THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, MONDAY^ MAY 29, 1967 —M PAGES 3 Escapees Captured in Waterford Home Pontiac State Police captured a convicted murderer and two other escappd convicts from Ionia State Reformatory early today after they allegedly had kidnaped a young Belding couple and foread them to drive them on an eight-' hour ride across Michigan. The convicts were arrested in a Waterford Township home at 3746 Oakview shortly before 6 a.m. today. They were asleep and offered no resistance, according to State Police. The captures of Allen Smith, 39, of Jackson; Dennis C. Hyde, 22, of White Lake Township; and Gerald Van Hoorel- beke, SI, of Grayling came more than eight hoars after the abducted couple reported the incident to die post and later identified their kidnapers from photographs. Smith is a convicted murderer. Van Hoorelbeke was in prison for car theft. Hyde was convicted of assault with intent to rape a Detroit woman in Springfield Township in July 1963. They escaped from the prison late Friday night along with convicted armed robber Welton R. Slayton, 21, of Mount Clemens who was captured yesterday by Hazel Park police. All four men had trusty status at the institution. The kidnaped couple, Clare McQueen, 20, and his 16-year-old bride of one month, Bonnie, told State Police they were abducted near Belding and held Related Story, Page A-2 captive on a ride' to Grand Rapids and Pontiac. They said they were overpowered by three convicts at the home of Mrs. McQueen’s sister, Mrs. A1 Pluskhat. The McQueens went to the house to get some belongings when they were reportedly surprised by the hoodlums who had been sleeping in a barn on the property. ★ * * The convicts were armed with a rifle and knives at the time. They forced the McQueens to drive them to Grand Rapids to see a friend and then pro-'' ceeded to Pontiac when they learned the man had moved. HUNCH PAYS OFF Smith, Hyde and Van Hoorelbeke got out of McQueen’s car in Pontiac and reportedly went to three or four homes of acquaintances before they were caught at the Waterford Township residence. A hunch by a State Police detective led police to the Waterford Township address. Assisted by Oakland County sheriff’s deputies and Pontiac police, State Po- lice broke the door in and captuired the • trio. Smith was sleeping on a couch. Hyde and Van Hoorelbeke were asleep in a bedroom. Kidnaping warrants/ were being sought against the three convicts. Five local residents, who allegedly helped the trio, may be charged with harboring a fugitive, according to State Police. Death Toll at 30 on State Highways By the Associated Press Michigan’s weekend traffic toll reached 30 today a? the long Memorial Day weekend continued. The latest victim included John J. Clark ofi New Baltimore who was killed today when his car was in a three-auto ptleup on M93 near Mount Clemens. Dale C. Crake, 19, of Imlay City was killed today when his car ran off M21 in Lapeer County and hit an embankment. William Slone Jr., 39, of Marshall, was killed yesterday when his car ran off U.S. 27 in Calhoun County. Charles W. Hendriz, 26, of near Buchanan died today in a hospital after he was injured in a head-on crash yesterday on U.S. 12 in Berrien County. STARTED 6 P.M. FRIDAY KIDNAPED PAIR — Mr. and Mbs. Clare McQueen of Belding appear somewhat relieved after a trying eight-hour ride across Michigan in their car (rear) with three escaped convicts from Ionia State Reformatory. The convicts, who were captured early today in Waterford Township, woe reportedly armed when they allegedly abducted the young couple near Jtelding. Couple Describes The Associated Press tabulation of holiday traffic fatalities began at 6 p.m. Friday and ends at midnight tomorrow. Other victims: Mrs. Harriette Harilkin, 32, of Detroit when a car jumped a curb and struck her in Detroit yesterday. The car’s driver, Willie Little, 35, of Detroit, was held for manslaughter. Kenneth Miller, 2, of Saginaw, when he fell from a trailer filled, with sand and was run over by its wheel on Fox Road, 15 miles west of Midland. Long, Scary Drive Thomas Gannon, 40, of Marquette, when his car ran off a rural road south of Big Bay in the Upper Peninsula early yesterday. Carl Rosenbaum, 51, address unknown, when he was struck by a car Saturday on the Red Arrow Highway a mile east ot Watervliet. Mrs. June Smith, 25, of Whittemore, when a car driven by her husband, Harvey, 32, hit an embankment on M65 south of Whittemore yesterday. Louis Cornett, 24, and Darfus L. Gol-stau, 32, died in a collision in downtown Detroit early yesterday. * ' • WWW Joseph Wallace, 55, Saginaw, killed when struck by a truck as he attempted to cross Interstate 75 in Saginaw County on Saturday. FLAT ROCK TEEN Carolyn Manor, 17, Flat Rock, died Saturday night when a car in which she was riding was struck by another vehicle on U.S. 24 in Monroe County. June Brennemah, 52, of East Lansing, killed when a car in which she VWrid-ing was involved in a collision at Michigan 43 and Okemos Road in Ingham County on Saturday nighfl Lorraine M. Manning, 39, of Grand Ledge, died Saturday night on County Road 401 in Roscommon County when a car in which she was a passenger collided with another vehicle. ★ . Sr Alex Hernandez, 33, and his daughter,.. Diana, 10, both of Hamilton, in two-ckn crash Saturday on an Allegan County road southeast of Holland. Frank A. Rosinski, 66, of Fraser, Sat-(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Pontile Proof Photo BACK .BEHIND BARS — Three Ionia State Reformatory escaped convicts are taken to Oakland County Jail this morning after their capture in Waterford Township. Tlie convicts — Dennis Hyde, 22, of White Lake Township; Gerald Van Hoorelbeke, 20, of Grayling; and Allen Smith, 30, of Jackson—were arrested for allegedly abducting a Belding couple and forcing them to drive them on an eight-hour ride across Michigan. Arabs and Israelis Battle 40 Minutes in fiotder Flare-Up By LOIS MANDIBERG “We didn’t talk because we were afraid they would think we were trying to cook something up,” said Clare McQueen when telling of an eight-hour drive as captive of a convicted murderer and two other Ionia State Reformatory escapees last night. ★ ★ ★ McQueen, 20, and his wife, Bonnie, 16,. were allegedly kidnaped at gunpoint in their hometown, Belding, and forced to drive the men to Pontiac. The couple, who’ve been married one month, toid of walking into her sister’s house about noon yesterday and finding one of the men sitting on the couch. “I thought he looked familiar and I made a joke. But then I saw another guy sitting and a third man who walked out of the kitchen with a rifle and told us to stand against the wall,” McQueen said. “We did just what they said,” McQueen, a construction worker, added. OFFERED CAR “The men asked for a ride. I offered them my car but they refused saying they would be arrested for car theft,” said McQueen. “Tbe man waved the rifle and Clare agreed to take them to Grand Rapids. I asked them to leave the gun behind and they did,” his wife saidi When they reached Grand Rapids the men decided to drive on to Pontiac, according to the young couple. "When they didn’t get out I didn’t think we’d ever see another stitch of daylight,” commented McQueen, who told of driving a tan 1961 Chevrolet in a six-hour-long, round-about way to Pontiac from Grand Rapids. NO TALKING “They didn’t say more than two words to us beyond giving directions, said Mrs. McQueen. “After we dropped the men off somewhere on South Saginaw we tried, to find our way home to report our experience to the poljce. “But we got lost on the directions the men had given us, so we found our way to the Pontiac State Police post about 8:30 last night and told them the story,” McQueen concluded. Area Prepares for Parades Area citizens are preparing for tomorrow’s Memorial Day parades in Pontiac, Sylvan Lake and Waterford Township. Most public service agencies and area ktores will be closed for the day. City, county, state and load federal offices will be closed for the holiday. Regular holiday schedules will be observed by the post office which includes limited pick-ups and no regular delivery services beyond special delivery. All operations except routine maintenance wifi be shut down at Pontiac Motor Division and CMC Truck and Coach Division, while all operations will cease at FIsherBody plant Pontiac’s annual parade will begin at the-intersection of Oakland and Saginaw at 19 a.m. Paraders will march to the Civil War Monument in front of City Hall for special ceremonies including a wreath presentation, and then proceed to the veterans’ plot in Perry Mount Park Cemetery for memorial services. * * o' The David Beiisle Post 1006 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will conduct the Waterford Township parade which meets at Dixie and Frembes at 10 a.m. Services iu the Drayton Plains Cemetery will conclude the parade. The Sylvan Lake Memorial Parade will begin at the Daniel Whitfield Elementary School at 11 a.m. Marchers will go to the Veterans Memorial Park for a dedication Service and then to the lake side for an air and naval service where planes and boats wifi strew flowers on the lake to honor fighting men. who have died fo battle. GM ADDS FUEL — Alger Comer , (left), personnel director of Fisher Body Plant, hands a $19,000 donation from General Motors Corp. to James Clarkson, chairman of the Pontiac Creative Arts Center fund raising campaign Jim Peterson, chairman of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce individual drive for the Arts Center, paints the rising figure on the progress board at West Wide Trade and West Huron. Jaycees have raised $11,009 during their month-long campaign which ends tomorrow. Some $100,000 is needed to renovate the center. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Arab mortar and machine guns from the Gaza Strip fired today on farmers and soldiers inside Israel and the Israelis answered with machine guns, an Israeli army spokesman said in Tel Aviv. He reported one Israeli was slightly wounded. While the firing ceased after 40 minutes, the incident served to heighten the Related Stories, Pages A-8, C-12 feeling of. imminent crisis in the Middle East. The feeling of imminence grew yesterday when President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt announced he would never retreat from his blockade of Israeli shipping in the Gulf of Aqaba. Israel's premier, Levi Eshkol, declared his army is ready to fight aggression, including a blockade. The firing on Israeli soil from Gaza apparently was begun by Egyptian irregulars and members of the Palestine Liberation Army. They are believed manning the front lines with Egyptian regulars farther back. It was the first such incident reported along the Gaza Strip since the U.N. Emergency Force pulled out of frontier positions last week at Egypt’s request. Drop in Mercury Expected Tonight Temperatures are expected to drop tonight after a season’s high of 82 was recorded at 10 a.m. Saturday in downtown Pontiac. The previous high for the season was 79 Wednesday. The U S. Weather Bureau predicts occasional light rain and cloudy skies for today. Highs are expected to reach 64 toll. The outlook for tomorrow and Wednesday k partly cloudy and cool. The lowest temperature reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 52. By ^p.ni|t. it had climbed to 70. This account was given: Machine guns and mortars began firing from the Gaza Strip at 12:35 a.m., at men working in the fields of a collective farm and at a motorized army patrol. * ★ ★ The Israelis replied with machine guns. The fire was concentrated near Nahal Oz, on the Gaza border about 45 miles southeast of Tel Aviv. Several fields were set afire. Early Edition Tomorrow The Pres* will publish a single, early edition tomorrow, so that its employes may observe the Memorial Day holiday with their families. Regular editions will’ be resumed Wednesday. I , I I In Today's Press First Time I First no-hitter in Invitational I 1 tournament history — PAGE I 1 C‘L Avondale I School board action ends rela- 1 I tively serenity — PAGE A-4. i LBJ, Viet Foes 1 I Adversaries have common 1 | ground on support of domestic I | programs — PAGE B-4. I* Area News ............... A-4 1 Astrology ............. .04 1 Bridge ......kjsqJL—....04.1 Crossword Puzzle......... .Oil 1 Comics ................. .04 I Editorials .......... ..A-6 Markets .................B-7 Obituaries ...............05 Sports ............. .01-0* Theaters.... B4 TV and Radio Programs Oil 1 Wilson, Earl ...............Oil , 1 Women’s Pages .......... B-l, B-2 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Surprise Shelling Hits Yank Brigade; Raiders Blast Hotel SAIGON (AP) — Communist gunners hammered at U.S. forces on the central coast in a predawn surprise attack today while others lobbed mortar khells into the ancient Buddhist city of Hue. Terrorists followed up the mortar attack by bobbing a Hue hotel housing members of the three-nation International Control Commission of Canada, India and Poland. Arrests Put Off in JFK Probe Garrison Says More to Be Made in Future NEW YORK (AP) - New Orleans Dist Atty. Jim Garrison says “We are going to have to defer any further arrests’’ until later in his investigation of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Garrison appeared Sunday on the ABC “Issues and Answers' radio and television program. ★ * He said additional arrests probably win be made before the trial of Clay L. Shaw, New Orleans businessman accused by Garrison of participating in conspiracy to kill Kennedy. No date has been set for his trial. Garrison has maintained since Shaw was arrested in March that more arrests would be made. BOMBARDED BY PRESS Asked Sunday when the arrests would be made, Garrison replied: “As a result of some experiences we have had—and 1 certainly don’t blame the press; naturally, they want to know about an interesting matter like this, but our office ’was almost put out of commission as if It were bombarded by artillery-We are going to have to defer ainy further arrests to try and make them at a later date. But there will be further arrests and they will probably be before the trial.’’ Garrison contends that the Warren Commission, which investigated Kennedy’s death, was mistaken in its conclusion that lee Harvey Oswald, acting Alone, fired the shots that killed Kennedy in Dallas Nov. 22, 1963. Garrison summed up his conspiracy theory, which goes like this: ■ • Kennedy was not killed by Oswald, but by a group of conspirators composed of Latin Americans opposed to Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro and of former employes of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. • Oswald was not a CIA Agent, but “was obviously an intelligence employe of the United States government. Troops of the 3rd Brigade of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division came under attack at 2:30 a.m. while encamped seven miles northwest of Due Pho, a coastal town 325 miles northeast of Saigon. There was sharp fighting in the same Area last week. A U.S. military spokesman said" a company of the 3rd Brigade took about 100 rounds of 60mm and 82mm mortar ar 57mm recoilless rifle fire from Communist force of unknown size, The enemy also hit the Americans with heavy fire from automatic weapons and small arms. * ★ ★ The fighting continued until daybreak (when U.S. units began a sweep of the area. Late reports said the action continued past midday. The U-S. spokesman said the Americans had reported killing 29 Communist troops. U.S. casualties were not immediately known. The mortar and terror attacks in Hue killed four persons and wounded 17, including a driver for the International Control Commission. Although the hotel was about 80 per cent destroyed, the” 10 commission members staying there escaped unhurt. No Americans were hurt. The hotel housed six U.S. Marines, several American civilians and several U.S. Navy 2 Teens Held in Attempted City Break-In Two teen-agers arrested early today by Pontiac police faced arraignment on charges of attempted burglary. Chester Eatmon, 19, of 553 S. Jessie and Patrick Young, 17, of 260 W. South Blvd. were apprehended, police said, shortly after discovery of pry marks on the roar door of the 5-V Gun Shop, 720 W. Huron. Police were called to the scene about 2:45 a.m. by a neighbor who heard pounding on the door of fhe shop. Eatmon and Young were halted in their car by police at a nearby intersection and released, but were followed when investigators noted a crowbar and pick protruding from the car’s trunk, # k k. Patrolmen David Schroeder and Norman Kilmer followed the automobile and stopped the suspects again at Lake and Gillespie. Schroeder said green paint-chips found on the erdtrbar appeared to match paint on the rear door of the gun shop. Police also took a hammer and flashlight from the pair. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy and cool with occasional light rain today. High 64 to 68. Cloudy tonight. Low 48 to 53. Tuesday partly cloudy and cool, temperatures low around 48, high near 72. Outlook for Wednesday partly cloudy and continued cool. Northeasterly winds 19 to 15 miles today. Lowest temperature preceding I At I a.m.': Wind Velocity 14 n Direction: East Sun sets today at 8:01 p.m. Sun rises Tuesday at $:01 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 113* a.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 1:17 a.m Downtown Temperatures Escanaba ..... 54 ll a.m......... 63 Gr. Rapids ........56 12 m.t........ .. 65 Houghton I Sunday in Pontiac BIRMINGHAM - The City Commission has received recommendation from the State Highway- Department that die city pay the entire cost of two crossovers of Hunter. The report will be studied at tonight’s meeting at 8 at city hall. In the report is a state recommendatien that left turns be prohibited at the Hunter-Forest intersection, bnt CRIME TALK — Planning a crime delinquency conference at Oakland University on June 8 are (from left):. Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors and president of the Michigan State Association of Supervisors; Judge Ar- thur E. Moore of Oakland County .Circuit Court, who will be a speaker; and his son, Judge Eugene A. Moore of Oakland County Probate Court and chairman of the conferences planning committee. Record Traffic Toll Expected Holiday Accidents Fatal to 346 So Far CHICAGO (AP) - Traffic accidents over the Memorial Day weekend snuffed out the lives of hundreds of Americans and safety experts feared today the long holiday peritkf might produce a record toll. The total number of deaths on the nation’s streets and highways stood at 346 early today. * * * Howard Pyle, president of the National Safety Council said traffic fatalities are running about 5 per cent less than last year’s three-day Memorial Day Weekend. However, he added, since this year the respite spans four days, total traffic deaths-barring a trend reversal—wiU hit a new Memorial day weekend high. “Reports to this time indicate the final total will fall within the 650-750 range estimated by the council at the start>of the holiday,’’ Pyle said. The final count will include traffic deaths from p.m. Friday to midnight Tuesday. Gov. George Romney will address school, police and government officials from 12, counties of Southeastern Michigan at a regional conference on crime and delinquency at Oakland University June 8. , ★ * ★ Nine other officials will speak at the day-long session, which cosponsored by the State Bar of Michigan, Oakland University’s Mott Center for Community Affairs and the Crime Prevention Center Committee. Four different community action programs presently In use to combat crime are Holiday Toll Up to 30 on State Roads (Continued From Page One) urday when he backed his car out of a driveway in Roseville and was struck by another car. Robert Glasbie, 24, Kalamazoo, Saturday when his sports car overturned on a Kalamazoo street. Eric Richardson, 10, of Bay City, when he was struck by a car while riding his bicycle in Bangor Township Saturday night. On* Y**r Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature .............. Lowest temperature ............... Weather: Cloudy.1 Cool Pamela Zeeff, 18, of Grand Rapids and Melvin A. Keller, of Cleveland, Ohio, killed Saturday when their car was hit from behind, thrown across the center line, and hit head-on by a third car in Ottawa County. Lycia C. Herron, 22, of Flint, killed on Thompson Road at the 7*'U.S. 23 overpass in Genesee IiSr*r' : : ®, County Saturday when she unity end warm drove her car out from a stop- 's Tomporaturo chart sign and it was hit broadside. 56 47 Fort Worth If 7*1 «" «r©S 7i % Davw Da,e Ta**’27*#f 43, 43 Los Angelas ** 60; near Morley in Mecosta Coun- 71 48 Miami Beach 10 77 . .,,, . . .. . 60, 3* Milwaukee 53 as ty, killed when his motorcycle ip 51 New Orlean- “ 4W " New York „ ... *3 34 truck Saturday in Grand Rap- 78 5* ids. “ 77 William Scott, 23, of Lansing, . 67 Lansing .70 Marquette IpShSoT f 33 New York*1* *» »! rammed into the side of a Traverse C. 67 44 Omaha ,, Albuquerque 68 51 Phoenix ind Lowest Temperatures Denver Is Date In *5 Years Detroit 3jt th 1*66 Duluth BOB ...... NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for ; the mid-Atlantic states, the Carolinas, Florida, most of the ‘ southern Plains ancj die central and northern Rockies. It will be mild in the Midwest and cooler in the Northwest. sing Road in Ingham County. Frank E. Rogers, 46, of Warren, killed Friday in a hit-run accident id Detroit. Barbara Towne, 26, of Greenville, killed in a head-on collision on Barridge Road in Montcalm Cbunty oh Friday. Rex Blair, 43, of South Bend, Ind., killed when his car collided with a tr&in Friday at a Berrien County crossing, Douglas J. Pustay, 18, of near Ann Arbor, killed Friday when ., the sports car in which he was riding crashed into the rear of a trailer truck on Jackson Road. Joseph D. Thomas, 14, of SaL inaw, fatally injured Saturday when struck by a car as he walked on Williamston Road. Romney Will Speak at dil Crime Parley 2nd Peace Conference Convenes GENEVA (AP) - After hearing U.N. Secretary General U Thant blame selfifh actions for producing the danger of a third world war, lesser Western leaders and a few minor Communist figures start talks today on how to live in pece. The Soviet Union and Red China were not represented at the second Pacem in Terris conference and many influential Westerners withdrew, some because of the danger of Arab-Is-raeli war. The conference is named after Pope John XXIII’s encyclical, Peace on Earth. ★ * * Thant did not single out any governments for special blame. He said practically all the governments directly involved in the major world conflicts are U.N. members but “when they feel that their vital interests are involved or threatened, they are willing to follow their own course regardless of fhe restraints and obligations that the charter imposes on them.’’ Thant was one who did not come to the conference because of .the Middip East crisis. He spoke on closed-circuit television from New York Sunday to some 200 persons at the opening of the four-day meeting. PRAVDA EDITOR Mikhail Zimyanin, editor of the Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda, was to have taken part in a discussion today of threats to coexistence. After word came from Moscow that Soviet citizen? were not to appear, his place was. given to .Nicolae Ecobesco of Romania, where the Communist government acts independently of Moscow in some foreign policy matters. Another panelist, Marian Do-brosielski, a counselor to the foreign ministry of Communist Poland, said he was attending “as a private citizen because I think this is worth doing and worthy of more consideration than it is’ getting from some people in the United States.’’ among the topics to be discussed. Delegates will be asked to set up similar programs in their own communities with the sistance of the state bar. ★ .iJE ★ Other speakers include: William Gossett, president-elect of the American Bar Association; C. S. Harding Mott, president of the Mott Foundation;, Dr. Lowell R, Eklund, OU Dean of Continuing Education, and Judge Arthur E. Moore of Oakland County Circuit Court. FBI MESSAGE Also, John S. Bugas, vice president of Ford Motor Co., who will deliver a special message from FBI Director J. Edgai Hoover; William M. Ellmann, president of State Bar; and Keith J. Lennhouts, Royal Oak municipal judge. And Frank Manley Jr., director of Genesee county Vocational Guidance Program, and Jerry A. Zerbe, Mott program administrator and member of Flint Board of Education. UAW Molds Up COPE Funds DETROIT (UPI) - United Auto Workers secretary - treasurer Emil Mazey yesterday confirmed that the UAW has withheld its customary spring contribution to the AFL-CIO’s Committee on Political Education (COPE). ★ * * Mazey said the union did not forward the first installment of about $25,000 that would ordinarily have gone to COPE by late May. ; Mazey said it was possible the UAW would spend money on education independent of COPE in the future. The UAW secretary-treasurer noted that there are no national elections in 1967. He said COPE has plenty of money for immediate needs and the UAW simr ply is withholding Its contributions pending a decision whether to make them. Mazey said about $175,000 would ordinarily go to COPE year. . TNT-Filled Boxcar Catches Fire in S.C. SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) —A boxcar loaded with 100,000 pounds of TNT caught fire after a train derailment today, and police ordered evacuation of a Earlier Story, Page C-5 wide area of lower Spartanburg County. The county sheriff, said, 'That’s enough explosive to blow up the whole county.” * On the American television program “Meet the Press” Sunday night, Dobrosielski blamed Israel for the Middle East crisis said the North Vietnamese of Army ammunition, were ready to negotiate if the United States would stop bombing them. North Vietnam and the Viet Cong are boycotting the conference. The sponsors barred representative from South Vietnam as a result. The railway car, one of about 35 that derailed on the Atlantic Coast Line’s main north-muth route, also contained a quantity The train left the tracks about half a mile from the community of Switzer, 18 miles south of Spartanburg. Three tank cars containing alcohol and other chemicals exploded and caught fire. * Birmingham Afea News Crossover Costs that no traffic signal be permitted: A further crossover, and traffic pattern changes south of Oakland on Hunter, is included in the plan. Hie city commission contends the changes are beneficial to the state highway system and that coets should be shared. It is recommended that the city and state officials meet to discuss a cost-sharing plan. Johnson Forces Hopeful of GOP Help on Rail Plan Also.'on thp agenda Is a report by city legal advisors concerning impounding of vehicles on city streets. Hie report states the city’s, (ordinance is valid under state law. '★ ★ k However, the legal firm also points out the city in exposed to claims of liability for property damage to vehicles resulting from any harm to a vehicle being towed away or stored. IMPOUNDING The firm recommends “sparing” use of impounding procedures. Vehicles have been impounded on restricted-parking areas and during winter snow WASHINGTON (AP) - Johnson administration supporters are locking to Republicans on the Senate Labor Committee to supply votes needed for approval of the President’s plan to avert a threatened railroad strike. It will take nine votes to get the President’s bill out of the committee. Administration strategists hope COP members will supply five of these, perhaps six, Several of the 10 Democrats on the panel have indicated strong reservations about the plan in view of bitter opposition to it from (he six snoperaft unions involved in the entire AFL-CIO. The bill is before the Labor subcommittee, which plans to start work on it in closed session June 5. 1 AMENDMENTS Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex., the subcommittee chairman, fold a reporter he expects many amendments to be offered and said he might have some himself. On the House side, the measure is being handled by tfie Commerce Committee. Several Democrats on that committee also have voiced reservations about the bill. Hie strike deadline in the dispute has been postponed twice through adoption of interim measures by Congress: The strike could begin June 19. Johnson’s proposal calls to a further delay of 90 days with intensive mediation efforts through this period. But if no settlement can be reached, the recommendations of a special five-member board to be set up under the bill would become binding for as long months. CONFIDENT Administration lobbyists say they are confident of five publican votes on the Senate panel and may win that of the other Republican member, Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York. Javits has said he may have ho alternative but to vote for it, even though he feels it clearly amounts to compulsory arbitration. Administration officials insist it is not. * ,m * But the New Yorker said he wants to explore other possibili- ties, including limited seizure of the railroads by the government. 20 Questioned in Stock Probe Rigging Investigation Is Expanding Rapidly NEW YORK (AP) - Some 20 brokerage house employes are being questioned by investigators looking into allegations of multimillion-dollar manipulations of certain stock exchange ' sues. The brokerage salesmen, employed by more than a dozen firms in New York and Chicago, are being asked if they were offered or accepted cash bribes, submitted to blackmail threats, by -the reputed stock riggers who sought to generate public buying in the issues. Some of toe men already have been fired or suspended by their firms. ★ * ★ It was understood that the interrogations were being conductedoy the stock exchanges with wHich they are affiliated and, in some cases, by a federal grand jury here. Hie investigation, moving forward on several fronts, is being rapidly expanded. At least two New York Stock Exchange issues now are under scrutiny along with a larger group traded on the American Stock Exchange. RIGGING SCHEMES Probers said the reputed rigging schemes are continuing and .are costing brokers and investors uncalculated millions of dollars. In addition to the grand jury and major stock exchanges, the situation is being looked at by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Chicago Police Department. ★ * * One prominent Chicago broker, partner tii a member firm of the New York Stock Exchange, received a death threat by telephone after suspending salesman who was being questioned. the salesman later was reinstated. Also on the agenda is a report on a proposed resurfacing of six downtown alleys. ★ ★ k The city engineer’s' office found some of the alleys are in need of resurfacing, but that only a thin layer can be applied due to grade problem?. Total cost would he about $9,000. Springtime Break Time for Prisoners: By the Associated Press It’s spring and the prisons have sprung. A total of 17 men walked away from five federal and state institutions during the weekend, apparently spurred to freedom by the balmy air. Supreme Court Extends Police Evidence Power WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court, in a precedent-shattering ruling, today voted 8-1 to give police moire power seize evidence from a suspect’s honie and use it at his criminal trial. In making the move, the high court threw out a 46-year-old distinction between “more evidence,” which the 1921 Supreme Court had held may not be seized, and other forms of evidence which police have been free to take when in “hot pursuit” of a suspect. Site Changed in Waterf ord The Waterford Township Board’s 7:30 meeting tonight will be held at the water department building instead of Township High School, the usual meeting place. The water department building is located at the Civic Center off Tubbs Road. 1 k/ k The list/of escapees included nine from Ionia State Reformatory, four from the Federal Correctional Institution at Milan, two from Waterloo State Prison farm near Jackson, and one each from Coldwater State Hospital and the Boys Training School at Lansing. 16 ROUNDED UP The springtime spree was over quickly for 10 of the escapees who were captured by police. Searches continued over a wide area of Michigan for the seven still at large. ★ ★ 6 Pontiac seemed to be a magnet for some of them, as five were found at homes of friends there and another was picked up 15 miles away in Hazel Park. k k k \ ' Four others were caught seven miles from Ionia State Reformatory from which they had escaped. Local Police Nab 2 Prison Escapees, In other rulings today, the court: • Ruled- that an American’ citizenship cannot be taken away without his consent. ★ k k 'In our country, the people are sovereign and the government cannot sever its relationship to the people by taking away their, citizenship, Justice Hugo L. Black said in the landmark 5-4 decision. • Held unconstitutional a voter-approved amendment to the California State Constitution that gave property owners “absolute discretion in housing” sales and rental?. • Denied a plea by Adam Clayton Powell that it role quickly on his c{aim that he was unconstitutionally excluded from his seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. • Granted Alabama a review of a tower courfrtding that had ordered desegregatton of all prison facilities in the state within a year. \ By agreeing to hear the appeal from the decision given last December 6y a three-judge federal court in Montgomery, the court continued to hold up the ordered desegregation of jails in the state. Two escapees from the Waterloo state prison farm near Jackson were captured early today by Pontiac police who forced their way into an apartment-on the city’s near east side. ★ ★ Walter Graham, 23, and Malcolm McNeil, 33, were held at the Oakland County Jail on escape charges pending their return to Jackson. ★ ★ ★ Prison authorities said the pair had walked away from the Waterloo farm last night. Local police, acting on a telephone tip, took the two into custody at 377 E. South Blvd. k k k Graham was serving a 6^to-15-year sentence for assault with intent to rob and McNeil was serving a l-to-15-year sentence for breaking and entering. Novi Parade Is Slated Novi Road inside the village wiU be closed to traffic between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m. tomorrow for Memorial Day services and parade. \ 1 Meeting 'll I Changed | The City Commission § will (m eel 8. p.m. 1 Wednesday instead of to- § night as originally re- I ported. \ A change from § the commission’s usual § meeting date of Tues- 1 day was necessitated by 1 j observance tomorrow of § Memorial Day. Vr THE PONTIAC PJtBSS, MONDAY, MAY^9, 1967 A—8 (Advcrtlummt) Help* You O voreouio FALSETEETH ' Looseness and Worry RotaiKbHuqMi MM ttacaUM Of lOOM I te«th. FaBTKSTB. •ilceUne »o they feel ot«» •"•nttel O rSfnmSiy y0Ur repUlATlY. 0#( FA8TEKTH it nil drug ooubtern. $OOII *Pain,ing ' nHK * Electrical * Brick Front MW tidint, 111 sMegles, 1 windows, “foot cond., fatv. nails, flower •Ml. Ifaol door. M rafters. «Had>reess, Eieensiea, CeMerTies MriMjfW ■ Hit. guarantse! Kay Bee Const. FE 4-6 shines stainless steel on contact! TflRHITE STAINLESS STEEL POLISH the perfect polish for FLATWARE • RANGES • SINKS KITCHEN APPLIANCES POTS • MOULDING • TRIMS ACTS INSTANTLY DISSOLVES TARNISH ON CONTACT Civet brilliant, lasting lustre; adds tarnish-resistant finish; needs no hard rubbing. No "all-purposo" metal polish can equal TARNITE for Stainless Steel, because TARNITE copes with the properties of this one metal, far better, faster and cleaner,. TARNITE makes your Stainless Steel things glisten like new, fast' and without any hard rubbing. Try TARNITE today. AT MOST HARDWARE STORES^ WASHINGTON (AP) — While] Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-|a solution while Javits said he mate opinion continued tolKyv said if the destruction of hoped U.S. troops would not be mount against unilateral U.S.| Israel is’ threatened, “I don’t required. All three opposed uni-military intervention in the Mid- think 'the United States should lateral action and recommended die East crisis, a top defense let it happen.” a solution through the United official warned there are indica-| Percy called-for “everything* Nations, tions sharply increased fighting short of physical force” to find ‘WON’T GO IT ALONE’ will come soon in Vietnam. Cyrus R. Vance, deputy secre- Senate Eyes Viet, Middle East important to our future security and well-being than it is in the Far East.” . deputj tar of defense, implied such a step-up in Vietnam action would he started by the Communists. He said, “J think there are strong indications that we may have sharply increased fighting _ the demilitarized zone, around the demilitarized zone, and probably concurrent actions throughout the nest of South Vietnam in the near future. Roseville Man, 50, Found Fatally Shot STANDING TALL -* Larry Jensen, a 6-foot-5Vi Navy medical corpsman was to go to Vietnam to help provide medical support for Marines. But the Marines couldn’t find a Leatherneck field uniform big enough to fit him, so he’s back in Detroit with his wife, Claudette, waiting while a special uniform is made. The problem isn’t his height or his weight (245 pounds), it’s his sleeves. They’re 38 inches long. He said “we believe we can handle anything that may come up at this timie” with the 455,000 U.S. troops now in Vietnam and others who are on the way. He said future troop levels are still under consideration. He said the concept of closing off the North Vietnam-South Vietnam border with obstacles and sensor devices “makes more sense today, despite its cost, than it did two years ago.1 NO NECESSARY CONNECTION Vance would not be drawn into any substantive discussion of the Middle East situation but said he sees no necessary connection between it and the Viet' nam war. The senatorial comment on the Middle East was freer. DETROIT (AP) - A 50-year-old Roseville man was found shot to death next to his car in an alley in Detroit Sunday. Detroit homicide detectives said the victim, Max Oravec, had also been beaten on the head. Police took a man into custody for questioning. Attempted robbery was the suspected motive, police said. U.S. Marines Don't Suit Navy Man Bound for Viet DETROIT (AP) — Medical I ical duty in Vietnam. Although Corpsman Larry Jensen is fir he admits he’s concerned about for duty, all right. But the Ma-{ going into combat, he considers rines are having difficulty find- aduty ling a uniform fit for Jensen. | „ and 18 years old are So Jensen, known to his bud-.getting their arms and legs dies as “the gentle giant,” is blown off over there,” Jensen [back home with his pregnant says. “The least I can dels try wife, Claudette, until the Leath-|to patch them up and, hopeful-ler-neck tailors can whip up aty, save someone’s life.,” J look Yon slice it gently ■way... and smile... and take a bite and simply sit and taste ... than yon get goin*............. •lowly ... then faster, faster, ‘fatter . . . and soon, it’s gone, dingblastit... our Colorado-<;orn-fed (teak, ain’t it GRAND! MNTIACl Hiiabatb Laka Road across fraai Tha MM Jett mat at Tslagraph. WESTLAND: Wayna Read just south of BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! suit of clothes for him. Jensen isn’t really much of a giant—he’s only 6 feet 5Mi and he tips the scales at a mere 245 pounds. But his arms are a bit of a problem. They’re 38 inches long and hang alipost to his knees. | Jensen actually is in the Navy, I but Navy medical corpsmen pro-| vide combat support for Marines in Vietnam and are Outfitted With Marine uniforms. TRAINS IN DUNGAREES The gentle giant went through a five-week training course at Camp Pendleton, Calif., wearing Navy dungarees. At the end of the five weeks, still without a uniform, he watched his buddies ship out for Vietnam. Jensen convinced commanding officers the 45 to 60 days until a special uniform is made could be better spent with Claudette than picking up cigarette butts. The 26-year-old medical corpsman volunteered for med- Sens. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y. and Charles H. Percy, R-Ill. said the United States should not let Israel fall “without doing everything it could to save her. ROSEVILLE (AP) - Two Roseville youths who reportedly threw a cherry bomb into a group of mourners in front of a Roseville funeral home have pleaded guilty to possessing fire crackers and alcoholic beverages. Larry J. Parenteau, 20, was fined $124 Saturday by Harrison Township Justice of the Peace Edmund Schmidt. Michael J. Russell was sentenced to 12 days in jail when he could not play his $82.50 fine. Ill This Week at Simms Complete WATCH OVERHAUL With PARTS and. LABOR at tint price... your watch will ba disassembled, cleaned and oiled, — adjusted and timed electroni- _______ roily, genuine factory parti used and you get full year guarantee on labor. Parti include items, crown, mainspring ■ or balance staff at this •Badly crystal OVERHAUL AND WATCH CLEANING Only ... 5. So did Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., who said the United States “must give loud and clear notice in advance that we will not go it aloije” in the Middle East dispute. “We are not and cannot become the sole policeman of the entire world,” he said. Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D., said it would be unfortunate to force Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser to a premature confrontation. He said he hopes some U.N. presence can be reconstituted in the Middle East. 2 Youths Fined Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., said it is clear that “the restraint of further aggression in that part of the world is more SINUS Safferers PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER 108 Moll Office Building Phone 682-4600 McMaster’s Imported Canadian KIs always been a great value. 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Our true Open-End Mortgage means that yon may pay any additional amount or pay up your mortgage at any time without notice or penalty. , ,. Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount for additional improvements or any other satisfactory purpose. ... Yon may pay interest and principal in advance at any time. . .. Terms on our conventional Open-End Mortgage run-up to 25 years. Monthly payments include Principal, Interest, Taxes and Insurance. 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC-DRAYTON PLAINS—ROCHESTER—CLARKSTON—MILFORD—WALLED LAKE-LAKE ORION- WATERFORD A-—0 /PONTIAC PltKSS. MONDAY, MAY 20, 1067 Holly Looks West to New Lake HOLLY TOWNSHIP - A large new lake haa beep formed by a dam on the western edge of the township and now appears ready for future development. Les Cotrill, a developer from Flint, built the dam at lineman and Eddy Lake, to form a 180-acre lake — to be called Seven Lakes. ' Hie land was previously covered by smaller lakes, bogs and farmland. Cotrill said earlier this year he may sell the whole package to a single enterprise or develop it as a subdivision himself. Township officials have hailed his effort as Important to the additional operating millage to run additional classrooms.” “We had planned to ask for no loan fund program, seeking permission to divert some of the Education to Go to Confab WALLED LAKE - A member of the senior high school staff has been chosen Michigan’s representative to the National Institute in Office Occupations to be held this summer at State College of Iowa. Jody Newcomer, office occupations, coordinator, will be one of 30 participants in the workshop which runs from July 17 to Aug. 11. * * ★ She was recommended for the program by foe Michigan Department of Vocational Education on the basis of her teaching and work experience. IT WONT LAST — Barbara Cole (right) of 9020 Marilyn, Commerce Township, enjoys the ice cream at Michigan State University in East Lansing while it lasts. The JJSU dairy store plans to •j AP Wirtphoto close the dairy store where-the four-deckers are sold on July ill With Barfou-a is Jan Soderstrum of Harper Woods. School Staffer Soroptimists Plan Town Hall 4 Personalities to Kick Off Series On Nov. 16 Genevieve Antoine Dariaux, director of the Paris fashion house, Nina Ricci, will discuss “Tips From A Paris Fashion Expert” Bess Myerson, former Miss America and star of several television programs, wfll speak March 21,1988 on “Women’s Place in a Changing World.” On April 18, 1968, Alistaire Cooke, U.S. correspondent, BBS commentator and master Of ceremonies of many television programs, will speak on “What Has the United Nations Done?” ★ ★ ★ Reservations may be made for the season or for any one luncheon through mail order to P. W. Box 504, Farmington, Michigan 48024. — The Soroptimist Club of Far-and Novi will undertake a new program next year—a Town Hall series. Four well-known personalities will speak at the program which will be held at foe Northland Theatre starting next October. ) Proceeds from the series are to be donated to foe Farmington YMCA capital building fund. Following each lecture, luncheons will be held at foe Glen Oaks Golf and Country Club, 30500 13 Mil#. The guest speaker of the day will hold a question and answer period following foe luncheon. Opening the series on Oct. 26 win be Walter Slezak, star of stage, screen, radio and television, who will speak on “Show Business Is No Business.” THE Board Action Serenity in Avonaaie By JEAN SAILE The relative serenity which has cloaked Avondale Board of Education sessions since the employment of John W. Dickey as superintendent a year ago has been shattered. At a special meeting called to accept foe recommendations of architects in regard to foe construction of resource centers in the elementary schools, foe board took foe opportunity to rescind its plan for extended-day sessions next year at the Avondale Senior High School. ★ * ★ The action has caused: , • A write-in campaign against school board incumbent Jessie H- Holmes at the June 12 election. • It has set off a flurry of rumorsthat Dickey would resign. Dickey has denied them. • It has left foe board with several alternatives but no concrete plan to provide 10 needed additional classrooms for next year. WWW “It’s the uncertainty of the whole thing,” said Robert Lewis, an active PfA member and announced write-in candidate against Holmes in foe forthcoming election. ‘The students don’t know where they’ll be attending classes next fall. Nobody knows which children will be affected or where the money will come from to provide the classrooms,” he continued. At issue is the May 8 decision by the board to place the senior high school on extended day sessions. Students in the 11th and 12th grades would have attended morning sessions and the 9th and 10th grade students would have gone in the afternoon. Ninth graders currently attend foe junior high school. WWW The plan was one proposed by -Dickey, who said he realized at foe time of its adoption it had not met with full-hearted acceptance by foe board. POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVES He stressed that prior fo the special meeting he had briefed foe board on possible alternatives to foe plan of extended day sessions. “It’s not foe first time a board of education has over-. ruled a superintendent’s plan, and it won’t be foe last,” said - Dickey. “I am not at all unhappy with their decision.” On record as opposed to the repeal of foe extended-day plan are board president Ray Isan-hart and Jack Slater. Slater is also due for reelection June 12. He is unopposed. Avondale, which this year has had its money problems with * foe Municipal Finance Commission and which still has its case under appeal, is now seeking further concessions from the State Department of Education; PORTABLE CLASSROOMS Dickey said a letter had been sent to Ralph Frostic, education Teen Receives Poster Honor LAKE ORION - John T. Cohoe, 3635 Locust, has been informed he was awarded an honorable mention for foe poster he submitted to the 1967 National Maritime Poster Contest. A student at Cass Technical High School in Detroit, Cohoe's poster was one of 10,000 entries submitted in foe 11th annqal competition sponsored by the American Maritime Industry, the U.S. Department of Commerce and foe Post Office Department. News Analysis consultant for foe school bond mission to funds voted for, a school and Board of officers to the purchase of relocatable classrooms. Dickey said he’d been told that chances were good for approval. Cost of ten such classrooms is estimated at $150,000. w w w A “We are , in a building program and from present indications we will continue to be for some time,” Dickey said. “These rooms could be used for a number of years to meet the expansion needs of foe district,” Dickey said. “These rooms could be used for a number of years to meet foe expansion needs of foe district.” RESOURCSCENTERS Other alternatives proposed include foe leasing of available church rooms, foe use of activities and multi-purpose rooms in existing schools, and the’use starting in January of foe resource centers now under construction. “The rub in such plans,” said Dickey, “Is foe need for this year; to make do with surplus funds which have not yet been appropriated,” he said. WWW Also under consideration is foe use of foe present junior high school site of better than 58 acres for construction of foe new high school. BID DROPPED Dickey said a bid on another location has been dropped because of the expense involved. “If we use foe junior high school site, we could possibly use site money for foe purchase Of classrooms," Dickey said. The board is expected to hear by Wednesday regarding the state’s view of the diversion of bonding funds. w w w >. ' “Until we hear we will not be ' able to take further action,” Dickey said. Friends of Library Elect New Officers ORION TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Martin L. Parker, 400 Nakomis, has been elected president of the Orion Township Friends of the Library. She succeeds outgoing president Mrs. Stewart Drahner. WWW Mrs. AI Urban is first vice president; Mrs. Dean Spitler, second vice president; Mrs. Gordon Brown, secretary; and . Mrs. Gerald Young, treasurer, w ,w w The group is,currently making plans for a summer story hour at the library and a June tea in connection with a forthcoming art exhibit there. Dam In Holly Township Forms Lovely Lake, Good Shore Line Tax Vote Delay in W. Bloomfi Troy Library's Story Hour to Begin June 12 The Friends of the Troy Public Library will sponsor a story hour for children starting June 12. w w w„' They will be held 11:30 a.m. Tuesday for the 5-8 age group. The class will be limited to 20 because of lack of space. WWW A reading program for various age groups will also be held during the/ summer with certificates awarded to children for accomplishment in reading. WWW .Summer hours for foe library will also start June 12. They will be: Monday and Thursday, noon to 8 p.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, noon to 5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday closed. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A special vote to increase property taxes here will not be held before this fall because of a lack of time to get the issue on an August ballot, according to township officials, w. w w An August vote was necessary in order to collect foe extra tax - this year, but a citizens committee has decided there is. not enough time to gather facts and compile figures. “In order to get it on an August ballot, we woqld have to have everything ready by July and that .isn’t enough time," said Clerk Doris Leach. “We want to do a good Selling job because we don’t want it to fall through again.” ■ WWW She said citizens and officials will work forough the summer to gather facts and figures. TOOK DEFEAT In April, 1966, voters defeated by 75 votes a 2-mill increase for added police and fire pro-tection. This brings officials to another problem — how to present the proposal. .Should the millage increase oe presented as one package or in three separate issues — one for poljce, one for firemen and one for roads? Deficit Budget Tentatively OK'd WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — A tentative budget, which carries an $80,000 deficit, has been approved by the Township Board. A public hearing must be held MSI) Quits Ice Cream, Cheese Business EAST LANSING - They’re taking some of foe moo out of MooU. The Michigan State University dairy store, long a favorite ice cream and cheese-buying spot for students and alumni, will close July 1. w . w w r; Officials say the closing is for “redirection of foe dairy plant-program of the Department of Food Science.” Dairy store customers say it’s sad. They won’t be able to, buy ice cream cones — two scoops for 15 cents . ^ or that delicious cheeselike confection called frumil or milk and butter from the MSO dairy herd. RESULTS OF EXPERIMENTS Products from the dairy plant first went on sale about 35 years ago. They were the results of experiments — all edible of course — and excess milk •and butter produced for campus consumption. Five years ago foe store sold 400-500 ice cream cones a day. The total leaped to foe current 1,200-1,500 cones a day as more and more students tromped to new class buildings on the south campus. But those same students, 1 about 38,000 now enrolled at Michigan State, are part of foe reason for the store’s closing. - w w w. The dairy plant produces milk and related items for the MSU dormitories. That takes lots of bulky equipment and manpower. “By halting production of milk for foe campus community, we’ll be able to free foe equipment for more teaching and research Work,” explained Dr. B. S. Schweigert, chairman of foe Department of Food Sciences. WWW “And that is the major responsibility Of this department.” before the budget is adopted but no’date has yet been set. Expenditures io the tentative budget amount to $587,291 while anticipated revenues total only $507,930. Largest increases over -last year are in salaries and benefits for the police and fire departments. Total police department salaries went from $62,000 last year to $101,900 this year and benefits were increased from $8,900 to $17,318; Fire department salaries were Increased from $40,500 to $47,$50 and benefits from $3,500 to $9,218. 10 PCT. RAISES The increases included 10 per cent raises for everyone plus three new policemen hired last fall and enough money to hire two more men. AH employes received about a 10 per cent increase. Other items in the budget include supervisor’s office, $63,-379; clerk’s office, $29,338; elections, $3,340; treasurer’s office, $34,235; general government, $48,550; police department, $155,118; fire department, $107,-400; building department, $71,-082; town hall, $5,490; roads, $15,000; and library, $54,335. area’s development. EXPECTED TO FILL The water behind foe daqi appears to be about a foot short ‘of 8$2 feet above sea level planned, However, it is expected $o fill completely later. Gone are all foe boggy areas and the land surrounding now appears to be a dry, usable shoreline. The lake has several deep spots up to 56% feet where former lakes are located. “The thinking on the separate issues is that if voters turned down one proposal, foe others wouldn’t necessarily fail,” said Mrs. Leach. She explained foe money is needed for, among other things, capital outlay items such as equipment for foe police and fire departments. She said there is no money included in this year’s budget for such items as fire trucks “which are badly needed.” One mill, which was voted in five years ago, will expire after the December tax collection. Attica Twp. Mishap' Kills Imlay Youth ATTICA TOWNSHIP - A 19-year-old Imlay City youth was killed when his car skidded out of control on M21 near Sommers $t 2:45 a.m. today. - Dead is Dale E. Crake, 19, of 2826 Black’s Corner. A girl passenger in his car, Frances K. Hill, 17, of 642 Lake Pleasant, Attica, is in critical condition in Hurley Hospital, Flint. Sheriff’s deputies said the car apparently went out of control after leaving a curve at high speed. The car left foe road, crossed a field to , a railroad embankment, leaped the tracks and ended upside down on the oppo-site side, deputies said. Heads Dairy Unit DETROIT (JRMK Jack W. Barnes of Royal Oak, general manager of the. Michigan Milk Producers Association, has been elected president of the newly organized Dairy Council of Michigan. Climate Contcol a Part Protector SANTA CRUZ, Calif (AP) -Sytvania Electric Products Inc., has a “climate control room” . which maintains a consistent temperature, within one degree Farenheit, to protect delicate electronic parts being processed to tolerances as minute as one-tenth the diameter of a human hair. Normal temperature variations could cause expansion or contraction of intricate metal* components used in electronic systems. This would make it impossible to mqet specifications sometimes as close as 90 millionths of an inch. Hearing Slated on Troy Airport Commission Notified of Lansing Session TROY—The Gty Commission has received official notice that a public hearing will be held June 12, at 10 a.m. in Lansing on the Jim Robbins Airport issue. The notice is included on the agenda for tonight’s commission meeting at 8 at foe municipal building on Big Beaver and 1-75. The airfield at 14 Mile and - 1-75 has been the focal point of controversy due to the attempt by its owners to get a commercial license. Nearby subdivisions have opposed the move charging too much noise was created, especially by jet aircraft. Last month foe City passed an ordinance restricting expansion of any of foe three airfields within its boundaries. JURISDICTION QUESTIONED However, the jurisdiction of the city in airfield matters was questioned by at least one state official. The Michigan Aeronautics Commission (MAC) will con-* duct the June 12 hearing and is expected to announce its study on safety hazards, in the area. The MAC is expected to listen to representatives of the airfields, city and state officials. It is not known if city residents will be allowed to spCak. An airfield license would also have to get approval of the Federal Aviation Agency. Dance Workshop at Wayne State The / University Center for Adult Education of Wayne State University, the University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University and the division of health and physical education at Wayne State University will sponsor a summer dance workshop June 26 through July 8. i Classes will be held in foe Matthaei Building at MSU from 1 to 4:30 p.m. and 6 to 9:30 p.m. June 26-30 and July 3, 541. Enrollment is limited and applications must be made by Thursday. THE PONTIAC PlitfSS. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Our Salsa Department WILL BE OPEN Wed. Evenings “Til 8 P.A/L We eerry • complete Hm ef draft-ln« end engineering supplies! Mon., Tues., Thurs. and Fri., 8:30-5 BLUE PRINT CO. 1CI4 W. Huron, 2 Blks. W. of Telegraph Red Buildup Hints Worst Battles Ahead mu MM I cent, ».«. cmsimsunu whiskey. m noor. n% cum hbitmi mm' Sours are sweet on Carstairs We've got it made, sugar, SAIGON (AP)—Communist military forces are openly challenging American positions in two key Vietnamese border regions. They are building \up their units inside the preparing for what may be the severest battlefield test the allies have faced hi the war. This view is based on battles in May and intelligence estimates of enemy movements and troop deployments inside South Vietnam In recent weeks. In late April and early May.iCommiinist effort in the Khelnamese are returning to Cam-North Vietnamese attempted to. ganh hills. ' bodia. occupy strategic hills above the . < Not all the military initiative Marine strongpoint at Khe Sanh|‘SECOND FRONT ih May lay with the Cotamu- below the western demilitarized The North Vietnamese have nists. The V.S. Army moved ' * " north into the former Marine base of Chu Lai and began Operation Oregon in southern Quant Ngai Province. U.S. intelligence reports indicate no less than one North Vietnamese division and five regiments are based there-. zone. A bloody series of battles ensued before the Communists were driven back. headquarters for Alto Insurance . . . Cancelled or Refused! Wo have several plans available for those who are experiencing difficulty obtaining Auto Insurance. Easy Payments-Broad Coverage— Fast, Fair Claim Service. Don't take a chancel CALL NOW for fast quotation. ... Safe Drivers Save Money Our Gold Key Auto Policy provides Top Protection at the 'lowest possible rate," plus Additional Savings for Accident Free Years. Gold Key offers "very broad coverage at Low. We Also Write Motorcycle Insurance. w if nw if ilnr/iTMi * i\r<5irpAivri 1044 Joslyn 334-3535 Pontiac, Mich. 48055 The main battle focus has been along the demilitarized zone that divides the two Vietnam#, and more recently in the central highlands near the Cambodian border. But Red units are known to be on the move elsewhere. 9TH EUVISION The half North Vietnamese-alf Vietcong 9th Division, thrashed by allied units in February’s Operation Junction City and driven into Cambodia, known to have moved back into Vietnam. One regiment is believed based in the southern part of War Zone D north of Saigon, protected by an artillery company that slamiqed Chinese-made 122mm rockets into Bien Hoa Air Base early in May. These rockets bring Saigon within reach of enemy artillery-type weapons. WWW The Vietcong 5th Division is reported well up to strength ant deploying along the jungled due east of Saigon. The U.S. 11th Armored Regiment got notice of this a week ago when an armored platoon was practically destroyed mihutes on Route 1 near Xuan Loc. The U.S. 9th Division, deployed In the northern Mekong River Delta, fought its biggest battle early this month, claiming 181 VC killed from the hardy 514th Battalion. A day earlier a company of the 9th was overrun, with losses of 19 dead and 47 wounded. Vicious fighting I American sources report they have evidence that the Vietcong are infiltrating the complete range of modern Chinese infantry weapons to hard-core guerrilla battalions and main force units in the delta. If this is American units there can expect4 vicious fighting ahead, particularly now that the monsoon rains are beginning. In two battle areas, the al-ways-present enemy threat has materialized into the real thing. These are at the demilitarized1 zone, and the Cambodian border-: of Pleiku Province in the cen-' I tral highlands. opened what appears to be a second front” on the Cambodian border west of Pleiku. Four of the six North Vietnam-Then came the attempted en-jese infantry regiments that drclement of the i.Marine have been sitting on the border ptrong point of Con Hiien which since Christmas have reportedly sits at the northwestern point oft moved into the central plateau. “Leatherneck Square” just. The ,U.S. Aymy’s 4th Division south of the eastern demilitar- has made several vicious con-ized zone. The battles for this! tacts with these forces. Its intel- The first voice radio signals ...... ^ ^ _________ across the Atlantic Ocean were area are still going on, and|ligence people say they detect sent from the Eiffel Tower to there is evidence of a renewed no signs that the North Viet-' Arlington, Va. "YOUR HEALTH" SEVEN DANGER SIGNALS 1. Recurring headaches 5. Nervous tendon and/ 2. Neck pain or ‘crick* 0> dlmMesi 3- Grating arid popping 6. General body muscle V noite when turning head' 4. Backache WARNING If any of thoso symptoms persist -CALL YOUR CHIROPRACTOR If You Have Any Questions, Call or Write Dr. H. H. Alexander ioz«j« Chiroprorlir 1’hyslcinn * oetynAvd.-, PE 2-0111 USE —BUY, SELL, TRADE! PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! FILL NOW-FIRST PAYMENT-NEXT FALL! Ashland Fuel Oil There’s no need to wait for winter! Fill your tank NOW and be assured your home has safe, reliable, even heat when the first cold snap occurs. No payment is due until October 1, and you will be billed at the lowest price that prevails during the summer months5. Or you can take advantage of the Ashland Fuel Oil Budget Payment Plan—nine equal monthly payments from September to May. There’s no interest, no, carrying charge. Ashland Fuel Oil is truly a superior home-heating product. It’s .safe, reliable and provides clean, even heat. And it is always competitively priced to save you money. 1 Ashland Oil ii first in service, too. You can count on receiving prompt, accurate metered delivery. No matter how cold the weather, your Ashland Oil Distributor will see that you, always have plenty of clean-burning Ashland Fuel OiL Call your nearly Ashland Oil Distributor __—sura1 f NOW and get the fump on cold weather M dyjgfdgfff# with a “sumtner-filF of Ashland Fuel QUl, nSIHoMU ASHLAND OIL A REFINING COMPANY DAVID GORDON, Agent 105, Ann Street EDWARD “MATT' MORRIS, Agent 703 Sooth Lafayette RICHARD A. SMITH, Agent 4304 Loving Street Savings for You Today END OF MOUTH JUST A FEW OF OUR MANY GREAT VALUES! No Money Down - 90 Days Same as Cash! 11 GOOD mmm SHOP 51 W. HURON BIG PRICE REDUCTIONS... you get more for your money FREE CREDIT easier for you to buy and save-note! Free Credit? THAT’S RIGHT! Tak# 3 month* to pay WITHOUT any finance or carrying charge*. And you may open your account in leu* than 3 minute*. You deal directly wit|» u* ... no bank .or finance Company ... we do our own financing. MAYTAG Deluxe Wringer Washer Buy Wnehne, rinses end spins damp-dry BO pounds of Clothes in 80 minutos! Big Spinner Washer, Now *125 *136 Dolivorod! Guaranteed! Serviced! EASY TERMS $5.80 MONTHLY Oversize deluxe washer with adjustable wringer has the famous Maytag exclusive Gyralator washing action. Buy now and save! Dnlivnrnd! Guaranteed! Serviced! NO MONEY DOWN $6.30 MONTHLY AlU has porcelain tub — SUDS SAVER feature — Power (Flush Rinse and fast • action drain pump. World’s fastest washer! *124 EASY TERMS *6.70 MONTHLY Mew 1967 — Great styling — all Walnut cabinet — alt channels (including 50) up-front tuning and speakers. Free stand induced. J ‘ Dnlivnrnd! Serviced! Warranted! NO MONEY DOWN *6.85 MONTHLY Starts meal cooking at preselected time. Has electric Clock and Timer — Minute Minded-Storage Drawer — Porcelain Enamel Phone: 629-7464 Phan*: 671-0511 Delivered! Serviced! Guaranteed! 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Reduced now to . *137 *137 Sale! REFK1GERATDKK 10% to 20% off! Delivery, Warranty and Service Includad! GENERAL-ELECTRIC Deluxe 12 cu, ft. Refrigerator, now Sensational value! Has big Porcelain-Crisper -width Top Freezer — Door Shelves, Etc. FAMOUS BRAND 2-DOOR 12 cu. ft. Refrigerator, Only Big, separate Zero-degree Freezer — deluxe Door Shelves - full width Crisper, and more! PHILCO 2-Door Deluxe with *Dairy Bar’Door, now Sensational value with all deluxe features! Has big crisper - Butter Chest, Etc. Hurry! FRIGIDAIRE 2-Door Deluxe with 15. cu. ft. Capacity Separate 1274b. True Zero* Freezer — 2 big Crisper* — V Butter Chest - Frost Free. *158 *178 *178 *743 3-Day Sale! FREEZERS MONDAY ... TUESDAY... WEDNESDAY! SAVE 10% to 22% - HEAVY DUTY . $4950 Delivered! Serviced! Guaranteed! EASY TERMS! America’s No. 1 sweeper. It beats—m it sweeps—as it cleans. Has throw away bag. Come in today! Con-, vertible. PHILCO Huge 306-lb. Upright Freezer, now All deluxe quality — 5 fast freeze surfaces — Dual Warranties. \ * ADMIRAL Gianh$26-lb. Deluxe Chest Freezer, now ... Has built-in Lid LockV— Interior Light — big Sorting Basket — Defrost Drain.*Ail deluxe! PHILtO Deluxe 16 cu. ft. Upright Freezer, Now Only *148 *178 *188 The Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac 51 W. HURON • Open Mon. and Fri. TUI 9 FE 4-1555 THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Knout itlvo Vico PrwMent MONDAY, MAY 29[ 1967 Ricm»» M. nmiuu Treasurer and flnonco Ofllcar . Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Editor’s Note: "It Seems to Me” wiU resume June 5. Grand Jury Limit Strikes at System Do our constitutional provisions regarding one-man grand jury investigations best serve the taxpayer? The entire one-man grand jury system has been a topic of debate in recent .years. Some feel it places too much power in the hands of one juror. Some point to it as the only effective way to combat organized , crime when other police methods fail. A ruling last week by the Michigan Court of Appeals has * halted an Oakland County one-man grand jury investigation being conducted by Circuit Judge Philip Pratt. The appeals court issued an order killing a subpoena issued by Pratt against a Madison Heights druggist. The ruling was apparently based on a constitutional provision that limits the length of a one-man grand jury to one year. In other words, the same grand juror, in this case Judge Pratt, cannot head consecutive grand jtiries investigating the same general area of suspected criminal activity. ★ ★ ★ Does this constitutional provision, in effect, cheat the taxpayer? Judge Pratt headed a grand jury which firsi focused on illegal activities in Royal Oak Township and theq expanded to include Oakland County. That grand jury ran from June 196% to June 1966. Last August State Attorney General Frank Kelley petitioned for another grand jury investigation into the charges of illegal activities centering around the Hazel Park Race Track. Oakland County Circuit Judges again named PrAtt to head it. This second grand jury, which has just been terminated, was like its predecessor, expanded to include all of Oakland County last September. Such investigations cost money. The first grand' jury probe cost taxpayers $33,047. Costs for the second probe to date have not been compiled. If the present ruling stands up, taxpayers’ dollars spent to date on the second grand jury will be for naught. Even more significant, however, is that the law itself has the effect of withholding from the taxpayer his most effective tool in such investigations. That tool is experience. In the case of Oakland’s one-man grand jury probes, the constitutional limitation seems to have cheated the public by withholding the services of our most experienced juror. ★ ★ ★ And what about justice?, We have the highest respect for the competency of our, circuit bench. But is justice best served by using a juror lacking in grand jury experience when an experienced judge is available to perform the task? Apparently Judge Pratt’s colleagues felt it wasn’t. They selected him for the job for that very reason— his experience. Another One? David Lawrence Says: Political Funding Finally Faced Results Reported of First Month’s Auto Check The first, month of operation of Michigan’s new motor vehicle inspection law produced many significant results. Conducted by foUr-man units of State Police operating in temporary inspection lanes, a total of 5,400 cars were Inspected during the 30-day period. Troopers handed out 1,074 tickets requiring major correctional action, found that 87 drivers did not have their licenses with them, 13 were driving with revoked and 10 with suspended licenses. About 6 per cent of drivers had some sort of license violation. ★ ★ ★ Four hundred eight drivers had no vehicle registration, and 103 improper registration. Six-hundred seventy-six drivers had no proof of in-, surance. Bearing heavily on the question of driver responsibility for highway safety was the fact that of the 3,144 cars equipped with seat belts, only 1,441 were in use. Inoperative windshield washers gave rise to the greatest number of citations with 1,297 while defective windshield glass was low with 19. Nine other categories of vehicle disrepair or neglect caught the eyes of inspectors. That an effective vehicle inspection program, so long advocated by highway safety authorities, will play an important role in cutting the rate of road accidents and casualties is well evidenced by the extent of driver guilt and carelessness so soon detected. Vote Amendment Promises Trouble By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - A Pandora’s box of troubles may be opened when Congress votes on a constitutional amendment to choose the president and vice president by popular vote. Virtually every political coloration from extreme left tpl extreme right! agrees that a I change in ourl outmoded elec-I toral college I system is nec-f essary to give* A m e r icans a Ruth m o r e direct Montgomery voice in the selection of their top leaders, i But the suggested cures are widely divergent, ranging from direct voting to proportional, congressional and district plans. The oue-man-one-vote method of ehoosing our chief executive has a pleasant democratic ring to ft, and epjoys the support of the American Bar Association as well as the senate majority and minority leaders. But election by popular vote could lead to more, rather than less federal interference in state and toed governments. This fact is clearly recognized, since the proposed constitutional amendment to provide for popular election states that nothing therein would prevent Congress from subsequently passing uniform residence and age requirements for all voters in presidential elections. Most Americans cannot ..vote until their 21st birthday, but some of our states permit dheir citizens to vote at the age of 18, 19 or 20. Resident requirements are even more diversified, with some areas enfranchising new residents after 60 or 90 days, and others requiring domicile for up to a year. * ★ ★ I Such stipulations make little difference v in the outcome of ‘presidential elections under ojur winner-take-all electoral college system, because each state now casts its electofak ballots as a unit: MIGHT MAKE CHANGES But if the electoral college were eliminated and each vote given the same weight, state legislatures might be tempted to reduce voter age and residence requirements as drastically as possible to yield a larger voice in the selection of the president. Thus, the federal, govern- ment would, probably be impelled to set an over-all standard for the 50 states to prevent such rivalry, and might then feel called upon to oversee policipg of the polls. Most liberals favor the direct vote plan, which has the advantage of depriving big c-ity political machines of their excessive power to influence presidential elections, and which would prevent the election of a chief executive who polls less than 40 per cent of the popular vote. But liberal Sen. Ernest Gruening of Alaska has recently introduced a congressional district plan which has long been espoused by Texas multimillionaire H. L. Hunt, a strpng voice for the far right. The Gjuening -. Hunt plan would retain the electoral college system, giving each state two ejdctors-at-large and one for e^ch congressional district, but the votes of the latter would be cast according to which presidential candidate carried the individual district, rather than the state as a whole. This is similar to the district plan^f a v o r e d by most states-rights advocates, except that in the latter case the votes would automatically be allocated by districts without need for an electoral college. WASHINGTON - At last Congress is coming to grips with the problem of how to finance .political campaigns. Up to recent months, the subject has been bypassed, and maiiy ir-regularities i h a v e either 1 been condoned or overlooked. If candidates LAWRENCE for public office must depend on other citizens or on organizations with a vested interest in legislation to put up the . money to help elect them, they . will inevitably feel under some obligation to repay the favor by their acts in public office. President Johnson has just submitted to congress a comprehensive plan. The President, in his message to Congress, has taken into consideration also, the . need for election reforms. He suggests a (5,000 limit be placed on the total amount that comes from any organization or any individual or member of his family. REPORT ON PAYMENTS Mr. Johnson has urged, too, that corporations holding contracts with the government be prohibited from making political contributions at the state and local level. Today they are only barred from contributing to campaigns for national elections. Mi*. Johnson wisely recommends that the comptroller-general’s office should be given complete authority to obtain full reports after each presidential election as to payments that have been made and to audit the expenses of presidential campaigns. This is an innovation which ' is .tong overdue. For obviously members of committees of Congress have been reluctant to investigate the finances of their own political party. When a bill was passed last October by Congress permitting each' individual to indicate on his income-tax return that a dollar-of his tax money might be used for political contributions by either party, there was a widespread dissent. BAD PRECEDENT It was pointed out that the new law did not deal with misuse of political hinds and that it would be a bad precedent to give the taxpayer the right to exercise any control over how his tax money shall be disbursed by the government. In comparison with the budget of the United States government, the total cost of presidential campaigns is rela? ve»*bal Orchids Mrs. Emma NickeB of 43 Clarence; 82nd birthday. Mrs. Jeannette Blake Of 59 Monroe; 80th birthday. tiveiy small, but it is nevertheless a large amount for political parties to raise. Hie worst aspect of the existing system is that it places parties and candidates under obligation to special interests. It is evident now that the whole system of campaign contributions will be carefully reviewed, and it is to be hoped that limitations and restrictions will be imposed so that no person elected to public office will feel that he has an obligation to give special favors in one way or another to those persons who have contributed large sums for campaign purposes. (Copyright, 1N7, Publisher! Nowtpapor Syndicate) Voice of the Pepple: Sterilization No Answer To Sex Deviate Problems A recent article suggested sterilization of habitual sex offenders as a last resort. Sterilization isn’t the answer as it will not stop the offender from committing another act orcommitting a murder. It will only stop pregnancy due to rape. Pregnancy can be stopped by the victim reporting to the hospital immediately for treatment before conception occurs. This will take care of a needless abortion or sterilization bill in case Of incest or rape. Is propaganda starting for a sterilization bill? It looks like it. Sterilization takes a right from one who has violated the rights of another and the punishment is permanent. Since when do two wrongs make a right? If sex offender's are.01, cure them. If you can’t, we must keep them isolated from society. CHARLES J; ADAIR 1109 DOVER Questions Need to Remove Unlicensed Car What right has anyone to tell you to get rid of a car just because it has a wrecked fender and no 1967 license plates? It has a brand new motor and my house and yard are as neat and clean as the best in my block. Some people would do well to take their own advice and clean up their own yards. VERN STINSON 1022 CHERRYLAWN Agrees We Need New Law for Sex Offenders I agree that all sex offenders should have an operation as there-are too many known perverts who are repeaters of these horrible crimes. Such a law should be considered. CATHERINE GULDI ROCHESTER Offers Suggestions to Help Reduce Crime The following suggestions would help reduce crime: • Better street and business lighting. • All closed business places wired with burglar alarms that sound off at the police station. Bob Considine Says: NASA Is Back at Work, Eye Still on the Moon HOUSTON — It just jsn’t true that NASA’s in the cold, cold ground. .The astronauts, the personnel at the The widows Grissom, White and Chafee have emerged from their weeds. The spacemen are back at work. Teams are being made up, exotic missions mapped. We’re still going to the moon by the end of this decade, by God. “Let’s talk about 501,’’ Paul Henry said today, getting on with the job. Paul is the Voice of Apollo. And that Greek god should have sounded so good. “It’s coming late this summer or early fall. It will be the first test of the Saturn-5 booster. Seven-and-a-half million pounds of thrust on takeoff, five times 4s much as we’ve ever han-dled before. “It won’t be manned but we hope to learn a lot from the mission. And will, I’m sure. Well send the spaceship into an egg-shaped orbit and then fire it back at the earth at about lunar speed.” Patiently, he explained. On the second lap around the earth, when the three-seat command ship is at its apogee, 10,000 miles from earth, the engine of the “service module” which will be attached to it will be ignited and will shoot the command ship at the earth — simulating its return to ehrth frond the moon. 23,500 M.P.H. By the time it comes to within 200 miles of earth it will be traveling at 23,500 miles an hour, just as will men returning from the lunar surface. To plunge at that speed ‘ into the jelly-like atmosphere in which we live might be highly lethal. So the wizards here at the manned space agency center have figured but a “cooling” system that goes baek to their daysas kids. The space capsule returning from outer space at this outrageous speed will be positioned so that its broad flat bottom will strike the earth’s atmosphere like a flat stone and bounce, just like that stone. But just as a skimming stone loses momentum after the first brush witn the water, so will the spaceship. Just as the stoiie eventually disappears into the water, so will the spaceship descend into .the atmosphere in which you and I wallow. • Police patrol of all schools, wooded and highly weeded acres, lovers’ lanes and parking areas. • Alarm systems in all businesses that could be easily touched off by employes and alert the police station. ★ ★ ★ All citizens should be alert and report any crime committed or suspected. FRANK E. WESTERMAN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Question and Answer Are there grocery stores in the Pontiac area that sell canner goods cheaper by the case for us people who have large families? I do a lot of canning, but there are still quite a few things I can’t grow. MOTHER OF LARGE FAMILY LAKE ORION REPLY We checked several stores and found none with a general policy of selling cheaper by the case. However, several of them said individual stores might make exceptions, and suggested you ask the managers of stores where you shop. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Super Cities The Denver Post Arthur C. Clarke, the great British science fiction writer, once described a marvelous city—millions of years in the future—in a book called, “The City and the Stars.” His automated city, Diaspar, was so fully automated that nothing was done manually; even “human” experience was programmed by advanced technology. But Clarke’s Diaspar proved faulty by the end of the story. Its residents wanted to be human after all. Technology had simply carried them too far. Diaspar was radically altered. ★ * ★ This, in a way, suggests the dilemma of today’s planners of new cities. The Denver Post Tuesday carried a bonus section describing Dr. Athelstan Spil-haus’ proposal for an experimental city, a project for which the University of Min-* nesota has (248,000 in federal funds. ♦ * ★ Dr. Spilhaus’s plan seeks to conduct an experiment to see if the dream city is possible—the city which never becomes out of date, has no waste materials and is not called upon to grow beyond a logical size, either in area or population. At the same time we hope that the experimental city concept-allows room for study of the human condition. How many churches, for example, • are to be encouraged in a totally planned city? ★ ■ ★ ★ Who is to pay taxes for the schools — and what kind of schools? If.the city operate? at a loss how long should the rest of America subsidize it? We’re not saying these are reasons for criticizing the project. We simply find that, like so many idealistic things we’ve assumed to be unmixed blessings, there are important questions of Choice to be faced when the ideal nears reality. by members of Congress on official trips abroad. Congressional committees make annual reports on individual travel expenses of members and committee staffs on committee business, but these reports do not fully account for such things as transportation, embassy accommodations and entertainment Silent Partner ... The Monroeville (Ala.) Journal If dogs could talk, they wouldn’t make such good friends. Extra Benefits The Bay City Times There’s nothing like firsthand experience such as world travej to broaden one’s perspective. And this truism is not lost on oux lawmakers in Washington. Last year almost half of the members of Congress took foreign trips at public expense. A survey notes that at least 243 (45.6 per cent) of the/members made a total of 337 government-paid trips often referred to as “junkets.” * * ★ . There is no comprehensive record of the total spending ^— spender listed ii committee reports was Rep Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, wh< headed a subcommittee tha investigated the travel spend ing of Rep. Adam Claytoi Powell, of all tilings. Hays spent a total of (6,-589 on foreign travel. No accounting was given on Powell’s expenses. ★ ★-k Two “retirees” figured ii the foreign trip itinerary. The; were Reps. Walter Rogers, D Texas, and- John C. Kunkel R-Pa. Both retired at end o the 89th congress, after the’ had spent (3,970 and (3,50 respectively on “educational’ trips abroad. Which all goes to prove tha in some oheupations ifs th< fringe benefits that- make thi job attractive: THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 A—? V SUMMER RATES AIR CONDITIQNED-CLEAN NMHMNMFgtA ROOMS CHECK IN YOUR FURS FOR SUMMER SEASON scientific, insured storage .. bonded pick-up and delivery Quality Cleaning Since 1929 c ADDING MACHINE DETROIT (AP) — Close (ojlast year, twice as many new patrolmen have been recruited by the' The first recorded 'eye sur* Detroit Police Department dim- gery Was performed iq 600 B.C. ing tin first four months oflby a man in India who intro-this year compared with the|duced an, operation to push same period far 1966. Robert Seaside a cataract to allow light Quaid, personnel director, saidlto enter the eye. QUESTION: How is a machine used far adding amounts of money? ANSWER: To add the figures at left (above) in the normal way takes time and trouble. Barbara, using her small adding machine, can add the same row of figures very easily in less than a minute. Adding machines are not difficult to operate. On the machine’s face, at left, are 2 rows of white buttons, both numbered 9 at to, going down to 1 at bottom. Both these vertical rows represent thousands of dollars; the one to the left, tens of thousands; the one to right, thousands from 1 to 9. To right of these are three vertical rows of black buttons. The left one of these means hundreds of dollars, the middle one tens, the one to right, dollars from 1 to 9. Two more vertical rows fo right mean cents, one row for tens, the one to right for 1 cent to 9. Suppose Barbara presses down all the 5 buttons, from left to right. They stay down; she pulls the handle and the machine prints 95,555.55 on a roll of paper and the buttons jump up. Then she presses down the button which means $10.60, pulls the handle again. The machine prints 10.00 and after she has presse da button labelled total and pulled the crank again, prints the total of “55,586.55.’’ Many modern adding machines do not have handles, operating entirely with buttons. Nigeria Facing Breakup LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) —. Nigeria’s two rival young colonels, Yakubu Gowon and C. Odumeg-wu Ojukwu, reached the showdown stage Sunday after 10 months on a collision course, lbs federation of Nigeria was threatened with breaking up. Ojukwu, 338, Oxfordreducated son of one of Nigeria’s wealthiest men, got a mandate from the consultative assembly he had appointed to declare his region the independent state of Biafra. ,* * * Gowon, 32, the federal chief of state, tried to halt the eastern region’s push* to independence1 by ordering it split into three I states within the federation. | Gowon’s decree created 12 states in all, including six in the northern region which contains about half of Nigeria’s estimated 56 million people and 60. per cent of the country’s 357,000 square miles. ★ * * The midwest region, smallest of the original four, remained intact. The western region was left virtually Intact and a new state of Lagos was created from the federal capital and the western region around it. “Diploma Breaks for High School Dropouts’’ GIT OUT OP THE LOW PAY RUT TODAY! For o Free Booklet That Gives You All Details Write to » National School of Home Study, Dept. MW-4 Bax 33, Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan APPROVED FOR VETERANS BENEFITS WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES? - - - USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. 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AA STARK PHARMACY Ml South Woodward THRIFTY DRUG AUBURNJJRIOHTS GIANT SAVINGS DRUO 3341 Auburn Road • BIRMINGHAM AREA BIRMINGHAM CAMERA SHOP DAMMAM'S 6450 Telegraph r Bloomfield Plaza DEMfiRY A CO. DRAYTONPUUNI THRIFTY DRUG NO. 3 4985 Dbda Highway nr. Wflllama Lak* Rd. MOLLY DICK'S RIXALL PHARMACY KEEGOJIARBOR CASS LAKE PHARMACY 3SM Orchard Lake Rd. NOVI REXALL DRUO OXFORD JACK'S CAMERA SHOP MITCHELL'S DRUG STORE ROCHESTER CAMERA SHOP WESLEY DRUO NO. t 1M W. 14 MNP of Floret ■LOOMFIBLDJJIUJ ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. CLAgKSTON ODELL DRUG HARRY C HAYES DRUG . Ill Commerce Rd. oar. S. Commerce Rd. HALL RIXALL DRUG WALLBP LAKE FRETTER TAKES THE WORRY OUT OF DISCOUNT BUYING 723,QOO AFPLIANCElNVENTORY T0 BE SCUTTLED F0R *377,000 BY MEMORIAL DAYP.M. MAKE US AN OFFER TODAY No Reasonable 1 Offer Refused r (. SALE At 6 STORES SUNDAY SALE AT ALL 9 STORES MON. & TUBS. EVERYTHING GOES! SPECIAL PRICES ON AIR CONDITIONERS, DEHUMIDIFIERS, AND ALL MAJOR APPLIANCES - TV'S, COLOR TV'S AND STEREOS. NO MONEY DOWN - 3 YEARS TO PAY SNUTTtR SHOP SALE T0NITE ’TIL 9-TOMORROW (TUES.) 11-6 FRETTER'S PONTIAC FRETTER'S SOUTHFIELD S. Telegraph Rd., Vi Mile On Telegraph Road South of Orchard Lake Rd. Just South of 12 Mile Rd. ADMIRAL Danish Walnut Consols IV. Brand MW, but out of carton, currant model, 23” soraon. Reduced to...............$1(9.95 WHIRLPOOL Floor Sample Dehumidifier SOUTH PONTIAC AREA shoppers [ Don’t Forgot To Visit My R«w Start FRETTER'S/ SOUTHFIELD . 2115 *. Telegraph Rd- StCMbri12IIM*d. 4,000 B.T.U. EMERSON Air Condiflonor. Automatic thermostat, extra hoavy duty no.tor and ton. Just...................$68 RCA Stereo Oonsolo, AM/FM MuHi-Plex Radio. Doluso 4-speed chanter... rodueod to...............................$161 *18” PRE-SEASON COOLING SALE e Flogs hi HsoosMd OoRot *89 ■"Wfltqf |t ooti Tor Loading Portabla Dishwasher • Mg 14 place Alim walking and ilnilag. rail Hie re- $12488 NO INSTALLATION DUMONT R0LLAB0UT COLOR TV! 181 Sq. In. 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SoMT A—-8 ■ •/ i TUB PONTIAC PRESS, jMOyDA Y, MAY 29, 1967 PRO-ARAB PINNED—A detective and policeman pin a pro-Arab demonstrator to the hood of a car when Arabs and Jews confronted each other at a “Salute to Israel” parade in New. York yesterday. Police prevented a serious clash between the two factions. Jews, Arabs Clash in New York NEW YORK (AP) - Jews, preparing to parade Sunday in support of Israel’s stand in the Middle East crisis, became engaged in a spitting, jeering, egg-and-shoe hurling fracas with American Arabs readying a counterdemonstration. The fracas which started at 72nd Street and Broadway, resulted in the arrest of a Queens man who allegedly threw a tomato at the Arab group and hit a detective. Bags of water were dropped on the Arabs from apartment windows. ] The Arabs' postmarch rally was interrupted by a bomb threat After police broke up the battle, some 25,000 Israeli supporters marched up Riverside Drive, while about 75 Arabs marched up Broadway chanting, “Aqaba is Arab," PRAYER BOOK The Arab group headed west on 86th Street, en route to Riverside Drive, but was turned back by police. Along 86th Street, a bearded Orthodox rabbi waved a prayer book and shouted in Hebrew. Several persons attempted to dart at the Arabs. Hie parade had been planned as a celebration of Israel’s 19th anniversary, but became an expression of support for Israel its confrontation with its Arab neighbors. * * ★ Before the parade began, hundreds of persons carrying the blue and white flag of Israel began pouring out of the 72nd Street subway station at Broad-1 tray. Busy Three Weeks Ahead for Legislature LANSING (AP) - If the 74th Michigan Legislature sticks to its current schedule, it has just two or three weeks to spend a billion dollars and to raise about quarter of the dough. It has to do tbjs,*and it has to pass bills sometime this year reorganizing Michigan’s lower court system. * * ★ It doesn’t have to do much else, and apparently it won’t. The money bill (actually Gov. George Romney has asked for $1,153 billion) is to run the state —schools, police, prisons, government agencies, health and welfare programs and the rest-in the year that begins on July To raise enough money to institute the state’s second bUlion-dollar budget, some form of tax increase is necessary, and most of the legislative discussions so far have hinged or- what would be the first state income tax. April i deadline Romney has vowed he will not approve the spending until the Legislature raises the money. That was-4% months ago, when the Legislature went to work and Romney set an April deadline. The Legislature has not raised the money. So it could be a busy two or three weeks. The first 4tt months of the 74th Legislature have not been greatly productive. There have been many bills and many debates, but the major issues resolved since Jan. 11 are few, and there are few vital pieces of legislation—apart from taxing and spending measures— now before the Legislature tor consideration. Among the accomplishments so far: An implied consent bill has passed both houses, but in different forjps, and is now in the midst of two-house negotiations. • The Senate, for the first time ever, has passed and sent to the House a tax package keyed to an income tax, which the House Taxation Committee now in process of picking • The Legislature has exempted Michigan, at least temporarily, from the Daylight Savings Hme requirements of the federal government. • The effective date for bringing migrant agricultural workers under workmen’s compensation has been set ahead two months, from May 1 to July 1. And that’s just about all. 1 The migrant compensation bill, as finally passed, gave proponents far leu time thin they claimed they needed. The implied consent bill could vanish In another stonq of debate like the one which accompanied It through the House. The time law could be undone by referendum petitions, depending on the State Supreme Court. Hie ate may not concur with House changes in Us tax bills. The Legislature wants to pass all its bills—except for court reorganization, which probably will be considered in a special fall session — by a week from Friday and go home for a month June 19. That would give three weeks to reach final agreement on fiscal reform, pass the record-high Romney budget, and adjourn for its summer recess. NEW 7-FT. VACUUM CLEANER HOSE Braided Cloth, All Rubber Saoir“.CAQ5 Able How Ends ^ JK hw I Regular 7.50 Come In or h'tee Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS / Disposal Baps, Hos^s, Brushes, Bells, Atlnehineiils.Jvlr. < “Rebuilt by Curt’s Appliances Vein# Our Own" 1 arts Complete with Attachments Free Home Demonstration-OR 4-1101 Within 25 Mils Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES Factory Aulharhrit White Dealer 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD 3 to Get Awards DETROIT (AP) — Go George Romney and Harry m, a Detroit weekly newspaper publisher, will be awarded Bronze keystones at the annual meeting of the Boy’ Clubs of Metropolitan Detroit Thursday. Russell S. Strickland, vice president of Rockwell Standard Corp., will receive the highest award, a Silver Keystone. Prospectors probed the Glacier National Park area in the early 1890s. A boom town called Altyn sprang up, complete with post office, two-story hotel, several dance halls and seven saloons. Time has erased all signs of the town. 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MONDAY, MAY 29> 1067 A—9 42 on Vietnam Fatality list WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has listed 41 U.S. servicemen killed in action in Vietnam, and included in the casualty count three' men who are missing in action. Killed in action: ' ARMY CALIFORNIA - Sgt. !£, Orville Fl-lt*. Concord; Sptc. 4 Carl O. Naosn-ftat. Long Beach; Pic. Mack I. Gregory, Gardena, Pfc. Rudolph R. Corona III, FKItte Grove; Me. David J. Johnton, Lot Angslm. COLORADO - Staff Sgt. Bobby V. Hayellp, Colorado- Sprlngi. C^SROROIA Pfc Jamea M. Burroughs, ILLINOIS - Pfc. Rugene P. Worden. ^IQWA — Me. Rugene A. Ward, Fay- KANSAS — Pfc. James W. Eldrldge, Nickerson. MARYLAND - Pfc. Robert J. Thomas Baltimore. MISSISSIPPI - Spec 4 Henry D. Me Ihnis, Meriden. - “ NEW JERSEY - Spec 4 Albert Kon ne in, Trwrton;. Spec 4 John Atkim " NEW YORK - Pfc. Waller T. Geloei Glendale; Pfc. Harold E. Fetner, Eai OREGON — Pfc. Dald W. Tolb West Linn. PENNSYLVANIA - Pfc. Richard Fishery, Yeadon. SOUTH DAKOTA - Pfc AlvW R. Spider, Fort Thompson. TENNESSEE - Spec. 4 Denny E. King, Loudon. VERMONT - 2nd Lt. Stanley M or, Brattleboro; Sot. Eugene H. I ton, Northfleld Fail:. WASHINGTON - Spec. 4 Gaon MAINE ■ art A. Turner, Portland. NORTH CAROLINA - Hospltalman S.C. Gregory D. Jenkins, Raleigh. MARINE CORPS ALABAMA - Cpl. Harry M. Wade-worth, Mlllbrook. CALIFORNIA — Cpl. Reynaldo S. nandez, Brentwood; Lance Cpl. Jam__ Fitzsimmons, Garden Grove; Lance Cpl. James A. Nicholson, Anaheim. FLORIDA - Cpl. Stanley Godwin, Fort Meade; Pfc. Ranald E. Sharer, Orlande MARYLAND - Capt. Martin N. Tull, Wheaton; Pfc. Sandy Zimmerman Jr., Baittmara. MASSACHUSETTS - Pfc. Peter Albert, Danvers; Pfc James C. Offley. New Bedford. MICHIGAN - 2nd Lt. Denaid F. Schafer, AMs PBski Cpl. RMBerd K. Richard Palran, C PENNSYLVANIA - 2nd Lt. Leo Kelly III, Pittsburgh. TENNESSEE - Sgt. James F. Akli McMinnville. VIRGINIA - Pfc. Willie L. Brow Newport Newt.‘ AIR PORCR ARKANSAS — Capt. Thomas E. Dai Jr., Fort Smith. Missing to dead, hostile: ARMY TENNESSEE — Spec. 4 Lynn C. Hays, ATURnCJ TONIGHT! SPECIAL NIGHT OWL SALE 10 0111111 MIDNIGHT! MEN’S SHORT S1EEVR SPPRT SHIRTS >UR EVERY\ffl COME FOR THESE 4 LUCKY BUYS AND ALL THE OTHERS TOO! shirts for summer,.. 100% cotton in solid colors, plaids, checktl Regular or button-down collars! S, M, l. WHILE THEY LAST! MISSES’ t HALF-SIZES SUMMER SHIFTS oA Si h|nli, stripes, In easy care cotton, saareuckare and blonds. Sixes 10 to 20 and 14V4 to 24'/i. WHILE THEY LASTI LADIES' SHIFT DIPT. 2 MINNESOTA - Cpl. HHSUL DAT SUE! SHOP ALL DAY TODAY AHD TOMORROW FOR THESE GREAT HOLIDAY BUYS! Missing in action: ARMY s«t. l.c. Clyde a. ward. Spec. 4 Jerry L. Beckham. AIR PORCR Ma|. Jack L. Veh Lien. Pied not as a result of hostile action: ARMY CONNECTICUT — wo. Michael Klght, Waterbury. AIR PORCR OREGON — Airman 2.C. Clifford L. Manilas Jr., Eagle Creek. Missing to dead, nonhostile: AEMY GEORGIA — Spec. S Hugh L. Hursto Ruchanan. 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Corner of Pixie Highway <|n Sanitone Certified Master Drj/cleaner Famous clothiers like Lord West recommend bur SanitoneCertified Master Drycleaner service to keep clothes looking new longer. Only Sanitone drycleaning restores both the original brightness and original feel of the fabric. Pontiac'$ Only Authorized SANITONE Service Center 379 E. Pike 4481 Highland Ed. 269 N. Perry 430 Orchard Lk. Ave. WASHINGTON (AP) — Thegled, police said. Miss Robeson son of a prominent Washington was a research assistant to Sen. doctor has been charged with Frank Carlson, R-Kan. first-degree murder in the slay- jjygp A-p sim tag of Judith Robeson, a pretty .. . senatorial aide. . ™lce said E(*?r °"cue. *ved + + + in the same apartment building Lewis C. Ecker II, 24, a bakery truck driver from nearby Waldorf, Md., was arrested Sun-1 day. Police said he surrendered j by prearrangement. where the slaying occurred but that Miss Robeson did not know; him. Authorities said Ecker, ac-jeompanied by his wife, was arrested in his car at a parking Ecker, who is married, is the'in clinton- Md-son of Dr. Henry D. Ecker, president of the District of Columbia Medical Society and associate clinical professor of medicine at George Washington University. * * * The nearly nude body of Miss Robeson, 25, was found in her southwest Washington apartment last Tuesday. She had been beaten, raped and stran- Gunman Sought DETROIT (AP)-»- Police today sought an unidentified gunman who shot and killed a drinking companion without apparent provocation in a Detroit bar. The victim, Shelly W. Mears, 34, was dead on arrival, at a Detroit hospital Saturday^ lord West says: Trust the care of your clothes to four Sanitone Certified Master Drycleaner TURKEYS WEST VIRGINIA WHOLE OR HALF U.3** HAM..................79* COUNTRY CLUB SKINLESS MARHOEFER CANNED WIENERS 2^99‘ HAM..... 10^*6** I CENTER CUT RIB SEMI-BONELESS I PORK CHOPS HAMS I JRJR4 LOIN ■ CHOPS 1 ®Tr» 99u WHOLE JLA* °*HALF WWl* J7 VALUABLE COUPON Limit On* Covpoi WITH THIS COUPON A SS PURCHASE OR MORE MORTON FROZEN CREAM PIES 14-OZ. WT Valid Men. & To**.. May 29 A 30, 1967 At Kroger D*t. A East. Mich. VALUABLE COUPON Limit One Coupon, WITH THIS COUPON & SS PURCHASE OR MORE KROGER REG. OR DRIP VAC PAC COFFEE Valid Mon. 4 Tuom., May 29 & 30, 1967 At Kroger Dot. & East. Mich. LIMIT 3 PIES KROGER FRESH WHIVI GRADE ’A’ LARGE EGGS. AVONDALE BRAND SLICED E 1 PEACHES9-1 ZESTY. SNIDIR’S TOMATO CATSUP WITH TOMATO SAUCE KROGER 7; ’1 ,TU I PORK BEANS lI HOT BURNING CHARCOAL Mnn briquets?uOO KROGER BRAND FROZEN LEMONADE TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON 2 PKGS CUT-UP FRYERS 2 PKGS FRYER PARTS OR 2 ROASTING CHICKENS Valid thru Too*-, May.30. 1967 . at Kroger Dot. A East. Mich. I -------uhtI WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY PACKAGE i COUNTRY OVEN ■ LAYER CAKE LValid thru To**.. May 30. 1967 _ et'KrOgor Dot. A East. Mich. I IE SURE TO PICK-UP STICKER NO. 7 THIS WEEK FOR 500 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COVERALL BONUS PAGE 2 FROM KROGER BOOKLET! TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON TWO 1-LB OR 2-LB PKG KROGER COOKIES OR SALTINES Valid thru Teas., May 30, 1967 _ at Kroger Dot. A East. Mich. E It Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. Prices And Items Effective At Kroger In Det. A East. Mich., Mon. A Tuos., May 29 + 30, 1967. None Sold To Dealers. Copyright' 1967. Th* Kroger Co. Cold Chilling Season's Swimsuit Skiers By DON GUY PINKHAM NOTCH, N.H. (AP) — Thousands of skiers from the Northeast are schussing a late-season snow bonanza on ML Washington. But the cold weather has been hard on the sun tanners and Tuckerman Ravine girl watchers. 1 ' V ’ ★ Sr it At this season, girls usually ski in shorts or swimsuits in the vast lJOOO-foot-high bowl. Sun reflecting from the glittering snow fields makes it warmer than a beach in midsummer. With a cold wind blowing Sunday, only pretty Joanne Couture, 15, of Montreal tried a swimsuit. After one. ehiUjr schuss, she donned slacks and a sweater. Unless it rains hot water; Tuesday should offer th^ best Memorial Day skiing in the 40 yars in which records have been kept in Tuckerman Ra-’ vine.' SNOW COVER Two feet of snow fell Friday atop a snow cover that' hardly melted on the high slopes since winter. Snow is at least 25 feet deep in the floor of the ravine at tree line. -, * * The ravine was closed briefly after the Friday storm because White Mountain National Forest rangers feared tons of new powder snow might cause ah avalanche. ★ ★ it However, Brad Ray, the chid snow ranger, reported that hurricane-force winds scoured most of the new powder off the face of the headwall, ending the avalanche threat. Joe Dodge, veteran Appalachian Mountain Club hutmaster now retired in Conway, N.H. says, “There is more snow in the ravine today than any year on this date since 1926.” Bruce Sioat, present club hut-master, adds: “If thhr weather holds, the June skiing should break all records.” The U.S. trucking Industry’s operating revenues in 1966 reached an estimated total of $1 billion, or about 6300 million more than the railways‘obtained from all sources. WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES? - - - USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED At). TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. P.M. Senate Aide's Rape-Killing Is Charged to Doctor's Son! TIME FOR CHANGE - Cold weather this spring has brought good late-season skiing to Mount Washington,, N- H., but made the usual swimsuits scarce on the girls. Joanne Couture, 15, of Montreal took one schuss in a swimsuit yesterday then hopped back into pants and a sweater when cold wind started. Normally, sun reflecting from snow fields makes it as warm as a beach in midsummer. I L i THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1067 Bi—1 MS SECTION Bride Chooses A-Line Gown The United Church in Ovid was the setting for the Saturday wedding of the Lawrence Bruce Reynnells (nee Mildred Luceiia Warren). —For the afternoon ceremony — the bride wore an Empire waist-ed gown of embroidered silk organza with a floor length A-line skirt. Her long silk illusion veil was secured by a pill box crown. She carried a bouquet of long stemmed yellow roses. Annette Kerbet was maid of honor with Susan Van Dyne as a bridesmaid. L$eEmig.was best man. Owen Seward Jr. and Loy and Bruce Warren were ushers. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. James Warren of Ovid and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reynnells of North Johnson Street. Enjoying afternoon coffee in the spacious diningroom of the Villa Francesca on West Long Lake Road are (from left) Mrs. Mary Joyce, Mrs. Mary Sawdy, Mrs. Aldea Delude, Mrs. Kathryn Morgan, Mrs. Frances Bennett, Mrs. Norah Hymans and Mrs. F. A. Ritzenheim. Pontiac Pm, Phot* by Roll Winter Sister Malvine, F.D.C., administrator of the Home for Retired Ladies, stands at the rear. The home is operated by the Daughters of Divine Charity, and is open to persons of all faiths. Health Department Oversees with rsvp Homes for the Aged and ELIZABETH L. POST ' Dear Mrs. Post: I receive numerous invitations to charity balls, fashions shows, previews, flower shows and the inevitable country club functions. *" ★ * In many cases I do not know anyone in the sponsoring organization but receive an Invitation only because of membership in another group. In refusing, must I acknowledge each and every one of these invitations? — Mrs. Burns ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Bums: When the invitation says R.S.V.P. or answer cards are enclosed, you must send a refusal. When however, a card is enclosed saying “I will take .... tickets,” and there is no blank for a refusal, you need do nothing. * ★ ★ ★ Country club announcements of dances or functions need only be answered of there is an R.S.V.P.; usually they simply ask you to make reservations and no answer is necessary. ORDER OF LEAVING Dear Mrs. Post: When two couples are dining out, and it is time to leave) does each gentleman escort his lady out, or do both gentlemen wait until, both have arisen and follow both out? — Curious /. Dear Curious: Both gentlemen wait and let the two ladies precede them. Picnic for Club Members ofThe Maple Leaf Club met for a picnic luncheon Friday with Mrs. Vivian Tubbs of Tubbs Road. Coming from Hamilton, Ont., was guest, Mrs. R. A. Lomalty. By JUNE ELERT “What shall we do with Grandma?” It is a heartbreaking question, laced with vaguely-felt and generally unwarranted undertones of guilt. Grandma (or Grandpa) may be ill or senile or simply weak with the weight of years and do longer able to cope with day-byday necessities. ★ * * Sons and daughters are understandably reluctant to relegate an aged parent to a “borne.” Eventually, they will visit a nursing home or a home for the aged. Perhaps they will be surprised and relieved to know that beloved oldsters can be safely entrusted to the care of a “home.” There are safeguards to ensure that care will be adequate. SAFEGUARDS The Nursing Home Division of the Oakland County Department of Public Health in cooperation with the State Health Department provides those safeguards. Enforcement of licensing requirements, inspectors, employe health standards, dietary supervision, investigation of complaints, etci. are all used. The staff of the Nursing Home Division consists of one full-time Administrator - Public Health Nurse, Mrs. Helen Beske, and one part-time Public Health Nurse, Mrs. Doris Schuchter. These women have the responsibility Of making licensure visits, prior to license renewal in January, to all 46 licensed nursing homes in Oakland County, plus five licensed homes for the agpd. Nine of the licensed homes are Medicare - certified facilities. * Here, in addition to minimum nursing care and staffing requirements (one licensed nurse, RN or LPN, on duty 40 hours per week), the many additional requirements for Medicare certification must be met. ★ * * All patients in licensed homes must be under the care of a physician. In non-Medicare facilities, these visits may be spaced quarterly. • In Medicare or “extended-care facilities,” as they are called, patients must be seen by a physician at least once a month. • All Medicare services must be available to residents. • Consulting services of a qualified dietician must be available. • A medical records librarian and a qualified social worker must be on call. • Nursing staff must be under the supervision of an RN and there must be licensed practical nurses on duty at all times when an RN is not on duty. About one third (740) at the presently ayailable beds are in facilities certified by Medicare. Construction of new facilities under way will add another 500 beds to this total. Homes for the aged differ in licensing requirements in that Luceiia Warren and Lawience Bruce Reynnells. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. James Warren of Ovid and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reynnells of North Johnson . Street.: MRS. LAWRENCE B. REYNNELLS Take Time Out From War Servicemen Send Thanks ABBY they are not required to provide nursing services, nor to re: tain nursing personnel. ★ * * Residents of these homes are persons 65 or older who are in good health. A physical examination and chest X-ray upon admission are required. Some may suffer temporary indispositions, but if illness requires them to remain in bed for a long period, or prevents them from being active, transfer to a facility where nursing care is available becomes necessary. Wednesday Talk by Dr. Drachler The Sisterhood of Temple Beth Jacob will sponsor a talk Wednesday evening by Dr. Norman Drachler, superintendent of Detroit schools. His topic at the 8:30 p.m. meeting will be “The Quest for Excellence in Education.” He will be introduced by Mrs. Lee Fisher of Birmingham. Hostesses for the occasion will be Mesdames Kenneth Dick-stein, Harry Arnkoff, Tom Horowitz, Sidney Barnett, Nat Morrison, .Paul M a n d e 1, Isaac Grahelsky and Herman Dick-stein. This wUl be an open meeting and the pubUc is invited. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I just got the thrill of my life, and because you were indirectly Responsible for it, I want to ■ share it with I you' - You asked I your readers 1 to write to the | lonely GIs in I Thailand who ■ never got any I wrote I a rather long, chatty letter and sent it to the address you suggested. I closed with, “You’d probably have been happier to hear from a beautiful, young blonde. Sorry ... I am a 52-year-old grandmother.” Here is a part of the letter I received in return: “No, I wouldn’t have been happier to hear from a beautiful, young Monde. You see, my mother died when I was two, so I never knew what it was to have a real mother, but your letter came about as doss to one a mother would have written to her son. Even though I am only, 19, I know that “love" can be based on friendship, admiration, and respect — as well as on romance. There is room in my heart for all kinds of love, so I hope you won’t mind if I sign my letter with "love” — the kind of love a son has for a mother he never knew. God bless you too. (signed) A Less Lonely GI” Now, Abby, you know why I-ama... THRILLED GRANDMOTHER DEAR ABBY: When I saw that letter in your column from GI Joe King, asking for mail for some of foe lonely GIs, I Couldn’t resist writing. I just received foe following from foe GI who got my letter: “Dear Mrs. Vaufoerine: “Your letter was actually beautiful. I read it out loud three times already, and all the guys thought it was great. “From that one mention Abby had in her column about writ- ing to GIs, letters have been pouring in at foe rate of 9,000 a day! And we are trying to answer them Ml. We love mail. It is foe greatest morale booster you can imagine. * * ★ “Here’s a little information about me. 1 am 28. Before joining foe air force I was a barber. My home is Kankakee, 111. I’ve been married eight years. We have a little girl who is four, and a son who is a year old now. He was a week old when I left. Before closing, I want to thank you ever so much for your wonderful letter. “You and all foe other folks back home who wrote those letters will never know how much you did for us GIs half a world away. God bless you! Ron” Assume Duties of Top Job for Hospital Vounteers By SIGNE KARLSTROM The Women's Service Committee of William Bekumont Hospital had its annual luncheon meeting last week at the Village Woman’s Gub. ★ % * Owen R. Pinkerman, Vice president and director of foe hospital, was foe speaker of foe day. v * James Fitzgerald, assistant director, conducted foe installation of the following officers ahd directors: president, Mrs. James Nichols; vice presidents, Mesdames: Alan Colman, Henry Metcalfe, Hazel Teunion; treasurer, Mrs. Warren Hornkohl; financial, recording and corresponding secretaries, Mesdames: LeRoy Gilger, Richard Montgomery, Norman Reuter and Russell Syers. * * * Directors are Mesdames: William Beasley, Oolman, Frank Friggens, Donald Bassett and Montgomery. * * ★ • Members and friends of foe National Cathedral Association, Michigan Region, recently Were privileged to hear Rear Admiral Neill Phillips. Admiral Phillips is chairman of the board of foe college. Some interested friends of the Washington Cathedral came to hear him at foe annual meeting luncheon which was held at the old Christ Church in Detroit. NEW OFFICERS Mrs. Edward Proctor, retiring chairman of foe Michigan region presided. New officers elected were: Mrs. Harold A. Beatty of Grosse Pointe, chairman; Mesdames: Alexander L. Wiener, Richard Eberleine and George Cary; vice presidents; Mrs. Rivard Klippel, treasurer; Mrs. J. Mil-ton Robb and Mrs. Charles Trapp, recording secretaries; Mrs. Harris R. Symes and Marjory Card, corresponding secretaries. Among the members from this area attending the luncheon were: Mrs. Howard B.' Barker, Mrs. Ari M. BeGole; Mrs. Mildred Collision; Mrs. Archie Crowley; Mrs. Maurice Gara-brandt; Mrs, Jonathan Ball; Mrs, John W. Gillette.Jr. and Mrs. Herman Scarney. BIRTH A first grandchild arrives. Kristyn Marie was bom on May 19 to Dr. and Mrs. Donald Heggen of Ann Arbor. Grandparents are Mrs. Abner M. Heggen and the late Mr. Heggen and Dr. and Mrs. Harold Longyear. WEDNESDAY Canfields Go to Islands Following a reception at Pine Knob Resort, the Richard Lee Canfields (nee Carole Ann Starr) left for a wedding trip to the Bahamas. The couple was wed Saturday in, foe United Presbyterian Church, Holly. * - ★ ★ The bride was gowned in an ivory cage Of silk organza and re-embroidered Alencon lace. A full length lace bordered * mantilla of silk illusion was also worn for the evening ceremony. She carried a cascade bouquet of white cymbidium orchids, Stephanotis and ivy. ★ ★. ★ Marie Wright was maid of honor for foe daughter of the Bud E. Starrs of Holly. S u e Radzum, Mrs. Lawrence Brad-sher and Mrs. Morgan Moss James Starr (brother of the bride), John Howe, Donald , Watts and 2nd Lt. James Dub-bert U.S.A. were ushers. JameB Canfield was Ins brother’s best man. They are the sons of Dr. and Mrs. Gail L. Canfield of Holly. 1 Woman’s World Series, 1 1 10 a.m., The Pontiac Mall. | . I “Let’s Get Started Cook- | I ing Outdoors,” by Barbara 1 1 Zimmerman and Harriet 1 I Cannon of Consumers I Power Company, Pontiac 1 Unit. This is last in series | for foe season. New series | begins in fall. Ladies’ Day Out Pro- | gram, noon, YWCA. Spe- | ical program displaying I spring tom class work in- I eluding creative projects. 1 Any interested, woman § may attend this coopera- § five event. Cal) foe YWCA I for information. Pontiac League of Worn- I en Voters, 8 p.m., The 1 Pontiac Mall. Mrs. Fred- | aide Holmes and commit- 1 tee on “China Foreign 1 Policy.” Mrs. Joseph I Jenkins, is hostess. This g meeting was originally | scheduled in All Saints 1 Episcopal Gmrch. § THURSDAY § Pontiac Navy Mothers f Chib No. 35$, 7:30 p.m., | home of Mrs. Lucinda Ball of Virginia Street. Special meeting. CERAMIC TILE From 39 Headquarters Vinyl Asbestos TILE m ACROSS From The MALL 2256 ELIZABETH UK Ml. FRONT BOOR PARKING w.»* FE 4-5216 MRS. R. L. CANFIELD Opan Mon., Thun., Fri. 9 to 9 Two., Wed., Sot. 9 to 6 B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 22. 1267 Too many and too frequent pregnancies carry hazards the health and survival of mothers and infants, declares Dr. Alexander Kessler, chief of the Human .Reproduction Unit of the World Health Or* ganization. ★ > * ★ The most “efficient" time to have a child is between the ages of 19 and 25, “when physical maturity has been attained, and physiological aging has not yet begun." Serving Oakland County Over 34 Year* HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL is now accepting applications from HOUSEWIVES and STUDENTS Who on interested in working either full time (40 hours) or part time (days or evenings). ENJOY: • Convenient Hours • Added Income • Purchase Discount • Paid Training Period • Many Other Benefits We Have a Variety of Positions Available New—C6m* in and See Usl APPLY IN PERSON Employment Office—Customer Lobby— Basement HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL WILLIAM WRIGHT Funtilure Maker* and Upholsterer* 270 Orchard Lake e FE 4-0558 EASY BUDGET, TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASH row Old? teod west of Telegraph. $3.30. Send check payable to: Oakland Community Collaga Community Services Division, 24S0 Opdyke Road Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 40013, or Call 6424210 ALL PERMANENTS 395 t„ 595 ME HIGHER Include* AU Thiti . 1—New Lustre Shampoo 2— Flattering Hair Cat 3— Lanolin Neutralising 4— Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Bagley Mkt. 338-7669 K J\ i _____________THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 _ vf " ,. Jrn '■ ' ' ; • •;; ‘ v Do You Know What The Governor Did Today? |Scd The Pontiac Press x A Member Of The Associated Press*. The Indispensable News Service ■t.. 'fs /// # r 1 , , ' • / ' . ; ' .. ' . _ • ^ fp ' Have The Pontiac Press Delivered Daily . . .Dial 332-8181 or 332-9277 Your need to know makes this newspaper indispensable You will, and you'll know its significance in the state capital, to the lawmakers, and to various political factions as well, if you follow the news of government in The Pontiac Press. The big stories from everywhere are here*, the latest from Saigon,* new rulings from the Supreme Court; scientific advances in the war against disease,* fashionable changes in hemlines and necklines,* and the news about City Hall, Wall Street, and the price of a good used car. How do we do it everyday? /With our fine staff of reporters right here, and The Associated Press everywhere else in the world.' v THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 89, 1967 LBJ, Senate Viet Foes in Home Accord REDUCE! -mm- < By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate’s Democratic critics of President Johnson’s Vietnam war policies are hedging their opposition with strong support for his Great Society programs at home. Seven dissenters whose seats will be at stake in 1968 thus are maintaining some common ground with the President, who is likely to be on next year’s party slate with them. S. Clark of Peqnsylvania, J. W. Fulbright of Arkansas*' Ernest Grueiiing of Alaska, George S. McGovern of South Dakota, Wayne Morse of Oregon and Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin. ★ * ★ As the party’s nominee, Johnson conceivably could skip some of their states in the campaign, thus avoiding publicizing the Vietnam policy friction that exists between them. HARD TO AVOID But no presidential candidate could afford to bypass states like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Oregon. Nor could he avoid vigorous campaigning in New York, Ohio and Indiana, home bases for some of his most vigorous Vietnam critics who won’t be up for election this year: defection might cost them their jobs, | Among the critics whose fate lies With the voters next year, only Morse, often a maverick, and McGovern have even hinted at an open break v^ith the President because of the war. President Named ' WARREN (AP) - Dr. Robert E. Turner, president of Macomb County Community College, has been elected president of the Michigan Association of Colleges and Universities If the election were today, the dissenters to the President’s policies would have to advocate the reelection of a president with whom they don’t agree or the group consists of Sens. Frank Church of Idaho, Joseph face the possibility that their OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 10 AM TO 6 PM. MONDAY, TUESDAY ONLY A Division of the S- S„ Kresge Company SALE! GERANIUMS! Shop Early... Many Colors to Choose From BE A PERFECT SIZE 14 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS BE A PERFECT SIZE 14 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS BE A PERFECT SIZE 12 IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS BE A PERFECT SIZE II IN LESS THAN 90 DAYS • All Til* Turkish Steam Roam • Private Ultra-Viotet For a FREE Tour and Privato Figure Analysis Call or Drop By Today! 334-06291 in each Kmart to sell starting Monday, 10 AM. MONDAY TUESDAY ONLY in each Kmart to sell starting Tuesday, 10 AM. 'Where but at Kmart would you find such a garden of geraniums at such a low price? Now for Memorial Day, you’ll find the loveliest plant imaginable for just 47c each. They’re all vibrantly healthy looking in rich, full colors! In fact, all Kmart geraniums look like “blue ribbon” prize winners. tBHMfwIlm « FmHHm for Womtn Commended and Approved by U.GAL. 1 IN 4-INCH CLAY POTS TFl r ENROLL^ TODAY FOR There’s more than just one kind, too . . . you’ll find many favorite varieties ... beautiful bud and bloom plants in popular colors. Patio Shop Only Opens at 10 AM. Buy a flat of 14 for m and save 58c more! $ T* | : CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD 1 It Pwry St. 334-0529 (Comer Rite and THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Tuea.Only Light* quickly and burn* bet* ter. Buy the big 10-pound bag now at savings and be ready tor picnic* and barbecues. Charge It You Can Shop Without Cash When You at Kmart! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD B—fl THtt PONTIAC PRESS* MONDAY* MAY 89, 1967 Amputee From Vietnam War Not Bitter, Would Go Back MODERN WOODMEN JUifa OnAtMHC* DEGLER jAt 32, Perron Shinneman, once aOPX FAUB, S.D. (AP) ~|a fighting-fit U.S. Marine, is a leftover from the war in Viet* nam. He has no left leg, thigh or hip. BIG CITY The Newest in Sensational, Thrill Rides and Spectacular FREE CIRCUS Evening Performances SEE THE FAMOUS KINO ELEPHANTS ****** MANY MORE TV and CIRCUS ACTS Special Bargain Offer! Dollar Strip Tickets! For Rides at Greatly Reduced Prices Sponsored by Metropolitan Club May 24 tm- June 4 PONTIAC Saginaw at Pike St. Bicycle Given Away OPtN 7 P.M.-624-3135 . STARTS AT DUSK PARAMOUNT PICTURES mmm LIHUJ5J Ed Wynn-Judith Anderson Anna Maria Alberghetti Now a civilian, with a wife and child to support, jobless until last week, he faced a pile of debts. * * dr The armed forces have had to' refuse his greatest wish — a chance for another crack at the Vietcong. Last August newspapers around the world published a photograph of Shinneman, home from the war, clasped in his wife’s arms at Sioux Falls Airport. One of his crutches lay on the rain-soaked ground. JOBS PROMISED The picture touched the hearts of millions] Sympathetic letters poured in, some promising jobs. . Somehow, no job material-ized, and the letters stopped coming months ago. Then last week, a local job placement firm hired him as a personnel worker for $350 a month, plus commission. Shinneman says he isn’t bit-ir, * BELIEVED IN WAR “Everybody in my situation feels about the same way, like the 18- and 19-year-old amputees I met in the hospital — they believed in the war, so, they had to give a little of themselves.” A year ago on April 12 Shinneman had a career in the U.S. Marine Corps ahead of him. That morning he had been promoted to lance corporal engineer and at dawn he moved out ahead of a patrol, looking for land mines. He stepped on WOULD GO BACK TO WAR - Ex-Marine Lance Cpl. Perron Shinneman holds a pair of crutches as he talks with his wife, Shirley on the porch of their home in Sioux Falls, S.D. Shinneman, 32, lost his left leg, thigh saved Shinneman’s life told him he made medical history. He was in surgery 15 times and received 134 pints of blood, 90 of them before he left the hospital in Vietnam. “Later I met a couple of doctors who worked on me in Vietnam,” he said. “They were surprised to see me and they told me sorta sheepishly that when they put me on the plane AP Wlr.pholo and hip when he stepped on a Vietcong booby trap. The armed forces have bad to refuse him his greatest wish—a change for another crack at the Vietcong. 2 OUTSTANDING ■ A * ACTON FEATURES! 9 £ Both it% Color for your holiday enjoymenti Hombre means man... Paul Newman is Hombre!| I VIM FOODS | * AMIMNRTS • Shrimp, Frah, Cleaned or Cooked • Lobster Tails • German and American Potato Salad • European Foods \ | Open Daily 9-6, FrL 9-8, Cloved Sun., 682-2640 3425 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor j “MONKEY’S 00 HOME’’ 1:M-11:0G “THOSE CALLOWAYS’* at 1:48 HURON WAIT DISNEY prUOntt M,uric. CHEVALIER Dm JONES VntttMIMIEUX m : uwroRctTT^S WALTDISNEY Those Calloways Tilt? “THOSE CALLOWAYS’* 1:00 - 5:00 - 9:00 IUCO. “MONKEY’S 00 HOME’’ 3:11 - booby trap. It blew half his left!10 the Philippines they took side away. bets. Most of them bet I ★ ★ * Shinneman still looks and talks like a Marine. He has lost Ids suntan but his hair is cropped close and his eyes are bright, his smile quick. “I’ll bet 75 per cent of these antiwar demonstrators don’t really know what they’re protesting about,” he said. “And I know why. Most of them were born during the Korean War. This is their first war and they’re just plain scared. 1 wife Working Shinneman has been home for good since February. His wife, Shirley, is working part time . npw, but she just started. Since his medical discharge, foe Shinnemans and their adopted daughter, Sharleen, 4, have lived on his $189 monthly disability pay. “Things will get better,1 Shinneman said. “The Corps s put me on 100 per cent disability but I plan to waive that for VA disability. That will give us $300 a month.” Starts TUES. IjjmLBOrandNAM Bmw NAMU. KILLER WHALE” Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATER One of the most heart warming^ v THE WONDERLAND OTa PTas EXPLOSIVE AjrA bullet in '^'■"WWfe'BACK! i hobbit man m , 1 FULLER UNEDURYEA The debts have piled There’s a car and house to pay for and other bills. 'Everyone is really nice about it,” Shinneman said, ‘especially foe real estate agent. He even loaned me the money for the down payment on the house. He says he’s not worried.” The adjustment to civilian life and his disability has been rugged. Shinneman quit high school and enlisted in the Marines the first time in 1955 because he couldn’t find a job. DIPLOMA IN MARINES “Later I got' my high school diploma in the Marines,” he said. He finished his first hitch in 1959 and worked at his father's appliance repair shop for a while. Then one day Dad told me he couldn’t afford to pay me anymore,” Shinneman said. “Jobs were really scarce.” In 1965 he reenlisted. Two months later he was in Vietnam. Now, crippled, it is even more difficult settling into civilian life. ★ sS i ★ i “My first thought was I ain’t a man anymore,” he said. “I was terrible to live with for a long time. I didn’t want to see anyone. I hated everybody. “It took a lot of work, foe doctors, the chaplain, my wife. I’m okay now, but I’never thought I would be.” Navy and Army doctors who wouldn’t be alive when foe plane landed.” When Shinneman finally left Befoesda Naval Hospital in Maryland he went to the naval hospital in Philadelphia where he was fitted with an artificial leg-It has broken and now he is waiting for another to be made in Minneapolis. “Knee I don’t have "any hip,” he said, “I’ll never walk unaided.-But with practice I should be able to get around with a cane.” Shinneman means it when he says 'he would return to Vietnam if he could. - “When I first got there I wondered what in hell I’m doing herte. But the first time we went into a Vietnamese Village and saw 'where the Vietcong had butchered children to force the villagers to turn Communist and then saw the villagers refuse. At that moment I knew what I was fighting for. “ When I came home I told my wife I would go back. She said: ‘What about Us?’ And I told her it was her and Sharleen I was thinking about. She believes me now.” Technicolor PAUL NEWMAN FREDRIC MARCH RICHARD BOONE D'ANECILENTO fHQjfiBREl CAMERON MITCHELL BARBARA RUSH and MARTIN BALSAM ALSO. I has got to know in riWMSHOT FREE 18 HOLES OF 00LF Putt-Putt Litas Far Nita Play OPEN DAILT 9 a.m. til 12 p.u. Dosalind Bussell Ibfaoit Morse Barbara Harris-* WOMB HOMECOMING — Shinneman, his crutch thrust aside, was greeted by his wife at foe airport in Sioux Falls, S.D., on his arrival from Befoesda Naval Hospital in Maryland last August. Now a civilian, with a wife and child to support, he was jobless until last-week and owes money. Sam Sharako says: "My Scotch is LAUDER’S Lauder's has been a greattasting Scotch since 1834. Now . . . Lauder's is a GREATER SCOTCH BUY at the NEW REDUCED PRICE. Same 86 proof... Same High Quality . . . nothing changed (except the price). Your Scotch Dollar Buys More LAUDER'S 86 PROOF, 100% BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKIES, IMPORTED & ----LED BY G00DERHAM & WORTS LTD, DETROIT, MICH. Ranm^wMURgHy 1659 worth Perry AT PONTIAC ROAD E3 FE 4-4775 Closed Mondays PARTIES • BANQUETS _ Frivol. Dining Rem Ur*» TO N.1.W GIANT FREE PLAYGROUNDSH!TSfWS!33l9SRV!1S |p r iv e - i n n i.tooo I ELECTRIC IttCAR HEATERS' MIRACLE MILE 1 SO. TELEGRAM AT SO. LAKE RD. 1 MILE W, WOODWARD CMOMEN UNOIR 12-FRII DRIVE-IN IN-CAR HEATERS FE 5-4SOO 1 POlfflAC 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U. S. 10) 1 1 BLOCK N. TEIEGRAPH RD. 1 CHILDREN Maul 12- FREE | IbmwwHB i G&& mm Excitement! AdventurewMjaBr s JeRRYiewis ripwEPNaND If forms SJwpJj i “KS AtTbej inSTTop” | HOTBOOB r THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 29, ltfffT B—7 MARKETS Hie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tMm in wholesale package lots Quotat ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau qf Markets as of Wednesday. Produce NEW YORK (AP) - Losers outnumbered gainers by aimnfrt twdto one early this afternoon as caution reigned on the stock market. Nervousness over the Middle East situation was heighten^ Apples,' McIntosh! by.' ioo by news that Israelis and Arabs "had exchange fire along ™ Gaza Strip. !i loo Continued concern about Viet ■ Nam was added to natural cau-tiolii because of Tuesday’s ,,dT'behr'..• i'75 Memorial Bay holiday when . -— - — - stock exchanges will be dosed. "1 1 slower than usu- Applts, Northern Spy, bu. . Apples, Northern Spy, c.A., Apples, Steele Red, bu....... Apples, Steele Red,- C.A., bu Asparagus. dz. bch. ... Radishes, Red, dz. bch. . Radishes, White, dz- l*h Potatoes, 20 lbs. Spinach, bu............................2.50 Poultry and Eggs DITROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AF)r-Prtces paid per pc for No. 1 live poultry: Heavy type hens. 21-23; roasters heavy type 27-28%) Broilers and fryers afljtof DETROIT BOOS Detroit (AP)--qgg prices pa dozen by first receivers Including white Grade A lumbo 30-34) extra ; large 25%-27%; medium 14-14%. 20*21, small 14-141 CHICAGO BUTTIR A HOGS CHICAGO (AP)-Chicago Mercantile Exchange-Butter steady) wholesale buying prices unchanged) 93 score AA 66; 92 A 44) 90 B 63%) 89 C 59V.; cars 90 B 44) 89 C 40%. _ Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 75 per eertt or “— - - \ whites 24%; mixed 24%; 23%. poultry: wholesale buying Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API—(USDA)- Cattle SO) not enough steers or heifers on hahd for market test; small supply utility cows 19.00-20.SOj a few cutter 17.30-19.00^ Vealers 25> not enough on hand for market test. . Sheep 125; not enough of any one group Hogs 25; not enough In today's supply CHICAOO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Hogs 5,500) butchers steady to SO 225 lb “ Losers Top Gainers Mart Affected by Middle East al because many investors had taken Monday off to have a four-day Memorial Day weekend. AVERAGES OFF Hie Associated Press average of 60 stocks at. noon was off .8 at 322.9 with industrials off 2.0, rails up .5 and utilities 6ff .6. Losses of leading issues ranged from fractions to 3 or 4 points. ■ J The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off 4.67 at 865.65. Chicago & North Western Railway, up 10 points, continued to response to news of its proposed Acquisition of Essex Wire. Stocks showed an irregular downdrift on tile American Stock Exchange. Dynalectron was active and down about a point. Losses exceeding a point were taken by Syntex, Coburn Coro., Wabash Magnetics and Flying Tiger. Westates Petroleum and Goldfield were among fractional gainers. Avien and Bata-Control Systems lost fractions. The New York Stock Exchange Admiral jO AlrRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum 1 AllegCp ,10g AllegLu 2.40b Alleg Pw 1.20 Allied C 1.90b AllladStr 1.32 10 331b 33% 33% 25 58 571% 58 - 51 23% 8% 23V. - 45 41% 40% 40% - 35 30 V 29V. 29% .. 14 10% 10V. 10% .. 7 70% 70V? 70% — X44 25 . 24% 24% + GPubSvC ,38g GTel El 1.28* Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific lb Oerter Rtf 1 -Getty Oil .I0g Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 10 32% 31% 32% 25 44% 65% 45% 27 54% 54% Uh .18 11% 111% 111% 14 58% 58 58% - 1% 49 41% 41% 41% - - Amerada 3 -AmAIrlln 1.40 AmAIrtln wl ...iCyon 1.25 AmEip 1.44b A Enka 1.30a AmFPw 1.14 44 35% 38% 381% .... 12 32% 32% 32% .... ' 20% 2Mb — 1 --- .... 32 51% 50% . .... HO» $0 58% 58 ...... AmirwCo 1.10 9 TI it is — % —.«• at mm m m ----cf 1.98 Am Motors ____ ____ .... __ AmNGat 1.90 34 39% 38% 39% + % Am Photocpy — m m — ' Am Smalt 3a HawPack .20 HoH Electron Holldlnn .50 Hottysug i.20 Memtitfc job 249 j Amphenol .70 Anacnd 2.2Sg ’ Anaconda wl Ankan Cham Armco Stl 3 ... J butchers 24.75 to 25.00; mixed l^t Armour 140 190-230 lbs 24.00-24.75) mixed 1-3 375-400| ArmsCk 1.20a "a sows 19.50-20.00. ! Ash Id Oil' 1 20 Cattle 9,500; calves 20; prime 1.175-Assd DG 40 ,450 lb slaughter steers 27.00-27.50; hlgh Atchlso, 1.40 holce and prime MOMJ00_ Jbs ' — i 55% 551% . I 22% 22% — % 13 51% 50% 50% — % 44 31% 311% 31%—1% 17 45% 45 45 - “ 43 29 20% 29 HowmatCp 1 HuntFdl ,50b jjj— Cp .179 I lbs 25.25- 24.25,-1; 24.00-25.00 high choice and prime 860-mooIavco Cp l 20 lb slaughter heiters 24.00-24.25; choice! avco Cd 1.20 800-1,100 lbs 24410-24.00 Uvnet w> Sheep 100; choice and fewpr|me 90- Avon 100 lb spring slaughter lambs 20.00 ■l 34% 35 34% +1 .40 23 1102% .102% 102% -t- % American Stock Exch. BebcokW 1.34 BeltGE 1.52 Beef Fds 1.50 AiexMeg .10* 5 35% AmPetrS .35g n i*% ArkLGas 1.40 Asamera Oil AssdOil & G i Cal Flnanl Cal Pack 1.10 CampRL ,45a 34 11% 10% 11 17 4]% 40% 40% 2 41% 41% 41% S SzJB^*** 39% » + % SSJSS 1 315-14 315-14-% SSSsi?r,i£: 2% 2% 2% + % 2% 2% 2% IgffyMy ao» names eng w. te;8 # BrazllLtPw 1 09 11% 111% 11% ..... Brit Pet .49g 9 9% 9 3-14 9 3-14-1-14 ESH.P. -80 Campb IChlb 25 4% 4% 413-14+1-1415“ ' Can So Pet . , ' Can So Pet 19 1 11-14 1 13-14 1 15-14_'“url lnd '■* Cdn Javelin 17 10% 101% 10% Cinerama 102 4% 5% 5% — Ctrywlda R)t 2 2% 2% 2% — Creole 2.40a 29 35% 34% 35% + Data Cont 01 17 161% 14% — EquItyCp ,14f SO 3% 3% 31% - Fargo, Oils >* «h7.usm» Felmont Oil FlyTiger .toh Frontier l,61f Gen Plywood . ■ ™ ... ..... Giant Yel .40' 33115-16 1% 115-16+7-14 Goldfield 129 4% 4% 4V ' •• Gt Bas Pet 10 3% 31% 31 Gulf Am Cp 42 10% 10 1(H Hycon Mtg 4 16 15% 16 Isram Corp 79 .5% 5% 51 Kaiser lnd 161 13% 13 131 McCrary wt 12 51% 5% 51..... MeadJohn .40 57 31% 21% 31% + % pMiChSug .log 6 5% 5% 5% + Vb Molybden 21 BW 51% 51% -11% Monog lnd 4 79 78% 78% — % New Park Mn 29 5% 5% 5% ... Pancoast Pet 125 1% 1% 1% + RIC Group- • 13 1% 1% *“ Scurry Rein 13 20% 20% Signal OIIA 1 84 33% 32% Sperry R wt 60 9% 0% statham Inst 1 38 30 Syntax Cp .40 213 09 aOU teRPH Technlcol .40 72 24 231% 23% - UnContral .20 50 8%' 8% 8% ... Copyrighted by The Associated Press 19 40 59% 58% 59% + 1 18 45% 45% 45% — 1 36 71% 70% 70% - 1 42 44% 43% 44% + 1 62 3% 3% 3% — 1- 128 34% 34% 34% - % 95 94% 95% 95% — % 22 29% 29 29% — % 39 35% 35% 35% ... 22 43 42% 42% ... 4 52% 51% S% +- 32 68% 67% 67% — 101 13% 13% 13% — 22 29 28% 28% ... 32 14% 14% 14% . 17 39% 39% 89% — 7 24 23% 23% — % 18 37% 34% 34% 118 130 124% 127 5% -) » 20% 20% - ' 54 5% 5% 5% 11 35% <*% 25% _ 13 30% 20% 1Mb + % 43 29% 28% 28% 43 23% 23% 23% ChPneu 1.80b Chi Rl Pac ChrisCraft 1b Chrysler 2 58 48% 48% 48% 24 18% 18% 10% 14 41 3% 67%...... x503 59 51% » +6% 8 34 35% 35%-% 22 22% 21 22% +2% • 54 39% 37% ' 120 41%tojj|d 5 29% J i 29% -t *% _ % ClevEIIII 1,68 m + % CocaCol* 2.10 aSas Its* Cola Palm 1 ? 'Tt CollinRad .60 193 48 47 47g33 14 CollinRad j ColoIntG i CBS 1.40b Col Gas 1 ComICre 1 42 94% 93% 9Mb — 28 35% 35% 35% . 75 72% 71% 72% — Stocks of Local Interest i* ,£ ££ $£ 1 „ IConElecInd 1 x28 52% 51 Figures after decimal points art eighths conFood 1.40 14 52% 52 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS ConNGas 1.40 151 27% 27% Quotations from the NASD art rapra- IconPow 1.90b 13 44% 44% sentative inter-dealer prices of approxl-jContainr 1.30 10 33% 33 mately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer marketsi ContAlrL .40 xl« 34% 34 change throughout the day. Prices do!Cont Can 2 17 54% 54 not lnclute retaM markup, markdown j Cont Ins 3^, 24 79% /*% aid AxkadiControl Data '455 91% 17% ....'ts^Sf'cooter'"!* 31 31% 31% 196 12% 11% 12% - 30 52% 52 » —1 t 39% 39% 39% + % IJ S.%,21% »%-,% —H— 113 52% 51% 52% . . 23 49% 40% 49%-4-1% 53 58% 55% 53% +r- 43 72% 71% 72% — 12 11% 11% 11% ... 10 67 . 44% 47 H-l % 109 30% 29% 2% —1% 11 44% 43% 44% + % 41 72% 71% 71% 15 45 44% 44% 14 26 25% 25% 24 45% 44% 44%-% 32 48% 67% 6714—1% 12 31% 31% $j%- - rul • Shell 6l|w3.i0 Shell Tm Jta SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.40 Hya SmlthK l.8ta 15 36 StdOllOh 2JO ** Packaging ...n Warn 1 StauffCh 1.00 StarlDrug .90 StevenJP 2.25 Studebak 50g 197 63 • 35% - lb — % 7 30% _______ . 24 449% 441 440% -1 110 37% 37% 37%.... 55 32% 32% 32% - % 30 91% 91 91 7 11% 11% 11% 129 30% 30% 30% , 44 91% 91 91% SO 59% $7% 59% +1% —J— 10 31 30% 311 + 3 234 233 233 -42 71% 77% 77% - 42 70% 77% 77% - Tektronix Taladyna Inc Tonnoco 1.20 Texaco 2.40a TexETrn 1.05 Tex G Sul .40 Taxaalmt .00 Tax PLd isg Textron 1.20 iThlMM .40 Tim Rl Tranattran, Trl Cont Jig TRW MO - Liggett&M 5 Uvingatn Ol MacyRH M0 Mad Fd 2.04g MagmaC 3.40 ■r Mid 1.40 28 S% 33% 33% S 40 47% 47% 2 11% 11% 11% 4 nib ri% n% + % 10 4% 4% 6% 34 50% 50% 50% - 19 50% 57% 57%- 30 17% 17, 17 - 21 29 29 29 - • 37% 34% 34% - —M— 7 53% 53% 53%-% 1 23M 23% 23% 3 55% 55. 55% 55 3415136% 34E 40 30% 30 i 14% 1 i 14% . «n Tank 2.30 nlroyal 1.20 -UnltAlrLin 1 UnltAlrc 1.40 Unit Cp ,50g Unit Pro# I , UGasCp 1.70 1 Unit MM 1.20 US Borax la aw. to3* US Lina* 2b USPIyCh 1.50 US Smalt lb US Steel 2.40 Unwtetn .41 f UnlvOPd 1.40 Uplahn 1.40 Braun Engnearlng ..............»-2 IM coxMctt .50 Citizens Utilities Class A ...17.0 27-4 CrouseHind 1 Detrex Chemical ...............19.2 20.0{crowCol 1.87t Diamond Crystal ........... .17.7 18J crown Cork Frank's Nursery ................1M 12.1 CrownZe 2.20 Kelly Servlets . ..'.27.4 2l.4 Crue Stl 1.20 Mohawk Rubber Co. ..........,. .84.1 J4.S Cudahy Co Monroe Auto Equipment ... :.24J 25.2'Curtis pub North Central Airlines Unite .. 9.6 10J.Curtiss Wr 1 Safran Printing ...............16J 17,Qi Scripto ...................... 5,7 6.2 n p, 1 Wyandoft* Chemical MM tLt 1M I M0 Mitekh 1.30 Mnm 1.30 MobilOII 1.00 Imonsan 1.40b [MgnlOUt i.53 MwtlVIfiird 1 Morrell MMorala 1 ----- 1.24 Nat Alrlln .40 Nat Else 2 Nat Can .50b NatCash 1.20 NatDalry 1.40 ““ Dlst 1.00 Fuat 1.10 Gent .20 Gyps 2 -sad l.50g ___Steal'2.50 Nat Tea .80 t- % Newbrry ,15g - % NEng El 1.3 I- % NYCent 3.12a h % Nlag MP 1.10 - 34% 1Mb + 1 23 27% 27% 27% + 38 75% 74% 74% —F ' 4 35% Mb 35% ... 29 25% M% Sflb-69 18% 18% ,18% I • 7 32% 30% 32% 21 S 25% 29 f 15 21% 21% 21% + —F— 155 1J3% 101% 1jt% —2% t iff Dividends Declarad Rata ried Record u . REGULAR Nat Sugar Rata .15 .. 4-15 P>Mta^.g D Tel (x) .. 4-15 (x) - Equal to about 8.1019. GanAnllF JO J:?4iiS‘grz6. GenPrec MO 39 21% 23% 21% >I%S U'% 76gl 76% 1—1% 29 311* jr ,C +“-38 27 24% -Mb ... SO 31% 30% 30% -—' Cl—. 190 23% 22% 22% —1% 134 44% 45 45% -1% 90 55 Mb 17 1% 188 70% M 48%-2% 43 % 47% 48 + 28 13% 13% 13% + 25 Mb 41% ' 41% — 44 20% Mb 20% + l Pit am mm — M 78 71% 77%-% 38 21% 21% 21% -% 19 107% 104% 104% ._. 97 47% 47 47% +-1% 35 50% 49% 49% a Pw M3 J1 30% JW4 30*55 -trap 1 x38 ,38% 37% 37%—1 Alrl .70 43410 114% 114% r-3 PaPwLt MB Pa BR 2.40a Pamtzoll 1.40 PepsiCo 1.00 PniitC 1.20a MB 3.40a WSa El IS —Rdg lJO . ....Morr 1.40 Pftill Pat 2.40 PltneyB ue PitPlete 2.40 Pitts steal Peiareid ' JO ProctefC 2.20 PubSvCol .90 Pubklnd M 133 43% 43 «% + 1? 14% 10% Mi — 1 10 42% 40 42 -a, 24 tm 32% 32% . . 53 45% 45 45 - '3 90% W% 97% —I 21 80% 05% 04% —1% Sri -i 22 32% 32% 32% M- IR%' Mb1 40% -34 40% 39% 39% — 4? 59% 59 » - 45 54% 53 53% - 16 42 61% 61% - x86 209% 200b 207 —3 35 wte ont gm-M A 9% Mb Hi.. H- Hit' 'A.- 3T — v 4 35% 3Rb Mb .... RCA Jte R?!3h^h ,40b RepubStl 2.50 i Mb 75% — Roan Sal .9le Rohr Cp .10 RoyCCala .72 Royal Dut lg RydarSys .40 143' 9% ; 9% ,9>A-40 24% 23% 24 21 34% Mb 34%-9 ISO 3Hb 37% 38 - ifeway 1.10 JoiLd 110 44 49% 40% 48% -70 1L 28% 20% -Ki MO 40 40% -9 95 50b 52 52% - 42 55% 54% 54% - 9 22% 21% 22% + 12 Mb 49% 49% -14 72% g% 71%-32 41 40% 40% ■A 51% (1% 51% + 9 43% 43% 43% -10 38% .«% 30% -34 27% 27% 27% •+ 20 34% 34 34 - % 21 31% 31% 31% — -r 10 40% 41% 48% - 45 18 17% 171b — 325 32% 3WA 3!%j— 19 24% 24 24% + i 37% - : za zesa 24% t 58% 57% 58 13% 13% 13% 45% , ii i.ioa 9 19% 19% 19%.+ ' ITS 119% 117% 111 —H 19 133% 132 132 -11 5 17% 17% 17% — 1 20 70 41 48 -21 47 25% 25% 25% + ' 2 74% ,74% 74% - ! Little Expected at Mart Talks De Gaulle Opposition Is Stumbling Block ROME (AP) - Rome welcomed the first Common Mar* ket summit meeting in six years today with inauguration of a new executive combine expected to be the only achievement. French Presklent Charles de Gaulle’s opposition to Britain!* application for membership and to proposals for political unity of the six Common Market members ruled out progress on those two major issues. That left little but formalities and ceremonies for the two-day meeting on the 10th anniversary of the formation of the 'European Economic Community. However, de Gaulle was expected to go alonjg With the inauguration of a 14-member executive combine to replace the three separate executive commissions that now exist for the Economic Community; the European Atomic Energy Commission, and the European Coal and Steel pool. EXERTED WILL De Gaulle also exerted^ his will here by opposing the appointment of West German Welter Hallstein to head the new combine. Hallstein is the longtime chairman of the EEC commission and a champion of the kind of political unity de Gaulle opposes. It was strongly rumored that the appointment will go to an Italian, or to Belgium’s Jean Rey, who distinguished himself as the Common Market representative in the Kennedy Round tariff negotiations in Geneva. Only ceremonial functions were planned for the opening day. The only working session, lasting three hours, is sched-45% -iU uled Tuesday morning. Hanging over the conference was fear of war in the Middle Ii Low Laai Hhg 41% 62% -1% By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - If some interests in the United States had their way, you would have a holiday today Instead of Tues-i day. Most holidays, these ad-| vocators say, should be cete-l brated on the first day of the] week. This is»a tick-1 lish type of posal, involving CUNMFF deep, emotions, patriotism, tradition and habit. But foe idea of Monday observances is a persistent one and may someday receive serious consideration. Some powerful forces give thrust to the idea. First, it is the spirit of the four-day week which, we are told, may be upon us this century. It would reduce interruptions in production. And there are obvious health advantages in long weekends. * ★ ★ One group that sees great beauty in the three-day holiday weekend includes businessmen, and just a little investigation 24 13% 13% 13% — 23 24% 24% 24% . 10 41% 48% 41% . 35 48% 47% 47% — % —u— 37 19% 19% 19% 104 81% 79% 79% —2% 27 104 103% 103% — r 10 10% 10% 10% < 67 40 39% 39% - » 9 00 47% 47% - i 1} 23% 23% 23% - ' . 19 35 24% 24% — % 9 44% 45% 65% X79 23% 22% 22% .. I 35 35 35 -% 28 51 50 50 -1% 2$ 50% 58% 51% —1% 117 44% 44% 44% 19 24% 23% 24% B Mb it H f 57% 54% Mb -~Y— VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope PaulsVI named 27 new cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church today, including four Amerl-jthe other. There were no mju-cans. This brings the membership |n the Sacred College of Cardinals to 120, the largest in history. The Pope’s action gave the United States nine cardinals, hree more than it has ever had- The new American prince* of the church include Archbishop* John Joseph Krai, 56, of Philadelphia; Patrick Louij^O’Boyle, 70, of Washington, D.C., and John Patrick Cody, 50, of Chlca- Westn AlrL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WnUnTal 1.40 Waatg El 1 u Weverhr 1 Whirl Cp 1 White WllsonCo 1.70 WlnnDtx 1.44 24 39% i ‘ 27 40% , > 39% + 41 76% 73% 73% 34 20% 27% 27% HOTPVPteUBH RH 23% 23% Worthing 1.50 xl24 45% 43% 44 —1% —X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp 1 x44 211% 374 275% «1.S0 14 31% 31% 31% 1.20 59% 59% 59% Hi Copyrighted by The Associated Prass 1947 4* are annual MMHM___________________ last quarterly or sarnl-annual declaration. Special ~ extra dividends or payments not da... nated aa regular are Identified In the following footnote* " *......... extra*, b—Annual Ml _______ ______and. c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declartdor paid In 1967 ptui stock dividend. a-Paid last year. t m Payable In stock during 1947, toti-mated cash value on ex-dividend or ox-distribution data, o—Declared or paid so tor this year, h—Declared or paid after flock dividend or split up. k—Oaclartd h dividends it p—Pal ferred arrears, n—New Issue, mis year, dividend omitted, done action taken at teat dividend bn. r—Declared or paid In 1944 plus dividend. t—Pald in flock during .. estimated cash Valt----- —^-<-—5 ex-dlstrlbuflon dat*. %-Saiat jit u v|—In bankruptcy ( x dlvi- panies terart r securities assumed b equalization tax." Ay to Hits Pole, City Man Injured A Pontiac man whose car smashed tatoia light pole in front of the eky’a central' fire station is reported in satisfactory condition today at Pontiac General Hospital. .. a # ■# | Fred C. Robinson, 52, of 153 Midland was injured Saturday qbout 7:40 pjn., police said, when his automobile apparently went out of control on East Pike near Hill and careened into the pole.. 27 Cardinals Named; 4 Are Americans The fourth American, the Rt. Rev. Francis J. Brennan of Shenandoah, Pa., has long headed the Vatican’s Sacred (Rota, the highest tribunal of the church dealing'with marriage matters. Rope Paul had increased American membership in the Sacred College to six cardinals at his first consistory, in February 1965, but Albot Cardinal Meyer died Sept. 4,1965. Mas# Would Fall on Monday Long Holidays Eyed the city some Monday morning. Very early, they may be jammed with desperate motorists who indulged themselves with an extra night at the cottage. Having so coddled themselves, they must rise in the darkness and drive madly toward the city and their first workday of the week, their blurred consciousness distressed by the vague feeling that the swollen sun seems to be ristalg like a great wound opening. What a way to begin the week. . Pontiac Names Service Head Other Changes Told for Motor Division gives at least one insight into manager. The appointment of James G. Vorhes as Pontiac Motor-Division’s parts and service director was announced today by Thomas L. King, general sales the reason why. Many bosses, it seems, feel their employes use Mondays as semiholidays anyway. This theory (views' the employe as arriving for work physically exhausted and emotionally drained, his head devoid of anything but golf scores and headaches. MONDAY JAMS Obviously there is some truth in this. For evidence you may check the roads from resorts to Vorhes, who has been Pacific regional manager since February, succeeds John C. Bates who was recently named assistant director of General Motors Corp.’s seryice section. Vorhes' plans to move to the Pontiac area. Another change announced by King was naming of Steven J. Kulcher as assistant zone man- Twisters, Hail, Rain Pound Many Areas By the Associated Press Property-destroying tornadoes, hail and heavy rains raked large sections of the nation Sunday night while unusually warm weather lingered from eastern New Mexico to Georgia. Funnel clouds were reported in Colorado, Kansas, Illinois, Indiana and Nevada. A tornado slammed into two homes In Jefferson County, Mo., shearing off the roof of one and destroying Barber Shop Is a Cut Above “Our Barber Shop” opens today at 485 S. Sanford. 11k shop is owned by Eugene Cog of 536 Judson who formerly owned a shop at 481S. Sanford, next door to the new site. "There are five barbers and all new, modern equipment,” said Cox. High winds accompanying a severe thunderstorm blew down one buildjng and ripped the roof off another in Ttipelo, Miss., Sunday night, but no injuries were reported. Marble-size hail pelted Huntington and Charleston, W. Va., and wind gusts to 50 miles an hour and heavy rains hit the area. FUNNEL CLOUDS Indiana also was hit by spring storms. Funnel clouds were reported at Geatesville, Goldsmith and Fort Branch, but no personal injury or property damage was reported. Heavy rain was reported in 10 states from West Virginia to Washington. Nearly lty inches of rain hit Parkersburg, W. Va. Lamar, Colo., recorded 94 There i* another side to thia • problem also. A midweek holiday sometimes leads to an additional holiday, self-proclaimed by the employe. The notable example is Thanksgiving Day, which falls on a Thursday and Is sometime* extended through Friday, either by design or indigestion. Currently, it is standard practice to grant at least six holidays, these being Christmas, Thanksgiving, New Year’s Day, Independence Day, Labor Day and Memorial Day. Sometimes Washington’s Birthday and Vet’s Day are added. 5 CANDIDATES Of these, at least five are com sidered candidates for switches to Monday: Washington's Birthday, Veteran's Day, Independence Day and Thanksgiving. Labor Day, of course, is a Monday holiday already. Whenever such proposals are made by Congress, businessmen or labor, the arguments soon follow. In a young nation proud of its history but untroubled by ceremony, traditional dates are, nevertheless, still difficult to tamper with. These dates are sacred to some. But Others ask why? ★ * * , ./• Advocators of Monday holidays point out that' there is hardly anything sacred, for example, about observing Thanksgiving Day on the fourth Thursday of November. It was set there by a congressional resolution that voided an earlier date proclaimed by Franklin D. Roosevelt. This was not its first move, either. Before 1939 it was observed on the last Thursday in November, having been set thero by President Abraham Uncoln in 1864. It was not Lincoln’s only Thanksgiving date. Just a year before he had decided on August 6. KULCHER VORHES ager in Pontiac. In 1962, he was named service and parts manager in New York. He also will move to the Pontiac area. Kulcher joined Pontiac in 1956 while a student at General Motors Institute. Vorhes joined the division in 1947 as a clerk in the service department in Pontiac. ★ ★ ■ Vincent A. McCabe, current Pontiac assistant zone manager, has been appointed Buffalo zone manager. He came to Pontiac in 1949 as assistant car distributor in Pittsburgh. King also announced these changes in Pontiac’s sales organization: • Walter W. Knocke, who has been Chicago zone manager since 1961, succeeds Vorhes as Pacific regional manager with offices in San Francisco. Gilbert A. Wiggins, Cincinnati zone manager, ceeds Knocke in Chicago. • John W. Johnston, Buffalo zone manager, succeeds Wiggins in Cincinnati. David C. Snyder, office manager and car distributor in Portland, succeeds Kulcher. All appointments are effective Thursday. 3 S. Korean Fishermen Killed by Reds SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -Three South Korean fishermen were killed and seven others injured in four North Korean attacks on South Korean fishing vessels' over the weekend off Korea’s West coast, military sources said today. ./•>• ★ ★ ★ The attacks occurred in the general area where South Korean navy boats exchanged fire for 20 minutes with Communist patrol craft and shore batteries Saturday, the sources said. ★ ★ ★ The gun battle took place near the Communist island of Suni-do, about 90 miles northwest of Inchon. No casualties or dam-ge were reported. Communist patrol boats fired machine guns at South Korean fishing boats after the fishing boats refused to go to North Korea to surrender, the sources said. All four South Korean boats returned to Inchon with the dead and wounded aboard, hey added. ★ ★ ★ It was not known whether the hooting occurred in Communist waters. of an inch of, precipitation . Lubbock, Tex., .85 of an inch. ★ ★ ★ A record high temperature of i degrees was set Sunday at Macon, Ga. Temperatures early today ranged from 33 at Old Town, Maine, to SO at Needles, Calif., and Brownsville, Tex. BOND AVERABBI Ii to TR* Aitaclated Proa* 20 It 10 10 1* lad. UML Fa*. L. 92J 81 j 9L9 *6.i it Chang* ion Mon. 71.9 to. Day 71.9 lek Ago 72.0 mlh Ago 72.7 •r Ago 74.7 17 High 7x0 03.4 92.5 184 84.9 914 494 *1.5 fjj 86.9 iw.* 84.1 911 88.9 794 914 OOW—JONES AVERAGES STOCKS; 30 Industrials ............ 20 Railroads .............. 15 Utilltle Higher grads rails .. Second grad* rails 10 Public utilities ... 10 Industrials ......... 250.45+342 134.24—0-47 314.20+0.25 mis. .. 82.15+107 1245+113 Day ...... 455.0 WM 150.2 323.7 Ago ...... 454.5 119.3 tKf 3234 HRR 4K» 4474 1024 1517 3K4 Year Age 475J 1744 MW News in Brief The theft of $22, a cota collection, two pellet air rifles and ammunition — total value of 8162 — during a break-in of her home was reported to Waterford Township pd’lice Saturday by Ruth M. Wilds of 6101 Andersonville. A television and portable » dip worth |U0 were taken from the unlocked home of Melvin King, 39, of 460 Nevada early yesterday, he told Pontiac police. Thomas Ostar, 26, of 66 Gage reported to Pontiac police yesterday the theft of his wallet rontaining |140 while he Was at a downtown tavern. The theft from his home of a portable television and small radio valued at $180 whs reported to Pontiac police yesterday by Jules D. Lavalais, 43, of 453 Linda Vista. m. § Stxces By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am 95 years old and my investments are just about able to keep me. Two mergers have me In doubt. I hold Hartford Electric Light and Connecticut Light and Power which merged into a third called Northeast Utilities. American Optical, which I owned, has been acquired by Warner-Lambert. Should I hold or sell Northeast and Warner-Lambert?” C.H. A) Northeast Utilities Is t holding company with operations in Contiguous territories in Connecticut mid western Massachusetts. This is hn( instance, I believe, in which the whole is stronger than the parts. Your Northeast is a sound stock, offering a satisfactory return, od I advise you to hold it. American Optical’s merger with Warner-Lambert was beneficial * to both parties, in opinion. You formerly held a stock involved mainly in optical products. You now own —; on quite a satisfactory exchange basis — an issue which is broadly diversified in. consumer products. As with most strong growth stocks, your current return on Warner-Lambert is be- low two per cent. You may wish more income, and in this event only, I would switch to CIT Financial, yielding 5.2 per emit. . ★ Sr 5r & Q) “Are tax-exempt bonds generally good investments? Could you name some of the better ones that I might buy?” GJL A) Direct obligations of cities and states are among the safest investments you can buy. There are also available tax-exempts ‘y districts and public authorities created by cities and states but payable only out of specific! revenues. These -vary as to security in accordance With 'thefr coverage of fixed charges. Currently I like State of California 3%s of 2000 at 100 and City of Seattle 3.80s of 1967, also at 100. These are high-1 grade direct obligations and are not redeemable prior to maturity. Roger Spear’s 4S-page Guide, to Successful Investing is available to readers. Far your copy send $t.00 to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Contra] Station, Now York, N.Y. 16617. (Copyright, 1167) B—8 V THE PONTIAC PK&S&. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 on Pennsylvania Railroad’s East-West mainline tracks in Philadelphia yes- is visible at left center. AP Wirtpholo VIET BEACHHEAD — One U.S. Marine stripped down to. his shorts yesterday to take a dip in the South China Sea while another tried to salvage what he could from a tank that slipped too soon from the landing "craft and got stuck up to its turret in the water and sand. They’re shown at the beachhead of the 1st Battalion of the 34rd Marine Division that was relocated from the mouth of the Ben Hai River to just south of the demilitarized zone because of heavy North Vietnamese artillery shelling. News in Pictures INSPECTING DADDY’S SHIP - John and Caroline Kennedy, son and daughter of the lytte president, get a close look at the carrier John F. Kennedy before Caroline christened it at Newport News, Va., Saturday. With them are their uncle, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. TOMBSTONE TERRITORY — A pair of U.S. Marines poke their heads from a’foxhole they hurriedly dug in front of a tombstone as North Vietnamese AP wirtpMto troops opened up a heavy mortar attack. The action took place in'operations near {he DMZ. CARRIER KENNEDY — Tugs push the ap wirtpmt* carrier John F. Kennedy out into the James it Was christened by 9-year-old Caroline Ken-Rhrer at Newport News, Va., Saturday after nedy, daughter of the late president. DISTAFF SOLblER MOVES UP - Her campaign hat , tilted at a jaunty angle, aft Israeli girl soldier,, Sgt. Nachaina Levkovitz, is driven with her male comrades-in-arms to an assembly area in the Negev Desert between die borders and over of the THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Clarkston Meets Kettering Tonight Leading Hur/ers Duel in Probably the two best hurlers In this year’s Pontiac Invitational High School Baseball Tournament are set lor encores tonight at Jayceb Park in today’s only quarter-final contest. Clarkston right • hander Dan Fife carries the Wolves’ hopes on his sturdy shoulders, widle Kettering is riding on the tal- ented left arm of Jack McCloud. The senior southpaw Saturday became tee first player in the six years of -the Pontiac Invitational to hurl a no-hit gamp, blanking Madison, 1-0. His fast - paced duel with the Eagles’ Ken WeslowsU took only 1:12 for tee seven innings — a tempo tee De- troit Catholic League would find hard to match even with its three balls, two shrikes rale. Dick Micell, who hurled the only other no-hitter in Kettering’s diamond history, caught McCloud's gem. The versatile Micell tripled in th^ fourth inning and scored on Mate: Cur- ry's bloop single for tee game’s lone run. McCloud whiffed U and walked four, but faced only two batters over the minimum 21 far seven innings. One was erased on a double play and Miceli gunned down another attempting to steal. Fife Friday night tossed one- hit. ball and struck out 12 in five innings of relief pitching as Clarkston defeated Pontiac Central, 5-4, In 10 innings. Tonight’s WKHS-Wolves’ tilt 4s set for 7:30. A couple of surprises highlighted action as the classy field was reduced to eight teams. Those remaining eight head into quarter-final action tonight (one game) and tomorrow (three games). Semifinals are slated for Wednesday at 5 and 7:30 p.m. with the finals on tap for Thursday at 7:30. Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department cosponsors the tournament with The Pontiac Press. Perhaps the biggest surprise une on Saturday when unheralded Clawson, with an unimpressive 5-10 record, ousted highly - regarded Royal Oak Kimball. And in an upset of lei Romeo (8-6) sent Bloomfield Hills packing by taking a 3-2 decision. Other results Saturday found Rochester downing Walled Lake, 2-1, Southfield belting Birmingham Brother Rice, 8-2, Waterford bumping Avondale, 4-3, and Pontiac Northern blanking Hazel Park, 4-0. The cream of tomorrow’s quarter-final action finds Wa-terfrod taking on Southfield at 4 p.m. on the lighted field. Mayo Makes Changes as Tigers Trim Senators DETROIT (AP) - Manager Mayo Smith has rocked the Detroit Tigers with his first major shake-up. He benched veteran Norm Cash, released pitcher Johnny Klippstein and optioned Jake Wood and George Korince. In the same Jbig sweep, the Tigers recalled pitcher Pat Dobson from their Toledo farm club in the International League Sunday and purchased two other Mud Hens players — catcher Bill Heath and pitcher Mike Marshall. Smite told Wood, an Infielder, and relief pitcher Korince they are being optioned to Toledo. He gave the players the word immediately after Detroit’s 3-1 victory over the Washington Senators. Smith told the stunned players of the changes as 52,357 fans largest crowd in the major leagues this season, were leaving Tiger Stadium. In the game, Denny McLain got his fifth Victory, with sparkling relief help from Fred Gladding. Smith said the primary reason for the shakeup was “tije need few a third catcher.” “Heath is a pretty good hitter,” he said. “With three catchers I can use Bill Freehan at first .base once in awhile or have him on the bench to pinch hit if he isn’t catching.’ The Tigers also have Jim Price as a reserve catcheir. ON CALL Wood and Korince were put under 24-hour recall option. Heath hit .301 with the Houston Astrqs in the National League last year. Dtoon, . Syurold SiSrSTlJ taJder, ported a M ndQ 10"'. ” '.. .... he had a 24) record with a 0.81 ERA ★ * * Smith said he benched Cash because the hustling first base-man, who hitting has been off * was “pressing too much." Major reason for the huge attendance Sunday was that the Tigers gave away free Little League-sized bats to youngsters. and a'1.47 ERA as a starter for the Mud Hens this year. Marshall, 24, a right-handed relief specialist, impressed pitching coach Johnny Sain in spring training. In 14 24 innings with the Mud Heds, all in relief, In Indy '500' Yanks Bucking Trend INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -American auto race drivers, who have watched a Scotsman and an Englishman wheel into Victqiy Lane for two straight years, have sound hopes of ending the trend Tuesday in the 51st 500-mile Memorial Day race. Parnell! Jones of Torrance, Calif., a former winner, was virtually conceded his second victory in the event if his revolutionary STP-Pratt A Whitney turbine car holds together for the distance. Italian-born but thoroughly Americanized Mario Andretti, Nazareth, Pa., will start from the No. 1 position and carry No. 1 on his car. He earned the numerals separately, the pole start with a record 168.982 qualifying speed in a Brawner Hawk Ford, the one painted on his car fay winning the D.S. Auto Club championship last year. The front row will be rounded out by international racer Dai Gurney of Costa Mesa, Calif, one of the game’s smoothest drivers, in one of his own Eagle FordS, and Gordon Johncock of Hastings, Mich., who finished third last year, in a Gerhardt-Fotd. SECOND ROW Although Jones’ qualifying speed earned him only a Second-row start, he had been babying an ailing gear box on the 10-mile trial run. After a new transmission was built by an Indianapolis firm specializing in helicopter gears,. Jones showed in practice he could pass anybody in the field. Jones, 1963 whiner, will share the second row with A. J. Foyt Jr. of Houston, Tex., the 1962 and 1964 winner, and Foyt’6 teammate, former motorcycle champion Joe Leonard, San Jose,. Calif., in Foyt-designed Coyote Fords. ★ ★ ★ The third row lineup will be Lloyd Ruby, Wichita Falls, Tex., who was winning the ’66 race until his engine failed, and brothers Bobby and A1 Unser of a famous Albuquerque, N.M. racing family. _ Mechanical troubles and late qualifications left the, five foreign starters far back in the field. Jim Clark of Scotland, 1965 winner, will start 16th, Denis Hulme of New Zealand 24th, Jackie Stewart of Scotland 29th; 1966 winner Graham Hill of England 31st and Jochen Rindt of Austria 32nd/ A1 Miller of Roseville, Midi., oldest starter at 43, will take off beside Rindt, youngest at 25 but No. 2 ranking Grand Prix driver last year. Huline currently leads Cage Tryout for Big Bubba BALTIMORE (UPI) - Bubba Smith, the All-America lineman who was tee first round draft choice of the National Football League’s Baltimore Colts, said Sunday he will first try his hand *t basketball by going to the Baltimore Bullets’ rookie camp, June 12-17. • T"‘ this world road racing'circuit. . The drivers were assembled at noon today for their final instructions and review of tee rules, with emphasis on a dean start. Sixteen cars tangled last year only yards beyond the starting line, eliminating 11 but causing no serious injuries. The worst wreck recently in the venerable speed event was a second-lap pileup in 1964 that killed drivers Eddie Sachs and Dave MacDonald. The old trade has taken 57 lives, including pre-500 races of 1909 and 1916. for 5,200 after running out of teem. More than 10,000 fans were turned away when the stadium announced a ticket sell-out. Smith said he plans to lot Price catch one ghme of the Memorial Day doubtebeader against the Chicago 'White Sox. The Tigers go into the key twin-bill trailing 'the Sox, who dropped a 34) decision to California Sunday, by one-half game. NINE CHANCES first bandied error but _ a hit in four tries. The Tigers bunched four hits and sowed all their runs in tee sixth inning against loser Pete Richert. Ray Oyler opened with a single and moved to second on McLain’s sacrifice. Don Wert singled, moving the runner to third and Dick McAuliffe’s sacrifice fly brought the run home, j Al Kaline walked and Willie Horton and Jim Northrup followed with run-sewing singles. * * * McLain struck out 10 but was lifted for Gladding in the ninth after he gaveup a homer to Ed Brinkman and issued successive walks to the next two batters. Gladding got Ken McMullen on an infield grounder to end the game. “McLain had a, little control trouble after the homer," said Smith, “and I brought in Gladding. But m tefi you this. Mc- Lain has pitched three fine games in. a row.” McLain, now 5-5, lost a 141 decision to Boston’s Jim Lonbwg last week but pitched a strong game. “I just got a little mad after the home run,” said McLain “I lost control Of myself for awhile.” Smith said he plans to pitch Earl Wilson and Joe Sparma against the White Sox Tuesday. Those two met twice in regular season play and gained a split. Waterford!s Skippers had more trouble than expected in stopping Avondale. ' ★ ★ ★ , Trailing 21 going into the last of the fourth, the Skippers came up with three runs, two of them coming across on a single by second baseman Rod Kennedy. RELIEF STINT ■Kennedy came on later in relief of starter Bill Hill and pitched the final two innings. Southfield catcher Ted Simmons jolted Brother Rice pitcher Mel Boomer with' a homo run, triple and double and drove in a pair of runs. Simmons blasted his home run over 466 feet in the third with teammate Dave Hubbard on base. , Shaky fielding in the first inning opened the doors for South-field to push across five runs Pantile Press Photo by Rolf Wlntsr on onjy three hits. JOB WELL DONE — A happy Jack McCloud (without * ★ * hat) is surrounded by his exurberant Waterford Kettering A walk to Brade Czajka, an teammates Saturday afternoon after pitching the first no- error and Jim Micielli’s single hitter of his WKHS career and also the first one in the his- produced the winning run in the tory of the Pontiac Invitational High School Baseball Tournament. McCloud stopped Madison, 14), at Jaycee Park, needing only 72 minutes to do it. (Continued on Page C-3, Col. 1) MADISON (0) KETTERING (1$ Clarkston Wins Regional Net Title Clarkston’s tennis team notched the first Class A regional championship trophy in the school’s history Saturday at Flint and now returns to the county eying the Walled Lake Invitational-title. The Wolves dethroned host Flint Central, who had won the regional the past three years, when Mike Dougherty upset Central’s topseeded Bob Sand-ford, 6-2, 1-6, 6-4, in the semifinals. Dougherty, who thus qualified for the state finals June 216 at Kalamazoo, teen lost to Flint Northwestern’s Wayne Thies in the finals, 22,22. Thies also beat Dougherty’s teammate Mark Erickson, 6 3, 4-6,21, in the semifinals. Clarkston had nine points, Central eight and Flint Northwestern m. Pontiac Central tied Flint Northern and Southwestern with three points, Waterford and Pontiac Northern ihad two each and Kettering ltt. Lapeer posted seven points for fourth place and took home tee doubles trophy as Panthers’ Ralph Potter and Carl Hender- son defeated Flint Central’s Rick Niemi-Dick Garthwalte, 6-4, 21, in the finals. PCH’s top-seeded Tim Shireman-Mike VanGuilder lost in the semifinals. The Walled Lake Invitational will begin Wednesday with 16 teams competing. The Wolves and Norte Farming-ton’s defending champions are cofavored. There are four singles and three doubles events. The finals are planned for Friday but could run into Saturday morning. , ^ ! H«rk«y, c Morrow, cf i 0 O Evans/ 3b 3 0 0 R0RH, rf 2 0 0 Karl, If 10 0 orton, c 10 0 Burns, lb 2 0 0 Totals 1* V • Totals 21 1 4 >•!»»•« .............ass ooo a- a o o K altering ......... 000 100 X- 1 4 0 TRIPLE - Mlctll. RUNS BATTED IN — Curry. PITCHING - Waseiowski i ip. ’-I K-kit, 2 SO, I W, McCloud 7 IP, 11 O, 4 W. WINNER — McCloud. LOSER - Waslowski. AVONDALE (I) WATERFORD (4) 1 0 Sheldon, ss 3 0 1 I I Hamilton, c 4 0 0 ........ ............ 000 440 X— 4 4 1 DOUBLES — Burt, Campbatl. TRIPLE - Davis. RUNS BATTED IN ~ Davis, Monochld, Campbell; Hemmerly 2, Hill. PITCHING - McGee BMP, O H, 4-0 R-ER, I SO, S W; Hill 0 IP, 5 H, 3-2 R-ER, » SO, 1 W, 1 HBP, Kennedy 2 IP, 1 H, 4 SO, 1 MSP. ERRORS - Burnell, Baaba, Burt; Galbraith. 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MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 1 C-2 ONE-MAN TEAM—Mel Cole, Pontiac Northern’s only representative in the state Class A track meet Saturday at East Lansing, turned in a stirring performance as he picked up 20 points to give PNH sixth place in the meet. Cole, shown running in the high hurdles, picked up two seconds and a pair of sixths for his 20 points. By the Associated Press Reggie Smith has made quick round trip from outfield to infield and back—with a stopover on the Boston Red Sox' bench. But the versatile rookie still looks best to Manager Dick Williams when he’s circling the bases. * A *■ Smith, an early-season disappointment at bat for the hardhitting Red Sox, broke loose Sunday by stroking three hits and flashing his speed to score three runs to a 4-3 Boston victory oyer the Baltimore Orioles. Elsewhere, the Detroit Tigers trimmed Washington 3-1 and climbed within one-half game of the American League-leading Chicago White Sox, who were blanked by California 5-0. The New York Yankees shut out Cleveland 5-0 and Minnesota divided a doubleheader with Kansas City, winning the first game 4-3 and dropping the nightcap 7-2. - Pittsburgh edged Cincinnati 3-2, St. Louis downed Philadelphia 8-3, San Francisco topped Los Angeles 4-1 and the New York Mets beat Atlanta 6-3 before bowing 7-3 to the second game of their doubleheader. Houston and the Chicago Cubs were rained out. Smith, a .320 switch-hitter and All-Star center fielder for Williams’ Toronto club in the International League last year, followed his manager up to the Red Sox this spring. He was switched to second base when iHdriph'l h!8delph sms FrthdHs»'__________ ^ St. Lou it (OWson >4 and Jackion Ml at Cincinnati (McCoal 3-3 and Quaan 5-U, 3. twMlMlt Now York (Fisher Ml at Lot AngaMt (Singer 0-2). night Only garnet scheduled. Tuesday's Gemot St. Louis at Cincinnati, night Atlanta at Chicago, 2 Houston at Pittsburgh, 3 “— “—b -* Lot Angulos, night it San Franciseo Four Share Lead in City Baseball Cranes Second in l-S Track Cranbrook’s athletic te were second best ot Cleveland University School to three Inter-State League events Saturday at Cleveland. life A -A The Cranes were second to the conference trade meet and lost to COS to baseball, 2-0, and tennis, 3-2. Cranbrook picked up seven firsts on the way to scoring 77 points, four less than University School, to the thinclad meet. Craig Taiberg edged teammate Eddie Randle with a 9.9 clocking in the 100, bat Randle came back to win the, 220 in 22 seconds. Randle, Taiberg, Kip Craig and Jim Long-ley were members of the victorious 880 quarter (1:31.7). The mile relay (3:28.3) also with Taiberg, Doug Moran, Bob Snyder and Craig Touhy running. ★ if , if Other Cranbrook winners were Taiberg 20-3% in the long jump; Charlie Craig, 10:06.8 to the two-mile; and Snyder, 51.0 to the 440. Four city Class A baseball teams registered their second wins Sunday as the men’s recreation league concluded its early season schedule. Defending champion Team- Unearned Runs Help Flinty LOOKS CAN DECEIVE Pontiac Pr«$» Photo - Waterford Kettering batter- runner Jerry Harkey (left) thought he beat this play at first base leading off the fourth inning Saturday, but Madison first sacker Bill Pietroski didn’t leave the bag until after catching the throw. WKHS won the contest, 1-0, at Jaycee Park. Last Chance for U.S. Golf Captain FORMBY, England (AP) • “If you think I came 3,000 miles to miss a 4-foot putt, you’re wrong.’* * a a The speaker was big Bill Campbell, who led the 37-strong American 'challenge for the British Amateur Golf Championship today. “This is probably going to be my last British Amateur and It’s one I want to win,” said big Bill. “I’m to a competitive mood — that means I’m kind of quiet. But if you’re playing well the shots work out for themselves-” ‘ A A A Campbell, 44-year-old campaigner from Huntington, wj Va., won all his four matches in the Walker Cup which saw a 13-7 American triumph over the British Isles at Sandwich week ago. California’s Jim McGlothUn stopped the White Sox on six hits for his fourth victory to five decisions while two Chicago errors contributed to three Angel runs. Don Mincher’s double and A1 Weis’ boot produced a run in the fourth and Ken Berry’s mis-play on a single by Jim Fregosi helped the Angels push over two more to five eighth. Mel Stottiemyre fired a five-hitter, Mickey Mantle crashed his 11th homer and Charlie Smith hit his first circuit of the season as the Yankees throttled sters 614 edged Pass Excavating, 3-1, to retain a share of first place with the other three squads at 2-0. M. G. Collision trounced UAW 653, 10-0; the Clippers whipped City Boys Club Wins Sectional Track Meet A Pontiac Boys Club track team edged 17 other state clubs to taking the 1967 Sectional Olympics Saturday at Eastern Michigan University. ★ ★ A Former Pontiac Central and EMU star Hayes t Jones, Olympic gold medal win- ner, was on hand for the event which was sponsored by the Boys Clubs of Michigan Associa- te S.Net Team Leads Mexicans in Cup Battles MEXICO CITY (AP) - The United States, buoyed by the doubles victory of Clark Graeb-ner and Marty Riessen, took a 2-1 lead into today’s decisive singles matches against Mexico and U. S. Captain George Mac-Call confidently predicted success to the North American Davis Cup finals. “We’rF in the driver’s seat now,” MacCall chortled after Graebner and Riessen — as expected — stormed to a straight-set victory over Rafael Osuna and Joaquim Loyo Mayo Sun-[No^rup 'day. The scores were 6-4, 6-3, 7- tion. \ Mike Johnson led the Pontiac sqnad by claiming three first place medals. His first medal came when he cleared the bar at five feet to the junior division, and he scored the second with a time of six seconds to the 50-yard dash. He earned the third by teaming with Steve Bullard, Leonard Dawson and Roosevelt Washington in taking the 200-yard Relay. * a A Dawson won the broad jump with a leap of 15-feet-6-inches and earned a third-place medal in the high jump. In the senior group, Harry Dickerson won the high jump with a leap of 5-feet-4-toches and Jerry Roach wound up second in toe 100-yard dash with a time of 11.3 seconds. Tiger Averages CIO 594, 9-4; and Booth Homes overcame Oakland University, 7-3. Entering the win column for toe first time were the Lake Orion Cardinals who outlasted Talbott Lumber, 8-5. The action at Jaycee Park will cease until next Sunday while the high school baseball tournament finishes. ★ * * Gary Fisher slugged a two-run triple and scored on John Fleser’s stogie in the fifth inning as the Teamsters rallied from a 1-0 deficit. Dick Roy singled home Pass’ lone tally off Don Picmann. RUNNERS Seven singles, six walks and five UAW errors, helped M.G.’i victory. Only winning hurler Bob Tuck among the regulars failed to score. Ray Heaton slammed a three-run homer to give CIO a 3-2 lead through 3% innings, but toe Clippers’ rallied behind Warren Stephens’ fourth:toning triple and Larry Johnson’s fifth-toning double. Hank Thomas had two singles and a double to account for three runs in the victory. Ed Sparkman hurled his ond mound triumph, striking out 11 Oakland U. batters. Tom Booth’s two-run triple put the home builders ahead and Dick Reddaway’s run-producing double capped their six-run rally. ★ A * Relief pitcher Bob Vollmer of Lake Orion limited Talbott to two hits over the final five innings and Willie Williams ripped a stogie, double and homer as the Cardinals scored eight times in the first four innings. Univsnity .. «M oto 1— 3 GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. I (UPl) — Flint picked up two [5. unearned runs here Sunday to squeeze by Mesa College of Grand Junction 2-1 to the second round of the National Junior College Baseball Tournament Pontiac’s Joy Fair, who suf-and knock the hosts out of the fered the embarrassment of run- Joy Fair 'Gasses Up' Freeh an ___ McAullffe ... Trscewikl, .. Cash ........ action. The Flint victory followed a narrow 94 battle won fay Gardner-Webb, N.C., over Phoenix, Arte. ning out of gas to the feature race last weekend at Toledo Raceway, returned to Flat Rock Speedway Saturday and won the 25-lap feature to his 1964 Che-velle. McLain 3 Sparing .... 4 I Glaring*"’ l I Aguirre ______ 0 I Padres ....... t i s>!£%ms .. m v x—Includes released pi training camp injuries sidelined rookie Mike Andrews and holdover George Smith. BAITING SLUMP Reggie’s batting average dipped below .200, however, and Andrews bounced back to claim toe second base job. Then, after an eight-game sojourn on the bench, Smith was returned to center field — and began hitting." He doubled to the first toning Sunday, tagged up and raced to third on a foul pop near the first base dugout, then scored when the Orioles tried to nail Carl Yastrzemski on a delayed double steal of second. Smith singled to the fourth, zipped to third on Andrews’ single and beat the throw home cm Yastrzemski’s sacrifice fly to medium center. In the seventh, he doubled again, took third on a bunt and tallied on a wild pitch. the Indians at Cleveland, tlemyre squared his record at 4-4 with his third shutout of the year.. Bob Allison drilled a double in the seventh inning, took third on an infield scored on a wile Dobson, keying game victory at and helping Deat come the first AL eight games. MORE DOUBLES But two more doubles by Allison in the nightcap couldn’t prevent Jim Kaat, t a 25-game winner for Minnesota, to 1966, from taking his sixth loss to seven decisions. The A’s tagged Kaat for three runs to the third toning,. Mike Hershberger’s two-run stogie climaxing the burst, and added four wrapup runs to the eighth. Cougars Play Tie Contest ,■ in U.S. Debut LYNN, Mass. (AP) - John Colrata’s goal with less than six minutes remaining boosted the Detroit Cougars into a 1-1 tie with the Boston Shamrock Rovers Sunday night before a crowd of 7,300 to a United Soccer Association opener that ended to a melee. RECORD RUN — Wayne Wills of Ortonville shows the form he flashed Saturday in streaking to a record 1:56.9 time to the 880-yard run in. the state Class C track championships at Mount Pleasant. Colrato took a head pass from Danny Trainor and scored on a hard boot into the upper corner from 30 yards out at 39:45 to cap a Detroit comeback. Boston opened the scoring at 30:00 of the first half when, Mickey Leech, a 19-year-old j sensation, scored on a 10-yard! boot after a neat maneuver. The game ended to a melee when an apparent goal by Detroit was nullified fay an offside penalty to the closing seconds. NOT INJURED Trainor booted the ball into tile net but Colrato was ruled offside. The Cougars protested and linesman Bob Jack jras hit to the mouth by a Cougar player during the argument. The official was not Injured. The two teams, meeting for the firit time although Irish neighbors, staged a tremendous hard-hitting game as major league soccer made its debut to New England. A Sr A The Shamrock Rovers are from Dublin, Ireland. Detroit is represented in the league by Glentoran of Belfast to northern Ireland. WINNING FORM—Pontiac Central’s Bill Tipton won the high and low hurdles to the state Class A track championships at East Lansing Saturday. Tipton’s time of 13.9 seconds in the 120-yaTd highs erased his old record of 14.0 he set last year. ' CLASS A RESULTS turn Mile - Kan Houm, Detroit .... Wnt.(,:a,,1>°'?rte6,KU«,R5 (1:39.5); I. I ------- Im ( HR JPR. — Freels Bacon, Flint Central (4-8); 1. Melvin Cole, B " Northern (*-7); 3. Henry AnT trolt Central Mi 4. Mike------------------- Devlaon (4-4); j, (Tie) Rick Joaey; Grand Blanc, Joe Kaiser, Groaae Polntti and tavern Miller,. Flint Southwestern “-‘vlndale («” Winning Driver to'Feather Nest' i record 7 i ot Detroit — Sparkman. Pais Excavating no Run - Willy WRtlams (Candl-Ooubies - wlllv Williams (Cor-i); Krause (Talbott). Winner—Voll- CHARLOTTE, N.C; (AP) -Jim Paschal, a crew-cut, slightly greying bachelor, figures chicken ranching may be better as a long term investment fiuui auto racing. But right now he plans to continue doing, both. ★ A A The 41-year-old veteran of years in the Southern stock car bull rings picked up Sunday to winning the second richest and longest of all stock car races, the World 600 at sunbaked Charlotte Motor Speedway. It was the second time Paschal had. won the event, considered by drivers to be the biggest test of endurance of all the South’s big speedway events. He won here to 1964 and invested] mhm, ^sSflSSUm his share of that purse to a chicken ranch near High (Joint. Paschal said after Sunday’s victory that his winnings would be used to buy more chickens. State Track Summaries I. Grog Si iedwK ’44.).. Roloy - Bottle Crook (1:2M)i _ i Point* (1:22.2); 3. Detroit Cast niiU)i 4. Ypsllantl (1:30.1); S. Northern (1:30.2); 4. Royal Oak ___-Jro (1:30.5); 7. Saginaw (1:31.1); I. Wyandotte (f:3U); 1. CtW Detroit Mumford, Kalamazoo Lay Norrli (1:31.4). (Brook* record ot 1:22.5 by Kalamazoo Central In 1243). (1:53.1); t Wayne Seller, Wyandotte (1:55.4); 3. Mika tmlrle, Bloomfield Hill* 4. Gary Scallen, Dearborn ......... Jr (Tlel Glenn Duuk, Detroit Thurston, Dick Mwlin, Detroit Finney (1:57.4); 7. Bob Donovan; Farmington (1:57.7); I. Pet Doran, Ann Arbor (1:57.1) (Brook* record at 1:53.3 by Walter Wlf-ion, Inkiter-Roblchaud In 1253). Mile — Kim Hartman, ooumnow (4:11.2); 2. Jim Leya, Flint Contrii (4:12.3); 3. Benton Stone, Ann Arbor (4:22.5); 4L Steve Oorsam*, Clio (4:22.4); 5. John Hill, YMtlantt (4:234); Ljob Cleaver, Detrolf Kettering (4:2SJTrV. Don. Estoo, Southgate Schaefer (4:27 I. Jim Wrlslay, loot Lowing (4:274). 4“ Run — Lorenzo Montgomery, Soumeattem (43.7); 2. Rich Ej Creek Central (3:24.3); I. Mount (3:304). Polo Vault — Dave Leltnor, Grand Havan (14-4V2); 1 Lorry B“— Mafia MU ■'-’Mhlp (13-11); 3. B ...------TV HIM (13-11); 4 Detroit Eastern (13-7); -----------.------.- _________________ ......— (13-7); 7. Earl ___________ Central (13-7); 8. Paul Van M—i- Grand Rapid! (Antral (13-3). (Break* recor of 14-5 bh Ron Short! ot Farmington In 1244). Long Jump — Lavern Miller, Flint Southwenern (23-10Vb); 2. Dennis Johnson, Kalamazoo Central (22-7V4); 3. Paul “vgha*,,Southgate Schaefer (22-1 Vi); 4 oyd Hoke. High land Dark (21-10%); Bob Johnson,.Ipontlae Control (21-0); Melvin Cole, Ponflec NortttOm (214%) i P Ranee Teeple, Inkster Cherry Hill (21-0%); 3. Greg Harden, Detroit South-(21-4%). .----- Put — Guillo Catallo, I (59-1 Hi); 2. Barry Binkley, Wayne (52-llVi); 2. Barry Binkley, Wayne Memorila (5S-4VS); 3. Gene Pankner, Waterford Ketttrtng (54-TVi); 4. Tom Orango, Saginaw (54-S); 5. Leroy Hull 154-2); 4. Charles Lolko, Birmingham Stahotm (55-4); 7. Jim Elmer, Kala- Royal Oek Dondero (41.2); 3. Johp Gilds. University of Detrlt High (42jfr4 Tom —“ Detroit Pershkijj (494); 5. Dwight YpSHontr (50.2); 4. Mlku ____Detroit Mumford OLml. ■____________ Cornwell, Battle Creek Lakefisld (50.4); Norttyn.(lffi);_ j. Bi_........ tte Crook Central (104); 4. chariot Robinson, Detrolf Mockonile (10.4); 5. Andrew Johnson, Bottle Crook Central (101);. t. Sanford McPherson, Detroit Chadaty (10.4); 7. Terry Walter, Dear-bom EdMi Ford (10.7); I. Charles rldin, Detroit ImiltlaMigr 00.7). 220 Dash -S Herb Washington, .... Control (32.4); X^Cherles Robinson, Do-trolt ItaCKonUl ,(214); 3. Eur Brown, Battle Crook Central (22.7); TSnX ,We|*or.- Dearborn Edsel (22.1);. 5. Andrew jehneon, Battle Creek on7uic'li7tiwml (14.9); t**l2 (Breaks record Ol MA »ef by Tt i^yeerT: 0 Low Hurdles v- Bid Tipton, 9 Csntrsl (19.3); 3.. M#Mn C HOC Northern (194); 3. Larry Bvi . Flint Northwestern (20.3); .... Logan, .„ Gary Kwaltkoskl, OWyendotte .. Jim Armstrong,^ Leiui^Sakton (214);,!, ndUij). r B^nlnghsm^ ! Royal Ook Klmbein3:24.0); 5. I '■ Grosso Point! State Meet Melvin Cole. Scores 20 Points to Take Sixth for Northern Pontiac Central track coach Dean Wilaon is a pretty fair judge of talent. . While observers were heaping praise on his talented Chiefs last week and predicting PCH * would capture the state championship, Wilson Was saying something else. He didn’t like it but Wilson admitted tote to the week that PCH wasn’t strong enough. “Battle Creek Central will win it with Flint Central second and then probably ns,” he was saying. It happened pretty much that way., Battle Creek grabbed the title Saturday with 48 points at East Lansing. Flint Central, as •Wilson predicted, would up second with 36 points, but Ypsilanti edged the Chiefs for third.place . with 23 markers. PCH had 22. A A A And one of the most stirring performances of the meet was . that produced by Pontiac North- , era’s Melvin Cole, a senior, who journeyed to East Lansing as a one-man team and returned with 20 points and sixth place among the classy Class A teams. TWO SECONDS Cole, who’ll be in the Champions of Champions Meet in . Kalamazoo tomorrow, picked up two seconds and two sixths, in gaining 20 points. ^ AAA He set a PNH record with a leap of 6-feet-7-inches to the high jump, good fm* second place, and he ran second to , Pontiac Central’s ace hurdler Bill Tipton in the 186-yard lows. : Cole’s other points came in the high hurdles (14.5) and the long jump (21-7%). Tipton was one of two double winners in the state competition. ' A A A He cracked his own record in , the 120-yard high with a 13.9 second clocking, well off the national standard he shares (13.5) with Richmond Flowers, now at* tending University of Tennessee. » WIND HURTS In the lows, Upton posted a,1-time of 19.3. Running against a the speedster from cracking the -20-mile an houn wind prevented state mark of 19.0 set by Farmington’s Rex Cawley 1958. He has had several clockings under ’ 19 secopds. Southfield’s Kim Hartman won the mile in 4:18.2, and Mike Imirie of Bloomfield Hills bagged a third to the 880-yard run. Farmington’s Bob Donovan-' placed seventh in the saiqe ’ event. Larry Reese of Holly captured • the state Class B title in the 880-yard run at Ann Arbor. The speedy Reese turned in a -time of 1:58.2 in nipping Curt -Griffiths of Strugis (1:58.3). Ecorse (43) won the team title. Howell was second (27), • River Rouge (25) third and Sturgis (24) fourth. In the Class C at Mount Pleasant, Wayne Wills of Ortonville set a record 1:56.9 to-, the 880-yard run to leading hi&'I teammates to a fifth-place fin- . ish. , (53-10). High Jump — Lorry Tylor, Detroit Cathedral (4-3); Jt Bill Cohrt, Blcks-burg (44); 3. (Tie) PMI Nichols, Cess City, and Jerry butcher, Corunna (4-1). Mile Reloy V Ecoroo (3:23.7); 2. Wi Run (3:24.4); 3. Fenton (3:27.3). ) Run — Lorry Roest. Holly (151.2); _ iurt Griffiths, Sturgis, M:SI#I fi Bryan Ksrd, CtarW|wj«* (1:50.4). .°*«k — John Schneider, Marshall "OBDi >• Dick Kluge, AT— ----- Cllntondele; 3. Steve Stone,____ . 220 Dash — John Schneider MorshoR r,5f^"tSS: * ‘ - Muwsbml, — OoMort nazoo Heckett ______________ _ „^7»J. 110 Relay — Ecorse (1:31.7); 2. Run (l:W.2); 3. Kelemar— (1:32.7). _U0 Low Hurdles - Wayne H .Erie Mason (29.9); 2. Hap Eaton, A. Ty Johnson, Musktgon. TEAM SCORING 1. Ecorse 43; 2. Howell 77; X River Rouge 2$; 4. Sturgis 24; 5. (Tie) Wyom-tna Rogers oM cTarencevllle 20; 7. Erie Mieen TOW; X Willow Run 11; 9. (Tto) Marshall and Detroit Luthoror n 11. Niles Brandywine IS; IX ( Clemens Cllntondele and ►ttetatt 14; 14. vtckburg 13; Mustamon Rstts Puffer and fHmfon' lO; M. B(flef^xfoVd.-John Glenn end Grand Rs Northwestern (544%). TBAM STANDING Battle Creek Central 43 Central 34; 3. Ypsllan ' — - ntral 32; 5. Flint .. Pontiac Northern 20; MM 19; I. (Tie) Flint Northern trolt Southeastern' 14; IX B Seaholm and Wyandotta 15; lz. do Pershing 14; 13. (Tie) Royal Oak dero. Mount Clemens and Detroit ! Konzle 12; 14. Detrdlt Finney 11W; ... (Tie) Flint Northwestern and Saginaw 11; It. Ann Arbor IX CLASS B RESULTS Two Mil Rogers (I Rapids East OtrMton '(9:5X1;' 3. ferry Furst, Niles Brandywine (9:55.2); ...“l1® stV,n8*' bafrott Lutharan West 14:19.1); V Den Hague, Ecorse qa-MESur*i,k * LatoBbay captured the ‘C’ crown with 30 points. Hartford! , and Traverse City St. Francis ^ shared second at 24 apiece. HELPING OUT Helping Wills with the scoring ' were Ron Waller (second to the ' shot put) and John Stevens ' (third in two-mile)., A , A A Detroit Country Day captured first place iiTthe 880-yard relay.--Clocked to 1:33.8 were Andy * Ditzhazy, John Means, Jerry ? Dowis and Casey McWilliams. Mike Christopher of Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows-took the high jump with a leap of 5-feet-ll-inches and teammate? Hartsock was sixth to the; j 440-yard dash. Rick Mrozinski of Orchard* Lake St Mary placed fourth to >’ the long jump. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Skippers Nip Avondale, 3-2, in First Game Simmon* Loads Attack in Southfield Victory; Rochester Win* (Continued From Pep C-l) top of the seventh inning for Romeo. It was Micielli’s second hit of the day. THREE HITS Jeff Kezlarian picked up three hits and teammates Kim Kez-lairan and Bob Calhoun checked in with two each for Bloomfield Hills. * ★ ★ Art Jackson struck out nine and gave up only four hits in taming Hazel Park for Pontiacl Northern. The winners came up, with three runs in the first, frame to put the game awayJ Don Hayward sparked the attack with a two-run single in the firit. Down 14, Rochester put together four hits for two runs in the fifth to nip Walled Lake. Dick Farrand’s second single of the day sent both of the Rochester runs across, the plate. Jim Burton went the distance for Rochester, scattering three hits and fanning 11. Ken Armstrong had a pair of hits for Walled Lake. ★ * * Four singles and a .walk enabled Clawson to push across four runs in the second inning en route to its surprise win over Kimball. Ron Hepner delivered a two-run safety .in the uprising. Kimball pulled within a run in the sixth, 4-3, and two runners aboard and one out, but Clawson came up with a double-play to kill the rally. Other games tomorrow have Rochester meeting Romeo at 1:30 and Clawson taking on Pontiac Northern at 7:00. C—8 IN RARE FORM — Jack McCloud of Kettering follows through after whipping another curve ball strike past a Madison batter Saturday at Jaycee Park while hurling the first no-hitter in his WKHS career, the second one in the school’s history, and the initial one in the Pontiac Invitational High School Baseball Tournament. Third baseman Pete Evans is in the background. Tour Vet Whips Player in Overtime for 2nd Win Shadow Wlngt Rad Knar - Koyai ra< Caleb', Daughter Prlnceu I Brown Sugar Baby Auric Ani Mi—$11,4751 i-ymt-om Trot, I Maha Gay Hooelar Si r Colossal Rudy S l tf Slonilll Mar Male ■and* April Gold Sailor Wayna Ad lot 6IH-4I9**! Conditioned Trol, V Mile ' Mary K. Rack Charlton Olract Waywlll knight High Lloyd Grayalone Lady "--'“i Adios Fox Flrn Lad nn-StWS: Conditioned Faso, 1 Mile May Chief C i --------------- John Justin Smith Jackson, p 2 1 1 Davidson, i Folks, 2b 2 10 Johnson, 31 D'L'Rosa, ss 3 1 1 Ross, 2b Hayward, lb 3 • 1 Car lay, ib Rhoney, d 3 f * UfjH -Deaton, 3b 3 I i Yoshonls, rf 3 0 Pontiac Northern ...MS «W #- 4 3 Haiti Park ........ HtMt-l 4 . DOUBLE - Jackson. RUNS BATTED IN - OsLaRosa, Hayward 2. PITCHING — Jackson. 7 IF, 4 H, R-ER 04, SO f, W 7; Welch 5 IF, N 3, R-ER 40, SO S, W 4| Jones 2'IP. H 0, R-ER 04, SO S, ERRORS — Hayward, Fulks, Dr-------- w o. WINNER — Jackson. Loasr—t Zmlkly, Jones. CLAWSON (4) Cummins, a: Lancaster c Scott, cf (S) I 0 1 McQuater, c I 0 0 Nladowlcr, p I I ,1 Ratals. ‘ ING TRIPLE - Dodds. RUNS BATTED IN Cummins 2; Russell 2, Hepner. PITCH-,G — Blair 4 IP, 5 H, R-ER 40, S SO, Wl Prlebe 2 IP, t H. R-ER 04,, 3 SO, W> Niedowlcz 7 IP, 6 H, R-ER 3-2, 4 9, 4 W. WINNER — Niedowlcz. LOSER . Blair. ERRORS — Heist 2, Run " * SOUTHFIELD (I) summon,, Roe. 1b I. 1 T 1 Eckhout, 3b 4 . . McLoan, If l 0 0 ( Walters, rf 1 0 0 I Hunt, rf 1 0 0 1 ' Daniels, If 1 0 1 < Toth, If 10 0 Burkert, p 4 0 0 10 010 Total, 24 1 Brother Rica ... . DOUBLES - Sin — Simmons. RUNS 2, Simmons 2, Pescl; — Burkert 7. IP, 7 2 w> Boomer 7 IP, SO, 7 W, WINNER -Boomer. ERRORS Tucker, — Hi— . . 512 o< - 4 II 024 440 0- 2 7 imons 2. HOMERUN BATTED IN - Roe Juett 1. PITCHING 4, 2-2 R-ER, 3 SO, 10 H, 4-7 R-ER, 3 Burkert. LOSER MldellL 2b 3 0 2 Samp, cf 4 10 Bryan, Ib 3 0b Standfast, till Paralno. 3b 3 0 1 . Payne, ,s 3 0 0 Czalka, rf 2 1 0 CwhWr'y, If 3 „0 0 Baumann, p 1 0 Calhoun, ,2b 4 0 Kuzma, lb 1 0 Godfrey, 3b 2 I 17 S 4 Total, 27 2 1 ......244 140 1— 3 4 I ......... ....J .....Oil 400 0- 2 fa DOUBLES — J. Kezlarian, Calhoun. RUNS BATTED IN - J.. Standfast, Par-alno, Mtctattli Kuzman, J. Kexlarlan. PITCHING - Johnson I IP, 3 H M R-ER, 2 w, Cohen S IP, 4 H, M R-ER, 3 SO, IW, 1 HBP; Baumann 7 IP, 4 H, 3-2 R-ER, to SO, 2 w7 WINNER — Cohan. LOSER - Baumann. ERRORS - Godfrey, Parrott, Kuzma. WALLED LAKE (If ROCHESTER (2). Armst'ng, rf 3.4 2 Burkean, lb 0 0 Wed, pr 0 0 0 Bo let, rf 2 1 G.Fogle, If 3 • t Hopkln,, rf 0 0 Alderaon, cf 2 0 0 Burton, p 3 0’ Horton, cf too Johnson, 3b 3 1 Mattack, lb 3 0 0 Lovelace, I t I Thomas, lb. t 0 o Kamer, if o o Race Results, Entries OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -Miller Barber smiled in the sunshine of victory today after beating Gary Player in a playoff for the Oklahoma City Open Golf Tournament title after rain delayed play of the final round tor one hour and 45 minutes. I didn’t remember H felt ao good,” said Barber, who rolled in a two-foot birdie putt on the third hole of a sudden death playoff. “This is nice. I’m very, very pleased.” ‘ Barber's only other victory in nine-year professional tour career was the 1964 Cajun Classic. Here he was the unheralded challenger as he steadily pulled into a tie with Player on the back nine, and then birdied the final hole to cause the playoff. Player, golfing in the threesome in front of Barber, finished with a birdie and had taken a momentary lead. Barber and Player both had Is Sunday, being tied with young Dave Stockton after 54 holes, Stockton opened strongly in the final round, going four strokes under par, but he shot a five-over-par 41 on the back to limp in with a 73. George Archer had a 280 total, good for third place, and Billy Casper and Kermlt Zarley were at 282. Stockton and Bobj Charles, who fired a 67 Sunday, were tied for sixth at 283. First prize money was $13,200, and Player took home $7,922 for second. Wolverine Entries Hazel Park Entries 'wSSSSST* h orIt! L Gee u Colby Worthy Harvester T. S. Rod Eagle Houston MlM 110 Nnh's Ftol It* Suggest Kaly 114 Top^ToggirY “* Loo M. Ill For Hour •lg Rullgh it* Ciosslc Art Dlxlelondklng 111 Brother F. Dot's Choice xltt Fishing Lurt 111 ickgammon 112 Kerry Clipper , jauland xtM Little Miee Tiparullah til Bit O'* Sun Mr. Mardl Grae xt12 Paragraph Bummln Arougd Bolillo Rousing Rebel 117 Ath-ltmi Option Claiming, 4 Furlongs Graphic's Gold lit War Raaco lit Ambo Aim 117 HI Hammy til San Fernando x117 Beau Imperial 111 ;Mark Prince 117 Sannlaatur 111 Bayduc 111 Radiy Siring ill ■*- —7*4; Claiming, 4 Furlongs MUat 110 Tigers Tun Senator Eric Trudy Dim 7th—StH0; Conditioned Pact, 1 Mil* , ....I Imp Jerry Wayna . Poppy Jtrt Lynn Klliarnay Lass Falsa Alarm Cherokee Rose Mighty Knor Rusty Dictator Rad Warpath lOth-atlHi Claiming Pace, 1 Mila ‘ Libby's Girl ' Popcorn Abbey Banana Royal Wolverine Results 2nd—412H) Condition** Pace; u*“"i warrior 21.40 1B.20 J.ao Luck ' Daub 3rd—si zoo; Claiming Pace; 1 Daring Angal - 3.20 !$!■ 1.1 Mary Carol 7.10 4.1 Spectacular 1 ■ 4J 4th—$3500; Michigan Coll Stake; T Ml Lovorglrlnlk . -, 2,|| j.20 2., Bosnia Byrd LOO 3.1 Sink or Swim 4J Nh—41Hg; Claiming Handicap Pace; Cindy 5.M 3.0 117 Gallant Command IIS — ill* thOid Roan Ml Leon xll4 Idle Dreamer DUMP l IIS a-Lucky Roman ill a-Ragal Foot 117 b-Tuffy Twist Ntt-STMIt Mr—"— --1 ---- Lad O' War Falla Suck iw Seaman Slnbad 110 ____ Misty spy IIS Bwana. Paacha loth—42304; Conditioned Pace; 1 Dude Adto* f.00 4 Uncia C'— Top Gunner Pamela: ( nSJ?;'- Tuesday 1-2) vs. Ren ill® HBH tMieW (14-2) vs. Water&d 1 Clawson (5-10) “ “ it (11-7-1), 7:00. Clawson. Pontiac Finals start at 7:2B p.m. Our man good at temporary work owim. p a a a Tefal* ts 11 Totals 24 2 7 atisai a-1 1 a DOUBLES - Hinds, Meradim. RUNS BATTED IN —■0. Pd*l*» Farr and 2. PITCHING — Horton 4%_ IP, 5 H, 3-2 R-ER, 1 ML IW, I HBP, m IP, J H, 3 SO, t Wf Burton 7 IP, 3 H, M R-ER. ,U SO, I W. WINNER - Burton. LOSER — Horton. ERRORS — Par-rand, Babluk. Rain or Shine GOLF DRIVING RANGE 10O faat of covered too Una. AH now bollsl CARL’S GOLF LAND 1976 S. Tatogroph Rd. wd’r* good at picking the right men for your work Call today for Loading help, Factory Worker*. Warehousemen, General Laborera, Use our employee* at economical latee. MANP®WEFl 1338 Wide Track Witt Pontiac VI 24316 70-7347-40-271 7449-70-49—2C OKLAHOMA CITY (API - Pinal aoorea _nd winnings In llw Oklahoma City wan goit itwmimgatz. XMHter Barber ($13,200) Gary Player ($7,920) George Archer (HtSO) Casper (Ml) ■Rm Zarley ($3,047) Bob Charlta (S2,37t) Dava Stockton ($2,374) — Colbert (12,044) 1 Hlakey (41,714) ... jld H*nnliiBhll Rodgers (0M7.U. , ------ ■ ia$iHyp1 saar22 SiOWla Johnson ($759). 73-75-70.72—29 Bob Roaburg (S589.88 ) 71-73-7/-49-291 s-- “arwey (UBt.00) 7l-7*-74-7o-a»i >nd Floyd. (SSB9.87) 73-77-70-71—291 Joatz ($549.17) TPJaKTj— Cliff Brawn ($502.25) 75-74-71-72-202 Ml Opparmann ($503.25) 70-71-72-/1—xv2 IIFrailar ($503.25) Mnttjj — John ion ($503.25) .. -MIIMir Barber w playoff on third extra 71-75-7047—303 71-7140-73—20! 71-72-72-71-2* 71- 75-7*71—217 72- 73-71-71—217 Three Pins Decide All-Star Keg Title ST. LQUIS m - Les Schis-sler pf Denver edged Pete Toun-tas of Tucson, Aits., 613 to 610 Sunday to win the $15,000 men’s championship In the All-Star Bowling Tournament. Schissler shot games of 208, 193 and 212. ★ + ★ Glorida Bouvia of Portland Ore., won the $5,000 women’s title by defeating Shirley Garms of Chicago 558 to 516. Mrs. Bouvia rolled games of 201, 200 and 157. Mrs. Garms posted 192, 158 and 166. The runner-up prize was $3,000. Records Fall in Road Races Five Standards Set at Waterford Course Matson Doubles BEAUMONT, Tax. -Texas A&M’s Randy Matson, scored a record double in file Gulf Coast Federation Track and Field meet Friday night, taking the shot with a toss of 70 feet’and winning the diseus with 185-7. Hazel Park Results Orchard Lanes Pitcher Blanks Softbalf Foe Bob Marshbanks yielded only three hits and fanned five last night in pitching Orchard Lanes to a 12-0 victory over Idletime Bar in a Pontiac American League softball contest. The winners bunched six hits with two walks and an error in scoring six times In the first I inning. I Bob Crandall, Bob Minton, Bob Davis and Bill Schneider lashed out two hits apiece for the winners. Orchard Lanes is now 1-1 and Idletime owns a 1-2 record. mmCT_____... Slone Mountain Rod Juitlco Jet Cook)* Ky. Choice Parachute Tragic EncantaC. Big Prize Daurna Spanish Kay Singing Nall Nh-tOTS; Cl Rlflesmokt Several class records were during the Weekend as the road racing season opened at Waterford Hills. Oh Saturday, BUI Petree of Riverview set a record in B-Pro-duction with his 327 Corvette. Hie new time of 1:21.6 (about 63 mph) sliced 2.9 seconds off the old record. In the Sedan 2 category, Ber-nie Leckow set a record of' 1:28.2 or 58 mph. Paul Susalla of St. Clair Shores set a record Sunday with his new Sedan NSU of 1:31.2. In race 2, Tom Abbott of Monroe set a standard of 125.2 in his Bobsy Bangnard Vee of 1:25.2 while Frank Cipelle of Detroit, set an F-Modified mark with a time of 1:21.8. Best performance was turned in by Dwight Knupp of South-field in an ex-factory Sedan 4 Baracuda. * ★ * He won three races. But in the feature Large Production Race, Knupp briefly led the field, which included a 427 Corvette, until he misunderstood aj flag signal and pulled into the! pits briefly. Jeff Lancefe Lotus Super Seven was the winner. Next event at the/Waterford HUls Road Course/will be the SCCA Regional races on June BULLETIN NOW IN JUST THRU EVININGS A WEEK YOU CAN BECOME AN ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN AT E.IJ. Enroll todayl Clatie$ now forming. En~'* Technician 1451 WOODWARD AVI. OEYROIT, 4*201 WO 1-514* Oscoda Pair Wins Pro Canoe Event M.M 5.40 1.40 Ram'* Horn Raa-Lynn Sulci Michigan Ri •th—7,540; I Romatan Caligula Magic Ege 9th—*7504; Handicap, On* Lima who who Comic Fallow ii.gg Out Th* window *4 Twin Da*M*(f-54) $575.40 LINDEN (AP)—Ralph Sawyer To.4d'4.4* TJojand Stan Hall, both of Osc iM 2 80 won the East Michigan Canoe 'urtanat Championship held Saturday on * am Mo tt* Shiawassee River and SUver *.«o Lake, Genesee County, i 5.40 Sawyer and HaU finished 1 £3 ahead of 75 other professional canoe racing teams in 2:03.35 and also won a sprint which concluded the race. The 16-mile race was sponsored by the Linden Jaycees. Second in the overaU competition was Verlin Kruger and Terry Norris, both of Dewitt, in 2:03.52, and third was A1 Wid-ing, of HoUy and Cecil Lame, of Flint, in 2:04.10. 11.40 4.# 2.40 24.40 0.20 5.10 19.00 9.40 5.80 MICHIGAN COLLIOT SCOPE BOARD By Th* Auociatod Prats BASEBALL District Four NCAA Playoffs PINAL Ohio Slat* 5, Western Michigan 4 (10 in- SEMIFINALS Iclflgan 5, Oh(o State 4 OTHER GAMES Central Michigan 4-12, Illinois State 3-t Son Marino Lists Ace v Bill Block of Lathrup aced file 155-yard, No. 7 hole at San Marino Golf Club yesterday. He used a 3-iron for the shot and carded a 44 for the round. DAYS ONLY Ends June t s'. for Your 11 New 1967 G.T.O. 2-Dr. H.T. 4-speed, 360 H.P. engine, P.B., radio, Tear speaker, custom belts, deluxe wheel discs, console, electric Clock, tinted windshield, ride and handling packoga, Safe-T-Track. $2845°° Rust Johnson Motor Sales 89 M24, Lake Orion. 693-6266 UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. Busy All Day? Play 18 Holes At Night Under Lights N0KTHW00D GOLF COURSE ' 15 Milo Rd,, 1 block East of Crook, If you’ve never tried file botfle, try the glass. The Canadian Clabman^ Code: Rule 6. If you don't want to try a big bottle, try a little glass. TTiat way you can see for yourself-Canadian Club has the lightness of Scotch and the smooth satisfaction of Bourbon. So, practice the Canadian Clubman’s Code, Rule 6: if you’ve never tried the bottle, try the glass. $643 $403 IS* Baal to Tl* Hamf* to S7 Into ! YEARS OLD. IMPORTED III BOTTLE FROM CANADA BY HIRAM WklKEt IMPORTERS INC. DETROIT. I4ICH. «4 MOOr.RtWE# GWMR WMIH. J I GOODYEAR QUALITY CAR CARE VALUES BRING YOUR CAR TO THE EXPERTS Protoot your car from winter's ravagai. TrafanL expert operators will-apply Sure-Sealing Compound* to ^|ys -your car's appearance. Ask about our complete ruat-proofingofferl MARCH SERVICE SPECIAL! Brake & Front-End Offer 8 Regularly $9.05 l| Now Only.*. SB SW Adjust brakei, add brake fluid and t*lt Repack frost wheel bearings. Align front-end, correct camber, cuter and to«-in. Balance both front\whteli. Route all four whaala. Y EASY ■ 0N ALL SERVICE TCDMC W0RK-TAKEUPT0 ItltlVld 12 MONTHS TO PAY Complete Brake Reline EASY BUDGET TERMS $125 Pay as little as... Wa reline front k rear brakei, rebuild hydraulic system including wheel k muter cyla., machine all drama, flush brake line* k replace fluid, new front grtueuala k shoe return ipringa, dean-inapect k repack front wheal baarinp. rp) FREE AUTO VJy SAFETY CHECK JUST CALL FOR APPOINTMENT...NO OBLIGATION! Spring Tune-Up Time EASY BUDGET TERMS! •G* 544 It mi Clean and apace plug*; reset timing & pointer adjust carburetor k choke; clean fuel bowl, air Altar k battery; check ignition wire*,,condenser, distributor cap, atartar, regulator, generator, fan bait, cylinder comp., battery. CHANGE-OVER SPECIAL! Tuos.-Wtd.-Thur*. only— C»ll for Appointmmtt SNOW TIRES REMOVED and your REGULAR TIRES INSTALLED 49 GOODYEAR SERVICE STORK lift Widt Track Drivt Saturday to till % C—4 I Jacoby on Bridge THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY ^ lOflT ROBIN MALONE AKPNovveut HOSTESSES WILLTAKE you ON A TOUR THROUGH THe CTTY By Bob Lubbers WCHRD«fiwJf4* NORTH 29 4 AI0S2 ¥A7 test 4K852 Wist EAST 4QJ94768 4Void 4 J92 ¥ 10 8 654 ♦ A 4 Q J 10 9 471 4 J10 9 4 SOUTH (D) •4K4 ¥KQS 4X0784 4AQ0 North-South vulnerable West North East South 1 N.T. 24 Pan SN.T. Pass Pass Opening lead—A Q By OSWALD A JAMES JACOBY Oswald: '‘Maybe we ought to devote a week to some match ■ point hands.’ Jim: “Do you have a good example how a | declarer c a n : gain a top by picking up over* tricks?” Oswald “Here's one that | helped Jay Cohen and Steve Robinson, of Washington win the Masters' Pairs' at the Mid-Atlantic Re- gional in Durham, N.C. Jay who sat North had to make a decision at his first turn to bid. [ “A double of West’s two spade overcall would represent a sure profit and possibly more than game would net. Actually, West would only have gone down three tricks for 500 points and three no-trump bid and made would be worth 600.” Jim: “I imagine that some declarers made only three no-trump. How many overtricks did Steve make?” Oswald: “Just two Qvertficks but he made them without taking any risk at all. He won the spade opening with his king and promptly led a low diamond from,his.hand. He had nothing to lose by this play and when the low diamond forced West’s ace, Steve could have claimed five odd on a squeeze but it was easier to, play the hand out."H diamonds, cash his last heart and watch East squirm.” ,, Oswald: “East would have discarded three hearts on spades. He would have to discard the high diamond or unguard his jack of elute. The squeeze would have worked just as well if West had held four clubs because he would have had to unguard the dub to hold a spade.” QH-The bidding has teen: West North But Smith 14 Pom 2 4 Pass 2 4 Paso ’ ? You, South, hold: 4AQS7 OKI 482 4AQ19S4 What do you do? A—-Bid two apadaa. Than la no hurry because on this sequence the two-spade bid la a ferae.' TODAY’S QUESTION You bid two spadea and your partner Jump* to four apadaa. What do you do now? IHE KERRYS By Carl Grpbert THE BETTER HALF THE BORN LOSER By Art Sanaom JACOBY Jim: “Suppose I rah over the rest of the play as Steve must have handled it. Assuming a second spade play by West, Steve would win with dummy’s ten, lead a diamond and let East hold the trick. Assuming a heart return, BERRY’S WORLD—By Jim Berry South would win In dummy, discard a diamond on the ace of spades, come to his hand with a heart, cash the king of What a beautiful dream—I dreamt I was a burglar and could sleep all day.” • Astrological By SYDNEY OMARR ;\'.fW’ Tuesday "Th» Mm man control* M* dMttny . . . Astrology points tho woy." ARIES (Mar. » • Apr. 19): Private iffalrs toko precedence over external natters. Important now to be quiet wlth-n. Solution to problems available. Know ... be receptive. Avoid contusion. TAURUS (Apr. 3D - May 'WtoMMl this your ’trionds ’maiT be outspoken. Show Don't confuse wishful thinking with istic situation; ‘Accent forthright app CAPRICORN (Dec 32 - Jon. If) tivlty today Is connocted wlth those _ . to you. Means you taco immediate roblems. Be receptive, don't force I ues. Know that versatility Is your host iiy. AQUARIUS (Jan. 30 - Fob. ID): . position coincides with cycle connected with money, possessions. Today you loom tho value of belongings. Luxury • DON'T ARGUE, strained . . . then you win alllot. GEMINI (May 3' made oromlee to parents . . Keep 0 in spotlight. So ere y> TAKE l 20): It y _____ ... ___m to oarents aspirations, ambitions. You can ___________ Important people. Do so — but bo post live of faQs. CANCER (Juno 21 • July 33): Folio* through on plans. This Is day whoi procrastination spoil* defeat. Acttoi equals results. Applies particularly. h PUBLISHING AND TRAVEL. Your ideal! ore totted. Stick to bolltfsl LEO (July 33 • Aug. 33): Know when your power lias. Moans don't expem efforts whert lob already has basn com pietad. Keynote solid decisions, wisdom cartful strategy. You have much to gain — through proper timing. VIRGO (Aug. 33 • Sept. 23): Stress now Marts. Independence, originality. Ac-cant today on partnarahtN, public rotations. tlw stay you react to surprl— Display versatility. Important to TA INITIATIVE. , LIBRA (Sapt. 21. Oct. 32): Your work, special interests demen' - aware pi routine, dUMM , ____ Intuitive intellect. Meant cemblne In 3 Investors Offer to Buy Monroe Bank By The Associated Press Three managing partners of the Monroe Investment Co. — two of them directors of Detroit’s Bank of the Commonwealth — laid they have offered $119 per share or $7,616,000 for the common stock of the Monroe State Savings Bank. James C. Holmes, Donald H. Parsons and Thomas H. Wagner said they made the offer because of the long - range growth potential in the Monroe area. 4 • 41 4 Holmes is president of H. P. Holmes, Inc., realtors and vice chairman of the Peoples Bank of Port Huron. Wagner is -board chairman of the Peoples Bank! of Port Huron and the Birmlng-ham-Bloomfield Banks and is a vice chairman of Bank of the Commonwealth. Parsons is board chairman of Bank of the Commonwealth, of Lansing and the industrial State Bank 4 Trust Co. of Kalamazoo. Ex-Con Faces Exam in Holdup Slaying DETROIT (AP) — A 22-year-old ex-convict today faced a June 5th Recorder’s Court examination on a murder' charge in the May 21 holdup slaying of a party store owner. 4 4 4 Jonny Mack Looney stood, Slide at his arraignment Saturday before Judge Robert J. Colombo on charges of slaying ■loro owner Joseph D’Angelo. Information loading to Looney’s arrest Friday was mailed to the Detroit News, which had posted a $5,000 re-, ward for D’Angelo’s slayers. crastfnate and doubt. Wisp course it M make discreet inquiries. BASE OPINIONS ON FACTS, 4 4 4 IF TUESDAY IS YOUR BIRTI ALLEY OOP By V. T. Hamlin' WHY DON'T TT HR’S A WAR CRIMINAL, AIN'T HE? GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high,., lor PISCES, ARIES. Special word to LIBRA: Keep resolutions concerning health, recreation and diet. (CepyrlgM IN), General Peplurei Carp.) - “As long as you’re pollin’ anyway—find out how Teddy Kennedy would do against Pat Nugent in ’72!” OUT OUR WAY. CAPTAIN EASY ■BHHT J>0*5 THAT ME WITH MJUR THfORY that leech ms shipped tost 33milb$. EASY.. By Leslie Turner ' its. APPARENTLY H4 ACCOMPLICE a PICKBO UP TMfr CASKETPRIMYi THEN VANISHED M THIN AfRt EEK & MEEK By Howie Schneider WE HAVE TO FIKJO . A MAME FOR OUR LITTLE MUSIC GROUP/ IT /SOMETHING WITH \ LIKE 'THE MUSICAL HOW ABOUT /THE WORD'MOTES' j MOTES* OR. 'THE 'THE SUICIDE MOTES*? Ik] THE MAME MIGHT J RYTHMICAL. MOTES * OR THEHlGHkxSfe^ it BOARDING HOUSE AUNT FRITZI—WILL 1 YOU TAKE ME TO THE j DRIVE-IN ■ E By Ernie BushmiUer AND I WENT TO THE TROUBLE OF CLEANING THE WINDSHIELD - By Bud Blake ptzemup stoute' ATTACKING M6, HUGO... ' amp watch Stripe \ PEFEM7 MS ... AFTER HE l perenrs Himself J 85* DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney l JJ m THB PONTIAC BRKSS., MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 0«—S ■ Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas OVER IT GOES — As a bulldozer lilts a comer, a house In the path of a doss-town freeway planned for Flint begins to crumble, with the chimney starting its fall. Work to dear the routes of the east-west and north-south routes is nowi under way. 2 Helicopters Killing 10 Soldiers FT. KNOX, Ky. (AP) - The Army announced today the death toll reached 10 in the crash of two UH1B “Huey”, helicopters during a training (mis- sion at this military base near Louisville. Ten soldiers were in Ireland Fee, Dates Set for Day Camp land County, Michigan, - the place < aforago. Dated: May M. 1*47 Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Unlo 154 W. Huron, Pontiac, Mid •y: 1: T. McCABE - May 27 and It. t»7 The Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department will sponsor seven one-week day camp programs during the summer Army Hospital, twb, listed in [for boys and girls seven through serious condition. N ,11. The 10 killed in the Sunday! Registrations for any of the afternoon crash were membersjweekly programs starting June of the 3rd Squadron, 17th Air 26 and continuing through Aug. Cavalry Regiment stationed at 11 are now being accepted at the base, said Lt. Col. John the parks and recreation de-Caithness, the post information!partment office, officer. A $5 fee for each camp pe- Identities were withheld pend 'riod must be paid at registra-lng notification of relatives. tion. Caithness said the helicopters were transporting troops on a! The day camp — to be held training exercise in preparation at Frog Hollow in the Pontiac Mrs. James L Allen Mrs. James L. (Bertha M.) Allen, 63, of 1128 Boston, Water-llford Township, died today. Her jbody is at Donelson-Johns Ftt-neral Home. JohnR. Cashion Service for John R. Cashion, 60, of 1022% Baldwin will be 11 i.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Cashion died Friday. He had been employed at the Hudson Tool and Die Co. and as a bartender. Surviving are a brother, Elbert of Keego Harbor, and a sister. Mrs. Mark Comfort Service for Mrs. Mark (Mary) Comfort, 82, of 3359 Lexington, Waterford Township, will be ' 30 p.m. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Comfort died Surviving , besides her husband are a son, Hugo of Pontiac, two daughters, Mrs. Irene Snyder of Waterford Township and Mrs. Grace Strang of Mount pleasant; six grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. two stepsons; 10 grandchildren; I finisher at Fisher Body plant, and six great-grandchildren. died yesterday. He was a mem-c L i r it I**61, of the Andersonville Oom-rranK I. (.anther jmunity Church and Clintoa Vak HOLLY — Service for Frankley Barracl«» No- 2803> Davis- t» 705 W. Clarkston Rd„ L Oakland County, Michigan, u________ ____ of a 1943 Dodge 2-Dr. Sudan, bearing •oriel number 413217*441, will Da held tar cash to the highest bidder, inspec-tlon thereof may be made at tame ai above, Oakland County, Michigan, the placa of storage. Dated: May 14, 1*47 Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union 154 W. Huron, Pontiac, Mich. By: L. T. McCABE May 27 and 29, 1*47 for a demonstration of firepower and armor mobility, scheduled June 1. Each helicopter normally transports 10 Imen, plus a crew of. three. Caithness said it was not clear whether the copters collided or individually lost power and dropped to the ground. NOTICE pp PUBLIC HEARING PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the City Council Is considering amendments to the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Sylvan Lake to provide for a reduction ping center District DPRNTCIIRMI Park District, and to amend Article VIII of said Zoning Ordinance a 14. 1*47, at 1:00 o'clock 2 Women Steal $85 From Man Two women Eugene Sizemore met at a drive-in restaurant robbed him of 885, he told Pontiac police yesterday. Sizemore, 25, of 51 Mathews said he picked up the women early yesterday at the Mary E. Cafe, 565 S. Saginaw, and was forced at knifepoint to drive to a nearby street, where the women took his money and fled. Lake area — will be limited to children for each period. Transportation will be provided. Seven Drown in Michigan on Weekend broth*,’ George Smith of Clmk-i?^ “ A“*“t in hope, of 9 ° titfl romm/ol onn tha By tiie Associated Press Seven persons drowned Michigan waterways during the weekend, four of them in boat-g accidents. Among the latest Water deaths/were two Detroit boys, Daniel Greenwood, 6, and his brother, Garrett, 8, whose bodies were recovered today from canal where they were swimming Sunday night. Girt Of'. CDoneLon ^ J)onaU 3i JoU It’s Meaning Now Touches Most Everyone .. When Memorial Day was instituted, it set apart a day for the memory of our nation’s heroes who had fallen in our defense. Following the Civil War, the long period of peace made fewer the families affected. Today, almost every family has those who are or have been members of our Armed Forces. Memorial Day means much to everyone of them — it affects us all. Honor all on this day set apart . for that purpose — for your loved ones as well as others. - mu 'Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 Patlcinq fi 'On Our Eremites a||i|i|: Si 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Expert Guidance Without Obligation from pSTfl MARKERS —. from $ 35 MONUMENTS .. from $195 Compare Our Price* Before You Buy Whether you need assistance in selecting a family memo- J BARRE1 tion. Well counsel you, assist Monuments you in every way. And, we specialize in fully guaranteed Bam Guild Monuments. See us today. .JN ----——_— OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8—SUNDAYS 1-4 Memorials for Over 73 Years MCR MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Parry FE 5-6931 ZrMM Platas for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Mew Cemetery Prices Dragging operations were finder way in Sanford Lake for the body of Michael Krone, 17, Saginaw high school student. He disappeared while swimming early today, Midland County sheriff’s deputies said. Martin Hansen, 39, of Marquette And his mother-in-law, Mrs. Lampie Lanenon of Iron-wood drowned Sunday when their 12-foot boat capsized while they were fishing in Lake Superior. Michae) Gay, 3, drowned when the boat in which he was riding sank in the Tobacco River just west of Gladwin on Saturday. John G. Daman, 45, of Lansing drowned in Mullett Lake near Cheboygan Saturday when his boat ■ capsized. A 17-year-old fishing companion, Terry Wolfe of Lansing, clung to the boat for two hours before being rescued. * ★ * Gladwin County sheriff’s deputies said young Gay was wearing a life preserver when the mishap which claimed his life occurred. The boat swamped when the driver made a sharp turn, they said, and the boy trapped under a seat. John Gillespie Service for former Pontiac resident John Gillespie, 72, of Port Orange, Fla., will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Gillespie died yesterday. He was a retired employe of the Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Grace; a daughter, Mrs- George Oley of Pontiac; two sisters, Mrs. Christina Brown and Mrs. Elizabeth Campbell, both of Waterford Township; and a brother. Baby Girl Hodges Service for the stillborn daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Billie Hodges of 1320 N. Cass Lake, Waterford Township, was held this morning at Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The baby was stillborn Saturday. Survivors include the parents; sister, Jill; and two brothers, Michael and Drew, all- at home. 'James A. Horace Service for James A. Horace, 46, of 121 Bagley will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Davis-Cobb Funeral'Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Horace died Wednesday. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are two daughters, Marilyn and Sarah Jane, both at home, and a sister, Mrs. Theresa Brown of Pontiac. Caather, 82, of 112 College was to be today at the Dryer Funeral Home, with burial in Creswood Memorial Gardens, Grand Blanc. Mr. Canther died Saturday. He was a member of the Holly Seventh-day Adventist Church and a retired employe of Grin-nell Brothers Piano Factory. Surviving are his wife, Madge; a daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Disbrow of Detroit; a son, Forrest of Femdale; two grandchildren;' and five great-grandchildren. Mrs; Raymond A. Elkins ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Raymond A. (Agnetta C.) Elkins, 56, of 1030 Absequa-mi will be 11:30 a.m. Wednesday at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs, Klkins, a member of the Lake Orion Methodist Church, died Saturday. She was past president of the Lake (Mon Woman’s Club and a member of the Order of Eastern Star No. 228, Pontiac. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Roland W. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Paul Stapert of Flint; a brother, Lawrence W. Bergo of Pontiac; and four grandchildren. 1 Memorial gifts may be made to the charity of the donor’ choice. Mrs. Paul Ferguson burg. Surviving are Ms wife, Ruth; a son,Glenn T. at ohme; Orion Twp. Boy Dies of Tumor Ronald E. Nebel, 6-year-old son of Mr. and' Mrs. William Nebel, 900 W., Clarkston, Orion Township, djed Saturday. ★ / ★ ★ The victim of a malignant brain tumor, Ronnie underwent ston; and a sister, Mrs. Grant Beardslee of Clarkston. Dale Sutherland LEONARD — Service for Dale Sutherland, 20, of 158 W. Elmwood will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Muir Brothers! Frank R. Morton Frank R. Morton, 62, a former Pontiac resident, died in Neosho, Mo., yesterday. His body is at the Clark Funeral Home in Neosho. He was a manager in a manufacturing concern and had lived in Pontiac for 35 years before moving to Neosho seven years ago. Surviving are Ms wife, Ruth; one daughter, Mrs. James Ald-'ters ^ Gail Wentworth of rich; one son, Roff; and three, Dryden and Mrs. William Crow Man Robbed by PaiF in City Independence Township man told Pontiac Police two men who jumped into his car at South Saginaw and Wilson robbed Mm early yesterday of 8254. Floyd M. Aulds, 33, of Pine Knob said he had stopped at two taverns on Woodward and was northbound on South Saginaw when the Men forced their way into his car at a traffic light. His assailants held a knife to his throat and ordered him to "drive around” for some three hours before they took his money and fled, Aulds said. 'its removal and followed the surgery with cobalt treatments. His illness was the reason for several fund-raising events conducted by citizens’ band radio operators in the area. Surviving besides his parents is a younger brother, Jon at; Funeral Home, Almont, with "P grandparents, Mrs. burial In Lakeville Cemetery,Tlucllle ,,J“?nger ° , For‘ K"ox: Lakeville. iKy,, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ford Mr. Sutherland died yesterday]0* ^ake Orkm. | at home. . ' , .. . , He was an employe of GMC ** A"ge,s wiH be Truck and Coach Division. Isa,d at u Surviving are Ms parents, Mr.&f' *** Church, and Mrs. Almon Sutherland oflSSj?! r ta '"’l Leonard; a brother, John Par- nvf ^ Funeral ish of Clawson; and two sisters.lHonic’ 0xford Susan at home and Mrs. Leon-j ard Sherwood of Waterford! TownsMp. Pontiac Twp. Ex-Supervisor Dies in Florida Chester S. Stone LAPEER — Chester S. Stone, 3040 Millville, died today. Hisi body is at the Muir Brothers I Funeral Home. 3 Rail Cars Ablaze Near Ammo Load Charles H. Thompson SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) - Three railway tank cars load-PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv- ed with- alcohol exploded and ice for Charles H. Thompson, 53,lcaught fire after derailing today of 3197 Caroline will be at llland P°lice said they were dan-Wednesday at Sacred gerously c,ose to a frei8ht car Heart Catholic Church, 1thffly* ammunition, burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Sn\pke from the burning tank-Pontiac. ers could be seen for 30 miles. Rosary will be at 8 p.m. to- *. * * morrow at the Harold R. Davis1 0ne P°hce official said no onel Former Pontiac Township Supervisor Leroy Davis died Sat-lurday in Largo, Fla. He was 65. | Mr. Davis, supervisor! for' |eight years, was an elder in the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church, a member of Pontiac Roosevelt Lodge No. 510 F & AM, the Scottish Rite Detroit Consistory, Moslem Temple, Detroit, the Rochester Elks Lodge No. 2225 and <4he Auburn Heights Lions Club. ^he 1 7 due/ Funeral Home. An Elks Lodge jj* into the Perim'ter of of Sorrow will be at 7 p.m. to-it!,ef,re becauseof the danger ofj the ammunition car exploding. There were no immediate reports on injuries. ROCHESTER — Service for former resident Mrs. Paul Ferguson of CMcago, 111., will be|morrow-2 p.m., Wednesday at Dry den I Mr. Thompson, assistant su-Methodist Church, Dryden, with perlntendent of the experimen-burial in Mount Pleasant Ceme-jtol engineering department of BLOG*' ROADS tery, Dryden. |GMC Truck and Coach Division, Police cordoned off all roads Local arrangements are by died Saturday. He was a mem- leading into the area, a half-Muir Brothers Funeral Home,jber of Pontiac Elks Lodge 810, mile from the Switzer crossing, Almont ’ Pontiac TownsMp Volunteer 18 miles south of Spartanburg. She (Hed in CMcago Saturday. Fire, c Fore-This included U.S 221 south Surviving are her husband and!®8”* 2* Metropolitan I from Spartanburg to Woodruff, son, Douglas of '■Flo8smoor,|<^J^ ' Kl. ^ D„_„ | First reports said 15 or w cars of Atlantic Coast Line’s freight train No. 293 derailed. The tankers exploded and caught fire, sending a pall of Roosevelt Lodge will conduc/ a memorial service at 8 tonight at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, and services will be conducted at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian {Church. Burial will follow in Pomeroy, Ohio. Surviving are his wife, Mar- guerite; a son, Kenneth of Pontiac Township; a daughter, Mrs. C. J. Edwards of Pontiac Township; 10 grandcMldren; two sisters and three brothers. 111. Mrs. Andrew B. Glaspie OXFORD — Service fur Mrs. Andrew B. (Clara) Glaspie, 90, of 19 W. Burdick was to be today at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, with burial in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Glaspie, whose husband formerly was The Pontiac Press outdoor writer and a state senator and state representative, died Saturday. She was a member of the Oxford Garden Club, Pythian Sisters and Congregational Church Women’s dub. (surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Little of Boca Raton, Fla.; a sister; two grandchildren; and a greatgrandchild. Frank Lyons LUM — Service for Frank Lyons, 75, of 4971 Lum will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden. Mr. Lyons, a retired fanner, died Sunday. Surviving are two sons, Kenneth of Pontiac and Donald at Riverside, Calif.; two daugh- Surviving are his wife, Bernadette; three sons, Charles L. of Pontiac, Glen of Rochester and Robert of Pontiac; a daughter, Marilyn at home; a sister; two brothers, Leonard and Law-both of Auburn Heights; and 10 grandchildren. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Former resident Virginia L. Voss, 34, of New York, N. Y., died yesterday. Her body will be at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. She was college editor Mademoiselle magazine. Surviving are her parents, Mr. I The male suicide rate in the and Mrs. Merle R. Voss of U.S. is three times that of fe-Bloomfield TownsMp. I males. grandchildren, all of Pontiac; one brother; and two sisters. Russel E. Wilsey Word was received today that Russel E. Wilsey, 81,- a former Pontiac mailmfui, died May 14 in McAllen, Tex., where he lived. He was a member of Pontiac Church of the Brethren. Surviving are his wife, Della Allison Wilsey; two sons, Earle E. of Kingsville, Tex., and Russel J. of Pontiac; one daughter, Mrs. Ruth E. Wilt of Escondido, Calif.; two sisters; one brother; Four Attackers Rpb Motorist inWaterford A Pontiac TownsMp man told Waterford Township police that four men attacked Mm and stole Ms wallet early today on Airport Road near Williams Lake. . # ★ Franklin C. Owen of 1323 Collier said he had allowed the subjects to enter Ms car under a false preiense. ★ ★ ★ They told Mm to stop the car, then jumped him and took the Both bandits wore described wallet before escaping, as siender-built Negroes in theirl Police said it was unde-30s, each about 5-foot-8. One had termined how much money was a mustache, according to Aiddf.|in the Wallet. smoke and flames 3,500 feet high. Virginia L. Voss All fire and rescue units in southern Spartanburg County were ordered to-the scene. Newsmen in planes said they could see at least 20 freight cars lying on their sides in a wooded area near the ACL’s main line leading northward from Augusta, Ga. I Several of the cars were' in 011 flames, including the tankers. Fire Guts Home in Commerce An early morning fire gutted a Commerce TownsMp home at 3274 Shambourne today, causing total damage of 84,000, according to firemen. The blaze apparently started at 6 a.m. from a defective heat-firemen said. Occupants of the home escaped safely. Death Notices OonilMn-Jolini Funeral Horn*. CASHION, JOHN R.i May 24, 1*47: 1024V* Baldwin; aga 40; dear broth-, ar of Giadyi Hadapatth and Elbert R. Cashion. Funeral service will ba held Tuesday, May 30, af 11 — ‘the Huntoon Funeral Cemetary. I Interment In . Cushion vi Soviet, Yank Spacemen in Cordial Capsule Tour PARIS (AP) — A Soviet] The 15-minute visit at the spaceman wenl-inside an Amer-j Paris, Air and Space Show was lean space capsule today and'apparently the first time a So-was checked out by an Ameri- viet cosmonaut had a close-up of Lum; a sister, Mrs. Cora Vincent of Lum; 11 grandchildren; and se* an great-grandchildren. Harry E. Miller Sr. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Harry E. Miller Sr., 62; of 2061 Joy will be 1:30 p.m.l Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial at Perry j Mount Park Cemetery. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be held at the funeral home at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Miller, a retired employe of Pontiac Motor Division and member of Joslyn Avenue UMt-ed Presbyterian Church, died yesterday. He was a member of Pontiac Masonic Lodge 21 and BPOE810. Surviving are Ms wife, Mar-j garet; three sons, Harry E. Jr., James and Thomas, all at home; two daughters, Mrs. Claude Smith of Niagara Falls, N.Y., and Millie Miller at home; | three sisters; two brothers and' four grandcMldren, Israel J. Smith SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for Israel J. Smith, 73, of 8883 Andersonville will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clark-11 stmt. Burial will be in Lakeview | Cemetery, Clarkston. Mr. Smith, a retired metal|| can space veteran. Police Action Pontiac police officers : and Oakland County Sheriff's deputies investigated more than 133 reported [ incidents in the past 48 ; hours. A breakdown of causes ] for police action: Arrests—21 Vandalisms—13 Burglaries—18 Larcenies—22 Assaults—2 Annoying Phone Calls—2 Indecent Exposures—1 Property Damage Accidents—19 Injury Accidents—18 Dog Bites—7 Cat Bites—1 Attempted Arson—1 Rapc*-1 Child Neglect—1 Disorderly Persons—7 Armed Robberies—2 Unarmed Robbery—1 Stolon Cars—8 Attempted Break-ins—2 Np Operator’s License—1 Drunk Driving—1 Carry Concealed Weapon—1 Contempt of Court—1 [view of the inside of a U.S. I space veMcle. 11 Lt! Col. Pavel Belyayev and ^=U.S. astronaut Michael Collins | met today at the American ex-11 Mbit, where an Apollo capsule is 11 on display. The meeting was I j extremely cordial. The Russian 'f|was. invited inside the capsule and Air Force Lt. Col. Collins II climbed in with Mm. Belyayev fired a long series of questions at Collins and the answers came back in rapid fire. Afterward, the two toured the American exMbit and the questions continued. ORBIT WEIGHT Belyayev asked Collins what weight the U.S.’ Saturn 5 rocket could hurl into orbit. Collins told Mm 200,000 pounds. Pointing to the Gemini cap-' sule,, Belyayev asked: “Whatl piloting systems are used: " Col-j lins replied; ‘‘Automatic manual.” * * * Belyayev said he had been the first Soviet spaceman to fly the Voskod 2 capsule with manual controls. When Collins asked Mm how far from the intended landing spot he had landed,. Belyayev said: “My landing was a little difficult. That is why the distance away was rather great.” Belyayev and Collins met for the first time on Friday and drank a vodka toast to Soviet-American space cooperation. COMFORT, MAKY; MAY tt, 1*47; 335* Lexington; aga 12; balovM wile of Mark Comfort; daar mother of M». Irena Snydtr, Mr*. Grace Strang an0 Hugo Comfort; alio sur- 31, at 1:30______ Funeral Horn*. Interment In Oak Hill Ctmeiery. Mrs. Comfort wilt lie In itafa at tho funeral home. DAVIS, LEROY; MAY 27, 1*47; Largo Florida; (Formerly of Pontiac Towmhlp); aga 45; beloved husband of Marguerite Davis; daar fathar of Mrs. C. J. Edwards and Kannath Davis; also survlvad by two slstara, three brothers and 10 grandchildren. Memorial service will be conducted by Roosevelt Lodge No. 510. Tonight at 0 p.m. at tha Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Haights. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, May 30, at 7 p.m. at tha Auburn Hulghts United Presbyterian Church. Following sorvlco here Mr. Davis will ba taken to tha Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, Ohio-for sorvlces and burial there. Mr. Davie will 7 to * p visiting t i 3 to 5 ELKINS, AGNETTA, C.; MAY 27, 1*47; 1030 Absaguaml Trail, Lake Orion; aga 54; beloved wife of Raymond A. Elkins; dear mother of Mrs. Paul (Etalne) Stapert and Roland W. Elkina; dear sister of Lawrence W. Bergo; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral service will ba held Wednesday May 31, at 11:30 a.m. at the Voorhets-Slplt Chapel with Dr. Robart J. Hudgins officiating Interment In, Parry Mount Park . Cemetary. Mrs. Elkins will lie In state at tha funeral home. (Sug- GLASPIE, CLARA; May 17, 1*47; 1* West Burdick, Oxford; aga *0; daar mother of Mrs. Elizablth Little; dear slstar of Mrs. Fred Harris, also survlvad by two grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funaral service was held today. May 2~ ‘ ~ GILLESPIE, JOHN; MAY 2L RH Port Orange, Florida, (Formerly of Pontiac); age 72; beloved husband of Grace Gillespie; dear fathar of Mrs. Georgt Olay; daar brother of Mrs. Christina Brown, Mrs, Elizabeth Campbell ; Gillespie. Funaral s held Friday, June 2, Sparks-Grif !, 1947; i william i win t Home. Interment li Cemetery. Friends may call Thurs- HODGES, BABY GIRL; MAY 27, 1*47,- 1320 North Cass Lake Road; beloved Infant daughter of Bllllo and Wanda Hodges; dear sister of Jill, Michael and Draw Hodges. Funaral servlet was held today. May 2*, af 10:30 *.m. at the Huntoon Funaral Home. Interment in Parry Mount Park Cemetary. HORACE, JAMMS ALLEN; MAY 34. 1*47; 121 Baglay Street; aga 44; delr fathar of Marilyn and Sarah Jane Horace; dear brother of Mr*. Theresa Brown; daar naphew af Mrs. Ore D. Sledge. Funaral service will be held Thursday, June t, at 2 p.m. at the DavihCaMt Pu-. neral Heme, interment in Oak Hitt Cemetary. Mr. Horace edit No ks state after 3:30 Wednesday. c—e THE PONTIAC PRESS- MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Death Notices f 3 Help Wanted Male MILLER. HARRY E..SR., MAY 18.1 Ml Joy Road; age tt» ka- I husbtnd or Margarot Millarj, Minor of Mr*. Cloud# Sm#hf HALL FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, lodges. church. OR ME FE 2- LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY Wlfifil Oex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 cent* 01 Slmnio Eroa. Drug*. Mr*. Edward Mthontont, Mr*. E. ‘ ----% Mf“ --------- ---| no* i mT f~BOX REPLIEs" ”| i At IP a.m. todes there! jwere replies ■1 Thej ] Press Office in the fol-i flowing bttxeep { t, 3, 4, 6. 14, 15 >17, 26, j ■ 28, 36, 37, 40, 41, 42, 44,1 j45, 46, 47, 51, 53, 55, 62,| |73, 75. -J NbBfcL. RONALD EOWA . . 2/, 1*67; MS West Li*rK*ton hoaO, ■ Lake or ton; age.*; Onovod *un ot ..... Nebei; Funeral Directors boiovod grandson of A Juongor and Mr. and Fora; door brolner ot .. COATS d FUNERAL HOMS '• ORAYTQN PLAINS Rev. Father Cushing ofticia-Interment In tno St. Joseph . Ronald will no in slat* at ossardot Funeral Homs. Lake J GODIIARDT FUNERAL HOME Keego Harbor. Ph. 682-0200. DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Homo "Ocslgnod lor Funeral** SPARKS-GR'FFIN FUNERAL HOME Huntoon i staft i 535 Voorhees-Siple am‘ h FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Established Over 40 Year* $4do fie Paid PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINEE I4S,high » INTERNA $450 TRAINEE DRAFTSMAN 1S-2S. high school or col lag* drafting. Mr. Hotar. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL isao s. Woodward E'tw $550 PLUS CAR SALES TlRAlJNEE 21-30 Soma College INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ' »HWI A Help Wantad Mala $7,200 FEE PAID College Grads-Engineers Management positions In all tlalds I work, soma exporl INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL I ACME STEP CO. JO±«]\ BRICK LAYERS. HOUSE'S AUTO MECHANIC New car dealership need mechanics, flood working con* ni t ions, many company benefits. Apply Jo Service OLDSMdBILE, 550 Oakland Ave., 332-8101. •LOCK LAYINd AN6 C'ONCRVTIi ATTENTION $50 Weekly—Part-Time —— m Immediate Opening for painter — for GM dealers — Apply to Mr. Kan Oudtey-Ha Pontiac Salas In^yrson only! . and install electrical Call 6744520, 4 p.m.4 night. AUTOMATIC Transmission Men REBUILOERS, FIRST CLASS. INSTALLERS. FIRT CLASS. imtnt to S20.000 anni lanagamant ability. Lar with management ability. Largo! raJ.oe natlonal organization. Time and % .ro,r over 40 hburs, Paid holidays, vara, i apartments. Good money making it Telegraph a -I- CARPENTERS Good rougher*. Union. 476-02 After 4 p.m., 4534482. CARPENTERS V Rough and trim. Residential town hat— —NfeaSito ■ — Service Center—Birmingham I .— openings for Ml time or pert lima drivoway salesmen and i ----------- Full lime. Hefp Woiited Female Saleswomen HOUSEWIVES Are Yon 35 or Over? your poise, maturity for Jraining. Wonted Nowdi ! f YEAR-OLD TWINS NEED A collect WSSU alter « >.m MUISLAOY, FULL TIME, OVER It, experienced ar Will trim rMit jto^^jArjton', Oratory ifip $70 YOUNG TYPIST No exp. Must type a ACCOUNT- ANT weekdays » to J. 427-1061 or 30-1 | 0748 evos. till 10. CHIEF MAN ABOUT 30 THAT IS INTER-esled In willing to learn light equipment to wait o ii Cemetery lets A TELEPHONE GIRL SI .50 to 83.55 par hour, 4 to S morning. Call Barb, 6744520, • 2 p.m.-0 fcm. tonight. ASSISTANT COOK FOR NURSING home, 10 a.m. to 0:10 p.“ Hi Lake area, EM 3-4121. Thompson, Charles h.; ma 19672 1197 Caroline, Auburn Hoi age S3; beloved husband of nddotto 'Thompson; dear (an* Charles L., Gian. Robert, Marilyn Thompson; doer br , ot Loonard, Lawrence and i Thompson; also survivtd b Kosyy?'wmniw tuesday "at p.m! BEf UTIFUL LOT, PERRY MOUNT j SYSTEMS*” EXP ERIE N Cl? ~ DESIR-at the Harold R.-oavis Funeral a n’m divW*' FE,ABLE- Homt. Auburn Heights, Elks | Tiffulny. May 30. at 7* p.m. Fu- Memorial Gardens. Less than to PLEASE M A L ^ RESUME OR 4-A SMALL BUT GROWING FIRM IN) THE AEROSPACE INDUSTRY HAS _A-!AN INTERESTING_ PO SJ T I O N| t soneble, 852 49S9. |AVAIL/-................ r 2 LOTS, 4 SPACES EACH, OLD , 7 Rugged Cross section. Oakland ,NO COLLEGE STUDENTS HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Summer work for 12 men. First coma, first sorved In olir “ ' Dept. SI 50 par wk. Call no* t at 217. Central, r Is Cemetery, gr 4- -1 BACKGROUND AND JOB i CHOICE LOTS IN OAKLAND HILLS Memorial Gardens. Less than to PLEASE ____ ________ ---jc-------^________..PHONE MR. ISAACS AT *92-27 t the VOSS, VIRGINIA L,; MAY 2S7 1967; M. C. MFG. CO. >. O. BOX 124 LAKE ORION, MICH. An Equal Opportunity Employer L-AROUND HANDY MAN, FOR MeaaBiifeMiiaar't. 647-6950. York; ego 34; boiovod daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marla R., Voss. Funerel arrangements are pending at the Donelson-Johns Funeral COLLEGE MEN Good paying 3 125 N KELLY SERVICES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE .... position assisting manover u, fast growing division. Good starting salary, excellent fringe benefits, college background preferred. Call Mr. Krair or Mr. Davis for appotnt- m*nt' KELLY SERVICES 25 N. Saginaw 338-0338 fa —il opportunity employer . Martin. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC INC. 4 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. •£ THE 19*4 CIVIL RIGHTS v! LAW PROHIBITS, WITH v ft CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS. ft I jv DISCRIMINATION BE-X; . cause of sex. since v. i ft SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE -X CONSIDERED MORE AT--X X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS % ■X OF ONE SEX THAN THE ft •MOTHER, ADVERTISE- X: tv MINTS ARE PLACED ;X & UNDER THE MALI OR -X ;X FEMALE COLUMNS FOR ft •X CONVENIENCE OF REAO- X; ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE X- . X; NOT INTENDED TO EX- " ' CLUOE PERSONS OF ft EITHER SEX. STATE L^eSsED-BONOED Open Soturday 9-12 ~ ■ EXCITING S F R I N G FUN FOR Scout groups, church, clubs. Rid' through Helds, woods, on horst drawn hayride. Followed by horn cooked Spaghetti dinner. See new born animals — Lambs, piglet! .calves, chicks. For reservations 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MEN New office will hire __ ____ 6 young men lor outside Order. Dept, and management. Must be 18-26 and high school graduate. Salary 1600 per mn r«n Mr I Green, 338-0359 COLLEGE GRADUATE. OIVERSI-fled position. StartmiailiBtaM top in 4 yrs. Cal 334-2471. Snelllng A 1__________ DELIVERY AND EXTRA HELP, must havt own cor. Gorinas Pizza, 625-4100. MALE PRODUCTION HELP WANT-' good pay and all fringe bane-exc. future tor right people, ly SEA-Riy boats. 925 N. La- MECHANICS with loois for night shift, pportunlty employer. Appl-Hunt at Great Lakes Et $240 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE ---- 134-4971 aga. experience, Starting salary expected to Post Office Bax 433, Pontiac, Mlchlgait.__________ AAA-1 CORPORATION We need 4 young women to complete our staff In Pontiac otflca. Must ba 18-26. sing la and high school graduate. Salary of $150 par wk."Ca|l Mr. Wllllanw, 331-0359 Assistant to Manager To hostess and supervise dining, room. Need • mature woman who hoe the ability to supervlaa. Good, If busy, FE 5-1500.____________ lABY SITTER, DRAYTON PLAINS1 area, preferably *o iiva.tn. call. after 3, OR 346eo. BABY SITTERS r 81.50 per hr. Jobt waiting, h t to roglstor at tha booming Case Lake Baby Sitter Service Saleswomen FOR HIGH FASHION LADIES SPECIALITY SHOP FULL OR PART TIME LIBERAL SAURY Excellent Opportunities Pvll benefit pregram at ne BECKER'S SHOES Raafaurant Telegraph |R _ general office position oHarlng future advancemont. Excellent fringe Help Wawted Feawh 7 WAITRESS FOR NIGHT SHIFT — Apply (In parson only, fkto Star WAITIIRM, FUU, ok AAiY YltMi. .. — - - q u I rad. a more Intomfing. person. We haw permanenf-yaer-r o u full and part Wma schedules ... our Fanttac store. Edih schedules require you to work some evenings and Miih a* we see necataary to asaign. Flqaaa apply fa our Of— manager at Tal-Nuren Shoppl Cantor. Winkelman's Griffs amt, 4......_____ WAITRESS WANTIQ APPLY WAITRESS WANTED, FULL TIME FOR F ULL ¥|Me TUPPERWARE HOME PARTIES Hat openings tor 1 part-time d< onstrators. S454100 weak comn lions. Free training. No tovc^. mant. For Intorvlaw phone 852-4300 Tuuparwr rn Heigh UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY Attend Spencer's training school WAITRESSES lent |ob, hourly « pws ups, paid vacation and pltalliatlon. Apply Big Boy Restaurant - Tewgraph-Huron, — Dixie Hwy.-Sllver Lk. Rd. ant surroundings, mrMtollC'uPd Mlranhrk Box 1, 'Dx- woman for OBNklAL ttPPCte work, typing ragylrod, send (eb and pay Intormatlon, j>ga, aduce- trsnsp., 5 day wk., Vic of Fon-•lac Lake and Crescent Lake Rds. OR 3-4322 aft, 4 p.m. ttfAitklii:1 6fiLY. kUN- daysi - — • »WeafMM.erF. I APPRAISER TRAINEE Salary' negotiable, only people interested In making a minimum of 810,000 yoarly need apply. Hospitalization plus many other company benefits. Call Mr. Folay confidential Intorvlaw. f74- 0363. L.OR I. 851- fS F0N* FOR A?e?E“JVE YOUNG . dTshwashers - tIrry's < o^Crooks’^Rd WTrma0Aik 'ISl pr'ess.' 'l440i"'DeDuindre. ~DalroH. Mr. TeCr “k b^ :'lo J m 4 p m MECHANICS FORTONSTRUCTION 1 L*_____________ SSWler^ WWl DIE REPAIRMEN 1 right people. 3^4008.___ I STEADY JOB AND EXCELLENT MECHANICALLY ]NCLINEO_ MAN YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREOIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. CONNIE ASSELIN I - Wigs restyled t Wigs. FE 84216. ACCOUNTING CLERK WORKING CONDITIONS, . ... MEN WITH PROGRESSIVE DIE REPAIR EXPERIENCE. { FISHER C0RP. 1623 W. MAPLE RO. - TROY 1 DRAFTSMAN - SHOP DRAWINGS for kitchen cabinet and Formica factory. Apply 7 to 12 noon, any day at lots W. Maple, Walled .. machinery maintoni rill train. Steady work. Apply to «r. Hehl, Pontiac Laundry, 540 . Telegraph Near Orchard Lk. 353-3M09 ex pointment. nee. Ideal - position for currently studying ac-evening school. Call IN LOVING MEMORY < Victoria A. away May 27 God planned to ■EMVeHOOH Surpassing every other; And we have had our share in I. For we had- you. dear mother. Sadly misted by Helen, Gerald, Cindy.______________________ Announcement* DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 1 2028 E. Hammond FE 5-7803 2 WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY I Profess1------ ~ OUR -?-*?-11 — Lest and Found SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN An equal opportunity employer_ -I AGGRESSIVE SALESMEN WANT-* w protects plus 3 reliable I SR- 682-1820. ARRO REALTY. ;r\T.v. ■_____ANNOUNCING another DEBT AID INC. ufftca, 718 RHcer Building, branch ot Detroit's win known Debt AM, Inc ' Pontiac Community. GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS. BANKRUPTCY, L REPOSSESSIONS. BAD CREDIT! AND HARASSMENT. Wu havu helped a ' ... - MEN'S GLASSES ■n oiacx leather case In ft cinlty of Huron end Saginaw Connolly's new store. Plena_____ tact Earl Jones at the PonHic Press Advertising Dept. 4T •LOST: FEMALE SIAMESE CAT, General Telephone pi- has openings now for linemen and in-staller repair man, liberal bona-fits, credit for pravlout experience, high school education or equivalent necessary. Apply General Telephone Co., 317 Union St., Milford. An equal employment op- portunlty employer.__________, ATTENDANTS, EXPERIENCE NOT f. Liberal reward. FE 2- terns. Let u with on* w ford. I credit prob- LOST — APRICOT FOODLE . ---- 1 —— - - idwIn-Welton. I. chain. Reward. FE laranteed S2Q0 a YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." aH<®ROE* *rr*"0M •nv,,m, 3 MARRIED MEN WANTED FOR Hours 9-7 MonT thru Frl. Sat. 9-S !v!JinBVSr .d.a.v.3’ FE /41tY CEOHDEO AND LICENSED) Beginning june 5 through Aug. Ben Powell Disposal Service will start the summer schedule of! 2 pickup* per week. Pickup days' college, will be seme a* last •— 1 “—r~ ---- 1 625-5470. $400 DRAFTSMEN TRAINEES Beginners and experienced with A PART-TIME JOB marrlod mart, 21-34, to „ ir evening: Call 6744520, AUTO MECHANICS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION MAN Heavy Mechanic Man Light Mechanic Man for Ford Dealer Call Hal at .1 3-2030 or FE 5-4101 M. er F. IH«lp Wu tted M. or F. 8 Hglp Wanted M. or F. % ENJOY DRIVING MR. STIER PONTIAC PRESS CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT EXPERIENCED MILLING MA chine operator, day shift, over time, full paid Blue Cross enc fringes, Brlney Manufacturing Co., NIGHT PORTER WANTED, HOLI- Needed At Once New and Used Car Salesman, to tulT our sates force, to tell — Pontlecs and Ramblera. Appl Rust Johnson Pontiac Ram ' i Orion. -.OPPORTUNITY For men with business end sales experience to get started warding career. Acme Paints has an opening to BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— 832-4131 BOOKKEEPER TO WORK IN Finance office. Must have thorough knowledge ot bookkeeping, some typing, free life Insurance, paid vacations. 1 5 day weak. Mon. through Friday. 30 E. Lawr Mr. Lee—FE 84421. , CASHIERS AND ThaatHhxTlU — ______ between 1 and 4, 8 end 10. CURB GIRLS FOR DAYS nights, apply In person only ____ CONCESSION Mlracla Mile Drive In Asphalt Paving ASPHALT SEAL COATING, FREE 3914745. ' T DRIVEWAYS AND COM-. Specialize In Seal Coat- CURB AND DINING WAITRESSES, kitchen girls. Suptr Chief. FE 24S31.________ Domestics and Live Ins I ok.- HR ______________ Full or part time. Rust' Country Store, 4500 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. appointment and Interview. EXPERIENCED ASSISTANT COOK to work tor private club chef. EM 34002. _______________ EXPERIENCED' GAS STATION Afl tanttont, full time. Airport Mobile Service, 3993 Highland Rd- Pontiac EXPERIENCED INSPECTOR for automatic screw machine shop. Celt 333-7903._______ EXPERIENCED: OUTBOARp ME-chenle. Steady work. Lake and HUDSON'S -Pontiac Mall- Factory Workers I EXCELLENT CHANCE TO ESTAB-I LISH GROUND FLOOR SENIORITY IN BEAUTIFUL BRAND NEW PLASTIC PLANT. EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS WITH LOTS OF CHANCES TO AOVANCE INTO HIGH PAYING CLASSIFICATIONS. CHOICE OF SHIFTS, APPLY 9:00 A.JU. SHARP, MOI DAY THRU FRIDAY MUS AVE OWN TRANSPORTATION. SALES- CLERICAL- IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FORf POSITIONS IN OUR NEW SfORE Full time (40 hours) and part time (days or evenings). Men's, women's, children's wear,- also stationery, candy, shoes, sporting goods, and others. Full time (40 hours) in opr new store* FOOD SERVICF- t'me' on(* PQrt t'me- Hostesses, waitresses, cooks, counter service, and bus boys. MAINTENANCE-Part t'me ova'*°^E for.evenings. STOCK- ^me t'me ava'iaw®- WRAPPING- Ful1 lime Old port time empteyinent available. BEAUTY OPERATOR ,“,l Time-40 Hlws w“k'f TAILOR-FITTERS Full Time-40 Hours W«kly ALTERATIONS FITTERS Fu"Tim-40 Ho",‘ w”klk ENJOY SUCH BENEFITS AS, Fine Earnings — Purchase Discount Paid Holidoys —Paid Training Period Paid Vocation — Hospitalization j AND MANY OTHERS APPLY IN PERSON ■ , EMPLOYMENT OFFICE . Customers Lobby - Basement MONDAY Thru SATURDAY IRST C O O K, EXPERIENCED only need apply. Must be ‘“'dg to run kitchen on chof's da. 425-3731, Pin* Knob Golf and Country Club, 6060 Maybut Rd., Clarks- Telegraph at Maple R , Sunoco Station, Gulf, Telegraph ai r GRILL COOK ExjfcrlencOd, top wages, hospitalization and other benefits. Apr*” person only. Blue Star Drive t assembly technlquai. Will slder foremen with right I ground. Send resume to PO 130 Lapeer, Michigan.___________ GRILL MAN Night shift, good wooes, paid |u hour, mtals, hospitalization ________ other benefits. Apply Big Boy Rts- GUARDS ^art-time, Im... _ and Suburban lob openings. "■ ji 44YTrHGraito^vdr'o^j7 -LO 8-4152, 10-4 p.m. PAY DAY - EVERY DAY Employers Temporary Service 65 S. Main, Clawson 2320 Hilton, Forndal* 27320 Grand River, Rtdford NO FEE - PAY DAILY ■r dealership. Exporlohcg IMP iry. Usual fringe benefits. Inquire M Oakland._______________ | v PART-TIME Earn end learn, good Income, learning a new profession. 10 to 30 years of ago. Car necessary. New subsidiary of Aloca. Phone FE 5-9932. DAY WORK, 35 TO 45 LRS. OLD. 1 or 2 days a weak. Experienced. Reference required. Own transpor-tatlon. Tup wages. Call Ml 64610. ._. _... Prefer woman 35-45 years. 426-4330.__ DENTAL ASSISTANT - RECEP-tionist, Pontiac area. Reply Dining Room Waitress 1 Do you on|oy meeting people and working with children? Wo' will train you os a waitress to work In tha friendly atmosphere ot our dining rooms. Day ana night shift, free Blue Crass and ilia Insurance, vacation a'ntt paid holidays. Top wages and tips. Apply in person Auto Repair WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, rebuilding, reoeellng automatic and standard transmissions. Band adjustments. Fluid and filter changes. All makes. All modal*. Rochester Transmission 126 Main St. Ra<______ til-6820 All work guaranteed Brick 8 Block Service BLOCK. BRICK, NEW OR REPAIR. Fireplace expert. FE 4-5580. BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT t hep laces specialty. 333-4470 brick. Block, stone - nEw and rapt' . 330,17701______________________ FIREPLACES, WRITTEN GUARAN-tae. EM 3-6079. Humber Journeyman STEADY YEAR AROUND, GOOO PAY. FRINGE! BENEFITS. _________OR 34106 car dept. General porter Service Manager tor Tom Radamachur Chevy-Olds. the. Clarkston. Apply In parson QUALITY CONTROL MANAGER For manufacturer of automotive assembly. Must know Inspection procedures and maintain records. Som* layout . experience desired. Send resume to PO Box 151, La-Michigan. RETIREE -r- 3 HOURS , 5 days weakly. Lawn c ||||g|| maintenance. S1.5C SECURITY OFFICERS Dearborn office needs melt female security officers for I tlac area. Must furnish blue pi tvn* uniforms, part time worl. ie 21. 278-1940, Dearborn. SALES M I N D E O?” GILT EDGE opening. $5,000 to sky. Call howl Dan Lee 534-2471, Shelling • Snell- SHIPPING CLERK Excellent compensation. liHMH mlngham vicinity. Typing essential. STOCK ANO SALESMAN. WILLING to work. Excellent location. 14,680. Call Angle Rook. 334-2471. Snelllng A Snelllng. USHER, CONCESSION ANO time help. Apply Miracle .... Drive In' Theatre, 2103 S. Telegraph Rd., between 1 and ' * WE NEED NOW! Gas Station attendant, end car dean up, over to yrs. oHMI part time afternoons. Lake Orion Area — Call MY 3-4266, Ask DIETICIANS ADA Therapeutic. S7,i ________ salary with automatic Increases. Outstanding opportunity in lar expending modern hospital " latest equipment. Located ' trolt area. Outstanding (rim fits. Reply Pontiac Press 1 'X DRY CLEANING Inspector - assembler, experienced preferred but not nucuuaUY, gdU train, apply to Father & 2-CAR GARAGES. 20‘x20', 8075. WE are local builders and build any size. Cement work. Free eatiM Nm Pedy-Bullt Garage Ce. OR I ALL KINbS OF HOME Improvements. Free est' ANOERSON-GILFORP,, FE --COMPLETE REMODELING Service Qualify work slnco 1945 Now Is thu best time to plan oi remodel — price* are lowest I m storrr I trim. FE 2-1211 Free estimate* EXECUTIVE SECRETRY FOR TOP notch,, firm. Good with . figures 5303. Call Kathy Shaw. 334-2471. Snelllng & Snelllng.' earnings, full time, pert time. Interviews will be held — 1 p.m, to 3 p.m., May 29, 31 end June 1st. 2167 Orchard Lk. Rd. HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 2 CHIL- HOUSEkBEPER WANTED, 3 DAYS, Ironing and cleaning, own ' portatTon, Bloomfield Hills reliable, 626-5735.__ HOUSEWIVES AND COLLEGE GIRLS Interesting long term telephone —ilgnmenfs at our oftl- EmU — pert tl Pick your sht SSn KELLY SERVICES N, Saginaw 331-1 Equal Opportunity Employer. HELP HANDICAPPED VETERAN, F YOU LIKE PEOPLE (ENJOY making friends and to tern money? Contact , .. . AVON manager. Call FE 44439 or writ# PO Box 91, D ' ‘ LIVE IN BABY SITTER AND housekeeper. Room, board good wages. 338-1241. FORD MOTOR COMPAY UTICA PLANT Needs ELECTRICIANS \ TOOL MAKERS MILLWRIGHTS MAIN WELDERS SEWING MACHINE REPAIRMAN JOURNEYMAN'S CARD OR Proof of 10 Yoar'* Experience Required Hourly Peraonnel Office - Apply: 23 Mile ot Mound Rood or Callt 731-3700, Ext. 264 Equal Opportunity Employer M-F W. Eight Milk, Detroit. MAID FOR MOTEL WORK. MAIDS, PART TIME. APPLY IN person Holiday Inn, 1801 S. Ttl*. graph. NURSES rad and license* MMj ihtormetlon. COMPETITIVE SALARY PART TIME TELEPHONE SOL tor*. 81.35 per hr. to (tort. PERSONALITY ANO Nils position In O. Call Pam F A Snelllng. SMILE REGISTERED NURSE FOR PART time In blood bank. - Sundays or holiday: ♦wen ft and 4. Aluminum Bldg. Hems l-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING AwMngt. — Storm Wjnaiwt FHA - Joi Vallely — stalled ay "Suparler'' — Architectural Drawing ' SEPTIC FIELDS, DRY WELLS, TRENCHING, DIGGINGS. S. Luce. Waterford Sawer Const, 6734240 — Free estimates. FE 5-7459, Eavestrcughing A-t NEW. REROOF - REPAIRS -Cell Jack. Sava tha lack. 3314115. OR 34590.____________________________ Fencing FENCE REPAIRS, 6r COMPLETE lobe, fast service, 25 years experience In Pontiac, Howard Acker, 682-5452. 24532, « lAliT fPA' i5JS73 TAG ASPHAItrPAVING. I • ASPHI iciallze In pi_______ i) coating. Make old d k like new with black- work guaranteed — F Janitorial Services SPRING CLEANING — WINOOWS ilumlnum siding end walls. Home Cleaning. FE A-T COMPLETE LANDSCAPING -specializing In broken concrete, — —Ha Free estimate*. J. Carpentry Floor $andlng HILLS SR., NEW AND sanding. FE 2-5789._ SNYDER. FLOOR LAYING >. an TUCK* PLUUK L«Tir Iding and finlihing. FE $-0591. Floor Tiling noleum, formica, Reeffgg HARTFORD! ROOFING ANb Bid-Ing. Same name since .1945. FE 8-4077, 1 -........ ROOFING-SHINGLING, R. Price. FE 4-1024. KEEL ROOFING AND SIDING. 332-5034. mates. Reasonable. 682-7514. fPECIALIZE IN HOT TAR ROOF-- tog, L. J. Price, fe 2-1II36._____ __Sand—Grovel—Dirt I BULLDOZING. FINISHED At TOPSOIL. 5 YARDS. Sli Send, gravel, ell kinds. 6734049. A-10 STONE, 6040, ROAO-FILL black dirt, meson stone. FE 5-2994. beach san'67 fill DINT, ANY type gravel del. 6744619. BLACK DIRT, SHREDDED PEAT, road gravel, fill dirt. Dal. 6934727. CHOICE BLACK DIRT FARM TOP- agg—- fe 44510. BULLDOZING, BLACK DIRT, FILL dirt. 334-1731 or 3324648._ PEAT HUMIS, TOP SOIL, DELItf-ered, or picked up. Sun., holidays. FE 2-4210 or FE 8-7978. P^S-S1EP.6EAVEU|lANALYap 5-4926.' retaining walls H. Waltman. : •W. TRUCKING. ALL STONE, md products, rood gravel. Test-d topsoil, black dirt. Crushed mestone. 628-2563, 3944062. Tree Trimming Service B&B TREE SERVICE, INSURED.' INSTALLATION OF SPRI9IKLING systems, manual and eut* — rial and workmanship gu Estimate* given, FE S-till MERION BLUE SOD. PICK UP OR lawn Mewing ‘DALBY & SONS" STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL 54005 Mosquito Spray FE 54025 MICHIGAN SPRAYING SERVICE, mosquito control, tree and lawn service and sprays. 391-1355. PORTERFIELD TREE SERVlcI* Trimming and Removal Shrub Care—Free Estimates. Fast Service—33S-1314 Lawn Sprinkling TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL, Reasonable. 391-1600. L'S TREE TRIMMING, RIMOVaL, fret estimates, reasonable. 628-3521. 673-7160, r- * ““ Riders and Fewer NORTHSIDE, 507 N. PERRY Yardman and Jacobsen Open Sunday's, 10 to 2 FE 4-0941 or 473-7512 CEMENT FLOORS FOR PARTICU-lar people, Bart Cummins, 391-2500. CEMENT WORK OUR SPECIALTY. Nothing too largo or small, il years — •— -1372. I estimation. 623- LICENSED SIDEWALK BUILOER. Patios, drives, etc. FE 5-3349. MULTI-COLORED PATIOS, FLOORS, — driveways, Ted Elwood Enter-prlses, 682-3373 or 335-3687. PATIOS, DRIVES, GARAGE SLABS, It cent* sq. ft. FE 4-2S76, days. Designing and Buildina SAM WARWICK II, DESIGNER, - '•tier. Home*, additions designed bur lot, 682-2820 or 6514726. t Dressmaking, TnHerin| Driver's School Dry Wjll Service Deck Sales - Service HAULING : TALBbTT LUMBER Glass service, wood or aluminum. Building and Hardware supplies. 85 Oakland_____________FE 4-4595 RUBBISH. NAME ________________time. FE S-0095. LIGHT HAULING, REASONABLE rates. FE 8-1246. light Hauling, basements, garages cleaned. 474-1242. FE 54806 Moving and Storage SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 10 Painting and Decorating , PAPER HANGING THOMBSQN FE 6BH ,1 PAINTING. YtoRK GUARAN-teed. Free estimates. 6024620. Piano Tuning PIANO TUNmO ANO REPAIRING Plastering Sendee PlnmMng A Heating BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT l»«r Laka-TOtograph at Huron. BROWNIES HARDWARE * FLOOR SANOEWt—FOLISHiSRS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER—POWER saws TIMBERLINE TREE EXPERT „ Removal, trimming, spraying, mosquito control. Frte estimates. 682- Trucl'ing LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, ■HMH 111 dirt, grading and grav-mt-end loading. FE 24603 Trucks to Rent Vk-Ton Pickups . lW-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT. Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pomioc Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 125 S. WOODWARD FE 44661 FE 4-1641 Dally Including Sunday TV Sales-Service I TV Service. 412-1488. BLOOMFIELD V guarantoed. IrwuradinFETioir' Washer Repair 1 Ip W«tp« Jl. tr F. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED i RH Neg.^wNh positive *7'“ ictore, A.____ vjg, Decereiiwj; II ,upy *N|rg»jo^^pecot*ToiL >a|J£ exterior THB PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 ' Tie WU» Track OrJw. ~ Man. thru *rl„ r *jn.4 p.m. ■ PAINT. PAPERING ApartNHll, f WNhlMi arkwey A lolly. ME _____________________ laroe ) hSoau an6 AAVM; i bedrooms, Uvta*----- -“-Tr~----- kitchen, adults 01 MODERN 1 EEOl Tuaaar. op 3.7t*t NG—INTERIOR, EX wonT,~rafaiincaa rM UMU) '>w” i - ."^■NMWNWiBfc - Him lob, mutt have maintenance experience, references required — salary plus apartment. Raolw Pan.1 tiac wiia tasc’dt DISHWASHER, PRIVATE >. flWOI altar IB ajn. Medical TfecHNgtpeistS'.-iJte ^£2 _ r week, . fils, rapid __, ■ rector, Leila Hospital, it., Battle CreekTMleh. A L ES EMPLOYMENT COUNSEL-lor. if you have the ability -~f deslra jo work _wltti people EMU1 I train you. Call Angle Rook. I fynltura. Call Watitod HowrtiM 6wdi 29 CASH FOR GOOD CLEAN USED Phone, MY 3-1I71. 3i«4 BATHS, ADULTS 3324443. ’* ,___1 MEN ONLY Available June I. Near Pontiac Airport. 4234541. * njiiSd^ houeeT* win pey teo""^? Rant Houses, Unfurnished 40 WANTED TO RENT, LEASE, OR'2-BEOROOM HOUSE, NICE NElGH-buy, 1 bedroom dwelling wits kltch-1 borhood. refs. 1 child welcome, an, bam furnished or unfum. Away I cr. l«« miles ____ _. „... Reply ta Pontiac I Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT Russell YOung, 334-3330 SjVt w. Huron St: DORRIS ICARFETEO THROUGHOUT It II - beautiful pert brick ranch hor that wanders all over this beau ful lot. 77x303. 3 bright and cheery bedrooms, outstanding family —— with massive brick fireplace, floor laundry room plut a ment, 11 Vhx2D living room, kitchen. Oak floors. Flittered end attached garage with cement drive. ni.tM. T's) GOOD HOUSE SENSE ta buy a home and break that .rent habit, chick this dandy lor a real rent beater, aluminum elded story, and half bungalow with 3 massive bedrooms, m baths, luxuriously carpeted living room and jtptraN dining room, spacious kitchen with *-—. — .. ..... isaumtn|i 49 Sale Houses , IN ROCHESTER MIDOLE- AGED -LADY WITH 5 Attrectlve 3 tlec Motors, yard, flreplece, Large landscaped -nrpetlnp, tun t— . 514.000 - I - FE 3-7041. I nr'^wetf^'nf^Pontla!^iS-BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE -i or west of Pontiac. «... I price Intarma- l Uving Quorters ixceilent West Side location, Ideal ror young merrlr" -5100. THE ROLF 333-7040. 33 3 BEDROOM HOME. FULLY CAR-—■ i pried, inquire attar ' ' Cherrylawn, Pontiac screened glass enclosed t Sharing." If you ai rnlng over 07500 nar int to Increase y presently I OR 3- i personal and confidential I Instructioni-Schools 11 Men Wanted Now To Train As Accident Investigators ALL CASH For homes any place In Oakland County, money In 24 hours.' YORK Part-Time.-' Previous experience n necessary. Train at Heine In spa time. Keep preeent lob until,re* * ta switch. Men urgently need lor tree details. Approved for V./ training. ABSOLUTELY NO Ql LIGATION. A division «f U.T. Miami, Florida, established 194S. Insurance Adjusters School RIDING DAY CAMP. RlOlNG AND swimming Instructions. Also stable management. Ktanmar . Riding Academy. ItOO Hiller Rd. 3434009. Reel Estate 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-! CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-ERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARDEN STOUT, Realtot ISO N. Opdyke Rd. PE 54I4S Urgently need tar Immediate Sale! Pontiac Dally 'M l MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 1029 ATTACHED GARAGE. 3 BEDROOM S v.m.r -------- _ _ ^.',-^25^ D*n',',' "4'1000' 1 I ^ 3^?rs°?kL 3S^lQuewsff^.^4i AUBURN~Sji^T'S j—^Vy~OWHER d blacktop di SOUTH SIDE large cerpetad Hvlng|JW0 Highland Rd. (AA39) MLS! *“ —4 Lc kLL THE ACTION LINE 474-3239 om, stairway II basement, gas neat, 4 garage. Only si 0,900, Gl FE 5-8183 ____-aiHPPi-—■ -- --- TOM room, 3Vy».™ c> gsTursrw'suaB o t f l c ♦ve- 343-4511.__11 family room, 20'x20'. Swimming t-stan-1 *~i ere cu a Pool with filter. Lot completely (her re- ICIJ r.ll.A- chain link fenced. SIS,900. Full prlct 11X900 on this extra! «|------“ IB *------f AUBURN HEIGHTS _ Llleflme aluminum ex neat 5-room home » _ separate WE BUY WE TRADE OR 44343 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains WE BUILD CUSTOM HOMES -your lot or ours. A X H Seles.1 MA 5-1501 or 4234343, payment. We have two •hat are dec rooted and what you are looking I easy terms. Vacant. Why Rent) When You Carl Buy | $150 Down broker, b down tc ■ PAN EDMONDS. REALTOR FHA PROPERTY tAANAGEMENT 624-4811 ot action: YORK |^^«.t6.v.bood Vrw.lt, *24-1 ScSSTgJS^J I 3 BEDROOMS, MODERN, EAST lach*d . ^---- I Side, adult* only, $135 with dep.,| CITY OF PONTIAC FE M0U.______ 2-bedroom ranch, full baiamant. ga l * * “i, taka over! -r Call 01 •GotjLelM»jtfnai«s 41 COTTAGES ON LAKE ORION. BY week or month. Also boat storage, S70-S90 weekly. 493492P. FOR A VACATION Apt. sleeps five. Beautiful ground!, Private Beach, Boat, Float, Swings. Cass Lake. 575 weakly. 402-3744. WE TRADE OR 44343 I* Hwy,, Drayton Pla~ area. Call u JACK LOVELAND 3100 Coe* Lake Rd. ___________402-1255 BUYERS WAITING Listings needed in Keego Mi area. Cell us- JACK LOVELAND CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT ____42 , SHOWER. WEST CLEAti SLEEPING I CLEAN, QUIET, SLUMPING ROOM. MEN ONLY, 04 COTTAGE 2SI-1S1S LAKEVIEW MtfrfeL SINGLE OC- SAGAMORE MOTEL. SINGLE uncy. S40 per week. Mr'-, TV, telephone. 709 I Rooms With Beard CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR ___________ 21 W. Walton m-SOSS'Dimt ((arse Multiple Listing servlet ispsit stores 74-l44t. ____Township - Rochester. Attract bungalow. Expansk y OWNER — 3-BEDROOM BRICK ranch. 2-car at-famlly room, rea, 519,500. FE r 451^951 - FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding laxas and ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION XBEDROOM HOME GAB NEAT, LARGE DINING AREA VILL ACCEPT ALL APPUCA TIONS PROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR OIVORCEES. OKAY WITH US. OPEN OAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 294 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REALVALUt REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 , WE BUY WE TRAOE OR 44343 OR 4434* I 4713 Olxlt Hwy.. Orayton Plains Cake privileges BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS I IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 3 ceramic Maths. Large kitchen. Fireplace In living room. Dining room, family room, targe screened patio, full Msament, 2Vi ■I “my axfrr- i------------- 532,500. BARGAIN 5 room modern bungalow, no rented tar S12J per month — 40x: content block building — Ideal h car repair - 100 Poet comm* del on Orchard Lake Avenue carpeted library, living and d Ing rooms, large kitchen, f basement, new 2-car garage. I beatable at StldOt. Term*. Warden Realty ENTLEMEN, in CHRISTIAN home, wonderful meals, h privileges, cell FE 2-7144, Wideman Work Wonted Mule I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT YORK AT 474-1491. LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC 626457?. REAL VALUE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH AND SQUARE LAKE Excellent arcade shope available tar retail or office. 700 square feet up. S12S per month up. To Inspect, call Bill Lynch, FE 1-3443 **" Telegraph Rood. I CLARKST0N MOST BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM-BUILT BRICK RANCH HOME, ■ ■ " " new. Three Meek* Iroi street. 127x21' living roon NfED. CASH? ovlng out ot stata? Need ( settle debts? Need cash .. „„ ‘ ‘ .Want cash for. General Rent Office Space 47 We will buy yout i today - Cell N is at O'Neil Rea It BARBER APPRENTICE. EXPERI-enced wants job heircutting. Pon-tlac, FE 2-1032. Light hauling and digging, Lawn work. PE 4-7344.______________ REPAIR. REMODELING WORK- NEED CASH TO BUY OR BU small jobs. Fleeter, dry wall. 334- or retlr-- —' -‘ m ATTENTION DOCTORS B DENTIST Establish your office In this " * em Medical Building nor ~ ,r | General Hospital. Largo £ suite now available. Call I WILL DO OOO JOBS, 12, hour. Cell 33B-1I42, attar 2 p.n VouNG FAMILY MAN WANTS Work JWnrlmi Female ^ 12 T DAY IRONING SERVICE. REF. Maxine McCewen, PE 4-3SS7 Ironings, wbbster - cIoMt SENIOR NURSING STUDENT DE-slres work In doctaris office tor month of July. FE S-5007 attar | or Other, for quick action CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 44351 UR EVENINGS OR 34229. WE HAVE BUYERS FOR HOMES, forms, cottages, acreage, lair river property. Call collect. BuiHing Sorvtett-SGppiiBS 131 FORMICAv COUNTER TOP - AND Cabinets, '-complot* xnnian «ndi remodeling, 5 Apartments, Furnished 37 BEDROOM APARTMENT 43 Norton. ROOM AND BATH, I ORION TWP., M24 NEAR 1-75 Minutes from averywhere. No for CPA, MO. Mfgr. Rep.. In* once, Lawyers, etc. OhIcos ,i Suites^ from SS5 Including heat a tanitorial services. i. Large m kltch- plete kitchen. Plastered eek floors, gas heat. Attached garage. Large landseeped ' GAYLORD I. 0. WIDEMAN REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4534 EYES. CALL 332-4490 Crestbrook MODEL OPEN guitar, sidewalks and city water. Drive ta Cteecent Lake Road to Crestbrook street and i GIROUX Rant Besintss Praparty 47-A SHORT ORDER RESTAURANT — fully equipped. Whit* Lake, M miles west of Pontiac. M7-4M4 Detroit - LO 54714. YEAR OLD RANCH, ROCHESTER area 3 bedrooms, carpeting, 2V1 baths, paneled family room, f|— place, laundry room upstairs, i *— ---------- •^l.3W. 651-3072. . hr BATH. RECREA-l DEPENDABLE LAWN SERV-! 3 people ta shire. Weekly 165. Ice. Free estimate, 3634060. 6732 M-59, PE 244W, M- ! Landscaping and black dirt, 3 rooms, sa# per week, sm laying sod grate. Contact Mr. deposit. Working couple only. FE i, FE 4-7607. 155 Grotldvlow. i 2-6454. MUSHROOM COMPOST PERTIU-»r. exc. «oc t|imiiitammmnn dens, etc. i|ik , 234X 4514MB BEDROOMS. KITCHEN FOR SIN-—. ___________ML gar-1 gle men. FE S-733& OS’ w. »»- a" rooms.' couple.only; JM GARDEN PLOWING AND YARD gredinq. rmV or nan. ly, 150 dep., 48 Augusta. N 4 ROOMS baby weJcra : week. SI0B Baldwin, cal BATH, SMALL 5444 Dixie Hwy. 623-1400 Open *ttl 9 p.m. OR 3445S OR 4-2B64 PE 1-4236 159 GAGE ST. This 3-bedroom ranch-style lust off Perry St., ta an a street with other new ham* Ing room, dining ell end ha.. — peted, bedrooms have oak floors, kitchen Is flded sin with tab of cupboard space. Full basement is tiled, pas hist, 514,500 with 5450 KENNETH Dan Mattingly DAN SAYS Only 114,900 mediate Men________,________ FE $-9497 or4744Stti DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY Dar* Mattingly 1 ? DAN SAYS Sell Pita spacious ranch In Orayton 'Woods, it has a large living room y With tadperock fireplace and 3 ~ bedrooms all carpeted, 1W baths with ceramic the, family kitchen with built-in oven and! range, 2 ear garage, walk-cut bswitnem, net septic, community wirier phis i targe lot. A real but at onl S21.WS. call now, PE M497 o 674-354*. Immediate possession. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY ELIZABETH LAKE Tri-tarot. 3 bad room, 2 both*. Fan*-built-ins. 2 car attached garage. Ity room with fireplace. Kitchen Lovely tanneappd lot. Lake prlvF I— mm c«b mim. Elizabeth Lake Front Perfect beech. Oftty S24.500. Terms. Don't welt, we trade. ELWOOD REALTY Gl, "0" DOWN i Pontiac Lake. This la a wlnn lor only 09,200 total price. Lari lake frontage and a 2 bedroo hem*. You mutt see this appreciate It. Call now; YORK t Hwy., Drayton Plaint WE TRADE ______________OR 44363 ler-comptata. FLATTLEY REALTY 630 Commerce Rd. Cell 36X49*1 VILLAGE of L*kO Oric... . lift 1-story furnished home. Quick —*“i. 0920X Terms. Call HAYDEN New Homes—10 Per Cent Dn. 3 bedroom, trMevel finished family "4 cor garage sixmo phi* TRADES ACCEPTED J. C. HAYDEN Realtor 3634404 10715 Highland Rd. HERRINGTON HILLS, 3 BEDROOM brick ranch, finished basement, ga- ar.- — — — HOUSE AND BARN, CORNER 10 acres, frontage on MIL .3 bedrooms, *1400 down, bM., 17,720. Will cottaider trad*. 517-443-3202. May villa. HOLLY-ROSE CENTER AREA . Attention: developer farmer, 125 — new aium siaea parity 2 ,.nn, of rqad trontage, part paved, port gravel. Priced S550 per acre jUu* buildings. Call today CARRlOAt QUALITY HOMES, INC. AT 332-4922 OR 62P44tt KENT ORAYTON AREA-4 _______ —i take privileges. Henfweod m Lot 60x120. —— we. tixooo witi >yd Kent Inc., Realtor N Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph 4123 or FE B-HR4 carpeted . ___----_ Ing room, basement, GAS heat, iiunory area, extra nlco corner lot. Only S13.SOO with terms. FAMILY HOME OXFORD Buy on land contract, targe 7-room family home, convenient to school 3-bedroom ranch \ Model Open LAND CONTRACT Two end three bedroom homo on th South East Side ot Pontiac. S750 Is all you need down and the payments of S75 par month include taxes and Insurance. No rad i«po or delays. Cell us about those. Evas. Coll Mr. Castoll FE 2-7273 Nicholie & Harger Co. 53Vi W. HURON ST. FE S41S1 WATKlNt LAKE PRIVILEGES By owner, 3 bedrooms, lVi baths, ranch home, full basement with racragtleh room. OR 34051. WILL DUPLICATE On your lot or ours, DEL 3-bodroom with left I block lo Senes c Watch tor signs. PARSONSONS BUILDERS 331-8511 1967jWAUEO 'LAKi, 3 .....BEDROOMS, 113,400 en’lend coni ...._i - 389 Whittamore DAILY ELIZABETH LAKE PRIVILEGES >00 MOVES YOU IN - Nice bun-■low — with excellent privileges 1 lake right there - 20' living —* ““h Tlreplece — very large lly planned kitchen with iiit-ins. First floor utility Tastefully decorated CHARLES VAN HORN, ItyC. 2400 576 N. Woodward Linda Viet* St - close to _ end shopping — fha — Gl a proved. Immediate Occupancy Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE S-lli - Multiple Listing Service ______belly ■fits __ SPECIAL R, J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open 9 to 9 legant older 11-room Georgian Co niol home. Beautifully reetor and modernized ter today's II tag. On IVY scenic acres. Tern OC 2354. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office/ PHONEt 313-685-1585 NORTH OF PONTIAC *350 down plus closing cos •II It takes to move Into this ranch with water softener, hardwood floors, carpeting and drapes. On large 200' lot. Coir tar details. C. Schuett FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 NewModel Starts at $1 On Your Lot OPEN Price Starts at $11,800 On Your Lot FHA—GI—BANK TERMS West on M59 to Oolano (1 blocl east of White Lak Twp. Hall) turn right to MODEL.. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor n the Mall MLB Room 110 462-5802, It busy 4S2-S800 ROSS "VENICE OF MICHIGAN" BIG 4 BEDROOM * Homes Colonials.. .tri-level ' from $28,990 total house including lot . , ■ go* course ... 1* mll__ boating . , , city water . . . tennis ““UKELAND ESTATES Dixie Highway across from Ohio Pottery Waterford, Michigan Open Dally and Sunday 1-7 p.m. ^ ROSS HOMES MODEL: 623-0670 *41 S, Telegraph Rd. SACRIFICE CDDPAPt. At SIMid Term*. Over-looking taBaiaatg tSwerrealIy^k? 1 COUNTRY LIVING Custom built brick ranch with carpeting, slate entrance, fireplace, lota ot closets and many other extras. Full basement. 2-car attached garage. On 3 ecr- ai *—— ■■-landscaped lend i Pull price 527.000 down er trad*. WILLIAMS LAKE AREA Largs contemporary ranch an ..Ri UHMaur* *m featuring: natural carpeted living room. ___ ..jors. New water soft-nnr. Large paneled recreation room. Laundry room off kitchen. Fill price *21,000. Land contract terms. CLARKST0N Executive type brick ranch v 24- ft. carpeted living room v fireplace. 3 large bedrooms, C peted dining room. 2 eerei baths. Full wolk-out basement. F WATER FRONT — BOGIE LAKE tree — 3-bedroom, paneled fair room, ottochod 2-car gorago lodgerock fireplace. 121,000 price. EM 34703. 2-BEOROOM IT. ROYAL AREA - Improved ulldlng site — 14,550. Halt down it land contract. EM 3-5477. 113,700. Call 3434703. UNION LAKE AREA - I largo1 bedrooms Cope Cod. alum., and brick, raised hearth flraploco. Pull price; *27,500, terms. 343-7700. OAKLAND LAKE FRONT -bedrooms, 2 baths, bosomoht, lei scaped lot. *21,200. Terms. 343- LAKE PRIVILEGES - Large liv Ing room, good fishing, children'-beech. 3-bedroom ranch, 1to-csr garage. 113,000. Terms. E7‘ * Gl - NOTHING DOWN - 3 p stole 4-bedroom, aluminum sidli lak* privileges. EM 3-5477. LOVELY LARGE - 3-BEDROOM brio: ranch, mint condition. Sacrifice 524,900. Now mortgage. EM 3-7700. c. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 HIITER OR STARTED HOME. VETERANS NOTHINO DOWN Large 3-bedroom h- living room. J. L. DAILY CO. Ml UNION LAKE RO. EM 1-7114 SCHRAM $550 DOWN price *15,550. OFF BALDWIN This fine -3 bed an 'with *lerge * eating . pie utility.room, lust to move ta. Pull prl rage! corner lot. FHA terms. List With SCHRAM And Call The Van 1111 JOSLYN AVE. FE 54471 REALTOR _______________MLS RHODES MA 3-0288! lake front, home, n rooms. mu o yjioo An |dM, for .comfortable living end healthful recreation. 3 bedrooms, IVY baths, gas hoot. Only S2I.OOO, SI.OQO down. Balance land contract. MOOEL HOMES. Quality bultt. Designed tar convenience and comfortable living. Ranches, Cape Cod end colonial. Let our experienced MOOEL OPEN DAILY, 3 TO 4 — This 3-bedrooin rancher mb floors, vanity ta both, ment, ges hoot, 111,750 on your lot. Out Elizabeth Lake Rd, ta Roslyn, north to opon sign or call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR. 3792 Elizabeth Lak* Rd. PE X 0179, after I, p.m. 4024427.---- SUNDAY, 2 TO 5. hom*!** OXFORD. Large 9 room home. Modern. Family sized kitchen. Garage and workshop. Nlco sized lot. Near schools and shopping. S1X500, S6,-000 down. Balance land contract. SUBURBAN. 4 --------- ---- “** SELECT A LOT - HOUSE HUNTERS - CALL 4703 AND STATE YOUR NEEDS — AND WE WILL HELP YOUM To soil your house or vacant erty. Coll Hackett and sta Packet* —'NO CHARGE IF NOT SOLD. EM 14701. 7750 Cooley Lk. GILES (CLOSE TO TOWN l-unlt income, gat heat, 4-car | rage, good ratitel area, furnlh Included, price and term* < available. Don't be th* person U misted this on*. UNION LAKE AREA garage, large lot with plenty of shade. /Only 51X500, plus mortgage cotta. I with e nice convtn- tol. Celt tor appointment. Claude McGruder Realtor Multiple Listing Service — Open 1 sr would eccommoda _ ____ lly. 11 rooms, 2 baths, 1-car ga-rogo. Presently rented tor S3S0 f mo. *12,500 with *2,500 down. Sisiock & Keht, Inc. 130* Pentlac State Bank Bldg. 84294____________ 330419] WATERFORD AREA Neat 2-bodroom ranch, built bn, carpeting, Gl't O down 875 per month. Owner agent TOMMY'S LAKE. 100' tot with lake InS!anW»d' CASEVILLB 100* wild Foul Bay, thing, garage, f it) 91 SYLVAN LAKE, FOR CHOICE LOTS ON LAKE FRONT, i course, terms available — *25-3050, osk tor manager. fireplace, prlvote study, ful ment, 2-car attached g a brick exterior. Many, mot tom extras. Built on your *29,900. Coll for an appol Les Brown, Realtor IRWIN 5»,ni? J K. Wonderful for th h hor" ■ i | if 12*,500 Ol KEATINGTON Beautiful lake-front and lakt-prlvl-loge lots availoblo. Plan to live on this beautiful new town In Orion Township. Modols open 3-* dolly, 11-4 Sat. end Sun. HOWARD T. KEATING CO. . 220*0 W. 13 Milo Rd„ Birmingham * ____________MIS-1234 , 1 PONTIAC, CLAltKSTON, WOLVER- Bloch Bra*. *23-1333, FE 4-4509. Lakefronts “ WILLIAMS LAKE - Immediate i h session, oxc. location and be. c beautiful deep lot. 2-bodroom y _____w„ Cantor Fred's School < 1 schools, i ___ your* Coll snyflmsT ' TUCKER Rl 3-b*droom, older home, located no j, ?un..JbMrU* SK 3SS THE BEST MOVEi down plus closing cost, Immodi- YOU'VE EVER MADE: yoi ate possession on closing. hays to a or a* when you I I this lovtly 3-bedroom brick ri In the city, excellent for s young It. has everything you coul family who needs 3 bedrooms, j sirs; foil basement, IVk both Closets or* largo, cheorful N PONTIAC LAKE — 3-bedroom mdd-1S'x20* family room, aluminum ng, IV,-cor oarage, new well septic service. Dandy loko- HOLLY AREA Cow 5 room ranch home it Tip- S sico Lake. Built In 1*5*. Aluminum siding. Garage. 2 nice sized bedrooms. Largo living room. Wr"-out basement with recreation ro Nice landscaping. Only 317,900. WHITE LAKE This sharp « room bungalow shopping canter. Only 314,011. VON REALTY GEORGE VONOERHARR, Realtor Val-U-Way BRICK RANCH HOME . with I bedrooms, full basement, gas hoot, hardwood floors throughout, large living room, conveniently arranged kitchen with plenty of cupboards, nlce|y landscaped room homo off Baldwin. Like no condition throughout, cloaets nr cupboards golora, spacious 13 1.. living room, tile bath, near schools and stores. Prlcod under 312,000. Quick possession. JUDAH LAKE 3 bedroom ranch with alum, siding, full basement, go* heat, specious living room and large kltchan, *o ft. tot, pavod streets, reasonable down payment. 3 blks. to grade Largo living — dining orai Our advice Is to hurry on th at only 316900. JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS Realtors 313 West Huron — Since 1*25 Buying or Soiling Coll FE 5-944* After S:0G Coll FE 5-3*33 1ILLER r, beautiful 13'x24' living it 4 nicely londKapod OFFICES AND MODELS CLOSED DECORATION DAY toplo trees, handy to traot In rear, sires nd police protection, aty drive tram Pe > sell quick BATEMAN REALTOR-MLS FE 8-7161 377 S. Telegraph Rd. i UNION LK. BR. ROCHESTER BR. rH SIDE - EM 3-4171 OL 1-3513 ..... 1.13175 Commerce Rd. 730 S. Roth. Rd. IARRO WE HAVE RELIABLE OUSTJM 1 BUILDERS WHO WILL BUILD any price Nome on your LOT OR OURS. IVk hour onrioc. Priced sd contract If oesirou. ask sot wr. Taylor. PONTIAC LAKE MODERN 2-BEDROOM summer homo located on largo fenced lot. Includes fruit trees, new 2-car garage. Being told completely furnished Including boat. Immediate ponetelon. A bargain at $11,900, torme to eult. Coir OR 4-030*. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Wo Offer for your Inspection this modern 3-bedroom home located on Pontiac Lake, Includes plastered wall*—IVk bathe, kitchen wl“ -. Ins. All large rooms, loads _. _ at* and storage art*. An excellant buy at 016,950, forms to suit. Call OR 4-030*. J. A. TAYLOR AGENCY 7732 Highland Rd. (MS*) OR 4-03 Eves. EM 3-9937 or FE 34710 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION NEW custom-built quedlevel on i excellent area with LAKE FRONT 2-BEDROOM - FIREPLACE — FULL WALK-OUT BASEMENT GARAGE. 021,300. TERMS. . _ «.„« „ .. Basement, gas ‘•imt towwEKCE RO. 3*34911 lachtd gangs. Pavtd drlvo LAKE FRONT, 2 POSSIBLY 3-BEO- By Dick Tumtr AUTO REPAIR OARAGE. ITXM', on Baldwin. 3*1-2322 or 391-1403. •sAOtV for saLI, LARoe clientele. 431-1447 otter « p.m. ILUlIU taRdll CALK - SBC-reterlsl end Answering Servlco. Including all oquIMMnt — ettractive Ming quarters. Reasonable lease — located Pontiac Wests Ido. Total price 32000. NATIONAL BUSINESS raker* _____________ PE 3-7141 3l6y car -...iAemwei — '<3Wi^ , 50 par cent off. Detroit 271- 21 on Farmington 47S-2646. j SPORTING EQUIPMENT S+ORE -One of the largest In tfw Thumb area. Shows good prafft $20,000 d down will gut you In business. ■ PIPER REALTY. Phon# Proa 313, 4443933. . I guess we’re always just a little late for everything, huh, Pop? Mrs. James said this was a good neighborhood till the day we moved into it!” Lots—Acreage '54 Sals or Exchange FRESH AIR BEAUTY QUIET WANT;... REAL ESTATE PROB-HAVE: . . . Ability to eolve them Tom Bateman, Realtor FE 8-7161 i Business Opportunities 59 IP YOU ALREADY ENJOY THIS I RARE COMBINATION THIS AD AO WON'T INTEREST YOU. LARGE- (AND SMALL) TRACTS OP LAND OF MANY DESCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE. HILLY, F‘ *“ WOODED, SECLUOEO, ETC. 2Vk ACRES, herd surface road, aportmenti. Year-round license, I nest forces sola. No trade. Ci 714-34*7 for appointment. Minima i Sole Household Goods 65 jdl TV * ***** Acl COMPLETE HOUSEFUL $295 lota, Choir. 3 tobies, 2 lamps, 4-plece bedroom, 5-plece dinette, stove and refrigerator, 3293. Toim* 33.23 weak. Coll Mr. AdOlkt. Pi 4-O904 WORLD WIDE (MX* to BRONZED* CHROME Ol NOTTS •ak, brand NEW. rtorgo and t l (mall (In (round, draoniif. roc- etoi tangular) tobies In hi rod Tpc 2- co MOTOROLA, TV *1, RECONOI- tlonod. 320. 3334451._ VfHl'i'B-BLACK. COLofcSD TV "non tv **rV C* PE MM 45 E. Walton near Baldwin bcor sterS """"" " EM 34H33. Per Sale MhceBeneees DOUBLE ' MVlON COUCN AND ■ business of your own? SUNOCO Hoe dealer frandiln available at Auburn and Adams Rd. Hava — mr eoneiqf »n In -q •> Efcil —moon* elfeq ia wminp is pay Sunoco Offers: 1— 1 custom blended gasoline 2— Salary paid during cnmplete fesslonal training gfMrant 3— High gtllonago outlet 4— Annual TBA refunds ’ L!SUN OIL COMPANY WEEKDAYS - Ml *4474 g EVENINGS AND WEEKENOS r MR, JAMES PASCOE 391-mi BUNK BEDS Choice of IS n/toi, trundle bod*, triple trundId fiMreM bunk bads complete, $49 JO and up. Pearson's furnitu|e^ Repossessed Black and whita TV's SI.23 PER WEEK t responsibl evening. Ki Sale Land ContracH f. OAMAUfcU (N SHIPMENT - kBni end * Hill -----Ita „ Little . 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Son u* beto WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1430 N. Qpdytojld;^ : FE 341*3 ORVEit, *35) WASHER, 325) APT. Ize refrigerator, 329: TV eat, 333. I, Hoffle, PE 5-2704.______________ ELECTRIC STOVE, 325, GAS STOVE — tefrigeretor .. Iff, Wringer ' Harris. PE 3-2744. ACTION On your land contract, targe or small, call Mr. Hiller. PI Sotlf. Broker, am Bilzobiiih Lekd Rood.. LAND CONTRACT AT 4Vk PER cent, 33300 balanee.llke now, discount 20 par cant. Attar ‘4 p.m. . 5 ACRES, slightly rolling li •*“ mu*. 34730. Term*. 1 ACRES. Ideal for horses i CABINET SHOP foil equipped millwork and cabinet: shop. Ownor retiring —. long established and vary profitable. 35,-000 down on real estate, busi-l ness and equipment. SANITARY SERVICE >lng a terrific LAND CONTRACTS FOR SAL* CON-tact Ron O'Noll or Ni ^ -luket, at OR 4-2222. Wanted Cortracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS GAS OR ELECTRIC STOVE -up. Used Maytag waehers *39. Good refrigerators from WARREN STOUT, Realtor busine»r manufacturing^ iitptall-j1450 N- PP^ko Rd. PE 5414, ..........ing septic eyetems. I________Open Evas, 'til 3 p.m. .. nslder sailing part IP YOU WANT TO 10 ACRES. This la an usually tlful parcel. All you could for. Scanary, traes, hills. S7,*i0, BUT CLOSING - i weeks possession —In acrpc c„r • i Kj* xx.Atneo. nor a i, oak a activity room. Gat hoot, fireplace fixture* mr“ ----------- brick plant*. ......... lining all. 2Vk-car attached a. to—— -------------- SCOTT LAKE S0x200 ft. lot s lieges. $1500, te hull Lake, o Excellent view, kooucm 03330 for quick sals. Annett Inc. Realtors Huron St. 3304 Office Opon Evenings t Sunday T*r"oPEN MEMORIAL DAY • C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-IS Ortanvllle CALL COLLECT NA 7-2113 _ FOR A QUICK SALE F YOUR PROPERTY CALL MAKE MONEY 1 PRODUCE MARKET k real going business, owner II and can't operate, 100 ft. front age on main hlghwoy, 33 x 3 block building. Includes al equipment Including truck. *5,00 down puts you In business. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 8-9641 after 5, end Tuos. coll’PE 4410* ESTABLISHED ORY CLEAN!... business for soli. Illness forcing It sole. Write Pontiac Press Box 5. $100,000 For equities and land contracts, smallest possible discounts, coll 432-1*20. Ask for Tod McCullough HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL tO A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP PURNITURE - Consists of: S-piece living room outfit with 2-place "■’Ing room suite, 2 step to1--'-- * cktall table, 2 table lomi 1 O'vir run Included. WINOOW WITH 3* door. OR 3-1334. COMBlfiATlbN'DOOR*. 301' An6 12". 311 a place. EM 34371. TA ALUminOM-vinyl libiHa Awnings, storm wlndowq. P p r auollty guorontood job. Call Jot Vilfoly 'Wd Rolinbln Pioneer" no DRAIN TILE* - REASON-able — 70 pltcat. 2' ea. 0990 Tackles Or. Ponttac Lake 474- ir LINOLliiM RUGS 33.95 EACH die Wall tile M oo. Ing tile — wall paneling, cheap. > Tile. PE 4-9957, H73 W. Huron 12* ALUMINUM BOAT. *35: APT.' ' e ga* range; lawn mower: oth-„ Mlsc. Ham*. OR 4-21M. 14 HORSEPOWER OUTBOARD ‘ at motor, noorly now. Rm*. 330-41. FOOT BEL-AIR POOL WltH 009. v 6 MOTOR GUZZA. 123 ct. nl. two. 4 chair shoo shine stand. refrigerator 3SS; chrome .......... — - choirs 013) *74-0228. ATTENTION CAMPS - SCHOOLS: good auto, dlshwoshtr. 493-2932. BROKEN CONCRETE FOR SALB BLVO. SUPPLY CONCRETE STEPS, SAFETY THREAD. REAS. ACM* Step co.' *024**2 HOUSES AND FLOWER BOX-ORAFTItS bed, complete 117. While chest S*. Boys bicycle SIS. Treadle sowing . machine. 110. Ping pong table $4. PE 59429. _____________ For Th« Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall ffiRUICA W/1BEP VLHIT9 'ffh. Inet to receive 10" rouhd basin, S44.9S. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M3* W GARAGE CUPOLA, 41X41X72. S» W) MAN FURNITURE CO. - 17 E. HURON FI OUR OFFICE SPECIALIZES I fond contract collections. FLOYD KENT, REALTOR .... Saginaw___________PE 54104 “ i, Corvan, washer, walnut d choirs, sots, boot, motor, sollt Ml cor equip., Hondo 50, sea - bikes, oqusrlum, guitar, amp., garage. Excellent neighborhood^ > WHY NOT TRADE? Sjjown by appointment. Price WANy A PALACE? it as big as Buckingham, I small family, this cusk BREWER aie acres Including IRWIN LAKE FRONT: 2-bedroom In Newly decorated Inside and stone fireplace In living n I, basement, drapes CLARK REAL ESTATE 342 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7NS ......."-1o Listing Service Spacious trood end landscaped ... overlooking beautiful Manito Lake, what a picture *— **“ comfortable living room irxSS* family room with LAKE FRONT Ideal for the small family situated on beoutmnty- landscaped k‘ bedroom, IVk - story homo ■ttochod garage. Has boot______ attached garag*. .Has boot dock, and mo wall on good sandy beech. Prlcod $15,000 cash to proximatety Vi down. Paymsnts *55 a mo. on land contract. GEOROE IRWIN REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE |ft W. Walton. FE 3-70 KINZLER Real Estali MUST SELL - 120 od - beautiful clear 2 acre lake! I I ISLAND, 200 ACRE, on S. Bay, under 350 rental Income 0345. '. Roettger, 2025 Tolle-hester, Mich. dream location for li —is zoned Industrial.............. ■ * i. on CEO roii- it Two. 3,000 i d and 75 ft. i Hera Is something new ' you In exterior design t._ planning. Carpeted living roc formal dining room, model kite* — 3 extra-size bedrooms, recr Non room wltt: fireplace and 2k garage. Gas heat, end towns watar. Large shaded lot and li privileges. Prompt possession. LAKE ORION AREA Now 3-b*droom ranch homos r under constructton. — over 1 square foot. 4 delightful root IVk baths and daylight walk-basement. Gat hoot. Com* In compare, and you will want i of those on sight. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 121* Dlxl# Hwy. 4234 Across from Packers Store MulWp la Listing $orvlco Opon *4 Frushour LARGE AND LOVELY This 4 bedroom brick colonial hi 2400 sq. ft. of living area Includli a 25' family room with flreplac 2Vk baths, a fabulous 21' mosti more custom fee tuna. This has both prepared for control air condition. *47,200- OFF BALDWIN Lot bo show you this dandy room homo with carpeted living room, drop** and full basement, alum, oldod exterior. It's extra nice and won't lost long. S13.500. W* WIN tokO'HWur house In trad*. JACK TRUSHOUR, Realtor *730 Williams Lake Rd. ML 674-2245 KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME” OPEN TUESDAY 2-5 P.M. SYLVAN VILLAGE Newor brick trl-iovoi that you will Do proud to own. Thro* bedrooms and two full ceramic tile baths. Carpeted living and dining room. Eating area In kitchen. Rocrtoften room with stono fireplace. Inter-com system. Water softener and power humldl-flor. 70 x 125' lot. Paved straots, city' water and sewer. Asking 329,950 . . . TERMS OR TRADE. Directions: Orchard Lake Rd. right onto Sherwood. Elaln* Smith will see you through. -J71 W. Huron St. MLS PE x HOLIDAY_____OR 4-3920 ANNETT 4-Bedroom Colonial Attractive brick 0, alum, homo In Twin Lakes Village. Spacious LR, formal' DR, family room with split rock fireplace, modem kltchan with bullt-lns Si large breakfast area, 2Vk baths, full bastmenf, gas heat. Lara* expertly landscaped lot with patio, laka privileges. *" 2-car garsgt. $34,950, ter Ottawa Driye—Colonial r present home. TAKE OFF YOUR SHOES before entering this gorgeous, Immaculate brick rancher. From th* elate foyer. Through th* ptueh car-“*“* living room, largo dining area, In ell* bedrooms, 2 full ceramic til* baths, massive professionally finished family room In low-er level, with (IMIm bmp ibmbii m th* beautiful te RARE \ LAKEFRONT HOME I and neat I I noted kltch- „ r garage. This home 11 PINE LAKE AREA 100x150* lake privileges L_____, sites, soil Individual or to builders. Tsrms — By owner. 673-3401. TODAY'S BUYS 30 ACRES, 990* frontage on ..MRI ■ wood Rd. Independence Twp. — . . Prlcod *t 311,000 with 3340* -*— A le northwesi Air kd frontage, 33,- i. 110'X15iX CORNER LOT. In Clarks- CLASS B BAR AND HOTEL Union Lok* area, money make. _ 13 rooms In hotel, shows excellent return on bar and hotel future with 320,000 down vintory will handle. Everett Cummings, Realtor 2513 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-3203 ;________363-7 HOTEL RESTAURANT FOR RENT, - -----i to sotlify tenant. Re- iant wanted. Auburn Ho* Auburn Ave. FE 2-9239. JOHNSON ! REAL MONEY MAKER one of the best high profit drive-inn restaurants In Oakland County with 175' frontage c ' LOANS TO $1,000 tsualiy on first visit. Quick, friom y, helpful. FE 2-9206 Is th* number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 9-5 - Friday 9-7 Son L b A N S " BAXTER B LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac Stale Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 LOANS’" I _ d double drass- ...........____, 0350. Also mapl* Trundle bods, 0100. FE 4-3354. MAYTAG, SQUARE TUB WRINGER ' her. FE 44110 offer 4 p.m. S WHITE PALM BEACH DIN-iscket, size 44, worn twice, double bed, Beauty Reef _ 3:30 B-m GOOD USED LAWNMOWERS 2 AND 1 cycle, 10" to 24" cut. 336-0241. HOOVER COMMERCIAL Swops ... mm Rood last yoor. Owner wants to ro-and will sacrifice ‘ . Will accept trad: II 635-3494. * M.ACF it 1 13,350. ON STREAM - big tot: soy IVk *cre*7 A basement, -— place? All ....______ _______ I kitchen with Oulox Electric Bullt-lns? An ovtrsizsd 2Vk-‘ If th* AT LAKE LOUISE This home was built 1 yea ~ "h flawless Care) the 3 bed ’ ON STREAM. Blacktop r PARTY STORE Motomoro area, grossing 30.-- month. High not profit. Includos 2-bedroom modem horn*. Over pn' hlghwoy. All this .for only Rd., 391-20C garage? of mo, t....... ... n a fabulous si has privacy and *1 . Thor* i E STRUBLE 5 BEDROOMS m your ikn OlVk-ofory only 314,950 or MILO STRUBLE 7-23 NEIGHBORHOOD FRIENDLINESS surrounds Hilt beautiful 2-bedroom ^ The kltclwn arJ .... ________o complete an planned. Its on Inspiration cook. Attached 2-car garage, room 25 x 13 with fireplace and Parkay floors. Located where •—"ling restriction assure yr*1 "* lly homes. There Is much . could tell you about this but Instead, let us show It to you: 320,750, It th* price and 90 |||dM| financing Is available. plus kitchen and 2 car If you want to add ante everyday living — see OPEN MEMORIAL DAY C. PANGUS INC., Raaltors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 130 M-15 Ortonvills CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015 UNION LAKE, proved for hou utility building, 312,900. 363-3101. ACRES ... i, well, 20,x60‘ lake privilege LIQUOR BAR nt of th* vary best In th* Thumb area on Saginaw Bay. Averaging 11,000 weak year-around. Can b* had for just 016,000 down Including real estate. Bring your checkbook and tee it today. Warden Realty FAST CRUISER 22* Cruts-Along with 135 h.p. Grey-marine, Ideal for couple or email mlly, complete sleeping, eating and Hot facilities. Many extras including custom made trailer. F r - * ..wugh for water skiing and \ seaworthy. Excellant condition. ol original cost, or equity In real estate. FE POUR AND 0 ,TRACK CAR TAPE ployor, 11 tapes, ' PE 4-3371.________ # Sale Clothing S SUIT SIZE 4244 fROM FORMALS, LONG, SIZfe 3. REPOSSESSED GE STEREO 01.25 PER WEEK Goodyear Service Store . 1370 Wide Track Dr. West Pontiac__________■ SINGER Deluxe Model-Portable Zlg zogger, in sturdy esse. Repossessed. Pay off $38 CASH or Payments of $5 Per Mo. 5 yr. guarani** UNIVERSAL Co. FE *0905 SOFA, GOOD CONDITION, SPRING CLEARANCE SALE SEWING MACHINES ‘Singer, Necchl, Pfaff Viking, Kenmore, Nolco Brother, While, Universal .—j are terrific v_____ ____, Ity heaters. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk., PE 44462.-14. KIRBY VACUUMS Excellent conditions, overhauled and rebuilt — fully guorontood. BOX POiYS INSTALLED, 5 or stool, 002-0354. MOWERSi USED, ALL tYPES, ALL repairs, sharpening, ask for Rsx, Taylor Lawn Mower Sorvlc*. 592 Mt. Clemons. Opon Sun, 'til 12. NEW COMMON BRICKS. 3C EACH. OIL FURANCES, FAIR CONDITION suitable for temporary hoot. *15. Jlvd. Supply , FE 3-7001 PICNIC TABLES S SIZES. LAWN PICNIC TABLES, 4' to O': ADULT ' child lawn swings all custom le of hand pooled Cedar logs PLASTIC WATER PIPE, 44", 33.45 ■ —r hundred, 1", 35.41. 1V4", *1.51, r: 310.01. G. A. Thompson. 7005 52 Resort Property 3 BEDROOM, FIREPLACE, BASE-ment, on shaded lot, 313,500. OA 0-2013. A. Sanders, rap. H. Wilson. Lots—Acroaga 1 10-ACRE PARCELS ON BLACK-fop-1 level, 1 gently rolling 5870 Oekwood Rd. OA 1-7054 - |U Sun, colly please. 2 ADJACENT LOTS IN TROYx buy my equity, 31200. 451-”** WANTED: W* are In dire building^ tots If you hav* a “"“'von REALTY GEORGE VONOERHARR .Realtor n th* Mall MLS Room MM 482-5802, It busy 402-5100 REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE” 5400 Sq. Ft. Warehouse Or Light Manufacturing on't miss this buy of o llfofirr FLOOR•LENGTH wedding gown with chopol train, slz* 12. Inquire at Robins Mobil* VIII ago. 114 Re* St., Pontiac. WEDDING GOWN AND VEIL, SIZE 10, FE 2-4047._ Sale Household Goods *65 Vk WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 '47 Necchl, cabinet, zig-Yagger “— '64 Nolco, 1 left, with cab- -jet, built-in zlg-zog ......*57.50 s Singer, Zlg-Zagger In cabinet ....., Pfaff, Dial-A-Stltch .'... 5 mo. old Dlal-A-Stltch . Viking Zlg-Zaggor ......... hooter, 349.95; 3-pleca bath t._ ; laundry troy, trim, 319.95: ir stalls with trim, 339.95: condition. Formal DR, ultra modem kitchen with large breakfast ares, family room with fireplace, screened ter- DEFINITELY DIFFERENT _____________________________________I Swimming season Is coming, so own * OR 10 ACRES WITH TREES, a home whore your family can! down. OA (-2013. * " en|oy these conveniences. We WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie Hwy. 473-1273 " iltlplo Listing Sqrvlc* WE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. Office Open Evenings 1, Sundays 338-0466 'BUD" ....... family. Swimming, boating and fishing, and located on a peninsula where you hove water both ' it and bock. 2-bedrocm, | wm, with fireplace, d walkout basement with r____ All this for only 317,900 call today. LIKE NEW you'll b* glad wt showed custom built ranch.- There' tor a garden on tho 260 lot. The master bedroom li 13, living room Is 20 x kitchen with dThing area ai I is. Hardwood floors, gas li ly Insulated. 4-BEDROOM BRICK W. SEVEN MILE RD. - located In Detroit's northwi area, ctos* to schools, bus door to Northland and dov town; carpeting end drapes, fli place, dining room, 2 bedrooi down, 2 up, IVk baths, f... | basement, rec-room, gas heat 3 end hot water, IVk-car garage. 1 Priced at 319,900.00, shown by » appointment only. neighborhood and < 1. Th* prlc* Is right. 7-22 R CONVENIENTLY LOCATED it Near Fisher Body, stores, schools 1- and churches and what a terrific | *— |t only 310,900 G.l. or F.H.A. This brick ond shingle 3- 200'. Prlcod at 16,000.00 each, NICHOLIE-HUDSON vtsocietes, Inc 49 Mt. Clemens St. FE $4201, f AFTER 6 P.M. FE 4-8773 e expecting your coll. 7-1 LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons: . ..* think our sons* of Voluos — Our list of Goad Prospects — HI Our Tire less Effort* — II Make YOU Glad You Called. RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Ponttac Lake Road Open Dally 9 to 9 Sundoy 10 to 4 | OR 4-2222 MLS i UL 2-2326 ’ ACRES ON CRANBERRY LAKE with lake frontage. 624-3360. I ACRES BISECTED BY THE Clam River within 4 miles of Cadillac on good road, 57,500. Cosh or terms. Write or visit Frsd T. Russln, broker, 217 E. Mason St., Cadillac, Michigan. 02 ACRES NEAR GOLF COURSE •V. of Pontiac — pertly wooded 300 ACRES In Hadley — fun set of (arm buildings — 3500 per acre. Underwood Real Estate 1665 Dixie Hwy., Clorkston 625-2615, Eves. 625-5015 — 625-3125 BEAUTIFUL ROLLING 7- AND 10-ecre homesites, Clorkston school district, one mile from expressway. Well restricted. I5.000-S1.900 with 10 per esnt down. PB mm ROOM RE- 1 v--_ 6 bedrooms, ...M 342,500. Substantial down. C> 4-H REAL ESTATE, 623-1400 A OR 4"~- dows in modem office. Plenty ol fenced parking. Extra 100x100'; vacant iot for expansion. Ideal i for distributorship or wholesale Why Not ? ? ? o look at this 3Vk A. parcel “■ ftg. — V of Possibility of purchasing an dltlonal 25 A. adjoining this MMMHforiM mfg. Includos Zoned MR ________ Income houses & 5 garages, *'10 a mo. brlngli 80 TO 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, beef or hogs! Nam* your f-—- 'Michigan*" n sit b AT ROCHESTER 4 acres with 2 bedroom horhe. I'/2-car garage. Reasonable down payment of *3,000. ago. Century old farm homo. Complete set of buildings. Potential lokosld*. 351,500. C. A. WEBSTER REALTOR 692-2291 ____________620-2515 LARGE BUILDING LOTS ON DEER! __________________________ .... *-*- -^"W'd*bathin?°'b.^: Sal# Busings* Property ____ to pufiHL - Clorkiton MA 5^921. 57 ROOM PRE- PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 W. HURON, PE 4-3501 OPEN WK. NITES TIL 9 REALTOR PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO Sli" BUILDER'S SUPPLY Greater Detroit Area Owner retiring wealthy. Trome.. dous future for someone. Nearly all mobile oqulpment 1— Hga 1 yrs. old. Grossing ov netting over 050,000, v business warranto the 'attention of Investor* at well at working owner or1 partnership, w down plus Inventory. "Lake Front Resort' Ine separate modem all-season 2-bdrm. cottages plus ‘ — Ir ranch home with rage. Over 200’ fig. FOR SALE OR LEASE 2 BUILD-Ings under enstruefion 320* H ft. and 6400 eq. ft. Royal to Fla. am *79,500 - 021 I sacrifice for LITTLE JOE'S „ Bargain House 1441 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6842 Acrai df Free Parking mm " • 9; >«t. 'WLO fiZ------ RICHMAN BROS. SEWING CENTER AUTHORIZED DEALER 445 Elizabeth Lok* Road (Across (ram th* Mall) 335-9283 SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — sows single _. double noodle, designs, overcasts, buttonholes, etc. — modem cabinet. Take over payments of . $7 PER MO. FOR 3 M0S. OR $56 CASH BAL. . Still under guarani** i UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 RAILROAD TIES. VERY GOOD -Will d*l. 052-1692. RECONDITIONED AND ' 6UARAN-■ '—' -ewer mowers, 112 end up. Shirley at Auburn. PE REFRIGERATOR, 320; HI-FI REC-ord ^jejier, *25; ‘61 Renault, 360. REYNOLDS TRUMPET, PLAYER piano 15 roils, Sekonic 8mm 3 turret lent movie camera, archery equipment, Kelvlnetor dehumldlfler — large copper porch screens, mlsc. 682-2312. RENT: ELECTRIC SEWER CLEAN-ers, rote-tiller, power rake, Hos-kin's Rental, PE 4-2W9. -2 PIECE SECTIONAL, 335: choir, 310: green sofa, 340; end tabte«jet, 329; bedroom set, 359; chest/' 31; dresser, 340; night standi, 35 up; dinette sot, A; reupnolstered. Hundreds ol fabrics end colors. Fra* sit. FE 2-4*76 ifrigerator, 15; baby bi L C. Lippi SED TVS ...................,*19-« olor TV* ................. *199.98 Sweat's Radio and Appliance Int H W. Huron _______________'334-547 HEY- dltlon, FE 4- 3 Rooms Furniture BRAND NEW $288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE l E. Plk* FE 4-7131 Between Paddock and City WYMAN'S SED BARGAIN STORE tur II W. Plk* Star* Only REMOVAL SALE --------I to 50 per cent on on merchandise. Some on* of e kind, somo crate marred, th* toe ottered. EASY SeRMS™ "™ " PE' 2-2150 Hi-Fi, TV & Rodlof 66 drafting tables, etc. Forbes,"4500 Dlxlo, Drayton, OR 3-9747. SOFA AND CHAIR, GOOD CONOl-tten, *40; 30" GE electric range, aut^' like new, *75; 5 piece dl-No* Formic* fo-ble, 375; boys luntor slz* McGrtg-?7 ^lt Clubs ond bag, *25. Ml SPRED-SATIN POINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2471 Orchard Lok*. 40. SPOTS BEFORE YOUR EyBs -I I prices 4 1 * 9x12 Linoleum Rugs Solid vinyl Tito ........ Vinyl AaMtOO Nl* Inlaid tile 9x9' ......... Floor Shop—12SS Elizabeth . "Across From the Mall" 42" TAPPAN VISALITE DELUXE g»s flov*. $45. 473-5453. 1944 CHAMPION. M*44. ‘ " Good fishing. 474-1US. «GOVERNMENT SURPLUS TRAN-“• sisters boards - *52-3234 attar HAM RADIO EQUIPMENT—SCR 522 2 motor transceiver, S4S. HW tl S3 M. transceiver with HP 13 power supply. Both for *100. Knight 10* 00 transmitter. 325. EM 3-4444, STORM WINDOWS AND SCREENS', tun size, fees, price, FE 1-5170. TRACTORS ~ Bolens 0-10-12 h.p. Sbnillcfty — 4-7-1612 h.p. LAWNMOWERS Comet — Goodall end others. USED MOWERS 7 h.p. W* Devert Mower with S SALE (fir ALL McCulloch Sews m Up. ROCHESTER H0U6HTEN POWER CENTER «w. UNIVERSITY TUB ENCLWUREL, GLASS ONLY *25. G. A. 'Thompson. 7005 Mto w u*.fipiys2p°'>xs’' W..B7JE. For Sole Miscellaneous 67 TALBOTT LUMBER tf!kM 1823 Oakland________flriJi - J niflfti|S™ltriTT' ’ *cS8flWy Lendtceplng, FE 4- USED CARS ■ 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5VA7 “But that’s not the stick I told you to fetch!” YOUR HOME IS ANYWHERE WHEN YOU OWN AN APACHE Picture yourself out camping Motorcycles 95 1955 HONDA SUPER HAWK, CUS-tomlzed, many - " 5p.m. 5M-W34. Is built In every Apache, things as: crank up topi. .... scram deers, 1 burner stovea, and sinks. Coma in md aaa these beauties af Evan's Equipment. Opm ‘til S p.m., Mon.-Fri. Sat. 5-5 p.m. 17 DMe 525-171 1954 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER -new, 4SW47S altar 3 p.m. k HONDA SCRAMSLHR, MIN Call OR 34574 MoMto Has 1-A 50'XIO' 1 BEDROOMS . . . *3,195 MANY GRAUTIES TO CHOOSE FROM RICHARDSQNJWINPSOR HOMETTE-LIBERTY-HAMPTON COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 3-1457 4H-1110 10x50 1963 CHAMPION: 54101 attar 3:30 p.m.____ 12x55 RICHARDSON-EXCELLENT condition. 4x0 utility shod Included. *04001. Boots — Accouortos COMET SAILBOAT, 1ST", CEOAI hull, No. 307. Built 1*37. Vary goo condition. Dacron sails. Ready i I960 HONDA CL 140, Si INS NORlijiN ATLAS, IlKd. 4 ■ 4906 Almond Lana, Clarkston. BRIDGESTONE Close-Outs __________sim 51X10' 1964 HOMETTE, GOOD CON- SHtaiL BSPS. —- A GOOD BUY 54' ABC 1 bedroom with... ... dows. Fully carpeted. Enclosad 40* cabana on .larga comar lot In 4 afar Park. Total value SI 3400 sale prlca $5900 terms avallabto. Shown IMS TRAVELMASTER IS*, FULLY self-contained tor sala or trade tor good pickup truck, 613-C— 1965 PICKUP CAMPER ....__________ uaad 4 walks. S1JOO. Also 1964 Mw t—1 —'—' —------------------ 3044009_______ I960 avalairB ‘ to* All. MUW. aircraft construction, tody sett-contained. Dealer's personal trallar -Only $4495. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dlkl» Hwy.' - <354400 BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 Dlxla Hwy. (U.S. 10) Drayton Plains, Mich. OR 3-1302 ... 10‘ TRAVEL TRAILER, EX-tras, SU95. 474-11B. 1967 FROLIC TRUCK CAMPERS -U5ed Gulbransm Organ — 25 padal — reduced to ... .01795 GALLAGHER'S- 1710 S. TELEGRAPH Oppn Evws * ..... EVERY FRIDAY ..... 7:30 P.i EVERY SATURDAY ... 7:3BWj EVERY SUNDAY ...:. ltM P.I Sperling Goods — All Typei Door Ifrlies Every Auction SMALL PLAYIR PIANO, 2 YEARS I___AUCTION 5089 Dlxla Hw». OR 3-1717 STAN PERI USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Organs from ....... .$388 Pianos from..........$ H GRINNELL'S (Downtown Store) 27 S. Saginaw St, WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC Plants-Trees-Slirubs B1-A EIG BOY TOMATOES. 25c PER pat or 5 tor SI. Pickle and melon plants, 10c a pot, assorted bidding plants. VERNDT'S GREENHOUSE — Vi block west of Pontiac The-atra on William Dr. LANDSCAPE EVERGREENS < shade treat, white spruce, 4' • I $2.50. Dig your own. McNeils Nursery, Maybee Rd. at Dixie Hwy. Hwy„ 4154534. Cloy! Sunday. LARGE SCOTCH PINE SEEDLINGS, S3 per hundred) patted Blue Spruce, 11. 175 N. Hospital Rd. LArVe' sELECTIOH. 1400 FLATS ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS Salas-Sarvlco Pulanockl OR 3-5594 2 12' HOUSEMAN REFRIGERATED dairy cases, 2 clwck-eut counters, 100* island S Aar of grocery shalv-Ing else paper baler. MA 6-190*. Sporting Goods GOLF CLUBS MCGREGOR Tourney DX, 10 Irons, 4 wo and cart, 0175, FE 5-3176. •ET OF GOlF CLUBi, 4 w666 irons, naw bag r' ““ --- *175, PBS-WK Vent, screened porch, cots. Stove etc. $75, 4734m Sand—Gravel—Dirt l-A SHREDDED TOPSOIL. BLACK dirt, send end gravet. PE FtflS. wry Auction rma, Ratall 7-day AIRSTREAAL I960, 24', TWIN BEDS, petunias, marigold flats S2.M a flat. Aim the fineti geraniums 59c gach. FARM BOY MARKET 467 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. Across from Pontiac Mall _ptn 9 s.m. to 9 p.m. dally. Sun. PETUNIAS, 1179 FLAT) GERAN-lums 40 cents ta. or S7 doz. Vernal's Greenhouse, 2441 Williams Dr., Vk block off Dixie at Pontiac Driva-ln Thaitra a— at claiaBut prices, jui ..uelvad la factory axporlmant and employe*) trailers. All new 1947 models on display heated showrooms. Opm dally 1 7 p.m. Sundays to a.m. to S_p.r Apache Factory Hematown Dai er. BILL COLLER, V4 mile aa of Lapaiir cityll TRAVEL ........ Since 19a. Guaranteed See them and dM a ttm at Warner Trallar an W. Huron (plan to loin Wally Syamfr axdting ca BRADLEY CAMPER nitty built, aluminum covan BOOTH CAMPER ALUM. COVERS, CAMPERSr PARTS, ACCESSORIES FOR ANY PICWif"_ . 7330 HIGHLAND RD. - PONTIAC DETROITER-KR0FF N«w md UMd Tracts 101 New and Used Can NS CHEVY to TON WRECKER. M4W. FG MMS. 1M4 CHEVROLET M TON TAUtk Custom camper pickup, V4, i samd tmia.111—. EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa d FOR THAT EXTRA sharp Car "'Check the met, n get the beat" at Averill Gale McAnnally's AUTO SALES ColltoHM, Texas i tap d I Shop mi I herein Ii, picnic privileges. 682-5711. tlacs, Olde and L .. . . state market. Tap dottar i MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava. Fe 5-1900___________ FE 44825 $440*0 Opart, nc $440-90 Trail, no 1440*0 ML, now $420-175 Twin, n PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains OR 44411 At Lem Lake OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK DAWSON'S SPECIALS — ENJOY THE MEMORIAL DAY .WEEKEND IN YOUR NEW 1M7 IS' Staury fiberglass runabout 71" jbaam, S yr. warranty, 1M7 40 hp. Evlnrude, controls, battery and b& *jBr $1295. USECf 14' Saa King flbarglas runabout $295. MANY GOOD BUYS ON NEW AND USED MDSE. Glaaspar and Staury flbarglas boats — Mirro Craft alum, boats — Ski _ r- Grummsn canoes — and steel pontoi motors — rank MSS to W. Hlgmanq. Kigm cstts.’X.V SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Fha 419-2179. opm 7 days * a m. COMPETITION CYCLES Cooley Lake Rd. 303*311 BULTACO METISSE, EXCELLENT, CLOSE-OUT ON CYCLES, Of left at law, law prices. Laa Salas and Service, til ML damans. FE HARLEV CHOPPER, Nick 1550 0MIIS»*411 HONDA 140, 1965, 24M Ml« tAP LOOK! Thl$ one won't last. Fresh from the snow. 1 57'xlf Deluxe Elcai WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES HONDA IN LAPEER FULL SELECTION OF BIKES, iris, accessories, small town dml-with friendly personnel. 6444071. SERVICE. BSA HORNET. 751 - 0900. 603:5677. McDonald Mobile Homes See our complete line of all nail* wldas, Travalo-Schu It-V Inda la-Sprlngbrook. S4695 up. Models display af fha new Cranberry Li_ Mobile Home Village. Country club living at Hi best. MM Highland Rd. (MSS), 2 ml. W. at williams Lake Rd. 363-5296. Hours MARLEtTES SS’43' long, IT to 10* wide. Early American, Traditions! or Modem Space available In 4 Sta ____ ■ Txtra erhaga. Also sm the famous taht weight Winnebago Trallar. OXFORD TRAILER SALES Town & Country Mbbila Homes OFFERS Spring Clearance Specials All 1967 Modtls 12 x 60 Front-rear bedroom, to bath ..............S5T 12 X 80 Early Amarlcan 2-bedroom ............S52 12 x 60 Executive itraloht 9-hadroom ........ ...162 60 Exec-expando condition, S400. a 4-0823. , ROYAL ENFIELD Faatast 7S0CC available BULTACO i960 State Champion Experts Service — all makai Jackat-Helmets-Accassorias LIT Indian Mini Bikes COMPETITION CYCLES 71M Cooley Lk. Rd. 341*311 SALE Ok SWaF 19, automatic Wtth _poW "SUM jf MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 44735. CHEVY 1943 to TON PANEL good condition. <444123. a Cadillacs, P STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES New at our naw location Wt pay mart tor sharp, l*t* mod- "TOP DOLLAR PAID” GLENN'S GMC TRUCKS and Campers Keego Sales and Service 632-7300 SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 341SS 1965 Buick SKYLARK, HARDTOP, POWER BRAKES AND STEERING. AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER -WHITEWALL TIRES. $1595 Downey Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 toll p LACFLSitWpOP. »■ OR 4- CADILLAC 4 DOOR. FULL war. 621-1444. ..... cadiLla2393. SELLING OUT ______ ________Ript registered quarter harsas. aqha champion cutting and reigning geldings, . mams with cotts and yaarttote RttRsiMM — — PDA stallion, _pricad f gerdlne and Penttoc I Hotfman. EMCWBL SHETLAND PONY-CART, HARNESS saddle, ate. 3*>*t51. HETLAND MARE. WITH 3 WEE ok) colt. Site MA 4-2349, afte?3. PIONEER CAMPER SALES PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS The* largest display of naw ca over pickup Iruck campers In tt area. Bargain prices on both M~ and usad. Exampla — Naw 1*42, r modals S795. Used 194S A—*“ THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM paint lob. Its. Fra* pickup and deltvary service, satisfaction guar- USHMAN MOTOR SCOOTER. Good condition. FE 5-1777. ” MINI-BIKES ‘ ' Competition Cyclas BS. trallar, 1250. $345 Bathurst. Oft Autntrn, Ponttac.1 ____ H^ idAT," MOTOR AND TRAlLE* ' FE'SdW*--------- - On Display SLICKCRAFTS Flbarglas l.-O. and Outboards OWEN'S CRUSIERS Sensational 30 sadan CHRIS-CRAFT Cruisers and spaad boats DEAL NOW LAKE AND SEA MARINE aodward at South Blvd. FE 4*537 POwEr CAT TIIglESDOs ___pi$415, 674-0235. STARCRAFT FIBERGLAS BOAT- I HORSEPOWER JOHNSON Excel tent condition, $110. 13M106. lr' AUjffkUM BOAT,. FURY CA- DID YOU KNOW? The New Low Price 1967 GMC Pickup $1789.00 Houghten Olds n N. Mato ol i*74i ______ ROCHESTER 18 RUBBISH TRUCKS 775-140$ between^34 p m., Wa r 1*49 CHEVY PICKUP, TOP RUN- 1959 CHEVY IL CAMINO PICKUP. PE 2-7172. 161 D0D06 to TON, CLEAN S4C Sava Aula.. PE 5-3278.___ 1962 PORD RANCHERO OR 1* Ford to-ton lara* box, EM 34011, >64 JEEF V4, HYDRO-TU&N FLOW TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1943 (MAC VMM pickup, with I cyi. tteetslda box ready to go at only GEM. Or US ’* •* “,‘-CLARKSTON, TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLOS , , . 1945 OMC 14-ton camper Special camper, V4, automatic, a you buy" ♦00 Oifclat Now Is the Tima, to Save On a Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 44547 MUST MAKE ROOM Iwvy't, 1*17, t '60's, 127 i ontltcs, 1 • Plenty of Others, t.. ECONOMY CARS cth Phni Hwy, CORVETTE, 1»S», JEWEL CONOI-"on, radio, auto., custom stats, imevabte hardtop, 682-4771. chEvV IMpala 1-door 1*60 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, *300. AAA 3-2842 attar 4 p.m. 1*40 CHRVV 2-OOOR, 1 OWNER. Low mltoage, original body, no rust Md Immaculate tnsMe and out, $395. SEAT COVER KING. 766 Oakland. Fa >«>. .„ IMPALA 4-OOOR, I AUTO- Bffi ISToiTaikffiat GRIMALDI CAR CO-_____ NEW 1947 AUSTIN HEALY, $1,899 ORIMALDI CAR CO. 980 Oakland NOTICE SPECIAL CONSIDERATION AND DISCOUNTS gan. Bafora you buy, give try I ORIMALDI CAR CO, 900 Oakland U.S. 10 FE 3*421 QREENBRIAft 9-)M. 4 Cylinder, Auto- 141 CORVAIR patsangar Wagon. 4 QiHife matic, Radio, and arlcad to aall. ROSE RAMBLER, S14S Commerce Rd. EM 3-41IS. ___________ 1941 CHEVY IMPALA CdNVERT- 1962 CHEVY 4-DOOR HARDTOP — •l* steering, auto., VI, raal a, 682-7MS Bafora 2:30 p.m. :H*VY, 4.660K, WHITE WAG-V4, all power, rebuilt motor, 1962 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, AA6I6, heater, axcallant condition, S39S. as SI down wllli King fl- vw CENTER 85 To Choose Srom —All Models-—All Colors— ' —All Reconditioned— Autobahn __________ ... Oaalar H mile North ot Mlracte Mila 1745 8. Telegraph " “ New and Used Cars 106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Con Finance You— ill MY 3-4141. CHEVfcdCP - 4 dYLINblR , 4 doer, S295, 44 Wtmpoto », Rochester, <51-4354. 1942 CHIVY II STATION WAOON WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HIATER AND whitewall tTres, FULL PRICE MM, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume watkly payments of $4-62. CALL CREOIT MOR. Mr. Plik* at HAROLD TURNER PORD, Ml 4-7100. ^ 1962 Chevrolet $395 Downey Olds itiS CHEW 44-TON PICKUP, BIO 4, 4-speed heavy duty sprlngi.16" tiros m back, extra wheals. Good sat up tor campar, 4474 Fourth St., Drayton Plain*, Woodltoll , 35 h.p. Evlnrude 1963 FORD to-TON PICK-UP, 1944 “1 trucks LUCKY AUTO SPECIAL Carver beat wtth toP-skl te cover and gagas. 75 h.p. Job son Motor with ti gal. tM Heavy dirty trailer with spa wheel and tiro. Only 04*5. CRUISE-OUT, INC- 83 E. Walton Opan, M Ft Ml SPECIALS We* pm Pontoons tew a* .J Little-Do Trallar*, -tram Iff. Boat numbers, vinyl, .. . 10e t PINTER'S cettont condition, 1600 ml. Best fishing a m IncTudt 1959 TRI-PACER, CECONITE Cover, 160 h.p., trash annual, VHT-3, *4,900, EM 34412. EM 364te FAA APPROVED SCHOOL. LET our kwtpuctort teach you to tty. ADI Inc* Pontiac Airport. OR 1*44 GLASTRON, MERCURY 930, traitor, EM 3-4*60. A-i 19*4 9* Horsepower evin-HfSw bate convert-will damenstrato. 11425. wm Wanted Core • Trucks 1D1 Need a Car? Do you have $49 and are yt working? i'll put you In the o.. Weak Credit? If you hove weak credit or n credit wa cm Mil you a '68-'4 car wttliaut a co-signer. Only, n qulrements you must be workln and hava S4$ down payment. Ban ’ SPARTAN DODGE 853 Oakland FE 34328 1 ' lW RUICk, S49 . Rellabta Motors.>E 1*742 lilS WMTI BUICK LsiSABRE Convertible, rail nice, 1959 T-BIrd, aood transportation car, FE 5-8960. BUtCK coMvertible. g98o, IVY 8, BEL 1963 CHEVY 'BEL-AIR, 6 CYL., stindard shift, radio, heater, whitewalls, tlntad glass, 1630. FI TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1914 CHEVY 14-ton. pickup, v-g, stick, tieatslde, on* (_ naw truck trade. *1795. On US 18 MIS Clarkston, MA 5-3071. TRUCKS ARE OUR Business truck, do-ft-yoursatt campar. GMC special PRICES ' Factory Branch MEUCUrWH* !o«klon6otCoa FE 5-M85i vary goad candRlM. Ml 7-7244. 1962 Buick Couptr pood citon transportutlon, spot deliver, no money down, full V $387 SPARTAN ^ DODGE 8SS Oakland Ava. FE 8-4328____ \ 1943 BUICK SPECIAL CLUB COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL ulfiz FULL price I4KTaB SO L U TILY NO MONEY DOWN, assume » money down. AS-IS SPECIAL I Only — $545 SPARTAN DODGE 135 Oakland Ava. Ft tras 1943 ASONZa, . JhMW Rtb AN O ltoTCTItyiflLfet TaWi AUfS matic with power, tmi at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. mi 4-273S. —------------imfAUTTOFer SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 835 S. ROCHESTER MAD .Mira0 ; ■ 1*44 CORVAIR CLUB COUPE WITH AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, JGKJMQ - ANO_ HlTifTE Ri^N O WHITEWALL Tlim,.JQMl PRICE S69S, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume Vi. autow.l, —. ___ good condition. 631-0098: LET, Birmingham, Ml drat ■ 1964 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, GOOD condition, SMte FE 34746. C-40 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY«Q, M7 -My mi fcii Cwi ^ _ It 1964 Chevelle MALIBU SUPER SPORT COM VIRTItLE. RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES. $1395 Downey Olds Ustd Can 3400 Hit Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 Now mi Meed Cm IP W44 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE# AU- 1NS IMPALA iMftH# I MTO-mane with powar tiaes at mike SAVOIE CHEVROLET, ■Ip'— » Sapeed t ! CHEVROL INS BELAIRE 4-DOOR AUTOMATI 4139J at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRI LET, Birmingham. Ml 4VSS. W8' iMrotA irioo^ I,7V1;'J MI CHfevhOLET IMFALA Convertible, 12,000 ml. I owner. SIMA Very clean. FE 4-2041 aftari. ind ».tt par menlh. ThS attar Ml 5-2747. “It only takas a mlnuts" to •M.^BETTIr ORAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford BEATTIE FORD TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS NS CREVY Impsla 4-doer hardtop, with VS, aaNma**- ------ altering, brakaa, radio, _ _ in mint cendfflenl 01401 On US It FORO INS Im ShbOR HARD-tap, SB V«, powar ataarlng, radio, haatar. vinyl lap, By ownar, 11,700, 1965 Ford Galaxla SN XL S-Doer Hardtop. 1963 Ford Galaxla SM 4-door aadan, with SM V-8, powar ataarlng, 4-apaad, burgundy with Mack buckata. Only- V-l. automatic powar atovlng, brakaa. Only- $1795 $1095 1965 Chevy 1964 Ford Impala 2-Doer Hardtop. V-S, automatic, powar ataarlng and brakaa. Only— Falcon Convertible with 4-cyl. angina, automatic, radio, heal-er. Now Only - $1895 $1195 '65 Plymouth 1965 Mustang SaMIlto row HardtoP'Wlth 2-Door ^Hjrifl^jrtth^V^atlck, $1595 $1595 1965 Ford 1964 Chevy Falcon Wagon with 4-cyl!nder, >a!itolVid'ltoM^HyCt»^rtr5a5R.*On» jlrad tor down ^payment. >45 OLOS DELTA IK - PP with extras. Coat 4335a sell tor BITES. FE 44100. 1966 Toronado COUPES, AIR - CONDITIONED, FULL POWER, LOW MILES. FULL FACTORY 2-YEAR WARRANTY. $3695 BANK RATES Downey Olds 1962 PONTIAC WAGON Cofallno with power ttoorln brakes, automatic, Only— $695 HAUPT PONTIAC On MIS at 1-75 Intarchanga larfcaton___ MAS-53 1962 Pontiac STARCHIEF, POWER BRAKES, POWER STEERING, AUTOMATIC -RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. $795 Downey Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Lk. Rd. FE 4-5967 EVEN IF YOU HAVE NO CREDIT, Standard Auto, DON'S USED CARS Small Ad—Big Lot SO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM i buy or wilt adlust your pa M expensive LADIES Ws can finance you, regardless « occupation or lack of cradlt. Onh S4S required tor down paymani Call Mr, Caah FE 44524, Spartan. 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury tunltop, radio, haatar, automatic with power, factory air Honing, 27,000 actual milts wit ranty. $1295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth I. Woodward______Ml 74214 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE, RED I. FE 54272. b SIS 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury III hastor, t———— ..... MNP — luggage rack, maroon with matching Intarlor. $1,895 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth NO s. Woodward Ml 7-S2I4 1944 VALIANT 1M, AUtOMATIC, whltowalli. Sad to, 41250. 451-1029. WALL flRlSI FULL FRlA ONS, ABSOLUTELY N’ MONEY DOWN. Aatytr mm™ 4-7500. 1943 eONNEVILLi CONVEfTOOL ^•’■'SA^E^E^E?! „MIKE SAVOIE Wagon Center 1944 IMPALA wagon, 0 automatic, power a Ing, powar brakaa 1942 PONTIAC wagon, 4 passenger, I auto 1N4 FALCON Mm 0*61Med Cot W iW^fAUNA c6WvifcTl wrM toy POHTI^S CATALINA 4-tXjOR lorlor, MOM iS 1964 Pontiac Bonneville Convertible Ott "A iETTER ORAL" it John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland ir ataarM, brekta. Ready to SOI While Wlto a Mack topi Saval HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. Mm EEd Ueed Core J IB Ibla. Kyllndar, automatic, I Ullage rambler 444 », Woodward rsr&r. ONE AT PETERSON fc SON RAMBLER In L0PS0- i— of parte, aarvlca. INi RAMiLER FULL FRICE. 449 RalltMa Motort. FE S4>42 1942 RAMSLER AMERICAN cbfi-var tibia, joed rubber, goof nlng condlHon. 3434S73. M3 RAMBLER ' M» Slklts, > door whlto, oHck, toll price, 4595. MARVEL MOTORS, 251 Oakland Ava. FE B4S7?. 1965 RAMBLER Classic convertible 71% radio, haator, automatic wlm power. $1495 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 148 S. Woodward______Ml 7-1214 Weak Credit? lurJ'a.’a.gri.jj.a car whhout a co-tlgnor Only ra- ratal, no torn downs. Call Mr. C*f'. SPARTAN OOOGB ‘ 1964 Pontiac BONNEVILLE, POWER BRAKES, POWER STEERING, AUTOMATK - RADIO, HEATER, WHITE-! WALLTIRSS. $1495 Downey Olds Used Cars 3400 Eliz. Lie Rd. FE 4-5967 ! Chevrolet, BlmUngham. 1945 OTO CONVERTIBLE, EXTRAS (fit tdMfftST WAGON, STAND. ard, 4, A-l, OR Nki. >1,101 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1945 BONNEVILLE 2-door hordtop. roof. 42155. On US 10 at Clarkaton, MA 5-5071. INI GRAND PRT5C LOADED, -----<04014, DOOR HARDTOP. ___________.» 4-2401. 1945 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 29,- It's Finally "Convertible Time" Save On these Specials Todayl 1964 CHEVY Wools Convor tibia. V-l, auto- ---------------rtS .$1395 1963 VW Karmann - Ghla Radio, haator, apaad, bi dark brown $1095 1964 BUICK Wildcat Cenvartlbla with automatic, power ataarlng, powar $1295 $1995 $1995 $2195 1966 BONNEVILLE ...j whlto top, whlto Intorlor, factory warranty. $2795 1966 BONNEVILLE Convertible. Powar ataarlng and brakaa, Hydramatlc, powar windows, radio, haator, whlttwallo. tinted glass. Balga with a Mack top. Mack intorlor. THIS IS A COMPANY DEMOI Factory warranty. $2995 LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track FE 4-1006 or FE 3-7454 INS PONTIAC tATALINA SPORT Si VW&ir ily 414M full price OSS dow 3.41 par month. Thli offer eni bast offer. 474081?. IMS TEMPEST 3-DOOR HARDTOP, s automatic, 81SM at mike SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng-ham. Ml 4-2735. 1044 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE. “ r steering, brakes, tilt col-42,400. 473-3545. new NiNANck flan for those; who havo credit problams. Can gat reestablished again, and tall you a car wlm no monoy down. LUCKY AUTO 1?40 W. wide Track 1966 MUSTANG ad with racing angina, oversized "•dvtofl-595 ■ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth PONTIAC A-1 THROUGHOUT. ...Jomatlc, power mM|||BMto GRIMALDI CAR CO. I 7-3214 wim matching Interior, looks III - never bean out of showroom. > driven, ona in a million, SON h price 444 down, and 442411 P month. , . "It only tokot a mlnuto to Get "A BETTER DEAL" I John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oaklund Ave. FBr 5-41 1M3 FORD CUSTOM 300 4 DOOR, ataarlng. brakaa, beautiful amber glow metallic finish wlm b‘—k nylon .top, 10,000 actual ndlea under new-car warranty 021N pries, ON down and 444.96 month. ... , "It only takes a mlnuto" to Gat "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava, BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? 1946 MUSTANG, TAKE OVER P Robin agga L. 4444 full price, i "It only tr“ , tala priced at „„ HI I mlnuto" to ^^HP'A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava, FE 5-4101 1043 |kALC6N CONVERTIBLE 1N7 T-BIRD M300R LANDAU, AIR conditioning, vinyl ruo*> ■■- ataarlng, bmhgmmMlBMtoJ 363-4849. 944 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR, VS, automatic, radio, haatar, steering, brakes, tready tor the 1965 GMC SUBURBAN, STANDARD tranamlsslon, low mileage, — fact condition. 179 Onelde Rd. 436.76 ^..n road, sale priced at 1 prfca, S77 down and only par month. , . "It only takaa a mlnuto" to Oat "A BETTER DEAL" all John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ava., PR S- 1965 ELECTRA 225 Hardtop \ $2495 \ ,1964 CHEVY 4-door, Bol-Air > $1595 Kinney Leasing and Daily ' Rental Available Ask for Hank Schloofor or Vern Sheffield (Sales Mgr.) 196-210 Orchard Lake Ave. £ FE 2-9165 1964 MERCURY Convertible with power eqt automatic tranamlsslon, ■ and haatar and whitawall tires. Full price 51195, only S down and weakly payments > 510.92. gg HAROLD TURNER ' FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____Ml 6-7500 NoMystery About Our Discount IT'S IN THE PRICE NO MONEY DOWN. tAKE OVER payments r- ““ cury Mr. . 1962 Falcon n wagon. 4 cyl. a all 60M010, attpr 4. >6 MERCURY 1966 ft r station wagon v tic tranimlsalon, i 1 $49 down and HAROLD TURNER '-FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. ■ BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 01345 1944-OPEL WAGON 1*5 Mike Savoie Chevrolet 100 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml 4-2735_________________ 1963 Pontiac Bonneville cenvartlbla, bucket seats, ASKING - $1187 SPARTAN DODGE 1963 PONTIAC HARDTOP Catalina 4 door, with power steering, brakOa, automatic, radio $1195 HAUPT PONTIAC On MIS at -Clarkaton 1943 BONNWUS, GOOD CONDI- 1964 TEMPEST 2-DOOR, STICK tuR price, 5895. MARVEL. MOTORS, 251 Oakland Ava. FE *4079. PONTIAC-RAMBLER Open Daily 'Til 9 P.M. On M24 In Orion, MY 3-6266 1966 PONTIAC BONN1VILLR, 2-DOOR HARDTOP $2595 5150 DOWN, FACTORY WARRAN TY, BANK RATES. Downey Olds 1946 PONTIAC 2 PLUS 2, 4-SP8I6. Double power. PE 5-4417 after ' 1966 LEMANS 2-DOOR HARDTOP 326, auto, tranamlailon, 52,100. 33S- 966 YeMFEST 4-DOOR CUSTOM, 1967 P0NTIAC-DEM0 Moor hardtop, power atoarl brakaa, radio, haator. Only— $2795 $3395 HAUPT PONTIAC n MIS at 1-79 Intarchanga Iten MA 5-5500 tot 1967 Plymouths Chryslers Demo Available 1963 T-BIRD Landau Hardtop, rid with white top, v-S, automatic, power steering, brakes, air condition-ing. $1345 r, with 4 'ey!, lo. Naw Only— $1395 1964 CHEVROLET Pickup, 4 cylinder, standard transmission, radio, long box. $1095 ninap____ Warranty left. Chroma Rack «*•*- $13,95 1964 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury Convertible, v-a. 1964 VALIANT $1195 -------------- *eyl. automatic, powar ataarlng, radio, ready tor spring. Only-$1145. 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury. H wagon, ' power ataarlng. $1495 . Only- $1495 $1995 1964 PONTIAC Catalina Cenvartlbla. V-l, automatic, power ataarlng and power brakes. Whlto with a Mack lop. ■ $1345 1963 FORD • Galaxla 4-Deer Sedan. V-«, automatic, power ataarlng and power brakaa. Only— $745 WE HAVE SOME TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS— Starting at Only— $98.50 1965 MUSTANG $1445 OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 4599.. .1944 Corvalr Monza coupe 4599 .1963 Ford Galaxla 4190.. .1942 Ford station wagon — .1941 Cadillac Coupe DaVHIe O CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rtf. at Opdyka FE 4-9237 ■ FE 0-9331 1040 PONTIAC, GOOD CONDITION, sacrifice. 445-1363, Milford. 142 P O fi^T I A C GitANb FRtX sports coupe, axe. eondtflon, 1 own-ar, all powar, 0900, FE 4-7124. 1942 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON- LUCKY AUTO Chrysler-Plymouth - Jeep First-Annual Memorial Day Sale 1967 DODGE Pickup, V-8, 6,000 actual miles ..$1895 1964 CHEVY Bel-Air Station Wagon, full power, V-8, automatic. Very nice turquoise...$1395 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury II Station Wagon, V-8, automatic, power steering. New car warranty. Only ...... ,i. .*..............$1495 1965 FORD Pickup, Fleetside, with V-8. Real Sharpl Only ...................... .$1395 1964 JEEP Pickup with Townside box, a real work horse........................... .$1295 1963 CHEW Impoia 4-door hardtop, V-8, automatic, power steering, factory air conditioning. Ideal second cor ....... ..........$1095 1961 PONTIAC Bonneville A^k&r hardtop, with full power. Must see to appreciate. Including factory air conditioning ...........$ 695 1956 FORD Pickup, 52,000 miles, • real good runner. Only ......... .................,.,.$ 295 1965 CORVAIR Monza 2-door hardtop, automatic, radio, heater. Now Only ...... —. .$1095 1964 CHRYSLER Newport 4-door sedan, radio, heater, full power, new car warranty. Showroom condition. Only .............11295 4961 CHRYSLER 4-door sedan, full power. Now Only .............$ 195 1960 CHEW 2-door sedan, transportation special. Mechanically A-1—..........., .$ 195 1963 CORVAIR Panel Truck. A real steal at Only ...... v.. if. 1.................4 295 1964 VALIANT, automatic, 225 6«yL. Radio, heater. New car warranty. Only_________$ 895 1959 CHEW Bp 1-Air 4-door. Automatic, V-8. Only ..................................$150 1964 RAMBLER 2-door hardtop, automatic, radio, heater. One owner. 31,000 actual miles, showroom clean. ..... .$1095 ON DIXIE HWYr- NEAR M15 CLARKSTON MA 5-2635 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 C-ll —Television Programs^- tomldmt by Station, liltod in this column at* .ubjoct to chango without notico TONIGHT 1:00 (2) (4) Newt, Weather, Sports/(C) (7) Movie: “The -Young Racers” (1963) Mark Damon, Luana Anders. • (50) Superpian (C) (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Science It Fun 6:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) Newi — Huntley, Brinkley (Q) (9) Twilight Zone (50) FUntstones (C) (56) What’a New 7:00 (2) Truth ra* Consequences (C) (4) Genie Pierrot — “Michigan Wildlife” (C) (9) Movie: “Rocky Mountain” (I960) Errol Flynn, Patrice Wymore. (50) McHale’s Navy (56) Creative Person 7:30 (2) Lucille BaU - Lucy tries.to save a small town from a freeway in this conclusion of a two-part-er. (C) fit) (4) Monkees — Davy grandfather visits. (C) (R) (7) Iron Hone, — Ben fights for the right-of-way through a nearly deserted mining town. (C) (R) , (50) Honeymooners (56) StandweOs 8:00 (2) Andy Griffith - Andy visits in old side-kick. (C) (R) (4) I Dream of Jeannie— Tony Is suspected of being a smuggler, when ! Jeannie conjures up mansion filled with art treasures. (C) (R) (50) Perry Mason (56) Great Books 8:30 (2) Family Affair — Bill gets a third foundling to care for; the twins’ 15-year-old sister. (€) (R) (4) Captain Nice — A Arabian sheik wants i make Candy Kane his 120th wife. (C) (R) (7) Rat Patrol - Moffitt goes to ■& German desert headquarters to get information from an ancient map. (C) (R) (56) N.E.T. Journal — One of England’s most distinguished prep schools, Eton, is examined. The report covers curriculum, ( atmosphere, traditions and a typical day’s activities. 9:00 (2) Coronet Btae (Debut) — An amnesiac searches . for his past in this first episode of 11 originally intended for the 1965-66 season. Chester Morris guest stars. (C) (4) Road West — An angry gambler wants revenge. (C) (R) (7) Felony Squad — An assailant with a compulsion for neatness sought. (C) (R) (9) Show of the Week “Sandy.” A waitress with no show business experience is booked, as a go-go dancer in this Canadian comedy with music from Broidway. (C) (50) Movie: ‘‘The Male Animal” (1M2) Henry Fonda, Olivia de Havil-1 land, Jack Carson. 9:30 (7) Peyton Place (C) (56) French Chef 10.-00 (2) Best of Mike Douglas (4) Rpn for Your Life — New York career girl poses as a woman wealth at a Mexican resort. (C) (R) (7) Big Volley — Bigotry and political extremism face Jarrod when to defends a Basque sheepherd-er. (C) (R) (9) Front Page Challenge — Peter Desbarats, editor of Parallel, joins the panel at Expo 67. (C) (56) Folk Guitar 10:30 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee — A centennial salute Nova Scotia. (C) (56) Cineposium 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News 11:30 (2) Movie: “Down to the Sea in Ships” (1949) Richard Widmark, Lionel Barrymore, Dean Stockwell. (4) Johnny Carson —Lois Maxwell, who plays Miss Moneypenny in James Bond movies, is scheduled. (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “Night Without Stars” (1953) David Farrar, Nadia Gray. 12:30 (50) Las Vegas (C) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) (4) News (C) tomorrow morning 4:15 (2) On the Farm Scene «:20 (2) News (C) TV Features N.E.T; JOURNAL, S:30 P m. (56) CORONET BLUE, 9 p m. (2) SHOW OF THE WEEK, 9 p.m. (9) 1:30 (2) Understanding Our World (4) Classroom r (7) Kingdom of the Sea (C) r 1:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today. Scheduled: British sports expert Brian Glanville and the comedy team of Bob and ' Ray. (C) (7) Morning Show 1:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round LOO (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 1:30 (7) Prize Theater—“Pericles on 31st Street” Theo-- dore Bikel, Arthur O’Connell. (9) Bonnie Pruden Show 8:45 (56) English VI 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) f (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Crane, Let’s Read 9:39 (7) Dateline: Hollywood (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (C) (7) Children’s Doctor (C) (56) Let’s Speak Spanish n 10:00 (4) Pat Boone (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Hawkeye 10:30 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 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 10:50 (56) We Speak Spanish I H “ (2) Love of Life (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking..! (9) Luncheon Date (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:05 (56) Let’s Read Spanish 11:25 (2) Jackie Crompton (C) 11:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (0 (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Take 30 11:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 11:55 (4) News (C) AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (ft) (9) Communicate (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (4) Doctor’s House Call 12:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (G) (9) Movie: “Stranger at My Door” (1956) MacDonald Carey, Patricia Medina. (50) Movie: “Indianapolis Speedway” (1939) Pat O’Brien, Ann Sheridan, John Payne 12:35 (56) Let’s Speak Spanish 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News (G) 1:09. (2) Password (C), (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game • 1:16 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (56) Arts and Crafts 1 1:30 (2) House party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girt (C) 1:56 (7) News (C) (56) American History 2:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (?) General Hospital 2:20 (56) Book Parade 2:25 (2) News (C) 2:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Sayl (C) (7) Dark Shadows (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:45 (56) Let’s Talk Spanish 2:55 (9) News 3:09 (2) Secret Storm (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Dating Game (C) - (9) Matches and Metes : '(C) S U (50) Topper (R) 3:25 (4) News (C) . 3:30, (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Virginia Graham (9) Swingin’ Time (SO) Captain Detroit (C) 4:09 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Bozo the Clown (C) , (7) Outer Limits (R) 5 (56) About Ceramics (Return) , 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas-Scheduled guests; Sportscaster Joe Garagtola and comedienne Joan Rivers (C) (9) Fun House (C) (56) Social Security jn Action :45 (56) British Calendar :55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (C) .00 (4) 'George Pierrot (C) (7) News (C) . (50) Alvin (C) (56) Cineposium 1:30 (7) News—Jennings (C) (9) Cheyenne (R) (50) little Rascals (56) What’s New 1:55 (4) Carol Duvall (C) .Answer te Previous tak 61 Dead end sips 14 Up-UHUt# .,9*55? 15 Robber 54 Complain lSBSaawetwHnMSUksiUts 17 Small horse 57*“* 19 Fearful (comb, form) MBouta of 34 Br»«cb 25 WUei 27BcdeiU(Ue 32 Fads! feature S4 Before , (comb, form) S8 “Deer- “ DOWN Ua*y£» lNoUybrealher 18S5r (pi.) 2 Narrow-minded lb Horticulturist 42 Doctrine Uaelins 22 Sail yard (Scot.) 45 Memorial stona 3 Female ahaap 23 Snare 48 Hale 4 Merits. , 28 Tranagreealoiui descendants 5 Power machine 28 Concerning 52 High card 6 Reaesrch room (Swords) (colL) 53-----Moines, Egypt Ousts 007, Cowboys CAIRO (AP) — James and American cowboys became s today of the Middle East crisis. They were barred from Egyptian movie screens because such types “glorify Americans and Britons as invincible heroes,” Minister of Culture Sarwat Okasha announced. The ministry said such films ‘show the white man as a master who subjugates animals and human beings in Africa and Asia and give a distorted picture of Africans and Asians— falsifying history and life,” the semiofficial paper A1 Akhbar reported. ■ American Westerns and thrillers about such agents as James Brand are very popular with Egyptians. Fish Death Case MARQUETTE (AP) - The State Water Resources Commission has recommended that legal steps be taken to collect $500 from the DuPont Chemical Co, for accidentally killing 5,000 fish last month. The company admitted accidentally Jumping chemical wastes into a northern pike spawning ground in White Lake, the commission said. ACTOR DIES — Character actor George E. Stone, 94, best known for his gangster roles, died Friday at1 the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital in a Los Angeles suburb. Friends said he died as the result of a stroke suffered 10 months ago. Bfaze Destroys North Carolina Horne‘, Kills 7 UNION MILLS, N.C. (AP) -Seven persons, a .woman and her six grandchildren, died today in a fire that destroyed their two-story frame house at Union Mills nine miles north of Rutherfordton. *; * * Dead are Roberta Bundlck, about 60; Jeff Baynard, 11; his brothers Mike, 9; David, 7; Johnny 4; and Jack 2; and their 1-year-old sister, Teresa. ★ ★ w The father, Bulo Baynard, was at work in a textile' mill when the fire broke out about a.m. The children’s mother died of cancer in January, according to Cy Nanney, a neighbor. _n r r r r 5" (T r r IT L \r nr iST nr E nr nr IT” r rr sr I ■ ■ i a a 26 26 ■ □ pr □ vr 30 H 3T | S“ 33 U sr sr R" IT T 1 «r vr cr ■ w in ■ nr vr 3 ir RT sr Ei 6r L. BT 5T L T! sr an -2 r Students Blow Off Steam jg | ; ■■ r| V T* . ■ ~ '■ in Friendly Free-hr-All ATLANTA, Ga.' (AP)- - Almost everyone got bombed as Emory University held its second annual aggression rally. The rally, a friendly free-for-all of mudbalU, overripe vegetables and eggs, is designed to let students blow off steam before final exams which start June 3'. * * * Helen Jenkins, director of Emory’s food services, and Dr. McLaren Johnson Jr., head of the student Infirmary, launched the wild melee Sunday.. With a long-drum roll from a Dixieland band, Mrs., Jenkins end Johnson, each armed with a bag of stale desserts from me university cafeteria and standing back to back, took three paces forward, turned and fired. SHE SCORED Johnson missed. Mrs. Jenkins didn’t.'f •' With me doctor dripping delicate red and white blend of strawberry shortcake, Emory President Sanford S. Atwood fired a starting gun and the real barrage started. * * ★ . • Conveniently, Atwood ducked. Most of the students were not so lucky. There were few misses as tomatoes, mudballs, sacks of flour and eggs filled the-air for 30 minutes. * OWN GOO The event is sponsored by the Phoenix, a student humor published on the Emory campus. In' addition to inviting students to bring their own assortment of goo, the magazine supplied 400 pounds of tomatoes. This week before exams “is a time of tension,” explained Phoenix editor Wayne Wood, “This is one way to relieve it.” Ex-Skipper Dies DETROIT (AP) — Services were held In Detroit today for Capt., James Mahon, 58, former skipper of me railroad ferry Manitowac and a retired Detroit river captain. Mahon, who died Saturday in a Detroit hospital, skippered me Manitowac between Detroit and Windsor for nearly 32 years after seven years as captain of Detroit river mailboats. Minot, N.D., with a population of about 30,000 has 300 acres of parks within its boundaries. —Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZ(1270) CKIW(800) WWJ(930) WCAB(1130) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHH-fM(94.7) Spirit of Chivalry Not Dead in Heart of 'Thinkers' Actor By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — “I’m gainst what is called ‘cool,’ ’’ Rod Steiger, me thinking man’s actor, said. ■’m sure to turn down any role that’s stupid, false or insipid — and James Bond-type villain who’s so ‘cool* mat he minks all women have to bej degraded.”' It was sort of shocking for a man to ] come out and say such chivalrous things about women in mis day and age. But Rod Steiger, the husband, you remem- j her, of Claire Bloom, thumped the table at 21 with his fist slightly as he added: ‘I’m not speaking for my wife but let’s just; say that she believes in good women and she’s; against ‘cool.’ ” WILSON “Cool” they see as a negativism, a putting down, a destruction. They ache for a good romantic realistic story. * > * “I say I starve beautifully,u Steiger remarked. “I have good food and a clean house and I own it, and compared to the other fellow I make a lot of money and 1’m.happy. ★ ★ ★ Actually he’s just returned from winning me Best Foreign Actor award In England for “The Pawnbroker,” he’s sold his Brooklyn Heights home, they’re moving to Park Av. Their daughter’s now 7, and they take her along when they zip around the world making films. “Actors started off as strolling players on jackasses,” Steiger said. ‘It’s still file same, except mat now we’re strolling players on jets.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Joan Crawford had to skip Martha Raye’s USO-Woman of me Year party at the Rainbow Rm.—somebody’d stepped on her busted foot. (Martha introduced Gfoi. Omar Bradley, saying “We were young together in World War II") . . . Red Skelton may be the second comic to do TV from Miami Beach; Hairry Singer of the new Statler-Hllton-Plaza is talking it over with CBS. Ray Bolger’ll return to me Waldorf at a hefty pay raise, doing one show nightly . . . Secret stuff: A very wealthy execu-five gave his very wealthy fiancee a 300G engagement ring— though he doesn’t have a divorce yet. . . Swank Cartier’s will be taken over for a day for filming of Julie Andrews’ movie “Star.” ★ ★ ★ j TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Bob Orben suggests d trade agreement with Russia—we send mem cars and they send us parking spaces. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Monty Hurst described a town he lived in: “It was so dull that when the traffic light burned out, nobody noticed it for a week.” REMEMBERED QUOTE: “We are never too old or too young to mind our own business.”—Thomas A. Edison. EARL’S PEARLS: Airline, fares can be paid to installments, and Arnold Glasow calls mis “debt-propulsion.” Monique Van Vooren, on the “One-in a Million” TV’er, wanted to discus? her eyes, but was running out of time. Selma Diamond suggested, “Why don’t you just talk about one eye?” . .. That’s earl, brother. (T*e Hall Syndicate, Inc.) lltS-WJR. News, Sports WWJ, Newt, Sport! WXYZ, Newscope CKLW, NOW!, Music WJBK, Music, Sports - WCAR, News. Joe Becarello WPON. News, Sports WHFI, Undo Joy Show 4tM-WJR, Bus. Barometer lilt—WXYZ. Joey Reynolds, 1:00—WHFI, British Jou CKLW. MUSIC Nows, Carlson tcope ►—WJR, Nl WPON, Arliona Weston WWJ, Nows, Sports, Music TUBSOAY MORNING 0:00—WJR, MUSIC Noll WWJ, Nows, Borders CKi W, Notes. Bud Davits WPON, Nows, Music .. WCAR, MM, Doltoll Jv WJBK, Nows, Books, Idl WJtYX, ij 7:00—WHFI, AlnMMC WJR, NfWO, Music HtH WPON, Nows, Bob Lawrence 7:10—WJBK, Von Patrick liOO-WJR, News, Sunnyslds ItlO-WJR, Music Hall ttW-WJR, Naws, Harris Shaw WCAR, Nows, Sanders whfi, (incli Jay CKLW, Joa Van WWJ, Naws, Neighbor ItiOO-WJR, Naws, Good Music WXYZ, Breakfast Club WJBlC Naws, Music WPON, Naws, Music ItiOO-WJR, Newt, Arthur TUBSOAY AFTERNOON WPON, Naws, Music CKLW, Nsws. Dave Shster WCAR, Naws, Dava Lock- BILLS PILING UP? Lat ub help you ... Wa can gat volt a fraoh start by eon-|—t debts into ana — ______ te the amount owsd sr number of STBdltoro. K loan. Oall or slap in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. Tolaphsiie I3M31S 814 Pontiao Slate Bank Bldg. Open Sate • to 12 YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct 1 According, to the latest federal government figures, the cost .of living has been rising again. When prices rise), the) value of me dollar in* creases. True or False? 2 President Johnson named Alexander Trowbridge * .to become me npw Secretary of in bis Cabinet. , a-State b-Labor c-Commerce 3 The total number of U.S. servicemen killed in Viet Nam since the war began pasted the mark during May. a-1000 . b-10,000 c-50,000 4 T roubles in the Middle East worry other nations because of mat area's important location, and because it supplies a great deal of the world's a-petroleum b-lronore c-wheat 5 Israel and its Arab neighbors have been quarrel- ing ever since Israel became an Independent nation in ... ?. . v . a-1917 b-1937 c-1948 The Pontiac Press Monday, May 29, 1967 []3£ TtwifrtOfUlM FART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1.. ...truce a-soldiers moving through an area to 2.. ...aggression check it b-an .answering attack 3.. ...casualty c-serviceman killed, wounded, or captured 4.. ...patrol d-a stop in fighting e-attack without just 5.. ...reprisal cause FART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for jiames that you can correctly match with the clues. 1.,...Beirut ^ a-capital, Jordan 2„..JVmman 3... ..Jerusalem b-capltal, United Arab Republic (Egypt) c-capltal, Lebanon d-capital, Israel e-capital, Syria ®-VK, Inc., Madison, Wisconsin Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or Symbols. 10 points for egch correct answer. lw keynote idea of Geneva peace meeting "Indy" race ip May 30 tradition 3.. H. source of eummer job information for youths 4.. ... many communities battle "Dutch blight" 5.. .M "Belmont" 18 final event in racing's . Triple Crown 6.. .M this state’s beauty named Miss U.S.A. ?,..« gulf important in Arab-Israell dispute Memorial Day honors war dead dispute over sales tax threatened to oattse state money crisis 10..H. Viking explorers once again in news PACEM IN TERRTS HOW DO YOU RATE? (Sean Each Side of Quia Separately) 71 to 80 points - Good. 91 to 100 points-TOP SCORE! 41 to 70 points - Petr. Site 90 polnti - Excellent. 60 or Under???-HW FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION What kinds of summer jobs are open to young people?______________■_______ ~ THIS WEIK'S CHALLENGE! Nokeaa About stoat share of the American labor force is made up of women workers? m Save This Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material Far Exam*. ANSWERS H-ei *o*6 -a-8 fo-i (3*i ij*6 fa*? *r-E fv-z *i-i szinu iobwas ti 4 »-6 lq-t ip-t *•*! >9*1 >111 q-S !«-» to-f fa-2 fp-l s|| md a-S !*•» fq-£ 1*1 M JLHVd C—13 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 Soviet Navy Nears Mideast Crisis Site WASHINGTON (AP) - A Soviet naval force is steaming in the eastern Mediterranean in position to play a possible role in the Arab-Israeli crisis, say Pentagon sources. At last report, the 15 to 20 So^ - viet naval ships in the Mediterranean were doing nothing more warlike than keeping track of ' the movements of the much bigger and more powerful U.S. 6th Fleet. 4 ★ * Some of the guided missiles aboard Soviet cruisers, frigates ' and destroyers are capable of challenging planes flying from three American aircraft carriers in the Mediterranean. • Other missiles aboard the Soviet warships are of the surface-to-surface type, thus could be trained either on American warships or'on land targets in the Middle Eastern coastal area. TASK GROUP The Soviets have maintained a Mediterranean task group for about three years as part of their widening naval activity around the globe. At various times, Soviet warships are seen in the western Mediterranean off Tunisia, Algeria, Italy, Greece and Egypt. ★ to ★ ^ The Soviet vessels are supported by oilers, tenders and supply ships which drop anchor from time to time in various sheltered international waters. Normally, the Soviets keep force comprising a cruiser; three to five destroyers and frigates, two or three submarines, four or more intelligence-gathering trawlers and a variety of supporting craft in the Mediterranean. SOVIET VESSELS The core of the Soviet naval force in the Mediterranean comprises first-line Soviet such as the Kynda-class guided missile frigates and the Kashin-class guided missile frigates, as "well as guided missile destroy- The Kynda-class frigate is rated the most heavily armed of all Soviet surface haval units. ■ 'to It is equipped with four-barreled surface-to-surface missile launchers and a twin antiaircraft missile launcher. The Kashin-class frigate is armed with twin surface-to-air missile launchers fore and aft. TORPEDO ARMED Soviet submarines in the Mediterranean reportedly are armed with torpedoes ratheri than missiles. , A favorite anchorage for the| Soviet Mediterranean force is. Kithira Island south of Greece. ♦ * # >: This position is conveniently close to the Dardanelles, and thus to the Black Sea fleet bases of the Soviet Union. It also is relatively near the more troublesome areas of the Middle East, such as the site of the present Arab-Israeli dispute. The Soviets have no aircraft carriers. However, the eastern Mediterranean is well inside the range of bombers based on airfields in the southern part of the Soviet Union. ’Griffin Wants UN-, U.S. to Act in Crisis PETOSKEY (APV-Sen. Robert Griffin, R-Mich,, said Saturday the United Nations or the United States should act in the Middle East crisis. . to ★ ★ “If the U.N. is unable tjo provide a peace-keeping role in this situation, we may wonder what future the U.N. has at all,” Griffin told a Republican gathering Saturday night in Pe-toskey. * ★ to He said that if the U N. takes no action, the United States should act unilaterally,1 or in conjunction with such interested powers as Great Britain, to settle the matter. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) President Johnson spent a quiet weekend at this Texas ranch, keeping in touch with Middle East developments, but nouncing no decision about when he will return to Washington. His press secretary, George Christian said, “I don’t know The Boy Scouts of America was founded Feb. 6,1910; Why pay morel Coast Guard's Role Is Eyed Two Congressmen Fly to Vietnam for Study WASHINGTON (AP) -Phil Ruppe, R-Mich., and Rep. Frank Clark, D-Pa., flew to Vietnam Sunday to investigate the U.S. Coast Guard and shipping problems. , Ruppe said the trip will include stops in Bangkok, Saigon and Manila. ★ to ★ He said the Coast Guard has prevented 250 tons of ammunition, arms, food and other war material from reaching the Viet-cong. “However, toe must constantly evaluate and search for better ways to bar seaborne aid to the Vietcong. KEY DECISIONS “The Coast Guard subcommittee of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee is going to be faced with some critical decisions in the near future. The Coast Guard is a small service, and every man and boat we send abroad leaves a hole in their mission at home. ★ ★ * “This year Coast Guard manpower in Vietnam has doubled to 1,100 enlisted men and 136 officers. If American military pressure increases, we can expect a substantial increase in Coast Guard activity in Asia. Chairman Clark of the Coast Guard subcommittee and I tend to gather information to guide us in the decisions our committee will soon be making.” ★ to to He said at Bangkok and Manila they will investigate shipping problems, construction of Port facilities, and possible port congestion. They expect to return to Washington about June 14, Ruppe' said. Tablet Is Out FLINT (AP)—The Flint chapter of the Eagles has withdrawn its offer to put a 2,500-pound granite tablet of the Ten Commandments on the City Hall lawn. The withdrawal came after the city agreed with a claim by the American Civil Liberties Union Out the tablet on city property would violate separation of church and state. When you can get America’s lightest whiskey for only 52 * ■Mi 4/5 Qt. No price increase CXTHAOeOIMAWUV Sy^tLINOSO WMISKIV GtrW Bff cn/vv | SEWN Oli V AN 1 STAR, STAR vImU SCOTCH LIGHTNESS pb |M| — CANADIAN QUALITY ll tagismiSSBS A smooth American blend at a money saving price *2S5*i BLENDED WHISKEY, N proof. 407. STRAIGHT WHISKEY- 60! *1086^h»- All Taxes Included £ GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. GOODERHAM A WORTS 1TD. PEORIA. 111. NoDedson o n LBJ Return when he’s going back.” It could 1)* today or Tuesday. y ' ■ to /'to to The President was relaxing in warn Texas weather. He took the wbefel of his white Lincoln Continental *to drive to church Sunday a few miles from his ranch at St Xavier’s Roman Catholic Church in Stonewall. Two staff members went with him, but Mrs. Johnson did Q°t go along to the services at the little white stucco church, which was filled with worshipers. 'to to -to. Christian said the President .was in touch by phone Sunday with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey on the situation in the Middle East. He also Worked on official correspondence. • to ||fc: "to There were a few $ain showers In the Texas hill country, but on. the whole the weather was ideal. QreditlTmoii family Credit Unions are different. They are owned by their members—lock, stock i and barrel. Becaiise of this, credit union members enjoy benefits found nowhere else. SAVINGS benefits . . . BORROWING benefits . . . INSURANCE benefits. ONLY IN A CREDIT UNION do all dividends go back to the members, with life insurance as an extra dividend on savings. Borrowers get a break, too, with loans insured at -no extra cost, and often a year-end interest refund. Thera are many other credit union advantages. DO YOU KNOW that more than IVb million people in Michigan ere now credit Uni members? Come in and find out why. If you are not a member aftd would like more information, contact t C. U. whore you work or one in your parish or call 332*9193. IT PAYS TO SAVE OR BORROW AT YQUR ROUND OR OVAL LAUNDRY BASKETS TEXTURED PLASTIC PAIL VEGETABLE UN The perfect solution to mony< ~ household stor- P age problems. 2 Lovely bim nest ^ into one another. \ and carrying de- m Lte'rirenti; and ■ * leaning iwp-;; 2-I pUm, jgbfjhfe #* j deriihgVasafool % Neat and tidy. Brush fits into drip-proof and rust-proof holder. CKoieb of lovely colors. Deep freeze or boll 'em FDA approved. Nontoxic, odorless. Choice of pts., qts., Yi gals. lObqt. capacity. Lovely textured finish in a choice of pastel colors. Heavy steel han- RECT ANGULAR DttKPAN Large 11-quart N#W Handy sp< capacity. Holds 2 FOR savers s,ac* more, saves time. " one another Your choice of £ ■ added cons while and lovely 3 ■ i*nce. ; /cake COVER SET Covered cake « dish with a|r- _ tight closure M keeps cokes and e pies fresh. With i crumb catcher ■ STOR-N-STAK NOW Attractive basket NOW 2 FAR *■ oosy to keep 9 |0R 0 ruK clean, noiseless, a rust proof, dent # ■' proof. Choice of ^ colors. * | Convenient size for flower water-ing around the house. Graceful CLEAT PLASTIC ^COMPARTMENT .S«i| SO* CUTLERY TRAY Wj*"*"!* ?** 6 compothn.nl! and accessibly. 9 |0R to keep your cut- 9 FOR •epshoes clean . lery In order. ^ nd dust free, f ■ Will not scratch, C ■ ZU can see the ^ ■ .asy dean. Pas- T '■ iam umi wnnf ■ . UTILITY CAN Rugged plastic cans with con- R venient pour a spouts, ideal to ■ keep on hand in d auto, oround yl home for many f A real spacer saver. Easy to attach to cupboard, cabinets, closet doors or wads. Choice of colors. ■AW A most useful set. Dustpan de-2 FOR signed for more A _ efficient opera-wW lion. Your choice T I ^ of attractive col-m* on. Handy S-qt. photic pail comes filled with sponges in Convenient sizes for all your cleaning needs. 6-PAK ICE CHEST Holds 6 cans or - RQRf battles. Water- • proof, buoyant, m FwS leakproof. For * m beach, boating, picnics, sport 1 ■ | events. MULTI-PURPOSE UTILITY TUB Lovely colorfast NOW tubs may be wed 9 eng for starching, * ‘W* gardening, pet C V cleaning, etc. IB- y B qt. size. ■ COOKIE CANISTER Attractive assorted pastel color, air-tight canisters ta Amp cookies fresher Ait indispensable kitchen Utensil. Convenient lift handles. Your choice of lovely colors. 5-pc. dosed top n decanter.with ^ pour spout and * measuring gra- I dations. With ^ four tumblers. FOR Colorful plastic pitchers are jpit-able for serving many types of beverages. YOYHi PONTIAC PRESS SPARTAN FA | GREAT STORK! Sm *he big differente. Longer lotting, and tar more reliable. CWg of 40-60-75 end 100 watt fixes. , SPECIAL 50/150 3 WAY 5YLVANU LAMPS—1 For $1 50 ft., WDiam. 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GALVANIZED CLOTHES PROPS With butterfly dip to hold fast ho -matter how bard Pm wind blows. With non-skid Bps. : dfpfc tjpt mtMoom LIGHT FIXTURE Enhances bath; unit with convenience outlet. Designed for good vision and utility. bedRoom light fixture ( ; Lovely 12-inch modern . bent glass dttracf ivelj^ decorated with walnut decorative trim. . - ■ » PCI ffiAHSBtOS \ i*rn»« todine* m* **• *T.. wm SsrfS gam«i-eK- PORCH LIGHT FIXTURE The attractive colonial with frosted glass and black finish will add warmth to your welcome. UTILITY LIGHT FIXTURE Lovely styled white glass with crystal side and bottom. For kitchens, playrooms, other areas. HALL LIGHT FIXTURE Colonial designed hail fixturowHh Its -frosted glass and raised pat- TV BUBBLE LAMP jl; SCREW-IN CEILING LIGHT Use in .ony room, porch,' patio, etc. Screws into ' any socket like a light' bulb. Blends with any decor. Contemporary Danish design. Unbreakable plastic shade in choke of colors. Brass bote, wa.lnut legs. HI-IIJTENSITY Replacement BULBS For dll makes of Hi-Intensrty Lamps. Packaged 3. ILLUMINATED MAGNIFIER LIGHT Powerful 3.5 magnifier lens. Useful for reading, stomp collection, and other hobbies. (Batteries not induded.) WEATHERPROOF LANTERN Great all 'round lantern. Perfect-for indoors or outdoors. Uses 4 "D" batteries (hot induded). SWIVEL SHADE NIGHT LUNITS Most practical for nursery, bedroom, sidrreoocfk hall, stairway, etc. Direct™ light where needed. 15-FOOT TROUBLE LAMP THREE EXTENSION CORDS 29-FOOT * HEAVY-DUTY EXTENSION CORDS Carries power took and , ether requirements?-**' Weatherproof. You get two 6-ft. and one 9-ft. cords, each with three-outlet connections. With convomente outlet in handle. You'd find use for this Hem in home, garage, workshop, etc. You Get AN 3 • PIECE SOCKET SIT Set contains 3/16", 7/32", 1/4", m/32", 3/8", 7/16* sockets. 10FT.WNITE TAPI RULE • Rustless case • Replaceable sted blade • Self adjusting hook RATCHET y SCREWDRIVER Finger-tip control permits instant use of ratchet for driving or removing screws. MARKER SET Write Off anything. Instant dry. Assorted WiU cut any shape in wood, plastic, masonite, ply- It oz. CLAW HAMMER Mirror IMdwd ol-law steel boo#. Will balanced, comfortable. A rugged dependable hammer. POtlSNINGKIT Set contains 5!4" lamb* wool bonnet. 5" flexible rubber backing pod. 5** sanding disc. Ik" shank arbor. ■MR A SCISSORS SHARPENER For shop and home use with all electric drills. A quality mode, noise free latch. Ruggad amd durable with itUfiriesv'deetbearings. 21 SANDING DISCS For many of your sanding needs. Ip RUBBER m 2 TUNGSTEN 1 SAW I MALLET BUMS | m Many uses. 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For koine, workshop, outo, etc. Contains n< monia but 7 including ammonia, in a handy aerosol can. ,15 tMBP*- dBt ers juices. I PC. GLASS SNACK SET For smart snack sef NANO MADE INDIA BRASSWARE Beautiful, exquisite pieces ig a choice of 15 individually selected styles. Assortment of colors and styles to match any decor. Glass Tumblers Ore perfect for serving many types of beverages. 1134 02. SPc 16 sc. ICHCAGU&SSn .. i FLORAL CENTERPIECES DECORATED SERVING TRAYS Easy to clean' NOW 17fc"xllfc". Has u reinforced hah- %■ 1 dies and rims. A!- T I cohol resistant. Sturdy Decorative metal bands. Abr sorbs moisture* keeping contents fresh. Good for cookies, biscuits. Add a lovely 'touch to your home. Long lasting plastic life like flowers. CRYSTAL LAZY SUSAN With Beautiful Brass Finish Base, Tray Is Detachable for Easy Washing. Revolves Smoothly on Ball Beating Base. MILK GLASS CHIP 'N DIP Sculptured mHk glass bauds with detachable brass plated holder. Ideal for pretzels, potato chips, etc. 22 inch DECORATIVE GLASS BOnLES DECORATIVE WASTEBASKETS Assortment of sturdy Metal baskets embossed with decorative designs and patterns. Imported from Italy. Attractive color and designs. Ideal for gifts and home decor. i. Use for iNStWfc wr.'mt. i* lAmp OIL I ypuf • jtjj?'* T BON BON DISH BhmiM ir celery dish # mst 7" BERRY DISH A FOR H For kitchen, playroom, den. Walnut finished frame. 4 W YOUR CHOICE 6 T'Vk; fp I W paint Waterproof protection for oil masonry wall surfaces, exter-ior or inferior, paint forms a hard dense long-lasting scrub-bableffclsh. White only. . Finish quality. Ui ffther one to fi many painting on -dean up needs, &« ** With rust inhibitor • Large 14 oz. can • So easy to apply 4 Ideal for redecorating ■ furhiture, toys, garden implements, etc. • 'Comes in blacl(, white, and Ivl range of colors. E-z NOTE m- ALUMINUM SAFETY EXTENSION LADDERS W*2SF00T gg HEAVY Z Will TARPW/6R0MMENTS %"*HM"ROLl r MASKING TAPE Pointing, seoHng par- 5qf.PA!NTPAIL I cleaning. Reinforced i 5 PIECE PAINT BRUSH SET PAINT BRUSH ASSORTMENT Quality brushes. Two W, two 1", one 2" brush. Ideal for every pointing need. With Safety Shoo* and Vinyl Bumpgrs. Includes Rope and Pulley. choke off quality 1 %' or V sa»h brushes, 3", 3W or 4? wefll bruehes. CAULKING : ' CARTRIDGES . ; For oflsedse^aidipatiisr. ALUMINUM STEPLADDERS SUPER §g^snc\: DROP CLOTH ^Lightweight eWarpproof Replacements for ' AppliespaintqveitlyJ 1 wrixeulFmht W9£**mA ■ on SMRvnuMeg m House nmr , A- iu pumc { Mfp ^CASUAL TABLE Beautiful stain and mar-resfetant top. Fixed 1kg sockets assure stability. Meat lair town, patio, faulty room* Fart, easy way to start sImhcooI Sip on and secure with drawstring. Protects yoer gritt SAVE ON HOUSEWARES JUNDERBED STORAGE CWST Kctertt and LaacUcopes. AUTO or CLOSET CLOTHES ROD For hanging clothes jH| in auto or closets. Es-«l ponds to fit all oufos and most dosets. Kh HEAVY DUTY VINYL WELCOME MAT Heavy duty vtnyl. Long Wearing. Shakes clean. T4^x21" sire.' 3x4 FOOT LINOLEUM MATS Your choice of assorted mats combining gorgeous colors and designs with a tough, resilient surface, tft.Deles*Met. . $2.00 UTILITY BOXES COMPOTES & CADDIES Assorted beautiful patterns. All steel bexes beautifully lithographed in fuAcgbr,, f PC STAINLESS PLACE SETTING Decorated melamine handles. A perfect setting for your table. A truly firm value. 3 YD. SHF AMKSIVE DECORATOR PLASTIC Decorator plastic, hundreds of uses.- on woNs, lamp shades, splash areas, etc. Easy to use. Lovely patterns. WOOD BOOK RACK Walnut finished hard' wood. Perfect for every room. 18%" long. 8" high. Assembles without tools, nails, screws or AUTO LITTER BAGS tree anywhere snap off and away. Another s ready for use igsper pkg DECORATIVE WINE BOTTLE! 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Walnut finished 3 minute timer ' of rugged hardwood. Ideal for timing telephone caRs, etc. *1 A gaily decorated heavy duty plastic lined cloth shopping bag in a tuck-away carrying bag. NOW 2fWI *1 All purpose bath or kitchen mat, washable, never curls. Restful to the feet. 18" x 24". NOW 2fOR ^ 1 JELLO MOLD SET Set contains a seamless Roasting Pan and 4 individual Jello Molds. el GARBAGE wOmeilw, ,-i-. : 26-QT. TEXTURED WASTEBASKET Lovely textured beauty, handsome in any rooin, Built-in handles. ^ - 40-QUART WAStiBASKIT aceful heaw-dufy basket a choice, of lovely pastel 6-GAL. PLASTIC " UTILITY CAN Snug fitting lid. Perfect for nursery, many other cleaning needs. Rugged plastic son with easy pour spout. For boating, gardening, etc. ..._ £ ■ • lilipc plastic CANISTER SET Uxor. gold ttanmd. Provides compact, organized storage. Revolves on .baH bearings. mazBr-sTBRABi CONTAINERS . .'HtWpMswtU, ||^ ■ ekds*t..' PLASTK COVERED BOWL SET LONG HANDLE DUST PAN Eliminates bending. Closes when lifted. A convenience you'll love. Heavy gauge, add, grease, and dirt resistant. A well-balanced beauty with removable head for pouring, unbreakable. £ eg MATCHED 4-PC. NYLON KITCHEN SET (ITENSIL SET Safe for finest china! Tray is sloped, grooved for speedy draining. ^ B Use for Teflon cookware or general cooking. Consists of turner, spoon, foric, and spatula. NOW M The Weather 'StS U.S. WmHmt Bureau F THE PONTIAC Y0X>. 125 NO. 96 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC* MICHIGAN* MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 —66 PAGES 10« 3 Escapees Caught in Kidnap Case Pontiac State Police captured a convicted murderer and two other escaped convicts from Ionia State Reforfobtory early today after they allegedly had kidnaped a young Belding couple and forced them to drive thpnx on an eight-hour. ride across Michigan. Tie convicts were arrested in a Waterford Township home at 3748 Oakview shortly before 8 a.m. today. They were asleep and offered no resistance, according to State Police. beke, 20, of Grayling came more than eight hours after tile abducted couple reported the incident to the post and later identified their kidnapers from photographs. Smith is a convicted murderer. Van Hoorelbeke was in prison for a car theft. Hyde was convicted of assault with intent to rape a Detroit woman in Springfield Township in July 1963. by Hazel Park police. All four men had trusty status at the institution. The kidnaped couple, (Hare McQueen, 20, and his 16-year-okf bride of one month, Bonnie,'told State Police they were abducted near Belding and held Related Story, Page A-2 The captures of Allen Smith, 30, of Jackson; Dennis C. Hyde, 22, of White Lake Township; and Gerald Van Hoorel- They escaped from the prison late Friday night along with convicted armed robber Welton R. Slayton, 21, of Mount Clemens who was captured yesterday * captive on a ride to Grand Rapids and. Pontiac. The McQueens went to the house to get some belongings when they were reportedly surprised by the hoodlums who had teen sleeping in a barn on the property. • The convicts were armed With a rifle and knives at the time. They forced the McQueens to drive them to Grand Rapids to see a friend and then proceeded to Pontiac when they learned the man had moved. of friends before they were caught at the Waterford Township residence. A hunch-by a State Police detective led police to the Waterford Township address. Smith was sleeping on a couch. Hyde and Vaii Hoorelbeke was asleep in a bedroom. by Oakland County sheriff’s' deputies and Pontiac police, State Police broke the door , in and captured the Kidnaping warrants were being sought against the three convicts. Five local residents, who jillegedly helped the trio, may be charged with aiding and abetting a fugitive, according to State Police. They s three convicts at the home of Mrs. McQueen’s sister, Mrs. A1 Pluskhat. HUNCH PAYS OFF Smith, Hyde and Van Hoorelbeke got out of McQueen’s car in Pontiac and reportedly went to three or four homes BACK BEHIND BARS — Three Ionia State Reformatory escaped convicts are taken to Oakland County Jail this morning after their capture in Waterford Township. The convicts — Dennis Hyde, 22, of White Lake Township; Gerald Van Hoorelbeke, 20, of Grayling; and Allen Smith, 30, of Jackson — were arrested after abducting a Belding couple and forcing them to drive them on an eight-hour ride across Michigan. Arabs, Israelis Trade Shots in Flare4Jp on Gaza Strip BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Arab raor-tar and machine guns from the Gaza Strip fired today on farmers and soldiers inside Israel and the Israelis answered with machine guns, an Israelis army spokesman said in Tel Aviv. He reported one Israeli was slightly wounded. while the firing ceased after 40 min: utes, the incident served to heighten the feeling of imminent crisis in the Middle East. The feeling of imminence grew yesterday when President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt announced he would never retreat from his blockade of Israeli shipping in the Gulf of AqabS. Israel’s premier, Levi Eshkol, declared his army is ready to fight aggression, including a blockade. The firing on Israeli soil from Gaza Relafed Stories, Pages A-8, C-J2 In Today's Press -Ffaf Time ' -.r1 First no-hitter in Invitational tournament Mstory—^PAGE C-L • . ~ 4 Avondale ------------— School board action ends relatively serenity — PAGE A-4. 1BJ, Viet Foes Adversaries have common ground on support of domestic programs — PAGE B-4. Area News .........— r;. A-4 Astrology ............ C-4 Bridge ..................04; Crossword Puzzle........C-ll Comics 04 Editorials ............. A-C Markets ...................** Obituaries ................04 Sports ..........-,,...0-1-01 Theaters...................B4 TV and Radio Programs . C-ll Wilson, Earl..............$41 Women’s Pages .......B-l, B-2 Drop in Mercury Expected Tonight Death Toll at 29 on State Highways By The Associated Press Traffic accidents in Michigan have claimed 29 lives as the four-day Memorial Day holiday continues. Latest victims were two drivers of cars which ran off the road and a passenger in a car involved in a head-on accident. Carl Rosenbaum, 51, address unknown, when he was struck by a car Saturday on the Red Arrow Highway a mile east of Watervliet. Dale C. Crake, 19, of Imtay City was killed today when his car ran off M21 in Lapeer County .and hit an embankment. Mrs. June Smith, 24, of Whittemore, when a car driven by her husband, Harvey, 32, hit an embankment on M65 south of Whittemore yesterday. Louis Cornett, 24, and Darfus L. Gol-stau, 32, died in a collision in downtown Detroit early yesterday. William Slone Jr., 3», of Marshall, was killed yesterday when his car ran off U.$. 27 in Calhoun County. Charles W. Hendriz, 26, of near Buchanan died today in a hospital after he. was injured in a head-on crash yesterday on U.S. 12 in Berrien County. Joseph Wallace, 55, Saginaw; killed when struck by a truck as he attempted to cross Interstate 75 in Saginaw County on Saturday. FLAT ROCK TEEN ' STARTED 6JP-M. FRIDAY The Associated Press tabulation of holiday traffic fatalities began at 6 p.m. Friday .and ends at midnight tomorrow. Other victims: * Carolyn Manor, 17, Flat Rock, died Saturday night when a car in which-she was riding was struck by another vehicle on U.S. 24 in Monroe County. KIDNAPED PAIR — Mr. and Mrs; Clare McQueen of Belding appear somewhat relieved after a trying eight-hour ride across Michigan in their car (rear) with three escaped convicts frotp Ionia State Reformatory. The convicts, who were captured early today in -Waterford Township, ware reportedly airmed when they allegedly abducted the young couple near Belding. _ Mrs. Harrietie Harilkln, 32, of Detroit when a car jumped a curb and struck her in Detroit yeiterday. The car’s driver, Willie Little, 35, of Detroit, was held for manslaughter. June Brenneman, 52, of East Lansing, killed when a car in which she was riding was involved in a collision at Michigan 43 and Okemos Road in Ingham County on Saturday night. Couple Describes Kenneth Miller, 2, of Saginaw, when he fell frotn a trailer filled with sand and , was run over by its wheel on Fox Road, 15 miles west of Midland. Lorraine M. Manning, 39, of Grand Ledge, died Saturday night on County Road 401 in Roscommon County when a car in which she was a passenger collided with another vehicle. Long, Scary Drive Thomas Gannon, 40, of Marquette, y0e%his car ran off a rural road south of Big Bay in the Upper Peninsula early yesterday. Alex Heraandez, 33, and his Diana, 10, both of Hamilton, in two-car crash Saturday on an Allegan County road, southeast of Holland. _L_ Frank A. Rosinskl, 66, of Fraser, Sat--____(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) apparently was begun by Egyptian irregulars and members of the Palestine Liberation Army. . They are believed manning the front lines with Egyptian regulars farther beck.1 ,» , »: > . . .... pace. le :. It was the first such incident reported along the Gaza Strip since the U;Nr Emergency Force polled out of frontier^ positions last wreck at Egypt’s request. This account;was given: Machine guns and mortars began firing from the Gaza Strip at 12:35 a.m., at men working in the fields, of a collective farm and at A motorized army patrol. - The Israelis replied with machine guns. Ihe fire was concentrated near Nahal Oz, on the Gaza border about 45 miles southeast of Tel Aviv. Several fields were set afire. The crisis originally was brought da by a series 6f border raids on the Syrian front and by Israel’s threat to retaliate, Egypt'promptly sent men and armor to the frontier and asked, the U.N. peacekeeping force to withdraw. Temperatures are expected to drop tonight after a season’s high of 82 was recorded at'10 a.m. Saturday in downtown Pontiac. The previous high for the season was 79 Wednesday. Hie U.S. Weather Bureau predicts oc- ‘ casional light rain and clpudy skies for. today. Highs are expected to reach 64 to 68. By LOIS MANDIBERG "We didn’t talk because we were afraid they would think we were trying to -cook something up,” said. Clare McQueen when telling of an eight-hour drive as captive of a convicted murderer' and twa other Ionia State Reformatory escapees last night. McQueen, 20, and his wife, Bonnie, 16, were allegedly kidnaped at gunpoint in their .hometown, Belding, and forced to drive the men.to Pontiac. “The man waved the rifle and Clare agreed to take them to Grand Rapids. I asked them to leave the gun behind and they did,” his wife said. When they reached Grand Rapids the men decided to drive on to Pontiac, according to the young couple. The couple, who’ve been married one month, told of walking into her sister’s house about noon yesterday and finding one of the men sitting on the couch. "When they didn’t .get out I didn’t think we’d ever see another stitch of daylight,” commented JdcQueen, who told of driving a tan 1961 Chevrolet in a six-hour-long, round-about way to Pontiac from Grand Rapids. . "I thought he looked familiar and I made a joke. But-then I saw another_ guy sitting and a third man who walked out of the kitchen with a rifle and told us to 'stand against the wall,” McQueen said. “We did just what they said,” McQueen, a construction worker, added. NO TALKING ' “They didn’t say more than two words to us beyond giving directions, said Mrs. McQueen. “After we dropped the men off somewhere on South Saginaw we tried to find our., way home to report our experience to the police. OFFERED CART “The men asked for a ride. I offered them my car but they refused saying they would be arrested for car theft,” said McQueen. “But we gotlost on the directions the men had given us, so we found our way to the Pontiac State Police post about 8:30 last night and told them the story,” McQueen concluded. Area Prepares Area citizens are preparing for to- The David BeMe Post 1008 of the morrofy!s Memorial Day parades in Veterans of Foreign Wars will conduct Pontiac, Sylvan Lake and Waterford ^,e Waterford Township parade which Township. Most public service agencies n. . . _ L and area stores will be closed for the meets ai and Frembes at 10 am- City, .county, state and local federal offices will be closed for. the- holiday. Regular holiday schedules will be observed by the post office which includes limited pick-ups find no regular delivery services beyond special delivery. tery will conclude the parade. -.The Sylvan Lake Memorial Parade will begin at the Daniel Whitfield Elementary School at 11 a.m. All operations except routine maintenance will be shut down at Pontiac Motor Division and GMC Truck and Coach Division, while an operations will cease at Fisher Body plant. Marchers will go to foe Veterans Memorial Park for a dedication Service and theff to the lake ride for an air and naval service where planes and boats will strew flowers on the lake to honor fighting men who have died in battle. Tonight will be cloudy with an overnight lowof 48 to 53 expected. Pontiac’s annual parade will begin at the intersection of Oakland and Saginaw at 10 a.m. / The outlook for tomorrow and Weednes-day is partly cloudy and cool. The lowest temperature reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 52. By 1 pjn. it had climbed to 67. GM ADDS' FUELS — Alger Conner (left), personnel director of Fisher Body Plant, hands a 310,000 donation from General Motors Cqrp. to James Clarkson, chairman of the Pontiac Creative Arts Center fund raising campaign. Jim Peterson, chairman of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce individual drive for the Arts Center, paints the rising figure on the progress board at West Wide Track and West Huron. Jayeees have raised 811,000 during their month-long campaign which ends tomorrow. Some 8100,000 is needed to renovate the center. k .. j„, Urn Paraders will march to the Civil War Monument in front of City Hall for special ceremonies including a wreath presentation, and then proceed to tha veterans’ {dot in Perry Mount Park Cemetery for memorial services. Early Edition Tomorrow The Press will publish a Single, early may observe the Memorial Day holiday with their families. Regular editions wfll be resumed Wednesday. tu THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, HAY 29, 1867 ■Surprise Shelling ’ Hits Yank Brigade; Raiders Blast Hotel Birmingham Area News Crossover Costs to Be Aired BIRMINGHAM .,..r, | | The City Commission has received a recommendation from, the' Statf Highway Department that the , city pay the entire coat of two \ crossovers of Hunter. , The report win be studied at topight’s me£ting_at a at city t Also on the agenda Is at re> port, by oity legal advisors concerning impounding of vehicles on city streets. mitted. A further crossover, and traffic pattern changes south' of Troops of the 3rd Brigade of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division came under attack at 2:30 a.m. while encamped seven miles northwest of Due Pho, a coastal town 325 miles northeast of Sai* gon. There was sharp fighting in in the plant The city commission contends state highway system and that costs should be shared. It is recommended that the city and state officials meet to discuss a cost-sharing plan. h ^However, the legal firm alsc points out the city is exposed tc claims of liability for property damage to vehicles resulting from any harm to a vehicle be* log towed away or stored. In the report is a state recommendation that left turns be prohibited at the Hunter-Forest intersection, but County Circuit ' SAIGON (AP) — U—«_ gunners hammered at 1 forces on the central coast i .•predawn surprise attack t ’ Awhile others lobbed r J shells into the__ ; city of Hue. Terrorists followed up the mortar attack by bomb-- ing a Hue hotel housing members of the three-natioh International Control Commission of Canada, India and Poland. Arrests Put Off | in JFK Probe i*’, Garrison Says More to Be Made in Future > NEW YORK (AP) - New Orleans Dist. Witty. Jim Garrison says “we are going to have to defer any further arrests” until Hater in his investigation of the .assassination of President John 4f. Kennedy. " V Garrison appeared Sunday on the ABC, “Issues and Answers” , radio and television program. ■ * * " * He said additional arrests probably will be made before * the triad of Clay L. Shaw, New Orleans businessman accused by Garrison of participating in a conspiracy to kill Kennedy. No date, has been set for his trial. Garrison has maintained since Shaw was arrested in March that more arrests would be made. BOMBARDED BY PRESS Asked Sunday when the . arrests would be made, Garrison replied: “As a result of some experiences We have had—and 1 certainly don’t blame the . | naturally, they want to -know about an interesting matter like this, but our Office Was almost put out of commission as if it were bombarded by artillery— we are going to have, jo defer any further arrests to ,#y arid make them at a later date. But there will te further arrests and they will probably be before the trial.” . r * ‘ ★ ★ Garrison contends that the Warren Commission, which in-vestigated Kenriedy’s death, was mistaken in its conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, fired the shots that killed Kennedy in Dallas Nov. 22, 1963. Garrison summed up his conspiracy theory, which goes like this: • Kennedy was not killed by Oswald,but by a group of con-spirators composed of Latin Americans opposed to Cuban .Prime Minister Fidel Castro and pf farmer employes of the U.S. pntral Intelligence Agency. * • Oswald was not, a CIA : agent, but “was obviously an intelligence employe of the United States government.” gon. There was shar] the same area last \___| A U.S. military spokesman said a company of the 3rd Brigade took about 100 founds of 60mm and 82mm mortar and 57mm recoil less rifle fire from r size. The enemy also Americans with heavy l-HM automatic weapons and small arms. ★ ★ • ' ir' The fighting continued - until daybreak when U.S. units began ‘ sweep of the area. Late re* ports said the action continued past midday. The U.S. spokesman said the Americans had reported killing 29 Communist troops. U.S, casualties were not immediately known. The mortar and terror attacks in Hue killed four persons and wounded 17, including a driver for the International Control Commission. Although the hotel was about 80 per cent destroyed, the 10 commission members staying there escaped unhurt. No Americans were hurt. The hotel housed six U.S. Marines, several American civilians and several U.S. Navy Seabees. CRIME TALK — Planning a crime delinquency conference at Oakland University on June 8 are (from left): Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors and president of the Michigan State Association of Supervisors; Judge Ar- thur E. Moore' of Oakland ■ Court, who Jv}ll be a speakei, _________ Judge Eugene A. Moore of Oakland County Probate Court and chairman of the conferences planning committee. 2 Teens Held in Attempte City Break-In Two teen-agers arrested early today by Pontiac police faced arraignment on charges of at-tempted burglary. Chester Eatmon, 19, of 553 , Jessie and Patrick Young, 17, of 260 W. South Blvd. were apprehended,f police said, shortly after discovery of pry marks m tavfear door of the 5-V Gun Shop, 720 W, Huron. :Poliee Were called to the scene about 2:45 a.m. by a ing on the door of the shop. Eatmon. and Young were halt-ed in thdr car by police at a intersection and , released, but were followed when investigators noted a crowbar and {tick protruding from the car’s trunk. ■ H k ir Patrolmen David Schroeder and Norman Kilmer followed the automobile and stopped the suspects again at Lake and Gillespie. Schroeder said green paint-chips found on the crowbar appeared to match paint on the rear door of the gun shop. Police also took a hammer and flashlight from the pair. The Wea Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report ‘ PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy and cool with occasional light rain today. High 64 to 68. Cloudy tonight. Low 48 to 53. {Tuesday partly cloudy and cool, temperatures low around 48, {high near 72. Outlook for Wednesday partly cloudy and continued •cool. • Northeasterly winds 10 to 15 mOes today. ? Lowest temperature preceding I a.m. Saturday and I joiret jmusKegon' 70 51 New Orlea Pension 60 33 New York 'Traverse C. 67 .44 Omaha Albuquerque 68 -51 Phoenix— » Atlanta 89 65 msbvrgh Pamela Zeeff, 18, of Grand Rapids and Melvin A. Keller, 18, of Cleveland, Ohio, killed Saturday when their car was hit from behind, thrown across the center line, and hit head-on by a third car in Ottawa County.- Lycia C. Herron, 22, of Flint, killed on Thompson Road at the 23 overpass in County Saturday when site drove her car out from it Stop-sign and it was hit broadside., David Dale Tagg, 27, of near Morley in Mecosta Coun-1 ” i<\ ty. Itillrri whrn his motorryrlf imaamai 70-ot Figures Shew low TomptnMwn bpMod NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for £ the mid-Atlantic states, the Carolina*, Florida, most of the ^ southern Plains and the central and northern Rockies. It will be mild jn the Midwest and cooler in the Northwest. .: t Jig Record Traffic Toll Expected Holiday Accidents Fatal to 346 So Far CHICAGO (AP) - Traffic accidents over the Memorial Day weekend snuffed out the lives of huhdreds of Americans and safety experts feafod today the long holiday period might produce a record toll. The total number of deaths on the nation’s streets and high-ways stood at 346 early today. * * ■■ *■ Howard Pyle, president of the National Safety Council said traffic fatalities are running about 5 per cent less than last year’s three-day^ Memorial Day weekend. However, he added, since this year the respite spans four days, total traffic deaths-barring a trend reversal—will hit a new Memorial day weekend high. “Reports to this time indicate the final total will fall within the 650-750 range estimated, by the council at the start of the holiday,” Pyle said. The final count will include traffic deaths from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Tun-day. Holiday Toll Up to29 on State Hoads (Continued Prom Page One) urday when he backed his car out of a driveway in Roseville and was struck by another car. Robert Glasbie, 24, Kalamazoo, Saturday when his sports car overturned on a Kalamazoo street. Eric Richardson, 10, of Bay City, when he was struck by a car while riding his bicycle in Bangor Township Saturday night. Romney Wi at OU Crime Parley rammed into the side of a truck Saturday in Grand Rapids,---------gSS William Scott, 23, of Lansing, fatally injured Saturday in. a head-on collision on Lake Lansing Road in Ingham County. Frank E. Rogers, 46, of Warren, kilted Friday in a hit-run accident in Detroit. Barbara Towne, 26, of Greenville, killed in a head-on collision on Barridge Road in Monti calm County on Friday. rex blair, 43, ti south Bend, Ind., killed when his car collided with a train Friday at a Berrien County crossing. Douglas J. Pustay, 18, of near Ann Arbor, killed Friday when the Sports car in which he riding crashed into/the rear of a trailer truck on Jackson Road. Joseph D. Thomas, 14, of Saginaw, fatally injured Saturday when stnick by a car as he walked on Williamston Road. I ... Gov. George Romney will address school, police and govern-ment officials from 12 counties of Southeastern Michigan at a regional conference on crime and delinquency at Oakland University June 8. Nine ether officials will-speak 2nd Peace Conference Convenes GENEVA (Ap) - After hearing U.N. Secretary General U Thant blhme selfish actions for producing the danger of a third world war, lesser Western leaders and a few minor Communist figures start talks today on how to live in pece. The Soviet Union, and China were not represented at the second Paeem in Terris conference and many influential Westerners withdrew, some because of the danger of Arab-Isr-aeli war. The conference is named after Pope John XXIII’s encyclical, Peace on Earth. » * * * Thgnt did not single out any governments for special blame. He said practically all the governments directly involved in the major world conflicts are U.N. members but “when they feel that their vital interests are involved or threatened, they are willing to follow their own course regardless of the restraints and obligations that the charter imposes on than.” Than! was one who did not come to the conference because of the Middle East crisis. He spoke on closed-circuit television from New York Sunday to soipe 200 persons at the opening of the four-day meeting. PRAVDA EDITOR Mikhail Zimyanin, editor of the Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda, was to-have taken part in a discussion today of threats to coexistence. After Word came from Moscow that Soviet citizens were not to appear, his place was given to Nicolae Ecobesco of Romania, where the Communist government acts independently of’ Moscow in some foreign policy matters. Another panelist, Marian Do-brosielski, a counselor to the foreign ministry of Communist Poland, said he was attending as a private citizen because think this is worth doing and worthy of more consideration than it is getting from some people in the United States." ★ ik . ★' On the American television pfogram “Meet the Press” Sunday night, Dobrosielski blamed and said the North Vietnamese Were ready to negotiate if the United States would stop bombing them. North Vietnam and the Viet iCopg are boycotting the ence. The sponsors barred a representative from South Vietnam as a result, UNDER FIRE Besides falling short of sponsors’ hopes for a meaningful East-West debate on' Vietnam, the conference also is under fire on three grounds: —Criticis say little representation was given, to-advocates of the U.S. position in Vietnam. at the day-long session, which is cosponsored by the State Bar of Michigan, Oakland University’s Mott Center for Community Affairs .and the Crime Proven^ tion Center Committee. '1 Four different community action programs presently in use to combat crime are among the topics to be discussed. Delegates will be asked tp set up similar programs in their own- communities with the sistance of the state bar. WASHINGTON (AP) - Johnson administration supporters are looking to Republicans on the Senate iLabor Committee to supply votes needed for approv al of the President’s plan to vert a threatened railroad It will take nine votes to get the President’s bill out of the com m,i 11 e e. Administration strategists hope GOP members will supply five of these, per- Other speakers include: Wil-liam Gossett, president-elect of the American Bar Association; C. S. Harding Mott, president of the Mott Foundation; Dr. Lowell R. Eklund, OU Dean of Continuing Education, Judge Arthur E. Moore of Oakland County Circuit Court. FBI MESSAGE Also, John S. Buga?, vice president of Ford Motor Co., who will deliver a special message from EBI Director J. Edgar Hoover; William M. Ellmann, president of State Bar; and Keith J. Lennhouts, Royal Oak municipal judge. , And Frank Manley Jr., director of Genesee' county Vocational Guidance Program, add Jerry A. Zerbe, Mott program administrator., and member of Flint' Board of Education. UAW HoldsUp COPE Funds DETROIT (UPI) — United Auto Workers secretary-treasurer Emil Mazey yesterday confirmed that the UAW hasjrith-held its customary spring contribution to the AFTrCIO’s Committee on Political Education (COPE). , Mazey said the union did not forward the first installment of about 325,000 that would ordinarily have gone to COPE by late May. Mazey said it wag possible the UAW would spend money on education 'independent of COPE in the future. The UAW secretary-treasurer noted that there are no national elections in 1967. He said COPE plenty of money for immediate needs and the UAW sim-is withholding Its contributions pending a decision on whether to make them. _ __ Mazey said about 8175,000 would ordinarily go to COPE this year. Romney Rated Top Candidate for GOP Several of the 10 Democrats on the panel have indicated strong reservations about the plan in view of bitter opposition to it from the six shoperaft unions involved the the entire AFL-CIO. The bill is before the Labor subcommittee, which plans to [start work on it in closed session June 5.' AMENDMENTS Sen. Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex., the subcommittee chair-man, told arreporter he expects many amendments to be offered and said he might have some himself. On the House side, the measure is being handled by the Commerce Committee. Several Democrats on that committee also have voiced reservations about the bin. Irz... ★___________* ^ The strike deadline in the dispute has been postponed twice through adoption of interim measures by Congress. The Strike mn Id hegln June 19.__ Johnson’s proposal calls for a further delay of 90 days with intensive mediation efforts through this period. But if no settlement can be reached,-the recommendations of a special five-member board to be set up under the Ml would become binding for as long months. CONFIDENT Administration lobbyists say they are confident of-ftve~Re-publican votes on the Senate panel and may win that of the other Republican member, Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York. Javits has said he may havp no alternative but to vote for it, even though he feels it cleariy amounts to compulsory arbitration. Administration officials, insist it is not. ★ ★ ★ But the New Yorker said he wants to explore other possibili- TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - The most formidable” candidate the Republicans could run for president in 1968 is Michigan’s Gov. George Romney, -says Sen. Birch E. Bayh, D-lnd, Bayh told a UDU-a-plate Democratic fund-raising dinner Sunday night at Toledo that, in, Indiana, President Johnson would have a “tough time” defeating Romney in a presidential election. ' ★ ' k k\ Bayh said he hopes the GOP decides to run former Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the presidency. He said Johnson would have ho trouble defeating Nixon. ties, including limited seizure of the railroads by the government. 20 Questioned PH HHI recommends “spar-ing” ^use of impounding procedures. Vehicles have been im-ticted-parking » winter snow Also on the agenda is a report on a proposed resurfacing of six downtown alleys._____1_ The city engineer’s office found some of the alleys are in need of resurfacing, but that only a thin layer can be applied due to grade problems. TPotai cost would be about Rigging Investigation Is Expanding Rapidly NEW YORK (AP) - Some 20 brokerage house employes are being questioned by investigators looking into allegations of. multimillion-dollar manipulations, of certain stock exchange ‘ sues. - . ■ The brokerage salesmen,; employed by more than a dozen firms in New. York and Chicago, are being asked if they were ottered or accepted cash ^ribe!s, submitted—to~ blackmail threats, by the reputed stock riggers who sought to generate public buying in the Some of tiie men already have been fired or suspended by their firms. - - * - ★ It was understood that the interrogations were being conducted by the stock exchanges with which they are affiliated and, in some cases, by a federal grand jury here: The investigation, moving forward on several fronts, Is being rapidly expanded. At least two New York Stock Exchange sues now are under scrutiny along with a larger group traded on the American Stocky Exchange. , RIGGING SCHEMES Probers said the reputed rigging schemes are continuing and are costing brokers and investors uncalculated millions of dollars. In addition to the grand jury qnd major stock exchanges, the situation is being looked at by the Securities and F Commission hnd the Chicago Police Department. ★ ★ ★ One prominent Chicago broker, partner in a member firm of the New York Stock Exchange,. received a death threat-by telephone after suspending a salesman who was being questioned. The salesman later was reinstated. Springtime Break Time for Prisoners By the Associated Press It’s spring and the prisons have sprung: A total of 17 men, walked away from five federal and state7 institutions during the weekend, apparently spurred tc freedom by the. b&lmy air. The list of escapees included nine from Ionia State Reformatory, four from the Federal J2 Correctional Institution at Mi- 5 lan, two from Waterloo State Prison farm near Jackson, and pne each from Coldwater State Hospital and the Boys Training School at Lansing. 10 ROUNDED UP The springtime spree was over quickly for 10 of the escapees, who were captured by police. Searches continued over a wide area of Michigan for the seven still at large. Pontiac . seemed to be a magnet for some of them, as five were found at homes of friends there and another was picked up 15/ miles away in Hazel Park. Four otiiers Were caught sev-., en miles from Ionia State Re-..... formaltory from which they had escaped. 1 ‘ ; - Local Police Nat 2 Prison Escapees British Mariner. Is Ashore After Circling the Globe PLYMOUTH, England (AP) -. Sir Francis Chichester, the ancietit mariner of the new Elizabethan age, settled down today to enjoying “some of the delights of shore life.” .' age around Cape Horn, he was alone with the sea and the sky. Behind him was an epic 28, 500-mile, single-handed circumnavigation of the globe in his 53- ^ough peace and quiet,” But tile 65-year-old seaman said as he stepped ashore Sim-day night that he was looking fonrard to some peace and quiet. “Although you would think after four months I would have foot yacht Gipsy Moth IV. For the 107 days of the outward voyage to Sydney, Australia, and the 119 days of the return voy- he said with a grin from under his blue yachting cap. “I’m looking forward to getting ashore, and facing some of the delights of shore life.” DINNER TREAT Site Changed in Waterford The Waterford Township Board’s 7:30 meethig tonight will be held at the water department bnilding instead of Township High School, the usual meeting place. The water department i bnilding Is located at the [ Civic Center off Tnbbs [ Road. Two escapees from the Waterloo state , prison farm near Jackson Were' captured early today by Pontiac police who forced their way into an apartment on the city^s near' east side. Walter Graham, 23, and Malcolm McNeil, 33, were held at the Oakland County Jail an es-charges pending their return to Jackson. ★ k ★ Prison authorities said the pair had walked away from the Waterloo farm last night. Local police, acting on a telephone tip, took tiie two into custody at 377 E. South Blvd. Graham was serving a 6%-to-15-year sentence for assault with intent to rob and McNeil was serving a l-to-15-year sentence for breaking and entering.,. Boater Drowns CHEBOYGAN CAP) - A 45. year-old Lansing man drowned on Mullet Lake near Cheboygan when his 14-foot outboard motorboat ' capsized Saturday. The man, John G. Daman, was the father of seven. A 17-year-old fishing companion, Terry L. Wolfe, also of Lansing, clung to the boat for two hours and was rescued. “the best dinner, by the best chef, in. the best surroundings and the best company—after four months of my own cooking.” “There are so many things, but that ip one thing I am quite certain about,” he added. ' * k ■ k He spent his first night ashore in a second-floor bedroom of a four-story, white Georgian mansion within sound of the sea. From his bedroom, he looked down on a statue of Sir Francis Drake, the first Englishman to sail aropnd the world. He sailed from Plymouth in 1577, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth' Meeting Changed The City Commission will meet 8 p.m. Wednesday instead of tonight as originally reported. A change , from tiie commission’s usual meeting date of Tuesday was necessitated by observance tomorrow of Memorial Day. 'TV MONDAY, MAY 29, 1987 8 !, Michigan 4 Editor’s Note: IHHMM re” will resume June 5. Grand Jury Limit Stiikes at System Do o u r constitutional provisions regarding one-man grand jury investigations bekt serve the taxpayer? The entire one-man grand jury system has been a topic of debate in-recent years. Some feel it places too much power in the hands of one j^ror. Some point to it as the only effective way to combat organized crime when other police methods tail. A ruling this week by the Michigan Court of Appeals has halted an Oakland County one-man grand jury investigation being conducted by Circuit Judge ^Philip PrattvThe appeals coprtra-sued an order killing a subpoena issued by Pratt against a Madison Heights druggist. ^grand Jury investigation into i of illegal activities cen-und the Hazel Park Race nd County Circuit \ named Pratt to head it. ^ grand jury, which has iated, was like its nded to include all hty last September. The ruling was apparently based on a constitutional provision that limits the length of a one-man grand jury to one year. In other words, the same grand juror, in this case Judge Pratt, cannot head consecutive grand juries investigating the same general area of suspected criminal activity. _____ ^ ^ ^ Does this .constitutional provision, in effect, cheat the taxpayer? Judge Pratt headed a grand jury which first focused on illegal activities in Royal Oak Township and then expanded to include Oakland County. That grand jury ran from June 1965 to June 1966, Last August State Attorney General Frank Kelley petitioned for Such investigations cost money. The first grand jury probe cost taxpayers $33,04ti Costs for the second probe to date have not been compiled.. If \ the present ruling stands up, taxpayers’ dollars spent to date on\the second grand jury will be for naught; Even more significant, however, is that the law itself has the effect of withholding from the taxpayer his most effective tool in such investigations. That tool is experience. \ Voice of the People: Sterilization No To Sex Deviate Problems A recent article suggested sterilization of habitual sex offenders as a last resort. Sterilization isn’t the answer as it will hot stop the offender from committing another act or committing a murder. It will only stop pregnancy due to rape. Pregnancy can be stopped bv the victim reporting, to-the hospital immediately for treatment before conception-occurs. This will take care of a needless abortion or sterilization bill in case of incest or rape. -...★ ★ ★ '■ ■—;*.-r. Is propaganda starting for a sterilization bill? It looks like it. Sterilization takes a right from one who has violated the rights of another and the punishment is permanent. Since when do two wrongs make a right? If sex offenders-are ill, cure them. If you can’t, we must keep them isolated from society. CHARLES J. ADAIR 110& DOVER Questions Need to Remove Unlicensed Car Another One? David Lawrence Says: What right has anyone to tell you-to get rid of a car Just because it has a wrecked fender, and no 1967 license-plates’ It has .a brand new motor and my house and yard are as neat and clean as the best in my block. Some people would do well to take their own advice and clean up their own yards. VERN STINSON 1022 CHERRYLAWN In the case of Oakland’s (merman grand jury probes, the constitutional * limitation seems to have cheated\the public by withholding the servicedof our meat experienced juror. \ .•’dr-__dir . ie -------..\ And what about justice? We have the highest respect for the competen-A cy of our circuit bench. But is justice ' best served by using a juror lacking in grand jury experience when an experienced judge is available to perform the task? Apparently Judge Pratt’s colleagues felt it wasn’t. They selected him for the job for that very reason-/ his experience. L Political Funding Finally Faced Agrees We Need New Law for Sex Offenders WASHINGTON — At last lively small, but it is never-" Results Reported of First Month’s Auto Check The first month of operation of Michigan’s new motor vehicle inspection law produced m an y significant results. Conducted by four-man units of State Police operating in temporary inspection lanes, a total of 5.40Q cars were Inspected during the 30-day period, ; Troopers handed out 1,074 tickets requiring major correctional action, found that 87 drivers did not have their licenses with them,____ 13 were driving with revoked and 10 with suspended licenses. About 6 per cent of drivers had some sort of license violation. ★ ★ ★ Four hundred eight drivers had no vehicle registration, and 103 improper registration. Six-hundred seventy-six drivers had no proof of insurance. Bearing heavily on the question of driver responsibility for highway safety was the fact that of the 3,144 cars equipped with seat belts, only L441 were in use. Inoperative windshield washers gave rise to the greatest number'of citations with 1,297 while defective windshield glass was low with 19. Nine other categories of vehicle disrepair or neglect caught the eyes of inspectors. Congress is coming to grips with the problem of how to finance political' campaigns. Up to recent months, .the subject has been bypassed, and many irregularities have either been condoned or overlooked. If candidates LAWRENCE for public office must depend on other citizens or on organizations with a vested interest in legislation to put up the money to help elect them, they wilTinevitably feel under some obligation to repay the favor by their acts in publie office. Johnson has just congress comprel The President, in his mes- manned space sage to Congress, has taken center, and a large amount for political parties to raise. The worst aspect of the existing system is. that it places parties ahd candidates under obligation to special interests. It is evident now that the whole system of campaign contributions will be carefully reviewed, and it is to be hoped that limitations and restrictions will be imposed so that no person elected to public office will feel that he has an obligation to give special fav-ors in one way or another to those persons who have contributed large sums for campaign purposes. IMMrjNb Publish*!-! I agree that all sex offenders should have an operation as there are too many known perverts who are repeaters of these horrible crimes. Such a law should be considered. CATHERINE GULDI ROCHESTER Offers Suggestions to Help Reduce Crime The following suggestions would help reduce crime: • Better street and business lighting. •All closed business places wired with burglar alarms that sound off at the police station. ★ ★ ★ Bob Considine Says: • Police patrol of all schools, wooded and highly weeded acres, lovers’ lanes and~parking areas. NASA Is Back at Work, Eye Still on the Moon • Alarm systems In all businesses that could be easily touched off by employes and alert the police station. . • ★ ★ ★ All citizens should- be alert and report any crime committed or suspected. r HOUSTON - It just isn’t The space capsule returning true that NASA’s 111 the cold, fj-om outer space at this out- /wild ffmiind , _ rageous speed will be posi- FRANK E. WESTERMAN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP cold ground. The astronauts, the personnel at the “If—ir That an effective vehicle inspection program, so long advocated by highway safety authorities, will play an important role iji catting the rate Of road accidents and casualties is well evidenced by the extent of driver guilt and carelessness so soon detected. into, consideration also the everybodyelse need for election reforms. He concerned are suggests a $5,000 limit be placed on the \ total amount that comes from any organization or any individual or member of his fa REPORT ON PAYMENTS —Mr. Johnson lias urged,-too,' Wfr that corporations bolding con- The widows Grissom, White tracts with the government be and Chafee have emerged prohibited from nuking po- from their weeds, litical contributions at t^e The spacemen are back at state and local lev*!. Today work. Teams are being made they are only barred from up, exotic missions mapped. tioned so that its-broad flat bottom will strike the earth’s atmosphere like a flat stone and bounce, just like that CONSIDINE^ But just as a skimming stone loses momentum after the first brush with the water, so will the spaceship. Just as the stone eventually disappears into the water, so will the spaceship descend "IflBr the' atmosphere in which you and I wallow. Question and Answer Are there grocery stores in the Pontiac area that sell canner goods cheaper by the case for ns people who have large familiesTT do a lot of canning, but there are still quite a few things I can’t grow. MOTHER OF LARGE FAMILY LAKE ORION REPLY We checked several stores and found none with a general policy of selling cheaper fry the case. However, several of them said individual stores might make exceptions, and suggested you ask the man-agers of stores where you shop. * . s- contributing to campaigns for national elections. \ Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Vote Amendment Promises Trouble By RUTHMONTGOMERY This fact is clearly recog-WASHINGTON — A Pan- nize^’ since ^ Pr0P°se,i con-dora’s box of troubles may be stitutional amendment to pro-opened when Congress votes h* popul** election on a constitutional amend- states that nothing therein ment to choose the president would prevent Congress from and vice president by popular wbsequentiy passing uniform wnt* v residence and age require- vote. Virtually every political coloration from extreme left extreme rig ments.for all voters in presidential elections. change in outmoded toral collegel system is neef essary to Americans a' wnth more direct Montgomery voice in the selection of their top leaders. Most Americans cannot vote until their 21tt birth-diy, but some of our states permit their citizens to vote at the age of it, 19 or 21. Resident requirements are even more diversified, with some areas enfranchising new residents after 60 or 90 days, and others requiring domicile for' up to a year. ment would probably be impelled to set an over-all standard for the SO states to prevent such rivalry, and might then feel called upon ^ oversee policing of toe polls. Most liberals favor the direct vote plan, which has the advantage of depriving big city political machines of their excessive power to Influence presidential elections, mid which would prevent (he election of a chief executive who polls lesi than 40 per cent of the popular vote. But liberal Sen. Ernest Gruening of Alaska has recently introduced a congressional district plan which has long been espoused by Texas multimillionaire H. L, Hunt Mr. Johnson wisely recommends that the comptroller-general’s office should be given complete authority to obtain full reports after each presidential election as to payments that have been made and to audit toe\ex-penses of presidential cam- We’re still going to the moon by the end of this decade, by God, “Let’s talk about 501,” Paid Henry said-today, getting on Super Cities The Denver Post many churches, for example, are. to be encouraged in a totally planned city? with the job.' Paul* is,.the Arthur C. Clarke, the great Voice of Apollo. mU um> . S ,, . ■.... ——~ ....... ....... v. Greek god should have sound- °?f® ascribed a marvelous schools? If the city operates at ° nUv___millirma nf tmarc in ’ ... . ..... And that British science, fiction writer, Who is to pay taxes for the schools — and what kind pf ed so good. “It’s coming late this summer or early fall. It will be toe first test of the Saturn-5 booster. Seven-and-a-half million pounds of thriwt nn takiwff, five time* as much as we’ve ever handled before. “It won’t be mantled but we hope to learn a lot from the mission. And will, I’m sure. When a bill was passed last We’ll send the spaceship into October by Congress permit- an Agg-sh.pH «*»♦ - ting each individual to indi- fire it back at toe earth at cate on Ms income-tax return about huMuf speed.” that a dollar of his tax money Patiently/ he explained. On This is an innovation wMch is long overdue. For obviously members of committees of Congress have been reluctant to investigate toe finances of their own political party. city—millions of years in toe future-3na book ariled, “The City, and toe Stars.” His automated city, Diaspar, was so fully automated that nothing was done manually; even “human” experience was programmed by advanced technology.» But.Clarke’s Diaspar proved ‘faulty by toe end of the story. Its residents wanted to be human after a loss howlong should the rest of America subsidize it? by members of Congress on official trips abroad. Congressional committees make annuhl reports on individual travel expenses of. members and committee staffs on committee business, but these reports do not ftflly account for such thing* as We’re not Basing these are transportation, embassy reasons for criticizing toe commodations and entertain- project. We simply find that, like so many idealistic things we’veassumed to he unmixed blessings, there are important questions of choice to be faced when toe ideal nears reality. ment. carried them too far. Diaspar was radically altered. Silent Partner . , v The Monroeville (Ala.) Journal might be used for political contributions by either party, there was a widespread dissent. BAD PRECEDENT It was pointed out that toe new law did not deal with mis- toe second lap around the ni8 fo a way, suggests toe earth, when toe three-seat f(lilenuna today’s planners nnmmflnn chin is nt its an(\om* . ... \ r command ship is at its apogee, 10,000 miles from earth, the .engine of the “service module” which wfll be attached it will be ignited and will » If dogs could talk, they wouldn’t make such good friends. Biggest spender listed in committee reports was Rep Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, who headed a subcommittee that investigated the travel spending of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, of all things. ___Hays spent a totalof <1,-_ 589 on foreign travel.No accounting was given on Pow-ell’s expenses. are widely divergent, ranging from direct voting to proportional, congressional and district plans. The ooe-man-one-vote method of choosing our chief executive has a pleasant democratic ring to it, and enjoys the support of toe American Such stipulations make little itrong voice far ttoTfar right' use of political funds and that difference in the outcome of The Gruening - Hunt plan it would be a bad precedent presidential elections under would retain the electoral col- to give the taxpayer toe right our winner-take-all electoral lege system, giving each state to exercise any control over college system; because each two electors-at-Iarge and one how Ms tax money shall be state now casts its electoral for each congressional district, disbursed by the government, ballots as a unit. but toe votes of the latter the earth — simulating its return to earth from the moon. ... _ 5 In comparison with the MIGHT MAKE CHANGES would be cast according to budget of the United States But if toe electoral college gw®™1®*, the total cost of Bar Association as well as the were eliminated and each vote ggff presidential campaigns Is rela- aensiS majority and minority given the same weight, state -------5— —— - ,------ SSEiSSSfES *■***£ * * 7. T . trict plan fa vo red by most But election by popular vote ^tewights advocates, except could, lead to more,'rather that in toe latter case toe 23,500 M.P.H. By the time it comes to within 200 miles of earth it will be traveling at 23,500 miles an hour, just as will men returning from toe lunar surface. of new cities. The Denver Post Tuesday carried a bonus section describing Dr. Athelstan Spil-an experi-mental city, a project for whiqh toe University of Minnesota has $248,000 in federal funds. Extra Benefits The Bay City Times Verbd Orchids Mrs. Emma Nickel To jriunge at that speed Into toe jelly-Uke atmosphere in which we live might be MgMy lethal. S^.the wizards here at the Dr. Spilhaus’s plan seeks to eondoct an experiment to see if the dream’c|ty is possible-toe city which never becomes oat of date, has no waste materials and is not called upon to grew beyond a fogkal size, either in area than less fedoal interference * ** sdectk)n 01 votes,would automatically1^ 01 43 CUrence; birthday- ‘‘cooUng” that toe'experimental city At tite same time We h There’s nothing like firsthand experience such as world travel to broaden one’s perspective. And this truism is not lost on our lawmakers in Washington. Last year almost half of toe Members of Congress took foreign trips at public expense. A survey notes that at least 243 (45.6 per cent) of the members made a total of 337 government-paid trips often referred to as “junkets.” Two-“retirees” figured in the foreign trip itinerary. They were Reps. Walter Rogers, D-Texas, and John C. Kunkel, R-Pa. Both retired at end of the 89th congress, after they had spent |8,970 and~63,506 respectively on “educational” trips abroad. WMch all goes to prove that in some occupations it’s toe fringe benefits that make toe job attractive. in state and local govern- president ments. Tins, toe federal govern- allocated by districts without need for an electoral college. Mrs. Jeannette Blake of 59 Monroe; 80t| birthday. system that goes back to their days as kids. concept allows room for study of toe human condition. How There Is no comprehensive record of the total spending flinty County lYsMii year, elsewher* in MlcM«t and all olliar ntmOmS UnlM Stata* nut a yaar. Alt MaH iaS-Krtpthma paynbla ■ IMm: Postage has boon paM at IM M Wamtar at MC organza line skirt ; Her long silk secured by a She carried a THE PONTIAC PRESS MAKE OVER PAGES PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1967 | Bride Chooses I A-Line Gown The United Church in Ovid was the setting for the Saturday wedding of the Lawrence Bruce Reynnells (nee Mildred Luceiia Warren). For the afternoon ceremony wore'an Empire waist-of embroidered silk with a flow length A- illusion veil was pill box crown, a bouquet of long stemmed yellow roses. Annette Kerbet was maid of honor with Susan Van Dyne as a bridesmaid. Lee E ml g was best man. Owen Seward Jr, and Loy and , Bruce Warren were ushers. Parents. of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. James Warren of Ovid and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reynnells of North Johnson Street. B—1 Saturday afternoon~vbws were repeated in Ovid by Mildred Luceiia Wayren and Hr, ” J Lawrence - HI' s * FT < 1 • Bruce HP ** Sv i Reynnells. Their parents are Mr . and ' MB ' 'V ' * % w ■* iH Mrs. James w 28 k ■ Warren of dvid and Mr. and Mrs. „Robert Reynnells of North-Johnson | r a.4 jA. Street. MRS. LAWRENCE B. REYNNELLS/ Take Time Out From War Servicemen Send Thanks Enjoying afternoon coffee in the spacious diningroom of the Villa Francesca oh West Long Lake Road are ffrOm left) Mrs. Mary Joyce, Mrs. Mary Sawdy, Mrs. Aldea Delude, Mrs. Kathryn Morgan, Mrs. Frances Bennett, Mrs. Norah Hymans artd Mrs. F. A. Ritzenheim. Sister Malvine, E.D.C., administrator of the Home for Retired Ladies, stands at the rear. The home is operated by the Daughterk of Divine Charity, and is open to persons of all faiths. ° oT^n^'' Health Departm with rsvp Homes for ABBY ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I receive numerous invitations to charity bails, fashions shows, previews, flower shows and the inevitable country club functions. * * ★ In many cases I dp not know . anyone in the sponsoring organi- . ration but receive an invitation only because of membership in another group. In refusing, must ■t acknowledge each and every one of these invitations? — Mrs. Dear Mrs. Bums: When the invitatiom says RiS.V.lV or answer cards are enclosed, (you - must send a refusal. When however, a card is enclosed saying “I will take .... tickets,” and there is ho blank for a refusal, you need do nothing. *—* •- w —---------- Country club announcements of dances w functions need only be answered of there is an R.5.V.P.; usually they simply ask you to make reservations and no answer is necessary. ORDER OF LEAVING Dew Mrs.' Post: When two. couples are dining out; and it is time to leave, does each gentleman escort his lady out, or do both gentlemen wait until both have arisen and follow both out? Curious Dear Curious: Both gentlemen -"'Wait-and let tile tW6'iadIes”pr£~ cede them. Picnic for Club Members of the Maple Leaf Club met for a picnic lunch-, eon Friday with Mrs. Vivian Tubbs of Tubbs Road. Coming from Hamilton, Ont., was guest, Mrs. R. A. Lomalty. By JUNE ELERT “What shall we do with Grandma?” It is?.. a * heartbreaking question', laced with vaguely-felt and generally unwarranted undertones of guilt. Grandma "(or Grandpa) .may be ill or senile or simply weak with the weight of years and no longer able to cope with day-by-. da/ necessities. ★ * ★ . Sons and daughters are understandably reluctant to relegate an aged, parent to a “home.” Eventually,they will /visit a nursing home or a home for the aged. Perhaps they will be surprised and relieved to know_ that beloved pldRers can be Safely entrusted to the dare of a “home.” / There are/safeguards to ensure that care will be adequate. SAFEGUARDS 7—""7" The/Nursing Home' Division of toe Oakland Cbunty Department of Public Health in cooperation with the State Health Department provides those safe-{ guards. .Enforcement of licensing requirements, inspectors, employe health standards, dietary supervision, investigation of complaints, ete. are all used. The staff of the Nursing Home Division consists of one full-time Administrator - Public Health Nurse, Mrs. Helen Beske and ~ dfle part-time Public Health Nurse, Mrs. Doris Schuchter. These women have the responsibility of making licensure visits, prior to license renewal in January, to all 46 licensed nursing homes in Oakland County, plus five licensed homes for the aged., Nine of toe licensed - homes are Medicare - certified facili- r Am / ph Here, in addition to minimum nursing care and staffing requirements (one licensed nurse, RN or LPN, on duty 40 hoprs per week), the many additional requirements for Medicare certification must be met. AH patients in licensed homes lust be under the care of a physician. In non-Medicare facilities, these visits rqay be spaced quarterly. • to Medicare or “extended-care facilities.” as they are called, patients must be seen by a physician at least once a month. • AH. Medicare services must-, be available to residents. • Consulting services of a qualified dietician^ must be available. • A medical-records librarian Mid a quaUfied social worker must be on call. • Nursing staff must be under the supervision of . an RN and there must be licensed practical nurses on duty at all times when an RN is not on duty. About: one third (740) of the presently available beds are in facilities certified by Medicare. Construction of new facilities under way wiH add another 500 beds to this total. Homes for the aged differ in licensing requirements in that Canfields Go. to Islands- FoUowing a reception at Pine Knob Resort, the Richard Lee Canfields (nee Carole Ann Starr) left for a wedding trip to the Bahamas. The couple was wed Saturday in-the United Presbyterian Church. Holly. •_______________— The bride was gowned in an ivory cage of silk organza and re-embroidered Alencon lace. A full length lace bordered mantilla of silk illusion was also worn for the evening ceremony. . She carried a cascade boUquet'' of white cymbidium orchids, Stephanotis and ivy. f . * ★ ! Marie honor for the daughter of the Bud E. Stairs of Holly. Sue Radzum, Mrs. Lawrence Brad-sher and Mrs! Morgan Moss were, attendants. James Canfield was his brother's best man. They are the sons of Dr. and Mrs. GaQ'L. [ f Canfield of James Starr (brother of the bride), jonn Howe, Donald Watts and 2nd Lt. James Dub-bert U.S.A. were ushers. Calendar 1 WEDNESDAY Woman’s World Series, 10 a.m., The Pontiac Mall. “Let's Get Started Cooking Outdoors,” by Barbara Zimmerman and Harriet Cannon of Consumer^ Power Company. ,Pontiac Unit. This is last in series for the season. New series begins in fall. j -Ladies’ Day Out Program, noon, YWCA. Spe-ical program displaying spring term class work in-creative projects. may attend this cooperative event. Call the YWCA for information. jPontiac League of Women Voters, 8 p.m., The Pontiac Mall. Mrs. Frederick Holmes and committee on' “China Foreign Policy." Mrs. Joseph Jenkins, is hostess. This meeting was originally scheduled in AH Saints 1 Episcopal Church. THURSDAY Pontiac Navy Mothers Club No. 355, 7:» pm., home of Mrs. Lucinda Ball of Virginia Street. Special meeting. they are not required to provide nursing services, nor to retain nursing personnel. . * ★ ★ Residents of these homes are persons 65 or older who are in good health. A physical examination and chest X-ray upon admission are required. Some may suffer temporary indispositions, but'if illness requires them to remain in bed for a long period, or prevents them from being active, transfer to ai facility where nursing care is available becomes nec- Wednesday Talk by Dr. Drachler The Sisterihood of Temple Beth Jacob will sponsor a talk Wednesday evening by Dr. Norman Drachler, superintendent of Detroit schools. . His topic at tha. 8:30 p.m. meeting will be “The Quest for Excellence to Education.” He will be introduced by Mrs. Lee Fisher of Birmingham. Hostesses for the occasion will be Mesdames Ke nneth Dick-stein, Harry Arnkoff, Tom Horowitz, Sidney Barnett, Nat Morrison, Paul ‘Mandel,' Isaac Grahelsky and Herman Dick-stein. This wiH be an open meeting and the public is invited. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN - DEAR ABBY: 1 just got toc thrill of my life, and because you were indirectly responsible for it, I want to n share it with | you. " You asked | your readers I to write to the, I lonely GIs in I Thailand who I never got any I mail, so I wrote La- rather long,--, chatty letter and sent it to . the address you suggested. I closed With, “You’d probably have been happier to hear from a beautiful, young blonde. Sorry . . . I am a 52-year-old grandmother.” Here is a part of the letter I received to return: “No, I wouldn’t have been happier to hear from a beautiful, young blonde. You see, my mother died when I was two, so I never knew what it was to have a real mother, but your letter came about as close to me a mother would have written to her son. Even though I am only 19, T laiow that "love" can be based on friendship, admiration, and respect — as weU as on ro-___ mance. there is room in my heart for all kinds of love, so I hope you won’t mind if I sign my letter with “love” — the kind of love a son has for a mother he never Imew. God bless you too. , (signed) A Less Lonely GI” Now,- Abby, you know why I am a . . . THRILLED GRANDMOTHER DEAR ABBY: When I saw tout letter to your column from GI Joe, King, asking for mail for some of the. lonely GIs, 11 couldn’t resist writing. I just received the foUoWtog from the ‘ GI who got my letter: “Dear Mrs. Vauthertoe: “Your letter was actually beautiful. I read it but loud three times already, and aU the guys thought it was great. . “From that one mention Abby had to ha column about writ- ing to GIs, letters have been pouring to at the rate of 9,000 a day! And we d.re trying to answer them aU. We love mail. \ It is toe greatest morale booster you can imagine. ★ ★ ★ ' “Here’s a little Information about toe. I am 28. Before joining the air force I was a barber. My borne is Kankakee, IE I’ve been married eight years. We have a little girl who is four, and a son who is a year oi, — v-'CocaCola 2.10 33* Colg Palm 1 9% iColfinRad . 0 38V, + i/i|CololntG. 1.60 Com 1C re 1.80 '47%47%— 27 27% iTTr~ > 71% 71% —I' i .34% 3 i 26% * % i ,39% 4- % i 50% - % A — % Stocks of Local Interest ^ n ^ Figure*- after decimal points ere eighth* conPow f90b OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS :contAirL m repre-tCjn, can sentative ......---- -- z—. - - , -w... , matety 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markate cont Oil 2.60 »» change throughout the day. Prices do Control Data 307 91% not Includa rotall ,markup, markdown or cooparlnT TO 10 31% . commission. Corn Pd 1.70 if 44%^ Cpwjao. M 10 16% x22 52% 51% 51% + 4 52 52 52 - 101 27% 27% 27% — ~UT 44% 44% 44% -t- 14 33% 33 33% + X7S 34% 34 34% - % 17 54% U- 54% + % 6 78% 7.8% 7|% “ 88% —3% Citizens Utilities Cl Detrex Chemical , Diamond Crystal . Frank's Nursery . Kelly Services -Mohawk Rubber Co. Monroe Auto ~ H||| Notlh Central A'cnmCei i.$7t A:CroWn Cork A CrownZe 2.20 T -Cfuc Stl 1.20 ( 1HI 13% 13% + x24 25% 24% »% ,+ —D— S 23% 23 23, ‘ - 17 33% 32% SMI — MUTUAL FUNDS 6T| Deere t.OOa Delta Aft- 1 DenRGW 1.10 ___DetEdls 1.40 . 8.89 9Tt:Oet Stool .60 19.21 19.90 DISmAlk flO 5.7 421 Dl i3.i awf.ot JDl Id Asked! D( Keystone Growth K-2 ’ Maes; .Invottort, Growths Mass, investors Trust . 7 M 7 M OowChm 2.20 ffSv| ]£•*♦ MW Lt lA0 • 1*-*^ If-fi DynamCp .40 ..19J8 20.89 30 64 63% 64 — 1 21 IT 110% 11* + 1 X7 19% 1*% 19% -t- 1 6 30% 30% 30% - . . 19 94W 14% MW-mOO L 11% 01% 01% — J . East Ai 21 156 155 155 IW x3 31% 31% 31% + % 61 35% 15% IB —E— - . ; EastAirLn Treasury Position ISS:- \ fSondO 1.7* 'Electron -Sp WASHINGTON .(API — The cash. posl- EIPasoNG I Non of the treasury compared with cor-|End Johnson responding date a yeer ego: {ErteLack RR May 34. 1967 May 24, 39661 EthylCorp .60 Balanc*— lEvansPd ,60b S 7,654,17243436 S 4364365,174331 IVarlhara - Deposits Fiscal Year July } 142,274,563^16.82 120407,229,945.15 Wlthdrawps Fiscal Year— EKodak 1.60a x39 136% 1»% 1» I 33% 32% 32% + 129491T97,919.14 Falrch Cam Pair H»i .1to 13,109,09449111 w — Includes OH*1 subject la statotory Dolly Madfson ;S 8 Keyser-Roth ..... .15 Q 56 10 ..POM 5 73% 73% 73% 0 60% 60% 60% — % 79% 71% 79% — % to 70% 60% 60% —2% 3 4%*' 6% + 60 28% 20% 28% -100 «% 40 40 - - 32 31% 31% , 31% . 32 55% 55% 55% h 8 32% 32% 32% — . 19 66% 65% 65% — % 23 54% 54% 54% . 10 11% 11% 11% + % 13 50% 58 50% - % 38 41% 41% 41% ... 6 47% 46% 46% — 38 26% 26% 2M-27 27% 27 27% + 19 11% 30% 31 — . 6 60% 60% 60% — % 166 12% 11% 12%-% 25 52% 52 ■ ‘ 39% 39% . 35 57% 55% 57%'+2 23 M% #% 44% - > W mi 71% 71% — 1 9 Tl% 11% 11% -M 4" 66% 66% 66% — 1. 43 30% 29% 29% — % 31% 31% 31% .. IdahoPw 1.40 6 36 35% 36 16% 16% 16%- IngerRend 2 inland Stl 2 InsNoAm 2.40 tnterlkSf T.OO 107 37% 37% 17%...... 30 32% 32% 32% — % 26 91% VlW 91%...... 6 11% 11% 11% +-% JdhnMan 2,20 Kaiser Al 1 , KayserRo .60 Ktnnecoti 2 KirnCLd 2.60 Lehman 1.86g LOFGIs 2.80a LlbbMcN ,23f LI?torHn‘A1.54t Livingstn Oil L 91% + % 7% 59% +1W —to—a*—31^4 31J y+t- 8 54% 53% 53% - V 2 234 234 234 -1 42 71% 77% 77% - V 21 49% 40% 49% + 9 11 56% 56% 56%-9 27 26% 34% 34% — 9 —K— 33 91W 90% *1% + % 12 110% 111% 11(14 — % 3 66% 66% 66%’- % 6—3£% 35% — % 114 63% 62% 63 31 22% 22% 22% ! m% 33% :: 6% + 17 — 25 17% 17 I 29 20% 70 a I 19 29 29 29 I x28 53W 52% 53W 7,400 136% 132W 133 I 7 23% 23W 231 ----/ 37% 3695 TT —M— 59% 57% 57% —1 I 53% i I 53% Aafquar .25g MartlnMar f MayDStr 1.60 “lytag l.60a :DonD .40b todCp 1.90 llv Sh 1.60 MerrChap^le mum 36% 36% -110 72 71% ‘71% — 3 33% 33% 33% — % 169 42% 41% 41% —1% 14 45% 45% 45% — " 6 46% 46% - ■ 30 m m V» - % 12 24%' 24% 209 If (M 45% ifi “ 2 26% MM Mon sen 1.60b I li J I 22% 22% 1 I 31% »r^w 4 30% 30% 30% 34 25% 24% 25 - % 23 34% 33% 3Mb-JO 42 109% llnb 107% -2% 3 269b 269b 26% iSk " —N------- 14 7696 75% 75%-1% NaiCish 1-20 - 34% 3 i ,34% —'I 4' 35% 3496 3496 —1 22 45% 45 4SW 3 29% 29% 29% .... 32 40 479b 4| • + . 26 1396 13% 1396 + 23 41% 41% 41%— « »% 20% 20% .. IT 279b 2696 |W6+> % 56 71 77% 72 I 30 21% 21% 21% IS 107% M696 109% . „ 40 4798 47 4796 +1% NWBan 1,901 l FoodFair .90 FordMot 2.40 Fore Dair .50 eepSut.2t :Pwtt 1.20 I A Sul 40 . ..I Am n.40 PanhEP 140 ParkeOov la > Paab Coal 1 _ .......... ||| 26 21% 21% 21% iPan ney!40a ' 76 21% 20% 21 + W'Pa PwLf 1.M " 3 49Vj 49% 49V, + % Pa RR 2.60a 9 77% 76% 76% —1% Pennzoll 1.40 25 31% 31 38 + % PepsiCo 100 5 16 15% 15% — %l PftzerC 1.20a 165 51% £ 51 —-96f|fii0'D;Pn~ 27 27 26%____J Phils El .144 W7 55% 55% .55% + W'PhtlRdg 140 I 20% 20% 20% — 1 15 34% 34% 34% + 14 Xm 27W 27% — - 46 nji 12% 1296 — 17 MW 36 36 — 4 36% 26% 26% ... x59 22% W% 22% -M* Wb * 32% -1 5 37% 36% 36% - fmmT 16% 26% 132 41% 43 41% + .. 13 16% 14% 16% - % 7 4 2% 4*%.f|%,+ % 23 32% 32% , M% 49 65% 3 45% 2 99% Wb 99% - % 17 99% 15% 04% -196 10 ^.W ®b U 62 41% ! > M% si- hi—1% ih Low Last Chg. PltneyB 1.20 PltPfaW 240 Pitts Steal Polaroid .40 Procters 2.20 PubSvCol .90 Publklnd ,34t PugSPL 1.60 Pullman 2.00' RCA .Mb Reythobn .90 Reich Ch ,30b RepubStl 2.50 Revlon 1.30 13 29% »% 29%.. 20 MW 36 36% + ' —49 78% 74% -76%—F 20 14% 15% 15% .. .07 65'* 65% 4596 + ' 47 31% 31% 31% — ' 50 5294 52% 52% — ' 70 37% - 37 37 SB 34 37% *“• | Rohr Cp .80 RoyCCola .72 Royol Dut la RydorSys .60 157 9Vb 9W — I Senders TO Schenley 1.40 Scherlno 1.20 Sclent bate SCM Cp -40b Scott Paper 1 x55 23% 23% 23% + 2 40% 40% J0I6 4 46% 46% 46% + 21 2996 29% 29% 4 83 B 83 - 9 57% 57 57% + „ 41 59% 5(9b 58% .... 40 lOtViS 105% 106% — % 49 «% 60% 6096 - % 60 If 21% 28%-% gg%8 mu 10 55% 5496 55 07 11% 16% 1694 -1% ROME (AP) — Rome welcomed the first Common Market summit meeting in six yealrs today with inauguration of- a new executive'combine expected to be the only achievement. French President Oiarles de Gaulle’s opposition to Britain’ application for membership and to proposals for political unity of the six Common Market memb^Tntedoutpro^son those two major issues. ★ ’ ★ ' ; ★ That left little but formalities and ceremonies for the two-day meeting on the 10th anniversary of the formation of the European Economic Community. However, de Gaulle was expected to go along with the inauguration of a 14-member executive combine to replace the three separate executive com-that now exist for the Economic Community; ti>e European Atomic Energy Commii sion, and the European Coal and Steel pod:" " EXERTED WILL De Gaulle also exerted his will here by oppoking the appointment of West German Walter HaUstein to head the new combine. Hallstein is the longtime chairman of the EEC commission . qnd a champion of the kind of political unity de Gaulle opposes. It wjas strongly Sfiblt Tfn .580 2 21% 21% 21% - I 72% 71% 71% — ; m j SlngerCo 2.20 Smith K 1.00a SoPRSu 1.77g SouCalE 145 Sou N Gas 1, 44 51% 51% 51% 9 43% 43% 43% — 94 13 38% 48% 31% — | 27 27% 17% 27% + . 9 34% 34% 34% *r soumrec i.w 15 3]% 31% 31% ... South Ry 2.10 6 48% 41% 48V, - . Spartan Ind 39 II 1796 1796 — % Sparry Rand 24$ 32% 31% 31% - % Squan 0 .70 17.2Mb 26 MW + % Staley 1.35 ISO 34% 34% 34% - % figgnMriv40 14 37% WA 37% - 96 Std Kolw' 40-^ 22 2S 2696'24% — M StOIICal 2.50b 101 50% OTb 91 - StdOIIInd 1.90 23* 54 53 53% —1 StONJ 1.600 255 61% 61% 61%- ‘ 250 8 65% 6SM 65% + ifi i 13% 13% 1Mb + s ** «S'T Steuff Ch 1.00 SterlDrua .90 SteviWP 245 ft H 22 4794 , t 45% , the appointment will go to an Italian, or to Belgium’s Jean Rey, who distinguished himself as tiie Common Market representative in the Kennedy: Round tariff negotiations in.Geneva. Only ceremonial functions were planned for the opening day. The only working session, lasting, three hours, is scheduled Tuesday morning. Hanging over the conference was fear of war in the Middle East. But there was no indication that tiie Common Market leaders could do anything , to lessen tension between Israel and the Arabs. 45 41% 45% 45% -IV, 136 63 61% 61% —2% 47 33% 33% 33%. 6 49% 49%- 49%' 1 25 25 25 . —T— - 70 46 44% 45- —1% .MIS 276% 174% 75 2496 24% 24% 103 75% 74% 74% 9 19% 19% 19% 16* 11996 117% 111 “ “*T6 1M1 132 -1% Textron 1.20 UnOCol 1.20a Un Pie l .80a " 9 Tank 230 ilroyel 1.20 _HtAIrLIn 1 ■■ UnltAirc 1.60 tMM 1.20 ‘KTto3*- Lines 2b 12 56% 56% 56% + __,„66% 45% .... x62 23% 2294 2294 - % V 35 » » - % 24 51 50% 50% -1% 16 59% 50% 51% -1% 70 44% 44% 44% .... 15 21% 23% 24% + ' 1* 94% 91 *3% —1 4 5694 56% 5694 .... —V— 60 30% 3Mb 30% — 75 39% 10% 30% 15 45% 45% 44% + —w— WamPic -50a 79 24% 24% 24% - ■"-■RLambl 51 49% 49 49 - hWat 1.16 • 3 2294 2294 2294 — tnAIrL 1 32 49% 49% v.„ . i 29 76% 74% 76%—1% 27 20% 2796 2796 - % m 23% -am — % WnUnTel 1.40 ■ ________■ I WeitgEI 1M 21 S 51% B Wayarhr 1.40 22 39% 30% 39 vmrlCp 1.60 — '— '— — White M 1.M tMHaWDf 1.70 WlnnDIx 1.44 Woatejorth 1 _________ 1.50 X106 65% to% 63% —1 —X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp 1 xll 201% 277 21 ’'ngstSht 1.60 -6 31% 31% : *nnn R 1.30 57 37% 59% ! Salts figures iff unofficial. Unloss offtorwiso notod, rtfos of divW § —mSSmm •grtLc rile AdS ated? dfvldmid.™?—Llquldotlng dividend, d—Declared ar paid to 1967 plua Nock dividend. a-PaW la>t year, t - Payable In etock during 1967, aeM-mm —- value on ex-dlvldond or ex-late. g-Declarad or paid to r. n Declared ar paid attar ___.-.,,,-ld Or split up. k—Declared ■ tt ______________or jwM Rite year, an accumulative, fr-"" '5 C T T-% > 1/ 40% 48% - W "trad er ite jKtkw taken at, leal dlytoen l_73% 73% 73% ’SklJtTouStoS 4 ca«h value on ek-divlderia I. wl—When tuued. nd—Next day i bankruptcy or rbcehtersMp- compiled by Tba MijSated Preee 3 If 11 60 lad.- Raa* urn Mad at Change (te cemaT : . IM.0 156.7 „.... : 475.4 1MJ.iM4,||L7 473.9 191.6 159.1 331.1 Little Expected at Mart Talks De Gaulle Opposition Is Stumbling Block By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - H some interests in tiie United States had their way, you would have a holiday today instead of Tuesday. Most holidays, these ad- | vocators say, should be cde-| brated on the] first day of the] week. This is a tick-! sh type of posal, involving CUNNIFF deep emotions, ______ patriotism, tradition and habit But the idea of Monday observances is a persistent one and may someday receive serious consideration. Some powerful forces give thrust to the idea. First, it is‘in the spirit of the four-day week which, we are told, may be upon us this century. It would reduce interruptions in production. And there are obvious health advantages in long weekends, to to to One group that sees great beauty in the three-day holiday weekend includes businessmen, and just a little investigation gives at least one insight into the reason why. Many bosses, it seems, feel their employes use Mondays as semiholidays anyway. This theory views the employe as arriving for .work physically exhausted ana emotionally drained, his head devoid jjrany-thing but golf scores and headaches. MONDAY JAMS Obviously there is some truth in this. For evidence you may check the roads from resorts to 27 Cardinals Ntimed; 4 Are Americans VATICAN CITY (AP)—- Pope Paul VI named 27 new cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church today, including four Americans. This brings the membership in tiie Sacred College of Cardinals to 120, the largest in history.* The Pope’s action gave tiie United States nine cardinals, three more than it has ever had. ■mi -mu. _ mi The new American princes of (wo w tiie church include Archbishops ” John Joseph Xrol, -56, of Philadelphia; Patrick Louis O’Boyle, 70, of Washington, D.C., and John Patrick Cbdy, 50, of Chica- The fourth American, the RL Rev. Francis J. Brennan of Shenandoah, Pa.,- has long headed the Vatican’s Sacred Rota, the highest tribunal of tiie . church dealing with marriage matters. . ' ★ 'to. ~to Pope Paul had increased American - membership in the Sacred College to six c at his first consistory, in February 1965, but AlbaT Cardinal Meyer died Sept. 4,1966. Barber Shop ~~ Is a Cut Above “Our Barber Shop” opens today at 485 S. Sanford. The shop is owned by Eugene Cox of 536 Judaon who formerly owned a shop at 481 S. Sanford, next door to the new site. “There are five barbers and all hew, modern equipment,’ said Cox. BONO AVERAOES Rein IlMl. Util. Fgn. L. Y4 4et Changes —,1 +.1 .... Brat BE 72-0 3-4 01.0 01J 14.1 Prev. pey 72.0 924 11.7 *14 16.1 '2.0 134 02-4 91.9 16.0 134 ga 074 Xssrjss Ago 72.0 Ago 7X7 W IW 73.0' *04 844 9X4 *5.7 034 *24 DOW-^JONRS AVERAGES 41 aroiy...... ........ If4j4—047 ■ ........ ..... 31447+040 1.8 10 Seoand grad1 1.710 PuMb utllltU 1.410 InduRrlal) . A?losf Would Fall on Monday Long Holidays Eyed the ?ity some Monday morning. Very early, they may be jammed with desperate motorists who Indulged themselves with an extra night at the cottage. Having so coddled themselves, they must rise in the darkness and drive madly toward the city and their first workday of tiie week, their blurred consciousness distressed by the vague feeling that the swollen sun seems to be [rising like a great wound opening. What a Way to begin the week. Pontiac Names Service Head Other Chaifges Told for Motor Division The appointments^ James G. Vorhes as Pontiac Motor Division’s parts ana service director was announced today by Thomas L. King, general sales Vorhes, who has been Pacific regional manager since Febru-ary, succeeds John C. who was recently named assistant director of General Motors Corp.’s service section, Vorhes plans to move to the Pontiac area. , Another change announced by King was naming of Steven J. Kulcher as assistant' zone man- Twisters, Hail, Rain Pou Many Areas By the Associated Press Property-destroying tornadoes, hail and heavy rains raked large sections of the nation Sunday night while unusif-ally warm weather lingered from, eastern New Mexico to Georgia. -Funnel clouds -were reported in Colorado, Kansas, Indiana and Nevada. A tornado slammed into -two homes in Jefferson County, Mo., shearing off the roof of one and destroying the other. There were no injuries. f ★ ‘ to to High winds. accompanying a severe thunderstorm blew down one building and ripped the roof off anpther in Tupelo, Miss., Sunday night, hut no injuries were reported. Marble-size hail pelted Huntington and Charleston, W. Va., and wind gusts to 50 miles- an hour and heavy rains hit the area. FUNNEL CLOUDS Indiana also was hit by/apring storms. Funnel clouds were reported at Coatesville, Goldsmith and Fort Branch, but no personal injury or property damagq was reported.. Heavy rain was reported in 10 states from West Virginia to Washington. Nearly 1%. inches of rain hit Parkersburg, W. Va. Lamar, Colo., recorded .94 of an inch of precipitation and Lubbock, Tex., .85 of an inch. There is another, side to this problem also. A midweek holiday sometifues leads to an additional holiday, self-proclaimed by the employe. The notable example is Thanksgiving Day, which falls on a Thursday and is ■ sometimes! extended through Friday, either by design or indigestion. Currently, it is standard prac-' tice to grant at least six holidays, these being Christmas*1 Thanksgiving, New Year’s Day, Independence Day, Labor Day and Memorial Day. Sometimes Washington’s Birthday and Veteran’s Day are added. CANDIDATES Of these, at least five are considered candidates for switches to Monday:.Washington’s Birth-'* . Veteran’s Day, Independ- ■ ence ‘ Day and Thanksgiving. * Labor Day, of course, is a Mon- , day holiday already. Whenever such proposals are made by Congress, businessmen or labor, the arguments soon, follow. Ih a young nation proud of its history bdt untroubled by -ceremony, traditional dates are, nevertheless, still difficult to tamper with. These dates are sacred to some. But others ask why? to ★„ ' * Advocators of Monday holidays point out that there is hardly anything saeredHor ex—, ample, about observing Thanksgiving Day on the fourth Thursday of November. It was set there by a congressional'resolution that voided an earlier date proclaimed.by Franklin D. Roosevelt. This was not tis first move, either. Before 1939 it was observed on tiie last Thursday in November, having ' been set there by President Abraham Lincoln in 1864. It was not Lincoln’s only Thanksgiving date. Just a year Wfqre he had decided on AOgust 6 ^ 3 S. Korean Fishermen Killed by Reds SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -Three South Korean fishermen were killed and seven others injured in four. North Korean attacks on South Korean fishing vessels over tiie weekend off Korea’s west coast, military sources said today. ager in Pontiac. In 1962, he was named service and parts manager in New York. Hu also will move to the Pontiac area. Kulcher joined Pontiac in 1958 while a student at General Motors Institute. Vorhes ^joined the division in 1947 as a clerk in the service department in Pontiac. to to to* - •. Vincent A. McCabe, -current Pontiac assistant zone r has been appointed Buffalo zone manager: He came to Pontiac in 1949 as assistant car distributor in Pittsburgh. King also announced these changes in Pontiac’s sales •organization: ' • Walter W. Knocke, who has been Chicago zone manager ^ since 1991, succeeds Vorhes as Pacific regional manager with offices in San Francisco. Gilbert A. Wiggins, Cincinnati zone manager, succeeds Knocke in Chicago. T John W. Johnston, Buffalo 7-nnp mflnagEr^siifppprig Wigging in Cincinnati. David C. Snyder, office manager and car , distributor in Portland, succeeds Kulcher. I n was not known whether the All appointments are effectivekhoofing occurred in Thursday. jwaters. The attacks occurred in the general area where South Ko- ' rean navy boats exchanged fire for 20 minutes, with Communist patrol craftr arid shore batteries Saturday* the; sources said. ' to' to to The gun battle took place near the Communist island of Suni-lo, about 90 miles northwest of Inchon. No casualties or damage were reported. Communist patrol boats fired machine guns at South Korean fishing boats - after the .fishing boats refused to go to North Korea to surrender, the sources said. All four South Korean boats' returned to Inchon wittr~ the dead and wounded aboard, they added. A record high temperature ofl||i 99 degrees was set Sunday at Macon, Ga. Temperatures early today ranged from 33 at Old Town, Maine, to 80 at Needles, Calif., and Brownsville, Tex. % m * m‘ News in Brief The theft of 322, a coin collection, two pellet air rifles and ammunition — total value of $182 — during a break-in of home was- reported to Waterford Township police Saturday by Ruth M. Wilds of 610LAndersonvU!e. A television and portable radio worth $110 Were taken from the unloched home of Melvin King, 3t, of 460 Nevhda early yesterday, be told Pontiac po-lftce. Thomas Oater, 26, of 66 Gage reported to Pontiac police yesterday the theft of his wallet containing $140 while he w«s at a downtown tavern. The theft from his home of radio valued.at $180 was reported to Pontiac police yesterday by Jules D. Lavalais, 43, of 453 Linda Vista. * 4 % « % * By ROGER E. SPEAR Qj “I am 95 years old and my investments are just about able to keep me. Two mergers have me in doubt. 1 hold Hartford Electric Light and Connecticut Light . mid third called Northeast Utilities. American Optical, which I owned, has beat acquired by Warner-Lambert Should I hold or sell Northeast and Waraer-Lambert?’’ C.H. A) Northeast Utilities is a holding company with operations in contiguous territories in Connecticut and western Massachusetts. This is an instance, I believe, in which the whole is stronger thah the parts. Your Northeast is a Sound stock, (titering a satisfactory return, and I advise you {to hold it. ' American' Optical’s merger with Warner-Lambert was beneficial to both partihs, in my opinion. You formerly held stock involved mainly In optical products. You now own .. . . .. . I i quite a satisfactory exchange portable teleyision and small|tois _ an isgue i*T*d& J1 IH M|H| diversified in products. As with most strong growth stocks, your gprent Return on Warneri^mmlrt is be- low two per cent. You may wish more inoahe; and in this event only, I would switch to CIT Financial, yielding 5.2 per cent. _—- to---,, to-™-;-to —•- Q) “Are tax-exempt bonds * generally good investments? Could yon name some of the better ones that I might buy?” gjl - - '■"-;v ■ - . A) .Direct obligations of cities and states are among the safest investments you can buy. There are also available tax-exempts issued by districts and public authorities created by cities ind states but payable only otlt of specific revalues... These vary to- security in accordance with their coverage of fixed charges. Current^ I tike State of California 3%s of 2000 at 100 and City of Seattle 3.80s of 1987, also at MO. These are lfigh-grade direct obligations and are hot redeemable prior to matur- *y. ‘ W • • ' / Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing is available to readers. For year copy send $1-60 to Roger . E. Spear, tn onre of Tie Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. mi?. . .■■■ (Copyright, 1167) 1 | THE PONTIAC PRESS. MON i>AY, MAY 29, 1967 Deaths in Pdntiac, Nedrby Areas Mrs. lames L Allen Mrs. James L. (Bertha M. Alien, 83, Of 1128 Boston, Water? 'ford Township, died today.- Her 'body is at Donelson-Johns Fu-jneral Home. John R. Cashion OVER IT.GOES - As a bulldozer lifts a comer/ a house in the path of a cross-town freeway planned for Flint begins to crumble, with the chimney starting its fall. Work to dear the routes of the east-west and north-south routes is nOw under way. 2 Helicopters CraFee, Dates Set Killing 10 Soldiers—PC JflfW FT. KNOX, Kyi (AP) 'Army announced today the death- toll reached 10 in the crash of two IIH1B “Huey” heli-. copters during a training mis- JtOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Nofc« I* hereby given by the i signed that bn June 3, 1967 at 10 at 70S W. "Clarkston Rd., Lake I Oakland County, Michigan, public Sale of a . 1959 Dodge 2-DrJ, bearing — number M312-138106, will be held for , to the highest-bidder. Inspection fl p Federal Credit Union Huron, Pontiac, Mich. By: L. T. McCABE May 27 and 29, 19< it jon June 3, 1967 a The Pontiac Parks and Rec-The sion at this military base near reation Department will spon-Louisville. Ten soldiers were in Ireland Army 'Hospital, two listed in serious condition, The 10 killed in the Sunday afternoon crash were members of the 3rd Squadron, 17th Air Cavalry Regiment stationed at the base, said Lt. Col. John Caithness, the post information officer. Identities were withheld pending notification of relatives. /Caithness said the helicopters Were transporting troops on a training exercise in preparation for a demonstration of firepower and armor mobility, sched-uled June 1. Each helicopter normally transports 10 men, plus a crew •of three. Caithness said it was not clear Mrs. Mark Comfort Service for Mrs. Mark (Mary) Comfort, 82, of 3359 Lexington, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Hun-toon Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. , Mrs. Comfort died yesterday. --Surviving- Mrs. EUdns, a member of the i 1963 Dodge 2-Dr. Sedan, bearing serial number 413217964V, will be ■" • for cash to the highest bidder. Ini tion IherVoT may be made at sami above, Oakland County, Michigan, 'place of storage. . Dated: May 2», 1967 whether the copters collided or Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union individually lost DOWer and 156 W. Huron, Pontiac, Mich. . r By: l. t. McCabe dropped to the ground. 19671 NOTICE of public hearing PLEASE TAKE NotlCE that the City - Council Is considering amendments to tga Zoning Ordinance of the City of Sylvan Lake to. provide for a reduction District and the industrial Bark’ District, and to amend Article..... Of said Zoning Ordinance to delete < line filling stations from the ... principal uses under Section A add It to the uses requiring B Appeals permit under Section C 'Please take further notice that the City Council will -meet at the City Hall o Wednesday, June 14, 1967, at 1:00 o'doc p.m. for the purpose of hearing an considering any objection to such amem ROSALIND WILDGEN City. Clerk • May 29, 1967 2 Women Steal $85 From Man Two women Eugene Sizemore met at a drive-in restaurant robbed him of $85, he told Pontiac police yesterday. Sizemore, 25, of 51 Mathews said he picked Up the Women early yesterday -at the Mary E. Cafe, 565 S. Saginaw, and was forced at knifepoint to drive to a nearby street, where the women took his money and fled, sor seven one-week day camp programs during the summer for boys and girls seven through Registrations for any of the weekly programs starting June 26 and continuing through Aug. 11 are now being accepted at the parks and recreation department office. A $5 fee for each camp period must be paid at registration. ★ ★ ★ The day camp — to be held at Frog Hollow in the Pontiac Lake area — will be limited to 40_childFen for-eacb period. Transportation Will be provided: Seven Drown in Michigan on Weekend Sefyice for John R. Cashion, 60, of 1022% Baldwin will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. , Mr. Cashkta died Friday. He had been employed at the Hudson Tool add Die Co. and as a bartender. Surviving are a brother, beli ef Keego Harbor, and a Blanc. Mr. Canther died Saturday. He was a member of the Holly Seventh-day Adventist Church and a retired, ehiploye of Grin-nell Brothers Piano Factory. Surviving are his wife, Madge; a daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Disbrow of Detroit; a son, For* rest of Ferndale; two grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren. ' , Mrs. Raymond A. Elkins ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Raymond A. (Agnetta C.) Elkins, 56, of 1030 Absequa-mi will be 11:30 a.m. Wednesday at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Hothe, Pontiac. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Carl Q¥. CPonelioa Q)onalt) 3t. Johns jr Kg Sr It's Meaning Now Touches Most Everyone .. When Memorial Day was instituted, . it set apart a day for die memory of our nation’s heroes who had fallen in our defense. Following the Civil War, the long period of peace made fewer the families affected. Today, almost every family has those who are or have been members of* our Armed Forces. Memorial Day means much to everyone of-them—Itaffeetr us all. Honor all on this day set apart for that purpose.— for your loved ones * as well as others. By the Associated Press Seven persons drowned Michigan waterways during the weekend, four of them in ’ ing accidents, _ Among the latest water deaths were two Detroit boys, Daniel Greenwood, 6, and his brother, Garrett, 8, whOsS bodies were recovered today from a canal where they were swimming Sunday night. ★ ★ ★ ■ Dragging operations were under way in Sanford Lake for the body of Michael Krone, 17, a Saginaw high school student. He disappeared while swimming early today, Midland County sheriff’s deputies said. : Martin Hansen, 38, of Mar- = quette and his mother-in-law, [ Mrs. Lampie Lanenon of IrOn-| wood drowned Sunday when their 12-foot boat capsized while they were fishing in Lake Superior. "Michael Gay, 3, drowned when the boat in which he was riding sank in the Tobacco River just west of Gladwin on Saturday. tiac, two daughters,“OTfS. Irene Snyder of Waterford Township and Mrs. Grace Strang of Mount pleasant; six grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; and four great-great-graUdchildren. John Gillespie Service for former, Pontiac resident John Gillespie, of Port Orange, Fla., will be ^:30 p.m. Friday at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Gillespie died yesterday. He was a retired employe of the Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Grace; -daughter, -Mrs. George Oley of Pontiag;, two sisters, Mrs.1 Christina Brown.aild Mrs. Elizabeth Campbell, both of Waterford Township; and a brother. Baby Girl Hodges Service for the stillborn daugh-ir of Mr. and Mrs. Billie Hodges of 1320 N. Cass Lake, Waterford Township, was held this morning at Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The baby was stillborn Satur-ay. Survivors include the parents; a sister, Jill; and two brothers, Michael and Drew, all at home. James A. Horace Service for James A. Horace, 46, of 121 Bagley will be 2 p.m. Thursday at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Horace died Wednesday. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are two daughters, Marilyn and Sarah Jane, both at home, and a lister, Mrs. Theresa Brown of Pontiac. Frank R. Morton Frank R. Morton, 62, a former Pontiac resident, died in Neosho, Mo., yesterday. His body is a) the Clark Funeral Home in Neosho. ' He was a manager in a manufacturing concern and had lived in Pontiac for 35 years be- HOLLY — Service for Frank I. Canther, 82, of 112 College was to be today at the Dryer Funeral Home, with burial in Creawood Manorial Gardens, Gr‘and Dale Sutherland LEONARD- Service far Dale Sutherland, 20, of 158 W. Elmwood will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almont, With burial in Lakeville' Cemetery, Lakeville. Mr, Sutherland died yesterday at home. He was an employe of GMC Truck and Coach Division. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Almon Sutherland of Leonard; a brother, John Parish of Clawson; and two sisters, Susan at. home and Mrs. Leonard Sherwood of Waterford Township. MAKE OVER FASES Clarkston Boy Dies of Tumor two stepsons; 10 grandchildren ; (finisher at Fiaher Body plant, and six great-grandchildren. died yesterday. He was a mem- Ronald E. Nebel, 6-year-old . ber of the AndersonviUe Com-80,1 of Nfr. and Mrs. William Frank I. Canth®r munity Church and Clinton yd^-Hebcd,' 800 W. Clarkston, died ley Barracks No. 2803, Davis- Saturday.^ burg. I Surviving are his wife, Ruth; f _T!W! victim 01 a malignant a son,Glenn T. at ohm«; abrain tumor, Roimie underwent brother, .George Smith of Clark- surgery last August in hopes of stonl fflira sister. M&HBraafe „r!m0V?l *“? „foPowfd ** Beardslee of Clarkston. surgery with cobalt treatments. His illness was the reason for several fund-raising conducted by citizens’ radio operators in die area. Surviving besides his parents is a younger brother, Jon at hpme, and grandparents, Mrs. Lucille Juenger of Fort Knox, Ky*. and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ford of Lake Orion. it A Mass of the Angels will be lid at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Joseph Catholic Church. Burial will be in East Lawn Cemetery by Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. ^JohB.Li.-Damaor 45, of Lansing (ore moving tcrNeoshir Qhone "FEDERAL 4-4511 Qatkinq On Our (Premise* Qoitelsofo^oltm ip* [ iBMEBaBBl W 055 WEST MU RON ST, PONTiAC —[drowned ffl|Mullett Lake near Cheboygan Saturday when his [boat capsized. A 17-year-old fishing compartonrTeFryJffolfe of Lansing, clung to the boat for two hours before being rescued. ★ ★ . ★ Gladwin County sheriff’s depu-, ties said young Gay was wearying a life preserver when the f mishap which claimed his life I occurred. The boat swamped whon tfro driver made a sharp turn, they said, and the boy was trapped under a seat. Expert Guidance Without Obligation from j MARKERS ...from $ 35 MONUMENTS . . from <$195 Compare Our Prices Before You Buy Whether yHKHKtfKl selectim teea assistance _______ I family memorial, or advice on cemetery requirements, take advantage of our experience. No obliga-tion. We'll counsel you, assist Monuments you in evejy„way. And, we ggg- specialize s fully guaranteed jC$H8iBg» Bam Guild Monuments. See ub todav. ________ OPEN EVEN!NGS TIL 8—SUNDAYS 1-4 Memorials for Over 73 Years INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 M. K-'iB ferry FE 5-6931 Bronx* Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries af Below Cemetery Prices Man Robbed by Pair in died Saturday. She was past president of the Lake Orion Woman’s Club and a member of the Order of Eastern Star No. !8, Pontiac. Surviving besides her husband •e a sgn, Roland W. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Paul Stapert of Flint; a brother, Lawrence W. Bergo of Pontiac; and foul* grandchildren. Memorial gifts may be made to the charity of the donor’s chpice. Mrs. Paul Ferguson ROCHESTER — Service for former resident Mrs.' Paul Ferguson of Chicago, ID., will be p.m., Wednesday at Dryden Methodist Church, Dryden, with burial in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden. Local arrangements are by Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Almont: She died in Chicago Saturday. Surviving are her husband and son, Douglas of Flossmoor, HI. Mrs. Andrew B. Glaspie OXFORD — Service for Mrs. Andrew (Clara) B. Glaspie, 90, of 19 W. Burdick was' to be today at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, with burial in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs. Glaspie, whose husband formerly was The Pontiac Press! outdoor Writer and a state senator and state representative, died Saturday. She was a member of the Oxford Garden Club, Pythian Sisters and Congregational Church Women’s Club. Surviving * are a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Little of Boca Raton, Fla.; a sister; two grandchildren; and a greatgrandchild. Frank Lyons LUM — Service for Frank Lyons, 75, of 4971 Lum will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Dryden. Mr. Lyons, a retired farmer, died Sunday. Surviving are two sons, KeS neth of Pontiac and Donald of Riverside, Calif.; two daugh- Chester S Stone LAPEER — Chester S. Stone, 3040 Millville, (lied today. His body is at the Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Charles H. Thompson PONTiAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Charles H. Thompson, 53, of 3197 Caroline will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, with burial in Mt; Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. Rosary will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be at 7 p.m. tomorrow, Mr. Thompson, Assistant superintendent of Hie experimental engineering department of GMC Truck and Coach Division, died Saturday. He was a member of Pontiac Elks Lodge 810, Pontiac Township Volunteer Fire Department, GMC Foreman’s Club and Metropolitan Club Spirit 60. Surviving are his wife, Bernadette; three sons, Charles L. of Pontiac, Glen of Rochester and Robert of Pontiac; a daughter, Marilyn at home; a sister; two brothers, Leonard and Lawrence, both of Auburn Heights; and 10 grandchildren. Virginia L. Voss BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Former resident Virginia L. Voss, 34, of New York, N. Y., died yesterday. Her body will be at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. She was college editor of Madamoiselie magazine. 4 Surviving are her parents, Mr. nd Mrs. Merle R. Voss of Bloomfield Towiiship. 3 Rail Cars AbtazeNear Ammo Load years ago. Surviving are his'wife, Ruth; one daughter, Mrs. James Aid- ^7 Mrs. Gan ’Wentworth°of rich; one son, Reff;^ and three.Dryden and Mrs. William Crow grandchildren, all of Pontiac; one brother; and two sisters. Russel E. Wilsey Word, was received today that Russel E. Wilsey, 81, a former Pontiac mailman, died May 14 in McAllen, Tex., where he lived; He was a member of Pontiac Church of the Brethren. Surviving are his Wife, Della Allison Wilsey; two sons, Earle E. of Kingsville, Tex., and Russel J. of Pontiac; one daughter, Mrs. Ruth E. Wilt of Escondido,^ Calif.: two sisters: one brother; Four Attackers Independence Township . man told Pontiac Police two Rob Motorist - men who jumped into his. car at ;.j , :-- South S ag i n » w anrf Wilson WofOrford [robbed him early yesterday of $254 Floyd M. Aulds, 33, of 48601 ^^WTowrahip-lfian toW Pine Knob said he had stopped’^aterford .Tqv:ns^P. p°a<* at two taverns on Woodward [our and was northbound on Southp* *311®* ear L.!^ay ?n.A^' .Saginaw when the men forced P°rt R°«d WilUams Lake. th^ir way into his car at a traffic light. His assailants held a knife to 'his throat and ordered {iim to ■“drive around” for some three hours before they took his l money and fled, Aulds said. ! Both bandits were described wallet before las slender-built Negroes in theirI Police said it Was unde-30s, each about 5-foot-8. One had termined how much money was ;a mustache, according to Aulds.fin the wallet. Franklin C. Owen of 1323 Col-llier said he had allowed the subjects to enter his car under a false pretense. ★. ★ * They told him to stop the car, then jumped him and took the SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — Three railway tank cars loaded with alcohol exploded and caught fire after derailing today and police said they were dangerously close to a freight car loaded with ammunition. Smoke from the bunting tankers could be seen for 30 miles. * ★ ★ ■ One police official said no one Could get into the perimiter of the fire because of the danger of the ammunition car exploding. There were no immediate reports on injuries. BLOCK ROADS Police cordoned off all roads leading into the area, a half-mile from the Swjtzer crossing, 18 miles south of Spartanburg. This included U.S. 221 south from Spartanburg to Woodruff. ★ ★ ★ First reports said 15 Or 20 cars of Atlantic Coast Line’s freight train No. 293 derailed. The—tankers—exploded— and caught fire, sending a pall of smoke and flames 3,500 feet Former Pontiac Township Supervisor Leroy DaviS died Saturday in Largo, Fla. He was 65. Davis,' supervisor for eight years, was an eider in the-Auburn Heights United Presby-terian Churrii, „a ^ Pontiac Roosevelt Lodge No. 510 F & AM, the Scottish Rite Detroit Consistory, Moslem Tepiple, Detroit, the Rochester Elks Lodge No. 2225 and the Auburn Heights Lions Club. ★ ★ ★ Roosevelt Lodge will conduct a memorial service at 8 tonight the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, and services will be conducted at p.m. tomorrow at' the Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church. Burial will follow in Pomeroy, Ohio. Surviving are his wife, Mar-guerite; a son, Kenneth of Pontiac Township; a daughter, Mrs. C. J. Edwards of Pontiap Township; 10 grandchildren; two sisters and three brothers. Fire Guts Home in Commerce An early morning fire gutted a Commerce Township home at 3274 Shambourne today, causing total damage of $4,000, according to firemen. The blaze apparently started at 6 a.m. from a defective heat-firemen said. Occupants of the home escaped safely. All fire and rescue, units in southern Spartanburg County were ordered to the scene. Newsmen in planes said they could see at least 20 freight cars lying on their sides in a wooded area near the ACL’s main line leading northward from August ta, Ga. .Several of the cars were in flames, including the tankers. The male suicide rate in the U.S. is three times that of females. Soviet, Yank Spacemen in Cordial Capsule Tour PARIS (AP) -- A Soviet; The 15-minute visit at the spaceman went inside an Amer- Paris Air and Space Show was ican space capsule today and apparently the first time a So-was checked out by an Ameri- viet cosmonaut had a close-up of Lum; a sister, Mrs. Cora Vincent of Lum; 11 grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren. Harry E. Miller Sr. PONTIAC TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for' Barry E. Wilier Sf., of 2061 Joy will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Fu-I neral Home with burial at Perry Mount Park Cemetery. An Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be held at the funeral home-at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Mr.THUIer, “a“relired employe of Pontiac Motor Division and member of Joslyn Avenue United. Presbyterian Church, died yesterday. He was a member of Pontiac Masonic Lodge 21 and 1 POE 810. Surviving are his wife, Margaret; three sons, Harry ,Jr., Jamea1 and Thomas, all at home;v two daughters, Mh. Claude Smith, of Niagara Falls,M N.Y., and Millie Miliar at home; three sisters; two, brothers and four grandchildren. Israel J.. Smith SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Israel J.< Smith, 73, of 8883 Andersonville will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Jhe Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home. Clarjc-ston. Burial will be in LakejAew Cemetery, Clarkston. Mr. Smith, a retired metal can space veteran. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies investigated more titan 133 reported incidents, in the past 4fi hours. A breakdown of causey for police action: Arrests—21 Vandalisms—13 Burglaries—18 Larcenies—22 Assault^—2 Annoying Phone Calls—2 Indecent Exposures—1 Property Damage Acci jf|-dents—19 15 Injury Accidents—18 Dog Bites—7 Cat BRes—1 —Attempted-Arson—1—— Rape—1 Child Neglect-1 Disorderly Persons—7 Arntod Robberies—2 Unarmed Robbery—1 Stolen Cars—0 Attempted Break-ins—2 No Operator’s License—1 Drunk Driving—! -Carry Concealed—-Weapon—1 Contempt of Court—1 view of the inside of ; I space vehicle. 11 Lt. Col. Pavel Belyayev and |;U.S. astronaut Michael Collins 11 met today at the American ex-I hibit, where an Apollo capsule is I on display. The meeting II extremely cordial. The Russian | was invited inside the capsule I and Air. Force Lt. Col. Collins I dimbed in with him. | Belyayev fired a long series of I j questions at Collins and the answers came back in rapid fire. Afterward,- tiie-two-toured-the AtweHrnn exhibit, and the ques- -• Hons continued. ' (HIBIT WEIGHT Belyayev asked Collins what weight the U S. Saturn 5 rocket could hurl into orbit. Collins told him 200,000 pounds. Hole, Belyayev asked: “What [piloting systems are used:” Collins replied: “Automatic or Manual:” f ; Belyayev said he had been the first Sbviet spacemanAo fly the Voskod 2 capsule with manual controls. When Collins asked him how far from the intehded landing spot he had landed, Belyayev said: “My landing was a little difficult. That is why the distance away was rather sreat.” ^ Belyayev and Collins met for the first time on Friday and drank a vodka toast to Soviet-American space cooperation. LEROY DAVIS Pontiac Twp., Ex-Supervisor Dies in Flo Death Notices CASHION, JOHN R.; M*y 26, 1967) 1024V2 Baldwin; ag* 60; daar brother of Gladys Hadspaath and Elbert R. Cashion. Funeral service will be held Tuosday, May 30, at 11 a.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment In Oak Hill Camatary. Mr. Cathlon will II* In state at the funeral home. COMFORT, MARY; MAY 30, 1967; 3359 Lexington; age 82; beloved wife of Mark Comfort; dear mother of Mrs. Iren* Snyder, Mrs. Grace Strang and Hugo Comfort; *f vlvad m -- — grandchildren. —ica wtit be hold Wednesday, May* , lie Ir Interment In O i funeral h DAVIS,“LEROYJ may 27, 1967; . Largo Florida; (Formerly of Pontiac Township); age 65; beloved husband of Marguerite Davis; dear father of Mrs. C. J. Edwards and Kenneth Davis; also survived by two sisters, three brothers and 10 grandchildren. Memorial service Lodge No. 510. Tonight I _ . at the Harold • R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Haights. Funsral service will be held Tuaeday, May X, at 7 p.m. at th* Auburn Haights United Prssbyterlan Church. Following service her* Mr. Davis will be taken to the Ewing—Funeral- -Home, Pomeroy, Ohio for services and burial there. Mr. Davis will (Suggested \ ■m.l. ELKINS. AGNETTA C.; MAY 27, ___1967; 1030 Absaquamt Trettr L*«* Orion; ag* 56; balovad wife of Raymond A, Elkins; dear mother of Mrs. Paul (Elatna) Stapert and Roland W. Elkins; daar sister of Lawrence W. Bergo; also survived ■' ______ ■ held Wednesday May 31, at tt:30 a.m. at th* VoorhaaS-SIpl* Chap*) with Dr. Robert J. Hudgins officiating Interment In Parry Mount Park Cemetery. AArs. Elkins oyill lie In state' at th* (unaral heme. (Suggested visiting hours .3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.1 The family suggests memorial Contributions be made to i hold today. May 19, at 3 p.m. at th* Flumerfalt Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment In Oxford Cemetery.______ GILLESPIE, JOHN; MAY 28, 1967; Port Orange; Florida, (Farmarly of Pontiac); age 72; beloved husband of Grads G ‘ ' * Elizabeth Campbell 1 Gillespie. .Punaral serves held Friday, June 2, at 1 - m.......SparkSrGrlffln (Suggested vl Jill, Michael and Draw Hodges. Funsral farvica was held today. May 29, at 10:38 * — — - dear father of Marilyn gnd Sarah Ora Di Sledge. Funeral sarv-H »w Thursday, June 1, the DavfS-Cobb Fu-■erment in. Oak Hill ....... .... Horae* Will He in t after 3:30 Wednesday. will be,told t jvr^Vat ti )