit life insurance avall-'CERAMIC TILE . able. Stop m or phone FE 5-8121. ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) I A . . ..r J. ...... ...M" TUI= Cl rtCiO CUAO 'WAlNuf' CM StE'REO, rorooe, rugs, furniture, misc, n Warwick. 483-4393, 482-2820. _ ■' NEW and USED 'reos at $1.25 per week and up, >r $1.45 per week and up. t $1.35 ^ per w SEE US FOR TERRIFIC BUYS GOODYEAR STORE M S.^Cass____,______FE S-SISY NEW AND used'CARPETING FOR . sale. Mpny assorted braids to choose from. Also several roll ends and remnants. Select from our. stock. We also specialize in carpet . -...... cleaning. ______________ ♦ trade-ins. Avon Troy Carpet Sales, 1650 "E. Auburn Rd., Rochester, S Daily. Sat. 9 to 1 LOANS TO .$1,000 Usually ___________ ly* ‘tielpfui. * > a . FE 2-9206 I Js the number to call. - GaKLAND LOAN CO. , 202 Pontiac state Bank Bldg. ' 9IB0 to 5:30 - t. 9 30 to , THE FLOOR SHOP __^2255 ELIZABETH LAKE ROA id-piece"' DUNCAN PHYFE "i other household ai 1964, 30 VOLUME,- WORLD BOOK encyclopedia,. large type tor sight saying; ’.i oft, MY 3-1640 after PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES spring Clearance of-kitchen cabinet »17J^Orch^d Lake, _______ 334-4329 PRIVATE SALE,'“bLONB MAHO'G. apy dining suite, ----- . TV, snowplow/ other Items. Take a look at 4448 Sashabaw Road^^Drajton from 11-5, Sat. and QuTCK~^EZE^RE'FRtGERATOR guarantee. 5100. 0 freezer, ll SHOP AT WARDS AND BE SATISFIED! i 75,00 i CORNER CABINiT (WHEAT MA-W, Huron I,%771 w‘fsi,.r'‘?ar'oU, Mlhlnlk*! lurnlluia ‘ laroidii, hOLikahLild (wiiu lahia, mOualloi tiaiiil, slaal liailar IhmkIv IiuiI lahmal. 471 now I ana. t-b « IP018 ttEt-ORE YOUR BYH lliam with Hliii Lustra. Rant al.. Irlt shampooar, II, MrCanillats Carpels. 5TAINIES5 8TEEl DOOBLE SINKS S3V 9S 0. A. Thompson,'70«$ MM 67 S|iartla| Ooi^i f f* ICUBA IAnK, HBfzinATOR, RACK liaOi, vraidhl ball , and Maillhts, 897 4(14 atlar t;3il TAD SHOWERS, $37 85,' COM SHREDDEO Rl-ACk ' BfftT; OR 3 5SSC or OR 3-9447. AI BLACK FARM SOIL, DELIV-—- - Inaded, 493 9740. H-E'S PIT, SANOTliRAV- HAIL SHOW P Fit fOMPIPTp with t^'9^ *'"* tuHdlnsi 149 58 with lauials, 114 99, lollats, lla vs, Mlihlgan Ffuaras<,anl, 393 Orthird TALBOTT LUMBER paint (iLisanul 9ala, iniarinr laylay, *”w'*all?M** *' ** 1099 Oaliland Ava. hit 4 4994 TMP SALVATION ARMY CHOICE RICH, AlACK DIRT. I yaiiis (III $1(1 Ol 4 yatds tor 113. Datlvarad. PE 4 49M. FOR (AST PPIIVERY, SAND, s'svaj, 111),............ • III w. (AWRENce sr. (tvarylhing la maal ymii h4 (Inihing l-(iinlluia. AppMai ton PIS, NEW. 114 9$, a. Themnsan, 70(i,^ m«9 w Iwo AND A half 41 ORV HOUSE I 1100. I USED 2X10, 30 AND 33 - FOOT. ' FE S 9097 USED OA'S AND OH FURNACES (liamllar Haating, ON 3'44 33. LISPO ram RUAO^TIBS, II 74. s 7.11 S4 WE DARE ANY POOD 8ERVICR TU MATCH THIS, "Why buy a freazar!" savinos (lallvarad to your hpma, All maati ami a'jxarias-har Iraa Iriloimalion, *47 1477 Hand Toali-Machlntry 68 'NAILER HITCHPI IN$TAU|6, drivtshalls shorlanad. WalidrIMar bill bunt up, arc waldmg, radla-tar rapalr. IM 4414 76 OP SOIL, RIACK DIRT, PHI, 1I4 orAvalt d»livarMt f«ii60nol)l9( ll Furywwn. ur-" .mIxTo ALPAl FA TlMSTrtV 'HAY '34 cants, good balas, cutting this week. Call J A. Arnold after 7 p.m pA S 3334,^_____i-- PlLl lACk DIRT, lOP SOIL, SAND, till and. 'graval. Mai's Trucking, PE 3 7774 < CIlOK P m ACK ^piRT ^1^1^ YARDS ^934' TOP SOIL, $1.00 A YARD,'Pll.( 4tlrt, $ 30 and till sand ♦ 40 a yard, Priicassad mad graval, $1-39 a yard DEL IVEHY EXTRA. AMER ICAN STONE MA 4 3141. Ptis-Huntlng bags 78 MAIN GERMAN shepherd piintiias, IIO 94, 47) 1190 ^^POODi^p^^PUPPifeS, SILVER, MAI 8 dachshunds, arc R*0- ' TO I,. 493 0919 I’ POODLE STYLING AND groainmg. tfi SMt. \ dachshund pups,'terms. Stud (logs 3 AMP IMS FE 9 39)9 AOoRAAlP com if pups, arc siMiis, warmed/ Haasontbla, Ol I 97al AKC BEAOl ES. eager 30 HUNT ARC WHITE TOY MOOOLI OR 4I93I ,k.c dachshund puppies ... Terms,' Eiltl Halm’s kennel's. FI 30199. arc! OFRMAN SHlhHtRO POP Pies )39 99)3 71 ARC MALE HASSPTT, 4 MONTHS, 179 tP 4 0113. lam 13 pm ARC MINI TOY POODLES. I APRI (EARt I NG STUD COLT CHEV. anna apiialausa bhitrri lln», no ralor Is yer Iml has puailbimiaa. Ol. Hay-Oraln-rEEd __________ M HOrCE RVa.,, from cofhbln#, Uiarla 16 Mlickl PHFNHY R .1-4949/ “'^.'arshrirvt Cherries for eating and (inning, pUk yoLir « .... in hard, Jotin R CHERRIES F(( red, OR PICK yiiMi own Reaulilul trull, Piea«a iKino ranlaineis koWa Sweet.,, nicked (Wiy, Early applifs new ■ Walch lor peaih ad Aug I Oak land Orchards. 3304 E Lomntarc e Rd hel Burns and Duck t,ake Ril. flUTIVATED Rl UEBERRiEk (ink V«ur own, bring (iinlainers, k :to a (luan Ortiar s lakan, $ 40 a quad 7909 Pltnllac I aka Rd , cat- 3V479’' »MPFn' and YELLOW BEaNS, ronlalnar 1304 Glddlngs Rd. MONTMORENCY CHERRIES,' At-leady pickad. lOc a pound, pIMtI'i I Ranch Rd. RD 1 MONTMpRENc^y CHERRIES. YOU (ink. Oalhy’s, 990 East Wallon. red' RAkPRfdHlES, GREEN beans. 4114 ( MnlnnvIlM, OR 19799. RPO RASPBERRIES FOR SALE. SOUR CHERRIES HAVE ARRIVED In 30pound (onlamers Irpian, DAVRY'S MARKET 1003 N. Main. Rn(heii*r OL 3 7III TONER'S Garden fresh VIGE- meic9 Rd Milford, EM JM Farm igatpoiERt 17 AT GALLAGHER'S ERANO NEW lOWREY ORGANS AS .OW AS $495 N(3 money tX)WN NO PAY MENT TILUSEPTETI-- EMBER SHOP US 8E9CJRE YOU BUY HURON DWIN ORGAN IS FE 94400 ?mme ** OR » 7313, PEk'IN&SSI! StUO- lERV rream on while, show bWpd , hE 3 0973, atl9i 4 pm. AKC SMALL POODlE* AT ItuD. puppces. tropical lish, • paraketll. canarlei. suppllfs, Crant's. UL 2 7700. ..n.v iBATMtNO AND GROOMING, PICK- lUSIC CO. UP AND OEl IVERY a9I 940S, I, 'TIL 9 P M beagle pups ) MONTHS OlD, FE 409mI " Ft 11171 years (;lo. board dogs groom pooDlEs { Orchard orov9 Kanneii. MA'4 till COLLIE AND'GERMAN SHEPHERD IHAPSODY puppies. 14 each FE S4340. IOAN COUII PUPPIES, OENTlE, GOOD I lor thlldran Pedigxwd 434 9749 keyboards. 39 note COLLIE STuO SERVICE. GOLDEN tih sustain, reverb.) SebI*. 439-347$, P*''r,!darling KITTEN!, FREE" TO CAM; good home. M3-099I. I$H BULL DOG, 3« MONTHS 1943 MAISfV .'FBROUION INDUS-trial irector. eciuipment and trader. 449-3974 0CTl74 l4llt. NEW AND USED TRACTORS AND equipment, peris end sdrvicd, KING BROS. 'FE 40/34 IFR 4 IMS Poniiir Rd el Opdyka NSW AND USED TRACTORS ihe'rt saws. Evans Equipment.' a3$- RftPAm especially John Deere end New/. Idea, Davis Machinery Co, Or-/ ...............— Alsd HcMnedlRr SEE US FIRST AND SAVE. JOHN DEERE. HARTIANO AREA Hilwe. Phone HARTIANO tSIl. I USED FRAZER ROTOtlLLERlL PART* AND SERVICE. L. W , 1970 Opdyke Trovtl IrailtrE UR 3 9949 IECTRIC GUITAR AND AMP 1997 OFTiROlTBR LOWREY HOLIDAY FRUITWOOl ORGAN Used but like new MORRIS MUSIC 34 $. Telegriph Rd, _ tram Tei+turon FE ENGLISH SETTER PUPS fFMAlB GERMAN ^ytFPMERD, labrador. BLACK. FEAWlC, AKC. 9 monlhi, i PIANO SPECIALS MINIATURE POODLE PUPPlES. ! , weeks, AKC registered. I whd I mele 1 epricot tSmeie. I mei I black to be dark apricat. reeioc j able. 9E 3 aaaa or Jt?3 Fernbarr 1993 RICHARDSON Sportsman. wllA stool and air heal Only S09S See Our Close-Out On Mtf( TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES _W- Huron ,St._____M2-4928 IE CAMPER AND truck, Mke ni ...____ WOLVERINE TRUCK""'CAM'PERS and Sleepers. New and used $395 up. EMPERIOR Tent Trailers, $449 UD. Jacki, Intercoms, telescoping LOWRY Camper Sale^ EM 3- 89 or used mobile home.' New wides 2 bedrooms for only $3,9 Delivered and set-up. Many mod on display tor your shopping e 4301. Dixie Highwa' : ,i .1 jl Drayton Open $ fo 9 Oeliy f X •!- 7» 19 O|DTN0ltK|i| lOXtl, (lARflT' i»e iihii umiiriiT |].VM t-jTTytU IH1 10 M ii aeNeiiAi. with (wninfi Kt up,m l»l. «W Itn. VAflABONO, fiABf) HI vuld*. 40 linnr (ii*n«. W» li»v» iww 4|)'iiio' loll la Op«n il«lly M;W Claud Sun. .Oxford Trailer, Sales * wMlh of l,(K« Otlon oi MV mi IkBRNl MOBII.I I Mrvii,* ir«« aailmi Parkhurit Traitor Saloi "VINO U TO sunndM.* ' •'*"'**/ ‘■•'ww Orion tfid 0«terd Oft MI4, ftoitl 10 AliMft Cwwnlrr Couilft, MY j 4411, CRANIllOttk {ft*j'*l lu”*' ” * *** “** '“ **'’***' •ABl-V AMRIIICAN CONTfMPORARV , . . ..fOINCH PBOVINCiAI- Cronbroolt IJ' Wido I4,4>i Midland Traitor Sales ... ^.r'vr. Hoijhu. ou. n«i iMinRsepowRB, eiiiNRuno, AI WidtiiiMt, loiili Oftil Iiiftifau, IIW rOftlftlMHI. Ok J 4i4l, I44II riiHit c ...... lo »«ll, ; A f t, 17.1*1 ,, „... uMd *ti»p», Cmiity I «k» Hood. W 34 HP JOHNSON ANO 6 Iric caniroli, IJM. FE 4 0MI is foot'kit boat, traiuIk; ■ “orCMry imwtrd. now l«rn> lid* Blll't Picftic Orouddi, l«. Blll'i Picftip OA 1)1114, '**00^«!I?i4*i fVj i»44 I4'V SOAKXY. TI llR.'tOAII,. ir, ikirok. 4v;i4IHI, A(Mf) BOAT TRAIlin) FOR IN ALIWAVII A BBtlOR DllAi BOATS MOTORS MBRCUHV Item MfCOtIplIOl Tr4ll»r» Marin* AtraiHtrl** ^ CROIIO OUT BOAT 0Al,lt n IFF OBEVER Oim and SihuH (»nl«r Clear the Deck- a p*r t»nl 10 JO p*r cam Used Units '(»» OORSETT ..... n Evinrud* MAID, Aiumihdin, Mar swir run add lr*il*r, only MiO. .y«ur MEK(UHY a.f Id IM.hp. " I.ONR OTAR BOA tV 01 AITNON and MFO BOATS. W* h*vp* law uood nialori 0000 USED _________ , Ai'low *1 10.par cant . Paru, larvlca, twin* FE 4«I4) ]in W. Huron I pud WHY RENT? BUY FOR l ESS S”® .............- . - niM*y ^|i*r intHdh. i.«u as aijo', | Jjfy j |^‘* 'iwliPO Ta**'Oriun, tViNRUDI motor I Bdalr and AccaMorlar "—1. Aluminum, >lb#r#l(li , CONTEST CCOSiSI IT i Irnm m, lo IlOO mnra I >l on d**li mad* Pal on n*w M*ri.urv'i, Rent Tr«iler Stsece Ant* AtceisErlei 91 MODEL A MOTOR. COMPIRTR I4«. and *am* oPwr pam Ml Wolla tiraat. Ponliac TirteAvttTrtich 92 AAA TRUCKERS SPECIALS Traad damaoad l'ra», oinarwlu parlaci («ndlfi)>n, a» ja and lOOB N. Ijafl and up CrAdd *v*ll*blf GOODYEAR STORE MiS CASS Ff S4II1 JULY SPlriAlS ' Factory biamitnad ijlTi: irKtion N traction • JS I li ftwy. )O.M.iiWnwy. to M « II traction Coll Olcb Curran VifA 4 tire's. lOdOXW'' MOxio. Motor Stitt, FE a4l»i. Used tircs, all ti2Es."i4 Iach 1000 to ctwoM Iram iJO t. Sapinaw 311/011. Aato Strvica 93 CRANKSHAFT ORINOINO IN THE (*r. Cylindtrt latorad. ZucB Ma-cnina Shop, Jl Hood. Ftwna FE , J IMI. REBUIIT 'o^STFIaTOIi" tiartari Iniiaiiod. |/«J A NO t. Sllfl P Meter Sceetert CHRIS CRAFT OWENS 'It'S FUN B04TS ■ lOjFI, Cantur^ M ■», C.C.^Sk InpraM. Ra^y to ao Miiit ba told. Kitmotf, Ml, Clamant. 44i< eaait - ___________________ Fool# HItchai and accaiturlaa Evarytbina tor tfir OWENS MARINE S 4 Ortbard 1‘ B SUPPLY FE tea Kessler's COMPLETE SiRVICE ANO#AETS to N, WatblnoJon Oxto OA 11400 marIne^ insurance, njo^'rii FOR SALE 1HJ CUSHMAN MO- ....... "F* '■'■iMUST SELL S4-f66'1 UTILITY , Boal mS or batl ottar Call at al|tr 4 00. 40J laif NEW FIBEROLAS' b6"aT, 40 l^tBrf C(Bri.TrH«kB 101 I ATE MOIlRi I *aa Hlib Caill TIIK l*()NTIA( IMiKS.S, \VKI)NKvSI)AV. .fM,r 2if. liMli ferBlgn Cars , TOS New and Uied Cere TOOlNew end Uied Cars 1001 New end Uied Can Sullivan Bulck Ponilac lalaj SPECIAL price PAH? HIK iaSVI»41 ( AHI VAN'S AUirO SALES 4440 Olxia Mwy. OH S 1144 ' NwA Bd?noin‘ “A?t m Olx^i? "IrOP DOLLAR PAID" USED CARS GLENN'S -a . Wasi Huriin I FE 'Alls? WANTEBi lSiftltSI CAR! Ellsworth ' AUTO SALES 4*1? OlKla Hwy. ma s I40 ■ we NEEB VoClR LATE MODEL USED CAR TODAY 1*40 TO 1»*1 MOOil S "Top Dollor Poid" John McAulllta FORD WE NEED CArSI MATTHEWSHARUREAVES 411 OAKLAND AVRNUB FB 4 444/ Jiink CersoTruchs 101A waniad. Top d«llof. dH S M4«. I TO 10 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS wanioEt. UR 1 jail, I TO 40 lUNK ears and trucks, troa low anvllrna, FI 11444. ALWAYS BUVlNO I I JUNK CARI - FREE TOW I S TOP II SAM ALLEN A ION INC. JUNK CARS HAOIBO AWAY, 4/1.S403. UiEd Aete-Trech Perte 102 VW, SUNROOF,, in/, BEAUIIFUI Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORUED VW itBAI EH 'r Mila Nnrth ot Mirada Mila l/44_S. TalagrapH, FE 8-45U 1940 AUSTIN-HEALY, 3000, SERIES, radio, hualtr, ovardriva, 'low mlla-404, dRiaiiaid (.Qiidiliiin, raaton ur* 44) lOtii dflai i f> m ’TR 3| WfT|) VS^|NfilNB, .'ll^'t^W‘«lirNEWN**p“.‘; IS’:'!.': :i tf. fOlA 'Tiimar'Ford, ^1 *?*9« 1941 AUSTIN HBAIY SPRITE rnadilar. Biiiuuiidy finith, 4,Ruaa. itantmlRRlnn A lifil* Imaiily. iliily 1/444. Eaiy larmt PATTERSON t'MMVROI IT E O , 1000 S wool) WARD AVE , BIRMINUHAM 100 , New end Used Cere ivsa UIEVY IMPAI.A rONVEHII lilr, V Si awln liamitiUMi.M OA J l4‘/« altar 4 pm I HfcVY, I9W BISlAYNE WMM IVdii Ponliaf: lip , 4 tp«ad, iiuiVi Mallury^ lai.S an.) OSii^a*- S?40, ir 1940 CHEVY IftAPAIA COUPE, V angina, 3ipaa ii m wolla Sliaal, Pimtini. 1949 FORI), VS, OflOD yumi nmlnr, Pint 141) lit 1944 FORD. Ruialawn. 1944 FORD, 0000 fHANSPOHTA linn, bail (iHm 4«» 0494 l♦4/■FOR0 STAriON WAOON, HUMS 1981 T'Bird 2»poor Hardtop Aulomatlc, radio, liaaiar. powar tsrwr BOBBORST „ 48(N"%KHiw*aid'.IIva '*'jt)IHMINOHAM Ml 4 44J* MB'dt I isai fauon IDOiih DF'iuxf, uii ' 'IK**®' Hm? Fb® drivai aimnil llkr I 'ffi'..rF('i^Rr.'rai.r,Tvr/i'i' "Alniosi A IV,6A" It mil 1941', FilHO railha.k, 4, n'h a' Ci'lorm'am« ’’'lint '"b"i''a I’ LLOYD'S ...(iln Mariiury.eomal New Locotlon r7')0 Onkinrid Ave. 4 J/IS, What'S' Your lilood Type? | 151; r;'Wud"'*r'"!.'i ii,'‘i:i m L’V^'.^:^rrw^ti%i •o.d^v,l4;w mnnay down. Call A N«w Locolion 1250 Oak kind Ave, I ilEVROl ETS(rvS, *494, Oft-» Haidwara, FE Mfiihl. HFVV BEI AiRi 19.4/ LLOYD'S I IftLuIn Varriury-Comat New Locofion 1250 Oakland Ave. FE 3 7141 SEATS, EXTRA I OW ig t, (Rrallani rondilion, pratn and whit* llnlih, radin, whllawaM llrai, |O0'« unfomli ... ■' ......- ■ 199 d'........ ‘ Autobahn Motors, Inc. M4HM 1949 CADILI AC. SELL INO FOR pant. Iirat, OR 4-9414 195/ PONTIAC for PARTS-eOOO .......... now brakai. A w, Highland Driva, 1S40 P'CiNTl AC'iNdINIf,' TRI Foiwar, 4 bolt malm, high dome plilom. with axtrai. FE >1194 WANTED; 4SPEED TRANSMIS-lion, lor a Ford, 114 S4». New end Used Trecki 103 I9M ooooe PICKUP/ '4? PLYM-eulhi 144 Pnnliac. OR 4 1114. CHdvV. 1944. CHAISII, CAB. P6l{, Hoc, 1949, itallon wagon. Your bM. Attornooni and avonlngi only. ... ... 4444. Pat#'. ______ • 1*1, FF 4419J. t FORD '/TON STAKE,"0006 194/ 01.04 WAOON, 194/ 0 R D R*ncn*ro. 71 II tial wml, 13 II. von bodv Dodg* or CImivv V*n*lt* Coait WId* Van Lln*t, 1/1' E. PIk* SI. t E 4-4044. 1944 FORD 1-TON StAkl TRoiK, good condition. FE 4-MM., , 1949 CHEVY I TON PANll. Sl.OOO mll*i, mak* oH*r . OR 10494 1900 YORD I TON, WITH OR WITH, out minnow dank, MY 1-5041. too OMC V,« PICKUP. Vy-TdN, Fia*tilda. Hoi ullllty unlit bum in. Only 4494. Eoiy tarmi. PATTER SON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVI., BIRMINO- 41/14. Renault ..... JOQOR, RADIO, ..-..TEH, AUTOMATIC TRANS MISSION. WHITE IIDSWALl TIRES. ABIOUITEI-V NO MONEY DOWN Pap—— ------‘ WHjTE 194(1 chevy imp -iw«r Maaring ai ino), 1119,4, 4. /4M al Good Cnrs oi Lowest Prices! angina, aniomalir Iraih-mittion, lati, man rnilas, ongu.al pwna, 194'/ 'FOItll OAI AXIF (liNVFI/ll limilaV ''a''(iaal,m'in'li th' V im"i”' 4 IIAWDtOP, M 0 Main Irantml^iui ^wjm mu an I wndawaii 'iIiHk’ (Y®®®'®* Awnai, 4/,494- 444'/»ll allai 111 ON FIIIIIHA, 4 noon n u New eeil Ueei Cere 10k lERP MAVERICK STATION V ■ 194'J, yiaip. /whatj^^dilua. mil Whila, 41.094 IIM w FE 1041/ or FE 4 4/4?, 1943 10MBT Exialln..t uimlllmn, adOftl, WliJo, kfuikt A lyiimtNi Mil U.fKH) fMtMAl 91,100. '4 On The Floor ond More" 944 comet Callania 1 door hard a’'!ifa''hma*^ nil mfr^clory '^oftielaj with ma iiaw i.ai warranty «till in altwi Saya Itiany U Idllllaitl LLOYD'S I liiiiTiii Ma/iury Comot New location 1250 Ooklond Ave. MARVEL GOOD BOBBER, 49.4. 195/ CMEVV 4, IDOOB, STICK, GOori MOTOR, 9«4 PEOPlt'S AUTO SALES 194/ I monay down. Pavinant waakly. Call Mr, Jot 5 /4d4. Hatkini Ch*vy. 940 CORVETTE RED mrniiglio/il, 11,150. FE 4 1017 j 940 UIEVV CONVERTIBtE WITH POHO, rk rtnil Uilllloi Mi4lrtiWtJkllir Iiillli 0111)1 I94H FORD F'AIHl ANE SOO, CBUIS MPVROLif STATION WAS atylindar, ilandard 4tlck, raal * (laan car. 119/ lull prii* wim mnnay down, LUCKY AUTO SALES I'F 4 4 or FE 1 705,1 4141144 FAIRIANE 400, laslar HiWIi Oanlai. fil. | v/'ll | FAICON I DOON SEDAN WITH I-(lin- naalai, a laal niilanua niab I anil 14 y.11114 h.i luily 4941. i .loflN MfiAOl IFTE roRi) I 4:10 Oakland Ava. I 1952^^1 INC01 Ns ^ 194/ OIOS MAHrnOI', 194. Skvl Aldii, FF 5 1/10 194/ OI ns 4 DOOR HARDTOP. 194'/ FORD H liaymanls FU 194/ FORD GAI .CON TAKE .OVER E 5oe innoH LLOYD'S 7e*V}ng^:nTh'ak*»'’‘r**lrrd'''4&? sir'"’/'!?'/*'"” 1962 Cutlass '\V(!kV“Auf(!)'sAiES "Punllni;'* DihiiuiiI 1 uI" New locution 1250 Oakland Ave. BOB BORST AUTHOHUFD VW 0 (Afc*i4 iip«n .. .............. und*r ennilructinni 1940 CORVETTE CONViRtIBLB, iB»»d, radio, h»al*r, wbll* with 11/45* T«l*oraBh aiiiia Inlarlnr, Only «,I95 Eaty ' „ pnaD * 00 ----- ,L'®Y*!?.i“Ji...5PEVROI ETi'’jlV Autobahn Motors, Inc. S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4 7/15 REPOSSESSION CORVAiB.I FORD 4 DOOR, RUNS GOOD. Down Paym»nt . H»ra Pay Mar* No CradlF Prohlami ‘'Aumariiad 0»*i*r'' OLIVER BUICK ond JEEP Carnar of PIk* and Can F'E 4 1401 "WAY,''iiS,,1,Wffl-',5Ar,S! . ,w- -------Jip-- I monlt ot 1/ 9! p«r w*« Parks *1 Harold Turn*; nglai IRTIN "Englond's Finest" 1941 CORTINA 1-door In glo* arcllc whil* with f,onlra»tlno wim *11 vinyl Ini*''-- ■ In your drlvtwoy 1960 IMPALA i hard lo lind matador . door hardloe with VI angina, and Fowar agulpmant, Hurry on on# tor only IIM/ wookly, no monay down, Call Mr, crodli w ordinalor, '■'“"1 Cooper Motors LLOYD'S yinyl Inlarlor -------- mdjhj^jiu 4) 4 down. Call •ordinalor. Lincoln-Morcury-Comot New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. FE 1./S43 II chRVhui ET' impalX, 1 Door LLOYD'S l.IncglnMarcury.C_ New Location 1250 Ooklond-Ave. Fi 1 /I4J I AUSTIN HFALY, 3000 6:CvHndor, pow«r tloarlnu, II,log W3I43I, 941 CORVATr 700 SERIES, 4 DOOR, radio, h«al»r, tulomalic Irantnm r............................ Drayton Plain* 1958 T-Bird Hardtop ■■ - midnight blu* tlnlih, oow-Brakt* and Crulila-0- *r •taaring, brakt* tne Malic, e f bank rails, '• miy $695 STN1K-HICKEY fORD 959 FORD^ aOOOR 'CLIAN I Mick, OH .1-4/9/. 959 THUNOERnilih. >997 P U prlc*. No mormy down, LUCKY AUTO SALES M141. I, bait VILLAGE .rlRAMBLER ndar cnnsiruclloni uuafnnlan, poRD, STATION WAOON, iramporlnllon tpaclal, ve »i aulomatlc, radio and lull Metercyclee 4 OA 1114/. 3*41 HARLEY DAVIDSON MODEL I 74. droMod up- rady -to got B.ll j Spanc*. 44/T Oliia HwY , Ciarkiton. I IHJ ALLSTATE 3S0CC, 3,Jt» MILES. eartaci c^ondllMn. tns. F’E 4**t4. 1941 FLH HARLEY'DAVTION; PUL-' Will locrltlca. $1,194. FE 1-0141. Honda Hciwk Lms Shifting NEW SPORTY HONDA *0 Low down paymont m aaiy tarmt ANDERSON SALES E. SERVICE “ Khi C CYCLE YAMAHA 5-SPEED TRANSMISSION COSTS LESS THAN ANY 4-SPEED IN ITS CLASSI Complata 1944 Lina 7440 Auburn. Utica Phorw /,1I 0J r ■$'BLiI'"l#44'-MO'N'6Ar; Hawk, with ball n*imal •M FE 4l»t. atirr 3 c (AILBOAT, I/ -FOOT NATIONAL orta daiign, mahogany built, Dacron Mill, oxirat. 1400. Call FE S-tS94. , _ ■ T ON'“eoAtiNd Niibl Homalilt ~ Tta Naa — A|ax Trallart siaoRE STATON bSa't HOlSf OR 1-1114. TMO/AFSON 19-foot CAeiTTCIiOlS- -- —h«i.• trallar. THOMPSONS DORSETTS. JOHNSONS DUOS _______ WATER FOR demonstration RIDES. CANOES-PONTOONS-ELIMINATOHS. NORTO.'9-BSA 5-SPEED DUCATI PONTIAC CYCLE SALES 371 S. Saginaw iMcyciee "7 ALL ALUMINUM DOCK ASSJ^B^LEO • MODEL! OPEN NOW ON C , 10-4 FE 4.9444 j 1 BOYS' BIKE, 1 BOYS' AND I glrli' 'M". SIO wch. tS3 Flocanca. Ci'RL'S M-INCtTBIKE, IlfTSUDS 14-lncb blk4, $11. MA US//. Tl-FOOT RUNABOUT, IS HP rude, aicctric Hart, trallar. plate), S400. 4I3-4S41. Ti-F06f~ARi$t6, CRAFT, IS H.P. A-1, Cboap, FE 4-4492. 3S-f6ot 'g'lass;par boat, 40 h.p. Trallar. 343-/311. fi~-“ F 'o'of"switzEk<;RXIi'T, its hors# Johnion, axcollant condition, aki oquipmont Includod. FE Evinrudo, Irallor, oxtrat. UfoOT cedar iTRtP, ^IBBR- glaa boRom, r--'-'--------------- ^is and lig? h.p. Chrl»-Craft motor with Iona shatt. roo-wnobl*. FE S-443S. IFTfOOT lapstraKb, » evin- 14' WOOD BOAT, TRAILER, Motor 34 electric. EM 3-2111 or FE 4»7908 otter 4.' $140. 314 3rd SI BILL SPENCE ciarkiton___________MA 5-4641 14-FOOt THOMPSON SPORTSTER, all controls, lights, cushions, Cus- alec. Color Tilt-Bed trailer. 482- 1/-FOOT BOAT, TRAILER.'-3S Evinrude elec, motor, skis, vertiblo top, all safety equipment, full length ........ ,• complete. 333-. f/ FOOT CENTURY RESORTER. ,>1957 Inboard, newly reflnished. 138 HP. Gray. 11,740. FE 1-9523. 38' AERO CRAFT, MERCURY, 800 / trailer, completa, ST,37S. j Midland Trailer. Sales, 1 125/ DIXIE FE 8-8/72 SAT., - .. ...... PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Hwy.. Drayton Plains >N LOON LAKE OR 44)411 TORY'S MARINl MARINA for JOHNSON MOTORS Shallak*, Gonova, Aroocratt, boat and canooi, IS yoar* raoair t: parlanct, open f‘til I. KEfcOO HARBOR TRADIN' DAYS"~^ Trad# up to that BIGGER BOAT AND JOHNSOkf MOTOR NOWI Starcraft — So# - Ray — Thor- PINTER'S VB carry' ohi OF TH largest supplies ot Mercury par In Oaklatid County. Kara Boa and Mdiori. MV 3-1400. WE wiLL siAt ANY 6iXi; I Boata, ■ Motor#, LaKa Orion. EQUIFPED TRI-PACER. , •, alwayg hangarod.. PE 5-1 Wontedl^a^nicke .101 ALWAYS BUYING./ytD.iPAYINO __YING ..........- MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS. ASK FOR BERNIE AT- BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I 912 S. woodward \ Ml ut get tAe bast" i AVER ILL'S 30» DIxl* Did You Know? VILLAGE RAMBLER Pays mor* for A 444 S. Wood'ward Ml 4-3900 HURON MOTOR SALES IS PAYING g:id^.n,'i brks“:s?H.'oTW.iSS 2-2441 MANSFIELD , AUTO SALES t buying shsrp let* . . . NOWI 1104 Baldwin AV*. FE 5-5900. MdM. r MOTOR SALES We pay hlghar prica* for aharp ISl/^Wp'Hwyl*' OR 4-030S 1960 CHEVY '/i-Ton’ Pickup truck, 4,cylinder itendard trenimiMlon, tor only 1995. Crissman Chevrolet Co., ROCHESTER , OL 2-9/11 I9*1'F0R0 F-1(X)'''>.t6n PiCKUP. long bpx. a-cylindtr, slick, radio, ............. JiRO-........... CAR/yiEN mem,®Fn%4 T' auto.: J/,«)0".ctual' Serviced In Europe >2,450, MA 4 143/ weekdays gtler / p m 1^ ana Used Cars 106 1941 CORVAIR, MODEL 700, AUTO-....ii, -ansmlsslon, radio and iiiaw.alls, one owner, >450, Autobahn Motors, Inc, ford 1941 FfONULINE BUS, RA dill liualar seal halls «• (Kilimi fiondiilon, >i,'/»5,99/ 44.411, 194/ FAUON DblUXP Cl UR WAG "Thu UllimulB In Living'' Is mis 1941 continental in 410 S. Wuodwaid RIKMINGMAM 1944 F 95 4 DOOR ksdan. Full nr ■ . OH .1 IIM stlar ,5, ' .' ' 194/ I’ORD OAl AXie 4 DOOR, V l engln*, auUimalli, power sleerlng. Hill, Only >1,195 Feiy lirrm, pat TERSUN (mKvHOIET (<). tOMI 4. WOODWARD AVB„ aiRMING- ! LLOYD'S JEROME Motor Sales 194.1 tOHD 500 XL CONVERTIBl P All niiwer. AM-FM radio. >1,240, 1444 Bayviaw. Union Laka. 1963Tord , Hardtop . y car warranty, l-cytlnder i BOB BORST I.lncoln-Merciiry 5)0 S. BIRMINGHAM REPOSSESSION -- 19M FALCON, No money down, p#ym»nts of IS./O weekly, call Mr. Johnion, /" 5 1404, Matkini Chevy. 1943 OAtXXif, east IACK vs Power iieerlng end brekti, wIl axcellani condition, l 4 /099, ..... ... 4-bOOR HARDTOP, Cruli-o-mallc IrammUslon, II >1,595. JEROME*VfKgU , Ruchesler LORD Dealer, OI 1963 Ford Galoxie 2-Dobr beeulllul pritel Only - $1695 Russ Johnson 1955 BUICK, FIRST >75, lu-lon*. SI,395 JIROVF FERGU-MN, Rocheiler FORD Dealer, OL 1943 itoNOLINf VAN V^ITH 4-cyllndor itlck, 7(10x13 4 ply tlrai, 4,000 aefuel miles, factory ottlelal unit! Savel. J|RO^Me_FEJGUSON, ..........ircb'Mfl Indor, Ilk* now mrough- Roenosler FORD D Rpchaaiar 'f ,G. M. C. Foctory Bronch NEW and USED TRUCKS FE 5-9485 iwrNAfibkTLV'iirf T r394. PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS, .FE 4-9100. , 1959 FOROr 4 CYLINDER, AUTO- 1942 CHlVV'"n WltH"RlB‘"FlWSH red Interior, no money down. Call Mr. Johnson, MA 5-2404. i4i"'CHi\/v hAr6top witTT ...................,550 lull , Haskins I. Call N power, Including window* *no i complately ovarhaulod las* ' 300 Vnlles ago. Ml 6-0091 ba Haskins Chevy. 1941 CORVAIR 4-DObR, STRAIGHT stick. >897 full prlc* with no money ~9i?'^3'LLA'cn95l'gH^ 1943 R amber. Discount, guarsnts* 5 Fords, 1944 to 1940, S94-UP Piry»rto'«Tom Economy Cars 1334 Dlxlg Hwy. CADILLAC . 1941 Coup* Daville. A® power, fi tory *lr conditioned. Sharp as 1962 Ford f-lOO '/i-Ton Pickups, (w* bev* two) blu* finish, l-foot stYlaald* box, h**t*r, signals. 1962Ford Falcon Ranchero Pickup with a whit* heafer. Only t1,094. ,1957 Ford Step Van Thif one has a green finish, .haater, Ford-O-Matlc, S294. BEATTIE FORD' AUTO INSURANCE Low Rates for; Sate^DrWers , Canct:ed and Refused. PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE . Stop In Today! 1044 Joslyn Ave. Frank A. Anderson Agency Fg 4-3535 Pontiac PROBLEMS E WILL^fe'" 0*t/R vIrY BE! TO HELP- . YOU BUDGET PAYMENTS AVAILABLE - BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mile FE 4-05S9 Next to Pontiac State Bank Foreign Can 105 1959 TRIUMPH TR3, LOOKS-RUNS good, excellent wir* wheals, Ml a-siao. :.; : , ■ V MOA 1959 HARDTOP,!ROADSTER, WILSON -PONTIAG-CAOILLAC 340 N. Woodward Ml Birmingham, Michigan 1961 Cadillac 4-Ooor Hardtop LUCKY AUTO SALES "Ponllac's Discount Lof»" 193 and 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or F 3-/853 (Access open to lot* while street ...... —ijtruction) I942*^CHEVR0LET BEL A|F?d50R - — Good condition. Privet* owner. Days. Ml 4-0935. After 4. 444-5404. 1942 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, blu# and light blu* top. MA 4-5517 Iwf CHlvrtOLET BEL AlW O-DOOR -sedan, 8-cyUnder, aulomatlc, radio, -—........ blu* finish. Matching InleHor. Only $1,895. Easy -- CHEVROLET PATTERSON __________ 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. AAJ 4-2735. 19'is3 CHEVY ¥EFaTR,"?060Ri'RA-dio, healer, whitewalls, 11,450. FE r steering. Bought i n 10 a WAGON. RADIO, HEATER, MATIC TRANSMISSION. W n i i c ' SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Payments ot Harold Turner Fprdi Ml '4-7500. »■ i9W' FbRb“G')rL A X r E 2 • DOOR ' A real sharp car. 1497 li/M pi LUCKY AUTO SALES (Acc«8B op«n to lott whilo undtf conitructlon.) fRANSPORfAtlON SOCIALS 50 to Choose From 1953 OeSOTO A-1. running ... $45 1958 PLYMOUTH, ‘ . S145 1959 PLYMOU-........... MANY MANY MORE SUPERIOR RAMBLER 5W Oakland _ FE 5-9421 Good Cars at Lowest Priced! , 1959, FORD Rombler-Pontiac *ke Orion MY 3-4144 943 FORD FAIRI ANE 3-DOOR, V-l Aulomatlc, rndlo, heater, solid red tlnlsti, laclory ottlelal carl >1,950, JFWOME FEROUSON, Rochester 1943 FALCON 4, STICK, Ra6|0, original owner, excellent condition. OR 4-0034. 1943 t*ORD GALAXIE 3-DOOR Sl-den, V-l eulometlc power ateer-Ing, brakes, like new factory ot-fIcTal. >3,195. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochestar FORD Dealer, OI. Credit or Budget Problems? We Can Finance You! 100 Cars to Select From! .Call Mr. Dale, FE 3-7865 _____ LLOYDS Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth ' 17 beautitut' NEW YORKERS AND CHRYSLER 300*. Must clean out stock. All models available. Save. $1,000 .....Mercury (ioMit New Location 1250 Ooklona Ave. Ff 3U843 1957 MERCURY conYERTTblE Power, mechanical gar. OL I 14 House full of kids" I You ( n*a”.1 LLOYD'S , Incnln- Mtreury-Comat New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. ■ .Ft 3-7843 1941 'mercur y ■ MONTERE'V 2 .... hardtop. Tinted windshield, radio, healer. Whitewalls, 14,- 84 3/94. 41,300. ' 1962 COMET f'door. or00n. ALyitnO^r. itindMrd trttion. fi.OVV VAN CAMP CHEVY IILFORO MU i Economy Loti Specialsl icroM from main ihoi 1959 PONTIAC lull prht 1958 CHEVY -convertlhl* 195/ PONTIAC Hardtop .... FORD '/i-loft pickup 1959 FORD Sedan 19,5/ CHEVY Convartibl* Bus, citan 1958 LINCOLN, Real nl I960 FALCON Wagon >49/ ALL THESE CARS CAN PURCHASED WITH NO MONEY DOWN I Grand Opening LLOYD'S Showroom 280 S. SAGINAW FE 8-0488 VILLAGE RAMBLER'S SPECIAL PURCHASE 32 '64 Factory Executive Cars LOOK AT THESE ' AMERICAN 2 ond 4 Drs. Aulomatl $1596 Classic 6's Aiiiomaiif, irantmisiinn, red heater, wlhdihltld washers, ( equippad, $1895, Ambassador V8's Equipped with automatic Irene-mission, (ransisibr rad' ' “brake*. lndM„,„, blljty group. $2296 VILLAGE RAMBLER 1964 RAMBLER Close-Out BILL SPENCE for Thot Rambler! Brand New 1964 Rambler Compare all claims Then get more for less VILLAGE RAMBLER We wpn't be undersold ' Nothing Down-Special Finance Ploh $49.71 $li.90 wk. $L66 Also FREE Fringe Benafifi To save ypu $ alter the Sale AvaliabI* only at . VILLAGE RAMBLER 4 S, WOODWARD, B'H, full pi I >588 y glide, power steering, radio, heal--1930; er. Aiure aqua finish with —‘-‘-' Ing trim. Only $2,»5, Easy BOB BORST Llncoln-Marcury BIRMINGHAM ' WILSON PONJIAC-CADILLAC 0 N.- Woodward Ml 4 •Tlrmlngham, Michigan CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, ilte with red leather Interior, irp 1-owner car, Jow mileage CADILLAC 1943, <-wlndow, blue power, faetbry _________ Matching Interior, low mileage, S WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Ml 4-1936 Birmingham, Michigan f944 CADIL'DkC COUPE _____________VILLE. ........ with air. OR 3-4979. 1954 CHIvy, GOOD TIRES; GOOD transportation, $75. 451-3155: 1955 CHEVY ___ .............. glide. S150. MA 4-5584, 1957 CHEVY 4, STANDARD SHTFT, _____ _ 3-7541. H. Riggins, dealer. 957 CHEVY CONVEREIBLE, NEW .... tires, power packed, l.. gbod condition, 1400. EM 3-4450. T958 CHEVY, 1940 I ' ' stick. Owner, FE 2-1842.. 1958 CHEVY V8. AUTOaAa'TIC, E>(-tra clean throughout! Payments, of ■$7.10 per week with no mor--down. ColII Mr. Johnson. MA 2404, Haskins Chevy. TEL-A41UR0N AUTO A NEW NAME CALL FE 8-9661 TODAY! SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICKv 52 S. MAIN, ROCHESTER OL T-81J3- ‘ ing trim, only $2,295. Easy terms PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIR-MINGHAM, Ml 4-27M,^ ?43*“C 6~R V E T T E, ENOINI^ER' owned. Exc. White. 2 topi, a ' 1-758-4n4, warren. 1943 CHEVY'COkfvglitiBLE white fopi Power steering and brakes, 409 ENGINEI $2,395. , Homei^ Hicjht PONTIAC BUICK CHEVROLET lA 0-2528 ■ Oxford, _Mlchlgan 943 CORVXiR COUPE. AUTOMATIC transmission, wbItaWalls, black finish with fawn Inferior. Only $1,395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET- CO„ 1000 S. WOOD- ----- birmi;4gham WARD Ml 4'2735.__,____________ 1944"'CORVAIR MO)IZA COUPE' Powergilde, radio, heater, white-walls. 3,500 actual miles. $addle tan finish. New-car guarantee — Only $1,995. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO„ 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM **' 4-2735. HAUPT DEMO • SALE factory offers, sunfire red finish, white Top, White leather. Interiorl Full power, this one else has very low mileage I 944 PONTIAC Cetallna 4-door 'dan, power steering, brakes, a.^ matic transmission, whitewalls, very low mileage! 1944 PONTIAC Bonneville Coupe, a Ing and brakbs. Whitewalls., 1944 PONTIAC Tempest st W-M1LEAGE CARS! Haupt- Pontiac VU5; _nd' MA 5i>6 MARVEL 351 Oakland Ave. FE 8 4079 159 T-BIRD, RADIO," HEATER, Automatic transmission, full power and air condillonlng, >1,295 full VILLAGE' RAMBLER S. Woociward, Birmingham 959 THUNDERBIR steering and brak< 1963 Rambler, powe RAMBLER CLOSE-OUT SALE! On the Models of Your Choice 50 Cars in Stock Easy Financing, Bank 940 FALCON .STATION WAGON, AUTOMATIC tRANSMISSION, RADIO,-HEATER, WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Payments ...... See Mr. Pa ' s at Harold Turner QUALITY SPEAKS New-Car Trades Easy financing, bank rates 63 FORD convertible, like new i priced at only $2299. 63 RAMBLER, V-8 engine w automatic transmission, on $2)95. 52 CHEVY Impala 2-door, V-8 « 1941 PONTIAC Ventura 2-door hard-1J59 °CAO)L*LAC,''’eoube Deville,- has- . . choice usra cars . ‘ SUPERIOR RaMBcER 550 Oakland FE 5-9421 Go Where and When You Want To: , GMG HANDY, VAN-Highway Sleeper ()' BY DAY The Very'Best BY NIGHT Complete Riding comfort for the Way io See Fold-A-Way Sleeping whole .family ’TheUvS.A. Beds and Bijnks RESTLESS? THIRSTY? . . .Move back to the roomy living area and relax. '.There is Water at the sink. •BORED?. .Curl up with a book, or the/dinette table is ready for a game of • cards. , , TIRED? . ...... .Lie down and relax on the sofa. HUNGRY? ..... .Go to the Refrigerotor for a shack. Here is, the absolute ultimate in family traveling comfort. The very latest design in family style camping. Have fun oy/ay from home and travel the easy way in a GMC HAND.Y VAN. (").GMC Handy Van (Specifications) 7:o6xf) ^Pty nrM KAodel G1001 /-Tone Finish FOW-R-Flo Transmission 5 cylinder engina S5 amp'Alternator Rear.Door Glass Right hand cargo c Radio Chrome Bumper Cigarette Lighter Right Hand'visor Inside Mirror Bostrum Drivers seat Heavy Duty Battery $4,362.83 »"® ®c*®8* Factory branch'' 726 0aklpnd ' FE5-94'85^ 'LVm' g/f- Ah L i'» 'hj‘ 'jAfr'jr,I?,‘ A, i J \ j A i“V •iri^ If' ' 1 ,>y l> 13 !' iJ* '' A ' <€i 0 N«w t)Ai UmiI Can 10* I Ntw aiHl Um«I Carf ^ 10* jpooB tufjPfOf' tMi fONriAC. powfa, vaiv AtilojmUt «ii(i Kvlth *11 I tinitn iiitHii 1*1 w iipituul* tshmiiufiiNu mt I ' 't* " • ^ M -SPECIAI,- rilK I'ONriAC’ 1»HKSS. Wiq)NKSt)AV. .11 LV 23. 10(11 ^'Coopt^r 'Motora i'^6o contiac .'11/1 (1ui« PKtylim hlnitiy KonnSVlUn VlilfO ‘ »M PI VMOWM V«, pgi l POlAl «r. mr cunliltionxi. luni unwi. llto or will «nll lor p(ltU.'l*M I'OKI ' c lim pick uf --------- —' ............... I SkrtIP, liealei, ^MIp kPil PyP'implK lrpn»(niytioh, po *1 biakpt pnp ppwac •(Mrinii < luit'k tpw ot til* r........- -■ in h«i. Prictit riBhl *1: $1395 PONTIAC m« PON 11 Ac k Good Cnr^ (it ; p pT AIT’ lowoil Prinsl, I n Lj i1 L ,,v„, ....: . STOBF K4iA R VHiLi Ml, Cldmem St M (lAkiDMil Ay* , p k4P/*i (I 3 /V5.1 ■ SUBURBAN OLDS "Birminghbra Trades" 100°i WRITTEN .GUARANTEE Every car listed corries I this fluoronlea. Take 1 llie guesswork out of 1 buying, Get one of our , Certified Uied ebrsi | Bank rates. , 1 1963 Olds "88" Cnnvartihla, rad, wbjia tnn, It rj3=i "ka n«w und.i'andy lo go, 1962 Olds Storfire 1 mnin, Ilka 'all in* »«y, wily *«4»S. 1963 OLDS "98" HnfdiiMr afluindnd *lih Juli gawai', air (ionflllinning, (it tuna llnikb wilh i(i*lrtiitlg mlaiigr. Vataiion kiiadal, 1959 OLDS Dynamic "88" 3 rtwir harrtliip, with aiitomallc, powar ktaarmu anb brakai, win-gpwk, Inal Pna ownerl 1960 PLYMOUTH ■ Belvedere 4>DMr. Swart, aulei4atic, laeia and trgalar, power. Only. f6*S,' 1^60 OLDS Super 4'Boor gpwar siaanno and brakal, wiiiiawaiiM Kaady To goi 1,963 OLDS Coupe ' yvilh V 6 engine, aulomalli,, faain, nualar, whilewallt, baaulllui me. lalllC green. Only |l.l*i 1961 BUICK. Special 4.Doof with v.| engine, aglgmallt, radio, healer, wtrllewalu. II,3*6. 1964 pids "98"$ Haminpi and timvajUblai. New tar warranty Irom IJW5. 1963 OLDS 2-Door Hardiop, Dyliamic "U", automat If, radln, whiiawaiik, pawerl All vinyl Irderlarl VACATION SPECIALS-' Over SO Used Cars to Choose From 2 Year Wqrranty SEE BOB MARTIN, STUB STUBBLEFIELD 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485. Naw f|a4 Um< Can 1M l*» ' PONTIAC. (ATAIINA CON vMllkl* a* (ri|M)w»i «lUk. Milk i Naw and l»«ad Cart 1O0lNaw and UiadvCan 10* •a^foaiiAC (AT/tuNA founii, p(a«i™lp «k»t, iNtw*/ (l••Fllla. mi- ::zn, .rz"; I LUCKY AUTO SALES 1*1 «n« IIM I. lAWnAW P» 4 Ml* or TB lAcmt pp*n IP loii ‘whii* iti |«tl TpMPeST'H-*MAN«. EXCPU-(•nl cpnimipn. Hppip llsalpr. Naw AiliMranimiMmtii g‘'CT ■* "Solid (4 th« lulip PI Ihlk l««l nciNNY rpim*i willi inaliTimu iiMi bippk Inlarim omT iIppp pii* iiI ( ainallnu lull III* 1*1 lor your iiiiil yunimot vaaiion, hiiy i|. Ipr iipiI $1/1/ waAkly ami any oifl c*i i.*n inak* down paymant Coll Mi R*l* nadil copidipplpr, « Mflhogdnj/"^ iiiNUTiinu ilrli (l**p all* III t*i Ipr your iiiltH ly II . for iiisl, any,Old c*i cm It 6*11 Ml, B«U LLOYD'S I imoln W*KMiy Coin*l Now Locotion \ 1250 Odkkiml Ave. j to s ;**,i ^ '62 Bonneville ..........^yy.sr whU w^iu, AUmt MN# n0w, «ow BOB BORST BUY ' With No Money Down No Credit Problems Spot. Delivery! ‘H ewick, «ul,om*iii •S/Ponine, '» Ch*yy 'S* Cn»vy lmp«l» '61 Pontine, *uto. »h»rp '61 «#reury Mpnl*r»y • ‘61 Rulek waeon, pow«r , '63 Chkvy w««on ,, . , '63 Pord Coonlry Sadnn '63 C«t*lln*. 3 dwr linrdlol) '64 lmp«l« J door hkidiop '63 AVanll '64 Oldl surfir* '64 Corv»H», 4 ipf»0'’Al‘„!llii* eiPiiomy ip6(ia| Only *6*6 b«»y, whll*.|pp I3»lf te# »43 , l*lini. PATiedtON 1 lieVHOI OT j|*6i PONIIAI. CiHANil PRIX, SAD, VlHWINSMiM^^KI'Vj^W 1*63 PONTIAC CATAIINA, * nOOH ........Ull i.HIW«l. i 16.000 Wll*4, *l,/(0, Ml $$$//, *63 PONTIAC'CATAUNA CON v«rliW*. Pow»r •Iporlno and' pow ar brakat, akcaiiani cundiilon, II. *50, F8'4-8/5l, 1962 Pontiac Bomteyille Sporti I Maulllul I ilop. ppw ........................ ptiwai 6la*i liiu and ’liiakai, aulomalli lianii nilNilpn A unt uwnar willi I ii a iniiaauai $2295 RuSs Johnson PONTIAC, 1*63, I S MANS, iOUPP, lai black llnltii and m«lehino radio, wbiiawaii llrai, avlamailc Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTIIO«l/rP VW BPAI ON ' ( Mila North 0l Miraela Mila I76| S lalaoiaph l-R 6 4631 1*63 PONTIAC *PASSBNOfH WAQ op, loadad, 13,646, OR .1 3736. DEAL lA^ITH Hough ten & Son Oldsmobile GMC Rombler lOCHISTPR 01 l'«76l BIRMINGHAM ■TRADES . 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VILLAGE RAMBLER 1*63 RAMRl ER CI.A6SIC, 4 000R. by owner OR 3 1746^ 1*61 RAMRl ER 3 DOOR WITH AU ictmaiic, alitrosi iik* naw, no mon, r,6A*^?.kk CREDIT MEN ON DUTY AT ^ALL TIMES‘TO O.K. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Phone 338-4088 ..-x ... ■■ ; ■■ ■ ■ ' • ■■ . ■ ■ ‘ - OPEN DAILY 9 A M- TO 9 P.M. - SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M,\ ►o t A'! ii>!/ F■ li■''1 we. 1 , ,/■ /Iy ./-At d/// Cornier -M,*59 a.f- Elizabeth Lake' Roa( 'i I A ' —LiTf \ TIIK I'ONTlXc IMIKHS, WKDNKSDAV. .K’l-V Ti\ IlKU —Television Programs— PMOrami fu|nlihtdl by iHytloni lliftd In thli column ort aubjoet to ehono* without notico. Channtl a-VyjOK-TV Chqi»n>l4~WWJ TV ChonntI 7-WXYMV Chonn*l O-CKlW-.yy Chonn»l 56- WTV8 TONWIIT liOOdHONewa (7) Movie: "Men of T©*> «i" UM2) ftobert Stock, It rode rick C'rawford. Journallata aeiU to (he alate In the im era. (») Yogi Bear (M) Mythology •iM (S) (4) Newa (7) (Color) Newa, Sporti (0) Interpol Calliigj Drowning la Inveatl-ghied. (M) At Ihhuo 7;M (2) Baaeball; Detroit va. Boaton ^ (4) Opinion (7) Have Gun, Will Travel Paladin findi hla client la a fraud (9) Lock Up Araonlat la sent to Jail for murder, / (M) Portrait of Japan 7:N (4) (Color) Vlrgnlan ^ Con artlat triM to bilk proapector. (7) Oule and'narrlet Nelaon family lenda a . hand. (9) Movie: "RMnance on the High Seaa'* (194» Jack Carson, Dorla Day, Jania Paige. Slngcjr wins a free cruise to the tropics. (M) Circus 9:99 (7) Patty Duke Patty decldM to Im^ prove herself. (M) People and Politics 1:99 (7) Farmer's Daughter Katy tries to help Insecure young prince. 9;N (4) Espionage Because'trial of African politician would embarrass British gov-ernment, an Inlelll-g«Ke agent la fired,: then duped Into help-/ Ing him escape. (V) Ben Casey Nursery school teacher hides drinking prob-lem until one day an accident forces her Into hospital, thus cutting off her supply. (9) Camera West . A look at Vancouver artist-poet Bi)I Bissett. 9:i9 (9) Newsmagatlne 9:M (2) Baseball Scoreboard (Time Is approximate) 19:19 (2) Rudy Vallee Special guests are Allan Sherman and the Four Seasons. (4) Eleventh Hour Dr. Stark with some Inebriated people In a comedy sequence. (7) Sunset Strip Spencer investigates ' Skid Row burglaries. (9) Dr. Hudson's Journal 19:39 (9) Mary Morgan 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) News 11:25 (9) Movie: "Higher and Higher" Frank Sinatra 11:99 (2) Steve Allen AuUknt from Oak Park, Mich., Robert C. W. Ettlnger, will discuss bhi hook "Prospect of • Immortality” (4) (Color) Tonight \ (7) Movie: "My Son, My ^ • Son” (1940) Madeleine ' Carroll, Brian Aherne. A man's str,uggle against slum life. 1:99 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Best Of Groucho (9) Featuretla (7) After HourK 1:39 (2) (4) News X THURSDAY MORNING 9:15 (2) MeditaUons Religion 9:29 (2) On the Farm Front 9:39 (2) Summer Semester Modern Comparative Drama; Giraudoux’s “On-dine" is discussed. 1 (4) Classroom (7) Funews Cartoons 7:99 (2) News, Editorial (4) Today ' Prince Abdul Rahman, prime minister of Malaysia, Arnold S, Treback, administrator of National Legal Aid Defence Association, are scheduled guests. (7) Johnny Ginger Comedy 7:10 (2) Fun Parade Cartoons 7:45 (2) King and Odie Cartoons -t < 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo The Captain talks about "Nt crafts.^xhibits antique 'tools. I (7) Big Theater 8:30-(7) Movie: “Men in Her Diary” (1945) Peggy Ryan, Jon Hall 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go. TV FeatMras Seasons Greeted By Unllod Prois InternntlonaL BANKItALL, 7:00 p,m, (2) Tigers meet lied flox in Boston's Fenway Park. i VIRGINIAN, 7;.'I0 p.m. (4) Pat O'Brien iwtrays u d |nm ■ ' ■ >«' gullible and /newly rich man who is ol)Jeet of gold-digger's , attention. BKN CASEY, 9;00 p,m. (7) Nursery school teacher m a n a g e I to keep drinking prohiem secret until accident puts her hi hospital, cutting off suiqiiy, RUDY VALLKE, 10:00 p.m. (2) Guests include satirist Allan Sherman, rock 'n' roll group The P’our Seasons, folk singer Judy Henske. FltJtgcrald, ^Simny Tufls (4) Living Women ^ (9) Kiddy Korner Kar-toons 9:99 (9) Jack La Lanne Exercise 19:99 (4) Make Room (or Daddy Mr. ,Chou's Oriental reserve Is strained when daughten meets Williams family. (7) Girl Talk Panelists are Arlene Dahl, Anita Colby, Florence D1 Santis (9) Robin Hood Son of one of men of Sherwood Is injured. 19:39 (2) I Love Lucy Ricky takes Over purse « strings from Lucy, cuts her allowance. (4) (Color) Word for . Word (7) Price Is Right Celebrity guest Is Gretch-en Wyler. (9) Movie: "Mark of (ilaln” Sally Gray, Brib Portman 19:55 (4) News 11:99 (2) McCoys Little Luke Is required to visit haunted house as part of club initiation. (4) Ck>ncentration (7) Get the Message Lauren Bacall, Roddy Me-Dowall. Wally Cox. Ann Sheridan are on panel. Il:39 (2) pete and Gladys Gladys causes Pete gr when' she subs for French dancer. (4) (Color) Jeopardy (7) Missing Unks Barbara Feldon, Tom Poston, Milt Kamen are ' panelists. THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Father Knows Best Betty's romance suffers when Jim, neighbor start feuding. (9) Mile, de Paris 12:'2S (2) News (2:99 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Ck)lor) Truth or Com sequences * (7) Ernie Ford Ernie sings “I Don't Want to Be.Hu|t Anymore," accompanied by Jack Fas-1:108(0 orchestra. (9) People in Conflict 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) December Bride Redecorated home-^waits Lily, gang. (4) News (7) Movie "I Was an Adventuress'' (1940) Richard Greene (9) Movie ‘The Go Getters” (1937) Brent, Anita |s Almanac Today Turns Make a 1:10 1:15 (4) To| 1:30 (2) As the (4) (Color) Deal . 1:55 (4) News 2:00 (2) Password ^ < Celebrity ' guests include^ Skitch Henderson. (4) D)rettn Young Second honeymoon plunnwl by Jcb and Amy . Stewart. 2:29 (7) News 2:90 (2) Hennescy Dr. Shafer rues rctujn of his old nemesis. Dr. Blair. (4) Doctors (7t-Day In Court Widow sues husband's boss, charging h© caused ..spouse mental anguish, 2:55 (7) News , 3:09 (2) To Tell the Truth Panelists Include Barry Nelson, Orson Bean, Georgia Brown. (4) Another World (7), General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:39 (2) EMge of Night (4) (Color) You Don't Say! Jack Narz, brother of Tom Kennedy, hosts Tom, Peter Lawford, Pat Car-roll, Abby Dalton. (7) ()ueen for a Day Va/saHon TIitiaL. (9) Vacation TlmeJ-Chil-dren 4:99 (2) Secret StorAi (4) Match Game . Carol Lawrence, Abe Burrows are celebrity panel members. ' (7) Trailmaster Concertina-playing wanderer joint Flint, who is escorting family to outpost settlement. 4:25 (4) News , 6 4:39 (2) Movie "Angels Wash Their Faces” (1959) Ann Sheri-dan, Billy Halop. (4) Mickey Mouse Oub (9) Hercules 5:09 (4) (Color) George Pier-/ rot . ' “Cruising the I.x)wer Mississippi” with James Metcalf as narrator. (7) Movie "Invasion of the Saucec Men” (1957) Steve Terrell, Gloria Castillo, Frank Gorshin (9) Captain Jolly and Popeye 5:15 (56) Industry on-Parade 1:30 (56) What's New -i- Chil-dren 5:55 (2) Weather (4) Carol Duvall Employe Skike at Detroit Dailies in Its Ninth Day DETROIT (AP) -Tbe strike at Detroit’s two daily newspapers moved into its ninth day today. No negotiations were scheduled. Mediators said both sides were on call. w ★ w The Detrblt News and Detroit Free Press have been doped since a sirlke called by the International Printing Pressmen’s Union Local is and the affiliated Plate and Paper Handlers Union Local 10 the Uteht of July 13 over terms of ne^ontracts. If P4rty Wins ^ontrol A' . ' . ,1 1) 111 Dem Eyes Slate House Speaker Post LANSING (AP) - A veteran Democratic legislator from the Upper, Peniiistiia today became hla party's first luuwuuced "cmidlilMte" for 8|Hiuker of the Ilouae—ln enso Democrata win control of tho chamber in the Novemimr ele<'(Jon. "I definitely will seek the speaker's |H«t If the Demoernts win'tho majority of seats In tlio lloUHO," declared lli'p, Dorn Inlc JacotaUtl, D-Negaiiiied, "[ feel (hilt I am qualified on the basis of my experience in the legislature and as Democratic caucus cliainuNu lu the )tt»l twu years," Many legislators, Democrats ami llepuhileans alike, expect Ipittrodrata may gain contrrd of one OP hoth liouses this year as a result of leglslnllve reapixtr-tionmenf, at present but one "guesstimate" by 'Democrats Is that they can take «fs many as fit) or 111 of the 110 house seats; If all DemiHoaltc'candldateH were l(> repeat the sUcci'ss ot Democratic Secretary of Slate .famaili Hare In th© 1962 election -an admittedly^ unlikely (level opment they would take (in of the new House districts. HOLD EDGE NOW H((pu1)l leans liold a 56-52 edge Italian Prinde Is Married to French Princess ►SINTRA, Portugal OPi Ama-(leo Duke of Aosta, second in line of succe.ssion to the defunct Italian throne, was married today to Princess CI a ud 0 of France, a daughter of tho French pretender. Europe's foremost royal claimants atlendcditlie wtiidlng of the 20-year-old couple In the 16th Century church of Sao Ro-dro In this mountainside resort northwest of Lisbon. Among the guests were ex-King Umberto of Italy, his only son. Prince Vittorio Bmamade; Don Juan de Bourbon, the Spanish pretender, and his son. Prince Juan Carlos. ' The Count of P^rls, tli,e French pretender, escorted hla daughter to the altar. Open Hearings on Gas Service NEW OHLEAN,S (UPI) ~ Police today examined (lie car (hut belonged to Dr. Mary .Sherman, an Internatlonnlly knovyp cancer research scientist who was stabbed to death and set afire in her fashionable apartment. Officers said several Items had been found near the car — Including n small tear gas-fjr-ing "pen" ■ - but were not sure whether these, were connected with the slaying. Dr. 8 her man, 51, was a widow and lived alone. Her body was found early yesterday by firemen summoned when neighbors saw smoke pouring from the apartment. She had been stabbed eight times and her body set afire. 2 Firmt Seek Rights to Supply UP Sectioni LANSING (AP) - Two utility companies were to present opening arguments today in a dis-put which could involve " millions of dollars, affect hundreds of thousands of hou.sehoIds and the economic future of the Upper Peninsula," said Peter Spi-vak, chairman of the Michigan Public Service Commission. Michigan Consolidated Gas ,Co. and Northern Natural Gas Ck). of (^naha are seeking supply natural gas to sections of the western Upper Peninsula, Including two Iron mining companies. Included in the potential service area are- the six iron ore pelletizing plants Of/the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Ore Co. and one owned by the M.A. Hanna Mining Co. Spivak said the area Is the scene of a struggle "seldom seen anymore east of .the Mississippi—a struggle between natural gas and oil interests to serve a wide area.^’ APPLIED TO COMMISSION |Jichigan Consolidated applied to the. commission July 10 for permission to serve 38 cities, townships and villages in the western part of the peninsula. It already has an agreement to sell gas to the iron ore pelletizing plant of the Hanna Mining Co. at Raridville, said Executive Vice President Hugh Daly. Northern -applied April 2 the Federal Power Commission for authorization to provide initial natural gas service to the area, a spokesman said. Northern is asking the public service commission to be admitted as ^‘a party of interest” in the procewiings; Northern said it has worked for two years toward providing service in the area and is ready to taild $35 million In facilities—n« all of them In Michigan—to bring gas 'to the state. rograms- WJR(760) VyXYZfl 270) CKIW(80P) WWJ(950) WCAR(113dKWPON(t 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-F TONtOHT «i(W-CKLW, N«WI WJR, N«WI WWJ, N«w$ WXYZ, N«w« WJBK, Newt, ■ 1 Robert E. Lee>^ WCAR, Newt, Joe BscereMa WPON, I I, Commentary, VJ, SjfKM -WJR, VJ, Bull e:10-WJR, Butlnait, Newt :88 (2) Movie:' “Easy Comei . Easy Go” (1947) Barry XXXXvX WXYZ, ---------- WPON, Sportt, Mutic WHFt. AAvtic tor Modemt aitMNJX. Lowell Ttiomet WWJ,; 3 Star Exh-v { VVXY4 Nawt, SpMe 'nw-WXVZ, Ed Morgan WPON, Newt, Bob Greeno WWJ-Newt, Emphatit WCAR, Boyd Carandar WJBK, JacK ....____ CKLW, Terry Knight tilS-WXYZ, Ruit Knlgl 1t:0»-WJR, Kaleidoscope 1I;00-WCAR, News, Sportt WWJ, News Final WJR. News. Sports Uiia-WCAR, 1.... IliU-WCAR, Boyd Corender t1i3»-WWJ, Music $( CKLW, Music 'f ■ THURSDAY MORNING , «:S»-WJR, Voice of AgrI. WWJ, Nows, Roberts •*'“.YZ, wolf, Music, Newi Examine Car of Slain Doctor Woman Scientist Kilted in Apartment Police said she was killed Monday night or early yesterday. * FOROCD OPEN The front door of the apartment had been forced open, and the doctor's purse was looted. Police said her killer tried to open a Jewelry case. The apartment had been burglarized several times in (he past few years. She had a burglar alarm Installed, but it was apparently not working at the time of the slaying- Dr. Sherman directed the Ochsner Foundation Hospital’s bone pathology laboratory, and she was considered an expert 1 bone cancer. Dr. Sherman’s maid, who last saw her Monday afternoon, said she was in good spirits, and said A woman friend might arrive for a visit. Dr. Sherman, a native of Evanston, III, is survived'^ her father, Walter A. Stults, a Denton, Tex., -professor of voice, and a sister in Chicago. Deputy Shoots Inmate Holding Homemade Gun STANTON (AP )-A Montcalm County Sheriff’s deputy shot end wounded a prisoner Tueis-day after, officers said, the prisoner pulled a: homemade zip gun on two other deputies. James Dickerson, 23, bf Mor-ley was shot, deputies said. He was sentenced Monday to three to four years for felonious Deputies said Dickerson was being removed from his cell for transfer" to Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson when he dr^w a homemade gun and ordered Deputies Harold Guthrie and Henry Bruinooge to stand against a wall. Officers sAid Deputy Tony Morlock saw the incident and fired one shot at Dickerson through a half-open doorway. Dickerson was hospitalized in Greenville. Divorces :. from Charles D Xffi'’B.“frimwniii -....... »n“l.''fr!.'rca'-M!-'«r-- Stephanie J. from Allen J. Spar ...—^ " -----*------ W. ! iieen w. irom, naroio i. lecx. Howard L. from Juanita 0. Watkins Gerald E. trPm Maxine S. Whiting Juanita from Venancio' R. Gomez Harriet from Floyd B. Ward Tlio pniaent hmiHo Niirakor, Alllaon Green, H KiligNlon, pre-(IIcIihI after making his own analyaiH of voting palWiiH In (he new dlatriels tliut Hepqtill. cans'would win no inore Ihap^ or 52 House seats. Democrats have (tontrolled the House only twice- In 193.1 and 1937, during the time when Michigan’s legiaiaturc met only once every two years, PARTY CONTROL Each chamber of the lesIsiA-ture is organized, in terms of leaderslilp and committee ap. polntments, by the party which holds majority control, Green, has said the possibility that Democrats may gain control was a major factor In hl.s decision to seek the Hepubitcan nomination for lieutenant governor this year. JacohettI, ii 44-year’Old repre-sentnllve for the United Steel Workers, has been In the House since 1964 and has served on the committees on education and conservation, among others. Other potential candidates among Democrats for the speaker’s post include Reps. Joseph Kowalski, D-Detroit, the present house minority leader, and George Montgomery, D-Detrolt, Hot Sun Scorches Italy for Ninth Day ROME (At») - A blazing sun scorched much of Italy today carrying the country’s hottest heat wave in 30 years into Its ninth day.’ Lightning killed five persons yesterday in various parts of Southern Italy. Four other persons died of sunstroke, The temperature in Rome rbse to tlie 90s. Designer Says Paris Great —for Making Women Ugly By EARL WHJIQN NEW VOHK - I guess Charles-de Gaulle will hate me (or this, ,,,. hill "Mr Blacl(w#ll," ilie lIollywiKiil ami NeW York designer, says lliat A|iiericmi women Imve smorioncil uj» and "quil buying' (hose ugly Unris 'origlnnls'.,. tliey don't need ParliS any more,” "Those I’arls deiiigners," .says tills revolu- WlLSON tioimry couturier, "stand hack After completing u criiotion and soy, 'I'm h geiillisl Ixxik how ugly i con make a beautiful girl look!’ ” "Mr, Blotjkwell" - first name RIehajrd, formerly an aclor wllli "Tlie Dead End Kids" -Hiiortill Imidly wlicn I askOd him about the new I'arls "IreiidN" If the liuyers stayed away from Paris, we’d he |l)citer off," lie insisted. "More and more vye’re buying less and less. What do I’arla dt’slgiicis know about American women'/" One tiling lie knows, lie says. Is that average middle-aged women should not expose their knees In extremely short dresses , . . "and no woman sliould buy a dress she doesn't like Just because somebody else says she loojks good in It." "American women will never go for the bare bosom bathing suits becausq tho American bosom needs help. That's why we make wtdl-deslgned dresses," he says. Jayne Mansfield and* "Mr. Blackwell" tiffed, he says, "be-cause Mansfield exposed herself in a crude, blatant way In my dresses, .She wonld always wind up with her dress falling off of tier because slie tlghlen^ it' like a girdle. She would get more publli'lty undresswi in one of. my dresses than when she was (IroHseu It it, "I a.skwl her to take my nnme off the crqdlls In jier picture 'Promises, Promises,’ bccau.so she did that to my dresses." It’s his opinion that most sex symbols prack up because they lot the sox Image become too personal. \ "I have dresscKi Jane Russell a long time, and she Is an exception who has been able to balance her llfe/^y not bringing the sex symbol thing into her home life." "Mr. Blackwell" Is a little indignant about people protesting that he sliouldn’t make mink-llnod garments because the minks have to bo killed. "That’s like saying you shouldn't cat ail day long," he exclaims. "That's about as ridiculous as hare-bosomed swim suits ... or Paris creations in America." THE MIDNIGHT EARL . Pat Boone’s company will sell to Sears Roebuck 100,000 pictures of — .The Beatles ... Red Skelton’s Las V/egas stint set an attendance record — they had to turn down more reservations than they could accept. . . The Actors Studio has a big-money H'wood offer for "Blues (or Mr. Charlie," but author James Baldwin prefers to sell it — at a third the price — to some friends: he thinks they’d keep it "more honest” ../. Gallagher’s sells) a drink called a "Bloody Shame" — it’s like a Bloody Mary, but without liquor .... The I.«ttermcn singing trio doesn’t appear In the Latin V* finale — they won’t go onstage with nudes .... A Brooklyn realtor’s prospectus for a house boasts: "Neighbors Include Arthur Miller, Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom” ... Comic Don Rickies says some of his teen-age costars In "Bikini Beach" were so young they didn’t get salaries — thAy got allowances. Frankie Avalon mentioned that many young singers came from Philadelphia — Pabipn, Chubby Checker and himself, among many others. He says jokingly.it got so that when a parent meets another parent, they don’t say, "How’s your son?" Instead they ask, “How’s your boy’s record gOing?" TODAY’S BEST LAUGH; 'Taffy Tuttle says she's anxious to meet a fellow with the same interests slje has - like getting married. , jl (Tht Hall SymUeaM, hn:,) 1 2 3 r" JT r: 7 ir r 11 12 13 u IB IB rr IB 20 21 sr 2T 26 32 3B 3B 4G ♦f 48 i\ 63 BT 67 66 bll/ 60 61 62 _22 ACROSS 1 Aromatic spice Aromati -----leaf 8 Turkey dressing spice ^ 12 Awry 13 Feminine appellation 14 Own frankly 15 Spice allied fo wormwood 17 Skeletal part 18 Peculiarity , " 19 Celtic soldiers 21 Elongated fish 23 Compass point 24 Expensive 27 Elderly ' 29 Limb 32 Mischief maker ‘ 33 Geometric ratio ' 34 Medieval poem 35 Southern general 36 Copulative verb 38 Hollands 39 Light (Latin) * 40 Bewildered 42 Table condiment 43 Feminine nickname 44 Adkaran Indian 46 —— bread 49 Slouan Indian 53 Malarial fever 54 Goes into eggnog 5 Sack ,6 Fuss 7 Northern soldier 8 Sword . ■' 9 Shakespearean village 10 Went 11 Female sheep 16 Consumed 20 Finis ^ 22 Infold 24 Pickle flavor 25 Australian bird 26 Top ^ 28 Flout 30'Sora jf 31 Candy flavoring 37 Auricle 40 Arab name 41 English game 42 Indian spice 43 Meat . 45 Eternity 46 Celt 47 Taj Mahal site 48 Dwarf animal 50 Chinese port 51 Cloth triangle 52 Biblical patriarch 55 Anger 56 Siesta Twanty yiara on tha alr-twa/va yaars on TV! Join tha Nataona for top c'omadyt 7:30 P.M. TONIGHT ON CHANNEL 7 - e upoiitored hy CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY " NEED CASH SZ, »2,200 ItBptiy $18.57 q Month REPAYMENT SCHEDULE I 111.57 Mu. 53.000. 00 I 525.33 Mo. 55.000. 00 I 542.30 Mo. 510.000. 00 I 504.35 Mo. Froo Privoto Homo Coniul Southfield Mortgage Co. Stoto-Wido FE4’4300 272-5490 9 a. m. to 6 p.nr. UNLIMITED SOFT WATER / RUST-FREE SO m W MONTH W« J^rvlcw All MdkM' WkTER KIHG son WATEB CO. Diviiion of Mtch. Hooting, Inc. 88 Nawbany St. . FI 8-M3 BIG SAVINGS! ’1963 Modala Molt Oo’^l • RANGES • WASHERS • REFRIGERATORS 1 ' u i I 'K -d ■ ■ ' ' , ' ; ■ ,•*<>. .d I. Ili ' si' >, , . , ■,■ ll 'niK i’oN'i’iAv riiKss,, VvKi)Ni<;jii)l\lVI jnsN’Vj. nmi 'dr .i(S:£ :.;■ 1*:: 1 , Chicago WatHen Rids Prison of beatH Row CHK’ACiO lAI'l Coml«‘tmu!(r men in C(Mik (.'imniy {nil unwI to live In n dcnth row niKhtnwin* oi li'K ifons, hysU'iiii niul hend-buuUng guards. '' Today they have nothing but praiae for Wardyii JaoK H Johnson, who liaa thrown out Ihr whole death row aetiifi, part of Itie Jail, only III paees from the eloetiie eliair, "Cook County Jail la the only (lenal tnatltution hi the U S. witii carotnl punishmont that' hiia done away with Ita dealli row,' '.lohnaon told the Aaimeloled' I'rcHH TiioHdiiy In ah interview The old dealli row emptied hi III5H was a iiinxlininn sene illy eelMijoek in ihi' ilet'iK'al STKONtJ'KMOTlONS COI!ilTA(iIOUS Tension and hysleria were ooniagioiw Tlie dore: "It’s a morbid "in Ihe past the emulemneil men were treated like wild anP mals and they ncled like wild anitnals. Now they're treated like human beings and they act like hnmart lHdngs ' HIWI'KC'TKII Wltherspotin, who has eltarge of a eonvaleseent ciillhlocli housing ,111 men. la respected hy his fellow ininait's, "lie's the only person I know who can walk into a psychopath cell and calm them down," said Moore. In his spare time. Wither-apiMin pecks out shopt. stories and articles on a balierwl lyvwrlter In his tiny cell, Home of his articles have, lieen puli IJifiied and he says his autoblog' raphy Is Vlng considered hy a largo puhllshtng house, ' WltherspoorMinee was (Hit Into the old death row at hIs request, so he could work on his auto-lilography. lie soon asked to leave Vcniise the silence and pi'csence of the elecdric chair were unlwarublo. 4 Warden Jolinson, an opponsnt of what he calls, "capital- rai venge," said most wardens are reluctant to try Ms plan because they are afraid of publib opinion if a condemned man IdllB or injures a fellow Inmate, itui Johnson said the e(fese despite the fuel they're going to die." TemiMirnture eoiUrols the wear on tires. A study showwl tires wenr five times more at 1(10 degrees than at 40 degrees on turnpikes. ,L Tha IMIfad States has more I eijirs slalhmed at embassies knd Ihsn 3,700 foreign Hefvice offi-1 legations In 111 countries. NEWI / I leptio RlbUCE DTmdUSE UP TO O LBS. 1 WEEK CAPSUIMI ^IIR TO TAKE AND MOW IfflO TIVI THAN TMI POWDPWO AND IIQUIO POOD aUPPUMINT, AND COSTS tISf IN* CLUOINO CAPSULES SUITED TO tOU INDI* VIDUAUT BY Lie PHYSICIAN, M.D. NO OASTEITII OK lEKIOUtAKHY WITH MEDIC* WAY CAPl DON'T DIET-JUST lATI AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE E, SO OK 100 LIS. AND KEEP IT OPPI MEDIO-WKY 33B-920B You Can Count on I n . . . Qiialii.v (ONt*., INo Moim* ;K srj Scars' Easy Paymcnl Plan ".Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 1., ‘ ‘111 ,,vf . ,1 "S 1 kw . 1... ' .'11 i' 1^1 /' ‘11,171,/ - . 'll/ V.lL rrrrr*^/—rt: ■“■‘-rr'’ /^/ -'/.ft fm iXM. I..XX ,,l . !' Ill'- Th§ W§afh§r I'JTI) >;.t > '■>' ■,:” ■ f. I'\ ■ ' ■ 1 /' / V.li WMUtlir tWMW rtTMIII ' Fnlr, lluiiilil i I- 'll p ' '■ ' ,V '' .V ' ' , r; i -y'lfir', 'V .'I ^1 * ■ ‘'i‘ "' ' mV-'- THE VOL. IW NO. m it it it it it I^ONTIAC, MICHIGAN/\VI'VljiNK)5i|)AV. .M LV n. MMU = .W l'\(iKS T Rtttcut Workers Hunt Victims in Ohio 'Hole Svfallom Three AKRON, Ohio (AP)»A young girl. ■ pollc«> man and a college boy who both triad to raa* cue her were preaumed drowned yesterday in a tIHool deep mud hole gouged in a four-lane highway when a sew«r line coliapaed during a heavy thunderstorm. More than lOO policemen', tiremen and volunteer workers tolled through the night trying to recover bodies of the three and*the car in vrhMi the girl had been riding. Thflr Job was cemplicaled when sail ei thie ■lilf'ef ike crater kept crumbling. A sheet metal casing was construbted at the acme to lMy|owered into the hole by a teas founded by his grandfather, William 0‘Nell. OTHERS REIK^UED Rescued from the hole before It enlarged and deepened were Claudia’s mother, Velma Shidler, and a neighbor girl, 4anet Uwts, 13. They were hospitallxed with biJuries, the girls swimming and was driving down the steep hill during the rain. She said she saw the hole in the pavement, tried to swerve her compact car, but more pavement caved in under her. V Missing were Claudia Shidler, 10; Ronaid D. Rotfuck. SI, an Akron ^Mjceman for five I years; and Hugh M. O’Neil, 1^ Georgetown University sophomore and summer employe at General Tire It Rubber Cd. which O'Neil apparently was on his way to work and stopp^ to help. His wallet was found near the cave-in and his car was parked nearby with keys in the ignition. ^ Rotruck, first policeman on the acene, had climbed Into the hole on a ladder but along with O'Neil was sucked under when more water surged Into the cavity and caused additional cave-ln. SMSl Barry to Fight Measure WASHINGTON (AP) -- A ^ |M2.5-mlllion antl|K)verty bill pointed toward a liead-on clash in the Senate today between the I Jolinson' administration aiul Sen, Barry Ooldwater, the Re-publican prosidenUol nominee. The many-sided measure, denounced by Ooldwater as de-signet! chiefly to get votes in this year's election, la being pushed by Piesident Jolmson as part of his declared war on poverty. ' As Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana called the bill up for action in the Senate, the House Itutes Committee planned to resume hearings on a measure. Administration leaders were cunfldonl the cornnmtce would clear the bill for a^lun by the House, but several days of hearings were in prosiwl, Once the hill roaches the House flm>r. It will face stiff (iOP opposition. Among other things, the Senate bill would establish a Job corps to help unemployed youths obtain new skills and work ex|)«rience, finance most (»f the cost of community programs In such fields as health, welfare and vocational rehahili-tatlon, set up a new Volunteers for America Corps to Help operate various fPfoJects. provide loans and grants to low-income rural families and assist migrant tfafm families, ('RITICI2Kg HILL Goldwnler criticised the bill yestarday as "an attempt to reap political rewards from Ihc American people’s natural and humane desire to Improve the lot of our less fortunate citizens," . He was Joined by Hen. John G. I’ewer, R-Tex., in (lltng a minority report on the bill, which was approved by the ,Senate Labor Committee on July 7 hy a 134 vote. Goldwater and Tower termed Ihe measure "a hodgepodge of programs treating only Ihe results, not the causes of poverty." Reds Inciting Harlem Riots? Dozen GOP Politicians ParleyWeighs Communiit influsnee Invfitigatkd by FBI Can't Support Barry 'Now' Action By The Assotdated Press Saigon Steps Up Pressure NEW YORK, (AP) -The FBI Is probing possible Communist Influencie in the city’s racial violence, which continued throughout the night in Brooklyn’s Negro section and resulted In the critical wounding of two Negroes by police. Acting Mayor Paul R, Scre-vane said the Harlem disorders had been IncitM in part by "fringe groups, including Uie Communist party." He suggested that tke FBI agents might Investigate the source of money for some street rallies and for some of the “very Inflammatory ... aati-Americin ... and ledi- A dozen Republican pblltl-dans, htcluding Hew York^s two senators, say they can’t support GOP nominee Barry Goldwater for president—as of now. None bolted the party. None Said he would campaign for President Johnson. One prominent New York Re publican. Slate Senate Majority Uader Waller J, Mahoney, said he expected that "all Republicans will be able to support the Goldwater-Miller ticket as the campaign unfolds." HOLDING OFF Other Republicans said they are holding off support of Gold- Exilti' DBrnonstration Marraci by Rioting Most, said yesterday they might back the Arizona sens-. tor If he clarifies or revises his views. Sens. Jac6b k. Javita and ’Kenneth B. Keating of New York announced their stands in separate news conferences. water. Tliey Included Gov. John H, Reed of Maine, Rep. Silvio 0. Conte of Massachusetts, State Senate Majority Leader William WASHINGTON (AP)-Urged Mayor Theodore R. McKeldin of Baltimore, a former governor; yesterday, foreign ministers of and Rep. James G, Fulton of Western liemispHere nations Pennsylvania. - considered today what steps to take against Cuban aggression. Saboteurs Enter N. Viet Nam The FBI investigation began investigating on orders from President Johnson. Both supported , Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York for the GOP nomination, and switched to Gov, William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania when Rockefeller withdrew. ^IGON, Viet Nam un-^South Vietnamese Air Force planes are dropping sabotage teanu over Communiai North Viet Nam and ore training to extend their combat operations, the air force commamter said today. nomese “have radfr and v fOed MtlalrcrafL** * Ky said he has personalty piloted a plane over North Viet Nam and that. the raids con- Air Commodore' Nguyen Cao Ky told reporters'at Bien Hoa "We keep very low and they can’t hit us," he said. 1ST STATEMENT The rmnaikk were the Rrst Nert| Viet Nam- The latest trial reported was In April. There have, been unconfirmed reporu during the past week of stepped-up sabotage actirity by South Vietnamete agents In this form of nRnes and bombing kround the North Vietnamete ciUes of Hanoi. Vlnh, Thanh Hoa sW^Sforlts, Pages B-12, D-5. Airfield that Russian-made jets were attempting interception of the flights. He mp^ the North VieL (dflcial statement that military operations are being conducted by the Saigon government directly against North Viet Nam. The Commnaitl Radio Ha-nri repeatedly has broadcast "spy cemmaadot" captured In Bus Service Is ExterKjed Hot Weather Will Continue Pontiac Transit Will Stay Through Aug. 31 PowntQwn Temperatures 6a.m.. .73 . 11 a.m.. .89 7 a.m. . . 75 12 m. . . .91 8 a.m...78 1p.m...92 9a.m.. .83 "I heard of a demolition team that blew up a bi^e In the north last week," Ky said. “They could have gone in by land, sea or air. Which do you think is the quickest way of getting them In?" NOT-ANOTHER COUNTRY ^ U.S. advisor at the airport said: "Remember, to a lot of these young guys, North Viet Nam isn’t another country. The border doesn’t mean anything to them. It’s more like northern Viet Nam.” Meanwhile Harlem, where rioting -started iuturday night following protest rallies over the fatal shooting of a Negro boy by an off-duty pollcie officer, was relatively quiet last night. FIRE AT LOOTERS In Brooklyn’s Bedford - Stuy-vesant section police fired at looters. Dozens of stqre windows were broken. About two dozen persons were arrested. Mayor Robwt F. Wagner cut short a European vacation because of the violence. Wagher said he would look into the report of Communist influence. He said he did not believe feddral troops or the National Guard would be needed to preserve order, w * ★ Police reported a riumber of the burglaries in Harlem, the big' Negro neighborhood in Man- STATE PLATFORM Javits, who is not up for re-election this year, said he would work for a state platform along the lines proposed by Scranton forces for a national platform at the San Francisco convention. He said he hopes Goldwater will do something to enable him to’ support the national^ Ucket. Keating said he hasn’t decided if he will seek reelection this year, hut if he does it will be as an independent ^Republican. Rbckefelier has said he would support the GOP ticket. But he sharply criticized the statement on extremism Goldwater made In his speech accepting the presidential nomination. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, \pushing the United Stales re- See Akalysis, Pagif A-4. quest for action, wWamong the day’s scheduled spealm A clash of several I Cuban* with hastily • mpned police marr^ wbaV-had started out as a peaceful demonstration by more than 5,000 Cuban exile* who came here to urge action agahist the Fidel Castro regime. More than 400 metropolitan and park policemen, some on horseback and motorcycles, helped quell the disturbance which broke out when some of the marchers insisted on leaving the pijrade route to head to the Pan American Union building where the foreign ministers are. meeting. POLITICALLY SPEAKING . . Senate minority leader Everett Dirksen, R-III., has a word with Sen. Kenneth Keating, R-N.Y. (right), on Capitol Hill yesterday. Keating said he cannot support Sen. Barry Goldwatpr. "at this time," but hopes he can do so.in the future. Dirksen made Goldwater’s" nominating speech. ^ Two Cubans and a park policeman received hospital treatment. ^ 45 TREATED About 45 other Cubans were treated for cuts, bruises, exhaustion and heat prostration. Flood of Candidates Three men and qne woman, arrested on disorderly conduct. charges, were released after postibg collateral'. A dapper, mustachioed officer in his inld-31*, Ky advocated immediate bomUng of North Viet Nam. The Pontiac City Commission laist night extended the city’s agreement with Pontiac Transit C»rp. throui^ Aug. 31. Under the annual contract-agreement, Pontiac lYansit pro-videa^hus service in the city. The firm announced in May that it didn’t plan to remain in Pontiac after the most recent agreement expired at midnight June After seven days of this hot sticky stuff, the weatherman says we have to last until Friday or Saturday before relief comes. Tonight’s predicted low is 85 to 70 degrees. Tomorrow will be a steamer with the mercury hovering around *4. The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. in the downtovm area was 73. ."The time is ripe," he said. “We could strike the first day, at least. The seicond day they would have their defenses r^y, pertiaps." ' His air force recently received from the United Stktes an infusion of single-engine, propeller-driven AIE fighter-bombers, whose range is appropriate to bombing North Vietnamese tar-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3). DISPERSE GATHERINGS A few shots were fired by police to disperse upmly gatherings. But there were no Ibrge crowds, demonstrations or anything like the weekend rioting in which one man was killed and more than 100 injured. In Brooklyn; the trouble started after a Black Nationalist street rally that drew about 500 Negroes. Firecrackers exploded in the crowd and-many people scattered in panic. Redistricting plans which ties arc in the face for the 10th they have never seen such a doubly Oakland County’s state and-19th Congressional District, large candidate field. legislative and, U.S. Congres- ^jjile 78 more brought a flood of . candidates \ . \ to run .for the new posts. . foUFv^nate seats. Eight candidates of both par- County riMtion officials say Minutes All-Importa as Local Hopeful Finds While filing tabulations are still being verffied^it appears every conte^ wUri»rcpre. seated by both major ^rtjes in the Sept. 1 primary. In Miami, organizers of'thc march charged that “Castro people" infiltrated their ranks aftd were responsible for the trouble. That agreement las extended oaee already, for a month'. Last night's aetioa was the second extension. “We are doing this so that , our new city manager (Joseph ' A, Warren) will have a chance to study the situation and talk with bus company officials," said Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. In Today's Press Singa/mre Island Curfew restores wdtf after racial rioting - Sfcito Bepnomy How well has Michij^ recovered from 1959 slump? -Page B-8. - / V- ■■ Warren is nolt slated to officially assume his post until Aug. v,,-3. DECLINES RENEWAL I Pontiac 'Transit declined from renewing the agreement, for -nn-- Gther?!^ on the basis of. op-, erating losses in the pqpt. few jeersj. . ^ V XpaeUdatesBile Office-seekers in 24 area townships file petitions • Page B-10 Area News ........... B-10 Aslrolow .............C-I8 ' .... C-18 ....C-18 Bridge Comics. Markets D4 D4 Sports Theaters ........ . TV & Radio Programs B-12 Wilson, Earl ...... .. B-12 Women’s Pages ...B-l-B-4 More than 200 police moved in to quell the disturbance. They' fired more than ISO shots in the air. Bottles were thrown. Store windows were broken; By ALLEN PHiLlIPS “We were tipped before the people left here Monday morning that Communists were oUt Competition is' keen in the to^tart trqwbie, said John,Mar-new 19th Congressional District, Uno, miXeganization leadei;. In which covers the west side of Miamf. the county and extends inth snoDftuT northwest Wayne County. sui'i'UKi Announced Republican candi- , , lates James P. Dickerson, an ized to march . " ■ [land University staff aide mgton Monument to the Lincoln ^ontiac attorney Richard Memorial and back to sup^rt. D. Kiihp, will face newcomer ■ Reno Varani did not Walk quickly into the Oakland County william\W Brasheiir' w h o ®®me insisted on going on Clerk’s office yesterday. He stopped to chat and ask directions, served tl^ terms as mayor toward the meeting site. "I even stopped in a drugstore on the way down and killed nfi ivnnin A ^ Subways were ordered to skip the F r a n k 1 i n and Nostrand street stops for a time. ' CROWD BREAKS UP The crowd broke u|> after an hour or two and police began getting reports of looting Uiroughout the section. - . About 24 Negroes were taken into custody. A' police sergeant said Sumner Avenue was “all torn tip," with many store windows ^broken, ' ; ( stopped in a drugstore on the way down and killed of Livonia a few minutes. I thought I had until 4:30 to file.” s DEMOCRAT But Republican Varam looked like a man hit Over the q ^ Democratk sidi> StatP head with a voting machine when he strolled up to file his AuduS (jS Biliie\s Farnum nominating Ktitions for the State Senate just about one iiif Lm^te wUh latfftL Paul minute too late. J. Rabaut, 2274 LocklihXjom- • With,the door to the elections filing office slammed shut merce Township, a real at thq lawful deadline of 4 p.m., Varani could only clutch his broker who once was an ak petitions bearing 400 signatures and vainly plead for admittance, to his brother, the late Con- ‘ gressman liouis Rabaut. . elections official listened sympathetically. But said ‘‘No.’” CAMPAIGN STAFF “But I've got my campaign staff lined up and all my printing done. I’ve spent over, 3500 to run in this campaign," mourned Varani of 19110 Nadol, ^uthfield, who hoped to run in the ISth State Senate District. i Notic*-e«rly It kMWR tlMl-light t«n blltfow ' ' BBWi. Contents o. ______ _____ ______ * Return to oddress as on driver's license. iMl-dieked u er «f Whoope lust se intact The 18th Congressional District, which previously covered the entire county but now will serve the southern portion, will see incumbent Rep. William S. Broomfield vler eausucUToa lerlence — |movlty. ' '/ / ■ . ‘ti /? V. ('' ' Widrthat, the man closest to being a candidate ye^r-day stalked off to get some legal advice. d - » *• u « , Running against Broomfield - “I may have been late," said VArani, ‘‘but I was actually for Republican nomination will inside the Clerk’s (oute.r,]( irffice at 4 q’c^ck. ,)|i(e’ll see, about tius.” be Robert L. Mott, 31345 South-But the door remairi^ closed. - / ‘ ^ tC^ijtiqyed on Page 2, Col. 4i) ■I /! ' to hRve Th^Pontiac Press to, yoiir vacation M'i '''lif'''' ' 'i' ;>'! ■;> ft THK l»()N'nAci PHKnSS, WKDNKSI)A\; JULV 'jit, IQrtI __ ,/ Crime Picture Worsens as State Stays AboW^KlJlI^AtltUUSe^ DhlTRUI'J" (AIM TIh' (TlUKi ol t-rlnie WiXM'lecI plt'Uiiy ID Mlt'hin«n ‘'wily 10 dodI' woi'NP ID lOtiS HiuJ the n|it' ol | wliolly rtOlecleii In Michigan, •serloim ‘ iTlnu' t omalnfld above The rale ol* aeHous crime oc* Ihe national average, cuiTcnccB In Michigan rose only The'closest thing lo a brighr 5 0 per cent in 4003 over 1002 )i|Ki| in a nalioiuil crime I'oporl The stale's crime picture, was ihiii (I skyrnckeiing inn i ctimpareil wiili the nalion s, was reveaM In figiieeii MupplieU byi' In Michigan, this rapreaanted, manalaughter, rgpe or robbery I Murder and manalaughter in« I Ma such crlthei in 1003 In Mioh> the Olll this la 4.2 per cent hike over |002'S was committed on an average creaaed 3 per cent to a total ofllgan. ■ «h ..........................-* ■'* '■”* -.... ■“ ---------- ■“ ........... The Mlchlgah crime rate m crime rate of 12.0. Nationally, • of every 4.8 mlnutea In 1003. 1063 was 13.5 serious crimes per, there was a 0 per cent rise. I This compared with one every] i||5noi, aa„„ 1,060 populution, the h’Bl said.' 'Hiere were more serious' five minutes in 1062 In Mich-1 .. . bOK# Auto thafls rose 18 per cent, the highest Increase In iny se« rious crime classification. w * The only decline a 4 8 UIDINGTON Ifi — Alfred Michigan community Police _ . andberg. 88. of Chicago aald the victim fall ou........ , . ous olfepses for ever,v I.OOO per Michigan in 1063 than in 1062 Curred each minute of 1063 in Heights, III, drowned Tuesday ilwat Into aM six tool of wi*'sault cases reported In the sons , A imi|or cr|m« such as murdn . ihe United Hlates, the PUi said in Hamlin Hake near Ihls Hake I ter. I state. r FA3tilA ’’SI1iHT SHOPPLXIi Alondafi through Suturdag iili 9:00. . . girnig of trvr parking I / %,lr '<■ ' ; ir' ; ■ : ’>■' ' Ml ' ' '''-'■ / *!' ! '/* ’ ' > " , ,4 .. .. ^ ,.j ^ ^ T|IK IHjrn^C l’jlli«S. WI;a)N»';sl)AV.\M LV UMU. WtiwESDAY, THMBSDtHyMfaf ^SftliM/iyy ISVk” X lO'/i" ('.amp (rHil has 3*poKition jirid. Legs form handle. „ A('. (^ hampion and Auto Lite spark plugs are re-manufactured and guaranteed for 10,000 miles. Sets of 8 only! Roomy 12 Vax 18x10” picnic basket with cover and two handles. For leisure wear! Comfy foam sock and knit uppers with foam backed matchini; Marshmallow® collOr and. center vamp strip. Vinvl padded sole. ............e,bla ■ ' Pink, light blue, black or red. Sensational Value! ' . 7-PIECE I MMCHEDi GOLF SET I 9x18” and 9x24” black or maroon rubber treads with safety edge. Pre-formed, easy to install. ^u.l mix in vaciiiiiu scaled can Bny now - Savel 12-INCH LONG PLAY ALBUMS 50-F00T 7/16” GARDEN HOSE 5 irons, 2 woods. Step^lown steel A;:;’.; shafts and “(iolf Pride” all-weath-er grips. Men’s R.H. only. Diirount Uolinr Day*! 2pl POLYFOAM COOLER CHEST Diteoiint Dollar Dayt! J4S Monaural and stereo albums by famous artists. ■ fl." . Light-weight, green vinyl with brass couplings. • Mmfr Four Aihuitu Whitt! Quantity Ltuu l.ight polyl'oatn chest keeps food hot or cold 24 hours,. Has two metal handle*. Charge Itl GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD ’''i r;i r - ■'^-i... 'y ' •: ^ T ■ ’ ‘ !■* :' '■'■/) V- , '■ ^ ‘ ' J' '.. f'W, ■ ’'' ,, ‘ ■. ,1* Vor/^ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' TllK PcmriAC PUICSS. WKiyKSDAV, JtUA\22, 1■ ;’i World News Roundup j. British Slate Pullout of Aden Troops LONDON (AP)-BHtaln Is willidruwing suine of the 2,000 tr(M)ps it sent to Aden last May |4i stamp out trihni MpHaings threuteiiiug ilm tedernthm of HouUi Araltln. The Defenae Ministry an* nmiiu'tal Tiiemlny night that British forces had reached their Immediate ohjectlves in the cluster of sheikhdoms encircling Aden Tlie mlnistTy said the l'’li'si Uattalhm of th# King's Own Ncotllsh Borderpi's would return to Hrltuhi by August. ^ I Aden garrison May 1 when the South ^ Arabian^ government asked ror help against the tribesmen, Vdaiming that they were being aided by the Yemen re|nd)lh‘nn regime and the Unit* ed Arab Itepubllc. Britain began Isilstering Its' IIAN(I(K)N, Burma |(AP)" Burma's feuding Communist rei^l factions have, agreed to form an alliance in the face of heavy mauling by government troops, reinoris reaching Kan-'gomt said UHlny, Klements of tlie Karen reliels, one of the five major Insurrec* ilonists grisips In Burma, at* He's Been Ready to Retire Since He Was JO Years Old FEET FELT WOODEN -Henny. DeuI, Miss Holland in the Miss Universe beauty pageant, carries her lieavy w^iod* en shoes as siie tries to catch up with the motorcade at the ‘ Miami, Fla., airport yesterday. . 'Jack Ruby Says Killing Planned' DALLAS (UPD -Jack Ruby ’ said during a He detector test given him by the FBI Saturday that he decided the morning of Nov. 24 to kill Lee Harvey Oswald, the Dallas News said today. Two FBI agents gave the test to the 53-year-old condemned slayer in the county Jail in the presence of a Warren Commis-. sion Investigator. Ruby had re-questad the test. The paper said the agents found nothing indicating Ruby lied during the test but that analysis of polygraph tracings of his breathing and pulse were not complete. By IIAI. BOYLE NEW YORK (AIM-Life keeps fellow so busy doing about hulf the things he ought to that, he doesn't have time to do a third of the things he'd like to. {?() he has to postjwne his pleasures mbst of Ills life. Hei is t(Hi busy doing Ills duty really enjoy hintself. BOYLE 1 have no sympathy ' with people who retire unwillingly at 85 and then pro(;ecd Immediately to die of boredom; To me they arc stubborn and unimaginative. When the world removes them from the harness of the dally plodding, they take revenge by dying. Oswald, the accused assassin of President itennedy, was shot Tliey live by the puritanical idea that work is given to man to keep him out of mischief. Without work they feel they have no mission in life. 1 have just the opposite theory. I think the only purpose of work is to save enough money to spend the rest of your life In mischief and fiotous self-indul-gtjnce. I believe that any kind of einployment is a form of slavery and any, man who Submits to it an hour longer than he has to is an unenlightened fool., GIVES SPEECH ^very morning I make a speech to this effect to my wife. She takes my rebellion in good grace. “ Just hold on to your job until you’re 65, Rover,” she says, '.^nd then you can do anything you want. You’ll be absolutely free. But frankly, 1 don’t think you’ll know what to do with yourself.” in the basement of the Dallas poUce station Nov. 2i Ruby said he decided to kill Oswald, “If the opportunity pre: sented itself,” to spare Mrs. Kennedy the angtiish of returning to Dallas to testify at Oswald’s trial. CONSPIRACY He also-said the test would prove he did not know Oswald previously and was not involved in any conspiracy to kill Ken-'■ nedy. Defense attorneys said at the Ruby murder trial that he had decided to kill Oswald on the spur of the moment. V Ruby was later reported to ^ have said that he decided to kill Oswald Friday, the day of the assassination and two days before Oswald died. Claim Cream Cakes Cause Food IHne» BUDAPES-T, Hungary (ff) Cream cakes, apparently spoiled by Budapest’s KKWegree heat; are blamed for a wave of food poisoning in the Hungarian capital. Fifty acute cases have been hospitalized and 35 who .were less seriously ill were treaty at home, the newspaper Neps-zabadsag reported. The paper said a number of confectionery and cake- • shops were closed jading a government medical inquiry. Huge Lawsuit Is File4 Against Desi Arnaz INDIO, Calif. - Desi Arnaz. retired television actor-pro^" ducer, has been sued for $36.75 million, by a Cathedral City, Calif., couple. The suit, filed yesterday.hi Superior Court by Mr. and Mrs. Jaek Young, charged assault, baitery, slander and false prlsonment. They claimed that Arnaz-chased them around the • Thuntferllird-■ Country- Club, whore they were employed as janitoris^last Jan. 1. That just goes to show how a woman can live with a man nearly 30 years and know absolutely nothing about him. I kik>w exactly what I’m | to do with myself when I’m 65. Planned retirement has been my constant daydream ever since 1 started sweeping out a grocery store at the age of 10 and gained an early and llfekmg (Iktaate f5 ir Men’s Pedwins Slip^tnt 6“" a“ MwiVBoyt'-White Tennis Shoes Use A Lion Charge with option terms • Wr 'fWJfk-:dr V Tllli PONTIAC DMXAS, Tex. (AP)«Two threatH againNt,th« life of Sen. Barry Goldwater, the Republi* can presidential nominee, were reported here Tuesday. A swltehlward* operatw at an iutomohile dealership saffl she received the calls Tuesday morning. Tlie second came as polkHi were being told of tlio first. Dallas Police Chief Jesse Cur* ry said he Imd alerlaeen removed. Most of the fear Is gone. Bat at nl^t, wenea retara-lag frem skepplag er some eat glaace at the tpef where their pace wlO qalekea, aad-lias la retara te the sMety of tbetarlMMaet. And at the 16th Precinct st»-Uon, the patient methodical aearch for a vicious killer con-tfnues. As a prelude to what was to have been a fine and glorious Four^i of July. Francis P. Brown and his Itfe-long friend, Sheldon R; Miller,* bought some firecrackers the day before. Concealing their eagerness, they waited until nightfall to go to the playground and set ^ the firecrackers. They were dead a short time later. ni'GiotTar OwfeMas s. VnwiM mtiiw er drinking may be a \Murce of mild, but annoying bleoder mationa - making you feel -jI retUjWfc Wnte^ and uttcomlonabte. And if leatle* iU|hla. with- bMdache OT , tional upset, arehddiiis tojour m -don't wait-try Dda^ Ms. Doss'S PiUs act for W jn bladder iniutions. 2—Ala»t relieving action On nagging backache, eadacSk m^iular a^e* and pains Iwadachk mi^ar a^e* and piuns .3-A wonderfully mild diuretic acudn thru the kidneys, tehdisg to jqcnsM the output of the 13 mius of kunw tubes. So, get the tame happy mlW mitlioos have.cnjoysd ior over 60 years. For eonven- They died ii a.hall ef imilets hi what was tenasd m “exo* csthw - like" slaying about Ittli p.Bi. Friday lUght, July 1. Residentg later said they didn't reaUid shOto were b^ fired from a gun because firecrackers had be«t shot off continuously in the neighborhood tho whtde weekend. The brutal slaying rocked the pleasant, tree-Uned resklenUal area on the dty’s west side bounded by West 7 Mile Everjgremi. WEAPON LOST The murder weapon, believed to be a nlnendiot 321 Ili ••* f, r; ' ■ " *■, ' I ^ 'It’' .... 26 Killed, 136 Reported AAissiilg After Cong Ambush Ttiic lH)N^nAC l»RKSS. VVJU^NKSnAY, imu ■/. ■■ HAiaL, South Vtot Nfltu (Api >«< A li.S. Army oiillMttol m«n and ahoul 1% VIoluaiuoNt) ., iK)ldl«t^a wero roporltni iniwdng today after a Communist am> bush that killed at least 26 gov- f *t Tl30 ONLY w inumnui KMED HIT FIRSTTIME AT POPILAR PRICES! ^mA- the lANUCKS \msGsn DAY WlTHtt I . metmrioum I > ■ Camini FRIO “NEYHIERE, irs YOGI BEAR” ei'ument tnmps ami woumladltha CTummudst, Viet atng. A Itattallon-whiPh has, Infllciml i tlw way to rallava a besieged |H»sslbly Itw others. ^ U.g. Arn»y captain was among I more Uiau l,Oob government outpost, a U.S. appksman said. T{e|s>rts , from the n)ufused Uie wounded brtiught to Saigon, casualties since April appa^ ITie attack In Chuong Thien battle scene indicated the misa* w * w ohtly threw Its full strength Province, 140 miles eouthwest of ing may have been captured by * The Viet Cohg’s "U, Mlnh" 11\iesday against a convoy on | Saigon, followed the usual pat- Shades of Col. Cody Unshorn Wild Bill Tucker Taking It Easy iTy lion TIIOIV1AS AP Movie Trtevishm Writer liou.YWooo Wild mil Tucker lias gone unsiToru for 16 years. His mane hangs white amt .stringy below his slioulder his mustache is wide and luxuriant and h i goatee is longer than a hilly-goat's. < H e presents an I m p o s ing figure at* he strides down 'Hollywood Hou-THOMAS ievard dally In Weslcrn-slyle tan gabardine suit, yellow silk shirt, black rniwboy b(H)ls and Stetson hat. He resembles everyone's conception of Buffalo BUI, yet for Col. Cody he lias scant regard. Talked to him once In San Francisco at the World’s Fair.’’ said Wild Hill. "He was all right. Drank a lot In his latcr years. He was a good politician, I’ll say that for hint." He was standing on a corner as a bus disgorged some travelers. He greeted several of them and they said, "Hello, Bill,' and continued on their Way. He from Roma cams a salesman gregarloua. to Sweden for seductions nefarious. The girls were so fair, and aoma of them b.. and what happened is downright hilariousi Albert S0Pd“ll®® resumed talking in his ram-1 "People like this gel-up of l)ling, nonstop manner. | mine. It means something to •^Junior Eddort Quix on- AGRICULTURE QUESTION: Where and how did irrigation originate? ANSWER: About 6,000 B.C., according to students of history, man ihade a revolutionary discovery. Up to that time he had been a wandering hunter, never certain of being able to provide enough food for his family. But certain tribes in the hlghl|snds of Mesopotamia, In the Middle East, discovered that It was possible to plant the seed of wild grain and raise enough food to last the year around. These first farmers built villages of mud huts and started to domesticate animals. Later—exactly why we do not know. ~;they moved down to the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. . , . 'There, conditions wm^e harsh; the rivers either flooded the land, or the land baked hard In the fierce sun. But these energetic peoples made a great,discovery; Irrigation. They banked up the rtyer edges In flood time and dug ditches to carry the water when it was dry. Plows were Invented for thetr newly domestknted animals to draw. Our picture ahows these conditions about 46RI B.C. The villages grew Into cities and by SBM B.C. the brilliant SumeriaA clvUlsatioa was nnderway. Meanufhile, on the Nile River, the early Egyptians were making similar discoveries. Writing and the arts, machinery, law and government, all got started after the farmer had learned to plant and irrigate. FOR YOU TO DO: Start a/scrapbook of yOur favorite Junior Editor panels.' , ' d West. 'em, something of the < They like to talk to me. "It makes mo feel good to be around people. I'm 72 yoirs old and I novw felt belt*- In my life. That's becauso I Uke people and I take care of myself. I eat good, sleep good and get loads of oxerclsa." ★, W dr He demonstrated some of his csllsthenlcs. One consisted of flexing his arms and moving them rapidly from side to side. AnothtHT he admitted was nothing more or loss than the shim-my“"It’s great for getting the blood to the brain and other vital organs." He was bom John William Tucker in Beatrice, Neb,, where, he noted, Wild Bill Hlck-ok'ahot It out with the McCan-dies. Bill's father was a frontier Judge alto was b6m in the same Missouri county where Daniel Boone died. LOUSY ACT Bill got into stjow business in 1912 as an imitator and whistler, billed as Tommy Thcker. It was a iwetty louty act, gs he recalled It. After war service as an air Instructor, he folloviM a number of occupations in and around the entertainment world. Among them: Imitating sounds for movie cartoons. "I can make any sound you name; here’s a hurricane," he said. “Shucks. T wasn't no movie star or anything like that," he remarked. "But I can make more money noir than I. ever did before. Don’t want to work, though. I got my Army pension and my Social Security. That’s gll I need." tom-hit an outpost, men ambush retlef forces. ' RAKE CONVOY Communist gunners raked the halt alto n-slsed government truck convoy manned by per- liap 600 men, Tlien theV liushed two companies of Viet- namese regulars lacliig to tlie TTie U.S. captain was with the regulars when he was wounded In the left knee and shoulder. A government battalldn was dispatched from VI Thanh, fbe provlBclal capital, and another batt ‘ ittalhMi waa airlifted In. Ame^ lean MMircea said the relief bat-lUona were hit hard. Government planes and helicopters stmfed and rocketed the Communist forces "with probably good nMulti," tlw Americans said. AMBUSH NEAR PORT 1^ ambush occurred near the mud-walled fort of Vbih Cheo, where the aame Viet Cong battalion killed or wounded more than 200 goveminent de- The battalion is named after' tlie V Minh forest, a key Viet Cong base near the southern tip of Viet Nam. Other Asian ] nations were making plans to send help to South Viet Nam. Government souroM In Seoul said South Korea was consider-' tng dispatch of a medicill company and to karate experts to train the Vietnamese In hatid-to-hsnd combat. SIGN BILL Preaidmt Dlmslado Macapa-gal of the Philippines signed a MAIN THEATRE n MHe m4 MsiM Si. ONI FULL WEEK hill authorising him to spend |260,QB0 on medical, military and technical teams for South Viet Nam: Judy to ieav0 London Nursing Home Tomorrow IjONDON (API - Judy Oa^ land Is expected to leave a private nursing liome tomorrow, her Undon agent jMid today. "Judy Is much tetter today,” said Harold Davlsoii. She Has been living In Loniton for the past three weeks. The 42-year-old singer was admitted to the Northumbe^ land House Nurslog Hoiine In North London for a rift Monday after being treated at St. Stephen's hospital for minor Injuries to her wrists.: Davison said she was hurt ac- cidimtally whUiyopening a metal-bound trunk. ' The overage capacity cd a railroad boxcar has been Increased from 37.5 tons In IB21 to more than 60 tons today. EAGLE NOW tlmi THURS. -AmHSWICTHIIILLEr' ELVIS PRESLEY ANN-MARGARET "ViVA Lm Vtf Ag" PttorSollorfi IC. Scott since,! 1020. when Sweeten issued the first postage Hjlatnp to promote the fight agaliist cancer, 46 other nations liavi^ Issued •lAiUar stamps. ; GLENN FORD "Mvamca It Um Iaai" it iB^iRBiy that you wtt BxilortBiica In atifitlmo H ttiat A tMU fit ia... wttni f. LiviNt nECUmiHHR lECMRiiiiir FNunisnr f:^keego Aierinlen I JO Set. Mat. BOe Dr.Strinoelove On Hs* I LSMiiS Ti Sis Winiiii Aiy 20 JACK GING PSYCHIATRIST ON TV's ’»nHi Hour Hr. Roborts’ n ^so j THAIS aai PRIdS TM., WMl.1 TiMtf*.. liM p.m. M- *>il( l«n. Him ii.m. $1.90,^$2.00-$1.f0 M*tMM M I |i.m, AN Seats JO HCKItS NOW ATi • MMWtH MM tHim, tMfOiMlM 0 KMn TravM, WtaMr AUN OROORS M eWykMM. r, iMiMiaM, I *WIY PAW LAOY" EATNRYN CROSIY ''SAMHuTpjHr* RANfARA'Iin* OBOES novt AmTlAARRIAOl" "AissNa OF A caur A«f. Il-ll "SOUND OF MUSIC' AIM. M-l* JINK ALLYSON "TNI RAATNW DANCr* UM. 14 JAYNi MANSnilO ac^br )■ CAVIO NORTHLANO eeii PAvio PAKKiNe FUYNOUSE l« WirMUM Cmmt, 0 eriwflew. feMwM* M M 'Ilf '■■'Vi 1*^'I ' 1' "HI ttif.'j. 'r;'i ■ ’ • 'i/wv /■ r, vV- f ,!• , "'4 't ".' ' • ■' !* ■' . ' ' ‘j. '•■ /, 5"'' '■ ' " : ] ' ^' ' ) PON riAC mps. VVKDNKHDAV. .ll l.V '2'd. M)0t LOWEST PRICES! CHECK COMPARE "Super-Righf" Quality BONiLESS BRISKET CORKED Point Cut 49 lb. Flat Cut ............ ,1b. 65* GRADE "A" "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY OVEN-READY Ducks 4 TO 5 i»OUND $IZiS lb. 39 "Sup»r-mght" Quality PORK ROAST BOSTON STYLE BUH lb. CUT PROM BOSTON STYLI BUTTS M YORK STEAKS...;......"- 49 QFQUAUrT Sliced Beef liYer 39^ "SUPH-ltlGHT" QUALITY NEW YORK CHEESE SULTANA FROZEN Sharp Cheddar | FRENCH “^69‘ 90L PEGS. I ANN PAOI—IN QUARTIRS A dFkdtko* I Corn Oil Morgorine...........4 99* WHITE BEAUTY ShoBleBiing 3-49' u Off UBiL—Niw jr Light Spry.. .;,.., 3 0/* PILLSBURY LAYER RiG. PK6. 29 ANN PAOi UYIR Cake Mixes . ALPHA BITS, - CRISPY CRITTERS, SUGAR CRISP, ° POSTS Your Choice 27 A&P WHOLE OR SLICED POTATOES ANGEL SOFT-TABLE NAPKINS.. 200 a PK6, A ee ' 4i A 25 w, fP • IP UB TEST ASPIRIN... too a* BTL. • • • • 17 S* VARIETIES-2 PKGS. OF 6 CANDY BARS....... 12" 49 SULTANA CALIFORNIA FRUIT COCKTAIL... 14-OZ. CANS . A# 05 SUPER-RIGHT CANNED / LUNCHEON MEAT....... 3 i „ |00 1 CANS ■ SALAD DRESSING ' MIRACLE WHIP... \ QT. WR ,'!:k■ 45 SUNNYFIELD FLOUR 5 ^ 39* ANN PAGE ELBOW MACARONI OR SPAGHETTI 3 - 49' .c-u I r>l • n*______________ f'' liriln .f. \T'? '>'1 ' !iV *'l"'lir/' sii I'' t''-V:J'. I -Hv. l',!, , ;■' , f.'Jl,;,! .;iJ. ]. f' ■ ^.il. . . ,■ ■, ','1 , , , . , ,1,1 ' ' ■!■ I . ,, ■ ■■I Avococ(p, Shrimp, Pineapple Make Colorful Sandwich Three ' popular salad ingredi-enla ere combined for the intriguing filling used In hearty **Av«H*« I t'allfomla avm-ado I lahlespism chill sauce 3 tablespoons mayonnaise 4 dinner rolls or burger buns Water cress, Rinse and drain shrimp l>rain pineapple, rokerving I tablespoon syrup. Cut avuHiodo lehgtliwlstt lulu halvesi romove sped ond skin. Dice avtK^ado;' comblrie with shrimp and pineapple. Mix chili Bauce„re8erved syrup and mayonnaise; stir gently into avocado mixture, Cut thin slice off lop of each roil; renwve part of soft center, Mil with avtH'ado mixture, Ke* turn tops to rolls and garnish wlUi water cross. Makes 4 serv-higs, ■i'liK Pontiac: imucsh, ^yK,ll,Nl'■,.slj|^,\v G^OatS Are Change 'IVjJi. lINlik Herbs, spices bikI grated orange or lemon rlwl lift many ■andwich fillings nut of the ordinary, adding noiiilng Itul flavor to the sandwich. , Fronr Potatoes Old-world meat accompani-mant! Ruck wheat Croats 1 cup coarse broWn buckwheat groats 1 egg, slightly beaten 2 cups (bImuiU iHiilIng . hot chicken sUwk Salt to taste 2 tahles|S)uns hulte'r or margarine In a buttered 10-inch skillet stir logellier the groats and egg. Over low iteat stir groats until dry and browned slightly. Add 2 cups stock and bring ,lo a boll; cover lightly and simmer until cooked through and liquid absorbed 20 |o % mln-ntea. If liquid is absorbed before groats are tender; add 2 to tablespoons hot or cold stock at a lime, Stir in salt (anuauU will do-pend on seasoning In slock) and butter. Serve at once or reheat over boiling water. Makes 4 servings. Combine equal parts of cranberry juice ctM'ktall nud cream soda in your refrigerator trays. Kreexe with sticks for colorful kiddie pops. FORECAST FOR PONTIAC 88 STAY * * SEALTEST... makes the difference! * * Natural fruit flavors Non-carboiiatied Ready to pour Noi^arbonated'’SealtSt T ropicarPunch tsTanlexoticlcomblnation|of^ pineapple, .orange and apricot.*A drink that’s true-^ruit delicious. So good.. . for you and the 'childreh. ^^No“^uss,*no^bother,'^just pour lighUrom th^arton: Nothing eould bej YOUR FAMILY DESERVES THE BEST;> INSIST ON SmJEST! Pink Lemonade ... zesty, tangy, and oh, so much fun tb^ljflnk! Lemonade . Most like homemade^x ENJOY THESE COOLING RE^JVESHERS NOW! ' f Ik , // Vi*^r' 1'—^ ■‘‘‘V 'r-r,'1 '.7■....... / .x. ■ : .i. FRUITS AND ViaiTABLlS AR| ALWAYS 'Summer-Garden' Freeh MICHIGAN GROWN Sweet Corn 39< Doz. " 1 'i"' ' _ ( 11P' ' ' ' 7 ' ' “'i 1 i’ *1 f- -y ;■ '.■Iv'/,, • r III Maiketa, THE PONTTAC t|llI«:SS, VVKI)I^ \\m Finance I MARKETS The (oitowmg arfl lop prtoN covtrlng Mioi of locally gi^wn produce by growete and loid by them In whotewle pookage Iota. Quotatlona are furnished by the l>elrolt Bureau of Markets as of TUMday. Product MllStrli CtwrriH. » Ch«*rbt, li.„. Curranta, n4 OMMbarrtM, «ri....... black, «rt. Sai«>barrt«t, rad, y bu. iS .... i.<* lii Onion*, groan, « Parilay. cu. Parilav Soot ^•aloa*, nM. M lb*. Iwrnig*. H Most Changes Small Stock Mart Moves Irregularly mw YORK (AP) li. Stock market prices moved Irregularly today. A majority of changes were extremely smsil., trading activliy held to about the same pace as the last week or so, which has been slower than average for the fjirst six months of the year. . Hie optimism of market analysts appeared tempered somewhat by the last two sessions of falling prices, However, some noted one outstanding characteristic of recent trading has been the ability of prices to bounce bact quickly from temporary setbacks. Major stmrk grwips were mostly mixed although airlines and rails showy a scattering of small gains. tiUSS (MINER Libby ■ Owen ■ Ford Glass quickly added 2 points after directors raised the dividend and declared an extra. tlCA fell back a full point. Late Tuesdav, the company made a big ryuctlon In sales and rental prices of major ele- ments of a rne™Pf Mb, - - I fryar* e« b v. DtTMIT aOM OSTiOIT IAPl~Bg| prkb* bbW Mr dWM IHfUrtl rbcgtvfrt <5>. 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Drapar I.W I 43W 434b 434b + tv eg .lot 7 1-1 3 .. 5 TVb 7Vb 7W . 3H 34b 34b -t- ■ Isram Corp Kalwr Ind Kraftor .lOb ' > Oil .» Mackay Ar McCrary w# 17 04b ' '> ik 1 iOb + W . ,.i5ISr . $14 514 5W - .. 4 3Vb 3Vi 3W-f1b W 10 174b 10' ..... 3 41b 4tb 41b-H 4b 1 331b 33Vb 33Vb R I C Group ,30t 1 444 444 444 4 Scurry Rain 5 144b 14W 144b -f Sbd W Air - 7 414 VA i'A ~ ^ Syntod Cg .Mo M M44 71V Tachnlcol .50b 17 ISVb IS . Un Control .10 14 SVb SVb 51b .. Wabb* • STOCK AvikAees, ComsHoi by Tlw AiSMiSM^|Ofios^ M. SMM S^t NM Changa .......4 +.$ ... W 1S:5,18:T ilW walk Ago ...... 440.7 103.7 150.0- 310J AAonth Ago ..... 438,4 174.0 {53.1 3IGI Yoar Ago ......Xi70.3 130.0 143.4 144.1 1944 High 4Si;7 114^4 tSO.l m.O ISigTSi:? I I^LOW ./V..^34U|| I1I.0 mo.^M.7 A^m b .10 ACO indu* 1 VrM* r (b«i.l Ntok cow LaM Chf. 1 40« 44H Alagert .7fr *“-tna i.iaa, Hoig 10' . .. MPd 00 Si.ao '■I’lo hi? ft ?5 Sft Grand I OIABP I.: •I Nor Rf GW Pin .1 ^ i 4 1^ iK I tolilbur l.M tamRIw 1.40 HarePdr ,40( HawlUl 1$k Moft Siart SS«rT,5 5 41*4 41*4 4M4 ~ >b 30 M'b Hib Ml* 4- W 4 » » M 1 14»b 141* 541* t 441* 45’/* 451* 43 Jl<4 31<4 M'4 ] low I0«* I0*« 1 114'* 1341* (mi* M P 1 ifLP , . P Cg III !J 8h ? j I? aii I I? ^ i AwhCa^ .1 1 17»b 171* 571* 14 15»* 351* Ml; 4 tlW 15*b IJH - 0 IIH IH* »1to 5 14 14 14 -I .......to s^^'i Barg War 1 4 ^«* Ml* 351* I »** m* sm Ti.tift tu ^4 M’* Y* Ip - 31 37** 37»b 171* + 'b 3 4lto 411* 4l*b 4- H ij ^ r u Brlgg»5 1 BrM My .m Bruntwick -luckty* .440 I 1 tft ni Tst-. I 10'* 1014 - ' i S'* k Lc; |4|wTroc I 10 ir* 1llb 10»* - to r ^ I I- Ml* . 4 Cho* Oh 4 PocH 1 a:w," CIT Pin 1.40 CmoiSv 140 citvsmi 1.10 C0C4 Cola 1 gjil InduH iSipgf'i.^” 'onCdIt 3.1 0 :ntWai 130 :onfiacind i :on»Pw 1.70 111* 19 l$*b 15'b - 1* 10 Tito Tito tTh t to . 4, 34to 14to 141b ■ •• mi5to 1351* l3Sto 7 47to 47to 47'b 1 171* 17to 17to 1 IS 13 13 11 43to «to 431b , n loto Mto »to 4 to 1 WMi MM lOto - to 5 40*b 4im 40to. ' " 1 Bto » »** 4 03to 031* 03'4 '3 4«V* 4*to t«to 34 M'4 37to 3I’4 -----Pd 1.50 inlc^ 'll 14 14lb 34to 14*4 4 W 10 S3 Slto S3** 4' to ,1 ^ ^ nto + 1* T ^ T " 11 MVii Mto iSt PanRIvor .00 Dayca Carp pMra 1.M OattaAIr I.M I Ml* Ml* Mto ... 1 13to Mto m — 1 47Vb *7to ATto ... 14 15'b 05V!i ISto -h to ,T 8?5r to I 15to l$to Ifb + to 1 17to 17H 17to + to II Mto Mto lOto-to 11 Tito 73** 711* + to MMI Ml Ml —1 1 3»b Mto 31to-1b FAdC Corp.........- .. - - - Footo M :UB 3 10 II II ..... *Mto Tito • I 0 .40 ll 'llto 111b tlVb—to ... WhMIer 1 31to llVb 31to 4. to Fr^S 1.20 1 361b Mto Mto 17 31to 33to 33to- \ J GtSlSTlM M Isto isto Svb -f to nfiri.5> ‘ ■■ ■ 1.000,..^. 04M--04to-041b:.. 1.W ' 3 Mto Mli Mi—to ■'S.-Fiia Idoal Ct«w I IllCant ind 1 lngarR4md 1 InUndt'i > *0 •nitrik —I— I Mto Mto Mto 5 471* 67>* 471* + 4 30to Mto W 1] 47]1* 471 4l< 4 701* 70«* 70' 3 70*. TOto 70** 14 10'* Mill 101* M Mto » Mto I 17'4 Tt’J S'* '** - to JmllhK^ 1.304 kSMS- SoufhnC r:70 SouNtlG 3M SouPtc I 40 I iporry Rond st’l oil Ind 3 StOIIN Jl.tOa SIdOMOhle 1 Stand Pkg SlauftCh 1.30 SlariOrug .70 issa-i* iKffli 'iSi 3 43'• 431. 43', - 1* 10 13'. 13 03'* - to 4 94 m 10 45to 49to 411* I to ‘i SS s“ F j!! Tann Oat lb Taxaco 3.30 TaxGSul .40 Taxin.lm .00 Taxfron 1,40 Thiokol MM Tig*—r*>- 41 87to 87to 07to ■ 5 op* 0514 OSH k 111* 13** 13*. 3 43'4 43>4 43'4 .4 Mto 10*4 MH 9*ito ^n* ^n* '! r r —T— 3 111* IIH 1 15 |— — ■ 13 00'* 10'.* 10'* to • 41*4 40to 4IH -f to 15 74'* 74to 741* + to 4 43H 431* . 4114 ‘ Tran* w Air 12 501* »H 10'* + 35' 441* 441* 4M I 4 I3H 53*4 51to - JohrtiManv 1 isiar..8 KaytrR Kanngedtt Kama Karr Me 11 50H 50*4 50 * 'b' Tt TT* Rir jnjitj —K— ' 3 M"4 ir* Mto +'to ’i T tSi; ^ tSiJ 1 'll* 'ito '*'* ~ '* Mto M?* Ml* Llonal Corp LHIonin I.OOt LockAirc 1.40 LonoSCtm I ; su LonoitiU .01 Uwal Clactr Unilard 2.50 LOkatMSt 1.40 1 :^to ^to 3jto - to 13 44to 44«b . 441* - 'b 1, 70H- 7I« 70H + 1* -Im— ' .Sa" MayOStr 1.30 MebonA n.40 7 17H 17'* UCarbM l.M as asii ^risi 3 351* 354* 351* '—II— " It 135to 135 135 1 47'* 47to 471 IS UG*«Cp 1.70 UnllMS.M I UOOyp la US Induit USFtywd 1.10 US Rub 130 Unit Wh»lan 35 ^ I SOto 5014 I 41* 4'* . . I 1314 131* t to 34to 37 ^ to 55 >v— 3 14'* 14'b 14to -I 47H 47H 471* —w— I 37to 37', 37'. I ,■ ■*3’* - ManiM i.sob MontD^U 1.40 Nat Blac NatCan .. NCaihR NDairy 1 1 Mto 54to ^ ~ \ M'b 8l* ISH - . 4 03H 031* 031* - to -N- ' 25 S4H 541* 541* 43 + 1* 1 747* rtto 7414 - Nat Slatl 3 7 40 SOto to - *'-t Too .10 3 141* 141* 141* - Ingei 1.1 4 10 Ml* Mto Mto - JZinc UO 3 44to 44to 44to - . ’C*nt .SOg M 441* 44to 44to -h NYChl SL I 4 53to 53 531* 4- NlatiM Pw 3 1 541* 541* S4to 4- .. NAAvla 3.4 0 35 4t 401* 40to - V* NorPac 140* 5 50 St SO -----'w 1.3* 1 14'* M>* Mto Northrop 1 Norton 1.20a Oeddant .50r pKldant ,30r OllHMath 1.20 OtlxElgv 1.00 Outb Mar .40 Owaniill 3.30 PacGGE 1.10 Pac^ Patrol PocTGT 1.20 $ 14H 14H' 141* - 0 101H 101V* 101V* - .-_P— • 7 M 31 32 4- 4 111* Mto 13'* . Pmiizoll 'l% PhOlps D 3 70 37 341* 37 4- 2 541* 541* 54'* . . 7 Mto 10 3» ~ 13 501* 59<* SOlb 4- 31 M' 3Sto M .. 24 3T* 3Sto 3Sto - 4 34to 1414 Mto . . I 34to 34to Mto .... I TP* 75'/. 75to-0 Rotxllng Co RokhCh .30 RopubAvia 1 - SU 2 110 13to 33 311* - 1 3 311* 3114 311* _ V It 34Vb 351b 34to- + 1 1 Mto .Mto Mto 4- V RoyDutch 1r sr 4 171b ITH 17to 4- to 40 4tto 44to 44to — 1b 20 151* ISVb ISVb 4- to 2 12 12 12 ..... k- kil. kMlkL SafOwySt 1.M SIJos Laad 2 SL SanF 1.40 » 1.40b IP .52f Schahlpy l S ' SCM .43t ScdttPap .00 Mdburg *40 Mwir OM 1.50 Sfc''’co^: M 71 Tito 71 4- 10 4714 4714 > 471* . . 1 Mto Mto 32to 4- 3 101* 1 2 10 10. •to • 114 + I* 'i*ii............... M »to lOto 30'* ..... 3 S31b 53to 531b-Vb 0 IMto 12014 llOto 4- Ob IS MV* 261*. 27to 4- lb 1 514 5to Sto ... 24; 50to/ 5014 SOto 4- 14 ... unoftlclili Unlati olharwist nottd, ral«i < In fh* foragolng ti" ........... ........... th* li$l. quartarly or Mml-annual. daclaratlon. Special --*xtra dtvidandi or paymam, not d* naiad a> ragular ara Idanllllad In following fodtnota*. •—Alao *— — ........— ...Jdand. c-LIquIdatmg dividand. d—Daclarad or paid In 1043 plus alack dividand. a-Oaefarad -rOaciarad ,o ir this y*ar. l-.P*ld In stock during . oallmatad cash valut on ax-dividand >x-dlstrlbutlon date, g—Paid-last ya— —'--------aid altar alock^dlvldi Daclarad or paid t nulatlva tiaiMi with dl .—. ... p—Paid this yaar, di Hand omiltad, datarrad or no action tal — . giyig^nd moating, r—Daclarad 1044 plus stock dividandi 1—P. during 1V64, astlmalfd ci - -----x dlMrlbut value ■■ola; . , 1—Salas In tulf. '■ ckt-Callad. x-Ex,dividand. y-Ex.DIvi-snd and salas In full, x-dls—Ex dlitrlbu-on. xr—Ex rights. xw-WIthout warrants. ww—With warrants. wd-Wh*n dls-trlbutad. wl—Whan Isbutd. nd-N*xt day teing raorganind sccurlllas assumad by si MqsI Grain Futures Moving infractions CHICAGO (AP)-Most grain futures contracts held within 11 fractions of previous closes today in fairly active But mixed early transactions today on the Board of Trade. At the end of the first hour, wheat was ^ to ceht a bushel higher, July new grade I1.39Y4; corn % to % higher, July 11.19%; oats V# higher to % lower, July 59% cents.; rye IVd-to 2V4 higher, July |1.25%; soybeans % lower to, % higher, July $2.47. Food Shortage in Cong Threat Civilian Traffic Haiti for Fear of Minei SAIGON, VM Nain,(UPl) Saigon mnrketB ran short of fresh moat and green vegetables today because of a Communist threat to blow up civilian traffic alixig the main highway winding through the Mekong l>»lla to tite capital. Bus and truck traffic has been virtually halted Along national Highway No. 4 since Monday, when Communist Viet Cong guerrillas spread word to truqk-era and bus owners that the road would be land-mined. The interdiction was proclaimed on Monday, 10th anniversary of the signing of the (kineva agreements on Indo- No unusual Communist activity was reported along the highway. But the threat alone enough to stop traffic. w w' It had two alms: to demonstrate Communist strength and deirioraltze the 2 million people of Saigon. EXPECTED TO KASE The Communists were expected to ease off the threat eventually, rathei^ than further Alienate, the populace, They claim that their was is with the South Vietnamese government and Its army. In a .similar action last year, the Viet Cong virtually panicked the capital by halting the flow of charcoal to Saigon's stoves for several weeks running. Route 4 is considered unkafe for travel at night, but during the daylight hours It usually is busy with civilian buaes. trucks and oxcarts and military hides. - , ' Treasury Position 4,404,344,KM.M 5 1,344.844,025. PlKil Yaar July I- 3,357,334,807.01' —i,aoo,Mo.t. WlflHlrawal* Plual Yoar— 4,514,027,085.88 51,823.44 304,475,317,713.15 „ lSM43,Om,214.7 X-Irtdiudat 5341,331,31 |act' to italulory limit Stocks of Local Interest Flgurai *n»r UKlmal point*;qr» elghthi. OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS The lollowlpg quotations do not ne... sarlly ropretont actual tranacllon but 4ra ,lha approximata AMT Corp, ...... Associated Truck ..... Bln-DIcator .......... Braun EngInaerIng . Cllliens Utllllles Class Diamond Crystal Ethyl Corp. Mohawk Rubber Co. Michigan Seamless lu »r Finance' -----1 Printing ... Vernors Ginger Ale . Wehr Corp. .......... WInkalmen's ..... Wolverine Shoe . . .. Wyandotte Chemical , MUTUAL FUNDS .. 14.13 15.45 Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund .................. Commonwealth Stock .......... 18.13 Keystone Income K-1 :........ o.08 lo.sy Keystone Growth K-2 ......... 5.78 4.31 Massachusetts Investor Growth 0.10 0.9S Massachusetts Investors Trust 17.04 18.44 Putnam Growth ......... ..... 0.77 10.64 Television Elecfronlcs ........ 8.33 0.08 Wbllingtoti Fund .... 15.42 14 80 Windsor Fund ...........;.... 1S,77 17.14 'Nominal Quotations ■RAGEI r.v.’.^>lio.'oi^;25 . ,.. ,Z 148-45+0.33 .;Y.. ■302.01f^.44 .. 83.04+0.08 .. (02.05-0.05 :: J5:fl:ik05 Grain Prices OPENING GRAIN , {.19-18% 1.17'b-to ?:». .. 1.20'A-14 Jul g£: Dec . ............I,.■' 1.28-28% Mar ...........-.,.(1.1..,'..., -1.30 ■ "•V ........,1*.............4^30to I ' / BOND AVERAGES mplM te’Yh* Asspciitad Pros* M 18 18 18 18 "W. Util. Pgn. U. Yp Net Changa ... ... .. +.1 NOon Wed. • 82.7 102.8 17.0 00.8 03.8 Prev. Day 82.7 102.8 87.0 9018 93.7 Week Ago 82.4 103.0 07.8 90.9 93.5 Month Ago 82.0 101,9 87.5 90.9 93.2 Year Ago 01.4 99.9 88.5 90.2 94.2 1944 High 82.7 103.3 88.4 91.2 94.1 1944 LOW 80.5 100.8 87.2 90.1 92.9 1943 High 82.2 102.4 89.5 91.1 95.1 1943 Low 79,7 99-5 87.5 88.4 93.1 WodiMsday's lit DlvMands Daclarad Pp- $tk. *f Pay----------------^ablo Lib OF Glass Lib OF Glass INCREASED EXTRA Unit Illuminating Aj» 414. 159.72. " In Business Planning See New Uncertainties By HAM DAWgON AP Itiibliibbii NbWb Aunlyai NEW YORK I'dilk'iil litr moil mill rndfll iili'ifp qrc Iwing nililcil III thii nni'crluinilDH of buhlnoNH pinnning. liiiNlniiNMiniMi linvii |u plnn nhcnil lie dm', T h i N Nummer hnil Ni'cmi'd In nffer fur Icxh tiinn Ihc umnil mniihnr of iin-ccrtAlnUcH. Ah the pin linerH took to the woods or the benches, nil the signs still ixiint-0(1 to H furtlier DAWNon dimt) In tile econuimy nnil the signs still do. The bellwethers—tile big cor-porntlons nnd the stuck mnrket ■“Ohvloualy were count mg on giKKl times. The ciirporntions were iin-nounclng Incrensed spending pinns, for utKinling equipment or Adding to existing pruductlon facilities. And ttiese plans of necessity lixiked well Into the future. ' RECORD HIGH.S Tlie stock moiket has been bettln|( on the nearer term, Prices, especially of many blue chips, have been bid to record highs. The meaning seemed clear — the big Investors, individual or Institutional, expected Increased earnings In the future, ahd maybe dividends, and certainly higher market values for outstanding' shares. Regular uncertainties that plague the planners were still there, of course. International strife could always upset any predictions. Natural catastro-phles such as weather or earthquakes could hit some Industries or regions, Tlie always unpredictable consumer could change from his present stale of calm confidence to one of doubt and then consumer spending would fall; and so would business sales and carpings., And the aging business upturn could run afoul of the tradi- % * r tSucces^ul i * $ Investing * s l® i By ROGER SPEAR Ql “We bought 100 Avco at 23 7/8 and 100 Automatic Canteen at 13%. We went short 100 shares of Vornado at 27%. We plan to build a house in November, upon retirement from the Air Force. We will need our money, now tied up in these stock transactions but don’t feel take a loss. What advise?” afford to C. H. A) I believe you will just have to accept the relatively small loss invoked in getting rid of both your Ring and short pcisitions at this time, since you require ji’our funds' in Novem-^ ber. .Ypu have in effect invested with a time limit, always a rather dangerous procedure. I can!t tell you, nor can anyone else, whether the price on any one of three given stocks will be higher or lower within a relatively short time span which includes a Presidential election. Your money belongs in a savings institution, safe from further fluctuations, until you require u-.,y ' < Q) “I have been interested in your occasional discussions of tax-exempt bonds. I am in a relatively higli b r a c k e t, / have a large stock list and own no tax-exempts. I. hay| enough income from my business but will be retiring soon arid may require more tocome from investments. Do ;^u believe I should buy tax-exempts, and if so, what *) you, suggest?” RM)eC. A) You should own some tax-exempts — not simply for theirrelatively high taxable equivalent yield but also because they will act as a backlog to your entire portfolio> lending a de^ee of stability that stocks alone cannot give you. I suggest fpr your investment California 3%’s-of 2,000 to yield 3.60; Cincinnati, Ohio SVq’s of 1986 on a 3.20 basis and New Jersey Highway Authority Revenue 8.40’s of selling at pai*. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but will finswer all qu^ions pi^issible in his col- tional cycle, If any excesstls should develop lo trigger a dowuiurn. liiil I he economli' signs mi the wimic were, end arc, rernnrka-lily near iinnnimlty in predicting nmlliiuing good times. NEW DNGICRTAINTIIOS For mbny business planners, however, there are now some new uncerlainlles to deal with, What could racial strife do to prmluctlon In some locnllti^s, to consumer* buying here and there, to the choice of localities for new plants? (iiotlng can mean property damages and loss of gixHls. It can also frighten away sliopiiers. or even keep factory workers i away from tlielr Jobs. Home lourisls are reporterl nervous. Travel to some trouble spots has dropped. Racial strife goes even dee|ier than these surface matters. Top management' in many cor|xtra-Itons is taking a new Imik at hiring pinns, at advert Ising campaigns, at moves to enter new markets. Management-lalKir r«- / lallons are affected in a numtiof of industries, 'I’he c(msli,’ucllon Industry, especially Its tresldentlal slg. mcnl. Is Nludylng Urn problem closely. And so are public offi-' cials mill store owners in many l•om»qnnllles. l•o^;m(;AL (:()NFl.l(Tfl The effects 'of the summer's |Hi|ltlcal eiinfllcts are less VUI-iile as yet. Rut huslnessmen ns well as voters are imnderlng wiial economic and government changes mlglil stem from (he electiim outcome In various regions, In the nation as a whole. Ami the campaign turmoil, some fear. mTiy affect consumer attitudes, either in general or in regard to specific products of coi'iHirations whose officials taken or decline to take, political sides, w w ,w A summer that lixiked like an economic shoo-in might yet develop sOme business flreworka unforeseen only a short time hack. Dr. Sam's Liberty at Stake as Court Reviews Ruling AKRON,' Ohio (APl-Sum Sheppard's freedom was at stake today at a hearing by the Otii Qircull U.S. Court of Appeals. 'iiie three-judge panel will hear arguments on a stay order that followed tlie convicted wife slayer's release from prison last Thursday on a writ of habeas corpus. Since his release, the 40-year-old former ^ay Village osteopath has married German divorcee Ariane Tebbenjohanns In Chicago and visited New York City. Sheppard, hiS wife, and attorney F. Lee Bailey were to fly to Cleveland this morning from New York. Sheppard and Bailey were to appear at the hearing. Mrs. Sheppard planned to accompany them to Akron. LEGAL MOVE The latest in a maze of legal moves was a motion filed In Cincinnati Tue.sday asking that the order that freed Sheppard be set aside. The order to cut short his freedom was signed by U.S. Appeals Court Judge Lester L. Cecil of Dayton. Paul C. Weick of Akron and Clifford O’Sullivan of Port Huron, Mich., will Join Judge Cecil for today’s hearing. to call for a new trial for Sheppard. In the motion. Corrigan charg;ed that Judge Weinman’a hearing on the habeas corpus petition was “a star chamber proceeding from beginning to end.’’ Corrigan charged the hearing was held "behind closed doors without a legal representative of the state of Ohio, the real party In Interest, being permitted to be present," Technically, the offiqe of Ills ()hl() attorney general repre-sented the state at the hearing. Corrigan’s petition, however, said the as.sistant attorney general In chai’ge of the state’s case entered into stipulations with Sheppard's counsel “with-out the knowledge and consent -by the state of Ohio, the plaintiff in the original action.’’ The. “original actiop" is tho 1954 trial, in , which the Cuyahoga County prosecutor’s offico represented the state. The, stay order would cancel Sheppard's $l0.OOO bond set by U.S. DistWet Court Judge Carl Ai Weinman of Dayton. In setting aside Sheppard’s conviction, Judge Weinman said Sheppard’s rights to a fair trial had been violated because of adverse publicity. ' Sheppard spent nearly nine years in prison for the July 4, 1954 bludgeon' slaying of his pregnant ’ wife, Marilyn. He claimed a “biishy haired intru-did the killing. Sheppard was sentenced to a life term for second-degree-murder. 60 DAYS "The motion filed in Cincinnati was by Cuyahoga County prosecutor John T. Corrigpn. Judge Weinman had given him 60 days Named Head of Auto Outlet Richard D. French Jr., 12909 Borman, Huntington Woods, has been named president of Hunter Dodge, Inc., a new deal-.ership at 499 Hunter, Birmingham. V French, 44, is a veteran of? years in the? automotive industry. He has held man-agerial positions with major c o m -panies in Bay City,. Flint and Detrott. FRENCH He attended Wheaton College and Detroit Institute of Technology. The new agency will sell aM service the complete' line of. Dodge products, including tru(:kq and travel i*, recreatiqb U'y: T ■/ ' vumcips.7/' Viildge Fights Deserters of'' Congo Atmy KAMIPINI, Congo (AP) -Village tribesmen, using bows and arrows, fdught off marauding Congolese Army deserter from Rebel-held Baudouinville, a district commissioner reported to* day. Police reinforcements reached Kamipinl, 30 miles south of Baudouinville, to round up the rebel soldiers. Another report of pillaging came from Daniel Demaeght, 42, a Belgian rancher who said that at least 15 vehicles, including five tractors and trailers, were stolen by the soldiers. Only eight Europeans now remain within a radius of three miles of the ranching station and their heaviest armament is the 22-caliber rifles of the' 80 police who were sent in diir-ing the last few days to set up roadblocks to cut the main roads but of BaqtJguinviUe. Villagers, outraged by the rebel soldiers, have taiken out their bows and arrows and declared their willingness to help" the police retake Baudouinville. Business Notes Bennett J. McCarthy, 615 Abbey, Birmingham, bps be'en named vice president and general rrianager of Michigan Blue Cross. Formerly assistant general manager, McCarthy has. been with Michigan Blue Cross 16 years. News in Brief MOM’S Rummage: Thnrsday, 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. —ady. Rummage Sale: July 23, 24 /and 25, 374 Fremont'off Frank* i lift. —ady. /to] Rummage Sale: Thursdiaiy and Fri., 945. 391 Indi(|n Lake Rd., Lalje Orion;' ' , -^|dv. 1''/ •) "Jr !■/V i ‘ii.