Tha_Weathor 0 * *un»r taw FUr THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 124 NO. 174 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 —56 PAGES GIANT JOB — Construction proceeds on the Clinton River between East Boulevard and Pad-dock as work is done near an existing 72-inch storm drain. A concrete apron to aid storm water flow is For Reserves, Guardsmen Unit OKs Call-Up Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Armed Services Commit-te e today voted to give President Johnson authority to call up about 190,000 Army Reservists and national guardsmen in connection with the war in Viet Nam. The authority, which Johnson did not request, was contained in a so-called “reserve bill of rights” approved 32 to 1 by the committee. The lone “no” was cast by Rep. Lucien Nedzi, D-Mich. Under present law, the Reject Three-Area Units Seeking UF Membership The Boys’ Club of Waterford Township has been rebuffed along with two other area organizations in their efforts to attain membership in the Pontiac area United Fund (PAUF). The request of the Boys’ Club, Alanp'Center and Camp Oakland Summer Camp were rejected by the PAUF board of trustees based on recommends- ---:-------- tions of the admissions committee of PAUF’s recently - formed planning arm. The planning committee was initiated to aid in implementation of recommendations made in a survey of UF agencies conducted earlier this, year by Prof. Russell W. Leedy, designed to assure the most effi-cient use of UF contributions. The boys’ club, located at 1580 Williams Lake and boasting a membership of about ! ’' * " ^ > is mmm * n I In Today's I Press Mountain Climber Area collegian scales highest U. S. peak — PAGE B-7. Farm Laborers ... Crucial union representation election is tomorrow - PAGE A-7. Gov. Wallace Critics warn of plans to defy school integration — PAGE C*7. Area News *.........A-4 Astrology .......... C4 Bridge ..............04 Crossword Puzzle ... Q-9 Comics ..............04 Editorials A4 Markets ............ 04 Obitnaries ..... . . .D-2 Sports .........C-l-C-l theaters ........ . .04 TV-Radio Programs . .04 Wilson, Earl ....... D4 Weasel’s Pages B-l—B-3 245, had received a $1,000 UF grant in 1965. At that time, the club’s membership application hinged on findings of the Leedy survey. Leedy turned in a negative recommendation for the boys’ club, and no further UF outlay ‘ was offered the organization. Following Us study, the PAUK planning committee and board of trustees concluded* • That the basic concept of a boys’ club is the emphasis on drop-in participation and mass activity. This type of program is designed for high-density, low - i n c o m e neighborhoods, terfard Township area. It would therefor* not bo practical to at-tempi to offer the boys dub\ type of service in Waterford _ Township. .............• ~ ".• i!¥haF there tie euononil- .... cally more feasible methods for providing the service rendered f Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Weather Suits Us Just Fine Grab your sunbrella and bathing suit and head for the beach. Pontiac area skieh will be sunny with temperatures in the f high 80s tomorrow. I Tonight’s low will be in the low- or mid-60s. Winds are from the southwest at 5 to 15 miles per hoar. The weatherman predicts more of the same for Wettoes-day as temperatures and humid, tty remain above normal. Today’s tow temperature reading prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac was 88. By 2 p.m. the mercury climbed to MI China Youths Aim Protest ot Russians TOKYO (AP) — Thousands of young Red Guards demonstrated in front ot the Soviet Embassy in Peking today but heeded official warnings against vio- iiteWM........ m ■■ nrai Japanese newsmen reported from the Chinese capital that tens of thousands of young CMnotP wvarrtitof ^ ehlbth- sy shouting “antirevisionist” llggang, _■ -- - Chinese leaders accuse the Russians of revising Communist ideology. However, the demonstrators — in contrast to the rowdiness of recent days — were orderly. The official Peking People’s Daily said the Red Guards and other demonstrators have heeded official calls to maintain discipline. Red Guards planned two days of demonstrations in front of the embassy as the current purge swept across ^ChSna and into Lhasa, the ancient capital of Tibet. Large portraits of Marx, Leain, Statin and Mao Tse-tnng faced the Soviet Embassy building as the Red Guards prepared to rename die street leading to the embassy. Known as the Street ot the Prince's Well, it is being renamed Prevent Revisionist Street. ' Canada Is Preparing Rail Strike Legislation OTTAWA (AP) - 1 of Canadians jammed bus and air terminals over the weekend as the government prepared legislation to get. the nation's railroads running again. * * ★ Virtually all rail service halted Friday as 118,000 employes struck for higher wages. Seeking an average increase of 30 per cent, they rejected an 18 per cent increase over two years. Parliament was to meet • this afternoon to receive two government bills. Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson said one would be designed to get the strikers back to work. The other, described as a massive transportation bill, i s expected to ease a seven-year freeze on freight rates and per- PmNac Pnu Photo by Edwartf R. Noblo being constructed. The project, begun in June of last year, was slated for completion in May 1967 but was slowed by construction strikes earlier this year. , President can order reservists and guardsmen on active duty only if he declares a national emergency. The 190,000 men eligible to be activated would consist of 133,-000 individuals who have served less than four months of active duty, along witn about 56,000 men.who are not members of organized units, have not had 24 months of active duty, and have not completed their overall reserve active-duty obligations of six years. * ★ ★ The committee decided to indue the call-up authority in its bill following a House vote last week which killed a similar Senate plan. PERSUASION Members of the Armed Services Committee perSGaded the House at that time to reject the Senate move, arguing that such authority properly belonged before their committee and that they were in the process of considering comprehensive reserve legislation. Oakland Highway roll in ’6( 99 mit the railroads to drop some uneconomical routes. ★ it 1r Mediation talks, which broke oft Friday, were expected to resume after both sides have studied the government measures. LAYOFFS EXPECTED The strike was expected to force large-scale layoffs, shortages and prices increases if it lasted more than a few more days. J. O. Goodman, general manager of the Ontario Automotive Transport Association, appealed to shippers yesterday to send only essential goods. “We’ve got to move the perishables first,” he said. Off-duty and vacationing truck drivers returned to work and every available tractor-trailer was being pressed into service, he said. Airlines and buses added extra runs to help transport the 70,000 persons who normally ride the tails daily. AVERAGE WAGE Hie strikers, belonging to 17 unions, earn an average of about $2.32 an hour. Opposition leader John G. Diefenbaker said Friday that his Progressive Conservative members of Parliament would stage an all-out fight against any government attempts to ‘ repeal freight laws to ease the railroad’s financial burden. The laws protect prairie and maritime province shippers. A nine-day rail strike in 1950 quickly slowed industry, leaving -lingering aftereffects. Some estimates put the cost of that strike at more than $100 million. IMMEDIATE VICTIMS Holidayiers, determined not to waste the last weekend in August, were the immediate victims of the present -strike as they sought alternate means of travel. Two privately operated ferry boats made extra runs to Prince Edward Island to offset the loss of Canadian National Railway ferries. Premier Alex Campbell said his government would have to operate one of the railroad ferries if the private boats cannot handle traffic to the island, which has a population of 101,- Crash Claims Pontiac Girl Novi Woman Killed in Five-Car Mishap Two Pontiac area traffic accidents yesterday claimed the lives of a 10-year-qld Pontiac girl a n d a 44-year-old Novi woman and result e d in the hospitalization of five other persons. Fatally i n -jured were Val-orie Smith/' of 233 S. Edith and Mrs. James Rudolph of 43635 W. 12 Mile, Novi. The Smith girl was killed in a three-car collision shortly, before 1 a.m. yesterday at M59 and Airport in Waterford Township. Valorie was a passenger in a car driven by Delois Smith, 29, of the South Edith address. Drivers of the other two vehicles were Sandra L. Jennings, 24, of 337 St. John, Highland Township, and Michael J. Knight, 16, of 5208 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township. The victim died at Pontiac General Hospital ■ about two hours after the accident. A five-car chain reaction accident on eastbound 1-696, just west of Orchard Lake Road in Farmington Township at about 6:30 p.m. resulted in Mrs. Rudolph’s death. Mrs. Rudolph was pronounced „ dead on arrival at Bdtsford Gen-. eral Hospital in Farmington Township. Her husband is listed in fair conditions* the hospital, while a 1511, "DhttfiyjT, an3~ a dau|If-t^ FatrteiflJ l are reported jp satisfactory condition. Also in satisfactory condition are Sharon Lowe, 2, and Joy Lowe, 8, daughters of Jack H. Gas Bomb Burns 6 in Waukegan Rioting WAUKEGAN, 111. UPI — A homemade gasoline fire bomb smashed into an automobile last night and burned six passengers during the peak of the third night of rioting in a Negro district. Sixty-three persons, most of them Negroes, were arrested. Police Chief Walter Riley said 400 to 500 Negroes spilled into South Genesee Street, a commercial artery in the heart of the South East neighborhood, and ------------ stoned passersby, smashed windows and tossed firebombs. Capt. J.W. Johnson said, “The worst thing I saw was those people who were burnt. There were little kids with their flesh coming off and women screaming.” The firebomb victims were Gabriel Albarran, 57; his wife,. Mary, 52; their children, Jesus, 15, and Esther, 6; and Jose Lopez, 50, and his wife, Nemesia, 54. All are residents of Wankegan. Esther Albarran was rushed to Cook County Hospital in Chicago — 35 miles south of Waukegan — where she was reported in serious condition. The other victims were in serious condition at Waukegan hospitals. Luci Johnson Nugent and her husband, Patrick J. spent Sunday night at the home of Nugent’s parents, the Gerald Nu-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Stock Market at New Lows NEW YORK (AP) - A huge wave of selling pushed the stock market to new lows again today, but prices began to stabilize around midday. Trading was so heavy during the morning that the New York Stock Exchange ticker tape fell 10 minutes behind in reporting transactions. Volume for the first two hours of trading piled up to the huge total of 5.42 million shares, compared with 3.71 million for the same period Friday. At 12:30 p.m., the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 5.84 at 774.72. ★ ★ ★ The biggest declines, on average, occurred in the first hour, but some stocks later trimmed their losses. Analysts ponder whether this was the long-awaited “selling climax” that theoretically precedes the low point of sharp declines. (Earlier story, page C-9.) At State Convention GOP Follows Romney DETROIT (AP) - Michigan Republicans prepared for their fall election day today with a slate of candidates, a new platform and a realization that the party’s right wing is as noisy and active as ever At the Republican’s weekend convention right-wingers provoked Gov. George Romney into “fake conservatives” and disrupted proceedings in Detroit’s CoBo Hall, before Iteing loveiP ^ whelmed in a couple of quickly maneuvered votes. The conservatives were voted down when they tried to add p Viet Nam plank and an income tax referendum resolution to the platform. At their fall convention, the Republicans nominated candidates for secretary of state, at- See^Stories, Page A-3 tomey general, the Michigan SUpreme,£ers e laced-o-toe style * variety of 3*e \ ‘AMF’ men’s and ladies’ bowlers shoes on special orders only bewiiHft»Ubigs.. SS.M- 099 Other bags to $12.88 "’WTlRMff 'WUCW1* wwOy 'Wnwrvaton * roomy ark) rugged bags * reinforced at strain points * rugged . heavy duty zippefs. attention bowling teams -get team discounts on ‘NAT NAST’ bowler shirts • come, in now and get the tedm discount on orders of 5 or more shirts. Big selection of shirt styles colors and lettering. Order now for delivery before season starts. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. |r TUES. t WEDS. iTONITETil IUM 9 a.m. to IM,. SPECIALS Compare these lower prices anywhere—then you'll know why they are called specials. Specials for Today—Tues. and Weds. only. , 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Sealed Beam AUTO Headlight Bulbs 88' Series 4001-4002 bulbs for dual system headlights 12 volts, © Limit 4 bulbs per person. Each , fl Modern Way o Repair Masonry 5 lbs. 2.49 , pmmwnm oncrett Patch MIRACLE COMPOUND SEALS CRACKS l HOLES FOR GOOD! • Just tdd wstir, mix, apply. e No preparation of surface. • Cures stronger than concrete. e Trowels is thin as '1/16". • Permanently repairs concrety floors, patios, walks, steps, driveways, ate. Galvanized 20-Gal. Garbage Cans With Cover \m All metal — galvanized to resist rusting. City and township approved size. Drop side handles. Limit 2. All Metal Perforated Rubbish Burners With Cover ,% shown—completely p 333 Powerful 'WESTINGHOUSE' Electric Vacuum Cleaner SOT Famous Westinghouse Vacuum Cleaner for the home . . . powerful motor picks up deep-in dirt. Complete with necessary cleaning attachments. SHOP SIMMS HOUSEHOLD DEPT. Spins Everything to Your Fingertips Ball Bearing Turntables |19 Sav. 40c an this 13" turntable with steel ball bearings. Spins contents to you—saves space at the table, keeps things within easy reach. #203. Bake, Serve, Freeze in Same Dish ‘Libby’ 2-Qt. Casserole With Cover Large 2-quart size cg5ser.ole by 'Libby' and you can take it from the freezer to the oven to cook, serve and freeze, all in the same dish. Handy round style. SHOP SIMMS SPORTS DEPT. ^Pre^asonHunwrs^e^l^ Ctn. 135 Clay Targets \A/CCTCDkl * ® WESTERN Sharpen up the 'ole hunting eye with these clay pigeons—limit 2 cartons. Hand Target Thrower l»» Hardwood-non-slip handle, leather thong. Shotgun Shells Boxes of 28s Target loads and M MU loads for skeet. , IIJ.II " £ '%im SIMMS!!, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1968 Visitor From Holland Likes American Style of Life Oakland County was well represented among the ribbon winners at last week’s State 4-H Show on the Michigan State University campus. Three championship rosettes were won by Oakland County 4-H clubbers, as well as numerous blue and red ribbons. Donna Homrich of the Mustangs Club was named grand champion in the English horsemanship class. Pam Kopacki of the Little Britches Club was n^med champion in the Appaloosa horsemanship class and Holly Head of " Bloomfield Club was named reserve horsemanship champion in the stockhorse category. Other top winners as listed by the Oakland County Cooperative Extension Office were as follows: Fitting and Showing^j stock-horse, Holly Head, first; Jim Bond, Clarkston Wranglers, third; English, Donna Homrich, third. Horsemanship—quarter, Pam Barnes, Gingellville, first; stock, Holly Head, first. Pleasure Class — Stock, Holly Head, second;- English, Donna Homrich, second; Appaloosa, Pam Kopacki, first; pony, Sue Latbam, Los Caballeros, first. ★ ★ ★ Senior Horticulture — George Shakespear, Skill ,’n’ Craft, and Norene Wudarcki, Oakhill, tied for first; Beryl Austin, Oakhill, third. Dairy — Senior Brown Swiss, 4-H Championships Won by 3 in County Joe Lozier, Oakhill, first; junior yearling Holstein, Doug Can-Meld, Nu-Ly-Wlx, third; aged cow Holstein, Brenda Long, Milford, third; Ayrshire, L1 C, Scrarolin, Oakhill, second; senior calf, L. C. Scramlin, third. Sheep — yearling Hampshire ewe, Karin Rose, Paint C r«e e k Valley, first; ram Hampshire lamb, Karin Rose, third; senior showmanship, Karin Rose,'second. ★ *• ‘ ★ Dog Obedience — subnovice A, Sigrid Medlen, Pine Knob, second; graduate novice, David Milligan, Armstrong’s Club, third; dog demonstration, Linda Armstrong and Nancy Milligan, Armstrong’s Club, 1st; open class, Pat Armstrong, Armstrong's Club, first. Some 3,000 Michigan 4-H’ers, 220 from Oakland County, took part in the state show, which opened Tuesday and closed Friday. Planning Unit Picks Officers FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-The Township Planning Commission has announced selection of three ot its members as officers for one-year terms. Chosen commission chairman was Charles G. Lorion. Mrs. Grace Richardson and L. D. Stadler will serve as vice chairman and executive secretary, respectively. Is Scheduled All Avondale Schools Open for Sign-Ups All Avondale schools will be open for registration this week prior to the opening of school dh Sept. 7. Elementary pupils entering Avondale schools fen* the first time are to register at their respective schools from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 3:30 p.m. Junior and senior high school students entering Avondale schools should register at their schools this week. A book deposit fee of $4.50 which is returned when the stu dent leaves the district or graduates, is required of a 11 seventh graders and all students s 8 through 12 entering Avondale for the first time. ★ ★ ★ Elementary pupils will also pay a fee to cover the cost of materials. SCHOOL RETURN Students will return to school on Sept. 7. The Auburn Heights and Stone elementary schools will start at 8:45 a.m.; Elmwood and Stiles schools will start at 9:15 a.m.; senior high school will start at 8 a.m.; and the junior high at 8:15 a.m. ★ ★ ★ Kindergarten pupils will start school on Sept. 12. Kindergart-ners from Auburn Heights and Stone elementary schools will attend classes in the Auburn Heights Presbyterian Church. Teachers OK Pact in W. Bloomfield WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Members of the West Bloomfield Education Association, in a near unanimous vote, have formally ratified a one-year teacher contract worked out by negotiating teams of the board of education and the WBEA. James Maker, president of the WBEA, estimated that 80 per cent of tiie school system teachers attended the ratification meeting, held Friday morning at the West Bloomfield High School. At least 95 per cent of them, he said, approved the agreement Bargaining teams for the two sides had settled on a tentative accord Saturday, Aug. 20, after a 10-hour marathon negotiating session presided over by Daniel Gallagher, a member of the Michigan Labor Relations Board. Terms of the agreement have been withheld since that time pending a formal ratification vote by the teachers. SALARY SCHEDULE Maker said the contract salary schedule for teachers with bachelor’s degrees .starts at 85,-650 and scales up to a maximum of 89,000 after 11 years. Salaries for teachers with master’s degrees will begin at 86,050 and range to 810,000 in 12 steps. A special incentive pay schedule gives teachers with a bachelor’s degree and 20 extra credit hours a maxi- mum salary of 89,400. Peak salary for holders of master’s degrees and 30 extra credit hours will be 810,400. * * * Also included in the package is a 82,600 life insurance policy for teachers .at no cost to them. ★ * ★ Maker said a provisiqn of particular interest to the teachers was a board agreement to strive for a student - teacher ratio of 41 teachers for every 1,000 pupils. NO STRIKE The teachers, said Maker, also agreed to the inclusion of a basic no-strike clause in the contract. The WBEA president said he was “completely satisfied’’ with the contract, which puts an end to a dispute between the two sides that began early last March. Hie teachers had threatened not to return to school this fall without a master contract. Negotiations had stalled about three weeks ago, prompting the WBEA to seek mediation from the Michigan Labor Relations Board.* * ★ * Representatives of the Michigan Education Association also had been in attendance at the meeting during the final weeks. ★ * .★ Schools Supt. Dr. Leif A. Hougen described the settlement as “fair and equitable.’’ Formal ratification by the board of education within the next few days will make the contract officially final. Kindergartners' Sign-Up Sept. 9 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Registration of Dublin School kindergarten students, both new registrants and those who enrolled in the spring, will be held on Sept. 9. ★ ★ ★ Those who registered in the spring are asked to report between 9:30 and 11:30 a.m. Parents registering kindergarten students for the first time are asked to report between 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. PEN PALS—Peter Muller of the Netherlands presents Susan Davis of 5326 Williamson, Independence Township, with two gifts from his country. A guest of Susan and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Davis, Peter plans on returning to Holland next month. INDEPENDENCE TOWN-SHIP — To 17-year-old Peter Muller of .Rotterdam, Holland, the United States is a spacious land, full of opportunity. He likes this country so well he plans to move here in about four years. The Dutch youth, currently on a month’s visit with pen pal Susan Davis-and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Davis of 5326 Williamson, wants to pursue a career in television. Peter, who speaks English fluently, likes the opportunities television offers in this country. ★ * ★ But before he comes over here for good, there’s the matter of a little learning and a mandatory 1%-year military obligation. PHOTO CAREER Next fall, Peter plans to begin a three-year course at a film and photo academy in the Hague where he will study to become a camerman-technician. Peter, who earned part of his fare and expense money with income from his newspaper route back home, had planned to make the trip to visit an aunt in Grand Rapids. But he admits Susan was the main reason he came over this summer instead of next. ' ★ ★ ★ Peter really surprised Susan in March when he called her long-distance from the Netherlands. Mrs. Davis said she was also surprised (or rather shocked) when she heard how much the phone call cost Peter — 815 for about lVi minutes. SEEING SIGHTS The Davises have been showing Peter the sights, such as Mt. Lookout and Mammoth Cave. Niagara Falls is als tile agenda. He’s very impressed with the U.S., not only from an economic and opportunity standpoint, but because of the availability of open space, which he said is quite a contrast from highly-urbanized Holland. The Dutch lad, who lives with his parents and brother in mid-city apartment, described the differences between television here and in the Netherlands. He said TV stations there operate only from 7 to 11 pjn. during the week with flight variations on weekends. Since there are no commercials, added Peter, TV users are sent monthly bills to pay for the shows. This amounts to four gilders or 81 a month. ★ ★ * Peter and Susan, a 15-year-old junior at Clarkston High School, have been corresponding for more than a year. “Since July 6, 1965,” he vividly recalls. TEACHER HELPED Clarkston teacher Mrs. T. Presean engineered toe meek ing-by-mall after meeting Peter last summer on a European trip. ’ ' At first, Peter and Susan one or two letters a week. FlaralPctra Area Festival ROMEO — A floral parade Sept. 5 will climax the 33rd annual Peach Festival which begins Friday. Gov. George Romney will act as grand marshal of the parade, which will begin at 2 p m: Lt. Gov. William G. Milli-ken will crown the Peach Queen, Amelia Ragel of Roseville. The coronation ceremonies will take place at 7/:$0 p.m. Friday-oh toe high school1 athletic field. The Children’s Parade will be held at 10 a.m. Sept. 5. * * * In addition to-the parades and coronation there will be art exhibits, window displays, a Mummers parade on Sept. 4 and a carnival and free acts. Although not the oldest institution for higher teaming in this country, the University of Pennsylvania was the first to become a university Jn. 1779. “I like everything here,” said Peter. “I like your way of life." Peter says that Dutch and American impressions of each other aren’t exactly true. “We think Americans are fairly rich,” said Peter, who added that the Dutchman associates the American family with five TV sets, two automobiles and a swimming pool. WOODEN SHOES OUT By the same token, windmills and wooden shoes and other ‘typical” Dutch dress are not typical at all. Windmills, long used to pump water and grind com, have been replaced by machinery, according to Midler, and the shoes and other “typical” attire are worn only for the benefit of tourists. ..‘.*....★ " ★........ Mm in Holland wear shirts and ties occasions, He wage is a week (837.50 to “Could you make it on 840 a have to.” He said the price of a Ford Galaxy in Holland is about 40,-gilders or 810,000 in American money. American cigarettes sell ipr 375 gilders (about 94 cents), while Dutch cigarettes bring in 150 gilders (about 37 cents). ★ ★ ★ Peter says about 40 per cent of the Dutdi population speaks English. Most speak at least one foreign tongue. Peter noted some differences in etiquette here compared with Holland. He said in Holland everything but chicken should be eaten with a knife and fork, even sandwiches. In Holland, taxes are included in the cost of items, said Peter, who expressed confusion over our system of adding on the tax costs. When a one-cent tax was levied on Peter after he had been served a glass of orange juice in a restaurant recently, be thought he was paying tor the glass of water he hadn’t ordered. Many people restricted jn their activities find the telephone their only contact with the outside world. For some it is essential to earning Helping people help themselves a living. But many of them are unable to use our regular telephones. They may be hard of hearing or, because of paralysis, unable to dial ommend Michigan Bell Pirttf the Bill System call or write your Michigan Bell Business Office. We will evaluate individual*need and then rec-or design the necessary will be or hold.a phone. With these people in mind, Michigan Bell and Bell System engineers have designed 'numerous devices to make telephoninglpos* sible. They have developed a phone for the hard of hearing thathas a little wheel on the handset; for controlling the volume. They have devised phones for people with limited use of their hands or arms. They have even developed a handset that amplifies thecaller’s voice if his speech is impaired. Helping these people help themselves is but one of many ways your telephone company continues to provide the best possible telephone service—to everyone. I. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ AUGUST 20, jQfjflU Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Frequent Nosebleeds to Anemia Q — I am a housewife. About nx months ago I had a nose bl&d. I stopped it by pressing on my nose for Qve minutes, but about once a month I get another nosebleed. Is this serious? A - In women a nosebleed that re-curs gvefyBRANPSTADT month is a part of the menstrual cycle. If this Is your trouble, it is not serious but your doctor or a nose specialist should examine you to see if there is a condition that can be corrected. The chief danger from frequently recurring nosebleeds is anemia. ★ * ★ This type of anemia, however, responds readily to treatment. Q — A terrible odor comes from my nose. My doctor says I have ozena. Can anything he done for it? * ★ ★ A — Ozena is a severe chronic rhinitis characterized by a wasting of the nasal mucous membrane and often accompanied by a loss of the sense of smell. The cause is unknown. There is no cure but it can sometimes be controlled by antibiotics and large doses of niacin or tolazoline to improve the circulation in the diseased tissues. Q — What is septal deviation? Is there any treatment for it? ★ ★ ★ , A — This is a bending of the septum (partition between the nostrils) to one side. The result' is a partial or complete blocking of the nostril. It can be relieved by removing the cartilage in the septum. Q — Can a chronic postnasal drip cause hoarseness? What, could cause paralysis of die larynx? Is there any treatment for it? 2 Scientists Are Volunteers -for Bifes^f 186 Mosquitoes By Science Service WASHINGTON—To prove that a type of malaria can be transmitted from man to monkey to man, two scientists- at the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone, let themselves be bitten by 186 mosquitoes. The scientists’ blood containing vivax malaria from some of the mosquitoes was transmitted successfully for what is believed to be the first time to night monkeys. The mosquitoes were Anopheles albimanus, one of the £ chief malaria^arrying Anopheles species of the world, and the full scientific name of the human malaria, Is Plasmodium vivax. The night monkeys used are Aatus tri-virgatus. Two night monkeys were first inoculated with blood drawn from a malaria patient living in Santa Rosa, a village on the Chagres River. Jr ★ ★ The monkeys had had their spleens removed and at the time of inoculation they received by mouth the immunosuppressant drug Imuran. The blood had been anticoagulated with heparin before it was inoculated into the animals. BLOOD EXAMINED Before inoculation with human parasites the blood of the monkeys was examined repeatedly to rule out the possibility of a natural infection with malaria, although natural infections have never been reported from night monkeys. These Anopheles albimanus mosquitoes, which have been in a colony at Gorgas for many years, were fed on one of die night monkeys that had previously been infected with parasites from the Santa Rosa patient. These mosquitoes then bit each of the two volunteers. The only other animal reported to be susceptible to jP. vivax is the chimpanzee Pan satyrus. ★ ★ ★ The researchers say that current work at Gorgas Memorial Laboratory indicates that night monkeys may become useful hosts for the experimental study of human malaria. Reporting the experiment to the journal Science were the two volunteers, James A. Porter Jr., and Carl M. Johnson, with Martin D. Young. A — If the postnasal drip is caused by a chronic low-grade | infection, (his could extend to the larynx and cause hoarseness. An allergic postnasal drip would be less likely to do so. Paralysis of the larynx may be caused by cutting the nerve supply to the larynx (one of the hazards of the removal of a goiter) or a tumor of the vocal cords. Many persons with paralysis of the vocal cord on one side have been benefited by an injection of Teflon into the affected cord. Q — I have heard that quinine is being used in the treatment of heart trouble as well as for malaria. Is this true?" ★ ★ * A — Quinine has been used to treat attacks of very rapid pulse but for this purpose the closely related quinidine is preferred. Q — My son has abdominal epilepsy. He doesn’t have convulsions but has pain in his abdomen. ★ *• ★ What Is the cause and the best treatment? ★ ★ * A — This disease'is characterized by abnormal electric brain waves and abdomina pains that are relieved by the anticonvulsant drugs given for epilepsy. The cause is unknown. (Written for Newspaper Enterprise Association) 6 Killed in Crash . LODI, Italy (AP) — Six per sons were killed and 24 injured today in the collision of a commuter bus and truck. The vehicles collided on a country road between Cremona and Milan. No otKeFcar comes close-whatever you plan to pay! Your investment in a Cadillac — new or previously-owned—will return more motoring latisfaction than any other car you can buy at the price. It’s great... going Cadillac! for some time. Third, a Cadillac will reward you with years of unsurpassed motoring luxury, performance, comfort and reliability. And fourth, you will enjoy unexcelled safety and convenience, exemplified by such features as cornering lights, three-speed windshield wipers, padded instrument panel and remote control outside mirror. Before you decide on any car at any price, consult your authorized dealer. Hjs expert knowledge of fine cars and of true automobile value will be mdst helpful. The Cadillac you buy today wfll prove to be a sounder investment than any other car you can buy at the price. For no other automobile built in the land offers such original value—and then holds that value as well or as long as the Standard of the World. There are many reasons for this. First, Cadillac styling is not quickly outdated. Cadillacs half a decade old are instantly recognized and admired. Second, many of Cadillac's perfoljmance and comfort features will not be available on other cars , SIT’S GREAT... GOING cuihm Motor cvOMtiM Standard of the World SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER FOR THE FINEST IN SALES AND SERVICE OF NEW AND USED CARS. JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 1980 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST • PONTIAC; MICHIGAN First to Waite's . . . THEN BACK-TO-COLLEGE and BACK-TO-SCHOOL Swinging Juniors . Just for the IN crowd . . . Print corduroy hipster skirts and 100% cotton sanforized washable "Poor Boy" . . . Sizes S-M-L and 5 to JT$I Sweaters in Navy, White, Plum and Green . , , Skirts in Plum Green and Navy prints. Corduroy’ Hipster Cotton Knit Poor Boys *6.99 *3.99 Sportswear.,. Third Floor CLASSIC , PENNY LOAFER 8eoo 2 pf $T3 or 6.90 pair * Bonus Selling TENNIS SHOES' H 2 - *6 OR PICK A PAII ONE OF EACH beftutoj mint/ PANTY HOSE *2.00 Beautifully fashioned, perfectly fitting in stretch nylon. Famous nationally advertised quality. And what a lovely price. Hosiery... Street Floor Just Say "Charge It" on Waite's CHARGA-PLATE Girls' Pre-Season COAT SALE Reg. 10.99 to 30.00 10% OFF Just Say "Charge It" Choose from our ENTIRE STOCK OF girls' and children's winter outerwear. Many assorted styles including dress coats, casual coots and jackets and ev< little boys and girls snowsuits. Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14. Charge Yours at..... Girls' arid Chikfreni Cbat Fashions. .. THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 It Seems to Me . . . GOP to Dramatize Identity With New Political Labels Professor Paul A. Leidy, retired University of Michigan Law School official and a former Pontiac resident, steps into the political arena with an idea for the GOP. ★ ★ ★ ' He feels the Democrats have very skillfully euchred the Republicans into an untenable position of “Birchism,” “ultra conservatism,” “reactionarism” and other derogatory terms of similar g ilk and implication. Governor Romney has long since declared open warfare on Republican extremists and as far back as the Presidential election refused to embrace' Barry Gold-water. ’ ★ ★ ★ During the .current interim, Professor Leidy feels the Dems have skilfully avoided the pitfalls of “extreme liberalism,” which their own programs of flag waving and spending, spending and spending, plus ultra extravagance have firmly established. ★ ★ ★ In a letter to Senator Griffin, he suggests the Republicans start calling themselves the "Thrift party” and the Democrats the “Spendthrift party.” The Dems would have trouble wriggling out of these cold, unadorned facts. ★ ★ ★ In a by-gone era when someone asked the late Senator Robert Taft about the plethora of “public aids” of that day, he replied: “Everyone believes in these t desirable ends. The question is: how many drones can one worker carry on his back?” Professor Leidy is certain the present profligacy in Washington is leading straight to dire evil — just as millions have been soberly forecasting for several years. Saddliiig unborn generations with the waste of today can, never be justified by any sound, hard-headed mathematical formula. ★ ★ ★ The Ann Arbor professor had Senator Griffin in University Classes and unhesitatingly pronounces him “the cream of the crop.’*’ ★ ★ ★ Along with a host of others he has a double interest in the Senatorial race. Primarily, he believes Senator Griffin is admirably qualified and possesses the talents and capabilities demanded in this Washington post. And then, unhappily, like others, he recalls Soapy’s miserable record in Lansing during those 12 spendthrift and unsound years of Government juggling* financing and finally a $75 million State deficit, plus a bad name for Michigan clear across America. ★ ★ It This deficit Governor Romney has liquidated. But what Soapy could think of to do with Washington’s billions is positively awe-inspiring. ★ ★ ★ Older Pontiac residents will recall Paul Leidy as a part of the management of Michigan Drop Forge and an especially personable and capable citizen at large. His ideas on the “Thrift party” and the “Spendthrift party” are certainly germane to the general situation and amazingly suggestive. Advance And Be Recognized! U.N. Budget Up Again .... United Nation’s current budget is up another seven million and totals $128 million. This is $50 m i 11 i o n more than it was six years ago. ■U Thant hopes voluntary contributions will bridge the gap and you know where they’re supposed to come from. Will we be the “duh sucker” again? The least we can do is insist that those two years Hn arrears pay — up or lose their vote as the charter provides. Russia’s one that’s dragging. So is de Gaulle’s precious France. ★ ★ ★ But you know what will happen: old Uncle Sam will force a conciliatory smile—and fork over. We’re the world’s most powerful nation. TRigre~gre tiu two ways about that. And we’ie the world’s biggest sap. There are no two ways about {hat, either. And in Conclusion Jottings from the notebook of y porter..................... » A consensus indicates the Bears1 Gale S^EFsisthe^e^m back in pro football today ........ Insider’s Newsletter takes a quick bow before the Arkansas town that has this sign at the city limits: “Caution—no Hospital.”....... Overheard: “With things as they are, Astronauts Young and Collins showed greater courage in returning than they did in blasting off.” ........•. Our great Public Health Service spends $45 million a year oh Yellow fever. We haven’t had any in 49 years. ★ ★ ★ Trusted Scouts advise me Cheryl Ross rates mention as oner of the area’s Attractive young ladies. ...... ... Airlines have laid plans for the greatest buying golfer, has five holes in one: three right-handed and two left-handed. ★ ★ Re-runs of Mitch Miller’s final programs show why he was ditched. The fine character of those early “Sing Along” releases degenerated into a Class “D” minstrel show when Miller decided he was a great impressario. What a shame........ .... Overheard: “I could have given the bride away—but I kept my mouth shut”......... Luci’s wedding dress has already been copied for a mere $69.75 and is for sale across the country.......... I’m advised there will be another two or three cents per quart milk hike before the end of the year» . . .......Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—our own “CXl” Werner; the J’s—Canadian rail strike which affects so many, people. —Harold A. Fitzgerald David Lawreiice Says: LBJ off Base on Southern ‘Lag’ WASHINGTON - President Johnson is a busy man, but he feels it is his duty to go around the country making a lot of speeches. Most of them have to be prepared for him, just as has been the case with other presidents. It is unfor- i tunate, however, that Mr. Johnson’s eagle eye didn’t catch a fallacy i that he delivered at the University of Denver last Friday, in which be Said: “There can be no doubt as to why the South lagged behind the North in the last century . . . The South lagged because in the American republic it did not accord its citizens full equality and a fall sense of a just society. This is the failure which in these last few years we have been determined to repair.” But what are the facts? In the latest figures available from the governments own records for the 10-year period from 1955 to 1965, the 11 South- ~ era states are actually shown to have grown faster in an economic way than the other Here are some of the significant points derived from official tables of the U.S. Departments of Commerce, Labor and Agriculture and the Federal regions have risen by 76 per cent. • Retail sales in nine years have grown by 56 per cent as compared with 41 per cent in the rest of the country. While there has been some progress toward integration of schools and colleges in the South in the last few years, this has been regarded by “civil rights” leaders as trivial compared to conditions in the North. Job opportunities will doubtless increase in the South in the *future, but the economic growth in the 14 states of South during tl ' can hardly be attributed to the arrival of either “full equality” or “a full sense of a just society.” So the President’s speech about the existence of a “lagging” South, allegedly due in large part to racial conflict, will be met with arched eyebrows by the businessmen throughout the South, including many in Mr. Johnson’s home state of Texas. Voic£ of the People: Likes Pontiac Arrows Over the Detroit Lions I watched the Lions on TV recently and never saw a worse team in my 35 years of enjoying football. I think the sportswriters were too kind to the Lions. After reading about the Arrows here in Pontiac, I think I’ll enjoy their games better. Maybe we ought to switch teams, but then why burden the people Of Pontiac with a team like the Lions. r q ' DON LUTES 487 BAY '‘Irresponsible Driver Caused Pet’s Death Is it not a crime to drive in residential areas at 50 m.p.h.? I saw my dog mowed down by an irresponsible driver as he crossed the street. The driver did stop to say he was sorry but he could not stop in time at the rate of speed he was traveling. He was a friendly dog that all the kiddies loved. Another dog cannot take his place but we will have to accept the fact that he is dead. KATHERINE McGEE 269 DELLWOOD Eliminate the Causes of Multiple Murders’ It is unfortunate that a deranged man shot all those people in Texas, hut eliminating guns will solve nothing. A mental patient has confessed to being “The Boston Strangler” of 13 victims. Shall we cut off everybody’s hands? Eight nurses were stabbed and strangled. Shall we scrap all knives in the country? Instead, let’s try to eliminate the sickness in society that is causing these mental afflictions. Respect and love for God and country mast be taught in earliest childhood to make sound, compassionate adults. I GOD FEARING AMERICAN Why Does Pontiac Resist Angled Parking? The advanced thinking of private industry as compared with government never ceases to amaze me. I have in mind the municipal parking lots. After struggling in and out of the city lot across from the Oakland County Jail, with its narrow drive and almost inaccessible parking spaces, I noticed the nice angled parking at both the Pontiac Press lot and the Detroit Edison lot. I don’t know of a municipal lot that wouldn’t lend itself to angled parking, but those in charge have so far successfully resisted this simple idea. TOM PETERSON WATERFORD Verbal Orchids Efner J. Leeman years 725 E. Mansfield, 80th bi Bob Considine Says: Leaflet ‘War’ Failing to Stem N. Viet Tide . Question and Answer Can you tell me what proportion of the_non-white population lives in cities, compared to the proportion of whites? READER REPLY According to the 1960 census, approximately 72 per cent of the non-white population and about 69.5 per gent of the white population live in urban areas. The Better Half r1 • The number of johs in the South has increased by JSpercrat, while the remainder of the country has gone up only 15 per cent. •Factory jobs alone have increased by 27 per cent as compared with -a growth of only' lw8 per ' <5eiil in all the other parts of the United States. • Personal income is up 83 per cent as against 69 per cent in the rest of the nation. per cent in the South as against a' 16 per cent increase in the remainder of the country. v • Factory output shows a v 103 per cent increase in the South, while 50 per cent is the gain in the balance of the country. • Bank assets have gone up by 92 per cent in the South, while all the other Smiles For some of us, work is an interlude of boredom between vacations. ★ * it Both mother and daughter always enjoy going buy-buy. ★ ★ * The neighborhood status seeker says several relatives of his are men in high places. Come to find out, they’re window washers. ★ ★ * Considering the quality of entertainment in some night spots, the thought occurs: “Why an amusement tax?” NEW YORK - South Vietnamese psychological warfare specialists are printing, and U.S. warplanes are . distributing, millions of leaflets intended mainly for North Vietnamese infiltrators. | Some are as tender as copies of forlorn CONSIDINE letters and even poetry found on dead invaders. Others are blunt and gruesome warnings of Hie fate awaiting the North Viet Nam regular at the end of hit lenfts stow trudge dawn the Ho ChiMIhh mil. According to the latest statistics, the leaflet campaign does not appear to be particularly effective. There are more North Vietnamese in South Viet Nam than ever before. * ★ f But there is no way of knowing hfiw many iSCtuallYlKSM-' ed after scanning the dramat-Tc aftf’dfrg Yrifessagef twittering down from on high as they moved south. • FAMILY AT PRAYER ^Ohele^flet, showing a North Vietnamese family praying before its family altar, with thoughts of the father of the household being shot full of holes by U.S. fighter planes, i reads in part: “Yon leave behind greater danger for your loved ones because your invasion of file south is what makes the war continue: yon leave rible irony. For What do the people of North Viet Nam want? * ★ ★ “They want what their neighbors also desire: food for their hunger, health for their bodies and a chance to learn, progress for their country, and an end to the bondage of material misery. And they could find all these things far more readily in peaceful association with others than in the endless course of battle... ” But still they come... Reviewing Other Editorial Pages See Ourselves ... CartetsviUe fOa.) Reckless driver: One who passes you in spite of all you do to prevent him. bore so easily with your proud young strength but that become much heavier for toe women, the old ones, and the little children who are no longer free to occupy their time with study and with play. Your place in your home is an aching emptiness.” Millions of leaflets containing a message from President Johnson to advancing North Vietnamese have been dropped. One passage reads; “This war is filled with tet- MhaMs Wrong?- The Grand Rapids Press Amid all the post-mortems that have followed the death of the New York Herald Tribune, one .of America’s oldest and most respected newspapers, no more penetrating conclusion has been offered than that by Mayor John Lindsay: “Labor must allow business to reorganize its methods in the interest of efficiency, and it must allow new techniques to be employed. To stimulate employment, old methods of doing things must change.” 1 * k , * It was the refusal of labor to permit such a reorganization that sounded the death knell of the Herald Tribune, with a resultant loss of an estimated 808 jobs. But It was not fids loss alone that provoked Mayor Lindsay’s comment The disturbing filing is that the loss of the 888 jobs to the closing of the Herald Trib- une reflects a trend echoed also 'in facts outlined to a recent seminar of onion officials on (he future of New York {Sty. - -Manufacturing employment, the seminar was informed, declined in the city from 963,- 000 in 1969 to 866,000 in 1965. This Included a loss of 24,506 . jobs in the apparel field and 11,000 jobs in electrical equipment manufacturing, traditional areas in which unions have been strong. , In a welcome but rare outburst , of candor, Peter J. Brennan, president of the New York City Building and Construction Trades Council, told his fellow unionists at the seminar, “We must be doing something wrong.” ★ * ★ 1 The continuing good health of business in general, and of unionism in particular, calls for a penetrating self-analysis by la- i bor as to just what it is doing wrong, followed by realistic adjustment of its attitude and its demands. How Many? Illinois State Journal ^ A pof^nFezf^iH^ bf how leaders in the war on poverty may be overcome with fervor in seeking out the poor was revealed in Missouri. Sargent^ observed 120,000 poor in a four-county area. Th* office Off economic opportunity announced a $43,511 grant for an action program. The zeal was diminished, however, when the Democrat congressman in that district recalled that the four counties had a total population of only 105,009. Recalculations by poverty warriors resulted in a figure of only 80,090 impoverished — 75 par cent of the population. And OEO finally conceded that 5,000 was more nearly correct. ■ Bungles of this nature are too frequent The humor they provide could be expensive to file taxpayers. Hazardous. /. Belleville (Kas.) Telescope This is the time of year when some people pay more attention to their drUging on the golf course than- they do in their cars. I new* printed In W1M > Oakland. OmSsf^- - nmoTW. mi m ha been paid at*rhe Jgayraw aMPanNac. Mich Farm Laborers in Key Voting THE PONT!AC 1‘KbbS. Mt^DAY, AtGlaT 29, I9«t> HOPE MEDAL FOR HOPE—The president of Hope College in Holland, Mich., Dr. C. A. Vanderwerf (left), presents the Hope College* Centennial Medallion to comedian Bob Hope in a special ceremony at the Ohio State Fair in Columbus yesterday. The gold medallion was struck in advance of the centennial celebration to be held Oct. 12-16 this'fall. Curvaceous Cuties Caught MARSEILLES, France (UPD— Although it is summer on the Riviera, motorists 'leaving Sa-lon-de-Provence were struck by the large number of eye-catching girls trying to hitchhike to nearby Marseilles. ★ * * All were beauties dressed in provocative skin-tight slacks, shorts or mini-skirt?. They were also particular, police said. The girls accepted a ride only if the driver was male and alone. Police said many of the trips ended a few miles down the road with a stop in deep, fragrant woodland about 15 miles south of Marseilles. In the woods was the world’s largest open-air brothel, police reported. The girls had au natural boudoirs complete with blankets, pillows, snacks and iceboxes containing chilled champagne. Police tracked down and closed the operation after several motorists, including prison inspector and a policeman, complained. DELANO, Calif. (AP) - What labor experts are calling a crucial point in die unionization of American farm laborers will take place Tuesday when Di Giorgio Corp. farm workers vote in a union-representation election. The election takes place near this San Joaquin Valley community and in San Diego. ★ * * The two organizations battling for the right to represent the state’s 80,000 farm workers are two of the nation’s most powerful — the Teamsters Union and the AFL-CIO. Both organizations have used every available medium to appeal for new members. Both have sponsored fiestas and have held other gatherings to attract voters. About 1,800 workers are eligible to vote in the election. National union organizers are signing them up. THREE CHOICES On the ballot, the AFL-CIO will appear on the left side. The Teamsters Union will be on the right. In the center will be a spot for the voter who does not desire union representation to mark his choice. Voting will take place between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. at the Sierra Vista ranch near Delano, and at the Borrego Springs ranch in San Diego County. The locked ballot boxes will j be driven by the highway patrol! to San Francisco where the; votes will be counted by the! American Arbitration Association. Results are expected to be released Wednesday. EARLIER STRIKE The chain of events leading to the election began nearly a year ago when the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee affiliated with the AFL-CIO. persuaded hundreds of field' hands not to report to the vineyards near Delano. A few days later, the National Farm Workers Association led its workers, most of them Mexican-Ameri-cans, from the fields to join the strike, or "huelga” as it is called in Spanish. Most of the AWOC members are Filipinos. ★ ★ ★ Ministers from throughout the state, social revolutionaries,' labor leaders and college stu-j dents soon joined laborers on the picket lines. 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DUDS FOR THE DORM Perky pj's, pretty gowns to keep you cozy warm 2”-3 PAJAMA 99 Polka dots and posies on cotton flannel lacy top empire gown of acetate/nylon long pants pajamas, or for a 'sleep treat'—a fleece. S-M-L, 32-40. Just a few from many. Burn the midnight oil in a 'snug as a bug' robe 3”-5 99 CHARGE IT Just two lovely loungers from our wide selec. ♦ion... all light as a feather and toasty warm. Clouds of Kodel® polyester, acetate fleeces, 100% nylon quilts. Sizes S-M-L FROSTEES FOR FUN 'Pets' of your wardrobe for campus capers a'go-go *21 FREE ALTERATIONS •AcrilanO acrylic/modacrylic •Toasty warm, weightless pile •Go-with-everything ash white RIGHTt 'Norsk' by Borg fun-fuzzy with brown cotton corduroy hood, front, vinyl straps. Misses' sizes 6-16 in the savings group. LEFT: Double-breasted Glenoit classic with T-flap pockets. Goes from Science lab te Sorority partyl Sizes 8-18 in the group. 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Heinz Trettner, general inspector of the armed forces, is a para troop officer who first saw battle in the invasion of Rotterdam. Ever since he became general inspector in 1964, Trettner has quietly campaigned for more authority for the military. He was dissatisfied with the degree of civilian control set up by parliament when rearmament began in 1955. ★ ★ * Lt. Gen. Werner Panitzki has been head of the Luftwaffe since late 1962. STARFIGHTER CONTROVERSY He, too, has demanded more authority for the military to m a n a g e the supersonic Star-fighter nuclear bomber. Panitzki argued much of the problem the air force had with the Starfighter was caused by division of author-ity. - Panitzki demanded a reorganization which would create an all-military command for everything connected with the Starfighter. Defense Minister Kai-Uwe von Hassel said it would cost too much money and the Germans have tod few people to staff such an additional command. KEPT SILENT The generals have been grumbling for at least a year, but Hassel used his power as peace- time commander - in - chief to order them to remain silent. Hie breaking point for Panitzki came when a Starfighter crashed into the sea and the pilot died. Newspapers criticized Air Force leadership for the death, saying high-ranking officers had been slow to introduce necessary refinements to the aircraft. ★ * * Panitzki replied by turning to die public and charging the ministry of defense’s civilian leaders with poor managemenl of the Starfighter, and with trying to blame the military for their own shortcomings. The excuse for Trettner’s request to be relieved was Has-decision to let the Public Services and Transport Worker’s Union distribute propaganda and recruit members in military garrisons. Trettner objected this would undermine discipline. His view was shared by Maj. Gen. Guenther Pape, commander of the Third Military District, whose request to be placed on inactive duty was announced Wednesday. The generals, it is believed, hope their action will give the Social Democrats and the dents within Erhard’s own Christian Democratic Union the ammunition they need to oust Hassel. |/& m| HOUSEKEEPING popip MONDAV-TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY MONTH END SALE! Hurry In for our Mouth-End Clean ont of BRANDrVEW ITEMS ... pins window and floor samples at prices that mean great savings for you. Don’t confuse these with the many “last year' models that am now being, offered elsewhere at comparable low prices - these are the NEWEST MODELS... with all of the LATESt FEATURES ... priced to sell fast. Don't forget — our low prices am complete, .including 24-hour delivery, 1* year expert service, and full protective warranty at no extra cost. They are selling fast. Sale ends Wednesday night. . . harry! ^-when Atwell L checks in ? CHECK OUT! 10 Viet Dead Are Identifiec by Pentagon WASHINGTON GB — The Pentagon has announced the names ot 10 men killed in Viet Nam. The list included six Marines, three Army men and one Navy man. Killed in action: R Call for free Inspection] PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER iffEUlBi Montsrs. ILLINOIS — Chicago. Norman A. Haft, MISSOURI - Sgt. Odll Thompson. COLORADO — Hospltolman 3C. Matthew J. Krlat, Denver. MARINES CALIFORNIA - Pfc. Lamarr Fliher, Lot Angelea. ILLINOIS — Pfc. William J. Schultf, Stone Park> Pvt. Josaph H. Walton, Chicago. NEW JERSEY - Pfc. Thomei R. Kyle Jr., Pork Rldgo. OHIO — Sgt. Bobby Coni, Columbus. TENNESSEE — CpI. Wlnford L. Sprinkles, Nashville. Died of wounds: Classification changed from missing to dead, hostile: - WO Michael C. 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Reduced now to... GE GAS DRYER Reduced \ for Month-End sale! Installed*\ Giant capacity — plus Automatic Lighting, Safety Stop Control, efficient Lint Screen, Etc. Hurry! \ RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-Cycle Gas Dryer, Installed*... Only It boasts Full-Family Capacity — Automatic Lighting - “Damp Dry” Setting - big Lint Screen and more. mi mi mo Kale! ItM ItHilillATOItS 10% to 20% OFF! Delivery, Service and Warranty Included, GENERAL-ELECTRIC Deluxe 12 cu. ft. Refrigerator, now Sensational value! Has big Porcelain Crisper — full width Top Freez^p — Door Shelves, Etc. FAMOUSBRAND 2-DOOR 12 cu. ft. Refrigerator, Only Big, separate Zero-degree Freezer — deluxe Door Shelve* -full width Crisper, and more! PHILCO 2-Door Deluxe with‘Dairy Bar* Door, now ' Sensational value with all deluxe features! Ha* big crisper — Butter Chest, Etc. Hurry! *173 *179 *187 *218 2-Door Freezer and Refrigerator DiHvtndl SarviMdl Ml;i> s.ilt ! I ltl l /I KS MONDAY.., TUESDAY.., WEDNESDAY! SAVE 10% to 22% RCA WHIRLPOOL 350-pound Chest Freezer, Reduced to NO MONEY DOWN $710 MONTHLY No frost ever in the refrigerator section — Big zero zone freezer — 121 cu. feet capacity — come see! Porcelain interior liner — adjustable temperature control —counter balanced Safety Lid. * GENERAL-ELECTRIC Huge 406-lb. Upright Freezer, now All deluxe quality, with Built-In Door Lock — 5 fast freeze Surfaces — Dual Warrantiez. ADMIRAL Giant 526-lb. Deluxe ChestFreezer, now... Has built-in lid Loek-Interior Light-big Sorting Basket -Defrost Drain. All deluxe! PHILCO Deluxe 15 cu-ft. -■* in Door Lbek - Freeze Control! *163 *176 *176 *188 j / V FREE DOWNTOWN PARKING Open Monday and Friday Evenings ’til 9 p.m, ■^GOOD HOUSEKEEPIN W DAlWTTAr Of PONTIAC 51 West Huron Street F£ 4-1555 WE’LL STAMP YOUR TICKET ——THE-PONXIAC-PaESS, -MQNIUY^AIIGUSXim A—9 NEW HOOT VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber I Exchangeable With O Q K Your Old Rt*U»o- W & ** able Hose Ends g| Regular 7.50 W <' ~Koiu* In or free Delivery PARTS aled SERVICE ^1 ON ALL CLEANERS pl Bogs-Hoses-Brushes-Belts-Attachments-Etc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Aeeliances Using Our pwn Po'tts^ Attachments Firms Go Too Far on Diversification fashion collars , Towncraft Plus short sleeved sport shirts with fashion collars. Stripes, checks, prints, with button-down - collars. And they're never-iron* Penn-Prestl Compare! 3.98 crisp s Towncraft Plus’ long-sleeved sport shirts in pastels, iridescent! and dark tones. Of Dacron* polyester / cotton. They're Penn-Prest... never need ironing!* Compare! •5 favorite oxfords Traditional good looks — Towncraft Plus' long-sleeved oxford buttondowns. In a range of popular1 colors. Stay smooth Fortrel* polyester/cotton. Compare! *5 TENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: 9:30 AM to 9 P.M. By DIQK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON - Many debates have been held on the question of whether art imitates life or life tates art. In case of ans, it is always ter. I am now Bob old which he satirized the airline industry. It involved his experiences with a stewardess who worked for Mother Murphy’s Airline and Storm Door Co. The name of that firm hit me right in the middle of my risibility. I laughed when I first heard it, and 1 still laugh every time I think of it. LIFE IMITATES ART I must say, however, that it does not now seem as droll it once did. Life has begun imitating art. American industry and business have entered an era of diversification that is producing some commercial combinations almost as comically incongruous as Newhart’s figmentary enterprise. The time when one company merged with aifother in the same general field apparently is about over. ★ On a single day this week the financial pages printed three news items that might provide Newhart with material for another record album. —CBS, a‘ radio-television network which purchased the New York Yankees a few years ago and which last month acquired Creative Playthings, was said to be studying the desirability of acquiring Curtis Publishing Co. If this comes about, I submit that the network should change its name to CBBTMS-Coiumbia Broadcasting, Baseball, Toy & Magazine System. —W. R. Grace & Co. was reported to have obtained an option to. purchase a S3 per cent interest in Miller Brewing Co. I had always associated the Grace name with ocean liners, but the story said it also owns subsidiaries that make chocolate in the Netherlands and pickles in England. Among other things. Logically, it seems to me, toe parent firm should now become toe W. R. Grace Steamtoip, Chocolate, Pickle & Beer Co. —I. W. Harper Co., a distillery, announced it will spend about |8 million in the next six months promoting its booze and line of clothing. I am not acquainted with the details, but the I. W. Harper Bourbon & Tailoring Co., would be right up Newhart’s alley. DOUBLE DUTY MEDICATION For pain of HEMORRHOIDS tmnquo the hospitsf-type mediation Because trtnquo is both tnesthetic and antistatic It Mrvts as a | double-duty medication (or hemorrhoids and raided discomforts. Tnnqvo's high, pain-killing potency comes from Its hospital-type formula of 12V, relieves pain in tec-! onds and sustains mlitf i for hours. Trtnquo's antiseptic properties help fight Infection end speed up tfs« heeling another line product of CRABaR) LABORATORIES NILES, ILLINOIS ' TRUDELL of TROY John R Just N. of 14 Milo Noxt to Soars *50 *50 *50 Hum in Neck FIFTY DOLLARS FREE TO YOU Not Alarming By Science Service SAN FRANCISCO - A hum in the neck need not be a cause for alqfm. Doctors now often apply the stethoscope to one of the two carotid arteries carrying blood to the head and sometimes hear an odd murmur that is often if wa don't beat ANY lagitimata deal on a NEW FORD from ANY dealer. Try your luck. You can't lot*. You HAVE to win. 237 BRAND NEW 1966 FORDS BUST 60!!! A eniteuf Al VA/AVS Cl OCT nilAl ITV P Dr. Arthur U. Rivin of the Student Health Service and the School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, reports a survey of ZOO J persons, aged It to n, many ^ of jvhom had a venuos hum. ; The occurrence seas noted in] 47 per cent of the young aduits and in 21 per cent of persons in the middle and older age group. * * * In some cases the bum rose to a musical “whee,” he said, and in others it became a loud to-and-fro roar. The norma! cervical murmur can be distinguished from the type linked with disease by the fight vein, Dr. Rivin says. Misdiagnosis has included aneurysm, aortic insufficiency and other diseased states. > Regardless of Price or Profit: T-Birds up to $1050 off -GaiaxieB Up to $750 off FairtMM up to ISOS off Falcon* up to $000 off Mustangs up to $900 off Discounts from Toefory TfJeH! ALSO 14 LIKE NEW DEMONSTRATORS TRUDELL FORD DrHOIT VOLUME DEALER __777 John R __ 5854000 - 556-2540 help stamp out ironing .. .with Penn-Prest! PENN •PJZfi’gr JVE V&K iA#*, •WHIN tUMIlE DRIED Our own Towncraft university plaids Look smart—in our natural genius of a sport shirt! It’s crisp and handsome, stays that way because it’s Penn-Prest. Whisk it right from the dryer onto a hanger... it’ll look just-pressed. No puckered seams, no wrinkles. Made to our exacting specifications . . . performance-proved in Penney’s modern Testing Center. Get it in plenty of colorful plaids. Compare! £ Trim Towncraft slacks...never iron! Here's a terrific buy! Our well-educated slacks are Penn-Prest—stay fresh qnd wrinkle-free with no ironing, ever! Treated" '* resist stainst Of Fortrel® poiyestor/cotton. University grad style ..Penney- . tqtfored for perfect -fit! Made to Penney’* demanding specifications,. -"machine wash. .".drip bir mac1im¥dfy,"featly fiadytoweart" " Ueeyour enneifi Charge Account TodayI AyW THR PONTIAC PRESS.-MONPAYrAUftPS1?"**, 1999 -—r———^ Exclusive tread design assures quieter running on dry streetsl w 4-PLY NYLON CORD ^ Super-strongl Takes punishment of winter driving in stride. plot 1.83 Federal Exciaa Tax each PRE-SEASON SNOW TIRE BUYS fVVoNTGOMERY WARD TRACTION! mm skid-resistors tread give super tractionl Our finest snow tire—Power Grip Nylon GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICE OF THE YEAR IF OUR ADVERTISED PRICE LOWERS AT ANY TIME IN 1966, WARDS WILL REFUND THE DIFFERENCE m Tubeless Sizes Black- walls Esdji^ Plus Fsd. Excise Tax Each Tire Tubeless Sizes Black- walls Each Plus Fed. Excise Tax Each Tire 5.90/6.00*13 ILfjg, * 1.61 7.75/7.50-14 7.75/6.70-15 18.99* 2.20 2.21 im* lljUtt--. 8.25/8.00-14 0.15/7.10*15 20J9* 2.36 ;• "23T — 7.00-13 6.95/6.50*14 16.99* 1.90 1.92 8.55/8.50-14 8.45/7.60-15 22.99* 2.57 2.55 5.60/5.90/6.00-15 16.99* 1.91 8.85/9.00-14 8.85/9.15-15 8.00/8.20-15 24.99* 2.84 2.97 2.97 7.35/7.00-14 6.40/6.50-15 7.35-15 17.99* 2.11 2.05 m •Whitmans $S Mon Per Tin LESS BLACKWALL 33-MONTH ROAD HAZARD OUARANTYI For short-term winter econ-■ omy, the Sno-Grip can't be beatl Rugged, deep-biting lugs dig in for surer-footed traction. Continuous tread pattern gives smoother running on dear roads. Angled tread bars reduce sideslip. 4-ply nylon cord for strength! Backed by Wards 24-month road hazard guarantee. EACH ONLY RIVERSIDE* SMMSRIP...A DEPENDABLE-QUALITY SNOW TIRE AT AN UNBELIEVABLY LOW, LOW PRICE! TUBELESS SIZES BLACKWALLS EACH PLUS FED. EXCISE TAX EACH TIRE 6.40/6.50-13 11.99* 1.83 - 7.75/7.50*14 14.99* 2.20 825/8.00*14 16.99* 2.36 8.55/8.50-14 1 18.99* j 2.57 7.75/6.70*15 14.99* 2.21 ; •WhItttmllt S3 Mora Per Tire. STORE U_l| . PHONE 682-4940 HOURS: Sundays 12 noon to 6 p.m. YrO H ■ S Cl Cl RwR ffi 1 ■ Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1066 ~ M s Vinyl Asbestos ENOUGH TILE^ FOR OW? ROOM Only $14.40 iTSSr |mcttSAi»H MRS. J. D. GONDOL J. D. Gon on Canadian WeddmgTripT The John Dennis Gondols (Marilyn Sue Morris) left for p wedding-trip to eastern Canada after their vows and reception Saturday in All Saints Episcopal , Chinch. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Hart D. Morris, Wenonah Drive and the John Gondols of Flint. Rev. Charles Sturm, officiated \t the service. A A A Re-embroidered Alencon lace fashioned an Empire bodice for file bride’s A-line gown of white silk organza over taffeta worn frith lace pillbox and illusion veil. She carried Phalenopsis d Stephanotis. ^eari Lanvin designs this : green-blue, and gold lame cocktail ensemble. The pink silk-lined jacket is worn over a pink crepe blouse. Two vertical lines mark the skirt. Shoes are large-grained beige and the hat is similar to the suit. Lap-Day Look Is Ladylike or Kooky Teen Desires New Twist for Party By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I’m having a Sweet Sixteen party next month. I have gone to many such parties and they were all more or less the same — dancing to records and opening gifts. I would like to have some other entertainment beside dancing all evening. I would appreciate any suggestions you may have. —Beverly. A A A Dear Beverly: In between dancing and giftopening you might play some games. They’re always fun. “Charades” will give your friends a chance to test their acting ability. Or, If you can print cards with the names of famous movie stars on them and pin one to each guest’s back and give them 20 questions to guess who they are. Another possibility is to cut out famous advertising slogans from magazines and see who can match up the greatest number with tiie products they advertise. Have some prizes ready to make it more interesting. Sorority Council The Pontiac Area Beta Sigma Phi City Council will open the sorority’s 1960-67 season *at a meeting this evening at 8:00 p.m. in the Riker Building headquarters nf the Pbn-tiac 'Area Chamber of Commerce. North African influence is visible in this red, violet, china blue and green cocktail “djel- , laba” entitled “El Moroco” and featured in Paris designer Nina Ricci’s fall and tointer collection. A cape of similar material is adorned with a red ostrich feather pompon. The djellaba is worn with shiny black shoes and square earrings. Cecil Moores Entertain for New Couple By SIGNE KARLSTROM On Sunday, the Cedi Moores honored Mr, and Mrs. Augusto Bini in their home for dinner. Mrs. Bini is the former Barbara Broock, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Broock of Island Lane. The pSrtywas planned for S$ of Mrs. Bfad’s friends to neet her husband. A A A • The Binis are now living -in Detroit where she is assistant to William Pitney, head of the ceramics department at Wayne State University. ANTIQUE SHOW Mrs. L. C. Lempke, publicity chairman for the Piety Hill Antique Show and Sale reminds us that their 16th annual show and sale will take place at the Community House in* Birmingham from Sept. 14 through Sept. 17. ★ Sr A Committee members working on the jeoject are: Mrs. Neil Talmage, chapter regent; Mrs. Robert Britner, and Mrs. Joel Watkins,. co-chairmen of the sale; Mrs. Graeme B. Supple, With Mm. Donald Shaw of Davison, her sister’s honor matron, were bridesmaids J]|a h e Bigler and Pamela Griffin of Pontiac and Suzanne Radi of Flint *a * * On the esquire side, were best man Scott C, Easson of Howell, and the ushers Dale ftkfrfch, Flint; Darwin Clark, Fenton, and Donald Shaw, Davison. ■ The bride attended . Michigan State UMvOnity and ■ her to*- . band, is enrolled at the Law-• rence Institute of Technology. program editor and advertising; Mrs. Clardhce Mitchell, tickets. Mrs. Newell Allen has charge of hostesses; Mrs. John W. Young, Mrs. Roy Thurman, Mrs, Herbert Green and Mrs. j: p. Charles are members of the general committee. ★ A A How wonderful to be ‘sweet 16’ and have a party planned around your favorite hobby in your favorite place. Ian Arons-son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl-Gunnar Aronsson of Juniper Lane was the lucky girl. The dinner dance in her honor was held at Metamora Hunt Club. Replicas of Ian’s horse “What Next”, which she rides daily at Metamora, were displayed throughout the dining room. A sculptured horse head in ice was the center of attraction around the punch bowl. Each table also had a small horse with flower arrangement. The “Fugitives” provided the dance music. ★ A A There were 14 young couples who gathered at the Aronsson’s home before the dinner. They were transferred to Metamora by bus. Ian’s brother, Jeffry, arrived home from Camp Ka-waga, WiS;, Just in time Jfor his sister’s birthday. Paris designer Pierre Balmain’s autumn and winter presentations featured a floor length evening dress with a red, violet and green striped skirt and a violet velvet top. Jacques Heim features a brown jersey cocktail dressi The front features a “T” motive and the waist is underlined with a bow belt. The dress is worn with a golden jersey turtleneck sweater and stockings and shiny gold shoes. What's In A Name? Don’t Answer to ‘Wolf’ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: How does a person go about getting her name changed legally? I am taking an awful ribbing. VIRGINIA! WOOLFI DEAR VIRrl G I NI A: I f| you're single! —•pen* could get| m a r r 1 e d. If I you’re married,! you could get! divorced and ask the court to I give you back your maiden name. But it’s hardly worth it. What’s in a name? Just don’t answer when somebody cries, “WOLF!’1 “ A A A DEAR ABBY: I cannot keep my mind on my work. All I can think of is that letter you published from a soldier who is returning home from Viet Nam, asking you what to do about a wife who refused to go with him to his new tour of duty. A A A Abby, how I wish I could spend just one hour with that wife. Maybe if she experienced the following she would change her mind: • Having a government car pull up in front of her house, bearing - two men who have come to tell her that her husband had been killed in action. ~ • Hearing the taps played for the last time, and feeling each note tear up every dream she ever had. •Having the last letters she sent to her husband returned to her, marked UNCLAIMED. I oould tell her how it feels because I have just experienced aD these things. I am not bitter. I just thank God that I had a chance to bring a little love into his fife. If I were that soldier’s wife I would be waiting at tile station with my togs packed, ready to follow him to the ends of the earth. But first, I would take his hand and lead him to the nearest chapel where I would kneel and thank God for sparing his life. And I would thank Him every day from that day forward. I hope you publish this letter and that soldier’s wife reads it, She is the richest woman alive. GOING ON ALONE ★ A A Troubled? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, inclose a She Sings Bass Mrs. Louise Malone Braxton, the only woman toss singer in America, will present a concert Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the New Bethel Baptist Church, Branch Street. The concert is open to the public. stamped, self-addressed envelope. AAA For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. Mrs. Burlingame Gets Citation of Horticultural Unit Alice Wessels Burlingame of Birmingham was given a Citation by the American Horticultural Society at the recent meeting of the International Horticultural Society in College Park, Md. AAA Mrs. Burlingame was cited for her pioneer work in horticultural therapy, the technique now well established in institutions throughout the country. The Citation also mentioned her success in putting the program in Chicago public schools Tor theirhandicapped children. Mrs. Burlingame’s first work was at Pontiac State Hospital. AAA This summer is the fifth year that college extents in occupational therapy have received instruction for college credit at the teaching center for horticultural therapy in the hospital. Mrs. George Romney greets J[oAnn Van Tassell, East Iroquois Road, at the Republican women’s luncheon in Detroit on Friday. The luncheon whjch honored Mrs. Ronmey,$trs. William Millikan and Mrs. Robert Griffin, preceded the opsptmgof the weekend convention. Miss Van Tassell is d candidate for a state house seat tn the 62nd Ittrfei J * i ' ' ’* > < * • LINOLEUM RUGS 9*1? *3®« Each Genuine MOSAIC TILE W Sq. Ft. 12"xT2" Sheets —Many Colors Vinyl Rubber TILE 9”x0” 2 15« MIGA 29Vf, Cigarette and Alcohol Proof Plastic Wall TILE 1«-2c-3* , 39% Ft. We Buy Blau Lamps and ACROSS From The MALL 2265 ELIZABETH LAKE ID. FR0VT I0M PARKING . FE 4-5216 . J W~^w Open Mon., Thur*., Frl. 9 to 9 . Tims., Wod., Sat. 9 to 6 • r ” **** ■ fne JVew ■■ STYROFOAM CEIUMfi TILE • Faint it i i THE IWT1AC rKK&S.JlQNIMY, /AUGJLJST 2fl,JLggg Easier Way A kindergarten teacher sent in this ingenious way of getting several wiggling toddlers into theic rain and/or snow boots. Slip plastic bags over their street shoes and pull the boot on over the bag. REARGE Floral Co. To Remind You We will be closed on Wednesdays during August. Please plan your visits and phone calls with this in mind. Phone FE 2-0127 PORTRAIT RLNDALh * • • Photograph ers 45 W. Huron St. "’V 'Vm 50 Phone for Appointment, FF. 5-3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS SENSATIONAL SPECIALS ON PERMANENTS P UtGAAG/ luscious wave with Yivi-Oil ■ ’10 t_ Complete — ~\ CUSTOM Vitalizing Permanent Reg. $15.00 for Tinted and Bleached I 255 Think of ttt The luxury of our •LM $25.00 Salon Custom Wave Sale- Now for Only $15°° f No Appointment Needed! 11 N. Saginaw St. Beauty Salon Phone FE 5-9257 Mitchells on Eastern Honeymoon Vows were taken and rings exchanged by Diana Lynn Westphal and Dennis Wynne Mitchell, Saturday, in the First Congregational Church in Dundee. Reception in the Tri-County Sportsmen League in Saline followed the candlelight rite. The newlyweds’ parents are the Armine A. Westphals of Dundee and the Harold J. Mitchells of Sutcliff Road, West Bloomfield Township. SILK ORGANZA Ivory silk organza with Alencon lace applique fashioned the bride’s Empire sheath gown and chapel train. An open pillbox of lace held her bouffant illusion veil. Matron of honor was Mrs. Walt Bergsma with bridesmaids Mrs. Gary Rehberg, Mrs. Raymond Falvo and Bonnie Mitchell. Robert Bayer was Ting-bearer. ★ ★ ★ James P. Mitchell of East Orange, N. J. was his brother’s best man. Ushers were Richard Westphal, Gary Wilk-off, Richard Sligay, George Beeman and Richard Look. After an eastern honeymoon the couple will reside In Saline. The bride is an alumna of Easter Michigan University where her husband is a sen- Writers to Meet There will be a meeting of the Oakland Writers’ Workshop at 1 p.m., Thursday in the YWCA. eumrrde sale! SMART I GIRL* dress sheer seamless, nude heel, demi-toe, plain knit or micro. 44« 2 pr. 85< 82 N. Saginaw St. Division of Thomai Jtwolry Cc i&tHe Qufpttlw} & 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST., Downtown Pontiac ____OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. TIL 9 P.M. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS - ELEVATOR SERVICE TQ EACH FLOOR l PROVINCIAf^j|ft©NiAL . TRAPITJQNAt - MODERN.... ALL BY AMERICAfS LEADING MANUFACTURERS! 5-Ptae Dinette (Not Exactly as Pictured) ON SALE TUES., WED. ONLY So good-looking with its bordered lifetime plastic top and the 4 matching coordinated chairsl A bright, colorful noteOn'your kitchen^ Use the extension leaf when you have a crowd oround the table, or for casual entertaining. The durable plastic top is mar, heat and stain-resistant and available tn lovely English walnut. (Not Exactly As Pictured) Reg. $59.95 Very Specially Priced 13900 FE 2-4231 90 Days Same as Cash Fuse Delivery • No Money Down • Months to Pay! “you must be satisfied—this we guarantee” Area Couples Exchange Vows in Recent Ceremonies SEAMAN MRS. TALLMADGE MRS. J. A. ROGERS Duggan-Lamphere Cheryl Irene Lamphere, daughter of the Grant A. Lampheres of Harvey Lake Road, Highland Township, repeated vows Friday evening with Dennis Michael Duggan. Rev. David Britz performed the ceremony in St. Michael Catholic Church. The bridegroom is the son of the Harold Duggans of Harmon Road, Pontiac Township. Chantilly lace "over white satin fashioned the bride’s gown worn with silk net veil secured by satin roses. Her bouquet of white roses and Stephanotis held a moonstone rosary from Capistrano. ★ ★ ★ Margaret Lamphere attended her sister as maid of honor with another sister, Patricia, as bridesmaid. Best man was Gary Crettier with the bride’s brother, Gary, as usher. After a reception in the Airway Lanes, the couple left for a honeymoon in Canada and New York. Hayes-Lyons Reception in the Italian-American Club followed the marriage of Leola Elva Lyons to Norris Dannie Hayes, Saturday, in the Christian Temple. ★ ★ ★. Their parents are Mrs. Elva F. Lyons, Cameron Avenue, Leo Lyons, East Boulevard South; and Mr. and Mrs. Z. B. Hayes, Kettering Street. FRENCH LACE Re-embroidered French lace adorned the bride’s Empire gown of white organza worn with bouffant illusion veil. She carried white carnations and gardenias for the rite performed by Rev. Robert Gamer. Mrs. Charles Parks, Walled Lake, was honor attendant with Nancy Hayes, . Carol Haist and Sally Rogers. Sally Parks and David Rogers were flower girl and ring-bearer. With best man George Hale were t h e ushers, Dennis Gruno, Donald Ore. and Anthony P. Zograpos. The' couple left on a wedding-trip to Orlando, Fla. Seaman-Talley Off to Houston, Texas, their new home, after reception in the parlors of the First United Pentecostal Church on Saturday are the newlywed Rev." and Mrs. Glenn Edward Seaman (Inelda Jeanette Talley, ★ ★ ★ The bride, who chose a white silk organza gown with tiered lace skirt, is the daughter of - Mrs. Lena Talley of Osceola Drive and Raymond Talley of Seneca Street. Her bouffant veil fell from a lace headpiece and she carried white roses and Stephanotis. ★ t ★ Mrs. Donald Blasingame was matron of honor with bridesmaids, Mrs. Harold Roberts, Mrs. Gilbert Davenport, Grand Rapids, and Sharon Robbins, Elyria, Ohio. Standing- as best man for the bridegroom, son of Mrs. Dean S. Yates of Oakdale, La. and the late A. L. Seaman, was David Myer of Vista, Calif. Ushers were Robert Brown, of Groves, Texas; Donald Blasingame, Harold Roberts and Gilbert Davenport. * ★ ★ The bridegroom will attend Texas Bible College. It Takes Experience to STYLE, FIT AND PERFECT A FASHION WIG OR WIGLETTE We have an excellent source, careful training and quality materials to assure you of a wise investment. Convenient Evening Appointments on Wednesday and Friday RANDALL’S Beauty Shoppe ] Wayne St. FE 2-1424 Talmadge-Jencks The Richard Whipple Tall-madges (Linda Kay Jencks) left for a southern honeymoon after their vows and reception, Saturday, in (he Ortonville Methodist Church. Rev. Richard Lobb of the Swartz Creek Community Methodist Church performed the evening rite. The newlyweds’ parents are Mr. and Mrs Russell W. Jencks, Ortonville, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Tall-madge, Swartz Creek. Jeweled re-embroidered Alencon lace enhanced the bride’s gown of white silk organza over taffeta styled with lace-paneled train. ORANGE BLOSSOMS Pearlized orange blossoms held her English illusion veil and her bouquet held red roses and Stephanotis. With Nancy Jencks, her sister’s honor maid, were Mrs. John Francis, Mrs. Dale Broecker, Mrs. James V a n -tine Jr., and JoAnn Leppeine. ★ * * Jerry Ward of Flint was best man. Seating some 350 guests were John Francis, Dale Broecker, Michael Teed, C. L, Streetman, Frank Gramer and Boyd Orriss. Rogers-Coleman A six o’clock ceremony and reception Saturday in the Waterford Community Church marked the vows of Kathleen Ann Coleman and James Albert Rogers. The Stuart G. Colemans of Ardreth Street and Mr. and Mrs. Winford Rogers of Rowley Drive; are parents of the couple who left for a wedding trip in Canada. A-LINE GOWN The bride’s A-line gown of white silk organza over taffeta was styled with bodice and court, train of re-embroidered Alencon lace. A laqe - bordered illusion mantilla and bouquet of white roses and forget-me-nots completed her ensemble for the rite performed by Rev. Robert Winne. Vicki HeYold was maid of honor and flower girls were Kimberly Rogers and Kristine Davies. With William Belisle, best man, were ushers Larry Gross, Stuart Coleman, Robert Davies. Mark and Gill Rogers were junior ushers. Needs to Be Punished The Masochistic Woman By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE A-520: Nora S., aged 31, has been married 10 years. “Dr. Crane,” her lawyer began, “s h e has sued her husband for divorce. “She charged physical cruelty, for h e 0 f t e n would beat her and blacken her eyes. “But when I had the divorce already won for her, she reneged! “Her husband pleaded with her to take him back and she did so. DR. CRANE The importance of Your Child's Vision I* Our Business Spring Action Glnsses ... So Right for Children ■s—MmA» uriiinp i ^ 1 tffiuiioA LET’S YOUR CHILD TAKE PART IN NORMAL ACTIVE PLAY. Sizes right for a child's face, these spring action frames hold gently and firmly in place and let children lead a normal active child's life. One Fining Will is Do The Trick 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. Doily 9:30 A M. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:30 A.M. to 1:391 FE 2-29 ■ “And by actual count, this is my 27th divorce case where the wife has relented at the last minute and taken back her brutal mate who had been guilty of repeatedly beating her up. “If wives sue on the grounds of mental cruelty, they seldom back down li£e this. “So why will women routinely forgive a husband who has knocked out their teeth, blackened their eyes, and even bodily thrown them out of their own house and locked the door behind them?” Maybe it is difficult for you readers to understand, but the typical woman is inclined to be a masochist to some degree. That means she not only accepts a reasonable amount of brute force but subconsciously relishes it. Remember Shakespeare’s famous “Taming of the Shrew.” . When the latter’s mate Anally made her walk a chalk line under threat oL beating her up, she purred contentedly and became a model wife! In childhood, too, many girls with brothers are shoved around and occasionally slapped down. So they subconsciously expect a man to he somewhat brutal. Gh, they don’i want to get black eyes every day or even once per year, but they don’t want tbeir mate to be a Meek doormat. And whenever they begin to suspect that then' husband is too mild, they grow irritated and often try to provoke him to lay his hands cm them in rage. ,As this divorce lawyer has wisely pointed out, the wives who resolutely go through their divorce proceedings, simply blame their mates for inattention. ★ ★, ★ They call it “mental cruelty” or “incompatibility.” He fails to compliment them or lean upon them for advice. So they grow enraged at such an affront and sue for divorce. To contrast, the women who occasionally receive physical punishment from their mates, feel that their husband is still interested in them. ★ ★ ★ He may act hateful, but they realize there is a close connection between hate and love. Maybe these wives have never read their Bible, but they intuitively agree with Hebrews 12:6, which states: _ “For whom the Lord loveth, he .chasteneth.” Now please don’t get the wrong idea from Nora’s example and go around saying: “Dr. Crane urges husbands to use rough treatment on their wives.” —This case is simply 4a show you the psychiatric explana* tren behind the apparent tong suffering,of many wives who accept black eyes! But you wives can prevent such masculine brutality by sending for the booklet “Sex Problems in Marriage,” enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. 01 RE-UPHOLSTERHfi or 1EW CUSTOM FUIITIIRE WILLIAM WRIGHT rinlttra Makers Upholsterers 270 Orchard lake • FE 4-0558 All Workmanship Guaranteed 5 Yean Phene today . . . well bo glad. «• bring fabric eagla to year boa*. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, UGUST 29, 1966 k ,u'{WKk< *W. Carol Richmond, 14, Lake Front Street, displays the trophy won by the Rae-vens Drill Team at the recent Veterans of Foreign Wars national convention in New York City. The team, captained by Carol, and representing the VFW Oxbow Post, No. 4156 of Union Lake, is the first junior team ever to win from Michigan. Footprinting Inaccurate Footprinting newborn infants for identification is practically worthless, a California pediatrician declares. He collected 51 sets of footprints, and another set from the same babies five to six weeks later. Experts comparing the prints could identify only 10 of the 51 babies, but even in those 10 evidence in clear ridges was not sufficient to stand up in court, says Dr. Kenneth S. Shepard of Travis Air Force Base Hospital. He suggests using identification bracelets, or tattooing babies with marks that will later disappear. Frederick W. Burnetts in Colorado Springs A dinner-reception in tbe Detroit Golf C3ub followed tbe marriage of Kathleen Laux to Frederick William Burnett Jr., Saturday, in the Franklin Community Church. Rev. Kenneth R. Callis of the First Methodist Church, Ypsilanti, assisted the pastor, Dr. Harold R. Bremer at the six o’clock ceremony. * ★ * The newlyweds’ parents are Miss Hodge M. R. Evans Take Vows A five o’clock ceremony Saturday in the Macedonia Baptist Church and reception in the church annex marked the vows of Joe Ann Hodge and Milton Roger Evans of Bondale Street. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hodge Jr., Cedardale Street, and Rev. and Mrs. Robert Harris of Detroit. k k k The bride’s princess - line Empire gown of white silk organza over taffeta featured Kabuki sleeves of Alencon lace and a chapel train. She carried a white orchid and lilies of the valley.. With Gwendolyn Hodge, honor maid, were bridesmaids Sharon Gordon, Gloria Barker, Elaine Fuselier and flower girl Lorrie Golden. Willie F. Hodge was best man. Ushers were Chris Gilbert, Santa Barbara, Calif., Jimmy Keel, Clarence Taylor, Vernon Hodge and Michael Carter. Kenny $mith was ring-bearer. k k k The couple left for a honeymoon at Niagara Falls. Mir. and Mrs. Elgar F. Laux, Bloomfield Village, and the senior Burnetts of Dallas, Texas. COURT TRAIN A cathedral-length illusion veil fell over the bride’s gown and court train of white silk peau de soie lace. Variegated ivy and Stephanotis accented ho* bouquet of Phalaenopsis orchids. ★ ★ * Attendants were Mrs. James Vrataric, Ypsilanti, honor matron, with Lisa Rogers and Oma Jean Goode of Dallas; Mrs. Phil Chapman, Phoenix, Ariz.; Susan Reed, Farming-ton, and Dianne Mott, Bir- B—8 V" With Thomas Shelton of Dallas, best man were the ushers Jack Smiley and Bill Short, Dallas; Don Laux; Jerry Ma-von, Donald Bollard and Rudy Moore. ' After a week at the Garden-of-the-Gods Club, near Colorado Springs, the couple will reside in Dallas, Texas vtoere he attends Southern Methodist University Law School. Both are alumni of the university. To Organize an Auxiliary ■The Waterford Jaycee Auxiliary extension committee was hostess recently at /a meeting for some 25 wives of the Clark-ston Jaycees in the Clarkston home of Mrs. Lewis Wint. The Waterford/group is helping the Clarkston group form their own Jayc/e auxiliary. Mrs. Wint,/was elected temporary chaiman with Mrs. Jerry Powell acting secretary. The Sepy 13 meeting will take place in the home of Mrs. Harvey Schroder, of Orion Raod, at 8:00 p.m. MRS JAMES ZANONI An early spring wedding in 1967 is planned by Nellie Juel Wressell and William Joseph Franzel. Their parents are the Clarence C. Wressells of Glaspie Road, Oxford Township and the Frank E. Fran-zels of Cherrylawn Drive. T Keep Your Eyes Open When You Shop By MARY FEELEY in Money Management Onfe of the high-cost-of-living items the average family pays for — but never enters in the budget—is what I call blind buying. This refers! to just making! purchases rato-3 er than criticalf selections. The difference! between hit] and-miss buying and thoughtful choosing can mean a money penalty that would set you right back on your heels if you stopped to figure it up over a year’s time. As one example, a reader in upper New York State, who apparently shopped with blinders on, actually enclosed the price label on a supermarket product when she wrote me — to show that she had paid $1.44 for 814 ounces of steak that was Rsted at $1.69 a lb. ~"”^Fi3di31n this happens all the time!” Well, why in toe world dbes she let it? Why doesn’t she keep her eyes open while she’s in toe store, and get mad right on the spot — instead of fuming after she gets home. housewives don’t keep a critical eye on prices when they do their marketing. j I don’t believe that reputable food markets anywhere rely/on over-charging to make a profit. It would prove a self-defeating practice. But I do believe the shopper shares the bility if she lets errors to pricing by without protest/It’s her money — why doesn't she respect it? / Food shopping, fi course, is only one area ip which you pay a price for wearing blinders. And women aren’t the only shoppers/who buy blind. A man writes from toe Middle West that / he has finally learned hi/ lesson — to look at a suit/before he pays for it. His advice to other men: to see that the seams at toe dipper are not sewed too close/to the metal so that they ’ Make sure there’s plenty nf /oom at the arm4 pits, Check to/ see if there are two inside pockets — some rpanofacturers cut down on this. Also; some stores which offer so-called bargains charge extra for alterations or won’t do them at all. S6 where’s toe bargain if you end up paying an extra $20 in order to make toe suit fit?” The same critical judgment is needed when jrbii buy a used Stores can make honest rriis-■ take*-every now and then. if wrong pricing is chronic, then tunng a ' rom|ief8®r raise a howl or go shop somewhere else. Another reader, in an Goait loeMo, writis toM she hos checked “lapses at three food stores” and finds over-charging “running over 3 per cent. This thieving is costing housewives countless dollars.” /If so, it’s only because the /“true interest” can be two different things? Abundance of merchandise and credit in all categories have made critical selection all toe more important — and at the same time, more difficult and when you spot tbe car you think you want. An automobile is one of the more expensive investments toe family makes. You can’t afford to be casual about it.......:... ...1—............— And bow critically do you go over an instalment con* tract before signing? When the payments come due, will yon discover that “interest” and time-consuming. But remember that selectivity is a sharp tool to help cut toe cost of living. (For Mary Feeley’s booklet, Make Every Dollar Count,” send $1 to Dollar Book in care of The Pontiac Press.) Vows Said Saturday in an Area Rite Midmornihg vows were spoken Saturday before Rev. John Fauser in St. John Fisher Chapel, Rochester by Shirley Kay Mapley of Rochester and James Morton Zanoni. * * + Their parents are the Gerls H, Mapleys of Greening Street, Farmington Township and the senior William J. Zanonis of Queensbury Street, Orion Township. k k k White Chantilly lace covered an ivory satin gown for the bride whose short illusion veil was held by a petal head-piece. Her flowers were white roses and Stephanotis. ★ * ★ Attending the bride were Mrs. Walter Fernald, Ivy Marie Brenton and Mrs. C. E. Paulson Jr. Frank Bader was best man with Richard Szeremet and Richard Mapley ushering. ★ ★ ★ The couple left for a honeymoon in northern Michigan following the church reception. She is an alumna of Oakland University where her husband is a senior. The Morse code of signaling was patented Oct. 30, 1838. FREE Area-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE | PHARMACY, IDG. ■ 880 WOODWARD-Medical Building ! “ ----------- MU |---- ■ Up BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Mrs. Irene Cotcher, Qster Drive, shows her oil painting, “Enigma IIIwhich is one of 50 igan State Fair. This is a first time at the Fair for Mrs. ColcheFu)ho tedches~dh adult painting class at the Pontiac YWCA. ALL PERMANENTS |m m NONE HIGHER . 1 — How Lustre Shampoo- >>' m §fr 2—Flattering Haircut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over BaslejrMkt. 833-9660 Sun Will Fade Clothes hung outdoors after laundering should be brought inside as soon as they are dry. Continued exposure, especially in sunlight, can cause fabric deterioration. The sun causes fading of some colors. Some fade even when hung in the shade. Bloomfield Miracle Milo Only 'Hi HOUR Back To School Special Vi Off On All Children’s Clothes Thru Size 12 Special Good All Week Trim Frays Keep a pair of scissors within reach as you do the weekly ironing. Use them to clip rav-elings. Then toe garment will not have to be handled after toe—ironing is cwnpleted. This keeps your clothes looking neater and is a timesaver. cm PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER 108 Moll Office Building 682-4600 .Dry Cleaning Special. Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday, Aug. 29-30-31 1 or 2 Piece DRESSES Only 98* Bloomfield Miracle Mile Only Dial 332-1822 Continuing Our Big ’/2-PRICE COLD WIVE SALE All our Ultramique waves on sale include cut and styled set Beauty Lane Serena Starbrita Reg. 17.50 Reg. 15.00 Reg. 12.50 8.75 7.50 6.25 BIG SAVINGS, too, on Zotoa Luxury Waves NEISNER’S BEAUTY SALON 42 N. Saginaw, 2nd Floor FE 8-1343 IMS'*3 SOFTEE M0CS 697 • New Rounded Tees • Fashion Styling • Sparkling Color Choice Soft and supple ... a fashion choice in four earthy colors. Your pick of Vintage Red, Loam Black/Jug Brown, Country Green. Sizes 5 ^o 1 OB, ‘ 6Vz to 10AA, 6Vi to 10AAA. Hurry for the rock bottom price during this special sale. She# Solon—Mezzanine THE VONWA£AHltiG8i^Q^A&~AUGU&X FORMIDABLE OPPONENT - A Patton tank of the 69th Armored Battalion churns slowly through the ubiquitous mud of South Viet Nam in the rainy season near the Cambodian border where the use of tanks has proven quite successful. Yank Tanks Defy History in Muddy, Jungly S. Viet CATECKA, South Viet Nam (0 — U.S. Patton tanks are sloshing through the mud and juggles of the central highlands, defying the enemy and history. Hie French had a disastrous experience with heavy armor in the highlands during the Indochina war. Rusty hulks of burned-out tanks and armored cars still can be seen. ★ ★ * U.S. tank men don’t intend to be remembered the same way. "We won’t fail here," says Lt Col. R. J. Fairfield, Chicago, commanding officer of the 69th Tank Battalion, the largest tank unit in Viet Nam. BRIGADE SUPPORT Fairfield uses his M48 A3 Patton tanks in support of the 3rd Brigade, 25th Division, which operates near Pleiku. “We are needed here. Tanks were thought impossible in Korea at first. Look at the number we eventually had there,” Fair-field observes. He and his men Ricelands Flooded in Laos, Thailand are proud of the role their tanks, have played in the monsoon-drenched highlands. They have been supporting,the 3r4„ Brigade for more than three months. ★ * ★ A tank platoon of five vehicles helped fight off a North Vietnamese battalion attack on a South Korean unit early this month, killing 40 per cent of the 197 enemy dead. Mud is the major problem for armor in Viet Nam. It proved too much for the tanks in their initial operations west of Saigon with other 25th Division brigades. Even with their wide tracks, the Pattons bogged down. The tanks could be used only against snipes and heavily fortified bunkers. DIFFERENT STORY The highlands are different. American armor is succeeding because tank retriever vehicles can move a bogged American vehicle in hours. Repair crews, flown in by helicopter, can repair in an afternoon a tank disabled by mines or recoiless rifle fire. ★ ★ * pie 69th Tank Battalion came to Viet Nam in January from Hawaii. The Patton tank loaded VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -The powerful Mekong, Southeast Asia’s longest river, continued to spill over its banks today, causing vast flooding in the ricelands of Laos and Thailand. * ★ ★ The river rose more than six Inches within two hours this morning at the Laotian royal capital of Luang Prabang. The crest was not expected for hours. * * ★ U.S. experts helped the Laotians erect mud dikes near Luang Prabang. for combat weighs 54 tons, carries a four-man crew of driver, leader, gunner and tank commander. The main 90mm gun fires white phosphorous shells, high explosives and deadly shrapnel canister. The tank also carries 7.62mm machine gun with 13,000 rounds of dhununition, a .50 caliber machine gun with 3,000 rounds, and individual weapons for $ie crew. Tank commanders used to ride with their vehicles. The commander rides a helicopter overhead. He keeps in constant touch and knows where every tank is deployed. He sits with a tommy gun on his lap, zooming low over his tanks and bellowing orders. Albion House to Be Museum ALBION (AP) - The Albion Historical Society this week fin-'' nalized purchase of the A. P. Gardner hoiise, built in 1869, for $100,000 from the Cify of Albion. A $43,037 fund has been pledged for purchase and restoration of the house. It will become a community historical museum. DISCOUNT SALE on 25 NEW JEEPS SAVE UP TO $1,000 C/utruxCdl Imported Gait Go. 900 Oakland Ave. (U.S. 10) FE 5-9421 “Ifl had my choice of any car on my test lot, Fd pick the‘Jeep’Wagoneer” Noted criticand test driver Tom McCahltl remarks on the new Wagoneer. , Recently, in Mechanlx Illustrated, Tom McCahill ’ said, "My front yard usually resembles a clearing house for a hot car ring. At present, better than $50,000 worth of autos stand there broiling in the hot Florida sun...of the whole kit and caboodle, my choice would be the ‘Jeep’ Wagoneer." Nearly eyeryone who’s driven the new 4-wheel drive ‘Jeep’Wagoneer agrees Jfs the most versatile car ever produced, "ft rides like the best Detroit has to offer,” says McCahill. "But If fl go places you ToafriDgottodrireitto believe it See yuf>OTir NyloTT in ypyir home for pnly $9.46 per month. GUARANTEED 10 YEARS IN WRITING NO MONEY DOWN ONLY Per Month YARDS CASH PRICE MONTHLY PAYMENTS 35 $308 $10.87 40 $351 $12.39 45 $395 $13.94 JIIM 55 $483 $17.04 60 $527 $18.59 Size Color Description Sale 12x26.fr-- Gold—b-8 Maytime $100 12x23.7 Cinnamon Moresque—E-8 Stoneway $155 12x22.6 Banana Gold—B-7 South Seas $ 06 12x22 1 Black-B-6 South Seas $ 95 12x21.5 Surf Green—E-8 TWA $115 12x21.2 Multi-Tone—D-8 100% Nylon $139 12x20.6 Dk. Gold Tones —D-8 Kinsdale $189 12x20.6 Purple-B-7 South Seas $ 85 12x20.1 Blue & Green - B-1 Commercial Nylon $135 12x20 Beige—E-8 Cameo Point $140 12x19 Ruby—B-6 South Seas $ 18 12x18.8 Spanish Gold —D-8 DCS $160 12x18.7 , Aspin Turquoise—C-8 Cote D Zure $1T5 12x18 Surf Green—B-8 Prospect Pprk $158 12x17.10 Fern Green—B-7 South Seas $71 12x17.8 Avocado—C-8 Glenn Royal $132 12x17.8 Cane Beige—C-8 Acrilan1* Plush $ 99 12x17 Souffle Beige—B-2 Fairmount $ 99 12x17 Beige—B-6 Ronda $101 12x16.6 Gold-B-7 Lakewood $ 99 12x16.6 Bamboo Beige-8-5 South Seas $TT. >2x16.6 Persian Blue—B-5 BOAC $109 12x16.3 Wheat-B-5 Orbit $89 12x16.3 • Blue Green —B-2 BOAC $115 12x16.2 Hyacinth —D-8 Invitation $130 12x16 Avocado—B-1 Rossett $140* 12x15.10 Beige-B-6 Sweetwater $ 99 12x15.7 Candy Stripe— B-3 100% Nylon $ 19 12x15 Biscuit Beige—F-9 Adornment $121 12x14.9 Spanish Gold-C-2 Fairmount $120 12x14.6 Dark Gold-C-5 Wishing Well $115 12x14.6 Sky Blue—C-3 Adornment $109 12x13.10 Rosewood—^-2 Quist $ 99 12x13.9 Indian Summer—D-5 Confetti $116 12x13.6 Royal Valvet-D-6 Modem $109 12x13.6 Rose Beige—D-4 TWA $89 12x13.5 Rose Beige—D-3 Fairmount $ 90 12x13.4 .Lite Blue—D-3 South Seas $ 59 12x13.1 Beige—D-6 Acrilan® $ 79 12x12.10 Burnt Orange—E-4 Country Casual $108 12x12.10 Grey Tone—E-3 Color Mate $ 74 12x12.7 Moss Green—E-4 Bordeaux $ TO If 12x12.6 Blue Green Tone—E-5 Country Casual $107 12x12.6 Toast—E-3 E & B $ 88 12x12.6 Golden Red —E-5 BOAC $ 85 12x12.4 Sky Blue-E-3 Crown $ 12 12x12.3 Persian Blue—E-5 Tonality $ 99 12x12.1 Moss Green —E-4 Bordeaux $ 85 12x12 Aqua —E-5 South Seas $ 50 12x12 Driftwood—D-4 Caravell $ 69 12x12 Orange—E-3 Sheer Twist $ 49 12x11.8 Coffee-F-4 Rossett $110. 12x11.7 Bronze Gold - F-5 Rossett $109 12x11.6 White-F-5 Invitation $ 85 12x11.6 Surf Green—F-7 DC-8 $ 75 12x11.5 Mocha-f-5 Maytime $19 12x11.3 Orange—F-6 Sheer Twist $ 45 12x11 Gold-F-4 Country Casual $ 80 12x11 Green— F-3 Tonality $ 05 12x11 Mocha — F-3 Pebble Beach S 78 1"2xT0.6 “TfRSnfirGbTd’— NeecfTeStar $ 84 12x10.9 Burnt Orange—G-4 Shooting Star $. 75 12x10!6 “ Light Gold *“ Pearl White-G-3 Mtmtfe*ttr Quist *T«r “ $ 88 12x10.4 Surf Green—G-3 Adornment $ IT 12x10 Avocado—G-5 TWA $ 65 12x10 Avocado—G-5 Nylon Plush $ 39 12x10 Olive-H-4 South Seas $ 46 12x9.6 Gold —G-2 C-77 $ 39 12x9.9 Beige—G-2 Adornment $ 59 12x9.9 Green Beige—H-5 Tango $ 70 12x9.4 ■ Parchment— H-3 Fairmount $ 56 12x9 Reman Gold-H-6 Pebble Beach 1 65 12316 Sandlewood—H-5 ■q^PHFfgglpaniMmiimH DC-8 $ 49 12x8.6 Beige—H-5 Stephen Ledon $ 49 12x8.1 Sandlewood-H-2 Wesley $ 65 12x8 Blue Flame-H-6 TWA $ 44 12x8 Bamboo Beige-H-3 DC-8 $ 39 9x9 Avocado-H-2 . Cote D Zure $31 OR 3-2100 OR 3-3311 3T50 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON PLAINS NEW STORE HOURS Mon. and Fri. 10 to 0 Tws., Wed., Th*%, Sat., 10 to 5:30 Think Karpet Think Karen’* PONTIAC PRESS, MONDA¥r-AUOUST 29r4D66 Ford Fioik HS1 Warns Against Interest Rate Hikes Freeman for Farm Factors centennial birth of Georg* Washington it was decided to issue a coin bearing the likeness of the general. However, before this could be done it was necessary for to act officially to Standing production of the ing Liberty quarter of 191G This act was passed March 4,1931 and the first Washington quarter was is* seed August 1. Although the Washington quarter is considered one of the coins in the presidential series, the likepess is actually that of General Washington four years before he became president. It was modeled from the famous bust treated by sculptor Joan-Antoine Houdon during bis visit to Mount Ver-noa in 1785. The Houdon bust was made at the insistence of the Virginia legislature which resolved that measures be taken to procure a statue of General Washington, of the finest marble and best Workmanship. Benjamin Franklin, our ambassador to France, arranged for Hondo# to come to America to accept the com- General Washington recorded the arrival of Houdon in his diary thus: "Sunday, October 2, 1785: After we were in bed, about 11 o'clock in th4 evening, Mr. Houdon, sent from Franc* by Doctor Franklin and Mr. Jefferson to take my bust, in behalf of the State Of Virginia, with three young men assistants, introduced by a Mr. Periu, a French Genrieman of Alexandria, arrived here by Water from the latter place." Sculptor John Flanagan was tbs second designer to put the fasces on a general circulation coin of th* United States. Th* bundle of arrows bound with a ribbon is a stylized version of the Roman symbol of authority—a bundle of sticks cen-' tered by a battle-ax and bound with a rad band. Flanagan's initials JF may be found at the truncation of th* neck of Washington. MADISON, S.D. (AP) -Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich., the House minority leader, criticized Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman Sunday as a “political phrase maker who was boro with a foot in his mouth." I Ford spoke to some 800 persons at a Republican rally in this eastern South Dakota farm community, scoring the Johnson Administration on a number of points. ★ ★ ★ Ford said that Freeman is “the only secretary of agriculture who has fever publicly expressed pleasure at the drop in farm prices." KANSAS CITY, Mo. (On -Former President Harry Truman said yesterday increase. The average moonlighter — there are four million — is a married man between‘the ages of 25 and 44, and he puts in 13 hours a week at his second job. . VENDING CHAMPS America leads the world in vending machines. It now has 12 million of these mechanical salesmen. Don’t you think IPs about time they invented one with a little built-in courtesy, so that when you inserted a coin in its slot it would rasp out a guttural “thank you " A grade school student gave (these answers during a musk “A virtuoso is a musician with real Ugh morals. And I know .what a sextet is but I had rather not say." h 4t h Forgotten heroes: John Giola, then 23, ddnced file Charleston for 22% hours in the Roseland Ballroom here in 1926. None of today’s sturdy voung Fruggers have ever challenged Ms 40-year-old record. t What are the chances of a family having,twins? The stork usually brings them on one out of 98 trips, and in only 37 per cent of twin births are the Infants identical or “look-alikes." * * * It was Will Rogers who observed, “I never expected to see the day when girls would get sunburned in file places they now do.” Hitler Slogans in Italy PARMA, Italy (AP) S Chalked swastikas and slogans praising Hitler and fascism were found today scribbled on the walls of publk partes in this north Italian city. QUESTION: What are sea shells made of? ★ ★ ANSWER: When we see a pretty, empty shell on a beach, we are apt to forget that an interesting little animal once built it. These shellmakers are mollusks—small, soft, boneless creatures. Such a mollusk hatches from the egg as a free swimming larva or veliger (1). After awhile, he settles to the bottom (2) with his ying-like paddles gone. He 'looks tempting to many hungry predators, bat he protects himself with an ingenious system. His soft body is covered with a fleshy cape or mantle (3), and the mantle is able to extract carbonate of lime from the sea water and deposits it as a strong hard material or shell. As the young mollusk keeps growing, adding larger spirals to the tiny shell he carried as a veliger, the mantle keeps covering them with shell (2). Then, when danger threatens, the animal can pull inside his shell, closing the entrance with a hard plate or trap door which he carries around attached to the ‘ end of his body. Some mollusks, like the clam, build shells of other shapes, but the material is deposited by the mantle in the same general way. YANKEE *€t* KM KITH AT MRS USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD • NIGHTS ’til 10 SUNDAYS ’til 7 If You Don’t Buy From 0sf Wo Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! TWO YANKEE STOKES IN THE PONTIAC AREA * MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER * 1UE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 Many men dream of riiiphfog mountains, but few ever scale the real thing. One of those setek few, a blond-bearded Bloomfield Township man diaries Bailey, recently ascended 20,230-foot Mt, , McKinley hi Alaska, the highest mountain in North America. A Swarthmore College senior, Bailey, of 5275 Adams, Bloomfield Township, and three fellow students Tucker Forsythe, Stanford, Calif., Stanley Adamson of Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Malcolm Moore of Marlboro, Vt., first diseased climbing die mountain two years ago. Bailey, 21, became interested in climbing during a 1957 family stay in Mexico. ★ ★ ★ He and his friends spent more than a year planning. Their preparation included a visit to Bradford Washburn, director of the Boston Museum of Science and an expert on Mt. McKinley. CLIMBING PERMISSION «In between climbing the Te-tons and the Alps for experience, the men wrote to Mt. McKinley National Park authorities requesting permission to climb; listing their experience and supply lists. When granted permission, they notified the Alaskan Rescue Group of their planned route. Last winter the four men climbed ML Washington, N. H., to “test our equipment and experience the type of weather we’d find on McKinley” explained Bailey. “It was 20 degrees below zero and there were 70-mile-an-hour winds,” he added. * * * "It was worse than anything we found this summer.” STARTED JUNE 18 The climbers began their day hike on June 18 as they started across the first 17 miles of mosquito-infested tundra, including the mile-wide McKinley River swollen by the spring glacial runoff. They spent the first night “B^t when the am went behind a cloud the tomperabare would drop 12 degrees jn as many minutes and we’d have to put on our (takas,” said Bailey. * * * The voyagers traveled at night while the snow was firmer and slept during the day. PLANT FLAG On July 18, Bailey and one friend planted a Swarthmore flag at the top of the southern summit, the mountain’s highest point. • In a three-day span two members of the expedition also climbed the north peak (19,479 feet) and Bailey re-climbed the south peak with another tripper. AT summit n.o-1™ By discardin« their spare Bailev niant« hie II Cha^es equipment and trail markers the men were able to bring Mt ,?’2K5?Wugh everything down the mountain Mt. McKinley in Alaska. on one of the gravel patches braiding the river. “We unpacked the Logan bread, a high-caloric concentrate I’d baked at school but it was so hard that we had to cut it with an ice pick,” he said. ★ ★ * “We finally foiind sticks and used it as a baseball.” HIGHEST CAMP During the next lfcmile stretch the men pushed up the Muldrow glacier, around a high ice fall, and up the Harper glacier to the 18,000-foot level where they made their highest camp. They carried 800 pounds of equipment in three relays: going a few miles, dropping the load, and returning for more. Reaching the Muldrow glacier, the climbers roped themselves together and began using snowshoes. State Tourist Unit Appoints GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) -Wesley B. Tebeau of, Muskegon has been appointed membership secretary of the West Michigan Tourist Association effective Sept. 1, it was announced by Robert Webster, the association president. Tebeau, 42, was a r tion executive at Muskegon until he resigned June 1 to run for the 9th Congressional District Republican nomination. State Sen. Guy Vander Jagt of Cadillac was the primary winner. ★ ★ * 5 Tebeau also is serving hu Michigan Tourist Council, t< which he was appointed in 1963. Moore stepped onto a seemingly firm bank of snow which broke. He swung the length of his rope — 25 feet — into a huge crevasse. FINISHES ROLL “Instead of panicking he took out his camera. He refused, to start climbing back up until he’d finished the roll,” Bailey said smiling. When sunny, the climbers often wore T-shirts. in one trip. * ★ ★ “It took us one hour to do scend roughly the same terrain we spent one day going up,” he noted- DIFFERENT ROUTE “We took a different route since the ice fall and the melting glacier had destroyed parts of our original path.” Why does Bailey climb mountains? “Because I prefer their natural beauty and calmness to the crowded billboard cluttered cities,” he said. ★ * ★ - ■“Imagine walking on the mountainside, seeing your shadow turned a deep turquoise by the red sun skittering along the i mountain peaks in the horizon, Bailey described. On the 40th day, however, the men left the mountain, Bailey only $350 poorer for the summer, already dreaming of those unexplored mountain regions in South America. There are more than 73,000 taxicqbs registered in the United States alone. TEETHING PAIN Millions ot mothers roly On laky ORA JEL liquid. Pot oa—pain's tons. HncommonM by many Mdiitriciins. tssy to uso. Stints ihn'rmocist^for v - ' W MBY (nUtENTs ) Xj~J ora-ifil’Vg/ CUNNINGHAM’S DRUG STORES HOME CARE EQUIPMENT BED RENTAL • HOSPITAL BEDS, COMMODES • ALL TYPES OF WHEEL CHAIRS • CANES, CRUTCHES, PORTO LIFTS • BED BOARDS, TRACTION UNITS AREA WIDE FREE • WALKERS. BATHROOM AIDS DEUVERY Dial 334-2529 AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SERVICE 1066 W. Huron / Area Man Scales Highest U S. Peak | IS YOUR | INSURANCE COST TOO HIGH? CROSSING CREVASSES — Chuck Bailey, crevasse on the long trek up Mt. McKinley. 5275 Adams, Bloomfield Township, secures a Bailey and his companions scaled North rope for his partner climbing across a America’s highest peak this summer. B- f Report Withheld Piggins Probe Is Over DETROIT (AP) — After issuing 71 indictments and four petitions for removal of public officials, Judge Edward S. Pig-gins has ended his one-mpn, grand jury probe into alleged aime in Wayne County. A report of his investigation will be withheld, Piggins said, until Wayne County circuit: Judges decide who wUl succeed him on a new grand jury scheduled to begin Sept. 1. Piggins, who closed out his 12-month probe Saturday night, is being considered to head the new grand jury. Some circuit judges have questioned legality of Piggins serving again. RESPECTED MEMBER” But Executive Circuit Judge Thomas J. Murphy said Sunday that “Judge Piggins has done very well. He’s a respected member of the court and he’s the conscience of the community’’ During his probe, Piggins held 2,000 interviews with 958 wit- The jury originally was Called to investigate reports of traffic fixing in the county sheriffs office. Piggins enlarged the probe to include allegations of gambling and bribing of a police officer in Detroit. ★ * ★ Action is pending on most of tiie indictments, although some persons were cleared of perjury charges for lack of evidence. Worry of FALSETEETH Slipping or Irritating? 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YOUR HOME 10,000 12,000 13,500 1S.QOO 20,000 YOURBARAOE 1.BM i m 1,509 —Twr YOUR CONTENTS 4,000 4,800 5.400 0.000 ~M*“ OFF PREMISE CONTENT* COVERAGE 1*000 1,000 1,000 MOO 1,000 ADDITIONAL LIYINMWEN8IS 2,000 2,400 2.100 3,000 MOO FAMILY LIABILITY 50.000 jam... 50,000 50,000 50,000 MEDICAL EXPENSE 1,000 1,000 . 1,000 1,000 MOO PROPERty damXg!"- 250 . 250 250 250 BT ANNUAL PREMIUM 85.00 STJM 11,00 4M0 41.00 \ "SIMILAR SAVINGS F •terrenes agi—.... --- ■ESidHWeRsRWreewtimpise CALL . . .------------------------ THJT FONTI&CPRBSSy MONDAY, AUGUST 29, ltM Negro GIs in Viet Nam Display Pride in Effort (EDITOR’S NOTE - This is the third in a four-part series.) By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban League 1 What sort of Negro GI is the Viet Nam military conflict spawning? What are this GI’s aims? Hi sag hopes? His ara-P bitions? Hi si skills? Does he| know why he’s in Viet Nam? These were some of the| questions which c h u r nedl through my I ____________ mind as I rode YOUNG the planes, the highways and the back - alleys criss-crossing Viet Nam villages and towns in search of Negro military personnel with whom I could talk. I was looking for Negro GIs with whom I could shake hands and let them know that we back home had them on our minds, are deeply interested in ttem and want to know what’s happening to them. With warm smiles, pride in showing us what they’re doing, and with pleasant surprise to see a Negro leader from the states in their midst, they played all the charm which only one genuine friend can show another. Once they got the feeling that we were not representing the government, but a private organization, the welcome mat was out. CONVERSATIONS There were dozens and dozens of conversations with individual Negro GIs in all branches of the services, up in the hills, in planes, at airports, in their ing compounds, at their duty stations and in the hospitals. Fairly typical of a wide selection of these men is one whom I shall never forget—M. Sgt. Frederick Robinson, 36, of Memphis, Tenn. Sgt. Robinson heads an outfit of the famed, precise and effective Special Forces — The Green Berets. Tough, brilliant, knowledgeable M. Sgt. Robinson makes one want to stand up and shout “hooray for ouc side!” He made no bones about telling us, as his white Southern commanding officer stood by silently and beamed on him with pride, that, “We don’t keep a man who’s prejudiced in the Green Berets. We’re a close-knit fighting team and we don’t for any nonsense! When every other member of the team’s life is dependent upon the other, we can’t afford that type of person. We get rid of Wm quickly.” LATER BRIEFING At a later briefing session in his headquarters, at an undisclosed forward fighting location near the Cambodian border, Sgt. Robinson proceeded to un-a TV-weatherman’s-type map of confusion of lines and curves and numbers into a meaningful dialogue, which fairly took one’s breath away. M. Sgt. Robinson, a 17-year veteran of military service, was on Ws second tour of duty in Viet Nam. He completed Wgh school before he joined the Army. He took additional courses after joining the services. As a member of the Green Berets , he, of course, also had to qualify as a paratrooper and go through this most rigorous, highly-specialized training possible for a member of the military. ★ ★ ★ It is men such as he who are most firm when they ray that after the service they have given to their country, they will expect no less than equal treatment when they return to their homeland and to civilian life. He is soon to do just that, and also to marry and to settle down-ASSUREDNESS I’ll take care of myself when I get back home,” he says with assuredness. “There’s no reason why the Negro can’t have what everyone else has in the United States," he declared, “if he’ qualified.” And tWs man, like the others with whom I talked, has a world of experience and disciplined training wWch can be a boon for this nation in business, in industry, in. any .area of endeavor he chooses. If he gets the opportunity. DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS’ TODAY, MONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY AT 9 P.M. Savings are booming during our introductory opening. We cordially invite you to visit our new store. 4-Pc. BEDROOM OPEN 2-Pc. Modern Living Room THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST S9, 196H, Problems Created for Child When Grades Are Skipped By LESLIE J. NASON Skipping a grade sometimes solves a problem for a nMM_ but, unfortunately, often produces new ones. Jade, while, not a real troublemaker was a nuisance all through the! third and fourth grades. He completed hisj work and re ceived ‘‘A’ grades, but be DR. NASON had enough spare time to doodle and fiddle and distract the other pupils. With Us parents' consent, the teacher and principal promoted Jack directly into the fth grade where Jack still doodles and fiddles. However, Jack is not now producing nt fiio level of which he was A conference with Jack made him aware of the need for a change in his behavior. A good boy, he was willing to cooperate. After the conference, he set out to consciously pay more attention in the classroom. Once he realized that it required better concentration and an added effort on his part to meet the challenge of grade work without the benefit of the fifth grade background, he was ready to start working on the solution of his problem. When pupils are allowed to skip a grade, as in Jack's case, teachers and parents most be careful to help them recognize die new challenge and guide them in their ef- forts to succeed in the new situation. Several students who have come to me for help during high school and ‘college years had difficulties stemming from the skipping of grades ' They were able to succeed in the advanced grades because of their superior intelligence, but they were handicapped due to skipping the drills in fundamentals that would have been required in the omitted grade. Sometimes it was fractions in arithmetic; sometimes proper introduction to cursive writing; and sometimes, although less often, it was a reading problem. Sometimes the problems are not academic. Jaw wps allowed to skip the second grade, since the work in the second grade had proved so easy for her that she spent most of her time listening to third grade classes. (She was in a split-level room.) By the end of the year she had practically mastered the third grade wale. Jane was a quiet student and had been no problem to her teacher or classmates in the second grade. She continued making high grades in all of her homework and on tests in the fourth grade. UNHAPPY However, Jane was unhappy in the fourth grade. She was no longer grouped with her friends and, seemingly, made little progress in making new ones. Her scholastic problem was solved through (he doable promotion, but a social one Jane’s problem of, adjusting > a new-group, many of whom were older mid larger than she, was one in which she needed help. A casual program, in which lie was encouraged to make one friend at a time, helped her to solve her new problem. For Rest of Life Avoid Strain After Aortic Graft By Science Service CHICAGO — Strenuous physical activities should be avoided for the rest of a patient’s life If he has had a graft replacement for hn abdominal aortic aneurysm, a Chicago physician advises in file questions and answers section of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Normal activities can be re- sumed if the postoperative course is uneventful, however. Dr. Hass an Najafi of Chicago was specifically answering a question about taking the so-called Air Force exercises, which he does not consider ‘normal,’' although the initial stages of these exercises should not be hazardous after the patient has a six-month convalescent period. FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES PRICED TO GO! FRIGIDAIRE automatic oven-just set and go! Cook-Master starts and stops the oven, cooks for you while you're away. Holiday-size oven gives you room even for a big turkey or whole family oven meals. Big, full-width pots-and-pans storage drawer. 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An the cavemen to the astronauts . . . now told 16,aii In 16 magnificent vetumes every family will wont to own! 1500 illmtratioas, drawing., magi - ■ ■ - ■ , IN FULL COLOR. START YOUR | COMPLETE SET TODAY 1 WITH VOLUME 1 ONLY 49* U mmmt: __£■ fit, v •'Y1 l i&tt§23 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQJTDAY. AUGUST 20rlft8d TO LINDSAY WITH LOVE-New York’s Mayor John Lindsay gets more than his share of affection yesterday as he attends a children’s block party in the Wililamsburg sec- AP Wlnphoto tion of Brooklyn. Lois Hernandez, 6, (upper right) and Annie Simon, 3, both plant kisses on the smiling mayor while Cheryl Hawkins, 4, appears unmoved by it all. Russians End Silence Soviet Spaceship Orbits Moon MOSCOW (AP) - After a silence of 36 hours, the Soviet government announced today that its unmanned spaceship Luna 11 had successfully gone into orbit around the moon. Luna 11 was launched last Wednesday and reached the vicinity of the moon Saturday night. Then it went silent, ousing speculation that it had overshot or crashed into the moon. But Britain’s Jodrell Bank Radio Observatory reported Sunday night that new signals had been picked up. Sir Bernard Lovell, director of the British space tracking station, said Luna 11 undoubtedly was in orbit around the moon. NO EXPLANATION There was no explanation for the Russians’ delay in claiming success for the second Soviet spaceship to orbit the earth’s lunar satellite. „ ★ ★ ★ The only previous Soviet announcement about Luna 11, made when it was launched, said the spaceship would orbit the moon and study near lunar space. Luna ll’s mission is believed to be to take pictures of possible sites for landing of a manned space vehicle on the moon. Black Is White at Zoo NEW DELHI, India (AP) -"The New Delhi zoo can prove that black is white. The zoo has acquired an albino black buck. Lunar Orbiter Tries to Focus on Surveyor 1 HAMPTON, Va. (AP) - Lunar Orbiter closed out the picture- taking phase of its moon-circling mission early today with its toughest assignment of all — trying to photograph Surveyor. 1. ★ ★ ★ On orders from the earth transmitted Sunday, two pictures were to be snapped at 1 a.m. and 4:50 a.m. today of the area where Surveyor 1 made its soft landing on the lunar surface early in July. ★ ★ ★ From today through Sept. 15, the flying photo laboratory will transmit the pictures it has taken back to earth. First Federal of Oakland Reserves tke-Right to Terminate This Accidental Life Insurance atAnyTimt OPEN YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT at First FederalS firings of Oakland and Receive, at No Additional Cost, ACCIDENTAL LIFE INSURANCE PROTECTION UP TO $10,000.00. In addition to this special protection, you receive our current rate of AVa% compounded and paid quarterly; which gives you an annual yield of 4.318, which is the Highest return paid on regular insured passbook savings in Oakland County. 761 W. 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Save $30..................$139 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY. THURSDAYS FRIDAY 'TIL 9 DECORATOR SERVICES • CONVENIENT CRfeDIT THE PONTIAC PRESS, MbNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 C-l —Rookie Darrell Brandon hurling 4 2-3 innings and newcomer Joe Foy driving in the go-ahead run as Boston stopped league-leading Baltimore 3-2. LOSING LEAP—Everything went wrong on this leap for Chuck Stearns of Bellflower, Calif., during the Men’pt Jumping of the Annual National Water Ski Championships at Miami, Fla., yesterday. Stearns lost his balance and a ski while trying a somersault, —Rookie Tommy Agee ,, singling home the winning run with one out in the 15th inning to hand Chicago a 4-3 triumph over Minnesota. OTHER GAMES In the other games, the White Sox swept the Twins, winning the nightcap 74 in 11 innings, Washington shaded Cleveland Chavarria led off the s 1 x t h ining with a double — the first DOUBLE WINNER—Bill Tipton of Pontiac .won die high and low hurdle events Saturday in the Jaycee National Track and Field Championships in Denver. The Pontiac Central state prep champion was clocked in a record tying 13.8 for die highs and 19.2 for the lows. Pontiac Central Ace Takes National Titles NEW YORK (AP) - Yankee fans, used to heroes but with few to cheer last year or this season, could have a new one in their midst—Steve Whitaker. It’s a little early to pass judgment, but Whitaker is showing the stuff of which baseball heroes are made. Since being called up by New York from Toledo, be has caught the fancy of the fans, is hitting, and is hitting dramati-ally. Hh latest dramatics came Sunday, when he hit a grand slam home run—his third homer in the last three games—as the Yankees pounded Detroit completing a sweep of the game series. “If I’m hitting, I hit body,” said the young er who belted his grand slam off southpaw Mickey Lolich. I’m not hitting, I don’t hit any-e.” “He has faster wrists than Roger Maris,” said Manager Ralph Houk. He swings like Maris which is perfect for the right field stands in Yankee Stadium. “As long as we’re convinced he’s not going to hurt himself by Special to The Press DENVER - Slender Bill Tip-ton of Pontiac emerged as one of the surprises of the National Junior Chamber of Commerce Track and Field Meet here Saturday. Tipton, one of the smaller hurdlers on hand, outran his opposition and grabbed two gold medals and a share of a record. Starting his senior year at Pontiac Centhal High School next week, Tipton took the 128-yard highs in a record- Blue Coat Title Won on 19th Kerivan-Chisholm Duo OLCC Winner* Allen Kerivan and his guest from Detroit Golf Club Tom Chisholm are wearing blue today after winning the annual Blue Coat Invitational Golf tournament at Orchard Lake Country Club Saturday. Kerivan and Chisholm scored a 1-up victory on the 19th over Carl Roth of OLCC and partner Ralph Ellstrom of Dearborn CC. ______*____★------A Roth and Ellstrom reached the finals by defeating defending champs Pete Green and John Collinson, 4 and 3. In their semifinal match Kerivan and Chisholm were easy winners over Steve Stubbs and Bin Albright, M. The champs were 99-under-par hr tte day whan the final* match ended on the 14(h hole. When Kerivan knocked in a 15-foot birdie on the, 19th, the match ended, but it was a later rally which forced the match *%ite ovmtime. ★ ★ ★ Theyfed la* wtikai* to play, and Roth and EUstrom took three of the final six holes to send it into overtime. FIRST FLIGHT (Sand Finals) c#fl M«» » Ralph ElWrom, M, I CrS& i Jem common. * i j * Caravan X Tom Chrlsholm daf. S Stubbs R Bill Mbrjyhl. Mi 4. Caravan X Chrisholm daf. Rath a atront, 1 flight (F Inala) Riley Bird a Andy Clement def. Gene Keeffe a Welt Reid. III. 5 a 4. THIRD FLIOHT George Squibb a Bill Show def. R o-RWhr a > John Adamson a Charles McIntyre idef. R. C. Leland-Floyed Bent If" *' FIFTH FLIOHT equaling :13.8 and came back to capture the 189-yard lows with a : 19.2 around a half turn. The double victory by Tipton enabled Michigan’s athletes to finish with 57 points, second to California (71) in the team division. Detroit speedster Charles Robinson took second in the 100-yard dash with a 9.7 clocking third in the 220-yarder at 21.6. SETS RECORD Robinson chased James Green of Eminence, Ky., who won the 100 in 9.7 and die 220 in 21.2, tying the record in the first event and establishing a new mark in the second. ★ ★ ★ Another Detroiter, Marion Pittman, wound up second in the 880-yard run with a time of 1:55.4. John Lilly of California won the event in record time of 1:53.2. Mike Lantry of Oxford High School tossed the shot pat 57 feet, 714 inches to place sixth in that event, and Ron Shortt of Farmington finished seventh in the pole vault. Other Michigan athletes placing in the meet were Mike Murdock of Detroit, fifth in the yard dash; Lavern Miller of Flint, third in the broad jump; and Delbert Littlejohn of Jack-son, third in the high jump. Win Drag Titles Two Pontiac drivers collected world championships in drag racing yesterday at Detroit Dragway. Jerry Stock took the crown In file Double A Compact division and Robert Decker took the title in the Formula Five H-Gbnipact class. Veteran Coach Is Sidelined DETROIT (AP) - Mike Haddad, veteran of 22 football seasons as head coach of Detroit Pershing High, will not be at the helm of the Doughboys this fall.] Haddad, hospitalized last June ' with a heart ailment, now is recuperating at home. But doctors have told him it may be months before he can return to his coaching duties. fighting himself, I think, we’ve got a good hitter on our bands.” “My problem in the minors was that I would fight myself,” said Whitaker. “If I had a couple of bad days; I would get all nervous and tensed up. I’m a streaky guy. I’ve gotten over this problem, though. I don’t let a bad day bother me.” In seven games with the Yankees, he is batting .391 on nine hits in 23 at-bats, with two doubles, a triple three homers and seven runs batted in. All of his extra base hits and RBI came in file Detroit series during which he hit .583. ★ ★ ★ Whitaker unloaded his grand lam into Ok right field bleachers in the fifth inning, making the score 94 and giving a comfortable cushion to another promising rookie, southpaw pitcher Fritz Peterson. Peterson allowed only . five hits, one of them Norm Cash’s homer in the eighth, in notching his ninth complete game, most of any Yankee pitcher, bringing his record to 104. ★ ★ ★ Joe Pepitone belted his 30th homer for the Yanks’ with a man on in the third. The Tigers take on their No. 1 rivals tonight—the Baltimore Orioles at Baltimore. Detroit will send Denny McLain (15-11) to the mound against the leagueleading Orioles. Local Entries Suffer Losses in Tourney Pontiac’s hopes for a state Hass A or B softball championship ended Saturday as both Spencer Floor Covering and Town and Country Lounge were ousted from the Port Huron re-gionals. City champion Spencer’s made its post-season Class A tournament debut and lost twice. Flint’s Top Hat Tavern nipped the local nine, 2-1, in the afternoon gamev Host Port Huron Emery Lanes eliminated Spencer that nig^it with a 24 win as Russ Sink scattered six hits, two of them by Jerry Wedge. Floyd Hicks was the loser. ______ In Class B, Town and Country — a Friday night winner — went down twice Saturday. Hamm’s Beer of Flint defeated the loungemen, 5-2, then Burk Bombers of Port Huron ousted them, 104, on 4 four-hitter by George Collins. Former Spencer’s pitcher hitter Sunday as Top Hat took the "A” trophy, 64, over Port Huron. The Burk Bombers dumped Flint twice Sunday, 104 and 6-3, to take the “B” laurels. WIN BLUE COATS—A1 Kerivan (right) and his partner from Detroit Golf Club Tom Chisholm won file Blue Coat Invitational golf tournament at Orchard Lake Saturday by ' defeating Call Roth of OLCC and Ralph Ellstrom of Dearborn, 1-yp mi the 19th hole. Kerivan is an OLOC membe|. Straight Win '64 Champ Robertson Two Strokes Behind With 139 Total Paul Bada has taken a firm grip on file city golf championship. , The 34-year-old Bada put together rounds of 66-71 for a one-under-par 137 over the weekend to take the City Medal Play title for the second year in a row and the fifth time in 13 years. Two strokes back of Bada were champion Dick Robertson and Avery Burton. Robertson posted a 68-71—139. Burton fired a 7049 for his 139 and Robertson won the runner-up trophy *in a playoff by gaining pars on the first two holes while Burton took a par and a bogey. * * * da, who won the title for the first time in 1954, held a one-stroke lead after his 66 on Saturday. A shot back was former state amateur champion Lloyd Syron. Bada’s other victories came in 1957 and 1961. FINDS TROUBLE Syron ran into trouble yesterday, carding a 75 for a 39-hole total of 142, while Bada turned in a steady two-over 71 over the par-69, 5,689-yard course. * * ★ Harold Daniels, George Hammett and Glenn Vallance shared fourth place with 141s. NOT ENOUGH LEG ROOM-Catcher John Romano (5) of the Chicago White Sox successfully blocks Minnesota’s sliding Cesar Tovar off the plate as he tries to score during the fifth inning of Sunday’s double-header opener in the Windy City. Tovar went from first to second on a throwing error, Ahead of Schedule AF Wlraphtto then tried to score when Romano’s throw sailed into center field where Tommy Agee retrieved it in time to prevent the run. Umpire John Rice and the Twins’ Tony Oliva (6) watch the play. AL Rookies Flex Muscles By United Press International American League rookies are doing today what was expected of them tomorrow. Although the “stars of tomorrow” are taught patience along with refined baseball techniques, the AL’s current crop of outstanding freshmen couldn’t wait to exhibit their tolents. a ★ ★ In four of the six games Sunday, first-year men contributed greatly to their club’s victory, with: —Rookie New York outfielder uAyesiauo grand slam *“““ C,”-J.......In rijUl' home run providing freshman southpaw Fritz Peterson an 8-1 five-hit decision over Detroit. —Rookie Ozzie Chavarria’s sas ‘City rally that gave first-year righthander Jim Nash Ms ninth victory, 2-1, over hit allowed by California started Fred Newman. Phil Roof sent Chavarria home with the first run of the game and eventually scored the second run of the stanza on Larry Stahl’s single. Nash, who began his big league career with seven straight victories, limited the Angels to six hits in raising his slate to 9-1 for the ninth-place A’s. Brandon left the game with two out and two on in the ninth inning) Reliever John Wyatt retired Brooks Robinson on a pop-up to preserve Brandon’s fifth triumphlnKdecfelOns. The Orioles held a 2-1 advantage before Tony Conigliaro’s single scored Jose Tartabull in the fifth and Foy’s safety tallied George Smith in the seventh for Boston. s i * .. ■ A,..* .. With two out in the 15th inning Crown Ski King MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Paul Merrill of Winter Haven, Fla., beat world’s champion Jimmy Jackson of Cypress Gardens, Fla., on form Sunday to win the men’s jumping event and overall crown at the National Water Ski Tournament. pitcher Pete Cimino (1-5) walked Wayne Causey and Smokey Burgess and Agee followed with his game-winning single. The Twins went ahead 3-1 in the 11th but Chicago tied the Miss Haynie Toledo Titlist score with another two-out rally. Joel Horlen 8-12 held the Twins hitless for 3 2-3 innings to record the victory. In the nightcap, Jerry Adair’s lead-off homer — in the 11th inning — Ms fourth of the season — provided Chicago with the twinbill sweep. Tony Oliva slammed a three-run homer for Minnesota and Harmon KiUebrew, who connected in the first game, hit a two-run blast. ladies tour. jgrtSftrMP* Mickey Wright *2,270 Kathy Whitworth 11.725 Shlrloy Englehorn 11,625 Mery Mills 01.240 Ruth Jeuen 01,100 Gloria Armstrong $1,000 Judy Kimball $050 72-71-70-212 70- 72-71—213 69-75-72—216 71- 74-72—217 74- 71-72-217 72- 73-73—216 74.71-74-210 72- 75-73—220 75- 73-73—221 73- 73 45 221 75-74-7F-233 74- 70-71 — CUftard Ann Cread S9J 74-77-73 X won playoff) ia ametebr TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -Sandra Haynie won a three hole playoff with Gloria Ehret yesterday to capture the 626.MQ wtt„ __mil TT,ll„„li Glass City Golf Classic on the J*"® Wtt®T . W1™6 J01®9*5 Jim King’s single with two out in the last of the ninth scored from second to give the Senators their fifth straight triumph and a sweep of the three-game series with Cleveland. Kirkland walked with one out, went to second on Bob Saverin’t infield, hit ami.came home on King’s bouncer to center. Dick lHamtr beamed for the Indians. Eastern Michigan Runner Captures Distance Race Tony Mifsud of Eastern Michigan set two records en route to victory Saturday in the senior U S. Track and Field Federation six-mile race at Oakland UniKKoftr. ★ • ★ * « Mifsud wound up with a record time of 34.1, and his four-mile time of 22.20 cracked a record set moments earlier by Chip Gorman of Birmingham Seaholm, who led the junior runners in the event. palling Mifsud were John Wisner of Kalamazoo College, Louis Putnam of Oakland U., Eric Center of Michigan State and Ed Kozloff of Wayne State. •• Gorman won the four-mile juniors’ race in 23.18.5, followed by Gary Towers of Detroit St Anthony, Mike Koerner of Cran-brook, Ken Howse of Detroit Finney and Larry Hurst of Pontiac Central. Joy Fair Sweeps ,3 Weekend Races It was another big racing Weekend for Pontiac driver Joy Fair. Fair woo the dash and feature at Lansing Friday night, won the 50-lap feature at Flat Rock Saturday and posted the fast time of 14.1. Sunday, he climaxed the weekend by winning the $1,000 Dixie Speedway purse near Flint and twice broke the track ran* cord of 16.15. We went 16.19 and 15.94 in succession, talking both halves of the 266-lip feature. Fifth City Golf Crown Won by Paul Bada N.Y. Routs Tigers, 8-1 Yankee Fans Find a Hero Pontiac Medal Crown Second 'i '» i % THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ AUGUST 29, 19M LION PROWLS—Tom Nowatzke (35) of the Detroit Lions heads into the line for a short gain against the Dallas Cowboys during first quarter action of an exhibition game Satur- Atlanta Posts First Triumph day night in Tulsa, Okla. Cowboys in the picture are Willie Townes (71) and Chuck Howley (54). Cowboys posted a 20-10 victory before 31,000 fans. State Tourney Next for Pontiac 9 Dodger Outfielder Finally Connecting as He Planned Plum 'Off Hook' Lions Loss Prom Our News Wires (passes for 244 yards and one; Johnson, getting his first long Detroit Lions quarterback Milt touchdown. Plum “got off the hook” Satur- ★ day night. “This was Plum’s finest Coach Harry Gilmer had as-jgame,” Gilmer added, saying: ■kg* 1call oyeri..He ^ ^ ball,exceptionally « ttard of the ptays from the|wd, ^ My we don>t press box. But it didn t help the g0 for ^ deep anymore. U°ns.;u^5 “^r^.^ Well, we triedTWe just up with the big play and lost to haven.t puUed it M yet; Dallas, 20-10. , , ’ Atlanta, a cast of hand-me-, iLsidowns and rookies, posted vic-many exhibition games for the tory No x in the National Foot. ‘" ball League by upending San It was the third loss in j Lions who will end look at quarterback, completed 13 of 21 passes for .285 ydrds, engineered scoring drives of 77, 87 and 79 yards and clinched the victory over the 49ers with a 35-yard scoring strike to Alex Hawkins. While the Falcons broke their winless streak, Green Bay throttled Pittsburgh 17-8, Los Angeles walloped St. Louis 32-14 and Philadelphia edged New York 24-23. In American League action, play Thursday at Tiger Stadium Francisco 24-17 in an exhibitionpreparatory to Friday’s regular against tbe Baltimore Colts. ★ ★ ★ “We got Into the game the plays we thought would work,” said Gilmer Sunday. “But our problem is that we are simply not coming up with the big play that changes the game.” Several times in the loss to Dallas at Tulsa, Okla., the lions moved deep into Cowboy territory only to lose momentum close to paydirt. Despite the score, the game was Plum’s best of the exhibition season. Plum connected on 25 of game. Coach Norb Hecker singled out two rookies for particular praise. —■ quarterback Randy Johnson of Texas A&I and line- season opener between the Dolphins and Oakland at Miami, Kansas City finished unbeaten after a 31-20 victory over Houston, the New York Jets upended Buffalo 34-17, Oakland tumbled Denver 52-21 and San Diego Chandler wrapped up the scoring with a 17-yard field goal. ★ ★ ★ Hie Rams rode Roman Gabriel’s passing to their victory over the Cardinals. Gabriel completed 20 of 31 passes for 191 yards and two touchdowns, a 16-yard strike to Jack Snow and a 15-yard pass to Tommy McDonald. Dick Bass scored the other touchdown on a 12-yard run and Bruce Gossett kicked three field goals. The Eagles scored twice with-11 in 25 seconds as time was running out in edging the Giants. By the Associated Press Willie Davis’ current hitting splurge may not win the National League batting crown for him, but it could help win tbe National League pennant for tbe Los Angeles Dodgers. Davis, who had spring thoughts of winning the batting title, lashed four hits for the second consecutive day as the Dodgers defeated San1'Francisco 5-2 Sunday and moved to within one game of the league lead. The loss dropped the Giants into a tie for first with the Pittsburgh Pirates, who defeated St. Louis 5-1 after losing the opener o~f the doubleheader 3-2. Davis’ homer and three singles extended his streak to eight straight hits before he grounded out in the ninth inning. Since Aug. 6, when he was hitting .268, the 26-year-old lefty has collected 36 hits in 96 at-bats for a lust-ly .375 mark. Over-all he’s now hitting .1 which still isn’t high enough to put him in contention for the title he thought he might be able to win. Davis was determined to reverse the performance that brought him a poor .238 average last season when the Dodgers won the pennant. “ITiis is going to be my year,” the rangy center fielder said. “I know why I’ve been having off and on years, and I know what to do about it now. It’s not a make or break year for me — I’m still young — but I want to prove something to myself.” MUCH ADVICE What Davis. was doing, he said, was taking too much advice from too many people. The only advice the Dodgers have for him is to keep hitting. Elsewhere in the National backer Tommy Nobis of Texas. crushed Boston 31-13. Ferndale Driver Wins Mike Buckel of Ferndale, driving a Ramcharger Dart, won seven of nine races and was crowned champion of the three-day world championships at the Detroit Dragway yesterday. Jim Taylor did most of the work for the Packers, scoring their first touchdown on an 11-yard pass from Bart Starr, then setting up another with a 41-yard gallop through the Steeler defense. That was scored by running mate Paul Hornung on one-yard smash before Don All Stars List Double-Header The Waterford Church Soft-ball League All Stars will be host to the Pontiac Church League All Stars for a double-header at the Drayton Plains diamond Tuesday. Hie first game will begin at 6:30 p.m. followed by an 8:T p.m. contest. Henry Knight will direct the Waterford squad and Bob King will coach the Pontiac men. LAST 3 DAYS pick out any coat from our entire stock and pay 20% less than the regular price during our QQfl jg* U. S. Swimmer Equals Record at Vancouver VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) ~ No matter where the meet is held, if Dm Schollander is in it, he’s usually very much in the swim of things. Schollander, who was outstanding in the recent U.S. National AAU Outdoor Swimming and Diving Championships, equaled the world record for the 110-yard freestyle Sunday at the closing of the British Columbia centennial meet. He won the event in 53.6 seconds, tying the mark set in the meet Thursday by Zac Zorn of Angeles. Schollander’ clocking came in a special time trial. Earlier in the meet, Schollander, the 1964 U.S. Olympic star who is swimming for the Santa Clara, Calif., Swim Club, set a world record of 1:57 in the yard freestyle. The old mark of | 57.3 was held by Australian Michael Wendon. Publinx Play Adds Winner Blue Division Crown Won by San Marino Two divisions of the Michigan Publinx Golf Association have been decided but two others in the weekly publinx play still are looking for a champion. San Marino, in its first year in the Publinx event, won the Blue Division yesterday by defeating Highland, 21-1.. Bald Montain steeled its White Division last week. Bob Armstrong fired a four under par 68 on his home course while Wally Nordess shot an eagle-two on the first hole to help with a 71. Rochester No. 1 team defeated North Brook, 18’A to 3% to clinch at least a tie in the Red Division, and the Gold Division remained a question as Braeburn and Idyl Wyld scored wins. Braeburn is the present lead-*r, but Idyl Wyld still has a match to play. Rochester No. 12 defeated Clarkston 17Vfe to 4V4, Sylvan Glen won over Hickory Hollow No. 1 team, 18V4 to 314 and Morey’s No. 1 was a loser to Hickory Hollow No. 2 team, 13 to 8*4. League Cincinnati stopped Philadelphia 5-2, Atlanta defeated New York $-4 and Houston edged Chicago 4-3. Davis' first-inning homer started 20-game winner Gaylord Perry on the way to his fourth defeat. Jim ^efebvre’s fourth-inning homer broke, a 1-1 tie, and Davis singled in the seventh before Rem Fairly homered. Don Sutton allowed the Giants only five hits, none between the second and eighth innings. Roberto Clemente doubled home two runs and scored another on Donn Clendenon’s double as the Pirates erupted for four runs in the sixth inning of the nightcap. Bill Mazeroski added a homer in the ninth. The Cardinals jumped in front 1 the first inning of the first game as Ted Savage tripled in one Tun and scored another. Savage got the triple when center fielder Matty Alou misjudged his line drive. Jim Maloney and Qon Notte-bart combined for a five-hitter against Philadelphia. Cincinnati battered Larry Jackson for three runs in the first inning ami went on to .their fifth straight victory. Vada Pinson homered for the Reds in the third. Weary January Collects $21,000 In Golf Classic WHITEMARSH, Pa. (AP) — for 72 holes over a tight course EXAMPLE: THIS LUXURIOUS PURE CASHMERE TAILORED AND HAND-DETAILED BY ALPACUNA Unusually fine silken cashmere — Tailored by a maker famous for qua!- F ity tailoring. Choose from several models, all hand-detailed. Black, navy, gray, tan, and vicune shades. Actually, this coat is an unusually good value at its regular price, so this sale presents a splendid opportunity to add a luxurious coot to your wardrobe at mWhlessffM spend. REGULAR PRICE $135. 20% OFF IN AUGUST............$108 A small deposit holds your coat until October IS. and charge customers will not be billed until £ctober. *The 20% deduction applies to men's topcoats and overcoats only. . 1 1 ■ 7i, l Sir Our Birmingham Store Open Monday, Our Pontiac Mall Store Open Every ironing to 9 P.M. 309 N. Telegraph ltd., Pontiac Mall Don January persisted to the bitter end. Even with $21,000 his sweaty paw for winning the $110,000 Philadelphia Golf Classic all he could say was: “I’m tired, very tired." This was where everybody came in. ...--....#.r.-■*.- *—---------- From the minute he arrived At tbe Whitemarsh Valley Country Club last Wednesday, the somber Texan pleaded exhaustion. He didn’t know where he was going to find the strength to lift a club. . Well, he lifted enough of the right ones for a 69-69-69-71-278, ami a one-stroke victory over Jack Nicklaus, despite two al-^ most unbelievable eagles on the final round Sunday by the Masters ind British' Open champion. SWING BETTER Explaining how an exhausted goffer could shoot 16 under par that requires finesse, January replied: “I believe I swing better when I’m tired.’ The 36-year-old January, in his 11th year as a touring professional, collected his first winning check since the 1963 Tucson Open, And he did it the hard way. January was tied with Arnold PaYmer for the lead after 34 holes, each with ’207. Nicklaus was five strokes back as they teed off for the final 18. Mlnncwta 1, Chicago 0 Washington 3, Cleveland I Boston 3, Baltimore 2 New York 1i; Detroit 1 California 4, Kansas City 5, 11 In Chicago 4-7: Minnesota 34, 1st gama IS nnlngs. 2nd gama 11 Innings Boston 3, Baltimore 2 New York I. Detroit 1 Washington 3, Cleveland 2 Kansas City 2, California 1 Today's Games Boston (Santiago 13-11) at California Brunet 12-9), night New York (Talbot 10-10) at Kansas City (Kraussa 10-7). night Washington (Hannan 2-S) at Minnesota Perry 7-5), night Cleveland (Bell 13-0) at Chicago (John 2-3), night Detroit (McLain 15-11) at Baltimore (McNally 12-3) night Tuesday's Gamas Boston at California, night New York at Kansas City Washington at Minnesota San Francisco .. Pittsburgh ...... Philadelphia .... 13-10) at Ntw San ^Francisco *(GlSbon 34) at Phlladel-hia (Bunnlng 14-9), night Houatan...(Cuellar...9 4) at Pittsburgh (Veale 134). night St Louts (Jester 14) at Cincinnati (Nuxhall 54), night Chicago ^iRijberis 44) at Atlanta (Cion- Chuck Courtney, 34,130 ... Bill Martindele, $3450 ... Roberto Devlcenzo, $2,700 Bruce Crampton, $2,700 .. Billy Caspar, $2,150 . Tommy bSR', $2,150 Dsvs Marl, $2,150 Chi Chi Rodriquez, $1,150 Charles Coody,41450 .... Julius Boros, s1,450 ... Gay Browtr Jr., $1450 ... Jay Hebert, $1450 ... George Archer, $1,450 dteWoWdjii«|bJ <3-74-7240-284 7247-75-70—234 7240-70-73—234 72-7040-74—»5 AP Wirephote HAT’S OFF TO WINNER-4Xm January’s hat falls to the green after his putt on the 18th hide dropped in the cup Sunday to give him the $21,000 first prize money at the Phila-delphia Golf Classic in Whitemarsh, Pa. The victory was »-"n-7S7oI»2 Texan January’s first major win in three years! Hurling Helps Teamsters to Local Class A Team to Play Friday in Battle Creek By JEBE CRAIG Pitching superiority carried the Pontiac Teamsters 614 city men’s baseball champion to a Class A District conquest of Flint’s Bishop Construction Saturday and Sunday at Jaycee Park. The local diamond rulers took the deciding game of the best of three series, 3-1, last night to qualify for the state championship playoffs this weekend at Battle Creek. The Teamsters will tangle with the Kalamazoo-Muskegon district survivor S p.m. Friday in Bailey Stadium at Battle Creek. In the Jaycee Park district action Saturday, the unionmen tripped Flint, 6-3, in the afternoon but betrayed themselves in a 5-0 nighttime loss to Bishop. ★ ★ ★ The defeat saw their No. 1 pitcher Tom Walters victimized by shoddy defensive work on the Teamsters’ part, though Flint’s southpaw'Bill Hajec gave the stronger performance as both teams went with their top hurlers. Hajec struck out 15 and allowed only one hit from the third to the ninth innings. Delayed double steals of home led to two of the first three Flint runs off Walters who whiffed 10 in six innings. DEPENDABLES Pontiac’s two victories were achieved by manager Paul Parks’ long-time dependables Don Sackett and Don Picmann. Sackett, the veteran right-hand pitcher who won the city league’s most valuable player award two years ago, stymied ' in Sunday’s title tilt with one of his strongest mound efforts of a season that so far has ’seen him win eight times without a loss. The Flint nine scored first with an unearned run in the top of the initial inning (the only time in the three games that the visiting team led). But in the last of the second, Lee Millie of Bishop coasted under Mike Marcum’s high fly ball to right centerfield with two out, and dropped the ball for a two-run error. Sackett carefully protected the slim lead although the visitors put runners as far as second base in five of the first six innings. LEAD GROWS The lead grew to 3-1 in the last of the fifth as Bob Rabaja swiped home on. a delayed double steal after a walk, stolen base and Les Stone’s infield Single. Sackett then heid Bishop to only two base runners daring the final four frames—getting foe last flve hltters in order. In a game that saw numerous fine fielding plays in the outfield, the Teamsters’ pitcher made the game’s top defensive effort when he back-handed Randy Adams’ sharp liner and converted it into a double play ' | ‘ ~'is Coffip’q lepd-Qff in Uie eighth Inning. ★ ★ ★ Saturday afternoon, Picmann benefitted from two-run outbursts in the first and second innings, The 4-0 lead proved too much for Bishop to overcome, though Mike Burklow and Walters had to follow Picmann to the mound in the last two failings. FLINT BISHOP PONT. TEAMSTER! AB R M THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 0-41 ~ GARY PLAYER’S GOLF CLASS: Don't take a divot Doubles Championship Is Delayed by • Major League Boxes BOSTON BALTIMORE ab r I) bl ab r l Tar tabu II ct 3 2 10 Aparldo St 5 1 ■ Fay 3b 3 0 11 Snyder If 5 0 Ystrmskt If 3 0 1 1 FRobinsn rf 3 0 Conlglaro rf 4 0 2 0 BRoblntn 3b 5 0 Scoff lb 4 0 0 0 Blefary lb 3 0 Jones 2b 3 0 0 0 Roznvsky c 4 0 32 3 I 2 Total tiEK ! Mazroskl 2b 4 Brandon (W, 5-7) . Wyatt ........... Palmar ......... Fisher (L,3-5) .... WP—Brandon. 1:50- A—12,220. CLEVELAND Colavlto rf 2 0 0 0 Valentina cf 3 1 1 Salmon 1b 3 0 10 FHoward It 3 0 0 Gentile lb 10 10 Lock cf t Oil Alvls 3b 4 0 0 0 MeMulln 3b 4 0 1 LBrown ss 4 0 10 Harrelson lb 3 0 1 '«Azcue c 4 0 10 Casanova c 4 0 1 Siebert p 3 0 0 0 Rlchart P 2 0 0 Davalllk) ph 1 0 0 0 Kline p 0 0 0 Tlant p O'O 0 0 Kirkland ph 0 1 0 Total w|33 2 l[2,i| Total^ ^32 3 I Cleveland* .. "a 0 0 TO 1 ? 1 S - Washington .......0 1 t I a E—Howser. DP-Cleveland Cleveland 7, Washington Howser. HR—Howser . .. LOB-28—Wagner S—Richer! : 2 0 0 0 Maxvlll a DP—Pittsburgh 3, St.L . Ittsburgh 10, St.Louis 4. 3B—Savage. SB—M.Alou, I 0 Washbm p 10 0 2B—Gagl?ai rock (2). f RERBBSO PITTSBURGH 0 1 Francona ph 1 1 2 Plche p 1 1 Brock If l 1 Savage r Mots cf 4 Clemente rf 3 Clndenon lb 4 Mazroskl 2b 3 _______ Bailey If 2 0 0 0 Cepeda .. ... tt^c 32,°,000»rb 12 Pagan 3b 4 0 0 0 Maxvlll ss 4 00 ODell p 110 0 Corrales c 2 01 Mlkkelsn p 1 0 1 0 Shannon ph l 0 1 Buchek 2b 0 0 0 Splezlo ph 10 0 Carlton p 2 0 0 Rally Earns 32-7 Win for Arrows BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP)-, American Davis Cup aces Dennis Ralston and Clark Graebner and Australians Tony Roche and John Newcombe had unfinished business to settle today before the championship windup of the 86th U.S. National Doubles Tournament. A berth in the final round against defending champions Roy Emerson and Fred Stolle of Australia was at stake as the Ralston-Graebner and Roche-Newcombe teams were directed to resume their postponed semifinal at noon on Longwood’i center court. ^HBP-^V^SIeberf (Harrelton). Hebert (2). T-2:34. A- 1,063. Killebrew 3b 7 1 1‘1 Wilhelm p Mlneher lb 5 0 10 FRoblnin pi Battey e 2 0 10 Pizarro P,t Zlmrman a 4 0 10 Skowron 1b Clmlno p 1 0 0 0 McCraw lb Uhlaendr ef 7 0 2 OBwry rf Versalles M 2 1 0 0 Ward H Grant p 4 10 0 Wail 2b O'Dell (W, 5-4) Mikkelsen Carlton (L, 2-2) < MyPc 52310 55411: Chicago ....... 001 000 000 020 001- E—B.Howard, Romano, „ Bufoi Uhlaender. DP—Minnesota 1, Chicago LOB—Minnesota 13, Chicago 14. 3E Weis. HR—Killebrew <2»). SB—Agee, Buford, Causey. S-Grant, Grant ____________10 2-31 Worthington R ER BB SO SAN FRANCISCO MDanlel p 0 0 0 5 Total 33 2 5 1 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 0- ,1-5) .2 2-3 3 .. 5 2-3 S I 21-3 1 6 110 Causey 2b 5 2 2 0 Weis 2b 5 2 2 3 Buford 3b _ ________ LOB—Los Angeles 0, S Francisco 6. 2B—Roeeboro, Fuent HR—W.Davis (7), Lefebvre (22), Fai (»)* SB—Wills. S—Perry, Sutton. IP H R ER BB Sutton (W, 11-11) , » 5 2 2 1 Perry (L.20-4) .. .. ( 12 5 5 1 McDaniel ......... 1 0 0 0 0 HBP-By Perry (Sutton). T—2:27. i 2 Carroll p 0 Abernthy p 0 Nlekro p Pontiac’s Arrows spotted Flint 7-0 halftime lead and then came back in the second half with five-touchdown assault that produced a 32-7 triumph Saturday night over the Blue Dev-il$ before 1,600 fans at Dye field. larterback Gene Csapo put the 'Blue Devils out in front with a six-yard TD pitch to Emery Welsh, after setting it up with a 60-yard pass to,Ed Johnson. But in the second half, things went wrong for the Blue Devils and the Arrows took advantage to pull out the victory. Arrows’ quarterback Bill Harrington flipped a 39-yard scoring toss to Chuck Wiseman cutting the score to 7-6, and moments later, . defensive tackle Chico Johnson recovered a Flint fumble in the end zone for a six-pointer. ★ ★ * The other Arrow scores came on a three-yard plunge by Willie Jones, a one-yard sneak by Harrington and a one-yard smash by Dennis Allen. The victory was the third in row in the exhibition season for the Arrows, who’ll open defense of their Midwest Football League championship next Saturday night at Wisner Stadium against the visiting' Ypsilanti Vikings. Australian Allan Moffatiraces at Waterfbrd Hills Road erased his track record in driv- Course, ing his Lotus Cortina to victory! Moffat breezed around yesterday in the H-Production and sedan class and the small production and sedan feature Siebler p Pascual p Rollins ph 0 0 0 « 0 Romano e 1 0 Worthgtn p 0 0 Total ____ ■flMMHNfl " Tim' Chicago ...202 101 000 #1—7 E-Mlnehom Nixon. LOB-MInnwota f, Chicago 4. 2B—Romano, Mlneher , HI Pascual. 3B—Byford. HR—KWrtirew (ML Oliva (22), AdOlr (?' Rnfonl 121. 5-Lamabe (2), Ol Causey, Uhlaender. w, Kranepool, Boyer. DP— 2. Atlanta 2. LOB—New York 4. 2B—Geiger, Torre, F-Alou. 3B—Harrelson. HR—Mathews (10), Carty (11). S—Carroll. 91(22- SF—Ward H R ER BB SO 1-3 5 KANSAS CITYh CALIFORNIA^ ^ Donaldsn 2b 4 0 0 0 Cardanal ct 5 0 Ife 43 0#,#o°fta^>ji Charles 3b 4 0 10 Plarsall rf 0 0 Chayarlasa 3 1 1 0 Rodg^s c3 1 Kansas CRy U# = » CfDarios,' j^^ral^J Aussie Betters Record in Waterford Hills Race opponents in the late afternoon final. After completion of the men’s semifinal, Maria Bueno of Brazil and Nancy Richey of Farmers Branch, Tex., will meet Billie Jean Moffitt King of Long Beach, Calif., and Rosemary Casals of San Francisco for the women's championship. Miss Bueno, a two-time coowner of the title, and Miss Richey, winner with Carole Graebner last year, defeated British Wightman Cup stars Winnie Shaw and Virginia Wade 6-3, 6-2 Sunday. VETERANS NEW G.I. BOX m '"'CST * .' ELI C IRON ICS. Wl<* >-P - INSTITUTE or )>~<1 ) TECHNOLOGY ■ nr W0 2SW I NAME .:. } STREET . I PHONE ... * CITY BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Net Tifle Taken by Miss Fisher Emily Fisher, 14-year-old stu-r dent at Kingswood School, won ° the women’s singles tennis crown in the Detroit Open by defeating Christine Wallace, Mackenzie High School in the finals, 6-1,6-3. k k k The men’s crown also went to a teen-ager, Marie Conti, 17 of Austin High School of Detroit. County Nines Beaten in 'Cj D' Reg Oakland Coufity’s entries in die class C and D regional softball championships at Owosso failed to bring home title trophies over the weekend. Norton’s Bar of Holly lost the ‘D” finale, 19*7, to host Owosso Mitehell-Bentley Sunday after mum, ***** •» SO Huron, M, Saturday to few* 7.7 deadlock and went winning run with one out in the eighth. Norton’s reached the “D” finals when Mark Phalen walked with the bases loaded in the last of the seventh Saturday to break a 1-1 tie with Port Huron. Roger Voorheis tossed a four-hitter for the win. Owosso erupted for eight runs 1 lithe finals. Mathis Ready to Enter Ring in Motor City DETROIT (AP) — Buster Mathis, the giant Grand Rapids heavyweight, was scheduled tb.step on the scales today*and end speculation over how many pounds he weighs. Because Mathis has no problem at all in meeting the weight minimum for heavyweights, he doesn’t bother to weigh himself between fights. Mathis seeks his 13th professional ring victory tonight against Lloyd Washington of Buffalo, N. Y., in a six round match. ★ * ★ He weighed 360 pounds he started his boxing career five years ago. And the former sign painter weighed 305 when he was selected for the U. S. Olympic team two years ago. Pause Refreshes Little League’9' WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) B Baseball doesn’t have a halftime like football but the Houston, Tex., Little League manager made an hour-long rainstorm serve the same purpose. k k k Houston was trailing West New York, N.J., 2-0, in the Little League World Series championship game Saturday when the rains came in the third inning. k- k k ’ Houston Manager Ray Plumb Jr. took the opportunity to deliver a pep talk. “Everybody got fired up,” Steve Reeves, a Houston player said. Texas returned to the diamond, loaded the bases and Reeves swatted a single to score two runs, Houston went on to defeat the New Jersey team 8-2 and capture the 1966 championship. 1.6 (61 miles an hour), bettering his old record by .4 second. Dr. Paul Sonda of Detroit won the big production and modified feature race with his Corvette before 2,000 fans with Gary Van-Camp of Farmington second and Bill Clawson of Dearborn third. SATURDAY RESULTS .. PRODUCTION - Tom Vamor ROCHESTER: Roy Parson, Detroit) Bll DeBoer, Grosso EFG PRODUCTION Camp, Farmington) Bill Darkness forced officials to I . Dstpone completion of the match Sunday night with the second-seeded Americans and | tiie third-seeded Aussies all1 even at two games apiece in the fifth and deciding set. Graebner and Ralston, taking the court while Emerson and Stolle were moving to victory,) won the first set 6-3, but Roche and Newcombe fought back to win the next two 6-3, 8-6. Then, on the brink of elimination, the Americans fought back to capture the fourth set 15-13. Emerson and Stolle, top-seeded in defense of their U.S. crown, swept past fourth-ranked Arthur Ashe of Los Angeles and Marty Riessen of Evanston, 111., 68, 7-9, 6-4, 6-2 and figured to have a physical edge over their Petrw.^oview: PRODUCTION — Bill Clawson, Dearborn) .........._ yoi, Detroit. Hi FORMULA - Larry MRH^RIchard Moller, Mt. Frank Costey, Utica. GH PRODUCTION (Novice) — Chris Gahman, Royal Oak) Charles McHose, r'—-yni Don Capron, Lake Orton. PRODUCTION (Novice)—Mat Spltz-Ann Arbor) Scott Clawson. Dearborn) Larry Cllngman, Farming!- SUNDAY RESULTS DE PRODUCTION — Jim _____________ Royal Oak) Larry Cllngman, Farming-'-‘in Marchosky, Southfield. ™_ PRODUCTION - Paul Sonda, Detroit) Russ De|aiffe, Detroit; Scott Clawson, Dearborn. ALL FORMULA - Larry ,WJ )arren; Stu Carter, Allan Park) Gh"’PRODUCTION — Don Parrish, Birmingham,- John Kelley, Birmingham; 'hrls Gahman, Royal Oak. SEDANS — Al Moffett, Detroit; Juar.. ,j Henderson, Dearborn; Tom Phimlstar, BRING YOUR CAR TO GOODYEAR Rookie Bowler Captures Crown in Pro Tourney FORT SMITH, Ark. (AP) -John Petraglia, a 19-year-old southpaw from Brooklyn, N. Y., won his first tournament on the Professional Bowlers Association tour Sunday night, the $27,500 Fort Smith Open. Petraglia, who had a 300 game in Friday’s qualifying' play, had a 9,452 total for 40 games, including 500 bonus points for winning 10 of his 16 matches Sunday. He had finished no better than ninth place in 12 previous PBA tournaments this year. Barry Asher, a 19-year-old from Santa Anna, Calif., was second with 9,180. Man of the uarter Robert Hamm When a tnan does an out-standing job of helping people with something as important as dependable planning for the future security of their families. Life of Virginia believes he should be recognised. Here is a man whose thorough training, skill and experience in planning have made him his - agency’s leading representative in the past *3 months. Shouldn't your plans for your family’s security be reviewed? Life of Virginia believes that this man is equipped to offer you thfe best in Planned Insurance. PONTIAC DISTRICT OFFICE 1080 West Huron St. Coll Bob for Insurance Information — FE 2-0219 LIFEYOF VIRGINIA DRIVE IN NOW Gat These GAR SERVICES and SAVE! Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday-Friday FOR EASY TERMS. ..lustug'CHARGE IT!’ Brake Special Get Your Brakes Adjusted Now! Me Any U.S. Car Front wheels removed and bearings repacked, brakes adjusted, add fluid, test. Grease seals checked. ms. AUTO SERVICE WORK «.K, Front End Special Makes Steering Easier, Saves Tire Wear w (Hus Parts) Repack front wheel bear* H ings, correct camber, I caster, toe-in. Align front end. Add $2 for torsion bars or ajr conditioning. GOODYEAR TIRED ANY SIZE one low price! . Power Cushion Original Equipment “New Car" Tires, Slightly Used, Expertly Reconditioned! 75% or more original tread depth remaining. Briggs cf Rolas 2b CalHson rl Alien 3b flffSWfftt] j 0 l 0 Simpson It 1**4 3 12 0 Cardenas si WERNER f, Cincinnati I. 2B-Mskjwy. 3 B—Briggs. HR—Pinjgn (Ml. - w: JaWesfaMgSea i j LJackson (L,12-13) Morris ........... xsss; w. m IP H RERBBSO HOUSTON i r h bl ab 10 1# Morgan 2b ‘ lilt SJackson ss 4 Kessinger ss Beckon 2b BWllltms rf Santo 3b j « i i Npinm » Banks lb 4(00 Staub rf Boccbslla It 4 0 1 O Maya If ^ Amlfltano pr 0 0 0 0 Harrison 1b Keough If 0 0 0 # Batsman c Hundley c 3 0 0 # R.Davis cf Browne d 4 13 1 Dlartcer p snap a 7-7 deadlock and went Ion to rout the Holly nine. Al Pontiac’s Roll Roost was an Cohoon wdn the game In relief and hit a two-run double in the big outburst. Jim Bass homered torthe losers,................................. CLASS C REGIONAL Owosso State Savings B2 020 11—« IS Pontiac Ron's Roost 033 010(0-7 4 2 — ling Pitcher—Jim Conklin. CLASS D REGIONAL 8-7 loser in eight innings Saturday to Owosso State Savings Bank after Mag its today night opener, 3-1, to the same team. Owosso nipped Erla’s Foods of Port Huron, 2-L in Sunday’s championship contest. Erla’s had beaten the bankmen, 4-3, Saturday. RALLIES Jim Conklin, who hurled a two hitter to win the title tilt, limited Ron’s to two hits over the final five innings Saturday as Owosso rallied from 64 and 74 deficits. “Mouse” Beers had a two-run double during a three-run Pontiac third inning. But LeRoy Winan’s two-out single in the seventh tied it, and Conklin singled home tike 34 3 11 LThomas ph TDtal HoutSS HS.stmh»CTR-B.WIIir.TO <25)7 l l DON WILSON’S YAMAHA t.l.i, tonrieo on# Sratil HELMET SALE ttn Hiihl.n0 S0.M# ltd Cntosrapb *0. Ul S1M2TI «rnM01l o MltchelLBentley 258 103 X—W Horten'. Bor 340 000 0-7 Winning Pitcher—Al Cohoon DON NICHOLIE 53% West Huron FE 2-9194 FE 4-0581 ■DDaaapDODDDDDMRMRtf “UsTareyton smokers would rather Tight than switch!” loin the Unswitchables.VH Get the filter cigarette with the taste \W| worth fighting for. Tareyton has a white outer tip' .and an inner section of charcoal. Together, they, actually improve! the Davor of Tareyton’s fine tobaccos^ WHITEWALLS •nl, *15" MORE NO MONEY DOWN-NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Buy 4 for as little as $1.25 weekly GUARANTEED If.any used passenger tire. Identified on our records as being niu^ntsod, ' “ at a result of any normal nod hazard within 12 months of purehto , then a pro rata allowanca par month basad on aalltng prtco will b made by tha Hilar toward tha purchase of any new Goodyear tin. 40 W. PIKE ST. Opon Mon. tfuuFiL, 8)30 tod, . Sat 2118)30 - TiJMWai jCgert- FTT FOR A KING - King Contantine of Greece wore this casual sweatshirt-c 1 a m-digger outfit as he finished third in the European Lightning Sailing Championship held last week at Phaleron Bay off the coast of Pireaus, Greece. 5,000 Jobless to Be Moved Labor Dept. Plans Include 200 in U. P. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Department of Labor plans to move some 5,000 unemployed workers and their families during the next nine months to areas where jobs are available, Plans include relocation of 200 Upper Peninsula residents. The program is part of an experiment begun last year, when 1,400 workers were moved an average of 686 miles and received an average of $400 for moving expenses, paid as either a grant or loan depending upon the individual case. Last year the program was conducted by federal - state employment security agencies. Of the 22 new projects, 13 will be conducted by the U.S. Employment Service and nine Department’s Office of Manpower Policy Evaluation and Research to various agencies. TO DETERMINE NEED The experimental program is designed to determine the need for a permanent program to aid in the relocation of unemployed persons. Findings from the experimental projects are to be submitted to Congress next year. Among the projects contracted by the Office of Manpower Policy Evaluation and Research, in conjunction with Northern Michigan University, was relocation of workers in the Upper Peninsula to jobs in southern Michigan and south central Wisconsin. Wages Not Keeping Up —Meany WASHINGTON (AP) -George Meany, President of the AFL-CIO, said Sunday the country is experiencing a “profit inflation” add wages must be ingje&sed to “restore the balance - between wages, prices and profits.” “Profits are climbing and take home pay is not keeping pace/’ Meany said in an interview on the NBC radio-tele-Terview "oijjf:gT television” pr

8*70* _______ BUY ASAVS Pork & Beans 1 24* j§®SK Mustard 1 1* WASHDAY MIKACIM MEADOWDALB 32* Tomato Juice 1 Ifej4 •“’25* FBTER FAN Peanut Butter "1PSBS STOKBLT 21* Fruit Cocktail TIER BREAKFASTS START WITH BANANAS TENDER & JUICY — U.S.D.A. CHOICE CHIQUITA Delmonico Steaks * *1.79 HERRUD OR SWIFT PREMIUM Skinless Franks £& 69* . . . HOME-MADE OF ONLY THE FINEST INGREDIENTS COUNTRY KITCHEN Potato ~EK3 Watch TV 2 Monday at 7 pm PLAY GREYHOUND DERBY! Clart Candy Bars 10 et. pkg. 39* Walchada Grape Drink If Walchada Low-Cal Grape Drink 1 qt. 14 oz. ct 39* Rival Burgers Dog Food In Gravy 2:s£,39‘\ Harthay Chocolate Syrup ' I tarn Laundry Datargant Instant Fels 4 5 lb. 6 oz. box *1.22 Hair..... Score 4 or. liq. plastic « 77* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ AUGUST 29, 1966 C-8 jPeop/e in the Newsj By IV Associated Press Barry Goldwater completed a trip down Idaho's “River of no Return” yesterday and emerged at Salmon'from nine days in the wilderness with stories about lightning storms, bears I and big fish. The former presidential candidate, with family and friends, shot the dangerous rapids of the Salmon River’s middle fork in three rubber boats. Along the way they explored Indian caves, I shooed a black bear out of their groceries, and I caught trout up to 19 inches long. GOLDWATER The lightning storm last Thursday touched off iqpre than 70 range and forest fines In southern Idaho. “The storm hit us just as we started to cook dinner, but we had to abandon that,” Goldwater said. “The rain was intense for about two hours and we could see the blue flashes hitting the top Of the canyon.” Model Seeks 'Protection' Against Pregnancy A Toronto spokesman for Lloyd’s of London says the insurance firm will have a decision this week for model Louise Baker, 21, who wants to be insured against pregnancy. “If the head office decides to go ahead with this, I think we can assume the premiums are going to be very high,” the spokesman said yesterday. He said the policy would be canceled automatically if she married. Miss Baker, 35-22-35, said, “It’s just like accident insurance. The cold hard fact is that if I got pregnant I would be out of work.” She said she earns $25 an hour in modeling fees. No Fingerprints for Frankie in New York Frank Sinatra can sing in a New York cabaret again, if ■ he wishes, without giving the city his finger? I prints. License Commissioner Joel J. Tayler said I yesterday he will end the requirement that I cabaret employes be fingerprinted — a regula-| tion to which Sinatra refused to submit. The City Council must approve Taylor’s | proposal. SINATRA Cabaret employes, including entertainers, bartenders, waitresses, waiters and owners, still must have a license. Beatnik?* Hero Gives Poetry an Airing ADen-Ginsberg, bearded poet hero of the beatniks, read some of Ms works yesterday in New York’s Washington Square Park—using four-letter expletives. About 650 persons turned out for the occasion in Greenwich Village and Ginsberg was left alone by city officials. He read for 15 minutes and was cheered wildly. The parks department has decided not to fight court rulings which have held that poets may read their poetry publicly in the city’s parks without first submitting them to Bet The Cash You’ll Need Right Now At Associates! . For back-to-school expenses, the first place to go is Associates. Money is available tor tumoST^ clothes, hooks and other educational expenses, Consolidate other bills at the same time and cut your monthly payments. Whether your money need is large or small— business or personal—Associates can help. Associates has nearly fifty years of experience and over 660 offices coast-to-coast throughout the U.S. and Canada. Visit or call the one near you! A Financing Ham For Kvmrr MM ASSOCIATES CONSUMER FINANCE CO. IN PONTIAC A84 Oakland Aveftue............FI 2-0214 389 North Telegraph Read.......682-2000 Pontiac Mall Shopping Center IN DRAYTON PUUNS 4476 Dixie Highway............OR 3-1207 Riverside cycles give you mere awlien more savings 000 and mere fun than anything else on 2 wheels! M ONTGOMERY WARD SALEENDS 1 SAT., SEPT. 3 TAKE THE "ACTION RIDE” ON A RIVERSIDE SPORT BIKE TODAY! *279 NO MONEY DOWN What beats any parking problem, has a 4-speed gearbox, 50 mph thrills, 120 mpg economy and the rakish style of a real mover? (Also seats 2—great for dates). Ah yes, the Sport Bike, 50cc variety, by Riverside I Fully equipped. DISPLAY IN THE MALL “WHEELS A GO-GO” RIVERSIDE 49cc MO-PED—AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION AND A ZIPPY 32 MPH! RIVERSIDE 125cc MOTORCYCLE-68 MPH OF OPEN-ROAD POWER! Trail across town or country! The ^ MoPed turns out 2-HP and over 145 ^ mpg. Turns out a lot of fun the minute you saddle up, too! 199 Here’s a real road-runnerl Kick thru the 4-speed gearbox and wind it out to 5500 rpm! Delivers 8.5-HP and 135 mpg. Fully equipped. WHEEL ALIGNMENT SAFETY CHECK HERE’S WHAT WE DO* o Wards experts correct caster, camber, toe-in and toe-out. • Scientifically balance wheels for smoothest ride. e Completely check and adjust brakes and hydraulic system. • Carefyilycheckvital points of the steering system. ENGINE TUNE-UP TO" • Pointi cleaned, set • Timing,carb.,compression checked • Spark plugs set or cleaned. 100% BRAKE OVERHAUL HERE’S WHAT WE DO “irThlfair"'qualify' TS-""' fined and bonded brake shoes on all 4 wheels. 2. Check master cylinder, bleed hydraulic lines and refill. 3. Turn drum% inspect hydraulic system, and repack front wheel bearings. 4. Carefully test-drive vehicle to chetfk work., MAKE WARDS YOUR ONI ****'SAi HEADQUARTERS RENT T uggle, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, 1 CARS, GOLF CLUBS--USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED I ADS. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 3M418L 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 m THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1006 Jacoby on Bridge »! . ♦AKQ972 *A84 WEST EAST *K63 452 V 10 763 W A K Q 8 4 ♦ J 5 4 10 6 4 * 10972 * K 5 3 SOUTH * A Q J 8 7< V J95 ♦ 83 ■*' - *QJ6 Both vulnerable West North East South ass 4 * Pass I ass Opening lead—W 3 By Oswald and Janies Jacoby Just because a finesse works the first time there is ho reason to assume that will work the next time. North’s bid of two spades meets with our did not make the play quite so easy and when the smoke cleared away South had managed to go down one trick. East won the heart lead with the queen. He considered a club shift for awhile and then decided to force dummy to ruff a heart and hope for the best. He led the king of hearts and dummy ruffed. * it ★ The ten of. spades was led from dummy and South Jet it ride for the finesse. West let it ride also, whereupon South led dummy’s nine of spades and covered with his jack. South was all set to make five or six depending on whether the spades broke 4-1 to 3-2 when he was rudely awakened from his dreams of sugar-plums. West produced the king of spades and led the ten of clubs. South thought and thought some more but he could come up with no better play than to duck in dummy. East took his king and played out his ace of hearts for the fourth and setting trick. We are sorry for South but must point out that he had no need to fall for West’s trump play. Once the ten of spades held he could afford to win the second spade lead with the ace and insure his contract-. TODAY’S QUESTION You bid one no-trump. Your partner bids two, no-trump. What do you do? Answer Tomorrow Q—The bidding has been: Wert North East South 14 Dble. ? You, South, hold: *KI5VK 111 4412 *Q 8 7 6 What do you do? A—Bid one, no-trump. You have a little strength and ean show It now. TODAY’S QUESTION You bid one no-trump. Your partner bids two no-trump. What do you do? Answer Tomorrow Michigan Seaman Is Held in Assault NEWBURYPORT, Mass. (AP) — Floyd Berg, 18, a Navy seaman from Lincoln Park, Mich., was charged with assault and battery on a policeman after police broke up what they said was a noisy party on Harvard Way on Plum Island Saturday. In all, 21 persons, including 8 girls, were charged with disorderly conduct and disturbing the peace. Police said most were under 20 years of age. They are to appear in district court Sept. 19. THE WILLETS By Wilt WetUrierf Union Charges Unfair Practice Market Held Up DETROIT (AP)—A lime gunman fled with $1,000 cash nrom the Chatham Market on Detroit’s West Side Sunday. Police said he had the names “Sue” and “Pat” tabooed on his right arm. BERRY’S WORLD By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (I i handle usual activities Indicated, head high . . . maintain d | . to basic principles. Surprise message due before day Is over. TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20): Attention turns to friends, evaluation of desires. Key is realistic attitude. Promises are easy — concrete results a bit more difficult to coma by. Concentrate on RESULTS. GEMINI (May 21 • June 20): Full Moon position emphastees sr honors. When celled upor ADDEO RESPONSIBILITY . . . ready. Hava facts at hand. Stick course without swerving. CANCER (June 2) - July 22): F now for future planning. Check sourc keep communication lines open. Obt hint from ARIES message. Catch ■ on correspondence. Improve relations with in-laws. LEO (July 21 - Aug. 22): Gat financial affairs In order. You — gain cooperation of Going it alone today n Intellect provides son Follow through! VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22): Accent on marriage, public relations, partnerships. Changes of creative variety due. Youngster's request deserves serious consideration. Stress UNDERSTANDING. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - oet. 22): Key , to success today is persistence, concentration i harmony, mature understanding. ampromlse. You gain more It DIPLOMATIC. Some undercover activities o o light. Be ready for subtle surpi AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Fab. 10): Steer situation also Improves. Maintain s PISCES (Feb. It - Mar. 20): Personal Interests dominate period. Stress appearance, personality. Finish ma|or prelects, exude confidence. Realize or* rt Importance Is observing . . . ca favorably Impressed. . Intuitive GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cyclo high ir PISCES, ARIES, TAURUS. Special ord to CAPRICORN: Full Moon highlights revelations which enhance ]— prestige. (Copyright 1»M, General Features Cam.) e 1964 by NEA, la “You just press this, spray it at the attacker’s face—and it’s guaranteed not to repel him!” BOARDING HOLSE "scORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect highlights creative endeavors. You gain You lose If you I Day to shlnel Si know you oxlst. SAGITTARIUS ifBIH - Accent on home affairs, responsibility, long-range prelects. Family require time, consideration. f THAT TWINS/ W^LL,THERE'S MOST BE Jj DEFINITELY A ^ALIVE — I)/6NAKE INVOLVED [ 30STSAW#SOMEWHERE-m-THAT’S1 ^ tT SHED // ANOTHER SIGNATURE I ITS (jf AND DATE SHOWING UP UNDERNEATH/ Give Itl Candidate's 'Platform' Collapses CAMP SPRINGS, Md. (AP) — Thomas B, Finan’a platform collapsed under lum at T psMtt-cal gathering Sunday. It was a wooden platform on which he was standing, not the platform on which he is running for the Democratic nomination for governor. ★ * * Finan, who is the Maryland attorney general, attended a crab feast at the Rose Valley Airfield. He had jOSt ttalsfoed speaking to Prince Georges County Democrats, trtren the collapse occurred. About half of the speaker ’s platform fell; dropping Finan and about 20 other persons some four feet to the ground. ’ No injuries were reported. EGAD, THERE ACTUALLY IS ANOTHER ) PAINTING BENEATH THIS ONE:! That's a common practice for j YOUNG ARTI GTS / THEY CAN'T afford to buy a new canvas ) EACH TIME THEY PAINT/SlNCEy THIS WAS FROM GRANDPA B DAVID'S EARLY PERIOD/ T PRESUME Hey FOLLOWED THEf gEN~— r OUT OUR WAY Celebrate City's Diamond Jubilee HARRISON (AP)—This Clare County community will highlight a diamond jubilee celebration with the Queen’s Ball Wednesday at the Harrison High School gymnasium. The ball will feature the Brothers of the Brush beard-judging contest. The week-long program ends Sunday with ," a parade and carnival, final events in the city’s 75th year of Incorporation. His Second Citation LONGMONT, Colo. (A - Harvey D. Rothenburg was a bit surprised when a Colorado state trooper gave him a safe driving award. Rothenburg confessed it was Ids second ‘citation” within a week. The earlier one was. for a traffic violation. THE BERRYS By Carl Gruber! GROSSE POINTE FARMS (AP)—Local 522 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes, AFL-CIO, filed unfair labor practices' charges against the City of Grosse Pointe Farms Saturday. The complaint, sent to the State Labor Mediation Board, said the city did not bargain in good faith. By Jim Berry i a M Jlmam] IS THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom WE GOT TO FIGURE OUr By V. T. Hamlin ...AND I THINK ft COULD BE THE ANSWER TO OUR PROBLEM! CAPTAIN EASY Ry Leslie Turner EEK & MEEK Ry Howie Schneider ^^rfsupT) O m3 Jr ’+•; - ( I GOT A FUNNY ^ > FEELING ITS GOING ^ ( TO BE A ROUGH J V. PAY / By Ernie BusdimCler By Bad Blake DON A 1,0 IH <> By Walt Diane] i THE POftTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1969 C—7 Special Chicago Unit Checks Brutality Claims . l je MLJP A BOY AND HIS DOG—Paul Carter Hawkins, 4, national poster boy for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, gave his Samoyed puppy a happy hug in New York yesterday. The Dilkm, Mont., lad picked die pup for his own from a litter brought to Nete York by a Connecticut kennel owner who heard of his /wish for a dog. The boy will appear on a television benefit for the association. Wallace Foes Warn of School Defiance MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Critics of Gov. George Wallace’s plan to defy school integration guidelines have pointed a warning finger toward a 1964 federal court order. It could mean the loss of state as well as federal funds for Alabama schools which refuse to comply. ★ ★ ★ The ruling, handed down by a three-judge court July 13, 1964, had nothing to do with the guidelines promulgated by the Health, Education and Welfare Department. They weren’t even in existence then. Instead, the court was cor cemed over Wallace’s use / state troopers in an unsuccdsi fid attempt to block integration of Tuskegee High School and, gee scnooi. / state bornd subsequently later, the mandate issued by the state board of education, with Wallace presiding as chairman, to close the Tuskegee school. Because the state claimed — and denied — jurisdiction trol over city and county schools throughout the state, the court suit which dealt/Originally with qothlng but Mrfcon County became one or statewide significance. / The three judges refused order immediate statewide delation, but said, signifi-v™Jy, that the court “could ami possibly should’’ compel the ‘'state to stop “the illegal and unconstitutional practice of distributing public funds for the purpose of operating segregated schools." Here’s How to SAVE MORE at LOW FALL PRICES NOTHING DOWN-PAY NEXT YEAR! I CHICAGO (AJ>) - Two policemen seised a bare-chested heckler in the ail-white Chicago Lawn community, rushed him to a patrol wagon and boosted him inside. The white crowd shouted: “Brutality.’’ Twenty-four days earlier police shut off a gushing fire hydrant in a West Side Negro neighborhood and arrested eight persons, an incident that kindled three, nights of rioting. Hie Negro crowd shouted: “Brutality.” Lt John Harris, commander ofc toe Excessive Force Unit of toe Police Department’s Internal Investigations Division, has 14 sergeants 8 Negro and 6 white — who check into reports of brutality. ★ ★ ★ Supt. 0. W. Wilson set up the unit May 10,1965, for that specific purpose. •87 COMPLAINTS In the first year, Harris said in an interview, the agency received 687 complaints. The allegations, he said, were sustained In 29 bf them and all the officers were penalized. Penalties vary according to the nature of the offense. They range from working on a day o~ to a 30-day suspension to discs' missal. If a violation of a lajp involved, toe case goes/to the state’s attorney. This summep^ from June 12 to Aug. 25^the unit received te; including about 35 fron^-the areas of the West Side and the scattered civil ghts demonstrations. inquiries have n 49 of them, with Harris been fjpi tKgjj m SUBSTANCE In 39, “a thorough investigation reveals no substance to allegations.” ' In 16, the charges were “not sustained.” That clause, Harris explained, means “there wasn’t enough evidence to prove or disprove the Allegations.” "That doesn’t mean it didn’t happen,’1 he added. In some instances, he went on, witnesses wouldn’t cooperate Or the complainants pooled off. ★ * * Investigation hasn’t been completed in the otter 143 industrialist Is Dead NORDBORG, Denmark (AP) — Mads Clausen, 61, one of Denmark’s major industrialists, died S EARLY WEEK SPECIALS! SERVE N’ SAVE-LEAN SLICED BACON..............k!f79* CORDON'S ROLL PORK SAUSAGE.......... MICHIGAN-GRADE 1 BOBBY’S WIENERS U.S. CHOICE-TENDERAY BEEF RIB ROAST 3 - I39 | m 79!. SPECIAL LABEL GIANT SIZE m m m mw 3-LB>uoz AJAX............... JIFFY BRAND FROSTING OR CAKE MIX W FRESH BRAND POTATO MtK CHIPS...**”?.?. tSKf EMBASSY BRAND.- -■.;.--.--F3.-. 3SK1.-. QUART SALAD MM DRESSING 33 RED. YELLOW OR LO-CAL HAWAIIAN H OA CALIF. THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES 3.^69' EA TOP VALUE 1 3 V STAMPS 1 OC TOP VALUE stamps WITH THIS COUPON ON i 2 CUT-UP FRYERS, B ■ 2 PEGS FRYER PARTS OR ■ ■ 2 ROASTING CHICKENS ■ ■ Valid Thru Sn., Snt., 3. 1966 -_A | At Krogor D.t. A Eo,t. Mich. |jl Z WITH THIS COUPON ON Z i 4.2-OZ CAN N Z i SPRAY POWDER \ B ■ CALM DEODORANT ■ lyjeutsteir*\irM WS COUPON ON ■ COUNTRY OVEN IXi-OZ. WT. a ■ PECAN CARAMEL ROLLS OR m i 1-LB.2-jOZ.OLO WORLD S WITH THIS COUPON ON $2 OR MORE STATIONIRY OR SCHOOL SUPPLIES VALUABLE COUPON * Free! Unit No. 1 Cortina ! 4-Piece Place Setting i WITH THIS COUPON AND . ■ PUR C I ASM OF ONE SET AT NEC* N RETAIL OF S1.49 ■ i Valid Thru Sat.. W 3. 196< ■ ■/ At Ktogtr Dot, & cast. Mich. § I7 Limit Ono Coupon. I VALUABLE COUPON ASIORTEP FLAVORS BIO "K" CANNED POP Kj SAVE 121 VALUABLE COUPON I VALUABLE COUPON SIM P ... RNR YOUR CHOICE RIO. OR ORIF 2 POUND COFFEE BORDEN’S SHERBET OR COUNTRY CLUB ICE CREAM I FIRST ^SECOND_____.SAVE! ■ I ■ 1 1 a ■ HaaM«tg BtopRR■ liymiBijRli■ I■ ■ ■■■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I Baa■■•■■■■■■■■•■■■A Baa■ *■■■■*■ a ■Haaaaaaa To Limit QumHHn. Print An# flow# EHactlva 7C hI Oof. A Boat. Mich. Thru Tun.. Aug. 30, 1966. Non* Sold Tu Dealer*. Copyright 1966. Thu Kroger Co. \ 0—8 -TUB PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUSTJW.,, 1888 Shelley Takes Note of'Patch of Weight' in Great Movie Bid , By BOB THOMAS i AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - “The only thing that stands between me and great movie roles,’’ said Shelley Winters with her customary candor, “is 30 pounds.” Even as her plump self, Shelley has < well enough to I become the only| supporting tress to win a1 pair of Oscars THOMAS —for “The Diary of Anne Frank" in 1959 and “A Patch of Blue" in 1965. But, of course,} the acting breed is ever restless, and she wouldn’t at all mind moving up to a starting Oscar. ★ * * But there’s the weight to consider. SHELLEY WINTERS Tuesday Only Special! “I think I can lick it now,” she said confidently. “I’m going to a dqetor who has put me on a strict diet. My trouble has bqen that I fluctuate up and down. I take off the weight, then I put it on for a role. Or else I go to Italy. If you can’t eat spaghetti in Italy, what else is there? REAL THING “Now I’m going to get my weight down and keep it there. No more of the funny business." Hie ubiquitous Shelley was in town to play a heavy — sorry about that — in “Batman.” claimed she did so in order to placate her daughter Romina, a blooming beauty of 13. “What a job!” exclaimed| Shelley, who prides .herself ini being a. method actress. ’“When I saw this guy in satin tights jump down in front of me andj say these crazy lines, I couldn’t keep a straight face. It was tool ridiculous.^ “Finally, the director had to tell me to stop it. He said I had to think of it as ‘playing Bat-man.’” I said, “Fine — this morning we play Batman; this afternoon we play doctor. Robin thought it was funny, but'I don’t think Batman got the joke.” OFF TO ITALY The actress was ready to leave for Italy and a movie with Alberto Sordi, followed by a return K> Broadway in three Saul Bellows plays, “Under / the Weather.” They are the sort of thing she likes to do — offbeat, artistic, serious-minded. “I don’t seem to do things right," she admitted. “Either I’m being too honest about paying my taxes, or I don’t make the right kind of deals. Whatever the reason, I don’t end up with much money. Take ‘A Patch of Blue.’ Sidney Poitier drew no salary, settling for 10 per cent of the gross instead. I did it for 50 thousand. I got.the Oscar and he didn’t; yet he’s going to end up with two million dollars! KIM NOVAK READS ABOUT ACCIDENT—Actress Kim Novak, who was taken to Sisters Hospital in Santa Monica, Calif., Friday after her car went out of control and over a 120-foot embankment, reads about the accident in a paper which was brought to her by actor Stu Whitman. Whitman drove Ujt to Santa Monica from Hollywood Saturday when he heard about the accident. Miss Novak suffered only minor injuries. HURON LAST 2 OATS RUNAPPALOOSARUN ----------.9:12 j WALT DISNEY I 1 nr. robin ( iGRUSOE,u.S.N| Washington Buckles Down for Legionnaires' Confab 'Faith'.Spares Bahama Isles MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Faith, a fierce and* fickle hurricane, came to a virtual halt in the open Atlantic today after a northerly shift that spared the tiny islands in the Bahama’s chain of her 120 mile an hour fury. Although her movement was limited to a slow drift to the north, Faith’s future path was uncertain. Forecasters warned the islands that she could spin in any direction. WASHINGTON (AP) - A sort of Fourth-of-July-in-August atmosphere gripped toe capital today as toe American Legion mustered for a grand parade, a feature of its 48th national convention. Beginning at noon and lasting Natalie Aids Police After Car Bumped LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actress Natalie Wood and her agent, bumped in traffic, helped police run down and capture an alleged hit-run driver, officers reported today. The car carrying Miss Wood and Terry Dene was struck from behind Sunday night as it entered toe Hollywood Freeway, investigators said. They pursued toe driver who allegedly hit them and sped away. Dene was driving. Two policemen joined the chase after Miss Wood told them: “That man hit me.”* j . They caught a driver identified as William Rutherford, 36, of nearby Glendale, who was booked on suspicion of felony hit-run driving. for at least seven hours, the event was to send 20,000 marchers along Pennsylvania and Constitution avenues. Traffic was to be diverted around a big downtown section. More than 6,000 of the marchers are members of bands, and bugle and drums corps. The armed services assigned some of their smartest units to take part. Four hundred National Guardsmen were directed to help police handle the crowds and the traffic. The convention which lasts through Thursday, has attracted some 50,000 persons, Legionnaires and their families. Hotels are jammed, overseas caps embroidered with gold-braided ini signia are everywhere. TALK BY JAVITS One of the convention preliminaries was a speech Sunday by Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y. Talking about the Viet Nam war, Javits said: “I do not believe the Legion will want to sound hawkish just because people expect it to. “Of course, we are capable of great escalation of force and of course we possess the military might to inflict unacceptable damage on our opponents, but I do not believe that Americans want to use that power at the risk of a nuclear war or, more probably, an Asian land NOW! ‘SHENANDOAH’ & ‘SPY WITH MY FACE’ A AAA AAA AAA FREE PLAYGROUNDS • EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES A AAAAAAAA^ Western Dems Wary War May Hurt at Polls .GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, font. (AP) — Western Democrats see the Viet'Nam war as an emotional issue — one that could hurt their congressional candidates if casualties continue to mount. Directors of the Western States Democratic Conference Sunday endorsed President Johnson’s efforts “to secure a peaceful settlement in Southeast Asia, particularly in Viet Nam. But in interviews, party officials, especially those from more populous states, showed concern about the war’s political effects. ‘When they bring a casket o a city with a soldier in it, people will worry about the war," said Frank Keller, Washington State Democratic chairman. “And when a war hero comes home and gives a speech, they’H feel differently. It’s an emotional issue.” 'It’s an issue and it’s a larger issue than anything else,” said Norman Stoll, Oregon’s Democratic national committeeman. UNCERTAINTY Tom Brown, New Mexico national committeeman, said ’there is uncertainty and un-est,” although “I think our people by a large majority support the President.” Keller said the congressional elections in November could be considered a referendum on the war. ★ * * He was one of a group of party officials who took a long look present congressional lineup in the 13 Western states of Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Idaho,, Washington, Alaska, Hawaii, Of’egon, California, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. Republicans hold 22 House seats out of 69 from the area. Of the 26 senators, 6 are Democratic. CALIFORNIA CONCERN Delegates also showed concern about California, where Democratic Gov. Edmund G, Brown is facing a hard Tight against actor Ronald Reagan, the Republican candidate for governor. Democrats hold 24 of California’s 38 congressional seats and “three to four are on the critical} list,” a source said. A big Reagan victory, he said, could cost the Democrats congressional seats. k k k National Committeeman Stoll looked over the Oregon situation and gave Rep. Robert Duncan, a supporter of President Johnson’s Viet Nam policy, a good chance to defeat Republican Gov. Mark Hatfield, for a Senate now held by the Democrats. Hatfield is a critic of the war. But he said the party is “not ; confident” about former Rep. Charles Porter winning Duncan’s old seat— MONTANA TIGHT In Montana Sen. Lee Metcalf faces a challenge by the Republican governor, Tim Babcock. The race is considered, a tight one. Democratic officials said they weren’t predicting losses or gains in toe congressional delegations of Montana, Arizona^, Nevada, Hawaii or Alaska. Washington State Chairman Keller said, “we don’t expect to lose any” of the state’s five Democratic congressmen and £SZKEEGO “we might ev$n pick up one” of toe two Republican seats. Miss Lucy Redd of Utah, toe new Westemn States Democratic Conference chairman, said “we are hopeful” Democrats will retain one House seat. Republicans hold toe other. tKwrmim'HteflMyQ FREE IS HOLES OF GOLF Putt - Putt * Ail New Greens Liles For Nite Play •ratlOAIlY 9 s jh. TH1I ns. OHtMqr, SwIWitU * — Cor. Norttiim4— BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! CEDLBtDeMille;sTHE TEN COMMANDMENTS heston brynnb? Baxter | ROBINSON OE CARLO PAGET DEREK Awm foch ■ • mq TECHMQ YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 Last week, a Senate subcommittee continued hearings on what It calls "The Crisis of the Cities.” Today, about . of every ten Ameri- cans live In or near cities. a-three b-five c-seven 2 The Labor Department last week announced that consumer prices rose again in July. Since July of last year, prices have risen about ... per cent, according to the Department. a-1.2 b-2.8 c-5.7 3 Defense Secretary McNamara discussed a plan to draft certain men who are now deferred from military service because of ..... a-religious objections b-family dependents c-health or education reasons 4 The Department of Agriculture announced that the average value of American farmland has been...during the past year. a-falllng b-rislng c-steady 5 Reeent news articles mentioning “Cicero” have concerned .. a-new historical discoveries b-Negro "fair housing’' activities c-:a military operation PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1...derelict a-“rent” on money borrowed r ..satirize c-something abandoned ..interest d-having to do witocitt- Lcivil e-enemy PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1 ..Buckpasser 2 ..Paul McCartney 3 ..Apollo ..Dwight D. Eisenhower ..Samuel Yorty a-last Beetle bachelor expects to marry b-first three-year-old “millionaire” racer c-Mayor, Los Angeles d-called for universal military training ' e-our moon landing program • VEC, Inc., Madlion, Wisconsin The Pontiac Press Monday, August 29,1966 [2H) TtefMPtaf Match word clues with their correspond-! ing pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. l.~.. Organization of American States meets this week 2.. M. Japan signed surren- • der papers Sept. 2, 1945 3.. «. for Dallas encephalitis epidemic some to observe "Labor Sunday” Sept. 4 S___ earthquakes killed thous^pds here a visitor to Africa and Asia return was welcomed 8mm, a political campaign begins here 9.. „. this leader met with LBJ at Campobello 10.. ... American-styie big food stores gain in France LE SUPERMARCHE FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION What does the word “democracy” mean to each member of this family? This Quiz is part of the Educations! Program which This Nawspapar fumishas to Schools fn this area to Stimulate Interest in ^National and World Attain as an aid'to Developing Good Citizenship, -- j^“oo you rati ?' "■ (Score Each Side of Quiz Separately) , ' 71 to 80 points - Good. 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE. 61 to 70 points - Fait. Site 90 points - Exeallant. 60 or Under???-HW fTiineuvf Save This Practice Examination.' STUDENTS Valuable Reference Materiel For Exams. ANSWERS 1-81 «W1|-L *J-9 iff *0-* Jftt IH-I fR-l iziffe 109ms 9-9 ip-t 19-j ta-2 iq-| i||| juim So-Mll lSd 8*1 H|*> lb*t H|*g lo-i «| luvd % THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 C-*» MARKETS | Thtf following ark top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as ot Thursday. ' -Produce Apple*. Wealthy, bu. Blueberries. 12-qt. crt. Cantaloupes. bu........ Watermelon, bu. ....... VEGETABLES Beans, Or, Rd„ bu........... Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. . Beets, dz. bch. ........... Boots, topped, bu.......... Broccoli, db., bu.......... Cabbage, Curly, bu......... Cabbage, Red, bu........... Cabbage'Sprouts, bu........ Cabbage, Standard, bu. .. Carrots, dz. bdt........... carrots. Cello Pk., 2 dz. . Carrot*, topped, bu........ Calory, Pascal, dz. sites. . Calory, Pascal, crt. ...... Celery, white, crt......... Chives, dz. bch. ......... Cucumber, slleers, bu. ... Cucumber, Pickle, bu....... NEW YORK (AP)fS The heaviest wave of selling in the long, seven-month decline occurred today with the stock market sharply lower early thiS afternoon. As the ticker tape ran Id linutes late at noon, volume for the first couple of hours piled up to the huge total of 5.42 million shares compared with 3.76 million for the same period on Friday. ★ ★ ★ Some prices began to recover as trading was its heaviest. Analysts pondered over whether this was the long-await* >, Sweet, 5 doz. beg . Dill, dz. bt............... Egg Plant, H bu. ... Egg Plant, Long type, p Kohlrabi, dz. bch.......... NEW _________...... ........ selected stock transactions York Stock Exchange prices; i, grain, d s. Dry, 50-11 Parsley, Peppers, cayenne, px........ Peppers, Sweet, pk. bskt. . Peppers, Hot, pr. bskt...... Potatoes, SO lbs, -......... Potatoes, 20 lbs............ Radishes, whits, dz. bch. . Radishes, Rtd, 1 dz. bch. . Rhubarb, outdoor, dz. bch. Squash, Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttercup, bu, .............4.00 Squash, Butternut, bu...............4.00 Squash, Italian, to bu............. 1.75 Squash, Summer, to bu. . Tomatoes, bsk. A......... Tomatoes, vs bu. ........ Turnips, Topped ......... Turnips, dz. bch......... / ■GREENS Csbbage, bu. ...:........ Collard, gratns, bu. A lean A lu .00 Alleg Cp .10* AllegLud 2.20 Mustard,/ bu................. Spinach,, bu. ............... Swiss Sherd, bu.......... ............... Turnips, bu............................US J LETTUCE AND GREENS Celery, Cabbage, dz. . ........... Endive, pk. bskt................. Endive, bleached ................. Escarote, pk. bskt. ............. Escaroft, Bleached, bu............ Lettuce, Bibb, p. bskt........... Lettuce, Boston, dz.............. Lettuce, heed, dz.......................I Lettuce, Leaf, bu................... 4.50 Lettuce, Romalne, bui ................. — Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—Prices paid per po tor No. 1 live poultry: Roaatera heavy type 25-25)4; broilers and fryers 3-4 lbs. whites 20-21; turkeys heavy type young hens 24-25. DETROIT BOOS (API—Egg prices paid per ■t receivers (Including U.S.): ade A lumbo 49-54,• extra _ CHICAGO BUTTER, BOSS Chicago (AP) — 'Chicago Mercantile Exchange: Butter uneven; wholesale buying prices unchanged to )4 lower; 93 score AA 73)4; 92 A 7314; to B 7194; 8t C 70V): cars 90 B 72; 89 C 71 Vi. Eggs steady to firm; wholesale buying i 2414-2614; special Livestock. '___ DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USDA)—Livestock: Cattle, W00. Trading on slaughter steers active and 2$ cents higher. Hen active end steady to 25 cents higher. .. few sales of cows strong to 50 higher, although hardly enougltdone to test pries*. High choice to prim* 1,000 to 1,200 pound steers 26.25; one load 24.50. Choice too to 1.200 pound steers 25.25 to 26.25; mixed good and choice 24.75 to 25.25; good steers 2L50 to 24.75; standard end low good 22.00 to 23.50; choice .700 to 050 pound tMfers 23.25 to 24.25; good heifers 22.00 to 23.25; utility cows 10.00 to 20.50; hoed at 25.60; couple lots of two or three around 250 pounds 24.00 to 24.50; I id of one,’ two and threo 300to 4 *hd steady. High choice end prime .37 tu 40; choice 32 to 37; good 26 to 33; standard 22 to 36. . Sheep 500. (man supply pf slaughter lambs and wees steady. A few tots ot choice and prim* to to 110 pound spring lambs 25.50 to 26.50; cull to good CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Hogs 5,50 huthcers 25 to St tower; 1-2 200-230 butchers 25.25-25.50; mixed 1-3 190-240 25.00-25.25; 2-3 230-250 lbs. 24.75-25.0 mixed 1-3 350-400 lbs SOWS 21.25-32.00; 2-3 500-550 lb 19.2M 00-: Cattle 11,500; slaughter steers steady prime 1,250-1,375 16 Markett Sfyarply Lower Heavy Selling Hits Stocks of the administration and President Truman’s comment that rising interest rates could lead to “serious depression. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off 5.45 at 775.11, having recovered from a loss of 7.57. The Associated press average of 60 stocks at nhon was off 2.2 at 277.9 with industrials off 3.6, rails ofi .9 and utilities off 1JL Prices fellin heavy trading oh the American Stock Exchange, sened over the weekend, with Conductron dropped about 7%, ed “selling climax” or perhaps one of several such which might occur before the long downtrend could be reversed. Glamor stocks fell several points. Big blocks of many stocks were sold at lower prices. The key stock* fell Bern fractions to or 2 points along a broad front. NEWS WORSENS The news background wor- increasing concern about the tight money situation emphasized by congressional criticism Walter Kidde common and preferred about 4, Diversified Metals more than 4. The New York Stock Exchange (AP)—-Following Is a I ..... ??3.V' —A— FI* POW 1-21 » 4 "" PL U2 32 <4 C Cp .75 39 3 .__.ap*lr .90 29 1 FordMot 2.40 359 4 : 1.90 21 429b 4194 4194 4 13)4 13Vb 1314 71 54)4 51 Vi 54Vb 249 4394 41)4 4394 +1)4 29 559b 539b 54Vb-194 127 20)4 27)4 279b ' 19 09* OVi 09b . .. 15 44 449b 449b -2)4 11 229b 22 Vi 22)4 — ‘ 157 35 3414 *4* - 41 27 14 2694—1 X56 239b 239b 239b . - . __ J 509b — ) 19)4 19)4 — I Allledstr 1.32 AHisChal .75 Alcoa 1J0 a ren 719 Amerada 2 JO 74 70V4 70 AmAIrlln 1.55 ”• *"* Am Bosch .40 AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 7* *nu «aw 4/ — AmCrySug 1 5 16 1594 1596 — ■ AmCyan 1.25 kill 34)4 14 34)4 ... ‘ nEIPw 1.32 51 33)4 329b 329b - 9b .. Enka 1.10a 46 33)4 32 ' 32 —2)4 AmFPw 1.16 1421 169b 1696 1694 — AHome 1 JOe 43 629b 61)4 629b — Am Hosp .40 43 37 36to 369b —1 AmlnvCo 1.10 4 17VB 17 17 — Vb *- **"J " 141 1496 14)4 149b — )4 46 30)4 37V4 37)4 —19b 90 9 09b 09b 11 36)4 36V4 36V4 .... 23 SOW 57)4 579b —1)4 —1 Clg 1. GenDynsm Gen Elec 2.60 Gen Fds U0 GenMIlls J.50 14 64V4 639b 64)4 — ) ......MM 6 57 569b 569b - GenMot 3.05e 430 71)4 709b 709b - ) GenPrac 1.20 135 549* 50Vb 53)4 +1 GPubSvc .49* 46 59b 594 59b . GPubUt 1.40 21 269b 26)4 269b — 3 GTel El 1.28 271 37)4 36V4 37)4 -9 G*h Tire JO 191 29Vi 2SV4 29V4 + 1 GaPacific 1b 51 35Vb 35 35)4 ... GerberPd .90 11 25 2494 24* — ] Goodrich 2 A Optic 1.25b Am Photocpy Am Smelt 3 Am Std 1 Am Tob 1.00 AmZInc 1.40a AMP Inc JO Ampex Cp 1 539b 54 3.25* 205 66 65 GracaCo 1.30 Granites 1.40 GrantWT 110 GtAGP 1.20a :: GtWSUg 1.60* Greyhnd .90 GrumnAlrc 1 Gulf MO 2.20* f Gulf Oil 2J0 GulfStaUt .00 Halllburt 1.70 24 34 Atchison 1.60 AtICLIn* 3a All Rich 2J0 Atlas Cp Avco Corg -1 Pd 1.20 BabcokW 1.25 Balt GE 1.44 Beaunlt .75 Beckman .50 Batch Air .80 Bell How .50 1 24)4 249b —19b 141 22)4 209b’ 21 10 16 151b 1594 96 7914 77 719b —B— I 27 259b 5 103 4 30 65 6294 639b-194 3 329b 31)4 31)4 —Db 176 29b 214 2Vi 117 299b 29)4 299b . It 20)4 19 19 —lVi X397 52)4 51 52 +19b 46 229b 219b 22 — " 32 329b 32 »9b + 51 40 29 399b — 6 41 40)4 40V4 — ■ 114 95 9394 949b —19b 219 79b 7)4 714 ... 41 259b 249b 2514 — 32 149b 149b 1494 + 7194 6794 71 —2Vb 7 239b 23)4 239b + ! 17 32)4 209b. 19 239b 23)4 33'4 - 1 12 27 16)4 2694 - 9 25 24)4 249b — ! 20 5014 50 50)4 + 37 2314 23)4 23V4 - ! 8 4294 42)4 42Vi - 31 589b 5694 50 -1 34 119b 1114 llVb — JohnsnJ 1.40a JonLogan .00 ■—s L 2.70 Mtg 1.25 3694 35)4 35<4 339b 3194 319b —19b lJVb 13'4 13'/- 4 3794 379b :Ht TT ” 14 31)4 *#)* .— ... J* j|» jk Ifvs t.W ' 09' 149b *494 46 73)4 73Vb 73V* — <14 30 3394 23Vb 239b - “■ 320 609b 57 60 4-1 23 269b 26)4 2494 — 429 25)4 24)4 249b 152 30)4 369b 379b - •1 g- 42)4 — 42)4—1 1 42)4 42)4 117 43)4 42. m 120 321* 31) hellers 36.00: mixed * high cholce^ind prhne 930-U50 lbs 25 00-25JO; choice BOD-1-025 lbs 24.00-25.00; good 22.00-23.00; utility end commercial cows 17.50-1925; Utility and commercial bulls 21.00-24.00. Sheep 500; spring Slaughter lambs mostly steady; choice and prime around slaughter ewes 5.00-7.00. Control .Pete Cooper iiid I * m opd 1.10 « „.-ngGWk 2e 42 SSR4 *j Crown Zell 2 to Crue Stl 1 20 40 Shocks of Local Interest Figures efter decimal points are eighths ‘ OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD era representative Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not Include retell markup, markdown or commission. AMT Corn................. 15 M Monroe AUto Eqi Diamond Crystal Kelly Services . 9.5 I t-ncmiLoi —. ■ .. MUTUAL PENDS • ; EMI ....7*1 14.96 HI.'. »*» m 14.53 15.82, 10.77 1177 51)4 *1 *114 . 43>4 ft A 42V, -22'4 22 22 T DanRiv 1.20b DaycoCp .50b DetEdls 1.40 Get Stool JO “—Aik 1.10 il Abe lb Chain 2 orostfndus 33 99b 914 9Vi + 20 19 119b 1194- —D— 29 2494 22)4 2294 -24 20H 20)4 209b- J W *fil Six + X40 6094 609b 609b M 93 W W9b —3)4 13 1794 1794 1794 I 27)4 I7V4 29)4 - x29 14)4 1194 14 — I Sw 98 rd 4 SIS SSi Suwwl 1 28 2794 1794 — 35 16994 145)4 161 - ■ 14 2*94 2IV4 20’4 - '4 m lJ# 115)4 114)4 etonYa 1.B * WanMj.» mp 30 5194 4»Vi 4814 —3)4 , I# * 8w = 56 17 SS 1d9b ... F—. 477 17*94 1719* 17* +»4 111324=8 17 Hi. 12)4 1194 41 Mb mi- MB- i'Flafi: .) High Li I 42)4 41 I 2394 i ParamPIct 2 ParkeDav la foab Coal 1 PcnnDixie JO Penney 1.50a PaPwLt 1.40 P* RR 2.40 *annzoil 1.40 PepsiCo 1.60 PffierC 1.20a PhelpD 3.40a Phlla E 11.40 ■ 1 olarold .20 'rotter G. 2 Publklnd .341 Pullman 2.00 taytheon .80 Reading Co RelchGn .20s lepubSteel 2 17 3494 34M 349b-1 61 1694 149b 14Vb — ’ 183 35)4 32)4 33 -T 7 5394 52 52 —2' 4294 —29b '111 349b 349b 3494 " nw i49 3* 22 zivw 21 )b _____Sal J5e 24* 794 7>A. 79b lehr Corp 1 45 33 32)4 32)4 RoyCCola .40 10 199b 19 19 n«;. t». ’ 14B mr a -w/, 'Uli, 3294 I 177 4.- — - — - 29 379b 349b 37 -9b 10 359b 35)4 35)4 — ' M 449b 43)4 64H- 18 1194 11V4 1114 — 31 3694 35 35 -J 35 199b 19 19)4 — Vb a 479b 47)4 47)4 — 9b — " 44)4 44)4 *“■ Hupp Cp .18* 74 49b IdahoPw 1.41 Ideal Cam 1 IllCenlnd 2.4( Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 inland Stl 2 InsurNoAm 3 InterlkSt 1.88 IntBusM 4.48 I 29'4 29’4 29V4 - 9b » 15)4 15 IIUbMjfe 8 6694 66Vi 66V) 54 39)4 3*94 3894 - 9b p 1.20e 102 25)4 25 1 479b 4 Kennecott 2 KernCLd 2.60 KerrMc 1J0 KlmbCtark 2 Koppers 1.40 Korvette Kresge JO Kroger 1.M ir Stag .70 , 1529b IS* 152 - 31 4294 41)4 41)4 —2)4 45 41 47Vb 47)4 —1)4 34 26V4 159b 26V4 —K— 47 36Vb 35)4 2594 -19b 21 3194 M - 107 29'4 29 29 /. , 15 579b 57 57)4 4 57 7594 74)*- 74Vi-. . 27 46)4 459b Mb 4 9b 22 23 -- 22 139.MPWP^^W 31 379b 359b 1*94 —194 21 249b 24)4 249b —1^- jpgettfcM 5 trvfi§jiW"01I LockhdA 2.20 tssicirr SB 12. llard 2.50 - .50 LuckySt 1.60b id Fd 2.564 50 219b 209b 209b — Magnavox .80 703 5114 t Marathn 2.20 20 519b 1 _ 9* Marquar JSt -. 9| MartlnMar 1 Z|% MSyDSIr 1.61 ■*aaapjff MontPow 1.48 IRs 41 2694 26)4 2614 -114 33 21)4 21'4 21)4-" 11 259b M4 259b — 117 7394 72Vb 729b -2 22 7Vi 7)4 TVi ... 9 8094 79)4 7294 —194 100 35)4 359b 359b 32 179b 169b 17 02 619b 59 59 9 10 29)4 29)4 11 8)4 21)4 28V4 7*' 32)4 31 Vb 2194----- 190 1599b 15394 1599b 41)4 12 21)4 3 ---- Nat Fuel 1.60 Nat Ganl JO NatGyps 2b N Lead 2.25e Natstael 2JO Nat Taa JO NorNGas 121 Nor PIC 2.60 NStaPw 1.52 MatllMB 1 NwstAirl M Wtf 26 2996 29)4 2 58 5394 53 ! 93 4194 41 4 15 1494 14)4 1 5 43<4 4294 429b — 8 «« 81 22'4 20Vb 20*4-4 WU 7994 83V4—1 * 3994 Mb 399b . ; I 33'4 32Vb 33H + 9b 244 » MVb 32 — X43 24^ 2394 C94 — immm OxfrdPap1 JO 44 1714 t«4 1M4 = ,5 8 88 S8 804=! (hds.) High Law Last Che. 102 54>4 52 5294 —2 Vi 27 3094 30'4 309b — " Xl5 4514 45 45V4 —1 1 5214-294 » 289b 4 Vb ' 7^94 —2V4 48 61V. 60 61)4 - 76 54V4 S3 5394 - 54)4 i -29b 29 — 77 39)b 3794 39)4 — 31 25)4 M94 25 — m 46 45 451* —M 25 5194 51 51 —IVb 23 54 52)4 5294 " 3) lDb 1194 1194 . 023 1459b 140 14494 —19b 82 49Vb 499b 499b 37 1 449b - —R- 407 4394 43 43)4 - 9 4494 43Vi 43Vi - 34 3toi 31 31 - 377 4194 44Vi 48 Vi 4 14 179b 1714s 179b- NY Pressmen OK Contract "'Merged Newspaper Nearer to Publication NEW YORK (AP) Members of the Pressmen’s Union have narrowly approved a new contract with the World Journal Tribune, Inc., moving the new publishing company a major step closer to initial publication ot its afternoon and Sunday newspapers. The vote was" 263-206 after 95 minutes of heated debate Sunday at a membership meeting. It came in the 127th day of the longest newspaper work stoppage in the city’s history. Nine other unions, which reached contract agreements with the corporation before the morning Herald Tribune was folded, will x try this week to make final' ‘contract adjustments. William J. Kennedy, president of the Pressmen’s Union, scheduled to give a report on his union’s Agreement to officials of the nine unions. SOLVE PROBLEMS Thomas J. Murphy, executive On Wall Street Folklore Takes Beating By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Some of Wall Street’s folklore is taking a beat's- Summer, as business measures it, is ,in its final days. Ami the stock market has yet to come up with the summer rally which the romantic like to think of as tra-i ditional. Rather, stock prices ast week dropped to the! lowest level in DAWSON more than two years. ★ ★ ★ Trading volume' picked up But observers were still wistfully looking for that traditions selling climax which is sup posed to spell the end of a long and sharp decline. : Talk about inflation is very much the “in.” thing this summer. But the tradition that peo-)le turn to buying istocks as a ledge against general price inflation seems very dormant at the moment. On the contraiy, the drop in stock prices is traced by many brokerage firm analysts less to an urgency to sell than to a lack of interest in buying. PUBLIC UNIMPRESSED Rising profits of a majority of corporations, along with record sales and production schedules, would — if tradition were running true to form — draw investors into the stock market. But as summer ebbs. the. public seems to be unimpressed by higher profits hr even by rising dividend payments. Traditionalists had hoped that SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Desertions from South Viet Nam’s 705,000-man armed HVHHPPR8IP___________forces are running nearly 20 per vice president of the AFL-CIO t:ent ahead of last year. A total ■Pal ijo SaarIGD UO Saar* Roe la Seaburg JO Serve! SheronStl JO 135 51H 51Vb 51)4 . 47 14Vb 14 14V. - Newspaper Guild of New York, said, “Whatever problems we have we can resolve either now or when we get back to work, either through grievance machinery or arbitration.” He also said, “Our position is that if they (the pressmen) got something higher than the $12 package, we are perfectly willing to wait until next March 30, and get back then what we are shortchanged, if anything. TTiomas M. Laura, president chairman of the Newspaper of the Mailers Union No. 6 and Trades Council, said he wanted to get details of the pressmen/ agreement before commenting. Matt Meyer, president of the publisheing corporation, said he hoped there wojild be no problem with the other unions. Other union leaders could not be reached for comment. ShellTra .48* SharWm 1.91 Sinclair 2.40 82 51 SlngerCo 2.20 58 449b SmithK 1 JOa 40 54V. SoPRSug JOa 35 20V, SouCalE 1.25 50 329b South Co .94 70 2SaeCp 1.70 . It MM 1.20 US Borax la r’rcr.4*.3* US Llnee 2b USPlywd 1.40 gfaRub 1.20 vendo Co JO k VaCIPw 1.28 78 6394 62 *3)4- 9 69Va 6894 69V4 4 —V— ............. 14 239b. 23 *Jto - I 34 40)4 3994 401* . Sales Boosted by Consumers A. H. Aymond, chairman of the board, has announced/that Consumers Power Company kilo^tt-bour sales of electricity increased 14 per cent volume sales of natural gas rose 9 per cent during the 12 months ended July 31, as compared with the same period a year ago. Gross operating revenue of (433,400,000 represented an per cent increase over the earlier 12-month period. Consumers Power spent more than (138,800,000 on expansion and improvement of its electric and natural gas systems and general service facilities from August 1985 through Ji% 19M, said Ay mond. The company furnishes electric and natural gas energy service in 67 of the 68 counties in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula, Earnings per share on the average number of common shares outstanding were (3.03 in the 12-month period ended July 31 compared with (2.76 in (he 12-month period ended July 31, 1965 ’ S. Viet Army Desertions Running Ahead of 1965 of 67,000 members of the regular army, regional and popular forces walked out in the first six months of 1966. If the desertions continue at the same rate in the second half of the year, the total number will be 21,000 more than the 1965 figure of 113,000. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s government expects, however, to reduce desertions through a new law imposing severe punishment and other measures improving' the lot of the' Vietnamese serviceman. Candidates' Radio Talks Postponed SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — The South Vietnamese national radio postponed today the speeches of 11 candidates running in Saigon for election to the Constituent«Assembly. No explanation was offered and a spokesman for the radio could not say when the speeches would be rescheduled. ★ ★ ★ The candidates were the third group scheduled to deliver brief campaign speeches. Last Friday and Saturday, the first two days of the official campaign period, more than 20 capdidates spoke and many of them were critical of the military regime. Elsewhere in South Viet Nam, other candidates evidently continued the series of speeches over provincial radio stations. * * ★ The campaign for the Sept. 11 voting was getting started slow-ly. One political meeting ift Saf-gon was canceled because only a few persons turned out. in stceet addresses and private meetings, however, some candidates were attracting small crowds and government propaganda teams were out in force in the provinces to spread the message. The biggest single brake on desertions is expected to be Decree Law 15, which was put into effect Aug. 1. Officials say the impact of the stringent new decree should be known by November. HARD LABOR It imposes a minimum punishment of five years at hard labor for ordinary desertion. g upon the circumstances, a deserter could be given up to a life sentence at hard labor and, if he deserts in the face of the enemy or to the Communist ’-side, his sentence would be death. A man will be declared a deserter after he has been absent from his unit for 15 days -compared with 30 days in the U.S. Army. Even before the new decree went into effect, official figures showed a sizable drop in the desertion rate in July. Authorities refused to speculate whether the drop was a seasonal one or a trend The rate reached a peak of 23.5 desertions per 1,000 men in the regular army last March at the height of unrest in the northern provinces. It dropped to 12.6 desertions per 1,000 in July. * * * Prodded by U.S. advisors, South Vietnamsee officials attacked the desertion problem by trying to improve morale. In July, the government granted a 30 per cent pay increase to servicemen to cope with the rising cost of living. More recently, it stepped up the rate of promotions, increased the ration allowance and began improving medical, postal, school and post exchange services. WUnTal 1 54 32 A — 94 76 129b 31V4 32 4 to 10 41)4 40to 4094 + )4 47 Mto 3794 M -1 2 45Vb 45 4})* 4 1 20 3194 31)4 31)4 .... 66 20)4 20to 10)4-to iju x4S l(to 27)4 ~ —X—Y—Z— Xerox Core 1 435 171 175 171 ----““ 1.80 --------- “ Wilson Co WinnDIx 1 Woolworth Worthing * A|ax Mgnfh ,10g 18 13 Am Pet rot A .20* 2 79b ArkLaGas 1 JO 26 37 i Red 1 60 3014 : 171 f~ at.'SK.'S*ff, dend* In the forego! iWwriMMnt* paood -.....- __________ or semi-annual declaration. Special or metre dividends or payments not doslg-itad as ragulr- — KtoWtig footnol_ e—Also , extra or extras, b—Annual ■to plus stock dividend. ^Liquidating Ivldend. d—Declared or paid in 1965 lus stock 'dividend, e—Declartd or paid i tor this year. f-P*vablo In stock dur-tg 1965, estimated cash value on ax-dlvl. end or ex-dlstrlbutlon dot*, g—Paid tost ear. h—Declared or paid after stock k Copyright** by Th* Associated Praai Is Near Death DETROIT (UPI) - Doctors said today a teen-age boy beaten and kicked in a rumble probably would die without regaining consciousness. Police pressed a roundup of members of a teen-age group called the “Greasers” who allegedly stomped Rick Farwell, 18, to teach members of the rival “Frats” to “stay away from our girls.” Rick has been in a coma since the ‘ rumble Friday night. Friends said sik “Greasers" grabbed him as he tried to flee Into his car, knocked him down, stomped him and left him bleeding and unconscious beneath the auto. last week would see: first, i selling climax that would cleat the air; second, the start of ai upturn that could be called i summer rally; and, just possibly, a revival of public confidence as summer neared th Labor Day weekend which business usually thinks of as th< real — not calendar — turn oi the seasons. But Friday, Aug. 26,the Dow-Jones index of 30 industria stocks closed at 780.56, or 24.0< points lower than the close or the previous Friday. More disheartening to the traditionalists, the market hac started the week with a sharp decline in prices on increased volume. Many had hoped that this could be called a selling climax. But the final session of th* week saw a day’s drop of 11.81 points with the tape running lati the final burst of selling. Some chart followers are taking consolation from this. It ju«i could prove to be that selling climax they’ve been hoping for The waning days of summei could see a rebound from the low point. At 780, the Qow industrial index was really loU compared with the record high of 995 set in early February. AT LOSS The drop of 215 points in i little more than six months led a loss for explanations. Cited as contributing reasons were: tigh: money, higher returns fron bonds and other investments Viet Nam War uncertainties fear that the long upswing ii business was leveling off or du« for a drop, increasing labor-management friction that talk of coming tax increases. But neither separately not taken together do they seem tc offer a satisfactory answer t< why the stock market is behaving as badly as it is. There is still one traditios left, however. And that is tha' whatever the market did Iasi week, or even yesterday., doesn’t guarantee what It will do tomorrow. And that’s why there’ll always be stock trader! and market watchers. News in Brief Waterford Township police are investigating a burglary at Stephens’_ Dairy Queen, 5606 M59, yesterday in which an estimated (30 to (50 was token from a cash box. E. Arthur Pierre of 3628 Zinnia, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday the theft of (15 and a television set, two cameras and a projector, valued at (385, from his home. Iteasuiyiosilion - .... Treasury compered u responding data a year ago. Aug. 14, 196* Aug. Blanca $ 5,533,245,494.45 I I 543,532,702.20 Daposltls Fiscal Yaar July I. 21,2J7,0S5J55.99 17.106,913,371.24 Withdrawals Fiscal Year, v t . W^M-701,055.27 20,762,170,016.56 X—Total Gabt 319,055,640,413.93 316,463,173J17J5 Gold Assets 13,259,036,272.75 X — Includs *266,21 subject to statutory II tjoon I 1966 High 1966 Low 1965 High I 170.1 170J 383.1 t 213.9 178J 369.7 i isi m |i I 149.3 T62.4 308.0 SC Rats rted Record .30 Q 9-30 18-31 ! ‘.v.v.::;; ■ JlS-o.m wtt'H m i Ago 73J 90.0 79.7 92.1 __hvAgo 74J tl> 01J «J **«( few B 8.1 m IS, B ill » 82 p 91.6 15.1 91.6 (P 8; k V. i — .•Ai * Investing * I # $ By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “I stupidly refused to sell one of my holdings — 460 Reynolds Tobacco — back in 1961. My original block of 100 shares had been split twice at two-for-one and I had a paper profit of nearly 500 per cent. But I was mad at the capital gains tax. What’s your advice now for a couple wanting maximum retirement income?” L. N. I (A) My advice is to hold Reynolds despite the problems confronting the tobacco industry^, The company is well managed, as exemplified by its diversification into the food and packaging industries; financial con-dition is excellent; and within |he industry Reynolds ran£s high for its aggressive and imaginative marketing organization. Your twice-split shares even now show a paper profit of 154 per cent at their adjusted cost of 14%; and the well? secured (2 annual dividend provides a 14 per cent yield on your original investment of (5,700. Reynolds is the largest factor in the tobacco industry and it shows jthe best growth reeord. Earik ings for 1966 are expected to move up to around (3.50 a share compared with (3.30 last year. ★ * * (Q) “My two young children each have (5,000 in savings for future educational plans. How should I now invest some of these savings? My retirement income will be aided by my long employment record as a U. S. postal service employe.” J. T. (AM believe you can begin to build their individual portfolios by using about half the available cash in equal-dollar amounts of-such growth Issues as American Cyan amid; AtlanJ-tic-Richfield; Bristol-Myers; Calgon; Commonwealth Edison; Chesebrough-Pond’s; General Motors; Long Island Lighting; Sears,.Roebuck and others mentioned here recently. The other half of the children's cash can be invested' liter, to allow the market some further leeway before establishing a new base for its next up- (Copyright, 1(66) ' C—10 -THE EONTIACEBEgS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, ltititi Weather Seen as Hood Factor Research Includes Health Side Effects WASHINGTON (UPI)-Some days a person feels like finding a suitably high window and stepping out. Could it be on those occasions that the weather is partly responsible for so deplorable I rotate of mind? Recent research indicates it might be. It had long been known, of course, that weather affects man’s mood and his health. Awhile back, Edward Digon and H. Barrett Bock of the Pennsylvania Health Department studied 527 suicide cases Philadelphia. They found an apparent association between suicide and changes in barometic pressure. ★ * * This apparent association may or may not turn out to be real. But it is a fact that the state of the atmosphere, the vagaries of weather, and climatic condi-tions can cause, aggravate, provoke, or set geographical limits on a variety of human ailments. TOUCH CHOICES Suppose man some day learns how to make the weather behave the way he thinks he wants it to. Ihe chief weather controller, from a medical standpoint alone, would face some tough choices. Yon know those lovely, invigorating days we sometimes get in spring when the air is Clean and clear and bracing breezes from the poles blow in from Canada? How about ordering up more of them, in or out of season? There are those who would curse the weather controller if he did, and try to get him fired. ★ ★ * For on precisely such days, according to Dr. Helmut J3. Landsberg, a bit more ultraviolet radiation from the sun gets through the earth’s atmosphere. For a sizable segment of the population, the results will be painful sunburn and possibly, after a number of exposures, an accumulation of . damage leading to facial skin cancers. Landsberg, director of the environmental data service of - the Commerce Department’s Environmental Science Services Administration, has Jnjrt recapitulated what is known or suspected about “weather and disease.” The weather can, as noted, cause sunburn. It also can bring about heatstroke and frostbite. It can aggravate air pollution, thus contributing to asthma and other reactions to pollens or smog. Weather changes often intensify amputation scar and arthritic pains. Atmospheric conditions are suspected influences in various respiratory and heart maladies. i. By DICK BARNES LANSING p “Greed," cry the opponents. “Good government,” say the advocates. ★ * ★ “Quit pestering us,” moan the senators. * The issue: four-year terms for state representatives. Hie Home approved last week a proposed constitutional amendment which would double representatives’ terms from two to four years beginning Jan. 1, 1967. It could be acted upon by the Senate this week. • But even Wtie remired two-thirds of the Senate go along with the amendnpat, R must be approved by a public Vote before taking effect.' ' * f + h Political ramifications ooze from every pore of Ihe {dan. House appetites for four-year terms were whetted by the new Constitution, which increased Senate terms from two to four years beginning next January. •Hie four-year Senate, two- yam* House plan set by the Constitution matches the system of 31 other states Thirteen states give all .legislators only two-year Major argument fin- the longer terms is that lawmakers can devote more time to work and less to reelection. LEGISLATORS’ LAMENT The complaint of many legja-lators r~ and U.S. congressmen as well—is they can work their fjtet year Jr office tat have to campaign most of too second in order to win another year of work. * • ★ *, ' The jlouse. plan would put House elections in the same year as gubernatorial and Senate elections. Some opponents say at least part of the government should be judged by tbe people more often titan every four years. They suggest half the House could be elected at one general 1 election for four years, tbe other half at an auction' Mb’' years later. * ★ ;f, v %; Other foes say representatives just want to guarantee their new $15,000 checks for an extra two years. * * * While few senators are enthusiastic about giving the House four-year terms, few want to anger tbe House by voting down the amendment. If Michigan does go to four- * year terms for representative*, it will bttbme the fifth state to do so, Metering the examples of Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and Maryland. Short-Terms Fugitive # ROGERSVILLE, Terni. (X) -A 22-year-old suspect broke out of Hawkins County jail, but bis luck soon turned sour. He '• hitched a ride in an unmarked patrol car. The deputy sheriff recognized the fugitive and brought him back to jail. Fruit Better In 'ConfroMed Air1 Storage- By Science Service WASHINGTON, - Fresh peaches and nectarines keep better in certain “controlled atmospheres" than they do in air, scientists at the 17th International Horticultural Congress, College Park, Md., were -r told..... —_............. Peaches ripened with a good yellow color and had less flesh breakdown when they were stored in a special atmosphere containing only 0.25 per cent, 1 per cent or 3 per cent oxygen and 5 per cent carbon dioxide than when stored in air, which is 21 per cent oxygen. By lowering the level of oxygen and increasing the percent of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and slowing the ripening process of fruit, fanners could hold on to some of their crops instead of marketing the bulk of what they have grown nt harvest time when prices are lowest. Dr. Raymond E. Anderson of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultura" Research Service here reported that after ripening, fruit held in a controlled environment had better flavor and a higher acidity, giving peaches and nectarines tbe tartness many consumers like. tilNkrage conditions were studied tor two years by Dr. Anderson, horticulturalist Chester S. Parsons and pathologist Dr. Wilaoti L, Smith Jr. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 THREE COLORS I'SB SBRSBI BBS 8BBI! 1 FOOD TOWN 1 - SUPER MARKETS 1 1 PEOPLE'S ^ 8 FOOD MARKETS d M Baldwin Ave.l 127 Cwmr CfhmUa 1 l pfEN SUNDAYS 1 S Cooley LakaRd. ini** ut* Ynuv* OPM SUNDAYS I 'ta'llrtte!** I I Cur MiM ■ fl » Auburn I us l pike st. I 7N auburn st. ■ ClOSED SUNDAYS I OPEN SUNDAY fl b*fc*t*IDAY MSOTCHARD LAKE AYE. fl CMfAAL'MdMb ■ A DAYS A WEEK ■ OPEN SUNDAY Peters or Kornacki HOT Grade DOGS 39< U.S. CHOICE CHUCK STEAK I PORK CUTLETS M SEMES ® W*. M * 49** BONELESS CHUCK ROAST VALUABLE COUPON DOUBLE Gold Bell STAMPS With This Coupon and $5.00 Purchase (Exc*ptBe*r, Win* or Cigarettes) Coupon Expires Wed., Aug. 31,1966 Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer THE PONTIAC PBESg, MONDAY-AUGUST 29, I960 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas. Mrs. Bobbie J. Combs He was employed by the Arnold! Surviving are three brothers, Nursing Home. Norbert W. Giroux of Pontiac, Surviving is a sister, Mrs.[Martin Giroux of Holly and Felix Lowe of Waterford Township. Mrs. John Eilers Former Pontiac resident Mrs. Bobbie Jean Combs, 41, of New Orleans, La., died yesterday after a long illness. Her body will be at the | Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. . , _ , , She was a nightclub pianist. fe? 2SL5® (Ge' Surviving are a son, Dana ?®ne ggF* »• °f .»* ^ Wiegand of Auburn Heights; « tonight at the her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gar- Baird-Newton Funeral Home, land Wells Sr. of Auburn 1 OT'““" R,,r'0 “'',I *“ "* Heights; two brothers, Garland Wells Jr. and Gilbert Wells, both of Pontiac; and five sisters, Mrs. Thomas Trudeau of Waterford Township, Mrs. Fotch Conn of Bad Axe, Mrs. Les Hartzman of Clarkston, Mrs. Paul Jankovsky of Houston; Tex., and Mrs. Richard Miller of Mont Clair, N.J. Robert E. Davis Service for Robert E, Davis, 39, of 24 Charlotte will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial in Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery, Avon Township. Mr. Davis, formerly employed by Thomas Die & Stamping Co., died Saturday following a long illness. Surviving are hi$ wife Mary M., his mother, Mrs. Arrie Davis of Sparta, Tenn. sons, James, Gary, Brian, and Michael; and two daughters, Teresa, and Karen, all at home. Also surviving are four brothers and three sisters. Samuel D. Dickerson Service for Samuel D, Dickerson, 67, of 1986 Airport, Waterford Township, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Wilkie Funeral Home, Detroit, with burial in1 Acacia park Cemetery, Birmingham. His body will be at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home until 4 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Dickerson died yesterday. Arson Suspect Faces Charge Lapeer. Burial will be in Columbus, Neb. Mrs. Eiler died yesterday after a brief illness. She was a member of St, Stephen Lutheran Church. Surviving are two sons, Jack of Octavia, Neb., and Alvin of Bad Axe; five daughters, Mrs. Robert Johns of Waterford Township, Mrs. Herman Heck of Lapeer, Mrs. Lloyd Klien-knecht of Lapeer, Mrs. Elmer Anderson of St. Edwards, Neb. and Mrs. Allan Lambert of Caro; 31 grandchildren; and 22 great grandchildren. Mrs. James Harry Service for Mrs. James (Sarah) Harry, 62, of 23 S. Shirley, will be 11 a.m. Wednesday dV the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery- - Mrs. Harry died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy M. Bivens in Virginia and Mrs. Rose Partain of Marysville; three sons, James A. in West Virginia, Eugene E. of Pontiac and Casey of Flint; and four sisters, Mrs. Ethel L. Tisdale in Indiana, Mrs. Arlene Roscoe of Taylor Township, Mrs. Mary Andrews of Rochester and Mrs. Pauline Marsino of Waterford Township. Mrs. Harry J. Meyers Mrs. Harry J. (Barbara A.. Meyers, 64, of 1547 Joslyn, died yesterday after a long illpess. Her body is at the Voornees-Siple Funeral Home. She was a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church. A Pontiac man who allegedly started a fire last night at the Roosevelt Hotel, 125 gjj Perry faces arraignment today on a charge of arson. John D. Allen, 32, a tenant at the hotel, was arrested by Pontiac police about 10:30 p.m. after firemen had been called to the hotel for the third time in two hours. Fire Capt. George Burklow said AUen was identified as a suspect on the basis of tape-recorded telephone calls received at the fire station. Burklow said the recordings indicated each of the three calls were made by the same person. Fire was discovered only after the first call at 8:30 p.m. Firemen said a trash barrel had been ignited on a rear stairway. The flames were extinguished with no damage to the building, Burklow said. Pontiac Bicyclist listed Fair After Being Hit by Car A Pontiac boy is in fair coriai-tion at Pontiac General Hospital after being struck by a car while riding his bicycle Saturday morning. Sam Draper, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Draper of 93 Elm, suffered a broken left arm in the accident. Pontiac police said the youth was riding the bike on Sout' Saginaw near Rapid about a.m. when he was hit by a car driven by James H. Roberts, 28, of 287 E. Wilson. Roberts told police the boy turned left in front of him just before he was hit. Roberts was not cited. Comet Said to Be High in Metals PASADENA, Calif. (AP) Two scientists report that the comet Ikeya-Seki seems highly metallic. Research fellow James A. Westphal and graduate student Eric E. Becklin, both of the California Institute of Technology, said Sunday: The steady increase and decrease in temperature with distance from the sun strongly suggests that the temperature of the comet was entirely dependent upon the sun,” He and Becklin, watched the comet for 19 days last October through a telescope, measuring its heat with infrared devices. ★ k “Some people have suggested that comets are largely com-of chunks of ice and dust,” Westphal said. ‘It is to believe there could be very much of cither In the nucleus of Ikeya- Seki. Our obser-vations show that there proba- f bly isn’t any significant amount of dirt and gravel jn this one Instead, there appears to be lots of metallic material.” Bernard Giroux of Pontiac; and three sisters, Vertmica^Glroux, Mrs. Madona Christie and Mrs. Marion Barnes, all of Island Pond, Vt. Mrs. Louis A. Burke ROCHESTER—Requiem mass for Mrs. Louis A. (Rosie) Burke, 82, of 312 East Street, will be 10 Wednesday at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery by the William R. Pot ere Funeral Home. Rosary wil) be 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Funeral Home. Mrs. Burke died today after a long illness. She was a member of St. Andrew’s Church. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Louis J. Miotke of Rochester and Henry Miotke of Lake Orion; three daughters, Mrs. Anna Bressler of Pontiac, Mrs. Helen Young of East Ta-was and Mrs. Lucy Bower of Richmond; 19 grandchildren;! and 23 great-grandchildren. G. David Dumas HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for G. David Dumas, 53, of 1644 LaSalle, will be 10 a.m. tomdrrow at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Clinton Grove Cemetery, Mount Clemens, by the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake Rosary will be said at 8 this evening at the funeral home. Mr. Dumas died Saturday. A member of St. Patrick’s Church, he was employed al Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Margaret; one son, David of Farmington; his mother, Mrs. GeOrge Dumas of West Bloomfield Township; and one grandchild. Also surviving are one brother, Frank of Union Lake, and four sisters, Mrs. Raymond Purcell of Keego Harbor, Mrs. Stanley Green in California, Sister Ann David, IHM, of Pontiac and Mrs. S. W. Sovey of Waterford Township. Robert P. Elliott WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -Robert R. Elliott, 66, of 60630 Van Dyke died yesterday after short illness. His body is pt Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Delwyn D. Haskell Jr. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Delwyn D. Haskell Jr., 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Delwyn ,D. Haskell, 1690 Petrolia will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the C. J. God-hardf Funeral Home. Keego Harbor. Burial will be in Ottawa Park Cemetery, Pontiac. The boy died Saturday after a long illness. He was a pupil at Four Towns Elementary School, Waterford Township, and a member of Sunnyvale Chapel, Pontiac. Surviving besides his parents are grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Arvin Waters of Pontiac, Mr. and Mrs. William Haskell of Rogers, Ark. and Mrs. Martha C. Laing of Pontiac; two sisters, Sandra E. and Teri L., both at borne: and a brother, Thom. Burglars struck two Pontiac home* and at least three business firms over the weekend, according to Pontiac police. Hardest hit was Howard J. Newhanks, S3, of 62 Stout, who reported the loss of four watches and a camera valued at $195 and till in cash in a break-in at his home. Newhanks told police bedrooms and cabinets in the home had also been ransacked. Willie E. Woods, 35, of 603 Highland told police a 38-caliber revolver and other items as J., at home. Memorials can be made to the Children’s Leukemia Foundation of Michigan. Orville Lawson Ur. MISS U.S.A.-WORLD - Statuesque Miss Utah, Denise Blair, 19, of Layton, Utah, clutches her robe and her trophy after being named Miss U.S.A.-World in competition at the Ohio State Fair in Columbus. The hazel-eyed secretary who taped in at 36-23-36 is flanked by last’s year winner, Dianna Batts, Falls Church, Va. (left), and Miss Los Angeles, 19-year-old Gigi Dahl, who placed fourth. Next stop for the winner will be the Miss'World contest in London. Freak Death for Teen State Road Toll Is 12 By The Associated Press An evening of celebration ended in tragedy for a 17-year-old Flint youth who was killed Sunday when his head struck a traffic sign as he leaned out the window ot a moving ci Michael 'E. Bielaczyc was returning from a wedding reception with three friends when he became ill. He leaned out of the window and his head struck the sign. ★ * * The driver of the car, Michael Perrine, 18, of Flint, was ticketed a few hours earlier for speeding and .was cited for drunken driving following the fatal accident which occurred In Flint. Bielaczyc’s death, brought to 12 the number of persons killed in Michigan traffic over the weekend. OTHER FATALITIES Others killed, besides the two in the Pontiac area listed on Page A-l, included: Nickie Reed, 15, Flint, Jerome Blakeslee, 27, Chesaning, and Ed war Moorman, 63, Laings-burg, in a head-on crash Saturday near.Owosso. Linda Lou -Banks, 20, of Wayne, in a two-car smashup in. Canton Township Sunday. ★ * ★ Garold John Sawyer, 25, Elsie, whose car ran off M21 in Ovid Township of Clinton County and struck a tree Sunday. Richard Bufford Vann, 37, Gallipolis, Ohio, whose car collided with a semi-trailer truck after pulling onto M 60 from a parking lot near Jackson. Charles Mason, 54, Corunna, whose car was struck by another while attempting U-turn on a road west of Flint Saturday. Paul Farnsworth, 22, Grand Rapids, in a two-car collision Saturday in Grand Rapids. Ragnar Robertson, 62, Elberta, struck by a car ^Saturday while attempting to walk across U.S. 31 near Honor. Father, Son Listed as Fair in Avon Crash Bulldozer Tips; Driver Is Killed CHEBOYGAN (AP) A bulldozer tipped over Sunday on the bank of the Black River, pinning the driver, William Dickson, 46, of Cheboygan, beneath the machine in the water and killing him-. The accident occurred about 10 miles southeast of [Cheboygan. HOLLY - Service for Orville Lawson Jr., 18, of 908 Winifred, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral Home. Burial will be in Davisburg Cemetery. The'youth died yesterday after a long illness. He was a June, graduate of Holly High School. Found in Pontiac Boy Tells of Kidnap Escape A 9-year-old Detroit boy found yesterday afternoon by two fishermen oh Pontiac’s East Side told Pontiac police he had been abducted near his home earlier in the day. „ David C. Burgher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Burgher, said he was "grabbed” from his bicycle in the Woodward-Seven Mile area by a man who forced him into an automobile. The boy told police he was take a from the car and stepped of nis clothes by his kidnaper after the bun had driven to a grassy area near the Clinton River adjacent to Auburn Road. As the man turned to put the clothes in the car, the boy said he ran and hid, coming out after his abductor had apparently left. The two men who encountered David ealled police, who picked him up near the intersection of Auburn and Opdyke and then called the boy’s father. The kidnaper was ' white, about 45-50, tall afld slend-r, with short-cut grey hair, and 1 clothes. wearing soiled ci A Rochester man and his 10-year-old son are listed in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital after their car struck another last night. Gerald R. Nichols of 435 -j-Mtehetooft -gttd Gerald fered lacerations in the accident at Michelson and Rochester Road in Avon Township. Youth Is Struck in Head by Model Plane FORT WAYNE, Ind. . Mr. Dumas will Not even to say gwxJby, You had gone before we knew It, And only God knows why. Sadly missed by father, mother. ligation. Call OR 3-0039. $50 CASH To schools, churches, clubs, t ganlzatlons for selling Welkins v nllla ai i <-5 P.m SsW i Thurs., afternoon Aug. 10 - Mount Clemens. I the Elton Black runarw ngnv, 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake.___________ HARRY, AUGUST 20, I960, SARAH, Pertain, Eugene, Caaey, and Jamas A. Harry; dear sister of Mrs. Thai L. Tisdale, Mrs. Arlene Roscoe, Mrs. Mary Andrews, and Mrs. Pauline Marsino; also survived by 15 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, August 31, at 11 a.m. at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home with Rev. Donald Gabier officiating. Interment In Parry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr*. Harry will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) a HASKELL, AUGUST 27, 1900, DEL-WYN D. (RUSTY) JR., 1090 P»-- trolls, Union Lake; age 10; be-i—mi of Delwyn 6. Sr. —■ ------- DeGraw officiating. ■ torment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Rusty will lie In state at the fun-nerai tame. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 end 7 to 9 p.m.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the Children’s Leukemia Foundation of Michigan, 13m Grata River, Oa- MEYERS. AUGUST 31, 1900. BAR-bara A., 1547 Jeatar Avenue; aga 44; dear sister of Norbert W., Ver- 5 p.m., oi - 24734. < “HOUSE OF WIQS" 150 N. Perry ________FE 6-6214 MISSIONARY FAMILY N E 6 D S ionary work In to, AH support UPLAND HILLS FARM PICNIC GROUNDS FARM TOUR - IRISH SETTER F LOST: WHITE TOY POODLE VI... apricot ears. Answers to Andre' FE 2-3100.___________ , FE 5-0790 aft. 3. LAW PROHIBITS, ........ ft CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. )ft r);iDISCRIMINATION BE- X-ft : CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE ft. -ft SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X X CONSIDERED MORE > AT- -X ft. TRACTIVE TO PERSONS X; of one sex than the ft; -ft OTHER, advertise- ft: '■ftMENTI ARE PLACED ft: & UNDER THE MALE OR " ft) FEMALE COLUMHS FOR ft •ft CONVENIENCE OF READ- X; •X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARB ft-(ft NOT INTENDED TO EX- ft'. X- CLUDE PERSONS OF -X ft: EITHER SEX. Help Wanted Malt •. Call 332-3053 0-10 ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office, 710 Rlker Building, branch of Detroit's well known Debt Aid, Inc. to serve the Pontiac Community. ----- GET OUT OF DEBT — AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT AND HARASSMENT. I-A GRILL COOK - EXCELLENT pay and benefits — Pled Pipers Restourent — 4370 Highland Rd. FE 8-0741. 2 SERVICE STATION MEN, GOOD pay for the right men, 25 years or over. Apply 1599 N. Woodward, Birmingham._____________________ A-l OPENING FOR EXPERIENCED real estate salesmen, extra benefits for right person. All inquiries confidential. Contact Warren Stout, 1450 N. Opdyke Rd., Pontiac, Michigan. Member Multiple Listing ACCOUNT* - JUNIOR AND SEN-ior. Many high paying openings leading to management. Cell Mr. Quarnstrom, INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL, 1000 Woodward near 14 Mila. 042-8260._____________ AIRLINE TRAINEES INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL, 1000 Woodward, near 14 Mila. 642-8268.______________________ ALERT MAN, 21 TO 34, MECHANI-cally Inclined, good with figures to be trained for shipping and receiving department In small manufacturing plant In Pontiac. Study work with growing comapny. Starting rate $2.75 per hr. plus banefits. Call 330-7111. tat. 3-5 p.m.___ AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE trainee, high school graduate, must have mechanical ability. Lyon Manufacturing. 23001 Telegraph, Southfield. A PART TIME JOB $200 PER MONTH APPLIANCE INSTALLERS, WORK study yur around, no layoffs for right men. Apply 421 W. Lincoln, Madison Heights. DELTA CO. Experienced or will tralnT A mechanically Inclined, 10 o Apply in person, Air-Way Lanes, 4025 Highland Rd. ASSISTANT MANAGER national paint MFG. Working knowledge of bookkeeping, credit and collections, with Mies back ground. Salary with fringe benefits, vacation. Insurance and ATTENTION Starts Immediately Mechanically Inclined Man NEW CAR FURNISHED No experience sands of people i with one low pay______ ford. No limit as to amount owed and number of creditors. For those that realize, "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOUR3ECF OUT OP DEBT." Home appointment arranged anytime , *T WjCHARGE. Hours 9-7 Mon. thru PH., Sat. 9-5 FE Mitt (BONDED AND LICENSED) 2X1____________________________ HALL FOR RENT, PARTIES OR receptions. OR 3-5202.___________ It Is the Law Residential builders, rasldsntlal alteration and maintenance contractors. September 1,. you must have a license and bond registered with the stele of Michigan. S2000 bond — $50 for 3 years. $5000 bond — $125 for 3 years. Bonds can be executed- in your office I* applications ere complete. Cell John-ny Clarkson 002-1014 or 537-0055. BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The | Press Office in the fol>, J lowing boxes: 4, II, 17, 21, 21, 28, I 30, 32, 27, 38, 41, 48, 48, I 41, 58, 85, 71, 88, 84 Fanorai Directors 4 GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME ---Harbor, Ph.f- coAts FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 07; DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Home "Deslgnad tor Funarals” Hunfoon Voorhees-Siple _______________..ivolvlng modi- :i etlon and contract negotiation. Must be member of Michigan State Bar. For additional Information and application tor examtna-------------------|—ntotCIv- ATTENTION HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE STUDENTS Part-time jobs for students attending high school or college will soon be available for boys 17 to J9 years of age. This is afternoon work and you must be attending s o m e school. No experience necessary. BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE PONTIAC PRESS ATTENTION Opening for dlatrlbutor. Nationally known beverage, established route, Pontiac area. Experience net necessary. Must be young and aggressive. Call collect, Mr. Staffer. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., KE 7-7188, Detroit, ATTORNEYS Career Opportunities As Labor Hearings Officer \ State of Michigan - Perma-' nent' civil aervlca positions i. with outstanding > Starting salary $11,4 to "ust have five • transportation. Apply li ’"HOWARD JOHNSON'S RESTAURANT 0450 Telegraph & Maple Rd. BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS AND Special Machine Builders Opening with 26-yur-old company, good working condition; pension, top wages, top benefits. Steady yur around work with overtime, ptaortonlty to become skilled In an phases of automation assembly rrw'o: BUS AND PIZZA BOY CARPENTERS HELPERS WITH CHIEF DRAFTSMEN DESIGNERS DETAILERS APPRENTICE DETAILERS Permanent position on special machines. THE GANGLER CORP. 4223 Edge land, Royal Oak 549-0280 Days 025-1009 Evenings CONCESSION HELP AND USHERS, over 18. Apply at Waterford Drlve- ln Theater otter 1 p.m,_ COOK. SHORT ORDER. EXPERI-enced only. Counter booth operation. Hospitalization. Paid lift Insurance. Apply In parson. Stuk and Egg Restaurant. 53V5 Dixie. Waterford.__________________ CLERK-PURCHASING Young man for position available Sept. 15. High school graduate who has completed military sero- under construction,mPVRM at Detroit. Clerical aptitude essential- Some knowledge of typing ' helpful. Duties will include Re celvlng. Distribution of stores and supplies. Stock control. Inventory benefits. Apply Personnel Dlrec- CLERK, PART TIME, 5-10 P.M., Tues. and Thurs. Noon-10 p.m. Sot. Mills Pharmacy, Birmingham. DELIVERY MAN, NIGHTS, 5-1 DISHWASHERS, 18 OR OVER, FULL lima. Apply Biff's, 575 S. Hunter Blvd., Birmingham.._________ DIE CAST MACHINE OPERATORS, top wages. LI 7-2900._________ DIE SETTERS Smalt stamping plant needs die setters tor progressive dies and automatic toads. Steady work with overtime end fringe benefits. Day or night shift. Automatic Press Products, 185 Elizabeth, Lake Orion.______________________ DRY CLEANING, WOOL PRESSER, mgnrs. k a nouic dots, ieie-graph at Maple. (I5M). DISHWASHER. OVER 18. RE-tlru welcomed. Good worktop. CApply°nin person™ ^toak^nd Egg Rastaurant, 5395 Dixit, Water- DISPLAY TRAINEE. NO EXPERI-ence necessary. Apply Personnel Office, 5th floor, Waite's._ DRAFTSMEN WANTED IMMEDIATE OPENING For Experienced Personnel N APPLY OR WRITE TO: Combustion Engineering Inc, SAGINAW DIVISION (FORMERLY WICKES BOILER CO.) 601 N. WASHINGTON AVE. SAGINAW,MICHIGAN 48607 EARN AND LEARN TO BE A Davey Tru Surgeon. High school graduates, experience not neces-sary. On-the-lob training program. Many areas tor advancement. Wa require experienced climbers, trimmers, foremen. Fringe benefits Vacation pay Holiday pay Premium pay Hospitalization Life insurance and retirement program. Learn to operate hydraulic cranes, aerial baskets, chippers, stump removal. If you are a high school graduate and like outdoor work don't mlsa this opportunity. Corns Irmlaghan ■17\MHa Ri For Interview c EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE ie^memtars M^.S. Call Experienced machine opera-tors( lathes, milling, 0D. and. ID. grinding. Day or afternoon shift. Steady work, overtime and fringe benefits. Briney Mfg. Co., 1165 Seba Rd. between Crescent Lk. and Pontiac Lk, Rds„ off W. M-59. nlclpal finance H I ble. Salary, $0,750 .. i experience. Groat 1944-45 at...HI „ minion, rresent capital Improvement program and parking structure, $2.1 million. Apply Personnel Officy, 151 Martin St., Blrmlng- PAINTERS. B~IR- FORMER CAB DRIVERS Make $250 weekly—No canvassing. Call Mr. Mayer today, 539-0404. FOR PRODUCTION MACHINING. MULLS, DRILL AND LATHES. DAYS OR AFTERNOONS. 289 SOUTH ST., ROCHESTER. ____ FRY COOK APPRENTICE, MUST , be able to work variation shifts, 18 to 25 yurs. Biffs Telegraph at GAS INCINERATOR INSTALLERS. We need several good installers tor domestic Incinerators, premium pay. Apply 421 W. Lincoln, GAS STATION ATTENDANT, • a.m. to 3 p.m„ 0 days. Good pay for permanent parson. Call Jim, EM 3-4155. _____________ Gulf, Telegraph and Maple.______ GENERAL KITCHEN HELP, DAYS, excellent benefits. Pled Piper Restaurant, 4378 Highland Rd. FE 8-0741. GAS STATION ATTENDANTS -Must be experienced, full or part time, good 'pay, local ret. Sunoco Station, Telegraph and Maple Rds. 1 GRILL MEN WANTED * Excellent benefits. Paid meals, hospitalization, pension plan and paid vacations,. Apply In person. Elias Big Boy Restaurant Tolegreph at Huron Olxto Hwy- at Silver Lk. Rd. > openings, d Birmlng- EXPANDING SAtR~STAFF Two salesmen needed, bonuses, demonstrator, contact: FRED DRENDALL LLOYD MOTORS Lincoln—Mercury-Comet 1250 Oakland 333-7863 NAME . ADDRESS STATE ... , Joinjfe1 Leader in the_ Medium Priced Field of the Auto Industry APPLY NOW FOR; Production Work (No Experience Necessary) ALSO: QUALIFIED JOURNEYMEN FOR TOOL I. DIE WORK OR MAINTENANCE JOBS IN PLANT ENGINEERING DEPARTMENTS Many of these jobs ore available now and] others will start with production of thp 1967 model. i All of the GM employe benefit programs will accrue as you enjoy top earnings with a winning team. MAKE APPLICATION AT OUR EMPLOYMENT OFFICE rontiac Motor Division GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION Pontiac, Michigan GENERAL MOTORS IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER HUSKY YOUNG MAN TO SERVICE exchange type water softener. Full time, will train. Apply In person: Pontiac Soft Water Service, 88 Falrgrove. _____________________ INSPECTOR FOR 2ND SHIFT. PRE-ciston Automatic Parte Co. 300 S. Blvd, Pontiac, Mich.____________ KITCHEN HELPER AND GRILL man or woman — Morey's Golf and Country Club - 2210 Union Apply Sea Ray Boats, I pur Rd.. Oxtord, Mich. _____________1 MAN TO WORK AS CLERK IN auto ports store. Must ha experienced. Hollerback Auto Parts. Phone 338-4851. __________________% MAN NEEDED TO CLEAN AND recondition used cars. Exp. not necessary. Walled Lk. 024-4561. MAN FOR FURNACE WORK, BOIL-ar work, duct work and alr-con-dltlonlng. Apply at 3)01 Orchard Lk. Rd. 083-3100. MW#, FOR OFFICE WORK. SEND MEN WANTED NOW TO TRAIN AS ACCIDENT INVESTIGATORS! Insurance companies pay top salaries for trained claim Investigators. New mu hired daily by various companies . . . action-packed outdoor work. Keep present |ob until ready to switch. Company car usually furnished WE CAN SHOW YOU I Write NOW -‘■AIR MAIL for complete details. Ab- INSURANCE ADJUSTERS SCHOOL Needed Immediately MEN TO WORK WITH NEWSBOYS AS ^ DISTRICT MANAGER Must be a high school graduate and have a late model 40-HOUR WORK WEEK CAR ALLOWANCE USUAL EMPLOYEE BENEFITS ARLO McCULLY CIRCULATION MANAGER THE PONTIAC $ESS NEW PROGRESSIVE HARDWARE Store has opening for 1 assistant manager, end I semi-skilled hardware clerk. Good'pay and working conditions. Chance for good Mure. Pontiac Area. All applications strictly confidential Pontiac Press Box 37. . NIGHTS-RESTAURANT, HIGHEST pay for combination dish machine operator, porter. Biffs, 4535 Tele- O ffEIL REALTY HAS OPENING for experienced seluman. We expect 1960 sales to surpass ell previous records — your Income potential is unlimited. Call Mr. Proksch, ules manager tor personal interview. Rev O'Nell, Realtor 3520 Pontiac’i.eke Road ’ 21. Contact Mr. Bryan Contact Personnel Dept. Pontiac PRODUCTION WORKERS Experience not necessary. Fisher Body Division 900 Baldwin Ave. Pontiac, Mich. 332-8301 An equal opportunity employer RETIRED MAN OR BOY THROUGH school to pick fruit. 23) N. Squlr- rel. Auburn Heights.____________ REAL ESTATE SALESMEN I need two conscientious sales people, with at least six months experience. Excellent working conditions, Multiple Listing Service, building program and progressive Help Wenttd NMe SALESMEN^ Need 2 capable men to follow up buying opportunities in the Pontiac ana In the rul estate line. ANCHOR-POWELL. CORP. atkm. Telegraph at Long Lake. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT. DEPENDABLE, EXPERIENCED ONLY. FULL TIME, DAYS. $2.00 AN HR. TEXACO STATION, WOODWARD AND ADAMS RD., BIRMINGHAM._______________ SHIPPING CLERK WANTED Sporting goods. Spalding Sales Corp. Phone Ml 4-1550 fef In- tervlew appointment._______ TAILOR - PRESSER FOR MEN'S shop. Phone 040-1942.________ TOOL AND DIE LEADERS SURFACE GRINDERS AIR’CONDITIONED SHOP HIGHEST QUALITY DIES AND MACHINES BUILT AT KOPPY Drill Press Operators TV SERVICE MAN, SWEET'S RA-dlo end Appliance, Inc., 422 W. Huron, FE 4-5077._____________ WAREHOUSE MANAGER Ambitious man wanting an exi t the largest reta D—$ WATER SOFTENER INSTALLA-tien man. 5 toady employment tor dependable men. Salary and truck furnished. Apply In Parian, 1:38-u ajn. Michigan water Sattatatg Service. 259 Frank 8t. Sitotktgtatu. Watersoftener Salesman everything. 8108 . :k drew while training. 1 newest salesman made r S5go last weak, but ha YOUNG MAN, MECHANICALLY inclined, Interested In avIattM, II yurs or older, full time. Apply Help Wonted Female Hi ______ MW k ______________ meet the public no short hand re-quired. Give age, marital * status, --------- —1 starting v— ' 1-A GRILL COOK - EXCELLENT pay end benefits — Pled Pipers Restaurant - 4370 Highland Rd. FE 8-0741. ____________________ and auto furnished. FE 8- BABY SITTER. 2 CHILDREN- CALL after 5 pro. 0B2-4719.__ BXBY SITTER, OVER 18, LIGHT duties. FE 5-8395. After 0 p.m. SITTER, LIGHT HOUSE- BABY SITTER I Paid RETAIL SALESMEN 9200 PER WEEK while1 training If you .—, No canvassing. Experi- ence In furniture — lewelry — Insurance — vacuums — clothing— or any retell line helpful. Company over 50 yurs old near Detroit In Warren, Michigan. Call today to 9 p.m. Mr. Mayor. Aru Coda 313-539-0404.______________ ROY BROTHERS STANDARD. 285 N. Telegraph needs full time experienced help days. Paid vacations. Paid Blue Cross. Overtime Apjjly ELECTRO-MECHANICAL ^ASSEMBLERS immediate; openings,7 Prior Assembly experience desirable, as well as mechanical aptitude ahd/or electronics training/Heavy lifting may be required in' some job duties. / NEWLY LOCATED PLANT PROGRESSIVE FRINGE BENEFITS EXCELLENT GROWTH OPPORTUNITY APPLY AT, PLANT FACILITy FROM: 9 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M. 9:00 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. MON.-WED.-FRI. /TUES.-THURS. or Phone 651-8811 to Have, Application Mailed Holley Computer Products 1450 NORTH ROCHESTER ROAD ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN A Subsidiary/of Control Data Corp. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER AIRCRAFT MANUFACTURING LOCKHEED - GEORGIA COMPANY A Division of Lockheed Aircraft Corporation Immediate Openings in MANUFACTURING AREA for Assembly Manufacturing Engineers Fabrication Manufacturing Engineers Tool Engineers Tool Planners and Tool Designers Jig and Fixture Builders Tool and Die Makers / Plastic Tool Builders Pattern Makers—Plaster Template Makers Milling Machine Operators MAKE YOUR MOVE NOW . . . COME TO ATLANTA INDUSTRIAL CENTER OF THE SOUTH ■ SUPERIOR AEROSPACE BENEFITS Call Collect - 404 875-4784 — Monday through Saturday OR , WRITE TO: Dallas Shelton, 834 West Peachtree Street, N.W., Atlanta, Georgia 30308, Dept. D(2)-145. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST beauticians needed for new!1 shop opening stink..FE 0-0e47. i BEAUTICIAN NEEDED. COIFFURE) For Amo 4644 W. Walton Blvd Drayton Plains, 6734712.____ BEAUTY OPERATOR TO MANAGE shop. Joe's -Beauty Shop. OL 2- 333 BE ASSURED OF A WONDERFUL Christmas! Earn UO M IU a week on your spare time. Openings for capable ambitious women handling Avon Cosmetics. Call FE 4-0439 or write PO Box ft, Drayton Plains. ______________ Bookkeeper, must be high CASH OFFICE CLERICAL Interesting Public Contact Wort lust Have Cash Office or Cred Adjustment Experience. EMPLOY#®Tt OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall CLERK TYPIST 1 ■ 25 or over. Immediate open-I II our credit department. CASHIER, GENERAL ebleMo meet the.'public 625-5071 bet. Hi a.m. <. Mon.-Frl. Good P< .BOOKKEEPERS ASSISTANT Typing.^ IjUng, telephone, flexlb 40(0 Telegraph Rd. at Long VL?ke|, time cashier over 25. 5 p.m. until 1 a.m. Paid hospitalization, meals, vacation and pension plan. Apply In person. Big Boy Restaurant. Tel- COUNTER AND OFFICE GIRL, "ust do typing. Apply Berg Clean-s. 4700 pixie Hwy. ClartstoR, opportunity lor a COUNTER GIRLS, (PAID HOLIDAYS ccesshd1 chain. Can V^S£s' Cteaners!"^ t of home nr in Woodward Blrmlnghat (^rlence.^ompany provides aU ma. vestment required. Our reputation Send complete back ground Information. Alt rdeplies confidential. Write Pontiac Press Box 31.____1 COOK FULL TIMEv RETIREMENT CURB- GIRLS KITCHEN HELP dental Assistant pontiac OIAl FOR LIGHT CLEANING A —jurS 8 V. Maple WIHBPV lu 4 to work in dry cleaning plant. 447-1743. iIRL FOR COUNTER WO*i.I Inspection, will train. CelUn's Oaan-— 650 Woodward,' QL 2-7711, DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR, EX-— -need only. Bob White Cleen- . Birmingham Ml 6-6733._ DRY CLEANING, WOOL PREfiSER, TURE TND DEPENDABLE. HAVE OWN TRANSPORTATION. VICINITY OF WATKINS LAKE, S3S-S40 WEEK TO START, DEPENDING UPON EXPERIENCE. 336-9294 — FORE 5. EXPERIENCED BEAUTI-■ Fashions, cross from ne 332-5052. . Hausman 651- n'FEMALE CLERKS, £ Concession and cashier, over s’eat'V' 18. Apply at Waterford Drive-In! 7:30-3-30, fice. Good salary with unlimited B opportunity. Call FE 2-3115.___ DEPENDABLE WOMAN NEEDED Sherman Prescription, A FbmbIb 7jWgr* Wwrttd MnIb WAITRESSES — > FOR FULL Ml ?, c HOUSEKEEPER, LIGHT DUTI& ■ ' "Iren, sleep in. Weaken i nights per week ft torfclng nurse to help tsband. He Is a writer-Requires very little lary open. Write Pontlec HOUSEKEEPER FOR A school OOP. 363-215». I I children HOUSEKEEPER TO ASSIST AAOTA-er wit# 5 small children. 3 days a week. (30. Rochester —- “~-transportation. 652-6741. HOUSEWIVES - MOTHERS, START now; earn money tor extras,---h Silks Clothing offers you IMMEDIATE OPENINGS, FULL OR part time for attractive and Intelligent woman with outstanding, rapid growing organization. ferable age 18 or over. Gool ture, unlimited opportunity am cellent training for qualified „JP son. For personal Interview call for appointment: FE (-1— KITCHEN HELPER AND GR_________ ---or woman — Morey's Go# rive own ~r«r.; Pofl *n* Sunds, 1045 Baldwin Aye. 1 LADY FOR DIVERSIFIED GENER-tk plus gas el. GENERAL HOUSEHOLD CLEAN- al offiea work' *YPjP0 required. I Ing. 3 days a week. FE 8-6581. Please write, giving age, educa —-------- 1 tion, family status, |ob and pa) Information fo Post Office Bo) No. 65, Pontiac._________________ LADY WITH REFERENCES FOR baby sitting — light housekeeping. 4 to 5 days per week. For appoint- ment please cell 646-7982._______ LADY FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK and companion for Invalid — llve-ln 6 days, good wages t< person. OR 3-9156.___________ LADY TO TRAIN IN SALES HOME furnishings, gifts end lewelry Must be neat appearing and hi.-Pleasant personality. Salary and Aluminum Bidg. Hems 1-A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING Awnings, Storm Windows E 5-9545 JOE VALLELY OL 1- Painting and Decorating ALUMINUM SIDING INSTALLED DEi-fUT W0RK|A) INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR R 4-3(67. . painting, free estimates, work PATIOS AND guaranteed. Reasonable rates. 682- . FE 5-3389. CEMENT1* ' QUALITY ^AINTING. REASON- LOW, LOW PRICES ON ALUMINUM combination windows and doors' and aluminum siding. OL 1 —* LtVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER/ 2 CHIL-dren. Bloomfield area. TR 3-7200/ Ext. $548/ 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m./ 644- 1239 evenings._____________ LADY FOR MEN'S ALTERATIONS. Phone 646-1943. ft TV/ FE 4-9802. Architectural Drawing DRIVE-WAYS Free Estlmetes PARKING LOTS, TENNIS COURTS, driveways. Reliable Contractors, Inc. 363-2423. TAG ASPHALT PAVING , Boots Repaired Brick A Block Service Building Modernization Springfield Building Co. I 2-CAR GARAGES, 20'X20', S875. WE| k, footings, basement ai LOUNGE AND FOOD WAITRESS wanted to work evenings from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m., good wages. Call Mr. Elwell Piano Tuning , Ceramic . Tiling $, Est.’ABH Sales. A Dressmaking, Tailoring ___ Eavestroughing AAA ALUMINUM GUTTERS' MSS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE eavestroujjhlng service, free est Plastering Service PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES D. Meyers, 363-9S9S, 674-2448. PLASTERING REPAIRS, REASON- ^ Electrical Services ABTEC CO. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS 682-6234 Residential Commercial Industrial Excavating x Cook. 682-6145. Fencing MATURE WOMAN TO BABY-SIT, s. Cell after 3 p.m. 682-1823. . Rental Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS — POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn Open Sun. FE 46KB 1 NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS - CLARKSTON ROOF ING COMPAN Y, LIGHT FACTORY WORK. DRILL ess, tapping, and light lathe rk. All shifts. Experienced — red but not required. Call nes between 2-4 p.m. for * SALARY $425 MONTH Phone Personnel Manager fo t Pontiac Proas Box S3, a MATURE WOMAN FOR CUSTOM-er office, part-time work, 3 to 7 p.m. and Sat. Apply to Miss Davidson, Pontiac Laundry, 540 -Telegraph, MATURE PERSON TO TAKE SOME dictation, answer telephone toijiEB clerical work. This Is a pe ant position with paid yamPli and other fringe benefits. Write MATURE DEPENDABLE WOMAN fm kitchen help. 120 p.m. shift. Mrs. Todd, weekdays before . ,.m. 651-9381. _________ MODERN NURSING HOME WITH 230 beds In need of a licensed beautician who likes working -m the aged. Contact Seminole MODERN NURSING HOME WITH 130-bed addition In need of LPN ‘ RN Supervisors Septic Tank Bldg. Shown by Toy Chest Dealer Ann Ort — 682-1833 Hy Sanding j ^ Stamp Removal L. BILLS SR., NEW AND STUMP REMOVAL. FREE Tree Trimming Service LEONARD'S FLOOR SERVICE Id floors made like new Floor Laying 25 yr t. 627-3775 Ct | NOW REPLACING SUMMER HELP* openings on night shift for waitresses no experience necessary, will train. Excellent benefits. Paid meals, ho: pitallzatlon, pension plan and pal Elias Big Boy Restaurant ! Telegraph at Huron i Dixie Hwy. at Silver Lake Rd. j PART TIME Floor Tiling Pedy-Bul# Garage Co. OR 3-5619. 2-CAR GARAGE- %m Also Alum, windows/ doors/ siding. |a-T dARPBT, FLASTtC> CERAMK Lartd5< GRAVES CONTRACTING and, Jl°“r Fre* «'■ 332-3259;j71-. _ ^..OSLAtUaiJ-^r 523-1297 ^ WAITRESS FOR DINING ROOM Day ahlft. Over 10. Rad's Drlve- In. OR 3-7173.______________ WAITRESS. MORNING SHIFT. NO VAITRESS WANTED TO W O R evenings from 6-1 e.nf. at Ri taurant and 4bunge. Good pi For further Information, Coll hi Elwell. UL 2-3410. Work Wanted Female Plains. Rocco's. WANTED: I R DIVERSIFIED OF- simple bookkeeping and be at “■‘i with the public. Mi m transp. and be able e evening per week. Gl wrwnce, starting wage e Reply Pontiac Press Oi WASHING AND IRONING PICKUP BoUdlng Services-Supplies 13 WOMAN FOR GENERAL CLEAI. ' child cere, 3 babies, 5 days, own room and it have ref., S40 wkly. WOMAN FOR OFFICE, ANSWER phone end simple filing,---Am Ing. Orlon-Oxford area preferred. Apply in pen 5 p.m. Wesfco Heatln WOMAN OVER 25 FOR F work, had feeding, sit chines and punch preti YOUNG WOMEN INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION will employ woman, 10-22, to ' In Its personnel control and i YOUNG WOMEN FOR INTEREST-Ing office work, type 50 words per minute, no experience necessary. Miss Miller, INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1800 Woodward near 14 Mile. 642-0268. H. Meyers. OR 3-1345. TAILOR FOREMAN SMALL FARM WANTED, with option to buy, small payment. 330-6694. Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND alterations. Mrs. B Landscaping 1-A MERION BLUE SOD, DELIV- A. Johnson & Son, Realtors 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 Moving and Tracking______22 AA MOVING Careful, enclosed vans, Insured, low rates, free estlmetes, UL 2-3999 er 628-3518. Apartments, Furnished 37 BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS EM 3-7820 Painting a Help Wanted M. or F. A — EXPERIENC secretary, excellent - EXPERIENCED PRIVATE secretary, excellent opportunity for qualified person. Apply Mr. Lewis, Lewis Furniture Co., 62 5. Saginaw. g! Wanted Children to Board 28 RELIABLE LICENSED M <3 cleaning and dishwashing. Steady lob, top wages. Morning or night shift. Only mature, responsible person need to apply. Bloomfield Canopy, 6560 Orchard Lake. Rd., 626- L ROUND COOK, EXPERIENCE ot necessary, If interested' MM --I FE 0-9971. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED 4 Postlve * 1 4 Neg. $7.00- 510.00—S DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE Pontiac FE 4 1342 Wtdo Track Dr., W. Mon. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Full « .rsar Bank 10 e openings, < xc. opportunl at Birmingham 10 E. Maple Rd. BUS B0YS-BUS GIRLS Experienced. 4616 It, Woodward, Royal Oak. EXPERIENCED TYPIST-GENERAL office work, permanent for qualified pereon — Apply Lewis Furnl-ture Co. 62 So. Saginaw. NEW GROWING COMPANY NEEDS full-time help. High school grai' preferred. Apply Spartan's Pi Dept. 2045 Dixie.____________________ SALES PEOPLE CONTINGENTS ON CALL AVAILABLE 3-8 HRS. DAILY Experience Desirable— But Not Essential EMPLOYM?lIf OFFICE Hudson's Pontiac Mall >y filling, weeding, li clearing House Raising - -twwse- RAretN««=Ft0e* - -LEVELING FREE ESTIMATES All Types of Remodeling Kitchan cupboards, additions, attic rooms, recreation roams, .garages,. 61umilum‘MQln^rrOOTmO: rPWTBS! > G & M^Construttion Co. , IS N. Saginaw_________FE 2-1211 — 1 ANY TYPE OF REMODELING | Irrigation Large or small lobs. Local work. ~ ---..... AMir work* guaranteed* ln nuyncws, |»nd«r«nlnn Dnrinn. nnrfinn Inn. CEMENT AND MASONRY WORK,! CEMENT WORK FOR PARTIC-i ULAR PEOPLE. BERT COM-MINS. FP8-Q245. TALBOTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum. JSulJdln^ M| ” '--- Moving and Storage TSSSi Painting and Decorating1 A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING PSON FE 40364 •i Pickups .MVP TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMEttf Telegraph r-w71,...... SALESWOMAN, lerienee necessai Raal irv, we •Ity, 13 parlancad beautician. Racepttslnoi periancad beautician. Racaptioniat “ gt knowledge of tyi I. and filing. Ca Top SOME Ixpfgi- mg, encc, parr Time. Youngland ChlL FE _________ .. mT.CN mIS' dXl: *■ T*l*Bf*ph' snort or6(n.Aaowai co3k. SECRETARY-fYPIIT FOR FhYsi-i ^ Lanro,' cans ottka. Salary open. Reply l-~> WOODWARD 1 Pontiac Praw Box 30- FE 4-14421 ABSOLUTELY „ prices paid roperty and lai rs waiting. Call nvw. J. J. JOll REALTY 2 3410 _________682-0282 Traverse City Vicinity CENTRAL LAKE, MICH, bedroom lake trout Proa TV. tf contracts. Buy- Pontiac Farm anda patio. A r--> -» —i 6,500. Quick LARGE DINING AREA WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. ROOM RANCH, ON LAKE AT-tached garage, family room, flre-PlacO, clean. (15,500. 625-1970. i A-A-A BETTER BUY REPOSSESSED FHA AND VA HOMES $50 down and monthly payments a low as $60. Call us Tor locations. ANCH0R-P0WELL C0RP. Dial L-l-S-T-l-N-O or LI 7-9000 An Exceptional Value Beautiful Rambling White 00s* own Interior d______ 1. $17,950- Fowler Realty AS LOW AS SBOO DOWN 514,950 FULL PRICE Bi-level and ranches. 3 bedroom: full basement, lake privileges, lot as large as V* acre. Model on ! -Commerce Rd. near Welled Lake. FAMILY TAILORED HOMES. ________________624-4200. heat, huge attic for storage an fenced back yard. Close to cor venences and Drayton Plain: YORK AT ROCHESTER Cozy country, living In 4 bedroom, 2 bath home on 3 acratvwlth 2 car garage. Immediate 'possession. $20,500. Sharp 3 bedroom brick ranch with full bostmont. 2 car garage. Close to schools. Quick possession. SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE bargain Off Ooklend Ave. - ' ■ large lot — full bat matlc heat — clos .MSytWMibYer... FREE! fV^buy^h!, WRIGHT REALTY CO. 312 Oakland Ave. FE 2-9141 After 7:30 call. FE 4-7762 BEAUTIFUL home. Fireplace In living room, large screened porch, breozewoy, — ----- — landfeaped ---------- Springfield Township, with Big Loka privileges. It's neat and dean, has natural flre-(.lace^Th. * "only (1* YORK — WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plelns BLMMFIRLD ORCHARDS SUBDI- room ’ bilevel, 2-car attacNed g rage, range and refrigerator, ca landscaped. S24.900. Shown by a polntment. FE 8-8139, BRICK 3-BEDROOM Fgll basement. Attached _ H brick garage. -75' wide tot. Paved street. C#yT water In g»5"hSSS aqu#y. Waterford area. All brick development. Phone C°riCHUETT C RANCH, 4 BEDROOML 11 I, 536,950. OL 14773. 3-bedroom ranch-style home at 159 Gaga St, Living room, dining ell and hall carpeted, oak floors in balance. Kitchen has ample cabinet space; full bath also with shower. Entire basement Is tiled. Fairly new home on a quiet street wltn other similar well kept homes. Owner Is making career with Armed Forces. $14,500 with $450 down on FHA mortgage er loss with Gl morgage. Kenneth G. Hempstead, Realtor E 4-8204 105 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY $10 Deposit OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 GAYLORD LAKE FRONT, 60x475 toot lot. Ranch home. Built 1951. Deep f r * a z *, stove, water softener, drapes and carpeting Included. Finished recreation room with bar, walk-out basement, sandy swimming beach with dock. Sea this now. Call MY 2-2(21 or FE 1-9693, SEVEN ROOM ranch home, flrit- LAWRENCE W.^GAYLORD HIITER CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES -large 2 bedroom and bath, oak floors, basement, 2 car garage. OAKLAND LAKEFRONT - vacant, 6 rooms and bath, large living room with fireplace, fenced lot, sand beach. Land contract terms. basements, gas heat, til,550 on your tot. To see the model call ‘ * HIITER, REALTOR; 3792 ■RPP.. both, n Drayton Plelns abounds I. Has fireplace, dining ind front porch for rock- YORK HOUSES! le Hwy., Drayton Plelns HOUSES! 4 BEDROOM RANCHES COLONIALS -SUBURBAN LIVING 100 FOOT LOTS VILLA HOMES, INC. RED BARN VILLAGE NO. 1 West of M-24 between Lake Orion and Oxford behind Alban's Country Cousin. Model phone 628-1565 IJCNOW YOU WILL BE SURPRISED o. Hampshire, Fruehour «■ Strubto Carpeted living room, hall, and l bedroom. Dining room, kitchen, an utility. 7 closets. 2V* car garage, black top drive. 2 shaded lots beautifully landscaped. Completely fenced with link Iplnt fence. Move right In, there's nothing to do. (14/600 with sill per mouth an land contract. Bring your dajtoslt CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR 21 W. Walton 330-4006 Multiple Listing Service IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CLARKSTON AREA 2 brand new 3 bedroom ranches. ng. Call U H. R. Corp. 674- JUST COMPLETED—3 BEDROOMS, siding, c— , oak fl LAKE FRC " —" - -------- -------u ---------- -------------1. S39.500. Shown1 by appalnftnenl. OR 4— LAZENBY WATERFORD TWP. 4 bedrooms, nicely carpeted la— p.,ra<^*^h»n^ ■V THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29. 1966 D-$ 49 Sale M SCHOOL HadMm bells •w -IJeSew*. pImom Sab Houses 49 j S«le Houses room a fenced V P° HAGSTROM, Realtor j .MULTIPLE listing service *00 W. Huron OR 4-03SI Mixed Neighborhood No down'payment First month fret MODEL OPEN AFTERNOONS 1- westowITrIalty 556 Bloomfield Near Luther FE 1-2703 aftemooni dinette, kitchen ' road, mr deep, numerous t NORTHERN HIGH RANCHER — new 3 bedrm., ful basement, OeHHer btrchtone hitch an, fully Insulated, storms ami screens. WE BUILD ON YOUR LOT YOUNG-BILT HOMES , REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RuimII Young 334-3S30 S3Vfc W. Huroi NEEDS FIXING, j basement, comer k $4,000. $500 down, U m ..... 100 W.T Moward. Save Auto. FE1 5-327$ or FE S-2397._______ | NEAR PONTIAC MOTORS School days here, elementary, Jr. High and High School, within 3 B|gg|g * |—1——------rted living garage, paved street, neat and clean, only 6 years old. $13,000 St EMPLEToiSr REALTOR WILL SOON RINGI IMMEDIATE POSSESSION RANCH* KLEVEL QUAD-LEVEL — COLONIAL ENJOY FISHING—SWIMMING—BOATING” Distinctive Homes by ROSS MODELS OPEN 2-8 P.M. DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY Colonial 4 Bedroom 4 3-Bedroom Ranch $25,900 Including Base Lof OFFICE: LAKELAND ESTATES Model Home OR 3-8021 "A fine builder with en excellent reputation" TRADES ACCEPTED . Close to schools shopping and churches LAKELAND ESTATES (U mile north of Walton Blvd. Dixie Highway) OR 3-8021 land. Pud price SIMM. BRICK RANCHER with thr built-ins, formal dining i Las Brown, Realtor SO, Elizabeth Lk. Rd. u™* *r»m the Mall) w FE 4-3544 FE £0591 TAYLOR Brown teCHRAMl "BUD" 'STOUTS Best Buys Toddy 49 Ircbnib Property • 50 Lets—Acreage 1 ‘73# A CLARKSTON Realtors I, Builders Since last ST. MIKE'S AREA go living room, formal dining MV plenty o» kitchen, Ite baths, d full baaemant an an acre of West Side-Income List With SCHRAM and Call the Van 1 JOSLYN AVE. FE S It attached 1 car Mrog*, -------- —m, fig possession, owner translarrad. OS* paths!*0*ler BEAUTIFUL HOME,- *i It — Mane an oftor. 334 Cash 54 »uiInsii OppErt—Hlee 99 GROCERY STORE ' cals Near Cadillac, Michigan. Small "5! or acreage, located i mile north-i town grocery wtlh beer and wtne west of Clarkston. Parcels are 1 license, taewdat > story bulldlAg to 4 acres in size and have, a with 5 room auoilmmn an second minimum of 500* road trontage. floor. Store dome a good butlnase Beautiful epuntryside Views. Priced with 3 person operation.' Ideal eat --------- — up for husband and wilt combination. An excellent buy at (MX I ANNETT PRIVILEGES ON I GALLOWAY LAKE Go with this 2-bad room bungs-! room,'oak floods,l'piaVtwed wails! Eastern Jr. Hi Area heat, new water heater, large lot, MxlM ft. with fruit and shade trees. FULL PRICE *9,950. AUBURN-CROOKS AREA nail family home, I* bedroom! large kitchen with nice dinln. area, gas FA Iwat, approximate- r ly l acre lot. Near schools a— 11 shopping. FULL PRICE 50,9: SMITH & WIDEMAN Tip-Top Home Site sirafie "SreySon Woods subdivision. IO'xIS*’, gas and water In street. Only $500 down, balance en land contract. N1CH0LIE-HUDS0N ASSOCIATES, INC. at Mt. Clemens St. FE 5-1201 AFTER 6 P.M., FE 5-0198 Val-U-Way *ie,500, terms. NO DOWN PAYMENT, NEW OR used. Art Daniels, 31000 Ford Rd. Garden City. GA 1-7080 or KE NO DOWN PAYMENT m elded 2 or 3 bedroi n your, lot for only *6,9 bedroom bungalow West ^suburban j family room .......... car attached garage and ext large lot. Full price S16.H PRICED TO SELL GILES Gl - NO MONEY DOWN - 1 room home with 2 corner lots, bedrooms, bath, hardwood floor gas heat, full basement, lots a: fend from street lo street. Prk only $9,000. Wilson Street. Clintonvllla Road — New California ranch. 3 bedrooms, largo living room, entrance closet, dining ell, gas built-lns In kitchen, new frost proof Frlgldairt, washer and • diver, go with property. 75'x240‘ lofl Full price, *15,90*: Terms. ____ ...... _____carpeting._____ heat. Dining room. Clarkston School district. Full pries S17.SX.----- available. HERRINGTON HILLS teat 3 bedroom brick ram. ITdandy bedrooms. 3. Spacious living room. fuii do semen! with recreation room. $1150 down. ON IRWIN s auto or traitor salat, new proposed Ford rum. ui Immaculate condition, 3 large bedrooms, LR 11x25 with fireplace, 15x21 ft. family room with Raman brick fireplace, 12x15 dining alcove, modem kitchen with all built-lns, 12x15 utility room, 12x15 ft. workshop, HW radiant heat. I'h car carpeted living room. Informal dining area, step saving kitchen, famliy room, firaplac*, ltt baths first floor laundry, basement, gas heat, attached 2W car garage, paved drive. Only *37,500 rec^ room, laundry and furnace room, broezeway and- garage. Anchor fenced tot, lake privileges. Only $17,000 with terms. Down, balance on land contract, 3 bedroom ranch homo In Waterford High araa. Patio, 2 car garage, carport, Anchor fenced lawn, blacktop street, other features. Only S14A50 total price. lake Pmwrty 51 COMMERCE - WOLVERINE LAKES tefet living, *995, ttO mont- —-private beadia fish/ furnace, convenient to t landscaped GIROUX REAL ESTATE 511 Highland Rd. (M59) 673-783 OPEN NEW MODEL attached | "bar! Charming Bi-Level The first floor pl« J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY fTWMSK gain at *15,900, terms to Clarkston Area—25 Ac. Nicely rolling, very scenic land, beautiful building site, fast growing horse raising area near Clarkston Hunt WE WILL ' TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Open Evenings A Sundays 1-4 338-0466 CHEAPIE Want payments cheaper than rant' Than, look Into the possible pur chase of this dandy 3 bedroom homo behind St. Joseph's Hospital. Gas heat. Tiled bath. Specious kitchen. Paved streets. Priced under 50.000, *350 down. 560 per month. List With Us-We Sell a Home Every 24 Hours R. J. (DICK) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ava. Open 9-7 O'NEIL . WOLVERINE LAKI ig, *995, 510 month p I RIDGE LAKEFRONT — Su- HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty FURNISHED LAKE FRONT . Cut* 3-bedroom, yeer-around, gas heat, ideal tor newlyweds or retirees. *14,450, $3,000 down land contract. 7-ROOM LAKE FRONT Good frontage, 3 bedrooms, full basement, large fenced lot, 2-car garage. Older borne with lots of room. Walking distance to Union Lake Village. $19,000, 54,000 down. $125 a month land contract. 2-ACRE LAKE FRONT Dandy 3-bedroom, full basement, new carpeting, new furnace, fire-piece, 3-car garage. *22,500. 57,250 down, $125 a month, land contract Everett Cummings, Realtor 250] UNION LAKE ROAD rrfl i Tiny — i ACRE WOOOED PARCEL s view of Deer Lefce end Deer Lenei privileges. $8950. CLARKSTON REAL ESTATE 145 S. Mein____________MA 5-5121' I HI-HILL VILLAGE Why not drive out this we________ end tee this unusual development valleys and winding roads. LADD'S OF PONTIAC ipeer Rd. (M-24) Pontiac FE 5-9291_________ ROLFE H. SMITH, Realtor 344 S. Telegraph E 3-7545 EVES. FE-3-7302 PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" CONEY ISLAND Talk about money. The sharpest. It's newly equipped, short order coney Island In Oakland County. Open from 7-7, six days a week, grossing over* *05,000 In high profit dogs and burgers. Making money Ilka the US. Mint and n't yours SCHRAM id Contract, Easy Terms. List With Schram and Call the Van I JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-9471 It's yours for an Investment of 57,500 down. PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. HURON, FE 4-3561 SEND FOR FREE CATALOG e operation, grossing INDUSTRIAL 25 ACRES I* M24 Lapeer Road. HOMESITES - SUNNY BEACH overlooking beautiful Walters Lake I privileges. 2 sandy beaches, dock-Ing. Owner. ■ DORRIS well drained acre lot In Manor — A prestige I could hardly find t *“ . You 11 v KcATINGTON Beautiful lake-front and lake-prlvl- this beautiful new town in Orion ike Oakland. 3 bedrooms/ 2i Township. Models open 34 daily/ walkout basement. Beautiful! 11-4 Sat. and Sun. From living and rec. roopr HOWARD T. KEATING CO. w i3 Mite Rd. Blrminghar TRADE 100 FT. LAKE FRONTAGE Trade In accepted. BETTER THAN NEW it. Better it 523,900. 22000 V The hardwood iduding the garage, one has more to « U 0-1234 LAKE FRONT Extra large, high elavitad lot wl road. Price 57,200 with terms. UNIVERSAL BROKERS, INC. 210 S. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac __________Call 334-3551 LAKE-FRONT HOMES — NEW AND used — J, L. Dally Co. EM *7114. LAKE OAKLAND, ftont, perfect for wal ment. $100 per foot. OR walk-out I - Bulldlf TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. / _________ 334 1545______________/ TRILEVEL AT 3533 WARRINGHAM! off William! Lake Rd. Drive by - . if you Ilka It call FE 4-951] for appointment. Priced for quick sale. 1 year old Bassett hound Included with no extra charge or buy dog separata for $50. to match and 8Je ceramic tile . bath Is nearby. A generous kitchen lined with birch cabinets, built-in oven *nd range dishwasher, ground-level lovely fam- SAT. Si SUN. 2-4 TUES. THRU FRI. 3-4 CLOSED MONDAY Anytime by appointment WEST WIND MANOR 1340 S. WILLIAMS LK. RD. NEAR UNION LAKE VILLAGE BRICK WITH ALUM. FAMILY ROOM S BEDROOMS IV! BATHS 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE $17,400 Plus lot SEE PLANS FOR OTHER MODELS STARTING AT 514900. WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT OR OURS j, C. HAYDEN, Realtor $43-4404 10735 Highland Rd. M-59 TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE I. Opdyke 3324)154 UNHAPPY RENTER? ook what $9,500 can buy right In Pontiac, near Pika St. 34*d-room colonial, full basement, garage, landscaped 50 ft. let. Taxes only 5150 and located close to schools. Convenient bank term Look into It today I , YORK WE BUY OR 44)363 47131 Dixie Hwy., I LAKE. 3-BEDROOM |—is, gas ha ' ------ 0. 424-3002. QUICK OCCUPANCY - 3 brick ranch with basement, fenced yard, water and sewpge. $800 LARGE 2 STORY FARM HOME with full basement. Complete modernized — new carpeting — paneled walls — new kitchen. Sltu- land contract. 4 BEDROOM RANCH NEAR Pontiac Lake — 2 full baths — basement — 2 car garage — LARGE tef^ *17,500. *4,000 dov - m | | rear garaga al -a to fell, so ci West Side 7 rooms and bath. Located li one of the nicest sections o Pontiac. All newly decorated. *17, 250. Call for appointment. John K. Irwin & SONS REALTORS 313 West Huron — Since 1925 Buying or Sailing Call FE 5-9444 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR 2 car attached garaga, full baimt. and lots more. Only 529,500. Terms 3 BEDROOM NORTH SIDE RANCH featuring wall to wall carpet, kitchen and dinette, carport, nice lawn and lots more. Only $11,450 with KINZLER $ LAKE FRONT HOME Spacious colonial ranch with Interior charm. Canter hall plan to I spacious rooms. 3 baths and walk-out recreation room, all central elr-condltloned. Plush carpeting and draperies throughout. Nice-ly landscaped and gentle slope to safe sand beach. Now too large for present owner and priced way below reproduction. Evt. phone “to Ellerthorpe, 474-2339. NEWER SUBURBAN All while aluminum exterior ...... colorful Inferior. Hat 20” family kitchen, 3 bedrooms, and walk-out basement room. Custom built I thermopane windows aHPQMVP Gat heat. Clarkston school bus by door. Low taxes. Priced br'-presont costs at 516,500. Eva. pi Mrs. Rockwall, 425-1744. 4-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL In a secluded wooded area on aero site near Maceday Lake In Clarkston School area. Cut -built for owner in 1944. Appealing brick and frame exterior. Kitchen j with built-lns. Paneled family-roomi an all modern Innovations. Plush I carpeting, custom draperies, newj pool table. Dock, boat and motor and other extras. 24'x30* Insulated Mg |—J garage for workshop. 4-BEDR00M, V/i BATHS possession. Ownor has!. _ built-lns. a master oaoroom mei, nwue nvw purchase and Is ready noo* front with lake privileges would moke Cleopatra laalous, 3 to movo, he Is also ready to. Terms available good size bedrooms, full basement deal. A small two bedroom home and 2 car attached garage. days 'are'^^^^hur’nf8'to° SislOCk & Kent, InC. DRAYTON FOUR BEDROOM. A this pretty "brick ranch today. It's1 1409 Pontiac ‘ * ' truly outstanding family^-~Uk ------ — E W00DHULL LAKE FRONT large bedrooms up, LADD'S OF PONTIAC eer Road (M24) P FE 5-9291 SCHRAM LIGHT MANUFACTURING PLANT 11,000 square feat. Suitable for varied types of operations. Centrally located In City of Pontiac. 155,750. Terms by mutual agree- ACREAGE 12 acres near' Oakland University. Suitable for multiple dwelling or mobile home development. 545,000. [Sale Land Contract* 60 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS See us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-1185 Open Eves, ‘til 5 p m. ACTION On your land contract, large or smell, call Mr. Hitter, FE 2-0179. Broker, 3792 Elizabeth Lake Road. Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A ~*~1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Set us before WAR.tJN STOUT, Realtor 150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54165 _____Open Eves. *tll 5 p.m. jmplete aluminum exterior sasy maint— k*H> I bedroom HMHR8NL I separata dining room, modernized kitchen, large screened In front porch, outstanding basement recreation room, blacktop drive end 2 car garage.! Owner may consider land cor—--to good party. DOUBLE TAKE. You can't this one up without looking Extremely eye-appealing retirement special mat 'Is In a tatting o' towering hardwoods and mimerou evergreens. Total property taxe of only 590 and iakt privilege within walking distance. Vary al tractive front porch with alum num awning. Hardwood floor throughout, spacious lie car gi rage. *8,500. DOORRIS A SON, REALTORS 536 Dixie Hwy. 674433 multiple Listing service mmpim has room and big kitchen. Real atio overlooking lake. A good at $14,750. $4000 down on cent land contract. No. 1-23. Lots—Acreage List With Schram ___________ t JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-9471 NEED LAND CONTRACTS. SMALL discounts. Earl Garrtls. EM 3-2511, M MOBILE LOTS FOR SALE, META- s aluminum 1 different and ilt-lns, m baths. buildings. Bordi Good Juck hui.......,. boating. Priced right o furnace. *15,500, 12,500. down. LUXURY LAKE FRONT - 4 bed-1. ________________ room Capo Cod, 3 baths, carpeting,:* ROOM HOME — * " drapes, dock, sea-woll, underground; ri*rt' sprinkler. *37,500. ----- ----1 NORTH SIDE 3 BEDROOMS flreplace — fully spotless shape. Living room ana ’ i- •“ —bedrooms carpeted. Sharp kitchen. contract termV Eves. MA «!>i9Br JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 15219 Dixie Hwy. 674-22; ! Across from Packer's Store 1 - Multiple Listing Service Open 9 nt., gas h rlva. 113,95 YEAR AROUND LAKE FRONT -Partly furnished, very nice 2 bedroom homo. Good beach. $13,750. 32,000 down. miles N. of Clarkston. Well-kept; ‘louse has plastered walls and' irlck fireplace. <11,500, $5,000 down' Underwood Real Estate | Dixie Hwy„ Clarkston . I Frushour 625-3615 S. 62544501 ROCHESTER - MS9 AND JOHN R - 3-bedroom ranch. Garaga. Large lot. Vacant. *2,000 down. Nix Real-l ty. OL 14221. UL 2-4874. KENT ARRO IRWIN A PRICE REDUCED LAKEFRONT and dryer. Situated on I largo Ipt. Shawn by appoint 3 BEDROOM Family home In exc. cond Nice living room, dining r kitchen and bath. Bedroom o< floor. Basement. Gas heat. Gi and 2 lots. Priced at 814,500. NORTH SIDE sided-aluminum storms — gas heat — 1VS ci screened petlo also facing ar. It's unlquMMafi*/"" only *10,900. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY AREA He who hosltatos Is lost <- so hurry to see this excellent 3 bedroom rancher that has huge lly room with fireplace, real kitchen with snack bar, ipai living room, attached garage, sized lot. An outstanding valu only 514,900. Ownor will con land contract with reasonable down payment. 3 bedroom bungalow .......■ . dining room. Auto, laundry set ii 5 large closets and lots of cu board space. Gas heat, alumlnu MODELS YOUR CHOICE - RANCH -COLONIAL — TRI-LEVEL $16,150 plus lot OPEN DAILY 2 I OPEN SUN. 2 to 1520 Pontiac Lake I FE 5-8183 ) ACRES ON GRANGER ROAO near Baldwin . . . choice land with lots of trees. Priced al 000 With SS.OOO down on lane EMpIre 3-__ QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-tracts. Clark Real Estate, FE 3-7SM nn rr i nn wiMgugMjM a lavatory, picture windows ! ■ Ml ■‘Bsement. $3,000 dowi d contract. For sole < month, option to bu r owner, UN 3-7627. SEASONED LAND CONTRACTS r. 625-1886 or 3344222. : largo - $1500. _____AROUND VACATION LIVING Waterford Hill Manor ....nlng — fishing — Boating- Large wooded sites. From 83750. DON WHITE INC. 2891 Dixie Hwy. '_______6744494 LOANS TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one month------------ Quick servlet with Credit Ufa tillJHMMIIMH Stop In or phono FE S4121. HOME 8. AUTO LOAN CO. ’ N. Perry St. FE 54121 9 to 5 dally, Sat. 9 to 12 56' i, aluminum i ndows, flrepla garage, WII ______ t. House features 5-ACRES 3-bedroom home, alumln Thermopane windows, I attached garage, LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on first visit. Quick, Irion ly. helpful. FE 2-9026 Is the number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9:30 to 5:30 — Sat. 9:30 to 1 LOANS Ing. Good groum building spot. Term 3 ACRES — with horse barn and —aw 3-bed room brick home, tarn-room, carpeting, basement — luced tar quick sale to $29,900. Standing on the tswirwaiTTfrg f&r you to come buy! |tahj|MMgi In Drayton Plains,! Established In 1916 j SCOTT LAKE PRIVILEGES — 4 bedroom home, wood floors, deep lot, nice surroundings. SS.950 with 7 IMMEDIATE. POSSESSION - will! j?1™* .«■ » * -itMi* tn.dM. tram! yard. $12/900 SPACIOUS LOT oak floors, 21' Mar~ siding, « OTRUBLE INKSTER I HAVE a new listing In a fine,, neighborhood. II features 2 bedrooms r — main floor and has attic ready be finished tar third bedroom. It * a lull bashement for recreation ICO. offers an Incinerator In h.»-> Kitchen & d ant. Gas Ha neat, adc i required on FHA terms. Gl" terms. Im-! WEST SUBURBAN Throe bedroom bungalow. Llvl , room. Kitchen * dining area. F $2000 DOWN baaemant. Gat HA heat. Carpo Land Z1 po. J v«“"* FHA this 3 bedropm_bungalow.: fisher BODY AREA modiste possession. blacktop Irontago. $12,500, *2,500 flcyd Kent Inc./ Reolttk" 2200 Dixie Hwy. ait Telegraph FE 24123 or FE 2-1904 VON SHOP, AT THE MALL carpotlng In 20' targe ctaMtti «tw and screens, breezi EMM GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR term* MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I W, Walton FE 3-78S31 EAST SI i Thro# Exc. condl-1 Throe bedroom bungalow. i room. Kitchen A dining area “ 7is HA heat. Vacant. UtlE SI 4,500. Wa could tr Another New Listing MMM- - -, HERE • 4* A„ MICE- FAMtfcV M©M« breezeway to 3l'x22'locatM tar your convenience Ml v fenetd yard, oriv* it»uaiirr-j'- .......... living I VSw| to^i^ Indian VtttogeM’i I Ted McCullough Sr., Realtor PHONE 682-2211 BEST TERMS EVER - commercial corner, 6,900 tq. ft. Suited to! many activities. ACRES-ACRES-ACRES - some heav- YORK ■■■ up miv ue TDinci homes In the booth In "Iron! of MLS_____ JR 44363 ORT 44J63' Tod * Restaurant. I D T-I J7lf Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Piatw | WATERFORD TWP ! rlliLxlJfi/O 163-7105 "Win with Shinn" 674-2004 ddequota tar a homo. It s £^eStrart“ oyttyffllfi LAKE ORION SUBURBAN. • 4nd ttwvfy*; cozy 2 bedroom home, full UU ment, gas hea'^MMggi Here's your ch from none and today. Only S12,i LAKE ORION. L..JMMMIM homo, gas heat, extra large lot, 2 car garaga, 2 blocks to Btanttw-Sttnmt school, city water, Meal tar the Green Thumb hobbyist. G§S8! ricro form, dabv barn, flowing stream, Nice 1 rooms, idroom homo, oil boat, near data. Only *30,500. *15400 nu.; carpeted formal, dining roc landscaped lot with ("paved drl to the 1-car garaga. This one selling tar lust $15,300. So you h bettery hurry — Don't target ( "BUZZ BATEMAN. No, 77-Golf Monor ~PL-AY~--GOLP- arty itay yw -wWti-the course lust minutes away from this brick trMovel. 3 bedrooms, 1W baths, 2 car attached garaga and large beautifully landscaped wooded lot. Almost ner deluxe features lust ml Oakland Community Ci ——ilon as priced i. Kitchen. Full b Eve. Call MR. ALTON FE 4-5234 Lake proparty. 1 a. 312,500 down. MILTON WEAVER Inc.. REALTORS In the Village of Rochester University " 14 VACANT LOTS Near Longfellow School. Will trai for land contract, house or whi ""brewer REAL ESTATE William B. Mitchell, Sales Mgr. 14, Rlkar Bldg. 50 ROLLING SCENIC ACRES WITH creak, woods and young ever-greons, sandy soli, dost to US-23 Expressway. Livingston County. *28,000 with 10 per cent down. FE 2-2144. L. Smith. j Sale Business Property 57 For Sale or Lease New 4800 Sq. Ft. Building plus 400 Sq. Ft. Ot office area. Unlimited parking. Zoned Light li» LOANS $25 to *1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER A LIVINGSTONE Swaps REFRIGERATOR, HOTP I swap or sell tar power shotgun. 338-4S19, after 10 A . BEAUTIFUL LOTS IN LAKE Angelus Grove, Pontiac Twp. 410 .Lak* Angelus Rd.________ JACK FRUSHOUR MILO STRUBLE TIMES No. 35-Real Desirable . CITY AREA: Clear twfory, bedroom home with full baseme .... and garaga. Vacant and Immei OR 3-347] Is modern, out. Only 56,950 lust starting ly se.vsu *1,000 dow-contract. First ottering. MAJESTIC reasonably priced. Sea Shinn ty now I LAND CONTRACT HOME BUYERS . —Shltm^t atty^ h** *’l near pish*- 8 If busy, 612-5000 SUNSHINY AGAIN This home savors the sun ----- yard shaded by mature birch, plenty elbow room to anloy las' water front. Living room Messed with ledgerock fireplace, separata din-— -S’— , utMlfy. EQUITY TRADE equity tram *2C INOIANWOOD SHORES NO. A Al ideal location tar your new home Choose your homesite today. ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 6-2306 25$ W. Walton >PE 5471 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 1 CLARK IN. *9950 PULL is sunroom mod bedrooms end King room, Ii ill PMamdnt wit 1 car garage. 51500 DOWN. $995$ FULL PRICE. 6 NOTHING DOWN TO Gl^s ; KSS.1 aluminum rrag;| bTm WII- 5V, per cent INTEREST. NO CLOS- I ING COSTS. WMWWMMMl taxes ■' IKAMPSEN | Let's Trade Houses!!! Donelson Park— The home you have been watting tor . . . Mated In an area ot fine homes. Some of the. features are living room, with fireplace, dining room, three large bedrooms, smartly finished recreation room with fireplace, two car attached garage with autpmatlc door opener. All this ond more, situated on a beautiful well shaded lot. Priced *f|ll trade Wlm ,trm< *° ,u|t or Clarkston Schools— Cowtry^n^vlng with city mnttn- be yours In this lovely three M-i room brick ranch. Two full ceramic baths plus an extra stall shower. 12x12 acraenad and olatsadl porchi overlooking good potential. Tv garage. All this $25,500. YORK 4713 Dlxlo Hwy., Drayton Plain* y bealStfuHy landscape?8Ot. Ce- ®(”h*ar^ot home. ffStd on^ *appSIcia'tE ' YOURA" Call' privacy"0 *** * m m For An Appointment. No OMk 362 W. HURON ST. FE 3-78* FE AM* ar FE S40S Multiple Ustlng Service Better a No. 20-Pioneor Highlands BRICK BUNGALOW: Three t~ No. 90—Twin Lakss 4 BEDROOM BRICK COLONIAL with one of the nicest recreation id extra large well-landscaped I. A prestige home In a wanoer-I araa with lake privileges. Price witfi f— No. 18— In The Country WITH LAKE PRIVILEGES on White Lake. Real nice, 2 bed-i ■ beautifully finished study fireplace' Oh — -it's quarters HSfej Full basement, gas Iwat, RCA bultt-lns, l W baths, 2 brick fireplaces thermo windows, 2 for lust $15,000 down. iWarden Realty^ J 3434 W. Huron — 333-7157 1 BIG SALE. USED BARGAINS Used washers, stoves, refrigerators rtMiiiii "Vlng rooms, odd bads, metal cabinets. Bar- ____ everything. LITTLE JOE'S TRADE-IN DEPARTMENT, Baldwin at Walton, FE 24442. 1 MORE TIME 1 RR____ BRAND NEW FURNITURE __________Eves. FE 24352 ___$278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly “SfflSr uonN,Tti33ANwD ------ ------ $21,0“ "■~ BRADWAY CO. WO 247*0 Ml 74444 CASS LAKE PRIVILEGES Lots priced a* low as $950. Soma on canals for^ *1290. teWMMOMi and municipal watai. 8 NORTH SIDE LOTS k to 3 g 58AS 28,000. Call 673- 15C BEEFBURGER Gross 59L000 teat yaar. on HP highway. Building has opportunl- n. Brekar, 754-9396. $478 (Best) $4.00 Watkly NEW LIVING ROOM BARGAINS 7-piece j brand new) taring room: 2-plec* living room suite, ton stop GULF OIL CORP. Hat a service station tor at 6745 Dixie and, MU Cter________ Sieh. This station Is ntwte remodeled and «p*WL mm taw rant and a minimum InvaataMut. if you want to b* your own Iom call Phil Hawley 444-1*41. fitoi nlngs and weekend* 344***' 1 ■ f ' living room iwatohtoB o________ ______or lamps, all tor *119. Only nevTbedroom BARGAINS 210 E, PM* FE dip Between Paddock end City Hall ,Op*n Mon. ehd Frl. Til $ PJn. 4 i N>w «wl Deed Tracta_103 fereip Cart ‘ , TRUCKS All Stries In Stock THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AJJGUST 29, 1966 JEROME FORD odteator Ford Du 0L 1-9711 New and Used Cars 106 TRUCKS ARE OCR Business! 1965 GMC Vi-Ton Pickup with VO engines, w* have 1 to choose from, on* blue, and one red, standard transmission. Your Choke Only — $1695 1964 Chevy.. '/i-Ton Pickup with the VI engine, radio, heater, signals, red finish. Only— ' $1395 1964 Ford ‘ F-350 One-Ton THIS BEAUTY HAS VI, 4 speed, signals, heatqr, rich rad finish. Only-, $1395 1963 Chevy Vs-Ton Pickup * - --t, stick shift, signals. 1959 AUSTIN MEALY Equipped with I opsed Insniniliilix MM sharp! Only M dawn an •aakly payments of 811.44. ! HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. IWUMttfc,B900^0^-^ IISJ BUICK saoon. OMY SPECIAL. ABSOLUTE-LY NO MONEY YtOWN. Vt *“"• ““•'hr payments of S3.44. CALL CREDIT MGR. it-*!®! •» HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7586. WE WILL TAKE ANYTHING Now aad Used Cart fl)6 TIZZY CUSTOM FIBERGLASS SP ■ WMDSW3 D—7- rt payment — for carl, REPOSSESSION MW BUICK ELECTRA HARDTOP. MUST SELL TODAY, NO S DOWN. FULL PRICE jfiw. CALL MR. CASH 338-4528. SPARTAN, By Kate Osann 19*2 BUICK SPECIAL. 4 DOOR. I owner. 442-2336.______________ 1942 BUICK SKYLARK CONVERT- MIKE SAVOIE , CHEVROLET HS4 South Blrmlr Ml 4-1725 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ju«t Mast of Oakland JEROME 1MI VW SUNROOF WITH RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, THIS ONE IS A NICE GAS SAVING "Bug", ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, AMume weekly payments of 14.0*. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parts at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7*0. LUCKY AUTO 19*1 VW, SUNROOF, R *25-7051 1963 TRIUMPH TR 4 $1195 2-1964 Fords F-100 Pickup with VI angina, standard, signal glowing groan finish. Only— $1395 1962 Ford Ranchero Pickup with a beige finish, Beater, si nets. Now Only — $895 1955 Ford F-100 6 Cyl. automatic, custom cab, blue fli Ish, Only — $295' BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 DOWNEY New Used Cor Location 1084 Oakland 1959 OPEL Station Wagon. $95 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. 1963 BUICK Rlviore sport cbupe. Full powei extra sharp. Only S49 down an weakly payments of 113.44. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4*4 C. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-7500 19*3 BUICK < A I own* In. 141 a m DOOR HARDTOP. Cadillac 1965 Coups DeVille Beautiful maroon finish, full power and air conditioning. Bring the family out and • take a look at this anal Only— $445 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON Cadillac WILSON Pontiac Mew mi IheJ ten 166 New and Used Cers l»*3 MALIBU SUPER SPORT, 19*4 CHRYSLER 300 HA convertfele. V-4 engine, automatic Power brakes and steer tranamteeton, power steering, tor-! tins or xaaaa as! green finish wittHbtack bucket « seats. Sharp. $1995. “SOMETHING NEW" j MIKE SAVOIE1 CHEVROLET - 1104 South Woodward Birmingham matching interior, 81 ,*95. Oakland 106,New mi BeerfCmy 186 OTOP;! TRANSPORTATION S95 UP Oscars Motors 441 S. Saginaw FE 2-ftH 19*5 CHRYSLER 3M WITH POWER I brakes, stowing and windows along I with bucket seats. Law down pay- 194* CHEVROLET C door hardtop, power nearing ana brakes. V-f. AM-FM radio, duel exhaust, 4 barrel carburetor. S2795. *73fel528. “I thought Jane Ellen was getting blase, but I just found * out she’s dieting!” CADILLAC 19*4 COUPE DEVILLE, 1940 W. Wide Track vertibte. Full power, air condi tc incj ing, stereo, turquoise with i r.r too end white Interior. Full /arranty. $ $1497 — Autoraina MOTOR SALES 12*35 Orchard Lake Rd. *12-4410 ~"te West of Telegraph N SUNROOF. 32,000 Ml. EXC. LLOYD r The Dodge Good Guys o the White Hat" Spartan Dodge 155 Oakland A i Mila N. of Ca FE M52I GM (Owner's Initials) LIbw Gale McAnnatly's Auto Sales I SrffiytSTs. '»« Buick convertible. LeSabre. or less man w. nsxing price. , BrI#ht rwJ still plenty of $997 1 r,.r" u _ , _ _ ’ . See Bob Burke, Jim Barnowsky Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 _ PINO A GOOD CAR AND COM-plete the Deal with Pontiac Co-op Federal Credit Union. — >7131_________________________ I zed dealer for TRIUMPH, MG, AUSTIN HEALEY, SUNBEAM, FIAT and MORGAN. 50 -New and Used Reedy For Immodieto Delivery NEW MG Midget Roadster, wire wheels, heater. Tonneau. Factory New Car Warranty. fli|bE||||| S19M. NEW FIAT Station Wagon, Only S15M. BANK FINANCING EASY TERMS Grimaldi IMPORTED CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-94211 New and Used^Cars 106 ‘ -ALWAYS FINE CARS- i Sport I Black Vinyl top. No n $14.87 weakly Call Mr. FE 5-4101, McAullfto. »■ Taka oi 19*4 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DOOR hardtop. Blue mist. Power steering, i whitewalls, tinted glass, * mos. old. Must sell. *82-554*. j REPOSSESSION 1940 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE. FULL POWER AND FACTORY AIR. MUST BE SOLD TODAY. NO MONEY DOWN AND JUST 81.97 WEEKLY. CALL MR. CASH. 338-4528. SPARTAN.___________ LLOYD 1961 CADILLAC Fleetwood. Extra sharp. Power steering, brakes, windows, ~ •nd factory air -Originally delivered Foreign Cars 1957 MGA, EXCELLENT CONDI-tlon, wire wheels. FE 5-9895. 1957 M(U. EXCELLENT CONDI-lion. 5400 or best offer. FE 8-8475. ESTATE S1497 STORAGE, Lloyd Motors FEE3*7,i4?,vd- 11250 OAKLAND 333-7863 wmiffiwam Buy With Confidence Pride of Ownership is Standard Equipment on these 1-owner trade-ins. Every one is well cared far and priced to make it Easy To Own. 1965 OLDS 88 2-door Sport Coupe ........ $1995 1965 OLDS Cutlass 2-door Coupe .......... $1795 1965 RAMBLER 2-door ............. v. .-> .$1395 1964 TEMPEST LeMans .................. . $1595 ~T964 C0RVAIR M8mo"TT: :T ' "1964fONTlA€“Bowwe¥ille-‘Spert4eupe 1963 OLDS 88 Convertible .................$1290 Ask for Leon (Goose) Robertson or Vern Sheffield, Sales Manager at HOUGHTEN OLDS OL 1-9761 * Rochester Cadillac 1966 Calais Coupe Beautiful gold finlih and Enloy the "Standard of the World" tor only— $595 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON" Cadillac Pontiac RED TAG SALE Now in effect > at Matthews-Hargreaves “Chevy-land" 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 CHEVY COUPE, 8995. ijH rord body, 8300. 1940 Veuxhell, 8485. Full midget, 8450. to Midget, _ New and Used Cars__106 —TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS- RELIABLE MOTORS 250 Oakland Ave. FE 8-9742 19*1 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR AUTO-metic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Runs and looks good. 8595. “SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET Tin* south Woodward I Birmingham 4-2735 - Ml 4-7889 I New and Used Cars 1964 CHRYSLER | Newport 44oor hardtop. Rosewood! with matching Inferior. Automatic1 transmission, radio, heater, f— steering and brakes. A very one-owner ca^ tor^miy BIRMINGHAM chrysler-plymouth BOB BORST N the dodge rebellion 9*4 CHEVROLET IMPAlA SPORTS Coupe, V-8, one owner. Gootf dltion, 81295. 338-8389 after *. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1104 South Woodward Birmingham Ml 4-2735 — Ml 4-7889 _ — MONZA SI ,856 19*4 PLYMOUTH Satellite 82^00 1965 FORD 10-passenger Station “'soon 82,350 DODGE stake D-300 81.650 ROCHESTER DODGE Drive Away—Save More Pay *51-8168______ ROCHESTER 196* STINGRAY. "427" HIGH PER-formance engine, 4-speed transmission, AM-FM radio, premium tiger paw tires, yellow flnist black bucket teen. 83995. “SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET U S outh Woodward Birmingham 4-2735 — Ml 4-7689 LLOYD 1964 CHEVROLET f $1459 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAkLAND. 333-7863 j Autobahn I MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW OEALER star'Tuto sales 952 Oakland Ave.___FE 8 mvOTMnn.- monza \ WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND ---R AND WHITEWALL ABSOLUTELY NO ■if DOWN, Assume heater' , 1- 1965 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR SEDAN? n 6 cylinder, standard transr’"*— I radio, heater, whitewall white with red Interior. : i “SOMETHING NEW' IMIKE SAVOIE | CHEVROLET MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 195* CHEVY, 5 GOOD TIRES, FINE Interior, good running engine, body rusted out. 875 cash. Call after ' PM or all day Wad., FE 2-*785> 195* CHEVY 4. REBUILT ENGINE. HAROLD TURNER DOWNEY New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1959 CHEVROLET WAGON 8, automatic. $145 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. - . ___radio ei _ •1 condition, 1995. “SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET Saloe, FE 4-9587, 245 S. E BIRMINGHAM 1962 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE -i full r--- —-.as— a. a 5-6251. Cadillac 1964 Coupe DeVille_ Eye-appealing medium blue finish. Equipped with lull Kmj 111-* _ J n<< h”,wk$445WD0WNO,,'y ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON Cadillac WILSON Pontiac Ml 4-1930 ■ DOWNEY New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1959 CHEVROLET See to appreciate. \ —~Jia5| DOWNEY Inc. Oldsmobile 1084 OAKLAND 18*0 CHEVY. CLEAN. I 1 ( LATE SUMMER lonvertible Sale | REDUCED PRICES-BUY NOW AND SAVE! [ 1965 EliaRA , . . .$2788 "225" ConvertIblt - Equipped with Full Fewer Beautiful Cuitom Trim 1965 BUICK $1988 Special Conytrtlbla - KyHnder Automatic, Fewer Steering, Radio, Hotter 1966 ELECTRA $3988 "225" Convertible — Red with White Top Full Powor, Factory Warranty, and Air Conditioning 1964 LeSABRE .....$1688 Convertible — Automatic Transmission Power Steering and Brakes 1966 SKYLARK \ $2888 Convertible — Power fleering, 5-CyHnder Engine Automatic Transmlaaton, Factory Warranty 1965 ELECTRA ... $2988 "225*' Convertible - Full Power, Belga Finish Factory Air Conditioning mmm mm -DOUBLE CHECK--USH) CARS- , - 554 S. Woodward 647-5600 V station wagon, V8, automatic, pow-er^steerln| and luggage rack. Vary --SOMETHING NEW' MIKE SAVOIE 19*6 CORVAIR 4-DOOR, RADIO, heater, auto., good rubber plus snow tires. 8350. *74-0650.________________ AUGUST Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused 19*6 CHEVY Moor *287 1957 CHIVY, sharp .8297 19*9 PONTIAC Catalina 8297 1957 DeSOTO, Rt* naw .8297 1988 MERCURY, 8-cyl. . 8297 19*1 COMET, Juto 8197 82.28 1958 OLDS Hardtop . : 8 87 81.20 1981 SIMCA,!Iito£,P**d *? **” 1988 BUICK LeSabr* 87 dnf ...„ 1988 OLDS Moor 87 dn. 87.00 1968 CHEVY Impale .. 8* dn. 8*.0T HO MONEY DOWN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS IMMRMATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALTFINANCING - CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just e*tf *f Oakland 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DOOR Hardtop, radio; heater, whitewall tires. 27,000 actual miles. 195 Dewn “SOMETHING NEW" j MIKE SAVOIE1 CHEVROLET , 1104 South Woodward Birmingham 4-273S — Ml 4-7896 19*3 CHEVROLET BEL AIR, STICK, no rust, excellent Condition, radio. 332-6992. ____________, 1963 CHEVY IMPALA, 283 4 SPEED, ’ IMF John McAuliffe Ford 1965 Chevy 2-Door Sedan $1488 1943 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTI-ble, black with white Interior, fully I equipped, extra sharp, 8795. Mazu-rek Motor Seles—FE 4-9587. 19*3 CORVETTE, FAST-BACK, 4 speed, 300 h.p. 82300. OR 3-«172. m3 Chevrolet bel air 4 door Get a 'BETTER DEAL’ at" John McAuliffe Ford *30 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4 JMF John McAuliffe Ford 1964 Chevy mission, p_ dows. Red finish with mat Interior. 095 down. “SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET Birmingham 4-2275 - Ml 4-7089 OUTSTANDING CARS 1965 MALIBU Super Sport VS, automatic, buckets, heater, re dlo, whitewalls. Now only — $1995 1964 CHEVY Bel-Air Wagon, V8, automatic, heater, ra dlo, whitewalls. Now only — $1895 6 CHEVROLET CAPRICE. DOU- IMF John McAoliffe Ford 1966 Chevy Super Sport Hardtop 2 door with radio, heater* 1 finance balance of only— $2101 Reasonable. FE 8 McComb CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH- IMPERIAL 1966 Skylark oversized red^llne tires, performance axle, custom seat belts, buckets. Only— $2894 1966 LeSabre 400 2-Door Custom Hardtop. Automatic, power steering, brakes, stereo, blue ribbon tires, Dave Rigalls Demo. Only— $3205 1963 Ford Station Wagon. Fewer steering and brakes, V-l, automatic. A nice car, at Only- $1095 1962 Cadillac . A real buy a mV~ $1795 2 1963 Buick $1795 • b|1963 Chevy \ 6-cy Under, t conditir- |j| $895 . Perfect condition. Only— 1963 Buick LeSabre 4-Door. Automatic, power steering and brake*. Only $895 1965 Buick LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Only— $2295 1962 Buick Invlcta Convertible. A fresh trad* and Is a real buy at $1295 1964 Chevy Impels 2-Door Hardtop. A nlc* family car, automatic, power steering, and ll only— $1595 1964 Opel 2-Door. College Special 8f only— $695 1963 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door with Vis DOUBLE . CHECKED USED CARS Hank Schaefer or Chuck Cramer OLIVER BUICK 196-210 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2-9165 •Air Wagon VO automatic, this unit It your tor only *100 “ ■ - ...... of Only niy -f $1688 Gat a 'BETTER D 1960 CHEVY Bel-Air IRUmPIMI -- »r> V8, automatic, heater, i, finance balance1 dlo, whitewalls. Now only — $695 Crissman Chevrolet REPOSSESSION — 18*5 CHEVY door, VI, champagne finish, i money down, 812.07 weakly. Ci Q.'oQT-tlSL Oakland 18*4 CORVAIR COUPE, LOW MILE- « P.m. UL 2-1440. REPOSSESSION Chevy it 4 doer. Taka over payments, 831 ,. t*4w FE 4-180* IMF John McAullfto Ford 1965 Chevy tORVAIR 2-Door i* r"nance Balance or ui $1145 Get e 'BETTER DEAL' • mm BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1966 OLDS "442" 2-door Hardtop. Tri-power, 4 speed, power steering and brakes, wire wheel covers. Burgundy with black vinyl top. Transferable new car warranty_$3195 1965 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille, loaded with extras. Metallic blue with Black Vinyl top. Only 14,000 miles..................$3895 1965 VOLKSWAGEN Deluxe. Radio, heaterj 4- speed. Economy Special .....$1395 1963 BUICK Riviera, Full Power, tilt iteering wheel. Sharp Birmingham trade.$1995 1963 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille1, loaded with all the extras including factory air conditioning, 6-way power seat. Only.....$2495 2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 — MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY— BUY ANY OTHER USED CAR ON THE LOT, AND UPON PRESENTATION OF THIS AD, GET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING CARS FREE (YOUR CHOICER - 1959 CHEVY 4-D00R- 1954 CHEVY 2-D00R-1959 OLDS HARDTOP- 18*4 PONTIAC BONNEVILL# 2-Door Hardtop. Beautiful blue l-owner and new trede-ln 8188S tLbbMM'.UcinkpA^BJg-.J economical 8148S red trim. 17,000 miles with new car warranty . .. 81885 18*3 BUICK LeSABRE Hardtop. Power steering and brakes, automatic, rad finish with custom loathor trim . . . $1595 18*4 PONTIAC CATALINA Con-vertible. Power steering and brakes, Hydramattc, dark blue with whit* top .............$1885 19*2 SKYLARK Convortibto. or steering end brakes, twawmn trrarawrrmrfn, ........................... 51285 19*5 HONDA, 4-aoead transml* slon, moStT ’’HT 3.00S miles, beautiful let black finish. WOWI ........................... 1285 I9M PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Door Hardtop. Powor steering and brakes, Hydramatk, etc. 3,000 mile company car .......... 82885 19*3 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible. Power steering and power brakes, automatic, rad and whit* beauty ................$1595 1958 CHEVROLET Station Wagon. Good transportation. Bettor hurry tor this one .............. 5150 18M CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-a GOOD used car? 19*4 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Brougham. Factory air conditioning, full powor. Yo* folks, It's LOADED ............. 54285 19*3 BUICK LeSABRE Station Wagon. Power steering and brakes, Dynaflow. No others around, bet- 19*5 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and automatic. 2,900 guaranteed actual mil** ............... 82285 I860 BUICK 2-door. Power steering. automatic 35,000 actual mil**, l-owner, almost like new top. Power steering land b Automatic. Beautiful rr 18*5 BUICK 4-Door Sedan, LeSabre. Better hurry on this one I The price Is right at .... 52085 1941 RAMBLER Stetlon Wagon, almost Ilk* new. Tha price Is 184* PONTIAC 2 + 2. ' 1 to saving a bundle Most economical a 19*3 PONTIAC VENTURA 4-Door 19«* PONTIAC CATALINA 2 hardtop. Powor steering brakes, automatic now car 18*5 PONTIAC CATALINA +Dotr Sedan. Powor steering and brakes, automatic transmission. You can't bast tha price “* Ask fort John Donley-Win Hopp—Lysle Bosinger-Duane Brown-Carl Matheny Gary Cecora-Dewey Petiprin—Joe Galardi-Tommy Thompson PONTIAC - BUICK . 651-9911 . 855 S. Rochester Rd., Vi Mile South of Downtown Rodtetfr 1 i>-a Urn ■< fcM Cm ^' - ll*Mew and (had Can DOWNEY New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1961 LANCER WAGON Radio, heater, standard transmit-.1' sion. I $295 j' DOWNEY! Oldsmobile Inc. ---THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOXDAY. AUGUST 29, 1900 106 New and Used Core 106 1»» LINCOLN Hardtop I AUTOMATIC. EX- CLEAN 1*40 FORD 1*43 FORD XL CONVERTIBLE. EQUIPPED WITH FULL POWER AND BUCKET SEATS. SHARPt ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $11.44. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7*0. I FALCON DELUXE WAGON AU-imatic, radio, heater, ■ 'MlEaallw Inyl Interior. Only—$3»5. Oakland 1M3 DODGE POLARA 4 DOOR automatic, radio, heater, pc steering, whitewalls, sparkling i finish, with matching tiots. Oakland Chrysler-Plymoutii |24 Oakland Avo._____fe ia 1965 DODGE A Polara Convertible, that Is right for you to anloy the su days ahead. Torquefllte V8, pot and factory Warranty for t protection. —. KEru»c»iun 1H1 RED FAIRLANE 500 2-DOOR. i Vii automatic, must sell TODAY. NO I DOWN. FULL PRICE ONLY Sift. CALL CASH, 330-4528. SPARTAN. 1964 T-BIRD • Has air conditioning, full power, radio and heatar, new whitewall tires, nlcs let black finish with turquoise leather Interior. Full price only SL495 and bank flnanc STATE WIDE AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 IMF 1944 FORD FAIRLANE 4 PASSEN ger station wagon, power steering and power brakes. Vary clean Sl»5 at JEROME FORD Rochesters Ford Oealor OL 14711. $1897 "Ask for The Dodge Good Guys Spartan Dodge' 1961 Ford Convertible automatic, VS, only $49 down ””$344 Get a 'BETTER DEAL' St" John McAuliffe Ford KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service Coronet "448" J i Tuxedo black finish, with all vinyl trim, power steering, Torquefllte, VS, end factory Warranty. For your protection. Only— $2097 FULL PRICE "Ask tor The Dodge Good Guys In the White Hat" Spartan Dodge 155 Oakland Ave. (Just 14 Mila N. of Cass Ave.) FE 8-452S IwT EDSEL CONVERTIBLE, 1955 4 CONTINENTAL CONVERTIBLE with full power Including factory air conditioning. Priced to sell. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY 520 S. Woodward BIRMINGHAM 444-4338 1965 MUSTANG Convertible. White top, almost Ilf new condition, low miles. Only S down and weekly payments i HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE, BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 weekly. Call Mr. A 4101/ McAuliffe. s u j . runcKcu, —I. Va cam. Body In good shape. Call EM '—J after 5.__________ 1954 FORD CONVERTIBLE, $50. I LaSalle off Telegraph.______ 1954 FORD, LTD, VINYL TOP, LOW mileage, FE 44122. 1959 FORD WAGON, RUNS GOOD. 1943 FALCON CONVERTIBLE. VS ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, EXTRA SHARP. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $8.44. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. URT VS, automatic .... finish. No money Sown, $9.07 weekly. Call Mr *— son at FE 5-4101, McAuliffe. weekly payments of $13.44. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-75 ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 REPOSSESSION, 1940 T-BIRD, SIL-ver, full power, no money down, $447 weekly. Call Mr. Mason, FE 5-4101 McAullfto. Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 OAKLAND COUNTY'S NEWEST Chrysler - Plymouth - Jeep Dealer '64 TEMPEST 4-door, a sparkling white beauty, with turquoise interior, radio, 326 V8...........$1197 '63 IMPALA 9-passenger Wagon, deep gleaming dark green, set off with chrome luggage rack, full power ................................ Only $159 down '64 FORD XL Convertible, a solid black beatify, power mokes this a real buy. Reduced to Only______$1595 '64 COMET Caliente 4-door, V8, full power, camel beige, must sell today. Reduced to..........$1195 '62 RAMBLER Classic Wagon, thrift saving 6 cyl. 6-passenger, radio, best offer takes. '62 VALIANT 4-door, the ideal going back to school car, automatic, radio............ Only $99 down '65 VALIANT V8 automatic, must see to appreciate! * Yours for Only ........................... .$1495 ON DIXIE HWY.-NEAR M15 CLARKSTON ...MA.5,2635. 1447 weekly. Call McAull" 1945 FORD LTD 4 DOOR HARDTOP V8, Cruise-O-Matlc, full power. Executive car. $2395. at JEROME FORD Rochesters Ford Dealer OLl New and deed Cm BEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A CAR low as U down? Try n Financing Call **- a Motor $14$ 1963 CONTINENTAL ull power and almost like n* condition. Only $49 down ai weakly payments of $15.44. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7580 Autobahn 1961 COMET Sparkling Red custom 4 that will be the perfect 1st oi car for you. Automatic, i $497 Spartan Dodge >41 COMET DELUXE 2-DOOR, AU- whitewells, let black finish, black end white vinyl Interior, $595. Oakland os .end poln r $87-5724, models. Automatic, or four si $1897 "Ask for The Dodge Good Guys Spartan Dodge Ing and air conditioned. Low milt- jIrOME FORD/ Rochester' Dealer. OL 1-9711. LLOYD 1966 MUSTANG Coupe, chestnut finish, $49 dovt asking price $2095 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 SPECIAL 1958 B 1957 Olds ..... 1944 Pontiac 2-door hard 1957 Ford and Chevy .... ments. EM 3-2954. ... ____J GALAX IE 51 sedan, Vt, automatic, r er, power steering, 4, miles. Company owned. JEROME FORD Rochester's Ford MUST DISPOSE OF — 1944 MUS- »t FE 5-4101, McAuliffe. 1942 OLDSMOBILE "98" SEDAN. ■Mfl power, blue with matching rlor. Really sharp. $1195. "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 4 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT STA-on wagon, 4-speed, radio, new Ires. Drives like new, $995. "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET 1104 South Woodward ^ B Jrm I ngjidm.^j,, 1942 OLDS F-S5 CONVERTIBLE, V-8. automatic, radio, heater, blue finish with blue top $895. Autorama” Autorama MOTOR SALES BRAND NEW '66s WE HAVE 9 1966 Valiants 3-Door, 4-Doors, Hordtops with V-8, automatic power steering and brakes, radio, whitewalls, wheel covers. From— $1595 WE HAVE 12 1966 ChrySlers Newport 2-door hordtops, 4-ddbr sedans, 2- and 4-door hardtops. New Yorker 4-door hardtop, with V8, automatic, power steering, brakes, air conditioning, power windows, From— $2795 WE .HAVE 3 '66 Belvederes Hordtops, Convertibles with V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, whitewalls, wheel *$2575 WE HAVE 6 '66 Barracuda with V-8/ automatic/ power iteer-ing and brakes, radio, whitewalls. $2195 WE HAVE ll> 1966 Furys 2-Door, 4-Doors, Hardtops and Convertible, V-8, automatic power steering and brakes, radio, whitewalls, wheel covers. From— $2295 mmsm o (smmm mwmwB 724 Oakland Ave. Pontiac FE 2-9150 MUST DISPOSE OF - 1942 CC automatic, 4 door, No 7 down, 55.87 Weekly, Call Mr. st FE S-4101, McAullfto. REPOSSESSION — 1943 MERCURY. REPOSSESSION - 1943 MERCURY ' Joor, automatic, power steering, money down, $8.87 weekly. Cell J MERCURY MONTEREY. FULL nolle/ original owner, 8808 *0)1 1944 COMET CALIENTE HARDTOP. V$ ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of $12.44. CALL CREDIT MANAGER MR. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7509. MARMADIJKE By Anderson and teeming New and Used Cart 106 WOULD YOU BELIEVE It's You We Want * THE WISE BUYER WHO WANTS TO SAVE MONEY il Pontiac Bonnie Com 19 Pontiac Starchlef 0 Chevy Impala Hard! New and Used Cars 106 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, ALL LLOYD 1963 PONTIAC Catalina coupe, trl - power, speed, $45 down, asking price $1195 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1941 Ford V8 2-door, stick 1940 Ford 2-door, stick 1959 Mercury Hardtop COMPACTS 1944 VW Coupe ......... 1942 Corvair 4-spd..... I 399 1943 TEMPEST CUSTOM 4-DOOR bgH station wagon. Radio, automatic, power steering, all vinyl trlm.digJ *—-I., best-"— “• ' 0PDYKE MOTORS GET SAAART-BUV FOR LESS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke E 8-9237_________FE 8-9237 1963 PONTIAC The always popular Catalina . option h%po??, *TcU^wbSe^tr1 ish, with rad Interior, automat power steering, and brakes. $1497 Full Pries "Ask tor The Dodge Good Guys In the White Hat" Spartan Dodge KEEGO Pontiac^-GMC-Tempest "Sarnie location SO Years" KEEGO HARBOR ir trade In. 335-0784, 1945 MERCURY PARKLANE door. 8 cylinder automatic, 'power. Breezeway window. A Tory Executives car. FanlMI Savings on this car atJEROME OE 1-9711 Rochesters Ford Dsalsr. 1942 PONTIAC 2-door 1940 OLDS 4-door ••• PONTIAC, 1-owner MERCURY 2-door OLDS 4-door PONTIAC Wagon CHRYSLErT air .... CHEVY convert .. 1955 FORD 2-door 1940 PONTIAC 2-door 1959 FORD 2-J— 1940 logon . CHEVY Wagon 'NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES REPOSSESSION — 1943 OLDS 88 convertible, full power, automatic, no money down, 811.87 weekly. 1*45 OLDSMOBILE F-8S, EXCEL-■nt condition, private owner. 451-4435. lion, FE 2-3337. - _______‘ring, Sul drive. FE 8-2716. - I960 PLYMOUTH . 363-0693, 1964 VALIANT 2 door 4 cylinder, automatic trar mission, beautiful ruby red wl matching Interior. Tlx best of T compacts. This week special $995 ' BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 840 5. Woodward Ml 7-« BARACUDA, 4-SPEED, VS, 3 ' miles. 81395, FE 1965 PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR, AUTO- —ic trensir' wj — -- K $1495 full LHiinuclllVIWn W. Wide Track transmission. Real ' X5 full price. LUCKY AUTO FE 3-7854 steering, .____ finish, tec- >r your protsctlon. $1897 Full Price "Ask for The Dodge Good Guys in .fflg White Hit" Spartan Dodge 1955 4 DOOR PONTIAC, GOOO CON-dltlon, 850. 473-5753. 1950 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE/ 2 r hardtop. *i I. OR 3-7548. PONTIAC 2 DOOR SEDAN, ...5 condition, best otter, 420-1471. 1940 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. Good condition. Sharp! 682-1911. DOWNEY New Used Car Location 1084 Oakland 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-door sedan, radio, heater, auto- $595 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Inc. KEEGO Pontiac—GMC—Tempest "Same location 50 Years" ____KEEGO HARBOR GM (Owner's Initials) Sale McAhnally's Auto Sales l Pontiac Starchlef 4-door i "ire engine red finish, au transmission, power steerl DRAFTED. 1942 CATALINA CON-, vertlble. Excellent condition. Plen-ty of extras, S750. UL 2-3728. [ end brakes. 2-)________ . See Bob Burke, Jim Bari or Bob Anderson Stop or call todayl 1304 Baldwin FE 8-4525 Across from Pontiac State Bank CREDIT NO PROBLEM >63 PONTIAC 2-door hardtop* Ai malic transmission, power stei Ing and brakes. S795 with no m COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 Top Quality, one-owner new car trades to choose from WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE . . . AND GET IT 65 Mt. Clemens At Wide Track FE 3-7954 196# PONTIAC BONNEVILLE GM _ ______I Prlx. Beautiful ..... light blue finish, automatic trans-nisslon, power steering end brakes. Low mileage. 2-year warranty. See Bob Burke, Jim Barnowskl r hardtop. Pull power, 1 owni , still under warranty. Tak >r payments, S41 a mo. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track ---- -FO-7844 1963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE CA- tallpa, Just Ilka new. Take - payments 829.89 a Mo. LUCKY AUTO 1944 TEMPEST 6 CYLINDER S 2 door, a real nice car. | « m» Na money down LUCKyAUTO 1940 W. Wldt Track r, clean. 473-5813. 945 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-verttble. Must sacrifice or dMdto 343-2303 or 343-9000. CHEVY- OLDS NEW CAR TRADES 1964 BUICK LeSabre 4-door, power steering, brakes, new tires. Only...........................$1895 1965 CHEVY Super Sport Convertible, radio, heater, automatic, power steering. Only .. . .$2095 1964 CHEVEU.E Super Sport, V-8 engine, 4-speed, radio, heater. Now only...................$1395 ,1964 OLDS Convertible, Dynamic 88 with power steering, brakes, automatic, radio........$1595 1965 CORVAIR 4-door Hardtop, automatic, radio, heater, red finish. Only .................$1595 1963 BUICK Convertible, power steering, brakes, radio, heater. Now Only...................... .$1495 ON DIXIE HWY. AT MIS "Your Crossroads to Greater Savings" CLARKSTON MA 5-2604 New end Used Cm ««*J BONNEVILLE. 23*80 MILES. Take older car trade In. 335-0784.' 1945 PONTIAC, 9 PASSENGER WAO ! 106 New etadI Used Cm IfNew —d Ueed Cm_______________________________10* Cash Low, Want to Go? forgiven. Approval by phone- ■ Mr. Vaughn, Dealer 515-4000 ; 0 RAMBLER 4-DOOR HARDTOP. 5*80 miles. Good condition. Call, ~K 5. 4*3-1195. 1 1964 RAMBLEk A Sporty "448H" 3 door Hardtop, aoft aqua finish, with matching bucket seats. Interior, and brand new deep tread whitewalls. DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT It CARS JO CHOOSE FROA 1945 GTO 4 speed, radio, heatei exc. condition, midnl 1943 PLYMOUm Stick 4, good condition, la mi BUICK f- auto, doub erlor. Sharp H BUICK nish. Radio, whltawalts. 677 S. LAPEER Rl Lake Orton MY 2-2041 $1097 1942 RAMBLER AMERICAN, STICK, --hosed new 1941, 24*88 ml. ox- St. 8575. OR 3*480._] „ _ . r&i. ^^^jSpartan Dodge •col 8595. isf Oakland Avo. Oakland “-'"itiiS“,~’ 1945 RAMBLER AMERICAN STA-I «on wagon. Auto. Radio, heater, st offer. Ml 4-1955. EST 6, STANDARD mileage end factory warranty. $2795. I "SOMETHING NEW" MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET op. Sharp. 7,(8 or 332-7339 aft. 3 1966 Pontiac Catalina wagi ar steering, green flnlshl brakes, automatic. Save HOMER HIGHT 1944 PONTIAC 3 PL top. Power steerl 4 speed. Many i 2-1306 after 4, 0. 1701 Baldwin. 1965 RAMBLERS DEMOS 4-door sedans. Very low mileage cars. Only 3,000 and 4,000 miles. New Car Warranty. Only $95 down, 36 - rribnth financing at bank rates. Credit no problem. 8 to choose from Village Rambler ! 666 WOODWARD - I BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 GO! Demo's - Brand New Executive Cars - Used Cars NEW . 1966 Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop with automatic, power steering, brakes, white-walls end radio. Save $727.45 DEMO 1966 Catalina 4-Door. Automatic, power steering and brakes, decor group, whitewalls and radio. Save $674.00 Executive Car 1966 Bonneville Full Price $2950 NEW 1966 LeMans 2-Door Hardtop. 4-speed, sprint rally cluster, with power steering and brakes. Save $531 Used 1965 Tempest 4-Door. Automatic, V*, i $1995 Executive Car 1966 Pontiac Custom 2-Door Hardtop. V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, whitewalls. Save $2495 NEW 1966 GTO Convertible. 4-speed, whltewslls, radio, safety track. Save $539.26 Used 1964 Catalina 4-Door Hardtop. Automatic power steering and brakes, radio, 31,000 miles. Sharp it only $1695 DEMO 1966 Catalina 2-Door Hardtop. Automatic, power steering and brakes, radio and whitewalls. Save $669 Used 1962 Tempest 4-Door Custom. Automatic, radio and whitewalls. Sava at $695 DEMO • 1966 Custom 2-Door. 4-cyllndor, automatic — “-"-walls. Save $406 HAUPT PONTIAC N. Main Street Clarkston MA 5-5566 SHARP AUTOS 1966 Pontiac Hardtop 1963 Pontiac Star Chief 1963 Rambler American 4-Door. Loaded with automatic, power steering, brakes and windows, power vents, air condition- 4-Door Hardtop. VlstO with automatic,. power steering and brakes, whitewalls. The unit hos a beau- lewel. White finish wlth^block trim, radio, heater, whitewalls. ing, automatic temperature control, block cordovan top, red tlnlsfi and whitewalls. Atony, many tiful let black finish. Only- Si 395 Good transportation! $595 moos extras. $1500 Discount 1964 Pontiac 1964 Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop. Light blue finish 1965 Pontiac Catalina Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop. Guaranteed actual miles and Is • one- with matching trim, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering and brakes, whltewslls. Ventura 2-Door Hardtop. Fontaln blue with black cordovan top and matching blue trim, automatic see to appreciate. Has ill the right equipment, with automatic 21,1100 actual milts. $1995 heater, whitewalls, EZ eye glass. COQQC JtMimisslon, rad 1% heater, raw-or steering and brakes. Only— $1895 1965 VW 2-Door Like Economy? Try this pns on a j V4«37v 1965 Catalina Convertible 1964 Pontiac Bonneville tlful red finish, has only 17,000 With mayfair maize finish, black top, black trim, 12*00 miles, radio, heater, power steering ond brakes, whitewalls. Only— 4-Door Hardtop with o midnight blue finish, matching trim, automatic power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. Vary sharp one-owner. '• $1495 1964 Pontiac Catalina $2395 $1895 '4-Door Hardtop. Light green finish, matching trim, ona owner. 1965 Pontiac Convertible 1964 Pontiac Bonneville brakes, whitewalls. Only—** $1795 1966 Pdntiac Bonneville Catalina vfith Ivory finish, blue top, blue trim, automatic, radio, 4-Door Hardtop. Beautiful light blua with matching interior, 23,-000 actual mites. Power steering $2395 heater, whitewall tires. A real shorp, 1-owner car. $1995 maize with white top, teaiher trim, low mileage, has automatic transmission, power brak* and 1965 Pontioc Catalina Light blue finish, matching trim. 1959 Pontiac 4-Door 'beauty/1, W ***" ”*' ™*' $3195 steering and brakes, Whitewalls. Sharp all lha way. $2295 new throughout! $795 1963 Pontipc 2-Door Hardtop with a sparkling light aqua finish, matching Interior, 1963 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop t-Door. Ventura trim. 1966 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop. Beautiful light green finish, black cordovan top, match- automatic, radio, hooter, power steering and brakes, whitewalls, ora owner and was owned locally! $1595 power steering and brakes, automatic whitewalls, gleaming midnight blue finish and matching ing blagk trim, factory air conditioning, automatic, radio, hooter, power steering and brakes, white- 1963 Rambler Wagon $1495 $3395 is Itl Radio. heaterTstlck shift! economical tcyllndtr engine. 1965 Chevy Impala 1964 Chevy Malibu $695 2-Door Hardtop with a beautiful burgundy finish, automatic radio, hooter, whitewalls and V-l engine. Extra nlcal $2195 1962 Pontiac Star Chief 4-Door sedan with a beautiful 2-Door Hardtop. Sparkling blua finish, automatic transmission, radio, hooter, whitewalls. Low miles, 1-owner. Sharp all the way. $1595 1964 Pontiac Catalina 1964 Pontiac Catalina 4-Door Sedan. Light aqua, matching trim, automatic, radio, hooter, power steering and brakes, whitewalls. - v *1695 1961 Ford Galaxie gold finish, matching trim, auto- 4-Door Hardtop. Light green fin-ish) matching trim/ ona owntr« 2-Door, guaranteed ona owrar, radio, hooter, whitewalls. Locally low mileage, power steering and brakes, whitewalls. Only— actual milts, spare never used, wWtewalte. Only- r*dl#' hMt*r' #n* $1095 $1795 y~ $695 Ask for Pat Jarvis - Pontiac On M24 in Lake Orion Ken Johnson- Bob - Rambler MY 3-62*6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 Heart Patient Is Doing Well HOUSTON, Ter. (AP) _ Re. gaining strength each, day, a woman whose heart was helped for several days with an artificial pump, spent a day out rtf bed visiting with relatives Sunday. Esperanza del Valle Vasques, 37, Mexico City beauty parlor operator, who underwent surgery for the temporary heart heip Aug. 8, has been able to take short unassisted strolls for several days at Methodist Hospital. Hospital advisories said she continues to recuperate without The artificial pump, called a left ventricular bypass, was removed after 10 days when physicians determined her natural heart had healed and no longer needed the assistance of the pump. FAMILY ROOMS (19)U| • ATTICS • JCITCHENS FINISHik BASEMENT New A Han and Idea a mra* ta Stitt Your Needs SSL... •hd Income * MATERIALS - *695 NO MONEY DOWN FREE ESTIMATES Available Up to I Years H m mm In Pontiac Since 1931 \5Yi££D0NC0 1.032 West Huron Street ] FE 4-2597 Aluminum Is Our Business LET US LOOK AFTER YOUR ALUMINUM NEEDS! • Door Canopys • Porch Awnings FREE • Carports ESTIMATES • Window Awnings PAII • Aluminum Siding UnLL and Trim 335-5071 • Aluminum Gutters • Aluminum Windows and Doors • Aluminum Shutters—Many Beautiful Assorted Colors DEAL DIRECT AND $AVE! CUSTOM AWNING MFG. 1661 South, Telegraph Rd. Just South of Orchard Lake Rd. HEATING and CQOLINQ Authorized Dealer SPACE-TROL ' 90,000 BTU *169 SPACE-TROL 115,000 BTU *189- O’BRIEN HEATING 371 Vomjiais ltd. FE 2-2919 Our Operator On Duty After Hourt GARDINER, Ore. (APT Hie tight-pants strike in this coastal town stretched into its seventh day following a meeting Sunday night of Local 2186 of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union. The union, which struck the International Paper Co. plywood plant last Tuesday after the company suspended a woman because her jeans were too tigljt, held its regular monthly meking. No 'Letup' in Walkout Over Pants Programs furaishwd by stations (Mod In this column aro subnet to change without notics NG535 2—WJSK-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WYvS Miss Pat Morris, 35, was suspended-on the grounds that her clothing was distracting to male workers. Miss Morris said six other women on her overnight shift wore the same type of clothes. She received an oral warning. The union maintained she should have received a written SUIT FILED The company filed suit Thursday, asking $12,786 in damages, phis $4388.30 per day tor the duration of the strike. Company spokesmen said workers did not complete proper grievance procedures before striking. The union says it has tried to arrange a meeting with management on the issue. A company spokesman’ said there would be no meeting untU the strikers returned to work. The present Eddystone lighthouse is the fourth to occupy the site off the English coast and was erectad by Sir James N. Douglas in 1882. -Television Programs— TONIGHT l:8l (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) (Color) Movie: “The Mysterious Swordsman” (1962) Frank Latimore (9) Dennis the Menace (60) Superman (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (51) Merlin the'Magician 6:38 (2) (4) (Color) Network News (9) Marshal Dillon , (50) Little Rascals (56) Discovering America 7:88 (2) (Color) Greyhound Derby (4) (Color) George Pierrot (9) Movie: “The Outcast” (1954) John Derek (50) Soupy Sales (56) (Special) International Magazine 7:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) (Color) Hullabaloo (7) 12 O’clock High (50) Alfred Hitchcock 1:81 (2) I’ve Got a Secret . (4) (Color) John Forpythe (56) About Ceramics 8:18 (2) Vacation Playhouse (4) (Color) Dr. Kildare (7) Jesse James. (SO) American West (56) U.S.A. 1:51 (9) News 0:10 (2) (Color) Andy Griffith (4) (Color) John David- (?) Shenandoah (9) Movie: “The Fighting Lawman” (1953) Wayne Morris, Virginia Grey (50) (Color special) American Challenge 9:30 (2) (Color) Hazel (7) Peyton Place By EARL WILSON NEW YORK - Michael Caine, the 33-year-old, spectacled Cockney with blond hair who has all “the birds” delirious about him, has made a study of diction and found that the rich speak softly and the poor speak roughly and guttur-ally — as a defense. to frighten people with,” he says. “The rich always talk softly, slowly and languidly because they’ve got enough • money to hire bodyguards to kick the daylights out of you. “The poor are as loud and ugly as they can sound — it’s their only protection.” He discovered this while being coached to play an American southern in “Hurry Sundown,” Otto Preminger’s new film, down in Baton Rouge. “I thought I would speak a Vivian Leigh ‘Ah do declayuh’ southern accent, but I found that was aristocratic southern,” Caine remarked at Gallagher’s the other day. v “Another thing, poor people always lean forward when they speak because they want people to listen td them — which nobody ever does.” ‘Rich people can sit back — they know people are going to listen to them. They have jobs or money — that people want from them.” MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED NO MDNEYD0WN-UPTD7 YRS.T0PAY 1913 picture of his father, dapper in a derby standing proudly in front of his locomotive, is one of Jack’s treasures, j “My father was very neat around the engine,” says Jack. Diction Expert Says Money Has Tonal Effect on People TV Features k-~ ~~—?f Canines ACtOSS 1 Timber---- 5 Australian 10 Christmas song U Pour 9il upon. ■ rite 13 Muse of poetry 14 Saint----dog 15 Craft 42 Nothing 43 Acidity (Hied.) 45 Breed of ■mall dog 46 Somewhat obtuse 49 Embarrass 51 Fisher, as with l/.S. Car-Racing Rise VACATION PLAYHOUSE, 8:30 p.m. (2) Patricia Ctowley, Mary Jane Croft and Billy Mumy star in story about boy who prefers the world of his mother, who is a book illustrator. JOHN DAVIDSON, 9:00 p.m. (4) George Carlin’s comedy monolog is about movie previews. Guests are balladeers Chad and Jeremy. • AMERICAN CHALLENGE, 9:00 p.m. (50) Films trace rise ef U.S. cars and driven in field of auto racing. PEYTON PLACE, 9:30 p.m. (7) Steven reaches understanding with Lee, encounters town’s first reaction to his taking the case. 10:80 (2) Mike Douglas (4) (Color) Run for Your Life (7) (Color) Big Valley (SO) (Color) Talent Scouts 10:10 (9) 2040 11:10 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:1$ (2) Movie: “A’ttack of the Mayan Mummy” (1963) Nina Knight, Richard Webb (4) (Color) Johnny Car* “All working class speak guttarally, to frighten people, because they’ve nothing Rise WILSON Broadway singing-dapeing star Jack Cassidy is writing a bode on railroading ... in memory of his father William Cassidy, an engineer, who died at 84. “One day he said to a new fireman, ‘Did yon. ever do any IdaiKlngt’ T^ firemin said he’d done a hit. ‘Then you waltz in there and clean out that deck properly!’ father"told him'” ' Railroaders were heroes, like athletes, when he grew oprJeeh ■aid, “Q»e Wwaed4a>toB«w m* aremtabeekaee my fatter was an engineer.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . Beatles grossed a reported $292,000 at Shea Stadium (of which they'll keep about 189Gs) . . . Sonji Clay spent her alimony loot from Cassius for *66 Cadillac ... Van ho was 80 Aug. 25 — will toor with “On a Clear Day.' Alice Faye’s turning down film roles because "they want me to play the matter of some actress about ten years younger than l am” ,.. Only one role’s been east so far jar the film, version of “Valley of the Dolls" — authoress Jacqueline SusannH play a bit part.- tave anything to pardon, little better than no for- REMEBERED QUOTE: *‘If you I pardon It quickly. Slow.forgiveness is giveness.” — Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. EARL’S PEARLS: In some beauty parlors, the gossip alone would curl your hair. A Soupy Sales teQs of the fellow who couldn’t hold a job: “He changed his occupation three times while the ‘What’s My Line?’ panel was guessing whit he did for a living.” ... That’s earl, (The Hall lyndfcets, Inc.) (7) Movie; “Gunman's Walk” (1958) Van Heflin, Tab Hunter (9) Movie: “The Good Companions” (1957) Eric Portman, Hugh Griffith, Celia Johnson 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:99 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) Dragnet 2:99 (7) Wanted-Dead or Hive TUESDAY MORNING 1:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 8:20 (I) News 6:25 (2) Summer Semester 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 4:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:10 (2) Bowery Boys (4) Today (7) Three Stooges 1:10 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:25 (7) News 8:30 (7) Movie: “The Fulie Brush Man” (1948) Red Skelton, Janet Blair 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:88 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:39 (2) Dick Van Dyke 9:55 (4) News 19:09 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess (9) Hercules 10:25 (4) News 10:30 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye 11:99 (2) Divorce Court (4) Chain Letter (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Sunshine Semester (50) Yoga for Health 11:10 (4) Showdown (7) Dating Game (50) Dickory Doc “Which way will you be going on your honeymoon — north, south, east or west?” young Humphrey was asked. “Yes, it will be one of those directions,” he replied. AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News, Weather, Sports ' ” fi) Jeopardy .....— (7) Donna Reed (9) Luncheon Date 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ Country (7) Father Knows Best (!) People in Conflict (50) Movie 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) jSews w 1;09 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Same (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “Hiawatha” (1962) Vincent Edwards, Yvette Dugay 1:25 (2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call 1:11 (2) As the World Turns <4) Let’s Make a Deal 1:51 (4) News 2:91 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives Radio Programs— WJM700) WXYZQ 270) CiaWtoOO) WWJ(WO) WCAR(1190) WPOMfl 400) WJKH 500) WHH-VM(94.7) TONIOHT ! CM-WJR, Haws, Sports WWJ, Newt, Sports CKLW, Musk WWJ, Nsws, Sporfsllne ' fiOS-WMPI, Jack Pultsr ViW-WJR, Scores, Music BKifciK&Sr*. "■“•taJE* 4 5 * 7 * 9" WWJ, Owrntahf HtlB-WJBK. Concensus -TUESDAY MOWMMO (tOS-WJR, Musk Hell -■ WWJ, Mem,Heberts CKLW/Hem, Bus Davies MS-WHPI, Almanac • WJR, Nsws, Music Hall , WPON, News, tea Lawrence 7i3»—WJBK, von Patrick TUBSDAV AFTERNOON 11:It—WJR. News. Perm WWJ, Review; Newt; Market The daily quakes seemed to be slacking off early this month, but then a new period of intense seismic Activity apparently SlS^SiSl mSSo »iei^ny*,<, ft«e-WJR, News, Harris WPON. News, Ben Johnson CKLW, News Dave Shafer WCAR^Newe. Dave Leek- volcanic in origin — began. WCAR, News, Senders whpi, unde tm , CKLW. Jet Van .. 1 WWJ, News, Netsbber llilS-WJK, Nsws, Ooetf SfeKL. Iliie^wj*, Newt, Arthur WXY&Pat Murphy Newt, WHPI, Newt. Encore WJBK, News. Shirley Eder ItlB-WWJ, News, Call Ken deli.' j StechncIan 1 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY WPON, Hem. Arisons / WCAOm Damn WJBK, News, Seeks, Bdb ■ krlei, Musk > WXYfc Mace Avery News, WJR, Newt, Elliot Field CKLW, News, Dave Shafer iiia-WJR, News. UnkMWr WPON, News, felt Ladd WXYZ, Dsv# Prime 1:11—wcar, New*, aacaiBlla WJBK, News, Music swicrt is J£DJS and TELEVISION 1429WiSt Htjttoi ?E4-8877 .(7) Newlywed Game 2:90 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7). General Hospital (50) Topper 9:25 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (0) Swingjn’ Time (50) Johnny Ginger ’ 4:00 (2) Secret Storm - (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows 4:90 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action It (9) Fun House 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:09 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Weather (56) Five Revolutionary Painters 5:30 (58) What’s New 5:45 (7) Network News 5:55 (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Humphrey Son on Honeymoon MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) - Robert Humphrey and his bride of two dayswrere honeymooning today at an undisclosed spot. Before leaving late Saturday, the 22-year-old son of Vice President and Mrs. Hubert H. Humphrey displayed some of his father’s finesse with newsmen. Robert and Donna Erickson, 21, were married here Saturday at St. Olaf’s Catholic church, sealing a friendship that grew out of their days at Mankato State College. Negro Leader, Hart to Speak at UAW Affair GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Roy Wilkins, president of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People, was scheduled to speak at three-day conference which began today to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the United Auto Workers Fair Practices Department. Other speakers include Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., and UAW President Wal-Hf K. Quake-Ridden Japanese Town Is Jolted Again TOKYO (AP) - Two fairly strong earthquakes followed by a series of minor tremors shoo the area around the quake-rid den town of Matsushiro in central Japan Sunday and today. At least seven persons were injured. 94 Prink 29 Torrid 28 Noodle (comb. 37 Entertained 38 Time of 44 Rant 47 Falsehood 48 Hostelry SOHound’si 2 3 4 r~ 8 7 8 9 If fr 2 13 14 5 16 11 i& \r so J * 1 23 r 27 29 15 91 33 97 39 H r IS 43 81 82 84 -a HOME IMPROVEMENT IS OUR BUSINESS M0HUQKn No Salesman1* Commission-No Middleman Profit! MfSnhlyrB *1,295 NO MONEY D0WN-FHA and BANK RATES NO PAYMMTS 111 FEBRUARY INF Member Pontiac Chamber of Commerce FREE ESTIMATES (No Obligation) FE 8-9251 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC MY BUSINESS: Working Solutions To Your Living Problems! Lot’s Talk REMODELING Eliminate In-Between Cotta and Confuaion... I Personally Will Call On You! FHA AND BANK TEAMS UP TO 20 YEARS AN OPPORTUNITY TO BID FOR YOUR WORK WILL PLEASE US BOTH CONSTRUCTION COMPANY TIC PONTMC FE 3-7833 p—*0 / THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST *9, 1966 THREEJM Be Ready for Winter ■'Jm FORM PAST41 YEARS GEE HAS BEEN SERVING PONTIAC AND OAKLAND COUNTY HOMES AND BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS WITH BETTER QUALITY ^ FUB>.. COMPLETE BURNER SERVICE Call us for your annual furnace tune* up. Insure yourself, of trouble-free, economical, clean warmth and cam* fort next winter. David H. Gee Today, as in 192$ you can depend on Gee for Complete Heating, Satisfaction! Quality fuel . . . quick, dependable personalized service . . . Accuracy . . . you get them all with qhe single call to FE 5-8181. Be sure—Be safer- Enjoy complete heating satisfaction. Call Gee today. Telephone FE 5-8181. COM* USERS ATTENTION! telephone W| «*ny • complete line of all regular FE 6-8181 grades of coal, including QEE POCAHONTAS , . and “LITTLE JOE,” The all-purpose STOKER IF YOU DON'T KNOW FUEL .. . KNOW YOUR FUEL DEALER % i I THF. PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1966 (JmCkriMf if ONE COLOR I— TTT. i 7i 100% NUON 2-WA1 I STRETCH CT lIVC SUCKS With Stirrup$l mrm™m ■oyrfsm*t*i6 TURTLENECK KNIT SHIRK bow ioq* cotton % aovr sins 4 «• i* ■jin COTTON BRIEFS A PACKAGED HOSE Si- * •■■«**? colenl 4 to 10V4 BOYS' SIZES 4 £■ —A .!-«- -> T3J (OfW| flNMPfl WffllfwIBB OwTllIh fte?® able OOrtartl ■•yon, rvbbar, I •ol.Jr. Pterin Mi, SALE..poor boy immjit B. Orion* actylk poor boy % sleeves. White, navy, loden, plum. Jr, sizes 34 to 40. F. Wide wale cotton corduroy jeans: royal, ^lorien, plum, wheat. Front zip. -Jr. „ iim 7*4 3. SALE.. boxer sweater, bermudas C. Sweater: Orion* acrylic in golden yel- A low, grape, navy, white, loden. S, M, L. -c D. Bonded wool Bermudas: brown, grape, navy, loden. Front rip. Subteen sizes 8-14. c. »m>mmUr 0. BwmmIm SALE..poor boy and sfirt G. Stripe poor boy: Orion* acrylic. Ribbed neck. Grape, gold, navy on white. Small, medium, large. H. Wool A-line skirt: No band, tab dosing, bade zipper. Navy, loden, brown, grape. Jr. high sizes 8 to 14. « L ■SiiMmm a ft. Rich, ft. gfMrtawcar — IMaoi'i Befleel Slant — SMrrtm, Hnt m»t, OB NurtUul, Kuttwl, Wartime, IJnnln Park, Pnrtkn. lttiUa) OMUfetm 0. #7*. M8 Call CA 3-5199; Suburbanites use ear handy toil-tree listing on pages $9 9 3 SALE m • • long, lean look in wide wale eordnroy panto A. Jeanh Wanted . . . the look of the wild west. Western styled jeans and cut-offs fashioned in popular wide wale cotton corduroy machine wash with like-new results. Nationally known Wranglers* offer smooth, lean figure flattering fit. Wheat, light blue, loden, burgundy. Misses sizes; cut-offs 8 to 18, jeans 10 to 18. Have both styles at savings. Come in or Shop by phone. CMM MOO or a tolh SALE . iperma-press shirts Our own dependable Corliss brand OXFORD cloth shirts keep their crisp lode always without ironing; Long sleeves. Washable cotton. Popular colors of white, navy, berry, blue, pink. Misses’ sizes 32 to 38. Ideal for back-to-school, campus. C. Tailored button down collar. D. Bermuda collar. S ALE ...mi s s e s9 stretch eapris Popular royal* adagio* rayon-nylon stretch cap-ris. Black, navy, loden, burgundy, brown. 8-18. 1 ♦y«j *|TT Bad««t Bl«y — m Bmk., AND SMUai Uaromt, 9mAma O. soo. »o» 1 9k* ■ 1 v ,( . . ' 1 .. I 2^1 ■' ' ££ nw* uijjrc*'**- If .4jv - *, fs II ¥r^i?'si • ■ ** WSMMB& WBwHR. SH’ W'isV'.; rwS 111*: SALE .. girls’ nylon stretch pant, coordinated tops A. Crew neck top in stretch nylon Dac-ron*-polyester. Red, navy, brown-orange, green-pink, burgundy-blue stripes. 7 to 14. Also, turtle neck style 4 to 6x. B. Coordinated double knit nylon stretch' pants. Stitched crease, stirrups. Red, navy, brown, green, burgundy. Sizes 4 to 6x. Also, girls’ sizes 7 to 14, 2.88. SALE.. girls’ poor hoy 88 C. 'In’ look sweater in Orion9 acrylic Crew neck, long sleeves. White, moss green, plum, navy, pink. Little girls’ sizes 4 to 6x, girls’ sizes 7 to 14. Buy several at this low sale price. Come in or shop by phone. 2 SALE..Orion cardigans D. Little girls’ classic Orion* acrylic cardigan in fall’s /w QA most wanted colors: white, navy, green, plum, bur- W m gundy. 4 to 6x. Handy for back-to-school, play time. F Also, girls’ 7 to 14......,...3.88 Uttls Gifts' Wear—Hudson’s Budget MwtS Bswatuwm, Northland Eastland, Westland, Uncola Park, Pontiac, Madison, Dearborn D. 88S S A L E .. g i r 1 s ’ lined all-weather pile coats A. Cuddly warmth with smart double-breasted styling, hood, Shell of Dacron* polyester-cotton. Hood, body lined with Creslan* acrylic pile on cotton backing. Acetate sleeve lining. Fall’s favorite colors . . . navy, claret. Girls’ 7 to 14. Also little girls' sizes 4 to 6x ... 7.74 SALE.. girls’ swinger jiini] 1. It’s news! The jumper with the swinger skirt! Solid heather top plus plaid skirt in wool-nylon. Predominate shades of red or blue, with white band trim. Girls’ sizes 7 to 12. Smart back-to-school fashions. SALE..little girls’ jump Mpt Sim — Bm*—. C. Fashion excitement for the younger set! Low-torso look with perky pleated skirt in wool-nylon plaid. Button, tab trim, Black watch, predominate shades of blue or red. Little girls’ 4 to 6x. NortrflMi, Eutland, WMtland, Unsafe raifc, Fwntiae, MaSImn, Dfuton 0. m Cmtt CA $-5490$ Suburbanites use our handy toll - free listing on pages ft, 9 « 4 * SALE.. favorite-style shoes for boys, girls Classic st>loi\vltliieatherup|!!ers,lQng-weaxmg man-made soles. A. Boys’ dress tie in blade only. Sizes 10 to 3. B. Girls’ oxford tie with saddle trim. Black in sizes 8y2 to 3. C. Boys’ slip-on style with easy-on elasticized side vents. Black only. Sizes 12*4 to 3. D. Girls’ trim buckle-strap style in black or red. Sizes 8*/2 to 3. Buy several pair . . . and save! SALE .. girls’ tennis E. All-time favorite play shoe for active sports! Cotton canvas uppers with long-wearing non-skid rubber soles. Comfort cushioned arch and insole. White only. Girls’ sizes 12*4 to 3. Gome in or call CA 3-$100. SALE..boys’ athletie shoes Rugged action shoes for boys on the go! Heavy-duty sure grip rubber soles, cotton canvas uppers. Cushioned arch, insole for comfort. Wash in your machine. White. Sizes 11 to 3. P. Low style. G. High style. shoes ||| Children'* SIMM - Hudson’s Bud let HM - Dunton. NurthlM*. Kustluud, WeuttaM. Uneota F«k, PontUe, MMIsou, Dearborn D. »TS SALE.. girls’ underwear SALE, {iris’ stretch tights A. Permanent press SLIP needs no ironing! Adjustable straps, elastidzed bade waist for better fit. Dainty ribbon trim. Kodel* polyester-cotton. White only. Sizes 4 to 14. ........ 84 controlled Paknit® combed cotton. 4 to 14. C. Corliss elastic leg double seat BRIEF. White combed cotton. Sizes 4 to 14. D. Our own Corliss brand band leg BRIEFS. Flat-knit combed cotton pamy, rib knit band leg. Machine washable. White only. Sizes 4 to 14. Buy now at tibia low, low etock-up price! 1 8.«P Shr’l E. Out own Corliss brand neat looking micro-mesh TIGHTS. Long-wearing, run resistant stretch nylon in fall’s favorite colors . . . black, red, navy, royaL Girls’ sizes, Small O 4-6; Med. 6x-7; Med. Large 8-10. Large 12-14. M pi\ SALE...fashion knee-hi’s F. Girls’ KNEE-HI’s with reinforced wear points. Popular colors . . » navy, red, white. Hi-bulk OlM* iaj&tietdt nylon. Sizes 7-8*A and 9-tL MP Wlwww — MWi stare* — Bmmtmm, MMUmO. Wwttat, II—Is r«k, fMtiMi Miami, DtMtam D. — ft A T F frogw9 new western (jJlLlI suede look Jacket Handsome suede look cotton outer shell. Snug Orion* acrylic ’sherpa’ pile body lining holds body heat. Rayon quilted sleeve lining. Dark brown, dark olive and western tan; sizes 10 to 20. ft AIF junior boys9 warm (JjfiLIi corduroy parkas ft AIF boys9 iridescent UiUili all weather coats ft A IF men's and boys9 iirl lifi basketball shoes C A ¥ F boys9 western look jjAlilj eardnrog slacks 157 JL s pr. ( Here’s a coat to defy the oddest days! Warm cotton corduroy outer shelL Orion® acrylic body lining. Zip detachable hood; knit collar. Dark olive, bark brown. Sizes 8 to 12. Nationally-known high and low styles —*i«h flanrJmgyinf mbfejr soles. Wash-able cotton canvas upper* and cushioned insole and arch. White; boys’ sizes J1/* • to 6; men’s (% to 12. Come in Person or SHOP-BY-PHONE . . , call Customer Shopping Service, CA 3-Slbi or call a Toll-Free Suburban Exchange: He can look his best and never worry about the weadter? Cotton-acetate outer shell, warm zip out Orion® acrylic pile lining inside. Black, iridescent olive and blue; sizes 8 to 20. Suburbanites: Ask Information for your Hudson's Toll-Free Suburban Number or use Listing below: IAST AREA: Call 777-5500 if year exchange Is HOword ^(463-465-448), PRescott (77l-772-77J.775-770-777.770.77f), 2ft or 2f4 or 701. Call 541-0000 if your exchange Is SLocum (754-757-760), 755 or 75*. Call 2*0-1*22 if your exchange is COngresa (2*4), 2*0 or 711 or 71*, Permanently pressed cotton corduroy stays neat. ... need* no ironing, Tapered long and lean with tab waist, high pockets, no-cuffs. Antelbpe, blue, olive. Regular 8 to 16, slim 8 to 16. SALE .. boys’ no-iron high pocket slacks Permanent press Ported® polyester-combed cotton. Kadis look neat all day I Plus . , . trim features school boys like! High pocket styling with tab waists pencil slim legs and cuffless, Colors of Hack, <«avy, and olive. Boys’ sizes regular 8 to 20 and slim 8 to 18r 1 ________________ n including Ypillantt, Ann Arbor. Coll 251 9999 if your oxchanga i AVonuo(212-213-2M-2S5), DRak# (37f), Orleans (676). PLaza (751), STarfiog (712), WHHnay (941), 675. Cali 2*1-1122 if your exchange is Floldbrook (149), GArfiuld (421-422-42M27), GRaonloaf (474-47*), PArkway (721-722-725). 2*1, 4*4, 591. Coll 451-951* if your ONthaago is ©Leo*iOw(45J).HUnt.r (452-491), NOrmandy (**2-**l-**5-*6«). 761 or 7*4. DM ‘O' ask for Enterprise *300 if your oxeboago is OXbow (697-699) . NORTH ARIA: Call 135-7251 if your axehango is EMpire (363), FEdaral (332-333-334-335-338), MArkot (624), MAyfair (626), OLIve (651-652-656). ORIando (673-474), ULyssos (562), *02. Call 541-5*00 if your ox-change is ELgin (366-357), JUalper (588). Lincoln (541 through 549), Midwest (644-646-647), MUIberry (689), TRoian (879), 353 or 756 or 756 «r 555. 10 Come in or Shop by Phone Call CA 3-5100 or a toll-free suburban exchange It’s two coats in one! It's a lightweight coat for right now! Add the zip-in lining' and it’s warm enough for blustery winter weather! And you can wash, dry, and wear . . . it’s permanently pressed, never needs ironing. Raglan sleeves, fly front button closing. Dacron* polyester-cotton with acrylic pile lining, sleeves in quilted acetate. Black, olive. Sizes 4, 5, 6, 7. ii SALE . , little bajrf? flannelette pa jam He’ll be toasty warm in/ this 2-pc. style of an-ton flannelette. Chdose from middy, con, ski styles in asstKfdd action prints. Sizes 4, 6, 8. an SALE . ... children9* 2 - piece knit nleeper Extra-long top to fit as v. Pre-i SALE ... permanent P re** dre»* alack* they grow. Pre - shrunk cotton knit Non - slip plastic soles. Colors of maize, aqua, blue. Little boys’ sizes 4, 6, 8. Stay-neat slacks you wadi, dry, and wear . . . need no ironing. Raycm-nylon - acetate. Navy, brown. Little boys’ sizes, 4. 5, 6, 7. Uttfa Boy*’ Hew — Hudson'. Budget Store* — Denlwn, Northland, Kantian*, Went tend, rufc. rathe, Hetlm, Battan 0. sat 11 SALE9 permanent press shirts stay neat Hey Mom! Just wash and tumble dry these handsome shim . . . no-ironing needed! They really stay neat from morning to night Cotton-polyester blends in long sleeves. Assorted fall colors in solids and plaids; 8 to 18. SALE9 cotton - nylon boys9 rib dress hose Get him several pair at our low price! Mercerized cotton, nylon reinforced heel, toe. Gray, black, brown, navy; 8 to 10'/^. Save! SAKE9 hoys? long sleeve SALE ... flannelette SALE9 boys9 Cranbrooh easy - care hnit shirts shi style pajamas briefs and T - shirts Just right for active days! Pure wash ’n wear Ac-rilan® acrylic. Regular collar styling with- two button front. Assorted colors; sizes 6 to 16. Our own dependable / PI Briefs: Combed cotton. 9 < *25 Cranbrook brand. San- | knit; taped front, legs. 1 forized® cotton flannel- Sizes 6 to 20. 9 ette. Crew neck style in y assorted lively prints. L Boys’ sizes 6 to 16. 1 * S'1. m ** t-shirts: Combed cotton , knit. Taped neck; full 1 cut. Sizes 6 to 20. J25 **»•» FaraUMnn — Had MB’! Baifet Stem — Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland, Lincoln Park, Pooka*, Madison, Dearborn D. SOS A. We’ve got the latest word In sock fashion! See this new crochet type nylon over-the-knee in six exciting colors; navy, off. wrgtfffdf, asfk green, Tight beige pecan.. One size stretches to fit sixes 9 to 11. Put your outfits in the campus spotlight and go ’over-the-knee’ for fall. 3 pr. 2.82. C. Comfortable *Defender’ casual shoes are great for in-or-outdoor fun. White cotton canvas uppers, rubber soles. Medium in sizes 4 to 10. Save now on these SALE ... cubit* stitch knee-highs B.Orion® acrylic nylon; medium fits 8 to 9*/2 and large fits TO to ll*/2 *n *>x fashion colors. 3 pr- 2.10. 'Step in style’ with our own Carlota casuals. Two fashionable strap styles, rounder toes. Long-wearing man-made uppers and soles. Medium 5 to 10; no D. Black, green jade. E. Black.. Hosiery — Hudson’* Budget Rtnmi — Downtown, Northland. F.ast-land, Westland, Lincoln Park, Pontine, Madison, Dearborn 1), 911 Women’s Shoes — Hudson * Budget Stores — Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Wcwtlaad, Lincoln Park, Pontiac, Madison, Dearborn D. 974 11 A. SLACK HANGERS: Keeps pants hanging straight ... avoids wrinkles. SAUSt 2 for 97c 1. COMBINATION HANGERS: Pants* a*at* stay neatly together; ssvcs.4Psoe._c SALE! 97e ea. C. SKIRT HANGERS: Sturdy tack holds 5 skirts, pinch.dips . ■■■» . no more pirn.... SAEM! 2 for IM7 D. BLOUSE HANGERS: Handy 6-tier hanger holds blouses, shirts neatly. 8AMX! 2 tor IjB7 sturdy 30-in. metal wardrobe with couveuient hut shell our 'Hudso' deluxe compact hair dryer E. Attractive, all steel wardrobe stands 30xt*6xT9-lttches; hat shelf for small or boxed items. Favorite crackle finish in Sahara brown enamel. Handy lock and key. Great for extra privacy at the dor- ^Ristoiyv-afcjnfacsanftrsteM^ .;,...T:.,rir umder-the-bed metul chest F. Sale! Here’s a space-saving idea. "Chest slides under standard bed. Lock and key. 18x6x42-inches. Convenient molded carrying case keeps the dryer neat, compact at all times. Handy four-position switch gives a selection of heat temperatures; quick - drying convenience. Ivory-color case with mirror in lid. Storage space for the large head bonnet, cord. WWIw — aMW’a naian a*«W —. HartWll. EaatMad, Westland, Lincoln Park, Pontiac, Madison, Dnrtm D. KM Toilctrlra — Hndson'i Budget Store* — Downtown, Northland. Kaatlnnd. Westland, Lincoln Park, Pontiac, Madison, Dearhom H. K4 14 Hu > eae J SALE 2 for *3 Sr Choose from pouches, satchels, shoulder styles. Grained plastic in black or brown tone. Buy several and save! Handbag*—Had soa's Budget Storm — Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland, Lincoln Park, FMttM, Madison, DesrWn D. 821 Foundations—HihImmi'r Budget Stores—Downtown, Northland, Fast- land, Westland, Lincoln Park* Pontiac, Madison, Dearborn D. 188 * ~*fwrgw..- casual.ba gs ..*—far-.back - to - com pstn figure .Haltering ideas from i well - known makers A. LONG LEG PANTY: Swinging colorful assorted designs of controlling power net. Small, medium, large. B. BRIEF PANTY: 'Aromi’ nylon spandex with double power net across front for tummy .liij jfifftwh Vhifd^Mf. L» xl. C. BRA: Stretch strap cotton. Stitched undercups for uplift. Non-roll band. White; A 32 to 36, B 32 to 38, C 32 to 38. D. LONG LEG PANTY: Antron* nylon lycra spandex body; lace leg cuff. Gives smooth lines under fashions. White; small, medium, large. a ? * ,, twr: NIGHTSHIRT SET: Outfit yourself for die evening in this nightshirt with matching booties and Antler cap. Cheerful blue or red bird print on white grounds. Comfortable easy-care cotton flannelette in sizes 32 to 40. 2.67. PAJAMA: Lounge or sleep in swinging style with this sharp bell-bottom pajama set; dainty self ruffle. Blue and rose print on white grounds. Easy-care cotton flannelette for chilly fall eve-, nings. Sizes small, medium, large. 2.67. IRREGULARS comfortable 1 Slips keep. you neat underneath back-to-school fashions. Slight irregularities mil not affect wear or appearance. Favorite white in sizes 32 to 40. Not all sizes at eyety store. SwSM Uagerte — l»lt. 10; Point Pelee, Sept. 17; Du Brul farms and orchards, Sept. 24; Arkon-Kettle Point, Oct. 1; and American Aggregates Gravel pits, Oct. 8. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Dr. Robert T. Halt, Director of Cranbrook Institute of Science, is in Tokyo to address the members of the 11th Pacific Science Congress'. After the conference, he will join a symposium on primate biology ^of the Pacific area and tour Japanese research centers concerned with primates. 2 From Area Tapped for Trusteeships Two Pontiac area residents were nominated for ^University board posts at the Republican State Convention in Detroit over the weekend. Mrs. George J. Heubner Jr., of 275 Guilford, Bloomfield Hills, was nominated for the University of MicMgan Board of Regents and Kenneth Thompson, of 735 Ardmoor, Birmingham, was nominated for the Michigan State University Board of Trus- A graduate of the university, Mrs. Huebner received a degree in advertising and jour-nalism and, for 30 years, wrote advertising copy for Maxon Inc. of Detroit. She has been a substitute teacher in the Bloomfield Hills School District and is a sustain-member of the Junior League of Birmingham. A graduate of MSU with a civil engineering degree, Thompson is assistant vice president — operations for Michigan Bell Telephone Co. FUND TRUSTEE He is active in many community affairs and serves as a trustee of the MSU Development Fund. Also nominated by the GOP was Kalamazoo businessman Robert J. Brown for U. of M. and Deckerville dairy farmer Frank Werrfinari Tor MSU. The Republican nominees will face Democrats in the Nov. 8 election for vacancies on the boards. Security Tight for De Gaulle Romney Lead Followed - (Contlnuad-Qnaf licans to support our boys.’ Romney took the rostrum • second time on the proposed income tax resolution. It would hamstring local and state governments, he said, and hasten the drain of power to Washington. Alfred Laport of Standish, chairman of the resolutions committee, said the committee had decided to give Sen. Robert Griffin a chance to declare Republican policy on national sues. er Warshawsky of South Haven, a member of the Workman’s Compensation Appeal Board and 1964 attorney, general candidate, and Judge* Thomas Brennan of Wayne County Circuit Court. ' The- income tax question had been considered and rejected by the preplatform committee, he added. NO DELEGATES None of the conservative elements had bothered to send delegates to these meetings, party sources said. A floor contest over tin Supreme Court nominations was avoided when John Q’Hara, a Birmingham lawyerWko entered the raee at the last Nominations to take on Chief Justice Thomas Kavanagh and A five-way race for two positions on the State Board of Education helped prolong the convention for eight hours. EASY WINNER Dr. Leroy Augenstein, chairman of the Michigan State University biophysics department and one-time candidate for the U. S. Senate nomination, won easily. Former board member James O’Neill of Livonia edged out Dr. Robert Cotton of Grass Lake by • handful of votes fa the second board slot. Cotton would have been the second Negro on' the Republican slate, and sources Indicated that Romney’s staff members were disappointed that he did not get one of the two berths. They win face incumbents Dr. Leon Fill and Donald M. D. Thurber in the November elec- Nixon said the high cost of living could be a more important issue than the Viet Nam war. GOP NOMINE E-George Washington, 49, is the MicMgan Republican nominee for secretary of state. He is the first Negro ever nominated by a major Michigan political party -to so high a place on the partisan state ballot. In November he will challenge Democrat Jamas M.’Hare who will have, served a mend six consecutive terms as secretary of state. (See story, Page A-3.) Although Kennedy has t tions to campaign for t cratic candidates in 18 or n states, his schedule is If* be dwarfed by Humphrey. French Somaliland Acts to Prevent Strife DJIBOUTI, French Somali* land (AP) — Security was tightened today in restive French Somaliland to prevent recurrence of last week’s bloody independence riots when President Charles de Gaulle returns tonight en route to Cambodia. Pierre Billotte, Frepch secretary of state for' overseas territories, broadcast an appeal for calm and reconciliation among dissident elements in France’s last remaining African territory. Billotte also conferred with Ahmed Idress Moussa, leader of the Parti du Mouvement Popu-laire which sparked many of the independence. demonstrations. They resulted in 4 dead and 70 injured. Billotte, left behind to inves- , tigate the riots, accused the neighboring Somali Republic of exploiting unrest in the colony. “Mogadishu (capital of the Somali Republic) has gone too far,” Billotte told a news conference. LOCAL AGITATORS He said he believed local malcontents chose De Gaulle’s visit to publicize dissatisfaction with “the manner in wMch they were governed locally.” “Foreign elements coming from the Somali Republic exploited the discontent. Those foreign elements added an element of shock,” he said. De Gaulle has stood fast against the independence demands. After the riots, he declared change could come only under democratic conditions and not through violence. De Gaulte reeaHed thkt to W58 the territory chose to remain a French possession. He £aid Ms government would abide by that decision. VP Sees B obby impact of inflation on the vot- While the vice president discounted the political effect of the Asian conflict on the voters, Nixon said Republicans would benefit from “the deep division within the Democratic party over the war effort.” BACKLASH EYED Rioting in some cities may I develop a backlash against local I officials mostly Democratic 1 but not against national candi- J dates, Humphrey said. Nixon | generally agreed. The former vice president I pointed to high federal spend-1 ing as an issue. Humphrey said the benefits 99 Other bags to $12.88 • smart designs * sturdy construction • roomy and rugged bags 6 reinforced at strain points • rugged heavy duty zippers. attention bowling teams -get team discounts on ‘NAT NAST bowler shirts • come in now and get the team discount on orders of 5 or more shirts. Big selection of shirt styles colors and lettering. Order now for delivery before season starts. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St SPECIALS Compare these lower prices anywhere—then you'll know why they are called specials. Specials for Today—Tues. and Weds. only. ____________ 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Sealed Beam AUTO Headlight Bulbs F* Series 4001-4002 bulbs for J®WJr dual system headlights 12 volts. Limit 4 bulbs per person. Each 88‘ Modern Way o Repair Masonry 5 lbs. 2.49 MIRACLE COMPOUND SEALS CRACKS & HOLES FOR GOOD! e Just add wattr, mix, apply. e No preparation of surface. e Cures stronger than concrete. e Trowels as thin as 1/16”. e Permanently repairs concreta floors, patios, walks, steps, driveways, ate. Galvanized 20-Gal. Garbage Cans With Cover [90 Ail metal—galvanized to resist rusting. City and township approved size. Drop side handles. Limit 2. All Metal Perforated Rubbish Burners As shown—completely j forated trash burner on I to provide draft (or c plete burning, limit 1 333 Powerful 'WESTINGHOUSE' Electric Vacuum Cleaner I • Famous Westinghouse I Vacuum Cleaner for the home ... powerful motor picks up deep-in dirt. Complete with necessary cleaning attachments. . SHOP SIMMS HOUSEHOLD DEPT. Spins Everything to Your Fingertips Ball Bearing Turntables P Save 40c on this 13" turntable with steel ball bearings. Spins contacts to you—saves space at the table, keeps things within easy reach. #203. Bake, Serve, Freeze fn Same Dish ‘Libby’ 2-Gt. Casserole 2s® With iAt#*## C#,w Large 2-quart size casserole by 'Libby* and you can take it from the freezer to the oven to cook, serve and freeze, all in the same dish. Handy round style. SHOP SIMMS SPORTS DEPT. Pre-Season luh1ersf ? Ctn. 135 Clay Targets lAICCTCnM. » ® WESTERN Sharpen up the 'ole hunting eye with these clay pigeons—limit 2 cartons. Hand Target Thrower |99 Hardwood-nonslip handle, leather wrist thong. Limit 1. Shotgun Shulls Boxes of 25s Target loads and light loads for slcMt. Price depends on 049 MNertb SIMMS.'!. ■jHf DELANO, Calif. (AP) — What labor experts are calling a crucial point in the unionization of American farm laborers will take place Tuesday when Di Giorgio Corp. farm workers vote in a union-representation election. The election takes place near this San Joaquin Valley community and in San Die- HOPE MEDAL FOR HOPE-The president of Hope College in Holland, Mich., Dr. C. A. Vanderwerf (left), presents the Hope College Centennial Medallion to comedian Bob Hope in a special ceremony at the Ohio State Fair in Columbus yesterday. The gold medallion was struck in advance of the centennial celebration to be held Oct. 12-16 this fall. Curvaceous Cuties Caught MARSEILLES, France f the community.” During his probe, Piggins held 2,000 interviews with 958 wit- The jury originally was called > investigate reports of traffic fixing in the county sheriffs office. Piggins enlarged the probe to include allegations of gambling and bribing of a police officer in Detroit. ★ it * Action is pending on most of the indictments, although some persons were cleared of perjury charges for lad; of evidence. Worry of FALSETEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don’t b« embarrassed by loose false teeth (Upping, dropping or wobbling when you eat. talk or laugh. Just sprinkle a little FA8TEETH on your plate*. This pleasant powder gives a remarkable sense of added comfort and security by holding plates more firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste. Denturaa that fit are ementlal to health. Bee your dentist regularly. Get FAS TEETH at all drug counters. GIVES FREE GUNS .HOME FURNISHINGS HUNDREDS of MICHIGAN! FAMILIES . Have Asked Even DemandedJ That We Repeal This Offer ITHAT’S RIGHTl WORLD WIDE GIVES! A FREE RIFLE OR I SHOTGUN WITH ALLl MAJOR PURCHASES...! AND REMEMBER All WORLD WIDE THE VALUE! OF THE GUN YOU RECEIVE! INCREASES WITH THEl VALUE OF THE FURNITURE! YOU BUY... FOR INSTANCE] 'THIS JNOOERN BEDROOM! ONLY $2*4 WEEKLY ] NAME BRAND RIFLE NAME BRAND SHOTGUN EVERY STYLE, EVERY ACTION and THEY’RE FREE at WORLD WIDE WITH MOST MAJOR PURCHASES EXCITING CONTEMPORARY LIVING ROOM ENSEMBLE ra m ONLY t double dretuer with c 1091 WORLD WIDE*! I disctdnt—1 PRICE And You Pet a Free Rifle or Shotgun ONLY *2«S If you liko modern, you’ll lov* thi* wide arm tofa and chair with all rovarsible foam cushion* and covered in long wearing nylon. Construction is all hardwood and thi* combination it available in many decorator fhada*. Buy With NO MONEY DOWN and NO PAYMENT TIL OCTOBER INCLUDES YOUR CHOICEDf WORLD WIDE’S DISCOUNT PRICE *129 RIFLE OR . SHOTGUN \ MICHIGAN’S LARGEST FURNITURE CHAIN! \ OPEN TONIGHT ’til 9 P.M. SUNDAYS NOON ’til 6 PJL ST" FREE BUY WITN NO MONEY DOWN AND NO PAYMENT TIL OUT. WIDE PONTIAC STORES EAST SIDE NEXT to Kiaart NORTH SIDE liiOMEFURNISHINGSl reuwn YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT YOUR WORLD WIRE STORE!' Til E POEmAS PRESS, MGN4MAY.AUGUST 29,1966 Shelley Takes Note of 'Patch of Weight' in Great Movie Bid By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - “Hie only - thing that stands between and great movie roles,” said Shelley Winters with her tomary candor, ‘ “is 30 pounds. Even as her plump self, Shelley has done well enough tol become the onlyf supporting tress to win a1 pair of Oscars THOMAS —for “The Diary of Anne Frank” in 1959 and “A Patch of Blue” in 1965. But, of course, the acting breed is ever restless, and she wouldn’t at all mind moving up to a starring Oscar. But there’s the weight to consider. unis ueiween me 3vie roles,” said rs — i m SHELLEY WINTERS Tuesday Only Special! T think I can lick it now, she said confidently. “I’m going to a doctor who has put me on a strict diet. My trouble has ‘ that I fluctuate up and down. I take off the weight, then I put it on for a role. Or else I go to Italy. if you can’t eat spaghetti in Italy, what else is there? REAL THING “Now I’m going to get my weight down and keep it there. No more of the funny business.” The ubiquitous Shelley was in town to play a heavy — sorry about that — in “Batman.” She claimed she did so in order to placate her daughter Romina, a blooming beauty of 13. ★ * ★ “What a job!” exclaimed Shelley, who prides herself in being a method actress. “When I saw this guy in satin tights jump down in front of me and say these crazy lines, I couldn’ keep a straight face. It was too ridiculous. “Finally, toe director had to tell, me to stop it. He said I had to think of it as ‘playing Batman.’” I said, “Fine — this morning we play Batman; this afternoon we play doctor. Robin thought it was funny, but I don’t think Batman got the joke.” OFF TO ITALY The actress was ready to leave for Italy and a movie with Alberto Sordi, followed by a return to Broadway in three Saul Bellows plays, “Under the Weather.” They are the sort of thing she likes to do — offbeat, artistic, serious-minded. “I don’t seem to do things right,” she admitted. “Either I’m being too honest about paying my taxes, or I don’t make the right kind of deals. Whatever the reason, I don’t end up with much money. ★ ★ ★ . “Take ‘A Patch of Blue.’ SitP ney Poitier drew no salary, settling for 10 per cent of the gross instead. I did it for 50 thousand I got the Oscar and he didn’t; yet he’s going to end up with two million dollars! Western Dems Wary KIM NOVAK READS ABOUT ACCIDENT—Actress Kim Novak, who was taken to Sisters Hospital in Santa Monica, Calif., Friday after her car went out of control and over a 120-foot embankment, reads about toe accident in a paper which was brought to her by actor Stu Whitman. Whitman drove up to Santa Monica from Hollywood Saturday when he heard about the accident. Miss Novak suffered only minor injuries. War May Hurt at Polls LAST 2 DAYS HURON It. ROBIN CRUSOE 1:4M:33>T:18-10:00 g WALT DISNEY | I IX ROBIN 1 fecmisoE.Es.Nl Coming WEDNESDAY JOSEPH E.LEMNE TBWMr WASHINGTON (AP) - A sort of Fourth-of-July-in-August atmosphere gripped toe capital today as the American Legion mustered for a grand parade, a feature of its 48th national convention. ^Beginning at noon and lasting Natalie Aids Police After Car Bumped Faith' Spares Bahama Isles MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Faith, fierce and fickle hurricane, came to a virtual halt in toe open Atlantic today after northerly shift that spared toe tiny islands in toe Bahama’ chain of her 120 mile an hour fury. Although her movement was limited to a slow drift to the north, Faith’s future path uncertain. Forecasters warned the islands that she could spin in any direction. ★ * The Miami Weather Bureau said that “only fringe effects appear Bahamas with occasional 'squaRs^oF . . Hour From Eleuthera to Grand Turk Monday.” I Heavy swells and pounding surf was expected on the and east side of the ei Bahamas. GALE WINDS Besides vicious 120-mile v near toe center, Faith spun force winds 300 miles f north and 200 miles to the canter was 570 miles east s ■NWWlPiliPM east at San Salvador. Washington Buckles Down for Legionnaires' Confab LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actress Natalie Wood and her agent, bumped in traffic, helped police run down and capture an alleged hit-run drivCi1, deicers reported today. The car carrying Miss Wood and Terry Dtme was struck from behind Sunday night as it entered toe Hollywood Freeway, investigators said. They pursued the driver who allegedly hit them and sped away. Dene was driving. Two policemen joined the chase after Miss Wood told them: “That man hit me.” They caught a driver identified as William Rutherford, 36, of nearby Glendale, who booked on suspicion of felony hit-run driving. for at least seven hours, the event was to send 20,000 marchers- along Pennsylvania and Constitution avenues. Traffic was to be diverted around a big downtown section. ★ * More than 6,000 of the marchers are members of bands, and bugle and drums corps. The armed services assigned some of their smartest units to take part. Four hundred National Guardsmen were directed help police handle the crowds and toe traffic. The convention which lasts through Thursday, has attracted some 50,000 persons, Legionnaires and their families. “ GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, Mont. (AP) — Western Democrats see the Viet Nam war as an emotional issue — one that could hurt their congressional candidates if casualties continue to mount. Directors of the Western States Democratic Conference Sunday endorsed President Johnson’s efforts “to secure a peaceful settlement in Southeast Asia, particularly in Viet Nam. But in interviews, party officials, especially those from more populous states, showed concern about the war’s political effects. “When they bring a casket into a city with a soldier in it, people will worry about the war,” said Frank Keller, Washington State Democratic chairman. “And when a war. hero comes home and gives a speech, they’ll feel differently. It’s an emotional issue.” “It’s an issue and it’s a larger issue than anything else,” said Norman Stoll, Oregon’s Democratic national committeeman. UNCERTAINTY Tom Brown, New Mexico national committeeman, said “there is uncertainty and unrest,” although “I think our people by a large majority support toe President.” Keller said the congressional elections in November could be considered a referendum on the war. Brown is facing a hard fight against actor Ronald Reagan, toe Republican candidate for governor. Democrats hold 24 of California’s 38 congressional seats and three to four are on the critical list,” a source said. A big Reagan victory, he said, could cost the Democrats congressional seats. we might even pick up one” of the two Republican seats. Miss Lucy Redd of Utah, the new Westemn States Democratic Conference chairman, said “we are hopeful” Democrats will retain one House seat. Republicans hold the other. P R EE 18 MOLES OF 6QLF Putt-Putt All New Greens Lites For Nite Play | OPEN DAILY 9 a.m. til 12 M". rit Nary. iwtMisM BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS'WANT ADS! National Committeeman Stoll looked over the Oregon situation and gave Rep. Robert Duncan, supporter of President Johnson’s Viet Nam policy, a good chance to defeat Republican Gov. Mark Hatfield ior a Senate seat now held by the Democrats. Hatfield is a critic of toe war. But he said the party is “not as confident" about former Rep. Charles Porter winning Duncan’s old seat. MONTANA TIGHT In Montana Sen. Lee Metcalf faces a challenge by the Republican governor, Tim Babcock. The race is considered a tight one. « Democratic officials said they weren’t predicting losses or gains in toe congressional delegations of Montana, Arizona,a, Nevada, Hawaii or Alaska. Washington State Chairman Keller said, “we don’t expect to lose any” of the state’s five Democratic congressmen and are jammed, overseas caps embroidered with gold-braided in-sipia are everywhere. TALK BY JAVITS One of the convention preliminaries was a speech Sunday by Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y. Talking about toe Viet Nam war, Javits said: “I do not believe the Legion will want to sound hawkish just because people expect it to. “Of course, we are capable of great escalation of force and of course we possess the military might to inflict unacceptable damage on our opponents, but I do not believe that Americans want to use that power at the risk of a nuclear war or, more probably, an Asian land wi NOW! ‘SHENANDOAH’ & ‘SPY WITH MY FACE’ EAGLE Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER TUESDAY LADIES’ DAY TUES. - WED. - THUDS. AAAAMAAAAFREE PLAYGROUNDS • EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES He was one of a group of party officials who took a long look at toe present congressional lineup in toe 13 Western states of Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Washington, Alaska, Hawaii, Oregon, California, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. Republicans hold 22_ House seats out of 69 from toe area. Of the 26 senators, 6 are Democratic. CALIFORNIA CONCERN Delegates also showed concern about California, where Democratic Gov. Edmund G. ES22KEEGO site Ms •DUfer GaMeR POiSER TtoeLaT Si I CECiLjB OtMULEsTHE TEN COMMANDMENTS heston brynner Baxter | ROBINSON OE CARLO PAGET DEREK hwwckl roa • indeSon ppxI TECHNICOLOR DRIVE-IN ft 2-1000 MIRACLE MILE SO. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. 1 MILE W. WOOawARD —FIRST RUN!— E auoRei = liePBURn : anopereRi = tfrooLr I |||| E how \ TO ■wart ■ *w* * ^ minion ft 5-4500 msm 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY | i| mw THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUSTS, 1966 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Thursday. Produce as&s-sy Pears. Clapp* bu........... Plums, Burbank. Vt bu...... Watermelon, bu. ........... VEGETABLES Beans, Or. Rd„ bu.......... Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Beans, Raman, bu. ......... Beans, wax, bu............. Beets, dz. bch............ Carrots, Celle Pk., 2 dz. Carrots, topped, bu....... Celery, Pascal, dz. stks. Calory, Patcal, ert....... Celery, whlta, ert........ Chives, dz. bch........... Cucumbpr, slicers, bu. .. Cucumber, Pickle, bu, ... Cucumber, Pickle, bu. ... "-"t. Sweet, S doz. bag . OHI. t . bch. . Egg Plant, v. ..... ....... EM Pl»"t. Long type, pk. . Kohlrabi, dz. bch........... Leeks, dz. bch. ............ Onions, green, dz. bch...... Onions, Dry, SO-lb. Beg ..... Onions, Pickling, lb. ....... Parsley, Curly, dz. bch...... Parsley, root.............. Poppors, Cayenne, pk......... Peppers, Sweat, pk. bskt. Peppers, Hot, or. bskt....... Potatoes, 50 lbs............. Potatoes, 20 lbs............. Radishes, white, dz. bch..... Radishes, Red, 1 dz. bch. .. Rhubarb, outdoor, dz. bch. . Squash, Mart Faces a 'Blue' Monday OK Contract NEW YORK (APl-s-The Stock Market seemed headed for an-other blue Monday early today as stocks fell in heavy trading. Losses of most key stocks went from fractions to about a point but the more volatile issues were down more sharply. Northwest Airlines lost 5 points at 80 on an opening block of 10,700 shares. U.S. Smelting fell 2% to 38 on 3,900 shares. Eastern Air Lines dropped 3 points to 65% on an opening of 16,000 shares. Zenith fell nearly 3 points. Down a point or so were Raytheon, Sperry Rand, Metro- and Phelps Goldwyn-Mayer Dodge. CONTINUATION Analysts said it was a carry* over of the heavy selling on Friday. Weekend news was not encouraging, they added. Wall * Street’s worries about high in-5 terest i ....... rates were underlined by congressional criticism of the administration on that score and former President Truman’s warning that high interest rates coukl lead to depression. United Airlines lost more than a point. Down fractionally were such stocks as General Motors, Standard Oil (New Jersey), Du Pont, Anaconda, U.S. Steel and International Paper. Other opening blocks Included: Ford, off % at 41% on 13,000 shares; Chrysler, up Mi at 36% on 9,500; and Pennsylvania Railroad, up % at 45% on 4,500. A a A On Friday, the Associated Press average of 60 stocks foil 4.3 to 280.1, a low since Nov. 29, 1963. Prices continued to decline on the American Stock Exchange- Down about a point were Syn-tex, Scurry Rainbow Oil, Barnes Engineering and Oak Electro-Netics (ex dividend). Merged Newspaper Nearer to Publication The New York Stock Exchange new YORK (AP)-Pollewlng is • 1 selactsd tlock transactions on the fork Stock Exchange with-------- NEW YORK (AP) her? of the Pressmen’s Union have narrowly approved a new contract with the World Journal Tribune, Inc., moving the new publishing' company a major f step closer to initial publication 4 of its afternoon and Sunday newspapers. The vote was 263-208 after 95 minutes of heated debate Sunday at a membership meeting. It came in the 127th day of the longest newspaper work stoppage in the city’s history. Nine other unions, which reached contract agreements with the corporation before the morning Herald Tribune was folded, will try this week to make final contract adjusts ments. i William J. Kennedy, president of the Pressmen’s Union, is scheduled to give a report on his union’s agreement to officials of the nine unions. SOLVE PROBLEMS Thomas J. Murphy, executive vice president of the AFL-CIO Newspaper Guild of New York, said, “Whatever problems we have we can resolve either now or when we get back to work, either through grievance ma* chinery or arbitration.’’ •, - He also said, “Our^position is, that if they (the pressmen) got i something higher than the $12 package, we afe perfectly willing-to wait until next March 30, and get back then what we are shortchanged, if anything.1 SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Desertions from South Viet Nam’s 705,000-man forces are running nearly 20 per cent ahead of last year. A total of 67,000 members of the regular army, regional and popular forces Walked out in the first six months of 1966. If thfe desertions continue at the same rate in the second half of the year, the total number will be 21,000 more than the 1965 figure of 113,000. Thomas M. Laura, president chairman of the Newspaper of the 'Mailers Union No. 6 and Trades Council, said he wanted to get details of the pressmen’s agreement before commenting. Matt Meyer, president of the publisheing corporation, said he hoped there would be no problem with the other unions. Other union leaders could not be reached fix- comment. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s government expects, however, to reduce desertions through a new law imposing severe punishment and other measures improving the lot of the Vietnamese serviceman. The biggest single brake on desertions is expected to be De- Sales Boosted by Consumers A. H. Aymond, chairman of the board, has announced that Consumers Power Company kilowatt-hour sales of electricity increased 14 per cent and volume sales of natural gas rose 9 per cent during the 12 months ended July 31, as compared with the same period a year ago. Gross operating revenue of $433,400,000 represented an 8 per cent increase over the earlier 12-month period. Consumers Power spent more than $138,800,000 on ex-end improvement of its electric and natural gas treat August______ trough July 1888, said Ay-raond. t The company furnishes electric and naturgl gas energy service in 67 of the 68 counties in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula. Earnings per share on the average number of common shares outstanding were $3.03 HI the 12-month period ended July 31 compared with $2.76 in , tBrirnroimf perroamaw jniy ■31.1965. stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal polnti are tlghtM ttw Say. Price* do markup, markdown ewnmiliign. AMT Corp.......... Associated Truck ..... Boyne Products .. . Braun engineering .... Citizens utilities Class A tffiSZJSr?"..: TO 10.0 . 14.5 15.1 Hi 17.0 Scripts Prank's Nursery North Central Al ■'homJeal1* W"l,* mutual funds Television Electronics . u ti tf.il! Bid Asked 101 171 ...IMS 14.71 0J0 10.30 ...|J4 402 ■ 11.17 ifjl ... 0.11 10.01 ..1*i| 14.12 . 17JI If JO Folklore Takes Beating By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Some of Wall Street’s folklore is taking a beating. % Summer, as business measures it, is in its final days. And the stock market has yet to come up with the summer rally which the romantic tike to think of as tra-i Rather, stock prices last week dropped to the! lowest level in DAWSON more than two years. Trading v volume picked up. But observers were still wistfully looking for that traditional selling climax whldh is sup- posed to spell the end of a long and sharp decline. Talk about inflation is very much tiie “in" thing this sum, mer. But the tradition that people turn to buying stocks as a hedge against general price inflation seems very dormant at the moment. On the contrary, the drop in stock prices is traced by many brokerage firm analysts less to an urgency to *eli than to a lack of interest in buying. PUBLIC UNDEPRESSED Rising profits of a majority of corporations, along with record sales and production a ~ would — a tradition were running true to form — dri tors into the stock market But summer ebbs the public seems to be' unimpressed by higher profits or even-by rising dividend payments. Traditionalists had hoped that S. Viet Army Desertions Running Ahead ot 1965 Candidates' Radio Talks Postponed SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — The South Vietnamese national radio postponed today the speeches ot 11 candidates running in Saigon for election to the Constituent Assembly. No explanation was offered and a spokesman for the radio could not say when the speeches would be rescheduled. A A ★ The candidates were the third group scheduled to deliver brief campaign speeches. Last Friday and Saturday, the first two days of the official campaign periods more than 20 candidates spoke and many of them were critical of the military regime. Elsewhere In South Viet Nam, other candidates evidently continued the series of speeches suer .provincial radio stations. The campaign for the Sept. 11 voting was getting started slowly. One political meeting in Sai-gon was canceled because only i fow persons turned out. In street addresses and private meetings, however, some candidates were attracting small crowds and government propaganda teams were out in force in the provinces to spread cree Law 15, which was put into effect Atig. 1. Officials say toe impact of the stringent new decree should be known by November. j HARD LABOR It imposes a minimum punishment of five years at hard labor for ordinary desertion. Depending upon toe circumstances, a deserter could be given up to a life sentence at hard labor and, if he deserts in toe face of the enemy or to toe Communist side, his sentence would be death, A man will be declared a deserter after he has been absent from his unit for 15 days compared with 30 days' in the U.S. Army. A A A Even before the new decree went into effect, official figures showed a- sizable drop in the desertion rate in July. Authorities refused to speculate whether the drop was a seasonal one or a trend. The rate reached a peak of 28.5 desertions per 1,000 men in the regular army last March at the height of unrest in the northern provinces. It dropped to 12.6 desertions per 1,000 in July. A .A A Prodded by U.S. advisors, South Vietnamsee officials attacked the desertion problem by trying to improve morale. July, the government granted a 30 per cent pay increase to servicemen to cope with the rising cost of living. More recently, it stepped up the rate of promotions, increased the ration allowance and began improving medical1, postal, school and post exchange services. May Combine 3 Beachheads WASHINGTON (AP) Marine commandant Wallace M. Green Jr. says the corps' three beachheads in South Viqt Nam may be combined into a beachhead within toe next tew months. The Murines have established the individual combat bases since March 1966 at Da Nang, Phu Bai and Chu Lai along a 110-mile coastal area. The Marines now have 56,000 men in the area. a A A “Some 17 months ego, when we first went ashore, we assumed responsibility for less than 10 square miles of retd-estate, with a very small number of Vietnamese living within the perimeters," Greene said in a copyright interview in the cur* rant Wue of U. 8. News ft World Report. But .neither separately nor taken together do they seem to offer a satisfactory answer to why the stock market is behaving as badly as it is. There is Still one tradition left, however. And that is that whatever the market did last week, or even yesterday, doesn’t guarantee what it will do tomorrow. And that’s why-there’ll always be stock traders — and market watchers. News in Brief Lorna Stinson M llil Kin-mount, Orion Tewnehip, reported to Waterford Township police yesterday the theft of her pedi-ree Samoyed dog, valued at 100, from a parking lot of a Dixie Highway bar. Waterford Township police are investigating a burglary at Stephens’ Dairy Queen, 5608 M59, yesterday in which an mated $30 to iso was taken from cash box. JL Arthur Pierre of 382$ Zinnia, WatOTordTownshlp.nPiF ported to township police yesterday tneffiefto? W nral television set, two cameras and a projector, valued at $386, from his home. Encephalitis Toll in Korea at 310 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -The death toll from encephalitis since early this month rose to 3101 in South Korea today as 54 s died in a day, tbe Health Ministry reported. The ministry said a total of 1,316 cases have been reported. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—Ths cssh position i Hip Treasury ptiwppraS with corre- Svf% 22, mi 00MlM*T.n HUamMui 20 JU 411/415.24 I SMAMAWMI kmnt last week would see: first, a selling climax that would clear the air; second, the start of an upturn that, could be called a summer rally; and, just possibly, a revival of public confidence as summer neared toe Labor Day weekend which business usually thinks of as the real — not calendar — turn of tbe seasons. AAA But Friday, Aug. 28,tbe Dow-Jones index of 30 industrial stocks dosed at 780.58, or 24.06 points lower than tbe close on the previous Friday. More disheartening to the traditionalists, the market had started the week with a sharp deciine in prices on increased volume. Many had hoped that this could be called a selling climax. But the final session of the week saw a day’s dron of 11.81 points with the tape running late in the final burst of selling. Some chart followers are taking consolation from this. It just could prove to be that selling climax they’ve been hoping for. The waning days of summer could see a rebound from the low point. At 780, the Dow industrial index was really low Compared with toe record high of 995 set in early February. AT LOSS The drop of 215 points in a little more than six months left a loss for explanations. Cited as contributing reasons were: tight money, higher returns from bonds end other investments, Viet Nam War uncertainties, fear that toe long upswing in business was leveling off or due for a drop, increasing labor-management friction that talk of coming tax increases. By ROGER E.SPEA&-(Q) “I stupidly refused to sell one of my holdings — 400 Reynolds Tobacco — back in 1961. My original block of 100 shares had been split twice at two-for-one and I had a paper profit of nearly 5M per cent. But I was mad at the capital gains tax. What’s your advice now for a couple wanting maximum retirement income?” L. N. (A) My advice is to hold Reynolds despite the problems confronting the tobacco industry. The company is well managed, is exemplified by its diversification into the food and pack* hiFlpfflfti financial nnn diner is neenaiti and wttiiln the industry Reynolds ranks high for its aggressive and imaginative marketing organ-' ation. Ymfr twice-split shares even now show a paper profit of 154 per cent at thhir adjusted cost of 14y«; and the well- secured $2 annual dividend provides a 14 per cent yield on your original investment of $5,700. Reynolds is the largest factor in the taramrtmi^ the best growth record. Earnings for 1966 are expected to move up to around $3.50 a share compared with $3^0 last year. A A . A.......... (Q) “My two young children each have $5,888 in savings for future educational plans. How should I now invest some of these savings? My retirement Income will be aided by my long employment record as a U. S. postal service employe.” J. T. (A) I believe you can begin to build their ihdlbddflal portfolios by using aoput half toe available cash in equal-dollar amounts of sujch growth issues as American Cyanamid; Atlantic-Richfield; Bristol .Myers; Calgon; Commonwealth Edison; Chesebrough - Pond's; General Motors; Long Island Lighting; Sears, Roebuck and others mentioned here recently. The other half of the children’s cash can be invested later, to allow the market some further leeway before esWdish-ing a new bate for its next up- (Copyright, 1IM) Ul& THE POOTfAC PSESSr^MOKPAYv JLUGU&T 89, is in Pontiac, Nearby. Areas Mrs. Bobbie J. Combs Former Pontiac resident Mrs. Bobbie Jean Combs, 41, of New Orleans, La., died yesterday after a long illness. Her body will be at the Sparka-Grlffln Funeral Home. She was a nightclub pianist, i Surviving are a son, Dana Wiegand of Auburn Heights; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Garland Wells Sr. of Auburn Heights; two brothers, Garland Wells Jr. and Gilbert Wells, both of Pontiac; and five slaters, Mrs. Thomas Trudeau of Waterford Township, Mrs. Fotch Com of Bad Axe, Mrs. Les Hartzman of Clarkston, Mrs. Paul Jankovsky of Houston, Tex., and Mrs. Richard Miller of Mont Clair, N.J. He was employed by the Arnold Nursing Home. Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Felix Lowe of Waterford Township. ' , Robert E. Davis Service for Robert E. Davis, 39, of 24 Charlotte wUl be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial in Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery, Avon Township. Mr. Davis, formerly employed by Thomas Die It Stamping Co., died Saturday following a long illness. Surviving are his wife Mary M., his mother, Mrs. Arrie Davis of Sparta, Tenn.; fou sons, James, Gary, Brian, and Michael; and two daughters, Teresa, and Karen, all at home. Also surviving are four brothers and three sisters. Mrs. John Ellers Service for Mrs. John (Ge-sene) Eilers, SO, of 3623 Cosey-burn will be 8 tonight at the Baird-Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Columbus, Neb. Mrs. Eiler died yesterday after a brief Illness. She was a member of St. Stephen Lutheran Church. Surviving are two sods, Jade of Octavia, Neb., and Alvin of Bad Axe; five daughters, Mrs. Robert Johns of Waterford Township, Mrs. Herman Heck of Lapeer, Mrs- Lloyd Klicp-knecht of Lapeer, Mrs. Elmer Anderson of St. Edwards, Neb. and Mrs. Allan Lambert of Caro; 31 grandchildren; and 22 greatgrandchildren. Surviving me three brothers, Norbert W Giroux of Pontiac, Martin Giroux of Holly Bernard Giroux of Pontiac; and three sisters, Veronica Giroux, Mrs. Madona Christie and Mrs. Marion Barnes, all of Island Pond, yt. Mrs. James Harry Mrs. Louis A. Burke Samuel D. Dickerson Service for Samuel D. Dickerson, 67, of 1986 Airport, Waterford Township, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Wilkie Funeral Home, Detroit, with burial in Acacia Park Cemetery, Bir-mingham. His body will be at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home until 4 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Dickerson died yesterday. Service for Mrs. James (Sarah) Harry, 62, of 23 S. Shirley, will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Harry died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy M. Bivens in Virginia and Mrs. Rose Partain of Marysville; three sons, James A. in West Virginia, Eugene E. of Pontiac and Casey of Flint; and four sisters, Mrs. Ethel L. Tisdale' in Indiana, Mrs. Arlene Roscoe of Taylor Township, Mrs. Mary Andrews of Rochester and, Mrs. Pauline Marsino of Waterford Township. ROCHESTER—Requiem mass for Mrs. Louis A. (Rosie) Burke, 82, of 812 East Street, will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St Andrew1 Catholic Church. Burial will bf in Mount Avon Cemetery by the William R. P o t e r e Funeral Home. Rosary will tie 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at foe Funeral Home. Mrs. Burke died today after long illness. She was a member of St. Andrew’s Church. Surviving besides her husband are two sms, Louis J. Miotke of Rochester and Henry Miotke of Lake Orion; three daughters, Mrs. Anna Bressler of Pontiac, Mrs. Helen Young of East Ta-was and Mrs. Lucy Bower of Richmond; 19 grandchildren; and 23 great-grandchildren. Burglars struck two Pontiac homes end at least three business firms over foe weekend, according to Pontiac police. 2 City Homes, 3 Businesses Are Hit by Weekend Burglars1 Hardest hit was Howard J. Newhanks, 68, of 62 Stout, who reported foe loss of four watches and a camera valued at 3195 and fill in cash in a break-in at his home. Hewhanki told police bedrooms and cabinetw in foe home had also been ransack ^WJJfo 8. Woods, 35, of 603 Highland fold police a 38-caliber revolver and other items Youth Is Critical; Struck in Head by Model Plane G. David Dumas Arson Suspect Faces Charge Mrs. Harry J. Meyers ; Mrs. Harry J. (Barbara A. Meyers, 64, of 1547 Joslyn, died yesterday after a long illness. Her body is at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. She was a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church. HIGHLAND- TOWNSHIP -Service for G. David Dumas, 53, of 1644 LaSalle, will be 10 ajn. tomorrow at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Clinton Grove Cemetery, Mount Clemens, by foe Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake Rosary will be said at 8 this evening at the funeral home. Mr. Dumas died Saturday. A member of St. Patrick’s Church, he was employed at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Margaret; one son, David of Farmington; his mother, Mrs. George Dumas of West Bloomfield Township;-and raie grandchild. Also surviving are one brother, Frank of Union Lake, and four sisters, Mrs. Raymond Purcell of Keego Harbor, Mrs. Stanley Green in California, Sister Ann David, IHM, of Pontiac Mrs. S. W. Sovey of Waterford Township. MISS U.S.A.-WORLD — Statuesque Miss Utah, Denise Blair, 19, of Layton, Utah, clutches her robe and her trophy after being named Miss U.S.A.-World in competition at the Ohio State Fair in Columbus. The hazel-eyed secretary who' taped in at 86-23-36 is flanked by last’s year winner, Dianna Batts, Falls Church, Va. (left), and Miss Los Angeles, 19-year-old Gigi Dahl, who placed fourth. Next stop for the winner will be the Miss World contest in London. FORT WAYNE, Ind.