The Weather V .S. Wnthtr Burtau Fart cast Warmer (DbIbNi an Fata u THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 125 NO. 131 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 -32 PAGES Road Fund Package Gets House Setback LANSING CP — A $61-million package designed to raise gasoline and weight taxes for virtually all motor vehicles suffered a setback in the House yesterday. But it was to be reconsidered today in a rare Saturday session. ★ * ★ The five-bill package, which the Senate passed last April, stalled when the House voted 46-48 against the measure to increase the annual registration fee for autos and other vehicles. The bill is designed to raise $24 million a year. It would charge most autos a registration fee of 55 cents per 100 pounds, with a $15 annual minimum. Under the current fee of 35 cents per 100 pounds, a 4,000-pound luxury car would be taxed at $14, while a 1,600-pound economy model would be charged only $6.40. Other parts of the “good roads” package, designed to raise more money for special restricted highway funds, would: • Boost the tax on gasoline and other motor fuels by one cent per gallon, raising an estimated $33 million. ★ * * • Give cities and the State Waterways Fund larger shares of the gasoline tax. • Change the formula for computing the weight tax on trucks, with the biggest rigs getting the highest fee increases. An amendment to the package raising the gasoline tax another quarter-cent to pay for Mackinac Bridge refinancing was to be considered by the House today. The Senate has defeated a similar amendment. - Gasoline taxes in Michigan were last raised in 1955. The waterways fund now gets Vi per cent of state gasoline levies. That share would be tripled if the package passes. Four of the five bills, including the weight tax measure defeated yesterday, are designed to1 stand as a unit. Each contains a provision that it will not become law unless the other three are passed. Youth Is Charged With Fatal Beating A Pontiac youth was being held without bond in the Oakland County Jail today on an open charge of murder in the fatal beating of his 15-year-old girlfriend yesterday. Assistant Prosecutor Ronald E. Covault said that the degree of murder would probably be determined when the suspect, Porfidio R. Acosta, has hJ s preliminary examination Tuesday. Acosta, 19, of 307 Ferry is accused of the death of Linda D. Arnold of 142 Clifford. Hie girl, a June graduate of Eastern Junior High, ran away from home about three weeks ago, according to police. ★ * * Her body was first found lying hi the street in front of Acosta’s home by a passing motorist, and later by police in the back yard of the home. GIRL’S BODY Acosta was standing Over the girl’s body when police arrived, they said. An hour and half before police were called to the scene of the slaying, two other patrolmen had investigated a fight on Auburn and East Wide Track involving Acosta and Miss Arnold. Police said she dsed a fictitious name and gave her age as 19. * '* * Acosta told police that he had hit her because he had caught her with another man. She told police that everything was all right and said that she wanted to remain with Acosta. Police said that the girl was reported missing June 13 by her mother, Mrs. Donald Arnold. It was the third time that she had left home since March, according to police. Acosta, who is unemployed, stood mute to the charge yesterday afternoon when he was arraigned before Pontiac Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum. * ★ ★ Acosta was returned to the county ...jail to await preliminary examination. In Today's Press Mideast Arms Pact Rapid Soviet shipments dim outlook —. PAGE A-5. Election Suit . Publisher charges Florida governor with, violations- — PAGE B-7. Schools in North U.S. will probe racial iirjhal-ance — PAGE A-8. . njf Astrology,..........\..... B-6. Bridge B-6 Church News ......... B-3—B-5 Crossword Puzzle ......... D-7 Comics .................. B-6 Editorials .......... • ••• A-4 Education Series ........ B-8 Home Section ........C-l—C-6 Markets C-7 Mystery Series ............B-7 Obituaries ............... A-7 Sports .......j...... B-l, B-2 Theaters ................. B-7 TV-R* *dio Programs .......D-7 Wilson, Earl...............D-7 Women’s Page ..............A-6 A PORFIDIO R. ACOSTA McNamara's Questions Sharp SAIGON (AP) — The U.S. Command argued for a new large, U.S. troop buildup today and may have run into sharp questioning by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara on how many troops are needed and why the South Vietnamese are not pulling more of the load. • ★ ★ * In making its case for perhaps 100,000 troops above the current 466,000 in Vietnam, the U.S. Command also told McNamara what Gen. William C. Westmoreland considered his troops could do with less. A U.S. official spokesman declined to elaborate on this point, but past indications have been that Westmoreland felt substantially less than the requested figure would leave him without enough troops to win the war. McNamara, who is on his ninth trip to Vietnam, will carry Westmoreland’s plea, together with his recommendations, when he returns to Washington to report to President Johnson. ★ ★ * The official spokesman said McNamara, in a three-hour discussion of allied troop strengths, asked “extremely close questions” on.the ratio of U.S. combat infantrymen to support and rear-area troops and discussed a possible boost in Saigon’s,army and militia force of 650,000. This represents about four per -cent of the population. McNamara apparently feels this figure is too low. Air, Land Baffles at Suez Canal BEIRUT, Lebanon UF) — Egyptian and Israeli forces battled in the air and on the ground along the Suez Canal today in what appeared to be the most serious clash between them since the six-day Arab-Israeli war. Radio Cairo said the Egyptian government demanded an urgent session of the U.N. Security Council in New York to deal with what it called “the new aggression.” The Egyptian broadcast said Israeli air force jets had attacked Egyptian positions in Port Said and Port Fuad at the Mediterranean entrance to the Suez Canal and that Egyptian planes engaged them in air combat. It claimed Israeli forces were trying to move up the eastern bank of the canal in a drive to seize Port Fuad. ★ * ★ i Israel claimed that Israeli jets were strafing Egyptian artillery which had opened fire on the Israeli occupation forces from the west bank of the canal. It said the fighting was. along several miles of the canal’s banks. HIT BY ARTILLERY Israeli tanks on the east bank were hit by the Egyptian artillery fire, a Tel Aviv communique said, -felt was the second straight weekend In which fighting had broken out in violation of the Arab-Israeli cease-fire which went into effect June 10, halting Israel’s sweep into the territories of three Arab nations: Egypt, Jordan and Syria. An Egyptian army communique said six Israeli Mirage jets, French-built p 1 a n e s had penetrated Egyptian air space over Port Said and Port Fuad at 2 p.m. (8 a m., EDT) the Cairo broadcast said. It added that Egyptian antiaircraft guns opened up, and Egyptian planes took to the air. It did not say how many. The broadcast said an air and artillery battle on the canal was in progress. Earlier, Egypt claimed its forces were repelling an Israeli attempt to advance on Port Fuad. It said the clash came at Has El’ish on the east bank of the canal. This was the scene of three clashes last weekend. ^n Israeli communique said Egyptian artillery fired into its positions, killing two Israeli soldiers and wounding 13. LAID TO REST — Slain West Bloomfield Township trustee and businessman Edward E. DeConick was buried yesterday in this family plot in Mount Hope Cemetery. Many years ago, the family spelled the name DeConinck, which accounts for the names on early markers shown here. Police Work Double Shift in Trustee Murder Case West Bloomfield Township Police are working double shifjts in order to sift every lead in the brutal murder Monday night of Township Trustee Edward E. DeConick. The Pontiac Press has offered a $1,-000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers of Edward E. DeConick.. “Right now we’re following up on every bit of information as it comes in and hoping for a break,” said one investigator. DeConick, 63, was buried yesterday in Mount Hope Cemetery. He was beaten, then shot to death by four intruders in his home at 5847 W. Maple. His sister, Kathleen, 73, who was beat- en and shot in the head, is in satisfactory condition in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She told police the chain of events leading to her brother’s death began when a woman knocked at the DeConick’s door about ll p.m. and asked to use the telephone. When the door was opened, she said, three men armed with a shotgun and pistols rushed in, beat the pair, then tied them up. After ransacking the house the bandits shot both and fled with a cashbox and floor safe, she told police. Miss DeConick was able to free herself and call for help. She described the male assailants as Negroes in their 20s, ranging from short to above-medium height. She said the woman was either white or a light-skinned Negro. September Draft Call Is Lower Than August WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Pentagon announced yesterday that 25,000 men will be drafted into the Army in September. The figure was slightly lower than the August draft call of 29,000. I World, State I News Events j Speck Throws Coffee at Guard JOLIET, III (UPI) — Richard F. Speck, convicted killer of eight student nurses, was one of four inmates who threw hot coffee on penitentiary guards during a dispute yesterday, the warden said. Warden Frank jl Pate of State-ville Penitentiary said Speck and three other inmates apparently were protesting another inmate's singing during early morning hours. Courts Next Step on State Tax LANSING (#) — Court action apparently is the next step for those who question the constitionality of Michigan’s new state income tax bill, despite discouraging news from the attorney general. In answer to questions by Sen. George Kuhn, (R)-Birmingham, A tty. Gen. Frank Kelley said yesterday that he believes the courts will uphold the bill and will rule that it is hot subject to a popular referendum. Aviatrix Has Earhart Theory OAKLAND, Calif. UP) — A modern-day Amelia Earhart with the same type of blonde, tousled hair and spirit of adventure believes after retracing Miss Ear-hart’s ill-fated 1937 flight that the famed aviatrix crashed in the Southwest Pacific near Howland Island. Ann Pellegreno, 30, a Saline, Mich., housewife, landed her twin-engine plane at Oakland yesterday, completing an east-west circling of the earth. Time Situation More Confused LANSING (ff) — Michigan clocks soon may throw up their hands iii despair if the state’s time situation becomes any more befuddled. A House-approved resolution asking the federal government to put all of Michigan in the Central Time Zone was reported-out of a Senate Committee yesterday, then returned to the committee for further study before senators vote on the measure. 'Congolese Are Victorious' BRUSSELS, Belgium iff) — Congolese government forces have defeated a band of mercenaries and rebels in Bukavu, Kisangani and Kindu, and the fighting there is over, the Congolese radio claimed today. It said President Joseph D. Mobutu would address the nation by radio later today. North Viet Strategist Dies SAIGON 141 — A shadowy North Vietnamese general who masterminded Communist political and military strategy in the south from a jungle stronghold near Cambodia’s border has died of a heart attack, according to Hanoi Radio. He was 53-year-old Gen. Ngyen Chi Thanh, who not only directed the war in South Vietnam but was the eighth-ranking member of. North Vietnam’s Communist heirarchy. Weekend to Be Sunny, Warmer FOUND DEAD — Vivien Leigh, 53, star of stage and screen, was found dead in her London 'apartment today. The former wife of Sir Laurence Olivier, Miss Leigh had long suffered frbm tuberculosis. She rose to world aeeiaim with her portrayal of Scarlett O’Hara in the film “Gone With the Wind.” Partly, sunny skies and somewhat warmer temperatures are on tap for the Pontiac area today, with temperatures ranging from 80 to 86 today and 60 to 65 tonight. A chance of a few scattered thundershowers exists for tomorrow, with south to southwest winds from 5 to 15[miles. The official U.S. Weather Bureau forecast calls for: TODAY — Partly sunny and warmer. High 80 to 86. Fair tonight. Low 60 to 65. * TOMORROW — Variable cloudiness and slightly warmer with a chance of a few thundershowers in the afternoon or MONDAY — Partly cloudy with little temperature change.________ Percentage precipitation probabilities: today 10, tonight 20, tomorrow 20. Judge Proposes an Anticrime Program Appalled generally over the increas- he has proposed, to prevent and coning crime'rate and specifically over '~tr°l lawlessness. 5 Held in Alleged Plot to Hire Killer DETROIT (UPI) — Five persons were arrested early today after allegedly attempting to hire a State Police detective to murder the husband of a young woman. \ All five, three men and two women, stood mute at arraignment in front of Farmington Township Justide of the Peace Bryon D. Walters on charges of conspiring to murder Leonard Wright, 2Q, of Highland Park. ★ . * * They were bound over for examination July 14. Bond was set at $50,000 each. Arrested were Nichlas J. Gueli Jr., 41, Hazel Park; Patrick R. McNamara, 22, Detroit; and Daniel M. Duffy, 23; Patricia Duffy, 20; and Laurie K. Wright, 18, all three of Highland Park. the brutal murder of a West Bloomfield Township man this week, Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore today called on local officials to considers 13-point program JUDGE MOORE Moore outlined his plan in a letter inviting mayors, commissioners, city managers and police chiefs to a 3:30 p.m. meeting July 17 in the Supervisors’ Auditorium in the county courthouse. He requested that they be prepared to act on the proposals. “Crime is all about us — increasing, frightening, almost uncontrolled and of disastrous volume,” Moore said in his letter. , \ •k ★ * “Truthfully, crime is rampant,” he continued. “Let’s apprehend, convict and ' sentence every major criminal to life imprisonment or until he is totally re? formed.” RECENT CRIME , / Moore cited a few examples of recent crimes, emphasizing the July 3 death of Edward E. DeConick, a trustee . and businessman in West Bloomfield * Township by a “vicious armed robbery gaife.” The jurist criticized the public for being apathetic toward the problem of crime and for apparent defeatism about the problem. “Apathy abounds,” said Moore. “Everybody groans about crime. But few indeed care enough to know how to do their part about it. Nearly all run out on the problem.” ★ * . '★ “Unless and until we have a plan to fight back and win against crime, we will' continue to lose more and more,” said Moore. PROPOSALS LISTED Included among Moore’s proposals are: • A multiple mayors’ proclamation that would give police powers similar to that under martial law. • Patrols by auxiliary police or national guardsmen in cooperation with local police. ★, ★ ★ • Voluntary unification of all police work in the county under a top police, F.B.I. or crime specialist at county • Limits on appeals, of convicted criminals. • An extension of maximum sentences in all felonies to life. Moore also urges that the governor’s Committee on Crime prepare a report within 30 days and then seek a special session of the Legislature on crime. • Petitions to congressmen and sen-ators, supporting constitutional amendments permitting and requiring interrogation of criminal suspects. Want Good Advice? Mr. E. H. F. writes, “Advise anyone who has something to sell to use a Press Want Ad. Ours sold two boats.” Thank you Sir for your kind words. You and thousands of others have experienced the selling action of a PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD Have you tried one lately? Dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 i A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 News Briefs at a Glance Birmingham Area News DETROIT <*>— An 8-year-old Michigan girl suffering from a brain disorder died yesterday despite efforts of the U.S. Coast Guard to save her life through 175-mile airlift from Traverse 2ity, Mich., to Detroit. Barbara Klanke, daughter of Mr. and Progress Report Slated on Immortality Attempt BILLTE L. IRWIN WILLIAM F. MOORE Two City Made Detectives Pontiac Police Chief William K. Hanger has announced the promotion of two department members to the rank of detective. Promoted effective tomorrow are Senior Patrolmen Billie L. Irwin and William F. Moore. Both have been with the Hie Pontiac force 10 years or more. Irwin, 42, a veteran of three years combat duty in the Army, joined the department in April of 1954. He has received certificates in an arson case in 1958 and a burglary case in 1964. He and his wife, Thelma, live at 124 N. Telegraph with children Kenneth, 15, and Kathy, 12. Reagan Flays LBJ Policies SAN JOSE, Calif. UB- Gov. Ronald Reagan, attacking President Johnson’s foreign and domestic policies, says Americans don’t like “talking of peace and prosperity while young men are dying in Vietnam.” "They’re not in the mood to buy the sickly pastel shades of political expediency,” the governor told .fellow Republicans at a county fairground barbecue. Reagan left Sacramento last night for an evening of political handshaking, speech making and a confidential chat with a leader of the Deep South’s resurgent Republican party. He talked for 45 minutes with Howard (Bo) Calloway, last year’s unsuccessful GOP candidate for governor of Georgia. Moore, 37, who spent four years in the Army, became a Pontiac policeman in 1957. He was awarded a certificate . of achievement in April of this TB Tests Required year for completing a course LANSING UP)— All cos- in juvenile code, law and prac-l metoiogists, electrologists, in-tice at Oakland University. I structors of cosmetology and He and his wife, Delores, live manicurists must undergo an-at 7751 Holcomb, Clarkston, nual tuberculosis tests under with children Lana, 16, Patricia,! a new public law, the Depart- BIRMINGHAM -- A progress |ress of the group. He said the report on “The Prospect of Im- Californians now have a cold mortality” movement will be'storage site as well as mobile given at a meeting of the [units that can prepare a body Cryonics Society of Michigan I at the place of death. .. „ . ■- , , \ _ .8 p.m. Tuesday at the Metro-1 veiSM. has also written a Children's HospiUl to Mreili. W. Eittogre of ’ n ^ tSIC'fi' i?r G^id!Oak Park, the man who wrotei Durak Durak said she probably,^ ^ named above, said Dr. Ettmger said the book died of a broken blood vessel in „We fire interested ta keeping contains many further details our members and the general!0" the process as well as “the public informed.” ;dr«na involved. u .... The society presently is pre- Dr. Ettinger gained national serving the body of Dr. James recognition with his theory Bedford of Glendale, Calif., re-that a human body could be ltired professor of psychology, preserved by freezing until Dr Ettinger said the Mich-some future date when medi- jgan chapter has made con-cal science had advanced to a siderable progress. New mem-state in which the fatal ill- bers are enrolled. “They ness could be Aired. [presumably will consent It is his belief that a person freezing of themselves or their could be revived and cured, [families,” he said. www Legal forms have been pre- Guest speaker for the society by society lawyers to will be Robert Nelson, leader Mear the way for the process, of the California chapter. pr- Ettinger said. His report will detail the prog- “We now have the equipment ----------------------------land are ready for operations,” I he said. At present bodies will Man Arr he brain, but that an autopsy would be performed to determine the exact cause of death. Barbara went into a coma and was taken to the Coast Guard’s Traverse City Air Station | where she was flown to Chil-I dren’s Hospital in Detroit. State Farm Prices Dip I LANSING »- The index of merit for investigative work 0f prices received by Michigan farmers declined 2 per cent during the month ending June 15, while nationally the index climbed 3 per cent, the Michigan Crop Reporting Service said today. Chiefly responsible for the] state’s decline, it said, werej prices of wholesale milk and wheat. 11, and Edward 8. 139 Aviatrixes Take Off Today in Annual Derby ment of Licensing and Regulation said today. The department said license renewal in Shooting of City Youth, Rare Crane Chick Dies Pontiac police arrested a 48-; year-old city man early today,! SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP).— shortly after his daughter’s [A rare whooping crane Chick, forms will be sent out in [date was wounded by a shot- born Thursday to the only July and unless the form is [gun blast while walking her | whooping crane couple to cap-returned with clearance from home. jtivity, died Friday, communicable tuber-1 Taken into custody at his! Zoo director Fred Stark said culosis signed by a physician home was Harry Dickerson of ^e fuzzy chick, who spent its ‘ - only full day of life swimming and being fed small pieces of local health officer, the igg Franklin Rd., according to ATLANTIC CITY N J, (AP) }icen.se „may aot ronewed police. He is in Oakland County After months of preparation, 139-women pilots take off today in a coast-to-coast race against the clock in the 21st annual Powder Puff Derby. ‘AH it takes to win is part skill, part speed and a lot of luck,” said Frances Bera of Long Beach, Calif., who has won the derby seven times. ★ ★ ★ The women, ranging from teen-agers to grandmothers, seemed to have luck on their side. A prediction of air turbur lence and thunderstorms gave way to a forecast of partly overcast — which is flying weather. Last year’s derby was delayed two days because of bad weather. The Weather by the State Board of Cosmo-metology. 'Church Unity Not Facf CENTER HARBOR, N.H. * — the general secretary of the National Council of .Churches says church unity is still far from fact and may be endangered by complacency. Dr. R. H. Edwin Espy of New York told an ecumenical conference, “The phenomena of world ecumenicity as it has developed in the past decade has become so familiar that people may begin to take it for granted. Jail awaiting arraignment on a charge of attempted murder, officers said. He is accused of shooting Clarence D. McConner, 17, of an unknown address on Hughes while McConner was walking with Dickerson’s daughter at Wilson and Franklin Rd. about 2:30 a.m., investigators said. McConner was treated at Pon- fish by its parents, crawled under its mother and was found dead two hours later. Stark said the cause of death was unknown. The body will be sent to the Department of Interior’s wildlife refuge center in Baltimore, Md. for examination. Rosie and Crip, parents of the dead chick, concentrated on keeping a second egg warm. It is expected to hatch by Monday. The eggs were laid two days Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY ^Partly sunny and warmer 2in C Minor, today. High 80 to 86. Fair tonight. Low 60 to 65. Variable! - cloudiness and slightly warmer Sunday with a chance of a few Crash Injuries Fatal scattered thundershowers Sunday afternoon or evening. South, GARY, Ind. (JPi — Car Bail-to southwest winds 5 to 15 miles. Monday’s outlook: Partly j er, 30, of Montague, Mich., cloudy with little temperature change. Percentage chance of, died today of injuries suf- rain: Today 10, tonight 20, tomorrow 30. j fered June 7 in a three-ve- ------ j hide collision on an Indiana LAKE CONDITIONS ! highway. Police said Bailer ,, , , r, I lost control of his car, which LAKE ST- CLAIR — Mostly cloudy with southerly winds 8 jumped the concrete divider to. <15 knots. LAKE ERIE — Cloudy with a chance of occasional and comded with a truck and tiac General Hospital for leg! apart last month. Experts had wounds and later released. [been trying for over 10 years to ★ * it mate Rosie but succeeded only The victim told police Dicker- after pairing her off with Crip son pulled up in a car and or-jla®1 January. Von Cliburn to . . ~~Z. T interlochen a - T Van Cliburn returns to the Na-sne remsea- | / & tional Music Camp July 18 for OFF HIS FEET his 9th appearance in seven McConner said the blast years. Cliburn, a trustee of In-Jknocked him off his feet, but terlochen, will perform with the|be was abie get up and to run. World Youth Symphony Orches-j He said at least two other tra in a benefit concert at the shots were fired at him as he| Kresge Auditorium. He will play fled down Franklin toWooSkilled Files for Vote mm_____ m.............. .....■ DETROIT (AP) — An inde- the Rachmaninoff Concerto No.|across wide Track and into the pendent union, which has been 9 in r Mirmr ^ ... . —. - r . . ... - . j Yellow Cab Co. office at 211 1 Saginaw. Area Reservists Attend Camp rain. Winds are south to southeast 10 to 18 knots. LAKE HURON j another auto. — Partly cloudy with south to southwest winds 10 to 20 knots. ______ LAKE MICHIGAN - Fair with southeasterly winds 10 to 15j - . . p . w . j knots. LAKE SUPERIOR - Partly cloudy with chance of brief port httrom * i showers Winds are south to southwest 15 to 25 knots. 1 F0RT HUR0N ® “ Recent* At I a.m.: Wind Velocity 5-15 n Direction: South southwest Sun sets.Saturday at'9:12 p.m. Sun rises Sunday 5:05 a.m. ! Gr. Rapids 79 63 Jacksonville 80 65 Los Angele: 84 43 New Orleans' Friday In Pontiac (as recorded downtow Highest temperature.... | Two Army Reserve artillery batteries left Pontiac this morning for a two-week campment at Camp McCoy, Wis. ly elected school board member, and Robert E. Schultheiss is giving!*® ™J°n W . 86 ,up the post because of a con>afel ln f a™y vehicles and g flict of interest opinion from M tow four howitzers Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley: Schul-!to 38 ann,ual summer camp, res theiss, businessman, former The units comprise 113 men. m ,954 mayor and a director of the' The 333rd Regiment, 70th |People’s State Bank, said he is!Div-. an infantry training unit 83 66 resigning in vifew of Kelley’s comprised of five companies fi m ruling that prohibits a schooljand' about 118 men, will leave s’ “board member from serving as tomorrow morning for a two-an officer or director of a fi- week stay at Ft Leonard Wood, „ ,, „ nancial institution that does Mo. mx 97 w business with the school district! The main party will be bused practice charges as a basis to burgh 85 64 or the state. Schultesis said he to Metropolitan Airport and will waive the NLRB’s so-called 30 Lake c. 85 >60 preferred to retain his bank fly by jet to St. Louis. 'per cent rule for the elections., trying to woo skilled tradesmen from the ranks of the giant United Auto Workers union, Friday filed petitions for representation elections for 120,000 skilled workers at pie Big Three: auto companies. At the same time, the International Society of Skilled Trades (ISST), filed unfair labor practice charges against the UAW, alleging that the UAW has interfered with the rights of employes to self-organization and having a bargaining agent of their choice. A UAW spokesman declined comment cfn the accusations. The UAW now represents skilled workers at Ford Motor Ctf., Chrysler Corp, and General Motors Corp. The representation election petitions were filed with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) by ISST‘President Joseph W. Dunnebeck, who said he would use the unfair labor NATIONAL WEATHER —The weather bureau predicts showers and thundershowers tonight in a number of scattered sections of the country. Areas due for rain include the lower Great Lakes, the central Mississippi Valley, central Appalachians, southern Florida, and the northern and southern Rockies. Indians Gather for Event ANN ARBOR UP) — Members of the" Ottawa, Chippewa Potawattamie and other Indian] tribes gathered at Atm Arbor today for a festival in conjunction with the .University of Michigan’s sesquicentehnial celebrations. The Indians will display craft work, talk to visitors j and present three programs fea-I taring songs and dances. Maine Eyes Adult ID AUGUSTA, Maine UP) — Maine may soon have adult Jndentifi-cation cards for persons 21 to 25. The Maine State Liquor Commission has purchased a laminating machine for the new cards, designed to protect liquor licensees who can have their licenses revoked for selling liquor to minors. Waterford Sets Hearings on Street Lighting Plans Two public hearings on proposed special assessment street lighting districts will be held in' conjunction with the Waterford Township Board meeting Monday night. Richmond and Lola Court are the streets where lighting 'is In other business, the hoard is expected to decide whether the township should lease or purchase a copying machine being used on a tried basis. Also slated for board attention is a request from Detroit Edison Cq. to operate a mobile customer service office at Highland and Crescent Lake roads on an interim basis until its permanent office is available in the shopping center there. ★ ★ * Another request, this one from the Drayton Plains Lions Chib for a one-day circus permit Aug. 11 at the Pontiac Mall, also will be considered. The board will receive five fifot notices of proposed rezoning and another first notice requesting toe transfer of stock ownership to a SDM-licensed store. .,j Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SHOP T0NITE til 9 P.M. mm MONDAY HOURS 9 AM. to 9 P.M. am The Big Discounts Are Still at SIMMS These Specials for Saturday-Monday Sine* 1934 Simms ha* bttn Pontiac's original discount *tora and still i* today. Shop tha*# specials Saturday and Monday. Wa reserve the right to limit quantities. Specials for Saturday and Monday-Only at Simms Complete with Scented Oil Early American Lamp 14-Inches High Simms Price .Vote [66 .$2.00 value, as pictured, old fashioned kerosene lamp with colored and scented'oil. Ideal lor use in trailer or cabins, . Scented Lamp Oil, limit 2........78c Housewares—2nd Floor Swivel Back-Padded Seat Kitchen Bar Stool Nicer than pictured. A swivel kitchen or bar stool with padded seat covered with a colohial print- in:washable vinyl. 24 Inches high. Bronze-tone frame. Limit 4. Housewares-2nd Floor 3-Head Comfort Control Men’s Schick Razor Schick Super speed 2 .with exclusive slide-rule comfort control, Ond washable stainless steel shaving head. Sideburn trimmer. Sundries—Main Floor FREE Bikini Hair Brush Adorn Hair Spray $2.25 Value [22 Get a Bikini brush with water-free, self styling Adorn hair spray. Create hair styles with the tiny bristles and skinny stem. Your choice of regular or extra hold. Cosmetic.—Main Fleer Assorted Style Short Sleeve Men’s Sport Shirts Make your choice from . this special group of . | sport shirts. Includes washable, terrycloth shirts in the Henley style and regular styles. Assorted colors. Sizes S-M-L Basement 2- to 5-Qt. Polyethylene Tub Ice Cream Freezer .. Make some delicious home made ice cream soon. It's easy with this manually-operated ice cream freezer. , Sturdy polyethylene tub. All find) k quality and American made. Ik ■ ' —Basement Repair Masonry the Easy Way 5-Lb. Concrete Patch Concrete Patch Simms Price Just 2« Miracle compound seals cracks ond holes for good, No prepo- 10-lb. Concrete Patch ..........4.69 Hardware—2nd Floor DuPont Cellulose Sponge Purpose Sponge Mop Sponie refill tor Ace sponge mop, 2 tor 99e Housewares—2nd Floor SUNBEAM Lighted Dial Electric Alarm Clock Self Starting electric alarm clock with lighted dial iso you' can see the time without turning on a light. 1 Factory guaranteed. Sundries —Main Floor New Aerosol Form Mum Deodorant $1.09 Value Only 59< New Dependable Mum comes in the handy aerosol spray form. One application gives 24 hour protection. Drugs—Main Floor F st Quality Perma Press Bermuda Shorts First quality ond permanent wrinkle-free Bermuda shorts, the popular Round-About'* style. Solid colors to choose from. Sizes 10 to 18. —Basement Sleeveless-Seersucker Ladies’ Blouses At Simms Only 96* Ladies* sleeveless blouses of striped seersucker that washes so easily. Greeh, orange Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS,- SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 A—8 8 in GOP to Tell Viet Proposal WASHINGTON (AP) - Long-muted House voices are beginning to be raised in support of some alternative to the administration’s Vietnam war policy. A few weeks ago, however, 60 Democrats, ail staunch supporters of President Johnson, cautiously raised the possibility of a renewed attempt to bring the United Nations into an effort for a peaceful settlement. * * ★ Now, a group of liberal Republicans has come up with a new proposal they say will im- prove chances for a negotiated settlement with minimum military risk. The eight Republicans joining in the proposal have scheduled a news conference Monday to make it public. None is identified with the GOP leadership, which has maintained a public show of support for Johnson’s policy. DOMESTIC DIALOGUE While they declined to disclose details of their plan before the news conference, the eight said it was designed “to reopen the domestic dialogue on United States policy in Vietnam, which has in recent months been curtailed through a growing belief that any form of dissent or debate in wartime is unworthy.” ★ ★ ★ In a statement announcing the news conference they said the plan presented “a viable alternative to the current administration policy which, to many, seems to offer no reason for optimism." * ★ * They said they also hoped their plan would remind “the policy-maker and the critic alike that Vietnam is still a limited war in every sense of that term 'and that there is an immense difference between the diplomacy of limited war and the diplomacy of total war.” * * ★ The eight GOP members making Hie statement were Reps. F. Bradford Morse, John R. Dellenback, Ore.; Marvin L. Esch, Mich.; Frank J. Horton, N.Y.: Charles M. Mathias Jr., Md.; Charles A. Mosher, Ohio; Richard S. Schweiker, Pa.; and Robert T. Stafford, Vt. Saginaw Hunts I Arson Suspect | SAGINAW (AP) - Police con-| tinued to search today for UC. Pato Boyd, a 27-year-old Saginaw man sought on arson charges stemming from several fire bombings of downtown SaginaW stores June 28. Meanwhile, four men were arraigned Friday before Munich pal Judge W. Glover Gage. Police said three youngsters allegedly involved in the bombings were turned over to juvenile authorities. Chrysler Recalls 6,000 Cars DETROIT (AP) -'Chrysler Corp. Friday announced recall of more than 6,000 late 1966'and early 1967 model cars because of a possible defect in front wheel disc brakes. The, firm said it had notified I the National Safety Agency plus owners of the cars involved to return them to dealers for inspection and any necessary corrections. ★ * * The cars involved included 525 late production 1966 models and a possible 5,975 early production 1967 models of the Plymouth] Belvedere and the Dodge Coronet and Charger lines. “There is a possibility that water may enter the disc brake proportioning valve,” a company spokesman said. “Dealers will install a new proportioning valve on the affected vehicles.'* HUB DUST CAPS Chrysler also said it was r| calling 159 Dodge Chargers made in 1967 which may have been assembled without' hub dust caps which protect front [wheel bearings from road-dirt and water. Another 7,407 Dodge Dart and Plymouth Barracuda two-door Hardtop models made in 1967 were recalled because of a possible defect in the rear center seat belt. A spokesman said there was a possibility that in a “severe collision, the center seat belt can be cut by a shelf panel brace.” Total enrollment in public schools in the U.S- in the fall of 1966 Was 42,987,000. Special Round point dirt shovel 8mm color movie film w/processing! 199 Special! 2-lamp fluorescent light 099 Reg. 2.59 Wards awn, and it matches any on the market! Standard 8mm 25* roll. Indoor (ASA 40); out (ASA 25). Reg. 16.99 White enameled steel fixture comes with ceiling chains, cord, hooks, knockouts and two 40-watt lamps. An 8x10" blade with extra-strong rolled shoulders plus 40“ wood handle mokes it ideal for your garden. Thickest where strain is greatest! Has forged, round-point blade; smooth, . fire-Hardened 47-in. Ash handle. Wards swivel wheel stroller cut 5.11 Vinyl-coated fabric saat is center-poised over extra-long wheel base for stability. Foam padded seat; steel frame. 1488 REG. 19.99 exactly a» pictured Deluxe Zig-Zag sewing machine e Needs no attachments; sews buttons, buttonholes O Stitch length regulator; forward-reverse control • With base, foot control • Built in blind hem and buttonhole cams Men’s sturdy boat Skips® -reg. 4.99 344 Cotton army duck uppers reinforced with nylon stitching give rugged wear. Cushioned insoles. 6V2 to 10Vs. *80 Reg. $97 Save! Beys' shorts never need ironing 196 e He looks neat 'cause they shed wrinkles e Mom solves work 'cause they dry ready to wear e Fortrel® polyester-cotton in - rich colorful plaids It's a neater, cooler summer in Brent® walk shorts! They carry your toy through the day looking crisp, unrumpled; sail through washer-dryer with good looks intact, don't even need touch-up! Limited styles and sizes. Save! Women's Blouses Save! Wome9i's Shorts Why paint twice? Use Dripless Satin Big buy! Wide-angle sports binoculars 2488 At the games or the races you get 525 ft-field of view at 1000 yds. 7x35mir coated optics. Wide angle. Reg. 2.25 classic bra - save I" Carol Brent&> "Focus" with circle stitch cups for youthful lift. Soft net lining. In cotton. A32-38; B, C32-40. Smart new portable Airline® 19-inch TV • Twin bujlt-in antennas • Flutter-free reception • Tinted glass cuts glare • Deluxe two-tone styling • Receives all 82 channels •172 »q. in. viewable area *134 REG.$149 3.99 wood-frame full-view mirror JM 56x16" sizs See yourself head-to-toe as you dress, sew! Quality window glass in 1" hqrdwood frame. Pre-drilled; w/screws. Yes—one coat covers any color with durable, fade-resistant finish; !t*s guaranteed! Applies easily. Damp cloth removes dirt. [99 V GAL. • Stay neat and cool in Carol Brent shorts • Perfect for summer fun • Assorted plaids and solids Make this summer a cool summer in Carol Brent shorts. If you're on the go you can't get enough of these shorts. Easy to care for 'cause they're 100% cotton. Misses' sizes 8-18. Jiffy vac zooms through work 1 S*8 -I 9REG.$20 Ideal for fast touch-ups. Light, easy to handle — yet powerful. Uses toss-away dust bags. Hangs to store. 200 REG. 2.99-3.99 e You stay neat ’cause they shed wrinkles • Perfect for summer fun e Assortment of colors It's a neater, cooler summer in Carol Brent's blouses: They carry you through the day looking crisp and unrumpled. Sleeveless or roll sleeves. In prints and solids. Sizes 32-38. Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontine, Michigan 48058 SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 Jo** vr. Fnrnnuu , . Executive Vice pmldenl Joint A. RlUT Secretary eat Advertising Director KNium SI. Fmowaie Treasurer And Finance Ottiear. Amo MoOouv Circulation Manager O. Makshali JORSAlf Local Advertising Managtr Unity Need for Downtown Rebirth Meeting with a representative group of Pontiac citizens, A. Dean Swartzel, an official of Federal Housing and Urban Development (HUD) did much to clarify issues related to the local sdene. The HUD regional administrator preserved a nice balance of objectivity and impartiality as the principal bone of contention — the Taubman plan for redevelopment of a downtown business center — was attacked and defended. Swartzel pointed out that the original Pontiac urban renewal program had been approved in 1961 and indicated that methods of its implementation were mainly matters of local responsibility and agreement. With reference to assertions by the Citizens Committee for Pontiac Progress that the Taubman plan was illegal, the HUD administrator said that he had requested the Washington office to investigate the charge, but gave as his opinion that local conflict revolved mainly around f‘procedural issues.” Seven different downtown development projects have fallen of their own weight since Pontiac first committed itself to an urban renewal program. Thus far the plan initiated by A. Alfred Taubman is the only one to reflect concrete realism with hope of ultimate success. We think that now is the time for all civic elements to resolve their viewpoints and aims, join in the common objedNve of city improvement and get wholeheartedly behind a plan that promises to transform the wastes of downtown Pontiac into the thriving center of activity it once was. Says Educator: Machines Artful, Not Heartful The graduating class of a high computers but the trend toward school in Charlotte, N. C., heard a treating human beings as numbers The POWER of FAITH By WOODI ISHMAEl Holiday Brought to M ind Events in U.S. History Did anyone rerfiember, while they watched the beautiful displays of fireworks on the 4th of July, the beginning of it all? The beautiful words and their meaning written by Thomas Jefferson to which the colonial leaders pledged their lives, fortunes and sacred honor . . . and in December of the same year, the bloody footprints made by rag-bound feet at the battle of Trenton. . . . . . Abraham Lincoln dying in Ford’s Theater, and Andrew Johnson smeared and publicly disgraced for carrying out his policies ......Dag Hammarskjold dying in a mysterious plane crash while trying to bring peace to the be-leagured Congo .... ★ ★ ★ General William Dean, captured and im- prisoned in Korea, while covering the retreat of his men .... Medgar Evers, of t h e Mississippi NAACP .... Rabbi Adler of Detroit.... John F. Kennedy. ★ ★ ★ The average teen-ager is much maligned, viewed with suspicion, and better than they can be expected to be with the example given them to follow. Be informed. Vote intelligently. Fly the flag proudly. Discuss the issues. And do not put up with ignorant opinions, based on heresay and prejudice. JOHN H. JOHNS TEACHER OF U.S. HISTORY ‘Let’s Cut Nonsense Spending for Education’ word of caution from its commencement speaker that might well be passed along to students—and their elders—everywhere. “The danger facing civilization today,” Chancellor D W. Colvard of the( Charlotte campus of the University of North Carolina warned the graduates, “is not in machines becoming more human, but in man becoming more and more like a machine.” The chancellor, if he will forgive an unacademic expression, said a mouthful. Day by day, it seems, modern living is becoming more and more mechanical, more impersonal, unpeoplish and numberish. It’s not only those blinkety-blink instead of persons. And while this may be extremely efficient, it’s also . coldly dehumanizing. No one warms up to someone who calls him by number or, in more tender moments by the cuddly salutation of “Occupant.” Or even “Box-holder," Expert Airs Inflationary Change for Tires . The free air Americans are accustomed to getting at service stations may go the way of the free lunch with a nickel glass of beer. According to tire expert Lawrence R. Sperberg, head of a Texas research firm, oxygen is the major culprit in shortening tire life. It eats Into the rubber and tire cord fabric and weakens both, especially when the air is heated during high-speed driving. He recommends using pure nitrogen, which makes up 79 per cent of ordinary air, to fill tires. Service stations conld easily replace their air compressors .with tanks of pressurized nitrogen. The initial cost of flushing the oxygen out of four tires and filling them with nitrogen would range from $1 to $2. Auto safety experts and the Tire Retreading Institute are pumping hard for the nitrogen idea, reports a national newspaper. The* retreaders see it as a boon to business because they would be getting sturdier used-tire casings and customers would look more favorably on recaps. ★ ★ ★ Original tire companies and tire cord manufacturers, however, are less enthusiastic. Perhaps they sense business deflation in the idea aired. Makes Frustration Seem Bearable By JAMES MARLOW AP Newt Analyst WASHINGTON—If President Johnson could just latch onto something solid—and big—it would rocket his popularity. He knows this but he has had to learn to make frustra-l tion seem bearable and the intangible look like an achievement. The Vietnam war has been] around his MARLOW neck since he took office, the end is not in sight, the critics —tapering off recently—have been after him like hunters after a fox, and the cost in men and looney keeps climbing, \ f-j \ \ The Pentagon figures it will need $21.8 billion for the war'alobe these next 12 months. But he has made peace gestures which the North Vietnamese spumed and both parties in Congress, except for scattered critics, are behind him, ★ * ★ Nevertheless, unless he can start peace talks before the 1968 presidential campaign, in which he almost certainly will run again, be will have to do a lot of explaining. rf this seems a handicap, the Republicans are in a box, too. They almost certainly will not pick an antiwar candidate, which leaves them in the role of backing the war but complaining about how it has been handled. And the Republicans have been critical of their own critics. They gave an illustration of this a couple of months ago when the staff of the Senate Republican Policy Committee turned out a 91-page report on the war, much of it critical, and the Republicans began quarreling among themselves. By shrewd handling of himself in all this, mostly in re-cent months, Johnson has been careful about what he said on the war, thus leaving his critics with few of his own words to throw back at him or turn against him. #. He ★ They have had to content themselves with complaints about the purpose, the validity, the tactics, and the strategy of the war, all of which are. in the field of abstractions and not of personality. LEARNED TO BE PATIENT Thus, while the United States under Johnson has suffered continued frustration in this war it has learned to bear the war patiently, so much so that it backs him in trying to win it if only because new national pride is involved. Nor can the United'States under Johnson take credit .for anything in the Middle East war, except staying out of it, which can be considered negative achievement since the Soviets wanted to stay out also, both sides knowing that if they got in they’d be in against each other. And there is nothing positive Johnson can point to—at this time, anyway—as coming out of his summit meeting with Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. ★ ★ * But Johnson handled it well. Kosygin, no matter how tough he sounded later for Soviet policy purposes, blessed the meetihg with a manner which seemed grateful. If Johnson achieved nothing positive at the conference, at least he built a bridge that might be useful later. Here Johnson made the intangible seem real and worthwhile. But all this puts the Republicans who challenge him in 1968 in the position of having to criticize frustrations and find fault with intangibles because these last two yeans of the. Vietnam war have been a kind of marking-time period. . The Christian Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal this year is a great ecumenical project. It is the first time anywhere that eight Christian denominations have joined under one roof to give/the Gospel of Jesus Christ to all men. The theme of Expo 67 is “Man and His World”. What could be more appropriate in such a setting than a graphic presentation of Christ’s basic and eternal truths? The major Christian churches in Canada have undertaken this venture together. They are the Rotnan Catholic, United, Anglican, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Baptist, Greek-Orthodox and Ukranian-Orthodox. Since they have always agreed on the fundamental principles of Christianity (while differing in some of their interpretations), they were determined to. present the Christian message with one voice . . . To remind Man of his responsibilities to himself, to his fellow men and to his Maker. Wliat Chancellor Colvard was telling the high school graduates was not to permit themselves to be so caught up in the space age that they forget that they have something no machine can have—human warmth. How long has it been since a vending machine smiled at you and said, “Hurry back”? Confident L ivmg: Defeat Inner Feeling of Failure DR. PEALE By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE It is amazing how some people insist on failing in life. I have seen many cases of perfectly competent people who got some | c o m p u lsive failure complex and rode | it tc/'just that —.f^ure.jpB They did not! u n/d e r s tand [ wh4 they were! that way, and I other people" were that anyone with potential ability could throw it aiyay. * ★ ★ There was such a man in Nebraska. His wife was puzzled And almost beside herself. Her husband’s ability was such that his business was, as she p u t it, “like an airplane ready to take off and fly. “But just when everything is going good he does something that takes ail the altitude out of it. And,” she added, “he is far from dumb, but he does things so stupid that it almost gives the appearance of being deliberate.” ★ ★ As a matter of fact, the so-called dumb things that he' did were deliberate, unconscious-. ly deliberate. When a person has a deep inner feeling of failure, but begins to succeed, the profound failure feeling sometimes does everything possible to protect itself and Verbal Orchids Fred Tyson of Lake Orion; 87th birthday. Mrs. Clara Hasenbein of 8790 Arlington; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Etta Mann of Lake Orion; 87th birthday. Dr. Lewis Sebille of 2100 Woodward; 81st birthday. Harry S. Stark of Birmingham; 89th, birthday. Merle Hubbard of 11 Gingell Court; 88th birthday. Or ley Bruff of 103 Henderson; 81st birthday. Mrs. Glenn Walton ! of 2115 Snellbrook; 84th birthday. prevent potential success. Its method of operation is the employment of irrational actions designed to nip success and induce failure results. Going into this case we found that this man’s father had been forced to be a farmer, when actually he had-wanted to be an educator. This made him a bitter spirit-broken person, and thp son grew up in this atmosphere. ★ The father noted in his son those sensitive quick-minded characteristics which made him a replica of himself. And by some devious, shall I say devilish, quirk of mind he also saw in the boy a rival who could be what he himself had wanted to be and he* determined to break him. This emotionally sick father drove into the boy’s consciousness a certainty that he would be a failure. So deeply imbedded was * this conviction that, long after his father’s death, and in a business of his own — me that had every potential — he often revealed the destructive ineptness that he had been assured he possessed. When we acquainted this man with the curious psychological mechanism so long dominant in his mind he began for the first time to understand himself. And also he had a new understanding of his father that developed into compassion for a man who bad suffered so acutely from emotional ill health. ★ ★ ★ We taught him to view his father not as a father but as a pathetic and unhappy human being. Then came forgiveness of . his conflicted parent. No sooner had the forgiveness been expressed than peace came to his mind. ★ ★ ★ “Your father wanted to succeed but failed so I suggest that you get busy and succeed — succeed for your father as well as for yourself. Maybe somewhere in the afterlife the* unhappy man will be at peace and take pride in you.” Tears welled up in hi a eyes. “That is what I always wanted — my father to be proud of me.” “Re was “not really « cruel man,” I said, “only a mixed-up, terribly unhappy person. But that is now in the past if you will leave it there.” Well, he did leave it there and went on to achieve the success of which he was eminently capable. * * * Naturally the psychological wounds of a lifetime did not heal instantly but the twin factors of self-understanding and compassionate forgiveness eventually cured this man of inflicting failure upon himself. ★ * ★ If you are experiencing failure or if a greater success might be expected as a result of your effort and ability, make an in-depth study of yourself. Determine whether an unhealthy thought pattern may be defeating you. And if so, remember that it can be changed. Failure is not necessary. . 1*1111 &1h1i : 111 ,.V - ;.;. 1, This Cafe Owner Bars Own Wife From Visiting His Pub Unannounced By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 29 and the mother of three children under 10. My husband Owns a very popular bar-lounge in town. (We live in a suburb). He comes home anywhere from 3 to 6 in the morning. He gets up about 11 a.m. and goes to work about 3:30 pm. I don’t mind his being in the bar business because it’s been good to us, but I do resent very much his FORBIDDING me ever to come to his place of business unannounced or uninvited (By the way, I never have, and I probably never would, so he doesn’t have to worry). He forbids me to set foot in his place except when HE takes me — which is always on the deadest night of the week. It’s a respectable bar, and caters to .women as well as men. This may sound silly to you, but his forbidding me to come by has become such & source of bitterness that I have developed ulcers. Ii is actually ruining our relationship. Can you tell me what to do? BITTER-HALF DEAR BITTER-HALF: Tell your hus-manri that you have had about as much FORBIDDING as you can stand, and that if he values your marriage he will accompany you to an impartial third party to help resolve your problems. If you have no clergyman to guide you, ask your family physician to recommend a marriage counselor, psychiatrist, or psychologist. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I am in the guard house for going AWOL. I’ve been here three weeks, and I’hate to tell you how much longer I’ve got in here because this is my third AWOL. My girl friend just sent word to me Local Hospital Needs Helpers A Pontiac hospital needs volunteer “moms” to help once a week in its pediatrics ward. * ★ ★ This requires playing with and reading to the children and if necessary feeding them. Any special training will be given by the hospital. The only qualification is that the volunteer enjoy children. Interested women may contact the Oakland County Volunteer Bureau. Meadow Brook Plans Busy Week Cultural Calendar By the Associated Press Here is a list of major recreational and cultural events in Michigan starting Friday, July 14, and ending Friday, July 21. ART , Ann Arbor—Annual Street Art Fair, South University Avenue. Through July 22. Detroit — Detroit ‘Institute of Arts: “The Arts of India and Nepal,” 4,000 years of Indian art. Through Aug. 16. Detroit — Detroit Institute of Arts: “Cezanne and His Contemporaries,” including works by Toulouse-Latrec, Manet, Modigliani, Renoir, Degas, Daumier. (Through Oct. 1. East* Lansing—Michigan State University, Fine Arts Festival. Opens July 16. THEATER Ann Arbor — University of Michigan Lydia Mendelssohn Theater: U. of M. Players Summer Playbill production of “The Physicists,” closes July 16. Detroit — Detroit Institute of Arts: “Funny Girl,” Detroit Summer Theater. Closes July 16. Hillsdale — Hillsdale College Summer Theater: “FMgan’s Rainbow,” closes July 16; “Oliver,” opens July 2L Dearborn — University of Michigan Dearborn campus, Fair Lane Festival: Yehudi Menuhin and the Bath Festival Orchestra. July 15-16. FESTIVALS Port Huron—Blue Water Festival: Includes Michigan State championship baton contest, July 18; Michigan State majorette corps and drill team pageant, July 19; International Day parade, 7 p.m., July 19. JANE MARSH H1ROYUKI IWAKI Six events of major interest are scheduled this week by Oakland University’s Meadow Brook Festival in the Baldwin Memorial Pavilion. This Sunday at 6:30 P.M., Sixten Ehrling conducts the Detroit Symphony Blankets, Star? Both Find Favor at OU Festival By HARRY REED “Grassers” are legal at OU? Sure they are, for the Meadow Brook Music Festival concert! What is a “grasser” you say? Area police officers who deal with the summertime affliction might call it an outdoor bash with no holds barred, usually consisting of teenagers and blankets and beer, in roughly equal parts. * ★ ★ Beer Is not in evidence at the concerts, but sedate sipping from pre-mixed thermos jugs lends a hazy glow to the soft shadows sneaking over the bandstand and up the hill, A few sharp slaps may not be in time with the music, but the bug problem isn’t bad at all. REDISCOVERY For those who feel they are close to nature when they squat to line up a putt, there is the amazing rediscovery that good grass is wonderfully soft to lie upon. Even constellations long forgotten from camping days come back to visit those who listen flat on their backs. 'Sixten Ehrling paints the dusk with a wizard’s wand, and gets accompaniment from a staccato motor bike two hills over, and a lonesome horse who can’t read the score. ★ ★ ★ Hie Detroit Symphopy sound washes over the recumbent forms like summer fog, and only the sharp silhouette of the later-comer breaks the magic from the bright stage. Its the best $2 bet you’ll make all summer. Irish Laughter Marks Reunion SOMERVILLE, Mass. (0 - There were peals of Irish laughter and a few tears when two sisters met Friday night 70 years after they last saw each other in County Cork, Ireland. * ★ ★ “At first we couldn’t say a'word,” said Ellen Aherne, 79, of Bandon, County Cork. “After all, It’s been 70 years, but then we both laughed and we’re laughing yet," , * ★ ★ Mrs. Aherne was reunited with her sister, Katie Harrington, 87, of Cincinnati, Ohio, at the home of Mrs. Harrington’s daughter, Mrs. Frank Toomey. LAS’? OF NINE The sisters are widows and the last of a family of nine children. “Well, we’re both older and age does make a difference,” said Mrs. Aherne, “but I knew her as soon as t saw her. We’ve seen lots of pictures of each other,” * * * The idea of a reunion came after their niece, Kathleen Wrenn, New York, got a letter from her Aunt EJlen saying, “I’m getting old, have you seen Katie?” f * *. ★ Miss. Wrenn said, “I wrote her and told her she could tome, and sheVrote bade and said she was coming.” The reunion is slated to last three weeks. ', Orchestra with violinist James Oliver Buswell IV the soloist playing Lailo’s “Symphonie Esppgnole.” The major work on the program will be Mahler’s epic Symphony No, 5. ★ * ★ On Wednesday at 8:30 P.M., the Meadow Brook School of Music Orchestra and Chorus will appear”The program will include Weber’s Overture to “Eury-anthe” and Webern’s “Six Pieces for Orchestra” conducted by James Levine, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 (with final chorus on Schiller’s “Ode to Joy”),conducted by Robert Shaw. GUEST CONDUCTOR Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8:30 P.M., and Sunday at 6:30, guest conductor Hiroyuki Iwaki will take over the Festival’s regular concerts with Tchaikovsky Competition winning soprano Jane Marsh as soloist. - Miss Marsh will be heard in TwiPa’s Song Cycle “Canto e Sevilla” Thurs- It's Official-Congratulations LANSING (UPI)—Two Northern Michigan legislators Friday introduced a resolution in the House that congratulates Linda Kaye Christie, 18, of Alpena, for being elected the 1967 National Cherry Queen. ★ * ★ Miss Christie will reign next week over the 34th National Cherry Festival at Traverse City. ★ ★ , ★ The resolution was offered by Reps. Joseph Swallow, R-Alpena, and Arnell Engstrom, R-Traverse City. day and Friday on a program which includes Britten’s Four Sea Interludes from "Peter Grimes” and the Sibelius Symphony No. 2. ★ * ★ Saturday and Sunday she will sing arias from Refice's “Cecilia” and Verdi’s “Otello” on a program which included Mayuzume’s “Bugaku” Suite and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4 in F Minor. Iwaki, one of Japan’s most distinguished conductors, has recently accepted a post with the Berlin Philharmonic after resigning as director of the NHK Symphony of his country. During his stqy at Meadow Brook, Ehrling will be guest conducting three concerts (July 10-11-13) with the Philadelphia Orchestra with soloists Gary Graffman, pianist, and Ingrid Bjoner, soprano. Meeting on Tuesday The Fashionette Club will meet Tuesday at the Ada Shelly Library at 7 p.m. Miniature Golf will be the program for the evening. Any woman wishing to lose weight may attend. William Deneens Will Be Honored Family members and friends are traveling to Cheboygan this weekend to participate in the golden wedding celebration of Mr. and Mrs. William Deneen, former Pontiac residents. Sons David (of North Saginaw Street) and Wayne (of OrtonviUe) are hosting the open house for the couple who were married July 8, 1917 in Pontiac. They have 14 grandchildren and 9 number of ,, great-grandchildren. Toni Jo Abbenante, 19 year old “Miss Michigan,” shops for a wardrobe in Detroit yesterday. She was winner of the Miss Michigan pageant in Muskpgori several weeks ago and a $1,000 wardrobe was among her prizes. that she is pregnant. Do you think they would let me out long enough to marry her? WORRIED DEAR WORRIED: Talk to the chaplain and plead your case. Maybe they’ll allow you just enough liberty to marry the girl. But don’t expect a honeymoon. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: We were given a dog as a gift, and everything is jUst fine, except for one matter: After we have dinner, my husband gives the dog his plate to lick clean. I think this is a disgusting practice, and could be dangerous to our health. My husband says as long as all the" dishes go into the automatic dishwasher and are rinsed in boiling water, it doesn’t make any difference. What do you think about this? RED’S WIFE DEAR WIFE: Tell Red that if “it doesn’t make any difference,” you’d just as soon have your own dishes and let the dog have his. ★ ★ * DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a couple who take your husband out to eat every night, but do not include you? My husband works with this man, and every evening he and his wife invite my husband out to dinner. They know he'a married and they know me very well, yet I am ignored as if I didn’t exist. I. O. FORM LA. DEAR l.O.: I don't think much of the couple. But why blame them? Your husband doesn't have to accept unless he wants to. mother to please hold her conversation until after the music session. Repeat if necessary. * * * DEAR ABBY: I nearly flipped when I read that letter from the bride who wanted her own brother to be best man at her wedding instead of her fiance’s brother, because her brother was tall and handsome, and his brother was short and not very good looking. Why doesn't she marry someone who has a tall brother? She says as long as her parents are paying for the wedding she should be able to pick the people for the wedding party. * I think I know her problem. Her parents-are not only paying for the wedding but for the man, too. Please print this. The poor groom might see it and wake up in time to be sav§(i a lifetime of des-pair. NEARLY FLIPPED IN LAGUNA -* ★ ★ Troubled? Write to Abby, The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, The POntiac Press, Dept, E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. DEAR ABBY: I am a bachelor, living with my widowed mother. I am her Sole support. ' As a member of a; music group, I am scheduled to entertain at home occasionally with classical recordings. Mother loves to talk, and she holds a steady conversation while the music plays. Obviously I cannot tell her to go to .the movies, or to leave the room. She prepares a lovely repast after the session. I think more of my mother than my musician friends, so do you think that under the circumstances it would be better if I were to discontinue my association with the music group? My m 01 h e r is very sensitive td criticism.' MUSIC LOVERS DEAR LOVER: Gently ask your Bridge Players Only The Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club will meet Saturday at 8 p.m. in me Pontiac Mali. AH bridge players may attend. Come True CoUege put her up for the college’s beauty contest, and she won that. Then she tried the Miss Michigan Junior College contest and won that. ★ ★ ★ “It was kind of a joke at first,” she said. “Now it’s getting to be a shock.” Luncheon Slated by Association The Countryside Improvement Association of West Bloomfield Township is planning a subscription luncheon Wednesday noon. Members will meet in the Regency Room of the Holiday Inn on Telegraph Road. ★ ★ ★ A tour of the Wisner Home on Oakland Avenue will follow the luncheon MRS. CRAIG R. SMITH Vows Are Said in Morning Rite A morning ceremony in,First Methodist Church, Cl arks ton united Carol Ann White and Craig Rolfe Smith today. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. White of Balmoral Terrace, and Mrs. Rolfe H. Smith of Maybee Road and the late Mr. Smith. ★ ★ ★ The bride's gown was floor-length silk organza with appliqued bodice and sleeves. Her chapel length train and controlled Skirt were .accented with smaller matching appliques. A full length veil was overlaid with a shorter veil, both secured with a circlet. She carried a bouquet of white roses and lily of (he valley. HONOR MAID Lou Ann White was maid of honor for her sister, while the bridegroom’s broth-' er, Sheldon, performed best man duties. Bridesmaids were Carole A. Melstrom of Rochester and Susan Smith of Detroit. The usher corps was made up of Neil Norgrove of Detroit, Bruce Annett Jr. of Pontiac and Robert Lamb of Union Lake. ★ ★ ■it Following a wedding breakfast in the Old Mill Tavern! the couple left for a honeymoon in Canada. Miss Michigan Enthusiastic About Dream WARDROBE She was scurrying about Detroit Thursday, trying out some of the 81,000 wardrobe she won at the Miss Michigan pageant in Muskegon a couple of weeks ago. "Everyone seems to recognize me,” she sighed. “It’s hard to get used to living in a goldfish bowl.” But then, she said, the whole thing is like living in a dream. “Why, all these prizes I got, and I’ll be going to Atlantic City for the Miss America pageant.” “You’ll have to lower your hemline a little before you do that,” said Mrs. James Patton, a veteran Miss Michigan chaperone. KNEES SHOWING Toni’s knees were tentatively peeping beneath her green dress. “At the Miss America contest, the DETROIT (AP) — Life has been a dress has got to slink to halfway down dream - in a goldfish bowl - to Toni the knees.” Mrs. Patton explained. Jo Abbenante since she on the Miss Toni said she d do that. Michigan contest. She said she was looking forward to ★ * * going to Atlantic City. “At home in Grand Rapids, I can’t go anywhere without be recognized,” said the 19-year-old brunette. “Ive never been anywhere in the East before,” she said. In fact, she explained she’d never been in a beauty contest before, till her sorority sisters at Grand Rapids Junior THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 VACATION /or everyone! Why not plan a vacation for your Rugs and Carpets while you’re gone. New Way will pick up your rugs before you leave and return them when you like. Call us NOW! ♦NEW WAY * RUG and CARPET CLEANERS 42 Whiter St., Pontiac FE 2*7132 EXPERIENCE Experience is the one great teacher that gives perfection. It is the one ingredient that makes a winning J. L. VOORHEES ball club from an old team over a HI young, fired-up inexperienced club. We are proud of our experience and reputation in this - community. During the coming years, as in the past, we shall continue to serve this area with dignity and respect . . . at a price within the means of all. M. E. SIPLE VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 'Not Too Early to Hit China' MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) -|Capt. Eddie Rlckenbacker, World War I flying ace and Congressional Medal of Honor winner, said Friday that “right now is not too early’* to hit the Chinese Communists with nuclear weapons. Rickenbacker spoke at ceremonies observing the 50th anniversary of Selfridge Air Force Base near Mount Clemens. The 77-year-old pioneer airman said that the United States is only “tickling” the enemy in Vietnam and that we must Bi-tack production centers and “starve the population out” if we are to win. Asked if such a course might bring the Chinese into the conflict,' Rickenbacker said ‘To hell with what Chinamen think, we’ve got the weapons. ★ * * Rickenbacker is a former chairman of the board of Eastern Air Lines. The industrial use of silver has risen in the United States from 95 million ounces 10 years ago to 145 million ounces in I960. Fighting Along DMZ Kills 836 VC in Week SAIGON (AP) - Infintry battles and small arms duels along the demilitarized zone over the last week have killed 836 Communist soldiers, the U.S. Command said today. U.S. Marines, badly battered by enemy artillery and ground assault forces early in the week, claimed overwhelming victory today as they announced that 506 Communists were killed in the past two days, mostly by air and artillery .strikes. Marine losses for this period were listed 17 dead and 46 wounded. ★ ★ ★ For the whole week, the Marines lost 134 dead, 631 wounded and five missing. Many of the reports of enemy dead were based on sightings from the air. In ground action Friday Marine unit that had'lost 12 dead and 30 wounded to North Vietnamese artillery fire Thursday more than evened the score when it caught 200 North Vietnamese in the open northeast of Con Thien. After the Leathernecks boxed the enemy troops in a narrow draw, blistering air strikes and artillery were called in. A Marine spokesman said 150 enemy bodies were counted after the smoke cleared. No Marines were reported killed in the Deaths in Pontiac Area UNIVERSAL GENEVE lc couturier de la montre The Tri-Compax Chronograph simplifies. calculations and timing problems. This superbly accurate watch has a stop watch mechanism with minute and hour recorder, it also indicates the date, day of week, month and moon phases. It is waterproof*, shockproof and has a tachymetrlc division measuring speeds above 60 km, on a basis pf 1,000 meters, one mile. stainless steel 1193. In fourteen karet gold $460. CORNER OF HURON AND SAGINAW STREETS - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ’ \ FE 2-0294 Linda D.- Arnold Service for Linda D. Arnold, 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elzie Arnold of 142 Clifford, will be 2 p.m. Monday at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Linda, a student at Eastern Junior High School, died yesterday. Surviving are her parents and six brothers and two sisters, George, Irene. Vernon, Joe W., J e f r y, Kenneth, Brenda and Ronald, all of Pontiac. Laurie J. Werner Service for Laurie J. Werner, 14-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Myles Werner of 3432 Lexington, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at Christ Lu t h e r a n Church, Waterford Township, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Laurie, a student at Isaac Crary Junior High School, Waterford Township, died this morning. She was member of Christ Lutheran Church. Surviving are her parents; brother, Michael at home; and grandparents Mr. and M Thomas Hicks of St. Petersburg, Fla. Stanley E. Casson BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -I Service for Stanley E. Casson, 72, of 21540 W. 14 Mile will be 3:30 p.m. Monday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in White Chapel Memor- ial Cemetery, Troy. He died Friday. Mr. Casson was a member of the Detroit Athletic Club, Oakland Hills Country Club, Highland Park Lodge No. 468 F&AM, Moslem Temple and Ford Old-timers Club. He was a retired vice president of sales of National Acme Co. of Cleveland, Ohio. Surviving are his wife, Ruth; two sons, Donald of Detroit and Vernon of California; a stepson, Ivan Baumann of Pontiac; eight grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Mary M. Johnson BIRMINGHAM — Service for Mrs. Mary M. Johnson, 77, of HMif Whispering Oak will be 10:30 a.m. Monday at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Kee-go Harbor. Mrs. Johnson died Thursday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Herbert I. Davis of Birmingham: two grandchildren; a sister; and a brother. Bernard A. Kitson WIXOM — Service for Bernard A. Kitson, 84, of 30700 Wixom will be 1 p.m. Monday at Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with burial in Wixom Cemetery. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Beulah Potvin and Mrs. Rebecca Shelton, both of Walled Lake, and six grandchildren. STORE HOURS: , 8:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. jSoMTB/teitiA VMV.2j= Hour JMcnor themw/inDRVCLEAWNG SHIRTS 4 for *| for [: with order of $2 or more dry cleaning. Free Moth Protection of all garments Ask Ajbout Our FREE Sunimer Storage Plan -Dry Cleaning Special- MON., TUES., WED., JULY 10-11-12th LADIES’ or MEN’S SUITS Miracle Mile Store Dial SS2-1822 Elizabeth Lake Shopping Center Dial 322*0884 *|I9 Specials Good at Both Locations Miracle Mile and 3397 Elizabeth Lake Rd. at M-59 Out in the South China Sea hope of recovering alive Maj. Gen. William J. Crumm and five others lost after two B52s collided grew dimmer. Search picked up pieces of debris from the two huge Strato-forts but* reported no sign of the crewmen. Thirteen crewmen were scooped out of the sea soon after the collision Friday. Crumm, a veteran of 26 years of Air Force flying, was scheduled to report to the Pentagon in August as director of Aerospace Programs, U.S. Air Force Headquarters. FIGHTING CONTINUES The deadly fighting in South Vietnam’s northern-' most province continued today with new artillery clashes and a pitched battle in which South Vietnamese infantrymen, - supported by air and artillery reported they killed another 84 Red troops. The fighting along the demilitarized zone was reported to U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara on the second day of his Vietnamese inspection tour. He is weighing Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s urgent request for troop reinforcements. The heavy North Vietnamese infiltration through the zone is a big factor in Westmoreland’s requests. He is believed to have asked for at least another 100,000 troops to bolster the 464,000 now committed to the war. ★ * ★ Before leaving South Vietnam, McNamara will tour the embattled 1st Corps area comprising the five northernmost provinces most-threatened by increasing Communist pressure. military spokesman said the casualty figures given for the past week’s battles in the demilitarized zone were by actual body count. However, only about one-third were confirmed by ground sweeps and the remainder by observation from light spotter planes and helicopters. The spokesman said that the latest casualty figures had been held up while they were personally reviewed by the Marine commander, Lt. Gen. Robert E. Cushman. Youth, 20, Charged in Grocery Break-In Michael L. Guilds, 20, of 7169 Michigan, Waterford Township, stood mute to a charge of breaking and entering yesterday before Justice of the Peace Patrick K. Daly. Justice Daly set examination on the charge for July Guilds was arrested early yesterday after a break-in at Rye-son’s Market, 4678 Elizabeth Lake shortly before 1 a.m. Two other men held by police were released after investigation. They are Jerry Short-way, 21, of 1150 S. Hospital, Waterford Township, and Leslie Baker, 20, of 40 E. Brooklyn, Pontiac. Oregon Bank to Be National Landmark JACKSONVILLE, Ore., (AP) — The C. C. Beekman Bank; Building in Jacksonville will bej designated next month as a national historical landmark. The bank opened in the 1850s, when gold was discovered in southern Oregon. But it did not! operate for profit. It served simply as the community strongbox. Depositors often received the exact same money they had put in earlier. She Donates Time Freely LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)-Mrs. Clarence Brown works long) hours, will, take on any job and never asks for a raise. In fact, she never asks for any pay at all. Mather of six children and grandmother of 15, she volunteers most of her waking hours “to anyone who needs me.” Last year she worked more than hours, equivalent to 150 eight-hour days. Among the organizations she served were Cystic Fibrosis, the United Appeal, Arthritis Foundation, Kentucky Dept, of Mental Health, Cerebral Palsy Center, Health and Welfare Council, Family Life Association, Toys for Tots and the Heart Association. Makes CANDY Quito Like CROCKER'S Crocker’s HOMEMADE CANDIES 2740 Woodward S. of Square Lake Rd. The Pontiac Mall Perhaps You’ve Heard the Story... about the inventor who worked all alone in his little hut, cut off from all other human contact, and succeeded in developing a crude but workable model of the typewriter. Unfortunately his success came SIXTY YEARS AFTER the original invention of the typewriter. How can you prevent such unworthy expenditures of energy? COMMUMCATE How to communicate? Through your Chamber of Commerce. Part of your Chamber’s service is to keep you abreast of the problems common to everyone in the community — tell you how others are solving them — give you the facts and figures to solve your own particular problem. All it takes to benefit from this service is your membership and participation in the Chamber. REMEMBER- Group Effort Makes Great Gains PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 33 W. Huron St. 335*6148 FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmacist YOUR PHARMACIST Cutlodlmn ofMrdical Information Hit library is an instant sourca of drug ImewMfla. His Bias contain hundreds of specific drug nomas and! thousands of facts about them. His records Include the hlstoiyof the health BfMwili Pharmacy Corner , Grandie^ Fra* ,r=r 219 Baldwin *",i" FE 4-2621 OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. W. BLOOMFIELD RANCH Brick froi it home with permanent siding in excellent condition. Living room. dining om, family room, modern kitchen e md 3 bedre c heat. M tener. Large lot, cement drive, 2 c or garage. School bus at ' door. Reduc ed la $14,900, terms. Directions; Coo ley Lake Re l„ right on Gr« ter Rd. to So, to 193'. Henbert. Follow open signs. li Wbrrni* yr: OTTAWA DRIVE BRICK Attrodivt 7 room home In excellent condition. Carpeted living room with fireplace, combination dining room and family room, ultra modem kitchen with built-in* and lavatory on first floor. 3 bedrooms and 2 baths upstairs. Basement, gas heat. Large lot, 2 car attached garage. Price just reduced to $32,500, terms. 277 Ottawa Drive. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST., PONTIAC 338-0466 Office Open Evenings and Sunday 1 to 4 OPEN SUNDAY MILKING STOOL $*|92 Styled it) the tradition the way you like it. Set includes a large round Formica Top table ond PIOW four (4) comfortable motes i chairs. Come In early tor this villV outstanding savings. RECLINERS Comfort that would make any man or woman op* predate the outstanding value offered on these fine quality recliners. You have a good choice of colors. 4405 Highland Rd. Cor. , Pontiac Lake Rd. 1 Mile West Eliiobeth Lotte Rd. OPEN DAILY TIL 9 P.M. PHONE 474-2251 TERMS ARRANGED 90 DAYS CASH OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 6 P.M. BUY, SELL, TRADE . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! THE PONtlAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1907 MONDAY ONLY - MONDAY ONLY - 9 TIL 9 100% Colton Thermal MONDAY ONLY - 9 TIL 9 Equal to Original Equipment Shock Absorbers Regular 3.79 Fits most cars ^ Each Low Cost Installation Available Most shocks are shot after 20,000 miles. Worn shock absorbers adversely effect steering, braking, acceleration. Get Sears shocks. They equal the control and comfort of all new car shocks. If your car is two years old, you probably need new Sears shocks. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back* Latex Semi-Gloss Cleans Up in Soapy Water Regular $6.99 Dries in 30 minutes A paint with all the durable qualities of the finest oil paint combined with the ease and convenience 6f latex. Ideal for kitchen, bath, playrooms, areas that take hard wear. It’s odorless and lead-free. SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-41 71 U.S. Will Probe Imbalance 108 N. SAGINAW—FE 3-7114 WASHINGTON (API — The and Welfare, told the Associat-I government plans major inves-|ed Press in an interview he tigations of northern school sys-( hopes the new effort can begin items to hunt possible violations I early next year. 'of the Civil Rights Act. He said the move will require I Peter Libassi, director of civil a large buildup in enforcement I ■rights enforcement for the De- personnel and will begin slowly, partment of Health, Education! Libassi, a\ young, straight- 'Sc SAVE $2395 A MONDAY ONLY! HOM( Of FINEST KANO NAMES 108 N. 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The enforcement chief said these practices include : • Drawing school district lines so as to keep white and Negro children in separate schools. • Using optional attendance zones between white and Negro! neighborhoods so white students who would normally go to a Ne- j gro school can choose a white! one instead. • Assigning white teachers; only to white schools, Negro teachers only to Negro schools. • Failing to provide teachers, facilities and services which assure Negro schoolchildren educational opportunities equal to those of whites. The U.S. Office of Education for some time has been looking Into alleged civil rights violations in the North, but on a very limited scale, Why is the new move being made now? First, says Libassi, the government has had all it could do since 1964 to bring an end to the South’s established school segregation. Now that job is nearly done: Of the 5,000 dual school systems existing in 1964 there will be only about 1,500 left this, fall. And Libassi says a recent amendment to the federal school aid bill passed by the House “is a clear delineation that there should be greater emphasis in the North” on compliance with nondiscrimination provisions. NERMINN SHOITS Political Action by NEA Urged BLANKETS $6.98 O') Hair Dryers Table Top Model 14" Reg. 923.99 «ay. “CHARGE IT” •t Sear* Self storing personal portable goes anywhere, gives professional - look-ing Tesults. Choice of 4 temperatures for fast, easy drying. 1 year war- Mfr’s Clearance Boys’ Western and Semi-Dress Jeans Were $2.49 to $3.99 One day savings on manufacturer’s clearance of boys’ jeans Western and semi-dress styles. Assorted litel, colors and patterns. Sizes 6-18, Limited quantities! Limit 4 pair to a customer. Boy*’ Wear, Main Floor 20-in. Reversible 3-Speed Window Fans Reg. $45.95 38*® Exhausts hot air from horn YANKEE’S laX LOW ITV PRICE | Asst, woven cotton plaids and solid color twill witn belt. Ivy model. Sizes 29-38. 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(AP) ■ The new president of the National Education Association has told its members to use their power at the ballot box to ensure that education’s needs are met. “The entire teaching profession and education in America are in the midst IS revolution,’ said Baulio Alonso at the NEA convention closing Friday night. “Whether this revolution brings progress or disaster will depend on teachers and their organization than on any other single factor.” Alonso, a Tampa, Fla., high school principal, said “Politics is not an unsavory business. We, who tqach government, who teach democratic concepts, who help perpetuate *our form of government should be the first to assume an active role in the political process. We must teach by example as well as by precept,” He said the day when legislators pass school legislation out of friendship or magnanimity for educators is long past, if it ever existed. Alonso said that some teachers have limited opportunity for status and advancement because of religion or the color of their skins. But he pledged renewed efforts to advance NEA’s progress in breaking down such barriers in the organization. The NEA also installed its firstTNegro vicepresident' Elizabeth D. Koontz, a public school teacher from Salisbury, N.C.i She is expected to succeed to I the presidency next year. ] MONDAY ONLY - 9 TIL 9 Kenmore Floor Shampoo-Polishers 2488 Regular $29.95 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Kenmore Polishers have 2-speed motor for cleaning and polishing. 14]/2-lbs. of balanced pressure. Cord stores on handle hooks. Monday only! MONDAY ONLY - 9 TIL 9 MONDAY ONLY - 9 TIL 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1867 > ™ B—1 Wins at Wimbledon Mrs. King T WIMBLEDON WINNER - Australia’s John Newcombe smiles contentedly Friday after routing Wilhelm Bungert of West Germany for the coveted men’s singles championship at Wimbledon, England. Newcombe swept Bungert, 6-3, 6-1, 6-1. Funseth Grabs Lead as Sikes WIMBLEDON, England tffl — Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., trounced England’s veteran Ann Haydon Jones 6-3, 64 Saturday for her second straight women’s singles crown in the Wimbledon Terlnis Championships. She became the first repeat winner since Maria Bueno of Brazil in 1959-60. Althea Gibson, the Negro star from New York, won consecutively in 1957-58. A capacity crown of 15,000 watched the women’s final on the hallowed center court in bright, sunny weather. The American favorite, 23, hit a majestic serving rhythm and volleyed with verve right from the start of the match. Mrs. Jones, 28, failed to pull out an adequate return of service and often was caught on the wrong foot. QUICK LEAD Mrs. King handed the third-seeded British girl a deadly blow by breaking her first service game with a brilliant forehand passing shot. That gave her a 2-0 lead. Always struggling to hold her service against Billie Jean’s powerful and accurate returns, Mrs. Jones managed to limp on through the next six games. Then Mrs. King wrapped up the set 6-3 after a great drive that had the British girl running the wrong way. The left-handed Mrs. Jones, a Wight-man Cup star of some years, fought back hard in the second set, but Mrs. King was too strong. After a brief rest Mrs. King was to take the court again in an effort to complete a triple slam — winning the singles, women’s doubles and mixed doubles — a Chicago Snaps Twins 8-Game Winning String By The Associated Press It took Gary Peters one inning to shut off the Minnesota Twins — just as Eddie Stanky said he would. It took Stanky a lot longer to turn on the Chicago White Sox — but when opportunity finally knocked they left nothing to Chance. The White Sox spotted Dean Chance a 1-8 first inning lead Friday night, then scored twice in the ninth on Zoilo Versalles two-out, bases-loaded error for a 2-1 victory that snapped Minnesota’s eight-game winning streak and dropped the Twins into third place in the American League race. Peters gave up doubles by Cesar Tovar apd Tony Oliva in the first, then stymied the Twins until the ninth, when knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm came on to complete the two-hitter. In other games Friday night, the New York Yankees blanked Baltimore 3-0, Cleveland trimmed Washington 6-3 and California swept a doubleheader from Kansas City 7-2 and 8-2. New York broke a five-game losing string behind the four-hit pitching of A1 Downing. ^ Sam McDowell flipped a four-hitter, striking out 10, and Pedro Gonzalez’ seventh inning single snapped a 1-1 deadlock before the Indians pulled away from Wahington with a three-run burst in the eighth. Rick Reichardts, wearing glasses for the first time in his career, blasted a pair of homers while Don Mincher and Paul Schall also homered in California’s twilight victory over the A’s. Roger Repoz, traded from Kansas City to the Angels recently, drilled two doubles and a single in the second game driving in two runs, and Reichardt added a two-run single. Three Women Tie in Carling Open BALTIMORE (AP) - Veterans Mickey Wright,.Betsy Rawls and Carol Mann carved three-under-par 69s Friday and wound up in a three-way deadlock for the first round lead in the $15,-0000 Lady Carling Open Golf Tournament. Two strokes behind the top three, and also under par, were Marlene Hagge, Sandra Haynie and Murle Lindstrom, with 71’s. Sharon Miller and Peggy Wilson carded even par 72a, good for a tie for seventh. . Mickey Wright .........36-33-69 Betsy Rewls ........ 35-36-69 Carol Mann . 35-34—69 Marlene Hagge ........ 37-34-71 Cranbrook Pitcher Blanks Talbott, 5-0 Cranbrook (84) used the shutout hurling of southpaw A1 Levy to down Tail- -bott Lumber, 5-0, Friday night at Jay-cee Park and stay in the race for a city men’s baseball title playoff berth. Dave Diehm’s opening inning single plated the only two runs Levy needed as he scattered four safeties—two by Ron Megregian — in registering his second victory of the campaign. Larry Kirchner doubled home two more markers in the sixth for the schoolmen who upped their hold on fourth place to a full game. Cranbrook also managed just four safeties with Diehm singling twice. tW Class A League’s seven contending teams will all see action Sunday during,, the five-game program at Jay-cee Para. i. Oakland Unlvarslty, .1 Clipper! vi. Cranbrook, 7:3d Tiger Solves 'Slippery' Delivery Freehan Beats Boston in 11th With 2-Bagger NORMAN’S STORMIN’ AGAIN— - Intrepid, a sleek young upstart, met Columbia, a grand old lady whose rebuilding included a new above-the-rudder tin (aptly called a bpstle) in an initial showdown today in tiie U. S. Observation Trials, of" the America’s Cup. The meeting of the newly built Intrepid and the 10-year-old Columbia also renewed a rivalry between two veteran skippers, Bus Mosbacher and I Briggs Cunningham. DETROIT (AP) — Bill Freehan solved a tricky .pitch inf overtime last night aS Detroit extended its winning streak to five games and slipped into second place ahead of Minnesota in the American League race. ★ * * Freehan cracked what he called "a Vaseline ball” to the lefttield wall for a double off John Wyatt Friday night. The hit in the 11th inning scored Jim Northrup and boosted the Tigers to a 54 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Chicago nipped Minnesota 2-1 and that left the Tigers in second, three games behind Chicago and half a game ahead of Minnesota. ★ ★ ★ “It was a fast ball,” Freehan said, “b think I hit the dry side,” he added with a grin. “He was throwing a Vaseline ball. It acts like a spitter. I think he kept the Vaseline on his pants.” MARSHALL WINS Wyatt came on in the ninth for the Red Sox and took the loss. Mike Marshall, who came on for Detroit in the ninth, was the winner. ■* ■* * Detroit jumped on starter Gary Was-lewski for two runs in the first off a double by Lenny Green and singles by Jerry Lumpe and Norm Cash. Joe Sparma started for Detroit and held the sox hitless until Reggie Smith singled in the fifth. Boston sewed in the seventh on a walk, a single by George Scott and a sacrifice fly by Rico Petr ocalli. Detroit got two in the seventh on Dick McAuliffe’s single and a towering home run by Cash, which landed high in the right field stands. ★ * * “I’m hitting better,” Cash said. “The second half has started I hope,” added the notoriously slow starter. Sparma went into the ninth with a two-hitter going. But with two out Tony Conigliaro tagged a 400-foot home run. Scott and Petrocelli followed with singles that knocked out Sparma. GAME TIED Reggie Smith and pinch hitter Jerry Adair rapped safeties off Marshall, tying the score. Andrews 2b 50 wm 3b 5 0' Ystrrmki If 5 0 Conialaro rf 4 2 o 0 Lumpe 3b 6 13 1 0 0 MAullffe 2b 5.1 1 o 1 l Cash lb 6 13 3 Scott 1b 4 1 Pet roc III si 4 1 : RSmith cf» *5 o : Tillman c 3 0' Adair ph io Wyatt p 0 0 1 3 0 Northrup rf 5 1 l o 2 1 Freehan c 3 0 11 11 Stanlay , cf 5 0 10 1 1 ^Horton ph 1 0 0 0 D 0 Trcewskl si 0 0 0 0 Waslwski p I0i Landis P ’001 Tartabuil ph 1 0 0 0 Sparma p 4 0 0 0 0 0 Marshall b 10 0 0 Thomas ph 1 0 Lyle p 0 0 1 Gibson e 1 0 ■ 4 T.t.l 44 O 14 a One out when winning run scored. Boston Ill Ml If* • f Detrait 20000020 • E—Petrocelli. . DP—Detroit 1. LOB-t Boston i. Detroit 15. ' 24-Green (2). Adair, Fraahan. HR-CMh 00), Conigliaro - (13). *B—Stanlay. SF— Oregon Five Winner ADELAIDE, Australia If) — Oregon State’s basketball team defeated a picked team from South Australia 60-58 Friday night. Vince Fritz scored IS points for the winners. For Reds' Rose Big Night Costly strands a runner at third base with By The Associated Press It was the most expensive four-hit night of Pete Rose’s career. Rose smashed a triple, two doubles and a single, drove in three runs and scored twice as the Reds downed Pittsburgh 6-2 Friday night. It cost him fifty bucks. That’s because the only time the Pirates retired him, Rose broke Cincinnati Manager Dave Bristol’s new rule that levies a $50 fine anytime a batter I Sevens Bring Luck I for California Bettor | PLEASANTON, Calif. air of Bob Hewitt and Frew McMillian. They beat third seeded Bill Bowrey and Owen Davidson, and meet Roy Emerson and Ken Fletcher in the finals today. Newcombe, a serve-and-volley 23-year-old in the best Australian tradition, won one of the easiest men’s finals in years when he beat Wilhelm Bungert of West Germany 6-3, 6-1, 6-1 in 75 minutes. AP Wlrophoto SWIMMING SATISFACTION - Three 17-year-old United States’ swimmers cruised to world records yesterday at the Santa Clara (Calif.) International Invitational meet. The invitational’s opening day saw Pam Kruse (left) of Fort Lauderdale better her own 400-meter freestyle record with a 4:46.4 timing. Santa Clara's Mark Spitz (center) did a 4:08.8 in the 400-meter men’s freestyle to trim four-tenths of a second off the previous mark. Claudia Kolb (right) of the host city was .3 under her previous world standard with a 2:27.5 time in the 200-yard individual medley. Finds Trouble INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. OB — R. H. Sikes said, “I either misread the greens or just didn’t hit them right1,” after missing eight putts of 18 feet or less. ★ * . * Whatever the cause, the putts that wouldn't drop Friday left Sikes two strokes off the pace instead of Well in front at the 36-hole point of the $100,000 Speedway Open Golf Tournament. Sikes, with 67-72-139, and Gene Lit-tler, with 71-68-139, were tied for second, behind Rod Funseth with 67-70-137. “I Was putting as well as I did yesterday, but they happened to bounce in yesterday,” Sikes said. He hit 16 greens but birdied only the 18th, on a five-footer, and three-putted • the 12th’ from 35 feet for a bogey for his even par round. * * *■ Funseth missed a 20-foot putt for an eagle on the seventh hole but got an easy birdie there and and dropped other birdie putts of 20, 12 and six feet. A shot against a fence on the 14th hole and a trap on the 17th brought him two bogeys. Rocky Thompson ... xEd Tutwlltr ...... Bill Casper ....... Don Esslg ......... Bob Goelby ........ Jack Montgomery . Steve Oppermann Steve Reid......... Chi Chi Rodriguez Larry Wood ........ Richard Martinez AP Wlrephoto BOGEY FOR LEADER-Rod Funseth from Spokane has sandy going on the 17th hole Friday at Indianapolis during the $100,000 Speedway Open pro golf tournament. He took a bogey but still had a two-under-par 70 for a two-stroke lead at the tournament’s halfway point. B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 M York 3. Baltimore '----2, Minnesota 1 ■ 7-8, Kansas Sunday's Gamas msat City at California nnesota at Chicago, 2 Haw York ............. 000 001 020—3 •Baltimore ., 000 000 000—0 I . Downing and Glbba; Dlllman, Fisher (4), Richer! (0) and Etchabarran. Downing, 9-3. L—Fisher, 2-2. . Home run—New York, Papltone (6). Dowell, 5-7. L—Pascual, 7-4. Home runs—Washington, Casnova (i Cleveland, Maya (6). Night Gama Minnesota .. too 000 000-t 2 Chicago ...... ooo ooo 002—2 6 Chance, Worthington (9) and Zlmmi merfT Paters, Wilhelm (9) and Martin. —Wilhelm 4-1. I__Chance, 11-7. Twilight Gama Kansas City ...... ' 000 100 100-2 8 California ........ 100 015 DOx—7 8 Undblad, Sagul (7) and Suarez; M *“..-ja^ft*jjers. W—McGlothlln, -California, Schaal (f I), Mlncher (14). Turner (6), Kelso (i Glothlin and Priday's Results Atlanta 3, New York 2, 11 Cincinnati 5> Pittsburgh 2 St, Louis. 5, Philadelphia 1 „ Houston 11, Chicago 5 ' San Francl^^ Angala. ’ Atlanta (Jarvis 8-" ** u— (Seaver 7-5), night t Philadelphia '^Cincinnati "(Arrlgo 52) at Pittsburgh ■(Sisk 58) ^(Chicago (Culp 58) at Houston (Giustl _ Los Angeles (Drysdale 7-9) at & Francisco (Marlchal 11-7) Sunday's Gamas Atlanta at New York St. Louis at Philadelphia Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Chicago at Houston o games scheduled. , Is (4), Gardner (5), Lar----------------,9), Koonce (8) and Hundley; Blaslngame. Lathian (3), Ellers (0) and Adlesh. W—Latman, 2-4. L—Sim- Clonlnger, Ritchie (8), Raymond I and Torre, Uecker (9) Hendley, Rei (9), Lamaba (11), R. Taylor (11) < Grote. W—Raymond, 55. L—I ^ l Home runs—Atlanta, Torre Miss Kazmierski to Defend WMGA Title on Line Joyce Kazmierski of Grosse lie, who collected three major golfing crowns last season, found herself a marked champion as she went about trying to hang onto the titles. Included in her triumphs last year were victories in the National IntercoUegiate, Women’s Michigan Golf Association and the Women's District Golf Association match play. She’s already lost one of them, the Intercollegiate in play at Seattle late in June, and Monday she’ll put the Michigan title on the line at Red Run Country Club. It’s the 51st WMGA championship, and a field of 141 will be on hand to battle in the 18-hole qualifying round Monday for 112 Leaders Finding Trouble at Top in Slow Pitch CITY MEN'S SOFTBALL Slaw Pitch Laagua W L W IGM-Shalea 7 2 Moose 5 H Sportsmen 7 2 Sport-O-Rama 2 spots in the match-play which gets under way Tuesday. There’ll be seven flights players in each one — to open match play competition Tuesday. Single rounds follow on Wednesday and Thursday with the championship finals slated for Friday afternoon. Miss Kazmierski, a student at Michigan State University, faces some tough opposition in her bid to retain the title: Two-time runner-up Patti Shook of Saginaw will be on hand, along with Janice Elias of Cascade Hills, Mrs. Anthony Koustas of Dearborn, Cynthia Hill of South Haven and Mrs. John Hume of Birmingham, a 1 former member of Red Run. Some other players who figure to have a say in determining the champibn are Mrs. ■ Werner of Indianwood, winner of the recent WDGA medal play championship, Feather Frechette, another Indianwood member, and Mrs. Midge Cova of Novi. Defending Pontiac city cham-pion Mrs. Chris J. Miller of bu^mu Farmington is also among the challengers for Miss Kazmier-I”*"^^ ski’s crown. AMERICAN LEAGUE TEAM BATTING At R H HR 2812 339 884 79 2687 347 847 73 ..... 2821 341 648 78 313 .244 Kansas City 2719 270 824 35 2t__ New York 2576 257 570 54 231 .221 Washington 2679 247 579 60 236 .216 INDIVIDUAL BATTING l 4/ 03 10 34 .JI3 V 36 65 13 46 .304 f 30 68 8 31.300 ! 28 72 6 36 .»8 Race Results, Entries 14 43 .297 0 22 .284 3 23 .284 10 33 .282 299 38 I 251 34 Vo W m .4 275 31 76 A 31 .2 275 , 26 74 6 32 .2 Northville Results FRIDAY Aerial Doug Scot Ervin Think's Dreai 3.20 Poplar Graft! Cempaneris KC Andrews Ban Cincinnati ........... Pittsburgh ........... Ellis and Coker; ' and J. May. Pagllaroi MY leles, Torborg (2). Automatic TRANSMISSION • SERVICE < “fully guaranteed” RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 922 Oakland - FE 4-0701 m That seat atop the Pontiac recreation department’s International League (Slow Pitch) Men’s softball standings grows hotter. For, the third straight night Friday the team manning die 'hot seat’ was dropped down in the listing. The Moose team accomplished the upset last night with a 6-5 conquest of Wagon Wheel Tavern. The Pontiac Press avoided costly spill when it rallied in the last of the eighth inning for two runs on Len Cote’s double down the left field line and a 9-8 victory over Sport-O-Rama Lounge. Artco broke loose for 16 runs in tbe third inning and held off Dave Grubb’s Kennels, 22-16, In the third game. Ray Ream and A1 Hubbarth each had half of their hits with two safeties in the big outburst by Artco. Waterford Hurler Runs Mark to 8-0 Jerry Thomas flipped a four-hitter last night in running his record to 8-0 as Day’s Sanitary (16-1) whipped McAnnally Auto Sales (6-11) n Waterford Township softball action. Midget Bar (8-9) came up with nine runs in the fifth to take a 12-1 decision over Clyde’s Frame and Wheel (9-8). Bryan Rudd led the winners with three hits. Ind—M00: Conditlamd Pact, 1 Worthy Emily 22.40 ! " irod - -8908: Condltiontd Pact, 1 Mila Tru Gallant 8.00 3.80 I Scotch Victory 4.00 3 Bunnv Chlif C Red Rainbow 4th—81100: Conditioned Paca, 1 22.40 8.60 5.60 7th—83500: PralOrrad Trot, Grand Grady■ Daring Dude Sonny Fortune 8th—81700: gM Paca, 1 Mila Claiming Hdcp. Face, 1 Arundel Scott Southern Pixie 20.00 10.60 6.00 Norlhville Entries El Dora Jenko Edna Linn ' Imperial Rildi Dody Doyle Rustic Moon k! Byrd April Gold Hawk Bye Bye Baai _____nd Gay Ace's Baby 3rd—81300: conditioned Trot, 1 Milo Highland Pick Llndy Pete Dude's Sally Success Zora Spectacular Joyful Imp Richard McGregor FenOlla's Boy Hazel Park Results Claiming, 4 Furlongs King bio 18.20 5.0 Bigibo 3.0 Pull the Switch DoHy Double: (510) Paid S45.40 3rd—$2500: Allowances, 6 Furlongs l: Claiming, 6V8 Furlongs 9in—>2500: Claiming, 1 Twin Double: (5553) Fold 1452.40 Hazel Park Entries MONDAY Uttf-825Ms Claiming, 6Va Furlongs Weight Hors# Woight Deck h5 Bright Gleam NATIONAL LBAGUI TEAM BATTING Pittsburgh St. Louis Chtcapo II H HR RBI Pet icisco 2753 34 2644 346 l Cepeda StL Clemente Pgh McCeVver StL Staub Htn Aaron Atl i 21 56 ‘ 6 38 3 26 2 13 5 23 2834 335 700 68 314 2720 312 667 51 295 2611 318 628 51 291 2705 286* 649 42 261 ____ 2516 228 581 47 211 .234 BATTINC ___J at tats) AB R H HE RBI Pet. 285 47 102 11 $5 .358 287 50 101 12 52 .352 252 26 87 291 67 96 276 51 90 212 30 69 - — 267 43 85 2 13 ! 59 92 217 37 68 1 151 ?*» -47 273 - ) 37 l 15 45 253 3 249 4 262 : .Howard Was 275 28 67 276 35 67 268 33 65 1 264 27 64 256 37 62 5 278 .36 67 1 8 ar mart decisions) IP HBB SOW LERA 5 39 25 32 1 « 30 19 39 4 6 98 48 70 7 1 78 21 68 7 2 93 39 72 6 Boswell Min Sparma Det 2nd—52500: Claim inah xlOO oak Brook 1 ion Flight 105 LarKster 1 y's Pay Johnny Domingo 1 115 Face Up 1 Somers 115 Rut# the Road 1 3rd—$2500: Claiming* 6 Furlongs \ Reason 118 Lady Go Go xl Concerto 118 Holme N' Gay 1 othing 118 Fleet Dove ess 115 Laura Liana 4th—12500: Claiming* 1 1/16 Milos Aco Richard 117 Hasty Pagan Rullah xl 12 Tough Kenna- n xl 12 Danger Day The Best Way To Make Friends With THE RENAULT 10 1. Take it with you on a trip 2. Check your gasoline expense 3. Check the roominess and comfort 4. Check the Price RENAULT* R.&MW0T0RS 1 like. W. of >eldwin J f M 4th—$3100: Clalml Whatever'! Right Welhalla I X107 ' 7th—64500: Allowances, 4 Monte ..Bodman, of Grand Rapids Baptist Bible |e“ Scout Camp will preach and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rose. College and Seminary. ion “Sjmon Zelottes, an Ancient!Juniors attending camp include vvwutv lur [Juvenile Delinquent” at the Eric Davis, Mickey and David NEWMAN AME United Presbyterian Church, - . The Rev. T, N. Christopher!Auburn Heights tomorrow Morris, Mike and Dennis Peter- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Subject: SACRAMENT Sunday Service and Sunday School.... 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Service....8:00 P.M. Reading Room — 14 W. Huron . Open Daily 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Monday thru Saturday FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams St.—Pontiac SUNDAY 9:45 WJBK 1500 ke THE LUTHERAN CHURCH INVITES YOU Delayne H. Fouling, Poito GRACE 5825 Highland Rd. (M-59), Pontiac Fhonej 673*6438 Sunday Chuich School f tl 5 Sunday Worship 8:00 Richard H.Feucht, Pastor ST. PAUL Joftlyn at Third (N. Side). Fontide Phono: H 8-6902 Sunday Church School 9:00 lotph C. Clout, Fatter *THf LUTHERAN HOUR" iach Sundi THE LUTHERAN CHURCH chwst >N AMER,CA Chari.. A. Cclb.rg, Po.to, ASCENSION < ii \ .Sunday Worth!p 8:00and 10:00 CH urth,School 9 a.m. ^ T , THE AMERICAN sVlvan lake Phan.: 682-0770 t WPON 7i0$ A M., CKLW I! NORTH OAKLAND j All functional committe j members of North Oakland Christian Church will get together for a planning session at 1 p.m. tomorrow at First iFederal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland Building. ★ h ★ ! Elders serving tomorrow i will be Harold Aeschliman and Eu-jgerie Thompson. Deacons assist-ling are Homer Richmond, Warden Stephens, Dick Thompson and Ed Underwood. BRAY TEMPLE CME L. Jones, a teacher at Jefferson Junior High School, will speak on “Basic Education for Adults” at the 4 p.m. program tomorrow in Bray Temple CME Church. The Rev. Amos G. Johnson, pastor of New . Bethel Baptist Church, will address the gathering on “The Spiritual Side of Education.” Mrs. Bobbie White, an active member of Friendship Baptist Church and leader of several | musical groups, will bring a! message entitled “A Dedicated' Life” at the 3:30 p.m. service! tomorrow in St. James Mission- j ! Proceeds will he used forlary Baptist Church. ’ j ! church improvements. j The program, under the di- i The program is sponsored by rectum of Jessis Terrell, is spon-the Tennessee^ grou p of the sored by the St. James Nurses’ church. I Guild. He will deliver a major policy j address entitled “Saving the; World of Mankind by Blood”! to the delegates and visitors of | the District Assembly of Je-| hovah’s Witnesses at Civic Cen-, ter. The legislation under fire has been proposed by Probate Judges James H. Lincoln of Wayne County and Norman R. Barnard of Oakland County- A national test case, initiated by Jehovah’s Witnesses in their opposition to forced medical treatment, is currently before the United States District Court' i Seattle, Wash. In this case, according to Ed-| ward Thornton, leader of Pontiac congregations, Jehovah’s Witnesses are challenging action taken by hospitals, doctors and judges in a number of instances in the state of Washington. Missionary Alliance Church North Cass Lake Road at M59 Prayer Meeting Wed., 7:15 P.M. ■ That Knock At The Door ■ Man Magnified REV’ V&g*** Morning Worship 9:45 A.M. Sunday School 11:30 A.M. Evening Ssrvico 7:30 P.M. Wod. Service... 7:30 P.M. Christian Temple "Wh«r« Faith and Friendliness Meet" 505 Auburn Ave. Rev. Lola P. Marion, Pastor APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 458 CENTRAL Saturday Young Paopla . . 7:30 P.M, Sunday School and Worship 10 A.M. Sunday Evening Sarvicas . 7:30 P.M. Church Phone FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone 852-2382 Nurses' Guild Plans Service Church of Christ 87 Lafayette St. SERVICES: Lord's Day 10:30 A.M. and 7 P.M. Wednesday 7 P.M. Bring Your Bihlf e "The Soul You Sava May Be Your Own* FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. *The Church Where All the Family Worship* Together* 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL "Adult Bible Class" Taught by Steve Cannon 11:45 A M. MORNING WORSHIP « Rev. U. B. Godman, preaching 7:00 P.M. EVENING HOUR Adult Choir Trios, Special Music — Rav. U. B. Godman, Preaching tfs* Word of God mb Bring a Friend to This Service Nursery Open » Transportation - Call FE 2-9857 U. B. GODMAN, PASTOR apM • SUNDAY SCHOOL • MORNING SERVICE • CKLW BROADCAST • CJSP BROADCAST • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP • EVENING SERVICE •MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE Wednesday • WBFG-FM Wed. Cfcu/tcfc 9:30 a.m. 10:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 9:00 a.m. 9 OAKLAND and SAGINAW Rev. Robert Shelton • Pastor ne«iwee*em«n»»OHoHM artguFi fwesn mem THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 B—fl BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. 10 A.M. Sunday Schooj 11 A.M. Morning Worship 6 P.M. Evening Service /Wednesday, 7:30 P.M. Prayer Meeting PASTOR, ELMO TAHRAN Phone* 647-3851 Meadow Brook Baptist Church 9:45 A.M. Bible School 11 A.M. Morning Wonhip Temporarily Meeting: Meadow Brook Elementary School Castlebar and Munster Rdt. ROCHESTER Rev. Robert F. Davii, Patter Texas Top Teens to Present Gospel The Top Teens From Texas will present the gospel in sermon and song at the 11 a.m. worship hour in Waterford Community Church, Airport and Olympic Parkway, Waterford Township tomorrow. ★ h ★ The young people are from high schools and colleges in the Dallas - Fort Worth area. The program will include concert choir selections, spirituals, hymns and gospel songs. The young musicians are, led by Donn R. Kenyon, executive director of Dallar-Fort Worth Youth for Christ. The Top Teens will come to Pontiac area as part of their tour of 21 states, Expo. 67 and Washington, D.C. United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street F. Wm. Palmer, Patter DRAYTON Drayton Plaint, Michigan W. J. Teeuwltsen, Patter Ass't. Donald Remillard Bible School.........9:45 A.M. Morning Worship..11:00 A.M. Youth Groups.........6:30 P.M. Wtdnutday Prayur and Study Hour...........7:00 P.M. OAKLAND AVENUE 404 Oakland at Cadillac Theodore R. Allebach, Pastor Audrey Umlcaman, Youth Director Worship 8:30 and 11 A.M. Sunday School . .. .9:45 A.M. Youth Fellowship . .5:45 P.M. Worship........7:00 P.M. Wed. Prayer....7:00 P.M. WATERFORD LAKELAND 7325 Maceday Lake Rd. Rey F. Lambert, Pastor Sunday:School 9:30 A.M. Morning Worship 10:45 AM. CHURCH OF ATONEMENT 3535 Clintonville Rd. Waterford Twp. Church School 9:30 and 10:45 Worship Service FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School 10:00 A.M. Sun. Worship 11:00 A.M. Evening Worship 7:30 P.M. Wed. Prayer . 7:00 P.M. Sat. Service 7:30 P.M. ANNOUNCING THE NEW PRINCIPAL at EMMANUEL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 825 Golf Driva MISS LjDII B. BOUGHER, Former Guidance Director of Anchor Bay High School- B.S. in Education and M.A. in Guidance , and Counseling from Lock Haven State Teachers College. 30 years experience in Education. Grades Kindergarten through 12th. Call FE 4-0961 for Registration. Monday through Friday IMMANUEL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL « Coming to Pontiac |j Mon., July 17 at the i EVANGELICAL i MISSIONARY i CHURCH 1 2800 Watkins Lake Rd. TOMORROW HEAR Rev. and Mrs. E. H. Eberle $5 from St. Petersburg, Fla. | 11 A.M. and 7 P.M. | COMING I CAMP MEETING « July 20-30 Speakers •jj P. O. Carpenter, W. T. Stone « L. E. Latham and J. Shelhamer, P Singers — Larry and Pat Neff ;fS CKLW-Sun., 7:30 A.M. £: WMUZ — 8 A.M. and 10 P.M. g A. J. Baughoy, Pastor FIRsf i ASSEMBLY 1 of GOD I Perry at Wide Track Sunday School 9:45 AM. Everyone Welcome 11:Q0 A.M, "The Mystery of Light" 7:00 P.M. ft Charles A. Davenport <£§ "THE CHURCH ON THE MARCH" REHEARSE FOR CONCERT - The Rev. and Mrs. Clinton Levert Jr. of 255 Raeburn and children put on a concert annually. Here the children are shown leaving McConnell School where they rehearsed for the 3:30 p.m. concert tomorrow at Pontiac Central High School. From Pontiac Press Phots left are Gwendolyn, Artelia, Anita and Clintonese. Colin is in the foreground. The Rev. Mr. Levert is pastor of the new Zion Community Church with services held in McConnell School. "AN AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH" BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH West Huron at Mark Sunday, July 9 9 A.M. — Church School All Departments 10 AM.—Morning Worship. Samson: Thirst—A Positive Passion* Rev. William Offutt WITH GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD Leggett Elementary School an ELYRIA RD. off Pontiac Lake Rd. Waterford Township Sunday School 10:00 A.M. Morning Worship 11 A.M. Evening Service 7 P.M. Pastor, Ronald Cooper EM 3-0705 REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST •f Latter Day Saints 19 Front St. 11 A.M. PREACHING ELDER J. W. MOSES No Evening Service July and Aug. J. A. Outland, Pastor 651-0732 When you taka Christ on the Journey of Ufeyou have an Infallible guide who’ll go with you all the way. SUNNYVALE CHAPEL Welcomes You 1— jj— Friendly Genera 69 S. Astor St. FE (First $1 Coil ef Eo.t Blvd 1 . j Nunrery Open Eoch Evening [ 1 SUN. SCHOOL, 9:45 A.M.-t l j EVENING SERVICE 7 P.N 1 Baptist Church 4-3421 334-7407 between Auburn and E. Pike) Rev. Robert Garner, Palter AORNING WORSHIP, 11 A.M. \. WED. PRAYER, 7 P.M. \ e Sunday School 10 A.M. 1 Join us to study Goil'sX. - words. Worship with us* 8 at 11:00 A.M, and at | 7:00 P.M. jj; We Welcome Visitors QlMt FREE 'METHODIST CHURCH ^ 501 Mt. Clement Street 4 ^ Howard Funk, Minister _ J | »! COLUMBIA AVENUE 1 BAPTIST CHURCH 64 West Columbia Avenue 1 (A Southern Baptist Church) | "Where the difference is worth the distance” 9:45 A.M. Sunday School-6:30 P.M. Training Union ! 11 A.M. Worship Service—7:30 Evening Service Wednesday Night Service 7:30 P.M. 1 Spiritualist Church of the Good Samaritan 1 4780 Hillcrest Dr. 623-1074 Waterford I SERVICE 7 P.M. — Ada Henry, Speaking / 'THE ROCK OF TRUTH" Women's Day at Providence MB Church Women of Providence Missionary Baptist Church will observe annual Women’s Day at 11 a.m. tomorrow with Mrs. Johnnie M. Wilder, guest speaker. * * * Mrs. Wilder’s subject is Women’s Courage in Today’s World." Before coming to Pontiac to teach in the Public School System, Mrs. Wilder was a teacher : schools of Gary, Ind. At 3:30 p.m. Marie McLauren1 will be presented as speaker J Mrs. Effert Denkins is general’ chairman. REVIVAL Evangelistic services will begin Monday evening at 7:30 with the Rev. J. E. Moss, pastor of the Springfield Baptist Church of Detroit, the speaker. ★ ★ * Meetings will be held each evening through Friday. The public is invited. ATTEND ORAL ROBERTS CRUSADE JULY 11-16 DETROIT, MICH. Coho Convention Center Arena One Washington Blvd. 2:00 & 7:30 PM All Prayer Cards are FREE—Given at Afternoon Services Only R. F. DeWeese Vep Ellis Afternoon Speaker Minister of Music Final Servlce-Sunday 2:00 fM Silvercrest fcptisf Sponsors School Daily Vacation Bible School scheduled Monday through Friday at Silvercresf Baptist Church will be under die direction of Hubert Karl of Detroit. Cochairmen of the Bible school are Mrs. Shirley Campbell and Mrs. "Margaret Lloyd. ★ ★ ★ According to Pastor John Hunter, Sunday School leaders are expecting near 600 children to attend the morning sessions. To Fill Pulpit on July 16 The Rev. Daniel W. Parshall of Faith Lutheran Church in Se-quim, Wash., will fill the pulpit at Grace Lutheran Church on July 16. ★ * ★ A former member of Grace Churcii, Pastor Parshall is visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weber of Iroquois Road. Anyone needing transportation may call the church office of the Rev. Leland Lloyd, assistant pastor, and the church bus will oall for the children. CALVARY) Assembly of God | Andersonville Road One Block off Dixie 9:45 A.M. I SUNDAY SCHOOL 1 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 7:00 P.M. Your Life Will Bo Enriched. Bible Ministry, Worship With U> This Sunday BIBLE STUDY, WED., 7:30 P.M. Pa«tor ARNOLD O.HASHMAN Dr. John A. Visser Speaks During July Guest preacher tomorrow and the remaining Sundays of July at First Presbyterian Church is| Dr. John A. Visser,, pastor I emeritus of the 3,600-member W es’tmins ter Presbyterian Church of Detroit. ★ ★ ★ He served the Westminster Church for 20 years. A former college instructor in speech and dramatics, Dr. Vis-j is the recipient of many I preaching awards. He has lectured in 21 countries. A past moderator of Detroit Presbytery, he was the Presbytery’s candidate for moderator of the 175th General Assembly. Royce Everett will sing "Behold What Manner of Love” by Fichthorn for the offertory solo. Jessie Stevens and Mrs. Lyndon Salathiel will.be greeters in the vestibule tomorrow morning. ★ Hr ★ Hosts for the coffee hour following worship are the Bernard Johnsons and ‘Mr. and Mrs. John Salow. Guest Speaks Evangelist J. W. Marshall of Little Friehdship Missionary Baptist Church in Newark, NJ. will preach at the 11 a.m. service tombrrow, and evening services during the week at Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, 351 Prospect. The meetings at 7 p.m. Monday though Friday are open to the public. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike St. THE REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD Rector THE REV. R. CRAIG BELL, Associate 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion 10:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rt. Rev. Ivol I. Curtis Church School Pre-School and Grades 1 to 4 6:15 P.M. Jr. Hi EYC Pontiac State Hospital MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH -68 W. WALTOty BLVD.- SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . 9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP . . . .11:00 A.M. EVENING SERVICE....... 7:30 P.M. REV. ROBERT F. RICHARDSON, PASTOR AUBURN HEIGHTS FREE METHODIST .255 S. SQUIRREL RD.i HENRY SCHMIDT. PASTOR . SUNDAY SCHOOL.....10:O0 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP....10:45 AM. EVENING WORSHIP......7:00 PJA WEDNESDAY PRAYER...7;30 PAL CHRIST ef the LAKES LUTHERAN CHURCH L.C.A. 9101 Highland Rd. (M-39) MORNING WORSHIP 8:00 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 9*15 Church School Pastor Garold Switzar Parish phona 363-3438 Waterford Community Church Airport Road — Olympic Parkway Robert D. Winne, Pastor Ken Orr, Youth Director ★ Sunday School.. . 9:45 A.M. ★ Warship Service.. 11:00 A.M. THE TOP TEENS from Texas. 28 young people with outstanding musical talent, inspiring testimony and challenging message. ★ Youth Groups ... 6:00 P.M. ★ Evening Service .. 7:00 P.M. —Nursery Open for All Services— Welcome to a Bible Preaching Church PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH Sunday School 10:15 AAA.-Worship Service 11:30 A.M. THE BIBLE-THE SUBCONSCIOUS MIND AND YOU A "Psycho-Religious" Series of Lectures WEDNESDAY EVENING - 8:00 P.M. 8 N. Genesee FE 5-2773 Everett A. Dell, Minister v FE 2-5877 First Congregational Church E. Huron end Mill St. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE 9.30 AM. Church of the Hay ft over Hlgrtut CENTRAL METHODIST 2 Highland Rd. MILTON H. BANK, Pastor %\ Brotherhood Without Restriction ?:£: MORNING WORSHIP and CHURCH SCHOOL M 9:00 AM. and 10:43 PM. p "SAUL, THE GREATEST SHIPWRECK KS IN THE OLD TESTAMENT" . m Dr. Bank Preaching IJ;:; Broadcast on wpon 1460 — 11:45 AJM. j&l YOUTH NIGHTS - Wad. 7-9 PM. M Parking Supervised Nursery Air Conditioned I FIRST METHODIST CHURCH f South Saginaw at Judson Clyde E. Smith, Pastor 'All Races and AH Men Welcome at All Times" || *j:§ Sunday Service Church School 9:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. XvJ Sermon Series "Old Commandments for a New Day* Jx-: ■jxjs IX "No False Witnesses" :•$; Clyde E. Smith, preaching &:■: i:$5 WED., 7:30 P.M. - BIBLE STUDY ;~ *StrPAUL 165 E. Square Lake Rd, Bloomfield Hills - FE S-8233 and FE 2-2752 W p Morning Worship 9:30 and 10:45 AM. I Wt Church School 9:30 A.M. •§: ||| Methodist Youth Fellowship 6 P.M. w Ample Parking—Samuel C. Seizert, Min.—Supervised Nurseryjjjj;:; ELMWOOD METHODIST, , 2680 Crookv.Rd. Sunday School 9:30 a.rr Worship 10:45. a.m. Evening Worship 7 p.m, Prayer Wed 7 p.m ALDERSGATE METHODIST $ 1536 Baldwin FE 5-7797 Rev. Cleon F. Abbott Worship 945 a.m. Church School 11 a.m. Eve. Worship 7 p.m. Dudley Mosure, pastor Prayer Wed. 7:30 p.m. '^^^ST.MjAAAESVAETHODiSflKCfrlUltCtf ^ 451 W. KENNETT RD. Opposite the Aleott Elementary School Sunday School.. 9:30 A.M., Mr. Trey Bell, Supt. Worship Service 11:00 A.M. — Nursery Provided Rev. Robert Secrist, preaching B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 Jacoby ort Bridge I heart* and continued the ratt. He was looking at the North hand and Couldn't be sure that South didn’t hold at least one more heart. South ruffed low, played out NORTH 8 *K87 5 4 V653 ♦ A7 ♦ A Q 6 WEST (D) EAST *6 *10 9 3 V AKQJ97 ¥ 1042 *9 ♦ Q J 10 4 3 2 ♦ K9 5 32 *7 SOUTH * AQ J 2 Tf 8 9 K 8 6 5 * J 108 4 East-West vulnerable West North East South Pass 4 * Pass 4 N.T. Pass 5 * Pass 6 * Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—V K By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY | He who lives by the sword dies by the sword. If he defends himself he lives longer but| sometimes youi just can’t anything abo the count ione spade and North and South, | would wind up at four spades. If hearts were opened and con-j tinued, North could make six I but a club or diamond shift I would almost surely hold North to five odd. | One West player decided to open with four hearts in | spite of being vulnerable i against non-vulnerable opponents. North passed. East passed and it was up to I South. South didn't have anything like a four spade bid but he! was one of those players who! are allergic to being shut outj by an adverse preempt. He took[ a deep breath and came outj with four spades. This excited North. He bidjh‘s ace and queen of spades, four no-trump to check for aces finessed dummy’s queen of and South dutifully bid five di- clubs, ruffed dummy’s last amonds to show’one. North de-|heart; returned to dummy withj cided that his partner wouldn't the ace of diamonds, drew1 have more than one heart and jumped to the spade slam. West was on lead and naturally opened the king of East's last trump, came to his; hand with the king of diamonds,! took one more club finesse and' claimed his slam. THE BETTER HALF THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1867 B—7 Intrigue-suspense of its best HOUSE OF CARDS by 3TANUY ELUN Stanley KUln. Distributed bjr Kins * D ATHED, shaved, and dfaaaed, M I was ready te reoonnoiter the enemy camp. • The objectives were clear-cut. Edmond Vosiera had let slip - that Paul de Villemont and hla .grandmother would be In Ven-g* lee. Now all I had to do was learn exactly where in Venice they would be, yet away from the chateau alive, cross the Italian frontier, find the child, take possession of him, and place both of us under the protection of the nearest American consulate. All this, of course, without . money or passport, and with the ; police of every country this aide of the Iron Country on the lookout for me. A small ear skittered to a ; halt in front of the building. I ' ; recognized Colonel Jesse Hardee. Later at lunch he talked steadily and passionately through mouthfuls of food, and 1 hoped no one else would enter the dining room while he was at it. By contributing an occasional nod to this monologue, I learned that he was a leader of North American Action — the division ef the Organisation d’Elite Internationale which was working to bring the light to the United ■totes. The colonel reached into his breast pocket and drew out a sheaf of papers, tissue thin. He Mapped them flat on the table, and I got a tantalizing glimpse ef what seemed to be rows of numben. "Here's the OBI table ef command today, and these last three pages alone list fifty ■nit commanders on the North American Action payroll and dedicated to its program. Fifty of them, and that doesn’t even include contacts who run outfits like rifle elubs and can be counted ea when the time I didn't want to appear too anxious to see those pages. I took my time reaching for them, and then a shadow fen over them, a hand covered them. Claude de Gonde was standing behind me, his lips set in a deathlike smile, his eyes eold with anger. "V you persist in meddling with affairs that don’t concern ’ yon,** he said te me in French, , -"you wUl have to be locked in your room,” and then shifting to heavily accented English he said brightly to the eolonel, ”*No, no, my friend, I am afraid none of this can be of interest to the ytnmg man.” He carefully folded wp the papers and handed them to the colonel, who tucked them back into his pocket, looking somewhat puzzled. *Y thought—” the eolonel said. “Of course, but Monsieur Da-i involved in a killing From the Rendon INSTALLMENT No. M yesterday in Paris and is now on his way to South America only a few steps ahead of the police. At present, he must be considered Kort de combat “A killing in the line of duty?" the eolonel asked calmly. “Yes, but what difference does it make?’’ de Gonde answered. ‘‘For his sake as well as ours—” “I need him in the States.” said the colonel. “Have the same face job done on him that was done on Morlllon—contact lenses, a few touches here and there —and'I’ll get him into the country by way of Mexico with no one the wiser. Why put a man like this in eold storage, Claude?” “Because it must be done,” de Gonde said shortly. “He is a very careless fellow, this one, colonel. I assure you he is not the man you taka him for.” Plainly anxious to change the subject, he now said to me, "Madame Voaiers is going shopping in Dijon later today and has kindly offered to replenish your wardrobe if you tell her what you need. She’s in the sitting room waiting to make out {the list. Madame Vosiers is waiting. The sitting room is through that door.” Matilde Vosiers was not alone in the sitting room. On a window seat , were the little Comte de Laennac and the bulky Edmond Vosiers in low-voiced conversation. At the opposite end of the room a smoky fire had been kindled in the fireplace, and Madame, Matilde, looking thoroughly miserable, sat on a couch beside the fireplace with a deal table drawn np before her. She motioned me to join her on the couch, and when I did 1 saw close up how shockingly haggard she was under an excess of make-up. She took a notebook from the table and handed it to me. “Please look at this,” she said crisply. "I’ve already written down the essentials you’ll need. Now listen! It’s been planned that you and Anne will be taken south by ear tomorrow night. There’s to be an accident on the road near Valenoe, se that the two ef you will be found dead in the car at the foot of the mountain there. No, keep your eyes fixed on this book. Say something about the clothing you need. Say it loudly” So that was why I had been allowed te remain alive this long! "Madame,” I said, and I had to clear my throat to get the words out, ‘Til need one other pair of shoes at least, and they should be properly fitted. If I could go to town with you—” “Impossible,” Madame Ma- I. Copyright © 1M7 by Stanley Ellin. Distributed b tildo said sharply. “Monsieur Vosiers will accompany me to Dijon and do the best he can from this list. He’s mod,” she whispered. “Completely mad. They all are. The one protector Anne had was Hubert,, and now he's turned against her, too, because of your affair with her. You must get away from here. Then it can’t be made to look as if you and Anne were running off together, It also means she herself is safe for the time being.” "What are the papers she’s attending to today? Is It her will?” “No, that was made out when we first came to Paris from Africa. These are the papers making my sister and brother-in-law Paul’s guardians, and with all .rights to handle his Inheritance as they see fit. Now listen. I can help you get away from here, but we must make a bargain.” “What kind of bargain?" This. I’ll arrange to get back from Dijon at nine, and you must be waiting in the hallway by the door. When Edmond and I step out of the car I’ll leave the motor running *° you can get away in it before anyone can stop you. There will be a valise in the car with clothing in it and a train ticket to Paris. The Paris express stops here at nine-thirty. The train is best because they’ll be watching for the odr on every road.” “All right,” I whispered, “the train it is. But you’ll have te make it a ticket to Milan.” "You have no passport.” "Let me worry about that. Just book me for a comportment on a train to Milan.” “That train is half an hour earlier." "Then get back here at eight-thirty. And I’ll need money.” “I’ll leave some in the valise." "And one more thing. Where is Madame Cesira keeping Paul in Venice? What’s the address?” 1 “Never mind that, you foot Keep away from Paul and Just consider your own neck.” I said, "What about the bargain ? What’s my end of it?" I asked. “To kill Mm. There’s a gun under the seat ef this couch. Get hold of it during the day. When you go to the ear you must use it on him. Swear you will.” “All right, I swear it” For the chance I was being given 1 would have falsely sweri to anything. "How do I know I can trust you?” -Madame Matilde asked. “You don't. You’ll have to find out when the time comes.” Davis tries be gM the OE3 Ift from Hardee. (To Be Continued MondayJ TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI)-A cult filed by a weekly newspaper publisher yesterday charged that Claude Kirk practiced election fraud in helping win election as Floridas* first Republican governor in nearly 100 years. Ibe suit was filed by J. A. Monroney of Apalachicola, who alleged that Kirk borrowed $75,-000 as a campaign loan and allowed a' group of wealthy businessmen to pay it-back. The suit also included a long list of other violations allegedly committed by Kirk, including illegal campaign contributions and listiu of fictitious contributors. \ Kirk refused comment. On earlier occasions he acknowl- I *>atur«s Syndicate. Publisher Charges Violations Vote Suit Hits Florida's Kirk edged borrowing thl money, but he said it was to pay personal bills. He had denied any knowledge of repayment of the loan. ★ ★ ★ Monroney asked in the suit for the court to find that the governor violated Florida’s “who gave it, who git H” laws and make “any further orders as shall be warranted in this case. UNCLEAR ‘ORDERS’ It was unclear what those ‘further orders” could be. Attorneys said yesterday that the penalty for violation of the election law Is revocation of the guilty official’s certificate of office. They noted, however, that under the state constitution the governor can be removed only through impeachment. It was Monroney’s second clash with a powerful individual in the state. His testimony fore a congressional committee that DuPont estate trustee Ball ran parts of north Florida like “feudal fiefdons” helped Congress that the massive DuPont holdings should be broken up. ★ * * In his suit against the governor, filed in Leon County Circuit Court, he charged that Kirk borrowed $74,600 from a Jacksonville bank and did not report it as part of his campaign funds. The loan, the suit charged, was later repayed by St. Augus-t i n e millionaire Herbert E. Wolfe and a group of unknown bankers and businessmen. 702 Stricken by Polio in U.S. During ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Ai final report on paralytic polio cases in the United States for 1966 showed there were 102 victims of the disease, 66 in Texas. Seven of the polio victims died. The U.S. Communicable Disease Center of the Public Health Service said in a weekly report that the polio case lead last year was the third lowest national total on record. ★ * * The CDC said the 1966 total was 41 cases more than reported for 1965 and 11 cases more than occurred in 1964. The Texas outbreak, described as one of the largest in recent years: involved primarily unimmunized preschool children of low-income background, the health agency said. WIDELY DISTRIBUTED Other poliomyelitis cases were widely distributed among state's. Besides Texas, only one county in the nation — Los Angeles County in California — reported as many as three cases. The CDC said only two other counties, King County in Washington and Cook County in Illinois, reported two-cases. More than 75 per cent of the cases occurred in children under 5 years of age and 74 of the 102 cases involved children who had never received any polio vaccine, the CDC said. Reports said only seven cases occurred in children who were considered adequately immunized from polio. Sixty-fjve cases occurred in males and 37 in females, the CDC said, with five cases occurring in men between 30 and 39 years of age and one in a man over 40. Only one female over age of 14 came down with the paralytic illness. Pontiac Theaters EAGLE Sat.-Thurs.: “What Did You Do in the War Daddy,” James Colburn, Dick Shawn; “Code 7, Victim 5,” Veronique Vendell. HURON Now Showing: Walt Disney’s ‘Snow White A the 7 Dwarfs.” Community Theaters Onss," Roddy / •j. Frl.: "Let's Kill Uncle." MIqoI ______ Mary Bsdhsrrw "Valley of Mystery, " Richard Egan, Paler Graves. SNOW WHITE AT ......... 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:00 NAMII, THE KILLER WHALE.......... 2:29-5:30-8:30 ^ A Musical : jPF w Masterpiece gr*. of Enchanting f Entertainment! HURON DENVER (AP) - “Capt.” Eliria Lavina stuck with her 'ship.” When an elevator piloted by Mrs. Lavina at the University of Colorado’s Denver Center got stuck between floors, Technicolor® ft ®i lkii£L wig Wk Killer Ma/epp BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Elevator Pilot Stays at Helm her 10 passengers were helped to freedom through a hatch in the top. Mrs. Lavina stayed in the stalled cage for nearly an hour before power returned. NOW EAGLE a* Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER Weak lays: Cent. 11 a.a. It 12 p.m. ■ay: Continuous 12 Mb Is 12 y.m. A very Special Agent with an eye for women... a taste for danger... and a code tug! A COLUMBIA RELEASE ' WB&WQtQMrt JRCHNIQOLQR* TECHNISCOPE* MRWPWHH0 H23KEEGO DOT ON A LIMB? » SHORTER WORK WEEK? • REDUCTION IN INCOME? • IN FINANCIAL DIFFICULTY? Maybe new U the time to see M.C.C. and get out of debt on a program that Will fit ySW Not A Loan! • One Place ta Pay! Michigan Credit Counsellors 702 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. FE 8-0451 OUR 13!ll YEAR Mnmbnr of both the American and Michigan Association of Orndtt Counsellors. John M. Nana on, Director... Locally Owned and Operated! MMMMWS Young Adult Niglil Club 16 to 21 Where the Action Is! NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-6181. ft* Walt m Disney’s Snow White Seven Dwarfs 11W1 1r RICHARD LAURENCE WAYNE • WIDMARK -HARVEY TECHHICOLOA’m'SL UNITED ARTIST* T.HnATWE DRIVE-IN THEATRE UNION LAKE at HAG6ERTY RD. EM 3-0661 Show starts at Duekl Adults $1.25-Children Under 12 Free NO OTHER WOMAN EVER LOVED WITH SUCH PASSION... OR KILLED WITH SUCH HATE! & STARRING JOAN STAPLETON ROBERT GREGORY -ALSO— __ PUNKS IN CARS ... WITH A CULT OF THEIR OWNI stmuFRANCINE YORK • EDMUND TONTINI • ROBERT BLAIR | GIANT FREE PLAYGROUNDS D R I V E - I N n 2 1000 || D R I V E BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M. MIRACLE MILE SO. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. I MILE W. WOODWARD CHILDREN UNDER 12 TREE MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NIKLY CHILDREN UMBER 12 FREE D R I V C - I N EXCITING CiRCUS TRAIN RIDES■ . D R I V E • I N BLUE snillwaterford. I. LAKE RD. AT AIRPORT RD. ile West of dixie hgwy. Tu.s. let j CHILOREM UMBER 12 FREE 1 MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NIKLY 5 RUhlWr fr I fcgwu I Z MAIN FUTURE SHOWN 1st NITCLY S MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NITO.T * = ALANARKIN 5 Fi.»t, StOBS i Shirley MbcLaine = = MICHAEL PETER z CAINE ■gtorSELLERS = LAST 4 DAYS! fgHI BlPni i K^-ccldr‘ , i r JSfti WgSHi A* ga-nttfe-. ■colorMarriage5 swbMwA 5 i*ss]gp§M||MfITECHNICOLOR*|jt2i f. Italia SljleJ TllllltllllfllllllllllllllllllllVltlllllllllHlIlIllllldUUAItJUUIAMfMIMAfJJIJJJJJJJIJJJIJMIMQ HIWWIlflMIBIIIfl lUluiiiaiiiiiuigiuiuii ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 | Tuts., Wed. Cash and Carry Specials Each 89c HOT DOGS Grade 1 Skinless 39: SHIRTS 27c BEAUTIFULLY LAUNDERED With Dry Cleaning Order SUNDAY ONLY-At 2 Stores Listed Below Only! B AZLE Y-E4IRWA Y FOOD MARKETS 4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains OPEN SUNDAY 9 AM. TO 6 P.M. 1220 North Perry at Madison OPEN SUNDAY IS A.M. TO 6 P.M. Authorised S.D.D. Diitrubvter e WINE e LIQUOR e BEER each Present Coupons When You Bring in Cleaning _ T |25| * Ladies’ * Plain Skirts f Men's Pants | Cleaned, Pressed m an "F - Ladies’ Plain A(|P| | Colored Drosses j | tieanea, pressed - j HURON CLEANERS » SHIRT LAUHDRY 944 West Huron St* hur^ntheater OPEN DAILY, 1 TO 6 ... SAT., 8 TO 6J... PHONE FE 2-0231 SPACE CONDITIONING, INC. HEATING and COOLING Authorized Dealer SPACE-TROL 90,000 BTU SUPER KEM-T0HE -$179 Ceiling White SoIb Ends Saturday- Oltly Julu 14 1 OAT * 38J SPACE-TROL 115,000 BTU —$199— KEM-T0NE 4“ DUPONTLUCITK® JQQ Ceiling White Only ^^ft w 9 fm ALL DECORATOR COLORS MB O'BRIEN HEATING 371 Voorheis Rd. FE 2-2919 Our Operator on Duty After Hours HUDSON'S 41 EAST WALTON SHOPPER STOPPER SAVINGS WITH... FOR THRIFTY EARLY TRUCKLOAD SALE LUCITE INSIDE WALL PAINT White end ell Ready-Mix Colors LUCITE OUTSIDE HOUSE New Formula Self Priming White and , M All Colors U Gal. NEW LOW PRICE SUPER KEM-T0NE Ceiling White All Readi-Mix Colors $4.99 Gal. TOE'S HARDWARE ™ BOS Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-2424 !6ft *4ul SUPER KEM-TONE - Reg. $7.19 Reg. Colors 0ur Specja| prjce -*4,99 SUPER KEM 1-COAT...........$11.80 Gal. GUARANTEED-ONE COAT COVERS ELECTRIC HEDGE TRIMMER Regular Price.....$24.95 SPECIAL PRICE .. *19*. ELECTRIC LAWN EDGERS PRICE........ *199S WE CARRY LUMBER PLYWOOD - FIELD TILE REDIMIX CEMENT ANjMMORTAR CEMENT $t48,nuu°9 MORTAR see us for TORO THE FINEST IN POWER MOWERS YES - WE TAKE TRADE-INS SALE! Limited time only—biggest nation-wide sale on the Rain Tire Ever! The Rain Tire The Country's Most Famous Tire Name! WHITEWALL [95 6.50-13 *17 Plus $1.80 F.E.T. and Smooth Tire Off Your Car! LATEST DESIGN FACTORY NEW CREDIT TERMS OTHER SIZES AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS! CRESCENT U.S. ROYAL 520 S. Saginaw 333-7031 HOOVER /VACUUM SERVICE REBUILT CLEANERS POWERFUL HOOVER UPRIGHT CLEANER BARNES A HARGRAVES HARDWARE 742 W. Huron St. park free FE 5-9101 Across Tram the Past Offtea immuEEL’ii MONDAY and TUESDAY ONLY Hoffman's Famous BUTCHER BOY STEAKS 65* 10-lb. Limit lb. Frying Chickens Legs or Breasts (Quarters) We Reserve Right to Limit Quantities HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS 626 N* Pony FE 2-1100 BHHiiMiiiiHB annil OPEN DAILY 10 to 10 - SUN. 12 to 7 COMPLETE OVERHAUL BRAKE SPECIAL MON. TUES. WED. ONLY 2J77 S.H-Adju.tini MON. TUES. WED. ONLY HERE'S WHAT WE DO: 1. Reline all four wheels with Bonded Linings. 2. Turn all 4 wheel drums. 3. Cheek all four wheel cylinders. 4. Bleed, flush and refill hydraulic systems with, approved SAE fluid. 5. Clean, Inspect and carefully repack front wheel bearings. 6. Adjust brakes on all four wheels and pedal clearance. 7. All work performed by factory trained brake specialists. Even at this low price, ‘ you can charge it at Kmartt f TVfl MONEY POWTC 11 THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 Hm Section Crushed Marble And Stone Impart Oriental Feeling To Entrance Cedar Shake Shingles Cover Roof Of The Terrance R. Evans' Home Built By Charles Bailey Of Utica Magazine Determines Design By JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Pres* “We saw the house plans in a magazine, liked them and had our builder adapt them to our needs,” said Mrs. Terrance R. Evans. Located on Butternut Drive, Shelby Township; the charming one-story incorporates an ideal traffic pattern with innovations including a windowless kitchen that acts as a divider between living, dining and family rooms and the foyer. White walls, white dra-peries and gold carpeting set the background for the contemporary living room. On the wall backing the kitchen divider, an oil street scene by Pauline Harris, a brass key, wood blocks, me- dallions, a mandolin, and a masque and etchings by Bernard Buffet are arranged to balance, the graceful bust of Mary Magdalene on the low walnut table. In the adjoining dining room, the contemporary vein is followed against the same background. COLOR INTEREST Lighting the area and iri-troduclng color interest is the green, blue and yellow plastic globed fixture which hangs over the round walnut table. Chairs, also of walnut, feature black leather seats. A copper fondue pot on the olive green felt buffet throw is offset by a pair of blue fruit prints. , %I want every major room in the house different,” declared Mrs. Evans. “Hie living and dining areas are contemporary. The master bedroom is geared for Italian elegance while our 18-months-old daughter Kara’s room is earmarked for Victorian rattan and our son Michael’s, Early American^ “And the family room,” she paused, chuckled and said, “that’s for comfort.” Novel paneling detail marks the oak paneled family room fireplace. A graceful crane, hand carved by Mr. Evans’ father stands perkily atop the room’s television set. The orange, burgundy and red draperies drop from wooden rods and rings. And in front of the black leather sofa is a throw that identically repeats the draperies’ colors. CL .. ... *- hup ll 1 Interesting Grouping Balances Mary Magdalene Bust On Low Walnut Table In White Walled Living Room Mrs. Evans' Father Made The Lighted Wine Cabinet Complete With Wood Hinges On Kitchen Counter White Candle In Single Brass Candlestick Confers Walnut Table Toy Soldiers March Across Sculptured Arrierican-Blue Carpeting Of 4%*Year-Old Michael's Military Bedroom DUALITY BUILT HUMES See These Exciting New Homes Today 11 MODELS NOW! immediate occupancy 11 MODELS 3-BEDROOM RANCH LAKE FUBHT LUTS HUM AVAILABLE Tzanck/ ami Cx&mnl Mwtefo e 4 MODELS Located at Silver Lake on Glenshire Street 3MODELS Located on Rutherford Street Located in the heart of Oakland Count/* beautiful water wonderland. Ideally located to schools, ^hopping, churches and everything for enjoyable family living and-priced within your budget. WE TAKE YOUR HOUSE IN TRADE... IMMEDIATE CASH. 4»0K%umaer 2 MODELS -mrmw Located on Vanden Street 2 MODELS TON LAKES SUB. Located on Candlestick Street behind our pffice. MODELS CONVENIENTLY L6CATED FOR TRAVEL 3881 Highland Road C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, I96T OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 WEST SUBURBAN ESTATE HOME: in new condition and featuring 15'x22' carpeted living room with beautiful fireplace. 15'x22' carpeted formal dining room, 2 nice bedroom* and full batn dawn, 14'xl 7' bedroom and full bath up. Ha* full basement and gat heat. New 2Vk-car garage. Exterior i* aluminum tided. Home tots on a large lot 280'x228'. Hurry to tee today. Crescent Lake Road, turn right to 1950 Crescent Lake DIRECTIONS: M-59 (Highland Road) west to Road, LISA BERGSTROM, Your Hottest. MILLER REALTY CO. •70 W. Huron St. FB 2-0262 FEATURES 3 Spacious Bedrooms "Highlander" *13.600 1 Vi Baths, Ceramic Tiled (*) Convenient Laundry Room Gas Forced Air Heat Brick and Aluminum Siding (*) Up to 1400 sq. ft. of living area CUSTOM BUILT HOMES SEVERAL PUNS TO CHOOSE FROM-CUSTOM BUILT ON YOUR LOT OR OURS-WILL TRADE... Open Daily By Appointment Saturday and Sunday-2 to 6 P.M. Phone: EM 3-993T Model Location 7929 HIGHLAND ROAD M-59 HIGHWAY White Lake Township 5 Mile* West of City Airport JAMES A. BEAL ESTATE INC. TAYLOR 7732 Highland Road (M59) OR 4-0306 EM 3-9937 Carpeted Living Room Carpeted Stairway Large Paneled Family Room 2-Car Attached Garage (*) Custom Built,Kitchen - ~ IP JjJg I Camera Helps I Insure Those Improvements Fire, theft, accidents — unpleasant things, things that happen to the o t h o r fellow. Not always. * ★ A They can happen to you. And claims following such catastrophes can be difficult to prove. { Just how much did you lm-i prove the game room before I the fire? Was the front walk In a dangerous condition? Was the stolen silver really that valuable? Not pleasant subjects, but very valuable ones. And your camera can be your best friend in insurance and accident claims. The process is very simple: * ★ ★ Photograph your home, as it stands and with emphasis on any additions. Photograph all - REALLY ALL—of your valuables. This means going from room to room to record furnishings; then concentrating on such things as furs, jewelry, silver, china, antiques, books, appliances. INVENTORY With‘such a pictorial inventory you have testimony—testimony which has been accepted by insurance firms — for your loss, should it occur. And with modem, easy-to-use cameras | such as the Argus 270, you can liner ease the value of your (household insurance for just Ipennies per item. One final precaution: When you have taken your photo-I graphs, mark each print with i place and date, post them all to yourself VIA REGISTERED MAIL, leave the envelope unopened and pat it in a safe place, away from home. An unopened registered letter carries weight—and an accurate date. ★ * ★ Then, if necessary, you can prove your improvements! EASY ON THE FEET - Resilient tile gives today’s home owner an opportunity to duplicate a variety of natural flooring effects. In this new vinyl-asbestos styling from Armstrong Cork Company, the surface is richly embossed to simulate the delicate texture of random mosaics. Note how the design flows from tile to tile to minimize the appearance of seams. A new floor finish won’t yellow, is slip resistant, and its vinyl surface will retain its gloss even after 10 detergent i, says the maker. Pine Forests Supply Wood The southern pine forests played a key role In the birth and subsequent growth of America. Today, they are an increasingly important factor in the modem economy. g When Captain John Smith directed construction of a crude sawmill at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1608, he created the nation’s first industrial enterprise. Since then, southern pine has yielded enough lumber to build 100 million homes. The early European colonists were quick to recognize the strength of the species and used it to get themselves established. The species provided decking and masts for early fighting ships. It also built famous colonial homes, like George Washington’s Mount Vernon and Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello. Today, southern pine provides enough lumber to build a million homes a year, 60 per cent of the nation’s pulpwood, the majority of its wood poles and piling — plus increasing quantities of plywood, laminated lumber, chemicals and other products. Portable Grill Is Pig Shaped A new portable covered cooking grill is shaped like a ] It has two grids and rei able firepans, cast iron legs and chrome handle. Got Big Feet? Maybe Those Slabs Did It Did you know that too much walking on concrete floors can enlargeyour feet? It canr" according to the Arizona Podiatry Association. ★ ★ 6 A spokesman for the foot doctor’s group declared recently that Arizona residents have bigger feet than most other Americans because their homes usually are built on concrete slabs. He pointed ont that wood floors g e n e r a 11 y are predominant in other areas. He went on to explain that concrete does not yield under a person’s weight. "Something’s got to give, if only a little,’’ he said, "and in this case it’s the feet.” In "giving," they spread. Foot doctors long have recommended wood floors, as opposed to hard, unyielding, surface?, because the resilience of the wood serves to minimize fatigue and foot ailments. 1 the Rochester eirea—Oakland University Apartments of flistinGtion Mill £ With features found in'850,800 homes. 0ns amt two bedroom vwtts^jocludinjR Wall-to-wall carpeting, draperies, sidtshwasheFpilispBsal, formica vanity, range, refrigerator, ceramic tile features, landscaped COUrtS, erttiBNtt* nk6n-in Mt&AmnA parking, large storage rooms, laundry'aou^pftijnd sttfiniL proofing. 8175 per month inch conditioning and hot water. _—™a™jll BLVD. X MILE EAST OF ADAMS .M09E$%raif f:30 AM-7:00 PM PHONE 051 DAMS 0 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 C—8 Dan Mattingly Presents .. . 493 West Iroquois Pontiac OPEN PLEASANT AND ADAPTABLE: Looking somewhat like providing sufficient expansion area for a family needing an L-shaped ranch, this inviting house actually is a partial two extra bedrooms, two-story, with the second floor only over the bedroom wing. KITCHEN BED RM. BED RM 15-0k. I vi' BED RM. ii'-o*. is'- V FIRST FLOOR PLAN G-96 SECOND FLOOR PLAN FLOOR PLANS: If upstairs is not utilized, first floor of that it can be used as a family room, den or an extra bed-this house is well laid-out for a family requiring only two room, or three bedrooms. Room at rear left is properly located so Partial Two-Story Proves Flexibility OAKLAND POOL - PATIO - BAR-B-QUE HOUSE ... Can Be Yours •. . Call Us For A Quick Action HOME MODERNIZATION LOAN , One Day Service Can Give You Up To $5,000 With Eight Years to Pay j ^ HONE MOBMIZATM ADDS COMFORT MDJALLE TO YOU HOME Could the charm of improved livability be added to your home? Sometimes a comparatively few dollars in improvements can transform a home completely by adding to its resale value or bringing leisure time to its occupants ... or simply improve the family environment. Be sure your work is done by a reputable licensed modemixatlon company and financed at First Federal Savings of Oakland. FIRST FEDERAL SAYINGS 761W. HURON STREET FE 3-7071 Downtown Pontiac - Drayton Plains - Rochester — Clarkston — Milford — Walled Lake — Lake Orion — Waterford This Quality Home Features: • 3 Bedrooms • 70% Brick Exterior • 1 Vi Beths • 2-Car Garage • Finished Family Room • Separate Foyer • Closets, Capboards, Storage Galore • 6-Ft. Patio Door How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obthin a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME—How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint on G-96 □ Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet □ ; ' ' j } Name ........................................... \ Pontiac Dan Mattingly Rochester 335-9497 model or 4-3568 OL 1-0222 Between thi kitchen and the family room is a laundry large enough for a washer, dryer, tub and mud closet, as well as space for an ironing board. OPEN Sat.-Sun. JUST FOR YOU S16,950 Plus Lot SUNDAY DIRECTIONS: West on Huron Street to Ottawa Drive, turn left 1 block to Iroquois, turn right to property where... You will find a beautifully decorated colonial home with 3 nice fireplaces, 2 full baths, custom-made drapes and luxurious carpeting. This stately home will he open for your inspection. 2 to 5 p.m. *24,500 The L shape of this house not only adds interest to the exterior, but makes1 possible what might becalled an economical expansion. With the bedroom wing running the depth of the house, architect Herman H. York has! provided an expansion area! above that wing. The remainder of the house, comprising the living room, dining room, kitchen and foyer, Is really a one-story unit, avoiding the extra expense that would be incurred if there were a full second-story. The net result of all this isj an extremely flexible arrangement, permitting a family to [have two, three, four or five bedrooms as it desired. * ★ ★ If H required only two bedrooms on the first flow, it could use the unfinished attic for is t o r a g e or, if necessary, add jtwo upstairs bedrooms at a later date. VERSATILE If three bedrooms on one floor were the requirement, the room designated on the floor plan as “family room, den or bedroom” would be utilized for sleeping. It is strategically located for any purpose, being at one end of i There are three entrances to jthe rear terrace — from the family room, laundry area and kitchen. I Two bedrooms, e bath and a j large amount of closet space are planned upstairs. One of the bedrooms is 16’ by 'll’, with the jother a big 18’ by 16’. (EXTERIOR ( Architect Ydrk has suggested ithe exterior use of masonry, leither brick or stone, in the! (center between the bedroom and igarage projections. . * * * | Wood shingles, either sawn or I lightly hand-split, should contrast with the brick; that is, if (the brick is dark, the shingles (might be painted white, or if the bedroom hall and near.the main bath, yet accessible to both the kitchen and the rear terrace. A walk-in closet and a private bath are in the sizable master bedroom. Even the smallest bedroom has 168 square feet of floor area. light brick or stone is used, the shingles might be left in their natural cedar color. Dimensions of the basic house are 55’ by 43’ 4”, with the two-car garage shown in the floor plan adding 23’ to the width. From $17r6Q0 (Plus Let) 10735 MlgM—d Rd. 363-6604 Moving through the covered entry into the spacious foyer,! the view to the right includes the full living foom, with a fireplace at the far end, and a portion of the adjacent dining room. ★ * * Although the kitchen lies directly behind the foyer, only the dinette area is immediately visible, the working part of the kitchen being hidden from view. ENJOY SUMMERTIME .. . In Your Own Backyard! NEW MODEL RANCHER: 3-Bedrooms, 1 Vi baths, beautiful custom-built kitchens, full basement, wood sealed-glass windows with screens, 2-car garage and gleaming white carefree aluminum siding. Custom quality at $16,950 plus inside decorating and building site. Ready for your inspection now. Cornar of Watkins Lake and Scott Lake Road. YOU CAN TRADE ROCHESTER BATEMAN REALTY union lake BRANCH DR I MUD DERI-■ I BRANCH OL 1-8518 377 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-7161 EM 3-4171 TERRACE t THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1P6T Beautiful Lifetime Docks of Structural STEEL Construction 20-Foot Length Painted Wood Top 42” Wide Bracing At Ends Only (Not in Center.) Pre-drilltd for connecting additional length 10-Foot T Sections Available Lightweight. 4'/i Pounds Per Foot. (Less Wood Top.) Pointed Wood Top is 42" Wide, 5-Foot Long Sections Complete 20-Foot Dock is Low Priced at $700 U-TL, COOLEY SOFT WATER CO., INC. 214 W. Walton Blvd., Pontiac 338-3333 SUMMERTIME FUN For those who want the finest in a fabulous Fiber glass pool. Practical, functional, beautiful, sturdily constructed and soundly engineered to last a lifetime. Stop In and see our display pool, it's an invitation to healthful, luxurious living, and family togetherness. CLARKSTON POOL OPEN Mon. thru Fri.,. 8 A.M.-4 P.M. 7170 Dixie Highway Clarkston - MA 5-2674 Sunday 1 P.M. A division of John S. Voorhees, Builder to 4 P.M. MODELS OPEN 2 P.M. to 8 P.M. The New Home That Will "Set the Pace” - in Family Living * OVER 1200 $Q. FT. OF LIVING AREA * OVER 000 SQ. FT. OF BASEMENT * OVER 100 SQ. FT. OF CLOSET AND STORAGE AREA * FOUR LARGE BEDR00MSf ALL WITH CROSS VENTILATION * FAMILY STYLE 12x12 KITCHEN * ONE AND A HALF BATHS * INCLUDES VANITY TOFIooring Rates Highest Although they have more competition than a few years ago, oak floors remain an over* whelming favorite for m o s“ rooms in American homes today, trade sources report. The National Oak Flooring Manufacturers’ Association says that oak outsells all other residential flooring materials combined. This does not include, of Icourse, materials which a re merely floor coverings. A Federal Housing Administration bulletin published in 1966 indicated the extent of oak’s dominance. Referring to a survey of new single-family dwellings inspected by FHA in 1959 qpd 1962, the bulletin reported: “Wood, nearly all hardwood strip, was used for finish floors in the ‘living. room-bedroom' areas of more than 90 per cent of the nonslab-foundation houses in both survey years.” Nonslab-foundation houses are those with basements or with crawl spaces. All but a small percentage of hardwood flooring used U.S. is oak. About 95 per cent of the nation’s hardwood flooring comes from the Southern and Appalachian regions, and about 97 per cent of the volume in those regions is oak. The remainder consists principally of hard maple, beech, birch and pecan: CRAWL SPACE Abo(ut three-fifths of the houses inspected in the FHA survey had basements or were built over crawl space. The others, built on concrete slabs, Were concentrated chiefly in the Southern and South Central regions. About 16 per cent had hard wood floors. In the remainder the slabs were either covered by nonwood materials or had no finish flooring. This situation is expected to change, the oak flooring association says, as builders of slab homes become more aware of a relatively new method of applying strip oak floors economically over concrete. The method involves nailing the oak to wood sleepers secured to the slab by mastic and by concrete nails. Generally the omission of wood floors in slab homes has been a matter of economy. Their desirability is universally recognized. Tips Given for Floors VACATION DREAM — The ‘-‘Lumber Look” ... No finished walls to paint, peel, Vacation House for Mother wash in this Nantucket vacation lumber Look' Is a Natural Look, ma, no finished walls.| tioners should be able to have! but rather to let the most ad-. As a matter of fact no finished^charm in a house without being! vantageous view come into the ceiling. It’s the new “lumber3 slave to il” [house for the occupants pleas- .............. - - Sunset and. sunrise are How do you get rid of alcohol spots on an oak floor? Rub the spots with a cloth barely dampened in ammonia, or with a cloth treated with liquid or paste wax, silver polish or boiled linseed oil. How about heel and caster marks? Rub vigorously with fine steel wool dipped in floor cleaner, than wipe dry. And grease or oil stains? The simplest treatment is to rub on kitchen soap. These and other tips, on removing stains and spots from! oak floors are offered in a free! booklet, “How to Keep Oak Floors Bqgutiful,” published by the National Oak Flooring Manufacturers’ Association. A booklet of broader s cope, ‘Oak Floors for Your Home,” also is available without charge. For a free copy of either! booklet write the Oak Flooring Information Service, 75 E. Wac-j ker Dr., Chicago, 111. 60601. I New Sink Aids Buyer New for baths is a self-rim-ming counter-top lavatory made of acid-resistant enameled cast Iron: * * * The Self-rimming feature eliminates the need for a metal rim, thus removing dirt catching counter seams. It comes in white and s 1 x other colors. t y * /A easy! Build Today! CALL ANDERSON A GILFORD slave to it.” look” in vacation houses. Why, Hendrix decorated the cover up those beautiful (expen- houses with charm plus easy sive) rafter and studs with' maintenance. Rents are in the plaster when they look so high brackets, but the houses rugged? Besides a vacation aren’t furnished in antiques, house should look like one. The idea sums up the whole vacation theory: easy maintenance from floors to rafters. No painting, no mildew, no wall washing. A house that is used in warm weather doesn’t need great insulation, and if more is needed, put it on outside before you shingle. The “lumber look” is something to think about if you are! dramatic scenery. Water and mountains are Views that can) increase the serenity of a vacation home,” says Hendrix. He prefers two picture windows rather than one smack in the middle of a wail structure. Protects children, pets end property DRAMATIC HEW FENCE ANCHOR'S FOREST GREEN PERMAFUSED• Instead, he chose good solid piaple in homey early-Ameri-can design. Table tops are scrubbablel j^e ijkes fabric shades rather woodgramed laminated plastic. than draperies (more work) and He softens the look of vinyl tile be especially doesn’t like theme in the living room with a rug fabrics at gg shore house -that matches the indoor-outdoor gullSt shellSt shi carpet of non-woven acrylic fib-| drama should ^ in the view> er on a little terrace adjacent A v a c a t i o n house kitchen to the living room. (should be work-proof with a * * * jgood refrigerator, and a dish- | __________ The bright nylon and cottonj washer so that the lady of the buying,” building*”renting. Newstretch denim fabric, a blue, house also can enjoy resort life, houses and apartments being |oran6e< red, lemon, green shin-, built on the waterfront at Nan-|gle pattern was designed on the tucket have two-story living island by ^ The Tilletts, well-area*. Detergent "Paint" for Clean Shutters known husband and wife textile! team. * The dining section of the large The fabric is used on two room is one-story tall and has chairs, two day beds , (used a bedroom above it on a bal- for guests) and laminated to cony. Off that is another bed- window shades at two large room. An open ladder to the picture windows. Floral paint-bedrooms increases the vacation) jngs ^ unframed and hung house charm. ; right on the studs. EASY TO KEEP [ “in a vacation house, one! “Every vacation house should ^should take advantage of thei be planned with easy mainten-| view, but architects and build- These will continue to look * ance in mind,” says well-known;ers often locate picture windows new after seasonai washings . interior designer James Hendrix! in the wrong places. wjtb no reaj paint needed. * who worked with architect andj . * . * * Vinyl blinds provide the add- L builder on the planning of the! “The idea is not to show the ad advantages of not peeling or I houses and apartments. “Vaca-ij world what is inside your house v |B Forest green color blends beautifully-1* with any yard. Vinyl coat won't peel or need painting; Either small-weave Modernmesh® or standard. With ' Anchor's square posts and gates. iv«r*«ry AS LOW AS $5 A MONTH FE 5-7471 No Down Payment • 60 Months to Pay • First Payment Oct. 1st Have you. ever heard about painting window shutters with a bucket of soap or detergent suds? This is not impossible if the I shutters are made of solid vinyl, f !We Want! WORK! Tdko Baldwin Rd. to Clarkstort-Orion Rd. Left two miles to N. Eston Rd. Right 5 blocks to model. Sales Exclusively By RAY O’NEIL REALTY CO. 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD., OR 4-2222 OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 P.M. Luxury Feature Home Notv Under Construction at The Chalet 4-bedroom with 2Vz baths plus powder room. Tri-Level includes all of these features: Sunken living room with cathedral beam ceiling-formal dining,room, kilclie n with nook and biiih-in range and o> en — dishwasher —vent fan —disposal -]o,x2.r family room with option? il bar and fire- ratily S i 1,950 and this price includes a base lot (mini- mum size 80 ft. x 120 ft.) Visit the Wonderful World of Keatington 'NEW, OPEN- HOURS DAILY and SUNDAY 1 to 8 P.M. Saturday71 to 6 Closed Thursday WE TRADE KEATING GO. MODEL: 391-2200 391-2201 HOWARD T. KEATINGTON SALES OFFICE Located At Corner Baldwin & Waldon Rd. Preview Color Before Buying Before selecting the color for i your next painting project, take ! home several color swatches to test in a room! you plan to paint. ★ * * Since many colors undergo a good deal of change from one < kind of light to another study • the swatches in both daylight. and nightlight. iPrice No Object NOW IS THE TIME! r GARAGES - From $888 KITCHENS - From $88S ' ATTICS - From $1295 ADDITIONS - From $988 RECREATION ROOMS - From $988 PORCH ENCLOSURES - From $888 Free Estimates — Long Term Financing KEEP OUR MEN BUSY AND SAVE ... CALL G & M CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 86 North Saginaw — Pontiac ~ M211 FE 2-1 GREEN LAKE FRONT This excellent home on beautiful Green Lake features 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, full dining room, family room, carpeting and draperies. Good beach and can be purchased on land contract. The price is right at ..... $41,900. 4, MAX BROOCK INC. 4139 Orcholrd Lake Rd. at Pontiac Trail MA 6-4000 444-4890 OFFICE OPEN SUNDAYS -r~~ THE P6NTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, C—5 in the lovely natural rustic beauty of LAKELAND ESTATES, a planned open space community, where you have city conveniences but still enjoy the migratory visits of wild Canadian geese and their families. Children9 too . . . have room to grow in! Buy at Today's Prices and Savel 2 SPACIOUS HOMES available for immediate possession THIS LOVELY CARPETED TRI-LEVEL ms Boulevard. Lot No. 49 4 bedrooms big • Formal Dining Room • Big roomy kitchen • Kitchen built-ms - • y big wall, m rld'je • Beautiful Family Room with natural fireplace • Incinerator • Large seeded lot TOTAL HOUSE Including LAKE PRIV. LOT ' ♦29.900 -plus- 4 bedroom COLONIAL • 10x16 Patio off 19x13 Family Room • 1st Floor Laundry • Ceramic Tile Bath • Roomy Kitchen and Nook • Formal Dining Room • Full Basement • Natural Fireplace • Formica Counter Tops and Vanity Tops • Kitchen Lazy Suzan • Kitchen Built-Ins * Gas Incinerator 5074 Shoreline Boulevard, Lot No. 45 TOTAL HOUSE LAKE PRIV. LOT ♦29,400 1885 sq. ft. LAKELAND ESTATES . . . Vmc& of MocJugan" .king • Marina • Golf Course e Tennis Ct. 1 Major Shopping Centers * School Buses As Low As 10% Down Mpves You It MODEL PHONE: 623-0670 » Hwy. (U,S. 10) from mile North of Walton-(over. Turn right Shores "Paradg of Homes" "A Builder of Fine Homes for Over 25 Years” To Improve Aquatic Fun Poolsmanship Is New Game By VIVIAN BROWN AP Newsfeaturei Writer The name of the game is poolsmanship. If you don’l want to get in a social rut — |fl mere water in a pit — you play the game. POOL PAVILION — The pedestals on either side hold tall white iron urns. Bamboo uprights at poolhouse roof are for decoration. Tole finials on roof are painted white. Designed by David Barrett. Before Buying Check Boiler Real poolsmanship requires that you have a plan for improving the aquatic delights, even if you can’t but more than one floating chaise this season. Next year, you plan to put in a full equipped cabana and heat the pwd. The following year, you will definitely get a decorator to make an environmental study of your pool. If you’re thinking of buying a new or older home this summer, remember to check the quality of its heating system. * ★ ★ This adice comes from the Plumbing - Heating - Cooling Information Bureau, which notes that many summertime home buyers forget to check the boiler because it’s shut down. Then when autumn leaves begin to fly, and the system is turned on, they find there are drafts or cold spots that can’t be made warm enough regardless of how high the thermostat is set. If you find an older home you like; it will pay you to have its heating checked by a qualified Unit Size Established by BTUs Air-conditioning units are sized, not by their ability to generate col air, but by how much heat they can remove from a house or a room. ★ ★ ★ The air-conditioning industry’s standard unit for measuring this capacity is British thermal units (BTU). A BTU is a way to measure heat. One BTU is roughly-equivalent to the amount of beat given off by a kitchen match. More precisely, it’s the | contractor. If the system is de-|amounnt of heat needed to raise fective in any way summer is Ue temperature of one pound the time to have parts replaced, , , , repairs made or even have a|° watf °"e degree Fahrenheit le88’ new system installed, if thatja*sea eve • Snazzy yes, but this year you That’s what you tell your friends. POOL PALS It is the kind of thing pool visitors want to know. Should they stick to your pool or wet their toes elsewhere. If you lose a pool pal, you smay never get him back. A pool must be pleasing to the eye to attract topboard guests. And as any pool owner knows, it’s no fun to swim alone. There must be comfort, color, sparkle and all sorts of Neptunic delights to amuse guests. And it costs money. ★ ★ ★ Your neighbor may lure your guests with something called a continental sun lounger, a most romantic contraption for two. The unit looks Oriental with its wicker hood and red and blue striped cotton awning that matches the upholstery. Two padded footrests provide the ultimate in comfort for weary gaggle of visitors (even those who can’t swim.) They can be in the swim and never get YOUR bathing suits wet. ROLY-POLY RADIO All the while a large polyfoam beach hall floats around the pool with music emanating from the radio within its plastic-banded innards. If the crowd is sporty, don’t estimate the impact of a snoozercruiser that is propelled by a two-cycle gas engine. It’ll require a large pool but it has great advantages. From a comfortable, lounge seat with nonsinkable pontoons, a pool host can cruise around a pool and see how the games are going and if everyone is happy. MildewProblem Is Eliminated A, new closet accessory helps eliminate the problem of mildew;- It’s a' cake that can be hung by its own tab on a hanger or hook, placed in drawers, trunk, gym lockers, sail bags, or slipped under a mattress. ★ ★ ★ Side 'vents in the slender container let the vapors from the cake escape. The cake is stainless and safe i use anywhere, the maker Isays. \ lookingfor fl KITCHEN CARPET We Have the Largest Selection in Town! FROM $450 «. $1 Off. Yd. T)onjl&/£m A-1 CARPET CENTER 4990 Dixie Highway . Phone 473-1297 DRAYTON PLAINS-1 BLOCK NORTH OF WALTON MON.. FRI., SAT. 'til 9 P.M.-TUES., WED., THURS. lit 3.30 SUNDAY 11 A.M. to S.30 PM. —. Q 8 8 8 8 9 8 8 8 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 6 B 8 8 8 0 Q 0 8 6 8 B O 8 O 8 8 8 8 0 O P B O 8° turns out to be necessary. ★ ★ ★ Good heating is important not only to your family’s comfort but to its health as well. Hydronic heat is a quality type in which water is piped from boiler to rediation in the i dividual rooms. The most popular type of radiation today is baseboard. The boiler itself can |be fired by gas, oil or electricity, depending upon your own preference. ★ A Hydronic heat is clean, even, quiet and draft-free. One of it! advantages is t h e ease with which it can be extended to additional living areas. GET TWO ESTIMATES THEN CALL US! • BRICK • BLOCK • FRAME 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE Buy From owMr — no tal.im.n, Every former Dixie customer will recommend us very highly. Make ut prove it. Personal owner's supervision on your job from start to completion. No subcontractors, we have our awn crews. We build all style garages in Pontiac and suburbs. 5 year guarantee on all fobs. No money dewn. First payment in Nov. Up to 7 years to pay. DIXIE GARAGE CONSTRUCTION CO. Between Crescent Lie. and Airport Rds. _______0B 4-0371 - B744 HIGHLAND HD. - U1-4416 (Call Collaet) can provide the piece de resis-Today, more than 90 per centltance in considerate poolsman- of the central residential air-conditioning equipment produced in the country is rated in BTUH—which is a measure of the number of British thermal units of heat that the equipment can remove from a bouse in one hour. This standardization of equipment ratings is the result of the Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute’s '‘Unitary Certification Program. Until 1959, when Unitary Certification came into being, many conditioners were rated in tons, or by horsepower or amperes. These were not precise units of'measurement, and the variety of terms made it very difficult for a layman to compare the capacity of one unit with another. For this'reason, ARI made it a strict requirement of its Unitary Certification program that all units had to be rated in Btuh. Other requirements of the Unitary C e r ,t i f i cation program, which includes units rated up to 135,000 BTUH, are that participating manufacturers must submit specifications and their own test data on all new models for evaluation by ARI engineers; that all models are subject to rigid performance and capacity ty~an^ independent iabora tory; and that no manufacturer can display the ARI “Seal of Certification’’ on his .units unless - he subscribes to all the standards of the program. p — foiling unexpected breezes that send guests scurrying to the indoor water cooler. Invest in three sided windbreak-ers of clear vinyl-panels enclosed in aluminum frames. ★ ★ ★ From this vantage point guests can see everything, keep every hair in place, and never raise a goose pimple. MAD, MOD Two kinds of poolside decoration are in vogue — absolutely hippy with mad colors and op-upholstered mod, mod chairs or casually elegant in the latest patterned-vinyl cushioned upholstery that may be left out in the rain; ■ And the most considerate hostess provides a wardrobe of for guests — paper swim suits, shifts, parasols, scuffs and robes in gay colon. A pool master who has strolled through ' a pool accessory shop without being moved to tears is just plain rich. ★ ★ ★ There are the little things for his competing pleasure — a basketball or volley ball game with 5 ft. 8 in. width net in an aluminum frame and another game which encourages you to write your own rules. —A gizmo scatters 12 balls sprung from a net and the pool crowd become retrievers. The bigger the pool, the more to fill up. You may choose a beach barge that will hold a AT THE 1 OPEN DAILY BY APPOINTMENT SAT. ft SUN. 1 TO 6 P.M. 10 Models to Choose From *24,990 Including Lake Privilege lot CONVENIENCE PLUS . . . EXPERTLY DESIGNED by "Beauty Rite" the name most prominent in the home building industry. • Family Room • Fireplace • Insulated Windows with Screens • 6E Elec. Oven and Range • Furniture Lika Finished Kitchen Cabinet e 2-Car Attached Garage • Basement e Fiber Glass Insulation “Lakeview Estates” ON MORGAN LAKE f MLTMBU/D. i*Pontise~ “Huntoon Shores” ON HUNTOON LAKE Homes Start at .$16,150 HOMES FOR INFORMATION PHONE 673-1717 Located in .the . heart of "Rolling Water Wonderland.'' You'll be Intrigued by the "Froth New Horizons" of this recognized residential community — all tha conveniences you would expect for gracious living! OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 172 DEAR HEARTS And gentle people, took such wonderful care of this attractive 3 bedroom home. Extras include large family room with fireplace. 2 full baths, built-ins, formal dining area. Lots of closets, full basement, patio arid garage. Paved streets and drive and has lake privileges, BUILT IN 1962. McCullough Realty DIRECTIONS: M-59 to Williams Lake, turn left to Elizabeth Lake Road, turn right to HURONDALE in ’ the "Riverside" Subdivision. 5640 Highland Rd. 074-2238 874-2239 The Ambassador 8275 FOX BAY DRIVE *27,000 WILL DUPLICATE MODEL at $27,000, with lot. Will sell model as is, which includes extras at additional cost. DIRECTIONS: WEST ON HIGHLAND ROAD (M 59) to WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD tarn left; then right on ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD to PERRY BLVD; then right to FOX BAY DRIVE._______, OPEN DAILY 4-8 end by Appointment Set. and Sun. 1 to 8 WATERFORD REALTY 4540 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS 673-1273 C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 WILL * GUARANTEE IN WRITING SALE OF YOUR PRESENT HOME Which give* you a positive solo and allows you to live in your prosont homo until you con move into your now BUY NOW SELL LATER Tht BATEMAN Way! Call in Your Appointment Today! BATEMAN ROCHESTER 317 S. TELEGRAPH UNION LAKE 0L1-MIR PONTIAC-FE 8-7161 EM 8-41T1 Color Coordinated Refrigerators* Art Comes to the Kitchen PATTER 2$4- "Today's kitchen is almost a m i 1 y room. It needn’t, shouldn’t look like an operating room. It should be a warm, in* viting happy setting for working, eating, entertaining,’’ says Penny Hallock Lehman, NSID, I the introduction to her Beautiful Kitchens Idea Book.” "And,” she adds, “it doesn’t have to cost a fortune to bring a kitchen to life wjth new color and patterns.” Proof of the ease with which t h e homemaker c a n be her own kitchen decorator can be found in the new line of “Designer Series” refrigerators and harmonizing wall coverings which Mrs. Lehman , The Value-Built by John S. Voorhees This 4-bedroom, 1,303 square foot home can be built on your property with brick and aluminum siding, full basement, two full-size bathrooms, ook and vinyl floors, 4x18 front porch, Aluma-vue windows, 2-inch sidewall, 4-inch ceiling insulation, and 6 large closets plus many other extras. £ j ^ JOHN S. VOORHEES, Builder TITO Dixie Highway yt c OCT A Clarkston, Michigan RIM W“fcO I ■# has coordinated for a leading refrigerator manufacturer. These bring a new decorating concept to the kitchen by making the refrigerator a part of the overall room scheme; Unlike other decorating ideas for kitchen appliances, these new refrigerators become part of the kitchen rather than a piece in the kitchen. NEW LOOK . This new look is achieved through the use of special designer panels, coordinated with matching wall coverings, that snap into the refrigerator door trim. “The addition of the refrigerator alone can add a new I look to any present kitchen,” Mrs. Lehman states. “Then, as the home maker wants and her budget permits, she can add harmonizing wall covering. * * * h ■ ... , . . J Even in the most expensive These wall coverings are sug- It may se the Multi-Purpose Brick Siding that does so many jobs - BETTER • Gives year-round insulation • Roll! duces fuel costs • Beautifies your home, increases its value • Resists fire-Lowers insurance rates e Ends repair and maintenanca bills—no painting a Economical to install • •. panel of the range or dishwasher. “Or, they may be used to cover a single wall or all the walls of the kitchen,” she explains. Coordinating for the Gibson Refrigerator Sales Corporation of Greenville, Michigan, which features fashion - faces for these “humble servants” of the kitchen, Mrs. Lehman refers to one design, called “Which Came First?” The refrigerator panel features a whimsical “calico-look” chicken against a background of eggs. ■ EGG DESIGN Harmonizing wall covering uses the egg-design, with smaller versions of the chicken repeated on a random basis. This pattern is available in a red, .black and yellow traditional color scheme. A delightful Pennsylvania Dutch pattern called “Treasure Tree” has also been included inj the collection. COMPLETE 2503 DIXIE HWY. PONTIAC SZ7S5SI modernization Opposite Silwi Uk. *o.d Phone 873-7507 (Office and Models) GARAGE SPECIAL BIG 2-CAR COMPLETE GARAGE «889 Including Floor, Clear Redwood Siding, 16x7 Taylor Door Also Frame-Brick-*Block-Alum. Complete Home Remodeling • Rec. Rooms from .. $995 • Attics from ..$975 • Dormers from .... $1995 • Alum. Siding • Kitchens from_$495 24x24x8’ from . . • Additions from .. All Jobs Carry a 5-Year Written Guarantee Commercigl Modernization Inquiries Invited 1 *t Payment Next Fall — 1 to 20 Yrs. to Pay — (Piy, of Atlas Const. Co-) MICHIGAN GARAGE BUILDERS FE 4-1400 . $595 . $1195 KE 4-1080 CO 8-1280 23800 W. 7 Mile Rd.- 1 Block East e» Telegraph Open Daily 9-9; Sat., Sun. 9-6 40 years or more — but chances are you're paying a fortune in fuel bills to keep the huge monster going. lem, he noted. A combination of several construction and design features has made such a warranty possible, he explained. Cases and drawers are “weatherized” — finished inside and out — to protect the wood against effects of moisture. Special plastic center guides,! reinforced with steel membranes for strength and stability, ride on T-shaped wood tracks” so that drawers mayj be opened smoothly without ac-| cidentally spilling the contents, j A new boiler can cut fuel cost by as much as twenty-five per cent, which is $100 a year if your annual fuel bill is $400. You can actually earn a profit after a few years by paying for the boiler with a low-intrest FHA Title I Property Improvement Loan, or a similar bank loan. Monthly costs can be kept at a minimum and wMl be offset by the savings in fuel. j * ,* * You’ll gain more than money At the lower comer of eachl I with a modern, compact, appli- drawer opening there is an L-ance-styled boiler. Space-age de- shaped glide of molded nylon, sign has produced more effici- Finally, each drawer in the ent, cleaner and quieter boilers, fully dustproof case has an * * ★ |over-lapping lip that permits. They are able to squeeze | enough “play’1 to. avoid stick-J more heat out of any type fuel, |ing. while responding quickly to calls Details of the warranty, for heat, adds the Council. jalong with other features, are Many people, with the savings outlined in an informative accrued from greater heating | hang tag on all Hungerford | efficiency, go a step further and “weatherized" cases, many of) modernize their distribution sys-| which are now available in fine This utilizes a tree covered tem. . ...........|lurmlure and department stores., with birds and flowers with a They pull out old-fashioned, peasant couple against a sub-1 bulky radiators that make mod-dued color background. em decorating an impossibility, - . and install slim, wall-hugging | Checks which resemble ging- ,baseboard units. ham in a red and white com- T h e s e units, which cah be bination carry out this theme paints t0 blend or contrast for wall covering which also with the decor of the room pro.l repeats the colorful birds pat- Vide both radiant and convected! Custom faucets? They’re tern- heat. Both types, of heat are j here — in 24-carat goldplate, An Oriental flavor has been I considered essential for goodjbrushed chrome and pewter captured in “Happy Cooking” I home comfort. which is a copy of an ancient! --------------- Chinese panel. | The words “Happy Cooking” Qrtwp Ti/TI© are spelled out in Chinese characters over simple baskets of , , / . D i leaves and flowers. This design /v\CIKIflCI DGCf color! ** Custom Faucets Decorate Room quality & economy with Stran-S buildings Vou get eceneiny with Stran-Steel buildings because economy It literally designed and built into every steel component It is the natural result of quality planned, mass production techniques that are not only better, but also economical The savings ar» passed along to you. Before you build any building, discover why a Stran-Steel building is a better investment. Find out why Stran-Steel la able to offer written guarantees to back-up the performance of the steel components. Lower heating and pooling bills are the direct result of exclusive insulated wall systems. Faster construction, often 60 to 90 days, will get you In business sooner. Call us for a free estimate or a copy of our brochure “10 Costly Mistakes To Avoid Before You Build.” We are ablo to handle youi complete turn-key project Arrangements can be made for financing. 0AKSTEEL DIVISION SCHURRER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 2431 Pontiac Road, Pontiac St Phona 338-4019 ■rejrj^eel i finish. uses a rust and green color combination. TRIVETS Final design in the Gibson collection is called “Trivets” and translated this familiar kitchen utensil and decorative item into a contemporary form. It is an overall pattern which is repeated in exact duplication for both refrigerator panel front and wall coverings in turquoise. A walnut, random planked cherry, and brushed chrome; j are also available, The designer panels are available on 15, 16, and 18 cubic foot models with top or b o 11 o m mounted freezers as well as [side - by - side, all - refrigerator I freezers. WANTED! ALIVE . . . AND SWINGING! We ore looking for thinking individuals seeking exening experiences in home life at: . Houses Priced From >24,950 Including Vi acre lot and , features shown “for- those aware who really care. Colonial* that ging. multi-levels that really giving." TIMBERLINE on the LAKE , LAKE PRIVILEGES • PRIVATE BEACH • BOAT DOCK • LAKEFRONT AND CANAL LOTS ; ; f j* 1 | Hand-carved, the sculptured hardware for the bathroom also includes door knobs, drawer; pulls. The manufacturer says they j were designed to fill a long-felt need in custom-built con-' The average homemaker will l temporary homes, walk 64 miles and spend around j 400 hours making beds during! her lifetime. The people who say so, Spring! Air Mattress Co., added that if she made the bed properly, she could cut the mileage by; One answer to the land short-75 per cent and the time by age in metropolitan areas is off-half. shore office buildings, like one Instead of making a trip designed for construction off the around the bed for each sheet! Jersey City, N.J., coast, and blanket, you’re supposed toj It will stand 200 feet off shore make the lied a quarter at a and be connected to land by a time. i driveway on stilts. Land Shortage Is Answered • NEW MATERIALS Everything in Remodeling . . . KITCHENS • DORMERS • FAMILY ROOMS REC ROOMS • REMODEL BASEMENTS ROOFING • EAVESTROUGHING • CEMENT WORK ALL TYPE WINDOW REPLACEMENTS STORM WINDOWS • AWNINGS • SCREENED-IN RATIOS PORCH ENCLOSURES • GARAGES • BATHROOMS ALUMINUM AftD VINYL SIDING FREE ESTIMATES C. Wee don (fonshudion 6o. 1032 W. Huron Street> „ - M NIGHTS & SUNDAYS PHONE: FE 4-2597 682-0648 MA 4-1091 /. .AT! * 613-2842 EM 3-2385 MY 3-1318 experts predict, IT WILL BE ANOTHER 20 YEARS BEFORE REAL ESTATE WILL REACH ITS PRESENT HIGH SELL W WHILE HO MARKET IS ITS H16HI WE GUARANTEE A SALE Guaranteed Sale WE LIST YOUR HOME AT THE MARKET PRICE We commit ourselves in writing to buy the property anytime DURING THE LISTING IMMEDIATE CASH SALE WE BUY YOUR HOUSE ALL MONEY IN 2 DAYS STAY SB DAYS AFTER SALE TRACE preiant HOME IN T CALL FOR DETAILS 7 Offices serving all of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne Counties YORK REAL ESTATE PImm: 674-0363 4713 DIXIE HIGHWAY THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 Record of Transactions for Week on Stock Market 1% 1! __ JI44 39M x » im «Jj» 84^—1H WEEKLY AMERICAN STOCK SALES 20,734,400 24,314,470 Year m .................vJMQtt TOTE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1007 Home Start -12 Begin School Happily By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. University of Southern California The first day of school need not be a scary one for a child, nor a tearful one for mother. It should be a happy experience for everyone concerned, even including the teacher. BuT it can be happy for all only if both mother and child are prepared to make it so. Children under 5 adopt the attitudes that their mothers expect them to adopt. When mothers are fearful that there will be a scene on the first day of school, there usually is. If mothers expect their children to enter school happily, they do. In one district it was announced that not all children could be accepted for kindergarten. Those who evidenced readiness upon arrival at school would be the ones accepted. * * * On the first day a seeming miracle took place: every child left his mother without a fuss. Obviously the mothers had prepared the children properly for this moment. And,no matter how much some mothers may have wanted to cry, they didn’t! GROUP BEHAVIOR Ordinarily in the first semester of a child’s school experience, whether it be preschool, kindergarten or first grade, the major concern is training in proper group behavior. A child can be trained to be comfortable and happy away from his mother. This should start early and be made a natural normal part of a child’s life. When such training is put off until the first day of school and is left entirely to the teacher, | Is always difficult. Children figure out ways to manage their parents, and often try the same schemes on die teacher. As long as the schemes continue to be successful home, the child persists in his behavior at school, sometimes thrrough three or four grades. ★ ★ ★ For example, Ed responded to his mother’s direction only when her voice reached a certain high pitch that he recognized as a danger signal. SHRUGGED OFF He dallied about picking up his toys; he stalled about going to bed; it was difficult to get him in from play. Ed’s father shrugged it off as being normal for a boy—“let him have some fun while he’s young.” In school, using the same tactics, Ed was a troublemaker both in the schoolroom and on the playground—not necessarily bad but always keeping those around him a little on edge. . He was careless in listening to teacher instructions; careless in his reading; his written work, was hardly acceptable. " ★ ■ ★ ★ After consultation with counselor, Ed’s parents made an about-face and started work- ing together to demand satisfactory behavior. When mother said “Ed it’s time for bed’ and Ed started his stalling tactics, father took him firmly by the arm and said “Your mother said ‘time for bed’.” In a matter of a week or two, Ed was going to school ready to be taught. HOME TRAINING It took a year for Ed to make up for the htree years he had wasted. He could have just as well entered kindergarten with the background of this home training and been a success from the start. A child doesn’t automatically know the techniques of getting along in a group. This as with all other types of behavior requires training. In a large family a child can be taught to respect the belongings of the other children, he can learn to take his turn on play equipment and learn to respect the rights of others. ubout Ted's Results- A rant’s extra special y service on Mondays. “ Ted's cooks, hostesses and waitresses really go all out to make your family dining a real enjoyable experience. f Dessert Special. . . F • i ■ Don’t Lose Your Cool Enjoy Life With GIBSOS Bn (MFORT from CONSUMERS POWER CO. 28 West Lawrence 333-7812 ★ NEW ★ AIRCONDITIONED Crittenton Hospital "ROCHESTER Now Ready to Offer Exceptional -Opportunities in All Categories — All Shifts LIFE INSURANCE HOSPITALIZATION PAID VACATION PENSION PLAN FREE PARKING 7 PAID HOLIDAYS Applications Are Being Accepted for: NURSING NURSE AIDES O.R. TECHNICIANS ORDERLY CLERICAL SUPERVISORS HEAD NURSES STAFF NURSES LPN's MAINTENANCE BOILER OPERATORS. GENERAL MAINTENANCE OFFICE WORK SECRETARIES ADMITTING CLERK CLERK TYPIST SWITCHBOARD INFORMATION CLERK OPERATORS «, X-RAY TECHNICIAN MEDICAL RECORD TECHNICIAN TECHNICIAN and MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS MEDICAL SECRETARIES Apply in Temporary Personnel Office in Person at 1201 W. University Drive or by Phone, 651-0000 After Monday, July 10 Every Day Monday thru Friday 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. SPECIAL PRICES FOR THIS SUNDAY ONLY - NOON TO 7 P.M. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST Sunday Only CLEARANCE OF MEN’S CLASSIC TROPICAL SUITS Our Reg. 22.97 14.99 Charge It Choice of Dacron® poly-ester/Atrril® rayon or Dacron® polyester/cotton and 3 button suits. Center vents. Dark tones, stripes, mixtures. *DuPon» Carp. Rag. TM Sunday Only MEN’S WHITE BAL OXFORDS AND SLIP-ONS Our Reg. 2.86 1.50 Charge It Choose your favorite style. In white only; sizes 7 to 12. Yon always save at Kmart! Sunday Only ALL PURPOSE FIVE- GALLON CONTAINER White, Pink, Blue, Maize, Black "WHISPER LIGHT" SUMMER PETTICOATS Lightweight, easy to carry tote of rugged polyethylene is the perfect carry-all. Completely washable. Your choice of white, avocado and Pacific mist Just say “Charge It” Charge It | Utility container of | rigid break-resistant | polyethylene has two-way spout closure and § air vent plug. In green S only. ' | 74* Our Reg. 88c and 97c Sunday Only Women's sizes S-M-L-XL-XXL. So cool, so luxurious . . . you’ll definitely want one of these lovely petticoats for your summer wardrobe! Acetate tricot, nylon or cotton ... some Perma Press models. Many with lace trim, shadow panels, satin appliques. Family Pay Checks Buy Far More At Kmart! Sunday Only ‘THE WHEEL’ I 22-GALLON I TRASH CAN | | Compare at 5.95 1 2.96 Charge It 22-gallon, plastic trash & can has 2 rubber i| wheels for easy mov-ing. In colors of red, green and sandal- | wood. Just say, “Charge It.” "DEFT" Exterior Finish 1.94 Out Reg. 2.66 Sunday Only Quart size. “Deft” protects and preserves the natural wood color of siding, fencing and patio furniture. Gives wood a tough, chip-resistant finish. Shields against moisture. Home Improvement Dept. Enjoy the Outdoors in Our Folding CHAISE AND CHAIR Aluminum Chaise Our Reg. 5.96 Aluminum Chair« Our Reg* 2.96 STATION WAGON PAD, 42x72x'/i” 2.66 Our Reg. 3.97, Sun. Only Vinyl covered, polyfoajnt filled. Mildew-proof. < SINGLE BAR CAR HEADREST 1.99 | Our Reg. 2.47, Sun. Only | Fits all ears. Made of jj thick poly-foam pad-ding. FAZIO" 7-PJECE GOLF SET 27.96 5.00 2 *5 Chaise: 1” tubular aluminum frame; 5 position adjustments; 74” long; 7x16 poly webbing. Save. Chair: 1” tubular aluminum frajjie with comfortably 2” flat arms; 32Vi” nigh; 6x4x4” poly webbing. GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Discount Price Sunday Only Matched set has 1-3 woods, 3-5-7-9 irons and putter. Woods feature laminated heads; irons arc triple-chrome plated and synchro-balanced with sand blasted faces. Pro-style, tri-color trophy grips. While quantities last. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 196T D—1 Glenn H. Griffin Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service** 46 Williams St. Phone FE 8-9288 Happenings Yesterday in State Capital By The Associated fr*u THB OOVERNOR Wm In New Hampshire on a combtm Ion "work and reel" holiday and planna to go to Pennsylvania today to help Oo\ and Mrs. William Scranton celebrate the! ' Tng anniversary. the attorney ornbral 1 he believes the courts will uphold loan's new Income tax bill ana will that It Is not sublect to a popular mdum. ' THB SBNATB THIS WEEK’S KEY VALUE resolution sponsored by Sen. George 1-Blrmlngham, which called or *- *- “-*■ — attorney general' .....—tlty of th X-SB399, Vanderlaan. Increase p HB2406, Brown. Make unlawful the Dying or selling of fish taken w‘‘‘ »rt fishing license. HB2020, Heilman. Authorise other political subdivisions to acquire a property In Michigan. Approved conference committee reports a by the Legislature SB707, Stamm. Increase fe urance company as surety. SB91, Richardson. Prohibit reduction of ;urrenf county contribution for probate udges salaries. X-SB339, Richardson. Prov lure for releasing medical d Current Status of Major Bills By the-Associated Press Taxation — Compromise Income tax bill passed both houses and awaits governor’s signature. Appropriations --- Passed Senate and now in House while subcommittees attempt to work out amendments acceptable to both houses. WWW Gasoline and weight tax increases—Passed Senate, defeated by House, but scheduled for reconsideration. Implied consent — Passed by both houses and awaits governor’s signature. WWW Sunday liquor sale — Passed both houses and sent to conference committee for concurrence in amendment. Sport fishing license increases -Passed both houses and sent to conference committee. [-SB51, Lockwood. Require State High-.y Department to furnish certification relocation of persons or businesses dls- PLASTIC LAUNDRY BASKET Resembles real wover baskets in design and color. One-bushel capacity. For laundry, yard, garden. ll governmental boundaries or If V * THB HOUSE Passed: SB7J, Beadle. Appropriate SJ55.7 lion for higher education) Increase aid to public schools by >39 million. SB75, Beadle. Appropriate >22.7 million for state corrections department. Defeated SB252, Fleming. Raise annual , motor vehicle weight taxes (notice given BENfFRAN KLIIM® OPEN DAILY 9>30 • 9 SUNDAY 10-I 2371 Orehard Lake Rd. (In th* Sylvan Shopping Center) BUY, SELL, TRADE ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Mime to Perform GRAND HAVEN IP) — Famed pantbmimist Gene Sheldon has been signed for the 1967 U.S. Coast Guard anniversary festival, it was announced today. Sheldon will handle a revue Aug. 3. at the junior high school auditorium and will perfrom at the “Festival of Bands” Aug. 4. Sheldon and his banjo have appeared-on the stage, in movies and on television. NEW, ALL-PURPOSE, MODERN RECORD CABINET Regular 12.95 YOU SAVE 4.20 NO MONEY DOWN 50c WEEKLY SturdOy Built with "Duroplax" Plasticized Mar-Resistant Topi Style success! Versatile cabinet with a dean, crisp modem look,-adaptable to ’most any decor. 16-x24* top, 27* high with sliding doors. Police System Is Blamed for Crime Rise KALAMAZOO (UPI) - The only way to fight modern organized crime is with a highly organized and integrated police force, not the “rural police system” now prevalent in this country, a University of California criminologist said yesterday. Joseph D. Lohman, a former sheriff of Code County, 111., and now dean of the school of criminology at the Berkley campus of the University of California, said crime is highly organized and yet it is fought by a police system that is split up among villages, cities, counties, states and the federal government. “Don’t blame law enforcement officers for the rising crime rate,” Lohman told a conference on crime and criminal problems. “Instead, blame our split-up system of law enforcement.” Lohman had high praise for the Metropolitan District police agency in Toronto, Ont., which encompasses more than just the Toronto city limits. w w w “There must be better coordination between police agencies,” Lohman said. “If our people are to have a better chance to live without petting mugged or murdered.” HOMI OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 1M N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 OPEN MONDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. - Park Free Rear of WKC! STOP! LOOK! READ! LOOKING FOR A CHURCH HOME? ... a place to worship God, fellowship with His people, serve the Saviour? We Cordially Invite You to Give Consideration to Our Church, Sunnyvale Chapel, 5311 Pontiac Lake Road VISIT US! WORSHIP WITH US! Get Acquainted With Our People, Our Sunday School, Our Church, Our Ministry, Our Missionaries, Our Ministers . . . JAMES DeGRAW V. 1. MARTIN DAVE LOEWEN Ministar of Music A Education Pastor “ . Director of Youth Visitation Enjoy our music — the soloists, the choirs, tho orchestra. Use our Nursery, Toddler's Church, Beginner's Church, Junior Church. Take advantage of our Youth Activities, Boys' Brigade, Pioneer Girls. Take part in our Bibto Conferences, Missionary Conference, Evangelistic Crusades. We sincerely believe that everything you and your family need for your spritiual life can be found in worshipping, fallowshippirig, and serving with us at Sunnyvale Chapal. Sunday School is at 9:45, a.m., the Morning Service at 11:00, Youth Meetings at 6:00 and Evening Service at 7:00 p.m. You will enjoy the Wednesday Evening -Service qt 7:00. SUNNYVALE CHAPEL 5311 Pontiac Lake Road _______, Weight, Feel Mean Dimes LOS ANGELES (AP) - Cabbie Thedore Hamlin spotted a canvas bag in the street Friday and after some tugging hauled it into his taxi. The bag bearing a Bank of America label was sealed but police said by feeling with their fingers they determined it was full of coins. By using scales to find out the *g weighed 58 pounds, the officers announced it was filled with 10,000 dimes. A bank official confirmed it. People in the News By thq Associated Press Texas Gov. John B. Connally says he will spend about a month hunting in East Africa as the guest of the American Broadcasting Co. The governor said yesterday the hunt— for leopards, lions, elephants, rhinoceros and cape buffalo—will be filmed for the ABC “American Sportsman” program. Connally said he never had been on safari and the biggest game he has killed was a mule deer. He said he will leave Texas July 19 and return “approximately at the end of August.” CONNALLY Strolling Bears Give Community a Start A big black bear and her two cubs took a stroll yesterday through the western Pennsylvania town of Mount Jewett, frightening a number of residents. Mrs. Charles Bonini was in her garden when her 12-year-old daughter shouted, “Mother, there’s a bear in our yard!” “And sure enough,” said Mrs. Bonini, “there was this big bear standing there.” She called to her husband, and he came out and saw the animal for himself. “I’ve been hunting for years,” he said, ’‘but this is the first time I ever saw one.” The three bears wandered about the streets until finally disappearing into the woods. Actress Daughter of MacRaes Seeks Divorce Actress Meredith MacRae, daughter of entertainers Gordon and Sheila MacRae, filed suit yesterday to divqrce Richard Berger, whom she married Feb. 27,1965. Miss MacRae, 22, is a star of the “Petticoat Junction” television series. Berger, 27, is a production executive with 20th Century-Fox Studios. Miss MacRae’s mother divorced her singer husband last April in Juarez, Mexico. Queen Asked to Finalize Cousin's Divorce The Earl of Harewood, cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, petitioned yesterday to have a divorce decree against him made final—perhaps by Monday. Harewood, 44, was divorced by his 39-year-old wife April 6 after 18 years of marriage. He has said he intends to marry former model Patricia Tuckwell, 38, named by his wife in divorce proceedings. Under British law, Harewood, who is 18th in line to the throne, must have the sovereign’s consent before he can remarry. sSs’ As soon as the queen grants permission, the couple expect to go abroad and marry in a civil ceremony. Naval Operations Chief Ends Korean Visit Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, newly designated U.S. chief of naval operations, left here today ending a three-day visit at the invitation of the South Korean navy. In Seoul, the admiral met with President Chung Hee Park, Defense Minister Kim Sung Eun, Vice Adm. Kim Yongwan, chief of naval operations, and other American and Korean officials. Moorer, new commander.in chief of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, will assume his new post Aug. 1. Russian Films 'Too Serious MOSCOW (AP) - A. blonde French actress, Nicole Courcel, after expressing hope that she would not bq jailed, let Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin know what’s wrong with Russian movies. I don’t think you will send me to jail if I say that there are good and bad films but that on tee whole I find your films too serious,” she told him at a diplomatic reception Friday at the French Embassy. “I wish you would make films that we could enjoy.” Kosygin had asked for her frank opinion on the subject and after hearing it he replied: “One must not artificially invent conditions of film production which do not correspond to reality. When you are socially adapted to our views, you will be able to understand films.” 'Dumpy1 Queen KEENEBUNKPORT, Maine UF) — Lindley Hunter is the new Miss Dumpy, who reigns National Dump Week in Kennebunkport. She won the title over eight other contestants. Her costume was discarded magazine covers. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Proposals will be received until 3 p Eastern Daylight Time July 21, 1957 the- Board of Education, Huron Val School District, Milford, Mich., for ruction of Sanitary system repla ___ for Brooks Elementary School a for furnishing and Installing casewe - Muir Jr. High school. Proposals a read aloud at the office of thr f Education, 7404 Highland Rd. file and may be examined at the follow-I ig locations attar July 1, 1957. 1. Office of Richard Prince, Architect, 3623 Douglas Ave., Kalamazoo. 2. Board of Education, Huron Valloy School District, 7404 Highland Road, Milford, Mich. 3. F. W. Dodge Cure. In Detroit, Flint 4. Builders and Tradars Exchange In Detroit. No proposals will be accompanied ■ of the p r falls B llqul-d file _ ■ sign the contract lecassary insurance within 10 da,* Iffl lot Ice of award. The bonding compar. ipon Issuing a bid bond thereby obligates htmseives to furnish a performance, „abor and Material Bond In the full mount of the contract should the sub- Each prelect will single contract. The Board of Education reserves the right to accept or re|ect eny or all bids and to waive Irregularities in proposals. No bids may be withdrawn within 30 days from the data of reception. Published by the authority of tlw Board of Education, Hul-on Valley School District, Milford, Mich. DR. TRUMAN OWENS, a performed under Garrison Will Reply on TV to NBC Show NEW YORK (AP) - New Orleans Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison will appear on the National Broadcasting Co. television network next Saturday to reply to NBC’s program which criticized his conduct of an investigation into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Garrison’s reply will run from 8 to 8:30 p.m. EDT. The program will be taped next week at the studios of WDSlPTV, the NBC affiliate in New Orleans, ★ ir ★ The NBC telecast, entitled ‘The JFK Conspiracy: The Case of Jim Garrison,” ran an hour June 19. In New Orleans Friday, Walter Sheridan, an investigator for NBC, was charged with public bribery of a prime witness in Garrison’s presidential assassination conspiracy case. FACES 4 COUNTS Garrison contends more than one person was involved in Kennedy’s death. The Warren Commission report said Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. Garrison charged Sheridan with bribing Perry Raymond Russo, 25, a Baton Rouge insurance man. Hie four counts against Sheridan charged he bribed Russo about June 11 by offering him: _ Lodging in California; , Payment of legal fees in extradition proceedings; Protection and immunity frorh the state of Louisiana and Garrison’s office; Guaranteed employment in California and job security. A spokesman in Garrison’s office said Sheridan’s whereabouts were unknown. An NBC spokesman in New York denied that Sheridan ever bribed or attempted to bribe any witness. Russo, is the main witness in Garrison’s case charging Clay L. Shaw of New Orleans con-red in 1963 to kill President Kennedy. Senator Wins Tribute for His Silence RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Jg|l fore adjournment of the North Carolina General Assembly’s 148-day session this week, Republican Sen. C.U. Parrish received an unusual tribute. ★ ★ ★ fellow legislator, Democratic Seri. Harry Buchanan said: “We would have been home long before now "if there were about 25 senators like Sen. Parrish. I want to congratulate him. He is the only one in the Senate who has not opened his mouth this session.” WAS RIGHT And Buchanan was right. Parrish never spoke from the Senate floor since the legislature convened, in February. Why? “I know I’m not so smart, and I don’t want everybody else to know. It was my first term,” Parrish told a reporter. * ★ * “Now I’m unemployed,” he said. He said he has not yet decided whether to run for re-election. Three State Men Killed in Vietnam WASHINGTON (UPI)-Three Michigan men wqre identified today by the Defense Department as having been killed in recent action in Vietnam. They were Marine Staff Sgt. Robert L. Morningstar, the husband of Mrs. Robert Morning-star of Lexington; Marine Pvt. Steven J. Powers, the son of Mrs. Edith M. Powers of Lansing; and Army Sgt. William D. Lewis, the son of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Lewis of Detroit. [ Junior Editors Quiz on- MYTHICAL PHOENIX $UDpeNLY, A NSW ■PHOENIX LEAPS UP PPOM THmf QUESTION: What is the story of the phoenix bird? ANSWER: The phoenix was not a real bird, but a legendary one invented by the ancient Egyptians. Greek authors, such as Merodotus, preserved the legend by writing it down. Every 500 years, according to Herodotus, a phoenix, which was a large eagle-like bird with red and gold, feathers, flew from Arabia into Egypt. It lived there for 500 years, then built a nest of fragrant herba. Fanning the nest with its wonderful wings, the phoenix set it afire and allowed itself to be burnt to death. But in the ashes was a small worm which survived. Suddenly, this turned into a glorious new phoenix, which then leaped into file air and flew off. Although impossible in fact, the legend was true to the idea that new things often arise from the ashes of the old. Death Notices Irk. Elzle Arnold; duur slstsr of gorge, Irene, Vernon, Jot Wayne, srry, Kenneth, Brenda end Ron-Id Arnold. Funtral service will » held Monday, July 10, at 2 p.m. t the D. E. Pursley Funeral ome with Rev. Alger Lewie at- CASSON, STANLEY E.i July 1, 1957; 21540 Wost 14 Milt Road, Bloomfield Townthlp; age 72; beloved husband of Ruth Cataon; dear fe- and Ivan J. Baumann; alsg survived by eight grandchildren end two great-grandchildren. Funeral 5224 Whispering Oak, Birmingham; ajje 77; dear mother of Mrs. Her- ter of Mrs. Phoebe Archlbold and John McDermald; also survived service will ^be held Monday,^July Harbor. Mrs. Johnson will Ilf Ir 7 p.m. today. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) KITSON. BERNARD A.; July 571957; Masonic Memorial Servlt-. _______ the auspices of F&AM No. 520. 1 Walled Lake, will be held Sunday at 0 p.m. at the Richardson-BIrd Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Fu- Mr. Kitson v WERNER, LAURIE J.; July 0, 1957; 3432 Lexington, Waterford Township; age 14; beloved daughter of Myles and Betty Werner; beloved granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hicks and Mrs. William Warner; dear sister of Michael W. Werner. Funeral service will be at the Christ Lutheran Church. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery, Arrangements by thu- Donel- Sunday. (Suggested visiting hours CARD OF THANKS — 1 KS THE FAMILY OF ACY MACK DIX, on wishes to extjrMS theji^apprej pathy shown them by their relatives and friends during their ra- THE FAMILY OF BERTHA HYATf and Millie Martlneau wish to express their sincere thanks to 1ha friends, relatives and neighbors fit! FAMILY OF JUblTH Williams Wish to express thi appreciation for the kindness a sympathy shown them bv th; relatives, friends, r ’-g-^helr ---------- YOUR PRESENCE |S EVER NEAR Announcements CABANA CLUB I LOOK HERE . $. thousands do, every day! that's why it's such a good idea to place a WANT AD Whether it's a buyer or an item you seek . . . finding is easy when you use and read Press Want Ads. , when you want to sell, buy, rent, trade/ hire, find. JUST CAU 332-8181 Either Way -They Do the Jrick - Quickly D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 ST ' . FOR RENT, RECSPTK uarwt ANV GIRL OR WOftAAN NEEDING " ‘-lendly adviser. phorx Ft Mitt are 5 a.m. Confidential. SBOX REPLIES 10 t.m. todaj there replies at The i Office la the fol-tg boxes: IS, 20, 21, 27, 28, 29, 13, 37, 41, 47, 48, 51, 56, 62, 72, 75, 81, 82, 16, 98, 99, 103, 110 Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME PRAYTON PLAINS________( DEBT AID, INC., til RlKER BLDG. ON AND AFTER ' roneTs5n% Funeral H "Designed f Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIM FUNERAL HOME "Thoughful Service" FE 8-9288 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Cemetery Lets >e Sale. FE 8-4558 or FE 5-02 A WHITE CHAPEL GAR-f Brotherhood, tec. 27# OR 6 GRAVE LOT IN OAKLAND HILLS Memorial Garden# $100 each. 335* UPLAND HILLS FARM Summer fun on the farm. Toi for the whole family. Seeing ml Ino of cow# children can pet Ian calves# piglets. Delightful hoi 81 drawn hay rides# pony rides. Delicious food from farm kitchen# admission and tour 25c. Rides and food extra. FAMILY VISIT SUNDAYS ONLY 11-0. Take Walton WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY BY Professional Color Free two ‘ Commerce Rd. Cor .. ----- of such a person) please call HHIII - 332-3809. GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM Lost and Found ! OUND: YELLOW MALE CAT# IN mm ---------3. Pontiac. FE 5-6538. Lost and Found ’ of S. Com- terrler dog. Vicinity of N. J«sle. Answers to the name of Peanuts. 17 yrs. old. Call 338-2629, LOST* GERMAN SHEPHERD FE-male, "Heidi." Teg Ohio, 644.4604. Help Wanted Malt 6 WELL DRESSED MEN TO &E-llver advertising material. SIS par evening. Car necessary, 625-2641). Subsidiary of Alcoa.________________ , 4 EVENINGS PER WEEK 4 HOURS PER EVENINGS $4 PER HOUR CaM 8*5^1325.' mU,> '* °r °V< $400 FEE PAID PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINEE 1-35 high school grad., no axp. net INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $450 TRAINEE DRAFTSMAN 11-25, high school or college Orel INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 60 S. Woodward, B'ham. 642-821 $7,200 FEE PAID College Grods-Engineers INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL . Call 335-5323, t Help Wanted Female IF YOU CAN HANDLE PEOPLE, will wdtk hard, and expect more money for the work you da cell tor Interview, 332-6186 ___ JANITbR FOR MEDiUA/LSIZED office building, gulred. Reply ' CENTER a" salesman' Lll commission idy work, salary. Contact M rador, 682-1661. MACHINIST, TOOL MAKERS,' Dl makers, part time or full tlm retiree's hired. ^Apply at 217 Ce Mechanical- Electrical Draftsman, required, Experienced draftsmen requlri transportation, 2 children, t school age. 682-41)2 after 6.______________ BAR MAID, DAYS, FULL TIME, good waogs, oxp. halptul, EM 3- Help Wanted Female Switchboard Operator BABY SITTER TO LIVE IN. OVER 2), 334-4355. Cell eves.________ ■ BOOKKEEPER FOR A NEW hlfcM. - opportunity to adyance. S500. I Helen Adams, 334-3471, Sntll- o Town It Country Rastau- 1 Rd. Near Adam: BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST bookkeeper through trIal CAPABLE LADY FOR WEEKLY WAITRESS FOI,. ■ sharp,'a53»-5000° WAITRESS WANTED. JOES CONE'Y ............5, Telegraph. 3384020. Space Detent MAN OVER Thoroughbred Lake. 363-7084 BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph S Huron in equal oppor-|cASHIER. SHARP GAL QUALIFIES re viont Mrs. Hal- here! S250. Call Viv Scott, 334-2471, 1304 for appolntmentj Spelling 6 Spelling. CASHIER AND DRUG CLERK TO WOftK FOR YEAR LOSTi 6 MONTH IDLD MALt beagle# vie. Dutton and Mi Mountain Rd. FE 0<0791. Help Wantsd Femalt 7 Help Wanted Female WINKELMAN'S OPENING SOON PONTIAC MALL II our Fashion Departmtnti INTERVIEWING -DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 4:30 P.M. SOUTH END PONTIAC MALL WINKELMAN'S ACCOUNTANT Expanding medium - sized CPA firm with diversified Industrial clientele. The^partners bivjte appll- any” member of* our staff, the op- ACCOUNTANT FOR COST AND AGENTS-C0LLECT0RS Ages 21-45. Permanent position. No experience necessary. We will train you. Potential earnings first year NEEDED AT ONCE ORDER DESK AND STEADY OF- Real Estate Salesman Due to hte expansion at the Me I need 3 more energetic salt ROUTE SALESMAN „ For ostabllshed route# above evei preferred?'"Xpply8* to Mrfk%h1t! Pontiac Laundry, 540 S. Tell ID E R NIGHTS, FULL iunday end Holidays off. | person to Town & Coun-, urpnt, 1727 S. Telegraph. SHOE DEPARTMENT MANAGER Cafeteria Hostess s. Apply^ln ^rson on PONTIAC MALL i accurate typist s urdays and two nights a m days off. Reply tc Pontiac Press. Pontiac, M TUPPERWARE HOME PARTigS has openings for 2 part time dealers. $45-1100 a week commission. Free training. No investment. For Interview phono 152-4300 or write Tupperware, 3329 Auburn Rd., Auburn Haights. TE AC HER WANTS BABY SITTER, nsp., IlgRt hou I 673-36431 Lk., Lk. Oak it and accurate. Restaurant. Kaego Harbor. before S, 612-7073 after 5. WAITRESS Exparlanct desirable, ... ... necessary. Age 25-30. Work nights Villa Chaff Restaurant. '’ Ifl M “ : ot Bogle Lake Rd. rls. Good v WANTED: WAITRESSES. CO * Coffee ____ illo"sou«h ~of~ M5f.' IE S TERN OAKLAND COUNTY School DisL*~‘ Shop, 1200 S. i beauty ^ consultan sonallty?* CaTl11”'!? 19 Hbera5|h°r/ringi 7.4110. TRAINED A! for Indlvldua ge II to 55 pleasing par WOMAN TO BABYSIT# MUST H ref., call after 6 p.m. 333- Help Wa.tted M. or F. Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A P REAL ESTATI CO. NEED: more salesmen for Utica qtflci :p. unnecessary, will train hoi allzetlon. Up to 1150 _por wfc start. CaU Mr. Husked, 731-1010. CAN YOU SELL? ■»- we hex* »n opening ._ f In making 1 SW* smtsawn REAL ESTATE SALES FULL TIME AMBITIOUS SALES PEOPLE NEEDED. Will tralr call for Interview — Hag-strom Realtor, MLS, 4000 W. Huron — OR 4-035S — i nlngs OR 316220 a— REAL ESTATE SALESMAN. PULL TIME, NEW OFFICE. CALL JOE KUYKND- Instructlons-Schcoli -^1 Caught WITHOUT A H.S. DIPLOMA To got a batter lob, to MORE MONEY) you netd For our FREE BOOKLET that tells you how you cal get a high school diploma by learning at HOME! National School ot Home Study, 229 Park Aye. So. N— York, N. Y. 10003 Depl. MW-4 APPROVED FOR VETS RIDING DAY CAMP. RIDING AND swimming Instructions. *<-^^seUe management. Klentn Academy. 1600 Hiller I CLEANING WOMAN, ADULTS, S. Blvd. Qpdyke area, Frl. Preferred. 338-6829. CLERK-TYPIST, FOR ARCHITECf-ural firm, full time, txc. working conds. profit sharing, give experience, rets, and rate desired In first letter. Reply to Box 289 Bloomfield Hills, Mich. 48013. COOK, SHORT ORDER, A8.W ROOT “ -r Drlve-ln. 4355 Dixie Hwy., benefits. Far further Information ,4,e Work Wanted Malt 8 A-l CARPENTER. ROUGH Riding 363-0009. | 11 APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING accepted at the Donut Centr- ** n. Saginaw Pontiac. For co BLOOD.DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED l RH Positive i I RH Nog. with positive | A-neg., B-neg., AB-nag. 0""*flMI COOKS, WAITRESSES AND DISH -—thers wanted. Apply in person# W. Huron St.» Eetmore Res- BROWN AND SHARPE OPERATOR p05iHons benefits, Berkley Screw Machine! ex*>8n<*1 ______,l | DENTAL HYGIENIST, PROGRESI Women Shoes slve office lust west of Ponflac available In our rapidly! established recall. 2 or 3 days i Wonted M. nr F. BHelp Wanted M. or F. VICKERS 15 Mile and Crooks Troy, Michigan Has immediate openings for qualified KEY PUNCH OPERATORS REM. RAND EXPERIENCE REQUIRED Second shift. High School graduates with recent Key Punch experience. and educational as- Call 576-3411 for Appointment 8:15 A.M.-5 P.M. An Equal Opportunity Employer BODY SHOP MEN *!ELDERLY LADY TO STAY V CARPENTERS EXPERIENCED ROUGHERS And finishers for houses and apat nsion—and hospital plan. Call irmacy, Birmingham. Ml clerk!-SHARP MAN FOR — •* firm. 16,000. Solid hi 1 Tom Wells, 334-2471, S NEW Air Conditioned CRITTENTON HOSPITAL ROCHESTER Now Ready to Offer Exceptional , Opportunities In All Categories. All Shifts LIFE ISURANCE - HOSPITALIZATION PAID VACATION - PENSION PLAN FREE PARKING - 7 PAID HOLIDAYS Applications are being accepted for: NURSING NURSES AIDES SUPERVISORS O.R. TECHNICIANS HEAD NURSES ORDERLIES STAFF NURSES CLERICAL LPN'S -MAINTENANCE............. BOILER OPERATORS GENERAL MAINTENANCE OFFICE WORK SECRETARIES CLERK-TYPISTS INFORMATION CLERKS ADMITTING CLERKS SWITCHBOARD OPERATORS X-RAY TECHNICIANS MEDICAL RECORD TECHNICIANS TECHNICIANS AND MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS MEDICAL SECRETARIES Apply at temporary personnel office in person at 1201 W. University Drive, or by phone (651-6000) after Monday, July 10. Every day through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. *SPSRSVRAI\D VICKERS 15 Mile and Crooks Troy, Michigan Has immediate openings for qualified Tab Machine Operators for second shift. 2-3 years experience data processing machine op Liberal employee benefits Including pension and educational sistonce program. Call 576-3411 for Appointment 8:15 A.M.-5 P.M. . An Equal Opportunity Employer COOK. 3-11 P.M. TUESDAY-SATUR-day. General experience necessary. Good salary and fringe benefits. Bloomfield Open Hunt. Ml 4-9411. n Pontiac. Permanent position •Ight men. See Mr. Presley, Mo luly 10. Symons Bros. & i i S. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac. Mi plication to Clift Scherer. 7404 Highland Rdl, Milford. 363-0940 or 887-4118. TOP NOTCH MECHANIC NEEDED. DRY CLEANER WORKING MANAGER . O'Brie ENGINEERS Experienced in the design of PLUMBING HEATING-VENTILATION AIR CONDITIONING ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS institutional buildings. Minim M ASSOCIATED end tool holders. URGENTLY NEEDED -utter grinder *- lathe operator <— ^O.D. grinder — Surface grinder over time# 15 min. from# Pont! MA 6-6223 or JO 6-0733. Blue .. Brinev I. Off V ESTIMATOR “ challenging, pern nity with well estat respected organlzatior > In Detroit, to our main t Woodward, Winkelman's STORES INC. Experienced Secretary Must have good shorthand, typing THE BENOIX CORP. Research Laboratories Div. Southfield. Mich. al Opportunity Employer COOKS FULL TIME COUNTER GIRLS PART TIME, EVENINGS AND SATURDAY HUDSON'S PONTIAC lor6°WYou would an|oy these bene- Purchase Discount BASEMENTS CLEANED. SMI cement work, light hauling, i weUSedoP*lf!rinFE 2-5169*m*sk for EXPERIENCED Wanted Real Estate 1 TO 50 IOME3, LOTS, ACREAGE CILS, FARMS, iUSlRflt l -ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 54165 Urgently need_fer Mitt MULTI Apartments, Unfurnished 31 1 ROOMS AND BATH, STOVE, RE-frlgeratar end heat, coupla. 29 N. Marshall._____________ 3 Room!, phlvATIt IaYh" aR6 ISTINO SERVICE ACTION a have many good buyers for homes In Pontiac. Call us tor quick "‘“I'sCHRaIm’rIaLTY 11 Joslyn FE S-9471 MEMBER OF MLS ALL CASH E>r homes any p I a c a In Oakland County# monay In 24 hours. YORK 3'ROOMS, BATH, UPPER, ADULTS, utilities not furnished, no chltdro or pota. 335-5275 attar 3. , ~ AMERICAN HBRITAOfc APTS. AT CRESCENT LAKE. 3 ROOMS 'fXin uWkttlM. a»$Me. AVON APARTMENTS BEAUTlFUL- iLL CASH It ... if behind In ^IMHPSP >r forciosure. Agent. 527-6400, CALL JOHNSON REALTY BEFORE YOU SELL OR LIST YOUR PROPERTY FE 4-2533 . HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AG---------- YORK AT 674-1698. JUST SOLD Immediate dosli te closing. I ’, 626-9575. NEED CASH? ovlng out of (fata? Need coil settle debts? Need cash to ... another home? Want cash for your home? Caah for your equity? Wa will buy your homo for cash today - Call Nlc‘-lukas at O'Nell Realty, 4-2222 or PE 5-4614 nowi No children • «:30 p "> Ipt. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS Ideally situated Bloomfleld-BIr- 1- and 2-rallable for from 1155 Hotpolnt, i ting ... utilities except electric. No r condttk>mn( looked In Bloomfield Orchard A located on South Blvd. (28 ft “J I between Opdyko a ' — way, ~— ............... 3M-4545.Schr CLARKSTON —nt, stove, mlngs. 625-1865. ELIZABETH LAKESHORE APART-MENTS I bedroom - adults, no pots, Boat well, sandy beach. Security deposit — lease — $165 mo. 5375 Cooley Lake Road._ MODERN UPPER _ 2-BEDROOM, ..PE 5-7643. MALL FARM OR WOODS WITH 37411 <____ Michigan oi II 476-5988. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 44358 OR EVENINGS OR 3-6229. Aportmgnts, Furnished 37 RELIABLE JOURNEYMAN MEAT- ROOMS Icome. $ b.#; Inquir ntiac. Call CHILD 3 Baldwin plus til utilities except electricity. in Orayfoa Plains area on W. Walton Blvd. Call OR 4-3603 attar 5:00 p.m. weekdays and Anytime Sat. NEW 2-BEDROOM. ON PbNtlAC Lake, colored appliances, air. carpet laundry, 8140, 1 baby. EM 3-7376. ROCHESTER NEW LARGE. 1 AN? 2' bedroom opts, and town house. Carpet, air conditioned, appliances. 651-0432. 643-7882.______________ WEST SIDE, 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 2 ROOMS. LOWER. PRIVATE. Work Wanted Female '' EXPERIENCED short o r d e SKILLS NEEDED >r engine lathes, vertica Employers Temporary S FASHION SALES and part time schedules to ^“store'ln* new ^fashion* wing >ntlac Mall. Please apply Mon. Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall TUTORING AFTER JULY 15 ON 2 “1 and Thurs. FE 5-6531. 5-7, - HOSPITAL DIETARY S E R GARDENER. FULL- WANTED 50 MEN MONDAY 6:30 A.M. SHARP REPORT TO 125 N. SAGINAW ST. REAR ENTRANCE WE PAY DAILY KELLY LABOR DIVISION Equal Opportunity Employer Registered e NURSES I. PU„ % JFFICE WORK, FULL J « C-12 POhtiac, Mich-i : IRONINGS DONE, I RONING5. WEBSTER - CROFOOT 2 ROOMS FOR FE 8-2737. 2 ROOMS 37 MECHANIC. ADULTS No children or 335,7742. _____________________ 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND SECRETARY AWAY? 3-ROOM APARTMENT, ' SESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, HAR- problems by providing a planned managed, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit as to 1 ROOMS AND BATH, PR entrance, 820 wk. 2 wks. e N. Telegraph, Apply Apt. 1 LARGE ROOMS AND ROOMS AND -BATH, PRIVATE CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT -OF DEBT . OOMS, NICE , king distance of I Pontiac Motor, ,,'pontlac. GENERAL OFFICE j Challenge for mature# versatile field helpful. Typing. Dependability a must! Woodside Medical Rehabilitation & Convalescent. 845 S. W^dward Pontiac. Apply bet. »| HOUSEWIVES Immediate openings for Dine-Out Club. ' Ideal hours f WELDERS, FITTERS AND PRESS BRAKE OPERATOR EXPERIENCED Excellent fringe benefits. ArtcS Inc. 3020 Indlanwood, Lake Orion. YOUNG COLLEGE I YOUNG MEN 18 TO 25 EXPERIENCED DELIVERY i Call 334-6744. c EXPERIENCED AUTO BUMPER Needed fn GM Dealership# irpmedi- FLINT, MICHIGAN DRY CLEANERS once In both systems Is essential. We are Witling to pay top dollar for the right man. Contact: L. C. Dortch. Ph: 742-2300, Flint, Mich- GAS STATION ATTENDANT, Experienced, mechanically inclined, local ref,, full or part time. Gulf, Telegraph and Maple. >tlonal company benefits si Interview call: HeipJAfanted Female Book- with Policy and court e> keeping end billing me experienced typist1 with hand: Write full qualifications to 'Bloomfield Hills, $350-$500 SECRETARIES-BOOKKEEPERS Good skills, no ago limit INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 80 W. Huron 334-4971 Assistant to Manager To hostess end supervise dir_____ room. Need a mature woman who has the ability to supervise. Good B)g Boy BEAUTY OPERATORS 180 guaranteed. Steady, goo >urs. Andre Beauty Solon, 11 I egtnow, FE 5-9257._______ KELLY SERVICES LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES. ‘ time. Chok. led care facility. Full and | Cajl 338-71 MEDICAL OFFICE RECEPTION-Hi experienced desired# rer‘ * ;ss Box C101. E-AGED WOMAN I Real Estate secretarial Mrs. McVeah In person please# between 9:30 - 12:30 or 1 A,n 4:30 except Saturday. Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 . Good pa\ • Interview NURSE LICENSED, PRACTICAL, office work, 4718 Rlker Bldg. FI Landscaping 1 ROOMS AND BATH, 525 WEEK 1 With 550 deposit. FE 2-1996. _ !di3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILDREN, ie beyond 40 hrs. Employment Office HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall Df $l#500 a month. t WOMAN FOR DETROIT. _______Wm ... ALL OF OAK- LAND COUNTY. CALL 334-2469. RETIRED MAN OR WOMAN SHOULD YOU Aake an employment change? NOW IS THE TIME! Michigan Bell 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit Phena:393-2315 STORE DETECTIVE. Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE Salespeople to replace 2 whq leaving the State's — take o current prospect file — hottest flee in the area. Many promotional opportunities. Call EM 3-6703 —Hackett Realty for Interview ““ NEED A GOOD SECOND INCOME? an you be a leader with othe women to help me develop a frar chlsed distributorship? START AS A DINEX DIRECTOR-MANAGER NOW This Is a part-time selling opporfu nlty with unlimited potential, i Party Plan — I only need 2 dl rectors and you may be one. Cafl now for appointment and fur ther details on this exciting nev ground-floor opportunity. MRS. BENFORO 334-8236 or 335-3725 18A YARD WORK, PLOWING, GRAD-OR 3-512150 ' BrnUf*- Garden Plowing 18-B PLOWING, ROOMS AND BATH UPPER. PRI- utilities, deposit required, prefer couple, new baby welcome. 1 mile ROOMS AND BATH. 8180 C Convalescent-Nursing HIGHLAND 9 21 Moving and Trucking 22 FULL, SAND, AND GRAVEL 7 Painting and Decorating 23 COLLEGE STUDENT, EXTERIOR, quality, refs., Inexpensive, Northwest Detroit, suburbs, 356-3966 or _354-8064.___ EXPERIENCED HOUSE PAINTER I Gidcumb, 673- Wnnted Children to Board 28 , anted Household Goods 29 CASH FOR GOOD CLEAN I furniture. Call Hell's At Phons, MY 3-1871. CASH FOR FURNITURE NWPWi pilsnees, 1 piece or housefu'. Peep FE 4-7181. COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD W Wanted Miscellaneous 30 CALL, THAT'S ALLI CASH FOR antiques, quality furniture and guhs. M. H. Bellow, Hally, 637-5171 IR TOOLS WANTED. ANY CON-ditlon. 682-4689. BRASS, COPPER, GENERATORS, -*--ters, batteries, radiators, FE EXECUTIVE wants to rent nice 2 or 3 bedroom home with ivy or 2 baths, within Vi hr. el Pontlsc. exc. ref. 334-2444, ext. SMALL HOUSE OR 1ST FLOOR. M Pension aged couple. OR6 Share Uulng Quarters MIDDLE-AGE WOIIAAN TO SHARK apartment. Call 338-2194. 3 ROOM COTTAGE $30 A $50 deposit# lake privlk 8-3832. 3 ROOMS, BATH# NEAR CITY FURNISHED ROOMS# 2 MEN >r couple. Pontiac. $52-4959. CLEAN ROOM FOR 1 PERSON# ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN working couple only# ho smokers# drinkers# children or pets# $50 de-Taosttr F€ 4-6040 11 e^fTh to ROOMS# UTILITIES FURNISHED# ROOMS AND BATH# SMALL Baldwin# call 338-4054. BACHELOR# AIR-CNDITIONED. 335- CLEAN 3 ROOMS AND B A t> Private., Working couple^preferret VATE, CLEAN# IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY — ONE 2-bedroom and two 1-bedroom heat# stova ifrigerators. /ail. Countr _jnditlonlng intry View Estates Sales 8-2571. LARGE NICE 3 AND BATH, NEAR airport, no children or pets. TBi| rile., OR 3-1943. HOMEFQR ELDERLY er widow. 673-9195. MODERN 4 ROOMS AND CO necling bath. Utilities, Adults ( a week and *30 deposit. 73 Bra Road# Stony Lake# Oxford# OA ROOMS, DRAYTON- Apartments, Unfurnished 38 conditioned, heated. Rec. - - '■ "a pets. From 8135. ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT everything furnished, priven m trance and bath suitable far 2 working mm. FE 4-3135..... Rent Houses, Furnished 39 couple in exchange for part lima Harold Hoffman. EM 3-6824 or FR lakIfrontl yTaT rounds family. Eftft 3-2193. Call Sunday, ftft 0 B I L E HOME. 2-BEDROOM/ Rent, sell. Take over payts. S68.44. -fit S125 me. 3S5-2777. RANCH ON CASS LAKE. 8125. Ill) Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 7 ROOM HOUSE, EAST SIDE, 838 weekly. Pap., rag., FE 8-8845. SMALL HOUSE, ELDERLY COO- WEST OF GENERAL HOSPITAL, 4 basement, s'l50. 673-63391 * ' Rent Lake Cottages 41 6934860. CABIN AT GRAND MARAIS ON Lake Superior, S35 a week. OR E FRONT, 2 BEDROOMS, MOD-V boat, sate beach. Off Round . Rd. 9443 Manden. 3634139 er lake frontTottagEs aT Ltw: Iston, FE 5-1325 after 5. LAKE FRONT COTTAGES. SLEEPS SYLVAN LAKE, FURNISHED i barbecue, boating * and* ,n,ba.C: $550 per season. 682-3477. UNION LAKE F-RONT COTTAGfe WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT# I ished 2 bedroom# good beac week or for season. Ask fo Taylor# owner. OR 4-0306# ev< DOWNSTAIRS ROOM WITH BAfR# LARGE SLEEPING ROOM# CAR-peted# with private bath and ra- tor0* or 2 refined gentlemen.*FE LARGE DOUBLE TWIN BED separate entrance bath# off Bal win, $15 single or $20 double p week. FE 5-3549 before 3 p.i ROOM FOR B SLEEPING ROOMS FOR RENT 188 Norton SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-cupancy, $40 per week. Meld service, TV, telephone. 789 S. Wood- Rooms With Board LOVELY LARGE FRONTROOM with TV, shower, both, near T«t-Huron. Good Southern cooking for Rent Office Space 47 ATTENTION DOCTORS l DENTIST Establish your offlca In this Modern Medical Building naar Pontiac for complete details. ( TROY AREA 2820 West Maple (E. of Ceolldga) I New, Complete with 8 VERY SHARP. NEW BUILDING. 900 sq. ft., store or office. Paved parking tat. Heat furnished. On heavily traveled road close te Telegraph. Professional people pre- ,erHEARTHSIDE REALTY ai47 Orchard Lk. Rd West of Telegraph 334-3593 334-3594 Rent Business Property 47-A CAR GARAGE SUITABLE FOR storage or warehouse. FE 4-7073 after 12 noon. FOR RENT OR' LEASE - *Mt square teat of fleer apace at 3345 Auburn Rd., V, mile east at Adams. *52-3388. _________ FOR LEASE—NEW COftftMERCIAL Iding at 7330 Hi lino. 2188 sq. «t- C 8ESSIONAI. UNi THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY/JULY 8, 1967 D—a t .„ wa*kS';i5>, mm, &sr *ve " ra Dv-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 MODELS Waterford OPEN SUN. 1 TO 7:00 P.M. FOX 'BAY Is?S3,§! WATPprnRn dpaity Sdr«ct5iL*°S WAICKrUixU VXCAL 1 1 OPEN 172 HURONDALE Mi DORRIS OPEN Sfssrl i— lt5surl, LOT. „ g&SS&S*. SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 373 DESMOND ' ^ g£ffi|3?5|S,,'Si,r£3 OPEN 3231 AVALON SSBSBSS1 on on' OPEN 5860 WALDON RD. Em^asisfi OPEN 3631 AUBURN RD. iMUSH OPEN 2824 ADLAKE GOLFVIEW ESTATES 3-bedroom lake front homo Ip' W™ L.M OPEN 6133 PARAMUS gSsjgM iiiai OPEN 220 E. IROQUOIS KAMPSEN ................... "IT'S TRADING TIME" KxSisS OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 :.R0«“3vEL M.ltlpie^Tlttinfl" LTv'iei' oSw > FE 5-8183 TWO FAMILY iSR ■pB^H pSE^DSnHE tts& ™ ELI ANNETT Union Lake Area ?,bX°To.rrhd:rnSfl $ S®« Herrington hills S^7cn.r GI - ZERO DOWN &...............leges = On Deer Lake for this 3- New8 carnitlnq. Privileges on J ■ K»£r~ oX M dally" FRITCH REALTY ^17.65 ACkES - IN CITY e^aT vVlle, i m i m&m ■ EmSp ; brick office bldg. ft'trffifc \nnett Inc. Realtors Sale Household Goods 65 °« «S’*S- * starYsewingbnowi i *ww.—j srswaiae ~ [si SOUTH SIDE KS$ fel^sV.L!Lo^ OPEN SUN. 2-5 Mmmsim,i..... REALTORS "28 &SJ IlIgMIfli nE-Bsi^SII r,ni is naan ™jyj!*?0'uj'm!5U'|'fY ' " “ EDGE OF TOWN ^ HIITER **** ^ C'n* |K» tefssessas illljftl jf'MONEY 5"3 KS|i ONE OF A KIND KENT E?kH,Sn;Ti i&MSp&i BATEMAN REALTOR—MLS FE ,8-7161 NttB 377 S. Telegraph Road UNION LAKE BR. ROCHESTER BR. EM 34171 01 1-8518 ll^Commerc# Rd. 130 S. Rochester RSI. Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor "mSu IRWIN OPEN SUN. 2-5 122 W. STRATHMORE MUM Nicho.ieA& Haricot FE 2-7273 - - ^ Huron §§_FEM ■ Val-U-Way I [LINCOLN JR. HIGH ■••flU SOUTH SIDE Multiple jg&iigg|Jg ;Zoned Property 11 ^ I ;;°h¥Over 16 Acres VaAFer in Waterford intact Owner 673-T717 !OUT ” OF .THE BOX 3 ROOMS : WbeT Vo AiTqOpment.j BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 5*dryerV'a'*reeThoTdeol. ;§ri'y $1.50 per week atn machinery plu, S room rpOd- WAT Baldwl?*. Walton FE J-6S4J A.'rj "rhODES.^RLTR., PE 8-2306] Eve«. Til fy_ Sat. 'til-* El Tormo 1 11 HERRINGTON HILLS I S, 'IS $288 BRAND$2E50 \.. _______ PEARSON'S. FURNITURE MSON,,« OsT- a | | Pi «Ml3 VON REALTY R. J. (Dick) REALTOR FE 4*: <5 Oakland^ Ave.^ ;g(||| trnsE^m, OPEN A REAL MONEY MAKER ®s®s PSp513ipS A-r COMPLETE HOUSEFUL $295 broockB Office Open Sundays '/A THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 196T D—5 Sal* Household Goads 65 DAMAGhD SHIPMENT — w »».. Lim» Joe's - fe i-ttn. Banish modern 98" sofa, fair qpndltlon, $25. 332-0429. tllNlNG ROOM SET, RBFRlGlR-ator, mile. poods, Ml 7-4857. desk chest, electric dr'yer, Maple double bad. 391-1774. DINING* ROOM SUITE, BEST OF- r. 132 Tl WmtRbOM SUITE, 3V' SYL-vanle color TV, rocker, easy chair, desk, bookcase, chrome dinette DRESSER, BOOKCASE, • ‘ complete. FB * •** ITS35; WASHE 'elrlgerator, 120 irrls. FE 5-2766.____ Easy SPINDRY WASHER, LIKE new. FE <-8468, 6 to 0 p.m.____ El ECTRIC STOVE $15, CHROME HI -•'*>' tables, Hi and _____IS.FE 5-2130. STOVE," AUTOMATIC Antique! v______________65-A BARN OF PRIMITIVE TABLES, rrtmodes, glassware and ore Items. Open week-to J p.m., ell day Sat. Junke Sis Highland, _______________l. WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamps or glass lamp shades. FE 4-0001 HiFi,TV 4 Budlw 66 3-WAY COMBINATION TV, i dinette $35, plcn EASY SPINORY WASHER. LIKE new. $55. 623-1035. __ El ECTRIC STOVE, WORKS GOOD, clean,, single bed, rollaway^ Red, crib, all j»od condltlcm. FE 1-2770. El ECTRIC STOVE, $25, GAS STOVE er5'$S?,el vSRnge'r Washer *$40, G. Harris. FE 5-2746.____________________ GARAGE ' SALE. HOUSEHOLD Sauar’e Lake east to Rutherford! S STOVE. DOUBLE OVEN, RO- , __u, i. .--tic .SX.XXM i Maytag washers Rochests 1523. . M| Guaranteed. reasonable. i ale model 2-dr. refrigerator. Apartment size gas r,n®*Jh”‘ Michigan”AppMance *Co. I2B2 Dixie Hwy 613 $011 hOTPOINT 2-DOOR REFRIGERA-$50 F E 4 3004._ *jyfetiaidEtid&w«j HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of: i-piece living room outfit with 2-plece living room suite, 2 step tables, 1 cocktail table, 2 table lamps and U) 0 *12' rug Included, toiece bedroom suite with double dresser, chest, full slie bed with Innarsprlng mattress and matching box spring and 2 vanity ‘‘chairs andlab“‘aiTtor $300. Your credit Is good et Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. , IT E. HURON FE 5-1501 IMPORTED PERSIANRUG. EaL. condition. $50. FE 5-6376.___ “ JULY SPECIALS ISED TV ..............|2$.g| n TV, FE 2-2257 Open 0-4 E. Walton, comer of Joslyn BARGAINS, LITTLE ___________l House. FE 2-4442 DECCA PORTABLE .STEREO REC-m player, $30, FE 2-4071. $270. 335-2470 after _4 MOTOROLA PORTABLE Tv, stand,^$45. FE 5-653$, 0-10 a.m. and SILVER TONE STEREO FM-AM RA-dlo Phonograph. 4 speaker consol, 2 yrs. old, very reas. FE 2-8437. For Saio Miscellaneous 67 1 FRANKLIN STOVE, $75. HEAR- Jng ald$l00._334-2753.__________ I A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING Awnings, storm windows. For A quality guaranteed Job. JOE VALLELY "The Old Reliable Pioneer" no money down, OL 1-4423. 2 TANKS OF TROPICAL FISH, motors, fillers, and stand. Sevaral house plants, queen of knight, cerasus, also bicycle exerciser, very old pewter. 332-7820. 4" CAST IRON SEWER PIPE, 99 r«n»« ner foot. No lead required. Thompson. 7005 M59 W. ailing tiWHHWHH LG TIJe^FE 4-9257, 1075 fxir ROSE BIEGE WOOL rug! ________FE 2-7172 ' OAK PEDESTAL TABLE WITH leaves. 4 matching chairs. FE *3454. __ 1255-POUND SET OF WEIGHTS, Michigan Fluorescent, 3*3 Orchard Lk„ FE 4-8462 SAILBOAT,^chaln saw and pe SEASON'S CLEARANCE S'A LI of all used and new desks, flies, typewriters, adding machines — drafting tables, etc. Forbes, """ _ Dixie, Drayton. OR 3-9767.___ SHAMPOO BOOTH, HYDRAULIC STEEL COUNTERS, SOME e counters. $20 ea. FE 2-7152. G. A, RUGS $3.9SvEACH paneling. TWO OUTDOOR TYPEWRITERS! ELECTRIC ANCHOR FENCE, 270’ DRIVEWAY 332-4123 after 5 p.m, ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 ANTIQUE FURNITURE, INCLUD- rlgidslre — freezer on bottom Crump Electric ^ ^ inoleum-r'ugs. MOST SIZES. $3.49 up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. pike St.. FE 4-7881. _______ KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION—$50 FULLY GUARANTEED Kirby Service & Supply Co. 117 DIXIE HWY.____ *74-2234 ronrn**furn!fureLamps, blankets, l AHOGANY B eFr O O AA SUIII* twin beds complete with mattress, box springs, frame and headboad, vanity, I lull sire headboard end frame. Call 673;5777._______ lOVtNG: MUST SELL ALL HOUSE-hold furnishings. Good condition. ~ NEW 1967 ZIG ZAG 59 PONTIAC CATALINA, $225 condition; 1967 Montgomery V WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT unt prices. Forbes pgaUaa Office Supplies, 4500 OR 3-*767, ^season. 5375 R COMPRESSORS, LUBRICATION AUTO REPAIR GARAGE, SELLING BE GENTLE, BE KIN expensive carpet, c Blue Lustre. Rent i pooer $1. Brownies *52 BACKYARD" SALE -^JJJLYIdX* odds and ends. Moving. Best offer takes. 1343 Buckingham, Blrmllg-ham, off Adams Rd. near 15 Mile. CAFETERIA TABLED FORMICA top, 6 stools that tola In. Used good condition. Price: St*.*5. BLVD. SUPPLY 500 S. Blvd. FE 3-7001______J CASE < "FORK LIFT truck 3.000 lb. 0050. . _ Blvd. Supply 333-7081^500 ji. Blvd. E LORRAINE CRANE ON RUBBER CHROME DINETTE SET, PFAFF AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG $5 PER MO. OR $49 CASH BAL. UNIVERSAL CO^FE 4-090 REFRIGERATOR, GAS STOVf gas space heater. Elec, drye Breakfast set. Reas. Electro-voic speakers.625-3009.____ REFRIGERATOR, FROST-FREI 8M,36,i-5309.J__________i REGULAR SEWING Goodyear Service Store SAVE MONEY SCRATCHED REFRIGERATORS Any Reasonable Price - LITTLE JOE'S ..—_____EE 2-6842 SINGER Z|G ZAG^ etc. repossessed.c?ay^ofl. Or Payments Of $6 Per Mo. UNIVERSAL0 C0.nt** FE 4-09Q5 STICKLEY CHERRY .TABLE’) Radio and Appliance. . ... iron___________334-5477 WYMAN'S :D BARGAIN STORE r 18 W. Pike Store Onl Occasional chair from $5.95 2-pe. living rm. suite.. .$l».*5 Hollywood bed, comp . »».»: Guart'd Refrig. . $49.95 Elec., Be*dlxBDryer*S.$59.95. I .jur Credit 1$ EASY TERMS WROUGHT IRON TABLE AND chairs, $45^44441440. i WESTINGHODSe ELECTRIC I er, reconditioned, $25 westinghouse matched^wash-3344116. ryef' YrS~ ° ____ 'houses, kiddie tables. Orchard Lake Ave.________ DRAFTING BOARDS' AND TABLES, 4' and 7'. Forbes, 4500 M _Draytorv OR 3-9747. • L E C T rTc ' L PGHT^ FIXTURES^FOR ENCYCLOPEDIA For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall BABY FURNITURE. _ yer. Color TV. Chll-rlothing. OR 14.95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 A FRAME 2-CAR GARAGE, $200, FE IK, POKER TABLE APPLIANCES, TOP OVEN RANGE, $110. 2 ____arlums, complete, 825. 674-2064. GOOD'REEL AND ROTARY MOW- , 1957 Pontiac, good r HOSPITAL BED, 2 Rl trie* stoveT'used*2 tr KELVINATOR 8500 BTU J tloner 110 volt,, used $150. 335-0958. LOVELY OLD VERY LARGE hardcarved1 solid oak sideboard, brass handles on drawers, 7 beveled nhlrros bn top, suitable for estaurant or bar, $200; brushed chrome electric service unit with magic eye-burher, n MILLINERY , STORfe FIXTURES, moving. Must sell all house-hold furnishings, good eondition-Deep freeze, power mower and Antiques MUSK1N SWIMMING F 100 YEAR OLD ORGAN. $135. 625- ■5432. after 4 P.m.__ ANTIQUE CHEST AND FULL Custom Antique Refinishing OFFICE FURNITURE, TYPEWRIT-ers, filing cabinets, etc. 052-3907. OIL FURANCES, FAIR CONDITION suitable for temporary heat. SIS. Blvd. Supply______- FE 3-7081 OUTDOOR FURNITUR^HSALES — The old fashioned picnic table E 5-9178, FE' PICNIC TABLES S SIZES, LAWN swings, outdoor ornaments, gifts, gags and lokes. Liberal Bills Out-post. 3245 Dixie Hwy. OR 34474. PLASTIC WATER PIPE, $4", 83.4* hr Sijo MBwHamwi 67 PLUMBING BARGAINS. P Standing tollal, $14.95; 30- heater, 049.95; Vjlece bath _ $59.95: laundry .ray, trim, $19.95; thowtr stalls with trim, $ 2bowl sink. $2.95; lav*., $2.95; $20 and up. Plpt cut and thrp SAVE PLUMBING CO* 141 win. PE 4-1514. Resale store. clothiHg. t gifts. m*n‘s work clothos. 294 Bald- RAILROAO TIES, NEW AND USED. TALBOTT LUMBER 14" Black and Deckor drill, « Appllanca rollers, 17.95 a pr. 4'xO'xSk" partl-'- 1-r* *" || 4'x$xH" pari 1025 Oakland THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 110 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to moot your need Clothing, Furniture, Appliance! WASHED WIPING RAGS ex in boxes to 300 lb. balos y 333-7001 500 S. Hand Toois-Machinery 68 i' VAN TRAILERS, CAN BE USED on tho rood or Idoel tor storego. Blvd. supply 333-7081 500 S. Blvd. sorted si loning machine t •—•$, $350. Cameras - Sarvlca 70 KEYSTONE 8MM MOVIE_CAMERA Musical Goods 71 14 SIZE 120 BASS PIANO AC-, yrj. o|d, $200. w “grand piano Call 391-3484. CLARINET, 1 YEAR OLD, $100. 474-2709. DOUBLE' STEEL GUITAR DUAL PICKUP CONRAD 0°R>3T79|W h C*“ *_________________ EVERETT BLONDE CONSOLE. With bench. S350. Eves. 4824)478. ENDER SUPER REVERB AMT. Excellent condition $300. Gibson amp with speaker. Only ^ 6 S?95. FE1 2.288**oreFE',2-5C796 after F EBRUARY'j 967 EPjRH 6 N i~~RJ- NELL'S Ponliec Mall. ( PIANO, EXC. CONDITION. $475. 225 —Nn Creek Rd. Auburn Heighls iler Park. ____•___.____ PLAYER PIANO AND ROLLS, SELL CHEAP eleclr^' guitar and case;"1 trie guitar with double pic tremfo bar, $30. Call Dava SUMMER BAND PROGRAMS UPRIGHT PIANOS TO SELL f Smith Moving 10 S. Jessie, F USED PIANOS. CHOOSE FROM Uprights, grands, spinets, and consoles. Uprights from $49. UPRIGHT PIANO, GOOD CONDI- ion EM 3-26)0 _ -__z* USED CONN1 SPINET ORGAN Sale priced at S795 Used Cable Console Piano A real buy at $445 SMILEY BROS. MUSIC I N. Saginaw____ FE 4-4721 UNUSUAL BARGAINS~^| IN PIANOS AND ORGANS From 1139.95 and up Lowrey, Hammond, Conn and GALLAGHER'S 10 So.. Telegraph 1 FE 4-0546 11 mil* eoptn of Orchard Lake Rd. on., and Frf„ 9:30 a.m. til 9 P.n Tuesi, Wed., Thurs., Saf.-5 p.m. WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 149 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 - -- 343-5500 Music Lessens 71-A ACCOROIAN, GUITAR LESSONS Sales-Service Pulaneck! OR 3-5S96 Hi PIANO LESSONS Pontiac Music ________ Office Equipment 332-4163 ^JF2 OFFICd' EQUIPMENT, ALSO AC-llbrary. 402-0214. PAPER FOR THERMOFAY MA-chlna, 8Vj x II par lOO'thaett. $1.69. ELECTROSTATIC PAPER ^OR S. C. M. SVS x 11 par ettedba ■*$. Writ# for freo i MS S. Vormont. Stare Equipment 73 FOR SALE: DRIVE-IN EQUIP- SPACE MAKlR MERCHANDISE, with frayt of ihelve*. gift masters with glass shelves, National Cash Register, wrapping paper culler, large table, sign maker 20' DOUGHBOY, - SBLL — TRADE ** ", Huron—FE 4-7451 ns/Wbao. first $30 t. GOLF CLUBS* SPALDINGS* M condition. OR 4« VALLEY POOL TABLE* 6 MONTH* Sand—Gravel—Dirt 1-A BLACK DIRT tat* tailed; alto topsoil, sand nd gravel, fill. Builders supplies, lud Ballard. 423-1410. SAND, GRAVEL, CRUSHED_ST6nE. . SAW Trucking. < 394-0042, FE 2-59 (T, TOP SOIL, sxnu, id fill dirt, dal. FE . BOB MARTIN AND SON FOR satisfaction. OR 4-0425. CROWN SANO, GRAVEL AND TOP-■g' EM 3-7722. DARK, RICH, FARM TOP SOIL. Pets—Hunting Dogs 79 SCHNAUZER, MINIATURE. MALE. FREE MANURE GOOO ' TOPSOIL AND JOHN COPEMAN SAND-GRAVEL-black dirt, and loading, Bulldozing. FE 5-1041._________________ RENTAL, DOZERS, END LOADERS, top ioll, peat, fill sand, >1. 391-3432, 391*1317. RUSS LEMON, SAND, GRAVEL — Fill, grading. FE 4 THE WEEK OF JUNE 15, Wl Al nouncad w* war* excavating a series of basements In the Dra ton, Union Lako, Airport, on Stone Products. AAA Pels—Hunting Dogs l,A dachshund pups* akc, ito down. JAHEIM'S KENNELS. FE 8-2538.__ I-A DACHSHUND, PUPS* AKC* ESTELHEIM KENNELS* 39M889. A POODLE CLIPPING* $3-up. $60 Sarasota. FE 8-8569. YEAR OLD MALE IRISH SET-tcr, no paptrt* 825. 624-4946. AKC MINIATURE POODLE PUP-pies. 673-5557. Y LOVABLE TOY MALE WEEK OLD KITTENS, HOUSE* AFGHAN HOUNDS; ______1 ALSO ___cages.FE_4-071_____ IREOALE PUPPIES.. PROTECT REGISTERED AKC ST. BERNARD, FEAAALE, AKC SIBERIAN HUSKIE PUPPIES. Reas. 334-3021.__________ KC COLLIE PUP, FEAAALE, Lassie type, pick of litter, Milford, AKC COCKER SPANIEL FEMALE Housebreker* AKC POODLE PUPPIES, WHITE, reasonable. 343-9551. BEAGLE PUPPIES, 6 WEEKS OLD, males. 240 W. Chicago.______ BEAUTIFUL PURE BRED, COL- BEAUTIFUL SIAMESE KITTENS, EM 3-7003. _____________ CHIHUAHUA PUPS, S WEEKS S — REASONABLE ELK HOUNDS, GERMAN SHEP-' rds, other puppies. Fish and pplles. dog trimming. Uncle _ jarWe Ret Shop 3304515—.-- GERMAN SHEPHERD PUK WITH GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, female, 0 wks. old, S25. 335-5402, GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, 5 tks old. SIS. 5075 Clarkston Rd., Cllntonvlll* Rd. 394-0095. GREAT DANES OF RO-SHAN, H SETTER, MALE, *-YEA*S, sd with kids, needs room to 3, 363-9503. ■_________________ MANCHESTER PUPPIES. MALE PEKINGESE, tered. 1 yr„ all sho children, 845. 335-0749. TERRIER 5 MIXED PUPPIES. I POODLE, WHITE, MALE, I champion. Ine, $175. 447-1174, POODLE AKC, MINI-TOY, Romeo 752-9134. part •rler, puppies, 85 ea. FE 5-6408. POODLE, STANDARD FEMALE, :hamplpn sired, exc. quality. FE POODLE PUPPIES, OAR ‘ ?dlng, AKC, ^ Aprkot^ REGISTERES 1 YEAR OLD MALE Schnauzer. $75. Harold Hoffman —• 3-4824 f- ”---- REGISTERED ENGLISH SETTER puppies. Ready to hunt In fall. Wormed and shots. OR 4-1(49. REGISTERED APRJCOt TOY POO- SAINT BERNARD REGISTERED year old femil*, $125. Call OA By Dick Turner “Boy! UIt ever DIRTY outside today!” Hay—Grain—Feed 84 BALED HAY. TAKE->OUT OF, OAKLAND CAMPER Open tor your Inspection KARIB0U KAMPER Tour-A-iiome — Sleeps 6 PICKUP TRUCK CAMPCRS FATHER’S DAY-Spedals, Oh Del Rey, Wildwood, Week-N-Der Derby <■ Tour-A-Heme cabove pickup campers. Over 20 differ ent models on display to choosi from. New B-Ft. cab high chan nel frame covert 1210. Usei 1965 Apache pickup camper will 6Vi' head room, tlMPt 3 wltl foam matfrtBsat $345. Open PICKUP CAMPERS MOTOR HOMES 17* - 19* - 2|* REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS 3252i_Dixie Hwy.____0R 3-1456 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS & CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS WITH CAMPER. 01895. i SCAMPER CAMPING TRAIL-sleeps (, frig., stove, sink, 150 or offer. 444-9195._______ 1965 WINDSOR, 12' x 40', BEAU- ----- 'urnished, utility cabinet, iher-dryer, 332-5177, Fford CAMPER SPEC. WITH 1967 WINDSOR. 12X60. MUST SELL. 967 — 28' TRAVEL TRAILER, tandem; air conditioner, must sell, 28745 Vanbom Rd., Inkster.____________ 967 VW CAMPER, SLEEPS 3, 3,000 mites. 674-3983. airstream lightweigf TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for See them and get a. demo tion at Warner TraTTer sales Save over $300 on new 1944 cri up models. Reg. $1495. F.O.B $1195 Including 2 gas ti Apache Mesa this is the hen model with canopy and add-a-ri $9)5. All the new 1947 models on display at all time plus c $20,000 worth of camping equipment. Open 7 days, dairy till 7 p!m!' Apache Factor . BILL . COLLIER. CENTURY YELLOWSTONE WHEEL CAMPER TRAILER ACCESSORIES OPEN 'TIL O, Mon to Frl. SAT $ to 5. CLOSED SUN; STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. McFeely Resort DON'T BE A (STAY AT HOME) FAMILY EVAN'S EQUIPMENT PICKUP COVERS, S24S UP. 10'4Y cabcoveri, $1,295 and up. L CAMPER MFO.CO. Jacobson Trailer Soles TRAVEL TRAILERS LAYTON? CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO 20 new end used NEW SeRvI'ce'dEPT. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy, ; ,, 625-4400 WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins-Crees Fans-i-Monitor Travel Trailers Holly Travel Coach 15220 Holly Rd. i Holly, ME — Open Dally and Sundays WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and Sleepers. New end — up. Also rentals. Jacks, telescoping, bumpers, I racks. vL«wr^ pamper II MOTOR SCOOTER Al CONDITION. 623-0006.______ Motorcycles • 95, 5-SPEED DUCAT! rambler* 30 h,p., 240 I . .11 price, $795, easy ter. „ ANDERSON SALES 4, SERVICE •- •■■,FE 3-7111 VIDSON, GOO I ike new. 187-4497, BEST OFFER. 17 FOOT THOMPSON 1965 HONDA 50 ELECTRIC START 1965 HONDA DREAM, 30j C5, windshield and helmet, exc. con-dition* $450. 821 Wolverine Dr.* Walled Lake. 624-2862. 1965 YAMAHfA 80CC ROAD BIKE, . EM 1966 CUSTOM j HONDA SCRAM- - m 1434._____ “ALL BEF i. anytime, Tl._____ HONDA 150 DREAAA. LESS 1-A 50x12* NEW 2 BEDROOMS $3995 MANY BEAUTIES TO CHOOSB FROM RICHARDSON-WINDSOR HOMETTE-LIBERTY-HAMPTON COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1457 fHU 6 HONDA. 150 CC, EXCELLENT ■ S, $325. 673-7448. 1966 HONDA 160CC, GOOD CON- 1966 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER. EXi " n. $525. 624-1754. TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE. >4 TRIUMPH TR-4 FE 8-4442 > HONDA SUPER 90, EXCEL- 5 CHAMPION HOUSE TRAILER. ) GREAT LAKES 1 shea , or unfurnished sting. Exc. conditio BRIDGESTONE SPORT 40, II 391-0414 _______ DETR0ITER-KR0PF Vacation Homes . wide with large expanding b< ooms and large expanding livl ivery In Michigan. Also 8 ft.* Yes,we deliver and set up. BOB HUTCHINSON, INC- H’ 3-1202 DUCATI EXPERT HONDA REPAIRS 1424 Crescent Lk. Rd. —OR 3-4247 HONDA S90 SCRAMBLER, BARS and tires exc. cond. low mileage. 624-2702. HONDA Hj|| Woodland Mobil Ct. 5 W. Grand River Brig LEAVING STATE. MUST SELL AT », 1944 Champion, 52’xl2', jja s. offer for my equity refu LOOK AT THE REST THEN BUY ONE OF THE BEST WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES American, Traditional or Modem Space available In 4 Star Park, nc extra erhaa*. Also see the famout light weight Winnebago Treller. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS I mile south of Lake Qr|on on M2; MY 2-0721 ' , * 1 MCDONALD MOBILE'HOMES See our complete line of 12* wldes 2 or^3( bedrooms ^ as tow as $4495 deity. 'Models on display at the new Cranberry Lake Mobile Homes tas*T'*9620°HTnohlandURd?V(lI^*Jwo miles west of Williams Lake Rd.) 343-7511. Hours: Weekdays 12 to! 8 p.m., Sunday 12 to 5 p.m.___ MOBILE HOME 1-BEDROOM. $2,850 or iw.ir rent furnished to c—■-335-2928. SOMETHING NEW OLD ENGLISH DECOR Also sea our complete line of 12* wide in 5 decors »»'-> *••• 1 60x12** brand Demos at a giant B99IR89 --- .. not be knowingly undersold. Free V7 HONDA 305* BLUE PAINT* ill FE 2-3570. BENELLI* 250 CC DEM6.* 5 CC* GOOD COND. 1967 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 1 ill day — l SCRAM- condition, $550. 673-9859 i P. FE 2- SCRAMBLER* SPORT* VERY HONDA IN LAPEER II town deal- MINI CYCLES; GO-CARTS H0DAKA ACE 90 HELMETS AND ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE .67 Dixie Hwy.* Drayton Plains 103 E. •' I NORTON P-11 SCRAMBLER* 750CC* ------ - y. 651-1511. SALE - SALE! SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-15 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW Suzuki Cycles & Accessories Cl|^Vounym^ f fster" 8MG SALK AND SERVICE 4667 Dixie Hwy.,_Drayton Plains USED 1966 150 CC Suzuki . -----> 1966 250 CC Suzuki . FREE HELMET V s $139.95. Complete cycla accessories. Take: w. Highland. Right on fldge Rd. to Demoda Rd. follow signs to Dawson T TfPSICO LAKE. Phone . YAMAHAS ALL MODELS AVAILABI^ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY t K. & W. CYCLE SALES & SERVICE Bicycles e parking. HOLLYPA* PARKWOOD ^MIDLAND TRAILERWeT 2257 Olxle. Hwy. ! 338-07) l GIRL'S' BICYCLE, $15. M FE 5-6005 Boats — Accessories 97 m SCOTT MOTOR, $85 TROJAN! V RUN-A-BOUT, MARK 55 m£&» cury, trailer* 8600 or best otterV 682-5642. CHRIS CRAFT, 215 HORS&-power, interceptor engine, 674-3537. 17' CHRIS CRAFT uTTliTV, PULL' cover, convertible top end trailer1: 105 H.P. Nice $950. Call 692-£791 for demo ride. 7>V CHRIS CRAFT" 140 H#. GREY marine (fireball) Incloding frailer $375. jyit 4)5292. W CENTURY, 120 HORSEFDW-er, reconditioned, 81000. 624-3126. 35 horseTohnson. BOAT, TRAIL-‘■*'75. Opeyke Hardware. FB 105 H.P. C-C. CAVALIER tion. In water. Well tl rine, Hersons Island. OL 1-0575 horse McCullough $2,395. 363-9373. BOAT AND MOTOR. $100. ___________ 625-3157, DAWSONSSPfeCIALS — USED I960 "J'-Steury Deep V flbergles run- flberglae runabout, ipeede, bunk seats, controls, battery & box, 1944 40 h.p. Evlnruda alac. motor S795. Glasspar 4. Steury flbarglaa boats — Mirra Craft alum boats — ski barge — Grumman canoes . Right on Hickory Rid Demodo Rd. Loft and s to DAWSON SALES A Harrington Has Everything!' Just In! • State Approved Swim Markers Dealer Distributor for LARSON Boats Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boats Aluminum and Wood Docks Do it yourself—easy to install. We will show you how.1 HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS (Your Evlnruda Dealer) S. Telegraph FE 2-0033 ~ MERCUV BIG SALE AT TONY'S MARINE ON ALL BOATS* CANOES* PON- JOHNSON BOATS AND MOTORS CHRYSLER-BOATS. AND MaTDRl DUO FIBERGLASS BOATS SILVERLINE-I-Of Pontoons-Cgnoes-Prami Aluminum fishing Complete line of fishing tackle Scuba diving equipment Little League baseball supplies Hunting supplies end general sports Many fine used complete*outftts of PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES contrail, $700, Exc. 312-6542. MONICATTi 4 foot aluminum boat. V-bottom vltts 4 horse power Chrysler out-oard. $395. Complete. Limited sup, ’"boats AND MOTORS 1 5250 Auburn Road, I MONICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) NEED-TRADE-INS Lone snr, , and latl 'gRUMMAN CANOES DEALER . iberglass canoes .. ....... $140 3.9 H.P. Mercury Outboard $149.95. Tradel Cliff Dreyor's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. ' ME 44771 Open Dally and Sunday* , D—6 Beats — Accessories NEW AND USED ROW BOATS — Stop lit oitd we'll eltow them to you. 2220 Pompey, 5 blocks e ot olrport, NEW MODERN BOAT WELLS F i, $4500 or highest offer. SAILBOAT. 14' JET AND TRAILER, molded Mahogany plywood, exc. condition, asking $525. 051-8093. I PORT-YAK, COMPLETE, 3*^ HiP. Evlnrude. Exc. Cond. $150. 082 ■58ff. SPECIAL 10' Carver boat with top-ski bar-cover and gages. 75 h.p. Johnson^ M°dut trailer' vflth wheel'' end^tlrV* CRUISE-OUT, INC- 03 E. Walton Open 9-8 FE 8-4402 Nevr and Used Tracks 103 Ejrtfc. R KIN SAUTO* 2-6230.______ 1958 DODGE 5 YARD DUMP, GOOD cond. $650. Call 682-6500* 760 Loc7 haven Rd._____ 1959 CHEVY IS TON PICKUP. V-l auto.. OA 8-2159.___ 1961 CHEVY CORVAN. $225. 682 0051 after 2:30.. 1961 GMC TlCKUP. %* $350. 8 W. New York. . . FORD ECONO VAN. A-l "PICKUP. WfDE 'BOX USED CRUISERS INBOARD It OUTBOARD 16' Thompson. Sleeps 2. Top. 40 h, elec. Pamco trailer ...... $9 19' Troian. Sleeps 2. Toilet. Fi Complete* ’ .7.7.. 77. .7 . . $1695 12* Troian Express Cruiser. Full Canvas. V-8 engine. Newly painted. Nice .......... ........... M295 Call FE 162 FORD , ____ halt ton. EM 3-0081. _™ 163 C’HtfVY PICKUP . . . Opdyke Hardware. FE 8-6686. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 ELCAMENO pickup V8, aulo-matlc, power steering, radio, whi-walls. white with a red interio $1595 On US 10 at M15. Clerk 1966 Chevy V2 ton Fleetside / only “ti.000 miles, sjut'end Save HOMER HIGHT Foreign Cars VW CENTER 85 To ChoosB From -All Models— —All Colors— —All Roconditioned— Autobahn Authorized'VWC6ealer W mile North of Miracle Mila >65 5. Telegraph_FE 0-452 |Nbw and Used Cars 10< BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You— WrF6*$'j’ol " McAulItte THE New and Used Cars ONT1AC PltKSS. SATURDAY. JULY 8. 1967 MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeming AUTHORIZED DEALER tnris Creft Slicker6ft , °W LAKE AND SEA MARINA * !! t. Blvd. at Woodward FE 4-9507 11 Airplanes PRIVATE GROUND classes starting July 11. 7 Pontiac Airport. We feel offer you the best trail facilities. Sign up now. C FORD TRUCK. 1 DON'S USFD CARS Small Ad-3ig Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM I MONZA AUTOMATIC 13,5 COOPER'S CHEVY IMPaLa SUPER 963 CORVETTE STINGRAY. LOW mileefle. Reasonable^ _674^610. 963 CORVAiR 2-DOOR. 4-SPEED $695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1963 CORVAIR 4-SPEED. | SION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL- TIRES, FULL PRICE $895. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly, payments of $6.92. CALL CREDIT MRG. Mr. Parks at HAI---------- TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. GLENN'S 2 Corwairs. 1 red and t while. 1 L/C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. “All right, let’s try it again and no nonsense this time ... Let me see your tongue!” ’New and Used Cars AL HANOUTE 106{New and Used Cars LUCKY AUTO 0 BUICK, POWER BRAKES A LeSABRE 2-DOOR |w Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 DOWNEY Oldsmobile Used. Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5967 , 338-0331 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa d, FOR. THAT EXTRA Sharp Car '"Check the ret hen get the bast" at Averill AUTO SALES CE 2-9878 2020 Dixie FE 4-69 Gale ; McAnnally's Itavt Immedii _ars! Now ship. California, Texas Top dollar paldl . get the best deal 1304 BALDWIN HELP! HELPI HELP! Drive to 6695 Dixie Hwy. or 625-3112. 1967"GMC 1962 BUICK CONVERTIB AUTO SALES, f i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, back-! up lights, seat belts, 2-, speed wipers, washers,U^Tck SPECIAL, 47doorTvT, padded dash and visor, auto, sxso. 363-?828.____ traffic hazard lights, rectional signals, insidei -----—=. I • . _ |1963 LeSABRE, POWER, EXCEL- rear-view mirror. lent condition. FE 2-7l42. 430 Boyd. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC red Interior. Only $1195. VANDE PUTTE B U I C K-OPEL 196-21 -Orchard Leke. F E 2-9165._, 1964 CORVAIR i lo. heeler, exceltenyondltlon. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE l Ml_£lemens F E 3 79 1964 CHEVROLET ! HAROLD 1 TURNER FORD, INC. 464 5. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-751 On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Maw ind Ueed Care 106 965 FORD GALAXIE 500 LTD — This Is the' finest Ford Motor builds, with V-0, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, factory alr-condltlonlng. Beautiful metallic champagne fin- New and Used Cara_______________106 1966 PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY, $200 down, taka over 865 pay-mantt. 625-4695._________________ eauty Is lust waiting to go. Only 1888 Full Price, 888 down, and $9.86 per month. 5-year or 50.000- "II only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John Mc,Auliffe Ford Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4 1965 MUSTANG HARDTOP. HIOHj*] ILER SALES. UNION LAKE. !M 3-4155. ___ I MUSTANG. HARDTOP, *1,500 THE BEST IN USED CARS HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1959,LINCOLN, AIR-CONDITIONED, ill power, runs good, $200. 391-434. I LINCOLN CONTINENTAL s¥- SHARP 1951 MERC U RY7~$350. FE 8-060$.___ 1959 MERCURY SEDAN, VERY in, 8295. EM 3-0081._ MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, omatlc, power steering and $1795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward_____MM 1967 PLYMOUTH power, 303 engine, cherti lack top matching nn BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth --'ward mi ■ RUPT? BAD CR ART Call FE 8-40 . White. King. WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS — NO GIVE AWAYS JUST *399 '62 Chevy 2-door 9 '62 Chevy Sta. Wagon LF-DOZEN CARS AT *99 OPDYKE MOTORS M30^Ponllac Rd. at Opdyke THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING NSMSfiIS BU1CK-OPEL, 1 . VANDEPUTTE “ 1962 COMET S-2 i be purchased i $1495 BILL FOX CHEVROLET t____________ $125. 646-8790. I960 PONTIAC HARDTOP, NICE, AUTOMATIC! $295. 333-7542, Riggins, dealer. p0NT|AC CATALINA CON- New and Had Cara 106 1964 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE Exc. condition. 33M461._____^ 1964 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE DOU-Tie power, sharp, $1350. Call 673-6347, attar 3:30. ___ 1964 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. All white. Exc. condition. 1 owner. Best offer. FE 5-3134 attar 4 p.m. rte/PONTIAC TEMPEST CUSTOM, Station waoon. B cyl. Stick shift Alr-condltlonlng. 81200. 628-3828. 1965 BONNEVILLE. GOOD CONDI-tlon. Reasonable. 682-5449. Eyes. 1965-pONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR hardtop, fully equipped, low ml., finance company executives car. take over present payments, need not be perfect credit, finance arrangement can be made. EM 3- GLENN'S VERTIBLE, I. er 81695 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET , Blrmingham. MI 4-2735. IMS CTO 2-(50OR HARDTOP, A-speed, power steering end brakes, *1795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham^ Ml14-2735 1965 PONTIAC ~ CATALINA CON-vertible. Clean, FE 2-281* or 673- 7889, ...........H| 19*5 PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN LUCKY AUTO LeMANS HARDTOP, STAR AUTO WE FINANCE LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS - I _____ m Rochestar |'62 Ford Convertible $497 c»™> Convertible $597 sassur Msara® u **", 4-2735. '62 Pontiac Hardtop . $697j mTs^M^sVa^E^ES:1'63 Chevy V-8 Stick . .$697 rolet. Birmingham, mi 4-2735. j 63 Chevy Convertible $497 ,is.rr3jvir 63 Ponti°c Wa9°n $897 edition. $1995. oL 1-5434._|'61 Mercury Sedan —$297 '62 Rambler Sedan —$297 I '64 Corvair . . $597 i EASY CREDIT I ARRANGEMENTS 962 OAKLAND AVE. 2. CALL CRED- TURNER FORD, Ml 1 M2 COMET WAGON, SELL, CONVERTIB GT, 1961 TEMPEST STATION WAGON. Needs same repair work. 391-2272. TEMPEST, 1962, 4-CYLINDER, 2-1 dll Ion, $450. MA 6-7051. '_1 1962 Grand Prix i PONTIAC CAT ALIN CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE, I ‘ GLENN'S 1966 IMPALA COUPE. POWER °L C. Williams, Salesman 1 VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL, 196-210 Orchard Lake. FE 2-9165._ 964 MERCURY HARDTOP* AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION,( RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES* FULL PRICE $1195. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $7.92 CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 1965 PONTIAC TEMPEST. 6-CYL, Automatic. 8975. 628-382$ 11965~G fO HARDTOP. 4 SPEED. Capitol Auto v<[ 312 ffi Montcalm FE 8 4071 jj* _ . (Juast East of Oakland!_ * 1962* PONTIAC STATION WAGON. Can" be purchased with no money t LUCKY AUTO. GLENN'S 1966 Catalina 4 door Sedan. Power Y“C. Williams, Salesmon 952 W. Huron St. c. condition. 3*3-4315. Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 or________EM 3-415* , , HELP l We need 300 sharp Cadillacs, Pon-tiacs. Olds and Bulcks for out-of-•fata market. Top dollar MANSFIELD * AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave FE 5-5900_______ STOP HERE LAST M&M TOP $ PAID for all sharp P0NTIACS, OLDSMOBILES, B U I C K S AND CADILLACS. We are prepared to make you a better offer!! Ask f.pr Bob Burns. WILSON . CRISSMAN “TOP DOLLAR PAID'-' GLENN'S Ye would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CA ; and generate 4 3-5849. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, FREE Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 1958 BUICK DAM side, parts for si OA 8-2918. 1M1 FALCON PARTS, AND 1958 Ford wagon parts. 391-1606. CHEVY AUTOMATIC TRAMSMIS- Auto Insurance Marine 104 Mini-Cost Foreign Cars 1964 BUICK SDECIA voii chIvrolet/bi Ml 4-2735.__ 1965 BUICK WILDCAT V $1795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth IBC.Willliams, Salesman- |FE 4 month. This ft J 1962 2-DOOR CATALINA. $600. hi II Double power. Call 673J878. I r 1962 TEMPEST^ t WAGON. EXTRA J CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, :HEVY IMPALA 4 IMPALA 4 uto., double p 4‘CORVAIR -DOOR SpDAN. IMPALA 4-DOOR . HASKINS AUTO. < rice $495. MARVEL MOTORS.; j FORD-AUTOMATIC V-8~ONE CHEVELLE d, 8. jwwer^steer 3et "A BETTER DEAL'' at: John McAuliffe Ford FORD FAIRLANE., CLEAN.,630 Oakland Ave._____ FE 5-4 mi.. 39LOW, after 5_ 1966 MERCURY MONTEREY HAI FALCON STATION WAGON.’ lop with automatic, radio, heel >. Can be purchased with no power steering, brakes, solid wt GLENN'S i BUICK LeSABRE 1 6 OPEL CADET 2 0 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE 395. Save Auto.. FE 5-3278. 1 CADILLAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP tONVERT YOUR ENGINE TO l performance. Call us for Inform *11 makes. Temi*. 537-1217. PARTS /FOR 1059 CHEW WAG-. on. Good V-8 motor and transmission, OR 3-1791. WANTCCU ENGINE, FORD *CYL-Inder used, mi'st be in running condition. MA 6-92T*. S 1957 VW CONVERTIBLE, EXCEL-lent condition,' 34,000 miles. $300. 682-5389 after 5 p.m. AUTO ^SAL^S, PM-596nand ELIZAG BETH . LAKE 'ROAD. FE 8-4088. | 1959 AUSTIN HEALY, SHARP NO rust $395. Call 682-0173. 1963 CADILLAC COUPE, BEAUTf-j 1959 VW MICROBUS, $300. CAN be seen at^ Wane's Jiuper Serv- 1960 MGA CdNVER'TFBLE: NEW 0^ 3-8447.lfeS* EXC* C0nd,t,0n* $750, 1961 RENAULT, 4-DOOR, 13,000 actual miles, very Httle rust. $150. 852-2736. 1961 VW REAL GOOD CONDITION. OR 3-0679. : 1961 VW, EXCELLENT RUNNING whitewalls, radio. $375. FE '5-6762'. !tfLEMrsi 1966 Coupe d^vljlle- *FuM ^ower L. C. Williams* Salesman | 952 W. Huron St. FE 4;737l M ch FE 4-1797 1964 ZADILLAC SEDAN PeVILLE, 4-DOOR hardtop, full power, -air-condition $2095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. M 1 1961 VW NEEDS ENGINE WORK, asking $295, 338-4305. GLENN'S with, air-condllloning. If C. Williams* Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many More to Choose From 1962 VW WITH RADIO, HEATER, *495. VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake. FE 2-9165. 1963 VW, GREEN, ENGINE OVER-hauled, 51,000 mi. $425. FE 5-1021. 1964 VOLKSWAGEN 4-SPEED, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-WALL TIRES* FULL PRICE $895. ABSOLUTELY NOflY0fD°798' CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAftOLD TURNER- FORD, Ml 4-7500. LATE model CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME MOTOR SALES 1980 Wide Track Dr F» 3-7C21 1965 VW. SEDAN, 1 OWNER* EXC. condition, must sell. 338-0761, 1965 GOLD J AGUA R XKE, - ehrome -spokes. -convartihle^JjBst offer. MY 3-8277 or FE 5-8316. 1966 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE, control ind antenna, am-fm radio* rear speaker, soft way 9lass f*nted ?°pr!ice $4,^2Va veWover^M, ^00 ^ri 1966 SUNBEAM IMP. EXCELLENT condition. $900. 625-1663. 1966 VW 2 DOOR BUG, RADIO, heater, really a fantastic buy at Only $1188. M price. $88 down, and $36.87 per month. Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 1966 VOLKSWAGEN, LOW MILEAGE, $1345 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET* Birmingham. Ml A 2735. Now Is The Time To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4647 1953 CHEVY 2-DOOR, GOOD CONDI-tion. $225: Must sell. 338-3220. 1966 TRIUMPH — TR4A WITH IRS. Call weekdays* 634-9885. KING OF THE ROAD 1 Countries Can t^eWrong $1798 GRIMALDI 900 Oakland*1 ^ FE 5-9421 FUN SEEKERS ■ ^ Join the IN-Crowd '67 SPITFIRE Mark II $2099.00 GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 1954 CHEVY STICK, GOOD TRANS-portation. $65. OR 3-8959. 1956 CHEVY VEL AIR* $50. RUN ning. 673-2785 after 6. CHEVROLET 1957 BEL AIR V8. Very good condition. $295 or best offer. 651-0798. 1959 CHEVY STATION WAGON, 6, radio, auto.* $135 — 334-3229. 1959 4-DOOR BISCAYNE CHEVY. Runs good. 46 E. Sheffield. 338- 1959 CHEVY WAGON. PEPEND-able. $75. 332-0014. 1*60 CHEVY* RUNS GOPD, DAM-aged rear fender* $135, 887-4846' FAMILY FUN SEEKERS v '67 FIAT HOOD $1498°00 GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. 900 Oakland FE ,, 5-9421 1961 Chevy Impala Convertible, automatic, radio, heater. white with red interior. No money, down, full price 8697. Assume weekly. We handle and arrange all financing. Call Mr. Dan at FE 8-4071. Capitol Aut6 312 W. Montcalm, FE 8-4071 (Just East of Oakland) FOR THE BIG MAN LUXURY FIRST '67 MGB-GT $2988 ' GRIMALDI 900 Oakland**1 C‘r FE 5-9421 • JAGUAR MARK II 3.1 LITRE-abarth exhaust. Borg-Warner ..auto. 1961 CHEVY. 4-DOOR. BELAIRE. Radio, heater. $300. 626-0271, 1962 CORVETTE 340, 4-SPEED, 2 tops, $1395. OR 3-0018. 1962 CHEVROLET NOVA CONVERT-ible $495 with nothing down and weekly payments' of S3.12. KING 1 AUTO SALES, M-59 and Elizabeth LAKE RO. FE 8-4088. 1962 CORVETTE, 327, GOOD SHAPE best offer* over $1*250. 628-1947 after 7 R.m. Mlchelln-X-Blaupunkt radio. 1/eiy tine condition. "Fine car Butts" are jprited to took it over, si.600. 2995 Lapeer Rd. 2nd house norfh of 1-75. After 6 p.m. Mt Day Sunday. > 1962 .CHEVY BEL AIR. BLACK • vinyl roof. Beautiful white exterior. f Perfect body, low mileage. Priced to sell. KELLEYS SEAT COVER 1 KING. 756 Oakland. FE 2-5335. 1965 CHEVROLET radio and heater and whitewal harold’ turner: Need A Car? GLENN'S CORVETTE .FASTBACK* - LUCKY AUTO I FORD* 1963, ECONOVAN — NO rust. Good tires. $650. 8005 W. Grand River, Brighton._ EXTRA SHARP 1963 FALCON WAG- Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: I John McAuliffe Ford j830 Oakland Ave. FE 5-41 1967 COUGAR, TAKE OVER PA FORD CONVERTIBLE, - j 1964 FALCON STATION WAGON. BEEN BANKRUPT? i ELIZABETH 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA WAG-on. engineer's car, air-condltion-Ing^ many extras. 82875. 651-3669. 1967 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE 4, "CY" Owens Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 1965 CHEVY ' $1295] Save $900 BILL FOX MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New i CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml ^4-2735 _ 1962 IMPERIAL. POWER STEER-ing and brakes. Loaded. $595. 308 Livingston, Highland. 1963 CHRYSLER ffnacu'afo ^ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDTOPS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM___Ml 4-75001 DRAFTED MUST SELL, 1964 FORD ! white, $375. OL 1-8340. 1 j i963~ L e M A N S CONVERTIBLE,! black, 326. auto., FE 2-2616._ "11963 PONTIAC CATALINA C O N-| GO!! i HAUPT PONTIAC $6 tEMPESt 4-DOOR SEDAf Me. Power steering. ^ Push butte ranty. Exceptionally cfean. *1,79 ,779 Whitlow. Commerce. 363-024 1966 PONTIAC DEMO'S 5 DELTA 88 2-DOOR HARDTOP,J PASSENGER WAGON I - SHELTON PRIVATE OWNER Pampered 1966 Pontiac Bonneville Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH .............. Clarkston y’MA_5-2635 1961. DODGEy 4 DOOR, GOOD a.... AUIUMAIIC I KAiVorVtIdblUfN, ^1/45 RADIO AND HEATER* WHITE-WALL TIRES* FULL PRICE $895. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of $7.98. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD* $2095 1965 OLDS 98 er steering, brakes, windows automatii $1495 "CY" Owens Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth . 724 Oakland Ave. FE S9436 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1963 CHEVY Impale 4 door herd-... ... automatic, powei Weak Credit? SPARTAN DODGE 964 DODGE 440, 2 DOOR SEDAN, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, good cond. $875, 358-3226, KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sales and Service 1958 FORD, NEW BATTERIES AND tires, good engine and trar------- slon *85. Call 647-6627. s $35. See at 909 Cameron. SO FA .CON STATION WAGON, . $100. Sava Auto. 5 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERT-1 ihftewalls, beautiful rhatador red FE 5-3278, 1961 FORD, beautiful . DOOR GALAXIE, "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford . Law mileage. *1750. 334-2848. 8350. 626-2323. 1962 FORD FAIRLANE. 4-DOOR, 37,000 actual ml., OL 1-6823. 962 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON. Automatic, 8, radio, heater, GLENN'S IKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? CAR^Call FE 8-4088 and! hWlMDE^ACHER P0NTIAC-BUICK 855 5. ROCHESTER RD, 651-5500 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 3 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ( GLENN'S I FINANCE REASONABLE! ST LUCKY AUTO radio* whitewalls*; Aztec bronze fiiv 1940 W. Wide Track ECONOMY USED CAR! >6 OLDS 8i I FORD 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, 964 FALCON 2-DOOR $895 MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET* I mlngham. f“ a FORD 2-DOOR* 8 — matlc, green $795 at Ml VOIE CHEVROLET* Blrrr “I 4-2735. i 164 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARD-V8, automatic* radio, heater, v V8, automatic, radio, heater, walls, beautiful frost white red vinyl interior. $1388 full | 50*060 .555,24^ per^jri Get "ABETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford 0 Oakland FE 5-4101 FORD 4-DOOR, STANDARD 2 DOOR HARDTOP, :. condition* $1295. 1965 FORD GALAXIE 50 tible with V8* automat! ler* power steering, Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. T-BIRD WITH FACTORY and priced at only $2495. _ BORST LINCOLN - MERCURY SALES._____________________ >65 Falcon 2 door, automat- BORST LINCOLN 1965 T-BIRD vertible, air conditioned, automatic transmission, radio - HAROLD TURNER FORD. INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_Ml 4-751 Sat "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffa Ford 630 Oakland Ava. ' FE 5-4 166 CUTLASS CONVERTIBLE, spaed. 693-6497 or ME 4-8734._ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1968 OLDS Dynamic 88 4 d automatic, power steering, bra radio, whitewalls. In warranty cally owned, $2295. On US T( M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. _ HARDTOP with ipaed, deep 1966 OLDS " 963 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, Auto- j mafic, *795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml |< 2735 .__ ____r_- 1 963 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, $850. 334-8551,. im ■ j:J RUSS ••JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER On M24 in Lake Orion MY 3-6266 BLER WAGON, 660 I fL?*4963!_ 19M~RAMBLER STATION WAGON. [ 6 cyl. stick. $697, full price., LUCKY AUTO Ida Track r FE 3-7*54 1967 RAMBLERS Get "A BETTER DEAL*.' at.:... - John McAuliffe Ford J Oakland Ave. fe 5-tioi S7 TORONADO. DELUXE INTE-rior. Air-conditioned. Prlv. owner. $51-8635. SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES 960 VALIANT V-200, RUI looks good. 332-0790. 961 PLYMOUTH FURY. Radio and heater. New condition. MAyfair. 6-641 WELL* OWNER. $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ID S. Woodward_____Ml 7-3214 163 VALIANT CONVERTIBLE! power steering, '65 engine with 14,-000 miles, 4 new tires and 3 snow tires, mechanically perfect, 8495. 363-6006. 1964 VALIANT. EXCELLENT CON- VO, automatic, radio, haater, air conditioning. Really a fantastic buy at Only 81388 Full Price with *88 down, and 843.56 par month. "It only takas a minute" Id . Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-4101 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury hardtop, automatic mission, radio and heate, whitewall tires. Ml price $1595 only $49 down-and' weakly pay- HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. I- 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. J BIRMINGHAM . Ml 4-7S0B 765 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR HARD-! TOP. automatic $1345 at MIKE AM. QUAD, RE-floor. Tach. Slicks, r. 3M-0155......... GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. E 4-7371 ( hoose^rorn '64~BONNEVILLE 4 DObR~HARC top* 1 owner. $127S.-FE 2-5210._ GLENN'S i64 Tempest. 4 door sedan-^Cu: L. C. Williams, Salesman , Nice condition. J* cars and parts. 664-4511. 1965 RAMBLER. REP CONVERTI-bie* V-8, RAMBLERVILLE USA VILLAGE RAMBLER 5 Birmingham Ml *~39 c5me see our TOOTHLESS TIGERS '67 SUNBEAM (Tiger Demo) $2295 GRIMALDI Imported Car Co. 900 Oakland FE 5-9421 BEATTIE FORD 1965 Ford Fatrlane 2-Door with 6-eyllnder, ] 1964 Ford Galaxie 2-Door 500 wltti V-8. stick. D"'7-$995 1963 Ford Galaxie 500—4 door sedan, with •V8, automatic, power steering, 0n'y'~ $1095 1964 Buick Specie). Automatic, radio, heet- automatic, rrtio,^ er. y 1964 Dodge,, One-ton Pickup with ScyllMW*. 4-speed, dual wheels, end will make a good wrecker unit l Only $1195 1963 Chevy; Station wagon. V-S, automatic. er. 0n'y-jn95 . rbdlo, M». ^Y— 1965 Mustang, 2-Door Hardtop with ^cylinder engine, stick, radio, and heater. 1965 Chevy 2-Ton. Staka body with 6-cyl- Only-. $1395 tended boom. Only— $595 -On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford-Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 i THE PONTIAC I’ll ESS SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 D—7 —Television Programs— Program* furnished by station* listed in thi* column are subject to change without notice Channels! 2-WJ9K-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKIW-TV, 50r-WK»D-TV. 56-WTVS TONIGHT , « :M (2) TV2 Reports (C) (4) News (C) (9) Robin Seymour ($0) Hy Lit (C) (M) Changing World 6:25 (7) Outdoor World (C) ' 9:39 (2) NFL Action (C) (4) New* (C) (7) Michigan Sportsman , affortlau ipaad changas and oasior operation! of attachments. You'll gat yew job* dona batter and in (ms tima, teal A law dawn payment and easy monthly installments con put an *-ar 10 HP Jacobson Chisl with Chibf-OAAatic-drtva in yaw yard todeyl FREE DEMONSTRATIONS KEEG0 HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-2660 ASPHALT PAVING DEEP STRENGTH ASPHALT PAVING a Parking Loti a Driveways Rtaurfacod a Stalest* Panatratian PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. FE 5-6983 FE 8-6511 502 S. Paddock as the missile race. 9 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:15 (9) Movie:“Hell’s Island’ (1955) John Payne, Mary Murphy. (R) 11:39 (2) Movie: “The Desert Song” (1953) Kathryn Grayson, Gordon MacRae. (R) (0 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Movie: “Touch of Evil” (1958) Charlton Heston, Orson Wellesr Marlene Dietrich. 12:39 (4) News 1:99 (9) Window on the World 1:15 (2) With This Ring 1:30 (2) News (C) (7) News 1:45 (7) Rebel (R) OUR BEST BUYS Dick VanDyke^Developed-Hos Fingernails for Proof By EARL WILSON LONDON—During the other war in the ’40s, Dick Van Dyke long-distanced the physician in West Plains, Mo., who delivered him and asked if he could supply him with an affidavit to the effect that he had been born inasmuch as the flnjaMfl court house with all the records had burned down. You still alive!” cackled the doctor, according to Dick. “You can’t be. I said you wouldn’t | live five minutes. No fingernails!” ★ * * I hate to disprove your prognosis but I’m M alive enough that they want me in the Army and §| I need proof of birth,” Dick replied. “Hell, heh, heh,” chuckled the ancient WILSON medico. “The Army! Why, you’ll never pass the physical. No fingernails!" Dick’s fingernails passed the physical, he eventually became a TV and movie star, and now this Missourian, who later became a Hoosier, is swelling around London with his wife, a nurse, and four sons and daughters, including 18-year-old Christian who’s soon entering Princeton Seminary to become a minister. All have fingernails, including Dick. ★ * ★ He is recognized throughout the British Isles where he is regarded as a non-swinger in swinging England. He wears vests —to remind him when he dines too well—he knows wines, he drinks vodka, he smokes too much, and in Hollywood he has been known to drive too fast. He isn’t permitted that vice in England, where he’s filming a picture, “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang," which is alleged to be the “purr” of a 1910 motor car. “I have to be driven to the studio,” he petulates. ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Bobby Darin was at a woman friend’s 29th birthday party, and she wouldn’t let the guests cut the cake — she planned to use it again next year. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “More people worry about' the future than prepare for it.” EARL’S PEARLS: Joan Rivers thinks New York should polish its image a bit for tourists: “It’s the only city where the. Welcome Wagon gets towed away.” _____________ YOUR CHOICE $498Sq. Yd. ’BeckwitK.- Evons FINE FLOOR COVERINGS , Tel-Huron Shopping Center Phone 334-9544 ffiSE. —Weekend Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZ(1270) CKIWQOO) WWJ(950) WCARO130) WRONG 460) WJBKO SOO) WHFI-FM(94.7) SATURDAY EVENING AS WE NOW HAVE A FULL STAFF OF SKILLED MEN TO ACCOMMODATE YOUR EVERY WED IN REMODELLING YOUR HOME - WHY NOT COME IN OR PHONE 673-6715 FOR A FREE ESTIMATE - There I• No Obligation. AUBURN BUILDERS „ 4494 Dixie Hwy. 1 DRAYTON PLAINS, MICH. 673-6775 4:45 ( 56) Christopher Program ‘ckTw,wnsws* 5:99 (4) Sports on Parade (7) Movie: !“U 1 y s s e s Against the Son of Hercules" (1962) Michael Lane, George Marchal. (50) Laramie’ (56) Living for the Sixties 5:30 (4) Sportsman’s Holiday Fishing and camping along New Brunswick’s Miramichi River. (GT* v (9) Rawhide (R) | (56) Antique* TOMORROW NIGHT 6:00 (2) 21st Century — A glance into the future of tiie U- S. space program. (R) Ladies’ Blouses At Simms Only, Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac 4 4 POOL - PATIO - BAR-B-QUE HOUSE... Can Be Yours .. . Call Us For A Quick Action HOME MODERNIZATION LOAN v 'One Day Service Can Give You Up To $5,000 With Eight YearstoJPay , > HOME MODERNIZATION AIDS COMFORT AND VALUE TO YOU HOME Could the charm of improved livability be added to your home? Sometimes a comparatively few dollars in impnovements can transform a horn* completely by adding to its resale voWor bringing leisure time to its occupants... or simply improve the family environment. Be sure your work is done by a reputable licensed modernization company and financed at First Federal Savings of Oakland. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS 761 W.HURON STREET Downtown Pontiie — Drayton Plains — Rochester — Clarkston — Milford — Waljed Lake — Dan Mattingly Presents ... 493 West ■ Iroquois Pontiac OPEN Partial Two-Story Proves Flexibility This Quality Home Features: • 3 Bedrooms • 70% Brick Exterior • 1!4 Baths • 2-Car Oarage • Finished Family Room • Separate Foyer • Closets, Clipboards, Storage Galore • 6-Ft. Patio Door How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in band you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME—How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 ! Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint on G-96 | Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet State v 1 1 .' &" i" ; ■'v-" ■■; “ .. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1967 Pontiac Dan Mattingly Rochester 335-9497 model or 4-3568 OL 1-0222 The L shape of this house not only adds interest to the exterior, but makes possible what might becalled an economical expansion. With the bedroom wing running the depth of the house, architect Herman H. York has provided an expansion area above that wing. The remainder of the house, comprising the living room, dining room, kitchen and foyer, is really a one-story nnit, avoiding the extra expense that would be incurred If there were a full second-story. The net result of all this is an extremely flexible arrangement, permitting a family to have two, three, four or five bedrooms as it desired. A ★ ★ If it required oniy two bedrooms on the first flow, it could use the unfinished attic for s 10 r a g e or, if necessary, add two upstairs bedrooms at a later date. VERSATILE If three bedrooms on one flow were the requirement, the room designated on the floor plan as ‘family room, den or bedroom” would be utilized for sleeping. It is strategically located for any purpose, being at one end of the bedroom hall and near the main bath, yet accessible to both the kitchen and the rear terrace. A walk-in closet and a private bath are in the sizable master bedroom. Even the smallest bedroom has 168 square feet of floor area. Moving through the covered entry into the spacious foyer, j the view to the right includes! the full living room, with a fireplace at the far end, and a por-1 tion of the adjacent dining room. ★ * ’ Although the kitchen lies directly behind the foyer, only the dinette area is immediately visible, the working part of the kitchen being hidden from view. Between the kitchen and the family room is a laundry large enough for a washer, dryer, tub and mud closet, as well as space for an ironing board. There are three entrances to| I the rear terrace — from the family room, laundry area and kitchen. | Two bedrooms, a bath and a large amount of closet space are planned upstairs. One of the bedrooms is 16’ by 11’, with the! other a big 18’ by 16’. EXTERIOR Architect York has suggested the exterior use of masonry, either brick or stone, in the {center between the bedroom and irage projections. ★ A * Wood shingles, either sawn or lightly hand-split, should contrast with the brick; that is, if the brick is dark, the shingles might be painted white, or if brick, or stole is used, the shingles might be left in their natural cedar color. Dimensions of the basic house are 55’ by 43' 4’’, with the two-car garage shown in the floor plan adding 23’ to the width. j.c.fcw/den From *17,600 (Plus Lot) 10735 Highl—d Rd. 363-6604 ENJOY SUMMERTIME . In Your Own Backyard! OPEN Sat.-rSun. L5 P.M. JUST FOR YOU *16,950 Plus Lot NEW MODEL RANCHER: 3-Bndrooms, 1 % baths, beautiful custom-built kitchens, full basement, wood sealed-glass windows with screens, 2-car garage arid gleaming white carefree aluminum siding. Custom quality at $16,950 plus inside decorating and building site. Ready for your inspection now. Comer of Watkins Lake and Scott Lake Road. Rochester BATEMAN REALTY union lake branch imiewiie heiu.it branch OL 1-8518 377 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-1461 EM 3-4171 SUNDAY DIRECTIONS: West on Huron Street to Ottawa Drive, turn left 1 block to Iroquois, turn right to property, where... You will find a beautifully decorated colonial home with 3 nice fireplaces, 2 full baths, custom-made drapes and luxurious carpeting. This stately home will be open for your inspection. 2 to 5 p.m. *24,500 YOU CAN TRADE an L-shaped ranch, this inviting house actually is a partial two extra bedrooms, two-story, with the second floor only over the bedroom wing, BED RM; £>-96 SECOND FLOOR PLAN FIRST FLOOR PLAN FLOOR PLANS: If upstairs is not utilized, first floor of that it can be used as a family room, den or an extra bed-this house is well laid-out for a family requiring only two room, or three bedrooms. Room at rear left is properly located so THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY. JULY 8, 1967 MAKE OVER PAGES, -—Television Programs-— programs furnished by stations listed in this column am subject to change without noHce TONIGHT * 6:00 (2) TV2 Reports (C) (4) News (C) (9) Robin Seymour -(50) Hy Lit (C) (56) Changing World 6:25 (7) Outdoor World (C) 6:30 (2) NFL Action (C) . (4) News (C) (7) Michigan Sportsman l| STRUGGLE FOR PEACE, 10:30 p.m. (9) TOMORROW AFTERNOON AS Wf NOW HAVE A FULL STAFF OF SKILLED MEN TO ACCOMMODATE YOUR EVERY NEED IN REMODELLING YOUR NOME - WHY NOT COME IN OR PHONE 673-6775 FOR A FREE ESTIMATE - There Is No Obligation, AUBL'RM BUILDERS 4* t llJxi« Hwy. ws AIN4;, MICH. 12:00 (2) Sergeant Preston (4) U of M Presents ' ] (7) Championship Bowling! (C) (9) Forest Rangers (50) Flintstones (C) (R) 12:30 (2) Mr. Magoo (C) (4) Design Workshop (C) (9) William Tell (R) (50) “Stallion Road” (1947) Ronald Reagan, Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott. 1:00 (2) Litilest Hobo (4) Meet the Press — Kurt Kiesinger, chancellor of West Germany, is interviewed. (C) ■ (7) Movie: ‘‘The Unknown” (1957) Jock Mahoney, Shawn Smith. (9) Movie: “Attack11 (1956) Jack Palance, Eddie Albert, Lee Marvin. 1:30 (2) It's About Time (C) (4) Target (C) .2:00 (2) Pro Soccer—Chicago Spurs vs. New York Generals at Yankee Stadium. (C) (4) Putt Putt Golf (C) I 2:25 (7) Outdoor World (C) 2:30 (4) International Zone (7) A study of a Columbia, S. C., organization, Rally Support for Vietnam Personnel (RSVP). (C) (50) Wells Fargo (R) 3:00 (4) Profile: U.S. Federal Judge George Edwards (C) (7) Directions (50) Movie: “Dodge City” (1939) Eirol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland. 3:30 (7) Issues and'Answers (9) Movie: “Fair Wind to Java” (1953) Fred Mac-Murray, Victor McLaglen. (4) Theater Four (7) Richard Boone 4:00 (2) Track and Field (Special) — The Los Angeles Times International Meet pits toe U.S. against the British Commonwealth. (C) (50) Laramie (R) (56) Living for toe Sixties 4:45 (56) Christopher Program 5:00^ (4) Sports on Parade (7) Movie: “Ulysses Against toe Son of Hercules” (1962) Michael Lane, George Marchal. ,(50) Laramie , (56) Living for toe Sixties 5:30, (4) Sportsman’s Holiday Fishing and camping along New Brunswick’s Miramichi River. (C) (9) Rawhide (R) (56) Antiques TOMORROW NIGHT 6:00 (2) 21st Century % A glance into the future of the U- S. space program. (9) Other Eye (50) Lou Gordon 10:30 (9) Struggle for Peace-Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and others interviewed on ^uch topics ClVohid* . 42 Scatter, a* h*y 44 Group* of matched piece* 4« Placei of confinement 49 Applause 53 River (Sp.) 54 Alaskan prospector 55 Eternity 5 Large, at out lliard 9 Sea eagle 12 Attack while - Spiv.;* (falconry) 13 Roman Cupid aoAwiiu., IS Unpaid balance s7 Feminine v » 38 insect 18 Perforated ball* 89 street* <»b.> ,0 "—1—^ 60 Plant ovule for rowing 1 Crustacean 2 Underdone, as a steak 3 Gumbo- * 4 Obnoxious 7 Theater bpx fraata cakes , 8 Amphitheater 83 Trigonometric 9 Inexplicable . functions 10 Network (anat) 35 Paused , 11 Require 40 Undertake 1 15 Stage whlspara (legal) 20 Mistake 43 Medicinal 22 Flowers quahtitie* i 24 Natural cavity 45 Manifest in the earth contempt 25 Verbal 46 President (abj 26 Expansions 47 Tumult 28 Flock of bittern* 48 Proboscis 30 Pueblo Indian SOTranquilize ceremonial SlAwQr * is ice SB Droop* 6 Turkish r“ roSJ One who 58 Crimson |m Z 4 \ 8 9 10 11 pr 1^ 14 15 16 17 1 19 20 21 zn 24 25 26 ] rN r 30 31 32 33 35 36 38 40 ■ 41 4^ 44' 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 S3 54 55 W 5? 58 59 60 61 8 JACOBSEN CHIEF TRACTORS WITH NEW CHIEF-O-AAATIC DRIVE new Chief-O-Motic drive tractors moke pear'shifting and toot clutching obsolete! Chitf-O-Matic is a new hand operated speed control (hot allows an infinito numbor of spoods forward ... up to 7 MPH and rovorsa spoods to 3 MPH. With Chiaf-O-Metk drivp you'll got far smoother starts, offortioss speod changes and aasiar operations of attachments. You'll got your jobs dona better and in lass time, tool A low down payment and easy monthly installments can put an 8 or 10 HP Jacobean Chief with Chiof-O-Metie. drive in your yard today! FREE DEMONSTRATIONS KEEGO HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-2660 ASPHALT PAVING Residential — Commercial - Industrial e Roads e Parking Lets e Driveways Resurfaced e Sealeete Penetration Fine Quality Material Workmanship at Competiti PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. DEEP STRENGTH ASPHALT PAVING as toe missile race. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:15 (9) Movie:“Hell’s Island” (1955) John Payne, Mary Murphy. (R) 11:30 (2) Movie: “The Desert Song” (1953) Kathryn Grayson, Gordon MacRae. (R) (C) (4) Beat the Champ . (7) Movie: “Touch of Evil” (1958) Charlton Heston, Orson Welles, Marlene Dietrich. 12:30 (4) News / 1:00 (9) Window on the World 1:15 (2) With This King 1:30 (2) News (C) (7) News 1:45 (7) Rebel (R) OUR BEST BUYS OLEFIN PILE TEXTURE Dick VanDyke Developed-Has Fingernails for Proof By EARL WILSON LONDON—During the other war in the ’40s, Dick Van Dyke ||p tong-distanced the physician in, West Plains, Mo., who delivered him and asked if he could supply him with an affidavit to the I®1 effect that l)e had been born inasmuch as the p :ourt house with all the records had burned “ down. “You still alive!” cackled the doctor, according to Dick. “You can’t be. I said you wouldn’t live five-minutes. No fingernails!” ★ ★ § ★ “I hate to disprove your prognosis but I’m alive enough that they want me in the Army and I need proof of birth,” Dick replied. “Heh, heh, heh,” chuckled the anc’.nt WILSON j medico. “The Army! Why, you’ll never pass the physical. No fingernails!” Dick’s fingernails passed toe physical, he eventually became a TV and movie star, and now this Missourian, who later became a Hoosier, is swelling around London with his wife, a nurse, and four sons and daughters, including 18-year-old Christian who’s soon entering Princeton Seminary to become a minister. All have fingernails, including Dick. He is recognized throughout the British Isles where he is regarded as a non-swinger in swinging England. He wears vests —to remind him when he dines too well—he knows wines, he drinks vodka, he smokes too much, and in Hollywood he has been known to drive too fast. He isn’t permitted that vice in England, where he’s filming a picture, “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang,” which alleged to be toe “purr” of a 1910 motor car. “I have to be driven to the studio,” he petulates. it * ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Bobby Darin was at a woman friend’s 29th birthday party, and she wouldn’t let the guests cut the cake — she planned to use it again next year. 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