Tim Weather * luraau F»f»CIH (Motto m Phi It VOL. 124 *N0. 185 THE PONTIAC PRESS Ct„. ~-\L.\ '• * '• §.- +.■ ' V~'~t 1 r ^'••‘V1 v:■ •■*— ■ iA ★ ★ p\ f PONTIAC, IGHIGAN, THtJRSDA>r, vFtTLY 14, 1960 -W PAGES Home Edition 10e Suspect Fails to Fit Description Eight Chicago Student Nurses Butchered CHICAGO (AP) — Eight student nurses were strangled and knifed to death in their dormito^. ry early today in what one official called “The Crime of the Century." One girl escaped to tell the horror. A man wearing a bloodstained white shirt was seized in mid-morning in downtown Chicago after he had attempted to purchase an air line ' ticket to New Orleans. Police said later he did, not match the description, however. In what FBI officials termed the worst crime within their recollection, the victims, aged 21 to 23, were killed singly dur-■ ing a 2 V2-hour slaughter binge. ★ ★. ★ . One young woman was strangled in a downstairs living room of the two-story brick town house at 2319 E. 100th St. used by South Chicago Hospital as a •dormitory. HID UNDER BED The scene is a middle-class neighborhood in the city’js far southeast section. The survivor, Miss Carazo Amurao, 23, an exchange student from the Philippines, spid she escaped death by hiding under a bed. Her story to police was semi- hysterical, but she described a lone killer with blond hair,. 6 feet 1, and weighing about 170 pounds. ★ ★ ‘ ★ Miss Amurao said she was one of several girls penned in an • upstairs bedroom—one of three bedrooms on the second floor. She said she was upstairs in the house when Miss Gloria Davy, ' 23, Dyer,Ind., first encountered the killer. It was first believed that she opened the door to him, but Edward Sheehy, South Chicago police commander, said that it appeared he had entered through a rear Kitchen window of the first floor. Miss Amdrao was quoted as saying she overheard him say that “he only wanted money to go to New Orleans and that he would not hurt us." As far as police could reconstruct the' crime immediately,. the intruder strangled Miss Davy and then went upstairs where five of the girls were in bed or ready to retire. This was at about 12:30 a.m. it, w ★ The killer bound the wrists of the five with stockings and , locked them in the bedroom. Within an hour, three other student nurses returned to the Miss Gargullo Miss Pasion Miss Wilkening Miss Davy Romney Signs Pay Increase LANSING- (#)—Gov. George Romney today approved a $2,500 raise in pay for Michigan legislators. Lawmakers will receive $12,500 in salary starting next Jan.. 1 and $2,500 in expense allowances—a level , ______ of compensation that Scouts' Drive Nearing Goal The major gifts division of the Boy Scouts of America Lost Lake Reservation fund drive reported Over $200,000 in pledges today, bringing the campaign to a total of $313,034. it' ★ . ★ Robert M. Critchfield, chairman of the major gifts division, said $206,223 had b^en solicited to date against a division goal of $360,000. The four districts oi the Clinton Valley Council - Ottawa, Pontiac, Macomb, and Manito—have reported a total of $68,052 to date from families of BoyScouts. —Ottawa District is setting the p$ce with $30,892 pledged compared to a target of $50,000. Pontiac District, also with a Life- adequate,” Romney said, adding: •, “f believe that state government will have an increasingly vital role to play in the future; to adequately fulfill that role we need better state legislatures. Adequate compensation will help make this possible.” At the same time, Romney signed bills to increase the salaries of Supreme Court justices from $25,500 to $35,(MW a year and of Appeals Court judges from $23,000 to $32,50Q-Michigan lawmakers are among the highest paid in the nation, but, Romney said, the Michigan Legislature wilt be frozen at the new level until Jan. 1, 1971. .★ . ★ * “The salary level in this bill is more realistic than some discussed earlier,” the governor said* Scattered Showers, little Relief Scfttt= Israeli Planes Bomb Syrian Engineer Units Arab Jet Downed in Raid Retaliating for 'Acts of Sabotage' TEL AVIV, Israel .(UPI) — Israeli planes today bombed Syrian engineering units along the River Jordan and shot down a Syrian MIG jet in a dogfight over that country, the Israeli government announced. (A Syrian military spokesman in Damascus said two French-built Mirage jets Of the Israeli Air Force were shot down in a dog fight with Syrian MIGS). Israel said the air attack was carried out in retaliation for a series of acts of sabotage carried out in Israel by Syrian agents — a series of mine explosions that killed one person and injured three. The raid was directed against Syrian engineers working on a project to divert waters of the River Jordan from reaching Israel. Israel has been tapping . the river for water to irrigate BODY REMOVED — Police remove the body of one of eight student nurses found slain in a South Side Chicago dormitory today. 'Big 4' Car Makers List Sales Decline DETROIT (UPI) — The nation’s “big four” auto manufac-turers reported a sales drop produced piore than half of the autos sold during that period, dormitory after having finished their night shift duties at the hospital a few blocks away. The next killing probably came duriag a struggle by one of the girls and the marauder. Besides Miss Davy, those killed were Merlita Gargullo, 21, an exchange nurse from the Philippines; Valentina Pasion, 23, of the Philippines; Pamela Wilkening, 22, Lansing, III.; Susan Farris, 22, Chicago; Pa-. • tricia Matusek. 21, Roseland, lit.; Marianne Jqrdan, 22, Chi-, cago, and Nina Schmale, 21, Wheaton, 111. 7 One body/was found in an upstairs hallway, and three in each of /two upstairs bedrooms. UNDER SEDATION Mjds Amurao was givpn v heavy sedation after telling/ner story of the massacre and . placed in a guarded room in / South Chicago. Dr. Andrew Toman, the Cook County coronpr, said “This is the crime of .the cen- „ tury. I’ve been a coroner for six years, and I’ve never seen anything like this.” Miss Farris’ body, with her throat slashed and a knife wound in her chest, was found at the hallway entrance tor the bathroom. In the east bedroom were the bodies of the Matusek, Wilken-irg and Jordan girls. Miss Matusek had been strangled, the others stabbed. The west bedroom held the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Mass Slaying Has Few Rivals Ranks Along With '49 N. J. Shooting Spree By The Associated Press ; Few mass murders of recent times have equaled in horror the killing of eight nurses in a Chicago residence hall today. * The classic case of senseless mass killing occurred on a quiet street in Camden, N.J. on Sept. 6, 1949. On that day Howard Un-ruh, a mild-mannered, Bible-reading World War II veteran, took a souvenir Luger pistol and went on a rampage in the street, gunning down 13 total. strangers. Unruh is still coa- ler, he * Macomb and Manito districts, With a target of $30,000 each, SlfeW' pledges ~of $li,5M-e-frd..... $3,518 respectively. .... 'Funds raised in the campaign will enable the Clinton Valley Council to purchase and develop into a reservation a 2,214-acre area near Clare. Flash CARTHAGE, Mo. (AP) —. Five persons were reported killed and scores injured today as a series of explosions rocked the Hercules Powder Co. plant, three miles southwest of here. Scattered showers and a chance of occasional thunder-storiqs are on ffie- agenda for the Pontiaf area today, tonight and tomorrow. The .weatherman said Saturday will be partly cloddy with showers possible. Little relief is in sight from hot, humid temperatures before the end of tbs week. Temperatures are expected) to register lows of 66 to 72 tonight , and zoom up into the 90s again tomorrow. w H) ♦ Morning northeasterly winds at 8 to 15 miles per hour, except briefly during showers, will beamie variable at 5 to 10 miles tonight. The low prior to 8 a.m. in - downtown1 Pontiac was 69. The reading was 76 at 2 p.m. aircraft went into action against a Syrian military engineering . unit working on diversion of tWe Jordan River southeast of A1 . Megor.” This is in the headwaters of-the river which rises in the mountains of Syria and Jordan and flows south through the Sea of Galilee into the Dead Sea. A brief official communique said one Syrian MIG was shot down and the Syrian pilot was seeq parachuting out of his • plane. It said the three other Soviet-built MIGo “retreated” duriag the encounter. . An Israeli' radio broadcast said the bombing took place at 4 p.m, (9 a.m. EST). The attack today was the latest in ,a series of Israeli-Syrian clashes that have broken out periodically because of Arab opposition to Israeli irrigation plans. • 10 days of July, led by’ American Motors Corp. v General Motors Corp., which set in 1966. ■ J. Pontiac Division Reports Sales Up! With only seven selling days in the Jyl^ 1-10 selling period (there were eight last year), Pontiac Motor Division reported today that its daily sales rate was up over a year ago. Thomas L. King, general sales manager, said an average of 2,59$ Pontiacs and Tempests were sold every day in the peHod, compared to 2,564 a year ago. Overall, he added, the.division ' sold a near-record 18,167 units from July 1-10. Ford Mgtor Co. sales,, were —22. per cent below the .f ix «t 19 days of July, 1961, Chrysler Corp. was down 35 -per cent and AMC sales declined by 42 per cent. v OMrsaid-tt-sfro. ------------■ early this month?cdmpared with 106,160 sales for the comparable period a year ago. ★ it it This was a slight drop in the dominance of the car field by GM. FORD Ford sold 40,172 cars this year, down nearly 8,000 from the 46,-079 the first 10 days of July 1965. * { it * Chrysler said its sales dropped . nearly 13,000, from 37,116 a year ago to 24,195 this year. ; hospital I Trenton, N.J. For sheer cold-bloodedness, , few mads murders rival the 1929 Cfriragn gangster.. slayings- known as the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. Eleven* members of the gang ruled by George (Bugs) Moran headquarters when* four or five men, two of them in police uniforms, came in and ordered the seven Moran mobsters to line up against a wall. The victims meekly complied, thinking it a routine police raid. A few moments later the seven lay dead, riddled by machine gun bullets, " The A1 Capone gang, fighting Moran for control of bootlegging, wag blamed for the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) CARAZO AMURAO Escapes Killer of 8 Chronology of Slayings Is Listed CHICAGO (A-Pi - investigators pieced together this chronology of the massacre today of eight student nurses. -About 12:30 a.m. a young man entered the nursos town-house by climbing through a rear kitchen window of the first floor. Carazon Amurao, 23, an exchange Filipino nurse, and another nurse confronted him. Carrying a gun in one hand and a knife in the « made them go. iato room and lie on the floor. He bound and gagged them with strips torn from a sheet. -Sometime later two more student n urses entered the house. The intrudes brought them to the same room and bound and gagged them.. -Still later, another girl returned from a date, pnd then two more returned. All were taken to the room and gagged and tied. -The man finally had nine young'women in the room and then began taking them away one at a time. -During one of his absences, Miss Amurao managed to roll under a bed. During the night of horror she was finable- to loosen her bonds. About 6 a.m. when all became quiet, she came out from under the bed, ran into another bedroom and climbed —nut on the window* J a d g a,— 1 Fernald Outlines OU Dream Theater' * , * ’i jj7' * I® fzfs H If m I Zkt i 'i \ h 1 '• . ' By PAT McCARTY John Femaid’s dream-projected to Oakland University — is to organize a coippany of topflight professional actors responsive to the community. If the university’s luck holds, that dream will become a reality here. Negotiations now are being conducted to attract the farmer head of England's Royal Aeadenfy of Dramatic Art ta the OU cam, us. The theatrical center he would establish here would include Michigan’s first repertoire company and drama school, furthering plans for a complete performing arts center starteef with the creation of the Meadow Brook Music Festival. “My plans should be finalized in about 10 days,’4 Fernald said yesterday in a telephone interview from his London home. He.has received other offers, nothbiy one from Richmond, Va. Of a visit to OU earlier this year, Fernald said be had been “very impressed with everything I saw.” “It’s a very splendid, go-ahead place,”- he said. “I like thp, ^njentaj climate tremendously.4 ★ * * Fernald said he has no detailed outline for the theatrical center he hopes to head. “I don't believe In having ideas until I’m actually oper- ating," he said. “Your environment affects what you do.” But he does have definite opinions on how actors should perform and how they should be trained. ..'''Ftfr',"10""years-,-'"Fernakl''-was"- principal of the academy which trained such theatrical luminaries as Alan Bates, Albert Finney, John" Gielgud, Trevor Howard, Charles Laughton, Viv- ien Leigh, Peter O’Toole and Susannah York. He recently .was described by * Peter Ustinov as "one of the prime architects of (England’s) impressive array of young actors and actresses who are so and screens of the world.” BRITISH SUBJECT Fernald, 61, moved to England from California as a child . (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Tigers'Swift Hospitalized DETROIT (AP) — Detroit Tiger acting manager Bob Swift Jas admitted to Henry Ford Hospital at/noon today and coach Frank Skaff will replace him as manager probably lqr the entire crucial series begining tonight with Baltimore. Swift was described as hav-ing “acute gastroenteritis" after a sadden Illness at his home find will be sidelined at least several days. -Judy Dykton, a student in a nearby townhouse, saw* Miss Amurao anrl heard her, and ran to notify the housemother in her townhouse. —Miss Dykton and the housemother entered the nurses’ residence and discovered the bodies. In Today's i Press ; Turns Actor Football star Jim Brown s§ I quits for movies — PAGE 1 111. City Schools I I Policy adopted for inter- | : group programs — PAGE 1 | W. I Painting 'Boo1 | 1 Schoolhouse on grounds I | of Wisher home spruced I I up — PAGE B-l. I Area News ........to | i Astrology .•.........,F4 1 f Bridge ........... F4 I * Crossword Puzzle ...7-11 | I Comics — Editorials ......A-4 1 Food Section D-2-D4 Markets ........E-18 Obituaries . ....B-l! Sports .... E-l-E-7 Theaters ... ....E-U TV-Radio Programs F-Il Veterans’ Serin .E-8 Wilson. Earl ....MI Women's Pages B-l-B-7 A-* THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1066 OU'Dream Theater'! Tr°Y Murder J I ^ ^ters Outlined by hrhdBPf?' Recalled! Blest 3 MIGs Birmingham Ar«a News (Continued From Page One) and became a Britishsubject 19 , our own famous players,” Fer-years ago. Chicago Deaths Stir Mass Killing Memory! Sewage Plans “I’ve done everything in England I wanted to do,” he ■aid, noting he feeing “peculiar tort of poll” to his native country. Theater in the United State*, Fernald said, “is ripe for a change." The Avon Township Board is I _ ' . _.. [going to investigate several al- Trtie discovery by Chicago teroate sewage treatment plans earlytoday of II-«Mdte SMdff 'ftrjdtah- murdered sU£ent nurses in aC the ^ Cunton-Oak-dormitory jadred the J^^land Sewtgh Disposal System, area with memories of the mptss r. ^ -estion of its finan-‘American talent Is enormousJslaying of seven member^ of| . . - - ■ mid told. He aoted he would like to bring some of his English associates with him, possibly a group ol six. but it lacks tradition and disci- U troy family- nearly two/years dal consultants, Stratton Asso- pline,” he said. “Americans I’vejago. dates, Inc. of Detroit, the board ,Cos( is the main factor In the township’s reluctance to join in the $28,627,500 project with six other communities. Representatives ' of Stratton Associates have been negotiating this week with the Oakland County Department of P u b 1 i c Works in an attempt to reduce j will seek an opinion from the the township’s $8,370,433 share He’s convinced tiiat regionalM** Following the brutal hatchet !Michigan State'Health Depart-of the project theater, outside of New York I terribly grateful for what they, and shotgun murders of his jment an(j the Watef Resources; City, will become dominant — have found there — and they. -a daughter, and five [commission Sidewinder Missiles Bring Down Planes School Negotiators Aim for Settlement Tonight BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Negotiating teams from the board of education and the Bloomfield Hills Education Association will meet 'tonight in hopes of reaching a settlement for the coming school year. and he wants to be one of those I have flowered there. who mold it. * " wi,liam Hettiger of stratton| Theater, according to Fer-| Hn was declared mentally ill. 5* tkjrerent oJkland'untg Gter,A “Si “beS versitv anH Rochester nlants leel lnal an" reaPPoraonrnent ________ SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — American jet fighters blasted two MIG21s out of the skies over North Viet Nam within three jminutes today after downing a slower MIG17 W»MIG, were brought Discusston wiU center around down by heat-seeking Sidewind-associate!1! demands fol-er missiles. | supplemental pay increases for * it i, coaches, class sponsors and As U.S*. Air Force F4C Phan- other special teaching assign- erpor of the Northwest Tar-ritory in 1790, named the town of Cincinnati in honor of the Society of the Cincinnati, a Revolutionary officers’ s o c i e t y, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. stepchildren Sept. 29, 1964, o( con8tructing . Clinton River ™ mrnents *rav- 'sewage treatment Diant. or en-iAssociat.es 5°"? memM” xnJ ». .rww ! 30-year-old William G. Grav- “The first thing an English- nalds definition, must provide | Today he U confined to theversity and Rochester plants. .rH^noV^Mrth^Ttolpounded an area just south of man learns about the United j * service to the community. -state Hospital for the Grind- The board also wants to B—-L-“ States is that New York is not U GREAT ERROR nally Insane at Ionia. 1 know what degree of treat- p the United States," he said. .Americans think a little dif- ■ ' /* * * ! ment would be required and I This, he said, would force “It’s an enormous country with Iferenyy » ^ jay “There is al “One/difference,” noted Lt..! how much it would cost, an enormous.amount of talent.1 The economics < are exaggerated o the theater! Broadway.” tendency for the actor In Ameri- Robert Mortenson of the Troy ica to think of himself, to relate jpolioe, “is that'somebody es- I them to drop out and probably scuttle the project. everything he does on stage to|c^ped from that guy in Chi-j THEATER FIRST ihis own feelings. He thinks ifjF*8°- If Fernald comes to OU, he his feelings are good, that hi?DIED IN SLEEP would want to establish a thea- performance is good. This i/aj ter first, letting a drama school' great error. follow as a natural development. “That makes more sense than putting the cart before the hone,” he said. “First yon establish a good theater* If yon have a good theater, then you waat to perpetuate it, to trail actors to graduate into it. *Tvt run a drama school for 10"years — I’m not particularly keen to start running another one right away. As part of the professional theater, a school is another matter.1' '.Nobody got away from they all died in Gravlin Mass Slaying Has Few Rivals : the 17th Parallel frontier where an estimated 5,000 infiltrating Communist troops were believed to be massing. The Air Force said the first MIG kill today was scored at 12:10 p.m. in the Red River Valley about 22* miles northwest of Hanoi. Other issues to be discussed include sick day illowances» grievance procedures, promotions and transfers. Both sides are hopeful that an e a rl y agreement can be reached. r caught. “The actor is a servant of their sleep.” the audience. His work ii an : Mortenson headed the in- set of giving. , y j vestigation into the seven “To be done properly, this deaths, requires technique. The actorj Police determined Gravlin has to learn a new way of [had lived in the house with the breathing, of standing, of mov- corpsesM his family at least! One of the most terrifying ing. Yet the audience should hot 24 hours before surrendering. stories of mass murder was told be aware of this. ‘“j’m sorry, I didn’t mean to in November 1961 by a little girl * * [do It,” read notes pinned to rescued after 3V4 days at sea on “This is not much stressed in|each .of the bodies. - a cork raft. America - but I think they’re SECOND MURDER on to it I doubt that O be the QravUn,, taMnlt wa8 gtill only one taking this approach, Wng determined when a second IDEAS PREVAILED jmass murder rocked Oakland j Fernald commented that the County, ideas of the academy he headed j Early the morning of Jan. 25, 1965, the wife and afar children of a Ferndale man died in a fire which swept their two-story house. Harry M. Belcher, 32, He sajd DPW officials indicated that the cost of constructing a Clinton River treatment plant would be exhorbitant. ‘They’re aware that you are SHOT DOWN concerned over the cost and are Three minutes later the sec-trying to determine the most ond delta wing MIG21 was shot economical way to proceed," he down 50 miles northwest of the j told the board. [ North Vietnamese capital. (Continued From Page One) JevENTUAL NEED | Capt. William J. Swender, 31, slaD|btcr, but Ik killers were j ..Wn evtataly j*, jl $$ NEW YORK (AP) -It’s official. -Frank Sinatra and Mia Farrow are engaged and they’ll be wed sometime between thanksgiving and Christmas. Paul A. Gwiim, a mathematics teacher at East Hills Junior High School, has been chosen to attend a Summer institute for junior high mathematics teach' ers at the University of Maryland. Eleven-year-old Terry Jo Duperrault told Miami inves- r . i „ is to connect to the Dequindre Ug.tm how tar pireiils, Ar- tar and Jta Diperrnult ‘thence Township tag “fVlta#,, ta 1st U. The cord of Fernald’s profes- have preV(|W jn England, aional company would be Ameri-; ^ ,. . . can acton he trained in Eng-I “The Englsh actor doesn’t jand i believe.in self-indulgence. This | is done at the audience’s «-EAGER ACTORS | pPnsei" he said. While he declined mentioning Fernald ^ of » j0urnalist-!char8e<1 with setting the fire iJ h* ^ dt playwright, in m a r rled tot0 h‘» own home, cussed the idea with several who L,ird. .Their, r ' , * . * u t daughter, Karin, is buUding her . Convicted by a Circuit Court own reputation on the English 4first degree murder to P“'“Tg-j*•* were eager for the opportunity to study again under their former teacher. At hit center, they would he involved in “theater for its own sake,” performing in plays worthy of their talents. “There are a great many fine American actors I would very much like to work with again,” Fernald said. “We would be interested in a broad spectrum of classic plays from Albee to Shakespeare by way of Ibsen and Chekhov. We‘ would be interested in anything that’s good, j that has craftsmanship behind OCC to Eye Free Tuition it." 1 "You’re eventually going to need a long-range plan such as this, but the question is whether you should pay this amount when you have no immediate customers,” Hettiger said. Avon Township is one of three communities which have not yet signed an agreement to participate in the sewer system, which licothe, 111., brought down the first Communist jet. “The MIG looked like a big, red bam door," Mid Buttell. “We shot him down with our first missile as he was on the tail of an F105. CREDIT Credit for the second MIG21 went to 1st Lt. Ronald G. Martin The six-week program, which sponsored by the National Science Foundation, provides teachers with an opportunity to gain a better understanding of recent curriculum developments in mathematics. Green Bay, Wis., and her brother were slaughtered aboard the kfetch Bluebelle by Capt. Julian Harvey, who also killed his wife) Mary. COMMITTED SUICIDE Capt. Harvey had been rescued earlier in a dinghy with the dead body of Terry Jo's sister, Renee, 7. After hi learned that Terry Jo had been rescued, he committed suicide. BIRMINGHAM - The Oakland County Heart Information Center has moved to an upstairs office at 277 Pierce, near the center of the city’s business district. Orchard Lake are still studying Richard N. Kriepa, 24, of Chest-the matter. The townships of "J08-Ind Pontiac, Orion and West Bloom-L In Jhe dogfight Wednesday field have already agreed to par-if?ur ^ ~ 1 six, slower MIG17s which chal- lenged them as the Americans were providing a protective ticipate. commander in the Royal Navy during World War II; Fernald maintains an active interest in sailing. . WRITING BOOK He currently Is “very busy . . . . . trying to write a book on stage TQr P[flgr/y direction — something no one' / has done.” h ir ★ Free enrollment for senior Betweerf chapters, there are [citizens will b£ explored by his thoughts of returning to his [Oakland Community College. native country, of breathing new Administrators were instruct-..... „ c,.. 1 . ._. , 10M ... . . .. ^____- n | 11 .. . . . 4 . .___a killings, Perry Edward Smith Anticipated revenues for 1966- frW" •"ta’ feta Wn« u4> UtalTl3.«C,l«. The ta J Another mass killing at sea was confeued last year in Miami by Roberto Ramirez, a former Cuban iobsterman. Ramirez Mid during an argument with Rogelio Dinz, captain of the banana boat Seven Seas, he shot the captain to death and then turned his gun on four.other shipmates. A best-selling novel “In Cold Blood,” by Truman Capote, lates the brutal slayings of all four members of the Herbert W. Clutter family at Holcomb, Kan. on Nov. 15, 1959. For those | City School Board OKs Hiked Budget shield for U.S. planes bombing the Co lYai railway and highway bridges 23 miles southeast of Hanoi. A $13,925,564 operating budget, calling for $515,418 in deficit spending, was approved by the Pontiac Board of Education last night. The final figure tops the esti- (Continued From Page One) mated preliminary budget by bodies of Miss Pasion, who had! $786,393. been stabbed several times in the chest, Miss Schmale who Eight Nurses Are Murdered Mrs. Pell Hollingshead, chairman of the center, said the volunteers who staff and eontrol the; office will welcome visits from' shoppers and passersby who are interested in activities Of the association. ' The office- is equipped to supply heart information, educational programs and patient information to all interested parties. Gen. Arthur St. Clair, gov- Frankie, Mia Plan to Wed The engagement was announced Wednesday by the mother of the bride-to-be, actress Maureen O’Sullivan. I couldn’t be more delighted,” the mother is a i d. ‘Frank is a wonderful person and I know they’ll be very happy together.’ Sinatra, 50, was causing teenage girls to swoon as he sang with the bands of Harry James and Tommy Dorsey some years before his 21-year-old bride was born. He has a son and a daughter older than Miss Farrow. DOESN’T MATTER The age difference doesn’t matter, Miss O’Sullivan said. '! know people who are antiques at 35 and others who can watusi at 70. Frank has always been absolutely sweet when I’ve seen him.” Mia, Who has been seeing .Sinatra for two year*, has said, “I feel more at ease with Frank than with any boy my own * Neither Sinatra nor Miss Farrow had any public comment on the engagement. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Added to the budget last night were $640,891 for instructional personnel; $84,8(0 for staff studies; $13,187 for secretarial personnel and $47,-445 for other modifications. Starting with this select H________________| troupe, the theater would e** ter of vitality. [night to investigate the possi-i . . . . .. 10ft, pand through its school. ,,’j m gQ wbere there „ a bUity of tuition-free education we;e han?ed in ^nl INFAMOUS PLAYERS [demand," he said. “And I shalljfor persons over 65 and to re-[ »«"“»»- was strangled, and Miss Gar-gullo whose throat was ci Earlier, police said some of the victims appeared to have been shot. Veteran policemen exclaimed at the massive amounts of blood. “Eventually ,we would make I fulfill that demand.” The Weather turniwith a recommendation. Rich) Full UJ5. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness l hard Condit, attorney for |dren his mother and his wife'* the college, also was directed parent$ were preparing to leave to research the legality of on a trip to Ftorhda, when Bauer such a program. went berserk with a shotgun and The proposal to waive the tui- slew the other six before turning [tion was made by trustee David the gun on himself. W. Hackett. [ MISSING 2 MONTHS the money to cover planned ex-l Later, Toman said he found At Parsippany-Troy Hills, N.J. penditures will be taken from no bullet wounds on any of the in 1956, engineer William Bauer, an unappropriated balance of bodies and said the murder | his wife, their two small chil- $1,176,772. weapon probably was a large The operational budget also butcher knife, judging from the includes, a $200,000 contingency size of the wounds, fund, i ’ [ The coroner said it was im- Among the recommendations of the staff included in the fi; Inal budget was $13,000 to establish a new community school like that now in operation at Me- jbe said. Carroll Jackson Jr., his wife Connell. [ Two of the victims had visited possible' to tell immediately whether any of the dead nurses had been raped. Further laboratory tests would be necessary, ___Mattered showers and chance of occasional thundershower* ^a®katt . .aftlTa;rfl and two small daughters were AlSQ added last, night WAS $22,-1 other atudeat -wtfSM in another - today, fright .and Friday. A little cooler today, nigbs te ;H was Mi arohjfltdii Ilia paill10 migaing/for^ two ^months after 750 ftn». 344 elementary library i residence buUding aramdnud’ [ Lows tonight 66 to 72. Highs Friday 84 to 90. North “j their car was found abandoned school positions, giving the dis-j night. ■' - to northeasterly winds 8 to 18 miles except briefly higher in of charge to everyone. tflH.y hemming variable 5 kJO n\iles_.^!lht. [‘WORTHWHILE’ Outlook for Saturday: partly cloudy with possible showers. ; gg,.} Anderson sup- Precipitation probabilities in per cent, today 60; tonight 50; L^j HaCkett’s proposal, and Friday 59. • added, "I believe it’s a worth- while project.” ■, Tier i» rwtuc i ““ v“ *“ •* o*««u»c i Lnw««t ItWBtrilUft tf«c*Olna 0 ■ 1 country road in Virginia in trict a half-time librarian at j January 1959. ■ - every elementary school. . | Highest Hmper»lur» I Inch; humid Thi» bah In f4 Zoo's New Blue Gnu Good News to Bantu N.Y. (AP) Downtown Temperatures Two months later, the bodies of Jackson and one daughter were found at an' abandoned sawmill near Fred-ericksbnrg. Va. said newly elect member Ralph F. Tyndall, “if I can have home assurance that the number wouldn’t be so large as to burdeo the college. amsSh n «] OCC President John E. Tirrelll . , • j ^ , .... ... , ------" 111 noted that only about 1.5 per vin Davis Rees Jr-> was sen- jnus are bad news to old daddy wielding a bolt cutter trying to !! Si ... .. . . .. lonmH fn Hoath in ' . . _ . . .1 BUFFALOW, . , , iere‘s a riew blue griU at the later that police found the bod- Buffalo Zoo. When little Gnudles ies of Mrs. Jackson and the oth- and his father, Bantu, met fix er child in shallow graves near)the first time,- their reaction Gambrills, Md. Gail Schuyler of North Jud-son, Ind~ m fellow senior nursing student, said they returned to theier own qnarters about 12:30 a.m. She did not name them, and declined to discusa it further. ancee, Jim Coras, 22, Lisle, 111. told of an attempted theft off Coons’ motorcycle from behind pleased Zoo Curator Clayton F. her residence building about Freiheit. two weeks ago. A dance band musician, Mel-| It seems that sometimes new They said three men, H it New York 101 71 amo to;cent 0f the enrollment, or 45 tenced to death in the apparent- gnus, but Bantu merely looked cut the chain that bound the (M rpctrM OwittM) Highest tsmptrituri ...... Lowest tsmpcrsturf ............ Mean temperiturt ......... 7» students, were over 45 years old 75 sr'/uSSi?" m ie'during the last semester. 74 jin'L*nke C 95 M 88^ Wt knOW 71 sT Franc'tcp u m of any school in the country ' • - ■ ■ ■ ' ' The detaUed plana wiU be done by the Detroit firm of Gififria h Rosoetti and are to be based on design and development concepts prepared by Caadill, Rowlett and Scott of Houston, Tex. The entire project is scheduled for completion a year later. The campna is located immediately west of Squirrel Road and between Feather-stone rnpd MM. > • The campuf has been de- •/ iM r These include a genera] s e m b 1 y building, laboriH for science, mathematics, business, technology, a library, a horticultural building and a boiler house. The library, a four-story structure, would be the tallest building on the campus. It will include administrative, personnel and counseling offices, a snack bar and a student lounge. J Bring Your Prescription Ho SIMMS Drag Dept. Fdr fast efficient service with fresh drugs according to your doctor's orders. SIMMS!?,, THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY U, 1966 A—-8 CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — When Gemini 10 astronaut Michael Collins takes a space walk next week he doesn’t expect his helmet visor to fog up a problem that forced an early end to Eugene A. Cernan’s stroll - outside Gemini 9 last month. Scientists have come up with a chemical that will be nibbed on the visor. It is called simply 350-AF, and has been used in cleaning optical devices, w * ★ Air Force Maj. Collins and Navy Cmdr. John W. Young are to ride into space next Monday AF Wlrwriwt* GEMINI II ASTRbkAUTS — Gemini 10 command pilot John ' W. Young (left) and pilot Michael Collins are shown by this globe after finishing a practice session of their planned three-day orbital flight that is scheduled to be launched from Cape Kennedy, Fla., July 18. Hie flight plan calls for a double rendezvous and space-walk mission. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Bigger and Better Values In SIMMS Clothing Dept. Specials for Thurs., Fri., Sat. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Entire Stock' Clearance Visor Clean for Space Walk ion • double rendezvous andfSO-foOt tether and a gas-powered space-walk mission. They are to hand gun to maneuver around blast off atop a Titan 2 rocket atL. A - 6:21 p.m. EDT, 100 minutes aft-l * ** jer an Atlas hurls an Agena tar-1 He Plan* *° remove one m*' get satellite into mbit., The astronauts pla/t to link up ith the Agena six hours after launching and then fire the Agena engine to shoot to a record 400 mUes into' space. This will put them In position to rendezvous two days later with another Agena left in space after the Gemini 8 flight in March. » MINUTES Collins is to spend 55 minutes outside the spacecraft, using a crometeorite detection package from the old Agena and attach another for a future spaceman to retrieve. fit- , ★ ^ ♦ Earlier in the flight he plans a less ambitious 55-minute excursion in which he opens his hatch and sticks his head into space to conduct photographic and scientific experiments. Cerdan’s viaor fogging was' Bermuda Shorts Now is tli* time to save on our ontira stock I of bermuda shorts including soma sta-prest L Good selection of solid colors and plaidt. I Sizes 28 to 36. American Made>Ban*Lon Men’s Sport Shirts r;& 299 I Cordigon or slip over style soft Bon-Lon I knit shirts in o' wide variety of colors. Sizes S-M-l-XL Short sleeves. Boys Ban-Lon Shirts Cordigon style short iImvm. In green champagne or red. Size. 8-12-14 only. 88c For Leisure and Sport Wear Men’s Canvas Shoes i y Oxfords in choice of 1 Colors t\ \ Convos Oxfords, with crepe ir solos and cushioned soles. Sand, navy or 'black colors. Sizes 7 to 12. Comfortable Cotton Men’s Sport Pants Western or Ivy Style Simms 1 Low Men's, sport pants ‘of 100% cotton, wrinkle and foil resistant. Colorfast end fully moehint washable. Sizes 28 to 38. For Sofas — Chairs - Odd Pieces (V ’ 1 Furniture T 60x7 2-1 nch \ Six* Throws, > 72x90-lnch h Six* Throws 72x108-Inch Sis* Throw*......... Soft but durable throws to protect ydur furniture, voriety of colors, include grass, turquoise, brown or rust. Fringed ends.1 Twin or Full Bed Base Bedspreads W %.3" Polished cottons in checks or Mac floral pntfrn. All American mod. and first quality, lull Size. . ” ' ' r :-;l Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. If Your TV Picture l?n't As Good As Should Be . ««.. It's-Time To Replace ,lt With A ‘REMBRANDT’A1 Channel Outdoor TV-Antenna Get All Your lut Hard-to-Get 3-6-9 and 12. Comport this antenno to $39.95 sellers -s 'all direction ontenna I with 12 position elec-' tronic switch which 'beams to the strongest _ signal on every TV channel. . .-this is the odvantage of rotomotor I Inning at a fraction of the cost. For all TV's including color TV. Completely assembled — ' easy to fnitall yourself. SIMMSS1, SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. Have you seen the variety of iftems in SIMMS new annex store? Here are some examples and please notice, the LOW PRICES! open tonite ’til 9 p.m. fri. and sat 9 a,m. to 9 p.m. easy car* stainless st*el 6-cit. dutch oven compare to $6.95 • with cover easy to clean • easy to care for ■♦-coot—heat—resistant* handies *. limit 2. mesh play pen r,ri999 value I lorg. 39-inch square pen • mesh .ides lets ’ circulate!,• keeps baby .of* in the yard or the Home * (elds for storage and traveling endorsed by ‘amold palmer’ ‘A-Jay’ caddy cart Compare to $12.95 sailors durable oil metal carl * large •a»y rolling wheels • od-lustable bracket holds ony size bog • folds ipactly. 8» match** Ford and GM car fini*h*e *150 ‘tempo’ touch-up spray fl easy to use • touch-up nicks and scratches on GM Or Ford Cors\* fa* way to touch-up. clearance prices on all lawn furniture II V|UI Mj 96 SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. caused by a sweat from a heavi-er-than-expected work load as he struggled to don a rocket-powered back pack, Blinded, he was forced to abandon the pack and return to the spacecraft cabin after a record 2 hours % minutes outside, half an hour shorter than expected. WORK LOAD Collins said his work load won’t be anywhere near as demanding, and will be reduced because his extravehicular activity is being split into two sections. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Nothing Is Stacked But the Bargains at SIMMS Sundry Dept. MAIN FLOOR SUNDRY DEPTS. ‘Wahl’ Royal Taper Electric Barber Clipper Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. PENTOMTE 'til 5p.m. $32.50 Lint 17" ‘Wahl’ Super 89 Electric Clipper |$15,60 list. Taper efipper with 0-000 cut, AAA heat resistant, shatterproof construction. yg * T ‘Wahl’ Senior Electric Clipper '$22.50 list. Cool, quiet, powerful, with ad- 4 099 justaloelfblades. 0-000 cut. I ‘Oster’ Motor Driven Electric Clipper $47.50 list price. Model 10. Air cooled, motor 08 driven, heavy duty. Progenic. M NORELQO Floating Head Electric Shaver 77 $29.95 Lint Price 17 Shaves 35% closer. Rotary blades, floating heads ana! si deburn trimmer. With coil cord and on-off switch. Norelco Cord or Cordless Shaver $38.50 list, latest model rechargeable speed 2777 NORELCO Flip Top Shaver $19.95 list. Model #20. Rotary blades, f|i top cleaning, on/off switch and rugged mold II77 Boys’-Girls’-Men’*-Ladies’ Timex Wrist Watches All Popular Models 20% O off $ 6.95- 5.56 $ 7.95- 5.36 $ 8.95- 1.16 $ 9.95- 1.95 $10.95- 8.76 $11.J5- 1.56 $17.95-14.36 $24.95-19.96 $39,95-11.56 New Novelty at SIMMS Hypo Squirt Gun 98c list price. Giont pldr tic nypo water.gun. Shool over 20 feet. Great stir mer fuq lor the kids. N North SUM* SIMMS.il. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. I \ Tobacco and Candy Specials Main Floor Tobacco Dept. KLEINS Chocolate Bar 7W-oz. size. Milk chocolate, plain or with peanuts or coconut, Reg. 3.9c. 15' Slim-Gold Finish Butane Lighter 98' $1.494ralue. Attractive, slim a 'lipstick. Lightweight butane . cigarette lighter. i ’ ‘Dun’ Admiral Cigars P $5.00 value;' Box of 50 10c popular 3” L size cigars. Tax included. MAM Candy Sale 11-oz. M & M Peanut... Reg. 49c eee* - 11-oz. M & M Plain . ... Rea. 49c XK® —11-OZ. M AM Wafer -. ■ e»g A9r WV SIMMS..?* Hour*: 9am to 10pm While They Last For Friday and Saturday 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Sgvo All That Lifting and Dragging Garbage Can Tote Carts EL As shown — holds two 20- or 30-gaHon garbage cans. Rolling tote cart prevents heavy lifting, jusf rgll your cans to the curb. Holds metal or.plastic cans. (Not Included with cart.) Your Choice of ‘GARDEX’ Floral Garden Tools 88! • Round Point Shovel • Cultivator - Hoe e Floral Rakt Long handle! floral garden tools for flower beds, around shrubs, lawn, etc. Genuine 'Gardex' American made quality. Wid#Built-lnWh**l*22-<^l. Trash Container 86.88 Paine — Abie Only Save $3 on this trash container on wheels — ride easily on rough surfaces, -easy grip tote .and dump .handles. Tite-fit cover. Green Weather resist-Iqnt Paly. 2916" high. 388 Oscillating Sprinkler (87 Aqua-Magic control lets you sprinkle, to the center, left or right. Sturdy motor arm swings to sprinkle areas from 26x12 feet to 26x48 feet. Moves eas*' fly on sled base. Electric Can Opener^- With Built-lil Knife Sharpener Ptrftri Gift For Waddings, Showers and Anniversaries appliance* Irk 1 — electric conmppener opens any size con end magnetic lid holder holds the lid. Built-in knife sharpener puts a keen edge on any knife.,Cutting wheel and lid holder remove for easy cleaning. No-mar feet. White color. 'SHAKESPEARE' Pushbutton Spin-Cast Reel Model 1771 Shakespeare reel with star drag feature. Pushbutton wonder cast for perfect no-backlash fishing. Comes with 90 yards of 8*lb. mono-line. with Service for Six Picnic Baskets $6.95 Value 399 •et-ever price on a woven wicker basket filled With cepe, plates end for your picnics. Leweet ever price 99 HeiM Segtaeer Street SIMMS!* Voice of the People: 'You Are Not Alone' Strike Against Airlines Groundless Within months after the transit strike that paralyzed New York City fQr nearly two weeks, the Nation is hit by an airline mechanics strike that grounded the planes of five major airlines carrying 250,000 passengers daily." Now in its seventh day, the strike was called after a year of fruitless negotiations between the carriers and the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists and termination of the mandatory 60-day cooling off period prescribed by law. Prior to calling the strike, a recommended settlement by a presidential emergency board had been accepted by the airlines bat rejected by the 35,000 mechanics who man 231 airports across the country. At issue mainly are the amount of an hourly pay increase and institution of an automatic cost'Of-living pay adjustment. ■, ★ . if ★___________; The travel plans of millions of Americans bent on business, pleasure or organizational travel have been rudely disrupted by the grounding of flight equipment that normally handles 60 per cent of the Nation’s commercial flights. This strike is but another epi- -sode in a long sequence of management-employe impasses in the area of public service that condemn users to inconvenience or hardship:—It "lean only hasten the day when meaningful legislation will be enacted in the public interest to effect orderly res-oldtion of labor issues without disruption of vital services. THE PONTIAC Mim Huron Street TlfURSDAY, JULY 14,1966 I 166 An Abandoned Property Problem for Neighbors The property adjoining ours has been neglected for two years since the owners moved away. The house is-condemned and is a public hazard. I have asked the City Incorrect this problem, and they always say they are going to notify the owners or have already done so. ★ ★ ★ With our summer tax bill, every property owner gets a notice about weeds. Why can’t something be done? MRS. BETTY NANCE KEEGO HARBOR To Former Pontiac Residents in California Former residents of the Pontiac area who now live in California. who wish to have their name placed on a Michigan roster, aite requested to send their name, address and hometown to: BILL BREITZMAN 29S3 W. ROWLAND CIRCLE ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA 92804 Broken Glass in Street Endangers Children I recently moved to Michigan Street where hoodlums play a game called “break the bottles.” They arrive on the street late at night In cars or on foot, break numerous bottles and run. I want them to know It isn’t the adults they are hurting but innocent children. I Just had my Uttie son in emergency for seven stitches in his hand, which is barely big enough to hold seven stitches. PAT SMITH 80 MICHIGAN Parcel Post Would ‘Size Out’ Competition David Lawrence Says: Multiples ‘Built-In Market for Downtown’ If there is one thing this Country doesn’t need, it la more government in business. At least that is the view of a significant number of editors throughout the fifty states. The most recent example of government attempting to move into an area of private enterprise can be seen in the proposal to extend t h e Post Office Department’s authority in the package carrying field at the expense of private carriers. The reaction offditors to this latest move to put gdrtmment further into business is typical. ★ ★ \ The Panama City, Fla., Netfs says, “Congress should look askance at the request of the \ Post Office Department that it bs permitted to extend its control over the package-hauling business. Deterioration of Us present services plus its current $400-million annual deficit is sufficient reason to cause one to wonder why it should be permitted to monopolize more of the Nation’s communications and delivery systems.” And in another section of the Country, the Milwaukee Sentinel observes, “It doesn’t make sense to expand the parcel post iservice in order to increase the post office’s business at the price of taking business away from private, taxpaying firms.” ■ it if it It is almost a certainty that It present proposals to increase the size and weight limitations of parcel post are adopted, package carriers such as REA Express will be forced out of business. In the cause of the REA Express, this would mean the loss of a $430 million investor-owned enterprise that pays heavy taxes and provides a worldwide service not duplicated by any other facility, either private or government. LBJ’s Talk Could Alter History Auto Lottery to Give Kremlin a Budget Boost The Kremlin, which has budget troubles just like any capitalist government, plans to raffle off two per cent of an entire year’s output of cars in the Soviet Union. This only amounts to 4,000 cars, but the lottery which began July 1 is expected to take in o o d 1 e s of rubles that will be used to finance intensified training for civilians. r gAiind like. an '."■*1' ' Though i Waiting lists for new and used cars, filled up for the next two years, were closed indefinitely last February. New plants, which will raise production from the present level of 200,000 cars a year to 800,000 (the U.8. is currently producing in the neighborhood of 9 million annually) won’t be in full operation until 1970. it ★ ★ sttih • united States, I WASHINGTON - A memorable address delivered by President Johnson over television and radio Tuesday night could change the course of human history. For the first time, the head of a nation talked directly | to another peo-l pie in the! midst of a war.r He earnestly LAWRENCE pleaded the cause of peace and emphasized that “cooperation, not hostility, is the way of the future.’’ Johnson’s speech was neither belligerent ih tone nor blustering. The President tried the art of persuasion. He pointed out that, since “humiliation can be the seed bed of war,” America is not seeking in Viet Nam “the peace of conquest.” Stressing what could lie beyond a peace conference, Johnson spoke of the need to strengthen the economic and 4 social development of countries in Asia with their enormous populations which suffer from poverty, hunger and disease. The President may have been thinking of Red China’s detachment from the world community as he tactfully argued that isolation is not good for China any more than it has been for the United States. which has the more powerful military force and weap- The strategy behind the kind of speech that President Johnson delivered may not be apparent to the naked eye, but it doubtless was based, on the advice,of those experts here and abroad who know what’s happening inside Red China and who recognife th|t this is the time to present to the people on the mainland a formula that could lead to peace. The President said, “A hostile China must be discouraged from aggression. A misguided China must be encouraged toward-understanding of the outside world and toward policies of peaceful cooperation. For lasting peace can never come, to Asia as long as the 700 million people of mainland China are isolated by their rulers from the outside world.” The log*1 right of the 290 signatories opposing the rezoning around Herrington School was questioned by Mr. Annett because they live 500 feet or more from the site in question. How does this compare with Mr. Poole, who lives in Waterford, Mr. Annett, also of Waterford, and Mr. Dresner of Grosse Pointe. RADIOS OF WORLD The text of the President’s address doubtless will be relayed by radio throughout the world. At least the diplomats will read it in full text, and those who have contact with Red China’s government are in a position to point out that never has there been a more sincere or constructive declaration made to an enemy durj ing a war than that which has just been proclaimed by the President of the United States in a conscientious effort to bring peace In Wet Nam. The motives of Messrs. Poole, Annett and Dresner are financial—they are after the highest dollar yield from the land. Residents are opposed because they want to protect the neighborhood from a bonanza-type development. We do not need multiple housing in a single family neighborhood. What is needed is a city wide development plan which will be functional for many years and designed to protect a home-owner from this type of exploitation. This seat-of-the-pants and piecemeal zoning is as obsolete as the bustle. Let’s put these apartments on some of that vacant land downtown. AH of the problems of the N. E. location would be solved and this development would provide a built-in market for the downtown business man. MEMBER, HERRINGTON HOME-OWNERS ASSN. Tired of Picking Up Litter From Her Yard Bob Considine Says: lotteries are routinely used to raise* supplementary revenue in [ffirtT.S-Sat', seldom has there been such a glamorous one, however. cadent capitalist society?' progrdSStt to two- and three-car families, even n nne^ar family in the Cbmmunlat paradise is for Ivan little more than a Marxist Red herrirfg. ....He saq on tills “Americans entered t h i s century believing that our security had no foundation outride our own continent.-Twice „ we mistook our sheltered position for safety. Twice we were wrong. Ike's Name Is Useful to Dems By BARRY SCHWEID WASHINGTON OP — Secretory of Defense Robert S. McNamara demonstrated anew this week that the Eisenhower image remains a potent one on the Washington scene. Asked at a news conference to explain his apparent change of heart about the wisdom if bombing the Haiioi and Haiphong oil de-pots, McNamara said conditions had changed and added: "i think it was essentially this same line of reasoning that led Gen. Eisenhower to make the statement that he did.” By Invoking the Eisenhower name, McNamara was doing what comes naturally. When you make a-controversial decision look to the formen president for a first line of defense. This is what President John F. Kennedy did after Dwight D. Eisenhower left the White House in January 1961 and this [is what President Johnson has done since. £#31 . ★ ' ★ ™ It’s usually a safe gambit. Having should dered the burden of presidential decisionmaking and concomitant criticism for eight years, Eisenhower generally is a sympathetic source of support. MANY BY-PRODUCTS The by-products of his support are considerable. Ihert^ls the political insurance Inherent I* a former Republican president’s endorsement of a Democratic ad-ministratlon’s decision. Stine of flit controversy is squeezed out of the decision. by giving it a bipartisan coloring. The magic of the Eisenhower name may turn the trick of rallying the undecided. And so Kennedy and Johnson employed this tactic again and again. OVERSEAS POLICY Id March 1962. when Kennedy advocated that the United States look beyond Ita borders toward closer economic and political association with Europe and Japan he noted Eisenhower’s general endorsement. When Johnson, in December 1163, appealed to Congress to reject a drastic redaction in foreign'aid fond* proposed In the House he said the cutbaek would undo Eisenhower’s efforts in Latin America. ’ In May 1965, Johnspn shored up his controversial decision to send Marines tg thd ,i Dominican Republic with an Eisenhower statement of support. ,1 ★ ★ ★ Last January, when air shrikes against North Viet Nam were resumed, Eisenhower was quick to support the move. NOT ALWAYS GOOD Cooperation between Eisenhower and his successors has not always been velvet smooth. Last August, for example, Eisen-. bower challenged Johnson’s oft-repeated contention that U.S. military action in Viet Nam Cowed from a 1954 Eisenhower commitment to the Saigon government. But that disagreement was the fare exception. “If we are wise now, we will not repeat our mistakes of the past. We wiU not retreat from the obligations of freedom and security in Asia.” ADDED SIGNIFICANCE The President's hank and outspoken words might have 1>een uttered in the privacy of a “summit” meeting with the heads of other governments. But they take on added significance because of their directness and the willingness to make such statements in the open. Rarely in the relations between two adversaries during a war has such frank- . ness been displayed, at least on the part of the nation Verbal Orchids • MarMw h mi.) < Henry Sabell of 470 W. Walton; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Hall of Birmingham; 60th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. William Mlhay of 591 Bradford; 55th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. 0. P, Caster of 113 E. Cornell; 54th wedding anniversary. Mrs. A. R. Mills of 140 E. Huron; 90th birthday. Perhaps “Just Wondering” has never picked up watermelon rinds, apple cores, broken glass, pop cans, beer bottles, etc. from her yard. This littering is done not only by small children but by grown ones too. After eight or ten years of this, they can continue caUing me AN OLD GROUCH Fidel Needs More Sugar to Regain Political Health Unchurched Seem Reluctant to Be Changed NEW YORK — Fidel Castro is aUve and kicking. His blast against the U.S. in general and LBJ in neighborhood of ‘a million dollars a day.’ “The rice ration is down to three pounds a week per person, about a third ut imer™P-private business; if you want less Federal interference in local'11™!- fh M government — and if you believe in individualism, Initiative and ___ H S « #« crittA. tor . strong Wes. vote for Dk*^ GEORGE KINDRED LIVONIA, MICHIGAN Canadian headquarters -here, visited a GM plant at Ste. Therese, Que., and held a meeting at the Seignhory Club I in Montebello, Que. RUMORS DENIED _ .. 4 . . 1 The spokesman denied ru- President Johnson asked us to pray about the Viet Nam war mu-g of a production cut and Suggestions for Prayers About Viet Nam Suggests We Learn Viet War Background The political background of the war in Viet Nam, our involvement, and the facts behind the often distorted and confusing reports given to us, are presented in “Our Viet Nam Nightmare” written by Pulitzer Prize-winning Asian correspondent, Marguerite Higgins, just before her death. ★ • ★ ; ★ This wonderful book shows that we are living up to the best traditions of our country and the moral obligation we but. such a blanket request might be confusing to God. ★ ★ ★ For the benefit of those who are uncertain what to pray ' for, here are a few suggestions: 1. Prove to the world, that might makes right. 1 That no matter whaMhe U.S. does, it stands for peace and democracy and so should be trusted and supported. | 3. That God has always been on our side. History has | proven we are His favorite people even if He is a I Universal God. ♦ * * v Surely these are the prayers that President Johnson wants us! nutter. CHARLOTTE H. ORMOND BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN Not Enough Doctors to- Handle Ail Patients My cheers are for The Press, for I feel we do need an Osteopathic College. < If the editors of the Detroit News and Free Press realized the doctor shortage, I feel sure they would change their |j minds. The M, D.s are too busy and I say We need more doctors and need them quickly. I realize we are paying heavy tazes, but what are taxes compared with current needs. ★ dr * The M. D.s cannot take care of everyone. A WIDOW cancellation of sales staff vacations at GM*s Canadian operations. Other industry sources reported that despite a decrease of 7.8 per cent in sales during the first half of this year GM has told the United Auto Workers Union of Canada it will employ at least 15,000 Canadian workers when 1907 production begins Aug. 4. This was the same number employed for 1966 production. The company is also reported planning to start a second shift at its Ste. Therese plant and open a zone office in Ottawa. ‘Recent Editorial Comments Were Unfair’ Your Editorial “Pentagon Drove a Hard Bargain—Hard on U.S.” was entirely unfair in saying “American bombs, purchased by Germany at a fraction of their . cost, were add back for a profit.” Obviously the Work 1 of a 'Snake' Thief 1 PHOENIX, Arts. (AP) - That ox in Thomas Clendenin’s backyard was broken into and robbed Wednesday, he told police. The thief mode off with a Mexican Boa constrictor 7Vi feet long and weighing 25 pounds. Poverty Is Questioned MARTINEZ, Calif. (AP) - A grand jury probe was ordered after the Orinda elementary school district had applied for Why should you try to incite trouble with another country? th^L^^ge hi! come of families in thecommu- Germany did not bay the bombs-—some scrap metal concern In Germany did! JACK B. BALDWIN BLOOMFIELD HILLS 1 nity was$13,000. PHONE FE 4-2511 or CHARGE IT ! On WAITE'S FOURTH FLOOR ii'fraanfrvcj ■ 11 > i' ■ n ^ ■ ■ —;— • WHITE Whiter-Than-White SPRINGMAID • SHEETS Cotton Muslins *1.99 R«g. 2.69 81x108" ... S2.29 Reg. 2.69 Dbl. Fitted ... S2.29 Reg. 1.20 pr.CoiM....$1.09 Cotton Percales 72x108"or * _ . _ Twin Fitted $0 A Q Rog.2.99 A,*t7 Reg. 3.19 81x106".......$2.69 Reg. 3.19 Dbl Fitted....S2.69 Reg. IJOpr.CoM..........SI.39 "SERENADE" TERRY TOWELS Wondorf ul'iavingj on this bright array of left cotton torry towoli. In rich loo pink, antique gold, lemon, light blue, verdion green, bristol blue, Siamese pink and white. Charge Yoyrt. Bath Towel...................... 1.69 Hand Towel............................1,09 Washcloth............................. ,39 Domestics... Fourth Floor BELLEAIR DACRON® PILLOWS Red label DuPont Dacron® polyester pillows. Cotton percale florals, solid covers, Notwtlltrgtnic and completely washable. 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Voitti2r-38" $800 sqrt NeanalNtEH is Men Mst 2* Tqr Rea lam Mm Sender 100* SUUTIFUUT MTVRAl hU MV1 lay: Silk Fashion Liquid Make-Up P Try Frai: Silk Fiihicifxi Piwdcr iqi: NadH far tka Face 1“ IfrljfieilawM Swum Nadar SIVt DRY SKIN ITS DtW! 'P' Skin OF W* Q, Skin D6* CS*' w w Bays Skin Dew Moisturizing Emulsion 300 Tp ftw: Shin B«w froiktnor aid Ttotr K NICE TO IE NEAR All DAY I ROLL DRY Mh M In. Parfaaa Spray ar Nrittai Cnaa Datdarant AathPenpiraat ToFmill«amS«tttEmnra4aa CLEANSE ANO FRESHEN WITH DEVI \ Skin Da* / % ■af: Skin Dtw Clianter Concentrate ni Cjm Makt- Up Btawtr 2°° Try Fret: Skin Pew f rtthaaer iwd Ttntr ■ay: laaaty Wa$ki*| Snian P TnfftWi“Wa>ariy PWtlttMm A—^ ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TKUBSDAV, JULY 14, 1968 COUNTY OF OAKLAND I NOTICE OF HEARING |1 KB: Petltlae to Locate, Establish snd!§ Construct an IMrwOuMy Drain | . In Orion Township. Oeklsndtoynty.jl Michigan County «Oram Commissioner of Oakland;| County, MIcMgsn, petitioning for the $ following prelect, to-wtt: Location, establishment and construction J , of an Intra-county drain to bt located ^ Soapy: What Debate? Cavanagh:I Accept By the Associated Press bate, ^nd that he had not agreed could get in on early develop* Beginning at, a point In the center line j of Point Creek, said point being 1410] feet north and ISjO feet east of the Southwest corner of Section II, TON,, - RioE Orion Township, Oakland County, Michigan,' thence southwesterly along; the lot line between lot #14$ and #14* i of "JohrsWinter Land and Home Sub."! and the extension thereof 700 feet to a ’Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cav- ments in federal aid He told a news conference at Marquette that he favdred building an expressway across the entire Upper Peninsula and developing a ■ Pictured Rocks * * * National Lakeshore along Lake At Harbor Springs in Emmet jSuPei?<^- The spokesman said Wednesday that Williams understood he was to appear alone on a show on the station, not with Cavanagh. $ub."i n Winter Land, t line between #164-#1*5 ot #1S0-#1$1, 940 fact more or less, point located 30 fact north of thal llna of Section 13; thence easti line parallel to and lying 20 feet ot the south line of said Section drain, i being located | _______it west d the ______ ot Section 13. T4N, R10E, Orion Township, OPklPnd County, Michigan. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, that the Drainage Board for said protect has considered the said petition and has made a tentative determination that said petition Is sufficient and that the said prelect I Is practical; has given the name "Ballard Drain" as the noma of said drain i and the namt "Ballard Drainage District" County of Oakland, on account ol drain- anagh Wednesday accepted an invitation to appear as a debater on a television show featuring former Gov. G. Mennen Williams, his, opponent for the! Democratic U.S. Senate nomin- But___the, ‘williams ramp bounty** uniiiamaj Sen!.Robert P. Gtffiln, incum- promptly replied that their man proposed a conference of feder- in the Novemb€r electlJon> ' al and state officials to ' workwM>; WasMngton WMnesday for the cutting or elimination of «mtmuin8 W? Satie Mms tolls on the Mackinac Bridge.J*™ to He promised to work for the« * ■“*«■* outright elimination of the tolls Festival for parts of two if elected. .a- ,,days' Williams was to complete his tour of all 83 Michigan counties with his visits to Emmet, Mecosta, Osceola and Isabella counties today. was interested only in a solo performance. ~ .a #- * Cavanagh's campaign manager sent a telegram to Richard Freeman, general manager of station WKBD in Detroit, say- Pigeon Fancier's Task Is Feed the Pigeons Road, project. . Orion, Michigan, for the hearing any objections to said the petition therefor, and to matter ot assessing the cost thereof to the public corporations above named. I At said hearing any public corporation to bo assessed or sny taxpayer thereof, will be entitled to be hoard. This notice la given «y order ot the] sold Drainage Board for the Ballard “We are delighted to learn from your letter of July 13 that Mr. Williams has agrekl to de-counties today. SAN FRANCISCO MAP) bate the issues with Mayor «ALERT SYSTEM’ James A. Schroeder, 33, eon- impartial SlSiTCSBJSWS WHAT DEBATE? , 100 persons at Northern Michi-! received sentence. But a spokesman for Williams gan University. He proposed an; mus* feed pigeons in the said the former six-term gov-j“early warning, alert system” approved areas the first Sunday emor knew nothing of any de-1 whereby small communities every month for the next two ------------------------------------ J years, Municipal Court Judge | Elton C. Lawless ruled recently. NOTICE TO EIDDERS U.S. Officials Admit Okay to 'Bu Hotel Record Registration for Arkansas Primary LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (API-More voters have registered for the July 38 Arkansas primauyj for any previous primary, j state auditor's office an-noun ca Perkwood Avenue ,* UMhaUan Ora s also t e Assessor of the City City, on the 24th dhy OLGA BARKELEV City Clet July 14. " Gadabout Corduroy-Champion for Fall A. Cardigan Blazer.... 15.99 8. "Steeplechase" Bermuda C. Petite Shift.12.99 Slim Skirt. 9.99 Shirt*............*.4.99 Striped Turtleneck .. 6.99 ....Polslty1'AMW BtBUM B.99 1 Crochet edge eeedigen 7.99 Stretrh Stnrkings ' , 2U0 Slim Skirt V 7....... 9.99 - Our wenderiul\u>d»~vvcrte7«efdMtoy-«oHection. 1009^ cotton vihiantly olive separates in luscious shads* of plum, grape, gingersnap and subtle white raigfn. Sizes 8 to 18. Charge Yours. HU SEMI-ANNUAL 4 V X " iilBlilfMif' ff Si irSpBIB non-stop shirtdress in easy-going Pyqueijtj^e^sey, ; Cool, dark and camfrot, this little vagabond Is ♦hat kind df stop-iti-ond-go drmww thatloobfissh and crisp, yet always fwb relcrxed. Piqoglla, pronounced pe-k-o-l-l-o, Is nwvmpl If* a special knit-like blend of 77% Arnel and 23% Nylon. Delicately textured, it tailors beautifully, retains its shape, know! no limit to-1ha times bnd places you'll .wear it. Washable, if drig>-dries, needs little or. no ironing, loves the busy life Colors,- Black, Green, Navy ’• Sizes. 10-20 and 1216-24V6 These Famous Brands . . . Life Stride, Air Step, Joyce and others. Values to 18.00 ‘ *8.90 $)P.9g, *12.90 '14*’ 9$ Choose yours from this wide assortment of famous make shoes. Choke of Spring and Summer styles in and Mid heels. Black, Bone, Red, Navy, Calf and Patents. Sizes 5 to 10. Narrow and Medium widths. Charge Yours at Waite's. Women's Shoes ... Street Floor Dresses.. . THird Floor EDWIN ETHERINGTON •SIHHEK SALE OOTSTJUIDnG VALUES! TEBUFIC SAWS U EVERY DEPUtTHERT! ~!—“t. "s' ,0‘— -$—•—i J ■-— - • :’J~ r Limited quantities * . , on sol* whilo they last BEG. SMI HETTBICX 2' DULL TENT WITH SCIEENS, ZIPPED DOOR, FLOOR Spacious as a 9x12' room! Nylon screen, zipper door, arctic seal storm flaps, aluminum from*, sup* ported windows. Groat camping. CLEARANCE Simmer Needs m OFF •Grills •Hoses •Hammocks •Cots •Patio, picnic tables •Garden umbrellas School 'Bonds' Attract Broker Stock Market Chief Takes. University Job NEW YORK (AP) - After 14 years, Edwin D. Etherington is returning to his first love -education. .“Hie field of education has always been a central interest of mine,” said the president of the American Stock Exchange. “And I guess that interest has never really strayed too far.” Etherington, 41, admitted that to leave the stock exchange post to become president of his alma mater — Wesleyan University in Middletown, Conn. — he will have to'take a cut in pay from the $100,000 a year he now gets. “Although universities don’t usually make public the salaries of their officials,” he aid, “I would say you are correct to assume that it will be something below my present salary." “I started as a teacher and assistant dean at the universal ty," he noted. ‘‘And I had my sights set to an educational post at that time.” But he was quick to add that “my eights than were let at a much lower level.Y Etherington asked the exchange board of directors Wednesday to accept his resignation,.effective next February. Suit Settled in Dearborn Riot Incident DETROIT. (AP) - A Dearborn man whose home was damaged in a IMS Labor Day riot settled for $4,SOO yesterday in the civil suit he filed against Dearborn officials for lack of protection. Giuseppe Stanzione had originally sued Dearbopi Mayor Orville Hubbard and other Dearborn officials for $250,000. He said trouble started because neighbors mistakenly thought that Negroes were moving into Stanxione’s home.____✓ Stmlone charged that poiiqe failed to break up. jk riot and, as a result, damage'was done to his home, I Dearborn City Attorney Ralph C. Guy Jr., said that the $4,500 settlement would be paid, by Hubbard and the others named hr the suit since the city was not involved in the civil case. The Dearborn officials were acquitted on criminal charges in Federal Court in June, 1965. Padded, chrome plated frame. Ideal for travel. riLLUW Buoyant, firm, cool! Wash* able# non-allergenic. Savel Camera Dept. Specials 157b OFF •Tape recorders (except Sony models) •Famous typewriters •35 mm & movie projectors •Floor modal specials mr. SNAP-SIDE UNDERSHIRTS 2-1” 100% fine combed cotton. Bunny West, 6 mos. 1V4 yrs. S/iQPM MODERN> CONVENIENT WAY... 'CHARGE IT' ANDTAKE MANY LONG MONTHS TO PAY OPEN KVUnr NIGHT TO 9 Drayton open Sunday noon to 6 REI Promote Judge McCALLUM CIRCUIT JUDGE ^ REG. $1 AND $2 FASHION JEWELRY 69°-99' Imported beads, novelty metals; necklaces, earrings, bracelets. Colors for every ensemble. Save todayl ALUMINUM INNEBSPRING CHAISE WITH EAST-CUE VIHYL COVERED CUSHION The height of luxury and comfort for summers to come. Adjusts to 5 comfortable positions. Sturdy waathewesittant aluminum frame. I,2-PC.STYLES GIRLS' SWIMSUITS Famous maker's new 1966 basic and novelty nylon interlock stretch swimsuits in sun-kist styles. Sizes 7-14. JUVENILERttYS' 2-PC. SHORT SETS Man‘tailored short sleeve, shirts with contrasting or matching boxer shorts. Many styles. Sizes 3 to 6x. SLEEPWEAR, PETTICOATS. DUSTERS, LOUNGERS, SUPS 1.88 REG. 2.99-3.99 Just In time for vacation... sizzling temperatures! Cool cotton dusters, sleeveleu patio loungers, nylon tricot slips, petticoats, lacy shift gowns. Sizes S-M-L, 32 to 40. Savel ~HEG. S3 AND $5 SUMMER HANDBAG [99.399 Simulated leathers, fabrics, imported straws. In black, naturaji assorted colors. Sizes and styles galorel VALDES TO $ 11-CALIFORNIA SLUB ACETATE LINE SKIHMEH 4.97 CHARGE IT A fabulous fashion scoop from the West Coast! Smart sleeveless look-of-silk body shaped skimmers, 2-pc. novelties. Solids, stripes, dots, prints! Sizes 8 to 18. Save nowl TOUR CHOICES REG. 1.99 JAMAICA SHORTS, PEDAL PUSHERS, KNEE KNOCKERS, JAZZY COTTON KNIT T-TOPS Shorts: All 100% cotton poplins, duck, denim, hopsack. Prints, solids. 8 to 16. Pedal push a r, knee-knockers: Solids colors, cas'd fabrics. Slim, triml 8 to 16. T-tops: Sleeveless, short sleeve solids, stripes, prints. Gay colors. Sizes S-M-L. KODAK FILM SPECIALS 8 mm-roll typo H, w/pro. 2.79 3^-20 oxp. typo.Il' w/pro. 2 39 B4W VP-120,127,620 . 3/81 Color d-120,12^, 620 . .. 9k 8mm mag. typo II, w/pro. 3.99. 16mm mag. typo II w/pro. 6.73 16mm 100' roll w/pro. 10.00 in ■ each DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—8 TUB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 19M Here’s proof* that' Montgomery Ward e Most cleaning power of any washer • 3 so pa rate cycles—easy 1-dial control • Lift lid...safety brake steps spin capASSI • 3 cycles, 2 speeds for all-fabric car* • Choice of 5 wash-rinse temperatures • Special wash-wear cool-down cycle • Pin trap protects pump from daman • NEMA m Signature washers cut wash time by 1/3 BIG capacity Unqualified 16-pound capacity never before available in any home washer BIG washability Giant SV-17 agitator with slant vane design for cleanest washes possible BIG economynets you wash any 2 to 1 6-pound load using right amount of water, soap BIG Value Giant capacity plus deluxe features, yet priced lower than many smaller washers CTApC OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 0,Unt 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall 15 cu. ft* Signature® chest freezer • Plant 525-IU, cuuoelty . Handy lift-out basket AA Adjustable cold control u-1 U • Interior light; lock, key/' Tliii Item Kn nniid Wofdi Excellence Award hr Superior quality and Valut. Exceptional value for air conditioner \ e Quantities Limited • Dehumidifies as it cools • Fitters and freshens air e> Controlled by thermostat • Compact, quick-mounting 139 PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. NOW! AMERICA’S BIGGEST HOME WASHER...ONLY AT WARDS M ONTGOMERY WARD $31 off Signature Z-door refrigerator tOOMY 14.0 CU. FT. CAPACITY $248 Rif $219 You never defrost refrigerator or freezer 17.1 sq. ft. shelf areas only 30 inches wide Covered butter keeper; removable egg rack Full width crisper; big 123-lb. freezer has the best buys in appliances! THE PONTIAC PRESS ' B—l Old-Fashioned Work 'Bee' Gets Job Done It’s an old-fashioned one-room scpoolhouse and it sits on the ground* "f »n nlri-fii«hinn«d home. ason enough work “bee” which took (dace Wednesday. Members of the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society donned their old clothes, assembled at Pine Grove, the Moses Wisner home on Oakland Avenue, and pointed the Interior of the schoolhouse there. ■ / • - *........+.......;....... Once the Drayton Plains School on Sashabaw Road, the building was donated to the society by Leonard Coats and moved to its present location. Now the historical group is busy assembling properties to be displayed. They want to have it ready this fall. Nearly all the third and fourth grades oif the Pontiac schools visit the site yearly as well as many from outlying districts. This year the children will see the school restored to almost its original condition. ★ • ★ ★ There are 11 desks already on hand, a teacher’s desk, hand bell, pump, dinner buckets, slates and a large school bell to be hung in a belfry someday. The building has a furnace, .but the society is looking for a pot-bellied stove for that authen- tic look. They also want old reflectors for kerosene lamps. Fifteen members of the historical society applied paint Wednesday. Four others had an equally important job — Miss Emma Howard, Mrs. Whitney Prall, Mrs. Harry Going and Mrs,. L. L. Dunlap served lunch. ★ * ★ The Wisner home is open Sunday through Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. There is a small admission charge. Everybody .had, a job at Wednesday’s- the Oakland County Pioneer and Histor-painting “bee’*, held to redecorate the teal Society spent the day working. They interior of the one-room schoolhouse on expect to have the school ready for the Wisner home grounds. Members of exhibition this fall. \gRpbert C. Andfpo^^Uverside Street, and Mrs. Vh&lSs A. Hudson of Libirtffabtreet 0 a wall done in a hurry when they cooperate £ a. TV |KMTiS3®liPri B. The Surburat, rw. 127.5© now $W.}0 C0lLECTI0N ^ Sa joy when you plnlgr your troth ane* with the diamond ring and ind you ahwya wanted her to have. Fashion Fsntisy diamonds by Kow, ; artfully cut, Ihcv truly orirwfM Karat *oW netting*. *f. 4 »nd Rone natumUy fajtun lupurb repliras of thermal feme, encK on vrry " , attj feminine ehnfn U H i A Swrrthenrt yenduil tells r mmmtmbryoriove,y*t •tyiaomuen tifeam- > PONTIAC MALL—Telagrapk at FHeabth Lake Inn* Open Every Night Until 9 P.M. Social-Sin Is Prying Into Privacy By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: In my opinion, one of the worst social sins is asking questions about sub- ■* jects which are private. Equally unforgiveable are the questioners who assume the children are deaf. “Are they jealous of the baby?V “Isn’t it good you can get rid of Elizabeth for part of the davin nursery achool?” Mi)f J ptrwnrlly otmtltlfr it an advantage for Elizabeth to play with children her own age. Why must they assume I am getting rid of her, and worse, why must they express it that way. in front of her? “The baby ...is the prettiest one, isn’t she? ” “Why is David so slow learning totalkT* '• How can you possibly answer such questions? — Patricia Hoffmann i * ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Hoffman: Your complaint is justified and gives me an opportunity to voice a plea to people to think twice before they speak, especially before children. Why people assume that small children are deaf or have no feelings, I do not know. I have squirmed with embarrassment myself at some of the questions asked i& front of my children by, I suppose, well-meaning older relatives. It is wiser not to answer such questions at the time, but you should make an effort to explain them to your child later. Often the remark can be shaded or worded fo that this hurt or confusion can be lessened. Dear Mrk Post: Please give me your honest opinion of a man who sits around his yard, visits next door or greets company in his underwear? To me it Is vulgar. Disgusted. Dear Disgusted: My honest opinion coincides with yours. An under shirt is not correct attire for visiting or receiving company. Although he need not go so far as to put on a jacket and tie for unexpected visitors, he must cover up with at least an informal sport shirt. BUMF TERMS DAYS SAIGAS CASH flit MONTHS TO PAY W-m Chan* at IBM MM P)Wlitl>wihiiBUI>iUII,|ini»i|ww»wiii|eia B-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, jftTLY 14, IM HHS SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE FOR WOMEN We’ve Reduced a Big Group of Famoue Maker Tkpe-Piece Double Knits of Pure Dacron® Color-rich pure Dacron double knit ensembles in smart three-piece styles. We can't- mention the famous moker but you'll recognize the nam when you see the label. Shown is just one from this gifcup, with a pique knit blouse and pique knjt trim on the jacket's collar, . cuffs, anjj pocket.. ^Striking shades of [> navy, white, blue, pink, or spearmint. ; Sizes 8-18. A very rewarding AA90 reduction at ■. ........ eer PMttoc Mafl Nm Opm tvwy Ivntof to t P.M. m N. THyM M* PwitKc mm Stay Jump Ahead o This Don't Ever Let Him Corner You By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Can a 82-year-old man be getting senile? I can't imagine why else my boss would be acting this way. He asks and I was the prettiest woman he had ever known, and if he cobid get rid of her he would marry me. (I am a divorcee.) When I came here I was warned that the boss fancied himself as a.real lady-killer, but I didn't think he would be this bold. He is a grandfather, active in his church, and is very generous. How can I keep him at arm’s length? This job is handy to my home, and the hours and pay are better than I could get elsewhere. REAL PROBLEM DEAR PROBLEM: When he asks you to work late, tell him you aren’t able. And when he starts bending your ear about his domestic problems, cut him short and tell him you would rather not hear about his private life. Keep your attitude 100 per cent professional. If be fires you, he fires you. Remember, a cant get. any chummier with you than you let him. * * X DEAR ABBY: I have read the etiquette books and I know the groom’s mother is supposed to keep her mouth shut, but here is the situation. My son’s bride-to-be is planning her wedding. She wants a 9 p.m. formal wedding I know it is entirely proper in some places, but our town is not that metropolitan, and I have never heard of a 9 p.m. wedding here, even among the very elite, which we are certainly not. Most of our relatives are in their 60’s and 70’s and they will attend a reception which starts at 10 p.m. I am afraid our side of the family will have very few. It seems a shame. Shouldn’t someone from our side talk to the bride’s side in an effort to get her to reconsider? GROOM’S MOTHER The Detroit Symphony Orchestra and Van Cli-bum, pianist, will present a program at 8:30 tonight, Friday, and Saturday in the Baldwin Memorial Pa-villion on die Meadow Brook Music Festival grounds. DEAR MOTHER: Yes. And the “someone" should* be die groom. DiEAR ABBY: 'After reading the letter from “QUIET PLEASE," who complained about talkative hair • dressers, I had to write. May I inform that dear lady that the poor beauty operators are the ones who do most of the listening. i I have been a beautician’ for over 20 years, and believe, me, there have been times when I have Wished I were deaf! Strangely enough, the higher-class the shop, the more the clients talk about their sex'lives (or lack of It), fights their husbands, problems with their children, and the petty gossip about the neighbors. The girl in the bodtt next to mine had to quit the profession because she developed an ulcer. Her doctor said it was from the frustration of having to listen to clients* without being able to tell them to shut up. So please tell “QUIET PLEASE" that here is one op-J erator who will welcome her with open arms. And if she'll ' be quiet, so will I. MARY AT THE LOOKING/ It’S alwai/s hot when committees for the Convent of the Sacred Heart’s fall fashion show hold their summer meeting; Wednesday was typical when Mrs. George B. Morris Jr. ffntertained the group at her Pembroke Road home. Trying to be cool—they look calm and collected —are (from left) Mrs. Raymond Flynn, Burning Tree Lane and Mrs. J. William Coyle, Birmingham. kept Hairdos Neot i there weren’t enough hairdressers to go around, hair had to be done die day before .a big event. British soldiers slept face down so as not to disturb their freshly set hairdos in the 18th Century. Von VojCjIma A-l CARPET Register Engagement Then Wait Six Months 50 RNISMBT 00! TO MAKE ROOM FOR 1967 STOCK Average House SAVE *00 x *110 TO SEE CARPET AT NOME PHONE: TERMS: R77.19Q7 4990 DIXIE HIGHWAY 90 Dayt or No Monty Down ■ Drayton Plains NO PAYMENTS TIL SEPTEMBER °P«" D>ilY * To * - Monday and Friday Til 9 P.M. , KocV Nwfh ^ WoHon tlvd • HiAJUUtAJULAAJLEJAAlAJUAllAlAAAJtAAAIjUULIJUUJJLAJUUUUUULAlUJUUUUULAJUUUtAAIUUUUUUUUtJJUUt. LONDON (JR - Couples in love should be required to register their engagements with the government and wait six months to marry, the British Bar Association’s General Council says. • * * * “If marriages were made more difficult, divorce would become less prevalent,’’ said a memorandum from the council to the British government. EXCEPTIONS “It is our view that no license to marry should ever — except in some exceptional cases — be granted until the parties have been engaged for a period of at least six months. The government is considering lowering the age for marriage without parental consent from 31 to 18. w w W Barrister Bruce Campbell, a legal authority on divorce, was one of the lawyers who testified before a government committee on the proposed change in the law. Campbell, married and the father of six children, s ed pregnant girls, divorcees, widows and widowers as exceptional cases who should be allowed to wed without the . six-month waiting period. W W * Juanita Frances, chairman of the Married Women's Association, commented: WWW “There is something to be said for making marriage a greater ritual so that men and women are impressed by the responsibilities they are undertaking. INCREASE BREACHES “But I fear the six-month license might lead to an increase in breach of promise actions, and these are very outdated." w w w Die Sun newspaper opposed the bar association’s recommendations, saying: “It is no use trying to legislate for human affections. Laws cannot guarantee happy marriages whether the engagement is long or short." Horn® of fir* fond N«m« : | I DIRIp FROM THE MUSIC TRADE EXPOSITION IN CHICAGO! New! Magnavox Stereo Radio - Phonograph, choice of 4 decorator styles This amazingly compact, space saving Mag-navoR combines superb stereo phonograph with exciting stereo FM and Monaural FM-AM radio. Powerful Solid State stereo amplifier produces 20 watts of undistorted music power-—so dependable that Solid State Components are guaranteed for 5 years. Advanced Acoustical System projects sound from front and. sides of cabinet. • 4 Spaakarsi • Micromatic Record Player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years. Choice of A beautiful styles. Warranty: I/year on parts, 9|) daysservice. i . YOUR CHOICE 198 50 GRINfsIELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 5. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 M. to liM Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days some as cash) or Budget Plan THIS POftTlAC PRESS, THtJRSl^AY, JULY 14, 1966 As the New York designers continued to show their fall creations to fashion writers, Kasper displays for the Joan Leslie house the black lace skirt dress over body-nude pink slip at left. And, at right, Bill Blass has a woman's pant-suit, in broom wool check worn with white wool turtleneck. Mid-Summer Sole AHIE SERTA HOLLYWOOD uHLE BED ENSEMBLES! • YOUR CHOICE OF ANY 10 HEADBOARDS AT NO EXTRA COST! • You Get: SERTA MATTRESS, BOX SPRING, STEEL FRAME, HEADBOARD! SERTA FIRM-TUFTED SERTA SMOOTH-TOP SERTA LUXURY HOLLYWOOD BED" ~ HDLtYWOOB EMSEMBL£ ____________________QUILTED ENSEMBLE 6995 twnsit 7995 t»&sit 8995 Rim d—ply hitud Sna--------a firm »mootli >ap Sarto-----0 EXTHAJOHM qullfd Sw*o__ Ma”nal B Matching box spring for MATTWSSI • Mulching box spring lor firm oxlra sopportl ' • Matching multi-coil box spring NO HONEY DOWN-30 MONTHS TO PAY! SOLID OAK TRUNDLE BED • Heavy-duty woven stripe cover! • Steel frame with costers) • Choice of any ol 10 decorator headboards! • Steel frame with coster B Choice of any of Ip * Sag-resistant "sitting edge"l * Steel frame with castersl * Choice of 10 decorator hoodboardsi Bouquet of Orchids, Grapes Recent wedding vows were taken by Mary Kathleen Lanktree, daughter of the Harold A. Lanktrees of Rochester and David G. Oaks, son of E. C. Oaks of Oak Park and the late Mrs. Oak* Rev. Edward Baumgartner of St. Andrews Catholic Church, Rochster, performed the nuptial Mass. The bride’s white organza gown was styled with an Empire A-line silhouette featuring a chapel train. Her bouffant , Better Hairdo : With Brushing Brushing encourages a better • hairdo. If your hair is short, brush forward after removing the rollers. * ★ ,w For longer hair, biend set sections by brushing upwardr ! For' more fullness, lift the hair, blend set sections by brushing upward. For more fullness, lift the hair strand by strand and brush toward the scalp. Then smooth over the outer layer of back-I brushed hair with your brush. veil of illusion fell from a ! of white pearlized grapes, pearl crown. ‘gold wheat and white orchids. She carried an arrangement , ★ * * Barbara Lanktree attended her sister as mtfid of honor I and Rosemary Kearney was bridesmaid. " Best man, for the groom and his bride who were honored at a reception the Elks Temple, Rochester, was Robert Sarti. Usher duties fterp carried I out by Harold E. Lanktree. The pair will spend a delayed honeymoon in August in the East. Sunglass Frames Get Woodsy Look ll Mr. and Mrs. Elbert f C. Burnett of Sashabaw ! Road, anri.ounce the I engagement of their daughter, Linda Gayle, i to Billy Ray Ingham, son of the William Ing-; hams of West Eight Mile Road', Farmington ; Township. October 29 I vows are planned. There’s a new lode in sun-' glass frames. The latest idea are simulated wood frames that give a girl a woodsy j look. | The wood-like frames are available in a variety of shapes including the “Ben Franklin’’ frame so popular with teen-agers. Sew With a Brick Keep a padded covered brick in your sewing room. Use it to pin material to that you want held taut’ while you are doing hand work. OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF REG. 1.97 SHORTS RUSHtN for TOTS and TEENS 338-6666 Open 9 ’til 5:30 - Mon., Thurs., Fri. 'til 9 1672 S. Telegraph, Pontiac Between Square Lake and Oreharrf Lake Roade ;;t~~v..'V7...........7;,-.v—“j BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS • TRIM STRETCH-TO-FIT DENIMS • FINE QUALITY WOVEN PLAIDS • MOST POPULAR SOLID COLORS • CUT FOR COMFORT TAILORING • EARLY-IN-THE-SEASON SAVING MISSIS'SIZiS 8 TO 18 Neal'S WHY YOU SAVI • Wf hov. nojfoocy fi.tu...! - fan or* no cr.dit cf.org*.! . AT MMRT HAIL ; • W. hovJmo er*di| Ioiri! • You mv« b«ovm wo Mvlf PONTIAC — 200 N. SAGINAW ST. CLARKSTON - WATERFORD on Dixie Highway, Just North of Waterford Hill big bb4 tall man in Mm family. P*m rofor to wr Big Mm'i 16051 Brand Rivar ami 8800 Vm Dyfca! Dreu Salon—Second Floor SUMMER % SALE - now in progress! Park Free Downtown Pontiac —COATS -d SUITS— WfcRE TO $39.98 WERE TO $59.98 *19 *34 -SIMMER DRESSES— Budget Dresses WERE TO $29.98- *7 *12 *15 Better Dresses Worm to (49.98 *19*23*27 ---SPORTSWEAR—— TWO AND THREE PIECE Summer Suits *1288 *1688 SHIFTS : »7»* BLOUSES-T TOPS *2“ *388 SLACKS *ft!» •488 *6** *788 SHORTS *3“ *488 ----MILLINERY—— Were (10.98 Wara $16.98 *3 >■ *5' V; Park Free Downtown'Pontiac Sr 48 N. Saginaw St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY, 14 IX* Copy Trend Setters the social pace-setters decree, regardless of how they may took in thoae bizarre styles. THus, fat women Aould abhor fun for the latter make them look even more elephantine. And rings make jrtubby fingers look even fatter P But such women, don’t think. So they try to flaunt their wealth via fttjr' coats, stoles and flashy rings. They also suck on cigarettes and swill down liquor because they are following the lead sheep. *• *• The leaders, of course, make money out of changing the styles. So they will advocate short dresses; then soon swing over to long skirts to force all women to buy entirely new outfits, since you can’t lengthen short skirts. And this zooms the sale of textile goods, so the fabric manufacturers smite happily. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of The Pontiac Press,-enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) “To. make them look less ridiculous in Florida’s warm weather, the hotels turn op the air conditioning. “Then those women can strut around and flaunt their furs in the lobby or the hotel diningroom. “Isn’t that silly!’' Remember my oft stated admonition that everybody is branded with this tattoo across his or her chest : “I WANT TO FEEL IMPORTANT!" . WANT ATTENION Millions of people are thus so starved for a little public limelight or spotlighting, that they try to flaunt their wealth. Thus, fat, waddling women will also flash many diamond rings on their stubby fingers. And wear mink or sable even in the summer weather of Florida just to ritz their I By Dr. GEORGE W. CRANE Rl CASE Z-4C1: Our daughter ra Judy accompanied her hus-s',j band to Miami Beach last fall S' for a sales convention. I “But, Daddy," Judy pro-ill testedafter III her return, Hi “it was so m cold in the ho- 89! tel lobby and EHpplf IS. the dining W/m. Hi; room that we B| ■** | almost froze. fact.jve H had to go out-■ doors to get ■■■■■ ■ warm! DR. CRANE ■ “So we spent much of our BB time on the beach, just try-■ { ing to thaw out. ■j “For the weather was like ■ summer outside. B] “One day I asked the hotel ■ manager why he kept the ho-|jf| tel so cold, and he said that H most of the women from New ^9 York and other Eastern cities H§ wanted to show off their mink BE I stoles. DRESSES Mercedes, Bates, director of the Betty Crocker Kitchens, recently was elected a corp-t orate vice president of General Mills. She becomes the first woman officer in the history of the company. As director of the kitchens, Miss Bates heads a staff of 52 women who develop and test recipes, test products, prepare cookbooks and answer homemakers' questions. She is the fifth Betty Crocker since the company established their kitchens in 1921. Now For the majority of people react much like sheep. w They stampede into any cockeyed fashion or habit that advertisers make them think symbolizes social leadership. “Keep up with the Joneses” is an old slogan in this connection. Our A. M. A. Journal recently stated that 4,500 new teenagers each day become fresh addicts of cigarettes. Why? Because in the middle teens, young folks lack self-assurance. They are afraid to stand out from the crowd as individuals, so try to merge in the herd reaction. And advertisers know this fact, so they cleverly manipulate youth into smoking and drinking, supposedly as symbols of sophistication. WOMEN GULLIBLE / Women are even more gullible than men as regards fads and fashions so they dress as I Summer 1 Skin Care 1It is easy to have a smooth S lovely complexion, despite 1 the skin-coarsening effect of summer. The pores open much wider in the heat so | it’s essential that they have | free movement to open and I close without being dogged. E Protect from cosmetic pig-I ments, dust and powder by I smoothing on your oil of I Olay. This will also protect I the complexion from harsh II sun rays and will give the S j^kin a cod, milky bloom a even on the hottest days. »* . Your druggist can supply you | with oil of Olay for your per-g! sonal needs. ... Margaret Merril Miss Chapman Takes Vows in Rochester Summer Cotton Print Vickie Frank Is Honored SHIFTS Vickie Frank, daughter of the Bruce Franks of Franklin Village was honored with a luncheon and bridal shower yesterday at Sylvan Glen Inn. Hostesses were Mrs. Robert Frank of Avon Township, and Mrs. Lewis Arscott of Roches- were regular 13. values SPECIAL 990 An August wedding date has been set by Miss Frank and Lee Kiefer, don of the LeRoy Kiefers oLBloomfield Hills. PRINT COTTON JAMAICAS were 7# now 4" ’ 1, PLAID and SOLID COLOR JAMAICAS 6 3" SOLID COLOR FULL LENGTH PANTS "99 were 8. now ” SLEEVELESS BLOUSES PRINTS and SOLIDS were 5. now 359 Douglas Chapman was best man with Charles In-grahm and Glenn Cummings as ushers. With costume jewelry more colorful, larger and dramatic than ever before, make certain that the pieces you choose to wear complement your, complexion, the shape of yourr face, and your costume, says beauty authority, Max Factor. SWIM SUITS were Follow a few basic tips and your jewelry will become twice as flattering. First, apply sheer foundation make-up that will give your skin a smooth, even tone against the Bring the color down over the" jawllne and throat. Choose a shade to match your skin, but -en~the - creamy-beige stde when you wear gold jewelry, and on the rose-beige side when silver is worn. If you select the new dramatic and colorful contemporary-primitive jewelry, be sure the colors flatter your complexion and go with the costume you are wearing. LIP HARMONY Then, make this jewelry even more flattering by selecting a lipstick to harmonize with the most important shades. Pure white jewelry will flatter a clear skin and point up one that is less than perfect. 4 Black jewelry is difficult to wear, for it accents lines in the face and neck. Unless yoiir figure is tall and willowy, wear modified versions of the large earring, bracelet and bead rage. Dangling earrings are for you if your face is hill or oval, but « round or chunky style, worn at the ear lobe level, will widen a face that is long and prove to be more flattering. WHITE STAG ; SUMMER PLAYWEAR j 1/S off— £:____ ;1i Sizes 8 to 20 whipped cream prints, solid silks, solid pi*inted silks matrlasse and others Nearly 70 co-operating firms joined us, in developing the Thomas Alva Edison House at Cranbrook Institute of Science. Wi think they did a great job. You’re cordially invited to stop in and see what wa mean. . A visiting scientist and his family will reside, in the House. They'll have the' convenience of allelectric living. It's even wired St a TV studio. - Heating cabfs melts snow on the drive and even in the eaves. And patio lights .do more hare than light the patio. They control insects too. Two central electric heating and air conditioning units maintain year-around climate conditioning and dean thf air electrostatically. Out in the garage, a remote control opener handles the door. Kitchen end laundry ere completely equipped ,with electric appliances. Come biy and see the new ideas that specialists have put into a truly ’modern home. Cranbrook Institute is on Lone Pine* Rd.. west of U.S. 10, ip Bloomfield Hills. The House is on Institute Way across from the Science Museum, Open 1 to 5 p.m. daily; noon to 8. Sundays through August 16. Edison guides will show'you through. ■DISON You should see what's inside Srnjj - Annual © Bra and Painty Girdle SALE of Famous Brands 20% OFF and MORE Im 2.SO to 12.50 NOW ‘ Attention-Lovers Plants are like people — they thrive on love and attention. The Society of American Florists says your flowering plants will bloom their best for you if they get enough water (but not too much), plenty of light, moderate temperature, end ample humidity. THE PONTIAC PBKSS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 B—a FRIDAY ONLY! Women's canvas oxfords with fully cushioned insole a Your choice! Whit# or black canvas uppers with fully cushioned insole fctf comfo/t, wear. Sure-grip, non-slip sole. Sizas 5 to 10. Jt IVIRY NIGHT TO t OpM Smimtt MM M A p.m. DOWNTOWN AND DILAYTON PLAINS TRADING BOATS IS EASY WITH A PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. JUST PHONE 332-8181. Mr. and, Mrs. Merle Crooks of Shawnee Lane announce the engagement of their daughter, B. Marlene Wagner, to Andre to A. Kives, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Kives of Rivona Drive. Her fiance attends University of Michigan. No date has been set. Set Wedding Date The engagement of their daughter, Patricia Irene, to Gary Lynn Latimen, son of the Ernest Latimens of Cur-wood Street is announced by Mr. and Mrs. William J. Lucas, Clintonville Road. An August wedding date has been set by the couple, Study the Pattern Study a pattern well before pinning to material and cutting out pieces. It eliminates possible errors. tJcSePHINE ZotHUAN Gray hair is no longer a badge of sge because many women, are prematurely gray. Women of all,ages have gray streaks put in their hair artificially. This is most attractive and is even indulged in by very young women. However, if you have gray hair and don’t like it, don’t worry, act! Hair coloring has become so expert that it is no longer a gamble if you have a competent operator. Gray hair makes acme women feel older, and some think it makes certain types look washed out. It’s all a question of individual opinion and taste. If~ you have gray hair and don’t like it, the worst thing you can do about it is to sit around and worry about it. This may even make you grayer because stress and worry of long duration may be a factor in graying. So can severe illness hasten the graying process. So far as I have been able to discover, there are no authentic cases of graying overnight. After all, the pigment which colors the hair is distributed in the shaft of the hair and graying can oc-' cur only at the roots as the hair grows out. PREMATURE GRAY Premature graying often seems to be inherited. It runs in families. Diet no doubt plays a part Just as it can in all the body processes and in premature aging. Malnutrition can do- all sorts of things to us. There has been some indication that certain members of the vitamin B family are helpfal in -restoring natural color. In tests some years ago a small percentage of persons were helped by dosages of members of this complex family- However, the tests were inconclusive. In the past it was thought to be smart to begin coloring hair before it became very gray, so that it would not be noticeable to friends or foes. It was a dark secret, known only to you and your hair stylist. Today that has all changed! NOBODY CARES Today , nobody cares if a woman decides that she wants to become a blonde, brunette, or redhead. Nobody, at least very few, thinks anything about it-Hair coloring has become so usual that it is classed in women’s minds among other cosmetic procedures. Party Goers Get Treats Homemade desserts by the of SL Perpetua's Church Altar Sodality will highlight Uieir summer card partZH^n Wednesday. ThVatmosphere of the card party will be flowering summertime., Flower arrangements ip wicker cages will serve as Centerpieces on each table and then be given? as table prizes. The day’s activities will begin at 1 p.m. Cochairmen, for the event are* Mrs! Nicholas O’.pea, Mrs. Barnes Brown and Mrs, Paul Holler. Ticket chairmen are Mrs, Joseph Gauthier and Mrs. Frank Flick. The party is open to the public. C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2000 weddingra. * May We Make Your Pictures?- Price Inc hi rtf n: ' • Picture for Press o Just Mirried Sign ' • Wedding Guest Book • Miniature Marriage (>i .tificate • Rice to Throw * • III.1.1 He: At at hr CHILDREN ’OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. ' The only danger is that you, may select a color which does not harmonize with the change in your complexion tone. As a general rule your new color should be a shade lighter than your natural hair color as you grow older: Dark shades are too harsh. If your problem is thinning hair instead of gray hair you? may want my booklet “Is Your Hair Thinning?’’ If so send 15 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for it. Address to Josephine bowman in care of the Pontiac Press. PAULI’S SEMI-ANNUAL SUMMER Now In Progress SHOE / STORE/ Pauli *1$ <0 35 N. Saginaw St. j We Accept Michigan Bankardf Charge Plates Wonderful, darkened acetate knits are cool- travellers now •.. will cany you gracefully into the coming season. They always stay fresh, never wrinkle, are a joy to Wear! Shorn are but 4, bee there and dozens more In down-to-esirth brown, bristol blue^ moss green, gallic green, blade. Sizes 7 to 15’and 8 to 20. 1 Simply wonderful. « * buy your knits today. months tmpeyl ■ £ h. ' • TilB P<)NTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. JULY U, 1966 m ,c^ *1 DDircc ww * rtuua CUT AGAIN! QualiCraft" 7.99-8.99 Dress Shoes 3.98 Save 50% or morel Doq’1 mi» those temorkabh* ^_values on Amorims best-s*IBng fashion shoes. , j I 3.99 to 5.99 Casual Styles 1.99 & 2.99 Fobulous young-shoe buys! Pick a wardrobe of skimmers, strap-ups, cutouts, smell heels, all amazingly priced Pontiac Mall Shopping Center VI Mrs. Betty Odle, exhibits-designer-in-charge, Cranbrook Institute of Science, admires a work done by nine-year-ofld. Kenneth Adolphus of Ecorse who has been given a one man show at the leading museum. His science teacher at the Ralph J. Bunche School in Ecorse, Alma Bailey, brought the boy’s unusual talent in the field of art, to the attention of Dr. -Robert T. Hatt, director of the institute. Hours for the exhibit are 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays and 1 to 5 p.m. on weekends. There is an admission charge. Expect 700 at White House Golo Texas Size Reception NEW YORK (At - Prospective fathers of the bride, who traditionally feel as the wedding bills mount that they’re not losing a daughter but they’re gaining a mortgage, will probably be watching the approaching L u c i Johnson .nuptials, with a special interest. Will the First Lady, through purely hospitable motives, set a trend that will lead to even . more “lien” days ahead for dad? Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson wants everybody — all 700— invited to the church for her daughter’s wedding on August 0 to come to a reception at the White House.. TEXAS HOSPITALITY “It offends my sense of hospitality to invite friends to the church and not to the reception and vice versa,” she has explained. Comments Amy Vanderbilt, expert on etiquette: “That’s awfully good if you have lots of money. “The average American family can’t include in the reception all those they’ve invited to the wedding. But if money’s no object, lovely.” ★ ★ ★ Miss Vanderbilt thinks Mrs. Johnson is perfectly right, though. "Because it’s so obvious they can afford to have everybody. For the average family it would be hard.” “I say in my book,” says Miss Vanderbilt, “which, by the way, they’ve had at the White House since t|ie; Tru-mgsMfflinisirgnftn,nffat summoned his other two and said, ‘From now on what I’m investing in is a strong ladder.’ ’’ At another prominent wedding — on Aug. 13, one week after Luci Johnson’s — all the many guests at the church again are invited to the home reception. „ SOCIETY WEDDING That’s Marguerite Slocum’s wedding at Newport, R.I., one of the high spots of the summer season at the society resort. The bride’s mother, Mrs. John Slocum, says everybody invited Ur the noon wedding will come to a 1 p.m. brunch under a big tent set up on the lawn at the'Slociito place. “When guests come from so far away it’s not fair to make them stand in a reception line for just a glass of champagne,” she reasons. That’S why the brunch. The tent will have a floor for dancing, and besides a society band Scotch bagpipers will skirl an occasional tune. But two examples don’t make a rule. Mrs. Gladstone Williams, who .teaches the social graces to Washington diplomats, government officials and protocol-minded capital newcomers, says it’s still up to the bride and her mother to decide whether to send out a lot of wedding invitations without . the reception cards inside. . * * x •* “If they’re knowledgeable, they’ll know what to do,” she says. “Of course, parents who don’t have the White House for entertaining would have to use a private club or hotel to accommodate 700,” she goes on ★ * * “But since the White House could take care of thousands, I think the Johnsons are being sensible In keeping' the reception that small. And parents everywhere should remember that the thing for them to do is use their own judgment." On CIMing Care Some Advice for Fellows By WALTER LOGAN NEW YORK -(DM) - An nnual roundup of advice, good or otherwise, on the care and feeding of men’s clothes, including helpful tips for the bachelor who gets lipstick on his collar and the housewife who has to wash the socks: HERE GOES: One way to get lipstick stains Jut of a white shirt collar or handkerchief is to rub them with a little butter held in a piece of wax paper then rub away ,with dry absorbent cotton. And one way of making wool socks soft and resilient is to keep a trace of de* tergent in the final rinse water. Otherwise:- Tell your laundry or laundress not to press the folds of French shirt cuffs — it'll keep soil from grinding into the creases. You’ll look taller if you brush your hair tightly at the sides and loosely on the top. * ★ * * Moths and mice will eat up your leather briefcase if you store it away dirty. You can wear ready-made suits if your waist is 35 inches less than your height.... Brown leather shoes or belts can be darkened by rubbing with milk to which a few drops of ammonia have been added. * it * If you keep adjusting your necktie you’ll get the tie and collar both dirty. If you stencil your name in big letters inside your wash and wear raincoat which looks like everybody else’s you can find it quicker in a mess of other wash and wear raincoats at a party. TIE WRINKLES If your ties are slightly wrinkled after wearing you can sometimes smooth them out with a load of books. If you pull down gently on the tie when you take it off it probably won’t wrinkle anyway. If you get real dirty around the collars and cuffs of a shirt you can loosen the dirt first with a solution of sal soda ... if you get your hat’s sweat-band stained by sweat you can take off the stain with a thick paste of baking soda. '* * * If your sweater looks tired give it a rest on an open shelf . . If you fold a muffler neatly and tuck it to your pocket you may stretch t h a pocket but you won’t lose the muffler ... SOUP ON SHIRT? If you spin soup on your shirt you can saye the day by rubbing, on a dry cake of soap before washing ... If you get yourjelt bat wet push out the dents and stand it on its leather band (pulled out, of oourse) ... If' you wear your shoes too often you can freshen them by sprinkling to moth crystals -and leaving for a few days.. * * If you get lipstick on your collar ana don’t have any butter rub it with a slice of white bread. If you put your hats on an jon - the - door hatrack move them around occasionally so they won’t get marks on them. Your new shoes will last longer if you polish them three days before wearing them — if you can wait that long... ' % ★ * • * ( If some of your cleaning methods leave a ring to gab-, ardine you might be able to get it out by holding the spot over steam from a kettle.. .. If your shirt is slightly wrinkled you can iron it with a hot light bulb... SIZE-SAVER If you put clear nail polish over your shoe size the size will be there when it is time to buy new ones... If you’re washing woolens to put away dissolve some mothballs to the last rinse water ... If you get yourself suntanned pastel shirts will make you look even more so. If you are wearing sponge rubber soles (in church?) clean them with a brush, soapsuds and a little ammonia... If you get your shoes wet you can dry them with your wife’s hair dryer but use cold air only . .. If you’re wondering what size a small boy wears add 2 to his age. (usual- . i- ' * * * If you wonder where these hints came^rom: Once again — the American Institute of Men’s and Boy’s Wear, which sends them out all year around and are collected by yours truly. Beef and Condiments I Dress Canned Beans wedding can be as large as you want and the reception as large or small as you want. For what it’s worth to multi-daughtered fathers who look with increasing approval on elopement as their offspring grow, Mia Vanderbilt recalls what a friend did: “He gave his first girl an elaborate wedding and then Convenience Is Best Part Since less than half the calendar days are "good drying days, one of the greatest advantages of an automatic dryer is the convenience of using it day or night to any weather. Mark Huck. an,appliance - - ' -di- rector, points out that a dryer eliminates clotheslines strung through yard or basement, carrying damp clothes, “pin* ning-up” and taking down laundry. Dryers save money — fewer necessities are needed because clothing and household items can be dried quickly for use again. Damage from sun-fading and wind-whipping is eliminated, too. lilMilK By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor “Slaving over a hot stove all day" appeals less and less as the thermometer maintains its high readings. Any main dish that is quickly and easily prepared Is welcome. - ♦ -,e —Try Mrs. Richard Seu-cey’s Hamburger-Bean Casserole. You can prepare it completely on top of the stove, bake it or even heat it on an outdoor grill. * * -.* Vary it by changing the kind of canned beans you HAMBURGER-BEAN CASSEROLE By Mrs. Richard Soncey 1 pound hamburger 1 teaspoon salt V< teaspoon pepper Vi cup catsup 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon mustard . ~4L I..(■!...7 jg — Brown hamburger. ad d salt and pepper, Mix catsup, vinegar, Worcestershire sauce and mustard. * Pour canned beans into , casserole. Add c a t > a p mixture and mix well. Add meat and mix again. Bake at 350 degrees until bubbly, about 30-45 minutes. Makes six servings. Take a dip in the Fountain of Youth Flufljr clouds against a aapphire-*-’•- - sky... tiny rosebud* opening Mibeautiful blossoms...a crystal-clear pond reflecting delicately scented flowers... your skin radiating the lovelineee provided by 2nd Debut. Only 2nd Debut create* such loveliness . . . softer flowing that is all yours... not an iut ...2nd Debut contains an ale-- called C-B-F 600 (C-t-F 1200 for double potency). When spread over the skin's surface... C-E-F-Cellu-lar Expansion Factor-penetratea deeply Into the outer skin layers to the cells below...as it peoet-*-- C-E-F esurics with it mobeuL__ water that expand to plump _ _jd fill in facialUnaaon thesur-fact to makeuesMi vidhlo. Got 2nd Debut, regular or double potency at your drug or department ■tor* today. ARRIVALS LTD* CHICAGO, ILIA. EASY CREDIT TERMS FE 8-4391 7 N. SAGINAW Summtr Tune-Up SPECIAL Bring your sewing machine in and have it cleaned, oiled and tension .... adjusted. Only ... */*• In homo $5.00 ALL WORK GUARANTEED! New 7-Ft. Vacuum Cleaner Hose All Cloth, No Plastic Exchange With Your Re-usable Hos# Ends RICKMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER Across From Pontiac Mill 406 Elizabeth Lake Rd, Phonal US-1282 ENROLL NOW Write for Free Literature 4823 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint, Mich. Transfers | OR 3-02221 ^byLOPiZln# Pianos Played ir 23rd Annual MUSIC FESTIVAL! The SAVE on Our Popular "HOLLY" SPINET PHANO FESTIVAL SALE PRICE *545 OTHER SPECIALS Frem $385 GRINNELL'S PONTIAC MALL arid 27 S. SAGINAW, DOWNTOWN \ ■ Use Yam CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN.(99 days soma os cash), or Budget Plan GRINtiCLL'S, Tontiac Mall, 682*0422 f. /Downtown .Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw Stv fE 3-7168 r: Use Your Charge; 4-Pay Plan (90 days some qs cash) or Budget Plan singer CLEARANCE SALE _uSl open stock |l SAVE Touch & Sew @ Zig-Zag SEWING MACHINES by SINGER SAVE! SAVE! Vacuum Cleaners, Floor Polishers, Stereo-Phono Equipment SINGER 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14,1966 AT SIBLEY'S MIRACLE MILE SEMI-ANNUAL Summer Maternity and Uniform m m t%2dL ~rM- FOR MEN FOR WOMEN FLORSHEIM RED CROSS Selected Stylet end VITALITY *17“ t.*19" Selected Stylet REGULAR $19.95 to*$25.$S . *9” t. HI" WIHTHROP - SIBLEY HUSH PUPPIES® Selected Stylet *8,# lMO" VALUES TO $14.95 REGULAR $12.00 to $17.00 SANDLER, HUSH PUPPIES 00MPHIES, MISS WONDERFUL $3.90 te $8.90 REGULAR TO $12.00 FLORSHEIM $14.90 Selected Stylet Reg. To $19.00 Sibley's semi-annual sale is famous all over the Ponfiac^area because of the wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and sgve many dollars in this great event. FOR CHILDREN ... SPECIAL GROUP MISS SANDLER A|A)|f YANIGANS AND "UW $3" T. *4" RED 00DSE Valuet to $9.95 “MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER” mb FES-9700 USE/ YOUR SECORITY CHARGE OR MICHIGAN {IANKARD llOAC MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER """ OPEN EVENINGS TIL9^ South Telegraph at Square Lake Read targe seMctwmt MatenHty Dresses, Blouses and Shorts NOW Vi OFF » Outstanding values on our Summer maternity drOsses. Fine selections of famous labels in a wide variety of styles. Clearance of UNIFORMS and SMOCKS NOW H OFF Assorted styles In. jersey, cottpns and fine blends. Alt famous labels. Also on sale*-uniform skirts. Slop in and save. MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MlfACLl M|LI SHOPPING CENTER JULY SPECIAL! Young Half Size Dresses... 12% to 22% Print Arnei Jerseys and Dacron and Cotton ... A group of prints and solid colors Full skirt & stylos and sheaths. Parents,You Can Rebel Too, By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: Our lS-yeir-dd girl rebuffs me If I even uk her if she’ a good time on a date. I’ve told her how this hurts me but all she says Is, her dates are her business. Mrs. Lawrence, > when I was her age I used to go into my parents’ bedroom after I’d been to a party or out with a new boy friend and tell them how liked, him, if he was going to call me again, if anyone had said anything about my dress. But this generation . . . ANSWER: Yoeur daughter it scared to discuss her dates with yea lest you use the informs tioa to try to recover childhood control of her. Ia that why you want the information? Or do you want it because you are interested in her happiness? If you are more interested In her happiness than you are in reclaiming control over her, say so. Blow up when you say so. You are entitled to indignation. She has misjudged you, 'The adolescent puts a taboo oa closeaess to parents because he asseeietes tenderness and warmth with humiliating infantilism, with depend- IMWU. DUO *144" Thrilling modem diamond ring fashion. Exquisite matched 14K white or yellow gold rings. me 27"—40" and ence on them” is a recent statement made by psychiatrist Or. Murrey Bilmea. He’s right Your 15-year-old daughter is scared of closeness to you because she thinkajfou’ll exploit it to turn her mto a baby again. So what? What has her terror of renewed control of her got to do with you? It’s her terror — not yours. You and I don’t have to put a taboo on closeness te a child because he puts one on closeness to us. We are not children. We are loving parents fgho are passionately interested in his happiness. Se when a 15-year-old daughter treats ns like n FBI agent seeking information an her social activities in order to stick her with a charge of subversion, we are entitled to get very mad. We are entitled to yell: - “Idiot, I’m asking you questions because I love you! I shortened the hem of that dress you wore to this party! I prosed it! I gave thought and work to make you feel happy in it! And yoii won’t even tell me if yon were! O.K. keep it to yourself! Be a pig aboutjt if that is ' retTOe!” Talk about domination! What think HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW FE 3-1114 HEW LOCATION 1*1 W. MAPLE, BHtMINMAM WOMEN'S WEAR Carpet Paths and Spots Easily Removed ... or dean carpal wall-lo-wall. Safe Blur I.ultra re>bri|htrns colon, laaraa nap fluffy. Real Miy^o-UM electric ahampoafr for 11 a Bay al Broom Brat., 704 Toil Huron St., Pontiac, Mich. Shaped exclusively for halfsizes designed, darted, side-| zipped to make you look sUm-| mer. Sew slacks, Bermuda and [Jamaica shorts in linen, cotton or a biend. . Printed Pattern 471»: Half Sixe Waist 27, 21, 31, 33, 35, $744, 4G inches. Fifty Cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 1001. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. Summer Fashion Festival — 4) design ideas in pattern-packed Catalog. Fun, play, work, travel clothes — all sizes. CUpl coupon in Catalog — choose one! free pattern. Hurry, send 50c for! Catalog. let this child’s fear of closeness to you scare you away from it, too? Dominated, controlled, swallowed up alive is what you are, my friend. It’s sure fascinating to know that the young regard us is a bunch of sneaky tyrants. But if we’re not sneaky tyrants, whht’s their distorted judgment got to do with us? Nothing. Not a thing. what you have Talk about c do you think you are when you More Time Is Taken for Vacations NEW YORK (UPI) - The average American camper spends 25 to 35 days a year vacationing, which is almost twice as long a vacation period as non-campers take. A study by an outdoor camping equipment manufacturer pictures this average camper as a man with a family of four to five persons and a yearly income of $5,000 to $10,000. The study indicated $h at campers are able to take more vacation time because they spend no more for food than they would at home, while noncampers spend the major part of their vacation budgets on room and board. An estimated 45 million Americans are expected to camp out this year. Juice Can Cutter If you cut both aids from small juice cans, you can use them as cookie cutters. Before removing the cutter from the dough, aprinkle your cooky trim, such as nuts or sugar, into the top of the can. 64th Anniversary The LeRoy Deans of Duck Lake Road, Highland Township, celebrated their Mth wedding anniversary oh July 12. Following vows in Ches-aning, the pair settled on the Alonzo Dean property where they still reside. There are four children: Mrs: Theodore Marsh of Otter Lake, Mrs. John Carde of Detroit, Mrs. Herbert Fitch also of Otter Lake and Harry Dean of Duck Lake Road, Highland Township. There are Fashionable Is Byword Paul Pugh, known fir - the Fashion designing world as Mr. Paul, is working as a tailor at Osmun’s downtown store. x Designer of both then’s and women’s fashions, Mr, Paul is a graduate of Curtis School of Pattern Making in New York City and has studied in both Paris and Milan, He made men’s fall models for Eagle Clothiers. But his preference is for women’s after • five and ballgowns. He would like to make gowns for The Supremes! BIRMINGHAM - PONTIAC MALL MR. AND MtiS. LE ROY DEAN A piece of waterproof adhesive placed over the hole when washing baby’s plastic or rubber toy will keep any water from entering it. > 10 grandchildren and 6 greatgrandchildren. Mr. Dean is still an active real estate broker and gardens for a hobby. His wife is a correspondent for a local publication and last year authored her first book. American airlines employed some 190,000 persons last year and paid more than $1.5 billion in wages. J0IN GRINNELL'S UNIQUE Rayon Knit .. keeps going froip morn hiffon belt it Washable Leather On the horizon are machine-washable white leather gloves -developed by a French manufacturer famed for quality. PLAYTIME PLAN For tun and relaxation, learn the Hammond Organ this summer! • ' eSRN We guarantee you'll play, in 3Q days. Lessons are easy. You learn by playing real songs! You get: • 5 organ lessons • Organ ia year home far 30 days • Lesson materials ALL FOR *25 Fee returned if you decide to buy. GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682 0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 till night *17” So versatile and smart with its contrast < triangle that drapes into a chiffon scarf . remove it for a jewel neck. And you can I if you wish. In blue and black, sizes 8 to 16. Our Mobile Fleet will bring a Hammond to your home for Free Trial. Only time Man o’ War was j defeated was when Upset beat him in the Sanford Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 13,1919. I Entire Stock of Summer WHITE STAG SPORTSWEAR 33^ to 40% OFF Shorts! Tops! Surfers! Pants! Colors! Whites! THE PONTIAC FRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 A Style for Every Figure Sears Bra Sale CANINE COMFORT-A little pup headed for a rabies clinic at Covina, Calif., is comforted by a friendly bulldog who’s been through th^ routine before. The clinic was sponsored by a women’s club and a veterinary association to facilitate mandatory vaccination of all dogs. Good Looks Go with Eye Protection PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES Everyone who wears regular glasses can have the same pro* scription in inn glasses. Sears optometrists offer complete service from eye examination to finished glasses in a variety of frame designs. Phone or come in for an appointment today. SEARS OPTICAL SERVICES Regular *4°° Each > for S50-or l^ach SEARS OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Pontiac J54 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 Dr. H. Bronson Padded, Stretch Strap Br'a Soft, "Wonder • fil cup padding adds one full size to your curves and Jooks completely natural! Stretch straps adjust for fit-to-you comfort. 32A to 38B. Contour Bra / Circular stitclied cottpn cups have 14-inch foam rubber lining . . fills out in-between cup sizes with a smooth,' natural look. In sizes 32A to 38B. Stretch Strap Soft Cup Bra Pretty, lace-over-cotton cups give shapely support. Nylon ufd Lycra® span-dex back stretched to fit you! Stretch straps give action comfort. 32A to 38C. CHARGE IT on Sears Easy Payment Plan Store Hours:-Monday, Thursday, Frit Saturday 9 to 9;,Tuesday, Wednesday 9 CHARGE IT on Scan Revolving Charge Hire** New Fashions for-Your Bedroom -----—- Place the ACCENT ON YOUTH sale 097 Regular 814.98 y Just say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears Airy cotton batiste with dainty ruffles. Matching canopy and quilted pillow covers. Cloud-soft Dacron® 88 polyester filling resists matting,even aftermachine washing. White, pink,ltblue. Regular $16.98, Full Size.................... .10.97 Quilted polished cotton splashed with vibrant colors. Polyester Riling. Lined draperies. Blue and green or brown and gold. Regular $14.98, Full Slae............. ........ .10.97 Floral bouquet* on white polished cotton. Lightweight poly, ester filling, pretty quilting. Lined draperies. Lilac or pink. ‘ Regular $14.98, Full Size ................10.97 Reduced 19%! Tri-Level Pillows! \ Regular $9.98 i Scars offers yon individual sleeping comfort at a low, low price! Evwy member of your family will I II f / sleep more reatfully 4ncL comfortably on thtese tri* ') ) / ^ y level pillows. Tri-level pillows are filled with duck feathers and duck down. Heavy featherproof striped cotton ticking. See these quality pillows today! Jumbo Tri-Level Pillows, Reg. $11.98 Jumbo tri-level pillows have extra amount of Riling. Domeitic Department,Main Floor Fantasy. CHARGE IT oa Sean Revolving Charge USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS BUY, SELL, TRADE Costs IVo More at St |You Can Count on l Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back tion jjuaran or your money THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 B—9 ford Workers OK Pact at Ohio Complex CLEVELAND' (AP) - Auto worker* % unanimously approved an agreement with the Ford IMotor Co. Wednesday, ending «. week-long strike at the company's two engine plants and foundry ip suburban Brook Park The 8,600-member Auto Workers Local 1290, by voice vote, gave its approval to an agreement reached by union and management officials, covering . ™ 200 health and safety griev-jductlon In IS Ford plants In fivejshfety conditions and 26 aoces. ‘ ’ .............I l " Full production was expected quickly, starting with the midnight shift it the fouhdry Wednesday night and the 5:80 a m. shift at bpth engine- plants today. PICKETS REMOVED William Stout, president* of UAW Picket lines were removed Local 420, said, the 4,000 workers from the plant after the vote there will be asked soon to was announced. | authorize a strike if SO griev- The strike had disrupted pro-lances involving health- states and Canhda, idling more production standards are not| than 30,000 hourly workers for re#olv®^__________________ several days. ★ ★ * • Ford faces the possibility ofl How to Hurt a Guy toother strike at its suburban! -........._ . ■ ____ Walton Hills stamping plant,r. HAYWARD, C a 1 If. (AP) -ti H| ■ ' Henry Walker was on a wreck-1 ing job recently when he lifted | - ATTENTION! • MEDICAL eUMOf • DENTAL OLMIOD 4 OPTOMETRY OL1NIOS • BARBER SHOPS • BEAUTY SHOPS • LOAN OFFICES • HARDWARE or RETAIL STORES I Your neighbor* will AAP,Franks Nursery, Community lank, I _Jj(ofjder Ijruqs, North Point Cl—nef on4 IHHt C—«rt Wm | Contact Tower Center Owner Blf 34100 a floorboard and discovered 117| CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A gallons of wine. Walker, dumped | LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. it all. He doesn’t drink. I JUST PHONE 332-8181. You Can Count on Us... Quality Costs No More at Sears TEENS’ Slipons, Oxfords from oiir Spring Line | p 1 gffijj { Were 4.99 to 7.99 997 M Charge It THE LEADER GAVE THE WORD — Flying under radar control with a B66 Destroyer plane (top), the pilots of four U.S. Air Force F10S Thunderdiiefs drop their bombs through low clouds on a military target in the southern panhandle of North Viet Nam. U.S. pilots use radar to locate and bomb targets at night and in poor weather. This photograph, released yesterday in Washington by the Department of Defense, was taken June 14 by the pitot of an RF101 Voodoo plane. Clearance of all discontinued patterns in smart teen favorite*. A wide Come ik, •«« *<>r youraelf! In auea 5 to 9 and 10. Boys,’.girl*’ oxfords, .Upon.-. 2-9' 1 Not All stytm In EoorrSlooooA alii Sears Annual SHOE CHILDREN’S Boys,’ Girls’ Oxfords, SJipons for Bugged Wear were 4.99 to 6.99 ' «arge it Shop early for h-,*. #,fes to 4. ‘-»7 MEN’S Better Quality Dress Shoes Come in, aelect good-looking, well-constructed dress shoes from regular stock, now at a low sale price. Quantities are limited, shop early for best selection. Men’* 6.99 to 1.4.99 oxfords, slipon* 6.97 Not All StyUo in EoorySloo «»<* C«tor Sears Parity Girdles are Styled m lb, For In-Motion Flattery! 8' - ne jlr^l . Precisely-placed stretch inserts let these Design-in-motion panty girdles move as you do. Sit, bend or reach ... they stay in place for fitting flattery and comfort Front panels give smooth tummy trimming. Hurry in and choose your favorite style today! Isizcs S, M, L, XI.. 299 each Save on these delightful summer pajama, now . .. when you want them most Our finest in cotton plisse ... wash and dry in a wink. Dainty print in many colors with lace edging. Sizes 32 to 40. 5” Sale-Priced Baby Needs! Cotton Gauze Diapers, our best quality diaper. 21- 027 x40-incfaes. Dozen—. 4 Training Pant* with SJayar crotch. White cotton. n?c Silts 1-4. V 4 Cotton Shirt, in white, fit. • Combed Cotton Gowns in honay* infante to 18 mo. Sale- 167 suckle print. Drawstring QTc priced. 3 For A bottom. Os Infants’ Dept., Main Floor ■' I )o\\ nlow ii Pontiac* Phone I I. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY II, 1PCC -Junior Editors Quix on (an CoiiiU 01 Quality Cost* INo Mo )N: What Is meant by an airplane breaking the sound barrier? ANSWER: Sound travels by waves in the air. At. sea level, these waves in the air move at about 760 miles an hour, tyhen an airplane dies at speeds below this (upper left), there is pressure in the air ahead of the wind. Bach pressure waves move ahead of the plane and act to make the air ahead flow so as to receive die plane easily when it eaters it. These “message" waves travel ahead at the speed of sound. But suppose that the plane itself flies at the speed of sound, or inter? In this case, there are no waves to prepare the air. The plane crashes into the unprepared air, causing violent disturbances called shock waves (upper right). These may travel down to earth as the strong sudden sounds which are sometimes so violent as to shatter windows on die ground. To “Irak the sound barrier” in this way, specially-designed planes are weeded, an ordinary ones might be torn to pieces. These supersonic planes are specially reinforced inside; the nose is pointed, and the body (lower picture) pinched in at the waist; this reduces drag and prevents the pilot from being injured. ★ * ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Not all supersonic planes look exactly alike. Keep your eyes open for models and pictures of them. 2-gallon LING CAN Water your thirstiest flowers and plants in one trip with this step-saving 2-gallon size sprinkling can. Lightweight, strong plastic will low-grip handle for balanced pouring. Large spout for quick-flow waterfiig. Get on* now for this special low price! j HARDWARE Miracle shopping rr — 3 96/0 " / CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON?---SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PqpAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EAST TO USB. JUST PHONE 8M1I1. 3-DAY BEST BUYS And Why ^ Exceptional Low Pricei iP ‘‘Charge it - on Sears ' All Are Find Quality! revolving CHARGE ACCOUNT ^ Limited! Weekend Only ^ Big Selection! Values! Save *6—ALLSTATE * * '.•/<>.. '■ /'X“ ", 'Voltage Batteries Equal to or Higher Powered Than Your Car’s Original Battery* Operate All Your Accessories•. • and Start Up to 50% Faster StaysNew Looking Remain! cleaner than m. conventional battery because there ate no links to corrode or messy tar covering to soften. More Power Internal connector* go through each cell wall rather than up and over I This shorter distance ducea resistance for much more actual starting power. You got 19 to 24% mom cranking turns at a 15% higher speed for s much as 15% longer. Recharge* Faster Leu resistance means your High Voltage Battery accept! a charge quicker, too. That’s important in atop and ro- ' ■tart driving and frequent accessory use. Large 1750-Watt Alternators Sears Price 199*5 ' "Will handle moat all 116-volt appliances. Permanent magnet. 4 • H. P. Craftsmen engine. ‘Sears 1000-Watt Alternators Sears Price 119" Lightweight, compact and always ready. Pen manent magnet. Extra ■ surge power. 2650-Watt Alternators With Battery Charger Regular |279.?5 6-H.P. Craftsman engine 23995 Be prepared for any emergency, where power fails, with just a tug at the starter. Puts out 115/230 volt 60-cycle AC. With 259fc extra rarge power. Permanent magnet 10-amp DC battery charger. Fencing Dmgrt., Perry St. Baiement Onaranteod 30 Months The 30-Month High Voltage Battery fits: BUICK, 63-65 LeSabre 300 and 340-cvu in., 63-66 Specials, Skylark 8-cyL; DESOTO, DODGE, PLYMOUTH, most55-66; RAMBLER,STUDEB AKER, 56 to 66 ; PONTIAC, most 55-66; OLDSMOBILE, 64-66 Jet-star and F858-cyL, CHRYSLER;56-58,61Windsor. 57-58 Saratoga, 61-63 Newport; also many imported ■saw. Buy yotas* wm and ssvsl.. ,_Regular $17.95 High Voltage Battery for: 1A05 flX Most ’56 to ’64 FORD and MERCURY 1“ Regular $1&.95 High Voltage Battery for: BUICK, 65-57, 59-62 and 61-63 Special and Skylark; CADILLAC, most 57-64; OLDSMOBILE, 54-63 and all but 64 Jetstar; CHEVRO- .... LETTmany 63-66; CHEVY II. most 62-66; 11®5 ‘ CORVAIR, most 65-66; FORD, most 65 and 66; Fairlane, most 62-66; FALCON-, moat 60-66; MERCUkY, 65-66 standard abift, most 60-63,65-66 Comet and Meteor. NO MONEY DOWN an Seas laveMsg Chan* idaaco Aecenariu, Perry 3t. Jiaieawitt- Your Choice 6 Needed Hardware Items Value* to 05.99 Q99 (J each ____ ___|______i wWi prii Lseluan, tlHif. liwb . 2 kejn. Craft,man 2-pi era »• B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, I960 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas - Wife of Area Executive Dies KIRS. HOWARD GOSSETT i Mrs. Sprits, a dietitian at Sar v i'cs for Mrs. Howard Ponti*c State Hospital, died (Josephine M.) Gossett, 67 of yesterday. 4421 Parnell, Waterford Town- EDWIN G. BRANNAN shift will be 16 s.m. tomorrow qycy)RD TOWNSHIP — Serv-at Coats Funeral Home, Water- TjwNSraP Serv ford Township. Burial will W-] ^ low in Hillside Cemetery, Belle- 0^14#^a 5*J} ***] Ciil» urday at Bossardet Funeral, ' a .___. i Home. Burial will be in. Oxford Mrs. Gossett, a laboratory 'cemetery. Masonic service will technidan, died Tuesday after L , tomorrow at the fu-a brief illness. ^ neral Surviving is her husband. Mr. Brannan died Tuesday af- SCOTT A. JOHNSON ter a long illness. An inspector Service tor Scott A. Johnson, with Pontiac.Motor Wvision he Chapel with burial in Perry!(rhurchofLtke0rio^. Mount Park Cemetery. ! ™two .. , . .. . ____ert of Lake Orion and Richard Mr. Johnson died Tuesday af-|(rf ^ ^ broth. ter a brief illness. era, Doiph of Pontiac and Ar- Mvfa^arehb^fe Irene^ /Phoenix, Ark; and a brother, three sisters, Mrs. Arthur Law two sisters, Mrs. Rfllpn Korc-] . p.ni:n. ur. io/*ir whitp of ^ dens Ometery, Novi. Service for Mn. Ctaude R. p0NTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-(Joan L ) SJeldon’ J®* JJ fee for Gerald A. Derry, 50, Manva will be 11 a.m.Satur-^ ^ 1:30 MSU Hospital Plant Dr. Feurif, health center director, aaid the new hospital would have 260 beds and capacity to ,0i)0 out-patient cells a month' for^ MSU’s 38,000 itu- EAST LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State University trustees will be eaked this fall to aft prove a new 06 million to H million hoepital and rnr Mn ttm-koUv cUl>te to replace the present the 1011 revolution which over-y 124-bed health center, Dr.jthrew the empire and founded Sun Yat-aen was leader of (Mery) Voss. 80. of 4005 Keith- Jimes ^ ^ wed^sy. Ue CMmae Republic, dale. Bloomfield Hiller* will be---------—------------------ . - -------- YOU WILL UKI OUR SUUNItS MSTHODS , IMPERIAL—CHRYSLIR-PLYMOUTH—VALIANT BIRMINGHAM "*** • CHRYSLIR-PLYMOUTH • * 912 f. Woodward Phono Ml 7421) NEED WORK? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 322-8181. MRS. BERKELEY VOSS A . retired diemaker and a member of the Detroit Finnish Summer Camp Association, Mr. Sorvari died yesterday after a after a long illnbs. Surviving besides her husband. are a daughter, Mrs. Alvin Townsend of Keego Harbor; a son, James M. of Waterford Township; four grandchildren; a sister; and a brother. MRS. TROY SPARKS Service for Mrs. Troy (Bessie) Sparks, 62, of 78 E. Tasmania will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Apostolic Church of Christ. Her body will be taken to the Heame Funeral Home in Stanton, Ky., for service and burial by the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. dren; and two great-grandchildren. of Detroit; a daughter, Gertrude Zuver of Lan-sister; six grandchil- M^pSkcSSy1” Pen7!^^e^is^ived by his wife, Z. MmSTS yesterday » *on’ Esko Harry Sor-’ Troy. Mr. Derry died yesterday after a brief illness. He was employed as an assembler at General Motors Thick A Coach Division. Surviving besides his wife, Gladys, are sons and daughters Joanne, Gerald and Noel, all of Mason; his mother,- Mrs. Ruby Mills of Ashley; three sisters; and three brothers, Richard of Pontiac, Robert of Atlanta and Carl of Alma, - MRS. EDITH STANABACK LAKE ORION - Service for Mrs. Edith Stanaback, 74, of 18 Slater will be 11 ait. Saturday at Allen's Funeral Home. Mrs. Stanaback died yesterday after a long illness. A former schoolteacher, she was'si member of the American Legion Auxiliary and an honorary mem- 2:30 tomorrow at Donelson-i Johns Funeral Home with burial 'in White Chapel Memorial Cem-| etery, Troy. Mrs. Voss, whose husband isi president of the Home & Auto! Loan Co., died Tuesday at her home. With her husband she was a member of the Wednesday : Night Dancing Cloth She also belonged to the First Presby- j tertaa Church. Women’s Association of tlie church and Pontiac Chapter of Needlework Guild, Inc. Mrs. Voss had served as; treasurer of the Women’s Auxiliary to Pontiac General Hos-j pital and worked with many civ-! ic groups in fund drives. * ** Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Gerald M. | Millar of Grand Blanc; and I three sisters, Mrs. Lena Barrows of Gulf Port, Fla., and Mrs. Ruth Parrish and Mrs. Edith framer, both of Romeo. * * * Also surviving are three brothers, Chester C. Bluhm of Flint, Elton Bluhm of Romeo and Stanley of Tucson, Ariz., and two: grandchildren. The family suggests any contributions be made to the Michigan Heart Association. The flag of the United States may not be used to cover a speaker’s desk nor draped over I the front of a platform. If the] flag is to be displayed flat, it should be displayed above and MRS. RICHARD H. MORGAN BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — jjgj- of the Lake Orion Lions behind the speaker; if Private memorial services are club. staff, it should be in the position AFTER-INVEIfTORY SAVINGS EVENT HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 SAVE *40 RCA VICTOR New COLOR TV on rollaround stand • Performance-proved 25,000 volt chassis • Dependable RCA Solid Copper Circuits • RCA Automatic Color Pyrifier 9 Powerful New Vista VHF, Solid State UHF 'tuners. Rtnilar 437.95 Now Only 3*7" With Cart, Free Delivery, §et up and 90 Days Fret Service • NO MONEY DOWN • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH • UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY! FAT OVERWEIGHT Available to you without a doctor’s prescription, our product called Odrinex. You must lose ugly fat or your money back. Odrinex is a tiny tablet and easily swallowed. Get rid of excess fat and live longer. Odrinex costs 83.00 and is sold on this___ guarantee: If not satisfied fo*'|sociatj()n any reason, just return the package to your druggist and get your foil money bade. No questions asked. Odrinex is sold with this guarantee by: SIMMS CUT SAT! DtUO STORE ' planned for Mrs. Richard H.l (Eleanor) Morgan, 76, of 6375 Surviving are two sons, Ray of honor, at the speaker’s right. Wing Lake. A member of the Women’s Chib of Detroit and of the Village Womens Club of Birmingham, Mrs. Morgan died yesterday at her home after a short illness. Surviving are three nieces. Memorial tributes may be to the Michigan Heart As- mond W. of Lake (Mon and William W. of Detroit; five grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Alice Crawford of Oxford. WEEKEND SPECIAL! Women's regular 2.99 casuals in choice of leather or fabric Choose from white tennis shoes with washable canvas uppers; cotton chino sandals in red or black or Italian look leather sandals m prix ton or brandy color with foam cushion insole. A wide range of women's sizes in the group. \ -> A.., .'/> JTl SPECIAL! REG. 3.99 Men's and boys' tennis oxfords 66 Terrific savings on those white cushioned tennis oxfords. Men's, boys' sizes. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY* JULY 14, lOOOj - C-l electric ranges! M ONTGOMERY WARD ~ - ?<^zZ'jx.'.. sSssSstSw Wards Signature* economy gas range o Surface burners light automatically; lift-off top e Big 25-in. porcelain oven with easy-to-clean lining *109 REQ. $111 *31 off! Gas range with automatic oven *138 REQ. $169 o low temp dial keeps food warm; won't overcook O Full lighted backguard has outlet, clock, timer *30 off! Full-featured range with linwrs *199 / e Timing center, dock; flexible hi-sim gas burners o Delayed cook 'n warm oven control; window, light 2-oven eye-level gas range-*21 off! *258 RE8. $229 e Bake, brail at same time e New easy-clean features e Electric deck and tinier , o Serving temp oven control ornnr OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY OlUnt 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall PHONE 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY* 1966 24 Acres Zoned to Allovfj firm Into Avon Township AVON TOWNSHIP — Twenty-four acres of property 'at Rochester and Orion roads were re-zoned to light Industrial by the . Township bird last night to allow construction of a plant tkmal Twist Drill and Tool Co. which manufactures electronic! The board unanimously approved the request of die Dura Coip. of Oak Park which plans to build a five-building complex on the site across from the Nq- equipment. In, approving the rezoning, the board followed the mendations, of the planning consultant, the Regional Plan-' ning Commission and the Township Zoning Board. The zoning board’s 5-2 decision last week brought some protests from land owners in the area who claimed the area is strictly residential. Rochester Principal Appointed They also said a traffic problem which already exists at that comer would be compounded. NO PROTESTS No one protested the board's action last night. Trustee William McCullough if approved, would have cleared the way for construction of a historical museum in Wixom has been denied by the City Council. The had also denied the proposal to | rezone the property, on the east side of Whom Road near the 1-96 interchange, from residential to special business use. The 10$ acres ia question are owned by B. J. Pollard, owner of a Detroit construction company. Tuesday night he appealed to the City Conned to reverse die zoning Pmtlac Pm* Photo by Mw«rt » NoMt i ----- ... BOVINE BOND — Afraid she. might miss something, noted that the new plant wouldj feossie makes like a cud-chewing Mata Hari as she spies i fit in with the two plants al- through eye-high weeds at the antics of the humans scurry-ready on that comer — National!____ _____________________________________________ ROCHESTER - The board of j™*1 Jf| ®nd Hol,ey Coraput'| education today appointed ing up and down he* dusty lane in Holly Township. Perhaps, however, Bossie merely is looking for greener pastures as Cbws, and humans, are inclined to do. new high school principal to re-• place a min it had appointed only a month ago. Richard D. Olson, principal of Central Junior High Scfcool, was named to the vneamey created by the surprise resignation of John E. Wellington. Wellington asked for a release from the position because of “personal considerations which were ndt apparent at the time of his acceptance." Wellington was approved as high school principal June 20 to replace Harlan Johnson who was made director of instruction and certified personnel for board heard a report from a the school district. 0m" representative of the newly- rauw to itu created joint water and sewer LAMJS ^ authority of the township and Olson, who received his bach- ^ village of Rochester. •tor’s degree in 1M7 from The group to investigating Western Michigan University, possibility of forming a corpora-came to Rochester in 1954 as a tioc under the Utilities Author-science teacher and counselor jty LaW which permits two units at the high school. 0f government to incorporate to * * * * Ideal with mutual water and sew-' Named to replace him asjer problems. The land, which is presently zoned administrative and professional, is being purchased from Avon Center Hospital. Hospital authorities had planned to construct a new building there but eventually decided to expand their present facilities on Avon Road instead. HVEA, School Board Set Talks The proposed five buildings will include a building for facturing, a two-story administration building, a research and development building, MILFORD—Negotiating teams for the board of education and the Huron Valley Education Association were slated to meet this afternoon and tomorrow evening hi an effort to reach settlement cm terms of a contract for teachers for the coming school year. At an HVEA meeting Monday, and service training school a representative, from the Mich-building and a cafeteria. jigan Education Association was AUTHORITY in attendance for the first time, In other action last night the, Clarenceville Board Names District Head along with MEA legal counsel who will remain with the HVEA through the remainder of the negotiations. Neil H. Davis, HVEA president, said die two sides are still far apart on a number of issues. Davis said the HVEA is presently asking for 65 per cent of the board’s total operating money for the 1966-67 school year. The association has not as yet, however, arrived at any salary schedule demand. SUGGESTED The schedule Request, he said, principal at Central Junior High was HSrold L. Hatherly, now assistant principal of West Junior High School. Marc E. Ferrand, junior high science and mathematics teacher, will replace Hatherly assistant Tentative Troy OK on Teachers'Pay The chief advantage would be in financing any future work, according to the group. The board last night also approved the creation of an Avon Township Planning Commission to replace the present zoning board and regional planning commission. TROY — The Troy Education Association bargaining team CLARENCEVILLE -The board of education today announced the appointment of David B. McDowell as Superintendent of Schools. The new group will perform the same rezoning duties as the two other bodies. It was explained that the one group will expedite handling of applications and devote, more time to local problems. and the board of education have CONTROVERSY reached tentative agreement on The most recent development the economic portion of a pro- in the controversial Winkler Mill posed 1966-67 contract. . . Bridge matter was given to the Under the agreement, which board’s road committee for must still be ratified, teachers study and recommendation, with a .bachelor’s degree will The proposed $15,000 bridge to get $5,560 to start and increase replace the one destroyed in an to a maximum of $9,210. accident last Ausust is appar- * * * • [ently acceptable to residents degree salaries-wlilfacar the bridge-tf the* fitotelsw the beard of director^ for Li range'from 66,155 To $ 10,(108. RosrtonmtsSton pays....IIJOOO! voni* Youth Inc. and tMs year Alfio, teachers with a master’s for an easment. is secretary of the L.Y.I. degree plus M hours wilL^fy. on The township board would he, McDowell lives with his .wife, a new.'schedule ranging from expected to pay half the cost ofLena, and their three children $6,667 to $10,867. a new bridge. at 19851 Louise, Livonia. Previous to his appointment, McDowell served five years as principal of the Clarenceville High School. McDowell succeeds Louis E. Schmidt, who resigned after 17 years as superintendent. Prior to coming to Clarenceville, he was a high school principal in Comstock and Venhont-ville, Michigan. The new superintendent holds a bachelor of science degree from Northern Michigan College and a master’s degree from Michigan State University. SPECIALIST'S DEGREE He is currently pursuing an educational specialist’s degree at Eastern Michigan University. In addition to his educational activities, McDowell has served would follow closely the MEA recommendation for the region. Such a pattern would range from a beginning salary of $6,000 for teachers with bachelor’s degrees to a maximum of $12,000 for teachers with master’s degrees and 10 years experience in the school system. Salaries now start at $5,200 for the first year' teachers with bachelor’s degrees to $7,800 for a master’s degree and 10 years experience. OTHER ISSUES The board and the association have reached tentative agreement on almost all noneconomic issues, said Davis. The two sides still have however, on fringe according to the HVEA head. Teachers are asking for an increase in their sick day allowance from the present 50 days to 100 days. Davis said the board has termed this demand “totally excessive.’’ The stalemate has also been reached on the question of hospitalization insurance. No compromise is in sight in this arda. Petition Denied Museum Rulbd Out WIXOM - A petition which, yyith .Wixom city officials. Ha wilL study Die situation and make a decision soon on whether to take his case to court. Presently ho sees the not plan any further meetings situation with the city so “hope- hibfted him from estabUshlng a museum oa the property. The council voted unanimously to deny Pollard’s petition on thel^“® grounds that he hadn’t provided iaeiHS> for an additional exit out of the proposed museum parking lot that would not run through a residential area. Residents in Wixom have Indicated they are divided on the question of the historical center. A petition opposing the project received 48 area signers. They cited property depredation, hazardous traffic, excess noise and rowdyism as the reasons for their stand against the museum. A petition backing the Pollard request wafs signed by 151 resi- w w ■ . w, Pollard does not feel the lack of another exit road at this time is a legitimate excuse for denial' of his rezoning request. WOULD SELL Marvin Liberson, who owns the 40 acres the road would be built through, said at the council meeting that he would sell the land to Pollard if the city approved the museum. Neither Pollard nor Liberson are certain that die city will approve the museum even if the road , is constructed, according to Pollard. Poliard Is convinced the dty officials are opposing his project simply because they are against the idea of a Wixom museum altogether. Wolverine Lake Girl Is Selected for Camp Trip He said that if the exit road were the real problem, it could be solved with little difficulty. TO STUDY SITUATION The builder at this time does WOLVERINE LAKE - Patricia Pless, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Piess, 1746 Shankin, is one_ of three county 1 high school! students select-! ed to attend! the Young Peo-I pie’s Citizen-! ship Seminar! this week at! Camp Kett near | Cadillac. The study- MISS PLESS type seminar attended by 150 young people from across the state is sponsored by the Michigan Farm Bureau. In addition to films, talks and group discussions the seminar includes a mock political convention and election. With Clinton-CDakland System Tank Towns' Are Out BY L GARY THORNE “Tank Towns"-where sewage I t disposal is accomplished through individual septic tank systems-are on the way out tioD of 210,7Mby mo, Clinton-for a large chunk of Oakland n„Hllllll / ln. County. Oakland is essentially an interceptor or trunk line to run . The county’s proposed Clio- j from a point on the west side ton-Oakland Sewage Disposal of Pontiac east to Avon Town-System will eliminate so-called ship and the Deqnindre inter- I tank towns in seven Pontiac ceptor nt 2346 Mile, area communities. The interceptor is to be a EAch of these communities j tjnritimg collecting the sewage « contributed by internal systems tiac, Waterford, Independence, . West Bloomfield and Orion and *at ««* “ ^m the City of OrchOrtkiake —*rflj seVen area communities. /1 to connect to the Clinton-Oak- * * * land system. Total construction cost of the! All but three of the^mmun-estima{edat tms Indepemtence and Avon |WJ mj|jon wl|h the lnterest towndhips and the City of Oncosts to total $12.1 million on ard have formally appro ved he ^ prop^ 30-year bond issue.1 plans and contract for the sys- ^ grand tota, ta estimated >t $28,627,500. PULLED OUT COMPLETE IN ONE YEAR ^ cwmunity 'ZJSl County officials have indicated JESSthey hoped construction could outof the proposed trunklmeLj ^ ^ ^ n*?rart this yesr to b* completed in Expected to serve a popwls-1 year. Individual ties would be responsible for providing for their internal sewer systems. I A big slice of Oakland County Icould be urbanized with the ad-I vent of proper sanitary sewers — regarded by most planners as a must for future large scale development. I THREE “HOLDOUTS” Of course, Clinton - Oakland won’t become a reality until the three “holdouts” approve their respective contracts for the interceptor system, )j .. Of the tifree, Avon Township appears the1 most reluctant Meantime, Orchard Lake of-; ficiais held a hearing Monday on the subject of the proposed interceptor system. ‘A decision on that city’s participation is tentatively scheduled for Aug. jl. The only other holdout — Independence Township, is expected to taka some action at the township board meeting next fiumwut FuAitihm CLEARANCE Buy Mow Save New Reg. 7.99,5Vh-ft. Multi-Color J|88 BEACH UMBRELLA___________ 4 Reg. 24.99, Manual Lift and Tilt’ 4 "788 7-FT. UMBRELLA.......... I I Reg. 7.99, Green and Whito R44 ALUMINUM WEB CHAISE ... 9 Reg. 16.99, Gold Annodized Frame • gS^jSSS-— WEB CHAIR..;.......... Reg. 19.99, Wood arm 4 JRR DELUXE CHAISE.......... 14 Beg. 1 2.99, Wood arm 088 DELUXE CHAIR.............. O Reg. 11.99, Padded aluminum 088 FOLDINGCHAIR......... O Reg. 19.99, Foam padded 4 088 FOLDING CHAISE......... 14 Reg. 2.99, Green web 199 F0LDIN6 CHAIR..... I Reg. 5.98 Pair Redwood ‘ 088 END BEHCHES............... Reg. 49c, 2 kits tor a chair OOC RE-WEB KIT.................... O0« •• No money down******., on anything Wards sells! • „ Just say "Charge It” ,.••* .....«*•*••••••....•..... OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Mall TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 a ' 'Mmmm THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY JULY 14, 1966 C~* Southern GOP to Attack Entrenched Dem Position s OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 127 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SUN AJLANTA, Ga. (AP)> Re. publicans in the South an making major bids for office this summer — Including some governorships which have been Democratic strongholdi for as long as a century. Most are convinced that voters will rally to conservative appeals, and party leaders in some states talk confidently of forging endurable two-party systems. ★ ★ * Republicans are planning governor' races in, at least five states. They say their candidates will seek seven seats in the U.S. Senate, hit 1________ the Hoqse of Representatives and an undetermined number of lesser state and local offices. ★ '★ * The resentment of administration policies which permitted Barry Goldwater to sweep five Deep South states in 1984 still is strong, but some candidates are careful/not to align themselves too closely with their lttt presidential nominee. HA VENT FORGOTTEN One reason: Vast numbers of newly registered Negro voters Haven’t forgotten that Gold-water voted in the Senate against the Civil Rights Act of 1964. * Swedish Royally Has New Addition LONDON. (AM - Princess Margaretha of Sweden gave birth to an t-pound no today. The Swedish Embassy said he would be named Charles Edwards Ambler. The princess is married tc British businessman John Ambler. They have a 15-month-old daughter also. * * * "Mother and baby are doing well,” said an embassy official. The princess is the granddaughter of King Gustaf Adolf. ‘This Is not a Goldwater year,"* says Claude Kirk, a ilthy investment banker from Jacksonville who- la seeking the governorship in Florida. ★ ' A If Most party leaders are trying | to soft-piedal racial questions ’’race will not bejrn issue,’’ the I Republican chairman in Mississippi states flatly - and tome re soliciting Negro votes openly. “We think a great number of ' Negroes will vote Republican,” says National committeeman I. Lee Potter of Wat Virginia, where Negroes comprise 20 per 1 cent of registered voters. PROMISE HE MOON “It will be hard to pry them I away from people who promise j them a moon they can’t deliver,** he says. “But we feel they ■ will be Intelligent enough to j know they are being hoodwinked." * * * In Georgia, Republicans have elected a Negro as parliamsn tarian of the state party in I hopes of recapturing Negro support which could provide the margin of victory in some | races. * ★ t The Republican spokesmen] are united almost comtdetely in their criticism of the Johnson administration. For the most part, they are shunting civil rights talk' to the background and bitting the President hardest op the war in Viet Nam and the rising cost of living. Campaigns in South Carolina will be based in part on ‘‘reducing federal takeovers of state, county and city government functions,” ays party chafrman Harry s. Dent. And in Mississippi, the state I chairman declares, “We are tlie only responsible, effective opposition to the ‘Great Society’.** BACK TO SCHOOL YARD GOODS DISCOUNTS Sensational savings! 1 to 10 yd. pieces el higher priced fabrics Beekeepers to Mapt IONIA (AP)—Michigan, beekeepers will meet July IS at Ionia to discuss business choose a Michigan Honey Queen for 1966. OUR 21th YEAR Of UTTER PHOTOGRAPHY Formerly Located h Rochester, Mich., NOW: SWOBODA STUDIO 647-4333 H RCA VICTOR “Golden Throat” Radios DECORATOR WOOD CABINET! RCA VICTOR SOLID STATE FM-AM TABLE RADIO e Solid State design provides instant warnj-up —cool operation e AFC for drift-free FM reception e 1,800 milliwatts of undletorted powir e Tuntd RF stage In both FM and AM band! e Big 7* oval speaker for rich "Golden Throat" lone e RCA Solid Copper Circuits • Slide-rule vernier tuning—'lighted dial OUR LOW, LOW PRICE The GLOBE TROTTER •85" The LANDLOPER The! QALAHAD . Most are machine washable .Most are crease resistant . Easy care...wash ’nwear . Miracle blends, /do fabrics blouses, dresses, shirts, sleepwear, * sportswear, curtains, slipcovers; pillows ... wide selection of patterns! SOLIDS, PRINTS, COTTON FLANNELETTE 36 - 45" broadclothi and reverie iwiiu in 2-lO-vd., niece*. Abo, 36" flannelette on bo Via. fA ERRIWALE COTTON CORDUROY 16-wiln cotton corduroy in lulitl fall colors. 36-37” wide. Machino wiibable. On bolu. BARK CLOTH IN SOLIDS-PRINTS ■el 93< MADRAS, DENIMS, HORSACKING, OSNABURGS 19“ a i7w loomfield Miraele Mila Shopping Cantor FE 6-9661 "CHARGE IT at Kmart! GLEN WOOD PLAZA NORTH PER RY AT GLEN WOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1M Romney Vetoes Hurt HirrifSaysKowalski LANSING (AP)-Gov.George kilted a bill designed to fulfill Romney, “the 'vetoeingut' chief1** basic purpose of our system; * executive” in Michigan history, jBf unemployment compensation. I 5JEC “""LfiHr "These vetoes, coming the noth his last two bill Hsu* heel, of Romney’s^ immodest Speaker Joseph Kowalski, D- self-description as the working ._. . .. man’s best friend, .will cause a Romney vetoed two pet Dem.|lot of ^ ocratic projects Tuesday-a bill Kowalski to reorganise the State Labor; Romney, earlier this week I § Department and one to e m- praiaed Teamster Boss James | £• <«e-week waihng Hoffa for saying he (Romney) I penod before a lani-off worker has done more f0T ^ Michigan1 ““ unemployment w°rking man than Democratic1 n. „ . ex-Gov. G. Mennen Williams The Labor Department was ever just _ reorganized about six months ago, Romney said and . the unemployment bill would ... „ . , turn the compensation program °ara9e Wa" Saved Into a welfare program, r A . __' I by Automatic Device- DAMAGED HIMSELF _____ He used his veto power! DETROIT (AP) — IMI Pro-, OK $886 Million lor State Education “irresponsibly again," Kowal- ducts Inc. of Detroit has created ski said, “and I believe he has a device to prevent drivers * “*,b*ck him from the responsibility forwaH °* their A <*** setting up a modern and effec- approaching the wall triggers tive labor department in Michi-lthe device which automatically gan,’* the former union repre-1 flashes a “Halt” sign to tlief sentative said, ‘‘and he has'driver. WINNER IN VIRGINIA — State Sen. William B. Spong Jr. speaks at a new conference in his home town, Portsmouth, after the Democratic primary vote tally showed him winner over U S. Sen. A. Willis Robertson by a count of 216,699 to 215,935. Virginia Democratic nomination in the past has been tantamount to election. LANSING (AP)—Gov. George Romney has approved more than $886.1 million in education spending for the current fiscal year, his office announced yesterday. The $588.8 million school aid bill and the $229.3 million higher education measure were among 10 bills signed late Tuesday. They represented the bulk of the \ 1974.1 million general fund budget for the 1116-47 fiscal year, which began almott two weeks ago. In the school aid bill, 'only $238 million comes PET *N PURR I'M ABSORBENT PET LinER 10-lb. BAQ • safe ami m i /? SAVE on HOME NEEDS! REDWOOD PICNIC SETS Sturdy! I’tabls. 2 benches. Reg. 21.IT. < 24" X 60” FOLDING TABLE Heavy duty, lightweight stool. Easy storage! Rag. 6.87%. ................ 20” 3-H.P. SUNBEAM MOWER Cutting htight adjustment. Hag. 64.50... 5-lb. Para Moth Nuggets or Crystals WALNUT EASY CHAIR Attraetivsinodsm design! Decorated arms! Reg. T.M.... ........ FUN SHOWER ................. 1487 455 4388 77* 049 . 43* F SAVE! BIG N LITTLE GIRLS'! GIRLS’DRESSES ............... GIRLS'TENNIS DRESSES ...................... GIRLS’PLAYSUIT 1 Pc. Sint 314....... GIRLS'CROP TOPS GIRLS’SHORTS ■ GIRLS’DRESSES tltul-1*........ 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FAMILY DEPART MENT STORES F FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES wwiiiui vi iiiAio nignwaj anu ieiagmpii nOM “ IN rURllAb 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 . / . / q M French Vacation Camp Nowadays 1 Days Only! . PARIS—(NBA)—The French, i who once thought roughiiig it was riding from Calais to Paris in a smoke-filled, til f r d-class strain compartment, have discerned the great outdoors. - J - practicality before the ratio was 70 million against N million. Last summer, an A m e r i c a n family fit six traveled Europe for 10 weeks in a caravan at a cost of less than $800. ^ Unfortunately, the 3,300 I camping sites are usually saturated. Regulations permit the accommodation of NO people per hectare (2.47 acres), 200 in the more luxurious sites, where each- teat is supposed to stand in a minimum of 320 square feet In the more popular regions, such as southern France, these minimums are often exceeded by at least 10 per cent. Lourdes, in the Pyrenees, Good old French Is the reason for it. Some 10 million Frenchmen have discovered that camping is a whole lot cheaper than a holiday on the Cote d'Azur. Besides, hotels simply aren’t available in July and August when most of France takes its vacation. - Campers represent every social strata and a wide range of'age groups. Discounting go-go teen-agers who escape all census - taking the typical French camper is'38 with a wife and family. OVER ORIGINAL factory INSTALLATION! The rugged nomads, reports t the Economic and Social Coun- < cil, are mostly factory workers i and white-collar types and are j1 considered upper-middle-c 1 a s s < citizens. ELOQUENT FIGURES < Figures are eloquent. In 1965, * for the first time in France’s ^ history of tourism, the number * of “camping nights’’ was higher ' to Lourdes live in tents or trailers while serving as volunteer i stretcher bearers and hospital aides at the world-famous* shrine. One of the largest French camping sites (over 10 acres) is in the Bois de Boulogne, within the city limits. In 1964, 80,-000 people set up transient I housekeeping in the lovely romantic woodland situated on the banks of the Seine, a stone’s throw from the fashionable Polo Club. TENT CITY ' The “tent city” in the Bois is is equipped with every convenience ranging from a self-service restaurant to post office, grocery store, newsstand,1 telephones, bath houses and laundry facilities. This year a nursery will take care of chil-: dren from the age of three to 10 all day for a cost of $2 a day per j child. i About one-third of the Bois | ' de Boulogne campers.live in I a caravan or the now-popu-lar family touring bus known here as the “combi.” There is I a special “pad’' for 48 vehic- ■ 6-cylinder m ™ PARTS EXTRA • Check battery, cables, cranking voltage e Clean and adjust or install new points A Adjust carburetor, set ignition- timing • Check compression, charging voltage Air condition your car at Wards low price today! RIDE COOL FOR LESS WITH A RIVERSIDE SUPREME Now In Progress! Play it cool this summer! Get icy comfort from the Riverside* Deluxe, even on the hottest days! Take away the pollen, moisture and dust—all you'll have Is an even flow of cool, daan air from the chfomed, 4-way louvered grill. Have a unit installed today! Otherwise every shape, size and species of twills seen, from the compact Finnish “igloo’' to spacious two room jobs with separate living and sleeping ! quarters. Naturally, a proper Frenchman wouldn’t consider abandoning ail his sophisticated ways, even under canvas. Pate de fois gras is still appropriate as an I hors d’oeuvre and more than one j .(French family has attempted,| with varying results, to charcoal i broil omelets and boeuf bour-guignon. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER _ Fraternity 'Haul' Was Good Play for Funds ! MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) -Sigma Nu fraternity men here traded their delapidated piano to a music store two miles away! and were allowed 325 in trade. But the catch was* they had to! deliver the instrument to the store — and the delivery men Top* cartridges slip In and out at easily as you change stations on a radio. Catalog Biting ever 2500 tapes of 16 to 2h hours playing time with tap# player. stereo tape player Instead of using'' professional I movers, the fraternity brothers I assigned 20 pledges to carry the 'piano on their backs in relays of 10 to a mile. The trip took j an hour, but $25 was saved. j W RED. 87.99 Plays up to 2Vi uninterrupted hours of your favorite musk. Fully transistorised; with dual Hl-ft amplifiers. Easily installed in all ears, boats, trucks, or house trailers. Stereo tapes as low as............ 2.98 BUY NOW. at DISCOUNT PRICES Rivarsida® 2-cycle oil-regular 2.79 MO MONEY DOWN | Cmon aboard for real cyde action! Taka a free trial ride at Wards today on a brawny machine that's equally at home on the opea road or easing thru big city, traffic. The best runner in its dass, it develops 0.5 hp at 6500 rpm. Get up to 135 mpgl Smooth 4-speed gearbox, lightweight 204 lbs., steering damper for sofa handling. Specifically designed for outboards and all ether 2-cyde engines! Gives complete lutyi- EASY TERMS PUK JEWELERS and OPTICIANS 1 N. SAGINAW (C»mmr Pika St,) FE4-1IO M ONTGOMERY WARD Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS. 1 F^S^i SOMMER FABRICS GOOD OLD FASHION SAVINGS! Dacron Batiste 4 Drosses Must Male* R o To-School and 1 Savings Up To Colorful floral prinU with knife planted skirt and bow to the waist and jewel neck* line. Also comes with self fold waist. 2** hem. ;/ SIZES 10-20 '7*18 * ^A^/t-2AV^ NEW ... WATERPROOF LADIES’ GOLF SHOES Lightweight and comfortable-, rain or shine. Made of Royalon — a rich shoe texture with iron construction. Wipes dean with damf> cloth. Mode With inner cushioning and replaceable spikes. ■ 60 different patterns to choose from* Either plain or fancies, ideal for drsssss, suits or sports* wear. Regularly said far ever twice thia low clsaronos price. A wonderful selection of Spring Woolsns reduced to a low, law price far Instant savings. 40 different patterns to cheese from. ROLF SET SPECIAL 0 Matched “JACK NICKUUS” IRONS. 3 Matched “JACK NICKUUS” WOODS. URGE KEYSTONE MODELOOLF BAR ...«•■ Value $V1 A' Short Sleevet Assorted Colon R«9* 2.29 OptmMwmy ] TEL-HURON child11 Use Your Security Ch«t» Tel-Huron Fabrics fit. for a Qvssn. Ideal for Sportswear, Drenti,£ui»sr Childrens Wear. You name "if. YouMI -b* able to find it in this group. Reduced for quick dean* Reduced for this spectacular clearance or a spactacufar lew, low pnee. You’ll be amaiad at the selection you nave in this group of fine fabrics. COMPLETE SET NOW Remnants Reduced To A Low, Low Price Our Remnants willlte reduced Vi off the regu- — * lar Remnant prica. This means you will be buy- ]/- IIL L Ing material at 65% off the original; pri go, /A Ul I Hurry in and save. STRATO-PLUS solid canter, lifetime cover ball................... SPALDING KRO-FLITE Liquid center, super tough cover... MeeOREGOR TOURNAMENT, medium tough cover.................... SPALDING AIR-FLITE Liquid center, distanc# ball....... ELECTRA, Super charged, cat! Incre your distance up to 50 yards... 12.10 doz. FABRICS FIT TO. SEW WITH A GOLDEN NEEDLE TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Phon. 335-5471 Osmun’s Take a GOOD LOOK Once a year you have-a- chancetocome to Osmun’s and get a pair of famous-make shoes for only Now is the time... during our great month-long, store-wide annual clearance sale. So come to Osmun's now. At these shoe prices you really can’t kick. Use your Osmun’s charge. (Or open one in three minutes.) (IncludingHush Puppies* and Jarman, discontinued styles.) SPECIAL BUY! $27.95 French Shriners (Available at Osmun’s Tel-Huron & Tech Plaza Stores) HindKraft is Firettomake a diamond ring with a fiery Genuine Marquise Diamond center to sell at a low price never before Both Rings Only a part of Ponfferesfaeo 1931 SMUN’S f CradN Tormtl Ppy.Weekly ” hi hanD^Krafl JAYSON JEWELERS ■ Tech Plaza Center in Wirran Open Every Nifht 'til I ■ Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac Open Every Ni|ht 1H 9 I FREE PARKING at ALL STORES ■ Downtown Pontiac - Open Fri. 'til 9 Opon Mon., Thur*., Fri. & Sat Tit 9 CHARGE IT' AT KRISGB'S THURSDAY, JULY n, 1966 . • WinkeLtnan’s • Osmun's • Kresge’s • Sander's • 1 Hour Valet • Jayson Jewelers • Children's Shop '• Griswold Sporting Goods • R. B. Shops • Beckwith-Evans • Shoe Box • Wrigley's • Camera Shop • Petrusha & Sons • Golden Thimble ENJOY TV WITHM RC* VICTOR THE TONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1066 Pompidou to Step Up? France's No. 2 lies a Little Harder 'Smoking Lowers Toxic Condition in Pregnancies' . „ I By Science Service » PARIS (UPI) — French Pre-, France, will hold national par-i While he prepares for battle', CHICAGO - Smoking may mier George* Pompidou is act-jiiamentary general- elections! Pompidou is acting confidently | be so bad for expectant into the shoeswOf the boss - I^mpidrjw has been given the hi?‘° * heipingj^a surprWr« *• President ChAdeGaulle. ;assign^by de Gaulle of on- W,np .. | *T*e,in« * £ Amri^ Co1- De Gaulle’s second seven-year suring ^ the Gaullist! In ^ecenl m0Dths' PomP|dou j lege of Obstetricians and Gyne- terpa still has another «4 years union for the New Republic!ha» spent * M** deal of time. oology here revealed, town. But he wUl be78in.No-(UNR) _ majority part in!*1 ***. ”5*?*.'^??. jWjgl vendber and many Frenchmen i prance since 1982 — is returned hom? ln,Cajarc’ where he wil1 believe he will, step down be-|t0~—| run for election. fore serving out his-full term. If he does so, few doubt that the suave roly-poly Pompidou will be ready to succeed the 1 general. power. If Pompidou can puli that I off, his political future seems to be in the bag. But if he should flop — and I particularly if he fajls to get He is “nursing the constituency,” to use a phrase from British politics, shakes hands with the voters and no longer shuns occasional rounds *f baby-kissing. But the 55-year-old premier elected himself — Ponjpidou is has some major hurdles to over-the first to admit it would be I curtains for his political career., himself increasing political ex-- j posure on television. Though he is only in robust 11 middle age, he manages to pro-I ject something of a comfortable "father figure." He speaks with I j ease and fluency on all manner I of subjects. There was significantly less preeclampsia, a toxic condition of pregnancy in which there is increased blood pressure; kidney damage and edema preceding convulsions, in a comparative group of smokers and _ .. ... , . I nonsmokers' involving 48,505 Pompidou also has been giving j jqavy mothers. \ BRONSON Although the finding was purely statistical and without explanation, the researchers said there was possibly a "protective” effect of smoking on toxemia. Infants bom to mothers who Relief for severe persistent smoked weighed less and the pain, such as is caused by can-[incidence of prematurity was cer or serious injuries to the ^greater in this and other stud-nervous system is expected ies, but the clinical importance! through a technique being de-:of these findings was lessened veloped in the form of a minia-j since there was no inerease in tare implanted electronic de- j the number of deaths near the vice. , ‘.time of birth. 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V8’S « 6’S __/S BIG-SAVING SUMMER BUYS ON CHEVROLET, CHEVELLE, CHEVY H AND CORVAIR Authorised Chevrolet Pooler in Pontiac MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES, • INC.X CiOrhaton /HASKINS CHEVROLET, INC. IMt'DMo Hwy. — ttS-NM Laka Orion AL HANOUTE, INC. •i. Part IM. — 4H-H Oxford HOMER * • NIGHT MOTORS, INC. Mil Ml CRlSSMAN CHEVROLET CO. S I, RadwaMr—MSfni WARD You save now because Wards is clearing its warehouses to make room for more shoes. All shoes are first quality. Wards reserves the right to limit quantities. Just say "Charge It" at Wards. family shoe sale WOMEN’S DRESS SHOES NOW 1/2 PRICE £88 449 OP NOW ll NOW *•“ were 6*99 Come to Wards soon I Take advantage of these rare savings that let you double your y money’s worth at Wards. You'll find shoes priced at 50% off of Wards usual low prices. You'll find fashion-right smooth and textured shoes and combinations of both. You'll chooso low-heels, mid-heels, high-heels; bow styles, cut-outs, strap pumps, just about any style you can want. Buy a complete assortment at these low prices. Not svsry size in every color and style, but your choice Is great. Come see, come save I WHY WAIT? USI YOUR CRIMT AND "CHARGE IT AT WARDS LOOK AT THESE FOOTWEAR SAVINGS f f0RWO»*iM,OlRtS Young, sweet,$o- **«• . 1 phisticated little A99I I heel. Leather uppers. ^ heavenly ednftgt^' ^ ■ these go-everywhere ^99 lounger. • ■ • I j White flats, stacked heels, wedges, not *>00 I all sizes. ** I Reg. IN SHOES FOR MEN m) Ported, dress and *•*.».»» Ssu?1 shoes. Not M 3,1 SKes and widths 6®® •:#g m Mu's best tebJ2S£m ^ cushioned work boot. 12®^ tjjmrt..,, „„ &r shteand work boot 788 I MSf"* work H I shoe and work boot. Q88 I maa.m<, ^,1 £* nj Small stacked heels. s' SHOE VALUES FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN Many sizes and styles to choose from White Patent Leathers Rag. 4.99 to 6.99 Assortment of QiHit Ties - #. Reg. .9.99 Oxfords Loafers ^ Boys’ side tie oxford Black Only Limited Quantity 444 344 244 1, OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9;30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P.M. Pontiac Moll TELEGRAPH ROAD CORNER ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TELEPHONE 682-4940 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY) JULY 14, 1966 . C—9 pir Plane Is Identified KUALA LUMPUR (DPI) - Wreckage sighted in thick jungle in northern Malaya has been identified as that of a World War It C47, '''-tn^-engined U.S. Army transpbrt command plane, a U.S. official laid. U.S. Embassy air attache Col. El wood H. Beeson who companied a 15-mas Malaysian police team to investigate the wreckage, ssid the aircraft number was 318261 and the only useful identification was a seat belt with the date June 2St 1945, printed on it. W 'A- ★ " • The air attache said the aircraft hit a 3,000-foot mountain about a hundred yards, from the peak, about 20 rniles west of Ipoh, in northern Malaya. Boots, h e 1 mets and some ammunition were found in the aircraft but there were no signs of bodies he repealed. Vief Proffers! Willticket Dow Plant No Constitutional Limits on Federal Taxation government tax take is in rela-iof West Germany, France and taken by state and local governments, But the federal tax levdl is still greater than the other two combined. Of the 28 per cent of gross tion to gross national product. ; Sweden were taxed at 35 per ft8t> ttwb watodlHgoodiaiiilc^ * ^ gr0M Mtional A Dow spokesman said die firm will take ao actita t# prevent Athe demonstration, adding, “We endorse the cithen’s right to legal and peaceful demonstration against action services produced. while, In the Nether* the total tax take - federal !,lw,as> fi8ure was 32 per One Treasury Departmentl|tate gnc, . . _ a_ounta t*’ cent, United Kingdom, Italy and expert sakl there’s no coMtltu-^ . { na° Austria 30 pier cent, and Luxem- tlonal limit to how high taxes jgj ^0jJ^cent of gro8s na-;bourg 31. . . ' go long as they’re non-r p ' Although there’s no theoreti- discriminatory. {HIGHER. TAKE ^ cal limit to over-all taxes, a * J Many free-world nations 4iave greatly increased tax take usu- I The best way to measure then higher take. In 1962, citizens ally means that the system of I government has changed or is| 'changing. through personal and corporate income taxes. * - * * The higli-wator mark for individual income tax rates came in 1944-45, near the close of World I (EDITOR'S NOTE - The As- tested in cWt -\in fact, the aoctoted Ptm-hu fust com-^^i government ha its own pie ted a survey in which neie.-^ cwft_bllttax rates, them- **» ARBOR , - (howTfZtf&’B {££3** ««’* * W *5^ „p« ..ylproduct, of the Ann Arbor chapter ofjor troubled them most about the " ... n*nd« ficn Students for a Democratic So-.world today. A series of readers’ ciety said today they will plcket^^^J^ th* ssirs ical Co. Aug. 6 because the firm I those questions.) manufactures napalm, a jellied' --- . gasoline used in the Viet Nam! By JOSEPH R. COYNE I WASHINGTON (AP) — A reader asks: “Is there a limit to, „ SERES? “ b‘i You Can't Beat A u formation |L*JaT«S?USf*lfc VTZ ,““d ta“ ^ ^ „ It to the amount of taxes M*» R correct names. ward some form of socialism,!ual income tax rates ranged with which he does not agree, government can levy. However, ” le®®n* * Cfa^tntri k1 "We had hardly become ac- one economist tioted. The spokesman said the Mid- there’s a very reel limit from a‘ir 1 C* quainted when I realized I had Strange as it might seem, a laikjplant does notmamiiacturepractifeal standpoint. corapv ana . a Miss Conti higher percentage of the na- napalm although a Dow plant in | w w * | * said ’’Mary’s date Jim beganl#0*1’8 wnlth is diverted to .taxes Torrance, Calif., does manufac-j Remember .the' American; Gail Conti, 22, switched to ^ok and sound better to me """ ” ture the gasoline product used i Revolution? Its basic cause was names with her 60,(001 by the moment ’’ in fire bombs; j taxation without representation. I University roommate. Mary Me- * i ★ * * Today there’s representation;Donald, when she filled out the SWITCHED DATES The Midland plant does make!— in Congress, in the state leg-!forms for her computer- The girls confessed a plastic material used in the islatures and in the city councils matched date a year ago. The switched dates, preparation of napalm but the— but there are still irate out-girls supplied the correct Miss Conti and her computer- material is being used currently cries over high taxes. 'answers with the wrong names.{picked fiance, James W. Fras-| One reason, * Treasury for other purposes, the spokes- * * * i * * * er, 24, of Akron, Ohio, Will be source said, is the higher share man said. Many , tax questions have been Then they set out on* their married -July 23. of gross national product now pdSr cent range and this year to > the 14-70 per cent range. The future of tax rates depends on what future war needs national product now going to- _ _ ward taxes, the federal, shore I n‘?f‘t,be *nd on *eh,lce‘ P1^ runs somewhere aroftnd 19 per! v“*ed by governments, cent, and- most of that js raised from 20 to 91 per cent and were reduced in 1964 first to a 16-77 “If the economy is properly managed and people are satisfied, I don’t see how you can tell what the practical limits of taxation are,’’ one economist says. IN JUST 15 MINUTES IF YOU HAVE TO SCRATCH YOUR-ITCH, Your Uc tack »t MV today than during World War II, I when the total take was 25 per {cent of gross national product, and the Korean War, when the' *°d take was 26 per cent. STILL GREATER CARL F. . INGRAHAM ■■ , CIRCUIT tor JUDGE Spy Charges Denied by Red LONDON (AP) - Diplomats today said that Maj, Gen. Sergei Edemski, one of two Soviets accused of |>aying Pentagon aide William Henry Whalen $5,-MO for American military secrets, is a leading Soviet intelligence expert. “That’s all lies,” Edemski said Wednesday of the FBI’s charges linking him and Soviet diplomat Mikhail A. Shumaev to Whalen while tlie latter was assigned to the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. During part of the time Whalen b accused of spying—from 1959 to 1963—Edemski was stationed in Washington. He has been the senior Soviet military attache here for tjie past four yean. Speaking excellent English, he told newsmen that British counterintelligence agents had not contacted him since Whalen’s arrest. The British foreign office would make no comment bn that, but it confirmed that Edemski is the same man named in the Washington charges as one of Whalen’s contacts, PRICE (UTTIMi WH EN New Coins TV Jammers ROSEVILLE, Calif. HI —> A new problem has arisen over the new sandwich type of copper quarters. Patrons at the Blue Lantern Tavern here have found they can turn off the TV set by plunking the new coins on the bar. A TV repairman says he is, imarta OT~«iyt«M ^ it si the sound made by the I “plunking” is on the same wave length is the remote control tot* the set. p4 Just Begun and WASHDAYS Done Wad 41 Us. ii 60 Millies EASY SPimRYJER Only Uio Easy Spindryer can do it, became only the Spindryer hei two tubs ... one for the washing, another for the riming and spindrying. The Spindryer ii twice at faint as an auto-' matie *... twice as easy ai a wringer. Oily ffk5**.,, No Money Down Save ’40®*! FRIGIDAIRE NO FROST 2-Dier "14” Was$298 NOW General w/ 1 n Electric Wa8her-Dl7er m This Great Value Koth Units #323 Complete Your Home Laundry With This Pair of Quality and Lasting Units NO MONEY DOWN-EASY TERMS SPECIAL 2-Days Only Friday, July 15 and Saturday, July 16. WE’LL SHARPEN SCISSORS PINKING SHEARS .... Reg. 1.50.... 49c REGULAR SCISSOR . . . Reg. 75c_29c KNIVES........ *...... .Reg. 50c.... 9c Here’* the ultimate .on 2-door Refrigeration and freezer convenience at the LOWEST PRICE EVER for which we've offered such a bountiful modpL Gone Forever is the messy task of defrosting! Here to stay is the most wonderful food-keeping convenience you've ever known. Other^deluxe features: Ice cube ejector kit, Nf agnetic door closures - All deluxe door appointments, plus many others. Hurry in or phone your order. NO MONEY DOW Pay Only $9.71 Monthly • • . or. 90 DAYS, SAME AS CASH! • No Frost ever from top to bottoml • 22.7 sq. ft. of Usable Shelf Area • No Frost Freezer holds 102 pounds • Meat Chest • Porcelain Enameled! e 2 Sliding Shelves! 2 Big Cri»x>ers • In choice of White or Coppexrtone! FIVE STAR tush Ar Carry SPEC :IAL! FIBERGLAS Patten Hoof Panels 26” WIDE— 96” LONG ASSORTED COLORS 125 EA. GIBSON AIR COmiTIOJWER 2-Speed $11Q 5,000 1.T.U. ltd Gibson Air Sweep drei yon the only air conditioner with power-driven louvers that automatically oscillate back and forth, provide draft-free cooling from well to well, even in farthest corners. OPEN MON. and ERL TILL 9:00 No MoneyDown, — Up to 3 Years to Day — Free Service Warranty GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF P4K6I1AC- 51 W. HURON ST. - FE 4-1555 Park Free Downtown FREE DELIVERY and SERVICE THURSDAY, JULY ,1966 Genuine* 4H Color*, 12"x12" shoots . . . the only permanent floor . . . Easy to install. Many Colon. ENOUGH TILE FOR a rxir room FOR ONLY $1440 9"k9" - Fint Quality Light Colon, Groottproo Mi #W1 ONTCOMERV WARD SALE) SEMI-ANNUAL BELGRADE, Yugoslavia' This was disclosed by the De-(AP) - Former Foreign Minis- fense Department today when it ter Koca Popovic was elected was questioned about reports vice president of Yugoslavia that the Communists had been today. He replaces Alexander obtaining drugs for their mili-Rankovic, longtime associate of tary needs, from these sources. VP Is Elected in Yugoslavia Ex-Minister Replaces Victim of Party Purge US, Viets Move to Keep VC posed regulations ctatreilbig tiohs/W Defense department WASHINGTON (AP) — The South Vietnamese govei and U. S. agencies nave moved to block tin Communist Viet Cong from getting antibiotics or other medicines from the black |market or, across drugstore icountera in'Viet Nam. the Special Forces, has written in the journal “Military Medicine” that “this ready access alarms officials who are concerned With resources control." ■ * * * V The Pentagon said it is assumed the Communists are interested primarily in such antibiotic-type drugs as tetracycline and penicillin. REGULATIONS President Tito who was purged from his Communist party and government posts early this month. ★ * * Popovic, 58, was elected by a joint session of Parliament. R also accepted the “resignation” of Rankovic, who had held the post since 1963. INVITED TO RESIGN Rankovic had beat invited to resign during a meeting July 1 of the central committee of the Yugoslav Communist party. At the same time the committee stripped Rankovic of all his party functions. It was alleged at the central committee meeting that Yugoslavia's state security organization, the Secret Police organized by Rankovic, had shadowed and eavesdropped on the country’s highest leaders. Rankovic also was accused of obstructing the government's new , economic reforms. Rankovic had long been considered a possible successor to President Tito. Capt. Arthur Aheam, Army doctor who served with Submachine Gun Used on One-Armed Bandit LAS CRUCES, N.M. UFI -Sheriff Rudy Gonzales shot down a one-armed bandit recently with his submachine gun. County commissioners or-j dered the sheriff to destroy a confiscated nickel slot machine, Gonzales used it as the target for his machine gun practice. t_____ regulations controlling the sale of pharmaceuticals. J All sales must be registered and customers identified, and limits have been placed on the amounts that can be bought. Also, the Vietnamese police have established control stations ht strategic points, the Pentagon said. ★ ★ * • Drugs supplied under the U. S, AID program are under com-mercial import control. To deal with the problem, the “Records are kept and shlp-Pentagon said, the South Viet- ments carefully followed namese government has im-lthrough to designated destine; ‘PREAUDIT In this .connection, the department said, AID officials conduct a “preaudit” pf Vietnamese importer* pf U. S. drugs to Insure legitimate customers and requirements. AID has a customs checked at Vietnamese porta, and then conducts a “postaudit” to ascertain the destination of the drugs. U. S. military medical supplies are guarded and their usage monitored. Plastic Wail TILE Vinyl Asbestos 2e-4 We Buy Glass Lumps and 'Leaded Glass Shades Vinyl Rubber MICA 39! MICA Cigarette and Alcohol Proof LINOLEUM RUGS Solid Each ACROSS From The MALL 2295 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FRONT DOOR PARKING FE 4-5216 Open Men., Thur*., Fri. 9 to 9 Tue>„ Wod., Sat. 9»o 6 BEATING THE HEAT — Michael Richard Rosenberg, 4, of Philadelphia gets a jump on the heat wave as temperatures hovered around the mid-90s. Phiadelphians, like much of the rest of the nation,‘•have been suffer- r tag from a steady heat wave that is now in its third week. 2 Detroit Officers Suspended SPORTCOATS REG. 22.95 TO 55.00 NOW 15.34 to 36.67 Summer weights in solid color, Stripes and plaids. All sizes, regulars, shorts and longs. _SHOgLStEBflb= SPORT SHIRTS REG. 3.00 to 9.00 NOW 1.50,4.50 Large assortment of patterns,, plain colors, plaids, paisleys and velours. Vee necks and Henley collars. Sizes S, M, l,XL SUMMER & 7.34. DRESS SLACKS infi7 WERE 10.95 to 1?.95 I UlU I _ BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE MW----------- V so. TELEGRAPH AT |w||>ffl<|/llW J SQUARE LAKE RD. MEN'S WEAR^ OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M. DETROIT (It - The Wayne County one-man grand Jury yesterday recommended the suspension of two more Detroll policemen for alleged consorting with gamblers. Police Commissioner Ray Girardin removed Detective Richard D. Davies, 32, and Patrolman Michael Yarema, 35, after they were charged with having frequent meetings with three met who are free on bond on gambling chargee. Grand Juror Edward S. Piggins also said that the grand jury investigation of the Detroit Police Department will not be completed before the jury ends on Aug. 31. Piggins suggested that a new grand jury be set up by Wayne County Circuit Court to continue the investigation. He indicated that he might be the logical choice for the job. ^ The juror also indicted a Detroit bar owner yesterday for contempt of court. ★ ★ ★ The charge was leveled at Steve (Jqmbo) Demoff for what Piggins called too many “false and evasive” answers. Demoff was questioned in connection with alleged gift-giving by bar owners to policemen to ignore reputed gambling operations. Demoff had been questioned oh three occasions in the last three months. In a statement issued yesterday, Piggins said: “I am completing 11 months of a physically taxing and emotionally disturbing experience. “Daring that time, I have learned that a grand juror most develop ... a determination to do his job straightforwardly in the face of criticism which he is forbidden to answer.’* Special low price for new ZIG-ZAG sewing machine REG. *140 NO MONEY DOWN " • Makes hundred* of ^ttqratfvs stitches aijd * Cee he betb k IS- ♦149 *238 m CU. FT. 2-DR. REFMOERATOR wy dp nom* brand. 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SAGINAW ' jTWtt PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, IMG ?. ***&'*&# yff§i '♦v*wV* All EXCEPTIONAL GROUP OF TROPICAL SUITS OF WRINKLE RESISTING DACRON -AND-WOOL REDUCED TO. s4485 Ullii Here's a saving that's pbsitlvely spectacular. A very big group of tropical suits ih crisp, cool, wHnkle-shedding Dacron®, blended with luxurious pure wool. They're tailored in smart two- and three-button regular, artd three-button natural shoulder models. And you'll find them in a good selection of the season's newest colors and patterns, in proportioned sizes,. From every- standpoint, this is one on the biggest suit savings of the summer. AND THERE'S NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS BIG SAVINGS ON FAMOUS MAKER DRESS SHIRTS 3'" *10 Long and short sleeve dress shirts in broadcloths and blends. Choose frjom regular, tab, and button-down collar styles in whites and solids. m BIG SAVINGS ON -NO-IRON KORATRON SUAAAAER SLACKS 5" Slacks that never need ironing, of Dacron®-cotton blended Konf-tron®. Traditional poplin in olive, navy, beige. Dressy bengalines in loden, grey, black. BIG SAVM6S ON FAMOUS MAKER CABANA SETS Oer Pontiac Moll Store Open Evenings te 9 P.M. 309 N. Telegraph Rd., Pen tine Mall Oer MnategboM Store Open FH. H 9; Sot. te 5«J# 300 Pierce Street Smart cabana sets by . famous mokers. Choose from terry lined and unlined styles, In hond-some paisleys, checks, and. solids. A substantial saving, at 9.99. BIG SAVINGS ON HUSH PUPPIES® SUMMER SHOES CBS A special group of discontinued styles . at worthwhile savings. Crofted of smooth glove leather of pigskin with cushion crepe soles. Sizes 6Vi to 12. sift II THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1968 USDA CHOICE US DA CHOICE LESSER IMOIINT USDA CHOICE BONELESS ROTISSERIE COUNTRY STYLE USDA CHOICE ECKRICH Smok-Y-Links o' FARMER PEETS MAXWELL HOUSE TREESWEET LEMONADE K? 0 APPIAN WAY . Cheat* or Papparonl E? PIZZARINO :59 SPARTAN 10*z. 1 O strawberries! KRAFT-MACARONI GLACIER CLUB OR VELVET NORTHERN HORMEL CINDY LiQUlt> pi OETERGEIfM DEMING RED PERSONAL SIZE U.S. No. 1 Calif. Long Whitt POTATOES Safeguard -Attn*” |Li~ “T x SUNDAY imm, ■pg-Vl/™ FOONM Ml. WALTON I F0MUUID LAKE ORION FOODLAND 151SSASHABAW FOODLAND mtKTmmum. MO.tkivlat.l'tO Mm. aw-Sab tm KRAFT ORANGE JUICE HRDEM«EALTEST COTTAGE CHEESE BORDEM-SEALTEST-NYE SOUR CREAM . KEYKO muamt m ROC OAL. Vtf *19° Half Hie Hot lil I.. BORDEN-SEALTEST-NYE HALF* HALF * 39° STEFFEN'S DRINK : trap#, Oranp LowCaloria Oranga & 5*$l SPARTAN ± DONUTS PLAIN or OQfi SUGAR 2doz. Rlc. ww D“—1 TgE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1M Americans Eat Seven STUFFED HOT DOGS Bubble Crust for Ice Cream Pie fort- Occasionally, even in war mi For that occasion arising ini smooth ice cream makes weather, a special event de-your home, remember this ice ifying combination, mands a festive dessert. The! cream pie with puffed wheat- _ , dessert ought to be nourishing coconut crust.-The harmonious . "r*****st cereals e though, to arouse heat dulled blend of delicately crisp and ^ tagrejent use in reci- appeUtes. sweetened cereal puffs and nutrl‘ _____ Uonal contributions of pro- tein, important B vitamins, essential minerals, and food energy. Ice cream, af course, is a dairy food with the food properties of milk. Preparation of the c e r e a ll crust requires only top of the range cooking of the syrup. The syrup coated cereal then is pressed into a pie pan, and put! in the freezer until needed. A tongue teasing pineapple lime| sauce adds further color and] flavor to this refreshing dessert J PUFFED WHEAT ICE CREAM PIE 3 cups puffed wheat % cup flaked coconut %diq> sugar % cup light corn syrup 2 tablespoons butter or margarine Vi teaspoon salt 1 1 quart vanilla Ice cream Pineapple Lime Sauce: ' 1 can (13% ounce) pineapple chunks, undrained % cup sugar' 1 tablespoon cornstarch 3 tablespoons lime juice 1 teaspoon grated lime rind 1 tablespoon butter or margarine . Combine cereal and coconut* in large buttered bowl. Set aside. Combine sugar, corn syrup, butter or margarine, and salt; mix and cook to the soft crack stage (270 degrees). Use to brash on frank* farters or hamburgers during grilling. Yield: ^Approximately 1 cups (enough for 2 dozen frankfurters.) •' . .- • ''*■ Stuffed franks, become a regular meat course when they’re filled with a tasty fining. Staffed Hot Doge t frankfurters 4 slices bacon, chopped and fried until crisp 1 cup (4 ox.) coarsely gfated sharp cheddar cheese 2 teaspoons grated onioit 2 cups soft breed crumbs 1 tablespoon An.goatura aromatic bitters Va teaspoon salt 1 egg. well beaten Split ^frankfurters lengthwise, not all the way through. Combine remaining ingredients and mixture to stuff frankfurters. Use toothpicks to hold frankfurters together. Put under broiler and broil until cheese is melted and top is brown. Serve with picklei, celery strips, green pepper rings and tomato (Ikes. 2 tablespoons butter dr mar-| For use ag m hors ganne . , , cut each frankfurter crosswise Vi cup finely chopped onion L* 4 pieces >nd serve on tooth. % cup unsulphured molasses | nlrlf< % cup catchup i " ★ * ★ Vi cup vinegaror lemon juice Hot d are , change on the % cup prepared mustard appetizer -tray. Tiny cocktail 2 tablespoons Worcestershire ^ or di'gonalJalices of sauce regular ones go into" a jelly and ^teaspoon tabasco mustard’ sauce.' * Melt butter in a saucepan. Add onion and cook until tender, Comal Glazed but not brown. Stir In remaining Appetizer Franks ingredients. Bring to a boil. Re-1 110-ounce jar (1 cup) currant ckice heat and simmer 10 min-l jelly BY JANET ODELL' Pwdae Press Feed Editor HotDogI Interesting, isn’t it, that the name of a food should be an exclamation of pleasure. But that’s the way people feel about hot dogs or frankfurter^. ★. dr ’ ★ Americans like them so well that they ate seven billion last year. ,, AU hot dogs are folly cooked, but the meat la them may differ. There are all beef franks and franks that con-tala both beef and pork. Michigan law allows up to .four per cent milk solids added to the meat. ★ * ★ Although hot dogs are cooked, they are perishable and should be stored in the refrigerator. Use within a week. ★ w ★ Children will settle tor plain heated hot dogs, or ones grilled over an open fire. Adults like a little more sophistication. Try brushing franks with this sauce. Frankburger Barbecue Sauce .1 frounco jar (% cup) salad mustard 1 pound cocktail framka . allcod franks Heat jelly and mustard together, stirring occasionally, until blended. Adi franks and host Serve with picks. Makes 3 servings. Frankfurters and pineapple become kaboba when they’re alternated oo skewe r s and grilled. Ring Around The Frank Pole 1 pound frankfurters 1 pound can pineapple chunks % cup packed brown sugar 2 tablespoons salad oil 1 teaspoon dry mustard % cup pickle relish 23 stripe cheddpr cheese 13 hot dog buns Cut each frank crosswise into three pieces. Drain pineapple chunks; reserving one cup syrup. In a mixing bowl combine pineapple juice, brown sugar, salad oil, dry mustard, and pickle relish. Marinate ■H franks in saih^m 1 to 4 hours or Remove from marinade and alienate franks with pine-, apple chinks on M metal skewers. Broil < to 7 laches from boat scarce I to 7 minutes, brushing with sanco as Place khbojss on crossed strips of cheese 'around center pole. Serve on buns with your favorite relish. Makes 10. GLAZED APPETIZER FRANKS Heat Leftover Beef in Yummy Sauce An excellent way to qse roast beef that’s leftover is described here. SKILLET BEEF LILA 1 tablespoon flour 1 can (6 ounces) vegetable cocktail juice 1 tablespoon (generous) dry onion-soup mix — as it comes from package Vi cup commercial sour cream Vi teaspoon sugar % teaspoon celery salt Rare roast beef —cut into pencil-thick 3-inch long strips (2 cups) Salt and pepper ' Into a 3- or 10-inch skillet, turn the-flour. Gradually stir or whisk in the vegatable cocktail juice, keeping smooth. Add the .dry onion soup mix, sour cream, sugar 8nd celery salt. Over low heat stir constantly until thickened and bubbly. Add beef (at room temperature) and quickly reheat. Add salt and pepper to taste. Makes 4 servings. ICE CREAM PIE-Puffed wheat mixed with syrup makes s no-bake crust for this summer pie. At serving time, spbon a lime and pineapple sauce over the vanilla ice cream filling. Cool to make, cool to eat . . . cool, man, cool. Tomato Covers Soup Eggs Sauce on Rusk '‘Why don’t you atop by fori The extra touch la to cut those lunch?” I hard-cooked eggs into sixths Sometimes it’s fun to invite a friend or some neighbors on the spur of the moment, Perhaps you saw a friend while shopping in the supermarket and on an! impulse invited her for lunch, ★ * ★ With very little time for preparation, eggs come to the rescue. It is then that it pays to have hard cooked eggs ail ready In the refrigerator to be blended with a ..can of this and a dab of that to make just such an inspirational dish as "Chlca-dee." lengthwise and to form a flower on rusk or toasted muffin with the easily made colorful sauce over all. Simple? Of course, and your friends will need only a cup of tea and a tossed salad to make a nutritious lunch. Chicadee 2 cams tomato soup Pour syrup, over cerpal-cOcp-... . . nut mixture in a fine stream; V* cup chopped pimiento mix until ^ evenly coated % cup chopped ripe olives *ith synip. Press mixture even- 1 2Vs oz.-can sliced mushrooms jy over bottom and sides of but-3 hard-cooked eggs, cut in tered 9.^ pie pan. chin j* 08i*y» freezer. 8 rusks I Spoon ice cream into shell. Vt teaspoon salt 'Freeze. ■ Combine tomato soup, pimen-j * * * I to, olives and mushrooms in' Prepare since. Combine pine-sauoepan, Heat until piping hot. -eppie, auger, eewtttareh, lime -rind, and butter or ■ ■otritioaMdyetj.r.ta I piece of ^ * little a p « c i»1 for tlut time pinwheel fashio„. Sprinkle eggs wbm prwparatioa^mhe* jwith. aaIt; Serve with sauce ***“• S, ££ poured over eggs. Makes 4 serv-li a blend of undiluted tomato jj~ ** ioup, mushrooms, pimiento ' 8 and ripe olives. Itekealaslyialatf With Dry Peanuts An interesting salad calls for peanuts. Special Tossed Salad 1 medium head lettuce, torn] into bite-size pieces J cups kqife-shredded chicory! (curty leaf endive) 2 large tomatoes, cut lq.wedges % pound cheddar cheese, diced %cup peanut oil % cup each wine vinegar and finely chopped dry (pasted peanuts WWW In a salad bolvl, toss together the lettuqe, chicory, tomauei and cheese. Best or shake together thfe oil sad vinegar; poor about % cup of the dressing over the salad; toot lightly; sprinkle with th^ peanuts. (Refrigerate remaining oil-vinegar, tightly covered, f 0 r other salad use.) _w * * . You may add salt and _ _ per to taste to the salad. Makes fto I servings. margarine; mix. Cook, stirring constantly,’ until clear and thickened. ChiU. Serve over wedges of pie. Yield: One 3-inch pie, 8 servings. POTATOES HOT DOGSF00TUN sS only jy Fresh Ground sr. sot ms oil POTATO SAW »FRY!B DRESSED 33£ CHUNK » ONLY 5 CALIF. SUGAR SWEET FREESTONE SA0SA6E SMOKED POLISH OAMTALOTPESg SlfcORANflES CALIF. 3G Doz. BANANAS'W 12^ TOMATOES freIsh CELLO SESAME HALIBUT STEAKS—If halibut Is frozen, let thaw on refrigerator shelf or at room temperature. Rub four halibut steaks on both sides with cut clove of garlic. Brush with oil. Sprinkle with lemon juice, salt and pepper and two tablespoons sesame seeds. Place on grill about four inches from moderate burning charcoal. Cook four minutes, turn and cook four to five minutes or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork. Makes four servings, ONIONS «— 3 Lb. Bag ~UeLeKT mean PASCAL Z3..7 \ CUKES FRESH CRISP 2-13*/1 \ CARROTS FRESH . CELLO 2-29’/ RADISH 2-29' uperMurket Open Weekly 9 to 9-Fri. and Sat. 9 to 10 PRICES SUBJECT IS MARKET CHANGE 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 D—a ASST NO. 1 20 Lbs. T-Bona Steaks 20 Lbs. Rib Stsaks 30 Lbs. Roast Beef 15 Lbs. Ground Boof 15 Lbs. Bar-B-Q Boot Ribs 100 Lbs. Total AFTER DINNER CAKE—For a cool evening this continental-type hot beverage will impress your guests. The lemon swirl garnish canoe prepared in front of everyone. Very swish. Coffee, Cocoa, Milk Powders Blend in Continental Beverage Cut Soup Preparation Time One of the best antidotes for a high temperature and humidity index is chilled soup. And, when it is presented and served on ice, it becomes even more effective in reviving appetites and restoring pleasant disposition^. Chilled soups have been enjoyed in many European countries for centuries. But it has only been in recent years that cold soups other than jellied consomme have appeared on American tables with any frequency. Frozen soups, frozen vegetables, frosea fruits and other frozen products give you a head start on making chilled soups. The washing, trimming, chopping and other preliminary preparation of ingredients has already bees done, making H possible to prepare cold and delectable aoupa quickly and easily. Following are two recipes which illustrate the simple technique. The first, Curried Carrot Vidiysaoiae, is a streamlined variation-of Vichyssoise, probably the best known of sll soups, i this country. The original version—simply cold potato soup garnished with chives — was created by the famous twentieth century chef, Louis Diat, at the Ritz-Carlton in New York City. Meat Queries Answered in New Extension Bulletin Here's a clever new way to elimax your meal with a continental flourish and impress your guests, meanwhile replacing any stuffed feeling with the bright flavor of fresh lemon. Heightened by fresh lemow It’s sure to start conversations, right at die psychological motaent when they have been known to lag. To go truly dramatic with this one, dim the lights and do the intriguing fresh lemon part (bring in the ingredients, ready on a tray) at the table! After Dinner Cafe with Lemon Zest 1-to 2 lemons V* cup instant dry milk crystals Vi cup instant cocoa mix 2 tablespoons instant coffee 4 cups vigorously boiling water Fill coffee server with hot water to pre-heat. Cut around each lemon (use tip of sharp knife or the bar tool that makes “twists”) to get thin strips of peel about Vi-inch wide. Cut strips in ltt-inch lengths and roll into curls. Press me curl gently between your fingers over each cop, to release die fragrant leniM all, then swirl into cap. Squeeze die lemons far joke and add % teaspoon to lemM peel in each cop. In large mixing bowl (or use blender) combine the three ‘ stant mixes, add boiling water beat with electric or rotary beater until thoroughly combined and very frothy." Pour hot water out' of the server and replace with coffee mixture, fill each cup and serve at once. Can be sweetened further with sugar passed separately, if desired. Makes about quart. . How do most packers tenderize their meat? Is it possible to over-tenderize meat? What affects cooking time of meat? * * * These and other questions homemakers ask atlout cooking meat aren’t answered in many to help homemakers understand cookbooks. WHY meat, fish and poultry are; * * | cooked according to certain rec-1 But they are answered in alommended practices.” new Cooperative Extension Serv- cooking . techniques,” Mrs. Dean continues. “Commercial companies offer directions for preparing their product either on the label in leaflets. We don’t duplicate that information. Instead we try Carried Carrot Vichyssoise 1 can (llVz ounces) frozen cream of potato soup, thawed 1 package (10 ounces) frozen whole baby carrots 2 cups (1 pint) light cream 1 teaspoon curry powder Chopped fresh mint, Press soup through a.sieve or whirl in t blender. Cook carrots tender; drain and press through a sieve or whirl in a blender. Combine pureed potato soup, pureed carrots and curry powder. Gradually stir In cream. Chill in refrigerator at least four hours. Serve la chilled bowls. Garnish with chopped mint. Makes I servings. Like the traditional Dutch Peq. Soup made the * old-fashioned way with a ham bone, dried peas and hours of simmering, this modem version combines the same two basic ingredients: ham and peas. The difference is that the hours of simmering and thickening have been eliminated through the use of a convenient frozen soup. Chilled Dutch Pea Soup Vt cup frozen chopped onion Vfc cup frozen chopped mushrooms 1 can (lOMs ounces) frozen 1 dMHMMMI FROSTY SOUPS FROM THE FREEZER— Cold and delectable soups can be made quickly and easily with convenient frozen ingredients. The Curried Carrot Vichys- soise illustrated here is made with frozen potato soup and frozen whole baby carrots. Light cream, curry powder and fresh mint are the only other ingredients. green pea with ham soup, gether green pea soup and thawed buttermilk. Stir in cooked onion 2 cups buttermilk (and mushrooms. Croutons 11-, ., _ • Chill in refrigerator at least Combine frozen chopped onion {our hours; ^ in chiUed and mushrooms in skillet. Saute bowls. Garnish each serving their own liquid as they de- with croutons. Makes 4 serv-Ifrost until tender. ' Blend th ings. Cut Crosswise Wondering how to cut up that rhubarb for pie? Unless the recipe states otherwise, you’ll be safe in slicing the stalks crosswise into tt-inch pieces. Another hint: never peel pink or red rhubarb. ice publication No. 520 called, Meat,\Let’s Cook It Right”, says Mrs. Carol Q. Kurth, area Extension Home Economist headquartered In Oakland County- - , ■ ★ * * Mrs. Anita Dean, nutritionist with the Extension Service, and author of the publication, explains, “Meats are important nutritionally for the amounts and quality of protein, B-vitamins and energy they provide. And meat commands a higher proportion of the family food dollar than other foods of the nutritive value required. This means that meats should be seletced and prepared to insure saving those nutrients as well as flavor.” “Today’s basic cookbooks supply excellent tested recipes as well aa descriptions of As an example she cited the answer the publication gives to the question: How can you tell when fish is well done? Here’-s the answer: “Too of* ten fish is overcooked. Fish is done when its protein has set At this stsge the flesh flakes easily when tested with a fork, aad it will be moist and tender with a delicate flavor. Many small fish require lean than tea minutes total cooking time. Overcooked fish and shellfish are tough and dry.” For a copy of the bulletin j contact Mrs. Kurth, Extension Home Economist, 155 North Saginaw Street, Pontiac, Michigan 4M58. If you are ambitious and want to bake them, you’ll fiftd fruit turnovers are wonderful to take along on a picnic. SHOlWSAI/E/fe/ ^ PORK LOINS 49 WeareU.S. Approved - We AeeoptFood Coupons CsntsrCvt Eft _ PORK CHOPS............ 09 lb. US. Choie. M _ ROUND STEAK.. . .......... 79 lb. US. Choke , CHUCK STEAKS......... 49 lb. Midi. Na 1 u«.*V«2um'Juicy 9 Lbs. $145 HOT DOGS.... v for I Hoim mad. Style AA _ KIELBASA................ 09 lb. Heme mads Style J|| _ RING BOLOGNA . . .......... 49 Jb. U A Choice . Jft _ BEEF ROAST... . ............49 lb. lean T.nd.r PORK LOIN jags ____________________ ROAST..... *#9 Ib. ......llllllll......... STOCK iip SPECIALS | Juicy IRQ ITERS ASST #3 Ptritrhtuse Steak. T-Bom Steaks Sirloin Steaks Burger Steaks Cut and Wrapped FULL BEEF LOINS 3tt$1 IA/ATERFORD V W MEAT PACKERS ORDER BY HOUIISi MON. THRU SAT. 8:30 -7:00 P.M. " PHONE 4980 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) ACROSS FROM WATERFORD HIGH Guaranteed for tenderness, flavor and quality or your purchase will be re-cut uUhin tan daya. Fresh, Lean ROUND CHUCK STEAK Lean, Juicy • Frying Chicken Quarters LEGS or BREASTS39il • Fresh Lean ■■ g/% na stem ,..,53 ...49,1 • Meaty Beef POT ROAST BOSTON Boneless Rolltd Beef ROTISSERIE ROAST SWISS Hof ,n 0°GS 1179* Freeh, Lean i HAMBURGER] In 3-Pound Packages Sizzling Hot... Ready To Eat BM-B-CUED CHICKENS 99! MAMETS Quality Meats Since 1931 71 North Saginaw-Ponti»c Opan Friday Evenings 'til 9 P. AA. This Ad its Effect Both Stores* Friday and Saturday 4341 Dixit Highway-Drayton Opan Wednesdays 9 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Thursday thm Saturday 9 AJA. to, 9 P.M, Sundays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. EM THE 3 , THURSDAY, JULY U, Roll in Ham Slices Mashed Potatoes Are Finger Food Among the rites of summer, the family picnic is one of the nicest It can be observed on a beach, in a cool woodland glade, or off the tailgate of the family station wagon. The common stocked in a i food, amply-portable picnic Danger Lurks in Picnic Food In the summer months, cook-outs, picnics and prepared lunches eaten in cars are a way of life with most citizens. But the high temperatures that are so enjoyable also pose a threat to food unless the rule is adopted which says: Keep hotl foods hot and cold foods cold. At this time of the year, there! Try these favorites youir next time out: ham, baked beans, and potato salad. A 1)11 of applied ingenuity gives them surprising new zest And variety. Combine the ham slices and potato salad in jelly-roll fashion and you’ve got the neatest finger food lunch this side of the Great Divide. ftote the unique and deli- lt’s a real Quickie made with packaged mashed potato granules, minced celery, hard cooked eggs, and flavored with.instant minced onion and zippy prepared yellow mustard. The picnic-styled baked beans i I with crumbled bacon have spir- Ham and Potato Salad Lags 1 envelope (4 servings) instant mashed potato granules 2 teaspoons Instant minced on- 1 tablespoon prepared yellow mustard 44 cup finely diced celery 44 cup mayonnaise ' 2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped 8 thin slices boiled ham (about 12 oz.) Prepare mashed potatoes as envelope directs; stir .in onion and mustard. Let cool a few1 minutes; add celery, mayonnaise, and. eggs. Spread slices of ham with potato mixture; roll up as for jelly roll. Chill several hours or overnight. 4 servings. Pak-a-Lunch Beans - — , - failed flavor, thanks to a dash of| J can jj1 h*888 is always an increase of -vtii 4 slices cooked bacon, crum- Micfi ^rtmSn^f ^gri- j “uce’ and freeze-dried ’chives, thilf ^e" culture. Many of these stem For easy serving at pieme 2 teaspoons freeze-dried chives from meals being exposed to time, spoon the beans unto indi- j Worcestershire summer temperatures without vidual paper cartons and pro- proper refrigeration after thejvide disposable plastic spoons or ^ ^Jj food is prepared. Foods containing cream'and eggs are particularly susceptible to food poisoning organisms when improperly handled. Heading the list are mayonnaise, cream fillings, potato salad, cream nances, puddings and salad dressings. Manufacturers usually handle 'such products properly as do most retailers, but often consumers are negligent because they are unaware of the hazard involved, says J. L. Littlefield, chief of the Food Inspection Division of the Michigan Department of Agriculture. To avoid danger of food poisoning, they advise keeping foods that are to be eaten hot well heated during die time between preparation and f H«g. similar precautions apply with cold foods. Chilling and good refrigeration are Dessert Calories Cut to Mi Sweetness without sugar is the appears from surface of mb-- tore. Pour into a lightly oiled 1-qoart mold; chill until set Garnish, if dpsired, with lew- PICNIC FAVORITES - Family favorites for a picnic are shown here in slightly different guises. Mom's delicious potato salad, made in a jiffy with instant mashed pota- toes, is served up in hanil slices rolled up Jelly-roll fashion. The baked beans are mixed with bacon, Worcestershire sauce, chili sauce, and freeze-dried chives. rIB S Stuffed Lettuce Sour Cream Has Fewer Calories special feature of the delightful and calorie-shy Rhubarb Dessert Jelly shown here.. Developed by home kxmo-mists for the calorie-free sweet-ner, sucaryl, this diet-minded recipe illustrates a modern new concept in food preparation .. that is, the subtraction of excess, unwanted calories from favorite dishes before they reach the table. With the help of this cycla-mate-tvpe sweetener, used in place of sugar, a wide range of sweets ordinarily forbidden to weight watchers era be enjoyed at a minimum cost in calories. RHUBARB DESSERT JELLY (Lew-Calorie) 5 cups diced rhubarb , Vi cup water 3 tablespoons sucaryl 'solu-tion 3 2-serving envelopes dietetic strawberry-flavored gelatin 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 cup diet gingerale In large saucepan, combine strawberries, or orange aec- leas. Makes 6 servings, each 26 calories; 2 grams protein; no fat; 4 grams carbohydrate. (With sugar 266 calories.) forks. The ham-and-potato saladl Combine all ingredients. Chill logs travel nicely in smaller serve at room temperature, waxed paper or plastic bags. If preferred hot, place over moderate heat just long enough Keeping food at room temperatures is dangerous in either case. Maintain hot foods at 140 degrees F. or higher and cold foods at 45 degrees F. or colder, is Mr. Littlefield’s suggestion. Round out yoor picnic ‘menu with cheese sandwiches and plum tomatoes. And. don’t forget tie pickles, fruit, to become bubbly hot. 4 servings. No Backbone; Easy Carving || To stuff an .iceberg lettuce Iicut out the core and heart. Pack „ . , Counting those calories? Remember, dairy sour cream 1 . , rhubarb, water and sucaryl. is lower in calories than many foods for which it can be |a soft cheese mixture into tne CoQk until tenderj stirring well substituted: For example: |!center of the lettuce, wrap tight- with wooden gpron to crush rhu- 1 tablespoon dairy sour cream has........... 30 calories |L flnd chiifthoroughly. Cut in barb.. Add strawberry gelatin, 1 tablespoon mayonnaiise has........ .........92 calories i| . , H *fbTing to dissolve; then add 1 tablespoon French-type dressing has........60 calories 1 wed«es and ?rve as 8 salad lemon juice and gingerale. * ...............................Jlwith French dressing. . | Let stand until foam dis- Beans and Beets Make Unique Salad This interesting salad combination is hearty and flavorful enough to accompany fish. Tyrolese Salad 1 can (S ounces) cut green beans, drained 1 cup drained sliced pickled beets 44 of a small onion sliced paper-thin and separated into rings 2 medium or small apples, pared and cut into thin sticks French Dressing and lettuce 2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced Mix the beans, beets, onion and apples with enough French Dressing to give good flavor. Arrange on lettuce. Garnish with sliced eggs. Makes 6 servings. Carving a pork loin roast is easy if you follow these simple! directions from the American Meat Institute. Have the backbone loosened, from the rib side of the roast at the market. When you take the roast out of the oven, remove the backbone before sending the roast to the table. Place the roast on the platter with the rib ends us, and rib side of the roast in front of the carver. Slice downward between the ribs to make chop-sized servings. If the loin roast is a large one, it is possible to carve a boneless slice between each rib. FELICE QUALITY MARKET SAL^PATE^^^UIY 14 thru JULY 20th 1116 W. HURON ST. Nationally Advertised Brands at Money Saving Prices” iqhts reserved to limit qu NORTHERN TOILET TISSUES maxwell house COFFEE DEL MONTE Family Size CATSUP 20tOZ. Bottle Hunt’s FRUIT COCKTAIL 34* Mb. 13-oz. can PINEAPPLE CREAM PUFF PIE-Bake a giant cream puff in a 9-inch pie pan. Fill it with whipped cream, pineapple and strawberries. Cut in wedges to serve. Giant Cream Puff Is Filled With Two-Fruit Mixture If you have a calorie con-, pineapple slices science, stop where you are. For 1% cups sliced strawberries these are the real McCoy cream! Bring butter, water and salt to puffs. Almost. full boU. When butter is melted, The cream puff mixture is; add flour all at once and stir baked m a pie pan and filled vigorously until mixture leaves with a heap of luxurious]sides of "pan and forms a ball, whipped cream, layered with Remove from heat, row after row of canned pine- geat jn eggSi one at a time, apple slices and bright fresh luting thoroughly between IggHj fjj *- each additions until batter is smooth and velvety. Spread TEMFTCMKUU ir 29* JELLO'S NEW-Asst. Flavors WHIP ’n CHIU 3V.-oi. 1 QC PRINCESS CREMES SANDWICH COOKIES 239c CONTADINA TONATO SAUCE 1 4-39° euarr*. .: ■1 - C 4-az. $4QO VIENNA SAUSAGE cans ^ | BORDEN'S 8-oz. QQc CREAMORA jar £3 DEL MONTE ORANGE JUICE 3 46-oz. $4 00 cans ■ VELVET PEANUT BUTTER 2 w 69* berries. All in all, divine. If you feel you must forego this delicacy until after the swim Suit season, how about just the pineapple and strawberries? Or just pineapple? This fruit is never out of Season and always good far dieters. Just enough sweetness to satisfy a craving without any added over bottom and up sides of 9-inch pie plate to form a ■hell. ately (275 degrees F.) 36 minutes. Turn off oven and let shell stand 15 minutes. Cobl. Beat cream until it begins to j Sf8-Continue until stiff. . | Spread half of cream over bottom of cold cream puff ; shell. Arrange 5 drained pineapple slices on top, then sliced I berries. Top with remaining fresh flavor. Pineapple Cream Puff Pie 4k cup butter 44 cup water Vt teaspoon salt Vi cup sifted flour 2 eggs 2 cups whipping cream 2 tablespoons Cointreau Arrange remaining pineapple slices on top. Garnish with ber-3 tabiespooos powdered sugar Tries and mint leaves. Chill 1 46 teaspoon vanilla hour before serving. Makes 1 1(1-pound 445 * ounce) can1 (9-inch) pit. HORTON’S SINNERS $100 11-OZ. PICKS. All Varieties Exocpt Ham RUSSITTI HASH MOWN POTATOES 12* 12 oz. pkg. C ALORIE S’ J.1 MITE D ORANGE DRINK 53/«-oz. Can 8e SWEET RIPE PEACHES lb. 19* CALIFORNIA FRESH * 1 Pkgs. OQc CRISP CARROTS 4 m for £9 SOLID CRISP RADISHES Pkf* 10* FRESH CREEK ONIONS Bunch ir KRAFT PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE 28* 8-OZ. Pkg. YELLOW ft's KEYKOOLEO Mb. etn. 22< SEALTEST HALF ’n HALF 39* H By Science Service PASADENA, Calif. - A new microscope developed here uses the same "blinking” technique astronomers have found best for detecting exploding stars. It is reported to be the first microscope that can either superimpose one image on top of another or rapidly alternate images. Engineers at California Institute of Technology here are now using it to spot the small changes in metallic crystals that lead to failure. Astronomers searching for ex. ploding stars, as well as for comets and asteroids, compare two pictures of portions of the sky photographed at different times. By “blinking” the pictures under a low-power microscope, they can detect small changes in position or size of objects. Blinking means looking alternately at the two photographs within a second or less. Objects! that have changed position seem! to jump back and forth as the images alternate, while objects that have changed size seem to pulsate. The same optical illusion is formed when the new microscope is used to compare a metallic crystal before and after stress is applied for a fraction of a second. Ttie comparison is made with| small X-ray negatives or plastic molds of the, metal crystal surfaces under a magnification of 50 to 500 times, a higher magnification than astronomers use for blinking. The new microscope wo sembled by David S. Wood, Thad Vreeland Jr. and David P. Pope. They are using it to study the stress-induced movement of dislocation lines in metallic crystals, which show how such tiny motions contribute to metal NEW RCA WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR FREEZERS GIVE YOU THE THREE THINGS YOU WANT MOST! Meet a Mind-Changer. (Like Rambler American) AUTOMATIC ICE CUBES™, never run out of toe with Whirlpool's proven "loo Magic” automatic loo maker. Every cube you uee le replaced quickly, cleanly, quietly. (Over 1,000,000 Whirlpool automatic ice maker owners will vouch for It!) Oxriy American Motors sales were up in June! How come? BIG CAPACITY. ■ Model pictured above has full 16.7 cu. ft. of storage space, yet It's designed to fit In standard epaoee of smaller refrigerators. You get a big freezer, big fresh food area storage, euper-etorage door, lota of shelf space and criepere that Ttoiiil a full buohtl) "*...... 2 NO FROST ■ There’s no frost In the refrigerator, no frost in the freezer... you never have to defrost, because Whirlpool does it for you automatically. Take the example of one vacation-blqeeed college student "This summer l am going to scrimp and save until I can buy a big car with a big engine. A real performer.” Then it happened. A buddy told him that Rambler Americans finished 1-2 in the Acceleration Test, Class VI, Pure Oil Performance Trials— . with standard Sixes. Then he readr about American’s pew 290-cube Typhoon V-8. "A lot of heavier cars don’t have that much engine,” he thought. And so they don't Laterhe learned he could take his pick of 4-on-the-floor or automatic at no extra coat That so equipped, Rammer American is the lowest-list-priced V-8 car built in America.* And that a long list of safety features, like, Double-Safety brakes, weal standard. But’' that was pure gravy. His mind was already changed. And that’s the way it went all last month. We sold more new cars this Jupe than last In fact sales bit an eight-month high. So before you buy a new car this month, meet the Mind-Changers: Rambler American, Rambler Classic, Ambassador, Marlin. With savings at a model-year high, they’re changing a lot of minds these days. j / ipraM ©American Motors... where quality is built in, not added on. ndk*jthjmiMga2jiimn& Every American Motor, car wm include* a Double-Safety tanka tyttm plui solid, ill-welded Smile-Unit body eomtniction ml afety feature* tike: padded d»«h and vi«or», outwit minor. it bdu, backup liihtt. windihield wmher*. hifhtr-wreinth winthhidd. ind variaNe-rpeed wtpen. Mind-Changing deals now at your Amerioan Motors/Rambler dealer BILL SPENCE. INC. 6673 Dixie Highway CJeriuton, Mich. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 Perk Blvd. M24 Lake Orion, Mich. HOUGHTEN & SON. me. 528 N. Mein S». Rochester. Mich, ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce Rd. Rt. 5 Union Lake, Mich. AND A PERFECT REASON TO BUY RIGHT NOW... (LOW PRICE) 12 MODELS FROM $249. SEE THE RCA WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR FREEZER THAT’S PERFECT FOR YOU AT SWEET'S RADIO & APPLIANCE, INC. 422 W. HURON Pontiac, Michigan 48053 Pkoiw^E 4*5477 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 FIREMAN RESCUED — Miami Beach fireman Robert Steele collapsed yesterday at the top of an aerial ladder when smoke and flames enveloped him as he sprayed water on a blaze that destroyed five businesses. Another fireman goes after him (left), two firemen start down the ladder with him (center) and helping hands from the ground reach for the overcome fire filter. Steele suffered smoke inhalation and was taken to a hospital. Replace TNT Balloons to Explode in Tests By Science Service I Army’s Defense Atomic Sup-WASHINGTON - Hfige bal- port Agency (DASA) will be loons will be exploding over studying the blasts, four more western Canada later this of which will-be made with summer with blasts ^quailing conventional chemical expto-up to 500 tons of TNT- j sives. At. least two such explosions will be aet off as pert of Operation Distant Plain, a aeries of shock-measuring experiments. Scientists from Canada, Great Britain and the U.S. STAY COOL WITHKA GIBSON \ OR FRIGID AIRE ,\ JR CONDITIONER Consumers Power Telephone 33-3-781 2 The Army’s alphabet soup —.—.—— e]£,l0Si,°“ CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A is Project auuXiE (wmuiat- L0W cosf PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. fog Large Explosive Detonat- JUST PH0NE 332-8181. ing Gas Experiment). Astronomers Have Found It Best Microscope Uses 'Blinking' Technique JUST COMPLETED, A COOL 1,900,000 AUTOMATIC ICE MAKERS BY WHIRLPOOL P-rfl THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 School, Bus Operation Aid Hiked Detroit Escapee Caught CHICAGO (UPI) -7- Chicago! serving a 3^4 to 15-year sentence FBI agents said yfesterday they tor breaking suid entering, had captured a Detroit escapee LANSING (AP)—State payments for operation and purchase ' of public school buses would climb from $18 million to $20 million a year under a formula approved Wednesday bjpthe State Board of i Education. The State Department of Education reimburses school districts for up to 75 per cent of the cost of school transportation. *• • ». Board member Donald Thur-ber said the new formula is; designed to meet increases in! costs since the formula last was adjusted in 1957. NEW FORMULA TALL BEAUTIES - Miss Adrian Eaton, The new formula would pro- ,.Mjsg TalJ ^ ig lg gnd standg 5 vide increases of 2 to 5 cents feet 11( wag chogen ,agt night as ..Migg TaU per mile traveled and a 14.3 per North America” at the Miss TaU North cerlt increase in state funds America Pageant in Cincinnati. Contestants available for purchase of new m Miss Eaton, Angela Bray, buses. Thurber said a public hearing “ ~ will be held on the proposed new formula: and it then will be reviewed by Atty. Gen. Frank Keljey. Hie state board also approved Wednesday establishment of ai at Wtjat State University. Moon Camera llnr board said it actedi ■ft«n receiving assurance from I pasadena Calif Uh Con- Wayne that it would wortl PASADENA- Ca“f <* - Con-closely with community colleges, “ct was *ost yesterday night in Southeastern Michigan to with Surveyor I, America’s cam-strengthen educational pro-jera spacecraft on the moon, grams for policemen and stu- the Jet Propulsion Laboratory dents of police administration.'announced. —h— «—— Contact was lost by .the Jo- hannesburg. Union of South Driver Honor System j Africa, tracking station as the who eluded the law far 15 years. M.W. Johnson, head of the Chicago bureau of the FBI, laid that James Wesley McDannei, 41, was arrested by agents of the FBI at-his home at suburban Berwyn. The warrut for McDaaael’s ^arrest charged him w 11 h u-lawfnl flight to avoid confinement.' McDannei escaped from the Detroit House of Correction May 21, 1951, where he had been ■The federal warrant for bis! arrest on the unlawful flight charge was issued by the U.S.| commissioner in D e t r o i t last Nov. I. Minnesota, with 11,977 lakes measuring at least 25 acres, eaqh, has more surface water any other state in the nation. All told there are four mil-! lion acres of it, enough to cover! both Rhode Island and Delaware. COCKTAIL LOUNGE M N. SAOINAW - DOWNTOWN PONTiAO OPEN 7 A.M. to 2 A M. Station Loses i Contact With At W1roo*o*o Miss Cleveland; Jackie Tilley; Miss Cincinnati; Rosemary Tasnick, Miss Chicago; Kathy Koehl, Miss California Tip-Topper (second runner-up); and Carol Baeschler, Miss Atlanta. Luci, Pat Make Application for Their Marriage License Took Too Big a Toll ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (AP) ^ «""• of the sun’ durin* - There was an “honor ^ »umet on the moon, tern” on the Atlantic City Ex- “Johannesburg ceased get- i pressway that allowed motorists ting television data from the who lacked change at an un- spacecraft/' a spokesman manned toll booth to pick up said. envelopes and mail in the toll. | Surveyor’s battery , has been But the program has been^m,^ possibly because, of cir-abandoned. Less than 20 P«r!cuit trouble. “‘It has been giving cent of the motorists were mail* -- •• ■' WASHINGTON I* - Luci Johnson, 19, daughter of President Johnson, and her fiance, Patrick J. Nugent, applied for a marriage license yesterday at the District of Columbid License Bureau. Nugent paid 50 cento toward the $2.50 license fee when he and Luci made out their application. The balance of the fee mast be paid when someope picks up the license at the end of the five-day waiting period. _ . , District of Columbia regulations permit a third person StUtr^viS’Se S Pick up the license after the waiting period, Archbishop Patrick A. O’BoyJe of the Washington Roman Catholic archdiocese gave official acknowledgement of the fact that Luci and Nugent are not a typical couple when he dispensed with the usual proclamation of wedding banns. REQUIRED Normally the proclamation of wedding banns is required in the parish churches of Catholic couples for the three Sunday’s prior to their wedding. ★ ★ ★ A spokesman for the archdiocese said it was felt that the marriage intentions of this young couple were well enough known to allow dispensing with banns. In advance of his wedding Aug. 6 at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception here, Nugent will put in two weeks’ duty with the Air National Guard at Travis Air Base at Savannah, Ga. He reports there Saturday. . HPRMt since last Friday that ing in the tolls, and the r®®" it is wearing out. But it has pcr-was losing more than $1,000 in forme(j beyond expectations, ' monthly revenue. j the spokesman said. "We cannot say surveyor is The two main alcoholic bever- dead, because we do not know,’’ ages made by the Vietnamese [the spokesman said. “The feel-are beer and ruou nep, made ing is it is not. We will attempt from fermented glutinous riceJto reestablish contact.” BECKWITH-EVANS PONTIAC STORE HAS THE BEST DEALS T '*• COMPLETE... INSTALLED OVER WHITE RUBBER PAD! BeckwttK-Evrxns FINE FLOOR COVERINGS Open 9:30 to 9 Daily Except Tuts. Till 6 TEL-HUR0N SHOPPING CENTER Wait Huron at Triumph 334-9644 CONVENIENT CREDIT No Monty Dawn 3 Years to Pay IMPORTANT NOTICE • All Yorn . Riforoitco io *o fact or plli of carpet. • "Doalon Pay" It a dollars' cut stsor cop for currant carpot. “Dooloa Paid'* woo doolor cot ardor for diKontinuod TAX EM HONC® Ray De Crane, left, income tax expert for Hie Pontiac Press is shown receiving the meritorious Public Service Award of the InternaT Revenue Service from Commissioner Sheldon S. Cohen. The presentation took place in Mr. Gohen’s Washington office. "As an editor and writer with creativity and insight, your articles on the many aspects of taxes have* contributed substantially to more effective tax administration by raising-the level of public undersTanding,^ tRS-------Commissioner Sheldon . S. Cohen said as- he made the presentation. De Crane was honored for his series and book CUT YOUR OWN TAXES, a > guide to better understanding of the Federal . Income, Tax Laws published • by: NEA and made-' available as a public ,■ service to Pontiac Press. readers of The i ; m THE PONTIAC PRESS .. Oakland County's im-PRESS-ive Newspaper For Home or Vacation Delivery Dial 332-8181 1 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE 1966 PONTIAC TEMPEST TRADE NOW! W* need good, cloan used cars a.. 1966demonstrators and mileago cars a terrific savings! Big Crime Lab Js THE 3PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 t : Sci by Lawmen-Physicist By Science Service CHICAGO - Establishment of a large, up-todate crime laboratory, 10 times the size of the current FBI lib, was pro-posed here by Dr. Albert V. .Crewe, physicist ind director of the University of Chicago’s Ar- gonne National Laboratory. ' P^00 the road and walk a few Science has been almoat'T"!*1 y8”4**’* one' park offi-„ — i cial lamented in an interview. Record Ctowds Visiting Parks WASHINGTON (AP) nr. risltin* the ua- net JUgiectBler tional perk syatem tn record numbers this year, but appar- ently not always to “get away from tt aD." They tend to take their city-style life with them. a So that in the vast expanses of Vellowstone.National Park; for instance, sometimes there’s bumper to bumper traffic on the loop road. v “If we could just get them"® pull off the road and walk a few “completely lieglecM" as an answer to crime, stated' Dr. Crewe, despite the fact that technology is now capable of putting teeth into the old saw that “crime doesn’t pay/* Dr. Crews said he has in mind a laboratory equipped with the largest end fastest computers, plus a nuclear “There hre thousands of acres In Yellowstone that sever have had i human foot across them.” And when, people tab to the rugged outdoor life by capping out, do they steal out to some sanctuary of nature to enjoy erentty alone? No. “Families are lured to.______ tobeoutdoors but not to be isolated; you'll find them tending to camp side by side. "They create their own smog, literally, by too many campfires close together," the outdoors park enthusiast said. actor for sophisticated chemical analysis. Also Important is communication research, particularly * In microelectronics. He said that the laboratory should be staffed with scientists of the hipest caliber v— physicists, chemists, mathematicians, pathologists, virologists, etc., under the wing of a university. PURPOSE The overall purpose would be to advance the field of crime detection, rather than to solve particular crimes. But, he said, a detection becomes more certain, it acts as a deterrent to crime. A murderer hardly ever uses arsenic poisoning, simply because its symptoms are so easily detected, end every criminal knows he should not leave his fingerprints at the scene of -the crime, . . Of all the took, of all the weapons which have been used on the problem of crime, science and technology have been among the mat profitable," said Dr. Crewe. Dr. Crewe called it “incred-Ible” that society should rely so heavily on technology and yet “completely ignore its future.** The main problem has been expense. Few local police departments can afford a nuclear reactor or a computer system. But the nation could. Some jobs of a crime laboratory might be to work out an alarm system for homes, set up a useful computerized fingerprint file, design p counterfeiting-detection device, and improve identification of criminals, using the new science of patera recognition. Chief of Staff Is Decorated The parks aren’t Crowded the people hive crowded up Ip the parka. ( This year, the 50th anniversary of the National Park Service, the agency expects a record 137 million people to visit the 2$1 units of toe national park system. This includes 32 national porks and six national seashores, plus historical areas and recreaitonal areas. Last year, the most popular spot in the system was around the Washington, D.C., area, where some bine million persons visited toe national capital unite such as Lincoln Memorial and the White House. Second on the list witi^ some eight million visits was the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia and North Carolina. Colonial Nation- al Historical Park at Yorktown, Va., was third with over six million; and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park of Carolina and Tennessee next with almost six million. Among toe national parks and national seashores, the most popular with more than two million visits each were Cape Cod; Mass.; Grand Teton, Wyo.; Olympic, Wash.; Shenandoah, Vi.; and Yellowstone. this year, compared to I3J mil-•' total in 1960. In lilt, Yel-itone had . a total of 36,000 i; last year it had I million, with some 42,QOO in a single day. UPSURGE OF CAMPERS .In the past, torts or four years, there has been a tremendous upsurge of campers. The service added 2,106 new campsites this year, making almost 30,000 in all, and expects nine million campuse days this year. A new historical unit at the expansion memorial site in St,\ Louis, Mo., drew some three It’s'come to the point where million. The total attendance in the system this year is running about 20 per cent over last year. It has more than doubled in six years - an expected 137 million if you want to take the mule trip down to the valley of the G^and Canyon — you have to reserve a mule in advance -“well in advance,'' the park man said. Elect *. * v. John N. O'BRIEN | -CIRCUIT JUDGE AUGUST 2 * Qualified 'Experienced -Ui* CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON?---SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. RESEMBLES ACTOR-FATHER - Romina Power at 14 may well become as famous as her parents, the late actor Tyrone Power (left), who she resembles, and actress Linda Christian. Die dark-haired actress, who lives with her mother in Rome, already is an idol among Italian teen-agers. She was named after Rome because her parents were married there. WASHINGTON (l)pi) - The! Army presented its highest non-1 combat award yesterday to its; chief of staff, Gen. Harold K. Johnson. Army Secretary Stanley H. Resor awarded Johnson the distinguished service medal at a Pentagon ceremony for his “key! role in the rapid expansion of j the Axrny to meet the Commu- ' nist threat in Viet Nam while j Inallrfng Army’; ability tOi fulfill its many other commit-1 ments throughout the world.** Johnson has been chief of staff since July 1964. ACROSS 1 You and me S Homonym lor “wood” S The best-tasting cigarette you cm smoke 7 Wage battle I Change (coll.) 9 Those who enjoy S Across 4 More readily 6 If you changed the V to an V it would be “then” Join the UnswitchablesJ Get the filter cigarette with the taste1 worth fighting for. — Tarayton fogs -a white outer tipi ... and an inner section of charcoal. Together, they actually improve 1 the flavor of Tareyton’s fine tobaccos. Tareyton IUB MMUBM mm tux tn pierre $umw miw. or Mosumi. hartfow. m THIS IS THE DRINK THAT IS! SMIRNOFF MULE It’s the drink to start with and stay with-a cool Smirnoff and 7-Up*. Pour a jigger of Smirpoff over % lime. Fill Mule mug or glas with 7-Up to liters Mute mup $100. A groat payable to Smirnoff Mule, Dept. titamte of Our ’66 Inventory ALL 1966 P0NTIACS TEMPESTS OTHERS MAY TALK DEALS, BUT THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE WEf THEMf fntnll nn •*in a does fay itswlf. It's th* big-»elling, swinging Wide-VaUIUliriU Track Tiger that combines luxuryJooksT J ' at to low a 'pries you'll have to look twice to believe It. A lot goes into making a car - end Catalina gate mere then He share. Sure, other care ara reaching for Cota-lino's onviabla position, but no matter how dolled up they gat, they’re |uet net Catalinai. 7 medals to cheese from, all with a happy host of da pay no-extra-cost interior features. • On The Spot Financing • Highest Trade-In • Large Selection • Faster Service Pontiac, Retait StoR£r 3rd In National Sales - 1st in the Pontiao Area!' 65 Rfft. Clemens Street, D0NWT0WN PONTIAC - FE 3-7951 OPPi NOWAY, TUESDAY and THURSDAY »M I P.M. - WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY til 6 - SATURDAY til I P.M. 16 Salesmen to Serve You! si gt & THE PbXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JUI,Y 14. 1866 Aide for United Fund Attending Institute Pontiac Area United Fund Associate Executive Director, Donald M. Millar is attending statewide Campaign Leadership «Institute today and tomorrow at taberfae Lodge in Cadillac. Sponsored by the Michigan United Fund, the jnstitute'is designed to help United Fund leaders prepare for the upcoming campaign season this . fail. Millar, former Oakland County Red Cross director, recently joined the Pontiac Area United Fund staff as director of campaigns. Dr. Harold E. Sponberg, president* of Eastern Michigan University, will give the keynote address. The nationally prominent educator has served with Northern Michigan University and Washburn University in Kansas. Hej is an active church leader and! one-time executive secretary of the 4-H Club Foundation. , / His message to the institute will serve to inspire and rededicate statewide* leadership of United campaigns in their task of seeking funds for the operation of health and welfare agencies throughout Mich; igan. ‘ * Attending will be United Fund presidents, campaign chairmen, budget committee chairmen, key volunteer leaders, as well After Extensive Study % l*S m mmm OKs Intergroup The Pontiac Board of Educa-| “Shared educational expert-tion last night adopted formal ences by white and nop‘white policies tor intergroup educa-H1* 'desirable,** the policy ... .T . states. ‘Where this will not oc-tional programs and the exclu-l^ of 0, sion of students from classes. I pupil populAtion within a school, Both areas were subject to consideration should be given to extensive study during the 1965- developing activities coopera- DONALD M. MILLAR It's the Staff pf Life BRAYTON, Iowa <* - Asked why he was feeding his dog slices of bread, 3-year-old ■ ney Esbeck had the answer. He wanted his pet to have (Nippies ‘like the neighbor’s dog!” and he had been told that Whe dog “had to get bred first." well as executive directors of funds from communities throughout the state. August Scholle, president of Michigan State AFL-CIO and president of the Michigan United Fund, will speak to the Conference this evening,, and Earl Prosser, Michigan United Fund executive vice president, will speak at the closing of the sessions tomorrow noon. 66 school year and now are covered by detailed statements. The statement on intergroup educational programs “formalizes what we were doing before and establishes a procedure,” school trustee William H. Anderson commented. Although not required to establish a program, every school will be eimouraged to do so, according to Assistant Superintendent William J. Lacy. Principals are to submit proposals by Nov. 1 and these will be. reviewed by the board. tively w i t h two or schools.*' Emphasis Is placed oh the Involvement of children, parents, teachers, administrators and community leaders in development of the programs. A resource center is to be developed and made available to them. Plans also call for the establishment of a district-wide committee consisting of intergroup relations chairmen from each school. The school board’s policy on suspension procedures is based 1 parents would be unaware that they have the right to appeal a suspension to the central administrator. The board last nigtit added smoking to the list of offenses which can lead to jus-pension. Other new provisions cover the falsifying of times, dates, grades or other data on school forms; fighting in or on school property or while going to or from school; and chronic tardiness. on an experiment conducted at Pontiac Central High School earlier this year. DISSENTING VOTE A single dissenting vote was cast by trustee Dr. Robert R. Turpin, who said he was dissatisfied that a principal could suspend a student without consulting the director of pupil personnel. Although favoring the proce-cedes suspension and parents ! dure in general, Turpin said 1 must be notified when their chil- dren are kept out of classes. Also considered by the board last night was a list of potential appointees to the school district’s human relations committee. The board deferred action on the Appointments until "recommendations are made by the [committee as a whole. The detailed procedure involves three to five steps in several categories determined by age and offense. In all cases, closing of classes to a pupil for two days pre- Sewer Gas Overcomes Young Royal Oak.Man TROY — A Royal Oak man who was overcome by gas while working on a sewer, yesterday is in good condition at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. I\>lice said, Douglas Peever, 21, was working for the construction firm of Marvin Lee and Sons when he was overcome by gas in a sewer on Liv-ernois near Maple. yrrrmTrmrrmTrrmrmrnTmTmTrrmTrmTrrrrrmTrrrrrrrrir^^ urns 17-1* ' Open Tonight and Friday Night ’Til 9 P. M. & IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC S.SA6INAWST. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service to All Ffoors • Provincial * Colonial • Traditional 9 Modern — AIL by America's Leading Manufacturers! A* ANNUAL JULY (Mmto • No Money. • Months To Pay 4 COMPLETE FLOORS Of HOMI WWUSHINOS-tUVATOW SSSVtC* TO EACH HOO« • provincial • Colonial • TRADITIONAL • MODERN All By America's Leading Manufacturers! Quantities are limited, and many are one of a kind and will be sold on a first come ba$is. Sorry, jio mail or phone orders on these itemsl • I ■RNffiMRHffllS IHHIfflffllSfflflli . cushions with famous Scotchgard 9x12 Room-Size Rugs Durable Acrilafr with foam back Decorator Colors Reg, 49.95 33. NOW Reg. 169.95 124. 119. 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Yz* °ff MATTRESSES and BOX SPRINGS 89 SET -COUPON- This Coupon worth $25 toward the purchase of a Color or Black and White TV, Stereo or Refrigerator. TERAAS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. free delivery V “you must be satufied-this toe guarantee?9 Phone FE 2-4231 90 Days Same As Cash 17-19 S. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC BUY ON WARD'S CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAN NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO P^YI ...............................................................nn>.n..si»»m..HM»iinuntttHlHHAmtfttlHlHnm...«1eni.....1..n*)^ is&aa,-' It! m!, ^. AAi , a/ / ___j i * 11 '______v WA .... •> - y I A.. i a • . ^1 1 ^ hk A * l THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 E—1 fullback Mow in Movim Role Cleveland's Power Runner Jim Brown Winding Career LONDON (AP) — Jimmy 1 Wednesday night. “Once I ris- Brown, perhaps the greatest runner pro football has ever known, is calling it quits — retiring at the peak of his career. "I am leaving the Browns with an attitude of friendliness and cooperation,” BroWn said turn to Cleveland I’ll do everything I can to help the Browns —'Other than playing." Brown was scheduled to make the formal announcement in a preSs conference in London today. The Associated Press learned of his plans Wednesday I England making a movie. His night, as did the Cleveland I decision* had been hinted for PlafoDealer. a®e. • MAKING MOVIE. Owner Art Model! had told The 30-year-old, 230-pound Brown he expected the fullback fullback for Cleveland’s Nation- to be in Hiram, Ohio when the gl Football League team is lnlveterans report to Condi Blanton Collier for training this week, I year,” said Brown, who still hasjmy original reason for returning [could pall Art and give him a and had threatened him with p a year to go on a reported $60. fine if he did not report. The >000 a year contract. “My origi movie Brown is playing in is not I nal reason for cbpiing back was expected to be finished until late | because Art wanted me to. I September. Then, when it was pointed out ** * * I by Art my reporting late put the "I had intended to play this1 team in an awkward position, Tigers Ready to Slash at Orioles' Lead! Bengals, Birds Open 3-Game Series Detroit Playing of Host; Eight Games Detroit (api- The lean League pennant not be decided in th days. But the Detroit Tigers never have a better chance qlose the gap on the front running Baltimore Orioles. Hie Tigers and Orioles a three • game aeries the first of six games the teams in their next' outings. If the Tigers are to cut the: Orioles' eight - game a number of trends in the half of die season must be reversed. LOSERS AT HOME First, the Tigers will have start winning at home. They were 20-24 before the home crowd-compared to 20-11 the road—prior to the break. They haven’t won a home aeries since they swept three games from Boston the first week of June. The Tigers have lost series to Minnesota, Kansas City end California sod split with the Yankees and Senators since. ★ ★ A. Despite their dismal showing, the Tigers are* running more than 70,000 ahead of last season's attendance pace. Changes in figuring the attendance — Ladies Day and Retirees Day ticket-sales count—are* responsible for some of the increase. More important than where the games are won, however, is the fact that the Tigers have not been faring well against the contending teams. The Orioles, for example, have won all three games played at Tiger Stadium to date and hold a 4-3 edge in the sea-eon’s series. Third - (dace Cleveland, which plays a doubleheader here Sunday and plays host to the Tigers for a four - game series next Weekend, hold? a 3-3 ad-vantage......,, California, which swept three games the last time the Tigers were in town, is 7-5 against the Tigers. Big Assignmentj for Golf Shorty I Public Links Tournament. The weed-thin Dokka, defending champion and medalist, has shown complete mastery of the aw win**!* Brown Deer course. He was ROUGH TIME — Ohioan flve-under-par in taking the 36-Ralph Colla, 17, has rough ho,e and was vorite to become the third play-to win the title in successive and the fourth medalist to better than i] he said, ,“I’mj more solidly and! my drives, especially, are straighter and longer.” going on the 14th hole Wednes- even with regulation in elimi- . ., .. .. , nating -Mike Moriarty of oan 11 “J Jat,onal Pab,1,c Francisco 1-up in 19 holes and IMs Golf Tournament in Herb Bolden of Denver, Colo., 6 Milwaukee, needing three and 5 Wednesday, whacks to escape the tall PHONE MAN wasn’t there anyjonger, j date when the picjture would be "I could see Art’s poiht. He completed. But nobody knew, didn’t want to set a' precedent We still don’t know.V> . and da anything to disturb team! Will he reconsider,*once the morale. It couldn’t be fair to] picture is finished? Blanton, either. “Nd;" Brown said. “This deci- “Each day I kept hoping, raion is final. I’m no longer preparing mentally for football. I’m committing myself to other things. I’m not going to play again.” In his nine-year pro chreer the former Syracuse All America carried the ball 2,359 times and gained a total of 12,312 yards for an average of 5.2 yards per carry. He scored 126 touchdowns, and led the league in ground gaining eight years. MVP AWARD - Last year he was voted the league's Most Valuable Player and led the league in rushing with 1,544 yards, averaging 5.3 yards a carry. He scored 21 touchdowns, one more than the old record but one less than the 22 scored by rookie Gale Sayers of the Chicago Bears. Collier was not surprised by Brown’s announcement, but the loss has to hurt. He said he was very sorry to lose “the greatest running back in the history of the game,” he added: “I want to make it dear that this is not a one-man football team. I certainly expect the Browns to be in contention. “As I’ve said before, I believe . we can make the necessary ad-' justments. We will have a more balanced type of offense with both backs running with the football and blocking.’’ The Browns’ chief remaining running backs are halfbacks Ernie Green and Leroy Kelly. ap wir«phot« Veteran Charley Scales is the No. 2 fullback. grass. Googie, a Memphis telephone maintenance man and father of three, is the oldest player in the field at 46. And he is the jolliest. “I’ve played in nine of these tournaments, and the farthest I’ve gotten was the third round in 1963,” he chuckled. “I didn’t even think I’d get in this time, but I made it through the $3P,T/s door as an alternate; ’ |(ornH £i», nioht “I’m a runt,” he said, “foil? 5^‘***4‘ «***uim _____ _ ___ (B«rbtr io-3) it Detroit get.. The name Googie was ||)|IL pinned on me year^ago. I don’t! Kw drink, and all that fat in the * midsection is from groceries.”. Googie was five-over-par withi fact, I thought I would be a mid- i (wilaon i-7), ssf" FriCyi eimt it California, night . WR at Kaniai City, night Waihington at MlhnMoti, night 1 Citvaland at CMcaiw, night I Baltimore at Datrolt, night,. THE FINAL PLUNGE? — Cleveland Brown fullback Jimmy Brown today announced his retirement from professional football, and plans to continue a career in the movies. During his glamorous career, Brown has'rushed for nearly seven miles of yardage in the National Football League. He presently is in Great Britain making a motion picture that would make him late for practice were he to continue his grid career. a 76 in eliminating Mike O’Con-nel of Carthage, III., 1-up in the second round. Dokka, 22, an advertising mat jor at California State in Los Angeles, remained a heavy fa- OUT AND IN - Don Heffner (left) was fired last night as manager of the Cincinnati Reds, and coach David Bristol (right) was moved into the post as an interim replacement. Sagging Reds FireManager CINCINNATI (AP) - Don Heffner has been fired as manager of the Cincinnati Reds and coach Dave Bristol, only 33, has the job today of trying to pull the team into the first division in the National League. Bristol was named Wednesday as an interim manager to take over the eighth-place Reds for the second half of tht sea- Fifth • place Minnesota is the only team in the first division which does not hold a series edge on the Tigers. The Tigers have beaten the Twins seven times and lost five. Acting Manager Bob Swift has named Earl Wilaon, Dave Wichersham and Denny McLain to face the Orioles. ""*• Swift said he plans to pla-l * * * toon against the Orioles which , takes over tonight as meads Jake Wood, Ray Oylerjtb* the St. Louis Car- and Mickey Stanley wiH start!®™!* in a twHHght doubletonight. |he*der- - The firing of Hdffner followed repeated denials by Cincinnati team Wednesday morning before getting word he had lost Ms Job. Bristol, a former minor league infielder and manager, is the third man to head the Reds since Fred - Hutchinson stricken with cancer and bad to quit as manager late in the 1964 season. Hutchinson died later. Things have been going wrong with the Reds — the pre-season favorites — ever since the start of the season. First their opening series was rained out Lm Angeles (Koufax 15-4) it New Yor (Shaw 4-7), night San Franclaco (Sadecki 4-5 or Herbel ; it Philadelphia (Jackson 7-7), night (Ellsworth 4-11) ot Pittsburg State Golfers | Chicago Ttfft... , (Veole 10-5), night Eliminated in isB Publinx Play Michigan’s hopes for a National Public Links champion were wiped out in the first two rounds of match play yesterday over the Brown Deer Park course n Milwaukee. WalMwg by fhxx —p»| Ponttee*s Tom BaHiet; Btti €ur*j of Farmington; James Walker of Detroit; and Allan Thomp-! son of Pleasant Ridge. Former Pontiac City Champion Mike Andonian, now playing oat of Camarillo, Calif., was oasted in foe first round by Ben Abihnl of Hawaii, 2 op. Balliet was a 4 and 3 victim of Lawrence Miller, of New Orleans in the opening round. Walker, after downing Dan dgan of Denver, 3 and 2, in his first match dropped a 5 and 3 decision to Richard Heyl of Alpena Coach iftEMUPofr Defeats Archer in Title Bout Griffith Looks for Next Foe NEW YORK (AP) - “If Joeyl two as a middleweight in five [head, about a half inch over his Archer wants another shot he years, three months. His welter-1 right eye, in the eighth round, can have it and so can Dick Ti-! weight title record is 10-2. I “It came from a butt,” said ger,” said middleweight chain-1 Judge Artie Aidala, 9-5-1, and] Archer. “He was trying to butt pion Emile Griffith today. “I’m judge Ai Berl, 8-7, voted for me all night. He kept lunging fighting champion and I’ll | Griffith. _ht anyone if the price iai Referee Johnny LoBianco right.” called it a 7-7-1 draw, giving The aggressive, strong 28-year-oid Griffith took the middleweight title from Tiger in April and successfully defended it Wednesday night with a majority decision over Archer in a brisk 15-rounder at Madison Square Garden. SOME JUST TALK each seven rounds and seven points. At the end of 12 rounds, Aidala and Berl “each had it 6-4 while LoBianco 7-4-1, all for Griffith. The Associated Press had it 9-1 5-1 for Griffith.. The ringside poll favored Griffith 18-5. Most of {the scores had Griffith the at me with his head. “I thought I won. I thought I outboxed him and won on the outside and the inside. I’d like to fight him again.” “He can have it if a promoter comes up with the right price,’’ said Gil Clancy, Griffith’s trainer and co-manager. “The same goes for Dick Tiger. Emile ducks no one.” Many champions in the past winner ty bi8 margins. _______ _ _ There were no knockddWns iphartyii)n«~FMi( tfeTiv-"blit Griffith hpi'Meri Arclier’S ___have talked about being fighting Jim Dutcher Heads Basketball Team ered. You can’t fault Griffith on that point. The husky Virgin knees with a jarring' left and right combination to the bead ' Islands’ native has been busifer the sixth round. He hurt Joey than an air condition salesman again right at the start of the during a heat wave. .................. Clancy said Griffith’s Sept. 30 fight with welterweight Stanley (Kitten) Hayward of Philadelphia i^« Vegas, Nev„ "it up in the air. “It was supposed to have been f: for the welterweight title but when the WBA (World Boxing BARBER TO PITCH Baltimore Manager Hank Bauer said Steve Barber would start tonight. He said he hadn’t decided on his other two pitchers. The Orioles defeated the Phillies H in is exhibition game at Philadelphia Wednesday night. ■ i Forgetting the series with the Indians, the Tigers will have to win four of the six games’ with the Orioles to gain two games in the “Games Behind” column. 1 even-four losses to the Tf Owner-General Manager Bill De-Witt that he planned any changes. Heffner held a workout for the Juniors After Jaycee Title ot 35 goliers teed , , this morning in the regional gers would leave the Orioles|j,ycee junior Golf Tournament four games up in the more im-)>t Pontiac country Chib, portent loss column. * . . . Should the Orioles gain the! upper hand in the six games— The 35 — competing in 16-17, 14-15 and 13-under age groups— are bidding for trips to the State Jaycee tourney scheduled for July 25 at Grand Haven, a * ■* , Sectional winners.from foe counties of Oakland, Macomb, say take four of them—it would increase their lead to 16 games and put them eight games in front in foe loan column. Tiger players to a man will say there's still a long way to go. But a slip-up now will . , mike the season seem that St. Clair and Livingston are en- much longer. for the first time in decades —! Virginia in the afternoon, and then they lost, nine out of 12] games before winning two in a]pMM Even the announcement of Heffner’s firing did not come off as planned. DeWitt’s plane developed mechanical trouble after leaving St. Louis and his prepared statement was read by Assistant General Manager Phil Seghi. * * "It ia with deep regret we announce that Don Heffner has been relieved of Ms duties as manager of/ the Reds,’! the statement staffed. “While feel that Heffner, who is a dedicated baseball man, did a good job, we believe a change at this time is in order . . . “It is our plan to seek a permanent manager as soon as feasible ... “Don has been offered a job to continue in our organization next year, and it is my hope that he will remain with us hi Tooth Drops; Rider Grabs; Horse Loses PLEASANTON, Calif, (ft -Jockey Harris Hawken-son lost a race at the Alameda Country Fair by his horse’s nose—and his own tooth. j ■/ As he led the pack driving War Whisk into the stretch, Hawkenson’s false tooth popped out of his mouth. “1 dropped my reins to catch it,” he said. “It fell on the saddle and when I reached again to grab it, I missed. It happened a few days ago, he said, adding that he got the« tooth back. YPSILANTI CAP) - James D. Dutcher, whose Alpena Community College teams posted a 166-72 record in eight seasons, was named head basketball coach at Eastern Michigan University Wednesday. Dutcher, 33, replaces John R. (Dick) Adams who resigned. Dutcher, a 1955 graduate of the University of Michigan, directed his team to two Mich-iigan Junior College Conference ^championships. The 1965-66 I team had a 22-5 record and I represented a three - state area Klin the national tournament. Three former Alpena C.C. players played for the EMU team last year which was 15-3, the best Hurons' record in 30 years. Kidd Doubtful Starter in World Alpine Meet SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) y — Billy Kidd), Who placed second in the men’s slalom st the 1964 Winter Olympics, whs listed Wednesday as a doubtful starter in next month’s world Alpine >ki championships at Portillo, Chile. , I "It’s still a question whether Kidd will start at Portillo,” said Coach Bob Beattie before the UJJ. team was scheduled to take off for the training grounds at Farellones. The Stowe, Vt., skier is rqpovering from an op* eration last winter. j eighth with two thumping left Association) took away Grif-hooks to the jaw. I fith’s welterweight title without Griffith has had 14 title I CUT FOREHEAD giving us a hearing it probably fights, 12 as a welterweight amr Archer was cut on the fore-1 fiRhl-” A pro-Archer crowd of 13,778 paid $102,242. Another $50,000 was added to the pot by television. Griffith, on his 45 per cent, collected about $60,000. Archer received a fist guarantee of $17,-000, the largest purse of his 10-year career. ★ ' ★ ★ Late support for Archer made the 28-yepr-old New Yorker 13-10 favorite at fight time. Th* Archer backers didn’t think Griffifth could spot the fleet-footed boxer 7% pounds and be effective. Most of the time however, Archer looked like the welterweight and Griffith the heavier man. Griffith’s record now is 51-7. Archer’s record is 46-3 and be still can boast that he’s never been floored. PRIMED TO PUNCH—Middleweight champion Emile Griffith (left) and challenger Joey Archer both appear to be winding up punches during this fourth round action last night at Madison Square Garden. The champion managed to cover up often enough and get'in sufficient jabs to retain his crown with a majority deciaiorj in the 15-rouna title bout. Three Lions' Veterans Agree to '66 Contract .BLOOMFIELD HILLS (API-Three more veteran Detroit Lions football players signed Wednesday bringing /foe total of signed veterans to 22. ' M * . *■ Jim Gibbons, the Lions end who bolds the team record for passes caught, signed tar his Larry Hand, defense end, and Ed Flanaga*,"foster, both signed (or their necond setsom. i E—2 1 , ■ v ■ 1V. ’ >,J‘■ afc» ^ •» THE PONTIAC PRESS,. THOTtSDAY, JULY, 14, 1*66 mvpmsm' The Obstacle Course; Or the final test we gave the Fifth Rose, local Net S&r Rising Affection Is Missing in Her By JERE CRAIG veloped under Mrs. Hoxies’sj cees’ Tournament 16-and-uu- who twice had to come At the tender age of 14, cute'guidance, winning the! 1962 state! der singles champion. Fred behind last Saturday- to Emily Fisher of Bloomfield Hills junior girls (12-and-under) dou-l and Mary each won 16-and- **“ "» **“ has found short skirts andbles title and finishing second under titles in the Birmingham “love” • regular part of her! in the singles. ! Jaycee* competition, summer for five years. 1 Since then she has added 14-1 ANGELES UH — AthleteCjties” in Viet Nam, although U.S.|many; G***® Redanti, BeP rid over are being asked! State Department offals flU the void left by Russia’s pressed doubts that the athletes me e a sophomore at Kings-! wood^SchoeMhis tolLand is one of three tennis-minded young- j sters in the Herbert Fisher faip-J ily of 150 Brady Lane, Bloom-: field Hills. Emfly’s sister Mary, 12, Is playing tills week at Middle-town, Ohio in the Western Junior Championships. Their brother Fred, IS, is currently attending camp where be b active in the sport. But- Emily is die furthest advanced, as the more than 50) championship and runner-up) trophies on the shelves in the family game room attest. RENOWN COACH A student of Jean Hoxie *4 the Hamtramck coach who is well known for her producing of champions, Emily began win-) ning net titles four summers ago. That was less dun a after she first pranced tiie courts at the private club the famijy belongs to in ▼oix. Her father 'noted Emily’s potential and initiated the lessons. He is a club player, kept away from the game by an abundance of work in the automotive business. His daughter quickly de-j WMGA Event Results Same » Mrs. Evans Wins 5th| time This Season Emily also is the state Jay- I Connie Capoui of Middletown,.the semifinals of the Sugar, NET DANCE - Nancy Bowl Tournament in New Richey of Dallas steps nimbly .Orleans the same week. ' on the court in returning a | Right now the soft-voiced, ded- backhand yesterday during icated court whizis prepar-l her 6-0, 6-2 victory over Patsy ing for the Motor City Women’s! Rippy of Oklahoma in the Championships in Detroit this) quarter-finals of the National 1 • ■ ■ 1 Gay Courts championships at Milwaukee. I weekend. ! Also fast approaching «a Eip&y’s schedule are the Lake j Forest (DI.) Girls Tournament, the Junior Nationals at Philadelphia and the National Jaycee Meet in Tampa, I Fla. Her mother Betty praises Em-, ily’s reponsible handling of the problems encountered with so much traveling. Her daughter prefers to reflect upon the many! friends she is making throughout the Western Hemisphere. field team’s meet against ^DIRECTOR U.S. squad at the Coliseum. But just who is coming, and when, remained uncertain to-day. . ’ ’ The sponsoring Los Angeles Times said a host of interaa-tional talent had been Invited to participate in the competition, scheduled for July 23-24. The Soviet team officially an-, nounced - Wednesday that It would not appear. Earlier reports of the can- [Trinidad; Mohammed Gamoudi, Tunesia; Henk Altmann, South Glenn Davis, special events dirtctor for the Times, told noted athletes from the free world have been invited to appear at the meet, along teams from Australia, and New Zealand. ★ ' Several U.S. athletes who missed making thd U.S. team are also scheduled Davis said. Among the athletes invited are AfHca; Keisuke Sawaki, Japan; Bill Crothera, Canada; Alvarez Javier, Spain, and Wilson Kip-rugut, of Kenya. Teams from England aqd West Germany were .unable to accept because of other schedules, but some athletes from each could appear, Davis said.- Name Golfers Miss Tourney Tony Roche, a left-hander with an overhead serve that breaks down like a Sandy Koufax curve ball, is bidding to become the first Australian ever to win the National Gay Courts Tennis Championship. The 21-year-old Roche advanced to the quarter-finals of the tournament Wednesday as he wore down fifth-seeded Clark /Graebner, Beechwood, Ohio, 6-4, Between tournaments, there are daily drives by'the mother and daughter to Hamtramck’s municipal courts for long practice hours perfecting shot accuracy and stamina. School hours during the fall, winter and spring limit her practicing to perhaps 45 minutes a day in the school gymnasium. a But Emily may become a steady1^* customer of the Bloomfield Tennis House-this off-season of she T(J win ^ ^ mugt of cellatkm were annodnced by Michael Jazy, France; Wendell Tass, official Soviet 8 Mottley, ' Jamaica; Kipchoge agency. |Keino, Kenya; Bodo Tummler, The Russians said their ath- West Germany; John Boulter, letes chose to cancel the appw- England; Lynn Davb, Wales; ^ pAULf Minn (UPI) ance because of U.S. “atrod-|Harold Norpotn, West Q,r'(Thft 1100,000 Minnesota Golf —---------- “ j . ■' j Classic was set to get under wpy ' k today with four of professional Soccer I GOTTIS top names conspicuous by ) their absence. ^ Call Timeout Aronold Palmer, Jack Nick- 1 a u s, Gary Player and Tony • \A/_ _IJ n|„w Lema decided to pass up a try in W or/Cl nOViat the 6200,000 first prize. ' 1 Billy Casper, who won the T/»NnnN rapt TT,e u u-s* Ope" a P1*^ H1® LONDON (AP) !with Palmer and then went on teams vying for the Jules Rimet teke ^ Weste*n open, Whs . , Trophy, emblematic of world). Open Sunday, stopped unseeded)professional soccer supremacy, £ in Drevious years as the Jim McManus, Berkeley, Calif., took the day off today to train,L p . y W, 64 plan strategy and tend to lnju-|5>l- ram ^ In other matches Wednesday, ries. I _____„ , „ fin, Roche’s countryman, Owen Da- The most serious injury re-| 001,8 Sanders’ who *** vidson, second-seeded foreigner, defeated sixth-seeded Mike Belkin of Canada, 6-2, 6-0. Seventh-seeded Stan Smith, Pasadena, Calif., ousted Austra- lian, Bill Bowrey, the No. 3 for- .1 ..... . ,. , , - eign seed, 7-5, 6-3. ! Eusebio played the last SOI Sixth-Inning Uprising No. 3 seed, Charles Pasarel! J? vir+nrU Puerto Rico, and No. 4 seed,'head bandaged and helped Por-, Helps Indians Victory Aussie Lefty Seeking Clay Court Net Title ported in Wednesday night’s World Soccer Cup action was a cut over the left eye of Portugal’s star forward, Eusebio, which required three stitches. Doug Sanders, one stroke behind Nicklaus in the British Open, and Phil Rodgers were on hand to challenge Casper. z&sfrsr- Marty Riessen, Evanston, 111. ’ tugal to a 3-1 victory over Hun-) IN TROPHYLAND - Bloomfield Hills’ Emily Fisher poses with a portion , of the more than 50 trophies she has earned while competing in junior girls’* tennis tournaments around the country during the past four years. Long practice and travel hours plus a myriad of playing court conditions have become commonplace during the 14-year-old Kingsyyood School sophomore's summers. Two Ranking Pros Start Tennis Bids Chester. In Women’s singles, Kerry b*ftihi]e .Melville of Australia, No. 2 for- at Sunderland Argenbna, ripped - Spam 2-1 in Group 2 at Birmingham, and Mexico and France tied 1*1 in Group 1 at London. Friday Uruguay plays France, Switzerland meets! CLEVELAND (AP) - A walk to Tony Curry, Chuck Hinton’s double and Fred Whitfield’s single provided two tie-breaking runs In the sixth inning for die Cleveland Indians, who won 3-1 over the Pittsburgh Pirates in an exhibition game Wednesday night. Class D Race Tighter to* City Junior Loop Winning may not become mo-' notorious for Mrs. Max Evans of j Southfield, but her opponents' are finding it so in their weekly) Women’s Metropolitan Golf As-! aociation outings. For the third week in a row, and for the fifth time this sea-' son Mrs. Max Evans wound up | An abbreviated perfect game, In the winner’s circle after the an impressive one-player effort firing died down. land the tightening Class D race Her latest victory came yes-all rated' attention during ter day at Bald Mountain Golf [Wednesday’s city junior base-1--------.— — Gub where she fired a 43-42-85!ball program. la 9-5 victory over the latter, j Hoad whipped Pancho Segura, I to edge Trillis Jacks (66) of BU1 Mansfieid of the Moose In “D” “b®". Cranbrook up^S-year-old Los Angeles veteran Novi and Mrs. Phillip DeGuerel w 1 h « e t American League |set the Pontiac Boys’ Qub, 6-1, who won the national crown (86) of Birmingham. team L.t a. of, g,e | and Franklin trimmed the] three times, 6-2, 64, while Ayala Mrs. Evans moved around the. h____ «v. 1— and u. Eagles, 14-6. The two winners rallied in the third set to defeat Bald Mountain course using up! np a 144 victory. *bus tied the Boys’ Gub for sec-Pierre Barthes of France 9-7, 4- only 28 putts, and she received. ' ond place, a game off the lead. |6, 6-4. a big boost when Miss Jacks! Stem Bab.uk was the whole -took a double-bogey 5 on the ?how. ?s 111®, Yf„' par-317th hole. h^akti ^ “et a“t’ J0’ Mr*. m«x Evans. Southfield ' 43^1-451 in a Class E American tilt. Ba-MrT'VhC'^r., B.rm^S^ biuk allowed only a lead-off sin-mr». Nick Pinuiuk, gle by Steve Bass m the seventh M^ChariMi;_In the nther E game, Pop Mr*. Harold Walton, SoutMloM *)-a-n Mrs. George Schode, Detroit Mr*. Stdnoy AytM, 1 man field that includes top- . seeded Dennis Ralston, the de- esT‘oa^i' , .. K - -l^L.L.X 01 »>.««£' ranked player in the n8tionf and _«.. _j #__-n. _^^ji 5 second-seeded Cliff Richey °f TP^s KoSS^ ftS *| ual,as* tramck, M(di., 6-3, 6-2 to ad- ^ SMOOTH WIN I vance to the semifinals. Ralston, of Bakersfield, Top-seeded Nancy Richey, Gdif., advanced kith a smooth seeking a fourth straight worn-F-- BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) - 5.3 g.2 victory over Lenny ,en’s crown, breezed by Patsy |Spain, Brazil takes on Hungary) The annual game for the ben- Third-seeded Andres Gimeno of)ScljOSSi Baltimore. Richey, wholRippy, Shawnee, Gda, 6-0, 6-2, and North Korea goes against efit of Cleveland sandlot l * Spain and fourth-seeded Butch Ralston in the Western in a second round encounter. Chile. bailers was 1 Buchholz of St. Louis get their . ' --------------— I initial tests tonight in the $23,500 jU.S. Professional Tennis Championships at Longwood. Making their first appearance in the bid for top prize money of $4,000, Gimeno will meet Lew jHoad of Australia while Buch-holz will face Luis Ayala of . Clancy scattered four hits, Chile, rapped two singles and a bases- Hoad and Ayala posted victo-loaded double as the AuburnU-ies as the five-day tournament! Heights Boys’ Gub Patriots tied got under way Wednesday night1 Rochester for second place with before a crowd of 2,300. WONT I AC JUNIOR BASEBALL cm* o m 53^1—941 Cranbrook 6, Pontiac Boys' Club 1 Mrs. H*nry PramicK, oatroom $341-94'franklin AC 14, Eagles 6 Mrs. A. O. Lalshman, Detroit 49-47—94 CtoM E American Mr*. Peter McAlpIne, Southfield 49-49-97 F.O.P. Yankee* 3, Met Club 0 Low Net: Mr*. Zahm 87-13-74. AHBC Patriots 9, Rochester 5 Flr*t Flight: Mrs. George Sullivan, Clau F Amarican Detroit 46-43—19; Mrs. Leonard Kruskle, Allen and Sons 10, Union Lake 48-43-9) Low Net-Victorlo ' ‘ ** “‘ Sill, Oetrolt 92-18-74. Second Flight: Mrs. Walter Shlptoo,i nnooaw », < Detroit 52-42—94; Mrs. Douglas Denton, Wldgot American Detroit 50-44—94; Mrs. Ruby Boettcher, AHBC Sportsmen 2, Pontiac BC Detroit 50-44—94. Low Net-Mrs. Jess Moose 14, Hawks 0 Marody, Taylor 94-23-73. Optimlae-I n, LoBanm gtont* X Third Flight: Mrs. - James Suddeth.j W“—* Birmingham 53-48—102: Mrs. F. W. At* | Columbia Aye. Ian, Royal Oak 3448-118. Lo*^ Net-1 Yellow Cab 8, ____ Yankeee 5 ... ___Warriors 7 Clarkston Cubs 3. AHBC Sportsman 2 TIRE SERVICE WHITEWALLS 4 FOR *37^ Tax 6:50-13 ......8:00-14 1i09*l4 . . ....1:60-14 1:50-14 ...... 6:60-16 FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE * FREE MOUNTING Fed. Tax .31 to .41 RETREA0S BOAT TRAILER TIRES and WHEELS COUPON SPECIAL - NO TRADE NEEDED BRAND NEW NYLON 8:26-14 $,4o, F«d. Tax $2.09 ’14 TUBELESS WHITEWALLS You Pay Only Advertised Prices at United Tiro new passenger car time era priced plus Federal Tax and old tii your cor. Advertised prices are the maximum you pay (or new tin at United. ALL CREDIT CARDS HONORED VISIT UNITED TIRE TODAY . . . AND SAVEI U Fill. Mb I - MT, • te 4 - CLOUD IUNPAT UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PflICES ARE DISCOUNTED—NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ava. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MAJOR BRAND TlftfW BONANZA Whitewall - First Line Original Equipment Tires abk$4to$5under our REGULAR LOW PRICES _ 7.76*14 FIRESTONES $9195 DELUXE CHAMPIONS I £ I OR GOODYEAR POWER CUSHIONS ,hl< *2.01 r.«.t. ORE WEEK ORLY-THRU THURSDAY BudgttTerms - Free Mounting- Fast Servi CARTER TIRE CO 370 South Saginaw At South Exit of Wide Track Driva Pontiac FE 5-613 plus *1.86 f.o.t. 8.25x14 After yecn of trying,we finally came up with the new taste we cull the Fi(jth Rose. We mude i light whiskey that actually tasted good. Something distillers had been trying to do for yCcn. But there wujujl the obstacle course. How would this new taste Hold up in this ourselves there was nothing left to prove. • day and age of ice and the mixed drink ? No matter what we mixed it with, this; So we tned it on the rocks. With soda, good, light t mate just didn’t do that old ■ In Whiskey Sours. Manhattans. Old- disappearing-act. Fashioneda. Highballs. Mini Juleps. ' To Four Rosea the obstacle course wad; We kept testing until we had proved to no obstacle at all. "Mao /wupp . pout sons Mtnum oot,iurjc. - sumocd wiousy ■ it psoOr -aads wnuur hkiju inam $4.52 $10.85 H 0*H*B CeS*#9M . * v; }\; ; / . THB .PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1966 ^ Use of All-Star Hurlers Riles ®y Awoctaled Pres* [cisco Examiner, that he hid Its mid-sumnter pause for the complained to Alston cra stbss aartsa business n< Pennant r*~* t^!* T**1 **”*»’ HWlf r» «M with a full schedule of 11 night1 frn*., ? > And wouldn’t it be nice to Aussie Runnel* Clarks have in old-fashioned Giant- T , _ _ Dodger squabble to stall off the! 'C,'(M Distance Race second half of the season? All-Stan. There’s no reason Al-i ston bad to use boa of mine. That burned me up and I told ‘ im ao.” Marichal worked three in-| nings and Perry, the winning pitcher, two. Alston also used his own Sandy Koufax for three innings and Jim Burning of Philadelphia for two. ’Skipper OSLO (UPI) - Australia’s Ron Clarke fought off a strong [. challenge from Norway’s Tour *- HeDand to win a 3,000 meters y race in 7 minutes, 56 seconds I, Wednesday amid a heavy thun-H derstorm. Perry, by Los Angeles Manager! HeUand, also clocked taJ:56, J 1 Walt Alston in the Al\-Star put on a burst of speed oo tbe ^00-R*”®*' I last bend to overtake Ger^ * * * I (many’s Siegfried Hellmann and The Dodger pilot denied that Frinks told Harry Jupiter, a he (narrowly missed catching [Franks, who coached first base! sports writer for the San Fran-' Clarke at the tape. | for the National League stars, There could be one brewing. San Francisco Manager Herman Franks is reportedly angry over the use of hk ace pitchers, Juan Marichal and Gaylord mentioned the use of Marichal! the yules, have more pitchers on Dodgers, send. Koufax after his and Perry. ,the team and maybe use them * * * .. Iftr.lmt one liming .apiece.” Franks didn’t say anythingGAME RULES to me about it," Alston told the1 Under All-Star rules ay start- 16th victory against the Mete in New York. In the American Examiner. “If anybody doesn’t , ers must play at least three in-! nings and pitchers may not be Alston was quoted-by the Exminer as saying “you have to go according to the game. I would have liked to have held Sandy out. He probably could have used three days rest. Everybody is in the same situa- ■yaw'/ . wnm wai usaj siui i likV the way the game u played U8ed for more thari three i now, then they ought to change ning, ■•.-VtiiV •! ". ~“11 * jr~ ★ I Franks’ complaint came dur- Switch Time of Game if* . “®ltar Rational I League face. His Giants hold a, ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Theio“-game edge on Pittsburgh,ij scheduled afternoon game be- with Alston’s defending champi-tween the Los Angeles Dodgers « Dodgers five games behind, j and the St. Louis Cardinals on j San Francisco opens a three-Saturday, July 30, has been game series in Philadelphia to-changed to a night game, Car- night before moving on to Pitts-dilfel general manager Bob burgh for what could be the sea-Howsam said Wednesday. son’s first cniciai series. The game will begin at 7 p.m. The Pirates are at home to CDT. i last-place Chicago while the League, Baltimore took an pressive eight-game lead into Detroit wfiere the second-place Tigers hoped to make some kind of dent in the bulge. Cleveland, n’ games back in third place, was at Chicago. , With the Orioles making a shambles of the top of the race, interest in the American League focused on “the, alsb-rans. Last-place Boston has won 9 its last 10 and was just Vh games behind the staggering New York Yankees.' Kansas City, under Manager Alvin Dark, has skipped into sixth place and entertains .the Yankees tonight. The Red Sox are at California, «. E—8 WEDNESDAY'S FIGHTS IW YOKE - (mil* Griffith, York, outpointed Joey Archer, 11 York. 1ST Griffith retained * MIAMI BEACH, Flo,. - Gordon l ■"», Savannah. Go., knocked oul I I, 1MVK MHiwaukat. 1. ' \ Dro»t Trucking j, weNrlord Meahonte 1 * ■ ■EMI rn We-I !J, Oi . New ESSIE* lUNUJ-mEW Un wumhio* New Formu|a 1NTERIOR ENAMEL acrylicutD ^OUse p/ilN^ ****** Atoferiitg :Hayt bright • bd* WAP®6 Save on premium-quality paints guaranteed te cover in one coat! /WoNTGOMERY WARD GUARANTEED ONE-COAT DRIPLESS LATEX FLAT CUT Ml GALLON GALLON REG. 6,69 ^CHARGE IT’ New Dripless Latex guarantees the one-coal coverage that other paints only talk about. Easy to use because it glides on effortlessly Clings to brush or roller; won't drip, run or spatter. Dries odor-free in 30 minutes, so you replace furniture fast. 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Choice of fade-resistant fashion colors or white Budget roller kit— 1/2-HP spray car with buy now and save! |2 gal* air tank Value-priced kit includes a big 9-inch roller frame, drip-leu cover,.metal tray, trim tool and extension handle for painting ceilings. Sealed ball bearingii never need oiling—give dean, oil-free alrl Delivers 2.0 CFM at 45 P.S.I. For farm, light industry, estate work. store -jrssrisflr" DmkIimf MmII ., ™NE„68!;4®4? HOURS: Sundays 12 noon to 6 p.m. Illlr HI 11 d w H^ulQI I Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. is THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14 1 m Approximately 40 different Tony Lenta Topi Briton I Will Dfrect Speedway programs arc presented si tte ' ” . ^ 7 world’s largest musical fountain] KINGS WOOD, England ian— | BATTLE CREEK (AP)—Jack ia-Grad Haven, Mich, \ j Tony Lcnu of Su Diego, Tompkins Of Detroit, a vice Calif., former British Ope a j president with American Air- Cooperstown fntryJuly 25 V USED in*. TIRES'5 '■"* *2 I0TAL AUTO PARTS IS Ml. Ctoman* fi urn golf champion, defeated Peter 1 lines ,\ Wednesday ,was named Allis, Barttisli Ryder Cap play- j director of the Grftt Lakes er, t andv 1/Wednesday ii a International Speedway near, «i7aa rh-iirn.. k .fmn hear. Groundbreaking cere-Pf - ' "?g* MtC • " 1 >»ohies for the track are sdhed- had a 64, oeven-under-par. and uled for September, with com-] equalled the coarse record. ^ pletion expected late in 1967. Ted, Casey Await induction' By The Associated Preai j Will Casey or Ted hare difH-Caaejr Stengel and Ted WjJ- cutty making a speech? Not if TO PREHHIIW QUALITY Iff fl DOWN TO EARTH PRICE Exceptional Values S1C92 | Q:su Hurt's your opportunity to gut trua premium quality, safety and performance at m realistic price. • 100% extra-strength nylon eord • Miracle mileage polybutadiene rubber • Deep, massive tread with over 10,000 traction edges • Sleek, modem styling with thin-line whitewalls *23.36 *26.33 *20.13 *21.30 •Wet* pfuioMtlra off your car use your cmr BHUBO WAREIIOITSK Bind Factory DMbulon /or headlines. They will be'inducted into the Hall of Fame at Coop-42 tr 4-lk TED, CASEY erstown, N.Y., on July 25. .When's man I*about to eater the most' famous bqllding in’ the picturesque village on Lake Otsego he is asked to No-Hit Contest Pads City Softball Lead appear in town a few days before the actual ceremonies. This, is done so that Paul Kerr* president of the Hall of Faroe, may show them around and make them feel at home. Since IMS Kerr has been an officer or director of the shrine conceived by the late Stephen C. Clark and dedicated In 1939. Kerr is vice president of the Clark Estates and many of his off hours are dedicated to baseball and the shrine. PRIOR TRIPS Casey Stengel and Ted WH-, liams, if Paul Kerr takes them through the Hall on the eve of the ceremonies when the building is closed to the public, will get a thorough look at all the baseball ^memorabilia.. Such a leisurely tour will give them all the ammunition they need for a speech. A no-hitter by Hershel Osen- Devault also collected a pair ! Both Casey and Williams havei toski carried Lit S Standard to of hits and scored far runs. been there before. In fact, Ted a 144 triumph over Ray White’s victorv raiwi, . played there in 1955 when one; Boys'iast night and moved the ^ , „ , * nom„ , o ,rec,!°f his foul line drives almost «**'■. «p ckoer to lb, tt, VZS7l5T^lbrol'e *» «. of • «»*- «l»> In the City National Softball (111)' ™e, tried to catch the ball. It was L“*"rT l* * ** - * e I DIMilntvsr wa, w* to mak.l struck out four, and after givuig MGM-Shalea (U-dTm-17, a ndla sP«*h » on the eve of indue-lUI ** Sport-O-Rama (7-3) turned back!tk>n PauI Kerr drov* Wm' ...... Cash Register (2-7) J around town, a sort of VIP treatment. The next morning Mr*. John MoGraw came up to DiMaggio and and said: "Babe Ruth,” Casey might say when he sees the home runl champion’s plaque. “I played] against him In the 1923 Worldj Series. I hit a home run to win Ithe first game, Ruth hit two for ]the Yankees, then I hit a home iron in the third game and won] it 14. “But Ruth got all the vaudeville bookings that winter. He hit a home run in the last game and the Yankee* won the World Seriei. up the-bases on balls in the] first and second tantegsrte «t;]National tied down and retired the last ^ 16 men in a row. _ .' . ^ , , , WINNING RUN Floyd Fraaier checked in with a double and a pair of A two-base throwing singles to spark the batting ^rcI,I® Dennison’s single sent attack, while Osentoski aided . across with* the win- his own cause with a double “n8 ™n in the last of the eighth and single.' Shortstop Steriey fravM b*it for moaenryl nnswiKH My MASONRY PAINT for Artco. Lee Amolf paced Art-co with four hits, while Bill and Bob Prisbe collected four each for the losers. Sport-O-Rama rapped out 20 hits, three apiece by AI Fisher, Bill Manser, Bob Amaugher and Dave Pea, in downing NCR. Tom Patch clouted a pair of home runs for the lasers. “Joe, Fitly Mrs. McGraw. I've never met you bat I’ve read about all the fine things you’ve done and I Just wanted to ihake your hand.” “It was one -of the nicest things that ever hapfcned to me,” said DiMaggio. Everyone at Cooperstown made Joe feel right at home and his acceptance speech was greeted with constant applause. ‘There was Grover Cleveland Alexander’s plaque. This man iwon 373 games and I had to hit] against him. In 19161 hit only .279 but I can’t complain. That was the year Alexander won 33 games for the Phillies. "And Burleigh Grimes. He, played in Brooklyn and other places but he always seemed be pitching against me, and us-| ing that pitch they call unsanitary today — the spitball. He] had a groat one. Captures Boat Race PONTIAC GLASS Company FOR FAMILY FUN SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION STARCRAFT THE lUDUET LINE . n and fiherplai, from lo 21-foot boat*, outboard) IOLA(I.M. P.) : THE LEADERSHIP LINE With the .olid feel SHELL LAKE Fiberpln canoea to 18' runabout,, outboard and inboard drive.. :h your choice of boat BOAT CENTER lilt t. Woodward at Adams Road JO f-4127-Ml 7-0133 Golf Favorites Fretting in Trans-Miss. Tourriey NEW YORK (AP) - Allan Brown, in jiis Broad Jumper, a 28-foot Donzi, won the 270-mile around Long island motorboat race Wednesday at an average speed oLapproximately 56 miles per hour. His elapsed time was four hours, 42 minutes. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) j- Upsets, conspicuously absent in Wednesday’s first round of ] match play In the 63rd Trans-Mississippi Golf Tournament at Edina Country Club, had the] ] favorites fretting as the surviv-ling field of 32 golfers headed ino the second round today. Closest thing to an upset Wednesday was the ousting of Jim Vickers of Wichita, Kan., : 16-year veteran of the Trans-I Miss and a runner-up in 1953, by j little-known Jeff Parry v of Zanesville, Ohio, 3 and 2. DEFENDING CHAMP Defending champion George Bouteil of Phoenix, Ariz., who was pressed to 11 holes before eliminating Bruce Sutnmerhays of Salt Lake City, Utah, sounded ithe apprehension of many of the top names. ! "I was darn lucky to win,’’ said Boutell. “In a match tournament like this, where most of |us are used to playing medal play, you can get careless and I get knocked off easily.” - Pfck your foe Weyaurchofct Medalist Jim Wiechers of Atherton, Calif., admitted the tend-1 ency to let down can get the favorites into trouble. “I lost my oncentration and started making stupid mistakes.1 And I think I got over-confident,” said Wiechers, who had a 3-up lead over Ralph Compiano of Des Moines, Iowa, then had to scramble for a 2 and 1 victory. 10|JJE MAN TELLS ANOTHER! WS SEAAI-ANNUAL John Miller of San Francisco,] 19-year-old top amateur in this1 year’s U.S, open, sweated out the hot putting of Terry Lynch of St. Paul, Minn., before post-] injg a 2 and 1 victory. Other favorites advancing included national amateur champion Bob Murphy of Nicholas, Fla who defeated Dick Howell of Wayzata, Minn., 3 and 2; runner-up medalist Marty Fleckman of Houston, who beat Phil Olson of Edina, Minn., 3 and 2, and Rem Cerrudo of San Rafael, Calif., who downed Jim Rheim of San Diego, 2 and 1. juretu bond HOUSE PAINT Tb» kbUcHv* ihbM b Nut Dtp mi and m ad M baauty ■ protection • Mora acanomleto CLOTHING SALE | tmmmmtsm&us&mm 5HAFFNER MARX it ] spaamrs (GRIFFON and VARSITY T0WH| °neU,,short J O nd Knit Shirts Tropical and Year'Round Suits 1 SPORT 295 20% off - - Iv*"* $59-95.Now ^(SHIRTS 3.9511 ]«***•• Wto. to $69.95 NOW *59”^...............| I j Bermuda Shorts jv**,. *79.95'.....Now *6975| SWIM TRUNKS || ""JUf* |Values to $89.95 Now $7995| Boxer and Brief Styles 1 if 20% off 1 vaiwi to $ 100.Now *89” I 20% off SLACKS SportCoats | STRAW HATS t%79s I Values to *39.95 ..... Now *29” r li Included*3* ] ■ XV THE POtlTIAC PRESS, THURSPAYrJTOY.M. 1966 E-J THE BEST IN SUES (SERVICE: Falcons' Roster Complete Ex-National Golf Champ Loading Women's Event NASHUA N -H (AP) Jo ®^ACK ‘MOUNTAIN, N.C. Adamchik, firmer University of by linemen Willie Towtffes and juries recieved in previous sc*-Anne Gunderson' earner, the"?* two profeoionalfoot- Pittibargh guard, has decided [Jethro Push. • '-onsona. women’s national amateu^ goiltf*11 2rfmterw“phfw h?!that P» M*1 antfor «*»■ champion in 1957, ’60 end '£ i« F*°!“ I' “ M —- back in form in an apparent bid for another U.S. title The Wlval of fullback Junior Hank Nowmarr President I’m The Dodge Boy Who SAVES YOU CASH Hank Niwman'i Now 27, married and coowner with her husband ‘ in a par 2 course in Seekook, Mass., Jo Anne, a former schoolteacher, is fitting the ball With her old-. time vigor after a year’s layoff trom tournament competition. * *■' A- * Mrs. Corner, a native of Seattle, Wash., held a commanding nine-stroke lead today entering the final round of the 54-hole New England Women’s Champi- Coffey and flanker back Angie Coia brought to 73 the number I of rookies and experienced play-era on the infant Falcons’ ter. *-'• s ‘ Coffey is a two-year NFL. player from Green Bay and Coia comes,>from the Washington Redskins. Ooacli Norb Becker ran his pro veterans through a drill called the Nutcracker Wednesday: tHe drill features a center, an offensive blocker and. ball carried* and a defensive man. Adamchik' quit the Pittsburgh Steelers ta return to his real estate brokqrship in Aliquippa, Pa. - 'I don’t think I’ll ever be a star in this league, so I had better stick to a business career,’’ he said. ‘This is my third year trying to make dubs.” Jethro Pugh. ' sonsons. The Cowboys’ rookie a quad has reached 50 players with the reporting of free agent flanker Dick Smith of Northwestern. THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (Jft-D alias Cowboys’ sophomore quarterback Craig Motion was Injured were Joe Burson, t demonstrating pinpoint passing defensive back from Georgia; during brisk offense-only drills Tom McGuire, defensive tackle Wednesday. from Tulsa, and Tom Michel, . * A * * 'halfback for Bast Carolina. The defensive line-up was ab-i CARLISLE, Pa.-Three Wash-igton Redskins suffered k n e e injuries Wednesday as the National Football League team con-two-a-day hcrimmages with full equipment under a hot sun at Dickson College. The club said Wednesday that defensivelhalfback Jerry Mertena and linebacker Bill Cooper won’treport when the sqnpd opens its training camp Saturday at St. Mary’s College. « It was announced earlier that! defensive end Dan Colchieo will miss the 1966 season to await full recovery from a 1965 injury. | ST. PETERSBURG BEACH, Fla. UD — The American Foot-! ball League Miami Dolphins’ll roster was trimmed Wednesday < when Coach George Wilson announced one playe quit and one! Japan, Chinese Rads Okay Sports Exchange TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese sports delegation now in Peking has agreed to promote sports exchanges with Communist Chi-1 na, Japanese newspapers reported from Peking Thursday. The dispatches said,the agreement called for Japan and Cork-munist China to-hold sepafatfR athletic meets in which the results are compared by cable. Automatic TRANSMISSION § swvioi • ALL MAKES ALL MODELS "fully guaranteed" ' RELIABLE TRANSMISSION HI Oakland — ft 4-0711 Course Mark, Ace for Local Golfer The .defensive min's job is to | s e n t from Cowboys’ Gaining SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-TWo'was cut. fight off the blocker and tackle :camp Wednesday scrimmaging more veteran players of the Na-| Bob Ferguson, an offensive the ruiuiing back. ' .with Los Angeles Rams’ rookiesjtional Football "League’s S a n tackle-end from Durham, N. C.,1 — in Orange. The coaching staff Francisco 49ers have been quit. Halfback Jesse Holt of Mi-j KINGSTON, R. I. (AP) — Ed j was pleased with strong worklforced to the sidelines by in-(ami was dropped. . LIGHTED Baseball Range • Par 3 Golf Course Bring the Family For a Holiday Weekend of Fun! CARL'S GOLFLAND 1976 S. Talegraph Rd. FE 5-8095 NEED WORK? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. Mrs. Ann Duch of Rochester I is leaving her mark on the Bald I Mountain Golf Course. 3 BAYS ONLY Full 4 - ply pylon body adds strength and mills rough road impact. The Dynatuf rubber tread really stretches your mileage. Road-hugging traction. Guardsman Tubeless Blackballs Price with Old Tire Pins Federal Eiccise Tax 6.00x13 11.85 1.61 6.50x13 14.55 1.83 7.35/7.00x14 17.10 2.11 , 7.75/7.50x14 18.80 2.20 8.25/8.00kl4 1 20.50 2.36 8.55/8.$Oxl4j 22.20 2.87 7.75/6.70x15 ' 15.80 2.21 8.15/7.10x15 20.50 2.35 8.45/7.60x15 22.20 2.55 WHITEWALLS $3 More Per Tire Pins Same F.E.T. in Moet Siaee guaranteed or your money Downtown Pontiac Phone Fl\ E—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JT3XY 14, 1006 No Matter How You Slice It. You Won't Get Hooked On Our Deal! The only Downey Olds slice is in price — Our straight-down-tho-fairway deals are sizzling hot — better than par values. • Stop in and make the smooth summertime swing to "Olds." / IT’S THE BEST DRIVE OF THE YEAR! CUTLASS SUPREME V f 8 Engine, Hydramatic, Power Brakes, Power Steering, Radio, Heater and Whitewalls. NOW ONLY *2614 DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE 550 OAKLAND AVE. ACROSS FROM WISNER STADIUM 2 More Sellouts on Spartan Slate College President Gives Golf Lesson EAST LANSING (AP) - The 1966 . Michigan State Football gomes Against Notre Dame andi Ohio State have joined the MSU-I T0'£>0’f ,[AP)_“ The „, . ... .. president of Bowling Green University of Michigan 8*™ staft University is getting to be on the ‘‘sold out * list. an old hand at giving lesaohs— Season tickets for MSU’s six home games are just about pme, too, said Bill Beardsiy, MSU athletic ticket manager'. * .★ ★ ' ; The U-M game is in Spartan Stadium Oct 8, the Notre Dame game is at East Lansing Nov. 19 and the Ohio State Jp golf. Dr. William Jerome, 46, went out Wednesday and gave college student Donn Daus of Cleveland a visual demonstration in the fiber points of the game. He whipped Daus, a senior at Rollins College in Florida, 2 and 1, in a second round match of the Ohio Amateur Golf Tournament. game is at Columbus Qct. 1S.| Dr. Jerome, who has been the nrfost pleasant surprise of the tournament, was prepared to give another lecture today, this time to Gary Artz of Akron, a soph at Ohio State. They clashed in a third round match today with the winner advancing to quarter-final play. The Bowling Green president is taking the whole thing in 81 r i d e. “I’m .really not that good. I just love the game,’* he Said after beating Daus. .Sbluuliut- IMu letter... Leifs Leaf erf brim built-in Schwinn quality m.oni battar ptrformancu and langnr trou-bl.fr.. IHu. Schwinn quality well run! OLLEGIATE 5-SHED PERAILLIURI •5F 1ASY TERMS A> outstanding valual Schwinn quyl-tty In a lightweight bicycle, tegular 5-ip.ad Sprint darallleur, band brakN, Schwinn tubular riml Heading U.S j Links Squad NEW YORK (AP) - Jess W. Sweetser of Garrison, AM., has been named non-playing captain of the United States team in the World Amateur Team Golf Championship to be played in 'Texicoaty Oct. 27-30. The four playing members off the U.S. team will be selected after the U.S. Amateur Championship at the Merion Golf Chib, Ardmore, Pa., Aug. 31-Sept. 2. Sweetser, a member of six Walker Cup teams, was the first native American to win the British Amateur championship. He won the tournament in 1926. "It’s just one of those things when you catch a good player who is off,” Jerome said. The tall, husky administrator qualified for match competition with a 74 Monday and then ousted veteran Steve Pipoly of Youngstown in his first match, 2 and 1. ★ ★ * Dr. Jerome, who says he doesn’t get to play often enough, carries a four handicap, and Is a member of the Toledo Country Club, site of this event. "A little local knowledge certainly helps,” he said. Thjs is the first crack at the (Alio amateur for Dr. Jerome, who won the Vermont State amateur in 1948. He took over at Bowling Green three years ago. 'There’s a lot of luck involved! in this game. Psychologically, atch play is fascinating. There are certain critical holes that you know you have to nuke to win,” the educator-golfer jsaid. “I just" hope somebody doesn’t knpek my block off before the tournament’s all over/' he added. Past Ohio amateur champions include Arnold Palmer, who competed while he was stationed with the Coast Guard in Cleveland. Jade Nicklaus played in the tournament several times but never won. SCARLETT’S licyde and Hobby Shop NEW LOCATION 203 N. Perry at Wide Track FE 3-7843 Bosox Switch Hurlers BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Red Sox sent veteran right-hander Bob Sadowski to Toronto of the International League Wednesday to make .room on the roster for southpaw Dennis Bennett. - »*•••**• * ’< t'.'rt ^ WHAT’S YOUR MCE PROBUM? NEED ANOTHER ROOM? BATH? KITCHEN? RECREATION ROOM? t’s easy! Just a phona call and Wickes trained ramodaling staff is at your service, in the privacy of your home. Absolutely no obligation! A complete, accurate estimate and a ‘‘Draft-A-Sketch” of your remodeling project will be given to you ... FREE! No ''Guestimates,, or hidden costs, you know in advance every detail and cost. Wickes with 120 Centers in 25 States, and backed by. 112 year reputation for de< pendability, is your guarantee of the finest available workmanship and materials. Why settle for less than the biggest... and the best, Wickes. ECONOMIZE, MODERNIZE THE DEPENDABLE WICKES WAY! IMAGINE! A BEAUTIFUL CAN BE YOURS FOR ONLY PUT IN A REC. ROOM • OTHER REMODELING PROJECTS EQUALLY LOW1 A PORCH ENCLOSED^ *2.39 A WEEK! ALUMINUM SIDINGS *3.59 . A WEEK! ... and you can finance it, too, with Wickes low Interest “Economy-Budget” bank finance plan. No money down and a plan to fit your budget. Don’t wait another day longer, Call Wickes TODAYi We'll n tidy up after the job! CALL TODAY-COLLECT 752-9191 Farmington 9' Still Winning Waterford Continues Legion League Chase Three-hit pitching efforts cir-ried leader Farmington and second-place Waterford to decisive victories Wednesday 'in American Legion Baseball District II League games. - Farmington won its ninth straight by trimming Troy, 6-2, on Jerry Turner’s three-hitter and nine strikeouts. Dick Miceli matched Turner’s whiffs snd hits, and posted a- shutout for Waterford, 5-0, over Milford. In addition, Miceli had three of the 11 Waterford safeties while posting his third while-waahing of the campaign. Mike Harkey drove hi the first run for the winners with a single. Chuck O’Brien and Mike Kuh-na matched pitches as Walled Lake held third-place Milford to a tie, 3-3. Don Freeman had two hits to support O'Brien for Walled Lake. Clarkston claimed a 7*6 forfeit win from Berkley. * * Wayne Johnston's three-run triple and Chuck Yiane’s two-run circuit clout sparked the Farmington attack. Waterford has a 6 p.m. makeUp game with Troy tonight at Wianer Field, and will meet Walled Lake Friday, again at Wisner. Collision Squad Falters. Rallies lor 54 Decision M. G. Collision blew a 3-6 lead, then came from behind In the seventh and eighth innings for s 5-4 conquest of Cranbrook last night in a Jaycee Park city men’s baseball game. The triunjph tossed the Class' A circuit’s third-place struggle into a three-way tie with Booth Hones (8-6) matching the record of last night’s two contestants. Ron Kind’s two-out tingle In the first extra-inning decided the Issue, scoring Darrell Lovell from second base after he’d singled and stolen a hue. An error, Dick Berrett’s pinch- U.S. Cagers Searching' Europe for Opposition VIENNA III - Because oficancSllsd ssvsr Al scheduled sport events involving tLS. teams in protest over the bombing of North Viei Nam. Pro-Am Preceding Lady Carling Golf i cancellation of games by Communist bloc countries, Col. Don Hull said Wednesday the touring U.S. basketball team will look elsewhere tor games. ' .■ f W ”4f I 4 Hull, executive secretary of the Amateur Athletic Union, told The Associated Press, “We crossed the ocean to play basketball.” Since the E a s t e r n countries cancelled the games, ‘We, are looking for matches with West European countries.’’ He added, “I tried- for three hours today to speak with sports officials In Moscow. But translation was bad, and I could not get smy cooperation. But I got their message that we were not wanted and had to (cancel my plans to fly to Moscow.” * * * , . Hull said the basketball team would leave here for 'Munich, Germany Thursday. “We can stay there with the American forces, and we shall have the help of Dr. William Jones of file International Bas-. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Play-for-pay women golfers get their first chance for a pay-check in Columbus today, but the scramble for the real prize money doesn't start until Friday. About 40 touring women .professional golfers team with amateurs — two men and one woman with each lady pro. — in a pro-am eventipffering $150 for the top pro. The serious business of golf begins Friday with the three leading money-winners heading the field seeking a $2,250 first prize in the $15,000 Lady Carling Open- « Much of the attention will to-ketball Federation, who will cus on Kathy Whitworth, Carol assist us in finding partners,”,Mann and Sandra Haynie, who Hull said. I stand 1-H in earnings this year. Communist countries h a v e, but has picked up second money Russian Takes Epee Title; U. Sr Women Lose MOSCOW (AP} - Alexei Ni-kanchikov, a 6-foot-t giant from Minsk, wwn the world epee crown at the world fencing! championships Wednesday. The Russian defeated Claude Bourguard of France in a fen-ceoff after they had tied at 4-1 in the round-robin among the six finalists. Another Soviet fencer from Minsk- Tatyana Samusenko, won the women’s wprid foil title for Russia on Tuesday. In the women’s team foil competition, the United States was beaten in the first round by tia 14-2. The Soviet girls reached the final by defeating France • 9-7. Hungary also reached the final by beating Rumania 9-4 in the other team semifinal. hit safety and a fielder’s choice produced the tying run in the last of the seventh for the Collision nine. M. G. grabbed a 34 lead in the first two innings with three errors making all the runs unearned. In both cases, singles by the lead-off batters were the' only hits in the rallies.* I Teen-ager Ed Bishop mowed down the opposition for M. G. without a hit until the fifth inning. Two walks and an error let in a run then, and Dave Diebm delivered the first hit for the losers to tie the score. The league-leading R. T. Clippers could extend their lead to a game and a half by beating! Evans Equipment under the lights tonight. Thwso jerseys ore .replicas of professional football jerseys . . . made especially for casual wear. Heavy duty cotton with double shoulders.. White body,with black, royal or purple numbers. UCLA inserts at tJscj shoulder. Sizes S-M or L. CRANBROOK ) Lovell cf ^ Holllmen si Haines rf . | Bramble rf 2 0 0 Boomer 3b Coloolmo e 3 0 0 Lomph'roph Taggart 3b 4 1 1 Rogers If Burk low p 4 B 1 Bishop p Cranbrook ...........ON Ml lb-4 I S M. O. Collision ..... IIP POP 11—J | || Double—Tsggerf. Runs Bsttsd in— Diehm 2; Kind. Pitching—Burklow S H, M R-ER, 4 SO, 4 W; Bishop S IP, 1 H, 3-2 R-eR. S SO, 4 W, 1 HBP, Tuck S IP, 2 H, 1-0 R-SR, 2 SO, Bomlt 1 IP, 3 SO. Wlnntr—Borrow (2-1). Lossr- SfSri' Tinr-* * low, Hummel, B. Hoovtnrfau I. Me-DenoM. Puhck, Burreif. Orioles Win Exhibition PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Tlfc Baltimore Orioles rallied for three runs in the 13th inning, two on Bob Johnson’s home run, to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies $■$ in s baseball exhibition Wednesday night. LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER HOME IMPROVEMENT DEPARTMENT KINS TIRE CENTER 31 W. Montcalm FE 3*1011 See the NEW UNIROYAL MASTER with the most liberal Guarantee in the tire induetry IT TIGER PAW HEADQUARTERS See the Popular NOW Brand New I TAKE-OFFS I 0.95*14 | Narrow 1 Whitewalls COUPON - - - -While They Last! j ’Mi COUPON• KING TIRE Center SPORTING GOODS 24 E. Lawrence FE 2-2369 In Downtown Pontiac JOHN McAUUFFE’S 6th ANNUAL VACATION SALE! for More Fun On .. t Your Vocation .. Make Your First Stop At John McAuliffe! Attention Sun Lover» The Ford Galaxie Convertible Was Made for You *2473 Nothing Extra To Pay! We Also Have 241 Other Vacation* Fun Cars Irf Stock! -1 Hour Financing and Delivery - It Only Takes a Minute To Gwjt a Better Deal JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ava., Pontiac • FE 54101 ’ ' “Four Hometown Ford Dealer** THg, PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, IQ6fl E-T Bin>^ QUALITY; NEW , TIRES! ' P NOT BLEMISHED! NOT * RETREADS!; 7 NOT SECONDS! CARPETING THE OUTFIELD - Workmen lay Astroturf over the outfield under the famous domed stadium in Houston, completing a resurfacing job started this spring in the infield. The synthetic nylon turf was developed after problems arose maintaining, the real grass that was first installed in the Astrodome. The Astroturf is laid, in strips and zippered together, and costs about $2 per square foot. The job will be finished in time for Tuesday’s Phillies-Houston contest. FISK WINDSOR 7.50x14 TUBIUSS CUSTOM 240 * 100% NYLON * FULL 4-PLY, * 24 MONTH OUARANTIll 4.00x16 TUII TTPI Setting Record Pace CUSTOM 360 • 100% NYLON • PULL 4-FLY • 27 MONTH OUARANTIll 4.00x15 TUBEliSS NEW YORK (AP) — More The Braves’turnstile count is than 25 million spectators — an up 568,451, while the Angels’ has all-time high — are likely to increased by 410,099 over last watch major league baseball year. Both have drawn more games this year- Qian 800,000, and have sur- Thia was indicated today passed their 1965 full-season when an Associated Press sur- figures. The Angels have the vey of mid-season attendance highest American League at-figures showed that the Atlanta tendance, 806,823. Braves and California Angels * * * have helped boost the majors’ Ten other teams are also gate total 7 per cent over 1965. showing improvement. They are * * * St. Louis, which moved into new The Braves, who moved from Busch Stadium Iwo month; ago, Milwaukee, and the Angeles, in up 190,(79 customers; Kansas their new Anaheim Stadium, city, 135,748; Baltimore, 110,-have been the most important 799; Detroit, 59,900; Pittsburgh, factors in lifting over-aU attend-33^2; Los Angeles,. 25,980; ance to almost 13 million going Washington, 25,921; New York into tonight’s games. Yankees, 24,186; San Francisco, NL AHEAD 18,707, and Cleveland, 18,848. A total of 7,445,231 have * * * watched National League clubs Houston, in its second season in action, while 5,427,846 have in the Astrodome, showed the paid to see American League largest decrease — 221,682. games. The combined total of However, the Astros have at-12,873,077 is 843,716 more than a traded 1,081,006 and rank sec-year ago in a comparable num- ond to Los Angeles, which has ber of playing dates. played before 1,311,324 persons A major league attendance in Dodger Stadium. No other record of 22,441,900 was set last dub has passed the one-million season. . mark. , Other teams behind last year’s attendance pace are the Chicago White Sox, 182,961; Philadelphia, 120,150; Minnesota, 107,630; New York Mets, 84,891; Cincinnati, 80,509; Boston, 8,787, and the Chicago Cubs, 4,401. eove I world's known j of firm oi Tha American League has been responsible for most Qf this year’s gain. It has lifted its attendance 504,120 while the NL, which has established records in each of the past four campaigns, is plus-339,596. wHWff* ! time to U-T8* i BUY * CUSTOM 240 • 100% NYLON » Pull 4-fly • 94 MONTH •UARANTII 7.50x14 LHwIkm . ’ 4*70x15 CONVENIENT CREDIT rnsKl OIL ' FILTERS |66 AU CARS A ID*)95 ituiallatiot TURTLE BACK SPONGE ituiallation available lisrn Bar Type Top Carrier INAL PM ALL-PURPOSI LOAM. SIZI 41% " LONG L wWi lathing Q O O O A VISTA CAR WAX brake, pedal tltarar Self-Adjustinc Rrukei S4 More Illuminated AMP & OIL GAUGE If mi THAN fUSHINQ UOHTS Installation Available White Levi’s. Guys Watch the guys dot set the pace—the crowd that ac£ die styles. YouTHind they al live in slim, trim White Levi’s. How shout you? Get in step. Get m style. Get into White Levfo—oow. AD dm Mln^ colors, in carefree cotton heavyweight twiH IT" Only 04.50. You can tell 'em by the Tab.'V^l GLENWOOD PLAZA North Perry Street at Glenwood m CUSTOM 2401 • 190% NYLON I • PULL 4-FLY I • 24 MONTH •UARANTII 1.50x14 ur«i«M 7.40x15 * 55 uilMl« 4 1.00x14 blJ 7.10x15 M5 miIm fat FISK SPORTS •SPECIAL • FULL 4-FLY • 2* MONTH •UARANTII 4.00x15 5.40x11 E—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUESQAY, JULY H, 18M Veterans' Benefits—# 2 Fined COO for Gambling d Insurance Can Be Reinstated By RAY CROMLEY |a smaller amount of paid-up pir-j to the VA Office administering . (EDITOR’S NOTE — This .umanenl insurance or continued jit, giving, your policy number! the ninth article in-^a^JJ-part for-the full amount as extendedlif- you know It. If. you don’t1 series on veterans’ benefits.) term insurance. The policyhol(l*jknow the number, be certain tib ----— jer may borrow up to 94 per give your Rill name, date of NewspaperEaterpriae Assn, cent of the reserve value of|birth and service number.' By RAY CROMLEY |his policy. f * * * WASHINGTON - Pon’t pankl * * * Persons outside -tjie' United If vour veteran’s insurance! Dividends on veterans insur-1 States may get help at the near-lapsesT There are provisions! « payable only on poll- eat U. S. Foreigi^rvice Office, that enable you to make it good ciesbearing the letter-prefix Ki — if you don’t wait too long. °v* ... . . If you have one of the usual A .^i^older may choose to permanent-type policies-ordin- ^s dividends m cash ary life, 20-pay life and the like or leave them.to apply against! - you may reinstate your poli-!premiums or to pay off loans cy by paying afl back premiums. I^msy have- made against his I If your policy is preceded by P0^' the letters “J,” “JR” or “J8,": He. may choose to |we it jnust be reinstated within five them on deposit and heatBi- _ years of lapse. terest. The deposit option is I Two .men arres^ w Pontiac Yon alsn must nav interest applicable only on permanent jP®1*** *■ early-morning gam-You also must pay intern! d to terml inslir. bilng raid April 16 pleaded guilty If the policy has, been lapsed ; (•» term) insur .. Munic, , ^ y^terday longer than three months. ance\ land were fined $100 each by If you have an endowment U the policyholder makes no judge Maurice E. Finnegan, plan, you must reinstate the pol-'^on, dividend^ is auto-. Wa|ter j. Stafford, 49, of 3226 icy within'the endowment pe- matically held under the Credit Highland, White Lflke Township, I Option, with interest. A monthly -• -—•* ** — '--1 t t ^ j premium will be withdrawn a i__... ----- [from a dividend credit the VA A lapsed term insurance poll-. .... - 1 cy usually must be reinstated ! . during the current term period., p *' * ♦ * I * * * To reinstate a term policy, you v were amon8 15 men ar' need pay ohly two premiums- Y may as benaf,ci' rested by warrant-bearing vice "oS Z X month of lapse 7 Pi squad P^lothesmen, w h o and one for the premium month I^Sino c to' broke Mo a building at 33 In -which requirements for re-^Baldwin about 2:30 a.m. instatement are met.” dividually or as trustee. j Thirteen of those apprehended ai 'TOMATif rfnfwai Im”* mfy ch^!1®e y j Veterans Administrationuen- I isKmnnumcaranwiiMHi si, ■REHOUSE SUB! ter Fort Snelling St. Paul, Minn. 55111 All other states plus Puerto Rico aad the Virgin Islands and all foreign countries including the Philippines are under the jurisdiction of: Veterans Administration Cen- j ter P. 0. Box 8079 Philadelphia, Pa. 19101 GENUINE SAVINGS OF That is, the insurance may be1 If you have any questions!; turned jn for cash, traded in for about your policy, write directly!! ^ "Veterans Benefits" ^ c/o Pontiac (Mich.) Pres4 I Box 489, | Radio City Station | New York, New York 10019 j Please tend me ...., .copief of Ray CromleVs no-book, "What You'vo-Got Coming in Benofit# for U.S. ■ Veterans," at $ 1 per copy. I enclose $ . | (Pl«ai* print cloOrty—this is your mailing label) [ NAME........................... I ADDRESS.................................. ioV>\* *. yjC YOU FORCE US TO EXTEND THIS GREAT CARPET SALE ANOTHER WEEK! THE OVERWHELMING RESPONSE to this incredible sate astonished us. If you were among those v^ho couldn't get waited on - we're truly sorry. So you won't be disappointed, these special sale prices will b» in effect for another week. Take.yovir choice of THOUSANDS OF ODD ROLLS, ROLL ENDS AND DISCONTINUED STYLES that —have been aaduffiad tn A9% Andjarnamhar. everything is in stock for INSTANT INSTAf l^Tf^TPN CITY............STATE. .ZIP.. imVMORVOll CM MM£...FVmSTM&IFJC® Y TRH>LE-SHE*RED c I Moku chacki payobl. to "y.t.ran. B.n.fiti," Allow 3 who. (or doliyory. | FURNITURE at MAY’S ‘Kvinthino for.the HOME!” 4.63 rS’. TEXTURED NYLON 3.11* SPACE-DYED V THICK ACHYLIC V “501” NYLON VcULPTIJP BED »80^ NYLON 11 SCROLL ■■CARVED ■■ NYMLON A *9.95 vqlu*. » n k MUST OUAUTYI 3.83 a /IT COLORS! HI-LOV* HEAVY NYLON \ NYLON 3.68 a TWEED 3M, it’s or to Owe MAY” • FURNITURE • CLOTHING APPLIANCES NUBBY NYLON mmm FIRST OUAUTYI 4.66 rX HEAVY PLUSH N7 5.48 M»ny Styles in IS'WIDTHS I 5.31 4.38 HEAVY TWIST V«C0LC»RS! LOOPS ACRILAN Stunning oaylie gib at Hi* iow.mt 5.22 a LUXURY HYLOH^ HEAVY HYL0H mm NYLON 5.76 y3. RANDOM-SHEARED Y CONFE HEM 4.‘-48v,d ti-tonedN FLORAL m ■ WOOL ■ I W/L TON Many elm. FIRST OUAUTYI 5.41* OUAUTYI IMV (tack. 6.46 s «. FIRST OUAUTYI 8:44 ft iJSlOL 5.74ft PER WEEK CARPET CENTER H I 20 II. Saginaw N PONTIAC 3121 W. HURON Nr. Hit .A.Ik L*kt M. FE 5-5000 IN SOUTHFIELD 21170 W. I MILE 357-4035 IN LIVONIA 10130 PLYMOUTH 421-5116 WARBIN I IN SOUTHGATE J IN MT. CLEMENS I IN TOLEDO 11011 E. • MILE 1M7I EUREKA 10101. GRATIOT I SB14M0NR0E| lilt W-IT I Hr. S*ntA(*l* Otni.r I MM M MMn lrW|* I W**t *f TaMuHn PR8-1111 202-2255 468-3300 | 882-3648 FREE "SHOP-AT-ROHE” & CRVICE! I Can't got out to shop I during this groot | monoy-saving solo? I Wo will bring a CAR-| LOAD of sampfoi to | your homo. Absolutely I no obligation, of | fours#! CALL FE 5-5MM THE PONTIAC I*RESS, THURSDAY, JULY 1A, I960 Potato Joins-Atomic Age Doits of Radiation < Speed Growth Period RICHLANO, Wash. (UPI) -Scientists gt Pacific Northwest I Laboratory 1iere are playing an! atomic version of “one potato,! two potato" in hopes of getting] that old staple, the spud, to doi doubleduty. j V*. * * Researchers say a series of! 1 experiments proved conclusive-.' 1 ly that potatoes treated with ar i dose of radiation wiH grow] { sprouts without the vegetable' having to go through- the normal 60-90 day “rest*-’ period. Other experiments showed matire at < stages. The conclusion being drawn here is that two crops instead of one could be grown in areas with long growing seasons if ..seed potatoes are ixradiated. And it is possible#that spuds j irradiated-before spring planting in Northern areas could ma-! ture in time to compete with! earlier- crops from Southern growing areas. STARfEDIN‘65 Dr/Lloyd E. Brownell started the potato studies in the siring of IMS while he was taking part in the “summer professor" program sponsored by the — Atomic Energy Commission. Brownell is a professor of chemical and nuclear engineering at the University of By WILLIAM* N. QATIS I not to close as it looks because I same guess, though he adds UNITED NATIONS*. tyY. (It- the assembly had decided it] thatt it is reilly too early to tell. Despite ill the talk abdit invit-l would take 9 two-thirds vote- Hsueh Yu-Chi of this fall and may givp it fewer votes than last year. Various U.S. scholars favor Red China's admission, but n py-,Sgjr r .35s- Red China Losing Votes tor U.N. Seat MEMORANDUM Nine of 'the 11 put the question before the last MU V/I11IKI 5 PVUIUOOIU11, UUV UW , . " . . . . ... enough U.N. members are for it to n»ke it come to pass. * ft*1 how to handle i ta the * * next one starting Sept. 20. Al- Delegates'estimate that inkia and Cambodia have drawp next fall’s General Assembly a * memorandum settmg forth resolution to oust the Chinese “e r case-Nationalists and seat the Chi- . nese Comumnisti will get sev- -0ne of the diplomats involved era! fewer votes than it did inin *!«“« talks expects that Corn-last fill’s assembly. munist China will get one or two That last resolution failedjfewer votes this year than it did Nov. 17 on a 47-47 'tie vote, witti est. abstaining. That was| A U.S. delegate makes the sion of the Chinese Communists.” Hsueh cited as some of the reasons why the Communists had lost votes: his own government had won friends away from them; some African countries had caught them redhanded at subversion; and sudden change in government brought some changes 9in Red Chinese policy. As far back as March 28, U.8. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg] remarked: “I would say right iat the moment that there are! fewer votes for' admission of seating Red China are: 1.She is Red China to the United Nations not entitled to it because the than there were at the last U.N. Charter says the United ' assembly.” The following month Nations is for peace-loving U.N. Secretary General Ucountries only. 2. She does not Thant said indications were that represent the Chinese people the question of the Chinese seat because they look to,the Repub-“will not be solved in the com- lie of China on Formosa, ing 21st session of the general 3. She is so hbatile^to - the assembly.” United Nations that she would Nevertheless, the -issue will be only obstruct settlements. 4. argued out along familiar lines:)™8 0P*n hostility shows a lack Among the arguments for0]interest in coming here. seating Communist China are: ■—-— --------------- is entitled to it. 2. With- Wqs No Huck Finn-out her the United Nations is not "universal.” 3. Some 690 million! PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)—Po-Chinese lack representation ^ are looking for the owners here. 4. Such world problems asof two rafts found recently on [disarmament and the war in!^e Columbia River., Viet Nam cannot be settled! Both had tubs aboard in which (without Peking. ja total of 174 marijuana plants Among the arguments against were found growing. AW Wireohotv DOWN THE HATCH - A fellow gets mighty hot in these days of 100-degree temperatures, but a swig straight from the jug, a dip in the pool and a coating of beach sand helps make the heat bearable for 15-month-old Greg Grandgeorge at Kennedy Park, near Fort Dodge, Iowa. He took mature russet pota-[ toes from a commercial field and exposed them to gamma rays from cobalt 60, a heavy , radioactive isotope. Planted in vermiculite for lab-1 ’ oratory observation, the potatoes were examined, photographed and replanted every | few days. TIME CUT The first group of irradiated! potatoes sprouted 22 days after] radiation. Later experiments brought the time down to less! than to days. “No abnormalities of any1 kind were discovered in the po-| tatoes,” said Dr. Charles A. Rohrmann, research associate in the chemistry department ofL Battelle - Northwest, which op-[ crates the laboratory. Coast Guard Ship to Study Sea Bottom BRISTOL, R.I. (AP) - Thg Coast Guard buoy tender i_ is scheduled to sail today on the first leg of a two-month cruise to stucty the bottom of the I Atlantic and Arctic oceans. * *r . ' * The Spar is to chart an under- ‘ water mountain chain called the Jan Mayen Fracture during its 17,000-mile voyage. • AMERICAN GIRL , • RED CROSS • JUMAM’S • EDWINS • MISTER BROWN • MOTHER 000SE •SUMMERETTES • SANDALS Htr* oft th« twice-yearly saving* yoy-vo bttn wailing fori Dos*.and casual typo* to wear right euow. All siM* but oaf in •v»ryr -slyla. Cam* warty! SECURITY CHARGE EEL’S SHOES SMS DIXIE • DRAYTON SLAWS in The DRAYTON INOMNR CENTER You c«n have* p*rivet trust in , vach proscription wo fill for you. Il is professionally prepared and PRESCRIPTION freshest druspa obtainable. Every prescription at Thrifty's. Is a. proscription you can trust. 140 North Saginaw Huron Street I FILLED BY US I QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 4895 Dixie Highway MARKETS 1 Rides Out British Rdte Hike Active Stock Market Rallies Tfa following are top prices: covering sales of locally grown pratyce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package rots. Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK (AP) — Hie that another increase in the of 60 stocks at noon was up .3 at Detroit Bureau qf Markets as of market rallied early this Federal Reserve Board’s dis-$<•$. with industrials up 1.0, afternoon after riding outttte!^ rate ^ * 4V4 ^ ^ rails off .4 and utilities up .2. news of a boost in the-British:. verv ijupiv psnpoioiiv in view _ _ _ ... Tuesday." Produce Airline Talks Push Forward Negotiations Indicate Substantial Progress The New York Stock Exchange LETTUCE AND OREENS Poultry and Eggs 0*1 DETROIT ( pound lor No Sns DETROIT IMS DETROIT (AP) — Egg prices paid ■ 1 Ip "nl HClIVn (Including U " ■ e i . . 3 is very likely, especially in view „ _ T . , .,, b^J?te-Tradingffas»ctive- I of the British increase. The Dow Jones industrial av- WASHINGTON (AP) - A* St0t* ^‘ces remained onan higherinterest rates and at 1,00,1 was "P 348 at line negotiations push forward J-geven keel despite the^ growing tightening of credit have dam-i88!.83. i . today amid signs that some sub- “• stringency of worldwide credit 6ned lces ^ now With reports o some issue* Ltantjal progress finally is being , ♦g reflected hy the jump in the , majorpartPof the bad news is JJ^ naiTowed4 *made toward ending the seven-Ibasic British interest rate to T J of ^ ^ stodcs begm to strike airltae stocta showed aL* strike. g per cent from 6 per cent. show strength jburst of strength. Eastern and| £ hi„t of definite progress jjo' * *'* ’ Gains of fractions to 2 or 3™ercan rose about 3, P*ncame Wednesday night when Si ?at ***<» was followed by a ^ were ^ted. American about t Asst. secretary of Labor James ujraUymg fa the British pound1" [J* advanced in moderate j Rey*,^ presiding over the ];gjwhich has been in trouble again average UP trading on the American Stock tnllfg met separately with rep-' recently. . I The Associated Press average'Exchange. ______resentatives of the five struck airlines — Northwest, Trans World, Eastern, National and United. They reportedly discussed the national issues involved in the request by the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists for wage increase and other benefits ih a three-year con-1 tract. There was no disclosure of the I outcome of the airline meeting with the Labor Department official, but a spokesman said today’s session would he another joint meeting. LOG JAM Reynolds Wednesday likened the union-management impasse to a log jam which might be eliminated quickly merely by moving one or two key logs. He cautioned against hopes for any quick settlement, pointing out that there had been no change the union's position since its Livestock American Stock Exch. Ctrywld* Rlty lWif> Jit Tim Olfc Ely Tlg*r i!3f ail Devil Gw Phrwd It Giant V«| .Hi Scurry Rain SM W Mr Signal Oil A 1 B.1? I Syntex Cp .40 " Tachnieol 75 Un Control .20 __ III PI.................11 Copyrighted by The Associated Praia 1000 Cl Stocks of Local Interest c^s«V» Figurei after, decimal oolnti are algtittii jcurtWr 1 over the couorraa stocks I Quotations from the NASD are repre-iOanRiv 1.30b aantative interdealer prices of approxl-jDaycoCp 50b Intar-dealer markets I Day PL 1.14 the day. Pricei do Deere 1i.iOa merkup. markdown Bid Atked De'Edis 1.40 ,, ,, Oft Steel .40 .rl OlamAlk 1.10 , --V SiSiNMraoe ‘*s» ,A . *•* JJ.j Douo Alrc lb ....W-J 'll Dow Cham 3 .. . 13.1. 13.4 Draper 1.20a *3.4 34.0' Dresslnd 1.25 1.3 244 duPent 2.50e 5.2 16.0 Duq Lt 1 JO 7.4 ioj DynamCp .40 —J SingerCo 2.21 SrnmK l.ooi Std Kollsman StOIICal 2.50 StOillnd 1.70. StOIINJ 1.60a StdOMOh 2.20 MRS StauffCh 1.00 SterlDrug .00 StevansJP 2 0 40% 48% 48% v 10 57% 570b 57Va — % * 30 33'S 32Vb 33V0 4 N —K— 47 43% 42% 43% 4 3 35% 35% 35% 4 00 31% 38% 31% 4 57 15% 83% 8% 42% 10 53% 53% 53% *- 2 27% 27% 27% 27 15% 15% 15% 10 44% 43% 43% BANK OPENING - Ricky Goodman (left), U, Of 672 S. Winding, Waterford Township, and Rodney Lidster, 10, of 727 S. Winding, Waterford Township, came to deposit money in the new Pontiac State Bank branch office at 3166 W. Huron, Waterford Township, which opened today. They each received $1 oft the ribbon for helping Milo Cross (left), chairman of the bank’s board; Dorothy Olson, Waterford Township supervisor;" and Edward E. Barker Jr., bank president, with yesterday's opening ceremonies. ‘p- $ Yank Double Agent Hits Red Pay Scale WASHINGTON (AP) - Is United Nations at New York, spying for the Communists which puts him in a different worthwhiie? ..I diplomatic category. “It is certainly not,” in the r + + opinion of the Arrierican double agent who got $3,440 for more TJ.S. sources at the United than four years’ espionage for Nations said Wednesday that the Czechs that was climaxed Pi*k would not be expelled from ___________„ .» by a futile move to “bug” key (this country because he "has statement of minimum demands I offices hi the State Department done nothing to violate the U.N. one week ago. j building. headquarters agreement." 11th Branch for City Bank West Huron Office Is Formally Opened The Pontiac State Bank, called by its president, Edward E. Barker jr., “the bank on the grow,” grew another branch his morning with the official opening of the West Huron Street office at 3166 West Huron. Reynolds said the parties still are very far apart but he said “I don’t think there is anything in the situation that cannot be resolved by the parties within hours if there is a real will to do It.” Reynolds said both sides are As for Mrkva, 38, the Moot-2! The new Office, the 11th since 33' 33% 23% 23% 6 29% 29% 29% 4 —u— 12 17% 17% 17% 4 26 59% 59% 59% 4 The American, Frank J. Mrkva pronounced meerk’ va, worked with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the State Department said Wednesday as it revealed details of yie strange cloak and dagger case. Although many secret listen-aware of their responsibility to ing devices have been uncov-the nation to settle the disagree- ere 8I0ULAR tS&ffeKSSLH % Cant Nat ShaaA 29 O The effects on retail trade. mer resort area’s seasonal business. feather holds the same grip on the travel industry in the winter—cal£ days up North and sunny days down South however, can show a mixed pat- spell money in the till for count- don’t sell, a host of things to farm families, inchKiiig, , these days, air conditioners and beer and soft drinks and even a vacation trip once the harvest fa in. <-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, ^HUESDAY, JgLY 14, IMP CTE PONTIAC PRlfeS, THURSDAY, JULY U, 1966 t Dorman's OldMill TAVERN Friday Special! Golden Fried All You ▼#(« Can Eat Is Wide Variety of $050 5838 Dixie Hwy. Waterford OR 3-1907 U. N. Marks AdfaTs Death Aid Measure Past 1st Test $3‘Million Multiyear Bill on House Floor * UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — u.N. diplomats and friends of Adlai E. Stevenson arranged a memorial service today to marie the first anniversary of his death. Francis T. P. Plimpton, who, _ served as Stevenson’s deputy att WAfflNOTON (AP) — The th* tt s mission iA ihn administration s $3.3 billion multiyear foreign aid authorization bill has sailed through Its first House test but opponents the U.S. mission to the United Nations, was one of the scheduled speakers at die service in the Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium at U.N. headquarters. ★ , ■ ★ ★ Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, Stevenson's successor as head of the U.8. mission, is in Geneva attending a U.N. meeting. An exodus of about half a million white person from New York City between 1900 and 1964 was disclosed recently. This was only partially offset by the increase of somewhat less than 400,000 nonwhites and Puerto Ricans during this period. '•fr * I bLluyJ mJUt I /■> . ' vowed to try again today slash both time and money from; the measure. Hie House voted down 1X2 to 86 Wednesday night an amendment to cut the two-year authorization to a single year. Rep.1 William S. Mailliard, R-Calif., author of the rejected amend-! ment, later declared: “Pm sure, somebody else will try again today. If they don’t,” he added, “I just might.” A final vote is expected latej today. Voting on amendments started .Wednesday after two days of debate. Opponents of the two-year measure argued that a constant review is needed of the aid program in light of changing, criti-| cal World times. CONFIDENCE Supporterr backed the admin-; istration’s contention that the! longer period is needed for planning and to give confidence to underdeveloped nations. f The issue touched off extended oratory. Rep. Paul A. Fino, R-N.Y., .charged most of the $2.5 billion given South Viet Nam through the program has been “stolen by profiteers and corrupt officials.” Many members who declared they supported the aid program ANIMAL ACTORS INJURED - Serang, a Siberian tiger, is treated by Mac McWilliams (left) and Ralph Heifer after sustaining steam burns yesterday' when a runaway railroad work car smashed into Africa, U.S.A, a compound near Los Angeles which houses more than 400 animals-used in movies and television. Also hurt was Judy (background), a chimp. Some of the animals were about to perform on a nearby set for television’s "Daktari.” WE DON’T 11 V ) ( IS THE BEST CLAIM OUR T I JL ft H » T0WN \ BUT OUR CUSTOMERS DO! • FISH and CHIPS Col* Slaw f ranch Friat . Roll and Butter S5« SPAGHETTI 110 T RICKY’S M Call 335-7154 or 338-7732 Ncwefik Inn- COCKTAILS MEN'S NOON SPECIAL9 • Steak • French Fries • Salad 4]25 4 SONNY DINNER SPECIAL Featuring Lobster Tails S „ Regular Menu Also Available 1R5 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-246_. Merle Has Look of Youth 34 Years After First Film By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD — Recently, s Hollywood matron encountered Merle Oberon at a party and ex-you can’t iRntun&a Cmttitrg Ittiei argued against a two-year peri-^,^ .1Good ^ od. Some said this issue should *, ^ looking be decided in the first session of yfflmg foreVer! ” a Congress, not the closing one.31(/J UfCOurlD not,” replied the THE BIRMINGHAAA-BLOOMFIELD-TROY AREAS' INTIMATE NEW LUXURY THEATRE AT SOMERSET PARK OPENS WEDNESDAY, JULY 20 Presenting You have $ thrill in « ’ - Claim Savings —Postmaster Pontiac Postmaster William W. Donaldson today urged persons who have not yet redeemed postal savings certificates to do so. 1 “Interest on these accounts is presently being discontinued on the anniversary date of each certificate,” Donaldson said. “AH fuids still held by this office as of April 26 of next j year will be forwarded to ! Washington.’’ The U. S. Post Office has announced it will discontinue its -activities in postal savings certificates, which currently pay interest at the rate of 2.17 per cent. * * ★ Donaldson said only 166 out of; 710 accounts have been closed out at the Pontiac office since the move two months ago. He said $201,417 is still on deposit at the office. Suggested hours for redeeming! certificates are 9-14 p.m. Monday ‘but why not try?” I She was bora Estelle Merle O’Brien Thompson in Tasmai>-| is, but don’t ask1 how many years THOMAS ago. Suffice to say that her first notable film was “The Private ILife of Henry VTD' Charles Laughton, and that was 34 years ago. After the lapse of a dozen years, Miss Oberon is back playing a Hollywood role in the multistar “Hotel”; she enacts a| duchess to Michael Rennie’s jduke. Her youthfulnAss naturally comes up in ah interview, and it is a subject she doesn’t i tire of hearing abotit. “Of course people mention iti | a great deal,” she smiled, “but what woman wouldn’t be pleased? “Remaining as young-looking as possible is good for everyone — as long as they don’t 1st it become a phobia. It has never been that with me. If I grow old, I grow old. Meanwhile, I owe it to myself, to God, and to those To Ask Probe GOP Eyes Halt of Suit WASHINGTON (AP)—Republican leaders are expected to call today for a congressional inquiry into the government’s dismissal of an antitrust suit against the Anheuser-Busch Co. after officials of the brewing firm contributed $10,000 to a Democratic fund-raising organization. A spokesman for the company said “the whole thing is preposterous.” It was understood that Rep. Charles E. Goodeli, R-N.Y., would call for the inquiry in a Homs-speech today. The issue was .first raised yeetei'day by House GOP leader Gerald R. Ford. He told a news conference “disturbing rumor!” were circulating that the Johnson administration may have dropped antitrust suits against companies whose executives contributed to the Democrats. Ford gave no names. A check of government records showed that on May 24 the August A. Busch family and two company executives made contributions totaling $10,000 to the President’s Club, twmpwMd nf persona who cnmhbtlte At leait fl.UUO 10 tlN Democrats. On June 17, record* shewed, the Justice Department dropped a civil antitrust suit seeking to force the company to divest itself of a malting plant in Wisconsin it had acquired from the Rahr Malting Co. The suit was dismissed without prejudice—meaning it could be refiled later, officials said. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach said the Justice Department hri voluntarily consented to dismissal of two antitrust cases this year, including the one against Anheuser-Busch. The second case, dismissed yesterday, was a civil suit charging several paper producers with conspiring to hold down prices they paid for pulp wood, Katzenbach said. He added he authorized dismissal of the cases upon recommendation of Asst. Atty. Gen. Donald F. Turner, head of the antitrust division, and members of his staff. who look at me, to maintain the best appearance I can.” How does she manage it? “Exercise. I swim every day of the year and do exercises in the water too. I have swimming pools at aU my homes — here; in Acapulco, Mexico City and Cuernavaca. “I eat sparingly but wisely. For lunch, I will have a steak and fresh vegetables. If I go to! a large dinner, I will eat a little bit of everything.” Admittedly, Miss Oberon leads the kind of life that most women would envy. Her hus-the Italian-born Mexican industrialist Bruno Pagliai, and they travel between their four houses, as well as to New York And Europe. They have two children, 0 and 7. Both Paglihi and Miss Oberon I collect art. Miss Oberon also collects jew-{ elry, and she is using her own in1 “Hotel”. - $350,000 worth. A| private detective protects the gems on the set. CECIL B.DtMILLE’S.i-.THETEH COMMANDMENTS heston brynner BAXTER R08MS0N DECARLO PNSET DEREK««£»££ feKKjft. Friday and Saturday 3:90 P.M. to 7:30 P.M. TEENAGERS UP T0 M Rile With tMs TEARS OLD 9U COUPON Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER Wttk Gayti Cant. 11 a.m. to 110.0. Iwtoyi OMttnooaa ttajB.toll*Jk EAGLE TUES - WED. - THURS. What _ ROMEO!! Jjjfc, What a RIOT!!! Columbia Pictures n *4* JERRYLEWIS JANETLEIGH iRUNNKIWE &wr X0 ALSO COtUMWA PiailRiS presents - GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN Afi'THONy QUINN .Mniomis ] TtKOMtfNAVARM • • • ALSO • • • *'• jt BEST SELLER! • • • "AUNBELT TOLiUE Sutonna PMntto I New Midla nd Chief • MIDLAND (AP)—Huntington Woods City Manager Fred L. lYockey, 42, will become city manager at Midland Sept. 6. He1 succeeds acting City Manager Jack Foster, who replaced AAAAAAAAAAfSEE PUVSSOUNOS • EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES AAAAAAAAAA D R 1 V E ■ l N fl MOM tucrate in-can nutirs O * 1 V E ■ 1 H IN CH HEATERS FI 5-4500 , Q Hit - 1 N IR-CM HEATHS 332-3200 DRIVE-IN MIRACLE MILE wmjAc BLUE* SKY Waterford's SOL TELEMAFM AT SO. UHE *0. 1 Mai W. WOOOWMO cniLMM unoin is ran 2935 01X11 HIGHWAY (U. S. 10) 1 SLOCK N. TEICGMM W. cniimen smei is ran 0f CMILDMli Sioii L|f20 F»MV0' ran. lam no. at AMFoer M. ■-MILE WEST 01 DIXIE MCWV. (U.L 10) [othim — FERUSM-JaVNE s HUSKY ’ MSNSFIELO Crusoe S 0 C°L°R'/% 4> never S -*»■ A had it g ioigood.'Z t.\ PSL •( HAL WALLIS- - S m QH5U£L,jil &iC heOuTHAGE ■mzzflrj TSf.l fHlNRY FONDA = ROBERT SHAW Z | ROBERT HTan i 5 IIOHFY 'IMF gfliwwfr „ liiNiiiiiiRRimiliiiiNiiiuiikT E—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY ifr 1966 Who says you cant afford a big refrigerator? This new Frigidaire Frost-Proof “16” has a gant 154-lb size freezer...and look at the price! DELIVERY and INSTALLATION! Our own courteous, trained experts deliver and install your new appliance accord-ins to factory specifications. WE HAVE THE WIDEST SELECTION OF FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES IN THIS AREA! ^wardofftlerit FACTORY TRAINED SERVICEMEN! Our high standards ef fast efficient sanies have earned us the Award of Merit—the most coveted award certificate a Frigidaire Dealer can tarn. EASY TERMS We specialize in terms to suit' you-payments are set up to fit your pocket book. No hidden chaws, OUR GOAL! We have built our business on satisfied, loyal customers. You must be satisfied or we'll make it good. NO Iffi, NO WALKING NO METERS! PARK IN OUR LOT me/ THERE IS A FRIGIDAIRE DEALER NEAR YOU! WAYNE GABERT 121 N. SAGINAW ST. FE 5-6189 WKC 108 N. SAGINAW ST. FE 3-7114 KEASEY ELECTRIC 4620 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-4601 Two great names ... FRIGIDAIRE and GENERAL MOTORS! Our appliances are backed by the integrity at these two great names. CLAYTON’S 2133 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 333-7052 CRUMP ELECTRIC 3465 AUBURN RD. UL 2-3000 GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP Of PONTIAC 51 W. HURON ST. FE 4-1555 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY U, 1966 ONE COLOR F—1 BOTH PONTIAC YANKEES STORE IN SAGINAW Mi PMTMGiM h It STOCK OF MERCHANDISE FROM OUR ROW CLOSED STORE AT WIEHEKE STORE |R SAGINAW! QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED ON MART ITEMS! NO IA0NET DOWN WITH MICHIGAN OAMMARD FLAN. BOYS 6 to 16 Pajamas aqc laadderti. Coal styles. Solid gbrwU* 8 7-Pc. Kitchen Tool Set 079 Stoinleee etaal tools. Gift baxad........Ni Mustang Electric Knife £99 Moke, all your slicing mkmmm........*........... W-------- Large Electric Frypan Q99 Tharmewora DuPont Teflon frypan. Cover and haad Cfstid .. REVERE STAINLESS Steel Cookware SAUCEPAN 10" SKILLET 2.19 4.M 2-QT. TEAKETTLE 2.91 8-CUP PERC 8.99 7” SKILLET 2.IT DOUBLE BOILER 5.99 Decorator Dresser Set 197 Moteliini brush and comb. Gift boxad. ......... ■ 3-pc. Stainl's Bowl Set 199 Handy 1-2-3 19* 3" Foam Kneeling Pad Handy for all houeohofd and garden jobs... Kromex Canister Set Chrome Lazy Susan qa^ HbndySrramn^ony |||| Hobnail Dinner Plates 1 Ac Lorga 1 ♦ J1094 SOUTH 4k K 96343 ¥85 ♦ S 2 4 6 32 Both vulnerable Wed North East South 14 Pass 1A Pass 2N.T. Pass 34 Pais 3 ♦ Pass 34 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—A J , low up bid of three spades then becomes a signoff and opener is required to pass. We have not studied the Wolff convention enough to be able either to approve it or to disapprove it. The opportunity for its use arises so infrequently that it will be some time before wwe have enough evidence to reach a decision about it. We do know that It Is (or use with e regular partner. It lasso complicated tbit If you and your partner aren’t completely i»min«f with ill ltg ramifications you should leave it strictly atom. In emy event If you do try it out please write and tell us your results. ¥-*.CHRDjMtt*W Workweek, Pay (fains Citkd in trooper Drive EAST LANSING (AF*)—State Police are hoping higher pay, a 40-hour work week and overtime pay will help attract new recruits for this fall’s training programs. Trooper pay now starts at $6,368 a year' and climb* in yearly installments to a top $8,836 in the seventh year. Weet -The biddi North nf hu 1 bit been: Sosi 1* Pass IV Pin IV Pass 34 Put 14 Pass 4 V Put . ? 1 Astrological Forecast 1 hm mSSIms. - ly SYDNEY OMARS For FrMey "The wts* men controls Ms deillny . . . Aitrslair betels Its way." ARIES (Mar. 21 • Apr. 1»»: Aseoclstes may bo Irritable. Effort to ba under- domestic errors. DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT It TOO LATH. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. tUiChinge ol pace Indicated. You could bo caMed upon to make importanl decision. Anelyis with care . . . avoid rush. Tendsncy towsrd sdf-defcep* lots exists Overcome standing sidetracks foolish ergejment before It cm Sort. Better to finish rather than start. Journey continue* to be emphasized. TAURUS (Apr. 20 • May 20): Money question requires fresh point of view. Not so good for speculating. Play cards close to chest ... wait tor additional tacts. Thtn your possessions are secure. „> GEMINI (May 21 • June 20):-Cycle continues high. You are et>le to make quick decisions. Key Is gaining cooperation of established Individuals. Steer deer e< gel-rich-quick schemes. CANCER (June *1 • July 22): Inner peace le essential ... now takes priority. If a negative port dominates, you make ethers end yourself unhappy. . Review recent post, future gods. Take time to analyze EACH AND EVERY AAOVE. LEO (July 12 • Aug. 229: Emphasis SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 • Dee. Sill Gain knowledge fe-om others Acted suggestions . . . especially relating to partnership end business proposals. Pressure Is being applied. Stand tall! 1 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan.' 19)1 Reach, 'beyond Immediate Indications. Realln you may not have complete story. Ond ] who comp to you for help may end w I aiding your effort*. Keep mind open. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. IS): Be| kind - but don't pertnit others to taka iadvantaga of you. Got your. sherel Many now Interpret sympathy is sign ol weakness. Ctioo*e your trlepds wlstly. Otherwlss expect troublo. PISCES (Feb. TV - Mar. 20)ii You may hove to etseclc legal aspects w current situation. ^o-operty could be Involved. Your chance for success depends on friends, wishes. Morey could enter picture!? the him at LI AAITATION, Don't over-spend. Keep desires In line with reality to ovoid disappointment. VIRGO (Aug. 23 • Sept. 22): Attend to ESSENTIAL matters early. Don'ljer; mit yourself to ha distracted by promises without practical bee. Ideas appear plentiful. CHOOSE THE BEST. p LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. >2) : Rounlw with friend pr relative well favored. Highlight peace, harmony. Try to correct eny on how solid %tfse foundation. Evenlno favors relaxation. ★ -2 ★ 1P FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY . . . you era attracted to Una things In Ilia ... but ortwn you wall until rial opportunity ha* paassed. ■Ar -2r ♦ GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cyela high lor GEMINI. CANCER, LEO. Spaclal word to TAURUS: Impulsive move could Iprovi costly. Watt l (Copyright 19*4# Ganersl Feeturts Cera.) Hike in Value of Prep Honors | Recommended LANSING (AP) — The $l| limit on awards to high school athletes would be boosted to $51 under a proposal approved Wednesday by the State Board ofj Education. * * * If the rules change becomes final after public hearings, it -would go into effect Sept. 1, 1967. The Representative Council of the Michigan High School Athletic Association recommended the higher limit. The $3 limit has been in effect since! 1954. .* *. ★ | The board also" approved a prnpnspH mlfts change that would allow junior high school ninth graders the same privileges of sports competition asi ninth graders attending four • year senior high schools. J,, Minyteman Missile Is Destroyed in Flight VANDENrfERG AFB, Calif I' (UPI)-A Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missile was destroyed by a ran g e safety) officer yesterday seconds after it was launched on a 5,000-mile test flight across the Pacific] Ocean. , An Air Force spokesman said the missile "developed a mal-| function and ms destroyed." Cause of the malfunction was not immediately determined. Yout South, hold: ,*A2 4PKJI4 44I3 4A14SS Wlxat do you do? A-----Pan. You aula sour when jou..... L for na, TODAYS QUESTION Inst-oad of bidding four hearts your partner bids tour ipedes over srour three spades. Whmt. do you doT r*ERRY'S WOill.D “Bdr. Goldwater says if he’d have known you were going to bomb North Viet Nip, he’d have voted for HIMSELF! ” BOARDING HOl/SE AF7?R ALL THE JOBS ARE FILLED AMD THEBES AJ0IHIW6 LEFTR)K>».WHATS THE By Howie Schneider ^the seoowd A FUMCTIOKJ, MR. 1 l SMART lAOmi;.../ .f /rid iwestcwb"' (THE INCOME WRE*/ llVRWS OFALLTte / V VUISeGUYSf^/ V fs? Marriage Licenses | Christopher C. Brown, 17* Earlemoor and UIHen J. Oyer, IN Elm David S. Harter, Walled Lake and ■ Dorothy 6. Guerin, Walled Lake John C. McCimy, Birmingham and Susan R. Campbell. Rio Gtashpe. Texes _. William R. Bartley Jr. ™' Donna R. Haven, Royal Osk ^Laon^ltvel, Utfce one irn mghnm 1, ■ A jv 1 Ronald T. Glpwscke, Union La Beverly J. Jarrell, XrtitA _ Peter R. Meekle. 332* Pont,* •M Linda L. Venetian 3980 Highland ■arena t. Willielmon, Oxtoyd Clarence E. Burmelsier, Cess Lake and Maxine M. Rogers, Sariead Robert W. look, 23 Rlverbank Alice L. Mayes. <1 West Rundetf Myron J. Forslund, Id loutte . Lillian D. Gueyls, M Ftsiaraa Clark W Christie, Reyal Oak i *yoliartJi.BTempjs. ^cheater and Wa-1 trjdin*'0°XLF*jl?l*l*SVb. Oakland r%m C. Mtdgtie (MnnnpiBfii THURSDAY, JULY 14, I960 ‘ F—8 Collision Puts Kids' Camp Great for 1 Death Notices :i THB 1854 CIVIL RIOHTI x! X-LAW PROHIBITS, WITN« rsiTsiN oxciPTioMt. Help Wwtod kWe A ELECTRONIC TICHNICIAN Train**, 21-2*. hsg. Hoc. or m*eh. Help Wetoid IMe HELPIR WANTED /Oft SMALL gtoto shoo. 351-412P evening. _ 3 in Hospital Two persona are in gtxxjcoo-flitton and one is in fair condition today in St. Joseph Mercy Hf^ltal, wl^h injuries suffered in a two car collision la White Lake Tbwnshlp yester-Jay. According to police, Rita ■ Klfmek, IS, of Susquehanna, Pa., suffered a fractured pelvis when the car in whkh she was riding was struck broadside by a car driven by William Richards, of ISIS Jack-son in Highland Township. Stanley Domalik, 22, of 112 Cranbpurne, Commerce Township, who was the driver, of the struck car, received scalp lacerations and a fractured neck. Domalik and his wife, Barbara, 20, are reported in good condition. Township firemen used hydraulic jacks to release Miss Klimek from the car in which she had been pinned by the crash. The truth of the matter is that most Modem parents would gladly hold up a bank, if necessary, to raise the funds to send their kids into summer* exile. Anything to get them out of sight and hearing for a while. ______ Of course, the first night Richards received minor in-1 re aw*y 8 i® * bit hard on juries, police said. ' 'mother. The house is so silent' The accident occured at 11:30! without the thunder of little! a.m. on Brookfield near Lake, °°ves. Grove in White Lake Township. L !f miss my babies!” she By HAL BOYLE \ 'the time of thjir lives. Peace,) Then - the relapse They NEW YORK (AP) —God bless! it’s wonderful. .. \ I whoop and holler, tease the' cat, | summer camp! ' * 4 * hog rite'telephone, turn on the' ntey're good for, the kids, but! No hideous ropk ‘n* roll music they are even better {for the parents. One of the major hypocri-i sies of our time' Is the idea that parents deserve credit for the financial sacrifice they make send their children to summer camp for two weeks or A month. BOYLE blares from the phonograph. Cobwebs begin to gather on the unused telephone. Mother no longer has to pick up scattered clothing from the floor. Dad can to any television program he wants—or even turn the darned thing off entirely. They can go to the movies without having to pay a teen-age baby sitter the down payment on her college education. The trouble with summer camps—from the parents’ viewpoint—to that they end all too soon. Back flock the released litle prisoners, chastened, freckled, mosquito-chewed.- phonograph and turn -up the television set They are back .to normal. Home again becomes the parental jail. ' sheldon; j. _|. 70 Marlva; ape 491 belovoc of-Claude R. Sheldon; deer r el,Mia. Alvin Townsend end Sheldon;, dear sitter el Mrs. phlne McGuire and Kenneth I Use survived by lour proi dren. Funeral service will b Saturday, July IS el II a. Doneljon-Johns - Funeral Herr ,Cemetery. Mr*. Shtlden w T had to borrow the money, but it’s worth it,” they say smugly. “The kids really need the fresh air and sunshine.lt * * . . does wonders for them.” -are so relieved to be home again they break intoj tears. Their pledges of eternal Death .Notices BRANNAN, JULY 12. ISM, EDWIN G.. law Ora Roadt Oxford) age 57; gtoM and Richard Brennan; deer brother R „„ Arthur (Name) Law, Mrs. Jack < Mollyt While, Mrs. Lala Wade, Arthur and Dolph Brannon. Mason-.......to - Friday, Ic * **r\__ . July H, at | p.m. at the Bossardet ■Pto, Oxford. Funeral to held Saturday, July it the funeral home, will lie In state at , GERALD DERRY, JULY 13, . A- 3177 Carolina, ___| •d* 50; beloved husbend of Gladys Derry, beloved son ot Mr*. Ruby Mill*; deer tether et Joanne, Noel good behavior last for about golden hours during which they act like angels. Trio Quizzed in Gas Theft Heights. Inti il Home, tent In VI . Derry Herold R. Auburn Chapel wails. Total mileage of the interstate . Iffi* me too, highway network has reached | cheerfully mixing them 19,173 or 47 per cent of the pro-!0*** posed 41,000 mile system set fori But, by the third day, they a 1972 deadline. I openly admit they are having Three Orion Township youths, lie. father !ere caPtured by Waterford I ’Township police this morning after five gallons of gasoline were siphoned from two darsj on N. Lake Angeius Drive. geeted visiting hours 3 to S p.m. GALPIN, JULY 12, ISM. PAUUNl. BO Virginia; age 54; beloved wife of Edwerd Golpin; deer mother of Mrs. Phyllis Morse, Mr*. Wilma VanDusen, Mrs. Ada MCCIaln. Per GOSSETT, JULY 12, ISM, JOSEPHINE M„ 4421 Parnell, Waterford beloved wife IWrks, july “ijnt**,HsSie -M.. 71 $. Tasmania; aga 52; beloved wIN of Troy Sparks; dear officiating, offer which Mrs. Sparks will bt taken to the Hearne Fu-nsrll Home In Stanton, Kentucky, Nr service and burlel. Mrs. Spark* will II* In at*N ot th* D. E. Pur-, slay Funeral Hojne. (Suggested visiting, hour* S:30 s.m. to S:30 VINCENT, JULY 12, ISiB,~ JACK, 2505 Adams Rood, Avon Twp.; aga 41; beloved husband of Shirley - Vincent) beloved son ot Mrs. Herman Vincent; dear father of Phillip and Kirk Vincent; dear brother of Mrs, Ursula Wheeler. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 15. et 11 a.m. pt th* Herald R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial In Kingston, Mlehi- Ar. Vincent (Suggested Patrolman Robert Reynolds nabbed the youths after he si them running to their car. A gasoline container and hose were found in the youths’ car. Police had been notified by Melvin Kimmer of 2925 N. I-alcp Angeius, one of the victims. • * ★ * Two of the youths were 16-Iyear-old juveniles. The other,! I aged 17, was released pending! the signing of a complaint. d -Gossett, be held Friday, July IS. H a. at the Coate Funeral Drayton Plains, Interment '-"i • Cemetery, Belleville, VOSS, JULY 12. 1*54, MARY H„ 4I0S Ketthdale. Bloomfield Hills; »g« 50; beloved wife of Berkeley Voss; dear mother of Mr*. Gerald M. (Doris) Miller; dear sister of Parrish, Mrs. Edith Kramer, Chester C.i Elton and Stanley Bluhm; also survived by two orandchll- Announcements 3 ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. offICi, 7.8 Rlkec: Building, branch of Detrolt'e well Pontiac Community.' GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT /NO HARASSMENT. i&CIRTA ^PlSCRIbinni IWJV , *■”?.; ,X: causb OF MXrjMMCB XlSOME OCCUPATIONS ARC S considirio aaore at-»TRACT tvl T9 PBRBONl .« OP ONE « THAN THB X; :■ other, ADV«RTISI-S MINTS AN! - PLACID 55 UNDER THE MALI OR SS FEMALE COLUMN* FOR K; CONVENIENCE OP READ- X; X: IRS. SUCH LIBTINM ARE X-X; NOT INTENDED TO IX- ;X » CLUDI PERSONS OP -X :X either sex. Help Wotitod Male i t PULL'time REAL ESTATE I SALESMEN. Won located office, plenty of leads and floor time, earnings unlimited tor th* Ambitious salesman. Cell Mr. Clark, $606 r MONTHLY GUARANTEED SALARY PLUS BONUS AND CO, CAR For Right Man Steady year around work. No strikes or layoffs. Must be neat. W* train. Personal interview only. Coll 574-2133 4 P.m-7 p.m. iTi OPENING FOR EXPERi-enced reel '■stale Salesmen, extra benefits tor rignt person. All inquiries confident's Contact Warren stout, 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd, Pontiac, Michigan Member Multi- pie Listing Service _ ASSISTANT PARTS MANAGER, good opportunity tor experienced parts men PE 3-7102. AUTO MECHANICS Become ^o^speclalltMl ^VW me-, VW' Dealer, 1755 PS. Telegraph, A PART TIME JOB ^ hours per ^evenings. Call 574-2233, $200 PER MONTH AUTO SERVICE MANAGER, ME-ebonies mechanics nelpers. Keego Pontiac Sales and Service, Keego ■ . Harbor.__, ____.________", Bartender, evenings '* t i l closing. Holiday Inn., 1001 S. Telegraph. Pleas* contact Mr. Frank Bronson, , ■ BARBER REPLACE RETIRING .............Elliabe IHiMi* Sk ■ami highly But pdf essential, .A steady employment and ovor- M.,C. MFG., CO.-LAKE ORION* MY 2-27H An Equal Opportunity Employer iXPERlENCELt RIAL SSI AT N 151 Martin aireer, Birmingham. _ EXPERIENCED BARTENDER FOR private club, state age, marital . Send resume It GOOD OPPORTUNITY Hydramatic Man Who Knows His Business I. D. GRINDER HAND Aviation Tool B Gauge Co. 34410 Ttbgraah-SowmotoM , SL- 6-5466 IN S U RANCE iNSPpCTOR, ford-union Lake oroa, algo ton-Whllmore Lake araa. . ton-Lakt OrlemOrtonvIlla an Irtjjn- JANITOR for office building. Want oble-bodled man, In goad health, who Is on Social Security but tired of doing nothing. Job pay* limit you can -earn under So c I a I Security which Is $175 par month. Greater fe. 4-5215 lor sppolntment. KENNETH 6. HEMPSTEAD 155 Elizabeth Lake Road, Pontlec JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT, RECENT business school graduate to work with cost system and Inventory control. Diversified duties with liberal benefits. Coll Mr. Zeccardelli, 334-2588. An equal opportunity em- LIGHT HAULING, PAINTING~ ■.. V " Reas. 338-3570 LOTMAK Good steady man tor very active’1’' “I benefits indud- ion and^ year OUTSTANDING — Community National Bank employe Mrs. R. Sanford Craft Jr. of 94 Riviera has been honored as the outstanding savings bondsalesperson in Michigan. She is receiving a certificate from Delmar Cote, Michigan U.S. Savings Bond director. Mrs. Craft joined the bank in 1933 and has been handling savings bonds since Dec. 14, 1941. In that period, she sold 4,784,1W bonds worth $212 million. Improvement Group Sets Festival Plans COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -| The Oakley Park Improvement Association has completed plans for their 25th anniversary festl- ( The event is slated , for Sun-'day, July 31, beginning at 12:30 p.m. at Oakley Park Beach on the south aide of Commerce Lake. The public is invited to participate in all festival activi- LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION help, 552-1385. _ LARGE VOLUME ST AN b AR D”Oi L Service Center has openings tor ■ driveway salesmen^ and gasoline Sundays oft and fringe benefits. Coll Birmingham. M17-0700. _ _ LIFE GUARD, RED CROSS QUAL- ified. EM 3-2881, 4 pm._ MACHINE REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE MAN FOR DAY SHIFT OR MAN WHO FEELS HE IS QUALIFIED AND WILLING TO LEARN. FRINGE BENEFITS AND TOP WAGES. ROCHESTER MFG. ____CO. ROCHESTER,_MtCH. "MACHINISTS Job shop esp. Oakland - Machine. 4865 W. Huron. (M-S*)._____ MACHINIST WITH MILL,. LATHE ound |ob, top rates, working hour week. Fisher Corp., 1435 . Maple Rd. Troy, Michigan. , 14 OVER 30 FOR FACTORY LA-ir |ob. Phono 335-1282 between and 11 a.m. lor Intenrlew._ 0 DELIVER, INSTALL AND Millwrights Electricians ( Pips Fitters Mointtnonce Welders Painters & Glaziers Dis Makers Toolmakers Pattern Makers Machine Repair Inspector—Tool 8s Dio General Electric's amazing new IW’oven! C ...electrically! FBAYEIj^^^ 589 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0526 Set Controls to "ClMn'\..Latch The Oven Door... Set The Timor! That’s All You Do! P-7 goes le wofk ,., i?4-3-hogrs your oven is cleaned completely, electrically! Baked-on grease and grime vanish, leaving your oven clean as new, even in ridges, between coils! Saves hours of messy, tedious oven-cieaning! PLUS: 3-in-l Sensi-Temp® Unit—makes pots and pans cook like automatic utensils • Built-in Styling • Dark Copper-tone, Mix-or-Match Colors, or White. FREE PROMPT DELIVERY BUDGET TERMS 36 MONTHS TO PAY Mill Lk. Rd-, LOU* Orton. PE 1 3-8338.________; LOST; BROWN AND WHITE | English Pointor vicinity of Huron . Gordon* - PE 2-0848. LOST: MAN'S 2S YEAR GM EN-grovod writtwatch, Waterford area, keepsake. Reword. OR M70B. ' Ltot: M.UE PARAKECt. VtfiW* ^ xsxi.fr*• LOST: FAMILY OOP. WAT! E D pointer. Short whit* hood, 2 block spots ot tall, answers to nor Rewwd. 524-2074. AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN 21 TO 34 WITH MECHANICAL DRAFTING EXPERIENCE FOR DETAILING AND MINOR LAYOUTS. SEND RESUME OR APPLY TO C0NDEC0 AUTOMATION INC, 25820 NOVI RD., NOVI, MICHIGAN. ATTENTION: MR. D- KAPS0N. 6ruo, stock or tobacco clerk, lull or part tiina, experience not necessary’ but desirable. Full fringe benefits.' Top wages lor top men. Perry Pharmacy. 40* E. Blvd. Pt 3-7152. ir'n With n •art and ' h.. Interview call 525- ClMNLY MAN ' to*- CiMt': D$-livery end general work around procery store. AAsiot have neat so- Sunday0 'or^ evening work. Apply Birmingham Community Market, ■“ “ *1 Mho JRd- Blrwtlhghpm. Pontiac Motor Division Has Immediate Openings foK Learner, Det^ilers-Body Drafting Must b« high school graduate with coursas irt Math and Drafting and have a high mechanical aptitude. Experience desired. Excellent Opportunity for Advancement Apply or send resume along* with salary requirements to: Pontiac K/Iotor Division Salaried Personnel Dipt. Glenwood Ave. at Montcalm ' Pontiac, Michigan or CALL: 332-8111, ext. 585 or 644 „ AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER * \ ' F—4 < THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 19M MEN TOR BTOO* ^ r .jmwmmui m+ M waft wa lOUTROARD MCCHANIC. IXW! PWTiR WANTEO. JAN I ■ r css IT motorcycle mechanic, full] IfCIMlUb FULL 4-9317 ■IIBINWI. i smw Km. im. h csllon entf chtnci lor JMfM Strsst, My»T .fay MMljblj. JfppivTn 1 ““ M T7S west Huron, Pon-of Elisabeth Cm Rd. NEW CAR SALESMAN 6'NllL I RSAL+V HAI OTONINK tor sxptrtonebd salesman. ---- pect IN* him *• aurora vlous records y- your too t»nt|el 1$ unlimited. Cl ProkscfL HIM manager I ma*I Interview. Ray O'NwII, Realtor Pontiac Alreert. *^arttimr !v *2.50 per hr., car nacattary. Mull be over II. Contact Mr. Bryan tor. tntoryiew, 0R34665._________ POLICfc OFFICER. CXPERlENCID.I ?r, "" day ahHt-enly. Attreetlvs Ml- “ Ideal working condition*, Blus ( PROCESS ENGINEER TOOL DESIGNER AND DETAILER SERVICE (TAT ION ATTENDANT*,! ItHBI. experienced, dependable, full lime, A|R(i 0|T~WOmEH TO ASSIST Mfi, HR *c-“ "!fto!i components. valusd'hlghty aaaarwldl. ny. meei wonting conomoni. eras __________ __________ Se?» SIS!*!"* PORTER WANTED. PART TIME. Robert Hall Clothes. MO N. Saginaw. Apply In peraon. »:3fr*iJ0 Electro * Mechanical Technician Trainee Detroit Metropolitan Area SALARY OPEN Age 21*35' Major office equipment company needs several train* ms, Expenses paid while in training. Company Car Plan Tuition Aid Plan Commission Pension Plan Paid Vacation GROUP LIFE AND MEDICAL INSURANCE Phone 567-2555 Mr. Granet or Mr. Ellis an tqual opportunity employer C. MF6. CO. LAKI ORION MY 2-2711 Equal Opportunity Employer POT WASHER, KITCHEN CLEAN- person. Orchard $ SALESMAN WANTED. STEADY ' In Pent '---- _ .-r- lap* m___ . Poultry Market, 377 S. Sagl- MhVICI STATloR ATfENDANT i________ HwRp Wwted Fee—to FULL TIME RBGKTERBO NURSE tor pediatricians office. Call £ Help Waited M. «K cSsiwe cel___ ________ ___ lifCRETARY - BOOKKEEPER .„ Board ol Education gfflc*. edi tor Mr. Muiidv. ■ h s Aaoouci'* needs I personnel. aSSBS3 B SALESMAN. MEN'S wIaR~RETAIL shop. Fall lime. parmanont, straight salary. Must be person-abto, ralloblo, and like ~ Ml ANN. W-dRFACE wUNDIR. STEADY experience necessary wSII train,1* HOUR} could uoe expectant mothers, or lljRHy iMdfripaad, salary an" bonus apply 14W E Huron Rm. ORIL'L COOK - DAYS, DOBSKY' Sales Help, Mok FamaU I A DAY, I DAY* - Union Lake. EM 3-»l12. man, working a hour week. Top ratal. Ftohar Corp. 1*23 w. Maple Rd„ Troy, Mich. «Ial estate part tim*. beverage - ---- ---------WATERFORD DRIVE- commission program^ 1520 AlrportRd. C VON REALTY Ooorgp Vonderharr, Rftr. .... too Mall l MUM_________ Eye*. OR MOM ROUTE SALESMAN Excellent nwpoi liinlli tor man 1 P re Par man w RETIRED? LOOKING F "— work? Church i i handymen, jo I HOUSEKEEPERS, COOKS, 0>A, WORKERS, MAIDS, CLEANING WOMEN. Part end full-time. Tea My. benefit*, tree uniforms and tranaaartafton. CALL ARTHUR TREACHER, ***4700. Girl's erlvatol ____________ ~ L___HOUSEKEEPER, FULL CHARGE - FOR Widowed, working mother. Mu*l “=s'- '- 5VI day*, S45 start. HI- tr t p.m. 3254039. ~~ 'I INTERESTING WORK. WOMAN 1 over tl tor TV rentals lr 1—‘ hospital. Sit. and Sun. Hour Uniterm* furnished. Send to Pontiac Pres* Bek No. 71 KEY PUNCH OPERATOR, experience « tut no*, a FULL-TIME REAL ESTATE SALES-—I. Experienced preferred and rad homea. Top Ion peM. Phone Mr. V.__ tor personal IntorvTOw. WE pi rn. ear. era* tfkly. Cer nec Ing. Reply to Pi 0. *3. Applicant YOUNG MAN HIGH SCHOOL AGE Ml drivers license tor summer :. Call FE 5-2373 betwer~ M BxaarlBSKB, pply Pdrao-imunlty Cell Bloomfield K Dept., Oakland Community 3*80 opdyke.— 04— <47-4304.__________________ CITCHEN HELP, FULL T evening work# 5171 Dixie -■ IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR AP- 5 | PRENTICE TO LEARN TRADE — Real Estate Trainees «*.N auto., screw machine SALES PERSONNEL NEEDED I Immediate placement due TO our large expansion program, earn SMS per month. Continual training plln, opportunity for rapid awancomonf. Min and women, •tilling Mtory, NS per week. Call Mr. Korby at *74-03*3, tan- YORK 4>1S Otxto Hwy., Drayton Instructions-Schools LEARN SHOE REPAIR OR ELEC-trie thtvcr repair. 131 W. Fourth* Royal Oak. . Work Wanted Malt 11 WiRted Real Estate 1 TO 50 _.... contracts'. Wy WAITING, CALL NOW. J. J. Jolt, Realty PB SAGS " Rent Humes, UpfaflilMd 40 Sale SMALL HOUSE OFF OAKLAND (hat Ufa CdWEfEI 41 COTTAGE ON LAKE ERIE, NEAR Fobite Fetoe. PE 5-SM0._______ COTTAGE FOR RENT Lewistort, Michigan \' Modem SNdmem cottegg to • v*c*I toners peredlM. *51 ^ Tr“1- Phone *74-0*54 LAKE FRONT COTTAGE. S BBD- mr *" weekly. OR 3-7227. MODERN COTTAGk, NEAR A ble River, HI weekly. At ENT RY WEEK OR I furnished, 1 • bedroom Lib* Orton. NUMB., SLEEPS l Woodstock Rd. FE! KRSS. |_ L^Jw'ktoeN wJd,- ] BEDROOM VAl' - LmL. 'Hi both*. Living room, dining ream, Family roam. Plreplece- Ldrge fenced tof. $21,7«). Union Lake area. 3*3-47*1. APARTMENT HOUSE. Ill IlM. Bast cosh Offer, write Rober# Young, STM Mkifon, FenHac. BEDROOM 2-STORY HOME, IVb Etfoto. PB BEDROOM ERICK RAN6h, IVb cer gertge otteched plus breete-wey, fireplace, private lake prlv-Itoge*. ill,too. Call owner — IS*. 3 BEDROOMS, RASEMEtj^-lftU, EUYfck N.HDS A 3 tqPRC^ij1 clean rodm for A lady. _____________ TffSpment, can ^«Y J|P j jLe(p|N0 r60MS. CLEAN AND D^r'Cp^p3uShI]u^ t ST^fftS4” - reasonable. FE *35m, cell aff. «; . REP. FRUSHOUR A STRUBLE ■ REAL tSTAtE 3*3 Oakland Ave. FAMILY MUST FIND A HOME IN INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP BEFORE JULY 13. 3 OR 3 BDDROOMS, CAN PAY UP TO S14.0W, CALL THEIR AGENT, YORK, OR d6uRli occupancy, iu a FOR EUSINIIS OR PROFESSION- LADIES. ‘NICE ROOM NEAR GEN-' HosplHI. FE 14051, lake Orion, sleeping rooms. pel*d, tv, totaphon*, segimore Molel. 7*f j ~ NICE ROOM, LAKE OAKLAND. Guar. Training Salary you are between 25-45, have sui OPERATOR. NOW STARTING Afternoon shift. EM 9-4121 fori cHHont* oarages or small |obt. OUR NEW INCENTIVE BONUS* apSimmenl - PIsSlffT 1“ PLANRACALLAMR MEETNZ^EUt!|-PNS, full AND PART TIME. A-l CARPENTER, ADDITIONS ANd| CLAWSON JU t-1341 POR AN ap. top wages. 334-W45.__________I «moll Ibbe. IWW*. / , i POINTMENT. ___________AAAID OVER 35, 7» SOUTH WOOD-'ALUMINUM HOUSES AND TRAIL-1 suburban — very sharp 3-bedroom ranch, attached 3 cer goroe*> lot 15x154', ppvtd streets, excellent neighborhood, newly decorated, vacant .» Price *14.000, >3,000 144 Dixie Highway OR AIM AFTER 5, OR 34MS5. FE 44141 OR 3-2301____________ NICE LARGE ROOM WITH OR j without kitchen prlv, 330-0357. i1 | PRIVATE ,home; REFINED MAN only, no drinker*. FE 3-410B. i . 304x100', 19500 on land contract. FLATTLEY REALTY *30 COMMERCE ___________3*34* 4COM AND OR BOARD. 135Vi 0 yearly. For confidential In-w call Bob Devi* or Dick t -Bt Vel-u-Way Real Estate. Help Wanted Female 1-3 BOOKKEEPERS. ACCC >< payable, accounts receivi payroll. Experienced only. 30 LADIES — .......a new prograi Fuller Bruah Co. - OR ragr—11 Interview. A BEAUTY OPERATOR, i^AlRl enced, full or part time. Appli Imperial Beauty Salon. FE 4-3571 Discount Prices 7 MAtURB WOMAN TO WORK PART #1 time in photofertphlc studio* no sx-l T « ,yrltwc> necessary. 335-0322. i. JJ Ml DOLE AGED WOMAN FOR - Sf.{4 °.h ceptionisl. Typing essential. Br-tween Wed and Frr morn, 9:30 to Jgjl‘1 13 noon. 131 N. Saginaw, Pontiac. MODERN NURSING HOME WITH 130 bed addition in need of LFN Head Nurses and RN Supervisors •nd Instructor—Contact Seminole Hills Nursing Home at 33B-7154. end exterior painting. Unwanted articles picked i GENERAL MOTORS. EXECUTIVE, TRANSFERRING FROM FLINT, NEEDS A 3- CWRKSTON°OR AREA _ 1 '^ktoTO Avt-'Wi A4«S4~~ _ | CALL HIS AGENT, YORK. j SLEEPING ROOM, WITH HOME OR 44363. prl»lleg*s, No drinkers, close to! LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC n'ffm'llCT* bU*’ <3°l ■ Immediate closing. REAL valus’ P-m- JJTW-— -------------------I REALTY, 5354575. ir garage, large lot, paved street NEAT APPEARING WOMAN I kitchen end grill wprk. Je Drlve-ln. 33 W, Montcalm. ODD JOBS AND LIGHT HAULING. 473-334I.___________________ PATCH PASTBRING, ALL KINDS. “ ‘tovsrsToR >.1541. . AiumiRvm Bldg, f Dressmaking, Tailoring I ALUMINUM GUTTERS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE . eavestroughlng service. Free tstl-mates. I73-I8I*_________ ■ ' Electrical Services Architectural Drewiey PLANS DRAWN. I ESTIMATES bet. 54 p. Guaranteed delivery, *35-0133. ATTENTION MOTHERS! EVENINGS FREE? Sell Toys Aug. to Dec, for — THE PLAYHOUSE CO. 20 ptt cent commission. Company supplies. No delivering, I beck orders or subetltutM. H perience necessary. Training Ul 2 5171 or FE 3-7377._____ BABY SITTER* 1 CHILD* VICINITYl PontiK Press Box Sf. of Osklend end Montcalm or live goi iablE LADY FOR In nnH «har* txpwsts. '"A-'UhI*J. .P.OR Work Wanted Ftmele MAN WITH 115,000 IS LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE WATERFORD AREA, CALL HIS AGENT. York, OR 4-03*3. NEEDED, NEAT *nd garage. Close-In. ronii. Mrs. MM, Ray O'Neil, Realtor BEDROOM i basement 115,000 price I DAY IRONING SERVICE. REF.1 WE AND PERMANENT Maxine McCOWin. FE 5-1471. varied hours, some week- i 16-YEAR-OLD GIRL WILL BABY holidays. Pay while learn-l sit In her home tor r or 2 children in person. Write Pontiac1 4 hours e day. Waterford area, i Answering Service. IS *73-03*2, ___ A-iJR_qNJNG, IN MY HOME, REP.I - DAY WORK OR| - weekly, own irsns. 335-4017. ._ ' I IRONINGS WANTED, WEBSTER-1 ......... AREA. it.lL. DOWN. GOOD CREDIT, CALL THEIR AGENT AT RETIREE WANTS 3 BEDROOM WITH LARGE LOT. CLARKSTON AREA, ALL CASH. CALL HIS AGENT AT 474-1*40, York Rlty. WANTED 3 BEDROOM WHITE wbMAN HAS' ROOM POR lady In Auburn Height* area. Kltch-«n prlv. Call «tt*r I “Tto AT ELIZABETH LAKE 3 bedroom, IVb story home with loncod yard and garoga. Only l block from park gate. *14,500. To see call *51-0503. SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE BEAUtlFUL COUNTRY ESTATE -----——vi»c Airport. 4b*dro»m approx. 5 acres. Lots pt GENTLEMEN. EXCELLENT FOOD IM. call PPOMP >r «t3.303).Gaylerd,»li , FE 2-725* BOGIE LAKE FRONT Y OWNER — » BEDROOM ERICK ■ABY SITTER WANTED. MATURE BABY SITTER FOR NEGRO HOME, 3 children. Some light ‘ 338-0703. BROWNIES HARDWARE anuadv cai b« uinuxu FLOOR SANDERS — POLISHERS B*!?-6-".Y-?A.l:E.?.-y?*&*-N WALL PAPER STEAMERS »x»*rlence In Idna cake* IU0 CLEANER — POWER Si S3 Jaslyn Opwn Sun. FE * Aiplull Paving A-1 NEW, RERC —- Coll Jack. Sava BASEMENTS AND BULL nn*iMfi,l °8 **390 BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN II OR d welcome. FE 4-3753, I! FE 5-7350.___ LADY NEEDS IRONINGS. 334-3570. txp. Must be proficient I :g Services-Supplies 13. MODERNIZATION AND ALTERA-. E. J. Anding Building Co. Eileen Dr., Bloomfield Httle.l - WAITING FOR THAT NEW HOUSE? Kitchenette cottages, Sandy Beach, sleeps 4. *55 weekly, Pontiac Lake Motel, 133 Highland Rd. (M5»). Rent Sttres 46 I LIKE NEW 23x50, AIR CONDI- dictating equipment. Call 3354135. SECRETARY HELP: , _______ [eel aetaf .ettdj personalized homes gpH _____ _____ FE 8-330t . FE S-195B 54446. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0350 OR EVENINGS Ina cakes and ro ys oniy, run time, no avenlr Sun. Anderson Bakery, 124 ii SECRETARY - REAL ESTATE OF-. I lice, kibwledae of aeneral office DEBT AID, i experience! —------- l necessary. Lo-j procedure. Real e lit Advisors 16-A niRIKBR BLDG e estimate*. OR 4-053*. ASPHALT CEMENT PAVING SMlctotlllB. FE 2-B7S7.__________________________________ “ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. [BULL OOZING. BACKHI ‘lurry! Hwryl 1 excavating, landscaping, light — “»aler service, baeament FE *-2555 evenings. iCLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, 33MHI ^isursnce and own. 6734337. HOT TAR ROOFING WORK, | Robert Prlca Roasting, FE 4-103* PARKING LOTS.hTENNIS COURTS, E. George BULLDOZING; WATER, GAS LINES! and sprinkler system*. ------— FE 544441- ..... ^7ill. M.Yieci' -■■—’lv * F CONSTRUCTION, GENERAL SEPTIC A.,.. excavating, basements, sewers, ce- tlsid w QUALITY ASPHALT SEAL COAT, men* work, water services and------------L“ in* Serv. Driveways, perking tots, cleanups. 473-74** Septic Tank Bldg. I. DRAIN AND g. *734524. fAG ASPHALT PAVING ______ FE 5-1S73 Walt seiber asphalt paving, FtnciRg Tree Trimming Service Brick l Block Service Floor Sgudiag -1 lakes -Tree Co., Trimming Stump and Trea Removals un *73-2134 _________________*25-1414 BOOKKEEPER, (M54). experience! ■I _ jf position. Fer-6129 High lane* M1 Dressmoking l Tailoring 17 | Mr. McDonald* Ml 6-1157 or Ml, —- <4451._____________________;____ I oressmakinq, tailoring and SECRETARY FOR GENERAL OF- sllerallons. Mrs. * J-‘ —----------------- lice work for general building — Heights arse. Call from 4 ‘or appointment. 852-1703. n Landscaping 18-A L MERION BLUE SOD, DELIV- - SHORT ORDER COOK FOR EVE-| ■ bi ----.... j.,j ,m> exnnrlancedj sery. 3324441, MA *427». L^- CMvklattMrtdlwd^ YORK EXPANDING COMPANY NEEDS PROPERTY NOW IN DRAYTON PLAINS. WATERFORD, AND SURROUNDING AREAS, PROMPT, NO OBLIGATION APPRAISERS. WE BUY OUTRIGHT, NO PEES, NO WAITING. FOR FURTHER OE. TAILS OF OUR UNIQUE GUARANTEED SALES PLAN CALL. OR 4-0363 Xent Office Syce SPACE IN MODERN COMMUNITY llec, plenty of traffic, paved R Ina. Only 1140 per month. Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE S4l*S 1200 SQUARE FEET OF OFFICE - M CASHIER - I SPIEGEL'S HOSTESS I M1**1*^1** Tld's of Bloomfield Hill* hai on experiencf preferred.' but^K>t opening tor a cashier on the morn ! Bre,*rr*°- DUT noT ing shift also a hostel time. Paid vacation, too. Apply In pprson. TED'S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE CASH I E R, CAR DEALERSHIP,I flee" "Lovely working"'conditions. mutt be Able to typ®# 86# Mr. Saltry afiatg j-------lid— *-*■ fi— Dcrkacz, ISS S. Rochester Rd..1 --- Rot better Rochester •CASHIER s commissior EXPERIENCED NCR permanent employment^ ( BnikBof ModeniizBtion I CAR GARAGES, 2O'X20', 4175. WE JOHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYING.| R„ '"bto SioSS ere local builders and build any* Sand ina end (inishlna. aatM7s I -”Monap'e-________________ / site. Celnent work. Free estimates., , / Pedy-Bullt Gerapa Co. OR 3-5*11. j old Fully Insured. 343-H47. I POSE JEWELERS TREE TRIMMING ANO REMOVAL.jCLEANING WOMAN, FULL dmi||ra d*y work, 5171 Dixie Hwy., Bd., Jereme. Ceil after *7 FE 3-7SM. M . TYPISf-RECEPTIONIST' -Full time for CPA office, i J have statistical typing experl, fir" Mr. Dooling at Allen A Rob-CPAs, Rochester. *51-859*. WAITRESSES WANTED FOR DAY Drlve-ln, Comer of Opdyke 1------------------- .. , . | and Pontiac Rds.____________- EXPERT! FAINTING [WAITRESS WITH SOME «»M ' Pitting- OB MM-flME, work experience. No Sundays or OAKLAND PAINTING, Dray- holidays. Mini! Lunch, e E. F- ------ Moving and Tracking AA MOVING Cartful, enclosed law rates, ties i 2-39S9 or «3»-35lt._______ BOB'S VAN SERVICE - MOVING ANO STORAGE eREI ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS ---------- 21! Apartments, Furnished 371 >ME, h ROOM' *15 A WEEK, S50 ' OE-13. | posit- No pets, FE *3(32. t | ‘ 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT Rant Business Prupurty 47-A ZONED M0. DIXIE HWY» DRAY- KIND Pointing nnd Decorating 23 A-l. INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR pelnllne, free sstlmsles. FE 5-5344. A LADY INIkRIOR DECORA I43R. Papering. FE 84214.______r *—- 6ec- v 2 BEDROOMS : S3 N. MIDLAND DR. 2 ROOM ANO 3 ROOM ApART-menls. Couple^ only. No pets.- De- 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ON LAKE, adults, 10483 Dixie Hwy. *25-254*. 2-BEDROOM TRAILER FOR COU-ple only - FE 54347. Dave. FE - 3-7281, ei- BATH. GARAGE. 1 WORK-ing woman only. Deposit. *B2-*1QS. ! ROOMS AND BATH, CHILO WEL-come, 420 per wk. with a S7S deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ay*. Cell 33*4054. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. UTILITIES. ~ DWIGHT. GRAVES CONTRACTING Lake Weed Cutting Tracking rooms, recreation rooms; garsg,-. aluminum siding, roofing. Frss est No down payment. G & M Construction Co. . It N. Ssglnew__________FE *im[‘ Landscaping- RIEN BLUE SOD, TOPlUSHT MOVING, TRASH HAULED ~d, grovel. Del. 33M301. ------- — - - -1 MERION BLUE SOD. SODDING, seeding end grading. No monsy down. Greece Landscaping. FE gggiiFEMn^^^ra CONCRETE POURED BASEMENTS •nd footlngHFgpr-ages. breeze-ways, :. Carpentry work. FE 4*1*2. B-831*. J COMPLETE LANDSCAPING,! *1 «nd front-end loading FE 34*43. line. grading. Broken LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING- ‘ 'K“'arl 052-32r ~ Cabinet Making CABINETS AND :■ FE 4-94*8. Carpontry . RMr Top self! etsftmato*. FE TRUCK HAULING. JMP rage, basement cleaning, UL 2- salary, paid vacation. SHERMAN PRESCRIPTIONS Maple-Lahser Rda. Birmingham s and Insurance, Plus ot Hits. Must be neat, willing n. Own transportation. Apply WAITRESSES .Dining Bonm;anri Curb Hospitilization. Lunch hour an food allowance. Apply In persoi BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph * Huron or i'1”'* * Silver Lake Rd. — .......... . NTERIOR j exterior, tree estimates. 333- __________ '____________ ROOMS AND SATH, NO £HIL AND PAPERING. YOU | dren. 73* W. Huron.____. . , Oryol Gldcumb, 1*73-0*9*. J BEDROOM MOBILE HOME, 6Vx- I PAINTING, 34 VEA_*AJIxpbrI-! IT'..1.'.50..* month plus utilities. j 3 ROOMS UPPER. BY PISHERS. 1 small baby welcome. *30 a week. 11 Ev»rYt(,lnfl fafhldwd. FE 4-Ttrt f' CTO 2 cmidren, light r dl.lons^a&SrtSton *^^1 >9, references, *2*-Zl5. 7-7070 t k Track Rantol EXCAVATING, DREDGING. 00Z-Ing, grading, leveling, seeding and i sodding- a i lop soil and black] dlrt.^ Free estimates. Reasonable. GUARANTEED SODDING._tXC£ TfUCkS tO Reilt PAINTING, PAPERING Tupspf. OR V30*1 Rant MiscellantnES 24-X48' GARAGE, HEAT, water available. MY * water available. MY I- 48 LlbHTS, BY OWNER - 3 BEDROOM MICK front, mixed.. basement, oas heat. flW. CLARKSTON AREA 2 - bedroom with carpeted living room and enclosed front perch. Convenient to shopping tnd-*ror**s-wsy. On largt lot. TSTulTr. Partially fenced. Utility budding. TO- R0LFE H. SMITH, Rtaltor i*------------ Ft *7141 COUNTRY HOME Lake Orion proa near galdwli homey 7-room housoi. Includ utility r _______ I-ctr at____ Large shaded yards. COZY 2 BEDROOM, VERY CLEAN, overlooking Walters Lake; be** ent. (1*50. Sylvan *25-1M* or 33* DRAYTON PLAINS 5 room bungalow, 2 bedrooms wil full bath up. Well arranged kltche and dining room with picture wli dow. Full basement, alumlnur siding, IVb car garage- A good sii summer house with paneled Inter or. Built - In stone barbecue. , . Quick possession. (24,000. $2,000 504. EMBREE & GREGG f. AL PAULY 15*5 Union Lska Rd. ' EM *4393 4S1* Dixie Hwv . r..r EM 3-3314 Open 9 to 9,pg EVES OR *1! 2 BEDROOMS. GARAGE. LAKE privltogN, (MS. OA *2012. A. WANTED TO SHARE RIDE TO downtown Detroit. Leave Sashabaw-Maybee eras, < 30 a.m„ leave Da-trolt, 5:30 p.m. 4734040. ' Wantod Children to Board 28 ROOMS, PRIVATE, *34 per week. FE 2-437*. 330 CHAM- 2-nbDROOM HOUSE ON IVk ACRE, ■*-»b*w end Maybe* area, 17,-Terms. Call <7*0770. COOKS, ADULT ONLY UNTIL AUQ*]____________ usl It, Girl Scaut Camp, Orton-[WATERFORD ORIVE-IN THEATER, vllle Mich. New facilities. Cad !■ 3534 Airport Rd. Box and conces- 1 NA7-34M.________ ,______________ slon help. 14 or aver. Apply] -----------------------BE CURB GIRL. GOOD **««»■« *wn «tt«r I P.m. _____________________RELIABLE LICENSED HOME. I mv Pled Piper - Restaurant, 4174 WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY I _*»Urly or day cars only. FE S-*340.|--------------------------------- -1 ..Highland pREF^j JVtottw^1» p,nm. ^ Wflnttd Honstbold Goodls 29\ ''Bflrtmdits, Unfurnishtd 38 basement, recreation room, kitchen and bathrooms my specialty Slate licensed. Reas. 6*2-0*44. Weedon, Co. , CARPENTER^ REPAIR, NO JOB CARPENTRY. NEW AND“‘rEPaTr. OR 34*51, MERION BLUE SOD. PICKUP n Stake! deliver* 13 Sherwood. *28-2000. INTERIOR F paneling, 40 FE 2-1235. Cement Work AND EQUIPMENT Dump Truck* — Semi Trailer* Pontiac Farm and :Lawn mowing, large lawns Industrial Tractor Co. preferred, rees. <25-334*. i *25 S. WOODWARD -.... ■---------------1— “ FE 444*1 FE 4-1443 ________ lumngr Open Dally including ‘ I S M. ' KITCHENS, -------------------------------------!----;---------■ tart experience - TAIBOIT LUMBER Glass service, wood Lewr Mowing i business of-|WOMAN TO CARE FOR CHILDREN T ling wim public. Dental 1*4 and 1 *■-- -.... necessary. Will train.! kttftlnQ. . w..., CLEAN USED a Auction, Dining Room |5h Supervisor BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED furniture- ! Cali . 'tb»*YSWl> AR DUR “RICE BEFORE YOU ike so little tor your furnitur ’ appliances and what have you. We’ll auction II er buy tt. B & B Auction OR ^-171 I CHILD. S10O A 87.44, 410.40 — I 30 GRASS S. C. Dlxson. OR >5849. restaurant dining BUS DRIVER WANTED. FULL OR I - t. i Apply tairttoc Ppddock., 232-3711.] I equipmpnt, ate. TED'S BLOOMFIELD HtLLS 6rug AND COSMETIC cleAks. WANTED: ANTIQUES ANO QUAL- MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS __». Telegraph, 7(3 Po.itlac T ■ _______ __________|____B Waited Lake 3700 N. Woodward.! llT,mwii„. ,nr ... family of 5, by Ai Royal O^i54 N?ZanTOr, Norlttvllto.l W'S^toS^X^toSI: RELIABLE GENTLEMEN _ •Ire .1 bedroom hem* In Wafartord ere*. 3384*51 Oscar Schmidt . .rnwHrn f*-1 ELECTORAL ENGINEER. WITH tuitions —. - - - - - - - . Fsraonnel deparfmant Pontiac c'.uii------ Women to make tolephona appoint- , Cttorp! Jtospltpl. Seminole r* m*ms from our afflc* in nuren, fentlec. ... m Salary commensurate with ex- MEN FOR TRIMMERS AND 6lE{ Experienced | FAMILY l casttrs, no experience necessary; : j ito worn** for assembly work.1 NEEO UNFUR- 3 ROOMS AND I kins Like Rd. «74-299* Mornings, 4734*27 DELUXE 1 BEDROOM, AVAILABLE .. Carpeting, refrigerator, Ses manager. U Salmsr, Ap|. 4 Rent Hog us, Furnished 39 2 BEDROOMS, 8254 THROUGH La- bor Day, 8*5 par mo. year ar-------11 thereafter, couple tidy, no SMALL 3 BEDROOM, FURNISHED. “ beautiful laks. Union Lake Years tom AM. mo.. First h to advance. Barkley 547- _ ____ _ Igood ref>.,335-48tt. . ---■ Tr- Fiwne 'AArrn.ni.1 PART-TIME SALESPEOPLE. »44Ss.lBg^*B!:.g /*WILy W*NTS LpPpge, *51-3500. ill a dw. Saturday, optional, no to-| 5j?.r00"' '*'>•*• relqtenee*. 473- 1 ' vestment, no canvaaEng. MfW IN aw week, steady. Must 1 fa *74-119*, FOUNDATION FITTER AND * teacher desires' FULL TIME DISMWASHtiT wit.22L.S CduNTEit "oiEl IJ^iJT^ TSSto —~ Fwdt*c Osteopathic Hospital. •edr6om near Pontiac rford. Rapty Retorancas. FI SON star S: 30 BEDROOM LIKE NEW. PARTLY | furnished. Automatic gas host tup-Pjted. Husband and wife only- Noi children, *• pats. On bua line, near 3 BEDROOM, PERRY PARK, «2S — dNL EE dtoWB. n lW-l 3ROOM HOME IN ROCHES-1 our no down payment plan. Pick up Nd tl Art Daniels Realty. 31040 Ford. Garden City. OA 1-7220 E. E. SHINN, REALTOR NOW AND THEN - you can buy aj^Krs^on Dixie Hwy.^ at the bedroom house, basement, 2Vi cer' *re»- *n tor H4,W). ~ MAYBEE RD. — Have sites, a few tott. Neer Sashabaw — Sat Mr. Shinn. COMMERCIAL—Ellzabbth Lake Rd. oppsslte hospital — there's only O'NHL end dining ell, carpeted; there's a netural wood-burning fireplace. 3 Mg bedrooms, t ample closets, a ini* (oyer. Full basement, garage, of course. All this and much more can be yours far S23.000 Honestly, It to "JUs* So". gt-a HEAD FOR THE WOODS preyton Woods, that I*. You'll be pleased I* find a vary spacious 3-bedroom ranch, custom built tor the present owner; oak floors, plastered walls, ceramic tiled baths. A full basement with flre-Mace snd bsr, makes a grand start tor a recreation room. Beeu- Hki m„ PA---------- patio. Full price S22.t40, quick possession #MS 4 BEDROOM Good location off Baldwin Avenue, comer lei. Large living room, I bedroom, Vh bath down. 3 bedrooms and bath up, fuil basement, *“*------- —n't last long at 114.940. Sea It today — of #5-23 WATERFORD AREA TMs to *bout the nicest ranch you will find In Nils prlca rang*. . ---- - —- — -ichan with left of cupboards. Liro* at StlfOL Bettor call today on this #*-27 By appointment enytim*. II trad*. 138(41, ipt, Priced ti garage. Asking 112,500. ’ eg* shed on tore* tot lend contract. *3,500 & 0 room with natural ttrsplec*. Carport a 1 tot* a* trra and Isndscoptng. 01 MODELS YOUR CHOICE-RANCH, COLONIAL or TRI-LEVEL $16,150, plus lot Driva out M59 (Huron St.) to Airport Rood turn right 1 Vi miles to Models. OPEN DAILY 2 to 6-OPEN SUN. 2 to 8 RAY O'NEIL, REALTOR 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. OPEN f TOT OR 4-2222 MLS FE 54619 i ( J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor >63-6404-10733 Highland Ed. (MM) LAKE ORION YORK WI BUY we TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 402“ . 4713 Dixit Hwy., Drayton plains p.m. Directions: Ab mil* Vyalton Blvd. on M-24. GLENN M. WARD Builder HIGHLAND. ESTATES ream. $13,700. 673-0770. House FOR SALK, BY OWNER. .. *42 east Grand Traverse, Unton HIITEFT NORTH SIDE — IVk story 3 bedroom home. Walk-out basement. 71x150 ft. let. Needs repairs. Full price $4,750. WEST SUEURBAN — Exc 6 rooms and bath. Carpeted living room. Carport. Largo wrst»200. Terms. WE BUILD - 3 bedroom ranchers. First month free Payments Ilka rant MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS t-5 AND SUNDAY WEST0WN REALTY 554 Bloomfield Near Luther FE 1-2763 afternoons. LI 2-7327 Eves. FIRST IN VALUe I Model 3 -bedrooms, IVk baths, full be ment, alyminum siding, large 0 Ing area/-attached 2 car garage. NEW BRICK RANCH C td Country Realty, 3354511. ___HOMES FULL BASEMENT RANCH BI-LEVEL Personalized Homes * .By Palmer Are Now Ready In j, I Jayno Heights } Open every night 4 to 8 p.m. j; 2 Custom Homes ready for immediate occupancy. • Colonial or Ranch Both carpeted and land* scaped. Large Lake Privilege Lots Located between Silver, Loon and School House Lakes EE 8-2209 PLEASANT LAKE Owner leaving Michigan, 'otters TAJ!r9R GILES Oak Full t d ^as heat. 111,-“S. -car garage, 2 lots _ with Anchor$tence. Only $11,750; I i fixtures, ceramic tile r>ng WATKINS LAKE, 45 toot lakefront and lot, an feet deep, S3.300. 90- INDIAN WOOD SHORES NO. Oakland Community College. Seale top, strse 3 Bedroom Ranch Located 7 miles west el f city limits, on desd-end Features large kitchen witt of cupboard space, dining paneled family room wltl place, 2-car attached gera dude* over Vk-acre or li Priced below duplication o Cosh lor oil kinds of property. WRIGHT REALTY CO. 312 Oakland Ave. . I . I After 7 p.m. coll FE 4-7762 -fW. twrdwooid NORTHERN HIGH BRAND NEW RANCHER PONTIAC LAKE FRONT bedroom modern cottage, I ex-j SB5] tr# let. 125' frontage. Only $11,250. »tdo|K. L. TEMPLETON, REALTOR [ 2337 Orchard Lake Rd. 6M-HM01 I $251 ROCHESTER. 3 BEDROOM BRICK f I ranch, carpatlng, built-ins,.finished!. basement, corner lot. $11,700. Celt Ron I 4$ • and liquidating their property only $3700, $1,000 down. 14. ACRES, Sllght||r rolling, samp •done' — llshlnt TO 2 ACRE parcels wH privileges, 11500, $20# down. IN ACRE FARM $1^.70 j NORTHERN HIGH AREA 2 bedroom ranch homo, I3'i living room, t'xt' kitchen, i gas furnace, well to wall c I POttnflj $11,750. only $400 dc Is BEDROOMS living room# dining ro ..iPMfeiifMrfa WEST SIDE-INCOME Val-U-Wayl Sr 'Buzz" mm IMMEDIATE POSSESSION NO MORTGAGE COSTS. CALL TODAY. «IS G.l. TERMS to Walled Lake, y $3,000 down to y payment of only V CLOSING COSTS n i toTSf. Joseph Men ece and 2 this HOxllO lot left Ku^^sW! OUICK - CASH fOR 'LAND CON-brick having B«t sq. ft., No. I, tr!£!»- .Claris Real 'I lose that home, smallest range, pushbutton controls. Ex-IGuar, ible discounts. Call 682-1120,! cellent *75. Call 338-3278. Guar. ,0r MROCREAll¥YSr' 140" ELECTRIC RANGE. GOOD| 13 tass-Ellzabeth Lake I level, down to 41" depth and cuti • 3'V swath. SAFE AND SIMPLE OPERATION ONLY $375 COMPLETE TOOLS, DIE MAKERS. Including sign plot*, full, with lit screen* OL 1-2211. condition, MO. OR 3-3879________ 40" STOVE - DOUBLE Deluxe Frlgldalre — electi OVEN. FEM1»:SaSy SCALES 13.90, SOTTLE ----------- Sterilizer 12.00, Children's —■r“ furniture, I S*t SIS. Children'- j|—1 ____ Wooden Go i household Items. Ml 6-6066. f ftart (no metor) --------------------era BEAUTY SHOP EQUIPMENT. 573- _______ Antiques ta-m, tin or su-sim. , ___ antique dishes and — —• —---------------• nps. Call FE 4b308. BEAUTIFUL ANTIQUE CHERRY] HOOVER PORTABLE SPRING- 37PIECE FRENCH LIMOOGE DIN- v BORING BAR ARBOR Sroimtf' AAePa Truckhso' 7 HORBE TANDEM T^AILfcse Orsv*1- "tel s Trucking, j M#rr|# Aertl OL 1-047S. —bud ballaAd--------------r-i»-Yi*»-oto <**««■ t*jjgy.™ I, gravel, fill idlrt, beach s builders supplies. OR 3-3773. u—* DRIVEWAYS AND *- IUUOOIIIMW--- r 'I" Nh gradn jNrjMMMir, id Rftvel. OR S-I730. fALBOTT LUMBER RIB. SAM jaj. GOOD RICH TOP SOIL AND BLACK -h* Del. PE 66jj.___________ Wuciukb. JAWo,' gIavIl 673-2151 or 573-5404. Fun in the Sun Cl^itN R4V OT-W._—__ j hive s fresh supply of ms HORSEBACK RIDING EVERY DAY ;p,ch, campers priced to sell, si Mss AaIHm H Corral. Alan ft OINTLI OK 4PI«It*P 15.50 QaL A FULL SET Gdii. rid d perch, tit. H TIRES, LAWN fii TRY.AND BEAT 0 WANTED: FREE F .. the QsMtn H Corral._ —H . . ■ ern tiding leaaoni. 1M0 Hlllsr Rd. Buffalo Msat, fully, toad##.... 363-4559.____________________IApachB Eagla ..HP...?.... PALOMINO QUARTER HORSEE. 5 Apachs Reven ............. -• —■ «»| Ml ibova prices Includ. BALD MQUNTAIM RD.I ,lr*,nd I _________PEW1W. , i| M, cant down, 35 months I riding HORSES. TENNESSEE ^ ratas. ■ hanaa anri miBrtsr horiM.! ) MlTl St., C ____ horses. ». 517-31 OR - VIA!, lOBCfPICK-UP CAMPERS X REGISTERED B I i, 1 trained bsagla. p. PL 1-3005. |IA POODLE CLIPPING. BS AND BALB0 HAY IN FIELD. EVE I up. MO Barasofa. FE B-B55P. ,but sun. itarllng .Tuaa. gp 1A, AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPS. STUD 30 cant and 35 cantl. 24M Hot imatodds. 332-7139. Ad.. Oxford. Phone 618-1837. THOROUGHBRED 6 ..—. .------------ Istsrsd mere, UN. wlnntr. lAarnps. HOBO SAL.« Reg. Tsnn. welklna mar a sm .. HORO BAUM Mund^vr I l«ly^ L 6 ! Flidics at J335S Aubum Rd. conformation and aouna. v» a »«iy-j v j,M| #r esi-3357 anytime IgMC BUS CAMPER. REAL NICE. OL i-tto. 84( See at It7 S. Johnson. Let. GOOD USED BUYS s II' Barth, all alum., eelf-con- ,jMd .....as »65 15'PTswis Brava ...... B11PS Ellsworth TraiUr Salts I Hwy.________ MA 5-14BB MAKE YOUR ORCHARD Lie. I City of Svlvan Lake. Commercial rage. Suitable for many types (. et enterprise*. Lot 50x150. | FOR SALE OR LEASlb' 14,ON m. ft. lot with 495 feet k-R| aiding. Over 1700 s«. ft. office, a 11,ON nq. ft. Steraft. will re-1 model or build to suit. HEAVY MANUFACTURING Waterford Township, DlxloHlghway .il 38' frontage. Some buildings on property. 09.700 Terms. | 'BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 177 S. Telaomph . FE 8-9641 experienced counselors, creon lira Insurance available -Stop in or phone PE 5-Bill. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry St. . . PE Mill ■ -----------— 10JP FORD WAGON. __ 8esIrgss 0p|wrt»alHii_591 siso or «w.P tor ? 473-5745. ...,C. CAR RECORD PLAYER S4S. COINS. GLASSWARE, LAMPS. RE- Call 3M0731. ________________ duced prices, 4 lea craam ^h-lr* SET OP I WATT. 3 CHANNEL C.B. talkies, 1 mo. old, perfect cnest condition, selling et V* original cawn* REM_______DUMP TRUCIC- -i-,-,. SN- j trailer. TO 6 dozer. ^C. drawers, S15. China Alio Dodge tractor. Good c cabinet, SU. Upright showcase, lion. OR 4-0535. $25. Other I*— — -------------------- - _________! 437-1770. RECORD_?LAYER NEEDLE5 COMPLETE SEf tools, FE 5-4823. AVE AAPSI >s. PE B-454T GOOD.[ FRETTER'S^VAREHOUSE ^OUTLET | 45 £° WALTON NEAR *BALDWIN. 1650 S. Telogroph FE 3-7HS1 T1.n.,, n c H A M N E L.I U” |,-u'airiussssra1mMSA i ___________I____________ MM________________ . CHEVY SINGLE AXLE DUMP.! artldSl. U5-74W._______| p.m. EM 3-2902._____ PONTIAC WAGON AND 1741 DINETTE SET, FORMICA TOP, itiac 4 door hardtop. Nica cart. Ch«|rs plus loaf, 825. Apt. qiiei 3-8706. j gas stove, S40. and other household 4 Chevy Impala, sell s 1. 593-5021 Bowling alley, small invest-) mint raqulrad. Powntewn tocntlon.l or 5835157.__________________- . Call 4il-2164 before 3 pm. . 11855 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE COMBINATION BAR AND RES* air, tull power, vinyl — — laurant. Class C liquor license. | eer werrnnty, MM SflN. Groms 8100,000 par yesr.------- 8 miles west of KalamMtb. Price msas. Csti attar «, or mr Geauty salon, MODERN, ■ equipped. Rr---------kl- » Area. Call I 53 attar 7 p.m. Located! estate a DOUBLE DOOR ADAAIRAL plex refrigerator and frees year old, 41" wide. *400. 647-5810. ” j USED TV'S Radio and Appltarsce^nc.^ JL- good b Ion | 353-117! EASY GAS DRYER. 3 YEARS OLD [PER MU Clean. $55.24" Phlto as^arimental| softener. S50. 524-445l! BONANZA ONE h Established bawlsaaas with frandiNs, high profit mi everhsad, prestige prods lectured by DuPont Co. Excellent FORMICA TABLE AND 4 CHAIRS. *25. Portable sewing, machine with . case. S25. FE S-93027 ^ OFF ON SEMI-AUTOMATIC condition, $55 — console. | 6-3906. Sat. MY 3-U35. _ For Salt Miscellaneou* 67 ^condition, < 674715M. 1259. ! 21 CUBIC wade la. Guar-*545 value. I^_94a d-— a experience. A.B.C. Htg, I train iiTopportunity." Owner unebie FOR SALE OR TRADE. 1855 HON-I CEW/ffl Orchard Lk. PE 4b452. —||— Requires small da 380. Dream. Exe-. wndltton. FR|G,DA|RE WASHER. ELECTRIC! luipment and In- After 6 p.m„ 144 W. Ann Arocr. a sjj 332-3222. ___________ LARGE 3-BEDROOM HOME. 1 pURN|TURE. SOME LIKE "NEW. - - ond sasUt you. closed porches. Free and dear, for Tsrafte tarMWXeevIno a res. I to 5, BS2-I703.__—. j- 2-bedroom homo. 164 Floronct Ave.| EvorWhlng must be sold! Includ-1 ■MNEMILK ROUTE. FORCED! j |„g jo.05 Winchester rifle with ^ ».?. j’fi?!*' I Sale ClothiBf M\ " ^ Herrington Ava k OFF ON ALL FLOOR AA^ElIfORD TRACTOR HI-LIFT, CENT. 393 Orchard Lk. FE 4-8462. Install, pounder. 21' lift with bucket. S3, Also con- 550. Cell oftor 5. OR 39538. LATE MODEL ORAVML carries 55 tonsi GANC Dtssal, I Haroiin, ... Clarkiton For The Finest In _ Top-Quality Merchandise Shop at Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall Store BASSETT PUPPIES. " iTANDEM S'— 9RED. ,„u M .....--------- Case Demo Construction Kino T ‘ Backhoe. ‘ Back t, T Vw' i $2,»95 . 50"' Howard Ro*e»rar, 1495, like naw. 40 other used! tractors, doters, and oil 9 INSPECT CENTURY-MALLARD SAGE - TAG-A-LONG All salt contained. 14' to IT four Md eight sleepers. SEE THE FAMOUS Canvas Back Camper by Mallard DISPLAY MODEL ON SALE $750 ..... registered. PE 5-3589. AND SILVER TOY POODLE ir eld. FE 2-3401.___ SHEPHERD PUPS) I, Ftntora MA PRPPMpiiffgalsk. 4335 Ssthsbsw Rd. Amsrtcsn Stuns. 15-sps9dVijcoti iCOON HOUND PUPS, 1B.AM3NTHS old. Ready to start tralfllMI «« TO OUR FRIENDS t Cameras • Service_________— — DACHshund, akc female, to A BOLEX, 3 LEMS tubrbt. ynsra old, 155. 332-7287. 16 MM DeVry »50. 16 MMl FEMALE CHIHUAHUA id projector $50. F-ontlac Lake I registered. FB 4-9455. H M3» Highland Md. (MB). FREE KITTENS— PUPPY, 1 FOR DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS BRR .^—.denfiai us« Liquid >loor Harden^P PONTIAC^HEAT-I simple Inexpensive Application J MWl RQchester. Phonal' “JWL “L°N3 UDIU KNAPP SHOES. ALMOSTl L 2-1639 ' between 7 and I *lu_.*+• il11ndin^n~I^E REFRIGERATOR *25. GOOD ING, CORNER M-59 AND WIL- Bo|m Builders LIAAAS LAKE RD. 674-2511 OR --------------------•— 612-5574, - ; »" PLASTIC PIPE, 83.45 HER 100;. call u Ian ____________» 16-11, r ^ ------.—,-------i swim mih aw 4. Reas. FE 8-4758. Cocktails—Fine roods long white wedding gown, 1 lebalf hour driva from Pontiac. * H|| EBNN Class B and; FE 5-2328______________ AND-MADE CORNER CHINA CAB-] Mat. S55. FE 5-833. J 597, G. A. Thwnpasn. die pips, $8,51 per 1 He pips, $10.26 per 1 pump with hlgn press: -------- 7005 A*“ | -30" REEL MOWER FOR WHEEL horse tractor. 1-24" x l O' swim-1 ming pool. 551-1311. I-A "BIRDS VINYL SIDING" FREE 1,000 GALLON OIL TANK GUN-TYPE OIL BURNER l to anyone who will i Musical Goods ^ S^l^^pH^^VraTRK " |TTe N S, iANO tOX 5JS: .JS,"’sm1 trained, call 334b497 after 5. 674-2247 between 8 an* S p. 4 months old. *30- 525-2512. I PIECE DRUM SET, BLUE PEARL GERMAN SHEPHERDS, AX with cymbal. FE 54459._______i weeks, wormed and shots. k BEAUTIFUL GIFT F*OR SOME- NmN^jnt, excellent blood TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES W. Highland »d~ MbP. PE 2-4P2B PHOENIX „ KADEC WINNEBAGO WOLVERINE srs snd trailer*. Alto Phoenix mbit. Wa sail and Install „_J Md OrawtlM HHchs* HOWLAND SALK* AND RENTALS Dixit Hwy. OR G-I5S* OPMtSJn. -til 8 a-m. ________i faom. Dal-Ray, 1 wood, Camp-llte. This stock m be sold to. make room far new 1957 models. Open dally'' I o.m., Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p BILL COLLEk, Camping a Marine suppllo- I ——‘ Upeer on M21. 33I.QIM. ___JY ORANp Beautiful Antiqued GERMAN SHORT .HAIR POINTERS. T Must tell. Best attar. All shots, n- ____cento, papers. 476-3324.__________. rr-anta*. 118. ttOUSR OP POOOLRb ___________J GROOMING AND SUPPLIES . ■ >I 0STER CUPPERS AND BLADES HU Dixie Hwv._____________________OR 3-B720 Pontiac at Opdyks Rl Open all day Saturday WANTED: JOHN DEERE B rake, qlda delivery. MA 4-1785- PICKUP COVERS, U UP. I AY 111B0 A I Rd., Warden Realty POP SALE: ROSS PORTABLE CE-ment ptont and two^JVi yd. trucks" 5904 Dixie Hwy. at Waterford Hill i OFF, DURING 6UR FUR-1 474-1013. _________;____ warehouse sale, Friday snd' MAYTAG WRINGER. ALUM. TUB, i. The toughest of Call 3324111. VIOLIN, - i diesel motor. 742-! KRAF T MILK ROUTE WITH A .... - -j, Diesel and » can milk! I 1153 Ford 350 pickup, i PARTRIDGE “W THE BIRO TO «!'' $277 . THREE ROOM - HOOVER COMPACT WASHER, | months old.’ttt.95 or boat off*, I 425-1927. ___________ • HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL *20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: 8-piece living room outfit wvltts living room suits, 2 step tables, cocktail table. 2 table lamps ar (11 fxl7-rug Included. 7-piece bedroom suite dresser, .CheiL tull tlv Inneripring msttress an l box soring W l V.nltj; lamp *399. Jtlful clapboard design. FRIGIDAIRE ' IRONER) VIOLIN, ——-mPVIRHE by "Bird" - — quality beauty shop equipment. Reas. FE to*' since 1795. * ' | 4-3353-________________ .?F(-L. US..TP *EE U-___I GARAGE SALE. THURSDAY, FRI. }jg|; Delivered MIXED BEAGLE . MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegrapts Rd. (cross from Tel-S-Soron FE 1-0557 > SEE Trovtl Trollirs _ , r CHEVY PICKUP CAMPER* OR 44614 13' ARISTO, EXCELLENT, *7€N [j ll’ TRAILER, LOADED WITH Cameo Truck Still h FE 5-9345—Joe Vl GARAGE SALE. THURSDAY, FRI. i|w> .......... , M ' ‘ “ | JACK HAGAN. ISAUSIC lizabeth Lk. Rcl- 332-0500 antique'oictures end dishes.__7216 Cooley Lk, Rd- 3*3-S5M_ POODLES, CHOICE, TOY BLACK, blond, ell ages. 850. OR 4-3349. PUPPIES FOR SALE, 6 WEEKS, —vtel Tetrtors. PR MMl.. RABBITS AND HUTCHES 334-5322 W TRAVEL TRAIUIk. SELF CON-tilned, tots ot extras. UL 2-2123- 21' SELF-CONTAINED, V GAS AND electric refrigerator, hot w«t'r 83 PIONEER CAMPER SALES PICKUP CAMPERS BY Travel Queen — Overland — Barth - Concord trailer*. MERIT FIBBROLAI TRUCK COVERS TRIM LINE CAMPERS BY COLEAAAN ’ THE GREATEST NAME IN THE GREAT OUTDOORS HURON_____________FE 2-3988 17 FOOT YELLOWSTONE, 19*2* 5371 673.3044. Cooley ‘" *■* HOLLY, ! PICKUP CAMPERS AND TRAVEL trailers, new enn used. Our prices are right—Trlpte H Collision—and Cimper. Service. 3534 Auburn Rd. UL 2-1440, POP-UP CAMPER. SLEEPS A B2SB. —OUTFIT TTwm h^eedtrtWymawf” ----- ■_________I______ WYMAN BRAND NEW FURNITURE I FURNITURE CO. 74>IECE LIVING ROOM ' ELECTRIC lifetime! Bring your checkbook you see It. Location, building. | fixtures, equippsent, you name ft,; toll Is the greatest! 80,000 young. THE RESORT OF RESORTS You could not design or build s liner resort for *190,000 than this 8-unlt beauty. Built to give maximum, maintenance free, Iona life, to s park setting-on 300 ft. of Booked solid every season. Gross- ____________ FE 4-3581 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG bop CORN TRUCK, NEEDS RE- LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1451 Baldwin at Walton FE PE 5-15011 sq 2-2150 i er more net « ------ dost, then cell PONTIAC HEATING CO. -— , ---v^ 1 (State Licensed) (N, LIKE NEW,I 1735 N. WILLIAMS LAKE RD. j . 1674-2511__________"____________502-55741 “ I AND iix- _____ iiwtilla- Installed erttl^^p^least 6 LADIES HAND TOOLED LEATHER * at MMfffbtt Vkjy Saginaw SMALL Baby Gfand *>*«' cellent condition, reaf *—“■ USED spinet piano, Ilk USED Spinet' piano ARGE 30" ATTIC FAN, COM-plete with outside louvers and celling grills. FE MODEL KIRBY VACJJUM ; W00L CARPETS. 9X1B tKTIV iix-| - - „ ucATcR~ nervWJ0. Curt's Appliance 13-, also pm md tlalrt. PE S-7317.|l^?e ”1 tlnk ROT Hose. tank. 810 each. Gallagher's Music .1710 S. Telegrams FE 4-0564 Open Eves Close -* * (MAKE CARPETS 1 I BEDROOM SET *40, 20" STOVE ] E. f V MAGIC CHEF AND 1 ROPER GAS| table $25. chest S10. M. C. Llppard, 559 N. 1 BIG SALE. USED BARGAINS if. Peed condition. 582-5955 Saturday during I PICK- SPRINGER tPANIEL PUPPI^. ^ AKC Raqlstared. g weeks, 544-7W. WS. ST. BERNARD, AKC, MALE I months. Magnificent show dog, nightly lame. Good home mart 1 jf* Important than price. 593-4444. ms THE ONLY LOVE MONEY CAN , k~,n cruuv German Shepherd . AAA 4-253*. UKC REGISTERED TOY FOX TER-•pups. S35 - **’” 1965 Chevy V» ton, fleetslde body, 6 eyl. •rd transmission, whitewalls, ^ finish, for only - $1895 E- i RENTALS - 15 FT. AND 14 FT. Brand new salt contained. All of travel traitor*. Holly Coach, li lolly, ME 54171. SEE THE MEW CORSAIR ON TV 0-1 toil It being donated to the Hear •J Fund. Then come see our model* '1 of 14' to 8', fully sell-contained You'll find they are everything VIZSLA, PUPS AKC REGISTERED, ROCHESTER C" *00d ^ ^ l 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS WIRED _ HAIRED TERRIOR. PUP-] CRUISE OUT, INC. I SCHOOL BUS MAD* iHfp ggrarr^a ~— non prime-ell i 3400 Dixie Hwy. a»5ght.0i>ltH A BONUS VALUE IN MOBILE HOME SHOPPING N unit* dliplayed - some unlti « up for Immediate occupancy IHtra-New perk, toiturln: cor munity building. Mw with twlr mine* beach, underground wtlinle shuffle boats, JO* x IN' loti ar many oth^r featuraa. OPEN DAILY 1* am la t pm SUNDAY 11 neon to 7 pm SUN-AIR MOBILE SALES, INC. MOS W. Grand River, Irlghton (between Brighton 1 Howell) AT COLONIAL All ISM Models on Dbptoy In Every Price Rarvia At Winter Dlacaunta ATTENTION Immediatt Occupancy JUST A VERY FEW CHOICE LOTS LIFT IN RIVER RANK MOBILE VILLAGE. Pontiac's finest mobile heme par IM S. Telegraph Pentl Adult Park Only Sae the large mobile hone display and mako your ns-arvaftdfi at our agents salsa BLUE* RIBBON HOME SALES 11 Ml Telegraph Rd. (lust north of I Ml.) Open 7 '---- brakes, S4M. 1435 4411. bEtRdltER—PONTIAC CHIEF KROPF BRIDGESTONE MOTORCYCLES Prom 1239,95 up _ „ . As low as 121 down PAUL YOUNG MARINA II Special c, alloy wheels, dual 0 carbs, lull IlgMIng a BUY NOW AND SAVE r*e cash discount on all light-weight Hottest during Honda'* summer sale. ALSO FREEH Genuine Buco lately helmet with each new motorcycle. ALSO FREEH Effactlva July 11, ’“-W. 11 month or 12400 mllewar-nty on any Hondo purchased rw. ■ ANDERSON SALES t SERVICE, Inc. 1*45 S. Telegraph FS 3-7102 JVlth ... 12.000 ml onymbaMEEBM CUSTOM COLOR 97 attar I pm. GUARANTEED I l Hal boniarna, V BOAT RACK ~ ' Sunday, July 17th - *J{ TO o.m. to 4 p.m.,* World Champion V*' Drivers From United States and Can a stew Food and ratnihmanta will bf served on (ha grounda all t&s race is sponsored BY TNI Art ichigon Outboard Racing Association RACE WILL BE HELD: Napassing lake Boat Club C e-s RISC RAFT. INBOARD. • *87-3 CLEARANCE I 1965 Modols Pontiac Only ERCURY-MERCRUISER deale CRUISE-OUT, INC. DAWSON'S SPECIALS - USED 14' •nd trailer, SMS. BUY NOW AMD SAVED BIO DISCOUNTS ON M-------------- USED MERCHANDISE! I Gleam Steury, Mlrm Craft boats, E- FREE-FREE Suzuki, IS months erl warranty. Balter than . poa men and' Tamarae acayot pontoons, Parnco Taka M-St.te W, Highland on Hickory Ridge Rd. to I Rd. Lett and follow atom to uav SON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LASCE HONDA 50 CC, LATE IMS, SO MILES CUSTOM COLOR lighting equipment. Special. $1325 RENT-A-CYCLE BY THE HOUR, DAY OR WEEK. New Yamata SB N and twin 100s. Rates cheeper thin owning. -'YCLE 13 to *0 to. taw the ntwaat In tottaa, Stewnrts, and fomoot V bngo travel traitors. Open f-8, closed Sunday ) Mila south of Lake Orton on MY 14771 Parkhurst Traitor Solis FINEST IN MOBILC LIVING IS M It. Featuring New Moon Buddy gad “—— Located I RUMMER SALE SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS an theee new and used beautlei over 40 to Choose from In t dlfterent dacort. All at rwducad prwn, 14 to *0 ft. tong, • toBBft/wida Wa have parking anacaa. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2357 Dixie Hwy. 33H77J 1 block north of Tatoaraph Rput TieHt Spfta 90 TRAILS* SPACE SOON , Oldsmobile Owners flltr «tnff flf aypyft pif- -—chonics and aur4ip-to4na«. minute wquipmint plus— and this is a big on#— our desire to try harder to serve your cor ntsds completely and satisfactorily, assure Oldsmobile owners of the finest service available. 4 DOWNET OLDSMOBILE, INC 550 OAKLAND FE 2-8101 to Dtmode Rd. item to DAW-TPSICO LAKE. SUZUKI BETTER OIT 'EM NOW 12 AAOS. - 12,001/ MILE WARRANTY TUKO SALES INC 073 E. AUBURN - ROCHESTER WANTED: OLD^INDJAN^MOTOR - WlLX.11 SWAP IM COMPETITION -----imble pipes for dock tmbto pipes with muffler Bicycles >em>« — Actatsartet 97 BOATS. DORSET, SLEEPS 1 — head and accaaaoriia, 75 Johruon elactric, 1400 pound tilt traitor, all naw In 1044. ir Yellow teakal AAark 50 Mercury and tral 3-0403. If j-UMINUM^ BOA^lltS. r ALUMINUM BOATS W. TRAIL-a * Sill. IS* canoes 1140. NO lb. fra I Ian sift. Now 15* flbarglaa Boat, 40 H.F. Johnson electric, fOC lb. trailer, battery-box 11250. ^BUCHANAN'S Ng Highland Rd._________363-2301 ALUMINUM. CARRIER AND inchor, 5V4 CE 4-4754. HORSE- lf ALUMINUM BOAT, power Evlnrudt. Wind lr*g wheel, controls, 14' THOMPSON, 35 H P. JOHNSON, rotor, good condition, 852-3413. CHRIS-CRAFT SKI OI&At WlTH MICHIGAN TURBOCRAFT SALES, INC 2537 Dixie Hwy..- Pentl Now Is the Time to Buy Boots-CLEARANCE-Boots IP to 17 end MFO Irv outboards, fiiaaata am 4 Flberglaa and Alum. -GOOD BUYS — lav Split! Boat Cost Naw ITfS NOW ONLY-.MR -CLIFF DREYERS (Marina Division) 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 46771 — Open Dally otte Sundays — Weirtsd Cm-Tnodn 101 STOP HERE LAST yjtsasjsa.’^T •• M&M MOTOR SALES New at aur haw location • 1150 Oakland at Viaduct BHS41__ TOP I £0* dll AH CAN iOP DOLLAR PAID" FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS GLENN'S • Waal Huron e». “paTmInts too HIGH* WILL')FAY TOP DOLLAR FOR bu!? mansf'ield UBS D CARS isoi Baldwin, mcke n. of Walton ID 10 JUNK I tow. OR 3 CARS — TRUCKS ML________ ‘ CARS » CENTS AND UFt ~ TSPlUK' JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS. FREE VMl Atfa-Tretk Parts 102 I. 313 Mercury motors. lie C:SoETHo^RZS» t 0 r itosion. All exc. condition. FE CHEVY • FORD-COMET - WALCON 4 *! Al Hanoutelnc. Chevrolet-Buick LaktQrtoh MYM411 __ Our Larga Sdarvlc* Dept, can handle your problems Immediately. So Let Oilv* r Ltnstng shew- you- hew $1797 . aaay, and how much chtapar 1$ Iho lea*« an automobile, rathter C "Ask for The Dixtje Good Guya" 1»60 CHEVY BEL AIR, CLEAN, B cylinder, stick, 1400,524-4451. Our Lara* Dally Rate - Fleets alia nvaiBablt, tor any accaalwl. For n* Sow as 14. nar dav. la Sp>artanDodge AAUST DISPOSE OF )f«0 C H E V V convertible. |i|p money down, BS.S7 weekly. Call Mr. Murphy at FE 5-4101. McAullffe. “I like infatuations. They don’t ruin your appetite the way a real crush does! ” (Just U Mill lT olCli will bn placed it your Dlagoeall I OLIVER LEASING fe AIR 'AIR CONDITIONED CARS MUST SELL ad lilac convertible, fully Md, low mllHW. idlllac convertible, ana own-l nr mileage, sharp, loaded. I Trucks IM New and U» FORD '/to »d Troths 1031 TON. LONG BOX, *1 962 BUICK lha tv eat and travel li n thli OM air cone wagon. Power, auti frost white finish a Tlrerw. FULL PRICE $1397 - 1961 F= JT... «“indudh« •®-,ffi|LUCK'Y AUTO(Spartan .DodofeL • Crulse-o-metlc end spotless blue' 1940 w . wida Trade {' BteS5 Oakland Ava. I,* icludlng la Foil Price'onV— ROCHESTER MARATHON - . Main St, Roc hi OL 1-3390 TE MODEL 'CADILLACS ON I HAND AT ALL TIME! JEROME MOTOR MIES /Idt Trick Qr FE 3.7021 ' » HIVY, 'FULLY RESTORED. $174*7 sk for Tht Dodge C uys in th« White h! Spartan E>odge TRUCKING BCPSINESS. INCLUDING' 1050 Internationnl Tandem dump,! and 1043 Cteavrolel slpni* »»i* Truck Ireq, 474-2353: Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ____Juat ml of Oakland LLOYD 1 961 CHEVROLET I mpela convertible. Automatic, pxower steering and brakes, beautiful sno-shoe white With llka-naw nylon top- Spot dallvopy- NO.MONEY DOWN . Weekly Payments of $8.88 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863' 19*2 CHEVY. 327 STANDARD SHIF+ Ant* Financiag 104-A CAR ‘AND COM- FereimCara Heavy Duty One-Ton Piclcups 4 speed, V4 end v«. honvy dul springe, tires, 1960-1904 OMCl and FORDS $695 i_ip FE 54101 John MeAuliffra Ford at OoMlwteted Avt.) Capitol Aiato ir Craocawf Lake. GLENNT'S any mort to chBOoa>rwre 1243 F-350, 3 YARD FORD DUMP, STAKES and DUMPS 1963 • 1964 - 1965 FORD F-400 - 3x5 Dwmpi Fron $1995 to $2995 ' 1963 FORD N-750 tody. 333 Cu. In. 'angina, 3 ipaer 1 epeed, 120-10 ply. . $2495 Big Stock of ot$t«r makes end models to aelact from ASK FOR TruCMc Dept. FE 54101 John McAuliffra Ford 277 Wat Mont ca Ian Ave. (I Block Eat of Oakland) LLOYD 1963 BUICK Wildcat convertible. Power stee id brakes, power window ^ • 1 r-condlllonlng, A hard 1 * $95 DOWN Weekly Payments of $14.97 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1957 Chevy J Bel-Air ijz-dooa'- hardtop, real sharpl $ave HOMER HGHT ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP ' EM 34155 fe 5-aa^t a 4 PM. 1942 SUNBEAM ROADSTER, THIS CAR IS IN EXCELLENT COMOITION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN, Assume weekly naVrrwnls of S7.IL CALL CREDIT MGR. MR. Park! at MAROID TURNER FORD, AAI A-7500. 1943 GMC '/4-T0N PlCtCU'P. if» a-boor Olds. Bath in axcallent shape. 4734117. f-CYLIH-l JEROAAI -----...---Peeler, ■ 1944 dtEVROLET VAN FORD, GMC Trucks Are Our Business "Not o Sideline" _ ...j camper, I - - 51195. FE 54ft. e6an, very clea REPOSSESSION — K ELECTRA "32!" C0N-! -E, FULL POWER AND 3" sae k auv ai n ria nrvA/ki J ~ Motors, Inc. On MU In Oxtote 0A Hitt 1942 CHEVROLET CLUB SEDAN WITH .AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL. TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aliuma weekly payments of $*.88. CALL CREDIT MOR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER GM WEEKS.TT. CALL N 4528, SPARTAN. GLENN'S INS BuB«Bt, real Sharp, rad, whit L. C. Williams, Salesman >7 CHEVIES, 2 AND 4 DOOR .................. s;------ Nash, 1*57 Plym. tor Gale McAnnally's Auto Salas 1**2 Chevrolet Impela Bdepr hardtop. White finish with red Anterior. Automatic trensmleelon. power steering and brake*. 2-yaar ' "‘"SEE-BOB BURKE •-I 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Pontiac State Bank 144 BUIC BC, 4 DOOR HARDTOP, LiSebr»^ axe, condition, 3*54544. MUST OBSPOSE OF 1N4 BUICK n wenragon, full power, bronie. nonay down, S10J7 weakly- «_ incoln, 1940 Ford $97 Ea. ----fy other*, lata model*, lrucka.1 ECOBMOMV CARS 3335 Dixie Hwy. | $*711**2 CORVAIR WAGON. CLEAN — g condition, S4P5. *73- Tiransportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE M~o Application Refused rtc special converti- rar steering, brakes, auto., S Basis. Sharp, 31,295. EM 1965 BUICK WlldCM*- with full poxrar au trinseto-wlsslon, radio and HAROLD 'Autobahn' MOTORS, INC. ^AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mil* noe-tts of Miracle Mile 5 S. Telegraegh FE L4131 FORD, INC. WOODWARD AVE. IIRMIN 19*5 HONDA 5*0, S24S. 2334 HART- 1965 Ducati Monza Jr. TM CC wtth tour MM silver and Mack flntah. tow mil age. Full Prtc* Only -“ Aak far The Dodft Good Gwya m Me WMto Hat" $347', Spartan Dodge 855 Oakland Avt (to Mile-N. of Cat*. FE 8-4MS t*U ISA LIGIfTNINi, tJM MILES, only SMB. OL I-— 1*45 HARLEV 74 electric start-♦UkLEY-OAVIOSON, 854 • CHRISCRAFT, 35 JOHNSON MO-w-r, 8550. 34 Frank. WHITE HOUSE FIBERGLASS. FIBERGLASS I0AT WITH *0 jraPPOI.... JIJM. EAA 3-S9S1. ■ HORSEPOWER EVINRUDd MO-tor, • Metric ttarttr and aN-frofa, uaed I haw* 8S7-457S. fr CHRISCRAFT tNIOARD, UtlLI-tias. Ilka naw condition,. 1957. - Docked el Unton Lak* bates, 11*50-Or. Gaadwln, LI 4-W34. THOMPSON CABIN CRUISER, ^asonabtev call after* OR 3-1141. 1W43 CPtRl*CRAFT IP SEA-SKIFF, Guaranteed lesi than 35 time. Will trad* ter car, are DMB er s*R outright Tandtei i aeefoni traitor, avtllatto. 3 19*3 7VX HORSE POWER ELGIN, •BSD. *250 Colony Drtva. M* £ilT6lv INBdXXb 'sifB Dart. IT, NS BA IntoraeMr, F E 8-74*1 after S UL *017. 101 1963 DODGE [jinM larakii, 1964 Chevrolet Handi-van with blue finish and double side doers. Ready to roll., 1965 GMC Vi Ton pickupj blue and whitt, automatic, ISJ buick power stMring and brakes,'____________ ESTATE 1961 GMC 1 Ton Pickup, 4- nrp speed transmission, V6 in- | v^^Xi AvJTLi P -11962 Chevrolet Vi Ton Pickup. I' wide sida with shell- 1959 RED CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE-5450 It *<(3434 W. H WtrGtel to 333 GLENN'S CHEVY CONVERTIBLE. F leering, brakes, top, i 1275. FI »43H. 1959 CHEVROLET ICingswood 9-possenger 4-cJoor Station Wagon. Full j^rica $245 with bank rotas. Many mora to efioose from at ‘ Bill -Smith Used Cars 462 N. Perry St. FE 4-4241 IRambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 IS CHEVY 4 DOOR IMPALA ta r-dtop 4, stick, 412-2341. » ' -dtHfevV'i ooM, i, 'AUtlb|-natlc, good rubber, good condl-loai. 4225. OR 3-9594, HELP! we need M dura Cedinacs. «1acs, Old* end lukki for o«#W-o*-state merkat. T» dollar pal*. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 11*4 Bildwln Avt. EXTRA EXTRA Dolktrt Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor ItwfgoMtoPMp'et Averill ' AUTO SALES MORE MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars weed hundradi et Btorp c*r» to mi jte state ardan, end la a*a> my tot, thet k a full etty baoc ‘'BALE McANNALLY'S Auto Sain JSWf .c^diTioJ type camper. }&(&vfe8sSlW4 GMC Tractor Model *1W5- A-5000, 5-speed transmission and 2-spaad axle, air !« brakes. Yellow arad white. 1962 GMC 6-71 Ditstl, 5-speed transmiuioEi, 2-speed axle, full air brak' 1966 GMC i-Ton Pick.up Hooter, defrosters, backup lights, saat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, inside rear view mirror $1779 ' including all taxes ' PONTIAC'S -ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Can FE 5-9485 1963 GMC Tractor, Model LA 6000-401 cul>ic engine, Mpetd transmission, 2-spaed axle, air brakes, Steel Tilt Cab, 1962 GMC Tractor-, model A 5000 with 5-speeci transmission and 2-spad axle and ' ill air brakes. GMC Factory Branch PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER Oakland at Cate FE 5-9485 $697 1941 COMET 2 Deer IN $297 SVYWege $197 Estato Storage 109 S. last Blvd. FE <8-7161 Re POSSESSION INI GUICK WAGON, AUTOMAT, IC. •WITH PLENTY OF POWER. MUST SELL. TODAY FDR FULL BALANCE OF 1297 - NO 1 DOWN AND LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS. CALL MIL CAIN, fl* 452* SPARTAN. ^ WITH MWVR, TUR-I CUapitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Autobahn MOTORS, INC. •_ AUTHORIZED VW DEAL9|lk Vb mile north of Mlrtgto Mil* 17*5 S, Tatopronh FE D-4E31 CHS" »IL "S'.$222."' 19*2 MONZA 2 DOOR, 4 SPEED, Would You Baliovelll W* Have What Wt AdvnrTIna And S*U What Wp Have At Bank Ratet-No Cash Mandate 119*3 Clwvy Bel Air 19*2 Chevy itepela 1942 Chevy II wage 1941 Chevy Impale hardtop 19*1 Chtvy Corvalr Coup* . 19*1 Pontiac wagon, 9 paaa. 19*1 NM*c Catalina Coup* Comot coup* .................*2 Comte wpgon .................*£ Ford FilrSiw • •••■••......»7f _____Cadillac COUP* DpVllld -----fl* 1958 Butck llBRStoD ....v........*1» 1957 Chovy Coup* ................ fl* 1957 Plymouth 2 door ........... * * GET SMART-BUY FOR LESS OPOYKE MOTORS 2230 Fat ! 1-9337 9*3 CHEVROLET SUFER SPORT with power steering and bralca*, power windows, automatic trana-nj talon, blue flntah with vinyl Tote. Autorama. MOTOR SALES 1903 CHEVY BISCAYNE, 4 is. V* teitotni"-^ 1 75. 451-0246. JME: 1963 Chevy Bel-Air 2-Door with twIHglW turquols* and spot-lass matching turquols* Interior, this Is a little lady's garagn kept $977 Get a BETTER DEAL" at Foreign Cart 105 Foaraign Cart 105 Foreign tan~ For Fun People— It's Sports Car "World Join the nevsr, exciting world that's known only -to those who ovwn and anjoy a fine quality sports car from Grimaldi Imported Car Co. Our larga Volume Sales allow us to give a better Daal— Pontiac's Only Authorized Triumph Dealer New '6614 Triumph Spitfire $2155 New, '66, TR4As $2840 New '66'/t Triumph The fabulous 20« Sedan, $ave Oakland County's Sports. .Car* Center 50 Shhct Naw and Ummd Sport Can- Bonk Financing, Easy Tarmi > ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY i*> lPUd Top Quality Used Cars lr conditioning, actual 74.000 miles. A 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury II l-Ooor Hardtop with automatic, radio, heater, p •r sewering and braltti, whitewalls, beautiful d Nuo flniih with matching Interior. Factory * rantty. 1960 PONTIAC Catalina Mhoor Hardtop, Automatic, rad . ■teor fng and brakes, whitewalls, c damn throughout, , y 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury H*r«rtop with 315 engine, automatic, pc brakes and winddwi, sparkling. v , heater, power 1962 PLYMOUTH Hydfop clean- With lid engine, eutomalic, radio 1964 FORD Golaxio Convertible T963 CHEVY' II Convertible with a 6-cyllnder engine, radio, haatei chestnut liplsh, matching Interior, Oi 1963 PONTIAC Grand Prix natic, radio, h Vhltewatls, «ii h with white |i conditioning, beautiful 724 OAKLAND AVE. Just North of Cost Ave. FE 2-91 $0 Mow md Mod Cere GM' J %hl» . . wagon with rack, gala with while lap, and tan lr Automatic tranamleotow. pa war steering and brake*. J-year war- r*"*^EE BOB BURKE 1304 Bqldwin FE 8-4525 Atrpai Iram Pontiac Data tank - I ttM ^eVROLfT STATION WAG-on with rack on tog, VI atick, ttt; lull price, U down. LUCKY AUTO Autobahn AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mild north of Miracle Mila 1715 8, " ' PUT YOUR MONEY ■\WHERE YOUR HEART CADILLAC IS 1964 CADILLAC ............................... ...........$395 DOWN Coupa DaVllle — Blue Finish, 4-Way Power, AN- 1964 CADILLAC ........... .............................$395 DOWN Sedan — Power Steering, Brakes and Windows — Beige Finish 1964 CADILLAC ... *............... ...... ............... $395 DOWN Caupa — White Finish, Dark Blue Trim, 4*Way Power 1964 CADILLAC ................. .......... .$395 DOWN Man DeVilla — Black Flhlth, 4-Wey Power, Factory Air 1963 CADILLAC.................. .........................$395 DOWN Coupe DaVllle — Leather Trim, 4-w«y Power, Air 1963 CADILLAC..............'............. ............. $395 DOWN Cgupo DaVllle — White Finish, rose trim, 4-Way Power 1962 CADILLAC , ........$395 DOWN Convertible — Rosa Finish, 4-Way Power —• Sharp! ■ 1961 CADILLAC ................... ......................$295 DOWN FROM OF BIRMINGHAM (Ask for Norm Doniilson) 1350 NORTH WOODWARD 1044 CHEVY. IMPALASUPER! 1 Sport. Clean. Ex’c. condition. Auto. EM 37431. 1044 CHEVY 4W, 4 SPEED CON-1 vortlblo. Son In service. Take-1 GLENN'S “No,( I don’t know where Mother and Daddy were going, Mrs. Fisher—and from the way they acted when they left, I don’t think they did, either!” “3 New and Used Can 1959 Chevy Bel-Air 'with vi, automatic, haatar, radio, color, black. Only 1915. Crissmon Chevrolet ..(On Top ol South Hill) ROCHESTER_______________OL 74771 MUST MOVE 1744 CHEVROLET convertible. No money down, 114.17 weekly. CaH Mr. Scott, 33M743. Lloyd’s. __________________ 1944 MALIBU SUPER SPORT CON-vertiblo. 4 spoed. 327. Exc. condition. C4II FE 1-3174. 1945 tHdVY, N flon. Tako M Chevy. 335-3155. STATION WAG- 1945 CORVETTE, 2 TOPS, 3 1944 CHEVELLE SUPER SPORT 394. take over oavmente or $2,300. FE 2-4574. 14 CHEVELLE SS 394, 340 HORSE. ' 373 posl-tractlon. $2200 or r payments. 2274 Oliver this Polara "SOO" matching bucket power steering, brakaa and 10* I New and Used Cars 106 1940 FORO 2-DOOR, RUNS GOOD. I Pull uric*, 1149. North ol 14 Milt 545-4000 Dyke at I Mila SL r---- TRUDELL FORD FULL PRICE h|209SS V Hifii ford i r tuma Ml a ! 3-0315. NO RUST, AS-nth payment. OR $1197 “Ask for The Dodge I Guys in the White H Spartan Dodge PE S 1943 DART 2 DOOR, SEDAN, cylinder, auto., power atMrlng. axi 1-963 DODGE' Polara 4 door with radio, haatai VI, automatic, power titering, a lk Tlatas. quolse finish with n terlor. 1 owner and I Only $1195 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1961 T-BIRD A Classic white coupe r The Dodgp Good Gu In tfjo Whito Hot" Spartan Dodge 155 Oakland Ava. (Just 14 Mila N. ol Cass Ava FE 8-4528 ... 1941 FORD WAGON, VS, AUT< ahn R at 14 Milt, 515-4000 an Dyke at I Mila SL 7-0007 TRUDELL FORD 1941 STARUNER, 390 _________ MO horse, 4-sp9*d, MSO. OL REPOSSESSION 1942 FORD SEDAN SPOTLESS BLUE FINISH. V-t. STANDARD FULL BALANCE M97 - NO DOWN. MUST SELL TODAY CALL MR. CASH, 33(452$, SPAR td this car It Ilka ntw. Bank I itaa. Full Price Only $1695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH (Weekly Payments * 'll 7-3214 DART 1905 OT, BLACK V-$, WHITE bucket teats, vinyl top, white-: ..... S14SO. Call 334-0211 V*L BUT AT ilPARTAN DODGE: $5 DOWN NO PROBLEM We Finance as Low as-$5.00 Special''Credit Auto Finance WE FINANCE .EVEN IF YOU HAV/E BEEN $5 DOWN Down . Plan • BANKRUPT • GARNISHEED • TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS f REPOSSESSED ^ “ ‘"'I960 CHEVY impala Hardtop! Automatic trarasaralsalgn, redi*^ heeler and 1961 CHEVY Convertible, l-cyllnder engine. '1962 PONflAC 3-Door Hardtop, •■cylinder, automatic, radio, heeler, power. ^1963“ BUICK Automatic transmission, radio, haatar. power. Ideal for summer I ~$495 15.33 Wwkly 119 Wppkly $895 PM Weekly ,, $895 ^ $1.17 Weakly 1962 FORD Galaxl* 7-Ooor. Radio, hMtefa 1960 BUICK ■ 1961 T-BIRD (-cylinder, eulomalic Irensmis- 1960 CHEVY Impale Convertible. Automatic transmission, radio, haatar; and Itindtfd trinimnsion. WOW! $695 $7.22 Weekly . . --’VlF ' r ”‘“$695" S7.3J WMkly . lion, tiill power. Full price— $595 tt a WMkly 1 $695 t7.33 Weakly 1960 PONTIAC 1962. MERCURY 1961 PONTIAC ' 1962 CHEVY II HarcPtop. Radio, healer, auto-matlc trdmmiuion, power. Skat-pl Rad flnlah. $695 PM Weekly Hardtop. Radio, haatar, automatic transmission, power. 1 Nice) ' $895' Hardtop, (cylinder, automatic, radio, heater, power. Sharp! $795 *.*! WMkly 4-cyllnder .angina, automatic \ transmission, beautiful blue "$795 \ 11.31 Weakly ■ CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland Ave. fat Wide Track Dr.) FE 2-9214 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service 1929 MODEL A, EXCELLENT CON-dition, 0400. .074-1304. 1934 p6k6, PONTIAC pSwERED. * 402-3253 IMMACULATE 1041 PORO 2 DOOR. 421 Pontiac angina, chevy trana-mlssion-pMitractlon rear end. Also 1N3 Pontiac Grand Prlx, powtr steering-brakes, automatic transmission. OR 4-3827 between 4 end — 1913 FORD. $$07~ $99 Mi.si STAR Auto Sales 60 S. TELEGRAPH 1 b>#PE 69661HUr0" Pretty Ponies 1963 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOME FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS U FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Par Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC 444 8. WOODWARD AVE. . 1943 FORD GALAX IE 4-DOOR, cylinder, chan. 945 E mar ton._ r e possession—ini Word past- back, turquoise. No money dow N.I7 weekly. Call Mr. Mason PE 54101, McAulHfs. 1963 Ford . A glowing bronze Galaxlo size . door atdtn,. with VI, outomatlc, matching vinyl trim. FuH Price— $347 "Aik for The Dodge Good Guys Spartan Dodge VAIRUNliJ 1945 GALAXIE VI, AUTO. 4 power steering, radio, heater, $750. ■ FE 5-5292._______________ 1941 FORO, CONVERTIBLE WITH V-l ENGINE, AUTOMAT IC TRANIMISSlONU POWER BRAKES AND POWER STEERING, RAOIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY SOWN, Assume weakly payments of S10.RS. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parka at HAROLD TURNER FORO, Ml 4-7501. 1903 'FORD VI 2 DOOR. 1 OWNER. Nlctl S79S. 333-7542. Riggins, Deal- REPOSSESSION - 1943 FORD CON-‘—Kbit, rose beige VI Auto, pow-No money down, $1.07 weekly. MU|T . DISPOSE OF 1944 t-BIRO, turquoise, full power No money down, $13.17 weekly. Call Mr. Murphy at FE S-4t01, McAullffa. JMF 1964 Ford Custom 500 $896 "It only tpkas $ minute to Gat a BETTER DEAL" at John McAulifft Ford 030 Oakland Ava. FE S-4101 1965 Ford Gala/la 500 4-Door with Hie 351 VR engine. cruleoj malic, power Hearing, radio, heal r. Only- $1995, BEATTIE "Yeur FORD DEALER $ln& 1930" Dn Dixie In Wbtwfbrd al the double stoplight OR 9-1291 ItiPrOlD 4-DOOR CUSTOM, 4- cvllndar, dean. 04S Emotion. _ H4F*'|*L*NE"GT convertible. 390 anglnt, 4 a pa ad poal-tractlon, A-l Ihape. 33$-4072~ Ml FORD GALAXIE MO, ,4 DOOR hardtop, VI, auto., radio, low minus, perfect condition. Private own-ar. 331-3759. _ .,,,r INTrITTBIRO. $3,415, LAND 1. *M-4317._ . STRATH- LLOYD 1962 MERCURY Commuter ata tropical turqu dition. Spat____ NO MON?/ DOWN ' $30.94 MOHTHLY PAYMENTS •Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7663 1963i Mercury pM,!ii,miJ&t^i^ Malic NO VS pwar steering, brakaa with matching all vinyl Interior, Full Frlct Only - 1965 FORDS T? TO CHOOSE FROM ALL MODELS FULLY EQUIPPED NSW CAR WARRANTIES AS LOW AS $49 DOWN Poymsnts as low as $11.95 HAROLD $1297 ik for The Dodge Deed Spartan Dodge DOWNEY'S, New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1964 MEROJkY Monterey lour doer Breettwiy. $1395 TURNER iDOWNEY Oldsmobile; FORD, INC. J4 5. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_______ Ml 1945 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE 10 peuengsr station wagon. Automatic, sowar steering and brakaa. chrome luggage rack. Thla la the bail. Sava Ml on this am. Call Autorama MOTOR SALES 7435 Orchard Lake Rd. 417-4410 ■ - waat ef Tetagr ’ Inc. New Used Car Display Area 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331 - 338-0332 144 MERCURY PARKLANI WltH 4-door breezeway. $1,S»5 at BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 420 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM Its convertible top, capacitive— charge Ignition. 4 on the fleer, irp. IMS. Owner. VE $-4042, Da- »r $17-5397, White L - TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL POWER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weakly pay-4.95, CALL CREDIT j Estate Storage 1957 T-BIRD, GOOD CONDITION, cell alter s p.m/w-sssl |- WATERFORD REPOSSESSION Gelaxle Hardtop, No money down, —, PE S-4101, McAulHfs. It FORD. WILL TAKE BEST OF- 1140 THUNDERBIRD COUPE. ROW-er steering, brakaa and windows. Excellent body . . lava -Autobahn 1744 $, Telegraph REPOSSESSION I960 T-Bird door hardtop with many axtri lust taka over the balance $450 at $54)0 per weak, no m ay down, lust ask for the "BA Guys, they wear the black ha Bill Smith r. Used Cars 462 N. Parry St. FE 4-4241 .0 PONTIAC 2 dooi ____m~ Estate Storage — Waterford Lot — 3311 Huron (MJ9) . FE 2-3211 Want Ads Pay Off Fast CHEVROLET OLDSMOBILE NEW CAR TRADES IPUMl 1964 CHEVY Impala Sport Coupa, 4-spttd, radio, haatar, 25 Mo. Warranty..................$1595 1963 CHEVY Wagon, automatic, V-8, doubts powtr, 25 Mo. Warranty. Ready to go at \ Only ................................. '....|14te 1965 CORVAIR 2-door Hardtop, Monza, auto* radio, haatar, 25 Mo. Warranty..........$1595 1962 OLDS 4-door Sadan, automatic, double powtr, radio, haatar, 25 Mo. Warranty . $ 995 1965 CHEVY Daluxa Sport Von with outo., radio, haatar, 3 Motor. In Foctory Warranty . $2195 1961 GMC Panel, V-6, Radio. Ready at.........$ 595 j ON DIXIE HWY. AT MIS "Your Crossroads to Greater Savings" CLARKSTON MA 52604 JMF 1964 T-Bird armlne white, with top, beige leather extras Including t REPOSSESSION — Mi nm automatic, V„ $4.87 weakly. ( PE S-4101 It--------- $2081 MUST MOVE 1942 MERCURY STA-tlon wagon. No money down, 99(7 weekly. Call Mr. SodH, 333-7943 MERCURY PAR.KLANE, 1' llr conditioning, 4 REPOSSESSION .. „ 1N4 PORO CMS-or, automatic. No money JB weakly. E 5-4101, MCAulHft. MUST MOVE 1944 T-BIRD. to down, $14.17 weekly. ScoH, 333-7843. Lloyd’s, 1944 FORD 2R STICK, NICE CON r 11,100 mHM. Fg' 1964 FORD i" tHek with radio, heater, blue ilih with matching Interior. An Ml 2nd car that la extra clean, ink rata financing. Pull price! ,IV' $995 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I. Woodward______Ml 7-3214 1965' Ford Galaxie 500 Hardtop' 2 deot, with tha 152 v( angle crulw-o-matlc, power alaarlng. r die, Malar, Sautame gold finis $2095 BEATTIE i, M9. New car v weekly. Call Mr. Murphy, at FE (Owner's InltlaH) Gala McAnnally'a Auto Bala 1945 Ford Mustang MM. finish with Maw Interior, malic hanwgjbjevt'iiR'' ^seT bobTurke 1304 Baldwin FE 84525 Acroei from Pqntlec State Bank FORb 1945 LTD,'42M MILfc, PaV oft balance of t2.Z7l.57, 4 REPOSSESSION - 1945 FALCON 4 door, tvrtuolM. Na money down, $9.17 waiikly. Call Mr. Milan. PE JMF John McAullffa Ford 1965 Mustang Hardtop Cherry rad, with a matching rai buckets, Cruise-O-Matic, radio, dan tread whitewalls, still In new ce warranty. Only $59 down, flnanci balance of only— $1766 John McAuliffo Ford nwtlc transmission, radio, heater, • whitewall liras, only’ $49 down and weakly payments ef $13.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. I 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. ! BIRMINGHAM _Ml ’ 4-750B I MERCURY 1945 COLOI4-Y PARK wagon. 9 passenger. 14,009 miles. Original owner. 10 mo. factory warranty. 4744453. . GLENN'S > WAGONEER, GOOD lino, body. 2 wheal ' 9. PE 4-2BS3. , and ring lab. $575. FINE SELECTION OP 1N2-43-44-45 Continentals at reduced Prlct Must go. Sea them at BOB BORST' 952 W. Huron St. , GOOD RUNNING il, <35. SI REPOSSESSION 114$ OLDS SEDAN WITH AUTOMATIC AND POWER. MUST SELL TODAY. NO t DOWN AND JUST $7.17 WEEKLY. MUST iKl TODAY. CALL MR. CASH, 335452$, SPARTAN. REPOSSESSION 114$ OLDS "$$2" HARDTOP — MUST SELL NOW. NO $ DOWN, OF CASS A! 1941 OLDS STARFlRE CONVIRTI. 1943 MERCURY METEOR: 4 CYL- HARDTOP, ally clean car miles, excellent id mechanically. Want Ads : Pay Off Fast / :MM«f BIRMINGHAM" TRADES ' 1965 SPECIAL ... .........................$1988 V-S, Automatic TranamlMlen, Powtr Stearins 1963 SPECIAL.......................... $1018 2-Door Sadan — Bucket Stall, Automatic, Radio 1965 LaSABRE .......................... $2188 2-Door Hardtop — Rad Flnlth, Parted Shape 1963 RIVIERA ........................ .$1988 A-1 Condition, Just Right for Summer 1965 OLDS .....$2188 Dynamic “•$" 2-Door Hardtop — BfaulUul Blua -Pinlah 1964 ftECmr';TCrTZTj....................$2288 2-Door Hardtop - Vinyl Roof, Air Conditioning 1965 SKYiARK............................$2688 9-Passenger Sports Wagon Double Power, Chroma Rack, Factory Warranty 1964 SKYLARK ............. ...'.!.......$2088 40tor Sedan — v-l. Automatic, Fewer Steering and Brakaa 1965 CHEVROLET............................$2088 Impala Super Sport Convertible — Double Fewer 1965 ELECTRA..............................$3288 "I2S" Convertible - Full Power, Factory Warranty 1964 RENAULT ... .......... ............$ 588 Dauphlne 4-Door Sadan — Excellent Transportation! 1962 BUICK ........................ ...$1288 I-Door Hardtop — I-Owner and Law Mileage 4________a---------j.........' t ^_______________ ^ mm 3 — DOUBLE CHECK - ~ USED CARS — 554 S, Woodward 647-5600 THE PONTIAC PRE88, THURSDAY, JULY 14,1960 NMMdUMdCan 106 #1*62 dlQS ■», Convertible with bucket •M MWtMfMr brakn. F-8 "MUST Movi INI 6ldi cutlass MM! lT'333*78*X 1*6! B0NNKVILL1 CONVERTIBLE, good condition, woo. Call attar r»r- 1963 OLDS ; Convertible twHh'full power. (nolle transmission, radio and haotor, whltowell tlroo. only $49 down and weakly payments only itiJi. * . HAROLD • TURNER FORD, INC. #4 S. WOODWARD AVI. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 1063 OLDS CONVERTIBLE. VMM}, Mr bluo. white top, whltowalls, automatic trono. BHM____ 1964 Olds Station 'Wagon $1795 l BEATTIE 1 OR 3-1291 Itu OLDS CUTLASS CONVERTI- -----‘tterlng ond brakes. condition. 626-8373. JMCm 106 Itow .ad Ihed (in transportation SPECIALS All In good mechanical . Condition, Priced 'to sell Tost. Wo Need* The Room. All cars carry out 1 year . used cor Warranty. wi PLYMOUTH wdaoa V . V Cob Finance. No Gath Noodo< BIRMINGHAM oaa • CH»Y»L»e.WLYMOUTH M9 t. Woodwr# mi y»ni4 VtS BUT, AT SMTAN DODOS vsvgiffmm: m OSjclmdAwl. 'Sy1™ OdOOkl!?feL,MaT0V.^ CATALINA-- ■ van. K JET* ,x 1961 Pontiac Catalina Convertible V0(| standard shift, powar steerin' ;$895 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1730' On Dlxla In Watarford it the double atopllght OR 3-1291 MARMADUKE By Aaderaon and Learning 1061 Pontiac Catalina Vtniura. Light sh With dak blua In- SEE BOB BURKE 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Vis out, At sfArtan dodob you can buy • INI Tempest Sport Coop# tor just 1307. isToaklend READY FOS _______________ MUST SOU TODAY. NO t DOWN AND JUST 111.17 WEEKLY. MUST SELl. TODAY. CALL MR. CASH, 330-4321. SPARTAN i*E Ipontiac STAR CHIEF, door hardtop, hydromotlc,7 pow atoorlng, brakes, radio, Mir. aa speaker with rtvtrb, sets gua MUST MOVE INI PONTIAC CON vartlbta. No money down, 112.07 wookly. Coll Mr. Scott, u~ — IMS PONTIAC CAtALINA, I DOOR hanttop, low ml. 044741. tM LUMNB, (TICK, IPOHT Contole. Exc. ____________ 1Y OWNER, SH/WP NiS OLDS M. 4-door hardtop. All power, 02095. DOWNEY'S Now Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1962 VALIANT ■r, Radio, hitter, otondard ■3,, 1317. Assume $395 DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. NEW USED CAR DISPLAY AREA 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331 - 338-0332 ' 1964 Plymouth A Perfect station wagon, for your summer vacation, Torquofllta, VS, glowing bronzo finish, with matets-me All Vinyl Interior, Pull Prica $1497’ "Ask for The Dodge Good Guys Spartan Dodge Vis iuT, aT TpaHtaN boboE you con buy a IMS Plymouth tor lust IMI7. 155 Oakland Avo. fe 1961 Tempest perfect 1st nr 2nd car to this soft ter lor** autom,*r>n. mim Call nj- 1*64 CAfALINA S^OkYi COUPE. -Light blue. White walk, heeler, radio. Standard trammluten. Econo-my engine Extra clean. Actual mileage, 19,200. Private awnar. Bast otter. OR 4-2441. GO!! ! HAUPT 'PONTIAC 1*64 PONTIAC Grand Prlx, automatic Power steering, brakes. 59* down. 1965 GTO with 4 speed, end rally Cluster BN down. On Mein Street CLARKSTON GLENN'S 1964 Pontiac coupe 4 weed. L. C. Williams, Salisman 152 W. Hum It. 4-7371 PE 4-17*7 1964 PONTIAC ^ Convertible with full potter, automatic yraeumltsion, redid, heater and wtiitewell tires, ant* 141 down ..and weekly payments el 514.12. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 664 $. WOODWARD AVE. ■IRMIMOHMI Ml WM BOB BORST Hear Ye... Hear Ye... A Change Has Been Made at . . . To Mark This Change We Have HARDTOPS CONVERTIBLES _______. 2 DOORS--------♦— 4 DOORS' STATION WAGONS IMPERIALS-NEW YORKERS 300s - PLYMOUTHS - V-1-P.s 3_ T.EUCKLQADS-OF - ~ 1966 .CHRYSLER FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS A V-. E Other Changes Have Been Made 19M IMPERIAL LE BARON 4-Door UP TO $1400 ON PLYMOUTH OR CHRYSLERS Service Department Sales Room 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. Mon. Tues. - Thurs. Mon. - Fri. : \ SAT. 12*2 fM. / \1/ ' ■--- " / yjj ... #til 9 P.M. /; 1ST A Large Selection of Birmingham One-Owner New Car Trades BIRMINGHAM PLYMOUTH CO. 912 S. WOODWARD - 647-3214 V I F—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1866 r mmi M Can IMMaw mmi mi •ONNCVHXI CONVt. tTIBLi. cm* Ml pH**- mt* aowar. BCEEGO Pontiac—GMC>-Tempest Cm 106 Now «td Deed Con GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman M14. Huron m. ^ ^ V more to choose from - New mmi MCn MM BONNEVILLE COUPE, HARO-toe, sp*ci*i Frtcal xKEEGO Pontiac-GMC—Tempest "Same location » Years" KEEGO HARBOR mi TEMMIIT CUSTOM HARDTOP, V4 angina, automatic transmission, Sunaat rad tlnlih, vinyl Mtofir “ Cell* n t fires, 100 R*r cent "HEY-Look Us Over— Lend Us Your'Ear— Our^. Prices Are the Lowest-This Time of Year! f Hr! 1966 BUICKS ASK FOR 'PC No. 464 00 Custom 7-Door^ Hardtop with automatic. LeSabre and brakes- radio, w Inted windshield. —$2995 LeSabre ASK FOR 'PP No. 459 00 4-Door Sedan. Bluemlst, and this i tiM model throughout! $2695 ASK FOR 'PP No. 415 00 Special lc and radio. Only— $2487 '66 -$2957 ASK FOR No. 426 00 Skylark with automatic, power steering, i t, ether extras I $2795 These Are Actual Honest Prices On Cars We Have Iti Stock! . . OLIVER BUICK 196-210 Orchard Lake Aye. FE 2-9101 ST CUSTOM -t'nWl’i tr««, loo ger Autobahh MOTORS, INC: AUTHORIZED VW DEALER W mile north at Mirada Mile IMS S. telegraph FE P-4S3I Ittt BONNEVILLE, POWER STEER-ing — brakes, tinted glass, vinyl top. automatic air conditioning, low mileage, factory guarantee. The beat at CetPllne price. UL i-jMjg. i t*M BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR HARO-top. power steering — brakes — seat. S7«-MH) attsr 4, POWER Ml engine, r seat, OBI- araa. LIKE NEW I LaMANS CONVERT I- DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 70 CARS TO CHOOSE PROM 1PM IMPALA 677 S. LAPEER RD. - Lake Orion MY 2-2041 New ud Used Cm 106 IBM LaMANS HARD smtlar-1 IMF 1964 Rambler PI napes balance at only— $1033 1965 RAMBLER Marlin V8 2-door hard-jop, automatic transmission, bucket seats, AM-FM radio, power brakes and power steering. Wire wheels. Excellent Birmingham 1-owner new car trade. Full price $2195 with bank rates for 36 months. Village Rambler 660 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1965 OLDS Cutlass Hardtop. V:8, automatic, power steering 6nd brakes, electric win- * dows .. ...... ............... SAVE 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door-hardtop. Full power including 6-way power seat, electric windows. 6000 mile car with trans-ferable new car warranty ..................... $»95 1964 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop, powty steering and brakes, tinted glass, air conditioned. Like new....................$1995’ 1965 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan. Full poweiyGold with black vinyl top. Transferable new car warranty. .........._______/... $3295 1963 OLDS F85 6-passenger station Wagon. V8, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Gold and white $1395 1966 OLDS Deluxe Toronqdo with full power including 6-way powerboat. Only 3,700 miles. Transferable new cor warranty .. SAVE 2 year Warranty 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 New mi ttmi Care 186 COME ■' TO > THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE ioo ' Top Quality, one-owner new car trades to choose from* WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT 65 Mt. Clemens At WM* Track FE 3-7954 Nwr —I MmiCm W Mt RAMRLIR BUPIE 4 DOOR mt. Oacara- PR MS4I- ' x Want Ads ^ Pay. Off Fast 1961 RAMBLER Classic station wagon. *-cv___ ——■*-“**- transmission, re ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 t«l AMERICAN 4 DOOR RAMB-I lar, excel Ian t condition, private | owner, 21S7 So. Gi “ * go Harbor, Rambler Sale New Car Warranty Irsnd new IBM RAMBLER American. automatic, whitewalls. Beat otter takes I 1965 MARLIN kastback, big VI, automatic, power disc brakes. Individual reciting seats. |i,tM. i RAMBLER Wagon, 4-door. mMT / RAMBLER . full Pdwer, I "■f 1M2 RAMBLER American. Sharp, Grimaldi * Oakland Avo. 1965 RAMBLERS DEMOS I 4-door sedans. Very iowj mileage cars. Only 3,000 and 4.000 m'les. New Car Warrontyj: Only $95 down, 36-month financing at bank rates. Credit, no problem. 8 to choose rrom at Village Rambler j 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 1km m Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT AOS . If you haven't ... try one. Hundreds of others do . . . da'lyl m MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's'Mww j CHEVROLET DEALER 1104$. Woodward Ml 4-2735 SHARP AUTO'S 1966 Pontioc Hardtop 4-Door, leaded with autamatlc. power (tearing, brakes and windows. power vents, sir conditioning, autamatlc ttmperitvrs control, black cordovan top, rad llrslsh and whitewalls. Many, many mere extras. Save 1965 Catalina Convertible With meytelr main finish, Mack top. Mack trim, 12.000 miles, radio. tieater, power steering and brakes, whitewalls. Only- $2595 1964 Pontioc Cotblinb 4-Door Hardtop. Sparkling aqua finish with matching trim, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, radio, heeler and whitewalls. Only— $1795 1965 Pontiac Catalina $2195 1963 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop 2-Door. Ventura trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, whitewalls, gleaming midnight bluo finish and matching trim. Only— $1495 1964 VW, Deluxe Station Wagon. Law mileage, 1 owner, ready to go. Only- $1295' .1962 Pontiac Star Chief 4-Door Sedan with a beautiful geld finish,' matching trim, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Locally 1963 Pontiac Star Chiaf matte, power altering and brakes, whitewalls. The unlf has * beautiful let black tlnlih. Only— $1495 1964 Pontiac BonnavllN, 4 door hardtop. guaranteed actual mllw ond I* owner. This III right ^equipment, with automatic transmission, radio, hoatar, Tpow-er steering, and brakes. Ortly— $1995 1964 Buick Special 4-Door Wagon. Bslgo flnlah with matching trim, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall*, V-6 angina, nice car. Only- ^395 1966 Rambler Classic BRAND NEW 7712-DOOT Hardtop. Red and block, vinyl top. automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tire* and Many Mors Extras., $600 Discount 1964 Pontiac B'ville 4-Doer Hardtop. Beautiful light blue -with matching Interior. 23,-OOO actual miles, rawer steering $1995 1963 Pontiac Catalina 4-Door Sedan. Light blue with matching trim, low mileage, one owner, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater and $1295 1963 Chevy Impala ■ • 28,000 $1295 1959 Ramblsr Ambassador 4-Door Man. Jot Macic tlnlih with matching trim, aaatanwllc. 3 staring, radio, haatsr, V4 . A real shirp car- all Ms* wayl $495 1965 VW 2-Door Like Economy? Try ttila one on I only t7iM $1495 1957 Olds Super "SB" 4-Door Hardtop. brlkos. Good transportation. Only $150 1966 Pontiac Bonnavillt Convertible. Finish Is rgtayfslr mails with whits togs, leather trim, low mlloigi. has •crtemotle transmission, power brakes and steering, whitewall tires, a rail beauty. $3295 1965 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop, 2-Doar Ventura with fan-tan blue finish, black cordovs hip. power steering and brakws, automatic transmission, radio, bw miiesgel Only— $2595 1959 Ford 2-Door Trsnsportitlon Special, only- $150 1966 Timpest Custom Station WngoO. Mentora rail white top, rid trim. Luggage rack, au-tometlc, power itaarlno, power brakoa, V-l pnglnt, EZ eye glass. Sovtl 1965 Chivy Impalcr Super Sport with e sparkling red finish, buck!) seats, "327'r 300 H.P. angina, 4-speed, radBo. heeler, power steering and brakes, whitewalls, and ready to gel $2395 ■ Ask for Pat Jarvi* - Kin Johnson — Bob Hill Pontiac - Rambler On M24 in Lake Orion h\ K Specialist in PRE-OWNED CARS Under $995.00 PONTIAC TV LOT M-59 At ELIZABETH LAKE RD. FE 8-4088: steering'and brakes. Black. $5 Down and $4.24 per week ...... ........................... 1961 RAMBLER Wagon, automatic, power steering, light blue finish. $5 Down and $4.24 , par week . ........ ...... .............. 1962 FORD Galaxit V-8 with standard trans- mission. Like new condition. $5 Down and $8.04 per week ........................... 1962 CHEVY II 4-door. Gray finish with matching inferior, radio, heater. $5 Down and $7.39 par week ......................... ....... 1961 OLDS 2-door Hardtop, V-8, power steering and brakes, automatic, black. $5 Down, just $8.04 per week ... 1961 VOLKSWAGEN. Dark blue finish and very low mileage. $5 Down ond just $7.39 per week ................................... 1960 FORD Station Wagon, 9 passenger, automatic,1 power steering and brakes'. $5. Down and $4.24 per week______ . . $395 $595 $495 $595 $495 $395 1960 BUICK LeSabre 2-door Hardtop, power steering and brakes, automatic. $5 Down and QOQR $4.16 per week ................. ........... kpZjv^vJ 1960 LINCOLN 2-door with full power, includ-ing factory air conditioning. $5 Down and just $8.04 per week...... ., .j..... .... 1962 CORVAIR Spider with 4-speed transmis-sion and^bucket seats. $5 Down and just $8.04 1962 DODGE Dart, 2-door, with power steer- . ing and brakes, automatic. $5 Down and just CFCT QCZ $8.04 per w»ek ....... ............. .MAJOJ 1962 OLDS 88 Convertible with full power, radio, heater, automatic. $5 Down and just $9.36 per week ............... .............>PU<3U 1957 CHEVROLET 2-door Hardtop, V-8, auto- matic, whitewall tires. $5 Down and just h!1 OR $3.84 per week .: ...... ...... Wl'ZJU CLARKSTON TV LOT 6695 DIXIE HIGHWAY (US 10) 2 BLOCKS SOUTH OF Ml5 - CALL COLLECT MW MA 5-2671 19^9 FORD 4-dcor sedan with V-fr^vV'irntir, blue and white finish. $5 Down and just $3.67 1 per week .— .................................. 1959 T-BIRD 2-door Hardtop, full power, radio, heater, white finish.' $5 Down and just $7.35 per week...................................... 1956 LINCOLN 4-door. Power steering, power brakes and windows, black. $5 Down and just $4.24 per week..............y................ 1961 FORD 4-door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, automatic, radio. $5 Down and | just $4.24 per week ... 1957 CHEVROLET Convertible. Radio, heater, V-8, standard tronsmissi $4.24 par week .......... 1961 FALCON Future. 2-door with 6-cy|indtr and automatic, radio, heater. $5 Down and just $3.84 per week .. 1955 PONTIAC 4-door. V-8, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tirws. $4.16 per week ......... $^95 Radio, heater, luggage rock. $5 Down and just $4.16 per weik $495 19$7 FORD 2-door Hardtop. V-8, automatic, radio, heater, block and white finish. $5 Down and just $4.16 per week . . . $395 1960 CADILLAC 4-door with full power, including factory air conditioning. $5 Down and just. $10.85 par week.: $395 1959 BUICK 4-door Sedan. Power steering, power brakes, radio, heater. $S Down and just $4.24 per week $395 1960 RAMBLER Station Wagon. 8-cylinder, overdrive, luggage rack, radio. $5 Down and just $4.24 per week $195 1960 BUICK Electro 2-door. Power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, bluo and white. $5 Down and just $7.35 per week $295 1960 FORD Galaxit 4-door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, radio, heater. $5 Down and just $4.24 per week fry . ~ • '-’Y' ■' $395 $395 $495 $395 KING FEATURES: /; • OVER 1200 FINE PREhOWNED CARS t ALL CARS CLEARLY MARKED NO DELAY * EXCELLENT SELECTION AT All PRICES * IMMEDIATE DEUVEKV # 13 CONVENIENTLY LOCATED LOTS a ALL CREDIT APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED GIANT SAVINGS. NO RED TAPE OPEN 9 TO 9 DAILY EASY CREDIT. AMERICA'S LARGEST VOLUME USED CAR DEALER .ft** J* 3715 N. WOODWARD. HO.a CLARKSTON a PONTIAC * ROSEVILLE a HIGHLAND PARK a WARREN a CLAWSON ,• S.E. DETROIT a ROYAL OAK • LINCOLN PARK *! N.W. DETROIT a NIVERVIEW SATURDAYS 'TIL 7 The tontiac press, thursdayjjulv Protest March Over; Cleric Packs Bags McALUSN, Tex. (H — Wendle Scott’s protest march is over, and he is picking to get out of a Church of Christ school b he was Ordered to vacate. * 'Pfb •* Scott joined f Fourth of July inarch of striking Mexican-American farm workers in the Rio Grande Valley to dramatize demands for union recognition and a 31.25 an hour mimimum wage fop field hands who now earn 80 cents to $1 an hour. Scott was asked by elders of McAllen's Harvey Drive Church of Christ to quit the march, men he refused, he was told to move out of the 'chuch-owned building he used for a school to train Mexicans for the ministry. The students, nine of them, are having to pack, too. The building doubled as a dormitory. “If we can rent a large house or if someone will supply us with a large place, we’ll move there,” said Scott. “Failing that, we'll move into my house, which is too small even for my * own family.'' 'Mighty' Mouse Puts Radio Station Off Air PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Officials of radio station WCSH smelled a rat when the transmitter was knocked out, putting the station off the air for 40 minutes recently. * * ★ But it was a mouse, not a rat, that short circuited the transmitter. The mouse was killed. Only one president, George . Washington, was inaugurated in two cities — New York in 1789 and Philadelphia in 1793. —Television Programs— if** t f :/ | & W Programs furnished by stations Ustedinthls column are iubl*ct to change without notice 7CC a-wjin-TV, 4-wwj-tv, 7-wxyz-tv, w-ckiw-tv, so-WitSCTTinBE^Wiv* tonight Ml(I)(4) New's, Weather, Sports (7) Movie; ‘‘Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell’’ (1961) Clifton Webb, Joanne Dru (I) Dennis the Menace (80) Jungle Jim (86) Friendly Giant 6:11 (86) Merlin the MagMai; 6:86 (2) (4) Network News (I) Marshal Dillon (SO) JJttle Rascals (16) Navy Log 7:16 (2) Zorro (4) Michigan Outdoors (I) Twilight Zone (86) U.S.A. 7:10 (2) Munsters (4) Daniel Boone , (7) Batman (80) Lloyd Thaxton (86) Marketing on th< Move 8:60 (2) Gilligan’s Island . (7) Gidget (9) The Saint (86) News In Perspective 6:20 (2) My Three Sons (4) Laredo (7) Double Life (80) Merv Griffin 1:11 (2) Movie: “Mysterious Island” (1911) Gary Merrill, Michael Craig (7) Bewitched (9) Seaway 9:29 (4) Mickle Finn’s (7) Peyton Place 19:69.(4) Rowan and Martin (7) The Baron (9) Wrestling (50) Country and Western Ttae 10:29 (50) Forrest Greeq Show 11:00 (2) (4M7) (9) News, Weather, Sports Radi (50) Horse 11:29 (2) Movie: i«ng “Agent Z55- ALUMINUM SIDING YOUR COMPLETE HOUSE 22x24x8 Your Ohdeti • PLAIN • COLORS • WOOD GRAIN *389 <25.95 per 100 sq. ft. STORM » DOORS5 FREE ESTIMATES W1V In Pontiac Since 1931 QlNamca Stmt" II0HTII SUNDAYS PHONEl 612-6641 MA 4-1091 6D4W KM J-2316 MY Mill NEW! Siue Pontiac “Super Chief' Special TV Antenna Especially De*ign«d by ANDI for Maximum Performance on Channels 2-4-7-9 For the Beit Color TV Reception hhtorotti KW/...h Mt Rk9«m4«M at Sold If CONDON’S RADIO & TV 730 W. HUR0N™srs«:a Open Saturday *1111:00 P.M. OpenMon.-Fri. Eves. Til9KJ0PM. .FE 4-9736 TV Features Mickie Finn Songfest MERV GRIFFIN, 8:30 p.m. (50) Guests Include actor Jan Murray, actress Pat Marand, singer Josephine Premice and comedian London Lee. MICKIE FINN’S, 9:10 pjn. (4) Frank Fontaine, a regular on the Jadde Gleason show, Joins Fred and Midde, the Dapper Dani and Mickie Finn dancers. ROWAN AND MARTIN, 10:09 p.m. (4) Actress-comedienne Joyce Jameson and comic Pat Henry are featured guests. Lea Brown and hit band pay tribute to the music of Duke Ellington. Desperate Mission” (1164) German Coboa, Yoko Tanl (4) Tonight (7) Movie: “Cry of Battle” (1963) Van Heflin, Rita Moreno (9) Sentimental Agent 12:11 (9) Window on the World 1:19 (4) Beat the Champ till (7) News 1:19 (2) (4) News, Weather (7 After Hours 2:99 (7) Dragnet FRIDAY MORNING 1:11 (2) On the Farm Scene 0:29 (2) News 6:25 (2) Summer Semester 6:11 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:56 (2) Editorial, News 7:61 (4) Today (7) Three Stooges 7:6i (2) News 7:26 (2) Happy land 8:61 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater S:2i (7) News 6:91 (7) Movie:-‘^Almost Bride" (1949) Shirley «, Temple, David Nivsn 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go Round> 9:19 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:19 (2) Dick Van Dyke 9:51 (4) News 19:99 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess (9) Hercules 19:25 (4) News 19:11 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Take 30 11:99 (2) Divorce Court (4) Chain Letter (7) Supermarket Sweep-stakes (9) Vacation Time 11:19 (4) Slowdown (7) Dating Game (50) Dickary Doc AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News, Weather, Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Luncheon Date 12:29 (2LSearch for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ Country (7) Father Knowa Best (9) People in Conflict (50) Movie 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:51 (4) Nfews 1:00 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey a — (0) Movie: “Jezebel’’ (1920) Bette Davis, Henry Fonda 1:21 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Can 1:29 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:H (4) News 2:99 (2) Password ' (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:39 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:11 (7) News. 2:00 (2) To Ten the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 2:25 (2) (9) News 1:21 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’ Time (SO) Johnny Ginger 4:19 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows 4:29(2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action la (9) Fun House 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac S:N (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (56) Discovering America 5:21 (56) What’s New 5:41 (7) Network News 1:15 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Klein Back to Testify in ' Dodd Probe NEW YORK (UPI) -Klein, a Chicago public relation* arrived from Germany yesterday en route to Washington to tell the U.S. Senate Ethics Committee that his friendship with Sen. Thomas D. Dodd, DConn., was an innoc Klein, 64, was bristling over charges by syndicated lata Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson which touahed off the ^raotl Senate investigation of his re- “*S2 Bern lationship with Dodd. RAGHH ' He said the two were motivated la their “lying” campaign by the fact that “Sea. Dodd and I are strong Americans and anti-Commnniiti.’’ “I don’t hesitate to say thi Drew Pearson is left wing," be said. The columnists accused Dodd of going to Germany to Improve Klein’s relationship there with various business concerns for which he is representative In the United States. Dodd already has appeared before the Senate Ethics Committee and denied there he ever acted on Klein’s behalf or received gifts from the Chicagoan. 'Plastic Gas Tanks Duo on 1967 Truck*' DEXTER. (AP) - Gasoline tanks made of plastic will be standard equipment on a line of 1967 heavy-duty trucks of major manufacturer, according to Phillips Products of Dexter, molders of the tanks. Freedom from electrostatic charge and durability were offered as advantages of the plastic tanks. , By EARL WILSON , HOLLYWOOD ANp BROADWAY - I found Van Johnson yi ‘completely under’’—having been hypnotized by Pat Collins and consequently off both dgarets and banana split*—when I visited lOokimbla’i "Divorce, American Style” set where 'everybody (Including Van and Dick Van Dyke) ; was discussing the trance Van’s in. “I want to stay in this supernatural world, I love It!" Van exclaimed. “I’U never smoke Phil Silvers visited me at the Beverly Hills and told a story) concerning his splitup with Evelyn Patrick. He was on theP»|JJ2J55*5££ tfff “HrJstic* with his daughter Nancy, in Florida and her mother, and Nancy registered letter that if drastic ig Car Disposal Inaugurated NEW YORK UR—The borough of Manhattan in New York City recently inaugurated free tow-away service for abandoned mo-far vehicles in am effort to cut down on discarded can that have become traffic and safety hazards as well New York dty Sanitation Commissioner Frank J. Lucas announced that motorists who wish to dispose of unwanted autos may call their nearest sanitation office and arrange mutually convenient time for pickup. ' * *. * Owners must sign the jalopy over to the department before the tow track will remove tt. 'Tranced' by Pat Collins, Van Sheds His Bad Habits Judges Plan Meeting MACKINAC BLAND (AP)-1u Michigan Probata and Juvenile Judges Association will meet July 17-30 at Mackinac n— 2 4 5 A 7 r 10 11 Its II 14 (A he 16 ■ ill 22 23 r 25 I r 2b 29 30 33 36 J ■ 40 41 42 43 44 I 44 47 48 50 bl 54 fes 56 to 11 Union Scorns Firing Threat Employes of Lansing to Take Strike Vote PLUMBING DISCOUNTS 13-PieceBATH SETI WM l winner . . I Colons (Mr L—ANSING (AP) - A union official predicts that the city’s thxr^atriofo^any and-afrrtrilc-injj municipal employes will e little effect on their strike “You know how I was oa banana splits,” be said. “I haunted Swanson’s in San Francisco, Wil Wright’s in Hollywood end Hicks’ In New York. I tried just one spoonful since _____________Pat hypnotized me and I had to pat it down. WILSON it was distasteful. I was hooked—and Pat unhooked me!” he,added with a big happy smile. Van must be an easy subject—he was hypnotized once before i Palm Springs by Sammy Renick, the jockey. ★ ★ '★ I TOILETS *18** I j Fireploce Got Logt f The prediction was made by Wmlter Oliver, International representative of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes. A strike vote will be taken Friday, he | said, adding: •*It is our feeling the mem- j be i—ship would almost unani-t mously support strike action.**] He said he would not be| suirprised to see next Monday ] set as the strike deadline. | ECmriier this week, Oliver sent th» city a telegram in which ha | threatened “drastic action” if the city did not resume contract negotiations, which have been | going on for nine months, by Friday. II luck Mt-Rim WASH BASINS $595 EXTRA SPECIALS! [ Un*T Tny Trim ... ei W.VI t i i r! M Oil. 10 YMr *aqn ■ aw || irUBCMjl daughter Nancy,__________ _____ said, “Daddy, do you have an envelope?” ... “Yes” ... “Put my name and address on it. Do you have a stamp?” ... "Yes, of course,” said Phil... “Put the stamp on it, Daddy,” Nancy said, “get in the envelope, seal the envelope, and mall it to me." ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Jakes Mason was at Arthur. (He couldn’t get a plane to L.A. to visit his children)... Bandleader Lester Lanin reports has 10 orchestras stranded around the country . .. Wealthy S. African John SchteatogerTl get hitched next month .,. Tony enrtu fold lflg " bports't!tr ui lM Shawn for 8Gi. (Tbuy waiilsl 68,500—but Dick found a scratch In the bumper and argued <500 off the price). Vina Usi, filming “25th Hour” in Yugoslavia, got a request for an autographed photo from Tito . . . Comedienne Joan Rivers’ll play a bachelor girl to Burt Lancaster’s “The Swimmers” .. Senta Berger and Michael Verhoeven postponed the wedding again. ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Goodman Ace autographed book, “The Fine Art of Hypochondria, or How Are You?” to a friend, with the note: “May I borrow this when you finish It?” WISH I’D 8AID THAT: When a woman asks to see something more expensive, she’s shopping. When she asks to see something cheaper, she’s buying. ★ ★ ★ REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The best time-saving device Is tomorrow. EARL’S PEARLS: Bill Bart of Bffl’s Gay 90s hired an efficient expert, whose first suggestion was that the one-man band was overstaffed. Producer Joe Levine, who's almost always flying somewhere, is grounded in N.Y. by the airline strike. “Now I know,” he what the subway strike must have been like.” That’s earl, brother. (TIN Hill SyaOcata, Inc.) action" meant a strike or slowdown, it would result to immediate termination of dty employment for offenders. City negotiators would not be able to meet with union representatives before July 28, Bod-win said, and would not meet then if Oliver did not retract bias implied threats. Oliver charged that Bod win beam been trying to provoke the unlaju’ Into a strike “tor the last nlrasi months hjr rrfnitnc tn bar gain to accordance with the hw.” Oliver said the union, which represents some 400 dty ww in various categories, will fil9 unfair labor practice charges against the dty with th9 state labor mediation bdard. C5fand Rapids Teen Saved Front Drowning MUSKEGON (UPI)-Sixteen-yearold Sharon Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reeves W a lliams, Grand Rapids, ______saved from drowning 1 n La Ice Michigan at Pioneer Park in F*Jorth Muskegon yesterday. e girl had been overcome while swimming ami was re vi*r«d by fire department members and taken to Hackley Hospital. — Radio Programs- WI6fflWWXr»naJNCnW(lWWWU(»WWGAafl16WWMNn440> SOW WW1*M(94.7) tiN-WJI wwj, “ CKLW, wxvz, WJIK, Johnny I rom ...in. OMnar e_ WWJ, Phona Opinion wxvz, Ed SNarpaw WJIK, Nan, Woill wcar, Km Him Mv'K-hut ita-WJIt Tjewe/OrW* m'iN-WXYZ. Danny Tartar 7||9-WJIK, taorti Wtta-wjR.leoraa.MMtk; • 11:00—WWJ, Raw*. Sport. WJR. Nawt, Sparta, Muale IliW-WCAR. Madlcal Journal lliW-WCAR, Ron Raw Iliia-WJSK, Canwnaui raiOAT MORNina PRIDAY AFTERNOON UiW-wjr, Nan. Nana WJIK. Nan, Edtr, Mw»*c WCAR, Nan, Day. Lode- fXY£ „_____ CKLW, Mai, Daw IWar ' '1—WJR, Focus wwj, Nawa. Rwana WXVZ, Avary, Muale, CKLW. *— “— WJIK, WCAR, ■SavePUIMBlMGl | 841 Baldwin ■ FE 4-1BI6 or FE 8-2 f 09 ! PORTABLES 17" Airline *29” 17“ Traveler *29* 17" Admiral *3995 17" Westing house $3995 17" Philco $4gss 14" Zenith $4995 17" Sy I vania $3995 17" G.E. $4995 17" Zenith *59” 19" Remote Control *79” 30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 WAtTONTVl 515 E. WALTON BLVD.. CORNER JOSLYN Open 9 to 9 MY JOB: Workingr Solutions To Tour Living Problem»! Let’s Talk REMODELING Eliminate In-Between Costs and Confusion.. # I Personally Will Call OwTout--------- REMODELING m ^kitchens BM ★bathrooms attics ★ADDITIONS *rs. ★RECREATION ★ ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING * FREE *^9(99Ut DMiga ESTIMATES and Layaut Sarviea KFaraenal SuparvitJag 27 Ystrt Of Ail Datails Ucsl SuccatsT r-Loeal Contractor Mtwbar Paitlac Ar»a r-Laoil and Quick Siryjga FHt UW BANK TBUU UP TO 2t YEARS AN OPPORTUNITY TO BID FOR YOUR WORK WILL PLEASE US BOTH BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION COMPANY FE 3-7833 718 North Pony PONTIAC - i' THE PONTIAC PRJESS, THURSDAY,-JULY 14, 196$ WARM Sun Glasses Sale-priced A bsrgsin at this price. Limit 2 pair. Camera. Film Sdc-prlced Q.6& ' Black and wluite film. Limit 5 ro 1U. Suntan Lotion Reg. $1.37 93C Coppertone suntan lotion. Unit 2. Men’s Socks BanLon 97c Stretch U 1 Men’s Bunion itntch locki. Man, colon.,Limit 6. Tirpolene 1-Gal. fJ7 C Cans U • Thins any pulnt or varnish. Limit ,2 gal. Saw Hsrse Brackets Propaie Taak Refill S.I.-pric.d Either of above items. Limit 3.' “C-B” Batteries Sale- Qc Priced ^ **• Radio or flashlight batteries. Limit 6. 1 ■"HBSl r SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. ON SALE AT MRS WAREHOUSE- 48t&46/MAWS71 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! FLOOR SAMPLES, 1,1,1 and 4-OF-A-KIAD. 0M> LOTS. nEMONSTRATORS ... ALL AT LOW, LOW SALE PRICES. ALL ARE MECHANICALLY PERFECT. V, i WH5E ’ HOWARD / W /v SEARS /X STORZ/g wfe V; AJ llRQl^ 5T^_, HUNDRIS OF OTHER ITEMS NOT LISTED 2-Pc. Bedroom Set, Was $118.95 7-Pc. Dinette Indudei pinfl bed and doable drencr with miner. Dini oil A/\ ■tylinfc complemented by rich Wllnut utin finlih. Abundant ilan|t ipirr. Ill 1 4-Drawer Cheat, Res* *61 .44.B8 ^ v Stain resistant top with color accents. Sturdy bronzetone tabular steel leg*, nplete with 6 matching chairs. Bright* Sale! Mattresses or Box - Springs Were 129.95 to $34.93 Twin Size 22SL Were |39«95 to 349.95 Full or Twin eno kitchen. Save! . PS H Em H Crib Sale Wat $26.95 Was* *26.99 18.88 19.88 „ ed plaid ^mp-r, whit. trim. Doable drop 8 avrt—*«. Natural. £ 11.99 Halim. 6.SS i $84.95 59“ Round Table &2 Reg. $37.93 0088 ™ J 14.95 Tobin 9.1 Was #29.95 22. «8 Were $59.95 to 979.95 Fuller OQ88 Twin ^3-^ewh Floor samples, mi s-matched, slight, ly damaged, some are brand new. Hurry in for beat aelecdon and uveit Sun. Contempora *~y Snivel Rocker Wu 169.95 49“ Elegant Modem linn. Re*en Me Seroio.m ni.hinn, no-.. Snve $41.95 on Sofa Pil|ow«luxe *1 (1088 with Suds-Saver......... A07 Electric Dryer.................m $309.95, Lady Kenmore T 0088 M99.95, I>«sluxe f 4088 with Suds-Saver......... JLW Gas Dryer . -................... with Suda-Savi MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM Lignited Quantities All froatleos in top and bottom sectiona. 3.9 cu. ft; freezer section maintains zero-degrees. Twin crispers. Left hand door. 14 cu. ft.rModel 196.77 30-in. Gas Range Sale $QQ ... ■priced OO 1 i7j.ua 1 ^B ’ 39” Gas Classic Sale- $1 QQ priced A77 5-Piece Sectional, Was — 2499S *199 Dramatic! A full 16-ft. around the walla. Reversible Serofoam cushions. Uphohtered In Nylon frieze and other covers. In colors. 3-pc. Barbecue Set Reg. *24.93 T988 Sale! 17.4 cu. ft. Upright Freezer ( Limited fl n O Quantities 100 Stores, freezei 609-lbs. of food. Porcelain-finish interior is easv to clean. Sale! 17.2 cu. ft. Chest Freezer Limited *1 OO Quantities *w Large storage capacity . . • holds 602 lb*. Porcelain finish interior. Save now! 30-in. Electric *108 Clock control oven, Aatomatio —lap unit mahoi aayWtewoil suto-—malic. Hug-in unite. - Double Oven 30** Electric Classic White or *278 Coppertono Bskt in 1 oven, b oven. Sliding top wiy.Tiaodoitlcu lit i Kenmore 20-in. A *77 17-in. oven wiU cook a feait. ■4 top burner*. Silicone oven — door ieoL Broiler. •.. Some /- and 2-of-a~Kiml! ALL fUUy GUARANTEED by fern! oaf Cassis; Double Slderoom Outeide Frame Teato 9ill4| ocraened window*. tewn-in floor. ..$164> -.$75 14-ft. Boat, 28-HP motor and 7504b. capacity trailer, complete.. 15* Boat, Motor and Trailer..... • • - - $1499 9xli$ Sideroom Tent.............. • — • • • $59 “400** Automatic Water Softener.... $95, Vi-HP Pomp............ $56.95, Laundry Tub w/faucet......49.88 30-Gal. Water Heater (take with) ... $44 $41.95. Laundry Tub w/faucet......36.88 $20, SgL Fiberglass Laundry Tub... 19.88 Pre-Finiahed Wood WaU Paneling * 3.89 $8.99, 4x6 THeboard7.67 *11.99, 4x8 Tileboard 9.97 Hardboard Panels 4x8 Panel 19-in. Portable TV.*.. .. leTV.... -. 6.87 V-Grooved Paneling 4x8.,:.......7.4.49 Other Sim Paneling on Sale .........$88 16-in, PortabletV.. . . -..................$98 23-in. Console TV.... • ...................$138 16-in. Color TV..... . • .....>.*....,....$199 donaols Stereo...• •••••••••....... ..$98 FM/AM Radio/Phono. Combination .$158 FM/AM Radio/Phono. Combination ..... .$168 All Items on Sale at Sears Warehouse—481N. Saginaw St. Tomorrow Noon ’til .9 PJL-Hurry In-Save \ V