ale, bat will net be delivered. The officials said they were not concerned by the initial fast spinning because they had experienced similar difficulties in the past which were easily cor-, rectod by ground signals. Pontiac Area Due to Be Sunny and Mild for Holiday Pontiac area < residents may look forward to a pleasant holiday weekend. Skies will be partly overcast tomorrow with a high of 78 to 82. Lows are expected to fall to Tfw Weather US, W—Hwr Swm* NiMH Partly Oondy, Cooler THE PONTIAC PRESS Edition! PQNTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 19«S-HW PAGES * * * * Consumers Leads Way State Utility Bills to Be Cut Peace Hopes Are Boosted in Santo Domingo Statements by Junta Leaders May Lead to End of Stalemate SANTO DOMINGO. Dominican Republic (At — New statements by two leaders of the Dominican' junta appeared today to open the door 4o a settlement of the stalemate in the Caribbean troubled spot. Gen. Antonio Imbert Barr eras, junta president, said last night that, the most difficult part of his task was completed arid he would step down when the Dominican people were assured of safety from communism, anarchy and despotism. Communism, Imbert said in a televised speech, had been confined to just one sector of Santo Domingo. He meant the rebel sector. The remaining task, he said, could be done by any “well-intentioned Dominican.” * * * He added that the armed forces and the political parties should share in the responsibility for safeguarding the country. INTERVENTION Imbert said any attempt by the Organization of American States to impose a provisional government would be a “gross act of intervention.’’ * * * Peace prospects got a further boost last night when the armed forces secretary, Commodore Francisco J. fUvera Cqminercr, told a newsman the armed forces would support any democratic solution put forward by theOAS. He added that the junta, which he said the army considered a “democratic government,” also would back the OAS. Dien Bien Phu Vieis Kill 120 Cong SAIGON, South Viet Nam UD — U.S. Air Force planes pgunded the airfield and barracks in North Viet Nam’s Dien Bien Phu today, site of the decisive French defeat in the Indochina War. South of the border, government troops killed 120 ___________ Viet Cong and captured 8 Auto Output Sets Records Best First Six Months and June in History Tiros Circles Globe, Hunts for Storms Most Area Businesses Will Close on Monday AM but essential businesses la the area will be closed . Mopday la observance of In-dependence Day. * Banks, stores, manufacturers and commercial companies will dose. There will be no maU delivery. Mail will be picked op on a holiday sched- CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) —The Tiros 10 weather satellite circled the globe today, its camera eyes ready to record the birth and movement of hurricanes, typhoons and other storms over a great area of the globe. * * ★ ' The mechanical meteorologist, launched late last night, joined three other operating Tiros satellites—Nos. 7, 8 and 9 —on space patrol. The quartet could provide the most comprehensive photo-1 graphic coverage yet of a full season of tropical storms. Tiros 10 is the first of the series paid for by the U.S. Weather Bureau and is the forerunner of an operational system the bureau plans to begin launching early in 1966. * * ★ At first, the satellite was spinning too fast for picture taking because of the failure of ah au-tomatic slowdown device. GROUND 8IGNAL The ground- radio signal sent during the second orbit activated the device, however, and Stowed ffie satellite’s spin rate from lm rpm s To the desired Officials reported all systems were working fine. DETROIT Oft-The U,S. auto industry reported today the biggest first six months and the biggest June production marks in automotive history. Preliminary figures announced by the four major auto makers showed that 5.158,743 new cars rolled off U.S. assembly lines frbm Jan. I through June 30. That smashed the old opening six months mark of 4,431,-816 set last year. For Jane, the count was 899,117 units. This broke the old record of 777,129 cars which rolled out of l’.S. auto plants in June 1964. To the auto industry, one of the mOst welcome phases of the six months report was American Motors’ production of 202,-003 Ramblers in the first half of 1965, compared with 199,427 for the opening six months last year. MARKS FIRST It marked the fint time in several months that AMC’s output had run ahead of its 1964 pace. ' For General Motors and Chrysler the first six months’ output marked eorjwrate highs. It was Chrysler’s best opening half year since 1955. High points Of .the six months showing by the various coi% panies and divisions included: Ford Motor Co. output in June totaled 255.620 cars and ran 17 per cent ahead of June, 1964. • (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) others in three ground operations, ai U.S. military spokesman reported. Communist mortars hit two air strips with mortar fire during the night. U. S. spokesmen said three helicopters were damaged at Cheo Reo, 220 miles northeast of Saigon, and another helicopter crashed due to mechanical failure after it took off during the attack on the Soc Trang strip, 109 miles south'-west of Saigon. U. S. spokesmen said a total of 30 planes pounded the targets at Dien Bien Phu, about TOKYO (Jfi-Hanoi radio said today the Viet Cong rejected the Commonwealth peace mission and branded its peace ‘ bid a trick to cover up U.S. “aggression” in Sodth Viet Nam. 185 miles west northwest of Hanoi. They said no antiaircraft fire was encountered over the scene of the bitter 1954 fighting and no enemy planes were sighted. All planes returned safely from the mission, they said. ★ * Sr The first attack on the target almost oh the Laotian border was made by eight F105 Thun-derchiefs supported by three other planes. They hit the Dien Bien Phu barracks area for 30 minutes, the spokesmen s a i d, destroying six buildings and damaging four others. They dropped 24 tons of 750-pound bombs and fired 2.75-incb rockets, the spokesmen said. The weather was reported good and visibility 10 miles. A short time later, 16 U. S. Air Force planes and three support Craft struck the Dien Bien Phu airfield, 3 miles north of the barracks area, the spokesmen said. 1st Reductions Won't Be Felt inThistounfy Power Firms Doing Business in Michigan Face Rate Review BANSING UH — While the economy booms and the cost of living climbs, utility bills for millions of Michigan consumers will start dropping this summer. The Michigan Public Service Cdmmission has called in every utility doing business in the state, and in many cases is negotiating or will negotiate for rate cuts, said PSC Chairman feter Spivak. The first of these cuts were announced yesterday. One was a 13-million reduction for 670,000 residential and 7,000 commercial electric customers of Consumers Power Co. in 32 counties of southern Michigan. Oakland County is not affected by the cuts. ★ * 4r The other was a 355,000 reduction by Wisconsin Public Service Corp. for customers in and around Menominee oil the Wisconsin border. MORE CUTS “Every utility in Michigan has had or is having its rates reviewed . . . and there is every indication there will be more cuts,” Spivak said. Spivak said Consumers Power reportedly earned |80.7 million in the first four months of this year. He said this was an increase Of 30 million over the same period last year. The Consumers Power rate cut will mean a saving of $4.20 a year to the average home owner who used 400 kilowatt hours of electricity a month, Spivak said. The new r a t e s take effect Tuesday. There will be no reduction for customers who used less than 100 kilowatt hours a month. Spivak declined to say how broad or extensive future utility cuts would be. He said they (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) VOLUNTEERS AT WORK w Junior .Charii-ber of Commerce members in Pontiac, Milford, Waterford Township, Lake Orion and Rochester and their wives have volunteered to redecorate the North Oakland Child Guid- ance CtiftiC at 133 Franklin. At work are Mrs. Ted Webster and Mrs. Peter Veraia, both of the Rochester unit, and Jim Monroe of Milford. Milford Jaycees began the project. Property Taxes Due to Be Higher in Pontiac taxpayers will pay $3.14 more per $1,000 of assessed property value this year oVer 1964 in school and community college taxes. A home assessedat $5,000 will pay $15.70 in added taxes this year over 1964. The total bill will jump from ___________ last year’s $207.80 to 53 Meteoroids Hit Pegasus Satellite U.P. Park Impresses Romney LANSING (AP) — A six mile Romney told his news confer-juke through the Porcupine ence that he did not think “a MountaiMState-park has con- mere extension of M107 isThe vinced Gov. George Romney . ,, “that we are not taking full ad- answer to matan« the *** 8 vantage of the scenic resources scenic beauties more assessible of our state,” he said today. to the tourist. VI don’t mean that there should not be a hi g h w a y through the park,” lie said. “Bat. if there is one, it should take best advantage of the scenic beauty without destroy- $223.50 for city, school and college government. On a home valued at 35,000, the increased taxes (315.70) would be split $3.70 for city, 35.75 for schools and 36.25 for _ the community college. The lat-WASHINGTON |( AP) - Pegs- ter levy Is being added to city sus 2, the satellite with the tax biHa for the firit tim€ wingspan of a four-engine air- Qt and ^ equally tax liner, has been penetrated by M including a 1-mill levy meteoroids n its first month in follthe community college, total orbit, the National Aeronautics ^ $t000 assessed valua-and Space Administration said tton\his year-a hike from last . .. , year’r$41.56 total rate. Meteoroid detection was the , primary reason for the launch- * f _ *■ ing of Pegasus 2 last May 25 Part of th* 31-25 and of Pegasus 1 last Feb.. 16. P*1, 31,000 assessed value • * * + comes from the college. This * Pegasus 3 is to be launched on f™ last y“r wa* incorporated July 30 to continue the study. *n t*,e coun^ 8 ’dnter tax levy. _________________________TAX BILLS City tax bills are due from July 1. Taxpayers have through Aug. 2 to pay their taxes. Financing a 1965 total budget of $B.$ million, city fines total 317.96 per |1,M0 assessed valuation: a 74-cent hike ever the 1964 rate of 917.16, ing the park as a wilderness wrea.” Romney walked thiough and flew over the park yesterday as part of his research of a bill, sponsored by Sen. Joseph Mack, D-Iron Mountain, and passed last week, which would remove the State Conservation Department’s authority to prohibit a road through the park. ★ * * Mack, Romney said, did not walk with the group through the park. OUT OF WILDERNESS He met the party after It-came out of the wilderness. Witnesses quoted Mack as say*. ing, “I’ve seen it already." The bill, Rtmiey pointed out, does not actually provide for the building of the road through the park. Romney said he was not limiting his remarks just to the Porcupine Mountains, but to the entire Upper Peninsula and the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) News Flash WASHINGTON (UPI)-Laci Into the Catholic Church at i small private Service at SC Matthews Cathedral today, the White Boone anaoaared. The increase in city taxes will cost a total of only $3-78 in added tax payments on a home assessed at 35.000. * ★ * . Most of the rate hike came from an increase in the special millage for waste collection and a rise in the equalization factor. The. 1965 waste collection tax rate was jumped to $2.14 per $1,000 assessed value over last year's levy of 81.43. WASTE COLLECTION City officials hiked the waste .collection millage to help finance the purchase of a sanitary land-fill aite.' % Also, tee city kad a 1 per' cent increase in the equalizing factor, a figure established to ' convert equalized valuation te -assessed valaattea. The breakdown on the city’s 1965 equalized tax rate, based on assessed valuation, is: 1194 1991 $12.34 General Fund $11.56 $ 1.85 Capital Improve- . merit.............$ 1.19 $ .57 Hospital Debt ....*$ .54 3 .84 Sewage Debt .......$ .78 $ 1.48 Waste Collection . $ 114 Added to tee total MU will be the $1.25 per 81,900 - sweated value for the college. Pontiac school taxes for city (Continued on Page 1 Coi. I) STANLEY S. KRESGE Exec Retires From Kresge Chain at ■ After 42 years, less two days, as an employe of the S. S. Kresge Co., Stanley S. Kresge, 1071 N. Lake Angelus, Lake An-gelus, has retired under the mandatory age-of-66 provisions of the Kresge retirement plan. He wUl continue aa vice chairman of the company and president of the 800-miQion Kresge Foundation. Within two weeks, the foundation, which in II years has distributed $79 million In grants, will move to new quarters in tee Detroit Bank It Trait BaiMtoi----------------— Kresge has seen the company expand to 700 stores in the United States and Canada. He termed his job distributing the $4 million of income from stocks and properties “frustrating” because of the task of eliminating a tong list of schools, colleges, hospitals, youth organizations and children’s institutions deserving of grants,. Russians launch New Space Satellite MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union launched another unmanned satellite today in .its Coamoo series, the Soviet news agency Taas announced. The observatory far Bochum, Germany, had reported picking up signals it said varied from the Cosmos aeries. The ofaaarv-atory bad sakl it could nbt tell whether the satellite waa manned or unmanned. The new satellite, Cosmos TV, carries scientific equipment designed to continue the study of outer space, Taas reported. The satellite la in a highly oval arMt, Tass said, ranging froth' 715 miles to 137 miles above tee earth. mff j»y THE fONyiACyRflajS, ypiffiYr JUJ^X *» ltttf Euromarl Faces Big Crisis as Farm Policy Talks Fail BRUSSELS (UPI)—The president ot the European Common Market today urgently pressed member nations to save the economic community from collapse. The market faces its most serious crisis since France vetoed British membership in ISO. The six member nations were urged to reeume negotiations on vital agricultural policy. The negotiations broke down yesterday, Farm regslatioas in force ran out at midnight June M. The failure to reach a new agreement left the community with a# common farm regulations. The key to the problem was held fry French President Charles de Gaulle. Diplomatic observers said a nod from the French president and negotiations recommence — a thumbs down and the community dies, w.. ★ . *■ Walter Hallstein, president of the Common Market’s neutral executive commission, cabled foreign ministers that a rest tion of negotiations “is the only way to get us out of this situation,” In to attempt to speed replies, Michigan Utility Rates to Be Cut ThisSumjper (Continued From Page One) “could not be described as ‘negligible.’ ” ’ Continuing economic growth over an extended period of time has pushed many utility when rules were last set the PSC sets rates and the rate of return allowable on a utility’s investment. The rate of return, expressed as a percentage of the investment, is usually touched only after a formal rate case has been heard. This process may take more than a year, Involving r e a e a r c h, preparation of detailed briefs and formal arguments. PERIODIC CHECKS Although the PSC usually makes periodic checks of the books of many utility flnfri, the inspections usually are not detailed enough to be used as the basis for rate changes. ★ w w The result b the changes are made only after negotiations, after a utility asks for more money or if consumers file complaints. Hallstein made public the fact hb commissioners are already working on new proposals to replace those rejected by the foreign ministers of France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg. In Bona, informed sources said the West German government believes de Gaulle b bluffing I* hb threat te stall the Euromart unless the ether five members bow te kb de-mead. It was France’s insistence the Common Market adopt her views on how the community’s farm policy should be shaped id the future which precipitated the current crisis. However, for the first timet the other members challenged France’s leadership. They said It was too much to ask of them to regulations which made them respon- practically sible for subsidizing French agriculture. A prolonged crisis could affect the United States, which ‘is negotiating with the Common Market countries in the framework of this “Kennedy round” tariff talks. TEST FOR MOTORISTS—If you spot the backward ‘E’ in this sign in Franklin, N. H., it shows 'you’re an alert metorbt. Deputy Police Chief James E. Newell Jr*devbed the AF Fhetefax test on the theory that signs in the road are ignored. Only four complaints about the ip-correct letter have been received. Auto Output Sets Records (Continued From Page One) The six months output of 1," 410,900 was far ahead of the'old mark of 1,100,900 set last year in the first half. * w * Chrysler had its best June production record in history, as 134,485 cars were built. The old mark for the month was the 133,302 Quota built In June 19$3. TURNS OUT * Chevrolet, biggest of the auto divisions, turned out 1,456,504 can in the opening six months of thb year, tapping the old high of 1,332,452 can built In the fint half of 1964. Few records survived the building surge in the first half INK I 1 Hie industry’s pride in Its first six months accomplishments was bolstered by a statement by James M. Roche, General Moton’ new president. He said he saw no signs of any slackening in demand for can in the last half of the year. _|t...jfe ★ Roche expressed belief, in an interview that demand for 1966 models would run strong in the fall and result in liberal use of overtime for auto workers in the final quarter. Property Taxes Up in Pontiac (Continued From Page One) property owners jumped 91.15 per $1,000 of assessed property value or 96-75 for iThoine with an assessed valuation of $5,000. LOCAL TAXES The home owner with, an assessed value of $5,000 on hb property paid $123 last year in local school taxes, white thb yeatf he will pay $127.75. % Higher school taxes result from a hike ia the millage allocated by the county, an increase in debt retirement millage and the rite in the equalisation fader. The breakdown on the equalized school tax rate, based on assessed valuation, is: 1964 1965 $12.00 General ...:..$12.18 $10.91 Extra Voted . $10.98 $1.49 Debt .......... $2.39 The debt retirement hike in the school tax rate was caused by a March bond sale. The $645,000 in bonds were issued to finance construction of two school additions, purchase of three school sites and other improvements in the school district. ★ A ★ i City taxpayers have not received their last tax bill for 1965. In December, the county Issues its tax bill covering the cost of county projects and government and the county school office. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness, windy and warm today with occasional showers and thunderstorms thb afternoon and evening, high 00 to M. Showers ending and timing cooler late tonight with diminishing winds, lew 56 to 62. Partly cloudy and slightly cooler Saturday. High 76 te 12. South to southwest winds '5 te U miles this morning increasing te II te 25 mites this afternoon, shifting to west te southwest tonight diminishing te 5 te 15 miles by Saturday. Smteay outlook Snnny aad mild. Yssr *n is Feetlsc At • a.m.: Wind VtlocHy 10 m#Jl. Direction: Southwest Son Mil Friday it 1:11 ».m. Son rtaaa Saturday at 5:02 am In Birmingham Armed Robber Captured An escaped convict was captured yesterday in Birmingham a half hour after staging a $4,-000 holdup in Pontiac and stealing two cars to make his getaway. * *. * A warrant charging Freddie Bledsoe, 22, formerly of Madi-son Heights, with armed robbery was expected to be issued today by the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office. Two Bloomfield Hills petrol-men, Kenneth Livingston and Carl HaS, apprehended Bledsoe at Oak and Hunter, in Birmingham, after panning his car on Woodward. He offered no resistance. Pontiac detective John De-Pauw said that Bledsoe admitted holding up Ducky’s Bar, 800 S. Woodward. owiier, Marshall W. 50, M 6155v Grace K., New Rates Set by Hospital Expansion and modernization at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital will give patients a choice of two room rates, it was announced today. Four-feed ward faculties tetiii new wing will cost $28 per day, instead of $25 per day in six-bed wards in the hospital’s old Semiprivate facilities in the new building will coat $31 per day. Current charges in the old building are $28 and $30 per day, depending on the faculties ‘ i the room. * " * * Private rooms will cost $36 per day in the new wing, instead of the current charges of $32 and $34 per day. Detroit Lawyer Plant to Run foi' Mayor Post DETROIT (AP) - Citing what he termed “the rising tide of crime,” Lee C. McManus, a Detroit attorney, announced today he will be a candidate for mayor against incumbent Jerome Cavanagh. ★ w . * McManus, 58, an assistant prosecutor from 1937 to 1940, has sought public office unsuccessfully seven times since 1935. The .Nsggi. m Watferford Township, told police that he had just returned from the bank at 3:10 p.m. after cashing checks when he heard someone behind him say “Thb b it Buddy.” HIT WITH GUN When he turned he was hit in the mouth with a gun. The gunman then Red on foot to Nebraska where he jumped in n car that had stopped for a traffic light. A Scenic Park Is Impressive (Continued From Page One) northern Lower Peninsula. “And I would like to repeat what I said earlier, that the most important single factor in thb area is the removal of the tolb from the Mackinac Bridge,” he said. ATTEMPTS KILLED Several attempts to removcTar lbwer the tolb were kUled in the legblature thb year. The matter b now under study by a block away be forced the driver, Eva Spears, 450 Franklin, out of the car. With police in pursuit, he' abandoned the car eight blocks away and ran into a wooded area. Then he took a station wagoft from a backyard in Bloomfield Township and fled south on Woodward. When he was finally forced to the curb, police said they found $3,850 in currency on Bledsoe along with a 32 caliber pbtol. Another $150 in change was buried near where he stole the second car. DePauw said that told police that he had been living in the Detroit area since walking away from a southern Michigan Prison farm in May. Bledsoe was serving a $-15 year prison term for the armed robbery of a Madison Heights gas station in April 1963. |. Birmingham Area N#ws- i 2 Boards of Education Will Meet on Tu Rock'rrlRbll Show Stopped | DETROIT (AP)—Four police-j. men were struck by buried feat- j ties Thursday night as they at-temped to disperse a huge crowd gathered to hear an outdoor rock-'n’-roll show. The show pn Bette Isle, an to* land In the Detroit River, was called oft after four of lb nine acts because the noise of the crowd was drowning out the* performers. The incidents occurred then. The officers struck by the hot- _ ties were not injured, but they offices, did call for police reinforcements which were rushed to. the bland, The reinforcements ih-eluded the force's Tactical Mobile Unit, a riot-control squad. No arrests were made. CROWD ESTIMATES ** Police estimated the size of the crowd immediately around a bandshell on which the performers were working at 12,000. However, promoters of the show said between 20,000 and 30,000 were on hand. „ . .______m. ,, ... The Ww was stopped about I Haberkom won board seats, one hour after its start when the Sewell had been appointed crowd became unruly and start- to the board a month earlier ed pressing towards the band-J upon the resignation qf Sec- Both the Birmingham and Bloomfield Hilb boards of education wfll hold their organizational meeting Tuesday night. Normally held the first Monday of July, the sessions were postponed a day because of the July 4 weekend. Th« twe boards will meet at $ p. m. in their respective Feature of the meetings will be the election of officers to serve during the 1966-06 term. Sr •# • At least one pew .officer will be elected for the Bloomfield Hilb board, due to the expiration of treasurer Max Millar’s term. DIDN'T RUN Miller declined to run in the June 14 election in which M. Edward Sewell and C. Henry stand. All performers at thb show, entitled “Americans in Harmony,” were recording artists for the Detroit-based record company, Motown Records Corp. retary Mrs. Jeaa R. Marts. He also was appointed to bold that post for the remainder of the term. Both Miller and Mrs. Martz had served on the board for seven years. - Aaafe '■£ ■ * Hm; Also to be elected,'Tuesday me a president and vice -president,, positions now being held W Bichatf H. McGraw and Dr. ChariesJ-. Bowers respectively. OTHER TRUSTEES * . Other board trustees are Mrs. Amylee Chamberlain, David W. Lee and Donald C. Hyde. Ia Birmingham, the current officers afe E. Rets Hanson, president; Mrs. Frederick M. Adams, secretary; Pell Hol-Ungahead, treasurer; and George W. Coombe Jr., vice president. Others on the board are Charles A. Leach, Richard Hoisted and George A. Schmidt. ★ ★ ★ Elected in June, the latter replaces Bennett W. Root, who did not seek re-election. Boy Killed on Farm POSEN (AP) — Lawrence Niedtwiecki, 5, of Posen died Thursday when he was run over by a wagon on the family farm. Donations by the public were i go to eight civil rights and public service organizations. Frank M. Seymour, 48, executive assistant to Motown President Berry Gordy, said the crowd was “exuberant, but not rowdy." ' He said he ordered thb show stopped after four acts because the. crush of spectators toward the bandstand and the noise made it “impossible to do a show.”-- , “The irony te that the show Bledsoe was M successful it killed it- self,” he added. He said he called for help from the police. Among the performers scheduled to go on stage were . the Supremes, Marvin Gaye, Martha and the Vandellas, the Four Tops, and others. NATIONAL WEATHER—Widely scattered thunderstorms era forecast for the north and central Appalachians, lower Lakes and Ohio Valley tonight with showers and thundershowers in the central Plains and drizzle along the north Pacific Coast It will be cooler in the upper Lakes and central Mississippi Valley. Johnson to Fly to NY WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson (dans to fly to New York City today for a 8 p.m. speech to the National Education Association and then go to Texas for the Fourth of July weekend at hb ranch. Romney did not indicate whether he would sign or veto the bill. He was impressed by what be saw — “certainly beautiful," he said—and became an immediate booster of the park. * * * “We should encourage people from all over the country to see thb area,” he said. STEEP TRAIL The hike took Romney and hb perspiring companions, including legblators, from Lake of the Clouds to Mirror Lake along a rough, sometimes steep, mountain, trail. Vatican Prtss Says Pope Invited to U. N. VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican press office announced today that U.N. Secretary-General U Thant has invited Pope Paul VI to the United Nations but added that it was too soon to say whether the pontiff would accept * * * But the unusual Vatican announcement breaking a silence here on frequent reports about such a trip, suggested the Roman Catholic ruler has the trip under consideration. (See World News, Page 1>-11) Keep You Cool and Comfortable NATIONALLY ADVERTISED COSMETICS I Roll On or Aerosol Spay New Mum Deodorant c k$1.00 value, now Mum comes in roll on and spray-form. Use Mum to be sure. 59' ‘lee-O-Dtrm’ Astringent 63c Clairol Cara Formula $1.50 value, your choice of Loving Core, Silk and Satin, . or Creatn Tenon, for .‘beautiful, hoik ''ri , , 89' Jergens or Woodburys Cream $1.00 value your choice of oll-purpow cream, cold dry ddn Cfow fey jfgems qr Woodbury. 49' PERMANENT Life Lotion Hair Treatment S3.00 value 14 of. A 60 second hair treatmea , counteracts damage. $2.00 value, medium type Lilt for fifty type of hqir. 1” r RINSE AWAY for DANDRUFF $1.00 value lor positive dandruff control and relief of Itchy scalp. Clairol White Creme Developer $1 so volue replaces ordinary peroxide for better hair condition. 8» & HUDNUT SHAMPOO I RINSE JM.75 value 16-ox. Hudnut egg shampoo or $1.00 volue 8-ozi Hudnut Creme rinse for clean, manageable hair, 1 19 I’ve Just Stocked p For The Long Weekend At SIMMS Tobacco Dopl Main Floor TOBACCO DEPARTMENT King Edward Imperial Cigars Bex of 50 $3.00 box of 50, 6c King Edward Imperial cigars. America's largest soiling cigor. Don't 225 Tampa Resagos Cigars Bag of 26 tesll $1.20 value, bog of 25, 5c cigars. A real ‘smoking pleasure at Simms Low Price. 85* Automatic Pistol Lighter Frtl cin of fluid ■■ .... . ■ . 69*^ 98c valua, wind proof automatic pistol' \ ‘ ^ \ style cigarette lighter. 1 » 12-oz. Ronson Fluid 59c value Ronson fluid for WfcdWda ill wick lighters in a pour spout :on. 4mWr Ronson Butane Fuel 65° $1.19 value Ronson butane fuel for butane gas lighters.,. —Tex— Sfe> Metal Ash Tray 39c value, 8" size metal ash trays in 4 colors with annonized finish. If Summertime Candy Special Your Choice 32* 4Vc 2 lb. emete stkee 49c 28 or. licorice babies 49c 20 oi. |elly ring 49c2lb.ti«nt|ells 49c 20 os 49c 20 ox. epice jelly drbpe a— Sparklers For July 4t)i IIP 12 _ 10c necks of I Rant sparklers far the ■ children's fun. In packs pf j 8. Us* 12., SIMMS"* & •T*; THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY JULY 2, 1965 REP. THOMPSON Southern Solon Killed by Truck Hit While Talking to Highway Patrolman GASTONIA, N G. (AP) Rep. T. Ashton Thompson, D* La., was struck and killed by a. truck Thursday as he stood talking with a highway patrolman who had stopped him for allegedly speeding. Thompson, 49, was taking his family home from Washington for the July 4th weekend. His wife and twp children, the family maid and the patrolman escaped serious injury. The truck driver was hospitalized for sibre back injuries.. ■cr~ * * * Police said the congressman and Patrolman J. C. Goodwin were standing between their cars when the truck, driven by Norman Turner, S3, of West-ville, N.J., apparently side-swiped the patrol car and-slammed into the left rear of Thompson’s 1965 Cadillac. ★ * * Thompson was thrown 18 feet and killed instantly. The truck continued for 264 feet down Interstate 85 before overturning. It was carrying egg crates and barrels of liquid soap. FLOWN HOME ,« Mrs. Thompson, 36, Christine Lea Thompson, 10, Ted Arthur Thompson, 7, and the maid, Evelina Pouliard, 52, had remained in the car. They were flown to their Vill Platte, La., home today in the plane of Louisiana Gov. John McKeithen. Thompson’s body was flown to his home state in another plane. - .He had represented Louisiana’s 7th District for 13 years. * it * Patrolman Jack Stewart said there was no indication what caused Turner to lose control. 7 Million to Use State Roads Over July 4 By the Associated Press An estimated seven million tourists^-* .record nuhiber—are expected to travel hi 3.2 million cars over Michigan highways during the Fourth of July weekend, the Automobile Club of Michigan said Thursday. '‘Michigan's highways, resort areas, and recreation centers will have their heaviest usage of the summer from Friday through Monday," the dub Said. State Police Commissioner Fredrick Davids noted that 43 persons died in Michigan traffic over the holiday period last year. Davids urged motorists Speaker's Mistake Calls for a Report LAGRANGE, Ky. (AP) - Leo Yarutis, .psychologist at the Kentucky State Reformatory,1 was invited to give an illustrated talk to a downtown restaurant. *,★ * i The appointed evening ar-rived, Yarutis, walked into aj meeting room, nodded to sev-l dal acquaintances and de livered his speech. Only then was Yarutis told he had spoken at the wrong meeting. The one he wanted was in the adjoining room. The psychologist packed up his equipment, moved to the new area anc) repeated his program. Illinois Justice Dies CHICAGO (AP) - Joseph E. Daily, 77, an Illinois Supreme Court justice since 1948, died Thursday in a Chicago hospital following surgery. Sprinkler 1.99 l shown — adjusts to .•miMVtr 4 different size an •) shapes of lawn areas. Smooth 5 gliding runners mokes to move around. 75-Ft. 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C. - Con National Director James Farmer told the group’s annual convention the civil rights movement, ’’flushed with many small victories, is now faltering.” XXJRE’i purpose, Farmer said, is to “retool and complete the Job.” • DENVER - The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Poeple (NACP), at its convention, was asked yesterday to call upon South American, Asian and African nations to bar Mormon Church missionaries because of. an alleged “doctrine of nonwhite inferiority." By UoHed Press International Dr. Martin Luther King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and the FBI were at odds again today. The current disagreement wa^touched off yesterday with a statement in Atlanta by Ralph D. Abernathy, treasurer and vice president of the SCLC. Answering ekerges that Communists control major civil rights groups la the LANSING m - An alcoholic driver is “an accident looking for a place to happen,”, a doctor told Michigan’s driver improvement officers Thursday. Alcoholics are involved in no cidents not so much because they are too drunk to drive safely, but because the “alcoholic is out to kill himself or somebody : rise,” said Dr. Richard Bates. I Many one-car accidents are suicide attempts by alcohol or drug addicts, he added. I For these drivers, said Bates, “Jail without treatment is a waste of the taxpayers’ money.” Personality problems are behind the alcoholism, he said. You eon hpvo thtcon-venionce of Soft Water ONLY A FEW CENTS PER DAY Have a whiter wash softer elothes, lovelier eenplexieM and even' save. up to N% on the East Coast The span is the onjy one crossing the river within 50' miles. Partially visible in the background are the Washington Monument and the Jefferson Memorial (right). FIRE ON THE POTOMAC - Smoke billows from 'blazing wood pilings on the railroad bridge across the Potomac River Into Washington yesterday during a fire which halted rail traffic on the main north-south rail route Bates, chairman of the State Medical . Society’s Alcoholism and Drug Addiction Committee, spoke at a workshop aimed at finding ways td deal with hard-i core traffic offenders. I Using information provided by Bates and Dr. Melvin Selzer of the University of Michigan, the secretary of state’s office issued guides for recognizing alcoholic | driver at driver improvement Interviews. • CHICAGO — More than 100 Negro and white demonstrators marched to the United Church ef Christ convention yesterday to appeal for the denomination’s help in seeking the ouster of Chicago Public School Supt. Benjamin C. Harris, whose policies allegedly foster segregation. * ★ ★ • CHICAGO - The United Church of Christ, for the first time In its history, yesterday elected a Negro moderator. He is Dr. Hollis Freeman Price, (1, president of Le-Moyne College in Memphis, Twin. • WASHINGTON - The House Rules Committee, by an, 11'- 4 vote, yesterday cleared the voting rights bill for expected House passage sometime next week. gnonii.” Abernathy said, “We even go to some extent to check the FBI files.” ★ NO MONEY DOWN ★ Come In Today or Phone Ft 4-3573 The FBI in Washington said this was “absolutely untrue. FBI files are confidential.” MADE CHECKS Abernathy said he didn’t mean the FBI opened its files to the SCLC, but indicated FBI agents made file checks for the SCLC. The FBI refused comment on whether it had been asked such information by the SCLC. Last year, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover stirred controversy among civil rights groups by calling King “a notorious liar” for some of King’s statements about FBI activities. In Washington yesterday, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., called again for an investigation to determine possible Communist influence in civil rights groups. CITE8 STATEMENT Thurmond cited a statement by Chicago Mayor Richard Daley that Communists were involved in Chicago school demonstrations, and a report by an Alabama legislative commission which said the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNGC) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) were “Communist-inspired.” - ‘ Elsewhere in the nation: Delaware River Dwindling Electric Incorporated I The guide says one adult in 25; • is an alcoholic and it is believed accidents involving drinking drivers “are to a large extent a problem of alcoholism rather than a problem of the effects of alcohol on the social drinker.” •* Secretary of State James Hare called Thursday’s meeting. He said the main problem is 10,000 hard-core pffenders1--about one-fourth of 1 per cent of Michigan’s drivers, i Hare suggested a four-point attack — checking the chronic offender’s police records, checking to see if he is an alcoholic, I alerting local police to keep an eye on him and enlisting the support of local judges. Court if New York City does not live up to the court decree. proposal but it was rejected by the commission members. Hughes indicated the commission will make its decision on a declaration of an emergency on July 7 and. left little doubt that it would decide in favor of the declaration. TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Delaware are considering an emergency plan* to stretch thd dwindling witer supplies of the Delaware River which serve an area with 20 million people. The plan was proposed Thursday at a closed, informal meeting of the Delaware River Basin Commission in Gov. Richard J. Hughes’ office. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS 'WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID Pick Up But Hughes toned down his stand at the meeting Thursday and stressed unity, He said the compromise plan offered “a reasonably sale solution for all states concerned.” U.S. Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall, the federal member of the basin commission, urged “agreement, not an argument.” -ACID TEST “This is an acid test for the commission,” he said. “There is not enough water to go around. All are going to have to tighten their belts.” Also attending the meeting were Gov. Charles L. Terry of Delaware; New York State Conservation Commissioner Harold I G. WUm; Arthur C. Ford, president of New York CityVBoard of Water Supply; Carmine I Guarino of the Philadelphia I Water Department; and two j dozen top water experts from the four, states. Drivers Are Tied Up by Meaty Traffic Jam SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Commuters stewed and motorists beefed when a freeway tie-up halted rush-hour traffic for 90 minutes yesterday. The cows, pigs and lambs were perfectly silent, however. They were spilled all over the freeway when a meat truck carrying 10 tons of cutlets, ham hocks, T-1£irs and hamburger overturned and created a meaty traffic jam for police to untangle. The decision on the fate of the plan will come July 7, when the commission meets again in Philadelphia. At a news conference after the meeting, Hughes declined to give any details of the plan because he did not want “to alarm people unnecessarily.’’ GAVE HINTS But he gave these hints: 4. New York City might have to reduce the aiqount of water Jt takes from two reservoir* in the Delaware’s northern reaches. 2. New York City might have to release more water from the reservoirs to keep up the flows downstream. - * * * 3. New Jersey and Pennsylvania water supplies in the basin might have to help out by releasing water into the river. Both New York City and Philadelphia depend for about half of their water supplies on the Delaware. NEW YORK DRAW New York City is allowed to draw an average 490 million gallons a day from the Delaware Basin under a 1954 decree of the U.S. Supreme Court. But in return it must release enough water to provide specified flows downstream. ■ * * * New Jersey and Pennsylvania officials have charged that New York is drawing out its full draught of water but has not been meeting the minimum releases recently. In calling the A wire and catheter have been used to clean arteries clogged by fat, and thus have prevented amputation of affoct- Armand D’Angelo, New York City’s water commissidner, attended the meeting. He *ai*l the city had offered its own- Imore—rufPAY ARE REDUCED!- ftfi YOU CASH MONEY for YOUR MONEY earnings on. Savings Sow m World's Most Glamorous Awnings meeting Monday, Hughes ALL CHANNEL TV urge screen portable TV with all new 82 channel TV built-in antsnna and carrying bandits, out-front sptaktr. Trotter's Law, law Sale Trlca FOLDING k\wmm Awnings SIMMONS! Hide-A-Bed Sofas and Mattresses AT MILLER’S Choose a Famous STOCKBRIDQI Early American wing style with maple trim. Beautyrest cuthiont, full-size Ad justo-Rest mattress. Colonial print cover. Stylo, color Deepsleep Deluxe mattress gives you: • Nbw quilted damask cover. • 100% felt upholstery. • Pre-built, sag-proof border. • Available In super sixes. *312 Adius' I ............. Twin or full sire, Mi tress or Box Springs. $249.95 $59.95 144 OAKLAND EASY TERMS FURNITURE FREE DELIVERY PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TELEGRAPH RD. Vj MILE S. ORCHARD LAKE RD. J Mile North of MiracU JHUe 1 > Open Doily 10-9~Opon Sunday 11 FE’3-7051 NO MONEY DOWN-UP TOM MONTHS TO PAY Closed Wednesday Afternoons Park FREE Around the Corner Along Clark Street APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLUE FRETTER SAYS: PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST HIGHER PRICES SAVE! BUY NOW AT PRESENT LOW-LOW PRICES • BUY NOW - SAVE! NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1966 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 A—fl 1 SggpRtePf? T ' V&i Jj#|pr; W Yanks Refuse to Panic Viet City Is Haunted by Bitter Memories , By HAL BOYLE QUI NHON, Viet Nam (AP) — Leaves from a war reporter'! notebook: This is a city i under enemy k siege where no r JAmerican is ' pushing the pan- Jkbutton. It is a city r haunted by bitter memories and by many refugees. War, the orphan maker, orphans many here daily. The bitter memories stem from the terrorist bombing last Feb. 10 of the Hotel Viet Cua. Viet Cong agents blew up the four-story building, then being used to quarter enlisted men of an aviation maintenance company. Some 23 Americans were among the 37 killed. 70 HOURS “We worked for 70 hours straight before others arrived to help us,” said a survivor. ‘‘We had to level the building to get everybody out.” ★ * * No trace of the'hotel now exists. Its site is used as a truck parking lot, and newcomers here pass it by unheeding. But those who were here than still carry memory scars. There is only one really safe direction in this key city in the central Vietnamese lowlands between Saigon and Da Nang. That is seaward, for we still control its watery access. ★ ★ * But the area westward from here to -Pleiku and the Cambodian and Laotian borders is a heartland of Viet Cong activity. Miitary leaders worry about the possibility that the enemy might try to snip the country in two along this axis in a dare-all gamble. Qui Nhon, rebuilt since it was rased and looted in 1945, is a neat looking city of French colo- nial design. Its strehta are Wide and well-kept. | CITY OF TRAGEDY But it has become a cliy of tragedy and mass misery. Refugees flocking in for safety from outlying villages have nearly doubled its normal population of 50,000. ♦ W . ♦ ” ' Its plight only reflectf the situation throughout the province of Binh Dinh, which »the second largest of South Viet/Nam’s 44 provinces, and its most populous area with the exception of Saigon. * it ir ★ ‘‘The province now has a pop- ulation of 852,000 - and 96,000 are refugees,” said Lt. David McLaughlin, 26, of Fort Lauderdale,' Fla., who' is a 1962 West Point graduate. Three members of his class that be knows of have been killed in action in Viet Nam. ‘‘We.think the enemy is creating a refugee situation here deliberately. With the main high- way and railroad cut, that forces us to supply the refugees by sea and' air, and puts a real drain on us.” MANY CATHOLICS A large percentage of the refugees are Roman Catholics -and strongly anti-Communist. Most have chosen to uproot their lives and flee here rather than cooperate with the guerrillas in their native villages. ★ w The refugees are huddled in 25 camps throughout the province. (hie of the seven camps here houses 10,000 homeless men, women and children. WWW They dwell behind barbed wire in abject conditions. They are fed and given what clothing Is'available and about five cents a day each to care for their other needs. Disease flourishes. One officer estimated that more than half the population of one large camp was tubercular. Peace, when it comes, will come too late for thousands of these civilians who pay the sad price of war. A tale to be fallen with a grain pf salt: Millions of propaganda leaflets have been dropped in enemy territory in hope of spreading disunity in the ranks of the Viet Cong. One defector turned up'carrying a bundle of the leaflets. A psycaologkal warfare officer questioned him as to whether his mind had been swayed by i the leaflets. w w w “Np, I can't read or write,” | said the defector. “My commander ordered me to go around and pick up all these pieces of paper — and I just got I tired of doing it.” . Life expectancy in Greece, Rome, Egypt and the Eastern Mediterranean region in the year One probably did -not exceed 30 years. It now is about 70 in many of those areas. LAKE MARGREtHE REGULATORY MARKER BUOYS are designed to float in an upright position, giving increased visibility for better safety and protection, Made of solid durable tough expanded polystrene plastic beads they will not waterlog, peel, rot, puncture or collapse. These.buoys have been examined, tested and proved satisfactory for use on Michigan waters by the Michigan Boating Control Committee. FOR INFORMATION CALL 692-1863 , James Arnold 470 Oakland St. Lake Orion, Mich. sea styles FOR THE BELLE'. OF THE BEACH From a great collection, three suits that make the most of summer and you. Top> sensational laeeWildriff suit, center the bikini maillot; bottom the form-fitting sheath. Many other styles and fabrics to choose from. Choose from such famous namdt as Cole of California, jpntzen, Roxanne and Bobbie Brooks. Charge Yours at WoRe's. , ; \. SWIMWEAR , THIRD FLOOR . DuPONT XMCT PONT SOI •!xr NYLON SALE The Fabulous Fiber That's OUT OF 1HIS WORLD ! ! LONG WEARING - EASY CLEANING -RESILIENT - MODERATELY PRICED 3 ROOMS INSTALLED WALL TO WALL “501” and continuous filament nylon GUARANTEED 10 YEARS IN WRITING! You ge* your choice oi coiors, in 12' or 15' widths cut from lull perfect quality rolls. You get deluxe tackless installation over heavy rubberized mothproot woffle padding. Includes all labor, door metal, no extras. NoW bocauto el ou> mettrBk tpeoel fectery purchase you con own this lamout luxury carpeting WAY SHOW tti uivel price Yet. IMi it a matt (mutual apparently ta awn the final) at beevtilul, long wto.-mg-cerpet at a record law price . . . many deHart below tit utwel tolling price. Tightly woven weave landt an attractive torture and createi o tpoctout look Te any interior - traditional or madam. Cleent mireculeutly and the new "HI-lIVll" treatment otturet long, long woor and will keep itt froth look longer. Ten smart decorator celert. 30 YARDS INSTALLED OVER RUBBERIZED PAD Just imagine . ... 30 yards of this 100% Dupont Nylon in your horn* for only $9.46 par month. ONLY $ SAVE *3.00 a yard! Sq. Yd. COLORS C95 Bl cou Antique Geld - -Maple Sugar Glade Green — Blue Flame Cordovan-DawnGrey * Creme deMenth-Delta Blue Biscuit Beige - Bay Leaf Eternal Fire-Mushroom Sauterene — Muscotel YARDS 35 40 45 50 55 60 CASH PRICE <308 $351 $395 $439 $483 $587 $12.39 $13.94 $15.50 $17.04 $18.59 OR 3-2101 OR 3-3311 4S28 Dixie Highway THE PONTIAC PRESS m Weat Huron Street FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 *gSHJL3g"SBL5 harold a. rrrzoniALto Pr widen t *nd PublUher . John W. FrmHau ' 5dvtrU«fn*,Dlrl«tor O win Mmmi Local AdTC Sound Social Concepts Advanced by Jurist Timely and cogent were the recently-expressed opinions of Circuit Judge Abthuh E. Moore on the moral poverty of a segment of our youth, the sub-1 versive attitude of 1 those who advo-1 cate passive resistance to laws they consider inequitable and the ; need to re-establish respect for and cooperation with our lfw en- MOORE forcement agencies. Particularly significant was the Jurist’s advocacy of “moral classes” in public schools for youths reared in a home atmosphere ofimxqorality and antisocial outlook. ★ * ★ None is better qualified to appraise the problem of juvenile delinquency than Judge Moore. The experience gained over a long period a* probate judge and his deep personal in-. terest in institutions for youth guidance make him an authority on the subject that has specialists in. the social field groping for answers. There would appear to be, however, a coilple of practical problems inherent in incorporating characterbuilding courses within the scholastic framework of the school system. One is that such indoctrination, to be effective, would call for specialized training on thsr part of teachers, since their mission would be to repair damage to character already . suffered by their charges. The other difficulty lies in the advene influence the degenerate home life of enrollees would have on the school program of moral rehibilita-tion. To make the program wholly effective, it would seem that it would have to envisage the upgrading of delinquents’ family atmosphere. ★ ★ ★ But. with lawlessness fast be- ■ coming one of the Nation's major problems, and juvenile delinquency making alarming contribution to it, any plan that holds promise of remedy is • worthy of deep consideration. The community is .indebted to Judge Moom for his abiding interest in its social welfare and for the counsel he is so well prepared to give. robber because he came Irom a broken home; a rapist because he may have been mistreated as a child; or a murderer because he did not.. . attend high school.’’ • Some courts seem so obsessed with technicalities that they lose sight of the trath. The 69-year-old solon pointed out that kidnaping has become h rarity because kidnapers have been given tough sentences. He urged use of the same formula for other serious crimes. ★ ★ ★ There can be do doubt that McClellan put his finger on one of the root causes of lawlessness and criminality in America. It is ardently to be hoped that his legislative measures for the protection of the public win quick Congressional approval, and that his philosophy is given the acceptance it merits by the judiciary and certain do-gooder agencies involved in the dispensation of Justice. In that backward nation, Russia, people only recently took up the hoola-hoop fad. Over here, a hoola-hoop is a collector’s item. Criminal Coddling Hit by Crusading Senator Next to J. Edgar Hoover, doughty chief of the FBI, none has d o n e more to combat organized crime in America than Arkansas’ Democratic Sen. John L. McClellan. As chairman of a Senate investigating committee, he has relentlessly turned the spotlight on racketeers And underworld characters in his campaign against criminality. Hence, when he speaks out on the state of crime in the United States, his words carry special significance. As openers, the senator, in introducing a series of anticrime bills, said that the balance of law enforcement now favors the criminal at the expense of his victim. Other points stressed were: • At the present rate of increase, in 10 years there will be one major , crime a year for each 32 persons in '" the United States. Last year there was 13 per cent more crime in the Country than in 1963. ’’ - ★ \ ;w Jlr I • A plague of sentimentalists seeks more and more sympathy, less and lighter punishment, for criminals- We cannot “excuse an armed David Lawrence Says: LBJ’s Record Stands at 50-50 By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON - As President Johnson heads into the last half of 1965 his record can .also beaplit in half: very successful at home; a lot of unfinished, dangling overseas bull-ness that leaves the world wondering. His popularity at home is high, the polls say. Over seas he has been criticized for his handling of foreign affairs, particularly in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic. He 'hasn’t shown yet MARLOW the same masterful talent for foreign affairs that he has demonstrated reputedly in domestic problems. ' .His relations with Congress, business, labor, and civil rights groups have been excellent and tranquil. la getting Cob-gress to do what he wants he is wdl on the way to the best record since 1 President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s early days. He talks a lot, some times moralizing, some times in a way unmatched by any, president, its in a recent speech expressing his compassion (a favorite word of his) for the Negro. * ★ 5 ★ . , The astonishing energy he has shown in working at his Job always has raised the inevitable question: How long can he keep it up? FUTURE IS DUBIOUS -There is a broad myitificatida about what to expect in foreign policy where Johnson plays the cards very close. For example: In six months how much deeper might' the United States be hv the yiet-namese-war? ■ When he went to San Francisco last week to address the 29th anniversary meeting of the United Nations he gat a lukewarm reception although the reason is not clear. Some of the restraint among the statesmen listening to him may have been intended to express disapproval of his foreign actions; some may have been out of disappointment that he didn’t come up with new ideas and programs. * * _ * President John F. Kennedy, at his death but not in his first few months as chief executive, had a far more shining image abroad thah Johnson. But this was after he got off to a bad start by backing the Cuban refugees’ disastrous invasion of Cuba. SIMILAR POLICY Yet, Kennedy's policy basically was not much different from Johnson’s—except lor the bombing of North Viet Nam. Johnson has been criticized for intervening in the Dominican revolt, a reminder to Latin Americans of the many times this country intervened hi their affairs before. There have been scattered, but com-, paratively few, Critical voices against John- /; son in Congress. Will this’last? GOP Must Face Up to Issues WASHINGTON-There’s more than meets the eye in the wistful complaint by Ray Bliss, Republican national chairman, that fund-raising by “splin-. ter’’ groups could make it harder for foe Republican NS-I tional Committee to raise| money. Actually, Bliss LAWRENCE may have foe cart before the horse. There’s usually no difficulty in raising money for political campaigns when the people feel that their grievances are going to be dealt with by the party seeking their support. The problem foe Republican managers face today is font foe party leaders , or spokesmen have not convinced foe country that, if foe Republican party did come into majority power, it would heed foe voice* of discontent. There is, moreover, at present a noticeable absence of organ-. ized expression by foe Republican party on the main issues of - foe day. ‘?Tf»ose who deserted foe party in the 1964 election campaign show no signs of remorse. DOESN’T KNOW Despite all the political debate since test November, the average citizen ooan’t know yet what foe Republican party as a whole stands for and what it seeks to do. Today some of the biggest problems before foe nation are being neglected by both parties. Bob Considine Says: The largest single issue in America is foe war on crime. People in the big cities find it dangerous to go out of doors at night. Even apartment houses, with lots of tenants, have been the scene of robberies as well as rapes. The story is the same in all big cities. * * ★ The chief trouble is that there ' are not enough policemen in most of foe communities to give. the people adequate protection. The federal government has neglected to do anything about foe problem except jto urge that special studies be made. BAD TO WORSE • Meanwhile, the situation goes from bad to worse. Crime rates are at a record high. There are other issues which neither political party is tackling. One is foe misuse of public funds. . * * ★ There are, for instance, scandals in certain phases (rf the antipoverty program. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST Congress itself has permitted all sorts of “conflicts of interest” to be tolerated, as is revealed by the 'findings in foe Bobby Baker case. Throughout foe United States there are many inequities felt fay the citizen, particularly in the field of employment. Persons who are qualified and willing to work are being discriminated against, not because ofrace or color but because they. haven’t joined or don’t wish to join a union. " * h * Also, many individuals are victims of the violence which frequently envelops strikes. FISCAL POSITION An opportunity presents itself, too, for the Republicans to call for a removal of foe barriers to free enterprise in America and for the maintenance of a sound fiscal position by foe‘government. The spending policies of foe last few years have put foe federal budget continuously out of balance, and indications are font an inflationary era is in prospect unless extravagant spending by government can be checked. The coot of living is rising, and the purchasing power of foe dollar is declining. The economic situation is often described as “booming,” but there are obviously many weaknesses in foe employment picture throughout the country. WIDESPREAD UNREST All these matters are contributing to a widespread unrest. An opposition party has foe responsibility and the obligation to expose blunders in government and to publicize the grievances of the people. Once this is done, there will be little trouble1 about'raising money for political campaigns. VOKf or me rcupic. - EM. Estes Expresses Hope torCttg fs Future As you know, I ora leaving Pontiac to become general manager of Chevrolet Motor Division. I find it very difficult to'leave Pontiac after a number of years as a member of the team that has earned recognition gs one of the best in the industry. Let me express my thanks and appreciation for the part The Pontiac Press and our friends in the community have played in making this possible. it it it * Pontiac is fortunate to have our chief engineer, John DeLorean, as its new general manager. I am confident that under his capable leadership the division will continue to grow and everyone will prosper. ' ★ ★ * . _ I hope to see many of my friends frequently as I « plan to continue as chairman of the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Building Fund Drive. E. M. ESTES ‘Will Long Remember Service of Leader’ Mrs. Ella Sandison rendered h great Christian service to Pontiac in her leadership in temperance groups, including programs for youth and children. She will long be remembered by the women who worked With her. MRS. SADIE PATTEN 41 AUGUSTA ‘Children Shouldn’t Have Access to Guns’ How many parents own a gun that their children have access to? Recently two teen-age boys in our neighborhood were target practicing in their back yard with a .22 automatic rifle. Our neighborhood is crowded with children, but luckily most of them were in their homes at the time. However, a bullet came through the wall of our house and lodged in the base of •'our racking chair, narrowly missing our daughter who was sitting in foe chair. 'fr it it We urge mothers and dads to keep guns away from children and warn them not to touch the guns, and the tragedies they can cause. MR. AND MRS. HARRY EVENS 118 VICTORY The Almanac By United Press International Olaf the Fifth ... king of Nor-Today I, Friday, July I, the wy • • ■ .aataman tfeisday In 183rd day of 1965 wity 182 to follow. 1903. On this day in history: In 1771, the Continental Con-The moon is approaching its ^ formally passed foe Dec-first quarter. laration of Indnamdf rr from The morning stars are Sat- Britain. The document was urn and Jupiter. signed two days later. The evening stars are Venus In 1990, Congress passed the and Mars. Sherman Anti-trust Act. The Better Half Reviewing Other Editorial Pages 1st Space Commercial Done by ‘ Krafty’ Ad Firm Think Twice The Atlanta Constitution „ Shipwrecked, a sailor spent five years on a desert island. One day he was overjoyed to see a ship anchor in the bay. A small boat came ashore and an officer handed the castaway a bunch of newspapers. The officer said: “The captain suggests that you read what’s going on in the world and let us know jf you want to be rescued.” for $7.6 billion. Taxes took $14.9 billion. This left $10.8 billion as profit. But not fall of that was paid to the owners in dividends. They received $8 billion. The remaining $4.8 billion was ploughed back into the business. To sum up, foe owner's share of business' financial cake is a modest one. Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. George E. McKnight of 95 N. Sanford; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Mae Franklin of Rochester; 85fo birthday. Royal Todd of Highland; 99th birthday. NEW YORK - Early Bird, the private enterprise communications satellite that hangs hr orbit 22,300 miles 'above the South Atlantic, said “cheese” the other day when the international television cameras focused on it Matter of fact, it said “Philadelphia Cream Cheese,” and there just couldn’t have been more excitement at the Regency suite of .the Hotel Americana, where j. Walter Thompson’s people had built a 'Uttle free load for reporters * around the first full commercial use of Comsat. J. Walter Thompson, foe largest ad agency in foe world, represents Kraft Food* a division of National Dnky Products Corp., foe largest international food roNSIDINR packaging organization in the world. The use of the incredible satellite to drive home the message of cheese to an audience of cheese salesmen and cheese officials assembled in Burgen-stock, Switzerland, where cheese is not unknown, was another “first” for Thompson, a Thompson man confided. Along with Kraft, which it has handled since 1929, JWT engineered radio’s memorable Kraft Musk Hall in 1933 and Kraft Theater’s pioneering “live" drama show on TV in 1947. HAD A HAND The agency also Jiad a hand in inaugurating color TV, with a series for Eastman Kodak in 1956, and, indeed, presented—in 1930 — the very first commercial television show in behalf of Libby, McNeill and Libby, in Chicago. It teemed only meet and just, therefore, for it to come up with the first utilization of Early Bird as a sales medium. More to It.,. The Holland Evening Sentinel It can’t be too often repeated that, according to all foie avail-abk evidence, foe average American has a woefully distorted opinion of the size of foe profits earned by business, and particularly Mg business. He thinks jfoat they represent a far larger proportion of the selling prices than they actually do. A publication of The American Economk Foundation tells a significant story. In 1983—the last year for which the figures are available — the 100 largest manufacturers in the United States sold $157 billion worth of goods. What happened to all that money? This happened: The coat of goods and services bought by these manufacturers from other businesses, most at which were comparatively small, was J91.4 billion. Payroll and labor benefits came to $42.3 billion. Obsolescence and depredation of equipment accounted Just One The Anna (III.) Gazette-Democrat Another way to keep the family together is to have just one ' Mock of Law and Order The St. Louis Globe-Democrat Some opponents of the House Committee on Un-American Activities have never been content with their dismal failure to blodk the committee in the courts or in the market .of American opinion. So they have assumed a unilateral right to go beyond the means of redress set up for all Americans. They have decided they are somehow exempt from legal and democratic decisions. At practically every HCUA hearing a hard core of left extremists has gotten away with insulting this congressional committee, has made a mockery ©flaw and order. It happened once again in Chicago. Why can that social sediment get away with antics that would merit for a normal citizen a knot on the head from the club of a Justifiably outraged police officer? Why is it that a mob of disheveled American radicals can hurl themselves under foe wheels of a police van; shout obscenities" and “police brutality” at men exercising patience and nsing kid gloves to extract them—and still be coddled by the Amer-lean left? • Many of our contemporaries, who would not hesitate to drop the 82nd Airborne on Alabama if Uncle Remus were denied his 1914 civil rights; seem indifferent to the wholesale violation of law, order and public decency in Chicago. The interference and insult hurled at HCUA are infamous. A Pane... The Omaha Evening Worid-Herald It’s getting so an American diplomat can hardly go near an Embassy window without getting a pane in the neck. .,. THE PONTIAC PKE3S> FRIPAY, Jujy ^ 1965 -Junior Editors Quit on- Limited quantities SUMMER HEALTH & BEAUTY NEEDS AT DISCOUNT PRICES QUESTION: What makes thunder sound the way it*does? New Dawn hair spray, 13-ounea Noxsama skin qraam, 10-ounce ANSWER: The ancient peoples were*terrified by thunder. They could not understand how it was produced. They itn-agined that one of the gods was angry at them—such as the Viking’s god Thor, whom we show raising the hammer which he was supposed to use in making thunderbolts. We still respect the mighty force of lightning, bnt this force is no longer a mystery. It is something we can understand. Lightning is caused by powerful electrical charges which build up inside certain kinds of clouds. When this electric pressure becomes very strong it is released by lightning, which may strike within the cloud or connect with something on or near the earth. , A very large amount of electrical energy passes through the thunderbolt, and this instantly heats the air it passes through to a very high degree. The heat expands the molecules of the air and these fly violently outward, crashing into the smaller molecules of the cooler air beyond. It is this collision which produces the thunder, symbolized, in the circular diagram, by larger circles ramming into smaller ones. Besides the main bolt of lightning, there are many small zig-zag side branches. From these smaller bolts comes the crackling sound we often hear. Kodak's deluxe Instamatic kit, everything for great pictures nr entire srofck Imj ien$: better qua|ii Breck Mist hair spray, 15-ounce The camera with built-in accuracy . . . won't let you make a mistake. With case, flashbulbs, batteries and film. Plus photo flip album. 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' THE ?ONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 j. > - iv m A—e if LBJ's Heart Attack Struck 10 Years Ago WASHINGTON (UPD-Ten years ago today a black limou-since sped along the highway from Washington to Middleburg, Va. The man in the back seat was on his way to a friend’s estate to relax for the holiday weekend. ' * * ★ The passenger had been toroUgh an irritating day in the capital. He wanted to unwind. But a nauseous feeling kept him on edge. Later that evening sharp whest pains appeared. Af^r harried consultation with a" local doctor, he was rushed to Bethesda Naval Medical Center. The next few days were filled ri worry. President Dwight Eisenhower expressed con-cern. The entire Senate rose and stood in silent prayer. Lyndon B. Johnson, the Senate Democratic leader, had suffered a serious heart attack. ★ W * ■ It is part of history that Johnson recovered and went on to become the 36th president of the United State?. BACK TO WORK Six months after his 1955 heart attack Johnson was back at his desk in the Capitol. Since then, he has given the appearance of a man in the best of health. He spent several days at Bethesda last January, but the ailment which put him there was only a heavy cold. Even though it has been 10 years since the heart attack, there is evidence it is remembered by the public. On June -trtiw^k market fell sharply after rumors spread in Wall Street and elsewhere that Johnson had suffered a heart attack pr a stroke. The White House promptly issued a statement insisting: “The President, lis in perfect health. There is and has been perfect health during the time be has been President.” • df *w ’ A Still, many persons wonder what effect the heart attack of 10 years ago had on the President, Who will celebrate his 57th birthday in August. CHANGE IN ROUTINE There is no question that the attack produced changes in Johnson’s routine. Shortly after his recovery in 1955, hie told newsmen it had saved- his life because “it slowed my pace, tlught me to live more sensibly.”. Naturally a big man at six feet, three inches and approximately tR pounds, Johnson has followed low-calorie diets to keep his weight down. He also gave up smoking following the attack and'has said since that although he misses it every day? he is glad he hasn’t gone back, to it. He catnaps during the day when his schedule will allow it. * * ★ Johnson’s characteristic energy has not slowed down, however. He works eigit hours a day and frequently longer. He exercises daily with calisthenics in his bedroom and a swim in the White House pool, often followed by a walk. DETAILED REPORT The White House has issued several reports on Johnson’s health. One of the most detailed was last Dec. 28, and was signed by the President’s official doctor, Vice Adm. George G. Burk-ley. The admiral said there was “no evidence of residual from the 1955 heart attack,” that AMERICA'S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN MEN’S IVY STYLED DACRON* AND WORSTED TROPICAL SLACKS comp. value 12.95 Treat yourself to more than one pair of these cooIk comfortable slacks! ' Distinctively tailored in a crisp blend .of Dacron polyester-and-worsted... trimfitting plain front model. Choice colors in sizes 29 to 42. FREE ALTERATIONS the President's health was excellent aad that he could withstand the strains and stresses ef1 the presidency “in out- The President is examined every few days or so by Burk-ley. From time to time other physicians are called in—usually Dr. James C. Caine it the Mayo Clinic and Dr. J. Willis Hurst of Emory University, who are most familiar with his medical .record and treated him 10 years ago. •' J||' * ih After the last recorded examination by toe doctors, on March II, toe White House said that “routine health measures including exercise and planned scheduled days for relaxation were discussed with the President.” GETS AWAY Since that time Johnson has made more attempts to get gway from the crush of business kt the White House. When he cannot make the trip to his Texas ranch for toe weekend, he has been using the mountain retreat at Camp David, Md., which is reserved for his use. And he has taken to cruising on the Potomac-River on recent balmy evenings to try to get away from it all. Predict More Flu This Year ... , - ■ l WASHINGTON (AP) - A Public Health Service advisory committee predicted today there probably will be an increased number of influenza cases in toe coming, winter season. t Surgeon General Luther L. Terry announced toe commit-toe’s recommendation for vac-cinatton for persons In groups which experience high mortality from epidemic tnflu-' ensa. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices noted that influenza incidence in the United States during 1964-65 was relatively limited. The last major epidemic of type A' influenza occurred in 196263 in most of the country and in 196364 on the West Coast. Since the outbreaks come in two to three year cycles, “the committee anticipates that somewhat increased amounts of influenza may be expected in the coming season,” toe health service said. The committee urged that persons in the following groups be vaccinated against influenza: Those suffering from chronic debilitating diseases, older persons, pregnant women and patients in nursing homes aqd other environments in,' which crowded living arrangements may lead- to a more - rapid spread of the disease. Sheriff Worm Parents About Cap-Ball Danger j The Oakland County Sheriff’s Department today warned parents that cap-balls, which received much publicity hi Detroit recently, are being sold in Oakland County Sheriff Frank Irons and Deputy Robert G. Phillips said that the cap-balls are dan- Hospitdl Sent $100 Check by Honor Patient JACKSONVILLE, Fla. UR -A former SL Luke’s Hospital patient has paid a 55-year-old bill. Robert B. Eleazer Jr., bos-pital executive director, reported receipt of a $100 chock from a man now living in Cornwall, N. Y. “I received excellent care, both by your doctors and nurses and orderlies. I made a vow at that time that if I were ever in position to pay you, I would do so,” wrote toe former patient. Hospital records indicated that toe man was a patient in 1910 tor three weeks, suffering from malaria fever. The debt had long been written off by the hospital. 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CHarmglow's Perfect Host gas-fired barbecue offers a new, yet proven method of outdoor barbecue mg. It gives you all the charcoal flavor Of outdoor cooking without the dirt/ bother and frustration. It eliminates the handling of messy ashes and charcoal. All cast aluminum construction makes it weatherproof. consumers power 2S Wat Lawranc. St. T«Mkhm 333-7812 gerous and could cause serious injury to a child who is ustag-toem. The balls, which are mat-Motored sad resemble candy balls, are exploded by Impact against the ground, a WaB or another person. In one case in Detroit, a child bit into one of toe caps j thinking it was candy and received a severe mouth burn | when the ball exploded. . The sheriff’s department received a report that a young boy was shooting the balls in a slingshot at other youngsters. The sheriffs office and the Oakland County Prosecutor’s staff are currently investigating whether the cap-balls are considered illegal under Michigan’s fireworks law. 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Solid Color Bermuda.................... 2.98 RENNETS WUCLE 00 p.jii. ■:¥lln|ak*‘5f,‘UJS. government cdfida) here, tow-ism could Ike built Into an even greater industry than coffee, now the country’s major source of foreign capital. Youth Corps Fails in Oklahoma City 22 Beautiful Color* to Choose From. PLUSH or TWEED NYLON for light Traffic - Perfect for bedrooms MOOT1NA TESSARA AND TERRAZO CORLONS Floor Care Products Large Selection for all types of Floors 14 Colors to choose from OPEN MON. and FRI. Tfl 9 P.M. FE 4-7775 C OVERINGS By BRYCE 8. WALKER PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (l)PI) — Of all the lands under the Caribbean aim, Haiti mayl have the most spectacular natural attractions. Huge bonOy mountains rise thousands of feet into mist- Red and purple hibiscus, oleander, bougainvillaea and flamboyant — the most vivid of tropical flowers—bewilder the eye. It has all the makings of a tourist’s paradise. I spent the days in a tourist hotel on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince. There were tall white columns, winding staircases, a palm-shaded swimming - pool, a neck of white-jacketed servants—everything for a luxury vacation. A A A I was the only guest, except lor a French manufacturer of auto tires who was there on HOTEL SPLENDID Meals were served In a spacious dining room of about 30 tables. High French windows let in the trade winds. The decor lived up to the name of the My fellow sheet had always finished breakfast by the time I came dewnswrs. Our dinner times never seemed te coincide. I met Mm once, on my fourth day. We had a rum poach together in the lobby sad. convened in brakes Anglo-French. There was a certain amount of companionship at the swimming pool.' It was usually taken over by the hotel manager’s four young children. . - a. ft -A $. My first day, I hired a taxi for a sight-see through Port-au-Prince. There is a museum, a pink and white cathedral, a n odorous native market and a church with strange child-like murals by local primitive painters. There is also the grime of tropical poverty. MANSIONS CRUMBLE Behind stone gate posts are crumbling Victorian mansions with every elaborate filigree, scroll, spire and cupola known our grandfathers. The gardens are lush with palms, orchids and avocado trees. The overall scene is a weird tropical Disneyland with green which mast he aeea to be believed. One of the main tourist attractions here is the artwork. Paintings by Haitian primitive artists fetch from $30 up in New York City. I bought three large canvases from an artist outside my hotel for $M and a bottle of 11.90 rum. ' ■ ' , * * 1 Following the advice of my guide book,.I stopped by the presidential palace to visit the Hal] of Busts, with statues of Haiti’s past chief executives. The building was mobbed with government militia and palace guard. NEED PERMISSION After stating my case to five different soldiers of ascending rank, I Was finally informed by a young captain that. I would have to get special permission from the secretary of state. That night, I Made arrangements with my taxi driver Is witness an “authentic" voodoo ceremony. Haiti is supposedly the only place outside Africa where you can see this weird ritual of drums, dancing and downbeat witchcraft.-The place for the ceremony was a deserted castle on the edge of town. I arrived at 9:30 p.m., and found one other visitor from the United States. Two hours later, we were told the SPENCER’S HOLIDAY PRICE BUSTERS Large , Selection of Roll Balances ceremony would not take place because then were not enottfi tourists to wetch it- vo. • A. t| .A.-One of the reasons for the de-cltoe of the tourist trade hi recent years is the political situation. Cruise ships temporarily discontinued their stops at Port-au-Prince in 1964 because of reports ,ot incidents pf terrorism by the secret police of President Francois Duvalier. RECENT FACTOR Another recent factor may be the revolution in the nearby Dominican Republic, though the border is effectively Sealed off and there is no danger. During the past six months, the government has m a d e a concentrated effort to bring back the tourist business. A new jet airport for Pan American Airways was opened Jan. a. There will probably be a slight rise in tourism this year. Two major shipping lines have begun stopping here again with their cruise ships. A A A Haiti is now experiencing one of the Worst economic depressions in its history. It needs a total capital investment of some |30 million each year simply to, stay afloat. Much of this must' come from overseas. AAA Tourism should be a major source of money from abroad. It is in most other Caribbean OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. (APIAbout 300 youths lost their jobs this week when the Neighborhood Youth Corpe project Mre, part of the administration's war on poverty, went broke. A ' 'A-^ AU^V'\ •- Dr. Larry Hayes, director of educational research for the sponsoring Oklahoma City school system, said the $91,080 in Office of Economic Opportunity funds for the project dried up Wednesday. The project began May S. . A A A „ Dr. Hayes said the Dallas NYC office has approved an extension but no action had been taken by Thursday in Washington. Two Die in Collision HILLSDALE (AP) - Duane Van Horn, 33, ot Hillsdale end Paul Ptucha, 77, of Jonesvilla were killed Thursday in a car-truck collision near here. up to 1/2 OFF purckusd with 11441, 32" Rotiry Mower attMkmsnt «t regular price. Bolen* Husky tractor* have standard equip-men! features other compacts don't even offer at. Optional. e Each handle* ever 25 different lawn and garden attachments. • Each has Bolens exclusive East-Switch Power-lack Hitch for changing powered attachments quickly and easily with-. Cut, halts. * Geared transmission and differential deliver more, power to the wheels. FULL BANGS OF ATTACHMENTS AVAILABLE TOP TRADES EAST TERMS MANUS POWER HOMERS, Inc. 3111 N. Woodward, 2 Blks. S. of 13 Milo — LI 9-2440 on. thru Fri. 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. — Sot. 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Put more flavor Pick up a few six-paks of Black Label Baer and enjoy real flavor this weekend. A good full flavor that comes from a delicate balance of barley and -grains, laced with the tang of carefully selected hops. O Brewmasters call this special flavor "premium". Yet it costs you only the popular price. So pick up some Black Label this weekend, / r AOLiwr ^ and get teal flavor in the bargain. / Put more flavor in your life Get more life in the flavor #.Cert* Brewing Company. Ciwridml. Ohio THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1WW PONTIAC. MICHIGAN B—1 New Financial Twist Offered on Walnut Lake Sewer Project WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — It’* an old story with a new twist — a Walnut Lake sewer arm paid for by property owners as they decide to uae it. The proposed project was tuned down last year by residents who based most of their objections on the method chosen to finance it. At that time, township officials backed establishment of Council Defied by Rossman Resolution Ignored on Attorney for Case LAKE ORION—Village President Clarence B. Rossman has hired attorney Wallace D. Mc-Lay of Waterford Township to represent the council Tuesday in a show-cause hearing in Oakland County Circuit Court. N The twice-postponed bearing is the result of a suit filed by Robert J. Swem in an effort to force the council to reinstate him as assessor. Swem, elected last March, resigned the office recently in a fit of piqqe because foe tfx rolls had not been tamed over to hM. He later asked Rossman to withdraw the resignation, but tho council voted to accept it, despite the objections of Rossman. v \ * A > A Swem has filed for a writ of mandamus asking the council to rescind its action and turn the assessor’s books over to him. DEFIED RESOLUTION He has retained the service* of Pontiac Attorney David C. Hertler to represent him in the case. Rossman hired McLay in defiance of a resolution passed by the council Monday night giving Village Attorney Robert V. Parent! the authority to defend against the suit. The village president has terminated Parenti’s contract and maintains that he is no longer the village attorney, despite the council’s ruling to the contrary. . 'A ' ★ A McLay and Swan have entered a stipulation asking for a writ of mandamus directing the council fo rescind its action in “extending the term of office of the former assessor ..." DIRECTS COUNCIL It further directs the council to turn over to Swem “all of the books, papers, documents . of office of the assessor . and asks the court to rule that Swem is “the duly elected and quftlified assessor’’ for the village. , In effect die stipulation constitutes nn agreement between the council, represented by McLay, imd Swem, the plaintiff, that mere 1s “no contest.” Judge James S. Thorburn, who is scheduled to hear the case, refused to sign the stipular tion, however. A * A A McLay said the question of who is to represent the council in the case is now a major issue. a special te pay for West Bloomfield’s share of the cost The township hr to pay $1,00,772, with Bloomfield and Farmington townships splitting the rest of the $1,727,000 total. A * f. The new method of financing approved by the board provides that die mooey be raised by two types of fees to be paid by property owners as they actually begin to use the sewer. PAID BY EVERYONE 0ne, called a unit capital charge, would be paid, by everyone, whether served directly by the trunk or by a lateral extended from it. ■ This char g e would vary from $350 to $050, reflecting the interest necessary to £ nance the program. The maximum ‘would be reached after 13 years. ' A ' A A The other connection fee would be paid only by those property owners tapping directly into tiie trunklin^ IN ADDITION In addition to the first fee, they would pay $300 to $510, with the maximum reached after 14 years. Being handled through the Oakland County Department of Public Works, the Walnut Lake arm would be extended from the Farmington sewage disposal system. The Farmington interceptor in 1100 to serve the eastern and southern portions of West Bloomfield Township and part of the City of Southfield. t 1 f.'. The Walnut Lake arm would be constructed in the area between 14 Mile and Pine Lake _________ of skater tq Just east storytelling, and gnfativtplayi of Orchard L«e Road. 7 MOST IMPORTANT “I’ve felt right along that the Walnut Lake arm is perhaps the most important trunk ■£gar that we could have in the township*" Supervisor John C. Rehard said. “It was a terrific setback when it was turned down,’’ * ★ it An informational meeting on the project has been scheduled for $ p.m. July 28 at West Bloomfield High School A letter explaining the proposal soar will be .sent to those property owners concerned. Groups to Combine for 4th Festivities AUBURN HEIGHTS — The volunteer f i* e department, Lions Club ahd American Legion will combine forces for morrow evening to stage a July 4 celebration. ★ A A The program will begin aj. 7:30 on "Squirrel Road across from Auburn Heights Elementary School. A A A Entertainment will Include a water fight between the firemen and a fireworks display. The affair is scheduled to last over two hours and willibe concluded by a drawing for prizes. There will be no admission charge for the program. On Rezoning in Utica Special Meeting Slated UTICA — The City Commission will hold a special meeting July • to take action on rezoning of the Keating farm property to allow development of a proposed town house project. At a public hearing last night, the commission and developers Hall Sterrit, Inc., of petrott agreed on a restriction limiting the number of dwelling units per acre to 12, or/ a possible totaled 720 apartments.* i) City Clerk Mrs. Euaiee Kopietz said attorney George Roberts assured the commis-sion that such a nstrlcttoB to legal. It wffl be in effect until im. Planning ‘commissioners previously recommended that the retoning r e q u e s t from single- r ii R4j_w residential to multifamily, be tor '* WlOW 64 multifamily, denied, but they later indicated Small Turnout for Head Start Fewer Children May Mean Lett Money Project Head Start began this week in the Avondale school district, but instead of the 45 participants expected, only 15 children are in the program. Schools’ Supt. George E. Shackelford said that according to estimates from the Bureau of Social Aid, from teachers, principals and other agencies, that ‘45 children could be expected in the program. “When we tried to locate them,” be said, "we found that some had moved, some were away for the summer sad tiie parents of some didn’t want to send them.”, Hie federal government contributes 90 per cent of the money for the project while the local district provides 10 per cent. Shackelford said Avondale’s funds will probably be prorated for the 15 children. Head Start is administered by the Office of Economic Opportunity, the federal agency coordinating the war on poverty. It provides underprivileged children with eight weeks of preschool training to prepare them for entry into kindergarten in the foil. GIVES KIDS The program gives them a head start to compensate for the lack of environmental and learning experiences already gained by their future class-lates. Herbert Pinner, director of Avondale’s program, said one of the main objectives of the project is teaching^ the children to communicate verbally and to get along with other children in situations away from home. A A it j “For many of these children, this is the first time they have been away from their immediate community,” he said._ The program takes' a nursery school approach exposing the children to music. aingiqg; pets, RIGHT ON SCHEDULE — Oakland County corn is running true to form,and will be more than “knee high by the Fourth of July” in most areas. Providing the knees by which to measure this field on Long Lake Road is Leah G. Laffrey of 3383 Elder, West Bloomfield Township. Shelby Residents Go to Court; Seek to Close Mine Operations Group Formed for Avon Study AVON TOWNSHIP -' An 11-member committee has been formed to study and eventually make, recommendations on the liest form of government for the township. According to the -township master plan, the population-of the Rochester-Avon area is expected to more than double in the next 20 years. The present popalation. is about 21,080 and more than 58,000 are expected by 1980. To prepare for the growth mid possible problems of extending services to .the increased population, the committee will try to determine which type of government will best serve the area in the future. ‘ ’W,- The committee is divided into three groups: A .A A The first group will study the present form of government and what improvements might be made. The second will study the probable effect on tiie township government if Oakland County adopts home rule. WILL COMPARE . The third will compare the advantages of charter township form of government and of a city form of government. . William McCullough, of 441 Willow Tree Lane, is chairman of the commjttef, vice chairman is David Andrews and Harold Pepper is secretary. Other members of the groups are Morgan White, Gordon Beebe, Philip Trimble, George Marquart, Harry Bell, David Hackett, John Lowes and Donald Bishop. SHELBY- TOWNSHIP - A group of township home owners have gone to court in an attempt to have sand and gravel mining operations near their homes closeddown. ---L. ^-----------------—----- Plaintiffs are the Country Lanes Home Owners Association and the township. They claim that tiie mining operations are in violation of a zoning ordinance and that public and private nuisances have been created. The case is being tried without a jury before Macomb Circuit Judge Howard R. Carroll. Thffhonie owners are asking the court to permanently close down operatlbns which they claim were started in 1964 by I -?4.. - the A and J Sand .Co. after the section was built up with $20,000 to $40,000 homes. ★ A A* They contend that when the land in the area of Shelby and 23 Mile Road was subdivided in 1958, it was zoned for homes and farming. AAA They want the land restored or rehabilitated. The defendants claim the mining was conducted several years before the home owners settled there. They contend the present operations “are in the nature of land developing-” 2 Dates Set for Boards' Organizing Like practically everyone dee, area board of education members will celebrate the national holiday Monday. However, their plans for the July 4th weekend have altered the schedule for organizational meetings, which normally calls for election of board officers the first Monday of July. Local interpretation of tiie state law has resulted In area boar,dg setting the organizational sessions on two dates —Tuesday and July 12. School board members in .15 districts will meet Tuesday to elect officers for the 1965-66. year. Lake Orion school officials will convene at 7 p.m., while those in Brandon and Utica will gather at 7:30 p.m. PLAN SESSIONS The Rochester and Walled Lake boards have planned their sessions for 8:15 p.m. AAA Those with 8;p.m. meetings are A v o n d a 1 e, Clarencevllle, Clarks ton, Dublin, Farmington, Holly, Huron Valley, Novi, Oxford and Troy. A A A Three boards have scheduled July 12 — South Lyon at 7:30 p.m. and Romeo and West Bloomfield at 8 p.m. Will Buy Site for H igh School FARMINGTON - Now operating two'Mgh schools, the Far* mington Board of Education has entered into a purchase agreement for the site of a fourth high school. The board currently is beginning to discuss the projected need for a third high school in five years or so, but it has not yet determined a site for the unit. A;’ A A Site for the fourth high school is in the northern part of Farmington Township, an area which has not yet experienced the development boom now influencing growth in other parts of the dis-trict. However, experts predict that the population there soon will-start to soar. The parcel of approximately ^O'Brien Will Speak at Ortonville Autorama BRANDON TOWNSHIP-Sen. Carl O’Brien (D-17th Dist.) will be one of the guest speakers at the first annual autorama of Ortonville to be held tomorrow at the Brandon Township High School football field. ' Tickets for the show, which will feature dragstrip, speedway, new and antique cars, may be purchased .at Grinnells downtown, at Pontiac Mall and at Lakeland Record Shop, 4516 Dixie Highway. 40 acres will cost $94,000 with the rate set at $2*350 an acre. A . A A Located at the soutbweaLcnr-ner of 12 Mile and Drake, the property is owned by Mrs. Eunice M. Morris. STAY AT HOME Mrs. Morris has lived on a farm there for some 23 years and will be allowed to occupy her home for another two years. Final sale of ti)e property is pending a survey of the property. Labeling ihe move “ver$ long-range,” school officials will allocate funds for the purchase from a $5-miUlon bond issues sftiroved by' district property owners in November 1963. They currently are studying future school needs based on enroOment projections tar lfH. ' A.. A A Estimates put tiie high seboo^ enrollment at 3,63$ in 1970, indicating the beard of education then should be thinking shout its third high school. — Weird Wind Does Damage at Area Home An apparent dust devil with the strength of s baby twister swept through the back yard of a Milford home yesterday with a loud roar that sounded like a low-flying jet. A A A Dust devils are small whirling masses of air mow common in the Plains states. They march slowly across a field coDefcting dust and straw in the «pter and often have the force of a pocket-sized tornado. A particularly vickNS one apparently stock the yard ef the Raymond Mehalko home at 783 Panorama and whirled off through a nearby woods. Mrs. Mehalko said that about 2:45 p.m. a wind came up making a terrible loud noise. The wind pulled off s row of shingles, ripped clothes from a back Vard line and tossed a picnic table from one end of the yard to the other.--rfm Mrs. Mehalko was 'at home with her husband and one of her eight children. The other children were playing in the neighborhood. Witnesses described tho “storm” as looking like ■ “whirling dust devti.” The Mehalko house was tho Only one touched in the block. . , Chick Production 4,000 Due at Charleston July 4 Gala GLARKSTQN—Some 4,000 per-1 sons are expected to view the-annual independence Day pa-1 rade slated for Monday at 101 a.m. A; A A The parade, sponsored by the Independence Township Firefighters Association, will form at Main and Miller, find proceed southward on Main to Chinch. Featured in the line of march1 wifi aq several colorful floats, including Rotary Club and Ciarkstoa Area Junior Chamber of Commerce entries, the high school band and the Chief Pontiac Post 377 American Legion drill team and rifle squad. * Other parade entries will include a contingent of boy and girl scouts, 4-H members, horseback. riders, antique automobiles and modern and vintage fire trucks. A A Clarkston’s Campbell • Richmond Post 63, American Legion, will serve as color guard. Frank Green is the parade marshal. 10 AWARD PRIZES Prizes will be awarded for the three best floats in the parade. Youngsters lining the half mile parade route will receive paper fireipen’s hats. Sandwiched between the pa-. rade and the gigantic fireworks display slated for • p.m. will be a series of sailboat races on Cranberry Lake. The 4 to < p.m. races called the Cranberry Yacht Regatta Will be limited to small boats. tii ui . Also sponsored by the fire-they might recommend approval commercial 'hatcheries^ vro- j a®sociat^n’> fire* nrs^ssa * t srj { May, one per cent above aver- [ school. specified number of units. Mrs. Kopietz said the main concern of the 50 or 60 persons attending the public hearing was the traffic problem. , ,V The property involved is the newly annexed section between Hall and Messmore on the east side of town. age, but 12 per cent below last May, the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service says. For the 1966 hatching season beginning last September, total hatch was 12 per cent below 1964 and five per cent below 1963. t 4-H Members to Meet EAST LANSING (AP)-More than 1,080 4-H Club members are expected at Michigan State University July 13-18 for the 47th annual 4-H Club Week. HAPPINESS A GO-GO This home Iras received the Parents Magazine Seal as their Award-Winning Plan for 1945. See Jt In their August issue. GO GET HAPPY Sm This Furnished and Landscaped Model Today .... Only 12 Lots Left 1/^1 Features of the COVINGTON • Full Basement • Maintenance-Free Aluminum Siding • Built-in Bedroom Closets with Convenient Storage Above • 40-Gallon Gas Hot Water Hooter • Tiled Tub dnd Shower Area • Formica Window Sfls • Full Insulation O Exclusive Thermal Brook Windows • Paved Streets a Community Water • 70*x ' 140* Sno Lot ahd Larger a Walk-Thru Bath a 140 Sq. Ft. FamUy Ream a Garage and Fireplace Optional *13,900 *104 Full Price Americana Homes OPEN 1 P.M.-8 P.M. -Closed Thursdays to Canunsrce to S. Comm arcs an S. Commerce, ML, Glengary St. Loft to Us 601 Los Aifaoles 624-4200 ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1065 V. St Policy Invokes Clidrigi THi DIAMOND RING. , YOU CAN KEIF WITH CONFIDENCE Keepsake SPECIAL f*** •" lo* cornu N. So*- Free forking wh.n.v.r you apply for an maw ana W. Huron St*. Mch Tima you bring approved loon or ronowot to our off ko a full monthly pay moot. Bring ut your parking tickot to bo tfadipod. VOSS and BUCKNER 209 NAflONAL BUILDING - FE 4-4729* SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. tO 10 P.M. DAILY SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 7 P.M. Conor of Dbtia Highway and TaJagroph Rood In Pontiac HISTORY PRESERVED - The 120-year-old home of former Michigan Gov. Moses Winner (1850 to 1861), at 405 Oakland, affords a glimpse into the past for summer visitors. It will be opened to the public beginning July 6, daily except Mondays, by the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society. The home still contains most of the original furnishings. Gov. Wisner's Home to Open The home of the former governor of Michigan, Moses Wis-ner, at 405 Oakland, will be open to the public daily except Monday during July and August, between 2 and 5. p.m. * * * The home, now the headquarters of the Oakland County Pioneer and Historical Society, has been -preserved, including1 most of the original furnishings. It was built 120 years ago. Moses Wiener served as the 13th governor of M1 c h i g a n from 1859 to 1881. In 1882, he Celebrate THE 44b On'rbor Own PATTI O Cash and Carry roger a. authier Patio Stour Co 10570 Highland > EM 5-4825 Hike Salaries -WSU Chief DETROIT (AP)-Wayne State University’s new president, Dr. William Rea Keast, Thursday asked for a $2.5 million faculty salary increase, the largest such request in the university’s history. Keast recommended the salary hike at a board of governors meeting: It was his first day in office. A He said faculty salaries were of prime concern to the university, noting, “It is clear there has been a serious and steady erosion in the faculty salary position since 1959.’’ He added that, “The university rating by die American Association of University Professors has dropped from Class A to Class C in those years. “There are serious Implications in the loss of outstanding faculty and in the difficulty of recruiting, particularly when the university is trying to expand its graduate program and needs senior faculty membra of the highest quality.” The board is expected to consider Keast’s request at its meeting July 29. Bull (Snake) Sheltered Albuquerque: n.m. (ap> —Attendants at the Albuquerque Animal Shelter report that among the stray dogs and cats picked up Thursday night, they collared also a brown and tan bull shake and a speckled screech owl. received . his commission as colonel of the 22nd Michigan Volunteer Infantry made np largely of Oakland County men. The 22nd Infantry left Pontine in September 1M2 under Wisner’s command. j He never returned to Pine Grove, as the estate is called, but died near Lexington, Ky., in January 1883. His widow lived in the home until 1905. The descendants told the borne to the society in 1945. The ‘governor’s mansion’ has the seal of Michigan painted over the doorway to the governor’s study where he conducted the business of the State of Michigan during the two years he held office. Children accompanied by adults are admitted free. There is a small admissiori charge for adults. Fine Honest Chief $100 I SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) -Police Chief Harvey Teasley was fined $100 Thursday on a charge of careless and reckless driving, Teasiey ‘ filed .the charge against himself following an accident last month when he drove the wrong way on a oneway street and tan into a car. City Court Judge1 G. Randall Whitmeyer told the chief: “I’ve read the accident report and am familiar with the case. The fine is the same given any other citizen in a case similar to this ope - $100.” Transistors! Trite Trash BIRMINGHAM, England (UPI) — Garbage collectors pick up more than 200 transistor radio sets each week from the streets here, according to a report from the Keep Britian Tidy Group. Editor’! Nott — The writer of this analysis has returned from a swing through Latin America, starting' in the Do-minican Republic and extending through South■ America.) r By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON — President Johnson has Latin-American political leaders in a state of stunned puzzlement, as if wondering whether the honeymoon of the Kennedy years is over. There is a new look, and it seems a tougher one. Yet, despite a detectable touch of uneasiness among Lat-in-American leaders, the results may prove healthy. In fact, there U an excitement being churned up in Latin America about the future, as if in many cases a corner had been turned and the Americans were on the edge of something new and promising. ★ W ★ Even the U.S. military intervention in the Dominican Republic seems to have had a sobering effect. Washington seemed agreeably surprised at the lack of a chain of political explosions tied to the Dominican crisis. Yet, if the intervention had not happened, the qualitative changes in much of Latin America .would have been less easy to detect. The intervention, without the formality of inter-American ap-proval in advance, was only ope aspect of what appears to be a new direction for U.S. policy. AMERICAN MESSAGE In effect, this policy would say to Latin-American leaders: “Pull up your socks and get to work. The United States can help with men and money, hut what happens to your countries depends upon yourselves." This has not been stated. It is an impression gained from unspoken attitudes among administration figures and Latin-American politicians and diplomats. ★ ★ * One hears from highly placed persons in Washington sentiments like this: “It’s time for the Latin Americans to stop crying and stop blaming everything 8n the Yankees. They know what is wrong with them, and only they can change it." Another impression gained among administration figures is that the United States has no intention of apologizing for actions it takes in its owif national interests. RED MENACE There is a hint of annoyance at the Jegalistic arguments of Latin - American governments which shy away, from hemisphere political cooperation and which, in the words bf one U.S. source, “refuse to face up to the fact that there is a hemisphere problem of Communist subversion.” # , ★ * Some governments oppose the special meeting of the Organization of American States scheduled next month in Rio de Janeiro, .They seem fearful they will be asked to strengthen OAS machinery against subversion. The message they seem to be1 getting from the''administration' is that now is foe time to face up to the problem, since they must do so in any event sooner | or later. % * * Jr Some Latin-American leaders told me they had the impression I that President Johnson does not care as much about them as the | late President John F. Kennedy j did. They reflect puzzlement, as! to see if in reality -he is devel-oping a new sort of approach to ! Latin America. Some of these claim that Latin-American confident in the United States and respect for it declined after the Dominican crisis. They claim, too, that the administration has a hysterical fear of communism. INSUFFICIENT FEAR On the other hand, many in Washington say that the Latin-American politicians do not have enough fear of communism, that they think of it simply, in terms of numbers and in a legalistic way, as if a Communist party, represented in a popular front government, for 'example, represented no real internal danger. Some in Washington who have been close to the Alliance for Progress say that perhaps, after the Dominican t intervention, Latin Americans are waiting to be reassured, to be told that the United States still loves them. WWW The Kennedy impact was heavy in Latin America, but forward-looking leaders in the area say his death had the effect of making them realise they would probably be obliged to rely more upon their own leadership. * w w . There is no talk of cutting back programs such as those developed under the Alliance far Progress'. Those are going forward and there has teen some pressure inside the administration for stepping up the ante on the ground Latin America is reaching the point where it can absorb more development. ft W '. W' However, the emphasis is likely to be more and more on self-help, more and morfe on carefully trapped out programs. SHaWS 'MICHIGAN S LARGES! JEWELERS EASY TERMS NORTH SAGINAW STREET In Downtown Pontise 241 Scrap Churchill Coach? LONDON (UPI) - The maroon and gold railroad coach used to carry Sir Winston Churchill’s coffin from London to Bladon after his state funeral will be sold for scrap because “there have been no offers for __ _ ^ „ it from museums!” a British1 CARS, GOLF CLUBS . . use Pontiac press Classified Ads. To rail spokesman announced. , place yours call 3324181. RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, PROPERTY, COTTAGES, Youth Corps Project OK'd in Two Counties WASHINGTON (AP) — The Labor Department has approved 8' neighborhood youth corps project involving four a in Michigan’s Muskegon and Oceana counties. The government, will* provide $88,000 for the project which is sponsored by the Muskegon Area Intermediate School District. $1,000 to *5,000 1st or 2nd! HOME mortgage SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS’. ★ CREDIT LIFE insur^ce TI aT NO EXTRA COSTI | Cash when needed! Without obligation, tee and talk with Mr. Merit Vott or Mr. Buckner, who have been loaning money to hundred* of people in Pontiac during the past 40 yean. All borrower* will testify to receiving fair, honest, and courteous treatment. (Do not take Y chance 'dealing with strangers or fly-by-night lenders.). When you deal here, you receive the full amount of your loan in casli at ortce. No papers to sign until the loan is rfosed. No charge for inspection, appraisal or.survey. No charge for abstract, title search or title Insurance. Borrow from us to consolidate your debts, to pay ofT the balance you owe on your contract, to pay taxes, to make home repain or improvements, or for any other good pun pose. See its today. SPARTAN SPARTAN SPECIALS! SATURDWONLY! 1.50 COPPERTONE |^p^^^^$M.98Fo*t«rGrant SUNTAN lift CHARADE LOTION flSSUNCIASSESl 111 2.98 LADY GILLETTE n, SHAVING KIT IN TOTE BAG 1.15 MULTI-PURPOSE LOTION 2.35 VALUE VO-5 SPRAY 25 FT. ROLL ALUMINUM FOIL WRAP REG 3.48 28SH&A? OFFICIAL 50 STAR AMERICAN FLAG KIT WOODEN HANDLE BAIT KNIFE OFFICIAL TRAIL I TUB PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 B—3 Judy Clearance Sale Wrn/i Men's Summer and Year 'round Suits Regular $699S to *100°° \lOLY74l 7 BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE *59»*79 SPECIAL VALUE Dacron and Wool 2-Pant Suits Regular *£5“ Sale Priced *63 «t,% *15»s35 Men's Sportcoats SK $38t.$48 Student Suits < Continental and Ivy Styles Regular to $55.00 $33 to $43 Men's Slacks Summer and year/round ago 1T99 Regular to $24.95 I to 11 Men's Jackets ,X°U 6" to 14" Men's Short Sleeve Sport - Dress and Jac Shirts 775 & ,or975 regular O C75 regular O ; $4.00 em O $5.00 mm Boys' Washable Slacks 2" and 3' Billy-the-Kid and Fdrah Regular to $5.98 99 Sires 3 to-?— Regular to 5.98 Boys' Slack Sets 2"and3" Boys' Sport and Jac Shirts Regular $3.00 159 2 for $5.00 Boys' Sport Coats __Special Group $1 A x $14 Regular to $22.98 | (J «0 IH Ladies' Summer Dresses • Juniors • Misses • Half Sizes Sleeveless, Roll Sleeve, Arnel . Jersey, Dacron and Cotton regular to *2998 99 to 19” Girls' Summer Dresses Our entire stock regular to $1098 3**..69* Ladies' Summer Suits regular to $24.98 10" to 19" Ladies' Summer Bermudas regular to $4.00 469 2 (or $5 Ladies' Skirts-Shells-Jackets 449 to 8" regular to $17.98 Ladies' Spring Dresses 6" to 14" regular to $29.98 Ladies' Summer Dusters 499 regular $7.00 regular . to $5.00 Ladies' Jewelry 99' Ladies' Skirts-Blouses—Jackets % Off Summer Styles4* Ladies' Handbags regular* .......099 799 4o $12.98 C t0 I Ladies' v Spring Suits regular to $55.00 125# to 27 50 Ladies' Spring Coats regular to $49.95 12s# 24!0 Girls' Slack Sets reg. $4.00 to $5.98 Sizes 3 to 14 3" to 4 99 Girls' Blouses Short Sleeve and Sleeveless styles regular $2.29 to‘$3.98 181 to 2" Girls' Terry Shifts-Cotton Robes regular $4.00 and $5;00 2"ond 3" Girls' Pajamas Shortie Styles A59 regular $4.00 £■ 2 for $5.00 Girls' Pedal Pushers 199 Regular $2.50 Girls' Pedal Pusher Sets Sizes 7 to 14 regular to $5.98 3" Hush Puppies BREATHIN’ BRUSHED PIGSKIN* CASUAL SHOES BY WOLVERINE Closeouts and/or Discontinued styles dr colors Regular $9.95 0^ 0 q Men's g88 Regular $8.95 pAA Ladies' 5®® ruil/795 - Q88 ,488 Children s O and 4 TM1 OHOt WITH THI OIAUTIPUL PIT SALE! DRESS tO90 Discontinued Styles CASUAL Reg. to $15.99. . Siics 4 to 10 AAAA to D widths HIGH-MID-CUBAN-HEELS STACK-WEDGE HEELS CASUAL Reg. to $9.99 DRESS 490 six.. 4 to io Ego £1 AAA to C widths El and R€MCH 29 Discontinued Styles 15“ OXFORDS and SUP9NS Sisos 7 to 12 Regular*to $26.95 A 90 E widths Men's Portage - Pedwins OXFORDS and SLIPONS Regular to $12.95 Sizes 6% to 12 A to E widths V° 8 90 Children’s Buster Brown-Poll Parrots OXFORDS - SLIPONS ^STRAPS Reg. to $8.95 - Sizos 5-8, 8Vi-4 A to E widths 190 4th of JULY SPECIAL! U.S. KEDS WHITE TENNIS SHOES !99 SUMMERETTES by BALL BAND Discontinued styles Ladies' White TENNIS SHOES Tapered To* Sizes 4 to 10 N-M widths Children's TENNIS OXFORDS 288 Rod,-flue, Whit* Molded Arch Reinforced Tee Si*.. 5-12,12H-3 Use a Convenient Lion Charge Plan with option terms i B—4 THK PONTIAC H<' frRliVA Y, JULY 2, 1965 Row Do Middle-Aged Children Treat ? (Editor's Note—This is the final article in a 10-part series on problems of the middle-aged. The series is condensed from the book “Generation in the Middle” by Thelma £. Parted.) By THELMA C. PURTELL Are middle-aged children overly eager to dump their parents anywhere they can, or are they overprotective, overly guilty, overly anxious? The Family Service Association, working with a $300,000 grant from the Ford Foundation, has announced that families are making their aged old before it is necessary by treating them as incompetents. They are hustling the elderly off to homes and institutions to be rid of them, often without consulting them and against their will. Other authorities, as weighty and valid, are ready to prove the reverse. That the old demand too much; that the middle generation tries to do too much; that no one has been asked to do so much before. Retirement at 65 is comparatively new; when that age was established, actuaries did not expect people to live much longer. With luck and legislation, this generation may not be dependent. Besides, their children may not be responsible for their children so long; the plan now is to revise education so that young people will graduate from college by 18, and have their master’s degree fay 2D. ★ * ★ It does add to the tensions of advancing years to know you are faced with responsibilities which your parents were spared and which your children will not have to face. A set of grandparents across town, a day’s visit away in the car, is an asset. Children get the sort of love they cannot get at home. It is different when tare el a defective child must be settled. There is only one answer: what is the best course fbr the greatest number of the people concerned. * * * Is the burden too much for the wife, who must doubje as nurse? Is the situation affecting the mental health of the children? Where would the olde^ person WM& get the best care, which Is best lot him? And finally, there is the hardest and most important <}ue»-tion: Am I answering these out . of love and understanding orj from selfishness, or because of! what I think the neighbors will1 say? I If and when all these can be answered honestly, you will have the right answer, whether it means a Home or home. NOW! We Use JET SMUT WAX YOU CAN Control YOUR OWN COMFORT l« a Ntw 1965 Cadillac Call LLOYD WALLACE JEROME CADILLAC FE 3-7021 the hard fact must be faced that, tor one reason or another, older, parents cannot live alone anymore. AGED BARENTS But in s o m e instances, an aged parent has literally' been removed from his home at the decision of a son or a daughter, who regrets it almost as soon as the move is made. A place must be made for ^parents. They must have love and attention as they near the end of their lives. But as often as they are misused or neglected, elders can wreck the life of the family, which, of course, is the last thing they themselves might want to do. (Old age does not automatically confer sainthood, however.) Forty-ish children often feel guilty Ipcause they are not including their parents in all their recreation. It may not have occurred to them that then fas be a. natural, normal withdrawal on the part of the aged themselves. ★ ★ ★ The University of Chicago, fol- lowing a five-year study* of healthy, normal older people, has concluded that this desire for solitude, which can reach a state of complete isolation,- is what many elderly want. The technical term is “disengagement.” * * * One of the thuigs that has been overdone is the folksy concept of a grandparent — unpaid baby sitters who love every minute of it, grandfathers who whittle away at toy boats, and are expert handy men around the house, grandmothers who are bakers of cookies and pies. It is also healthy and practical to realize that older people can be very difficult. There is no glossing over what a couple, of recalcitrant, spoiled oldsters can do to a family. COMPLICATIONS All these heartaches are doubled and tripled when they are complicated by the fact that the old people have no money of their own, and must become dependent on the whims and largess of children to whom they once gave all. It can be tragic if there simply is not enough, money, if the youngest generation must be penalized in their social life and education. The final problem and the saddest is senility. It is as heart rending as when the fu- Marriage Licenses Uward F. Dud* Jr.. Hml Park and Judith K. Lutkut, Farmington Larry J. Holcomb, Oxford and Ula M. Sartta, Oxford Thomas W. Busch, Blrmlnaham and arabara A. Llstman, Bloomfield Hills Harold I. Book, Milford and Linda C. Lennox, Femdelo Leroy D.' Soogren, 153 W. Ypeltontl and Margaret M. Lynch. Slrmlnghem David j. Short*, Royal Oak and Carole A. Brlner, Dearborn Donald J. Card; Drayton and Diana S. Fuffle, to E. Fairmont Dalo Beckwith, SouthfloM and Rita M. McFarland, SoulhfMd Edward F. Zawaskl, Royal Oak and Catharlna M. Sandaraon, Birmingham Tarry L. Kramp, Drayton and Oall A. Zevesky, S3 Gladstone David A. Daley, 1451 Alma and Gloria Norman K. Clark, ISIS Loach and . Ith A. Newby, HU Grant Richard H. Drake, OHM Pontiac L and Swan K. Faatharston, 31 Dwight Ratoart J. Bargert, Troy and Ethel Sutherland, Detroit Humphrey, 744 Scotty Jackia D. Lange, Watartord and k. Oscendosky, Ortonvllle Gary E. Cook, 405 Jamestown Read md Beverly j. Murray, Warran Arthur If. Hackman Jr„ Southfield larbara J. Dusseau, Monro* Alfred D. Stelmel, Ferndalt and Sylvia Brant G. Hughes, Buffalo, N. Y. Kay A. Botsford, Birmingham Daniel C. Hamlin, Orchard Laka and Audrey S. Doner, Dreyten Willie R. Cooper, 55 Murrey and Geraldine Martin, Rochester John E. McGuano, Grease Isle end Diane A. Gory, tsuthfisld Michael L. McKee, Radford end Chan Detroit Pair Killed ROSE CITY 475! 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SCHOOL JSSL'n: Ww ^ SOUND SNAPSHOTS 111 TALKINS IITTEIW tMIMMU m s LISTEN TO MUSIC • CAPSTAN DRIVE PRECISION TAPE TRANSPORT MECHANISM All for only 95 $1.00 A WEEK ALL PUSH BUTTON CONTROL A miracle of miniaturization. A matter-piece of mechanical and electronic detign. Make recordings of top quality and play them back in true fidelity! All the features, dependability and precision of instruments costing many times morel Open Tonight Until 9 P. M. Buy Your Vacation Needs as Wall as Gifts for Every Occasion on Enggass Easy Credit Terms I JEWELRY CO. 25 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Is Tito Russian Convert in Communist Party Split? BUY. SELL, TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS. MOSCOW (UPB - For the first time in years, Yugoslavia may be willing to attend meetings of groups of the world’s Communist parties. Western observers in Moscow today read this Interpretation into a Joint, Soviet-Yugoslav communique issued yesterday at the conclusion of Yugoslav President Tito’s two-week visit to Russia. They said it could bold implications for the future of die Sino-Soviet struggle. In the.' communique^ Tito agreed oil the need for “comradely. discussions” among all Communist parties “on the most vital problems of the day I and their solution on the basis of Marxism-Leninism and Socialist internationalism.” Russia called an international conference of 19 Communist parties in Moscow in March 1964, apparently to lay the I groundwork for ousting Red j Chine from the world Communist movement. | NOT INVITED I Yugoslavia, which has ignored similar conferences since 1957, was not invited to the 1964 meeting and did not attend it. The Moscow conference ended in agreement to hold occasional “consultative’' meetings to be followed eventually by a world Communist snmmit conference. The observers said yesterday’s communique indicated Tito now may be willing to join in the “consultative” meetings. it . ••*#' ir They said if that is true, the Kremlin may have won a new convert to its reported plans to take decisive action against Red China. SPURNED PLEAS In the communique, «^ito tip; effect backed Moscow’s appefiT for Communist unity “in the face of imperialist danger." Red! China has spurned such pleas in the past. Tito also lined up Yugoslavia solidly behind the Kremlin on issues ranging j from Viet Nam to the Dominican Republic. The communique called for “an immediate end” to Ameri- can bombing raids against Communist North Viet Nam and demanded the United States pull its troops out of the Dominican Republic. ' 'W' 'it * It urged the recognition of two separate German states and the “normalisation” of West Berlin. The Communists want Western troops out of West Berlin, which lies deep in the heart of Communist East Germany. WORLD CONFAB The communique also called for a world disarmament conference and the expansion of the United Nations Security Council and the.U. N. Economic and Social Council (UNESCO) to accommodate “the new independent states of Africa and Asia." The Moscow observers regarded the communique as a gratifying reward for the new leaders of the Kremlin, who gave Tito a regal reception. Tito himself called the visit the “most satisfying” he has ever made to Soviet Russia. Grocery Prices Climb; Man Dies in Protest BOMBAY, India (JR - Suun-derji Ramji, 50, a peddler, burned himself to death amid hundreds of people yesterday to protest profiteering by grocers. ★ * ★ Ramji had announced he would commit suicide publicly if grocers didn’t stop overcharging. He poured kerosene on his clothes and set fire to them. He died soon after being taken to a hospital. *, i CLOSED MONDAY ROYAL BOND MINT 2 GALS. *5®° e Latex e Semi Gloss • ENAMEL e All Colors ONE WEEK ONLY PLASTIC WALL TILE MAO-O-LAC’S WONDER PAINT of the Century • FAMOUS FORMULA “It” • Exterior-Interior Finish • NO PCELIflS e NO BLISTININO He* 97.99 CERAMIC WALL TILE 4Vk"x4Wt" . Wt Lean Tools 35c X ASPHALT TILE Dark light colon-A C ®*HSS "T • to was this: | They’re making windshield wipers for submarines.” Los Alamos Mas Peace Mission, Today, the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory of the Atomic Energy Commission makes no secret of the feet that it, and another laboratory at Livermore, are. the places where all die nation’s bombs, missiles and other nuclear arms are created. Even so, some pretty unusual, non weapons activities are going on at both laboratories. These include: 1. The quest, to harness the fearsome,hydrogen bomb reaction for peacetime electricity production — a quest which was pioneered at Los Alamos in a machine dubbed the “perhapsa-tron.” 2. The “Rover Project” — Hie dreem of using nuclear reactors to propel spacecraft to distant planets, perhaps at speeds approaching the velocity of light, instead of using conventional chemical boosters. 3. “Plowshare” The program /aimed at using nuclear explofpves for peacetime uses in a range from manufacturing new elements and increasing the flow of natural gas deep underpound to carving out canals and harbors on the earth’s surface. SEARCH FOR PEACE A visitor to Los Alamos and Livermore is impressed by the talk heard of the search for gaaen ■ specials IOGANY PANELING Prs-fiaislnd 4x8 SHEETS GRADE “A” QUALITY Fiberglass INSULATION 3875 Airport Road at M> TRAMS 674-2662 peace ffrom the two men who are most immediately responsible for keeping America’s nuclear arsenal stocked with the very best in the weapons field. They are Dr. Norris E. Bradbury, director of the Los Alamos lab, and Dr. John Fodter, director at Livermore, .which is a branch of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory of the University of California at Berkeley. Livermore is about 100 miles from Sen Francisco. ■ ■ * * . 0 - Bradbury was one of the developers of the original A-bombs in those hush-hush days when the Army took over an exclusive boys ranch school and built 'a, secret clay around it. The rough wartime community — now a lovely, progressive town — is. located on a tabletop known as Pajarito - little Bird - Plateau, halfway up the eastern slope of the Jemez Mountain range, overlooking the Rio Grande. But the Weapons laboratories are still secret. Bradbury says- weapons still constitute at least 50 per cent of the lab's effort, and that “if the chips were down” — and war was on or imminent — his entire staff of 7,000 would be working full blast on the exclusive effort of producing even more powerful, efficient and sophisticated weapons. OUT OF BUSINESS But Bradbury, a thin, wiry, fast-talking man, also says: . “While making better weapons is still our major activity at this laboratory, we’re not in this business for any fun of making bombs. Our objective, really, is to nut ourselves out of business. Production of nuclear weapons Terry Fines KHG 8046 C. B. RADIOS PARTS SERVICE TV RADIO UL 2-1097 New and Used GARDEN TRACTORS Air-Cooled Engine and Parti ★ MINI-BIKES * R. V. Snyder KHG 7050 LAWNMOWER SALES AND SERVICE TRACTORS TILLERS UL 2-1097 IT'S LAWNMOWER TUNE TIME AGAIN AT OUR PUCE SALES and SERVICE for ★ JACOBSEN ★ MOTO-MOWER ★ YARDMAN ★ TORO Coll U« Now at UL 2-1097 RADIO DISPATCHED TRUCKS AUBURN ROAD SALES & SERVICE 1416 W. AUBURN ROAD — ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN BETWEEN CROOKS AND LIVERNOIS is an end toward sdmetiiing else — peace. And we’ve been lucky So tor.” l . From the start of discussions leading up to the signing of the limited nuclear tori ban treaty — which outlaws aU but underground testing — Bradbury was convinced that such i move offered the “possibility of taking the first real, even if small, step in the direction of the prevention of a nuclear' war.” - :* p. . w ' And he says “We’ve learned > test underground successfully” ' •>es for cook-outs. With tight-fitting lid. Just say “charge it* .. . BET sss* GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Day Camp Is a Girls , JULY; ing Stone By BETTY CRAWFORD A chance to learn, a chance to play, f chance to m«£t new friends — this it what some 135 Girl Scouts are getting at day camp this week. ■ * 4* , The camping day begins at 9:90 each morning at Hawthorne Park in the northern tip of the city, just south of Walton Boulevard. The' girls range from Brownie scouts, who are second and third graders, to Junior scouts, who are from the fourth to sixth grades. About 10 junior and senior, high school girls are there, too, assisting the g5 adult unit leaders with camping activities. They are members of the Cadette and Senior Girl Scout corps, respectively. In addition, two nurses stapd by in case there’s an Illustrating how to make a basket out of water reeds is program aide Margot Beauchamp of Kuhn Street. Carefully watching before it’s their turn to try are (from left) Debbie Berry of Norton Avenue, Lynne Kline of Lincoln Avenue, and Pam DeStross of Mary Day Avenue. The reeds, gathered from the nearby lake shore, were soaktd in water before use to prevent breakage. Homeland Exhibit for Art-USA One of the most exciting, largest and widely acclaimed modern American art coilec-tions in history — "ART: USA" — will open to the public at The Detroit Institute of Arts on July 10. The exhibition will remain through Aug. 1. Ranging from realism to ab- stract expressionism and geometric abstractionism—“ART: USA” consists of 102 paintings by as many outstanding contemporary American artists. It was assembled in 1962 by Lee Nordness, New York art dealer, for S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. of Racine, Wis. Fun Evening in Store at Hills Country Club By SIGNE KARLSTROM The dinner dance at Bloomfield Hills Country Club tomorrow evening promises to be a jolly good time to begin the Fourth of July celebration. Amofig the many members who have made reservations are: the Robert VanderKloots who have reserved a table for six; klr. and Mrs. Paul McKenney have a table for 10; T. Russ Hill has a party of eight; the Robert G. Winger-ters will have a large table,* as will Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gates and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Mills. ★ ★ * Others are Mr. and Mrs. IfUke Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Carson: E. Dalton, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Robertson, Mr. * and Mrs.' George Tischer, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Prucher, the D. D. Douglasses, the H E. Johnsons. . With Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wilson Jr. wiH be the Harry Hoyts, the Samuel Gawnes and the Howard Keatings. At another table there will be Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Colombo and Mr. and Mrs. William Baldwin. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Goad will be at a table with Mr. and Mrs. >Jack Frost, the George Browns and Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Hpwe. SWEDISH WEDDING Mrs. Joseph Wellman of Falmouth Road leaves foe Sweden on July 10 to attend the wedding of the Wellmans’ son Mark. On July 24 he will claim as his bride Carina Pehrson of Gothenburg.1 Mrs. Wellman will be accompanied by her daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. James Nelson and Mr. Wellman’s sister, Miss Ruth Wellman of Fort Wayne, Ind. * * *. First they will visit Norway and Denmark and then spend a few days in Stockholm where they will meet Mr/add Mrs. E. Wright Yount, formerly of Birmingham, but now residing in London, Eng- -Jand. -----------> ----,1—-i The Younts will also attend the wedding which takes place in Gothenburg. ^ The bridal couple will travel by boat to USA. Mrs. Wellman and her traveling companions will stop in London for a visit with the Younts before returning home by air. The engagement is announced I of Pauline ||fl| Elizabeth Myers, Eastern Michigan University senior, *and daughter of Mrs. Cecil Myers of Chippewa Road and the late Mr. Myers, to Robert Greenhalgh, son of the, J. Robert Greenhalgh* of Ottawa , Drive. emergency or to give first aid: ■ it -r f .. The administrative duties of the camp this week fall on Mrs. Loyal Joos, camp director, and her assistant, Mrs. George Beauchamp. Next week thetwowfilreverie their roles, when a new session begins. learn about nature In toe area filled with toll shade trees and grassy hills that smile at the sun, the girls learn to appreciate nature. Divided among seven units according to age, the scouts also learn various crafts such as basket making with reeds they’ve gathered by the adjoining lake. Camp skills, including fire building, knot tying, and out-door cooking are taught, too. The type and degree are dependent upon the ages in the If you visit toe camp near midday, you may be ferity enough to see a heartwarming .victory, smile on the fece of a Brownie. What Is she smiling about? The juicy red (or is it black?) wriner she just' roasted over the campfire. -' COOKING ADVANCES Moving on to a junior unit, yoU will see more, advanced cooking tried and successfully completed! Juniors are treated to one overnight stay at toe camp. Working as a team, they pitch tents and up comes a temporary city. Here, campfire programs are scheduled. PAULINE ELIZABETH MYERS The exhibition, known formally ,as the Johnson Art Collection, is currently touring major U.S. museums, after its unusually enthusiastic reception abroad. It drew nearly 300 thousand visitors during two and a half years in 14 countries on three continents, under the auspices of the United States Information Agency. * ★ ★ “ART:USA” has broken museum attendance records wherever shown in this country. Jt comes to Detroit from the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.' < It has appeared at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D. C., the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, and the Museum of Art of the Rhode Island School of Design. MANY ARTISTS Included in the collection are major works by Hans: Hof-' mann, Edward Hopper, Josef , Albers, Mary Tobey, Edwin Dickinson, Charles Burchfield, Milton Avery, Ben Shahn, Isabel Bishop, Karl Zerbe, William de Koonin, Peter Blume, William Thon, Walter Murch, Will Barnet, Larry Rivets, Stuart Davis, Robert Rauschenberg, Andrew Wyeth, Jack Levine, and 82 others. * “w * “ Nordness, who assembled the collection, commented, “All are artists who have been purchased by American museums, and all have received serious critical attention.” ★. ■ ★ . w The collection and its travels have been characterized by H. F. Johnson, chairman of S. C. Johnson & Son, IncM as “an act of faith in American art and an experiment by a business firm in international relations on a people-to-people level . . . motivated by a desire to show the best in American contemporary art to the workL". i * * “ART:USA” was accompanied by its own curator,. Joseph Messing,1 throughout its overseas tour. * ★ Oj Mr. Messing is also traveling with the collection in the United States, and will be at The Detroit Institute of Arts-during the exhibition period to conduct general tours on Tuesdays at 16:90 a.m. and Thursdays at 1:90 p.m.. GALLERY TALKS A special s t u d y series of three coordinated weekly' gallery talks will be given by Mr. Messing on Tuesdays at 1:3b p.m. and Thursdays at 10:90 a.m. “ART:USA" is a free exhibition and will be open to the public during The Detroit Institute of Arts’ summer hours —9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily except Mondays and holidays. Having a gay time are these Girl Scout pic flicker s. The scene has been repeated every day this week at the Pontiac area Girl Scout day camp. Working up an appetite Try Time Payment Plan wasn't hard in the open air< The cool, wooded area at Hawthorne Park provided an. excellent site for camping and outdoor fun. Smile Pays Dividends By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am a teenage girl, old enough to go with boys, but I’ve never had a real date. I am sure it’s because of my teeth. I have a space between my two front teeth big enough for another tooth to fit in-to. I attract tell your deceased husband’s mother that you have been advised to consult a lawyer. After that, I don’t think you’ll have to. DEAR ABBY: I read your column every day, but never thought I’d be writing to you. I have a wonderful husband in every respect, except for one. He smokes his cigarettes down until they are about a quarter of an inch long. That r/fc no' tier He~ has to drop it from his mouth into an ash okay and my ABBY teeth don’t ache I don’t need a dentist, as they can’t afford it right now. Everyone calls roe the girl with her teeth parted in the middle. I know other people have worse problems, but what can I do about mine? SELF-CONSCIOUS DEAR SELF: I understand your , plea for a pretty smile, and agree with it Ask your parents to let you find a good dentist,with a “time-payment” plan. As a girl’s face can be her fortune, her smile can be the “interest." DEAR ABBY: Mv husband passed away a wry short time ago. While I was still numb from grief, and shock, his mother barged into my home and demanded that I return the furniture which she had given us when we were first married. . This furniture was old and she was going to throw it away, but my husband rescued R from the junk heap and he and I refinished it. I never knew that things given to one’s husband had. to be returned after his death. Is this legal? My friends tell me I should see a lawyer.,Should I? CONFUSED DEAR CONFUSED: First, Brookside Unit of Garden Club Picnics by Pool Mrs. R. E. Bratton of Lone Pine Road, opened her home Thursday to the Brookside branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association tor a poolside picnic. Mrs. Carl Bird’s floral arrangement won first prize. Mrs. Alger Scott won second prize; and Mrs. L. R. Sampson, third place. Mrs. W. R. McClure received honorable mention. * * ■ -* '* Judging the arrangements of flowers from members’ gardens was Mrs. Carl Larson of the Bloomfield Hills branch of the association. Cohostesses were Mrs. E. G. Winn and Mrs. S. J. Nye. Wins Scholarship Janice Tuharsky, of Wellesley Terrace, a graduate rot Cass Tech High School, has received a 8250 scholarship awarded by The Fashion Group of Detroit. She will attend Parson School of Design in New York City this fell. This potato is mighty lucky! It’s getting the expert attention of Junior Scout Sally Cumber-worth, 8, of Newberry Street. Sally’s peeling potatoes for lunch menu in her unit. Even the presence of the photographer didn’t take her mind off her duties. tray because he tan’t get hold of it with his fingers. He has bought many cigarette holders, but the plastic ones melt and the metal ones have to have the remains dug out. Once the butt stuck to his lips and I had to use a pair of tweezers to get it off. off. I’ve tried telling him about it in private, and even making fun of him in public, but I just can't win. Help! ___________ .HAVE HAD.IT DEAR HAVE: If you’ve tried telling him in private and teasing him in public, and haven’t been able towin, the only solution is for you to become a better loser. SorTy, but there is no teaching a man who doesn’t care to learn. DEAR ABBY: A serviceman once wrote that he was hurt because no respectable girl was allowed to date a man in uniform. He reminded me of . a serviceman I once met when I 'was 16, He also said that he missed being made welcome in a home comparable to that of his parents’. I frit so sorry-for Mm that I talked it over with my parents. They trusted me and.agreed to give some of these servicemen a chance to show they were gentlemen. Mother got in touch with toe chaplain at toe base near our town and asked him to send 2P nice young men to. our home fdr a swimming party and barbecue supper. \ I invited 19 nice girls to be their dates. It was so much ftm that we did this every Sunday. The parties were chaperoned by my parents, and I can honestly say that there was not one serviceman who got out of line. I am now 37, happily married and have three daughters. And if THEY want to date'servicemen, Tm going to « use the same plan my parents used for me. Thank you. ANITA Surprised when they saw The Press photographer snapping their picture are Rose Isenberg of Henderson Street (right) and Patricia Miller of West Huron Street. The two are carrying water to be placed next to the campfire in case of emergency. % Folk singer Jackie Page, 16, of Augusta Avenue, strums away on her bass ukelele, playing and singing “Bondua.” Jackie, a senior girl scout and program aide at the day camp, took "her instrument along to camp to accompany the young voices. ® * v " *. THE TON-TIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1905 B—9 September voids are planned by Ruth Ann Fenner, daughter of the Lester E. Fenners of Shaman Street and Floyd Edward Chapel, son of the Leonard C. Chapels also of Shoman Street Engagement news' is made by Patricia Anne Soucy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Soucy of Lancaster Road and Thomas W. Gillis, son of Mrs. William Gillis of Marion Avenue and the late Mr. Gillis. Winter vows will be taken by the pair. The Trunjan R Hortons gf Oxford announce the engagement of their daughter, Diane Kay to Thomas H. Arthur Jr., son of the senior Anhurs of Lake Orion. September 25 vows are planned. * Mr. and Mrs. Robert DReynolds of Archbold, Ohio, announce the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn Kay to Richard D. Lord, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hotoard I: Lord of Sunnydale Avenue, Independence Township. Both attend Detroit Bible College. Unwise to Let .Wedding Costs Mount By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Dear Mary Feeley: My young daughter is getting married in- a few months. Please tell me what my obligations are toward her and toward the ex-| penses of the Wedding. Although my husband was; out of work last j year, we man-j aged to see her j through high school, and paid most of the expenses for her to graduate from practical nursing school. She started to work four months ago, and we all egreed that she would pay $15 a week for board, leaving her about $35 a week to have for her wedding. Now we are told she expects a big wedding with a reception! Her boyfriend and his family expect and want a $1,000 reception—when all we can afford without going broke is about $300 for church and breakfast for both families. Please advise me on this and save me one big headache! Mrs?C. L., Pawtucket, R. I. Dear Mrs. L.: You’re in for a headache any way you figure' it. Just managing the simplest sort of wedding will guarantee that. So for heaven’s sake, don’t spend $1,000 trying to satisfy the bridegroom’s family. . $20»$74 Summer Handbags Regular to $15.00 $4»$10 Summer Jewelry Regular to $5.00 Sportswear t to $18 Orion Knits c $4te$9 Regular $8 to $18 Orion Knits and Crepes Summer Sportswear Reg. $6 to $12 Tops and Bottoms $4*.$Q Spring Coats Regular to $50.00 17!0,"$25 All Weather Coats Regular to $40.00 $10-$27 Suits-Dresses-Ensembles Regular $18 to $120 Vi Off fiewi- Aiuuutf Entire Summer Stock. Including Spring Shoes1 Andrew Geller regular to $30.00 1890 DeLiso Debs regular to $19.95 1490 Caressa-Mr. Easton regular to $16.95 1290 Town & Country Dress 990 California Cobblers re*«iaru,$12.95 690 Town & Country Casuals Regular to $9.95 £90 Sizes 4 to 10 » AAA to B widths SUMMERETTES a, BALL-SAND Discontinued Styles - 88 HURON at TELEGRAPH Italian Sandals Regular to $8.95 Sizes 5 to 10 :90 Tins PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUI^T2, ieat Belts Nylon Speaking of safety and synthetics, eoe of the more recent applications of nylon is In automobile seat belts. ' * * * ■ When warnwreatber months draw more families back to the open road for picnics, visiting, or Just plain neighborhood shopping, here is a • statistic worth remembering: most auto accidents occur within 25 miles of the home. Average temperature of all the waters in the world’s oceans is about 39 degrees. Enroll NOW! Enrollments Taken Dally at Your Convenience PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16UE. Huron Phone FE 4-1854 Study the latest techniques and hair fashions. Call Miss Wilson for further information The Thomas Gallons of Wixom Road, Milford Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Patricia E. to Lt. H. Alan Toth Jr., of Cocoa Beach, Fla., son of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Toth of Clearwater, Fla. She is a graduate of the McAuley School of Practical Nursing. Her fiance is stationed at Patrick AFB. Late September vows are planned by Nancy Jean Steward, daughter of the Aline N. Stewards of Kimball Street and James Hutchinson III, son of the junior James Hutchinsons of Knoll-wood Street. The bride-elect attended Michigan Christian College. KINNEY'S SHOES • | For the Jt'hole Family I I PONTIAC MALL 1 | MIRACLE mile CONTEMPORARY LOWBOY RCA VICTOR MivT&td COLOR TV e RCA Solid Copper Circuits e Glare-proof RCA HhLm Tubs e Super-powerful 25,000-volt chassis e RCA Automatic Color Purifier e Ultra-sensitive VHF/UHF tuners e One-Set VHF fins tuning STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 W. HURON FE 2-6967 Late October vows are p tnnn e d by Diam Jo Luther arid Ted G. Wagoner. Their parents, residents of Holly Toumship, are the Arnold A. Luthers, East Holly Road arid the George E. Wagoners, Grange Hall Road. Writers Elect Noel Loveland Noel Loveland was elected president of the Oakland Writers’ Workshop at the Thursday meeting held in the YWCA. WWW Two more elected to offices were Rose Marie Cain as vice president and Mary Buffmyer, secretary-treasurer, w w * During the workshop manuscripts were read by Sheila Go in and Miss Buffmyer. TkelaX iA NOW! FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY! SAVE TWICE on basic sets of TOWLE *- » Tin UN 6 ’2flJ/6upto$ 69.00 with Towle’s S*ve-By-The-S«t offer 'SflV6 UP to $ 55.20 with elimination of Federil Tar up to $124.20 total savlnfli A ran opportunity! TewtoTs Saw-By-Tha-Sot promotion and tlta elimination of the Federal Excite Tat offer you double savings on basic services for 4, 8 or 12 people. Choose from a complete selection of Towle patterns. Take your entire set uae oun silver club plan to OIVIOB YOUR PAYMENTS. NO INTERKBT OR CARRYING CHARGES. Natiae Lesate franc* Provincial . ON Muter El Brand** Ctndltlif ht JU*| Richard CnftMua. The Store Where Quality Counts FPED rPgjU/2 ~CO. Pontiac*s Oldest Jewelry Store 2& West Huron FE 2-7257 Polly's Pointoa Replaces Moth Balls DEAR POLLY — When staring winter woolens do try this trick that was on my grandmother’s list of home remedies. Instead of pungent moth balls and moth flakes, use odorless epsom salts wrapped in game or thin doth. Also sprinkle ep-som salts under the edges of wool rugs. I have done this for years and never had a moth problem - JUDY. - DEAR POLLY — When using ribbon to make a bow for.a girl’s dress, make a small buttonhole in the center of its length. w w w Sew a small button on the dress where the bow is to be placed, button the ribbon on the dress and then tie in a bow. This is much better than pinning the ribbon on. Taking the bow off also mhkes for easier ironing. When putting needles in a pin cushion, leave some thread on each needle and they won’t easily disappear down into toe pin cushion. If they do, it is easy to pull them out with the thread.—ELSIE. WWW DEAR POLLY - I took down my heavy draperies and padded valances to replace them with lighter obes and no valances. The white enamel traverse rods did not look well against the walnut woodwork in the room. w ’ w w I bought dark brown gummed tape, cut it in pieces the lengths of the rods, flattened it on the front put of each rod and then carefully folded the edges over the tops and bottoms of the rods, w . w w The cords still pull the hook holders and the rods blend with the paneled wells and dark woodwork. In case I want to I can have white rods again by pimply pulling off the plastic tape!—SARAH w * , w DEAR POLLY - My grade school daughter needed a shoe bag. I cut a pair pf my husband’s old light blue corduroy pants off Just below toe worn .knees, sewed a seam across and let the cuff down apd used the hem to pull a drawstring through and made a loop at the. end at the cord for her wrist. I also use snag cuffs from worn socks to make clothes for her doU. I cut off the foot and the cuff can be used for a sheath dress or strapless sun dress. The girls have fun 'using their own ideas, too.— MRS.L.Z. DEAR POLLY - My hint it for those who use powdered milk. Put the required amount of powder milk into a quart botUe and mark that level with red nail polish on the outside of the bottle. ★ ★ * No more measuring will be needed as the bottle is just filled to that line and then water added.—M.L. * ★ * Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a dollar if Polly uses your idea in Polly’s Pointers. Mrs. Joel Darby recently received a bachelor of arts degree from Michigan State University. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eldore Klender of Williams. Lake Road. ■ Jack Price, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Price of East Colgate Avenue, was awarded a doctorate in. education from Wayne State University. He has accepted a position as supervisor coordinator, of mathematics for San Diego County, Calif. SPECIAL SUNDAY MENU PRIVATE ROOMS AVAILABLE For Wedding * Birthday, All Otcaak Partle, Roast Young Tom Turkey Country Fried Chicken, Family Style Chicken a la King • Baked Iowa Ham Broiled Lake Superior White Fish Baked Stuffed Pork Chops Roast Sirloin of Beef Vegetable, Salad, Dessert Included j ADULTS CHILDREN UNDER TEN Jk *2°° ifJr NOON and EVENINGr Throughout The Year! DMgktfml Simmer, Outside Catering Service Also Av»»*h|t 3230 MNEJLAKE ROAD ROUTE 2, ORCHARD LAKE, MICHIGAN Shore of FlunUke Revealing the decorative wonders of Mediterranean design are these newest Hpllmark pieces.. Added to this collection are dressers, chests, commodes—a credema, buffet, armovr and a handsome china—all with the to-the-floor base styling. Designed by Norman Hek-ler, Hallmark is constructed of select pecan veneers and solid ash. The chiseled look of the drawer fronts and door fronts, the, adaptable, and classic shapes of beds, mirrors and tables have made the collection a favorite among lovers of Spanish decor. Line available locally. . D.S. Longs Repeat Vpws Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Ealy of Boston Avenue announce the recent marriage of their daughter Jean C. to Donald S. Long, son of the Stanley Longs of Edna Street. Attending the couple at the rite performed in the home of Rev. Orville Windell of the First Assembly of God Church, were Mr. and Mrs. Keith Phares. ★ ★ ★ The bride will attend Oakland Community College and Mr. Long will complete his architectural engineering studies at Lawrence Institute of Technology. Miss Lang Is Caught Up in Pre-Nuptial Whirlwind Celina Anne Lang of Riviera Terrace was tailored at a trousseau shower, Thursday, in the home of Mrs. Duane Bailey on Red Mill Road, Pontiac Township. Jeanette Bailey of Hatchery Road was cohostess. * ★ ★ The bride-elect, daughter of the Case E. Langs will marry Jon Fredrick Barnhart, Saturday, in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. His parents are the Martin F. Barnharts of Goldner Avenue. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Harvey Hall and Diane Jones of South Winding Drive were cohostesses at a recent shower in toe Hall tame on North Roslyn Drive. ★ k ★ Mrs. Dale Fulcher and Mrs. Michael Lang of Buick Street honored Miss Lang at a shower in the Fulcher tame on LaSalle Street. Flower Cutting? Cut flower stems at an angle. Then, even if the stem rests against the bottom of the vase, the blossoms may still draw water. Don't Fence Them In Children Need Space By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE W-425: ’ Colette B., aged 29, is the mother of two little boys. On a recent speaking trip to Los Angeles, I was a dinner guesi. at Colette’s home. She and her husband were exulting over their beautiful house which they had only recently acquired. So they showed me its ultramodern advantages with FaSHlOlfS Getting ready for your vacation? Shop hero and let na outfit you with a complete fun-time wardrobe. For a stylish send-off to rammer, this b it Charge Account* A U Free Parking ^ } Bobette Shop 16 N. Saginaw FE 2-6931 all the glee of a toddler over a new toy. And that new house was the sort in which a movie could be filmed. For it had all the modern gadgets and push-button appliances. But I didn’t dare voice my inner thoughts,* for its back yard was a patio only 12 feet deep and overlaid with stones. * “ ■■■ ” *' * *• — “Where will your boys romp and play?’’ I wondered. “There is no place for them to dig trenches or build a fort or even enjoy a swing.” So will you parents PLEASE remember that when you purchase a home site, your youngsters also have certain rights? * * * Maybe daddy and mother enjoy sitting in a parlor or lounging to a patio or squandering long evenings before a TV in an exotic plush dwelling. But you adults have already had your childhood whereto you probably romped and played over grass or sand! REMEMBER CHILDHOOD Maty of you. came from farms or small towns where you could enjoy sandlot baseball games or hikes along a stream and climb trees. ★: • ★ 1 k-- — Are you forgetting that children should .not be confined to a “cage,* even though its many rooms and ultramodern furnishings make it a dream house, of the sort pictured to modern magazines? * k it Many college graduates are now trying to keep up with the Joneses but are meanwhile forgetting the needs of their children. It is far better to occupy a ramshackle old frame house on a big lot with real soil to the back yard, than to own the swankiest modern dwelling even though it has a superb view of a bay or lake or mountain skyline! ★ ★ ★ Until your child reaches senior high school, he needs land — lots of land — under his feet. He requires amide outdoor (day room — and not just indoor nursery space! * ★ ★ After he enters college, he may be content to be cooped In his own room, surrounded by a bed and a bookcase. But toddlers and early grade school children should have ample running space outdoors. They need leg room far romping to the soil! “Don’t fence me to,” Is their subconscious wish. * * ★ Yet many American young couples are selecting swanky tames to flatter their own vanity or indulge a lifelong ambition to have a “dream” house, such as they have seen to the movies. ♦ it it Beware! Movie life is artificial and its stage settings try to mimic royalty. But regal European families lead a goldfish bowl existence. So please consider your flowing children when you purchase a home! * V it k • And don’t pay too much for a house! For then you get peptic ulcers trying to meet the instalments! Send for my “Budget Booklet,’’ enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. It shows you taw much you dare spend on a house, bared - on your income. - ' k k ■ k ■,] (Mwayi writ* to Or, Crete in cere o* Th* Pontiac Praaa, *nclookig * tong tUmpoO. addresHO envalope an*^ COMMMI tw* tor ana at HU B-—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1063 of science teas awarded Camille Schutt Michigan University at Marquette. A member of Gamma Phi Alpha sororityshe is the daughter of the Melvin A. Schutts of Auburn Avenue. Keep Attire Simple in the Off ice By TIm Emily Post Inititute Q: I have Just graduated from college and in another week I will be starting my first job and wish to make a good appearance. WIB you please tell me what type of clothes are in best taste for a business c" “ A: The unfailing for clothes worn in an office are that they be tailored, smart, in good taste but in no way conspicuous. Above all, avoid wearing clothes that need constant rearranging. ' It is not necessary to sacrifice prettiness to exaggerated sleekness, but do avoid erything that interferes or catches or keeps getting out of place. Also, wear clothes that properly cover you. Scant attire may be very alluring in a musical revue, but is out of place in a business office. One important accessory for ^beautiful business clothes is a *pair of plain sensible shoes of best quality. High-heeled, fancy sandals and heel-less slippers are not only inappropriate but Fuinous to any foot that must be much stood upon. A well-shod foot is much to be prized and noticed. If you would like the booklet entitled “The Bride’s Trousseau,’’ send 10 cents in coin and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Emily Post Institute; in care of The Pontiac Press. Sr A * The E m i 1 y Post Institute cannot answer personal mail, but all questions of general interest are answered in this Noted British sculptor Keith Godwin is shoum here employing his art in a new medium — wool. Assisted by his wife Mary, Godwin used a pair of garden shears as his Sculpting tool to carve out the relief design in a huge 26 by seven-foot white wool rug which hangs on a With Garden Shears wall in the entranceway of “Wool House,” the International Wool Secretariat’s new world headquarters in London. Godwris sculpting technique um to formrpaper templates of the design elements, fasten them to the rug, and then carefully cut around the patterns. Continuing OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE of Quality Furniture WITH SAVINGS of 20% to 50% column. 4882 SIZES 2-4 Sculptor Clips Big Rug LONDON — Carpet makers have been weaving rugs with sculpture designs for years. But — probably for the first time anywhere—a sculptured rug has been created by a professional sculptor. Noted British sculptor, Keith Godwin, has just completed a 26-foot long relief carving—not in such traditional materials as stone or wood—but in a huge white wool rug. His - sculpting tool: a pair of garden shears. WWW Made of pure natural wools, the rug will greet visitors entering “Wool House,’’ .the International Wool Secretariat’s new world headquarters in London, which has just opened. The “wool sculpture,” measuring 26 by 7 feet, hangs on a wall in the foyer of the nine-story glass and granite building which houses the staff of the world wide promotional and research organization. Helped by his wife Mary, who is a textile designer, Mr. Godwin clipped away with his shears at the thick pile of shaggy wool yarns until his studio floor looked like that of a barber shop on a busy day. Mr. Godwin’s sculpting techniques was to form paper templates of the design elements, fasten them to the rug and then carefully cut around the patterns. At first sight, the solid white carving gives the appearance of an abstract relief. But the design was inspired by the sheepfarming countryside around the Godwin’s cottage in Dorset (Southern England). It depicts sheep pens, country lanes and the spiraling tracks left behind by tractors when they circle the snowbound Eng- lish fields in winter to feed the flocks. A principal lecturer at a London art school, Mr. Godwin has created the decorative sculpture for a number of London’s most modern office buildings, including the Commonwealth Institute. But up to now, he had never worked in wool. The bearded, 48-year-old sculptor was commissioned to create a suitable wall decoration for the foyer of Wool House by Hulme Chadwick, the architect responsible for the building’s interior design. It was decided that a wool sculpture would be the most novel and appropriate. The rug on which Mr. Godwin carved his design was manufactured in thick, single-level pile at the factory of V’Soske Joyce Ltd., located in Moycullen, Connemara, in the Irish Republic. for a Whole Lot More Beauty, Quality, Long Life, Colors, Patterns. IF YOU DO Come to MCQUEEN’S 8CARPETS 4076 W. Maple (15 Mile Rd.) At Telegraph Rd. See how a bandana yoke and ties add an outstanding touch to this saucy skimmer! Sew it all in bouncy checks, or sew dress In white with real bandana print fSrcontrast.------------ Printed Pattern 4882: Children’s Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 takes 1V« yards 35-inch fabric. Fifty cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, in care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept. 243 West 17th St., New York, NAY. 10011. Print Name, Address with Zip, Size and Style Number. Complete Fashion Report in our new Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog plus coupon for One Free Pattern! Everything you need for the life you lead — 350 design ideas! Send 50 cents now. Some People Prefer to Pay a Little More James E. Sage, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Sage of Oxford, received a bachelor of science degree June 1j from Ferris State College. Adopt Ethics Code The new code of ethics of the education profession has been adopted by every state teachers association in the nation, the National Education Association reports. Featuring- FRESH LAKE PERCH Enjoy the Hospitality V of the Famous for Our Fine Buffet Serving 3 Time* Daily from 31-25 Alto a la Cmtttt Mena Service • BANQUETS • MEETINGS • RECEPTIONS Cocktail Houn Special Low Prices CAS LIGHT ROOM $ Hoff DAILY Dancing Nightly and on Weekends Dance lo the rhyltwiM of “Mteker * Terry" featuring the new Miami of the “Certovox lorner of Pike and Perry F£ 5-6167^ Choose from a wide selection of Living Room, Dining Room and Bedroom Furniture, all at substantial savings! Interior Decorating Service . Designers of Home or Office FURNITURE ItMlNAV It, AIOICMAID lAKf AVI. Home of America's Best Furniture! Open Friday Evenings Ample parking Michelangelo accepted no pay for supervising rebuilding of St. Peter’s Church because he believed he was working for the glory of God. » CALBI 119 North Saginaw FE 5-8222 Free Parking Rear of Store Jungle Vine Is Divine! Rattan is a solid jungle vine, said to have the “strength of. iron and t h t warmth of wood.” Furniture made from rattan is easier to moye about than regular wood furniture because it is not as weighty. Rattan is never to be confused with bamboo which is hollow. , Seating pieces; in better; quality rattan employ platform frames of hardwood to securely hold webbing that supports seat cushions; they are bound securely at joints with rattan peel which expands and contracts with the rattan. ★ * * Rattan furniture is available in medium-low to high brackets for both casual rooms and semiformal settings, says the Summer & Casual Furniture Manufacturers Association, a division of NAFM. ★ ★ ★ High - style collections include almost as wide a range of seating and dining pieces as found in regular furniture lines. Accessories include bars, occasional tables, even desks and bookcases. Rattan takes both natural wood and color finishes very gracefully.. MONtH-END SALEl Clark D. Lefurgy, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lefurgy of Colrain Drive, received a bachelor of science degree in mathematics from the University of Michigan. He is a member of Phi Kappa Tau. Gets at Corners Cut an old whisk broom into a rather narrow shape af the ends and use it for efficient cleaning of hard-to-get-at corners. FINE OPEN Place Settings from 12-Service as low as Choose From Over 100 Fine China Patterns DIXIE POTTERY We’re Excited About the NEW WHITE NYLON HAIRNETS in Human Hair Style $ No Elastic, No Visible Edge. TV? RANDALL’S SHOPPE 88 Warn. St. FE 2-1424 TfifB PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 Franklin Roosevelt Jr: Starts Work for New Federal Antibias Commission WASHINGTON (AF) - A new federal cummheton with the aim of ending Job .discrimination on aoooont of nee, religion, •ex or national origin is open for business today. Its. chairman, Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., said Thursday the —t1—** would be on per- suasion and conciliation, rather than “penecution." W' ,♦ '« * The commission's legal existence began at midnight last w t, and its task is conceded to be enormously complex. Other members of the five- ing field tripe to explore the problems they wifl be expected to deal with — charges of discrimination in hiring, firing, promotion or other employment practices. . IDEAS WELCOME Roosevelt said the commission welcomes these complaints as well as suggestions on how it should Operate. ' . While (tarsuasion Is the watchword, if an employer or labor union or employment agency persists hi discrimination, it could find itself hauled before a federal court' Then if the court's orders Weft defied, the offender could be jailed for contempt. In the long, complicated Tide VII there are many clauses fed exemptions. For example, a newspaper cannot be punished for publishing a discriminatory ad but the person who offered the ad might be: The title makes its bow under fire from several directions. Sen. John L. McClellan, frAtfc., described it Thursday as “a useless agency, unnecaasgry and uncalled DELAYING FACTORS Some civil rights organisations, including the National R|________ _r the Adrance- ment of Colored People, have crltidaad the time consuming processes specified hi Title VH. For one thing an aggrieved per-son cannot get federal attion until he has exhausted his remedies under state fair employ-, meat practices laws. Twenty-six states have such laws, soma stronger than otbera Mercury, nearest planet to the aim, also is the naOest jlsnt in our solar system. SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS 4 Big«SALE DAYS fefefe OPEN SUN., JULY 4th & MON., July 5th 10 a. m. To 3 p. m. Other Days 8 to 8 FRIDAY • SATURDAY SUNDAY • MONDAY 6-WEB FOLDING CHAISE LOUNGE S-FOOT ALUMINUM r STEP 799 LAOUER I tl-tt. Aluminum Ml Exteasioa ladder.. IT 2S-ft. Aluminum 4 mm Ertemlea ladder. .14__ PIASTER BOARD I4’x8’SHEETS 4’xS’xH”..... . $1.45 ALUMINUM SUDIHG WINDOWS BUY NOW AND SAVE S3, SOW sia Jg, NOW ..Itfe.. 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IDo Door Bumper* . 00. tie Bag. 29.86 Heavy. Duty Deluxe 23.M WOOD LEVELS onlyM.98 CISSTON THE FIIUNEB........... |J| WOOD MITU BOX and SAW......... ,1J| ELEBT1I0 SCLOEEMC fltM.......... Slo HACKSAW BLADES, 21 HADES hi... US WE DELIVER ANYWHERE AUPrikM Jn Quantity Quoted EAVESTROUGH , Extra AAe par Spacial i*ngth DOOR HARDWARE Key In Knob jam Door Lecb A M9 Reg. 6.95 "f PASSAGE SETS .,. 1.99 MAC-O-LAC FORMULA “99” VINYL U1IX MINT COLD BOND PAL LATEX PAINT Color* and Whit# IDO COMIUUTION PAINT PAR AND ROLLER 89* LUMBER-HARDWARE-PLUMBING 7940 coolet lake road-en miti THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; JULY 2, lMfl Man Indicted in Murder Plot Grand Jury Accuses | Illinois Stable Owner CHICAGO (AP) - The Cook County Chicago grand jury yesterday accused Silas Jayne, 56, owner of a stable in suburban Park Ridge, of plotting to kill his brother, George, 42, also stable operator.. Hie Indictment specifically charging solicitation to commit a crime was returned before Alfonse F. Wells, acting chief justice of criminal court. The solication charge is a misdemeanor punishable, upon com viction, by a year in the county jail. —- w a ★ j; Silas Jayne’s lawyer, George Cotsirilos, said Jayne would surrender and post bond. The indictment was voted after the grand jury heard testi-money from George Jayne, who has a stable in surburan Palatine; Edward Morarf, 22, of Miami, Fla.; Stephen Grod, 28, of Del Mar, Calif., and William Whitaman, a Cow County sheriff’s policeman. OFFERED $15,006 Grod and Moran told police they were offered $15,000 to kill George Jayne three days after Cherie Rude, 22, a professional horsewoman employed by George Jayne, was killed. When Mias Rude started Jayne’s car, parked at his stables, June 14 a bomb under the car’s hood exploded. George Jayne told police later he believed the bomb was meant for him. * * * Whitsman said he posed as killer hired by Grod. Jte met Silas Jayne at a horse near Milwaukee on June 10, he! said, and collected $1,000 from! him. The officer said Grod and Moran told him this was a down payment for the killing contract '65 Water Mishaps Fatal to 110 in State EAST LANSING (AP)-Water accidents claimed 110 lives in Michigan during 1965’s first six months—up 10 from the same period of 1064, State Police provisional figures show. ★ it ' it The breakdown for 84 of the deaths for which official reports have been received includes 21 swimmers or waders, 18 boat passengers, 17 who fell from bridges, banks, docks or piers, 14 boat operators, 13 who fell though ice and one skin diver. Florida Man Drowns in Michigan River MESICK (AP) — The body of Luciano Sisneros, 27, of Clewis-ton, Fla., was recovered from thw* Manistee River near this northwest Michigan community Thursday. State police said it appeared Sisneros was swimming in about 35 feet of water when he suffered a cramp and KIN K S I NK SPECIAL! 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AIR CONDITIONER NAME BRAND ®BB& Fits Any Standard Window HUGE CAPACITY NUELY TIL 3-GIGANTIC PONTIAC LOCATIONS MIRACLE MILE X DRAYTON PLAINS jl CORNER OF HOPPING CENTER * SHOPPING CENTER I DIXIE HWY. uii telegraph iw) .* l son oixie HWY. and TELEGRAPH 4SEJHJHE CREDIT YOU NEED C-i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2,1963 River Projects Conservation SACRAMENTO, Cillf. (AP) — White the nation racaa to sere some of Its remaining wild rivart, California conservationists are in an 11th hour fight over one of the state’s last wilderness streams. The state’s Water Rights Board, after three years of So That Our Employes Might Enjoy a Long Holiday Weekend Wa Will U CLOSED SUNDAY and MONDAY JULY 4th and 5th PART1ES-BANQUETS Pclvott Dining Room Stating Up T» 70 Dotabii FIRESIDE LOUNGE Now Open Year ’Round •Steals •Seafood •Luctews Home Made Pantie*-Take Out Too COLOR TV—CHILDREN WELCOME Cooley Lake Rd. at Williams Lake Rd. Union Lake study, hearing and controversy, has approved plans for a series of water and power dams on (he Middle Fork of the Feather Re- construction crews will move onto the river In the rugged Sierra nest year if the Federal Power Commission, the sols remaining Obstacle, approves the project end grants a permit. Four water districts seeking irrigation supplies for rice forma in the Sacramento Valley any the project is needed to provide low cost water and would offer added recreation oppor-tunities at ns reservoirs. FREE WATER Conservationists' say it would ruin one of California’s finest wild trout streams to give 1,200 farmers free water that .could as easily be obtained from a nearby state reservoir or else-here. The Middle Fork of the colorful river rises in a valley of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. ■* 4e' h ★ It tumbles to the. central valley in a series of trout-laden riffles and polls. Its 17-mile canyon stretch — steep rode wells in a barely accessible pine forest wilderness — is a magnet for outdoorsmen. Water groups headed by the Richvate Irrigation District plan a 674-million string of dams, power houses and tunnels on the upper and lower reaches of the river. The electric power would be sold to pay for the project, in effect giving the districts free ierre £ Featuring RANDY DIVISION the Drummer with the biggest beat! two Grmat Musical Groups Combined into On# "3 Frenchmen 2VS Playing In The Beautiful French Cellar Ivsry Wed., Fri. and Sat. Nights • ***'» AM. Howrt Lanes 6697 Dixit Hwy- CLARKSTON -626-5011 Russians Studying India's Oil Deposits QiUXUtTA (AP) f. The leader at a Soviet tana aur-veying the Bay of Bengal for off-shore oil deposits says airly findings indicate enough ell to make India doe of the itorid’s leading producers. The Russian study wilt continue several more SURPRISE INVITATION — President home in Chapel Hill, N.C. The President Johnson, during a visit yesterday to the De- chatted with present Commerce Secretary partment of Commerce, telephones former John T. Connor (left) and then telephoned Commerce Secretary Luther Hodges at his Hodges, Inviting him to “come up and see us. Square and round EHgaEBl .y "jEaBSSfe' Qardeh Center Ballroom CAMPUS BAUKOOM Dancta* (vwytiM*., ft.. Sat. FINiST OKHHTXAS 16 Appointed to Faculty Posts at OCC Sixteen faculty members were appointed last night to the Oakland Community College, Including a director of technical and area vocational programs and an associate dean of student activities. * * ■ ★ James H. Dotseth, 54, of Livonia was named to die vocational education post by the college board of trustees. His 12-month salary will be $14,460. • A Royal Oak man, James S. Manilla, 41, of 3631 Clawson was appointed associate dees of student activities last right. He also was named an assistant professor of physical education at the Ankara Hills campus. His salary will be $13,266 annually. Dotseth has been assistant dean of instruction for technical education at Schoolcraft Community College. , it ★ Manilla, former prep basket-ball and football coach, has been director of health, physical education and athletics for the City of Royal Oak for eight years. 146 ON STAFF The new faculty members give OCC a total teaching staff of 145. In other business last night, the board okayed the par-chase of 461 tape recorders at $65,766 from Dage-Bell, Inc. He special tape machines wtil be equipped for playback only. Four contracts were awarded for construction work at the two campuses. „ < W ★ it Superior Installers & Excavators, Inc. was awarded $17,750 contract for septic tanks at the Auburn Hills campus on the lowest of three bids. ELECTRICAL REMODELING A $2,700 contract for electrical remodeling atthe Highland Lakes campus went to Fred W. Moote Electrical, Inc., while Anderson Plumbing & Heating was granted a 64,848 contract for I People in the Newsj By The Associated Press Lynda Bird Johnson, daughter of the President and Mrs. Johnson, left Durango, Colo.-, yesterday, with a trailer caravan group after spending two days in M e s a Verde National Park. The itinerary of.the party was not disclosed, but Miss Johnson was scheduled to visit Laramie, Wyo., on July 4 and spent several days in Grand Teton*National Park, Wyoming, after- LYNDA BIRD ward. Gun. Clark Retires as Head of College Gen. Mark W. Clark, 66, former United Nations mender in Korea, stepped down yesterday after 11 years as president of The Citadel, state military college in Charleston, 8.C. Clark was succeeded by Gen. Hngh Pate Harris, who retired last March as commanding general of the U.S. Continental Army Command. Two Soviet Cosmonauts to Visit Cuba Soviet cosmonauts Ctd. Pavel Belyayev and LL Col. Alexei Leonov will visit Cuba this month, according to Havana radio heard yesterday in Miami. Jim Boyer ff Newports “DISCOTHEQUE” see GLENDA, A’ GO-GO Girl! Dancing Every tyfad., Fri., Sat., Sun. water and gas main work at Highland Lakes. Commando Contracting and Painting Co. was awarded a contract for 65,958 for remodeling of the second floor of the Highland Lakes administration building. Set of Visual Tapes for Medical Library NEW YORK «» — A visual-history project to create a medical library of video-taped personal reminiscences by some of the world’s most important pioneers in the field of psychiatry is under was at Colhmbia University. “Right now,” says Dr. James H. Ryan, who heads the program, “the interviews are interesting and informative; 30 or more years from now they*! be tremendously valuable historically.” * - The tapes, produced in a special television laboratory in the New York State Psychiatric Institute at the Columbia-Presby-terian Medical Center, will be available to students, doctors and historians. FRIDAY SHORT SUBJECTS-7:00-9:00 "GIRL HAPPY"-7:20-9:20 Jumps with the campus crowd to make the beach’ball' bounced in RlNAiiaON Vrf UEWOCOtflR SATURDAY-SUNDAY-MONDAY SHORT SUBJECTS-! :00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 "GIRL HAPPY”-1:20-3:20-5:20-7.20-9:20 STARTS WEDNESDAY, JULY 1th SPECIAL MATINEES JULY 7th THRU 18th fHnfiSmi&l House Kprors $NPRM|W| Technicolor Mi ima m iii 40 merit sweep m sateen with Kwmmmt! The Sword of AhBate JAM SESSION EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT Dell’s Inn Uto,S2,ub CaH Fur Rasarvationa FE 2-2DB1 1 Tommy Timlin Moiortmu Cmmofy M.C. Sharon Beuror Lovly Dmnctr THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1963 C—-8 (Eamelot 3tm AT MAPLE LANES IN WALLED LAKE Th* Best in- Prime Beef & Lobster Dancing Nightly . (Except Monday) . MA 4-3081 ]?95 W. Maple Road Walled Lake, Michigan Woody Allen-JsMaking 'I ijk^dirAj > ^ ■■ ____________________ ___________ His Own World in Movies 3103 4amewwH m MiracleMllei^ itfffliliM Enjoy %hO Hospitality of the ton jtofrl NOW appearing WEEKENDS IN THE “TEMPEST ROOM** Mickey rTmiuj Featuring the New Sound of the “CORDOVOX” SPECIAL COCKTAIL HOUR Gaslight Room 5 to 7 DAILY Corner of Pike and' Pei^ry FE 5*6167 | International Smorgasbord f “< hilt its mineral-rich upper peninsula and Lost Peninsula. it** Or Last month, the Toledo City Council, noting file tornado problems, urged Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes to initiate talks with Michigan to transfer Lost Peninsula’s 1,770 acres back to the Buckeye State. Rhodes hasn’t done so. FROM MICHIGAN The offer should come from Michigan,’’ said a Rhodes administration spokesman, because it would be “donating” the land. L Michigan’s view was different. At Lansing, State Rep. Raymond Kehres offered a resolution to renegotiate the 1835 settlement over the Toledo Strip and let residents of tho 448-square miles (and, apparently, Toledo) decide if they want to stay in Ohio or be “rejoined with the State of Michigan.” The resolution died in commit- Before anything can happen, Michigan and Ohio legislatures | and Congress have to act. So, probably, would Lost Pen-1 isula residents. Ohio or Michigan? "It doesn’t make much differ- ( ence to us,” says Mrs. Irene i Deindoerfer of Lost Peninsula.1 “Fun” DANCING Every Fri.-Sot. 9-2 a.lit. Hear All Your Old Favorites In The Style oft* ELAINE TITUS orKj HAROLD RUSS HmmmiOrtm Drum CRESCENT LAKE INN 4804 Elizabeth Lake Road Kennedys Set for River Cruise ELK SPRINGS, Colo. ID-Don Hatch, the veteran river runner who leads, the Sen. Robert F. Kennedy party down the Yampa and Green Rivers along the Utah - Colorado border today, ■ays he isn’t worried about the river rapids. The Kennedy family, Includ- ing wife Ethel and five of the couple’s nine children, flew to Vernal, Utah, Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs. James Whittaker and their two sons. ♦ W dr Whittaker was with Kennedy whan he became the first person to ascent Mt. Kennedy in Canada. Whittaker of Seattle, Wash., was the first American to efimb Mt. Everest. Hatch, 37, is a schoolteacher who has been running the rivers since childhood. He will command file three 27-foot rubber rafts the party will use in the. 83-mile journey. TRIP ROUTE The party travels from Lily Park on the Yampa River in Northwest Colorado, to Dinosaur I Quarry on the Green River in eastern Utah. The trip will take them through the wild canyon lands On the border country. The Yampa joins the Green River at Echo Park, where the party plans to spend the first night. Most of the river journey is within the Dinosaur National Monument, an area famous tor its important dinosaur discoveries. A quarry at the south end of file monument is where the group will wind up its trip about noon Sunday. Hatch said there are about eight spots in jhe rivers known as rapids. But he said they were1 not considered dangerous He said some of them could be tricky depending on the leyel of the river. The higher the water, the more dangerous the j rapids. But he said the water! i was now low. £Z2KEEGO OPEN 6:30 H The LaadeW* g^pr |r=nl U C. HALL-60 NORTH TILDIN 1IBII OFF WEST HURON - ■•hind -RipV □UDIDSE] Join the Fun fy (jo (jirU Discotheque Dancers pirn * DANNY ZELLA Wed. thru .Sun. 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. Kef W Anchor 4195 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint U S. NATO Envoy Resigning; Rust Aide to Move In WASHINGTON (AP) -Thomas K. Finletter is resigning as ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organixaiton and will be replaced by Harlan Cleveland, assistant secretary of state. ___ • y • ■— President Johnson, announcing the changes Thursday, said be would name Joseph J. Sisco, a career Foreign Service officer, to replace Cleveland as assistant secretary tor international organization affairs. * * * Finletter, 71, is retiring to prF vate life. He has been ambassador to NATO for 4M years. The President said: “You are among those outstanding Americans who have contributed greatly to the strength and achievement of this country through their dedication to public service,” Tl“ Qandbasi featuring RONNIE WOLFE AND THE RUN-A-WAYS MUSIC St DANCING TIESMY. FRIDAY. SATIRDAY EVERY WEEK M-59 md ELIZABETH LK. Roads FE 3-9879 ¥ New West Point Class Is Largest in History WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) -The largest class in the 163-year history of the U.S. Military Acadony began training at West Point Thursday. On hand wore 1,138 plebes, whose first two months will be devoted to basic military training. The daas of 19B represents all SO states and inehides five young men from four foreign countries. MARIE COLLIER Callas Stand-In Gets a Boost LONDON (AP) - A 54-year-old Australian soprano was nervous today about singing for fans who paid to hear Maria Callas. But soprano Marie Collier’s confidence was bolstered by a surprise invitation to sing at Milan’s famed La Seals Opera House. Miss Collier was called in to replace the ailing Miss Callas in three performances of “Tosca” beginning tonight at Covent Garden, her first rehearsal was Thursday, and her agent brought along Francesco Sicilian!, director of La Scala. t ★ ★ At the end--of the -second act Sicilian! went backstage and told the stand-in singer: “I never knew anybody Uke you existed. You must come to La Scale, i am offering you a contract on what 1 have heard.” Miss Collier, wife of a London construction engineer and mother of four children, told nfcws-men to sing at La Scala had been her lifers ambition. ; WAS TERRIFIED Before Siciliani’s offer, she; had said she was terrified of the i audience tonight. “They will expect Callas and i they are not really interested in j me,” she said. “There will be1 this terrific Callas image in front of their eves.” *. * Miss Callas collapsed during a performance of “Norma” in Paris last month, and extreme fatigue was blamed. The Royal Opera announced Wednesday that the singer’s doctors had ' decided it would be impossible for her to ling four performances of “Tosca” in 10 days. Reports from Paris said she has low blood pressure. DANCE TONIGHT_JO BOB LAWSON’S TRIO Every Thu radar, Friday. Saturday and Sanday Night 9 till 8 A.M. White Lk. Inn h Orman Rd.at Jaeluoa Blvd. J ltt Mile North of M-59 Liaeitf^ Want ads make it easy. Picture your pleasure skimming across tho water with your own outboard motor. This happy couple are getting sot for tho first of many trips to tho lake to enjoy the like new outboard which they wore able to purchase the easy way - through a Pontiac Press Want Ad. Dial 332-8181 Bo sure >© Order the thrifty six-time rate PONTIAC PRESS . Want Ads TllB PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1963 \ a Ford Says National Interest Key to GOP Viet Stand NOT IN THE RUNNING - Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. tells a Washington news conference yesterday he will “not enter the New York City primary” as a candidate for mayor. He -left the door open for a bid for the governorship next year. Roosevelt heads the Equal Opportunities Commission, charged with enforcing provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 banning job discrimination. New Immigration Law Likely WASHINGTON (AP) - House Republican leafer Gerald Fold says hit party *Vill be guided by the national Interest” in Hs stand on Viet Nabs. “Republicans Will continue to disregard partisan considerations in fontai policy,” be said, contending mat “some Democrats would abandon the free people of Viet Nam. * m • * “The President must not yield to diem,” Ford said. The Michigan Republican said GOP support of the war effort does not mean 100 per cent agreement with every presidential action. * ★ ★ Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R-Iowa, joined Ford in the news conference. He said “any impression that Republicans are trying to undermine a policy of firmness has no foundation whatsoever.” WASHINGTON (AP) — The unemployment rate Increased to 4.7 per cent in June after hitting an eight-year low of 4.6 per cent in May. But nonfarm employ-! ment reached a record level of 67,459,000. Reporting these figures Thursday, the Labor Department said they were based on the first II days of the month and therefore did not reflect the foil impact of die entry into tbe job market of college and high school students. . . a '*/ • a .. Total employment for die month readied 71.6 million, up from 714 million in May. WASHINGTON (AP) Republican leaders in Congress say there are “danger signals” in (he nation’s economy ami accuse the Johnson administration of “giving glib and pat answers to serious and Involved questions.” At e Joint news conference Thursday, Houss Republican leader Gerald R- Ford said price and wage increased in spite of continued substantial uymployment ate creating "distinct Inflationary pressures.” Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R-Iowa, said the administration seems to be suggesting that anything wrong in the economy stems fronnrspfech by William McChesney Martin, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. Martin said there woo some similarities between the present economy and that which preceded the 1929 crash. Martin also said there were differences. Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Da HIM tim Stop. «Mp or nWb when in in, eat. laugh or mm? Don’t M annoyed and eintwrr*«M4 3' «urh handteapa. TAriamtm. an Saline (non-acid) powder tosprinkle on your piataa, Mags tam iawh more firmly art. a 4% interest rate from the first of July.) At "The Commonwealth" you can alio maintain a convenient low-cost personal checking account Or an economical commercial checking account.' You can keep a safe deposit box—bank « by mail—buy Travelers Checks and government bonds. And when.you want to borrow, you’ll find "The Commonwealth” will make a special effort to get you the money you want quickly- and easily They'll even develop new ways just to help jm if it’s necessary and it doesn't matter if you want the money for a big business enterprise or a summer vacation. You can’t get all of these service* at all financial institutions. So consolidate—do all of your banking at "The Commonwealth;’Our 33 offices throughout the Detroit area are open from 10:00 A.M. to 5.00 EM. Monday through Thursday and until 600 RM. on Friday B BANK OP THE COMMONWEALTH How clean is electric cooking ? Here’s a shining example Cooking with a modern electric range keeps your kitchen cleaner. No flame, no fumes, no fuss. Your pots and pans stay cleaner. Curtains and woodwork, too. Electric ranges are also more efficient. Because the heat transfers directly from the heating element to your cook-* ing utensils, there’s no waste in heat. All the electricity you use goes to work for you in your cooking. And because there’s no wasted heat, electric cooking fa cooler. It cooks the food, not the cook. And there’s more. All electric ranges are backed by Edison’s exclusive no-charge service. No charge for electrical parts. No charge for labor. And this applies no matter where you bought your electric range. So live the cool, clean life—electrically—with a modem electric range. m EDISON ■ rn-.;- wm$y. PONTIAC FRIDAY, JULY i First Major 20th Century Change Glass Fiber Used in Greenhouses Tile Tint major change in greenhouse construction in the 20th century may be under way with the use of glass fiber reinforced plastics to replace the glass panels now used for more than 90 per cent of structures built to protect growing, plants. Robert A. Aldrich, associate professor of' agricultural engineering at Pennsylvania State-University, University Park, Pa., said at the 1965 annual meeting of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers at the University of Georgia, Athens, that “thin, shell greenhouses built of high light transmitting glass fiber reinforced plastics have much to offer as controlled environment plant growth structures.” Mach additional research and development work is A SCOTTS SPREADER with 5,000 sq. ft. bag of TURF BUILDER only $Q90 Scotts E-Z Spred is an enameled steel spreader. A bag of Turf Builder fits into it perfectly and it's adjustable. Spreads all other Scotts products too. Your lawn needs a feeding of Turf Builder NOW to meet the challenge of hot, dry weather to come. 9.95 SCOTTS ZEPHYR ROSE DUSTER note only $095 This all aluminum machine is so sturdy it will last a lifetime. Turn the crank slowly — it dusts roses perfectly with great accuracy and very little effort. It's so sturdy 1 ’ — it dusts roses per- JPI____IPI__________| __ verv mi “ ^ *" very thrifty with Rose Dust too! SCOTTS “HAZE” ROSE DUST $1.45 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Puutiuc Stars, 2AM Woodward Av*. - Rhone FI 5-3102 Drayton Stare, 42AA Dixie Nwy. - Phene OR 3-2441 Clorfotea Stare, 6676 Dixie Nwy. - Pliant MA 5-2745 needed, however, before this new type of greenhouse be-comes a familiar sight to greenhouse visitors, he added. Aldrich described the construction of three experimental buildings using glass fiber reinforced plastic panels to fabricate multibarrel vault roofs. Two of the buildings utilized flat panels of the plastic material for the vault roofs, and corrugated panels were used for the cylinders of the roof in a third building to test the possible light transmission advantage of the corrugated materials. PLAT PANELS The roofs formed from flat panels exhibited remarkable stiffness under maximum load, Aldrich said, but the reof made of corrugated panels buckled der the same load and had to be unloaded to prevent,breaking the valley beam joints. “The light regimen within structures covered wife translucent glass fiber reinforced plastics appears to result in satisfactory plant responses,” Aldrich reported. Chrysanthemum and geranium plants hi four-inch pots were grown in one of fee flat-panel constructed buildings and in fee corrugated-panel building, and the third building was used as an entomoloby research greenhouse. Film plastics have been used rather extensively within the past ten years, and have resulted,^ successful crop growing buildings, -Aldrich acknowledged, but “the principal disadvantage of this greenhouse is the necessity for periodic replacement of the film.” One of the possible advantages of the use of high light transmitting glass fiber reinforced plastics Is feat it may produce a structure with fewer construction joints, permitting infiltration that should result in more complete control of fee greenhouse climate, he said. DINING OUT — Terraces and patios can be delightfully formal or informal for less expensive yet more enjoyable outdoor enter- tainment, says the American Association of Nurserymen. Every home-owning family can afford a lovely family garden living room. Gardeners Utilize Wafer Effectively! Wife much of fee country suffering from a water shortage - ami not just this year, for this to the third year in a row for many — every effort should be made by gantoners to get the greatost benefit from what mabnure they do have. hr any areas are to be planted at this season fee soil should be prepared very deeply. Late vegetable crepe wffl be best when fee tap layer af soil caa be removed one shovel deep aad fee seO beneath it broken up. Also 1-2” of humus material, Date Back to Dinosaurs Living Fossils Intrigue Gardeners A garden at the New Y o r k World's Fair has germinated an idea in fee minds of many visitors wife green thumbs. It is the prehistorfip garden at Sinclair Dinoland. A prehistoric garden is one Oft is planted wife living fossils and descendants of fossil trees and plants. Living fossils are species of plant life which in appearance have remained unchanged for 100,000,000 years or longer. Descendants of fossil trees and plants have changed in appearance, but their lineage has been traced back to their early beginnings in fee Cretaceous, Jurassic and Triassic Eras (60 million to 167-million years.) One visitor to Dinoland asked, “If a prehistoric garden can be grown in the middle of Queens, why can’t I grow one at home?” FOSSIL BOTANY .“He can,” replied Dr. Her- man Becker, paltbotanist at fee New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx. Dr. Becker’s specialty is fossil botany. He added, “Many gardeners don't know it, but they may already have descendants of fossil trees and plants on their land.” He mentioned as examples, the elm, magnolia, oak, maple, birch, hickory, persimmon, grape, water lily, fern, mountain laurel and holly. A A , A “There are scores of others,” he said. “And if you live in fee South or the tropics,” he went on, “there ere palps, fig vines, dogwood, bread fruit trees and custard apple.” Dr. Becker said, “its not likely that the average gardener will find living fossils growing in his back yard-” But he point- ed out that the species can be grown. He mentioned the Ginko trees from .China,'the Cycads of Mexico, the Sequoias (Dawn Redwoods) of China and North America and the Ailanthus Gla-dulosa (Tree of Heaven.) SPECIES RARE “Although these species are rare,” he said, “the gardener can buy seeds, cuttings and even young trees and plants from seed stores and nurseries, and grow them in his yard.” The prehistoric garden at Dinoland was planted to provide appropriate surroundings for its life-size dinosaur reproductions. There are 42 Gingko trees, 22 Southern magnolias, some 100 Metasequoias, 650 Osmunda Regal is (Royal Fern), 37 Ailan-thus Gladuloea and a variety of 58 pine trees and evergreen shrubs. Save a Corner for Child's Playground The old saying, ‘The grass is always greener in the other fellow’s yard’ need not apply these days. Let Dad fuss wife the fertilizer, fee seed and fee lawn mower to his heart’s content, but save a corner of fee yard for a playground area and provide your children with an imaginative learning experience as well as fun. Sound expensive? Not so, according to Frank Caplan, President of Creative Playthings Inc., Princeton, N. J., whose latest free catalog has an entire section on how to set up play areas for children. According to Caplan, a well planned play area HOUGHTEN'S ROCHESTER the LIGHT TOUCH for lovelier lawns BR0ADMC Riding THttor Ig > 5 * txclusivt FLOAT ACTION tins gin h*S ground prtssurt pgr sgusn Inch thin a dinar’s toes I •O in snow, too; door walks, drives. Ali-ssasan utility tor llttto • more then the pries af a slngls-purpose riding mower. Sea it nawl Easy Tonus Arranged Houghton 6 Sob 521 N. Main St. 01 1-9761 can cost surprisingly little and for those parents who want as much variety as possible a cooperative playground provides fee solution. A start - can be made on your own block in a cooperatively run backyard play ground with eaefe parent giving up a part of his unused backyard. The importan thing to remember is tha play yards are meant for active, spontaneous play and layouts should provide for adventure, discovery and activ ity. Tunnels for crawling and climbing add adventure. Concrete pipe crawl ducts embedded in hills of earth provide the mysterious cavern-like darkness so intriguing to children. Short tree trunks or large smooth rocks properly placed will do for a variety of jumping games, as well as for seats and tables. Every playground should have a sand a water play area. SAND BOXES SMALL Most sand boxes are so small, most children won’t sit on one spot and make sand pies, but prefer to build castles, tunnels and trenches. Reasonable ways of providing water are to use tractor tires cut horizontally or have large plastic basins at varying heights connected by fails or channels wife circulation completed by a simple pump. Children love running up and sliding down. Full advantage should be taken of any difference in levels. Earth shaping by a bulldozer can create artificial mounds for falling down and if laid wife granite steps, can be slid down or climbed up. NEW PRECISION CUT-LONGER LIFE — POWER PROPELLED REEL MOWERS art y««r bait boy I Low Down Flyman! ■Mg Tonga Here’s a new Jacobeen Reel Mower in action.. . one of the 4 aide-wheel models available. Whether your lawn is large or'mall there is a Jacobeen power propelled reel mower just right for youl They're ell on display now. Como in... pick out yours and begin enjoying real lawn mowing convenience, performance end safety! , Now at the New and Larger Nona af Michigan Rental Service 6660 DIXIE HWY. CLARKST0N Across from Waterford MM 6251515 For active play without in-terruption, provide play facilities and equipment indoors for nse in inclement weather or shelter from sudden downpours or Burning hot son. Covered verandas or roofs extend play in damp or bet weather. Swings and see-saws do not Landscape With Color for Beauty In landscaping your home, try to provide color for tha better part of fee year, regardless of season. Of course, evergreen will provide fee fresh green color throughout fee year. Other trees and shrubs offer colorful barks and berries or attractive branch formations. In planting, consider whether the shrubs are easy to grow, If they are attractive for long periods, whether they bloom, if they may be used in flower arrangements indoors, and whether they are hardy for your locale. Evergreens desirable for their foliage include juniper, cedar, arbor vitae, yews, blue spruce and various pines. WWW Flowering evergreen include rhododendrons, laurels, pieris and azaleas. DECIDUOUS SHRUBS Deciduous shrubs, which lose their leaves In winter offer great seasonal color — among them roses for all summer, forsythia early it) the1 spring, viburnum and flowering quince, another early garden brightener. (Try a few sprigs of flowering quince for a graceful indoor arrangement.) For flaming fall foliage there is the wiaged eunony-mous. Depending on the climate, co-toneaster may be evergreen or deciduous, and it has bright red berries from fall to winter. Py-racantha also has red or orange berries. White or copper birch offer attractive bark coloring. plug 3-5 pounds fertilizer per itt sq. ft-, should b* mixed hi for deep rooting. a v The top layer may be returned and fee crop planted -Vwife more humus and fertilizer added. SPEED GERMINATION To encourage germination, rows should be watered after planting, and covered with two thicknesses of newspaper. This wffl prevent fee seed-bags from drying op. • All plants should be protected wife a mulch of either black polyethylene plastic-wood, or bark chips, peat, grass dippings, corn cobs, partly rotted leaves, ground sugar cane, pecan or ripe bulls,- pine needles or a layer of small stones. * A * Do not sprinkle every night. This is a waste of water, and encourages the roots to stay near fee surface where fee water sup- ’ pty Is much smaller. If water most be applied, pot it on at the rata d 1” per week—if it can be spared. A coffee caa filled under a sprinkler will shoe yon 1”. After feat, apply water so It does not wet the loaves. A soil-soaking hose is excellent for this purpose. -S •• ★ ★ ★ The water should be applied in the evening when there is less evaporation. WATER USE And while we are on the subject, scientific tests prove that garden watering does not consume as much water as leaky faucts, car washing, filling portable splashing pools and even baths. This last leads as to the question, “Can bath and dish water be safely used In fee garden?” The answer Is “yes,” if not done .for too extended periods. The soaps or detergents in the water in limited quantities will not prove harmful. A * A In fact they might even be slightly helpful. They may even make the water “wetter” and more penetrating. The important part is not to keep it up any longer than necessary. Delphinium Named for Ocean Dolphin . The name of the perennial Delphinium came from the resemblance of its flower to tha dolphin. ★ A A The flowers make attractive bouquets, alone or with roses. . A climbing tree is better than a see-saw. Opportunities to use I sand and water, to work wife construction and artistic media, i to play with games, to dramatize wife dolls and play houses, to use wheel toys, to rail boats or to garden — all these are im-portant in any play yard plan. AAA Provision should be made for children to play by themselves. Appropriate plantings and dividers can create play niches for intimate individual play, for [ PICNIC TABLES — All Set Up Ready to Go — Cedar Legs — Spruce Tops 6-ft. Family Table *24*° dreaming or contemplation, t Vast open playgrounds are not child-Ilke, they’re noisy “recreation factories.” ROOF TOP? If a backyard is not available, landlords may be approached for use of apartment roof tops, or community authorities ap- 8-ft. Banquet Table *295° e Prices Include Local. DelhraryNv e We Will Weatherproof with Spar Varnish if Desired pealed to for the use of center areas on- wide boulevards or1 dead end streets. That prevision of play areas t-is important is emphasized by 1 UNESCO’s current world- , wide campaign for “Space | for Play.”, Parents — in their own back;, yards — cun help promote this great cause. TOWN & COUNTRY GAME* CENTER 5812 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 3-7147 XrOPEN SUNDAY OIXAMEltTAL IRON Beautify Your Homo Wife Custom Designed FREE ESTIMATES • WE DELIVER ANYWHERE CONCRETE STEP COMPANY 6497 Highland Rood (M-59) Ironwork Rofflng—.. Mi......... Apples. Steel* Rad, bu. ........ Charrlos, l+bul. crl. ... Strawberries, JA-qt. Crt. ....... VEGETABLES Beans, green, bu. .....'......... Beets, A. belts........ ......... Beats, tapped, bu. .............. Broccoli, dz. ................... Cabbage, Curly, bu.............. Cabbage. Rd, bu............... Cabbage Sprouts, bu. ...... ..... Cabbage. Std„ -bu.--------—.....1'fS Cowry. Pascal, erl. ...... Celery, Pascal, dz.. stelke .... Celery, While ...............• ••• Celery, while, da. stalks ....... Cucumbers, Sllcers, bu. ......... DJII. da. bclw. ..... ■■■■•...... Kohlrabi, dz. bcbaT i ;... ...... Onion, green, dz. belts. ........ Parsley. Curly, dz. bch.......... Parsley, root, dz. belts. ....... Paso, bu......'■■■■.............. Potatoes, new, 25-lbs........... Potatoes, now, 50-lbs. .......... Radishes, rad, dz behe. ......... Radishes, white, dz. belts...... Rhubafb. outdoor, dz. belts...... Squash, Italian, Vi by........... Squash, Summer, Vi Ml............ Tomitooi. bskt..............*.... Turnips, dz. bon................. greens Cabby, ^bu. ............•........ Kale. bu. ..." Mustard, bu. ... ................ Sorrel^ bu. ..................... LETTUCb Minii'"i......... Escaroie, bleached .... ?■....... Poultry and Eggs OiTnOIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid par pq lor No. I live poultry: heavy type b 22-22) light type hens 74;. roasters a » DETROIT BOOS OETROIT (API—Egg prksas paid par I ozan by first receivers (Including U.S.). unites Grade A extra latyaM-35) large , 0-33; medium 27-0; small IS-»i , trade A large SMW medium 27-0; , man Hi chaaka 19. L CHICAGO BUTTER, ROBS i ; CHICAGO (AP)- Odeaga Marcantm , ■xchonge—Butter steady; whOttMli buv- . tg prices unchanged; *1 score AA 5 2 A SaM; 00 B S7Vi, W C 57; ' ^Egps^Vteady! SJU buying pr- . tandards 27; dirties unquoted; checks lit*. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (APl-CUSDAl^lyepoullry: "•«aM *—1— ~'U'“ ’Vi lower to Vi l special lew heavy b Caution Before Holiday Stock Mart Eases After Rally NEW YORK (AP) - Hie stock market eased today after a three-day rally snipped. a six-week losing streak. Prices were irregularly lower and trading was moderate. Brokers and investors' were moving cautiously in advance of the three-day Fourth of July weekend. The market will be closed Monday. The enthusiasm that accompanied the rally was somewhat dimmed by a faU in U. S. gold reserves to the lowest level since October 1938, a rise in unemployment in June and a drop in "factory orders ifi May. Changes of key issues were held mostly to fractions with a few going to around a point. E * ★ The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon was down .4 to 319.3 with industrials off .5, rails off .6 and utilities up .1. * * * The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials at noon had dipped 0.38 to 871.21. It had been off more than a point an hour earlier. ★ * * Rubbers and utilities advanced while most other groups were mixed. International Business Machines lost more than 3 points and Xerox and Control Data declined more than a point. Phelps Dodge and Homes take Mining gained about a point. American Telephone, which, reported record earnings for the 12 months ended May 31, added half a point. Du Pont gained in the same rahge. ★ * * U. S. Steel dropped about half a point while Republic Steel gained the same amount. Corporate bonds were mostly unchanged and Treasuries de-clined. ......- The New York Stock Exchange ; roasters 24-25V5) Livestock HICAOO LIVESTOC (API—— l butchers 25 to mostly M higher; 225 1b. 24.7S-2S.M; 14 350-400 lb. . 21.00-21.50; 400-450 lbs. 20.j0-21.00) 500-MO lbs. lt-75-W.75. I Cuttle 4J00; calves none; slaughter | , steers steady to 25 higher; dx toads, ( prime 1,250-1.325 lb. 27% hl^cholc* |, and prime 1,150-1,UO lbs. 27.75-29.00; [ ( spring lamt S4.00-2S.00. American Stocks NOON AMIRKAN NEW YORK (API - Following I; list of selected stock transactions on American Stock Exchange with r Mki?\lJ IsJ High ArttLMMk 1-36 2 42Vb ,42Vk 24k 25 + ~A 5 VIA 414+ V4s I < IV* 42VS < 14 194+1-161 < 5 39H 39to 39to i 1344 1344+ 44 S 14V4 14V4 14V4- 1* CoxBdcas M 30 I4« 444 444 CrowCf* 3 2594 254k 2S?k+ 4k Crown I 7444 7344 74 - 1714 1744+ Vk Cudahy Pk CIT Fin 1 Cities Sv 2. ClevEIIII 1. CocaCol* 1 CoIgPal 1.1 ColnnRad Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER YHR COUNTER STOCK! Quotations trom-the NASD are representative totsr dealer prion of opproxh mately II mil Intar-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices da not Include retaH markup, markdown or Mohawk Rubber Co. o Tube Co. 23.2 242 Sefron Printing...... Vomer's Ginger Al* . wohr Carp- .......... Wolverine Shoo ...... Wyandotte Chemical . MUTUAL FUNDS 'tfc* &+$ 10 144 m 144-“ 0 4344 4114 4214 4 13 2714 044 2714 — 44 . 99 4044 4714 40 - ■ v 17 7444 7544 74_. +1 AmAIrlln 1.25 ■ Bosch .50* ~nRdSi l.ao Am Can 2 44 1214 1114 12 ... 3 4514 4544 4144 I 44 to 43% 4414 + 44 59 014 044 044 - 44 15 50V. 50 50V. - 14 If 1944 19V4 1944 — 44 295 4794 4714 4794 + 44 50 ItYh 3414 + 14 10 3444 3444 3414 - 14 37 15VA 1444 1444-44 12 2414 2614 2414 - 44 49 4114 4044 41 - 44 1 914 944 944 .... 22 4414 MW MW 0 3414 3444 3414 + 44 11-1514 35 35W .... 45 1714 1744 1744 ... 13 3744 3744 3744 + 4 4 29 2044 3144 +-! 5 7444 74 74 —A 13 1944 19W WW + 1 51 2944 2044 3044 - 1 t 49W 40W 40W — 1 9 144 ll* 144 + 1 43 1JW 3514 3544 — 1 3 3514 3SW 35 V. - < 27 4914 40W * I 3414 2414 2414 - 1 HollySug 1.90 HomMtk Mb I CdnPac 1.50a I 1444 14W 14W .. ConsPow 1.40 Com Pd 1.50 t {{S . .' 4W+ Vk Crown Zell 2 Wellington Fund . Jitney ,40b list Stag 1 IPasoNG I mor El 1.20 morRod .40 ll rleLack RR I vansPd ,30d t is w Polrch Hiller t *« Fansleel Mot S Egr f ' Flltrol Cp 2 [ >«•** Flrestno 1.20 5 .Ml PsIChrt Ult I 14.29 PtUMWO 1 I 17.49 Flo ROW 1.30 • 3?W + 44 i 944 + W 30 744 714 I 1244 »}% 1)44 I 4744 47 4714 - (bds.) High Low J Ford Mot 2 145 521* ForoDalr .50 13 14 VX tit 2 £2 GamSk 1.20b 2 3144 GAccopt 1.10 5 1914 GenTlg 1.30 | S5,n GenDynam I IS Wv Gen Elec 2.20 104 9714 Gen Foods 2 24 7944 GonMIlIt 1.40 14 1014 GenMot 7.75a 144 #7W GenPrec 130 20 28W GPubSvc Jig B 4 . G PubUt 1.34 1 37<4 GenTelAEI 1 162 3944 GsnTirs .40 19 2144 GePodllc 1b 20 54W Gillette l.lfi GlenAld .50a Goodrch 2.30 Goodyr 1.15 » PepsiCo l.M PflzerCha U PhelpsD 3.40 <■ ms Philo El 1.40 34 47 - 14 Phil Rdg 1 JO 39 37 . .. —- - to 4314 M 5314 0 44 W. 10 7414 2M & { 2*T*l>u"OII 1 I »7 t 9L t • + 44 j 4 3744 - 41 i S2M 5214 - 44 I 4144 4944 +144 3444 3414 - 44 3644 3414 ..... > 0314 03<4 ...... 5114 5114 ..... 44 , 4414 + 44 7344 74 - W 1314 1314 ..... 044. 044+ 44 1 1444 + 44 44 + V4 ■ 2444 +114 ■ ft&n 34 49V4 4IW 49 — RexallDr .30b 1 Rayn Mot m 1 ReyTob l.M 42 W44 14 .1444 + I 3914 3014 3014 - 14 2214 22W 22W 19 044 2744 2714 + 7 744 744 714 .. 12 3544 35W 3514 + 5 5014 49 5044 + 42 41 S9W 5914 - 5 4314 4344 4314 - 6 4044 40 0044 + 43 SS44 53 I1W ... IntPaper 1.20 Int TAT 1.20 ITECktBr .00 10 1014 1044 1014 ... » 40 47W 4794 — <4 StRegP 1.40b 20 3414 3344 < SanDImp .441 235 714 494 —1 7 2914 014 1 17 6144 4144 I . It j) 794 SCMCorp .Ml 14 10 d794 1 1---->ap .90 22 3494 3444 3 ____AL 140 3 37W 37 i SoorIGD 1.30 100 54W 54 i loirs Roe 1 41 40V4 4744 1 See burg .40 7 20W 2014 i Servel----------....■•Mb—4...— Shell OH 1.70 72 to 044 * ShellTra Jig 2 1414 1414 1 Slier Wm 1.70 5 52 5144 3 ilnclalr 2 24 54W 54 1 SingerCo 2.20 32 6544 65 4 SmithK 1.40* O 71 77W 1 Pi’S 241 5444 5444 S4W 2 40 40 40 - —J— i SouPoc 1.40 t South Ry 2JO i Sperry Rond i Spiegel 1.0 i SquereD 1.60 Staley US t StBrands 2.40 Std Kollsman „ i StOIICal 2.0 SlOIIInd 1.50a JonLogan .90 JonotAL 2.0 W - 14 stdOHOh I 11 044 5144 5144 - —K— 10 3414 3414 3414 -4 rti 15 39H 0W 3914 + 22 MVj 45W 4SW + 5 3314 3314 3344 - 109 3544 35W 35Vj - V 5214.5244 5314 + 114 1114 12 12 0 3714 37W 37W - 9 70 4914 70 3 35 3494 35 + > 1914 1914 1914 KamCLd 3.0 KirkNat .40 Kopprs 2.40a Korvelte Kresge 1.0 LehPorCem 1 Loh Val Ind Lkhman l.Ttg LOFGIs 2.00a ’ LlbbMcN .291 LlggettSM 5 Lionel Com Litton In lJ7t LlvIngiO .761 LockhdAlrc 2 Loews Thoat 13 MW —T— » »w ujn^ml 0 82W 0114 92Vs + I 4 3W 314 244 . . 0 9514 95W 85V. - ' ' 1914 18W 18W . 13 34 33W 34 — Lukens III 2 Mock Truck! Mad Fd l.5Sg Mammal G*2 Mognovox I Marathn 2.20 Mor MM l.» Marquar ,25g MartlnMar 1 MayDSIr 1.0 McCall .40b McDonA .40b MdCan ll| Mead Cp 1.0 Merck lo MerrChap .0 MOM 1 JO Mohotco .0 Monsan 1.40b Mowipy i.0 Mont Pw 1.0 Moniwwd l U — Vk Textron 1, Thlokol .Jrt , TMewat Oil , Timk RB 1.00 , Transom .00b Traniltron , Trl Cont ,75g ’'went C .60b in Carbkto 7 In EMC 1.12 In OU Coll In No in Tank UO in AM. JM,. Inlt Alrctt 2 , Jnlt Cp .3Jg Unit Prgfj UGasCb 1.70 i Unit MM 1.0 i USBorax .80a USOyptm la US Muol "» Lines 2b tPlywd 1.0 S Rub 2.0 32 44W 434k 431k y^W 21 41W 41W 41V, — V4 5 514 51k Mk ... 14 4494 449k 4494 + W 51 25W 24W 0 4-94 —IT— • 40 V. 5914 40W -0W 0W 0V, . m 0 3714 31 + 54 39W MW 39 + 0 5294 5194 52 • + Ml 7114 70W 70W.^-27 71W TOW 71V. - I 1794 ll + W j 0 1514 -1514 1514 + 1 WnAIrLIn .80 ' WnBenc 1.10 ' WestnMd 1.0 1 WUnTel 1.4b 1 Waste El til Whirlpool Cp 22 39W 014 3994 - ' 3414 3414 2914 + ; 1 MW MW MW 15 014 014 0<4 - *4 0 47W 4714 + 42 M 3714 M + 11 3094 3094 3094 + .... . J 014 3094 014 —X—Y—Z— i Xerox Cp JO 102 144 14294 144 — 94 YngstSM 1.0 0 4094 094 2994 — 94 Zenith 1.40 21 7494 7314 7314 - 94 Sales llgurst aro unofficial, otherwise noted, rotor the foregoing table a NlagMP Norfolk W Northrop 1 NwstAIrl . 14 12314 12414 Ml J1W J2H . . 14 0W 5994 + W 14 014 4494 + W 14 MW 1414 “ * aw aw M 14W 1394 1394 17 5194 5514 5594 + —P— M tSto M MW + 19 014 0 3994 + lb 10 13W 5114 53W + W a 094 2994 094 — W S 0 MW f „ 4 1514 WW I5W + 11 W 094 0 +1 ft 37* 3714 37W .., S3 014 3994 0 — i ___. ____________ _ the lot! quortorty or toml annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments ml desig-nated| as ^regular are identified In the a—Also extra or extras, b—Annuel rate plus stock dividend. c-LIqvMating dividend. d-Declorod or paid In 1945 phn stock dlvldond. e-Pald I; ---------- f—Payable to stock during t*" BdorJdM 'Killed Brother by Accident' Southgata Man Shot in Fight With Bandits SOUTHGATE (AP) — Police gl. Frank Torres said today that one of two Southgate brothers killed in a holdup last New Year’s ^ eve accidentally shot and killed the other in an exchange of gunfire with the bandits. “We have known all along that Emil Bacilla shot his brother, George, hut have withheld the information because of the impact it might have on the famiiies,“ Torres said. Sr E. ★ He said ballistic tests proved a bullet taken from George’s stomach came from Emil’s gun. Two men, Fred Rogers, 28, of River Rouge and William D. O’Guin, 30, of Hazel Park were convicted by a circuit court jury Monday of first degree murder in Emil’s death. They received mandatory life sentences Thursday and served notice of appeal. 3RD MAN A third man charged with them, Starr Card, 28, of River Rouge, was acquitted. WWW Mrs. WilUdean Baker Oulette, 21, who testified she participated in the fatal holdup and implicated all three men, pleaded guilty Monday to assault with intent to rob. She is awaiting sentence, while Card still is held in connection with a Madison Heights drugstore holdup last Jan. 8. WWW Emil Bacilla, 52, and George, 60, operated a Southgate drugstore. Mrs. Oulette testified Rogers' and O’Guin went in the store, while Card waited in a getaway car outside. Edward S. Ferris, chief of the prosecutor’s criminal division, said today he still has under consideration possibly bringing Card back into court on a charge of murdering George. He. said Michigan law would permit such, even if Card did not fire the gun. WWW “In any homicide where one of the victims is killed by a bullet fired from a pistol of a second victim while defending against a holdup,’’ Ferris said, .“the parties perpetrating the holdup may be charged with flrst-de-1 gree murder.’’ Business Notes Armin Seiffert, 500 Romeo, Rochester, vice president and purchasing art director of MacManus, John & Adams, line., Bloomfield Hills, is retiring after 32 years with the advertising agency, according to Erpest A. Jones, presi- SEIFFERT dent. Seiffert joined the agency as an assistant art director in 1833. A former Detroiter, he attended the John P. Wicker School of Fine Art Treasury Position I2SJSM49J0.95 123.599.060,878.01 X-TMal Oub9- 3lt.4S5J1X007.01 311.810,850,314.86 Goto Assets— 14.192,042.03.0 15,461,20.587.26 (X) — Includes 8303.344,990.76 debt not sublet! to statutory limit. 0 Rath . IS UNI* ... 45 Stocks RONDS )55.*09+o!79 .. 30V.52+0.25 Compiled by Tbe Associated Pros* Noon Pri. oj.i 101.1 0.1 Prow. Day 0.1 lM.t 0.2 W—* A am. 0.3 101.1 0.0 13.0 101 J '0.3 12.1 10.2 07.4 HilEi? «•» > 82.0 100.1 Kb 02.9 MM 0.4 0J 10.0 07J STOCK AYR RAGES r n is Ind. RaM UNI. 51 v|—in bankruptcy or receivership or •biigMNMbod under tob bankruptcy Ad, or securtttot Mourned *-- — ponies. In— Foreign Issue toroot equalization fox. .... ..40J 150J 1 Year Ago ..........445.4 10.1 1 1945 HtaR .........505.2 mj 1 1945 LOW ............45U 10.3 1 HM4 High <..........475.1 WA 1 By 8AM DAWSON AP Basinets News Analyst NEW YORK—Silver producers are betting that the price of the metal will have to rise. They contend that, the cut in the amount used for coinage by the United States will only postpone the false] for a time. Even some government officials admit that a rise from DAWSON the present official 1129 a fine troy ounce to somewhere around |2 an ounce is possible in coming years. World usage of sliver in industry and the arts is mounting fast and production is lagging far behind. Even if all coinage of the metal should stop, there still would be a shortage. Producers say the only way to increase the supply is to let the price rise so that prospecting will -be attractive again and production from low-yield ores can be resumed. Such prospecting already is being pushed in die north Idaho Coeur d’Alene mining district. Mining company officials say the search to based on the firm belief that sooner or later the price mpst rise. Nearly half of the present U.S. output comes from this region. Much silver also is a by-product of copper and other mining, and output rises and falls with the demand for these metals. CUT CONTENT New coinage proposals call for elimination of silver from dimes and quarters, and cutting of silver content to 40 per cent in half-dollars. But the First National City Bank, New York, Red Barges Halted by W. Germans BONN, Germany (AP) — Two Communist East German barges were held up today at Schnackenburg on the Elbe River because their captains refused to sign the usual permits for entering West German waters, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard’s spokesman reported. Press chief Karl Guenther von Hase told a news conference that the Communist government “to obviously making a test” of conditions upder which barge traffic can move between the two Germanys. East Germany dropped the old four-power permits for barge traffic and introduced documents of its own Thursday. The Erhard government objected to this as a violation of postwar agreements but instructed West German shippers to make no difficulties. Barges had been moving normally until this morning when the two from East Germany came up to Schnackenburg on the northern border. Erhard’s spokesman said that the crews had obviously been specially instructed to make a test case. OLD TYPE West Germany to continuing to use the old type of permits, which it views as underlining the obligation of the Big Four victors in World War II — the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union — to bring, about German reunification. “Naturally, we have the right to determine which papers Soviet zone barges must use in our waters,” Von Hase said. The press chief pointed out that the Western powers deplored the hew arrangements introduced: by East Germany and notified tbe Soviet Union they will continue to hold the Russians responsible for the regular movement of barges between the Germany’s. < points out today that “how the new coinage would affect the supply, demand and price,outlook for silver” to still far from a settled question. Zooming demand for silver in recent years is partly due to new uses for the metal in many fields of electronics and . electrical equipment, includihg aerospace devices. Use in the photographic field has also grown rapidly. A U.S. Treasury staff study puts total consumption outside the Communist.bloc at 550 million ounces in 1964, compared with 238 million ounces in average annual demand in the 1949-53 period. Production came to 216 million ounces in 1964, against 174 million ounces in the base period. Industrial use in 1964 was <286 million ounces, against 153 million in the 1949-53 period. U.S. mints used 203’iniUion ounces in 1964, against 30 million in the earlier period. Other nations used 62 million ounces for coinage in 1964, against 43 million earlier. BANK SAYS The bank notes that even if the United States had used no silver for coins last year, .the deficit outside the Iron Curtain would have been 132 million ounces. * ★ * The U.S. Treasury suspended sales of silver in November 1961 and has been retiring U.S. silver certificates at the statutory price of $1.2929 an ounce. The price on the London market Thursday was $1,297. Treasury stocks now are estimated at a billion ounces, but present coinage use would cut this to about 445 million ounces by this time next year. Hie price would have to rise beyond $1.3824 an ounce — the point at which the silver content of present dimes, quarter and halves would be equal to their face values — before hoarders would be tempted to melt them down for their metal. ★ * . * But as world demand climbs, production must rise or even the U.S. Treasury will find it hard to maintain the present legal price and protect its coins. Silver producers seem sure that one way or another, prospecting and mining will have to be encouraged. _________ By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am a young man with a good Job and like to speculate in the market. I own 200 Wichita River Oil; 50 Edo Corp.; 50 Papercraft; 25 American Safety Equipment aad 25 Pacific Tin Consolidated. Should I retain these stocks or switch, and if so, will you recommend some alternatives.” R. D. A) I am very much opposed to speculation by the untrained investor. It very rarely pays off over a period of years and sometimes results in serious impairment of capital in a really bad market. Your stocks are not wholly wi t h out attraction. Wichita River Oil, a rather deficit-ridden situation, seems to have little appeal, and Pacific Tin has been showing good earnings but operates in Malaya, which must be considered a risky area. Sr * * To replace these two, I suggest King’s Department Stores, which is speculative only in the sense that it is a contender — and a strong one—in the relatively new discount merchandising field. And over a period of time, I would aim to upgrade my list by putting major emphasis on quality and growth, rather than on speculative attraction. ★ ★ * Q) “I would like to know ii investing in debenture bonds is safe and wise. We have been approached by a representative of a real estate cor- poration, which is selling debentures to yieM eight per cent.” T. O. A) A debenture represents wholly unsecured indebtedness and its safety depends entirely on the credit of the issuing corporation. Debentures issued by American Telephone are stronger than the mortgage debt of many other companies. A debenture issued by a real estate corporation may be another kettle of fish altogether. There is an element of risk in any such obligation; otherwise -they would not offer an. eight per cent yield, which is far above the going rate. I myself would be inclined to avoid this type of investment, which is not only difficult to appraise, but sometimes unmarketable aa well. Roger Spear’s new 48-page Investment Guide is now available to all readers & this column. Clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, | Box ISIS, Grand Central Sta-l tion, N.Y.C., N. Y. 10017. (Copyright, 1965) News in Brief Mr*. Minnie Kelcfa of 1012 Fremont, Waterford Township, yesterday reported the theft of a power mower valued at $7$ from her garage, according to township police. Janies Hollingsworth, 29, of 398 N. Saginaw yesterday reported to Pontiac police that his room was entered and $55 stolen from a dresser drawer. til B Promotion Director Is Named for Mall Hie Pontiac Mall shopping center, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Roads, has named Mrs. Nelson McCarthy promotion director. She succeeds Robert L. Wittbold. Mrs. McCarthy, 2127 Hempstead, Pontiac Township, his been with the Pontiac Mall since September 1962. She has two sons who attend Oakland University and a daughter who attends Avondale' High School. At tiie same time it waa announced that Clyde' Canfield, 2297 Langham, West Bloomfield Township, was named property manager for the Mail. Voted Head of Board of Institutions Charles Edwards Jr. of Madison Heights yesterday was unanimously elected chairman of the Oakland'CoGfity Board at ~ Institutions. The seven-member board was established last February by tha County Board of Supervisors to administer c o u n t y - operated medical facilities. John A. Macdonald, chairman of the social welfare board, hud served as temporary chairman of the board of institutions since it was organised. Edwards, a member of Madison Heights’ first city council, served seven years on the board of supervisors including 11 months on the key Ways .and means committee. His term ori the board of supervisors expired in April and he was not reappointed as a Madison Heights representative, ADMISSION POLICY In other business, the board of institutions reaffirmed its admission policy on both tuebercu-lar and non-TB ciscai; Oakland County residents will receive priority for TB care admission'. Nonresidents will be admitted if there is room. Priority on admission of non-TB cases will go to. persons receiving public assistance who require care at a level between that provided t>y a nursing home and a hospital. t *■ * County engineers reported that the $130,000 remodeling of the medical care faculty should be completed by the end of Art-gust. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 2, J90fl C— 9 Help Underachiever Spot Main Trouble ' By LESLIE J. NASON, ED. D. When It. comes to balking at something new, the underachiever goes to th^head of hfau Already badly discouraged, he is doomed to additional failure next fall unless he makes a new approach, improved his skills and makes a head start. It (s.aet always easy te determine the causes of uader-achlevement. But the summer pause in regular school activities provides an opportunity to search far the pipit's handicap and te take steps toward a remedy. A student’s successes and failures should be reviewed from die beginning of Ha school life. This usually will being to light af least the majof factors holding achievement below his innate capacity. ★ typ** ' £, Let’s look at the school history ef Jeff, who win an underachieving eleventh-grader last year.' ! HIGH I. Q. At the age of lisp, Jeff was considered a well-rounded, well-adjusted child with a high I.Q., which might have been even higher except that his cbordina-tion had not kept pace with bis mental capabilities. The first evidence ef radar* achievement appeared hi die By JACOBY * SON AXQTS fAI ♦ A881 ♦ tax BAST tmt V 9 7 5 J ♦ QJS *J4 ♦Aioe WQJ1084 4 101 ♦ QMS SOUTH (D) Alt ¥K« ♦ K.7 4 S ♦ AK875 Baal and Wart vulnerable Wort Marta Kart 1* 1 N.T. IN.T. A letter from Columbus, Ohio, reads, “In a recent duplicate every South player became declarer at three no trump and every West opened the queen of hearts. How should South plan his play?” The answer is that South can count six top tricks and needs to acquire three more- He can make two by IBs _ -*--F immediate a t • tack in c 1 u b but this will give the defense | time to get their I hearts establish-ped before South has any chance to go after a ninth trick in spades. So South can see that it is up to him to attack spades at trick two. If he wins the first heart in his own hand and leads his low spade toward dummy West cannot afford to rise with his ace since that play will give South three spade tricks in addition to six tricks Astrological :' • Forecast JACOBY mm *11 By SYDNKV OMARI* ARies (Msr. *1 IB ,Apr. 1*1: Olv* special attention to sotting proper root, recreation. important Mm* «' Con- v o i d ex-: OMor o soil-restraint GANCE ot INI (May 21 to ««•- —■ •mi moons well, but may r*» u* formed. React accordingly Stress harmony. Not a pood dev tor i^ytoo/o. WW personality and :cr (Jim it to Jmy n): 11 peel put ott for another day-Art are factor* which con now M situation. Ffloods mor# rw f you or# a pood listener. 00-i (mn GEMINI meesega. (Aug. 21 to Sopt. 21): Study Improving public relations. Sx-rmref to Stas, suggestions. Taka bpnga In Itrlda. Many want o ur views. Express them in "(SapT^ lS *o Oct. 22): N® *,m* Obtain hint from ARIES mes-llllto poet oaporlpnce. Bxctllny of unusual snfsrtslnmenf Indl ry to understood new Idee* io (Oct. n w 5__ courts to put limit on now »■ nd tonight. Mean* _ romomoor son run irw. M A -GITTARIUS (Hof. 22to Doe* I factor favors your position- Ovn HiPouragod by PW* minds. Kaap tocta of h*no oblo for unusual matting. ?l* #;• d fly JARIUS (Jan. 2D to Fab. 1DH ways ef saving money. „Djv. eta with unusual, oven bizac CesN(Fab. It'lo MV. W): V* i Of drain an mate or partner, to atop trying te force Issues. Did Use Hdr Obfaln naedad pHvauy rtant to be analytical, find Ms n WHY tar certain conditions. DATURDAY II YOUR giRTHOAY IERAL TENDENCIEI: Day tm- Mia upsetting ot the old . . • **»• Britton of now mothoda. G IT unusual medical teduitaum third grade. Mrs teacher, realising that he turned in m in ice* und kings. Therefore, Wett will have to dnek. South will hold the trick in dummy and must go right after clubi. He will lose the third dub trick to West and Weit will set up his hearts, bid now South already has made a ninth trick in spades. I If South wins the first trick in dummy and leads a spade toward his jack'he will go down because West will take his ace immediately and South will only have set up two spade tricks and he still hat not set up clubs. On the other hand if East held the spade ace the lead of a spade from dummy would be the winning play. There Is a slight percentage in favor of the actual winning play. Even if East holds the ace of spades he may hold off when a spade is led to dummy’s Iflng. He shouldn’t but he just might. WCflRD SerteM You, South, hold: AtAQSI WBQ4 0BI7 +A J7 What do you do? A—Bid three gpidea to nee found it staffed with pieces «* P*P«- Evidently he would fagin a written task, nuke a mistake, tear it up and begin over again. Unfortunately, no one helped him solve his problem' at this Jeffs fourth-grade teacher felt tiiat he was just too Ian to do his work. She reported, however, that on oral work Jeff was the fastest, mossiAecqrate pupil in the class. ORAL TESTING During the rest of elementary school, his teachers leaned heavily on oral testing to help him through. Most of his marks were average. Jeff is a warm, friendly person, well liked by his classmates and teachers alike. He joins with the neighbors in long, serious discussion and they ofteii comment how inter-esttagasd intelligent he is. He acts as though he definitely wants to go to college and talks of no other plans. Yet he refuses to do any written work. And Me year he failed two subjects! * * ■ Jeff started school, as many flhfoirea do, handicapped by backward physical coordination. Naturally be got off to a slow •tart to writing. TRAIN HIS BANDS His history shows that no one, from that very poor beginning to the present time, used firm, kindly insistence to help him train his hands to write. His problem could have bean solved at any point if this had been done. And it atm is not too late. Summer practice far as little as II minutes twice a day has proved successful for fourth-grade lege students who were discovered to be non writers. Summer work must be concentrated on repetitive writing practice, with major attention on gaining facility. It is the ease with which a student writes that counts. (You can get “Help Your Child Succeed hi School,’’ by sending $1' to Help Your Child, Box 1277, General Post Office, York, N. Y.) THE BERRYS By Carl Grubort mmaa OTHERWISE JUST HAND OVER] yOURORpe AND ASK HERjs Hi LU i m i f Ji j jj MW W i DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke and Phil Evans THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 8, lPflg C-40 ORCHARD IS CELEBRATING 14 YEARS OF VALUE-GIVING ... BY OFFERING YOU THE GREATEST SAVINGS IN OUR ENTIRE HISTORY OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 9 AM. to 9 PM. OTHER DAYS 9 A.M. TO 5:30 PM. • NO MONEY DOWN • FREE DELIVERY • 24 MONINS 10 FAY • FREE NUKING GOOD SERVICE • MOOTS CASH SHOP IN AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT Deal Direct-No Finance Co.-Pay at Our Store Como to our birthday party! We've lit too tot* on prices to celebrate with m explosive solo that will rook the town! Hurry in! Ycu Won’t need cash ,.. put your crcWH to work! OVER 100 IN STOCK-AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 60-IN. LOVESEAT NESTLES ANYWHERE for sitting room, dan or imell living room. Solid foam cushions, provincial print covor. AVERAGE 13-IN. 3-CUSHION SOFA Most popular litol Zipparod foam cushions. Stylish print or twoad covor. EXTRA LONG 14-IN. 3-CUSHION SOFA Extra sixad far axtra comfort! Foam soats, pillow backs. Print or twoad covor. 91-IN. KING SHE 4-CUSHION SOFA For tha largo living roam. Foam soot cushions. Zipparod cavers. Print or twoad. Reg. $129.95 In Patchwork *99” foam rubber cushions coil spring construction extra arm covers LARGE SELECTION OF ROCKING LOVE SEATS A full house of fine furniture.. CHOICE QF Stylish prints for long-wearing tweeds at one low price 10-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE • Double dresser and mirror • Matching chast • 2 Boudoir Lamps • Bookcase Bod *2 Bad Pillgws a Innarspring mattress and box spring • Separately $138.88 5-PIECE DINETTE FORMICA EXTENSION TABLE • 4 washable plastic chairs • Separately $48.88 9-PIECE LIVING ROOM 0 Nylon sofa and matching chair • 2 stop and 1 coffee table 1 2 fable lamps • 2 throw pillows Separately^ 28.88 • Foam Rubber Reversible Cushions • Quality Coil Spring Construction • Arm Covers and Self Decking • No Money Down • 24 Months to Pay • 90 Days Cash • Free Delivery • Free Parking • Good Service .AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT Deal Direct No Finance Co. Pay At Our Store A real bsrgain maWata built to high Sarto standards. Has heavy-duty long-wear ticking, sisal Insulation and cotton fait cushioning, high-cod stssl Innsrsprlng construction. Assures years of comfortable 9-pc. Coordinated Ensemble INCLUDING • 81” Long Foam Cushioned Sofa • Mrs. Cbalr • High-back Mr. Chair • Large Matching Ottoman a Two Walnut Finish Step Tables • Cocktail Table • 2 Lamps ALL 9 PIECES e Choke of Colors e Quality Furniture At Ono Low Price • Reversible Foom Cushions 164* ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 2 Blocks West of Wide Track Drive Only $12.00 Par Month NIAL Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY ORCHARD ■ m THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 19M D~I Aging Cuban Rescues Tiger Starter in Boston Reliever Pena Helps Detroit to 2-1 Victory AP Phatofax ONE OF THOSE DAYS — Billie Jean Moffltt of Long Beach, Calif., registers dismay over one of her shots yesterday in a singles match against Maria Bueno of Brazil at Wimbledon, England. Miss Bueno won the semifinal match, 64, 5-7, 0-3. 4 ★ ★ Rookie Makes Yankees Pay By the Associated Press The New York Yankees are putting Curt Blefary through college and Blefary’s putting the Yankees through a wringer. Blefary, signed by the Yankees as a hot outfield prospect in 1962 but lost to Baltimore on waivers a year later, continued to haunt Ms former employers Thursday night, belting a home run and triple in the Orioles’ 4-3 victory over New York. / WWW The 21-year-old rookie, S native of Brooklyn, has clubbed five homers, driven in 11 runs atxFcompiled a .375 average in nine games against New York this Reason. What’s more, when he finishes with Yankee pitching he’ll hit Yankee management for the unpaid bill on his college education. The Yankees gave Curt a $28,-000 bonus when they signed him off New York’s Wagner College Emerson in Net Victory Stolle Loses. at Wimbledon Bueno, Smith Collide for Women's Title WIMBLEDON, England (AP) • —Roy Emerson crushed fellow I Australian Fred Stolle 6-2,6-4,6- 4 today and won the Wimbledon tennis championship for the second straight year. ' It was a repeat of the 1964 final when Emerson whipped his Davis Cup teammate in four sets. It was the third consecu-; five year in which Stolle was : beaten in the final of this tour-' nament, regarded as, the world ; championship of amateur ten-j nis. W W W ' 1 A sellout crowd of 16,000 jammed the stands surrounding ;. the famed center court to watch • the Aussies on a cloudy after-inoon. ; The United States was shut • out of both the men’s and wom-ien’s singles finatk Defending | champion Maria Bueno of Bra- • zil will meet Margaret Smith of *. Australia for the women’s title ; Saturday. ; Maria defeated Margaret in 1 three sets last year. ; EASY WINS ; One fact emerges - that ' Wimbledon's four finalists are ! way out on their own in the ; amateur game. All of them won their semifinals easily.. Whatever happens in the . men’s final, the title is going to ' Australia for the eighth time in ■ 10 years. A A A ! 'Miss Bueno and Miss Smith ; are the old rivals and know each other’s game backwards. Margaret has won 13 times in 17 meetings between them. But only two of these matches have been important finals on grass, and Maria won both of those — at Forest Hills in 1963 and at Wimbledon last year. A- A A'- V Billie Jean Moffltt, for chirpy little American Wightman Cupper from Long Beach, Calif., made a brave effort Thursday to dethrone Miss Bueno. She fought back gamely to level at one set all, but faded and was defeated 4-6,7-5,34. 22 VOLLEYS These two are among the finest women volleyers in the World. In this phase of the match, Billie Jean was on top, for she scored with 22 winning volleys against Maria’s 14. The Brazilian won the match on her service and her ground strokes. She mixed her services . cunningly and Billie Jean never knew what to dxpect next. One service was fast and flat, the next was sliced, the next kicked bead-high. Miss Smith Was a more convincing winner. She flattened. Britain’s Christine Truman, the Hurling of the' 16,900 partisan fans on the center court, 64*M. Philadelphia Hurler Making Comeback PHILADELPHIA (AP)-When the Philadelphia Phillies blew the National League pennant last year by losing 10 games in a row with 12 games to play, everybody asked: Where is Ray Culp? The 23-year-old right-hander pitched nothing but a few innings of relief the last two months of the season, didn’t start a game after Aug. 1, and didn’t pitch at all in those horrible late September games. A * A Manager Gene Mauch wouldn’t say what was wrong. Culp wasn’t talking. So there were rumors that Culp was in the manager’s “doghouse.” “He Eleven Americans Tee Off in England SOUTHPORT, England (UPI) — Eleven American hopefuls teed off today in the first qualifying round of the classic British Open championsMp that will be held next week. In the two qualifying rounds being staged today and Saturday, only the 7$ low scorers will be selected to join the 52 exempted golfers to enter the first round of the tournament proper starting July 7 over the 7,037-yard, par 78 Royal Birkdale course. A A A Of those exempted from the qualification rounds, Jack Nick-laus was rated a 7-2 choice to win the event, add Arnold Palmer, two-time winner of the Open was a 5-1 selection. Defending champion Tony Lema rated 6-1. Terry Dill of Mulshoe, Tex., and amateur Bill Castleman Of WMte Sulphur Springs, W. Va., were the top American contenders in the qualifying. had a sore arm,” "He refused to pitch” etc. Thursday night the 180-pound Texan hurled a three-hitter against the Milwaukee Braves, beat them 2-1 for his fifth win against four defeats. It was Ms second victory in the Phillies’ current five-game winning streak. He was asked what was different about the Culp of 1965, from the idle Culp of 1964? The 6-footer came right to the point. “I don’t know anything about that doghouse report,” he said. ’I had a sore arm, sore elbow to be exact. Every time I pitched it hurt. I decided I was too young to ruin myself and wouldn’t pitch. The arm feels fine now, but if it hurts again I’ll stop pitcMng again.” Culp said he never thought of quitting, that he never lost his confidence. He said if his elbow wasn’t sore he would have been pitching and winning. Mauch, who has stubbornly refused to talk about the 1964 season, at first refused to discuss Culp’s problems of a season ago. He said: /.‘Go ask Culp and whatever he says I’ll corroborate." The manager did s a y he thougM that except’ for one pitch, which Dennis Menke hammered for a run scoring double, Culp’s victory over the Braves Thursday night was the young pitcher’s finest perform* ance as a PM1. Redskins Ink 2, Drop One WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Washington Redskins announced Thursday that two veterans who .sat out last season have signed to (day in 1965 and one old pro has been put on wafv- Offensive end Bill Anderson, who quit the club last year 'to become s coach at Tennessee and fullback Km Webb, who spent last season studying law at Atlanta, have signed to play this season. Veteran placekicker Jim Martin, a pro for 14 years, has been placed on campus and agreed to pick up the tab when he returned to school. He has a year to go but will attend classes only during the off-season. So, the Yankees will be paying the bill for another two years. WAIVER PRICE Blefary was grabbed by the (Moles for the $8,000 waiver price in 1963 when the Yankees, who had named him a designated player, tried to slip him back to the minors while clearing a spot on their roster for utilityman Harry Bright. “They told me they needed help to win the pennant,” Blefary said. “At first, I was going to quit baseball. My balloon had burst. I always wanted to play for the Yankees. “Now — I couldn’t be hap-pier.” A A A Ditto Baltimore Manager Hank Bauer, whose Orioles are in the American League race despite a mediocre offense. Blefary’s 286 batting average is second only to Brooks Robinson’s .304 mark on the club and Curt leads in homers, with 11, and RBI, with 35. T\je Orioles’ victory kept them 3tt games behind first-place Cleveland one-half game jin front of fifth-place Detroit. The Indians trimmed Washington 7-2 hi other AL action. SEVENTH LOSS Blefary homered off Whitey Ford in the first inning, starting the New York ace on the way to his seventh loss in 16 decisions. Ford had won six in a roW! Jerry Adair tripled in a Baltimore run in the second and the Orioles made it 4-0 in the third on Blefary’s triple, Robinson’s double and. a single by John Or-sino. A A A Leon Wagner’s two-run homer, two doubles bv Chuck Hinton and three singles by Max Alvis backed the five-Mt pitching of Sonny Siebert as the Indians increased their league lead to foil game over Idle Minnesota. DOUBLE AT HOME New York Mets’ catcher Chris Cannizzaro turned in an unassisted double play the easy way yesterday against the Cincinnati Reds at Shea Stadium in New York. Reds’ Jim Maloney (46) tried to bunt on the third strike to bring Tony Perez home from third in the fourth inning. Maloney missed the ball and Cannizzaro stepped in front of the plate to make an easy tag on Perez. ■ Local Runner 4th in Games Special to the Pontiac Press WASHINGTON-Abram Powell of Pontiac finished fourth yesterday in the 400-meter dash at the 10th International Games for the Deaf. Powell was timed in 50.4 seconds as Leonid Djourouk of Russia won the event with a world deaf record time of 48.9 seconds. Djourouk previously had won the 800-meter run. Caren Overgard of -Walnut Lake, finished sixth In the womens 100-meter butterfly swimming final. Her time of 1:513 was well behind the winner, Josefa Czer-winska, of Poland, who set a world deaf record with a clocking of 1:20.5. 300 Bowl Maintains League Lead John Herrington tossed a two-hitter last night as league-leading 300 Bowl knocked off Elks No. 810, 54, in city American League softball action. In a second AL game, Spencer Floor pounded out 11 hits in a 5-1 decision over Town & Country. In International League games, Buckner Finance romped to a 13-4 decision over Michigan Bell. The victory boosted 300 Bowl to 11-1 for the season, maintaining the squad’s two-game lead over Spencer Floors (9-3). AAA 300 scored once in the third on a triple by Maurice Stack and a double by Fred Milliron and made it 5-0 with four markers In the fourth. BATTING STAR Stack added a double to his triple to take batting honors for the evening. Teammate Gene Shell collected a pair of singles. AAA Herring fanned six batters and gave up a pair of singles, one to Stanley Grant in the third and the second to Roger Nosek in the fourth. Spencer scored once in the first, twice in the second and added the final two runs in the fifth in taming Town & Country (1-11). Floyd Hicks scattered four Mts and farmed nine to pick up the victory. AAA Buckrier came up with six runs in the first inning and added three more in the second in routing Bud & Lou’s. Bob & Larry came up with four runs in the top of the seventh to nip Howe’s. Dean Per-kio’s single sent Maury Yarnold across the plate with the winning run after Yarnold had chased home a pah* with a dou- Harry Diehl and Bill Cumber-worth paced the attack with three hits apiece. WATERFORD GAMES In Waterford TownsMp action, Day’s Sanitary Service (8-4) rolled to. a 14-1 decision over Huron Bowl (5-7) behind the two-hit pitching of Bob Fraser, j >; HSSfci s I and Bob St Larry (6*6) ended a w&rw-Mick*. uw-hihiw. six-game losing streak with a L iwi ........ni b • Motlanan p 0 0 0 Flcmom p b b b O. A'borU p * 1 1 Lolich was working on a two-hit shutout going into the seventh when the Sox touched him for a run on stogies by Lee Thomas and Bob Tillman after a base on balls to Felix Mantilla. When Chuck ScMlltog singled to open the Sox eight, Pena was sent in. He put foe next time men-down to order and pitched to only four men in the ninth. HELPED BY ERROR The Tigers, who got their first run to the third inning on Don Wert’s double, Lollch’s stogie and an error, acquired toe winner to the ninth when Red Sox strategy backfired. With men on first and third and one out, foe Red Sox played their infield back for a possible double play. + A A Norm Cash had beaten out a mt down the third base line and raced around to third on Wert’s second Mt, a stogie to right George Thomas ran for Cash. ■ Pinch-hitter Gates Brown grounded to the left of second-baseman ScMlltog who, with no chance to make a play at home, was in awkward position for a double play. He made the force out on Wert at second but Brown easily beat foe throw to first base as Thomas scored. AAA OITROIT BOSTON ab r h M Schilling lb 4 bib M'A'Iitfe as J b 0 1 Bressoud ss 4 0 0 0 Lump* » 4 0 0 0 T.Hort'n 1b 4 S b 0 Oamatar r* 3 b 0 S Mantilla cf HOD Katin* e» 4 si a C'ltM'o J ' W.Horton V 4 0 10 L.TWM* ZBB 3#i# S- — ISIS 3 0 0 0 U&jbiiw::^teAl\ V'WwbiMw MbrMU' LaPratt 1. Fry*. Rotarts. Funck. LOO-Huron-Airway «, FBI A Fbdilnp ■ opart 4 Innings. 0 H. R-ER *-3, SO 5, Ptemann V» Inning S H. R-ER H, SO 1i MoUanan Innings, 4 H, R-ER 24), SO ti l ■ Rob arts b Innings. 1 H, R-ER O-O. Frye SV, Innings, 1 H, R-ER M, SO 0. W 3. NOA begirt (Funck. N. Roberts). Winner—Fry*. Loon" Eggert. 2 Outboard Racos Sat INDIAN RIVER (AP) - Two dock outboard boat races, the 17th annual Top O’ Michigm Marathon and the 3rd annual Short Course Regatta, will be held July 1041 on Crooked Lake near Indian River. LoMek p 3 0 10 fin# p 1 f 1 0 _ Totals HIM Tetels Jill Dejrejt . eel M* 0W—1 E—Bressoud. DP—Detroit 1. LOB—Detroit l, Boston 7. 2b—Worst, W. Horten, “-‘In*. S—L. Thome*. IP .. H R ERBBSO HBP—By Lolich, MantMa. T—2:14. A 343. _________ State Hurler Inks Pact With Mets BUI Collins, a 22-year-old left-handed pitcher from Lathrup Village, was signed as a free agent yesterday by the New York Mets. He will join the Marion, Va., farm dub to foe Appalachian Rookie League. The Mete also signed southpaw hurter Fred Raabm of Portland and sent him to Mari- TUB PONTUC BUBSS* FftlUAY, JVLV 2» l?M lions Have Date Pontiac *'1 * * * *, :*'*S' Squad Tilt But It Still Get* Lost e L ——----------- . Scheduled New Golf BafE Refuses to 'Snrfile' for Aug. 7 ibsrMt Catalina GOLF tfW:M?rf_ /. COM/AdO PO¥W4 UA/00* tHT CHM*. //✓ 7ZACV -******** AAMG J&1p~ MAIYCAUy* ■TUlO WIU* , 6WOW CL-EAtflV ■TUg KOUp- &M0UUPBR5 PUAYIN ARM COW-fRC?U A sturdy Hull. Hie prettiast line, tl spy craft arounri. and a MM cabin to .halter you from the rein.! What more doe. a tun-loving weekend MlW naed far exploring Hie waterways? The Catalina la at much at yee can find an a 1C feet hell. Two goggle can Heap in the cabin and there', extra .leaping teem net on the ipaciou. cockpit deck far thoee who tike to camp net far the night. Chooae a John.on outboard te move tree around with .peed, safety and comfort. Mora fen than , a fri.ky tiger kitten! A TEW NEW '64 M0N-CU1BEMTS WITH run 2-Yl. GUARANTEE STILL AVAILABLE AT D1ASTIC SAVINGS • Doraetts • Mariners • Thompsons • Penn-Yans • Pontoons • Canons • Alum. Pishlnf Boats • Prams • Johnson Motors • Alum. Docks • Alum. Wator Cycles • Wagon Train Campers • Brigestone Bikes MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 to I PJUL SUNDAY 10 to 5 PJL Pail A. Yonag, lie. 4030 DIXIE HWT. Drayton Plains OB 4-0411 NEW YORK (fi ■— The man said he had a new golf ball which wouldn’t cut, would keep its shape, would maintain its resiliency and would meet all the necessary standards, q ¥ * A ball that wouldn’t “sm^e” when hit by a duffer? . • “Yes, indeed,” the man replied. “I’ll send you the ball and a hammer so you can test it.** * * ★ Well, the ball and a sharp-pointed hammer arrived Thursday and we tested it, surrounded by unbelieving duffers in the office. We hammered and ham-nifesed. Nothing happened. No cutsXNe “smiles.” The man who create this ball, called Long Play and which now is being marketed in lead-| ing department stores, is a non- Our Boss Is Jumping With Joy ’cause our safes are terrific! _ JH He Say*: W* ^ "Keep Offing 'em The Shelton Dear See the Tempest Le Mans If over a car mad* the low-pric.d cars look to th.ir laurel., *hi. Is If. For where •h* can th« traditional low-prieu buyor got a Pontiac that looks liko thl. at a prko m low ho'd novor boliovo possible? Whon you stop to think that you can got tho la Man* with tho n.wo.t, smoothest, gos-savingett six ovor or your cholco of a rogular or promium-fuol V-8, it really mako. you want to stop looking right hot*, doesn't it? We Have Them in Stock! PICK YOUR BODY STYLE-PICK YOUR COLORS Takt Immediate Delivery Brick Special Bulck doesn't moke choop con—diet's for other people. But they do moke economical car., and o case in point i. tho Buick Special. Boar in mind, that tho Special it a Buick-*>with all tho quality, reliability and superb engineering that the noma implies, two year* in a tow, tho economy champion in its classl Enough Mid, it's |ust tho lowest priced Bulck you can bvyl> Plus Excise Tax Savings Too! PONTIACS BUICKS Tom post $55 Spocial....... $55 Catalina $60 LoSabro Wildcat $70 Star Chiof Eloctra Bonnovillo $70 Riviera Plus Excise Tax Savings an Accessaries A normal accessory package including radio, heater, hydramatic, power steering and brakes, washers, decor group; will givo you another $13.00 or more in savings. SHELTON SL 855 S. ROCHESTER RD. ROCHESTER 651-9911 Often Mon., Tuea., Thurs. 'til 9 - Wed., FH., Sat. *Nl 6 )lfer, researcher Harry L. ander. He now Is president of Lander Produets, Inc., of Trenton, NJ., which is manufacturing tho chemically-produced ball. It’s made of a synthetic rubber produced by Phillips Petroleum Company of Bartlesville, Okla. HIGH PRESSURE How did a non-golfer come op with what ba calls an indestructible baU? “If boe of my associates had not been a golfer,” said Landers, “the jUill never would, hove been discovered. The thought never would have entered my mind.*’ ★ f ‘ * Landerg was experimenting in rubber chemistry to produce, In a special vulcanization process utilizing the Philipps elastomers, a material which could withstand great pressures in a saline conversion unit he is developing. In order to test the material’s resiliency on the device he had at hand, it was necessary to shape the substance Into a ball approximately the size of a golf ball. It was at this point, said Landers, that an associate said “why not a golf ball?” Landers said it took many months of intense laboratory experimentation to meet the required standards of the U.S. Golf Association tar size, weight and degree of resiliency. How much punishment can the ball take on the golf course? “Most golfers consider themselves lucky to get two or three complete rounds out of the conventional ball,” said Landers. - * * ¥: “The LP has been tested for hundreds of rounds without losing any of its original characteristics.” . That is unless you hit one’ln the water or over a fence. A lost baU is still a lost ball. Top-Seeded Stars Near Net Finals CINCINNATI (AP) - Herb FitzGibbon and Bill Lenoir appear headed for a showdown Sunday in the men’s finals of the Tri-State Tennis Tournament. * * * FitzGibbon, the top-seeded player from Garden City, N.Y., and second-seeded Lenoir of Tucson, Ariz., smashed their way into the quartet-finals Friday with impressive victories Thursday. FitzGibbon defeated F/ank Connor of St. Louisa 2-0, 64, 0-1. Lenoir downed Pancho Castillo of Bogota, Colombia 6-3, 6-3. WE WILL aVERHAUL YOUR ENGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl.............’95” V-8's.............’115” This includes . . . Rings, Rod Bearings, Main Bearing, Grind Valves, Fit Pins, Deglaze Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! |jll»o^J^ STANDARD ENDINE REBUILDERS 695 AUBURN RD. • 338-9671-338-9672 The first roar from the Detroit Uons will be heard Aug. rwhen Die team moves into Pontiac’s Wisner Stadhim for an intra-squad battle. The pre - season encounter here will be the fourth for the Lions, who played the game last year at University of Detroit Stadium to benefit the Ray (Scooter) McLean fund. McLeaa, former Lions’ of-fenseive backfield coach, died of cancer early In 1964. Sponsoring the game here will be the Community National Bank and the Pontiac Jaycees. ★ * ★ Jaycee officials said the game win be much the same as last year, with the Lions splitting the squad into two teams and play-ing a regulation game with the exception of kickoffs. CGACH DEBUTS The game will mark the first appearance of head coach Harry Gilmer on the sidelines. Gilmer, former assistant coach with the Minnesota Vikings, filled the job following th^ resignation of George Wilson last winter. ★ ' ★ ¥ The Lions will also unveil their 1965 crop of rookies. Among the newcomers is Jerry Rush, former Pontiac Central gridder who started at Michigan State University. Rash played tackle — offense and. defense — at MSU bnt the Lions plan to give him a try at defensive end. Rush played last week in the All-Star game at Buffalo on the East squad along with another Lion draft choice, fullback Tom Nowatzke of Indiana, who is expected to bolster the Uons’ running attack. * * * The game is scheduled for 8 p.m. Tickets will be availabie in about 10 days, Jaycee officials said. Prices are $1.25 general admission and $1.75 for reserved. CIM* ■ i Y.nken (POP) 13. Lskors 1 Tiger. 9, SI. Michael 6 Eagles No. 1230 7, Kennedy Standard larvica 4 Clan r X15s I. Moose No. 3 1 Columbia Avonuo ,Recre«tlon 23. Pilgrim Church 7 SAVE today, SIDING, per square Aluminum, without backor, white . 25.50 Aluminum, with laminated backer, white...............,*......29.95 PLYWOOD SHEATHING 4x8 Par Shoot 9b" CD....................2.44 14* CD..................*,..3.28 9b* CD......................3.84 9b" CD......................4.40 Plugged 1 Side (touch sanded) KILN DRIED BOARDS m 1x6 Beards, serf. 4 sides 85.50 m 1x12 Boards, surf. 4 sides 89.50 ^ FIR PLYWOOD 4x8, per sheet %" AD Interior, Go6d 1 Side 2.56 14" AB Interior, Good 2 Sides 7.65 Vs" AC Exterior, Good 1 Side 2.88 9b* AC Exterior, Good 1 Side 3.83 Vh" AC Exterior, Good 1 Side - 5.25 9b" AC Exterior, Good 1 Side 6.08 9b" AB Exterior, Good 2 Sides 8.10 TAYLOR OARAGE DOORS All-Steel dean, complete with hardware, lock 9x7______46.50 16x7.... 91.00 (Glaxing on all doors available) FELT, p«r roll 15-lb. 432 sq-ft-Ml.......2-10 30-lb. 216 sq. ft. Roll...2.10 Fir/F.L. (Construction, Mix. 25% Std.) 5 Big Centers ‘ to Serve You! Grelle Wins . Yanks Pull Track Coud V HELSINKI, Finland (AP) -Jim Grelle, the Mat-finishing tactician from Oregon, has parlayed French dynamo Michael Jazy’s absence and the form failure of Olympic champion Peter Snell into an American coup in the 1,500 meter run —highlight of the World Track and Field. Games. .With Jazy, world record holder at the mile, two miles and 3,-000 meters, on the sidelines and Snell unable to mount the pace that made him the world’s premier middle distance runner a year ago, the methodical Grelle nipped former Oregon teammate Dyrol Burleson in Thursday’s 1,500. Snell finished a distant fifth in the comparatively slow race. * * ¥ Grelle, outsprinting Burleson after the pair caught pacesetter John Davies, Snell’s New Zealand countryman with 200 me|-go, was clocked in 3:40.0. on finished in 3:,41.f Snell, whose winning time at the Tokyo Olympics last fall was 3:38.1, trailed Davies and Poland's Witold Baran in 3:43.7. The victory gave the Americans six .firsts in the Games. Theron Lewis of Southern University won the 200-meter dash in 21 seconds. Bob Segren of Los Angela took the pole vault at 16-1,’ and Ron Whitney at Los Angela captured the 400-meter hurdles in' 52 seconds Thursday. Texan Maintains Lead in Lefty Golf Tourney LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Young Stewart Chancellor battled today for his title as left-handed golf champion of the nation as the amateur tournament entered its final round. The 27-year-old businessman from Midland, Tex., led at the 54 hole point Thursday with a 219. the LIGHT TOUCH for lovelier lawns exclusive FLO AT ACTION tint give /•Si ground prtssun per squtn Inch than a dancer's Mas I •0 In mom, toe; door walks. purpose riding mewor. So* It nowl -Low Down Payment Easy Toma Arranged THE MOWER SHOP 71*10 NORTHWESTERN SOUTHFIELD ELOIN MSU HAVE 4-4-2's IN STOCK AND READY FOR DEUVERY ALL COLORS AND MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM Northern Oakland County’s 442 Headquarters HASKINS CHEVROLET-OLDS 6751 Dixl« Hwy., Clarkston ___________;-------F-i—. MA 5-5071 i. i i * j j 4, 4 4! A i ' ■ .4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY g, 1965 P—a Michigan Boxer Ninth NEW YORK (AP)—Ring Mag-Mine Thursday rated lightweight boxer Kenny Lane of Muskegon No. 9 challenger to champion Ismael Laguna of Panama. OPEN BOWLING Daily 5 P.M. to 12 FREE BOWLING INSTRUCTIONS by MIKE SAMAROZMA, Jr. Mon. - Wad. - PH. 2025 Elizabeth LK. RD. FE 5-2013 Major League te CLEVELAND ' WASHINGTON ibrhM abrhbl Howwr u 210 • Bl's'am* 2b 4 I 1 0 Davsllllo cr 4 1 0 0 M'Mull'n lb 4 1 ) 1 Alvis 3b 4 13 L Klrkl'd If 4 010 Celavlto rf 4 0 0 1 KIM rf 4 0 0 0 Wagner If 0 2 2 2 Hold Cf 2 0 0 0 Hlnfon 1b 2 0 2 1 Chance 1b 4 0 0 0 Akim c 2 0 00 brumley c 4 0 0 0 Gonzlaez 2b 3 0 0 1 Br'kmen u 3 0 0 0 Slebert p 4 0 0 0 KmHIZ p 10 10 Ridzlk p 10 0 0 Hamlin ph 0 0 0 0 II 7 2 4 Totals a 0 01 ............\ 1« 240 000-7 ilnatan ............. 000 ‘01 000-2 _ -Chance, Blsslngame. LOB—Cleveland o, Washington 4. 2B—Hinton T HR—McMullen (II), Wagner (11). SB—Howser 2. S—Howser. SF—Gonzalez, Colavlto. IB H R EN IB SO Seibert W. Id I S 2 1 S II 3 5 4 5 3 •i I 1 0 0 0 1 1 _________________n In SIN. _ HBP—By Rktzlk, Akim. Balk-Koplitz. FB—Azcue, Brumley. T—2:47. A—6,602. Wash in) 8S&lL Duioii . Koplltz NBW YORK BALTIMORE ObrbM abrhbl Rlch'eon 2b S 0 1 0 Aperlclo sa 4 0 0 0 Kuban sa 4 0 2 0 Brandt cf 2 0 0 0 Traah If 4 01 § Blafary If 4 2 2 1 UTS ANGELES CHICAGO Wills sa ail1! Becker 2b *4 2 2* Gilliam 2b 4 0 11 Landrum cf 4 o o o W.Davis d 1 0 2 2 Williams rf 4 0 10 Fairly rf 4 0 10 Santo 3b 2 110 Johnson H 5 010 Banka 1b 4 0 2 0 Parkar lb 3 0 10 Stowart If 4 0 0 1 La|ohn 3b 4 0 10 WE C 3 110 rorborg c 3 0 10 Kas ngar sa 3 1 1 0 Ros'boro ph 1 1 I 0 Handley p 10 0 0 Fsdraa p If 01 MOmW p 1000 Latabvra ph 1 1 0 0 AmVano ph 1 1 1 1 Totals 32 3 1 3 Tetait 31 4 ♦ 4 | “ Angelas ............ 0T *** 1 -Kesslngar. DP—Los Angi a Angelas II, Chjcage 4. Gilliam. HR-Becker 2 ... . Wills, W.DavIs, Fairly. $F-Gllllam. IP N 1 BRtB Podraa L, 3-5 .... 4 1-3 5 3 3 3 P'ran'skl .. 1 3-3 4 3 3 0 Handley ........ 41-3 0 1 I 1 McDaniel W, 3-3 334 0 0 0 2 Ab'nathy 2 3 10 0 PB—Khig. T—2:34. A-7420. ST. LOUIS Gagllano rf Groat ss Brock If PTmBueeH 4 ab rhb 0 Bailey 3b 4 13 1 0 Mote cf 5 13 1 0 Clem'nta rf J 2 3 till Robinson 3b 4 repnone 1b 4 0 S 0 Bowens rf 4 Boyar 3b 4 121 Orslno c 4 Repoz cf 3 1 1 I Powell lb 3 Ford p 1 0 0 0 Adair 2b 3 Edwards ph I 0 0 0 Barber p 1 Mantle ph 10 0 0 Barker ph 10 10 T^.P,r 15 3 10 3 Tefal! 30 UawJM ..... Maz'oski 2b 5 1 Stargell If 4 0 ________ ■■ Vlrdori cf 1 0 ilackar c 3 0 10 Allay ss 4 o Maxvlii 2b 1 0 0 0 Lynch p Warwick 1b 4 0 0 3 Vlrdi DP—Bahlmora ! 112 00 ■■■VOTMa ah ooo 0 i d 1 Crandall c 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 Veale p 20 0 3 0 0B Rodgers ph 1 0 0 i , McC'ver c Totals Of. Laufs . , Pittsburgh . 11 E-Groat, Pittsburgh “ittsburgh f. 2B—Bailey. Gagllano, Stargell, “ ** “to - Amt. SF—CMn,___________ H R IRBOI 0 2-3 9 3 3 2 Go To Orion For Your GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES SI M-24, Lake Orion 693-6266 AMERICAN LBAOUI Haw York ....... 16 19 .401 Lm Angelas . . . 33 A M Boston ......... 29 43 M Washington ..... 30 46 .391 Kansas City 23 65 .331 Thursday's Results TRUCK CAMPERS wolverine at Pienaar camper talas RAILBf SALES (Btmkar 4-4), -nlgM Detroit (Sparma 5-1) (RMiarf 56), ntobt Minnesota (Grant 9-2) at Kansas City ((rPanoyiM 4" Simmons Vaaia ...... Schwall .... G?bbon L, 2- i, Schultz, Stallard. T—3:26. 3 0 0 0 Klaus lb Now York 200 100 E—Nona. DP-New York 3. LOB-CIn-clnnatl 7, New York 0. 2B— Johnson, Robinson, Canlzzaro, Hiller, Lewis. 3B—Perez. Swoboda. HR—Kra- McCool ... 1 1 2 Craig 1 0 0 Jackson W, 4-10 9 7 1 HBP—By Maloney, Napoleo Pavletlch. T-2:31. A-14,730. . Hamtramck Dominates Net Meet GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - Except for breakthroughs by Detroit and Kalamazoo in two divisions, the 1965 Michigan Closed Junior Tennis Tournament singles championships here were closed Thursday to all but Hamtramck players. Mark Conti of Detroit defeated Mike Whitty of Hamtramck 6-1- 3-6, 6-1 in the finals for boys under 16. W WW Carol Hunter of Kalamazoo outlasted Emily Fisher of Hamtramck to win the title for’girls under 16, by scores of 8-6 and 10-8. Hamtramck competitors took the remaining singles crowns. Tt was Chuck Brainard 6-1, 6-4 over John Hainline, Detroit, in boys under 18; John Lamer-ato 6-3, 6-3 over Mike Anderson, Saginaw, in boys under 14;' Tony Lamerato 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 over Dave Emig, Muskegon, in boys under 12. TEAMMATES Susan Dykes won 6-1, 6-3 over Hamtramck teammate Gloria Novitsky iit gjrls under 18. Plums Bartkowicz defeated Linda Berry of Kalamazoo 6-3, 6-0 in girls under 14. Amy Kiertanis won 6-2, 6-0 over Sandy Muthig, Detroit, in girls under 12. Kathy Dombos and Linda Berry of Kalamazoo defeated Sheri Carlson and Carol Hunter of Kalamazoo for the girls doubles title in the under 16 class, 4-6, 6-3 6-3. Vesper Crew Posts Upset Over Harvard at Henley Strong Comeback Earns Decathlon PATTERSON Chrysler Plymouth Valiant Imperial Dodge Trucks 1001 N. Main St., Rochester 651-8558 Chicago at Lag Angeles Minnesota atKansesCity, twilight NATIONAL LEAGUE Waa Last Pet. Bthintf Los Angeles 46 32 .590 - tf. I New York 27 50 .351 Thursday's Results Chicago 6, Lm Angeles 3 New York 5, Cincinnati 1 Philadelphia 2, Milwaukee 1 St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 4 Only games scheduled. Today's Gamas San Francisco (Marlchal 124) •« go (Koonce 6-5) St. Louis (Gibson 94) at New (Fisher 64), night Cincinnati (Jay 6-2) at Philac (Short 94), night I, Milwaukee (Clonlnger 104) at burgh (Cardwall 6-2), night I i« Angeles (Drysdale 12-7) si H :e 6-9), night Saturday's Games waukee at Pittsburgh, i Francisco at Chicago MILWAUKEE PHILADELPHIA ab r k M *»'i Cline 1b 3 0 | « Briggs —...._ „ ______Romas 2b Aaron rf 4 0 0 0 Calllson rf 4 0 11 Torn c 4 0 10 Allah 3b 3 110 Carfy pr 0 0 0 0 Gonzalez If 4 0 0 0 Mattows 3b 4 0 0 0 Stuart lb 3 0 10 Aiou lb 3 0 0 0 Dal'mpla c 3 0 11 Klob it ' 0 0 0 0 Wlna ss 3 0 0 0 Jonas If 3 110 Culp p 3 110 Menks ss 3 0 11 PB—Dalrympls. T—2:05. 4 ; Northrup Cash ^TOTALS BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) — Bill Toomey, with a pair-of remarkable comebacks, is the 11965 National AAU decathlon champion and along with hard-' luck Russ Hodge, will soon be ! bound for Russia. - Toomey, 26, who teaches in a Los Angeles high school and competes for die Southern California Striders, came from be-i hind Thursday night to win the 110-event affair with a score of 7,-1764. Hodge had 7,682. i Hodge, 25, from the Santa Clara Valley Youth Village, was I the leader through the two-night 1 event until disaster struck in the ! pole vault. : The 225-pound Hodge vaulted 112 feet in his first effort, but approaching the 12-6 mark for the first time, pulled up with a badly strained muscle in his right thigh. He dropped out of the pole vault, Toomey won at 13-0 and the difference in points for this event was 82. VESPER-42 E 2-2 HENLEY-ON-THAMES, England (AP) — The Vesper Boat Club of Philadelphia, fresh from a startling upset of - Harvard, now plans to take a crack at Germany’s top crews. “If we win, we go to Ratz-burg,” Vesper coach Allen Rosenberg said before the triumph over Harvard. ,“If we lose, we’ll go to the Lucerne Regatta in Switzerland so we can get Harvard again. * * * “We know we’re faster.’’ Now, everyone else does, too. Vesper, the 1964 Olympic champions but an underdog to Harvard, turned in convincing triumph over the Crimson in a heat of Henley’s Grand Challenge Thursday. The winning margin was three-quarters of a length and the time for the one mile 550 yards was a record 6:18. FIRST SETBACK It was the first loss of the year for Harvard, generally regarded as one of the finest collegiate crews every produced in the United States. “We will go to Ratzeburg,” said Vesper manager John Kelly, brother of Princess j Grace of Monaco. ' Fords Dominate Qualifying Trials in Stock Race DAYTONA BEACH, Fla./ (AP) — If a Ford doesn’t win the $58,000 Firecracker 400 stock car race* here Sunday, it won’t be for the lack of trying. In two days of qualifying, Fords hold eight of the first 12 positions, including the inside J pole spot. Marvin Panch of Daytona Beach picked off the pole in the first day of qualifying with a two-lap average of 171.510 miles an hour. On the outside pole, in a 1964 Mercury, will be Earl Balmer, a 30-year-old newcomer of the I ^ASCAR circuit from Floyd Knobs, Ind. He averaged 169.2041 m.p.h. Before they go; however they’ll probably clad) with a fast German erdw on the Thames. Vesper will row against the Nautilus Club of England in the semifinals. Nautilus covered the course in 1:42 Thursday—24 seconds slower than the Philadelphia boat—and Vesper expects no trouble. PLAN A HOUDAY WEEK-END OF FAMILY FUN... • BASEBALL RANGE * •DRIVING RANGE • PAR 3 GOLF COURSE DAY or NIGHT GOLF! CARL’S GOLF LAND 1910 *. Talagraph M. - Asrest Frew WraBie MM# Need work? Use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. Low in cost. Fast in action. Phone 332-8181. BUNDED WHISKEY. M PROOF, 40% STRAIGHT WHISKEY-6055 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. GOOOERHAM l WORTS LTD., PEORIA, IU. $285 $452 $10*8 Pint 4/5 Qt. Half Gallon Includes 4% Michigan latos Tax ’ Like Scotch Lightness? Canadian Quality?. (At a money saving price) Get G&W Seven Star America’s Lightest Whiskey (It’s a smooth American Blend)- fffllMIEItiimUS 6-FOOT PICNIC TABLES CEDAR FENCE POSTS ■Mg 3”x7\. ... each 50c 5”x7’.. jfjClL 4”x8’.. ... each 95° mSm 4”xio’.. ...ach*1M • Kiln Dried Lumber, 5-2x10x6 • 0n« Set Artistic Wrought iron Legs • All Dolts (knook down) FIR $1923 SCREEN DOORS 2495 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 682-1600 Hrs.: 7:30 'til 5:30 Men. thru Fri. Saturdays 7:30 A.M. to ,1P.M. 30”x6’8”x1”... $775 32”x6’8”xl”... $]95 36”x6’8”x1”... ...*825 CALCIUM CHLORIDE 10Mb. bag.......... *2** mu LUMBER COMPANY Far The NO WAY on the no. im SEE MICHIGAN'S PAT! S FACTION MCE 631 Oakland at Cast FEB-4101 NO. 101 A Matthews Michigan’s Largest Volume Chssrplsl Dealer D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JUI>Y B, 1965 By FLETCHER SPEARS The wrap-up of the recent 54-hole medal play tournament of the Women’s District Golf Association is still a conversation piece for many of the gals. The ending was what you might imagine, one of those Hollywood-type things where the leader looks like a sure winner and in the end turns out to be the loser. That’s the way the WDGA tourney ended. And it was an ending the gals will‘d find hard to top. Ih case you missed it, Mrs. John Hume of Birmingham, who plays most p! her golf at Red Run. found herself behind by eight strokes going into, the final IS holes but came on to > make up the deficit and win by one shot. And on that Anal round, Mrs. Hume equalled the Birmingham Country Club women’s record of 73, which had been set two days earlier by Mrs. Keith LeClair of Barton Hills, who turned out to be the runner-up. The v i c t o r y, probably the most dramatic in the 37-year history of the event, helped Mrs. Hume even the score a bit in her head-to-head duels with Mrs. LeClair. , k * * The two have dominated the WDGA medal play event in the last six outings, and Mrs. LeClair has been in and out of the winner’s circle since 1955. WON IN ’55 Mrs. LeClair won in 1955, 1956 and 1957 and after the ’57 victory, she decided to take a little CORRECTIM EVANS EQUIPMENT SALES & SERVICE 6507 DIXIE HWY. WILL BE OPEN SATURDAY and Closed Sunday and Monday time off to be with her family. Mrs. Hume won her first title in 1960 and finishing second that year was Mrs. LeClair. flie JW event was won by-Sally Sharp, now Mrs. T. M. Werner of Forest Lake, who also won in ’58 and ’59. Mrs. Hume won again in 1962, and it wa? Mrs. LeClair’s turn to finish first in 1963 with Mrs. Hume holding the runner-up spot. ★' k ★« The two finished tbe.same way last year and it looked like a repeat this year until Mrs. Hume’s sizzling finish. TITLE MONOPOLY Eddie Harrison, 72, has found the Pontiac Retirees’ tournament easy pickings. In six tries, Eddie has won the championship five times, his latest coming last Tuesday at the-Pontiac Municipal Course. A mixed two-ball foursome tourney is scheduled for July 17' and the Women’s Medal Play starts August 7. ... AO Photofix THAT’S ME — Pointing to her position at the head of the pack is Mrs. Cathy Cornelius of Santa Fe, Calif., who fired a one-under-par 71 yesterday at Atlantic City Country Club in Northfield, N.J., to take a one stroke lead in the USGA Women’s Open. Holding the second spot is Mrs. Marlene Bauer Hagge. ’ Life of Housewife Lures Leader in Women's Open UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. I Min. From Downtown Pontiac Michigan Tubociait Sales & Service Check our Uaa Before Buying 2527 Dili* Hwy. 674-0308 Boys Register for Golf Play Registration is now under way for the Pontiac Press Putt-Putt Golf Tournament scheduled for July 14 r 17 at the Putt-Putt Course on Dixie Highway In Drayton Plains. The tournament is open only to Pontiac Press carriers. Entry blanks may be submitted to the Pontiac Press Circulation Department or filed with the manager at the Putt-Putt course. | Entry deadline is 5:30 p.m. July 10. All entrants will be required to play in the qualifying round July 12 or 13, and only those players with a 54-hole score of 150 or less will advance to the finals. The finals consist of 216 holes of medal play, with the entire field playing 54 holes the first dayfJuly 14). The field will be cut in half for the second round (54 holes July 15), and it will be sliced in half again for the third round (54 holes July 16). FINAL ROUND The low 10 per cent (or a minimum of six) of the players will play the final round of 54 holes July 17. - ——• ★ ★ ★ The winner will have an opportunity to play the suburban open Pytt-Putt champion for a trip to Findlay, Ohio, where he will compete against national putt-putt champions for automobiles in the Putt-Putt National Putt a Car Tournament. NORTHFIELD, N.J. (AP) -Kathy Cornelius wants to win the big one again and then settle down to the life of a housewife and mother. wee “I won’t play more than 10 tournaments next year,” said the 32-year-old touring veteran from Rancho Sante Fe, Calif., after taking a one-stroRe lead in the first round of the Women’s National Open Golf championship Thursday. * * ★ ‘Im going to settle down with my husband and daughter,” she said. “I’m going to be an assistant to the assistant pro at Rancho Sante Fe.”, Her husband, Bill, is the head pro at the Rancho Sante Fe Club. Her daughter, Karen is 11. STROKE AHEAD Mrs. Cornelius, winner of the Open in 1956, shot a one-under par 71 for a one stroke lead over Marlene Bauer Hagge of Sarasota, Fla. ■k k k But the surprise in the field was amateur Anne Quast Welts of Mt. Vernon, Wash., whose 74 put her in third place, Mrs. Welts, three-time national' women’s amateur champ, hadn’t played a tournament since last August and had a baby six months ago. * ★ ■Betsy Rawls of Spartanburg, S.C., seeking her fifth women’s Jim Butcher Believes ... Better Service Makes Fast Friends of Oar Customers and Vice Versa As I've said'before, any dealer can sell you a car, and any Chrysler-Plymouth dealer can sell you one of our cars. The biggest single difference is the service you get orf that car and the price you pay for it, after you've bought it. That's why we decided to make Better Service at a fair price, the big PLUS you get here at Oakland-Plymouth on any make or model car. ^ And it works because most of the folks who leave here happy with both the work and the price come .bock to us for more of thg„same whe* they're ready for a new car. The next time your car needs service, drive it in here and let us make d friend out of you. Then maybe someday you'll be a, customer for a new or. used cor', too! / Jim Butcher's OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC. 724 Oakland Are., Pontiac 335-9436 Where Better Service Bring* ’em Back open, shot a 75 and tied for fourth with last year’s rookie of year, Susie Maxwell of Oklahoma City, and Marilyn Smith of Jupiter, Fla. Kathy’s 79 put here In a bracket with Patty Berg, Phyllis Pruess, Barbara Romack and the popular French girl, Catherine LaCoste, all of whbm will have to come up with fine rounds today to survive 'the cut. Baxter Loads Western Open New Putter Puts Texan Ahead CHICAGO (AP) - Rex Bax-ter, a philosophical Texan, hoped today ids new putter was sighted on his second pro golf triumph in seven years as the 870,000 Western Open went into the'second round. The 28-year-okl Baxter, an NCAA champion for the University of Houston in 1967, shot a five-under-par 66 at Tam O’-Shanter Thursday for a one-stroke lead. k k k Second was Chi Chi Rodriguez, the defending champion, who cut watermelon from his diet ’and shot 67. Six players were knotted at 68, including Frank Wharton, Joe Campbell, Fred Hawkins, ★ ★ ★ Sonny Mettwln ... Bill Oomtt ...... Fred Hawkins .... Frank Wharton ... Kan Still ....... Tony Lama ....... Chandler Harper . Sana Llttler —... Toma* Vetch .... Rod Funeoth ..... Edwtrd Kudloty . jc-JIm Wlochort . Jack McOowan .. Bart Weaver .... . 34-33—*R . 33-34—SR 34-35—4R . 34-33—4R . 35-34—OR . 32-57—4R . 30-33—OR . 30-33—OR . 35-34-4* . St-14—71 . 34-34—70 . 37-33—70 . 3R-31—70 3434-70 . 35-35-70 . 35-15—70 . 34-34-70 35-34-71 3544—71 Morlene Bauer Hagge why Rewls ludjr Torluemke Mary W MHp* Sandra Palmar Ruth Jetton Gloria Armstrong Clifford Ann. Creed a-Loretta Perstein Carol Mom a-Anne Richardson e-Helen Slgel Wilson Botsy Cullen......... Sybil Griffin ....... 30-34—74 -—40-35—75 40-35—75 37-30—7* 40-34-74 37~*°—77 4037—77 39-39—70 41-37-70 t-Nancy R a-Phyllls I t-Carlo Jean Glasgow U. 3. Swimming Star Exits Hospital Today BERNE, Switzerland (UPI)-U.S. Olympic swimming star Don Schollander was due'to be rdeased from a hospital here today in order to fly home. Schollander, who won four golf medals in Tokyo, is being treated for mononucleosis. Alter Davie Cup Setup LONDON (UPI) - The European Zone of the Davis Cup will in the future be divided into two sections, with the winners of each meeting American and Asian Zone champions in the semifinals, it was announced today. Sonny Methvin, Bill Garrett and i Tun Aaron. PAR BUSTERS In all, 38 players broke par 71 In the quest for the $11,000 first prise. W # k Included among i3 bunched at 69 was British Open champion Tony Lema. The Big Three of the U. S. Open—Champion Gary Player, Jack Niddaus and Amie Palmer—skipped this meet. kk.k Baxter, currently 74th on the PGA money list with $6,114, won his only pro tourney at the close of the J9$3 tour, the Cajun Classic at Lafayette, La. A new putter Jw first tested in last weekend’s St. Paul Open figured in Baxter’s 33-33 round in which he sank two taps from 20 feet and one from 12 to account for three of hlrsix birdies against one bogey. k if " The field will be trimmed to the low 75 players and ties after today’s second round. After 54 holes Saturday, It will be cut to the low 00 and ties for Sunday’s closing round. Enjoy a new ROCKET- convertible during the Holidays. * Dynamic 88’s * Jetstar 88’s * OLDS F-85’s * Cadillac . CONVERTIBLES mmmmmis! 280 South Saginaw-St. FE 3-7021 At Home on the Farm NEW YORK (UPI) -* Flag Raiser, winner of four stakes races during the spring and pace-maker in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, is doing well on the farm in Maryland, trainer Hirsch Jacobs reported Thursday. When you can hear your MUFFLER see your MIDAS MAN • FAST, EXPERT SERVICE • FREE INSTALLATION • MUFFLERS GUARANTEED* against rust, corrosion, blow-out even normal wear-hut for as long as you own your car. Written guarantee good in 450 Midas Shops, coast-to-coast U S. and Canada. •Roplocod it n*c*»**ff for only • sonic* eftorgo. 435 South 3. Blocks South of Wide Sagii ’ide Tra maw rack Driva MUFFLERS e PIPES • SHOCKS UArZriPDTY CALIFORNIA RUSTIC REDWOOD PICNIC TABLES rlMWLIM I AT CARLOAD PRICES HAS IT! AT CARLOAD PRICES COMPLETELY MACHINED FOR EASY ASSEMBLY AND FINISHING - ALL HARDWARE INCLUDED BAFT“x"“$7950 COMPLETELY BUILT-UP 5/4”x6” CLEAR FIR DECKING, ZINC0L TREATED FOR LONGER LIFE WITH STYROFOAM This Raft Floats Like Foam 45” SQUARE TABLE WITH UMBRELLA HOLE MOOT TABLE WITH $01 25 TWO SIDE BENCHES 4a I Rugged 2" Stock • PERMANENTLY BUOYANT • WILL NOT. RUST It's always a Happy Landing with tha now PIER KIT Chairs •... ea. $5.75 34* square parquet top Redwood table aiid ottrocllv chain. Ideal for apt. balcony or garden petto. THESK ARE 00MPLITELY BUILT UP AND FINISHED 0ART0N PACKED, LEGS LOOSE 48” ROUND TABLE WITH UMBRELLA HOLE INCLUDING 4 BENCHES TOPS ASSEMBLED ON TABLES AND BENCHES - LEGS LOOSE -CARTON PACKED. *29” 9 ft Dock Section, 22.50 K.B SAME SIZE BUILT-UP only ... 5/4* x 4* Clear Fir Docking, Zlncol Treated 2x6 Stringer* C6t to Fit — Hot Dipped Galvanized •tool leg support*. CLEAR FIR COCK BOARDS «/4”*4» .... I Ft. 25o .... 4 Ft. 34c 5/4”x6” .... 3 Ft. 42o .... 4 Ft. 55o l/4”xS» .... S Ft. Mo .... 4 Ft. TSe* ZINCOL DIPPED ......8,95 ,..v.. 9.95 too-mo4, tram O«U*H — M*4* from Oordwl Basket Weave $gS5 Board on Board Now Only Only $]85 4- FT. STEEL LEGS only . 5- FT. STEEL LERS only. Ail material precut and stained far easy assembly. Including 1 — 4"x4" pact — 4'x6' tactions. UAMHTY LUMBER A SUPPLY GO. BUILT UP ADD $2.00 PER SECTION INSTALLATION SERVICE AVAILABLE 2165 HAGGERTY HWY. Walled Lake-MA 4-4551 $ THE PONTIAt PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2,1965 pontiac ness CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING INDEX NOTICES Cord of Thanks ........... l |n Momoriam .............. j Announcements .............. 3 florists ................ 3-A Funeral Directors .......... 4 Cemetery Lots .............4-A Personals .............. 4-B Lost and Found.........*.. 5 i EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male ........... 6 Help Wanted Female______.... 7 Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Mole-Female . 8-A Employment Agencies ...... 9 Employment Information ...9-A instructions—Schools.......10 Work Wanted Male ..........11 work Wanted Female.........12 Work Wanted Couples .. , .12-A : SERVICES OFFERED building Services-Supplies ..*13 Veterinary .................14 Business Service ...........15 Bookkeeping and Taxes.... 16 Credit Advisors ..........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring. .17 Cordoning ............... is ‘ Landscaping ..............18-A Garden Plowing ..........18- Income Jax Service ____ laundry Service ...... Convalescent—Nursing . Moving and Trucking .. Fainting and Decorating Television-Radio Service Lpholstering........... Transportation ......... Insurance .............. beer Processing ........ .19 . 20 ..21 .22 . 23 . 24 24-A . 25 . 26 ...27 WANTED Wanted Children to Board . 28 Wanted Household Goods . 29 Wonted Miscellaneous......30 Wanted Money .............31 Wanted to Rent ...........32 Share living Quarters.....33 Wanted Real Estate........36 RENTALS OFFERED Apartments—Furnished ......37 Aprrtments—Unfurnished . 38 Rent Houses, Furnished ... 39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished . 40 Property Management... 40-A Rent Lake Cottages ...... 41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms ...............42 .43 ..44 .45 46 47 47-A 48 SPECIAL NOTICE pontiac mess Classified Deddlines Du* to Early JULY FOURTH EDITION MONDAY JULY 5th For Saturday's Edition v* Regular by 4:3# Friday 7/2 Contract by II noon Frl. 7/2 Display by 2 p.m. Thurs. 7/1 For Monday's Edition For Tuesday's Edition Regular by * - a.m. Mon. 7/S Contract by 12 noon Frl. 7/2 Display by 2 p.m. Frl. 7/2 CANCELLATIONS * for Saturday's Monday's Editions by 9 a.m. Sat., July.3 Tuesday's Edition by 9 a.m. Mon., July 5 ba forgotten 14 years ago today. I had to say, *Lord, You taka Ms hand and (dws him “ I've done mv bast." ARE DEBTS WORRYING ' YOU? -Employer not contacted -Stretches your dollar -No charge tor budget analysis Write or phono for free booklet MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, rlullin'F* *JUU LOS# WEIGHT SAFELY wy I TI HiiV - ---- Reply _____Press Box 2.____ WHITE CHAPEL, 4 LOTS, NEW Death Notices CALDWELL, JULY 2, 1763. MAR JORIE FLORENCE, 4371 CMOse-men, Drayton Plaint; age 48; beloved wife of Joseph Cildwell; deer mother of- Mrs. Nell (Nancy) Shrontz, Mrs. Carl (Carolyn) Lerm ot Mrs. Fred (Btrnlce) Easton, Mrs. Edword (Beryl) Hainey, Mrs. Gian (Wava) Olmstead, Mrs. Frad (Grace) Booth, Mrs. Don (Shlrloy) Crone, and Vernon and Clifford Met tel; alio survived by nine grandchildren. Mrs. Caldwell will Its In state at the Coats Funeral Homs until 10 p.m. Saturday after will I *-*-—*- At 10 ■.in. today there were replies at The Press Office in tlie fol- i lowing boxes: 7, It, U, 14, II, 18, 23, } 27, 29, 38, 41, 45, 49, 58, ] 65, 67, 18, 79, 73, 89, 82, 85, 87, IMS. ' __________________________I Rooms With Board Rent Farm Property______ Hotel-Motel Rooms ...... Rent Stores ............ Rent Office Space....... Rent Business Property. Rent Miscellaneous .. REAL ESTATE Sole Houses Income Property . Lake Property . Northern Property Resort Property Suburban Property Lots—Acreage Sale Farm; .. Sole Business Prope Sale or Exchange FINANCIAL Business Opportunities .... 59; Sale Land Contracts ...... 60 !' Wanted Contracts-Mtges. 60-A Money to Lend ..............611 Mortgage Loans ..........'.. 52 j MERCHANDISE CHAFFEE, JUNE It, 1743, JAM R.. 3727 N.W. 27th St., Msrgs Florida, tormsrly of Clarkston; i 71; beloved husband ot M Chaffee; door, brother of M I Elsie Smith, Mrs. Harold Reynolds and Mrs. Mlko Ranek. Funeral service will be held Saturday, July S, ol 2 p.m. ft tha Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Interment In Lakevlew Cemetery. Clorkiton. Mr. Chattoo will lie In slate ot the Shsrpe-Goyetta Louise McClellon; dear sister of Mrs. Kathlaen Daniels, Mrs. Lou-elle Phillips. Mrs. Rosla Kinder, Mrs. Josephine Brown, Mrs. Gertrude Duncan, Mrs. Lucille Jacobs end Edward Harper. Funeral servlet will bo hold Tuesday, July 6. ot I p.m. at the Trinity Baptist Church with Rev. Lae Andrew Greggs, pastor, officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Gatlin will lit In state ot mo Frank Cerruthers Funeral Home otter 7 p.m. Saturday. . Sarah Scott. ander Hernandez; dear brothar < Daniel Hernandez. Funeral ■ l. Park Cemetery. 7 to 7 HIGHT, JUNE 27, 1743, EARL T., 1 Indianola, Oklahoma, formerly of Auburn Heights; ago 43; beloved husband of Laura Hlght. Funeral service will be held Tuesday. July 4. at 1:30 p.m. at Sparks-Grlffln Chapel. Interment in While Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Hlght will II* in stale at the Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Sunday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 3 . Russell Adams and V Inton; alto survived by ildren. Funeral serv hbld Saturday, July 3. " t Sharp* - Goya Swaps — . — Sal* Clothing ........ Sale Household Goods Antiques ... Hi-Fi, TV & Radios .. Water Softeners ....... For Sale Miscellaneous Christmas frees ...... Christmas Gifts .... Hand Tools—Machinery Do It Yourself ............ 69 Gcmeros—Service — — 70 lOlusical Goods........... 71 Music Lessons ............71-A Qffice Equipment..............72 Store Equipment ............73 Sporting Goods .............74 Qshing Supplies—Baits.........75 $ond-Gravel-Dirt ...........76 Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel —77 Pets-Hunting Dogs ............79 Pet Supplies—Servic*......79-A Auction Sales ..............80 Nurseries ................. 81 Plants—Trees—Shrubs ... 81-A Hobbies and Supplies 82 FARM MERCHANDISE L’vestock ................. 83 Meats................... 83-A Hay—Grain—Feed ............ 84 Poultry ....................85 Form Produce .................86 Farm Equipment .............87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers — ..........88 Housetrailers —............ 89 font Trailer Space......... 90 Gommiercial Trailers ... *. 90-A Auto Accessories........... 91 T)res-Auto-Truck .......... 92 Auto Service ...............93 Motor Scooters ............ 94 Motorcycles ............... 95 Bjcydes 96 Beats-Accessories .: 97 Airplanes ................. 99 Wanted Cars-Trucks ........101 Jgnk Cars-Trucks 101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts .102 New and Used Trucks ... 103 ’ Auto-Marine Insurance ... 104 Fbreign .Cors .'...........105 New and Used Cars ... Funoral Homo. ___________ view Cemetery, Clarksron. Hinton will lie in state a Sharpe - Goyette Funeral I ot Foorl Me* Nobb; dear brother of Mrs. Loo Walker and Mra. Doris Hudson. Balrd-Newton Funeral Home, ;nd*r auspice, I the auspices of Baird - Newton Funeral I REIN. JULY I. 1743. ERNEST C.. 454 Auburn Avenue; age 47; beloved husband of Elsie L. Rein; dear father ot Richard Rein; deer brother of Mra. Janet McKinney, Mrs. Morlo Evans, and Ban, Arnold, Art, Tod, Alvin, and Henry Rein; olio survived by three grandchildren. Mr. Rein will lie In state at the Voorhees-SIple Funeral Home until 7 p.m. Friday at which time he will be taken to the Drake 4, Son Funeral Homo, Chicago, Illinois. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, July 6. Burial In Acacia Park. Chicago, Illinois. (Suggested visiting hours ROBAR, JUNE 30, I74J, MARTHA E.. 3314 Lincolnshire, Waterford Township; ago 76; dear mother of George A.. Lawrence, Melvin A., Richard W. Robar end Mrs, Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Funeral i t l« a at St. Benedict's Catholic Church. Intorment In ML Hop* Cemetery. Mra. Robar will II* In itoto ot the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 7 p.m.) RICHERT, JUNE 23. 1741 PFC. RONALD R., 74 Thorp*! age It; beloved son of Chester and Thelma Rlchert; door brother of Robert, Peggy, Joann*, RoMn, Phyllis and Richard Rlchort. Funeral service will b* hold Saturday, July 1 at 1:30 p.m. at tha Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home with Dr. Emil Kontz officiating. Intar men t In Parry Mt. Park Cemetery. PFC. RKhert will lie In state at the Sparke-Grlffln ■ *—*— visiting .106 SCHNEIDER, JULY 1, IT0S. CATHERINE, 103 North Berkshire; age 71; dear mother of Mrs. John L. (Catherine) Kllloran, Mrs. Berth* S. Grelsler, and Andrew Schneider, Bernard Schneider. Floyd Schneider. and Or. Fra~~‘ binger and Mies Roe* 1 also survived by 10 grandchildre —1 grot grandchildren. Mn HOLD IT! ■ Shop the Classified Columns Daily! . . . here's a better way to earn extra money! It's quick, simple and productive. Just look around! your home, garage and basement and list the many! items that you no longer use. Hundreds of readers ore searching The Press's classified columns daily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the chanje that it holds! Try it! YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID I I GOOHARDT FUNERAL HOME COATS UNREAL HOME PLAINS i D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car farvfcp F« 4-1211 bONELSONJOHNS FUNERAL HOME "Oealgnpd tor FuneraH" HUNTOON 77 Oakland Ava. FE 2-0171 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME -Thoughtful Sonrteo* PE 6-7204 vooEhees-sipie FUNERAL HOME FE 2-0274 Over ar---- Cemetery J-ots each. FE 2-0423. GRAVES, CHOICE PLOT, WHITE Chapal Camotory. 343-7337. m SACRIFICE 2 UJTS IN WHITE Chapel. FE 5-1007. ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NSEOING o friendly 7-5127 baton ,..... _ - sw*r, cell FF t-0734 font nunt.al ' OAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 07 Menominee _____ _____FE S700S EQUAL RIGHTS FOR fecial hair u McDowell, State qualified. OR 3-2075. - DIE DESIGNERS PROGRESSIVE DIES Meyer Engineering Co. 17227 Ml. Elliott. Detroit ELDERLY MAN FOR YARD AND garden work. Mar* tor homo |— wages. Room and board. 4-0330. 6 Help Wartod Male SERVICE MANAMR FOR SMALL ' gpowlhl GM dealership- Good based an salary and commto- ----tunny tor • qualHIca- SERVICE STATION Cotton's Standard Service Station — located at Pontiac Lake Road and Opdyk* to available tor- tooting to tha right man. Training financing, guaranteed Income tv«H-abto. FOR INTERVIEW CALL PAYS Ml 47311 AND NIGHTS CLAWSON 500-3000. U RFAC E GRINDER, EXPERI-enced In progretahr* did detail work, In modom stamping plant. EXCELLENT SALES OPPORTUNITY PAID TRAINING PROTECTED TERRITORIES HOSPITALIZATION RETIREMENT PUN PRESTIGE Requirements: Age "StM", hH school education, prater tolling ak. •n insurance or retail background, but not nocoaaory.. Coll FE ■**** SHIPPING AND RECEIVI clerk usual be high school gradu and have completed military o IENCEO CARPENTERS NRMR do both w— work. Holly, 434-7333 EXPERIENCED LOCK OPERATOR ENGiSIUf Assistant Chief Engtomr jsrotorabjjr t company Lost and Founr BLACK MALE POODLE* A pony offers local employment. This Is • company with gr-Atodnugto rrent potential, excell boftofltt. You must „ _ high school graduate. Good ing salary (with company car or car allowanca fu/hlshed). Pleas* contact tha Personnel Manager at 22767 Woodward, Ferndato or coll PROFICIENT YOUNG LADY FOR chohanglng lab, Morthond and typing add aaatot bookkeeper on oc-cation. Royal Oak pro*. Ml 44220, oxt.4. gatlon. Pontiac. TRAINEE - GRILL MAIL IMS. neat, willing, apply In person. Ellas Bros. Big Bay Drive ins. 20 S. Telegraph and 240* Dixie. No Phan* coup pcbwtad. . VENDING PERSONNEL Repairman, Sorsrlcomon, Route Su- food aorvlea management con atlon. Detroit and omor Ohio art___ Excellent wages, fringe boneflft. Submit complete resume to P.0. Box 774, Totodo. Ohio. Ropltos con-fldentlal. WANTEOi rHal ESTATM SALES-, |)(w -I Iv* $4471. STOCK MEN, MAR-pvor 2t, and of good tor our factory branch MMPimaorW-150 Auburn Avo. I BABY SITTER, HOUSEKEEPER,. ROBUST WOMAN FOR 5 DAYS, t) a.m.-7 pan. Cooking, and **TV eral cleaning. FE 5-3001 after 5 hoonltot, split day. _____, ----- unfcrmo torn (shod. Writ* gMd gwiNlogOtono to Pen-Itoc Press lax 40. WOMEN OVER SB to DO ALL Cm of ganaref office work to work with flgwrot. ...... Pontiac Post Off lea Box 232 giving ago. education, lot experience, and BEAUTY OPERATOR uss pe mol o-1g it.' ~ ’ COMBINATION CLEANElf ARd spotter tor new dry ctoantog plant, 2743 Orttiord Lotto Rd. Coll 403- ' SELL tupperware Full-time pay tor part-time w No Invottmowt necessary. P i train big: Phone 057-4300 or « Tupporworo, 3327 Auburn Haights. WOMAN FOR~c-HOUSEWORK I " ToWlRNp home. Mu transportation, t jjjg INS WOMAN WANTED 1 WOMAtl FOR KITCHEN. APto.) Big-Bey Driva-in, S4H oixto Hwt between H pjn.________'■ WOMAN BETWEEN 30-40 TO LIVE CJ34-03W WAITRESSES _____ WAITRESS; NEAT, NO SUNDAYS. — In person. Encor* Rostou-Miracle Mil* Shopping Cen- llghl housework.” Room and boorC and SIS a week. Drayton or**. BBee, WOOL FRESSER. EXPERIENCED, good working condition*. Jonoi Devls pry Ctoonort, 047-3000. YOUNC LADY TO WORlTON CASH register and familiar with bookkeeping. Apply 7740 Cooley Lake Rd.. r WAITRESS Far Pontiac Country Club. 4335 Eilzoboih Lake Rd. Apply In por- WAITRESS IN CAPETMJA. 25-33, good wages, 1-------------- 675 East Ml ___ , Thurs.___ ! BETWEEN RMS. PART ■UR, small grocoryMMBUuUU Plains, call FE 3-2SBf EXPERIENCED ,c60kt0 I woek. Good working < is. Pontiac Pros* Box 14. i Call i Full Or paR^Wme restau- rant help, Intoda *r curb girls, axportanc* not necessary, ever It, 7470 Highland Rd. on M37 near WHIIoms Lake Rd. 47MM. _ vicinity to spar* time severing iv or par week at thtlr convenle canvassing or sol letting. D Cor necessary. Earnings ui FE 3-4731 74 p. ATTENTION COLLEGE AND HIGH ' xsl students: Summer employ. it. Now taking applications, nlngs In all dopsHnSnls. F | ----8100D DONORS H9GENTLY NEEDED hi Poilhh 11 4 *7.00, 110.00 * t "1401" Programmers Will work on a variety of computer programs — engineering, production control, distribution and accounting. Minimum of 2 years experience on IBM *'1401" tope systems. Apply in Person or Send Resume toi - SALARY PERSONNEL SECTION FORD TRACTOR DIVISION 2500 E. Maple Birmingham, Mich. ■I opportunity employer FOUND: BLOND COCKER SPAN-MI, owner may have by Identifying, vicinity of N. Parry and Kettering Avo. 332-3373. lost! medium sized bird dog. brown with whit* spots, vicinity of East Clarkston and Orion Rd., Lake Orton. Family ' J Msf 3-1474. LOST: WHITE ENGLISH BULLDOG gently needed. FE 3-73»7. ot blueprints M071^10 p.m. FULL TIME POSITION OPEN FOR mon experienced In credits and collections. High school graduate. Must be ambitious and desirous to progress. Car not needed. Starting pey and benefits according to qu*r-tflcattons. Phone Mr. Voss tor to tervtow appointment, FE 5-4434. BABY SITTER WANTED TQ LIVE Coll before 1:30 or after 10 „ 4C-2204. ____________ BAKERY SALES GIRL OR BAK-ory helper. Experienced. Full time. 11.25 to start. Anderson Bakory. 124 W. 14 Milo, Birmingham Ml 4-7114. BAR MAID-WAITRESS WANTED, Halp Wanted Mole 2 RELIABLE DRAFTSMEN WITH perlence in machine design. Good irking conditions. S3 hr. wk„ II ME' 7-7241 In Holly for *p- f 2 MEN HIRING PART-TIME iw factory braAch Is taking op-cottons tor Immediate evening APPLIANCE SALESMAN WITH some sales experience, steady employment, apply before 7 a.m. Room 404, Consumers Power Co. 2# W. Lawrence, Pontiac. W* ere an equel opportunity employer.__ ASSISTANT FOREMAN FOR AFT- draulic or electrical equipment < perlence. The work Is Interestlr varied and provides good on t |ob training. Reply Pontiac Press FULL TIME REAL ESTATE SALES men. Mutt have experience end successful teles record. Eigh new Boouty-Rtto modal homos, now reedy for showing. Opportunity tor aggressive talesman to mak* more than average earnings. Phone Ray or Roger O'Neil for personal in tervtow. OR 4-2222. GARAGE HELP, PREFER SOMfe-one with some automotive knowl- 404 Consumers Pow-I. Lawrence, Pontiac. BEAUTICIAN, CLIENTELE WAIT-Ing, exc. opportunity. Goon's of Pontiac, FE 47724. vacation. Apply person oeiween 2 and 5 p.m. at tl Big Boy Drhrp-ln, Telegraph ar Huron or Dixie Hlohwav and S r Lake Rd. GROOM TO TAKE CARE horses, good wages, board room, 4 days, 23175 W. 14 Rd., Birmingham. _______ HAVE HAMMOND ORGAN, NElO player. Call 245-2545. HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE W good grades and references work In offloe, military service preferred, steady employment, MS per week to start plus other benefits, paid hospitalization, life Insurance. vacation and holidays. Apply before 7 a.m. Consumers Power Co. Room 404, Pontiac. We are an equal opportunity employ- weges. ipesri._____ ___ „ . ........ ■■■■■■■ SITTER. OWN TRANSPORTA-! 7 cMIdren, 7 a.m.-3:30 p.m.| 334-4144 after AdvtrHtlm Sptdnhtot BUSINESS CARDS, AIDS AND PRO-mottonal materials. OR 3-3473. mop. Eve. hours. :r Pontlac-Opdyke Rds. COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY CLEAN-Ing plant, evenings 4-1 p.m. Apply Flesh Cleaners, 337 W. Huron. DISHWASHERS WANTED. APPLY i. Rotunda Country T-TIME, 675 AAA OPPORTUNITY Opening lust available for aggres-| ritoMd salesman. Incen- HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Average 52.75 per hour part tii earn S115-S130 full time. C needed. Phone after 6 p.m. to rang* Interview. 545-4222._ IBM TABULATING OPERATOR Excellent opportunity for a m ence, qualified s and assist w x No. 72. ______ ______ANb r laundry, days. Apply 1220 - H ' ~ "ester. C ......- necessary, exceptional opportunity for right pert— ‘* qeneral insurance agency In Birmingham^ Catt 444-3410._ _ EXPERIENCED STENOS AND TYP-!' Isis. Work the hours you want. j Cell Manpower___ ______332-8386 e EXPERIENCED SOOKKEEP-. er, top wages and benefits. Send Alvmiiram Bldg. Nbihs KAISER kLCOA ALUMINUM SID ING, GUTTERS. STORM. WINDOWS - DOORS, CEILINGS, AWNINGS. SUPERIOR. FE 4-3177 SHERRIFF-GOSLIN SIDING ROOFING 54 S. Cats Lake_______FE 2-5231 DRAYTON FENCE CO. 3324 Addle St 47441321 PONTIAC FENCE CO. 3722 Dixie Hwy._______OR 34373 Architectural Drawing Asphalt Paving I OS CONSTRUCTION FREE ESTIMATES, DRIVEWAYS Perking Lots. fl ■ ' DRIVES, PARKING LOTS, WHAT? DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, FE S-4780- Free Estlmitos. DURNEN . ASPHALT PAVING CO. Get* our bid first. Free estimates on driveways and Asphalt ' ' coating. OR S-17S7, 442-4371. sting Service. Check this pppor-l illy. Inquire to Warren Stout. 10 N. Opdyke, Pontiac, FE S-I14S| 5 MEN PART-TIME EVENINGS Locatl factory branch Is expandi Immediately. Clean work, hdu work record. For Interview call Pleasant working conditions, with EXPERIENCED. MEDICAL ASSIST-1 ■ ant, Btoomfleld-Blrmlngham area. MA 4-4347 after 7 p.m. liberal employee benefits pro-• grams. Apply In person — Employment Office, Hoover Ball A Bearlng^Co., Bearing Division. 5400 FEMALE HELP WANTED, JOE'S Coney Island, 1651 S. Telegraph. FE 3-7)20. "MACHINIST' 1 FVmL mlddfe-agedY woman, 'full charge — motherless home. MA 5-5871 or eves. OR 3-3831. GIRL FOR GENERAL OFFICE General machine shop work, all machines. Also pneumatic control work In real estate en(l Insurance office. Steady employment, top hourmweek,' fringe beneSto^Apply In person Sahlln Supply Company, 7S0 West Maple Rd. Troy. MAN WITH TRUCK~F0R DRV Mn^SRdT*!MS7)AfOR V4-0304. ^ GIRLS 18 OR OVER, GOOD WORK-ing condltons, A A W, Milford. 2128 Milford Rd. Applyjn person. N OVER 21 TO MANAGE CREO-department, experience not nec-isary but helpful. Only persons terostod In coreor In retau credit, eld need reply. Mkto transfer. Salary ASSISTANT MANAGERS WANTED i. Ago* 21 to 30. High school , make decisions, ab-.......g Many ftoMtomMm i Mr. Sprifigei ......... Co., 1105 N. 333-7017. Automatic Screw Machine Operator erate Brown & Sharpe screw me chines. Apply In person. LITTLE I. DAVID MACHINE CO. 1774 Pontiac Orlv* _ BODY MEN WANTED. APPLY 27 5-0142. FE GIRLS OR WOMEN: TO ASSIST supervision In telephone work. No experience needed, will train, must have pleasant voice. Could use expectant mothers, slightly handicapped. and widow ladles, also mlddloaged ladles to train for supervisors. Salary and bonus. Not magazines or home Improvements. - Apply 24V7 E. Huron Room. No. 1. HOSTESS. DINING ROOM MANAG- Building Modernization 3-CAR GARAGE, 1077 ADDITIONS Also Alum, windows, doors, siding. GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates____QRl 4-ISH CARPENTRY AND REPAIR WOffk ___ OL 1-0255 __ EXPERT REMODELING AND AD-dltlons by Craftsman. OL 1-2774. . H . Oldei a person. Big Bo MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Train-7 months to 1 year learning $10,000-113,000 a year lob. Earn $125 to 5130 while training. For per-sonel Interview, phone OR_3-8345. MARRIED MAN ON FARM. MILK-ing experience necessary, living 3005 North 8 TO INSTALL RAILS HOUSEKEEPER AND COOK, FOR invalid wife and husband, widow, no encumbrances, 40-40 years old. BOYS 14-21 Now taking applications for ft time summer work. Average mission earnings to 075 per wi Inquire 15u N. Perry. Intorvl from 12 noon to 2 p.m. BUTCHER, PART TIME, ton! super market. Just Dail - 332-8181 Griffin Funeral H me uaiy Funeral Home, S lady. New York tor sorvl Y NAME IS JACK. IF YOU NEED shift,'21 days on nlgltt shift. Minimum of 1 weekend off a mo. Days off vary. Apply Mildred Crozier, Oakland County Jail, 104 Wayne SL, Pontiac. KITCHEN HELP, 10 OR 'OVER. 3L 2-3731._______ Basement Waterproofing Block Laying BLOCK LAVING AND C E I Boats-Accessories STOP DREAMING let Us Help You Sove BOATS—MOTORS—TRAILERS DOCKS Discount prices now In effect Harrington Boot Works "YOUR EVINRUOE DEALER" 877 S. Telegraph_____332-0033 PLASTERING AND REPAIR. etonobto. George Lap. FE 2-7722 PLASTERING. PRKd ESTIMATES. D. Meyers. 343-7*75. 4743440, OHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LAYING, tending and finishing. 25 years experience. 332-4773. :. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING sending end finishing. F FE 5-0572 BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS — FOUSHERS WALL RfiMR STEAMERS RUG CLEANER - POWER SAWS 7S2 Jootyn Open Sun, FE 44106 General Maintenance INTERIOR-EXTERIOR Maintenance Ctoanlng-Palntlng-Londtcaplng PAINT MAILBOX, POST AND RE-1 “tt box. Rog. 17.75, special Mto f. Mailbox Maintenance, LAWNMOWERS REPAIRED AT Free estimates. 33S-1 CARPENTRY WORK] remodeling. 442-0103. INTERIOR FINISH, KITCHENS, paneling. 40 years experience -FE 2-1235. Cemsnt Work CEMENT WORK Lkantod Cement Contract Ft >9122 'lows PART TIME CARPENTERS We pay $5.60 per hour For experienced men - Includes vacations — Holiday — Pension— Hospitalization — Accident Insurance — Unemployment Insurance-Old ago benefits. $6.50 for Layout Men Lots ot work In Pontiac and Wa- Call Pat**Mason, FE 8-22S5 or Willis Teeple 674-1962. CARPENTER, ROUGH AND FIN-Ish. FE 8-7700 on FE 4-2272 after 4 ARPENTERS NEEDED, AT toast 2 years experience, not union. Non* other need apply. UL 3-1712 or 602-2257. ________ COLO HEADER SET-UP Steady work, oood wane: fringe I PROFESSIONAL WINDOW CLEAN- “Din DESIGNERS Contract •i-nce D_________ McNkholt, Detroit. PI Engineering, 13313 DIE MAKERS WITH PROGRESSIVE die experience in modom stamping plant. 1423 W. Maple Rd., Trey. 2377 Elizabeth Lake SECuAlfY 6'#FI-jrnlsh own uniform. 1. call PE 5-5115, CEMENT WORK - FREE EST1-■X.V/...BX. I , mates. OR 4-2334, coll anytime. KITCHEN SERVERS I patios, drives, garage slabs For evening work In fine family 4*c sq. tt. FE 4-2874. Pays. type, restourant. Pleasant working condition, plus many benefits. Must t transportation. < mn only, HOWARD JOHNSON'S TELEGRAPH AND MAPLE BIRMINGHAM AAATURE WOMAN TO LIVE Ceramic Tlliag NEW ANO REMODELING WORK, “to slot*, marble, Pontiac Tito S erble, 482-5278;_________ PORTER Man 48-33 years of age, apply at Big Bov Drivo-ln, Telegraph and M&THER'S HELPER, MUST BE Mh|*M|totoatotoM|~— housekeeping, open. 423-1207 j Neughton Rd. toi Trey. 6*7-4700, slRvice stAt1aYtInBant. SVIVVICe STATION ATTKNOANT-experienced part lime. Shell torn lion, Hunter-Oak. Birmingham. LITTLE COST, BIG RESULTS WITH PRESS WANT ADS! aping am ax fl, [ DreeBmatOofsTgiioring IONS ALL TYPE) leather coats. OR ; Dry Walliog Home Improvement George's Construction et 3 Lake Dredging Landscaping •A COMPLETE LANDSCAPE SERV-67410520. MERION OR KENTUCKY $66, laid or delivered. ‘ dressing old lawns Na money down. LNH9HM 1, FE 2-0)41 or FE 5-3302. i complete landscaping, sodding, seeding, discing, plowing, grading, b«£k hoe and front end loading, retaining walls. Broken 4-Inch sidewalk, sold by ‘ ' “ » estimates. FE 4-337T. ' CONCRETE - AAV Lawn Spraying TALBOTT LUMBER Moving and Storage SMITH MOVINO CO. Ft A4I44. Painting and Decorating ST itlng, f r i rtntood. 8 n o extBrior PAINTING ANO CAULKING ST. T Fenton. 343-4440. IRUSH. OR ROLLER. ItE RETAIL PLUMBING . ANO HEATINO SUPPLY - Repair Pert* and “ -----‘ Oakland Aug. Wallpaper Steamer Floor tend* r t, polisher., hand senders, furnace VQUUm ctoeneri, Oakland Fuel A Paint, Ot Or-chord Lok* Avo. Fl S-4130. CLARKSTON ROOFING COMPANY, re-roofs and repair. Insurance work and own In Wayne, Oakland and Macomb Co's. 4737287, NEW ROOFS. REPAIRS. INSURED — BWTdhtoRd. Call Tom. 4834345. ROOFING AND REPAIR. 482-4778. OL 1-4441___ ROOFS: NEW. RRFAIX General Molntonancp 443 4IN Scott Roofing Company Shingles, siding and guitars. OR Sand, Gravel and Dirt Tree Trimming Sendee ENERAL MOVING, HAULING furniture, traitor*, troth 24 hr service. Also Sun. 04-777$. HAULlhO ANb RUBBISP NAME your price. Any lima. 77075. LIOHT MOVING, tRASH HAULED rypbWL'fli trent-ond' toedlngj FE-* jSK LIGHT HAULING. GARAGES AND B ’ ctoanod. 474-110. TRUCK HAULING, LAWN, GA- Tracfc Bawlal Trucks to Rent WTon pickup* Ito-Ton stohg TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Truck* — Soml Traitors Pontiac Farni and Industrial Tractor Co. OS S. WOODWARD FE 47451 _ __ FE 7-144S SEE FOR ‘ YOURSELF! ‘LITTU C0S1, big results with PRESS WANT ADSI Attractive 718- PHRlWhil ... _______________ General homltel. Contact Forion-nol Doat. Detroit QMpiipgthlc Hospital. 12323 TMrd~£OR couple, no children. West slda sac tton. Call 3)441**. COUPLE WITH~TEEN AGE TWINS at or buy, fe Sana. Short Utli OBBrtsw 33 MAN WILL SHARE APARTMENT office, ref. required. After 4 pm.. Wanted Real Estate 1 TO 50 HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE. PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROF-ERTIES AND LANG CONTRACTS Urgently needed for Immediate WARREN STOUT, Reoltor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE - ALL CASH ---FHt wd Cl EQUITY__ mediately. 6ETROIT. BR 1-0440. ANNETT “NEEDS--------- LISTINGS Due to our recent booming sales program wo need listings more than anytime In our Sydor history. We handle pit types of erep- ReirtUheCetlafH 41 5-ROOM COTTAGE, FULLY PURN-Ithed, lake privileges, private beach, sets Dufflald off Ormond Rd„ White Lake. MIHord. M7-SS14. CEDAR ISLAND LAKE, LARGE '577. l*3-7*4t. LAKEFRONT COfTAGBS AT LEW-iston. FE S-131S after fc LARGE BI-LEVEL COTTAOE' ON Lean Lake near Mia, me. swimming and (Wing, 4 large reams, t fireplaces, tleepe IB STS per weak through Labor Day. EM 3-944*. Em 3-2505. , MODERN 1 BEDROOMS. IS MILES north at Pontiac. OR 3-7217. YEAR AROUND LAKEpRpHt. E ROOMS N il, FE 4-9051. ROOM AND OR BOARD >35V* Oakland Avp. FE 4-M44. SLEEPING RbOM F6R MAN CALL ObD SO. FT. ON WIDE TRACK Drive West. Will refurbish----- needs of tenant — or at immediate occupann. Leslie Tripp, Realtor. frE 54141. UR-CbNDllfiONED OFFICE modem downtown office bylWI Elevator service. Reesonabte r I far personal appotnt- Annett Inc. Raaltors 28 E. Huron St. FE 8-0466 CASH BUYERS “ -flea _ ■ _ .Til__________ 3*34444. 437-4445, Pat. WE 3 41 HAVE BUYERS FOR ANY KIND of property Mr R0I* egM. «Bt Paul Jonas Realty - Ft 44554. CLEANING AND wall WASHING. I _______442-4*53 or 4B-5SM ___ IRONINGS IN MY HOME. 35t voorhels Rd ______ fe 4-3044 i IRONINGS WANTED. WEBSTER- ' Crofoot area. FE S-n3i._ LIGHT HOUSEWORK AND BABY j| sitting. 3344844, WIDOW LADY, PRACTICAL NURSE desires day dr Right duty or would consider position as housekeeper at Homs for Solti Sure you're not selling too cheap? Why not let one of our courteous well trained professionals fctsrt IbsIhbss PrBtNHly 47-A 1 STORES. ONE 14*7(44', OTHER lfx*5'x3*‘, Perry Shagging Center corner Parry, Joslyn and,Ivy Sts. across from Kroger Super Market. BOB'S Cansy island. Bob Meue, FI MtSS. 20x40 BUSINESS OR PROFESSION-al building—too an. ft. m the Fon-talnblaau Ploia.Coll OR 4G222. 30" X Jr SEVEN-STALL GARaGE, HIGHLAND RD. NEAR CASS LAKE Rd. Naw office building and ad loining stare area. Canpawly air conditioned and pPnl>C ideal for — e—^umbibI Bfifl nN||f bosl-332-f 121. 2-BEDROOM BRICK, GARAGE, basement, raas. 1424137. 2-BEDROOM, S - CAR GARAGt, • Drayton Woods. 473-0341. Business Strvict IS ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE-RE- CHLORlbE SERVICE CO. Residential. CommerdaL Industrial SSStlSSor 335-0057 Free Estimates SEA-WALLS, NOW IS THE TIME la mart- mus1 PmawMi > TaBarhn IT DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND alterations. Mrs. Bodoll FE 4-9053. SEWING ART) AlTtlATIOK'S lERdnifhsg 1B-A 1-A PEATMOSS, TOPSOIL, dirt. und. crushed lln ____ Tall Timbers COMPLETE LANDSCAPING. RE talnlng watts ar'lgMMB 1—1— sidewalk sold by mates. FE 4-3371. I ShWfl broken .RaViim BRICK FbR PATIOS AND fireplaces. 4" broken concrete. OAKLAND FUEL AND PAINT. 45 Thomea St. FB Stiff. YARDS GRADED AND PREPARED for sodding. T. Elwood. SS2-3373. IM Convalescent-Nursing Emmy Elliott Ben Hall Ernie Vaughn Don Will Be Happ, W-----I Times Realty 2 ACRES, MODERN 3-BEDROOM. Reas. Meyvllle, FE S-444S. 2 BEDROOM HOME. GARAGE, ... work shop, Rochester, 152-4414. ' 2-BEDROOM RANCH HOMETTCAR ■ | geraya^bromewey^ vicinity of Syl- | 2 HOUSES,! - 1 BEDROOMS, Hie Wmm$ 49 Mt Nggsgs 49 ATTRACTH/tgRICKJIANOL^ON AUBURN TSilGHrel Tgedrooms. remedeled end newfy decorated, large let with nk* shady yard. AubVeiI WftfHTl — HWPjtOOM Mixed Neighborhood No down peymant ranch; Bril* tot 47x344. 4444 Adams Road at Auburn. First msnth tree „ Peymftto ilka rant MODEL OPEN APTJRN00NI14 AND SUNDAY WEST0WN REALTY or. Btoamftoid and Luther PE HM etternaens. li 2-4*77 Eves. - FtRETlN VALUE MIKED SUBS: PONTIAC AREA LEWIS REALTY - FE 1434*. . MODEL jack Preston built homes. A VACATION AT'hOmE, SAILBOAT rid* to buyer. 1||66F Lek* beech privilege*, : Birmingham schoefs. shopping area 3 Modu, city bye •*rvE* 1 Mock. 3 beqrooms, IV* bgllii, rad bridi, tamNy mo wflh ■ wfiwa windows, iMB^nMiisn with dishwasher, disposal. 2V*-cer . attached garage, basement, fenced play area, aemjst, dag ML trash, ty painted. 414,444. MA 44224. BEAT THE Y fER tENT 4-bedroom BrNgL lWwtory. ges heat, 2-cer garage, brfiiSivey. water softener, carpeted, drapes, extras. 3010 Old Orchard — Mt Voorhels. Optn Sundays 1 til S. 333-7344. •LOOMFIELD HILLS ICHOOl Oli-trict — Adams IM. yd 1-75 arate dining ream, full, basement, 1 acre et Mod. wig sell en land contract. SIG740. BANDER REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS MIS-3555 sUdlng^toor* oft large family area. Vs-bath and ceramic full bath, thermal glass vmdew*, Armstrong - Sh*s9 ytogtMIriien floors, painting and Bdmg*. ail included at $14354. Dlmcttont:- North off Walton Blvd-. 4 blocks Met off Soshabaw to 4175 Midland Sal. 44'"” Sun. 2-4 OR 54411 BLOOMFffiLD NEW RANCH MODELS OPEN NOW 3 bedrooms, family ream,, fireplace. 2 bath*, baaamtt, 2-cer garage, Igndeceped. Ctoee to school end church, ale. 2 blocks seal et Ted's on Square Like Rd.; tum north at church to houses. Priced 125304414,900. Lew down payment. Immediate possession. BGRABAUGH Woodward at Square Lak* Rd. FE 24053 Realtor MODERN 2-BEDROOM LAKE PRIV-1 togas, bmotway, attached garage, gee heel, paved st„ large tot. Immediate aamaalan. Charies h. Harmon. FE 44141. . 1 NEW BEICK COLONIAL . Hammond Lokg Area ! 4 Bedrooms, 2J/*^baths. family room tached garage. fuB basement, gat heat, Immediate possess ton. ONLY $31,500 HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY FE S-1321 MA 4-7321 new faEm, ranch Nouse -Clarkston am*. 3V* acres, 3 bedrooms. family room, IV* baths. 4-stall m« Bern and carrel. JWTU Jtt ACRE PARCELS AVAIL-able f*r future building. Q1RECTIOIIS: 3 MILES NORTH OF Clarkston on MIS to OeK Hill Rd., 474-1744 Cell anytime Builder. 'EY OWNCK - >GEDROQM BRICK, garage, fenced, basement, r • c. room, miked area. FE 54*10. BY OWNER: 3-BEDROOM RANCH, wgfc Out basement, alum, siding, carpeted, scenic view. Devleburg area. 514.900. MA 5-MM. NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENT THE 1ST MONTH Temporary model located at Lu ttier end Bloomfield. | BELAIRE HOME BUILDERS : FE 4-2743 1:34 TO 5 P M. | EVENINGS, LI 2-7327 BY OWNER - 3-BEDROOM RANCH VACANT. FOHTIAC TWF. Ub-CAR GARAGE. LOT *0x210. KNOTTY fine $iNirrcri«WLV v decorated INSIDE AND OUT. WELL KEPT UP NEIGHBORHOOD. ASKING 40340. 4744 DOWN MAKE OFFER. FE 44252. North East Side 5-room modern bungalow, finished attic, l-c*r garage, full basement, recreation room. Everything is Immaculate. $14300. FHA or Gl or Land contract. PAUL JONES REALTY FE 44550 BY OWNER NEAR ROCHESTER 2-story colonial — 2 years oW, In University Hills, 4 bedrooms. IV* baths, living mam. dining ream, family mem. 429,944. 651-3150 OXFORD AREA Beaut Rut Colonial home on 35 acres 15 minutes from Fentlac, very attractive setting, large landscaped yard, 4 reams, large family type kitchen with flreptoca, else fireplace In llvlnd room, carpeted floors, 2 ceramic tiled befits, partial baeement, ell heet, barn with t box stalls, grain storage above, 435344. C. A. WEBSTER, Rtaltor | MY 2-2291 OA 1-2515 i BY OWNER, IMMACULATE 3-BED-room brick ranch, basement, large kitchen end dining area with door wall bullt-lns, retted covered patto —fenced yard. High Gad Estates, near Waterford Twp. High, aygll-able July 24. 41*304. 4744455. Outstanding Buys—Terms . 10 Clarence Stu SSOO down 314 S. Marshall, tlttl down 30 PairareiM. rinwn WEST OF PONTIAC, 2 BEDROOMS, • m hatha. taasBai an is torn of MtNMrWlffiNnum sldOdL mant. Scar garags. A ... ,, heme. SI5.SPS and S3.5S0 down. By owner. CaH dSBMtT or 34G3171. NEAR OAKLAND UNIVERSITY - TAYLOR MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 to 9 Inesdey by appointment »r your convotifonco) 7909 Highlond Road (M59) 5 Milts West of Airport Brick and aluminum siding, 1 bedrooms, IV* baths, walkout family room. 2-cor garage, will duplicate on your lot or ours. Highland Rood (M») it Elizabeth Lake Rd. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION room trMeveb lorge tom-carpoting and built-in Pshon Road. INDEPENDENCE TWP. 2 bedrooms, gas FA htat, a mlnum awnings. lMkMO* lot. I col lent condition. SS.S50. Terms. WHITE LAKt TWP. buHt-lns. I .“SBJ ______l coil uHodeyl ** *'*** Clorkston Reol Estate A 5-5121 RETIRED COUPLE HAVE SOLD home, will pay cash for H room homo, 1 story. Must h bear garage. DORRIS A il REALTORS. OR 4-0224. VACANT LOTS WANTED ac. Wa pay more, imti-losing. REAL VALUE f. 4BW575. Mr. Oi -BEDROOM HOME ON ONE ACRE West Bloomfield Twp. MA 4-5714, 3-BEDR00MRANCH 2-car perege. paneled recreation I room In tuilbassment, lot 130x300".: su.900 with to per cent dow* . FLATTLEY REALTY 420 COMMERCE_________343*401 3-BEDROOM HOME. DRAYTON aroo, near lake and schools. Specious rooms and bullt-lns. Largo tot, 2-car gafaga. recreation —to potto, wsB ig&Riiad. pnissosslon. StfcSW. OR tached garage, full bamm iinbii In back yard. Sto-MSV 5-ROOM HOUSE. G L A S S B D I N WANT 3 TO 15 ACRES Prafarably with i home In secluded area. W. H. BASS "Specializing In Trades" REALTOR FE 3-7210 BUILDER wAfCtAb TO BUY ON LANp CfthP-trect, 3-bedroom house on largo lot or acreage. In or near Pontiac. FE 4-7747. ROOMS. BACHELOR APART- nant, IN a month.............. no. raqulrad, no Cooley Lake Road. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-come. $20 par weak with a $50 deposit. Inquire st 273 Baldwin f ROOMS. MIXED AREA. I ment, gas heat, storms and screens -314 S Marshall. OR S-340f._______ *2, MURRaV. CLEAN 3 STORY 3-bedroom, basement, excellent condition PMG57S0 down. Immediate 40?*$*"?' 2YLVAN 425.1I24 natural fireplace, 3-unit I apartments, large rooms, lu ment, 3004 down. FLOYD KENT* INC., Realtor One Acre Parcel Included with this 3-bedroom lv*-story hem* In Clarkston School arte. Baeement, ell heat, braazeway and |V*-car garage Yours for only 111,000 with WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1454 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FB 5-41*5 Open Eves, till 4 p.m. ___Closed July 3-4-ith ANNETT New Urban Area large lot, »13,t00. ( Pointing A Decorating 23 INTERIOn — ixtCRIOR DECOR ating — maintenance pi any kind —free aetimpto* Fi 44044/_____ PAINTING AND PAPERING VOU are next. Orvel Gldcumb, 6734)494. MtMnNSl FAFntNG . TUPFEr .PR 3-7041 paintino and' oecorating. in- ter lor and exterior, blacktop patching, 'and coating, reasonable rates, tree estimates, FE 2-2453. ____ »' IAL1TY WORK“AS5URE6: PAINT , papering, web washing. 473- 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD WEL-com*, $27.54 per week with a 175 deposit. Inquire at 27) Baldwin Avt., call 32MM4. 1 level- natghbomoed- Naai uren. Private entrance. , ity. Reply to Pontiac Prats 4-ROOM bdwfl. 3 ROOMS UP. 125 * week each. FE 44445. 4 ROOMS And Bath, 6hild wEl- coma, 435 per week with a 1100 5 ROOMS AND~|ATH. EASEMENT, NEW GROUflO F L O O R AFART-1 - middle at July op • h, living Fum. pr untum. 331-4340 after 5 A part mant*, Unfurnished 38 5700 DOWN - 2-BEDROOM, 1 — *Hr smli .iRr" bath, (XIF l .. -J44, IV*------ tots wHh I Ctll between * p.m.-f p.m., Sunday calls. _______ 16950 Attention, Retirees! FHA Repossessions: 2*44 We tonga, Union Lake 1341 Athlem, Oxford 151 Taolln, Oxford North Point Realty 5904 S. Main Clarkston MA 5-B41 if no ana. MA 4-1512 Hammond Lake Estates 2141 S. Hemmend Lk. Drive. £ HIITER CE REDUCED - Owner says N this 14 acres. 3-bedroom mod-home. baeement, 2-c*r ga-—. ,tor age shed with WATERFORD ... 2-story Celenlal, large family rm., I faience stone fireplace, dining room,j 15 ACRES — drapes, well-to-watl carpeting, farm I cmm km style kitchen with bullt-lns, Ir Ing Bar B Q. walkout 'bass n NORTH END - 2 bedroom *1 home, etomlnum siding, lull C. SCHUETT FE 3*7088 WEAVER AT ROCHESTER Country ranch home on 1 1 having ever “ --* —* * tifui tocattoi fireplace, paneled celling. 3 bedrooms. full basement, ell hot water 1 heat. 2-car garage. Only $33,000. _ Terms. . . I* WHIFFLE LAKE - 1 sandy btach, nice • snavr •»>< room home, attached garage, hot water host. A reel nice y* a blacktop CLARK *AMBLINO EANCH HOME. NEEDS M SOME OECORATING AND OTHER ATTENTION. Only S14,t‘" It home. Attect)^ 0»rW- Ften- OVERLOOKING ELIZABETH LAKE S8>p Including 'taxes and’ Insurance. •Hurryl V LAVENDER REALTY IS FBR CENT SAVINGS ARE POSSUMS on homeowner policies. In aa-pi us mutual companies. There — ---caiient dependable ~~~ prompt quefittonT'Kra/Hempstead. Realtor HOMEOWNERS Scales. FE 2-5011 or FE 44403. DAY CARE FOR CHILD. PHONE FE 0-17IQ RdLIARlli, LICENSED DAY CARE I. FE »4»4ft Wanted Household Geedi 29 HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU tUklL SUV ANtlQUES. FURNI im 5103, ME 7-SI93. CAM FOR PIANOS, FURNITURE, fliifBrfedsiipft Mels. etc. Fl saiMi______■ ______ 2 ROOMS AND BATH, NO DRINK- dren permittee. _ ___ ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL 39 t LAKE 1 BEDROOMS, NEWLY DECO-retid. FE *111t. ■IIP R O OM RANCH. FAMILY tTiii $9,990 Randier on your tot. Lovely 3-< ““ —^ 1— X*R»,- full b - BOULEVARD KEIOM+S CLEAN 4-BEDROOM, EASEMENT, 1-------a near Fentlac Mall. StlS plus deposit. Elwood Reel- FULLY INSULATED. Deelgned for bettor living. No money down. WE TRADE Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YO^NO. pV* W. HURON AFFORDABLEI By met1 anyone, newly decorated HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE USE PRESS WANT ADS AND GET .RESULTS! EVERY DAY- NEAR CRESCENT LAKE — 2- FE MITt, niter I p. HURON GARDENS I and kitchen, b IN OXFORD HEAL NICE • ON M24 I ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker FE 0-230* 25S w. Walton FE 54712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ■wflCHOLIE WORTH SIDE raoe ,Z4'TW' ftrm,‘ 1 Tm-b 9dr eon) bunofbw. Living MILTON WEAVER INC., REALTOR In the Village el Rochester III W. University . 45H14I WEST HOWARD ST. VACANT 2-BEDROOM. 1 BEDROOM ITg. floor Gas H AND LIVING ROOM CARPETED. Walklno dlstl 1-CAR GARAGE, FULL BASE- dmPtonttoc'Term MENT, GAS HEAT, LIKE NEW ™wn Konnac. lerm THROUGHOUT, FENCED LOT - ...T smE ONLY 110,750, 11.500 DOWN ON rhrefrbedroom bungalow. . LAND CONTRACT. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 233t Orchard Lek* Rd. 442-OmO WEST SIDE. SEMINOLE HILLS. —bedroom Colon lei. lino, modern kitchen lor. Ml WORMER LAKE FRONT. Spacious 3-bed mem tog f— •petlng. MODEL Tri-Level OPEN DAILY MON, THROUGH FBI. S-7 SAT. AND SUN. 14 HOUCRESt SUBDIVISION M59 AT TEGGERDINE RD. dining < 'f'JS SOUTH SIDE Three - bedroom bungalow. Living and dbiblg are*. Kitchen. Baeement. Autematfc HA heat. Vacant. About $350 moves you In. Ev*. Cell MR. ALTON FE 4-5234 NICHOLIE HARGER CO. - TO BUY, SELL Atffi TRADE LIST WITH US OPEN 4 TO 4 MuiHpte Llstinfl leryloi "BUu7" Big Family? Short of Bedrooms? •n see thl4 delight gm brick and frai u WtU. TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings end Sundays 1-4 Times Realty FE 8-0466 NEW LOCATION - 1 '* ® T ■I OF WATERFORD HILL. iSSt Dixie Hlghwsy, Waterford, 0^ 4<3SS, Open paneled family rsem, IV* ,K flit baths, large Hvml ________ with carpeting »n>i trnfk htf place, bullt-tn HI-FI, marble win- . F »h Gas Hast IV* EaNw Over 1,324 $V 2,90 Living Area Move lit Tomorrow. 3-bedroom trl-laveL family room, paved street, lak* privileges, 5495 Pontiac Labs Read. ,900 EC0N0-IRI Attached Garage —... I Let included $11,000 WHI duplicate en year let* EM 3-4404 18735 Highland Ed. (MU) Office Opan 9-5:30 Cheod July 44 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor YOUR HOME in the Country Perched on acre of J*L_ -wwiwft SwjMMd IN*. Gfdroqm ranch, full bpsement has 30x12’ owwwe work shop In roar yard: srSddrsM^F *,w“: asstf^g HAMMER, PAINT BRUSH jOnly $1,000 Down and Some Ambition And you con be the proud of this f — i, nestled nmeng . Towering oexs out West a ways mant; sliding glass deers t* ■'future I petto. tdSM.. Ii.ooo ddwn en land contract.' HAGSTR0M I "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor Realtor I 'evenhmi call sa2405^ range tlt.lt, apt. -ange $29.00, gas drier JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Mi Baldwin at Walton. PE 1-4*41 First traffic light south of 1-75 Acres at Free Parking Open Eves, 'til t Sat. 'Pi 4 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-R00M OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3 Weekly $478 (Best) $4 Weekly NEW l IVI NO ROOM BARGAINS 7-piece (brand now) living room: ;&*r I m a 1 LARGE SECTIONAL, LIKE NEW, Steel Gray; 1 platform rocker and footstool, red; I Maple phono-graph; twin rinse tube. 4M-S033. 1 TWIN sizeITbox SPRING, MAT-I frames, full sited box mattress, plastic uphol- ___i chair, consol* radio- Kitchen (acuities, dining record player. Call MA 4-S334._ storage^ space ‘uwlslrt j2 MATCHING CHaTSsTI END TA-bles, cotta* table, crib mattress, clothing. PE 3514*. tS, ONE WITH Fireplace 11 * x fixtures. Wrought ■I stool. I twin headboards. FE 1-0*05. 1-YEAR KELVINAtOR AUTOMATIC —■‘ir, pricer -------— * - - sale. PE 1 ROOMS OP FURNITURE ALSO MaaMw|Mg|M| MS Lakavlaw ____ _____ Excellent condition. *73441*. LtPT - HANDED REFRIGERATOR. S30. 31*4*14. S-1744 OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 New ond used furniture of *11 kinds. We buy, toll. trad*. 7 days. Consignments. accepted. W* fl- "hALL'S AUCTION SALES OS W. Clarkston Rd. Lake Orton UK 1-1*71 or MY 34141 **“ "‘-’yw ato m__________ tv, ml washer, ns Electric stove, S3S. V. Harris. PE 5-17*4. -----------------------:«i''iLjR- Drastic Reduction On / Repossessed Kirby WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS, ONE YEAR OLD. CALL AFTER K *51-*414 Kirby Co. SINGER OlAL-O-MAtlC, ZIG ZAG CURTS APPLIANCE. . SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG SEWING MACHINE — DIAL - A-MATIC - IN MODERN WALNUT CABINET. ENT ‘ " I hot**, etc. Take SPECIAL *30 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE - Consists of: 1-plece living room suite with 1 stop-tabtos. 1 cocktail table and 1 table f-plece ‘bedroom suite with double dresser chest, full slit bed with Inners print mattress and box-springs t* match with t vanity 5-ptocf‘dlnettt sat, 4 chroma chairs. Formica top table, 1 bookcase, txll rug included. All lor Sit*. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. tl B. HURON PS 4-4M1 U W. PIKE PE S-11S* SPOOL TWIN flfl57~ MATTRfSS end ^agrtn^, Sl$i^bwnd_ Lone _cot- condition! OR 44SSS. i, IS. Exc. ____I euppttoe. CrodL sell, *top per, Mock end galvanized ato* end mtbig*~i|M' and Li— Bottte Gas Installation Two IMpound cyRndors m mgM, *11. Groat Ptabto i PE StW I* Mahagan, . I .. r Mahogany MlldB., Ogan MpN. mdPii tves. 1.1*, porch 11.55. tjNgatBjrg samples. Prices only toctory can give. Michigan Fluorescent, SM Or-cherd Lake. It. FOR buStv CONCRITB FLOOEt ' For the Finast in Top Quality MerchandiM Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL Hi EE AIR CONDITIONING NOVt lor a llmhad tone,1 gat a baauti- cemptot* heating lab. This altar Tywjwy t—‘ —* _____stoat. Garage tow tin. Fra* estimated. I Salat C#* tug Cola 1 tr cabinets. *33.50. B-tollets, *19.95, OLD, HAGGERTY HAS itl 4 ft. sg. Redwood picnic toblo with 4 benches tdl K.D.; 14" M. parquet tap Ragweed cord, or atonic, table assembled in carton* mn. HAGGERTY LUMBER »S5 Haggerty H'way. MA «4S»1 374*1. HOT WAtiR HEATER. J* DAL-ton gas canautnar* approved MM* vatu* Ut.M and *4**5 marred. Michigan Phiartacant, Jtl Orchard STUDIO COUCH, SbFA. GAS stove. IS14331. rv T A P PA N GAS RANOB, «*CiL-tont condition. FE 4-1*71. UPRlOtrt DEEP FREEZE, GOOD condition, >100, also refrigerator. nrs ’ Hms I TV, radio, phono combination S4*.tl Used Frigidaire refrigerator *3*.t5 Sweat's Radio B Appliance Inc. tO W. Huron ____________3*41*77 VACUUM CLEANER, AIRWAY, EX-cotlont condlton, S30. MA 4*111. WESTING HOUSE SEWING MA-chlno, does fancy work, PE 373*4. WYMAN'S USED BARGAIN STORE At Our tl W. Pike Store Only Apt. St*.t_ . tlt.15 ___. to go _________— l.bnly REDUCED TO 1147 ____j tl Weekly FRETTERfS WAREHOUSE OUTLET 1150 S. Telegraph_____FE 3-7051 A SINGER PORTABLE Used. Does all practical tewing. Won't last tong at only S1t.t5. 5-year guarantee. Rlchman Bros. jewing Canter. PE S4M3.__ Rlchman Bros. Sawing Center. FE 5-91*3.____ ASSORTED BABY FURNITURE. 0g|---------- Jjpbbench. Ml *- BABY Bib, BUGGY. "£aE MED, --------1, seal labia, mlsc., A-t ________314-1*11. BEDROOM OUTFIT WltH BOX spring, mattreu, davi en table, 4 chairs, _____ ______ oft Cass Lak* Rd., Katgo Harbor. BENDIX WASHER-DRYER UNIT. Refrigerator. 4*1-1154. BRAND NEW IMS MODEL ROPER Res stoves. Only 1 toft. 3 models i bullt-ln ovens, brentt, white tnd stainless steal. JIM'S OUTLET Cor. Airport and Hatchary Rd. BRANO NEW. ■MRP...........- , SM. FE 4-IMP.______• ______ Antiques 45-A MARBLE TOP DRESSER AND matching bad, walnut. Vary nka. Y-Knot Antiques, 1*345 Oakhlll, Holly, MB 7-IIM. Open 7 days. Hi-Fi, TV A BwOob U 13 CHANNEL CB RAOIO PE * !NV^tORY ^REPyCTMHt| SALIjl— machines, -u— "Ya. _ , __ Inapt to Pontiac Stdto II OR >— ' .. MOWER. GILL'S needlepoint chairs, _____________Jtrtc stov*. *44-71*5. lake PUMA*, ii* galLUns to«R LUMBER 4'xt‘ plasterboard 4‘xl’ Masonlt* pegboard ll"xil" whit* calling til Burmeister's We Dallvar EM 3-4171 Open 4 days a week-* *jn, M I p.m. MODEL HH ROTARY SWEEPER with curb brush, used for cleaning shopping centers. In cxcelliM condition, rigged ter and loader. MU MUST SELL - *#IECB hiMlM room grouping. Springer Spaniel AKC, I months *M and dog heuea. OR 344*7. NECCHI ZIG-ZAG SEWING MA-CHINE,. MUiXfL AUTOMATIC IN MAPLE CABINET. Pay 4ft account in I month* at 9M gar SIMS 11-INCH USEO TV Walton TV PE 3-2257 • 515 E. Walton, comer or josiyn HI-FI, RCA MARlTlV. BLOND CON-soto, diamond neadl*. *115. MA HIM, SONYlOO STEREO TAPE RECORD-or. FE 5-5441. ______________ For Salt MiscaNnNdw *7 I OAS FORCED AIR FURNACE, 100,00* BTU, comotoNly Inataltod, *5*5 Ac* Halting, 474-2*11 or i PICNIC TABLES, 5 SIZES, LARGE selection. Leg lawn awPiga, rose arbors, traHtaas. Ltoarai bills Out-pOSt, 31*5 Dlxto. OR 3*474. PLUMBING BARGAINS. PRit- 1 WEEK SPECIAL 4'x7‘ BIRCH PREPINISHEO PANELING. 3 COLORS S4.*7. ALUMINUM SCRREN DOORS, COMPLETE WITH HARDWARE-*1.49. PONTIj 14M Baldwin I GO-CART FRAME WITH MOTOR, 1 WHEEL 4X1 UTILITY TRAILER, good fires and 2 new 700x14 t-ply all purport liras an rim* all tllSr UL I-3104. rxir i inqleum rugs *3 *5 each Pintle wall tile lc *a. Calling tile - wal’ nanellng, cheap, BS.G Tile. PE 4.99V7, 1075 W. Huron Easy Spin-Dry. I I — I. refrigerator, SI tioned Frlgldaire washer. 1 CRUMP ELECTRIC I 14X11 ALUMINUM CARPORt WlTH I pitots, 5100. FE 1-1374. ! 5* GALLONS OF GASOLINE PRff I with any Lawn Boy mower. Tony's Marine. Keege Harbor._____ 400 REDWOOD PLANTERS, PAC-y close-out bergelna. Liberal '• ---»1, »*T O’ ’ “ Magic. Immediate possession. HOME WITH ACREAGE tti H BIG FAMILY HOME _ j shade trees end bushes? went tots el lewr M ploy ant V—I M - lest, city Wcetton. Buy with , down end only 154 per. 1 including taxes end Insur- RAY O'NEIL, Realtor | 1520 PONTIAC LK.RO. OPEN 9 to 9 OR 4-2222 MLS EM 30531 i-to range ,od*^ Nr particulars. ...,______‘bedrooms”s34*!5oo. iftn- ALBERT J. RHODES, Broker »«*" fe hso* u* w. weiten pe 54712 PONTIAC "area WotErtord Hill Manor SCH00LH0USE LAKE I INDIAN WOODS MANOR LetotrcSn UJS0 OPEN SAT.-SUN., 1-5 ___. .. . Beautiful subdivision with lake DON WHITE, INC. “ 1*91 Dlxto- Nvnr. OR 4*4*4 Ity room. jVi beths. Kitchen i Ins, dining room, attached ge- .L.0C5_T.: face brick trMevet, 1 om, 2>A Sixth-lining t „ -„»u. WILL TRADE. Many ''choice buligbtg able, priced town lit. North town Olxle Hw l HOME ii GORDON WILLIAMSON gallery of homes 3*777 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 4 PRIME AREAS. I »or rail details — H w» don't hove H, we can find M. TIMES REALTY, *7341**. PRESS WANT ADS PRODUCE RESULTS! ^___ ... ....— Knowledge for I concrete helpful, but not necessary. Write or phene - GLAMOUR POOL CO. Holland. Michigan.. 1 OUTSTANDING BUY I General markll,____ *275 monthly Income property. Sh~— «*«««* profit, wnr SIMM plus uvwn. WARDEN REALTY 1414 W. Huraw, Pontiac__1137157 PURE OIL COMPANY HAS FOR lease In Lake Orion on M14 3-bay service station. For the Pure Oil Ca. program, *133344. S M A L L oAlLL RESTAURANT, downtown Pontiac, fully equipped. Write Pontiac Press Box 7. FE 2-9206 is me number te call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. Ml Pontiac Stele Bank Bldg. *:38 to 5:30 - Set; *.30 tel _ LOANS TO $1,000 To consolidate bills Into one monthly payment. Oulck service with courteous experienced couneetors. Credit life Insurance eve liable -Stop In or phene FE 54121. HOME & AUTO LOAN CO. N. Perry Si. PE Mill , 9 to 5 dolly, Sol. * te 11 WHEN YOU HIED $25 T<$ $1,000 We will be glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. M* Pontiac ttoto Bank Bldg. FE 4*1574 BLECtRl^rcAaNGE, 4 tuBNERS, FREEZER, UPRIOHT, LIKE NEW, MS; upright atom, mi RCA TV, MS; 1-plece bed roam set, *50; 3 piece black sectional, *95; old oak I buffet. *“ -—- — FRIGIDAIRE 15-FOOT FREEZER, Ilka new. ISMtlt. FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC dryer. **' Murphy bed end springs, *25. mlsc. <130 FURNITURE SUITABLE”FOR CAB-In or cetUge. PE *-tt*7. - GAS STOVE, IIS FE 35*11 heeler. *47.95; 3-ptoce I 159.95. Ltuswify tray, frith, aiv,ni shower stall* with trim 114.95; 3bawt sink, *2.95; LPV4, U.tSi PUMP. MOTOR. PUMP HOUSE. IS gal. Storage tank. 75*47*4. SAVE ON LUXAiAe Atlb RHaaM MA 31501 0 , 31527. double sink, *15.95. Chipped' b SMALL * 6inettE sCf.'AFAHT-ment gas stove, i-srhael metal utility traitor. 333951*. 5PRED-satin >aiNts. Warwick ------ 2*7* Orchard Lake. 07- valua 114.5*. Llvatirtoa t__ with faucats *14.95, toltot* i.._ Michigan Fluoraycant, Ml Orchard i-eel ruildinds i'XT' Utility house .................... S1M.3E i**kr utility heua* ........«t*.9* lB'xT' *cr**n Mua* *239.50 TALBOTT LUMBER . IMS Oakland TORO-COLt ~TF REEL TYPl rider lawn mower, *55. Naw drive-«r brae. MA *-57*3. 74E ORCHARD LAKEAVENUE. hit- tiS^ P?RD, M;'NOAj ITOVl, *15. PE31SS4 ___ 1957 ' CHEVROLET PICKUP, 195* Chevy stake, 195* Chevy dump, 1951 and 194* Ford Dtesals with backhoes plus 4 extra buckets, 7 ft.x20 ft. teal shanty, naw portable electric ganarater, walker floor locks, assorted hand toots end equipment, will sett or Individual units. Must salt to agttto aetata. Phone FE 54111 or flop el 1035 Stanley St. Pontiac, Sat. and | racwdEtona* gator TVs from *175. Oalby TV, FE *4M1. 70,000 BTU, maoicThITp space heater, exc. condllton. 4S7.U50._ APPROXIMATELY 4 souares of Alsco Aluminum siding, white with team backer. I Inch table taw complete, stand and motor. Mtl-tord «*H*B>. ATtiTwIlDERTH WitilLSTsTv ttonary air' compressor - 1M sAMPs. Whitman power trowel, Ford tractor wtth blade. Centaur tractor wtth-mokrar, heavy cement THE SALVATION ARMY ——ld store PENCE ST. __________jruszZo UNIVERSAL CHEF GAS STOVE. * burner, dwiBle oven, grilL abnaet new.SL EM3«itr ________ USib BAtHROOM FIXTURES, cheap. 131 North Squirrel. NMMTRlAL PORCELAIN, j nwni ftudreecent fixtures. AIM used chain hoists wtth trolleys. PE 4-04*1. * WALNUT BABY CRADLE, BXCIt-tont cendltlea. PE 4MM. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENfj AT discount prices. Forbes, 4501 Dixie Hwy. OR 347*7._______________ BURR HAND SAW RITOOTNER with ton ptotot to cut Wtoront amount at Ham per Inch, vary arbor praia, *134*14. DELTA SCROLL SAW. **" WITH Wand, varlabto speed control wM ‘.-H P. motor, MS; Doha parkabli radial saw wtth stoat MM and I'/i-H.P. motor, SMS- Many ad*l-ftonal attachments Included wlto thooo toot*. MA 41319. DRILL PRESS, FLOOR MOUNt, VV Inch capacity wtth radtol arm. — D—8 THE PONTtAC PRKS^, FRIDAY, JULY ar, 1005 coNnokgans ImmSt wum -?wowt Ml Thomas aptoit n«< M P*M> walnut. bargain _J ad spinetxgen, KM SOHMIR PIANOS. Big Savinas on all floor models SUMMER STORE HOURS *lS*4lt. to S:3* PJW. LEwWIr^iKcCO, , Across from Birmingham theater) EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED Bob s von Service EM 3-7M* aiiltAE'cCpBE-oui. si7.ts, elec- yoor). Lake R c S3!.05. (Full trade-in Confer, ISIS Union _<»UITAES GUITARS GUITARS . • atock of oil typos of guitars 1 ‘morris music 24547 IUITAR, SPANISH v attadunont that _________ ,.*no Into a player. AH electric, no pumping, fully automatic at onto >349.50. MORRIS MUSIC ____ _____ _________ PE I4S57 sel66m UsEo trade ins Thomas grtnet $3»s Thomas spinet, toss than a year old, MW,' Jock Hogan Music Confer TENOR BANJO MYt-IM*_______ UPRIGHT PIANO ■ W* Used spinet piano w a root buy. ir&W rr*. * Only l used accordion, 120 base USED ORGANS CHOOSE PROM HAMMOND, LOWERY, WURLITZER, SILVER-TONE, ETC PRICED FROM $250 Grinnell's (Downtown) 27 s. Saginaw PE 3-tim WALKING. TBAifiTtit* WITH AT; tachmonts. Cultivator, disc, wood cutter, plow, snow plow. 6H.P. WIs. engine, SH5. ASA 5-5233 or FE 54101. Mr. Hargrave. WANTED — USED CORNET OR trumpet. Must bo a bargain. Tele-—- ••AI-HIT. Meek Ibbbbpb ACCORDION. GUITAR. LESSONS. Salas-Sarvlco PytOhOdll Stora EqoipmBRt 73 RESTAURANT EQUIl or trade. PE 54722, Sporting Goods fSL. PERSONALIZED POODLE CL If p6odle.-, tpY puppiEs, STub service YORKSHIRES. PE 50701. poAoLV.' bUck;--mali; Moiu, akc, a— grooming-cLippIM. PUPPY TO GQbD HOME _________OR 5a0f0 PURE BRED SIAMESE KITTENS. FEBTHS. REO TAN DOBERMAN FEMALE, « months. 33647*. REGTSTERED ENGLISH POINTERS ready for hunting season. FE B3H7.________• REGISTERED ENGLISH POINTER Richway Poodle Salon II OAKLAND ' PE MSN SIAMESE KITTENS. TOND3SU ________Kottory. 425.101*.____ SIAMESE KITTENS. 525-20H. after 6 P-m SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPS. CHAM-plon sired, will bo hunting Mils fell. Reason oblo Utica. 711 •0200. WHITE, BLACK AND BROWN AKC toy male poodle puppies. Call after 5, OL 14780. _____________ WHITE MINIATURE POODLE. 5 month. AKC registered. Must sell. M0. 502-2305. _________ AUCTION SALE, SATURDAY J p.m. Bluebird Auction, 15053 D Hwy. Soma antiques, furniture . Ulw misc. Home. M. Bellow. I 437-519*. EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY 7:30 P.M. 7:30 P.M. 2.00 PM. Sporting Goods—All Typos Door Prltae Every Auction Wa Buy—Soil-Trade, Retail 7 Days Consignment*Welcome Hr auction 500* Dixie Hwy, OR 3-2717 PRIORI AUCTIONS EVfeRY FRI .day night 7 o'clock. Quality antiques and homo furnishings. Paul Hillman, auctioneer. Consignments accepted WoMMay through Sunday. 1-6. 3637 Lakeville Road. Ox-ford. QA 3134*. OXFORD COMlEUNltV AUCTION. Every Sat, at 1 p.m. 670-2523. PUBUC AUCTION sat.. JULY iROTTOiSO A... Davisburg, Mich, next to the Post Office. Hardware, houseware, g< sral merchandise, furniture, mei wear, glassware, coffee topic,, cocktail tables, end tables, china Ing equipment, ski boat accwsorles, stool net. adding machine, 1*60 T-BIrd, DuPont Ll Marty other Items—not N & M STOCK LIQUIDATION SALES COL LUCKY NELSON SATURDAY, JULY 3. *:30 AM. to the walls, Calttomla bound. 1300 Caldlno Rd. Corner Dye 3 miles West of Flint Stan Perkins, Auctioneer Swarti Crook. Ph: 5354400 2 WHEEL P1BEROLAS TRAILER, wr 3:30, 673-3700. 30-06 SPRINGFIELD WITH WEAV-or 6Z scope, sling and case, 0100. iisars Wotor-WItch outboard, Ito n-:------ NA bRar mAGnum bow, quiver GUNS: BUY-sELl-TRADS Burr Shell. 375 S. Telegraph SCUBA DIVING GEAR. MAKfe $—< QrmMHrt PuACK DIRT, GRAVEL AND SAND MMNNng specialty In smel‘ ■-*“ CHOICE BLACK DIRT, 6 YARDS PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-SW* graval. fll. dlr- " TOP SOIL BLACK DIRT. GRAVEL, beach sand, and HD dirt. FE 5*573----- TOP SOIL, PEAT, SAND. CLAY loam, washed otone. Pol. 552-4710. TOP SOIL, PEAT HUMUS, SANDY loam, or aval, fill dlrf, br sand. FE 2-6S63. tOP SOIL DELIVERED PE 2-2*0* or PE 2-2*65 TOP SOIL, THE BEST. MQjjflll- Pets—Hunting Dogs_____ l-YEAR-OLD COCKER, FREE, TO -good homo, OR 3-3647. A I DACHSHUND pups, terms. Stud doge. JAHEIMS. FE 0-2536. ADORABLE FLUFFY C O C NT AKC REGISTERED POODLES AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. STUD service. IMATODD'S. 332-713S. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. STUD dogs. ESTELHEIMS, Fg_2-06*t. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, Llebestroum and Marx-Oak, Mood lines. 52521SI, .______ dren. OR 5-20*3. All Breed Grooming 4 Orchard Lk., Keego_652 5070 . PETS. FISH AND SUPPLIES, union Lake Pood end ~ ~ 7215 Cooley Laka Road. ALL PiT SHOP. 55 WILLIAMS FE 55533. Blrda boarded. BEAGLE PUPPIES, SIS. or urn. - CANINE COUNTRY CLUB i Rochester. Clean, comfort-able, convenient, bathing,, groom-mg, boarding. Plckua and delivery. * to 5 Dally. 052-4750 551-3505 CharlottE former trimmIr ENGLISH SETTER. REGISTERED, RMs and white. wInwVm old, has all shot*. NA 7-4571. English pointer pups. _____________013-171* " ENGLISH BULL BOG PUPPIES PC 1-565* FREE KITTENS 5365 England Beech, Highland. GERMAN SHEPHERDS, PURl- good' horn*' furnishings. complete; Jenny Lind type) < of drawers; living room furnll round dining room table w leavaa; desks; end tobies; ll and ruga; dishes and utar electrical appliances; good space heater with storage t garden Vector with tools. A Interesting entlque pieces. Proulx, auctioneer at OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION, on H M25, now In Metemora Twp. ml. N. of Oxford. Ed Proulx, pi 67S-2523. SATURDAY 7:00 P.M. HALL'S AUCTION SALES, 70S W. Clarkston Rd., Laka Orton. Couch “* chair, china cabinet, Maytag stoves, living room suites, awl rockers, riding town mowi lamps, town furniture, bikes, A FM radios, record players, n a— -d used Items Sosk, auctioneer, and Gary Barry, "The Sinning Aucttonoar." MY 3-1171 or MY4414I.________________ PONY, SADDLE AND HARNESS, nearly new. OL 3H41._________ REGISTERED HUP ARAB. S250. also Appalooaaa. OL 1-047S. REGISTERED AND GRADE horses. Saddles. 752-30*7. SHETLAND PONY, 3 YEARS OLD, STRAWBERRY ROAN GELDING, good 6Hhorse. Sorrell mare with .filly at sMa, feat, flashy, experl-' rldar — * TENNESSEE WALKER MARE, IN y. buggy an I; 0024061. 75 ACRES OP MIXED STANDING Farm Equipment ; 17 2-I.H.C NUMBER 27-V 7-POOT mower >100 each. 1—N. t. tide delivery rake on ruB- bar. 110* 1—Case tractor, modal S.C. and cul- WANTED: OLD HA rawer mounted ,t traitor. Need to OR SS oieoe. in good WAGON WITH Travel tnftn , BEAUTIFUL LOTS FOR SALE perk near Gaytonl. vw ea vm, or 4734*42. Y aLusAINUM SERRO SCOTTY —— - saoST o* 32120. r truck camper*, 177* svel trailers, *7*5. Pontiac A Walton, PE i3*' scotTy with scrRiNed-iN aumlnn PP LMli 17 evu I l t wun evt awning, >5S0* FE MWI.____ 'li-FOOr THAVIL TlUlllft I* BOLES AERO. MOOERN, CMT $7,000 must sacrifice for *24*0. Built-In sir condltlonSr, now htoa-a-bad couch EM 3-52*7. N4 driptwMK II - P O O t, sleeps 0. *300 down, Iske over pay mants. 335-1*22. 1*64’ TlNTTRAILER and EQUI p. ■ mant. Call after 4 pjil 3354221. 1*55 0' AND 10! CAB-OVER CAMP-era, completely equipped, from *7*5. Call or see Joroma-ParguMn • Rochester FORD Ooakr, OL AIRSTREAM .lOHTWEIOHt APACHE CAMP TRAILERS t tow new 1*54 models left at use trailer prices. Factory demor stretors and utad tralkra o display at all times. Opan dall * a.m. to I p.m., Sunday* 10 a.nr to * p.m. Apache factory Itorm town dealer. BILL COLLER, BOOTH camper rium covers and campers fa pickup 4207 LaForeSt. Water OR 3-5524. CAMPING SITES Swimming, safe beach. Fishing. McFsaly Gssert. 1140 MIS. Orton-vhk. Campors WINNEBAGO OVERLAND PHOENIX WOLVERINE Front liioM 3255 D OR Install Reset am IS and RENTALS CENTURY TRAVELMASTER GARWAY-SAGE is on our show trailers have reduced. Sava on these 13' to REESE HEAVY DUTY TRAILER Mld^Mto^typ*, electric - Rentals - * Crete. *k*P ■ u may have < il. Moka your ..... . Mtore It Is too tgli^lgt — Holly Travel Cooch, Inc. 15210 Hally Rfd Hedy ME 54771 SALE PRICES ON ALL CAMPERS Specializing in Ono Good Brand of ' Travel Trailers PLAYMATE Streamline Alf 24', 26' and 31' NOW ON DISPLAY —The twin bed models— —Luxury—Quality—■ Holly Travel Coach Inc. IS210 Holly Rd., -Open Deity 3200 S, Rochester Rd. VACATION CAMPER BUS 1*53 Ford Bus that sleeps 4 ar has a stove, refrigerator, sink ar water supply. It he* a Ptog ■ hook up electricity at a trailer camping park. The with canopy, luggagi used to go to Ftorl only 14,000 miles. SAVE Will finance, NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES 335-5525. WOLVERINE.. TRUCK_____CAMPERS and sleepers. New and uaad, S39J — Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, sBEEh bumpers. ladBtrs, Camper Sotos, 1325 s. Havsetrailers PONTIAC n stock. 15-ft. Tour-A-Homr $750 TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES FE 2-4*28 COME OUT AND SEE THE NEW The 1 weekdays travel trailers, Comanche, Trot-wood, Frolic Bee Lnw, New Skamper, and used. M*S and up. Rentals start at *50 par v—*■ ■— plks and servlet, Open *-», Sat. *-6, Sun. S-5. JACOBSON Trailer Sales B Ran ||M Williams Laka Drayton P CONVERTED SMB Call arrer m V slier SI. Waterford. Complete line of IT * •Iso so* the new 20* w We garantoe a space in a net modern Mobil Homo park. REMEMBER, LOW OVERHEAD: SAVE REAL MONEY MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie 33S-0772 One block nor$ of Telegraph BLCAR HOUSETRAILER, 1 model, Sx24, very good condlt SMB <*7-4711. HURRY ’noney you save wilt . DETROITERS Super Savings - ' ‘■Urvvui'T Quality Travel Trolkrs" 16' 17' 19V4' and 23' KENSKILL Spree sale In our history. YES. we're skshlng prices. YES. we take trade ins. YES. we have tow down MPm have financing Trtn.t or 3-badroom models I YES. wa have many utad. YES, all Datroltor products meet or exceed the rigid Blue Book Standards tor hasting, plumbing and electrical systems. You rr----- gamble. You always an toy ultimata to safety, comfort roaak value. YES, you'll save hundradi .. dollars during our sate. Open dally until a. Saturday and Sunday until 4. Bob Hutchinson Saks. 5301 Dixit “ m Drayton Plstoe. ■ Porxnurst Trailer Soles FINEST IN MOBILE LIVING IS TO 5* feet Feetur’no new V Buddy and Nomads Located hallway between Orion CREE Truck Campers laWxTVY Truck Camper, on Display - All are Self-Contained. CREE 13’/*', 15y*', 17' ond 20' Travel Trolkrs All Models on Dlspky The PUMA CAMPER for 1965 Is‘Here! For tht first time to this ores El-Dorado and DeVille Series. True e Scamper for '65 All Over America ... Travel light . . . travel • "Tty « — I > Unit WE RENT TRAVEL TRAILERS. MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW) Oxford Trailer Sales Open *■*, Closed Sun. 1 mile S. y mile! MUST SELL ml CHAMPION, bedroom, tome equity, take mo gage. See after 5 P.m., 55* Pit it., Southfield Downs Trailer Pei By Hat* Owns Wasted Can-Tracks WE NEED CAM! TOP DOLLAR FOR OOOO, CLEAN CARS Mottnewp-Horgreaves 531 OAKLANDjAVENUE JuRk Cars—Tracks 101-A -2 AND IS JUNK CAR* T TRUCKS Fro* tow, OR 3-S»3B -» I M M JUNK iARS - TRUCKS trot tpw anytlwk. PE * Mil. “I should be able to go to the movies with k>u, Gladys. I have 78. cents with three more pocketbooks and two more chairs to search!” Used Ante-Track Part* 102 Bicycles BICYCLE-ENGLISH RACER -I pood, ponarator liahti. Ilki no 334-7716. BICYCLE BUILT FOR TWO. ____J5 or 552-5537.__________________________ BOY'S 24-1NCH SCHWINN, OIRL'S CENTURY. 25-toch Elgin. OR 3-74M.______1---------- " OR RENT. h'6fe ~A BICYCLE built for 2. Special group rates, Jereb tandem-tlme. 454-51*1, 531 Mato St,, Rocheator. GOOD USED BUV*. “SPEED" SA- 96 j Boats-Accessories CANOE. 1S-FOOT OLDTOWN. berglassed. *100. Ml 5-7428. _ > CENTURY SUN SLED, DEMO. *2.-n 7*5. MAZUREK MARINE SALES dward at S. Blvd. FE 44SI7 FpOt SKIFF *1.250. MA 4- a. 250 a Soats-Accessories 12-FOOT ALUMINUM SEA NYMPH, irty new. SS37 Clinton Rlvor Or., ____Elizabeth Lake Road. 12-FOOT ALUMINUM, BOAT AND S-horse Evlnrude motor. 332-0***. 12 Ft. ALUMINUM BOAT, EVIN-| rude 15 HF, tilt trelkr, complete or separately. OL 1-**27. i 14' FIBERGLAS BOAT, 50 HORSE : Evlnrude. trailer, 19*2 modeU. many extras, like new, TR 9-028* , day*. TR *-5215 otter 5. | 15-FOOT WOLVERINE. 25 HORSE-power Johnson electric motor and trailer, exc. condition. *550. OA *-3*71.______________________ lT CEDAR STRIP MERCUfcY Mark 15. *150. 425-3074 alter 4. IS' FIBERGLAS. RUNABOUT, 50-horsepower Scott motor, trailer, 4. 333-5174, alter 4, FE 2- 15-FOOT FIBERGLAS M ■ ■ * - power mercury motor, elec-itertor, tank, controls and Very good condition. 574-371* 15-FOOT CLASS SKI BOAT, NEW 55 H.P. Mercury, Air-Boy traitor — *1,050.5*2401*. _ 15-FOOT CENTURY COLT AND ^UWbw **75 35 ho. 4-cyl. In- 0AKLAND MARINE 3*' S. Saginaw FE > Pally til 5. Sun. *tll 1 p.m._ DAWSONG SPECIALS — NEW 1*55 15' ftoury fiber las lapatraka runabout, S yr. warranty, IMS 33 h.p. Evlnrude Else., control*, battery and box, 100 Pamco traitor. A real buy at $11*5. USED -14' molded plywood runabout, with t*5* 35 h.p. Johnson Elac. and traitor. Excellent condition. $550. USED - 14' flborgla* runabout. Con. top, horns, speado, mirror. Priced to sell at S4*5. USED Id* molded plywood runabout 25 h.p. Johnson Elec, and traitor. All lor S2*5. Grumman canoe* — Mirra and Cherokee alum, boat* -Steury and Pinker boats—Evlnrude boat* and motor* — Pome* trailer*— Kayot Alum, and steel pontoons—Geneve flbergles pontoons. Take M5* to W. Highland. Right on Hickary Ridge Pd. to Demode Rd. left end follow Signs to DAW-SON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone Mein *-217*. EVINRUDE 10 HORSEPOWER MO-tor, Eas-A-Matlc starter, exc., 0135. Call 555.707. FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT. EVIN-I Call 5 d condition. S250. For the Finest in Boats or Marine Supplies 11-HORSEPOWER MOTOR, USED —535-10*5. ____ CHRIS-CRAFT, FIBERGLAS 23' LUHRS SEA SKIFT, good condition, V bcrtVis ana nceu, >1975. 731-3H3. ___________ 25 HORSEPOWER EVINRUDE, electric. 353-7006.____________ 1*41 40-HORSE EVINRUDE LARK, SEE Ptrmtnqhom Boat Center __N. of 14 MHa Rd. at Adame Rd. JOHNSON MOTOR, 5-HORSE POWER Exc. condition. *75. Ml 552*1. LIGHTNING, to-FOOT) DACRON sails, wood hull, trailer, exc. condition, 0*00. Ml 5-1*50 before noon. LIKE NEW, 1*55 JOHNSON M horsepower motor, *500. 502-2530. NEW 15-FOOT CANOEl BIBP _ Buchanan's -_________________353-2301 VERY NEW BIG FIBER G L A S RUN-I head,: about' I apetr»ke. 05 electric mo- I tor, *00 lb. trailer.- Battery. Speed-•I n b ! orreter Fire extinguisher $1,39*. u D e' j BUCHANAN'S __ 3*3-2301 NEW 12-FTTKUMINUM BOATS Buchanan's______________353-2301 NlW 45-HORSE MOfoRS 2-gal. tank, good condition, *350 ury* o^oard. *500. Ml 4-a**. FIBERGLAS ' aitor, Hm -FE _____ I is-FOOT^ catamaran, tri- S1.0S0. - HIGHEST PRICED PAID FOR SHARP CARS C0AST-T0-C0AST MARKET SPECIAL PRICES Paid tar 1*3*-1*06 car* VAN'S AUTO SALES » Dlxto Hwy. OR 3-1356 GLENN'S m 1*Sator' SUN'ROOP, ^iraWALLS iM* HEATER, WMTfWALl TIRES, ■iKiyAGI, NO MONEY < DOWN, ASSUME CAB PAY MNnOfliB PER IMONTH. rambler, * WOODWA— 1 rawdlck, aaa 9. » AVf.. BIRMINO- whiftwl FE 2-6969, _____________ Independence Day Specials 1*61 TR B lapaed, lyncromaah . ....«6* 1*64 Sunbeam Alpine hardtop *17*6 1*63 Etot roadster, blue »!!»* 1*45 M. G, B ready tor- summer ........................ *21*5 SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland___________FE 5-0521 YOU buying JUNK CARS - FREE TOWS TOP SS - CALL FE 5-»l4J sam Aueii iratisrr _ S13.05 par weak. Turner Ford 465 S. WOODWARD AVB. BIRMINGHAM Mf 4-78 Volkswagen Center » 1*5* - NEW- 1*54 Camperam*, vw. Turquoise beauty with gas heater, 5.400 certified miles. SAVE **00. 100 per cent unconditional warranty........ *21*0 Chofo* $2195 SES. FRANK STUBBLEFIELD . OPEN THURSDAY TIL * WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1 block south of 14 Mile Birmingham Ml 4-ltl* IM4 CADILLAC, COUPE DEVILLE. Saturday, July 3rd, 10:3* *.m. *50 down and SSI par month wli gat you a new Chavrotot. Call 01 see «My John ml r Chevrolet Co. 1000 s. .. Birmingham. MI 4-37M, 1*50 CHEVY, 1-DOOR. G call FE 2-fell. 1*51 CHEVY. 2-DOOR HAR6TDP. excellent tranaportatton, ft*. • MARVEL____________251 Oakland Are. lHi *%MvlTTE, good shape", Pontiac angina. 57341111. 1*55 CHEVY, AOOOR AUTOMATIC, good transportation. >125. Ml 5-5772 tHS CHEVROLET WITH 40wfi steering, |1*5, 3*7 W. Montcalm; daater.___ 1*51 . CHEVY BEt-AIR LOOM. _^rr;,.rc^,(T?V 1954 CHEVY IMPALA 3 - DOOR, hardtop, automatic, radio, hotter, gat this one at only *27 a month. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MBRCURY 520 S. Woodward Birmingham LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1958 CHEVY 4-door sedan, S-cyllndar, transmission, radio/ heat W*"*- $450 Llbyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1*51 CHEVR6l|T, NIC* CONDI-tlon. Call 5*2-5731. 1*5* CHKvV tONViilkTI»Ll. 5734735____ 1*31 CHEVROLET CONVERtlBLl, dean body, MA 5-173*. Repossession YQTJ 105A nilirux KarHtu. nn t nMtfterfl " - *177 « 1*58 BUICVk hardtop,-------- And payments of lust S7.55 weekly. Wo wtH bring cor to your home. Call Mr. Cash, at 33*-53M, daater. HOME 0? THE Double Checked Used Cera OLIVER BUICK 1*641* Orchard Laka _____FE_2-9145___ 1*82 BUICK INVICTA CONVERTI-ble. must salt by Thursday, best otter. EM 3-9533 or EM 3-3155. CONVERTIBLE SPECIALS! Johnson, traitor. Ilka new, *1,38* SAILBOAT 13' RACING SCOW. ill with T tx BEST OFFER, 14* WOLVERiNE plylap custom, 35 h4. Evlnrude, Dunlap trailer, many extras. MA S-13**. __________ AQUA CAT-12' and 18' WE BELIEVE Your Best Buys Are GLASSTRON-MFO-LONE STAR BOATS John McAuliffe ' I FORO -|53* Oakland Avt , FE 5 CHEVROLEt TRUCKS 1*51 Vi-ton Fleetside pickup, blue, 4, standard transmission beige flnith, 4, stick * FISCHER BUICK 554J. Woodward_64M60Q Repossession 1952 BUICK Electra "225" with . establish bank credit Turner Ford I 554 S. WOODWARD AVE. ; BIRMINGHAM Ml 5-758* ! 1959 CHEVY 1-dOOR, STICK. A-t condition, full price. No money down. Coll Mr. Boo. I’tela-huron 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 CHiVY CONVERTIBLE, 1939 IM-I pale, good condition, double power, eufo,. V4, 651-4751. 1*3* CHEVY A l ONToWNfR Tel-Huron W. Huron Ft MWI CHEVY, a CYL. BEST OFFER. ______FE 62152. Safari. Used Truck Tirai All Sizes Buget terms avaltebls FIRESTONE STORE 333-7*17 I. Term*. *37.1117. MANY OTHERS KING BROS. Ft: 54714 . FE 5-1553 Pontiac Road at Opdykt the 11* -NOW ON DISPLAY— Holly Travel Coach 15315 Holly Rd- Holly ME 4 —Open Dally ana Sundays— CRUSADER CAMPER COMPLETE-ly new concept In camping an display at Newcomb's, 3T23 Lapeer Rd. M-15 at I-7S. S38-3S15. - ELLSWORTH AUTO & TRAILER SALES OPEN SUNDAYS Ar 1 P.M. See the all now Aval tors, Barth*, Tawa* Bravos, Hotly and Cone Ira, i 14' to Si'. We alas have rental*. 5577 DM* Hwy. FOR RENT. 2 Wolverine 13ft. campers on '55 GMC pickup*. *100 weak plus mltoaga. SCOTT RENTAL SERVICE _______ FE 35141 ________ FOR RENT, IS^OOT ' VACATION I . trailer, steeps six. FE 24*91. FOR RENT, l3FOOf~VACATION traitor. 424-2550. , I_______________________________ INTERNATIONAL METRO STEP .T.?S *• «»lX' In van camper. FE 54175.__ MARV'S CAMPERS j Rent or Buy FE $4*1* 34*1 N. Jqriyn, 1 Mite* N. at I-7S PICK-UP CAMPER FOR to TON 1 immediate Delivery BIG DISCOUNTS ON TONY*? MARINE JOHNSON MOTORS years repair expartenca. ____to «. 2595 Orchard Lake Rd. BEFORE YOU MAKE ANY DEAL. — —r prfea. Ear's Boats, Mo-15 w Clarkston Rd. ' *"* ______WY 31*0*. Mercury outboard*. Shall Lak* axis (up) Deck Riviera Cruiser (On* of tha Bast Float Boats mad*) " (I Pontoon, prices from l BUY OFi a 3150* MBtorcydts 195* HARLEY DAVIDSON, I mltoaga, side car also ava 5354722. 1*54 MAIM, 250 CC, L*0* ACTUAL _mU*a. 54342. i excellent mechanical condition. SIDE DELIVERY' RAKES, MOWERS THE LARGEST "REAL" —■— -•— •- -nichig •wissr cnenune in IKK.,, uavls I, Co- Ortonvllle. NA 7-32*2. TOP AUbWAbet FOR YOU'R 3010 Diesel torvtaa store I Priced to move. 4 bottom plew, *7*5 down; 535 J. O. Oelsef *5*5 down; 3 tractors priced *115 to SIRS. Wt trad* finance. Herb end -— " 5337)4). PRESS WANT ADS SMALL WANT ADS BIG DEAL FOR YOU! like n____ and heating TRAVEL TRAILER • nice way to taka a vacation Reese hitch** Installed From ***S JOHNSON'S 517 East Walton.at Joslyn ---- Pi *4 1*54 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE. EM Swfmir 4 pjZ_______ *5 - T*54~TrIumRH tR. HtBw Oqty. . BONNEVILLE, "650". Good condition, a: WOO. Ml 67420. 1*65 honKTspoRt 5*. LIKE NEW. S250, 335-2446, 1*65 141 HONDA. LOW MILEAGE, new knobby, canvas cover, *53 take over payments ar *4*7 caah. BEAT THE HEAl NOW - UP TO 3*JSC ... BOATS NOW IN STOCI Pontiac's Only Mercury mercruiser Dealer FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marin* and Sporting Good* CRUISE OUT, INC. I E. Walton . FI 34401 I Pblly *4_______ ‘ B0ATS-B0ATS , ur annual July claaranc* «aie on! Runabouts, fishing boa- canoes end pontoon boat*. Over 30 different Models to choose tram, Opan dam » am to I Sill collar! l* mite aast 'oi Laaear an *M1. .________ Century Donzi SALES AND SERVICE 1*69 DEMO'S . BRONCO 17' Interceptor 340 (UN CORSAIR ir Mart Cruiser ISO , BBS , USED BOAT CLEARANCE ■ Volv# 113 _____ __ L . *17*5 Chrii Craft 28' Express “ ' Cliff Dreyer's Gun ond Sports Center 1521* Holly Rd. Hally, ME 66771 Open Pally and Sunday JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS Boat* Cano** Traitors Crarythlng tor tha boat OWENS MARINE SUPPLY ~ i Orchard Laka PE 14*2* 1*63 Corvalr *5 aanal. blue eiM white 2-tone, 4. stick, radio, heat ar. Ilka ntw S1.1N PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. Woodward Ava. Ml 6273! BIRMINGHAM GMC j FACTORY BRANCH New and Uaad Trucks FE 544(5 675 Oakland SPECIAL 1965 Chevy Demo hton pickup truck, ha* tong box, tu-tono point, heavy duty roar springs, rear bumper, deluxe hooter, gouges, two *o**d wipers, Jr. Wan Coon mirrors, radio, SIM plus tax and license Mottnews-Hargreoves, Inc. TRUCK DEPARTMENT *31 Ooktend Ava. at Cats F! 54161 i. Cash, et 3334533 d 1963 BUICK tomatlc transmission, power steer-Ing and brakes, radio with roar speaker, whitewall tires end other extras. A sharp dark maroon one wtth^ luxurious flight beige vinyl both In appearance and performance. A "TOP QUALITY" ear 2£r to**own* too* at* our* tow price My S1**S. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler — Plymouth —-"lard Ava. IBRA, BLU 4761511 638*L___________________ 1*50 'CHtVY 2 DOOR witK A green finish, 5 cyt. angina, automatic transmission, radio, drives bMu.Hu.,^Fu.l(Sric.|2,5. King Auto ”fEW84088W' I LUCKY AUTO t**i PICKUP CAMPERS pickup campers, completely •quipped. Including us circulating heater *035. Ovor 15 different models of pickup campers on display at all times Oivsto coaches *5*5 * a.m. to traitor *toctc Br*LLr COLLI _____ dally Sundays 16 __ ._4che camp HamMwn Btolar. factory H COLLER, ^ PLAYMATE^ features and strength of construction that you are looking tor, several models an dteptey. at Johnson's SI 7 I. Walton * Joslyn PE 6BB ar FB 6B*1* Ront -or luy Pick-up campers S79S end up. T & R Camper Mfg. Co. 11* Auburn Rd. t blocks west < Llvamois an MJS, Rochester, Mid IMS MAICO RACING MACHINE, 250 cc. brand new — no mBot, mus* sell cheep. OR 34215 otter 5 pm B $ A - NORTON - DUCATI SALES 3 SERVICE OO E. Pike FR 6*07* OMPLITI line of bridgi step .1w*l*rc»clr - -• with only M L__ PAUL A. YOUNG INC. 5030 Dlxto Hwy-'Dryton Plaint* Opan *ay«n doy*--- HONDA-TRIUMPH- NORTON ANDERSON SALES B SERVICE 1655 3 Tetegropb FE 141 K&W CYCLE YAMAHAS ___traitor SIS* Chris cron Cavalier Exprots IS' IBS V4 lull equipment *3350 ! Barboui 17' Sklbb, Evlnrude 75 RF. . . •* 7*S Century Resorter, 13 Incap- 115, .......................Mm Chris Craft 30*. Needs vernlsh. » Ho It* Curly Croft 1*', Gray 55 * 5*8 1*50 Garwood 15', Gray 73 S *0 1M1 Slick cron 14'. Evonrud* » H.P., Traitor . SIM Craft IP, Johnson 7S 1953 Boch loll Boat 17*, Full Sells CASS LAKE MARINE**” th Rd. 5*14151 COMPLETE LINE OF DORSETfS-Paa* — Thompsons — Mariners and SPEEDBOATS ‘*4 ChrteCraft Cavalier -41 Ckrte-Cratt, us H.P., MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM WALT-MAZUREK LAKE & SEA MARINA Woodward at 3 Blvd. FE 54551 _ ____104 AUTO-RITE BUY AETNA CASUALTY tern high quality, auto In 3 at rata* mat save 20% TO 40% NO 0UES OR FEES CALL US FOR NO OBLIGATION details BRUMMETT AGENCY Cta. MB* FB 65*8* I AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE 1 STOP IN TODAY Anderson Agency FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn Ave. BUICK 1*54 Skylark hardtop. Brenz* finish with matching trim. Now car warranty. $2095 SEE FRANK STUB9LEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY *TlL * WILSON 1 PONTIAC-CADILLAC llrmlngham Ml 61*1* i 1 T Wock south an* Mil* i N W. Wide Track Drive 14 ar PE 37155 1*40 CHEVY IMPALA, 15*3, ItlAL _ buy, awnar, EM 34312 Qua*. 1*5* CORVETTE, 327 ENGINE, DU quad, now tlrd*. «)7B3 MA 605*. W?THCAUTOMAf Jc TRANSMISSION RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE- TIRES, ABSOLUTELY l . 4EY DOWN. Payments of *21.15 month. CALL CREDIT MOR. cleai>I i*50_chevy” sficK. Hi LeSelte, Fi 2-3517,_________ 1*5* CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, 135- I BUICK 6000R SPECIAL DE- Teeeip'Cm 105 "LOOK 1*5* Cedlllec coup* OeVItte, white, reel sharp, new muffler system. *5*7 lull brie*. CREDIT NO-PROBLEM, WE FINANCE -BANK RATES. ' LUCKY AUTO WAIltttb: JMV OS rWJ. M Gator traitor wheel and tiro, OR WANTED: BUY OR -------------* 1 RENT, 'w WE FINANCE Kino Auto LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1962 CHEVY M Air. tlx-cy Under, euto-mlsslon, radio, heater. White with blue Into- Lloyd Motors 1250 .OAKLAND.. _ 333-7863 performance and It hoi a radio, heater, whitewall tire* and chroma wheel covan. Eaiy paymenti arranged to eult your budget. Full price only l*»5. BIRMINGHAM Chryeler—Plymouth *14 S. Woodward Avo. Ml 7-3214 IMS CHIVY NOVA WASON, FULL 1, EM 3- CHEVY 4-DO 4 engine, autoi idlo, heater, e IVY 4-DOOR, WAGON WITH -, automatic tranamlnlon, extra clean! 11,3*3. _____ H guion Inc.. Rochester FORD Dealer. OL l-*7ll.___ 1*43 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, Automatic, double power, whitewall tires, and other access., SI4S0. Tel-Huron Auto Sales. FE 8-9641 or FE 3-0443. ms'CHkVY BEL AIR. ONE OWN-ar. 2-door, sharp, $1,3*5. HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham, Ml 7-0*55. IMS MONZA, 4-sPBED, $1,400, /x W- FESQI02_____________ ” 1963 Chevy $1795 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Since IW' '"Homo of Service After the Sale" OR 3-1291 CHEVROLETS Out Birmingham Way 1*5* CHEVROLETS Bltceyne J-door sedan. Black and whit* 2-tone, 4-cylinder, Power- gild* ............ * * Brookwood station wagon. Turquolss finish, 4-cyUnder, standard transmission ............. * 4,5 1*40 CHEVROLETS Blscayne New and Used Cars IN %Xf%SS3SS, tires and additional i smJW.— 1*43 CORVAIRAAONtA, AUTOMAT-jc, buck** seats, good condition. 111* FOR 6, BODY LIKE NEW, S150, OMC pickup/ S4t. box, vary good, >150. **3-1130.______ 1*57 FORD RETRACTABLE CON-vertlbte, S350. 541-204' 1*44 CHEVBLLfc MALIBU C6N-vertlble, 4-spood. 474-30)7. 1*44 CORVAIR MONZA, AUTOMAT- CHEVY, 1*44 IMPALA CONVERTI- 2 4r., 4-cyl., a radio, solid fawn, $15*5. VAN CAMP CHEVY MILFORD________________MU 4-1015 Repossession Repossession ...........■ r. Cash at 330-4520. SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIEI O OPEN THURSDAY 'TIL f WILSON PONTIAC-CADIILAC 1 block south of 14 Mile Birmingham Ml 4-1*1 *1960 Pontiac Bonneville 1961 Pontiac Bonneville 1963 Pontiac Bonnavillt 1959 Olds 98 All priced below market price, all can be purchased with $5 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK -RATES. LUCKY AUTO • TttW, wide Track Drlv* FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7054 1*41 CHRYSLER. 4-DOOR, ONE OF the sharpest you'll aver see. $*95. HUNTER DODGE, Birmingham, Ml 7-0*55._ PATTERSONS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-VALIANT July Jamboree 1960 CHRYSLER "Windsor" 7-door hardtop that will compere with cars costing a groat deal more. Beautiful Mack and sliver interior has been protected by deer plastic covers since new. Dark red body wlt*> » «*»» and whitewall tlree. le 2-tone, 4; Powerglide, p Brookwood s and w" " Blscayne 2-door, grei II CHEVROLETS rim. 4-cyllnder, sti Impale 3-door hardtop. Light matching trim, VI, Powerglide, power steering and brakes $1.3*5 Impale convertible, white * Impale Sport Coupo. Bright red rod Interior, V«, Powerglide, | brakes, steering, General Du. white sidewalls >. Equipped w ir steering i WE FINANCE Auto __FE 8-4088St CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-RAMBLER and JEEPS See All 5 In One Showroom BILL SPENCE King !CLARKSTON 6673 Dlxi« Hwy. 1962 CHEVROLETS fmptl* 4-door hardtop. White v red trim. VI, Powerglide* po> Steering, brakes, radio* heater* wh er* whitewalls 'er glide, ’ Yl *995 an* saddle ten* VI* “AIR CONDITIONED" Ish a _ _ _________ ......____________ Interior that Is Immaculate. Many plus features Include tinted glass, power driver spat, power steering, power brakes, automatic transmission. Radio and excellent i wall liras. FACTORY NEW _ WARRANTY will be transferred to you. Easy payments can bi ranged on LOW COST NEW TERMS. Full price only 124*5. CHRY-------------- tibia, gold and black, raoio. neaier, power. $3725. Mrs. Klmmerly, 1*51 Clubvlew Dr., Square Lake. FE 2-4410._______________ 1*57 DeSOTO ADVENTURER CON-vedHble, new top, FE 4-3175. IMTdOOGE "330," STATION WAG-on, beautiful, VI automatic, power, si.3*s. Hunter dodge. Bir- mlnghem. Ml 741*55._______ Bel Air 4-dooi Powerglide. 1*44 CHEVROLETS Blscayne 3-door sedan. Azure Impel* Sport Coupe. 1963 DODGE CORVAIRS 4-door eodan. Dark blue, radio, heater, whlte- 1*43 Nova 4-door sedan. Azure aqua with matching trim, radio, heiter, whitewalls .... ....... 51,3*5 1*64' Corvette Fastback. Silver finish, Mack leather trim, fuel Infection, aluminum wheels. Royal Master whites. Sharpest on* anywhere $3,4*5 25 Months Chevrolet OK Wcfrrontv PATTERSON CHEVROLET 1104 $. Woodward 'Xv*. Ml 4-17! BIRMINGHAM s, full factory warranty, lor $1787 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) (Just Vi mile north of Cass Avo Spartan Dodge 1*43 DODGE "330", 4-DOOR, AUTO-matic, radio, heater, $1,3*5. HUNTER DODGE, h the Chrysler Warranty $1397 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Just 14 mil* north of Con Ave.) Spartan Dodge KESSLER'S New end Used Cera 106 1*47 FORD, 3-DOOR, R New wed toed Cm 161MARMADUKE 1*43 FALCON tOOOH; AUTOMATIC tronomloalajy radio, low mkiego. shrrpl 311*3. JEROME-FERGU 1*51 FORO FAIRI ___________ILANi _____ 4-door. Full power. 3**-7*33. standard transmission. excellent condition, S3M, 1475 Crumb Rd. Welled Lake, MA 4-3443. *5* FORO, 3-OOOR HARDTOP, V-* Automatic, radio, heater. Absolutely No Money Down. BJ» O-Metic, XL 3*0. good condition. 1*43 FAIRLANE 2-DOOR HAhbtOP, Mack, rad bitarlor, 21,000 miles ., whitewalls, leaf belt, axe. ____ft Ion. SISW. FE 2-3704. 1*43 FORD FAIRLANE "500" 2- TEL-A-HURON 60 S. Telegraph FE 8-9661 FORD. A STICK Studebaker, 6, stick 1*5* Edsat, 4-dr. H'top, a 1*30 Chevy, ' aNa -----CHINSC BEAUTIFUL 1*43 THUNOERBIRD Landaau. 1-owner, muat bo |—-be appreciated. Can b* i ■*" " Coats Rd. OA BG111. HUTCHINSON'S Sal** • 1*43 FALCCm 2-DOOR. WITH cylinder angina, standard tranam sion, radio! extra dean. si.Oi JEROME-FERGUSON, Inc. RoclU ter FORD Dealer, OL 1-4711 ■ F*ORD ___________________ >, V-a, auto., power steering. mm. FE 4-S4I3, 1*40 FALCON, 2-DOOR. STRAIGHT .. . -- -)y *j*7 35) Oakland Ave. FORD 1*40 T-BIrd coup*. Burgundy finish with Mack roof. Has to to b* on* of th* cleanest cars $1095 SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELD OPEN THURSDAY *TIL f WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1 block south of 14 Mil* Birmingham A^l 4-1*30 1*44 FORD GALAX IE 500 X 1*40 FORD, 1-OWNER, (CYLINDER 4-door, $450. 402-3431._ door, beautlfu|N'redAVlnlsh> original condition, no monoy down, 54.15 per week. Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE 1C* 5. East Blvd. J FALCON .WITH STICK SHIFT, tSKndX1' fT price* $495. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES. FE 1964 Falcon ' 2-Door Sedan With fh* 4 cyl. engine, red fli Ish, radio, hooter, whitewall Only- $1595 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWfY. IN WATER.WORD "Your FORD DEALER Since 1*30" ‘Home of Service After the Salt" OR 3-1291 1960 SUNLINER One of the original Fastbacks in sparkling tuxedo block with V~ automatic, end In mint condltloi Only- $787 Full Price Call 336-4520 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom) ist 14 mile north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge white, bucket se Repossession FORD T-BIRD, BOB BORST 1*41 FORO VI, 7-DOOR, VERY standard shift, bargain, FE “ Riggins Dealer, 3-7542, Opdyke LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1962 T-BI Landau. Onyx finish ---- -ul! power. $79 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1*42 T-BIRD. RAOIO, HEATER, AU-tomatlc. power steering and brakes, elr conditioning, FULL PRICE OF ONLY Sl.f»7 CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at Wlda Track FE 2-9214 MONEY DOwfr. Payments of _______ per month. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500 Repossession, 1*42 T-BltlD Landau, full power, no monoy down, call Mr. Johnson, at MA 5-2404, dealer._ 1*43 FORO FALCON 2-DOOR, tomatlc transmission, radio, heater and other extras. Economical transportation with plenty for th* family, or Maal a. I I ond car. Light beige with harmonizing inferior trim. Guarar ‘ 1*43 T-BIRD CONVER1.............. condition, sharp. Blue. Dealer, 1304 Baldwin Avenue. Pontiac. 330-4525. nes" a dazzling styled Galaxle g red all vinyl ATTENTION!! Our credit manager, Mr. Del* la back, enc* again am find It paaai-M* to ha Ip ail our cuatomors who have had credit problem*, and would Hk* • good mod car. We feature spat dauvary. FE 3-7863 1350 Oakland, Ave. hardtop, ( v-a with i MINOHAM. Ml 4-2735. -IMF John McAuIM* Ford 18634 Ford Fastback Hardtop With radio, hooter, Beeutlful red finish. $1797 Nbw and Used Can 1*45 FORO FAIRLANE NO 2-DOOR, 6-cyl. automatic, power steering, and only 6.100 mlloe on this beauty 11 SS to be Saved I ~ ROME-FERGUSON I “ ' 1*45 FORD LTD 4-DOOR HARD- * -- --'ic, power steer- mileage! $2,7*5. JMF' John McAullffe Ford 1964 T-Bird Landau Hardtop fth 3-woy power, local own was bought I Bi-Monthly for — $39.90 angular control. 1*3* Opdyke 1*64 jdEP, METAL CAB, PARKING 1964 Ford XL 2-Door Hardtop with a blue finish* VI 352 engine, radio, heater, Crulse-O-Matlc, power steering, brakes, whitewalls. Only- $2295 BEATTIE condition* 335-9387 JMF 1964 Falcon Coupe With radio* heater, automatic* dar blue finish. A real beautyl $1795 - 1*44 FORD 500 4-DOOR 6-CYLIN-der, stick, radio, ■ow mileage factory official, 51,7*5. JEROME/FER-GUSON, InC., Rochester FORD Peeler, OL 1-*711. JMF, John McAullffe Ford 1964 Ford Fastback, V-8 Engine rith Crulse-O-Matlc, extra sh-.r. ower steering, factory trash, .oaded with goedlesl S3* down, KEEK-END SPECIAL AT O. $1887 1*45 FORD GALAXIE 500 4-DOOR hardtop, V-i angina, automatic, power steering, radio, low mileage, only $2,695. JEROME-FERGUSON, Inc. Rochester CONVERTIBLE, top, 4 cyl., stick. Take o _____.... ___r, console, --- glass. 1000 miles. $2,500. F€ S-034*. 945 MUSTANG, POWER STEER-Ing end brakes, 02,150. 4744)541 $1397 Call 334-4521 NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Ihewroom) (Jut! 14 mil* north of Casa Avo.) Spartan Dodge LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance Radio, heater, whitewalls. Ver low mlleega. $79 DOWN Up to 36 Months to Pay Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 By Anderson and Leaning “I had no choice ... He keeps having guestsi.” 1*43 otlos 4-DOOR hardtop m. JRE ROME-FERGUSON, . chaster FORD Water, OL 1-97T1. Pretty Ponies 1965 Mustangs 7 USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS • 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT AS LOW AS $79 DOWN PAYMENTS OF S15.V5 PER WEEK Turner Ford New aad Used Cara 106 LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-786$ JMF John McAuMffe Ford 1965 Mustang 2-Door Hardtop With th« "289" V-8 engine* ra dlo, heater, whltawalle, pope steering. Immediate delivery. “ . $2695 it tweeper* si ■ctTsFE 5-31 1964 Willys Jeep Wagon 4-p*sseng*r, with a sparkling whit* finish, radio, heater, Only— $1695 BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD "Your FORD DEALER Sine* 1*30" lorn* of Service Attar th* Salt" OR 3-1291 1*54 LINCOLN PREMIER, 4-DOOR, ~ mechanically, good transporta- no*' ,*con8tlo... _ _ II price only S2*5, no money iwn 53.10 per week. Call Mr. ESTATE STORAGE LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1959 MERCURY 2-door eaden. Power aftertax Lloyd Motors T250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1*60 MfeRCURY 2-bOOb HAltbTOP, Ith a light blue finish, radio, later, whitewalls. Full price of WE FINANCE King Auto 3375 W. Huron St. FE 8-4088 1*40 MERCURY WITH V-0 ENGINE and automatic transmission, radio, heeter, power brakes, power steering. Full price $4*5. NORTHWOOD AUTO SALES. FE BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY ) S. Woodward Blrmlnghei MI 6-4538 1*43 PONYlAC itARDTbb, 11,475. 4*3-347)._______________ 1*43 OLDb M 4-DOOR HARDTOP, double power, exc. condition, OR 3-34*4. 1*43 OLDS STARFIRE, t-DOOR, *42 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE, black, automatic, radio, haatar, power, real buy $1345. BOB BORST LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 1962 MERCURY it with original bel^e J»c1ory 4 S. Woodward Ava. JMF John McAullff# Ford 1963i Comet S-22 comes^wlth the snowshM whit* fl tomatlc,^ oarage kept condition, $: $29.90 John McAullfff Ford -630 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101____ >64 COMET 4-DOOR .WAGON* Al tomatic* radio, haat6r* power* ei tra nice . $1795. BOB BORST Otherwise In good condltloi Lieblch, 5*5 Maloney St Lake, Oxford Twp. OA 0-24 .........2 to Mon., July 5. 1*5* OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE with power brakes and power sharp. Full price S5*S, NORTH-WOOO AUTO SALES, FE 1*23*. 3354. Pet Flenlgen. OLDS CONVERTIBLE, c. Call Mr.^rown. ESTATE STORAGE 10* S. East Blvd. 1960 OLDS " 2-door •lor trim. A i. Easy term written guaran< ringed to suit .... ____ price only $795. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 14 S. Woodward Ava. Nmr «m| *m4 Cm 1M iftarSojA. LUCKY AUTQ Repossession 1*41 OLDS tm ■ no monoy dow of MA MOM, i ether extras. A vary attractive matalltC'bnxua - for a mu Full prka BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I S. Woodward Ava. Ml 7-3 BOB BORST JEROME 0LDS-CADILLAC 2*0 S. Saginaw . St. FE 3-7031 radio, healer Sparkling gold finish, Interior, has a V-speed transmission, t power brakes, pev whitewalls. $2095. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 104 S. Woodward Ave. Ml 4-3735 BIRMINGHAM 4 OLDS *t 'CONVERTIBLE, AIR- VISIT THE "GOODWILL" USED CAH t^OT Of Pontiac Ikitail Store M Mt. CNmjjn Stroot VALIANT , 1*44 2-door. Economy spec lei with standard tranamMan, radio, heater. $1295 SEE FRANK STUBBLEFIELO OPEN THURSDAY 'Tit * WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC l block south of IS Mil* Birmingham . Ml 4-ir lt49 PONTIAC, GOOD TRaNSPOR- SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 855 Rochester Rood 4I1-**)1_________ *51 rF6NTIAC. MECHANICALLY Perfect. SI50. Ft $401*._s HAUPT PONTIAC 1*43 CHEVY 2-door, stick, 4-cyl. These can carry JACK HAUPT EJCDOUS GOODWILL Warranty I N. Mam Street Clarkston, Mich. MA 5-5544 Mwr mi 9mi Ora lii LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1959 PONTIAC Radio, heater, whitewalls, power stealing, power braka*. Full erica $595 Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 Purr- Formonce Cars 1965 GTO With 4-epaad, trl power, and aH th* factory food lee. $2897 FuE Price 1965 Olds "442" , With 1.M0 actual mllat, 4 speed, posl-tr.ctlon $2847 Full Price 1965 Mustang "«*" V-0, floor shift, bucket seats. $2287 Fun Prim 1965 Corvair CORSA Convertlbl*, with 4 speed. tech, burgundy finish. Black luck- $2397 All these cars have Factory Warranty for Your Protection- Additional Location 855 Oakland Avo. Spartan Dodge critic* to settle whit* wads, to green. Muet -state. 4*3-616* 1*40 PLYMOUTH VALIANT, OOOO condition, S400, Bloomfield Hills. FE 5-0204.________________ 1*40 VALIANT V-200, WHITE, 1-pass, wagon, standard trans., windshield wethers. $4*5. Ml 4-3013. 1963 PLYMOUTH "Fury V-I" 4-door with au-transmlsslon, power steering, —-er brakes, radio and whitewall tires. Original light bolgo finish with on Immaculate red mterrlar. A most attractive car that handles and performs very nicely. Easy payments arranged to suit ------ C.,11 .,!» Mh, tint SEE US LAST For A Great Deal On your now or used Pontiac or 8*h"E'g0*pQNT|AC SALES A SERVICE 682-3400 eluding radio, with revorberator speaker. FACTORY NEW CAR WARRANTY ........... 1*5* CADILLAC 1*5* Bulck 2-door, hardtop $4*5 ' 1*5* Bulck, 4-door, hardtop 1*51 Chevy wagon $3*5 1*5* Chevy convertible *1*5 1*5* Chevy 4-door, VI automatic $4*5 1*40 Chevy 4-door, hardtop $0*5 1*60 Cl)gj^ wagon 1*40 Chevy 2-door, hardtop 1*3* English Ford $1*5 1*42 Comat 10*5 ' * 1*42 Falcon W*5 195* Olds 1*5* Pontiac hardtop $1*5 1*43 Tempest *11*5 Bill Smith's USED CARS 462 N. Perry FE 4-4241 VACATION SPECIALS VAL-U-RATED _________OSED CARS____ 100% Wiritten Guarantee Ivory car I Mod carrioa this guarantee. Taka the guesswork out of buying Used Carat Credit No ProMeml 1963 OLDS F-85 4-Door, V-8, Automotic, Radio, Heater, Whitewalls. Only .................$1695 1964 OLDS Cutlass Hardtop, V-8, Automatic. 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee............$2195 1963 OLDS Cutlass convertible, V-8, automatic, power steering, sharp .....................$1995 1964 PONTIAC Catalina, 4-Door, Hardtop, Power Steer- ing, Brakes, Automatic, Radio ana Heater, White-walls, Lake New ....................... .v .$2395 1964 OLDS Jetstar I, Automatic, Power Steering, Buckets, 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee $2595 1963 OLDS "98" Luxury Sedan, (3 to choose from) with full power ...........................$2395 1961 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Full Power. Priced to Sell ............................$1995 1964 OLDS "88" Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee $2495 1963 OLDS 2-door hardtop "88", power steering, automatic, radio ........................ $1995 1963 PONTIAC Bonneville, Hardtop, Power Steering, Brakes, One Owner................$2095 1961 OLDS 9-Passenger Wagon, Power Steering, Brakes. Sharp One Owner....................$1495 —--------MieiMATOE OP 2-YEAR WARRANTY---------------- 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 ■Autobahn Specials Autobahn Motors, Inc. NO MONEY DOWN TRADE UP OR D0WN-We Finance All of Our Quality Cars 1960 Pontiac Hardtop .................$697 1959 Chevy, Automatic .............. $497 1959 Buick Hardtop ...................$497 1960 Ford Convertible ................$597 1960 Volkswagen ......................$697 1959 Mercury Hardtop .................$397 1962 Ford, Automatic..... ............$897 1959 Olds'Hardtop ................... $597 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE f ROM PHONE FE 2-9214 125 OAKLAND AT WIDE TRACK PRE- JULY 4th SALE! Mint Condition Used Cars WHOliSALE - PRICES YOU MUST SEE TO BELIEVE I VILLAGE RAMBLER SALES 666 S. Woodward ' Birmingham PH0N1 Ml 6-3900 i V l)-10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1W New end Used Can______IN ALWAYS CL IAN IAT« MOMU If* PONTIAC STARCHIE*. AU-tomatlc, radio, haatar. Abaohitoty no m*n#y down. SMI weak. Call fir. Bat ^jg Wt handk and arrango all financing. TEL-A-HURON beautiful J lono finish. pc Ing and brakes. foil s™ „ til no money down, Sill P WOOK. Call Mr. Broom. ESTATE STORAGE 180 S. I apt Blvd. _3337U1 or trad*, call attar 4 p.m., PE M817. 1090 RED PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE PE 20833 boforo S. 8330. $98? Additional Location 855 Oaklond Ave. Spartan Dodge Now and Used Core 106 &BL no *Tmwo SALEl PE ##234. ^ ^ ^ 1*Xon’tcalw*doalor. _____ 1044 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, FULL power. PI MW. be aeon at W Ptoronco Street, rtft, Ml. No I PROBl ATE*. LUCKY AUTO BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1962 PONTIAC Catalina. 4-door sedan. Radio, hooter, whttowolle.Beige wT matching Interior. Pull price $1495 LloydMotors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 New and Used Can 106 Rebossession ESfcMWM IMS BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR, POW- CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parka HAROLD TURNER FORD. A‘rrI* gage rack, full power, I owner. 11,1ft full price with CREDIT NO PROBLEMrwE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1 BONNEVILLE 1-DOOR HXR& ip, all Power, low mileage, aharp, natty dxtroa. OR 3-3274._ I PONTIAC CATALINA, MOOR Mart, dean, 1 owner, SIAM. 40- YOU CAN SAVE HERE Turner Ford 444 1 WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7*0 1*41 4-POOR PONTIAC CATALINA hardtop, power steering and brakes, exc. condition. 1-owndr. 474-104. r owl Used (an IN 1963 PONTIAC _ .nHaaga. P Stmwm ~wt. -—I la Separb Motor car. $1987 NOW QS»BM Additional Location 855 Oakland Avs. Spartan Dodge 1f4l PONTIAC BQNlfEVijLLl CQN- es/hydrom 0. EM 3-47(1 LLOYD'S Holiday Clearance 1963 PONTIAC Coupe. Full power, radio, haatar whitewalls. Midnight blue wit matching Interior. $57 DOWN $8.90 Weakly Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 Mm id Nod Cm Catalina, -ftatton wagon, f pea-aengar. power steering and brakae, radio and hooter, aMpmatlc. rod whltowolw real aharp. $1995 Homer Hicrht 1441 TEMPEST LeMANS, 4-CYLIN- i pgnaala, dark condition, >1,150. PONTIACS 1441 Grand Prtx coupe, blade « white Interior, Hydremetlc I power, 1UM octuel miles 11, PONTIAC 1411 Catalina Sport Coupe. White flnlah with rad interior. A Knott like now bi every respect. $1895 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1 Mock south of 14 MUe Birmingham Ml 4-14I Naw sad Usod Cars IN 1964 PdNflAC Catalina Convertible to Soli Immediately. Call PE H1S1 Ext. 344 bofort 5. 1444 PONTIAC 4 PASSENGER STA- k--------— ■—jjggjgj, extras, OR mm. _____________CONVERTIBLE, bucket aaala, AM-PM radio, vlbra-sonic speaker, poal-tradlon, tran-tlalor distributor, >2,100. FE 4-4414. tlon wagon, loodei 13J80 nil MHO. ( 14*4 BONNEVILLE ( Repossession 1444 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOOR. •1444 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE C044-vartlble. $2,450. FE 8-0453. 1f44 PONTIAC WAOON, TOP RACK, : 4-DOOR SEDAN, dty car.automatferodlo, t looks and rune-good, S1745. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY YOU CAN SAVE HERB 1964 GTO Has 4-speed trAiamliakm, real low mllaagt, radio end hooter, whitewall tires, naw car warranty, si# or your old car down. , Payments of 114.43 par wook. TurnBr Ford 414 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7SOO Ntw and Need Cm IN fen Ford Pickup. CoN OE 3-OtOS. 1*44 PONTiAC BONNEVILLE sports coupe, radl* heater, power, lew ml leapt, extra aim. 12384. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCURY * nt W. Waodward Birmingham NEED A CAR? Da you have U.oo? Art yeu working? put you In the lo* crod*/ appllcatk CALL MR. OAN WE FINANCE FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 WEST MONTCALM Transportation Specials $5.00 DOWN lfS4 Chevy wagon 1457 Studebakar 1958 Buick . 195* Olds .. 1954 Opel .. 1951 Pontiac wagon 14* Chevy 1914 Pontiac 4-door 1940Chovy 50carTto choose FROM WE HANDLE AND ARRANGE ALL FINANCING CALL MR. DAN FE 84071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FOR THE FIRST TIME IN PONTIAC AN OUTLET FOR AUTOMOBILES! OF DETROIT NOW COMES TO PONTIAC LISTED BELOW ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY CARS RELEASED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE AS OF IULY 2 1965 1962 Pontiac 4-Door Hardtop. Power altering and brakes, r Weekly Payments $10.48 1960 Pontiac Weakly Payments $9.48 1960 Buick 4-Door Hardtop i - steering and broket, automatic. Weekly Payments $8.48 I960-Pontiac Convertible with automatic, double f Weekly Payments $8.48 1960 Chevrolet 'Weekly Payments $7.48 1960 Lincoln S-Ooor Hardtop. PuH power, automatic, ra4 whitewalls. Nice! 11 Weekly Payments $7.48 1959 VW Radio, hooter, whitewall tiros. Extra thorp. Weekly Payments $4.48 1960 Ford 4-Door Hardtop. Power alter ing and br healer and whitewalls. Weekly Payments $4.48 $997 $897 $797 $797 $697 $697 $397 $397 WE Finance All Our CARS NO MONEY DOWN Delivery in 5 Minutes Credit Man on Duty 9 A.M.-9 P.M. ASK FOR MR. MASSEY 1959 Pontiac 4-Door Hardtop with full power, whlh Weekly Payments $4.48 1956 Cadillac 4-Door Hardtop with radio# haatar# tiros. Clean. Weekly Payments $3.48 1960 Falcon . Automatic transmission, radio, hash Extra clean. Weekly Payments $3.48 1957 Chevrolet 2-Door Hardtop with V-t engine, stick Weekly Payments $2.48 1959 Chevrolet Brookwood Station Wagon with radio, and stick shift. Weekly Payments $2.48 1959 Mercury 2-Door Hardtop with automatic, radio Really nka. Weekly Payments $2.48 1958 Chevrolet 2-Door Hardtop with "141" angina, pi hooter. Sharp. Weekly Payments $2.48 1958 Oldsmobile r steering, radio and >, power brakes and p Weekly Payments $1.48 $397 $297 $297 $197 $197 $197 $197 $97 STATE Auto WIDE FE 4-5967 3400 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. 1 .BLOCK WEST OF M-59 (Huron) Ne» mi dud On 116 TEMPR8T LEMAN* CONVERT; i^temwi steering. FE 1444 TEMPEI miles. OR Hm.___________ Mfl RAMBLER 4-9901 SEDAN actual -miles, warranty bosk. Pull LEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES, LUCKY AUTO »*4 TEMPEST 4. 2-DEM©S 1965 Pontiac Catalina Wgn. This beauty has doubt* power V.. Sou# 1400 1965 Pontiac 2 Plus 2 And Is fully equipped 1965 Pontiac Catalina 2-Door Hardtop ....... . Save 1400 1965 Bonneville Convert. Fully equipped ........Save I7S0 1965 Bonneville Vista Fully equipped lav* 8700 1964 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop Red and white finish, power steering end brake*, ahorpl $2495 1964 Pontiac 4-Dear Hardtop — Turquoise beauty with power steering end brakes. Sharp. $2495 1964 TEMPEST LeMons With a sparkling red finish. Mack Inferior, console, new cor warranty. Reel Sharp Throughout! $2195 1964 VW Sedan 0,000 actual miles. Set this on* today. $1595 1963 Pontiac Starchief 4-Door Hardtop. Sharp beauty, power steering and power brakes. $2195 1963 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop. Catalina*. FOUR TO CHOOSE PROM. Soo those beautiful cars tedoylll $1995 1958 RAMBLER American $199 1958 RAMBLER Sedan ........$199 1959 MERCURY Sedan ......... ...$199 1959 PONTIAC Hardtop ... ...,$199 1957 BUICK Hardtop $199 1958 PONTIAC 4-Door $199 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville CONVERTIBLE with power steering, brakes, windows and seats, automatic, radio, roar speaker. This la a dandy one-owner car. $1995 1963 FORD Galoxie "500" 2-Door Hardtop with v-8, radio, hooter and whitewall*. $1595 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop with automatic, power steering, brakes and windows, radio and haatar, a one-owner whit* beauty. $1795 1962 PONTIAC Wagon tunad *10* pdrtactlon7*r *M*rlng *l— br*k**' $1795 1962 RAMBLER 4-Odw^A beauty with whitewalls, radio $1055 1953 PACKARD $99 1957 FORD $99 1950 CADILLAC $99 1958 STUDE $99 RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac - Rambler on M24 in Lake Orion MY’ 3-6266 i) i Lr ^-Television Programs— Program! furnished by itatiom lilted in this column ora subject to change without netlco. J s-wjuc-tv, 4-wwj-tv, 7-wxyi-tv. f-aaw-'rv, so-WibA-W.Bt-^m/x THE PONTIAC KHKhS, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 106A J£3L FRIDAY EVENING •:M (3) <4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “Phantom Stagecoach” (1957) WU-liana Bishop, Kathleen Crowley (!) Peter Potamiu (SO) People Are Funny 156) Big Picture 6:90 (7) (Co]or) News, Weather (9) Bat Mas ter son (50) Comedy Carnival (50) (Special) Ride . the Wild Horse. Tracing the changes in teaching sci-* ence and math since World War II 7:11 (2) Baseball (See TV Fed-tune) (4) Traffic Court (7) Shivaree Guests: Johhnny Crawford, Shirley Ellis, Dobie Gray, Alvin Cash and the Crawlers (9) Movie: “Savage Horde” (1950) William El- J____liott, Adrian Bo6th (50) Little Rascals (56) World of Music 7:99 (4) International Showtime (7) Flintstones (50) Lloyd Thaxton (56) Mental Health 9:00 (7) FDR (See TV Features) (56) Changing Congress 9:39 (4) (Color) Bob Hope Fred Astaire and Barrie Chase dance in rerun showing. ' (7) Addams Family (50) Roller Derby (56) U.N. Day Concert 9:90 (7) Valentine’s Day (9V Time of Your Life 9:20 (2) Baseball Scoreboard 9:39 (2) Vacation Playhouse (See TV Features) (4) Jack Benny (7) Peyton Place (9) Telescope (50) Stock Car Racing 10:09 (2) Slattery’s People (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) 12 O’Clock High (9) Great WOr 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:11 (7) Nightlife 11:30 (2) Movies: 1. (Color) “Terror of the Red Mask” (Italian, 1961) Lex Barker, Chelo Alonso. 2. “Rachel and the Stranger” (1949) William Holden, Robert Mitchum. (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (9) Movip: “I, Mobster” (1959) Steve Cochran, Lita Milan, Earl Marsh. 12:90 (50). Jockey Standings 1:90 (4) ThinfMan (7) Movie: “Black Cat" (1934) Boris Karloff, Bela Lugos/. (9) International Detective 2:30 (7) All-Night Show SATURDAY MORNING 9:10 (2) News 1:15 A) Farm Sc?ne » •:30/(2) Quest for Certainty ftd (7) Americans at Work 7tW (2) Mister Mayor r (7) Plays of Shakespeare /7:I5 (4) News 7:90 (4) Country Living (7) Junior Sports Club 9:90 (2) Happy land -----(4) Bozo tiie Clown (7) Crusade for Christ 9:30 (7) House of Fashion 9:00 (2) Alvin (4) Top Cat 9:30 (2) Tennessee Tuxedo (4) Hector Heathcote (7) Starlit Stairway 10:00 (2) Quick Draw McGraw (4) Underdog (7) Dick Tracy (9) Vacation Time 10:30 (2) Mighty Mouse (4) Fireball XL-5 (7) Superman 11:00 (2) Linus the Lionhearted (4) Dennis the Menace - (7) Casper . (9) Poopdeck Paul’s Sports 11:30 (2) Jetsons (4) Fury (7) Porky Pig TV Features FDR and Churchill By United Pres* International BASEBALL, 7:00 p.m. (3) Detroit vs. Washington, from D. G. Stadium. FDR, 9:00 p. m. (7) Historic relationship of Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill is recounted. VACATION PLAYHOUSE, 9:30 -p. m. (2) Half-hour comedy with Dean Jones as playboy whose teen-aged sister comes to live with him; with Jay C. Flippen. SATURDAY WESTERN OPEN, 4:00 p.m. (4) Third round of $70,000 tourney is telecast from Chicago. AFTERNOON 12:00 (2); 8ky King (4)- Miekey Mouse Club (7) Bugs Bunny (9) Country Calendar 12:30 (2) Sergeant Preston (4) International Zone (7) Hoppity Hooper (9) En France 1:00 (2) Decisions (4) House Detective (7) Baseball (9) Movie: “Dangerous Exile” (English, 1957) < Louis Jourdan, Belinda Lee (50) CBS Bowling Classic 1:15 (2) Report From Washington 1:3A (2) Of Men and Motives (4) Movie: “How Green Was My Valley” (19411 Walter Pidgeon, Maureen O’Hara 2:00 (2) Detroit Speaks (SO) CBS Tennis Classic 2:30 (2) Movie: “I’d Climb the Highest Mountain” (1961) Susan Hayward, Rory Calhoun 3:00 (9) Canadian Open (50) Profiles 3:15 (4) Sportsman’s Holiday 3:30 (4) Horse Race (9) Cheaters (50) Movie 4:00 (4) Western Open (See TV Features) (7) American Bandstand (9) Wrestling 4:30 (2) Highway Patrol (50) Gospel Singing Jubilee 5:00 (2) Movie: “No Man’s Land” (1962) Russ Har-. vey, Kim Lee ' (4) George Pierrot: “The Italian Riviera” (?) Wide World of Sports (9) Tides and Trails 5:30 (9) Let’s Sing Out (50) Cowtown Rodeo 5:55 (4) S.L.A. Marshall Jazz Festival Start IsSmooth Guardsmen on Alert to Prevent Trouble Travel Mode of Elite Downgraded b Taxi Strike By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — The Jet Set went Bus Set. Yes, the N.Y. Jet Set, which gets haughty even about riding 'economy class,” was forced by the taxi strike to walk ... or ride buses or the subway . . . and though the members smiled through their capped choppers, they were taking umbrage, since there was nothing else much to take. The best solution seemed to be to discover you’re a devoted lifelong friend of soihebody who has a car ... and make him believe you NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - The Newport Jazz Festival, protected by National Guardsmen on standby alert, blew into the second swinging round of its 12th season today. • ' Gov. John fl. Chafee said an 'adequate” number of guardsmen were on alert to prevent any repetition of the 1960 riots. All went smoothly, if not quietly, Thursday night with a folk-singing program featuring Muddy Waters, Pete Seeger and Memphis Slim. Trumpeter Diz-f Gillespie also performed. P. A gathering of 3,500 sprinkled through the 12,000-seat arena for the opening round. Producer George T. Wein said he wasn’t worried about the financial out-1 come of the four-day festival. SCHEDULED TO SING Frank Sinatra is scheduled to' sing Sunday, and people who want a ticket for that concert must also buy a ticket for at least one other performance. The result: “The largest advance ticket sale in history,” said Wein. He added the advance sale is 45,000 tickets for the seven performances. ★ * * Tonight’s' session has Thelo-nious Monk, Art Blakey, John Coltrane, Miles Davis and Carmen McRae. Afternoon headliners will be Cecil Taylor, Paul Bley, Archie Shepp and the Jazz Composers’ Guild Orchestra. The festival moved this year from Freebody Park to a site outside the city because the council felt the congestion of Jazz fans in past years had got- ten out of hand. _________ Newport is geared for the jazz buffs, but the welcome mat is not out for those who have bunked for free oh the public beaches in the past. Newport beaches and those of surrounding towns are off limits at sundown for the duration. Controversial Heiress Is on Honeymoon CLINTON, N.Y. (AP) - Heiress Gamble Benedict and a husky state policeman are honeymooning today after a quiet wedding' in this upstate college town. The couple sped away by car to an undisclosed destination for an announced flight to Ireland following a simple double-ring ceremony Thursday. % Gamble, 24, arid Thomas F. Gallagher Jr., 32, were wed in St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church. Only 15 dose friends and family members attended. Two trooper friends of Gallagher patrolled the street outside to keep away any intruders — especially Gamble’s former husband, onetime chauffeur Andre Porumbeanu. Porum-beanu had been insisting he 'wanted to see his and Gamble’s sons — Gheorghe, 4, and Grigori, 2 — who are in their mother’s custody. The New York DSlly News quoted Porumbeanu Thursday night as saying he was “in terrible shock” and; “I’m going to enlist in the armed forces and ask for immediate duty in Viet Nam.” Pop Song Interrupts British Piano Recital LONDON (UPI) - A recital by pianist Clara Haskil on the BBC’s highbrow Third Program was interrupted yesterday by a recording of Andy Williams singing “Never on Sunday.” A red-faced BBC spokesman sai4 later a “technical hitch” fed the pop song from another channel on to the ‘Third.’ Jackie Kennedy, the Leonard Bernsteins, and people like that cruised down to the Theater De Lys in limousines for the delightful opening of “Leonard Bernstein’s Theater Songs.” But Hong Kong Dong Kingman, the artist, and I rode the bus down, and the bus back to The Plaza Theater for “The Knack” opening ... another bus over to Arthur for a party .. . and then how happy I was to discover I was about the best friend that comedian Joey Adams ever had, inasmuch as he was out with his Cadillac. “Joey!” I cried, my feet and other areas aching from the bus riding. “I never see you any more, baby! . . . Uh, where’s yopr car.” ’About six blocks away,” he said—it was really eight. ‘What d*you expect from a guy that won’t spring for a parking lot?” said his wife Cindy, about a mile later. ★ ★ ★ , I wined and dined Joey at Steve Paul’s The Scene (when he drove us there), I introduced him to Steve Paul personally, I allowed him to chauffeur us to a bistro where I was to meet actress Barbara Nichols who was going to tell me how she flattened Cassius Clay on the “Nightlife” TV show. “Darling,” Barbara phoned me a half hour later, “I can’t get a taxi. I whistle ... and for once, nobody whistles back at me.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . Woody Allen’s writing his second film, “Take the Money and Run”; he’ll also star and direct . . . Carol Channing did “Hello, Dolly!” in dark glasses — her eyes were puffy from sunburn . . . Merv Griffin’s flying to Paris to TV-tape interviews for his show. Inger Stevens fell in the bathtub, required stitches in her forehead . . . New feud: Tony Quinn and Alain Delon, filming, “The Centurions” in Spain . . . United Artists publicists say kiddingly that Dina Merrill’s the first co-star Bob Hope ever had who was richer than he is. (They’re in "I’ll Take Sweden.’’) (Tlw Hall Syndic***, lac.) _______ ~ BLACK AND WHITE r- r- V 5 i r* r“ 16 IT nr l! u IB 16 17 18 26 IF a 23 W w W 28 5T r 34 2/ 39 46 41 46 44 45 46 48 46 sr 51 62 2 40 Flat plinth 44 Thin 42 Ore deposit 43 Plant apoplexy 44 Ruminant 47 Jewish tribe (Bib.) Quiet Party Set for Luci's Wth Birthday WASHINGTON (AP) - Luc! Johnson Y™ 18 today and plans to have her birthday cake during a qtaiet evening party at the White House. A few friends were invited to join the festivities, descrijjed as ‘‘nothing elaborate." Prdldent and Mrs. Johnson plan to mark . Lvpl’s birthday during Ihe day. Two weeks ago they gave their younger daughter a combination birthday-graduation gift, a green Corvette Sting Ray convertible. Luci was graduated last month from the National Cathedral School for Girls here. A working girl during the summer months, Luci got permission to stay away today from her part-time job as opto-metric technician ’ in the office of Dr. Robert Kraslpn. Come September, Luci will begin classes a( the Georgetown University School of Nursing here. She plans to take a four-year course and pick up a bachelor of science degree as well as the credentials of a registerd nurse. ACROSS 1 Black (poe(.) 5 Black------- I — white 12 Deplorer 14 Pueblo Indian 15 Whiten 16 Ardor 17 Haphazard 19 Interstice 20 Violinist Bull 21 Mix 22 Malarial fever 24 Capable of being split 28 Cattle genus 600 State Teens Travel Abroad During the past month, more, an 600 young people left Detroit Metropolitan Airport on a mission of good will and international understanding. Under the auspices of the Youth for understanding (YFU),, these young people, from pp-( proximately 200 Michigan high schools, will spend two months members of families in 14 different countries.' *- * * Organized “to develop inter- national understanding through a living experience with a family in another country,” the program is both interfaith and interracial. ★ ★ * YFU is also called “Michigan Teen-age Exchange” because it brings youth from Europe and Latin America to Michigan. Four hundred European teenagers will return to their homelands in July, following a stay with Michigan families. 29 The White------- 30 Be inattentive 31 Snakelike fish 32 Feminine appellation 33 Three (comb, form) 34 Type of sail (pi.) 36 Canvas shelter 37 Scraps 39 Noise 39 Feminine name 42 Covered with lead 45 Dry regions 46 Vesuvianite 49 Design 49 Brilliant white light 50 Corn bread 51 Compass point 52 Asterisk DOWN 1 Hebrew eponymous ancester 2 Greek letter 3 Fatefully 4 Simpleton 5 Central Vietnamese (var.) 6 Soak, as heihp 7 Theses 8 Deviates, as a boat 9 “Do not wish” (Latin) ‘ 10 Gem 11 Grape beverage 13 Tropical plant 19 Ascended 21 Racing boats 22 Encourage 23 Proceeder * $4 Card game for one “ Superintendent 26 Forsaken 27 Redact 29 Human organ 35 Well-groomed (Fr.) 36 Coronets 38 Tenth (comb, form) Northern Scandinavian AVOID Whiplath! AUTO HEADRESTS SIR Limited | W Pr* Number--— N0RTHSIDE AUTO SUPPLY 811 N. PERRY IT. The Mishnah is the code of Jewish ecclesiastical law. FORMICA CUIRETS *35 Per Ft. 1 : Include* well, bo*e and counter top I Ft. KitohM $288 SATURDAY til NOON IMPERIAL CABINET CENTER 711 Peeley lake id. 393-9919 BIG SAVINGS! AIR $QQ9S CoHiitioicrs-^-7 SWEET’S Sfutm W Huten______SJ4-S67T | Tips on * UHF ANTENNA S INSTALLATION I WE HAVE FOUND THAT: | * vhp Antennas ere generally Mt tdttofectory Mr UHP Reception. ■ ir Although Indoor UHF Antenna* may worn, a »**d outdoor UNP World News Briefs Start Village Protection Plan in Borneo KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysia is resurrecting in its Borneo States a program successfully employed in defeating Communist guerrillas on the Malayan mainland — resettlement of isolated villagers in protected centers. The government announced the project after a daring raid Sunday night by a terrorist hand4n-tha Borneo State ^)f Sar-awak. The raiders were said to have included local Communists linked with Indonesia's “crush Malaysia” campaign. VATICAN CITY (AP) - Vatican informants say if Pope Paul VI does go to the U.N. General Assembly, it probably won’t be before early next year. They pointed out that the pontiff will be busy with the final session of the Vatican Ecumenical Council from Sept. 14 to about Dec. 8. The next General Assembly session opens Sept. 21 and is expected to run until the end of January with time out for Christmas. Msgr. Alberto Giovannetti, the Vatican observer at the United Nations, said in New York Thursday that the Pope is considering the yisit.and “there is a possibility it will happen during the 20th session of the General Assembly.” V v' Msgr. Giovannetti talked for 30 minutes with U.N. Secretary-General U Thant and said they discussed the possible papal visit. It would be the first papal visit to the Americas. reading in years Thursday night, speaking in a frail voice while seated in a theater box. Pound was part of a poetry program at composer Gian Carlo Menotti’s annual festival Of two worlds. He read 10 poems, none his own. They included j works by Robert Lowell, Marianne Moore,’ the 4th century | Chinese Tao Yuan Ming, and Pound’s translations from Dante. The bearded, -wavy-halred poet received a 10-minute Ova-» tion. BERLIN (AP) — A streetcar | crashed. into another one that! had stopped to discharge passengers today during the morning rush. hour. Police said 30 persons — most of them school-children — were hurt but the Injuries were not serious. * Low-loot UHF spoclol typo load-in « mtonnt art tor superior to on* tod# In. • It oupoflor to llto ordinary Dealer Blake Radio I TV FC 4-5791 3149 W. Huron, Pontiac Colt’s TV Service UL 2-3100 3307 Auburn R#., Pontiac Condon Radio-TV FC 4-0110 730 W. Huron, Pontiac C IV TV, Inc. FC 4-1111 141 Oakland, Pontine Colby Radio I TV FC 4-0103 340 Leigh, Pontio^~\. Dobat TV I Radio OL 2-4*22 104 Mt. University, Roc hosier Crocon't Radio-TV 625-2161 4730 Clorkoton Rd„ Clork.lon Nod’s Radio-TV FC 6-0112 770 Orchard Ufcn Ave., Pontiac Johnson Radio-TV FC MHO ■ 45 (. Wolton, Pontiac Lakeland Electric OR 34111 7369 Highland Rd., Pontiac Listing Latimor Radio-TV OR 3-2911 3530 Soohobow, Drayton Plaint Obel TV FC 4-4941 3410 tliiabeth Lake Rd., PonNot Peer Appliance CM Ml 14 0161 Commote# Rd., Union tale Al Beading TV MY 3-1124 1700W. Clorttoton Rd., LofcaQiMn Stofantki Radio-TV FC 24391 1157 W. Huron, Pontiac 8weet Radio RTF FC4-9911 —- .422 VV. Huron, Pontiac * Troy TV-Radio TR 64919 5965 livomoio, Troy Walton Radio-TV FC2-2tn SI S L Walton, Pontiac WKC, Inc., Bsrvtoe 814-1118 3S79 Dido Hwy., Drayton plain* Radio Programs— FRIDAY EVENING MO-WJR. News, Sport* WWJ, Now*, Sports :BUW. Now* WJBK, Nim WWJ. Business ' i WXY.Z. Alex Dreler CKLW, Tom Shannon WPON Dove Howard Show (iWmWXYZ. New*. Sports WWJ, Box i WJR, Baseball Fenfire 7:00—WXYZ. Ed Morgan . •WJBK, A. Thayer WCAR. Boyd C* render . WPON. News, Johnny *•““ WWJ, Now*. El—*“*' whfi. Curtain 7:15—WXYZ, Ltd Alan, Maple, Now* WWJ. Phono Opinion 7:14—WHFI. News, Monti •ilB-WWJ. Snorts Linn fltB—WWJ. ’ New* Sport* Lin* ltite-WXYZi M*dc*p i*^wjiTMiS*' , ItltB-WWJ. N«W* PM WJR New*. Sports, Music 11: l*-WCAR. Rx. HOoBb UsM-WCAI^CererKtor wjr Mink SATURDAY MORNING o.M-wjR^AerlcyWur* WWJ. N8W» r8rwl CKLW. Muttt. World Tomor- WXYZ, Pat Murph News WJBK, lib Let WPON, News Art* WCAR. New*, BIN «:M-WCAR, Food I Thought, MSU *:>*—WJR, MuolC H 0:45—CKLW, Bud Davits TitotWJRt Newt. Musk Bud Davit* CKLW, New: 1:1*—WJR, N 1:14—WJR, N M4-WWJ, » WCAR, New: WPON, Newt. Ban Johnson WPON, Newt, Bon Johnson WCAR, News, Tom Kolllnt WHPI, Marc Avery, Music. OR Baseball WPON, News ★ADDITIONS* FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING-SIDING W00DFIEL0 CONSTRUCTION CKLWjtopw*. P«*« Shafer ASTRONAUT TRAINING—Astronaut David R. Scott peers into a canyon in She Valley of 10,000 Smokes in the Katmal National Monument in Alaska yesterday. This is part of training exercises for men undergoing walks as preparation for a group'of 10 space-on volcanic surfaces hikes on the moon. WILL COME TQ YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE AND PLANS-NO CHANGE CALL FC 4-4138 6 Months Before ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING THE *ON'i’I AC I'RfcbS, ,ymi)A¥, JULY* Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MM, JOSEPH CALDWELL Service and burial for Mrs. Joseph (Marjorie F.) Caldwell, a, of 4171 Cheeseman, Water-fold Township, will be from the Westbrook-Tidd Funeral Home in Hnm«f with burial in Falr-view Cemetery. Her body will be taken from Hie Goats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, at 10 p.m. to- Mrs. Caldwell, a member of the Methodist Church in Homer, died this morning after a nine-day illness. Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. Matilda Mea-ael; a son, Jerry of,Union Lake; two daughters, Mrs. Nell Shronts of Homer and Mrs. Cart Larm of Pontiac; nine grandchildren; five sisters; and a brother. MRS. JAMES GATLIN . Service for Mrs. James (Sarah HJ- Gatlin, 68. of 216 Harrison will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in Trinity Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mrs. Gatlin, a member of Trinity Church, died yesterday after e three-month illness. She was a retired maid. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Mary ,Louise McClellan of Pontiac; tf brother, Edward Harper of Pontiac; and six sisters, Mrs. Gertrude Duncan of Detroit, Mrs. Lucille Jacobs of Toledo, Ohio, and Mrs. Kathleen Draieb, Mrs. Louella Phillips, Mm. Rosia Kinder and Mrs. Josephine Brown, all of Pontiac. ERNEST C. REIN Service for Ernest C.vRein, 69, of 464 Auburn will be from the Drake & Son Funeral Home in Chicago Tuesday with burial in Acacia Park Cemetery. His body will be taken time at 9 p.m. today by the Voorbees-Siple Funeral Home. Mr. Rein, a retired employe of Peqtiac Motor Division, died yesterahy after a long illness. MRS. ANDREW SCHNEIDER Service for Mrs. Andrew (Catherine) Schneider, 91, of 163 N. Berkshire will be at the Daly Funeral Home fat Schenectady, N. Y., Tuesday. Arrangements were by the Sparks-Grif-fin Funeral Home. Mrs. Schneider, a member of St. Thomas Catholic Church in Schenectady, died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. John L. Killoran, with whom she made her home, and Mrs. Bertha S. Greisler of Scotia, N. Y„ and four sons, Dr. Frtmcis Schneider of Wood-bridge, Conn., Floyd of Mill-dale, Conn., and Andrew and Bernard, both of Schenectady. Also surviving are 10 grandchildren, six great-grandchildren mid two sisters. JAMES R. CHAFFEE CLARKSTON - Service for former resident Janies R. Chaffee, 71, of Margate, Fla., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery. Mr. Chaffee died Wednesday after a long illness. A retired employe of Fisher Body Division, he was a member of the 100F Lodge of Pontiac. Surviving are his wife, May, and three sisters, Mrs. Elsie Smith of Pontiac, Mrs. Harold Reynolds of Alpena, and Mrs. Mike Ranek of Hollandale, Fla. MRS. JOSEPH GRATOPP AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Joseph (Martha) Gra-topp, 83, of 2864 York will be 2 p. m. Sunday at Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, Clawson. Private burial will be Tuesday at Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak, by Price Funeral Home, Troy. Mrs. Gratopp died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving are one sonr David E. of Troy, and one sister. GARNET A. HINTON WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Garnet A. Hinton, 59, of 8800 White Lake will be 4 p. m.. tomorrow at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Homs, Clarks-ton. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkaton. Mr. Hinton died suddenly' yesterday. He was an employe of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are his wife, Lucile; one daughter, fafrs. Russell Adams of Ctarkston; one son, William of Clarkston; and 10 grandchildren. DAVID L. McNABB LAPEER Service for David L McNabb, 72, of 183 Higgins will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Baird-Newton Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mt. Hope Cemetery under the auspices of American Legion Post No. 16, of which be was a member. Mr. McNabb died today after a long illness. Surviving are his wife, Pearl, and two sisters, Mrs. Lee Walker of Lapeer and Mrs. Doris Hudson of Pontiac. CORDIE A. RUSSELL ROCHESTER — Service for Cordie A. Russell, 85, of 301 E. Third will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Pixley Memorial Chapel. Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mt. Russell died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired employe of the Rochester Police Department and the Rochester Fire Department _| Surviving are seven sons, (Gerald of San Francisco, Harold of Whittier, Calif., Eber of Tiburon, Calif., Everett of Royal Oak, Milton of Lake Arrowhead, Calif., Raymond of Rochester and Morley, in the U.S. Air Force. MRS. CHARLES TRAVIS ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Charles (Estella) Travis, 83, of 329 First will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at William R. Potere Funeral Home. Burial win be in Mount Avon Cemetery. Mrs. Travis died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Florence Brown of Duarte, Calif., and Mrs. Mabel Honeywell of Rochester. NOTICB OFPUSLICSaCb r” No«c* I* Hereby Given by the undersigned met on July «. IMS, at 1* o'clock ajn. at MM Woodward, Sorndoto, Oak- Rib Hits Home in Commerce Members of the Ernest Day YamUy, who left an a vacation last night, wiU return to find much of their Commerce Township home destiwyed by fire. * * * Damage tentatively has been estimated at |9,600 to the Day house at 3205 Massine. The blase sighted by a neighbor shortly after 1 a.m. today destroyed the roof and part of one wall la the op-stain 'level of the ltt-stsry house. Cause of the fire was not immediately determined. Assisting Commerce Township firemen in their three-hour fight with the fire were volunteers from tiie West Bldoinfield Township and Union Lake departments. State PuliCe fids morning wars searching tor the-Day-tam-ily reportedly headed fair a vacation somewhere near Newberry in t^e Upper Peninsula. State Dams WIN Volw on Special Convention LANSING (AP) - The Democratic State Central Committee plane to vote July II on whether to call a special nonetection yeaf party convention in October for discussion of state issues. Democratic State Chairman Zolton Ferency announced the meeting Thursday.. He said a proposal Calling for a convention Oct. 2-3 in Detroit has been mailed to all central committee members. 0CC AM Extra $20,016 by State ‘ Oakland Community College (OGC) has been allotted in additional 820,016 by the Michigan Department of F\iblic Instruction from the State’s community college capital outlay matching $uud.\ The supplemental allocation la in addition to the initial $415,560 received by the local college early this year, according to George Mosher, OOC hoard chairman. ‘ l * ' ^ Explaining supplemental funds, a college spokesman said that the state often ends its fiscal year with unspent funds when estimates are under actual costs. Schools, and colleges can resubmit programs for these excess funds. *Japanese Reds Plan Bombing of (/.$. Embass/ TOKYO (AP) - The J«P* nese Communist party newspaper Akahata reported today that Trotskyist elements plan to bomb tha U.S. Embassy, in Tokyo. Akahata, in a front-page story, said it obtained the information from “hlfihly reliable” xirces. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said “We have been informed recently from the Tokyo Metropolitan Police” of the possibility of violence. He added the .embassy has taken no extra precaution because the safety of the building la with the Japanese police who are “maintaing the usual vigilance.” Suspends Sentence of Oak Park Youth An Oak Park youth who had pleaded guilty to negligent homicide in a traffic death was given a suspended sentence yesterday after his conduct diming the past nine months was reviewed by Circuit Judge William J. Beer. Beer had delayed sentencing Rodney K. Elnick, 18, last October*. At that time he said he would take into consideration Elnlck’s behavior during the delay.. Elnick was the driver of a car that collided With another atQuartonand Franklin in Bloomfield Township June 13, 1964. A passenger in the other car, Mrs. Rex R. Brubaker, 64, of Beverly Hills, was fatally. Injured. GLOVE LEATHER FOR WORK OR PLAY! Mr. STYLE IMS Pontiac Convertible bearing serial number SUPI3W4, will kg held, for cosh to the MglMt bidder. Inspection JUMBO 0REPE SOLES CUSHION INSOLE BOTH YANKEE STORES LOAFERS or OXFORDS MIRACLE Mill & PERRY at M0MTCALM PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW-FE 3-7901 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9 DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY■ OR 4-0321 OPEN MONDAY. THURSDAY. FRIDAY TIL 9 I0TN STORES CL6SEB THIS MONDAY, JULY 6tfc-SU0P TUESDAY UNTIL 9 P.M. CALIFORNIA REDWOOD cmW JUST 810 DOWN 72“ Plcnle Table with 2 Benches, Cholse lounge, Club Choir with vinyl cushion, 18“ End Bench. (Easily ossembltdi . . . .$98 to compare the superior quality features of these three fine groups is to understand why they have been previous ‘sell-outs’ • Tha fIntel 2" all-clear old growth California redwood. • All frames are precision mortised, tenoned and glued. , • Carefully-constructed and finished by skilled craftsmen. • All cushioned pieces feature redwood slat backs. • Reversible vinyl covered foam cushions are easy to clean and are supported by strong heiicol-tied aluminum strapping. • All hardware is plated for maximum resistance to weather. V $98 The Weather THE PONTIAC PRE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1968—44 PAGES In Michigqn VOL. 128 NO. 128 Utility Bills to Be Cut HIKING GOVERNOR - Gov. George Romney views Lake of the Clouds in Porcupine Mountains State Park while taking a six-mile Mum on U. P. Road Plan AP Photofax investigation hike yesterday. His guide was Richard Ueck, assistant park supervisor. Romney Explores Park - ONTONAGON (AP) — George western Upper Peninsula wilder-Romney, Michigan’s hiking gov- ness, ernor, had a better slant today while many of his score of . on Porcupine Mountains State companions became tired, P'A- long-striding Romney whipped Rut he wasn’t tipping his hand through a six-mile investigate how he’d act on the proposi- tion hike in the pork yester-tion to cut a road through the day. Auto Output Sets Records for June. First Six Months DETROIT (At — The U.S. auto industry reported today the biggest first six months and the biggest June production marks in automotive history. Preliminary figures announced by the four major auto makers showed that 5,158,743 new cars rolled .. off U.S. assembly lines from Jan. 1 through June Pontiac Area Due 30. to Be Sunny and Mild for Holiday Pontiac area residents ipay look forward to a pleasant holiday weekend. Skies will be partly overcast tomorrow with a high of 76 to That smashed the old opening six months mark of 4,431, 816 set last year. For June, the count was 899,117 unite. This broke the old record of 777,120 cars which rolled out of l’.S: auto plants in June 1964. To the auto industry, one of 82. Lows are expected to fall to the most welcome phases of the 56 to 62 tonight. J six months report was Ameri- The weatherman promises a «“» Motors’ production of 202 - sunny and mild Sunday. *“mb,ers ‘"the JWJ"* J of 1965, compared with 199,427 Fifty-eight was the low tem- for the opening six months last perature in downtown Pontiac year, preceding 8 a.m. The mercury MARKS FIRST “I don’t know yet what I’ll do," he said afterward. ★ * * Romney, bareheaded and dressed in outdoor clothes, made the hike in order to become better acquainted with the park. NEAR COLLAPSE En route, some of his companions were near collapse in trying to equal Romney’s pace. Romney’s purpose was to help him decide whether to approve or veto a bill to permit the road construction in the 58,600-acre tract. He was impressed by what he saw — “certainly beautiful,” he said—and became an immediate booster of "the park. “We should encourage people, from all over the country to see this area,” he said. STEEP TRAIL The hike took Romney and his perspiring companions, including legislators, from Lake of the Clouds to Mirror Lake along a rough, sometimes steep mountain trail. In the forefront with Romney were Richard Ueck, assistant park supervisor, and Dr. Ralph A. MacMullan, director of the State Conservation Department. Along the way the hikers stopped to talk with campers. “I’m glad you came,” Mrs. Diane Elcoate of Ludington told (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Peace Hopes Are Boosted in Santo Domingo Statements by Junta Leaders May Lead to End of Stalemate SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic UPi — New statements* by two leaders of the Dominican junta appeared today to open the door to a settlement of the stalemate in the Caribbean trouble spot. Gen. Antonio Imbert Barrer-as, junta president, said last night that the most difficult part of his task was completed and he would step down when the Dominican people were assured of safety from communism, anarchy and despotism. Communism, Imbert said in a televised speech, had been confined to just one sector of Santo Domingo. He meant the rebel sector. The remaining task, he said, could be done by any “well-intentioned Dominican." ★ * * He added that the armed forces and the political parties should share in the responsibility for safeguarding the country. INTERVENTION Imbert said any attempt by the Organization of American States to impose a provisional government would be a "gross act of intervention.” Peace prospects got a further boost last night when the armed forces secretary, Commodore Francisco J. Rivera Caminero, told a newsman the armed forces would support any democratic solution put forward by the OAS. He added that the junta, which' he said the army considered a '‘-democratic government,” also would back the OAS. Dien Bien Viets Kill 120 Cong SAIGON, South Viet Nam (A — U.S. Air Force planes pounded the airfield and barracks in North Viet Nam’s Dien Bien I*hu today, site of the decisive French defeat in the Indochina War. South of the border, government troops killed 120 Viet Cong and captured 8 _____ others in three ground op- Police Capture Armed Robber erations, a U.S. military spokesman reported. Communist mortars hit two air strips with nortar fire during the night. U. S. spokesmen said three helicopters ere damaged at Cheo Reo, 220 miles northeast of Saigon, and another helicopter crashed due to mechanical failure after it took off during the attack on the Soc Trang strip, 100 miles southwest of Saigon. U. S. spokesmen said a total of 30 planes pounded the targets at Dien Bien Phu, about 185 miles west northwest of Hanoi. They said no antiaircraft fire was encountered over the scene of the bitter 1954 fighting and no enemy planes were sighted. ★ * N * All planes returned safely from the mission, they said. FIRST ATTACK The first attack on the target almost on the Laotian border was made by eight F105 Thun-derchiefs supported by thr e e, other planes. They hit tiwBTerr Bien Phu barracks area for 30 minutes, the spokesmen said, destroying six buildings and damaging four others. They dropped 24 tons of 750-pound bombs and fired 2.75-inch rockets, the spokesmen said. The weather was reported good and visibility 10 miles. A short time later, 16 U. S. Air Force planes and three support craft struck the Dien Bien Phu airfield, 3 miles north of the barracks area, the spokesmen said. ★ ★ * Twelve buildings were reported destroyed at the field, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) had climbed to 79 by 1 p. m. Most Area Businesses Will Close on Monday AU bat essential businesses in the area will be closed Monday in observance of Independence Day. Banks, stores, manufacturers and commercial companies win cloae. Thera will be no mail delivery. Mail will be' picked ap on a holiday schedule, but will not be delivered. It marked the first time in several months that AMC’s output had run ahead of its 1964 pace. For General Motors and Chrysler the first six months’ output marked corporate highs. It was Chrysler’s best opening half year since 19SS. High points of the six months showing by the various companies and divisions included: Ford Motor Co. putput in June totaled 255,620 cars and ran 17 per cent ahead of June, 1964. The six months output of 1,-410.900 was far ahead of the old mark of 1,160,900 set last year in the first half. Chrysler had its best June production record in history, as 134,465 cars were built. The old mark for the month was.the 133,202 quote built in June 1953. TURNS OUT Chevrolet, biggest of the auto divisions, turned out 1,456,504 cars in the opening six months of this year, topping the old high of 1,332,452 cars built In the first half of 1964. Few records survived the building surge in the first half 1965. • The industry’s pride in i t s -first six months accomplishments was bolstered by a statement by J a m e a M. Roc h e, -General Motors’ new president. He said he saw no signs of any slackening in demand for cars ‘ in the last half of the year. * * ♦ Roche expressed belief, in an interviwe, that demand for 1966 models would run strong in the fall and result in liberal use of overtime for auto workers -in the final quarter. An escaped convict was cape tured yesterday in Birmingham a half hour after staging a $4,-000 holdup in Pontiac and ing two cars to make his get away. A warrant charging Freddie Bledsoe, 22, formerly of Madi* son Heights, with armed robbery was expected tq be issued today by the Oakland C o u n t y Prosecutor’s Office. Two Bloomfield Hills patrolmen, Kenneth Livingston and Carl Hall, apprehended Bledsoe at Oak and Hunter, in Birmingham, after pursuing his car on Woodward. He offered no resistance. Pontiac detective John De-Pauw said that Bi e d s o e admitted holding up Ducky's Bar, 800 S. Woodward. .. • ■•Ira,..*---.*. TTteowiier, Marshall W. Moore, 50, of 6155 Grace K., Waterford Township, told police that he had just returned from the bank at 3:10 p.m.. after cashing checks-when he heard someone behind him say “This is it Buddy.” HIT WITH GUN When he turned he was hit in the mouth with a gun. The gunman then fled on foot to Nebraska where he jumped in a car that had stopped for a traffic light. A block away he forced the driver, Eva Spears, 456 Franklin, out of the car. With police in pursuit, he abandoned the car eight blocks away and ran into a wooded area. Then he took a station wagon from a backyard in Bloomfield Township and fled south on Woodward. ★ * ★ When he was finally forced to' the curb, police said they found $3,850 in currency on Bledsoe along with a 32 caliber pistol. Another $150 in change was buried near where he stole the second car. DePauw said that Bledsoe told police that he had been living in the Detroit , area since, walking away from' a southern Michigan Prison farm in May. Bledsoe was serving a 3-15 year prison term for. the armed robbery of a Madison Heights gas station in April* 1963. Tiros Circles Globe, HGnts for Storms, CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — The Tiros 1 weather satellite circled the globe today, its camera eyes ready to record the birtlj and movement of hurricanes, typhoons and other storms over a great arep of the globe. The mechanical meteorologist, launched late last night, joined three other operating Tiros satellites—Nos. 7, 8 and 9 —on space patrol. The quartet could provide the most comprehensive photographic coverage yet of a full season of^ tropical storms. Tiros 10 is the first of the series paid for,by the U.S. Weather Bureau and is the forerunner of an operational system the bureau plans tobegin launching early in 1966. * ★ * At first, the satellite was spinning too fast for picture taking because of the failure of an automatic slowdown device. GROUND SIGNAL The ground radio signal sent during the second orbit activated the device, however, and the satellite’s spin rate ^ 138 rpm’s to the desired Officials reported all* systems were working fine. The officials said they were not concerned by the initial1 fast spinning because they had experienced similar difficulties* in the past which were easily corrected by ground signals. Consumers 1st With Trimming of $3 Million Oakland Not Among 32 Counties to Feel Electricity Rate Slash LANSING W — Wfflle the economy booms and the cost of living climbs, utility bills for millions of Michigan consumers will start drooping this subi-mer. J The Michigan Public Service Commission hap called in every utility doing business in the state, and in many cases Is negotiating or will negotiate for rate cuts, said *PSC Chairman Peter Spivak. The first of these cuts were announced yesterday. One was a $3-million reduction for 670,000 residential and 7,000 commercial electric customers of Consumers Power Co. in 32 counties of southern Michigan. Oakland County is not affected by the cuts. The other was a 655,000 reduction by Wisconsin Public Service’Corp, for customers in and around Menominee on the Wisconsin border. MORE CUTS “Every utility in Michigan has had or is having its rates reviewed . . . and there is every indication there will be more Cuts,” Spivak said. Spivak said Consumers Power reportedly earned $80.7 million in the first four months of this yenr. He said this was an increase of $6 million over the same period last year. The Consumers Power rate cut will mean a saving of $4.20 a year to the average home owner who used 400 kilowatt hours of electricity a month, Spivak said. The new rates take effect Tuesday. There will be no reduction for customers who used less than 100 kilowatt hours a month. Spivak declined to aay how broad or extensive future utility cuts would be. He said they “could not be described as ‘negligible.’ ’’ Continuing economic growth over an extended period of time has pushed many utility profits higher than anticipated when rates were last set. The PSC sets rates and the rate of return allowable on a utility’s investment. The rate of return, expressed as a percentage of the investment, is.usually touchedonly after a formal rate case has been heard. This process may take more than a year, involving research, preparation of detailed briefs and formal arguments. For Pontiac Residents Property Taxes to Be Higher VOLUNTEERS AT WORK - Junior Chamber of Commerce members in Pontiac, Milford, Waterford Township, Lake Orion and Rochester and their wives have volunteered to redecorate the North Oakland Child Guid- ance Clinic at 133 Franklin. At work are Mrs. Ted Webster and Mrs. Peter Vemia, both of, the Rochester unit, and Jim Monroe of Milford. Milford Jaycees began the project, r: Pontiac taxpayers will pay $3.14 more per $1,000 of assessed property value this year over, 1964 in city, school and community college taxes. A home assessed at $5,900 will pay $15.70 in added taxes this year over 1964. The total bill will jump from last year’s $907.60 to $223.50 for city, school and' college government On a home valued ht $5,060, the increased taxes ($1S.7I would be split $1.70. for city, $5.75 for schools and $6.25 for the community college. The latter levy Is befog added to city tax Mils for the first time. City and school equalized tax rates, including a 1-mil! levy for the community college, total $44.70 per $1,000 assessed valuation this year—a hike from last year’s $41.56 total rate. * + -a Part of the rate hike—$1.25 per $1,000 assessed value «*# comes from the college. This tax last year was incorporated is the county’s winter tax levy. TAX BILLS City tax bills are due from July 1. Taxpayers have through Aug. 2 to pay their taxes. Financing a IMS total budget of $$.$ million, city taxes total $17J9 per $1,M0 assessed valuation: a 74-cent Mho over the 1964 rate of $17.1$. The increase ht city taxes will cost a total of only $3.70 in added tax payments on a home assessed at $5,000. '■ ** Most of the rate hike came fronvan-increase in the special millage for waste collection and a rise in the, equalization factor. The 1965 waste collection tax rate was jumped to, $2.J4 per $1,000 assessed value over last year’s levy of $1.43. WASTE COLLECTION ! City officials hiked the waste collection millage to help finance the purchase of a sanitary land-fill site. Also, the eRy had a 1 per cent increase in the cqnlbfog (Continued on Pag* 2, Col. $) T&a yoNflAC PRK3& Mifrflg asfarmf§fey Talks fail BRUSSELS (UK)—'The president of the European Common Market today urgently pressed member nations to save the economic community from collapse. The m a r k e t faces its most serious crisis since France vetoed British membership in 1983. The six member nations were urged to resume negotiations on vital agricultural policy. The ne- Yanks Bomb N. Viet Sites; 120 Cong Die (Continued from Page One) te said, five others were damaged and the center of the runway was cratered with bombs. ATTACK WEAPONS Thiry-four tons of 750-pound bombs along with BuDpup missiles and 2.75-inch rockets were used in the attack, which also lasted 30 minutes, the spokesmen said. The Viet Cong fired 20 to tl mertar shells into toe Soc Trang airfield sooth of Saigon Thursday night, bnt U. S. helicopters there were hurriedly flown to another field. Damage was minor. Another air strike today took 20 Navy Skyhawks'and Crusaders 40 miles southeast of Hanoi, the closest yet to the North Vietnamese capital since air raids on the Communist North began Feb. 7, the spokesman said. The raiders attacked the Nam Dinh oil storage tanks, described as one of the biggest petroleum tanks areas in North Viet Nam. TANKS IN FLAMES Pilots reported flames from the storage tanks shot more than 200 feet Into the air from all compounds and approximately eight large tanks were destroyed, the spokesmen said. They reported secondary explosions were observed tor as long as 25 minutes after the first bombs hit. Heavy antiaircraft fire was encountered, pilots reported, bat no enemy planes were sighted and all planes returned safely to the carrier Oriskany, the spokesman said. Six tons of 250-pound bombs were reported dropped, along with Bullpup missiles. A U.S. mission spokesman announced that 320,000 leaflets were dropped over North Viet Nam summarizing results of UJ5. and South Vietnamese air raids from Feb. 7 to April 30. Farm regulations ran out at midnight June 90. The failure to reach a new agreement left toe community with no common farm regulations. The key to the problem was held by French President Charles de Gaulle. Diplomatic observers said a nod from the French president and negotiations recommence — a thumbs down and the community dies. Walter Hallstein, president of the Common Market’s neutral executive commission, cabled foreign ministers that a resumption of negotiations “is the only way to get us out of this situation.” TEST FOR MOTORISTS—If you spot the backward ‘E’ in this sign in Franklin, N. H., it shows you’re an alert motorist. Deputy Police Chief James E. Newell Jr. devised the AF Photofax test on the theory that signs in the road are ignored. Only four complaints about the incorrect letter have been received. SPEED REPLIES, Id an attempt to speed replies, Hallstein made public toe fact L commissioners are already working on new proposals to replace those rejected by the foreign ministers of France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg. In Bonn, informed sources said toe West German government believes de Gaulle is bluffing in his threat to stall toe Euromart unleu the other five members bow to Ms demand. It was France’s insistence the Common Market adopt her views on how the community’s farm policy should be shaped in the future which precipitated the current crisis. However, for the first time, the other members challenged France’s leadership. They said it was too much to ask of them to approve regulations which practically made them responsible tor subsidizing French agriculture. A prolonged crisis could affect the United States, which is negotiating with the Common Market countries in the framework of the “Kennedy round” tariff talks. Vatican Press Says Pope Invited to U. N. VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Vatican press office announced today that U.N. Secretary-General U Thant has invited Pope Paul VI to the United Nations but added that it was too soon to say whether the pontiff would accept. But the unusual Vatican announcement, breaking a silence here on frequent reports about such a trip, suggested the Roman Catholic ruler has the trip under consideration. (See World News, Page D-ll) Property Taxes U p in Pontiac 'Wouldn't Sign Permits W. Germans Halt Red Barges (Continued From Page One) factor, a figure established to convert equalised valuation to assessed valuation. The breakdown on the city’s 1965 equalised tax rate, based on assessed valuation, is: 1984 1985 112.34 General Fund . . . . 212.58 $ 1.85 Capital Improvement $1.88 $ .57 Hospital Debt.....3 .54 $ .84 Sewage Debt ......$ .73 $ 1.43 Waste Collection ..$ 2.14 Added to the total bill will be the $1.25 per $1;M0 assessed value for the college.-* ★ * Pontiac school taxes for city property owners jumped $1.15 per $1,000 of assessed property value or $5.75 few a home with an assessed valuation of $5,000. BONN, Germany (AP) — Two Communist East German barges were held up -today at Schnackenburg on the Elbe River because their captains refused to sign toe usual permits for entering West German waters, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard’s spokesman reported. Press chief Karl Guenther von Hase told a news conference that the Communist government “is obviously making a test" of conditions under which barge traffic can move between the two Germanys. East Germany dropped the old four-power permits for barge traffic and introduced documents of its own Thursday. The Erhard government objected to this as a violation of postwar agreements but instructed West German shippers to make no difficulties. Barges had been moving normally until this morning when The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness, windy and warm today with occasional showers and thunderstorms this afternoon and evening, high 88 to 86. Showers •fiding ud turning cooler late tonight with diminishing winds, low 58 to 82. Partly cloudy and slightly cooler Saturday. High 7$ to 82. South to southwest winds 5 to 15 miles this morning hmvfag to 15 to 35 miles this afternoon, shifting to west to southwest tonight Himini«hing to 5 to IS miles by Saturday. LOCAL TAXES The home owner with an assessed vahie of $5,000 on his property paid $122 last year in local school taxes, while this year be will pay $127.75'. Higher school taxes result from a hike to the millage allocated by the county, an increase to debt retirement millage and the rise in the equalization factor. Hie breakdown on the equalized school tax rate, based on assessed valuation, is: 1964 1965 $12.00 General ........$12.18 $10.91 Extra Voted ....$10.98 $ 1.49 Debt ....... $ 2.39 Theyjpbt retirement hike in the scjrool tax rate was caused by a March bond sale. The $645,000 in bonds were issued to f inane* construction of two school additions, purchase three school sites and other improvements in the school district. WWW City taxpayers have not received their last tax bill for 1965. In December, the county issues its tax bill covering the cost of county projects * and government and the county school office. ^ Direct la Sun n -Moon At | a m.: Wind Velocity I Direction:'’ Southweet sets Friday at 1:11 p. ’Itee Saturday at 5:02 a. TMa Data In 93 V 70 M Fort Wortli 1 nnrr¥ii_ ea. lit Quality PANELING FUSTIC COATED Loan Mahogany DURABLE PANELING PLENTY PONTlACT tARGEST TILE CENTER , ■ fij of free Our Own Instsllatien Work Dona by Exports . PARKINS Open Mon. an* Fri. til liM M-| T*o»«.Wo4, Plot*, Set. !W IM|L ■ "> ESTIMATES j CERAMIC TILE Fat floor, wall . 1x1 Cryitaline uc ”*■ 59° CEILING tile special > 11x11...... 8c sq.n. ! 12x12 .....r. 12c sq.ft. LIONT FIXTURES 0L0SE- ^ wr. 60% 1075 W. Huron St. Phone 334-9957 If You Don’J Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Even a lady could learn to like Soft Whiskey. It’s not hard. Many women don’t find whiskey very likeable. In fact, they find it hard to take. So you usually find them with ginor vodka, or one of those lady drinks. But we’ve changed all that We’ve given whiskey more appeal. A lady can even drink Soft Whiskey straight. Without batting an eyelash. 'Soft Whiskey swallows nice and easy, /treating her ever so tenderly. . But don’t get the wrong idea. Soft Whiskey is rio softie, ft’s 86 proof. And does e^dfo^hat any 86 proof does. It just does it softer. So lady, be discreet Now, about the softening process. All we can tell you is, some of Calvert Extra is distilled in small batches instead of huge ones. Forgive our being so closemouthed. But we fell flat on, our faces in year after year of experiments before we found the formula. After all that, we’re notgoing to make p 1 St it easy for anyone to steal our^women. Calvert‘Extte . ■r $2-35 Includes All Texes $10.98 cm* my* co* m ' co* #** BLENDED WHISKEY • 86 PROOF - 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS®1966 CALVERT DIST. CO.. N.Y.C, $4.52 FIFTH O, me s 108 NORTH SAGINAW ON NEW LOW PRICE philco Nationally Famous for Quality, Dependability and High Standards of Performance To Give Your Food The Safest and Best Care The World. fHILCO14 cu. ft. COMPLETELY "Mo Frost” REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER For your maximum satisfaction in the years ahead you get these modern features < • • * 14.0 cu, ft. 2-Doer only 30" wide. e Storei 93 lb*, of frozen food* in zero zone freezer • Completely free of frost • Total Shelf orea 20.1 sq. ft. • Deify Bar Storage Deer • Lift-out Deer Tray for egg* • Enclosed Better Keeper • Deer Shelve* for half-gallon milk container* and' tall bottle* e "Book Shelf* Storage bt freezer door vegetable! NEW $ LOW FRIGE 268 FREE SERVICE In our own sarvica dept, with factory trained ax-part*, with a combined experience of 60 year*. ■ FREE DELIVERY M ■ By our own float of modem I ■ truck* assure you of I ■ prompt, careful delivery. B PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT Tlf • No Down Payment Til • Op to 36 Months to Pay « if |-—----------- rs Same at Cash Only The New 1965 PHILCO Refrigerator Gives you such a distinctive quality loolr! Large 13 Cu. Ft. MODEL WITH 53-lb. FREEZER a 1.42 cu. ft. freezer stores 53 lbs! • Full-width Meat and Chiller Drawer • Milk shelf in door holds half gallon containers and toll bottle* 4 White Titanium Porcelain interior a Full-length Shelf-lined Storage Door • Flush typo Door Hinges; Mag-a Full-width Porcelain Crisper hold* ' natic gasket door seal lb Bushel *168 COMPANION SPECIAL! PHILCO 19M PORTABLE TV with UHF-VHF Reception New tapered- Contbuntol style In two-tone gray with finished bock and disappearing handle. Telescoping Phrotenna for both VHP arid UHF channels,- transistorized UHF tuner; 6" x 2“ speaker with out-frent sound. Smart rollabout stand included, free 90-dqy servicet SPECIAL REDUCTION ’139” PMK FREE IT HEIR OF WKC - OPEN FBI., MON., THMS* TIL 9 P.B. C—* THE PONTIAC PEBSS, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1865 MARKETS The following are lop prices covering sales of locally grown produoe by growers and told by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Sureau of Markets as of Wednesday. tscst poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY White* IM1» ttrrid *oek 73-24) Wocfc-llnga 22-29. ' dbt«oit loot w#‘wBL lssw *6*18 ,o m alum 25W24; email 17) check* IMOVk. CHICAGO, SUTTB*, BOO* Amph Corp 1 4 W Hi mt-lk Anecon 1.75g t m *1 *1V% - It AnkenCh ,03p 1 *1* 91* 914 . ArmeoSt ) 4 M 441* 4*2* + Armour 1.60b II W 2M* Mi. A Atchlean 1.40 A von Prod JO BeMLIm* .40 CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAOO (APWWMH*»JPOMWTT-wWkieeW buying pricMlVO higher) roeiter* 24-251*) epoelol . **B White Rock fryere **•*!) tew heivy hens 104m. Livestock CHICAOO LIVESTOCK KHmXS* S^jrtsrvS5!.‘' ™ %0(h2SJ0) American Stocks NOON AMERICAN jrrja& p*....... ■H 8f i Drift My 1.20 Brunswick Bucy Brit 2 *i$4 And QIIAG Bonies^Eng 1 e LoilChg. k 25% + ft k 4Vk T W 4 np+t-ii i i&*4.? " » ?* **- Cdn Javaltn II 2% *X>? 5 88i $%iw I5N pSm? Oil' .15* Site ttWa. • .a* » ™ i 43 7% 7H 7% + 10 41* 4 4 ... i S 171* 17H 171* — New Pk Mng Pncel M RIC Group AW Scurry Rota Sbd W Air Signal Oil A 1* Syntax Cp .30* 40 MB 74 TetfwUtOl .75x0 10 17M 174* UK Control JO 44 41k 44k 25V5 251k 251k — Stocks of Local Interest OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Ounlatliim from, the NASD art ft,, •adtettva kWerdeeler price* of epproxt-mately 11 ajn. hdar «*ol*r mark-*-chAnga throughout the day. Price* net Indud* retail markup, markdown AMT Carp. BffiMl an. ■ C It lien* Utilities Clae* A Diamond Crystal ..............»•* Ethyl Carp. .................34 KBRy Olrt .....................IM Mohawk Rubber Co. .............£+ . Michigan Saamtees Tula Co. ..0J I PWifir r Safran Pi Affiliate* PuoB.vj.j.ft*. Chemical Fuad ......... CommonwooHh Itodc . 1.71 M2 ....14# 15.22 ....*.11 *Jt SBSS8: IBbSm. ! Jx 5.75 Ml Mao*. Invurtori Truat PlfMWj Stgffit ....... 16J7 11+4 .... 947 lt.74 ....14.9* 1* J* After 3-Day Advance Stock Market Pattern Mixed NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market fell into a mixed pattern early today after three days of advancing. Trading was moderate. * * * Wall Street looked for a rather quiet performance in advance of the thnMay Fourth of July weekend. Some disquieting factors were the dropln U.S. gold reserves to the lowest level since October 1938, a rise in unemployment in June and a decline in factor bookings in May. KEY ISSUES Changes of most key issues were fractional. Many were unchanged. Republic Steel gained about half a point while the other major steelmakers were un- Opening blocks included Unit- ed Air Lines, unchanged at 71% on 20,300 shares; McKesson & Robbins, unchanged at 35% on 21,400; American Telephone, up % at 07% on 7,800, and Ford Motor, up % at 32% on 3,000. Thursday, the Associated Press 60-stock average advanced U to 310.7. . * * * Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NSW YORK (AP)—Renewing if selected itock troMocftont on fork Slock ixchang* with 10:3 Sul** kbbott Lab 1 (kM* 45$* Lest CRp. 451k + % Bw Oiled C 1.90b killed Str* 3 UllsChel JO Hum Ltd .00 i 74 Mb +14k ■ **9*r-4* i *12* + 4k .... Can 1 Am on > AmBIPw 1.34 Amer ink* 1 ^*pT3|l t Cl 1.40 4Aoiiom~l ...JGes 1.70 AmOptlc 1.35 AmPhoto JO j SW 53% 534* + 12* 474k I 13 IM ! 1 ft* : * 424k + 1 * in* +1 k 27 + 4 k 174k + 1 I MM — 4 k 40* f ) 44 +1 4 «»•••• 501* — V k IPVfe — u Hw si J mi .. .. 27 20V* 20 201k 27 MVk Ml* MVk —B— 1 ISM 35% HIM 29 17% 17% 1 TVe 2 37% 3714 87% Iff » 39 1 w% mi m% 15 29% 29% 29% 574* — 4k 4fkk + V* 20 — M KlrkNet ... Kopprs 2.40* Korvette / Kresg* 1.40 hMSb5? i 4% — % » 40% 4* % i i 1% + % Cal Finl .311 CMp H .80 Carrier 1JS ____ Tree V CelaneseCp 2 -Cenco In* .30 Cent SW 1.30 CerroCp 1.40 Cert-teed .70 CdiwMAIM) Chemplpk 2 Che* Oh 4 ChIMII StP 1 ChRIPec .25p OiMtl Pee ct Chryelor lb CIT Pin 1.40 amity 2.oo CMulliu TO CoceCol* 1,70 *>taPo 11.20 i MVk .... ! 1«* + » i 424* + 1* I 774* + M met Corp IMlIn 1.271 vlngsO .741 ckndAlrc 2 LoneSGi 1.12 jjRVU 1 Loral Corp Lorlllkrd 2.50 ipm Mad Sq Oar Magnavox 1 Marauar Jk MartlnMar » MayDStr 1.50 McCall .40b McDonA .60b McKaat 1.70 Merck la fflassn*1? MlnnMM 1.10 1 67% 67% 10 19% -mm 2 14% 24% 3 24 14 30 46% #% 15 33% 33% 2 401* 401* 11 22 3 244* 14H 11 144* 14 Vi 4 371* in* 10 30’/* 30V* ml l 54W -i MVk + \ Crown Zell Cruc til 1 CurSf* Pul Curt Wr 1 . iSikSi* 4 514k 514k 3 224k IM*. 41 124k 32V* i B B 1 44k 41k 5 17Vk 144k —D— 2 25V* 25V* 24 32 32 5 344k JMk 3 MH 244k I MM 214k BS + H *Vk — Vk MM - Vk 2SM + Vk mi Dlenty .40b DomeMn .40* DougAir ,30d Dow Ch 1.10b Droeaor 1.40 Boat A 1 -—E— k MVk -HVk k 17M........ k .404* — M Ir Lin 24 524k 524* 5 4 1.40 n DMA 7#Ik I f 2.20 imer~Ei”l.20 EmerRad .40 ErleLeck RR EvensPd JOd Eversharp 1 FeirCem .St* Folrch Hiller FedDStr 1.50 FerroCorp l £imtn*CPl.» FeKhrt 1.414 Fla Pew 1.20 M.Hrua FoodFelr .40 PMC Cp 1W Ford Mat 2 For* Dolr J» “matt 1.40 :ru*nCp 1.50 MnDynam 1 lenikec 2.20 Jo nFood* 1 GenMIll* 1.40 GenMot 2 2Sg GenPrec 1 Jo 1* t T* r 73V* 73V. 73V* + V* 11K+* * ip ‘TTS*:: 54 474k 474* 1 TIM 744k 7 40 M, 13 344k 144k 3 spff 1 44 44 4 10 234* 23Vk 2 1 IM V Ny 3 MtPInl Iff8 • MV* 30V* 3 MVk MVk ill i-l ! Sll NCt HamPap US Hanna Co 1o HecleMng 1b HtrcPdr .40g Hew Pec .log Hoff Electron HottySug l.oo Homestk 1.40 iCwyud 1.10 Hook Ch 1.20 House F 1.40 Hupp Cp -29f ■ Ideal Cam 1 IllCent ind 2 IrUend *«! 2 It M „ - . a 11 14 5 24+1 —H— I 411* 41V* 411* .... If » MM 35 +] , } 0 If W + 1 . 7 42Vk 434* MO 4 1 II 274* 274* 274* - 1 IS 111 3 444k 44 444k f 1 4 41 404k 41 + 1 2 434* 4344 434* - ' 5 404* 40 404k + 1 0 01* 41* 41* .... —i— io ia% r 47% 41 — % 7 49 44% 44% + % 9 44% 44 44 - % 3 84% «3% B4%-% M SWk Slk . 7 MVk qj* S3V* — 4* hi r 3 524k 524k 52Vk - —K— 1 5 Ml* 34V* 3£*-4 It:: t 32V* 32 S2V* .. > 321* 221k 22Vk — 1 fS* 124* 1244 - Vk 2 IM 31k m... 11 154* 45Vk SSVk — V* V P# 2Vk T# + Vk 11 4*4* 441* Oft* + It 1 Ml* 1*1* MM + 1* 2 1*4* 111* 1*4* + it 1 %£ §4* $* = & —M— It 3*4* 33 57 20Vk 2C Walworth Co WomPM .50 WRMrLM a WnBonc 1.10 WUnTol 1.4* Wests El 1.20 WhlteM 1.40 Wilton Co 2 WtnnDIx *“ 204*. tun Worthlngtn 2 —X—Y- Xerox Cp JO 17 141 YhgttSht .80 10 404* 20 571k T m* 3 S3 1*1*174*. Sik 17 . p 'S3 JI Sv* B*i3 NCtshR 1.20 Netbtiry 140 Not OM 1.40 Not Fuel Mt 20 71Vk 7 S 4044 4 8 494k ( d S3 1 10 NLeed 1.500 Not Steel 2 Nat Tea .10 N EngEI 1.20 NJ Zinc 1 NYCent 1.30o NiooMP 1.10 Nornlk W 4a AuM IM - S3 83=3 Si* Si* In* 71 VS + H I 24Vk 301* MVk — 1* Northrop 1 Nwst Alrl JO j)M0|' iJB 3 344* 3*44 344* + 7 2344 2344 2344 . I 221k 22H 124* =3 PepsiCo 1.60 PflxarCha la t 8313 1 39% — % 1 36% — % kF*| ■ fc-l 1 t*3 +i3 M — 1* I 344* - 14 t 1*4* . 111k Wr Nik + W 511k 514k 514k — Vk TIS” 83 + 3 1 334* M 334k + * + V* A + 4* * + V* iS3:: S3 83 sLt-4* pis hi Sparry Rend Spiegel 1.30 Ba Std Kotlsmen StOM Cil 2.20 liOillnd 1.50a in Mil .No StertOrug .» hdt.l High Lew a* m* a ! 374* WM * a. a I 7IVk 70Vk fit S3 ! S3 +8 4* - Vk I*... it + 1* v* -H »* + v* 1* —1* I 774k 77H 774k . :ont ,75g It C .600 Unit Fruit fi HROi LM, UnltMM -1.20 ■ 1 32 M 32 + V* 2 424k 424k 424k + V. 14 44V* 44 44 ~ H 5 r s,oct orriiriT"fh^NruTiur Pkld mu iw, dividend omitted, deferred — no action'taken at last dividend mee r—Declared or paid In I2M plus i dividend, t—Paid In itod* -*“*— estimated cat distribution d trlbuted. wmSmii Issued, ltd Rant .Sir delivery. v|—IM bankruptcy or •'receivership being reorganized under 12- — Act, or 40g*rM*> o**um*p ponies. fn-Pevylgn bout terest. equalization tax. Treasury Position WASHINGTON JAP)—The cosh posltk >1 the Treasury compared with cor re I 11,727J03,139.74 I 1!,140,M7,950.1J Deposits PbcalYaar July 125,0334 0J01.47 121,192,545+57.23 Withdrawals Plecal Year— 125,954,149,059.95 !23.S9*.060.I7*.( X—TotelOtbt— 314,455,313,107.01 3HJ10J5L314J* Gpld A,H192,04i*03.59 15,441,239,507.26 (X) - Includes 42*3,344,990.7* dot' - ' subiect to statutory limit. mau TO Indus ................ *44.51—3J3 20 Rail* .............. 193.09+0.20 15 UNI* ................ 153.42-0.4* *5 Stocks ............... 32*!*3—0.75 RON* KM. Util. PflR. I Net change ........... ... ... Noon Thurs 42 0 100.1 fL) 22.7 Prans.,,piu i2.o lfM M.1 22.7 Week Ago . 12.4 101J M.O 22.7 Month Age fi) 101.7 M «J Year Ago . MJ 103.2 17+ *0.7 1945 High . 43.7 10L4 M.2 *5.0 1*45 Low .. 12.0 100.4 MJ M+ !»£».: as IK “j a? Not cheng* .-1.4 +J —J . Noon Thurs .... 445J 1MJ 1*7+1 n*v. Day ..ttfJ im.7 itfj j Week .Ago .44M 151.4 1*4+ 1 flfclll 88fr.:::::::TS3«S]33! 1*44 High .Ml 1*9+ 147J j 1*44 Low ........9)2 )11.7 HU i as extra' Business Notes Annin Seiffert, 500 Romeo, Rochester, vice pretiden and purchas-HBing art director Hof MacManus, Hjohn & Adams, ^^^Hlnc., Bloomfield Hills, is retiring ^HHn«Hafter 82 years ^HH^ith the adver-H^HHtising agency, HJk according r n e s t ffWMMBWij ones; presi-SEIFFERT dent. Seiffert joined the agency as an assistant art director in 1933. A former Detroiter, he attended the John P. Wicker School of Pine Art. Detroit Building Sold to Firm for $2.3 Million DETROIT (AP)- Sale of the 19-story, 50-year-old David Whitney Building for $2.3 million to National Investors TVuat of New York was announced Thursday by Whitney Realty Co. Ltd., of Detroit. The building, catering to physicians and dentists, is a downtown Detroit landmark at Woodward Avenue, Washington Boulevard and Grand Circus Park. It houses 300 physicians and dentists and has 175 suites occupied by associated services. Senate Meets Briefly, Adjourns for Holiday WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate met today for just three seconds, for. the side purpose of recessing ever the July 4 holiday. Sen. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., upheld Ms reputation as the fastest gavel in the membership with the bare announcement of toe action and a solid bang of the mallet. Producers Betting Yes Silver Price Rise Due? I that the price of have to rise. They A ■9 m By SAM DAWSON AP lariasM News Analyst NEW YORK—Silver producers are betting that the price of the metal will have to rise. They contend that toe cut in toe amount used for coinage by the United States will only postpone the raise for a tone. Even 'sent* government of-1 ficials admit1 that a rise from DAWSON toe present official |1J9 a fine troy ounce to aomewhere around $2 an ounce is possible in coming years. World usage of silver in industry and the arts is mounting fast and production is lagging far behind. Even if all coinage of the metal should stop, there still would be a shortage. ★ A Producers say the only way to increase toe supply is to let toe price rise so that prospecting will be attractive agrin production from low-yield ores can be resumed. Such prospecting already being pushed in the north Idaho Coeur d’Alene mining district. Mining company officials say the search is based on the firm belief that sooner a* later toe price must (ise. Nearly half of present U.S. output comes from this region. Much silver also is a by-product of copper and other mining, and output rises ami falls with the demand (or these metals. CUT CONTENT New coihage proposals cajl for elimination of silver from dimes and quarters, and cutting of silver content to 40 per cent in half-dollars. But the First National City Bank, New York, points out today that “how the new coinage wogdd affect the supply, demand and price outlook for silver” is still far from a settled question. Zooming demand for silver in recent years is partly due to new uses for toe metal in many fields of electronics and electrical equipment, including aerospace deviates. Use in the photographic field has also grown rapidly. A U.S. Treasury staff study puts total consumption outside the Communist bloc at 550 million ounces in 1984, compared with 238 million ounces in average annual demand in the 1949-53 period. Production came to 216 million ounces in 1964, against 174 million ounces in the base period. Industrial use in 1964 was 286 million ounces, against 153 million in the 194943 period. UJ, nunts used 303 million ounces in 1964, against 36 milBon in toe earlier period. Other nation used 62 million ounces for coinage in 1164, against 48 million earlier. BANK SAYS The bank notes that even if the United States had used no stiver for coins last year, the deficit outside toe Iron Curtain would have been 182 ml The U.S. Treasury suspended sales of silver in November 1981 and has been retiring U.S. silver certificates at the statutory price of 812929 an ounce. The mice on the London market Thursday was 31.297. Treasury stocks now are estimated at a billion ounces, but presi coinage uaa would cut this to about 443 million ounces by this time next year. The price would have to rise' beyond 813134 an ounce — the point at which toe silver content of present dimes, quarter and halves would be equal to their face values — before hoarders would be tempted to molt them down for their metal. * ' ★ v ★ But as world demand climbs, proguctioo must rise or even the U.S. Treasury will find it hard to maintain the present legal price and protect its coins. Silver producers seem sure that one way or another, prospecting and mining will have to be encouraged. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) *1 am a young man with a good Job and like to speculate in the market. I own 288 Wieklia River 041; 38 Edo Carp.; 38 Papercraft; 23 American Safety Equipment and 23 Pacific Tin Consolidated. Should I retain these stocks or switeh, and if so, will STANLEY S. KRESGE Exec Retires From Kresge Chain at 65 After 42 years, less two days, as an employe of the S. S. Kresge Co., Stanley S. Kresge, 1071 N. Lake Angelus, Lake An-gelus, has retired under the mandatory age-of-66 provisions of the Krehge retirement plan. He will continue as vice chairman of the company and president of the |90-million Kresge Foundation. Within two weeks, toe foun-datioa, which la 41 years has distributed fN milliaa in graato, will move to new quarters in toe Detroit Beak A Trust Baildtag. Kresge has seen the company expand to 700 stores in toe United States and Canada. He termed his job distributing the |l million o^ income ^rqm stocks and properties “frustrating” because of the task of eliminating a tong list of schools, colleges, hospitals, youth (tgantMltora and children’s institutions deserving of tives.” R. D. A) I am vary much opposed to speculation by the untrained investor. It very rarely pays off over a period of years and sometimes results in serious impairment of capital in a really bad market. Your stqcka are not wholly w i t h o u t .attraction. Wichita River Oil, a rather deficit-ridden situation, seems to have tittle appeal, and Pacific Tin has been showing good earnings but operates in Malaya, which must be considered a risky area. ★ ★ ★ To replace these two, I suggest King’s Department Stores, which is speculative only in the sense that it is a contender — and a strong one—in the relatively new discount merchandising field. And over a period of time, I would aim to upgrade my list by putting major emphasis On quality and growth, rather than on speculative attraction. * * ★ Q) “I would like to knew if investing in debenture bonds is safe and wise. We have been approached by a representative of ■ real estate cor- Voted Head of Board of Institutions Charles Edwards Jr. of Mad-iaon Heights yesterday was unanimously elected chairman of the Oakland County Board of Institutions. The seven-member board was established last February by the County Board of Supervisors to administer .counfy- operated medical facilities. John A. Macdonald, chair* man of toe social welfare board, had served as temporary chairman of the. board of institutions since it wa a porathm, which is selling debentures to yield eight per cent.” 'T. O. A) A debenture represents wholly unsecured indebtedness and its safety depends entirely on the credit of the issuing corporation. Debentures issued by American Telephone are stronger than the mortgage debt of many other companies. A debenture issued by a real estate corporation may be a n o-t h e r kettle of fish altogether. There is an element of risk in any such obligation; otherwise they would not offer an eight per cent yield, which is far above toe going rate. I myself would be inclined to avoid this type of investment, which is not only difficult to appraise, but sometimes unmarketable at well. Roger Spear’s new 48-page I e v e‘e t m e a t Guide is bow available to all readers of ttio column. Clip this notice and send 81*89 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1118, Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N. Y. 18017. (Copyright, 1885) Edwards, a member of Madison Heights’ first city council, served seven years on toe board of supervisors including 18 months on the key ways, and means committee. IQs term on toe board of supervisors expired in April and he was not reappointed as a Madison Heights representative. ADMISSION F0UCY In other business, toe board of institutions reaffirmed its admission policy on both tuebercu-laT and non-TB cases. Oakland County residents will receive priority for IB care admission. Nonresideflts ' will be admitted if then is ' Priority on admission of non-TB cases win go to persons receiving public assistance who require care at a level between that provided by a nursing home and a hospital. ; ' * |# * || County engineers reported that the $139,996 remodeling of the medical care facility Amdd be completed by toe end of August. MRS. NELSON MCCARTHY Promotion Director Is Named for Mall The Pontiac Mall shopping center, Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Roads, has named Mrs. Nelson McCarthy promotion director. She succeeds Robert L. Wittbold. Mrs. McCarthy, 2127 Hempstead, Pontiac Township, has been with the Pontiac Mall since September 1962. She has two sons who attend Oakland University and a daughter who attends Avondale High School. At file same time it was announced that Clyde Canfield, 2297 Langham, West Bloomfield Township, was named property manager for toe Mall. News in Brief Mrs. Minnie Keichof 1V72 Promt, Waterford Township, yesterday reported the theft of a power mower valued at |72 from her garage, according to township police. James HaUiagswerto, 29, of 388 N. Saginaw yesterday reported to Pontiac police that his room was entered and $55 stolen from a dresser drawer. Teen Motorist Killed GRAND RAPIDS (AP>—Stanley <1. Daniels, 18, of Grand Rapids was killed today when the car in which he waa riding struck an obstacle in the city.