^. m.i. mm* m*m, hmmi r '< ' ' Mini « ' i ‘ VOL. m --,: NO ★ if it it Rights Bill is racing Final House Hurdle I A0/PRES&. PONtFaC. HlcrflGAN. TtmffDAY, ilfeUST 9,‘ lW-Si PAGES -A WASHINGTON — House passage of a broad new civil rights bju is expected today buta.final /maOenge still remains to'ilts / key open housing provision. \ Voting should begin late in the day after the House completes its section-by-section consideration of the measure. It wrapped up the ndxt-to-last one last night, writing a federal antiriot law into it, and leaving \pnly two relatively noncontro-versial provisions to be dis-. posed; of today. All actions taken by the House during the 12 days it has been working on the bill are subject to separate roll call votes just before final passage. Opponents are believed'ready LBJ Views Inflation ’Viet War Not Worsening’ WASHINGTON UR — President Johnson said today that ih Viet Nam “I don’t see any change for the worse at all” and at home things are going “reasonably well” on holding the line against inflation. Johnson t&d a news conference that weekend plane losses and casualties in Race Track Principals Are Called DETROIT (UPI) — Four jockeys and a trainer were subpoenaed yesterday to testify before a federal grand jury investigating gambling charges against 14 persons, two of them reputed Mafia leaders in the Detroit John Olszewski, chief of the Internal Revenue Service in Detroit which served the subpoenas, said the raids last Jujy 1 Related Story,. Page C-l involved “one of the largest syndicated gambling operations ever raided by this office.” The trainer, Sherman Armstrong, 37, oOce a top jockey, trains horses for the wife of Richard A. Connell, president of the Hazel Park Racing Association. Word of the subpoenas came as Gov. George Romney appointed Joseph A. Childs, former State Police commissioner, to head the troubled State Racing Commission. ★ ★ ★ Child’s first headache in office was expected to be a decision on the fate of one of the Hazel Park directors, Dominic P. (Fats) Corrado, who was named as a Detroit-area Mafia chieftain in testimony before a U.S. Senate committee in 1963. PAIR SOUGHT IRS agents served subpoenas to Tommy Barrow, who finished third in standings in the just completed Hazel Park season, veteran rider Williams W. Cox and Armstrong. They were searching for two other jockeys Alphoaso Cay, leading joekey at Toledo, Ohio’s, Raceway Park this past season, and R. J. Bobby Bright. Coy reportedly was in Mon-' treat but the whereabouts of Bright were unknown. * * * ★ Barrow, 34, was the jockey who in 1959 barely lost out in gaining Horse of the Year Honors for Hillsdale. The 14 arrested in the raid last July were charged with not having the $50 gambling license therefore conspiring to evade and defeat federal gambling excise laws. OS ONES “Hi, Daddy. When you finish supper Mommy’s going to tell you what happened to the car.” Viet Nam were not unexpected. He also said he had found no place in the government that was responsible for reports out of Saigon that the war there might drag on for eight years on the present basis. The assessments from Saigon had been attributed to Pentagon studies. On the question of domestic price increases and higher wage demands, Johnson said the present guidelines are the best thing the administration has been able to produce, but they are under study. ★ ★ ★ And he said figures on what has been happening “do not indicate the country is going to pot.” TO URGE RESTRAINT The President told reporters at a hurriedly arranged session in his White House office that management and labor are going to get continual urging “to be as restrained as much as they possibly can.” And he indicated that if they aren’t, recommendations may ■ result for some other sort of action later. But on this he was vague, aside from saying that' the situation is undo1 constant study and evaluation to see whether the government can come up with something better than the guidelines. * * ★ House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan accused Johnson of having “tried to talk prices into remaining stable.” Sewer Pact for Orchard Lake Nixed A contract to participate in the proposed Oakland - Clinton Sewage Disposal System was rejected last night by the Orchard Lake City Council. The council vote was 3-3. The proposed contract needed majority approval for passage. The proposed $16.5-miliion system needs approval of all seven communities it is to serve. Four have okayed it andJwo others have yet to vote on participa-tion. The Orchard Lake action was the second setback for the proposed system. It was originally planned to serve eight communities until Pontiac withdrew about a month ago. Councilman Frederick S. Strong, Jr., who voted for the proposal, explained that the system offered the only means for sewage disposal. ★ ★ A He said that before Orchard Lake had become a city, it was > not able to be included in the/ Farmington interceptor and had asked to be included in the Clih-ton-Oakland system. ’COMMITMENT / Strong said he considered the previous decision a commitment which should hpVe been upheld last night. / He also said that' the need for sewers is very great in the city, which ig now served by septic tanks. / He said that' in his opipion, the council members who voted against the proposal, did so because they didn’t want another millage proposal. fk ★ ★ Everett R. Casey, who along with MAyor S. F. Leahy and councilman Kenneth T. Treacy, voted against the proposal, said he Was not convinced that the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) to press a final attempt to do-, feat the housing provision by asking for a roll call on an amendment exempting individual home owners from the proposed ban against racial discrimination in housing. ★ * * The amendment, which House leaders consider vital to final approval of the measure, was adopted by a one-vote margin, 180 to 179. If It should be defeated on a roll call, a final motion to knock out the whole section of the bill would have a good chance of carrying. The House wrote a major change into the bill yesterday whAn it adopted an amendment by Rep. William C. Cramer, R-• Fla., aimed at preventing outside agitators from inciting racial riots. The ameiidment, shouted through with little dissent, would make it a federal crime/ punishable by up to five years in jail or a $10,000 fine, for anyone to cross a state line with tile intent elf encouraging, inciting or taking part in a riot. Cramer and many other speakers said the /ash of racial violence in some/northern cities in recent weeks calls for a federal law to/protect citizens against such.Violence. Rep. James C. Corman, D-Calif., one of the few who spoke against K, said it would mark a severe/encioachment by the federal police power on state and/local jurisdictions. DAMAGED IN DISTURBANCE - Tom Zas-ucha, 18, of Marshall points to the broken windshield of tiie car he was driving when he was pelted in the Negro section of Lansing last night AP Wircphote during a racial disturbance. Zasucha said that, after his car was hit, he tried to escape and hit a utility pole. Lansing Riots Bring Blast From Rom Mostly Sunny Tomorrow's Area Outlook The U.S. Weather Bureau reports variable cloudiness today will end tonight with skies fair again. Mostly sunny is the outlook for tomorrow. Temperatures dropping to lows of 50 to 58 tonight will climb to 72 to 80 tomorrow. Partly cloudy and wanner with a chance of afternoon showers is Thursday’s prediction. it ★ ★ West to southwesterly morning winds at 5 to 15 miles per hour will become southwest tonight. A low of 66 was the reading prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. At 1 p.m., the mer-curjyecorded 74 . LANSING (AP) - “Irresponsible conduct” that has marked two nights of racial violence in Lansing, “threatens the progress we have made” in civil rights, Gov. George Romney said todav. ★ * ★ “No citizens have the right to power of force,” he said irwi statement issued from .his oP fice. “There can be no private power based on force—not black power, nor white power, nor shared power." He called on “all citizens of our state to work toward the end that discrimination and other injustices are completely eliminated on a peaceful basis, and so that the power of governmental force need not be applied.” Last night, Lansing police set off tear gas grenadeh to break up gangs of youths who threw fire bombs, bricks, bottles and sticks at passing cars. Several persons were injured before the violence -A the second straight night of racial unrest in Lansing —was brought under control. Four persons were reported shot, none seriously. Negro and white clergymen, credited with police with keeping many youths off the streets last night, joined today with police patrols trying to prevent recurrence of the violence. At least a score of youths have been arrested — both white and Negro — since the racial flareups took a serious turn Sunday night. “It looks like everything is under control now,” said Mayor Max Murninghan, who interrupted a vacation to supervise the police plans for controlling the situation “I don’t anticipate a renewal of the violence, because I feel they’ve blown off enough steam,” Murninghan said. Clergymen in clerical garb were credited by officials with helping keep many youths off the streets by talking, with knots / of teen-agers wherever the/' could be found throughout t city. Some 250 city, state and/oun- Protest at (Zapitol LANSING (AP)fAn estimated 1,600 state Employes demonstrated at the Capitol today, protesting what they termed inadequate pay and unsatisfactory working conditions. Annual 4-H Parade Is Viewed by 1,000 Despite threatening skies and forecasts of rain, more than ' 1,000 people lined SagmqW Street * yesterday evening / to watch tiie annual 4-H parade/ The half-hour parade, which contained a wide variety of floats, walking units, jtorses, dogs and the state ctyhmpion Rae-Vens Drill Team, /marked today’s official opening of tiie Oakland County 4-H Fsur. First prise for the best float in the parade webt to the Bloomfield 4-H Club. Hie OakhiD Club of Hotly took second place honors and the Ro-Hl Club of Holly was awarded third place. The Paint (jfreek Club won fourth place /while honorable mention wentto the Pine Knob Chib of East Orion and the Oxford Club. *1 * * Hie K-9 Club, made up of 4-H dog owners from all over the county, took first-place honors among the walking units. SET UP EXHIBITS ThE Wolverine Riders were secomhplace winners in that category and the Straw Hats fronjf Galloway Lake took third kite 4-H fairgrounds at Perry and Walton was a beehive Of activity this moruiag as home L28$ youngsters began /setting up nearly 4,888 exbfb-/ to for judging. Awarding of ribbons in home i economic?, photography, flowers, vegetables, poultry, rabbits and general exhibits was scheduled to get under way at 1 p.m. today. * | * Highlighting tonight’s program, which gets under way at 7:38, will be the crowning of the 4-H king and queen and The Pontiac Press Freckle Contest. BEEF JUDGING Tomorrow’s schedule calls for beef judging and junior beef showmanship at 9 a.m., followed by clothing judging at 18. The Ralph Braid trophy for beef showmanship wtil be presented at 1 p.m. English Halter class judging will also get under way at 1, along with swine judging. A vegetable judging contest and flower identification contest will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Tomorrow is also kiddies day, when children will be admitted to the Wade Amusement Co.’s eight rides at reduced rates. The evening program calls for a tractor operators’ contest and senior beef showmanship, to begin at 7 p.m. WINNING FLOAT -The Bloomfield 4-H Club’s float, emphasizing education through 4-H, was first-prize winner in the float division of yester- day's annual 4-H parade. The half-hour parade was tiie kickoff for the Oakland County 4-H Fair which opened today. K-l LEADER r- Peggy Cad-wallader of 1056 Rocawies, Oakland Township, and Bambi led the K-9 4-H Club, winner of first place in tiie walking division • pf yesterday’s 4-H parade. ty police were called into action for the second night in s'row Monday as caravans of' teenagers roamed the city/smash-ing windows and beating up at least two youths. DunepBill Approved by Ho use Panel /WASHINGTON (AP) - The /House Interior Committee reversed itself today and approved 17-12, a Senate-passed bill to establish the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore in western Michigan. The committee, in a surprise action last Thursday, voted down the bill 12-8 to create tiie national lakeshore, on tiie edge of Lake Michigan, at an estimated cost of $25.3 million/. Saylor’s motion to reconsider was then approved 17-12 and approval of the bill followed. / Saylor last Thursday first voted for the bill but lain-changed his vote to no to permit him to ask for reconsideration. Before chairman Wayne N. Aspinall, D-Colo., could put the motion to a vote, Rep. Charlotte T. Reid, R-Ill., moved that Saylor’s motion be tabled. Mrs. Reid was defeated mi a 17-12 vote and Rep. Craig Hosr mer, R-Calif., then challenged the proxies cast. Aspinall ruled them acceptable. If the bill wins eventual House passage, it will have to go back to "the Senate because of various amendments adopted by the House committee. In Today's Press Pension Plan § Waterford Board passes § I retirement system for 1 township employes. — | j PAGE A-5. Road Project I ' Work on Square Lake j ! in high gear.-PAGE B-9. Guidelines Wage-price policies may I be revamped—PAGE A-7. Area News ... ; Astrology ..... Bridge ; Crossword Puzzle | Comics ........ | Editorials j Markets ........ | Obituaries .... [ Sports ........ I Theaters ...... i TV-Radto Wilson. Earl : Women’s Pages C-l—C-3 I c-u B-l—B-3 feKss. Ttmsb^I m llridr ^ Orbiter Poised for Today s Lctunch Turnout Is Moderate forArkansas Runoff LITTLE ROCK, Ait. (AP> —leryftine' else that Arkansas selected a Democratic from wa emanates Washington. nominee for governor on this! / * * * wans, sunny day and early re-/Holt contended that the elec-ports from the polls indicated at H°n of Johnson could endanger moderate turnout of voters. the state’s rewarding partici- * * * |V pating in dozens of federal aid- USfe choice in a runoff primary programs. waf between Jim Johnson, 41, a To which Johnson replied: “1 dedicated foe of the/ederal gov- couldn’t end most of these pro ernment; and Fpdnk Holt, 55, grams if I wanted to. Jim Jobn-whfc is pledged/to continue the son’s not going to close the post stage’s friendly relations with office.” Washington/ Johnson, an avowed segrega- £ Z* * tionist, has charged that Holt is ■Qie Vote was expected to be a tool of the political organiza-somewhat lighter than that in a; lion which has supported retir-Jujy 26 preferential primary tog Gov. Orval Faubus for ymtn 420,000 voted and Johnson years, led'the ticket with 105,000 votes. NO ENDORSEMENT About 400,000 of 684.000 regis Faubus quitting undefeated tered voters were expected to after „ with his eye on a ca« ballots. Most local races m rac€ against Demo-were settled m the first primary CTatic ^ j William Fulbrlght an* this usually results in a in ^ not endorsed either! ligfit runoff turnout. j candidate in the runoff. POLL TIMES A few years ago the winner of Polls opened at 8 p.m. and 0* Democratic primary could close at 6:30 p.m. ! sit back and wait for automatic * * * i election jn November. This is no Johnson pegged his campaign>ger true. Winthrop RockefeU- on criticism of President John- er and a revitalized Republican; son. federal school desegrega- f°r w™er tiotr orders and just about ev- <* what has developed into a . . ...____:_______________ real fight among Democrats. Johnson is the champion of' the conservative element of the! state party, a vigorous propo- THE MISSION nosc-shkoud^ StPAPATION 7XWrFJTT ■■ * \ t--i i • ■' To Photograph Sites on Moon Birmingham Arta News Commission Motorcycle Nine Landin . Will Be Key Objective BIRMINGHAM sures aimed at regulating motorcycle rental agencies were adop-Areas ted by die City Commission last ''file controls from operating within 500 feet of a residential district and establish the hours that the bus-inesses.can be open. The lew ordinance sets the hours of operation between 10 a.m. and 8 p.m., and at the PHOTO W'&W REASStMtlY. DATA ANALYSIS V MISSION DATA TAPES CONTROL * FILM MISSION IN SPACE - The Lunar Orbiter, set to be launched by an Atlas-Agena resolution pictures are to be made of a narrow belt,, across the lunar equator (upper right) and transmitted to a ground station noon, is intended to achieve a lunar orbit less (lower right).. than 30 miles above the moon’s surface. High f i 'Going to Cicero' jt ! 1 County Denis' Convention Is Tomorrow' Marchers Eye Chicago Suburb Annflw proposal that would prohibit passengers from riding on vehicles with five harass-power or less was referred to the cjlty attorney for study. State law allows passengers on motorcycles of greater horsepower. Mrs.. Charles A. Leach, of 900 Wimbleton, has been appointed chairman of the Women’s Volunteer Services Committee, Oakland County Chapter of the National Foundation — March of Dimes. Her activities will include birth defect education through the medium of slides and films, speakers, literature, tours of the March of Dimes Birth Defect Center, and working with volunteers in Oakland County’s children’s health program. A tour of the March of Dimes Birth Defect Treatment Center, Ann Arbor, will be held in October for local and state club presidents and key volunteers. Mrs. Leach has planned three discussion series on birth defects to be held at the school administration office in Bloomfield | Hills. The first will be on Sept. TV Soviet Union succeededrental »8ency can’t operate un- 19. The second and third dis- 2th Luna 10 last April but it!,ess .J* fi- WlU * ^ 17 parrieri no cameras provides a $5,000 surety bondand Nov. 2L- which protects the city against other past March of Dimes MORE SOPHISTICATED lany damage caused by a motor-; activities for Mrs. Leach in-Lunar Orbiter is a much morelcycle. i elude Mothers’ March co-chair- sophisticated vehicle than any I ★ * ★ |man of Birmingham, Mothers’ and a CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -Lunar .Orbiter, a flying photography lab, was poised for launching today toward an orbit about the moon to snap pictures of the hidden backside, Survey- - ..... . ^Atlas-Agena rocket was to IP ®- 1# a m blastoff between 2:03 p.m. and The restrictions were ap-4:42 p.m. EDT to start the 850- proved after weeks of discussion pound spacecraft on its intended by the commission over the ris-238,944-mile journey. ling number of motorcycle to- * * * ljuries in the city. With its four solar panels fold-j * . * ed down to give it the appear- According to Police Chief ance of a giant four-leaf clover,[naiph w. Moxley, injuries Lunar Orbiter was to dartjy^f *111 probably double the through the weightless world of|23 recorded in 1965. space for 90 hours, reaching the; IMnmT™ vicinity of the moon Saturday " . .. „ i During the first six.months g' * * * jof this year', 18 motorcycle in- If successful, it would be the juries were reported, half of into orbit around the moon by the United States. Seven previous attempts failed, six in the early days of rocketry between 1968 and 1960. them in June alone. Only three injuries occurred to all of 1864. Under the new ordinance, P ™..I.______t^:of the others and the National! No action was taken on an|Mar<>h Colonel. Captain i__________________ nenl of states rights and an un-, CHICAGO TAPI - Ocero,] there wi^ be a ctemonstration ^ ' Aeronautics and Space Adminis- amendment that wouBlave re-jMj»rChing Mother forthe Birm- | relenting criUc of federal efforts scene of one of the Chicago Wednesday, probably m Bogan,, an apartment in Cirera to July , traUon ^ # had a mUch!quired the agency to provide op-| ingham area, in the field of civil rights. I area's worst race riots 15 years a southwest side neighborhoods, he moved m seme furmture. ^ chance of----------------------------~ *L--1 • ' ° . .____________. iffi____iLii______- Tavn ITTiot niohl vanrfa s hrnkp into.8 . . The Oakland County Demo-I cratic Convention will be held] tomorrow evening to the supervisors’ auditorium at the County Courthouse. Congressman Billie S. Orchard Lake Nixes Sewers aide of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., told a rally of 1,000 civil rights workers Monday night: "I'm going to Cicero!” Cicero, an industrial suburb of 70,000 white persons which hugs I Chicago’s western border, once num of the 19th District will be I the near future. i harbored A1 Capone’s bootleg- the keynote speaker at the 8 He also said that he believed jgers. (Continued From Page One) Far- c'ty needed sewers now or in ago, has been named the next]adjacent to Chicago Lawn,'That night, vandals broke intoj^ earlier U.S. tries. major target of the open; where whites attacked a civil the building and destroyed the! housing drive being conducted!rights column last Friday. I furniture. A mob of 5,000 hurled; moon by civil rights leaders. “We marched in Jackson and bottles and bricks and home-; Selma,” Bevel said, “and we j made fire bombs at the build-will inarch in Cicero.” Eerators with a protective hel-j met since a bill to that effect is! The Rev. Jesse Jackson, an Bevel said Cook County andj The National Guard was or- ^ probe would' t>e caught Cicero authorities will be asked dered to Cicero by Adlai E. the moon-s gravitational field, to protect the demonstrators. J Stevenson, then governor of IDi- another interceptor was going to be built which the city could ise. R. J. Alexander, Director of Public Works for Oakland County, said that there is a definite need for sewers to any community that in served by septic tanks. He said that there is always i danger of sewage flowing into Viet Nam, I streams and lakes near-by. water pol- t * ★ lution and mental health. Alexander said that any future A * A interceptor would not be con- A total of 182 delegates will structed for a least 10 years, be named to attend the state iHe also expressed displeasure convention later this m o n t h. that the isolated community of j ThiaJ includes 116 from die 18th | Orchard Lake had turned down District and 76 from the 19th its second chance to connect! District. | with a major sewage system. | Immediately after convening, delegates from the 18th and 19th Congressional districts will hold separate meetings and then return to complete the agenda of the full convention. Among the resolutions to be considered will be the support of the Osteopathic College in Pontiac, a stand civil rights, The civil rights rally was held at the Warren Avenue Congregational Church where partici-of the drive for open bousing met to hear Jackson and other leaders discuss strategy and disclose new target areas. jmg. About 550 miles from thejpgnding. in the legislature. — after two tricky mid- _ .rFNrv maneuvers, a ground 0NE AGE signal was to trigger a space-) There ® only one motorcyc e craft motor, slowing the speed Rental agency presently operat- ing to the city. Searchers Find Slain Teen Girl ______ „ fort worth, Tex. (ap> — “H they want to protect us, kllj nos. Martial law was declared | For several days, the groundj TantntivP OK !^fear^h h8s f^?d ght; if they donL *e wUljin the area. |planned to track the craft as it1 ' enTClTlVG \JI\ tewi-age ^ri who whirled in an orbit ranging from! ; ». on Housing right march anyway,” Bevel dared. FBI COUNT Chief Arthur Bilek of the sheriffs police said his 176-man force would provide as much help as possible. The Cicero force totals 99 men according to FBI statistics. Jackson and Bevel said the march would take place this week, but woul4 not say when. police say was raped and choked to death after her two male companions had been shot and killed. The discovery Monday night ended a search touched off early Sunday when a curious fish-Tentative federal approval of erman opened the trunk of an the site for proposed public [abandoned auto and found the housing for the elderly is to be j bullet-riddled bodies of two received tonight by the "City teeiJ-age boys. Commission. i A * A , made by the Soviet Union’s! Approval of the site author-i Investigators charged Roy Cicero received Its first taste S Luna 3 and Zond 3 — from 37,-toes the Public Housing Com- Green, 18, and Kenneth McDuff. of violCTce in 1925 when A1 Ca-iworth of 4“^ watches and|000 miles and 6,000 miles as|mission to p r o c eed with the|20, both from the Marlin area pone shifted' his operations from)^pendanls-. * * j they raced past the moon. preparation of a development; 100 mite south of here, with series of under-! William Merlin rs co-own LANDWG AREAS program for the site. ; murder, to lodged rape com- wuiiam Mr-ripan un co-own- 1 plaints on the basis of a state- _ _ u ___________________________ _____________ __ _ w '”,ent by Green i9si"mi ■ HMMi 3 Are Sought in $1,800 Theft at City Store Two women and a man who ‘ hung around” a Pontiac jewelry store for several hours yesterday are sought by Pontiac police after discovery of $1,800 110 to 1,100 miles above t moon. Then the motor was to fired again to drop the low point; -., . p. to 26 miles above the surface, j 5/f© *S DUG While in the high mbit, Lunar! Orbiter’s tw| cameras were to; ■ take a few general interest pictures, including glimpses of the ft side of the moon that never H< faces the earth. The only pre- re vious shots of the backside were O Although the Rev. Mr. Jack-son indicated Cicero was among immediate target areas, others the King organization said there are no firm plans for a Chicago, a senes w unwr-i william McClean 68< march JLhere this week or even world-style shootings earned the I of pauli,s Jewelry at 28 w. Photos of the nine potential this summer Jtown national action. Huron, told police he first no-astronaut landing areas were to The Rev. James Bevel saidl On July 11, 1951 a Negro busl^^ jewelry was gone wait until the spacecraft dipped I about 6 p.m. yesterday, an hour to lower course, starting rfter the three suspects left the I about Au®. 22. The two youths w e accused The Weather Negotiators in Airline Strike to Make Another Settlement Try after the development pro-j rials. « Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report * PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness sad cooler today with a chance of a few brief showers. High 72 t»-M. Fair tonight, low 58 to 58. Mostly sonny with little te&nperature change Wednesday, high 72 to 80. West to southwest winds 5 to 15 miles Thursday’s outlook: Partly cloody ami warmer with a chance ed afternoon showers. Precipitation probability: today 80 per cent; tonight 10 per cent; Wednesday It per cent Alvardo, his cousin, Mark Dun-I Th'o nine area* are located ini nam, 16, of Tarzana, Calif., and !store- a narrow band stretching across^ Previously Pontiac had bee*1: Edna Louise Sullivan, 16, of Ev- j McClean said the women ap- ft moon,s jjjj an?include[aPProved .for of PubhcJ erman. | peared to be shopping, whfle terrain -flat bousing designed for the eld- Central Texas authorities ar- [ the man came and left the jplains, cr^ and highlands. ,%£ , L ,. , | rested Green and McDuff sepa- 1 store only to return again. ! A A A The proposed site of the high-jrately late Sunday and brought i The missing items had been! One of the areas is in the rise apartment units u along (them to the Tarrant County jail in showcases at the rear of the [Ocean of Storms near the crater'East Wide TVack at Cofbge. here. _ H Z , . [store, he said. Falmsteed where Surveyor 1 In other business scheduled McDuff demed any knowledge WASHINGTON (AP) - Nego-'the airlines a huge bargaimng; Police iheorimi one of the landed In June and transmitted for tonight’s regular commis-of the slayings, but Green, tiators for striking mechanics, advantage and that no effective; s|iPPed the jewels out of the! 11 237 closeap pictures. Officials sion meeting, the commission is j shortly after his arrest, blurted: and five trunk airliner agreed I bargaining can be expected! display case some time when [hoped Lunar Orbiter would ob-'to consider a plan for revamp-, “My God, I’ve got to tell some to make another effort at „ even consid- McClean’s attention was divert-jtain pictures of Surveyor 1 and [mg the parking lot back of r‘lf” 1 jj T ........... ’ ’ ‘L - *— [its surroundings. Sum sets Tuesday at | Weattwr: Cloudy, n solving the dispute that has, . grounded about 60 per cent ofler“1« legislation the nation's airline capacity.. , The parties, who met into Monday night without harrowing the gap between their positions, yielded to urgent personal I requests from the House Com-; ”jmerce Committee, which is con-; Hi sidering a back-to-work bill already passed by the Senate. ed by the other two. 'Hall. >f City body about it. I can’t sleep: can’t think. I can’t do nothii 3 More U.S. Planes Downed v-Y T.X. I 57 Fort Worth *4 Escanaba 61 51 Jacksonville 61 or. Rapids «7 fl Kansas City 71 Houghton 61 51 Lot Angeles Highest tomperaturi This Data is N Yaars 2 69 s. Francisco 61 56 6 57 S. S. MortO 7 43 Seattle 0 S3 Washington SAIGON South Viet Nam1 Vietnamese company through; North Vietnamese through the I necks met and scattered a divi-, (AP) - North Viet Nam’s an-;the night near the demilitarized\W just^south of the demihtar- sion of Hanoi regulars last tiaircraft defenses knocked zone and other American troops|lzett Mne ^ere the Leather ! month. . . . n idown three more U S. planes tracked a battered Communist n is!... ^amy.e N' Frler*J: , Monday as American jets,battalion in the central high-17 pres'ding ^ over today ^ communist north;lands after it mauled a U-S. 1st !' ^jhearing, asked firs!. the Pres,‘!with a record 139 combat mis- Cavalry, Airmobile, Company. 5 T“ // from fta highland “ If^ h*ve been tost over North Viet bmuegroun) said the cavalry- Nam since Sunday. men counted at least 85 enemy dead and estimated at least 180 more were killed by U.S. air and artillery fire. u to miller and then the chief nego-,2 2 b*tor for the airlines, William 17 tfjj. Curtin, whether they were 5 7, willing to meet this afternoon. " * Both said they were. Friedel «then had them set the time and 2 * place before he continued with ! the committee session, j The meeting was set for 2:30 |p.m. at the Labor Department. PROSPECTS NOT BRIGHT More than 300 planes probably took part in the assault, since a mission may involve three or four planes. But a U.S. Spokesman said there had been other fighting was accompanied days on which more planes hadj^ gulden Spurt to helicopter been sent against the north flosses. Nine U.S. Army and though on fewer missions. , Marine choppers were casual-A a a Monday. Two crashed and The Three planesJost Monday burned west of the highland However, nothing happened at were an ^ Force Thunderchief; town of Pleiku, while seven today’s committee hearing that[ fighter-bMnbers, the U.S. com- more were damaged in other gave any indication the negotia-|mand ^ ^ were ^ down; action, tors would <2° “V better at; gj northwest of Hanoi. |m pg^D Vietnamese marines reported finding 170 enemy dead after allied air strikes during Operation Colorado. It began Saturday a joint enterprise of U-S. Marines aad South Vietnamese troops in Quang Tin Province 350 miles northeast of Saigon. A U.S. spokesman said 215 Communists had been killed in the .reaching common ground than ^ was Wt K mOes they did Monday. northwest of Dong Hoi. Only one NATIONAL WEATHER—Tonight’s weather will be rainy over the Blast Coast Of the nation, the Ohio and Tennessee The assessment when they broke up Mondaw night was “ceiling zero, visibility, zero,” on prospects for a negotiated settlement in the month-old walkout. On the legislative question before the committee, Semilier and Curtin made completely opposed recommendations. pilot was rescued, and two are Five of the seven planes lost Sunday were TTiunderchiefs. Six pilots are missing from those raids. GROUND WAR PICKS UP As the North Vietnamese [brought the number of U.S. Peace Talks Chance Seen _________________________ ________________ Siemiiler stuck to his conten- planes kwt above the 17th Par-i # * valleys?the eastern Gulf Coast and parts of the northern tion that ordering the striking!allel to 329. the ground war; With the help of air and artil-Plains and northern Rockies. It will be cooler in the Ohio [mechanics back to work for a picked up in South Viet Nam. lery support, two small Marine Valley and warmer to the southern Rockies. [cooling-off period would hand1 U.S. Marines battled a North (units stood off an estimated ISO INJURED GI — An Army medic comforts a wounded infantryman after applying bandages last week to cuts received when aViet Cong mine Masted an armored personnel carrier qn South Viet Nam’s Route 13 near Bau Long. Yank troops were clearing the route for a convoy to be used as bait for a large Viet Cong force believed to bo in the area. MANILA (UPI) - Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos said today there was a “fair chance” of a peace conference by Asian nations to seek an end to the war in Viet Nam. North Viet Nam and Communist China already have rejected the suggestion first raised by Thailand at a recent meeting of the Association of Asian States (ASA) of which the Philippines and Malaysia also are members. Marcos told a news conference that nations which might take part in u all-Asia meeting were the Philippines, Pakistan, India, Ceylon, Burma Japan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Laos. But in Taipei, Formosa, the foreign ministry today indicated that the Nationalist Chinese government may scuttle toe move by the three memberoatioos of the ASA to bring peace to Viet Nano. AAA A spokesman of the ministry told UPI the ministry has so far not made any official announcement of its attitude cm toe issue because it has not remved the letter sent by the Philippines, Thailand and Malaysia.» THE POKTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1866 King and Kennedy Plead for Racial UrtH^ Dr. projects, Including summerschools, cities, housing and job nth- work and recreation for Negro I opportunities for Negroes. Con-youths. This woukf befeUoffed! ' ★ ★ * -day by long-range projects, lie said, “We may not have much time plea inching improvements ini to spare if we are to avoid a racial crisis in this country,” of some Negro leaders to pull Kennedy said, “but the hour is apart from the white men who not yet too late. We can do it” have Hoeen helping them. PULUNG APART ★ * * whites and Negroes, and rich have come wherrblack and and poor, .have been aggravated white , have worked together, in recent months by the desire The v~«ry basis of integration is working together with white people. ★ * it «. - i “If you cast them off — if you isolate yourselves—you will berc strengthening die bonds of Whole system of segregation.! You will be crippling your own effectiveness in what is basically not a white cause or a Negro cause, but an American cause;* for unify. King and Sen. ___________________ Kennedy, D-Maas., key speaker at a "freedom banquet” Monday, called for a massive cotp mltment of the 'i nation’s resources to upgrade the Negro’s life in America. Teat Gas Routs Rally in Mississippi Town Belief in God has declined' slightly in the United States during the last 14 years. King met Kennedy at the airport when Kennedy flew in for GRENADA, Miss. (AP) -the talk. CSvil rights leaders said state Two police cars escorting highway patrolmen used tear them to town were disabled by gas to break up a Negro voter flat tires. Police reported later registration rally Monday night, that about 300 pounds of carpet N0 COMMENT tacks were found scattered on hi-hn,™ na the highway from the airport. were unavailable URGES SUPPORT for comment. Kennedy urged Negroes to Robert Johnson, who identi-stand by their white supporters, fied himself as a Grenada wortf-He proposed a massive program er for the Southern Christian to help Negroes, and said it Leadership Conference, said one would "cost a lot of money, but patrolman told Hosea Williams, we can afford it. a leader of the SCLC who was "We have the resources many conducting the rally, to disperse times over. The only thing we the crowd, lack is the will. We are spending ★ ★ * $2 billion a month to defend the “When they didn’t move,” freedom of 14 million people in Johnson said, “the officer South Viet Nam. Why shouldn’t opened fire with tear gas.” we make the same kind of effort Johnson also claimed one state for the 20 million people of the trooper fired two gunshots, “one Negro race right here in Ameri- at me.” ca whose freedom and future is Harkley Klinefelter of the1 also at stake?” SCLC said there were about 600| sign up voters in the Negro neighborhood. TEAR GAS He said about 30 troopers moved in on the rally, firing about 20 cannisters of tear gas, hitting several people. However, an officer at sjate police headquarters in Jackson, about 100 miles away, said only 10 highway patrolmen were assigned in Grenada. Willie Savage, owner of the cafe, said the federal registrars left about 8 p m. and the Negroes moved onto the street for the rally, where Williams climbed atop a car to talk. Savage said highway patrolmen ordered the rally off the street and Williams directed the I crowd to move to a nearby REMINGTON IS SERVICE OILING ADJUSTING CLEANING . CAPITOL HEIGHTS — High above the nation’s capital In Washington, D.C., a painter works almost at the top of toe towering statue of Peace and Freedom which rests on the dome of the Capitol. A fellow painter can be seen holding the ladder at the base of the statue pedestal. SPEED WORK - A new Brsa ille printout is checked after a special computerized device embossed the work 100 times faster than standard Braille print methods. e program short-range Electric Shaven -Main Floor hours by federal registrars to,I told him to close up. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate’s Democratic and Republican campaign chiefs agreed today the best course their party candidates can follow in this fall’s congressional election is to support President Johnson’s Viet Nam policies. Sens. Warren G. Magnuson of Washington, head of the Democratic Campaign Committee, and his GOP counterpart, Sen. Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky, also agreed in separate interviews that full employment is likely to offset in part dissatisfaction with rising consumers prices. course but hasn’t done enough yet to bring the war to an honorable conclusion. “I think that from the Republicans’ standpoint, the issue is simple,” he said. "We don’t debate how many angels can stand on a pin. We have nearly ‘“‘HH in Viet Nam and we 300,000 and the President want to get them out under honorable conditions. . “We are not weakening our President. It is the statements of prominent Democrats that we don’t have a sense of purpose in the war that have encouraged the North Vietnamese to keep on fighting. MORE GOP “The greatest service the country could do for the F*resi-dent in this respect would be to give him more Republicans in Congress.” j Magnuson looked for an even exchange of Senate seats, with the Democrats retaining their 67-33 Senate margin. Morton felt the Republicans would pick up from three to six Senate seats in 35 contests in 33 states. Magnuson said that while he isn’t pressing senatorial candidates to follow the advice of Postmaster General Lawrence F. O’Brien to campaign in full support of the administration’s 1 Viet Nam policies, he has found that those who do have won most of the primaries. NOT AN ISSUE “The Republicans aren’t making Viet Nam an issue in most races and I think that is because there is wide support for the President’s policies,” Magnuson said. Magnuson said that while in-. Ration will be a problem in the election, he believes the administration is "doing a great deal to slow it up.” > EMOTIONAL ISSUE Morton said the inflation issue is becoming an emotional one. “For the first time,” he said, “the housewife is dealing directly with it. It’s not something confined to economic charts but something tangible she finds at the grocery store. It is going to be more of an issue than it has in the past because it's close to her and the housewife is mad.” Morton said that most Republicans take the position that Johnson is pursuing the right leads the "bumper crop" of over 400 custom*- ors on opening day through our new ween W. Lawronce and W, Pike; - It's dssigneci for people on the go with 4 windows AUTO BANK offie» on West Wide Track Drivo I to give you spead banking, right from your car. PROTECTED AGAINST*-**-DIRT, MOISTURE, AND SHOCK - AN EXCEPTIONAL VALUE. Bank at Commimi^-WWDST PEOPLE IS IMMSI? BROTA it3(L THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, im HIGHLAND FUNG - The Scottish Highlanders from Flint added sparkle to yesterday’s annual downtown 4-H parade. Hie parade marked the official opening of the Oakland County 4-H Fair today at the fairgrounds, Perry and Walton. Joint Program Bogged Down Walled Lake,Novi 'Far Apart' on Sewers Wailed Lake and Nqvi may have a joint sewer program in the future, but at the moment any cooperative planning seems to be bogged down by a lack of communications. Although Walled Lake, through the firm of Johnson and Anderson Inc., has completed 77 per cent of the total project (dans, the Village of Novi has not been informed of these plans, according to Harold N. Ackley, village Two-Year Contract Is Reached by School Officials and HVEA Nor has Walled Lake contacted the Department of Public Works (DPW), through which the project is being developed, said R- J. Alexander, director of public works for Oakland County. Royce Downey, city manager of Walled Lake, said it was up to Novi’s representative, Donald C. Young, to contact Walled Lake. He further stated that Walled Lake has no direct con- | tact with the DPW until the be feasible because the soil — plans are complete, but that the the property was not suitable, firm of Johnson and Anderson a temporary treatment plant sewer Unit, called the Huron-Rouge interceptor. SERVE 2,9* The sewage was to be treated i Detroit and would serve a total of 2,900 units. Walled Lake determined that the cost of extending the interceptor would be too great for the community. Novi was able to meet the finances, however, and the southern portion of the village is now served by the interceptor. <* Walled Lake proceeded to investigate other types of sewage systems, including a lagoon-type system. In 1982, the city asked Novi to share the expenses of - a preliminary study of this type of system, designed to serve Walled Lake and the northern portion of Novi. The study indicated that the lagoon-type system wquld has been in ^contact with the department. The concept for a joint sewer system began in 1961 when both Novi and Walled Lake were invited to make use of an inter- County. The plans called forj , j both communities to extend the | CIRC^flfr LAKE MILFORD — Negotiating| the 1967-68 year. The present teams representing the board leave is 50 days, of education and the Huron Val- Also locluded m ^ contract j ley Education Association have jg a payment #{ ,9.25 per reached a two-year contract) employe to ^ made by ^ agreement board for each school month j Among the features of the of hospitalization insurance, agreement are a 60-day accumulated sick leave for the The new salary schedule, 1966-67 school year and a 70- bj»sed on nine steps, gives be-j . day accumulated sick leave for ginning teachers with bachelor \/tcs f/-\r Poc^C ■-------------------------------degrees 65,675 with a maximum * * \Jolo was proposed as an alternative project. ★ ★ * The treatment plant was planned to function only until Huron-Rouge interceptor could be extended up to Walled Plan/ called for an intercep-I tor to circle the lake plus a small treatment plant with total of approximately 2,200' tap-ins. Walled Lake was to pay 65 per cent of the cost with 1,400 tap-ins while Novi was to pay 35 per cent of the cost with 800 tap-ins. Since the entire city of Walled Lake would be involved in the project, its portion of the total cost would be financed by an ad valorem tax. Only a northern portion of the village of Novi would be affectfinancing would have to be by special assessment districts. HEARING HELD In June of 1963, the village held a hearing to determine the necessity for sewers in the A definite need was established and special assessment districts were set up. In July of the same year, the village council voted to delay any action until the exact cost of the project was determined and until it knew Walled Lake’s intentions and how soon it would proceed -with the project. A joint meeting of the two communities was held in February of this year. It was known that an industrial park was planned to be built in the Novi area. * ★ ★ The major obstacle in the construction of the plant was the determination of the number of sewer taps required. BOTH LIMITED Both Willed Lake and Novi were limited in the number of taps by the Health Department and the amount was not sufficient for the development of the plant. Ackley explained that, in order to increase the number of taps, the treatment plant would have to be enlarged and that this could not be done because of toe limited amount of land available. At this meeting, a special committee was established, made up of representatives from both communities to study the proposed construction of a treatment plant, the number of home it would serve and the total cost of the plant. $ Donald C. Young, the Novi representative, was voted off the council after about two of these meetings, but the council asked him to continue as their committee representative. no Contact Sinde that time,, according to ; Ackley, Young has not been contacted, by Walled Lake. Downey said that since Young was voted out of office, the city has not been contacted by him and has received any word or Young’s position. In .toe meantime, Downey said, tte city has asked to join in toe Wixom sewer system but was turned down because of overloaded facilities. Walled Lake has continued with construction plans for the project, including the treatment plant to be built in the village of Novi. Downey said that construction would not begin for two to three years. Although Walled Lake is anxious for Novi to join in the effort to dean up toe lake region, Downey said, the village doesn’t seem too enthusiastic. He said that it is for this reason that the city has proceeded on its own, BY WALLED LAKE Downey further stated that jf the village decides not tq^join ini the project, it will be financed, entirely by Walled Lake. j DPW Director Alexander ' said teat if toe project is cm-tinued, it will have to be a joint effort. Willed Lake has recently invited the village of Wolverine Lake to join to the program. Downey said the village would be able to join the project by increasing the size of toe treatment plant. ★ - ★ Ackley, however, stated that the Health Department would not allow any expansiqfc in toe plant. A hearing is tentatively set up for October with the Health Department to determine if the plant could be expanded, Downey said. Ackley said that on toe basis of this experience, he would definitely advise the council not to take part in any more joint communjty projects. Downey emphasized that the area waf really all one community working on one problem. He said that Walled Lake and Novi are not only neighbors, but cousins. Judge Honored DETROIT (AP) - Theodore Levin, 70, chief judge of the |u.S. District Court in Detroit since 1959, was honored Monday by a group of his former law clerks at a luncheon observing his 20th year as a federal judge. ! 13 Candidates ’’ Hearing Near on Budget for Clarenceville A public hearing on the 1966-67 school year budget will be held Thursday at the Clarence-vibe Board of Education office. Copies of the preliminary budget may be bbtained in advance at the office on West Eight Mile. Members of toe board and toe administrative staff will be available at toe meeting to answer questions concerning toe budget. The board has announced the appointment of four administrative positions. it * ★ The new appointments include Lynn Nutter from athletic director to assistant principal of toe high school; David Kam-ish of Arlington Heights, 111., to principal of Edgewood Elementary School; Frank Brenner, former teacher and assistant principal of Edgewood to full time assistant principal; and Mrs. Elizabeth Moore to serve the special education program and assistant principal at the elementary level. Each of the appointments was made from the recommendations of the screening committee for administrative positions. of 68,735. The present schedule ranges from $5,200 to $7,800. Under the new agreement teachers with a master’s degree will receive salaries rangihg from $5,958 to $9,647. The present schedule calls for salaries beginning at $5,408 with a maximum of $8,580. TOTAL COST The total cost to the board for the contract is $215,000. Neil Davis, president of toe Huron Valley Education Association, said a ratification vote on the contract will possibly take place on the first day of school this fall. Scholarship Won by Area Graduate INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP -Clarkston High School graduate John Slade was one of six youths who received College scholarships Sunday in toe Knights of Pythias international public speaking contest in Indianapolis. Slade, son of Mr. and Mrs. Archie B. Slade of 5490 Waldon, a $500 scholarship. Three other contestants won scholarships for the same amount. A Paris, Tenn. youth captured the championship and won a $2,000 scholarship. Slade had reached the international finals by winning local, district, and state and sectional contests. in Rochester ROCHESTER — A total of 13 names will be on the ballot Sept. 20 when village voters go to the polls to select nine char-j ter commissioners and to decide on a proposal to incorporate the village into a home-rule city ★ it ★ Should the incorporation question be approved, the commission would be charged with the task of drawing up a charter for the. new city. Defeat of toe cityhood proposal would void the commission election. The deadline for filing nominating petitions was 4 p.m. yesterday. * it it The following names will appear on the ballot for charter commission seats: Earl E. Cargill, 320 Wesley Thomas V. Case, 407 Castell William C. Chapman, 311 Wal-John L. Dahlmann, 265 South Street.; Alvin V. Gurfin, 1129 Main; James C. Hill, 120 Griggs; and Samuel Howlett, 227 Romeo. OTHER CANDIDATES Others are Frederick C. Hugger, 1325 Catalpa; Harold Mil-1002 Mahaffey; Ernest Reschke, 230 South Street; Jane E. Fzcesny, 321 W. Third; Bernard W. Vosteen, 614 Parkdale; and Morgan B. White, 725 Elizabeth. Lake Orion Hearings Set Work on New Charter Said on Schedule LAKE ORION — Work on! of each geographical section toe village's proposed new char-1 of toe community, ter is proceeding according toi ^ prftsjdent would servers expectations and should be com-1 a voting member of, the council Their approval of the plan would change the village governmental structure for the first time since March of 1891 when the present charter was in-; stalled. Even if the charter proposal is approved, however, it would not take full effect until at least a year later, Allen said. ptete by early next month |and recognized as the of. Wesley B. Allen spokesman ficial representative of the com-for the five-member Charter munity woukl have no veto Commission said Sept. 14 hasl He wouW also * chair. been W 35 target. d3ie I man of all council meetings completion of the new charter. . , . ,, . ' ,, An election would be held an-Sept. 14 is also the first of |nually to select four councilmeo. two dates set aside for public The three candidates receiving hearings on toe charter. The [the most votes would get two-second hearing has tentative- (year terms while the fourthly been slated for Sept. 28. Heading vote recipient would president* ctertaS Hie commission has heen at awarded a one-year term. jcouncilmen. ._____________ work on the project since March' The second key provision not- Those elected will serve out when it was established by the ed by Allen was the oqe estab- their normal terms. Officers village voters. lishing a village manager ad-would be elected under the new ★ * * ministratjve system. • Allen said the key points in Ut manager would be cbo-the document were the provi-j $e„ b council to hold of-sions for an expanded village! ficf for an ^finite term, council and for a village man- He wonM 8erve 0B a hU. ager system of government. time bagls and woald have PRESENT COUNCIL complete charge of toe day- The present six-man village hHl,y operations of village government. Hie new charter provides for the appointment of all Village officers, except for manager, clerk and village attorney, by the village manager. Allen said plans now call for the charter proposal to be presented to the voters for their On the ballot for March of 1967, besides the charter pro-' posal, will be the regular races .charter in March of 1968. Dinner-Dance Set in Canada council with a president chosen by the village electorate would be replaced by a seven-council, including a president selected by the council members. The commisRion felt, explained Allen, that the expanded council was needed to adequately serve the Interests (approval next March. The Shelby - Utica - Sterling Chamber of Commerce Fourth Annual Summer Event Will be a '-dance on Aug. 20, at the r Memorial Auditorium, Ideated on the riverfront Windsor, Canada. Hie program will begin at 6:30 p.m. Tickets may be obtained from toe Chamber of Commerce office or from any! 'chamber director. Buickk special travel plan; a first class vacation i at economy rates. Four out of five new car buyers ended up paying what a new Buick cost. See our Buick travel agent. Choose from his wide variety of factory-fresh Buicks* Take a Buick vacation at low, kind-to-your-pocketbook prices. First class Buick service will issue your clearance in time to board a sparkling new Buick, todays Immediate departures. Come on in, make your choice, get your clearance, fasten your seat belts and take off. See tout Buiclc trawd agent. OLIVER MOTOR SALES, Inc. 210 Orchard Lake Avenue 9 THE PQNTIACTRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 Pension Plan Okayed for Employes The Waterford Township Board adopted a retirement system for township employes last night with a Sept. 1 effective date. The move climaxed a three-year struggle to establish a pension plan. For one reason or another, a plan had neve r^been approved until last night. All township elected and appointed officials except policemen and firemen, who are covered by a similar retirement plan, are eligible to participate fa the system. w ★ ★ At a recent meeting, 24 of 27 employes in attendance voted in favor of the plan after firing questions at Ronald Smith of Gabriel, Roeder, Smith and Co. consulting actuaries of Detroit who drew up the plan. 1965 FIGURES Based on June 1965 figures which showed 41 employes earning an aggregate annual salary of $260,898, the township’s first year cost would be $34,728, However, since there are more employes and a higher combined wage now, the first year cost would be greater than the original estimate. Employes will pay three per cent on the first/$6,600 of their annual salary aiid five per cent Water Mark Is Set in July i A record volume of water was pumped through Waterford Township’s internal water system last month. / A new mark also was established for number of new connections to the system, according to a report submitted by Water Department Superintendent Kenneth Squiers to t h e township board last night. Some 93,788,000 gallons ot water were pumped through township lines last month, exceeding the previous high of 81,-999,400 set this June by 11,788,-600 gallons. In July 1965, water usage totaled 78,216,060 gallons. On the a v e r a g e day last month, 3,025,415 gallons of water flowed through the system. In this year’s record pace, township residents have used 322,392,900 gallons of water the first seven months. Fifty-two new connections were made last m o n t h, two more than the previous record set in May of this year. on any amount fa excess of this figure. The township’s share is I2s98 per cent of the first $6,600 am employe earns and 16.SS per cent of portions oyer this figure. YEARS OF SERVICE Pension amounts Will be based on years at service at retire- New Building Off From July '65Mark New construction in Waterford Township last month fell below July 1965 figures, according to a report submitted to the township board last night. Estimated cost of new! construction, additions and alterations last month totaled $546,363 as 105 building permits were issued by the township’s building department. In July 1965, 157 permits were issued for construction estimated to cost $975,681^ Despite the decline, total estimated valuation of new construction, additions and alterations the first seven months this year is still ahead of the 1965 pace for the same period. ★ t ★. ★ Estimated construction! valuation through July this year amounted to $6,997,916 compared with $6,466,216 for the same period last year. i RECORD SET And last year, a record was set when permits were issued for construction estimated to cost $15,031,037. Primary reason for last month’s dip was a drop in the number of permits granted for new home construction. Only 17 permits were] issued for new home construction estimated to cost $287,723.) This compares-with issuance of 33 permits for new home construction worth an estimated $575,332 in July 1965. | *1 ★ ★ Among the permits issued last month was one for a six-unit apartment building on Voorheis estimated to cost $46,000 and another for a $41,400 addition to Terry Machine Shop. Other permits approved were for 17 home addition's, $47,-450 ; 32 garages, $47,178; nine swimming pools, $30,595; 19 home remodelings, $29,780; an addition to Fire Station No. 2, $8,387; two garages and breezeways, $5,750; and four commercial signs, $2,100. f ment and average monthly wage of an employe over a period of five consecutive years. An employe with 2$ years service, earning an average of $6,MM a year, will receive pension pay totaling $2,400. Trustee Loren Anderson was the lone dissenter in last night’s 6-1 affirmative vote. Anderson asserted he is fa favor of a retirement plan for employes, but said that many questions about the plan were unanswered, including the township’s share of the expense the first year. KNOW COST “I will hot agree to enter into any agreement or contract between the township and anyone without first knowing the cost to the township,” said Ander-lon. “This is, I believe, to be fa the best interest of the township.” In other business, the board authorized Township Attorney Paul Mandel to acquire options on three two-acre parcels of land for test well purposes. ★ ★ ★ Water Department Superintendent Kenneth Squiers assured the board that present water capacity is sufficient. HEARING DATE Sept. 12 was set as the public hearing date for two special assessment district street lighting projects on Edgeorge Street in Holiday Farms No. 3 Subdivision and on Seebaldt Street from Walton south to Louella in Loon Lake Heights Subdivision. Service charge to residents for maintenance of four lights on Seebaldt Street would be $151.32 a year or $2.91 for each of the 52 assessments. Edgeorge residents would be assessed $8.40 each per year for operation of two new lights. The township would pay 10 the total yearly Hie township will pay for seven new street signs at a total cost of $70. per cent charge of RENAME STREET In still other business, the board agreed wfith the Oakland County Road Commission oh renaming West Embarcadero to Lake Oakland Shores Drive. The action was called for when residents of West Embarcadero and nearby Embarcadero complained about confusion arising from similar addresses on the two streets. CAREFUL DRIVERS GET A 20% DISCOUNT! Auto Insurance Eight persons were injured) In a second accident yester-yesterday in three separate traf-lday, 22-year-old Dale W. Char-] fic accidents, including a four-1 ijCk 0f 2520 M59, Highland Town-1 car collision in Oakland Town-i^ ridjj)g a motorcycle) collid.| 8 Hurt in 3 Accidents Approved last night was a request for a new SDM license for Wonder Drugd of Waterford* Inc., 5967 M59. REZONING REQUEST Also last night, the board read! first notice on a request to rezone from local business (C-l)J to single family residential (R-i IB) a parcel in Meniwaters Subdivision, and tabled a proposal rpteSJS ~ „„„ for a scrap yard license at 22421 BUY> SELL, TRADE. USE Edinburgh. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! ilirui th» nalim —Around thi tl«k FAST FAIR ,, FRIENDLY DICK HALL AGENCY 11* S. TELEGRAPH ROAD ship. The latter accident at Rochester and Whims yesterday afternoon hospitalized four persons, including two children. In fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital are Beverly A. Meirow, 34, of 158 Whims; her son, Larry, 13; Frederick Rood, 10, of 3735 Aquarina, Waterford Township. Ruth Rood, 46, of the Waterford Township address, suffered multiple injuries. Her condition was not given. ed with a car driven by George] W. Brown, 50, of 2144 DavistaJ also Highland Township. FAIR CONDITION The 9 a m. accident occurred I at M59 and North Milford Road! in Highland Township. Charlick I is in fair condition with a broken leg at Pontiac Osteopathic! Sheriff deputies said a car driven by Virginia A. Mosher, 35, of 122 Bradley, Romeo, ap- In a 5:45 p.m. accident at Rochester Road, just north of Tienken, Avon Township, two more persons were injured. In satisfactory condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital are Basil . , ... .. ._____ P. Popa, 46, and his wife, Betty, 42, of 348 E. Third, Rochester. in the rear, sending it across the center line intq the Rood] auto, which, in turn, slide into1 The Popa car collided with an! a car driven by William B.j auto driven by Bruce Shear, 16,1 Miles, 24, 11391 31 Mile Road, I of 4966 N. Rochester Road, Romeo. I Avon Township. 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Charge Yours. fourth Floor Thank You: For vour vote at the Polls Tuesday, August 2nd As vour neighbor and friend I will appreciate your continued support in I lie General Election, Tuesday, November 8th. ROY WAHL DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR PONTIAC TOWNSHIP SUPERVISOR Shop Mon., Thur., Friz and Sat. 'til 9 100% Wool Georgia FLANNEL AUTOMATIC WASH ‘N’ WEAR V ^ 100% NYLON JERSEY § Watch plaid-timely anytime! Arid even more to when it's machine-washable nylon jersey, the wrinkle-free wonder that knows no season! Step in at nine... look just as fresh at fiveI Pearly buttons and a pleated skirt add feminine flattery. Handy »* pockets hide at the sides. And, of course, this dress has all the quality details Casualmaker is known for. Watch plaid Is the fashion watchword this yearl Sizes: 10/20,12Vil22Vi Colors: Blackwatch, Brown wafeb Dress ... Third Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 48 West Huron Street • Htieij A. Pribbuu Cfafttmaa #f the Botrd TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 Jo** A. Rnir OoorotoiT sad Adv.rtiung fticuuD M. Rrmuu Trtuurar Md Flntnea How*,, h. Fitohmu, II rrwldtnt »nd.r ' Aim Mccuur John A. Macdonald Few have been privileged to serve his fellows to the extent that had John A. Macdonald during a igglife that exceeded ■the Biblical prom-pise by eight years. Chairman of the iOakland County IS octal Welfare iBoard for the [quarter - century ■preceding his death, Mr. Mac-MACDONALD donald had previously been attached to the sheriff’s department in law enforcement capacities. In 1950 he was recognized by the Oakland Citizens League for service to the community and in 1965 was named temporary chairman of Oakland County Board of Institutions. A native of Michigan, Mr. Maci donald was identified with the former Wilson Foundry Corp., one of Pontiac’s pioneer industries, for 25 years before entering public service. This early business training stood him in good stead when he assumed direction of the County’s welfare establishment, as it enabled him to introduce sound business methods in the administration of the sort of agency that often suffers from an unrealistic attitude toward public money in its dispensation of relief funds. Thanks to Mr. Macdonald,s acumen, uncounted thousands of dollars were saved in meeting the community’s responsibility to the needy. ....★... ★......★....'IS' The many friends and colleagues of John Macdonald, drawn to him by his engaging personality and integrity, will mourn his passing with deep sorrow. Fair to Display Achievements of 4-H Members Yesterday’s parade ushered in Oakland County’s annual 4-H Week spotlighting the fair where more than 4,000 exhibits of achievement will be on display. Some 2,200 youngsters make up the County’s 77 clubs whose 35 project areas embrace all phases of agriculture, livestock husbandry, home economics and mechanics. At a time when unrest and lack of purpose characterize so large a segment of our youth, the initiative and self-discipline inherent in the 4-H program are forces unsurpassed in character development. ★ ★ ★ In paying respect to the 4-H concept that functions within the framework of the Oakland County Co-Op Extension Service and was instituted in 1914 by the Smith-Lever Act, a full measure of credit is due the body of volunteer adult leaders who direct the young people in their projects. There are 250 of these dedicated leaders serving in the area. What does 4-H symbolize? Head, Heart, Health and Hand. And when a human being, young or old, has developed the potential in these areas to the utmost, physical and spiritual tone is the inevitable reward. \ U.S. to Blow Cigarette Illusions Up in Smoke Uncle Sam is finally getting around to putting an end to all this conjecture as to which cigarette is the most dangerous—or, to put it positively, the safest. The government is going to make laboratory tests to determine the exact amount of tkr and nicotine in each brand. ★ ★ ★ This will be most interesting especially to the cigarette companies. It does seem a shame, though, to upset the impression some of us have received—that each and every brand of cigarettes has more and better filter, and therefore less tar and nicotine, than any other brand. It will be hard for Uncle Sam or anyone else to find a more satisfactory arrangement than that. Free Funerals Next Gimmick Montgomery By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - The Great Society is taking such a paternalistic interest in our welfare from cradle-to-grave that it’s only a question of time before we’ll get free funerals, if there are still enough tax-, payers left to pick up the] tab. When that day comes may find ourselves facingl the same governmental! pressure as the Red Chi-[ nese, to choose cremation* because it’s cheaper. Ancestor - worship considerably stronger in Chinn than here, bnt the Mao-Tse tung regime has abolished the Ching Ming festival — the day when Chinese traditionally visit the graves of their ancestors — as an official holiday. Further, the people are being brainwashed to stop using needed land for grave plots. Throughout most of China the usable land has become communal property. Burying of bodies is prohibited there, and many • i peasants have been persuaded to remove the bones of their ancestors from old graves, so that the land can be cultivated. CONTRARY TO CONFUCIUS This, despite the fact that followers of Confucius condemn cremation as absolutely contrary to his teachings. Americans may not be too far removed from similar governmental control, become when Big Brother steps into the welfare field, independence Inevitably lessens. Within the past year Congress has voted Medicare not only for the needy over 65, but for every senior citizen without regard to his income, or to whether he has paid a dime into the Social Security system which doles out the cash. ♦ * ★ Title 19 of the same act will extend hospital and medical benefits to people of any age whose income is decreed to be adequate for normal needs, but not for illness. MINIMUM INCOME Another new law provides federal rent subsidies for five big categories of our population, and a recent presidential commission report urges that the government guarantee a minimum income for everybody, whether they earn it or not. Each of these bonanzas carries a long list of dog and don’ts and masts, miles of red tape, and an army of federal bureaucrats to administer the programs for which oar tax money is collected. Uncle Sam is already meddling, with how packaged foods must be labeled, has decreed that health warnings must be printed on cigarettes (but not on liquor, coffee and candy), and has arbitrarily decided how. much we can earn while still collecting government subsidies and hand-outs. Since we surely have as much right to die well as to live well, and two recent bestsellers on the high cost of dying have demonstrated public interest, some electionconscious Congress is sure to latch onto free burials as another vote-getting gimmick. In Shanghai, the cheapest funeral by burial costs 881.90, and by cremation only $8.19, so perhaps the dwindling economy block on Capitol Hill will add an amendment restricting our tax-paid funerals to cremation. Unless the Great Society decides to outlaw death altogether, that is. Vpice of the People: ED VALTMAN. HARTFORD TIMES /^W*r7d 'I Have A Feeling I'm Being Shadowed' David Lawrence Says: Nixon Blames Leaders for Riots fflix Parental L tw Juvenile \andmsnC at has never seemed right to me that juveniles, bse of their age, could deliberately and wantonly Ly another’s property, yet not be responsible jamages. Apparently, some senators in Minnesota the same way and decided to do something about f A measure, sponsored by a Minneapolis Conservative, Senator Mel Hansen, was approved in the Minnesota Senate which makes parents liable for a maximum of $750 in damages intentionally caused by their children. That is exactly as it should be. parents are responsible for the actions of their minor! children. Those who do a proper job in training do not need to worry about the outcome since God has guaranteed: “Train t|p a child in the way he should go, and when he is old, he will not depart from. ft.” j ★ ★ ★ How are you coming as a parent? • MRS. B. HALLENBECK f 362 N. CASS (Editor’s Note: Such legislation is long overdue. How about Pontiac j and Michigan?) ‘Ju<%e Fellow Men as Provided by Law' There is,an evident unwffflnpess on the part of some people to let the Circuit Court, by due process of law, determine the guilt orjinnocence of our Supervisor, Edward Cheyz. / Men are innocent until proven guilty. Let us judge our fellow) men sanely, fairly, as provided by law. -MRS. CHRISTINE DABERKOE WASHINGTON - Wanted: A new “Peace Corps” —one that will undertake a mission of peace inside the United States. Riots in many cities in all sections of the country have been causing loss of life as! well as of I property. Forecasts ofL more disorders LAWRENCE and disturbances are being made by police officers who are in intimate touch with the rising passions of communities everywhere. Many of the leaders of American thought not only in the colleges bnt in the churches, have argued that “civil disobedience” is fully justified and that each man may decide for himself what laws to obey. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, in a copyrighted article in the current issue of “U. S. News & World Report,” describes the significance of the problem as he says: “The polls still place the war in Viet Nam and the rising cost of living as the major political issues of 1966. But, from my own trips across the nation, I can affirm that p r i v a t e conversations and public concern are increasingly focusing upon the issues of disrespect for law and race turmoil. . . . ★ ★ ★ “Who is responsible for the breakdown of law and order in this country? I think it both an injustice and an over-simplification to lay the blame at the feet of the sidewalk demagogues alone. For such a deterioration of respect for law to occur in so brief a time in so great a nation, we must look for more important collaborators and auxiliaries. ‘MY BELIEF’ “It is my belief that the seeds of civil anarchy would never have taken root in this nation had they not been nurtured by scores of respected Americans: public officials, educators, clergymen and civil-rights leaders as well.” The only recourse left is to reason with rebellious elements in the clergy of the country, the educators and all others who have been encouraging protests in the streets rather than adherence to the customary ways of obtaining redress through public forums and the people’s representatives in governmental bodies. There is need for a nationwide appeal to churchmen, for instance, who, in their zeal Verbal Qrchids Mrs. William Batchelor of 65 E. Ann Arbor; 89th birthday. Mrs. Edna Scafe of 220 N. Johnson; 85th birthday. to advance the cause of civil rights, have unwittingly helped break down the precepts of law and order that have been established as fundamental in the American system of government. ★ * * Perhaps the time has come for the various units of the American Bar Association to form a “peace carps” to sit down with and explain the true meaning of law to the educated as well as the un- educated, to the leaders in the churches as well as their rank and file. * ★ ★ Certainly the majority of the American people would like to see steps taken to overcome the ill effects of the doctrine of “civil disobedience.” ★ ★ ★ In this way a start could be made toward a restoration of peace inside the United States. Cemetery Preferred Over Trailer Park Perhaps Independence Township does have an abundance of cemeteries, but if a choice were to be made, I would choose the cemetery*over the trailer camp that threatens to establish itself here. * PEACE AND QUIET ‘Postal Service Ruled by National Policies’ Local mail service is more closely controlled by National policies than is generally realized, Please do not blame the local postmaster and carriers so readily or jump to conclusions so (juickly. l 1 GEORGE LUENBERGER 9 ORIOLE ROAD Bob Considine Says: Bob Kennedy’s Question Unanswered in S. Africa Question and Answer The .other day you answered a question aboat F.A.I. air speed records, pan you tell me why I read of planes going several thousand (miles an hour, when the official world record is a lot less than that? , 1 12-YEAR-OLD FUTURE PILOT I REPLY NEW YORK - Sen. Robert Kennedy’s succinct definition of South Africa’s apartheid (a p a rtness I policy makes info rmative reading in Look Magazine; “If your skin is black in South Africa: “You can not participate I in the political I process, and CONSIDINE you cannot vote. “Yoa are restricted to jobs for which no whites are -available. “Your wages are from 10 to 40 per cent of those paid a white man for equivalent work. “You are forbidden to own land except in one small area. INFERIOR BY LAW “You live with your family only if the government approves. “The government will spend one-tenth as much to educate your child as' it spends to educate a w b i t e child. “You are, by; law, an inferior from birth to death. “You are totally segregated, even at most church services/*' Sen. Kennedy asked a lot of questions during his South African trip and he received a lot of answers. But one of his questions, asked at the University of N a t a I in Durban, went unanswered. Aqaestioner had explained the Sooth African position to him regarding the attitude of most churches. After all, the man said, whites and blacks could not worship together because the Bible taught that God created the Negroes to serve. “But suppose God is black?” Kennedy asked. “What if we go to heaven and we, all our lives, have treated the Negro as an inferior, and God is there and we look up and he is not white? What then is our response?" There was no reply. Certain types of planes don’t qualify for F.A.I. records because they are carried into the air by another aircraft. The X-15 is such a plane and the record for that type of fixed-wing research aircraft is 4,159 m.p.h. set by J. A. Walker June 27, 1962. The F.A.I. speed record 1,665.93 m.p.h. set by Col. Georgyi Mosolov over Russia July 7, 1962. Col. Robert L. Stephens and Lt. Col. Daniel Andre reported 2,062 m.p.h. over California May 1, 1965, but that hasn’t been ratified. In Washington: Brazen Rejection of Rule of Law Th» Pontiac Press Is MNeratf by con lor lor SO corns o nook* wtnro mailed M Oakland. Garina* U* tagston. Macomb* Lapeer and Washtenaw Countin It Is (11.01 a class rats at Pontiac. Michigan. By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) - A good proportion of the American people is hiding frpm some very unpleasant truths about itself. Far too often, public bell a v i o r of Americans is appall ing. Many, are openly and aggres-1 sively It less. Others BI06SAT are basically lawless in spirit and, though they would hot acknowledge it, have developed an incredibly high tolerance of crime and violence. Evidently they can {pel neither shame nor shock. Short of the grosser offenses against their fellow Americans, m a a y have made trespass and other invasions of privacy virtually a way of Me. They are arrogantly ill-mannered on the highway and in every public place. They are uncaring and Indifferent toward the rights and needs of other human beings. The courts of this country are currently embarked oh a process of reinforcing shaky individual freedoms. But while they are about it, countless Americans are turning freedom into license. They exhibit a contempt for authority which is destructive of freedom. They really do not think that any kind of hampering, disagreeable law ought to apply to them personally. In an age that is prolong deep into the mysteries of |iu- man conduct, they have begun to convert explanations of misbehavior into excuses for it p as Chicago’s scholarly police chief, O. W. Wilson, points out. In a nation whose political system is founded on the will of the, electorate, some Americans are pretty close to saying that there is no individual will and no personal responsibility. The offender is always the creature of forces: “He came from a broken home . . . Hs was a deprived person ... He was unloved ... He blacked out.” Some probers into conduct seem to stop just short of arguing that crime is human and, hence, democratic. Indeed, the ennobling cloak of the word ‘"democratic” is today being thrown over all manner of licentious behavior. The word is being defined to mean 3 “I am to be left alone to do or say anything I please, regardless of the consequences to others.” Any interference with such unbridled behavior is being promptly labeled to some eludes as “undemocratic” and even “fascistic.” Some of those brilliant young foots at Berkeley and other campuses argue that they an bound by no law or rule they hud no part in making. They (accept no an-thority but ftrir own constantly shifting opinion. Some Negro leaders frankly justify lawlessness and violence done to the name of their rights. A few appear to contend they are above the law. The most startling comment made recently in Chicago by Stokely Carmichael, hot-headed “black power” advocate and chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, was this: ★ *• i( “We’ve got to let them (the white community) know that when they arrest one of us to our community, we’re going to move to disrupt this whole country.” The consequences of turning freedom into anarchy are written large across the face of this country — to shattering, death-dealing riots, in a rising crime rate fiiat the most unemotional public authorities think spells crisis. - If it is the crisis they say it is, then the hiding from ugly truths cannot continue much longer. The reassuring words “only a minority does these things” will no longer suffice. Misbehavior, np to and including the breaking of laws, is a commonplace to 1966 for many millions of Americans. The numbers involved are frightening. There is almost no place to escape the depredations. He who says the peril to a sane society is exaggerated is whistling past a graveyard loaded with people who thought “it can’t happen to One of the truly comic notions of the age is the idea the American people are constricted by overorganization. Beneath the top-heavy weight of big government, big business, big everything, millions are managing ingeniously to live nearly unfettered to increasingly dangerous and destructive chaos. ES$, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1 /AIRPORT GREETING - Vice President Humphrey shakes hands with an unidentified / airline machinist union picket shortly after his arrival at Kansas City, Mo., Municipal Spfeaking engagement at the international convention of the plumbers and pipefitters union. Earlier in the day he discussed politics with former President Harry S. Truman in Independence, Mo. Detroit Schools May Get Needed Funds LANSING m Detroit’s school system apparently has a good chance of coming up with $4.5 million of the $12.5 million it says it needs, and Gov. George Romney was helping to look for more financial answers today. Members of the Detroit Board of Education met Monday with legislative leaders and then with the State Board of Education. They were to meet with Romney today. House Speaker Joseph Kowalski, D - Detroit, said after one meeting there would be no half-day sessions for Detroit, and that a way around ' Detroit’s problems would be found. The state board did not decide immediately what action it would recommend, but there was talk of recovering $4.5 million from the city’s teacher retirement system and borrowing to meet other needs. POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS Kowalski mentioned the $4.5 million among possible solu- te pay into the retire- $12.5 ment system in 1966-67, but Kowalski said that under recent legislation, the state should handle the payment. Miss Louise Grace, president of the Detroit board, told' the state board the legislature could do several things, including passage of a bill-that would distribute the state’s general fund surplus among all the state’s school districts. But a legislator attending the meeting, Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, predicted that declining revenues from automobile; sales tax collections would mean the surplus would be used up by July 1, 1967. And, he said, Detroit stood lit-tly chance of receiving special financial help from the legislature. Any proposal “must have something in it for every district to get anywhere.” He recommended that Qetroit borrow to meet its needs and try again in the November election for increased millage. Detroit voters defeated a 2.5-mill tax increase in May. It have yielded an estimated million. , Remain Administration Policy Guides May Be Altered WASHINGTON (AP) - The administration may >at not abandon and battered guidelines/ which left for dead by some of their critics. At present, however the 3.2 per cent guidelines which President Johnson’s chief economic adviser has called far from ideal remain official administration policy. But the White House said Monday the entire picture is under study and it’s impossible at this point to predict what the President’s labor-management advisory committee and his other advisers might recommend. Strong hints of a possible I change dune Monday from Sec-^ retary of Commerce John % Connor and Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler after each held a separate conference with the President. MUST BE CONTINUED They said the guidelines must be continued as parts of the ministration’s efforts to fight inflation but not necessarily in their present forth. Fowler said increased produc- voluntary tlvity is still the key $o the entire concept while Connors said productivity in a specific'industry must be taken into account. The guidelines call for a voluntary ceiling of 3.2 per cent on wage increases — representing the annual increase in productivity — and relatively stable prices. “I think we’ll continue to need something like the guidelines,’ Fowler commented. “They have served a useful purpose. They will always need adjustment and revision. They cannot be frozen always in a solid pattern.” Connor said the 3.2 per cent formula can lead to misunderstandings in specific industries. NOT DROPPING RESTRAINTS The White House said the administration is not abandoning restraints which have been under especially severe strain the past 10 days with rejection by airline machinists of a contract agreement worked out under White House auspices. This provided a 6 to 7 per cent wage and fringe benefit increase. Subsequently the steel industry announced its decision - to raise prices by $2 and $3 per ton on sheet and strip steel. Effective Wednesday. Hunt for Mate of Slain Woman Goes On LINCOLN PARK (AP) -Police in this Detroit suburb continued today a search for the husband of a woman found slain Saturday. bors. Police said she had been shot three times with a' small caliber pistol. Her husband, Valentine, was seen leaving with the couple’s two children shortly before the The body of Mrs. Diane Ko-!body was discovered, police vach, 24, was found by neigh- said. Since then, Montgomery said, a tax exemption for older persons has gone into effect which might make a millage boost more acceptable to older voters. The state board planned to; discuss financial problems at its regular business meetings, tonight and Wednesday. Miss Grace said the Detroit board probably^ would seek additional millage in November but that it would not help this year. " ★ ★ ★ She added that the valuation j against which Detroit levies its! school taxes has decreased steadily for the last five years. It takes more services to give a Detroit youngster an education equal to that given an out-state youth, she said, because so many Detroit pupils come from; homes which provide few educa-i tional advantages. A. L. Zwerdling, another Detroit board member, said the sensible solution would be fiscal reform. Dr. Leon Fill of the state board suggested tax revision for education only. ZENITH PORTABLE STEREO- PHONO Model X560 • The Modemaire Features solid-state amplifier with 32 watts peak music power. 6 speakers (3 in each remote unit); Stereo Precision Record Changer with Micro-Touch* 2G tone arm. Green and Grained Walnut color. 149.95 f The quality goes in before the name goes on• SEC YOUR LOCAL ZENITH DEALER pm* i enneut ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY W Penney's announces its famous back-to-school bargain days! 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Sizes 2 to 16. regularly 3 for 1.55 194 O 122 1 NOW q#for 1 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. tHE POyXIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST % 1966 SALE fashioned fiir-"' SALE... misses’ Perma-press blouses Cool, trip Idol thunki to permanent press. 12 to H i. Solid Dacron' polyester • cotton, spread collar, roll sleeve. Whim, pink, blue, preen, gold, beige. C. Liberty prim; Ami* rayon - cotton. Mae, green, plum, gold. Bermuda collar, roll sleeve. 0. Paisley print; Zantid' naaaaai Teal, plum, laden, brick. SALE. . . misses’ double-knit poor boys New fashion accented styles in shape-itoidmg durable cotton double knit tops. lions. They go’everywhere, anywhere. White, plum, blue, loden, gold. Small, \ptcdium. large. A. Crew neck; elbow, sleeves. I. Slow pipe neck; long sleeves, p. Turtle neck; long sleeves. J ALE... comfortable girdles by famous makers Favorite long leg panty gitdle ttyles at one exciting savings price! Popular whit* in met mull, medium, large and extra Urge. A. 'Action back' waist insert motes with you; rein-lotted back panel. B. Sil-O-Ette with reinforced hip control ptnrls. Ali» i/ar/ar gkilt itylf. C. SilO-Ette* with hip control penell. Aft* umil*r Jfird/r t/|/r. 1 '4, A l 12218673 ft.............h . . '5V, . vj TPI8DAY. AUGUST », ISM Begins Wednesday 5 Bays... Aug. 10th through Aug. 15th boys’ Western jackets §§S#'i|P boys’ no-iron jeans gHill 2M These 12 EXT BA-SPECIALS are tor WEDNESDAY, Aug. If ONLY! No Phone Orders! Orion crew cardigans WEDNESDAY! Crew neck, long sleeves, Orion* acrylic. 6 colors. Misses 36 to 40. nylon panty hose, pr. WEDNESDAY! Colors of 417 beige and light taupe. Petite, I average and tall. JL irregssleepwear WEDNESDAY gowns. 32, 34; 36, 42 or S, M, L in group. package hose, 5 pr. WEDNESDAY! Little boys’ A A. assorted dark tone stripes, vltl'' Cotton. Sizes 6 to 8Vz. tFV onr own Toe-Kite shoes for boys, girls 184 tU S&Susfl aaa« cotton thread,14 tor WEDNESDAY! Mercerized (4 cotton. 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(AP) - A masked and tattoqed gunman was sought today for kitting a customer who triad to thwart a 3,139 MILES OF PEDALING — Bob Guinan (left) of Pittsford, N.Y., and Bill Meub of Bethlehem, Pa., check Bob’s flat tire on San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge yesterday. The two Lehigh University students had just completed a 3,139-mile cross- country bicycle ride from the George Washington Bridge to the Golden Gate, the trip undertaken as an educational adventure, coincides with Lehigh’s Centennial Observance and took 42 days. Sniper's Father Lauds Police AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) have respect for you for doing your job,” the father of Charles J. Whitman told a policeman who helped kill his sniper son. The father, C. A. Whitman of Lake Worth, Fla., met Monday with Patrolman Ramiro Martinez, one of those who shot Whitman in his sniper’s perch in the University of Texas Tbwer. ★ ★ ★ At the meeting, the elder Whitman agreed to leave his son’s arsenal, which brought death to 16 persons, in police custody forever. Whitman came to Austin to collect the personal effects of his son. He also collected the effects of Whitman’s mother, killed by the son. The mother was separated from the elder Whitman. HIS STATEMENT Whitman issued a statement saying: “I came to Texas to express my sympathies and regrets to all concerned and to cooperate the fullest with all law enforcement officers and I have met personally and embraced the man that killed my son and have no animosity, in fact, have respect for him for doing his job.” Whitman’s eyes were red-rimmed and watered as he made several official visits in Austin the same day another person died from his son’s accurate rifle fire. The 16th victim, who died Monday, was to be buried in Wichita Falls today after services in Austin. Karen Griffith, 17; was struck in the chest by a bullet from the sniper’s rifle. Whitman, 25, an architectural engineering student, stabbed his wife and shot and knifed his mother to death before ascending to the observation deck above the 27th floor of the university tower last Monday. The tanned and muscled man shot to death Herman Nadi-43, Monday and fled on foot out the bade door of the Inwood National Bank, firing three more times at pursuers. * * ★ FBI agents and police went door-to-door in the heavily populated North Dallas area but found no one who had seen a Si-foot, 9 inch man with “J. tattoed on one arm. His paper shopping bag broke under the weight of lulls and | coins and, as he ordered frightened women customers to scoop the money into a cardboard box, two male customers charged him and tore off his shirt and mask. Observers said it appeared at first that Nachman and J. E. Cole, 53, had succeeded subduing the man—but then he found his gun and shot Nachman through the neck. PURSUE GUNMAN ‘There was dead silence after that — a small ‘pop’ and things just stood still for a second, said James B. Munsell, bank cashier. “Then the gunman ran for the back door and I ran after him.” Walter Wenning, vice president, and a Southern Methodist University student working in the bank, Charles dymer, 21, joined in the chase but stopped when bullets almost hit them. Munsell said the would-be robber entered the bank at fast walk about 9:45 a.m. and began yelling and waving his gun at the more than 20 men, women and children in the lobby. 'Don't anybody leave. Don’t hit any buttons. This is a hold-up," he told then, running toward foe head cashier. >ther customers, such as Ode, entered be told them, ‘‘Oome on in,’ or TO kill you,” Nachman, who began his a sault on the gunman by pitching a five-inch .wide heavy ash tray { at his head, was an auto sales-1 man who moved here last year from Chicago. He leaves a wife and two daughters,-The bank is located in one of J the busiest shopping centers of! North Dallas. It was robbed of1 140,000 last September, a year after H opened in 1004. Suspect Is Bound Over CHARLOTTE (AP)-Richard George Herr Jr., accused slayer of a pretty Grand Ledge wife, was bound over to County Circuit Court Monday following examination in Charlotte Municipal Court. ★ ★ ★ Herr, 25, of Lansing, was held without bond on an open charge of murder following examination by Judge Robert C. Ballard. No trial date was set. ★ * * The body of Mrs. Betty Reynolds, 37, was found July 7 on the banks of foe Grand River. Mrs. Reynolds, mother of two children, had been fatally stabbed. 16 Latins Benefit Offer OU Scholarships Oakland University has joined 14 other Michigan colleges and universities to offer scholarships to 16 students from British Honduras under the auspices of the Partners of the Alliance. An arm of the U.S. Department of State’s Alliance fo Progress, Partners of the Alliance coordinates direct-assistance activity between people in the U.S. and Latin American countries. ★ ★ ★ The scholarships for tuition and room and board for the full four-year programs, are Worth over $85,000 and are offered by the institutions themselves. ' D. B. Varner, chancellor of Oakland University and vice chairman of the Michigan Partners of the Alliance, initiated the scholarship offer by direct contact with the institutions involved. • The Partners’ education committee, chaired by Warren Huff, also chairman of the Michigan State University Board of Trustees, set guidelines that will assure Financial participation by the people of British Honduras to cover transportation, books and incidental expenses (approximately $500 per student per year). Upon completion of their studies, students are committed to return to British Honduras to help their people and country with their new knowledge and skills. i ^get the facts! I call. HEMHrS SUPPLY 2685 Lapeer, Road "s®5" FE 4-64S1 CALL TODAY! Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD 185 Elizabeth Lake Road ir Murphy St., ( Blacks East at Pontiac M No Waiting-Immediate Installation! 333EXa GAS FURNACE SPECIAL MO OFF $40.00 off tHa installation pric* of a com plat* f urn act or boilar job. Call JE 9-0200 and prosont this coupon to tho Budman man. W« com* to you. Only on# coupon par OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST 1Br 1966 Only Budman't, tho 59-yoar-old family firm, offart worry-fraa credit for ponnioa a day. No paymanti if you'ro tick or out of work. No cash needed — no payments 'til Price Conversion Burner W FROmCTOXY&WL ALUMINUM DOORS I P«*ma-Seal mode! ALUMINUM WINDOWS Scraan A Storm Patmolum modal. Doubt# hung. *9* Factory Price Riot! ALUMINUM AWNINGS AND PATIOS Stock Must Be || Cut 25% Alum. Siding • Gutter* • Reefing I til I p.m., Saturi aed Sunday til • p.m. A Budman man will coma to yc_ bane daily fil tl p.m., Sunday til 6 p.m., with (tea gift* If your old refrigerator seems to be shrinking... . trade it now for this B16FB16ID!iUB£ FROSTPROOF “16! ” I.R.W9- Modal FPDA-16TK, 16.3 eu. ft (NEMA standard) • Mammoth 154-lb. freezer and giant refrigerator section are completely Frost-Proof. No defrosting ever! • Twin Porcelain Enamel Hydrators for fruits and vegetables! • Deep door shelf holds V^-gallon cartons, big 46-oz. juice cans-even the tallest soda bottles! SAVE *20 NOW *298 SPACE AGE ADVANCE IN REfRIGERATION Packs more power por cubic inch than past FrigUalra unitt* CLAYTON’S « THE POWER CAPSULE for mon tpaoa, now foaturasf. “where quality furniture is priced right" 2133 Orchard Lake Rd. 333-7052 i£v POOTIAC PMBSSi TPltBDAY. AUQU8T «, lint MARK S. STEWART Vies President-Manager MAEEMQVING INTO OUR NEW BUILDING THURSDAY, AUGUST 11 DIXIE HIGHWAY JUST HORTH OF FORMER LOCATION CORNER OF FLORADALE STREET - ACROSS THE STREET FROM ASP WALTON WIN We have outgrown our present quarters and are moving to our new larger building to better serve our ever-increasing number of customers. We will now have: • 5 TELLER WINDOWS • 3 DRIVE-IN WINDOWS • CONVENIENT FREE PARKING • FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE • 5% TIME SAVING CERTIFICATES ^ e $4.50 PER $100 A YEAR ON NEW CAR LOANS We cordially invite you to stop in and see us real soon and real often. A pleasant surprise awaits you. G.E. COLOR TELEVISION OR ONE OF 10 OTHER MAJOR PRIZES 5 TRANSISTOR RADIOS ... 5 ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES At Drayton Plains OfReo Only It's very simple with no obligation on your part. Simply stop in as often as you like and sign a registration slip. Drawing will be held August 22nd. You need not be present to win. DRAYTON PLAINS OFFICE BANKING HOURS: MONDAY - TUESDAY THURSDAY 10 3 WEDNESDAY, If to 12 SATURDAY 9 t. 12 FRIDAY 10 «o 6 Pont I bo State Bank MAIN OFFICE SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE Mentis Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation a ANMHHT HEIGHTS BlMlWIN AT1ILE ■MUYTM RUINS ■ MIRACLE MILE afTO W. LONG LAKE ROAR ,M H ai|| MB ELIZABETH LAKE RSA* bCLARKSTOH lOPOYKE-WALTON BEAST HIGHLAND put .nd Duck Uk. R..« A—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TtTEgfDAY, Man's Place Anywhere but the Kitchen The Association of Labor Medi- vention here Aug. 30-Sept. 5. BOYLE By HAL BOYLE . NEW YORK (AP) - One of life’s little ordeals today is put-ting up with Pijm’s cooking. A growing number of American men are obsessed with the delusion that man's place is in tne kitchen. Well, it isn’t, the dining room, His place is in with his feet under the table. Things weren’t so bad when dad confined himself to barbecuing steaks. All that was necessary was to keep a first air kit handy, warn the children to stay out of the back yard, and develop a fondness for the taste of beef-turned-into charcoal over charcoalcoals. OUT OF HAND But since Papa starting buying exotic cookbooks — “How to Filet Whale," “Ten Easy Ways to Prepare Sirloin of Wolf” — and took over the kitchen well, filings have rather gotten out of hand. The trouble with the amateur male chef is that he is less an artist than he is a ham actor. He has enough props to put on production at the Metropolitan Opera. He dons a big white cap and a colorful apron bearing some such cute motto as “Don’t Kiss the Cot*," bids farewell to his loved ones — and marches into file kitchen, book in one hand and an immense fork in the other. Soon steam and the sound of dull explosions pour out into the living room, and unnerved guests turn pale and ask for third, fourth and fifth martini. ★ ★ ★ No one, naturally, is allowed into the kitchen while the master is performing his miracles. But if you peek thehrein you can’t help wondering whether the host, wildly waving glittering instruments, is trying to win a Boy Scout merit badge ip chemistry or merely rehearsing the rede of a mad surgeon in a horror movie. PLENTY OF SEASONING He turns the turbulent mess over glad cries, seasoning it with saffron and turmeric, garlic salt and cloves. He anoints it with basil and rosemary, oregano and marjoram, sage and tarragon. He sprinkles it with the aromatic seeds of anise and sesame, fennel and caraway, cardamom and coriander. As the host, his face parboiled red, finally struggles to the table with the bubbling gook, he calk out triumphantly: ‘‘Surprise -- guess what it You mMhr wonder if be really knows. What started out to be a meal has turned into a lottery. It is then that the wise guest, where, bids the amateur chef a firm and immediate jpodby. Remember, in dealing with amateur chefs, tie stomach you save is' certainly your DEM0NSTM1S won w Touch & Sew zig-zag sewing machines by s i n c e r • Eiclusiva Push - Buttor in—wind* right in • Eicluthrt n*w spinning thmd tyitsm s Exclusive Slant Nssdli • Only machinnthat dull three kinds if iiwlnf straight stitch, zig-zeg ind Win e Color TV. Ask your local SINGER CENTER for detelle. Oth.r naw BINQER* rawing machlnra from *4S.SS. What s new for tomorrow It at SIN C E R today/’ DOWNTOWN PONTIAC orth Saginaw Phona 1U-792* PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTS* SINGER Convention Set MACKINAC ISLAND (AP) atioh Agendas and file Association of State Labor Relations Agendse wffl hold a joint coo- Knights f/sef ftMlSiaB*1 Iesldent of the Grand Seaetar-s’ Association of the YU** ■■■■...............................-TiPf, vsa DI5RPPERRII1li RCI The ’66 Rockets see moving net fast became OMs Dealer* are laying YtS on every Olda in stock! No need to wait until Fad for a big bay on a new Old*. Big selection? YES. Big trade-in*? YES. Every Old* engineered far your greater comfort, safety, and driving satisfaction? YES. Olditnobile Dealers have juggled the calendar to brink you Year End Saving* right now on any Olda you choose. See your Old* Dealer— the YES nuui who has everything for yon! SmP OUT FRONT in a Rocket Action Corf ■ rmmemm • hhuty-hight • btaufmc • ushty-emnh • cutum . r« • vmta-ciniiscr • ud D QLDSMDBILE l OH oucAT tuac to a* wmuc tm action m .. an yooa num> MJMtMU ovality bcale* man DOWNEY OLDSMODRI, INC 550 OaMand Avenue Pontiac, Michigan HASKINS CHEVROLET, INC 6751 Dixie. Highway Clarkston, Michigan HOUGHTEN A SONS, MC 52t N. Main Strsot 24* ANNIVERSARY SALE!! GENERAL ELECTRIC SELFCLEANING OVEN RANGE ^Prices Start As Low As NOW-FORGET OVEN CLEANING DRUDGERY! Juki latch the oven door, set the dials, and forget this messiest cleaning task. All baked-on grease vanishes. Your oven comes out sparkling clean. $ 219 -FREE-THREE BIG DOOR PRIZES Nothing to Buy—Come in and Register Now * UDICO Automatic Electric Ice Crusher * General Electric, Battery Operated Port. TV * RCA Victor Table Clock Radio * ANNIVERSARY SALE 124 YRS. OF SERVICE FRAYE FRAYER’S ANNIVERSARY STEREO SPECIALS RCA VICTOR 48-Inch Maple 4 speakers, $QWOOO 24 watts CHO ” RCA VICTOR 63-Inch Pecon, 8 speakers, 120 watts r RCA VICTOR 59-Inch Danish 6 speakers, 56 watts 3 RCA VICtOR 72-Inch Maple, 8 speakers 120 watts J RCA VICTOR 64-Inch Danish, 8 speakers 120 watts These are just a few of the many bargains to choose from during this Anniversary month of Spectacular Values. Jtiie Stop in for Free Refrsslunents. NEW RCAVICTOR 25TOLOR TV SWIVEL MODEL fixer 589 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0526 Try Cliche ' Exercising By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK -Past this desk came a quick observation that set me thinking. It mentioned that one exercise not good for you is “jumping to conclusions.” Digging into the store of cliches that do involve physical exercise, so to speak, there are many exercises that are not good for you besides jumping to conclusions. Also, I discovered, many that are beneficial. Not recommended, for instance, are running into debt, running down your friends, racing to keep up with the Joneses, throwing barbs, and pushing your luck. Good for you, in turn, are reaching for the stars, stretching the imagination, pulling in the purse stiipgs, walking off with honors, riding out the storm, and swinging into action. The Charles TenEycke Munsons (Krisfine Puvogel) greeted guests at a breakfast in Plum Hollow Golf Club after noon vows Saturday in St. James Episcopal Church, Birmingham. Their parents are the John E. Puvogels, Middleton Drive, West Bloomfield Township, and Dr. and Mrs. Henry T. E. Munson of Grosae Pointe. ★ * * Alencon lace motifs accented the bride’s Bianchi-designed Empire gown of veiled white silk organza with court train. An open pillbox held her veil of French illusion. She carried white butterfly As the list grew, 1 separated the cliches into “good for,” and “not good for” you categories. Take some of the “good for” group: Toeing the mark, pulling yourself up by the bootstraps, point-ing with pride, sitting down to talk things over, standing up to a crisis, picking up the pieces; Climbing the ladder of success, taking o^e step at a time, t o s s i n g out worries, bending over backward, diving in ail over once a decision is reached, and putting your best foot forward. ★ ★ ★ In the “not good” for you group I came up with: Stretching the truth, ducking responsibility, walking out in a huff, swimming in self-pity, throwing a tantrum, tossing a brickbat, tottering on the brink, carrying the weight of the world orchids and Stephanotis for the rite performed by Rev. John Hayden. Honor matron was Mrs. Larry Willis, Ann Arbor, with bridesmaids Mrs. John Porter, Oak . Park; Mrs. James Yeomans, St. Clair Shores and Patricia Munson. With best man Douglas Sleight of Columbus, Ohio were the ushers Thomas Padgett, Lansing; Hal Munson and Douglas Puvogel. After a Wisconsin honeymoon, the bridegroom will resume dentistry studies at the University of Michigan. Both are' alumni of Albion College. on your shoulders, throwing a curve; Throwing a one-two punch, kicking a man when he’s down, tossing your weight around, bending foe elbow too frequently, running ‘seared, and teeing off on a friend. You’ll think of still more “exercises" if you’ve read this far. There is for instance one conclusion that if a person doesn't lean over backward to stress the “good for" you group, he may end up doing pushups — of the daisies. Couple Wed on Saturday Venise lace accented a white silk organza over taffeta gown for Linda Lee Goodrum who became Mrs. Douglas Arthur Hel-mick Saturday in the Gractf Lutheran Church. A butterfly veil of silk illusion and bouquet of white daisy chrysanthemums completed her ensemble for the noon rite and reception in foe Kingsley Inn. Parents of foe couple who left for an eastern weddingrtrip are Hie Grant Goodrums, Orchard Lake, and the Theodore Hel-micks of Monroe. Bridal attendants were Robin Buesching, June Wilkinson, Mary McIntyre, Judith Hel-mick, and Lori Helmick, flower girl. Richard Helmick was his brother’s best man. Guests were .seated by Whit Brooks, Robert Shimmel and Wayne Salow. The bridegroom is a graduate of Eastern Michigan University where 4|he bride has senior status. Ceremony in Afternoon for Charles Munsons MRS. DOUGLAS A HELMICK Be Winner If She Minded Own Business Calls During Dinner Hour Upsetting By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: You advised a woman not to worry because her husband was seen riding down the main street with another woman in«^ broad daylight, r™ Your reason-? ing: “A n who is playing! games with an-| other woman is| not about tog parade her! around in broad! daylight.” 1 ARRV------------ Boy, are you ABBY ever dumb! People have been getting away with murder in that theory for years. When I see a married man with a chick who is not his wife — unless she is his sister, I guess the worst. And 99 per cent of the time I’ll be right. GOODGUESSER DEAR GUESSER: Why guess at all! Mind your own business and you'll be right 100 per cent of the time. * * * DEAR ABBY: Someone wrote a letter to foe mother of the boy our 17-year-old daughter had been going with, and in it she said same terrible things about our daughter. She said our daughter and this boy had not been behaving themselves. (I think you know what I mean.) The boy’s mother didn’t mention it to me, but foe boy told our daughter. My husband said I should forget it because if we Film for Retirees A film on Michigan history will be shown at foe 1:30 p.m. Wednesday meeting of the American Association of Retired Persons, Pontiac chapter No. 7 meeting to be held in the Community Services Building. make any accusations without proof we could stir up matters worse. I understand the letter looked as though it could have been written by a grown woman. It made me side to think foat anyone could be so cruel and nasty. - If you were foe mother of that innocent girt^ what would you do, Abby? HER MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: I would listen to my husband. ★ * ★ DEAR ABBY: Please don’t think I am an idiot, but at this moment I have had it! I am so frustrated I don’t know what to do. I work in a one-girl office, and there is no one to turn to if I can’t spell a word. I know the word is jn? the dictionary, but how on earth can you find a word if you don’t know how to spell it correctly. For the past 20 minutes I have searched hopelessly for the word “exorbitant.” I feel like a fool for having wasted so much time, but I couldn’t help it. As I mail this, I still haven’t found it. Can you help me. FRUSTRATED DEAR FRUSTRATED: You needn’t “feel like a fool.” Others have had the same experience. First, guess at how you think the word is spelled. If that doesn’t lead you to it, look up a synonym, or a word which means almost the same thing. In the case of “exorbitant,” — look up “excessive." * * * DEAR ABBY: After reading the article about the wife who was all broken uf> because her husband wanted to fly for a hobby, I had to write. My husband has been flying since 1921, and holds one of the oldest commercial licenses in existence. A man is much safer in an airplane than, he is on the freeways. My husband flies hunters and fishermen into the High Sierras, which is rugged country. But I never worry because he makes sure his ship is in first class condition before he takes off. And he never takes chances in bad weather. MRS. RPZ ★ ★ ★ CONFIDENTIAL TO A VERY KIND MINISTER IN BAR-STOW, CAL.: Forgive me if I gave foe impression that the apocryphal tale about the biblical Sarah and Abraham, which was sent to me by a reader, was indeed FROM the Old Testament. It was not. But I will repeat, the answer to all human problems can be found between foe two covers of the Bible. “Seek and ye shall find.” Problems? Write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped, self - addressed envelop. Problems? Write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, inclose a stamped,' self-addressed envelope. Daughter Visits With Mother Houseguests of Mrs. George Wasserberger, Illinois Avenue, for the past two weeks have been'her daughter, Mrs. Philip B. F. Agee with sons Filepe and Christopher. Philip Agee joined his wife and family late last evening, arriving from Washington, D.C. He is with the State Department in Washington, D.C., where the family will take up residence. They have been living in Montevideo, Uruguay. By ELIZABETH L POST Dear Mrs. Post: Yesterday, while entertaining at a dinner party in my home, my husband’s boss called on the telephone just as we had begun to eat. He frequently telephones my husband at home with matters which could easily wait until working hours. I explained to him foat we had dinner guests, that we were then eating, and asked if my husband might return his call later. Now I am not sure foat I acted within foe bounds of good etiquette. — S.R. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. R.: You were quite correct in asking your husband’s boss if your husband might return his call later. If the matter were of such urgency that . it could not wait, I’m sure he would have told you. ★ ★ ★ Too many bosses feel they have a right to call their employes at any time of foe day or night. This is an extremely inconsiderate habit —.except in emergencies,' a man’s time at home should be his own. * ★ ★ Dear Mrs. Post: I am planning to be married this summer. My dad is not alive and my brother will be giving me away. Would it be permissible to have my mother .as my matron of honor? — Mildred. Dear Mildred: It would hot be appropriate to have your mother as matron of honor. This office should be filled by a relative or friend of approximately your own age. Your mother should sit in foe front pew on the left side of the church, to be joined there by your brother after he gives ‘The Tender Land’ to Premiere etnllac Pr«i Photo Ham H. Bedard of Crescent Lake Road, Mrs. Clarence Myers of Shimmons Road and the hostess, Mrs. Radenbaugh. The committee gives a yearly nursing scholarship. Deborah Frye of Royal Oak is the recipient for her second year at Bronson Hospital SchooLof Nursing in Kalamazoo. MRS. CHARLES T. MUNSON The Meadow Brook School of Music will achieve another milestone on August 15 and 17 when the Opera Institute, under the direction of Dr. David DiChiera, presents the Michigan premiere of Aaron Copland’s “The Tender Land.” Both performances will take place at 8:30 p.m. in the new Matilda R. Wilson Auditorium at Oakland University. . ★ ★ > Appropriately matching the contemporary theme of foe final Meadow Brook Festival week, Copland’s three-act opera is set in midwest rural America. It was commissioned by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammers tein H for the League of Composers’ 30fo anniversary year, the first produced at the NeW York City Center in 1954., •M * * The principals and members of the chorus in the Michigan premiere production are o u t-st and ing singers, many with professional experience, who have met at Meadow Brook this summer to study and work with Dr. DiChiera in an opera pro-granvxo-sponsored by foe Mott Center for Community Affairs. DETROITER HAS LEAD Emily Derr, of Detroit, will sing the leading role of Laurie Moss, eldest daughter of a farm family, who reaches new maturity after falling in love, then being deserted on foe eve of her high school graduation. Holder of degrees from Michigan State University, Miss Derr, soprano, now teaches in Oak Park. Sha sings with foe Kenneth Jewell Chorale and at Grosse Pointe Memorial Church, has performed with the Detroit Opera Theater and the Piccolo Opera Company, and appeared in recital and on television. * * * Singing the role of Laurie’s mother is Leslie Eitseo, well-known mezzo-soprano in the Detroit and suburban area. She now teaches at Schoolcraft College and has received‘acclaim for her interpretations tit such leading operatic roles as Car- They come bearing gifts to the benefit card party sponsored by the scholarship committee of the Pontiac Women’s Club. Standing at the entrance to the John Radenbaugh residence on Sunnybeach Drive, where the party was held Monday, are (from left) Mrs. Wil- Reach for the Stars men, Suzuki in “Madame Butterfly,” and Siebel in “Faust .” Also in ^he cast are Gloria Harper of Mt. Clemens, Paul Hill of Takoma Park, Md., Frank Spoto of New Milford, N.J., Roger Jamison of Detroit, Ronald Luchsinger of Dubuque, Iowa, and Oakland University, Grace Kuhns, of Troy, Herbert Simpson of Sarnia, Ont., and Violet Weber of Cleveland. Clyde Vinson, director of the Court Theater at Wayne State University, is stage director. John Wustman «is musical consultant. Musical coaches include Naomi Amos, Lawrence LaGore pnri Gerald Maddox. Russell Hammer and Victor Webber are preparing the chorus. CONDUCTORS The Meadow Brook Chamber Orchestra will be under the direction of Dr. DiChiera and William C. Byrd. Dr. DiChiera, a leading figure in the develop- ment of opera in Michigan, is presently writing a book on American opera. William Byrd, musical director of foe Musical Performing Arts Association in Flint, is assisting in foe Meadow Brook School of Music orchestral program this summer. ★ ★ ★ Tickets for the performances may be purchased through the Office of Continuing Education at Oakland University. Rehearsals take place daily at Oakland University for the Aug. 15 and 17 Michigan premiere of Aaron Copland’s opera, “The Tender Land ” It is being presented by the Opera Institute under joint auspices of the Meadow Brook School of Music and the Mott Custer for Community Affairs. Dr. David DiChiera, director of the opera institute, here works with leading singers, Leslie Eitzen (left) and Emily Derr. A . ^ B—B THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. AUGUST 9, 1G6U Mid-Summer Special PERMANENTS! Hive fun in the Sun with I care-free Perm from Vr ^ Beauty Shop Biker Bldg., FE 3-7186 ftattatfasaaeaartkaaaaLat ^ » #EW*M0OERN Corned BeefSandwiches IMUWlttM ■•isiKBf* Huge Napkins Won't Fly Away Spoall, fly-away napkihs can be a nuisance at back’ yard barbecues and picnics. Solve the problem by making your own king-size napkins, each one a yard wide, Jhran inexpensive printed coir ton fabrics. The National Cotton Council suggests! you use these generous cloths as napkins, individual tablecloths, or to protect uncovered food from insects. Get Large Shoes When buying baby any footwear, socks, bootees or shoes, be sure they are large enough to avoid any pressure on the developing structure of his feet. During the Month of August We Will Close At Noon On Saturdays Fill SM*8400 Dixit Highway------------| Birmingham Cuttomen CM 334-0981 -.Vp Toll Charm LEARN A PROFESSIONAL SERVICE! Paramount Beauty School MODERN NEW FACILITIES 26 W. HURON Phone: FE 4-2352 Nuptial Promises Are Exchanged by Six Couples MRS: CHAMCZYK Off on an eastern honeymoon are the Stephen M. Chamczyks (Margaret) Helen Kosiba)* after recent vows in Our Lady of the Lakes Church and reception in the Knights of Columbus hall. Janet Kosiba was maid of honor for her sister who chose silk-faced white peau de soie appliqued with jeweled Alencon lace. She wore a bubble veil and held a crescent of white roses and Shasta They are the daughters of the John M. Kosibas'of Em-barcadero Drive. Other attendants were Michele Allen and Kathy Vitasinsky. The bridegroom, son of Mrs, Francis Wazdowik of Orton Avenue had Ronald Butler for best man. James Dailey and Dennis Vitasinsky ushered. 8S1 1 i & w DURING JULY AND AUGUST Wa will to open only on Tues., Wad. and Thurs. ; 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Clan?* HANDCRAFT SHOP _ rnttumi.im...... 1 fe wiii Plan Nuptial Vows The engagement of Oakland University student Carol Anne Dooley to Raymond F. Kasat is announced by her parents the Kenneth L.“ Dooleys of Pingree Drive! He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Kasat of Aquarina Drive. Late November vows are being planned. HOLY COW! MILK'S GONE UP, TOO ? In these times of "higher prices for everything," the economic facts of life leave the dairy industry no alternative but to raise the price of dairy products. FACT NO. 1. A dairy farmer received no more money for hit milk at the start of 1966 than he did in 1952. FACT NO. 2. The price of milk from your dairy or grocer was no higher during 1965 than 1952. IN THE MEANTIME FACT NO. 3. The cost of operation of a dairy farm or your local dairy has risen continually since 1952. Automotive pay in 1952 was $4,708.00, in 1965 $9,701.00. Farmers and dairies must compete for this labor market. Construction costs have risen 40 per cent since 1952. Adequate farm machinery and dairy plant equipment costs have almost doubled since 1952. For example, a farmer's 3-plow tractor cost $2,000 In 1952. He paid $3,600 for a comparable tractor in 19651 FACT NO. 4. There are less than half as many dairy farmers and dairy plants in Michigan now than there were in 1959. FACT NO. 5. Unless the dairy industry can receive a reasonable price for its -goods and services, it can't stay In business. FACT NO. 6. Population expansion plus increased use of dairy products calls for more milk production. An adequate supply of milk and dairy foods can only be supplied by an economically sound dairy business. People receive 28% of their food nutrients from dairy food, while dairy foods cost only about 18% of their food budgets. DAIRY PRODUCTS ARl STILL YOUR »1ST FOOD 1UYI I I Let american dairy association of Michigan MRS. D. O. ORCHARD Immediately following their marriage and reception Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church, Sandusky, Mich., the Dale Orville Orchards (Barbara Ann McAllister) left for an Upper Michigan tour. ★ * ★ The Keith McAllisters and the Orville Orchards, all of Applegate are parents of the. bridal couple \who were both of Gladstone Avenue. ★ ,* Alencon lace accented the round neckline of the bride’s gown of white silk organza over taffeta and appeared above a border of Venise lace edging her hemline and double Watteau train, - ★ ★ * Bouffant veiling fell from a petal headpiece, sister’s honor maid at th e Karen McAllister was* her rite performed by Rev. Robert E. VanderHart. Sandra McAllister and Janice McLennan were bridesmaids. ★ ★ ★ The bridegroom had Gerald Wagner for best man, Raymond and James Orchard ushered with Raymond McAllister and William Welsh. LUCAS MRS. R. D. WARREN MRS. % W! DAVIS MRS. A. W. MORELL The newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Max Lucas (Yvonne Annette Tate) left for a trip to Niagara Falls after their wedding and reception, Sautrday, in the Judah Lake Baptist Church. Their parents are Mrs. Anne Tate, Greenshield Road, Orion Township, and Gordon F. Tate of Marion, Mich.; Max Lucks of Putnam Street and the late Mrs. Lucas. SHEATH GOWN Re-embroidered French lace accented the bride’s sheath gown and train of white silk organza over taffeta worn with illusion veil capped with a lace pillbox. White orchids, carnations and ivy rested on her white Bible. Maid of honor was Lynn Lovelace, with briadesmaids Mrs. Francis Wheaton Jr., Gaye Heckman and floWeV girl Tammy Spencer. Deborah Molyneux was train-bearer and Brian Farrar, ring-bearer. ★ ★ ★ . Donald Lucas was best man for his twin, with Francis Wheaton Jr. and a cousin, David Lucas, as groomsmen. Ushers were Ron Randolph and William Lewis. The Ronnie Davis Warrens (Sandra Kay Marcum) left for a wedding-trip-to New York after recent vows in Evangel Temple. Their parents are Mrs. Amy Marcum, East Ypsilanti Avenue, the late Sam Marcum and the Henry Warrens of Arlene Street. „ An illusion veil complemented the bride’s gown of white Chantilly lace over taffeta. Sweetheart roses centered her bouquet of white carnations. With Mrs. Frank Reid, her sister’s matron of honor, were Linda Leffew, Mrs. Larry Cushist and Paulette Salmons as bridesmaids. Flower girl and ring-bearer were Melinda Warren and Paul Trader. Richard King was best man. Ushers included Roy Trador, William Marcum and Paul Warren. Arthur P. Marcum escorted his sister at the evening rite performed by Rev. Geoffrey Day, followed by reception in the Fisher Body Union Hall. Clean With Oil The new waterproof leg make-up to simulate a tan presents a cleaning problem. Cosmetologists suggest using a baby oil to help remove the make-up. This also leaves legs soft and smooth. Carpet Paths and Spots Easily Removed.... „r ciean carpet wall-to-wall. Safe Blue Luetre re-orightena colors, leavi fluffy. Rei ‘ jMjfiju i Suds Kids Did you ever stop to think of how ofteh you rub your eyes or touch your face and lips each day? The times are as countless as the number of germs carried by dirty hands. That’s just one reason why it is so important to keep your hands clean. Wash them often with warm water and plenty of soapsuds to protect both your health and your complexion. Cotton is a vegetable fiber. FwabfflmofFamily LOWREY ORGANS Only tha LOWREY has^all these wonderful features: LOWREY tound fidelity ... • LOWREY playing rn>« . . . full, rich voice* reproduced Lowrey’s exclusive “Minit-Mu-throujh Matched twin speak- sic” enables anyone to play ore tor tree M-ti purity! beautiful music right away! • LOWREY glide control ... , provides real slide trombone * • • ***!*’. and many other realistic tonal k*aut? !• V*“r. effects!v Available in a undo choice at cabinets and finishes! s,art $60500 unpd At PIANOS Chickering — Fischer Lowrey — Kimball and Many Others 90Day» Same at Cash or up to 36 Mo. sjjfv i/ajT Dome Open Mon. and JFri. Eve*, ’til 9, Daily ’lil5*30 1710 S. Telegraph Road ' (V» Bik. .H. of Orchard Lake Ave.) Lota of Free Parking FE 4-0566 Furniture Styles Quite Similar A new style trend at the furniture markets features English furniture from the' 16th and 17th centuries. * ★ There was close contact between England and Spain in those days, and it is difficult to tell the difference between the Spanish styles which have been popular for several years, and the new English versions. Modern manufacturers include latex foam seats though, a far cry from the horsehair of Queen Elizabeth’s day. Lingering Aromb Perfumes last longer if kept in a cool, dark place. Donna Jean Snyder of Cass-Elizabeth Road became Mrs. Thomas William Davis in a recent ceremony in the Four Towns Methodist Church. ★ * ★ Their parents are Mrs. Alexander Efemenko of Sylvan Village, Edwin Snyder of Detroit; Mrs. Loraine Davis, Lansing Street and Paul Davis of Auburn Avenue. * * * The bride’s gown of white satin was styled with lace sleeves with matching lace edging her cathedral train and illusion veil. Her bouquet held white carnations. ★ •* * * Honor matron was Mrs. Patricia Bierschbach with bridesmaids Mrs. John Kelley and Janet Neiger. * * ★ Richard Foote performed best man duties with Ronald Goldsworthy and David Garnett as ushers. ♦ ' ★ ★ The codple left for a trip to Upper Michigan after the rite performqfl by Rev. Horace Murry and reception in Moose Temple. Reception in the Methodist Education Building followed the recent marriage of Sandra Kay Hoffman to Arnold William Morell in the Oxford Free Methpdist Church. • The newlyweds’ parents are the George A. Hoffmans, North Newman Road, Orion Township and the Arnold Mor-ells of Oxford. LACE MOTIFS Lace motifs accented the bride’s gown of white nylon sheer over taffeta and her five - tiered chapel train. A beaded petal headpiece held an illusion veil. She carried white roses, pink carnations and Steph-anotis. Janet Beegle was maid of honor with bridesmaids Mrs. Bo Lee, Vickie Allen and Margaret Brown. With Danny Richards, best man, were Randall and Terry Morell, Elmer Parrish, David Richards, Sam Putnam of * Thornville and Richard Cash, Marion, 111. ★ ★ ★ After a few days at the Pontchartrain Hotel in Detroit, the couple will be at home on Indian Lake Road. Recruiting Becomes Evident Call for Workers Heard “Recruiting" is usually associated in the public mind with the Armed Forces and the famous “Uncle Sam Wants You” poster. More and more recruiting is becoming a part of business world discussions, as company managements attempt to counteract the effects of the ever-tightening labor market. Manpower, Inc. alone could employ an additional 50,000 men and women, reports Marian Woodward, office division manager of the international firm’s Pontiac area office. Currently the temporary help firm employs 233,000 people throughout the world. According to Mrs. Woodward, “main emphasis in recruiting is to lure the housewife out of the home and back into the business world. The current situation has created ideal circumstances for them to earn money more or less on their own turns.” She added that in many instances housewives can work at hours to suit their own and their families’ convenience, and that free brush-up courses are available to help women regain their business skills if they have become a bit rusty. ANNOUNCING That DONNA DAWE Former Instructor With Over 4 Years' Experience Has Joined Dave and Jim All Specialize in Sassoon Haircuts oCa Uerpne J J4air ^}asliion5 88T Woodward Ave., Pontiac, Mich. 338-0317 Across From St. Joseph's Hospital Would you believe... , “J DID IT MYSELF” ... What a pleasant surprise (or your family or your friends to find you have renewed your furniture covers or the seats in your car with - Upholstery material — Naugahydo -Fastnors - all tha naeassary equipment from Bill Kelley's SEAT COVER KING 756 Oakland Ave. Comer Kinney 3 Slacks Wast at Montcalm ■ Opon Daily 9 q.m. la 6 p.m. Talapkona FI 2-5335 “It’s really a ‘buyers’ market’ for women office workers,” she said. ★ ★ * A recent nation-wide employment outlook survey conducted by Manpower Inc. through its network of offices indicated that 31 per cent of the country’s businessmen expect to hire additional help during 1966. A frequent comment among representatives who said they expected to need more workers was, “I don’t know where we’re going to get them from.” She Is Exception to the Rule MANGUM, Okla. (A - At 79 Mrs. Nell Davis, still considers herself a typical American hopsewife — except for one thing. She has nevbr walked unassisted. * ★ ★ Mrs. Davis, despite a double curvature of the spine resulting from infantile paralysis at four months, has succeeded in graduating from high school, marrying and rearing a daughter, holding a job and doing outstanding church and civic work in Mangum. * ★ ★ Married in 1918, tragedy struck two years later when her husband died and left her with a small daughter. R was then she began waking as society editor of the Mangum Star and as a correspondent for area papers. • ★ ★ ★ She also taught piano in her spare time. Her many civic and church activities, including a term as justice of the peace, earned for her the “Woman of the Year” title by Kiwanis International of Mangum in 1946. 6 it * She was married the second time in 19(9 to Flood Davis of Mangum. Carpet Paths and Spots Easily Removed electric ahampeoer fee $1 a day at Pat LalKr Haaaa af Calar. 3139 V. Harva, Pootiac, FE S-M27 will m mgmmm I hhhhbh| I' 1 m I THE PONTIAC l'KKSS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 l$t Him Support Soft Pll lfea^n Character 1 ■ dr. crane I By DR.GEOJIGEW. CRANE CME Wii: Hal H., aged 37i a Gary steel worker. “Dr. Crane,” his wife pro-tested, ”1 wish you * d t a li to my husbAnd. “For hie has subsidised his worthless younger brother ever since our marriage 16 years ago. “He sends him (50 every month (hit of . his pay check. “I wouldn’t object if the brother were ill or temporarily out of a job. “But he is a chronic sponger. He doesn’t work, though he is able-bodied. “When he does get a job', be soon manages to lose it so he can go on unemployment relief. “But my husband is so good-hearted, he is a soft touch and has remitted to this worthless brother every month. “Meanwhile, our 5 children have suffered, for that $50 would go a long way toward buying them bettor clothes and school supplies.” remittance dangers Sometimes parents'will make “remittance men” out 'of their sons. ; They start out by giving the teen-ager an overly generous cash allowance each week. This is continued through college. Then the young fellow marries, so his generous parents carry on with their largess. But such continued outside financial support weakens the man’s own financial stamina. It’s about as hazardous as to urge him to rely on crutches when he has two good legs. Many a generous brother becomes a soft touch for his shiftless siblings or in-laws. But there comes a time v/hen you must consider such long continued generosity as a Every married man should realize that when he marries, he takes a vow at the wedding ceremony “to forsake ALL others and cleave only unto his wife.” The reverse is likewise true of the bride. And* that word “Ally” refers to fathers, mothers, in-laws and other kinfolk! I We need to enshrine a new concept in morality which we psychologists call “commendable selfishness.” This means that it is folly to reduce your own family to starvation in trying to feed your in-laws or even the neighbors. Uncle Sam also needs to analyze his profligate foreign largess by that same rule. ★ * * For we have-almost exhaust--eu the rich Mesabi Iron Range in Minnesota with lend-lease iron and steel to Britain for her two World Wars. We have also reduced our oil reserves alarmingly to play “Santo Claiis” to the world, after which we have brickbats thrown through our Embassy windows and see mobs carrying signs that read: “Yanks, Go Home.” MEADOW BROOK FESTIVAL Detroit Sppkoiv Orchestra—Robert Shaw conducting Howard C. Baldwin Hemrial Pavilion Thursday, Friday, Aug. 11-12,8:30 P.M. J. S. BACH-MASS IN B MINOR Charlene. Peterson, soprano; Florence Kopleff, contralto; Seth McCoy, tenor; Ara Berberian, bass The Meadow Brook School of Music Youth Chorus * Saturday, Any. I:), 8:30 P.M., Suday, Any. It, 6:30 PJ. BENJAMIN BRITTEN-WAR REQUIEM Ella Lee, soprano; John McCollum, tenor; Raimund Herincx, bass-baritone The Meadow Brook School of Music Chorus The Boys’Choir of Christ Church, Grorne Pointe •1-S0’ •* Office, Oakland University, Roc healer, Mich., (Tel. SSS-7211,Mt.2301)oratGri»v»«.M- . ircnade: jpus WOOL PC.^TARSIA KNITS iHaritj to $45 2490 • meriting special value • famous maksr ^ . • navy, mist grata, cranberry, walnut, gr • miim’jiit* • to II Summer voids $ 1987 are planned by Nanq/ Jane Cavanaugh, daughter of thf Robert A. Cavanaughs 6f Humnjjer Lake Road, and Donald Edward Novak, son of the Theodore C. Novaks of Beverly Hills. Both attend Oakland University. NANCY JANE CAVANAUGH Polly's Pointers Knits, No Problem William R. Powells Travel to Nassau A cruise to Nassau will climax a southeastern honeymoon for the William Roland Powelb (Jane Ann Walters) who were wed Saturday in die Waterford Community Church. White peau satin trimmed ; f r sw Edward Bouers Return Home The Edward Bauers of North Cass Lake Road have returned from Walnut, Calif, and a visit with their son-in-law and daughter, the Richard Derragons /(Shirley Bauer) parents of Pamela Colleen, born July 14.. Paternal grandparents are the Ralph Derragons of Heitch Street. Staff Sgt. Ray P. Bauer en route from the U.S.A.F. base at Valdosta, Ga. to Viet Nam also joined his parents and the family group. with beaded Alencon lace fashioned a gown and train for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Walters of Southward Street. ■ * '★ * She wore a bouffant vejl and held a cross of white carnations and lilies of the valley. Sandra Bowden was honor maid, with the bride’s sister Teresa joining bridesmaid Melody Meschen. Judy Reh-ner was flower girl. Frank Powell was his brother’s best man. Their parents are the B. D. Powells of Sandy Beach Drive. Ushers were Harold Weston, David Converse, Francis Mervyn and Jack Powell. Jeffrey Bryan carried the rings. Reception in the CAI Building followed the rite performed by Rev. Robert Win- DEAR POLLY - and Edna -1 have been a seamstress for many years so have shortened many knitted skirts. If it is a two-piece suit, there is a waistband and you can take up at the waist. Cut off the elastic enclosure and make a new one. If the knitting is heavy I have substituted a cloth casing for the elastic instead of making a new knitted one. Patterns in the knitting often make it necessary to do the shortening from the top. When shortening at the bottom I measure the correct length just as I would for a cloth skirt. Using the tight zigzag stitch on my machine I go over the line where the cutting is to be so the knitting will not ‘run.” After cutting off the surplus I go around the edge with the zigzag stitch to make a “binding” and then hem by hand. I Be cautious not to hand sew too tightly when putting in the | hem or you will make a vis- I ible ridge. —*MRS. W. W. H. | DEAR GIRLS - Thank you for your innumerable suggestions, many of which were the same or very similar to that of Mrs. W. W. H. However, I want to caution you to always sew, on the sewing machine, around any knitting before cutting. Some readers suggested putting in the final hem with a hand cross stitch. 1 prefer shortening at the bottom so as prevent extra thickness atj the waist. And, girls, did you: know that wearing a taffeta slip under a knitted skirt or dress > helps it keep its shape? —| POLLY POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY - Do any of you know how to remove burned plastic from glass?' A piece of plastic wrap burned on to the glass door of my broiler and I cannot get it off. - MRS. C. Z. DEAR POLLY - A friend of mine keeps all old roller window shades and cuts them to the proper sizes, with pinking shears, for use as shelf liners as well as liners for bureau ACCEPTED BY MANY! Model of New * Miniature Hearing Aid Given A most unique free offer of ipecial interest to those who bear, but do not understand words has just been announced bjr Electone. A true-life, actual aiao replica of the Smallest Electone ever made will be given absolutely free addition to a free hearing t to anyone answering this advertisement. 'Wear-test it .without cost of obligation of any kind. It’s yours to keep free. The siae of this Electone it only otift of its many lea-tores. It weighs lets than a third of an ounce and it’a all ear level, in one unit. No re# lead front body, to head. (Mere is truly nar hope for the hard of hearing. These models are free while the limited supply lasts, to suggest yon call or write for yours mow. Again, wo ripest, them ia no cost and certainly aw obligation. BETTER HEARING SERVICE Id E > tfknw—gh. Ft MN I Plain jgUatn drawers and closet shelves. They can be wiped or washed I clean. — CAROLYN DEAR POLLY — If you spray hanging ornaments or baskets' of artificial flowers with insectl spray they will not get festooned I with spider webs. — MRS. D.l C. M. DEAR POLLY-Those gals tease their hair as I do always need to lift it after I each spraying. If you do not j have a regular lift-up comb, try one of those plastic picnic forks. ^ I have been using one for some time and find it lifts my hair just enough. — MAE DEAR POLLY - When one of my knitted dresses or skirts gets a bit too tight, I slip the garment over the back of a chair which is a bit wider than the skirt and let it stay there for a few hours. When removed, it fits nicely and there is no need of blocking. — MRS. J.S,1 Remove Odors From Your Clothes Now and then clothes present an odor problem. Most commonplace odors sire automatically removed during the wash and rinse cycles since they were originally caused by bacteria now removed by hot water and detergents. Tumble dryers also help to hold bacteria down by eliminating the moisture needed for growth. If odor persists, the addition of a disinfectant — such as a'chlorine bleach or a pine-oil — can be recommended; either will generally banish odors. And tumble drying definitely retards mildew. Cross Versions Numerous versions of the Maltese cross show in the new jewelry. Among the handsomest — a gold base with colored stones set in. Poi CI-©*«D AOO. t THRU AUO. U _ VEjtDA’S BEAUTY SHOP 5 IS K. Pike .1 North Fram-in ________FE 2-0361 Lemons For Beauty To keep your skin clear and fair you need the natural cleansing and bleaching properties of lemon. Ask your druggist for a bottle of lemon Jelvyn, the latest type skin freshener that beau t il u 1 women throughout the world are now using. Lemon Jelvyn braces and conditions the skin to a beautiful new clarity and fine grained texture; its excellent toning properties help stimulate the surface cells, clear out stubborn, blemish-inducing and pore-clogging particles and smooth the skin to beautiful ',lar-ity. Lemon Jelvyn is ideal for quick complexion cleansing and two capfuls in your final shampoo rinse will give a sparkling shine to your hair. Lemon Jelvyn is a must for complexion beauty. 54” Doable Dreiser, Framed Mirror and Double or Twin Bed! An outstanding savings! Decorate your bedroom wills Use wonderful look of ’ttlie finely crafted furniture that offers loads of storage space. Matching Chest, aale priced at 94.50. See many of tho Ethan Allen-pieces at both Wiggt stores—view this and tho entire collection at Wigp Bloomfield. Convenient Untu, 90 DaynSam* at Cash BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH Rl). PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON STREET fas Downtown Pontiac JfMUfU - China, Crystal, GijU tad EcWdUtaFnmifauw BmUrUHMtiiZ I B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9,1m i—Junior Editors Quli on— 1 HOLY GRAIL The Shape of Mart's Future—} Genetics Can Rub Evolution QUESTION: Is there an actual Holy Grail? ★ ★ A ANSWER: “Grail” originally meant a dish or cup. The name Holy Grail became associated with the cup used by Jesus at the last Supper. Many believed it was used by Joseph of Arimathea to catch the Savior’s blood on the cross. Ancient stories told how tl^e Holy Grail disappeared and became the object of search by the valiant knights of King Arthur’s Round Table. As told in Malory’s “Le Morte Darthur,” three knights, Galahad, Bors and Percivale, finally saw the precious object. Our illustration shows Sir Galahad kneeling before it. The iUnstration is based on the beautiful drawings by Aubrey Beardsley, who illustrated Malory’s book. In the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City can be seen the Chalice of Antioch, which was found in the ruins of the ancient city of Antioch, in Syria. This is believed by many people to be the actual Holy Grail. It was found in 1910 by Arab workmen. The cup is of plain metal inside, but the outside is of silver, carved in an intricate and beautiful design. It is similar to the cup shown in the illustration ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: In your library, look for Tennyson’s “Idylls of the King.” It contains a wonderful story about Galahad and the Holy Grail. Spiraling Bus Fares Hit Rio's Commuters RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) — Commuters in the Rio area are turning to bicycles and shoeleather in the face of fare increases that have virtually priced bus transportation out of the kw-income-famity’s budget. The latest round of increases, which , pushed some fares up to 480 cruzeiros each way — about 22 cents — has hit especially hard in Alliance for Progress housing developments around the fringes of Rio de Janeiro. * ★ * “I don’t know what I’m going to do,” said Zacarias dos Santos, a laborer who lives in Vila Kennedy, about 14 miles from downtown Rio de Janeiro. On a wage of about $37 monthly, ly KEASEY ELECTRIC 4626 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint, Mich. OR 3-2601 (EDITOR'S NOTE—The day when man wiU control his own evolution may soon be here. Few outside the field of science realize what is being Accomplished. The following first of four articles explores the exciting—and sometimes frightening — prospect opened up by reepnt gams in a comparatively new field of research: genetics$. By RALPH DIGHTON AP Science Writer Would you like to be able — To grow a new heart, brain, kidney, arm or leg whenever you need it? TV> grow gills and live in the ocean or wings and fly with the birds? To explore other planets in a strange new body adapted made impervious to the most hostile environment? Or would you settle for something simple, like a doubled tripled life' span in a world cleansed of disease? HUMAN RACE Those are some of the more. Elementary efforts at genetic exciting possibilities scientistsj tinkering, altering the genes believe have been opened for lower life forms, have already the human race through recent succeeded. Heat, X rays and advances in genetics. [drugs have changed the off- There is a grim side, too. Thelspring of bacteria and even insame advances conceivably js^is so that they are hardly could be used to turn men into!recognizable, a race of slaves whose thoughts In the past 10 years, biologists and emotions are predeter- have begun to understand why mined through genetic tinker- they are able to cause these jng changes, or mutations. Ahead * ★ * | lies the task of understanding Eminent scientists * memhow to control the changes, to such as Dr. Melvin Calvin of thel make sure that mutations which Lawrence Radiation Laboratory occur are desirable, of the University of California Tinkering with genes can and Dr. Ray Owen, chairman of|bringjgreat^ peril as well the Biology Division of the Cali-fornia Institute of Technology - Thus man eventually may be faced with deciding whether he wants to go on looking thinking like his ancestors—or whether he wants to be something completely The first big breakthrough in genetics—discovery of a chemical substance called DNA — came in the 1940s, almost simultaneously with another great scientific discovery: The unleashing of the forces of the 'atom. j “Atomic’* has become household word. “Genetic” is destined to become one. There are many scientists who believe that cracking the genetic code, learning the language of life, is at least as vital mankind as cracking the atom; perhaps more so — the promised ability to control what we are made of could lead to a race of men invulnerable to radioactive fallout. ESTIMATION When will this brave new “genetic age” come to pass? Authoritative estimates vary from a generation to a century. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER SaaSfcgll Open Evenintl til 1:30 MM I It must support a wife and three children. * * ★ To avoid paying the daily round-trip fare into town, Zacarias will probably walk five miles each way to catch a suburban train into the city. The overcrowded and accident-prone railroads are subsidized and charge only about 416 cents each way. Others in Vila Kennedy, Vila Alianca and other suburbs are1 talking of buying bicycles to get! them to the railroad station. | Most already get up about 4 a.m. to get in line at the bus stop, wait about an hour, and| then spend about two hours riding into town. “Pretty soon it won’t even bej worth going to sleep,” says a Vila Kennedy resident. “We’ll! barely get home and have to |leave again.” ★ ★ ★ Rio’s commuters are the City's poorest workers. Ironically, many were sent into the suburbs against their will when the Alliance for Progress develop-) ments were built in 1964 and 1965 as part of Rio’s slum clearance program. Many argued that the developments were too! far from their jobs. j already foresee a need for decisions arising from this new trend in research. Genetic tinkering is almost j certain to generate opposition -from environmentalists who believe the way to improve man is to improve his environment, not his heredity; from religious leaders who believe the human form exists today as it created originally by God and should not,be altered. A SCIENCE Genetics is the science of heredity. It deals with genes — from a Greek word meaning “to give birth” — and how they control growth, using patterns handed down from generation to generation. ★ ★ ★ Although incredibly tiny -every human body cell has an estimated 150,000 of them in its nucleus — genes are the most powerful living force yet found. Genes control the manufacture of protein molecules, the building blocks of life. And now science has learned that genes themselves can be controlled. I great benefit. CONFIDENCE Scientists are confident that not only the shape but the very thoughts of men can be con- trolled genetically, .by predetermining the structure Sanction of the organs that generate emotions, i, What If, In the hot too distant future, some nation set out to breed a race of war-loving per men - while the United States was breeding peaceful intellectuals? Such a situation probably is several generations distant; and man may have improvea Himself enough genetically to meet it with wisdom. But there are other crises closer at hand. TRANSPLANTS The recently learned skill of transplanting kidneys and planting artificial hearts created a small furor over the question? Should ability to pay be the primary factory in determining who gets this chance at extended life? Geneticists believe they someday will be able to relieve the current shortage of human “spare parts.” They would take a bit of healthy tissue from a failing heart, for instance, and direct its genes to grow a whole new heart - easily transplantable back into the patient because the patient’s body would not reject Its own flesh and blood. But even if enough spare parts were available for all who needed them, the transplanting would require considerable skill and effort. Serious questions of ethics arise. WHAT KIND? What kinds of people will be worth-this trouble? Scientists? Politicians? Clergymen? Physicians? White collar workers? Laborers? Who shall decide which are worthy? And who shall pick those who decide? INVENTORY CLEARANCE CLOSE-OUT - PAINT BARGAINS • INTERIOR LATEX • SATIN ENAMEL • LOW LUSTRE ENAMEL • SHAKE and SHINGLE PAINT • HOUSE PAINT-TRIM COLOR • ENAMEL KOTE - COLORS 52"h , F re-Flo NYLON BRUSHES Sizes 1” to 4” 50% off f. VINYL BOND WINDOW SHADES, 22” to 34” Widths....1 ■ 79c ea. WALLPAPER CLOSE-OUTS PREPASTED WASHMLES................59c S.R. STAINPROOF VINYLS.................51.98 S.R. PREPASTED FULLWALL MURALS......... • .55.0(1lea. ROOM LOTS (Average Room) Choice Patlerni... .52 5* and up ACME QUALITY PAINTS 3 N. Saginaw (Cor. Pike) FE 2-3308 Open 8 to 5:30 Daily, Friday 'til 9 I Loaded with questions tike these, the coming genetic explosion could rip society wider apart than a hydrogen bomb. Or it could create a paradise on earth. * * ★ Much depends on man’s reaction to new knowledge about his tMnking about improving your twinet •Ihpn shouldn't you us soon? Loajttor* available up to 36 month*. Take advantage of our services — after all they're for you. CALL 335-9493 CHIEF PONTIAC FEDfML CREDIT UNION 7M Joslyn Avenue - PwrtiiM V. .\ore You Can Pay All Those Bills! 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Box 4361, Clinton, Iowa 52733 | Sirs: Please send me 50 cents-my bonus for | | discovering the convenience of having plenty | | of nutritious, delicious Sealtest treats on hand. | | I'm enclosing “Mr. Cool” end flaps from three | | different Sealtest multi-paks... or the name | | “Sealtest" from the Sack o’ Sundaes bag, plus j | “Mr. Cool” end flaps from two other multi-paks. | a NAME | ADDRESS i CITY | STATE ZIP CODE 1 offer limited to one r pfund par family; aul rot October S. | 1966 Void wbere pro hlbited. taxed or rjpgr 5? 0187 L--- Get tli# best...get Tf7 -■/ Til TOE8DAY. AUGl ■ '";v> ^; t . ism • \ • ':.-v m Some Hard Workers Come In Small Packages. While it might be hard to^con vince spme mothers; that a broom* swishing; bundle of energy, this size Is really muA b^jp. %hen. .there is housework to-be done, there fs:another:'Cmall package'7 which millions of busy 'mpfhers\'guf:'{p work;time ,and tirYie again. Newspaper Want Ads' areysmall bundles:'of energy too, and they can be)Ipu.nied en to do big jobs at low cost anytime you need:Ihem. tf you have some- thing to sell, want to hire help,' rent a spare room or vacant apartment^ on If you are searching for a hard-to-find item, all you need to do is put a Want-Ad to work on the job. f lit .is a pleasant experience to place your ad, too. Simply dial 332-8181 ;and ask f'efr an Ad-Visor. A friendly, helpful lady will assist you in wording and placing your ad. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Dial 332-8181 Be Sure To Order The Thrifty Six-Time Rate THg PONT!A<5 VttfcSS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 0, I960 V-4 Actress Giovanna Ralli lion Beauty Love? to Work By MICHAEL SHORT HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Giovanna Ralli is a small, striking, dark-haired Italian reminiscent of Sophia Loren and Natalie Wood. , . ' ' She lords to work, and work, and work. Audiences have seen her in only one American movie, “What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?" They’ll see more soon. msmur's 49sa DAY Dig into as many golden buttermilk pancakes as you can eat for just,.. Of ■ course it’s Uncle John’s for Pancakes. But have yon ever tried his Steak Sapper? WOODWARD AVE. and 14>/i Mil* Rd. BIRMINGHAM 15325 W. 8 MILE JMt Em> •( Gr»nfi.ld IOOOl TELEGRAPH RD. Her contracts call for at least seven more Dims - and ihe wouldn’t object to doing them all without a break. Mis Ralli spent much of a recent 12-hour working day sweltering in a car before cam- < I eras at Paramount filming a scene that will consume but a few sconds on screen. The sequence for “The Caper of the Golden Bulls” shows a car being searched at the border between Gibraltar and Spain. The sun, at least, was authentic — hot as Spain’s. Miss Ralli brushed back her hair with her hand, licked , her lips, tugged at her gloves and waited placidly for technicians to prepare for shooting. Movie lights added to the sun’s glare. A few minutes later a rehearsal and a take went satisfactorily. Her shooting over for awhile, Miss Ralli jumped out of the car and walked away as if grilling under the sun were unimaginably entertaining. “Caper,” a comedy-thriller about a jewel robbery at the Pamplona festival in Spain, is the latest of Miss Ralii’s more than 30 films since she became an actress at 13. She is now in her mid-20s. When asked why, though she has worked hard at her career for half her life, she almost never takes a vacation, rarely relaxes for more than a weekend, she smiled and replied: “I prefer work."'' ** 1 RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY Featuring Our Famou* Kother Corned Boot Special Luncheon Every Duy GIOVANNA RALLI She has been an established actress in Italy for years. In 1965 she received the Italian film critics’ Silver Ribbon as the best actress for Carlo Spino-! la’s "LA Fuga." She is unmarried and has no| Greek Theater Will Continue Expect to Complete Season Despite Crisis YPSILANTHUPI) - The Ypsilanti Greek Theater said! yesterday it is undergoing “a: week-to week financial crisis”! but expects to finish its advertised season. Whether there will be another! season for the much talked | about experiment is another, question, a spokesman said. j The theater, intended to be the first permanent vehicle j solely for Greek drama in j North America, is losing (18,-000 a week. The opening attracted 84 critics and a wealth of national publicity, bat the $16,000 the theater has netted each week has not kept pace with its $34,-' 000 payroll. I "We have no intention of clos-, jing the theater,” a spokesman said. ‘‘We’re going to continue Final Powell Rites to Strains of Jazz By HOLLIEI. WEST |phone; Don MoOre,. bass, and NEW YORK UPl - Harlem | Billy Higgins, drums, has said goedbye to one of itsj When the group switched definite plans other than contin-jthrough the advertised season! uing to work. Her biggest com-sc!,edule untll,.SePt 4> plaint, she says, is that she 11 was earlier reported the hates flying but her schedule r"eater might be forced to sus-j leaves her no other way to trav-1 Pen — Maine worm dl g g e r s have turned on the worm dealers again. Sand worm diggers along the Sheepscot River were on strike today backing demands for a 25-cent increase in the fee they receive for digging up 100 worms. ★ * * Between 7 5and 100 sand worm diggers struck yesterday. They want $1.90 for each 100 worms instead of the $1.(5 they now receive. Luci, Pat Given Privacy-Plus own, pianist Bud Powell, New Orleans-style funeral procession tc the jazz strains that Powell made famous. “He sure did leave a lot of beauty behind,” said a spectator, part of a crowd of 5,000, as sextet moved slowly up Seventh Avenue Monday playing “Dance of The Infidels," one of Powell’s numbers. It was near the end of a long road from a Harlem childhood through fame as a leading innovator of the 1940s bop revolution [church in 1939. in Jazz to hospitals ajid mental institutions, and to death July 31, at the age of 41, from a com-1 bination of alcoholism, malnu-j trilion and pneumonia. | He is to be buried today nearj |his mother’s grave at Willow! ;Grove, Pa. j ! Powell’s Harlem farewell drew some of the most promi-inent jazz musicians in the! 'world, including pianist Thelo-nious Monk, drummer Max ! Roach,' saxophonist Yusef La-teef, and Barry Harris, Billy .Taylor, Bobby Timmons and Randy Weston, all pianists directly influenced by Powell. : Harris, the most successful of j [all Powell disciples, led the sex-1 jtet which included Lee Morgan,! itrumpet; . Benny Green, trom-|bone; John Gilmore, tenor saxo-l from a mournful tempo to some of Powell’s livelier pieces, the quickened tempo swept neighborhood children with it and they skipped gaily beside the musicians. Many of the spectators lining the curb snapped their fingers to the beat. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Owen J. Scanlon who conducted a requiem Mass for Powell at Harlem’s St. Charles Roman Catholic Church said he remembered Powell singing in a choir at the Last week, 300 Mood worm diggers won a strike against worm dealers in which they demanded $2.50 per 100 worms, an increase of 25 cents. Sand worms and blood worms are used as bait by IWAIT OUTSIDE NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) — Traditional British reserve may be helping Patrick and Luci Johnson Nugent enjoy a honeymoon free of sightseers as they relax at a luxurious waterfront home. ‘Bahamians observed friendly White House request that the couple be allowed privacy,” said an information ministry official. Asked to arrange for newsmen to talk to the Nugents, Bahamas officials contacted the U.S. Consulate. The word came back from Washington: “Their privacy is not to be disturbed. The Nugents are staying, at Capricorn, the (250,000 home of Rebekah Harkness-Kean, a socially prominent philanthropist who is in New York. It is secluded by thick tropical foliage on three sides. The fourth opens onto a white sand beach. the British island after the Nu-, gents flew in from New York; Sunday waited outside for the{ newlyweds. The Nugents were reported to have made a boat trip and it was not certain if they had returned. Sunday night, they attended Mass at St. Francis Xavier Cathedral. BE MODERN WITH Hnl*] =1 k OH SOLID BRASS | OSCAR 11 Pli FERRELI 129 Opdyka Rd. ion#: 338-2800 Holdup Suspect | Demands Exam Camera crews who hurried to was arrested. DETROIT (AP) - Bobby Lee Hunt, 21, of Detroit, captured by police after barricading himself with a gun in a home, demanded examination Monday on an armed robbery charge. The hearing was set for Aug. 17, j: Hunt is accused of holding up a| grocery store shortly before he BI06EST BARGAIN IN HISTORY Plaza Pharmacy Jerry A Joanne Dunsmore, RPH 3554 Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phone 613-1261 U Hour, A Hay .Wr.re FREE DELIVERY Money Order, luutd Hero 8vj FratarrSandrrs Candy \ You May fey All Utility Bills at Plaza Pharmacy / Old Soviet Trait Out: Vodka, Wife-Beating |cbi. canny l. Rutherford, siiw MOSCOW (UPI) - Peter Fav-ling up his wife and 70-yeai*-oldjmade stiffer if the criminal was i, Mobil*,;lov made a mistake when he)mother., drunk, it said, itoon hi lhit his wife He should have hit] In Turkmenia, K. Postnikovj These five cases indicated the Edward f. Hop.'East Chicago!: her a year ago. | was sentenced to three years for; new law will be used mainly to, P Bp j Had Mrs. Pavlov taken her beating up his wife at home and stamp out two time-honored | Len« cpi. row w. jorgeneen, Honolulu, i jumps last year, Peter would then, when she went to his of-Russian customs — vodka-drink* —1. have gotten off with a lighter [flee to complain, for hitting her ing and wife-beating. The two! Febvr. Jr., Cheim,-1 punishment - possibly as little again there. (Customs usually are practiced) In Moscow, Vladimir Niko-layev, 21, a ne’er-do-well cob- ; bier, took money from his wife and tired to rob two | women with a knife. He muffed the robbery, but got six years anyway. And in Leningrad, E. Yeremin, an assembly-line worker,' attacked one of his coworkers and tried to rob him. The court put him away for eight years. In each case, drinking was involved. And the new law stated that drunkenness — which used to be a mitigating circumstance in* any crime — is to be considered an aggravation frbm) now on. Any sentence must be ATTENTION! • MEDICAL CLINICS • DENTAL CLINICS • OPTOMETRY CLINICS • BARBER SHOPS • BEAUTY SHOPS • LOAN OFFICES • HARDWARE or RETAIL STORES Space in TOWER SHOPPING CENTER looattd at M-59 (Highland R4.) and Airport Rd. for leato. 500 sq. ft. or 1260 sq. ft. Contact Tower Center Owner BR 34100 reprimand, possibly as much as 15 days to a year in jail. But Peter got drunk last week and lit into his wife and 12-year-old ton. When the dost had settled, Peter was in jail for five years, a victim of a new law aimed at Soviet hoods and hooligans. The law was announ ed at the end of July and went into effect immediately. It provided for, among other things, summary punishment of druftks and stiffer sentences both for vandalism and other “petty hooliganism” and for more serious ‘hooliganism,” such as assault and battery or armed robbery. simultaneously. Wednesday Only Special! All You S s Union Lake and Haggerty Rd. 363-0661 Adults $1.2$ Children Under 12 Frio BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 7:30—SHOW STARTS AT DUSK LAST TIME TONIGHT • HE BLED A PAGAN ENURE! CHARLTON f ULTRA- MOD GREGORY SOPHIA PECK LOREN A STANLEY OONEN production ARABESQUE V TECHNICDIW PANAVISION* HESTON RICHARD BOONE. WARLORD TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION*) HURON at 1:15-3:50-6:25-9:00 Lr:. t Maty Ibppins TECHNICOLOR Starting at 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:■> ilii^iiiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiuuujjiuiujlllliiliiilHiiiiiimiiiiif liiiiiniin B THE PONTIAC- TljCSS, TUESDAY., AUGUST 9, 1066 Jacoby on Bridge NORTH 9 ♦ Q9854 >942 ♦ 8 ♦ A953 WEST EAST AKJ AVoid VAJ» 49 7 653 ♦ AKJ5 ♦ 108732 AQJ108 A K 6 4 2 SOUTH (D) A A107632 49 K Q 10 ♦ Q94 A7 East-West vulnerable West North East South 1 A Dble 4 A Pass Pass Dble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ K By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY The time to lock the barn door is before the horse has been stolen. The time to plan r play is at the very start. sr*,, little fore- MP™ FTh ought will Jgf many a N* headache later U\ * West opened1 the king of dia-| monds and! shifted to the JACOBY . queen of clubs. South won with * ♦ * [dummy’s ace and proceeded to study the hand thoroughly. He noted that it would be a cinch lif the.spades were tqdfoide. If they didn’t he would still j be able to make his contract if he Could hold himself to the loss of one heart trick. West was marked with the ace of hearts from his bidding. If • he also held the jack of hearts i it was South’s problem to find [ some way to force West to lead that suit. ■ Eventually South worked it lout. He led a club from dummy land trumped it. Then he played his ace of spades. East showed [out as expected but South did not mind He trumped a diamond in dummy, a club in his hand, his last diamond in dummy and dummy’s last club in his hand. Then he threw West in with a trump. North and South were each left with three hearts and a trump. West with three hearts, a diamond and troubles. He could lead any card he wanted to but South would lose only one trick. 1 How different if South had hot remembered to trump a |club at trick three. He would | have been unable to strip the I hand ftffce a losing lead from West. • 'M’CHRD Sendee Q—The bidding has been: West North East , 800th 2 A Pass 2 A Pus ? You, South, hold: A None 49 None •4AKJI1 AAQJ98754 What dp you do? A—Just bid three elnbs. You have started with a game-forcing bid and there is no peed to hurry. TODAY’S QUE8TION Your partner continues, to three spades. What do you do 'now? Navy Launches Assault Vessel PASCAGOULA. Miss. (AP) — A 570-foot Navy “carry all” am-j phibious assault ship has been1 launched here. The $26-million| vessel will carry six helicopters,! 850 combat troops and 118 officers in the assault force, plus a| crew. She was christened the I Dubuque- Avocado Use in Cuba: Food for Thought MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The tasy, but calorie-packed avocadp will beautify rather than fatten milady if a Cuban scientist’s idea < works’out. - Havana Radio said today it I has been disoevered that avoca-j does are a dandy base for' cosmetics. | Cuban women have had to exert their makeup artistry to' the utmost in recent years because of a shortage of lanolin, the main skin-preserving in- ] gredieht of modem female warpaint. The broadcast monitored in Miami said Castro’s food minis-tfy is backing creation of “the industry of avocado oil and byproducts.” It said a pilot project Will utilize 2,200 pounds of avocado oil in manufacturing' cosmetics/ The government will plant avocado groves to provide oil for the makeup-makers, the broadcast said. & V * Astrological Forecast By SYDNEY OMARR j For Wednesday "TI>o wist man^contrels h*, destiny SAGITTARIUS (Nov. M Oec^JU: Utter Action Refuse* to procrastinate. One ARIES (Mar. It-Apr. mj r'cAPRICORN B(Oec. 22 - Jah. ItlMndn much through lourney or special rtneDtins. Be alert/ versatile. Change, travel Indi- endeavors, dealings with children. Exerting period In that changes, adjustments cated. Members of opposite sex attracted. are featureid. YOU BREAK OUT Or EMOTIONAL RUT, Goodl AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. 1«): Be sure LEO (July 23 • Aug. a OEj DV/an uviauM ~7sNA^D, A6AIM ? —' / A mi BOKN 10S£R, i N'KMOW THAT, THORtlAPPLE? r \ /"llT TL1C 1 IkIPl y pi||| 7 8 2 _ — i*M—- - \ § ^—— ^ s —— JB f 1 b ■ #<• ^ c;—’ 0-9 “The boys say odds of it raining are 40-60!’ By Howie Schneider Letters Protest 'light Money' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A; jn Francisco building-supply | lanufacturer has launched a uripaign against “tight mon- w Charles O. Walker says the lan is to have 15,000 letters on resident Johnson's desk by ;pt. 15 protesting the current ■edit curbs. He said the letters will urge; > President to “loosen the edit situation so that builders, ppliers, and would-be home yers can get together.” Walker said the Johnson ad-inistration is responsible for & tight money situation in lich “builders can’t build, ppliers can’t sell, and buyers n't buy.” Detroit High in Traffic Deaths DETROIT (APt-The rate of traffic deaths is higher in Detroit than in five other major cities, the National Safety Council said Monday. It said Detroit, in the first six months this year, had 3.6 fatalities per 10.000 registered autos. Houston was second with a 3.3 rate. Funeral for Exec j GULL LAKE (AP)—Funeral service will be held Wednesday in Gull Lake for Oswald B.f Higgins, a former vice president of Montgomery Wand Co. Higgins, 73, died Saturday ir his home here. During 1966 it is estimated that 1.8 million marriages will take place. Not year, there will be 1.9 miOion marriages it i* expected, and about two million in 1968. / I M6AU,Ulc€. \ l vgu really; 1 \ TURhJ ME Ofj ! J j —llji - YkNOWWHAT A YOU ARE? Y0CRE AN EMOT10WAL / V^DROP-OOTiy ^ r 0 p.., ^ a (BOV, I PGAULV ) V PIG M0U J J ijt. nAncv By Ernie Bushmiller /at ■i ■jp / a?~ Jf jfe ■ JSW j -nme- bushhu. l gJ. 9 By Bud Blake —------—: . '_■ - .r S ' H 7-^fX^; d THE PONTIAC PRESS! TIT THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST », 1066 ing Scheduled Oct. 1 uare m, y Highway Depart* f icials ace highly ptimistic that Square ake Road will be re* pened to traffic by Oct. as scheduled. The |3,156,000 project, rhich essentially will con* ert Square Lake Road rom a two-lane to a six-ine divided, limited ac-ess highway, covers a .72-mile stretch from 1-75 > Telegraph. closed for the ambitious construction project the first week in May, Square Lake was a narrow three lines wide from Telegraph to Woodward and two lanes between Woodward and Opdyke. In some places, the road will be eight lanes wide, according to officials. Before the road was Highway Department official. being built over the Grand f way until traffic is moved The road grading and drainage phases of the operation already are near completion. This was considered quite inadequate in view of the estimated 15,000 vehicles which travel the Square Lake Road section between Telegraph and Woodward daily. NO DOUBTS “We have no doubt that the road will be open to traffic Oct. 1,” said a State In fact, paving by the Cooke Construction Co. of Detroit, general contractors for the job, has been started near Woodward. Constructing three new bridges, two over Opdyke, are workers employed by another contractor, Nolan and Jarvick Co., also of Detroit. Trunk Western Railroad main line. In addition, the existing bridge spanning the tracks will be reconstructed. The new bridges are 80 to 85 per cent com-pleted, according to Highway Department officials. Renovation of the existing bridge won’t get under to the new pavement. The bridge is currently open to traffic. The work force for the road and bridge projects has ranged from 50 to 125 men during the three months since construction began. No seriou s accidents have occurred on the construction project. OVER MAIN LINE The other new bridge is Dump Truck Is Nearly Obscured By Dust Prehistoric Monster? No, Gravel Bins Paying Machine Operator Needs Quick Steady Hands An Oasis In The Desert Of A Hot, Dusty Road Job Mechanical Confusion Of Square Lake Road Project Resembles Hollywood Battle Scene IE—lfl THE POMTIAC PEESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST ft 1988 Getting 'Feel' of Campus SYRACUSE, (AP) - “I’m a fallen wbman,” the smiling teen-ager quipped as she got up fromihe pavement, steadied herself and started across die parking lot, tapping out a rhythmic staccato with her red-tipped cane. “In this game, you learn to fall or you don’t walk,” said Linds Lassoff, 19, of Buffalo. Linda, along with 20 classmates, is about to take one of the biggest steps of her life. * ★ * Linda wants to become a psychologist specializing in helping the handicapped. James Kirst, 19, of Eden, plans to become a teacher, and Peter Devasto, 17, of Brooklyn, hopes for a career as a mathematician. ALL STUDENTS All are above-average students. All are blind. Next month they will enter colleges and universities with at least one advantage over their sighted counterparts — a six-week, on-campus preview of the problems and demands of college life. ★ ★ ★ Veronica Gilligan, member at the State University Hospital and coordinator of the state-aided program which began there three years ago with a federal grant, said the “philosophy behind the whole thing is to ease the path.” The first couple of months at college are pretty hectic for anyone,” she said. “We try to throw them into every situation they are going to run into in September.” SELECTED STUDENTS Hie students selected for the program all are high school graduates who have been accepted for admission to college During the six-week period students live in Syracuse Uni versity dormitories with a sighted roommate, take a regular college course for credit, learn to get about campus v assistance and become acquainted with library and cafeteria facilities. * * * Taking notek in the classroom is accomplished with a tape rear a stehomask machine, a recording device with speaking tube that fits over the nose and mouth, allowing a dent to dictate without disturbing others. Braille writers and standard typewriters are used for written assignments and many of the textbooks they will be using in the next four years are reconled talking books.” ★ ★ ★ Miss Gilligan said the 32 teenagers who participated in the first -two years were “doing very well in college.”. Major fires in the United States destroyed property valued at 3312,886,900 last year. GOING TO VIET NAM -Donald G. MacDonald was picked yesterday to head the .U-S. foreign aid mission in South Viet Nam. He succeeds Charles Mann. MacDonald, 44, is now stationed in Nigeria. Iowa ns Take to Fiesta ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - The f|rst cornbelt fiesta picnic for Iowans in New Mexico attracted 2,000 persons recently to the state fairgrounds, Foreign News Commentary Will French Troops Pull Out? By JOSEPH W. GRIGG PARIS 1 OFFER STARTS TODAY] FANTASTIC VAL! C *---~ " I * ..... .. T'_' ' . . LI for limited time only Wheelin’ Dealin* Don Frayer Says . . 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Limit 1 URGE MOP and BROOM Both for Remember WE SERVICE WIUT WE SELL AND WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE OPEN DAILY TIL 9K)0 P.M. MONDAY THRU SAT. Remember QUALITY IS OUR MOTTO YOUR SATISFACTION OUR AIM CLOSED SUNDAY To Allow Our Em ployees A Day of Rest With Their _____ Families I f__________ Remember... The Fravar Family Has Stood For Savings • Service - Satisfaction In The Pontiac Ana For the Past23Yiarel OUR WHOLESALE BUYING. POWER SAVES YOU MONEY /tCUj£ JEW/ /tCUQJl HOME FURNISHINGS INC. 1108 W. HURON ST. FE 2-8204 (next to Felice Quality Market) DOWNTOWN FURNITURE 25 S. SAGINAW FE 5-HU DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 5-PC. DINETTE GROUP You get a large Family Size Table with 4 long wearing, sturdy, matching chairs. 8-PC. BEDROOM GROUP Includes a bed, dresser, Mirror, Chest, Innerspring Mattress, Spring and 2 Decorator Lamps. 7-PIECE LIVING ROOM GROUP .Includes a Massive Design Sofa, Lounge Chair. 3 O occasional Tables, 2 Decor• ator Tramps._____ SOFA-BED ALSO AVAILABLE *317 • YOU CAN BUY ANY ROOM SEPARATELY p^ALL 3 ROOMS PtNOLUDED AT THIS ^ FANTASTIC PRICE V -._____- f ;.* u .. * h .• ,A \: . • S .. • f v SRB ...........: * THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 C~r>l There’s a similarity in basehalldiaiecti between the New York Stengeiese and die Pontiac Parksenese. ii Me* York, the Yankees and" the Mate have bad Caaey stengel guiding their baseball fortunes with his own unparalelled and unabridged vocabulary., Pontiac’s answer to Casey and his Stengeiese is Paul Parks and his Parksenese. Far mare than 35 years, Parks has been active hi Pontiac athletics and activities and during these years there has been a growth «f Parksenese-understanding among sports fans and athletes. Last night, the Casey of Pontiac chalked up another city Class A League baseball crown as manager of die Teamsters. As he roamed around the coach’s box along the first base line, fans shouted to him continuously. JEERS AND rHRFBS They rib him, they shout advice to him, they insult him, they criticize him and they applaud him. When the umpire makes a questionable decision they call to him to protest, when a player makes a bad plaiy they holler the blame at Parks. ★ ★ ★ But Parks, who has a dozen nicknames including “Wizard" “P-P,” “Casey” among others, just grins and bears it. He has been around too long to let the tedders get his goat, and having won more championships than anyone could imagine in city league play, one could hardly heckle success and be serious. Since the day he lost his leg in a train accident at the age of 19, ending his hopes for a Major League baseball career after signing a contract with the St. Louis Cardinals, Parks has been one of the most devoted men to Pontiac sports; • ★ ★ He has managed, promoted and taken part in most every conceivable sports function held in the j area. His outspoken ways and self-assuring manners haven’t always made him' a candidate for a popularity contest, but there are very few around Pontiac who can honestly claim he has given less than a 100 per cent in any task asked of him. He holds tickets to the Tigers, Lions, Red Wings, Pistons, Arrows, and any other sports group for which tickets are available. “H I had a couple million dollars I’d build d big sports auditorium for all the kids, for all the people in "Pontiac,” he said, “but I guess I’m just hoping I live to see it.” This is something one better believe. He’d rather go to a sports event than eat. When his baseball team clinched the city Class A regular season championship last night, they celebrated, giving a toast to their manager. CONGRATULATIONS Winning wasn’t the only reason for celebration. His friends gathered to offer congratulations on his birthday, which is actually today. * * * Like the controversial professor Stengel of New York, one could like him or dislike him, agree or disagree with him, but most would have to admit, he’s been the Casey of Pontiac, a live wire of sports in die city for 35 years, deserving of a happy birthday wish. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press The CIO No. 594 clan A baseball team wanted very much to put a little salt In the wounds of the league leading Teamsters last night but pitching wildness and errors helped the Teamsters to a 114 triumph and the regular season championship. The Union team defeated the Teamsters twice this year, including a 6-5 victory Sunday. Victory Again Bypasses Podres, but Tigers Win Class A Baseball Title Won CIO Saif Shaker Is Plugged by Teamsters To complete the playoff pairings, CIO must now face M.G. Collision tonight at ^faycee for the final berth and 5th (dace to the standings. Tom Walters, Teamster er started strong in striking out five batters in the first two innings, throwing only 11 pitches to three batters in the second inning. RAGGED CONTEST7 But over-all it was a ragged game as CIO starter Steve Ken- drick walked the first four Teamster batters. Hd was relieved by Dick Goldsworthy in the 4th inning but not until after fedz Teamsters had walked, four others reached base' on errors and hit batsman and time on hits in Ms stay on the mounds CIO scored first when Mel Tayiqr doubled home Chet Woodmore. Teamsters made it 2-1 M the bottom half of the first on the spree of walks and fly by A1 Barkley. A run in the third made it 3-1 when Les Stone bounced a single over second to seme John Fleser who doubled. do threatened to make a big inntog of it in the third after singles by Bruce Maim, Wood-mere and intentional pass to Mel Taylor. Dav$ Fagierlie was caHed out for interfering with the catcher which started a rhubarb, but a grounder aided the inning without a run. Walters struck out three in the fourth, but to between he gave up three hits and a walk to account for two CIO runs to knot the score 3-3- Prosperity ended for CIO in the fourth tonihg when Tfeam-i sters scored four times. Walters walked, Rabaja was safe on an error, both advanced on a wild pitch and Dave Houck loaded the bases by walking. Goldsworthy took the mound and Fleser drove to Walters with a fly ball. Dave Gottschalk popped tip and Barkley laced a drive down the left field line. Tfc relay was wfid by the shortstop Stone doubled against the right center fence and four runs made It 7-3. In the fifth, Rabaja was on with an error. Houck hit a low fly which'center fielder Fagierlie missed trying for a shoestring catch. The ball got past (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 4) Bragan Fired as Manager of Atlanta Braves Caddy Crown in tournament Dean Fox Shoots 70 to Lead BBC Caddies in Annual Event WASHINGTON (AP) - The only thing blocking Johnny Podres American League comeback appears to be his National League’s teammate’s helping hand. Podres, who joined the Detroit Tigers last spring after 13 National League seasons with Brooklyn and Los Angeles, was deprived of a victory for the second time in a week Monday | night when reliever Larry Sherry, his ex-Dodger teammate, failed to protect, a late-toning lead. The Tigers finally beat Wash- BaHtmoro ... Detroit ...... Cleveland . California Minnesota .. Chicago....... New York .. Kansas City . Washington . Beaton 3. Cleveland t Detroit 5. Washington 3, 12 Kansas City 6, Minnesota I Only game* scheduled. Tsday-s Games Minnesota (Merritt 2-101 it (Lopez 4-10), night Chicago Paters 54) it K (Krausse » “ —M Detroit a 417 s vs ington 5-3 on Willie Horton’s two-run single in the 12th inning, but by that time Podres was just another name in the box score. The veteran left-hander, making his fourth start after 23 consecutive relief appearances, checked the Senators on six hits for eight innings before leaving for a pinch hitter with Detroit ahead 3-0. ★ * * Sherry, however, . couldn’t hold the lead in the ninth. He gave up a single to Fred Valentine and a two-run homer to Frank Howard, another former Dodger, then was clipped for a two-out stogie by Paul Casanova being replaced by Hank Aguirre. Aguirre walked Jim King, and Ed Brinkman tied the,score with a single off Dave Wicker-sham, the eventual winner. LEFT GAME Last Wednesday night, the Tigers led Chicago 3-1 after seven innings when Podres, who had allowed * five hit forced to leave the game with a stiff shoulder. Sherry came to at the start of the eighth and served up a two-run homer to John Romano. The White Sox scored three more runs to the inning and won 6-3. -----T WASHINGTON Wert 3b 5 Trcewskl 2b 5 California I Wood ft 0 0 McMulln till S O 0 O Valentine rf 5 I 1 Cleveland Herman 74) at I nett 1-1), night Wednesday', Gimi f California, nl Cleveland at Boston Philadelphia . Oyler I _ _ _ ----- 3 110 ______ ■ 1 0 0 0 MCrrnkk p ... Sherry p 0 0 0 0 Cox p 0 0 0 Aguirre p 0 0 0 0 Cullen ph 10 0 Wtckshm p 0 0 0 0 Kline p 0 0 0 Northrop ph 1 1 1 0 King ph 0 0 0 Plodding p 0 0 0 0 Hmphrys p i 0 0 JUS Total 443103 10 OOO 0 1 0 001— * 1 0 00 0 0 0 03 Ml — I _____ McFarlane, Tracewek. Brinkman. DP—Detroit 2. LOB—Detroit 10, Wadiiiigton7 11. 3S-W.Henan, McFarlane, Stanley, Pod re,. 36-1'- --- ts-McCormtek. Wirt. IP H ft ER New York . Houston ... Chicago ... Cincinnati lfrsTson FranclKO 4-7 . Atlanta 10, Lot Angela, r New York (RGont 7-4] a (FHouJJoo^GIuSPlM) at CMtoOO «»- iworttiS-17) T - . Lo» Angeles (Koufox 10-5) el Atlanta (L£mFraKtatt*«!ha M) at Cincinnati (Pappas 7-5), night New York* a?"pmSwrg®!'night ■BBItoJ Louis, night ig 12-7) at tt. Louis : ? Sherry ........ 14 3 -Aguirre ....... 0 0 Wlckshm (W, 4-2) . 114 1 . . I Gladding ......... 2-3 0 0 0 i Loltch ........... 14 O I I 0 McCormick ....... 7 24 4 3 3 1 eSc ............ . 04 1 0 0 0 Kina . ...-.....t 10 11 Last Year for Classic •LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los Angeles Basketball Classic, held the past six years, will bfe discontinued after 1967, spokesman said Monday. Deap Fox of Huntington Woods carded a one-under-par 70 yesterday in leading a Birmingham Country Club team to the Michigan Caddy Championship on the Birmingham layout. Fox, 17, who’s planning to enroll at Eastern Michigan University this fall, put together nines of 36-34—70 over the 6,442-yard bourse despite a double-bQgey on the final hole. The six Birmingham CC caddies piled up a total of 493 strokes to finish a single shot Ahead of Bloomfield Hills. Pacing the runner-up was Pontiac’s Gary Balliet with a 77. Defending champion Edge-wood finished well back with a 542 total. •A'CJJtoAN CADDY TOURNAMENT at Birmingham Country Club 1. Birmingham Country Club - 473 aFox ........... 34-34-70 Mlko Bergsma .... ,o .5______u WcTooou. ................ S73W* Jim Blugerman ..........4544-17 TOP CADDIES — These six Birmingham Country Club caddies cans in with a team total of 493 strokes over 18 holes yesterday to capture the 1966 Michigan Caddie Champion- ship. They are (from front to back); Mike Bergsma, Phil Schroeder, Jim Blugerman, Dave Adrente, Rick Topous and Dean Fox. 1. Bloomfitld H Gary Balliet .. Rod Cook .... Mike & Dale Zipper ! ‘ 4441—17 Holland Lund ................( IT 1. Plum Hollow — 52s' Paul Mclntoth ...............4)41—12 John Kina ...................42-51-73 Jock Woldekowikl ...........44. ■ Rich Miner ..................44 Walt Kaczer ..................1 45. Don Nlepoth ..................42- Name Ex-State Police Chief Racing Position Filled Allan Kllkka .... Lea Komfield Doug Lamb Chuck Rauatta . Gary Shea ...... i. Rad Run - 534 Ron Sroka Doug Oscelott .. Pat McGaught .. Dave Frantz John Ordwy .. Paul Harrison . Rlc Yaager ... Randy Berry ................ David Allan ................ Greg Ghetll ................ Dan Larkin ................ John Kitchen ............... 7. st. Clair Rtver CC — 547 Robert Baker . Fred Tinzey ................... 4547-75 Dk* DMIerattl ................. 4547-74 Mika Carman ....................5042—72 Wally Pflepwn ................41-54-11)2 Bill Rebum ..................... 5247-77 Scott Slier .................... 4243-15 Ron French ................ Ken Logermon ............... Mike Sheridan .............. II. HlHcrwt CC — 57* - * ' 4742-57 ..............4145-55 ............. 5047-77 ........................................ 4347-70 Mark Hartslg ...............53-54-107 Gary Herdtey ............. .52-50-102 I. Detroit CC - STS John t Travel Problems LIMA, Peru <«P) - The Wichita State basketball team, originally scheduled to play two games to Peru, has had to cancel the dates, the Peru Basketball Federation said today. The Federation said the team was unable to make connections because of an airline strike to tbe United States. LANSING ,(AP) « Gov. George Romney called former State Police Commissioner Joseph A. Childs out of retirement Monday to be the state’s new racing commissioner. Asked why an ex-police officer was appointed to the horse racing post, Romney replied, “I want to be sure we have a man in , the post hd| unquestioned ability to protect the • public interest." Childs said, “I don’t know horses, but I think I know people.”-Romney canje back with, “I Two Advance as Softball Playoffs Opeii L&S Standard downed Idle-time Bar, 2-1, and Bud & Lou’ topped Timberlanes, 5-4, at Northsidelast night to opening games of the Pontiac National Softball League’s’ upper bracket playoffs. Local 653 forfeited to fredman the lower bracket. MGM Cleaners blanked Sport-O-Rama, 96, as the slow pitch playoffs opened. Idletime and Timberlanes play at 7 tonight at Northskle in the double elimination tournament and L & S meets Bud & Lou’s in the nightcap. Fredman goes against Ray White’s Boys at 8:30 at Beaudette. The Pontiac Press meets National Cash Register a slow pitch game at 7. • Burley Monday tossed a two- don’t think there is any problem with the horses.” Romney announced the pototment of Childs while federal agents were serving subpoenas to four Michigan jockeys and a trainer for testimony before a grand jury investigating a gambling conspiracy case. HAZEL PARK One of the problems which Childs will face at the outset is what to do about Dominic (Fats) Corrado, 36, a director of the Hazel Park Racing sociation. Corrado was identified U.S. Senate committee hear-by former Detroit Police Comissioner George Edwards as a member of tbe Mafia. “The Corrado case ' indicates (Ahe need for careful and thorough consideration by a person with the type of background Mr. Childs has,” Romney tojd a news conference. ★ ★ * Canada recently ordered Corrado out of the country as an undesirable alien. Barry Beaman, who retired as racing commissioner last week, asked Atty. Gen. Frank runs soored in the sixth on two stogies and an outfield error. A single, Gary Field’s double and two errors let in the tying and winning runs for Bud & Lou’s in the sixth. Jim Gallaher lobbed a three-hitter at Sport-O-Rama and was backed by Tom Palmiter’s two triples and a double and Turn's double and homer. Kelley whether he could move Corrado from his racing job. Kelley’ opinion said the racing commission could remove a racing organization’s employe if it could prove he is engaged to “improper activity that inimical to the welfare of the people of the state.” DECISION DUE A decision in the Corrado ase now must be made on the basis of Kelley’s ruling, Rom-' ney said. Childs retired last August after 13 years as state police geles Dodger system; commissioner and 32 years on tbe force. The new racing post pays $15,000 a year. Childs and Romney said they had to mind no certain time span for which Childs, 56, would serve as racing commissioner. 'He starts right now,” Romney said. Playoff Toll at 2 in Waterford Loop Two teams were eliminated from the Waterford softball playoffs last night. Hillerest Nazarene ousted Midget Bar, 10-0, as Harvey Keith collected three hits and scored three runs. Duane ^Francis singled, stole hitter for L k S. The winning second, went to third on a i ground out and scored on an infield bouncer as Buckner Finance rallied for an extra toning win over fcixie Tool 7-6. Both winners are 1-1 to the two games and out playoff. Winner's bracket games tonight will have Day’s Sanitary playing McAnnally at 7 and Richardson taking on Lakeland at*:*. New Field Manager Is Billy Hitchcock ATLANTA, Ga. UP) Bobby Bragan was fired today as manager of the Atlanta Braves and replaced by coach Billy Hitchcock. Hitchcock managed the Baltimore Orioles of the American League in 1962 and 1963. He was a i scout for the Braves in 1965 and was hired as a coach last winter. | Bragan’s discharge had been the subject of speculation throughout the summer after the Braves skidded into the second division of the National League. However, after Bragan survived a slump before the All-Star break, it was the thought he probably would be kept as manager the remainder of this year. Bragan, 48, had managed the Braves for the past three seasons and was in his fourth year when (he team moved from Milwaukee to Atlanta this spring. Hie Braves finished sixth under him in 1963, fifth in 1964 ana fifth again last year. PITCHING WOES This season, the Braves have been plagued with poor pitching and Bragan’s pitching changes touched off the ire of Atlanta ^ fans, who in recent games j booed him whenever he stepped j out of the dugout. Speculation that Bragan | would be fired u n 1 e s $ the I Braves started fast already I was under way last winter, | and was renewed when At- | lanta quickly propped into the I second division of the Nation- | al League. The Braves,- front o f f i which was not happy over the f Braves’ finish a year ago in | Milwaukee, reportedly hoped! not to fire Bragan this year be- 1 cause he was one of the strong- I est supporters to backing the f move to Atlanta. Bragan as a player saw limit- » ed duty with the old Brooklyn Dodgers to 1943, 1944, 1947 and 1948. He still is highly regarded BILLY HITCHCOCK on the Dodger organization, and speculation is that he will get job somewhere to the Los An- Schedule Cage Games BALTIMORE (AP) - The Baltimore civic Center will be the site of five college ba ball doubleheaders sponsored by Championship Sports, Inc., next fall. Homer Champ By The Associated Press Tony Conigliaro, the Boston Red Sox’ 1965 American League home run king, has turned to bunting in a bid to improve his batting mark. “I’m not kidding,” the young slugger said. “I’m going to bunt against any third baseman who plays meback.’’ Conigliaro, who has belted 20 homers despite a dismal start this year, collected two hits, including a perfect bunt down the third base line, as the Red Sox defeated Cleveland 3-1 Monday night in fog-swept Fenway Park. Tm trying to get the home run off my mind,” he said after raising his average to .268. ery time I become hoime run conscious I get fouled up. When I hit, the homers fall: “However, I’ve been getting robbed by third basemen who play me deep behind the bag. Ken McMullen robbed me four times, diving to his left and his right, to s doubleheader Washington less than two weeks ago. So, I bunted on him for hit the next day, “So, from now on I’m bunting any time I see the third base-man playing back. And that goes even when we have a runner on third and one out I can get my RBI with a hunt just as easy.” \ Although his bunt didn’t figure to the scoring against the Indians, Conigliaro was spectacular to the field blanketed by billowing fog which interrupted play six times, including once for 20 minutes in the top of the seventh, POA, Lakeland Capture Titles in Junior League Police Officers Association and Lakeland won city junior league championships yesterday and berths in the state district tournament. POA took the measure of ranklto, 10-3, to win the Class D spot. Tony DeLarosa led POA with three singles and* Steve Renda picked up two. Art Goldman pitched a one-hitter as Lakeland downed Moose, 4-1, to take the Class F crown. Fraternal Order of Police will be the Class E state tourney representative. JUNIOR LEAGUE PLAYOFFS Claw E National AHBC 7, H.B. Yankees * Class P National AHBC Sportsman 10. Pontiac BC 1 Spartan Dodge 3, UitNM LeBaron 5, Hornets 0 (forfeit) Widget Mattenal * • Yellow Cab 7, AHBC 7 (championship) Kegler Second WASHINGTON (AP) - Four victories and two losses gave Jan Chidester of Wyoming, Mich., 1*0 points for second place Monday in the Girls Handicap Division of the All America Youth Bowling Championships. Winner in her division was Linda Nash of Galveston, Tex., with 1*6. c—s THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 PST! BUDDY! Yeah? GONNA BUY A TRUCK TODAY? Why today?* BECAUSE CHEVY DEALERS ARE OFFERING CTBffPHIS.. BK VALUES... AND FAST DEUVERY QHJ TRUCKS RIGHT NOW! Did you say Chevrolet ? n* ^ He’s shouting at me. Authorized Chevrolet Dealer In Pontiac Milrt*«wi>HirfiMMi, Inc. 431 Oakland Ave. 3334141 Jackson Ex-Seaholm Golf Ace 'Beat Best' Says GAM Chahnp By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sporti Editor, Pontiac Prow It was like old home week for Birmingham Seaholm golf alumni jn the dining room of Franklin Hills Country Club during the Golf Association of Michigan tournament over the weekend. Pete Green, Mike Conroy and Pete Jackson, members of the powerhouse Seaholm golf during the 1955-58 season when the Maples were the big names in prep golf, were huddled1 around the round table talking about the opening rounds of the GAM tourney. Green, medalist in the tournament four out of five years, lost in the opening of match play to Hunter McDonald, Conroy was an elated winner over Ralph Ellstrom, and Jackson scored an impressive win over Gene Eyler. With Tom Draper and Green out of the picture it was anybody’s guess who could give Michigan amateur king Bod Stevens seme petition far drawn. McDonald, a native Scot, was the consensus of Jackson and Conroy, fellow members of Oakland Hills, as the probable threat. ★ if ★ one offered Jackson’s name as a strong contender. Apparently, the drives of the 145-pound Jackson were not as booming or impressive to his ex-Maple teammates. CONCENTRATES ON PUTTING But Jackson decided to concentrate on his problems on the greens and when the GAM ended Sunday in a 36-hole finale, here is where Jackson was toe victor and Stevens was the vanquished, 2 and 1. ★ ★ ★ It was the first major state golf crown for Jackson. “For me it was like Jack Fleck beating Ben Hogan in the U. Open. Stevens is the best amateur in Michigan and beating Pete learned his golf on one of the finest courses around, Oakland Hills. The Jackson family has held membership at OHCC for 22 years. Dad Paul, brother Mike, sister Penny and Pete have often made a foursome over the challenging Oakland Hills layout, “and I think learning the him is the thrill In golf for me, game on that course, does give wasn’t too hopeful of qualifying golfer some advantage ptayvjMkf ing anywhere else,” Pete said. In junior golf, Pete and Mike won many honors. When Green, Conroy and Pete were with the team in the mid-fifties, the Maples were the perennial powers of The Press Invitational Golf tournament and in state ranks, having won the state title in 1958. In state play however, Green has been a big name for many years of recent. Conroy and Jackson have played more in club tournaments. Pete 'won die Oakland Hills club title last year by 15 Lowly Batter's Lone Hit Tumbles Dodgers to 3rd By The Associated Press Hank Aaron leads the National I] League in homers with 31 and in ' runs batted in with 85. Joe Torre is not far behind with 27 and 73. Felipe AIou has the hits in the majors, 160, and the secorid best average, .330. Rico Carty fe not far behind at .327. Denis Menke is very far behind all of them. HO has a .241 average, nine homers and 37 runs batted in. * * ★ But as far as the Los Angeles Pitchers Lead Batting Attack in Church Play The two-game knockout playoffs in the Waterford Church softball league will continue Friday after pitchers led the way in victories posted last night. ’ Bob Moore, the winning pitcher with two doubles and four rbi’s hurled Christ Lutheran to 11-7 win over Union Lake Baptist and Ron Chaffee pitched a three-hitter in defeating Elizabeth Lake Church of Christ 11-0 for Judah Lake Baptist. The B division was a family affair. Clay and A1 Campbell combined for three homer and ive rbi’s in pacing St. Stephens to a 14-8 win over Church of Sod and Basil Putman Sr. and Jr. netted two singles, two walks, a triple and three runs scored in Donelson Baptist’s 13-9 triumph over St. Paul Methodist. Dodgers and San Francisco Giants are concerned, Menke I far ahead of his Atlanta Brave teammates on their hate lists. Menke didn’t have a hit Monday night until the ninth inning when he singled home the fourth run of the inning and gave the Braves a 10-9 victory ovfcr the Dodgers that dropped them from first place to third in the hectic NL pennant race. Hie Giants split a doubleheader with Cincinnati, winning 7-5 after losing 10-6, and moved into second place, three percentage points behind the Pittsburgh Pirates, who were idle. The Dodgers are ohe-half game BATTLED BACK ' Menke’s game-winning hit was his third in the Braves’ last seven victories. Two weekends ago the 26-year-old shortstop beat the Giants twice in less than 24 hours with run-scoring ilnges. The Giants battled back for a 6-6 tie in the top of the ninth inning July 29, but Menke singled across the winning run in the bottom of the inning. The next afternoon die teams fought into the 11th inning tied Ace for Visitor An Ohio golfer ran into a little luck playing at Kensington Park Saturday. Jim Rutter of Celina used his driver and knocked the ball into the cup on the 175-yard, No. hole and wound up with a 36 for the round. It was his first HRS mmrn *“Us Tareyton smokers would rather fight than switch!1' Ctorkston Haikini Chevrolet, Inc. I Dixie Hwy. 625-5071 Lake Orion At Hjnoute. Inc. I. Ptrk Blvd. Oxford Rocneater Homer High! Motors. Inc. Ctitwnsn Chevrolot Company 140 4. Washington 628 2528 755 S. Rochester i 652-9721 Join the Unswitchables.1 Get the filjter cigarette \ with the taste y worth fightihg for. I Tareyton has a white outer tip \ ... and an inner section of charcoal' Together, they actually improve \ the flavor of Tareyton’s fine tobaccos. \ Tareyton I 5-5 before Menke ended it with a bases-loaded single. His winning single that tumbled the Dodgers to third was the sixth single in the ninth. Ty Cline started the hit parade, and Mack Jones, Felipe Alou, Joe Torre and Rico Carty followed before Menke finished it. strokes with rounds of 71-74-09 over 54 holes. Soever played to We state tournaments, se I thought it would be fun,” be said. “And after I missed getting my entry Into the state amateur I thought I’d try tor the GAM.” Last week in a round at Oakland Hills, he three-putted five times in the first six holes, and in the GAM. Just before teeing off in Thursday’s qualifying, a friend Ron Kottler at Franklin Hills spotted a defect in his putting and suggested a change. TAKES ADVICE If was good enough to help Pete to a 72, three strokes behind Green the medalist, and after that “I wasn’t ready to ignore the advice,” he noted. “I-knew no one gave me a chance against Stevens,” he commented “and I was determined to play it cool.’-His “coolest” shot came at the 17th, when he rammed a 4-iron shot out of a deep rough to within 20 feet of the cup. When Stevens boomed his drive, chipped long and then putted six feet past, -Pete decided to play'it cool. “I decided it wasn’t time for the J. L. putt, I just wanted to get close,” he said. What did he mean by a J. L. putt? ■‘I meant I wasn’t going to charge it . . . you know, that department store charge!’’ ADVICE IN WINNING - Pete Jackson took some putting advice from Ron Kottler (background) of Franklin Hills, put it to good use in winning the GAM championship Sunday by defeating Bud Stevens. It was the first major state title for Jackson, a member of Oakland Hills. That certainly didn’t make Menke a hit with the Dodgers, who had erupted for three runs and a 9-6 lead in the top of the ninth. John Roseboro doubled in (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the first two runs and scored the the final article in a 20-part third on Torre’s error. I series in .which author .and ------------- [swimming coach Christian B. Sparks has offered tips on No Additionalttgtf*" *8inBer*- * By CHRISTIAN B. SPARKS J You are well on your way toward becoming a good swimmer and can look to the not-too-distant future when you can begin to enjoy other water sports feeling safe in the fact that you can take care of .yourself in the water, that you have SPARKS ON SWIMMING Heart Injury for Dressen DETROIT (AP); Doctors say there is no evidence Charlie Dressen has suffered additional heart damage, but the Detroit Tigers manager remains hospitalized in serious condition. Dressen, 67, recovering from his second heart attack in 14 months, entered Henry Ford Hospital Sunday, suffering from a kidney infection. ★ ★ ★ The hospital reported late Monday he “seems to be responding to treatment and shows slight improvement. However, he continues to have some elevation of temperature and his condition remains serf- entered the hospital May 16 after suffering the second heart attack, was released as an out-patient and was under treatment when hit by the kidney ailment. * * ★ The baseball team is being managed by Frank Staff, coach who was appointed acting manager when Bob Swift, Dres-sen’s interim replacement, was hospitalized. Swift, who was third base coach, was admitted to the same hospital, where it was found he has lung cancer. Swift is undergoing cobalt treatments. Teamsters Defeat CIO for'A'Title ! (Continued From Page C-l) him and Houck came all the |way for an inside the park homer. •k * + Two more runs in the 6th closed the scoring and the season race, opening the way for the playoffs which start Sunday, with the Teamsters facing Booth at 8:00 p.m. 3 1 1 Ryan 4 « 1 Fagerlia , 3 11 Taylar . • • • Bara 4 11 Heaton t 1 1 Quick BOO Janks 34 n * Tatat* 31 4 .4........ IBS 310 0-4 1 ......... Ml 411)1-11 * I Walters, Fagerlie, Gottschalk, — Taylor, . RBIs- Ffotar, Stone. Hem* ________________ Houck* 2, Stone *, Berkeley, 1 Heaton, Ftoter, Woodmere, Gottschalk. ------T9 Pitcher - Walters. Losing have not discussed, the competitive start. The idea is to dive out as far as you can, as fast as you can, and as shallow as you can so that you can come up and start swimming as soon as possible. Study the follow-ing illustrations to develop the start: STAND ERECT Stand erect, toes locked over edge, look straight down the pool. On' command, “Take your mark” bend to position, lean forward, weight on front of feet, Local Group Purchases Silver Lake a healthy respect for the water and have a reasonable knowledge of the rules of water safety- You may be interested now in skin or scuba diving, boating or sailing, water skiing, surfing, or any of the other water-associated sports. You might want to develop your skills for competitive Swimming. Competitive swimming may well be the largest participant sport in our country for boys and girls through 17 years of age. The- AAU “Age-Group” program numbers in the hundreds of thousands. Wherever there is a swimming program, there is a team. Find one where there is a qpach who can help to advance your swimming stills: There is one skill which we head down with eyes on edgej of water. On the sound of the gun, fall forward, swing the arms hard and lift the head. Drive hard, wittr the Pegs and body absolutely straight from fingertips to toes and level with water. Upper body naturally drops and will enter water first preventing “flop.” Keep “straight” body position. Keep straight body position to take advantage of good glide. Start stroke just before surfacing, Come up swimming hard. Do not take breath until stroke is well under way. Perhaps this start will get you on the way to a swimming career lor safety, for fun, or for fame. Which ever way It takes yon, good luck and good swimming! Purchase of the Silver Lake Golf Club on Walton Boulevard by 10 local businessmen was an-nounced this week. ★ ★ ★ Making the announcement was A. G. Kampsen of Kamp-sen Realty, a member of the 10-man group, who handled the financial details of the purchase from Fred Green of Goodrich. Kampsen said the group has immediate plans to install a drainage system at the J,128-yard, par-37 course. The layout covers 88 acres. Purchase price was not announced. An underground watering system and a new clubhouse are among the group’s long range plans for the course, Kampsen said. .... ★ ★ ★ • Along with Kampsen in the group are Don O. Tatroe, Superintendent of Waterford Township schools; Walter E. Greene, engineer at Pontiac Motors; Dr. Charles I. Patrick; Dennis R. Bruling, official of Darrin & Armstrong Construction; Garth R. Sayers, engineer at GM Truck; Frank E. Rocassi, automobile sales executive with Ford; and Earl VanDyke of Pontiac Motors. Berths Still Open in Tri-County Meet Berths in the starting field are still available for the Tri-County Open Golf Tournament slated for Saturday and Sunday at Bay Potato Golf Club on Haggerty Road near Union Lake. ★ ★ ★ Golfers will play an 18-hole qualifying round on Saturday, and the field wffl be divided into three flights for the final II holes Sunday. Officials expect to distribute $1,300 in prims. Hie tourney is sponsored by the Union Lake Jaycees. / * * * Players may register by filling out entry blanks at most area courses or by calltagKto Cockin at 363-0000. Cockta is chairman of the event Redskins' Back Suffers Injury CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) - The Washington Redskins said Monday defensive halfback Lonnie Sanders suffered a severe bade sprain durtag>dri]k. The former Michigan State star was working in place of injured left ear-netback Jim Steffens, a former Detroit Lions player. Steffens suffered s collapsed lung and four broken ribs in an exhibition game last Wednesday, and will be lost for six weeks. THE PONtlAC PRltsS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 Four ways to start your swing... ASTOfl S Wlf6 Is Arrested Major League Boxes CLEVELAND 0 Tartabull c t Fov 3b 0 Ystrmskl H 0 Coniglari I lb 4 0 1 0 Scott lb Salmon 2b 2 0 0 0 Ryan c Petr ocelli. DP- Azcue (0), Scott (21J. Hearing Again on Cdssius' Draft Status MINNESOTA KANSAS C I Cmpnerls ss 3 010 Herthbgr rf 4 010 Cater Tb 3 011 DGreen 2b 4 010 Charles 3b Oil 020 00*—4 LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A hearing Aug. 23 could provide the basis for determining if heavyweight champion Cassius Clay is exempt from the armed services draft because of his religious beliefs. Clay, a convert to the Black Muslim religion, claims exemption as a conscientious objector. Under his present 1-A classification, he is eligible for the draft. Clay will be represented at the hearing by New York attorney Hayden Covington, who handled hundreds of Jehovah Witnesses cases during World War II when that religion claimed deferment for its members. The Justice Department said Monday that the session will be conducted by Lawrence Grau-man, a retired Circuit Court judge in Clay’s hometown. Policemen Suspended in Dispute Teen Girl Holds Lead in Amateur Robins* Miss Shelley Hamlin, a vivacious teen-ager from Fresno, Calif., took a two-stroke lead today into the final round of qualifying for the USGA Women’s Amateur Golf Champion- Miss Hamlin, who began playing the game only four years ago, fired a par 73 in Monday’s first round — the only golfer in a sparkling field of 118 to match the card. Major League Leaders ATLANTA (AP) - The Atlanta Police Department suspended three officers Monday pending investigation of a dispute over the arrest of Mrs. Henry Aaron, wife of the Atlanta Braves’ home run slugger. | Barbara Aaron was charged I with “disorderly conduct-fcurs-ing” and failure to obey an offi-j cer’s signal after an incident July 30 at the Atlanta Stadium] j parking lot for players. She goes | 'to court Aug. 16. American League BATTING (250 at bats) - Oliva, A , Baltimore, .315; B. Robinson, a, .298; B. Robinson, Baltimore, i, Chicago, 48; Oliva, Minnesota, i, Detroit. Campanaris, Kansas City, 2f; But Chicago, 28; Valentine, Washington, Aparicio, Baltimore, Cardenal, Califo VicCraw, Chicago, 17. HITS - Oliva. Minnesota. 137; B. Robison, Beltlmore, 131; F. Robinson, Bar" ..lore. 125; Aparicio, Baltimore, li Richardson, New York, 117. DOUBLES - Yastriemski, Boston. 1 v Robinson. Baltimore and Oliva, M ..isota, 27; Kalina, Detroit, and Valenti; Washington, 33. TRIPLES - Hershberger, Kansas C —I Irinkman, Washington, 8; eight pie Western Juniors Qualifying Today 5 2 3 1 DJohnson II 0 0 8 Cardenas s “I guess I was kind of lucky,” the 17-year-old high school sen-J| ior said. “I wasn't too nervous.” ij But if the harrow, twisting 3 Sewickley Heights Golf Club o I layout didn’t shake Miss Hani-o lin, it played havoc with the [nerves and scores of a lot of better known and more experi-- enced golfers. ..BIB 2 5 2 IB X—II 2, Cincinnati 1 i (14), Hart (25), Laloney (W, 12-4) . 5 “It really doesn’t give you much margin for error,” said Mrs. Gordon P. Street Jr., the former Judy Eller of Chattanoo ga, Tenn., and a two-time national junior champion. CINCINNATI BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Revenge was uppermost the minds of four piayers who were set to tee off today in the first of two qualifying rounds for the 49th Western Junior Golf Championship. The four were victims last year of defending champion John Richart, 19, of Ann Arbor, Mich. Richart downed Bruce Osborne, Lamesa, Calif.; Phil Aldridge, Bloomfington, 111.; semifinalist Greg Pitzer, Westwood Village, Calif., and finalist Jim Herring, Amarillo, Tex. Richart will join the low 31 qualifiers in the start of match play Thursday. The 18-hole final will be Saturday. JBLES — Alou. Atlanta, Phil ______go,' and Callison, Philadelphia, Pinson, Cincinnati, 23; Rose, Clnclni Clemente, Pittsburgh players tl I Cardenas ss 3 0 10 This is the second hearing for Clay, who successfully defended his heavyweight crown last Saturday night against Brian London. Unanimous Verdict for Detroit fighter Baldschun (L, 1-5) . DETROIT CAP) - Johnny Powell of Detroit, weighing 161, punched out a unanimous, eight-round decision over Detroiter Ted Wright in a boxing match Monday night. It was a repeat of Powell’s July 11 victory over Wright, who weighed 160. Powell, 26, staggered Wright in the fifth round but the veteran middleweight hung on. A crowd of 2,082 at Coho Arena stood and cheered during the eighth round as both boxers slugged rapidly and Continuously at each other. The crowd pjiid $3,852 to watch the battle. LOB—San Francisco LOS ANGELES i. Paul F. Klinefelter . s. Michael J. Skate n Hagbery . Nancy Roth Syms Mary Ann Downey Phyllis Preuss Elizabeth Chadwick Robbye King Pamela Tradinnlck >1 Dye Mrs. Carol Mrs. Scott L. Probasco Palama Sue Fox ...... Gayle Anna Sykes Sharon Morren .......... Dors Phillips Lida Matthews ......... Ex-Wolverine Is All-Purpose PEEKSKILL, N. Y. (AP) Bill Yearby, the No. 1 draft pick of the New York Jets, worked out at three positions Monday with the American Football League team. Yearby, a defensive tackle at the University of Michigan, started the drill at that position, then switched to the offensive line and later to pass catching at tight end. The Jets originally drafted the 21-year-old Detroit Eastern High graduate as a tight end. The Negro baseball star said Monday his wife’s attorney would object at her trial to what he termed “incompetents on the police force.” Mrs. Aaron claimed a policeman pulled his gun when he stopped her. Police said Patrolman L. W. Bedgood placed his hand on his revolver! but did not draw it. BATTING (230 at ball) - A urgh.. .343; Alou, Atlanta, ten tea Pittsburgh, .329; Carty 127; Stargell, Pittsburgh, .322. RUNS - Alou, Atlanta, 82; l RUNS BATTED II i; White, Philadelphia, 72. . Davis, Ll________ PLES - McCarvei Pittsburgh, HOME RUNS - i, Atlanta, 31; rre, Miiamo, m mays, San FrandSCO, Santo, Chicago, Allen, Philadelphia, - Brock, St. I Jackson, ................... I geles, 31; Phillips, Chicago, 28; Harper, Cincinnati, M PITCHING (ten decisions) - Regan, Lbs Angeles, 10-1, .909; Perry, San Francisco, 17-2, .895; Marichal, San Francisco, 17-4, .810; Koufax, Los Angeles, 18-5, .873. Maloney, 16. STRIKEOUTS - Koufax, Los Angeles, 220; Bunning, Philadelphia, 168; Gibson, Louis, T61; Maloney, Ciftci—** ~Sm le, Pittsburgh, 157. UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. a Min. From Downtown Pontiac Acting Chief Greg Beerman said Bedgood was suspended pending “a thorough and complete investigation.” Also suspended were Detective Lt. C. J. Strickland, in charge of the stadium police office, and Lt. B. ~ Rains, general police supervisor at the stadium. He said the three were not charged Need A Hand? Call For Temporary Help! Call for the best! Manpower’s “Reliables”. They specialize in loading, warehouse and shipping work. Ask for one man or a crew. MANPOWER THE VERT BEST IN TEMPORARY HELP Call 332-8386 Track Drivo, Wait Tobacco Too Good To Smoke 2 0 0 0 KJohnson p 2 O 0 0 Aid to Inmates RALEIGH, N.C. (AP);^’Horace (Bones) McKinney, forrper Wake Forest basketball Poach and a Baptist minister, has gone to work as assistant director of rehabilitation in North Carolina’s prison system. Just a pinch of Copenhagen Snuff between chatk and «um brings you the satis, faction of omoldng-without smoking. At a pries that beats smoking tool — ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF UNITED STATES TOBACCO COMPANY-* ........ Sit SM t«4—It (2), Torre, L.Johnson. ( 3. LOB—Los Angeles 7. Eaglets Seek Coach Orchard Lake St. Mary is looking for a cross country and track coach for the 1966-67 season. Persons interested may contact the Rev. John Rakoczy at 682-1885 for details. o nr MONDAY'S FIGHTS _ By The Aiiedated Press DETROIT - Johnny Powell, trolt, outpointed Ted Wright, 140, *?AS VEGAS, Nev. - Chick 139V5. Oakland, Calif., outpoint* Juarez, 140V5, Las Vagas, 10, large WATERFORD TOWNSHIP RECREATION Man's Softball Standings (Final) Lakeland Pharmacy 17 R icherdsen's Dairy . u Hillcrest Nazarene 4, Buckner Finance 0 Midget Bar McAnnally's t Day's Sanitary S o Seles . R ichardson's Dairy Hillcrest Nazarene 4, Buckler Finance t Midget Bar 12, Dixie Tool 4 Day's Sanitary 13, Richardson's Dairy 3 Lakeland Pharmacy 10, McAnnally Auto Sales 3 N8W KING EDWARD TIP CIGARILLO When In Doubt f See Harfoute... And Ask For Bob Johnson, Al Hanoute'e genial General Manager. With the exception of four years in the U.S. Navy in the Korean war, Bob hat been telling Chevrolet* and Buicks here for 10 years. Hit broad experience in* eludes 2 years at the General Motors Institute. Al Hanoute's Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion MY 2-2411 inventory Vast and Enormous R means BVICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. at Williams Phone 332-9101 Open Mon., Tues. and Thurs. Nights ’til 9 C—S FOR FUN PEOPLE- ftV THE SPORTS CAR WORLD! Example: The Fabulous New 1966Vi Triumph MK2-Spitfire — $2155 67’* Notv InStock Oakland. County’* Sport Car Center Bank Financing Low Down Payments Over 50 New and Used Sports Cars rltnaCdl Imported Car Cd. 900 Oakland Ave. (U.S. 10) FE 5-9421 50 Select New and Used Sports Cars Bank Financing, Easy Terms ■ ■■■■■■■■■I NEW FULL 4-PLY M20O 11/1111 narrow nnil 7.35 x 14 - $20.00 T.T5 x 14 - $21.00 8.25 x 14 - $22.00 8.55 x I'ricct In 14 — $23.00 rlutle Federal Tax GUARANTEED A Top Quality Tire For Less Than The Price of First Line Tires. RETREAD TIRES |*895 Grade 1 Premium Custom COMPARE OUR _B(.U PRICES FIRST! FRO"1 WHEEL ALIGNMENT Tl Scientifically measured and CtfBQR correct caster and camber wlew w Ye Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief cause of tire wear) For the SMOOTHEST RIDE You've Ever Had, LET US TRUE BALANCE and TRACTIONIZE YOUR TIRES I WITH OUR KIMSWAY *79“* TIRE CONDITIONER GLEN HIGHT Tiip Department Manager .to think about Now's the tin the haavy driving taaion ahead ,, . weekend trips .., vacation, etc. Remember, yeu'ra only as sofa as your tires and we carry a complete line of the finest quality plui every modern scientific facility, from true balance and trac-tionizing to wheel alignment. i APPROVED MAJOR CREOIT CAROS MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER 123 East Montcalm FI 3-1145 i m THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. AUGUST 9, 1966 mmm Pressure Is Mounting m ' m\ More Inflation Likely MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of Ideally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots.1 Quotations are furnished by the' Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol m^et Trading Is Moderate Market Prices Hold Steady NEW YORK (AP) - Stock Thursday. Produce Apples. Dutchess, Bu. Apples, Redborn, bu. Blueberries. 12-qt. crt. . Centeloupes, bu. Currents, red, l*-ot. crt. Peaches Sunhaven, bu. VEGETABLES Beans, Gr. Rd„ bu. Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Beans, wax, bu. Beets, dt. bch. Beets, topped, bu. BrodoM, dz. bu. . Cabbege, bu. Cabbage, Red, bu. Cabbage, si. bu Cabbage Sprouts, bu. prices were steady moderate trading early this afternoon. 1 Changes of key Issues ran from fractions to a point or so. Brokers found some encour-’•“jagement in good employment *•« figures, rising steel production 6.501 and the acceptance by Adrainis-5 noi (ration officials of the steel 7 oo Price increase. *00 * | Airlines, which had been weak 3js in early trading, found some 2*00'strength on the news that the ^ 00| striking machinists and the five a.'oolstruck airlines would resume loci negotiations this afternoon. Eastern Airlines advanced 2! of 25,000 shares, New York Cen-points, Pan American World {tfal eased to 66% Airways, which was not struck,! held a gain of more than a point, Steels, motors, aircrafts and electronics advanced. AVERAGES VARY The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon was up .3 at 306.7 with industrials up .2, rails up .1 and utilities up .7. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials at noon was unchanged at 849.05. Douglas Aircraft traded off % at 55% on a block of 25,000 shares. Also trading on a block Jones & Laughlin gained about half a point and U.S. Steel was up by a lesser fraction. United Aircraft, Zenith and Raytheon picked up about half a point. Sperry Rand, again actively traded, added a point. ★ k ★ Prices advanced in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange Gains of a point or so were made by Astrodata, Baifield Industries, Gulton Industries, Levin Computer, Realty Equities and Xtra. Computer Door Closing on '66 Cars Has Already Begun | I By SAM DAWSON | AP Business News Analyst | NEW YORK - Businessmen as well as housewives face the likelihood of further inflation, | And such Changeover on '67s slowing in the upward pace of the economy may be in prospect isn’t likely to deter the continuing rise of prices in many lines. These range from thel___ price of new DAWSON cars to the raw materials that go into them, from the prices of services the family expects and _ needs to the cost of labor. j surplus metal with which it ★ ★ k I could threaten to flood the mar- The economy has boomed ket. In the great majority of Sciences lost a point. The New York Stock Exchange By CHARLES C. CAIN j DETROIT (AP) - The final cars of the 1966 model run roll off an assembly line at Ford’s Dearborn assembly plant this week as the industry switched over to 1967 model production. Some 4,500 of the 1966 model Mustangs are to be built on the Dearborn line before the industry calls it quits Friday on the model year. Ford, last of the auto makers to end 1966 production, also was the first to begin 1967 work. Output of 1967 Thunderbird and Lincoln cars has been under way at Wixom for the past three weeks. Chrysler got started on 1967 production this week after a closedown for vacations model changeover. Six of Chrys-ler’s assembly units were due to | resume work this week with the ?o 57% IKK seventh, the Los Angeles plant, m 53vJ mu sf* - % scheduled to hum again next 5 K'/« mu 85%+ % week. 51 MU 67U M + %: 1? M* T 8* - % GENERAL MOTORS l|f 46vu «$+ %| In the General Motors family, 16 sou 50A 50* + w! the first of the 1967’s are due si 53u 53u 53% + vyjthis week from Chevrolet, Buick ’• fial uu 14% | and Oldsmobile. Cadillac and io 65% 65% i1*! Pontiac finished their 1966 model 25^ 56 5su s* #^ iast week and are on vaca- 104 49% 41% that couldn’t be matched by increased efficiency and productivity. HIGHER COSTS But the monetary restraints, while clipping some industries such as nome building, and deterring some consumer buying of big ticket items such as new cars, have also resulted in higher costs of doing business — and therefore of an even greater urge to raise the prices of the goods and services involved. And the government’s voluntary guidelines have been effective largely in cases where the administration held a whiphand. The price of aluminum was held down because the government the housewive to the loudly protesting stage, 1 Her bills bajd suddenly started rising much faster than her husband’s pay chet^. It, in fact, had been dipped a ML first by higher Social Security taxes, and then by larger withholding for federal income taxes. And in many cases the income-clipping also extended to higher state and local taxes. The businessman has been having much tee same experience. Wholesale prices of industrial materials had held fairly steady in tee early years of tee 1960s, while his production and sales and profits were mounting. Then tee demand for ; raw materials, and semifinished tion. American Motors, first of tee auto companies to complete its 1966 model run on July 1, scheduled to resume work on its 1967 cars Aug. Ford said three more of its assembly plants, at Louisville, St. Louis and Wayne, Mich., were to get started on 1967 work this week. Through last week, the industry had built 8,605,860 of the 1966 models, with Mustangs due to add 4,500 for a final total of 8,-. _ 610,360 cars. This compared with Z H 8,729,402 for the same period jj'4 8% 1'JS'last year. u% 17% - mu! .i. . jmunity under the Internal Reve- Music Company nue Code,” said Samuel Beard-' ’ sley, acting district director of tee Internal Revenue Service for Nevada, when asked if his agents would testify if subpoenaed. “We’d rather not get in- Adds New Chain in Philadelphia American Music Stores, Inc., volved,” he said. (AMS) parent firm of WKC, Inc., of Pontiac, has purchased Jacobs Brothers Music Co., a five-store chain headquartered in Philadelphia. Acquisition of the 66-year-old firm was made by Grinnell Brothers, another operating subsidiary of AMS. close to the limits of its present resources and production facilities. And tee inflationary pressure is mounting. So far, tee curbs on tee economy’s booming rise have been mainly of two sorts: monetary restraints teat make credit tighter and interest rates higher, and government guidelines that tried persuasion to hold down price and wage increases cases, industrial pricesand wage scales — have gone up, it unnoticed. Except by the consumer. He now is very aware of the rising cost of living. The cost of many services has been going up steadily right along. It took a big jump in food prices early in the year, and again in midsummer, to bring LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Federal tax agents will decline tq, talk if called to a Nevada hearing into charges tee underworld secretly rakes, off millions' year from legal gambling casinos, a U S. official says. The Nevada Gaming Commis-on, at Gov. Grant Sawyer’s request, hoped to sift fact from fiction in allegations that mobsters skim untaxed profits and hold illegal hidden interests in lucrative gaming table and slot machines. The hearing opens today. had huge defense stockpiles of be^ " exceed And the wholesale, price index started to climb rapidly. Industrial commodities hit a peak in March and then moderated. PRESSURE UPWARD Now the pressure is mostly upward again. It isn’t just steel prices alone. Several other metals are in short supply, with prices well above tee year-ago level. And the prices of semifinished industrial products are under pressure, both from tee rise in basic commodities and from the demands of labor for higher wage scales. ★ ★ ★ Since tee economy is using up abodt all of the raw materials and semi-finished products that the nation’s natural resources and industrial production facilities can supply — as well as all the labor available for many high skilled jobs — the pressure will continue. It will continue even if the economy continues to rise at a 10 per cent pace — rather than the record 17 per cent rate of the first quarter. And monetary restraint and government voluntary guidelines for wage and price increases may have already done just about all that the businessman — or the housewife — can expect from them. U.5. Agents May Mum in Nevada Gaming Case. case of casino license-holders, is tantamount to a subpoena, he said. / * ★ ★' Beardsley said none of his tax agents had been asked to appeal to his knowledge. But he | said they could not comment, qiase teat was not a matter of public record, such as in court testimony. Skimming would violate federal, as well as “state, tax-reporting laws. FBI agents from Las Vegas testified in a federal court case involving Desert Inn stockholder Ruby Kolod earlier this year that they installed electronic eavesdropping devices in the Desert Inn with the intent of ^ gaining information on criminal I fj| activity. INFORMATION Dean Elson, FBI chief in Ne- ‘REQUESTED’ TO TESTIFY Jack J. Wainger, president ^ ^quest, in the AMS said that "with an annual Ivada, told the court, “We had I information coming to our at-5 , | jtention that there was a vast Only one casino employe, Sum of money ^mg taken off tee top by the ownership of the Desert Inn.” The commission said any testimony of criminal activity would • be turnqjJ over to tee commission’s George Gordon of the Desert Inn oh the Las Vegas strip, had been subpoenaed. But a gaming control agency spokesman said an undisclosed number of club officials had been “requested' volume of over $2 million Jacobs Brothers is the leading retail music store in the greater Philadelphia area and holds much promise for further expansion.” e Detroit - headquartered AMS operates 52 retail stores in seven states selling a wide range of musical instruments vu and related items. Market i of Negro Put at $27 Billion -estigative and Qpforcement branch, tee Gaming Control Board, for possible {license revocation action. * ★ * The gaming commission, in I * ir*.*-* v Successful % iimestim I*.-**.*-...* '* By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “Would Allied Supermarkets be a good investment for me? How does it compare with other food chains? I am 14-years-old and have $200 to Invest.” A. R. (A) Allied Supermarkets is engaged in an ambitious program of expansion which will carry its units into S- S. Kresge K-Mart discount stores. This will require large capital expenditures. Increased earnings are not expected until next year at the earliest, and for fiscal 1966 (ended June 30) there is an administrative procedure ,itHe expectation of an im rove_ initiated by the board, has arbi- mPnt nvpp thp t1 ,« n ehnrp i by trary authority to revoke gambling license, or close casino, for anything determined to be an “unsuitable operation.” Nevada casinos reported record gross winnings^, of $328.8 WASHINGTON (AP) Commerce Department estimat-' million to tee state during 1965. ed today the value of the Negro ------------------ consumer market at $27 billion annually. The estimate was made in a newly published guide for businessmen on the buying potential of more than 20 million Americans.^ County Gl Is Mute at Holdup Hearing Secretary of Commerce* John T. Connor, in a foreword to the publication,, said the size of the market reflects “a solid economic advancement” made by Negroes during the past five years. “The market represents for America both an opportunity and an obligation,” be said. “It will be an increasingly profitable market as the Negro is given greater g opportunity to contribute to, and share in, the general prosperity.” ★ ★ ★ The guide contains statistics! on Negro buying, a bibliography of government and nongovernment articles and publications on tee Negro market, and a list of Negro newspapers and maga- ment over the $1.28 a share earned in fiscal 1965. Profits in the last nine years have been moving down irregularly from their peak of $1.45 in 1958. The food chains generally are Hard pressed by mounting competition and rapidly rising wholesale prices. Allied Supermarkets, according to their published assets, is from 1/5 to 1/10 the size of the three industry leaders: Great A & P, Safeway and Kroger. In my judgment, you should save your money until you have accumulated at least $500. Then I suggest- as a first investment I msolidated Foods or Borden DETROIT UP) — Marine Pvl Charles Wick, 20, of Madii Heights stood mute at his ar- ^ raighment on a federal bankjc”ny.^Bote have* show „ robbery charge yesterday in! strong growth pattern since 1956. U.S. District Court. j ★ # * Judge Thaddeus M. Mach-rowicz set bond at $2,000 aft) set a preliminary hearing for Aug. 22. Wick is accused in tee $3,300 holdup of tee Wayne - Oakland Bank in Royal Oak last Thursday. He gave himself up to police Saturday. He is on leave until Aug. 25 from Camp Pendleton, Calif. i 'f.1,* > st0+*5 zines throughout the country. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-Th* cash position J tha Treasury compared sponding date e year ego: > Aug. 4, 1964 At News in Brief The theft of a drill motor valued at $850 was reported to Pontiac police yesterday by Lloyd Ehli, foreman on the Truck-a-Way Carp., 355 S. Sanford. MOM’s Rummage: Thursday 9 to 12. Indianwood and Bald- The number of June gradu-l^cj1"’ sgp ates from colleges and universities, receiving bachelors’ a n dreSSst! advanced degrees was about 700,000, 16,075,215,770.16 12,371 J96.714.34 x-Totai Debt- 319,772.M2,942.65 316.8*2,467,156.66 Gold Assets-* i.' 13,334,070,600.50 13459.013,614.13 Includes 02tt.227.322.03 deb Subject to statutory limit. DOW—JONES AVERAGES (Q) “A junior in college, I have $1,000 to invest. Three stocks have been highly recommended to me: General Tel & Electronics? Am. Hospital Supply, and Sears, Roebuck. Which one do yon think best for me?” A. S. (A) Assuming teat an ambitious college student wants a growth stock for some future needs but meanwhile would appreciate regular dividend checks, my choice for you is General Telephone. GT&E is second only to American Telephone in this segment of its operations. You will share in the results of the company’s electronics research while providing yourself with the defensive cushion of a utility stock. Based on estimated earnings for 1966, GT&E’s price-earnings multiple of 20.9x is tee lowest of the three and its annual dividend of $1.28 will give you tee highest yield — around three per cent. (Copyright, 1966) ' */ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 C-JF SetforSept;l2 A hearing on a motion for a new trial for 20 men convicted of gambling at the Steren Assembly Chib in Madison Heights has been scheduled lor Sept 12 before Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. * * ' * The hearing was to have been held yesterday, but Ziem granted a postponement to allow the prosecutor’s office time to answer the 80 points defense attorney Carlton Roeser has given as reasons for the new trial. His elients were found guilty following a trial in Manistee a year ago. ★ * ★ The trial had been moved to the Northern Michigan community after Roeser contended that his clients could not be impartially tried in Oakland County becuase of the widespread news coverage the case had received. ★ * ★ Sixteen of the 20 men received prison terms. They were released on bond pending the outcome of Roeser’s appeal for a new trial. Detroit Gl Killed WASHINGTON (AP) - Army Spec. 4 George G. Trueluck of Detroit has been killed in Viet Nam combat, the Defense Department said Monday. He was the son of Mrs. Vivian Trueluck of Detroit. On Cit/i South Side Four Arrested in Break-Ins Pontiac police responding to two reported break-ins on the city’s South Side early today arrested loqr youths, one of them a 14-year-old juvenile allegedly caught inside a doctor’s office. ★ ★ ★ Held at the Oakland County Jail for investigation of breaking and entering are Tommy Colburn, 17, of 60 Green; Raymond DeLong, 16, of 158 Green; and Winston M. Maxwell, 18, of Detroit. The juvenile was taken to the Oakland County Children’s Center. Colburn and DeLong were apprehended by Sgt. Robert W. Verhine near the intersection of Palmer and Orchard Lake-at 3:45 a.m., shortly after a reported break-in at a doctor's office at 166 Palmer. ★ ★ ★ Patrolmen Raymond Dickinson and Merton R. Kesselring apprenehended the juvenile after stationing themselves at the front and rear of the building. OFFICE RANSACKED Police said the office the three allegedly broke into had been ransacked after entry wa gained by smashing a side window. ★ ★ * Maxwell was sitting in an automobile. near Cole’s Cut-Rate Drugs, 501 S. Saginaw when arrested by Patrolman Norman R. Kilmer about 2:15 a.m. Allegedly in Maxwell’s car Wage negotiations between the city and police and firemen are slated to reopen this week with meetings scheduled for 3 p.m. tomorrow and Friday. Nicholas Santiwan, personnel director, said the wage commit- ^ Sparics-Griffiii |) rnuroAi win Mr , 7 ^ FUNERAL HOME FE.8-9288 Outstanding in Poptiac for Service and Facilities 46 Williams St. at the time of his arrest were dow of the store had been broke?) out. Police said two other suspects made a successful escape on foot from the rear of the drug-i-'store.' half-gallon bottles of whisky similar to ones reported missing from the drugstore. The frbnt door and front Wage Talks With City Police, Firemen to Resume This Week Romney in Royal Oak Twp. JP Case A request for the removal of a Royal Oak Township justice of the peace from office has been referred by Gov. George Romney to a probate judge for the taking of testimony. Oakland County Circuit Judge Philip Pratt, sitting as a one-man grand jury, had requested the removal of Justice of the Peace Lonnie C. Cash. State law requires the governor to refer such requests to a judge for the taking of testimony. He referred it to Probat< Judge Francis Castellucci of Macomb County and requested Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley to represent the state in the case. Cash, 42, was suspended from office in May after Pratt charged him with five counts of perjury before the grand jury. He was later indicted of obstructing justice. Cash, a justice of the peace since 1959, has not yet stood trial on any of the charges. tee of the Pontiac Police Officers Association (PPOA) has requested a meeting with City Hall representatives to discuss their 1966-67 wage package. The PPOA seeks longevity pay and a 20 per cent hike in base pay of $1,276 per man. Santiwan said the $1,276 wage] boost, if granted, would amount to a 20 per cent increase calculated on the starting rate for! patrolman of $6,084 per year. j The police proposal asks longevity pay on the basis of a ris-1 ing scale of 2 (6 per cent of base pay after five years service to! 10 per cent after 20 years. i MEETING SET Santiwan said he had not yet1 received wage proposals from] the Pontiac Fire Fighters Un-j ion, but that a meeting with; firemen was set for 3 p.m. tomorrow. He expected the wage requests would be similar to that of the PPOA. Burglars Hit Local College Burglars struck early yester-i day at the Michigan College of] Osteopathic Medicine at 900 Auburn, escaping with five office! typewriters valued, at $2,400. .V1' * * * Dr. Stuart FI Harkness, administrative dean V>f the college, said the break-in was discovered about 8 a.m. when the building was opened. Entry was gained by smashing a 3-by-8-foot plate glass window with a large piece of wood, according to Pontiac police. The typewriters, includingII four electric models, were.taken I from a storeroom at the rear. 1 Two spotlights designed to il-1 luminate the side of the building I apparently had been broken | prior to the break-in, police | said. if! They Follow Instructions to the Letter KANSAS CITY, Mo. Of) — Secret Service instructions to convention, officials of the Plumbers and -Pipe Fitters Union yesterday were explicit. Do not, agents told them, admit anyone to the floor after a certain hour before the arrival' of Vice President Hubert H. ® Humphrey, the convention I speaker. ★ * * f Doormen to the convention arena followed the I orders to the letter. j They locked the Secret j Service agents out, until j Peter T. Schoemann, president of the union, advised of their plight, let them in. 1 Death Notices Huntoon Funeral inierment in Maple Hill Cemetery. Charlotte, Michigan. Mr. Jackson will lie In state at the funeral home._________ MENZIES, AUGUST 9, IMS. PERCY. 747 S. winding Drive; age M; deer tether of Mrs. Margaret Rue-precht, Mrs. Orson Willare end Mrs. Frances Homouer; also survived by five grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Funeral ear-vice will be held Thursday, August gested visiting hours 3 MILLEN, AUGUST 7, 1964 B.. 29 v, East Street. O 28; beloved husband c Mitten; beloved son ol $50 CASH nine and pepper. Ceil 9MM t- JOE-S SPAGHETTI HOUSE It MOW delivering pfir- ----- 332-0434, u LOSE weiOHT SAFELY-WITH Dex-A-Diet Tablets. Only ft cents at Simms Pres. Dregs, OPEN UNDER FORMER MANAGEMENT WILSON'S MARATHON SERVICE CORNER OF ORCHARD LAKE AND JOHNSON PONTIAC, MICHIGAN_____ BOX REPLIES j At 16 a.m. today there) 1 were ■ replies at The) | Press Office in the foil ! lowing boxes: ) 3,4 , 9, 22, 24, 36, 43, $6.1 j , 67, 80, 164, 118. | Deaths in Pontiac Area i Sen. Hart Votes With Majority WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., voted with the majority Monday as the Senate passed 53-31 a bill setting federal standards which states must meet in their weekly unemployment insurance payments. Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., did not vote on the measure. Papal Decrees Slated Friday VATICAN CITY (AP)-Pope Paul VI will order into effect] Friday all remaining parts of Vatican Ecumenical Council decrees not already in force, the Vatican announced today. Involved are five decrees among the 16 that the pope and the bishops of the Roman Catholic Church approved during the 1962-1965 council, They deal with bishops’ powers, religious or-, ders, missions, the laity, and Christian education. The other 11 decrees are already in operation and include such things as changes in the Church's Mass and public worship, ecumenical relations with other Christian churches seek-j ing eventual unity, and attitudes toward Jews and other non-Christians. Walter V. Jackson jf Birmi"^mokBur,iaLwiH M , ,, , . ! low in White Chapel Memorial Service for Walter V. Jackson, cemetery 89, of 532 Orchard Lake will be A rosar wi„ be said tonight 11 a. m. tomorrow in the Hun- at „ m at the Price Funeral toon Funeral Home with burial Home in Maple Hill Cemetery, Charlotte. Paul S. Parton Mr. Jackson, a retired em- AV0N township - Service ploye of Pontiac Motor Division, for Pau, § parm g of 2863 died yesterday after a long ill- corinthia will be iff p.m. to-ness- morrow at the Harold R. Davis - i. . Funeral Home in Aubura Percy /wenzies Heights. Burial will follow in " ! Service for Percy Menzies, Moqnt Avon Cemetery. 80, of 767 S. Winding, Water-* Surviving, besides those al-ford Township, will be 11 a.m. j ready listed, is a daughter, Mrs. ] Thursday in Sparks - Griffin Jerry Foster of, Avon Township. j Chapel with burial in Acacia * ' Park Cemetery, Beverly Hills. ] A. J. Tillman ! Mr. Menzies, a retired tool) KEEG0 HARBOR - Word maker, died yesterday after a . g been recejved 0f the death brief illness. He was a member l{ former resident A j Tin. of Order of Eastern Star, Chap- man ?3 of Rossville Ga ter 477 and past master of Unit- Mr TOlman died ,ast week, ed Craft Masonic Lodge No, 574. iRer a brjef juness service; Surviving are three daugh- \ . burja, were Saturday in| ters, Mrs. Frances Hornauer of]Rossvjne La Habra, Calif., Mrs. Mar-j survivjng besides his wife,; garet Rupprecht and Mrs. Or- Rate are a son jack 0f okla-i son Willard, both of Pontiac. |boma city, Okla.; a step-Also surviving are five 8ramHaauffhter, Mrs. Harold (Cath- Taylor, Mrs. Glen Grider, H Wendel and Ricky Parlon; i ers and eight grandchildren. children; and five great-grandchildren. Allyn R. Champion WIXOM - Service for A11 y n R. Champion, 68, of 29480 Wix-om will be 10 a.m. Thursday at the Casterline Funeral Home in Northville. Burial will be In Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi.. Mr. Champion died yesterday after a short illness. He was a member of "the Odd Fellows of | Novi, Wixom Post of the VFW and the Farmington Elks'Lodge. 1 Surviving is his wife, Jennie. daughter, Mrs. Harold (Cath-leen) Russ of Pontiac; a broth-four sisters; 12 grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Policeman Dies as Car Hits Pole Human beet make mere honey when Investing their money fa yield them a useful return. If It's income you seek why not ask us this week hew to help you to make1 money earn. You may be particularly interested in an ''accumulation" plan which enables you to invest as little or as much as you wish—out of income. You can consult us without any obligation whatsoever. INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS FE 2-9117 818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. IMMEDIATE QUOTATION SERVICE Our Facilities Extend from Coost to Coos* OCC Announces Sign-Up Schedule The registration schedule for Oakland Community College's fall session was announced today by Registrar Philip D. Conklin. An advance ^registration for returning students will be held Aug. 16 at both campuses, and new students may register in advance the next day at either Campus. ★ ★ ★ Regular registration is scheduled Aug. 29 and 30 at the twp campuses and Aug. 31 has been designated the date for late registration. Registration is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on all registration dates. UFO Report Set in Detroit DETROIT (AP) - A 50-year-old Detroit policeman died Monday after his car bounced off a median on the Ford Freeway here and crashed into a utility] pole. Patrolman John J. Zens, of] the Detroit Police Department’s] Pierre J. Mathieu I identification bureau, died ini TROY - Requiem mass for General HosPital in Pierre J. Mathieu, 46, of 31081Uetrolt „ _____<**4 Alpine will be 16 a.m. tomor-' no. 90,716 n.puic " * ire * i STATE OF MICHIGAN row at the St. Colufnban Church! Th, pr0bate court _____________________r----------* *or th. County of Oakland , I Estate of Damon Dean Canaday, “ Dial 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BY S P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. _________________no notification such error is made, by that It will be assumed the correct. The Press as-no responsibility tor of the first Insertion of the advertisement which has been rendered valueless through the e day of publication attar the rst Insertion. Whan cancella-ons are made be sura to get Closing time ments containing larger than regul is 12 o'clock noor An additional charge ot I Pontiac Press Box numbers. The Pontiac Press FROM I A.M. TO 5 P.M. Funeral Directors Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Voorhees-Siple I FUNERAL HOME, FE 2-5122 Established Over 40 Years _ Cemetery Lots 4-A WHITE CHAPEL,* ENTIRE LOT — ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone FE 2-5122 can FE 2-8734. Confidential. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES ‘ 739 Menominee__________FE 5-7803 GET OUT OF DEBT ON A~ PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD , TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS ___________FE 8-0456 R. DOWNS, AUGUST f d thoughts of one so dear it memory la Unidentified Flying Objects] (UFO) will be discussed tonight and tomorrow at the Veterans Memorial Building, Detroit, by a former Air Force lieutenant assigned to the government’s] investigation of the flying; saucers. * * ★ The guest speaker, Mel Noel, will discuss the three occasions he and three other officers in 1953-54 saw, groups of UFO’s, and their communication with the objects on the third sighting. The 8 p.m, public meetings are: sponsored by the Detroit UFO Information and Research Center, 672LMHIer. Steel Rod Follows dHHM and grandchildren._______ IN LOVING MEMORY OF MOTHER Gertrude M. Mortlmore. who passed away August I, 1965. God saw you getting weaker. So He did what He thought best; IG MEMORY OF OUR ennett Lee Wilson, killed to accident August 9, 1965. SEND THEM BACK TO SCHOOL WITH A PORTABLE TYPEWRITER 37 Years in Pontiac MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM REMINGTON • CORONA UNDERWOOD • ROYAL *49? • Trade in Your Old Machine • Easy Payment Plan • 1 -Year Guarantee in Our Own Service Dept. BSHiSSSF ■MHRIP■OmMSS enniTBBi ■ 12} NirHi Saginaw SI taWFENBT AVA, Mo. (AP) - A slender steel rod fell off a passing truck, bounced off the pavement, penetrated the windshield of another truck and killed a passenger inside the cab Monday. ★ ★ * The victim, Eugene Buchanan, 41, of Ava died instantly, police said. He was riding, a State Con-; |servation Commission truck, the] | highway patrol said. It iwestbound, the other truck was] eastbound on Missouri 14. DONALD E. ADAMS STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Probate Court. tor the County of Oakland Estate of Cyrel M. Ferman, Ordered that Pontiac, Michigan a ] to Josephine t 29, 1966, ’robate Courtroom, tearing be held on Tire Firm Robbed Thieves smashed a window early yesterday and took five television sets from a Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. warehouse at 40 W. Pike, Pontiac police were told. ★ * * Value of the stolen televisions was placed at $565. The break-in was discovered at 8:30 a.m. when the store was opened. pr* Dated; Dooley A DONALD E. ADAMS Judge ot Probat r. Attorneys t, 1966 e. 90,711 STATE OF MICHIGAN . The Probate Court for the County of Oakland Matter Of Bill J. Mertystczyk, Helei lartyszczyk end Michael _Andrew Met tyszczyk. Change u> n.mr. I It Is Ordered that on August 29, re blessed by knowing hi Annou.Ktments 3 ANNOUNCING ANOTHER DEBT AID INC. office, 710 Rikei Building, branch of Detr “ the GET OUT OF DEBT - AVOID GARNISHMENTS, BANKRUPTCY REPOSSESSIONS, BAD C R E Of f AND HARASSMENT. We have helped and saved thousands of people J,‘ Pontiac, Michigan the petition of Bi change Outing Planned j A golf outing followed by a picnic is planned for Pontiac Realtors Multiple Listing Serv-] ices members tomorrow. ★ * * The golf game will begin at 9 a.m. at the Silver Lake Golf Course to Waterford, Township. A picnic lunch will be served in the afternoon at Oaklapd P^rk. Martyszczyk. Mlchai Martyszczyk and Jennifer Tt tys^cjyk to- Bill J. ^Marty, H Publication and service sht as provided by Statute and Dated: July 19, 1986 DONALD E Judge July 26 and August 2 lifer Therese St 29, 1966, Courtroom, izczyk to rtyszczyk, STATE OF MICHIGAN THE PROBATE COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF OAKLAND Matter ot ROSETTA PRISCILLA CLAS-IMAN, Minor,------------- s Ordered tl ■ Name on August 30. Probate Courtroom Pontiac Michigan a hearing be held on the petition Ot Raydeth Hook to change the name ot Rosetta Priscilla Clesmen •o Rosetta Priscilla Clark. Publication and service shell be made i provided by Statute end Court Rule. Dated: July 2S, 1966. * DONALD E. ADAMS, Judge of Probate August 2, 9 end 16, 1966 v payment you c YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT." Home appointment arranged anytime AT NO CHARGE. Hours 9-7 Mon. thru Frl., Sat. 9-S FE 2-0181 (BONDED AND LICENSED) People Are Shopping Every Day.. Thru The !i Pontiac Press Classified It's the Quick, Useful Source to Find Most Everything Under the Sun, Quickly; TRY IT-YOtm SEE I 332-8181 2 ANY ROOM—HAND UPLAND HILLS FARM I CAN BE HEALED OF ANY d ell diseases "through the pow-ot your subconscious mind" - ic Unity Center. Huron end Gen- LOST; LABRADOR RETRIEVER black, female; Beagle, male. Mlle-Farmington Rds. Reward K TOY POODLE. ST: GRAY POODLE, BROWN markings under tall and on hind tel, silver collar with rhinestones, ns. to "Suzette." Reward. Call ollect 273-9628. le return. FE 2-S412. DAY IN KRESGE'S, : portfolio; contents— 1 rectory and personal :-: the 1964 civil rights LAW PROHIBITS, WITH v CERTAIN EXCEPTIONS, X; discrimination be- :•> CAUSE OF SEX. SINCE V. :-: SOME OCCUPATIONS ARE ;X CONSIDERED MORE AT- -X TRACTIVE TO PERSONS OF ONE SEX THAN THE X; X OTHER, ADVERTISE- X ments are placed UNDER THE MALE OR :* FEMALE COLUMNS FOR X; -a CONVENIENCE OF READ- X; ERS. SUCH LISTINGS ARE X-:> NOT INTENDED TO EX- -CLUDE PERSONS OF -X ;X EITHER SEX. Help Wanted Male DIRECT SALESMAN, CANVASSERS, commission basis. Don't miss this opportunity to establish yourself 2240 Years of Age ve. Salary plus commission. Call A I OPENING FOR EXPERIENCED real estate salesmen, extra benefits for right person. All inquiries confidential. Contact Warren Stout, 1450 N. Opdyke Rd.. Pontiac, Michigan. Member Multiple Listing ABLE-BODIED MAN FOR JANITOR cation. Pension, etc Housing tor men and wife. 644-1400 Ext. 210. AGGRESSIVE MENS^ORGANIZAj rrwdiate*and long1 term opportunity • in prime suburban area. Resume stating experience, references and pay requirements to Pontiac Press Box No. 10. _____________' A REAL ESTATE SALESMAN. CON-SCIENTIOUS EXPERIENCED MAN NEEDED FOR SALES MANAGER IN OUR NEW LOCATION. YOUR INCOME POTENTIAL IS UNLIMITED. ALL INQUIRIES CONFIDENTIAL. ASK FOR ROY LAZENBY-LAZENBY RLTY. OR ASSISTANT FOREMAN WITH SOME mechanical hydraulic or alectrlcal experience for gnawing plastic Inlection molding plant. Salary open. We will train right man. Should be over 21. Send resume to Pontiac Press Box 20. alert man por shippWo ah6 receiving end minor maintenance. Must be good at figures and preferably mechanically Inclined. Starting rate. 12-25 per hour, 4S hour* per week. Vacation and hotpHali-zatlon aim; paid holidays, steady work. jB-7111. ______________ • ARC WELDERS 5* HOURS Tools Fixtures. Apply In parson Jeda Industries, 990 Wide Track ^ C—6 I1IK rox H*U I ItKSK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 0. 1966 A PART TIME JOB A married imi. 21-34. to » 4 fiours per evening. Can 674 4 pm.*7 p.m. $200 PER MONTH BARBER—GOOD JOB—2525 . 332*703, aftar 4. BARTENDER — MUST BE TOP-notch with cocktails, haw* pieplant personality, be dependable and able BONANZA ONE MAN Established business with exclusive franchise, high-profit margin, low overhead, prestige product manufactured by Dupont Company. Excellent gross opportunity. Owner 1 smali**1hvesfmen! Display Manager Welto's personnel. DRAFTSMAN TRAINEE Some training required, some < e desirable. Artco Inc. M DRY CLEANING INSPECTOR. AIR conditioned plant. Good salary, Birmingham Cleaners. 1253 S. Woodward,........... DRIVER FOR SEMI RIG — WILL-Ing to work In factory when not driving. Plont located in Lake Brand. ». Cell 152-1703 from » X AYERS F < _____ K of work. Villa Homes. 426-1438. BUS BOY WANTED FOR FULL time. Apply in person only. Franks Restaurant, Kongo Harbor. BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS AND Special Machine Builders 5 Opening with 26-year-old company, good working condition, pension, top wages, top benefits. Steady veer around Work with overtime. Opportunity to become skilled in all phases of automation assembly equipment with leading company I in this field. Clyde Corporation, ’*** *V. Maple. Troy. DRIVER'S HELPER j move furniture. r. Johnson, 673-5787. E. D. M. MACHINISTS FULL TIME JANITOR. NIGH Sundays end holidays off. Ap In person Town A Country I FLAT SHARPENER SPLINE GRINDER Must Have Broach Experience! (pension program with prog res- Eqpal Opportunity EmpRoyor BOYS-TRAVEL be 21, high school graduate. . otters Incentive plan with gi starting salary and liberal be fits. Ask for Mr. Hopklns-673-1201 for Interview. ASSOCIATES CONSUMERS FINANCE CO. 4676 Dixie_______ Drayton Plait anufacture local-ike has tmmedi-■ machinists ex-ctrical discharge An equal opportunity employer. ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN Trainee 21-30, high school grad with electrical, mechanical back-i ground. Call Mr. Sipple. Intema-I tional Personnel, IMP -Woodward! near 14 Mile. 642-6266. ■ hospitalization, pension paid vacations.. Elias Big Boy Restaurant Telegraph at Huron Dixie Hwy. at Silver LK. Rd_ HAND SCREW MACHINE ' 'OPERATOR MANAGEM'T TRAINEES (22-28) 418,000 POSSIBLE WITHIN 2 YEARS Michigan's largest used car dealer is opening 6 more lots this year and needs men to manage them. No Experience Necessary as we hove a complete training program, salary plus bonuses, fringe bene-i; fits, paid vacation, etc. APPLY Iff PERSON [King Auto, Inc. | M59 at Elizabeth Ik. Rd. PONTIAC 338-4088 N TO DELIVER, INSTALL AND A Help Wealed Mute 4 Help Waited Female SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT. “White tall time. 52.00 pgr r. Stall Station, Huntar at Oak, tndCK-fttl SERVICEMAN. EX-—***** preferred, IS Mila and TURRET LIES AND HARDINGE operators. Top wages and J» tits. Benton Corporation, 2*7® TECHNICIAN HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE WITH JANITORS Pontiac General Hospital has Immediate openings for full-time |ani-tors; age 30 and over. $336.18 per month. Apply In person. Personnel s.^Prefersomfconf CLERK Woman lor tad and part t counter work. Pantlac * — I Dry Cleaners. 54P s. Tele- c£r ~i DAYS, NO SATUR-lor work at Me|da • store. Apply wee* days Damman's. Bloomfield >plng Center, Blrmlng- COSMETIC GIRL, EXPERIENCE preferred, over 21. Join and grew with a fast growing chain. Meal working conditions, frlng ■ — anr.s MATURE WOMAN FOR GENERAL tloc Press Box COUNTER GIRL - EXCELLENT pay, .meals, uniforms i ‘ vacations. Huntar House Huntar Blvd. Birmingham. NURSES AIDES' 66EEOED. APPLY 532 Orchard Lake Avenue - Apply 532 Orchard Lake Avenue - Tuesday and Thursday, 9:J6 through TRUCK DRIVER, MUST years of age and have license. Apply In persoi Avalon Street, Auburn Super Chief. FE 2-6651. 21 DISHWASHER, NIGHT SHIFT - MILL AND ENGINE LATHE OPERATORS Make over $200 weekly Drill Press Operator >, Blue Cross, Liberal v Rough 4 need ape AEROSPACE WORK Part time work available McGREGOR MFG. CORP. di steady work. No students. Sea Mr. M I Smith at K-Mort, Glenwood Plaza, - between I A.M.-9 AM. Landscape help. steady| I 679-6604°Tro'y. * ° ** |W LAB TECHNICIAN Chemical or bilogical trainings exc. salary. See Mr. Sipple, International Personnel, 1880 Woodward near ! 14 Mile. 642-8268!___________' i 'LATHE AND MILL HAND, EX- | i perienced, steady. Highland Ma-I chine Products DH| 4865 Highland 674-2584 | LATHE AND MILL OPERA-! I TORS AND GRINDERS, EX-j I PERIENCED ONLY. OVER-! ►I TIME, FRINGE BENEFITS. I j BRINEY MFG. CO., 1165, I SEBA RD., OFF W. M59. 3 LINOLEUM, TILE AND FORMICA1 V TO WORK AS AUTO PARTS trk. Must be experience. Apply l Jllerback Auto Parts, 273 Baldwin' re. Phone 338-4051. If WANTED FOR GAS STATION! id sporting goods store, 21 to 65 iars of age, 48 hrs. per ' PPly 3630 Dixie Hwy., Dr Drill Press Operators DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER, OX- DINING ROOM SUPERVISOR Ted's of Pontiac Mall, has ai !wOOL PRESSER, EXPERIENCED. ‘ Janet Davis Cleaners. 647-30W. SERVICE STA- WANTE0. p0RTER FOR' LOCAL ) Elizabeth Lake 1 MOTHERS! Th« Playhouse Co. Needs vou ta aaU toys, this ta Me cash Investment, del Ivory i collecting. Extra bonus gifts, Got commission. Training now. F * roglotoro llrmlnghan hours. Call 644-4900. HeipWantadM. jnrJL^ HAIR STYLIST WANTED FOR l»RO- 1807. _______ IMMEDIATE OPENlllG . FOR . Laundry. 2674 fl ’ MACHINISTS Lake Manufacturer has or young men and women n machine operations. Steady m good waoes and Wta ^""wsIW^LSKteH: n equal opportunity employer. 12-222?“* NOW IS THE TIME TO BECOME A TOY CHEST DEALER LEARN NOW - SELL NOW FOR FALL DELIVERY SEE THE TOYS -COLOR CATALOG SHOWN BY TOY CHEST DEALER ANN ORT - 682-1833 NO INVESTMENT NEEDED THE TOY CHEST . NOW REPLACING SUMMER HELP ipenlngs on night shift for wsltr no experience necessary, will ti Excellent benefits. Paid meals, plfallzatlon, pension plan and Apply In person Elias Big Boy Restaurant Telegraph at Huron Dixie Hwy. at Silver Ll ME 7-5173. M.HT Battaw. » HOME IN 4 ta. Cat! Ed Ki 45. Reyeraa char ____M HOMS OR cottage. 1 children, 2 aduli _______om 175 to SIB®. 362-7798, ADC MOTHER AND I CHILDREN 'all separated, ana desperata tor house anywhere — Plesse consider US. 332-7305._________, ■■ BENOIX ENGINEER , Wishes to rent a 2 or 2 bedroom house hi the north or northwest area. Plesse call Poroaanel Office, Bendix Research Laboratories. PHARMACIST Position available tor i pharmacist In well - or progrart pital. PC LADY OR COUPLE, HELP POLIO patient. Llvei'ln. Children —I --------- 624-1772. LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED, male and female, “art or time. Call FE 29144. TEACHER FOR UPPERJELEMEN: Iter red. 62M292. Sedas Help, Male-Female 8-A F°R £tjCi- drug STORE clerk, EXPERI-Art Bidelman’l enced' personable, N. Saginaw. Men's Clothing Salesman essential. Good ; EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. J, shift. Full or part time. Gi [j; Grill, 49 N. Saginaw St. r.! EXPERIENCED RESPONSI d housekeeper, good with chlk i- live ift, top wages, vacation private employment. FE 5-811 ■ d apply- Over scale. 332-9121. CAREER OPPORTUNITY Farmer's Insurance group, one i America's leading multiple Hr over 25. Applicants must be ml ried and presently employed. Lee without disturbing your present e ployment. We'll license, train a.._ finance you. Contact Ray Carnes, district manager et lit® *—“■ Career Opportunity 4 MEN NEEDED No experience necessary, we train. Starting pay $150 plus hospital and „ life Insurance. Profit-sharing pro- ?ram tor outstanding applicants, all PERSONNEL MGR„ 674-2231, COMBINATION DISHWASHER—PI za delivery, car required. Au< matte dishwasher. Preferably i 4. Woodward, Royal Oak. Driver and Delivery Man Steady employment, for home fui nishings. Apply In person at 257 Drill Press Operator Experienced, 58 hours. Apply person Jods Industries, 590 W EXPERIENCED OIL AND GAS! Burner service man, top pa yS steady work for right person. Apply < --PENNEY'S' ICED BRUNSWICK mechanic. “Paid h L(MACHINIST WITH SOME EXPERI-! ehce. Steady work with benefits.: _ c Ball Mfg. Co OR 3-28S3. or 682- iN ^^92. Eves y- ' ; 1 .4 MANAGER TRAINEE MIRACLE MILE 1 PLASTICS PLANT NEEDS Help Wanted Female 1 WOMAN, FULL TIME, 1 WO/V Bn part time, small store, Drayto IlfSlSiT PONTIAC GIRLS NEEDED AT ONCE 9 BURRO SENSt OPERATORS 30 SENIOR TYPISTS | If,JUNIOR TYPISTS 10 CLERKS ... ALL SHIFTS FOR DINING ROOM; waitresses, cafeteria waitresses, salad girls, counter servers. Paid, vacations and Insurance. Meals and uniforms furnished. Aooly Green-1 field's . Restaurant, 71 Birmingham.________________ PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY. OK-1 lord area. Send letter giving exp. to Pontiat Press Box No. 82. Sales Opportunity Nursing' Home' 6l| 338-71*3,'TI3Jj1__ M| .....I Ext. 25, 10 a.m. through 4 p.m.l EXPERIENCE AND SOME--------- Monday through Friday. ______ LEGE EDUCATION. PLEASE RECEPTIONIST-OFFICE MGR. ! SEND A COMPLETE_ RESUME Exc. opportunity. Experienced — TO MR. D. R. BRIDGES, 40C Sharp. Personality-plus gal. Call S^.PIX, DETROIT, MICHIGAN ,s Koss, 335-6165. 48217. : full-time wait. 1 ftesponsIble'.woman OR emu SALES PERSONNEL NEEDED! , 5 p.m. t. 3 Hi, expanstonn,progr.m? earr FAMILY OF 5 DEBtRCS 1 BED-room house. Robert Harris, 332-B151, Rm. 122, after 4. FAMILY-DESPERATELY NEEDS 3 OAKLAND UNIVERSITY PROFES-sor wants 2 bedroom, laraa llvlno room. 335-7956. THE FORD MOTOR CO., WIXOM plant, has employees seeking housing accommodations. It you have rental property available contact A. D. Toy, Housing Coordinator. FI 9-2400, Ext. 2504. 5000 Grand ata^m rii|Hllii»MWg|BM»taita^^M WANTED HOUSE TO RENT, 3 ' bedrooms. Sales executive :atlng in the immediate fu WANTED TO RENT A GARAGE IN i of Huron and Telegraph, es Typewriter Sales end Serv-FE 2-2201._____________________________ YOUNG MALE TEACHER DESIRES furnished apartment In Blrmlng- ham area. 674-3270.______________ YOUNG COUPLE DESIRE 2 BED- 3*Swi. Share Living Quarters 33 YOUNG LADY WITH ATTRACTIVE apartment In Pontiac will share with working girl. Must be 21 to 25. Call MA 6-2751. WantedRealEstate_________3 ALL CASH 10 MINUTES Luji h«hinij in payments or u e. Agent, 527-6400. n EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDES, „ „, ,4'S AIDES FOR MODERN) nursing home. Own transportation. Call 357-S533. j—1 i 4-8OI5 between 9 A.M.-5 P.M. only. SALES, STOCK AND FOUNTAIN LA;; GENERAL. THURSDAY THROUGH ^ TptltSdetl” ] rtfdhtf Ref. S30.e6to-9on. ,,,Vt r: Apphr. m red’eMlle ' IG1RL IS OR OVER FOR CURB AND shopping Center. advancement, starting salary, $95 per week. Call Mr. Korby at 6744)363, Pon EXCELLENT Opportunity IN A HIGH LEVEL OCCUPATION Due to continued exponslon, the Pontiac branch office of General Motors Acceptance Corp. has an opening tor ■ field representative. allowance, good working conditions and an excellent chance tor advancement basyd on qualifications. Must have Initiative, resourcefulness and like to deal with people. Young man with college background preferred. Call 682-4040 for appointment between y a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. {Jut equal opportunity employer) WANTED: A REAL SALESMAN . . . ... who wants to operate independently and who has ability and ambition to build his own business and long term security. Exclusive protected territory, guaranteed high straight commission, full fringe benefit program. An exceptional opportunity for the right man I Nationally known reputable manufacturer of complete line of high quality institutional and industrial maintenance and sanitatidh^roducts is expanding and has opening in surrounding territory for development by qualified direct Representative. Write for interview stating full qualifications, Pontiac Press, Box 60. Canada, Hawaii and Australia. We have had a very good expansion In Michigan and contemplate mare. Starting salary 8400 up. OPENING IN PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. SEABOARD FINANCE CO. 333-7017, MR. SPRINGER. T i Millwrights Electricians Pipe Fitters Maintenance Welders Painters & Glaziers Die Makers Toolmakers Pattern Makers Machine Repair Inspector-Tool & Die Houlehan, 647-7154, I NEW CAR SALESMAN Rotunda? ■a: dXV Is5 Oak-j REALTY HAS OPINING vlous records — your Income c tential is unlimited. Call N Proksch, sales manager tor p< ation, 125 North Sagl-| jrther information call . 338-0338, Kelly Girl Division. Kellv Services Uin equal opportunity employer) GRILL COOK DAYS. DOBSKM ion Lake. EM 3-9112 ■■tEachIr^^H s. 647-232S. f HOUSEKEEPER, a! HOUSEKEEPER, 'SECRETARY FOR LA N'l no?necessary, 338-7141.__ -^SECRETARY, AFTERNOONS FOR|We BUY 1 real estate office, must b»ve exc. 0R 4-0363 shorthand and typing. 5660 Dixie. 47:3 oil Hwy., Waterford. OR> YORK WE TRADE OR 4-0306 I., Drayton Plains 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS Urgently need for Immediate Saldl WARREN STOUT, Realtor ISO N. Opdyke Rd. PE 5-1165 Pontiac - Daily 'til 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ABSOLUTELY Top prices paid for all topes of property and land contracts. Buy- '"Tl'jOLL^REALTY E 2-3466______________682-0282 HOUSEKEEPER ™f|eJL|^usf 11 Children.URri. 6266885. : YOU HAVE USED 4 O Box I Call FE 4-0439 01 , Immediate opening. 6 SHOE SALESMAN Full earn In... .........■ Shoes. SO N. Saginaw. 382 Oakland Aye. SECRETARIAL Instructions-Schools 10 Bookkeeping exp. naiessary tor — . - ... . , 1 , —-Ml furniture store. Exp. In accounts | DEARBORN SEMI-TRUCK payable also necessary. Exc. op-, DRIVING SCHOOL portunlty In progressive, y o u n g WOrk YOUR WAY THROUGH c AV 3-1633 wvendefte, Michigan EL WOOD REALTY company. Salary o 5787, 357-5$. Southfield. PARTS MANAGER, SUBURBAN GM PORTER FOR ACTIVE USEO CAR lot in Pontiac area. Good working conditions, vacations, top pay, uniforms furnished. Must have valid drivers license. Apply In person to AUTORAMA Motor Sales, 2635 Orchard Lake Rd. (1 mile west of Telegraph ASSISTANT CASHIER MEN'S WEAR BOYS' WEAR SALES I CASHIER-SERVICE DESK j CREDIT INTERVIEW COTTON SHOP SALES GIRLS' WEAR SALES PLANER OPERATOR NOTIONS SALES SPORTWEAR SALES PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION GENERAL MOTORS CORP. PONTIAC, MICH. week, get premium for e; PENNEY'S ■I PONTIAC1 AREA ie additional training, a MEN FOR STEADY YEAR-AROUND 6497 Highland Road. 473-7715, I Cook Coffee Co. a’ ■" ll Telegraph, Attention Housewives Sell toys Aug. to Dec. for TOY GUIDANCE id delivery. 625-0133f ENGINEERS /. MANUFACTURING . . . TOOLING . . . TOOL DESIGN . . . DETROIT INTERVIEWS AUGUST 12, 13 AND 14 Wt art the nation's leading supplier of electro-hydraulic servo-valves, servoactuators, Industrial sei valves and control systems tor aerospace and industrial application. These product lines, plus our diversification Into numerical control machines have unlimited market potential. Our advanced manufacturing processes have kept pace with our let-age orientation. We coqtinue expand our numerical control center, make use of electron beam welding, -electrical discharge mac Ing, electrochemical machining, and advanced surface and heat testing processes. The opportunity keep abreast with the ttete-oMhe-art contributes to our employees' professional growth. Currepft Opportunities Are: EQUIPMENT DESIGN ENGINEER PROCESS DEVELOPMENT ENGINEERS Reporting to an engineering manager, economical mi design. responsible I equipment selection and the Integration of MANUFACTURING ENGINEER Determine manufacturing sequences required for the fabrication of precision perts. Requires thorough knowledge at machine tools Inspection and testing techniques, tooling and gauging concepts, stampings, castings, forgings, etc. BSME or IE sirable. c components, o snock equipment f accomplishing as- FACILITIES PLANNER Staff position reporting to manager of manufacturing engineering, will be responsible tor coordinating the plant and office facilities layout with management and layout group. Must be a good communication and capable of lustitying recommendations. Planning space and facilities requirements for future growth and expansion will be a necessity. BSME/IE, MBA desirable. TOOL DESIGNERS DeOign/layout and detalling/tobllng, jigs and fixtures, and gauges and testing of Moog products! Make recommendations tor changes factoring and/or performance. Tool design graduate—Associate Degrei precision manufacturing Industry. . Consider being a part of oui relocation, and the education itfing a men-on-the-moon. with us the opportunity h xcellent fringe benefits, Inc York State's Niagara fri ange tor personal Interview in Detroit, telephone collect (714 ) 652-2000, T. V. Cosgrove, daily o Aug. 12th. Day of Interviews pJtone.TRinlty 3-8507 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.' AN INTERVIEW IS NOT.CONVENIENT AT THIS TIME, SEND CONFIDENTIAL RESUME TO: MOOG, — BARMAID AND i PRODUCTION WORKERS Experience not necessary. Fisher Body Division 900 Baldwin Aver Pontiac, Mich 332-8361 opportunity ei j Rd. (M59). 335-5552. Exp '1 BARMAID, DAYS, NO SUNDAYS, PORTER TO CLEAN BOWLING A BABY SITTER, S OR 4 Real-Estate Salesmen I need two conscientious sales people, with at least six months experience. Excellent working conditions. Multiple Listing^ Serv- Les Brown, Realtors & Builders J FI 2-4810 or Ffe 4-3564_ RETIRED MAN FOR PART TIME night watchman, earnings to maximum allowed under social s — Bldg. BEAUTY OPERATOR, PART OR ■ | time. West Bloomfield Hair ilons. 682-9868.____________________ BABY SITTER. LIGHT HOUSE BEAUTICIANS ,ryBerX KEY PUNCH OPERATORS URGENT NEED 5 hours or more per day START IMMEDIATELY KELLY SERVICE INC. KELLY GIRL DIV, 125 N. SAGINAW FE 3-7987 | • Immediate Openings for business mind-. . ed women with at least a high school diploma, and having typing and c I e rical abilities with office or retail experience. These are permanent, salaried positions with a prominent I o c a I business concern for those who enjoy public service and contact. Excellent working e n v i r o n m e nt, fringe benefits and fail opportunity for development and advancement. Please submit a short, basic resume covering your abilities, experience and interests for immediate interview to Pontiac Press Box No. 69 SECRETARY NEEDED Work Wanted Male 11 PICKUP. BASEMENTS, GARAGES — and yardi der“' "-------------- articles picked up cost. Also clothing. SWITCHBQARD OPERATOR Part time. Applicants must t high school graduates, h a v previous switchboard exp. and t willing to rotate shifts. Apply I General Hosplte I office, Pontiac STENOS-TYPISTS GOOD EXPERIENCED X-WORK-ING WOMEN NEEDED NOW FOR PROFITABLE TEMPORARY WORK — PONTIAC AREA, CALL MANPOWER-FE 3-8336 IGHT HOME REPAIRS. PAINTING and misc. Work of various types. Experienced. 624-36)4. _________. SETUP AND SALAD GIRL V SECRETARY-BOOKKEEPER NEED-ed to open new business office at Seminole HIII6 Nursing Home. Cell 338-7153, Ext. 25, 10 6,m. through 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. TEACHER NEEDS SITTER F children In Commerce area, housework, own trensp., rets. P. O. Box 148, Union Lake. , WAITRESS FOR I ROUGH CARPENTERS CONTRAC- FIRE DEPARTMENT »■ August 25, ?966. PORTER NEEDED 1015 Golf Dr. near Orchard L Rd. and Telegraph. RETIRED MAN - 4 NIGHTS r E D, EDUCATIONAL I. Woodward area. For ___________Highland Rd.______ LEGAL SECRETARY, EXPERI------- desired. FE 4-9501 for ap- service Station attendant, STANOARD OIL CAR CARE CEN-ter has openings tor mechanics In tone up, brake and alignment. Days - Sunday oft. Excellent bay and fringe benefits. Little pumping necessary. Mf I !7-om°® ISTOCKMAN - FOR WORK A1........... | pie - Telegraph Store — Apply ' week days, (—6 pm. Damthan'i Bloomfield Plaza Shopping Cento —Birmingham,_______ TURRET LATHE OPERATOR -capable of making setups an reading blueprints, exc. wages an I fringe benefits. Contact Bob Me ' Clendon, Brlney Bushing, ii4 N Cass Ave., Pontiac. 334-2588. Equa Opportunity Employer. . Good wages, pleasant Howard Johnson's prsph et Maple Rd., Blrmlnghar for permanent employment desirable occupation. Must __ previous experience In handling of cash and light typing. Good starting salary with periodic Increases and many fringe benefits. A ' at our store in the Pontiac 4 ""rose” JEWELERS * have an opening for e cashier over 2S. S P.M. P.M. Paid hospitalization, vacation and pension plan. ir Walton and Perry. xjsands of busy hqmer lust like you — are havl . I making good money — ’ $45 llerettes. Select your own h plan your own schedule oy your own territory. ■ Bryan at OR 3-4865. AND PRACTICAL NURSES 3382. 255 State Stre< (ID FOR MOTEL - EXPERI-mced preferred. Must hsv ransportatlon. FE 3-7906 MATURE OFFICE GIRL FOR TELEPHONE AND ---- TYPING IN DRAY* HWiilta FOR AP- TON PLAINS. ic giving Itus, |OP fmmm ... ................ PATCH plastering, all kinds. , ... ,jlt-tlme employment. Apply! H. Meyers. OR 3-1345._____________jp| I person only. Frank's Restau-; SAAALL BRICK, BLOCK AND STONE —t, Keego Harbor.__________ i jobs, specialize In chimneys. Call FOR FAST SERVICE AND TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR PROPERTY — LIST YOUR HOUSE AT THE MALL. VISIT OUR BOOTH IN FRONT OF TED'S RESTAURANT GEORGE VONDERHARR, Realtor .n the Mall MLS Room til 682-5602 1 It busy, 682-5800 tain, 3 bedroom, ( Work Wanted female 12 Y HOME. OR tings. | r IRONINGS DONE TELLER Immediate opening I to type, handle cash _ _ — public Good working conditions and fringe benefits with local Ings and Loan Company. Sand ume to Pontiac Press Box " OFFICE WORK AND MISCELLAN- moN Bulldlngjeitoice6-S^ppnesJ3 PERSONALIZED HOMES WAITRESSES BE MORE-BE A JOHNSON GIRL it working conditions. Above rage earnings. Must be —* wllllrlg to train and Dressmaking & Tailoring 17 Landscaping' _________Jl M MERION BLUE SOD, DEL.IV- Convalescert-Nursing FOR AMBULATORY ___P .^.cializes In diet cases, private or semi-private. EM 3-2536. Moving and Trucking AA MOVING E 4-3177 or 35-3958 after 6 YOUNG WOMEN INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION will employ woman, 18-22, to train In its personnel control and management dept., no experience nec-cessary, no typing required. Must be ready to start work ImmedlSte- SALARY $425 MONTH Phono Personnel Manager tor In- YOUNG WOMEN FOR INTEREST-ing office work, type 50 words per minute, no experience necessary. Miss Miller, International Help Wanted.M. or^F. 8 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Postlva RH Neg. $7.00- 610.00—612.00 DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr., W. Mon. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. _________Wed. 1 p.m.-7 pun. BOWLING CENTER EMPLOYES Sevov Lanes, Pontiac’s newest Bowling Center is Interviewing to Mfitatata positions; Bardtenders, cent"' ------ -------_.,d |ani graph, Pontiac. BUSBOYS _______ and salad girls. Day and evening end benefits. ApptPMMPiiWP day, 2-5 p-nt. Bottle 8, Basket Shop, IBS N. HllT ta I H mlngham, 444-6553. COUPLE FOR RESTAURANT cleaning and dish washing, steady lob. top wages, morning or night shift. Only mature responsible persons need apply- Hoemlfeld Canopy, 6S60 -Orchard Lake Rd wit._______ v ______________ COMFORTABLE HOME AND PAY tor retired lady or couple In n turn for Hghf ssrvltai. Ml 4-6286. bCSK CLERKS NEEDED. EXPERI enced. Holiday Inn of Pontiac, ItOI S. Telegraph. : tj-2209 ■ediTJ Apartments, furnished 37 Painting and Decorating 23 QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-2872 P11 washlnO- 673- d Associates. FE 4-8284. Wanted Children te Board 28 RELIABLE LICENSED HO Wanted Household Goods 29 CASH FOR GOOD CLEAN USED *—nlto*. Call Hairs Auction, r 3FT871 or MY 34141, We'll auction It or buy It. B & b Auction 9 Dixit OR 3-2717 COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS -et cash. FE------ Wanted Miscellaneous 38 | equipment, etc. LISTINGS WANTED not give us e try, we would property. TIMES—TIMES—TIMES REALTOR — APPRAISER 5690 DIXIE HIGHWAY (South of Waterford Hill) I 4-0396_______Open, 9-9 Dalit REALTY, 626-9575. I OR EVENINGS YORK PLAINS, WATERFORD, AI___ ROUNDING AREAS, PROMPT, NO OBLIGATION APPRAISERS. WE BUY OUTRIGHT, NO FEES, NO WAITING. FOR FURTHER DETAILS OF OUR UNIQUE GUARANTEED SALES PLAN CALL. OR 4-0363 ROOM FURNISHED APART- 9 children. Inquire c BEDROOM APARTMENT, 2 CE-ramlc baths, sir-conditioned, car-peted, ^complete formica kitchen. Washer and dryer. Intercom sys- ROOMS AND BATH, UTIUTIES. '09 Williams. FE 8-0784. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL- »sit. Inquire at : a. Call 338-4054. decorated, 835 3 ROOMS, NEAR PONTIAC MO- 3 ROOMS, DEPOSIT REQUIRED ROOMS AND BATH, BABY welcome, $37JO per wk. with a 6100 deposit, inquire at 273 Baldwin Avo. Call n~ r6oMS AND BATit, ADULTS jniy. East side, FE 2-1672. 5 ROOMS, 640 PER WEEK, 650 DE-poslt, city. 474-»7l. ADULT COUPLE ONLY, 2 ROOMS — garage, '1#4 Henderson tatort >.m. * new. Suitable for MAtORE !, Good reference, Cell be-i 54 p.m. 334-0715. J c—a TIMES DORRIS ■ THE PONTIAC PfrESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1066 S4 CARNIVAL By Dick H — K^L.L'^osS!Nic« YORK gjrwrJTW.^ - '..... "m« r« 3-o' ml" ! |p§j» I sid^r tr«o». | Times Realty »EALTORcAW>RAISOR . multiple listing'service j „.J«K’. ■ • T~l : ANNETT'S Northern4 PRUSHOUR M & 'ifl— ■/I 3 DTRUBLE E IT IS __ KAMPSEN SPACE AGE Waterford Ranch ifiii STOUTS Best Buys Today Country Style - “It’s a deal then. We go steady until ctur i Gulf Oil Corporation AL PAULY 30 ACRES, HOME SKI HILLS LU/vwvttKUAi ""si'-SfKS SUNOCO tgLjg "Big Money" .nTontiac Tri-level - wm wm O'NEIL And Call the Van Coast to Coast Trades $277 THREE ROOM OUTFIT m W |Zmp"« listing S«fVlceM'40,< TO SETTLE ESTATE TAVERN LICENSE and RESTAURANT 17 ACRES 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, 10 AND~M~ACR EU“ A R CE L 57WHIT E LXrPAULY “^VAT^NTTdfr Kliii BATEMAN usiness Opportunities 59 A COUNTRY STORE & beer USO N, ODdyk* Rd._Ph._FE MH5 mm ladd'S OF PONTIAC “KT Beaver Lake PRIVATE RANCH R LOT PRESTIGE AREA BEST OFFER OR 4-1456 PLEASANT ACRES lX EASY WALKING DISTANCE 15 o Qrtonvllle I restaurant in excellent Roy- ng|9£i Warden Realty Ion* «"d'only Xmi"»Vlrom You will love Beaver Lake Shores ,L j’fnOpS II i" H,,,hw,y "Is GROCERY, BEER AND WINE C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS OPEN 7DAYS 1 feHSJr “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" HR 1& 2 ACRE^PARCELS ST — FOR THE HORSEY SE1 • RS 5 nmm SEASONED ggpHS® flPfMWl 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS' WAR.KN STOUT, LOANS 0AkLANDmL6ANC*C0. ft gftgfeyg AUTOMAnfziG zag 5= "eNKtrtT'stoye' US I ' 8'-lO'-l2' AND 14' ftggii pSffli facTpyrkIfsects •passf —H jW£S-- ^GALLAGHER'S lUSIC FESTIVAL TRADE-IN GINNELL'S DOWNTOWN 27 S. SAGINAW . gw For The Finest In ;\ THE PONTIAC PRESS, COCKER SPANIEL inths, female, champion ________am, 34 Champion! In pedigree. AKC 13 mos. diver female miniature Poodle. REGISTERED SIAMESE KITTENS Seel, Blue and Chocolate point, also BEAGLE PUPPIES, lit E. 336-2994, after 13 noon GERMAN SHEPHERD POPPIES HOUSE OF POODLES GROOMING AND SUPPLIES OSTER CLIPPERS AND BLADES 5S10 Dixie Hoy.__ORJ-aMO REGISTERED TOY FOX TERRIER ________________E 2-1497. REGISTERED ENGLISH POINTER, male, year *,J REGISTERED TOY F SIAMESE TOM CAT. DECLAWED end wormed. Good (tud. Harness, leash and bowl Included. S35. EM 3-2353. __________________ VIZSLA PUPS, 3V> MONTHS. HUNT- perfect pet. AKC reglsterec AUCTION SALE: EVERY SATUR-day night, 7:30. Furniture, sporting goods, hardware, groceries and EVAN'S EQUIPMENT Is Having Its Last Rourldup on 1966 Apaches BIG CHIEF SAY MOVE PLENTY CAMPERS OR BURN LITTLE CHIEF RAVEN “DICK" TO STAKE. ME GIVE SUCH GOOD DEALS YOU THINK | NUTS. SO PLEASE COME TO RESERVATION AND MAKE ME MUCH HAPPY. YOUR APACHE DEALER ^Hours, 9 •.m. to8^>,m. Evan's Equipment 4307 DIXIE HWY., CLARKSTON 1966 NIMROD CAMPERS CRUISE OUT, INC. > loin o APACHE CAMP TRAILER, REA-sonable, OR 3-9351. APACHE CAMP TRAILERS Factory Denhonstrator, never t to camp in. $339. Open d 'till 0 p.m., Sunday It am 5 p.m. BILL COlLER. Ape Factory Hometown Dealer, 1 r 1943 PONTIAC CHIEF. H^XST. 2 bedroom, exc. condition. Call I fora 5 p.m. 336-4040. __________* I >44, lO'XSS* MOBILE HOME, FJJ ly furnished. 333-744* after 5: < LaForest, Water. CAMPING SITES 100 acres, private lake, safe_, modern facilities, McFeely Retort, 1140 Ml 5, Ortonvllle.___ EVERY FRIDAY . . 7:30 EVERY SATURDAY ......, 7:30 EVERY SUNDAY ........ 2:00 Sporting Goods—All Times Door Prizes Every Auction We Buy—Sell-Trade, Retail 7 d Consignments Welcome MB AUCTION > Dixie Hwy._______OR 3-8717 OUTDOOR COUNTRY MARKET, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 42$ N. Woodward, Bloomfield Hills, Sat. Aug. 13 at 10 a.m.-9. Antiques Victorian and iunk, local artiste and work, lunch- WEDNESMY. AUG. 10-10:30 a George Cole Farm Eetete 9710 E. Newburg Rd., Durand WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17 - PI ant t-Trees-Sh rubs 81 -A BLUE SPRUCE GOOD SHINNERS, UmtBck____________S3 1 WELSH MARE WITH 3 WEEK colt. 1 Welsh pony, IV* yrs. old. 2 YEAR OLD APPALOOSA FILLY, *300; 1 Thoroughbred Stud, 3300; 1 Roan, $130, OR S-HQ.____________ * WEEK OLD PIGS, PONY CARV —d harness, rMlna hot— —1 -wrap halier. 423-1333. O-YEAR-OU) WARE, ENGLISH OR Western. Very gentle. Exc. con- dWton. 4B-S7S4- ____________ | APPALOOSAS, QUARTER HORSES, | registered. SM service end h**rd-I |«B- Call Lazy P. OMOIS. DOUBLE THE FUN AT Va THE COST New 1966 Coachmen Now on Display at JOHNSON'S VACATION TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. WALTON FOR RENT. TRAVEL AND LIVE IN ------- ome. Available Aug. 3-2000. HOBO PICK-UP CAMPERS NEW LOCATION For Stjchlers (1 mile west of our old address) 2i;000 sq. ft. blacktop ' (no muddy feet) Modern service facilities Up to date access. Display INSPECT CENTURY-MALLARD SAGE-TAG-A-L0NG All self contained. 14‘ to 20' tour and eight sleepers. ALL MALLARDS AND SAGES SPECIALLY PRICED . . . REDUCED TO SELL ' HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY ':00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. SATURDAY ,:00 a.m. to 5:00 pm. CLpSEO ALL DAY SUNDAY. TOM STACHLER AUTO AND MOBILE SALES 1 W. Highland Rd. M-39, FE 2-4921 PICKUP CAMPERS YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE wood. Camp-life. Tub Wodt most Lapeer on M21. WHY RENT? amp«r year around. 1966 APACHE RAVEN. } $11.27 mo 1966 APACHE EAGLE ) $17.10 mo 1966 BUFFALO ) $21.45 mo< YOUR APACHE DEALER EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 4507 Dlx)e Hwy., Clarkston telescoping, bumpers,______________I racks. Lowry Camper Sales, 1323 S. Hospital Road, I aka EM 3-3401. Spare I lO'XSS' ROYCRAFT, IN PARK NEAR Pontiac. Completely furnished, ' MBOHl poaaeaslen. 794-3400. ANDERSON SALES S, SERVICE 1443 S. Telegraph EE 3-71 (M RENT-A-CYCLE BY THE HOUR, DAY OR WEEK. New Yamate SO, 00 and twin lOOs. Rates cheaper than owning. RIDA-RENTA CYCLE 714 S, Woodward, Bqham 447-7480 MOTORCYCLE REPAIR WORK, ■gltflir FE 3-9114. ‘mMlldtoJ SUZUKI CYCLES. 3 :-2Sbcc. rupp ________ _j $139.95. Take M59 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone MArn 9-2179- Lone Start 19' to 12* and MFG Inboard or outboards, Glosstron Boats, end Flberglas led Canoes es low as S1S9. Riveria Cruller Pon-----WlMPi Shore Station boat lifts, and also Lone Star Sail Boats, low as —* -GOOD BUYS- Oday Splnt Boat Cost New $795 NOW ONLY — $330 Centruy 19' Inboard, with 109 grey,; jtt ■ uses Lit -(nice) SUZUKI BETTER GET 'EM NOV. 2 MOS. — )2,Q0u MILE WARRANTY TUK0 SALES INC. 172 E. AUBURN — ROCHESTER UL 2-3343 SO'XIO' GOOD CONDITION. SUZUKI KAWASAKI BULTACO MOTORCYCLES MINI-BIKES Bert's House of Champions (Formerly Custom Color) _______238 W. Montcalm 2 PONTIAC CHIEF, GOOD lition. Reasonable. EM 34)607. 1 CHAMPION, 46'XIO', 1 BED-1 UNI —1 after 5:30 p Bicycles * — I BOYS, GIRLS' 20", 24'' AND 1 °-t “ — ” -~«ed S20 up. 33S-475S. 1941 MOBILE HOME, 2 BEDROOM. Good condition. Located ( 1 | " price $1,000. FE 5-~ - ___________ . TON PICKUP, RUNS. good, $40. 335-7204, ____j 1937 FORD 5-YARD DUMP TRUCK,! 2-spe*d. <423. 8S2-4S37. __________ * Johnson $095. CLIFF DREYERS O'DAY FAMILY SAILBOAT, DAC-I r Johnson's Outboard A SAILBOATS Wayfarer, Aqua-Cat, B-Llon, Pace-ships, Bayviewer; also used boats, rentals, fittings. AVON SAILBOATS ISED SKI BOAT, 14' FIBER SLICK-creft. 75 h.p. Evlnrude, trailer, cover Included. Total price, 11,100. Can be seen at Harrington Boat Works, 1899 S. Telegraph. FE 2-4033. Airplanes 1940 GMC, 19S9 FORD PICKUPS. FE 5-2741. >43 FORD F-350 1-TON 4CYLIN der with 4-speed transmission, owner like new. JEROME FOPD Rochester's Ford Peeler- OL 1-9/U 1963 Ford Vi-on Pickup $895 HOMER HIGHT white top, heater, whitewall tire*, only sev oown and weekly payments of $1192. HAROLD F TURNER FORD, INC. I 444 S. WOODWARD A BIRMINGHAM OLIVER BUICK 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 .iUCKY AUTO 363-0943 otter 5 P 1943 CHEVROLET. SINGLE AXLE Dump. Excellent condition. “ * "■ Trucking 674-2553. .1 CHEVY V* TON, 4 CYLINDER, etondord transmission, Fleet ,J~ 3199 Devondale Rd. 966 AUSTIN COOPER S 1275, Excellent condition, extras, must sell, >1,895 or teade down, 33S-9579. 966 VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER UNIT. Full factory equipment everything Including fold back top for standing room, icebox, water, table. Autorama MOTOR SALES 635 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-441 1 Mile West of Telegraph_ 944 CHEVROLET PICKUP. GOOD condition, 81,200. OR 3-5240._ 964 FORD Vj-TON PICK-UP. V-8 Mlchelln tires. Booh s- Accessories 97 12* ALUMINUM BOATS $99. TRAIL- 382 Oakland Ave. DETROITER. 12'XS6'. GAS ALL-WAYS AT YOUR SERVICE Sun-Air Mobile Sales, Inc. eady tor Immediate occi ancy In beautiful: SUN-AIR ESTATES OPEN: 10 a.m. -9 p.m. Sun: 12 Noon-7 p.m. PHONE: 227-1461 Anniversary Sale No reasonable offer refused On spot financing 4% Guaranteed parking space WATERFORD SALES AT COLONIAL IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY IN OUR NEW ULTRA MODERN PARKS AH 1964 Models on Display In Every Price Rang* DETROITER - PCNTIAC CHIEF KROPF King Size Values Lion Size Savings Now Over 35 used to select from. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Sales 4301 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Open M to 4 Star Park, t extra charge. Alee see the famoi light weight Winnebago Trailers. OXFORD TRAILER SALES 3(63-231 o4rsT 12' MYERS ALUMINUM, 0/ horse motor and trailer. $200. 4748 Kempt, DrlytqM^togMIl^^^^ra ALUMINUM DAY CRUISER, 'ally equipped with trailer and Mercury 300. 0925. 334-0844 aft. 16 FOOT LAPESTRAKE conditioned 2S horse Evlnrude Motor, convertible top and trailer. S33S. Call 674-08S4. 6' LARSON FIBERGLASS, CON-vertible top and all access., 75 h.p. Evlnrude motor, $112S. 674- 8 h.p. outboard motor. ALUMINUM GUARANTEED BOATS, CLEARANCE! 1965 Models Now On Display Pontiac Only MERCURY-MERCRUISER DEALER CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton Open 9-4 FE $.4401 CHRIS-GRAFT M SUPER SPORT, 210 H.P? II CAVALIER, 210 H.P. 17V* CORSAIR. 1-0, ISO H.P. MANY USED BARGAIN^ PAST, SUPER-SAFE SKIING AND family fun, no propeller hazard, let drive l$S hj>. Cuet, 17* Crawn- c"n SnFn” hu”' “crlf,°* ,,7,#' anted Cars-Truck* 1011 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Cor "Cheek the reel, then gel the beet" at Averill (Excellent conditio HELP! We need 300 shim Cadillacs, I Decs, Olds and Bukks for ou State market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1945 FORD DUMP 1943 FORD 4CYLIN- ■Krr ________ ...... JEROME FORD Rochester! Ford Pettier. ~ I MORE MONEY Paid For Sharp Cars need hundreds of sharp cars to fill out-state orders, and to stoc. my lot, that li a full city block GALE McANNALLY'S Auto Saids 1304 Baldwin FE 1-4525 STOP HERE LAST e for sharp, lets mod- M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location 1150 Oakland at Viaduct GLENN'S CREDIT i. Economy Cars. 2333 Dtxtoi WANTED GOOD USED CLEAN CARS—CASH , Opdyke Hardware FE 8-4484 Autobahn MOTORS/ INC AUTHORIZED VI \m mile north of j 1765 S. Telegraph 1965 GMC CUSTOM CAB, / 1966 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrostOTs, backup lights, , seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, inside rear view mirror $1779 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Opdyke Hardware 1962 BUICK $697 Weekly Payments . STAR AUTO SALES Heavy Duty One-Ton Pickups 4 speed, V6 and VI, heavy du "‘1960-1964 GMCs and FORDS $695 up 24 other used trucks to select tram all mekei and medals Easy Terms. ASK FOR TRUCK DEPT. FE 54101 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Mantcelm Ave. (1 Mack E. at Oakland Ave.). USTIN HEALEY, SUNBE, IAT and MORGAN. u50 New and Used SALE PRICE S BANK FINANCITY EASY TEJIMS Grimaldi v and Usad Cars 106 Cadillac 1964 Sedan DeVille Equipped with full power. You deserve the finest; why ,hl*,uxur,ou, $345 Down ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac JEROME MOTOR SALES Vide Track Or FE 1 1964 CADILLAC Convertible with full power, juRRI like new, 24 month A-l warranty, as low as $129 or old car dow~ HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7300 it, between 4 and 7 LUCKY AUTO VILLAGE RAMBLER, 15 M AND LIVERNOlS, TRO\ 63 Bulck 4 yloor wagon, ! 1959 Plymouth, convertible, 8299. MUST DISPOSE OF -Gran Sport Hardtop, va, rurqu Bltck Vinyn top. N omoney bi 816.87 weekly. Call. Mr. Murph FE 5-4101, AAcAullfte._________ 15 BUICK ELEGTRA 225 r hardtop, factory I yl top, am-fm radio, a top a condition, extra sharp. Grimaldi too Oakland Ave. Cadillac 1964 Convertible Beautiful Turquoise finish with white top and white trim. Equipped with air conditioning and AM-FM radio. A truly unique automobile! $345 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac Cadillac 1965 Coupe DeVille Eye-appealing red finish and equipped with full power end air conditioning. Bring the family out and take a • look at thn fabulous automobile. $445 DOWN ASK FOR NORM DANIELSON WILSON Pontiac Cadillac 1965 Cadillac Coupe toil power, 10,000 ectoel mU Grimaldi 1961 CHEVROLET Automatic transmission, 6 - cylinder engine. 2-door model. Full price S497. No money down and assume smelt weekly payments. We handle end arrange ell finenefng. Call Mr. Oan At: * l FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ESTATE STORAGE - PONTIAC - 1962 OLDS Convertible . Burgundy, full power $1097 Estate Storage 109 S. East Blvd. FE 3-7161 1942 CHEVY 2, i, heater. Blue finish and ic« of $495 with $5 (town ts of only 14.42. KING AUTO SALES M58 at Elizabeth Lake F FE 84088 mafic transmission. $740 Fui Prlca. BOB BORST 1942 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, POWER BRAKES AND POWER STEERING. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, Assume weekly payments ol $9.88. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. Autobahn MOTORS, INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER v* mile north of Miracle Mile 1745 S- Telegraph_FE 1-4131 Mansfield AUTO SALES 1942 Chevrolet Super Sport » 2-door hardtop." Red finish with black Interior. 1-owner, low mileage. 1104 BALDWIN FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 1943 CHEVY BEL AIR WAGON. V8, Would You Believe II Bank Rato*—No Cash Needed 1943 Chevy Bel Air 1942 Chevy Impale Co 1959 Chevy Bel Air V 1941 Chevy Sedan ... ...$*89, iwt Pontiac Wmmmmm I960 Pontiac Catalina hardtop .. 195$ Codlltac Coupe DeVille ... • >vy COMPACTS . _ 1942 Corvatr Coupe .......A 489 1941 Comet Coupe ..........* *9 1943 Ford FalrVane ........8 799 1942 Buk* Special CanYt ....$$99 1962 Old* FIS .....--mI....J2 1944 C*rv*lr Monza Coupe 1999 1943 Tempest Coup* .......* 499 \ PICKUPS 194$ Chevy 44-ton V* ' Radio, mirror* ,........*13*9 Opdyke motors , ; GEt SMART-BUY FOR LEU . 2230 Ponttoc Rd. el gm FE $-9237 FI $923$ C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 0, 1968 SPARTAN DODGE W\*m ■Cm* IK Don't Lose Your Car 1 I 1963 CHEVY IMPALA. FULL POW-er. 1 owner. A-1 condition. Gone Inte service, 51000 OR 3-5463. 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA SUPER Sport with automatic transmission, power steering and power brakes. Autorama Wtw mi jwd Cm 1965 Monza Convcrtibi* 4 Speed, buctah, only HAM. Grimaldiy 900 Oakland Ai stkk. Ere. i Mansfield 1104 BALDWIN 8-8825 FE 5-5900 O AND HEATER, WHITE- CREDIT NO PROBLEM HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. IRMINGHAV _Ml 4-75( ATTENTION. 1965 CHEVY~SUPER I—t. 327-300 h.p. 4-speed, NowwMUwtlCm Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ave. FE 2 -9150 rang# all financing. Call M D,n ** FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM f CORVETTE* POWERGLIDEr 2 50 CHEVY Biscayno 50 PONTIAC 2-ck>or 55 FORP 2-door 51 CHEVY Wagon NORTHWOODi i Downey's 1: NEW \ USED CAR LOCATION 1 f: 1084 Oakland j j'1964 CHEVROLET ^ |rrt,n,fror' $1495! r< ; Downey j5 Oldsmobile*, Inc. 1084 OAKLAND | 338-0331, 338-0332 |K 1945 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE, Super Sport, 397, 350. Going in ttie service. Take over payments. Mansfield AUTO SALES 1464 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door sedan. 4-cylinder engine, automatic transmission. 1104 BALDWIN FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900! GO!! HAUPT PONTIAC c, buckets, heater. 1964 CHEVY Wagon^ 1963 CHEVY 4-door yl automatic, healer, whitewalls, lor is browMWjr— OL 3-9721 : OF — 1946 CHEVY abu Super Sport 396 ■y Down, S17.B7 week- Downey's NEW USED CAR LOCATION 1084 Oakland 1964 CHEVROLET impele Super Sport convertlbli VI, automatic, power steering an $1595 DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331, 338-0332 BILL SMITH 1964 CHEVROLET Impolo 2-door Hardtop ■ automatic transmits! _______jl beige color w Ing interior, and car chased for only SI 462 N. Perry Street Ft 4-4241 or 3344751 steerir < CHEVY Bel Air wagon, radio, heater full price $1495. 1965 TEMPEST 2 door, autonr I cyl. radio heater, whltev ill price $1705. 1963 VENTURA brakes, whitewalls. $1495. I TEMPEST 2-dooi price, $1395'. r steering, really shari in pnea 11995. On Main Street CLARKSTON MA 5-5566 1945 CHtVELLE SS 283, 2 DOOR, white, red Interior, radio, heater, Ziebart. extra clean, S1S25, 335 1200 bet, I end 5. 745 CORVETTE 2 TOPS, LOW Mansfield ick interior. Factory War- 1104 BALDWIN FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 BIRMINGHAM TRADES 1963 OLDS 98 Convertible. Full power, sharp ) 1-owner. Priced at .................$1795. 1964 OLDS Jet Star 1 Coupe. Full power, bucket seats, metalic blue with matching interior $1895 1966 OLDS Toronado Deluxe, equipped with full power, factory air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, 6-way power seat. Only 7,000 miles ............. ..................' SAVE 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-door Hardtop. Loaded with all the extras including Factory , air conditioning and tilt steering wheel and 6-way power seat.....................$2195 1963 OLDS Hardtop, power steering and brakes, automatic. At only................. $1495 _______________2 YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 1966 CHEVELLE SS 394, 4 SPEED. 64aSoDGE Stakt D-300 .. ROCHESTER DODGE i More Pay ROCHESTER RED TAG SALE Now in effect at Matthews-Hargreaves "Chevy-land" 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 1962 Chrysler 2-Door Hardtop with VS automatic, power iteei Ing, brakes, radio, heater, tan Ir "i§®r\ BEATTIE | "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" | On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight ___OR 3-1291 McComb ! CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH j IMPERIAL OL 14551 1001 N. Moll j ROCHESTER 1963 Chrysler , Newport, we believe ^thls_^ls on< power equipment, makes this i very tine family car. Special toda: $1195| | Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth-Jeep On Dixie Hwy—Near M15 i MA 5-2635 Standard Transmission 1964 CHRYSLER w » original miles $1295 1 transportation-ouality Oscars Motors 1944 DODGE 4 DOOR, VS, AUTO- LUCKY AUTO IMF 1964 Dodge Polara 2-door with the famous 424 engine, r dio, heater, black finish, aul malic. Only S59 down. Flnan ~ $1245 MARMADUKE By Anderson and LwJugfll— mitmitm I960 < hint N MUST DISPOSED “He sure is proud of that new sign!” SEEN BANKRUPT? NEED A___________ with as low as $5 down? - Try King Plan Financing. Callus KESSLER'S Salas and Service 1954 FORD? VI STANDARD TRANS- 1959 THUNDERBIRD ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 T-BIRD 2-DOOR HARDTOP, AUGUST Transportation Specials BUY HERE-PAY HERE No Application Refused 1959 CHEVY 2-door . 1960 DODGE 2-door . 1958 OLDS? full pow. 1960 VALIANT sedan 1959 OLDS wagon .... BONNEVILLE . 1961 DODGE conv't. ‘ CHEVY, ffj IMF John McAulIHe Ford 19634 Ford Fastbock Hardtop 2-door with whitewalls, radio, heater, VS engine, power steering. Only S59 down. Finance balance of "$1045 Get a 'BETTER DEAL' at" John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 12 TEMPEST 2-dr. S497 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN AT FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto WE WILL TAKE ANYTHING LLOYD Galaxle two door hardtop. I tomatlc, power. Beautiful metallic chestnut. No money down, no payments until ’ September. Monthly payments of less than S34. Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 >2 FALCON DELUX WAGON, A omatic tranmlsslon, radio, whl vail tires, Color Black with i 1966 SKYLARK . ........................ $2988 4-Door Hardtop — Power Steering and Brakes. Custom Vinyl Top, Notch Back Bench Seats, Custom Seat Balts, 1966 LeSABRE....................................$3088 400 — Power steering and Brakes, Custom Seat Belts, « E-Z-Eye Glass, Remote Control Mirror, Factory Warranty 1966 RIVIERA .,........................ $4088 Factory Air Conditioning, 6-Way Seat, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Notch Back Seats 1964 ELECTRA "225" 2-Door Hardtop — Power Window $2088 s. Brakes jpd Steering 1963 ELECTRA "225" Convert lb la SN&Rf $1588 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-Passenger Wagon — V-8, Automel ip st i*888 1964 RENAULT /Dauphine 4-Door Sei $488 -DOUBLE CHECK — -USED CARS - 554 S. Woodword New and Used Cars 106 pay mews ot w.j/. KING AUTO SALES M58 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 8-4088 STEERING WHITEWALL 1943 T-BIRD 2 t " _____________J-........— - New S1495 at JEROME FORD Rochester Ford Dealer OL 1-9711* 1943 FORD 2-DOOR, HARDTOP. Pretty Ponies 1965 MUSTANGS 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT As Low As $49 Down and $49 Per Month HAROLD TURNER 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 1945 MUSTANG WITH AUTOMATIC —»r steering, Silver end blue h with e snow white Interior. Downey's NEW USED CAR LOCATION 1084 Oakland 1963’/2 FORD "Festback." VI, automatic, powe steering and brakes. Exceptional! $1595 . DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 1084 OAKLAND 338-0331, 338-0332 D GALAX IE S00 4 DOOR 1964 Ford- XL Convertible, e raven brakes, AM-FM radio, new i walls, many other extras. Or... $1695 Kessler-Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth-Jeep On Dixie Hwy.—Near MIS MA 5-2635 New and Usid Care 10 1965 Forcf Custom 2-Door with V8, automatic, radio, haate light blue finish. Now only — $1795 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930' On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 Autobahn MOTOR*. INC. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER to mil# north at Miracle Milt 17*5 S. Telegraph FE *4531 1946 MERCURV WHltC FULL price SI91 RELIA Oafclimd Down, SSJ7 Weekly, Can A Murphy at FE 5-4101, McAullfte. 1943 COMET 1-DOOR WITH AUTO- King Auto 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 blks. S. of Ml5) .CLARKSTON MA 5*671 REPOSSESSION - 1943 MERCURY B| 520 ___ M....latching I ceptlonally clean, S1795. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY Woodward BIRMINGHAM 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ?* door hardtop, whitewall tires, full power. Radio, heater. Full price, $795 with $5 down and weekly payments of $7.27. King Auto 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 blks. S. of Ml 5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 Autorama MOTOR SALES LLOYD $1987 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1945 FORD FAIRLANE. 2 DOOR hardtop. Standard, radio, heater, whitewalls. $1450. 474-5053, Novi. 1945 FORD GALAXIE 500 4-DOOR, LUCKY AUTO 1965 Ford Galaxie 500 Sedan 4-door, V8 automatic, power stee ing, radio, heater, black finish. $1995 BEATTIE DEALER SI le In Weterfc louble stoplii 3-1291 mPPSMHIWPRSw whitewall tires, nice let black finish with turquoise leather Interior. Full prlca only *3495 and bank fir ancingat^TE ^ AUTO OUTLET 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 1944 FORD FAIRLANE 4 PASSEN-stetlon wagon, power steering power brakes. Very dean $1295 JEROME FORD Rochester , IMF in McAuliffe Ford Chevy- olds new car TRADES W 1966 MUSTANG, Convertible, automotic, double power, red with black top, radio, heater.........$2295 1962 C0RVAIR Spyder, red With black interior, 4- speed, radio .............,.............. ... $ 795 1963 IMPALA Super Sport, automatic, radio, heater, pqwer steering ......................... .$1295 1963 PLYMOUTH Fury 2-door Hardtop, 383, 3-speed, radio. Blue.......... ...................—$1095 1963 OLDS Starfire, power steering, brakes; automatic, radio. Outstanding ........ ..... ........$1595\ ON DIXIE HWY. AT Ml 5 "Your Crossroads to Greater Savings" CLARKSTON MA 5-2604 1%S Ford . Mustang 2 plus 2 Festback with Vt, automatic, a beautiful gold finish. ”"$1995 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Stneo 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight „..J0R 3-1291 ___ IMF John McAullfft Ford 1965 Ford 4-door Custom Automatic, radio, heater, coloi — whit*. Whitewalls. Yours tot only 179 down. Finance balance "”$1545 Get e 'BETTER DEAL' at" John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 MUST DISPOSE OP - 'BETTER DEAL' at" KHi 1965 Ford XL 2-dOor Hardtop with buckets, VI, radio, heater bronze finish, whitewalls. Only $9 down. Finance balance of only - $1799 4 COMET WAGON, CLOSE-OUT 'keego KEEGO HARBOR 1965 Comet Caliente Hardtop Ing, radio, heater. $1895 BEATTIE Your FORD DEALER Since 193( On Dixie in Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1291 1959 OLDS i wagon, Automatic tram in. Good transportation _____ ill price *1*7. Credit no prob- Capitol Auto AUTOMATIC T R A NS A . . _ SION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO FORD, Ml 4-7500. Houghten Olds BUY WITH CONFIDENCE For the Best Buy In a Used Car, Look ot these Rochester bucket seats, automatic, Windows, power seat, radio, wall tires, A-1 condition. 1964 TEMPEST LeMans with automatic, power steering, radio. New Premium whitewall tires, white finish with white bucket seats. This car like new. I960 CHRYSLER Sport Coupe, auto mafic, power steering and powei brakes, power windows, radio, new whitewall tires. Siee and drive this one today. Ask for Leon (Goose) Robertson or Vern Sheffield, Sales Manager at Houghten Olds jpi et M On 9* ■vgsfe sz gy 3s* 1295 with $5 down and low woekd payments «f lust *2.97 KING AUTO SALES M58 at Elizabeth lake Rd. FE 8-4088 Mew mi Jm4 Cm 106 yssd~~ Bint, full payments 442 H. P 334-4751. m and $33.00 It Bill Smith Used rty St„,P€ 4-4 : BONNEVILLE atalina 4-door sedan. Automati transmission, radio, heater. Fu price $397. S3 down and assurr weekly payments of S3. We hai die and arrange all flnandni Call Dan at: FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 1961 Pontiac — 4-passenger, thd Id . ....y fun. A sh ______I. S75 e BIRMINGHAM - tor vacation I $995 Kessler-Hahn Chry sler-P ly mouth-Jeep On Dixie Hwy.—Near MIS MA 5-2635 condition. 21,000 miles. EM 3-3900. 162 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARDTOP, steering, brakes, loaded, $895. Ma-zurek Motor Sales, FE 4-9507, 245 Is. BlVd. East. _______—— 1942 CATALINA 4 DOOR, 1945 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, close out price. Full power. KEEGO Pontiac—GMC-Tempest "Seme location 50 Years" KEEGO HARBOR 11945 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertible, excellent, days OR 3-9747, ------•— OR 4-3604. 1945 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE - SHELTON Opdyke Hardware — FE 1-6686. 1946 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CON-vertible, full power, AM-FM re-—-g, $3150. 451-0793. LLOYD ber. Monthly payments of let?thi Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 weekly paymente c FORD. Ml 4-7500. 1943 PONTIAC WAGON. FU er, air conditioned, like n battery. 3330 Crooks Rd. IMF John McAuliffe Ford 1963 Pontiac Catalina Convertible ’ down, finance balance $1299 REPOSSESSION - 1943 OLDS 00 convertible, full power, automatic, No Money Down, S11.I7 weekly. Call Mason at FE 5-4101 McAuliffe. DON'S USED CARS SMALL AD-BIG LOT 79 CARS TQ CHOOSE PROM 2 dr. auto. 4, radio, heater, wh wells, black. 1943 OLDS F-05 Cutlass, 2 dr., auto., dou power, red, white top. 1945 MERCURY 4 dr., auto. 0, power steering, lii green. Radio, heater. 1963 IMPALA . I. double power, brown, white 9 Super Sport 2 dr. hardtop, au 677 S. LAPEER RD. 1964 CONTINENTAL CONVERTIBLE with full power Including factory air conditioning. Prided to sell. BOBBORST 1964 Olds Vista-Cruiser Wagon with VI, standard transmlsslo radio, heater, turquoise finish $1795 BEATTIE "Your FORD .DEALER Slnco 1930' On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight OR 3-1391 161 PLYMOUTH Ft«Y VS, STANI LLOYD Bonneville convertible. Full power, bucket seats. S69 down, no payments until September. Monthly payments o4 less than $49. Lloyd’ Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1964 CATALINA DELUXE, LOW King Auto 6695 Dixie Hwy. (2 blks. S. of Ml 5) CLARKSTON MA 5-2671 Mansfield AUTO SALES 1964 Pontiac Catalina 2-door hardtop. Power steering and brakes, Sunflre red finish, very sharpl 1104 BALDWIN FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 1964 TEMPEST 2-DOOR, 4-CYLIN-der, stick, a 1-owner car, still under warranty. *1,2*7 full price. LUCKY AUTO PLYMOUTH 313 4-SPEED, eders, quads, cam, solid. Bast er. Drafted. Call 684-1000, be- 1965 PLYMOUTH iteillte hardtop with VI onglna, ai tomatlc transmission, radio an heater and whitewall tires, ne car warranty, only $49 down er weekly payments of S14.N. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 757 PONTIAC 37# CUBES, 4-BAR-rel, 3 speed on the floor, sharp Interior. FE 2-2329. 1959 KXftlAC 4 00OR CATALINA, power steering, brakes, A-1, best otter. OR 3-3341. KEEGO Pontiac—GMC-Tempest "Same location 90 Ysari" KEEGO HARBOR , 1964 PONTIAC BONNE---------------- vertlbte, alr-conditfoned 99war brakes and steering, dodters car in mbit condition, $2300, days 444-976*. evenings end I 9 Buick hardtop, al COME TO THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 100 Top Quality, one-owner new car trades to choose from WHERE YOU EXPECT MORE ... AND GET IT 65 Mt. Clemens At Wide Track FE 3-7954 Mansfield d interior, low mileage. 1104 BALDWIN -8825 ■' FE 5-5900 >p, special rriwi KEEGO Pontiac—GMC-Tempest "Same location 50 Yean" |||B' ARBOR 766 GTO, MARINA GREEN, WHITE interior, good condition, tri-power. OR 3-3741. 766 BONNEVILLE. CORDOVA TOP, power, tinted glass. OR 3-Q9Q3. Mansfield - AUTO SALES 1964 Pontiac Catalina Staton wagon. Powar steering and • brakes, chrome rack, E-Z-Eye glass. Mission beige finish, 4,000 miles. Prlcsd right. 1104 BALDWIN FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 ■ RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler On M24 in Lake Orion MY 3-6266 766 BONNEVILLE, POliVER brakes and steering, plus many ex-tras. $2,850. 335-1393. Mansfield AUTO SALES ,w ^]“»e BAl[)W|N FE 8-8825 FE 5-5900 other extras. I LLOYD 1961 RAMBLER sedan. Good transportation. No money down. Full prlca $189 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 943 RAMBLER CLASSIC,! indeiv stick, going Into i must sell. $750 vary good tlon. 624-1025. 1965 Rambler Wagon 4-door company demo, new ci warranty. Only - SITU. Grimaldi 1964 PONTIAC GTO with 4 speed transmission, spa dal engine, radio and heater whlteweM tires, 24 month A-warranty, only $49 down am weakly paymanti ot ItUI. HAROLD. TURNER 1965 RAMBLERS * DEMOS 4-door sedans. Very low mileage cars. Only 3,000 and 4.000 m:les. New Car Warranty. Only $95 down, 36 - month financing at sank rates. Credit no problem. 8 to clioou from Village ' Rambler 666 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 ,SJUDJBAKER ’ 'USENGER Static wagon, automatic, transmission and tell powar, vg Full Price $495 with only *5 down and^low weekly payments of lint KING AUTO SALES M58 at Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 84088 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 —Television Programs— Pfogramt MM by stations listed In fills column am subject to change without node* 2—WJBK-TV, 4—WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CiaW-TV, 30-WK8P-TV 66-WTVS" TUESDAY EVENING l:M (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Three Hours to Kill” (1954) Dane Andrews, Donna Reed ' (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Jungle Jim (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Merlin the Magician 6:30 (2) (4) Network News (9) Marshall Dillon (50) Little Rascals (56) Museum Open House 7:60 (2) Leave It to Beaver (4) Weekend (9) Arrest and Trial (56) Science Reporter 7:21 (2) Daktari (4) My Mother, the Car (7) Combat (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) (Special) French Future 8:16 (4) Please Don’t Eat the Daisies 8:16 (2) Hippodrome (4) Dr. Kildare (7) McHale’s Navy . (9) William F. Buckley Jr. (50) Merv Griffin (56) U. S. A. 8:81 (4) Movie: “Walk Like a Dragon” (1960) Jack Lord, Nobu McCarthy (7) F Troop 8:28 (2) Petticoat Junction (7) Peyton Place (9) Man of the World 10:88 (2) (Special) CBS News Special ' (7) Fugitive (50) Shirley Eder 16:38 (2) Eye on Detroit (9) Newsmagazine (50) Film Feature 11:88(2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:28 (2) Movie: “Apache Warrior” (1957) Keith Larsen, Jim Davis (4) Tonight (7) Movie: “Tight Spot” (1955) Ginger Rogers, Edward G. Robinson (9) Movie: “They Were Sisters” (1946) James Mason, Pamela Kellino HIPPODROME, 8:38 p. m. (2) Host Rini Lopez introduces tenor Enzo Stuarti and the rock V rolling Dave Clark Five. Circus acts are also featured. AN ESSAY ON BRIDGES, 10:00 p.m. (2) A casual but appreciative review of the history, styles and lore of man’s most daring art—the building of bridges. EYE ON DETROIT, 10:30 p.m. (2) “Youth Corps in I Action” shows Detroit 14- and 15-year-olds working as I summer Junior police who observe police work and ™ methods. Sherriff-Goslin Co. Pontiec'i Oldest Reefing end Siding Company! Free Estimates 332-523P ROUND OAK 100,000 BID *179°° ROUND OAK 130,900 BTU L-*20900_J O’BRIEN HEATING »t WOMBS «• F! 2-2819 Owr Operator on Duty After Store Hour* TV Features Hippodrome to Rock 1:08 (4) Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:15 (7) News 1:88 (2) (4) News, Weather (7) After Hours 2:88 (7) Dragnet - WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:28 (2) News 6:25 (2) Summer Semester 8:28 (4 Classroom (7) Funews 6:55 (2) Editorial, News 7:88 (4) Today (7) Three Stooges 7:05 (2) News 7:38 (2) Happyland 8:88 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:25. (7) News 8:38 (7) Movie: “Nancy Goes; to Rio” (1950) Ann Soth-1 ern, Jane Powell 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) living (9) Romper Room 9:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke 9:55 (4) News 10:00 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Eye Guess (9) Hercules 10:25 (4) News 10:38 (2) McCoys (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Take 30 11:00 (2) Divorce Court (4) Chain Letter (7) Supermarket Sweep (9) Vacation Time 11:38 (4) Showdown (7) Dating Game (50) Hickory Doc AFTERNOON 12:90 (2) News, Weather, Sports Sports (4) Jeopardy (7) Donna Reed (9) Luncheon Date 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Swingin’ Country (7) Father Knows Bes (9) People in Conflict (50) Movie 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:08 (2) Love of Life (4) Match Game (7) Ben Casey (9) Movie: “I Dream of Jeanie” (1952) Ray Middleton, Muriel Lawrence 1:25.(2) News (4) Doctor’s House Call z 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal .1:55 (4) News 2:88 (2) Password (4) Days of Our Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us (50) Love That Bob 2:55. (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4)' Another World (7) General Hospital (50) Topper 3:25 (2) (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Nurses (9) Swingin’Time (50) Johnny Ginger 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (7) Dark Shadows 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (7) Where the Action Is (9) Fun House 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:88 (4) George Pierrot (7) News, Sports (56) Science Reporter 5:38 (56) What’s New 5:45 (7) Network News 5:55 (4) Here's Carol Duvall Killed in Crash DETROIT (AP). Twenty-year-old Dennis Stanza of Detroit was killed Monday afternoon in Detroit when a car. in which he was a passenger swerved off the road, hit a tree and rolled over. 3! . . Anwar to Previous Punt* Birds ---------------------— ssAgm lSmall ringing 3#Bjlttmoi 5 "Wise aid bird" »Yneliih 8 Meadow_____ 39 M»le sheep U Partidu 40 Sheep's bleat 13 Author of "Hie <1 Lugo thrush 'Kh beccbauaU 48 Cl*u of bird* 15 Chinese oocret 49 Extinct bird society 51 Layer of aye's 16 Goddess of the , in* dawn MRoman patriot 10Rotogravure 17 Head (Fr.) S3 Redactors (ab.) (ab.) 18One who erect* *4Lease 11 Retain r. stagings 55 Ardor 19 Once common 38 Greek letter 30 Razor 56 Natural channel fz New York 40 Brag -r— guy 41 Speed« i I 20 Bodies of water 42 Ellipsoid 22 Finest ~ asmnSFof ___________ powers 22 Honey-maker 2 Plant port pudding 23 Gunlock catches 3 Heating device 24 Pitcher 26Kolt adored 4Annoyers 25Again«t 30 Grain bristle* 5 Musical drama 26 Low haunts >1 Hardy heroin* 6Court 27Ireland 32 Proton water 7 Boy's nickname 28 Scrutinise ZZ Obtain ZEeisUe 29 Try SI Abound dlipsoidal 43 Herb of goosefoot family 45 Level 44 Church feat l 3 r- 6 r" B" TT TT 12 IB 14 IB 16 17 IB 9 Er 21 ■ r 34 _ ■ r 27 28 29 Mi r U 32 BS m r 36 ■ r 39 ■ F 61 12 r 17 46 48 bl 52 53 64 56 56 57 • Set to Pay for TV Relay Satellites Continues East Storm Batters South Haven NEW YORK (AP) i - The Ford Foundation -is prepared to put up all the money needed to turn into reality its proposal f