Tho Weather Partly Cloudy Tomorrow Showers Tonight (Otiaiis m p*a* t) . VOL. 125 — NO. 01 Nasser BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s threat to bar Israeli shipping from the Gulf of Aqaba heightened the danger today of war in the Middle East. Nasser announced yesterday during a visit to a front-line air base in the Sinai Desert that his forces will close Israel’s only direct access to the Red Sea to all Israeli ships ami other ships carrying strategic goods to Israel. Israel has vowed to fight if the water- THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1907 -46 PAGES um.SW'MftWi Homo Edition 10c Threatens to Block Israeli Shipping way between its southern port of Eilat usd the Red Sea is blocked. Hopes for an easing of the crisis cen-tered on U.N. Secretary General U Thant, who left New York last night for Cairo to copfer with Nasser and other officials. Thant said he also plans to meet with Israeli leaders “at the Appropriate time.” He declined to say whether he was optimistic. *. j * * , In Washington, the State Department advised tourists and other Americans on nonessential business to leave Israel, Egypt, Syria and Jordan. About 10,000 Americans are estimated to bo in the four countries. NO ORDERS .U.S. officials said, however, that no orders have been given to the U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean to evacuate U.S. citizens or take any other action. A few hours before Nasser announced he would block the Gulf of Aqaba, State Department officials told editors and broadcasters at a foreign policy briefing that the United States would consider the closing of the waterway a very serious matter. A Its? U.S. commitment to Israel, considered still in effect, defined the gulf as an international waterway and said the United States “is prepared to exercise the right of free and innocent passage” on behalf of American ships. . Britain was reported ready to back any United Nations action against interference with free movement pf ships through the Gulf, foreign Secretary George Brown was flying to Moscow today for talks with Soviet leaders on the Middle East crisis and other world problems. TROOPS STATIONED Since the 1956 Suez war, troops of the U.N. peace force in the Middle East had been stationed at Sharm el Sheikh, on the, Egyptian side of the entrance to the gulf, to prevent interference with Israeli shipping to and from Eilat. * * * • With the withdrawal of the U.N. force last week at Nasser's demand, Egyptian forces returned to Sharm el Sheikh and once more trained their guns on the shipping channel through which Israel gets most of its oU from Iran. 200 Still Missing in Brussels Fire New Vote in Senate -on Tax Ceiling Due U Thant Middlo East 3-Judge U.S. Court Denies ilth-Hour Bid by DSTFoes DETROIT (AP)—A three-judge federal court panel today denied an llth-hour move to k.eep Michigan in Eastern Standard Time, questioning its jurisdiction in a, suit brought 'by two private citizens. Barring last-minute action by a state court, the ruling appears to open the way. for the State Board of Canvassers to certify petitions demanding a referendum on whether Michigan should stay on EST or switch to Daylight Saving Time. • The board meets in Lansing tomorrow and has promised prompt action. If it certifies petitions and there is no further legal action, the state will go to DST, jumping clocks one hour, perhaps immediately. 3 Communities Set Parade Plans However, state, officials at the hearing said the Board of Canvassers may merely announce it would certify the petitions —-if they are sufficient—at some future date, giving business and industry a chance to prepare for the time change. FURTHER ARGUMENTS The court in an opinion read by Judge George Edwards said it questioned its jurisdiction as a three- or even one-judge panel in this particular case and called for both sides to present further arguments within 30 days. ★ ★ * The federal court action will have no bearing on any immediate action by the Board of Canvassers. ★ ★ ★ The attorney far the two private citizens—a woman from Wayne County and a man from Oakland County—said he would appear before the Boairti of Canvassers tomorrow and failing success there, probably would go to the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. LANSING (AP) - The Senate last night agreed to reconsider its vote on a resolution some senators claim would “take the wheels off the buggy” of the entire state income tax package. The resolution would permit voters ,to decide in the November 1168 election if they want a 5 per cent ceiling on any state or; local Income tax. “Nothing could be more destructive to die tax plan than this resolution,” declared Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “It was turned down once. The logjam was broken last week. Don’t bring it back again. Let sleeping dogs lie,” Levin pleaded. “The only thing that was broken last ■ week was the taxpayers’ pocketbooks,” * Weatherman Says Nimbus to Reign Occasional showers and thundershowers forecast for today are expected to end tonight. The weatherman predicts temperatures will be somewhat warmer with the low in the 40s tonight, the high climbing to near 70 tomorrow. Partly cloudy and mild is the outlook for Thursday. Morning southerly winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour will continue. A brisk 36 was the low recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury reading at 2 p.m. was 58. interjected Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy. “The wheels will be off the buggy if this resolution prevails,” warned Sen. John McCauley, D-Wyandotte, referring to the tax plan . “Fiscal reform is more important than this resolution,” said Sen. Harry DeMaso, R-Battle Creek, chairman of the Senate Taxation Committee. In other Capitol developments yesterday: • The House saluted four former Michigan governors in a special afternoon session, then returned in the evening but took no final action. • The state selective service system ordered draft boards to provide 1,287 men for Army induction in July. • Gov. Romney welcomed a group of touring Japanese governors. DeMaso’s committee put tobether the tax package, estimated to raise 3239 million a year, that passed the Senate 22-16 last Thursday. TWO VOTES SHORT The Senate vote in favor of putting the 5 per cent limitation on the ballot was 24-12. This was two votes short of the 26-vote, two thirds majority needed for passage. Sen. Charles Zollar, R-Benton Harbor, had given notice last Thursday he would ask reconsideration of the resolution He waited to present bis motion until after 10 p.m. yesterday night, when some senators had drifted out of the chamber. The vote to reconsider the Thursday vote was 14-12. Plans have^been finalized for next Tuesday’s Memorial Day parades in Pontiac, Sylvan Lake and Waterford Township. Hundreds of civic, social, military, po-, lice and school groups are expected to march in the parades commemorating the nation’s fighting men who have died in battle. Pontiac’s annual parade will begin at the intersection of Oakland and Saginaw at 16 a.m. Marchers will proceed south on Saginaw to Auburn, honing east on Auburn and north onto East Wide Track ending at the Civil War Monument in front of City Hall. There will he ceremonies at the monument including a special wreath presentation. ★ ★ ★ Following, a gathering will be held at the veterans’ plot in Perry Mount Park Cemetery with memorial services including placing of the wreath. Marchers in the Waterford Township parade will meet at Dixie and also at 19 a.m. The David Be 1008 of tiie Veterans of Foreign will be conducting th march along Dixie Road. Services will follow in the Plain Cemetery. He said the whole building was in flamedittlOor 15ipinutes. ' A police officer spoke of other places where the fire seemed to have flared at the same time- STORE THREATENED A store offical said a number of threatening telephone calls and letters had been received criticizing the store for a two-week campaign to sell American goods. On May 13, a group of young pro-Peking Belgian Communists entered the store to protest against the sales campaign. They wore white T-shirts with anti-American slogans lettered in red. One of the young demonstrators was quoted in the Communist weekly Voix du Peuple as saying: “Neither arrest nor jail nor firing squad will ever stop us.” Today, firemen combed the ruins for bodies. They pledged not to leave the scene until all bodies were recovered. WITNESSES SOUGHT Brussels radio sent out repeated calls for witnesses of the fire to help police in the investigation. A girl oh the Innovation staff said of the tragedy: “The most terrible thing is to discourage people who don’t believe you. Relatives of missing persons don’t want to nccept the truth. We keep telling them that aU those trapped in the fire are dead. They keep hoping. They keep waiting.’’ “The basement, ground floor, first and second floor were evacuated in relative calm,” said Bolle. “But it was very different with the upper floors,” worst fire since 323 persons were killed in a circus fire in Niterol, Brazil, Dec. 17,1961. ★ * * The fire roared through the five-story Innovation department store at the peak of yesterday’s midafCernoon shopping rush. ENTIRE BLOCK It quickly engulfed the steel and concrete structure and burned out the entire block of buildings. The memorial parade in Sylvan Lake is scheduled to begin at 11 ajn. at the Daniel Whitfield Elementary School. - Marchers will go to the Veterans Memorial Park, Pontiac Drive and Garland, for a dedication service. A ]f Pierre Bolle, vice president of the store, said the fire broke out simultaneously at opposite corners of the building on the first and third floors. AP Wirtphote LEAPS FROM STORE-People watch from the street as a woman leaps from a burning department store in Brussels, Belgium, yesterday. Some 200 persons are still missing. The toll so far is 13 dead and 100'injured. BRUSSELS (A) — Arson was suspected today as the cause of a Brussels department store fire in which some 200 persons were reported missing. At least 13 persons were known dead-' Fire brigade officers said 100 persons were injured. ,A spokesman for the store said the list of the missing, both customers and store employes, was still growing. Auto Hearings Romney Is Urged Punctuated byt0 Be a Candidate U.S. Rap at GM WASHINGTON — Republican members of Congress from Michigan urged Gov. Romney today to become a declared candidate for president. ■ It was feared it would be the world’s DETROIT Gfl -* the auto industry stood accused today of trying to turn the. federal auto safety hearing into a sideshow. The charge was made yesterday by Robert M. O’Mahoney, general counsel of the National Traffic Safety Bureau. It came during the opening session of a three-day hearing at which auto companies aired their protests against the timing and content of one of the government’s 20 safety standards. He called GM’s presentation a side-and added, “This presentation should be conducted in a manner befitting the fact that it involves the safety of the citizens of the country.” Russell A. Potter, hearing examiner for the National Traffic Safety Bureau, denied O’Mahoney’s request that all the GM testimony be tossed out. He said O’Mahoney would have a chance for Witham, general chairman of cross-examination at today’s session. Monroe, and Mrs- Taylor. (See Edward Adkins of GM’s legal staff denied that the industry was acting in . bad faith. 1 .Kl r The,. statement was issued at a hews conference in the names of all the Republican legislators from the state except Rep. Gerald R. Ford, the Republican leader in the House, Ford said, “As Republican leader of the House of Representatives I should not and therefore will hot endorse any candidate for the Republican presidential nomination above all others prior to the Republican convention.” O’Mahoney’s ire was aroused while General Motors engineers, representing the industry, showed some of their 1968 car interior hardware, items such as door handles, window levers and seat back locks. GM said all had been changed from 1967 specifications but that they still do not meet the government’s safety standards for 1968 cars. ^»—-The industry has maintained that meeting the standard — one governing design of car interiors to afford maximum protection to car occupants in event of a crash — is practically impossible. O’Mahoney objected' vigorously to GM’s testimony as he declared, “They are trying to make idiots out of the U.S. government.” I Oxford ■ History-rich village is profiled - PAGE A-5. ' Waterford Twp. Rezoning request for apartments is denied — PAGE A-3. Golf Champ 1 Kettering wins Pontiac Press Prep Golf Tourney-PAGE C-l. I In Today's Press Sports Radio Wilson, Earl Women Area News ...... Astrology ...... Bridge.......... Crossword Puzzle Comics _____ Editorials .. High School Markets ... A-4, A-5 ....B-8 ....M ...C-U ....B-8 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 Court May Extend 1-Man, 1-Vote Rule WASHINGTON(AP) - Hie U.S. Supreme Court has hinted it may require apportionment of, local government bodies by the one-man, one-vote yardstick it has tied to Congress and state legislatures. But it said yesterday that a case involving the Kent County School Board, Grand Rapids, and three other cases did not have the ingredients for such a ruling at this time. The implication that the one-man, one-vote principle may be applied to bodies directly elected by the people was hailed by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson who also served on the five-member committee that drafted a reapportionment plan for the board of supervisors. “I am convinced that one-man, one-vote will be applied to legislative bodies elected by the people,” Bronson said. ★ * ■ “It seems clear,” Bronson added, “that the Supreme Court $700,000 Is Stolen From Armored Car BROCKTON, ■ Mass. (AP) -Cash totaling some $700,000 was stolen today by robbers, wielding submachine guns, who seized a Brink’s, Inc., armored car outside a bank. ★ * * The estimate was made by Frederic L. Lincoln, an assistant vice president of the First County National Bank of Brockton. State Certifies Tax Valuation Oakland County’s 1987 equalized valuation of $3,034,706,025, set last month by the board Of supervisors, was certified yesterday by the State Taix Commission. The new county valuation is a $345-million increase over the 1966 equalized valuation of $2,689 billion. Herman W. Stephens, director of the County Equalization Department, attributed the 12.85 per cent valuation hike to county growth and an upward trend in property values particularly on acreage in the outlying areas. In setting the state equalized valuation of Michigan’s 83 counties at $29.89 billion yesterday, the State Tax Commission made no changes in its preliminary valuation report issued May 8. it ★ * . The statewide valuation increase is $1.5 billion. NO CHALLENGE Yesterday’s s e s s i o n of the State fax Commission was the first time in years that no county representatives appeared to challenge assessment figures at the annual hearing that precedes the equalized value de-terminatin. Equalized valuation is the basis for all 1 o c a 1 property taxes. Reginald Cole, bank president, earlier had said a “conservative estimate” of the loot could be as much as $500,000. Included in the loot, Lincoln said, was $460,000 in cash picked up from the Campbelto branch of the bank. He said it reprc sented Monday night receipts at Raynham Dog Track. MASKED TRIO The truck was seized by three tasked men when it stopped outside the bank’s East Side branch. Cole said one guard and a bank employe got out of the truck and entered the bank to pick up more money, A second guard remained in the truck. * * ★ When the pair got inside the bank, Cole said, the three gunmen confronted them. “I don’t know how they got in,” he said, “but when the guard and Richard Gutterson, about 38, of Brockton, entered, they were jumped by the trio.”' holds that the one-man, vote.principle does not apply at the county level when no direct election is involved but applies in cases of Sections.” PLAN COMPLETE The reapportionment committee two weeks ago completed a plan based on the one-man, one-vote principle that would divide the county into 27 districts with one board of supervisors member elected from each district. This plan would trim the present beard from 87 to 27 members. Members of the present board include the 24 township supervisors and delegates appointed by city governing bodies. All members of the smaller board under the one-man, one-vote principle would be elected. 4r ★ * We will make a careful study of yesterday's Supreme Court ruling,” Bronson said. ~ appears that the reapportionment plan is very much alive. OLD DECISION “We reserved the question whether the apportionment of municipal or county legislative agencies is governed by Reynolds V. Sims,” Justice William O. Douglas said for a united court. In the historic Reynolds-Sims decision in June 1964, the court held that seats in both houses of state legislatures must be apportioned on a population basis. In the Kent. County case, |Douglas said “the principle of lone-man, one-vote has no relevancy” because the board not directly elected by the vot- Cuban Unity Group Office Ripped by Bomb in Miami MIAMI, Fla. (AP), — A time workers to drop plans for to-bomb today tore apart the office day’s general strike, of a Cuban unity group that hours earlier urged Cuban exile The case arose when school patrons filed suit to prevent the county Board of Education frqm detaching certain schools from | the City of Grand Rapids and One of the men brandished aiattachin* them iri?tead to machine gun and another took the Brink’s guard’s Cap mid jacket,” Cole said. “He went out and surprised the guard waiting outside in the truck.” GUARDS TAPED The guards, Richard E. Hailey, 61, Brockton, and George LeMoine, 53, Bridgewater, and Gutterson were taped “so only their noses and the tops of their heads showed.” The robbers then forced them into a men’s room and handcuffed them to a gas pipe, Cole county. Douglas said that if a state provides for an election of a local official or agency, whether administrative, legislative or judicial, the one-man, one-vote principle must be applied, It had been reported earlier the gunmen rushed into the bank and threatened the truck crew and Gutterson, an operations assistant of the bank. A passerby heard noises coming from the bank and notified police who found file trussed up men. They were taken to Brockton I Hospital where it was reported [theysustained only bruises. The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Increasing cloudiness today with occasional showers or thundershowers likely later this afternoon or early tonight. Showers or thundershowers ending tonight and milder. High 62 to 67. Low tonight 42 to 48. Partly cloudy and mild Wednesday. Thursday’s' outlook: Partly cloudy and mild. Southerly winds 19 to 20 miles today. At I a.m.: Wind Velocity 10 r Direction: Sooth Son sets Tuesday at 7:55 p.m. H —. Wednesday at 5:20 a. n rises Tuesday at 1:13 p.m (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature ....... Lowest tamtorature <•........... Mean temperature ............... Weather: Sunny Highest and Lowest Temperate This Date in 95 Years One Year Age hi Pentiac Highest temperature .............. Lowest temperature ............... Monday's Temperature Chfrt - "28 Fort Worth 78 is it Jacksonville " ■ 37 Kansas City ■ MOl 42 Milwaukee 52 37 sa 40 New Orleans “ IS NHBR 60 33 Haw York Traverse C. 57 3S Omaha 8S 62 Albuquerque 80 S8 Phoenix 105 ■ 0 j, ptttifcurgh a 87 43 St. Louis 72 54 45 Tampa 83 48 42 Salt Lake.C. 89 69 42 S. Francisco 58 . 83 53 S. S. Marie 59 37 56 35 Seattle ' If 60 41, Washington Escanaba “ Gr. Rapids • ff Houghton 5* Lahsing 58 Marquette I Muskegon Pellston Burglar Gets Blfme for Fire A $13,000 fire at a Pontiac business early today was blamed by city fire officials on burglar. ! * * * Two pumps and a ladder under the command of Asst. Chief Lee Nyo answered an alarm at E. Howard, shortly before . and were at the scene nearly three hours. Fire Marshal Charles Metz said the blaze was apparently set, either accidently or intentionally, by someone in the process of a break-in. Metz said the fire started in an array of papers strewn about during the ransacking of an office. * ★ *' Nothing valuable was believed missing from the building. Authorities said $10,000 of the damage was to the building, the remainder to contents. Repairs Alter Traffic Routes in the Area BIRMINGHAM - Beware, parkers on Maple Street. The City Commission ordered teeth put in the restrictions on parking between 4 and 6:30 jfjn., with a $7 fine plus possible towing charges. It was pointed out at last night’s meeting that some parkers have been using the street so long they haven’t noticed the signs, which were placed Friday and Saturday. The no-parking restrictions Jt’Mtlac P JOB FAIR — Mrs. Mary Muldrow (left) telephone operator, and Mrs. Donna Noel, personnel worker were among representatives of some 30 companies who visited Pontiac Central High School yesterday. School officials an,d the Pontiac, Area Urban League jointly arranged for hundreds of hjgh School students to discuss educational requirements and career opportunities with different firms. 1 Birmingham Area News Maple Parking Ban fnforedd are all-day test by the city and wiD be to effect every day .except Sunday. Some opposition was voiced to the move by the Birmingham-Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce. However, the commission decided to proceed with the plan which was approved by a commission vote last week. ' ★ * ★ One commissioner, Robert Page, voiced a strong objection. He said he was opposed to tak- Consider Port Blockade, Colorado's Love Urges jng 65 parking spaces away from downtown merchants. “The people haven’t yet been educated” to recent street innovations, he * said. He urged “common sense” aad questioned die logic of seeking fast-moving traffic throughout die city. Morice Barnett, a chamber official and owner of Bloomfield Fashions, warned that in the winter, cars would be passing right next to the sidewalk and throwing slush at pedestrians and store windows. The commissioners listened to objections, promised to consider them, but . ordered the 30-day test to proceed with enforcement of the ban. SAIGON (AP) - Gov. John A. Love of Colorado, chairman of die National Republican Governors’ Conference, said today ‘serious consideration’' be given to blockading Haiphong harbor, in North Vietnam. “If supplies continue coming in to South Vietnam from North Vietnam, it would be difficult to see an end to the war,” Love prior to his departure for Tokyo after an eight-day tour of South Vietnam. It has been estimated that as much as 80 per cent of North Vietnam’s imports are brought in through Haiphong. Love said he is not in favor of stopping the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam. / “I’m here wearing two hats, he said, “both as an individual and as a representative of the governors’ conference.” The governor traveled extensively through South Vietnam, visiting military installations in all four corps areas and pacification projects as well. His tour included one day in Thailand, a flight over the demilitarized zone and visits to die carrier Kitty Hawk, several Vietnamese villages and Marine, Army and Special Forces units. . 1 “I don’t think the war will be on militarily,” Love said. “I don’t mean that the military isn’t necessary shield," he said, adding that political support for a viable, society in South Viet- HoldupVictim Found Locked in Car Trunk A 61-year-old Pontiac man, found locked in the trunk of his car yesterday by city police, told officers he was forced into the trunk by a man and woman who robbedhim. Daniel Coleman of 37 Crawford said he was approached by bandits as he 4gft a bar at Sanford and Perry. The man shoved a sharp object into his back, probably a knife or small gnn, he said, and ordered him into a car. He told police he was forced to drjnk a half-quart of whisky after the pair took $115 from his wallet. The man then kicked him in the ribs, Coleman said, and made him get into the trunk of his own car. But the 24-hour strike against businesses already was under way to protest the U.S. detention of Felipe Rivero, one of the most aggressive anti - Castro leaders. * ★ ★ The strike’s avowed aim was to pressure the federal government into releasing Rivero from Dade County jail where he staged his own protest by continuing his hunger strike. The blast in the “Little Havas’’ section demolished the offices of Cuban- Exile Representation, a group formed in 1964. ★ ★ ★ Cuban strike leaders predict-1 that 15,900 Cuban exile workers would stay off their jobs in Miami alone. They said many Cubans in New York, New Jersey, .California and other exile [centers had promised to join the protest. Nice Action Pontiac police officers ■ and Oakland County sher- : iff’s deputies investigated I some 90 reported incidents' j the past 24 hours. I A breakdown of causes I for police action: Arrests—11 Vandalisms—14 Burglaries—11 Larcenies—19 Assaults—14 Disorderly Persons—2 Armed Robberies—2 Indecent Exposures—1 Property Damage Accidents—14 Injury Accidents—4 Avon Twp. Fire Damages House, Destroys Bam A barn and the upstairs of a house at 3651 Livernois, Avon Township, were destroyed in a fire early this morning. It believed to have been started by two small boys playing with matches in the barn, according to firemen. Estimated cost of the damage was $1,600 to the barn and $8,000 to the house which was owned by Mr. and Mrs. J. Hof-ferman. Firemen said no one was hurt in file fire which started about 8:36 a.m. and was extinguished about three hours later. The Avondale Fire Department, which answered the call, was assisted by the Troy Fire Department. Firemen say they assume the fire was started by the two Hof-ferman boys, ages four and five, who had been playing with matches in the barn. Viet Truce Prevails, but 10 Yanks Die SAIGON (AP) - A 24-hour truce for Buddha’s birthday prevailed over much of Vietnam today, but the U.S. Command said 10 Americans were killed and 17 wounded in Communist attacks since the allied ceasefire went into effect at midnight Monday. The U.S. Command nounced that in the 24 hours preceding the cease-fire, three American planes were downed over North Vietnam and two ove^ South Vietnam, while U.S. fliers shot down another Communist MIG. Four American pilots were listed as missing. A U.S. spokesman said aerial reconnaissance reports were not yet available to indicate whether the Nort'i Vietnamese were taking advantage of file truce to increase their movement of supplies to South Vietnaih as they have done in the past truce periods. The allied stand-down is to end at midnight — noon EDT. The Communist forces had announced they would observe a 48-hour truce ending at 7 a.m. Wednesday Saigon time, or 7 p.m. EDT tonight. The U.S. Command said in the first 12 hours of the one-day allied'truce, 21 incidents had been reported, with a dozen of them considered “significant.” nam would in the end settle the war. * ★ ★ think it can be won but think it’s going to be long and drawn out,” Love said. Waterford Airs Police'Morale The final meeting on- redistricting of elementary schools for next semester will be conducted by. the school board at the gym of Baldwin School, Chester and Maple, at 6 p.m. The meeting was scheduled for the gymnasium to accommodate the large number of parents expected to attend to protest the transfer of their children. Numerous proposals and counterproposals are up for review. Guns, Ammo Worth $3^00 Stolen in Area NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for parts of Michigan and Florida. It will be wanner in the Mississippi Valley and coder in the northern Plains. & ''-v • r, Road repairs have caused some temporary changes in area traffic routes. Oakland Avenue and Saginaw Street between Lafayette and West Wide Track are now open to two-way traffic. North Paddock, however, was scheduled to close today between Mount Clemens and Michigan for M59 construction, according to Joseph Koren, traffic engineer. The area should be blocked for about five to six he said. * ★ North and southbound traffic should use East Boulevard. Oakland, closed to two-way traffic since April 27, was open last Thursday as a one-way northbound street. Improvements needed to make Cass one-way southbound were constructed at the intersections. Decision Due on Grant lor Youth Corps Project CD Officials Rush to Fill Shelter Gap WASHINGTON (AP) - Civil Defense officials—saying about 70 million Americans would be unshielded In case of nuclear attack in 1972—are trying to get fallout shelter potential added to' planned buildings. Officials said even the estimate of 70 million unprotected persons or ’ about one-third of the U.S. population—assumes present approved shelter programs will be carried forward for five years to the time when Communist China is expected to be capable of launching at least a light nuclear attack on the United States. Waterford Township Democratic Trustee Robert E. Richmond last night said he is concerned that a’ morale problem may exist in the township police department. Talking at the Township Board meeting, Richmond mentioned two recent resignations as possibly indicating a morale pn&lem. Detective Sgt. Ernest Mann , is resigning from the department effective May 26. Det. Jerry St. Sonver resigned from tiie force a few months ago. I think it’s time we look into the morale situation of the police department,” said Richmond. “I think it behooves the board” to find out why Mann resigned, he said. ★ ★ ★ The board offered no further comments and did not take any action. Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson mentioned that^ the Waterford Township Police and Fire Civil Service Commission will meet Thursday night. Police Chief William Stokes said whenever a man leaves a small police department, it becomes a big issue. About $3,300 worth of guns and ammunition was stolen from Dunham’s Sporting Goods, 30096 Northwestern, West Bloomfield Township early today. Taken were 21 pistols, including revolvers and automatics, four shotguns, three rifles and an unknown quantity of ammunition, according to township police. They said a resident observed what they believe to be the suspects’ car leaving the scene about 1 a.m. It is the second time in little more than a month, that the store has been broken into. On April 4, about $7,000 worth of guns was taken. It is still up-der investigation. City commissioners are expected to consider acceptance tonight of a federal grant designed to finance a youth corps program in the Pontiac Police Department this summer, A Justice Department announcement released through the office of U.S. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., two weeks ago notified local officials of a grant of some $15,000. - The announcement,. which caught city officials by . surprise, triggered a flurry of last-minpte arrangements prior to informal study of the project by commissioners^ - r*— f The program is aimed at 14-and 15-year-old boys from economically disadvantaged homes. ★ . ★ # Thirty boys will be selected by a joint police-citizen committee and will receive $10 for a 20-hour work week in addi-a $200 lump sum at conclusion of the program, according to the proposal. In other business, commissioners will receive a proposed ordinance establishing a license fee for scrap-metal processors and will also be presented with a six-month 'report from the Pontiac Transit Corp. Because of the growing need for shelter spaces, officials said today, the agency is embarking on a trial, direct-mail campaign to persuade architects and owners of planned buildings to add fallout shelter potential to their projects. This would mean incorporating various design features into new buildings to protect occupants from radiation in a nuclear emergency. The idea is to accomplish architectural and [ engineering changes early in the project at little or no extra cost and without significantly changing the building’s appearance. Police said entry was gained to the store through the roof of new addition presently under construction. The .theft was discovered .this morning by the owner, Verb Martin. Wounded Clerk Routs Robbers SOUTHFIELD (AP) - A seriously wounded motel clerk pulled a gun and let loose a barrage of bullets to rout two would-be hoidup men in South-field today. The cleric, Torres L. Sebring, chased the pair out of the building, then collapsed. A camel has three stomachs, with pockets In the walls of the first two that can store water. Pontiac, Monroe Mayors Back Home After Swap gin in his first attempt at elective office. ★ ★ ★ ,i He drew envious comments from local officials with talk of expected construction by the Detroit Edison Co. of a $200-miUion power plant in Monroe by 1970. • WOULD DOUBLE VALUATION Installation of the plant would nearly double the city’s assessed valuation, Cohn noted. Mayor Pro Tem Leslie H. Hudson compared notes with Cohn on downtown business districts and was told Monroe also suffered from sharp skids in retail sales in recent years. Cohn said his city had not yet undertaken development efforts comparable in size to Pontiac’s proposed Taubman plan, but had initiated a community center in the hart of Monroe’s blighted urban area. * # ♦" “Last year we obtained $7 million in federal assistance and not her $5 million from the county (Monroe),” Cohn said. “We feel the federal money is [there to be used and we certainly aren’t going to let our tax city after unseating Monroe’s dollars finance development in other cities.’’ Mayors of Pontiac and Monroe were back in their home towns today following an exchange of offices yesterday in observance of Michigan Week. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., who returned to the city last night, offered some insists and comparisons of the two cities. “Life is a little bit calmer there although they have projects they’re working on similar to oars.” He cited the work Monroe is doing toward eliminating its poverty pocket and commented on its industry. T was amazed that you wouldn't find more air pollution,” he said. PEOPLE ‘CONGENIAL’ Taylor said be found the Monroe people “vary congenial.” Mayor aad Mrs. Morton R. Cohn completed a fast-moving day in Pontiac by dining at the Madras Red Fox Restaurant in Bloomfield Township before retaining to Monroe. Cohn, 43, is serving his first term in office Ip the downriver incumbent mayor by a 2-1 mar- h /V THE PONTIAC PHKSS. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 For Apartment Project A+-9 Rezoning Bid Denied The Waterford Township Board denied a rezoning request for apartments by a 5-1 yote and , tabled a similar proposal at its meeting last night. had been made previously by the Oakland County Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee and the Township Planning Commission. Proposed was the construction of 12 apartment units at an es- Denied was a request to re-zone from slngte-famUy residen- Umated'^st atou7$lW,000.' tial to multiple dwelling property off Malcolm near Cooley Lake Road. Democratic Trustee Robert E. Richmond was the lone dissenter. Negative recommendations BRUCE ROBERTSON Lions Club Will Install New Officers nature, would allow townships to use surplus funds to purchase items not budgeted, according to township officials. ★ ■ ★ ★ Bids were opened last night for a public employes honesty blanket position bond. Apparent low bidder of slx companies was The Drayton Plains Lions Club will conduct an installation ceremony for its recently elected 1967-68 officers at 7:30 tonight at Howe’s Lanes, 6696 Dixie, Independence Township. Bruce Robertson, 30, of 6223 Snow Apple, Independence Township, will be installed as president for the one-year term. He succeeds SeymourKarp. Presiding over the installation ceremony will be Wayne McCandless of the Pontiac Lions Club. He Is a past district governor of the LI on s organization. James W. Marshall, principal of Oakland County Children’s Village School, will be guest speaker. ★ ★ ★ Other elected officers to be installed include Walter Lager-quist, first vice president; James McMuray, second vice president; Ralph Kepengst, third vice president; T. L. Kelt-sley, secretary; and Maynard Mathers, treasurer. OTHER OFFICES Also slated to assume office are Lewis Giddings, tail twister, and Charles Hopkins, lion tarn-: er. Elected to the board of directors were Stanley Larkin and Donald Frayer. Reelected to the body were Philip Moody Jr. Peter Tenuta. Tabled one week at the request of Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson was a proposal to rezone from single-family residential to multiple dwelling property on Scott Lake Road opposite Wanamaker. FAVORED BY PLANNERS The request for apartments previously was recommended for rejection by the County Coordinating Zoning and Planting Committee, but favored 4-2 by township planners. A request by Treasurer L. Catherine Wolters to revise the township payroll procedure so that employes aren’t paid in advance was approved by the board. Beginning June 23, the township will withold one week’s pay of ail salaried employes. However, a week’s pay, will be advanced to those employes who request it. +■ ★ ★ Advanced wages are to be repaid piecemeal over fi consecutive pay periods. CREATES PROBLEMS The present payroll system creates bookkeeping problems, according to township officials, because wages often have to be estimated. In other business, the board tabled for one week a request by Mrs. Wolters to purchase a billing machine for the treasurer’s office pending an attorney’s opinion on whether the township can legally expend funds for purchases not appropriated in the budget. A proposed law, which has passed the State Legislature but | still requires Gov. Romney’s sig- Wilkinson Insurance Agency of Pontiac with a $291 premium extending over a three-year period. REFERRED FOR STUDY Ail bids were referred to the township insurance committee for study and recommendations. ★ * * The board voted to open bids on workmen’s compensation and employer’s liability insurance at 8 p.m. June 19. ★ * * Also last night, a resolution as passed, stating the Township Board negotiating team has the authority to bargain collectively with the township e m-ploye’s union, but doesn’t have the authority to execute tract without approval of the! Township Board. Police Dept/s April Report 1$ Approved The Waterford Township Police Department investigated 854 complaints last month, according to a report approved by the township Board last night. Listed among the complaints were 152 larcenies, 72 malicious destruction of property reports, 49 break-ins and 11 automobile thefts. Twelve larcenies and one break-in were cleared, according to police. In addition, seven stolen cars were recovered. Loot taken in the larcenies was valued at $11,794, but $1,133 was recovered. the report indicated. ★ ★ * In last month’s break-ins, loot worth $5,466 was stolen of which $1,200 was recovered. DAMAGE ESTIMATE Destruction damage last month was estimated at $1,561. The April report showed that 77 persons were arrested by township police during the 30-day period. Of these, 51 were adults and 26 juveniles. A total of 165 traffic tickets were issued, 157 to adults and eight to juveniles. ★ * ' * . ■ The report also indicated that 407 complaints were answered by township dog wardens last month. Forty-six citations were issued and 133 dogs were taken to the Oakland County Animal I Shelter., Supervisor Is Delegated Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson was named d e 1 e g a t e and Trustee Herbert C. Cooley alternate to the Committee of One Hundred of the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments (COG) last night by the Waterford Township Board. The Township Board previously signed a resolution of intent to join COG, an organization aimed at providing effective ways of working together to re-solve common metropolitan problems. Of a potential membership of 345 cities, villages, townships, counties and school districts In the six-county area, 146 jurisdictions have expressed an intent to join COG. In other business last night, Johnson expressed concern over the proximity of high-voltage lines to two pedestrian overpasses in the township. Johnson was referring to overpasses on Walton Boulevard by Season Junior High School and at Williams Lake Road and night. present term ex- pires June 1. A July 4 fireworks permit for Fergus Owens, 1925 Watkins Lake, was approved by the board. Also okayed by the board was a-Veqtteft of pavid Belisle Post 1008, Veterans of Foreign Wars, to conduct a poppy sale in the township Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The board took no action on an identical request by Chief Pontiac Post 377, American Legion. The board also read first notice on a request to transfer 1966 Class C liquor licensed business at the 99 Club, 86 S. Telegraph, from James and Virginia E. Liddon to Margaret M. Borys and Lloyd A. Jones. DOES YOUR AUTO INSURANCE PAY . . . ... For loss of any Personal Property STOLEN FROM your car—whafhar your car Is stolen or nof... T (Under Comprehensive Coverage) —this is lust one of many •pedal Benefits tor Non-Drtnkara IF YOU. DON’T DRINK— NND OUT ABOUT NON-DRINKERS INSURANCE CALL HEMPSTEAD, BARRETT aid ASSOC. Moin Office 185 llisabetli U. M. ' Pontiic, Michigan Phene: FI 4-4724 Branch Offico 19 Peninsula Lakeville, Michigan Phene: OA 8-3494 Convention Post The American Personnel and {Guidance Association has an-m u i . , » „ . , Inounced that Dr. Robert A. Wil- U8"8?" ^y Schoolcraft Schoo - u director flf the guidance program at Oakland Schools,1 I has been appointed program co-i a, , ^ . Jordinator of its 1968 annual con- Also last night, the board vention to be hcld in Detroit. “ resolution to vacate He told board members he will ’ _ take a further look at the situa-|, tion. a plat in Huron Highlands. Consisting of 40 lots, the property borders on the north side of M59 and stretches eastward from Pontiac Lake Road. A Circuit Court hearing on the petition is scheduled June 12. William Morrisey was reappointed to a term on the Police and Fire Retirement Board last It is anticipated that Detroit will host the largest convention in the history of the association —about 8,000 to 10,000 people. NU-SASH REPLACEMENT WINDOWS Layaway , Portable TYPEWRITER For Your Favorite Student • Trade i)f Your Old Machine • Easy Payment Plan • 1 Yr. Guar, in our own service Many Models to Chooso From 38 Years in Pontiac • Remington • Royal • Underwood • Corona 123 Nrih Saginaw SI fXFENKI We put more into Chevrolet, so you get more out of it. GM When you While you buy it. own it. 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This is one improvement 'H completely change and beautify the leeks ef your house er FREE ESTIMATES CWeedon i ffcmshruction flb. ■ 1032 Wasf Huron Street re J OCQ7 nights a SUNDAYS phone.-Tfc W*£tWl 682-0648 MA4-tNf M.mb.r of th. Chamber o» Comnwc. 613-2842 EM 3*2311 Everything te MeiUmuntion MY 3*1319 mm nipvmvi ivnwvn jww sure feeling 4r Authorised Chevrolet Dealer in Pontiac MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 631 Oakland Ave. „ 335-4161 Clarks ton . TOM RADEMACHER CHEVROLET-OLDS, INC. 6751 Dixie Hwy. 625(-5071 Lake Orion AL HANOUTE, INC. 209 N. Park Blvd. 692-2411 Oxford HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. Washington 628-2528 Rochester BILL FOX CHEVROLET, INC. 755 S. Rochester I 651-7000 A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 'Fair Chance of Winning' Seen Pontiac Twp. to Push Annexation Case PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - The Township Board last night voted to pursue its court case “as far as need be” to determine the constitutioiiality of the state law in regard to annexation by cities. Supervisor Roy Wahl said he had been informed by former Township Attorney Robert Po-tere that the township stsrnds a fair chance of winning. ‘ N At issue is the IM5 annexation by the city of Pontiac of <12 acres lying along the city’s northern border east of Bald- “We are vulnerable in other spots along our boundaries,” Trustee Walter Smith noted. ★ ★ ★ “It’s expensive, but let’s have a go at it,” said Trustee John C. Richardson. UNANIMOUS VOTE The vote to continue the suit, due probably for trial next month in Circuit Court according to attorneys, was unanimous. The board last night awarded the Job of auditing township accounts to die Birmingham firm of Carey and Olsen, with the idea that new ac- counting systems might be advised for township records. A reported overage of $152,000 — loose front its proper account — triggered a long and heated discussion by board members. Trustees objecting to the motion did so, they said, on the basis the firm had not been interviewed and that a charge rate had not been set. FIRM AUDIT The Birmingham firm reportedly audits the Farmington Township accounts. “I want it done now,” said Trustee Claude Arnett Jr. “I don’t want to wait as we’ve done in the post for everyone to make up his mind and then fail to get the Job done at all” The creation of a water board by a 4-3 vote of the board and the naming of Charles Chandler as manager and purchasing agent and Mrs. Opal Ogden as clerk triggered more verbal fireworks as Treasurer Goldie Mailahn objected. She charged the naming of a clerk to receive payments was a stripping of the treasurer’s power granted unde^ state law. The right to seek new township attorney Paul Mandel’s advice by individual members of the board was affirmed providing the supervisor is informed of the request and answer. A decision to fbf up the township’s Precinct 3 voting station was made by the board. Used as a community center by Auburn Heights residents, Use building was reported as being in a poor state of repair. Supervisor Wahl’s appointments to township advisory boards were passed over dis- Voters Pass Tax Hike; Library Assured Gravel Mining Bid Rejected OXFORD TOWNSHIP -Thumbs down on any extension of gravel mining, at least for the present, will be recommended to the zoning and township boards here. The planning commission has rejected a request for a change in zoning which would permit such an operation on two par-1 cels of Gingell property and one on Hartland north of town. ★ * ★ The acreage involved amounts to 137.57 acres. * * ★ The commission set up committees for a thorough study of present township zoning with an eye to needed changes, and assigned for study a new building code and electrical code in- . eluding plumbing, heating, and cooling and ventilating ordinances. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-A new library in the northern portion of the township was as4 sured yesterday as township voters approved a one-mill > tax increase. \ . ★ * *’ About 1,848 of the township’s 13,1848 registered voters turned out to approve the increase 1,305 to 543. Money raised by the tax will be used to finance a 10-year $2-million capital expansion program and operating fund. The first portion of the program will be a 20,000 square-foot library on 12 Mile between Orchard Lake and Farmington roads at a cost of $814,000. ★ * * Books for the new building Yes No 1,305 543 would cost an estimated $400,-000. EXPANSION SLATED The present library within the city limits will be expanded at a cost of about $293,000 with another $140,000 allocated in books. The two libraries are shared by the city of Farmington and the township, The present one'-will continue to serve residents in the southern portion of the area while the new one will benefit those in the northern area of the township. The city is financing its share of the library through a %-hiiIl tax increase approved by council action. The township, by state law, had to seek approval from the voters. Facilities to be included in the new library are a periodical and adult reading room; a large reference room, an audio visual fa- • cilily, a children’s room, small study rooms and a meeting and exhibit room for community activities. * . Thomas Czubiak, chairman of the Farmington District Library Board, safd planning for the new facility will start immediately. It should be ready for use within a couple of years, he said. Staff, Program Cuts Eyed in Troy Schools SHeep Follow 'to the Death' HERMANUS, Cape Province, South Africa UR — A former, M. Theron, lost 79 sheep here when one jumped over a deep erosion donga (gully) and the others followed. The sheep plunged down the steep side of the donga. Most were uninjured after the fall but died of suffocation as they , landed on top of one another in a mass at foe narrow bottom. The African • shepherd, some distance away at the time, saved a few by hoisting them out. TROY — A cut of 22 teachers from next year’s proposed staff and reduction of several programs have been posed by foe school board. this is foe alternative offered in an “austerity” plan proposed to be put into effect if , foe June 12 7-mill levy is turned down by voters. The district caine up with* a deficit figure of $278,000 for last year and is anticipating a similar one in the next school year. The seven mills, or $7 per $1,000 assessed valuation as equalized, is to be levied for one year. The tax could be expected to produce about $250,000 for the district. ★ ★ ★ An $18 million rise in property evaluation is expected to bring the budget almost in line, if voters okay foe seven mills. Also on foe June 12 ballot will be a proponent of the school board’s policies and a determined opponent. Incumbent Gordon Sparks of 6389 Elmoor, seeking a new four-year term, is opposed by ' Harold Janes- of 6204 Herb-moor, an outspoken foe of the millage request. Americans paid more federal excise taxes on liquor and less on tobacco in 1966 that in 1965. Millage Backers Plan Sessions TROY—A campaign is under way to secure a “yes" vote on foe 7-mill school levy question on June 12fo ballots. A committee, headed by Commissioner Richard Snoad, has 100 volunteers who will be participating. More than 30 neighborhood coffees and a series of public meetings are scheduled before foe June election. The committee points out foe necessity for the millage to get foe district out of debt and continue its1 program. ★ ’★ ★ They point out that foe millage levy will cost foe average home owner about $70, or less than 20 cents a day. The meetings are.all set for 8 p.m. at: Tomorrow, Niles School; Thursday, Union School; May 31, Colerain School; June 5, Morse School; June 6; Fellowship Methodist Church; June 7, Poppleton School. Janes predicted last week foe board would make “threats” about foe program to “frighten the voters” into approving foe millage.. . ★ ★ ★ He insists foe district can get along without “frills,” cut some of foe new teachers and come up with a balanced budget. Janes is a professional accountant. Sparks denied the board’s list of, 28 proposed cuts is a “threat.” “We made a careful consideration of where cuts would have to be made. We want the voters to get a clear picture of what they face,” he said. Sparks said the administration ' and the board will present its case in a series of PTA meetings, at churches and coffee hours right up until vote time. Among foe proposed cuts are 10 teachers in music, four teachers of art, eight elementary teachers and other special and physical education positions. Proposed savings would also come from increased food prices and reduction Of trips of athletic and educational nature. An earlier possibility ★ A driver is more efficient with both hands on the wheel, so drop that bottle and control yonr car as it should be. No one can drive far with an inverted bottle before his eyes. There is also such a thing as a sensible speed. EARL TURNER $ ‘Support Need for Action Against Sex Crimes’ The sixth commandment tells us “Thou shalt not kill,” and yet some are forced to, while others who are known sex criminals are handled with kid gloves because thdy are sick. A man. crazed with the lust for sex is no more than an animal without the ability to think and act as a human. •k k k Perhaps sterilization is the answer to this growing problem. Then this cancer that is torturing sex fiends can be held in check, at least to a point where the ones known to have this problem can be stopped before it is too late for some defenseless child. * 4)’ ■ The Pontiac Press editorial last week was a great assistance to those of us who did not know who to communi-- cate with concerning effective measures for sex deviates. I hope this editorial will be repeated for those who may have missed it. The Press strongly suggests that we write our legislators in Lansing and demand help. Please write -now and help protect the lives of our children. McNamara Powers Go Too Far WASHINGTON - Who is really running the war in Vietnam for our government? Presumably, as the Constitution says, there is only one commander - in • chief — the President o f the United States. But evidence is accumulating that virtually supreme power over the I m a nagement f of the armed | services h i been delegated LAWRENCE to the secretary of defense. This contradicts both the spirit and the letter of the Constitution. The National Security Act of 1947 permits the delegation of administrative duties to the secretary of defense, but there is nowhere ih the statute any transfer of authority or control over the making of decisions in war operations. The question was studied and reported oh by a special committee appointed by President Eisenhower in 1953, as the Korean War was coming to an ehd. But the document submitted to the House Armed Services Committee is mostly concerned with the functioning of the Department of Defense in peacetime. The formula followed ever since has been one that makes the secretary of defense virtually the commander-in-chief. ★ ★ ★ , He makes the decision as to the size of the forces to be recruited and sent on tor- sional conferences with the military chiefs, they do not as a rule have separate consultations with him alone. Never before has such a system been operated during a major war, in which the United States has participated. In both World War I and World War 0, the highest military officers were in constant contact with the President. Today military strategy is far from secret. Civilians have their say and can overrule or nullify military decisions if they think considerations of an international political nature should take precedence. The whole subject needs exposition in a comprehensive manner by a committee Mrs. Dan Grogan of Birmingham; 95th birthday. Mrs. David Mogg of 93 S. Shirley; 83rd birthday. H. Grimmer of Farmington; 86th birthday. Elmer Wilson of Marlette, formerly of Pontiac; 84th birthday. CONARRATOR The duke is conarrator of the film; with Orson Welles. The camera,does not show Orson. He was making a film in Spain at the time and did his bit off-camera. The doke is frequently on, ' serving as a delightfully informative and witty catalyst as he site in the flowery garden of The MID, their place outside Paris. Many thousands of these poor young urban Negroes have no ties to anything but trouble. Family reins upon them are loose or nonexistent. V y \ v A kaleidoscope of images of affluence unfolds before them in shops and elsewhere as they idly roam the streets. Hot-eyed sloganeers shout hate and stir the youngsters’ hostilities. ★ k k In the shabby settings! where they live, these elements can quickly fuse and light the fires of a shattering riot It is a small step to the picking up of a brick or a rock, or stuffing a dirty rag into q gasoline-filled bottle to make a Molotov cocktail. -'The NAACP’s Roy Wilkins, Americans are white. Some f^ poor- being deprived 6.5 million white families live " . great goad to the riotous in abject poverty — against 1.8 million Negro families living in that state. The difference in proportions, not numbers, is what makes the Negro! condition worse. The very poor represent 36 per ceht of all Negro families, just 14 per cent of white families. Yet the numbers of white poor are great — and their Th* Pontiac Press Is delivered by carrier tar 50 cents * week; vdwr* mailed «• Oakland, G*naa*« Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer and WasManaw Counties it Is (IMS a Postage hat bam paid at tta 2nd das* rata at PonT ——- - Member at ABC passions of the young «inm dweller, then the nation’s poor whites have the necessary moj tivation. / Still, they have not been caught up in the July-Sep-tember contagion that has swept the country since 1964. Should youthful Negro riot become the pattern for the cities for the next decade or more, as some grim observers have predicted, it la difficult to see how the millions of pom- young urban whites can resist indefinitely this contagion of summer fury. If attention follows the camera and the camera follows violence, then the young whites may decide that the lesson is plain for those who would find a way out of their . poverty-ridden oblivion. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 A—7 Life Links Long's Probe, Hoff a CLARKSVILLE, Mo. (AP) -While Sen. Edward V. Long, D-Mo., promised his Senate subcommittee would continue investigate wiretapping, the Senate ethics comittee was taking note of allegations that the senator may have ties with the Teamsters Union. An article in this week’s issue of Life magazine suggested Long’s interest in exposing wiretapping in federal agencies was tied to the Justice Department’s efforts to convict Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa. * ★ * • Hoffa’s lawyer gained a hearing from the U.S. Supreme Court Monday in connection with their charges that Hoffa’s 1M4 mail fraud trial was affected by government eavesdropping. ★ ★ * Ufa magazine said Long received about $48,000 during the past two years from St Loads attorney Morris A. Shenker, Hoffa’s chief counsel for the past two months. our 77tb year of uninterrupted dividends lor College starfti good thing SAVE NOW If a good to have a nest-egg when that freshman starts school... and when you start a savings account for educational purposes, ifs good to know you'll earn the highest possible rate at Capitol... 4.84% on funds loft in your account for 12 full months. INCORPORATED 1WO • UNSINC. MICHIGAN • MEMBER; FEDERAL HOME LOAN SANK SYSTEM CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN 75 WEST HURON STREET • PONTIAC Visit to Gl Son Was to Be Last 5 Midshipmen Linked to Drug Use OKMULGEE, Okla. (AP) -Last fall an Oklahoma man stopped off fai Saigon during a trip back from the Middle East to visit his son, a U.S. Marine at war in Vietnam. Today he is preparing for the youth’s funeral after learning of his death in action. ★ * , # ‘Now, I'm especially glad I stopped, Charles R. Keck, Okmulgee cattle and oil man said Monday at Ms home. * , Keck said his son, Cpl. Rus-| ssU (Rusty) Keck, 20, died of enemy rifle fire during Operation Hickory Thursday. Young Keck was with the 1st Battalion of the 3rd Marine Regiment. A SURPRISE Last fall after the elder Keck decided to stop in Saigoq, he visited the headquarters of the 1st Battalion in the field and surprised hit son. The elder Keck is a Marine1 veteran who fought in the jungles of the South Pacific in World War n. ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -The superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy, Rear Adm. Draper L. Kauffman, says five midshipmen have allegedly experimented with marijuana and three are under investigation. Kauffman said Monday night that two of the five had already been dismissed from the acad- emy “for unsatisfactory conddct not related to the possession or use of marijuana.” , w ’ ★', -it The other three were put on restriction. Kauffman said the three, two juniors and a sophomore who alf admitted using the drug, were attending classes but were restricted to academy grounds. In a statement cleared through the Secretary of the Navy and the Secretary of Defense, - the academy superintendent added that no disciplinary actfoti will be taken until a complete report is received from the Naval Investigative Service. r~ BACKACHE—i Joint Pains You long to mm Mimr palna, •van temporarily, until tna mum ll cleared up. For palllRtlvo, or temporary, pain relief try OeWKr* Pillt. Famous for OVSf M yMCS DaWltt’s PH Iscontaln an anafiieale1 to roduco pain and a_ve*ymHS diuretlcto help eliminate retained fluids ihua fluahlna out Irritating pain Mualpg bladder wastes. DaWltt’s Pills often succeed srhoro othars fall. If pain parsfas always SM your doctor, insist on L DeWitt’s PillsJ State UF Budget at $4.5 Million LANSING (AP) - The Michigan United Fund has announced a budget of $4,534,568 to meet the 1968 needs of the 36 agencies it supports, a seven per cent increase Over the 1966-67 allocation. The money is to be raised this fall by local United Fund, Community Chest, Red Feather andj Torch drives. State AFLCIO President August Spholle is this year’s Michigan United Fund president. Mediator Enters Contract Talks TRAVERSE CITY (AP) State labor mediator Jerry Ford of Grand Rapids today entered negotiations on a master contract between the Traverse City Education Association and the school board at the request the teacher group. Last week, the TCEA charged the school board with creating an impasse in negotiations, by refusing to consider economic portions of the contract until noneconomic terms were settled. 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V/i Mile West of Telegraph East Side I Detroit I Downriver i Birmingham Southfield I Toledo iPeteskey, Mich. PR. 148101 ««■*m 1AV. 5-35951 Royal Oak EL 7-27Q0ICH. 142811 347-1442 i i fwr—^i, Come in—or Call Us... ^ Let Us Show You Why Guaranteed ALUMINUM All SIDING AND TRIM EXPERTLY CUSTOM-FITTED TO COVER THE ENTIRE HOUSE AND GARAGE buy DIRECT- We Design • Ws Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee A—4 ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 Red-Led Unions Strike in Hong Kong HONG KONG (AP) ~ After. 11 days of wild antl*British rioting, Hong Kong’s Communists Shifted their attack on the colo-j mal administration to the labor, front. Drivers from Communist-led unions struck, idling more than 400 double-decker buses and .severely crippling public transportation on Hong Kong Island. ' Three thousand dockyard workers went on a sitdown strike. Leaders of the pro-Communist seamen’s. and textile .workers’ unions were reported planning strike calls. The Communists also were said to be planning to try to disrupt the supply of water, gas and electricity, but the colony’s British government has a semimilitary Essential Services Corps of 6,000 men trained to keep the public utilities working. I Communist labor agitators moved* throughout the colony, threatening retaliation against ail Chinese who do not John the anti-British drive. The colony’s labor force is 99 per cent Chinese.. Government official broadcasts, repeated every few CAMPING WE WILL GO - Sixty 8th-grade students at Madison Junior High School left Sunday for six days of conservation and nature education at the Outdoor Education Center at Sleeper State Park near Caseville. Dennis Beach, head of the science department and founder and director of the program, was among six teachers to accompany the students. Leaving the School grounds are (from left): Victor Sherfield, 576 Second; Terri Durfee, 541 Valencia; and Ken Martin, 966 Kettering. Waterford JCs Slate Session About Workshop The Waterford Township Jay-cees will sponsor a meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow which they hope will lead to the establishment of a sheltered workshop for the handicapped, vocationally limited individual in northern Oakland County. ' All interested persons are invited to attend the meeting at the Community Activities, Inc. building, 5640 Williams Lake,! Waterford Township. A Jaycee spokesman said Goodwill Industries of Greater', Detroit has offered to staff and. equip a building if sufficient area interest is demonstrated. The Jaycees contend .it'.has been estimated that six of every 1,000 persons can be helped by sheltered work and vocational! Me Masted; Imported Canadian Ift always been a great value. Butnowitls even better. *4.47 4/5 Quart Rafail $2.86 Full Plat Rttail Vdum wH# Liils We don’t want to be the biggest bank ... 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They are also planning a, banquet when the girls will be awarded their pins and the boys tie tacks. tional kick-line and dance chorus along with satires on the school and other acts. the senior banquet this year will be held in the Birmingham-Bloomfield Teen Center. Every member of thd senior class is invited; the cost is included in the senior dues. They , have been giving concerts throughout the school year, with proceeds going toward a scholarship fund to be started .next year for an outstanding choir member. The Madrigals, another group tinder the direction of Choirmaster Jones, has been asked to participate in a color television program called “Sounds of America.” They have already been filmed and will be on television soon. Many plans are under way for senior activities as the school year draws to an end. VARIETY SHOW Swing Out is a traditional senior production where the seniors spend an entire morning putting on a variety show for the dent body on the last day of school.. The dinner will be catered, and strolling violinists have been hired to. provide entertainment during the meal. The Teen Center will be decorated in black, white and gold with yellow flowers on each table. Dinner will be served by candlelight. _.. f MOCK ELECTION After dinner, the mock election results will be announced by Vivian Ross and Jay McAul-life, co-chairmen of the dinner. Field Day songs will be sung, and concluding the program will be a speech given by Ross Wagner, principal. Swimming, boating and homeroom baseball games will take up most of Senior skip day, May 31, along with a catered lunch by Alban’s. Richard Bagg, dramatics teacher, and Margaret Wholf-art, girls physical education teacher, are directing the show. There will be the tradi- TV Producer Will Speak at Cranbrook By MIKE KINSLEY The: Forum at Cranbrook School is presenting one of its most jsovdt,. programs of the year tomorrow. The speaker will be Burton C. Benjamin, executive producer'-ef the long-time television series^The Twentieth Century," and aijti) of its new replacement, “The ifst Century.” While the former concentrated on Hie past, showing historical newsreel footage, etc., the latter tries to predict what life iti the next 130 years will belike; J Benjamin is flying in from New York for the day. He will conduct a seminar-type session for interested classes and show the fihn “Standing Room Only” from -The 21st Century” series concerning the population explosion. Later. Benjamin will speak at an all-school assembly and show “The Twentieth Century”'film “The Violent World of Sam Huff,” a television classic and one of,the first television documentaries ever made. - By CHRIS BLAKENEY Pontiac Central High School students received their yearbooks — the “Quivef” — last Friday. After a careful examination of thq photos (to find out which students were caught by the photographers doing what), the students covered the pages with messages to one another. Preparation for the yearbook publication begins in the Utica Names Chief Editors for 2 Papers By SUSAN OWEN Utica High School will have two separate newspapers next year, due to the split-shift system. The editors-in-chief will be juniors Michael Walsh, for'the morning edition; and James Beck, for the afternoon edition. The style of the paper will be changed. As it is now, the size of the paper is 17 by 11 indies. The new paper will measure 2S by 17 inches. The Future Secretaries of America (FSA) was introduced to the students by Anne Horton, distinguished member of the National Secretaries Association and secretary to the divisional manager at Consumer’s Power Company. The first meeting was held May 2, when 36 girls were received into the club. BUSINESS TEACHERS Sponsors to the organization TRANQUILIZERS—Seaholm High’s Maple Chorale will help to sooth jittery nerves and shaky knees at the school’s baccalaureate and commencement exercises. Getting an early start on their practicing are (from left) Kris Blackwood, Scott Nielsen, Frances Alfs and Jan Lennox. Scott and Jan are seniors, Kris, a junior and Frances, a sophomore. SCHOOL NEWS GROUNDUP c* Kingswood By CATHY SHINNICK Those Kingswood girls who have achieved a 3.5 average will have their names read the Merit Roll, and Honor Roll certificates will be given to girls who have maintained ail 4’s and 5’s. 11 p.m. in t he gymnasium, draws nearer. Juniors have been working on decorations on the theme, Ltiau, Island of Paradise. Campaign signs and posters cover tiie walls as Student Council elections near again. Candidates will speak this Monday at an all school assembly. At Pontiac Central 1Quiver Distributed fall, and the staff members follow a rigid work schedule. The first step in composing the “Quiver” is to choose a motto. Stagemasters Last Play Near With the help of adviser Ken Brown, this year’s staff chose the words of Joseph Addison: A true critic ought to dwell rather upon excellencies than imperfections . . and com- municate to the world such things as are worth their observation.” STAFF MEMBERS Members of the “Quiver” staff are Dolores Ciucci, editor-in-chief, Cathy Crew, assistant editor (faculty and advertising) and Phyllis Jackson, assistant editor (copy and portraits) 'Taming of the Shrew' Will Be Presented By JUDY FRANCIS Waterford - Kettering Stage masters will present its final play of the year tomorrow through Friday. §taff workers are Bev Bacak, Cheryl Dell, Chris Kennedy, Kathy McClure, Sue McDonald, Diane Shane and Debby Sibley. The girl with the highest scholastic average in her junior and first three quarters of the senior year will be awarded the Augur phi. A girl chosen fromihe seventh and eighth grade who exhibits the best traits, of a Kingswood girl will be announced to have her name engraved on the Kitty Kingswood sculpture. By KATHY KOURTJIAN Friday 32 members of the American Youth Hostel Club wilj travel to Montreal, Canada, to visit Expo ’67 from North Farmington High School. Lake Orion are Joan Guilstorf, Donna Nich- By TERRY SOLAN Again . the Orion yearbook Dragon has been completed olson and Imelda Kring, all business teachers. and will be arriving for distri- Last Friday, seniors attended their prom at Hillcrest Country Club, in Mt. Clemens. button about June 1. This year’! book under the direction of editor Dick Sheardy and staff, offers many new surprises. Anxiety mounts as the Prom, to be held Saturday from 8 to North Farmington Seven students were language department instructors to give oral recitations of various literature y>r music of a foreign culture. Representing the French Department were BUI Orr, Debbie Dolan, and Janet Freeze. Participating in the German division were Mary Robertson, April KoramUler, Tammy Rairigh, and Kathy Kourtjian. By PATRICIA POLMEAR Election of Marian’s All-School Board officers for 1967-took plaice May 12. . Last Saturday seven students took part in the Language Festival at Eastern Michigan University. Ann Marie TYacey is the new president; Kathleen Reddy, secretary; and Patricia Polmear. St. Lawrence Prom Is Near Susan Savant and Barbara Glynn, sophomores, were named junior commissioners. Big Senior Events Scheduled May 29 By JAMES PAKLEDINAZ With soft music and softer lights, the many minds of the St. Lawrence High School senior class turn to thoughts of the Senior Prom, May 29. On election day, polls were open from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. At the close of the day, Sister Anna Marie, principal, announced the new officers to a tense student body. Boys race around in the process of renting tuxedoes and buying corsages for their big date of the Couples wiU have their prom dinners at various restaurants around the area but a majority of them have decided to meet at Sid’s Entertainment will be provided in the appropriate mood by the Vintage House band. Traditionally the prom couplet wiU meet at Jte convent for punch, with the nuns. Most of the couples will be meeting around 9 p.m. AW, CMON — Katijy Hallman seems disgusted with Bob Wikczewski who shows a lack of enthusiasm for the St. Lawrence High School Senior prom at the Vintage House, May 29. Both are seniors. May 21, the St. Lawrence High Choral Group will give its annual Spring concert. SELECTIONS Selections will be taken from “Bye Bye Birdie” and “Mary Poppins.” “Taming of the Shrew,” will be presented in the gym, which will be transformed into arena-style theater. Pete Teeuwlssen plays Pe-truehiono who tries to change Katherine (Bonnie Bone) from a scolding, vicious girl into a sweet gentle wife. In doing So he helps the younger sister Beanca (Karen Alexander) find a husband who is played by-Ralph Windeler. University of Michigan Re-gentS-Alumni Scholarships have been awarded to Gregory Gallagher, Geraldine McCurry,1 Marian Comedy, relief is found in rival suitor, Hortensio, (John Van Rpekel), Grumino (Curt Darling) and Gremto (Rich ’Sbsen). OTHER PARTICIPANTS Also included in the production are Pat Davidson, Rodney Reinhart, Ed Gallaty, Dav Swain and Carol Methner. Katie La Joie, Kathy Anzi-cek, and Anne Marie Wise, juniors, were elected senior commissioners. ; Sandy Swain, Mike Salley, Kathy Arides, Dan Orders, Mary Sies and Linda McClnne complete the. list of student players. Considered one of Shakespeare’s funniest, the play has been updated by the Stagemas-tors. Clarkston By LINDA HEATH' One outstanding Clarkston student, Mike Schweitzer, is the first student in fourteen years to obtain a straight “A", y 4.0 average at Clarkston. His future plans include rigid engineering program at General Motors Institute in Flint. He plans to enter the field of mechanical engineering. While at college, Mike hopes to join a fraternity, as well as paticipuate in intramural sports. Milford By PAULA MIREAU The Milford High Schoo Choral department presents Drifting and Dreaming” at Kensington Metropolitan Park, 7:3b on Friday, May 26. The concert under the direction of Mrs. Eleanor Beam, unique in that the choir will be aboard the “Island Queen” forty- Directing the play will be Patty Looman with Harriet Davidson, student teacher; assisting. FUTURE TEACHERS Future Teachers’ at WKH will gather for a final get-together June 3 at Pontiac Recreation Area. The picnic scheduled for 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. will be recreation day with badminton, croquet and other outside activities. Kris Wetterhahn, Wendy Wold and Nancy Wlrth. U OF M GRANTS Receiving University of Michigan grants are Gregory Gallagher, Judith Gloonds, Joyce Montgomery, Ruthie Walker, Bonnita Williams and William Garltag. Editors’ assistants are Tert Bramble, advertising; Sonya Hutchinson, features; Chris Mason, sports; Marcia Olds, copy; and Marianne Schone-man, groups. Sandra Lewis, Frank Johnson and Rose Valenti have received the Michigan Associ- , ation of Business Schools Scholarships. Gary Seiser has received the. Michigan Technological University Scholarship. The Woman’s Auxiliary of the Oakland County Medical Society has awarded its nursing scholarship to Deborah Witherspoon. The Oakland County Alumni Club, Michigan State University, has awarded a scholarship to Valeria Davis. ’Senioritis,” that dread disease that creeps up on seniors the last marking period of their high school “career,” has not yet attacked at Central. The seniors, on the basis of last marking period’s grades, are still on top. Twelve seniors appeared on the Principal's Honor Roll (all A’s) while the sophomores and juniors together could only manage to produce eleven scholars. r STUDIOUS — Senior Denise King anxiously studies the text of her valedictory speech as she practices to an audience of chairs at the Academy of the Sacred Heart/ At Sacred Heart It's a Family Affair E1 e c t e d to positions on the 1967-68 senior class board are Todd Baker, president; Tim Donaldson, vice president; Nancy Cover, secretary; and Pat Cahape, treasure. Student Picks Leaders in Rochester By MARY ELLEN QUINN Graduation from the Academy of the Sacred Heart will be a family affair for Denise King. As president of the student government, Denise will give the valedictory address, a task traditionally given to that officer. With her on the speaker’s platform will be her unde, Rev. John Schuett, S.J., a faculty member at University of Detroit, who will preside over the June 6 exercises and give the graduation address. By KARIN HEADLEE Following a Student Council Elections Assembly at Rochester High School, students voted in their first hour classes for next year’s officers. The girls Glee Chib and the Choir has selected a variety of songs all concerning the beauty of spring and the approach of summer. Specialties — on the guitar, by Pat and Kathy Lindgren and dancing by Darlene McDonald. By a majority of votes, Larry McLean was chosen president; Dave Marr, vice president; and Nancy Johnson, secretary. The treasurer is yet to be elected. Kathleen McKenzie, a senior at RHS, has been awarded a 8600 scholarship to Pontiac Business Institute. Kathy was chosen on the bads of her academic ability and her high school’s On Friday, in honor of St. Madeleine Sophie Barat, the foundress of the Sacred Heart order, several {iris will present tableaux and readings on her life and example. The following Wednesday, the May Procession will be held on the school grounds. Denise is a representative of the fourth generation of her family to attend Sacred Heart. , Full or Twin-Silt , i COATS n BLANKETS i 1 r'""'' ' MC • * rWi’h *1 00 1 Coupon U7 j j Coupon ltV7 j Coupons Redeemable At Both Locations MON., MAY 22nd thru SAT., MAY 27th ONE HOUR MARTINIZING BLOOMFIRLD MIRACLE MILE CENTER and ■1 * * 3397 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. AT M-59 i WHICH LADY IS A .. Naturally ... it's tho girl in tho Middle! Have the figure you've wanted and iooe pounds and inchen regardless of your age, plus LOOK and FEEL BETTER the EASY Holiday Health Club Wayl RESERVE YOUR MEMBERSHIP NOW AT PREFERRED MEMBERSHIP RATES SAVE 50% ,★ lone 1 dress size in 1 week! ★ lose 2 dress sizes in 3 weeks! ★ lose 3 dress sizef in 6 weeksl ★ lose 4 dress sizes in 8 weeks! ELECTRIC BELT MACHINE ... Whittle inches and pounds off the waistline OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK MONDAY THRU FRIDAY II A.M. to ID P.M. Sat. 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. MODERN STEAM BATHS ... Where those excess pounds visually melt away. Courses for • SLENDERIZING • RE-PROPORTIONING • SPOT REDUCING • FIRMING-TONING OPEN EVENINGS TIL 10:00 Over 2000 Affiliated Studies Coast to Coast and WORLD WIDE FACILITIES FOR MEN-FACILITIES FOR WOMEN COMMENDED AND APPROVED BY U.G;A. 1 North Ptrry 1 North Party, 334-9529 (Corner Pite and Perry) FOUR COLORS THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 B—8 ^Ex-Governor Likes to Be in Driver's Seat *. MARQUETTE (AP)— Murray per cent hike per hundredweight © Van Wagoner finds it’s hard in auto license plate fees, to break the habit of recom-i Van Wagoner, who led Mich-mending programs to the Mich-ljggn’g road-building efforts as %an Legislature - even if he *** highway commissioner tosn’t been governor since 1942. from 1933 until he was elected Wagoherand fhre<: m0re goyer«)r in 1941, alio urged Mrs, Kenneth Dicksteln, Mrs. David Zamek, Mrs. John Miller, Mrs. Stanford Conn, Mrs. Max Clymer, Mrs. Charles Zamek, Mrs. Kenneth Hoard, Mrs. Robert Langmuir, Mrs. Robert Crandall and Mrs. Verne Riemensphnelder. h H it Trips for the children to a pet shop, the library and the Detroit Zoo are planned before the end of the school year. ■ ★ * * Dr. and Mrs. Harold Bienen-feld of James K. Boulevard hosted the event. Floyd F. Barckholtzes Say Vows Pamela Rose Peter and Floyd F. Barckholtz Jr. both of Pontiac spoke their vows Saturday evening in St. Stephen Lutheran Church. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence F. Peter, of Romulus, and the Floyd F. Barckholtzs of Bad Axe. Mrs. David Shahan of Romulus was matron of honor with attendants Sandra Peter, sister of the bride also of Romu-lus, and Gayle Barckholtz, sister of the groom, from Bad. Axe. , The new Mrs. Barckholtz was gowned hi floor-length peau d’ange overlaid with silk organza, in Empire style. The dress had a scalloped neckline and bell sleeves. Her veil was an elbow-length silk illusion1 secured by a cluster of net petals, and was accented with fresh lily of the valley. She carried a cascade of white roses and lily of the valley. * J. Michael Darby was best Ask About Our Florida Holiday NORGE CLEANING VILLA6E < 1105 Joslyn n 1-2786 man with ushers Barckholtz, < cousin bridegroom ftom St., and Len Golding of Bad Axe. Assisting the ushers was David Shahan. James of the Charles, iMMgw iMfHC&SSSr1 1 MTimassra jmsmmuE-. BUY, SELL, TRADE M « USE PONTIAC PRESS WAMT ADS! Cobyi ^Pkotogwipluj 4y V/urtmumt Colin, COMPLETE ALBUM OF 18-1Q”x1!T PRINTS 8S8A- $109 Call 338-9079, Anytime MRS. BARCKHOLTZ JR. PTAs Pontiac Alcott, 1:00 p.m. School band and orchestra. Multipurpose room. Baby sitting. Refreshments. THURSDAY Bailey, 7:30 p.m., Annual family banquet, pot luck. LeBaron, 7:00 p.m., “The School Enriches Through Music,” featuring the fifth grade choir. Wisner, 7:30 p.m. in Gymnasium. Musical Program. FRIDAY Herrington, School Fair, 5 to 9 p.m. SATURDAY Wever, PTA School Fair, 11:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Rummage Sale, 3 shows by Skeet-er the Chimp. Golden Shadow Matches Trend The latest trend in women’s fashions for evening is glittering golds. Whether entertaining at home ip a gold-spangled pants suit or out for an evening on foe town in gold lame, sparkle and glitter -is' foe order of foe evening. To enhance your golden glow, add sparkle to your eyes with a bint of golden iridescent eye shadow. Celebrate The Holiday With Us! Enjoy the relaxing atmosphere of Hie Ltbcirfy Cocktail Lounge Right in the Heart of Downtown -Pontiac 8$ N. Saginaw prepare for business leadership .. .through evening cla»»e»!at PBI hutinrM offering both dir butlne** administration, CPA and aecounling, clerical, office Professional Accounting Higher Accounting Junior Accounting Bookkeeping Tax Accounting Buaineaa Adminiatrat ion Word Study Buaineaa Engliah Buaineaa Math Executive Secretarial Legal Secretarial Stenographic Clerk-Typist Office Machines IBM Key Punch Typewriting Dictation Gregg Shorthand REGISTRATION INFORMATION FOR PBI: Write, visit or telephone for a copy of latest catalog. Plea** , Ideal Bridal Gift:Fra*er'* Stainless Steel Hollow arc, Now . At Sale Price*! Serving pieces thoughtfully designed to look lilA fine Sterling without the caret Prac-tical for continual use-will not tarnish. Many splendid pieces in the collection. Sale pieces . listed here: Reg. 8.00 Bread Tray...................5.00 Reg. 8.00 Bolter Dish . .. .'.......... 5.00 Reg. 8.00 Divided Vegetable Dish . . . 5.00 Reg. 9.00 Covered Vegetable Dish . . . 7.00 Reg. 10.00 Sugar/Creatner/Tray . . . . 7.00 Reg. 15.00 Hostess Shrimp Server .... 10.00 PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON ST. InOowMOTM Pontiac—FE d-12ta hotly Tilt S:Vt Chinn. Cry*tmt, Ci/Ur and Ethan Alien Furniture BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH RD. ■At Loaf Lake Rd.-644-7370 Mao., Than, and Fri. tilt 9. Cklam, Crystal, Cifu and Camptno Fmrnltmra_____ Travel Costume '67 ... by $30 The smartest little traveler you've ever seen. Washable easy-care Dacron and cotton has a woven stripe. "■ It's always ' ready to go. Carmel. Sizes 6 to 12. California Cobblers presents a flattering Little Shoe . . . Be as comfy as con bo with the fashionable round too and inch-high stack heel. The applique .pattern is reminiscent of a patchwork design. Platin-i ombre trim or whits pastel multi trim. Sizes S to 10, AAA to B Widths. California a A. COBBERS W HURON at TELEGRAPH ■BM THE PONTIAC PKRss TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1Q6T ONE COLOR BIOOMHEID MIRAtU MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH ID. AT SHARE LAKE HD. PLENTY OE FREE, EASY PARKINS - OPEN NISHTS TIU S P.M. P B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 2S, 1067 Gets AMC Post RQB1N malonb By Bob Lubbwi NORTH *Q*4 VAIl ♦ S ♦ KQJ872 WEST EAST 6K1063 * *752 ¥542 ¥K8 ♦ J108 74 80985 *2 + A954 SOUTH (D) A AJ8 VQJ10 7 3 ♦ AK2 ♦ 10 6 Neither vulnerable Weit North East South > 1¥ Pass 2 * Pass 2 N. T. Pass 3 V Pass 4 ¥ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—* 3 East Counts his winners. A club and a ruff are two tricks, his king of hearts will be a third trick. East asks himself, -‘How can! we beat this hand?” He needs to find another trick in his part* 'ner’s hand. What can that trick be? It can be the "ace of dialmonds. If it is, then the trick will never get away. Suppose it is the ace of spades? That trick will keep also. How about the king of Spades? West sees that if he IgiveS his partner an immediate club ruff that king of! 'spades will never make a trick! ibecause South will have time' to draw trumps, after East makes his king, and discard any losing spades on dummy’s nice; By OSWALD and |l°ng club suit. JAMES JACOBY East thinks a little while I Here is a hand from H. W. *on8er-Kelsey’s book, ‘‘Killing Defense If South happens to hold the, at Bridge,” which shows how a king-jack doubleton in spadesj j „ and four diamonds the spade wm «ive South a chance to count a hand k rid 01 his losin* club We are going to| use our own| code word West can get his ruff in but East’s preltminairy checkup had disclosed the strong probability that if South had held 54-2-2 distribution he would not have rebid two no-trump. After all these conclusions East leads a spade and the hand collapses. | Stucky has been named vice | president in charge of automotive purchasing for American Motors Corp., AMC President William V. Luneberg announced Monday. Stucky has worked in the purchasing department of Ford Motor Cp. 'for the past bight years. WClIRDJta#** 2 * Pass ? You, South, hold: 4AJ1S65 V2 OK 4 S +A Q 8 6 What do you do? lustrate East’s' | thinking. 1 Pass East Analyzes; [ the" lead. He JACOBY notes that it! A—Bid four clubs. Your part-surely is a ner must have a long elub suit. Singleton. He reviews the bid-u he >»»s anything else yon ding and notes that South should w*° gwae. hold exactly five hearts. South' . today’s question also holds two clubs and East! Y°u clubs and your decides that in all probability belg^ Holds three cards each in spades! . _ and diamonds. , Answer Tomorrow ™ y> w. .ft • . £ Astrological Forecast Brr 1 By SYDNEY OMARR . For Wednesday “The wise man/rontrols Ms destiny Astrology points the /way." ARIES (M«r. 21 - Apr. 19): Not s ' r long-distance travel, JjMfl TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May protects. Have confidence I * * - - requirements, e goats. t‘----------------------- „__________o confidence. GEMINI (May 21 • originality, *hmN| puzzled. Don't chose rainbows. W receptive. You'll, win I LEO (July 8 - Au tuner aspect points to-------------------- endeavors, pleasant surprises. Minor altercation could upset evening. Permit logic to rule emotions. Stay out olj foolish argument. VIRGO (Aug. 8 - S--------------- -------- between home, career Interests could erupt. Strive tor balance. You can solve dilemma by mature approach. Avoid tendency to be fixed. Stress flexibility — ha versatile. ■ Oct. 22): Day qsitlon tends to I Iff What you do with this opporhi Is of paramount Importance. Accent -Of RESPONSIBILITY. SAGITTARIUS • (Nov. ■ Special documents may coma to yo tention. Get raliabla opinion. Stay ’ law. Check source material. Gain If you adhere to principles. 1 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - J quasi from one who works ... be fulfilled. Favor you granf............ be repaid. Take opportunity to cement friendship. Addsd responsibility 1 ' dj catod. AQUARIUS (Jan. 8 - Feb. II): Special Births The following is,a .list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office fby name of father): Lee S. Garretson, Farmjnpton ^ Lynn G. Robinsoft. Utica1 Edward J. Connors, Birmingham Gerald J. Stasak, Farmington Charles R. McCulloch, Birmingh Donald A. Kalfayan, Lake Orion -Donald A. McGhee. 2M Marshal' James T, Nichols, 4537 Horst Kenneth R. Welbaum. Rochestei Burl Wright, 79V, a----- Thornes G. McMIt—.. — ... Jamies E. Seuve, 2715 Redondo Phlltfp S. Gardella, Walled Lak Wilbert T. Alexander, 290 Ferry Edward J; Kettenstock, Far teddy W. BentfMd. I7i west P Russell R. Wilson, Clarkston Warren R. Furry, Milford John F. McClusky, 689 Desota Carlton R. Samson, 4430 Elizabt Albert M, Serra, Waterford Wwtcr F, Mshatou Jr., Troy 1 JohnC. DePotter, Birmingham . Colllster, Utica __ __________ Jlrmingham G. Bill> Keego Harbor _____A B. Chopbl 111, Bloomfield Hills Alexander G. Keureilan, Blrmlnghar E. Frank Moelich, Bloomfield Hills Daniel H. Dahl, Birmingham Roger P. Spaven, 5655 Clinton “*™ke wCohnor. HeeNE ^VF. LaBarge ■ "*'JTr‘*t, Fen ’Connor, Farmington IMRi. UEPW Jr„ Blrmi William $. Wright, Farmington Dante) B. Groves, Bloomfield Hills Edward A. Rusin, Bloomfield Hills Thomas B. Rice, Birmingham '“—*'* * 1 *■■■“" nlngham ________x. 2*1 Oakland Llebrecht, Birmingham "lU man j. Lieurecm, Don F. Carlson, Tt„ Robert L. Barley, Bfrmlnghi.. Robert A. Salzwedel, Birmingham David A. Young, Birmingham William E. FWht, Troy Andrew Rosasco, Bloomfield. Mathew J. Schenk, Birmingham Robert H. Lyle, Farmington Wayne T. Good, Birmingham SKt^Awbmm Benard D. lulltuih. 81 f mm toward i TUB PONTIAC PHKSS. TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 Jpycee Fund Drive Progresses B—9 The Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce la currently spear* heading a month-long campaign to raise $25,000 for a Pontiac Create Arts Crater. Approximately $60,000 has been collected to help rebuild the art center, the former City Library at the corner of Wil-” s and Lawrence. GIFT of a LIFETIME GIVI AN OLIVETTI UNDERWOOD UNDERWOOD 21 TYPEWRITER The features and "feel" of o standard at the Weight and price pt a portable. • 88 Character Keyboard • Half-spacing,, Vertical and Horizontal • 3 Secretarial Scales • Full size diameter Carriage roller • Variable Line Finder MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART 8$ N. Saginaw FE 4-5788 Next to Simms EAGLE Pentieo’l POPULAR THEATER PAUL IIEUimfln /JULIE MIDREUIS tears you AIMED HITCHCOCK’S APART WITH __ SUSPENSE? I TECHNICOLOR* 1 auTo^S'ChT ™*hnic0(PR The art center will be available to all persons for meetings, workshops and classes in pottery, oil painting, photography and other arts and crafts. Rooms also will be available for exhibits and club . meetings. A calendar of events of community interest also will be kept there. “For 1$ years the Pontiac Society of Artists has needed a meeting room with * stage, as well as classroom and exhibit space. Also, many people in the community, particularly children, have needed a reference area for beginning artists to experiment in the visual arts,” commented Mrs., Arthur Hays, president of the Pontiac Society of Artiste. ■ Sr ★ W Dr. Harold A. Furlong, president of the Pontiac Creative Arts Center, emphasized the center’s appeal to the entire community. GREAT OPPORTUNITY “There is a great opportunity in Pontiac for an art center to meet the requirements of people who have leisure .time for instructions in the visual arts,” he said. “In addition, there will be lectures and demonstrations devoted to the appreciation of contemporary art.” K Artists will be working in front of stores at the Tel-Hu-ron Shopping Center Friday and Saturday as a campaign highlight to emphasize the need for an art center to work in. Exhibit of works by (oca1 artists are in many store windows for the duration of the campaign. WWW All collected money will be used to renovate the building which will house the pro] center. The building is si turally sound but needs remodeling to be adapted to the needs of the center, according to the Jaycees. . Pontiac Pntu Photo ARTISTS AT WORK - Local artists, Marilyn Moore of 1$IV4 N. Johnson and Mrs. Richard Leach of 2401 Oakway, West Bloomfield Township, secretary of the Pontiac Society of Art, work in temporary quarters in the Pontiac Mall to highlight the need for a Pontiac Creative Arts Center. The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce is spearheading a drive this month to raise $25,000 to make the center a reality. Artists will be working at Tel-Huron Friday and Saturday. Need for More State Road Taxes Told ONTONAGON (UPI)--A Michigan Highway commissioner warned yesterday that unless a highways-only tax package passes the Legislature this year, the state will have to cut much road construction in the next,, five years. ,♦ ft ★. And, said Wallace D- (Mike) Nunn, that/ would amount to losing a big share of the $35 million planned for road building in the Upper Peninsula. 8pealdag at a meeting of the Great Lakes County Road Association, Naan said that $150 million has heed spent in the last 1$ years in the Upper Peninsula to modernize old roads and to build new ones. But much wqrk remains to be done if we are to meet the Upper Peninsula’s ' highway needs,” he said. It depended, he said, on _ Senate - passed package of bills now waiting action in the House to raise the necessary money. Those bills, among other things, would raise gas taxes ; by one cent a gallon and the * weight taxes for license plates from 35 cents to 55 cents per K hundredweight. RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Featuring Our Famous Koahur Cornod Baaf SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY COMMERCE UNION LAKE AT HAOOERTY RO. EM 3-1111—Show Starts at Dusk Adults SUI-Childran Undar 12 Frsd FREE ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS -LAST TIME TONIOHT— 1st RUN “HOT RODS TO HELL” Also “THE VENETIAN AFFAIR” • STARTS WEDNESDAY **** PAUL NEWMAN FREDRIC MARCH RICHARD BOONE DIANE CILENTO JJOAJBREJ Plus: David Janssen in “Warning Shot” HURON NOW at 1:M & 11:00 ■ TORY CURTIS ROSANNA SCHIAFFIN0 Arrivederci, /gags,,,,. immmm ■**** MUST RATW6!' IS PAWS BURNING; WITH AN INTERNATIONAL ALL-STAR CAST at 8i45 only In particular, the site needs a new heating plant, wiring and decoration at an estimated cost |of $100,000. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., has designated May as “Pontiac Creative Arts Center Month” in an attempt to help the fond raising efforts on behalf of the center. The City of Pontiac has agreed to lease the old library building for a token sum of $1 per year and assist in the financing of the renovation. ★ * * Persons interested in contributing to the fund campaign ma) write to the Pontiac Jaycees in the Riker Building in care of the Pontiac Creative Arts Center. invites You and Your Family To Be Wednesday Nighters Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS 95c PONTIAC MALL Only 120 Children VnderlO CHOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. Social Security Outlay Is Up Fire at Ford Fatal to 3rd DETROIT (AP) - Last o D,* jlSL,,.* - 'week’s propane gas fire at the y PCt, Increase in Ford Motor Co.’s River Rouge plant has claimed its third life. County Over 1965 Social Security benefits paid to Oakland County residents last year totaled 866,806,112, an increase of nine per cent over 1965. lino J. Heino, Social Security district manager, said recently that 66,112 persons were receiving benefits at a, monthly rate of $5,567,176, 'at the end at 1966. Some 50,745 were older people, he said, receiving benefits as retired workers, the wives and husbands of retired workers and as the surviving widows or aged dependent parents of workers who have died. Heino also pointed out that 10,533 young widows and children in the Pontiac* area were receiving benefits amounting to $756,562 per month at the end of last year. Also, 4,834 disabled workers and dependents were receiving benefits at the monthly rate of $374,756. ' * * h' , , “Practically every young family in Oakland County has survivors’ protection under Social Security that can be worth $75,000 or more and equally valuable disability insurance protection,” Heino said. TAX CONTRIBUTIONS The average worker can expect to collect more than the value of his Social Security tax contributions just in benefits payable to him and his wife in retirement, according to Heino. H he doesn’t live to retirement, his family may collect more than the contributions he has paid; and the same will be tnie if he shpuld become totally disabled for work before 65. * ★ ★ ★ Under the present tax schedule, even young workers who begin work to 1974 will pay only about 80 to 85 per cent of, the value of their potential benefits. Matching contributions paid by their employers will account for the rest. Estel Perry, 43, of Melvindale, died Monday of burns suffered when a pile driver rammed a pipeline leading to a| propane gas chember last Tuesday. Wolbur LaRue, 25, of Inkster! rad Hugh McGovern, 57, of; Skokie, 111., a&o died as a re-' suit of the fire. Man Stands Mute in Death of Wife KALAMAZOO (UPlj - A 39-, year-old Kalamazoo man yes- J terday stood mute on charges of killing his wife because she wouldn’t turn down her record player when he told her to. * * * Roy David Mabry was held on the murder charge after a plea of innocent was entered for him. ★ ★ ★ Police said Mabry shot his wife Lela, 39,two weeks ago be-i cause she would not turn down' the volume on her record play- • er after he told her to. ** AL0-M0ISTURE PLUS®^\ This delicate, non-greaay night creme...rich in precious Alou Vsrs gel...penetrates and gently blooms new lift and smooth-noss into your complexion. With Purchase of any [of the 3 AlO Coin\c£tcd shown below. stimulate: -skin with this cool, lime-acentod toner... form u la ted Witl) precious Aloo Vora ■si to restore the skin's PH factor (Acid/Alkallne) to perfect balance, ^ .two- flfty-snd • four dollars ALO-VSKIN CLEANSER... rich in precious Aloe Vere gel ... leaves your skin shining clean and.velvety soft. AL0-FACE® make-up foundation Aloo Vara gtl ...pampers your face all day lone. A 1b Housing Director KALAMAZOO — Thomas J. Carr has been named director of university housing facilities at Western Michigan University, effective July 1. Carr, affiliated with the university housing office since 1962, succeeds Archie Potter, who retires. K* Specialize In LAROE QUANTITY ORDERS for parties, picnics, meetings, social groups or dinner at home. A Division OF OAWN ( DONUTS A-S-kii» e » eTTe e e/< Tender, Fresh, Young, Plump CHICKENS Deep fried in fresh pure vepet able oil for the most de-» KSSSgS • • • *nr * Ar *. j i cmjmmon j i NOUS JfKC > L ^5*2. ©Q I : Open 7 Days-S i.M. to 12 Midnight 93 NORTH TELEGRAPH d BETWEEN TEL-HUSON AND PONTIAC MALI. «I CNI6KEN-PHONE 335-2444 , DONUTS-PHONE 335-0101 JUUUUUULUJULA EBCS3BG Training Grant KALAMAZOO (AP) - The' Kalamazoo public school system will receive a $203,000 grant! to train 70 unemployed.workers under the Manpower Development and Training Act. “HOTEL” Rod Taylor “FIRST TO FIDHT” AU Color Starts TOMORROW! if® Andl’mFeelin’SoSad a RICHARD QUINE nonenn BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M. DRIVE-IN BLUE SET I Waterford TAKE 175 TO MT. CUMINS RO. OROYKE AO. AT WALTON SLVO. CHILDREN IINSER 12 FREE AIRFT WMS. LAKE RO. AT AIRPORT RO. MILE WEST OF DIXIE HGWY. (U S. 10) ‘...Caught betwi os' young...and ruthlaw < \7iSS* TNI jmm piayfliris cHKUUCITlr € ROBERTWUHR I IK I WKS “”WRPPBgHC iBwiws; I — ups* 5 JUNE | ILKINSON i rilllinilll.UUUNJINJNs X ifiMfii9tiiaali4i||||||||||l|||liai"||f FAMILY ROOMS Beautifully Finiihad AS LOW AS *1395 • BATHROOMS KITCHENS • SIDING • WINDOWS I CWeedon ffonslrurtionffa BUILDINQ COMPANY 1032 W«st Huron Struct FE 4-2597 In Pontiac Since 1931 MEMBER PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE L -HI Work Guaranteed , DO YOU HAVE A CROWDED LITTLE DINING R00M-AND A KITCHEN THAT’S TOO SMALL? Then phon* Jim McNeil at POOLE LUMBER. He'll coma to your home, at a timO that's convenient to you, to show you how to turn your two smalt rooms into one spacious, attractive area where your family can spread out and ba comfortable. And POOLE LUMBER can handl* the entir* job for you, using quality.control throughout. ' 1 '} 72 Years of Service In Th6 Pontiac Areat LUMBER HARDWARE 151 OAKLAND AVE. - PONTIAC Phon* FE 4-1594 B—10 Tlllt PONTIAC TtJvSOAY, MAY 23, 1967 NEW YORK (UP!) % Visitors to the Brooklyn Botanical Garden have been warned to beware of the squirrels. .* * Nine persons have been attacked in the past two weeks, including a guard who said a squirrel ambushed him from a tree and bit him on both ears. Pilgrim Habit PLYMOUTH, Mass. (UPI) -Kenneth Tavares, manager of a museum opening Friday, says Monday is wash day because of the pilgrims. He. says die pilgrim women spent 65 days at sea aboard the Mayflower and debarked on a Monday. Tavares said they did their washing immediately and the tradition was born. SCULPTOR WITH A PROBLEM - Sculptor Les Levine stands between two parts of his creation, a 1,600-square-foot exhibit of 7-foot-high plastic bubbles, at New York's Museum of Modern Art. The artist, 31, says walking through the plas- Legislators See Film on Politics LANSING (UPI) - Michigan legislators went to the movies yesterday and saw themselves in living color. Typical reaction? “Boy, buddy, are you ugly!’’ As part of Michigan Week festivities, the House chamber was darkened for the showing of a half-hour education film made earlier this year about the complex and sometimes puzzling doings of the Michigan Legislature. “Hie People Enact” cost private donors $40,000 to film. Its “star” was a typical freshman state representative, Harold Conway, from an unnamed city and of unmehtioned political persuasion. “Hal” Conway was a professional actor, but his costars or “extras” for the most part, were the real thing. The film showed Conway chasing from meeting to meeting, talking to visiting school-children, chatting with lobbyists, going to caucus and sweating over how to vote on a key bill! relating to an unnamed issue. The film crossed party lines consistently and drew bipartisan cheers, applause and boos at appropriate moments as representatives popped on the screen. It also got laughs at inappropriately bad moments that only those who share the agonies of the legislative process would find funny. The biggest howl of all — to lawmakers—came when Conway said to a bunch of schoolchil-| dren: “Those thousands of bills that) are introduced are trimmed down to just a few hundred by[ committees. And by the thne they get bn the calendar, yre' kqow what they’re all about. WAITING FOR SPRING This dejected-looking feline found warmth yesterday in an old tire suspended by a rope in BensenviUe, a Chicago suburb. AP Wlrephoto tic bubbles is supposed to make the viewer happy. Levine has a problem: what to do with the bubbles hfter the exhibition tour. Art Bubbles Over, Runs Out of Space NEW YORK (AP) — When sculptor Les Levine creates a new work of art, he also creates a problem. Like where to put it. Take, for instance, the 1,600-square-foot sea of plastic bubbles Levine blew into the Museum of Modem Art. It took practically an entire outdoor terrace to set it up. And it was a big terrace. Now the exhibit is over and the bubbles have to go. But where? One just doesn't set up 1,600-square-feet of plastic bubbles in a living room comer. Since they’re 7 feet high, they don’ hang easily from a studio wall. SAVED BY SHOW Luckily, Levine got a one-man show at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis so he doesn’t have to worry about where to put his bubbles until that’s over. The bubbles are being shipped by truck. “What I’d really like to do is sell the work,” the 31-year-old sculptor said. “But it might take some time because I’m asking 622,000 and there aren’t a lot of people with that much money to spend or any place to put this. Agent Snail ASHBOURNE, England (UPI) — Not even the most dedicated spy thriller fan could be expected to swallow a story about the British government sending radioactive snails into a tiny town. • ‘ A gulp is in order. The British government is sending radioactive snails into Asb-bourne. Scientists are releasing ,400 snails in an abandoned qilarry near Ashbourne in test designed to study changes in their shell colors, it said. To help them trace the snails, a “small’ amount of radioactivity is being dabbed onto each one. Bon*t worryrsaid the govern-ment. The snails wiil / only travel some 50 yards a year, a spokesman said, and anyway, the radioactive level is too low to be dangerous. | 'Can't Bear 1 Problem' FRENCH CREEK, W., Va. plastic (AP) — Fred Trainer, superin- anamid Co. tendent of the French Creek Game Fanh, has an unbearable problem. I’m not worried though. I’ll just keep finding places to gjexhibit it until I find someone to buy it.” I WANTS TO SELL PIECE I! Levine said he’d like to sell the piece to a large corporation | to pep up the lobby of a big building. I “A very big building,” he added. The sculpture consists of 16 half bubbles made of acrylic ..........to the artist for his work by the American Cy- He has eight bears, six too many for his farm. And he would like to give them away to zoos or trade them for other | animals. The increase in bear population was due to people bringing in cute found in the woods. [“Many times the animal is not j really lost from the mother, but | is carried away by a well-mean-ling human,” Trainer said. A factory superheated the 16 sheets of plastic and blew \ out with air to fit Levine’s specifications. loses Sense of proportion Walking through the bubbles is a physical rather than visual experience. Hie viewer tends to lose his sense of distances and proportion. - “It’s supposed (o make people happy, that’s all,” Levine said. He didn’t always make people happy with such big exhibits, however. ★ ★ ★ "When I became a professional artist 12 years ago, my first piece was 8 inches high,” he said. “They just get progressively (bigger from there. , | “If I sold these bubbles now for $22,000, I’d probably go out and spend $21,000 to build a piece as big as a whole museum. “Maybe I’d ask New York City to lej me build it in Central Park. That’s .the only place big enough.” - AP Wlrephoto — Charlene Rowe, 11,. js a star of the Hornets, an o(herwise all-boy team she Phil Houser, general manager of the Hornets of the Southern League, is her team, has been approved for Little League hasn’t been made yet about this year. 1“f People in the News By The Associated Press Some 1,500 members of the Japanese community greeted Crown Prince Akito and his wife Michiko in Brasilia yesterday. The royal couple flew from Argentina on their Latin-Ameri-can tour. President Arturo da Costa e Silva of Brazil and his wife, together with most of the Cabinet, also greeted the couple at this ultramodern inland capital. What's in a Name? Nothing, Says Judge A woman who named her ninth child after a judge has been given a suspended sentence by the judge. “You must understand this has nothing to do with my decision,” chuckled U.S. Dist. Judge Bailey Brown in Memphis, Tenn., yesterday. Laura Willis Agnew was indicted March % with her twin sister on a charge of cashing a government check mistakenly delivered to her home. Mrs. Agnew’s ninth child, Bailey Brown Agnew, was born nine days after the indictment. Both she and her sister, Clara Elils, pleaded guilty and received’suspended sentences. Quirks in the News. SHORT SUBJECT - France’s entrant, Sylvie Mouton (left), 16, discusses her miniskirt at the International Teen Princess Pageant yesterday in Chicago. With her are AP Wlrephoto Finland’s Kristina, Kankaanpaa (center), 17, ' in native costume, and Betty Hannam, 18, of Chicago. Winner of the Pageant will be crowned Friday. Wall Thief BILUNGE, England (DPI), Police are looking for the thief who made off with a four-foot-high, 20-yard-long stone wall. Happy Folk Need Room WASHINGTON UPi - “The happiest people,” says actress Eartha Kitt, “are those who have been left a little place to play, or swim, or just sit. We have enclosed our concrete. There is no place for them to go.” Miss Kitt was urging a House Education subcommittee to support programs aimed at avoiding summer violence in The nation’s underprivileged neighborhoods. , The actress, born in poverty, said Monday a major cause of juvenile problems is lack of communication between youngsters and adults. FOOD FOR CHILD OF WAR-A little Vietnamese boy, who was brought out of the demilitarized zone so he would not get trapped in fighting there between U.S. Marines and North Vietnamese troops, holds a packet of goods from an American C-ration carton. GOVERNMENT ORDERS PETS DESTROYED—William Singer holds his two pet alpacas from Peru, moments be-, fore a U.S. Dept, of Agriculture agent,seized the animals at Singer’s North Hollywood, Calif., home yesterday. The pets were to be destroyed as a disease-prevention measure. Agents told newsmen alpaca are known to carry foot-and-mouth disease, and that the' animals, named May and Tayr were admitted to the U.S. over the weekend by mistake. Superplane Watchdog Vows No Monopoly WASHINGTON UP) - Although only two contractors have been picked by the government for the billion-dollar development of the supersonic transport plane, action will be taken to prevent monopoly situation, an Air Force general says. Maj. Gen. J. C. Maxwell, deputy director of SST development for the Federal Aviation Agency,- said the contracts with Boeing Co. and General Electric provide that the government could help set up a competitive manufacturer. “It would take a lot of know- how and major financing but I believe that the U.S. aerospace industry inherently has this ability and that if the SST program proves outstandingly sue* cessful, then financing should be available,” he said. Boeing will build two prototype SSTs for flight testing and GE will build the engines. Plans are to have the 1,800-per-miie airliner in the air by the end of 1974. Family Set for Solitude CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) U With few supplies and lots of enthusiasm, the Richard Ault family leaves today on the first leg of a trip to be alone for one year on an island in the South Pacific. 1 think everybody has a desire to get away from it all,” Ault, 29, a former radio announcer in Akron. Going with jiim are his wife, Lois, 25, and their daughter, Tracy, 3. The traveling gear includes a supply of food, a dog, monkey, guitar, minimum clothing and medical supplies, including a year’s supply of birth control pills. Also packed are an ax, a few knives, a telecamera and film and a radio that only trans- LUNCH TIME! — With a bottle of milk gripped in his four nimble paws, this baby raccoon lies on his back and peacefully has THE PONTIAC PRES? TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 _____ C—l Waterford Schools in Seesaw Battle Kettering Captures Pontiac Press Golf Invitational By FLETCHER SPEARS Township rivals Waterford and Kettering have been taking turns in the golf winner’s circle this season and it’s Waterford’s turn next with a tasty prize in sight. * * ★ :*• ■' Last Friday, the Skippers of Waterford’ captured the Class A regional crown at Brighton, and it enabled them to take a 2-1 lead in the rivalry with Kettering, which finished in a tie for second one stroke back. Yesterday it was Kettering’s torn. The Captains evened the score at 2-2 with the Skippers in taking the 16th Annual Pontiac Press Invitational at Ppn- ' tiac Country Club on a cool, windy day. The Captains’ four-m a n squad posted a score of. 316, finishing five shots ahead of Waterford. Southfield placed (322) third and defending champion Bloomfield Hills (324) fourth. ★ ★ ★ The next big date for the prep golfers is next Monday when they’ll journey to Marshall for the state championships. FIRST VICTORY It was the first yictory In The Press tournament for the Captains and coach Steve Hubbell., ★ Waterford and Kettering entered the tourney as cofavorites but newcomer Utica showed early intentions of pulling an upset. The Utica squad trailed by only four strokes after nine holes but. faltered on the back nine and closed with a 345 total to finish 12th. Taking honors in the Gass B-C-D division for the second straight time was West Bloomfield ,(339). In the over-all race, the Lakers finished ninth. ■ # * * * Play was conducted under a four-man team’ setup — five-man teams were used formerly — so the 316 score posted by tbe Captains will go into the record book. BIG GUN The big gun for the Captains was Gary Quitiquit, who collected medalist honors over the par-72, 6,305-yard course with a. 74, his best round of the season. ★ * ★ Dave Moiianen carded 78 to go with Quitiquitfs 74, While Dan Larkin and Jim Richardson rounded out the foursome with Waterford’s ’Four R’s’ performed well but they didn’t have a match for Quitiquit. Rod Skelton and Randy Berry posted 79s for the Skippers, while Ray Tallerday checked in with an 81 and Randy Rieth an 82., Walled Lake’s Russ Herron, medalist last Friday at Brighton, played the back nine first and ran into some problems with a four-over-par 40, but he rebounded on the front side for a 38 and a 78. ★ ★ ★ Gary Balli&t of Avondale fired a steady 38-37—75, while Mike Sheridan of Royal Oak Kimball came through with a 36-40—76. 1,. Kettering (314. ___ 71, Gary Quitiquit 74, Dan Larkin 17. Jim Richardson 82. , • Wi ■ 7. Waterford (371) - Rod Skalton 7», Randy Barry 79, Ray Tallarday H, Randy Rieth 82. ' • 3. Southfield (323) — Elliot Spoon 7*, Bob Scheuer 78. Mary Blamly 82. Mark Mattingly S3. 4. Bloomfield Hills (324) — Bill Scott 71, Gaorga Orr II, Randy DaArmant 12, Tarry Lorn) 83. 5. Pontiac Control (328) — Daye Run*' Kin 79, Gary Backman 80, Dave Mc-aalay 83, Tom Pintw 86. 6. Rochester (329) T- Dick , Saits 79. Rod Cook 80, Bart Johnson 83, Carl Griffis I!. I 7. (Tie) — Royal Oak 0JM| Ron Srofca 80. Dave Frants I Oieson 87, Larry Kraft 90. — Royal Oak Kimball (338) — Mika Sheridan 76. Doug Colllck IS, Bill Rogara 88, Pat McGaughay 89. 9. west Bloomfield (339) — Mika Waters |1, Bill Joysay 16. Pat Windoy 86, Play Boston Tonight Tigers Are No. 1 Target From Our News Wires As the Detroit Tigers prepared to meet the Boston Red Sox tonight they found themselves the target team in more ways than just tbe obvious. The Tigers took a day off Monday but recaptured the American League lead when the Chicago White Sox dropped an 8-7 contest to the Minnesota Twins. Chicago slipped to 11 percentage points and a half-game behind the Tigers as the lead changed hands for the second tjune since the. Tigers split doubleheader Sunday with the Yankees. “It’s too early to get excited about whether you're in fist or second place,” Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said. “But I like the fact we’re 19 games over .509.(21-11).” Baltimore’s Tom Phoebus, who started going places when he returned home, has given the wandering Orioles a new look at their old neighborhood. Phoebus, a Baltimore native who came up from the minors late last year and pitched shutouts in his first two starts, blanked the New York Yankees 7-0 on two hits Monday night, lifting the Orioles back to the .500 level after a three-week subterranean flight. The 25-year-old right-hander, who lives less than two miles from Baltimore’s Municipal Stadium did not allow a hit until the seventh inning and struck out 11 Yankees on the way to his second victory in three decisions. MOVE UP The triumph, seventh in the last nine games for the world champions, sent them into third-place tie with Kansas City and Minnesota in the American League. California < topped Kansas City 6-3 and Geveland blanked Washington 4-0 to other AL action. Phoebus, a chunky, 5-foot-6. fireballer whose 13-9 record and 208 strikeouts helped Rochester capture the 1966 International League pennant, joined the Orioles last September and whitewashed California and Kansas City on a combined yield of nine hits. * ★ * Frank Robinson, meanwhile, crashed his 10th home run taking the league lead — and Dave Johnson and Andy Etche-| barren also poled homers for the Orioles. Minnesota’s Cesar Tovar, who had two homers and four hits in Sunday’s victory over California, stayed hot with two hits and a pair of RBI against the White Sox. The Twins came from behind with a three-run burst’in the sixth inning, Zoilo Versalies singling home the go-ahead run. Tovar’s 2-for-3 night raisedl his batting average to tying Frank Robinson for second place behind AL leader A1 Kaline of Detroit. EIGHT HOMER Don Mtocher drove in three runs with *his eighth homer andi a two-run single, backing Jim McGlothlin’s six-hit pitching as the Angels overcame Kansas City’s early 3-1 lead. Mincher’s single in the seventh capped a three-run rally after KC reliever John (Blue Moon) Odom wiki-pitched the lead run across. Steve Hargan stopped Washington on four hits and drove in the only run he needed with a second inning single. Lee Maye and Chuck Hinton rapped bases-empty homers for the Indians, helping Hargan breeze to his third shutout and fifth victory of the year. INTERESTED OBSERVERS - Watching some of the late starters finish in the 16th Annual Pontiac Press Invitational yesterday at Pontiac Country Club are members of the Waterford Kettering team along with coach Steve Hub-bell (right). This foursome (left to right) of Dan Larkin, Baseball Pairings Made PCH, Clarkston Open Tourney Pontiac Central and Clarks-ton have been paired in the opening game of the Pontiac Invitational High School Base: ball Tournament Friday night at Jaycee Park. ★ it i ir The up-and-down Chiefs, coasts of the sixlh annual tournament with Pontiac Northern, will catch the highly rated Wolves (13-5) one day after the latter’s Wayne-Oakland League title showdown with Northville. But PCH will enter the tourney following double-headers Monday and Thursday that will complete its Saginaw Valley Conference slate. Central has been splitting most of its twinbills. The tournament pairings were announced last night at a meeting of the competing schools’ representatives and tournament officials from the sponsoring city Parks and Recreation Department and The Press. The PCH-Clarkston winner will play Monday night the survivor of Saturday’s noon contest between Kettering (15-3) and Madison (8-4). Also in the upper bracket are the Saturday Rochester-Walled Lake and Romeo - Bloomfield Hills games. They will be at noon and 2:15 p.m., respectively, and the winners will ptay Memorial Day (Tuesday) afternoon. In the lower bracket, South-field (12-2) will meet Birmingham Brother Rice (6-5), Waterford (11-6) will play Avondale (3:1)6), Royal Oak Kimball (li-3) will oppose Clawson (3-7) and Hazel Park (£12) will tackle Pontiac Northern (9-4). Sweep Doubleheader No-Hitter Helps Chiefs -Senior southpaw Larry Walker hurled a five-inning no-hitter the second game yesterday to give Pontiac Central a doubleheader victory over Bay City Central. Bay Gty managed only one run off Pontiac pitching for the afternoon, came in the fifth frame of the opener which the Chiefs won to 15 innings, 2-1. Cecil Martin, sophomore Victor Quince and Gary Richardson combined to check Bay Gty in the opener. Richardson came on in relief of Quince in the 14th to pick up the win. Gyde Duncan’s stogie sent Al|j - . . Bessant across with the first!8Pf s champion according to a PCH run to the third inning and;P?£ system based on team Martin’s stogie to the 15th brought Randy Sutt across.with the winning run. Prep Calendar marker All toe lower bracket games will be played Saturday with the PNH-Hazel Park encounter concluding the seven-game schedule under the lights at 7:39 p.m. The four lower-bracket survivors will meet to quarter-final contests. The semifinals will be Wednesday evening and the championship tilt is set for 7:30 p.m. June 1. Southfield, the county’s No. 1 ranked team, is the defending two-time champion. ★ e ★ Tickets are on sale only at the Parks and Recreation Department office at City Hall. They are (1 per adult and 50 cents per student for each session. There are also adult tournament tickets on sale for $4. MSU's Spartans Best in Big Ten EAST LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State has been judged the Ten’s unofficial all-around The Spartans topped the scoring tabulation by winning championships to football, hock-The second game was called ey, tennis and wrestling Dave Moiianen, Gary Quitiquit and Jim Richardson posted a score of 316 to win the Press crown. The issue was still to doubt when the. team moved over to the ninth green to watch the action. Home Builders Triumph, 10-6 A couple of big innings carried Booth Holmes to a 10-6 opening season victory over Pass Esca-vating last night in city Class A baseball action. Booth picked ,up four runs on 'only three hits to the third and sent five more across the plate on only two hits to the fifth. The losers tightened the game a little with three runs to the seventh. Jerry Hill picked up a pair of singles and knocked in two runs for Booth and teammate Chuck Honchell contributed a couple of hits to the attack. Ken Mazur and Larry Crouch picked up two hits apiece for the losers. Trtite 21 6 7 Tatalft 23 11 I RBI — Dm)00, Crouch, Dallty; Hill 2. Errors — Lundy 3) Roborte. Harris, Booth. Pitching — Dally I H, S SO, 3 W; Sparkman 7 H. tl SO, 4 W. Winner — Sparkman. Loaar — Dailay. after five innings because of darkness. TEAMMATES PRODUCE While Walker was silencing the Bay City bats, his teammates managed two runs to the second and one to the fourth. Dale Houston and Sutt lacked up run-scoring single^ in the second and Richard Vine walked and moved around on a succession of errors tying with Indiana for the basketball title. MSU took 113% points, Michigan placed second with 90 and Wisconsin was third with 77%. MEDALIST — Gary, Quitiquit flashes the form he used to firing a two-over-par 74 yesterday at Pontiac Country Club to earn medalist honors to The Pontiac Press Invitational Tournament. Babe's Friend Golf Titlist fourth. BEAUMONT, Tex, (AP) -i The late Babe Zaharies,'great-t*ie est woman athlete ever in the DOUBLE-TEAM OPPOSING HURLER — Clarkston’s ,Jerry Ostrora (left) and Tom Allen rapped consecutive triples to a^ throe-run fotAih toning as the Wolves trimmed Clarence-ville, 7-0, Monday and set up a Wayne-Oakland1 League title showdown Thltosday with Northville. Story on PagrC-3. Tbe double win raised PCH’s Saginaw Valley Conference record1 to 9-7. The Chiefs play Pontiac Northern to a doubleheader (3 p.m.) tomorrow on the PNH field. Pontiac Cant. 881 888 888 888 881- 7 7 3, S. City €««. 888 818 888 888 888- 1 It 41 srtln, Quince (7), RICHAROSOt... Tremper; KeWeL Kocisky ft). United JStates, is honored each year to her home town with a jlf tournament to her name: Members of the Ladies rofessional Golf Association joid enough to have played with Babe on the tour would rather win this one than just about any they play. ___________ “Without Babe Zaharias the round gave her a one-strokej ^rtcJptL KSSrtw'wT tour wouldn’t be as big lead, slipped to a 74 Monday del (14) and Gojhaw. . ras it is today,” said Marilynfand finished with 213. She was ISmith after winning the flOJMOjtied by defending champion ttFStga wiha- i i ^event Monday. tShirley Englehorn, who also tournament,” she added. “Babe and I were good friends and she! meant a lot to me.” Miss Smith, whose three-stroke, first-round lead vanished to Sunday’s wind and cold, came back with a par 70 at Bayou Din Golf Oub Monday to win the $1,500 first money. She had 210 for the 54 holes. Kathy Whitworth, whose, three-under-par 69 to the second WTHS'First' Doesn't Slow Central Team Waterford Township pulled a ’first” on Pontiac Central in track yesterday, but the Chiefs weren’t impressed as they ran off with a 79-39 victory. The Skippers, who suffered their eighth loss against four wins, swept the high jump first the first time in a meet with Central. Larry Biskner topped the event by clearing 5-10%, ■k it it Bill Tipton didn’t compete because he was resting a knee which Was banged up to Saturday’s regional win, but the Chiefs had sophomore Bob Johnson to take up the hurdles chore. Johnson won the highs in 14.8 and the lows to 19.9 on the Waterford track. Earl Polk cleared 13-6 to the pole vault to beat Biskner by half a foot. S»=s 8 ’ event Monday. rt, NEARNIAsf raty wa wanted to win this [finished With a 70., GARY 1&LLEET J 'X r. C—I Tq)(« College Post i Ailing Bone Qualifies KALAMAZOO (AP)-Edwird -----------------,—------ C. Hager, bead basketball coach at Muskegon High School since 1951, has been appointed assistant professor of physical education and freshman basketball coach at Western Michigah University effective July 1. 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 Ex-Hockey Player Paces Field ! An ex-hbckey player and a range atf6 I local pro who almost didn't play led the field in the ‘local’ 1U.S.G.A Open qualifying yesterday at Pine Lake and Edge-| wood Country Clubs. | Ahead of the pack was 27-year-old Bobby Breen of Wood-bridge, Ont., * who carded even-par 72-71-143 for his finest showing as a professional in a golfing career thkt’s only seven years old. And a stroke back of Breen was 3S-year-old Gene Bone of Pontiac, now pro at Bay Pointe Golf /Club in Walled Lake, who was a doubtful starter until two hours before teeoff time. Bone developed a case of ten-! A big shot came on the 10th hole at Pine Lake, a sharp dog- W sa,d come ba<* leg left on a long par-5. Favor- a8*dn next year,” Breen said. ing his shoulder a little, Bone didn’t go. had been hooking the ball and CHANGES SHOES it paid off on that hole. His shot failed to Clear the trees but it sailed through them bought a pair of golf shoes. He flHWaBaaiHaaal___-!. ... H ,. , , - Hand he took advantage of the just missed gaining an ‘Ap- IT h,s r!g? shSer last break to bag an eagle-3. His proved Player’s Card’ last wi£ ! W A V!tVT\ I JV*]1*? 0n a";four-.W(>»d,shot nestled on t h eLr in the PGA school in Florida. * iM MM JsNLJLJyJU I okUnend who helped him get green 10 feet from the pin and He’s heading back for another I the ailing wing in shape for yes- he canned it. try this fall. | terday s play. | Breen, Bone and 20 others I A shot behind Bone was Mike bucket of balls. “I hit them well so Tknew it would be okay,” he said. Gene started slow in his first round at Pine Lake, a 6,680-yard, par-72 layout. He carded a 40 on the front side but came back with a two-under-par 34 on the back nine for a 74. At Edgewood, he played a steady one-under-par 70 for his 144. BIG SHOT who qualified yesterday will now move on to Tam O’Shant-er for the ‘sectional’ round June 6. Survivors in that round will travel to New Jersey for the main tournament June 15-18. Breen, a stocky ,5-10, 190-pounder, played junior hockey in Ontario for five years. The York Rangers gave him a look at their rookie school in 1959. Souchak of Oakland HiNs. Ted Kroll of Franklin Hills carded a 147 to share the sixth spot. Bone is after his fourth trip to the U.S. Open. Last year in San Francisco, he tied for 34th with a 298 and won $790. Among the casulaties on the 124-p 1 a y e r field were former state amateur champions Mel-yin (Bub) Stevens of Livonia and Lloyd Syron of P o n 11 a,c Country Club. Five of the 22 qualifying spots went to amateurs. Leading the amateur shooters was former Michigan Open Chuck Kocsis with a 147. ‘Local’ qualifying rounds were Instead, he turned in hisjheld at 53 sites across the na» skates a short while later and tion, and five more are slated Prep Front DEAD. ALIVE Walled Laka Mika Souchak, Oakland Hills John Dalrymple, Sylvi | “ •BRIGGS 1 SPORTING GOODS Far Buns* Reward •Satisfaction i 682-0820 ‘I pouldn’t lift my arm,” Bone I I {was saying in describing the ail-■ ment. “I really didn’t know what I to do so I called a friend of I {mine in Grand Blanc, Dr. Joe | Batdorf (a member of Warwick I {Hills where Bone once held thfe head pro post), g 3211 Orchard Lake Rd., Keeeo | GETS HELP ■ I I “He said, ‘Come on up,’ J away I went.” Current Softball Champ Still in Winning Groove Defending Slow Pitch cham-itwo hits and turned in a spark- 'ClIP THIS COUPON*^*! L Gene made the trip three days'pion Shelea Lounge-MGM Clean-ljing fielding performance in a Good for 9 Hoi*, of Golf with ONE PAID ADMISSION Mon. through Thun. CARL’S GOLFLAND 1976 S. Telegraph Rd. . a row and the treatment of ers ran its record to 2-0 last]i°s*n8 effort for Spprt-O-Rama. , cortisone and heat, gradually 'night by bo^ng Moose, 27-6. I. .Steve -Morse -picked up threcl today. U.S. OPEN ‘LOCAL* QUALIFYING QUALIFIERS Bobby Breen, Pipe Valley; Wood- .72-71—143 ,bridge. Ont. , Bey P i GC, .74-70—1,4 71-74—145 77-4?—144 ------------------- .. .. .74-72—146 Tad Kroll. Franklin Hill* ..... 74-71—147 (e)Chuck Kocsi,. Rod Run GC 74-73—147 Brlen Charter, Arbor Hills, - Jackson . ......78-6*—147 Chuck Matlack, Rockford . . 74-74—148 “ion White, Lenawee CC, Adrian 74-74—148 Toward Brown, Green Acres, Bridgeport . ...... ... '73-75—148 Jimmy Picard. Tom O'Shenfer .74-71—148 Robert Peneeiuk, Hydeewey GC, Tecumseh, Ont............ 73-73—148 Ray Bolo, Western GC ...........74-73—14P (»)Or. Mel Weolfling, Sylvanla, 0...................75-74—149 Dennis B. Titianl, Iron wood .77-72—149 |B4fi||dAG. Cameron, Oakland ■4 .................. 77-73—ISO McCImurry, Knollwood CC 78-72—ISO / Wilkinson, Red Run GC .74-74—ISO (a)John U. Law.,Lincoln Hills, Birmingham............. 71-79—150 (a)Andrew P. McGuire, Forest Lake CC JK . 75-75—150 ahh Molenda, Black River CC .70-72—150 ALTBRNATBS (a)Davlc i Clark, Gowi .. 75-74-1 eased the ache. He had an 8:20 a .m. tee time yesterday. To give the arm a test, he was on a practice hits and scored twice for Thej< " " " I Sportsmen, fo othw filow^ Pitch games, | Artco scored 13 runs in the Wagon Wheel Tavern downed Fisher Local No. 596, 21-6, The Sportsmen defeated Sport-O-Rama, 7-3, and Artco knocked off Hagen Shell, 13-10. Bill Waun cracked out two home runs, a double and triple in a six-for-six night to pace the Shelea-MGM attack. Jim Gallagher helped out with five hits. Boh Lornz picked up three safeties for the losers. Wagon Wheel sent six runs across the plate in the fifth and I woh the game under the 15-run j rule. first four innings and held on to down Hagel Shell. Archie Dennison led the winners with three hits, ^form Stern picked up three for the losers. Shrine Takes Title; SEMA Race Is Close wood, Flint. . NON-QUALIFIERS >lck Bury, Birmingham ....... (a)Molvln Slovens, western ~~~.C ... ................. Thompson, Wlllowdele, .................■•...7378-158 . Tomsslno, Berton Hills . .7378—154 Dove Somaritonl, Sylvanla, O. ..7371—154 (a)Pata Green, Orchard Lake ..77-77—154 (a)Jamas Funston, Plum Hollow 80-75—155 “turtle J. Reynolds, Nprthwood tone Id F. Allred, Mount Clemons .................... a)Harvey E. Woodard. Loch-moor CC. GP Woods (a)Glenn H. Johnson, Grosse Me GC Bob McGillen, Western G8.CC . Tom Cosmos, Oakland Hills ... A1 Cr.wt.rd rapped oat S§I SfjLff ”"gle 10 spark gyd ™*sfe it & Hoty sa Redeemer; and Southfield Ted om Talkington, Washtena a)Tom Pendlebury, U. of Michigan GC ................ lei Mzhickteno. Glengarry CC, Holland, O. ............ Ten Judd, Spring Meadows; 0 GC 80-74-11 7380-154 .78-78—154 .79-77—1 the winners. Shortstop Rob Dyka picked up Detroiter Strampe in Bowling Lead “ivis, Royal Oak Syron, Pontiac CC ' Munith, Mich. a half game in front in its loopLmSmtS j? Novak, Edgewood Vic Junola, Sylvan Glen, Tro j The Blue Jays, the -county’s oian oaks, top-rated nine at 12-2, are now!<»>Ed w. Lauar, Edgewood c.__PH ill in »»• u: |(a)Ray Planner, Grosse lie GC .80-79—159 8-1 in the Southeast Michigan (aiLeign Tuohy, Forest Lake cc 74-85^-159 Association. Runner-up R 0 y a 1 (*hursht?SN?Y K,infl' c*d*r' 79-SO-159 Oak Kimball (7-1 and 11-3) can j ^ul P^“2%s,Ev‘iJi;wood cc tie Southfield With a win today (a)Wllliam Newcomb, Barton ST. LOUIS (fP) - FormerIover Ferndale. (.VpJid'Ewaid. Oaklandhiiik : champion Bob Strampe of De- '■ * * ★ ste9e*!^ov??M./LCBreJ.roy troit rolled into first place in the shrine upped its record to 9-2] (aT^ri fF"SU Washtenaw cc qualifying rounds of the, All-Star as Jim Chiesa hurled a two- MMKlJSSS'uSm H Tournament Monday hitter and fanned eight againstLtSI* ACLaskv North Hint with a 12-game total of 2,601., Holy Redeemer. Rick Zimmer-L 8,rmln9h*m V’.............’ • Strampe outscored the entire man drove in the first run with! ac?« gc. f*«SV Sunny 288-man field in the second |a single. .Errors plus Tom Szost- '4^ gc J Fl0wer,' R0Ch' of preliminaries with & kowski’s sacrifice fly completed ?ro^e' 1,1 J4CQ . r Alexander Redmond, Lochmoor »003f the scoring for the Knights. Mm g.p. woods .............. 0 ' 0 Chuck Su/PMtin RattlA TrAAk 82- 79—161 H-B0—T61 83- 78-161 82-79-161 183-228-259-222-201-276 series. The slender veteran shot L232 Sundhy in the opening round. Les Schissler of Denver shot a 11,263 Monday to boost his total j to 2,566, worth second, place. Brother Rice Tops Salesian Clemens ... ,. ............ like Dennis, Orchard Laka CC 82-81-143 ober* E. Phifer, Northville . . .8378-143 llfad Hill, Tacgmseh, Ont. ____80-83-^143 DMichael Sarem|lan, Edge- They now will meet Harper Woods Notre Dame Thursday afternoon in a Catholic League inter-divisional playoff. Jack Roe, who has been in , ... P ... . . Willie Mosley; Detroit . a bat Slump much of • the sea- David M. Dunn, Glen Gary/ son, rapped two hits for twoUi3!la?L.' rbi’s to feature Southfield's at- GtI2oci“ tack against Hazel Park. T o mk'j* Burkert remained unbeaten with Robert *Iclf a three-hit performance.1 llanos* 'el The Blue Jays can clinch at4o Under the terms of the merg-er agreement of last June, the AFL is to add another team by ’68 with the franchise money of about $8 million going into the National Football League’s coffers. , The county prep sports scene beginning Friday thgirt will be dominated by the sixth annual Pontiac Invitational High School Baseball Tournament at Jaycee Park—though local track fans certainly will have a strong interest in the state Cla$s A champion* ships Saturday at East Lansing, The diamond tourney will include 10 of the top 11 teams in1 the county, with only twice-beaten Royal Oak Shrine (seventh rated) unable to play due to conflicts with school functions. The 18 teams that accepted their invitations to play will have the majority of this year’s outstanding individual players. i *i* ★ Heading the list are four performers almost assured of- repeating on the All-County Team and who will command much of the big league scouts’ t i m e: Clarkston’s Dan Fife, Kettering’s Jack McCloud, Kimball’s Tom Scott and Southfield’s Ted Simmons. ' The Blue Jays’ ace catcher has been the most valuable player^ as Southfield won the last two tournaments. He seems certain to lure a large bonus offer in this summer’s free agent draft. Should any of them sign pro contracts or (as in Fife’s case) continue their diamond careers in college they will be following the worthy examples set by numerous others before them in the tournament. ■k h -k Pontiac Northern’s Larry Frye and Milford’s John Kasper signed bonus pacts last year, while Dan Sherban of Kimball and PNH’s Roger Hayward did likewise in preceding seasons. Northville’s Phil Andrews moved into the starting lineup this spring as a freshman at Spring Arbor College. Royal Oak’s Mike Clark is closing in on a Wayne State hitting record as a sophomore. PNH’s Mike Burklow and ROK’s Kim Hillstrom are the junior mainstays of the Central Michigan mound staff. Rick Trudeau of Walled Lake is a leading hitter at Western Michigan. Undoubtedly there are others whose accomplishments haven’t been reported. Pontiac Pratt Photo LUCKY TWOSOME—Don White (left) of Lenawee Country Club in Adrian and Phil Ferranti of Toledo collected aces in the U.S.G.A. Open ‘local’ qualifying yestierday at Edgewood Country Club. For White, who was among the 22 qualifiers, it was his first hole-in-one. For Ferranti, third alternate, it was his fifth ace and he’s only 25 yearsxld. Cincinnati Top Choice for New AF1 Squad NEW YORK (AP) — The, the matter would be referred to American Football League Rozelle *who ruled on a similar probably will expand to 10 dispute between Green Bay and teams for 1968, with Cincinnati Detroit on the Ron Kramer case the most likely choice, and the a few years back. Super Bowl game probably will In any eventf the Taylor mat-be set for Sunday, Jan. 14 in ter will not come up at the Miami s Orange Bowl dinting j league meetings. Each league prp football meetings opening) plans to meet separately. Thefe today- is a possibility that the jqjnt merger committee will get- together for informal sessions. * TODAY’S - m By Tht Associated Pres, American > Loagut Won Loll Pet. Bohil ii mn Paul Brown, former coach of the Cleveland Browns, has been I actively promoting Cincinnati;g*'£r«£, . >- ^ as a pro football site for some '7 time. His group is expected to Mlnnesoi! “tS* h get consideration when a city c!?v»"andIs and owner are selected formal- YvasMnStm 11 ly. Californi The status of Jim Taylor, ciJitiXon ......VI Green Bay fullback who played Pascuai. KnowW iai, Hompiu out his option and became a Ha%an4,*5aT--Pa4%4i, 3-2? Sin _________________ .... free agent, may or may not ton “I* rurt*~c',vW,nd‘ “Hof Jim Niebauer’s coaching du- wind up in the lap of Commis- New Yprk r~loo 000 000-0 2 ajttes' at the school. The likeable JJJJ-Jgfsioner Pete Rozelle, who heads !82j”™r»i both leagues. MoMiay'i Result, But regardless of the tournament’s past performances, the 16-team event will have its {standout playera_ and accom-piishments again this spring and is an excellent attraction to keep sports fans from having to travel far over the long holiday period. BONUS BITS Tomorrow night’s St. Michael sports banquet marks the end Titbot-Tin**-^^ViiwTJung-coach.catae to St. Mi-Gibbs; Phoebus^nd Etchebarren. ehael as an assistant mentor in .... ••• .....84"79—163 _ , !w—Pho6bus# u—■ 9iwn, r<, iin_A Washtenaw CC .84-79-1631 Taylor reportedly is anxious ..Home runs—Baltimore, F. Roblblnsonj 1956. Brother Ri^e defeated Sales- share of lhe thle ^ Sni^ ian 104-14 in track yesterday. 6 (a) g T -.I, yf 4 .Haze! Park again Thursday, Brother Rice thinclads took 43 J IWwniaaaiaaaaaBaaMaa—awwn °at of the 14 events jn their U°'vy.i o«"Th"n, i -r ■ «• nyayf«fT B last league meet of the seasomI JO'Vi 5 jXrktt') Willi ■ ’/ii) P/*v firT * The Warriors finished with a , — « now lou i^un ray ujj record. Salesian has a trfgur 4.11 Those Bills! 5 league record for the season. bCTfi Rod Thompson, Slo yCharles Cameroi 0-1 7 Gogolowsklj Our Convenient HOMCOWNER’S LOAN PLAN Offers Up To $ 5.000 With As Long As 5 Years To Repay Your pre»ont homo equity cart mean instant peace of mind to you. No more threatening letters, annoying phone calls or bill colfocters. Through eur lean program there are nQ closing costs, no application foes and your loan is completely protected by life insurance at no additional coat... what more could you ask? ■ Phone-In Your Application, Today! i FAMILY ACCEPTANCE: S CORPORATION J S31T National Building » O IMO 5 If WEST HURON ft 9 IMana^aaaanua ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■^paann ■ ■* HUDSON'S PONTIAC AAALL Is Now Accepting Applications FOR POSITIONS IN: LUGGAGE and SPORTING GOODS MEN'S CLOTHING SALES SHOE SALES HARDWARE STOCK MAINTENANCE (Part Time Only) I FULL TIME (40 HRS.) AND PART TIME (EVENINGS) IS AVAILABLE ENJOY: • Purchas# Discount • Paid Holidays • Many othor benefits APPLY IN PERSON EMPLOYMENT OFFICE - CUSTOMER LOBBY - BASEMENT HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL h Fax, Chandler F my Shannan, Orel iard VgnAtter, Win, David A. Graham. Utica ........ 88-84—174 OTHERS: (a) Barry Salemon, Knollwood CC, DNS; Quentin B. Smith, Gregory, 80 MC; (a) Fred Behymer Jr., CC of Lansing. DNS; Bill Wingo, Wingo CC, Battle Creek, DNS; Pete Osack, West Shore G&CC, 80 NC; Carl G. Sprague, Dundee GC, DNS; Carl F. Rose, Goli-land, Pontiac, 83 NC; (a) Fred Kammer Jr., CC of Detroit, DNS; Stan Brion, Tam O'Shanter, 83 NC; Hal Whittington, Grosse lie, DNS; Carl Lundquist, Grosse ......81-83—144 to play with the New Orleans ,f, Mt. •j^Jj^jfSalnts, newest NFL entry, but! Mir Lake......ii-83-i44j the Saints must reach an agree- Lp_______________ 80-84-144 j ment with Vince Lombardi, gen-jg*^w^| "roe Hiiis Stao^iM eral manager of the Packers, on! i.mm* 4n' Birming- ,3'83~144 j just compensation. j Home run' ■o '• M-JtiM iLyfiy lwo clubs cannot agree,' cS!if4rniai,v .-Talbot, l ...Imoro, F. -------- Johnson (3), Etchebarren (3 ll3 010 010-7 11 ] Two years later he took over 3io ois wx-i iy 2| as head football, basketball and josephsonJ^McNertney4 (8)?°Kaat!! baseball coach. But the merger g "ilno (4), Wort • I — - - — - - - ---- W -Kline, 2- -Chicago, Berry 'or thing ton (7) 8 .... 003 000 000—3 < 010 200 30x—6 ; (7), Odom (7> t. Corb< •I Park, 81 NC; J *9 NC; Wil- Leaders Travel Collision Path in Waterford A collision between the un-beatens in Waterford Township softball action comes Thursday Thacker, Red Run, 77 NC; (af iames[ The two ran their records to] Detooifcc.1*NQrd ..... Cottar, 6-0, 6-4, ... ■ i.uwd, u ,,,, „ Oava Causbla, 6-2, 6-3. Ben Benson-Clitf Selber (W) del. A ruita Lang-Amos Johnson, 6-2, 9-7; K Barway-Jim Collins (PNH) del Gi Dovre-Rogrr Reed, 6-4, ,1-6, 6-4. CLARKSTON 5, KETTERING t t Beattie dtf. Scott Parr: Kim Beattle-Tom Bullard def. I Pete Morgan, 6-0, 6-0. Southern Illinois Thursday in the NCAA District A baseball playoff. Big Ten champion Ohio State will play Valparaiso, champion of the Indiana Collegiate Conference in the first game of a doublehedaer. Western Michigan and SQJ will meet in the second game of the double-elimination tournament. may make the Grand Prix-type southpaw again. NEW YORK (AP) - Whitey Ford, bothered by a succession of ailments over the last few years, has been forced out of the New York Yankees’ pitching rotation again. * A * Ford, who left a game against Detroit in the first inning Sunday, has a spur in the elbow of his left arm and will be out for an unspecified length of time. Dr. Sidney Gaynor, the team physician, said he told Manager Ralph Houk in Baltimore, where the team is playing a three-game series with the Orioles, that “the situation was not too encouraging.” Gaynor prescribed a week's rest after which he said he would examine the 38-year-old Emmanutl Evangel. Tempi INCLUDING CONCRETE 50 sq. ft. of Driveway FREE ESTIMATES On All Types of Modemizatirn . CALL \0W FE 8-0747 Call Anytime Day ar Mite _______Detroit Call 538-8300 CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRIES~T9115 W. 7 Mile Rd. Firm Offers Rust Warranty No matter what modal ’67 car you buy, you’ll be getting tha bast bargain on warranties aver offered, Indeed, General Motors has extended its warranties to include "everything except tires which are warranted by the tire manufacturers." But is "everything" except tires on cars getting factory backing for longer periods? Not necessarily. StilL unwarranted is the actual car body, except for defects in workmanship or paint. Ziebart Process Corp., 821 Oakland Ave., Pontiac, is offering a five-year, or 50,000 miles, warranty on cars treated by its rustproofing process. The warranty will protect against "any rust through" over the prescribed period. The process involves spraying a petroleum-based chemical coating "inside" door panels, headlamp fixtures and other areas susceptible to rusting. The average "treatment" costs about $56. Under the 5/50 warranty, motorists whose cars have been Ziebarted are celled in each two years or 20,000 miles for a free inspection and "an extra shot of Chemical if it’s needed. Ziebart Process Carp.* 831 Oakland Ave., Pontiac, will be happy to discuss their Guaranteed Protection program, just call FE 4-0502. When In Doubt See Hanoute And Ask For Jim Hanoute Jim Hanoute has been selling Chevrolets and Buicks for Hanoute Inc 9 years. Sales training for this job Included two years at the General Motors Institute. He Is a member of the Buick Sales Master and Legion of Leaders Clubs, both of which are evidence of his ability to serve you well in the selection of your next car, new or used. Al Hanoute's Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion MY 2-2411 FONTIAC CHURCH SOFTBALL LEAGUE Saturday's Rasults Fraa Methodist Church 6, Evan-mpla 2 h of God 11, Trinity Baptist 5 Monday's Results ), Trinity Baptist ,t r\ Frag Methodist 13, T JUNIOR OASBBALL On Display Haw The WA WA Gamp Trailers and The AH New Coleman Gamp Trailer Stop and See Them Today! Goodwill Automatic Heating 3401 W. Huron FE 8-0484 Is freedom from money worries. We’ve been giving people greater peace of mind for over 50 years. Need Money? Come and get It at...! C). Commercial Credit* 2243 S. Telegraph Road Phone: 334-9954 L C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tHm in wholesale package lots Quo tat ns are furpished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol Wednesday. Produce FRUITS Delicious, Golden, bu. Delicious, Rod. bu. DeUdOus. Rod, C.A„ i McIntosh, bu. ,, McIntosh, C.A., bu. . Apples, Apples, Apples, Apples, jonemen, du Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A Apples, Steele Red, bu. app** Chives, d Onions, C Onions, I f Poultry and Eggs Stock Mart Drops Irregularly NEW YORK (AP) - International tensions and concern about the domestic economy accompanied an irregular downturn in the stock market early Tuesday afternoon. The crisis between Israel and the Arab nations, escalation in orders and tightening interest rates were factors which restrained buyers in the stock market. ★ ★ ★ The trend toward another climb In interest rates was urn derlined by Gardner Ackley, chairman of President Johnson’s Council of Economic Advisers, who said he was “somewhat disturbed”by the upward trend in long-term interest rates. ★ ,j ★ ★ Another decline in long-term U.S. Government bonds emphasized the interest rate situation. This increased the yields of the bonds. 1 Prices were mixed at the start, with more plus than minus signs, but as the session continued more and more investors toqk to the sidelin averages were down and losers outnumbered gainers by a 3-to-| ratio. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was down .5 at 323.1 with industrials off .8, rails off .2 and utilities off .1. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange..Dy-nalectron was active and up ‘ractionally. Cosmodyne dropped more than a point. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AF r pound Exchange selected ----- , —A— Salts New York Stock DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (API—Egg prices paid per do ten by first receivers (Including U.S.): White Grade A lumbo 30-34; extra large large JS-JTVi; medium 20-23; i unchanged;,93 s( unchanged; 75 per cent or belter braoe A Whites 25Vi; mixed 25Vi; mediums 22; standards 24V,; checks 20V2. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)-i-(USDA)—Live poultry: wholesale buying prices unchanged £ * higher; roasters M’/i-W; special fed rock fryers 20-23. id white Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API—(USDA)—Hogs U S. 1 and 2 200-220 pound barroGs — gilts 25.00-25.50; U.S. 1, 2 and 3 210-240 —i 3 240-270 pound . Sheep 500; couple loads of choice and prime 90-110 pound lambs 21.00-29 pood and choice 26.00-27.50; cull to gc slaughter ewes 6.00-10.00. Cattle 600; scattered loads of choice 950-1150 pound slaughter steers 2.600 ----------- - O 25.50-21.00; 22.50-24.00. Abbott Lab ABC Con .SO . 43 27 26Vl 26'a — ADex Cp 1.60 11 MW 32>A 32'A — ACF Ind 2.20 x39 52 51'A SIVk — AdMIllls .40b IS 35 34Vi 3496 — Address 1.40 139 60V* 50 5SVi — 9k Admiral 5.0 00 25V, 249b 249b .AlrRedtn 1.50 X32 42>/b 41 41W AlcanAlum 1 80 309b 30 30 Alleg Cp :10a 14 1096 10'i 10VS AllegLu 2.40b 10 71 709b 71 Alleg Pw 1.20 23 25Vb 25Vb 25Va 819b 8196 —2 i 389b 389b — 9b GrantWT 1.10 1 .90 166 21Vb 209b 209b- 1.90 37 54Vb 53 5394 - IRP.—.jrs 1238 13Vh !3Vb 13'A ... AmNGas 1.90 78 38Vb 3794 38 — 94 tm Photocpy 1476 109b 9 50% 50% 50% + Beckman .50 13 j American Stock Exch. ItSM#*-'.* NEW YORK (API - American Stock §#nd,x J* 20 72% 71% 72 — V AaroJatG ,50a ^ „ BethStl 1:50a 95 3«b 34V4 349b—Vb ---- — — 979b 979b —9b I 3794 3 AntPitra ,3Sg !■ R ....... ArkLGas 1J0 6 399b 399b 399b — 94 ASomerOOit 96315-16 313-16 39b....jjP ” ,'80a AssdOII 16 135 .3 , 29b 3 ..... 8222! , in* AtlasCorp wt 33 29b 29* 29b I Bernes Eng ; 10 339b 329b 32H -'AiSXKJrV'0 BraxHLfPw 1 ' 25 1194 119b 1194 + VkiijSftV L. Brit Pet .550 19 3-16 9 3-16 9 3-14-1-161 ®u5Vf Campbl Chib 74 79b 79b 7Vb....i Burt Ind 1.20 Can So. Pet 29 1941 13-16 19b ' Burroughs 1 Cdn ’ Javelin 65 UH 1094 30 294 49s FlyTtatr .1 Frontier 1. McCrary v MeadJonn 3 tl'A 1194 11'A-372 4394 42 4294 — 21 gw. 4i 4i9b + ee^^m 0 99b 9 99b + 9b CarterW 76 93-16 894 9 3-14+3-14 — Cal Flnanl Cal Pack 1.10 CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a I Camp Soup 1 Canteen JO CaroPLt 1.34 Carrier Cp 1 39b 396. 3’A I 6'A 59b 69b 4 ! 1394 129b 13’A 4 i 594 59b 59b 4 I 33'A 33 33 594 594 594 , Case m CeterTr 1.20 ' NelaneseCp 2 Cencolns JO Cent SW 1.60 29 439b 42J8 43’A .. x4 5294 529b 529b + 52 699b 619b 69 4 267 1496 139b 139b- 1$ 291b 2896 289b — 34 159b 159b 159b — 'A 65 59b 49b 5 — 13 276b 279b 27Vb 4 15 3496 349b 349b — 9b 30 2096 209b 209b - " 78 2996 284b 2996 4 i 57 23Vb 229b 229b — 94 7 42 4t 9b 42 4 9b 46 59 SUb 589b 4 H 43 149b 14 14tb — 43 199b 109b 189b— .. 34 4496 4496 44Vb 4 96 V 6296 011b 02 , 41 40 50Vb 559b 5096 — Vb 21 4596 441b 4496 —1 139 409b 3014 3»lb —196 I 5694 5696 56'AH If l\¥T k 1 151 3496 34Vb Syntax Cp .40 100 979b 1 , ChiMil StP 1 ChPneu 1.80b A ChrlsCraft lb A Chrysler 2 i 19% — 9b CltlesSvc 1.80 34 479b 46’A 4696 —196 10 3796 369b 369b 20 379b 369b 36Vb 196 19b 19b —16 Techntcol .40 UnCWdral JO. .. .« ... Copyrighted by The Associated press 1967j Col Gas 1 ICollInRad .60 I Colei MG 1.60 CBS t,40b I 3996 399b 399b-jl 112 1111b 1119b ■- 29 329b 3196 32 -99 9396 92% 929b-12 369b 359b 36 4 X30 - 749b 7496 749b-55 279b 279b 279b 4 1A 65 279b 279b 27Vb ... 52 419b 4016 409k — 29 511b 51 519b— R 138 699b 6696 6796 —1% ■ 'T-----------•----!T Comsetv 1.20 Stocks of Local Interest STm- .............................I * > Con Edis 1.80 88 349b **i* — ConElecfnd 1 115 549b 53'A 539b- OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS ConFood 1.40 18 53 5294 53 ... Quotations from the NASD are repre-|conNGas 1.60 162 27% 27% 2794 ... sentetive inter-dealer prices of approx!-,conPow 1.90b 25 46 459b 459b — mately It a.m. Inter-dealer markets Contalnr t 30 ' 24 3294 329b 32Vb — change throughout the day. Prices do cont Air n.40 259 ’36V, 359b 36 4 not include retell markup, markdown or cont Can 2 29 54 5394 539b 4 commission. 'Com Ins 3 19 819b 8ivb 0194 4 Bld Asked Cont Oil 2.60 x47 719b 709b 709b — AMT Corn. ..... t ^ Jfl ^agopai n»i» __iii obv4 oa\u w/» —3 Associated Truck . Braun Engineering Citinns Utilities Clot Detrex Cnemial ............ .... _ .. ________ ... . ____ _. . Diamond Crystal .............10.2 11.6 CrouseHInd 1 3 309b 309b 2 Frank's Nursery . -Accept UO GenAnilF .40 Gan Clg 1.20 Dynam i .... Elec 2.60 Gen. Fds 2.40 m..... J.70g GenPrec 1.50 G PubS yc .38^ 243 649b 6294 i i 72V, 729b 4 96 PltPlate 2.60 x17 4 Pitts Steel 10 1 Polaroid .40 79 21 ProcfarG 2.20 10 I PubSvCol .90 78 .5 Publklnd .341 » PugSPL 1.80 Pullman 2.80 37 329b 329b 32V, - H 40 58 5716 S79A —IVb 25 311b 31 319b 4 9b 79 65V, 6496 6596 —296 62 5496 54'A 5496 — V 23 119b 1196 1196.... 212 1296' 129b 129b — 96 19 50 4996 499b " 0 39 3896 3896 65 2496 2396 2396 47 3696 359b 3696 (Itds.l High Low Last Hhg. 4 42 33 329b ----- 1 £ 0 113 599b 511b .. .. 0 9 419b 4196 419b 4 96 DETROIT M — Spring was in the air in Detroit auto companies today, both in sales and production reports. “There is nothing like spring to get auto sales moving,’’ was the way General Motors President James M. Roche described it. ★ * Both Roche and Henry Ford II, chairman of the board of Ford Motor Co., were in agree-ent that the auto sales slump past — at least for the balance of the 1967 model run. ★ ★. ★ The optimism of Industry leaden was reflected in production schedules which called for estimated 175,000 curs to be built this week, a slight jump over last week’s output of 174, 073 cars. , 11 3696 369b 3696 ..! 26 4996 499b 499k — ' —R— 208 .5196 SOVb 50V, - ' 22 30 291b 29Vb ... Raytheon .80 RpIchCh .40b RapubSN 2,50 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b Reyn Met^ .90 RheemM 1.40 Roan Sel .98a Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 RyderSys .80 I 6596 6496 45'A - 1 379b 3596, 3596 —IV: 99b 9W 994 jftv. M 0M4 049b j* FURTHER HIRE EYED Ford, Which added 39,000 cars to its original production schedules in toe4 past' two weeks, reportedly'^as considering a further small hike. Dealer reports from throughout the country showed toe do- . mestic car inventory had beer/ President Named upped slightly to a 47-day Supply or about 1,381,900 cars. I 6596 - 13 2796 27 —H— 110 5296 5196 519b . 88 479b 4796 479b 4 96 106 58 561b 5696 —2 , 23 469b 454b 454b .. Safeway 1.10 83 239b 239b 239b — 1 9h StJosLd 2.80 X9 409b 4096 409b 4 1 9b, SL SanFran 2 7 4796 4696 4716 4 1 StRegP 1.40b 121 2896 289b 2896 - " .112 1 i 119b 1 i 721b 4 31 319b 309b 3196 — 1 14 5 49b 5 4 1 719b 701b 7016 -196 nt Pap US nt TS.T 1.50 ' lowaPSv 1.24 ITE Ckt lb _____Cp 1.20 JohnMan 2.20 JohnsnJ 1.40a 23 1196 1196 1196 — '511 89h 2096 294b/f 51 0396 031b 0396 .. IS 31 309b 3M6 4 16 StdOllOh 2.50 St Packaging Stall Warn l "nuffCh 1.00 rIDrug .00 _ .vafiJF ITS — - Studebak ,50g 175 6796 I Joy Mfg 1.25 Kaiser Al 1 KayserRo .60 Kennecott 2 KernCLd 2.60 Kerr Me 1.40 KimbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.40 Kresge .00 Kroger 1.30 I 429b 429b 4296 — 9b TempaEI .60 ■Tektronix Teledyne Inc .. .. Tenneco 1.20 434 S Texeco 2.60a j TexETm 1.05 72 .2294 2296 2246 4 Vb ■rSieg .70 116 2096 9 LOFGIs 2.80a 62 1296 1296 1246.. Ml 0 74b 796 4 I 3396 3396 3316 - Transltron lockhdA 2J0 -oews Theat LoneSCem 1 LoneSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.16 Lorillard 150 LTV .50 LuckyStr .00b Lukana Stl I .541 283.10196 100’A 101 Vb ... .. 7496 75 — 1 120 3096 384b 3096 4 9 105 149b 1396 139b 4 1 MP... 0 249b JM96 249b .... TRW 1.40 » 6016 6796 689b .4 1 TwenCen 1.60 30 4996 484b 4896 — 9 -*U— UMC Ind JO x67 20 1096 109b 4 1 ■- Carbide 2 77 5496 549^54'* - 9 _:kTr 1.591 275 6 MacyRH 1.60 20 5 Mad Fd 2,08g 0 2 MagmaC 3^0 16 J Magnavox JO 112 3 X30 20V, 2096 20'A .. 20 »lb » 20'A 4 11 5696 559b 559b - 190 1379b 136 136 - 25 2496 2416 249* 4 31 3796 3796 3796 - —M— MeyDStr 1J0 Maytag lJOa McCall JOb McDonD .40b I 2996 2994 299b I 14 1Mb 134b I 2296 2296 22>A I I 3396 339k 334b — 9b 10 4496 4316 43V6-V 6 479k 4696 47 — « 36 * 7696 76 76 —. 1 Monroe Auto Equipment North Central Airlines Units Safran Printing............ Scrlpto .. .......... Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS , Keystone Income K-1 ... Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth . Mess Investors Trust .. Television Electronics . Wellington Fund ............ Windsor Fund . 15.2 .15.6 Corn Pd 1.70 20.2 21.0 CorGW 2.50a 27.2 27.6 Cowles .50 20.0 21.0 CoxBdcas .50 .10.2 18.6 CrouseHInd 1 12.6 13J CrowCol 1.87t . 27.0 28.0 Crown Cork 24.3 24.7 CrownZe 2.20 .. 24.4 25.0 Cruc Stl 1.20 .. .10.1 10.5 Cudahy Co sked Dan Rlv 1 9.67 DaycoCp 1 20.09 Day PL 1. 10.31 20.00 DomeMin MGM lb MldSoUtil .76 1 iMInerCh 1.30 , 9b|MinnMM 1.30 I 1296 1 t Change Noon Tues. 72.0 Prev. Day — k Ago 72.2 02.0 72.6 10 duPont 2.50g ’ East Air .30g ’ E Kodak 1.60a Year Agp iii os,3 83.3 12J M 1047 High 7]J 05.6 84.0 02.4 89.4 iw&ds 179 !eS 21 tS f 2? 2? E'«'ran Sp 1966 High 79.5 101.4 86.1 f3.l 90.7 cip>«nNr. 1 1916 L& 70.1 80.9 79.2 90.4 83.7 —..............— 'End Johnson DOWjWNtt AVERAGES |»hy^, Js 30 Mua ................... 167.08-3.07 j-HB ........... ... 230.B1-0.r- I 3146 319b 319b . ■ i 30'A 2996 2996 — 'A ! 63 629b 6294 4 M « 11994 11894 11894 —1 I 369b 3614 36V, - ! 389k 389b 389b .. I 169b 1614 16,94 - I 3594 359b 3594 9 I 33Vb 33'A W. 84 469b 4614 469b EvansPd .Sb 279 3096 28 29 —14b Eversharp 25 219b 2146 2194* —F— 455 10796 1021* '10346 101 2394 2294 23 — . 135.96—0.32 . 312.76—0.73 Fairch Cam ____ i Fair Hill .150 .. 81.40 .... i Fansteel Met I 5196 l I 51 Vb 4 16 “ 3494 2496 3494 + ' -66 I99b 1096 1994 - V, —144 223 45 295 2394 229 185 4894 471 10 2214 32 10 3194 31 lit 2596 25 13 3596 35 62 114 11294 11394 — 9b 7 2646 2616 2616 ’* —N— NatCash NatDairy .. Nat Dlst l.i -------m Nat Fuel 1.60 Gen I .20 20 1196 1 NYCent 3.12a Occident .80b OhioEdls 1.30 OHnMath 1.80 8S8,E«Tr?«. Owenslll 1.35 Oxford Pep 1 PacGEI 1.40 Pec Ltg 1.50 Pec Petrol PacPwLt t.20 PaeT&T 1.20 Psn/ASul .60 New Yerk Stocks of Michigan Interest FlrstChrt .Sit ASroquIp lb 1 4594 4594 4594 -I- A — 07 2196 2196 2196 — 86 5294 52 5294 - 289 2416 2396 2396 — 'A ) 324b 32'A 329b + 15 1 I 5896 5594 56'A —216 L 5894 58 58 ■jfa 1096 11 IA Cp .40b all 71V, 6916 7096 — 9b ft Paper 1 128 29>A 289b 29 — 9b • ** 26 579b 5716 5796 + 16 33 52 51 5194 ..... X86 539b 5294 5294 — % 19 1616 169b 169b — “ 21 109b 109b 1096 ... rl GO 1.30 rs Roe la burg .60 Sharon Stl Shell Oil 2.1u Shell Trn .58g -herwnWm 2 ilndalr 2.40 122 67 6694 6694 . H 10 22 219b 219b — 16 14 5094 50Vb 509b + Vb 12 749b 739b 749b + - 89 6196 609b 609b — 74 519b 519b 5194 + 21 4316 429b 4316 — Calendar year output reached 3,047,695 as of last weekend, about 21 per cent behind the 3,883,509 cars built in toe like period a year ago. General Motors led the production parade last week a^ it built 83,441 cars, about 1,*“ cars more than the previous Week. GM was toe only car maker whose output last week was higher than toe preceding week. t 3594 3594 - I 189b 1 I 189b + |S4 3294 „ 15 269b 2616 2694 ■ 5 38 38 30 + 96 38 2616 2516 2594 105 609b 59'A 59'A 53 56 5594 5594 — 94 322 4294 6294 629b — 9b 90 65 649b 649b 47 14 1394 1394 _ 98 5594 54 54Vk +116 6294 629b — Vb J ^2594 259b 259b + 16 17 3194 3ilA 3194 .... 119- 4516 4496 4596 + 3 77 1899b 18596 185V, — 1 88 7094 70 7094 4 n RB 1 I 1 .log 127 1 I 4196 4 i 2516 1. i 7594 7694 Elec 1.20 28 2596 1 UnOCal 1_ ■' i Pec 1.80a i Tank 2.30 ilroval 1.20 ..litAlrLIn 1 UnitAlrc 1.60 mb®, UGasCp 1.70 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la - ""TnW . — lines 2b USPlyCh 1.50 il 2.40 I 39% 39% 39%- 55 38% 38 38% — % 15 49 68% 68% - M 29 23% _ 23% 23% — 30 68% 67 68% +1% 345 24% 24 24% * ** 13 35 34% 34% 54 54% 53% 54 + % 45 63% 62% 62% ~ 86 44% 44 % 44% 52 26% 25% 25% IS 89 87% 87% -V— WnUnTel 1 WastgEI l.ou Wayarhr 1.40 WhfrlCp 1.60 White M 1.80 WllsonCct. 1.70 WlnnDIx 1.44 Woolworth 1 Worthing UO Salas figures ■ l 2394 23'6 2394 -t 65 3794 3616 3 8 75 . 7416 7496 — ' i unofficial. dands m the foregoing table are annual -tsbursemenfs based on the last quarterly - semi-annual declaration. Special --r, an accumulative issi ar, *M*?drandn’omf»»ad,$Sd ( dividend. t-Paid ii xr—Ex rights, xw—Wll ww—With warraMs. «r* trlbuted. wl—When Issued. I ellvery. vl—In bankruptcy < being reorganized und Tuesday's 1st Dividends Declared Pe- Stk. of Pay-Rate rieu Record abb STOCK k of Commrce. (xltOpc 6-6 +2; (x) Oublect,^ approval. Spring's in Air at Auto Firms Sales, Output Reports Generate Optimism By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Amidst toel playful gamboling of bulls and Ibears on Wall Street ia a swiftly growing breed that'thinks like |a bear but be-! haves as a bull. It b the short trader. Some say he lb bullish, others |dedine to label him as either, insisting that at though he has™"™"? been around the CVNN^r Wall Street pasture a long time, hb recent proliferation may be significant. However, much evidence has! been collected by Watt Street Izoologtata to suggest he b a hybrid, a hull in bear’s clothing or a bear in mind but a bull in shape. fri the past month, toe number) of shares traded short has rben to 14,896,373,^the highest figure! on record, prompting a lot of lanalysts to question what it all' adds up too | DECLINING MART Thb figure means that trad-1 ers have bet that many shares on a declining market. It means that close to 15 million shares have been borrowed and sold in the expectation of falling prices. Business Notes George T. Humphrey has been appointed president of toe Aero Commander Aircraft Divisions of Rockwell-! Standard Corp. Humphrey of 4359 Stoneleigh, B loomfield Township, will move to Pittsburgh where the Aircraft Divisions’ headquarters are I located. He was vice president and general manager of the Automotive Products Divbion in Detroit since July 1966: HUMPHREY ,A Walled Lake man, Fred L. Morningstar of 1440 Beverly, has been appointed treasurer of j group of c o m-| panies owned or controlled by Detroit industrialist Robert B. Evans. The com- »" panies are: The The Ready Power Co., De-Morningstar troit; Grand Rapids Store Equipment Co. and Widdicomb Furniture Co., Grand Rapids; United States Motors, Oshkosh, Wb.; M-B Co. New Holstein, Wb. ; and the La Coquille Real Estate Co., Palm Beach, Fla. Morningstar was formerly on toe audit staff of a national certified public accounting firm. Mark J. Nielsen of 6195 Dakota, Bloomfield Township, ha< been appointed to toe newly ated position of 1 regional vice president for Metromedia. Nielsen, who has been vice president and jDetroit area manager for the Foster and Klei-ser Divbion of Metromedia NIELSEN since 1959, will be headquartered in Detroit. Bear or Bull? Short Trader Is Eyed So, where’s the profit to be made? Simply by waiting until toe price drops and then pur-charing shares of the same stock. Thb stock b then retorted to toe lender in place of that borrowed earlier. *. ★ /e ' A transaction such as thb could mean "that a stock borrowed and sold at $95 could be purchased later and returned to toe borrower at a cost of $75. The profit, less commbsions, would be $20. What upsets toe black and white thinkers who must categorize ail animals as bulls or bears b toe negative answer to thb question: BEARISH? If that many shares are bet on a declining market, doesn’t thb represent a bearish outlook? It would seem so, but a majority of stock market analysts say such a huge population is bul-‘sh, for these reasons: —If so much of the public feeb toe market will go down, then its a good bet toe market will go up. Thb is an ingrained attitude among many professional They feel the public, which is seldom defined, is often wrong. . ★ ★ ★ , —Every short position represents a future sale. For each share that has been borrowed and sold, a purchase must eventually be made. If toe price C. Richard Johnston, of 5169 Nob Hill, Bloomfield Township, has been named president and chief operating Officer of Mar-plan U.S.A., an international market-research organization. Johnston has served as vice chairman and previously vice _____________ president and JOHNSTON Detroit manager since joining toe agency in 1960. C, which would _____ .... ____ „ ______ on • proposed tlvo par cent coiling tor ony state or local Income tox. Recon- Financial Fund Declares Dividend Financial Industrial Fund, Inc., has declared its 126th consecutive quarterly dividend from investment income. The company’s current assets are ★ ★ ‘.ir approximately $370 million. Announcement of the' dividend came from the fund distributor Financial Programs, Inc., 2279 Miracle Mile Arcade. ★ * ★ A distribution of 3 cento per share is payable on June 19 to shareholders of record May 31. Home Revamped for Match Niche AMARILLO, >TexaS' (®) * Several years ago Mrs. Felix Phillips, an artist, gave Mr. and Mrs. Marion Bruce a tin holder for long-handled matches to sit in the hearth of an open fireplace. * * * The Bruces had no fireplace where, the match holder could be displayed or uses. They decided to build one. The installation of a fireplace lead to the complete renovation of the whole house. REGULAR 1 71% 7094 7196 + 9>|coml Solvent Q +2 6-30 sublect Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API—The cosh position -f the Treasury compared with —— sponding dote o year ago: Bal«nc»_M*V 10. 1967 May IK 1966 7.«».*90J12.92 t 6.896,903.397 80 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— 139,122.392,076.47 117,113,648 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— . 1*40.111211-99 12S.4SJ.24S,266.49 X-Totol Debt— 32S.029J70.707.02 V 318,617.761.418. Gold Assets— t l3.10MjgJ37.94 13,534,021,700.37 ,v, 8266.058.022.70 ddr* Ug ry Ibfllt, ’ News in Brief Judy McCaidy, 45, of 19 Exchange told Pontiac police yesterday a television set, stereo and tape recorder valued at some $600 were stolen from her home. Investigators said entry was made by breaking through a front door window. Rummage-May 24th, W, 3026 Beacham, Waterford. —Adv. Rummage Sale Wed., May 24 Amvets Hall 570 Oakland Ave. 9 a.m.-l ,p.m. Adv. In case of summer, you can still get an electronic tune-up and wheel balance at Mile Pure Servicenter, Jim Alexander. —Adv. to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. -Adv. Lodge Calendar Pontiac Shrine No. 22 Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem cooperative dinner and officers practice, Wednesday, May 24, 6:30, 22 State St. Monday Events in the Capital lent yestorday In Dotrolf. attending luncheon marking the opening of ___hlgon Week, welcoming a group of visiting Jtptnoio governors ana attend-a dinner In thalr honor. STATE SELECTIVE SERVICE rdertd Michigan draft boords to In-I 1.167, men Into the armed servlets ... July, plus 120 men formerly classified tor limited service, the highest draft drops, toe shorts purchase for profits. If it rises, they purchase so as to get out. This results in toe widespread belief that short interest is bullish, and that a rising short interest means strength for a stock and a declining short interest means weakness. POPULAR BELIEF The popular belief, therefore, is that thb record high short position—it has doubled since 1964 — - represents a cushion against a very sharp decline in toe market for certain stocks. But not everyone b convinced. Some critical thinking b being done. For one thing, short sellers generally are not amateurs. And even today’s amateurs are becoming more sophisticated. There b a good deal of thought behind the short sellers. They aren’t all wrong. • * * * In addition, thb record high figure still represents only 1 per cent of toe total shares traded on toe New York Stock Exchange. At today’s pace of trading, thb represents less than two day’s activity. Technical factors may be contributing abo. There are some indications that toe high short position may represent some highly involved maneuvering associated with the recent large mergers. ★ ★ * In favor of the bears’ position — that stocks will drop — b toe oldest maxim on Wall Street, that what goes up may well come down. Much of the short interest, of course, is on some stocks that have doubled and tripled in less than a year. However, until their true nature has evolved, it seems that the bears may be their own enemies, forced to act like bulb. THE HOUSE Played host to four former a special afternoon session sldorod several Senate bills In the 85,000 Cougars Recalled by Ford for Light Defect DETROIT^ (AP) - A defect that could cause the car’s headlight covers to close while toe lights are. on has caused the Fo/d Motor Co. to recall all 85,-000 of its 1907 Cougar! The luxury sports car selling for $2,850-plus features a concealed headlight design operated by a hydraulic vacuum pump that opens the light covers when toe headlight switch is turned on Ford said Monday that under a combination of circumstances it may be possible for the doors to close while the lights are on. The company said toe likiihood of thb occurring b not great, however, all Cougar owners are being asked to bring their cars into dealer for repairs. STOCK AVERAGE • Associated Press 30 15 15 60 Ind. Rolls Util. Stock: ... — J —J -.1 —J .. 454.7 109.1 152.3 323. 455.5 189.3 152.4 323.i .462.7 188.9 154J. 327.C 465.1 111.0 156.0 325.2 ...473.3 177.0 150.6 324.r .473.9 189.5 159.1 331.1 ,...413.4 159.4 151J 292.: . 537.9 213.9 170J 369. ...318.0 143.9 130. 2269. 'Career Day' Is Seeking to’ Lift Students Motivation of students toward higher scholastic achievement ultimately, better jobs is the theme of “Career Day" to be presented tomorrow at Jefferson Junior High School, 600 Motor. Mrs. Anne Russell, teacher coordinating toe event, said exhibits would be erected in toe school gymnasium by represent-atives of Pontiac Motor Divbion A t l a n t i c & Pacific Tea'(ft, among national firms, as weli as several local companies. Panel discussions on toe choosing of a career, what employers expect of employes,^ and toe imporatnace of Negroes selecting a career arc scheduled during toe 10 am-3 p.m. program. Participates in the discussions will include Dr. Robert R. Turpin, local dentist; John F. Perdue, Pontiac director of school-community and human relations Mrs. Tomi Jackson of Detrdlt radio station WCHB; and Walter R. Greene, deputy director of toe Michigan Civil Rights Commission. ★ ★ ★ In addition, specific talks will be aimed at the professions of college teaching, design engineering, chemistry and fashion styling. Mrs. Russell said parents of Jefferson students are invited to attend the program. fSuccessfuhlnvestfrig* By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 45 years old and have just started investing. I own Alcan Aluminum, Ameri-Telephone, General Motors, Tenneco, International Paper, and Standard of California. Is this a good list for income and moderate growth, and b it conservative?” S. B. A) I seriously question whether all these issues are the best holding for a man of your age, with many years to go before retirement, in studying a stock I believe it is important to look at its price action over a period of years, as well as Its * #' % #j „___■ _ _ record of earnings and divt Mom’s Rummage Thursday, tdends. Three of your issues — Tenneco, Alcan Aluminum and International Paper—show an upward trend in earnings hut little or no price progress ever the past decade. In your position, I Would switch these stocks into ethers of lesser yield but a mueh stronger chart picture. As substitutes, I suggest Caigon, Nor- wich Pharmacal, and Warner-Lambert, ★ ★ ★ Q) “I bought Peoples Gas Light & Coke, which was recommended as a sound'situation. I have watched the stock drop from 50 a share to the recent price of 36. What b your opinion of this stock?" * J. L. A) I have a high opinion of Peoples Gas as an income holding with a good long-term outlook. The gas dbtributors, as a group, have fallen out of favor, possibly because 1966 earnings were affected by a warm .winter and less gas consumption for heating. I do1 not recommend toe gas stocks for appreciation because their technical action has been power than that of most groups in recent years. You bought a stock near its all-time high and you will need patience. Ultiroatetyi you are going ^to see futi Feeevery, in«y opinion. (Copyright, 1M7J THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 County Dems Slate Leadership Study the Oakland County Democratic Committee will present service for James R. Clark, a leadership workshop June 10 » of 28 Oriole will be 11 a.m. torto * Courthouse audi-j Thursday at Donelson-Johns Fu-W # ' jheral Home with burial in Wood- Speakers for the 9 a.m. to 4 tawn Cemetery, TWedo, Olio, p.m. program will be State' Mr- Clar^* a retired engineer Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley, U.S.j°* GMC Truck & Coach Divi-Congressman James O'Hara and!sion* died Sunday. He wap a State Democratic Chairman Zoi- | member of Collingwapd Ave. tonFerency. Presbyterian ChurCh in Toledo $ * ★ land Alpha Sigma Phi, Univer- Workshop session topics will.aity of Illinois, include precinct organization, Surviving are his wife, Iva; publicity, public relations, local a son, Richard S. of Detroit; club organization and finances.land two sisters. thinking about improving your home? Than shouldn't you sea us soon? Loans aro available up to 36 months. Tako advantage of our services—after all they're for you. / Call 335-9493 v f H CHIEF PONTIAC . EMPLOYEES FEDERAL, CREDIT UNION 710 Joslyn Ave.- Pontiac County Fights Labor Findings Exceptions Filed in Sheriff's Dept. Case Oakland County officials yesterday filed exceptions to a recommended order issued last Homer Finkle, 75, of 284 S. Bast Blvd. died this morning. His body is at the Voprhees-Sl-ple. Funeral Home. Surviving are Ms wife, Margaret; four daughters, Mrs. Kenneth Hlsler, Mrs. Carl Anthony, Mrs. Earl Bracey and Mrs. Gene Knoll, all of Pontiac; ajmonth by the chief trial examin- Howard of Pontiac; 10 grandchildren; 12-great-grand-children; two sisters, including Mrs./Edna Stoval of Pontiac; an6 twp brothers, including Frank of Pontiac. / Mr. Finkle was a retired employe of Maple Leaf Dairy. William J. Ferguson t AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for William J. Ferguson, 65, of 1010 Kingsview will be 3 p.m. Thursday at Pixley Memorial i Chapel, Rochester. Burial will | be in Lakeville Cemetery. I Mr. Ferguson died yesterday. He was a retired employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division. Surviving are his wife, Louel-la; a son, Davey of Rochester; one grandchild; and a sister, Mrs. Fred Haldeman of Washington. NEW 7-FT. VACUUM CLEANER HOSE braided Cloth, All Rubber Exchangeable with eve me Your Old R.U- SQ95 able Hose Ends K ^ w Regular 7.50 '|d C.nme In nr Free Deli very PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS Disposal Bias. Hoses, Brushes, Belts, Attachments, Etc. “Rebuilt by Curt’s Appliances Using Our Own Part*" Free Home Demonstration-OR 4-1101 Within 2S Milt Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES huclory yfulharixe.l While Dealer 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD er of the Michigan Labor Mediation Board calling for resumption of bargaining between the county and the sheriff's department bargaining agent. A Dr dr The exceptions were hand-delivered to the State Labor Mediation Board office in Detroit. The recommended order issued April 21 stemmed from an unfair labor practice charge filed by the sheriff’s department bargaining agent, Council 23 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes. Bargaining broke down last June when the county alleged that clarification was needed the employer designation. IN THE RUNNING — Pontiac Northern High School's Trouble Shooting Team, (from left) Wayne Grubb and Richard Harris, and their auto mechanics instructor, William Taylor, receive congratulations from Wally Mahar, regional service manager of Chrysler-Plymouth Division. The team placed second in the recent Plymouth Trouble Shooting Contest in Flint. The top three teams will compete for $100,000 in scholarships and other awards in the Detroit finals June 19-21. First and third place winners were from Port Huron Northern and Grand Blanc High Schools, respectively. School Board May Fill Post! A new principal of Pontiac Central High School mid architect for a new east side senior high are expected to be named tomorrow night’s Pontiac Board of Education meeting. Principal Francis W. Staley bf Central had requested reassignment to another administrative position. An architectural firm may b«. hired to prepare preliminary drawings and cost estimates for third senior high school, which could be ready by September 1969. Enrollment problems at McConnell and Emerson ele* mentary schools are also expected to be discussed at the meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Central Administration Building, 350 E. Wide Track. Sheriff Frank Irons had been named as the employer in the PFC. Richard A. Snyder orl8ina! organizing petitions of1 ' the union but county officials AVON TOWNSHIP — Service content that the board of super-for Pfc. Richard A; Snyder, 19, visors has budgetary control and of 346 Wimpole Will be 1 p.m. should have been the designated Thursday at University Presby- employer, terian Church. Burial will be 2,200 Pontiac Children to Register for Kindergarten To Talk to Grads JACKSON (AP) - Dr. Ernest O. Melby, professor of education at Michigan State University, will deliver the Jackson Community College commencement address June 13. Melby, on the MSU staff since 1956, is a former chancellor of the University of Montana and a past president of Montana State University. IrnMTFNTinivs Idren are expected to be regis- Willis: 8:30-3. in White Chapel Memorial Cem- _ .. . . ... tered for this fall's kindergarten '* * ★ etery, Troy, bv Pixley Memori- .][^® ^eP^^ ^”J®^.^®^|classes within the hext two' Owen: 8:30-4:30 (no school far More than 2,200 Pontiac chil-| May 29 McConnell, Whittier,j June 1 Baldwin: 9-12 and 1-3. Emerson: 9-11 and 12:15-2:30. Franklin: Ail day the county has conformed to its al Chapel, Rochester. ‘ Pfc, Snyder died May 8 of injuries received while fighting in Vietnam. He attended Rochester High School and was a member of the University Presbyterian Church choir. He joined the Marine Corps in March 1906. 1 , , ^ J . ■ He was With the First Bat-1/lso included in the exception, Fourth Marines H & S Co 81 Mortars Ith* sl,enff and h®8”1 ot suP®r" Surviving are his parents, Mr. T.180” aretKpu^t “?■ ** and Mrs. R. V. Snyder of Avon1*** w,ere 1tag?*,y joined l" Township and three brothers#* unfair labor charge aga,nst including Lee of Rochester and]®01”' weeks, Gerald White, director!current kindergarteners) of elementary education, esti-1 Twain: programs at 9:30 andi mated. |l:15. The following entrance requirements must be followed, White said: Robbie at home. Frank A. Will bargaining obligations which the union disputes in its unfair labor practice Charge and that a union shop agreement sought by the union is itself rejected in the act under which the two units are bargaining. I I .... . I .. • A child must be five years of age on or before Dec. 1. • The parent must present the child’s birth certificate (noY hospital certificate) before the first day of school. • An immunization record for I smallpox, diphtheria, tetanus, wkw pertussis, poliomyelitis and mfea- After reviewing the excep-'sles must be presented. 12:30-3. Bailey and Wisner: 8 :30-3 May 31 Rogers: 8:30-11 and 1. Irving: 1-3. LeBaron: programs at 9 and King Denies Red Influence Longfellow; 8:30-11:30 and 12:30-3:30. McCarroll: 9-12 and 1-3. Webster: 9-12 and 1-3:30 p.m. June 2. * ★ ★ Wever: 8:30 and 12:30-3. June 1 and 2 Bagley: 9-3:30. June 2 Central: all day. June 5 Alcott: 8:15-2:30. Tha following It a III •hlclM which hoy* boon oociarao iwn-°ned ttnraitr* Khadulod for iL p«hllc Auction, pursuant to Sec-*8,®» AcS. 300 of Public Ado of 1747 (C.L. 1740,Sec. 257,253): •old F124|l roltl C59F 240 367 K P756H 71623 nt 02210640 / P10V 3H 43 617 ury 5TWA 431 SOM F60L0O 13 700 t IP 102 004 445 io above vehicles will bo hold * » 24, 1067 ot 1:20 p.m. May a, 1067 for Banker, 60 .tions, the State Labor Mediation j Board will either accept or re-ORION TOWNSHIP — Frank [ject the trial examiner’s recom-A. Will, 75, of 4535 Baldwin diedlmended order, yesterday. His body is at Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. A/ retired farmer and maintenance employe of Proper School, Mr. Will was a member of St. John Lutheran Church,! Capac. ! Surviving are two daughters,! Mrs. Herbert Mead of Pontiac1 A Mass for 60-year- and Mrs. Darwood Lepard 0f oW Arthur L- Keyes’ assistant Laurel, Md., and five grand-v«e president of the Rochester children. branch of the National Bank of Detroit, was to be today at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church, Rochester. Keyes died Saturday. There will be a committal service at 10 a. to. tomorrow at the Bronson City Cemetery, Bronson. Keyes, who resided at 209 ICharles, was a member of the Plains Cooperative Nursery next Rochester Rotary Club and the Kindergarten roundup dates: May 2A Herrington: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nursery Class Sign-Up Set Parents interested in enrolling their children in the Drayton /(Sparks ^ V# FUNERAL HOME 46 Williams St. Griffin/ fall are urged to attend a meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Christ Lutheran Church, 5987 Williams Lake, Waterford Township. Open to children who will j start kindergarten in September 1968, the nursery will be held from 9:15 to 11:15 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the church. | Anyone desiring further Information can contact Mrs. J. Herbert Mueller, 2321 Oakdale, Waterford Township. Bronson American Legion Post No. 259. Surviving are his wife, Josephine, and two sisters. Regular Thing m m Monday m lna , his retreat in South Carolina,. _ Math contests are annual “It is unfortunate that the Free- In addition, 120 men formerly events in at least one Pontiac'dom House has allowed itself to I classified for limited service high school and now speech con-lfeS™*^^ ” *- ffP tests will be the gomgthing l» that,1dark‘ the junior highs. *ned **• 80,11 „of our nation a A well-received speech con-,lew y®81,8 ago- '*» the first — between 45 Saves the Mail ATLANTA, Ga. tfl — By going to work earlier than usual, Newton Smart saved the Atlanta post office about $100,000. He walked into the office early one morning and interrupted a burglary. Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities FE 8-9288 California’s San Joaquin Valley usually produces more raisins annually than the rest jof the world combined. The robbers fled empty-handed, leaving behind two mail bags filled, with $100,000 worth of stamps and currency. We've ‘Got Exec's Appeal! For those who need a private dining and meeting room. These wiir seat op to one hundred with a PA. system and piped-' in music and soundproof rooms. Mable Goodwin will help you with a choice of plans. • Complete Meeting and Meal Package I Individual Meal Prices • Choice of Menus 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4561 Locked Home Burns; 2 of 4 Children Die | HALLANDALE, Fla. (AP) — Alone in a padlocked house, two young children burned to death in their bed today when fire swept their three-room frame house. Two other screaming children escaped. Police said the front door of the house was fastened with a at Memorial Hospital in Hollywood. Willie James was not injured. 1‘JUST OUT Cataldo said the parents4 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nowell, were separated. Nowell, 39, “was just out” at the time of the ,fire, Cataldo said. Each Pontiac elementary school is holding individual* registrations with some schools having programs for parents and children to at- FROGMORE, S.C. (AP) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has! denied accusations in a Free- Bethune: 8:45-3:30. June 6 Crofoot: all day. ! Maikim: 8:30-3:30. Hawthorne, Whitfield and Wil-I „ .. . _ jsoft schools have already had dom House paper that Commu-,rounc|Upg nists influenced his antiwar I __ |movement. He says the charges! have a McCarthy-like ring. The Negro integrationist, Who jwas criticized in a position j paper by Freedom House for ! lending his “mantle of respecta-CvaawmL bility” to a peace movement Opeectl event that contained “well-known . Communist allies and lumina- Will Rornmo |ries of the hate-America left, 7 fin Uvwwf I ly [said the charges, were complete- ly false. Draft Quota for Pontiac 44 in July PUBLIC AUCTION Tfw following li • list of Ir..^, vohldot which havt boon declarod a_______ dotwd and ara tharafora Khadulad for «» P Public Aurfftm. pursoant to Sae-tlon 232 of Acio M0 of Public Act* of 1040 (C.L. 1041,Sac. 257,2S2): 1056 Chevrolet VB56T 202 347 1034 Plymoiim 20377 137 Solo of tho abovo vohlcloo.Wlll b# hold on Saturday, Jung 24, 1037 at 1:10 p.m. at tht City of Pontiac DPW Yard*, 117 Leka St., Pontiac, Mich. May », 1037 Death Notices BAKBR, ABB IE A., May », 1067; 2530 North Milford load, Highland; ago 71/ dear mother of Mri. Thurlow Orovar, Mr*. Charlai Skinner, Raymond and oiirald Bakor; door inter of Mrt. Jennie Prieur, Mrs. Myrtlo Route, Lawrence, Edward, Charter, Wilbur Highland WW Its I homa. Pontiac Selective Service boards have been directed to supply 44 of the 1,167 Michigan men to be ordered for induction into the Army in July. i aoe 7 Ml .___..J dark;_______ Itther of Richard S. Clark; daar brother of Mre. Wllllom T. Brooke and Mre. John Touhey. Funeral d Thursday, May is OoMlMPeJahna draft. Two of these will be inducted through Pontiac Board seventh graders from the six junior highs will now become an annual event with the addition of an eighth grade contest mid a ninth grade debate. Commenting on the first speech contest recently held at Madison Junior High, Mre. Joan English of Kennedy Junior High who originated the event said: “this is an event designed to [develop the students’ speaking ability at an age when , social poise is becoming inportant to the student. Speech is required I for seventh graders in Pontiac.’’ itr * * Winners of the first event, sponsored by the Pontiac Ki-wanis Club, were: Gary Landry of Madison in declamation, Annette Vailancourt of Kennedy, oratory; Julie Urla, Kennedy, interpretative reading; Mike Tindall, Madison, humorous reading; and Roger Norberg, Kennedy, extempore speaking. Thief Takes $600 Radio A two-way radio valued at nearly $600 was stolen from a truck parked at the Thick Service Co., 554 Franklin Road, Pontiac police were told yesterday. This makes the State’s total for the month 1,287, the highest of the year. The previous highest draft call was 1,174 for June. ★ ★ Pontiac Board 65 will order 14 men fro: induction in the regular draft; Board 67, 10; and Board 331, 20. ROYAL OAK Royal Oak’s three boards will call a total of 86 registrants. Officers said the radio wasj r!“ r? t“J!he|making the Oakland quota 1M PWUan Motor DivMoo p Men between 19 and 26 years old Will be taken, with the eldest There was no sign of forced entry to the vehicle, police said. The typewriter is said to go back to 1714 When Queen Anne of England granted a patent to .Henry Mills, an for a device to reproduce letters “so neat and exact as to not be distinguished from print.” selected first. Volunteers between the ages of 17 and 25 will also be accepted. ★ ★ Col. Arthur Holmes, state Selective Service director, said another 7,500 Michigan registrants will be ordered for preinduction physical examinations I in July. They received dictionaries for themselves and trophies for their schools. haso lock and that the back NoweU arrived home shorUy ^LnLSafter firemen arrived. Police door was bolted and nailed shut . , .. . ^___ . w „ • , I arrested him on a charge of when they arrived shortly after ^ . 1:30 a.m. I ■ ★ ★ * MOTHER IN SHOCK The dead were Charts Nowell The mother, Mattie Nowell, Jr., 5, and his sister, Patricia, 2.|38, was hospitalized with shock. Detective Sgt. John Cataldo said j A fireman said there were both were found on their indications the blaze might have charred bed.,, {started from a cigarette. He UPI Columnist Dies in Florida STUART, Fla. (UPI) — Lyle C. Wilson, national columnist fro* United Press International and former vice president and Washington manager of UPI, died today in Martin Memorial Hospital here. He was 67. * ★ ★ He was taken to the hospital [from his home here yesterday, Citizens Fight Crime Police Program Starts Tonight The gram, designed to give citizens a hand in fighting crime, will be formally kicked off tonight at the City Commission meeting. Capt. Donny Ashley, the program’s coordinator, looks to public support as the means to make CHEC a success: “It’s worked in Flint, Grand Rapida and Saginaw,” he said, . . -----— —o—---------- —iiiuiu 1115 xiuuic licic vesiciuay.> . v .« a , - Another sister and toother, said a fire marshal was inves-(suffering from coVnpItoRttons r# “* ?**** ? !Dotore8, 4, and Willie James, 3,|tigating. It was not known, heiheart d»w»pfip but failed to re-! Pa^^P8^011* WOfk here. jwere clawing at the padlockedtsaid, how long the children had[Spond to treatment. He had had| Ashley pointed out that people door when passers-by arrived, j been alone. 0 [three coronary attacks over theihave become more and more !Dolores was in criticdf condition! Hallandale is north of Miami, jpast 10 years. |aware c^the city’s rising crime service w 25 et 11 i Punerel J Clark ■■ hSm? HP*rJ a-"»- 1M»V- (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 3 Bno 7 to ♦.) FINKLE. h6mV4, iAsy H, l4«>; 2S4 E. Boulevard, South; ago 75; bo-*“"* ot Margarat Finkia; thy) Mrs. Earl (Roaalaa) Bracey, Mra, Gena (Peggy) Knoll, and Mr.; Howard Flnklai daar brother of Mrs. Edna Stovall, Mrs. Edith LaMarsh, Mr. Frank and Mr. Alex Finkle; also survlvod^By-10 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. , Funeral arrangements are pending at the Voorhaee-Slplo Funerel Home where Mr. Finkle Will lie In steto. (Suggested vlslt-ing hours 1 to5end 7 to 0.) KASTEN, ANNA, May 21, 1»37; 403* Lotus Orlvo, Waterford; oga 7?; beloved wife of Alter W, Kestan; dear mother of LmMF C. and Gerald H. Kaston, and tlw lata Row. Alex Kasten; dear alitor of Mrt. Harold Bennett; alao survived by nine grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren. Funeral service wilt be hold Wadneaday, May 24 at 1 p.m. at tha Donelson-Jahns Funeral Homo. Interment to Onk Hill Cemetery. Mra. Kaston will lie In stats at the funeral homa. (Suggested visiting hours 1 to S and LBFURGY, FRANK, May 22, 1M7; 123 Augusta straatj beloved husband of Bertha Lefurgyt dear father, of Mrs. Arthur Potor and Willis D. Liturgy; alao aurvlvod by five grandatlldran. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, 1767; 303 Spring Park Lake; age 20; beloved son or mr. Arthur McCtoitond; 'daar brother of Mrs. Bfity AAowery, Mrs, Davit Burka, Mrs. Travis Willis, Mrs. JoAnn Johnson, Mrs. Mary Lou Lopaz, Mrs. Rax Drayton, Floyd, Evorett and George McClelland. Funeral torvlca will bo held Wednesday, May 24, at 1 p.m. at the Rlchardson-Blrd Funeral Homo, Willed Lake. Interment In V— Lake Cematory. will lia In stall SMITH, STEWART S„ May 21, 1»37; 3322 West Maple, Walled Lake; age 70; beloved husband of Detta Smith; daar father of Mrs. Chariot Counts, Mrs. Harry B. Matcher, William P., Stewart R., and Elmer G. Smith; daar brother of Mrs. Lily Fletchar; also survived by 13 grandchildren. Funeral service will be hold Wednetdey, Mm) 14. at 1 te ‘ “ Rlchardson-Blrd Fu- Pontiac police CHEC pro-'rate and are demanding action. ■•“i*""1 -«.,a “Here’s a chance to Belp'tiie police department do something about it without going out on a limb," he said. * ★ ★ Ashley explained that' a participant, or CHEC-MATE, needn’t even identify himself when reporting suspicious activity to police. “We’re aiming for an Enrollment of 20,000 persons here/’ he said. CHEC’s letters stand foe “Citizens Helping to Eliminate Crime.” " *§ , . " " _________ .. the Rosary Tuesday, May 23 at B:3B JMR. aI tho Donation Johns Funeral Homo. On wadneaday. May SfejML TpS: will ba taken from the funeral home to tho Ksrpw Fmwai itssrx*. Alpena, Michigan, ice wtlt be haw Fr.__,...... It s.m. at the St. Mary's C Church. Alpena. Intormanf Cross Cematory. Alpena. L. ... tro will lie to state at too Done! son-Johns Funeral Homa. (Suggasl. ad visiting tsaMtsTila 3 and 7 to 7.) will, 4535 BaKtwto ■' Road, JiBwiltoip* age 75; daar tafhor of Mrs. Herbert (Thelma) Mead and «w-wood ((^raBnai) (SBoratj mm int In Holy c—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1067 To Buy, Rant, Sod or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS . Office Hovrii 8 cun. to S pan. Cancellation Deadline 9 am. Day Following First Insertion $7,200 f:e PAID College Grads-Engineers Management potmans In nil fields. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL —...... PMtn $7200 FEE PAID OFFICE MGR. TRAINEE Agn 21-30,' degree, no exp. nncn International personnel leeo. S. Woodword STtom. WMW A TRIjCK m«chanI6 own TdOli (Ms Wasted Male 4 EXPERIENCED MILLING MA chine operator, day shift, over time, full paid Blue Craw am fringes, trlney Manufacturing Co. u*j Saba Rd„ off W. M-s*. ExperiencRA iMWcfoR PBR EXPERIENCED SERVICE MAN TOP PAY. 40-HR. WK. GUARANTEED. FRINGE ERNE PITS. RETIREMENT, INSUR- ANCl. WORKMAN'S COMPENSATION. APPLY IN PERSON ONLY. Announcements 100 PER CENT HUMAN HAIR WIO-lets on sale, M.»5. House af Wigs. Ft+4314. __ ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID IRC. office, 718 Rliter Building, branch af Detroit's -*•--Aid, Inc to servi have helped a i of people w( that MalK "YOU CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OP DEBT." Hama appointment arranged anytime AT NO CHARGE. Hours 9-7 Men. thru Frl. Sat. Id FE 2-0181 (BONDED AND LICENSED) - ItALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, ■—— church. OR 3-5202, FE 2- todges, 3838. LosE WiiOMt safely with Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 91 cents at Simms Brea. Drug*._________ BOX REPLIES 1 At 19 a.m. todaj there were replies at Thel Press Office in the following boxes: S, 1,14, IS, 18, 20, 28, 90, 40, 41, 4S, SI, 55, 58, O, *2, 78, 75, 77, 79, 82 Faaeral Directors COATS FUNERAL home DRAYTON PLAINS *7*04*1 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME SPARKS-GR'FFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtul Service'7 FE +92M Huntoon l» Oakland Ave. Voorhees-Siple teraetery lib 44 t LOTS, 4 SPACES EACH, OLD n Oakland hills mamuriei uerdens. Lei* “* ' price. FleMbredfc MM. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING .a friendly advlaar. phone FE 2-V,23 before S p.m. Confidential. CONNIE ASSELIN MAY SPECIAL 1 DAINTY MMWWPVEMIV mi E. Hammond FE +7S05 O YOU HAVE A DEBT PROBLEM? Wo can help you with a plan you can offord. DEBT CONSULTANTS OP PONTIAC INC. 114 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. , PE HIM STATE LICENSED-BONDED Open Saturday M2 a.m. Exciting spring pun for calves, chicks. For reservatloi *28-1*11. UPLAND HILLS FARM GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME FB+0455 Professional Color. Free brochure A SECURE CAREER EXPERIENCED GAS STATION AT-fondant, full time. MtfaiT jUdii Service, 5995 Highland Rd., sub" California. to expand our ronnoc URBAN OPERATIONS, need 2-3 married man oat 23-45 to manage thaw retail and merchandise operations, operators are currently earning tar than 88,000 with plenty of i i Blue Cross-Blue Shield-Malor Medical i Profit sharing retirement program i Guaranteed salary plus excellent bonus plan • Opportunity to enter sales EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER _______Tarns roUndlng area. 1481 N. Perry. EXPERIENCED SUMMER PLAY-ground directors. Salary 870 r weak. Apply Waterford Two. r reetlon. 5*40 Williams uig H Drayton Plains. 1:20 a.m. to 4 PER MONTH OPPORTUNITY For several carpenters. Call 235- Accountant Factory Workers EXCELLEMT CHANCE TO, ESTAB-1 "H GROUND FLOOR SENIOR-IN BEAUTIFUL BRAND RPV PLASTIC PLANT. EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS /WITH LOTS OF CHANCES TO ADVANCE INTO HIGH PAYING APPLY 9:00 A..M. SHARP, ___ DAY THRU SATURDAY MUST HAVE OWN TRANSPORTATION. SMALL BUT GROWING FIRM IN THE AEROSPACE INDUSTRY HAS AN INTERESTING POSITION AVAILABLE IN THE PONTIAC AREA - ANALYZING AND WORKING WITH COMPUTER PROCESSED COST RECORD. COLLEGE BACKGROUND AND JOB COST SYSTEMS EXPERIENCE DESIRABLE. M. C. MFG. CO. ). BOX 12* LAKE ORION, MICH. In Equal Opportunity Employer responsibilities of the accoui department, pleasant working _ dltlons In Birmingham Management Co. Call *4*4(29, 9 to AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MEN New office will hire an 4 young r Dept, and . 18-26 and Salary s*00 pei “ 338-0350 9: AGGRESSIVE YOUNG train for mar-------* fast-growing i sary as will. train. Guaranteed starting salary plus commission for right man. Apply In person, 4*5 Elizabeth Laka Rd., across AGGRESSIVE SALESMEN WANT-ed. 2 new prelects plus 3 reliable custom builders have made It aesary for us to Increaw hire? Goneral Telephone Co. ^now for linemen ant. ... repair men, liberal bene-rodlt for previous a — Co.,'3l7AtfnlonSt. portunlty employer. ATTENTION $50 WEEKLY-PART TIME Four evenings, *-lo p.m., married men, age 21-35, to merchandise and Intrell electrical appllai Call 474-0520, 4 P.M.-8 P.M. AUTO MECHANIC New car dealership need mechanics. Good working-con* ' d i t i o n s, many company, benefits. Apply I to Service . OLDSMOBILE, 550 Oakland Ave., 332-Si 01. BAKER — EXPERIENCED PRE-ferred or will train. IS or over, 104 N. Perry. 33+9041. Call for an appointment. BRICK LAYERS. HOUSES apartments. . Good money ■opportunity. OR------------- - _ chucker operators needed ... Pontiac area. Top wages. Overtime. Exceptional benefit*. Call 333-7983. From Detroit call 3-3*13. 5 BULLDOZERO^ERATOft, SOME — I experience necessary. OR -3-1993. LOST: SET OF WEDDING RINGS, BUS BOY, 8 A.M.''f6'VP.M._GOOD I benefits, apply et _ - -i emerald wages 41 m ______________ nond, reward. 335-874*. gig poy Restaurant Telegraph a . female Pekingese.! Huron. __________________________ Sashabaw-Maybee Rds.j 7 _____ . —o colL Chi Id’s ward. *23-1105. ImalL 'b lack poodl mole. Last In vicinity of I fellow. Reward. Call FE '< FE +1790. WARNING! IF PARTY T CLEAN UP MAN, SUNDAYS AND holidays off. Apply in parson to Town A Country Restaurant, 1727 j| Telegraph. COLLEGE STUDENTS HIGH SCHOOL GRADS of Consumers Discount Center. FE Summer Work for 12 men. First 5-8317. 17 Clalrmont Place, Pontiac, come, ft ' '------------—~r--------— | Dept, ill ........ | Fox, 338-0359. 9:15 a K C B R T A 11 THE 19*4 CIVIL RIGHTS •: LAW PROHIBITS, W IT H ----------- m exceptions, :• p ______ since -v SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X ,v CONSIDERED MORE AT- X; TRACTIVE TO PERSONS ’& •X OF ONE SEX THAN THE » OTHER, ADVERTISE-M E N T S ARC PLACED :::: » UNDER THE MALE OR $ FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X-;X CONVENIENCE OF READ- jSf •X ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE S •X NOT INTENDED TO EX--X X; CLUDE PERSONS OF % X EITHER SEX. X; 4 WELL DRESSED MEN to DE- $400 NO FEE FINANCE TRAINEE 21-28, some college. Ahr, Burkart. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL " B M+4971 $550 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE $4,000 FEE PAID 2 YEARS COLLEGE ' Trikikig mmmui In el p|ffiFL peri - GRILL MAN, NIGHTS, ap pay tor goad man, 5 days, enefits, vacation. Biff's, Telegraph it Maple (15 EXPERIENCED IN FRY ana broiler work, evening shift, Sundays or Holidays. Bedell', R taurant, Square Lake----- Btoomfleld Hills.__ DISHWASHER AND GENERAL kitchen help, full time and part-time days. Good pay. Pled Piper Restaurant. 4370 Highland Rd. FE >*741. _______ TERRY'S COUN-. W. Maple, ‘ ' DISHWASHERS - *42-9190, DIE REPAIRMAN STEADY JOB AND EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS FOR MEN WITH PROGRESSIVE OIE REPAIR EXPERIENCE. FISHER CORP. 1*25 W. MAPLE RD. - TROY ENJOY DRIVING MR. STiER PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT Hslp Wanted Mol* FaRT Time fane* installer (to sat equipment turn. 3*3-2107. EXPERIENCED; OUTBOARD ME-chanic. Steady work. Laka and See Marine, FE +9547.___ EXPERIENCED BODY AND Paint Man I ship, good p lift. Apply li ALLEN INDUSTRIES INC. Http Wanted Hmm»>__________ A ORIU, AND KITCHEN GIRL, curb and dining waitresses, H“ er Chief. FE 24S51. Assistant to Manager To hostess and Supervise dl PATROLMEN ft nr. vision 2d-si wiimniT iwMIf flood physical condition, mutt be resident far 4 months In State of Michigan to qutHfvvfw gun ptrmtt. Mutt hold valid Michigan drivers lletnaa, outdoor work, patrolling various properties. immediate cpanjnQt In Pontiac, various shifts and mat wYter,ABrush St. Depot, DetroH. A*‘ GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD An Equal Opportunity Employer PHARMAClit, FULL OR FART- poasatlen. 8 ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES Ah career woman, Sarah Coventry I openings for part time work, a earnings, no Investment, no < livery, call Georgia at 335-6891. BOOKKEEPER ____iced only. Through trial balance. Waterford. 423-1333. babysitter, uvf IN. CALL A#t- , PIANO AND ORGAN . SALESMAN Aggressive young man la tall Baldwin piano* and organs and other top line musical merchandise. Experience jarefarr— makes ply fo Mild.. ____ Cass Blliabalh Rd. Plumber Journeyman STEADY YEAR AROUND, GOOD PAY. FRINGE BENEFITS. ■ORTER. FULL TIME, EVENING shill, uniforms, mooli furnished, also Blue Croat. Westerner Beat Buffat, 4108 W. Mapl* Rd„ Blrm-Ingham. *38-47*7. ____________________ PORTER Naadad af one* for our now car dept. General porter v.ork. Ask tor Howard Lewis, Service Manager for Tern Rademachar Chevy-Olds, Inc. Clarktton. Apply in person ir 8 p.m. 33+4 iBYSITTER I IXkV'WTtER +5:30, MONDAY-Frl. Between Rochester and Laka Orton. Own transportation preferred, *30 a weak. 451-8741 M|| BASV llttER WANfED. 4 BAYS Waterford. xj+SSn'efterl BABY SITTER, IMMEDIATELY, may live In. OR 3-9203 or FE 5-7020._______ ■ BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— ____________852-4131 CASHIER. FART OR FULL TIME. FIRST .COOK EXPERIENCED y. Must bo obi* >n chef's day off. to run kitchen . *25-3731, Pine Knob Golf and Country Club, 40M Moyboe Rd., Clorks- FULL OR PART TIME devote 4 evenings per week to business, we will pay you S50 Weak salary. Cor required, Mr. Wilton at 852-1325. Mil* RETIRED MAN FOR SALESWORK. D*-j Pick your hour*, S3,000. Call Angle Rook. 33+2471. Snelllng A Snolllng. RETIRED MAN TO WORK 14 hour* par weak only, car necessary, assistant to President of Homo Improvement C am p a n y, mutt heve complete basic knowledge of Construction business tor •itlmatlng lay - out of materiel. Plsjese call after * p,m. *73-2842. FURNACE AND SHEET METAL INSTALLERS. FE 2-9)24. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX--lenced, mechanically Inclined, ___at references, full or pt"* *’ Gulf, Telegraph and Maple. GAS STATION ATTENDANT WANT-ed. Tel-Huron Gulf, S N. Tele-qraph. FE M043. GRILL MAN iges, paid lui itallzatlon i other eenetift. Apply Big Boy S tourant Telegropn-Huron._____ and Suburban |ob openings. Mf. Clemens, Utica and Birmingham Included. Bonded Guard Servlets, 441^ E. ^Grand 8lvd„ Detroit — LO HAND SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR STOCK. AND SALESMAN. WILLING to work. ExCellont location. S4,(“ Call Anglo retirees contTdkredT Little A David Machine Co., 1794 Pontiac || (Sylvan Lake), Pontiac. HARDWARE CLERK, APPLY » lobs. Machine operators, s toys, weldors, common lobe Como In and apply. Employers Temporary Servlet *5 South Main, Clavraon 2320 Hilton Rd., Ferndal* 27320 Grand River, Radford PAY DAILY tWENTY •reefing cornlval rides, ap grounds. Big City shows INSURANCE REPAIR SPECIALIST, must b* experienced in shingles, TV- antennas, glass repair, JIG-FIXTURES BUILDERS 51 hours, days, full-part time. Apply In person— Joda Industries 590 Wide Track Dr. E. LANDSCAPING LABOR. EXP. OLO-*r men preferred. Steady —h White's Nursery. U | LANDSCAPING, LOKE OPERATORS • t r I mm era. 2415 Weodi-- ., Bloomfield Hills. 332-1237, LOCKER ROOM ________ Golf Club, 30500 W. 13 Milo Road near MiddlobolL Must ba ex-perlertced shoe shine man. Salary plus tips. Good opportunity sharp man. Transportation m MAN 21 OR OVER WITH LATE MODEL M TON PICKUP TO DELIVER NEWSPAPERS TO CARRIERS. SUBSCRIBERS A“~ NEWS DEALERS IN 1 WALLED LAKE AREA. FROM 12:30 P.M. TO 4:30 P.M. 5 OAYS PER WEEK, MILEAGE PLUS COMM. APPLY M. STIER CIRCULATION DEP-T. THE PONTIAC PRESS MANAGEMENT TRAINEE- A future for your family! Blue Crest, Health and Accident Ins. paid 2 weeks vacation. W* ms » home. Good wagos. 3915 N. Roch- MECHANICS FOR CONSTRUCTION equipment repair. Young growing dealer otters good opportunity *" right people. 330-4000. MECHANICS Delsel and get. Mutt enced with tools tor night .. press. 14*01 D+Qulndre. Detroit. MEN FOR LANDSCAPING AN lawn cutting. Don Porter Lan seeping. *7+0797, OFFICE AND STOCK. EXCELLENT MEN WANTED Immediate full time lobs avolleblo near your home. We train y* to teach driving end provide you a completely dual controlled 1__ Ing car and also the customers. Requirements: Over 25 — married — good driving record — —|b 15032 Grand River._ MIDDLE-AGED CLEANUP dyman. Nights end oart-timii 5-3*72. 1 to 2:31 SALES MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY Prominent . local. Insurance to «, marrieo, nign MW graduate. Our new career pis,. .. lows you^to sen and recruit old i^lts!ncar expenses. ______ opportunity n In Oakland Coun-background In elec- SECURITY OFFICERS Dearborn office needs malt female security officers ^fer type uniforms, part time wo min, ego 21. 270-1940, Dearborn. BLE PLEASANT YOUNG i tor housework in country Mg' ^—, 2 day CLEANING WOMAN FOR REAL estate office. Twice weekly. Nights. Good wages. FE 2-4010. __IRKS, FULL TIME, DAVS C.. nights, S days Week, excellent working conditions, paid vacations. Shermtn Prescriptions, Moplo et ....— --mfnrtam. COOKS For doy and avail..., -....... pleasant working conditions, good wagos and benefit*, must have tom* experience and transportation. Apply Iq person only. HOWARD JOHNSON'S TELEGRAPH AT MAPLE RD. BIRMINGHAM CURB GIRLS FOE DAYS ANb COUNTER GIRL For dry cleaning plant, MNHI experienced. .Drayton Martlnlslng, 4718 Walton Glvd., Drayton Plains, DENTAL ASSISTANT AND REcEP- ____ ______ Pontiac Prats Box stating qualifications.________ 3^247L Snelllng | DENTAL ASSISTANT -_ RECEF- mji WwHi 8L or F._S Pharmacist Full Time minJ!P 4&3731? pJ|rvet'Knob”’Goil and Country Club, MSO Maybaa Rd., Clifkawn. Saleswomen _________ Ago 21-55, 40 hrs., salary and commission, liberal discounts, paid Insurance, Saleswomen HOUSEWIVES Art You 35 or Ovsr? It you are — your poise, malurll are naturals for fashion tralndi) Join our solas or clerical staff an loam the tc "-— NOW IS THE TIMEI Michigan Ball 1345 Css* Ave., Detroit ________Phone: 393-2815 TELEPHONE RECEPTION WORK, elc., for person over 25 wnh desire to. lee rn real aetata and work part of full tint* In our Water-ford Union Lalw, or Royal Oak office. C. SCHUETT Ml 6-8500 and hours as wa aL. — assign. Pleas* apply to a manager at Tal-Huren : Canter. Winkelman's SECRETARIAL WORK Advantages: Good payi Mon. • Fi work aratk) paid vacattoni v B fi If par- ____ __________y other Qualifications: Bo appearance; SHORT ORDER COOK, GOOD wages, hospitalization, paid lunch life Insurance apply at Big Boy Rastourent Telegraph and Huron. TELEPHONE SURVEY AT HOME, no soiling, 20 hour* woakly, Pontiac area, sxperlanc* necessary. 272-5550.___________________________ The biRMlNOHAM boaRd of Education hot several socrotarlal vacancies both full and ha" Qualifications oxperloncod, typing *0 words psr min., shorthand W words por min. Ml 4-9300 TYPIST HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE WITH TYPING AND GENERAL OFFICE WORK. M. C. MFG-, CO. I Indlanwood Rd. Lake 482-2711 An Equal Opportunity Bptoy NO canvassing, no strictly appolnwnanla Ing on* or the world's rintsr proa-ucts of Its kind. Quarantood salary or commission. Filter Queen of Pontiac. F" 4 /DOCT6r'S RECEPTIONIST FOR - doctor, no experience needed, train. Call In parson — TRUCK DRIVERS AGES 21-45 . Needed to train as SEMI DRIVERS — Potential tamings: 110,000 to $12,000 per year. Phon* 1-513-893-9313 or write Al-win Semi Dt I ' — 814 High, Hamilton, Ohio. WANTED SALESMAN Wo are looking tor a salesman who Intonds to make 515,000 per year. An experienced salesman, who la will-ing to work and desires to qualify* forl*th*s*rpositi<)n *— selling new and used cere In • modern, progressive GM dealership. Many fringe benefits Including hospitalisation, profit shoring plan and vacation. See Mr. Jo* Galardl or Tommy Thompson at SHELTON PONTIAC - BUICK, 855 S. Roches-ter Rd;, MUMiM EXCHANGE HOURS Fbll CASlt WOMEN who wont to bo successful and earn good money In their spar* time. Money-back guaranta* makes Avon Cosmohct vary much in demand and easy to sail. For Interview call FE 4-S439 <-------- PO Box 9t, Orayton Plains. FULL TIME GIRL f6E gCNEKAL clerical, excellent taorklng conditions, employee benefits, Wallas Personnel Dept. PE +2511. InT" view hours: 9-11 a.m., 1-5 p.m. GENERAL OFFICE, EVENINGS. - through Sun. at private coun-■- Call FE 2-8323. GENERAL OFFICE, MATURE. EX-cellent location and benefits. Hur-*303. Coll Kathy Shaw. 33+2471. Storey, FE 2-9232. WALL WASHER Full time position available In local hospital. Experience not necessary. Should hive some knowledge of painting. Exc. salary end new fringe benefit program. Contact St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. 900 Woodward Ave., Pontiac. - -- -- opportunity omployer HOUSEKEEPER i.JcHil- TR 3-7200 ____________64+1227. HOUSEKEEPER, 3 DAYS, EXCEL-lont cleaner, ' WANTED: 2 EXPERIENCED PART- WANTEO - - MECHANICALLY ... CLlNED YOUNG AAAN TO TRAIN IN THE HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING BUSINESS. APPLY IN PERSON ONLY. KAST HEATING AND COOLING CO., 580 S. TELEGRAPH. WOOL PRESSER, FART TIME, AM or PM, good pay. apply Uptown Cleaners, 45537 Van Dyka, Utica. 731-7070. YOUNG MAN.NEEDED me- trical contracting company f stock and delivery. FE +9959. YOUNG SEMI ■painter, r—— *73-2872. (xperlone* rwcessary, opportunity or odvancomant. Sea Mrs. Bldal- $240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE 33+4971 $325-$400 . GENERAL OFFICE Receptionists, typists, accounting Clarks. Many varied positions. FM paid. Mrs. Plland. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 880 S. Woodward B'ham *42-8268 $350-$500 SECRETARIES pIrsonnel 33+4971 INTERNATIONAL A TELEPHONE GIRL AAA-1 CORPORATION Vc need 4 young women to co Mete our staff In ^ Pontiac offi Must be 1+26, single end hi chool graduate. Salary of S150 i ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY Immediate opening at Oakland Community Collage, Bloomfield Hills - kScatlon, typing I hand required. Excelle end fringe benefits. Ant FE 2-0191. INTERESTING OFFICE OPEN-Ing tor a mature woman ‘ consider training somaom has raised her family and wants to work again. Sand reply giving t age, experience, starting salary Etaxpectad to Post Office Box 435. Qrpontlac, Michigan. i. to 5 __________________ WAITRESS WANTED, NO EXPERI ^a~ necessary. Mg 1 L*a Draperies, 193* S. Tel+ DRY CLEANING Inspector - assembler, experienced preferred but not necessary, train, apply to Father A Cloanors, 955 Josiyn, WAITRESS WANTED. APPLY IN person to Staoocoach Inn, $103 Dlxlo Hwy., Waterford, corner of Andartonvilla Rd. WAITRESSES Noon or evonlngs. Apply Devon — rsiph A i — ‘ & WAiYkUs F6r night ' shift, apply 'In parson only, Blue Star Waitresses WAITRESS, NIGHTS, GOOD JIEti . TIME SECRETARY NEEDED tor Insurance and Real Estate Office. Call for appointment. FE 5-9440. WAITRESS FOR FULL TIMl evening work. 5171 Dlxlo Hwy, Orayton Ptolna. ' WAITRESS FOR CAFETERIA, NO •xporlonci necessary. Call *■6185..______ WANTED - RELIABLE 6LOEE HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN. FULL charge of rectory. FE 2-9872. “ H0USEWlVE$ AND COLLEGE GIRLS Interesting long term telephone assignments at our office. Full — part ttma, good rata, high set graduate. Must hav* telephone parlance. Pick your shift, 9-1 5-9 p.m. Como In or coll 5 Brooks. KELLY SERVICES 125 N. Saginaw Equal Opportunity HOUSEWIVES Earn S2 to S3 par hour In your spare time. Pick up and dollvor Fuller Brush orders. Fdr Interview KELLY SERVICES RUM. rout* experience preferred — Car necessary, part time r“"' full tlma, applications being ceptod. For porsonal Interview Call 332418*. LIVE-IN BABY SITTER, CkClL-' t wages p* NIGHT HOSTESS. APPLY HOLl-dsy Inn, 1801 S. Telegraph. ~ Mr. Bronson. NURSES Registered and licensed. Full part time. For part tlma, you us what hours and days you work and we will fit you In. those who hovo bean away I nursing this Is a wonderful oppor-Contact Santlnol* Hills A permanent plus tips, r-pltallzatlon. taurant — ' Hwy.-Sllvar Big Boy R ph-Huron, i Saks Help, Malg-Fomalo 8-A Instructions-SchoGl* ENJOY THESE BENEFITS* ---- MR - BLUE SHIELD RATO HOLIDAY! AND MANY MORE BENEFITS Hudson's SHOULD YOU TEiXiiSs Full time Immediate opening. ... experienced tellers. Excellent opportunities, salary end benefits. Apply BlrmlnoMm' • Bloomfield Bank - 1025 E. Mapl* M., m WANTED -~MAlE OR FlMALE experienced ges lull tlma. Alma rport I Rd., F< Saks H.lp, Male-Female 8-A Intareetad money- ittot* experience hatptut bul not necessary. We heve a good building program attractive commission For Interview call - Mr. OR +0305, eves. KM 3-754*. LEADS PLUS SALES EQUAL MONEY executive caliber men, earn 8200 par wk. Proven 50 par cant dose ratio. *4+9700.__ at Hackstt Realty 7750 Cooley Lk! Rd. Enroll by calling EM 3-6703 today. A real career Is ir — you. EM 3-6703, REAL ESTATE PROFESSION W* ore a 24 yr. old sales organization with 4 office* In Oakland and Waynt counties. Business with us H v»nf eood. Mr. B. In April (Ms 2nd month In reel estate) received $1810 under our high 70 cent pay plan. If you aw t mlnrinri and .^*1.,^ r * miMions In the entire area - up to »jSr “M OF THE TOTAL, AS HIGH AS 35 PER CENT FOR LISTINGS ALONE - Also P tailzatlon and Ufa Insurant be“-awflisSSS.. ■XFtRliNCBD OR For confidential in- C. SCHUETT, ROYAL OAK, Ml +1500 H. COSWAY, UNION LAKE, CHUCK CROSsfwATERFORD, FE 3-70N ^EAL ESTATE SALES----- nigner income In the Real Kata pr?. ,ion.' "'"centlv* pay with earnlnn 'LP" 4r* 1 confidential | Wanted Childrw la Board 28 SALESPEOPLE iiKaa" gnw Wanted rtwBBliGld gQGdi It W HOUSEHOLD OF FURNITURB wanted. Auctlonland. OR +1547. CASH FOR FURNITURE A reFAiE. r8mo6ElIno WbWk— III jobs. Plaster, dry wall. S)+ ____i, ________ VVUNa FAMILY man wa Work Wonka Female 12 DAY IRONING SERVICE, REF. bllHWAiHlNG OR ,HOUSEWORK days a weak. FE +0021. IRONINGS WANTED, DllAY+ON Building Sarvius-Suppliss l 3 retired dabts? Lit i you convert your equity qvia Waterford Roolty 471-1271, l Smith. OFFICE FILES. DESKS, / chinos, drafting equipment, i OR 3-9757.______________ FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO. OB*, tain patents and process Invention. Apply to Pontiac Frau Box. Wanted to Root Dressmaking & Tniloring 17 ORESSMAKING AND ALTERA- 1-1 DEPENDABLE LAWN SERV* let, Fre« eshmato, 3*3-40*0. ANDSCAPING ANO BLACK OlRt, laying sod groat. Contact Mr. Johnson. FE +7507, 155 Grandview, 2243, *51-0145 and 739-0710. JM GARDEN FLOWING AND YARD grading. Reas. OR nna.______ ■OWING, DISCING, AND TOP toll. FE +0158, Al's Landscaping. PLOWING, DISCING, R6T6 tllL* | flr,v*',nd jandTnicking________22 1*83 SINGLE AXLE OMC-HAUL-Ing sand, gravel or asphalt by load or contract. Call John Newell, 235-1044, day or night,_____ ANb, DIRT, GRAVEL, TRENCH-Ine, loading. Lawn, basements cleaned, UL 2-5Q*a, 852-32SI. TRUCKING BY THE HOUR. 5AND. gravel, top toll, Hmestone. used cement block. *52-0514. PrinH'ij t.nd PitoraHng 33 LADY I Papering, ■ A D I E S DESIRE INTERIOR painting In Watartord — ----estimates. OR 3-8304 PAINT, PAPERING Transportation ) FLINT, tOME-OWNERS POLICIES AT SAV-* 1* pgr cant- Hempstead, ____CLEAN USIC furniture. Calf Han's Audton. Fhon+ MY S-1S71, Ilul wl">nicE appltzncaa and whatmva you. We'll auction It or bin It. B & B AUCTION Dial* On S-2717 —n BRASS: RADIAtORSf ' “■* ganarotors, C. Olx- Araa. Up to 1150 par n SAAALL FURNISHED APT. BY , , KRESGE ASSISTANT MANAGER' «il trained, axe. re/t. Bat. t_ - :30L *82-4*00, aft. 8 p.m. *82-7751, wateRf6r6 "MufLE - TEaCH- Ica housa tg n ‘ ' . .. need nice h_____ black Scottish tarrlar. *2+1581. WANflti' FflR' t.Wllk! CnD QF. ''—. Cottage tor 4 on beautiful Upper Peninsula. Pantltc l Box 72. YOUNG BNOINEER ANO FAMILY daNra 2- or 2-bedroom home west Telegraph and ndrlh of 10 i. Rent to $lS0 per too. 451- Shnra Iking Quarters 33 YOUNG WORKING GIRL TO there home with time. FE +2442. YbUNG WORKING WOMAt) HITS 1 TO 50 MOMES, LOTS, acreage far. . CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND land contracts WARrfEN STOUT, Realtor 1«0 N. Opdyke Rd. FE +414S Urgently need for Immediate Sale I Pontiac Dally 'til S MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH For homas any place In Oakland County, money In 14 hours. YORK !KF xS&T WE TRADE . OR 441343 , OR +0343 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains , ALL CASH 10 MINUTES , H behind In payments or dar forcloture. Agent. 527-6400. BUY ON LAND CONTRACT — and +b*droom homes, vacant Ic and many lake front horns* In II UNION LAKE. 353-4703. BUYERS WAITING SOh ~ 41 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT ‘ FE 3-9141 * qrf. 8 Help WEEttd M. Bf F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F. - WE NEED STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES TYPISTS MANPOWER 332-4314 WOA6AX TO DO GENERAL CllEAN-Ing and laundry work at private club. Good wages and working conditions. 4 days • week. Oft Mondays. Cell JO +7199. WOMAN TO HELP WITH HOUSE-work, no eves, or Sundays, live In. FE 33+7348, (41W Oakland Ave. WOMEN tO W6RK EROM HOME. WOMAN WANTED FOR DRUG clerk. Parson's Drugs, 1990 - Auburn Rd. corner of Crooks. WOMAN FOR GENERAL OFFICE work, typing required, send |ob end pay Information, age, education end family situation to Post .Office box 232, Pontiac, Michigan. - don't call. 33+9334. ------ reliable, sitter tor 3 .... schoolers. S days weekly. References, own transportation. Call aft-— 4:30. 442-9575. Hnlp Wanted M. or F. 8 APPRAISER TRAINEE. Salary negotiable, only .people Interested In making a minimum of 310:000 yearly need apply. Hospitalization pluz many other company benefits. Cell Mr. Foley for - confidential Interview. 47+ 0343. JRH BLOOD D0NQRS URGENTLY NEEDED S7.50 $7.50 O-neg. “"■“,J**N community _ . wwwOD CENTER In Pontiac FE +9947 1342 Wk)* Track Dr„ w. Mon. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 p. Wad. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. dishWasher days, full Steady work, good pay. 62+11 urslng Home. 33+71S, Ext. ir more totormatran, competitive salary ELEMENTARY /SCHOOL TEACH, are tor grades 2. 3, and 5. Starting salary 85,500. Classes 30-35 children. if Interested call St. - eel's School, Sletor—‘ ^ 1992 or convent 3 conditions’. Experienced and li perlenced. Apply In person V Tues., Wed., from 9:30 to ) »-m. Seminole Hills Nursing Hb 532 Orchard Lr*-- *— OLDER WOMAN WANTED TO stay with 3 children. 5 day* wk. My home. No housework, U_ a week. Williams Lk. area. Wstor-ford. Own trarapertatfon. Pleas* cab FE' +35*1 batwaan 7:30 +m. ONE GIRL OFFICE “ jpuriz&'Vi Rlker Bldg. ExPERIENCBO COOK, eltilltAL avos. Tato-nrlto Name, adit Pontiac Press INSURANCE Ofttc*,dalm processor, WB, multiple Hne Insurance Co. Must he high school graduate, i -college preferred. Excellent ploy* benefits. Call 447-3900: . R. A. Jones to arrang* Interview appointment. AETNA LIFE ANO CASUALTY CO. Equal Oppartanmjgg^^ S A L ES EMPLOYMENT COUNSEL-lor. if you have tho ability and w»ir train yw!kCal>|tt> AiS*Ra*0 13+2471. Snelllng + Snelllng. HUDSON'S “Pontiac Mall- . IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR POSITIONS IN OUR NEW STORE SAT MUJls'Iime (40 [,ourf).1?nd Pflrt tim« Ways or Bvenings). Oxi,1 iL.iO~ 5fenS' womens, children's wear,- also stationery, can-ay, shoes, sportina goods, and others. . , CLERICAL— Ful*tim# WO hours) in our new store. FOOD SERVICE- Fu»tlrrte'andPartti,n«- Hostesses, waitresses, cooks, counter service, and bus boys. MAINTENANCE-Part tim# available for evenings. STOCK— Fu*l time and part time available. WRAPPING— FmI1 tim* and Part tim* «mPloyment available. BEAUTY OPERATOR TAILOR-FITTERS Full Time—40 Hours Weekly Full Time—40 Hours Weekly ALTERATIONS FITTERS $ SjpSfc" w«wr ENJOY SUCH BENEFITS AS: Fine Earnings - Purchase Discount Paid Holidays — Paid Training Period Paid Vacation - Hospitalization AND MANY OTHERS APPLY IN PERSON • EMPLOYMENT OFFICE - Customers Lobby — Basement M Wanttd Rtal Estate 36 LQTjt ml, Call THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. MAY 28, 1007 Multlplo Listing Service__ I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH POR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND CountyT CALL asint VORK AT 474-1490, NEED CASH* ■ML DRUMMOND story building ( Nf* Of land, zoned llohf n 5?Z'SL.4 *"!• rbdhisfrom tor gf Pontlic. 9017014. K6r homIs. RmI Estei* Apvlmmlh HnUhtf 37 ROOMS .AND, EATH, PUT WITH basomont. Qbrago. no a wk. Adults. mWS. j rooms, priVATI IATR UT(U-ttos (urn. sn wk. No drinkers, dilldran ar peto. Call Pi *7414. « rooms AnB lATM. HMf i... srsa, eoupto only. Call UL s-IWS. rooms aRo WAiTj), T4ldiiX vt -mF1" * ASUlts onlY7 IHCIAL TSTI M0¥i«.«iNs3,w?Pik p?55^«ir^ sb* wtaTjaw run tuuk cwuiit, va, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACtim CALL NO1" ‘ *5“---- TOR, OR or um. THINKING OP SELLING? LET ONE of our ax port-----i through your C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 i3aMM-Bowm' i~ro6ms INB-IATk COuPle J"1* 15 '!!?' uWII,1»* furnished, West slds. -FE s-ms. I BEDROOM, m BATH, RECREA-non room and fireplace, ideal tor wssk. IPS'Augusta, 3 ,R0P“* AN6 BATH, SM wCfek-ly, $50 dtp., 42 Augusta. MA 47439. Af llrtl, UEfwpIlhll III APARTMENTS, 1 ' 1-BEDROOM. paid. Adults. lOW DIxle. 435-2546. NICE APARTMENT, 1*40 MOB+h! ,“J" ‘ “*| FE 4-0001. ApartaMHh, Unturnisligd 31 ITMRNT, kitchen, s except Cembali, 1- 2-SEDROOM* NEW, NEAR SHALL Carpeted. ManansH. Mr and —- —,,is—d, >SBtad, jRac. pets. From SIM. Lawrence St. .^FAMILY S ROAM, OAl HfeAf, close In, adults. FE S-74M. AMERICAN hRriTAQB API MM WATKINS LAKE RD. MANAGER'S APT. C-2 ' end 2-bedroom apartments bo avallabla soon. We tornM-.M utilities Including electricity. Car-ports available at no extra coo*. AVAILAELR JUBa S AV CKIi. cent Lake, tor young working — pie, strictly pvt,, neat, dee.. . rooms and bath. Refrigerator and electric stove. No children, no, pets. SHO mo. plus utilities. 6SM9S6, LARGE, NICE 4 AND BATH. GA-rage, yard space, near Airport, man and wife only. SI 15 per mo. OR 3-1943. 1 jU, MODERN ONE-BEDROOM CARPETED, AIR |——S apartments. Adult month. Call PE »1ISS. 5-BEDROOMS, PONTIAC, AREA Security deposit MS-440] BEDROOMS, 1 CHILD WELCOME, 1-A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING Awnings — storm Windows FHA — Joe Vallsty — ol 1-4422 ALUMINUM SIDING INSTALLED zazas: PUNS DRAWN. ALSO PUNNING MAS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE saggea,MfYlc* ** - fcwwiWhw SEPTIC FIELDS, ORY WELLS, TRENQIINQ, DIGGINGS. S. Luce *-iwer Const. 473-024 NMCiRg FE MU?,____________________ ASPHALT DISCOUNT PAVING CO. Soring apodal — wholesale prices — Free estimates. FE 5-7459. DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS. FREE Estimates. FE 5-4900. parlance in Pontiac, Howard A PONTIAC FENCE CO. SSSS Dixie Hwy. __________423-1040 CARL L. RILLS SR., NEW AND * “ Root tending. FE S-STSt. . SNYDER. FLOOR UYING ---—-a-i-— If HEt, WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, rebuilding, resealing aut standard tranamissloiiA luatments. Fluid and fl as. All makes. All model. Rochester Transmission How TBit CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Linoleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. 741 N. Perry, FE 2-Wtfl. FLOOR ANb WALL tlLlNG Ceramlc-vlnyl-asbestos -----------| 4737414 Brick ft Block Strrice BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMEN Janitorial Services SPRING CLEANING - WINDOWS floors, aluminum siding and walls. Stanley Homo Cleaning. FE S-7117. work, fireplaces specialty. 335-4470 BRICK, BLOCK, STONE - NEW end repair, apadalln In fireplaces. 330-1770. Fireplaces, written guaran- A-l COMPLETE LANDSCAPING -specialising In broken conere' retaining wells. Free estimates. Building Modernization 2-CAR GARAGES, 2Px20‘, S875. WE ere local builders and build any size. Cement work. Free estimates. Pedy-iullt Garage Co. OR 3-54lQ. ADDITIONS-GARAGES Masonry. All kinds of alterations. Red Welch Construction Co. C. Welch . Joasph Raynor OR 4-0051 FE 5-1701 alL kinds of home Improvements. - Free estimates. ANDERSON-GILFORD, FE 5-5114. URGE UWNS PREFER!) COMPLETE RiMdbtlLISiG > . Service Quality work since 1»45 UWN SPRINKLING PUMPS J bathrooms. Slate licensed. Rose. Cell after 5 p.m. 4S2-044S. CARPENTRY, RECREATION rooms, kitchens, free estimates, Phil Kile, 152-1337, 379-6691. CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. Free estimates. 33579*1. CEMENT WORK OUR SPECIALTY. Nothing too largo nr small. 25 years exp. Free - tBMENT: PATl6t. DRIVEWAYS, basements. Reas. UL 2-4213. Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. .. FE 4-7)07 Eves. FE Mill tngs, floors, drive-ways, sidewalks, and repair work. Ted Stowed JO| terprlses. 442-3373. 335-3487. IhgssnHildng, TaBorinf ALTERATIONS * ™1 TYPES, KNI __________sr coats OR S-71S1 BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING APPROVED AUTO DRIVING school. FE 87444. Free Home Pickup.________ ' Dry WjH Service COMPLETE DRY-WALL SERVICE, remodeling and new, free estl-matoe 837-3239.__________ Dock Sties—Service PERRY DOCKS SALES-SERVICE SS74 Desmond, W---- 473-4447 CUTLER CONTRACTING FE5-4S44 hot p.y FER2?£lNQ->MIN<>l-IN°“ “keel roofing and 332-5034. qlj.AAITy BP9FINQ- NEW AND RE- STONE, 40-40, ROAD-FILL < dirt, mason etono. FE 5-2144. BEACH SAND, FILL DIRT, ANY type gravel del. 474-04IS. CHOICE BUCK DIRT FARM TOP- soil. Delivered. FE 44MS._____ BULLDOZING, BUCK Dlftt, FILL dirt. 334-1731 o---- PEAT HUMIS, U. ered, or picked ui processed Gravel, analyzed black dirt andlap soil. BuUdozIng. FE 5-4928: Siding ROOFING, SIDING, EDITION, RE-heir's llscenced builder, OR 3-7— Tree Trimming Service BAB TREE SERVICE, INSURED. Trimming, removal. Free estt mates. 474-1211 or 724-2475. BBL TREE tkIMMINb,. REMOVAL so estimate. FE 5-444t, 47431)0. "DALBY & SONS" _ STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL FE 5-3005 Moeguno Spray FE 5-3025 TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL Rjders end Power NORTHSIDE, 507 N. PERRY NEW RAILROAD TIES. ROUGH sawn hardwood. Boat, dock ■ -426-7451 TALBOTT lUMBlk Glass service, wood ------- Mower Service RIZZUTO POWER MOWER SVC. 521 Whlttomoro ------- SMITTY'S LAWN MOWER REPAIR Service: New-Used lawn mowers for sale. Sf» Chalmers, off Pi--- Lake Rd. FE S-OSOf. 1-A AAA PAINTING. INTERIOR-exterlor. Free estimates. A-1 PAINTINI ING AND iAngino PAPER.......... THOMPSON FE 4B344 A-1 PAINTING. WORK GUARAN-teed. Free estimates. 412-0420. AAA PAINTING ANO DECORATING Free estimates. • " expert Fainting and paper hanging. ■—* II Herbie, 4734770. Plane Tuning Plastering Service PHtmbhig I. Beetiag__l CONDRA PLUMBING Si HEATING BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS~P0LISHERS B WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-P0W$O6ltt 952 Joslyn FE 4-4105 CURKlTlIlli ROOFING Cb, on* of the "Best.** - 473-7277 HARTFORD ROOFING ANO SIL gimMimmmMm since itss. fb BEDROOMHOML. ......—___ basement, $125 month. 500 Valencia Or call KE 3-7871. BEDROOMS, MObERN, H1Y Side, adults only, S13S with ' ROOMS ON UKE, 2 BEDROOMS, 2 car.garage, mmlEdMMmaillS June 1. SIN mo. 425-5175. 3771 TIENKBN, FGCHEStf* MICH. m . . _____ occupancy, 3-4200, Eves. 3547121. ■" ______’s Realty. _______________ CLARksYdN—2 BEDROOM, BATH, --------- ‘ required. 673-4372, Send—6wvel-Dlrt DOZING. FINISHED llmates, MSS i, FE 5-4740. reasonable. 424-3521. TIMBERLINE TREE EXPERT Removal, trimming, spraylti quite control. Free estlmel Jrucjdng LIGHT MOVING, gm-------■— -pf a-i LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, ' "Tieh, fill dirt, grading and orav-nd front-end loading. FE 2-0403 Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pickups IVk-Ton Stal TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pomioc Farm and Industrial Tractor-Co. 123 S; WOODWARD FE 4 Open Pally Including Sunday TV Salts — Sarvice TV REPAIR SERVICE, COLOR OR black and white, Keego Harbor end vie. A-l TV Service. SS2-I42S. BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANER! Walls cleaned. Rees. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1431. WALL WASHING Sab Houses Crrl • BEDROOM NEW LUXURY BHrmill, carpeting, drapes Md alr-conditloning, stove ami rehrlg. erator, SIN mo. Including all utilities. Adults only. 23S4 williams or. next to Fqntiac Drlvo-ln TttootorTlSS-9315. 1403 J a* Mgr. : 2-4607. 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive aut M-59 Just west of Case Lato Rd. to CSndelstlck. --m behind the Dan Mattingly ' DAN MATTINGLY FE 57497 OL 1-0222 BEDROdM, FIREPUCB, GA- Rent Homes, Unfurnished 40 IEW UKB FRONT_ 3 BEDROOM 485-5406. garage, basement. SI 50. 6 TerPm>^r“* ^ Lauinger REALTY INI Williams Lk. Rd. at M-59 6/4-0319 BEDROOM A HOUSE AND 6A-rege, near Auburn Heights, cam-HP7-.f!*EtoiMtad. pert basement, not witir htat, nfet yard. MSS 3 T *»■ Ctolr. 2 bike. E. w Adame OKAY WITli US. Rd of, Auburn Avo. 812,700. or RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding toxat and Ineurance ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME LARGE DINING AREA ,3 6k4»iGnflG*AS, tliH Efw is^sassra drapes One owner. Send repHee to Pontiac Press Box SI. BEDROOM RANCH. BV Gwi Orton Twp. 3712 Minton Dr. 750 or can assume present i pegs. Cmtu ANNttlflfBjw, OPEN DAILY AND. SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 , GAYLORD EXCELLENT CONDITION. 1 _______ ‘—«, Basement. Garage. All liape end priced 1r 2-2821. FE 17493. LOTS. Ideal building sites north o, Pontloc. Extra large. Vacant scrags also. All prices and tlzs Cell MY 2-2121, FE S7493. , BROADWAY ANO FLINT STS. 3 Bedrooms MODEL OPEN 579 COLORADO 1:20 to S p.m. — 4 day week WEST0WN REALTY -FJI *-7743 de^s ' _ HERRINGTON HILLS, 3 BEDROOM brick ranch, flnlehed basement, — mg--------—,900. F157S3I. 4-H REAL ESTATE CITY - sharp 5 room bungalow, full baeoment, alum, siding, gas host. Immaculate condition. Prito $9,500. Gl or ATTENTION QSNTLEMAN-FARMERS 40 ACRES--completely renovated. Old farm stole farm nace, 2 barns, elhs Ings, good shopo. from POnflOC, near Priced a, $42,500 -stentlal down. . HILLTOP Brick end frame trllevel In view of toko Orton. 3 bedro_______ 1W bathe, fireplace, country-size kitchen with builMne, gas baseboard heat, HY-car--------- ^ 111,190 BRAND NEW, 3-bedrm., ranch, on MigW' *-'■ “‘-isomont tolly IN-illy kltclwn. No iDEL. KlLATSb, Rent Lakt Cottages 41 COTTAGES ON UKE ORION. BY week Or month. Also boot storage. S7D700 weekly. S9379SB,____ IERN YEAR-ROUND HOME, ss Lake front, sleeps S, 1150 412-2024. MULLETT UKE, MODERN. BOAT, available July 1-15, and August 5 through Labor Doy. OR 3-34SI. CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, ROCH-ester irea. call after f n m I52^H3. FOR BUSINESS, PROFESSIONAL FURNISHED ROOM FOR MIDDLE-agsd couple. Use of kitchen. S15 plus SIS deposit. References. SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE Phono 151-3503 ATTACHED GARAOE. 3 BEDROOM homo. *7,730. Art Daniels. 47' *'** Modal—454-2135. VON TOWNSHIP - iUBURBAN Rochester. Attractive 2-bedroom bungalow. Expansion attic. Full GIRLS, PhlVATE BEDROOM 6 share balance of now ho Clorkston ores. MA 5-1554, PROFESSIONAL MAN - IN NICE 1. 543 W. Huron — FE 3-7111. ROOM FOR UDY, WITti iSE VvITN- ixut, wim or wit n privileges. 3347537. BEAUtlFUL 3-BEOR06m RANCH-r, full bsssmsnt,, 117 ceramic to bath, Vi aero ot fenced grounds, thor features. 473-5145. OWNER, 3 BEORGGm Tl «,»i many extree, choice locatlc... 1. will take trade. 633-1344. n Pontiac, 334-3701, Rooms Witk Board BEAUTIFUL ROOMS. EXCELLENT meals. Lunches pecked. FE 4-5580. BETWEEN TEL-HURON — MALL ----", Fi 8-7005. EGGM. LOVELY HOME Rant Stores 46 STORE-OFFICE-STORAGE 332 W. Huron St. 20x40, stsam heat, parking. Immediate possession, 175 mo. Dick valuot, 345 Oakland Avo, Fl 4-353T. Rant Offlct Sgao 47 ATTENTION DOCTORS ! DENTIST Estebileh your office In this Med-“-Medical Building near Pontiac r complete details. OR Rev O'N 4-2222. FOR LEASE - OFFICE SPACE, medical, dental and other professional suites, new modern building being built on M-53, Romeo, Mich, ideal location and facilities. AvellaMt tor occupancy approx. 2 mos. Call 752-3507: RENT OR lRaSE, 2 OFFICE! ANO storage room, ample parking, 2520 Rout BufintSB Praparty 47-A BUSINESS CORNER FOR RENT r. S75 per monm. FEM105. doctor 0 SHORT ORDER RESTAURANT -juUf equipped. White Uke, 1 M west of Pontiac. M7-4S44 or rolt - LO 57754. ! BEDROOMS, irX35', FURNISHED WASHERS-DRYERS REFRIGERATORS SERVICE SALES WOLTERS REPAIR________482-7222 WlEdEw Wusktug RESIDENCE WINDOW WASHING, -lebto rales. Call Clifford be- 4-7 p.m. 334-1920. THE TIME IS RIGHT TO BUY A HOME Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT Russell Young, 334-3139 S3V» W, Huron St. AT ROCHESTER Family room In this 3 bodroor brick ranch In the country. It* HANDYMAN SPECIAL icon! 2 bedroom ranch with basement, double tot, S4,9M_ Ownera Agent, York Realty, 474> rooms/ formal dining room or carpeting. Ilk baths, also garage. Priced at 219,900 < FHA terms, tor quick sale. YORK LAZENBY NEW RANCHER I BEDROOMS—FULL BASEMENT Ilk BATHS—17' LIVING ROOM SEPARATE DINING-PANTRY IN KITCHEN All 3 bedrooms ora largo, 14' dining sliding door-wall off dining . to patio, durable. aluminum tldlpg on the exterior. $13,950 ur lot dr ours, 10 par a 1__1, plus closing costs. Wo v guarantee sale of your homo or v.... ■» your equity or homo In trod*. ROY LAZENBY, REALTOR Open Dolly from 9 to 9:30 p.m. Sundays, 1-5 p.m. 4424 W. WALTQN-OR 47301 Mixed Area OSMUN STREET. 3-bedroom ________________ In excellent condition. Living room with brick flrapleco’, dining — kitchen, toll " *—• Waterford WAY WE—introduce you to gracious living in this charming very old 7 homo in' Rochester eras? It has character — lots of specs, S rooms ROYER Richard S. Royer, Realtor Exclusive Living And privets; too, 4-bedroom cor temporary situated on T econi acres with breathtaking view. 11 baths. Exposed basement. WOode and fruit trass. Lakt Orion oraa. Enjoy Country Living At It's best with this 2-story, Mdraem farm house. This excel tionaf buy Is situated on 21k acre oast of Oxford. Lots Ing sites In the Oxford eras. Li ciped In various subdivisions. 421-2541 823 S. Lapeer Rd. Oxford Office hours 9 to 6 except Sur SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS WATERFORD realty 4540 Dixit Hwy. 473-1273 .Multiple Listing Servlet SACRIFICE v COOP AFT. At S10.900 Terms. Over-looking Lokt Angelus on Milford Rd. ing-fishing and swimming. 4 i carpeting throughout, draperies, built-in stove. ov4n and refrlgt alar. M o’v Ing out of State TOWER REALTY — KE 17100. Frushour. LAKEWOOD VILLAGE Words, alone, cannot describe this ' beautiful 3 bedroom trl-level with full baeoment, this brick end alum. -home featurss a large carpeted • living room with natural fireplace, 3 baths and a large wooded lend- • scaped lot with 200* on a wide • feS* •*" quick ot s 031,900. Why not trada In your -present hornet , CITY RANCHER Located In tht Pontiac Northern' area. .This clean 3-bedroom ranch ' MOO^down l ** I* ' gas heat, loacls ot closets, plus TODAY? b,dt Yird' CA^L US EAST SIDE gas heat, down on F to 61. EVA HOWARD FE 2-6412 670 W. Huron, Miller Realty MIXED AREA Completely redecorated 3 bedroom home with basement, gas heat, conveniently arranged kitchen end dining area, gleaming hardweod — throughout, ilk — HOLLY • ROSE CENTER AREA Mention: developer 'former, 125 •eras, nice 5-bedroom farm homo t sided born, 2 miles 3500 n Bra of road frontage, part pi gravel. Prlced SSSO per Milldlnot. Call today C HAYDEN New Homes—10 Per Cent Dn. room, trl-level flnlehed family it, ilk car garage 112,900 plus 1 bedroom ranch with tun ment, 2 car garage, alum, i *14700 plus tot. bsdraom brick trl-level, ilk bathe, 2 car garage, loads of cloae' storage 317,400 plus lot. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Ooklond Avo. Open t to t MOM CAN COOK UP A STORM — In this complete kitchen — Includes stove, refrigerator, dismaster end lots and lots ot cupboards. 3 spacious bedrooms, vestibule, large utility, 1'k baths, House Is completely carpeted oven the bathroom, l'k-cer garage, cook-out patio. Clorkston arto near expressway. 117,500 — STARTING OUTERS OR SLOWING DOWNERS Priced to please 2-bodroom bunga------------ — sluing, fenced TRADFS ACCEPTED J. C. HAYDEN Realtor 263-0604 10715 Highland Rd. (M-St) Y 16WNER. i-Eo6M HOUSE -Extra tot, nil ft need, it N. Fi tt. FB >753! Northern High a BARGAIN 5-room modern bungalow. ... —nor on Orchard Alto haito acreage available s . tow down payment. WRIGHT REALTY CO. 12 Oakland Ave. FE 27141 *Caeh tor all kinds ‘ — CURKSTON AREA, 3 BEDROOM ad ranch, lake prlvllegei, load-xlth extras. Owner transferred. Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3 bedroom, family roam and 2 ci garage priced at only 115,990 pli lot. Located In new tub with pavi streets, curb, gutter, ildewell and city water. Drive out M to Crescent Lake Read turn rig to Crestbrook street and model. DON GIROUX Ellerthrope LOTUS UKE PRIVILEGES 3927 Percy King' Cf. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, M-tovil. Large family-recreation room with fireplace. 31k car garage. Ext. close to schools < Reasonably priced. GLENN ELLERTHORPE 4334 Balmoral Terrace Waterford - __________6237011 MAY 21-27, 1967 REALTOR: , real estate M strict coda of Association of Raal Estate ELIZABETH UKEFRONT Built tor ton and relaxation. $24,500. Terms. SIZAR PONTIAC MALL 3-bedroom brick ranch home. — basement. Recreation room. Largo lot. Exclusive area. S24,500l Terms. WE TRADE. ELWOOD REALTY 402-3410 FHA HOMES el direct with ...ker, 0 town to vets. DAN EDMOND! RULTOR WANT ADS ARE FAMOUS For i. "ACTION'' 'looking Sylvan Lake. Living n, kitchen and bath. Gat heat. 700 with S2500 down. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Can Lake Rd. 412-1255 ____________________j, T cai 'age. Praaently rented for 03 no. 112,500 with 22500 down. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1301 Pontiac Stats Bank Bldg. 17294__________ 3217295 IRWIN UNION LAKE 5 bedroom Colonial with attached 2-car garage. Mae lerf - dining room, * built-in range ar i In large femi discriminating buyer.' Deh'r'miu EAST SIDE 3-bedroom bungalow with be semi oil htat, ilk-car garage. Good t lot and can be bought on Is contract with 11500 down. OXFORD 3 bedroom older with part btse----- Walking, distance to down- ■ - ' ^ K onto JOHNSON SEE THE NEW BEAUTY-RITE MODEL HOMES AT HUNTOON SHORES and LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW EST. 14 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM. PRICE - SI 5,250 UP. How To Get There . . . Huntoon Shores — West oq * MSS, right on Airport Rd., 11k mllos. Open dally and Sunday, 2-6. L ' Angelus Lake View Est. . .v on Walton, right on Cllntom..... Rd., right on Costa Most. Open Set. end Sun., 2-4 p.m. RAY O'NEIL REALTY, INC. 3520 PONTIAC LAKE RD. OR 4-2222 SECLU&fb MObERN F A RI Lauinger REALTY 1531 Williams Lk. Rd. at (M59) 674-0319 2>EE. THESE j Bi-L#veis. Duplication PRM $26,800. 90 por cant financing able. Lakeland Estates. On Hwy. Jus! peat Walton Blvd. across from Dixie Pottory. Open Dolly I to 7 p.m. Clowe Fridays. Rote Homes. 1941 3. Telegraph. 6237470 or FE 47591, JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 VON to 1954, elumlntgh siding, garajje, tog room, walk-out basement* with i! 3"x32' recreation room. Lots of flowers and Met landscaping. -Only 117,900. Immediate Possession Built In 1946 3 bedrooms. Aluminum siding. .Thormopono windows throughout. Over 1,000 square foot ot living area. Ilk „ baths. New carpeting. City water. Recreation, i ^^gorogo. IV mortgage SYLVAN VILLAGE Neat 4!k-bedroom, 2 baths, toll bowment, gat hset, 2-car garage with excellent-supervlsed beach. Priced reduced 317,500 — good mortgage ca n be a rranged.- K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lakt Rd. 402771 TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 Pontiac State Bonk 334-1545 OR 4- NATURE LOVERS Custom built brick ranch tooto country stylo kltchon with loti cupboard space. Carpeted tot dining room. Stole entrance. carpeted living room. Family n_ Finished basement. , Recreation room with flrapleco. 2 car attached garage. 21k wooded ecree with live stream. More acreage available. Full price only, **' Trades accepted. . WATERFORD AREA bedroom ranch, I rpatlng, Ql'i 0 t month. Ownor a 173 j___ R 474-1411. 427-3147 WATTS. REALTY 1951 MIS at Slid Bagw lok* >E BUILD CUSTOM HbMES ISa mu™tFjSo&kh >il**’ WEINBERGER RESALE — 3-BEO- place, a bright kitchen with Ins and formica cabinets, 2 attached garage, toll tiled ment and sealed gleet wl___________ fully landscaped lot. 331,000 with 10% down. NORTH PONTIAC VA no money down on this ranch, That's bean newly decorat-l3.BEOROOM BRICK AND FRAME ■..ii —i— bungalow with .garage and cyclone 2 car garage. Full price o C, SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 NEAR OAKLAND U. i* a clean 3 bedroom r It Ideal tor a retired o .... Ml .. schoois and shopping. 311,900 with FHA Terms. Immedl- •’* WWy, HALL ment. attechecT 1 Only $11,900, 00 i l-BEDROOM — aluminum ranch In Waterford. Clow to schools and shopping. This It a brand nsw >. homo and will bo finished shortly. Features largo bedrooms, loads of closet space, clean gee heat. Only . $14,500, 10 pet. down. M DOWN TO EX-OI - Largo 2-bed-room bungalow will* separate dining roam, largo living room with .. flrapleco, partial basement, 2-car . Oirage. wttlng an a wooded let. Only 910,200. UKE FRONT - room, 24' living ri flrapleco, built-in JM In kltchon, llk-cer garage. Offered . ARRO E HAVE RELIABLE CUSTOM BUILDERS WHO WILL BUILD ANY PRICE HOME ON YOUR a starter home. Hat largo ty water end sewer. G.l. sting costs down or 11,500 d i land contract. Warden Realty New Model Starts at $1 On Your Lot OPEN Price Starts at $11,750 On Your Lot test ot Whlto Lok Tv. . turn right to MODEL. VON REALTY GEOROE VONDERHARR. Realtor n the Moll MLS Room 110 402-5802, If bU»V 482-5800 Genet Drive. Just east ol on Walton Blvd. lit, light MV 1 block to Genet Drive - PARSON ScInS0 BUILDERS 338-8588 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 4-room 2-story homo. 3 t toll basement, gat heat _ owner will tell on land contract and the price la only 84,950. ” NO MONEY DOWN Ranch or trl-levol shell on your exterior complete. FIATTIEY REALTY 620 Commerce Rd. Cell 3437981 E6 LAKE VILLAGE, LeBARON SCHOOL YORK WE BUY .WE TRAC 1 47343 , OR 470. 47t3 0lxle Hwv„ Drevton Plaint UKE PRIVILEGES. UNION UKE m. Fa Total is’deslgno home for you! Cali Ime. 472-4120. AUBURN BUILDERS ROCHESTER AREA UKE FRONT PONTIAC LAKE MOOERN X BEDROOM summer horn* tocated r large fenced lot. IndiidM frs soto’compHsWy ?urnlsj«? tocludl! boat, immediate possession. ,u J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY L «,LT(„ 7732 Highland Rd. (MSI) OR 47304A - In the Villaga of Eves. EM 3-9937 or EM l.TiJs'HlI W. University TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE I. Opdyke pineuEe 3 bedrooms, 2 bath, family __ unique landscaping, privileges on one of the best swimming ^di boating beaches on Pine I ------- “ 40-1049. ROSS "VENICE OF MICHIGAN" BIG 4-BEDROOM Homes Colonials.. .tri-level from $28,990 total house including lot . golf course ... It mill boating .. . city water . . . tern LAKELAND ESTATES Dixie Highway across tram Dbla Pottory Wetsrtord, Michigan Open Dally and Sunday 1-7 p.m. ROSS HOMES MODEL: 623*0670 941 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-0591 Why Rent When You Can Buy $150 Down plus closing costs NOTHING OOWN BUT CLOSING COSTS to GIs, 2-bed roam aluml-bungs low,. gas h ‘ Model Open Ted McCulloMRh Sr., Realtor PHONE: 682-2211 En|oy the summer to this 3-bed- leges. Large living room, oil FA host, attached Ilk-ear garage. On 2 lots. Only a few' hundred * teat from the shore. Owner transferred. 811,500. By appolntmont. THE R0LFE H. SMITH CO. 14 S. Telegraph FE 3-7848 WILLIAMS UKE PRIVILEGES "ZERO" down on ■fi . 0,4*lot wsomont and Lota ot fruit YORK WE TRADE OR 47343 It Hwy.. Drayton Plaint WYMAN LEWIS REALTY "BUD" NEAR ST. MIKE'S 3-bedroom home, corner location, white alumlqum tiding exterior carpeted living rootn, fireplace dining room, one bedroom down 2 up, toll basement, gee host Priced at 114.900. Terms can b EAST SIDE 5-room eemlbungalow, neat at pin, with carpeting md drape: heat, attached garage, 2 lo Onto 81,500 down, balance .land contract at 275 per man • k NOW i large home with 2% be room, fireplace, bullt-li garage, huge petto, property. 834,90! terms. FE 5-8183 Three bedroom homo v LAND CONTRACT South east side, two story, b< ment, throe bedrooms. $750 d< with payments ot 075 per me that Include taxes and Insurai No Red Tape. Cell tor detail*. , Castell FE 2-7273 : KINZLER : NEW COLONIAL * An architectural beauty with Into-. * rooms, 2 baths, forma! dining room, kitchen with rich cabinets and GS bullt-lns. 19' paneled family room With fireplace, toll basement, l-car garage. To Include. * lake privileged lot at 020,900^AUKj * homes to select from. WEST SIDE CITY Near General Hospital. Solid older , homo with 4 spacious room* and welk-ln closets# gas heat. Mgr garage, large shaded tot end Me* ' garden. 511.900 with 3400 down on FHA or ctoebio cost* onto to quall- NICH0LIE-HUDS0N FUS>1201, after 6 f>V FE 4-8773 JOHN KINZLER, Realtor C--8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 28, lOgfr Sdd’ Hmnss IRWIN BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Located at the comar of Squ Road and South Boulevard. 7 room home, ) bedrooms. L _ Include 2 ceramic tiled m - Since 1925 NORTH SIDE Excellent 2-bei room home with lvt-car garag tn,500, *ioo down, FHA terms, MODEL OPEN DAILY, 3 TO 6 • ment, gas hoat. 111,750 oh yo lot, Out Elitabeth Lake Rd. Roslyn St., | ----------Eg TUCKER SOUTHSIDE - VACANT 3-BEDROOM, brick ai frame home, like new In and oc... Full basement, gas heat, about 3 yrs. old. No money down. N— Baglay School. EASTSIDE — 2-3TORY FAMILY sized home,« petlng In living, dining and t room, large modern kitchen, / basement, gas, heat, air' coi tloned, large garage. Priced to with low down payment. FAMILY RANCH - LOCATED ON NEVADA ST., v 3 bedrooms, hardwood floors i gas heat. Alum, storms-screens-awnings. Move In ter about S400. LAND CONTRACT - Only *200 down on this 3 bedroom I story ranch home, lust CLARK OOOO WEST SUBURBAN LOCATION. CLOSE ,IN. 3 bedroom brick ranch. Vestibule with entrance closet, ceramic tile HJITER NEAR THE Mall — This larg bedroom, m, baths, family r with flreplacel bullMn stove oven, full basement, attached swear garage, large tot. Immediate ANNETT Union Lake Area 3-bedroom ranch with famll room. Largo lot end extr 2-car garage. School bus l door. Ol terms. I I I HHTER,""REALTOR^ 37W Elizabeth Lake Ed,. FE 3- KENT Established In 191* MILY - West side of Pontiac, good renting area; Close to wls end favorite'banter. 115,- COUNTRY living — 3 bedroom ' to on one acre lot. Nice kitchen i birch cupboards. Plenty of , Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 or FE 2-19 49 Sale Houses around home. Good beach, lot SS‘x236'. 2-car garago Owner anxious to sail. Investment Property Good west suburb-marcial property i -----—-| propert SCHRAM Baldwi 5-INCOME- basement, recreation s|Mce S^&88K!danJ5! Only] IS brick. 2 bedroom, down *19,500 FHA or 61 TERMS. Less and 4-room apartment tor cash.' I down plus closing costs. LAKE FRONT; 3. bedroom hdme. tfQQ DOWN i fireplace I Gas Is Call tor an < -$19,600. Mtg. terms available. CLARK REAL ESTATE —1362 W. HURON ST.FE 3-7880 Multiple Listing Service It full basement In mxeo area. In like-new a | Ion, call for appointment to List With SCHRAM And Call The Van JOSLYN AVE,-----FE *9471 REALTOR TIMES spacious living room place, attached 9 3 lovely lots am down to quallfl Don't hosltato t won't last, call appointment. lotnaso' e of this lovely aluminum I ranch home, ha* full 1— I, plastered walls, largi 3 BEDROOM Ranch In the Waterford . with gas heat, attached garage. Times Realty MILO STRUBLE Realtor FE 5-6514 MLS FE 0-4025 3001 Highland (M59) Val-U-Way DRAYTON PLAINS This 3-bedroom aluminum home Is spotless throughout. Large modern kitchen, hot water 3-car garage. Large 100' tot. price only *104100 FHA term*. LAKE ANGELUS RD. This home sets on one of the highest points in Pontiac Twp. with the light* of the city' ctobrly vis-able in the distance. 3 bedrooms, huge living, room with fireplace, IVi baths,' dining room, maple and oak floors, alt In excellent condition, large .l*y-*cre too Priced at only *10,500 with t__ able terms on land contract. Additional lend available. Call today. OFF BALDWIN ♦■bedroom ranch-type horhe, large dying- room, dining area, convenient kitchen, gas heat, larg* closets and plenty of cupboards, — pietely redecorated inside am Only *500 down. R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Avt. optn Brown d Builder* Since 1939 ft. formal dining room, lovely living room with fireplace, m bath*, 3 car garage, nice With petto. *25,500. RUSTIC RANCHER. Let in yea thn roomy ranch style |_,_ wHh ten’Mad and quality aiu--*~"*t tiding, r-"— * — 1 file In eounfiy » dining ana with i wall, full beeement, I Efmd^aragfcAlumn-Vu* v les/Brown, Realtor JIRIaWk 4k. Rd. * Wh trim tea Mm) . FE 2-4010 or FU 4-35*4 STRUBLE living room, large ____ basement, concrete drive __ ____ ready for garage or carport. Priced at. 011,500. TRADE YOUR EQUITY On our coramic C'.E RHODES MODEL HOMES. Quality*- bu ranches^. Cape Cod and colon Designed tor your Individual n* — Let our experienced sales s INDIANWOOD RO. 15 acres, wooded and scenic, excellent modern 4-room home, 2-car garage, workshop, dog kennels. Ideal location, convenient to M24 and 1-75. Ohty *30.000, *10,000 down, balance ' I contract. SUBURBAN. 4-bedroom home. White Lake Twp. He* larg* paneled ” Ing -room, family-size kitchen, tached garage, nice corner lake privileges. *13,500. Term*. TOURING BUS, deeps I, with stove id refrigerator, ready to go. Only 1,500. Terms. INDIANWOOD SHORES NO. 3. Ideal location for your new' Ik_ large homesites, well restricted — reasonably priced. Select your homeslte today. Albert J. Rhodes, Realtor E 1-2306 250 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE TRADE 28 E. Huron St. m Evenings and Sunday 1-4 338-0466 Wideman OLARKSTON MOST BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM-BUILT BRICK RANCH HOME, LIKE . NEW. Three blocks from main streef. I2'x2*' living room. Large dining room. 9‘x14' modern kitchen. 24'x33' recreation room, finished In knotty pin* with complete kitchen. Plastered walls, oak floors. Gas heat. Attached garage. Large landscaped .— plain relaxing. If you are, t at once, luet listed a beauty 1 to Lake, Theres a large petto iter front for those evening Ft, big iVi car garage, ‘hb I In porfh. Both from I. 0. WIDEMAN REALTOR 2 W. HURON ST. . 334-4526 EVES. CALL 332-4490 GILES LOOKING FOR SMALL FARM? right. Hurry, this w JUDAH LAKE ESTATES 3-bedroom ranch, built li On* block to elementary ----- and bu* to high schools. Aluminum storms and screens. Only 02,700 down with *75 per month ~~ ' " NOTHING DOWN School. Call tor appointment. Claude McGruder Realtor Multiple Listing Service — Open 9-9 221 Baldwin Av*. FE S-6175 DORRIS MACEDAY LAKE*MANSION. 450' of beautiful lake frontage framed with towering pin* ' end majestic oaks. 5 bedroO____ _ fireplaces, first-floor family room plus basement bar-room and gam* room, 1W. baths, full basement, bomb shelter and so many outstanding sales features w* can't possibly list them all. EXCITING? WELL I GUESS. Owner anxious to start Construction their new home has sharply duced their price on this atirac and well built Norman brick n..__ home. This larg* 3 bedroom home fronts on„ the Golf Course for a panoramic view of the surrounding countryside, Oak floors, 12x24 ~ TED'S CROWDED? 1 SNEAK PREVIEW THE TIME IS RIGHT TO BUY A HOME end this hem* offers all this: 1W b ~ *---------- dr?ve* carpeting, ’aluminum storms and- screens, many other, extras for *21,000. Let's try a trad* tor size. A CLOUD OF DUST IO, the street Is paved at sharp ! bedroom 2 story hi-- gag----* ----an acre Mgdown So I RIGHT TO BUY A nuniB. DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR Foot tor toot, anyway you n ur* this 3 bedroom aluml ranch located In Waterford nee. lake areas. If Is a yardstick of quality- Large tot. paved drive ■r garage, many extras. T TIME 15 RIGHt TO BUY HOME. $16,500 with only 10 ... cent down. THE TIME IS RIGHT TO TRADE. \ McCullough realty .460 Highland Rd. (M59) AH CALL THE ACTION LINE 674-2239 MANUFACTURERS REPRESENTATIVE OR SALESMAN •ally located for access wr territories. Beautiful 3-1 om brick, custom-built bilevel i tightly restricted Tyrone windows, beautiful kitchen i recreation room tor entertain 1 family living. Iiftercom s tor quick M HOWELL ToWn & Country, Inc. ' Highland BraAh Office PHONE. 313-685-1585 CARNIVAL O'NEIL WHY JtOT TRADE? running brook also. Realistically priced at *35,900. Trad* your horn*. WANT A PALACE? it a* big as Buckingham; i small family, thl* cil i In your present home. NEIGHBORHOOD FRIENDLINESS surround* this beautiful 2 bedroom "lek rancher. The kitchen an" Mj| g area Is so complete and •nned. Its an Inspiration to any ok. Attached 2 car garage, *Hto i room 35x13 with’ nrapteci irkay. floors. Located where irestrlctlon* assure you of q .irs There's an system tor a summer. AmtnMIPWnAPAPi dock welting tor you. This home priced to sell at one* at S21.500 .. don't welt to call on thli on*. 8-26 WATKINS LAKE FRONT ist In time to enjoy the tovi nd beach on Watkins Lake. Levi bedroom bungalow, with nice I ...g room facing the lake. N baseboard hot water furnace tsched IVY car garage and oi 117,900. « OFF BALDWIN-NORTH OF FISHERS This 2 bedroom home has bt decorated, nice carpeted I oom and lovely beck yard to In. Walking distance to Fisher ---- 0500 down with G.I. terms. iw LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY for 3 Good Reasons. STOUTS NEW I RANCH HOUSE OR SPLIT LEVEL - Reedy to move In, these 2 d lightful 3-bedroom homes with i deluxe features, select oak floor ceramic main bath with vanlt GAS heat, sliding glass doors petto, attached IVi-car garage loads of other extras to see, i these can be duplicated on yoi lot. W* have the keysl BIG INCOME! Plenty to get excited about wt mix terrific setup Including ‘— owners deluxe S- RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Road Open Dally 9 to 9 Sunday 1 to 4 MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR Located In Judah Lake Estates, 3-bedroom aluminum sided ranch home with gas heat. Glent-slz* family room, 90'x90’. Swimming pool with filters. Lot completely chain link. *15,900. HERRINGTON HILLS BRICK sharp new ottering on this recreation NWWWWIPNpB nee., water softener, 2-car garage, 2 tots lust around the corner from school. $15,950 on easy terms. FAMILY HOME In excellent repair. Featuring 14'x23' carpeted living room with fireplace 'li bookcases. 23' tong kitchen rlth ree. room. Master bee i 14'x23'. 2Vi-car garage ■... I its. Lots more and only 014,900 on *250 DOWN PLUS COSTS. 3-bed-room ranch. This home Is only 2 years old and has carpeted living room, dining area, tiled bath and fenced back yard. See It to- living room. 15x16 kitchen obY/tv/Tim ' ...—w uilt-ins. 2 full ceramic tlted NATIONWIDE Flnd-A-Home, assist you In the selection of the perns wim built-in vanities. _______ water heat. Outsandlng 20x30 family room with fireplace ------------ 2 car attached garage. *26,- on't be Hi t with a beautifully modernized 12'x-IS' kitchen- with double stainless steel sink end loads' of birch cupboards. Alt colored fixtures In bath with glass tub enclosure and bullt-ln vanity. Brand new carpet- DORRIS St SON, REALTORS i36 Dixie Hwy. 674-03! MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME' SYLVAN MANOR »lth new carpeting, Wxr oom, 10'x9' kitchen, utility .JM - Carport, paved drive. Ottered Ice three-bedroom home toeat-i on carefully landscaped lot. itchen with dishwasher.- utility OFF WA1T0N BLVD. Over an acre parcel. Three yi plastered Walts/ _____________ with built-in eppItaiK**. Attached two ear garage with eutoir-"-door opener, paved drive. cated in Pontiac Northern ____ Madison school districts. By all means see this on* today!) Only *25,950. TERMS OR TRADE NEW HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION Lake Angelus Lakeview Estates — ranchers and colonials ter -front or lake privilege 4-UNIT INCOME WALLEO LAKE AREA and schools; excellent Investment opportunity In the heart of one of our fa,*t growing ---- Substantial income, realistic and best of terms. Priced *25,000 with *5,000 down on *Vi i cant Land Contract.,Purchasers cr It ta be approved by teller. NO. 35 CLARKSTON AREA BRICK RANCHER; 3 bedrooms, glassed-in pgrch, aluminum errand screens and carport. Large 150 ft. nicely landscaped tot. A _ well-located euburban property with blacktop street. It'* reasonably priced at *14,950 with as little as $1500, down plus costs. Better not Welti CALL NOW! NO. 94 ROCHESTER AREA WONDERFUL country living In ,..._ brick rancher. It's a "First-Time Offering", excellent condition, well-I—'--aped and Rochester schools by ___ 3 bedrooms, family room and attached garage all on larg* 300 - deep tot. Priced at *19,950. teM NO. 65 _ _____ in this 3 bedroom, basement and 3 car garage. >3-y old gas- furnace end new hot-wi MODEL HOMES LAKE OAKLAND SHORES: lonials, Trl-levels and Ranchers I I with extras i hires. Beautifully furnished i lux* quality ell ih* way. I lion — priced on your tot as $19,950. Several new homes » vision, meat of choose your own decorating conn. OPEN SAT. E SUN. 1-S p.m. and DAILY 6:30 to |:30 p.m. Dixie Hwy. to Sashebaw, right to Walton, right to Big Bateman sign, lef ' Models. TRADE YOUR EQUITY BATEMAN REALT0R-MLS FE S-7161 377 S. Telegraph Rd. UNION ILK. BR. ROCHESTE ER. |......* OL 1-1518 Rochester Rd. 4-enj 75 C^mrLrco^Rd.^ By Dick Turner WANTED: W* are In dire need .of building^ lots If you have bW ter “"von realty GEORGE VONDIRHARR .Realtor n the Melt mls Room ih WATERFORo HlLL MAtifilk. Beautiful views. All type* ol erchl-tecture possible an thee* fake-front, canal (rent, golf view and In-eld* wit. Priv. beech. Price* start at *4,230, » per cent down. “Junior is at that awkward age-old enough to riot^ but too young to pay the fines!” LARGE METAL AND POLE EARN 'Ik* new — On 20___________ oily and Fenton - *11,500, $t* Underwood Real Estate 086SOI 623-2813. I SuburbanProperty 53 , COUNTRY LIVING North of MS9 an S. Fenton Rd. NEW 3 bedroom home with 2 car attached garage. Full basc- . W* carry our own fl-i. Cell Stanley Real Eetele, Mkh. 629-8621. After 5 r Sundays; 629-3629 or 629- Lot*-Acreage unit. AIM I 60'xtO' stare now leased. 200'x323' property zoned o dal. Ideally located near 130'XI23' Wist OF PONTIAC -Hpar M39 and Elizabeth Lake, ,000. Cell 1*7-3166. BEAUTIFUL ROLLING 7- AND 10-acre homesites, Clarkston school district, on* mil* from expressway. Well restricted. SS4MO-SS.900 with 10 ' ' — ........ Warren Stout, Realtor 0 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 3-1165 Multiple Listing Service Oelly'"Uhh Inceme Property WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 5 acres approved for 41 unit ntu lipi* dwelling. Terms. AL PAULY 4316 Dixie, Rear R 3-3100________EVES. *234*01 LAWYERS REAL ESTATE 3323 Rochester Rd. 609-0610 Trey LOT 50x150 ON STIRLING ST. OFF "it. Ctemens. *1730.33I-6733. m LOTS ON SYLVAN LAKE, FOR permanent home only, Jamas K Blvd. at end of Draper St. Phone Detroit 066-5063. A Mobile Home Paradise Lest then 100 miles from Pontlsc on the Rifle River. En|oy swimming, boating and fishing on one of Michigan's finest rivers or lust relax to Michigan Out-Of-Doors. Lark* lots with variety of C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 M-15 OrtonvUle CALL COLLECT........ LOCATION IS IMPORTANT Lek* front tote, Lakewood Village ■ jtiful beach, Neye* and DUBLIN SCHOOL AREA 3 pic* home ell* lot*. 60x197, 5tx-118, 107x147,, CALL EDWARD CHEYZ Brewer Real Estate 72* Rlk*r Bldg._______FE 6-3101 BY OWNER, LAKE PRIVILEGES, . bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, dining room, living room, den, full basement with recreation room, 2S OrtonvUle CALL COLLECT NA 7-3*15 Sale BesIhbss Property 57 BUILDING SOON? tlenel properly- Easy excess Flint and PQntlec. FRONTIER REAL ESTATE CO. 1257 N. MAIN ST., LAPEER PHONE: 664-2091-664-4791 RUNNING RUNNING RUNNING AND HEART SEIZURES CONTINUE TO CLIMB — SLOW DOWN AND ENJOY THE PEACEFUL LEISURE OF COUNTRY LIVING. ACREAGE PARCELS 17 ACRES, 300* of lake frontage, some trees, near M-1S. *14,950, *1600 down. t ACRES, a breathtaking view across from state land, *13,000. c. PANGUS INC., REALTORS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-15 OrtonvUle CALL COLLECT NA 7-2IT- legts. si,500. Terms. Ottawa Hills Wbterfront 90' water-front tot on VI hull Lake, over 300' i Excellent view. Forest Lake Area Poreet Lake Bloomfield schoeis, ! Terms. Office Open Evenings A Sunday TODAY'S BUYS W ACRES, n& frontage on Indh 110'X150' CORNER LOT. I 25*3 900* STREAM’ Blacktop road, Vj-ACRE WOODED LOT. Lake privileges on Deer Lake. S6,9SO. Clarkston Real Estate0 5156 S. Mein AAA 5-5121 PINE LAKE AkEA V lek* (ripM I______m ___Mil Individual *T to builders. Tenite r- B» owner. IHMSK/x ft ACRES NEAR MITCHELL LK„ Urge 4-bedroom tritevel of brick and sandstone home. Interior da- D&N'T READ tHIS UNLESS YOU WANT TO MAKE MPNEY— . . , ■ l W* have an excellent Mrvlc* station location ter. lee** In tiec area: 3490 Airport at .... Items Lk. Rd. Htah geltenage and profltebte backroom work. We'll help you got started with only a emeu Investment. CONTACT GUS CAMPBELL OR TLARRY TREFKK, *73-1313 days or bvbnTnos. iXCkLLiNT LOCATlW - ««v CERY MARKET — Beer 40 ACRES — 10 ROOM RE- *“■"* --------I — 6 bedrooms, room, 2 barns, lining room, 2 be wildings, rolling I •om Clarkston. Fr sepan____ BM other out-bull. 5 mins, from ______________ ...... $42,500. Subetanftel down. CALL 4-H REAL ESTATE, 433-1400 AND OR 4-3004.________________ ACRES, ABOUT I MILES FROM Pontiac. Metal ------- -------------- dt-lype In ly room with fireplace. P eny In A-1 condition. MtM Prltch Realty. Phone OA S-1300. 80 TO 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy; grate, Mads #rw*0®hav*,#l!t* '5OUont*'el "Michigan*" Farm Real Estate Headquarter* — Dean Realty Co., Coldwator, Michigan. Del* A. Dean Farm Broker and Auctioneer. Write or call 517-2»-2377-dayt — 27M137—nights. Warden Realty YOUR HORSES WILL SMILE AND SO WILL YOU MORE STRIKES 11 « MORE LAY-OFFS H Hew much more can you take? Now it the time to get set up your own business. OPERATE . MONEY AAAKING GULF SERVICE STATION in or around Ih* Pontiac ere*. We'll help you get started with only a smell investment. Contact Gut Campbell or Larry Tre-peck 673-1215. Oays or Eve. PARTNER WANT ho COCKTAIL Lounge. Send replies to Pontiac OLIVER TRACTOR AND EQUIP-ment butlnMt Including real Mtate and Inventory — on busy US 10, Drayton Plates. 139,500, terms. UNDERWOOO REAL ESTATE 0665 Dixie Hwy., Clerkaton 625-3615, Eves. 623-3015 or *23-3123 OPPORTUNITY MAN OR WOMAN Responsible person to Mrvlc* and collect from automatic -"ia||e|M 187 FT. DIXIE HWY. ^ ^ to suit. Has. a good two house that could be converted to INDUSTRIAL BUILDING ,000 tq. ft. maMnry building, ... tele or I*sm, large parking area, located In Pontiac. Pr1—3 *1 let* than S3.00 per sq W. HURON ST. 0 ft. near Josephine, Zoned _ . an priced right. Ideal for many commercial um*. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 So. Telegraph 338-9641 After S cell 334-1109 PARTY STORE led In Thur ISl’ FOR SALE OR LEASE .JnMring office building 1300 tq. ft. plus full usable basement, alr-condltloned, best of lighting, good location, paved perking. . JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Realtors 3131 West Huron-SInce 192$ Buying or Selling Cell PE 5-9446 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty COMMERCIAL CORNER 200' road frontage on Elizabeth Lek* Rd., over l ten, ------ 1—' -—I MM, ed mac........ ............. price *25,000. uenu contract terms. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2303 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3203 363-7131 LAWYERS REAL ESTATE PONTIAC COMMERCIAL — Excet-location In r~~ egg — of frontage houM. Priced at t contract. 689-0610 323 Rochester Rd. i*rty i REAL ESTATE PROS-HAVE: . . . Ability to solve them Tom Bateman, Realtor FE 8-7161 Business Opportunities 59 A ONE STOP SERVICE PARTRIDGE & ASSOCIATES, INC. 34 OFFICES - Industrial Properties — Investments PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE -50 W. Huron St., Pontiac, Mich. DETROIT ■ PONTIAC W0 5-8759 FE 4-3581 A-1 Tovern-Oakland County With take-out, nice apartment, ri frigerated back bar, excallei equipment, grossing over $5,000 month, 'toctudto real estate. Onl ‘STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE "WE WANT TO BE YOUR REALTOR? 2M1 S. Lapeer Rd, Lake Orion BE YOUR OWN BOSS-GENERAL STORE Grocery, ADDITIONAL INCOME o< 6995 It secured by invsnmry- No franchise, fee, no extras. Potential Mmlng 0200 to 1400 per month. All redly* confidential. Sand replies to Pontiac Press Bex 37. r WOOD PRAM SAILBOATl Jfl8 • Honda 300 Dream. Sell or trede— power "Evlnrude tor equal FE W1B. etter 4 dm, ■ FAST CRUISER 22' CruleJUong with 111 h.p. Orey-. marine. Meal tor couple dr small family, complete eisepteg, eelliw and toilet facilities. M*ny extra* Including custom made trailer. F *1 ( tough tor water skiing and very laworthy. Excellent condition. Of-..red at to of original east, or will trade tor equity In reel estate. FE LOW DOWN PAYMENT AN6 tHB ' mortgage costs In 0 sharp like-new 3-bedroom brick hem* w0h ------------------- Call FE 4-353T, after 7 p.m. FE 4-' 64*7 or FE S-19S4. • TRADE id 60aY,‘*S HORSEPOtV-*r airpten* engine for chain mw, MM-! or S130. FE 34143$. TRADE 1963 T-BIRO LAN- _____ ______ could make monthly expenses. McCUL-LOUGH REALTY. 674-3239. WANTED Veto FURNITURE, dishes and mltc. tor cash. 391-2367. WILL TRADE HiAtltiO AND OR WILL TRADE BRAND NEW ELEC-lPi{on*r626-l4ld0r '* GROCERY-BEER, WINE NEAR ROCHESTER i experience needed. Car i »v85 cash necetMry. 4 to I hours weekly. Excellent monthly Income. For local Interview, write KAY DISTRIBUTING, 5309 Blvd., Mpls. — — .......I take-out llcerae, the only take-out In. * 10-mil* dlus; plus living quarters, < 66,000 down to handle. Owner will accept frM and dear house, your equity, land contract ' what have you of value tor do payment. A real opportunity go In business tor yourMlf. O'NEIL REALTY, INC. 3520 Pontiac Lake1 Road OR 4-2222 Sole H—eefcaWyO—d» U Vt WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO FAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House 14fl Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6142 REFRIGERATORS, 3 GAS stoves, 3 dinette seta, 1 Maytag wringer washer, slum, storms and screens. 335-75*3. 3 Rooms Furniture BRANO NEW $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Flk* FE 4-7111 Between Paddock end City Hell • . 4-PIECE BEDROOM SET, • ; (brand new) M 62.30 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE 9x12 Linoleum Rugs . .$3.89 Solid Vinyl Til* .........7c **. Vinyl Asbestos til* ..... 7c ea. .30" KENMORE ORE GAS STOVE. *80. FE 5-5533. PRINTING BUSINESS, lent At part time. 1 For Retire*. Drayton Ft SPORTING EQUIPMENT STORE -One ef the largest In ttw Thumb area. Shew* good [ profit, $20,000 down Will put you In business. PIFER REALTY. Phone area 313, 644-39*3. ____ SUNOCO STATION FOR LEASE (4,000 during Month of April Lapeer (M-24) and Golden Gat* LAKE ORION'S BUSY LOCATION EXCELLENT BACKROOM POTENTIAL * your own boss, earn whet _ capable ol earning — not what some on* *Im i* willing to pr Sun Oil Co. WEEK DAYS — Ml 6-6674 Evn. and Weekends — Mr. James Pasco* - 391-1*17 breakfront: FE 4-0036.__________ BEAUTIFUL WINTHROP CANOPY bed, new , mattress, 2 turquoise -davenport beds; hlde-a-bed, round - Sale laud Contracts_____ 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ui beto WARREN STOUT, Realtor 150 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-0165 Open Eves, mi» gun. caEpeYino, new is'xr*", per les, OrlenteL well, dec Upholstery fabrics. 662-0161. ACTION On your land centred, lerg* i small, call Mr. HlUer, FE Ml> Broker, 3792 Eiiziibeik Leie ~- Wawted Centracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS - Urgently needed. Sm us beta you deal. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 150 N. Opdyke Rd.__PE 141*, CHROME OINEtYE SETS, ASSEhk-bl* youreelf, mvs: 4 chain, table *69.96 value, $29.95 also 4 chair $100,000 jlttee and land contracts, possible discount*, call Ask tor Ted McCullough OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES land contract cdMeHonk. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR .. .. - pe 56101 QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-trad*. Clerk Reel Estate. FE 3-7000, ree. FE 4-4*18. Mr. Clark. LOANS TO $i,ojoo Usually on tint visit. Quick, friendly, helpful. FE 2-9206 0AKLANin6AN*C0. 309 Pontiac State Bank Eldg. 94 - Friday 95 Sax LOANS sis ta S1400 ti sured Payment Plan BAXTER * LIVINGSTONE LOANS te« LrnJiZd will taSI COMMUNITY itaUsbSS. ^7!!i-teg^etS!:{; O'NEH REALTY, INC 3320 Pontiac Latte 3 , OR 4-2222 OEIOW LAKE PRIVILEGE Iota, Twed WI; 19S4 Oimnf B Chevy pickup. Swan tort <7: Furniture bargains. Complete llpe of furniture for all rooms for you -to choose from. WORLDWIDE HOME FURNISHINGS, Gtenwood Pleze (next to K mart). Ml*, BRAND NEW. Larg* and small size (round, drop-l*af, rec-. langular) tablM In 3-, 5- end 7pct Mis. 624.95 up. ^ * PEARSON'S FURNITURE » E. _Plke_____________FE 4-7SI1 BUNK BEDS Cholct ef is stytes, trundle bedt, triple trundle bed* and bunk bed* complete, $49 JO and up. Peareon'b Furniture, 21* E. P“" tHEST OF DRAWERS (NEW) Repossessed Black and white TV's Goodyear Service Store 1370 wide Track Dr. Wed Pontiac CLEARANCE SALE : Living room sets, *49, brown, green . gold; odd chairs, 110 to *29; couches. *19 to *39, gold, green, blue and i«m; Salem maple end table Mf. *19; bedroom sets In Walnut, Meow Mahogany, Blond, *55 to S65; painted chest or dresMr base, |4 to sis,- 6-pc. dining room, S70; china caMnet, S30; drop-leaf tabn, S25; Buffet, SMi refrigerator, W day**! -30" ger or elec., S65; 48", 627; wringer washer, $25: dryer, comb, washer-dryer, 675; . dinette, *19; hoc. dinette, M. C. Llpperd, 339 N. F- Yi ft*, es. OAMAGtU IN SHIPMENT S. Harris, PE 5-2766. DRYERS AND OTHER GOOD USED appliances. Michigan Appliance Co/ 3262 Dixie Hwy. 673481 lT ELECTRIC STOVE, SIS, GAS STOVE 635, Refrigerator with tap freet-*r 649, Wringer Washer 640, O. c"— ** 5-0*6. GAS RANGE, PRACTICALLY NEW; dliilir. 3364123/ 1 ■ ELECTRIC irovi - SIS up. Used Maytag washers tram *39. Good refrigerators from 635. -Used furniture or ed kind* at bar- f RADE-mCDEPAR?toENT. BALD-WIN AT WALTCW? Fl S4S42. GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGEft- S3*. FE *001. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL ■rtE®WI. ***** bedroom suite with dookte dresser, ctwst, full size bed wdh Innerspring mattress and matehM* box spring and S vanity lamps, j piece dinette set with 4 chrqme . chain and table. All tar *399. Your credit to good « Wyman's. . WM4AN FURNITURE CD. 17 E. HURON FMImH IWW.TmHT FE M3* Ml Hevsefceld Q-ds is CRAY BEDROOM SIT - TRIAL! fife FRONTOUARI W. tiff. W**ftfte/l*U** heavy ' washer, fill Ol rang* S3S. Oln-atte Ml. $7. I portable electee heaters, til. I' wooden stopl adder, $4. 2 aata of metal blna. u. Studio couch and chair *35. f barrel bach Chair*, tit. *7*4039. Linoleum rugs! most sizes; l^^^rnfhR,. fit THE PQXTIAC ! For Soft Living fc66M» ’ KifKHIMi flAfc round teWeimlsc. Wad. r - -in iW. “concrete steps 3M53fe NECCHI / DELUXE AUTOMATIC 21* xag aawtn* machine - cabinet su'sva's ever payment* of $5.90 PER MO. FOR 9 MOS. OR $53 CASH BAL. 66Afe*_ for iale. call be- tween 7 and I p.m. 3*1-0*43. ■AS'TjPIN-bRY WASHfeR, slnette-Jntam aaat. *474154. bNGAGEMEtiT AND WOODING ring,, *Ua 5VV. heat otter. J734447. EXCELLENT, WWOlW1 A MB economical, that** Blue Luatra Car-Pat and upholitary cleaner. Rant alactrk; shampooor II. I I G Tha co. low w. Huron st. II? PRE OWNED LATE MODEL SINGER it collacf balance of (40.10 caih er I4.il month- ' Hon, zlg-zagger ham*, doefgns, """ rICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER 445 Elizabeth Lake Road ate. Call credit REPOSSESSED GE STEREO *1.21 FOR WEEK SAVE MONEY iPfefcO" AuiON CbtfVlMtlONAL waihar, *35, Ilka new, PE r"— —I heavy duhy .... I---.3. Built In zig-zag ... fancy work, full .auaramao, tree lessons. Your cholc* of portable carrying case or cabinet extra. Rag. Sllf.50 value, NOW ONLY *99.95, payment* accepted, Pontiac** only auttiorlaad Nacchl dealer. RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER 445 Elizabeth LakO Road SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC designs, appliques, buttonholes. Repossessed. Fay Off. $54 CASH OR' $6 PER MO. PAYMENTS UNIVERSAL^ CO: FE 4~°90S tor, now In Sept. *2flQ ca*ti. 335-1*29. 5a SPECIAL t 10*7. DRESSMAKER HEAD. IN NEW cabinet. Zlg-zagaar for hams,' ' .tonholes, dsslons, etc. t .collect 4*5 contract. Guar- RiCHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER ibath Lake Road 3354312 set's Radio and Appliance Inc. 1. Huron *344*77 WANTED TO BUV WHITE DOUBLE BED.) tRRINOt WYMAN'S USGO BARGAIN STORE At our 1( W. Pika Store Only Wifi, TV t RgMm 21" USED TV« .................*29.9 Walton TV, FE 2-2257 Open 9--515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE .Joe** Bargain House, FE 24*42 GOVERNMENT SURPLUS TRAN-sistors board* - *52-3224 after g4Ijndio Tkas tape recorded. HAM RAblO SET; JOB w/TT linear (Illegal for C. B. “** F E *4$0*i J2EGENCY RANGEGAIN aide band frantcelver, 21 ________ •—* ““i 10 hours with mlk* ‘ * i antenna. GIRO and ■ supermag b *02-10*7 lefora 6 For Salt Mrscellanoous 67 i-A aluminOm-VWVliibiNfe Awning*, storm windows. F o quality guaranteed lob, Cell J« Vbllely "Old RollablO Pioneer" r fxl? LINOLEUM RUGS 0.95 EACH Plastic Wall tile 1c r~ Ceillnn file — wall paneling, chai BAG Tile. FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Hui -■' LAWN SWEEPER SlOl 12 Ft Aluminum Boot, 2 sot* of oars *75; 32" +H.P. Woodall Lawn mbwer |12S> IB* tree trimmer S4; «" hassock fan S2S» «" Hassock ♦eh Sid ----- SIS) Gra 22X21 DOUBLE COMPARTMENT 1 POUND_______ _____________ W metal ladder 1*5., 20* wood ladder *15. Maytag wrlhger. wash-« *35, dishwasher *2$, tH MB ibos FT. USED FIR 37U; 5,000 FT. used lx* sheeting, very good.' 4*2- ADDING MACHINE, %2S) CASH check protectory $25; desk/ sfc Beverly's, 775* . Utica. 73144*0. B^RN WOOD/ SPIIT RAIL ..Fence, railroad ties. FREE DELIVERY. FE 5-9120. r RUMMAGE. WEDHE5-... ,.._rs., Frl. Mr- — " M G dttfcfohwnBla. , TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 AMPIO PORTAFLEX AMPLIFIER, ” ’tnoon speaker, rovsrb-tr chennels, 5 lacks, *2*5/ BA.R'TONE UKB5. *21 ANp *2*. *toryTclark ORGAN* MORRIS MUSIC 4 Tslsgrsph ~ Across ft- r>. OR 347*7, Olxls, For Tht Finest In Top-Qpality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall PUHMiCA COVERBD VAN!tV CAl ELECTRIC GUITAR, *35 HE *33*7.______ GUITAR AND AMFLIFlf%7~l t you waNr W mu. VAU6 piano coll Mr. Buyor at GRIN-NELL'S Pontiac MBn. 4*34422. IvfcRS-POND PIANO, WALNUT esnsote, S50B. 334-7401.___ LOWFkY ORGAN BLUE f AG SALE save *50 Tb (300. LARGE SE-LECTION*. FREE DELIVERY. Ira Money down — bank terms. ; GALLAGHER'S- 111* S.,TELEGRAPH flT» BJft-Sat. til 5:3d MAHOGANY KIMBALL PIANO. EX-“PE54SH9. e 2-2144_________ CLOSEOUT: CLOTHES, ■ GaImGB SALE . '»■ Wod. and Thur*. 1-7 p.m. 1 Percy Kina, Waterford. Used from |«S now from *479 Shop us bstera you buy. GALLAGHER'S - 171* S. TELEGRAP ______ » p/n« Sat., ‘till 5:2 NEW CONSOLE PIANO, WALNUT WITH BENCH ........... SMILEY BROS. 117 H. Stalnow FE 4-4721 garden TRACtb*, Flow, i tivator, disk, cuflor bar, and i blodo. Best offer. FE 2-7*1*. iiBsoN REFhlGHkAYAA, c6F-psrfon*. S225. 27 Fsnsloy Court. AnyHmo after 3:11 ““ PLAYER PIANO, ______ ULMBiir RECORD CABlfT-FE 4-51*4, UL 24*34 GOING OUT OF BUSINESSS Alger Hardwaro, Main St., Clarks-•on now In final days. Don't wait. Includs: cash rsglstar, c tors, shelving. Tim* used Pianos and organs Organs from ......... .$388 Pianos from...........$ 69 GRINNELL'S Downtown Stors 27 S. Saginaw St. GENERATOR*, DIRT CONVEYORS, SSteTOtsSf* ** HOOVER COMMERCIAL *!»- VALUE - NOW S57.H KIRBY SERVICE B SUPPLY CO. *743234 HOT WATER HEAtE*, 3b GAllON WURLITZER AND ’ THOMAS ORSANi ANO PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS _ JACK HAGAN MUSIC 4*7 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 332-0500 1172 Coolty Lake Rd. 3*3-5500 Music Lssscrs 71-A KIRBY VACUUMS Excellent conditions, oVbdlauls |^d ^rebuilt — fully ggeSBew Kirby Service & Suppjy Co. ■17 DIXH HWY. ■ *74-223* LOFTY file, FRtl FAoM 1 | 1 with Blue _____.whip------ _____— 752 Joolyn. LAVATORIES COMPLETE 524.50 v*lu* $14.75 also bolhlubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irroaulors. terrific values. Michigan Fluorescent, 373 Orchard Lk., PE 44462-1, LEAVING STATE, GIRLS CLOTHES size t to 10, Furniture, gas -elec, refrig. for cottage or 2 beds, box springs and ms_____ l deuble, l *& size. 3 baby bids. Hlcholr, 2 doll buggies, smoll Jirond piano, itoo Inverness. Sylvan BOX POST*' INSTALLED, Offica IqiiipmoRt " 72 ADDRESSOGRAPH PLATES EM- __________ ‘1*4* after OIL FURANCE3, FAIR CONDITION _ suitable for temporary hoot. Ill Blvd. Supply FE 3-7011 ONE OF THE FINER THINGS OF PICNIC TABUES, 4> to r; AC and child lawn swings all cu mode of hand pooled Cedar end Spruce, finished In clear varnish. Moon Valley Rustic . .. niture.Co. *4*5 Obit* Hwy. *25- .75; 3-ploco ________| *59.95) laundry tray, trim, 117.75) shower ttallo with trim, *39.95) 2bowl sink. S2.7S) lavs., *2.95) *20 and up. Pips cut and thro SAVE PLUMBING CO„ *41 D TIES. NEW AND USED. RECONDITIONED AND GUARAN-tssd power mowers, S12 and up, HertYs. Shirley at Auburn. FB heavy duly. *25-429*. MOTOTILLERS, ROTOR ----- — - cutters _____________________332-9271, RENT: ELECTRIC BEWER CLEAN-I roto-tlller, power Rent*!, Ft *2M*. RUMMAGE SALE — WEDNESDAY, I, Mlsc. 2452 Uplong, off Square HC Rd. Near Mlddle Belt. Wed. Thurs. IB-1 SEASON'S CLEARANCE S> L _ of oil used and new desks, filss, typewriters, adding machines — drafting tables, etc. Forbes, 450S , 175) 5 * nette set, drop “— Die, 175) boys I r,*rciuk__________________I SPREO-SA1 IN FAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2«7l Orchard Lake. «S2- iixw' pemcie uoara, S4./3 4'xSxSt" particle board, S4.9S 1025 Oakland Ft 4- THE SALVATlbN ARMY ' RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE,ST. iverylfttng to moot your naeda ___doming. Furniture, Appliances TRAILER HITCH, LIKE NEW. FIFL vise. 4 St. level. Luggage carrier for VW. Vi" rope blocks Vk H.P, electric motor. Hand lawn mow*" 2 pc. sectlonel davenport. FE f VAN TRAILERS, CAN BE USED oa the road or Wool tor storage. Blvd. Supply M3-7C01 BO S. Blvd. AIR &MPRESSORS, LUBRICATION equipment, hydraulic lacks, " cleaners, ytc FOnttec Motor . .. ion Ml Ctemone st. FE Kno*. CLARK f*Sk-Li. FORK I aitostewtir RWbr nn - bullt. Ilka wow. S4J00. OL l-WP. Musicsl ioods 71 C—• POODLE cUpASlb” Ahb^HAM- POODLE CllNmND AND SHAMPOO. OR S32S2, Roes. poparV. 334-2097 REGISTBRBD TOY FOX ftfcftl|6 MAY IS MUSIC MONTH TOY POODLE iniD SERVICE. 332-52*9 or 335*772,_________ Auction Salts Public Gentleman's Auction Wed., May 24, 7 to 10 p.m. elec, typewriter 6 N f EJB: 'SPINET CONSOLE-jrend Plano, will pay Clsh. FE Start Equipment 73 12* HOUSEMAN REFRIGERATED dairy cases, 2 check-out counters, 100* Island 5 tier of grocery shah Ing also paper baler. MA 4-2704, Sporting Goods I a dozen brand nev ight new lost year ai 1 t season. *130. Will i. Coil OR 33153 bat. . TENTS. SxlO AND_____4x7. new. Roosoneblo, *744X70. berretta silver snipe . „ gauge, S135. 335-9014. after * p.m. BUY - SILL - TRADE 5V Guns—720 w. Huron—FE 4-7*51 hOMff ANO ARROWS~s2*3349 GENE'S ARCHERY-71* W. HURON LADIES GOLF CLUBS BAD AND -------- ill -------bowling __________ling boll 1*4 hater* 1* a.m. collapsible cai and bag, 1 lai bag. *h-91*4 SMALL GRAY TOP POODLE) OR 43174 F BERNARDS, FEKIN6ESL. Doxies, Poodles, MiQorlcan Eskl- ___IS OPEN «:30 P.M. AUCTION 7 F.M. SHARP. ‘ Tjmnw, i Y FRIDAY ..... 7:3* P,l... every : 2:8 f!nl WrfiStv^JIuSB? luy - Ml - Trad*, Retell 7 Caii»jai>m*Ms wiieom* ala AUCTION Olxlo Hwy.______OR 3-2717 .... registered, holf-reglstored and grad* horses ■ Terms cash. Horseshoe Ranch -73725 McKay-Romoo.. North of 3 J test of Von Dyke. URLIC AUCTIONS GAUKLER storage Company, 150 S. Tola-iraph Rd. Pontiac. Thurs. May IS, *:30 p.m. unclaimed freight ■nd storage, mlsc. Furnishing, dolhlnai etc. r> Auctioneer sic. Terms cash SATURDAY MAY *7,1* A.M. McLavsy Homs and Farm Eotat* ml.. No. of Undon Comer Cook Good HousohoId-Cub and Oliver ** Perkins Saloo-Strvlco Auctioneers. Sworn Crook________Phono *357401 5ATURDAY, MAV 27-1:3* P.M. Virgil Gray Form Estate IV* miles West of Grand Blanc Tractors—S. F. Com bin*—Trucks Ston Pork Ins, Auctioneer Swartz Creek_______Phono *35-9400 PlantsTreesShrubs S1-A BIG BOY VOMATOES, 25c PER pot or 5 tor St.' Plckl* and melon plarifs, 10c o pot, assorted bedding plants. VERNOT** GREENHOUSE — Vk block west of Pontiac Tho-otro on William Dr. FiOWER FLATS, I DOZEN LANDSCAPE EVERGREENS AND shad* troos. white mruco, 4' to 4' S2J0. Dig your own. McNeils Nur*. ory. Maybe* Rd. at Dixl* Hwy. Hwy., *2*3*21 Closed Sunday. FARM BOY MARKET 417 Eliza both Lk. Rd. _ Across from Pontiac Moll Open * o.m. to 7 p.m. dally, MUMS. S1_ DOZEN. OTHER PER- onnlols, FI 4-4175. SMITH-RUGER 4 TOP SOIL. FILL DIRT, MA- —1, -MM li&tfra---------- stone., American Ston* Products. 1-A BUCK DIRT State tested; also topooll, >"■> gravel, fill. BuUd7r* «■ Bollard. *23.1410. 1-A SHREDbED TOP SOIL, BLACK dirt, sond and grovel. FE 1-1495. -1 TOP SOIL AND BLAtK DIRT. APPALOOSA8, QUARTI TOP SOIL 10 YAhb*. I 1-1 BLACK DIRt, SAND AND CLAY fill, waehed stone,, crushed ■ stone. FB S34I7. Ho Boyt. >-i Yoi^ tail an6 bLack Girt OR 4-145* OA t-2227 offer *■ ARABIAN, WELSH, SHETLAND pony at stud. KenLo. *273792. beaTitiful 3 Year old Iioan BLACK DIRT, TOP SOIL) GRAVEL ston* (oil kind*), fill dirt. FE 4-9120 BLACK DIRT, TOPSOILS, WASH -—A and ston*. road gravel, and sand and dirt. Delivered. FE HORSE SHOEING AND TRIM-mlng. Buck Myor, Howell. Days, * ■517-5*<-1510 ovoo. 13173464841 'STAL TRUCKING SAN _ oVoL oil Areas. Pol. *23-13*7, DARK, RICH, FaMM TOP SOIL. « RUSS LEMON - SAND, GRAVEL, fill. FE 431*2. / SCREENED TOP SOIL, WHOLE- A-1 DACHSHUND PUPPIES, 7 WKS. — - lloterod. <7>-l**7. AFGHAN MALE, 5 MONTHS, ALSO ------ «7Wte Forsten, FE 837*7. ___ POODLE PUPPIES, Cl._.... and Week, * weeks eld. UnriMs-torad poodle awpteo, EM 1M69. iLL PET SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS, FE BasseYt puppies “ AKC also stud servtco. 7*7-4*22 BASSETT HOUND. 7 MONTHS, FE- BfAOLI traht mi* toil- *7*325*. colLiE pUFpies, i WEfict Old, IN PIANOS, NEW AND USED spinet*, consoles, granite, player — - spedelty, free delivery In Oakland Coutrty. Open night untn 7. HOUSE OF STRINGS I Mile Rd. Ham Forte, lust s wast of 1-75 LI MMMftlla k>illAU2DII f. „ FE S-7751- - MINIATURE SCHNAUZER 11 pits. AKC roe- Unite beautys. Ears crogpod. Ail Note. Utica. 7(1-33*5. NORWEGIAN GLKMOUNO PUP-ples, roesonabte. *2737(4. Orton- vlt£ By Kate Osann McDonald Mobile Homss Ses our comptet* lino of all now 12' ..wides, Trsvelo-Schult-VIndale-Sprlngbrook. *4*95 up. Mod*Is an display at tho now Cranberry Lake MoblI* Home Village. "Country c living at its bmnHr.Wghl Rd. (MS9), 2 ml. w. of wnm Lake Rd. 2tS.S2M. Hours — wi days Til (jib Sun. .123 p.m, SPRING SALE SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF W' WIDE IN I DECORS. WE HAVjL 4 ONLY. DEMOS AT A GIANT MVijWS. WE WILL NOT BE KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD. FREE DELIVERY UF TO 200 MILES, MCE SETUP WITH AVAILABLE PARKING. PARKWOOD - HOLLYPARK Open 9 to 9 —‘ 7 day* a wool MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 57 Dixie Be wt Trqlltr Ipse* 90 LARGE LOTS. NATURAL GAS SQUARE LAKE MOBILE HOME * k, has 1 spaces tor ran* -lokb front. Coll 53S-34N. toWAhoTiAateUlteSOM “If I tall you something in the strictest confidence, will you give me credit for the story „when you spread it all over town?” Travel Trailers 88 GET SET FOR SPRING OOOO USED < TRACTORS, TRAILERS, TRENCHERS, PLOWS. BIG SAVINGS ON NEW MASSEY-FEP GUSON FORK LIFT LOADERS, •ACKHOES. Pontiac Farm and . Industrial Tractor Co. SPORTCRAFT MFG. Pickup sloopors and covers Wolded tubular from*. 41*0 Foloy Wotertord *234X50 TRAVEL TRAILER *733*59, JOHN DEERE AND NEW IDEA , mower, I. *513427 HY CAB OVER CAMFER. HOME-mad*, self-contained. SOW. After 4. *51-3492. _________________________ 15' TRAILBR, SLEEPS *,"GOOD ^trailer; SLEEPS 4. USED 1 week. Exc. condition. *5135*4. 19*5 1*' WHITE STAR TRAILER, sloops 1 used 2 months, salt con-Mg ' *1395. UL 2.1030. t*5 AVALAIRE 22* ALL ALUM, aircraft construction, fully self-contolnod. Dealer's personal trailer — Only *4,195. Ellsworth Trailer Soles *577 Dixie Hwy. ____________*25-4 5 MELODY CAMPER. LOTS OF writ. M0»t Mil. Inqulrt Cttaro's ^••rvlcs.^1715 Pontiac Trail, Holly Travel Coach 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME — Open Dolly end Sundays WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS ------- --------used, SMS Intercoms, ladders. Solos, 1325 Mil.. Lok ■—* carriers. 1 FLAT) GERAN- Vernot's Greenhouse, 2 SIX-YEAR-OLD REGISTERED ■warier horses. Palomino mar* inn — B»y Goidiiw ssse. *12-79*2 g&af- Cwro through advanced lump-^ CrossjCountry ridlng. Bab^slt- flush toilet*, hoi ■ fishing. HgU mil* McFooly' Rosori 27-3620 wi HORSES ANO TACK FOR SALE or trad*. 425-4M7, or *343011 LARGE SHETLAhb PONY, *75) AL-- addle and bridle. *2537*2. PONIES, *35 UP, FE 11*31. ■ REGISTERED ARABIAN GELDING, 3 yrs. old, mull soil, *250. M131j7. STABLE FOR ONE OR TWO HOUS- LARGE SELECTION. 2,000 FLATS of varloti** of annuoli, perennials, petunias, mirlookls, etc. S doz. (late S2.U a flat. Also the fin * In geraniums, 59c each. FARM BOY MARKET 417 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Across from Pontiac Mall Open 9 a.m. to * p.m. daliy and Si balk Mods, and onton sots. Boros Mortcot, _22S* Dbrto Hwy.- • “* BRAND NEW I.H.C. 1 MODEL NUMBER 3414 TRA< WITH INDUSTRIAL LOA AND BACKHOE. ONLY *4,900 Terms available KING BROS. COME IN AND SAVE FE 4-1*42 FE 4373* Ponttofc Rd. at Opdyko Rd. Aark's tAactors AND MA- used tractors, load- chlnery. IN ers, down, Betwear 93371 ■ co2m>leTe line of Opan dally* Tc.lWt. Root. OR 33277. " —--------- —1 today. Jacobson Trailer Sales iMM 1 Lake Rd. OR 3-59*1 APACHE CAMP TRAILERS ood assortment of now 176* mod-tit ,at dos*4iut prices. Just rOMlvod II factory sxportmantel and. onwloyoM traitors. All < naw 1967 modsli on display In hooted showrooms. Opan dally til 7 p.m. Sundays IS sjn. tel p.m ir city limitepn M-21. 1932. GuarsnteMlor llfi .horn and got a Hwt at Warmr Trollor W-,Huron (,ten | | BOOTH CAMPER ALUM. COVERS, CAMPERS, PARTS, ACCESSORIES FOR ANY PICKUP 7330 HIGHLAND RD. - PONTIAC k of Orton-11N Ml} CENTURY YELLOWSTONE WHEEL CAMPER dp In and Inspocl our from STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. _ tlghlond (MS7) FE 2-492S LlftLE CHAMP TRAILER I equipped, *400. FE 1 OAKUND CAMPER Open for your Inspection Koribou Kamper DON'T MISS THIS KARIBOUI A superb truck camper Alto aluminum, covers 3354X34. BoldWtn ot Colaeto PICKUP COVERS, S245 UPT-10'*" cabcovers, $1,295 and ut T1 R CAMFER MFG. CO. MUlNBi" *52-2334 PHOENIX AND WINNBEAGO CONVERTIBLES 4xS slatpers PICKUP CAMPERS REESE AND DEAW-TITE HITCHES PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS B CAMPERS Travel queen campers^ merit Fiberglass covers PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS The largest display of new ca over pickup truck campons In III ore*. Barasto price* on bodtl n< end used. Example — Now Hu r model* *795. Used 19*5 Apse., r model With tw head room Snd poly foam moHrotstt. I Iks now, *345. New 1947 cab high truck cover with Chennai Wool framing, screoned latousl* window*, iifi while is l*s». Sa*.gur Mite sr-clals today. Opan dolte til 7 p.i Sundays w a.m. to S p.m. Nil Chy BmBs SPECIA ECIAL INTRODUCTION ° TO THIS AREA 1G TALLY HO,TRAVEL TRAILER TRAILER SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES AT JOHNSON'S I4H10 W* **" ** ^0,,Yn pB TRAVEL TRAILERS WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans-Monitor Travel Trailers FE 2-35*9. _________ CRUISER INCORPORA1 t„TW If:. Avinrud*. Full coi— skiing. Skiing accessories Included. OR 33179. ■ _______________ . REAL BEAUTY, BUELLER FT baralfS let boat, if inboard. |*t bo«» to set*, no props. Low on up. kosy, run* In shallow water, *73- SCLLE R I V tt R MARlNl ClfV privet* boot wall, UW, electric water, adequate parking. CR S32S2 CENTURY Hi7 IliV, 1*0 GRAY. “ ■ isj flnlsh. Mobil Service si*-10 Mil* Rd. and Ryan, War-ILocum 4-7474. WINDSORS 1, J. C. Telklngton N 1, 225S S. Tologrsph Ri n Mirbcte Mill ros-30. Auto AccBtsorlBs Tires-Auto-Truck ir CMC Truck, *325. Od 1-3212. THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM point |0b, SS5. Free plcku) dtHvory service, satisfaction _ anteed. Exail Paint and Bump, ytamgilM liiinTt • Motorcycles ANDERSON SALES 1 SERVICE 1*45 S. Telegraph FE 3-7102 '67 All models available . Including 350 G.P. 2 locations, 1947 5. Telegraph 7*15 Highland Rd., Pontiac DON WILSON'S YAMAHA 19*2 HARLEY bAVIDSQN SPRINT: :c $225, motor good, .n ' or repair. 403 Enzabotn , Pontiac. 322-1*27. ____ - 305 HONDA, EXCELLENT llllon, seddlo bags, holmot. FE Waatad Cars-Trvcks 101 DON'T BUY UNTIL You Uy Tony's Marine Bla dlouiunt on oil 19*4 boots and motors. Johnson motor* boats, Awocraft canoes and , Ing boat*. Geneva j ohdO ...., *3395, aleo Shall Lake Boat*, 2*95 Orchard, lake Rd., Sylvan LaMy "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS SSI W. Huron St. FE 4-7271 FE 4-17*7 EARLY BIRD SPECIALS Johnson boats and motors Chrysler boats and motors Duo liberates boats Sllverllne-I-O's Pontocns-Canoos-Prams-Sallboats Aluminum fishing boot* Bridgestone Motorcycles Complete lint of fishing tackte Scuba diving equipment Little League baseball supplies Hunting supplies end general sport PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. __4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains OR 4414II At Loon Lai Opon dollv 7 a.m.-* p.m. Mon. and Thurs. 'til 9 p.m. Sun. H A.M.-4 P.M. FAST CRUISER 22* Cruis-Atong with 135 h.p. Grey-marina, ideal for coupto — family, complete stooping, i toll*! facilities. Many oxtras includ-custom mod* trailer. Fast lh lor water skiing and very irlhy. Excellent condition. Of* at ono-half ol original cost, will trad* tor equity In rool ost* FE 2-554*. GLAS SPAR • STEURY „ MlRRO Cratt Grumman • Kayot Evln-rud* - Pomco. DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE, Phono *29-2179. GRUMMAN CANOES, GRAND-R|V-— boat tola. 2S92B Grand River, HARRINGTON STOP HERE LAST M &M MOTOR SALES Now at our now location W* aoy mor* ter sheirp, tot* mad (I cars. Corvettes noiidad. • SPECIAL PRICES VanWAIt1'kuto^rtef^-^t? »12*» Ws woukl liko to buy late modal GM Cara or will ao-cept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Jaek Care-Twcb 10VA - AND 3 JUNK CARS—TRUCK! o tow inytlmo. FE 2-2«««. starters’ and gahorators, C Dlx-son, OR 3-5S49. UNK CARS Xn6' TRUCKS, FREE tow. 673-3224. Utad Aato-Track Part* 102 4 RADAR MAD WHEELS FOR Chtvy or GTO, $70. FE 2-18SS. 19*0 FORb MOtOR, AUTO*AA?l4 CONVERT YOUR BNOINE TO HI portormonc*. Coll ut for Inform*-tlon. All mekos. Terms, 537-1117. DODGE 440 CUBIC INCH MOTOfc $400. Car Irollor 012S. 852-97*4. DOORS TO Flf' lMl AkD *2 TEM-past. Olds, F-SS and Bulck special 4-door or station wagon. Reas. *73- 19*5 harleV OAVidsOn, 2t0 CC, 1945 SUZUKI *0,120 *74-03*5 Dot. S p.m FE 2-4040, ask tr- 19*5 HONDA SUPER HAWK, Customized, many extras, *500, call - - *28-3234. telescoping, rocks. Lowry Cl S. Hospital Rd., 3-3*01. Sport YOUR HOME IS ANYWHERE WHEN YOU OWN AN APACHE Picture yourself out comping the groat outdoors, but with tht horn* comforts. Special qua. .. Is built In svsry • Apach*. Such things as: crank up tops, f " screen doors, 3 burner stoves, a sinks. Com* In and seo these boi tits at Evan's Equipment. Op 'til I p.m., Mon.-Prl. Sat. S-S p.i *507 Dixie Hwy. 194* KAWASAKI TRAIL MODEL (5 CC. 13SS ml. Exc. condition. Own-or In Navy. S30S. FE 17071 19*4 NORTON 750 CC ATLAS, 3*3- 034540 Sport, now $44090 Sport, now |jd|K Troll, now . 7»f 1-A SO'XIO' 2 BEDROOMS . . . 03,19 MANY BEAUTIES TO CHOOSE FROM RICHARDSON-WINDSOR HOMETTE-LIBERTY-HAMPTON COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1*57 *23-1310 10*X3*;, PALACE, EXCELLENT condition, complololy furnished ■ *2,000, 0074000 between I a.m. an — After «:30 coll 007-5195. 12x55 RICHARDSON—EXCELLENT I x 0 FT. STEWART, rooms. Lot No. if, W. Mobil* Fork. 2 Ml. N. of C 19*3 CRANBROOK, 2-BEDROOM lO'xSO', 1100 cash and toko ov< -----------3-90*0. BIG SPRING VALUES WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES *333 H‘ Across CLEARANCE SALE TRAVEL TRAILERS ■14' 19*5 Winnebago, sleeps *. I_ ■I*' 19*5 Wlnnsbago, steeps «. S159S -21' 194* Wlnnsbago, sltspt Oi completely self-contained. Reg. price 03995, 11,000 discount. S299S-2-15' 19*4 Wostwlnd, sleeps «. t Larger Used Units 30' Pontiac Chief, 1955 ..... 19*5 44x10 Atlas, 2 bedrm. 1709 40x10 Grjfi Lakes, 2 be iom CjMjTOlon, 1 bedrm. *2995 19*3 55x10 General, shall. . OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN M, CLOSED SUNDAYS mil* south of Lako Orion on M: MY 2-0721 KR0FF bargain MARLETTES 50--43' tong, 12* to 20' « American, Traditional Early todi— Star Park, antra crtiag*.__ IHjht wolght Winnebago Trolltr. i OXFORD TRAILER SALES °f£N 9-0, CLOSEO SUNDAYS mil* south of Lok* Orion on « MY 2-0721 Town & Country Mobile Homes OFFERS Spring Clearance Specials All 1967 Models X* BSA MARK II SPECIAL, 1 months old, *00 miles, small tank and filled side covers, perfect condition. Cell after 7 p.m. *52450" 3021 Hsnrydsle, Auburn Heights. . HARLEY SPORTSfWR-SHARP. *1200 cash. 3*3-33*9. HONDA DREA^, kk^ELLENT Dealer Distributor for URS0N Boats Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boats Aluminum and Wood' Docks Do it yoursslf-easy to install. We will show you how. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS (Your ivlnrud* Dealer) 1099 S. Telegraph FE 2-8033 HYDROPLANE, NEEDS WORK. Mercury Hurricane 10 horse motor, 035, Coll otter S p.m. <20-3234. BRIDGESTONE Cfose-Outs CLOSING BUSINESS SACRIFICE SALE NEED—TRADE-INS NOW'S THE TIME TO BUYI W* carry *11 Chrysler Lon* Star, Glestron. MFG boots, snd Sl“ boots. Rlvlork cruiser pontoon complete service of outboards Morcury outboards 3.9 to 110 h.i and Morc-Crulser authorized del or. Cypress Gordons skis O styles). GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER CIOM out 194* Fiberglass canoes ........ Ill *" m. canoe. ..... ... *159 *1, Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. ME 44771 Opon Dolly ■ ~ EM 3-4433 *24-2434 ih friendly personnel. *444*72. MOTORCYCLE Insurance LOW RATES Anderson Associates 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535 ROYAL ENFIELD Fastest 750CC avdllabto BULTACO 194* State Champion Export* Service — oil ms J*ckot-H*li--- - SALE - SALE! used motorcycles marked dowr iv now and savt. Easy terms. IOERSON SALES Si SERVICE )■ Tslsgrsph FE 3-7102 SUZUKI'S NEWEST MOBIL "ISO 259CC. Rupp .......__________ _____________ *139.95. Hslmsts, lockets, complst* line of cycto accessories. See them DAWSON SALESAT TlPSI- Sales, C.. _____ MUNCIE 4 SPEED ' age, tl3Sj 47343M. New and Used Tracks 103 1-OWNER. 19*3 CHEVY PICK-UP. S700. 1-owner, 1957 California Chevy, exc. shop*, 2450. <74-3337. BUSfiS. /ilCTilis kAtH ‘TAkfeS. Lin* bool*. Got Ready for Spring Now KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS LAKE OR Ion, my s-moo lisploy :rafts On SLICKCRAFtS ■rgtos l.-O. and Outboard* CHRIS-CRAFT misers and tpood b»> DEAL NOW PINTER'S THUNDERBIRD, STARCRAFT, MFG JOHNSON. Boot* and Motors. Cy-pros* Gordons water Ski Shop. 1370 Opdyko Open 9-9 (1-75 of Oakland University Exit) SAILBOAT - STAR, NEW bECK fittings^ two Mil of cotton - cod# $1 $-344-923$. YAMAHAS ALL MODELS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY K. & W. CYCLE SALES B SERVICE free pickup on all motor repair 3* Auburn Utica (E. of Pontiac nr. Doqulndrt) 73)4)29$ _______ SPECIAL ' Carvor boot with top-ski I f cover and gagas. 75 h.p. Ji son Motor with 1$ gal. ti Heavy duty traitor with s; wheel and tiro. Only ST495. CRUISE-OUT, INC. E, Wolton Opon 94 FE 14403 s repair. *9 S. Frond*. 18 RUBBISH TRUCKS 19*0 throi chassis « 775-1400 bviWWII v-3 p.m.. —onci.. 151 JEEP WITH SNOW ILadI and brand now ohort block ongln*. 3344941.____________, 195] FORD 14 TON PICKUP, R*aL sharp modtonlcally and other-Wise. No Junkl Try It, you'll so*. OR 34935. “FORE PICK-UP, GOOD ir, root., FE 54005. 1955 pQlIb W-VON, 0300. ItsT 335-7*57, Oft. 5 p.m I CHEVY VAM, 1250 OR WILL •ip for garagof tool* or oqulp-tent. B52-4444.________________________> 1/57 14-TON ( rer, St25. FI *41777. L CAMINO PICKUP. ■PPEMPWtaa J abl*. KINO AuTC _____ __ and ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD. FB 04000., l"tALtft,,M LAKE ROAI ... "SMfc“jirVAH. HM PAINT. Very good. OMO. EM 34001. 9*0 CHEVY vs Ton’ pick-up and camper, joy box, rnochontooliy 19*1 CHEVY PICK-UP, BIG BOX, rool nice. S**S. Sava Auto. FB 5-2270. 2 chevr6iI6¥ to TON PICKUP, FE 04000. I ELIZABETH LAKE RD. TOM RADEMACHER* CHEVY-OLDS 1963 GMC Vi TON FLEETSIDE pickup, wllh V«, stick, roody tor the rood, only WS. On US 10 at MIS, CIOfMtOn, MA 5-W71. 94* CHEVY Vi-TON PICKUP, V-l, automstlc, low mlteogo, *24-5***. 9*4 CHEVROLET te TON TRUCk Custom camper pickup, V4, 4 snood Irons. Ilka now, *274910. GMC Vi TON PICKUP. E)(- Bicycles Wanted Cars-Trvcks 101 Boats — Accessories OATS, Flborglos runob BUCHANAN' t. 25 HP Evlnrudo. <2*9002. 14' WOLVERINE WAGEMAKER - traitor. 25 H.E. EvT ' I-------- 332-7955. ' FIBERGLAS, 50 H.F., TIaTl. *' LARSON 75 HORSEPOWER -Evlnrudo motor, TO* No* Traitor, lots of extras, *1.500, *024*74. 6' BOAT, 25 JOHNSON MOTOR, trailer, *250. 33*5 Bathurst. Off Auburn. Pontiac. VERY SPECIAL TWO » X 40's, Bahamas Damaged but greatly reduced 14' MOLDED PLYWOOO, ELEC-trie starting, 35 h.p. Johnson Out-boord with Irollor, S500. 3*3-7524, f*' sail .boaT, maST SaIl aNd mote controls, wonderful ter flsh-htg and ^vory sate ter chlldron. *M5. Traitor to optional. Slit. 33S- ir FIBERGLASS LAPSTkXKlT . H.P. electric meter. Hit traitor, .must son. Make otter, 33*4*5*. S#ALL PONW5R—BfiAf WttH IS Gray AAar 0. FE 4-2S41. APPROVED SCHOOL, LET r Instructors teach you to fly. M Inc., Pontiac Airport. OR DOWNEY Oldsrnobile Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5Y67 338-0331 Gale McAnnally's AUTO SALES hov* Immediate mod MIE sni Now shipping to Oklahoma, Taxes and parts —' EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa d FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car •"Chock th* r* than got th* bote" of Averill HELP! Wo need 3*0 sharp Cad.-I —. tlecs. Olds and Bulck* for out-of-state market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES MUJPwSkg*. Power steering -Heavy-duty equipment for troll* temte|Mte||ra*£M4?L_^H BILL FOX CHEVROLET S. Rochester Rd. OL 1-70 -ROCHESTER - 1967 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters; backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and vjsor, traffic hazard lights, directional' signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXaUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 GMC TRUCKS and Campers Keego Sales and Service Honk. <83-7300 SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 34155 «r EM *4K Avta tasvwpwa kUrfve 104 Mini-Cost’ Auto. Ins. Mr good drivers na owners tea. tor quality hoi to rtokhteuron . ytifolptet BRUMMETT A ItavEptlMta INI VOLKSWAQON, SUN ROOF. warrant prtvSSk' pYhS?**1*' C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1P«7 Feralf Ct» HO TM» ROADSTER, 1*000 RSSl^ m?2SSw5®Sv Jr. Radio. Seat belt* Trailer hitch. Like naw. Z7.0Q0 ml. Mounted mow m hkt Wi">VbER. RED With Mack Interior. 17,00 mile*, vnnr good condition, driven 1 year, *1,700. 451-0701 after S. 1*45 RENAUlTM, 666b CON- S VW REOUCEO TO *1,095. OR 1964 VOLKSWAGEN 2-DOOR, LIGHT blue, 11495 at MIKE SAV"'" CHEVROLET, Birmingham, h it** TRIUMPH 4-A WITH IRS wire wheels. 434-9*45. >44 VW~ll».">451jUST, bftIVEN Iv in lump*. *ir“ 70 Woodland, Sylvan 1*64 VW 1 660fc, WltH 4 SPElP, "lt only takas a minute" to Cat "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffa Ford MO Oakland Ava. PE 5-4101 SPORTS CARS GALORE!! Evary Modal and Col6r Available You choose from IS new, and over IS used, reconditioned oporto ^•Ipr'lJs A Try Before You Buyl GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. Mi Oakland ___________FB 5-9421 VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models— —All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn Autherfild VW Dealer Vt mile North of Miracle Mil 1743 S. Talaorapf 1941 CORVAN 95, VERY 0000 CON-dition. 1041 Corvalr 500, —~ tires, both vary --------------- 1941 CHEVY BISCAYNE 4 New and Used Cara BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You— Just Call Mr. Mason or Mr. Murphy af FE 5-4101 NEED A CAR? Bankrupt, recaivanhlp, or |uot plain Credit Problems, " — — working and have sor we can finance you. E have been turned down ___________ we have fine (election of good used car*, call Mr. Dan at FE •-4071 for information, Capitol Auto 1942 CHEVY, 4-DOOR, WHITE 111 “i. V-*, all power, 1 shape. 482-5788. 1«2 CHEVY 4 DOOR. AUTOMATIC, Perfect body with no rust. Excellent condition. *795. SEAT COVER KINO. 754 Oakland. FE 2-5335, 1942 CORVETTE, 4-SPEED, NE 1955 BUICK *49. Rallabla Motet*. FE M742. 1*41 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, *900, LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track Fe 4-1006 or FE 3-7054 1943 BUICK 2-DOOR HAROTOP, automatic with powar *1195 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1*41 CHEVY IMP ALA, 2-DOOR 1943 CHEVY SUPER SPORT CON- verttbla, powar “ ----- otter. 343-9540. 1963 Buick LESABRE. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER BRAKES, POWER STEERING, WHITEWALL TIRES. $995 Downey Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Ik. Rd. FE 4-5967 1*44 BUICK ELECTRA Ml 4-DOOR, full powar. No money down. LUCKY AUTO Fe 4-1004 or FE 3-7*54 BEEN BANKEtipf7 BAD CREDIT? NEED A CART Call FE M“ and ask for Mr. White. King. 1*43 GREENBRIER ESTATE V OB OLIVER BUICK 1*4-210 Orchard Lake 1964 BUICK Custotfl LaSabre 4-door hardh powar, twHIght turquoise, gara kept condition, only It* or your < car down, no payments till Juh ASKING- $1447 SPARTAN DODGE 1965 Buick SKYLARK, HARDTOP, POWER BRAKES AND STEERING, AU TOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER -WHITEWALL TIRES. $1595 Downey Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 ) CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ' end Rear Air conditioning. New Tires, Complete tuna-up. No ~ I Truly a fine family Jet Black flnlah, ■ Yot this one to appreciate It. Shown surarra?““ a Wilson Crissman Cadillac Ask for Rich Kroll Ml 4-1930 1962 Cadillac DoVfBo typo, 4 door, ebony bloc hardtop. Extra sharp, showroor condition, *99 or your old ca down, ASKING- $1587 SPARTAN DODGE JEROME ~T New ood W Cara 188 1942 FLEETWOOD CADILLAC, full newer plus air, gr — Ml frl407 aftar 5 p.m. On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 Now is the 1 Time to Save On a Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 1954 CORVET, S1154. >6fittAC TRI-power engine, FI 5-5101 after 3:30 1*55 CHEVY WITH ROLL BARS and 1*57 Chevy, full race « I 482-7*41 or FE *-3241. write 1*40 '45 VW and ‘45 Dodge ......... 4 Cadillacs—Convertible and hardtop. 1954 to 1*57 .......... . *97 up Plenty other*. A tow pickup*. ECONOMY CARS 2335 Dixie Hwy. 1940 CHEVY 2 DOOR, f OWNER. Low mileage, original body, no rust and immaculate Inside and out. $595. SEAT COVER kins 754 Oakland, FE 2-5335. IMPALA 4-DOOR, S AUTO-marlc, power (tearing, 5395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham Ml 4-2735. 1962 Chevrolet IMPALA, AUTOMATIC, S-CYL., 2 . DOOR HAROTOP. $395 Downey Olds USED CARS 5 Ell*. Lk. Rd._FE 4-594 MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward - Ml 4-2735 1962 CHRYSLER I. Original paint, VI automatic, —5, hooter, powar steering and brakes, low mileage on tiros. Must sen to be appreciated. $895 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 840 S, Woodward Ml 7-3214 Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth-Vellent-Jeep 6673 Dixie Clarkston 5-2435 whitewalls! I black (BELAIRE _2-DOpRvl,>AUTi(^ -EVI 4-2735. MIKE SAVOIE 1966 CHRYSLER irti 4-door hardtop, a slue Interior, one own* mileage. $2495 | BIRMINGHAM 1 Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward______ Ml 7-32)4 1959 DODGE, EXCELLENT ME* chanical condition. 5255. After 3 "It only tokos a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford FE 5-4101 iwj CHEVY IMPALA STATION TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS !*$? CHEVY Impute convertible, automatic, radio, heater, ------ block top. 5-5071 ~~ *" Clarkston, 1*43 CORVAIR 2-DOOR 4-SPEED H MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO- LET, II 4-2735. JSSn' 1*64 CHEVELLE SS CONVERTIBLE — Auto,, (harp, Sat. »-5. 333-7848. 1*44 CHEVROLET 4-OflOR AUT( I condition. 473-5*55 attar 1*44 CORVAIR 2-DOOR WITH RA-■“1. heater, beautiful red finish, I price only 5595, no money 1964 Chevelle MALIBU SUPER SPORT CONVERTIBLE, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. $1395 Downey Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Lkt Rd. FE 4-5967 1*44 CORVAIR CLUB COUPE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES. FULL PRICE S77S, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments of 54.95. CALL CREDIT. MGR. Mr. Uf|| W HAROLD TURNER IaI 4-7500. FORD, 4 r’ti.,C°?''AIR 2-DOOR, 4-SPEE^. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO------ — M 8-2735. LET, Birmingham, 144 CHEVELLE 401 . .._ at MIKE SAVOIE CHivROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-273S. 2-DOOR AUTO- 1944 IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP, *'■*“—.1. -uu ,)4Jj af CHEVROLET, automatic v MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham. CHEVROLET, 1*64, 2-DOOR, BIS-*tlck, Corvette angina, needs work, 5493. FE 5-3444. 1*45 -IMPALA 2-DOOR, 0, A„.„-matic with power $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmlng. ham U i-VTK heater, powar steering, arctic with black Interior, this wnn-s special at only — *1400 full price. *00 down, *53.41 par month. "It only takes a minute" to Got''A Batter Door at: John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 E 8-7449, 1965 Chevy 2-Door hardtop, with 4-speed, r dio, heater, whitewall*. Only — - $1395 HAUPT PONTIAC . . On M15 at Interchange 1-75 lorkston ^ MA 545 Now ood lleed Cora 186 1945 CHEVY IMPALA, MJ O O R hardtop. VI, itlck. No money LUCKY AUTO X Ffe 4-1004 ___________ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*55 CHEVY -2 door, VS. auto-motlc, radio, heater, whitewalls, B1»s!**SnftlB*To aTAMS^ciaricston! MA S-JWffli 1945 IMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOP, “'elSUfoJir.Sf 1965 CHEVY ____sr station wagon with • tomatlc transmission, radio ai hooter and whitewall tlroa, ft price BlSBi, only *4* down ai weakly poymonta of 112.45. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC, 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____ Ml 4-7500 1MI CORVAIR MONZA CQNVERT-Ek 140 h.p. Auhx—fla ■" gd|h top. 343-3204. M-FM, 1 1944 CHEVELLE WAGON, I tomatlc, r------—tea “ MIKE S,_________.. Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1*4* CHEVY IMPALA FULL ROW-or, air conditioning, only $2395, VAN CAMP CHEVY, Inc. On Mil-ford Rd., Milford, MU 4-1025. CHEVROLET BISCAYNE. 51500. or station radio, hooter, power steering, brakes, power roar windows, metallic turquoise with matching, all vinyl Interior, chroma luggage rack ilka brand now — *248* lull price 888 down, and lust 07V.M par "it only tokos a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford » Oakland Ave. ________FE 5-4101 power flooring, light motollh -quolto with white nylon lop, condition throughout. 11,004 price, Ml down, 049.92 par n "It only tokos a minute" h Oat "A BETTER DEAL" a John McAuliffe Ford 030 Oakland*Ava. FE 5-4101 1*44 FALCON. S$00. STICK SI good. 343-5224. Lit, Blrml________________________ 1*44 FALCON. STICK SHIFT. LOW mileage. Sharp. 152 Thorp*. 1*44 FORD 4-DOOR WITH V-S ENGINE, SYNCROMESH TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES, FULL PRICE *7*5, ABSOLUTELY ; NO MONEY DOWN. A a ad me weekly poymonta of S7,ll. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porks qt HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 1*84 FORD CUSTOM 4-DOOR, automatic, radio, hooter, power s tearing, brakes, theta Pontiac Highway dapt. car*. 7 from, your cholco tor LMMjau|M|(| *88 down, "It only tokos I ......... Got "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford ... Oakland Avo, _ FE 5-4101 1*45 T-BlftO, VERY CLEAN, 52,250 Opdyka Hardware TOM RADEMACHER dow sedan, automatic p 1961 OOOGE LANCER, 1940 DODGE convertible, air, good co "" Below book price. Ml 7-0292. 1944 DODGE 2-DOOR, RADIO, KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Solo* and Service 1966 DODGE CHARGER with VS, automatic, p throughout, twl-llght ... finish. 099 or your old car Spot Delivery, No Poymonta $2297 SPARTAN Dodge FORD, 1*4* COUPE. COMPLETE and original, fair body. 1*40 k original, excellent body. 602-4442, i960 Falcon Moor, Ilk* new condition, no me sy down, spot delivery, asking $269 SPARTAN DODGE Weak Credit? If you have weak credit or m credit w* can Mil you a '40-'6, car without a co-signer. Only re qulrements you must be working and have $45 down paymt. Bank rates, no turn downs. Call “~ Cash. SPARTAN DODGE *55 Oakland_____ FE 8-4524 1*41 T-BIRD. NO MONEY DOWN LUCKY AUTO ____________________FE 3-7054 BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CfcllDlt? NEED A CAR? Call FE 8-4000 and ask for Mr, White, king.___ OPEN 9 TO 9 P.M. Transportation Specials 1*43 FALCON V-l Convertible t 4*7 T-BIRD Convertible .*5*7 OLDS Convertible ...*497 PONTIAC Convertible .t 1*7 !PCa6(LLAC Convertible ....*3*71 0*42 TEMPEST Convertible ... *497 945 MUSTANG Convertible ... 51497 1940 PONTIAC Wagon .....*297 1940 FORD Wagon ........ » m I960 OLDS Wagon .. * «»l 1941 DODGE Pros*. 1962 CHEy~ &-- 1*41 OLDS Km mi a—4 Cm 104 MARMADUKE LADIES Call Mr. Ca»h FE 0-4520, Spartan. lW FORD dADfttllt 500 2-boOH. A automatic, M75 at MIKE lA. VOIE CHEVROLET. Birmingham. 943 FORD GALAXIE 4 OOOfl, transportation ipeclal at only *3*5 full prlct. No money down, *22.41 "It only takea a minute" to Off “A BETTER DIAL" at: John McAuliffa Ford 430 Oakland Avo. FE S-4101 1 PASSENGER V-| ...lATIC TRANSMISSION, > OWE K EQUIPMENT, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIREST FULL PRICl *7*5, ABiOLUtELY NO MONEY DOWN, Aooumo weekly pay. man fa « 17Jt CALL MGRt M_r. Park* at MViQI I FORD GALAXIE CONVERTI- 144 FALCON WAGON, AUTOMATIC *845 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. 1144 FALCON SPRINT, EXCEL- . 2-2073. s 536.02 per n FE 8-4404 Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Pbt Month HAROLD. TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-750 1965 Ford Country Sedan station wagon. ____ steering, brake!, r. Only - $1195 1945 GALAXIE 500 CONVERTIBLE. Power brakee, steering, 51,500 — 852-1444._______________ 2-DOOR _________ ____i Bower POMP81655 at MIKE SAVOII CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml t 146 FORD 4-DOOR AUTOMATIC, with power $1195. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Binmngnam. f" 1^66 FORD edan station wot iglne, automotlc 1 ...... power (tearing, n_ .... hooter, whitewall lire*, tell price 51995, only *4* down and wookM payments of $14.95. HAROLD TURNER IRMINGHAM 1944 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 10 wagon V-8, automotlc. >er month 50,000 mlto-5 year :ar warrentj|^^ ^ m|nute« to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford I Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 1966 FORD CONVERTIBLE, V8, Automatic, radio, steering, brake*, beautiful amber glow matalllc finish with black nylon top, 10,000 actual mllee, still under new-car warranty. 52,000 ' " price, SOI down ond 545.74 “It only take* a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 By Andonon and Learning New and Used Cara 108 STAR AUTO We Findntae You must have 1 year or more Employment and we will finance you a car. Call credit advisor for mora information. STAR AUTO 962 OAKLAND FE8-9661 1*42 Corvalr 2-door 7 1*41 Chevrolet ...... 1*40 Cadillac hardtop 1*5* Pontiac ... Dodge hard Fora wagon “The note says: ‘We’re stuck ... Fill the can with gas—and the dog with candy! ’ ” New and Used Cara 106 New aad Ussd Cara 106 BRAND NEW 1967 Olds 1*44 irORO COUNTRY SEDAN V5, automotlc, power steering, brokoa. Taka over balance. Call after 4:30 FE 0-3040. FRESH START 1*47 T-BIrds, Mustangs, Galaxle Low Down Paymonf. Crodlt problem. Coll Joo Wolet, JAC LONG FORD SALES, 4514711 Rochester. 1944 GMC CUSTOM SUBURBAN. 3 ■ V4. i >44 COMET CYCLONE GT Convertible, black, white top ond In •erlor. Must eall, beet otter. Eves. 4-43*3. NO MONEY DOWN. TAKE OVER payments on 1*44 Montoroy Mercury 2-dr. hardtop. Alio for sola 1*42 Falcon wagon. 4 cyl. stand-ard <150, Call 402-4014, attar ( new car warranty/ automatic transmission, radio and hooter and whitewall tlras, tell price 520*5, only 54* down and weekly payments of S15.*5. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 5. WOODWARD AVE. IRMINGHAM__Ml 4-7500 1*42 MGA, BEAUTIFUL 'CONbl-•' reasonable. 673-5507. MG MIDGET 1*45, CLEAN, 1-OWN-shape. 343-0372 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1*42 OLDS I---- " * t M15, Clarkston, AAA EQUIPMENT, AUTOA4ATIC TRANSMISSION, R A O I O AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES. FULL PRICE *9*5, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payment* of 19.45, CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Park* at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 4*44 OLDS. '18' 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Power (tearing, powar brakes. 813*5. BOB BORST Lincoln Mar- SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES 435 S. Woodward 447-5111 1*45 OLDSMOBILE 88 2-DOOR AU-tomatlc «'"hga—- * SAVOIE ______ ham. Ml 4-2735. toanamlMtoteVP ana hooter and whitewall tire tell priea *1795, only *4* dov ond weakly payments of $14.45. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC.: 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM condition, $2*300. ' 1966 Toronado COUPES, AIR . CONDITIONED FULL POWER, LOW MILES FULL FACTORY 2-YEAR WAR RANTY. $3695 BANK RATES Downey Olds CHEVY. 9-pass. OLDS Air conditioning ... $ BUY HERE-PAY HERE FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM Just East of Oeklond , h BEATTIE FORD 1962 Pontiac Catalina 6-passenger wagon. 1963 F.prd Galaxle 500 4-door sedan, with Only— $995 £ V-8, eutomatlc power steering, brakes. Only- Si 095 1966 Ch^vy 14-Ton Pickup with custom cab. 1965 Ford F250 54-ton pickup, V8/ stick, step bumper, V-8, radio, heater, whitewalls and tinted glass. Extra nical Only- Si 895 ' flbergles cover over back. Only $1695 1966 Broncd 1961 Chevy Pickup, with 4-cyt„ 4-wheel %-Ton with 6-Cyl. «ngin«, stick j shift. Only— of new car unit warranty. $1995 $795 1963]eepster 1966 Ford Station Wagon, outomotlc, power steering, 4-wheel drive, radio, heater. Only - radio, l^tor^cTttom^eob?1"!! tone, whitewalls. $1395 $1795 —On Dixie Hwy. In Waterford— Your Ford Dealer Since! 1930 623-0900 1962 Pontiac STARCHIEF, POWER BRAKES, POWER STjilRINO, .AUTOMATIC -RAOIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. $795 Downey. Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 factory equipment. Now $2,827 HaughtenOlds 526 N. Main, 0L 1-9761 Rochester PACKARD, 1951 WITH 1*55 V-* 4 cu. In., floor shift, call 335-4242. f»5t PLYMOUTH. STS. RUNS GOOD. ---------- 425-4424. $1195. HAUPT PONTIAC On M15 at Interchange 1-75 Clorkoton____________MA 5-51 Ml VALIANT STATION WAGON, now rubber, $195. Save Auto. FE 53271. 1961 PLYMOUTH Fury 4-door hardtop, VS automotlc, good second cor. good second cor. $495 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ■*—J -—■ 7-3214 1*44 PLYMOUTH 4-OOOR WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO ANO HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES, FULL PRICE SflS, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weakly pay-man ft of *945/C ALL credit MGR, Mr. Fork* ft HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7508. Need a Car? Do you hove 54* and are ye working? I'll put you In the « of your cholco. No credit app. ri fused) Cell Mr. Cosh at FE 1-4521 ____MOUTH 311. AU 543^2.Cl 1*57 PONTIAC $8* Reliable Motors. FE 8-»74I. 1*58 PONTIAC, GOOD TRANSPOR-585. 887-4340. 1*40 PONTIAC 4-DOOR, GOOD RUN-nlng condition. FE 4-338*. , >40 PONTIAC HARDTOP cduPE. Rodlo, hooter, automatic trantmls-ilon. Beautiful maroon finish with a white top. Perfect body. 8595. SEAT COVER KING. 754 Ookland. FE 2-5335._________________________ NoMystery About Our. Discount IT'S IN THE PRICE 41**...1*40 Pontiac Catalina 5499.. .1*43 324 Mir. LoMona Coup* --— ----- convertible I ■________ Corvalr 5599.. .1*44 Corvalr Monza coup* *599 .1143 Ford Galaxl* —*...1*42 Ford rtatlr- m *...1*41 Cadillac Ci ur*...l*40 T-BIrd 14**...1*42 Chovy, 2 d NO CASH NEEOEO—BANK RATES 1*40 PONTIAC VENTURA CdUFE. Automatic, Power Steering and Braki*. Drive thin beauty end you'll buy Itl SEAT COVER KING 754 Oakland Avo. FE 2-5333. 1962 P0NTIACS SAVE Chovy Fpoisongor i Cadillac hardtop ... 1*45 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vortlbl*. Power steering, brakes, air, tint, *l*c windows. Now Hr**, l-owner, thorp. 445844*, 334-557*. 1*45 TEMPEST WAGON STANDARD *•’'*1’”' y >ew. “ 334-1383. IffNEVILLE, 4-DOOR, LIKE Top! 20,000 PmrrSe*n*l 41$ Fourlh it., Pontiac *1508. 351 iisrasm 1963 Pontiac 1963 Pontiac BONNEVILLE HARDTOP 2-door with tell powor, and yc Save HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. On M24 In Oxford, Michigan 0A 8-2528 1*43 PONTIAC HARDTOP, REAL good. 333-7542 Rlggln*, dealer. 1*43 PONTIAC, DOUBLE POWER, tlree, nice 11258. 1*43 Ckdllloc,! all power,i 4-8550. I I Cart IBB DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—dig Lot It CARS TO CHOOII PROM y™r * JnBMf IQ MIS •xppnslvt car. n M-24, Lk. Orion _MY 2-2041 T, BhmlnghemL New bbB UeaB Cm 168 1*44 PONTIAC LEMANt 2-DOOR I top, Only S2,IM « i down wid only SI onto. "It onlyjoko* a minute" to Get "A SCTTIR DIAL" «U . John McAuliffa Ford 430 Ooklond Avo. FE 5^101 *44 CATALINA I Or steering and I 12,200. 134-1*54,______ hardtop with 2,000 actual miles, bronze finish, with black Interior, automatic, powor flooring brakes, whitewalls, new cor guarontMf This weeks special only tSM full ‘ price with III down, only t*1.0t p*r month. "It only takM a minute" to-0*1 "A BETTER DIAL" Oft John McAuliffe Ford 010 Ooklond Avo. ' FE idlfll tEMPEST 2-DOOR HAROTOP, I automatic, *1595 of MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmlng- ham AAI i.mi LADIES S45 required far down payment Coll Mr. Cosh F8 5-452*. Spartan. SHELTON ‘ 1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 2-OOOR HARDTOP $2595 *150 DOWN, FACTORY WARRAN TY, BANK RATES. Downey Olds 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA, 1 OWN-Hardtop, power steering *, AM-FM radio, clean’ 1*64 PONTIAC LKMANS CONVBRT-Ible, Sprint, rod with whit* top, black Interior, buckotioale, perfect condition, low mileage, 4 on floor, 4-barr*l carburetor, rad line tires, posltractlon. Take over payments plus *250. OR 3-7167 after slick. Original ownor, leaving —unlry. Complete lorvtoa ratord, w liras, delivery Juno 7. *450. 451-4151. i»42 ramblEr cLABsiC 4 booV »gBSrawatt S 1*63 RAA4BLER. STAND A RB transmission. Rod with a white s.^r.Wfe.'ay.aii: 1*61 rambler"amI>ri£an 2-OObH ACTUAL MILtC ----* - ‘Ml 1*44 AMBASSADOR WAGON. l platinum' with bloc vinyl lop, map whoolt, your o car down, ASKING- $1787 SPARTAN ’ DODGE 1944 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX. EX-cellent condition. Ownor moving out Of state. 115*5. 334-9302. YOUNG PEOPLE . v. -NEED A CAR? ESTABLISH YOUR CREDIT THROUGH US AT HILLSIDE 1965 MUSTANG seats. A little dandy. 1966 VW Sedan. R--- . tint or second 1967 COUGAR Ith rod bucket ^495 I covers. Fin* ^£95 cor Is In showroom condition. 1966 OPEL Kadette, all rod finish with i believe ut toll $1695 with red ouckef teats. Four- ^395 1965 CORVAIR Monza two-door hardtop. Four speeds, radio, hooter, .imp A one-owner beauty.......................... fl/YO 1965 BUICK Skylark 1 Gran Sport two-door hardtop. V-S, automatic, |MMf —'— nf brakes. Black vinyl room. Thl* Is every way. Want something really _____ steering a beautiful car different? 1962 PONTIAC Catalina two-door hardtop. All blue 1964 GALAXIE "500" convertiblo. Rod with white top, V-powor steering, radio, hooter. Beautiful. . 1963 PONTIAC Catalina two-door hardtop. Candy appl* r Interior, Automatic, power sharing and bi $1995 :: $1395 : $1195 LINCOLN -MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1967 c'hrjsier$s Demo Available, 1961 CORVAIR Automatic, must drive to appreciate. Only— £ 495 1965 CHEVY Biscayne 2-door, with 6 cyl. •utomatit. Radio. Now Only— $1395 1964 CHEVROLET Pickup, 6 cylinder, standard transmission, radio, long box. Low miltag* — Llk* now. $1095 1965 PLYMOUTH Bolovodor* II wagon, 4-passenger, radio, heater, V-l, automatic powar steering, 22,000 miles and 20,000 miles of Warranty left. Chroma Rack On'V- $1395 ‘ 1964 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury Convertible. V-l, automatic, powor (tearing and brakas. Only- $1195 1964 VALIANT Signet convertible, 4-cyl. automatic, power itearlng, radio, ready tor spring. Only— $1,145 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury II wagon, VI, automatic, power steering, excellent condition In and outl Only— $1495 Chavalit Station Wagon, automatic, radio, whlt...JRP Beautitul bronze finish. Only— $1495 Now Yorker 4-doi steering, brakes, whitewalls. Only — $1995 t. V-l, automatic, powar steering and power brakas. White with a black $1345 1963 FORD Galaxle 4-Door Sedan. V-l, automatic, powar steering and powar brake*. Only— $745’ WE HAVE SOME TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS— Starting at Only— $98.50 1965 MUSTANG or. Only— $1445 OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 1967 PONTIAC Grand Prix $1500 WANT TO BE A TWO CAR FAMILY Trade With Us Today! -0, automatic, powor stoorlng, rakes, whitewalls, radio, hoot-’. Ivory finish. Only — $1495 $1795 $2495 $1795 $2095 1965 BUICK $1895 1964 PONTIAC Cotolln* 4-Door Sedan, with power steering, brakes, automat-Only— $1295 $2795 PONTIAC—RAMBLER Open Doily 'Til 9 P.M. On M24 In Orion, MY 3-6266 % THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 C—11 —Television Programs— Programs fuml$h*d by stations listad in this column aro subject to chango without notico TONIGHT (4) New* (C)/ * -(7) Movie: “Smoke Sig. nal,” (1955) Dana Andrews, Piper Laurie. (C) „ (SO) Superman (C) (R) -- (56) Friendly Giant 1:15 -(66) Children’s Hour (2) News—Cronkite (C) ' * (4) News—Huntley, Brinkley (?) Lock Up •:?0 (2) (S p e c i a 1) National Drivers Test — A viewer-participation quiz on driving hosted by Walter Cronkite and Mike Wallace. , Boone (7) Joey Bishop (9) Movie: “The Extra Day,” (English; 1956) Richard Basehart. 12:30 (50) Las Vegas (C) 1:91 (4) Beajt the Champ (7) Untouchables (R) (9) Wihdow on the World (C) ; 1:30 (2) (4) News (C) , TOMORROW MORNING 1:15 (2)* On the Farm Scene «:2« (2) News (C) 6:39 (2) Sunrise Semester (4) Classroom (7) Kingdom of the Sea (C) \ 7:99 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) ' (4) Today (Q) (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:99 (?) Captain Kangaroo (9) Romper Room 8:39 (7) Prize Theater: “Th Hook,” Ed Begley. (R) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Bonnie Prudden Show 9:05 ( 56) AU-Aboard for Reading 9:25 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 9:39 (7) Dateline: Hollywood (9) People in Conflict 9:56 (56) Children’s Hour 9:55 (4) News (C) (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 53 River duck 64 Son ot Gad 22 Hideous" loBed monster 11 Engines (ab.) 24 Hit with* WCotarie 17Dtmin crushing blow 0OWN t...... pen 27 Sycophant* 28 Chief god ot tbs 7Eddas ■H-------- I 20LoWh*nnti 7 Musical syllable 31 Closer 28 Growl, as a dog 27 Hull peas SO Sorias of connective things 32 Philippic' . . ■ 18 Hinder from 1 Farmhouse action cookery gadgets 23 Farm fence 2 False god openings 3 Farm tractor 24 Scrutinise must cure an emir’s prize cheetah or forfeit his water rights (R) (C) (4) Girl From U.N.C.L.E. — April and Mark investigate THRUSH’s “molecular reorganizer.” (R) (C) k (7) Fugitive — A motorcycle gang tries to frame Kimble in a .revenge killing. (R) (C) (9.) Exjx> This Week (C) 10:30 (9) Newsmagazine — / report on ^unodian Eskimos. (56) Century of Progress 11:60 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) Joe Pyne 11:30 (2) Movie; “18 in the Sun, rin Spaak, Luisa Mattioli. (C) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (C) (0) National Schools 10:18 (56) Reason and Read 10:20 ( 56) Science Is Discovery 10:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) One in a Million (9) Hercules. , (50) Yoga for Health 10:35 (56) Children’s Hour 18:50 (56) List’s Speak Spanish I 11:00 (2) Love of Life if) Jeopardy (C) ' (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Mr. Dressup (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:05 ( 56) Interlude 11:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) (9) Tales of the River Bank 2 r 4 r 5" } r" 9 10 r 12 a 14 IS 16 It 19 20 21 23 2$ ■ r 28 29 4b 5T 44 36 9 P 3T w 42 43 44 [46* !u 48 48 44 53 55 56 S7 23 Young Hoffa Rated Favorite! Student at Fete | HOLLAND un — Hope Col-! lege junior Elsie BwBnaqsi is representing her country, Mai-' ,awi, Africa, at an international < affair in Washington, D. C- The e , . .. . - . 'benefit, showirig art, crafts,I bpecial vote loaaydolls and jjress styles from 36, to Fill Kowallki cil of the African-American In-DETROIT (AP) - Voters in' stitute. northwest Detroit today went to I ' ....... the pblls in a special electioni — Q77 , D that will temporarily end the 54-1 / ,0// TO benefit 54 tie in the Michigan House of -u Representatives. ' DETROIT (AP) - The 7,877, Making his political debut,Z°Z James P. Hoffa/ the Demo-I^? *nralled In the com-, . .. ’... Ipany’s stock ownership program1 cratic candidate and the 26-year-,^ 1962 wlu share assets of $19 o d son o the imprisoned Team-|million ^ weeky tHe company sters Union president, was r«t^jhas announced. That amounts to ed the fkvorite in the heavily ^og return for each invested,' Democratic district. I the company said. QUALITY ' REPAIRS on all mako HEARING AIDS Lot men Available FONT!AC MALL OPTICAL « Skeleton Identified; Man Held HOUGHTON (AP)-A, skeleton was held on two counts of per* found in a Dollar Bay dump-yard April 17 was identified Monday as that of the long missing William Newman and the man’s son was ordered held for alleged perjury in the investigation of his father’s disappearance. Sheriff John W. Wiiganen of Houghton County said the skeleton was identified positively by i iegedly first said his father fell University ' of Michigan and j from a boat on Dollar Bay while /q\ —rttw State Police crime laboratory the two were fishing and later (Italian; 1963) Cath- U:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow experts. I changed his story saying he and Daniel Newman, 22, the son, I his parent had a scuffle. jury. His bond was set at $5,000 and he was remanded to the sheriff’s custody by Justice Reu-ben Rowe of Calumet pending further investigation to determine the cause of the elder Newman’s death. ★ * Newman, about 55, disappeared last fall; The son al- His opponent, Anthony C. Lic-j ata, 48, an advertising executive who has been active in Repub- i lican causes, was given slight chance of victory although Gov. George Romney and Sen. Robert Griffin, R-Mich., carried the district in last fall’s election. I One vote Hoffa djd not get was his own. Hoffa moved to the district April 1, too late to I register, for either ihe primary or the special election to fill the seat vacated by the death of Rep. Joseph Kowalski, the former Democratic leader. UGHT TURNOUT A light voter turnout is expected, despite interest drawn to the race election by its importance to leaders of both parties in the Legislature and the Hoffa name. I John Smith, city elections .commissioner, forecast a tuiyi-! out of 8,000 to 8,500 out of 32,600 registered voters in the district.1 ★ * * , I Both Vice President Hubertj Humphrey apd Sen. Robert F.[ Kennedy, D-N.Y., visited De-j troit and endorsed Hoffa for the1 seat. As attorney general, Ken-j nedy worked relentlessly to put Hoffa’s father behind bars. ! Romney criticized both Democrats in a campaign speech for Licata over the weekend. i ‘This kind of endorsement, demeans our political system,’ the governor said. ' Both Hoffa and Licata campaigned door to door Monday Sherriff-Goslin Co. Pontiac'* Oldest Roofing and Siding Company Free Eitimatee 332-5231 REPOSSESSIONS? GARNISHMENTS? HARASSMENT? BAD CREDIT? Lot us holp you soivo any of those problems. ' W# con get you a fresh start, by' consolidating ol| your debts into One weekly payment you eon Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. OPIN SAT. I A.M. to 12 N! BASEMENT SUSPENDED CEILINGS Interior Remodeling Specialists CAPLES CONSTRUCTION FE 6-4468 (Financing Available) _______P* Arm a Etcented Michigan Builder Flock of Entertainers Seen Hitting the Vie Front By EARL WILSON - NEW YORK — There’s a big rush now for stars wanting to go-!to Vietnam to entertain the GIs. Bob Stack's going for USO 12:25 (4) Doctor’s House Call on; a handshaking tour, and Jonathan Winters is taking over a 12:38 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Eye Guess (C) - (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Friendly Giant 11:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) (9) Chez Helene 11:50 ( 56) Modern Math for Parents 11:55 (4) News (C) ■ AFTERNOON 12:00 (2LNews (C) , - (4) Match Game (C) » (7) Fugitive (R) (9) Take 30 (50) Dialing for Dollars ■ show for USO. And this will raise once more the question of which girls would go and exactly how mijch' they should wear and how much they should undulate. .. j The Ballet World is buzzing with a sen-. Rational rumor about one of its idols ... Sorry, make that two of its idols ... We happened to see the Royal Ballet at the Met with the architects the other night and noticed how the architect? applauded the lifting o'Hhe chandeliers to the ceiling at curtain-time. Romy Schneider was in the audience with her nice husband. ,■' ★ ★ ★ “ It’s hard to believe that Leonard Bernstein, when he wasn’t yet a genius did the music for “Wonderful Town,” including that ] glorious song “Why Oh Why Oh Why Oh, Way Did I Ever Leave: Ohio?” But there he was at Tavern on the Green the other) mqrning at Jean Dalrymple’s party for the revival of same at. City Center. “I even have an honorary degree from Ohio State University,” he said. ★ ★ ★ WILSON THE MIDNIGHT EARL (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) (9) Communicate (50) Movie: “Danger Signal," (1945) Faye Emerson, Zachary Scott. (R) 12:35 ( 56) Let’s Speak Spanish I 12:56 ( 56) AU-Aboard for Reading 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (Cj. (9) Movie: ‘Canyon River," (1956) George Montgomery, Peter Graves. 1:16 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 ( 56) Reason and Read 1:30 (2) House Party (C) / (4) Doctors (C) ,(7) Dream Girl (C) 1:46 ( 56) Art Lesson 1:55 (7) News (C)' (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 2:60 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) ; Ingrid Stevens wore such skimpiy negligees in “Guide for the ^ Another World ■* 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE, (3 only). Walnut, bronxo draw pulls. Has larg mirror. Floor satnplo. 9209.95 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE Slightly damagod. Triple dresser, large chesl Bookcase bed. $259.95 BASSETT BEDROOM SUITE 4289.95 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE by Bassett. Floor Sample 4415.00 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE NOW $0^00 $j47oo $122°° $17700 $10400 $2550° Regular Price 5109.00 jrn, SOFA and CHAIR 1 Only. First come gets it at, 5119.00 2-PC. NYLON SUITES >- In your choice of colors. 6 only — floor samples. 4249.00 2-Pc Contemporary Suites Beautiful modem blues and brawns with arm caps. Sava 5100.. 5230.00 2-Pc. Sofa Bed Suites 1964 cloeaauts. tick nylon friace cavara. Choice of colors. 5259.W 2-Pc. Nylon Suite 510700 Floor sampie. Wide arm in dtap turquoise friese eevsr. N row I 4-Pc. SECTIONALS NOW 55700 59300 S149“<> 513300 *167«° *215°° 5119.90 599.95 59.95 55.95 RECLINING CHAIRS veral stylet to choose from. These, are bn ma chain with finatt covers. Sava. RECUNER CHAIRS 511.95 Floar tamplet of better chain in your choica of colon and covart. SWIVEL ROCKERS AND recuner Chairs *83“ *68“ *58“ *3“ *910 Little Joe’s TABLE LAMPS, Ddd Lot ERRAND COFFEE TABLES *11 95 519.95 559.95 5199.95 HEAVY ROLL EDGE COTTON MATTRESS INNERSPRING MATTRESS $|^00 and BOX SPRING (Floor Sampto) SERTA RESTOKRAFT MAT- $0000 TRESS or Box Spring ,2£, Serta Restokraft Mattress $0000 and Box Spring (soiled) Saveral ona-of-a-kind box springs and mattraseas at terrific savings.* Cover clote-outt and floor samples. FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES -• TELEPHONE FE 2-6842 OPEN DAILY UNTIL 9:00 PM. SATURDAY UNTIL 6 R.M. 5219.95 5339.95 5229.90 5189.90 5189.00 5219.90 no Foot SM Whirlpool LHD REFRIGERATOR IT Cubic Foot ROt Whirlpool REFRIGERATOR n-tiMhsetwuiioooi ELECTRIC RANGE M-look SCA Whirlpool GAS RANGE rot Whirlpool CLOTHES DRYER ■otmirtiMoi AUTQ. WASHER *209" $2ggoo $171°° *133°° *138" $1778° NO MONEY DOWN! Baldwin Avenue, Corner Walton THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. MAY 28, 1097 5339.95 7-PC. DINING ROOM SUITE Salam Maple. Round table with 4 matching $OJI chain, large buffet and hutch. Floor sample. LIVING ROOM SUITES—SECTIONALS APPLIANCES-CLOSE-OUT SPECIALS BEDROOM SUITES SAVINGS ON BEDDING NEEDS DINETTE FURNITURE LONG EASY RCA WHIRLPOOL DISHWASHER • NO PURCHASE NECESSARY • NO OBLIGATION JU«T COME IN AMP REOISTER Little Joe rides herd on quality furniture at lew, low cost every day, but for this great 15 day hnnann Little Joe has lassoed every piece of furniture in our big store and branded every item with prices so low you'll never forget this sale! Come in, corral yourself the furniture you need for your home, your cottage or for Anniversary or wedding gifts. TERAAS! You’ll never save more and you make your own terms. NO MONEY DOWN! THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 ONE COLOR When you start getting 'things together for the family vacation, let the following pages of this special Vacation and Recreation Guide help you plan things from the . beginning. As you read through the Guided you will find ir full ot interesting information on places to go, how to get there and what to see. You will also find valuable information on what to buy to satisfy the travel and recreation needs for the whole faroily^.^|.p:; f,. k______,____ THE PONTIAC PRESS THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, lftgT Vacation Campsites There’s a big (election and plenty of room for family campsites and group campsites in Oakland County and in the state of Michigan. Top photo shows camper getting a site ready for his family. Photo to the right shows how groups got together for some outdoorlivingat Highland State Recreation Area. Activities Outdoor living can be fun for youngsters (top photo) and letting them help themselves to cookonts. But no vacation or camping trip is complete without, some happy fishing moments as seen on the face of Herbal Hawkins of Union Lake (below). Horse back riding, deep water angling and a good old fashion hike are also great activities as seen in these photos at Highland Recreation Area. ^ ' Local Sites Offer Convenience Area Campers Stay Home Weekend vacations are thei and the Dodge No. 16 unit at “motto” of the Pbntiac Area Highland Recreation Area. w**°«**!/ H In the coining months they’ll PnrjB and Recreatifxi- Depart-^ t0 Algonac State Park, Para-jdise Park near Holly, Mo- ment.. The group convenes at camp-| ing sites withta conveniait driv- tonviUe and tag distance for relaxation and fellowship one weekend a month, including an outing this past weekend at Dodge No. 5 in the Proud Lake State Recreation Area. This location was a last-minute switch from Metamora State Park after that area unexpectedly was closed for repair work. The Pontiac Area Campers have already visited Lakeport (Feeley’s private park near Or- rprivate park near North Branch. LIMITED The families in the club limited at present to 75 — utilize mounted campers, trailers and even tents for the outings. There some organized entertainment at each gathering, but generally the approach is casual and often spur-of-the-moment. The current officers include Pete Hughes, presldetn; Ray Wilson, president-elect; Joe Goines, vice-president; Virginia Rose, secretary; and Jo Kline, treasurer. Choose Site for Camping With Care I There is also a board of directors with six couples on it, plus recreation department sponsorship headed by John Streit. Inquiries about membership application can be directed to any ■ of the officers or Streit through the parks and recreation office at City Hall. A s p e c i a 1 project for the dub this year is a trip to Expo 1967 at Montreal in early August. Since the Pontiac Area Camp-Stop traveling early enough^8 were formed in 1961,53 clubs to enjoy the surroundings and*?v® been orgamzed around the also so you will have Tnough8kt® T af* light to see where you’re set-fluted with the National Camp-ting up camp. Pick high groundI,®1 Hikers Association, whenever possible! Stay out of | * * * gulleys and valleys. Look out fori Pontiac’s membership has tall trees with leafless and dead tfown by five times the original limbs. | 5 families. The social organiza- Stay clear of tall grass and kn lakes pride in bringing fam-heavy brush. These can be fire Uks together for more than 24 hazards during a dry season hours at a stretch. and a breeding ground for in-j —1----------------- sects during a wet season. ★ ★ ★ Winds will usually blow off take and travel up toward higher ground during the day time. At night winds move toward the water.. This may be helpful in calculating your best campfire whde most fishermen like to or cooking arrangement. lfJsh on comparatively calm days, It is necessary to fish with Greater Care on Calm Days In cool weather it is best to locate your camper, if possible, to catch the last rays of the warming sun in the evening. By closing all the flaps you, in effect, trap the heat inside for a more comfortable night. STAKING THEIR ‘CLAIM’ - When the Pontiac Area Campers take one of their monthly “weekend vacations” it isn’t difficult for those around them to learn who the visitors are or where they’re from. Putting up the club’s banner Saturday at the Dodge No. 5 Unit to Proud Lake State Recreation Area were chib officials Ray Wilson, 1121 Voor-heis (left), Pete Hughes, 297 W. Brooklyn (kneeling) and Don Today, 21 Delaware (right). Generally the club’s trips are outiide the county but a last-minute switch was necessary for this past weekend. Plastic Bags Are Handy Plastic laundry, bags with a zippered top are mighty handy for toting all sorts of damp items when traveling by camper. Solves the problem of wet suits from the-last swim before heading borne. ; greater care and quiet in calm waters. On windy days, some fish bite better but usually will seek the lee side of a lake or pond where the food may be blown toward them. Insect eating fish often feed near the surface at night or to early morning, but the persistent fisherman can find such nocturnal feeders during the day, too, by fishing in deeper waters or special “hiding places.” :* J In general, the best time to fish—is "every chance you get.” THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1067 D—® ’ OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 12-7 & WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. Our Reg. 68c. Raft is 24x36” inflatable, sturdy vinyl, constructed with a “see-through” window and tow rope. Our Reg. 44c. Gas-in-flated vinyl balls... plain or flecked transparent It’s fun for everyone. BLAZON Four iSeat whirly bird, with 4 bucket seats, easy pump mechanisms. All tubular steel and heavy bracing. REPAIR KIT FOR SWIMMING POOLS' VINYL COVERS FOR 8-FT. SWIM POOLS 1.77 Charge It 74° 4 Days Only SVgfiz. tube of pln«tic cement, Clear, f-gauge, heavy vinyl plastic 24x6" plastic patch. Save at i covering for swim pools up to Kmart. B-ft. in diameter. Including a 'Makes underwater repairs handy repair kit 2-RING 70x12” SWIM POOL 4 Days Only B ^ A Charge It JT Jj 0 interior prints. Repair kit is included. Family-size ... Helds More than 600 Gallons of Water 8’x20” STEEL WALL SWIM POOL 8-ft. dimaeter. Vertical supports. Rigid construction. Bottom drain. Vinyl liner. 8-Ft. Sturdy Plastic Pool Cover ............... 1.71 Our Reg. 14.44 10.87 2-SECTION SAND BOX AND POOL 2.57 Our Reg. 2.97 4 Dayt Only 4 Days Only hard play and won’t tip over. Just aay, "Charge 72"x27", 5-TUBE AIR MATTRESS 76° Discount Price—Charge It Pillow style, two-color vinyL Two valves for easy inflating. Sane! 24-INCH STYROFOAM* SWIMMING RING 1.67 TWIN HULL PLAY BOAT* 5.66 Our Reg. 5.97 4 Days Only Discount Prico Charge It Play safe in the water. Light foam ring is great for beginners. Life-sise ... 5 feet x 32 inches. It’s strong, rigid poly plastic ... a Twin-hull catamaran with room enough for two children. Bright turquoise color. Great fun for the youngsters. Charge it. *lallaet included 4 Dayt Only Our Reg. 1.74 1.47 1.96 2.97 Cotton terry beach towels with fringed ends. Siae 34x62”. Multi-color, screen prints. While quantities last. Our. Keg. 2.33 4 Days Only Our Reg. 3.33 ‘ 4 Days Only White Styrofoam* board will 60x21' . , . support* weight* up 3'x5' FLAG WITH 12" POLE* Our Reg. 9.96 7.73 1 SOLARCAINE F LOTION _ I pwirtlirt | | SUNBURN F [wtMOBW^IMjUM jn OuLtJt. Tmvuaa I j| 01BCOVIMY \ff COPPERTONE ' JLA pn II Smt^i ZlotionJ 4 Days Only The national flag. Sewn stripes and dyed stars. Cotton bunting. 12-feet high—3-section tubular steel flag pole. Polly, rope, hardware. Charge SEA & SKI SUNTAN LOTION Our Reg. 1.17 SOLARCAINE * LOTION Our Reg. 1.02 COPPERTONE* Q.T. LOTION 84*iux.. 82^ •Rolo adjssts to different heights liquid wt. For a beautiful suntan. Tube or bottle. Stops sunburn pain fast! • Limit.* Qu.ntiti.i 1.58 Tana quickly, evenly! SUNTAN LOTION Our Reg. 1,32 107 THREE-PIECE LUGGAGE SET FOR VACATION Discount Price cases with vinyl trim, n__ plastic handles. 15” vanity, 21” overnight, 24” tourist. Fast, natural tan with | burn protection. | •Net weight. Limited quantity •Liquid wt. | STURDY METAL FOOT LOCKER FOR STORAGE Our Reg, 7.91 5.88 4 Days Only Locker is 15%”xl2Vi”x3\ strudily constructed, select from black, navy blue. Convenient space-saver. "Charge NOXEMA* SKIN CREAM FOR SUNBURNS Our Reg. 1.11 83' Jar 4 Dayt Only Medicated. Its cooling, soothing action helps relieve sun-bum pain fast. Use also as a beauty cream. Just say, "charge it”. ' “FIRST AID” BY JOHNSON & JOHNSON Our Reg. 1.29 77' 4 Dayt Only Compact ldt in "pocket sise* .. ... small bat complete and ' perfect for travel. Most * necessary first aid itema. "Chargeit” Ask for a Kmart Credit Application and just say, it”! glenwood plaza corner north perry at glenwood 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY $3, 1067 Carry biscuit mix in an ttol p|an Frequent Stops tight, waterproof container. With u . ' T,. 7nlIrm,Uml k„J Plan it ao tint you and your this basic tagradfcnt you may frequently, the makings for biscuits, short That’s the way to make sure cake (on canned fruit topping),! they enjoy every minute yon pancakes, dumplings anwmake it possible for them to breading for fish frying., 'spend in the great outdoors. 500 ce TRIUMPH TIGER 100 The Famous Jack Pina Modal OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE: T120R—Bonneville The World’s Feu tost Motorcyelm TT BONNEVILLE T100R DAYTONA SPECIAL TR 6 ROAD-SPORT 200 cc TIGEItCUB See Them AU At Daily 9-8 Sat. 9-5 , ANDERSON SALES AND SERVICE , 1M8 S. TILifllUPH, PONTIAC PE MW Common Sense in Trailering Carefree trailering i s n’t a question of luck. It's a combination of good old fashioned common sense, a little preventive maintenance and safe driving You know from experience that anything you neglect will deteriorate. The tires of your trailer are no exception. Trailer tires are designed and tested by the tire manu-(fcturer to assure safe operation at all legal highway speeds. These tires require fairly high inflation pressures for maxk mum reliability and minimum wear. Trust the manufacturer and follow these recommendations: 1) Buy a good tlr/ pressure gauge and use it/(You can’t tell Just by looking.) ' 2) Check air/ pressure when they are cod/ 3) Never bleed pressure from tires whenthey are hot. 4) Always check tire pressure before starting on a trip. ■T Don’t forget the spare.) Inspect your tires regular-_ for cuts and bruises. 8) When not using your trailer for ati extended period; remove the tires, reduce the pressure approx. SO per cent and store in cool, dark place. / /lyfo Con venien ce Foods Helpful to C Convenience of design is being built into practically every modem camping and outdoors product, but nowhere has convenience in packaging been more highly developed than in the foods and beverages available to today's outdoor enthusiast. * * * Mm The call for ^he traditional tools of tiie cupper’s trade — the can opener, hole punch and cap-lifter — have practically been relegated to nostalgia by new packaging techniques developed in recent years. ★ * * Today, in 1967, the camper can reach for his package of mixed vegetables (taken from nearby food-and-beverage cooler), open a freeze-dried steak, throw it all on his handy Camp stove and then relax until ready with an easy-open can of his favorite drink. 1 Decadent? Hardly. Even Consider Kids in Travel Tour Passenger Comfort Important in Plans VACATIONS ..). ARE WONDERFUL •. • don't spoil yours Nothing can give you a headache faster than the glare of sunlight on die water; or reflected from the hood of your oar. Before you go ... order a really good pair — optically ground, especially if you wear prescription lenses. We Have An Exciting Selection of Frames. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE aion 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. Daily 9:30 AM. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:30 AM. to 0:30 PM. FE 2-2895 Once the tour route has been finned up, it’s time to think about the comfort of passengers. If the kiddies are going along, be sure to make provision for them to entertain themselves during long stretches of driving which sometimes bores youngsters. ★ * ★ Simple games, picture books, soft toys, may be enough. But be sure also that you have made provision for carrying sof' drinks. Portable containers of the thermos type will help you serve the kiddies—and yourself too—a cooling drink at a moment’s notice. This matter of what clothing to take on tours gets simpler each year now that permanent press fabric and drip dries are available. They solve the travel laundry problem and make it possible for travelers to step out of the cars after long stretches of touring, looking fresh as daisies. -Rothes, of course, should also be chosen with due consideration for the c 11 m a t e through which you are traveling, and the variety of recreational and social activities in which you plan to engage during your tour. T , LESS ROOM By all means plan to take your fishing tackle, and swim suits far everybody. With less room needed these days for clothing, it should not be difficult to find space for sports equipment as well. and columnists have confessed pabUely the rigors of “rough-ing It,” finally deciding that IPs bettor to take advantage of modern technology and enjoy another hoar or two each day of Ashing, hunting or hiking. Every outdoorsman takes on a certain responsibility as new packaging techniques bestow new-found leisure, however. The bean or soft-drink can, the plastic bag and the wax carton can qui^dy change from a convenience to a nuisance in the hands of irresponsible campers ahd picnickers. '’Disposable” and “throwaway” are great ideas on the ' slf, but when the buyer’s enthusiasm for this added convenience, the lake shore and tiie trout stream the resulting titter brings the natural question — “Was this trip necessary?” Piles of papers and cans and bottles were available for viewing back in town. MORE POPULAR As convenience packages become more popular, manufacturers and suppliers are more vocal in their concerns over the litter problem. HERE IS A TICKET TO TRAVEL FUN. The 1967 Apache Mesa at a Memorial Day Special of Includes Three Burner Stove, Dinette, Sink, Ice Ben, Bottle Gas and Carrier Also See the New Crank-up Ramada Eight Sleeper. And Another Vacation Social—the Falcon Model at $576.00 EVANS EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixit Hwy., Clarkston, 625-1711 IF YOUR VACATION TAKES YOU TO YOUR OWN BACKYARD...... e Kiln Dried Lumber e One Set Artistic Wrought Iron Lets e All Bolts (knock down) Enjoy Family Fun With This 6-Foot Redwood Picnic Table at $2695 From LUMBER 2496 Orchard Lake Rd., Phone 682-1606 HOURS< StOO AAA, to 5:00 PAL — Saturday 8:00 AAA. to 1 P.M. DON'T BET YOUR Lin Oa tssond, Third or Fourth Liao. CHEAPIES... Get High-Quality DUNLOPS! Safe at 100 mph* ..and still popularly priced PROOF AGAIN THAT DUNLOP QUALITY AND ADVANCED DESIGN.COST NO MORE DUNLOP LOW-PROFILE gold seal *Another Dunlop first. Tested and proved safe at 100 mph so you have that extra margin at 50, 60, 70, 80. Phenomenal traction, rain or shine. Patented Safety-Shoulders. Longer mileage. Pressure-seal innerliner. Full 4-ply. Tyrex. True Low Profile Design. MY SIZE* SALE PRICED NOW THRU HAY 29Ni MUR *24 WHITEWALL TUBBLESl Plus Federal Exclso Ttuf $2.08 to $2.53 EXCHANGE * 7.35/14 - 7.75/14 - 8.25/14 - M6/14 745/16 - 7.75/15 - 5.15/15 - 645/15 •"We certify that Gold Saal Low-Prefile tires wore in excellent conditioriafler numerous tests, at sustained speeds of 100 mph."Tiro Engineer-■/, ing Service Testing, Inc., Carson CHy, Nevada. Carter Tire Co. 170 South Saginaw At South Exit of WMsTraek Drive PONTIAC FE 5-4136 TIIB PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, Boating Is Pleasure, Also Big Business Maybe It wla a cave man climbing upon • log In a stream la search for a new dwelling; maybe an Indian beckoifing his son to Join him in bis canoe to cross the lake and bunt; maybe a Portuguese explorer calling his crew together for a ’round-the-world Jaunt. ;But somewhere, someone had to be the first to say those words: “Let's go boating.’1 ; " ... J * ¥ The age of boating is as old as mankind, but die pendulum of time has changed biude boating from a means of transportation to an instrument of recreation. Today, “Let's go boating” means let’s get together on the water. equipment, accessories and oth-i necessary to enjoy boating in a single year. More than l million recreational boats now dot America's waterways, almost 7 million of which are propelled by out- Pleasure boating, 1M7, is big recreation and big busi- Pleasure boating comes in many forms: canoes, sailboats, fishing skiffs, houseboats and yachts, but the design which can be credited with producing the post-war boating boom, with making outdoor conscious Americans boat oriented is the outboard runabout. Specifically, Mr. Average American Qoat Owner has an outboard boat 15.4 feet long powered by a 29.9 horsepower outboard . . . and chances are It’s perched on an easy-to-towi trailer when it’s not in use. Ihe boat length and outboard Kr are the averages com-by the Outboard Boating Chib of America. Modern jurats are practical-|ern breed of outboard: power-ly maintenance-free. They are ful, quiet, economical and de- safe, roomy and rugged. . Three and one-half million traileite are In use, and there are 5,500 marinas and yacht clpbs offering facilities for tMs legion of boating fans. MANY SPLENDORED A boat ride takes a family to an isolated island for camping; a father and son to tee 1‘hot spot” for an afternoon of aqgling; a group of teen-agers to the reef for diving; an elderly couple to a quiet picnic site; and seven CUb Scouts and their leader to a deserted beach to find driftwood. Boating is a means to many activities. The American Water Ski Association reports the number of water skiers has now topped 9 million. Paving the Why for the surge in boating popularity has been the outboard motor. Evolving from the noisy, crude “kftudtle busters” of the 20's is the mod- Take away skiing, camping, diving and all the others and boating b a popular recreation in itself. A cruise In an outboard runabout melts tension... carefree relaxation with no traffic lights, no telephone (unless you want a ship-to-shore unit!) and lob of clean air, crisp Hreeaes and cool water. The QBC also reports that more than 40 million Americans participated in recreational boating during the past year. This army (or navy?) of “water rats” spent almost IS billion at the retail level for major It’s quite true that pleasure boating, in Us infancy, was a rich man's sport. “Yachting” waa the name of the game before mass production coupled with engineering breakthroughs brought boating within reach of pendable. Tom Kalbfus, marketing chief* of Johnson Motors, the giant of the outboard industry, cites the use of lightweight aluminum parts as the Initial key fo out-boarding’s success story. His firm made' this significant "first” in 1921 on its then top-power 2 hp. model. The Waukegan, DL, firm’s 1967 line runs from 3 to 100 horsepower plus a recently-introduced 115 horsepower mill --foe GT115 — built especially far “high performance buffo.” just about anyone who is employed! /Hong with more boat and; motor for less cost came knowl-i edgeable marine dealers of-j fering top-notch service and convenient financing. Distaff Fashions Bright for '67 Outdoor Scene Hie distaff side is not taking the male sportswear fashion resurgence sitting down. New looks, styles, silhouettes ... fresh colors and fabrics all fcrlend to make the women’s sportswear scene for 1967 the most exciting ever, Coordinates are going to be as popular with the girls asi they are with the Lord and Master. Printed pants and jackets are expected to be a big look and, of course, the cotton “Tee Dress" that grew from the original “Tee-Shirt” Is going to be seen in every area of leisure activity from beach to the evening cocktail party. ; Panto and tops with the knit, look in velour inspired by the Italians are ging to be popular in striped and solids, j* A bikini with an overskirt and tank top are typical of the vitality that will make the American male want to keep up with tee Janes. i Surfing is a look as well'as a sport. t Twill, stretch cotton, authentic corduroy, authentic Hawaiian prints are among the fabrics Ihat provide the style. ; The “mod” look will feature «mini bikinis, cotton prints and •two piece hipriders. Cover-ups ”will carry out tee theme. There t»is new excitement in synthetics: Lycra spandex combined with other fabrics, for in- stance, provides great figure control. Designers use body seaming, contour neck-lines and belts to provide better and more flattering figure definition. The girls are with it all right — and aren’t the boys glad of it! Salt Pills Help to Beat Heat Heat prostration or hear exhaustion are caused by prolonged heat and humidity, fatigue and excessive loss of body salts and water through perspiration. Buffered salt tablets should be' taken to replace lost body salt and *to prevent Ills caused by excessive heat. RivnrsMa Cottages and Motel Bathing Beach - Fithing Pi*r -Brick Unit* - Kitdttnnttn* -Honeymoon Cottag* IMt N. River M, Mm* KNntwr M1M to Clair, IHoM*aa HIAWATHA CARD OF DETROIT Dktributor* of Southoatt Mich-loan'* most comploto lino of natural po«t cord* and allied •ouvonir item*. Detroit natural •lidos. Tot. (AC311) 482-7321 P.0. Sox 48S Ypsilanti, Mich. pTrrrmrrrrrrnTrTrrrrrrrm^ t&ESt: 14-DAY TOUR Pacific Northwest—Glacier Park B *600 VIA AIR Leaving July 29th Fmr Firtktr Information Coll l ^FwdJaii/TAOiiirf- 108 PONTIAC MALL OFFICE BUILDING Phone 1*82-4600 JUU19 li tuuuumjuiut 9 kfJUUUUULUJUUUt Your first coif, for a happier, carefree more fun-filled vacation should be to Fox, Pontiac's favorite family drycleaners. A bright, crisp and clean wardrobe is a must for people on the symmer go. Summer cottons, slacks, sport coats , . all are returned ready for travel, fresh as new to look better and'last longer. Call today for convenient pickup and delivery. Quality Cleaning Since 1929 719 Wsst Huron FE 4-1536 Pw-fiuiiuiiis fiats!’ MACKINAW TRUCK CAMPERS and DODGE TRIKES Large Selection—Immediate Delivery Fully self-contained campers. Manufactured in Walled Lake. Voted No. 1 for Design and Quality. All sizes for all trucks. Dodge frueks carry the famous 50,000 mile war* ranty. Buy the package and save. Bank financing- Wa. taka trades! LLOYD BRIDGES I RA V ELAN D Dodge Cars Dodge Dodge Trucks *1010 W. Maple Open till 8:30 P.M. Daily Walled Lake Sat. till 6, 624-1572) FACTORY BRANCH Wkat a difference a mm makes All New mm » ton WITH THE For That Second Car With Versatility • “BIG PLUS" This Price Includes Deluxe Heater plus— Door Locks (Both $ides) plus-Traffic Hazard Lights plus- Padded Dash Panel plus- Padded Left Visor plus- Side Mirror plus- 2-Speed Wipers plus- Windshield Washers plus- Back-Up lights plus- Directional Signals » plus- 8*15x15 4 P.R. Tires <881 DELIVERED INCLUDING ALL TAXES Don't Settle for Less Than The “BIG PLUS" FACTORY BRANCH OAKLAND at CASS FE 5-9485 uv-j m ■mMHtonni M D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1067 114 Per Cent Rise ' Government recreation perts predict water skiing par* tidpation will increase 114 per ient in the next ten yean. On the basis of current partitipa-lion, this means there could be fepwards of 17,000,000 skiers by 1877 and, as the American Water Ski Association says, “That's a lot of people having a lot of fun by any calculation! ’’ Montreal Expo Has Classy Calendar of Sports Events MONTREAL (NEA) — A year and a Half ago, Col. Ed McClelland took a tour of Montreal's Municipal Golf Course to see if it woudd be suitable for the Canadian Open being held in conjunction with Expo 67. “The next .morning,” he said; “I had a stroke. I told the People at the golf course that’s what their layout did to me.” Col. McClelland can joke about the story now because he has recovered sufficiently to carry on as sports director of Expo 67. The Canadian Open, worth $201,MS, is just one of many events he has scheduled for Expo’s six-month stand. And: it will Be played on the Munidpal course with golfers like Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gay Brewer going for the top prise June 29-July 2. For three years, Col. McClelland has worked longer hours than he ever did in the Anny readying the sports schedule for Expo. .< i In the Army, he was used to a sunrise-sunset day as an artillery officer. He retired three years ago, joining the ifrgpn staff and bringing along his ability to organize quickly and efficiently. Safety • Service • Satisfaction AND the famous Midas Guarantee! ,111117171 |7|* V H* necessary, you own your car. A111PI I lililk A for a service charge only. Midas Shock Absorbers; Standard: Guaranteed for Replaced, if necessary, tor SHIII If K 20000 m"M °r yeafS a service charge only. kvllvr Heavy Duty Guaranteed for 30000 miles or two years TI!A\'KA\ISSIOY\ Muffler Installation Is FREEI INSPECTION IS FREEI SERVICE IS FAST and COURTEOUS! You’ll LIKE Midas 500 Shops Coast-to-Coast] 435 South Saginaw 3Bk>cks South of Wido Track Drive Fridoyt 8:30 A.M. to 7 PM. FOR EXPERT TRANSMISSION SERVICE MIDAS TRANSMISSION SHOP 334-4727 1905 Wide Track West, at South End of Wide Track What makes the colonel even more remarkable is ft«f he was able to continue as director of sports following the stroke, which has left him with a miner speech impediment EXCELLENT CALENDAR In addition to the Canadian Open, there are a number of other excellent sporting events, ranging from cycling to fencing. The main attractions, however, will be the Open, the Cuts-dian Lawn Tennis Championships, a six-team international soccer tournament and the year’s finest track and field meet, matching the first- and second-place finishers in the European Championships against their counterparts from the Pan-American Games (Aug. 9-10). The trade and field meet will come closest to being a preview of the 1968 Olympic games because dost of the world’s top performers will be competing in Montreal. In the soccer tournament (May 31-June 11), England, the World’s Cap winner, is entered along with Russia, Mexico; Belgium, West Germany and Austria. “The English,” McClelland said, “probably will send many of tite players from the World Cup team. We’ve already sold 15,000 tickets for the championship game and the fans don’t even know who will be in it." GOOD FIELD The Canadian Lawn Tennis Association has lined up an excellent field for its championships Aug. 8-15. Roy Emerson, Tony Roche and John Newcoihbe will represent Australia Marty Riessen and Arthur Ashe are two of the U.S. entries. From Spain comes Manuel Santana, from England Mike Sangster, from Sweden Jan Erik Lundquist and from Canada Robert Bedard and Mike Belkin. Canada’s oldest sport has not been forgotten. On Ang. 4-6 there will be a round-robin North American Indians’ La-, crosse Tournament featuring teams from Canada and the UJ5. This sport originated with the Indians. In the old days, tribes played against each other and the winner was the side which lost the fewest players. “I don’t think we’ll quite have anything like?,that,” Col. McClelland said. “But these people do know Ijow to play the game. It won’t be too tame.” A1.cn nn fh* snnrts m Take Guaranteed Aeeommodatfont With Yob This Vacation with the TRAVEL QUEEN SIMPER America’s Safest Camper or the BARTH TRAILERS AND CAMPERS **First Choice Where Choice I* Unrestricted*' | BANK TERMS ARRANGED | PIONEER CAMPER SALES 3881 W. HURON PONTIAC FE 2-3909 Why settle for Par? Take a golf lesson that works on any course in the country—Eagle. A comfortable new Hush Puppies* golf shoe. A clean cut style in Breathin’ Brushed Pigskin* Lightweight Water repellent. Brushes dsan and new-looking in seconds. You’ll be seeing a lot of this shoe around courses everywhert. Try on a pafr yourself. Slop by soon. i Hush flVippies NATIONAL l BANK Now 21 offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties JOE'S ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS anin rnrm Bcrotrr irimmcs cmronmN INSTANT CREDIT Uajer CreditCar* THE PONTtAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 D—7 Check Park Services Wishing, riding, bunting, walk-1 Engineers federal reservoirs,! Some 4,450 sites on the Bu-ing, boating, 'driving, skiing,laiKj some 25 major TV A lakes reau of Land Management’s anyone? • in seven Southern states. 457-million acres, mostly in 11 °Pp°rt“nltle8tjor *** “d| In the West, millions each many other outdoor recreation enjoy sightseeing, swjm-acUWties are available through m|ng fishinJ wa(er. out the nation. 1 skiing, hunting and camping at *. *, * 'more than 210 Bureau of ROc- The National Park Servlce jamation project areas which_... ___________ administers more than 230 areas ] cover some 3.5 million acres of able to the public free of charge. ‘FOWL’ ATTRACTION — Canada Geese and their goslings can be seen this time of year at Kensington Metropolitan Park near Milford. It is expected that 180 goslings will survive natural predation by raccoons, turtles and the carelessness of man. Park Geese to Get Bands Program Will Holp Learn Their Habits Visitors to Kensington Metro- pointed out that many of these politan Park near Milford now have an opportunity to see A "B a n d i n g Program’ Canada geese is now being conducted by the naturalist staff at Kensington Metropolitan Park near Milford to help determine the range and distribution of geese which nest in the vicinity of the 4,300-acre park. ; dr dr ik The “Band” is a numbered metal ring placed on one leg of the goohe. With these Richard Mortemore, park naturalist, is trying to check on the whereabouts of a flock of approximately 3,000 Canada geese which winter and nest in Kensington Park and throughout southeastern Michigan. Persons locating a pair of nesting geese on streams lakes! throughout the counties of Oakland, Livingston, Washtenaw and Wayne are requested to contact the naturalist staff ' writing to Richard Mortemore, Park Naturalist, Kensington Metropolitan Park, 2240 West Buno Road, Milford, Michigan! 48042 or phone 685-2417 (Milford1 Exchange). Kensington Park Has Nesting Canada Geese Canada geese and their goslings. These may best be seen along the shores of Wildwing or Kent Lake within the 4,300-acre park. Richard Mortemore, park naturalist, stated that 31 nests with a total of 185 Canada geese eggs have been found -r the highest number of eggs counted in the park since the survey began in 1959, when the count was nine nests and 45 eggs. He expects about 1(0 of these eggs will hatch sometime this week. Mortemore said that a few of these goo-lings will die due to natural predation by raccoons and turtles, however, the people who capture the young and try to raise these goslings are the biggest cause of mortality. Naturalist Mortemore also people are well-meaning and not aware of the damage they cause by disturbing the nesting geese, nor do they realize that there is federal penalty for molesting waterfowl. dr ★ 4 Visitors are encouraged to come apd observe wildlife, but not to disturb Canada geese or other wild animals in the park. Traveling Breaks Are Good Ideas It is wise, when touring, to . stop frequently to fill the tank. Seasoned tourists make it a' point to do so whenever the! gauge reaches the half-full! mark. These stops can serve other purposes, such as offering a nr chance to stretch one’s legs and I In opportunity to give the kids if liny — a break. I PLUS A PRIVATE BEACH ON LAKE HURON! On U.S. 25,4 Milas Norfli of Blue Water Bridge First Motel North of Detroit Kith a Beach on Lake Huron IM2 take Shore Road Nit Huron, Moh. N. IV HH2 The GifHdeal for Graduation, Vacations, Weddings, Birthdays from Pontiac { Show you know what’s what about Birthdays from of outstanding natural, historical and recreation significance on more than 26-million acres. These Include 33 national parks, seashores and lakeshores, 143 historical parks and 12 designated federal recreation areas. * K v dr ■ Camping, boating, nature study and other facilities are available in many of these qreas. The National Forest Service maintains 154 forests covering 181-million acres that include walking trails; overlooks camping and picnicking areas, and visitor information, centers. There are 312 national wildlife refuges in the country, covering some 28%-mlllion acres. About 176 of these are open to the public for fishing, hunting and other outdoor rec- Western states and Alaska, ai-so are open to the public for I outdoor recreation. Many of these outdoor recreation opportunities are avail-? able to the public free of charge, land and some 1.7 million acres In tome instances Federal Rec-! of water surface in 17 Western reation Area Entrance and/or states, Alaska, and Hawaii. ! user fees are charged. Golf At Its Best Regulation 9 and Par 3 ENJOY OUR DAILY. ^ BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS WATERFORD HILL C0UMTRY CLUB 6633 Dixit Hwy. 625-3060 Red . „ "Bargain Fares IhC&cago Fishing and other water rec-, reation are available on 235 of, the 350 US. Army Corps ofj .l,0.y.$8.9° W. * onadian sew**-. Call Gt-CN»‘332 6ran? National Trun* Railway* Western 25 NORTH SAGINAW ST. IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC VISIT ENGGASS MODERN •.OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Dr. B. SmroMm, Optometrist, Open Monday, Thursday, Friday Evening* Until Minn * . Lloyd’s CUVoraih CAMPER SALES IS ON THE MOVE! That's right! We're building a new showroom right behind our existing, camper display. Stop in and see the beautiful campers we have now and watch for our Grand Opening Ad in July! kAKIIMM HAMPER FOR Fll IN .iiMmiiiwanaw ir' -tv • I K& EHVorado r '67 Al*° The Newest thing on wheels. We have a wonderful stock of these beautiful campers just waiting for you to enjoy. Make Lloyd's the place, where your summertime 'dreams come true. Life* . time warranty to original owner. At Lloyd’s Just the thing for your vacation plans. A House on Wheels. Beautifully constructed with ah interior whieh include many luxurious appointments as standard equipment. Expensively made, and priced JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR PDCKETB0UK. SEE THIS BEAUTIFUL SUMMERTIME COACH AT LLOYD’S. ALSO SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF TOPPERS TO FIT ANY TRUCK OR POCKETBOOK. EHVorado 3681 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. (2 blks. West of M59) CAMPER SALES Call FE 3-7376 TODAY! ' 11... D ■ 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY/MAY 28, 1967 HOM3A SALE SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL MODELS Sot. ^ 9-5 ANDERSON SALES AND SERVICE Daily 9-8 SAILING ALONG — Whether large or small, sailing vessels get pletny of attention during the summer. Although sailing races usually are in. the spotlight, the smaller craft-such as the one above—are most frequently used by the entire family. Sportsman Should Dress With Plenty of Color The word is out to sportsmen everywhere: “Don't camouflage yourself.” This is. the year when the male peacock is going to fan his plumage and colorful indeed are his feathers. his dominance in the outdoors New colors, such as steel sails are Just port of the man’s fashion story. Coordinates — matching or complementary shirts, slacks and sweaters, or combinations of shirts and swimsuits of, walking shorts — are expected to be very popular. Golfers, swimmers, s u r f e rs, will find coordinated sportswear the answer to the complete 'look.” 1645 S. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC FE 3-7102 Make Checklist Before Taking Trip THE MATHEWS GROVEUND ESTATES RECREATION CENTER Tho Campers Paradise-Tho Homo of Paradiso Boaeh GROVEUND ON THE DIXIE The Lend of the Dutch Windmill Halfway Between Pontiac and Flint Corner Grange Hall Road and Dixie Highway Semi For Brocharo Today PH. 634-9811 HOLLY 1, MICH, Here’s a checklist of services for your car before leaving on a vacation trip. Consult your owner’s manual for proper timfe. ENGINE: Complete ignition check, Including: spark plugs, distributor coil, points, condenser, timing and advance wiring and connections. FUEL SYSTEM: Check, including: idle speed, fuel leaks, clean PCV valve and fuel sediment bowl, clean or replace air filter. (Perform with tune-up). COOLING SYSTEM: Check coolant, hoses, fan belt, radiator cap; inspect for radiator leaks, flush and install rust-inhibitor. ATTERY: (TIRES: Check water level and cables; Check for adequate tread, LOCATIONS IN THIS AREA TO SERVE YOU: Woodward Avo. and WA Milo Birmingham — Mi 4-2127 16325 West 8 Mil« Rd. JustEastof Greenfield - Detroit 10001 Telegraph lid. Near Plymouth Rd. Unde John's Is Also in Landing and Toledo to Solve Your Dining Proolems. ,, BUY, SELL/ TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS One of the many hats of Consumers Power spoilage, can now be included in the camper’s menu. Mechanical refrigeration at the campsite brings the benefits of the home refrigerator to camping. * ★ V To use a POLAR/Box refrigerating locker compartment, the camper secures a locker key from the camp office. A daily fee is paid to the camp administration for the use of the locker and the key that is issued is the only one that will fit that locker. Waterfowl Hatch Later Than Normal WINNIPEG,. Manitoba (AP)-W The prairie waterfowl hatch will be later than normal but habitat conditions are generally excellent and a good production season is anticipated. “Although run-off was less than the potential of the snow cover, there was sufficient water everywhere to put the1 habitat in' prime condition for the breeding season,” the report continued.^ Because the late spring delayed nesting, there was little damage from snowstorms in I April. Travel In Comfort In One Of These Quality Lines Ho corners cut! 33% more spacious! HEW BOLES-AERO' TRAILEKS, More storage — more headroom 0 — more elbow room. And now, MObi/dynamlCM a Solo* wc/uWva for now taring nl Sot now 2ff to modPhl W ypm** d* of ■"? ■, ' r’-w■ Whothor a fold-down compor or • truclc mount, try « Stamper for towing oa to, economy and comfort. JACOBSON TRAILER SALES VACATION -TRAILER RENTALS Supplies — Sales - Service 5690 Williams Lie. Rd., Drayton Plains OR 3*59$ 1 We tell industry’s decision-makers: has more of everything" Because Michigan offers industry the abundant resources and facilities it needs, Michigan has the highest industrial grpwth rate in the nation. Consumers Power Company helps to keep our state growing. We work with Chambers of Commerce and other community groups in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula to bring new business and industry into the state, to create the new jobs that keep our economy surging $head. As in the past, Consumers Power advertising in a wide range of business publications, will tell Michigan’s story in 1967 to the nation’s industrial decision-makers. consumers Power GENERAL OFFICES: JACKSON, MICHIGAN Where "continuing progress" is more than just a slogan D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1067 Here's Sports Calendar for Summer Trips Check Storms Before Sailing Hid any luck controlling the wind and waves lately? Know anyone who can make a storm subside? Or anyone other than new YORK (AP) - TwelvejWinnepeg, Canada, July 23-Aug. ■ rtrt Is, -e amt control tta|U S f. h,v"WCT weather—but we can control our can Games wil‘ be picked in,selected for women’s basketball, exposure to it. ; final trials at the University of So check the weather reports Minnesota and in the vicinity before you go to sea. And if itjof Minneapolis July 1-5, the U.S. looks like bad weather coming, j Olympic Committee announced say, “We don’t sail tqday.”jMonday. That’s why they call you Cap- The hemispheric version of tain. 'the Olympics will be staged at THE FUN NEVER SETS AT THE DOUBLE-J Vacations Exclusively for Young A Weekly ^acatio!^rogran^eginnin^4'0^p!M^ On Sat. Til After Lunch the Following Sat. June 4 Thru Sept. 17, 1967 $99 JS& JACK. & JILL RANCH "AMERICA'S TftlENDUfST RESORT" hothb otty, michioa N 49452 PHONE AREA COPE 516-tW 44444 field hockey, soccer, men’s and women’s swimming and diving. Here are the events and dates of final trials in the Minneapolis rea: Track and field —July 15-16, Memorial Field. BasebaU-July 1-15, University of Minnesota. Men’s Basketball — Final trials, Williams Arena, no specific date. Boxing — July 6-7, St. Papl I Armory. ; Gymnastics — July 8-9, Williams Arena. , Judo—July 7-8, Hamline University, St. Paul. | Tennis—University of Minne-sota. Volleyball — Williams Arena, ! squad must be Selected by July I Weightlifting—July 10-15, University of Minnesota, j Yachting — July 6-15, Lake Minnetanka. 1 Calling All Gat the Complete Protection of FULL MMT COVERAGE $400 C, PER K [ The mo ton b ju»t boginning to start out right by ilotoiy protecting your investment. - H. R. NICHOLIE For COMPLETE Carefree Protection 61 Mt. Clemens FE 3-7858 Wrestling—Early rounds, Williams Arena, July 34; quarterfinals, St. Cloud State July 7; finals, Mankato State July 8. SITES FOR OTHER EVENTS Cycling—July 8-15, Velodrome, Northbrook, 111. Equestrian — Three-day and Dressage, June 26-27, Gladstone, N. J. Jumping squad training i Europe. Fencing—June 24-July 1, National Championships, Los An-geles; July 6-16 World Championships, Montreal. Rowing —11 Eights and single sculls, June 30>July 1; fours, pairs, double sculls, July 14-15, Orchard Beach Lagoon, Pelham, N*Y. Shooting—July 1-15, Fort Ben-ning, Ga. Water Polo —June 22-25, Los Altos, Calif. COPPER COUNTRY - Fort Wilkins state park in the Keweenaw Peninsula is one of die many historical sites in the state. It is near the picturesque Brockway Mountains in the Upper Peninsula’s copper country. Th« 1967 BSA LIGHTNING Mon up to big-motor powur — root powor in Af performance packed LIGHTNING 650. Flaoh ahead of tha crowd with rockat-fatt acceleration. Got smooth, effortlo** cruising ’ and rosponsivo handling in ovary spoad ranga — flafton stoop*st hills tor you and your passangor with a flick of tha, throttle. Stop with assurance with raciifg-typa hrakas. Enjoy a powerful big angina In a handsomely proportioned motorcycle. Beautifully finished in a Metallic Red, Chroma. Sat. 9-5 See It Today ANDERSON SALES AND SERVICE 1645 S. TELEGRAPH PONTIAC Daily 9-8 Plan Easy Drive Determine in advance to so plan your vacation.as to never permit the driving to become a race against time. Plan it for leisurely driving so that you may do more than just watch the landscape roll by. Island Fine Vacation for Trip by Water Boating has the answer for those who dream of owning an island for get-awayJrom-it-alF vacations. Meet the modern houseboat, the portable island with all the conveniences of home and all the potential to lull passengers into the mood of the South Seas. Room, not speed, is the es-sense of houseboating. Houseboats run from 18 to more than 50 feet, and selecting the best model for a particular family is similar to choosit summer home. The “typical” houseboat has private bedrooms, toilet and shower, complete galley (that’s a kitchen, landlubbers!), a heating unit and a deck-patio for sunning and outdoor entertainment. __ Houseboats can be rented, too. A check with the chamber of commerce in a popular boating area should uncover the names of houseboat rental operators. IF YOU WANT A TRUE VALUE YUU MUST SEE THE TOTAL PICTURE Low Price-ls Nice ... But You Want More Than That! PONTIAC RETAIL UFFERS MURE! Look over all the Good deals you can find ... but make certain you see the total picture-4hen when you have found the best deal... before you buy, compare it with our TOTAL VALUE DEAL on the 1967 PONTIAC/TEMPEST. 1967 Mileage Cars Available Now! Hugo Savings, Wide Selection to Choose From! Ptndkt detail Store WIRE TRACK AT MT. CLEMENS mt DOWNTOWN PONTIAC GOOP/YEAR MAM** ALL-STAR VALUE LINE UP! Out they Co at these Low-Low Prices-Hurry. ANY SIZE IN STOCK Tubeless or Tube-Type New Treads Retreads bn sound tin bodies. 4°^4 plus 4 tires off your cor. Price includes MHMMRR ^HIBI Fed. Fjc Tax. You get the same road-gripping Rib Tread Design that comas oa our new car “Power Cushion** tires NO MONEY DOWN ON OUR EASY PAY PLAN . FREE MOUNTING BIG SIZE VALUES AT SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS-SHOP EARLY! PRICE BREAK 8PECIAL Spalding Golf Balls Liquid Center “Go-Fllte" 3*1® Limit one set-to a customer at this price. Consistent long distance A accuracy. Lasting tough cover finish. Rotomatic 18' Rotary Mower With closed type handle 2-Gallon Gas Gan For car, mowers and motorboats 99* Rust-resisting plated. Revera-____________ Ible metal spout, ft plastic m I*?1;Br,ght red 4 y>1IOW ■RBI fln“h' • Has dependable 3 h.p. engine. Adjustable cutting height. Heavy-duty deck. Includes rear baffle. Air Cooled"Gushion Unit I to a customer $109 at this price... A For cool summer driving. Patented Dyne Flex wire spring unit. Man sized -17*h" x 35". In blue, charcoal and green. Large 24" Brazier 5599 Complete with wheels and convenient shelf A real family-size cook-out buy! Cornea in attractive enamel finish. Grid is fully adjustable and complete with handles. MAY SERVICE SPECIAL Front-End Alignment Regularly $7.50 Now only... $Q66 Any U.S. car aim parts. Vfar We inspect front-«nd springs, shocks ft steering assembly; align front-god; cor rect camber, castor, toe-in. Brake Adjustment S119,«_ Remove front ft rear wheels, adjust brakes, repack front wheel bearings, inspect grease seals, add fluid, test SPECIAL OFFER! We clean ft inapect buttery clean ceblea ft hold down, add water, recharge to maximum capacity, test GOODYEAR 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE SERVICE STORE HOURS: 9:30*6; SAT. tO 2:30 D—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1067 Regatta Tawaa City Alma Petoskey Gaylord Spring Laka Activities Schedule Btrmlntftaqi village Pair saSasMs-s ~ Enactment Calfbrallgn' ’ Sms Festival ^ . Antique Auto Tpur 1 giwtojttout jefooat Race ' ffSAjfea Class Raoatta l L""> c"** ; Buckskin Rendezvous yww Bluer Canoe Race n City Pal — . Rough Stock Rodeo. G-Bar-A Ranch IS Jaycee Ragatlo ' 25 Nomnai Music Camp opens ■ *» , ^SrdSpisw'iUrsw#rld'* clwmPto"*h"» June 2S-July 2 Michigan Amateur Golt Association Tournament June 29-Aug. 20 Maedowbrook Music Festival ’ X. '..11 Annual FMMjM Tournament June JGJufy *-4—“a— JiarTL- m. c ...rra . Warren International Fraadom Festival Notional Strawberry Festival Rtuworff Fswval Rodeo. Star Valley Ronch World's Championship Unlimited r Arts and Crafts FatNvsl Fourth of July Yaditliig Lot Freedom Ring, Hanry Ford A Pino River Canoe Race AljHno ntllMl Old Fashion Day water. FasHval Antique Show District Junior Snip. Sailing ORM_______I Top of Michigan Marathon Outboard Race National Cherry Fostlvol Compact Half-Tent Trailer Has Economical Features This year, before, highway travelers will see vacationing families rolling along with streamlined, colorful " ttle two-wheeled trailers at^ iched to their automobiles. At the end of the day any one of these outfits is likely to be parked betide a scenic lake, a cobf, dear trout stream, or in the sand at the ocean’redge. And a few minutes after the towing vehicle has rolled to a halt, the camper trailer will unfold into m tent on wheels — one of the moat popular of a 11 recreational vehicles in the modern campground. ★ #• * f These compact h a 1 f-trailer, half-tent vehicles, owe tJieli success to many features. On the highway, they ride so low the driver can see over them in And in the campground, the tenMraller blossoms Into a virtual Pandora’s box of surprises. Typically, supporting legs drop down to brace the trailer, and sliding out from either side come large drawers containing beds already made up. T h e n lightweight aluminum bowp lift Into place and a colorful canvas top balloons out over a shelter that may be 20 feet wide. Here is comfortable living space for an entire family, even on a rainy day. This whole Job of setting up camp Is often completed in less than IS minutes after a family arrives at the campground. * ' *■ of the newer camper trailers are provided with a crank. Give it a dozen turns his rear view mirror. They are and drawers' slide out by them-easy to tow and handle. Storage selves, and the top opens Into space inside them makes (t position. One manufacturer has easy to keep the car clean. |gone a step further this year, and for the first time, replaced the crank with a fractional horsepower electric motor. Press a button and you make camp. The next morning press the button again, and your camp shelter fqlds into place. WIDE SELECTION Depending upon h 1 s n e e d s and the limits of his pocketbook, a camper can choose from a wide selection of camper trailers. Prices run from about $600 to about $1600. Such trailers are usually good for at least years of vacation camping. The more costly models are often equipped with wall to wall carpeting, complete kitchen units, built-in ice box, and a dinette with cushioned benches beside a. big picture window. Zip-in plastic windows let campers look out but protect them from rain and wind. Privacy curtains divide the interior Into individual bedrooms. Because campground operators 8till have trouble figuring out whether to class these plush little vehicles among the trailers or park them with the tents, their owners often take their choice. Inmany western states, if thereto no campground near, they can pull off almost anywhere on government land. . Because they have everything they need, they can set up camp wherever the setting sun‘catches them. Campers graduating into many states. camper trailers must wire taill lights and directional signals to the car system. The trailer hitch should be a rugged one, and the type that attaches to the frame of the towing vehicle to far superior to a bumper hitch. A safety chain to essential, legal requirement in The beds come equipped with thick foam mattresses. f Dinner and Clam toko Chicago to Seugatuck- M laugan t_____________________ National Cftarry Featlval Rodao SIM WHor Fat— Craowni Fair QiiiMM Celebration , Van Cllbum Concert All Stotol Double* Shufflebotrd Tournament Ann Arbor Art Fair Manchester Chicken brdll Meadow Brook Hospital Flasta Michigan District Lightning Class Ragatta Annual Village Art Fair Fine Arts Festival OK Fashion Days Throe Rivera Water Carnival Muskegon YWCA Antique Show Old Fashion Days Yacht Club Race Vanatlan Festival Blasting of the Fleet Chaboygqn v—“ North Amork Barry County F rin Con Tourist it Guam Featlval \ Strsat Artists Fair Old Fashioned Day* Sear Lake Days ‘Marino. City Centennial Calibration MjMWdbWWtwF-CilllW-MocollMtt ' Tawaa Bay Waterfront Art and Craft* exhibit lama Fra* Fair Gratiot County Youth Folr Antique Fair Otatgo County F t Fair Annquo anow Tour of tht Lumberman's Monument Bika Race ■ Iosco Gain Show Standard Flower Show Lot Chdneaux Watercede Foro Marquette River Canoe Race Brighton Centennial Calnean County Fair Lewtil Showboat Emmet County Fair Labor Day Yachting Regatta Leelanau County Open Golf Championship Maddnoe Bridge Walk St.lvMn Fall Festival Detroit Fall Antique, Show-Solo, Groat* * I I And Here’s Another Strong, Silent Type, JOE PINTER “Your Authorized Johnson Dealer" See Him Now About His “Let’s Go Boating” Specials Choose Your STATECRAFT or MFG Boat With a JOHNSON MOTOR . *.......... Only *1,095 WEERES PONTOONS ........... Low as *375 THUNDERBIRD BOATS .. . (You’ve Seen These Beauties in Action on Flipper’s TV Program) REMEMBER ,,. “It costs only a little more to own the very best.” Only 10% Down - Up to 5 Years to Pay PINTER’S MARINE 1370 Opdyke Rd. • (1-75 at Oakland University Exit) Get a Sea-Horse by the tail and hang on! Thrill-skiing is yours with any of the new Johnson V-4's for 1967. Slalom behind'our powerful V-100 hp with revolutionary Power/Pulse ignition — a system that provides instant starts, uncanny smoothness from slowest idle on up (regardless of the engine's state of tune!)... eliminates breakers, points, condensers and their upkeep, lengthens spark plug life 5 to 10 times...' Take off (for less loot) with our V-80 or V-60. Eager, Johnson-dependable—. Johnson with significantly lower fuel consumption than outboards of comparable power — using economical. S0-tO-1 gas-oil ratio. (For maximum motor protection, use specially formulated Johnson Premium 50/1 Outboard Oil.) Your-Johnson dealer makes it painless. He needs used motors, and deals like it. He'll stretch the payments on 18 Sea-Horse models, 3 hpto 100 hp, VVhy wait? ONE OF THE HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE 5800 DRYDEN ROAD, DRYDEN, MICH, for rotorvations call 796-2245 No Liquor... Just Good Food. Sea RayBoot* — O'Day Soil Boots JohrtsonMotors Water Skies, Equipment and Accessories LAKE ORION MARINE & SKI CLUB 1#N&4, Late Orion 69S-I14S FAMILY THAT VACATIONS AT HOME . • . Just 30 Scenic MILES FROM PONTIAC DIRECTIONS: M-59 to iconic Rochester Read, North to Dryden Rood, east 2 miles to CHUCK WAGON. Squote Lake Read to 434, North to Dryden Road, adit 9 miles to CHUCK WAGON. I WEEKDAY LUNCHEONS From 11 to 3 ROUND-UP Style-$1.25 CHILDREN UNDER 10, % Price WORLD'S TASTIEST PRIME ROUNDS (SATURDAY AND SUNDAY SPECIAL) > PLUS AN ELEGANT SELECTION OF STEAKS, ROASTS, CHICKEN, HAM AND TASTY SEAFOODS! MICHIGAN'S FINEST WESTERN STYLE RESTAURANT INVITES YOUR FAMILY TQ DINNER 1 1 D—XS THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 38, 1067 WMW3 LET YOURSELF GO In A 16 Ft. Silver Line Dart Powered by a Mercury 650 - 65 H.P. Motor. 1,000 Lb. Trailer, Battery, Battery Box, 12-Gal. Tank, Mechanical Steering and Top. Reg. $2439.00 This Week *199900 KAR'S BOATS and MOTORS 405 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion, Mich. MY 3-1600 Choosing Outfitter Requires Precautions By RICHARD ALDEN KNIGHT The Jet method of travel we accept today aa standard has made the world a very small place indeed. You can leave your hearth of a morning and be way back in beyond that evening. Nearly every magazine carries advertisements claiming the big-gest fish, the largest heads of trophy game. Everybody is a winner . ..no one loses. This is not always the case. ★ * ★ Not everyone in the hunt-the-sport-for-hire trade is Goldilocks. There are as many unscrupulous camp owners and outfitters as there are plumbers and television repair men. The reputable ones stand above the crowd, delivering what they say they can deliver and giving back value for dollars ’ I have learned much of what I will tell you from here on out the hard way ... perhaps it will save you a few heartaches. In the course of writing about fishing and hunting, I travel extensively, all over North and South America. In these travels, I have taken some fantastic reamings, these given by men seemingly not capable of harming a flea. SOME SUGGESTIONS I have also met a great number of honest, hard-working men in their trade. So here are a few suggestions. Take them to heart. (1) Buy some carbon paper and make a copy of every letter you send. Your first letter will merely ask for particulars, prices, etc. Make up a file folder and mark it “Trip to Blank Lake Lodge.” File all subsequent letters therein. (2) After reading the preliminary literature sent to you by the camp, look for the information that is not included. Exactly what does the price quoted include . . . good outfitters wiU tell you immediately, borderline operators tend to skim over this point.* Do you have to bring your own sleeping bag, rifle scabbard, fishing tackle and camp gear or P*" Deify, Call 3S8-74H _____Pontlao THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 LANSING—More tourists than establishments with special ever before ire expected to, attractions for tourists. ^ delight - and often the summer in quest of recreation frustragon-of the tourist court ana relaxation.^ - Igeiors begins at the point where By year’s end more than 26 million such travelers should spend over one billion dollars to keep tourism Michigan’s second-largest industry. Among the “d( selors is giving tions indicating preference of oi Tfiat estimate — concurred in by the State Highway Commission and the Michigan Tourist includes everyone Council traveling by car on stat ways for a recreational cationing purpose. LONELY OUTPOST — Point Betsie lighthouse near Frankfort is etched against overcast skies that tell the approach of a Lake Michigan storm. Hie light was commissioned in 1858 and is a popular attraction for tourists, photographers and artists. Prepare for a Hot Summer Of Driving Ahead EATON AIR CONDITIONER At Lots At $189.50 Plut Installation Service On All Makes PIKE RADIATOR SERVICE JU.UHUMMUFT FISHING BOATS for tts low as *229- ALUMINUM FISHING BOATS Am Now on Display In Our Showroom with Special Models as Low as *69u Car Designed for Camping Station Wagon Tows Larger Trailer Towing a trailer, particularly one of the newer, heavier models, often exerts more of a strain on an ordinary passenger car than the caj is designed to handle. ★ ★ ★ Fortunately for camping and enthusiasts, sever a the tourist coun-at the point where end. n’ts” for coun-recommenda-to travelers a ne business es-over another. ■ W ★ ★ sometimes puzzles, even the traveler. fthigh-or va- Modern toilets are being installed in 14 of 44 roadside rest areas. One thousand eight bun-picnic tables at roadside this problem and are producing vehicles designed and equipped with trailer towing parks are spotted along the high ways. ★ * ★ Acquisition of 178 “scen strips” visible from highways begun. And the screening in rural areas of 56 Junkyards and the removal of 48 others is underway. * ★ ★ Michigan’s interest in the motoring tourist is shown in seven Travel Information Centers located at strategic points. A continuing headcount at these centers is me of the indicators used in estimating total travel volume* by vacationers in the state. And this tally shows 601,( motorists stopped at information centers last year — to double the count ot 1963 and help make a prediction that by 1970, these centers will serve one million persons annually. Pontiae’t Only Mercury— MerCruiter Dealer CRUISE-OUT, INC. IIL WALTON-FE MM2 1-11 It BALDWIN EXIT—OPEN I to 8 International’s station wagon one of the leaders in this special-duty category. it is not built on a conventional automobile frame but on a more husky type, the Travelall can pull trailers up to 10,000 lbs, without tailwagging or bottom-dragging. ★ ★ ★ It seats nine adults without any knocking of knees or squeezing of elbows. It can also carry 124-cu. ft. of cargo with the second and third seats removed. Fitness Meet Slated The newest of these Travel information Centers is now in construction stage and probably will not be open until mid-August. NEAR PORT HURON Located on 1-94 near the Blue Water Bridge in Port Huron, the center will be manned by two full-time employees and three seasonal employees. More than 2.5 million pieces of literature advising motorists concerning attractions in t h state are distributed through the centers. ★ ★ ★ Besides 300,000 official state highway maps and 178,000 highway department-produced pamphlets, there are safe-driving pamphlets produced by the Michigan Tourist Council and Regional Tourist Association pamphlets. And then t h e r e are the countless pamphlets offered by local chambers of com- Hie 1967 Detroit Metropolitan Youth Fitness Meet, with Over 2,000 boys and girls representing over 50 communities throughout the Detroit Metropolitan Area competing in the finals, will be held at Lower-Huron Metropolitan Part near Belleville on merce, development issocia-Thursday, July 27. | tions, and different private New Brunswick, Canada. What do you do after youVe seen a river run two ways, and had your car coast backwards, uphill ? Loyalists, more than 40% of the people are French-speaking. Ibis captivating blend of two great cultures is only part of the unique variety offered by the “Picture Province". Dotting the coast are Ashing villages where weather-toughened fishermen wrest their living from the waters of the Atlantic. (Be sure to witness the “Blessing of the Fleet” at Caraquet or Shippegan, a colourful and touching ceremony held every year in July.) There’s a wealth of vacation activity In New Brunswick. Especially this year. For 1967 ia Canada’s 100th birthday. Our Centennial. Naturally, New Brunswick will be joining in the coast-to-coast, year-long party. And as our guest, so will you. Whether it’s the Centenary Festival of Music in New Brunswick is a land vacation contrasts. In its cities of Fredericton, Saint John, Daihousie and Moncton, the. 20th century chares its {dace with the history-filled pkst. The Saint John River, a ribbon of sparkling blue water, tranquilly threads the length of the province. Yet when it reaches the city of Saint John, it becomes the thunderous spectacle called the Reversing Falls, where the river literally runs two ways. At MarteRo Tower overlooking the harbour at Lancaster, guards •till wear the English uniforms of the 17th century. Yet just a few miles away ia town, pretty girls , And although many of the inhabitants of New Brunswick are descended from United Empire Saint John in July, the Shediac Lobster Festival in August, dancing in the streets, or pda folk pageants, this is the year to do New Brunswick. To help you decide exactly where, what, when and how, send in the coupon below. We’ll send you free maps and brochures. Have a nice vacation. Jlt't tor llitli birthday. Join us In aur year-long, cswt-tKSMt Cewtenn CANADIAN GOVERNMENT TRAVEL BUREAU, OTTAWA, CANADA N*M9 New Brunswick, “The Picture Province” to: Sleuthing is sometimes required. At the Sautt Ste. Marie Center, a girl’s purse was found containing only a few photographs as means of owner identification. On the photos was imprinted the name and the location (Redford Falls, Minn.) of the photographer. WWW The photo was mailed to the photographer, who advised that it was of a Miss Lynn Quesen-berry of Redford Falls, so the purse was sent to her. Want O different vacation this year? Talc® a Norton. Go to the mountainL To the seashore. To your old camp site. It will be greatl Comfort, performance, end impeccable finish. All Norton. Service coast to coait. Doily 9-8 ANDERSON SALES » SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph PONTIAC DRIVING TO CANADA? Art Important Message to Our Policyholders To avoid Inconvenience, and possible impoundment af yo**r car in case of a‘n accident, you should carry an official (yoDow) Non-Rotidenca Insurance Card whiledriving in Canada. This card serves as proof that your Insurance meets all the requirements of the Provinces af Canada. We Issue these “yellow cards* to our clients. So en|ay your trip—but da call us several days before you leave. H . protection for TRAVEL and SUMMER FUN! UTTENL0CHER AGENCY INC 306 RIKER BLDG., PONTIAC, FE 4-1881 .. over 35 years of disfingulthod service THE GREATEST TIRE NAME IN RACING... More races are won on Firestone tires than any other makel Timtott*#e& PRESENTS THE WORLD'S FINEST LINE OF HMH-PERf 0RMANCE TIRES FOR V0RR CM! Don't accept an imitation of the original... tNh SUPER SPORTS WIDE OVAL the' tiro shape of tho future! There's only one WIDE OVAL in the whole wide world! SAFEST tire Firestone ever built! |H The new Firestone Super Sports Wide Oval — horsepower to move .than ordinary tires. America’s finest new 1967 high-performance cars are equipped with Firestone Wide Oval tire*. Now you can get them for your present car. You’ll be surprised at how • little it coats to get all the safety and per- rnffmT,0*Firegtone Sup,r SporU ^id* Firestone high-performance passenger tires are built with rugged nylon cord for maximum strength and safety...like famous Firestone racing tires! Our rough and'tough 125 m.p.h.tiro Timtone SUPER SPORTS HT ’Ibis tire ia ia ruggbd as thay come...at 60 m.p.h. or 125 m.p.h. Its special race tire construction inseparably welds the nylon cord body to the high speed treed for maximum strength and safety at sustained high speed. Firectone’s unique wrap-around tread provides cat-claw traction on corners and curves. If you have a car that can dish it out..this tire is for you Saw* Sports "500" - FirnloM TM How much do thay cost? *25°° to Amorica's most asked-for-by-name tira firestone This passenger tire needs no introduo-tknuit’s America’s best known tire. Out of Firestone's racing history...the Firestone "500” comes hungry for actioiL..long mileage, dependable sta- bility and road-hugging traction~.es-pecially on curves. Handsome golden stripe styling and sculptured sidewall enhance the beauty of your car. See the complete Firestone High-Performance line today. -wro 5000 ls all you pay! Drive in today I NO MONEY DOWN...TAKE MONTHS TO PAY! IMPERIAL Lawn & Plant FOOD High Analysis 20-10-5 •5000sq.ft, A*i coverage •Season-long feeding 187 I Limit 2 Additional begs 42.99 aa. Tircsfone Tire and Appliance Center 146 W. HURON 333-7917 drinks clean from the can > chills fast > stacks and stores neatly > disposes easily GAS GRILL Th« smart now gas grill is claan, economical and smokeless. It's ideal for brickyard patio, or even your porch. Now you can enjoy the wonderful flavor of outdoor cooking without the mess and fuss of starting and waiting for a fire. Telephone 333-7812 CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY 28 WEST LAWRENCE ST. PONTiAC, MICHIGAN Go* Lamp, and Grill*. BREWED FLAVOR The Stroh Brswery Company, Mtroit. Michigan 48226 MOMLJUW MAIL COUPON FOR MORE INFORMATION consumers Power SPECIAL OFFER LIMITED TIME ONLY GAS YARD LIGHT A handsome gas post lamp adds beauty and charm to any home. Its soft, ever-present radiance provides a warm welcome to guests — and a reassuring protection against intruders. Buy a grill or lamp or both during thU SPECIAL OFFER! Strohs new dean-Top six pack MODEL 300-8 EM*14 JUROR ng there ina BUICK aiofic& THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1067 Mighty Muskie Fisherman s Test e Automatic transmission • Power Steering and Brakes e Whitewalls, 8.45x15 e Radio e Tinted Windshield e Remote Side View Minor • Custom Chrome Molding e Deluxe Steering Wheel and Carpeting Plus $122.32 Tax and Transfer *2,983 OLIVER BUICK By PAT SMITH Written for NEA The Chippewa Flowage was a sleeping giant in the dawn. Wisps of mist clung like angel hair to the Christmas tress rimming the shore. A lone green rowboat—with two passengers— glided across the slick surface, mirroring the heavy, gray Ay. So still... so peaceful. But beneath the water’s quiet roof the muskie, mightiest of all fresh-water fish, was on the feed—perhaps glaring that moment at the boat carrying the 12-year-old boy and the old man. * * * “Do you think we’ll catch a muskie^ grandpa?’’ asked the bqy. “Well,” said the old man, “the muskie is a very moody critter. Sometimes he’ll feed for days, eating everything in sight including baby ducks and mink and even squirrels and birds perched on low-slung Open Monday and Thursday Nights 210 Orchard Lake Aye. at Williams St. “Other times he’ll just loaf, some say he broods, not even eating. But today is good muskie weather. Yep, Fd say we got al pretty good chance of FE 2-9101 The boy’s hands trembled while rigging his heavy-duty casting rod with special 50-pound test line. ' The boat drifted close to where hundreds of submerged tree stumps formed,a kind of Egyptian palace for the muskie. ’fhe boy began casting amLre-trieving his deep-running lure. The big spinner—simulating a mouse—passed over a large stump. Suddenly, the resident muskie tore through the still depths, swirled the muddy bottom into a cloud, and muscled into the morning air, shaking his long fine head and crashing back on his side. NOT QUITE knees shaking through faded dungarees the boy exclaimed, “Did you see him? He musta been 100 pounds at least!" “Well* 30 pounds a n y w a y,” said the old man. “The world’s record Is under 70 pounds you know. Do you expect to break the world’s record on your first trip?” “Naw," said the boy. “The stupid jerk missed the spinner. He’s not so smart as you/ said." “He’s not, er?" Mid the old man. “How do you know he didn’t miss it on purpose. Maybe he’s showing you he’s wise to those hidden hooks. You’re not fishing bluegills or sunfish, now. This U muskie country." Three hours went by until, finally, the muskie made his move. He smacked the lure as it hit the water. With all his weight the boy set the hook, then again, and again. Now the battle of life and death began. The muskie towed the boat across the Cove, making such powerful dives that sevpral times the rod was pulled completely into the water. But the boy hung on. The old man slowly reached for the gaff and the .22 caliber revolver. For a full hour, he observed the battle. Suddenly, the a p e n t fish lay next to the boat, his eyes filled with fear and fatigue. After the fish was weighed at 34 pounds, the boy looked up at the old man and said quietly, “Thanks, grandpa." In northern Wisconsin, b o y s sometimes become men while fishing for muskie. HEADQUARTERS FOR into Insurance ... Cancelled or Refusedt Wo have several plane available for those who ate experiencing difficulty obtaining Auto Insurance* Easy Payments-Broad Coverage-Fast, Fair Claim Service, (font take a --------.L NOW for fast quotation. ... Safe Drivers Save Money Our Gold Key Auto Policy provides Top Protection at the "lowest possible rate," plat Additional Savings for Accident Free Years. Geld Key offers "Very broad coverage at lew, Low Cast"! We Also Write Motorcycle Insurance. ~A—Auccu± INSURANCE 1044 Joslrn 334-3535 Pontiac, Mich. 48055 NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 3328181. SPECIAL OFFER Charmglow PATIO PAIR NO MONET DOWN 12 MONTHS TO PAY b THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 D—15 Auto Can Be Life-Saver Too EXCHANGE OF STARES - A young moose exchanges looks with a group of tourists and rangers on ble Royale. The moose herd on the island in Lake Superior numbers about 600. A a pack of wolves keep moose from becoming too numerous for the range capacity. No hunting is permitted. ENJOY YOUR BOATING COMPLETEIY! you a, ---------------- fire, theft, or damage to your boat, motor and trailer at all timea—winter or summer-on the water or on the highway. You may even iniure your sports equipment such as scuba gear, skis and ski belts. F/M Blue Water Insurance may be extended to protect you in case of accidents involving swimmers, water skiers or other boaters. Enjoy the fun of boating without worry. Be fully protected. Phone us now. DANIELS HEADQUARTERS js»osa rw ■ycarse«Q. TRIERCURY OUTBOARDS 3S/l0to110H.P. Also M.F.Q. and Chrysler (Lone Star) Been and Sail Beats. CLIFF DREYER 18210 N. Holly Rd. Holly, Mich. ME 4-6111 TOP DEALS NOW . . SAVINGS ON ... MERCURY OUTBOARDS 124 "Boating*. Ona Port Of Call" . 1268 S. Weadward at Adam* Read * JO Mm Ml 141SI Man., Thereofrl»-S COVERED BRIDGE — There are a few covered bridges still being used in Michigan. This one is Langley Bridge, crossing the St. Joseph River near Centrevilie. They are favored stops during fall color tours. Ontario Provincial Parks You’re stranded at least dozen miles from any possible bind of assistance — and that in a direction of Which you’re not certain. What now? All your instincts tell you that doing something is better than nothing. Walking would be better than just waiting, they say, And your instincts are 1 per cent wrong, International truck authorities suggest. ■ ' ★ ★ ★ With the possible exception of food, your normally-equipped truck or car has everything you need to survive and await help for days on end, if need be: Hera's a list of some' of these needs: (I) Shelter; (2) Water and a drinking cap; (!) A stove and m ate k e s; (4) Blankets; (!) First aid *UP-plies; (!) Signal flares. Your vehicle doesn’t have them you say? Oh yes it does. The first requirement, shelter, is supplied by the cab or body of your unit, according to International. That isn’t hard, to recognize and appreciate, but finding the rest of the supplies among the parts and accessories requires a little more ingenuity. They’re there, nevertheless. As for water and a drinking cup, says International, your, radiator carries, gallons o | water that you can drink in an emergency and the fuel strainer bowl on your engine or a hubcap can serve admirably as a cup. ■ %», * * If your radiator water is rusty or dirty, it can be filtered through a handkerchief. If it is contaminated by anti-freeze possitily there is snow on the ground you can melt. Your radiator’s petcock, of course, makes a perfect faucet. TIRE STOVES What about the stove and matches? No, the stove isn’t your unit’s heater. You’ll need your gas for other tasks. Rather, your stove is your tftes. Each .iof them will burn feverishly for I four to six hours. tires or oil in a hubcap that can be burned to send billowing clouds of Mack smoke Skyward, a rear view mirror that can flash the brilliant rays of the sun with direction for many milks tad an unscrewed sealed beam that can be pointed where you wish to pierce the blackest nights. deviea can be your horn. So far, only the surface of survivai equipment your vehicle carries has been scratched, but you should be getting the idea. ★ * “Every motor**vehicle has everything you really need to stay alive except food,” confirms a California highway patrolman, “but not one motorist in a hundred, when he finds himself, plain out of luck, sees his transportation as a survival kit. RANGER SPEAKS His first inclination is to toss away the keys — you’d be astounded how many people do — and set out for help. Too often, he’s beyond help when we find him a couple of miles down the road, dead from exhaustion, heat or cold." Mms TOURIST CABINS MOTELS Air Conditioning—Radta- TalavUian— Family Units with 2 Baths Food Rofrothmonti Noxt Door Ptntire, Mtoh. . towns ft MSI COME ONE-COME ALL CQMPACTSCADILLACS 4-PIY NYLON Following is n list of provin- •«»•* «» Mi H!"r#!’.* cial parks in Ontario; camping is permitted in all, but some are quite limited; this is indicated in the descriptions: RONDEAU PROVINCIAL PARK—S«c-‘ ‘ provincial park to Ontario, to 1194. is located on Lake «r Morpeth off rwod equally forest of pins, i tor ond cherry. The park** 4 eonducM stop.______ ... ... Irla, 4-V9 miles Iwy. 3. It* 11,540 acre: Info marsh, forest, and place for migratory wm » especially ducks and shore-birds, fowl shooting ll permitted I special licence obtainable In M during the open season. The parti** If—I MttMM Id _______shagbark hickory traas. tfoturaWijryams consist of musaum exhibits, labal i, conducted walks. TURKEY POINT PROVINCIAL PARK — 778 acraa of natural oak forest ov looking Lake Erie; located 13 ml 'tiuth of Slmcoe and nine miles so t Hwv. L it has a sand beech i Icnlc facilities.. WHEATLEY PROVINCIAL PARK -sted on Laic* Erie, approximately i slla east of the village of Wheatley ... .iwy. 3. It has one mile of sand beach and picnic facilities, and. IN “ * traitor sites art spaced thf forest of hickory, oak, mat cherry, walnut and dogwood. A legion, formed by I | soy crea ks, — **- is - sand beach and swimming area —•— —- pgre has s r—— _ __________BHIr sites, picnic *lH2.16 Buick, Cadillac, Chrysler,* y Continental, Lincoln, Olds , 855.14, 885.14, 845,15, 885/900/915.15 *19“ fiUAROIAN PREMIUM NYLfiN U-S.ROYAL CITY TIRE Y 508 North Perry ot Paddock - Ntor Kmart Headquarters for Chrome Whaals FF A AAAA Wire Ovals • Racing Slicks lE 0‘UaJUU 4 brand-new Mercs featuring new THUNDERBOLT ignition without breaker points tr Mticury, Toad 4u Ik, Wk. KitMutfor M I* rig, U4. BtoWM tf Smutch Cog, See It In the Galaxie 500., Vacutloa This Year la FORD COUNTRY! ...OR AM OF THE GREAT NEW FORDS or the FUuhy Mustang... *11AU OF FORD COUNTRY'S MUCTION AT It Only TakeemMfaute to Get a Better Deal John MeAulif f e Ford Ml OAKLAND AYE. “Pontiac’s Hometown Ford Dealer” Ft Mill D—lfr THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears SALE... Pre-Holiday Fishing, Boating and Camping Values . Choose a Rod, Reel or Tackle Box at This Price Your Choice 9 44 Each Spin Casting Pack Rod. So convenient to/cany and store! 5-piece rod has its own carrying case. Tabular fiberglas. Light action. Spin Casting Reel. Machine-cut gears are smooth and quiet. On-off anti-reverse lever and star drag. Die-cast aluminum frame, 8-point pick-up. 5-Piece Spinning Pack Rod. 14VMhch long sections conveniently store in carrying case. Tubular fiberglas. With natural cork grip. Spinning Reel. Smooth, powerful drag is easily adjusted for controlling big fish. On-off anti-reverse dick. Ball-bearing drive. Spin Casting Rod-Reel Combination. Light action rod has aluminum handle for long wear, natural cork grip. Three zinc-plated steel guides. Reel features internal cams for bail release. Adjustable drag. 3-Tray Tackle Box. Durable Cycolac plastic. Plastic, foam grip bolder protects reel. Cantilever action trays. 10xl2-Foot High Wall Tents 7-foot center height for stand-up Regular $119 comfort. Cotton drill fabric. Nylon screen door and windows. Aluminum Frarhe Screen Houses Fiberglas screen, outside screen houses. Water repellent and mildew resistant, sheds rain and son. 2 sizes, lOxlO-ft and 12xl2-ft Center height is 8-ft. Ted Williams 4-Lb. Sleeping Bags 4 lbs. of bonded Vycron® polyester Regular $24.99 fiber-fill for warmth. Big 33x79-in. *■ tfkOO Cotton duck cover. ■ WH NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Pa 9xll-ft. Outside Frame Tent. Holds approximately four dots. Gold color cotton drill fabric. Three nylon screen windows. Regular $79.... *04 Sd Youth-Style Umbrella Tent. 7x7-ft. base. Aluminum l outside frame. 5-ft. 6-in. center height. 6-ox. cotton drill J fabric. Regular 827.99 .... ...........'••• 25” [j j| | 2-Tray Tackle Box. Made of lightweight Cycolac plastic ... durable and long-lasting. Recessed handles. Pebble grain finish. Regular S3.99..... • 344 Single Mantle Lantern. Compact, but gives a. steady dependable light. 2-pint fuel tank... 10” \ Nylon Air Mafttress. “1” beam construction. Strong and long-lasting. With S tubes, single valve inflation* 72x30-in. also.................................. Ted Williams Cheat Waders. Triple-laminated material .. . rubber sealed between 2 layers of cotton. Heavy robber boot. Regnlar S17.99 .... ...... 13” Reversible Vinyl Poncho. One size fits whole family. Brown on one side, red on the other....... 233 2-Burner Stove. Folds to 18xllVi-in. Holds 2Vi pints of fnel. Blue and orange color.... ........... 12” Lure Kit Assortment. Choose from spinners, spoons, flies, poppers. In plastic ease .. ........ 88« , Sporting Goods, Perry St. Ba*rm*nt Phone Sears for More Details on These Values ^Satisfaction guaranteed or your money bqck” SEARS Downtown Pontiac FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRE^P 0Vffl The Weather PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 —40 PAGES ASSOCIATED mess UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL adrisedtourtetsaixiotWAmerieanson BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Egyptian way between its southern port of Eilat President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s threat and the Red Sea is Mocked, tassasssaa g*r «**■»■*. Desert that his forces will dose Israel’s •*:* *»»*».* only direct access to the Red Sea to all ‘fn ± Israeli ships and other ships carrying J^teMte^oPtoLdic ? y strategic goods to Israel. \~ whether he was optmusttc. Israel has vowed to fight if the water- • In Washington, the State Department he wooid block the Gulf of Aqaba, State Department officials'told editors and broadcasters at a foreign policy brief* ing that the United States would consider the dosing of the waterway a very serious matter. A 1957 U.S. commitment to Israel, considered still in effect, defined the gulf as an international waterway and said the United States “is prepared to exercise the right of free and innocent passage” on behalf of American ships. Britain was reported ready to back any United Nations action against interference with free movement of ships through the Gulf. Foreign Secretary George Brown was flying to Moscow today for talks with Soviet leaders on the Middle East crisis and other world problems. TROOPS STATIONED "* , Since die 1956 Suez war, troops of the U.N. peace force in the ^Middle East had been stationed at Sharm el Sheikh, on the Egyptian side of the entrance to the gulf, to prevenHdterference with Israeli shipping to and from Eilat. Egypt, Syria and Jordan. About 10,000 Americas are estimated to be in the four countries. NO ORDERS US. officials fsaid, however, that no orders have been given to the US. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean to evacuate U.S. citizens or take any other action. A few hours before Nasser announced With the withdrawal of the U.N. force last weeka( Nasser’s demand, Egyptian forces returned to Sharm el Sheikh and once more trained their guns on the shipping channel through which Israel gets most of its oil from Iran. 200 SI/// Missing Brussels Fire worst fire since 323 persons were killed Pierre Bolfo, vice president of the jn a circus fire in Niteroi, Brazil, Dec. ' store, said the fire broke out simul-17,1961. BRUSSELS (*l — Arson was suspected today as the cause of a Brussels department store fire >n which some 200 persons were reported missing. At least 13 persons were known dead. Fire brigade officers said 100 persons were injured. A spokesman for the store said the list of the missing, both customers and 'store employes, was still growing. ft was feared it would be the woirld’s taneously at opposite corners of the building on the first and third floors. He said the whole building was in flames in 10 or 15 minutes. The fire roared through the five-story Innovation department store at the peak of yesterday’s midafternoon shopping rush. , ENTIRE BLOCK It quickly engulfed the steel and concrete structure and burned out the entire block of buildings. ‘ A police officer spoke of other places where"the-fire seemed to have flared at the same time. STORE THREATENED A store offical said a number of threatening telephone calls and letters had been received criticizing the store for a two-week campaign to sell American New Vote in Senate on Tax Ceiling Due On May 13, a group of young pro-Peking Belgian Communists entered the store to protest against the sales campaign. they wore white T-shirts with anti-American slogans lettered in red. One of the young demonstrators was qouted in the Communist weekly Voix du Peuple as Saying: “Neither arrest nor jail nor firing squad will ever stop us.” / interjected Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy. “the wheels will be off the buggy if this resolution prevails,” warned Sen. John McCauley, D-Wyandotte, referring to the tax plan. “Fiscal reform is more important than this resolution,” said Sen. Harry DeMaso, R- Battle Creek, chairman of the Senate Taxation Committee. In cither Capitol developments yesterday: The House saluted four former Michigan governors in a special afternoon sessiOn,then returned in the evening but tookreflagl action. • The state selective'seryice system ordered draft boards to proVidq^l,287 men tor Army induction in July. • Gov. Romney welcomed a group of touring Japanese governors. LANSING (AP) - The Senate last night agreed to reconsider its vote on ' a resolution some .senators claim would “take the wheels off the buggy” of the entire state income tax package. The resolution would permit voters to decide in the November 1968 election if they want a 3 per cent ceiling on any state or local income tax, “Nothing could be more destructive to the tax plan than this resolution,” declared Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley. “It was turned down once. The logjam was broken last week. Don’t bring it back again. Let sleeping dogs lie,” Levin pleaded. Today, firemen combed the ruins for bodies. They pledged not to leave the scene until all bodies were recovered. WITNESSES SOU GHT Brussels radio -sent out repeated calls for witnesses of the fire to' help police in the investigation. U Thant Flies To Middle East 3 Communities Finalize Memorial Parade Plans A girl on the Innovation staff said of the tragedy: “The most terrible thing is to discourage people who don’t believe yen. Relatives of missing persons don’t want to accept the truth. We keep telling them that aU those trapped in the fire are dead. They keep hoping. They keep ending at the Civil War Monument In front of City Hall. There will be ceremonies at the monument including a special wreath presentation. Plans have been finalized for next Tuesday’s Manorial Day parades in' Pontiac, Sylvan Lake and Waterford Township. - Hundreds of civic, social, military, police and school groups are expected to march irr the parades commemorating the nation’s fighting men who have died in battle. Pontiac’s annual parade will begin at the intersection of Oakland and Saginaw at 19 a.m. Marchers will proceed south on Saginaw to Auburn, tuniing east on Auburn and north onto East Wide track LEAPS FROM STORE-People watch from the street as a woman leaps from a burning department store in Brussels, Belgium, yesterday. Some 200 persons are still missing. The toll so tar is 13 dead and 100 injured. “The only thing that was broken last week was the taxpayers’ pocketbooks,” “The basement, ground floor, first and secomf floor Were evacuated in relative calm,” saiaBoQe. “But it was very DeMaso’s committee put tobether the different with the upper floors,” tax package, estimated to raise (239 million a year, that passed the Senate 22-16 last lliursday. TWO VOTES SHORT-------------2——“ The Senate vote in favor of putting the 5 per cent limitation on the ballot was 24-12. This was two votes short of the 26-vote, two thirds majority needed for passage. ***■ ’’ ” Sen. Charles Zollar, R-Benton Harbor, had given notice last Thursday he would ask reconsideration of the resolution Weatherman Says Nimbus to Reign Following, a gathering will be held at the veterans’ plot in Perry Mount Park Cemetery with memorial services including- plaeing of the wreath. ------- Marchers in the Waterford Township parade will meet at Dixie and Frembes, Occasional showers and thundershow-also at 10 a.m. The David BeBsle Post ers forecast tor today are expected to 1008 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars mil be conducting the parade which will march along Dixie" to Williams Lake Auto Hearings RomneylsUrged WASHINGTON if) — Republican njei H. .-^I. Li m hers of Congress from Michigan urg rUnCrUulcU DV Gov. Romney today to become a. < " clared candidate tor president. Uf' ^ A A They promised “to do everything i ( KQP Ol v/Vl can to convince Mm to become a caw » date, to nominate him and to elect bi The weatherman predicts temperatures will be somewhat wanner with the low in the 40s tonight, the high climbing to near 70 tomorrow. Partly cloudy and mild is the out- Mayors Return to Their Homes Services will follow in the Drayton Plains Cemetery. The memorial parade in Sylvan Lake is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. at the Daniel Whitfield Elementary School. Marchers will go to the Veterans Memorial Park, Pontiac Drive and Garland, for a dedication service. to thatoffice. DETROIT UP) — The auto industry stood accused today of trying to turn theTederarifutdsafetyftearinf rntoar The statement was issued at a news conference,-Ja-the names of all the Republican legislators from the state except Rep. Gerald R. Ford, the Republican leader in the House. Ford said, “Aai Republican leader of the House of Representatives I should not and therefore will not endorse any candidate for the Republican presidential nomination above all others prior to the Republican convention. ” — He waited to present his motion until after 10 p.m. yesterday night, when some senators had drifted out of the chamber. The vote to reconsider the Thursday vote was 14-12. -- Morning fufltherly winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour will continue. ~~ A brisk 36 was the low recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The mercury reading at 1 p.m. was 60. •Mayors of Pontiac and Monroe were, back in their home towns ^oday following an exchange of offices yesterday in observance of Michigan Week. Hie charge was made yesterday by Robert M. O’Mahoney, general counsel of the National Traffic Safety Bureau. It came during the opening session of a three-day hearing at which auto companies aired- their protests against -the timing and content of one of the government’s 20 safety standards. O’Mahoney’s ire was aroused while General Motors engineers, representing the industry, showed some of their 1968 car interior hardware, items such as Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., who returned to the city last night, offered some insights and comparisons of the-two cities. - “Life Is a little bit calmer there although they have projects they’re work- He cited the work Monroe is doing toward eliminating its poverty pocket and commented on its industry. door handles, window levers and seat changed from 1967 specifications but that they still do not meet the government’s safety standards for 1968 cars. Oxford History-rich village is profiled - PAGE A-5. Waterford Twp. Rezoning request for apartments is denied — PAGE A-3, Golf Champ Kettering wins Poqtlac Press Prep Golf Tourney—PAGE C-L * “I was amazed that you wouldn’t find mare air pollution,” he said. PEOPLE ‘CONGENIAL’ Taylor said he found the Monroe people “very congenial.” Mayor and Mrs. Morton R. Cohn completed a fast-moving flay in Pontiac by dining at, the Machos Red Fox Restaurant hi Bloomfield Township before returning to Monroe. Cohn, 43, is serving his first term in office in the downriver city after unseating Monroe’s incumbent mayor by a 2-1 margin in his first attempt rat elective office. V ‘ - J*v The industry has maintained that meeting the standard — one governing design of car interiors to afford maximum protection to car occupants in event of . a crash — is practically impossible. O’Mahoney objected vigorously to GM’s testimony as he declared, “They are trying to make idiots out of the US. government.” He called GM’s presentation a sideshow and added, “This presentation should be conducted In a manner befitting the fact that it involves the safety of the citizens of the country.” Russell A. Potter, hearing examiner for the National Traffic Safety Bureau, denied O’Mahooey’s request that ail the GM testimony be tossed out. He said O’Mahoney would have a chance for cross-examination at today’s session. Edward Adkins ofGM’s legal staff denied that the industry was Acting in bad faith. Astrology Bridge ... He drew envious comments from focal officials with talk of expected construction by the Detroit Edison Ok of a (200-million power plant in Monroe by 1970. WOULD DOUBLE VALUATION Installation of the plant would nearly double the city’s assessed valuation, Cohn noted. Clark Gal- Jr. yesterday during Mayor Exchange Day. Looking on are PRESENTS KEY — Monroe Mayor Pro Tern Clark Gal- Jr. yesterday during Mayor Exchange Day. Looking on are lagher Jr. '(right)* Government Day activities chairman, pre- (from left) Dr. Anthony P. Wltham, general chairman of sents a key to Monroe to Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Michigan Week activities in Monroe, and Mrs. Taylor. TlIE-EO&mC PRESS. TUESBAV. MAX 23, 1967 Birmingham Area News Court May Extend 1-Man, 1-Vote Rule Maple Forking Ban Enforced ing 65 parking spaces away from downtown merchants. “The people haven't yet been educated” are a &day test by the city and will be in effect every day except Sunday. Some opposition was Voiced to the move by the Birmingham-Bloomfield Chamber of Com-merce. However, the commission decided to proceed with the plan which was approved by a commission vote last week. BIRMINGHAM - Beware, parkers on Maple Street. The City Commission ordered teeth put in the restrictions on parking between 4 and 6:30 p.m., with a $7 fine plus possible towing charges. It was pointed out at last night's meeting that some parkers have been using the street so long they haven't noticed the signs, which were placed Friday and Saturday. The no-parking restrictions to recent street innovations, he One commissioner, Robert Page, voiced a strong objection. He said he was opposed to tak- . SAIGON (AP) - Gov. John A. Love of Colorado, chairman of the National Republican Governors’ Conference, said today “serjous consideration’* should be given to blockading Hair phong harbor, in North Vietnam." . “If supplies continue craning in to South Vietaam from North Vietnam, it would be difficult to see an end to the war,” Love said prior to his departure for Tokyo after an eight-day tour of South Vietnam. Viet Truce Pervails, but 10 Yanks Die 3-Judge U.S. Court Hears Anfi-DST Suit DETROIT W — Two private citizens went before a three-judge federal Court today in an llth-hour effort to block any move to put Michigan on Daylight Saving Time. A Wayne County woman and an Oakland County man asked for an injunction to prevent Secretary of State James Hare and the State Board of Canvassers from certifying petitions Stale Certifies Tax Valuation Oakland County’s 1967 equalized valuation of $3,034,706,025, set last month by the board of supervisors, was certified yesterday by the State Tax Commission. The new county valuation is a $345-million increase over the 1966 equalized valuation of $2,689 billion. Herman W. Stephens, director of the County Equalization Department, attributed the 12.85 per cent valuation bike to county growth and an upward trend in property values particularly on acreage in the outlying areas. In setting the state equalized valuation of Michigan’s 83 counties at $29.89 billion yesterday, the State Tax Commission made no changes in its preliminary valuation report issued May 8. ★ * ★ The statewide valuation increase is $1.5 billion. NO CHALLENGE Yesterday’s session of the State .Tax Commission was the first time in years that no county representatives appeared to challenge assessment figures at the annual hearing that precedes the equalized value de-terminatin. Equalized valuation is t he which demand a referendum switching from Eastern Standard Time. * * * The hearing before the special tribunal, transferred here from a single-judge court in Grand ■ " i, came just a day before the canvassers were to meet in Lansing, possibly to make a decision that could put state clocks ahead one hour, perhaps before the end of the week. Court sources said the likelihood was the judges would dismiss the petition until remedies were exhausted in state courts. CONTENTION IN SUIT Hearing the petition were Judges Noel P. Fox, George Edwards and Thomas P. Thornton. ★ A suit filed in District Court in Grand Rapids by Detroit attorney George E. Lee contends that the federal law which tablished Daylight Savings Time provided that all states must exempt themselves from the ruling before April 30 or on Oct. 29. WWW No change can therefore be made until Oct. 29, Lee’s suit claims. Meanwhile, the Board of Can-assers vowed "To try for prompt answer on tee issue when they tackle the question on Wednesday. ★ ★ ★ 'This assumes that the court n’t intervene today,” s a i d Mrs. Esther Waite of East Lansing, board chairman. ★ * ★ If the board approves the pe- titions submitted to it, the approval could automatically switch the state to East light Time. This would mean turning the clocks forward one hour. taxes. Members of the present board include the 24 township super-- visors anti delegates appointed by City, governing bodies. All members of the smaller board under the one-man, one-vote principle would be elected. We will make a careful study of yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling,” Bronson said. “It appears that the reapportionment plan is very much alive.” OLD DECISION y “We reserved the question whether the apportionment of municipal or county legislative agencies is governed by Reynolds V. Sims,” Justice William O. Douglas said for ^united court. ' l In the historic Reynolds-Sims decision in June 1964, the court held that seats in both houses of state legislatures must be apportioned on a population basis. In the Kent County case, Douglas said “the principle of one-man, one-vote has no relevancy” because the board is not directly elected by the vot- JOB FAIR — Mrs. Mary Muldrow (left) telephone operator, and Mrs. Donna Noel, personnel worker were Among representatives of some 30 companies who visited Pontiac Central High School yesterday. School officials and the Pontiac Area Urban League jointly arranged for hundreds of high school students to discuss educational requirements and career opportunities with different firms. The case arose when school patrons filed suit to prevent the county Board of Education from detaching certain schools from the City of Grand Rapids and attaching them instead to the County. ★ ★ ★ Douglas said that if a state provides for an election of a local official or agency, whether administrative, legislative judicial, the one-man, one-vote principle must be applied. The - Republican party was formally organized in Jackson, Mich. July 6, 1854, at a convention during which the dele- _____________________ _____gates nominated candidates basis for all loc a l property from the Whigs, Free-Soilers and Democrats. The Weather Full Us S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Increasing cloudiness today with occasional showers or thundershowers likely later this afternoon or early tonight. Showers or thundershowers ending tonight and milder. High 62 to 67. Low tonight 42 to 48. Partly cloudy and mild Wednesday. Thursday’s outlook: Partly cloudy and mild. Southerly winds 10 to 20 miles today. ht ||| NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for parts of Michigan and Florida. It will be warmer in the Ifiaaiasippi Valley and cooler in the northern Plains. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A time bomb today tore apart the office of a Cuban unity group that hours earlier urged Cuban exile HoldupVictim Found Locked in Car Trunk Burglar Gets Blame for Fire A $13,000 fire at a Pontiac business early today was blamed by city fire officials, op a burglar. ♦ ★ * « Two pumps and a ladder und-er-the command- of Asst.- Chief Lee Nyo answered an alarm at E. Howard, shortly before and were at the scene nearly three hours. Fire Marshal Charles Metz' said the blaze was apparently set, either accidently or intentionally, by someone in the processof abreak-in. Metz said the fire started in mi array of papers strewn about during the ransacking of an office. Nothing valuable was believed missing from the building, Authorities said $10,000 of the damage was to the building, the remainder to contents. Repaii iirsAlter Traffic Routes in the Area-, Cuban Unity Group Office Ripped by Bomb in Miami A 61-year-old Pontiac man, found locked in the trunk of his car yesterday by city police, told officers he was forced into the trunk by a man and woman who robbed him. Daniel Coleman of 37 Crawford said he was approached by (he bandits as he left a bar at Sanford and Perry. The man shoved a sharp object into his back, probably a knife or small gun, he said, and ordered him into a car. He told police he-was forced to drink a half-quart of whisky after the pair took $115 from his wallet. The man-then kicked him in the ribs, Coleman, said, made him get into the trunk of hisownear. I workers to drop plans for to-day’s general strike.. .. •______ But the 24-hour strike against businesses already was under way to protest the U.S.' detention of Felipe Rivero, one of the most aggressive anti-Castro leaders. ★ * * The strike’s avowed aim was to pressure the federal government into releasing Rivero from Dade County jail where he staged his. own protest by continuing his hunger strike, The hlast in thi» “Little Hava-a” section demolished the offices of Cuban Exile Representation, a group formed in 1964. ' 15,000 TO STAY OFF JOBS’ Cuban strike leaders predicted that 15,000 Cuban exile work-ers would stay off their jobs in Miami alone. They said many Cubans in New York, New Jersey, California and Other exile centers had promised to join the protest. Dr. Ernesto Freyre, head Exile Representation and one of the attorneys who helped arrange the release of Bayof Pigs prisoners in 1962, -said he supported the protests against Riv-ero’s arrest. — Armored Truck Robbed; Guards! z beared Hostagesi BROCKTON, Mass. W* -Robbers wielding submachine - guns cleaned eut-a Brink’s, lne,, armored truck today and apparently took two guards as hostages, "state police saidL The truck was found abandoned, with the motor running, just across the town line from Brockton. Empty moneybags were! strewn on the ground but there : was no sign of the truck crew. There was no immediate in- SAIGON (AP) - A 24-hour truce for Buddha’s birthday, prevailed over much of Vietnam today, but the U.S. Command 10 Americans were killed 17 wounded in Communist attacks since the allied ce fire went into effect at midnight Monday. The U.S. Command also announced that in the 24 hours preceding the cease-fire, three American planes were downed over North Vietnam and two over South Vietnam, while U.S. fliers shot down another Communist MIG. Four American pilots were listed as missing. A U.S. spokesman said aerial reconnaissance reports were not yet available to indicate whether the North Vietnamese were taking advantage of the truce to increase their movement of supplies'to South Vietnam as they have done in the past truce perils. The allied stand-down is to end at midnight — noon EDT. The Communist forces had announced they would observe a 48-hour truce ending at 7 a.m. Wednesday Saigon time, or 7 p.m. EDT tonight. The U.S. Command said in the first-12 hours of the one-day ai-lied truce, 21 incidents had been reported, with a dozen of theqi considered “significant.” formation on the number of robbers or the amount of money stolen. An Abington policeman, William Donaldson, discovered the abandoned truck, in this, town some 20 miles south of Boston. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated § some 90 reported incidents | the past 24-hours.------ A breakdown of causes for;.police action: . Arrests—11 Vandalisms—14 Burglaries—11 Larcenies—19 Assaults—14 I—Disorderly Persons—2 _ Armed Robberies—2 Indecent Exposures^ Property Damage Accidents—14 Injury Accidents—4 Road repairs have caused 9ome temporary changes in rea traffic routes. Oakland Avenue and Saginaw Street between Lafayette and West Wide Track are now open to two-way traffic. North Paddock, however, was scheduled to close today between Mount Clemens and Michigan for M59 construction, according to Joseph Keren, traffic engineer. The area should be blocked for about five to six weeks, he said. North and southbound traffic should use East Boulevard. Oakland. elosed to two-way traffic since April 27, was open last Thursday as a one-way northbound street. ★ ★ Improvements needed to make Cass one-way southbound were constructed at the intersections. Decision Due on Grant for Youth Corps Project City commissioners are expected'to consider acceptance tonight of ,a federal grant designed to finance a youth corps program in the Pontiac Police Department this summer. AT Justice Department announcement released through the office of U.S. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., two weeks ago notified local officials of a grant of some $15,000. The announcement, which caught dfy' officials by surprise, triggered a flurry of last-minute arrangements prior to informal study of the project by commissioners. The program is aimed at 14-and 15-year-old boys from eco-nomically disadvantaged homes. . * * ★ _ Thirty boys will be selected by a joint police-citizen committee and will receive $10 for a 20-hour work week in addition to a $200 lump sum at conclusion of the program, according to the proposal. In other business, commissioners will receive a pro{ dinance establishing a license fee for scrap-metal processors and will also be presented with a six-month report from the Pontiac Transit Corp. CD Offici Rush to Fill Shelter WASHINGTON (AP) - Civil Defense officials—saying about 70 million Americans would be unshielded in case of nuclear attack in 1972—are trying to fallout shelter potential added to planned buildings. Officials said Pven the esfi- mate of 70 million unprotected persons or about one-third of the U.S. population—assumes present approved shelter programs will be carried forward for five years to the time when Communist China is expected to becapabfeof launching at light nuclear attack on the United States.' / ★ * * Because of the growing need for shelter spaces, officials today, the agency is embarking trial, direct-mail campaign to persuade architects and owners of planned buildings to add fallout shelter potential to their projects. This would mean incorporating various design features into new buildings to protect occupants from radiation in a nuclear emergency. The idea is to accomplish architectural and engineering changes early in the project at tittle or no extra cost and without significantly changing the building’s appearance. The Office of Civil Defense estimates that to date more than 158 million shelter spaces have been located in large buildings but “not^all of this shelter space is located close to where the people are.” Romney Is Given Scroll Signed by Utah Backers From UPI Wire Story A group of prominent Utah Republicans yesterday gave Gov. Romney a 1,500-foot scroll signed by 5,000 backers of the new “Utahns-for-Romney” committee, the fourth Romney—for President state committee. The Utahns, led by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett and Reps. Laurence J. Burton and Sherman P. Lloyd, also showed artwork of Romney-for-President and bumper stickers. Romney, greeting the Utah delegation in the living room Of his home in Bloomfield Hills, smiled and said Us likeness on tee poster artwork was excellent. But he didn’t 'commit himself to run for the 1868 GOP presidential domination. Romney sat in the middle of the room while the delegation gathered around .him. Telegrams were read from other ■ " ’V Utah Republicans, all endorsing Romney for president. | The scroll was presented by Robert B. Young, an insurance executive and former chairman of the Davis County, Utah, Republican organization who heads tiie Utahns-for-Romney. group. Romney chuckled when one said he dated Romney’s wife, Lenore before the governor met her. The Romneys are Mormons and have deep family ties in Utah. Preceding the visit of the Utah delegation, the Romneys were breakfast hosts to a group of nine Japanese governors here on a seven-state visit as part of an exchange program between the National Governors Conference oftheUnited States and the Japanese Governors Association, sponsored by the Department of State. Romney was in the delegation that visited Japan in 1965. Consider Port Blockade, Colorado'sJ.ove Urges throughout tee city. Morice Barnett, a chamber official and owner of Bloomfield Fashions, warned that in the winter, cars would be passing right next to the sidewalk and throwing slush at pedestrians and store windows. - The commissioners listened to objections, promised to consider them, but ordered the 30-day test to proceed with enforcement of the ban. It has been estimated that as much as 80 per cent of North Vietnam’s imports are brought in through Haiphong. Love said he is not in favor of stopping the U.S. bombing of Norte Vietnam. WEARING TWO HATS’ “I’m here wearing two he said, “both as an individual and as a representative of tee governors’ conference.” The governor traveled extensively'. through South Vietnam, visiting military installations in all four corps areas and pacification projects as well. His tour included one day in Thailand, a flight over the demilitarized zone and visits to the. carrier Kitty Hawk, several Vietnamese villages and Marine, Army and, Special Forces units. -★ ★ * 1 don’t think the war will be won militarily,” Love said. T don’t mean that the military isn’t necessary: as shield,” he said, adding teat political support for a viable, ongoing society in South Vietnam would in the end settle the war. ■'* * ★ ‘I think it can be won but I think it’s going to be long and drawn out/’ Love said. The final meeting on redis-tricting of elementary schools for next semester will be conducted by the school board at tee gym of Baldwin School, Chester and Maple, at 8 p.m. The meeting was scheduled fra* the gymnasium to accommodate the large number of parents expected to attend Jo protest tee transfer of their children: Numerous proposals and counterproposals are up for review. Waterford Airs State Award to First-Year Waterford JC Wpterford Township Jaycee W. Cecil Stricklin, 30, of 3325 Angelus was named the outstandingfirst-* year ‘ member! of the Michigan! Jaycees St the I group’s recentH annual conven-g” tion in Traverse! City. As recipient! of the top 1966-1 67 State Spoke! Award, Sticktim will represent the Michigan Jaycees in national Spoke competition at tee U.S. Jaycee convention in Baltimore, Md., the week of June 25. Police Morale The five outstanding f i ri t-year Jaycees in the U.S. will be selected at tee convention. Waterford Township Democratic Trustee Robert E. Richmond last night said he is concerned that a morale problem may exist in the township police department. Talking at the Township Board meeting, Richmond mentioned two recent resignations as possibly indicating a morale problem. Detective Sgt. Ernest Mann is resigning from the department effective May 26. Det. Jerry St, Souver resigned from the force a few months ago. Supervisor of suggestions and ECR (error “Cause removal) at Pontiac Motor Division, Stricklin recently was elected internal vice president of the Waterford Township Jaycees for 1967-68. Spoke stands for service, participation, orientation, knowledge and enthusiasm. In the Michigan contest, first-year Jaycees from chapters throughout the state were judged in three areas: activities in and out of Jaycees during their first year, a written examination and an oral review board. “I think it’s time we look into the morale situation of the policedepartment,” said Richmond. “I think it behooves the board” to find out why Mann resigned, he said. The board offered no further comments and did not take any action. Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson mentioned that the Waterford Township Police and Fire Civil Service Commission will meet Thursday night. Police Chief Wiliam Stokes said whenever a man leaves , a small police department, it becomes a big issue. Graduates' Gift: No Long Talks LESLIE, Mich. (AP) - Leslie school board members have ruled out long-winded graduation speeches which, they say, have been trite and mostly unrelated to tee circumstances, This year, the board plans to have a school graduate make a short talk “pertinent” to the occasion and then put the spotlight on accomplishments of the graduates. WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. Supreme Court has hinted it may require apportionment of local government bodies by the one-man, one-vote .yardstick it has tied to Congress and state legislatives. But it said yesterday that a case Involving tee Kent County School Boara, Urkhd Rapids, and three other cases did not have the ingredients for such a ruling at this time. The implication that tee one-man, one-vote principle may be applied to bodies directly elected by the people was hailed by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson who also served on the five-member committee teat drafted a reapportionment plan for the board of supervisors. “I am convinced that one-man, one-vote will be applied to legislative bodies elected by the people,” Bronson said. „ .-—’ * * . * “It seems clear,” Bronson idded, “that tee SupremeTourt holds that the one-man, one-vote principle does not apply |at the county level when no direct election is involved but applies in cases of elections.” PLAN COMPLETE The reapportionment commit tee two weeks ago completed a plan based on the one-man, one-vote principle teat would divide the county into 27 districts with one board of supervisors member elected from each district.. This plan would trim the present board from 87 to 27 members. PRESS THE PONTIAC 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48058 ..TUESDAY, MAY 23,1907 , \ ■ KOW1U H. W—IB, n Chairman ot tbi Botrd - ^h. MAMMi Bamt Jr Rub Ricbau U. Bawauu Treasurer and Jlnance Olllcar . Good Citizens Pay U.S. Crime Bill Crime as it has steadily fastened its hold on the Nation, has been viewed mainly in its, social, political and human aspects. The dollar price society pays for crjme has been generally overlooked. "Bht if there be indifference on that score, the President’s Commission on Law Enforcement should rudely dispel it. ★ ★ ★ ■ Crime, reports the Commission, will cost the Country a staggering $21 billion for this year alone. Broken down, it means that itjwill take an estimated $400 out of the pocket of every law-abiding fam- ^ UyT The figures derive from the direct economic impact on the citizenry from crimes against people, crimes against property, illegal traffic in various products and unlawful practices, and the $4.2 billion cost of all law enforcement agencies plus the $1.9 billion individuals spend for protection devices and services, insurance, and legal fees. Paradoxically, the commission warns that w6 will not be able to cut the cost of crime until we raise the costs of fighting it. This means increased outlay of money for more modem crime-detection equipment, better training for law enforcement and correctional institution officials, broader and better vocational training for prisoners, probationers and parolees. Crime concerns all respectable Americans/' and all should' make it one of their major concerns. Spring Cleanup Is A Good Morale Build-up Sparked by community pride, Pontiac’s 1967 cleanup drive is u n d e r way this week. The chairman of a block-club and home owners’ association committee, Mrs. AdelB Walker, said the campaign is aimed at an initial target of heavy and appliance-type rubbish, to be followed by a “paint up, fix up’’ and beautification program for which neighborhood awards will be presented. ★ ★ ★ Needless Ursay, the long winter abetted by record snowfall piled up | formidable- accumulation of useless material in the average household,, with deferment of maintenance and improvement plans. Spring flashes the signal that it is time to break out both rubbish and upgrading designs, with enhancement of pride in property ownership and tenancy. We commend the civic-minded leaders sponsoring the community improvement program and urge all residents to do their part in promoting citywide participation. Moves Afoot to 'Boot’ Electoral College The electoral college seems to have few remaining friends in high places. Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, R-Ill., and Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chairman of a Senate constitutional amendments subcommittee, and the American Bar Association all favor abolition of the institution. Bath’s subcommittee has opened hearings on a proposed constitutional amendment that would provide for direct election of the President and Vice President; At present, the Country’s two highest elected officials are chosen indirectly; the voter in a presidential election casts his ballot for a slate, of electors rather than for two candidates. The elector in turn is expected td cast his ballot for the candidates receiving a plurality of votes in his*s t a te, but he is not obligated to do so. ★ ★ ★ The anomalies of this system have long been evident. Since 1850 there have been no fewer than nine Presidents who had a majority in the Electoral college but not an absolute majority in popular vote. Of this group, two did not even have a popular vote plurality. The electoral college, it is said, in the past has tended to magnify the voting power of the big urban states. This once was defended on the ground that rural areas had more than their share of representatives in the Federal House and in the State legislatures. ★ ★ ★ But that argument has lost Validity since the Supreme Court’s decisions on behalf of equal legislative apportionment. The “one man, one vote” criterion, proponents of the abolition of the electoral college argue, &cwdd'have universal applica-tion. #l Think I'm Onto Something!' David Lawrence Says: McNamara Powers Go Too Far -Voice cf the People: t Reader Has Suggestions to Insure Safer Driv Why all the rumble about cars not b0ing safe at t any speed when the trouble/ is the “loose hut behind the wheel?” American built ears are the safest in the world even though they are not completely automatic. No automobile can travel 120 mphwith-out a driver and stay in one piece very long. ★ A ★ A driver is more efficient with both hands on the wheel, so drop that bottle and control your car as it should be. No, ode can drive far with an inverted bottle before his eyes. There is also such a thing as a sensible speed. , EARL TURNER ‘Support Need for Action Against Sex Crimes9 ^ '^The sixth Commandment tells us “Thou shalt not kill,” and yet some are forced to, while others who are known sex criminals are handled with kid gloves because they are sick. A man crazed with the lust for sex is no more than an animal without the ability to think and act as a human. ★ ★ * Perhaps sterilization is the answer to this growing problem. Then this cancer that is torturing sex fiends can be held in check, at least to a point where the ones known to have this problem can be stopped before it is too late for some defenseless child. ■“"TT..'*'< V ' The Pontiac Press editorial last week was a great assistance to those of us who did not know who to communicate with concerning effective measures for sex deviates. I hope this editorial will be repeated for those who may have missed it. The Press strongly suggests that we write our legislators in Lansing and demand help. Please write now and help protect the lives of our children. JACKIE FELKER CLARKSTON be secretary ot defense. -w-* i ri y------■._■_ry i f # Duke, Duchess tfuter the letter of the Constitu- 7 WASHINGTON - Who is really running the war in Vietnam for our government? Presumably, as the Constitution says, there is only one commander - in - chief — the President o f the United States. But evidence is accumulating that virtually supreme power over the m a nagement of the armed services has been delegated LAWRENCE to the secretary of defense. This ---------------- and the letter of the Constitution. The National Security Act of 1947 permits the delegation of administrative duties to the secretary of defense, but there is nowhere in the statute any transfer of authority or control over the making of decisions in war operations. The question was studied and reported on by a special committee appointed by President Eisenhower in 1953, as the Korean War was coming to an end. But the document submitted to the House Armed Services Committee is mostly concerned with the functioning of the Department of Defense in peacetime. The formula followed ever since has been one that makes the secretary of defense virtually the commander-in-chief. ★ * ★ He makes die decision as to the ntiz* of the forces to be recruited and sent on foreign missions. OBLIGED TO REPORT He may “assign or reassign the development and operational use of new weapons or weapons systems to one or more of the, military depart- sional conferences with the military chiefs, they do not as a rule have separate consultations with him alone. Never before has such a system been operated during a major war in which the United States has participated. In both World War I and World War n, the highest military officers were in constant contact with the President. Today military strategy is far from secret. Civilians have their say and can overrule or nullify military decisions if they think considerations of an international political nature should take precedence. The whole subject needs exposition in a comprehensive manner by a committee of* Congress. Bob Considine Says: I have giyen birth to eight children. The pain and mental agony suffered for nine months was made endurable by the love and support of my husband. I cannot imagine how a victim of rape or incest can maintain her sanity under the circumstances. Shame does not always lodge upon the right shoulders. Often the person responsible is not known. A qualified physician who has the interest of his patient’s mental and physical well-being at heart should be allowed the privilege of therapeutic abortion. A MOTHER BY CHOICE Residents Appreciate Prompt Street Service My neighbors and I appreciate the prompt and efficient service in replacing a broken culvert on Tex Ave., and the grading involved. PAUL J. PEARSON 574 TEX Question-and Answer--------- I’m interested in volunteer work such as tutoring in our • ,• - (TW* 9- n*I vea. Is there any kind of program such as CALM (Chicago mnpnrtwn tl) EM IS r ILItl Area Lay Movement) in which teen-agers try to open doors UCULUUft l/U 1MU9 A EUll {pr deprived chlIdren by devoting a few hours each week NEW YORK - The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, at peace with the world in their Waldorf tower, came around to speaking of the filming on “A King’s “I was awfully nervous for the first half hour or so of the shooting,” he said with a chuckle. “But then I settled down and by the time the fourth day’s shooting was finished the chaps — very good men — came to me and asked me to do the beginning all over again. It was a good idea.” "My niece arranged for the -castle scenes,” the Duke said. He said it like a man who admired a sporting gesture. They all once belonged to him. to tutoring them? I’m a high school graduate, and though 1 have no college training in teaching, I have plenty of leisure time I’d like to put to good use. Pm surd other Pontiac teenagers feel as I do but don’t know how to go about volunteering. BARBARA STOCK 960 TECUMSEH REPLY Here's a start jar you: The Office of Economic Opportunity (333-7006) needs help along those tines. Ask for Mrs. Walker or Mr. DeWan. The Head Stdrt Program has application forms for volun-teers. Ask for Mrs. Butler at Pontiac Board of Edu-cation, 338-9151. camp Fife Girls are also looking for volunteers. Call Mrs. Davison at FE 2-3827. If this letter brings calls from other organizations, we’U let you know. Churchill’s life, affected the Windsors differently. “Duchess was much more touched than I,—the first time we saw it screened,” the slender and casually groomed ex-monarch said, lighting a pipe. “I took it in stride.” . “It made me very sad." the Duchess said in her matter-of-fact manner, “ft— brought home to me Jiow much the Duke gave up. ft makes me feel very inadequate.” The Duke’s face expressed In Washington: Dilemmas of Our Poor Whites By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA)-The inflammables for the hot summer ahead are the nearly 5 million U. S. Americans Need to ¥tew Road Ahead ByRUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - If it is true that history repeats itself, Americans can scarcely view with com-the ship which d con-f Greece, birthplace f democracy. Nearly two hundred years Montgomery ago, while we were still a British colony, Prof. Alexander Tyler wrote about the fall of the Athenian Republic in these words: “A democracy cannot exist as a permanent farm of government It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. “From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by ■ dictatorship. fl , “The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations has been two hundred years. These nations have progressed 'through this sequence: from hiM^agttAapirUiial fqjtfl • from - spiritual faith to great cour-age; from courage to liberty; from liberty to abundance; from abundance to selfishness; from selfishness to complacency; from complacency to apathy; from apathy to dependence; from dependency back again into bondage.” POSSIBLE FATE We are indebted to a reader, James Oviatt, for Tyler’s timely reminder of our own possible fate. In less than a decade, this nation will ede? brate the two hundredth anniversary of its declaration of independence from Great Britain. None can question the spiritual faith and great courage of our founding fathers, who led as from bondage to liberty; nor qnestiea die abundance which that liberty brought ns. But are we, like the once great civilizations of. Athens and Rome, now progressing through selfishness, complacency and apathy back to dependency and bondage? __We read of the personal greed that has brought proud legislators to their* knees, of special interests that demand special privilege, of selfish labor leaders who are wrecking newspapers and other industries, of “Black Power” advocates and white segregationists. ‘MOST BENEFIT Tyler warned that demo-era^ can exist onfy until the people begin voting themselves largesse from the treasury, and ^electing those candidates who promise the most benefits from the public' trough. And dictatorship, he added, inevitably follows loose fiscal policy. How much longer, 'then, can we safely continue to promise everything to everybody? How long can our national policy be one of distributing largesse to those who refuse to help themselves, both here and abroad? ’ ....... armed forces.’ The secretary/ to be sore, is obliged to report to Congress the details of any action he proposes to take. ’The United States is engaged today in a large war involving neafly“ a half million members of the armed services, and the cost is running into many billions of dollars a year. But the duties of the commander-in-chief are being performed, in effect, by the secretary of defense. ★ * , ★ He makes recommendations and interprets the proposals of the military men. While President Johnson has occa- Verbal Orctudsr Mrs. Dan Grogan of Birmingham; 95th birthday. Mrs. David Mogg of 93 S. Shirley; 83rd birthday: ----- ____________________ of Farmington; 86th birthday. Elmer Wilson of Marlette, formerly of Pontiac; 84th. birthday. “What?” he cut in. “What I got in exchange far outweighs what I forfeited.” * WORLD PREMIERE The hour-and-40-minute film has its world premiere here tomorrow night for the bene-m New York's Hospital for Special Surgery. “A King’s Story” is rich with the pomp and ceremony of the life into which the duke was born, reared, flourished and left. Extraordinarily deft editing gives cohesion to the unfolding of the tale. The jerky motions of World War I scenes involving the then Prince of Wales have been amazingly smoothed to blend into the serene colors of today’s latest wizardry in film making. CONARRATOR The duke Is conarrator of the film, with Orson Welles. The camera does not Show Orson. He was making a film hi Spain at the time and did his bit off-camera. . The duke is frequently on, serving as a delightfully'informative and witty catalyst as he sits in the flowery garden of The Mill, their place outside Paris. i 10.6 million — in city'and countryside alike*— comes to almost one-third of the 34.3 million estimated U.S. poor of all races. _ * ★ ★ Many thousands of these poor young urban Negroes have no ties to anything but trouble. Family reins upon them are loose or nonexistent. r • v> A kaleidoscope of images of affluence unfolds before them in shops iand' elsewhere as they idly roam the street* Hot-eyed sloganeers shout hate and stir the youngsters’ hostilities. ★ : ★ ★ •-In the shabby settings where they Uve, these elements can quickly fuse and light the fires of a shattering riot, ft is a small step to the picking up of a brick or a rock, or stuff-tog a dirty rag into a gasoline-filled bottle to make a Molotov cocktail. The NAACP’s Roy Wilkins, sanest and soberest of the Negro leaders, warns that more work and better pay are the only hopeful antidotes to this peril. As everyone has long known, unemployment runs to staggering proportions among untrained young Negroes. Not long ago, Daniel P. Moynihan, famed for his studies of the Negro poot,_ dwelt upon these same dangers. # •?(?' m All this understandable nervousness over the summer blanket out the continuing plight of the millions of white poor in city and on farm. More than 7 of every 10 poor Americans are white. Some 6.5 million white families live in abject poverty — against 1.8 million Negro families living in that state. The difference in proportions, not numbers, is what makes the Negro condition worse. The very poor represent 36 per cent of all Negro families, just 14 per eentof- white faatities. Yet the numbers of white poor are great — and their tlw Associated Praia la antitM Ttia Pontiac Press h delivered by carrier tor ■ cants a week; where mailed In Oakland, Genesee. Livingston, Macomb Lanaar ansi Washtenaw Caonttaa » b SKM a year; elsewhere h Michigan aM aU other places in the * Slabs CUPS yssr. All n FV>stagenSti dilemmas cannot be brushed aside as trivial while the nation’s television eye concentrates on the yonng Negroes’ tragic summers. Poor whites up to the age of 21 total 10.6 million—exactly equal to the Negro poor of ail ages to this/ country. Some nine-tenths of these youthful whites haunt American cities. Seldom are they seen on the big screen, even to the hottest sdmmer. * * ★. Thejr employment ist of course, better. So, to a considerable extent, is their recreational opportunity. But they are, nevertheless, desperately poor. If being deprived is the great goad to the riotous passions of’the young slum dweller, then the nation’s poor whites have the necessary motivation. Still, they have not been caught up to the Jnfy-Sep-tember contagion that has swept the country since 19(4. Should youthful Negro rfot become the pattern for the cities for the next decade or mine, as some grim observe ers have predicted, it to difficult to see how the millions of poor young urban whiles can resist Indefinitely this contagion of simmer fury. If attention follows the camera and the camera follows violence, then the young whites may decide that the lessen to jdato for those who would find a way out ot their poverty-rkUpn oblivion. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1067 NORTH AQ94 ; f A9 6 48 AKQJ872 WE8T CAST AK1053 A752 ♦ 542 ♦KRc ♦ J 108 7 4 4 Q 9 8 5 *3 a AA954 SOUTH (P) A A J8 VQJ107 3 - A-AK2 ■ A 10 6 Neither vulnerable Weet North East South Pass 2 A Pass 2N.T. Pass 3 4 Pass 4 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—A 3 By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY Here is a hand from H. W. Kelsey's book, “Killing Defense at Bridge,”, which shows how a defender can and should count a hand. We are going to use our own ft o d e word “ARCH” to il-BstrateEast’s | thinking. East Analyzes the lead, notes that it surely is a singleton. He reviews the bidding and notes that South should hold exactly five hearts. South also holds two clubs and East decides that in all probability, he holds three cards each in spades and diamonds. and a raff are two tricks, his Msg of hearts will be a third trick. Et&~&aks himself, “How can we beat this hand?” He needs to find another trick in his partner's hand. What can that trick be? It can be the ace of dia-mondSu If it is, then the trick will never get away---—L--—- Suppose it is the ace of )ades? That trick will keep How about the king of spades? West sees that if he gives his partner an immediate club ruff that king of spades will never make a trick because South will have time to draw trumps, after East makes his king, and discard any jlosing spades on dummy’s nice long club suit. East thinks A little while longer. If South happens to hold thel king-jack doubleton in spades and four diamonds the spade lead will give South a chance to get rid of his losing club before West can get his ruff in but East’s preliminary checkup had disclosed ’ the strong probability that if South had held 54-2-2 distribution he would not have rebid two no-trump. After all these conclusions East leads a spade and the hand collapses. Qefs AMC Post DETROIT (AP) -Marvin W. Stucky has been named vice! president In charge of'automotive purchasing for American Motors Corp., AMC President William V, Luneberg announced Monday. Stucky has worked in the purchasing department of Ford Motor Co. for the past eight years. The serpent is the symbol of sin in Christian'art. , -ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers £S By Carl Grubert JACOBY V+CllRDj;-«*44 Q—The bidding has been: West, Neeth East | I 1 4 Pass 2 A Pass. You,. South, hold: AAJ19«S Vt 4K43 AAQIS What do you do? A—Bid four clubs. Your partner must have a long club suit. If he has anything else you want to be il Astrological Forecast M By SYDNEY OMARR "TIIC wiM contracts. Thor*_______________ .... yet to be surfaced. Bt patient observant. Ultimately you sain If U TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20): (sfufKil. Hava requirements, axpras partner Into confidence GEMINI (May 21 - originality. Inoeponde______MR ____________ vantaga of surprise element. Be jgware of what people think, how they re&R In short, get finger on pulso of public, you learn today — — ....— . CANCER dilemma by mature oporoMli. Avoir tendency to be fixed. Strata flexibility b*LtaRAt,l(Sept. 21 - Oct. 22): O., features movement, dynamic ideas. Opposition tends to melt. You get free hand. Whet you do with this oppor"-Is of paramount Importance, Accent of RESPONSIBILITY. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 , Nov. 21): ------------ hint from TAURUS Message. Confide matt or partner. Investment question should be settled. Do eo via Intelligent discussion. Reed between the tinea. Check detail!. SAGITTARIUS (N«V. 22 -Special documents may come .. tention. Get reliable opinion. S' "irwrcnaek source matertatr"**■ If you edhero to principles. CAPRICORN (Dec. ti • Jan. It): Re quest from one who works with you | he fulfilled. Favor you grant today The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): i mm %, Garrets&h, Farmington f W. Van Vurst Hie Birmlnghar " “ “ mtngnanr o. DHL Rocnesrer C. Brumaae. Birmlnaha W2A Gerald ., ....... .............. Charles R. McCulloch, Blrmlnghenr Donald A. Kattayon. lake Orion Donald A. McGhee, 296 Marshall James T. Nichols, 6537 Horse: Kenneth R. Welbeum, Rochester Burl Wright, 79V, acker Thomet G. McMillan, Itve, 2TIJ R< Km. MR .. „Jexender. 290 Far., Edward J.. Keftenstoekr—Permlngtor Teddy W. Bentfleld, 176 West Princeton Russell R. Wilson, Cl---- Wtrren R. Puny, Minora John F. MeChnky, 669 Oesote Cerllon R. Samson, 4430 Elizabeth Albeit M. Serra, Waterford wetar ri Meischoss Jr., Troy ~ John E. OePotter, Birmingham ----.-_surt4.-C_______________ Michael J. Miller, 3123 Avalon David J. Nelson, 2546 Hempstead Arles Mtndlans, Utica D&Sui Q., Wllllemton, Birmingham EIRpnr L. Mead, Troy James M. Osterhoff, I........ Ronnie G. Ball, Keago Harbor WnaMATCbapIn 111, Bloom... . Alexander G. Keurellan, Blrmlnghai E. Prank Moellch, Bloomfield Hills Oaoial H;Ddhl, Birmingham M^Ma^Jl Sooner,56Farming! Daniel B. Groves, B... .... Edward A. Rueln, Bloomflelr Thomas B. Rke, llrminghtm Robert L. Bartey.tSfmlnjhem > Robert A. Salzwadel. Birmingham David A, Young, Birmingham Harvey H, Braun, Bloomfield Hills Jciqph R. Ouarte, Farmington I _____J $ m THE PONTIAC PRE^S, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 Joyces Fund Drive Progresses The Pontiac Junior Chamber I Approximately $60,000 has oftmnuneree* ....... ( S is currently spear- been Collected to help rebuild hei$Hng.Aihaatlfclong campaignjtheart center, the former City to raise $$5,000* for a Pontiac Library at the corner of Wil-Creative Arts Center. . c jliams and Lawrence._____________ GIFT of a LIFETIME GIVE AN OLIVETTI UNDERWOOD UNDERWOOD 21 TYPEWRITER The feature* : of a standard at the weight and | a partible. Free TYPEWRITER •• STAND with graduation. TypewweSiT^ Our . gift ' to the graduate witjV.the purchase of a now typewriter. • 88 Character-Keyboard , • Half-spacing, Vertical and Horizontal • 3 Secretarial Scales •' * • Full size diameter Carriage roller • Variable Line Finder MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART 88 N. Saginaw FE 4-5788 Next to Simms Pontiac'S POPULAR THEATER iiMktoiaik PHULliEIUmmiJULIE HnOREIUS ALFRED HITCHCOCK’S The art center will be avail-• able to all persons for meet-tags, workshops and classes in pottery, ofl painting, photography apd other arts and crafts. Rooms also will be available for exhibits and chib meetings. A oalendar of events of community interest adb Will be kept there. "For 19 years, the Pontiac Society of Artists has needed a meeting room with a stage, .as well as classroom and exhibit space. Also, many people in the community, particularly children, have needed a reference area for beginning artists to experiment in the visual arts," commented Mrs. Arthur Hays, president of the Pontiac Society of Artists. W ★ ' * df Dr. Harold A. Furlong, president of the.Pontufc'Cr e a ti ve Arts Center, emphasized the center's appeal to tiie * entire community. GREAT OPPORTUNttY 'There is a great opportunity in Pontiac for an art center to meet the requirements of people who have leisure time for instructions in the visual arts,” he said “In addition, there will be lectures and demonstrations devoted to the appreciation of contemporary art." Artists will be working in front of stores at the Tel-Hu-ron Shopping Center Friday and Saturday as a campaign highlight to emphasize the need for an art center to work in. Exhibit of works by loca1 artists are in many store windows for the duration of (be campaign. TEARS YOU - {technicolor®^TMB CURTRIIT HURON NOW It 1:M A ttl«0 ■ TONY CURTIS ROSANIUtSCHIAFFIHO. Arrivederci, ONTONAGON (UPI)-A Michigan Highway commissionerwarned yesterday feat unless a hijghways-only tax package passes the Legislature this year, fee state will have to cut much road construction in fee next five years. ARTISTS AT WORK — Local artists, Marilyn Moore of 131% N. Johnson and Mrs. Richard' Leach of 2401 Oakway, U7/W BlAAmfinU TAnmakln .1 iC n«-Al___«___ West Bloomfield Township, secretary of & Pontiac Society of Art, work in temporary quarters in fee Pontiac Mall to highlight the need for a Pontiac Creative Arts Center. The Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce is spearheading a drive this month to raise $25,000 to> make fee center a reality. Artists will be working at Tel-Huron Friday and Saturday. All collected money will be used to renovate fee building which will house the proposed center. The building : " turally sound but needs remodeling to be adapted to the needs of fee center, according to fee Jaycees. NEEDS In particular, the site needs a new heating plant, wiring and decoration at an estimated cost of $100,o6o. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., has designated May as “Pontiac Creative Arts Center Month" in an attempt to help the fund raising efforts on behalf of the center. Social Security benefits paid to Oakland County residents last year totaled $66,806,112, an in? crease of nine per cent over 1965. Kino j. Hfeino, Social. Security district manager, said recently that 66,112 persons were receiving benefits at a monthly rate of $5,567,176, at the end of 1966. Some 50,745 were older people, he said, receiving benefits as retired workers, fee wives and husbands of retired workers and as the surviving widows or aged dependent parents of workers who have died. The City of Pontiac has agreed to lease fee old library building for a token sum of $1 per year and assist in fee financing of fee renovation. Persons interested in contributing to fee fund campaign maj write to fee.* Pontiac Jaycees in the Riker Building in care of the Pontiac Creative Arts Center. PONTIAC MALL Invites You and Your Family Tn Dp Wflffaittffatf Miahtpn? III IIv VV VUIIIIvUilJ mglllul O Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS Only 120 Children ■ Under 10 95! ■ CHOICE OF POTATOES OR VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND PUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. B—9 Road Taxes Told Need for More Slate Upper Peninsula’s highway needs,” he said. It depended, he said, on a Senate - passed package of bills now waiting action in fee House to raise fee necessary money. Those bills, among other things, would raise gas taxes , by one cent a gallon and fee ! weight taxes for license plates ; from 35 cents to 55 carts per * hundredweight. » I And, said Wallace D. (Mike) Nunn, that would amount to losing a big share of the $35 million planned for road .building in fee Upper Peninsula.____ Speaking at a meeting of the Great Lakes County Road Association, Nunn said feat $156 million has been spent in the last 16-years ta the Upper Peninsula to modernize old roads and to build new ones. But much work remains to be done if we are to meet th SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERY0AY SIS Oakland Fr— parking ft 3-4061 COMMERCE FREE EliCTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS UNION LAKE AT HAGGERTY NO. j EM 3-MS1 - Show Starts St Dusk Adults $t.2S-Childron Undtr 12 Frts -LASt TIME TONIGHT— 1st RUN "HOT RODS TO HELL” 4Uo “THE VENETIAN AFFAIR” - • STARTS WEDNESDAY < *»*. PAUL NEWMAN * FREDRIC MARCH I RICHARD BOONE DIANE CILENTO mm Plus: David Janssen in "Warning Shot” Social Security Outlay Is Up 9 PcL Increase in County Over 1965 Heino also punted out feat 10,533 young widows and children . in the Pontiac area were receiving benefits amounting $756,562 per month at fee end of last year. ■ Also, 4,834 disabled workers and dependents were receiving benefits at the monthly rate of $374,756. “Practically every young family in Oakland County has survivors’ protection under Social Secur i^y feat can be wo*th $75,000 .or more and equally valuable disability insurance protection,” Heinosaid. TAX CONTRIBUTIONS The average Worker can tex-pect to collect more than the value of his Social Security tax contributions just in benefits payable to him and his wife in retirement, according to fidino. If he doesn’t live To retirement, his family may collect tore than fee contributions he has paid; and the same will be Inte if he .should become totally disabled for work before 65. to * . Under fee present tax schedule, even'young workers who begin work in 1974 will pay only about 80 to 88 per cent of fee value of their potential benefits. Matching contributions paid by their employers will account for the rest. Tfairring Grant KALAMAZOO fAP)The Kalamazoo public school systems will receive a $203,000 grant to brain 70 unemployed workers under the Manpower Development and Trainjng Fire at Ford Fatal to 3rd DETROIT (AP) —. Last Week's propane gas fire at fee Ford Motor Co.’s River Rouge plant has claimed its third life. Estel Perry, 43, of Melvindale died Monday of burhs suffered when a pile driver rammed j throygh a pipeline leading to a profane gas chember last Tuesday. Wolbur LaRue, 25, of Ink and Hugh McGovern, 57, of Skokie, 111., also died as a re-suit of the fire. Man Stands Mute in Death of Wife KALAMAZOO (UPI) — A 39-year-old Kalamazoo man yesterday stood mute on charges of killing his wife because she wouldn’t turn down her record player when he told her to. Roy David Mabry was held on the murder charge alter a plea of innocent was entered for him. AL0-M0ISTURE PLUS®"\ ■greasy night creme... rich in ^precious Alow Vera gel...penetrates and gent-ly blooms new life and smoothness into your complexion. With Purchase of any [of the 3 lL0 CoforitiCA shown below. cool, lime-scentod toner. ..formula ted with precious Aloe vgra gel to restore the skin's PH factor (Acid/Alkaline) perfect balance. ALO-V SKIN CLEANSER... rich in preciout Aloe Vera gel— ... leaves your skin shining clean and velvety soft. Pius-* I face ..rich in precious Q Aloe Vara gal " ...pampers your 1 face all day long. H Police said Mabry shot his wife Lela, 39, two weeks ago be-j cause she would not turn down! fee volume on her record player after he told her to. Housing Director KALAMAZOO W — Thomas J. Carr has been named director of university housing facilities at Western Michigan University, effective July 1. Carr, affiliated with the university housing office since 1962, succeeds Archie Potter, who retires,.--■.- -.......- C5H3 KEEGO “HOTEL” Rod Taylor Starts TOMORROW! ^ In The Closet And Pm FfcHin1Sml niiu i in i Wviiii siu oau M FAMILY ROOMS Baoutifully Finished f I aOR AS LOW AS I WVV « BATHROOMS KITCHENS • SIDING OJeetion (Fonslruclionffix BUILDING COMPANY 1032 West Huron Street FE 4-2597 In Pontiac Since 1931 MEMBER PONTIAC AREA CHAMUR OF COMMERCE AU Work Guaranteed Tender, Fresh, Young, Plump CHICKENS Deep fried in fresh pure vegetable oil for . the most de-° lightful CHICKEN DINNER feast, ever. . . Buy it by the BOX... the BUCKET... the BARREL! r 1 OOffiu*’* SPecHll I onuunoM fUan i *OU| OgSc I : L. OQ . Open 7 Day*—5 . i.M, to 12 Midnight A DIVISION OF —PAWN DONUTS pa timjuuum 93 NORTH TELEGRAPH BETWEEN TEL-HURON AND PONTIAC MALL CHICKEN-PHONE 335-2444 1 DONUTS-PHONE 335-0101 ABB ii 9 Q 9 D 9D JUUUUUL a B B B 0 0 D 9 8 9 8 D D » 8 0 BBTTo 0 _« DO YOU HAVE A CROWDED LITTLE DINING R00M-AND A KITCHEN THAT’S TOO SMALL? Than phone Jim McNeil at POOLE LUMbIr. He'll come to your home, at a time that's convenient to you, to show you . how to turn your two small rooms into one spacious, attractive area where your family can spread out and be ™comf^al)te7 And POOLE LUMBER can handle the entire " job for you, using quality control throughout. 72 Years of Service In The Pontiac Area! iHSiSgS. Iir OAKLAND AVE. - PONTIAC Phons FE 4-1IM . ® THE PONTIAC PRESS TOESDAY, MAY 23r lfl^ Waterford Schools in Seesaw Battle Kettering Captures Pontiac Press Golf Invitational was Gary Quitiquit, who collected medalist honors over the par-72. 6.308yard course. His best round of the seaSonT l By FLETCHER SPEARS f Township rivals Waterford land Kettering have been taking Iturns in the golf winner’s cir-Scle this season and it’s Water* ford’s turn next with a tasty while Ray Tallerday checked in with an 81 and Randy Jlieth an 82. —.Walled Lake’s Russ* Herron, medalist last Friday at Brigh* ton, played the back nine first and ran into some problems with a four-over-par nut he rebounded on the front side for a 38 and a 78. Dave Moilanen carded 78 to go with Quitiquit’s 74, while Dan Larkin and Jim Richardson* rounded out the foursome With Waterford’s ‘Four K’s’ performed well but they didn’t have a match for Quitiquit. Rod Skelton and Randy Berry posted 79s for the Skippers, Gary Balliet of Avondale fired h steady 38-37—75, while Mike Sheridan -of Royal Oak Kimball came through with a 3840—76. Gary Stack For an 107. 1 Last Friday, the Skippers of Waterford captured the class A regional crown at Brighton, and it enabled them to take a 2-1 lead in the rivalry with Kettering, which finished in a' tie for second one stroke back. Yesterday it was Kettering’s torn. The Captains evened die score at 2-2 . with the Skippers in taking the 16th Annual Pontiac Press Invitational at Pontiac Country Club on a cool, windy day. The Captains’ four-man -squad postedascoreof316, finishing five shots ahead of Waterford. Southfield placed, (322) third and defending championBloomfield Hills (324) fourth. ★ * ★ The next big date for the prep golfers is next Monday when they’ll journey to Marshall for the state championships. FIRST VICTORY It Was the first victory in The Press tournament for the Captains and coach Steve Hubbell. -------------------------- Waterford and Kettering en: tered the tourney as cofavorites _ but newcomer Utica showed early intentions of pulling an upset. , The Utica squad trailed by only four strokes after nine holes bnt faltered on the back nine and closed with a 345 total to finish 12th. Taklng-honorgrin the-Class B-— C-D division for the second straight time was West Bloomfield (339). In the over-all race, the Lakers finished ninth. ----1t..★---★---- Play was conducted udder a four-man team setup — five-man teams were used formerly — so the 316 score posted by the Captains will go into the record book, BIGGUN The big gun for the Captains Play Boston Tonight Tigers Are No. 1 Target From Our News Wires f As the Detroit Tigers prepared to meet the Boston Red Sox tonight they found themselves the target team in more ways than {just the obvious. I i The Tigers took a day off ‘Monday but recaptured the > American League lead when the Chicago White Sox dropped an 8-7 contest to the Minnesota Twins. Chicago slipped to 11 percentage points and a half-game 'behind the Tigers as the lead changed hands for the seco tinie since the Tigers split doubleheader Sunday with- the , Yankees. “It’s too early to get ex-■ cited about whether you’re in fist or second place,’’ Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said. “But I like,.the fact we’re 10 games over%88 (21-11),” i Baltimore’s Tom Phoebus, who" started going places when he returned home, has given the wandering Orioles a new look at their old neighborhood. Dave Johnson and Andy Etche-barren also poled homers for the Orioles. Minnesota’s Cesar Tovar, {who had two homers and four hits in Sunday’s victory over California, stayed hot with two hits and a pair of RBI against the White Sox. The Twins came from behind With a three-run burst ii the sixth inning, Zoilo Versalles singling home the go-ahead run. Tovar’s 2-for-3 night raised Is batting average to .331, tying Frank Robinson for second place behind AL leader A1 Kaline of Detroit. EIGHT HOMER Don Mincher drove in three Pontiac Central and Clarks-ton have been paired in the opening game of the Pontiac Invitational High School Baseball Tournament Friday night at Jayoee Park. Phoebus, a Baltimore native who came up from the minors late last year and pitched shutouts in his first two starts, blanked the New York Yankees 7-0 on two hits Monday night, lifting the Orioles back to the The up-and-down Chiefs, .500 level after a three-week subterranean flight. The 25-year-old right-hander, •who lives less than two miles from Baltimore’s Municipal Stadium did not allow a hit until the seventh inning and struck out 11 Yankees on the way to his second victory in three decisions.- MOVE UP The triumph, seventh in the last nine games for the world champions, sent them into a third-place tie with Kansas City and Minnesota in the American ‘League. California —topped Kansas City 83 and Cleveland blanked Washington 4-0 in other AL ac-’ tion. Phoebus, a chunky, 5-foot-8 fireballer whose 13-9 record and 208 strikeouts helped Rochester capture the 1966-4ntemational League pennant, joined the Oriole* last September and white-washed California and Kansas City on a combined yield of nine hits. ,* ★ * Frank Robinson, meanwhile, moiled his 10th hoim taking the league lead — and Prep Calendar runs with his eighth homer and a two-run single, backing Jim McGlothlin’a six-hit pitching as the Angels overcame Kansas City’s early 3-1 lead. Mincher’s single in the seventh capped a three-run rally after KC reliever John (Blue Moon) Odom wild-pitched the lead run across. Steve Hargan stopped Washington on four hits and drove in the only run he needed with a second inning single. Lee Maye and Chuck Hinton rapped bases-empty homers for the Indians, helping Hargan breeze to his third shutout and fifth victory, of the year. INTERESTED OBSERVERS - Watching some of file late starters finish in the 16th Annual Pontiac Press Invita-tionaL yesterday at Pontiac Country Club are members of the Waterford Kettering team along with coach Steve Hub-bell (right). This foursome (left to right) of Dan Larkin, Dave Moilanen, Gary Quitiquit and Jim Richardson posted a score of 316 to win the Press crown. The-issue was still in doubt when the team moved over to the ninth green to watch the action. ______________________. < Baseball Pairings Made PCH, Clarkston Open Tourney hosts of the sixth annual tournament with Pontiaq Northern, will, catch toe highly rated Wolves (13-5) one day after the latter’s Wayne-Oakland League title showdown with Northville. Bat PCH will enter the tourney following double-headers Monday and Thursday that will complete its Saginaw Valley Conference slate. Central has been splitting most of its twinbills. The tournament pairings were announced last night at a meeting of the competing schools’ representatives and tournament officials from the sponsoring city Parks and Recreation Department and The Press. The PCH-Clarkston winner will play Monday night against the survivor of Saturday’s noon contest between Kettering (15-3) and Madison (8-4). Also in the upper bracket are the Saturday Rochester-Walled Lake and Romeo - Bloomfield Hills games. They will be at noon and 2:15 p.m., respective-ly, and the winners will play Memorial Day (Tuesday) after- In the lower bracket, South-field .(12-2) will meet Birmingham Brother Rice (6-5), Waterford (11-6) will play Avondale (3-10), Royal Oak Kimball (11-3) will oppose Clawson (3-7) and Hazel Park (2-12) will tackle Pontiac Northern (94), Sweep Doubleheader No-Hitler Helps CRiefs Senior southpaw Larry Walker hurled a five-inning no-hitter 4n the second game yesterday to give Ponttoc Central a dbu-bleheader victory over Bay City Central. Bay City managed only One run off Pontiac pitching for the afternoon, and that marker came in the fifth frame of the opener which the Chiefs won in 15trmingsr2*lv—— Cecil Martin, sophomore Victor Quince and Gary Richardson combine! to check Bay City in the opener. Richardson came on in relief of Quince in the 14th to pick up the win. Clyde Duncan s single sent A1 Bessant across with the first PCH run in the third inning and Martin’s single in the 15th brought Randy Sutt across with the winning run. ★ , * ★ The second game was called DOUBLE-TEAM OPPOSING HURLER - Clarkston’s 'Jerry Ostrom (left) and Tom Allen rapped consecutive triples in a three-run fourth inning as the Wolves trimmed Clarence-vllle, 7-0, Monday and set up a Wayne-Oakland League title showdown Thursday with Northville. Story on Page C-3. All the lower bracket games will be played Saturday with the PNH-Hazel Park encounter concluding the seveurgame' schedule under the' lights at 7:30 p.m. The four lower-Dracket survivors will meet in Tuesday quarter-final—contests. The semifinals will be Wednesday evening and-the championship tilt is set-for 7:30 p.m. June I. Southfield, file county’s No. 1 ranked team, is the defending two-time champion. _____★____★___★_ Tickets are on sale only at the Parks -and Recreation Department office at City Hall. They are $1 per adult and 50 cento per student for each session. There are also adult tournament tickets on sale-for 64. - aft.gr five innings because of darkness." TEAMMATES PRODUCE While Walker was silencing the Bay, City bats, his teammates managed two runs in the second and one in the fourth. Dale Houston and Suit picked up run-scoring singles in the second and Richard Vine walked and moved around on a succession of errors fourth. \ * ‘ J | The double win raised PCH’s Saginaw Valley Conference record to 9-7. The Chiefs play Pontiac Northern in a doubleheader, (3 pim.) tomorrow on th PNH field. MSU's Spartans Best in Big Ten EAST LANSING (AP)—Michigan State has been judged the Big Ten’s unoffiriaL-aU-around sports champion according to a point system based on team tides. WWW The Spartans topped the scoring tabulation by .. winning championships in football, hock-ey, tennis and wrestling and tying with Indiana for the bask-etball title. MSU took 113% prints. Michigan placed second with 90 and Wisconsin was third with 77%. It. Oak Park C Sob Vehon It, J Kahn 7S. /1». Milford (3Sf) - Rick Yoa Dave Dakar 13, Tad Walnborg * S3, Cary Spaas 91, Bruce Rupert 93. Home Builders Triumph, 10*6 A couple of big innings carried Booth Homes to a 10-6 opening season victory over Pass Esca-vating last night in city Class A baseball action. * * Booth picked up four runs on only thrfee hits In the third and sent five more across the plate oh only two hits in the fifth. The losers tightened the game a little with three runs in the seventh, Jerry Hill picked up a pair of singles and knocked in two runs for Booth and teammate Chuck Honchel! contributed a couple of hits to the attack. Ken Mazur and Larry Crouch picked up two hits apiece for ■ the losers. PASS BOOTH HOMKS EXCAVATING (9) . (It) A B R H AD R H Daaton lb 3 I l LaPritt 2b 3 1 1 Lundy it 3 10 Booth If 3 0 0 Mazur cf 4 12 Robarts rf 3 1 0 Rogers 2b 0 0 0 Hill 1b 3 12 MEDALIST—Gary Quitiquit flashes the form he used in firing a two-over-par 74 yesterday at Pontiac Country Club to earn medalist honors in The’ Pontiac Press Invitational Tournament. , Babe's Friend Go Titlist beaumont; Tex. (Ap) — The late Babe Zaharias, greatest woman athlete ever in the United States, is honored each year in her home town with a golf tournament in her name, Members of the Ladies Professional Golf Association old enough to have played with Babe on the tour would rather win this one than just About any they play. “Without Babe Zaharias the ladies’ tour wouldn’t be as big as it is today,” said Marilyn Smith after winning the 610,000 event Monday. 'I really wanted to win this tournament,” she added. “Babe and I were good friends and she meant a lot to me.^ Miss Smith, whose three-stroke, first-round lead vanished in' Sunday’s wind and cold, came back with a par 70 at Bayou Din Golf Club Monday to win the 61,500 first money. She had 210 for the 54 holes. Kathy Whitworth, whose three-under-par 69 in the second round gave her a one-stroke lead, slipped to a 74 Monday and finished with 213. She was tied by defending champion Shirley ’ Englehorn, who also finished with a 70. WTHS Doesn't Slow Central Team Waterford Township pulled a first” on Pontiac Central in track yesterday,, but the Chiefs weren’t impressed as they ran off with a 79-39 victory. The Skippers, who suffered their eighth loss against four, Wins, swept the high jump first the first time In a meet with Central.. Larry Biskner topped the event by clearing 810%. * ; * Bill Tipton didn’t compete because he was resting a knee which was banged up in Satur-‘ ’’s regional win, but the Chiefs had sophomore Bob Johnson to take op the hurdles chime. . V' ; Johnson won the highs in 14.8 and the lows in 19.9 on the Waterford track. Earl Polk cleared 13-6 in the pole Vault to brat Biskner by half a foot. PONTIAC C. 79, WATERFORD 19 TWO MILE RUN — Harold Boone (PC) I Fenton (wT), Costello (PC), time 9:0.1. WO RELAY — Pontioc Central {Turpin, Bryant, Qarclo. Noel), timo 1:3S.O. MILE RUN-----Bob Dickie (PC), Gallo- way (WT), A. Johnson (PC), time *.-37J. 120 HIGH HURDLES - Bob Jelmoon (PC). Kroaabocfi (WT), Lohff (WT), W.m 3ww THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1967 MM: I f j W §|Plj y? 1 p y E__I MARKETS The following are top prices ..covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold % tl-an in wholesale package kits . Quotat' ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Product b pd lclao*, g I# OuPclou*, J b Mi bu. .. fuaroLi Appiti; Mciniollh, cA/taT.'. *“*“ *-1, bu. ... i, C.A., bu. . Apples# Northern Spy, bu. .us “V“« wsses. i£|£ fflSFsJwL.£*'bo- - fS Control Data and Polaroid lost . ......................................................... ’"ViJbtai ___ ETABLSS Eastern Air Lines Mid gS& ^ Potatoes, so lbs. . Potatoes, 20 Ibe. ........ Rhubarb, holhomo, dx. belt. . - Rhubarb, hothouse, J-lb. box Poultry and Eggs ..Mvy type heiuM 9-il'i roasters heavy tjjw 26-20; broilers and fryers DBTROIT BOOT dozen by first receivers li g prices unchanged; 03 score AA i A 66; 90 B 63%; 59 A 5 per cevtt' or* Setter Grade A ‘Whites *S%; mixed 25%; mediums 22i standards 24%; cheeks 2;%. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (API—(USOA)-Uvo poultry; wholesale buying prices unchanged-to 1 higher; roasters 26%-29; special fed white rock fryers 20-13. Livestock » ‘“f.Swo! 1 active, steady to 25 lower; Early tosses in Industrials Stock Mart Slips NEW YORK (AP)-*-The stock market declined irregularly early Tuesday. Trading was active. Prices ware mixed at- the start An early loss in tile industrial average widened and gradually minus signs began to outnumber phuses. Big Three motors took freer Uonal losses. about 2 points each. national Nickel rose more than ....int each. ernationa! Paper was unchanged at 29ft on a block of 59,090 shares. Newberry rose more than a point in response to « $25-a-share tender offer. Tim nervous international situation involving Israel and the Arab states, the escalation in Vietnam, lower machine tool and tightening interest rates were factors which re- opening blocks Included: American Telephone, unchanged at 56ft on 7,000 shares; General Electric, oft ft at 88ft on 4,200; Chatter, off ft at 41ft on 4,500; and Standard Oil (New Jersey), off yd at 62V 4,300. On Monday The Press Average of 60 1.1 to 323.6. vimM§ JapandM governors Ing a dinner In (Mr honor. . STATE SELECTIVE SERVICE Ordered* Mkhlaaa dreff boards to, bluet 1,167 man Into the armed services i July, plus 120 man'formerly classified ar limited Mrvlce, the highest d— sll so farlMs year. •■ j , THE SENATE Voted to reconsider Join . which would allow the p< n a proposed five per car ny state or local Income Fractional gains predominated on the American Stock Ex-- changer______ The New York Stock Exchange (lids.) High Law —A— I__III 60V, 5* Gan Elec 2.60 Gan Pds 2.40 ‘ GenMIlls 1.50 "dt 1.70g rac 1.50 ‘9 .i«g u 2.40b X21 42Vb 4140 4144....... 55 3Mb SOW 30'A — V, It WH 10% 10% 4 % 9 71 704b 71 ... 7 25% 25% 25% — 57 39% 3944 39%— ■RPfirf .00 Oa Pacific lb Garber Pd 1 Getty Oil .10g Allis Chall 35 Sm 2414 2414 i.oo ioi nib »i n Ma 3 41 Mb Wk 1444 —Tib rl n 1.60 40 95V459444 9444 — 44 Iriln wl 4- 40V4 474b 47% 4 - itoh it 22 43 4244 4244 4 Goodrich 2.40 AmCyan AmElP 1 iHogie 1.20 --..i hgig 3( AmlnvCo 1.10 AmMFdy .90 AMet Cl 1.9t 112 i i 2044 21 72% 7*. 41 14 2944 29'A 2944 - 04 4944 44V4 ,49% -31 M 32% 3244 - 29 54 5744 5744 — fr~si4* r “ ■ ■ 4444 65V4 -214 Grace Co 1.40 GrenitCS 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtAOiP 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Flnl GreenGnt .00 Greyhound l t 4144 41%~4T% + 4744 4744 — < %-% Avco C hundred heed at 25.00) mixed .. ...„ lbs 23.75-24.50;5 mixed 1-3 330400 lb sows nlumM. Cattle 8J0; calves 10; trading ■laughtar steers over 1,100 lbs sb steady to 25 lower with the decline ... . u high choice and prime; steart weighing. Avnet .51 under 1,100 lbs fairly active, fully!Avon Pd steady; slaughter heifers active, strong to 25 higher; cows and bulls fairly active, fully stoady; prime 1,140-1,450 lb alaughtor steers to.7M7.25; high choice and prime 1,100-1,4M M .U.0M4.75; high cholct and prim# *004,150 lbs slaughter heifers 25.50-26.00; utility and commercial cows 17.25-19.25; canners and C-------------- i6.oo-i8.75; utility and commercial 20.50-24.00. (Gas 1.90 41 304b 37% 37%- PMwmr in Tove 9% io + smelt 3a 39 64% 6344 64 4 Am Std 1 . 69 234b 23 **% — Am TAT 2.20 190 56% 564b .. . Am Tob 1.00 50 3244 33% 3244 . “ “ 7 79% 19% 79% -Mb ISO 344b 13% 33% ... 10 23 2244 3244 — 30 9044 90% 9044 4 4 45% 45% 45% 4 15 14% 14% 1444 ... 16 5544 II In* + 75 34% 33% 33%- PM 22 54% 54% 54% ... PU 4.20—13 34% 34% 34%— ■* ‘ 63% «% + Halllburt 1.90 Harris Inf I Heels M 1.20 Here Inc Jg HewPack .20 AMP InC .72 IM» Anecnd 2.25g ----da wl ---Cham AMt.nl 3 ermsCf 1 Ishld Oil 88 9444 96 9 59% 50V 56 47% 46% Til 12 72% 7244 72% .... 44% .44% —1 43 34% 3444 3444 66 90 *7% 97% 66 30 29% 30 ... 20 35% 3544 35%-44 30 43% 43 « — % x2 52% B% 52% f % 39 09% 6044 69%-f % 191 M% 94 14 - % 11 29 20% 29 - ' 5 15% 15% |M file 1* 29% 6 56% sew aov, 13 24% 24% 24% . 21 1744 37% 17% - % —M— Mack Tr 1.599 262 _ 51% M —— 19 69% 67% SO 34% 34% 3444 -% » M% n% IT. • j| ** 5*% 5244 *7%*7% mm 45% 4544 10 12% 11% 33%-% 111 34% 35% j6% Marquar .25g MartlnMar 1 MayOStr 1.00 Maytag 1.60a McCalf.40b Stocks of Local Interest igjg? m* cmttmr tmcimti mint, are elodths' CrouseHlnd_ 1 antBTao idi conPow i.90b Contalnr 1.30 sr^Y0 Cant M ) ■ . ... .... ^ Cant Oil 140 X32 71% 70% 70% Central Data 244 90% » Cocparln U0 12 »%. 31% _ Corn Pd U» 20 45%^«% .41% + % ■atop. -grleoa-dO- ap- (■£ proxlmattly 11 a.m. inter-dealer merkete . change throughout the day. Prices do not Include .retell markup, markdown or , commission. 7 9% 9% 9% - Truck .. 3.5 A0. r V 1.20 Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Class ■\7Z DaycoCp 1.60 D*y P- 21-9 Deere 1.00e 77-6 VL* Della Air 1 70-J DenRGW 1.10 • “B BWBWPHWI..........;:m .., L1 Mohawk Rubber Ce. .24.4 HJf Disney .40b Monroe Aula Equipmant 244, Dlst laag 1 urn m H 24 24% 24% 24% + % ■—D—-6 11% 21% 21% ' f 31% »% I Crystal 20 6246 <2% H .... 21 lti% 11044 119% — U 12 19% 19 “ Kelly S ji Ctnlrai Airlines____________ —, Safran Printing ..............14.2 lTj'Dawaim- 120 Scrtoto . ..............5.7 U DreperC 1.20 S^.ZLTi.M, -a— —»—* ' Mi: UA IwITiul 1« .4 36% 36% 36% 11 44% Sit 46% 4- % 7 11% 01% (144 Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL >UNDS 33.4 34.0 Dress I nd l ._ ■ . Duke Pw 1J0 - ^ nt lJi v __ LI 146 OynamCp 40 I 9.49 O Chemlcei Fund Commonwealth Stock Dreyfus . . .. > .i>t.......r«.re jwnr,a. . .. — Keystone incema K-1 .......9.20 10.04 East Air J0g Keystone Growm -MO x&!i Mass. tlWHtoys Growth ... 12.01v14d| WMAVaJJI Mass, investors Trust ..... 14.94 ItJ gOfO .-W #_ »-•—* -fit*-.-- )3 45 14.70 ElBondS 1.72 !! 1A74 jm Electrons,, .. 1JJ9 15.18 jlPaa^fC. 1 i Erie Leek RR I EthylCorp 40 34 1M 156% MM - % 11 31% 3146 3141 79 14% 16% 14% 14S MO 103% 104 +44 to 134% m 133% - % -35 27 26% B WMB 12 M 74 MP% CimpBid by the AsaacletoO Press Noon Mon. 72;0 93.1 02j 91.9 prav; Day 72.0 934. 02.4 91.9 Week Age 72.3 942 13.1 924 Month Xia 72.6 94.9 04.1 92.1 Year Age 74.9 95.3 13.3 92 .4 1967 Itfi 73.0 95.4 92.4 -Kl|Pl OOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS STOCKS .......... .... 30 Indus ........... cam ID .150 „ . I___rll Met , 57.1 Fodders M 0SJ PadDStr 1.70 H.9 JJerroC^JO saip, Flnestne 1.40 ♦O.l FIrstChrt 51t (3.71'Plinlkoto 1 i Fla PLf 1.44 Fla Pew 126 I PMC Cp .75 ~R II 10%,%% .io% — % s 4 61% 01% 01% + % 24 ^11% 33% — % I 0% 0% 6% + % 47 4016 46% 46)4.4-% am mnn 207 109% 105% 105% -2% » 23% 2246 23 -% 5 51 50% 51 4- % 39 19% 19% 19%-% 13 65% 45% 45V I J‘5,7.MtJl 41 to% 25% “■ . + % M7-96-4d7,ForeDair . I HI Mb 50V, 1 24 27% Mb PI Mj- Sib 53% 17 Sl% 31% 4% T % Si Bonds ffwipsMrti 10 Higher grade rills .gj^GglO Aecag 1J0 io lacend grade rails . 02.55+o.oa:GanAnilF M « KSS? utlimas ....... • 02A3—830 Gan Cig 1.20 ..... 07.45-0.10 GenOynem 1 Holld Inn .50 HollySug U0 37 33% 32% 33% -H% 10 45% 4$ 45 ■ - X42 71% 71% 71% Houet LP 1 HowmetCp 1 HuntFds .50t Hupp Cp .171 10 46% 46 16 27% 26% 14 45% 45 1 PI . M 40 67 65% 45% —1% a 31% 30% 31% - % Idaal Cam 1 III Cant 1.50 Imp Cp Am Ingoriuhd 1 Inland Stl 1 I 17% 1 i 17% .. 53% 53% so, m 7% 7% 7 46% 46% 46% . . . ,J ins IRS IRSiSS 5 30% 3044 30% + % & 473% 471% 471% — % 64 30% 37% 3)% + H 43 »% » 33% - % 24 92% 91% 91% + % ............ I 1144 li% 11%-% Int Pan 1.35 1215 »% 20% »44 + " tot T$T 1.50 26 93% Mb 93% - „ ITE Ckt lb 12 56%, 55% 55% — % J«W*ICol.20 4 3044 30% 3Mb ..... JohnMan 2,20 15 57% .56% _M% -,% t Nick 2.00 3 242 M 242 -2 KemCLd ttO Kerr Me 1.40 KhnbClk 2.20 Kopporo 1.40 64 93% 91% 9144-1% 12 117% 114% 117 — % 1* fflb ®b 67%-% X21 »% 37% 37% — % 11 62% 60% 62% -F % S 2244 B% 2244 + % LehPCam .60 UK Val Ind Lehman 1.86g LOFGIs 2.00a LlbbMcN at Liggett&M 5 Llfinriln LM Llvlngstn Oil LeckhdA 2.20 Loews Theat LanaS Cam 1 LonaSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.16 Lorlllard 2.50 LuckyStr .00b i a 28% + % t 12% 1244 + % 744 + % 11 33% 33% 33%— l 20% 1 »% + MadV Fd 2.( i 55% 55% 4 L00d 4 23% 23% Mb 4 jjj 14 56% 56V, 56% - .vk ii’SEZ uu -urn 67 22% 22% 22% — 4 W 3Mb 33% 3344 — J 7 34% 34% 34% — 4 * *TA ” Metv Sh 1.40 'AAWcKC 1.40a MOM 1b MldSaWtE .76 MlnerCh 1.30 IM 1.90 ___ „an Tax- MobllOil 1.00 7§ 4 47% 44% 47 25 74% 76% 7#% --% U 11 |9%1% 4 % lisf 199 45 43% 5%-1% 271 »% 22% 22% 8 89 88% 88% — 1 42 57% 5644 57 .... —V—____________ 579 42 4044 i I 60 44% 43% i 13 4644 46% J 22 24% 24% 24%- I 23% 2344 + % I Net Alrlln .60 WaMHMHtvr Nat Can .50b 5alry 1.40 Diet 1.30 44 114 l8 113% - % 3 24% 24% 34% - % 04 79 794b 79% 4 % ' t! ft'-m § 37 . 30% 36% +'% WnUnTel 1.40 Jtortl ei loo Whirl Cp White M 1.80 a 37% 36% : 96 5144 51V, i 12 41% 41 4 9 42 -% i 47% 4 Nat Genl J0 Nat Gyps 2 (teal 2.50 no J? Nevada P » 11%- S S ffi I*£* II 40% 47% 40 I 13% 1344 1JH4- io am 4 75 7444 7444 - 7 Mb 11% 36% 4 _________... I .JO S% 34% 34% 4- I Worthing 1 JO 140 67% 414b 41% 4 '--------'.mi X- '-Y —, Xerox Carp 1 (0 293% *91 291 -* YngstSM 1.80 17 314b Mb 31% 4 Zenith R 1J0 69 60% 39% 60 — Copyrighted by The Ateedatad Praia 1907 A. < 1 f pyBLraa? li* 21.» .“«• T ?tNY3m Yul ft* Nori?fkW»t_6e —710Mb 1«% 2 5744 5744 5744 16 31% 31 * ■ H .1?* ,2* .2^ " ^ or extras, b—Annual .... -Hvldend, ti I Igulriallpp dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1947 plus sleek dividend, e—P«W law year, t — Payable In stock during 1967, er" mated cash value an ex-dlvldend or i ........ — g—Declared or paid -Declared or paid at Edls 1J0 ____Aim 1.00 Otis Slav 3 Oulb Mar JB OwantUI 1-33; 10 274b Mb 27% - 34 694* 69% 49% ■ 34 46% 40% 40% — . 5* *1% 21% 21% — 1 •2 5244 B " I 29% 29% 29% 4 % 40 34% 34 34% — % .. a nib 3D*-toL4 in ij% ii% ij% - PacTAT 1 JO Pan A Mil , -49 Pan Am .40 Pan Am wl If I 0944 09 69% — % i 35% fin 34% — % f »J4 37% 37% 4 •' Paab Coal 1 PennDIxle .60 (MM IJh PaPwLt 1.52 Pa RR 2.40a . j| a% 27 5 43% 43% aft-r-OO II 17% If 4 4(1 5 32% 32% 32% 4 J PmiilCe PraerC _____ Phelp D 3.40a , 24 92% 91 91% - PhllMorr 1.40 a ML „ 90 MB' 50% 59% — % 9 41% 4144 |f% I n ii% a% Mb S 55% 1, a 63 ft J46 214 214 -1% 10 07% f2% a%— 74 23% 23 23% - ere Identified In t c dividend or split up. k—Declared tth dl -Pale » this _______ accumulative Issue le In arrears, n—New Issue, yew, dividend '—■**- ______taken •» moating, r—Declared or pal Stock dividend. f-^PsId In 1946, estimated cash valua i or ax-dlstrtoution data, z—Salas In full. 1. x-dls—Ex dlstrlbu-xw—Without v|M i. ww—With warrants, wd—Whan 1 itod. wl—Whan laauad. nd—Next day ear* Treasury Position 7,406,948,212.92 .... Fiscal Year . 139,122,392.076.47 Miy IA IMS I 6,096,983.397.80 m Wimdrawaw fbMfl -___________91 U 146455,112,268.99 125,455,245,266.49 X-Total Debt— 328.029,670,707.02 318,617,761,412.31 Gold Assets— * * 13,100425.437.94 13,534,021,700.57 IX) - Includes ---------- J l-----------* Monday Events in-the Capital Spent yesterday In Detroit, marking H«9 opening oT «. .group at and altond- By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Amidst the playful gamboling of bulls and bears on Wall Street is a swiftly growing breed that thinks like bear but be-l haves as a bull It is the short| trader. Some say he is bullish, others decline to label] Resolution -him as either,] insisting that although he haV been around the Wail Street pasture a long time, his recent proliferation may be significant. Business Notes However, much evidence has been collected by Wall Street zoologists to suggest he is a hybrid, a kill in bear’s clothing or a bear in mind but a bull In shape. In the past month, the number of shares traded short has risen to 14,896,373, the highest figure on record, prompting a lot of analysts to Question what it ail adds up to. DECLINING MART This figure means that traders have bet that many shares on a declining market. It means that close to 15 million shares have been borrowed and sold in the expectation of falling prices. A Walled Lake man, Fred L, Morningstar of 1440 Beverly, has been appointed treasurer of-group of companies owned or controlled by Detroit industrialist Robert B. Evans. The companies are: The The Ready Power Co., Detroit; Grand Morningstar Rapids Store Equipment Co. and Widdlcomb Furniture Co. Grand Rapids; United State: Motors, Oshkosh, Wis.; M-B Co, New Holstein, Wis.; and the La CoquiUe Real Estate Co., Palm Beach, Fla. Morningstar was formerly on the audit staff of a national < tified public accounting firm. Marie J. Nielsen of 6195 Dakota, Bloomfield Township, has been appointed to the newly cre-ated position of! regional vice president for j Metromedia. Nielsen, who has been rice] president And Detroit areal manager forthej Foster and Klei-ser Division oil Metromedia NIELSEN since 1959, will be headquartered in Detroit* ild Township, has i to the newly ere- a :H9 Mi 85,000 Cougars Recalled by Ford far Light Defect DETROIT (AP) - A defect that could cause the ciar’s headlight covers to close while the lights are on has caused the Ford Motor Co. to recall all 85,-000 of its 1907 Cougars. The luxury sports car selling for 82,850-plus features a concealed headlight design operated by a .hydraulic vacuum pump that opens the light covers when the headlight switch is turned on Ford said Monday that under combination of circumstances it may be possible for the doors The Company said foe liklihood of this occurring to not great, however, all Cougar owners ate being asked to firing their cars into dealer for repairs. CumpitoB by • *?-7 .ara ,, , , mt 154J 325.2 ~ |3a2.. 324J 7 W3 MM »i2 413.4 159.4 151J 292J M.9 mj ml Mr *“* A 130.2 209. Bear or Bull? *----------— Short Trader Is Eyed CUNNIFF So, where’s the profit to be made? Simply by waiting until the price (hops and then purchasing shares of foe same stock. Ibis stock is then returned to foe lender in place of that borrowed earlier. A,.;.-'*,. % A transaction such as this could mean that a stock borrowed and sold at $95 could he purchased later and returned to foe borrower at a cost of $75. The profit, less commissions, would be $20. What upsets foe black and white thinkers who must categorize all animals as bulls or bears is foe negative answer to this question: BEARISH? drops, foe shorts purchase for profits. If it rises, they purchase so as to get out. This rekilts in foe widespread belief that short interest is bul-and that a rising short interest means strength tor a stock and a declining abort interest means weakness. Jf that many shares are-bet on a declining market, doesn’t this represent a bearish outlook? It would seem so, but a majority of stock market analysts say such a huge population is bul-sh, for these reasons: . —If so much of the public feels foe market will go 4pwn, then its a good bet the market will go up. This is an ingrained attitude among many professionals. They feel foe public, which is seldom defined,, is often wrong. POPUIAR BELIEF The popular belief, foerefore, is that this record high short position — it has doubled since 1964 — represents a cushion against a very sharp decline in the market for certain stocks. But not everyone is convinced. Some critical thinking is being done. For one thing, short sellers generally are not amateurs. And even today's amateurs are becoming more sophisticated. There is a good deal of thought behind foe short sellers. They aren’t aft wrong. —Every short position represents a future sale. For each share that has been borrowed and sold, a purchase must eventually be- made. Il the price In addition, this record high" figure still represents only 1 per cent of foe total shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Af today’s pace of trading, this represents less than two day’s activity. , Technical factors may bf contributing also. There are some indications that foe high short positioik may represent some involved maneuvering associated with the recent large mergers. President Named C. Richard Johnston, of 5169 Nob Hill, Bloomfield Township, has been named president and chief operating officer of Mar-plan U.S.A., an-i 11 e r n a • tional market-research organization. Johnston has served as vice chairman and previously vice, president and JOHNSTON Detroit manager since joining the agency in i960. Home Revamped for Match Niche AMARILLO, Texas (UR) -Several years ago Mrs. Felix Phillips, an artist, gave Mr. and Mrs. Marion Bruce a tin holder for long-handled matches to sit in the hearth of an open fireplace. The Bruces had no fireplace where foe snatch holder could be displayed or uses. They de-elded to fiuiltf one. The installation of a fireplace lead to the complete renovation of foe whole house. Financial Fund Declares Dividend ESTIMATE OF SPEED Estimates of the speed of foe trains varied but police said foe northbound train was traveling at 60 miles an hour and foe southbound freight at 45 m.p.h. Financial Industrial F u njd, Inc., has declared its 126th consecutive quarterly dividend from investment income. The company’s current assets are approximately $370 million. Announcement of the dividend came from foe fund distributor Financial Programs, Inc., 2279 ‘Miracle Mile Arcade. A distribution of 3 cents per share is payable on June 19 to shareholders of record May 31. News in Brief Rummage—May 24 th, 9-1,3026 Beacham, Vttaterford. —Adv. Rummage Sale Wed., May 24 Amvets Hall 570 Oakland Ave. a.m.-l p.m. , Adv. In case of summer, you can still get an electronic tune-up and wheel balance at Miracle Mile Pure Servicenter, Jim Alexander. —Adv. Muni’s Rummage Thursday, 9 i 12. Indianwood and Baldwin Rds. 1 Saves the Marl ATLANTA, Ga. (A-* By going to work earlier than usual, Newton Smart saved the Atlanta post office about 8100.000. HU walked Into foe office early one morning and interrupted a burglary. The robbers fled empty-handed, leaving behind two mail bags filled with $100,000 worth of stamps and currency. Judy McCauly, 45, of II Exchange told Pontiac police yesterday a television set, store) and tape recorder valued at same $600 were stolen from bar home. Investigators said entry a front door window. Pontiac'Shrine No. 22 Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem cooperative dinner and officers practice, Wednesday, May 124, 6:30, 22 State St. Devote Fatal Collision of NY Trains is Described In favor of the bears’ position — that stocks will drop — Is foe oldest maxim on Wall Street, that what goes up may well come down. Much of foe short interest, of course, is on some stocks that have doubled and tripled in less than a year. However, until their true nature has evolved, it seems that the bears may be their own enemies, forced to act like bulls. NEW YORK (AP) - James Sullivan was riding in foe caboose as (he 60-car New York Central freight snaked its way north through foe yard. Suddenly, he remembers, “I heard the air in foe emergency brakes go” and then came foe crash. He was thrown to the floor and when he got out, he said, ran up to the head of foe train and-saw that the two engines had jackknifed. I tried to help a guy on foe grbund, but he was all burned and dead.” The dead man was one of six crewmen killed Monday when two: New York Central freight trains collided head an and burned in an upper Manhattan railroad yard. Six others were injured, two of them seriously. Today, as workmen labored to remove foe tangled wreckage froni foe tracks, railroad investigators sought to determine how foe two trains came to be on foe same track. The two freights met with such impact their engines were catapulted over a retaining wail and up an embankment, despite last-minute, efforts of foe engi. nemtoJhattttfijfraliiB.zr: The collision occurred on the northbound track near 148th Street on foe West Side. The southbound track had been closed for maintenance work. Railroad officials could not say why both trains were traveling Mj foe same track. 'Career Da/ Is Seeking to Lift Students Motivation of students toward higher scholastic achievement and, ultimately, better jobs is foe theme of “Career Day” to be presented tomorrow at Jefferson Junior High School, 600 Motor. Mrs. Anne Russell, teacher coordinating the event, said exhibits would be erected in foe school gymnasium by representatives of Pontiac Motor Division A11 antic & Pacific Tea Co., among national firms, as writ as several local companies. P a ■ el discussions on foe choosing of a career, what employers expect of employes, and the ImporatBacG of Negroes selecting a career are scheduled during the 16 amt.-3 p.m. program. Participates in foe discussions will include Dr. Robert R. Turpin, local dentist; John F. Perdue, Pontiac director of school-community and human relations Mrs. Tomi Jackson of Detroit radio station WCHB; and Walter R. Greene, deputy director of foe Michigan Civil Right s ission. In addition, specific talks will be aimed at foe professions of oliege teaching, design engineering, chemistry and fashion styling. Mrs. Russell said parents of Jefferson students are invited to attend the program. SuccessfuNnYmi # * ** % 4* % * * By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) '! am 45 years old and have just started investing. I own Alcan Aluminum, Ameri-Telephone, General Motors, Tenneco, International Paper, and Standard of California. Is tills a good list for income and moderate growth, and is it conservative?”____S. B. A) I s eriousiy question whether all these issues are the best bolding for a man of your age, with many years to go be1 fore retirement. ’ fo studyihgji stock I believe it is important to look at its price action oyer period of years, as well as its ecord of earnings and divi Three of your issues — Tenneco, Alcan Aluminum and In- was made by breaking through teniatiooal Paper-show an up- TV * • * . . ° & tirord Irnn/l m Ward trend in earnings but little or no price progress over the past decade. Th your position, I would switch these stacks into others of lesser yield twit a much stronger chart picture. As substitutes, I suggest Calgon, Nw- wich Pharmacol," and Warner-Lambert.—JIB Q) “I bought Peoples Gas Light & Coke, which was rec-ommended as a sound situation. I have watched the stock drop from 56 a share to foe recent price of 36. ^Vhat Is your opinion of AlHtNk?^ , J.1^- A) I have a high opinton-ot— Peoples Gas as an income holding with a good longterm out- ^ look. The gas distributors, as a — group, have fallen out of favor, bly because 1966 eanrings affected by a Warm winter and less gas amstqmitkm for heating. I do not recommend , the gas stocks for appreciation because their technical action has been poorer than that of: most groups In recent years. You bought a stodk ww its alt- r time high and you will need 1 patience. Ultimately, you are going to see full recovery, in my (Copyright, imi THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1967 Service for James R. Clark, ® 78, of 28 Oriole will be 11 a.m. ' Thursday at Donelson-Johns^Fu-neral Home with burial in Wood-9 a m to 4 lawn Cemetery, Toledo, Ohio, will be 'state! ***• Clark, a retired engineer Prank KeUeyTU.S.p GMC Tl11ck & Coach-Divi-m James O’Hara and W died Sunday. He was a State Democratic Chairman * Collingwood^ Ave. ton Ferency. [Presbyterian Church m Toledo * * ★ land Alpha Sigma Phi, Univer- Workshop session topics will,sity of Illinois. * include precinct organization,! Surviving are his wife, Iva; publicity, public relations, local a son, Richard S. of Detroit; * dub organization and finances. I and two sisters. Homer Finkle,-75, of 284 S. East Blvd. died this morning. His body is at the Voorhees-Sl-pie Funeral Home. Surviving are his wife, Margaret; four daughters, Mrs. Kenneth Hisler, Mrs. Carl Anthony, Gene Knoll, all of Pontiac; a son, Howard of Pontiac; 10 grandchildren; 12-great-grandchildren; two sisters, including Mrs. Edna Stoval of Pontiac; and two brothers, including Frank of Pontiac. Mr. Finkle was a retired employe of Maple Leaf Dairy. thinking about improving your home? Than shouldn't you see us soon? Loans aro available up to 36 months. Take advantage of our services—after all they're for you. Call 335-9493 \\ CHIEF PONTIAC si EMPLOYEES FEDERAL MlmTUHICN 788 Joslyn Ave.-Pontiac William J. Ferguson AVON TOWW&IP — Service for William J. Ferguson, 65, of 1010 Kingsview will be 3 p.m. Thursday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester. Burial will be in Lakeville Cemetery., Mr. Ferguson died yesterday. He was a retired employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division. Surviving are his wife, Louel-t; a son, Davey of Rochester;