The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Fereciet Chance of Showers (Detalil on Page t) VOL. 18J5 — NO. 134 THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 —68 PAGES Home Edition JO* State Budget Finish Eyed by Legislators LANSING UR — Hoping to finish the budget today and take a recess after six wearying months in session, the Legislature gave final approval yesterday to bills spending $537.4 million in fiscal 1967-68. * * * Eliminated, meanwhile, was the most controversial item left on the legislative calendars — Sunday liquor. Proponents of the measure to allow Counties to legalize Sunday sale of liquor In restaurants without a popular vote let it die yesterday. They conceded they lacked the votes to pass it in 'the House. Up for House action today were two of the biggest spending bills in the state's anticipated $1.1 billion general fund budget — those making appropria- tions for higher education and for the Department of Social Services. Approved yesterday was a bill to appropriate $323 million to various departments from a number of special restricted funds, such as the Motor Vehicle Fund, the Trunkline Fund and the Watercraft Law Enforcement Fund. ADDITIONAL SPENDING That $323 million represents state spending in addition to the $1.1 billion general fund budget. Also passed by both houses fa) identical forms were bills appropriating $17.9 million to the Public Health Department, $2.6 million to the Department of Military Affairs, $24.68 million to the Department of State Police, $10.1 million to the Commerce Department, $3.72 million to the Labor Department and $2.14 million to the Department of Licensing and Regulation. The Senate approved House-passed bills giving $22.92 million to the Corrections Department and $131.16 million to the Department of Mental Health. * * * Senate majority leader Emil Lock-wood,' R-St. Louis, and House majority floor leader William Hampton, R-Bloom-field Hills, said they hoped to finish by noon today. But a House floor fight was considered likely on the big higher education bill. The Senate version would appropriate $240.2 million. The House increased the figure to $255.7 and tacked on a 5 per cent increase in aid to public K-12 schools, estimated at about $24 million. Reuther Takes UAW Bids to Township Officers Get Longer Terms A new law, signed bv Gov. Romney Monday, will add nearly two years to the current terms of Michigan’s elected township officers and trustees. The new legislation wil] eliminate the lame-duck period now affecting township officials, who are elected in November, but must wait until April 10, before assuming of gee. Township officers — including supervisors, clerks and treasurers — elected in 1.966 will serve until Nov. 20, 1970, in accordance with the new law. Congolese Said Devouring Whites KIGALI, Rwanda W> — A Congolese Cabinet minister today reported cannibalism of white settlers in the southeast Congo as a refugee pilot told of a stalemate between mutineers and loyal troops in Kisangani to the north. Interior Minister Etienne Tshiesekedi told newsmen at Bujumbura, capital of Burundi, that Congolese had eaten several whites in Lubumbashi. He said he feared similar cannibalism might occur in Bukavu because of the mutiny there by white mercenaries and Katangan troops loyal to ex- Premier Moise Tshombe. * but was there ever a more beautiful summer morning than today? Weatherman, however, says the picture will change. He forecasts mostly cloudy skies and a little cooler tonight and tomorrow. Trustees elected in 1964 also will serve until Nov. 20,1970. Trustees elected in 1966 will remain ' in office until Nov. 20,1972. Township officers normally serve two-year terms. Trustees are elected to four-year seats. For example, Waterford Township’s Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson, who was elected to a two-year term last November, will instead remain in office until Nov. 20, 1970. His term was slated to expire in April 1969. Waterford Township Trustee Herbert C. Cooley was elected to a four-year term in November.' Under the new legislation, that term will be stretched until November 1972. The former expiration time was. April 1971. The new law reduces the wait for newly elected township officials to assume office from five months to two weeks. Beginning in 1970, township officials will be sworn into office on Nov. 20. Of significance is that no township contest will be on the November 1968 election ballot. The law climaxed a move by township leaders to wipe out the five-month lame duck period faced by newly elected township officers. Under provisions of the state constitution, terms of office can be lengthened, but not shortened. Northwesterly winds will continue at 10 to 20 miles per hour. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 10, tonight 20, tomorrow 30. The temperature at 2 p.m. was a warm 81. Chrysler Today DETROIT UR - Walter P. Reuther presented his contract demands today to Chrysler Corp., smallest of the automotive Big Three. * * * Reuther’s demands were believed identical to those he served on General Motors Monday and Ford yesterday. ' Vice’ president-administration John D. Leary, who headed the Chrysler negotiating team, told newsmen, “We are prepared to work hard to settle our differences . . . and hope we can reach an agreement without a strike.” Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers union, did not chat with newsmen' before he went into the Chrysler negotiating room. His aides said he would make a statement after he presents his demands to Chrysler. These include profit-sharing. Reuther’s Chrysler visit is his third in as many days to members of automotive’s Big Three, where current ' three-year pacts run out Sept. 4. Related Story, Page A-3 He previously dropped on bargaining tables at General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co., similar sets of what he describes as the union’s “longest and most ambitious” list of demands. The profit-sharing goal came as a surprise Monday at General Motors. Reuther emphasized this as “essential” to a peaceful settlement at Ford yesterday. * * * A guaranteed arihual income previously had been given top billing among union goals. INCOME PLAN Under a guaranteed annual income plan, Reuther says a worker must know at toe beginning of a year what his income for- toe next 12 months will be, any layoffs noT withstanding." Oh, What a Beautiful Morning... Poets rave over the perfect days of mid-70s tomorrow. Considerable cloudi-June and October’s bright blue weather, ness an<* c*®! 1* Friday’s forecast. Temperatures registering a low of 54 to 60 tonight will reach a high in the In Today's Press Nuclear Weapons ft Pentagon defends U. S. mili-' 1 tary capability — PAGE D-7. 1 Troy Schools Principal, controversial sys- 1 tern retained in heated meeting | PAGE A-4. City Affairs 1 Commission approves land trade with Michigan Bell — PAGE D-6. Area News .,........ — A-4 Astrology .............. F-5 Bridge F-5 Crossword Puzzle....... F-ll Comics ................. F-5 , Editorials ........... A-6 Food Section .......D-l—D-3 Markets . F-4 Mystery Series — —... E-II Obituaries .............E-12 Sports .............E-l—E-7 Theaters .............. D-7 TV and Radio Programs . F-ll Wilson, Earl .......... F-ll Women’s Pages ...... B-l—B-5 I I 1 I s j Mrs. Ronald Baker, JUNK ROCKET — Mrs. William Tymkow (left) and ------------- ... both of Avon Township, will present this “junk mall” laden rocket to Congress in early October along with a moving van load of the mail to make their protest emphatic. f ... RETURN FROM VIETNAM - Returning-from an inspection* tour of U.S. forces in Vietnam, U.S. officials arrive at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington late last night. From left are Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, AP Wlrtpholo Undersecretary of State Nicholas Katzenbach and Chief of Staff Gen. Earle Wheeler. McNamara is to report his findings in Vietnam to the President. (See story, page E41.) [ Freezing-of-Bodies Process Detailed by Group Leaders A long-standing rule in toe history of man is that death signals tlie end of life. Perpetuity is not now generally considered a realistic alternative. But, there is hope for the dead of the future. New techniques in freezing may open toe way for prolongation of life on Earth after death. Dr. Robert C W. Ettinger,professor of physics at Highland Park College, outlined recent developments in his concept last night at an open meeting of toe Michigan Cryonics Society at Stouf-fer’s Restaurant, Southfield. Appearing with Ettinger was Robert Nelson, president of the California Cryonics Society. Nelson, an electrical engineer, headed a four-man team that carried out toe first freezing of a human last January in Los Angeles. PURPOSE OF CRYONICS The purpose of the cryonics (low-temperature biology) movement, said Ettinger, is to preserve a body after clinical death until such time as scientific means are available to revive, repair and rejuvenate the whole person for a continued lile. The freezing process was outlined by Nelson who carried it out in January on Dr. James Bedford, a professor of psychology at Glendale College, Calif. Immediately upon death, artificial respiration is applied to prevent permanent damage to body cells that otherwise would be deprived of blood. The body is, packed in ice as quickly as possible and cooled to about 10 degrees centigrade. Ones the body is cooled to the required temperature, the blood is removed and replaced With a chemical preservative. CADAVER FROZEN After this perfusion, the cadaver is frozen and stored in a special vault at minus 320 degrees centigrade. There is no risk to the individual being frozen since failure of the process will simply leave the person dead, according to Ettinger. ★ * * About 40 people in the Detroit area, have asked to be frozen upon death, Ettinger said. N. Viets Kill 35 U.S. Troops in Vicious Highlands Battle SAIGON UR — Offensive pressure from North Vietnamese troops, which had seemed lately to be concentrated near the demilitarized zone, erupted violently today against two companies of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division in the central highlands. A large detachment of Hanoi regulars pounced on an American force totaling Junk Mail Drive 'Is Doing Well' The drive by a group of Rochester area women to collect a moving van load of “junk mail” to present to Congress is “doing exceptionally well,” according to Mrs. William Tymkow, inilia-1 tor of the effort. •k * * Forty -three centers have been established throughout Michigan to gather the mail, and some contributions have been received from a far away as Mesa, Ariz., and Roanoke, Va. The Ivory Brothers Moving Co. of Warren has donated a large moving van and a jdriver to haul the accumulation to Washington, D.C., where it will be delivered to the doorsteps of the Capitol in early October. Mrs. Tymkow of 47953 Dequiridre, Avon Township, said the drive is being made to protest a congressional plan to raise rates on personal mail while junk mail (third class bulk rate mail) continues to be sent by the millions of pieces each day at the same low rate it has always enjoyed. WWW " Members of I the Avon-Rochester chapter of toe Oakland County Democratic Women's Federation] of which Mrs. Tymkow is vice president, started the drive late this spring. about 250 men in rain-swept jungles just north of toe la Drang Valley. They killed 35 and wounded 26 in vicious, close-quarters fighting. There was no immediate accounting of North Vietnamese casualties. Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett reported from Pleiku that the infantrymen had-eempleted a survey of an area hit by B52 bombers Monday. They were on their way out when they came under heavy fire from mortars, automatic weapons and small arms. The la Drang Valley, near toe Cambodian border, was the site of the week-long battle between U.S. air cavalrymen and North Vietnamese regulars that cost heavy Casulafies on both sides in November 1965. Several major engagements have been fought in that area since. INTELLIGENCE REPORTS intelligence officers had reported that fresh North Vietnamese regiments were bracecf close to the frontier of Cambodia, which professes neutrality, during toe present rainy season for another effort to wrest . the highlands from allied control. American planes and ships carried toe war to North Vietnam again yesterday with air raids deep in Red territory and ship-to-shore bombardments far up-toe coast Five Red MIG2IS were reported sighted. * Nasser a Moderate? CAIRO (AP)—It became increasingly evident today that President Gamal Abdel Nasser is siding with the doves, as far* as immediate counteraction against Israel is concerned. Giving the first indication of Nasser’s thinking at the toplevel Cairo talks among Arab leaders, Yousef el Sebay,. Nasser’s closest confidant,, counseled patience ami moderation. Masters Champ Fires 70 in Britain HOYLAKE, England fllPD — Masters champion Gay Brewer, after opening his round with, a double bogey, fired an eagle and three birdies on the back nine today for a two-under-par 70 in the opening round of the British Open golf champion. Brewer, who went out in. a near-disastrous 39, had f i v e-onder 31 figures coming home over toe 6,995-yard Royal Liverpool course. Colorful. Doug Sanders, runner-up to. Jack Nicklaus for toe British crown last year, had an identical start as Brewer, reaching toe turn in 39, but he too' caught fire on another scorching day to cover toe back nine in 32 for a 71. The early first-round lead went to Lionel Platts, a 32-year-old Englishman, who shot 36-32—68. ★ ★ ★ Peter Jones and Jimmy Hume, two relatively unknowns from England, were tied at 69. Kel Nagle, the 1960 British Open champion from Australia, opened with a 70 and South African Gary Player, who won this title in 1959, equalled par with a 72. Most of toe field of 150, including favored Jack Nicklaus, still were on the course. - IJuyers Left Qut In The Meat First Caller Snaps Up Refrigerator “Plenty of action from our .Want Ad. First caller rushed out and bought,” reports Mr.“H:S. REFRIGERATOR WITH FREEZINO COM-partmint in top. Good condition* ^. PRESS WANT ADS Move fast to sell what you don’t need or want. Dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 A-2 l THE PONTIAC PR&SS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 High Taxes, Reserve Call-Up Seen 'Escalation Means Dark Future' WASHINGTON (AP) —, The hawks, diverted At the Congressional critics paint a j moment by the alarms of dark picture of increased taxes, I ble American involvement in price-wage controls and mobilization of reserves if President Johnson intensifies the Vietnam war. African conflicts, are otherwise relatively silent while awaiting Johnson’s decision after he con-, fers with Gen. William C. West- The doves are telling Johnson jmoreland and Secretary of De-through Senate and House jfense Robert S. McNamara, speeches that he also will be {Both just returned from Viet-risking World War UI if heinam. pours in a huge complement of I But Senate Republican Leader ground forces and expands the I Everett M. Dirksen seemed to bombing of North Vietnam. voice the general view of hawks —;-------------------------that if Westmoreland wants more, troops, he ought to have what he needs. Senate Democratic Leader jMike Mansfield, who wants a | renewed effort to reduce the present level of U.S. involvement in the Asian war, cited the possible domestic effects of ex-BOSTON (AP) - Hi. Brrt^g^cmllict. Negro popularly elected to the U.S. Senate says this summer’s racial violence is causing what appears to be a 1‘punitive reaction” to the civil rights movement. “Today,” said Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., “alarmed by riots and cries of black power which have often meant violence, the mood of the nation is resistant to progress in civil rights.” 'Riots Bring Antirights Acts! Mansfield ‘iold the...Senate. Tuesday that a third world war may be “already incubating in the ever-deepening and expanding struggle in Southeast Asia.” He said every escalation, thus far had failed to bring the conflict nearer an end. * ★ * Before we take another sig-j nificant step deeper into Vietnam,” he said, “it is to be j hoped that we will have asked ■ ourselves at what point we in-j tend to increase taxes, apply the wage and price controls, tighten i the draft exemptions, call up the reserves and make the countless other adjustments in our national life which are implicit in further extensions of! the American involvement.” Mansfield’s estimate that Vietnam expenditures will rise Israeli-Arab Forces Clash During Talks to $25 billion yearly brought a prediction from Sen. George D. Aiken, R-yt., that an increase of 18 to 20 per aent in income taxes may be in the offing. Aiken questioned whether citizens who urge intensification of the war are willing to pay the price for an all-out effort. '**"••* * An effort by Secretary of State Dean Rfisk to placate senators who vigorously protested Johnson’s dispatch of three U.S. transport planes to help the Congo government appeared to have made little headway. * * * ’ v I Chairman Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the Senate Armed Services Committee, who said it I was immoral 1o send one American serviceman to the Congo, said after hearing .Rusk 'in a closed session that he hadn’t changed his,opinidhs about anything. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. isure Israel for refusing to give (AP) — New fighting between I up .the Old City of Jerusalem. B___ .Egyptian and Israeli forces on| Israel announced that Israeli Brooke received the Spingarm land and at sea was reported|naval units sank two Egyptian] Medal for outstanding achieve-1 today as angry Moslem diplo-1 torpedo boats Tuesday in the ment by a Negro Tuesday night!mats at the United Nations first naval clash between the from toe National Association]worked on a resolution to cen-[two nations since the Middle for the Advancement of Colored |----------—~ East war last month. People during the organization’s j 1 ] An Israeli army spokesman] 58th annual convention. | Pichor RfiflU Plant Isaid the engagement occurred] in the Mediterranean about 16 miles off the occupied Egyptian town of El Arish when thei Egyptian boats fired on a pat-] An open house at the Fisher rolling ’Israeli flotilla vriiich in-Body plant, 900 Baldwin, is eluded the destroyer EJath and scheduled tomorrow from 11:30 two torpedo boats, a.m. to 2:30 p.m. to give the] The spokesman said eight Is-public, an opportunity to view:raeli ' seamen were slightly the plant operation. ' |wounded. Defeated Bill Is Slipped By CALLED IN FOR QUESTIONING — Secretary of State Dean Rude (left) and Sen. William Fulbright, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, pause yesterday, on Capitol Hill before a closed-door session of the joint Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees. Rusk was on hand to defend the administration action—criticized by members of Congress—which sent three U.S. military transport aircraft to the Congo, a new trouble area. Congress Wants to Hike Role in Troop Decisions WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress wants a much , greater voice in deciding whether U.S. military forces should be ordered into new world trouble spots, members of two key Senate committees told Secretary of State Dean Rusk. He met with them Tuesday to Eye Second Vote j on School Tax CHELSEA (AP) - School officials will meet Thursday to decide when to hold another balloting on a Chelsea school operating levy defeated by voters Monday 427-410. Also to be decided is the amount of the levy to be sought. The defeated 6.75-mill proposal consisted of a 4.25-mill renewal and a 2.5-mill increase. New state law prescribes at least a 40-day wait before another balloting can be held on the levy. Fisher Body Plant Slates Open House! >rj Reason Why 6 Adults and school-age children are invited to visit the plant. Parking will be available at Receiving Entrance Np. 1 on Bald-in. Refreshments, including coffee, donuts, soft drinks and milk, will be served to visitors. Plant tours are expected to take about 45 minutes. An Egyptian communique claimed that Israeli machine guns opened fire on Egyptian forces on the west bank of the Suez Canal south of Ismailia. The communique said Egyptian guns fired back and knocked out two Israeli armored cars. It said there were no Egyptian casualties. LANSING (AP)—Members of [the Senate Appropriations Committee demonstrated Tuesday I that there’s more than one way ! to skin a cat-or change a license fee. | Observers said it was a clever] j maneuver, but some House _ . . members said it was a dirty Cfll*7Dr/ Cnin trick ! OHIfJ Earlier in the session, Sedate] •// i i , Appropriations Committee OTlII /V\yStQrV Chairman Frank Beadle, R-St. ' ' Clair, and members Charles Zol-iar, R-Benton Harbor, and Garland Lane, D-Flint, introduced a bill changing license fees for real estate brokers. The Senate passed the measure but the House killed it. Then the senator jacked an identical provision as a rider to the 1967-68 budget bill for the Department of Licensing and Regulation — sending it over to the House on a take it or leave Grand Juror Issues 2 Bench Warrants Bench warrants were Issued yesterday by Oakland County Grand Juror James S. Thor-bum against two men who failed to answer subpoenas.' Arrested, then brought before Judge Thorbum, were Emil Pavlovics, a Madison Heights druggist, and Roman Nowicki, a former Madison Heights councilman. Why they were ordered to appear Monday before Thor-bum is not known because of the secrecy surrounding grand jury proceedings. Early in the inquiry, then conducted by Judge Philip Pratt, both Nowicki and Pavlovics, along with two other men, including Rep. Bill S. Huffman, were c i t e d for contempt of court. ★ ★ ★ The four contempt charges were later dismissed by the| Michigan Court of Appeals, a ruling that subsequently led to the disqualification of Pratt as the grand juror and the naming, of Thorbum as his successor. I The investigation being con- ducted by Thorbum on the request of State Attorney General Frank Kelley is aimed only at alleged criminal activities surrounding the Hazel Park Race Track.. Thorbura’s authority as a grand juror expires Aug. 16, since the investigation is only a continuation of the Pratt judicial inquiry which under law cai only be conducted for one year. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A heavily armed band of six greasy, thirsty stowaways who took command of a freighter off Miami Beach apparently vanished after listening to the ship captain’s jokes for two hours Tuesday. The stowaways fled ashore after straggling for 30 minutes with the moorings of two lifeboats. They brushed past a barkeeper and his date and hailed a taxi, which has not been found, either. That was the story police and officers and passengers of the ship, the Freight Transporter, pieced together. The motive for the ship's seizure was still a mystery. Ramon Carpio, captain of the 353-foot ship, said the men told him they had intended to “use the vessel to hijack another ship.” defend the dispatch of three U.S. military transports and about 126 troops to the Congo, i whose government is trying to overcome rebel mercenaries. “We don’t wish to continue intervening here, there and everywhere,” Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., of the Foreign Relations Committee commented in telling newsmen of the congressional demand [served on the administration. He also charged the administration’s Congo decision was based on greatly exaggerated reports of dangers to Americans there. Fulbright said the experience of the initial involvement in Vietnam caused what he described as growing congressional apprehension over the authority of the President to order U.S. military forces into trou-' bled areas. He said Rusk seems' unaware of this apprehension. In the future, Fulbright said, Congress wants to be in oh the decision - making. Consultation involves more than notifying congressional leaders of decisions already taken, the chairman asserted. Birmingham Area News Ambulance Firm Loses Pact, Not Determination BIRMINGHAM — “I’m still | here in busines and I’m here to stay,” said Michael O’Hara, owner of Birmingham Ambulance Service, 855 E. Maple, which lost a city contract held for 10 years. His firm lost in bidding for city contract to a Royal Oak-firm, Oakland’ Directors Service at 13Wt Mile near Woodward. O’Hara asked $1,000 per month, but the other firm asked $300* ^ The contract amounts to a subsidy by the city. Under it, an ambulance service is obliged to have vehicles ready at any time of night or day at the call of police or firemen. ★ ★ ★ O’Hara said his ambulances averaged four minutes to answer a call and challenged the new firm to equal that time. $350 SUBSIDY O’Hara’s bid had steadily risen over the years. He started out with $350 subsidy, when the city was “hurting for an am. bulance,” he pointed out. However the costs of everything climbed since then and to keep an ambulance now costs $138 per day, he said. The Royal Oak firm at Monday’s commission meeting promised to provide equal service at a far lower rate. Representatives of the firm | said they were able to-bporate more cheaply due to superior bookkeeping and collecting services. O'Hara commented “If they can do it, let them.” He said he intends to bid again next year. Meanwhile, h i s service is “available anytime to anyone,” he said. Suspect Shot in 'Escape Try' The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly sunny, cooler and less humid today. High 74 to 80., Mostly cloudy and a little cooler tonight and Thursday with chanceof~showers later tonight Thursday. Low tonight 54 to 60. Friday outlook: considerable cloudiness and quite jcooI. Northwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles today. Precipitation probabilities: in per cent: Today, 10, tonight 20, tomorrow 30. At I a.m.: Wind Velocity 10 n Direction: Northwest Sun eett Wednesday at 9:10 p.m. Sun rises Thun s Thursday at 12:24 a. One Year As* in Hlphest. temperature . Lowest temperature . . Mean temperature Weather: Rain 1.S in (as recorded Highest temperature Lowest temperature 77 54 Los Angeles 8 06 62 - Miami Beach S 83 » Milwaukee * 77 67 New Orleans t PHRIP 82 54 New York ft Traverse C. 88 63 Omaha 8: -------- »l 67 Philadelphia ft 85 72 Phoenix to 82 45 Pittsburgh 8! SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St be your own decorator with unpainted furniture «.. and when you buy it here at SIMMS annex store, you'll save morel SIMMS annex storo hours are: -*■- Thurs. and Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. — Frl. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. WiAtHH IU01AU NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and tbpndershowers are forecast tonight In the Carolinas, Florida, the southern Plains and the Rocky Mountain region. Cooler temperatures are expected in the northern tier of states from the Dakotas to the middle Atlantic states and New England. sanded and ready to finish yourself . • smoothly sanded pine wood furniture is ready to point finish in any color you wish • kiln dried, too • select from many other pieces of unpointed furniture in Simms annex store. 3-shelf bookcase 3-drawer nite stand 5-drawer chests 10-drawer chests M CO 00 11* 20“ 3188 • m x 30 x 37-inch' lize • model 353 at discount price. • 15 xl3V4x 26-inch size nite stand with 3 handy drawers. • 15 x 27 x Winch • pine wood chest of* drawers • easy-glide drawers • model 3051 • 15 x 52 x 36-inch chest of. drawers •-model 310 with easy glide drawers. Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored if you have a credit cord from a major a}l company or from ■ Sears, Hudson's, Words, Kmart.Waite's, fenne/s, etc., you may be eligible for instant credit on purchases of $30 to $150 hereof Simms. Ask mahout it, Wiretap Hearing for Haifa July 24 CHICAGO (AP) - James R. Hoffa, Teamsters Union president now in prison, will be brought to Chicago July 24 for a hearing to determine whether government wiretapping aided his conviction of fraud and con-| spiracy in 1964. wee Judge Richard Austin of U. S. District Court issued the order Monday for Hoffa’s appearance. One of two men arrested as suspects in the burglary of a Pontiac grocery store was shot by police early today when he attempted to escape, according to city officers. * * * In satisfactory condition In Pontiac General Hospital is Rob: ert McCullough, 26, of 1147 Stanley. McCullough was shot once in the right leg, police said, after he and Sampson Miracle, 39, of 125 Parkdtde were followed to the Stanley address and arrested shortly after an undetermined amount of goods and cash was taken from Figa’s Market, 344 W. Ken-nett, about 3:30 a.m. Police, who said the suspects were pursued because of a vehicle identification by witnesses, said Patrolman Robert Bates fired the shot when McCullough attempted to flee while being placed in handcuffs. * * * Miracle is in custody in Oakland County Jail pending arraignment on a burglary charge according to officers. Theft Hits Police DETROIT (AP) — Thieves stole property from the parked cars of two policemen at an East Nine Mile Road precinct headquarters Tuesday. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Get All the Latest 196& PANASONIC ^ Products Here at SIMMS Right Now! PmSOHIC 8-TRS. Pocket Radio Camera Styled Miniature As shown — $16.95 seller — superb recep- _ tion, push-pull audio output circuitry and superheterodyne for high- sensativity. Slide-rule tuning. Smart leatherette camera styling. Model R1326. Only $1.00 holds in layaway. PANASONIC 9-Transistor FM-AM Portable Radio Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored Superb design and engineering. A,. 216-Inch dynamic speaker delivers full balanced sound. 2-*tep tone control. Complete ready to play. $37.95 seller. Model RF 680 tryPuuusonic... 'PANASONIC’ Portable Tape Recorder 2m Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored $37.95 value—lightweight and compact recorder operates anywhere. Automatic recording level control for perfect recordings, 2 speeds, capstan drive wide range 3" PM Dynamic speaker. With accessories and batteries. $1.00 holds in layaway. Model RQ113S. 0 FM-AM Rpdio ft Phonograph Portable AC & Battery Power Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored $59.95 value—compact unit gives you listening pleasure wherever you go—4" dynamic speaker for brilliant sound. FM-AM radio and 3-speed phono with flip-over cartridge. . . and batteries take aver automatically if AC current should fai!.£omplete. Model SG571/ 4#9S PANASONIC’ 10-TRS. Battery & AC Power FM-AM Portable 49»5 Charge It! Major Credit ception, slide rule tuning, el antenna. With batteries and parphone-Modpi RF 757. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 A—a Ford VP Speculates His Firm Is Likely UAW Target for Pact DETROIT (AP) - Its vice president in charge of labor relations figures that Ford Motor Co. “stands a better than even chance” of being the “target’ of the United Auto Workers Union in this year’s contract bargaining. Such speculation came from Ford’s Malcolm L. Denise shortly before the UAW presented him with what Denise described as “a long, large and difficult’ set of demands Tuesday. with the union negotiators who want profit-sharing, a guaranteed annual income and substantial wage increases among other things, Denise told newsmen he still thought Ford stands pretty good chance of being it.” UAW strategy in the past has been to win a contract by strike or otherwise from the “target” company .then “target” company, thert use it elsewhere. Denise's speculation came ii a news conference. Following him, UAW President Walter P. Reuther said Mr. Denise not,” but added, "I’ll find out.”]3 supplemental unemployment POTENTIAL TARGETS ;beneflt plan there' Igm chances Reuther isn’t likely to name target until he decides where he stands his best chance of winning. That decision likely will be delayed until the final days of current three - year contracts that expire September, 6. Denise said that based “the logic of the situation, Ford could be the target, as it was in 1949 and 1955. Chrysler was the target the last time around in 1964, when the UAW won early] retirement with pensions ranging up to $400 a month. The I don’t know if I union got its first pension plan volunteering orjat Ford in 1949 and in 1955 got Reuther said that “right now. Ford is one of three companies The size of General Motors in our general sights.” The others would be General Motors, the Industry giant, and Chrysler Corp., smallest of the Big Three auto makers. After a three-hour session makes a strike against it a serious financial risk. But the UAW pulled its longest ever against any of the Big Three there. That was in tins 1940s and it lasted 114 days. The UAW’s strike fund is expected to reach Curious Pair Held, Grilled in Maneuvers $65 million by the time current pacts expire. But a strike against GM, where the UAW claims almost 400,000 members, would drain the fund dry in just over six! weeks, even at the UAW’s lowt strike benefit rates of $20 weekly for a single worker, $25 for a member with a wife and $30 for] a man with a family. The drain of a GM strike KINGSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) - ; Two teen-agers mistaken for Special Forces troopers disguised as civilians were takenlwould run about $10 million a prisoner Tuesday during a mili-|week- A strike at Ford with aj tary maneuver in central West!1^'®** UAW members would, Virginia cost about *3 8 rn*1*‘on week'y “They were on top of us be- H c>nteT & fore we knew what .happened,”I95-000 UAW hour^ rated work' said David Mayle, son of Tun- flbodt $2.3 milion a week. | nelton Mayor Corder Mayle Before Denise tabbed Ford as j “We were scared to death." ] a most likely target, others * * * within the industry had ex ...., , * „ pressed a similar view pri- Mayle and Larry Harris, 1 also of Tunnelton, said they had £' spotted helicopters and went to TARGET investigate. ' But Chrysler — the least sus-j “But instead of finding them, pected—ended up the 1964 tar-they found us,” Mayle ex-j get. Most guesses then were plained. GM. INTERROGATED The youths Were interrogated] Strike Is Ov©r and confined to a compound at Camp Dawson for more than, an MUSKEGON (AP)—Plumbers hour until they were properly |apd steamfitters, members of identified. Both were wearing Local 154, AFL-CIO, were back old Army fatigues. Mayle also ion the job today, ending1 a work wore a green beret. stoppage since Thursday which The incident occurred as threatened major West Mich-members of 19th Special Forces igan construction projects. Group were attempting to infil-! Agreement with contractors was trate‘territory defended by Ft.]reached Monday but details Knox, Ky., soldiers. i were not revealed. IT’S THE RIGHT TINE when you wear , Q OMEGA THE WATCH FORA-UfETtME OF mt)S POSSESSION A-Stlf-Wlndint. date-dial Seamaster $1 Other Seamasters $95 to )<--8-14K (Old, matching bracelet. Sapphette I..., ..... .rw.t.l facet-edged crystal $235 0\ix pride in being able to offer Omega watchea ’ to the customers of this store is two-fold. First, only the finest jewelers are privileged to offer these exception^ timepieces. Each jeweler is selected on the basis of high ^Irniral standards and its reputation for integrity. Second, the expert watchmakers jj, our store proudly rec-* Omega watches. They know the inside facts and why it takes many times longer to make an Omega than an ordinary watch. Every Omega movement undergoes 1497 quality-control inspections from blueprint to final assembly tp assure peerless accuracy and long service. Sold with a world-service guarantee...honored in 163 countries. Omega watches for men and women are priced from |65 to over "*1000. Ask for free style brochure. REDMONDS Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Parking in Rear of Store ^Aadterjaed Omega Agency...the WorUTs ififost Wanted I Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac TOM0WW.Thurs.9ajnio9p.nl OnV Here At SIMMS SXSm Coupon Sale Our department managers have been scoUring their departments to find special items that you may need and put their lowest possible prices for this one day coupon Sale. So clip those coupons and shop Thursday^^^g^^MW>w^to^^^^niitities. 2-Lb. Bag ‘Newmans' Salt Water Taffy Reg. 98c Delicious, fresh salt water taffy-famous Newman's brand. Limit 2. Candy—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon Easy—Accurate ‘DrHz1 Electric Scissors With Coupon 488 Cuts all fabrics the easy electric way. Safe and accurate, too. Just press the button. Limit 1. Sundries—Main Floor — Clip Zhis Co Carton of 88 Books, 1,000 Lttet Book Matches With. Coupon 1 3120* 25c value, box of 50 books of book matches, 1,000 lites. Limit 3. Tobacco—Main Floor % Zhis Coupon 150 Sheets St Envelopes Stationery Pack With Coupon 33* 98c value,-giant pack of stationery—50 envelopes and 150 sheets of paper. Sundries—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon l-Ft. American Made Air Mattress s. [09 R«g. $1.59, inflatable Clip Zhis Coupon Throws 750-Ft. Beam 5-Cell Flashlight 39* All metal flashlight, regular 98c value, throws' powerful beam. Batteries are extra. Limit 1. ■ • Sundries —Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon IVfrxl 1-inch 96 Pages Coloring Book 14* Regular 29e value, big 96 page coloring book keeps the children occupied on rainy days. Sundries —Main Fleer Clip Zhis Coupon Score Liquid Men’s Hair Groom Wf.th Coupon 87* $1.49 value, 11-oz. Score hair groom made by Bristol Myers. The dear liquid with the grooming action of a cream. Drugs—Main Floor individually Foil Wrapped Alka-Seltzer Tablets 98c valud, pkg. of 36, a foil -wrapped to Way fresh. Redyes excess acidity. Drugs—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon Imperial Cubes IV Flashcube Camera Reg. $6.50 seller. Uses 127 size 12 exposure black and white or color -prints. Cube not included. Cameras —Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon 9-Volt Transistorized Walkie-Talkies The Mon From Washington SPY Model.. Solid state walkie-, talkies, complete with battery. $8.95 value. Comoros—Main Floor -iffS Clip Zhis Coupon 'ABC'Plastic Page _ Photo Album »<"• 11^ FjWS—; Coupon I Holds 48 prints, for color-pack, swinger or instamatic Cameras—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon — Ideal for Travel Study View Master Viewer $1.75 value, for children or ' adults. Comes with 1 FREE reel. Cameras —Main Floor Clip Zhis 1 Big Family Size Tube Pepsodent Tooth Paste 48* - 95c value; the good tasting tooth paste for the whole family. Fights tooth decay and mouth odors. brUgs—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon Halo Shampoo 530 — $1.09 value, 6Vi-oz. Halo shampoo for normal or dry hair conditions. Leaves hair shiny clean. Drugs—Main Floor' Clip Zhis Coupon Fresh Tasting‘Reef Antiseptic Mouthwash With Coupon 53* $1.09 vaiue 14-ozi the unique new mbuthwash for clean breath. Drugs—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon New Spray for Women Mum Deodorant Clip Zhis Coupon Clip Zhis Coupon White Enameled Wood Ot Men’s Dungarees i, l ~ - |99 Toilet Seat 2*2 Men's work dungarees, heavy 11%-oz. weight, slight irregulars of $3.49 values. Sizes 28 to 42. , —Basement Clip Zhis Coupon Tough, Heavy Weight Boys’ Brushed Denims |50 With Boys' brushed denim westerns, tough heavy weight denim, | fully sanforized and bar-tacked. Sizes 16 only. — Basement - H* Replace old Worn-out aerial now. Complete with all parts necessary tor installation. Hardware—2nd Fleer Clip Zhis CouponClip Coupon Yinyl Covered Reinforced Train Case 10-Cup ‘West Bend’ Electric Coffee Maker Train case with mirror, Vinyl covered and fiberglass rein-1 forced. Slight irrs. Choice of blue or gray. — Basement ^ Appliances—2nd Fleer Clip Zhis Coupon^^^Clip Zhis Coupon^ V«-ln. 'Black A Decker1 Electric Drill With geared chuck and 3-wire cord. 2250 rpm motor for dependable long life service. Limit 1. Hardware—2nd Fleer Clip Zhis Coupon Clip Zhis r Your Choice Pkg. of 8 5^ Dishcloths, Towels 86* Shakospearo Push-Button Fishing Reel With Coupon 4-- 12x12-inch all cotton dishcloths— pkg. of 8, or 12x24-ineh hack ■ toweling towels. Pkg. of 8. 1 $ — Basement Model 1771, pushbutton Won-deccast, star drag reel, casts artificial ond live baits without backlash. Limit 1,,. Sports—2nd Floor Clip Zhis Coupon^^M^Clip Zhis Coupon Dishwasher-Proof, 8-oz. Coffee Mugs - $2.98 value, set of 4 oven-proof, dishwasher-proof and color fast 8-oz. mugs. Gift boxed, too. Housewares—2nd Fleer 32x80-lnch Vinyl Folding Doers With Coupon 2p Fits 32x80-)nch door opening. Your choice of beige or cloudy white. Easy to install. Hardware—2nd Fleer Clip Zhis Cpupon 5-Qt. Ice Cream Freezer Manually Operatod $2.19 value/ famous Ecko basting ' -----, and spatula | _ ith blue Teflon H Housewares—2nd Floor ^ gj Regular $7.98 seller. Makes Grandma used to make. Comes complete with recipe book.' Housewares—2nd Floor 1Bx2T-ln. Sponge Rubber $1.09 value, 4Vi-oz. The famous Mum deodorant now In the Spray form. It's so easy to use,; Drugs—Main Floor Clip Zhis Coupon Is Kitchens With Coupon* Fatigue Mat 46* Large size checkerboard | sponge rubber mat relieves tired leg muscles. Ideal for | at sink or ironing board. Housewares—2nd Floor. | | i- hold appliances, adjust- jg/f able, fits under ell ap- Sweetener Tablets Swseta from Squibb Clip Zhis Coupon Zhis Coupon ™.ftsr Clown-Animal Pictures, 4il4#i Metal Lined Vinyl Wastebasket Colorful clowns and Ibvable dog pictures with white frames. Ideal for nursery,1 den, etc. 10Vbx!2*tlkev Housewares—2nd Fleer [27 Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Tufted vinyl wastebasket with meta| lining. Ideal for any room. Regular $4.49 value. Choiee of pink, gold or green. Until 2. t \ Houeeworee—2nd Figof V THE POX'riAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Troy Schools Keep Principal, System By ED BLUNDEN TROY — In an emotion-packed school board meeting last night, the high, school principal survived another motion to fire him and the “modular system” survived the educational trash can. In both cases the vote was 4-3. About 300 persons jammed the high school cafeteria. The board meeting was a climax to a long, bitter dispute on how to solve the district’s financial crisis — which is expected to be in the red about |465,000 by next June — and the experimental education system in effect at the high school. • * * * The meeting ended with petitions being circulated demanding the school board hold another election asking for an eight-mill school levy, a request that was defeated by a 214-1 margin on June 12. Oxford Council OKs Hearing on Rezoning for Expansion of Plant OXFORD — The Village Council last night authorized a public hearing on a request to rezone 8.35 acres of land in the northeast section1 of town from residential to industrial. The rezonffig war TOSjmmended' fcr“ approval by the planning commission. ★ ★ ★ Village Manager Robert Smalley said that the township land adjoining this acreage is now zoned industrial. He said the change within the village would allow expansion of a small industrial plant now. located in the township. The area is near some abandoned gravel pits. MB! NEWS 5-POINT PROPOSAL Dr. Rex Smith, schools superintendent, acting as a catalyst, clarified the issues by making a five-point proposal. “I’ve been backed into a corner,” he Lake Orion Will Get Tough With Junk Violators LAKE ORION — The Village Council here has served notice on residents that unsightly and unhealthy junk collections will not be tolerated. . ★ ★ ★ The council added two sections to the village’s public nuisance ordinance stiffening the terms of the ordinance and establishing penalties for its violators. Excessive collection of junk, scrap metal, lumber and other discarded materials on private property or village premises will be punished with a fine not to exceed $100 and a jail term not to exceed 90 days. Complaints against persons accused of violating the ordinance will be investigated by Village Manager John F. Rein-eck who also serves as village health officer. ★ ★ ★ The ordinance was made effective .immediately. REPRESENTATIVE SELECTED In other business, the council voted to appoint Village President Wallace Crane the council’s representative to a Lake Orion area recreation committee. Crane will take steps to form the committee to be composed of representatives of the Orion Township Board, the Lake Orion Youth Center, and the Orion School Board. Formation of the coprimittee was requested by the Pontiac Area United Fund which has approved a grant of $2,610 to the Orion Area Youth Guidance Committee to conduct a summer recreation program. said, “I have to take a stand.” His proposals were: • Fire Joseph Bechard, high schbol principal. • Drop the Stanford System (modular) at the high school. • Return to traditional classroom procedure. ★ * * • Call for an investigation and evaluation by outside educational authorities. • Drop “tea-grouping” or “sensitivity training.” MIXED VOTE The first three proposals were defeated, the request for outside analysis passed unanimously and it was decided “sensitivity training” had already been done away with. Dr. Smith said he had “lost aU confidence” with Bechard’s ability to administer the modular system. He said many complaints had been received, of students loitering in the halls in the unscheduled type of class procedures. He also attacked teachers who did not know how to handle the system and who were indiscriminate in handing out passing marks. which they “skipped” or “were not taught.” Board members and parents in the audience said the system was fine for some students, but others seemed unable to cope with it. DIFFERENT FORMS Trustee Donald Richards pointed out . that 1,400 schools used a form of modular system and it was up to the district to find the one best-suited for it. In the confusion and noise of the meeting, the modular system was actually voted out for a few minutes. In the roll-call vote which followed discussion of the i s s u e, Robert Dolmag voted to abandon it. Members of the audience pointed out he had been speak-. ing in favor of it a few moments before. * * * The issuq was called back and then passed 4-3. Voting against the system were Lloyd Stage, Alex Tunstal and Harold Janes. TO RETAIN BECHARD Dolmag also voted to retain Bechard, the principal, as did Stage, William Stewart and Richard Snoad. Tunstall and Janes, newest member of the board. The board announced a 28-step austerity program revealed bejpre the millage election loss was being put into effect. ★ ★ ★ , The junior high was placed on a shift basis, divided between moaning and afternoon groups. Sports, music and art are,to be dropped. VICTORY ONLY HOPE The only hope expressed for retaining at least some of the programs was a quick millage election victory, it was pointed out. A committee was formed among the audience and petition-taking started as ' the meeting broke up. * ★ , * Trustee Stage made a plea to the audience when the issues at hand were resolved: “Let’s quit fighting and make our school system one Troy can be proud of," he said. Students were advised to retake classes Voting against him were Richards, FACE-LIFTING—The trailer park site on Orchard Lake Road in Keego Harbor gets a face-lifting. The lot was recently sold to the Roll. Development Co. of Pontiac, whose first step in renovating the site is the removal of large trees that lined Found in Bloomfield Hills the roadway. The trailer park is to be relocated closer to Cass Lake while space along the street will be cleared for future stores. Indian Skeleton Marked for Research BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The bones of an Indian found at a building site across from City Hal] will be used in a study of ancient disease. Dr. Warren L. Wittry, director of the Cranbrook Institute of Science, said he has offered the remains for study by Dr. Donald- Hagge of St. Mary’s Hospital, Livonia. “Dr. Hagge has an interest in paleopathology (ancient diseases) and is writing a book on the subject,” said Dr. Wittry. The skeleton is at the institute, mid the bones are marked by arthritis and absecesses, the director said. They were found by workers for the Alden Building Co. on a site for the Kingsridge apartments. ★ ★ .* Dr. Wittry said the bones were marked by the presence of a copper of bronze object believed buried with the dead Indian. However, despite a renewed search the object was not found. “It would prove extremely valuable in dating the bones,” Dr. Wittry said. He would like to know if the metal was a type brought to the continent by Europeans or one that Indians made for themselves. Copper-using Indians predated white man in this area, Dr. Wittry pointed out. FOUR FINDINGS About four findings of Indian remains have been made recently in the Bloomfield Hills area, he said. However, he doesn’t expect many more. “The places chosen to build homes are exactly the , places the Indians preferred,” he said. Milford Rejects Bids to Fix Bridge The price wasn’t right as far as the Milford Village Council was concerned. ★ ★ ★ . The council decided to forego immediate plans for repairing the River Street Bridge when they learned that the lowest bid for the work was still some $5,-800 above village manager Joseph S. Brophy’s original estimate of costs. In January, when the council voted to accept bids for the bridge repairs, Brophy estimated the cost would be approximately $12,000. While rejecting all bids, the council did indicate that it may prefer to completely reconstruct the bridge sometime in the future, Village Clerk Mrs. Norma Jean Melzer said. * * * Hiie River Street Bridge has been closed since it was destroyed in an accident last year. 1,460 U.S. Planes Lost SAIGON UP) - The United States has lost 1,460 planes over North and South Vietnam so far during the war, the U. S, Command reported. DR. REX SMITH Principal in Utica Gets Directorship UTICA — The Utica Community Schol Board has appointed Leonard Morrison, currently principal of Morgan Elementary Schbol, to the post of director of elementary education for the distrct. ★ ★ it Morrison, 37, 45890 Brownell, before becoming principal of Morgan, was principal of Sterling Elementary School for seven years. The bpard also appointed Bernard Matrille of 11210 Saar to a position on the board vacated by the resignation of William Porter. ★ * 1 ★ Matrille, 44, is an engineer at the General Motors Technical Center in Warren. School Millage Supporters Will Present Views HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Proponents of a 10-mill school ballot issue wiil present their point of view at three meetings coming up in the area. ★ * * The millage proposal lost in the June election by a narrow margin, but school authorities are hoping to put it across in a second attempt. At stake is about one-fifth of the school’s total money. Of the 10 mills being asked, 7 are operating renewal and 3 represent a tax increase. The meetings are set: tomorrow, 8 p.m., Holly High School, 850 E. Sherman; Tuesday, Holly High, 8 p.m.; and July 19, 8 p.m., Davisburg Elementary. A third election may be held, if the second fails, and under study is a plan to institute an austerity school budget in the event all elections fail. According to school officials a group of 70 volunteers is helping with the mill-age election. Oxford School Board Elects New President OXFORD — The board of education has elected Robert McWilliams as president for the coming year, replacing Louis Coryell. Roe V. Sausser was reelected secretary and Stewart Langley was again named treasurer. * ★ * The board also discussed finding another building to house the administrative offices. Schools Supt. Roger Oberg said the high school, where the offices are now located, needs the extra two rooms which would be made available if the offices were moved. Gets Boys State Post PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Robert Hill of 2940 St. Clair has been elected to the office of city assessor at the American Legion Wolverine Boys State. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hill. For Letters to Viet GIs Agency Apologetic DETROIT UP) — The Detroit office of the Michigan Department of Social Services was apologetic today. oVef certain letters to servicemen in Vietnam. * The letters —. to servicemen whose families are on welfare — implied that the men might send home some of- their combat pay. Mildred Fritz, a district supervisor for the state agency, said the letters were sent as a matter of form to relatives of persons receiving state aid. Miss Fritz said no serviceman needs to send home any money — nor does he even need- to acknowledge the letter. ★ ★ ★ She said the department is studying the matter. “Whether or not these letters should be sent to soldiers whose income is limited and who are in battle is a question in my mind,” ^she said. { The practice was disclosed when one young soldier sent his letter home to his mother. It reportedly was the first letter he got from home since arriving in Vietnam two weeks ago. The soldier’s father was described as a wounded World War II veteran who has been in and out of hospitals since his service and unable to hold a steady job. ' * ★ The form letter, received by servicemen as well as others, said, “It is important that we know about your Income, obligations and contributions to this relative before we can help or continue to help your relative.” (• W . M , Jimii - m twimJSodjy vt 900 Baldwin Avenue ma "A Good Place to Work" Anck i r UrbN rlvJUo Thursday, July 13,1967 t Plant Tours From 11:30 A.M. to 2:30 P.M. Adult and ' -School Age Children v . Invited : . ,■ * \ - yf -mlSt, v * * /■ • Park At Receiving Entrance No. 1 on Baldwin Avenue THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Hot Water for the Romans a Future Power Source? WASHINGTON (UP!) old Romans steeped in the stuff — undoubtedly munching languidly on grapes or sipping wine. Twentieth Century Icelanders use it to heat houses and generate electrical power. Bills are pending in Congress to exploit It further in this country, particularly in Hawaii, Alaska, and western states. The “stuff” is geothermal energy, manifested in the Roman Baths of old as hot water supplied freely by Mother Earth and elsewhere in this century as steam to drive power generators. ★ ★ * “The earth,” according to the U.S. Geological Survey, “Is a tremendous reservoir- of heat, with hot spots generally occur- ring near areas -of volcanic activity that occurred during the past million years. INCREASE IN USE “World use of the earth’s tural heat as an energy source mainly in Italy, New Zealand, Iceland, and the United Stated — has now reached abput one million kilowatts. “It can probably be increased at least 10 times under present economic cohdi-tions, and maintained for at least 50 years. “This production would be approximately equivalent to the energy produced by burning one billion tons of coal.” * ★ ★ To tap the earth’s subterranean heat sources for power, you drill holes deep into the crust and then channel the up- rushing steam into turbine generators. MINOR ROLE At the moment, geothermal energy seems likely to contribute only in a minor way to civilization’s fast-growing power needs. But .the same thing might have been said about petroleum resources a dozen decades ago. According to the geologi- Clerk Retires ADRIAN (AP)—County Clerk Alice Welch retired today after a 47-year career in the Lenawee County Courthouse. She has been clerk since 1956. Lenawee County supervisors designated today as “Alice Welch Day” and closed the courthouse early to give her a party. She is 70. cal survey “Our knowledge regarding geothermal resources is comparable to that regarding petroleum resources at the turn of the century,” Since early Roman times “Health spas” built around hot springs have flourished in Italy, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Arkansas, Georgia, North . Carolina, Virginia, and North Dakota. ★ ★ ★ Italy, in 1904, was the first nation to use steam from the depths for power. Now Italy and New Zealand generate about 400,000 kilowatts each from this source. WORLD LEADER Iceland is the current world leader in use of geothermal energy for production of heat electricity. California is generating more than 56,000 kilowatts the with steam supplied by earth. Mexico, Central America, and New Britain Island in the South Pacific have geothermal power projects. The Russians are exploiting the deep volcanic heat of Kamchatka Peninsula. ★ ★ * Of the world’s total geothermal resources, according t6 the geological survey, the United States possesses 5 to 10 per cent. Bills now before Congress would spur their development. Hospital Exec HART (AP)—Robert Traut-man, Oceana Hospital administrator the past seven years, has resigned to become head of the Manitowac, Wis., Memorial Hospital on Aug. 1. it ennetif ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 9 THE PENNEY STORY 4One eye on quality; one on price” By ROBERTA NASH More often than not, in a store's newspaper advertising, the emphasis is on the price of merchandise, for this is the item that readers want tp know. But the Penney people want to besureyou understand that this emphasis on price in advertising does not represent the thinking within thi Penney organization. The thing that makes Penney wheels go round is value, or what you get for that low price. “We have to keep one eye on quality and the other on price,”oneof our buyers said tome. “Every sale we make today is designed td bring the customer back tomorrow.” SAVE $1 i Non-slip bra mado of cotton- f Dacron® polyostar - nylon with cotton lined nylon loco cups. 32-36A; 32-40B, C. NOW .. .2 fot$4 SAVE *2 Long-fog panty glrdlo of ny-lon-rayon-rubbor-cotton with Ho(onca® nylon inner bands. S, M, L. XL. Proportioned. NOW ... 5.95 1 iJtnA | ’ LIKE IT? CHARGE IT? ftf .. SAVE *1 SAVE *1 SAVE 50' Adjustable stretch strap bra of nylon-Lycra® spandox; cotton-rayon cups. Stretch back. 32-36A; 32-40B, C. All cotton bra with soft Da- All cotton bra with 'petal lift' cron® polyester fiberfill. cup supports, delicate em-Adjustable stretch straps, broidery. 32 to j36A, 34 to 32-36A; 32-38B; 32-38C. 36B,C. NOW . . 2f-r$5 NOW .. 2*o,,5 NOW. 2.50 SAVE *1 SAVE *1 SAVE *1 'Criss Cross' bra with embroidered nylon cups, acetate-rubber polyester elastic, t 32-38B, 34-40C. Soft shape brd with nylon, Size-up cotton bra has soft lace and polyester fiberfill foam rubber cup lining. Fills cups, nylon-spqndex elastic, out 'in between' sizes. 32-White and colors. 38 A, 32-36B. NOW .. .2fo,*6 NOW .. .2 for*5 NOW . . .2f.r*4 LIMITED TIME ONLY! save 15% to 25* (on our exclusive Adonna@foundations! SAVE $1 Nylon-Lycra® spandex bra with Kodel® polyester cup lining. Stretch straps adjust. Sizes 32 to 36A, 32 to 40B. SAVE$1 SAVE*! Cool cotton bra with nylon Stretch strap bra of Dacron® lace cups, rayon - cotton - polyester-nylon-cotton. Da-spandex - nylon elastic. 32- cron® fiberfill cups. White, 36A and 32 - 36B, C. pink, blue. NOW J .2 for *5 NOW .. 2f«*4 NOW .. .2 for *4 SAVE *1 Proportioned waistline girdle of nylon-rayon-rubber-cotton. Slimming inner control’ bands. White, Black. SAyE$2 Proportioned panty girdle of nylon-Lycra® spandex has slimming self panels. White, black, pink. SAVE $1 'Action back* long leg panty girdle of nylon-Lycra® spandex. Acetate-rayon-spandex elastic panels. S, M, L, XL. NOW .. . 4.95 NOW . . . 6.95 NOW . .. 4.95 PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. OF... Our "NEW” LOCATION at 3432 W. HURON ST., Just West of Elizabeth Lake Road COUNTY'S Exciting New ■EMU MIME A Luxurious Center Dedicated to Your Health and Recreation Combining the latest from Palm Springs and Europe Be a Charter Member!. Next SO men or women who call or come pre-opening'spegial HURRY.. . LIMITED \ ENROLL NOW FOR affiliated Prestige Club, are located in itie. throughout the U.S., Can.de, Latin i and Europe. It’, fun to belong. CALL 334-1591 NOW! THE SPA (HYDRO-SWIRL POOL) AREA: EXCLUSIVE Direct from Europe and Palm Springs. Relax in special seats while Hot Swirling Mineral Water explodes against you to give you the very finest in Modern Hydrotherapy. Stimulates entire-muscular and circulatory system. Offers relief from arthritis, rheumatism, bursitis, aches and pains. FEATURING ★ ROMAN STEAM ROOMS Steam Away Pressure, Tension, Business ★ DESERT DRY HEAT ROOMS Increases Circulation . Relieves Tension ★ FLORIDA SUN TAN ROOMS Wear a Beautiful Bronze Tan the Year Around ★ HOT WHIRLPOOL BATHS Soak Away Achea, Pains, Sore Muscles ★ ELECTRONIC MASSAGE A Glimpse into the Future in Our Electronic Department OAKLAND COUNTY’S ~ ULTRA MODERN HEALTH OLUB PLENTY OF FREE PARKING! OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 a.m. — 10 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m. — 6 p.m. Sat. 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sun. • Facilities for Men COMMENDED AND APPROVED BY U.G.A. * nDUCH CALL NOW 1 I NEW LOCATION 1 AND RESERVE YOUR CHARTER RATE SPECIAL! 334-1591 1 334-1591 J 1 3432 W. Huron St. 1 n - . | MEW LOCATION | i (Just Watt #f or I * 1 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. at | 334-0529 1 IN. Perry St. 1 | Highland) Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Pontiac, Michigan 48058 President and Publisher John W. hmui taecutive Vice President and Editor dome A. Rnjnr Becretary and Advartlelnd Director dvertlslng Manager High Court Struggles With ‘Smut The U. S. Supreme Court, with much backing and filling over the past decade, at last seems to be arriving at a philosophy regarding obscenity which, while it will not satisfy everyone, may be the least imperfect solution to this difficult and enduring problem. Reading between the lines of the court’s latest decision voiding obscenity charges brought aghinst a batch of girlie magazines in three states, and in the light of other recent decisions, these guidelines seem to be emerging: • Censorship or suppression of reading or looking matter sold to adults will be extremely difficult and limited only to the most flagrant cases presenting a clear threat to the health of society. • Laws designed to keep pornography away from children, or vice versa, will likely be upheld. • In no event ,will the court -tolerate the “pandering” or high-pressure sale of erotic matter through such means as provocative advertising or unwanted junk pnail. ★ ★ ★ This still does not answer the question of just what constitutes “pornography” or “obscenity,” nor why it is permissible to use sex to sell shaving lotion but not magazines. Because the question is probably unanswerable, the court will continue to be called upon for verdicts in individual cases. But these three guidelines seem to be something each community can live and work with. Sea Swimmers Warned Against Coastal Current Beware the killer at the seashore this summer. The killer, says’the Environmental Science Services Administration (ESSA) is the rip current (often miscalled an undertow) — an insidious, powerful ocean and Great Lakes action which can exhaust the strongest of swimmers but which even the average swimmer can easily escape if he knows how. The rip current is a strong, narrow current flowing- out to sea at right angles to the shore, carrying hack the Water brought in by waves and longshore currents. It can travel at speeds up to three miles an hour and change its position from day to day and even during the same day. The same beach may have several rip currents at one time and then go for weeks with none at all. The person caught in a rip current soon notices that he is much farther out to sea than he expected to be, or is moving out faster than other swimmers. ★ ★ ★ This is- the point where most swimmers who lose their lives make a fatal mistake: They begin swimming their hardest toward the beach. Since the rip current is seldom more than 10 to 20 feet wide, swimmers should swim PARALLEL to the beach, says ESSA, and they can soon be free of the current. Welfare Assistance Reflects Crazy Quilt Picture Nobody likes the public welfare system — neither the taxpayer, nor the welfare worker, nor the recipient. Thousands of welfare dependents across the Country demonstrated against claimed inadequacies of the system on June 30. A second nationwide protest is scheduled for Friday. Public welfare is expensive. In large cities, expenditures for care of the needy are second only to those for public education. The over-all cost of welfare has risen ,by more than 150 per cent in the past decade, and it is still rising. The U.S. Commissioner of Welfare estimates that 7.5 million Americans are on welfare rolls — at a time when the Nation is enjoying unprecedented prosperity and jobs are going begging. The welfare system actually is not a system at all, but a hodgepodge of Federal, state and local programs.. The Federal govern-ment shares in the cost of state programs for needy aged, blind, or disabled, and for needy children in certain circumstances. All 50 states have programs financed by state and local funds, and most localities have some aid for those not eligible under other assistance programs. Something is obviously wrong somewhere. Steps toward reform may be taken next November, when a conference of business and labor leaders will try to “come up with new and revolutionary ideas-which . . . will lead to more effective programs and reduce dependency” on public assistance. World Headed for Waltz of Words By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON - The next few months look gabby. The United States and most of the world seem headed into a slow waltz P r e s i dent Johnson, with the 1968 presi- MARLOW dential race only & year away, can be expected to start patting himself on the back in public speeches in livelier fashion than he has attempted for most of the past year.1 fibs exuberance recently got the better of his reticence after two events which; him: ; • His summit with Soviet Premier Alexei N, Kosygin. • His neat sidestep of the Araib-Israeli war. After that he sounded off in a Baltimore speech on > the wonders of life in America. He got thunderous applause. Since he likes to be liked, this was probably ail the encouragement he needed to "by more of the same. Now he has to deal with a dawdling Congress which nobody expects to make a distinguished record in the last half of this year’s session. This 90th Congress seemed clothed in defeatism from the start. No one expected it to match the performance of the 89th which, in 1965,i put on a fabulous performance, and it hasn’t. ★ The 90th wasn’t as thoroughly dominated by Johnson’s Democrats as the 89th. The 1966 elections, turning a.lot more House seats over to the Republicans, gave them and Southern Democrats a lot more veto power over Johnson’s requests. . ENERGY BURST And|, since the 90th will remain here until the elections in November 1968, there’s no reason to expect a sudden burst of energy next year, either. 1. Recently, the United Nations has been as chatty as a psychiatrist’s office. The defeated Arabs, unable by •themselves to push the Israelis off their land, were not at all self-conscious about asking the United Nations to do the pushing for 4hqm. But the United fit* Irons didn’t. And, since the Arabs are in no position to fight another war soon, for months to come they and the Israelis should be relying more on gabble-gabble than guns. ★ ★ , Moscow has been showing restraint, which seems part of its policy, since the Soviets want to influence the Mideast just as much as the United States does. BIG UNPREDICTABLES The two big unpredictables in these next few months are Red China aftd Vietnam. The Chinese, undoubtedly puffed up over their progress in developing a hydrogen bomb, are still as chopped-up looking as a hamburger because of their internal dispute., .This may distract them for a while from any outside capers although the violence of tiie Chinese Communists in the British crown colony of Hong Kong could turn grim. Still unsettled, with no end in view, is the war in Vietnam. Johnson hqs to wrestle with the, problem of sending, or not sending, more U.S. troops there. Hpis sure to be denounced if he does or if he doesn’t. There will be ho end of talk about all this although the war itself seems there indefinitely. Protests and Proposals Outlined by Press Reader I protest: increase in taxes before we at least tried an austerity program; the. purchase or expensive landscaping by the highway department from private concerns at the same time we are selling trees at the conservation department. ★ ★ ★ I propose: State employes — even elected ones — supply their own transportation to work; we tell fathers they will support their own children and when they don’t ,they be placed in work camps for use in critical labor shortage areas and their wages refunded to the public agency caring for the children; we telf any female over 18 that her first illegitimate child will be supported by her and that her second child will be considered the result of a criminal act by her and she will be prosecuted instead of supported by the public. ★ ★ ★ I propose a new look at the Medicaid program to put an end to the endless paperwork and abuses; that every able-bodied person now on welfare rolls be required to report to the nearest MESC office and apply for any job he can do. Failure, to report or accept a job would automatically terminate eligibility for public assistance. I would put an end to withholding taxes. JANIE C. COLLINS BLOOMFIELD HILLS , Hawks, Doves, Now It’s Eagles WASHINGTON ^«Lots of things nowadays disturb members of Congress, Democrats as well as Republicans, but lately many of them have become somewhat annoyed by the way the papers z o o 1 ogical I terms in describing their LAWRENCE attitudes on questions of policy in Vietnam. Thus, senators are described as either “hawks” or “doves,” and while the distinguished legislators have no special antipathy to birds in either category, they would much prefer that some other bird be chosen to characterize them — as, for instance, “eagles.” Republican Sen. George Murphy of California has embarked, therefore, on a crusade to raise the ornithological standard by sending around a small pin to be worn in the lapel. It’s not exactly made of gold, but it is at least that color, and the California senator hopes to line up at least 50 members of the Senate who would avow themselves to be “eagles” rather than either “hawks” or “doves ” * * * The “resolution” written by Sen. Murphy is not' intended to be filed for “We would therefore point out that if bird-like designations must be used, our national bird has been the American eagle which, one will recall, carries the olive branch of peace and friendship in the one claw, and the armed arrows of war in the other. “This most impressive emblem has served our nation honorably and well in both peace and war for nearly 200 years. We see no reason to change. “Therefore, we the under-. signed members of the United States Senate respectfully re-, quest that hereafter we be referred to as eagles, so that everybody at home and abroad may know exactly where we stand." Bob Considine Says: Tyrants Built Great Cities of World, Says Architect NEW YORK—“Every great city in this world was built by a tyrant," Edward Durell Stone assured CQNSIDINE nevertheless has been distributed to many members of the Senate. Th irty-two have already signed the declaration, which reads as follows: “The press and communications media have initiated “a practice *f designating members of the United States Senate as either • ‘hawks or doves. “If one is designated a ‘hawk,’ it carries the implication of the most unfortunate image generally attributed to the ‘war-monger.’ -“A ‘dove,’ on the other hand, would ignore our national honor, interest, friends, agreements, stated principles and commitments in order to avoid conflict at any cost and achieve peace at any price. “This division of the members of the Senate has created some confusion at home and abroad and great uncertainty as to the true positions and dispositons of the members of the Senate, which might have a distorted and detrimental effect on bur national policy. Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Dean of Highland; 65th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Jessie Moss of Union Lake; 86th birthday. Clarence Smith of Royal Oak; 85th birthday. Mrs. Lena Dandison of 3800, Green Lake Road; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Jessie Peterman of Rochester; 82nd birthday. “An exception, perhaps,” j he conceded. “But it had a naturally spectacular platform on which to build. And the good fortune to be limited, like the island of Manhattan. “San Francisco is the tip of a peninsula. Water protects it from, say,' Oakland, and God protects it from the other suburbs. “New York—I mean Manhattan, of course—has three saving graces: the East Riv-er, which separates it from Brooklyn, IRcT Hudson, which separates it from Hoboken, and a tyrannical man named Robert Moses who knows what he wants ‘ and doesn’t give a damn who doesn’t like what he does. “Tyranny is the only thing that will make democracy work," one of the world’s foremost architects said. “You just can’t build something big and important. if some little old lady holds up the program with her vote until she dies. Would Louis XIV have listened to her? Peter the Great? Caesar? “New York, to me, is the greatest city in the world today. I know Log Angeles is or will be bigger, if that’s the word. But I feel about Los Angeles as Frank Lloyd Wright did. “Frank gaid, ‘If you turned., the world on its side and everything ran down to one point, you’d have Los Angeles.’ “New York, well, is different. #I want to be where the action is. In New York everything is conditioned to attainment. “People who achieve anything in the arts are recognized pnd honored here even if they don’t have two pennies to rub together. , “Where else in the world could 1 - have had breakfast one morning with Joe Louis, lunch with Henri Soule and dinner with Frederic March?” Mr. Stone is for “tyranny” against "progress.” “Progress, so called, is something we’ve got to be wary of,” he said. “It is a scourge that is so evident in New York, for example, that it has decimated our hotels until the Plaza is just about the last stronghold. “Progress means tearing down some delightful old building,' a wonderful brown-stone, say, and replacing it with something taller with lower ceilings/ and walls so thii}'you can hear somebody going to the bathroom three _ apartments a’wSy. ‘Encouraged by Interest of One Senator’ * It is encouraging to know there is one of our Senators (Sen. George W. Kuhn) who is interested in the low income family on the State income tax they have put on us. I say bully for him and what he may be able to accopiplish. HOWARD ADAMS 485 CENTRAL ‘Save Front Page for More Important News’ If Mr. McEIwee is so concerned about Gov. Romney being “natural born," he might .ask the Governor’s mother. It would save the front page of The Pontiac Press for important news. A PONTIAC PRESS READER ‘Not All Agree on Animal Shelter Services* To many the Oakland County Animal Shelter seems like a good thing, but there also are many who do not welcome or appreciate its high prices and heartless service. RENEE RAGATZ • 2591 BENDER DRAYTON PLAINS ‘We Enjoyed Recent Neighborhood Parade’ We’re grateful to the children and grownups who live on Motorway who gave us the pleasure of their parade on the 4th. It was very enjoyable. MR. AND MRS. M. McSKULIN 405 GATEWAY Question and Answer I recently read that the volleyball was invented In the late 19th century in Massachusetts. It seems to me you ran an answer some time ago saying the same thing about basketball. Were the two games invented by the same person? FAN REPLY N6. Basketball was invented, by Dr. Janies Naismith at Springfield, Mass., in 1891. Volleyball was the brainchild of William G. Morgan at *Holyoke, Mass., in 1895. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Our New Tax Grand Haven Tribune — A .Wisrnnsjn citizen, upon being informed that Michigan had no income .tax, was amazed. “How did you ever escape that”? he asked. Well, we haven’t. Michigan has become the 39th state to adopt ' an income levy. Our enthusiasm is not overwhelming. But Michigan, despite its onetime big surpluses, was heading for a bind. Government services simply cost more. * They reflect the inflationary trends that have worried Americans for several years. Most of the agencies depending on Michigan tax revenue for their operations were strongly in favor. We hpve a deep-seated concern over the initiation of this new tax in Michigan. The early Indications are that the levy is relatively moderate. But our -prediction is that it will climb. In a- relatively' short time Michigan will be bn the verge of going broke again and then there will be loud clamor for a tax Increase. Our Wisconsin citizen says that tiie Wisconsin state income tax is becoming almost as painful as the federal income tax. He might add that the federal boys are also considering at least a six per cent boost. _ .We _lael~. that. . Urn..new. revenue should not give the Lansing crowd the feeling that they have just been given a nice fat bunch of bills to spend. We know that we need more money for education, for highways, for parks, for mental and hospital institutions, for advertising the state.^ The state is growing and progress must continue. But it might be surprising to find out how much money is being wasted in various small projects. Governor Roquiey had to win this fight or suffer a serious reverse in national prestige. Yet the honor of boosting taxes, even when needed, is a dubious one. It would have been splendid, although apparently impossible, 4f our governor bad-distinguished himself by reducing taxes without damaging state services. will undertake—going back to school. Everything Miss Kellems does she does with zip and a keen sense of-drama;—BJv-e-likes to take on the big opes— the income tax, voting'machines, or A. Searle Pinney, the former state Republican chairman. Now that Mr. Pinney is out as R e p u b 1 i c a n chairman her war in that sector is over. Now that the party lever has been at least half-conquered, her, assault on that front has concluded. But income tax deductions are, like the mountain, still there, and the attack must go on. ★ ★ * So Miss Kellems this fall will enroll as a graduate student at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. And her doctorial thesis will be^-guess what? The income tax. The thesis eventually will be published as a book. Miss Kellems’ war in Connecticut may be at an end, hr at least —there is a truce. But her war with Washington is still on, and, if we know Miss Kellems, it will be escalated. Young at Heart Hartford Courant At 71, Miss Vivien Kellems is acting like a woman half her age. She showed up at a. Republican fund-raising dinner in Hartford last week, full of pep and excitement about another adventure she soon The Pontiac Press It delivered bp QMMPHI _ in the united States *26.00 a year. All mall subscriptions payable to advance. Postage lus bean paid at the and class rata at Pontiac. Michigan. Member of ABC. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1067 A—7 MID-SUMMER SALE! Mod* tn U.5.A. Woshoble cotton sailcloth. Black or Chino. Women'* to 10. ^ 1.84 paisley. To 10. 1.84 ehilds cushion tennis ox. Non-slip soles. White, 8 k 12, 12J4-3, 5-10. l 1.84 Italion-styie "Duet": Podded insole.. Prugna brown vinyl. Women's to 10" 1.84 White canvas. Fully cushioned insole. Youths', 11-2; boys', 2V4-6; men's, 6Vi-12. , 2.66 Sale! Men's, women's and children's 2.99-3.99 play casuals YOUR CHOICE AND Every type of shoe your family will need for summer! Mother, father, brother and Sister! Sport and play-time shoes galore at a bargain you won't want to miss. Sizes right for all! Yours at tremendous saving! 10 CU. FT. 12 CU. FT. 2-D00R REFRIGERATOR Hers b top quality, dependability and performance in a compact refrigerator with many deluxe features. We cannot print the brand name at our low price but you'll knew It instantly. Big freezer chest, glide-out shelves, mognet door. Roomy shelves le mention this famous manufacturer's n< FREE DELIVERY, INSTALLATION AND SERVICE FREE DELIVERY, INSTALLATION AND SERVICE ■ny more deluxe features. *147 N0R6E 14 Oil. FT. 2-D00R IS COMPLETELY FROST-FREE! Forget defrosting forever TOP AND BOTTOM when you own this handsome 2-in-ona appliance! You'll love the extra nawOonvenience features. Giant bottom no-frost freezsr stores 144 lbs. Glideaut shaffand storage basket. Special “Food Freshener* In no-host refrigerator. Twiri porcelain crispers, deep handidor shelves, dpiry and egg storage. Very deluxe; FREE DELIVERY, INSTALLATION AND SERVICE IS COMPLETELY Highland bring*,you this 2-iit-ano vofua at big saving* right now. From tha saparata 103-lb. capacity frooxor to tho 21 *q. ft. of food ro#m this sparkling family-*i*od Hotpoint it COMPLETELY FROST-FREE. Twin porcolain crisport. Dairy storago doors, ogg racks. Entiro unit rolls oiit on wbools for oasy cleaning. Modol CTF-114. jfe A FREE DELIVERY, ^ V P* i NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO FAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Comsr Elizabeth Laks Rotil f APPLIANCE CO. mm OPEN DAILY 9 cun. to 9 p.m. • PHONE 682-2330 J DAILY THRU JULY 16 DETROIT, MICH. Cobo Convention Confer Arena One Washington DM. 2:00 & 7:30 PM ___________________J Disposal Study Gets Grant of $83,000 Approval of an $83,000 fedora! grant for a solid-waste disposal study in Oakland County and adjacent communities was announced today. The project will begin Aug. 1, according to Oakland Cunty Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry, and completion is expected by the end of this year. Total cost of the study is estimated at $128,000. The county will be responsible for funding the $42,000, or one-third share, not covered by die grant from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. H* | Jones, Henry and Williams, Inc., a Toledo consulting engineering Arm, has been retained to conduct die study in conjunction with the drain gommission-er. * Barry was named by the County Board of Supervisors last October as the agent for the refuse disposal study by a 40 to 89 vote after a power struggle over which county unit should handle the project. Several supervisors wanted the study under die jurisdiction of the County Board of Auditors which would have given tile supervisors direct control over the project. In voting to give Barry, an elected county official, the study jurisdiction, the supervisors actually voted away some of their own authority because the three members of the board of >audi-are employes of the board Of supervisors. Last month the supervisors authorized inclusion of JYayne and Macomb counties in Barry's study to assure federal participation. U.S. General to End Sad Trip Home COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Gen. William C., Westmoreland, commander of y.S. forces in Vietnam,' ends a sad journey home today with the burial services for his mother, Mrs. James Ripley Westmoreland. Mrs. Westmoreland died' at her home Sunday of a congestive heart failure. She was 81. The funeral is at 5 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal church with burial at Elmwood Cemetery. ★ ★ ★ The Rev. James Stirling, rector- of Trinity, and the Rev. Allen B. Clarkson of Augusta, Ga.‘, will conduct the services. The Rev. Mr. Clarkson is the brother-in-law of Mrs. Westmoreland’s daughter, Mrs. N. Heyward Clarkson of Columbia. President Johnson and Gov. Robert McNair sent of condolence to the general. MAY MEET WITH LBJ WASHINGTON (AP) — House and Senate conferees still trying to agree on legislation to prevent a , nationwide rail strike indicate they’re displeased about increased pressure from the six rail unions involved. The unions told congressmen Tuesday they will withdraw their interim pledge against a nationwide strike unless Con-rees soon on the legisla- T h e conferees planned a series of meetings today -after Rail Unions Irk Congressmen reaching no agreement Tuesday. ■ Chairman Harley O. Staggers* D-W. Va., of the House Conanerce Committee said he hasFhigh hopes we can reach soma agreement." QUESTIONS TIMING Bts he said he questioned the timing of the unions’ statement “a little bit’’ Several conferees said- privately that the letter from Joseph W. Ramsey of the six-union, negotiating committee complicated matters. Tito unions pledged not to strike pending congressional action after the Senate and ise .approved differing anti-';e plans in mid-June. Ramsey said the union setting no strike date but withdraw their pledge 1 conferees make no progress Saturday. He said “the only way we get the railroads to negotiate seriously is through our members’ right-to strike.” He accused the * railroads of “still stalling, hoping Congress will enact compulsory arbitration.’" Credit Union Chief Quits,-Ex-Teacher Gets Position Joseph Atwell, who recently retired as an industrial education teacher at Pontiac Central High School, whs elected president of the Pontiac Teachers Credit Union yesterday. He replaces Ted Wiersema, whose resignation is effective today. Wiersema, a former prin- ATWELL WIERSEMA cipal of Eastern Junior High School; has been an officer of the credit union since 1933 and president since 1960. He and his wife Mildred, will be moving to California to be near their .two children. The Wiersemas now live at 316 W. Iroquois. Atwell, 810 Menominee, has been an officer of the credit union for seven years. NEW OFFICE Pontiac Teachers Credit Union, which has 1,400 members and more than $1.7 million in assets, is currently constructing a new office at 100 Auburn. More than 70 per cent of the Pontiac School District employes are members of the 36-year-old credit union. On his arrival in Columbia Tuesday, Westmoreland said he was unsure about when he would return to Vietnam. He said he would “probably meet with the President, presumably in Washington" before -making the return trip. ★ ★ * He told newsmen “I am encouraged," when asked of the progress of the military situation in Vietnam. Westmoreland, accompanied by his wife and two of their three children, spent Tuesday night at Ft. Jackson, near Columbia. ★ ★ ★ Also arriving with Westmoreland was Spec. 5 Bobby Strickland, 24, of Mullins, S.C., who was in Hawaii for a brief rest when he heard that Westmoreland was to stop there on his way from Vietnam. Strickland asked for a ride so he too could attend the funeral of his mother. She will be buried at Mullins Hate this afternoon. ATTEND OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Drayton Opon Sundays Ndon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 *****?***********★★*★★★*★★★★★★★*★*********¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥*****★★★★*★★★★*★★★ ***¥ * *** *¥ *> * * ’# * ** ^^%'lWMt.... § vV >'i i ii Tm&'/ff? *★★★ -*★ ★★ .*★★★ NOW . . . permanent press in a hoys’ double-knee jean. Our own Cranbrook brand. No-iron cottop-nylon denim. Navy, brown and olive; regular and slim, 6 to 12. Cotton canvas uppers with cushioned insoles and sure*, grip rubber soles for safety! Colorful solids . . . also some, patterns in | children’s si^es 8I/2 to 2. Save plehty! * Cool, wash ’n wear cottons. Coat and middy styles with short sleeves and long legs, also knee length styles. Assorted patterns on light grounds. Boys’ sizes 8 to 16. STAR Wmsr. girl*9 brief* A. Sleeveless vest of Pak-nit* knit cotton. Easy-care, washable. Sparkling white in girls’ 4 to 14. B. Band leg briefs with elasticized waistband. Long lasting combed cotton.* White. Sizes 4 to 14. 3 for 1# tot’s stretch sleepers for extra freedom Exceptional savings on sleepers that stretch to give with baby’s every movement. Little-care cotton-nylon terry washes easily, stays comfy'soft. Convenient snap front and crotch makes them easy on or off. White, and pastels. Small fits birth to 12 mos., large fits 12 to 24 mos. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ * filliii aicejterc STAR SALE! Easy-care, no iron cotton plisse in nurMry print* on white. Snap front. 1.2,5. 94e seconds of ‘(uril}' diapers 944 Ld dot. STAR SAT EL Elat w**v*: cotton (tun with woven-in fold linea and pinked edge*. SliflCht mitweaves won’t af- tnddlar*' peat* C. Waterproof: Vinyl. S,M,L,XI.. 4 for 94* D. Training pant: Cotton. 2. 5.4. 3 fori.i V tlaafcef tceeada ■.Receiving Uanket: second* are this-weaves. Ii7? f. Thermal blanket: seconds, mis-weaves. 1-77 III lad crib ifcssfs STAR SALRI Nursery prints on whit* grounds. Long-wearing cotton. Fit. , ted corner \ won't pull out 390 Fitted whit* tb**t..'.Mr ********** TV1 . \ »*> ■mm Senior Couple Celebrates Date With Reception SIGNE KARLSTROM Recently Mr. and Mrs. Robert Livesay, Mr. ana Mrs. Clark Pardee and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Gardner Jr. gave a reception in the Livesay home on Valley Forge Road honoring their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Gardner. It was the senior Gardners' 50th wedding anniversary. It is rare on an occasion such as this that both the matron of honor and the’ best men can be present. However, Mrs. A. W. Noting'of California, Mrs. Gardner’s sister, came, with Mr. Noling. ★ ★ ★ They are presently at their summer home in Leland, Mich. The best man was • Raymond Woolfenden Of Birmingham both he and Mrs. Woolfenden were present. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Luther came from Grand Rapids, Mrs. Clinton Berry from Ann Arbor and Mr. and Mrs. Earle Gardner from Highland. SUMMER HOME On Saturday, Mrs. W. Lloyd Kemp will leave for her cottage at Harbor Springs. Daughter Mary Kemp of Chevy Chase, Md. will be coming for a family reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rizley (the former Katherine Kemp) and their five childreh of Tulsa, Okla. will be there. The Rizleys have a cottage in Goodhart which is nearby. ■ Lt. Col. and Mrs. Stanley E. Reinhart Jr., with their four children, will be coming from West Point, New York and Dr. mid Mrs. William L. Kemp Jr. of Palm Beach, Fla. and their two children will join the family. ★ ★ ★ On July 31, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard T, Lewis will entertain at a buffet supper in their home honoring friends of Cambridge, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence M. Levine, whose son, James is conducting the Meadow Brook Student Orchestra this summer as well as performing as visiting piano artist at the Meadow Brook Festival. Tryouts Are Slated by Avon Players The Avon Players have scheduled tryouts for roles in the gay nineties melodrama “Dirty Work at the Crossroads’’ for 7 p.m. Sunday and 3 p.m. Monday at the Avon Playhouse on East Tienken Road. * * * , Seven female, and three male roles are to be filled. Experience or membership in the Players is not required. Performances are scheduled for Aug. 18 and 19 at 8:30 p.m. Mrs. Jack Lawson is producing the show; Mrs. Ted Stratton is directing with assistance of Mrs. Martin Rosalick. Waterford Garden.Unit Plans' Potluck Meeting The Juiy meeting of the Waterford branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association will be held Thursday at noon at the Watkins Lake hoine of Mrs. George Stout. ; A potluck luncheon will precede the business meeting, with Mrs. Arthur Arnold and Mrs. Barry Church assisting the hostess. Fitzpatrick's Son Born David Leigh Fitzpatrick arrived. July 3, his parents are the Garland D. Fite-Patricks (nee Diane Crawford) of Ida Terrace. Grandparents of the child are Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Culps of Fern-barry Court and the Howard R. Crawfords of North Ardmore Street, THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 ~ \ B—1 Includes e Double Dresser • Mirror • Twin or Full Size Bed FREE DELIVERY With 9vmMm lifetime MICART, [Plastic Tops @) Choice Skirt May Miss Presidential OK LONDON (UPI) Lynda Bird Johnson bought a mini-mini skirt and the shopkeeper who sold it wprried today about what her father will say. "I hope the President approves,” said Harry Fox. * * * Carnaby Street which popularized the mini skirt now features items which come nowhere near the knee. According to reports from Carnaby Street, Lynda Tuesday spent 20 minutes making up her mind and then selected the shorter model. Her yellow dress with the knee hem and her wide-brimmed hat attracted virtually no attention as she strolled down Carnaby Street amid the wild stripes and thigh-high skirts it has made famous. ★ ★ ★ President Johnson’s eldest daughter went into the Carnaby Street shop wearing a yellow dress that some fathers might consider as mini as style should' allow. Its hem reached the middle of Lynda's knees. Swinging London considers that most Victorian. Here are two creations designed by Karen Stark for Harvey Berin, a house that makes clothes a man might buy for his wife. At left, a jersey wool dress with red, pink and gray stripes. The gray She was reported delighted. “The weather is gorgeous,” said Lynda. Tuesday night she waS guest of honor AP WireptiMo at a party given by her host and hostess, , U.S. Ambassador and Mrs. David K. melton coat complementing the ensemble is striped, Bru<^ Her frequent date, movie actor in similar manner as the (fazss. For evening wear, George Hamilton, was reported on loca-right, it’s a regal white crepe ball gown with the tion in Spain. bib necklace sewn in. It eliminates lost jewelry. R was not known if she planned to meet him in Europe. Let Her Attend These Gatherings Lonely Woman Does No Harm Nancy Walker Honored Sunday Early American OPEN S^OCK children to raise while they go out and work to keep up with &e Joneses, or to get away from the children. Senior Citizens to Meet Pontiac Area Council of Senior Citizens will meet Friday at 2 p.m. in the Community Services Building. The speaker will be Joseph Perkowski of the Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union. Please tell them that we did OUR job — now it’s time for them to do theirs. GRANDMA W. DEAR GRANDMA: A general “statement” won’t accomplish anything. If YOU know of such a “young mother," I suggest that YOU tell her. ★ ★ ★ For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Weddjttg, send $1.00 to Abby, in care of The Mpitiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, fvntiac, Mich. 48056. . AT SIBLEY’S MIRACLE MILE SEMI-8NNIIAI SHOE SALE Nancy, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brown of Berea, was the weekend guest of her fiance’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Theron H. Taylor of Harp# Street, where, the party was given. Lodge in London’s Regents Park, the official residence of U.S. Am-bassador David Bruce. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: There is an older wom- an in our town who is a real weird char- acter. She lives alone on some sort of pension. (They say her husband ran off and left her years ago.) She loves to get all dressed up and go where people are. Well| she must her church entitles hei the social take place in the social ABBY hall of her church, because she never misses one. The fact that she’s not invited doesn’t seem to bother her. She goes to all the teas, receptions, and parties where refreshments are served, mingles with the guests, helps herself to everything, and has a very good time. Isn’t it the minister’s place to tell her she should stay away? He sees her at all the gatherings and surely knows she hasn’t been invited. Honored Sunday afternoon with a bridal shower was Nancy Walker of Berea, Ohio, who will marry John D. Taylor Sept. 2. Seventeen guests attended the lawn party hosted by Mrs,. Donald Lum, Mrs. Morris L. Hall, Mrs. Michael Drake and Mrs. Clarence Ridgley. ap wirepKot* Lynda Bird Johnson, daughter of the President, is shown posing in the garden of Hanover CHURCH MEMBER DEAR MEMBER: If anyone is to discourage an uninvited guest, it should be tiie hostess. The poor woman is probably lonely. And if she causes no harm and enjoys herself, what’s-another glass of punch and a few cookies amid the socializing? ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I’ve always been a big fan of yours, but now I’m a bigger fan than ever, and here’s why: While out at Arlington race track the . other day I came across a horse named GABBY ABBY, so 1 had a hunch and bet f a bunch. The horse came in and paid over $55. I hope you won’t take offense. CHAS. FROM ELMHURST .DEAR CHAS.: I’ve been told that I have “horse sense” (that’s the kind one finds in a STABLE mind). And horse sense is what keeps horses from betting on people. ★ * ★ - DEAR ABBY: I would like to speak for grandmothers who feel as I do, but don't have the courage to complain: Why do young mothers think that since we have raised our family and now haVe some leisure time that we have NOTHING to do — so they give us the grand- Luncheon, Golf Game Marks Day for Club A round of golf at Pbntiac Country Club followed a luncheon Tuesday for the Niblick Golf Club. Hostess for the occasion was Mrs. Paul Buechler of Motorway Drive. Some 29 members made plans for an outing Tuesday at Harsens Island. A day of golf with a luncheon at tiie Mid-Channel Golf Chib will be featured. Mrs. Wilma Dickinson will be hostess. h ★ 4t Mrs. Dennis Lowes, a former member, was a guest at Tuesday’s meeting. Mrs. Dscar Eckman of Largo, Fla. was also a visitor. J \ A guest day is slated at the Pontiac Country Cliib in August. FOR MEN FL0RSHEIM Selected Styles $1780 & $1980 Regular $19.95 to $29.95 WINTHR0P - SIBLEY NOSH POPPIES- Selected Styles $7M VALUES TO $17.95 FOR WOMEN RED GROSS and VITALITY Selected Style* $990 & $ir° REGULAR $13.00 to $19.00 SANDLER, HUSH PUPPIES® MISS WONDERFUL .. Discontinued Styl *3.18 f REGULAR $8 to $20 FL0RSNEIM *15’° Selected Style• Reg. $18 to $20 Sibley’s semi-annual sale is famous all over the Pontiac area because of the wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and save many dollars In this great event. FOR CHILDREN... SPECIAL GROUP HUSH PUPPIES® NOW MISS SANDLER $J gQ YANIGANS AND RED QOdSE to Values to $9.95 "Michigan's Largest Florsheim Dealer1' lies Open Every Evening Til 0 P.M. .Bleotnfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center S. TELEGRAPH AT SQUlllE LAKE RD. FE 8-9700 1 mm B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 STAFFS Have You taken your children to thl* value-packed, famous b Bridal Vows See Guests Shoe Sale? School Shoes. Play Shoes. Tennis Shoes. Slippers. Oxfords. Loafers. Straps. Styles for all size children and big' boys, too. Sale Shoes at Bqth Stores! STAPP'S SHOE STORE 931 W. Huron SHOE STORE 418 N. Main Street Rochester For Evening Hours Pteose Call 332-3208 ^TTirinnnnnnrrirTinnfTirTiroTTTYTTTirTirTr^ CONNOLLY'S OF THE WEEKI Replace her ring with this icy beauty — a carat and sixteen point first grade brilliant cut diamond — for that important gift with a lifetime of pleasure. If you wish, trade-in allowance happily given. $1,500, FE 2-0294 Ml 6-4293 Cjuulrjuulrxrjulrjlrjuulrjuulrjulrjlrjlrjulrjl Are Spoken Vows wqje exchanged Saturday evening between Jan-nene Kathleen Lasley and David 6. Barens in St. Andrew’s Episocpal Church. ★ ★ . ★ The bridal couple was attended by Julie Ann Lasley v sister of the bride, and Michael Barens, the bridegroom’s brother. ★ ★ * Guests were greeted later at a reception in the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Lasley of Geneva Road. Hie bridegroom’s parents are the Henry Barens of Graves Street. Picnic Is Planned The Women's Society of Christian Service of St. James Methodist Church will sponsor a picnic supper at 6:30 p.m., Thursday in Fellowship Hall. * * * This cooperative event is open to the public. A Last Minute Touch for Silver A beautifully appointed table calls for silver that glistens. For that just - polished look every time, keep a pair of clean white cotton gloves in the silverware drawer. ★ ★ * Before you set the table, put the gloves on and use them to handle the silver — without leaving tell-tale fingerprints— and also to give it a final rub before setting it in place. The gloves, of course, should be washed in hot soap or detergent suds between uses. Boqrd Your Elevator Too ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: What are the rules about seeing departing visitors to the door? We live in a large apartment house. Our apartment is at the extreme end of the hall. When the guests are leaving, I close the door behind them as soon as they have started walking down the hall. My husband prefers to keep the door open until he sees our guests step into the elevator. We’d appreciate your helping Us do the right thing. — Wilma N. ★ ★ ★ Dear Wilma: Because occasionally an elevator is not operating correctly, I prefer your husband’s way. In order to be sure that guests are safely on their way, wait inside your open door until you see that the elevator has arrived. Then give a final wave if they look back, and close the door. STRANGER Dear Mrs. Post: I was invited to a large cocktail party recently and found I knew no one (here but the hostess. I felt very out-of-place and left after 15 minutes. Would it have been proper for me to go up to other guests without being introduced, and start a conversation? What is the proper behavior for a guest who finds himself a stranger at large party? — L. K. ★ ★ ★ Dear L. K.: You can’t very well walk up to two strangers who are talking together unless they speak directly to you. But you can start a conversation with anyone who appears to be alone. Don’t carry it on without some response from your listener, but if she or he seems eager to talk, no other introduction than that of being under your hostess’ roof is necessary. Former Area Resident Wed in South, Carolina The world’s most beautiful sprinter says: When are we going to get an extension phone? And that’s a fair question when you consider that she's doing a lot of running, and doesn’t have one medal to show for it For as little as 95-cents a month she can have an extension phone where she needs it-Different type phones and various decorator colors are available. So, call in your order to Michigan Bell and surprise her now. Then, you could get the medal, Michigan Bell Part af tbs Nationwide Bed System Desk and Wall phones • 651—monthly charge for each extension. • $4.00—one-time charge. Covers any number of phohes in color installed cm the same order. No charge for black. A nominal serf ice-connection or chan ft charge may be applied!*. Charges quoted for residence extensions do not include tax. Your choice of decorator colors. s -While cleaning out her desk, Mrs. Virginia Hopkins found an uncashed check issued to her on June 21, 1956. ★ ★ ★ It was given her in payment of appraisal work done for the Fort Worth Real Estate Board. It wps still negotiable when she took it to a board meeting to display as a joke. —.—_ ..............—_ Someone Inadvertently spilled a glass of water on it, washing off the signature and invalidating the check. Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Sherman of Crescent Road will mark their golden wedding anniversary on Friday. The couple was married in Detroit July 14, 1917. An open house to celebrate the event will take place in the home of their son, Clair, on Voorheis Road from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. There are two grandchildren. Psoriasis, a Stubborn Skin Problem New treatments for psoriasis, a stubborn skin problem affecting an estimated 6 million Americans, have to be evaluated* in a • number of ways, according to Dr. E. Lip-man Cohen, a dermatologist. Convenience, side - effects, site and size of lesions, and the patient’s medical history must be considered. ★ ★ ® • Dr. Cohen, reported in Medical Digest, that he has found ammoniated mercury ointments and steroid therapy (with or without wrappings) ; unsuccessful because of adverse side-reactions. Tar and dithranol (available in the U.S. as Anthryl), he wrote, remain “the two most important substances in the topical treatment of psoriasis." Washable Wallpaper Dorothy Draper, noted decorator, believes that the cost of washable wallpaper represents good value for a child's room — especially when it’s scrubbable. tel fit Company EVERY FRIDAY A Complete Menu of The World’s Mo8$ FtSWOTed. Cuisine a Entertainment - Tue»day thru Saturday j, S2^AN S OLD M,LL TAVEI*N 5838 Dixie Highway Win ||i to WATERFORD MICHIGAN . v/: ^WjVftvwf'OYrt'iwi *■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Phobias Cause Adolescent Girls to Starve Selves BOSTON, Mass. (UP*!) -Pre-adolescent and teen-age ! girls who starve themselves to dangerous levels may do so because of inner fears of I growing up, being lonely, or ; becoming independent of their, families, according to a psy- | chiatrist and psychologist at I Children’s Hospital Medical ' Center in Boston. The experts said the problem is One that may be increasing. Since 1960, they have seen about 25 cases at Children’s. Known as “anorexia nervosa,” the disturbance usually starts with a girl being preoccupied with her body size, contour, and a fear of fatness. The refusal to eat any and all foods is connected with a deep-seated fear of something growing inside the body. The , experts figure such fears and ! fantasies turn out to be a disguise for the anger and built the children experience towards people in authority ! over them. Now Appearing Wednesday Thru Saturday STEAK HOUSE 24000 Plymouth Road CORNER OF TELEGRAPH : o ------- CORNER Or TELEWICArn myuu uuuuu»a miuuuuumuijuuui *1.00 value now 50*; with SNOBOL label jr No-drip sponge design Can’t scratch bowl Comes with its own storage container Send 501 add one Sno-Bol label to A E. Stdley Mfg. Co.; Mop Offer. Box 9000, Dept. FJ, Decatur, III. 62525 ' Students in the recently Completed Gourmet Outdoor Cookery class at Oakland Community College find that sampling is part of the fun. Mrs. Leon Renner, Cooley Lake Road hunts for the proper utensil as Ray Linley of Hazel Park eats an orange wedge. They are preparing seafood and fruit kabobs. The men in the class almost outdid the, women in their enthusiasm. ■ Amel Dunbar will teach a second and, third group of students in his Gourmet Outdoor Cookery class how to bone chicken breasts. Two new classes start July 20 on OCC’s Highland Lakes campus. Hours are 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Further information may be had by calling OCC’s division of community services. Auto Agitation Wash After Wearing Motor-touring families can M imperative to wash convert their car into a wash- those conspicuous ‘'new look” ing machine by carrying dirty stockings — of all colors and duds in a large covered con- ! textures _ ^ s0ap or deter. tamer filled with soap or de- . . .. . . tergent suds. The car’s mo- gent suds after evei? single tion, en route to the next wearing. This keeps them campsite or motel, supplies bright and snug to flatter legs the agitation needed for loos- which are always in the lime-ening soil. , light SPRING and SUMMER >ATS and SUITS SUMMER DRESSES Mrs. J. A. Kratage, Wards Point Drive, waits with a pan of chicken as Steve Willis, second year food technology student at Oakland Community College, gets the grill ready. Willis assists Dunbar in conducting the course. Prospective students are advised not to eat dinner before attending the evening class, say graduates of the first course. Budget DRESSES were to 29.98 Better DRESSES were to 49.98 fpr GET THESE SPECIAL VALUES! CO™u„4.9, 12“ to II ^ H 7.93 5“ to 10 SWIMSUITS Q88 t were to 10.98 0 to l SKIRTS ass, A were to 7.98 L *0-4 BLOUSES were to 4.98 l SWIM SUITS BIG Shoe SALE SPORTSWEAR KNIT SUMMER SUITS were to 29.98 SKIRTS SLACKS SHORTS NATURALIZER • DELISO DEBS • MARQUISE TTOPS JACQUELINE • LARKS Dress • CONNIE Dress CORELLI Casuals e LARKS Sports and Flats YOUNG FOLKS GIRLS' DRESSES for summer! were Regularly *7 to *23 Now GIRLS'SKIRTS GIRLS'SWIM SUITS Famous Brands SUMMER HANDBAGS SUMMER HATS Don't wait! Come in tomorrow and find your size I Sensatinal savings on these nationally-advertised shoe' fashions ... great shapes, new silhouettes,, straps and bows in a rainbow of colors. . .. «. were to 10.98 use PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS BUY,"SELL, TRADE TduiT eo»n CUANtf tiinitmmmissss^nj B—4 Mom's Snobbishness Creates Resentment THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 196T By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: I’m asking you to help me stop resenting my five-year-old girl. You’ll need to know that I’m a college graduate, a musician who at 21. married a man who could not read. After eight years of marriage, *he has not only learned to read but also has taken college courses that promise us finally a secure future. But I can’t stand my second child. She’s got my mother-in-law’s, red hair and many of the common mannerisms I detest in this woman ... ANSWER: You don’t hate this child, girl. What you detest is yourself—that aspect, that part of you which married so detestably “beneath” you. You asked for this. So I’m handing it to you straight. Your resentment has nothing whatever to do with this child. It’s got to do with your still-lingering terror that the scornful people who told you that it was a "common” streak in you which married an illiterate man were right. In this child who resembles your vulgar mother-in-law you AMERICA'S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN see no escape from your own “common" streak. What I’m saying is that you have not yet worked out your freedom from your family’s snobbish social values. You’re 29. At that age we still have a long way to go before we truly trust the judgement we have opposed to our parents’ judgements. ★ ★ ★ Oh, we’ll think we pulled free of control by them when we married the illiterate man we loved—the man who has justified our confidence in him as your fine husband has done. But er or later we discover we haven’t. We discover that we’re IT'S STOCK-UP TIME FOR TENTS & SHIFTS! 2$3 STOCK UP on the two most-wanted shapes! STOCK UP on cooling cottons and blends! STOCK UP on abstracts, florals, plaids! *" STOCK UP on softly shaded pastel hues! STOCK UP on lively-bright bold colors! STOCK UP on deeper transitional-tones! SIZES iO TO 18 CURKSTON STORE OPEN SUNDAY NOON TO 6 P.M. PONTIAC 200 North Saginaw CLARKSTON Just North of Waterford f Per the Big and Tail Man in the Family, Pleaao Refer te Our Big Mm's 9ha» at 16051 Grand River er 9800 Van Dyke still manipulated by terror that we are the socially disappointing inferiority they said we were when their college graduate-musician daughter announced her intention of marrying a man. who could not read. So my advice to you is to try to accept your resentment of this child as tranquilly as you can—and attend to your fear of her as an inescapable reminder of your own nasty “commonness." If I want to be glib about it, I could say that you’ll quit senting your little girl when you quit your ancestor worship of your family’s social measure- Revive Skin Beauty With Facial Sauna We usually take for granted that the farpily automobile | needs a tuneup from time to time. But how many women will take the time to give their complexion a much needed revitalization? Winter winds, summer sunning, drying heat indbors, and the heavy concentrations of dust and soot in the atmosphere are ampng the factors playing havoc with the complexion. ★ ★ ★ The new beauty appliance, the Saunda Facial Sauna, takes the guesswork out of complexion care, thoroughly deep lses the face, and when used with the Saunda beauty preparations offers a complete facial in 20 minutes. The results are immediate nd the process assures a professional-type facial which can be taken conveniently in the home. STEAM MIST The gold, crystal and ivory colored appliance is specially designed for ,dressing table use or in the powder room. Unlike the old-fashioned teakettle or vaporizer whose searing steam could cause injury to delicate facial tissues, the Saunda mist is scientifically created and con- VANTAGE WATCHES 17 Jewel 2®5». 19” NEISNER’S WATCH REPAIR trolled to remain a constant, comfortable 118 degree F. The appliance is activated by adding 1% ounces of tap water and plugging into an electrical outlet. Warm mist is generated within a few seconds. The swirling mist penetrates the pore openings causing pearly beads of perspiration to form. The flow of perspiration drives out deeply-ingrained grime, oil, and make-up which often cannot be removed even with the finest cleansing creams. At the same time, the gentle action of Saunda increases the blood circulation to the surface of the face, and results in a natural radiant glow. A Saunda facial is a comfortable, relaxing experience, ing tensions, soothing the eyes and it helps clear sinus passages, too! After the face has perspired freely for five to eight minutes, the following skin care program is recommended. ROUTINE First, a facial scrub preparation is applied to absorb the impurities driven out by the perspiration; secondly, a freshener is applied to close the pores and tone the skin; finally, a moisturizer is used to restore the skin’s protective oil and moisture to just the proper balance. The Saunda appliance which is packed with the special facial preparations is available at most fine drug and department stores. Friendly Handshake It’s a friendly gesture to “shake hands with soap” many times every day. Faces and figures of pretty girls dominate the scene at Miami Beach, Fla., this week as contestants from all parts of the world take part in the Miss Universe Beauty Pageant. Faces at left are (top) Miss Sweden, Eva-Lisa Svensson; (center) Miss Hong Kong, Laura Da Costa Roque; {bottom) Miss Dominican Republic, Jeannette Rey. At centgr walking out of the surf is Fee Voniitzewitz of Germany. The faces at right are (top) Marcela Montoya Garcia of Bolivia; (center) Ayse Yelda Gurani, of Turkey; and (bottom) Maria E. Torres of Paraguay. Padding Out in Contest Swimsuits By KAY BARTLETT MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Some might call June Wiley a statistician. Others would say she’s more a detective. l But at least one Miss Universe contestant is sorry June’s backstage. NO HELP June checks to make sure the girls aren’t giving nature a boost in the swimsuit competition. “I fit all the girls personally and I can tell pretty quickly if one of them suddenly gets more busty,” she said. Miss France, 36-22-33, and Miss Scotland, 38-24-36, presented the biggest problems for Miss, Wiley as contest rule prohibit altering any part of the official swim suit. * ★ ★ ' “I need to have my suit taken in at the waist and hips," complained Lena Mc-Garvie of Glasgow, a public relations officer. “Not so," proclaimed June, “only buttons on the straps can be adjusted." Anne Vernier, a student from Geneva, France, would like for the lower porgion of her suit to fit a little snugger, June said. The answer is still no. “These suits are made for Can't Forget His Birthday LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Three years ago Mrs. Susan Reese “forgot” her husband’s birthday. Die next year, to prevent a similar occurrence, Kaye Reese ran an ad in a newspaper to remind her of his natal day. Last year he again reminded her in radio commercials. This year the husband used portable billboards at intersections to remind his wife, saying: “Kaye Reese an- nounces his birthday will be this Diursday.” His wife did not forget. Set Gala Evening A hayride, dancing and chicken-in-a-bask4t are all on -the agenda Saturday for the Pontiac chapter of Parents Without Partners. The meeting place is Jim Schultheis’ barn in Highland at 9 p.m. Interested persons may contact Mrs. Pat Barger for further information. averagers, and let’s face it, she has a much better than average figure,” Miss Wiley said. ★ ★ * Miss Wiley also decrees what size suit the contestants shall wear as they parade before the judges in Saturday night's CBS television production. Sometimes her judgment and the contestants are at odds. Miss Italy, a 39-25-39 model, wanted to wear'a size 10 suit, Miss Wiley said. She got a 14. Another of Miss Wiley’s chores is producing the offi-ial statistics for the girls. Sometimes the tape measure here varies from what the girls reported. ★ * ★ One girl this year, whom Miss Wiley would not identify, burst into tear when her hips measured 36. “They’re 34%,” wailed the contestant. “Thirty-five, at the most, but never 36.” Make Your Appointment Now! PERMANENT and HAIRSTYLE Tinting—Bleaching Cutting IMPERIAL ' 158 Auburn Ave. Park Free FE 4-2878 Edyth Steiuon, owner Orphan Colt Eats Buttons PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-Ted Burns came home from a trip to Los Angeles with an unexpected passenger in the rear seat of his car—a horse. ★ V Burns found the two-month-old mustang on the Nevada desert after cougars had killed its mother. He brought it home for his son, Tod. He named the colt Buttons “because that’s the first thing he ate off my-jacket.”—-....... 'Little Baby' Stuck in Tire BIRMINGHAM/ Ala. (AP) —Firemen jumped aboard the fire truck and rushed to the scene when a woman called the station and frantically shouted: “Little Baby’s got her head stuck in a tire.” ★ * ★ Upon arriving, the firemen greased the ears of the 10-month old baby and slipped the head out of the center rim of an automobile tire. The woman who called the firemen said she got excited and forgot to tell them that “Little Baby” was a dog. Friday Meeting There will be a meeting Friday at 8 p.m. of the David Belisle Post No. 1008, Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary in the VFW Hall on Aubilrn Road. 1 temporary Job Lasts 48 Years LOUISVILLE, Ga. OP) — When a group of businessmen bought the News and Farmer, Louisville’s weekly paper, they asked a local school teacher to edit it “for a while.” That “while” stretched into 48 years. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Virginia Poihill Saxon recently retired after nearly five decades as editor, during which time she paet some of the nation’s most famous personalities, including President and Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt. “There’s no place like a country newspaper for meeting people,” she declares. Aid and Comfort Wives who join political candidates on campaign tours, are often most helpful by just continuing some home-type chores for their hopeful husbands. Mrs. Hatfield, wife of the Senator from Oregon, says: “All I do en route .is wash Mark’s socks. every night.” % ■ fine fashions for everyone Watch for grand opening late July another fine Hadley's store New Fashion Mall in The F%ntiac Mall 606 Oakland Avanua* Pontiac FE 4*2579 »t»t n.U I.M.f.M.H ltUIJUUJU.UJUItU.U.1.U t« » mm U.ff.M H t lT THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 I B—S Michigan made in The Pine Shops, Big Rapids, this furniture is reminiscent of a bygone era. The secretary desk mighthaoe belonged in a rural landowner’s counting house; it is carefully fitted inside. The handmade rush seat of the ladder-back chair is tough and pliable; the chair would be at home anywhere. Wall sconces are charming accessories. May be wired for electricity. Curious Tot Downs Lye; Will Recover SEATTLE (UPI) - Lee Ellen Prevele was a curious youngster. Like any two-year-old. She took a swallow from a container that contained a small amount of lye and her esophagus — or food pipe — was severely burned. That was two years ago and the child qince then has had more than 50 operations to open the esophagus, which became partially blocked with scar tissue. On occasions she had to be fed directly through a tube in her abdomen. When it was found that repair was impossible, doctors made a new esophagus for Lee nit of a piece of her large intestine. The youngster is recuperating well and doctors rate her chances of total recovery as excellent. But it has been a bad two years for Lee and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Prevele.. EXPENSE “I’d estimate our medical bills at about $20,000 but that is nothing compared to the Utter anguish we have had,” said Mrs. Prevele. Mrs. Prevele said she hopes their experience will serve one useful purpose, by acting as a reminder to others to keep dangerous substances out of tiie reach of children. Somehow It's Just Not the Same manufacturer, withdrew voluntarily because the show’s rat-| > lngs were so good and manyi watchers were children. By BETTY CANARY |into the wound while the battle The B e v e r I y Hillbillies lostiraffs around them. one of its sponsors recently be- *** ,the buddy sh^eJa d«/ cause the show was too popu- are t«. fron? a crumpled pack lar. Now the way it usually and « ^ man? happens is that a sponsor drops No sireel He hastily unwraps a show because nobody is f caramel and presses it be-watching it. tween his lips. + ^ Then there’s the dramatic n'| shot where the blindfolded man is backed against the wall. Time was when he was s h o . , I I S ; little mercy before the rifles Applause is due the cigarettecracked Not any more, makers for living up to their voluntary code of not advertis- ANY LAST WORD? ing to juveniles. The cigarette “Got a last request?' code, set up by the industry it ! "Please — a cigarette, self, requires among other! “Can't do it, old buddy —| things that advertisers a v o i d:rules, you know.” suggesting that smoking is es- “But I'm going to die!” sential to social prominence.! “Sorry about that!" distinction, success or sexual at-i “Just one puff, man!” traction. ! “Can’t do it — bad for Athletes or celebrities with!heart." special appeal to children do not appear in the advertise-l ments. Things have also changed! with the program script writers. And, while I don't think they should coerce people into smoking, I cannot help but wonder how some of the old scenes would have been handled. Take the romantic shot. You know, where Humphrey Bogart lit two cigarettes pnd handed one to the lady. Health factor or not, that scene, had real im-j ‘So what? You’re going to shoot me!” “You want to go with emphysema?" Look, I’m begging! One last butt!” “How about a mint?” “Good Lord! Shoot me!” “Sure you wouldn’t like mint first?” first?’ SHOOT! SHOOT!” E Utility Items for Kitchens If sacks of all sizes are boxing you in, Ekco Housewares Company has the answer for you. They have recently introduced a paper bag holder that attaches to the back of your kitchen cabinet door and provides space tor storing bags, both large and small. The chrome-plated metal kitchen “organizer” is just one of many new homemaking helpers including a lid holder, a utility shelf, a package shelf and a spice shelf. feel your best ...and look it! Lengthen Life With Exercise Lack of exercise is probably shortening the average American man’s life expectancy by as much as five years, says Dr. Jean Mayer, professor of Ihutrition at Harvard’s School of Public Health. American man’s life expect-plication. Can you get the samel ancy now is 68.5 years, which effect with two sticks of spear- is a good five years or more mint?________E_____ under that of men in other Qr what about The main soldier scene? He's down and difference is that men in those breathing heavily. His b ud d yicountries get more exercise, Dr. leans over him, pouring sulfa'Mayer says. ' IMPROVE YOUR FUTURE! . . . through short, intensive career training in business Excellent positions available — prepare yonrself now Day School or Evening Division Air Conditioned Classrooms Free Placement Service Secretarial, Accounting, Clerical, Office Machine Programs Speedwriting or Gregg Shorthand MID-TERM OPENING JULY 24 REGISTRATION INFORMATION FOR PBIs Writ*, riiit or telephone for a copy of leteet catalog. Pleaie indicate interest in either evening or day programs. Addreia; 18 V. Lawrence Street. Phone FE 3-7028. $11 te *14 Charge it With Michigan Bankard or Security Charge SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Today, I’m giving you a few more travel tips for home or abroad. Everyone loves knits and they do travel beautifully. Knits don’t wrinkle, don’t soil easily, and can be dressed up or down. I’d suggest one in a becoming color, possibly a sleeveless dress that can be accessorized with either jackets or sweaters. You can add printed smoke rings, chiffon scarfs, hr jewelry and wear one costuriie from morning to night Be sure your raincoat is just as functional under the sun as well as under a cloud. A gay colored one can serve as a-regular coat and because it has been treated with a water repellent spray, it can double in the rain. JRemember when traveling, no one expects you to dress the way you would at home. Most large cities of the world are very fashion conscious, and you will always want to look your best. Fashions latest dictate is a coat of cotton brocade. They are so handsome and can be worn 12 months a year. They have the look of wool, silk, or whatever. Make yours tailored in style, the beauty of the fabric will make it outstandingly beautiful without being overdone. A tip from a fashion coordinator: Tent dresses of whipped cream fabric are perfect for auto travel (belted or unbelted). They are so comfortable, look nice when you get out of the car and can serve as a robe in an emergency. Lately, I have had several requests for a pattern for an English riding jacket and breeches. I haven’t been able to locate any and am hoping one of you can help us out. If you know of such a pattern, please write to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600.1 will be happy to forward the information to) others. TAILOR TRIX WINNER Mrs. George Schupp of Louisville, Ky. is this week's Tailor Trix pressing board winner for her following suggestion. Recently, I had to reline a coat, and I didn’t have a pattern'to go by. I ripped obt the old lining, sprayed it with spray starch and pressed it flat. This gave body to the material, and it served much better as my pattern. Dear Eunice Farmer: Many of the new patterns have gone back to the side zipper or else simply open at the shoulders with no other closing on the pattern. I have become so used to the back zipper and find it very difficult to get a dress on and off without one. Is it all right to go ahead and place the zipper wherever I wish? Mrs. B. C. i Dear Mrs. B. C.: Many of the foreip designer patterns have eliminated the | center back seam. These dresses also have a minimum of fit, making it rather simple to get in and out of. However, if you are the least curvacious and wish to have a slight amount of fitting, it will be difficult for you to get the dress | on and off. In most instances, I can’t see where a zipper (if done professionally with a hand-picked finish, instead of top stitching on the machine) detracts from the desip of the garment. ★ ★ ★ Be sure to add the additional seam allowance at the center back of your garment when you are cutting it out. Another tip that will save frustration: Make your center back seam 1 inch wide instead of the usual % inch. TTiis will give you ample seam allowance for a smooth zipper application. WSCS Social Will Be Saturday The Women’s Society for Christian Service of St. Luke’s Methodist Church is planning an ice cream social Saturday at 4 p.m. Cochairmen are Mrs. Glenn Weiler attfl Mrs. Jack Coulter. Proceeds will be used for landscaping of the church property. 'Soap and Suds' Is Club Project to Help Needy Any club group seeking ideas for a special project might consider one developed by a woman’s group In West Monroe, Louisiana — where August was designated as “Soap and Suds Month.” Wet Cut Blooms If you do not have time to arrange your bouquets of flowers as soon as you have cut them, place them in a bucket of water until you do have time to arrange them. Just a 10-minute wait on a hot day can ruin ap otherwise beautiful^bouquet if you don’t I put the flowers immediately in water. Members collected contributions of soap and cleaning supplies which were then given to deserving organizations for distribution among needy families. * * * * This theme could be used any time of the year, because every day is a soap-and-suds day — and needy people are bound to appreciate such thoughtfulness. OENBVA .... FROM $123 REDMONDS Jewelry 81 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC Free Perking in Rear of Storo s___________1 . We didn’t plan it that way, but kids turned out to be new Soft Fleischmann’s most loyal supporters. They have their reasons. That it’s soft enough to spread without <***■* * *• fheac/iiptic^Speaiet^t^ Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center, S. Telegraph Tel-Huron Center, S. Telegraph—Rochester,, 1451 N. M^ain Pontiae Mail Shopping Oonter, N. Telegraph MORE and MORE PEOPLE ARE BRINGING THEIR PRESCRIPTIONS TO CUNNINGHAM’S WHERE YOUR DRUG DOLLAR BUYS MORE! F0RY0vm COTTAR # PORCH •K» IMPORTED-3 X 5 FT. RICE STRAW RUG FLOWER FRESH PRINCE MATCHABELLI SUMMER SHOWER SPRAY MIST THESE BEAUTIFUL RUGS HAVE A DURABLE WEAVE AND COME IN VIVID MULTI-COLORED FLORAL DESIGNS, flM NATIONALLY KNUn- w. rscnnORANT PADS - 75 » 1st Sack flag poach ,.69* 6-12 SPRAT INSECT repellent - 76* SWEET* 49* 24ee - SQUIBB • 2 INDIVIDUAL GRILLS • ADJUSTABLE TO 3 LEVELS [GLEEM Toothpaste 59* jf REG. 95- * .. merely the problems of an aa-lever, to approach a position of timlsSile defense system / be- parity with the United States or cause after all the antimissile system is not a weapon of aggression, of attapk, it is a weapon of protection— It’s a defensive system^ And we fed, therefore, that what should be considered is the entire complex of armament-disarmament questions.” ! SOVIET DEFENSE BOAST Earlier last month the chief of Soviet civil defense boasted that his country could destroy all enemy missiles before they reached Soviet territory. In February this same official, Marshal Vasily I. Chulkov, had said tiie Soviet Union was not completely safe from missile attack. Red China’s emergence as a nuclear power is causing the United States to reevaluate its position. ★ ★ if In a report issued June IS, the Senate-House Economics Committee concluded that Red China has a “very large capacity for nuclear weapon develop- tiie Soviet Union, either in numbers or sophistication of nuclear weapons." Two days later, Red China exploded its first hydrogen bomb. Furthermore, scientists on the staff of Japan’s Institute of Atmospherics concluded that tiie explosion had occurred 18 to 31 miles high, indicating that the .bomb was sent aloft by a missile. EXPERTS DIVIDED Some American experts, while opposing an all-out ABM system, believe this country should provide some protection against a possible surprise attack from a substantial force of nuclear-tipped missiles■ from Red China. Others favor holding off improvements in technology make possible more sophisticated systems, such as exploding huge nuclear bombs in the path of incoming warheads, or orbiting a series of satellites that be attacked below 100,000 feetj enemy missiles. It would jm>L satellites in orbit. by the Sprint. Both these ABMs destroy the targets with a nuclear explosion and merely have to detonate their charges within a mile of the warhead. ★ ★ h * But tiie Soviet Union, like the United States, has complex dq-coys to fool tracking radar and is producing missiles With maneuverable, multiple warheads. U.S. Minuteman and Polaris missiles are believed able to carry .three warheads each. require the complex tracking radar of Nike-X, and it would not be hampered by decoys or maneuverable warheads. Underground nuclear testing in Nevada has proved the feasibility of such an awesome weap-However, some specialists say atmospheric tests would be required to perfect it. -* ★ 4 They note that the Soviet Union has conducted considerable Hie United States working on a second generation antisatellite system. It already has the Nike-Zeus rockets on Kwajalein Island and Thor missiles on Johnston Island in tiie Pacific Ocean. But these early systems are limited, and defense officials have been studying follow-up programs for two years. Until recently, most satellites had a predictable path, deter*1 k®86® ntisriles. electronic means, the latter could learn the contents of the suspected satellite and, if necessary, destroy it. Defense . officials report the United States already can determine whether an enemy has placed a nuclear bomb in orbit. However, they say it is unlikely in the near future than an orbiting bomb could match the accuracy or reliability of ground- above-ground testing with mined by orbital mechanics. „ . , --------- — - bombs up to 60 megatons. The However, both the United States To protect U.S. satellites from There has been speculation that Russians 71 such an(1 Soviet Union now have- ma- P°ss»bie attack, this country is the large Soviet ICBM might | tests before signing the limited neuyerable satellites that could developing coveys of satellite have as many as 15 in a single nuclear test-ban treaty and are easily elude present antisatellite , ^° confuse trackers and Exploding very large nuclear bombs in the paths of such concentrated attacks thus would be better than the “one-on-one” concept of Nike-X. Such bombs would have the force of 100 or I more megatons, more than 10 times the power of the Nike-X bursts. Detonation of a few of these «..*«»,«, J targe rocket-carried bombs at could* destroy a rocket as it lift-ithe Proper altitude and latitude ed off could trap dense quantities of ir if * j radiation particles in the earth’s clouds of metal projectiles to Much research and testing i8 magnetic field. pierce and destroy the rocket bring done in these areas, as RADIATION BELT before it got out of the atmos- well as on projects designed to Um explosion would disable Iphere. believed to be developing such ABM defense. The Defense Department also is reexamining a concept called Project Bambi which was abandoned in 1964 as too costly. It envisions hundreds of spaced out in low earth orbit so that several would be over enemy territories at all times. ROCKET DETECTION Satellite sensors would detect a rising rocket, and the vehicle would immediately MANEUVERABLE MISSILES interceptors. Under extensive research is the possible use of powerful ias-Systems under study by thejer or radiation beams which United States include maneu-i could concentrate enough ener-verable nuclear attack ships gy in a pencil-thin line to etoli-that would fly directly at a tar- terate either warheads or satel-get and satellites that would flyllites.' already been proven that seat belts are good for uS. Yet officials of the Federal Highway Administration testified that public acceptance remains tepid. WARNING LIGHT When one auto maker put a warning light on the dash board to show when seat belts were unbuckled, many motorists responded by smashing the light. Finally, consider man’s reluctance to ride backward in airplanes. intercept, inspect and destroy hostile satellites. Nike-X consists of two separate rocket systems. The Spartan, with a range of 400 miles, would intercept a warhead side tiie atmosphere, Warheads any missile within several The development of mam- miles, and within 30 minutes an artificial belt Only 5*x36” — rigid poly-plastic. Room , for two children. 5«6 FABRIC AIR MATTRESS 432 Only Durable fabric air mattress has pillow. Save! Unit St Per Cntamr 296 Copportone Lotion 84* Our Reg. 3.66 Our Reg. 1.32 Limit 2 Per Customer 432 Only NOXZEMA CREAM °7ff* 7A( 10-ost. mwf ‘ Limit 2 Per Customer 576 Only GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD C-+ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 ThursFri., Sat. at 31200 Schoenher at 13 Mile and All CELEBRATING marfl A Division of thoS. S. Krasko Company with Storos throughout tho Unitod Shrtot, Conodo and Puerto Rico Men! Get these Grand Opening Discounts Gold Tones, Paisleys, Stripes! MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Our Reg. 2.97—3 Dayt Only Boys’ 8-18. Nassau length. Lastex® stretch rubber, acetate, rotton/spandex. MEN'S SWIM THUNKS SAVE! Our Reg. 2.48... 3 Days Only Our Reg. 93c ... 3 Days Only Machine washable. 65% acetate/ Machine washable, nylon brief. Handsome short sleeve shirts of 100% cotton for cool summertime wear. Hl-boy roll or button-down collar styles. Machine washable. In many colors fast shades! S-M-L. Save. PERMA-PRESS SPORT SHIRTS Our Reg. 2.47 ...3 Days Only SM JM ggm 50% Blue “C”® polyester. Jg JR. BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS loll mam BAN-LON® SPORT SHIRTS FOR MEN 2.88 FIXED-PRESS DRESS-UP JEANS FOR MEN Men*» 28-36, Reg. 4.44 2.88 ‘ Machine washable jeans that never.need ironing! Handsome /imijils “dress-ups” are available in tan; black or loden. Men's are tailored of 75% cotton/25% Dacron® polyester; - All are shrink-resistant S-XL. Handsome, placket neck style Ban-Lon® shirts of 100% nylon. Savely c T d * BOYS’ COTTON TERRY SPORT SHIRTS, SAVE! Our Reg. 1.88 W *9^ 3 Days Only ( 0 f Cool sport shirts of 100% cottoty Mock turtle, crew neck models. 8-18. Men's Reg. 312.17 Take advantage of this 3 day only special!. Dunbrooke white, combed cotton tee1 shirts and briefs for men, boys, quality shirts and briefs are full cut, machine washable. Men’s 28* 42, S-XL; boys’ 4*20. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD A Division of thsS.S. Krotgo Company with Stows throughout the Unitod Stoles, Canada and-Paerto K»CO All KmartsjOpen Weekdays Till 10 PM*; Sundays 12-7 GRAND OPENING!, Fresh New Fashions at Big Discounts THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 SPECIAL PURCHASE ADVANCED STYLINGS Charge It • Many Manufacturers’ Samples • Prints, Stripes, Solids and Combos • Jr. 7-15, Jr. Petite 3-11 and 10-20 The very latest trans-season wear in fabu-Iona fabrics, including acetate double knits. Dacron® polyeater, Arnel© triacetate jerseys, cotton poplin*. * C»lon«»« Corp. TJUL Quality, Value, and Fashion, Tpo l GIRLS’ CHOICE CROP TOP OR PLAY SHORTS, 7-14 Tour Choice! Our Reg. 97c Ecu 3 Days Only A. Ruffle-bottom crop tops in gingham check* or bandana prints. Crisp, washable cotton. Charge It! B. Shorts in solid colors, stripes or prints. Cotton popoin, seersucker and stretch denim and mbre. For Moppets and. Big Sister TRIM NYLON STRETCH TOPS IN SIZZLING SOLID COLORS 3 Days Only Long-sleeved, tattle-neck styles to wear in or out We’ve also the same style of aerylic/rayon in zesty stripes. S-M-L. Women** Cotton/Acetate Charge It Pitch a tent... take the A-line... try the new at-the-waist waistline . . . or maybe a two-piece outfit They're hen In robust cottons and no-iron fabrics, pretty plaids and solid colors. 3-6X; 7-14. , , Our Reg, 2.78 3 Day* Only Picture-pretty with lacy, smocking and applique trimming. Styled with large pockets. Pink, blue, or maize solid colors or checks. 12-18. Charge It Purple, gold, spice, navy, loden, brown, green, royal or wheat Sanforized© Expandra® nylon/ cotton deniip, 8-18. •Erwin MfHtT.M. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Ct*6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY* JULY 12, 1967 All Kmarts Open Weekdays Till 10 P«M»; Sundays 12-7 REMINGTON 300 SEUGTRO Shaver 18.88 Our Reg. 22.9S.. .3 Day* Adjustable shaving head, 4 ■having positions, limit 1. ALARM CLOCK BY "WESTCLOX” 1.77 Discount Print, Charge It Keywound alarm clock has ivory colored case. FOLDUK TRAVEL ALARM CLOCK 3.26 Our Reg. 3.96 ... 5 Day Square case; red lining; radium hands. Limit 1. “Typhoon” Model RONSON LIGHTER 1.66 Our Reg. 1.36...3 Day Vindproof, “Typhoon” light* er has handsome finish. . MEN'S MESH CASUALS !Our Reg, 2.96. V 3 Days Only •iij: “Apollo” oxford styles, sizes 6Vt to 12. ££ .Features: black mesh uppers; full cush-| ion insoles and long wearing rubber soles and heels. MEN’S HOUSESLIPPERS Our Reg. 1,96 /By/ 3 Days Only Jr Jr * 3 Day* Only Bandsome and comforUble Everelte-siyle u , , , “Apollo” slippers with smooth Marsh- Men * y°nlh* mallow® vinyl uppers and soft cotton 11 * 2> ^hit® 1cotto1? «■»«• ®P* . tony insoles, lining. Padded soles and Pe”; ful1 cu,hion in*oles; rub* heels. beroutsoles. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD A THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 A Division of Hi# S. S. Krtsgo Company with Stores throughout tho United States, Canada and Puorto R ico Look How Little It Costs To Have Fun! COLEMAN STOVE OR LANTERN 10.34 Our Reg. 1 l'.99Stove Otfr Reg. 12.99 Lantern Your RODDY” ROD and REEL COMBO 11.00 Our Reg. 14.83 3 Days Only Compact two-burner stove beats fast, evenly... uses Coleman fuel or white gas. Double mantle lantern burns 20 hours on One filling. Adjustable illuminatiqn. Wind, stormproof. Limit 1 each. Both The “Roddy” Reel is perfect for all-purpose fresh water or light ocean fishing. All parts are treated for eorrosion resistance. Rod comes in 616 or 7-foot length with medium action. MOVIE EDITOR, LITE METER, FOCAL CAMERA our Choice jL JVjv Days Only SoOO SUNSET UNITIC LITE METER SWINGER CAMERA, CASE AND ALBUM Sunset unitic light meter has “still,” “movie,” “Polaroid” settings. Reg. 6.88 Now 5.88 MARK II MOVIE EDITOR Mark II Baia 8mm Or Super 8 movie editor has splicer, screen, Our reg. 10.77 Now 5.88. FOCAL CAMERA OUTFIT Kmart instant loading still camera has built-in automatic fiashcube socket. Reg. 6.88 Now 5.88 Our Reg. 21.73 ALL 3 FOR 3 Days Only • Swinger Camera. Black/whites In 10 sec. • Carry Case. Holds Swinger, film, bulbs. • Paisley Alum. 11x9’* black page alhnm. Swinger Camera Alone • • • • 12.88 GREENBRIER WOODS 11.79 GREENBRIER IRONS 19.49 (Limit 1) GOLF BALLS WITH FAST-RESPONSE SWIM FINS I.B0 Discount Price. Charge It Swim Fins features top quality rubber and fully adjustable to fit even the younger set. Charge It at Kmart. While Quantity Lasts .22 RIFLE HAS DE LUXE FINISH HARDWOOD STOCK Discount Price 10.00 Charge It Single-shot rifle has hooded famp front sight, adjustable military rear sight, all-German steel bolt action. FOCAL PROJECTOR 40J5 Our'keg. 59.88 3 Days Only Slide projector has 12* remote control cord for armchair shpwing, 500 watt lamp, 100-slide roto tray. Anscomatic S-85 camera has 4:1 manual zoom; reflex viewing; CDS exposure control, pistol grip. No. 126 Anscopak B&W Film. Rag. 44c 110-POUND BARBELL SET 11.47 Our Reg. 17.97 || 3 Days Only RED HEAD SLEEPING BAG 5.00 4-Lb. Pill Limit 2 110-pound adult aet comes complete withMNvoMag weirfita, perfect companion for your summer camping trips .. . Wled chrome-platedsleeves,,two dumbbell handles and dins- thi, .dultoiae sleeping bag has warn, 4-fb. insulation; trated exercise instruction booklet. Limit one set to a customer.. faU Mparating zipper; brightcotton flannel lining; canopy! Limit 2. KMART 7x35 BINOCULARS 10.00 Our Reg. 16.88 " 3 Days Onty Precision center focus binoculars have diamond-cut eyepiece and focusing wheels. In vinyl carrying case. Just Charge It. ' •, OX 126-12 Film. 0«r (tag. 1.11............. v..6|o RELOADABLE CUBE WITH FLASHBULBS 1.49 Our Keg. 1.97,3 Days Amplex reloadable fiashcube with 12 AG-1B bulbs. VICEROY SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA 79.88 Our Reg, 89.86,3 Days 3-spced camera' has behind* the-lens CDS electric eye. ‘MITCHEL 300’ SPINNING REEL 13.97 ■ Our Reg. 16.86,3 days only RUBBER HIPBOOTS 6.96 Leakproof. Full pleated soul and heeL Adjustable belt loop strap. ARCHERY SET BY “YORK” 4.99 Our Reg. 5.97 3 Days Only Complete set includes solid fiberglass bow with recurve, four cedar arrows with bullet-type points and replaceable nocks. 16-inch target and instruction booklet.-Shop Kmart and save! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEBNESDAY, All Kmarts Open Till GRAND OPENING! >ut tha United Stain, Canada and Puerto Rica Apply and Shop without C GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD RIPPLE BRIM HAT | Our Reg. 5.48 9 Oft 3 DaysOnly ft«V0 Large linen ripple brim in black, white, ¥: beige, brown, coffee. Fite alL JR. MISS NYLON SEAMLESS HOSE 2 p°'r 56c Our Reg. 2 prr. 86c mesh nylon style. Four 4. Choice of Colors | mm viscose 9 TWEED RUG, SAVE! i Our Reg. 13.88,3 Day* Only & Viscose loop rng with bnilt-in foam rub-ber padding. All edgea serged. Many >x popular colon. Limit L - $ FLAGSTONE RUG Our Reg. 5.67, S Day* Only 24x36”, cut and loop rayon pile rng. Colors! RUG AND LID COVER Our Rtg. 5.11,i Days Only Viscose rayon matching set. 24x36” oval rng. - Wide choice of colors. 3-TONE DECORATOR RUGS 2.37 Out Reg. 3.37 3 Day* Only Thick, heavy throw rnga in fnll 21x36” aixe! Long-wearing viscose rayon pile with sore-grip, non-slip backing Machine washable. Charge It ajt Kmart! CANNON TERRIES Our Reg. 56o 41* Limit 4 Per Customer While Quantity Lotts "DAN RIVER*” SEERSUCKER rdmste41yd,3Devm4r 2H Dan River® fine quality combed cotton seersucker. 36” and 45” widths. 5 to 10 yard pieces. BOYS’STRIPE TOP CREW SOCKS 3pair68c OurReg.3pn.88o 3 Days Only. Soft cottons, crew style with stripe-patterned, tops. 7-1014. MEN’S RIBBED TOP CREW SOCKS OurReg.68o 52* 3 Days Only, Men’s ribbed top crew socks of Orion® aery, lie, stretch nylon. Men’s Spun Cotton WORK SOCKS .OurReg. 3 prs 94o 3~74* 3 Days Only. Soft spun cotton* with comfortable cushion foot. 10-13. KAAART QUALITY BED SHEETS AND CASES WHITE COTTON MUSLIN PILLOW CASES Limit 4 packages to a customer Our Reg. 89o 3DaysOnly f for 2 76* 72x108” and TWIN FITTED BOTTOMS Limit 4 packages to a customer Our Reg. 1.83 3 Days Only 1.63 11x108” and DOUBLE FITTED BOTTOMS Limit 4 packages to a customer Our Reg. 1.96 3 Days Only VllBlvUlCI 177 “RIPCORD” BEDSPREADS Our Reg. 837% 3 Days Only 5.44 Double (90x110”) bedspreads in solid color, deeptone washable cottons. ^ Plain hems. Pre-shrunk. Limit 2. 2.33 BRASS BIRD CAGE KMARTEASY SPRAY STARCH* 33* Our Reg. 42c 3 Days Only. Guaranteed tested Spring Clothes Pins.38c tttWKM, l»t VErisIS Our Reg. 3.97 3 Daya Only Adjustable-height to 54”. Perforated top for cooler ironing. Beige color. None sold to dealers .. . one to a .customer;Charge It ‘ - , Our Bag. 2JT Teflon Ironing Board Cover, Pal Sat .■■■ 1JS STRAW BASKET BAG Our Reg. 1.37 3 Day* Only Sprightly flowers trim the tilt-down opening. Sturdy handle. Tan. 11x7’*. Our Reg. 2.77. Brass-finished. Plastic top, bottom. Parakest Kit.............98c 2.33 FREE FREE Cardboard Carrier! DogYummie* 5-GALLON AQUARIUM 7.77 ROAST OG. TURKEY ©w#( DINNER With Dotting, Whipped Potatoes/Vegetable \ rnrr 4 Neon Tetras with rnU Purchase of Kit or Aquarium TROPICAL FISH . . * • 4 for 96o I THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 C—0 All Kmarts Open Weekdays Till 10 PM.; Sundays 12-7 GRAND OPENINGS Apply for Credit and Shop without Cash Complete 8-Pc. “Easy-Do” HAIRCUTTING SET BY RAYCINE Our Reg. 7.57 437» 3 Days Only S4t includes: Raycine; haircutting attachments; forged steel shears; tapered comb; handy storage tray; and stand-up instruction book. Only 3399 wide, precision crafted New Admiral Duplex 20 FREEZER-REFRIGERATOR COMBINATION • No Defrosting Refrigerator Discount Price • Freezer Holds a Huge 235 Lbs. 5.70 cu. fiflar^ ca^ huge 235 lbs. 12.36 cu. ft. no-defrosting re* frigerator interior has balanced-cold for proper temperature and humidity. Precision crafted for dependability. Just say, “Charge it.” - NO MONEY DOWN- 369 Charge It MONTHS T PAY Brews 12 to 30 Cups “WEST BEND” COFFEE MAKER Our Regv 8.86 6.97 3 Days Only It’s automatic! Just pdur in cold water (correct level on side of urn), add coffee, plug into any AC outlet Coffee stays at serving temperature. 'WivlvlfWot The Last Word in Conveniencea WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER • Pay Only 7.92 Per Month • 108-Lb. Zero-Degree Freezer Super-storage door; “floating quiet” rotary compressor. Charge It. Automatic Washer. 2 speeds; 14-lb. 7 O Q88 capacity; 3 cycles. JL O 27 Electric Dryen Whirlpool dryer has lsrye 7 O capacity, is easy to operate. J-mW Jr Free Installment oh Detroit Edison Lines Charge It NO MONEY DOWN - MONTHS TO PAY Discount Price 189** Toastmaster OVEN-BROILER 1 Our Reg. 17.57 SDaysOnly Two appliances in one! Used in one position, it’s an oven. Flip it Over and it becomes a generous-siae broiler. Temperature guide oh side panel. 2 position baking or broiling tray with glass door. Chrome finish. . GE PORTABLE HAND MIXER 7.74 Discount Price Charge It Three-speed finger-tip control... just a flick of your finger changes speed instantly to High, Medium or Low! Powerful GE motor never' needs filing. Handy beater ejector. Weighs just 3 pounds. White with chrome trim. < GE STEAM AND DRY IRON 7.74 Discount Price Charge It Switches from steam to dry at the push of a button. Handy fabric dial, sets the correct heal for ironing. It’s lightweight and features stylish contoured handle that’s designed for ironing ease, comfort. Charge It, 'limit.d Quontily, foon. Sold to D.ol.r. ... / GE 2-SLICE TOASTER 9.88 Discount Price Charge It Features: easy-to-read, 9-position toast control; extra high toast lift; snap-out crumb tray; easy-to-cleah chrome-plated steel shell - with stay-cool end panels; silver color -trim on front base! Fully automatic for toast is you like it,; GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12,v 1967 Grand Opening Savings on (AJGE avocado green combination No Money Down ... Pay Only GE No-Frost 15’ refrigerator-freezer combination in avocado green is mounted on wheels for easy cleaning. Plus: separate.temperature controls; auto-fill icemaker; 145*lb. zero degree freezer. Just say “Charge It”... Cash Price 299.88 IQ” (B)NEW 13.5 cu. ft. GE REFRIGERATOR No Money Down ... Pay Only Model TB-14S. “Two-Poor 14” refrigerator freezer features: automatic defrost refrigerator section; temperature control; 4 cabinet shelves, ! adjustable; removable egg bin; 132-lb. freezer. Coppertone or white. Cash Price Z3JL3S_______,__-------__------------- 8 83 Per Month (C)GE AUTOMATIC FILTER-FLO WASHER • No Money Down . •. Pay Only Model WA 803C. 14-lb. capacity washer has Filter-Flo washing system; 2 wash cycles; 2 wash, 2 spin speeds; cold water wash and rinse; permanent press fabric cool down. Cash Price 188.88 (D) General Electric Automatic Di yer Model DE 51OC.. • •. 115.18 GE Matching Gat Dryer.......................... 12 8.51 T92 mmm' Per Month (E) 30-INCH HI-SPEED ELECTRIC RANGE No Money Down . •. Pay Only —92 Model J-318. GE automatic range has picture window door. Attractive design has lighted oven, interior; removable oven door; full-width storage drawer; push-button controls; hi-speed Calrod® surface units. Cash Price 188.88. FrooInstallation of Eieetrie Appliances on Detroit Edison Linos 7 Per Month GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD C—XI THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 196f ^ act*®? Nh lllillliii -V‘0U if'*»ON EY. BACK-'Jtt Grand Opening Savings on Portable TV Sets Check these low Kmart Grand Opening Discount Prices! Admiral “Instant Play” portable TV baa 172-sq.-in. picture area, 17,000 volte of picture power, built-in monopole antenna, front-mounted controls, Admiral quality speaker, decorator styling. 3 days only. Features all channel VHF-UHF reception; 60-sq.-in. picture; built-in monopole telescoping antenna; front controls; high impact, textured polypropylene cabinet. Lightweight, just 14 lbs. 3 days only- 1 (■) Modern MA Victor TV Dependable, RCA Victor portable television has 172-square-inch picture; 20,000 volts of picture power; fine VHF-UHF tuning. Specially priced at Kmart where you can Charge It! 3 days only. f (F) COMPACT MA PerfMo Modern styled, RCA Victor television features: 172-equare-inch picture; 20,000 volts of picture power; built-in VHF-UHF antennas. Lightweight, easy to carry. Shop Kmart and Charge It. 3 days only. 0088 .mm Charge It 11988 119®? |fM . ^'' Charge' It SC888 MW 10.22 Month GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY iNWOOD THBtPQNTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 GRAND OPENING SPECIALS! • WHEEL ALIGNMENT . . . 4.87 • brakeITdIustment .. .87 • WHEEL BALANCES4w» 4.77 WRIGHTS INCLUDED ON FAMOUS FISK CUSTOM 240 [Tubeless Nylon Cord ARCTIC AIR DELUXE Auto Air Conditioners 2 YEAR OR 24/000 MIL! WARRANTY :k tmih dilium ■WAY FLASHER F light* into •m.ra.n-ey wamingflmMrs jitney. MUFFLERS VINYL FLOOR MATS I TUNUSS PLUS FEDERAL sins ■XCISI TAX | 6.50x13 1.80 |7.75/6.70x 15 2.23 | 7.75/7.50x 14 2.21 [845/8.00x14 2.38 | All *lm. blndtwnllt. tub.l«». pju « th» old Pro off your «j Fords, Chevy, Rambler, Dodge, Plymouth 11 ill Olds F-05's, Pontiac jfl Tempests, Bwiclc Specials ■ '3 lit !! TUBELESS SUES _ ~rm*« 7. 6.95/6.50 X14 EACH OCISE Ttt Ts5®] 1.9S 2.0S | 7JI/7.00x14 16s®1 1.9S J 7.75/7.50 x 1. | 7.75/6.70x13 16*° 2.23 I SO5/«.00x 14 I e.is/7.io*i» 18" 2.33 2.56 2.53 I MS/SJO x 14 1 9AS/7M x IS 1 19" || fA0/SJ0x1S» . 2.16 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 I>-1 Don't Overlook Cukes for Summer Eating Cucumbers are in peak supply. So enjoy yourself. And we are happy to remind you that they are very, Very low in calories. But not when served with sour cream, ol course. Try them cooked sometime. Delicious and different. Slice unpeeled cucumbers about Mi-inch thick. Cook 5 to 1 minutes in 1 inch of salted water. Drain. Serve with a white sauce flavored with a little minced onion, or a sauce of half chicken stock and half light cream, Cucumbers in Sour Cream 2 cucumbers, 8 inches long 1 cup thinly sliced fresh onion rings V« cup sour cream 1 tablespoon cider vinegar 1 tablespoon water Vt teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon ground black pepper 2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh dill Cook Apples in Syrup for Good Dessert You’ll still find1 a good assortment of controlled-atmosphere storage apples in the store. % Try some like this. Skillet Apples Mi cup of sugar and a pinch of salt 1 cup water 3 Very large yellow Delicious apples, pared and cored and each cut into 8 wedges 1 teaspoon vanilla In a HMnch skillet ever low the sirloin section, as well as j heat, stir together the sugar, below the round or leg. The ,, . ... ' .. •teaks are boneless and the fat salt and water untl1 sugar ** follows a pattern similar to that of round steak in that most of it is in the edging. Q. How U it prepared? Q. What is the name of this cut of meat? A Beef tip sirloin butt steak. Q. Where does it come from? How is it identified? A. It comes from the hind-quarter of beef, specifically the section known as the tip or knuckle. Ibis is right next to 2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced Wash cucumbers. Wipe dry and score down sides with fork. Slice thin and combine with onion rings, sour cream, cider vinegar, water, salt, pepper and chopped dill. Toss lightly. Turn into serving bowl. Garnish with sliced hard-cooked eggs. Serve as relish. Makes 6 servings. Fresh Cucumber Sauce for Fish 1 cup finely chopped, peeled fresh cucumbers V» teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar -1 tablespoon cider vinegar Mi teaspoon ground black pepper Vi cup heavy cream, whipped Combine cucumbers and salt. Let stand in covered bowl in refrigerator for at least 1 hour. Drain and mix with sugar, cider vinegar and black pepper. * * * Just before serving, fold in heavy cream. Serve over baked salmon, broiled fillet of haddock, swordfish Or other fish. Makes 1 cup. CUCUMBERS — Crisp and green and wonderfully fresh tasting are cucumbers. Here, they’re prepared with sour cream and fresh dill. Use a sour cream substitute if you’re a calorie counter. Canned asparagus benefit Always remove cdke-pan lin- You can add minced parsley from being served with; ers as soon as the cake is. in- with a heavy hand to a bread browned butter. 1 verted on the cooling rack. ' 1 [stuffing for poultry. Sugar Pie So Simple Sugar pie is a sweetie. The one that is baked starts with an uncooked pastry shell — the 9-inch size. Sprinkled into it is Mi cup flour mixed well with 1 cup light brown sugar. ★ ★ K The dry flour particles are separated by the moist sugar to prevent their clumping together when a pint of light cream, flavored with vanilla and nutmeg is poured in. Small pieces of a stick of butter are.added. The filling will thicken when cooked 40 to 45 minutes in & 350 degree oven. When firm ih the center and pastry Is brown, this sugar pie is done. SERVE CjebhcUuUk1 MEXICAN FOODS Ut AMERICA’S HOMES Write for five, exciting recipes “MEXICAN FOODS FOR AMERICA’S HOMES” QeMwrdt Mexican Foods Co. I I,, CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE, JUST PHONE 332-8181. A. By broiling if the meat is of high quality. This means using a dry heat method as is used the others until all are removed. Stir the vanilla into the small for steaks from the short loin or! ^ing surfaces and still hold sirloin sections. This steak is “?eir shaP*- This1 wlU *ke also marinated dnd broiled. It about another 5 “lnnte«- Use is excellent to use for cutting; 8 slotted spoon to remove any into cubes to be used for ka-l apples^ that get done before bobs, to be broiled out-of-doors on the grill. If it’s cut thin, pan-broiling is the method to use. If there’s any doubt about th| amount of syrup in skillet; pour ality, use file moist heat meth-|over apples. Cover and dull, quality, use the moist heat Serve with Custard Sauce, method (braising) for cooking. 'Makes 6 servings. Dress up supper tonight with low-calorie shrimp cocktail Delicious made with Golf Kist Shrimp i fresh from the Gulf Coast, home waters for nature's tastiest shrimp Gulf Kist Shrimp are already cooked. No peeling, no waste. Only 170 calories per can. Economical, too. 4% oz. can equals 10 oz. frozen unshelled shrimp. SHRIMP, COCKTAIL Vi cup Hunt's Tomato Catsup 1 tablespoon lemon juice W to t teaspoon horseradish Dash of Tabasco 1 can Gulf Kist Shrimp Lettuce leaves Drain shrimp. Cover with ice water, let stood 5 minutes; drain. Arrange in 3 cocktail glasses, garnish with lettuce leaves. Combina other four ingredients, poor over shrimp. Chitf.-3iervtngs. ■ Enter the Stokely-VSan Camp Vacation Coloring Contest and Win a Summer Full of Fun solves. Bring to a boil. Add the apples; cover and boil gently about 5 minutes. Uncover and continue cooking. gently turning apples as necessary, nntil they are soft through, . have transparent- 128 BIG PRIZES FOR EASTERN MICHIGAN To help you in the coloring game, be sure to see the Stokely color guide labels, and the famous Van Camp's Pork & BeanS label at your favorite supermarket. And, be sure tb buy Stokely Fruits and Vegetables when you shop. They’re picked only when the color is perfect, to give you perfect flavor. Stokely picks just like you do...when the color is right. A Thermos camping tent... the pop tent that works merely In minutes. plus a General Electric battery ^ operated TV, the personal portable TV sot that play* 25 THIRD PRIZES: . ZebcoFishing Sots... rod, raal and fishing ^^Mgs ^00£Z**** 2SECONP Kodak Supar 8mm Movie Camaras and Projectors. .. perfect for home movie viewing at its very beat, featuring Instant loading. m'HM FOURTH flRfjj PRIZES: JKBsm Thermos picnic chests... the perfect insulated . picnic chestfor back J yard barbecues or fHH camping out needs. HERE’S ALL YOU DO TO ENTER* l. Te enter, simply color thi ic.ni above using crayons,.eolorsd pencils, or paints. Jhescenemuat ^ colorsd^howiwtr. It It not necessary to match tha colon with thqso on tho Stokaly ond Van Camp's label*. Than fill In tha eoupon.balow and land * mth your antry to tha addraii indleatad on tHi eoupon. ni iun aaeh antry li correctly filled in with your name,dddwl and tip coda. * Mail your antry to "Stokely Vacation Coloring SweepstekM." p'oMSox 35560. Minnespolls, ’Minne.ota 55460. Tntriee mult tw E£"«,on.bny « SSfe’ antry formi available at your grocery. 3. WlnnOm will be talected ln random dfiwipga.by Adamwnurita. Corporation, an irtif#DO#ia»nt judging orgonizRi . - art final. Only one prise to a family. 4. All entries become the property of Stokely-Vsn ^mp end none | will be returned. Winner* will benotihed by mail.A^completejlst of winners will bo aveileble after September ^ »57. to _enymM reouesttna seme and enclosing e stsmped._s.U-eddnssed envempe to "Stokely Vacation Coloring Contest" F.O. Bot 35546, Minneape-Us, Minnesota 55460. 5Uf**ri^l<*rt.!i^^tera.r“scept*implodes!*an ™helr*nl[rS?uk< i To: Stokely Vacation Coloring Sweepstakes________ Box 35560. Dept. too. Minneapolis, Minn. 55460 • It my entry Hr the ttehely-Ven Cemp'e VMaMen 1 My favorite feed stare is D—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. Sugar Important in Baking—Does More Than Sweeten Sugar has a hidden life that very few people suspect. It isn’t that sugar is sneaky. Nor has it developed any tricky character traits since it was first discovered umpty- steen years ago. It’s just that there’s more to sugar than meets the taste buds. You hive known sugar all your life. It might have been added to the formica that went into your nursing bottle. More likely than not, it’s been on your table at home every day. • To sprinkle on grapefruit. • To stir into coffee or iced tea. • To add toanything that needs a touch of sweetness or a better flavor. You have used sugar in your cooking, too. Most often, of course, in your baking. Yet outside of sweetening a cake, a pie, a cookie . . . outside of adding to toe flavor of bread, biscuits and muffins . . . outside of being an indispensable Item In toe frostings you put on the goodies you bake—outside ■ of these things, do you know the many other ways sugar has been helping you all these years? Learn more about sugar and you’ll understand just how it helps you to bake better. Here are some facts — real "cloak and iheasuring spoon” inside information — that can com! to your aid every time you do battle with the mixing bowl and the oven. Let’s consider breadmaking first. In bread, toe primary ingredient is flour. And toe important element in flour, as you know, is gluten. It’s gluten that becomes elastic when flour is moistened, but if you don’t take care, those strands can become tough. They can develop a stubborn streak and tend to-fight toe yeast or, baking powder -or beaten egg whites you tely on to make your baking “rise and shine.” But did you know that sugar takes the fight out of gluten? Sugar tenderizes gluten. While you’re blending, miking or kneading, sugar softens Take Special Care of Poultry Purchased in Summertime Taking turkey home on your next shopping trip? If so, consider yourself a budding actress «— a star in the great tableau of getting turkey meat from farm to table. * Your role as homemaker, though it comes toward the final act of this drama, is as important as any other. The producer, of course) an essential character. And this drama needs the support of retailers, wholesalers, processors, transporters and inspectors as well. But.for toe final scene — toe protection and pleasing of your family — toe spotlight is on you. Poultry is highly perishable — and all the more susceptible in the summertime. Spoilage producing microorganisms are more active in warm weather, you see. So, your role in providing wholesome food for your family is even more demanding than usual. INSPECTED? Starting in the store, you would do well to look for turkey — whether you want a whole bird, or pieces — the official USDA inspection mark. This is your cue to £ wholesome selection. Poultry wearing this mark, you can be sure, has been processed under toe careful eye of your behind-the-scenes partners, inspectors with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Consumer and Marketing Service. The inspection mark-is your assurance that the turkey has been processed under sanitary conditions, was a healthy bird, and is honestly labeled and Any turkey which has come across state lines on its way to your food store will have been inspected by these experts. And since most poultry is raised in large numbers in widely scattered parts of toe counfry, toe majority of birds ___in food stores wfil have under- gone this inspection. Once you catch the cue from the inspection mark, it is time to go into your own act. Select toe size package which seems right for your family or meal plans. Reject anyproducts which have damaged trapping, or if the display cases seem unclean or improperly refrigerated. WORK FAST As soon as you check out of toe food store, hustle your purchase home to refrigerator or I freezer. Avoid letting this 'meat” stand at room temperature for any length of time. If frozen, your purchase will keep well ftp to a year in the freezer. Depending on size, it will keep in ^your refrigerator, thawing gradually in 1 to 3 days. Use fresh, chilled poultry within s day or two, or freeze it at home. Do not thaw the bird at room temperature. Allow it to thaw slowly in the refrigerator, or quickly under running cold water. Serve the hot turkey, hot, and cold turkey really cold. Refrigerate leftovers right away. If your performance has included all these pointers, you can take a bow — and plan on encores — as a protector of your family and provider of good, wholesome turkey meals' Luau Sandwich Have a little “luau” with open-faced sandwiches of deviled ham spread on toast and topped with a half slice of cheese and me whole pineapple slice. I these easy and. exotic-tasting hot snacks in a 376 degrees oven for about 10 minutes, or cheese up toe protein molecules in toe gluten network and keeps it from toughening, thereby insuring a high rise every time you bake. And that’s why sugar belongs in your baking recipes. There is one sugar does a secret job for you breadmaking. When you bake with yeast, sugar acts ad a food. A very special one. For sugar feeds yeasts—makes them grow—and when they do, yeast breads rise faster and higher. FEEDS YEAST In other words, sugar multiplies the power of yeast to leaven. Feed those yeasts, and see what it does to your reputation as a baker! And sugar comes to your aid in toe m g 11 e r of light and tender c n k e s, too. Perhaps you have thought it was only leavening agents (baking powder, etc.) that accounted for toe lightness la your baking. Taint sol . Sugar’s Effect on shortening Spice Is Subtle Ground mace accents the flavor of fresh fruit in this fruit cup conbinatioii. ★ * * For 6 servings, combine 2 cups of sliced strawberries with cup each of diced pineapple and grapefruit sections, 2 table-spoons of 1 e m o n juice, V« cup of Sugar and teaspoon of ground mace. Toss lightly. also contributes to -tenderness and lightness. When you cream butter (or other shortening) with sugar, the sugar is not merely bring combined with the butter to produce a better flavor, but it is also incorporating additional air into toe shortening and eventually into the cake. This additional air expands under heat when you bake. Result: greater height, greater lightness and tenderness. .There’s still another way that sugar helps when you bake. A fascinating change comes over sugar when baked goods are in the oven. Under heat, sugar Ganges its color. When toe temperature gobs about 347 degrees Fahrenheit, sugar becomes golden amber in color and richly delicious in flavor. This magical change in sugar, called caramelization, accounts for the brown color and crisp surface of cakes and cookies. Sugar, then, acts as a counter agent against tough Tang/ Cooler Buttermilk and orange Juice are happy companions. For a cool and refreshing beverage, combine 2 cups each buttermilk and orange juice. Add a dash of salt and 2 tablespoons sugar for 6 wonderful servings. As a general rule, cake pans should be filled from only one-half to two-thirds full. gluten; escalates your yeast forces; adds extra air when creamed with shortening; and caramelizes to make your baking glamorous and richly delicious. Quite a secret agent, sugar! SAM A WALTER Delicious Sausage Carry Out! — 682-9811 Open Etming* PONTIAC MALL MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL Egg Batter Is New for Coating Fish It’s an interesting batter for fish to be served with chips! ■ Yorkshire Fish and Chips 3 eggs % cup milk Vi teaspoon salt 1 cup (about) unsifted regular flour 2 packages (each 12 ounces) frozen sole fillets, defrosted Frozen French-fried potatoes Beat eggs until foamy; gradually beat in milk, then salt. Gradually stir in enough flour to make batter consistency of heavy cream. Dip strips of fish in batter, a few pieces at a time, allowing batter to run off before frying in deep fat. Heat potatoes according to package directions. Apples Top Cake Ever serve square of chocolate cake with a topping of applesauce flavored with orange? Interesting and delicious combination! CHERR,Y TIME — Heap fresh sweet cherries high in a white bowL Surround them with a half pint of sour cream ntirori with two tablespoons brown sugar and half a teaspoon of vanilla. Add «maii bowls filled with toasted coconut, ! ebqpped almonds and toasted sesame seeds. Let' your guests dip Uw cherries flret into the sour cream, toeo into the other fa^dBents. Wonderful conversation i piece. Meat, Tk But at Fomwi Jada U.S. CHOICE CENTER CUT GMCX RUST 49* 1-Lb. U.S. Choice Chuck Cut Seven Bene Steak 58* SPECIAL LABEL AJAX CLEANSER FOR SALADS OR COOKING MAZOLA OIL IN HEAVY SYRUP-DEL MONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL HUNT'S SAVORY PORK and REANS DEL MONTE APPETIZING TOMATO JUICE CHASE & SANBQRN GROUND COFFEE FLAVOR KIST HONEY GRAHAMS HART’S YOUNG TENDER CUT WAX BEANS PAPERMAID ASSORTED 9" PAPER PLATES 1 LB. 1 OZ. CAN 10‘ 59° 19° 'T 10° « 25° I19 29° 15 Vi-dZ. 1 OC WT. CAN I £, 2-LB. CAN 150 CT. PKG. 88° ORANGE, GRAPE, PUNCH OR PINEAPPLE/GRAPEFRUIT STOKELY DRINKS 19* I QT. 14 OZ. CAN BEECH NUT STRAINED BABY FOOD 41/2-OZ; WT. JAR 7* SAFE, LIQUID ROMAN BLEACH ■38* GAL JUG UPTON, LEMON, UME, MINT, ORANGE OR PUNCH ICE TEA MIXES RIB ROAST 4th & 5th Ribs 79 LB. ROSE CANADIAN STYLE END PIECE CANADIAN RACON 99* BOSTON BUTTS 59 FARM. VIEW CHICKENS PLUMP ROASTERS TURKEY DRUMSTICKS U.S. CHOICE BONELESS WHOLE BRISKET BACK ON FRYER LEGS 3 LBS. OR MORE FRESH HAMRURG YORK BRAND SLICED BACON YEARLING STEER SLICED REEF LIVER 1 LB., 6 OZ. CORNISH HENS U.S. CHOICE ROUND BONE BEEF ROAST U.S. CHOICE SEMI-BONELESS ENGLISH ROAST ,28° u. 68° ,49° ,46* ®89° ,. 59° -79° ,65° »78° THERE'S A FARMER JACK'S NEAR YOUI N DAIIY MO. SAT. S-IO, SUN, 1-7 Pricea effective thru Sunday, July 16. Sorry, No Sal** to Dealer*. raNTUC MILL SHOPPING CENTER GLENW00D PLIZI SHOPPING CENTER MIRICLE NILE SHOPPING CENTER . PIXIE HWV, IT WILLUMS LK. RD. 0G0MA DINNEBS 29* SLIM JIM FROZEN SHOESTRING FBENGH FBIES 29 , U.S. #1 NORTHWEST GROWN BING CHEBNIES .39* CALIFORNIA EARLY SUN GRANDE NECTABINES THE PONTIAC PJtESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1067 D—8 RICHARDSON FARM DAIRY STORES For Meat and Shrimp Pish Rice Is Cooked in Tea Recently, a reader described cooking in plain water won't do. particular dish as a “bell ringer .^’Actually, the connection between food and bells goes back to ancient Far Eastern Garnish the rice mixture with thin strips of omelet and accompany it with salted peanuts and toasted coconut for a touch that’s leaends' various shaned i*i|Jauthentically- oriental yet not legends, various shaped bells t00 bizarre f American tastes were used to proclaim the ex- Tea ls the proper beverage to cellence of food as well as its variety. • For example, in India, “Chai Garam” bells told of travelers -drinking hot tea under the blazing sun; “Sweetmeat” bells decorated street stands and helped the vendor sell his wares; ry House” bells adorned spice houses. Here’s a “bell ringer” of*a dish, adapted from a highly popular oriental one. It’s fast and easy to make—uses ham, beef and cooked shrimp (leftovers if you have them) and is unusually delicious. The seasoning trick that makes it so good is: cook the rice in tea. “Brisk” tea adds an extra “something” to the taste — full-bodied flavor — that Add Rose Wine to Jellied Mold The dessert is light, refreshing and prepared ahead. Pineapple Wine Jelly 1 package (3 ounces) strawberry-punch flavor gelatin 1 pup boiling water Vk cup pineapple syrup (from canned tidbits) % cup dry rose wine 1 cup well drained canned pineapple tidbits Dissolve gelatin in boiling water; stir in pineapple syrup and rose; chili , until slightly thickened. Fold in pineapple tidbits. Turn into 8 or 7 one-half cup I heat, molds; chill overnight to allow Meanwhile, in the same skil-wine to flavor pineapple tidbits, let, melt butter. Add eggs to Unmold. Makes 6 or 7 servings. I make a thin omelet. Then cut I into 1-inch strips. Garnish serve with oriental foods and most people will prefer a brisk” tea blended especially for American palates. Use either loose tea or “flo-thru” tea bags and start off with fresh cold water. Bring it to a fast rolling boil and brew the tea for 5 full minutes in a teapot which has been rinsed with scalding water. You’ll have a delightful beverage that rates the ringing of a bell — op sounding of a gong! “Ho-Chlh” Rice with Meat and Shrimp 214 cups water 4 tea bags 2 cups packaged precooked rice 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter or margarine .V4 cup chopped onion 1V4 cups diced cooked ham 1 cup diced cooked beef 1 cup small cooked shrimp or chopped large shrimp Dash of Tabasco 1 tablespoon butter or margarine 2 eggs, well beaten 1 cup chopped salted peanuts 1 cup toasted coconut In large saucepan, bring water to a boil; add tea> bags; cover and brew 5 minutes. Remove tea bags; stir in rice and salt. Cover; let stand 5 minutes. In medium skillet, melt 2 tablespoons butter; s ail t e onion, ham, beef, and shrimp until onion is tehder. Fold mixture and Tabasco into rice. Cover; keep warm over low ORIENTAL DISH — Here’s a version of a favorite oriental dish, admirably suited for American tastes. Cook the rice in “brisk” tea to give it specially delicious flavor. Gar- nish with thin strips of omelet and accompany with salted peanuts, toasted coconut— and plenty of hot “brisk” tea. Mix Egg Yolks With Roquefort Stuffed eggs make a appetizer! ROQUEFORT EGGS 4 hard-cooked eggs great Ruffle yolk mixture with the I tines of a fork held flat. Oven Is Answer When frying bacon for a crowd and you do not have time | Sprinkle with paprika and to stand over it, place the un- ______________ garnish with parsley sprigs,separated slices on a rack in a 2 tablespoons Roquefort cheese Peking in stems. jfour hundred degree p 0ven with a shallow pan below. Ba- 2 tablespoons mayonnaise Salt and pepper to taste Paprika and parsley sprigs Shell eggs and slice in half Your chocolate pie will have;mixture with omelet strips, lengthwise; remove yolks and a new flavor if you melt several Serve with chopped peanuts and mash fine with Roquefort, chocolate mint candy patties In toasted coconut. Makes 6 to 8!mayonnaise, salt and pepper, the hot chocolate pie filling. I servings. j RefiU whites with yolk mixture. Fill Ham Bone Cavity Having your meatman remove the leg bone from a ham leaves a dandy cavity for stuffing! Of course such festive treatment of a ham demands a party. con is done without any watching in eight to 12 minutes depending upon how crisp you want it. Well-beaten egg white is used for clarifying sugar syrup. Celery Soup Drop Cookies Are Is Creamy Full of Peanuts ICE CREAM CLUB BUY 12 HALF GALLONS at REGULAR PRICE and RECEIVE ONE FREEI STOP tU TODAY and ASK FOR A CARD... lea craam lovars maka Richardson's thslr haadquortari. Baeausa thay gat o wida voriaty of naw and unusual flavors; bscausa of our exceptional quality and bacauso of RICHIE’S ICE CREAM CLUB! Ask for your momborship card at any Richardson Farm Dairy Stars# Wo'll punch it each tima you purchase a half gallon of ice cream# When your card is pirnchad 12 times...It's worth a FREE HALF GALLON OF ICE CREAM. Start todayl_______________' Let a soup and sandwich the bill. Celery Cream Soup * 1 cup diced celery V« cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons each butter or margarine and flour 2 cups clear fat-free chicken broth 1 cup light cream 1 egg yolk Salt and white pepper to taste Gently boil celery and onion in % cup boiling water until very soft; reserve. Melt butter; stir in flour, then chicken broth; cook and stir constantly until thickened; add Vi cup of the cream; bring almost to a boil; add celery mixture. Thoroughly mix egg yolk with remaining Vi cup cream and gradually but vigorously stir into soup. Cook and stir constantly over low heat (do not boil) until hot. Makes 3 servings. Popular with young and old! .Serve them at a tea party. Peanut Wafers lA cup blitter or margarine V4 cup sugar Vi teaspoon vanilla 1 egg, separated V4 cup unsifted regular flour, stir before measuring Vi cup finely chopped cocktail peanuts 2 tablespoons cornstarch Cream butter, sugar and vanilla; thoroughly beat in egg yolk. Gradually beat in flour; mix in peanuts and cornstarch. Beet egg white until it holds soft peaks; fold in. Drop by 2 teaspoonfuls about 3 inches apart on greased cookie sheet; spread into 2V4-inch rounds with back of spoon. Bake in a moderate (373. degrees) oven about 5 minutes oy until browned around edges, Remove at once with wide spatula to wire rack to cool. Makes about 2 dozen. JOIN RICHARDSON'S Sauerkraut Had Chinese Origin Sauerkraut usually appears on German menus. Actually, though, the Germans did not originate this food. In the third century B.C., Erqperor Shih Huang of China used a form of krant to supplement the rice diet of the workers building the Great Wall. This cabbage was fermented in rice wine. Sauerkraut has changed Nut little through the years and the Germans gave it the name by which we know it today. TWTC PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Ifs a Pleasure to Shop CAMPBELL'S mo hiimm4 m NIINim IMI at Williams Lk. I OPEN SUNDAYS •III Cooley Lika M. Union Lako Villtio OPEN SUNDAYS Ml Auburn Ava. OOSCD SUNDAYS 465 E. Pika St. OPEN SUNDAYS I IK Orchard Lk. Rtf. ] I OPEN SUNDAYS^ Car. Maybaa Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS 'OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Prices •Friendly Sendee a Bell Stamp* th, right tomato BANQUET FROZEN COUNTRY KITCHEN PESCHKE HYGRADE KLEENEX FRANKS FRANCO AMERICAN RINSO 4-oz. wt. 15-oz. wf. Hygrade Shortening Thin Coupon AVI6 3 md $5 Purchase "TMw ti OUR FAVORITE BORDEN'S or SEALTEST SALMA KRAFT miracle Whip LIBBY'S ^ MRS. OWENS GRAPE * iS’/i-OZ. WT. CAN PILLSBURY AQUA NET UM SFUY 4®t With coupon sWrir Miracle Whip On**** 10-0Z. WT. JAR This Coupon md Puiuliaaoa of $5 or Mora. » FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase of 1 Pkfl. or More of CUBE STEAK £il FREE GOLD BELL ill stamps With Purehps* of Any : 'jl BEEF BOAST I 0 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Pnrahasr Of 3 pkgu. or moro of | CANDY J A FREE GOLD BELL if Stamps With Purchase of 3 Plcg*. or Mora of if COOKIES « J A FREE GOLD BELL v Ilf Stamps With Purchase of '20-Lb. boo of ■'* CHARCOAL I Rfl FREE GOLD* BELL IHI Stamps With Purchasa^ of a Whole, Half or 3-Lb. Can | (FREE GOLD BELL*| Stamps With torches* ir moro whole or cut-up FRYERS FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 D—-B Land Trade With Michigan Bell Is Approved City commissioners last night approved, 7-0, an agreement for the city to trade downtown parking lot land to the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. for a planned phone company expansion. Under the terms, the city would give to the phone com-| pany its present parking lot south of the Bell building and east of Mill. The phone company would purchase property in the block bounded by Perry, Lawrence, Mill and Pike, raze the buildings there — a bar, bowling alley, a diner and a sport shop —and turn the land over Lowest Bidder on Loan Notes! Is Announced City commissioners last night received a report that the Community National Bank of Pontiac was the lowest of six bidders on $1,004,000 worth of loan notes. Money gained from Ihe notes is committed to development of Pontiac’s R44 downtown urban renewal area. James L. Bates, director of planning and urban renewal, said the Chicago office of the Department of Housing and Urban Development had approved the bids. The commission will take formal action to approve the bids at its meeting next Tuesday. The Interest rate to be charged on die notes by Community National as quoted by the local bank is, 3 per cent. Five other banks or institutions, none local, submitted bids calling for from 3.02 per cent interest to 3.49. to the city for blacktopping i and installation of parking | meters. City Manager Joseph A. Warren said the actual mechanics would take about 10 months. Commissioners, after much * ★ * discussion, added an amendment to the proposed agreement which calls for the city to receive compensation if the exist-1 ing city-owned lot is worth more I money than the lot proposed to be developed for parking. MORE USABLE LAND’ District 4 Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson said there is 5,600 more square feet to the existing city property. Warren said the city will actually receive more usable 'M' Confirms Tuition to Rise Vice President Sqys Level Not Yet Set ANN ARBOR (AP) - A University of Michigan vice president confirmed Monday that the university will raise tuition for the fah. However, he would not speculate on the size of the Increase. ‘We haven’t set the level of the increase,” the unnamed yice president explained. He commented that the state appropriations were inadequate to maintain present levels of university services, and said addi- land for parking under the exchange and noted that it is more convenient to the downtown area. District 2 Commissioner Robert, C. Irwin was the only commissioner to vote against the amendment. ★ ★ ★ He said he thought the land the city was to receive is more usable and probably of more value that that it would give, and because he didn’t think it ‘proper to come in at the last minute and make changes” in the agreement. ADOPTED UNANIMOUSLY The resolution to effect the agreement was adopted unanimously. Commissioners last night also received formal notice from Robert R. Eldred, chairman of the Citizens Finance Study Committee, concerning the committee’s recommendation on the best method of raising new tax income for 1968 municipal spending. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. I expressed thanks to the com-j mittee but ho formal action was taken. Commissioners are < pected to announce within week their decision concerning the need for new taxes. ★ ★ ★ In other action, the commis-received a report that public health service and the Alcoholism Information Cento* LOVE LETTER — Mrs. Leonard J. Barnes of 1664 Beachcroft, West Bloomfield Township, reads a letter from her husband, a telephone lineman with the signal corps in Vietnam. She said she received the 14-by-16-foot letter after writing to her husband complaining he “didn’t write enough.” She thought it was a package until she began unwrapping — and unwrapping — and unwrapping. Her husband entered the Army in 1966 and has been in Vietnam nine months. House OKs Farmer Relief, but Dems Delay Its Effect LANSING (AP) — The House, over some Democrats’ objec- versity services, ana saio aacu- tio d with the t,onaL revenues had to be | Senate version of a bill to ease a burden on farmers resulting from extension of workmen’s secured. The U-M regents had been expected to act on a tuition increase and the university’s fiscal budget at a special meeting today, but university officials announced Monday the meeting had been postponed until sometime next week. They have been waiting for the Legislature to agree on higher education appropriations. A higher education budget bill passed the House last Friday providing $62.2 million for the University of Michigan compared to $58.6 million in the Senate version. The differences are now being worked out in conference committee. A decision is thought unlikely until the end of this week, however, since Senate representatives to the conference committee will not be in Lansing until Thursday. Monday night a House conferee said the lower chamber will stand firm on its figures and fight for an increase. The $62.2-mi!lion appropriation approved by the House would mean a shortage of $2.6 million or about $35 per student per term, to cover existing programs and increased enroltamm commitments at the university. The university has scheduled a 6.2 per cent enrollment increase of 2,244 students, to bring total enrollment to 38,307. compensation to-farm workers. - The Democrats retaliated by refusing the bill immediate effect-meaning it will do farmers little good this year. ★ ★ *. Also passed by the House was a Senate measure giving the Public Health Department power to inspect,’’license and regulate hospitals — setting up quality standards and banning discrimination because of race, religion, color or national origin. The compensation bill changes a law which took effect July 1. It provides that in computing a farm worker’s “average weekly wage" for compensation purposes, only wages earned in farm labor would be counted. DEM OPPOSITION Democrats said that was discriminatory because other workers’ benefits are calculated on an average of earnings from any type of employment. The bill also limits coverage to workers employed by the same farmer for at least 13 weeks in a row. Tfie original law did not require that the weeks be consecutive. ★ ftc ★ Rep. Joseph Swallow, R-Al-pena, House Labor Committee chairman, said the law in its present form is “raising eco- Auto Victim Dies COLDWATER (AP) - James Fuller, 50, of Berkey, Ohio, died Tuesday at a Coldwater hospital where he was under treatment for Injuries suffered in a traffic accident Saturday. His wife, Granet, 49, remained hospitalised. Branch County sheriff’s deputies said the car in which Fuller was riding collided with one driven by Helen Doane, 18, of Burlington, Midi., at a comity road intersection northwest of Coldwater. nomic chaos among "farmers,” because insurance companies, lacking experience in writing workmen’s compensation policies in agriculture, are protecting themselves by charging large premiums. Earlier this session, majority Republicans tried to delay the effective date of the workmen’s compensation extension until late this year. They passed their bill on a party-line vote but Democrats then also withheld the needed immediate effect and would agree to only a two-month extension—until July 1. has been taken over by Oakland i County as of July 1. NURSE TRANSFERRED The services were housed in City Hall. The public health nurse on the city payroll has been transferred to the county, and is now located in the County Health Building. . The information center, still located in City Hall, is being financed now by the county and will be moved to county facilities in three weeks, Warren said. The city will save $21,000 yearly but Pontiac residents can! still avail themselves of the services, Warren said. The commission also tabled zoning decision and approved rezoning to Residential 3 the area north of East Walton and east of Giddings and rezoning to a Harking District land connected to the General Motors Truck ? Coach Division parking lot at South Boulevard and Tex. After hearings, the commission approved installation of water mains in Northfield Cameron to Arlene; Arlene, Walton to Northfield and Woodward, East Boulevard to the southern city limits. HUH OPEN 8:30 624-3135 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK IHWIMD HANET AnMQM PRESENTATION In EASTMA9C0L0B SNOW WHITE 1:00-4:00-7s00-1 OlOO NAMU 2:30-5:30-8:30__________________ TECHNICOL “SHOW WHITE" MU BE SEEN AT THE MATINEE, TOO! CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON, BICYCLE? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY! Corporate mergers in the United States in 1966 totaled 1,746, a drop of eight per cent in comparison with 1965, the Federal Trade Commission reports. DURING EXPO'67 HOSTEL DOWNTOWN MONTREAL $4.00 PER DAY CONTINUING OUR CUSTOM-TAILORED from *179S Harmon a| I' Clothlen-Uniformsi "After-Six" Tuxrrlo RrntaU 908 W. Huron il TrlffrtlA 1 PmIIm . Mid-Summer Doll Sale Now in Full Swing! 3 Days Only - Reg. 7.96 A Family Tree of Dine Dolls • 23' Wafking Doll • 12* Toddler Doll • 4T MM Dofl 6.96 3 Days - Reg. 5.96 "Hi-ChairBaby" Drinks, Wets. 4.96 She drinks, she wets! Wears footed sleep-play set. 18* Tail doll in high chair, has bottle, plastic cup and tumbler. Buy your Christmas Dolls Now during this big Sale! USE OUR LAYAWAY! Hold up the biggest doll’s hand and she will walk with you. Two biggest dolls have rooted hair, movingeyesand jointed limbs. All ore in beautiful! tent-style dresses. 3 Days ‘ Reg. 2.97 15" Little Treasure 3 Days - Reg. 4.9.6 Mama Doll 'Dorlii' lorrie” 96 Asweet 20-in. baby... so soft and cuddly. She cries "Mama" and is a Magic bottle baby. Moving eyes. Rooted hair. s Dressed forabirthday party. Has tooted hair, moving eyes, jointed limbs. Lifelike face. 3 Day Special! - 18 Debteen n Walk A child's dream cotne true! 18* Walking* doll,dressed for school or play. Rooted hair. PONTIAC MALL DOWNTOWN PONTIAC TELrHURON CENTER DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE S. S. KRESGE COMPANY THE PONTIAC £5ZKEEC*0 Romney OKs Bill Setting Minimum on School Days LANSING (AP) - A bOl requiring schools to provide a minimum of 180 days of instruction a year and setting a penalty for those who fail to do so was among three measures signed into law today by Gov. George Romney. Besides setting the minimum number of school days per year at 180, the law stipulates that school aid will be deducted from a violating district at the rate of l-90th of its total school aid i for each day under 180. COMMERCE DRIVE-IN THEATRE UNION LAKE AT NUOINTY NO. IN MW — *how Marti it Saak Mulli ChlMnn Undtr II Fra* NOW SHOWING “YOU ME GOING TO ENJOY •ALEITVERYMUCR”^ “Caine rives i performance!” (kcwnenoed m utwe wnacu) ----ALSO----- Mamma’s Hung You In The Closet And I’m Reelin'So Sad i RICHARD QUINE nmuim ^ Also signed by the governor was a bill authorizing cities, villages and townships to enter into mutual police assistance agreements in case of emergencies. The bill which takes immediate effect, also provides that two or more cities, villages or townships adjacentto each other may set up an intermu-nlcipal police authority to provide police services to member units. ★ ★ ★ Romney also signed a bill changing the residency requirement for undersheriffs and deputy sheriffs from three months in the county to one year in the state. D—7 Gets Sales Post INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Jack C. Frost of 6125 Cramlane has been assigned as a sales representative in the Detroit area for Lunkenheimer Co., a Cincinnati-based valve manufacturer. MUTE EVIDENCE-A shattered helmet and a lone shoe were all the passenger on a motorcycle left behind yesterday when the cycle plowed into the middle of a truck. Donald A. Wolpert, 19, was dead on a at the hospital. The driver of the bike, £ E. Hall, 17, is listed in fair condition. N-Weapon Strength Defended WE’RE OPEN EVENINGS, TOO! Steaks Prime Rounds • Breasted Chicken • Lobster Tails • Char-Broiled Steaks • Fresh Florida Snapper and Pickerel • Famous for Excellence in Sea Foods • Try Our Famous Round-Up Style Dinners No Liquor — Just Good Food Call 786-2245 for Taka Out Ordars Call for Rasarvations WASHINGTON (AP) — The i of strategic weapons. One meg-Pentagon, taking issue with aton equals one million tons of some retired military leaders, TNT. says the United States has! The Pentagon, asked to corn-enough nuclear weapons to dis- ment, said it wouldn’t discuss courage any attack on this megatonnage figures because * * * 'country. they are classified. But it did Frost is a graduate of Purdue i Among the group contending maintain that numbers of University and worked for the the Soviet Union, is gaining .mili- ons and size of warheads alone Henry G. Thompson Co. for the tary superiority are Air Force “are a very incomplete indica-past 11 years. 1 Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, who tor of military strength. for 12 years headed the inter-' * * * continental ballistic missile de-j “True military capability re-velopment program, and Gen. suits from numbers of weapons Curtis E. LeMay, former com- that are accurate and reliable, mander of the Atlantic Fleet, that can survive an enemy at-Dr. Edward Teller, the nuclear tack and that can penetrate ene-I scientist who often is referred to my defenses,” the Defense De-as father of the hydrogen bomb, partment said. “The United I also is in the group. States has and will continue to * * * have more than enough of such ^ .. .. .... weapons to convince any enemy LPey said evidence indicates ^ attack on Ms country l theSoviet Union is succeeding,wouW ^ suiddal„ in its massive drive toward | Thg headed by strategic n^itery supenon^ ^brieve* also said toe United and that the United States js States should d l an ABM I cooperating m this effort hy antiballistic missile system -slowing down its side of the because> in lts absenCjB ."■ creased.” PRESENT POUCY The Johnson administration’s present policy-is to hold off dep-loyment of toe ABM, which would be designed to intercept incoming enemy warheads. The report said toe United States is placing sole reliance for deterrence on offensive missiles and a dwindling bomber force. This means, the group said, that if there were a Soviet ultimatum to surrender, toe United States could only fire its offensive nuclear weapons or surrender.- The report concluded that an ABM “would at least strengthen the hand of the President if he is confronted with such a fateful decision, and it might stay the hand of an enemy at a critical mornpnt in history.” The report said the Soviet Union ' apparently is developing orbiting nuclear bombs, and said civilian leaders deliberately decided to let the Soviets reduce toe U.S. lead in long-range offensive missiles. OTHER SIGNERS Others signing toe report were Army Gen. Paul Adams, former commander in chief of the U.S. Strike Command, and Air Force Gen. Thomas S. Power, former commander of toe Strategic Air Command. Like toe other mili-■ tary men, they are retired. The group said it made toe report at toe request of Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., of toe House Armed Services Committee. The Exciting HAWAIIAN GARDENS Restaurant and Resort Motel Par 3 Golf Course Mini-Vacation Plans Open Daily Except Monday WHY HAWAII! Became of its ai aty with your choice of enchanting American or Island food i phere of lake* with shimmering larches, glass dance floor, volcanos, real live palm trees, walk*, patio* and dinners starting at 63.65 r Because beautiful LINDA HOWE performs Island Rituals in the Waitoma Grotto Lounge, a wonder of the world, with dancing to DON PABLO and His Orchestra with no cover charge on Thursday and Friday p Because on Saturday you can eiyoy exquisite dining or join a Royal Hawaiian Luau with ANDY ZELENAK and his Orchestra and LINDA HOWE r Because on Sunday children and everyone love the fun of fine eating in a tropical playground 4501 Grange Hall Road Reservation* 634-8231 Holly, Michigan 174-1100 Dll H - IN UM WMS LAKE RD AT AIRPORT F0 MPT Milt WEST OF DIXIE MGWY - ministrative machinery among 00 , , people who for 20 years have f.re boredom and the com, been hostile to ,them ties of c,vU a^>nistrat.on. The cities of Nablus and He- transportation facil- bron have considerable, unem-j back in operation within ployment which the Arabs claim: . . ... _ was caused mainly by reside-!^8 of S£ir °f,Pa“on-tions imposed on tbe liSbUndus- In Jerlch0( eight miles from tnes toere-soap furniture, wrecke^ |llenb Bridge shoe and glass factories. where thousands of%efuge|s SOME HOSTILITY | crossed into Jordan, the soldiers There is some hostility among I put aside submachine guns to Bethlehem’s young p e o p 1 ej become garbage collectors, despite the tourist boom by Is-| * * * raells visiting holy places. ! “The Arabs came to mt A young hotel clerk pointed at | day and asked us to help them the blue and white Israeli flag I because they had no trucks'and flying from the town hall and the garbage had been piling said: “I am angry and ashamed up,” said the military com-when I see that flag fly there. It mander. “Once they were able does not belong here. The Is-to do it themselves, we let them, raelis do not belong. I “Our policy is to have them The Israelis had water, elec- Current Books FOUR LETTER WORD. Compton, the 13th largest in- GAMES — The Psychology of Obscenity. By Renatus Hartogs, M.D., with Hans Fantel. M. Evans Co. $5. This is no scholarly, footnoted dissertation aimed at university archives.. Rather, it is a series of essays the layman can understand — though he will find a good many semitechnical terms — on psychological significance of obscenity in our present day social order. Dr. Hartogs is an experienced psychiatrist who uses many case histories to illustrate his points. He finds that obscenity , is a language of antivalue, antiorthodoxy, closely related .to the curse and black magic. ★ Sr ★ He has a chapter on American swearing, asserting that American cussing is more heavily salted with sex than elsewhere (a revolt against Puritanism) Here is something different from the popular book “Games People Play,” suggesting some of the whys and wherefores of obscenity’s currency in contemporary life. ILL-AT-EASE IN COMPTON. By Richard M. Elman. Pantheon. |5.95. do things themselves, run the municipalities as before. We cooperate and supervise rather than interfere.” The major, a reservist who is a lawyer in civilian life, is luckier than most of the Israeli military commanders in the occupied towns. He once was mayor of Rishon-Letzion, one of the oldest settlements in Israel, and knows municipal problems. * ' * * Troops spent a day watering! • range and banana groves j abandoned by their owners lj since the fighting. There is no official program j > to win over the Arabs, but many jj Arabs seem convinced their ■ standard of living would rise j under the Israelis. : •WANT PEACE’ Sallah Abdu, 65, was installed • as mayor last month after the regular mayor and four of Jeri- .; cho’s seven municipal counci-lors fled with half the town’s 15,-1 .j 000 inhabitants. In surrendering' 'j the town to the advancing Is- j raelis, he said, he told them: i j “You have nothing to worry 1 about here. We want peace.” His secretary, Rashid Areik- j ., 30, area U.N. Works and Refugee Agency officer, said he : did not flee because “I prefer to : die in my own home and my ; country if I am to die with : honor.” ★ ★ * His brother is a Jordanian general. In Nablus, 60 miles north along winding mountain roads littered with burned-out shells of Jordanian tanks and army trucks, some 17,500 persons are living hand-to-mouth because of unemployment, according corporated city in Los Angeles County, has an estimated population of 75,000 and is next door to the vaguely defined Watts Mayor Hamdi Kana. He said the | area where riots occurred in the)Israelis had promised to reopen' factories soon. Jenin, a small dusty farming summer of 1965. The author, a free-lance writer, paid a visit there last summer and spent weeks getting to know the people and their ways. He found that in the rapidly changing population of Compton, the city has become more than 50 per cent Negro. The bulk of the Negroes are quiet, lower middle class people. But he says the riots accelerated the exodus of the whites and the influx of impoverished Negroes from Watts, so that Compton has become unstable and economically on the downgrade. This is a disturbing report, obviously, and many residents of the big cities and their satellites will discover some surprises. Angelenos and other Californians won’t like some of Elman’ judgements and opinions. Bu at least they are offered mor in sympathy than in scorn. The price of the average railway freight car has doubled in the past decade from $7,800 in 1955 to about $15,000 at present. town, appears quiet and normal. The mayor said some 30,000 persons had fled the area, but he expects 25,000 of them to return. ‘I am sure they will come back,” he said. “What is there for them in Jordan? The Jordanians don't want them. This is farming country. I understand it. It is hard to leave the land." In Bethlehem, the white-stone city where Christ was bom, Mayor Elias Bahdek said there were 2,500 unemployed and work on many municipal projects had been halted. But he said the Israelis had promised him funds to resume them. | He claimed that 95 per cent of the city’s income of $2.8 million a year from tourism would be lost because of the war. * * * Bandek said several buildings had been damaged in the fighting around the city, including the Church of the Nativity. He claimed 30 civilians were killed and 40 wounded. FE 4-2411 CONNECTS YOU WITH WALL STREET Try it—call on one of our Registered Representatives for up-to-the-minute reported information on the securities which are of interest to you. We can tell you: The price of the last sale The current high The current low ** The bid price , The ask price The total volume Yesterday's close The earnings for the last four quarters V The indicated yearly dividend rate, \ \ . \, The time of the last sale ,.. In less than one minute! Our Ultronic Stockmaster gives us this information instantaneously directly from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. If you want solid advice and fast, efficient service give us a call. Or send for a copy of our Financial Services Brochure. No cost or obligation, of course. WATLING LERCHEN & CO k Stock Exchange, 2 North Sagin July Ckwmm Ladies' Summer Sportswear Regular to 30.00 2” „ 19” Men's and Students' Suits Regular to 75.00 *39 „ *64 Ladies' Knit Tops and Slacks Regular to 7.00 2" ,a 4" Men's Suits Regular to 150.00 *68 „ *126 Ladies' Summer Suits Regular to 60.00 *10 „ *40 Men's Slacks j:$i Regular to 18.00 599 1499 - Ladies' Summer Dresses Regular to,36.00 7” „ 19” Men's Sport and Dress Shirts Regular to 4.50 Sxj 2 for 650 Girls' Dresses Regular to 15.00 3” „ 7” ; Men's Knit Shirts Regular to 8.00 . 3" ; Girls' and. Pre Teens | Shorts and Knit Tops Regular to 5.00 229 2" Boys' Knit and Sport Shirts Regular fo 4.00 ::-S: 1” „ 2” § j /\k MW Naturalizer | White Nurse Oxfords" Discontinued Styles i Broken Sizes Reg. 12,00 79O NATURALIZER—LIFE STRIDE Discontinued Styles ? DresS Regular fo 18.00 * 1090 II90 NATURALIZER-LIFE STRIDE Discontinued Styles Casuals * Regular to 15.00 690 890 MISS AMERICA Discontinued Styles Dress — Casuals Reg. 12.00 490 AMERICAN GIRL , Discontinued Styles DRESS CASUALS 490 g90 ITALIAN SANDALS Entire Summer Styles 2»° „ 690 BUSTER BROWN Children's Slides Discontinued Styles Reg. to 10.00 490 Men's—Children's ■ n Ladies' HUSH PUPPIES Discontinued Styles Cplors 399 PORTAGE-PEDWIN Discontinued Styles Oxfords and Slip-Ons Reg. to 14.00 Q90 CANVAS OXFORDSI .SLIP-ONS J By Ball Band | Discontinued Styles j|| j| 288 — 388 THE PONTIAC PRESS - —p PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1067 ~ ^— All-Star Rookie Earns Royal Treatment National Team Triumphs, 2-1, in 15 Innings ANAHEIM (AP)—tony Perez started his California trip as i king and climaxed it by keeping the National League on the throne in All-Star competition. Perez, the Cincinnati Red who replaced starter Rich Allen at third base in the 10th inning, decided the longest All-Star game ever played when he hit an 0-1 pitch from Kansas City’s Jim Hunter into the left field bleaehers in the 15th inning. ★ ★ * That gave the National League a 2-1 decision Tuesday and a record five straight victories over the American League. Trailing 12-4 in the All-Star series in 1949, the Nationals now hold a 20-17-1 edge after winning 16 of the last 22 games, which include a tie, and nine if the last 11. * Until Perez hit his homer, pitchers had dominated the game with a record 30 strikeouts. The victory before 46,309 at the California Angels’ Anaheim Stadium also helped soothe the National’s and Walter Alston’s feelings that were collectively shattered last October by Baltimore’s four-game sweep of Alston’s Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series. ★ ★ ★ Alston, however, felt no more joyful than Perez, the 25-year-old Cuban who brought his wife, Pituka, and their 14-month-old son, Victor, to see him play in. his first All-Star game. They arrived in Anaheim late Monday night, unaware they were about to receive royal treatment. PRESIDENTIAL SUITE “I don’t know what happened,” Perez related ii^ between accepting congratulations from Alston, President Warren Giles of the National League and Baseball Commissioner William D. Eckert. “But when we got to the hotel we had a lot of trouble because they have no more rooms left. So they give me the presidential suite. I felt just Uke a king,” Even at the $58-a-day rate, the National League probably would be willing to keep Perez in the suite the rest of the Team Scrimmage Set for July 29 Lions Schedule Tussle on Local Turf The seventh annual Detroit Lions’ full dress intra-squad game will be Saturday afternoon July 29 at Pontiac’s Wisner Stadium, it was announced today. The intra-squad scrimmage is being sponsored by the Community National Bank and the Pontiac Jaycees. In the past, except on two occasslons. it was a contest between the offensive and defensive units. In 1964 at U. of D., the scrimmage was played as a game between the White squad and Blue squad for the Scooter McLean fund. In 1965, it returned to Wisner Stadium and was also played as a regulation game. Last year under coach Harry Gilmer the format returned to a con- ' test between the offensive and defensive units. AP Wire photo PRIDE OF CINCINNATI — Tony Perez (24) of the Cincinnati Reds prepares Jo slap National League teammate Tim McCarver’s hand after crossing the plate wnh the tie-breaking run following his 15th inning home run Tuesday at the All-Star event, but this year coach Joe Schmidt Game. American League catcher Bill Freehan (background) of the Tigers looks said he preferred to have it as an after- disconsolate after the key blow in the NL’s 2-1 victory. noon scrimmage. Sanders Two Shots Back Scot, Briton Share Golf Lead His home run, the third of the game— the others also were by third basemen, Philadelphia’s Allen in the second inning and Brooks Robinson of Baltimore in the sixth—broke up a duel that was punctuated moire by strikeouts than by hitting. Allen connected for his homer in the second off AL starter Dean Chance of Minnesota, a former Angel who was booed by the fans before the game. Robinson tied the game with his drive off Ferguson Jenkins of the Chicago Cubs in the sixth. Tony Conigliaro, AL right fielder from Boston, prevented possible damage a couple of times when he grabbed a pair of shots off the bat of St Louis’ Orlando Cepeda, in the 10th and in the 15th—just before the homer. A total of 12 pitchers, seven for the National and five-for the American, took part ih the three-hour, 41-minute contest that eclipsed the 14-inning game at Chicago’s ComisKey Park in 1950. ★ * ★ Prior to Tuesday, the record for total strikeouts by both clubs was 20 in 1955. Jenkins led the fan parade by getting a record-tying six American Leaguers. Pittsburgh’s Roberto Clemente, on the other hand, belied his stature as one of baseball’s best hitters by striking out a record four times. ★ ★ ft Perez struck out in his first appearance against Hunter in the 12th inning, ance against Hunter in the 12th inning, but got revenge the second time around. The Kansas City right-hander was permitted to go more than three innings— he pitched five—because the game went into extra innings. NATIONAL AMERICAN abrliM afcrhbl Brock If 2 0 0 0 Corow 2b 3 10 0 Mays cf 4 0 0 0 McAul'e 2b 3 0 0 0 Cl'ta rf 0 0 10 Oliva cf <200 Aaron cf <010 Klljab'w lb <000 Capoda lb < 0 00 Conpl'ro rf <000 Allen 3b 4 1-1 1 B.Rob'on 3b <1 1 1 Perez 3b 2 111 Yas'skl If 4 0 3 0 Torre c 2 0 0 0 FrOahan ic 3 0 0 o Haftor c 1 0 0 0 Mantle ph 1 0 0 0' Banks ph 1010 Mr'ettl as 10 00 MoCYar C 2 0 2 0 McGI'lln p 0 0 0 0 - Maz'skl 2b 4 0 0 0 MOntle ph 10 0 0 Drv'dale P 0 0 0 0 Petars p 0 0 0 0 Helqts ph 1 0 0 0 Mlncher ph l o 1 o leaver p 0 0 0 0 Agee pr 0 0 0 0 Alley ss 5 0 0 0 Downing p 0 0 0 0 Morfchal 0 1 0 0 o Alvls ph 10 0 0 Jenkins p 1 0 0 0 Hunter p 1 0*0 Gibson p 0 o o 0 Berry ph 100 0 Wynn ph 1 0 1 o Chance p 0 0 0 0 Short p 0 0 0 0 Fr'osi ph-ss 4 010 Staub ph 10 10 Y Cuellar p 0 0 0 0 Rose 2b 10 0 0 Totals 52 2 0 3 Totals 4010 1 National ....... 010 000 000 000 OOI-T-2 American ooo ooi ooo ooo ooo—i . 6—None. DP—Robinson, carew Kllle-brew McAullffe, Klllebrew. LOB—Nation-al 5, American 7. 2B—YastrZamskl, Mc-Carver. 3B—None. HR—Allen, B. Robinson, Peraz. SB—Aaron. S—Fregosl, Freehan, Mazeroskl. SF—None. IP H R ER IB SO Chanel ......... 3 111 0 1 McGlothlin ...5-. . 2 1 0 0 0 2 Peters .........-3 . o 0 o 0 4 - Downing ......... 2 2 0 O O 2 Hunter L ....... 5 4 1 1 0 4 Marietta I ..... 3 1 o o 0 3 HOYLAKE, England MB — Peter Jones of England and Jimmy Hume of Spot-land shared the early lead in the British Open Golf Championship today with three-under-par 69’s on the tough Hoy-lake course. Jones, a 24-year-old protege of exchampion Henry Cotton, made the Jura in even par 36 and came home in 33. Hume fashioned his brilliant score with 34-35—69. A bunker on the 18th caught his second shot and gave him a 5 that lost his chance for the clear lead. Doug Sanders of Ojai, Calif., flubbed his way around the first nine in 39 shots which included a bogey at the short fourth and a double bogey at the fifth. But then the man with the fancy colored suits and dhoes and the short backswing got loose with birdies on the 10th, 11th, 16th, and 17th. IBs par on the final hole gave him a back nine of 32 and a challenging 71, two shots off the pace. Harold Henning of South Africa was ragged around the greens and had to settle for a 36-38—74. Stan Peach of Australia fired a great 33 on the back nine for a one under par 71. Sanders said after his round: “that’s the best I’ve putted for some time. I could read the greens prqperly — because they were green. I have difficulty in lining up properly when the greens have a tendency to be brown. 1116 greens have a marvellous putting surface.” Sanders had a good drive at the 404-yard tenth hole, sent a wedge to eight feet and sank the putt for his birdie. LONG PUTT 'Then his four iron at the short 11th wound up 13 feet from the hole and he sank it. He bunkered his second at the 529-yard ’6th, blasted out to 14 feet and sank the putt for another birdie and then canned a 10 footer for a birdie at the •17th. A 28-year-old British professional playing in the golf’s big league for,, the first time set a blistering early pace. Jim Cockin, a playing pro this year after holding a teaching job in Sweden, shattered the front nine of the 6,995-yard par 72 Hoylake links with a four under par 32. Cockin, a Yorkshireman now attached to Royal Midsurrey in England, played flawless iton shots which set up birdies on the third, seven, eighth and ninth holes. SHARP THREESOME—Chuck Byrne of Birmingham (rear) along with sons Kip, 12, (front) and Chuck Jr. won the annual Father-Son Tournament yesterday at Pine Lake Country Club. Chuck Jr. and dad teamed to fire a one-under-par 71. Birmingham Father, Son Win Honors in GAM Competition It’s nice to have a golfing partner such as Chuck Byrne of Birmingham in a tight matdh.' Byrne, 48, at present is champion of three counfry club invitationals with a different partner for . each and he’s a past champ in a couple others. In winning the above, Byrne golfed with family friends. Yesterday, it was strictly a family affair, the annual Golf Association of Michigan Father-Son Tournament, and Byrne’s two partners scored again. an actual 78 in the best ball event and they wound up with a net 65. A third team in at net 65 was that of Earl Burt and son Mike. In with even par 72s were the teams of F. E. Richart and son Frank, along with Dr. A. LaCroix and son Paul. FATHER-SON TOURNAMENT ' Nat Results <5—Chuck Byrne-Chuck Jr.; Chuck • Byrne, Kip; Earl Burt, Mike; «r-A. Cameron, Dave.. <7—Howard Wlkel, Dave; R. W. Man-. villa; Dave. ■ • • 68—D. w. Bee, Dennis; B. A. Wright, Bruca Jr.; C. Shaffran, Eddie; Tom Dr..J. Sigler, Robert; L, W. Sewer1*,, T—3:41. , Byrne teamed with Chuck Jr., 27, for a one-under-par 71 at Pine Lake Country Club to lead all teams in the gross division, and thqir handicap of six gave them a 65 and a share of first in the net , division. | And that wasn’t all. Byrne’s other partner, son Kip, 12, helped his dad to Thomas Jr., Billy; Tom R____ ____ _ G. D. McCarthy. William G.; H. Shapr Mark; Dr. J. Picard, James; F. a. oi David; Dr. T. Goode, Merton; T, Stevens. Tom. ' 71—J. j. Sukenik, John Jr.; R. D seeker, David; J. Kirwan, Gary; BortoMtl, Mark; R. Weinberg, T< Or. A. A. Yesbick, Tom; W. Rove Battle Line Drawn by Golfer's Father SUTTON, Mass. (AP) - The battle over a 10-year-old girl’s eligibility to play in the Ladies Professional Golf Aa-sociation championship moved, to t h e courts today as hef father blamed “Jealousy” for the controversy., “The only reason I can see that they the other players won’t accept her eh: taring, is mat they’re jealous of her,” Jack Klass said after his daughter, Beverly,, was barred • Tuesday. “They don’t Uke to be beat by a 10-year-old gfrl.” ■ * * ★ ' ■ All of the lady pros questioned on this subject deefined comment. Klass and his attorneys indicated they would seek a restraining order to halt the tournament from the state Superior Court sitting,at nearby Worcester. The week-long controversy came to a climax Tuesday as registration was completed for the 72-hole tourney scheduled to begin Thursday at Pleasant Valley Country Club. At an emergency meeting, the tour players voted to stick with their newly enacted rule limiting professional entrants to those 18 and over. Tickets will be available at all Community National Bank branches. Herb Adderley of the Green Bay Packers may be helping out the Lions. Adderley, former Michigan State star, is serving an example for the Lions’ rookie coraerback Lem Barney. Barney, entry from Jackson Miss. The format of this year’s scrim-lage has not been determined. The game in the past was also a night State bidding for a job with Detroit, chose Adderley as one man he’d like to emulate.. Another Packer Barney admires is Bobby Jeter, also a coraerback. “They’re the greatest and I’ve tried to pattern myself after them,” Barney said 1 * * * * Barney, a Southestem Conference all-star three years in a row, was Detroit’s second seleetion m the college draft. A 6-feet, 195-pouhds, Barney is fast and has impressed defensive coach Jimmy David. QUICK AND FAST “He’s very quick and he has good speed. You have to have both to play the outside,” David said. Hie Lions spent their third day of rookie practice today. Head Coach Joe Schmidt brings in he regulars next week. Rookie flanker Jack Clancy of Michigan was a standout Tuesday as the Miami. Dolphins scrimmaged in preparation for American Football League action. “Clancy could step in as a first-year man,” coach George Wilson said. DRAWS BEAD — Boston’s Tony Conigliaro zeros in a sparkling one-hand catch of a long drive hit by Orlando Cepeda of St. Louis in the 10th inning during yesterday’s marathon 15-inning All-Star Game at Anaheim’* Big A Stadium. Buffalo Swaps Center for Denver Draft Choice BUFFALO, N. Y. MB — Center Dave Behrman of the Buffalo Bills was traded Tuesday to Denver for a high choice in the 1968 American Football League draft. | ' ★ |||i. ★ , I Behrman, the Bills’ No. 1 draft choice in 1963 after starring at Michigan State, was sidelined on toe eve of toe 1965 AFL championship game in San Diego with a back injury and has not played since. He was starting center in 1965. ★ * ★ ■ A spokesman said the trade was contingent on the AFL draft choice player’s health and ability to play. MID-SUMMER GENUINE DUPONT 501 NYLON 3 ROOMS—219 SI FT. 10x12 Living Room, 9x9 Bedroom, 3x6 Hall REGULAR *209.00 INCLUDES LIMITED CALL 334-0177 FOR CONVENIENT IN-THE-HOME SHOWING! ACRILAN • WOOL • HERCULON (indoor/outdoor) ALSO ON SALE PONTIAC CUSTOM CARPET, INC. VISIT OUR SHOWROOM PHOk|. at House of Bedrooms ■ -Viy ■ 1662 S. Telegraph — Pontiac 334-0177 E—9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1067 U. S. Group Undecided Open Tennis Vote Due Today MONTDORF LES BAINS, Luxembourg (AP) — Robert Kelleher, president of the United States Lawn Tennis Association, went into a vital meeting on open tennis today still unsure how he would vote. As the International Lawn Tennis Federation prepared to discuss Britain’s plan for open tournaments over an experimental two-years period, Kelleher said: “The U.S. delegation has no Arm instructions. We will listen carefully to the views of other nations and, according to how the debate develops, we shall decide how to cast our votes." Latest canvassing among delegates suggested that the British resolution had only a slim chance of success. A two-thirds vote was needed to pass it. Open tennis is bitterly ' by the Communist bloc, and by' many smaOfer countries who fear their players would be squeezed out of competition if the pros were allowed to play at Wimbledon and other big tournaments. AMS RICA'S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHINO CMAIH ONCE-A-YEAR Kelleher said: “We. know whether opep tournaments would be a good thing for tennis in the United States. It might prove to be — but we just can’ tell. TWO YEARS However, we do feel that if Britain wants to stage operi tournaments we should not stop her. The British are suggesting an experimental period of two years, and maybe that would tell us what we want to know. “If the experiment proved success we would all have learned a useful lesson.” The British argue that Wimbledon is accepted as the unofficial world championship, and they want the world’s best players competing In it. Australia, which opposed open tennis for years, has changed its position and it is seconding the British resolution. The French, who disagree with Britain over details of prize money, kept the delegates guessing as to how they would Britain, the United States, France and Australia are the major tennis powers. Each command 12 votes. If they acted together many other countries might go along with them — and the battle for open tennis could be won. Tennis Rookie Sharpens Play Ralston Posts Win in Tourney Opener BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP)-Rookie Dennis Ralston, second leading money winner on the current tour although he is looking for his first victory, has “high hopes" in the $25,000 U.S. pro tennis championships. “I’ve just started to play well again after a long period of so-so play," Ralston said after polishing off fellow American Butch Buchholz 6-2, 6-3 in an opening round singles match Tuesday at Longwood Cricket Club. Timberlanes No. 2 continues to cling to . first place in the city’s National League softball race. The bar team raised its record to 8-2 last night as Jim Fields flipped a two-hitter in a 1-0 nod over Timberlanes No. 1 (6-7). Fields struck out four and gave up singles in the second and seventh frames. The victory kept Timberlanes-2 a few percentage points ahead of J. A. Fredman (9-3). “I was returning service well, and that’s the key to playing on grass," Ralston said. “I wasn’l serving well myself, however, but I just managed to get it in somehow." Ralston’s was the only easy victory of the long, foggy eve-nirig. Luis Ayala had to rally for a 1-6, 6-1,16-14 victory over Sammy GiammalVa, and Mike Davies bung on for a 6-1, 9-11, 11-9 triumph over Pierre Barthes in the other singles matches. Both matches went more than two hours. even ' OUR FAMOUS SORENTO* Australians Rod Laver and Fred Stolle eliminated Mai Anderson and Barry MacKay 64, 6-2 in doubles play. Top - seeded Ken Rosewall swings into action tonight against Anderson, while Stolle meets MacKay in another first-round singles match. Tonight’s doubles pairing is Alex Olmedo and Pancho Segura vs. Davies and Buchholz. DACRON-WORSTED TROPICAL SUITS 32 88 reg. 39,95 Golf Champion Renews Defense of Her Crown Get ’em while it’s hot and getting hotter... and while they’re smash-priced for big savings! Lightweight, long-wearing blend of Dacron poFp ester for stamina, and worsted for shapgdceeping good looks. 2 and 3 button models in timely patterns and colors... regulars, shorts, longs. ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) -fending champion Peggy Conley of Spokane, Wash., was out to win her second match today in the Women’s Western Golf Association Tournament. COMPUTE ALTERATIONS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE CLARKSTON STORE OPEN SUNDAY NOON TO 6 P.M. CLARKSTON 6460 Dili* Highway just North *f Watarford Hill Par Above Average Six* and Exceptional Value. Vialt Our 9% Mm'i Shop at 16051 Grand River or 8800 Van Dyk. PONTIAC 200 N*ith Saginaw ss Conley, who posted a 76 in qualifying, defeated Robbye King of Arlington, Va., 2 and 1 in her first match Tuesday. Today in the second round, Miss Conley went up against Mrs. Mark Porter of Riverton, N.J., a co-medalist who defeated Jane Bastanchury of North Whittier, Calif., 1 up in her first match. Three of the five co-medalists who tied in the qualifying round were beaten in their first matches. Among them was Mrs. Barbara Ann Boddie of Shreveport, La., tiie runner-up last year and twice the champ. Mrs. Boddie fell before Mrs. James Pickrell of Dayton, (Milo, FAIL TO RESPOND — Heart-warming bursts of applause greeted two non-starters when they entered the All-Star game as pinchhitters Tuesday, but Mickey Mantle AP WlraphM* (left) of the Yankees and Willie Mays of San Francisco both took third called shrikes in the tense duel at Anaheim, Calif. State Titlist Enters B'ham CC Tourney Michigan amateur champion Bill Newcomb will be among the starters when the 20th annual Birmingham Country Club Invitational opens tomorrow. Newcomb, 27, a golf course architect from Ann Arbor, won the state amateur crown two weeks ago at Charlevois, and he’ll try for the Birmingham 2-Hitter Aids Leader in City NL Softball into second place in the American League with a 5-1 decision over Town & Country (9-6), while MGM-Shalea (8-2) moved into a tie for first in the International Slow-pitch with a 15-12 decision over Artco (54). A walk to Jerry Meger, a sacrifice and a double by Rick Fitzgerald produced a first-inning run and that was all Fields needed. Local 594 scored twice in the second and three times in the third to down T & C. Dennis Diehm picked up a pair of singles to pace the winners attack. Bill Waun and Bob Prisbe rapped out three hits apiece for MGM - Shalea. The winners jumped into an early 13-6 lead and choked off a late rally by Artco. Lee Arnold and Ray Ream came through with three hits each for the losers. a second NL game, Orchard Lanes (4-11) forfeited to Bob’s Bar (5-10). Local No. 594 (104) moved’ Neffer Fretting Over Her Age Leroy Bone fired his second non-hitter of the season yesterday as he pitched the Pirates to a 1-0 victory over the Owls in a Union Lake Little League content. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Although she may have a bad birthday, Linda Tuero’s tennis nich to be ! de- doesn’t leave mi sired. The Metairie, La., player advanced easily in Tuesday’s second round of the National Junior Clay Courts Tennis Championships, defeating Kathy Dombos, of Kalamazoo, Mich., 6-0, 6-1. Still, Miss Tuero is apprehensive about being top-ranked in the junior girls division — partly because she thinks she had a bad birthday. She explained: ‘I won’t be 17 until October, that’s what I mean about a bad birthday.. .1 was only 15 when I was ranked first last year, but now I’m too old for the 16-year-old division and I’m pretty young to be in this one." In other action, top-seeded Woody Blocher of Dallas, Tex. , whipped Tim Vann of Los An* i, Calif., 64, 7-5 in the boys’ 16-and-under division. Second No-Hitter for Young Hurler Bone fanned 12 and walked two. Losing pitcher Bob Fulton allowed only one hit and struck out 13. Cubf Twin* Orioles Lake Junior Afhtotle League STANDINGS MINOR LEAOUI W L W L 4 0 Liana 1 $ 4 3 Rad Sox 1 < Plretes LITTLE LEAGUE First Division W L 8 0 Athletic* - 7 1 Ranger* 5 2 W L Yankees Second Division WL 3 5 Angels 2 1* W L 1. t Cardinals IABB RUTH LEAGUE W L 6 0 Met* 2 3 Indians W L 1 S title with A1 Robinson as his partner. The Robinson - Newcomb team fa one of 96 member-guest squads that’ll tee off in tiie first round tomorrow. Anothier single round of match play in the best-ball tournament is on tap for Friday with semifinals and finals slated for Saturday. Returning to defend their title will be Chuck Byrne and Joe Comeback Test for Local Golfer Mrs. T. M. (Sally) Werner of Indianwood will get an Indication today of how well her ‘comeback’ Is progressing on the women’s golf scene. Raisings family kept the harp-shooting Mrs. Werner away from the tournament activity for four years, but she returned this year with a performance that made It look like she had never been away. In her first ‘comeback’ test last month, Mrs. Werner cap-tared the Women’s District GoU Association medal title for the fourth time and now she’s trying for her second state championship. In the opening round of match play in the 51st Women’s Michigan Golf Association yesterday at Red Run in.Rqyal Oak, Mrs. Werner turned back Mrs. W. D. Anderson of Lakelands, 4 and 3. min 4-5; Mrs. Arthur Rosenberg i Fred Hauck 5-4; Mrs. Bruce Mllki Mrs. John Hume 1 u“ ------------ But her real test was slated for today when she met defending champion Joyce Kazmier-ski of Grosse lie. EASY WIN Miss Kazmierskl, a graduate Leader Extends Softball Lead Third Place Battle in Waterford Loop The first-place Day’s Sanitary nine extended its Waterford Township men’s recreation soft-lead Tuesday night while Brisson, and winning invitationbecoming commonplace for Bryne. OTHER TITLES Back in June, Byrne teamed with Rob Ryan of Birmingham in taking the Indianwood crown and last year he and Tom Low-rey captured the Dearborn title. Other teams expected to give the defending champions some trouble are Bob Whiting and Charles Granadev; the father-son combination of Rollie and Richard Weyand; ex-state amateur king, Bud Stevens and Elmer Ellstrom; and current GAM titlist Pete Jackson and A. V. Lotti. the third-place battle grew hot- Day’s trimmed the Waterford Merchants, 84, on John Herrington’s one-hit, 10-strikeout hurling. Clarkston Appliance dumped Clyde’s Wheel & Frame BIRMINGHAM INVITATIONAL Championship Flight Pairing* Upper Brai IPS* Jot Britton ind Donald Nelson; Dave i. Sigler v*. Tom Rollie Weyand and Rlchan . John Duncan and I Elmar Ellstrom Leonard Malls ' Robinson Wlllltm Curtis; Al Don Newcomb va. John -ad Broad; Harry Hyvonen Pistons Opening Camp in August at Marysville HS DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Pistons are going back their old training base 'at Marysville High School near Port Huron after a five - year absence. General manager Edwin E.i Coil said Pistons Coach Donnfa! Thick a™1 heavy rain Butcher will assemble his rook- forced another postponement ter. Coach Warren Stephens saw his unbeaten Pontiac Police Officers’ Association Class D team overcome a 3-0 deficit in the final two innings last evening-for a 4-3 triumph, then vote to forego any chance for the city junior baseball title. P.P.O.A. denied the upset bid of Arnold’s Drugs as Mike Clancy ripped a big triple in the sixth inning and then ended the game with a tie-breaking single. After the tense win, tiie team elected to eater the state Connie Mack Baseball Tournament and thus not play ia the city Class D playoffs for the right to compete in the State Recreation Association tournament. 7-1. The win boosted the Appliance men within one game of third-place Clyde’s. Third place is important in the standings since it will provide the township’s entrant to the state Class D post-season tournament. The Rev. Harold Hughes at lowed five hits but whiffed 11 in recording his second win in two nights for Clarkston. Mike Applegate had two hits to produce four runs, whiel Jerry Powell scored three times and has two hits. Day’s big hitters were Art Ruelle who had three safeties, and Ben Trader whose two-run single opened the scoring for the sanitation crew (17-1). U.S. Skippers Eye Yachting Weather NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Skippers of the four U.S. yachts competing for the right to defend America’s Cup hoped for better weather today and a chance to resume the current series of observation trials. WATERFORD JUNIOR BASEBALL McCullough Realty 13, Teamsters-414 Elmar's Ashland 12, Bib Boy Drlve-ln Perry Pharmacy 14, Kiwanls Club 12 Lakeland Hardware 7, P&M Rad sox 4 Ron. Police OA II ies at Marysville Sept. 5. With them will be Terry Dischinger, back With the Pistons after two years in the Army. Team veterans will report 11 Sept. 10, Coil said. Butcher says he expects a squad of 14 to r players at Marysville. The Pistons will play a 12 game exhibition schedule, now being completed, before opening their regular season Oct. 17 at Cobo Arena. Tuesday, giving the yachtsmen their third straight day of idleness. Weather also forced postponement of Sunday’s scheduled races, then the crews took Mop-day off before trying to resume Tuesday. ★ ★ - ★ Pairings for today’s races remained the same as for the two postponed events: Intrepid vs. American Eagle and Columbia vs. Constellation. of Michigan State University, advanced to the second round by easily disposing of Kathy Thomas of Lakelands, 7 and ,6. Twice runner-up Patti Shook rolled past Mrs. Sharon Barrett of Bridgeport, 4 and 2. , The third round is slated for tomorrow with the semifinals and finals on tap for Friday. Joyct Kazmierskl 7-4; Mrs. T. M. Wl up, 1* h Shanahan del Linds MacDonald 4 r Montagu* 7-4. ;anice eras ■“ **“ * ■ ; Barbara f ‘tfLJLij .... I 4-3; Mrs. CITY JUNIOR BAIBBALL Clasa D Bloomfield Hills 10, Cranbrook I PontiaC Police OA 4, Arnold's Drugs 3 Clast U A marlcan I 4, ABBC Patriots 1 GARY PLAYER’S GOLF CLASS: Finish high to cure a slice t Thomas, Kathy The def Mrs. V Lausr daf Mrs. T. H. Gutthlng, 3-2; Mrs. Frank Campslt del Mrs. C. F. POX, 3-1. Petti Shook dot Sharon Barrett 4-2; Ira. Anthony Keuitas def Mrs. Robert —| - *- *•— “ g. Marquardt def -i; Barbara Ronn oar Cathy Henrlckeon, up; Mra. Chris Millar d*f Mm. e. O. X L. Goddird def Unbeaten '9' Shuns Spot in Playoffs In other results Tuesday, Bloomfield Hills had an eight-run inning featured by L a r r y Appleby’s three-run triple to edge Cranbrook, 10-8, in “D" action; and Felice’s Market topped the Auburn Heights Boys Club Patriots, 6-1, in a key Class A American contest. Wan Last Pet. Bshlnd capo .......... 47 33 .513 - irolt ............ 45 35 .543 2 ...inasots ...... 45 34 M IVb California ...... 45 40 .537 4Vj Boston .......... 41 37 .513 4 Cleveland ........40 42 .411 i ----Tiara ....... 37 43 .47* f ..... York ....... 34 45 .444 111* Washington ....... 34 47 .434 12Vh ‘'ansa* City . 35 47 .417 14 Tuesday's Gamas Nltlonal League All-Stars 2, American eagua All-StarsT, IS Innings -Only gama scheduled. Today's Gamas Chicago (John 3-5) at Cleveland (McDowell 5-7), night Only gama achadiried. Thursday'! Gamas Kansas City at Minnesota, night California at Chicago, night Detroit at Washington, 2, twl-nlght Cleveland at New York, night Baltimore at Boston, 2, day-night. National League Won list Pel. Behind St. Louis ........ 47 32 .405 — SarH^ancisco. 45 » > .542 5 Cincinnati ....... 44 37 .541 3 Atlanta .............. 42 37 .517 7 Pittsburgh ....... 40 30 .513 71* Philadelphia .... 40 40 .500 SVk Los Angelas . . .. 34 47 .420 15 Houston .......... 33 50 .378 17 N*W York . .. . 31 47 .377 1*Vh Tuesday's Results National League All-Stare 2, American League All-Stars 1, 15 Innings Only gama scheduled. Today's Gamas Pittsburgh (Blass 3-3) at St. Leula (Hughes 7-3), night , Only game scheduled. Thursday's Games Philadelphia at Atlanta, night New York at Cincinnati. 2, twl-nlght Pittsburgh at St. Louis, night Chicago at Lot Angeles, night „ Houston at San Francisco_______ E—8 THE PONTIAC PRESfe, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 See your Chevrolet dealer for summer savings now! MATTHEWS-HARGREAV.ES, INC. Authorized Chevrolet Dealer in Pontiac AL HANOUTE, INC. . 631 Oakland Ava. —' 935-410 209 N. Pmk BM. — 692-2411 ' Oxford HOMER MIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. Washington — 628-252* - ame Claude of Baltimore bad men left over 6n his American League squad, including the three pitchers who worked Sunday and were not expected to action. They were Jim Lon-borg of Boston, Joe Horlen of Chicago and Steve Hargan of Cleveland. Hie others who didn’t see ac- (AP) — Walter Keltner, Jim Hegan and John ised all of Roseboro. The two new Hall of Famers formed a battery for the first-ball ceremonies before the game. ★ * ★ Red Ruffing, the old pitcher, was on the mound and Lloyd Waner, the former outfielder, was the catcher. When Lloyd, tiie Little Poison of the famous Waner brothers, caught the ball he dashed for the dugout. Thev started the game in 91-heat Tuesday, but they sweated it out into the cool evening hours. * ★ ★ ★ The game set a new All-Star record for time consumed, three hours, 41 minutes and the innings, 15. The old records were 14 innings and 3:19 in 1950 when a homer by Red Schoendienst, now St. Louis manager, won it for the Nationals who have taken all five extra-inning games. Ihe winning pitcher doesn’t usually get a booing, but Don Drysdale heard the old bazoo at Anaheim Stadium. All-Star Game Tidbits Goes Distance A Chevy pickup gives you more truck for the money BUY, SELL, TRADE . . . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS one of 10 players who played in the entire game. Nothing else quite measures up * to Walker's DeLuxe Bourbon Only Chevrolet offers alj these pickup □ Superior forward visibility, down-front and overhead □ Generous leg; and knee room in cab for driver comfort □ Truck-engineered independent front suspension with coil springs (series CIO, C20, C30) □ Two-stage rear coil springs (series CIO, C20) □ Full double-wall side panels add double-wall tailgate (Fleetside) □ No external joints to rust or corrode on Fleetside box □ Dual master-cylinder brake . system with warning light □ Chevy’s money:saving 250 six; available 292 six, 283 V8 and 327 V8 (series CIO, C20, C30) O Self-washing, rust-resistant fender skirts. Wheelhouse undercoating. Aluminized muffler > □ Smooth ball-gear steering □ Telescoping lower steering shaft (series CIO, C20, C30) □ Padded instrument panel crown. High level ventilation □ Safety door latches and hinges. Pushbutton door locks features: □ Thick-laminate Windshield. Dual-speed wipers. Washers □ Four-way hazard warning flasher. Backuplights. Direction signals □ Delco battery aind Delcotron generator - □ Specially protected electrical circuits □ Special camper-truck equipment packages available □ And many other features contributing to comfort, convenience and job-tailoring utility / America’s bestselling 6-cylinder pickup—Chevrolet’s Model CS10934 Fleetside STATE CHAMP—Art Berry of Pine Lake Country Club shows off the trophy he collected Monday for winning the state Assistant Pro Championship at Saginaw. Berry, assistant to Elmer Prieskorn at Pine Lake,' carded a 36-hole score of 146. , Accent on Accuracy in Publinx Tourney By ED JOHNSON SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) ' “When I first got out there and looked down some of those fairways I thought I was on a rifle range.” • That little thought from Tom-‘my Chee of Honolulu, Hawaii, pretty well sums up what the nation’s top amateur Public Links golfers think of Seattle’s scenic but tricky 6,329-yard Jefferson Park Municipal Golf Course. The lush par 36-34—70 layout . Is where 150 local Publinks elimination winners were to begin today i the four-day 72-hole Na-: tional Public Links Championship, using a medal-play format for the first time this year. Chee, who works in aiHonlulu Insurance company office, agrees with mast other players that it will be accuracy, * not power, that will determine the new champion after the final 18-hole round Saturday. The hilly, narrow fairways— no wider than 35 yards most places—and the tiny, postage-stamp greens “give a fair shake to the short, accurate hitter, I rather than the big blaster,”! said Chee after Tuesday’s final! .practice rounds. CAN’T SLIP . “There have been a lot of birdies on the par-five holes, he went on. “They are easy and ^here’ll be a lot of low scores— that is, if you can keep the ball going where you aim it,. “One slip, though, and a fellow’s had it.” With Monty Kaser, last year’s titlist from Wichita, Kan., now a pro, pre-tourney favorites elude the 1966 runrier-up, Dave Ojala of Two Harbors, Minn, and a couple of former Publinks champs—Verne Callison, cramento, Calif., winner in 1960 Bill McDonald, Topeka, Kans., who took the crown in 1964. The field will be trimmed to the low 60 players, plus ties, after ihe second 18-hole round. The team championship also will be decided Thursday, after 36 holes. A trio from Pittsburgh won the Harding Cup team title last year. Among Michigan players in the field are Dick Robertson of Pontiac and Ron Rothbarth of Clarkston. In the early days of the All-Star seriestheydidn’thave rules about pitchers working only three innings, so.Lefty Gomez of the New York Yankees went six innings in 1935. Under the current rules no pitcher can go more than three unless the game goes into extra innings. The last time anybody worked as many as five innings recent years before Tues-|’s long stint by Kansas City’s Jim Hunter was in the 14-inning game in 1960. Larry Jan-then of the New York Giants, worked five frames. There is one exception. A relief pitcher can finish an inning and then go three on his own. That was how Johnny Antonelli of tiie Giants worked four in 1956 and Lew Burdette of foe Milwaukee Braves in 1937. In the wartime years special rules were in effect When Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh struck out four times, he broke a record held by eight players. Among the eight men who had struck out three times in an All-Star Game were Lou Gehrig, Mickey Mantle, Bob Johnson, Stan Hack, Joe Gordon, Ken Mexican Quintet Wins MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico’s national basketball team made it three straight over the University of Nebraska Tuesday i flight with a tight 84-80 victory.! b,MIDAS TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS THIS IS WHAT YOU GET FOR ONLY • Remove the pan • Clean the screen • Replace pan gasket • Renew the fluid • Adjust the bands • Adjust the linkage • Road test 1990 WIDE TRACK OR. W. At th« South End of Wide Track IN PONTIAC Phone 334-4727 Open Monday thru Friday 8 to S-Saturday 8 to 2 _____-OR MUFFLERS • PIPES • SHOCKS. SEE MIDAS MUFFLER 435 South Saginaw • at wide traok iwruaj viva SHOCKS.— FE 2-10101 E—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 THIS WEEK ONLY Everything for Outdoor Fun Continental Style Cabin Tents 10xl8-ft. Tent Regular *189 SAVE *30 10xl2-ft. Tent Regular *169 SAVE *30 159 *139 Exciting new Ted Williams continental style! Large living area for the whole family . .. stand upright in any part of your tent. Anodized aluminum frame lets yon set it up—take it down—in no time at all! Yellow and green cotton-drill walls are topped with cool white roof. Two awninged end windows measure 21x85* in wide. Big 3.3x66-in. door has over-sized canopy. Inside door, window flaps — zipper folly closed for privacy and weather protection. 6-fi.l-in. high eaves. Ted Williams 10xl2-ft. 2-Lb. Insulated Sleeping Bags Sean Brice 897 24b*. of Vycron® polyester fiberfilL 75x34-in. size. Cotton eover and lining. Big Camping Values Regular Foam lee Chests Lightweight, keeps cold for 4 days AQe 16xl2xl3l4-in. deep. 2-Quart Vacuum Bottles With sore seat stopper, non-drip 166 Ud and vacuum Slier. ’, One Gallon Thermal Jugs Lightweight Keeps contents hot AA, or ebld for 8 hours. «ltl Ted Williams 1 ^-Gallon Jugs Regular $6. Keeps contents cool. S 97 for 8 hours, blue and white. tI Durable Plastic loe Chests , Keeps food, dnnk icjr said. Sears ■ regular lew pries. Ta Kit Holds 2 Vacuum Bottle* $9.99 plaid rubberised fabric ease, M-97 plastic sandwich box inoluded. 9 Single Mantle Lanterns 2-Burner Camp Stores with Cover With 21/2-pt tank, adjust- U U 97 able windshields. M.ML, Outdoor Game Values ns mil m *149 Anodized aluminum outside frame makes it so easy to set up! Blue and green cotton drill walls, white roof. 82-sq. ft. of nylon screening for superior ventilation. 7-ft., 5-in. center height. Eave heights: 6-ft. at ends, 5-ft. 3-in. at Center sides. Fall width canopy entrance. Big enough for the whole family to go camping Keep in Shape . . . 110-Pound VINYL COATED BARBELL SETS C|eck Sean Lew,.Low Trice Home Shoe Outfits ■rSVMK , 097 •10.99 Croquet Sets For sk players. AO 097 equipment isTnclnded O Volley Ball-Badminton •9.99 set; all ' 797 equipment # •3.99 Tennis Rackets / 5-ply wood frame, nylon gar Keep in shape with regular workouts. Set includes one 5V4-ft. bar plus two 16-in. dumbbell bars. Four 216-lb., , four 5-lb. and six 10-lb. plates. *^,..•11 Assorted Softball Bate Ebony WiitA, 10-in. grip 99* 12-ln. Picnic Softballs Leather cowhide QQc cover , tFtr "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Open 9-9 Mon., Thurs., Fri. & Sat. Shop 9 A.M. to 5:30 Tues. and Wednesday Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY* JULY 12, 1967 E—a You Can Count on Us . . . Quality Costs No More at Sears "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 Lightweight, yet accurate and ragged for professional use. Capacitor motor develops 1% HP; features direct drive with no belts or gears. Built-in steel tracks assure long, dependable service. Carriage rolls on ball-bearings for velvet-smooth operations. Cuts to 2% in., and rips to 25% in. SAVE *50.99 10-In. Radial-Arm Saws Regular *229” •179 • Extra-large 20% by 40-inch work table • Color-coded controls up front for fast set-ups • Needs no special adapters for accessories Superbly accurate for professional use. Ball-bearing motor develops 2 HP; features direct drive, overload protection and automatic electro-magnetic braking. Special friction-lock holds carriage firmly when pushed to rear and stops creeping. Cuts 2V2 in. deep and rips 25% in. wide. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Phone Sears for All Your Hardware Needs Regular $1599S 120 A massive, powerful saw. Capacitor motor develops a full 3 HP. Extra-large table prevents blade from protruding in front when out-ripping—safer. Cuts to 4 in. thick and rips to 26% in. wide. Electro-magnetic braking stops blade automatically, does not drag when started. Four sturdy legs included. SAVE *3098 on Craftsman 9-In. Radial-Arm Saws Regular *299 240 SAVE *5 Itatlial-Arm Saw Stands For 9 and 10-in. saws. Holds 5 drawers or 4 shelves. 26 tool-hanging hooks included. SAVE $2.99 Retractable Casters Fit stand above. Step lever low- $10 era and retracts casters. Set of 4. SAVE 99c Rugged Steel Drawers For stand above. ^Extra-large •4ea. size . . . x 15% x 414-in. SAVE *50 on Craftsman 12-In. Radial-Arm Saws SALE! Craftsman Radial-Arm Saws the PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 2 Share Honors in Ladies' Golf Bobby Cruickshank and Jean E-—6 Takes Cage Aide Post CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -Bill Foster, athletic director and head basketball coach at Shorter College at Rome, Ga„ since 1962, has joined The Citadel . . , . . . staff as assistant basketballj!carded 4?u yesterday*) coach, Citadel Athletic Director sharf '}°™Ts..in thf. SiP Eddie Teague announced Tues- ver Lake ladies ««« league, day. *...*.* Shirley Fredericksen took low net with a 37. Iola Dalton paced the first flight with a 39; Gloria Frank led the second flight with a 37; and Maxine Fogal had a net 44 to pace the third flight. Mrs. Frank took low-putt honors with AA. Map? EXPERT ENGINE OVERHAULING GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS 1 LOW PRICES 1 EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OOIUPEWALTY MOTOR EXCHANGE 1029 OAKLAND AVL FE 3-7432 Lake Orion's Miscues Help OU's Pioneers Snap Losing Streak Oakland University took ad-imen’s baseball league win Tues-vantage of a generous L a k e day night at Jaycee Park. Orion defense for an 11-5 city I + * * The win ended a four-game losing Skid for the Pioneers | (4-11) and moved them within one game of the slumping seventh-place Orion nine (5-10). The Cardinals committed seven errors and had several other fielding lapses in handing Oakland seven unearned runs. Dave Call’s two-run double and two bases-loaded errors resulted in a six-run decisive fifthinning for the winners. Call had three hits and three runs batted in for the tilt. Clay After Bout in Charity Cause SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Cassius Clay wants to defend his heavyweight championship in Oakland, Calif., and give all proceeds except $100 to feed “the poor, undernourished people — white as well as black — Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia." The champ, dethroned by the World Boxing Association but still king in New York and possibly California, was expected to apply to the California Athletic Commission this afternoon, in person, for a license. He let his old one lapse. and singles by Jim Stitt, Erik Eriksen and Willie Williams. A key contest is set for 8 p.m. today at Jaycee when M.G. Collision meets defending champion Teamsters 614. OAKLAND U. AIRH Walters 3b S 2 0 Doty ss 4 3 1 Call 2b 4 13 After John Kampsen’s ground ball triple sparked a three-run outburst for Oakland, the Cardinals rallied for five runs on two outfield misplays by the winners I ORION (l) AB R M State City Will Fete Golf King igamells c g. Hart e Sulims p I Williams 2b 3 i Hooper lb 3 I D, Eriksen Volta; Williams. sen 2, Wolfe, Carlson; E. Eriksen, ms. PITCHING — Sullins 7 IT 5-4 R-ER, 3 SO, 5 W; Manning H. 6-3 R-ER, 5 SO, 1 W, E. Erl HP. IP, 3 H, 5-1, R-ER, 3 SO, 2 V WINNER - Sullins (15S7. LOSER -“MS nlng (0-2). ERRORS " ------ Doty; Eriksen 2, A Tonight's Game JAYCEE PARK J------------- ». G. Collision, 8 l Teamsters-614 1 WHILE THEY LAST! One price offer! GOOD-YEAR ^^NYLON CORD WHITEWALLS Famous "ALL-WEATHER" Tire lor Pick-Up and Panel Trucks • Tufsyn rubber and 3-T nylon cord! - • Get truck-tire rrength at passengeri car tire priteu! Prlcos start at on!/ GOODYEAR RANCH AND COMMERCIAL 9 Your best tire buy in its price range. Pick your size how and Go Goodyear. Any size ’ whitewall tubeless listed at this one low price i Extra mileage Tufsyn rpbber i Track tested ' l Discontinued tread design Sizet Plus Fed, Ex. Tax and old tire 6.50x13 $1.55 , 7.75x14(7.50x14) $1.88 8.25x14(8.00x14) $2.05 7.75x15(6.70x15) $1.89 tSize listed also replaces size shown in parenthesis NO MONEY DOWN... on our EDsy Pay Plan! GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 Wide Track Drive - FE 6-6123 - Mon. - Fri. 8:30 - 6, Sat. to 2:30 NUMBER ONE IN TIRES—-CAR CARE AND GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES TRAVERSE CITY (AP)r Walter Hagen once ruled the world > of golf as Babe Ruth ruled baseball and Jack Dertip-sey ruled the ring. Younger men have taken over le fairways since Hagen’i reign daring the 20s. But the Haig, possibly the best golfer the game has known, still is viewed by many as master of them all. ★ ★ ★ Traverse City is having a testimonial dinner for the 75-year-old Hagen the second week in August. The guest list reflects Hagen’s enduring stature. Gene Sarazen might wind up as the toastmaster. And if goes as planned, the audience will include Arnold Palmer , Hogan, Jimmy Demaret, Byron Nelson and Sam Snead. ★ * * A dozen stars from the current tour are expected. So are Johnny Revolta, Craig Wood, A1 Watrous and Ralph Guldhal, contemporaries of Hagen when his name was a household word. In all, about 350 persons are expected. HELPED STATUS “This whole affair is so fitting -as a tribute to the man,” says 1 Eddie Karcheski, Traverse City club professional, ‘/because in addition to winning every professional golf tournament in his time, he (Hagen) did more than any other person to elevate the of golf to fhe status and respectability it now enjoys.” Hagen won the PGA title a record five times. Four of those wins were in succession, from 1924 through 1927. ★ * ★ “The one I enjoyed the most was the first one, in 1921,” Hagen says. “But it was fun after that seeing how many more I could pile up.”'' Hagen, thrilled about the testimonial, describes it as a “shocking, wonderful surprise.” Scapofort Star Gam 14.0 Ollly Living tot*—*1788: claiming, t Furlongs Daily Dw 3rd—838881 Race Results, Entries Hazel Park Results Clipper 4.88 All Claiming, 4 Vi Furlongs Optimistical win r- Flyer Ith—* . Darling Grodo Optional Twin fth—S3200: Clali Military Guy Mr. Don Yatts rrotwood Jotf 4th—41000: Conditioned Fact, 1 Mich. Calt Stake, 1 i—Coral Rldgo 2.J Bye Byo, Lowell Pete Adloo MM show wagering) I _m Winn stable entry 8th—$1388: Conditioned Face, 1 Wlnsockl wick 8.41 Chief A Claiming, 4 Furli ■sT, :ool's Error 3.: ith—$3408: claiming, l Mils Regal Bomar 20.08 7.20 4,i Dodgertown 4.08 2. Regalement 3. -th—*2*8$: Claiming, 11/14 Milts lying Sage 4.10 3.80 ,2.i Pummelo 4.28 4J 'I's Guy 3. Twin Doublet (4-1-5-4) Paid 51.010.28 Hazel Park Entries THURSDAY 1st—$2500: Claiming, iVt Furlongs ----- Horse Walgl Firm Bull l Affaire de Coeur 115 Sandy's Friend 1 Whereistheline xl 10 Judge John J. 1 | * Prldt 115 Three L's 1 ____ _.ass Upastream xll Queen x112 Goldrock n I0»h—1000: Conditioned Nevada Girl g John 122 Claiming. Dinky Joe 115 Rippeys Pay Day 1 0 AAardgras Beau 117 Blade Dalles * i 117 ideal Rhythm Love 115 Shinrone ______Kathy x11« Heye's Policy Fancy Affair x113 Brock Brush Gallagraph 118 Whirling Sea — A—.aj ns King of Bah ran .. _______ 111 4th-<-$2400: Claiming, 5 Furlong* Fleet of 80 Set for Sailing Event CHICAGO (AP) - A fleet of more than 80 sailing vessels leaves the Chicago Yacht Club harbor Saturday for the start of the annual 333-mils Lake Michigan crossing to Mackinac Island — the longest inland lake race in the country. The ships leave the harbor in shifts beginning at 1 p.m. They are expected to cross the finish line at Mackinac Island sometime Tuesday. Rosa Asmar xl84 s Jth—42480: Claiming, 1 Milt _______ ________________ Double xl08 Ith—*1488: Allowances, 4 Furlongs Chamdanals 115 Cussalot 115 115 Noble Light xtOS xllO Deviate xllO de 115 Me Gemini 110 xl05 a-Danner's .............r Quean »—Canonic entry 7th—*4508: Claiming, 4W Furlongs 'Em Up 113 a-Erins Luck b-Duress xl08 Owen's. Lea 4th—$1008: Claiming Hdcp. Trot, 1 Mile Cohasset 4.30 3.18 2.M Worthy Emily 5.00 *,40 II Sue Northville Entries WEDNESDAY lit—MOO; Conditioned Face, Mlldtni. 1 Dixie Corbitt Gander 3rd—$708; Conditioned Tret, 1 — ‘I Colby Peter R I; Claiming Pact, 1 Mile: Cindy G Red Rainbow Scot - Roger Abbe Graystone Lady 1 K. Chief Marl B. /____ Knox Greenleef Douglas Mazzy Anderson 7th—8780; Claiming Paca. 1 Mila: “ “ Freeman Josedale Jet Arrow i Grattan Casandra Creed HMl Flanagan Johnnie W. Wilson B. Hedgewood 18th—*888; Claiming Face, I Mile; Wiggle Wick Cardinal Ijrf b-Winami s—Grlssoi b—Lofton : Claiming, * Furlongs Choice 110 Frances Grey Xll4 a-Tonga Base DAVE FOSTER the wider choice of all three great lines of General Motors can . . . Pontiac, Chevrolet and Buick . .. at the only showroom in Oakland County where yon can see all three. Dave, a graduate of the G.M. Leadenhip Club, bring! with him the knowhow of 30 yean experience selling can. So, for the best ear for you at the right price, drop in and ask for Dave. Homer Hight Motors, Inc. 160 S. Washington St., Oxford OA 8-2528 Claiming, 1 non X105 A Laddie xllO > Northville Results 2nd—$800: Claiming Paca, 1 Mila Country Prince 14.00 5.0< Shadydale Gayboy 4.01 ft. C. Mertdaie Daily Doubla: (4-8) Paid 1188.48 Mentor Named at South Haven SOUTH HAVEN (JR — Marion White, junior varsity basketball coach since 1963, Tuesday was named varsity coach at South Haven High School. ’I * * * is He succeeds Joe Lineman who 'J resigned to become varsity basketball coach at Farmington High School near Detroit. In mm so CLIP THI* COUPON ■ CARL'S GOLFLAND 1774 S. Tologrsph Rd. Pontiac and North Suburban’s Number 1 GARAGE BUILDER • Many Styles K • All Sizes j * Prompt Service ^ . STANDARD ' Bank Ratgs. No Down Payment Required Closed Sundays 852-4030 SUBURBAN Home & Oarage Builder 1598 E. Auburn Rd. Rochester ------------------------------—N SERV11S1C OAKLAND COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS luzelle Agency, Inc. ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Closed Saturdays—Emergency Phone FE 54)314 Phone F£ 5-8172 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 E—7 Pontlic PrtM Photo PRESERVED TROPHY - Danny Lee (left), 2076 Gulliver, Troy, shows off a mounting of the state record brown trout he caught May 15 while fishing McCormick Lake near Lewiston. Bob Armstrong of Hilde’s Taxidermy helps hold the 19-pound, 3%-ounce trout that eclipsed the forme? mark by almost two pounds. The fish measures 33Vi inches long and has a girth of 21 inches. Car-Deer Mishaps Rise in Southeastern Michigan Deer hunting with cars in Southeastern Michigan continues good — and the driver ARMSTRONG THE SAFE TIRE New PT 100 4 HEAVY PLYS NYLON CORD CONSTRUCTION Contour shoulder wraparound tread for extra traction and stability. Armstrong's exclusive full depth safety sipes for unmatched traction on wet and dry roads. NO LIFETIME— | EAST CREDIT | gets to keep the deer. Unfortunately, he also has to pay the repair bill. Cars have been known to sustain heavy damage in this type of hunting. Injuries to drivers occasionally result. * ★ ★ During the first six months of this year, 74 deer have been reported killed by cars in Oakland, Macomb and Wayne counties. The ,same period in 1966 resulted in 42 deer being killed. * ★ Oakland is by far the leading county, according to Conservation Department district game: biologist Howard Greene. Hej said northern and western Oakland are the big danger spots. “The only solution,” said Greene, “is for motorists to be more observant. Deer can run into the road from anywhere in Southeastern Michigan.” ★ * * Deer have been reported, struck by autos along Woodward Avenue in Birmingham and heavily populated areas along Dixie Highway in the Waterford Township area. flhhg the Outdoor 7 I VOGEL—Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Press HE’S PROUD — David Grubb Jr., 5, of 4155 Mill Lake, Orion Township, is proud of the 26-inch northern pike he landed last week at White Fish Lake near Wawa, Ont. He caught the pike on a fly rod and his father assisted with the landing. Pinter's Boat Club begins its fourth season of operation with the Saginaw River Cruise as the highlight of the season scheduled for Sunday, July 23. The trailer boats will leave Pinter’s Marine, 1370 N. Op-dyke, at 8 a.m. according to eruisemastefr Carl Betz of Pontiac. I Another event on the schedule The schedule of Solunar Pe-ijs the Bob-Lo Cruise July 30 riods, as printed below, has and reservations should been taken from Richard Alden Knight's Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer. Boating Group Set to Open E**t*rn Daylight T made with V. Karagosian for boat slips. Other trips are planned for Cedar Point, Ohio and Chatham, Ont. Membership in the club includes boaters from Pontiac, Rochester, Bloomfield Hills, Clarks ton, Waterford, and other Oakland County communi-!!« ties. ms Any boaters desiring mem-8:55 ibership can call Pinter’s Mar- Longer Season on Woodcock Being Sought Mio to Be Opened for Turkey; More Quail Gunning Days A longer woodcock season, an increase in antlerless deer permits and a new open area for turkey hunting are being recommended for this fall. This Conservation Commission is expected to approve the changes during its monthly session tomorrow and Friday at Higgins Lake Training School. Small game seasons are expected to remain the same. The firearms deer season will either open Nov. 15 or 18. The final date still is being mulled by the Legislature. Regular Waterfowl seasons will be set next month when regulations are issued by The Interior Department. If the recommendation on woodcock is approved, the season will open in the Upper Peninsula and northern Low-'er Peninsula Sept. 15, instead of Oct. 1, as in the past, and run for 64 days. Regular small game seasons in these two zones will start Oct. 1. Conservation Department game biologists feel that an earlier opener will give hunters a chance to harvest timber-doodles that may migrate before the regular opener. Michigan is considered the No. 1 woodcock hunting state in the nation. Antlerless permit quotas probably will be raised for some areas. NEW AREA Turkey hunting will be Nov. 3-12 in three special areas and by permit onlyl The Mio area will be opened for the first time. Allegan County is being closed. Baldwin area and Beaver Island will remain open. The Legislature has increased the quail hunting from Nov. 1-20, but the department is requesting a curtailment in the number of counties open to hunting bob-whites. It is recommended that Oakland and Macomb be among those closed. Nine would remain open. A special season on snipe and rails will be tried concurrently with the special nine-day shoot on teal. The same areas will be open for snipe and a teal hunting permit is required. By legislative act, bow hunters will be permitted to take deer in Southern Michigan until Dec. 31. The December grouse season in Zone 3 probably will be continued. Angler's Rule Book Not Being Followed Fish in area lakes aren't go-;week away, although a few Ing by the angler's rule book. j large fish are being caught at Bluegills should be j Walled .Elizabeth and Lakeville, ing crickets in deep water — Bass action during the day, catches are only spotty. i using plastic eels fished on the * * * I bottom, has been good at Lou- Pike are supposed to retreat jse, Woodhull, Cass, Kent and into their weedy lairs and sulk Maceday. Evening is best at for the remainder of summer Pontiac, Pine, Deer and Duck. - action on pike is good. j Trolling deep with spoons has ★ * * I been producing some rainbows Black bass hit only at dawn in the 20-inch class at Pine and and in late evening this time of I year — limit catches are being r made in mid-day. And even : trout, normally very difficult to : catch on area lakes after June, are showing signs of new life. Good catches of large pike are being made early and late in the day at Pine, Oxbow, Orion, Orchard and Union lakes. Large chubs still-fished about four feet down are the | top producers. Most fishermen feel top blue-1:::-gill fishing with crickets is a wh*u$zMora Pontiac PrtM PI NEW LEADER—Alan Wilson, 13, of 6919-Simmons, Waterford Township, holds the new pike division leader in The Press Big Fish Derby. It is a nine-pounder He caught last week while fishing from shore at Fox Bay. The bass division leader remains at seven pounds, two ounces. ' 8.50-13 ■ 7.75-14 : 8.55-14 Canine Training Opens Sportsmen may train ' their dogs in the field from sunup to $■ sundown beginning July 15. OPEN DAILY 8-J UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. Dead Alewives Big Problem Dead alewife, windrowed from one end of Lake Michigan’s east shore to the other, have communities, resorts, property owners, the Conservation Department and vacationists, all deeply concerned! with the question: What can be done about it? There is hope, based on past! Vacationists might be wise to experience, that mid-July will (postpone Lake Michigan holi-see the beginning of the end of days wherever possible until) the messy situation. Meanwhile, I later in the summer. SaVe more every day at Bill Kelley1* Seat Cover King —Expert workmanship — Lowest Prices — Instant Credit. $2988 Clear Plastic SEAT COVERS Get sat for the Summer and Vacation trips with smart, clear plastic seat covers especially designed for particular drivers. *90 AUTO TOPS WE REPUCE CONVERTIBLE REAR WINDOWS AND ZIPPERS VINYL ROOF 4995 Look exactly like original equipment. Ah work done by skiltod craftsmen. $69.95 value. INSTANT CREDIT ALL WORK _ GUARANTEED! f Bill Kelley’s SEAT COYER Telephone FI 2-5335 Open Daily • a.m. to 6 all kinds of cleanup operations are Under way. C o n s e r v at 1 o n Department fisheries men point out, however, there is little hope that any of these cleanup efforts will be adequate urflil the j dieoff tapers off through natur-I al processes. w I K PINTER’S TRAILER BOAT CLUB BOATERS, IS EXPANDING! NEW MEMBERSHIPS V\ ATTENTION! ) NOW OPEN 4 \ # For these interested in — oraanlzed dav and 7 organized day and weekend bruises, drop HHTEIPS MARINE for Ralph Mitchell. Interested boatert arm invited to convoy for the Saginaw Rivet Come to Clarkston Town FOR EASY ON THE POCKETBOOK DEALS Buying...] | TRACTORS Selling... Trading...] DOZERS | EXCAVATING EQUIP. | NEW USED REBUILT YOUR EQUIPMENT IS WORTH S CASH IN TRADE. CASE EQUIPMENT DEALER 4 Miles North of Clarkston Complete repair/ser. facilities FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY CLARKSTOR FARM EQUIPMENT GO. M-15 at OAK HILL RD., CLARKSTON, MICH. PHONE MApIo 5-2238 SPECIAL YEAR ’R0UHD PRICES OH/ALL EQUIPMENT! E—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 we care------------, It Isn’t easy to buy bean coffee! Nowadays, very few stores offer you bean coffee. Why does A&P still offer coffees in the bean? Basically, because “We Care.” Specifically, because we know these facts: The coffee bean is nature’s seal that holds the flavor. * Once that seal is broken by grinding, flavor fades... NO MATTER HOW IT’S PACKAGED. The shorter the time between grinding the beans and brewing your coffee, the greater the flavor. Something else that’s important to full coffee flavor ... the correct grind. We don’t have just one, or two grinds. We have seven. We custom-grind your coffee to fit your coffeemaker, Tasty Pickin’s—Fresh Produce! A Real Value! BANANAS 2“29‘ NEW GREEK ffl Jfc* SOUTHERN GROWN Cabbage ... 10 Peaches .... 29 W SWEET, DELICIOUS m Bing Cherries n 49c FOR TASTY SALADS Avocados >• Oven-Fresh Jane Parker Buys! SAVE 6c—JANE. PARKER, SWEETLY ICED Glazed Donuts PKG. OF 12 39 SAVE 9c—JANE PARKER A NET WT M Wfc.. Golden Loaf Cake 2 49* JANE PARKER COCONUT CHOCOLATE CHIP NETWT g* Shortbread Cookies ’!«39 JANE PARKER Cracked Wheat Bread or _ WholeWheat . . 4 - 99‘ JANE PARKER OLD FASHIONED White Bread . . . “"27 JANE PARKER DATE-FILLED NETWT. A*. Coffee Cake .... 39 WITH PECANS—JANE PARKER Fudge-Iced 1-LB Hi rara Devil's Food Cake “i 59 SAVE 6e—JANE PARKER Baked Twin Rolls 25* JANE PARKER CHEESE FLAVORED — ^ _ Corn Puffs......» 59* JANE PARKER DOUBLE CRUST Lemon Pie SAVE JO* 39 l-LB. 8-OZ. SIZE Every-Day Low Price! Mild and Mellow EIGHT O'CLOCK COFFEE 1-LB. BAG 3-lb. Bog........,,,.4,75 59' A&P BRAND NETWT- AAc AiP BRAND A UB. Instant Coffee 10j'«z'Coffee vacuumpacked A can ‘ So if you want the finest cup of “The Think Drink” you’ve ever tasted, buy and brew one of A&P’s three Bean Coffee blends. Mild & Mellow Rich & Full-bodied Vigorous & Winey SLENDERALLA NETWT. O Grape Jelly . . . . 33 Soft Margarine • • RED ROSE PKG. FUTTERF.NGER Tea Bags • • • • • ti 55 Candy Bars . • • • DOLE HAWAIIAN _ , „ ^ ^ "RECONSTITUTED" REALEMON Pineapple Juice 3 «*« 89* Lemon Juice ... 47* 25* 59* ANN PAGE PROWS FINE FOODS NEEDN'T BE EXPENSIVE ANN PAGE QUALITY / MBk WB Salad Dressing - 4# Not every store can offer you custom-ground bean coffee. A&P can and does. Shouldn’t A&P be your store? COPYRIGHT • 1967, THE GREAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA CO., INC. PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, JULY 15TH Salad Mustard . ANN PAGE DRESSING Thousand Island ANN PAGE RED RASPBERRY a Preserves . . . . 2 NETWT. 8-OZ. • STL. uAlJ ANN PAGE ■■ 1-LB. 25 Barbeque Sauce . . «?£ 33 ^ _ ANN PAGE BLUE CHEESE NETWT. 0% 25* Dressing . . . . . . ^ 35* _ ANN PAGE SPAGHETTI OR pd|, 75* Elbow Macaroni . . »° 59 MAXWELL HOUSE Instant Coffee . PACKED IN WATER Empress White Tuna NETWT. 6-OZ. I JAR NETWT. T-OZ. CAN 89* 37* A TASTY CHEESE CRACKER i Cheez-lt DSL MONTE LIGHT, CHUNK Tuna Fish . . DAINTY LUNCH . - Preserves . . CHARMIN < Toilet Tissue NETWT. an Pt 10-OZ. 3 5* • PKG. WO# .3 met .313 I00 4 35’ .3? 79 You may Win up to *1,000 in cash... PLAY BONUS BINGO /t'f Easy . . 11ft Pun Play All 12 Garnet at Once ADULTS ONLY NO PURCHASE REQUIRED Simply pick up your prize slip and game book at your local A&P store or request same by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to P.O. Box 358, Detroit Michigan 48232. Ruby Matthew*, D,trait uby Me $500 Mary Lou Agnollo, St. Clair Shirt* $100 WINNER SOME OF LAST WEEK’S WINNERS Thelma V. Bitnar, Belleville.........$100 Rosa M. Howell, Lansing ......---— 100 "Alla Matthews, Imlay City —--------- 100 Otis Jones, Detroit------—-—— TOO Mrs. V. Morse, Pontiae--------•------ 1®® C. Verant, Dearborn ..—-------------- 1®® Louis Hardy, Romeo ----------—------- 1®® Mabel Kempt, Grand Rapids -h.—..... 1®® Helen Breda, Detroit.........-------- 1®* Mrs. Zapolski, Detroit -------—------1®® THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 E—® Choose “Super-Right For More Taste —Less Waste! Enjoy the full flavor of "Super-Right" Mature. Corn-Fed Beef "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS ALL-MEAT FRANKS STEAKS Round 59 JANE PARKER—SLICED SANDWICH OR Frankfurter Rolls 37 DEE-LISH BRAND gmMM- Sweet Relish - 39* PKG. OF 12 T-Bone Steaks... is. I1* J Porterhouse—. u.|M "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS BEEP U 09 Rump or Rotisserie Roast . . . . “ I CRY-O-VAC. OVEN READY—3 TO 5 LB. SIZES BMP Turkey Breasts Jt Savings A-Plenty on Fine-Quality Groceries! 1*5- A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY All Green Cut Spears Asparagus 3^89* A&P BRAND—LIGHT, CHUNK Tuna Fish 3 NET WT. 6’/j-oz. m cans m A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY IN TOMATO SAUCE—SULTANA 2-LB Pork'N'Beans 25 29* CELEBRITY BRAND CWNITWT. dM Luncheon Meat 3 $S5- 1 OUR OWN (25 FREE WITH 100 PKG.) A m Tea Bags . . 95* PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING oM ' Crisco.............3 " 85* 4c OFF LABEL OfcOfc* Spic and Span . . 22 DOWNY i_QT. Mamc Fabric Softener 77* PERSONAL SIZE jm 40«( Ivory Soap . . 4 pae JJ 13c OFF LABEL i.dt m m _ Top Job.................k 46* Zest Soap . . .2““ 31 IN QUARTERS—NUTkBT _ Margarine . . 5 TROPICAL PUNCH OR GRAPE A&P Fruit Drinks 3 SULTANA—SMOOTH Peanut Butter ANGEL SOFT Paper Napkins 10c OFF LABEL—GIANT SIZE Sunshine Rinso GIANT SIZE Advanced All . . GIANT SIZE Fluffy All . . . . 10c OFF LABEL Vim Tablets . . . FOR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS Dishwasher All 1-QT. 14-OZ. CANS PKG. OF 200 3-LB. 2- OZ. PKG. 3- LB. 1-OZ. PKG. 2-LB. 6-OZ. FKG. 89* 85* 59* 25* 66* 71* 79* 57* 41* NEW! SOFT-PLY (2-PLY) ft B0XES B* GRANULATED BEET m M ft Facial Tissue 3 * 59 Sugar . . 5 - 49 A&P BRAND—FLUORIDE Toothpaste S1QC TUBE SAVE AT AAP Miracle Whip . . 8 49* HILlS BROS. NET WT. if .SO Instant Coffee . . 'Kf 1 Metrecal Shakes f 69* Carnation Slender 4 5® 89* Potato Buds . . 69 GIANT SIZE—WITH PREMIUM 2.LB Silver Dust Blue 81 LAUNDRY DETERGENT, LIQUID ColdwaterAll . . & 73* SCOURING POWDER Of NET WT. <%|c Comet Cleanser 2 ss 31 FOR WHITER CLOTHES NET WT, 4) g%€ Stardust Bleach '}%■ 39* 15e OFF LABEL—GlANT SIZE , .. OMM** Surf Detergent GIANT SIZE 2-LB. n- Breeze ..... Ml 81 Be OFF LABEL r.pT m Lux Liquid . . . 49* 12c OFF LABEL—FAMILY SIZE Listerine antiseptic PINE SCENTED /^weeare FBICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JULY 13th. "SUPER-RIGHT" FULLY. COOKED SEMI-BONELESS 79 HAMS "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS — Strip Steaks . . . . u199 FRYER BREASTS WITH RIBS ATTACHBO OR _ Fryer Legs .... u 69* "SUPER-RIGHT" BOSTON STYLI »UTT — Pork Roast .... 1169* CUT FROM BOSTON SYLE BUTTS OmMM Pork Steaks 1179* FROZEN ft-LB. BOX 1.BO) Cod Fillets . . . . .“ 39* FROZEN, DELICIOUS _ _ Haddock $2.39 . . .“ 49* Evap. Mi 6 89' IONA—TlLLOW a 1-L8. fling Peaches 4 '£Sh 99 CHAMPION BRAND A Fig Bars . ... .2 - 39* AAP BRAND—ALL FLAVORS (4-CT.) NET WT. p p. Instant Breakfast PKG.‘ 55 GREEN GIANT—FRENCH STYLE GW NET WT. M MM - Green Beans 2 iss- 49 Waxed Paper 2 - 41* SUPEROSE NIT WT. PAc Sweetner .... m1 59 PILLSBURY GM NET WT. M A. Buttermilk Biscuits 2 tubes 19 BAND-A ft) BRAND, LARGE 4S pM. Plastic Strips . . ™ 59 REGULAR OR MENTHOL NIT WT. Ofm. Aero-Shave • • • ’{ffTi YOUR CHOICEr— A&P GRADE "A" Chopped Broccoli Of CUT CORN 2^39* STOUFFIR'S MUTWT MA Macaroni & Cheese 'no 49* Grape Juice . .2E39* Cream Cheese Cake «£ 79* Coffee Cake . . .’Sff-79 YOUR CHOICE —A&P GRADE "A" Cottage Fries, Potato Morsels or 2 39 CHOCOLATE COVERED ICE CREAM Cheerio Burs 29*1 w 12*59* MEDIUM SHARP 1,99* Lestoil .... . 'Ml1- 59* BIG ROLL i|Q Mf. Scot Towels . . . W 31* FOR EXTRA DRY SKIN NIT WT. A Of- Pocquins Lotion ,0^69* 10e OFF LABEL 3-LB. MM- Instant Fels . . . ‘»iz 66 ARP Our FinMt Quality 5-Graln m A MM. Aspirin Tablets 100-29* Frankenmuth Cheese 1179* MILO COLBY tm mc Pinconning Cheese u 75 AAP—LARGE OR SMALL CURD 14J m g* Cottage Cheese '^49* AAP BRAND AMf- Choc.Milk... *• 27* snsm T»n* n,t wt. « Ac Presto Whip . . 'is-3o and a Share of Product Prizes, too CUP THESE EXTRA PRIZE SLIPS TO HELP YOU WIN! MORE OF LAST WEEK’S WINDERS Robert O'Connor, Detroit.—.—.............$100 Agnes Phillips, Orchard Lako.........— 100 L. H. Lynch, Warron...................... 100 Virginia Sprickett, Kalamazoo .............. 100 Letlio Hiatt, Niles . . ........1.--- 100 Mrs. B. A. Sulkowski, Plymouth .......... 100 Lucille Skiarczyk, Allen Park........«... 100 Jacqueline Nelson, Rose City............ 75 Mrs. Pat Root, Hartford...............— 50 Helen M. Potter, Cadillac.--------------- 50 Iffurut Juror, Wyondi $500 WINNER $100 WINNER m*t ROOOWOd k iKo.. NXC. ASSORTED FLAVORS YUKON CLUB Beverages a Regular or Lo-Cat 12FL.OZ. CAN ASSORTED FLAVORS SOFT DRINK MIX CHEERI-AID 6 **19* THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Two Officers tfo Retire From State Police The retirement of two Michigan State Police officers long associated with the Pontiac post was announced Stoday by Col. Fredrick E. Davids, director of the or-Hganization. i Slated to retire I tire after com-Ipleting at least ■ 25 years service 'with the State STRILECKY Police trooper Alfred Strilecky, 46, and Cpl. John H. Benser, 48. Strilecky, who has been stationed at the Pontiac post since 1957, will retire Sept. 1. Benser, who was assigned here from 1956 until his transfer to Houghton Lake in 1964, will retire Aug. 10. A native of Wheeling, W. Va., Strilecky enlisted in the State Police in 1942. In addition to his 10-year stint at the Pontiac post, he has served at New Buffalo, Detroit, Houghton Lake and Pe-toskey. SERVICE CITATIONS A graduate of Dearborn High . School, Strilecky is the recipient of two meritorious service citations. He is married and has two sons and a daughter. . Benser joined the State Police in 1940. Besides Pontiac and Houghton Lake, he has served at Battle Creek, Detroit, Jones-ville and Alpena. A native of Boyne City, Ben-aer also has been awarded a citation of meritorious service. Married and the father of a son, he attended Central Michigan University for two years. OCC Trustees Set Meeting Oakland Community College’s Board of Trustees will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Conference Center at the Auburn Hills campus, Pontiac Township. The regular meeting was pushed ahead one week. The most important items on the agenda are: • Discussion of agreement with Watied Lake Consolidated Schools for admission of high school students in vocational-technical courses at OCC. • A recommendation to approve a two-year agreement between OCC and Colorado Mountain College for the exchange of instructional media and course packages. Case No. 67-5-2 LEGAL NOTICE Notlc* Is hereby given of a Pul Hearing to be held by the Waterf Township Planning Commission on J 25, 1967, it 7:30 p.m., E.D.S.T., In Waterford Township High School, located at 1415 Crescint Lake Road, to consld— changing the zone designation from R-l Single Family Residential District R-2, Multiple Owelling District, as defined .by Township Ordinance being the "Zoning Ordinance of 'ter Township of Waterford", County, Michigan, on the foll< scribed parcel of property: CASE NO. 67-5-2 Lot 22, except the Nly W fet visor's Plat No. 23, part of the ™ of Section 23, a part of the SW Section 14, T3N, R96, Waterford 1 ship, Oakland County, Michigan, cording to the Plat thereof recorded in Liber 28 of Plats, Page 37, Oakland AKinux _ I ounty, Michigan ' 4995 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48054 LEGAL NOTICE Is hereby given of a Public o be held by the Waterford Meaning Commission on July 25, 1967, at 7:30 p.m., E.O.S.T-, in the Waterford Township High School, located .at i4ij crescent Lake Road, to cor-1-— ' rhenaino the sans designation from I District to 0-1, Local: Business OMrlCt, t Ordinance of the Charter Township Waterford", Oakland County, Michigan, an the following described parcel of . 99* FRESH FIRST CVTS Pork Chops •b 69* SLICED FAN SUE Armour Bacon *}.%?,. 75* LEAN. MEATY Spare 81b.1 69* SLICED LVNCHEON MEAT Eckrich Varietie$3wt3^9fl MICHIGAN GRADE. I Skinless Franks 2 £.89* 25’ MEADOWDALE CUT Green Beans 2 JJ; 39* MEADOWDALE Sweet Peas PLAIN OR IODIZED Colonial Salt 1 O' • TENDER & JUICY | Pork Steak* 69c • FRESH SPLIT SPRING j Broilers * 39* J FRESH GROUND ALL BEEF U.S. CHOICE BEEh • • Uwwalu.8.i*iii* 1 AQt Dik ciamIt ^ oo«! : Hamburger m ** 4r KID MeCIK Cut. Ib.VW • • Lesser Zntilieslb. 35c US. CHOICE BEEF STEAK CLUB or T-Bone W* US. CHOICE BEEF STEAK Sirloin || * $1M U.S. CHOICE BEEi Ball Park Franks GOLD BELL ‘ GIFT STAMPS RUMP, PATIO OR CHUCK Boneless Beef JRoast CHUNK BEEP OR HORSBHBA‘ Alpo Dog Food DOGS LOVE RALSTON Dog Chow FRESH CALIF. SWEET RIPE Santa Rosa Plums IS* i;itrCr.«k.r3^89« SO HANDY St* HM* EASY BOUNTY Jiffy Biscuit Mix ^35* Beef Stow CHOCOLATE MIX Horshoy Cocoa IS: 29* 79* EASY INSTANT Carnation Milk ALL FLAVORS MBADOWDALB Canned Pop CAMPBELL'S IN TOMATO SAUCE Pork A Boons KIDS LOVE SPAGHETTIS Franco-American 7jl RITTER TREAT * Asparagus Spoors HOME GROWN FRESH Tender Green Beans CALIF. FREESTONE Frosh Nectarines HOM GROWN FRESH 39* Sweat Red Beet* 30* Pricai good thi w July IS. Right i Limit. V* INSTANT COFFEE WHOLE OR SLICED 74 H-ox. O 4M| t Chock Foil O’ Nuts-<79* But tor Hold Potatoes;!*' . BUTTERFIELD TREAT ,>i FBH r- 11* Potato Slicks -50* TOO* Applo.auco -V- 49* 0 UL 9QC PLAIN dR IODIZED c a Morton Salt HAMBURGER DILL CHIPS Vlosic Picklos 50 Extra Mi Ml (ill Stop SIEitn Mi Ml Gill Stops SIBilfJ Mi Ml till Stanps SO Extra Mi Ml (HI Stanps SOExtra, li( HUBr WMH Stuns WNh purchaia K SOExtra MiMMiit Stuns with ptirchoie of H SOExtra WMH Staffs with parchaw of*1 JwTVwdtrfil Hair Spray " THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 E-^ll SowEOF CARDS India's Princes Set to Fight tor Pensions by STANLEY ELLIN CHAPTER tt TOT train «u pulling In 1 whan 1 got to the station oh a dead run. L%w Anna da Vlllemont climb aboard. Whan I stepped Into Its vestibule, the train was already sliding out of . I reached Compartment 3, Car S, found the door unlocked, and stepped Inside, locking It behind me. Anne looked completely unstrung. Tm glad you showed up,’ she said with a weak attempt at the light touch. T was just getting ready to panic.” "Nothing to panic about. Did you get a. customs declaration from the trainman?" “Yes, I already signed It and gave It to him along with my passport He has the money, too. I told him to change It to lire. And I asked about connections to Venice. He said we’d get Into Milan at three hi the morning, and a train to Venice comes through there about four.” "Now let’s see that » paper. Which one Is it?” "Franee-Soir. It was the only ene they had from Paris.” My spirits rose as 1 scanned the first few pages. There was no mention of Louis le Hue’s murder in them.. "The man who killed Louis eras the same one who delivered Paul to his grandmother afterward. Who Is he?" I asked. "X don’t know. Probably t by Charles Los- By. "He does the planning. He gives the ordera” ■ Bo that eras It When stupidly let Toschcnhant know I couldn’t erode with him on my stories the coming weekend because Anne had other plans for me, he already suspected what those plana were. And when his spy, Leon Becque, brought Elaine to Veronique's apartment the next evening to celebrate their engagement, he had learned enough to confirm the suspicions. "And Sidney Scott?” 1 said. “They killed him.” "Who did ?" "AB of them. They called me up that night to say Madame Centra was dying and that I was to have Sidney drive Paul and ass to He Saint-Louis right a-way. They killed Sidney there. They drowned him In the bathtub the way you’d drown a helpless animal. I didn’t see It because when I came fat they gave me a drink with something In It that knocked me out completely.” INSTALLMENT No, 37 "Why did they kill nim?" "Because 1 told him everything so he'd help Paul and me got out of the country. And that same evening he went to Bernard about It I didn't know trusted Bernard Bourdon.” "So the whole story you handed the police—?" Tt was Leschenhaut and that doctor who runs the sanitarium —Dr. Linder—who made up the story.” “And,” I said, "when Max Marchat, your nice respectable lawyer, read the transcript of the police interview he suspected you were lying. After a while he made the mistake of asking people embarrassing questions, and that was the end for him.” "How do you know about it?” "Because once you know the OBI it’s easy to work out the answers. Do you want to know another answer I just worked out? It’s pretty risky handing over a quarter of a million dollars a year to an outfit like the OBI, what with all the snooping bank officials and tax collectors who might get curious about tt. But you can hand It over by losing it in Installments to someone named Splnosi who runs a gambling joint in Saint-Cloud. He doesn’t keep the money for himself. He's an OBI agent and passes it on to them, doesn't he?” "Yes.” “So with Leschenhaut the president of the club and Spin-osl the treasurer, what does that make Morillon? Sergeant-at-arms? Chief executioner?” I felt Anne stiffen at this, but she said nothing. "Well?” 1 said angrily. The Infatuation for Morillon might have withered; loyalty remained. It was a knocking compartment door which started her. “Madame, I have your passport and money.’’ I swiftly doused the reading light, drew the blanket over my head, and got a grip gun under the pillow. “All right,” I whispered, “you know what to do.” I heard the snick of the door bolt. ‘The passport, madams. And this packet contains twelve thousand lire.” "Thank you very much.” The door dosed; the bolt snapped back Into place. Half-smothered, I threw aside the blanket and turned on the light. "Y all,” "I think we did.” Anne’s eyes were fixed o ceiling, her Bps drawn back, her teeth set. She looked Ilka someone on the rack while Its ropes were being tightened. "If you only told me everything from the start You trusted me enough to bring me Into the house, but from then on—” T told Sidney everything. You know what happened to him. X didn’t want the same thing to happen to you.” That was a mistake.” “Caring what happened to you?” she asked. "Oh, why don’t you try being honest for a change! What you cared about was having me get you and Paul to the States. AH right, that makes sense. But the romance you cooked up between us, that touching love story you were acting out for my benefit — that wasn’t the way to do it There never really was a love story at all, there?” 'AB I want is to get Paul out of danger. I don’t care what happens after that!” "Then you’d better start ing. Do you think you'll be safe anywhere with what you know about the organisation? Do you know the first assignment Leschenhaut would give Colonel Hardee and his Yankee storm troopers If you ever got to the States?" •Til find some place—” • "Not until the whole lot of them are finished off for good, and that Includes Hubert Morillon. Now answer one question. If the time comes that you can get up in court and testify a-gainst him, would you do tt?” She didn’t speak, but when she abruptly turned her head a-way from me I knew the answer. I took hold of her chin and forced her to look at me. Her eyes were glistening with tears. "You fool,” L said, almost pitying her. "(Jo you really believe you can keep running the rest of your life? Just because you once thought you were in; love with him—” “More than that." “More than that?" -T married him,” Anne said. "He's Henri de Vlllemont, my NEW DELHI, India (AP) -India's 554 remaining princes are sharpening their swords for a duel over their pensions. First blood, was drawn when the National Committee of the governing Congress party demanded an end to pririfcwy privy purses. These are the major means of living for the forma* fabulous, bejeweled princes. WWW Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s government would have to amend thfe constitution to give effect to the National Committee’s recommendation. The constitution guarantees the princes their rights and privileges. The princes receive a total of $7.73 million a year from the Indian exchequer. This was granted them at the time of independence in return for surrender of nearly 400,000 square miles of territory held by die princes with absolute rule over more than 100 million people. UNEXPECTED VOTE The unexpected* vote was taken at the end of the three-day Congress convention under the initiative of a left-winger, Mohan Dharia, 42. Only 50 out of the 450 members were present. Competent sources said the move took even the party’s high command by surprise. The high command had presented a motion for curtailing some of the princes’ titles and privileges such as freedom from arrest and exemption from income tax and municipal tax. Nothing stronger was expected. WWW The reaction from the princely order was sharp. "It is nothing but a unilateral act of highhandedness,” said Maharaja Manbendra Singh of Tehri-Garhwal, himself a follower of the Congress party and a member of Parliament. ‘RETALIATORY MEASURE’ “Of the princes, only five per cent are in politics, and, of than, only half are against the Congress,” the maharaja said, explaining that he was unable to understand the Congress committee’s “retaliatory measure.” The party suffered reverses in last February’s elections. For the first time in the 20 years since freedom, non-Congress governments took over in eight of the 17 states. Even in Parliament the Congress strength was reduced from 384 to 282 in a house of about 500. w w w The party’s rank-and-file condemned faulty leadership, fail- ure of the government to arrest soaring prices and check corruption and internal bickering. Finally, they blamed the princely order for Congress foundering in some states. , 'They had in mind Maharani Gayatri Devi of Jaipur, opposition leader in Rajasthan State, and the stately Maharani of Gwalior, who is the opposition leader in the Madhya Pradesh Legislature. In Hariana and Orissa, former rulers dominate the non^Congress governments. NEXT MOVE “We are not going to take it lying down,” Maharaja Manbendra Singh said, “and we are awaiting the next move from the government.” Mrs. Gandhi, caught between her party’s mandate and the princes, has arranged a meeting with some of them to find out what can be done and how far she can go with the willing consent of tiie princely order, r w ~~K—w----------------- Two princes are in her government, Maharaja Karan Singh of Kashmir as minister for tourism and Maharaja Bha-nu Prakash Singh of Narasin-garh as deputy minister for industrial development. Of the 554 princelings, 11 receive privy purses exceeding a million dollars a year. The parses range down to a mere $25 per month received by the Maharaja of Katodla in Gujarat. HEIRLESS PRINCES Privy purses have been reduced with the death of every ruler and have lapsed with the death of some heirless princes. It is estimated that in another couple of decades the total expenditure would be cut in two. The younger elements are taking to business, politics and to learned professions,” one prince says. "WWW The Hindustan Times called the move “privy purse-lifting” and said: “The question bristles with embarrassments and difficulties for the government. It will damage the confidence in the government's pledged word to the princes, and its lifting is not Worth the limited1 political gains that will accrue to it.” Beam Kills Man PARMA (AP) - Herman T. Stiles, 63, of Horton was killed Tuesday when a steel beam fell on him as he was dismantling a canopy in front of an abandoned gasoline station. The dark-haired, dark-eyed, trimly muatached Colonel Henri de Vlllemont became the blond, blue-eyed, clean-shaven, highly Nordic Dr. Hubert Morillon. The hair dyes, contact lenaea, and scholarly-looking apeetaclei completed the transformation oC colonel to doctor. (To Bo Continued Tomorrou>J e aereL Copyright o 1967 hy Stanley Kills. Dlstribwted by ■ 29 Americans Killed in Viet Identified WASHINGTON (AP) - The names of 29 men killed in action are included in the latest casualty list released by the Defense Department on the Vietnam conflict. Hie list also includes the names of three men who died of wounds, four previously listed as missing, no?? dead—hostile; five listed as missing due to hostile action; one captured or interned; eight who died not as a result of hostile action, and one missing not as a result of hdsitle action. Killed in action; Curry, Pontiac. OHIO — Spec. 4 Richard N. Robey, Spencervllle. PENNSYLVANIA — Pfc. Nick Panella LOUISIANA — Hospltalman Taddy M. Hart, Graanwall Springs. i TEXAS—Hoapltalman Philip H. Converse, Dallas. MARINE CORPS CALIFORNIA — CpI. Jamas H. Cooney, Camarillo; Lanca CpI. Pater G. Talmon III, Fountain Vallay. FLORIDA — Lanca CpI. Francisco A. Mazarlegos, Tampa. ILLINOIS — Pfc. Joa C. Leutenegger, Granite City. INDIANA — Pfc. Bruce A. Yoder, Ko- KANSAS — Pfc. Richard L. McKInnell. Wichita. MICHIGAN — Lanca CpI. David B. MISSOURI — Staff Sgt. Jerry L. M ler. Poplar Bluff; Lanca CpI. Thomas V McMahan Jr., Kansas City. “■*—-------:Y ■ «— ' * Schmutz, Camden. NEW YORK — CpI. Ronald Boston, Brooklyn; Lanca CpI. Cesar E. Carvallo, PENNSYLVANIA — Pfc. Kenneth P. Birelev. Marcus Hook. Bishop; VIRGINIA — Lanca CpI. Charles I Johnson, Covington. WASHINGTON — Lance CpI. David / Bradley, Pullman; Pfc. Maurice K. Mac Patrick, Valley “"SCONSIN Marshall. Died of wounds: WISCONSIN — CpI. Jamas M. Shepard MARINE CORPS CONNECTICUT — Lanca CpI. Robert C. Nelson, Milford. TENNESSEE — Lanca CpI. James R. unsford, Jackson. Missing to dead—hostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA — Pfc. Charles E. Crain/ edwood Valley. NEW JERSEY — 2nd Lt- Malcolm F. Tassey, Rutherford. NORTH CAROLINA — M.Sgt. Ralph J. enc, Fayetteville. SOUTH CAROLINA — -Pfc. Franklin H, enn, Aiken. Missing as a result of hostile action: NAVY Lt. Philip C. Craig. MARINE CORPS . CpI. Robert C. Sherman. AIR FORCE Mai. Ward K-. Dodge. . Mat. Dewey W. Waddell. Capt. William V. Frederick. Captured or interned: NAVY Lt. (|.g.) Jamas W. Bailey. Died not as a result of hostile action; ARMY INDIANA — Pfc. Jackie L. Sanders, NEW'YORK — Spec. 4 Patrick G. R. Brldenbaker, Stockton; Spec. 4 William 'toft, Brooklyn. PENNSYLVANIA — Spec. . Bach; Royersfor1 MARINE CORPS CALIFORNIA — 2nd Lt. Bruce Ion, Newport g RESEARCH VEHICLE—This is the X24A supersonic manned Ming body, a research vehicle which Was turned Wer to the U.S. Air Farce yesterday in ceremonies at-the Martin Marietta Corp.’s Baltimore, Md., plant. The wingless vehicle derives aerodynamic lift from its shape alone. It is scheduled to begin flights from Edwards Air Force Base in California late this year or early next year. ■MMKi Gunnery Sgt. I I .......Ipott, Santa, A-- NEW YORK — Capt. J C“'~a!R FORCE S ROet MISSOURI — Airman l.C. Bernard Ferd, Lees Summit. Missing not as a result of hostile action: ARMY Sgt. l.C. Thomas L. 1 Soviet industrial output so far this year has shown a gain of about 11 per cent over {rear, according to reports. (AdvarNaemant) FALSETEETH| Chewing Efficiency Increased up to 35% ige up to 3 ____■pHwwtaf...-______________ your plates. FASTEETH holds uppers -----T JUUI and two great-grand- N.J., founded in 1847 the news-I paper, Washington National children; childten. Memorials can be made tojEra, in which the famous novel, the First Church of Christ Scien-I “Uncle Tom’s CaJjin,” first ap-tist, Birmingham. Ipeared. Auburn Rd.. Auburn Heights, Michigan. | Tuesday, a |19M Hoover^ dasher, ^Serial No. *0*5, ,n y Clerk for speciflcatto Hoc, Michigan j II and 12, .1967 , Oakland NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, that ege^BoanMor said proiect has s sufficient end that the said : protect is practical; has given the name "BREWER DRAIN" as the name of sold sold Drainage Board tor tho Guyer Drain. DANIEL W. BARRY, Chairman of the Drainage Board for tho Guyor Drain Oakland County Drain Commissioner 1 HILLVIEW I |i MEMORIAL GARDENS i ;j:; 6513 Dixit Hwy., Waterford c | 625-5000 625.-5001 & Is There a. VAN GOGH In The House? OAKLAND 761 W. Huron Street Downtown Pontiac Rochester, Drayton Plains, Walled Lake, Milford, Clarkston, Lake Orion, Waterford You can get one at a special low price at First Federal where you can save twice. Open a new Savings Account or Add to your present one in the amount of $20 ... and you not only earn a generous 414% but also the privilege of purchasing a world famous art treasure from the collection in our lobby for just $5.95 (which is a true $25 value.) These masterpieces are not prints, They are full color, 18” x 24”, replica paints on canvas by Van Gogh, Renoir, Utrillo and others; Each is on authentic artists* canvas mounted on a custom-crafted wood stretcher. A wonderful opportunity to start a cdllec-tion of art treasures and save. • • Open a new Savings for $20 or more • Add $20 or more to your existing Savings • Purchase any Savings Certificate • Open a new Safe Deposit Box THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 YOUNG IS YOUNG - Dr. Arthur Young, long-time Pontiac physician and new Oakland University doctor, is still young and healthy after 34 years in the profession and at age 71. He spends his mornings at OU’s health service, afternoons at his own practice and spare time traveling or following sports. OU's Doctor at 71— Too Busy to Retire By DICK ROBINSON When Pontiac physician Dr. Arthur R. Young took a job as Oakland University’s doctor earlier this year, he thought he would coast into retirement. WWW - But today the 71-year-old doctor is busier than ever with his own practice and a new health center project at the university. “I decided to ease up a little when I took this new job,” Young says, “but I discovered my work increased since I had to condense devotion to my own practice into half a day.” He works mornings at OU’s makeshift health service and afternoons in his office Riker Building. ★ ★ ★ A veteran of 34 years in the medical profession, Young is now wrapped up in plans for the university’s $600,000 health center. Ground-breaking for the new facility is scheduled to start this summer. AWAITS COMPLETION "I want to stay around to see that finished,” remarked Dr. Young. N Casa No. 67-5-3 CITY OF ROCHESTER NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS •ARBAGE AND RUBBISH COLLECTION The City of Rochostor, Michigan, will rccalvs sealed Mdi I until 3:00 P.M. Wednesday, July If, 1967, for the collection, transportation, and disposal of garbage and rubbish from r“**| m corporate limits of the City, Specifications and , ___ ______ available at the City Office, 400 i Street, Rochester, Michigan. The City of Rochester reserves right to reiert any or ad bids an waive any Irregular (ties In the bide proposal if It determines It Is In hast Interest of the City so to do WILLIAM S. SINCLAIR .City Manager The one-story health center is expected to be completed in eight months. It will have offices for a medical director and two doctors and examination, physical therapy, first aid, isolation and solarium rooms as well as overnight wards. Oakland University’s first regular doctor, Young indicated that he is healthy and has no immediate plans for retirement. * * * Prior to entering medical school, he was a baske coach at East High School in Wichita, Kan., where he grew up. One of his teams won a national championship in Chicago. SWITCHED TO MEDICINE “I decided to go into medicine when I was working for the DuPont Co.,” he explained. “People with Ph.D.’s there were getting ahead. So I decided to get an M.D.” Die personable physician still vividly recalls incidents when he started his practice in the mid-1930s. “There was no money in those I days,” he said. “We used barter. I got paid butter, chickens, I tomatoes. Once I fixed a frac-1 ture and got paid a quarter of a beef. “It was a very pleasant relationship." Recalling one memorable experience during one of the many home visits, Dr. Young commented: “I had to follow a snow plow to within IVx miles from a woman who was expecting a baby. Then I had to walk to tile house in ltt-feet of snow. To get to the hospital, we had to find a neighbor to hitch up a team of horses and sled.” Dr. Young’s business built up so much since the depression days that he has to think twice about retiring. ★ ★ ★ “There is such a shortage of doctors in the area that it is a problem for me to retire,” he maintained. “I have loyal patients. There is no place to send them." OAKLAND PATIENTS On the other hand, his patients at Oakland University will certainly have a place to when the health center is completed: , Before Dr. Young came to OU, sick students received attention from on-duty nurses with a doctor called in for more serious cases. Now, Dr. Young — as the only physician at the university—has three nurses helping him during the day and two people to take night cases. 'My chief responsibility is the dormitory,, students,” explained Dr. Young whEt* lives at 2340 -E. Hammond Lake, , Bloomfield Township. “We expect 1,800 of them in the fall.” ★ * * He conceded that there Is ‘not muclftpressure” on him at the university since most cases involve sore throats, headaches and other minor ailments. But i,t is apparent that his university patients will continue to increase as OU grows. A1 4,000 students are expected this falL Dr. Young will continue to be What’s so hot about our July sale? This: Eagle, Phoenix, Petrocelli, Martinelli, Arrow, French Shriner, etc. So don't wait! Come to Osmun's now! The heat's on! But don't worry . ,. the stores are air conditioned. a part of Pontiac sfneo 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN * VOLINS MEN |=REE PARKING at ALL STORES 41 Downtown Pontiac ■ Tel-Huron Center In Pontiac ■ Tech Plaza Center in Warren Open Fri. & Mon. ’Ml 9 Open Every Night ’til 9 Open Every Night til 9 delta. * * ★ It’s called riverine warfare, a term first used by Union troops in 1862. The 1967 version combines amphihious tactics, river assault groups like those formed by the French lit Vietnam, and an historical thank you to Gen. Winfeld Scott, War Tactics to Fight VC in Delta for Navy gun- islppl. onth a flotilla gunboats and been launch-sweeps in es-igon. These are pinpricks in the vast area that holds one-third of Vietnam’s people and furnishes most of the rice to government and Viet-cong alike. * ★ ★ The heart of the operation is the Benewah, a converted tanklanding ship now jammed with troop quarters, command cen- ters aud -communications gear-as well as a popcorn stand. G; COMPLAINTS Aboard the troopships are two battaUadsrof the U$ 9th Infantry Division; the officers anxious to make riverine warfare work and the# infantrymen bemused at finding themselves part soldier, part sailor and part Marine^ The GIs complain at cramped quarters and the Navy’s refusal to permit beer aboard. ★ * ★ The growing pains appear relatively minor and the Infantrymen plowing through the gooey paddy-fields are happy to have the motley fleet of armored landing craft nearby. The shallow-draft landing boats are modified versions of old World War II craft but much better armed. Some carry machine guns and mortars. A special type carries a 40mm cannon. They are meant to not only land the infantrymen but then push into narrow waterways and give direct supporting fire where possible. The delta, 75 per cent under- water duiing the rainy Reason now starting, has countless waterways where such craft can operate. The Vietcong has used these waterways freely in the past, flitting about in sampans at night and disappearing by day. Many areas are honeycombed with bunkers, foxholes and trenches neatly hidden in palm stands, inside villages or camouflaged into the'dikes crisscrossing the paddy-fields. The Vietcong move into them when needed, then fade away to another area if pressed too far. Last year U.S. planners sharply increased U.S-. Navy patrol craft in the -delta to cut. down guerilla mobility and — hopefully—to force the Vietcong onto high ground strongholds to be pounded by sir, artillery and infantry assaults. * ★ * The idea of the riverine forces is to put infantrymen into the delta for relatively short operations then brining them out for hot'meals, clean beds, hot showers and a few days* rest — before sending them out again. F—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 LOIN CHOPS ...99«< ALL MEAT OR ALL BEEF ECKRICH WIENERS.......75' TASTY FLAVORFUL PRE-SEASONED OVEN-READY ECKRICH SMOKEES............89* MEAT LOAF... WITH THIS COUPON l SS PURCHASE OR MORE : KROCIR VAC PM COFFEE 13T\ Vo lid thru Sun., July K, 7967 of Kregsr Dot. I Can. Mich. Limit On* Co upon. HOT BURNING* LONG LASTING CHARCOAL ..hdlftS $1" BRIQUETS...................20 88 KROGER BRAND■ PORK AND BEANS..............--10 5 DELICIOUS FLAVORS Hl-C DRINKS.......25 FRESH BRAND TWIN PAK POTATO CHIPS ................—5* BUTTERFIELD BRAND SHOESTRING POTATOES...................3«.2S ALL VARIETIES EXCEPT BUTTERCRUST AND GIANT LOAF KROGER BREAD 4 89^ HURRY! COMPLETE YOUR ROYAL COURT DINNERWARE SET NOW AND SAVE $6.00 WITH THE COUPONS BELOW! VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON SAVE 28' COLD POWER COLD WATER ‘ LAUNDRY DETERGENT 5-LB. 4-OZ. PKG. i COUNTRY OVEN 6 VARIETIES nHannm I COUNTRY CLUB FROZEN I LAYER ■ POT PIES I CAKES Wf. •■■■49 BETTY CROCKER s KROGER WHITE HEDRJH SIZE t| GRADE'A’ 'I FRESH EGGS CAKE MIXES 3^89 HAKES 8 QUARTS-KROGER INSTANT DRY MILK <69 GIANT SIZE LO-SUDS BRIGHT DETERGENT 49 FOR SNACKS AND LUNCHES SPAM CANNED MEAT............-%.48 ■ THIS COUPON GOOD FOR $1.50 OFF ■ Z TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OF ! "ROYAL COURT CHINA 4-PC. place. ■ SETTING (OVERSIZED DINNER I ■ PLATE BREAD & BUTTER PLATE. ■ CUP & SAUCER). . ■ REGULAR PRICE............*3.4# ■ BI (LESS. Hi - COUPON............$1.9# ValU thru Sun., July 16, 1967 r of Kroger Def. WITH THIS COUPON OH ANY 2 PKGS SEA PAK i FROZEN ■ SEAFOOD I Valid thru Sun., July 76, 7967 WITH THIS COUPON ON .i ANY ANY 6 PKGS KROGER a PUDDINGS > » Valid thru Sun., July It, 7087 aj of Ktaggr Dot, t Rost. Mich. H EA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO 1-LB l^OZ JARS KROOER PRESERVES . GORDONS LjHUtIMNr ■ at Krogar Oat. | East. Mich. Olf■■■■■■>■■■■ ■ d_: WITH THIS COUPON ON U-FLOZCAN LYSOL SPRAY DISINFECTANT Kragar I. Mich. id 99% FAT FREE-PET EVAPORATED SKIMMED MILK SMOOTH SPREADING PARKAY MARGARIHE PATIO FROZEN BEEF EHCHILADA DINNER NABISCO CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES CHIPS AHOY!............ FOR DISHES-MLD SWAH LIQUID 12-0Z WILDFLOWER’ LIBBEY GLASS INSIDE SILVER DUST................. WHITE LOTION MILDNESS FOR HANDS DOVE LIQUID FROZEN TUNA NOODLES STAR-KIST CASSEROLE...4 BANQUET FROZEN 4 VARIETIES COOKIN’ BAGS FLUSHABYES DISPOSABLE DIAPERS 24-CTPKG 24-CT PKG 24-CT P MEDIUM NEWBORN TODOLEI T 99 *1 100% PURE FLORIDA fUSH ORANGE JUICE. DELICIOUS CALIFORNIA SUNKIST ORANGES. 115 SIZE CALIFORNIA SUNKIST LEMONS. F—8 THE PONTIAC l-it> WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 190T COUNTRY CLUB POINT CUT U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY FLAT CUT RIB STEAK WHOLE OR HALF USDA CHOICE TASTY FLAVORFUL WHOLE WITH RIBS ATTACHED WHOLE WITH BACK PORTION U.S. CHOICE ROUND BONE COUNTRY CLUB 4 TO 6-LB KROGER FROZEN FANCY 3 TO S-LB SKINLESS WIENERS ...........59* YOUNG DUCKLINGS......................................................- 59* ROASTING CHICKENS - 39* EATMORE GOLDEN ROLL MARGARINE...............-15 KROGER FRESH HOMOGENIZED GRADE 'A' 1/2 GALLON MILK............2 89 KROGER OR BORDEN’S QUART HALF & HALF 43 KROGER OR BORDEN’S PINT SOUR CREAM............... 39 FROZEN ASSORTED LIBBY’S DRINKS..............wN B&jSWj!'- M PURE GRANULATED I PIONEER SUGAR ■ BORDEN'S ELSIE ICE CREAM BARS ELSIE BORDEN’S ICE CREAM 15^ . V . ' - - s s - s V# ' * >*/ '« rf*' <'■» vo<*&. KROGER SPINACH, PEAS 6 CARROTS OR PEAS FROZEN VEGETABLES..........6-™ *1 COUNTRY CLUB SALTED _ ROLL BUTTER. .............«~49 EMBASSY BRAND SALAD DRESSING.............-.29 LADY BETTY BRAND v ________ QUART PRUNE JUICE 36I 6 591 Valid thru Sun., July 16. 1967 at Krogar Dot. & East. Mich. Limit Ont 1967 at Krogar Dot. & East. Mich. Limit Ona Coupon. PIZZA OR HICKORY'FLAVORED HUNT’S CAlSUR...£%10r KRAFT SALAD DRESSING MIRACLE WHIP........% 48* ALL PURPOSE WESSON OIL..... „j GALLON »r» BIG *K' BRAND CANNED POP... v.-rt .°.z.7* LIGHT CHUNK DEL MONTE TUN A,‘^25* KROGER BRAND-BONUS PACK 64 TEA BAGS.........49* SCIENTIFICALLY RIPENED TO BRING YOU MELLOW-RIPE SWEETNESS AND FLAVOR l# sunrise FRESH ■ GOLDEN RIPE^MI BANANAS GREAT FOR SNACKS-KRUN-CHEE POTATO CHIPS........ SUPERFINE WHITE WHOLE ONIONS............. 31* WHITENS YOUR WASH BULL DOG BLUING -T--„r: DINNER RIPE % MT. WHITNEY OLIVES....&S 31* 111 WYLER’S BEEF OR CHICKEN BOUILLON CUBES.............SflO* HH COLLEGE INN TASTY CHICKEN ALA KING.......“i149* LSI I* d CHICKEN CHOW MHK.v..c^S7* .9f?cs 39* 2-FL OZBTL !■ RIVAL DOG FOOD' ml I burgers ’h gravy.. 2 is-oz ViT'CANSvmW FRESH CRISP ' ____ BIBB LETTUCE........ ........-49* CMWORNIa” AVOCADOS...... . ..'**» 29* LONG WHITE POTATOES...... 20 «« »1»* CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE FUDGE OR STRAWBERRY METRICAL SHAKE AR1 CONTAINS ■ 99 3 ENVELOPES 6 FEET 2 INCHES LONG, 2 FEET WIDE ALUMINUM FOLDING BED *Q99 ONLY JOHNSON AND JOHNSON BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS 61 214 OFF LABEL WOODBURY SHAMPOO SPR AY CAN BAH DEODORANT.........c. ” 72* 7< OFF LABEL BAN ROLL ON 154-FL OZ BTL ARi DEODORANT ikiimhW FOR FAST RELIEF EXCEDRIN TABLETS 100-COUNT Dottle 1 16 SUNSHINE BRAND KRISPY CRACKERS -fctf 30* Quantltlas, Pricaa And Itati»* Effactiva at Krogar In Datralt And Eottam Mich. Thru Sunday., July 16, 1967. Nano Sold To Daalars. Copyright 1967, Tho KtogOr Co. I i f—4 i , ... ' ”; THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 1 Markets, Businessartcl Finance MARKETS •|The following are top prices divering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tk'un in wholesale package lots Quotat ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce Report Boosts Cigarettes Applet, Dtlickxu, Red, C a Applet, Northern Spy, bu. Applet, Northern Spy, C.A Applet, Steele Red. bu. Applet. Steele Red. C.A* Broccoli, dz. bch. 2 50 CAbbtae; Curly, bu. CMont, Green, dz. bet Cauliflower, dz. bch. . Celery, Reset I, dz. bet MUstard, bu...................... Sorrel, bu....................... Spinach, bu....... Turnips, bu. LETTUCE AND GREENS Lettuce, Boston, dz Lettuce, Heed, bu. t±S: Rom'eine, I Poultry and Eggs Active Stock Market Declines NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market declined early this afternoon but cigarette stocks were strong on an encouraging news report. Trading was active. The market as a whole seems to be taking a breather alter a strong performance since the end of June, analysts said. They called it a pause in the summer rally. The cigarette manufacturers advanced from the start in an unusual display of strength, considering that the over-all market was stymied by profit [taking. Late in the morning a report] The Dow Jones industrial av-ms published that Columbia erage at noon was off 2.43 at University will hold a news con- [877.02. ference Thursday to announce a .Prices were mixed on the new' development relating to American Stock Exchange, reducing the health hazard of Goldfield was active and off cigarette smoking. The same about a point Losses exceeding report quoted tobacco industry a P°int weAr* tak Tiger acquired the rights to a new) Fischer & Porter advanced filter for cigarettes. The reports were not confirmed immediately. - The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon dipped .3 to 330.1 with industrials off .5, rails off .3 and utilities off .2, Thieu: More Yanks Needed 'S. Viets Must Hike By Private Enterprise Council 1 Big Government Fought By JOHN CUNNIFF i The Council for Private En-AP Business Analyst terprise, whose main purpose is NEW YORK - PhilosophicalJ distinctions sometimes fail to disturb front-line fighters irf the continuing war between private enterprise and what some busi- j Army Size, Efficiency'jnessmen con*] sider to be the! .swollen monster. ABOARD USS CONSTELLA-lof bjg govern-TION W» — Chief of State Nguy-Jment. | en Van Thieu said today South I The. brand-new. Vietnam’s 350,000-man regular for Pri- a*>my will have to be increased vate Enterprise, CUNNIFF and made more efficient to|*or eXamnle is __£__4k. £b wmaImb! 41ia . . . r — . those who oppose government regulation on the grounds that tiie fewer the restrictions on business, the better it is for both buyer and seller. And there are those also who believe that certain government services in fields such as recreation and entertainment are j inherently bad, even when they offer little competition to pri- private enterprise in every pos- b sible way,” maintains a simple, I pragmatic approach to the contest. Its view is that the more work s the government handles, the i less there is for private enterprise. And so fy* suggests that o wherever possible the govern»[vate enterprise, ment get out of retailing, en- legitimate RIGHTS gineering, dredging, employ-, The counci, however, states ment agencies, florist shops, |sim , that guch aetivities are parking lots, restaurants and,wrong they deprive j shipbuilding. business of its legitimate rights. MORAL APPROACH I Private enterprise, they say; is press the war against the Com- headed by Edward Hood, who j„ this way it is unlike its the American way. It built the munists. -i_- t.___I. 4k. eklMknlUAinil . .. *. I . _*.._1 i_s_J AntmlNr If ic iho cfrmiOPCt .CVS- The New York Stock Exchange ange selected noon p ABC Con .80 Abex Cp 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 AirRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum 1, AllegCp .10a AtleaMi 2.40b Alleg Pw 1.20 Allied C 1.90b AlliedStr 1.32 sr5?Apr&5» ■ »0 B 09 Eggs steady prices unchangto^TW 32; mediums 24; standards 25; checks 1 ™ „ * AmCrySug I it receivers On-iAmCyen 1.2S Jrade A lumbq, AmEIR 1.44b )7%i large, 33-1A Enka 1.30a ; small 15-16. AmFPw 1.14 * (AmHome 1.20 hlnvSo i.lt rjMFdy J>0# c sz7 ') wholesale buying Am PMocpy 'Z3B& l GenAnllF .40 100 23'/j _____Ot 1.70a GenPrec 1,50 GPubSvc .46g GTel El 1.28 32 28% 28% 28% + 48 44% 43% ‘ 1 33% 32% 32% — 1 B , (USDA) — I wholesale -buying prices ' roasters 27-29; special Am Std 1 \tn T8.T 2 sjjjpTob l Amphenol . Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK 6ETROIT (AP)—(USDA) - (USDA)— Cmtle jso, ,....,1.. haters on enough steers 30 22% 22% 735 1 53% 52% 653 36 34 4 107% 107V. 107% - % Goodyr 1.31 Grace Co 1 Granites 1 GrantWT 1 GtAAF 1.3C GulfStaUt .80 PltPlale 2.60 Pitts Steel Polaroid .40 ProcterG 2.20 PubSvcColo I Publklhd .34t PuOSPL 1.60 Pullman 2.80 u Raytheon .1 4! Refch^h .4 4 RepubStl 2. RheemM 1 3 b I Roan Sel .3 38 , Rohr Cp .1 StJosLd 2.80 II 58 Va 58J/4 58Vi — ]/ 16 219 * 217% 217%ft "But Thieu cautioned that any increase in the armed forces would have to be weighed 1 jjl against the effect on the na-" tion’s economy, the availability of equipment and the time it would take to train the new sow diers. ‘ * * * Because of this, he said, a substantial increase in American troops was needed as soon-as possible in South Vietnam to ‘exploit the successes we already Have.” be would make no estimate of how many Americans he believed were needed. “I believe that, with equipment and financial help from the United States, we will have more troops ready to meet any situation,” said Thieu, a lieutenant general who is running for president in the national elec-%! tion Sept. 3. J MANPOWER LOW £] U.S. sources have indicated that South Vietnam had scraped also heads the Shipbuilders cousins in the fight against big country. It is the strongest sys-Council of America, which rep-jg0vernn,ent( the largest enter-] tem- resents an industry well-subsid- prise ,j„ America today. Many! Despite Its great Strength, ized by big government. other opponents of big govern-however, private enterprise is ------ment take a moral or legal or hardly winning the battle with a ’political approach. growing government, the 'council feels. Dedication tenton Hospital yesterday set Aug. 5 as the date for dedication ceremonies to take place for the hospital’s new Rochester unit. for Hospital “This Is a problem that won’t be corrected immediately, if ever," Hood said. “This little deficits. This group maintains! that big budgets are mostly po-j litically inspired and that the, ■ . ,. government is acting immorally eff°rt isat 8oing t0 s jin passing on debts to future|Pr°^em The board of trustees of Crit- generations. An open house for the public is scheduled the following day. Work on the new facility, located on Walton Just west of Rochester, has been under way since July 1965. The opening had originally been set for this month bnt was set back due to a series of strikes in ^ ----------. various building trades. |the bottom of its manpower pool The 207-bed hospital will be-!™ %'and could not substantially in- gin recejVing patients Aug. 15, mmE ,?i crease its armed forces. But ________mi it Mian M The little effort Hood refers to Anothe7° group consists of'was ftmed ft - • r- ..... . .. ,nf various industrial associa- many of which have Tuesday Action in State Capital of tions, lobbying as their main concern. They meet once a month, informally, in Hood’s office. 3 Witnesses Testify in Beating Death ;bn into South Vlotnom. ipplles Signed crease its armed forces. Bqt according t0 Mrs. M. E. Ail«i, Thieu said, We still have the director 0f public relations. Rectfle the senate Administrators have staffed |. hous** . manpower for that.” Vealers 75; not enough In J Sheep 100; not enough In » toot morket. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO tAP,)—(USDA)— Ho butchers 25 higher; 60 head 1 lbs 24 25; 1-2 200-230 lb butche 24,00; 1-2 190-210 ~ cn' 240 lbs 22.75-23.5t 35b-46o lbs 19.00-10,50-19.25; 2-3 41»-,»v W! WMk; pr1rne°i ,17^.350 lb sraughte! 27.25-27.75; high choice and pnmi 1,450 lbs 26.50-27.25; high cholt prtme 865-1,025 lb slaughter heifer 26150; choice 800-1,025 lbs 25.25-2 Ch»»n 400, tnrtna slaughter lamb 2-3 270-290 lbs 2 riy to BerchAr .00b Ball How .50 ply to Bondlx 1.40 ' j Beth?tl*,1.50a I Boeing 1.20 3.000; BoiseCasc .25 210.515, Borden 1,20 23.5O-BorgWar2.20 1 sin. BriggsS 2.40a ).lBrist My .80a 1 63% 63% — 1 3 31% 30% 30% , t7 506% 503% 504 —2 SingerCo 2.20 Smith K 1.80a SoPRSu 1 27g ■ 24 -1% Echoing a statement made Tuesday by U.S. Defense Secre-23% + % tary Robert S. McNamara that 47% - % allied troops should be used 93% - % more effectively, Thieu said “a , S%i3%lbig program to increase the ef-, 6*% + vo! ficicncy of the South Vietnam-] Z % ese operational forces and pop-; so% + % ular forces militamen” was un-F % der way and would start to show 14 results in about one year. . 46% 5% 46% — % | * * * 113 68% «% - v*1 Eventually, Thieu said, there 114 59% 58% 59 - will be more Vietnamese troops 39 393/b 39 ‘ 39%? % to ‘relieve the American troops 3i 39% 39% 39% I %! from file operational and pacif-33 53^ 52% 52% — i’'’ ication task. It should and must 53 20 19% 20 + % be done ” A7R TJ 33% 333A > C UVUC. 3 10% 10% 10% 7 32Va 32% 3 68% 68 Three witnesses testified at a j preliminary hearing in Pontiac “'minfmumi Municipal Court yesterday that " Porfidio R. Acosta, charged jwith-murder, had been involved jin a fight with his girlfriend less than two hours before she was ‘mendments % found beaten to death. the hospital with 110 doctors; fW £oncu, cruiting efforts are still under way for nurses. The 16,170,000 cost of the fact lity has been financed through donations, loans and federal grants under the Hill-Burton Fund. is I Acosta, 19, of 307 Ferry, accused of killing Linda D. Ar-to?^nte^l»«impreprlel,‘,’3' rn" !nold, 15, of 142 Clifford, a run-•sB7S*B*aciio. Ap’propript# 117.9 mil-away from home, last Friday Bx—?B7PUSe»pP*.*Appropri»tej *22.9 mil-1 morning. 2 Spacecraft Await Trips CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AJ>) — Technicians today prepared two big spacecraft scheduled to depart from here Thursday- —HB2231, Engstrom. 3.1 million In restrict!- ----- | — Hb2232, Engstrom. Approprlolps 9jnlbton^for En-|,"*ma Appropr a 2463, Holbrook.^ Credl^^nlei ° S*THB HOUSE imedloto effect. HB2231, Engstrom. Appropr ion to various departments ti The hearing, which will de-termine if t her re is probable ition!j cause to bind Acosta over to H Circuit Court for trial, was ad-iitte* report1 journed until next Tuesday by ,„! Judge Cecil McCallum. Treasury Position I Std Kotts .50 180 3BVi 36% ! ■* i StOilCal 2,50b 124 56% 55% i SMOillnd 1.90 74 58% 57% ! i.iStONJ 1.60g 213 61% 61 ( StdOilOb 2 50 5 68% 481': ( . ... one by barge, the other by rock- Thieu spoke with newsmen j . 1 8 ’ v offnrno/tttiinr. CO mAJnU .50-18.50 s?2mf v and enforce ti hange eligibility 5,260,285,916,45 * 10,344.209,643.04 Fiscal Year July l- _ 1,957,030,579.41 1,639,901,779.69 2,7747342^70.99* 2,864,140,867.11 Debt- 326.619,978,205.82 319,719,009,369.6? **3, *09,630,002.77 13,434,650,231.85 Ides $262,012,536.47 debt not sub-statutory limit. W-JONES AVERAGES ""AXT21 American Stock Ekcfi. !^^cpM2 —f,— 55 12% AeroietG ,50a AiaxMag ,10e AmPetro ,35g ArkLGas 1.60 Asemera Oil AsedOil & G Barnes°r|ngt BrazllLtPw 1 Brit Pet .49g Campbl Chib Can So Pet Cdn Javelin Cinerama Cfrywide Rtt Creole 2.60a Dtte Cont EOuityCp ,16f-Fargo Oils 66 i Felmont Oil FJVTjgerylWj Gen Plywood Giant Ytl .40 Goldfield Gf Bas Pet Gulf. Am Cp Hycon Mfg Kaiser Ind MeadJohn .48 AtlchSug .loo RIC Group SdUrry Rain Sltmaif OitA 1 Sperry R wt Statham Inst Syntax Cp .40 Technlcdl .40 UnConfrol .20 WnNudr .20 Copyrighted by LockhdA 2 jneS Cem jneSGa 1. jnglsLt 1 2% + %! CBS 1 6 Colg Palm l * CofflnRad .80 CololntG 1.60 1/4 —i'/bI con Edls 1.80 % — VajConElecInd 1 x32 28% 28% 28% + Cont Oil 2 60 55 j tn The Associated Pi Stocks of Local Interest Figures after deci AMT Corp. . ........ Associated Truck G*yne Braun Enginering Citizens Utilities C~ pOtrex. — l Chemicj >nd CrVetz A/lonroe Auto Equipment North Control Airlines Unit Sefran Printing .-...... Sertptn MUTUAL FUNDS Doy PL 1,3 Deere 1.80a Del Mnte l.i Delta Air 1 DenRGW 1 ,iv OetEdis 1.40 Oet Steel .60 DiamAlk 1.20 grLfi DomeMin .OH DowChm 2.28 Dresslnd 1.25 Duke Pw 1,20 duPont 2.50g Ouq Lt 1.60 DynamCp .40' .. 26A 27.2 EatonYe 1.25 .. 20.2 21.0 EG&G .20 __ 16.0 16.3 ElBondS 1.72 16.1 i6.5 Elecfron sp 32 2 33J) EIPasoNG 1 " rr * 5 z Emer El 1.60 ' 7 56 i End Johnson fns ErleLeck RR j!! 144 EthyiOorp A0 14.4 ’f-J EvamPd .60b " «i4 Jl i Evarsharp 3 330% 330 330 -1 60 30% 30* 30% . - 36 121% 120 120 — % 16 39% 38% 38% - % 4 36% 36% 36% 25 155 154% 154% - 8 30% 30% 30% 61 10% 18% 18% -—E— 293 56% 55% 55% -1% \ g—SI • - ' c GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly advlaar, phone FE 2-5123 before 5 p.m. Confidential, ANYONE HAVING ANY ONE OF these numbers In the Packer Bingo Game please cal OR 3-5133 before tore Friday. B-17.22; 1-54; N-14,21; ■ 6-34, 80; 0-20,76,79. Will give part Annaiincemeirtt 3 officiating. Interment In Ortonvllle Cemetery. Mr. Dickson wllUJa In state at the funeral home. GORDON, BETTY; July 10, 1*67; 753 Bundy Street, Flint; age *5; dear mother of Vlrgia Gordor and Mrs. Elizabeth, Alexander; ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL gas? Get new PH5 tablets. Fast Bros, Drugs. CABANA CLUB~HAS OPENINGS. Write Pentlac Press Box G *’ Pontiac.________________ survived by 12 grandchlldi great • grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren. Funer Friday. July Macedonia Baptist Church with Rev. Claude Goodwin officiating. Oak Hill Cemetery. 1 lie In r | ' Carruthers Funeral Home after i. Thursday.___________________ HALLETT, BERT WILLIAM; July 10, 1*67; 77*1 Pontiac Trail; gag 66; beloved husband of Ethel :. Eva Irish. Funeral, service will be held Thursday, July 13, at 2 p.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment In Richardson Cemetery, West Bloomfield Township. Mr., Hallett will lie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to Funeral Directors LENIHAN, LAWRENCE T.) Ju . 1*67; 1316 Leon Road, Walled Lake; age 63; beloved husband of Mary s. Lenihan; dear father if Lawrence T. Lenihan Jr.; ‘ jr grandchMore COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 674-0461 ....... _e held Friday, July at 11 a.m. at St. William's Catholic Church, Walled Lake, with Rev. Father Raymond Jones officiating, interment In Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Mr. Lenlk-igj||y|m||j0aj| 7* Oakland Ave. t the funeral home-after 7 LOWE, CAROL J.1 JULY 10, 1*67; 2343 Midvale; age 33; beloved wife of Charles Lowe; beloved daughter dear mother of Tracy Lowe; — survived by one sister. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. (Suggested visit Ing hours 3 to 3 and 7 to * p.m. Voorhees-Siple MANN, WILLIAM J.) July 11, 1W; 45 Ruth Street; age 5*; beloved husband of Freda M. Mann; dear father of Mrs. Milford Bennett, Mrs. Donald -Falk, Mrs. Sharlden Trltt, Mrs. Ronald Tollefeon and Warrant Officer william j. I Jr.; dear brother of James Funeral service will be hsl day, July •' ‘ " - - Donelson - Johns Funei Interment In Perry Mi Cemetery. Mr. Mann t NAPIER, ZELPHIA SHANNON; July TV 1*47;- -1T234' Charlevoix Str—‘ Detroit; ■ ---------------- ' Paul Napier; dear mother of Mr: Roberta Mollohan, Mrs. Wllm Straub, Kenneth and Ronald Shai non; dgar sister of Mrs. Albert Hatfen, Frank, Oscar and Harold Blake; also survived by 11 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, July 14, at 3 p.m. at the Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home. Interment In Christian Hills Cemetery. Mrs. Napier will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 , 1*67; NELSON, LOUIS B.; Jul< 1345* Pierson, Detroit uu, >■»>>> of Waterford Township); age 73; beloved husband of Daisy Nelson; dear father of Robert Nelson; alsc survived by 10 brothers and sisters, two grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Funeral ser- e held F U July 1 at 11 a.m. at the Lutheran Chur. of Atonement, 20221 Lahser Road, Detroit. Interment In Cadillac Memorial Gardens, East. Mr. son will lie In state at the Ha Mulligan Funeral Homs, 1*530 Seven Mils Road, Detroit 1», Michigan, until tne body ■- - NICHOLSON, WILLIAM H.; July 1*67; 160 Auburn Avenue; age ) beloved husband ~ J | s Donelson - Johns ROUSE, HERAAAN H.; July 11, 1*67; 606 W. 11 Mile Road, Royal Oak (formerly of Pontiac); dear broth service will be held Friday, July 14, at 1 p.m. at the Christian Temple. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Rouse will lie in state at the Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Home until Friday noon. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to f fcpEC. 4 McCURRY, ANDREAS, JULY 4, 1*67; 680 Parkwood Street; age 20; beloved husband of Sharon McCurry; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCurry; beloved grandson of Mr. and Mrs A. C. McCurry and Mrs. Ann; Helgl; dear brother of Evelyn. Debra, and Robert McCurry. Funeral service will be held Thu; lay, July 13, at 1 p.m. at t Sparta MU I RENT, RECEPTIONS. i. OR 3-5202, FE BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. todaj there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: 3, 6,11, 12, M, 15, 20, 21, 27, 28, 29, 37, 41, 47, 51, 53, 82, 72, 75, 81, 82, 85, 99, 103, 110, 112, 113 I. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME OONELS3NJ5HNS Funeral Home "Designed for. Funerals" Huntoon SPARKS-GR'FFIfc FUNERAL HOME Thouflhful Service"__FB frMM FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Established Over 40 Y HOLD fit OTHER FOLKS DO... Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't . . . try one. Hundreds of others do . . . daily! It pays L-. . McCurry v jy. (Sugg o 5 and 7 Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS containing type sizes larger than regular agate type is 12 o'clock noon 'ey previous to publication. CASH WANT AD RATES I LOVING MEMORY OF IL Ktyga, who passed away ' July 12, fttfc , *.•.**-^ may claimil youf «« And God may claim your i Tha leva we Mvis fer you, d tartly mb rand children 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 reader: are searching The Press'! classified columns daily for fust such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the change that it holds! Try it! YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DIDI Either Way -j They Do the Trick - Quickly Just Dial - 332-8181 Classified Section ' t|HITp VaBtid Male 6 Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted Female 7 BUILDING AND MACHINERY — Apply Ip Mr. Hahl, Pontiac Laundry, 540 $. Telegraph. CAB PRIVERS, FULL OR PART DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES E. Hammond FE 5-7805 MRS. LENA F. GREEN, FORMER-1 of 233 Chandler Ave. is hospital-id and .recovering from heart lack and' stroke. She had lust ... AFTER THIS DATE JULY 12, 1*67 I will not be responsible for any debts contracted by any Other than myself. Herbert H. Koehn Jr.; 103 9. EtHth, P« | ON AND AFTER THIS DATE JULY other than myself. Thomas A. t they, 7770 Detroit Blvd.. Wa Lake, Michigan. UPLAND HILLS FARM WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY B’ Professional 'Color. Free brochur svallable. 330-907* anytime. GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE Lost and Found 5 FOUND IN N. ROCHESTER AREA, EXPERIENCED GAS S T J help and manager for shift. Airport Marathon c M5* and Airport Rd. LOST: GIRL'S CLASS RING, IN-^ju^gL, I ost at Montgomery LOST; WOMAN'S RED BILLFOLD at laundromat on Mt. Clerr—--Papers badly needed. 335-7614. LOST BLACK AND GREY RHINE-—— cluster* pin, keepsake, RE-626-0570-Mrs. Fllcklnger LOST; SILVER MALE MINIATURE - ~1le vicinity of Baldwin and Wal-wearlng license. REWARD — Ohio. 644-4604, Help Wanted Male $400 FEE PAID PUBLIC RELATIONS TRAINEE 15 high s< INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 334-41 $450 UP CLERICAL High school grad. Type ...I. Mr. Hater. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $$00 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE 21-30 Some College INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $.500 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEE 21-30 Some College INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $7,200 FEE PAID College Grads-Engineers Management positions in all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL NEW COMPANY HAS 3 to™ IcTwork Evenings, gu S50 wk. Call 335-5323, frc A Part-Time Job ■ning. Call 674-0520, I . 1. tonight. $200 PER MONTH MECHANIC. DIESEL PRE-rred. Good pay and benefits. Call ~“ll FE 4-1875. AAA-1 COMPANY ir?® guaranteed^ $200 * per II 391-2336 between 3 and 7 t ACCOUNTANT Expanding medium • sizei clientele. The partners invifc specifically our 1 ACCOUNTANT FOR COST ji.. -?ral office work. Industrial it. Exc. opportunity. Sent1 — . Potential earnings AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MEN 6 young men for outsit dept, and management. • AUTOMATIC GUN WELDERS FOR ■oduction welding. $3.50 per hour eld Insurance plus fringe bene Is. G & W i Engineering Inc. XU Williams Dr„ Pohtlac, Mich. BE A FORD CAREER SALESMAN openings for two man preferably with retail (parlance "nor necessarily Ive," This Is for you — a i 012,000 a We, furnish complete training Including a course at oFrd Motor training school, i Investigate pur caree now; by calling Mr. C at FE 5-4101 for an Intel oFrd paid Insurant openings ARTENDE lime; Sundev NIGHTS, FULL Bridgeport Operator years experience. Steady lob. ay shift. Top fringes. 57 hour eek. Old lino company—now plant —• - •"* 16 Mlia Rf *— SALESMAN. EAGER ................. j ‘or this spot. Exc. location, 85,-Call Angle. 334-2471, Snelling finishers for houses a> SALESMAN, SHARP. LIKE CARS? , is an axe. opportunity, 05,200 . Call Angle. 334-3471, Snelling COLLEGE STUDENTS HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Dept. $150 per wk. Call Mr. Pafford F 8-0350. 9:15 a.m.-l p.m. “Tcollege students" sidiary of Alcpa. and carbida. Top fringes. 57 week. Day shift. ^ Old Une^ DISPATCHER F * ‘a carrier, e typing, i DRY CLEANER WORKING MANAGER Must be able to operate top quality plant, apply Drayton Mm| Evenings Part-Time 3 men needed Immediately part-time evening work. Mu$i neat, mature, married and hi EXPERIENCED TREE SURGERY crew leader, 03.35 hourly, frlng-beneflts, paid vacation, 1 year — 6 paid holidays, partial paid Insurance 'prograi and half over I______.jar week, share iwn moving expanca. The Dayey Tree Expert Company. 3046 Rochester Rd., * Troy. MU 9-2200 or JO 4-4007. Call 334-6744. or 353-91*1 e portatlon. Call 633-1314 after 6 p WAREHOUSE HELP, STOCK M> wanted, grocery experience, Uf nlngham Hydraulics. 1 GUARDS I Suburban job 01 Clemens, K 441 E. G 8-4152, 10 mediate City Birmingham HARDWARE CLERK conditions. Fringe benefits. A. L. DAMMAN CO. Telegraph and Maple you can handle People, will work hard, and i JANITOR FOR MEDIUM-SliED. red. Replyn®o Press^ Box C- , TOOL MAKERS, Dl 's hired. Apply, at 217 Ce jst off S. Saginaw. ' e :ollege studenTs7 |ob? Guaranteed $600 1. People's Fish and Poultry >rket, 377 S. Saginaw, "— I MECHANICALLY INCLINED do delivery and servica of “ ~ ble to furnish references and ver 25. Apply. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3465 AUBURN -ROAD AUBURN HEIGHTS MAINTENANCE HELPER HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE W SHOP EXPERIENCE AND CHANICAL ABILITY. MAINTENANCE MAN Hlght Inc., Oxford. OPPORTUNITY PLUS The Clark Oil 3, Refining Corp. has available a service station management or dealer franchise; We specialize In gasoline sales We offer $8000 per year to start Opportune, ..._________ Hospitalization, IJfe -stirement program — For additional Information a ■I 0-7233 or S4FW24. ORDER DESK AND STEADY OF-fice work, industrial. FOr man over 30. Send complete resume (ft Pontiac Press Bbx C-118 Pontiac, TBOARD MECHANIC PART ne, call Ken 731-0020, INTER - EXPERIENCED, y work, call. '....■ l 12 noon or after 4 0 Oakland Ave, FE 5-4101 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD B0DY/SH0P MEN leed 2 men for' busy body s ine experienced painter ■— fenced bumper.; Clean, i can 333- ir < "■ sTde"Li ncqln#"'mercu r y. i all fringe benefits. I ask for At BUrgy o ion, ISO Oakland Av PARt TIME HELP WANTED, ilngs or evenings, married, l, guaranteed $200. Easy hours. 674-0520. PART TIME — $40 TO 330 PER —k, must have car and br lob rork evenings" 674-2210. „ utilities, a $75 weekly experience pretorri apjjhMn person, 1255 West Sllv: ROUGH CARPENTERS. UNIC round work, 332-H21. , ROUTE SALESMAN estsbllshed routs, abovs ev M MWhT.. 540 3. Tele- SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TRAINEE lalionally known corporation .. ooking^ for^ youn^men 21 to^. selling. Mechanical aptitude, fringe benefits, fur SHOEMAN PERMANENT POSITION ith good salary, fringe benefit-Birmingham, prescription shi islness so experience In quell iocs Is necessary. For appolr SKILLS NEEDED Centerless or cutter grinder.. ... ret or engine lathes, vertical mills. chanlc. Thread Inspector a f unskilled 0 Reply"‘tb<,ii« sB pioomneia mils, Mich. 48013. CLERK TYPIST TO START Redford, 27320 Grand Rlvar Clawson, 65 S. Main Ferndale, 2320 Hilton Rd. Employers Temporary Service, li STOCK MAls Elizabeth L 25-55. APPLY 2397 SURFACE GRINDER »d steel tools. Top fringe! Day shift. Old I company — new plant. Apply 1462 RAINEE, TOP-NOTCH COMPANY No exp. needed. $5,200. Call Angie, 334-2471. Snelling 3, Snelling. ■ fleet of 40 vehicles. Dirt-plication to Cliff Scherer, 7404 Highland Rdt, Milford. 363-0*40 WANTED MAN TO TRAIN for managers position in Carry, out food store, must have some food experience and able to furnish good references. Starting saldry $150 weekly plus bonus, AM FE 2-1740, after 3 p.m. AMFE 2-1740, after 3 p.m. 334-5942, for appointment. WANTED , mechanic's helpers, WELDERS, FITTERS AND PRESS BRAKE OPERATOR EXPERIENCED YOUNG COLLEGE MAN^TO J3E^ Pontiac Press’ Box C-27, Pontiac, YOUNG MAN UYING^N^WATEI lefphone OR 3-»328.____ YOUNG MEN 18 TO 25 QUALIFICATIONS: - 338-3218 - Help Wanted Female $325-$400 GENERAL OFFICE . Woodward B'hi AAA-1 CORPORATION plete our staff Tn Pontiac office. Must be 18-26, single and high school graduatt. Salary of |Uf per wk. Call Mr. Waynt. FE ARE YOU Interested In working 2 I morning, afternoon or tarly ning for a 92 year old com...... and earning 380-8120 weekly? Po- Car necessary. Call before 12 noon. Ml 2-7363.__________________ Assistant to Manager To hostess and supervisa dining room. Need a mature woman who has tha ability to supervisa. Good wages plus benefits. Big Boy Restaurant. Telegraph & .......- .For Interview call 334-4503 ATTENTION MOTHERS I Evenings Free? The Playhouse Co., Inc, Exc. Commission PLUS valuable bonus gifts. Please call; „ .BETH WEBER FE 3-7377 or 682-1774 BABY SITTER; TOP SALARY, EXC .congenial. TV. Must j BABYSITTER WANTED CALL AF- BABY SITTER 5:30 A.l 5 days, Dexter Rd. FE I BABY SITTER TO LIVE 21. 334-4355. Call r i.-2 P.M. ’**1, OVER BAKERY CLERK, PAYS, 25-40 yrs. age, Apply In person Bakery, 3337 Auburn Rd. BAR WAITRESS DAYS, 0611 *ar EM 3-22i . ___ . .... ehergetic I man. Will train. VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Re) BARMAID NIGHTS, FULL TIME, Sunday and Holidays off. Apply in person to Town & Country Restau- t, 1727 S. Telegraph. BAR MAID ALSO WAITRESS. AP-ply in person Avon Bar, 3982 Auburn Rd. Near Adams Rd, BEAUTICIAN, FART T I. .... 6*34264. . BEAUTICIAN, MODERN SHOP, per-cent, excellent cflenteM. OR train stylist to be Instructor. 731- BEAUTY OPERATORS $100 guaranteed. Steady, good houra. Andre Beauty Salon, 11 N. Saginaw, FE 5-9257. BEELINE FASHIONS—NEiDS YOU FOR HOSTBSS^OR STYLIST— BOOKKEEPER. balance. Avn Center Hospital, Heusmen. 651-*381. _______________ IOOKKEEPER. FULL CHARGE (borough trial balance, seme f experience. The Gay Lee Co. W. 14 Milt Rd. Clawson OP FOR NIGHT shlFT. Reels Drive In. OR 3-7173. CAR , Cafetefia Hostess Ted's of Pontiac Mall has ai holidays, day shift, hospitalization and llfa insurance and sick benefits. Apply in parson only, TED'S ■PONTIAC MALL CLEANING HELP, 1 DAY WEEK, refs, and- Irons, required. Vicinity Orchard Lake. 682-2424 after 4. CLERK-TYPIST. ADVERTISING conds. profit sharing, gl tlence, refs. and. rate d first letter. Bloomfield H good math beckgroui considered. Good starring hmij rking conditions. McComb COOKS FULL TIME COUNTER GIRLS PART TIME, EVENINGS AND SATURDAY HUDSON'S PONTIAC Store?WYou would tn|oy those b Pine Earnings . Hospitalization Purchase Discount Paid Holidays Llbaral Vacation Policy Paid Training Period Many other Benefits .HUDSON'S Pontiqc Mall COUNTER GIRL FOR CLEANING ENJOY PUBLIC CONTACT, LIGHT typing and bookkeeping. Help win this goodie. $433. Call Pam "Oita 334-2471, Snelling $ Snelling. Experienced Secretary t have good shorthand, typ Ills and recent experience. I ound" helpful. *Call 3M-3500, < 3, for interview appointment. Southfield, n Equal Opportunity Employer EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER Inn. 2635 E. Highland Rd. Highland, Mich apprr • M )f Pontiac, 887-5330. EXPERIENCED NURSE'S AIDES. ’rd shift. Apply In psrson ’**■ Sllverbell Rd. GENERAL OFFICE. YOU'LL TALK of people hare — S2.' Scott. 334-2471. Snelling Snelling.____________________ GENERAL OFFICE. SHARP GAL on her Mas, S238. Call Jr —" U6 2471, Snelling & Snelling. GENERAL OFFICE. PART-TIME! position for gal who ---------- noons free, $140. Call Pam Fox, -------- Snelling S, Snelling. GENERAL OFFICE Challenge for mature, v woman. Experienced _ln medical field helpful. Typing Dependability Woodside Medical Reha- ________ 8. Convalescent. HI * Woodward Por ,_ HOUSEWIVES Earn 82 to 83 par hour In your spare time. Pick up and dallvar Fulhr Brush orders. For ' phone OR 3-5176. Housewives — Part Time We need 6 mere housewives, 25-50. us In a DEBORAH DOW Plan Business. Showing b*—..... low priced costume lewelry. Highest Profit and BOhus to those !■•*— qualify. Call today. 334-8832 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR —nan for telephone work e-Out Club. Ideal hours _ sewife or student. Phone 338- LEGAL SECRETARY $120 PER LIKE PEOPLE Our friendly neighborhood office needi a person who likes ta talk with people, taka payments, do typing <35 wpm or better). Good S salary, paid vacations, and other ‘ outstanding benefits. Liberty Loan Corp., 1224 W. Maple Rd., Walled Birmingham she commission and Phone 642-7578. MATURE WOMAN H5S QflEb care, 2- children. In nr* ■— Starting September for t Lotus Lake aree. 473 *882. MATURE WOMAN FOR COOK preferred. , noon snm 4-iu p.m U ||| Drug*, 1030 Cooley L BaU LI 7-26- voibkk ro Help Wanted M. or P. • MIODLEAGED WOMAN WISHING to work pert lime end experienced Reel Estate secretarial work. Roc-—inundations necessary. Ask for ____ ;Voan In POnon between 9:30 — 12:30 oi 4:30 except Saturday. Warren Stout, Realtor " Opdyke Rd, FB 5-1165 4 450 Ponflec MOTHERS WOULD YOU BELIEVE 11 The Toy Chost offers easy easy work demonstrating toys. ... will train. No Investment, delivery or collection. Plssss csll 632-1333. NURilS - LPNs AND RN‘3, W0LL end pair time. Mrs. Indlsh M— Center Hospital, 651-9331. . NURSES Roglstorod and licensed. Full a part time. For part time, you l nursing this Is a wonderful oppor unity. Contact Samlnola Hills Nuri Ing Home, 338-7152, Ext. 40 to OAKLANp UNIVERSITY Secretaries verel openings have L.... — sd at tha University, raqulr-g experienced secretaries with and personality. posltloni will.provide Interesting work, axcollant work anvlror Mi outstanding qpportu-■--------------------uf, starting Oakland University Personnel Department Rochester, Michigan FE 8-7211 , Bet. 8-12 1-5 PAYROLL CLERK, 3-GIRL OFFICE mipded gel. Exc. location, t fit$, $460. Call Heldh Adams, 2471, Snelling 6. Snelling, PROOF OPERATOR Full time immediate opening experienced preferred apply at the Birmingham Bloomfield Bank, 1025 East Maple Road. Birmingham. An equal opportunity employer. absolute necessity, woodside Medical Rehabilitation 8> Convalescent. >45 S. Woodward. Pontiac. Apply RELIABLE MIDDLE AGE WOMAN tor motel work. Must have owr transportation. OR 4-0311. RESTAURANT l.jmWPWPi si.10 starting, apply in parson Jan's North Side Restaurant Jos- ES COUNSELLOR. IF YOU ;a the^ ability ' ' 88j|8 you. Call Angle, 334^2471.'^"snaliriig Z Snelling._______________ SALES POSITION FOR RIGHT GAL In fun spot! S2ML Call Vlv Scott. 334-2471. Snelling G Snelling. SECRETARY, POISED educational firm. Llbaral minded, opportunity! $542. Call Pam Fox. 334-2471, Snelling 3, Snelling. SECRETARY. LIKE TO MEET greet people? $300. Call Jo Ball. 334-2471. Snelling 8. Snelling, SECRETARY IN AUTOMAflVE advertising dept. Matur minded gal. Exc. location. $500, Call Helen Adams, EE AMERICA! WONDERFUL Opportunity to earn vour vacation money servicing Avon territory. G o i STENOS AND TYPISTS SENIORS BOTH THE BEST TO YOU WE SURE DO OFFER TO HELP FILL UF YOUR VACATION COFFER I ANYWAY — ; COME ON KELLY SERVICES S N. Saginaw — 642-9650 — 338-0338 Equal Opportunity Employer Switchboard Operator TELEPHONE SURVEY AT H " selling. 20 hrs. weekly Pc...... i. Experience necessary, $1.25 f. Keego Harboi 182-7872 after 5. WAITRESS FOR GROOVY NEW Pitcher House, west of Ponflec. Call Don Suter, 682-9*35. WAITRESS F Blue Star p’rlv SOME ■NPUMR be able r appointment. FE light \ month. 426-2**0. ____________, if E S T E R N OAKLAND cbuNTY School District needs ■ in areas of elementary HHPmii office, typing and shorthand - necessary, lib '' S. Call 867-4118. WOMAN TO BE TRAINED AS beauty consultant tor individual demonstrations, age IS to 51, personality. Call fi rviaw. 332- i Wanted M. or F. 8 APPLICATIONS ARE NOW I accepted at the Donut Can N. Saginaw Pontiac. For c BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive PM factors 17.50 A-neg., B-n*g., AB-neg. SIS MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER ontlac FE 4-9947 1342 Wlda Track Dr„ w. Mon. thru Prl., * a.m.-4 pjn. taurant. .. MANAGE LARGE apartment building In Pontiac toll time lob, must have maintenance experience, references raqinred, salary plus apartmont. Reply to Pontiac Press Box C-31 Pontiac, Michigan, ' HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall few openings' left put If you a; time merit Office pi— Apply In Person ' Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall Initructioni-Schools RIDING DAY CAMP. RIDING AND Hmmlng Instructions. Also stable -------r— Klanlner Riding liter Rd. 363-000*. Work Wonted Male TIME WORK WE SECURE LOCATIONS FOR TESTERS Mai* vor female, wanted tor thl --- urV|C( route tor Sylvan! modern method fra* self-service tuba Ing and marchandlslng units. ..... not Interiors with your prtstnt employment. To quollfy you must hav* $1,747.50 to $3,4*5 cash available Immediately for Inventory and — I ........... weakly couH nit up to 16.000 par yr.i should be able to atari at onct. This company will extend financial assistance to full time If desired. ACCOUNTANT, OFFICf fUNAOER, 20 yrs. experience. FE 4-742*._ BASEMENTS vcleane6, sMall —int work, light hauling, small doP*lt!,,TE Y2-514*,*mask tor BOY-20 WANTS JOB fled for time and Investment. Income should start Immediately. Business set up tor you. Sailing soliciting, or experience Is not nectssary. For personal Interview in your city — please Include yi telephone number end WRITE: TUBE4-MATIC ELECTRONICS CORP.* 6267 Natural Brldga Ava. Pina Lai MO. 63121.______________ DEPENDABLE LAWN CU+TING ~ - 1 gardening. 651-54*6. EXpFrTeNCED CHAUFFEUR, ANY LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING, ^■■■jaataMnd weekends. Call after 334-4360. G DONE rIA- ibly. FE 8-822*. LIGHT HAULING, HAND DIGGING. ' n work. FE 4-7346.___________ SHOES MEN'S CLOTHING HARDWARE and FiNE JEWELRY HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall / Interviewing tor the above In our new store. You wout •n|oy these benefits Fine Eernlngs Hospitalization 1* Discount ■Id Training Pei Aany other banal Apply In parson Employment Office HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall SHOULD YOU Make an employment change? NOW 1$ THE TIME! Michigan Bell Phone: 3*3-2115 Sales Help, Male-Female 8-A 2 EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE Salespeople I NEED CASUAL LABORERS Call MANPOWER 332-0306 _ PART TIME, STEADY, PAINTING. Reas. Call B " “ I " PATCH PLASTERING, ALL KINDS. Howard Mayers. OR *3-1345._ RELIABLE JOURNEYMAN MEAT- . 4-flaa. TRASH HAULING, BASEMENT “ washing, painting. Work Wanted Female •1 IRONING SERVICE. 634 MEL-rose. Maxine McCowan. FE 4-3867 BABY-SITfiNG — »;30 P.M. TO DAY WORK. 2 OR 3 HOUSEWORK, NEED TRANSPbR- tatlon. 335-4251,_ IRONINGS DONE IN MY" h6Me. f HOME - PON. c area. FE 2-53- IRONINGS DONE. S3 334-805*. momlnge and eves. IRONINGS, PICK-UP AND DELlV- RONINGS. WEBSTER - CROFOOT eras. FE 5-34*6. Credit Advisors GET OUT OF DEBT AVOID GARNISHMCNTS, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, HAR- % RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND 1 LOSS OP JOB. Wa have helped thousands of people with creditor problems by providing a planned managed, organized" program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFORD. NO limit at to t. For those w LICENSED AND BONDED Home Appointment Gladly Arranged No Cost or Obligation tor Interviews HOURS 9-7 P.M.—SAT. *-5 p.~ DEBT AID 1 State's - take . Many 1 Landscaping CAN YOU SELL? 10, we have an opening toi --------------- making money. Reel Estate axperiei helpful but not noceseary. a good building prpgrbnnmHPOM attractive commission schedule For Interview call — Mr. Taylor, Gardsn Plowing_____ 18-B PLOWING, DISCING, AND TOP R 4-0306, eves. EM 3-7546! 2 PULL mMMPM PEOPLE NEEDED, wm train -call lor interview — Hag-strom Realtor, MLS, 4*00 W. Huron — OR 4-0358 — evt-__nings OR 3)6279 and FE 4-7005. FE_2-0,,I 18-A Moving and Tracking 22 CLEAN-UP JUNK, SAND AND Painting and Dacorating 23 Htlp Wanted Male t Help Wanted Male CONSUMER POWER CO. Office Clerk High School graduate with good grades and references. Interested in office work and willing, on occasions, to work a rotating shift. Engineering Technician Trainee Technical graduate with, an Associate Degree In Engineering. College student who has completed 2 years of work in math or science. Meter Reader High School graduate who likes to work outside. Uniform furnished. Full-time employment, paid hospitalization, life insurance, paid sick leave and vocation. Wages commensurate with experience. Apply Monday, Wednesday or Friday, 28 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac, Room 420 — 9-11 a.m. or 1-3 p.m. Equal Opportunity Employer t Wanted M. or F. SHelp Wanted M. or F. THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM announces the following OPEN COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS These examinations are being announced to establish lists to fill present and future vacancies In these classifications. CONTINUOUS EXAMINATIONS Applications tor these examinations qwy be filed until further notice. SALARY RANGE TITLE Accountant 1 Accountant Trainee Ctortc 1 Court Reporter 1 Court Reporter n Dental Clinic Assistant I General Staff Nurse Key Punch Operator t Key Punch Operator II 5,409— 4 4,560— 6 3,909- 4 Patrolman arpmnter i: Prograi...... .. Public Health Clinical Dentis! Public Health Nursa 1 \ « Real Property Appraiser t - 7,500 - 0,800 - 10,500 APPLICATIONS MAY BE OBTAINED FROM. THE PERSONNEL DIVISION . OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1200 If. T ' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS- WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 F—T Painting PasuruHng 1| PAINTING-INTERIOR-EXTERIOR COUPLE AND 2 CHILDREN NEED 3-Mdroom house, unfurn. North •iw RgHorroaTm-l?#. - < Children You’re next. Orvtl Gldcumb, *r3-qiIalIVV work assuredI pXinT- Ing; P*poring, well wishing. *7*. WaittEd Children to Board 28 RELIABLE LICENSED HOME DAY cere by week. PE 3-6340. Wonted Housajiold Coeds 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE ANC pllances, 1 piece or housetu'. eon’s. PE 4-/S8I._____ COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD WANTED Auction land_________-OR 4-3567 GOOD USED HIDE-A-BED.COLO-nlal preferred, OR 3-3S79 otter 6. Wanted Miscellaneous 30 1 CALL, THAT’S ALL I CASH FOR antiques, quality furniture and guns. M. H. Bellow, Holly, *37-5193 AIR TOOLS WANTED. ANY CON-dltlon. 602-4689. BRASS, C<3PPER, GENERATORS, starters, batteries, radletori _“ COPPER, BRASS') RADIATORS) starters and generators, C. Bki . OR 3-5049,_________________ WANTED: COAL FIRED HOT WA-ter boiler. 300,000 BTU output. OL ■ 1-MSt. Outside of Pontiac. 33S-W32. FAMILY URGENTLY NEEDS 3-bedroom home. 334-0300. WO-BfeDROOM SMALL HOUSE OR apartment near bus llha. Reply to P.O. Box No. 3409 or 335-5030. J Living Quarters 33 ALL CASH ‘or homes any place In Oakland County, money In S4 hours. YORK .VB BUY wi TRADE OR 4-0303 OR 4-0303 4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains ELDERLY GENTLEMAN WANTS retired'non-drinking couple In good AaSEHT 1“— and maintain home utilities paid. For health tc rent fn_. .. Interview call Fl GIRL TO SHARE LIVIN& AUAR- Wanted Real Estate 36 1 TO 50 IOMES, LOTS,. ACREAGE PAR, CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARDEN STOUT, Realtoi 450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8163 Urgently need tor Immediate Sale! Pontiac Dally 'til 0 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE us*)#?1qul ACTION i have many . good lomes In Pontiac. Call us esults, courteous service. SCHRAM REALTY 1 Joslyn FE S-9471 MEMBER OF MLS ALL CASH 10 MINUTES der forciosure. Agent. 3174400. ........ CASH-3 OR ' BED- room home In Pontiac Northern area, FE 4-9007, CALL JOHNSON REALTY BEFORE YOU SEL|. OR LIST YOUR PROPERTY FE 4-2533 Apartmants, Furnished 37 CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES i o ki d WR,GHT haYe t ER HOME PURCHASER :OR A START-IN OAKLAND l-BEDROOM FURNISHED APT — Miller St., o« Henry Clay, *50 dep. *30 wk. FE K34*. mant. NIC*,'334-493S. 5 ROOMS AND BATH, *(0 PER month, plus dep., FE 445*9. lake1 "radNY VC!aA AoOWb' 2 bedroom. Nice beach. iGaa heat. *145 par mo. FE 2-2031. NORTH SIDE LOCATION. 3 BED-room*, tide baths, full basement, *135 me., plus sec. dep. Send reply* to Pontiac Press Box C-14, Pontiac, Michigan. 1-BEDROOM AFARTMENt. *3 Norton Av*. 2 BEDROOM TRAILER, NO CHIL-dren. FE 2-294*. t ROOMS AND BATH* CHILD welcome. $25 per wk.# with $75 dep.# Inquire at 273 Baldwin Avp. Pontiac# Cell 338-4054. Rent Lake Cottages 41 CABIN AT GRAND MARAIS ON Lak* Superior, S35 a week. OR 3-1*21. GRAYLING — LEWISTON. SANDY 2 ROOMS AND BATH. FURNISHED end unfurniahed. Adults only. $15 ma nine tie Hun FF 9.19m. LOT a—WANTED IN PONTIAC immediate closing. REAL VALUE MALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, tor small lake or hunt club. Write BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME, equity or land contract. Call Clark Real Estate, FE 3-7SM. Wpt / £S f /, ' » 4 £ ' ','^i /' i Aluminum Bldg. Hints FHA — Joe yellely — OL ‘ ALCOA ALUMINUM SlDlNG Immediate Installation — Licensed and bonded. Marcsll Construction, FE 0-9351. Aluminum1 siding, roofing in- stsllsd by "Superior" — vour authorized Kaiser dealer, FE 4-3177. Excavating 1*A BACKHOE AND DOZER SVC. Stwer and Septic Installation Basement Excavation—FE 8-2555 ALL CAST IRON SEWERS, WA-ter .services. Condra. FE S-0443. Charles T. Durbin, Excavating, Water and sawar Installation. Truck. Ing. Septic repairs. 624-1130. ____AsphaltPaving ^ ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND roadways. Same location slnco '“,n Also selling asphalt end Ann Arbor Construction Co. MApie ASPHALT AND SEAL-MATING, BULL DOZERS, DUMP TRUCKS, basements, beck filling, fill dirt, sand-gravel-etc. Shelby's — 692- TRENCHES, SEWERS ANO SEPTIC LT, QUALITY jattng, I— M r 363-70 DRAYTON ASPH tlmates. ,674-0198 __________ CRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS. FREE Estimates. FE 5-4900,_________ , PONTIAC ASPHALT, PAVING Fast action, 503 5. Paddock. FE 5-6903 or FE 1-651]. ~~~~TAG ASPHALT *AVlSSI FE 5-1173 Auto Rtpoir___________ WE SPECIALIZE IN REPAIRING, rebuilding, re sealing automatic and standard transmissions. Band ad-lustments. Fluid and filter changes. All makes. All models. Rochester Transmission 136 Main St. Rochester 651-6030_____All work guaranteed Boots and Accessorial Starcraft aluminum and flberglas Shell Lake and I.M.P. flberglas. 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road Fencing [CHAIN LINK AND^WOOD FENCE CUTLER CONTRACTING PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5933 Dixie Hwy._____ 633-1040 Floor Sanding Floor Tiling^ CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Landscaping Brick t Block Strvlct -1 BLOCK. BRICK AND GLASS-block. New or repair ot any kind.'Custom fireplace by expert. Guaranteed. 334-0205. RICK, BLOCK, stoncT'cement fireplaces specialty. 335-4470 Building Medornizgtion t-CAR GARAGES. 30’x20’, *875. WE MERION BLUE SOD, WHOLESALE - atail, black dirt-peat, Tam-Farm, 760 Lochaven Rd. ________Lake. 602-6500. MERION BLUE aNd KENTUCKY MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD Laid or/ Del. No money down. BRESCE LANDSCAPING YARD GRADING, PLOWING ) remodel — prices are lowest I Additions—recreation rooms attic rooms — aluminum storm windows - siding and tMm. 06 N. Saginaw GAM FE 2-1211 Free estimates______________Terms FOR HOME IMPROVEMENTS, GA-rages, additions, remodeling: Can Drummond Corp. Days 673-0573 Nlohts 693-6909. _______ PAINTING, HOME RtPAIR AND remodeling, free Sit. FE 5-6376. Carpot Cleaning Carpentry A-l Interior exterior — Family ■ finished) dormers, porches, recreation rooms, kitchens bathrooms. State licensed. Reas. Call attar 5 p.m. 682-0648. Plumbing & Heating CONDRA PLUMBING A HEATING kantal Equipment BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS “ I FE *-6103 tOTOR _____„_____________.ranchers, backhoes, Jackson’s, 332-927]^ Rent HdUSSS, Furnished 39 NEED CASH? wing out of *1*1*7 Na settle dabtat Need a another home? — your home? Cl JPUJ Realty. Inc. ( ICH ON CASS LAKE. I13S. 1114 . jjham, 1-531-3056. VACATION Housl T RAIL Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 BEDROOM HOUSE IN Dixie and Scott Lake area, monthly. Call PE A119S be 3-BEDROOMS, SWING SET, BLOCK to K-Mart, basement, garage, — modeled, gat or electric. Res tibia parents welcome, ref. drinkers or pats. SI 10 mo„ dap. 30 McKinley Dr. bttwaag 5-ROOM^TERRAC^ON E. ROOM APARTMENT, $33 WEEK. Dap. required. 673-7986, 673-710). ROOMS AND BATH. BEAUTI fully decorated, carpeting, draper-las, ate. No children or pats. ROOMS FURNISHED. EXCEL-lent condition. 133 par weak. S50 depot1!. 674-1531. PONTIAC. UTILITIES turn. Deposit required 852-4973. A 3-ROO*T APARTMENT, UTIL-Itias furnished. Adults, 75 Clark. ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE lo children or pets.’335- ROOMS ANO BATH, SI25 MONTH >135 dap. FE 4-6606. .______ ROOMS AND BATH, NEAR 3 ROOMS, NEAR PONTIAC GEN I Hospital, 530 par weak, dep , FE 44136.__________pj_ 3 ROOMS AND BATH. UTILI LAKE fas, Tdap. "required, S35 Salt Houses ABEdROOM HOME PLUS SEPA-rate Income, lake privileges. Out Orchard Lake Rd. 682-1840. LAKE FRONT, 2 BEDROOMS, MOD-— boat, safe beech. Off Rot“" Rd. 9443 Mandon. 363-8139 LAKE-FRONT COTTAGE ON LAKE Orlpn, clean, ■ad||n^MiM|l|lBi mlng. 6936334. ____ FRONT, GOOD BEACH Modem, dealt alee- * *“J — near Caseville, 1 season, M5 weekly. BEDROOM BRICK TRILEVEL, 1W baths, 3-car’ garage, large kitchen^ and dining area. $17,600 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL, 2W baths alumavlew windows, 2-car brlcl garage, paneled family room, $27, RANCH MODEL NOW OPEN J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 363-6604 m *10735 * Highland*Rd?K(MS9 6, Sand Point V, mon**- — 2-2342, GRAYLING. LEWISTON, I MIDDLE STRAITS, 3-BEDROOM. 15. EM 3-3181. WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT, FURN-ished 2 Bedroom, good beach. By week or for season. Ask for Mr. Taylor, owner. OR 4-03J6, eves. FE 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH ANO entrance, bachelor, no smoking or ’ ’ iking, 334-270). BACHELOR, A I R-CONDITIONED, furnished. 335-6129. ____ CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM. 30 ‘ FE3f’” i ROOMS AND BATH. ADULfS only. >30 weak. 391-3362. I ROOMS ANO BATH, baby welcome — — “*■ week, *100 . dap. LARGE DOUBLE TWIN *e6. separata entrance bath, off Bal Win, $15 single or $20 double p< week. FE 5-3549 before 3 p.r Roofing HOT ^ TAR ^ROOFUtG-SHlNGLING, QUALITY ROOFINd. NEW AND RE-a*r“ Bonded material. Free esti-l. Reasonable. 682-75 SPECIALIZE I HOT TAR ROOF- I. Price. FE 3-1036. ICE ROOM, LAKE OR 3-7539 before 12 no NlEl ROOM FOR JR CONDITIONED^LADY^ONLY. FE 2-4003. OLDER PERSON IN QUIET No smoking or drinking. 331 SLEEPING ROOM — LADIES ONLY Perry Park Area. 335-7274. BACHELOR, AIR-CNDITIONED. 335- SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE 1 —-mey, S40 par week. Maid si TV, telephone. 709 S. Wc BASEMENT APARTMENT f —I drinkers. FE S-5074. Rooms With Board BASEMENT, APARTMENT, ADULT imales. 338-4545. Sand—Gravel—Dirt gravel, sand and stone. I CLEAN 5 ROOMS AND B CHOICE BLACK DIRT FARM TOP- PROCESSED GRAVEL, ANALYZED —d top soil. r'“ *—■ :E >4926. SAND, GRAVEL, SEPTIC STONE, 60-40 top toll, 5 yards *15. Rtas. prices. 673-0049. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY — ONE 2-bedroom and two l-bJ----- - eludes csrpstlng. heat. LARGE 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT, •" private balcony, furnished all utilities. Mall area. 338- r 335-4743.______ LARGE, NICE 3 AND BATH’NEAR airport. No ehlir - mo. OR 3-1943. MOBILE HOME FOR ELDERLY ■ - sra-91*' Septic Tank Installation [HOLMES EXCAVATING. F E 44451, NICE 3 ROOM AND BATH. lawn Mowing LAWN CUTTING, L A R G E OR Lawn Sprinkling ling and Hardware supplies. Swimming Pools Apartments, Unfurnished 38 -BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL Tree Trimming Service :-l TREE TRIMMING BY B&l Free estimate. PE 5-4449, *74-3510. I 8. B TREE SERVICE, INSURED. Trimming, removal. F r a ■ «*ti-matas. 674-1281 or 734-2695. "DAIBY & SONS" STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL FE 5-3005 Mosquito Spray FE 5-3025 -IIAJOR TREE SERVICE. FREE estimates. FE 3-7669. PORTERFIELD TR^E: SERVICE Ting and Removal CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR. Free estimates. 335-99S1. Cement Work ANDY FOR PATIOS. D R I - PR slabs. Baterntnlt. UL 2-4213. 338- IEMENT WORK OF AH . Free estimate. 335-4510. TYPES OF CEMENT WORK Cement and Block Work Guinn’s Construction Co. FE 4-7677 Eves. Fl 59133 LICENSED SIDEWALK BUILDER. RIZZUTO POWER MOWER SVC. 521 Whlttemore ________FE M*2i* SMITTY'S LAWN MOWER REPAIR Service. New-Used lawn mowers for. able. 885 Chalmers, off Pontiac Lake Rd. FE 8-0809. TAYLORS LAWN MOWER SERV. Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES, JCNIT dresses, leather coats OR 3-7193. MBS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE e a vest rough Ing service fret tf Moil Posts _ BOX POSTS INSTALLED, TREE REMOVAL, WOOD HAULED ^'682-2752. G V O Enterprises. Maintenance Insurance ALLEN'S MAINTENANCE Moving and Storage Tracking______________ i'l LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hau*ed reasonable. FE 4-13S3. HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any time. FE S-0095. LIGHT HAULING, REASOilABLE LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING. ' blah, fill dirt, grading and grav-ind front-end loading. FE 341601 Ice, 593 6 ... PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING _ THOMPSON _________ FE 4-8364 Jfl PAINTING. WORK GUARAN-teed. Free estimates. 682-0630. ,AA PAINTING ANO DdCORATlN* Truck Rantol Trucks to Rent Vb-Ton Pickups 1 tb-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS ANO EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trsilers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S, WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1443 Open Dally Including Sunday PlasteringService A PLASTERING repairs free Eft. Lawrence. 413-4639. PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATE! O. Meyers, 363-9593. PLASTERING AND REPAIR. I Water Softeners WgB BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Wells cleaned. Reas. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631 ALL WASHING—YEAR* parlance. Raaaonable. FE M«: Washer Rapaiir WASHERS-DRYERi REFRIGERATORS SERVICE WOLTERS REPAIR 6 , utilities, .. ... . .. Inkers or 4. Pep. FE 4-6395. Rent Office Space ATTENTION DOCTORS 8> DENTIST Establish your office |g MMh ern Medical Building r complete details. OR 4 sound conditioned, heated. ..... room. Adult* No pats. Prom *135. FE S-858S. Rent Business Property 47- car GARAGE SUITABLE FOR storage or warehouse. FE 4-7073 after 12 noon.__________ BEDROOM UNFURNISHED apartment. Located at 54 WII1*“ No children. Call FE >-9288. BEDROOM APARJMENT W I garage and heat furnished# child# $100 monthly# Lakeville ai ROOMS AND BATH# STOVE# RE-frigerator and heat# coupla. 29 N. Marshall.________ ___________■ ROOMS, PRIVATE. NEAR DOWN-1. FE 4-313) or OR 3-8425. AMERICAN HERITAGE A Now has 1 and 3 bedroom ments evallshle due to leal ATTRACTIVE 4 ROOMS, PRIVATE BACHELOR 3 ROOMS MAIN FLOOR ?E 2^4?76. PrV* ' BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfield-BIr-mingham area, luxury 1- a bedroom apartments avallab . . from *155 Hotpolnf, sir conditioning ar _ . pllances, large family kitchens, swimming pool and larga sur ■’“,- looked In Bloonifleld Orchard Apts, locatsd on South Blvd. (20 Mila Rd.t, between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open dally and Sunday 3 to 8 p.m. For Information call 391-4545. Schram Rlty. FE 8-0770. SLEEPING ROOMS FOR RENT packed. FE 4-5580. TROY AREA ROOM, 3-BEDROOMS, GARAGE, basamant, with lake privileges or Middle Straits Laks, *10,800. 363 vllages, l ally. *35,000, * 10% DOWN NEW HOMES Sale Houses___ . CITY OP PONTIAC eat 3bedroom layout, with M basamant, gas heat, completiy carpeted, 3 car garage, ZERO down, 578 per month, Immedial occupancy. FHA Approved, owner agent, 674-1649. __ CLARK INCOME: 8 spacious rooms thru-oul 5 rooms down With fireplace I living room. 3-room apartment up. Private entrance and b*"** walk-ln closets. New gaa i Cedarshaka aiding. Full I mant. Only *14.500. *2,500 d UTheSn CHJGH: ‘ 3 Bedi ) ACRES, . ______________ Beautiful setting. Elevator, Equipment. Near M59. 685-887-5580.___________- i repair and paint. 111,190 BRAND NEW. 3bedrm„ ranch, o your iot# full basement fully 19 SUL AT ED, family kitchen. N money down. MODEL. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT Russell Young, 334-3830 C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 rege. Excellent condition clean. Price *15,500. Mortg t-59~WEST:' 3 ACRES: 4 bedri MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CLARKST0N AREA Located within t block of Clerk PLEASANT LAKE Yeer-eround 2-bedroom lake home featuring plastered hardwood floors, enclosed t ly at *l7!m J. A. TAYLOR, AGENCY, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. family room, I ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor Optn Dally from 9 to 9:30 p.m. 4636 W. Walton’— %jR ’4-030t . Charming 4-bedroom older home -—-'I community. Has a small ba a fenced back yard. Larga I school. Excellent for a lari ly with 4-bedroom and •eaned tn porch. OC 3570. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. PHONE? 3T3-685°1585 HIITER Are You A Handy Man? You can finish basic-bllt 3-hedroc alum, sided ranch on 68’x120’ site features of this home 1 i Lake. >13,900 -ir take over land contract 2339 Orchad Lake F ARRO Ted McCullough, Realtor 4-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH — Ex-’ cel lent area, lake privileges Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3 bedroom, family room and Oarage priced at only $15,990 lot. Located In new sub with streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out to Crescent Lake Road turn to Crostbrook street and mode GIROUX to Long iite with garage# tached 2-car garage# LARGE LOT ON CAN Lake, aood buildinj and 2’/2 farms. W ;# lake frbnt# lake p PHONE: 682-2211 5143 Casa-Ellzabeth Road MLS______________OPEN DAILY AT ROCHESTER 3-BEDROOM l'/S-story bungalow, gai trees, 1'/4-car garage, *15,900 Terms. 3BEDROOM COUNTRY HOME MILTON WEAVf 111 W. University i baths, 2hot(. FK 5-4095. AFGHAN HOUNDS) ALSO. ' ______$75, 625-5589. AKC tOV toLLl'Bll ISS' I — — Ituds, 625-4384. 71 AKC ENGLISH BULL" kUPPIES, • ». old, S125i OR 3-3337. AKC GERMAN SHORT " HAIltfeb Pointers, 3 mot. 2 malas, 1 fa-male, puppy shots, wormed. These ere es nice es you could buy at any price. $40 with papers. S2C without. 1243 Meadewlawn. 332-MOt. KC BLACK MALI TOY POftbLC A mot., rate, to someone who will n. 674-0739. MCC REGISTERED NORjtfiGIAN i. Like n finish, f AKC REGISTERED GERM RMSMHPV-ybar-old, COST tew 875, price 835. FB ‘ EW 1968 MODEL snr«MhrMi organ. $300 . r. OR 3-2030. ALL PET SHOFf, UAHUA PUPS, I WEEKS OLD ___________ $24-2843 CHOICE OF LITTER. POODLE s. Also Toy Stud Service. US&D PIANOS, CHOOS^ FROM UP-"t*. grands, spinets, and con* s. Uprights from $49. USED CONN SPINET ORGAN Sale priced at $795 a real buy at 1445 SMILEY BROS. MUSIC t N. Saginaw FE 4-4721 UNUSUAL BARGAIN^ IN PIANOS AND ORGANS Lowrei immond, Conn ai ^ oulbransw^ ^ New IHanos trbm $380 sgallavgheK.- __Tues., Wed- Thurs., Sat.-t p.m. WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS INSTRUCTIONS AND ACCOROIAN, GUITAR LESSONS Sales-Servlca Pulaneckl OR 3-5596 Office Equipment OFFICE DESK large Meoitlv^^e,' 60x33"! \ ELECTROSTATIC PAPER THERMO-FAX MACHINE, GOOD Store Equipment • DISPLAY RACKS, shephei $106. Pontiac., any GERMAN SHEPHERD, 5 WILLIAMS St. Farm Produce CURRANT BERRIES. ' COON HOUNDS. BLACK AND TAN. ‘ mos. old, $25. OR 3-0966. ENGLISH SETTER, FEMALE ~ 332-456)___________________ Elk hounos, german sh6p- herds, other puppies. Fish end supplies, dog trimming. Uncle Charlie's Pet Shop 332-0515. FEMALE. PART COLLIE — FREfe to good homo. FE 2-3MO. KITTENS, FREE CAT, Hond, black, or 1 yea WHITE CAT TO G06d KERRY BLUE TERRIER PUP-plas, AKC Champion brooding, 626- KITTENS FREE TO GOOD HOME. KITTENS. FREE. BO* TRAINED 396-0384 AALE BEAGLE. 3 YEARS OLD, AKC, good huntsr. $50. FE 5-527S, MALE SIAMESE SEALPOINT KIT-ten, housebroken, 12 weeks, Hi FE 5-7865._____________________ POODLE, BEST OP LITTER, black mlnl-toy. 3Vi months, ause-broken. 332-5173. POODLE! STANDARD FEMALE, chemplon sired, exc. quality.. FE POODLE BEAUTY SALON Clippings—AKC Pups—Stud Servl Pet Supplies—6*2-6401 — 402-0927 3 MALI Reas. 62 REGISTERED COLLIE PUPPIES wks. old, Lassie type, worn temporary Immunlietlon. 007-4 REGISTERES 1 YEAR OLb MALE Schnauier, $75. Harold Hoffman EM 3-6S24 or FE 2-9115. . _____ REGISTERED ENGLISH SETTER pupplts. Ready to hunt In ||U IyEAR OLD MALE GERMAN SHORT- neon sign, soda fountain, freeiers, carburetor, pape ucts. Fenton. 629-7504._ RESTAURANT FIXTUREs'll cond., bargain price, call F Sporting Goods DOUGHBOY, COMP Pet Supplies—Service 79-A EXQUISITE POODLE GROOMING by appointment only. 332-8785. OR WH45. I Auction Sales 30 u By Kate Osann LEAVING STATE, MUST 4ELL AT a. 1964 Champion, S2'xl2‘, no i. altar for my equity refused. Wide In 5 decors. Wa have only 1 60x12', brand ntw, for 04(95. Demos at a giant saving not ba knowingly unden_____ . . „ delivery up to 300 miles. Fret set-up with aval labia parking. ARKWOOD HOLLYPAR ipen 9-9 1 days a wa MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy. ' 330-0772 1110 > ‘My father finally let me have a bikini, but he’s furious about the price per square inch!” 84j Travel Trailers ', DAVIS- Boats — Accessaries i Rd. ■52-3334 Town & Country Mobile Homes PROUDLY PRESENTS "The * Westchester" a 12' x 60' Mobile Home unlqui In floor plan, beautiful decor, idea for retirement. Moderately priced See it today. ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50 HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 Bicycles 96 24" GIRL'S SCHWINN UlKO — :.GlftLi. 0486.....liKlS, BOY'S 24" TYPHOON BICYCLE, r—9 Boots—■ AccoMoHo»i 97 OWENS M' FLAGSHIP, FULLY equipped. In the water, SI,Ilk, m-4000, Nights, 425-2007. molded Mahogany plywaed, H condifienfaaianB va. wmn. —GLASS CRAFT OUTBOARD SPECIAL rver beat with top-ekl bar* ar and gagas. ZS h.p. John-Motor with || gal. tank, ivy duty trailer with ipace let and fire. Only $1491. CRUISE-OUT, INC. M Walton Open 9-0 FE 3-4402 THE HYDROPLANE, (TIERING, 10 h.^ Mercury. Lightning 0140, 682- USED CRUISERS INBOARD k OUTBOARD 14' Thompson. Sleeps 2. Tap, 40 h,p, elec. Pamcp trailer ......... 099S r Troian. Sleep* 2. Toilet. Full canvass, bow rail. 60 h.p., trailer complats .................. 1129$ O' Crestllner. Flbergtaa 1-0 110 h.p. Sleeps 2. Toilet. , Pull c*n- FE 8-8506. ____ ■ 22' Owen* Expre 4' YELLOW JACKET. MOLDED hardtop. Stand plywood. Windshield. Controls, Gas Complete tank. Tarp. 30 HP Scott. $300. L, FIBERGLAS RUNABOUT V ’ FIBERGLAS BOAT, TRAILER, 45 h.p. motor, 3650. 363-0841._ ’ WOOD BOAT AND TRAILER, 3100. FE (-1256. After 6._____ ' ALUMINUM RUN-A-BOUT, 35 4' FIBERGLASS 40 HORSE JOHN-son electric, alloy tilt trailer, $895. 332-5937, 86 r. Brook- 11 Equipment trailers. REESEVnd’dRAW-TITE HITCHES Sold and Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS CLARK'S TRACTORS AND ••'nery. 100 used tractors, I dozers, baekhee* and tru NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE HAY I — -s $55 vt Cliff prey-' io noiiy Ka., Holly — Op$n Daily — Si $FORTCRAFT~FICKUP SLEEPERS. *'nld «q. welded tube frame. Foley Waterford 623-0650 Used IHC No. 4$ F Used IHC No. 31. F lew lHe No. 1$ PTO chopper wit :orn head. $1595. MANY OTHERS COME IN NOW AND SAVE KING BROS. : 4-1462 FE 4-073 it Opdyke R SPECIAL SALE ON WHEELHORSi TRACTORS w mower attachment I KING BROS. 1-1662 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. WHEELHORSE GARDEN TRACTOft TRAVEL TRAILERS , Your dealer lor -LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO 20 new and used taller* Tn stock NEW SERVICE DEPT. Etlsworlh Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy._________425-4400 condition. $325. ~ 88 10* PICK-UP CAMPER/ REASONA-ble. $25-4803. PLAYMATE travel trail- er. 1965 Good conditii WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees fans—Monitor Travel Trailers WAG-MASTER Sleeps 6 or I 13' end-IS' on hand Holly Travel Coach 10 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-4! — Open Dally and Sunday* — WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and sleepers. New and used.' up. Also rentals. Jack*, Interco telescoping, bumpers, I a d d * racks. Lowry Camper Sales, . S. Hospital Rd., Union Lake. 3-368t7SPare tl ---- 7 TRAILER, SLEEPS 4, GAS AND self contained. 1964 FROLIC,, 16', 1966 TAWAS BRAVE. 14'. HYDRAU-lie brakes. Sleeps 6. Like new, SW 6-3473, etter 5 p.m. Drydrn. bie, lamp, and misc., baby it Ml 4-8720._, RESALE* STORE. CLOTHING, N GENE'S ARCHERY-2 TV & Radios_______ 21" ZENITH TV $40 _____$68 Balboor Pontiac fl" USED TV ........... Walton TV/ FE 3-2257 Ol RETAINING WALLS AND^ BRgAK- 7677Cor IOn C°‘ *** ZABETH 13 and 11 3303 Gl SAILBOAT/ chain saw and SEASON'S CLEARANCE VALLEY POOL TABLE, $ MONTHS crifice, $300, 338-8320. 'a Bargain H II FI EQUHH months BARGAINS. LITTLE OR 3-9767. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK i Lake: 682- take SOIL AWAY THE BLUE LUS- IX-20 $125. SX-100 1 $130. wasltd! \ ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING * *Y ’joe'vallely i-WHEEL 'UTILITY TRAILER -“spare wheel, lights, fenders, *75. I TANKS OF T ROPI CAir""F ISH! motors, filters, and stand.1 Several house plants, queen of knight, very old pewter, 332-7820. f SECTION WOOD LAKE FRONT - IRON SEWER PIPE, 5 M?9 1 mattress. 674-3217. V LINOLEUM RUGS *3.95 ^EACH tiling til* — wall paneiing, cheap. MJ Til#. FE 4-99571 1075 W. Huron PER CENT HUMAN HAI everal pieces; wigs. 363-4995. 1967 DJAl-A-MATIC Z1G ZAGGER BUILT-IN SEWING Machine. Just dial for button holes * SINGER MODE! 66 -Zlg tagger for button holes, hi -Ate. Guaranteed. $20.74 cadi o ANTIQUE FURNITURE INCLUD-• Ing did clocks, oriental rugs, es, lewelry. Silverware ana II — 1027 Clark APARTMENT S I ZE ELECTRIC Frigldalra refrigerator, 8x7’ 4x2'. call 363-9722 FENCp AHf DIxieTora CALL BOB MARTIN AND S6N FOR ‘ :oll, sand and gravel, fill. “1|*| deliver Is guarantaed to t board, $4.95 aa DARK, RICH, FARM TOP SOIL. rards for SIS del. FE 4-6588, FARM TOPSOIL, $ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE .118 W. LAWRENCE ST. GOOD TOPSOIL AND B L PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS ! UTILITY TRAILER S'X7', E: | I condition $125. 55 So. V ACA tT6n CABIN* rentalTBozers, end loaders, ifnace ana tanx <20 gallon, •agister, 75,000 BTU. OR 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. bales Blvd. supply 333-700) 500 S. Blvd. Wedding announcements i Hand Tools-Machinery 68 2 C-7 HOMELITE POWER SAV I" And 17" bar, good cond. s. 625-3800. ILERS, C a or IMtt Siva. Supply 333-7081 500 S. Blvd. r compressors, lubrication »miinmrnt,^hydrauHc jacs, s earn Ilemens St, FE 2-0)'" „ „w. AIR GARAGE, SELl t completely, hoists, equlpr ----------------... t. KtOO, 628-3254. 1,,‘ 'TORkLIFT* TRUCK . 3,000 lb. $850. Blvd. Supply 333-7081 500^. BlvkJ. LORRAINE™ CRANE ' ON RUBBER. 603-6860. J9 1 PROJEC- BUY - SELL TRADE > SKIS. 1 WATER Sand—Gruv-i—Dirt SAND AND GRAVEL, ALL os delivered. 623-1367, Water- 1-A BLACK DIRT a graven fjJL Builders sui >, GRAVEL, CRUSHED STONd. sizes crushed limestone. Del. to 50 mi. SAW Trucking. 628-, 394-0042, FE 2-5946, 2R-YEAR HOLSTEIN HEIFER. - ------- Hereford bull, purebred. 673- . FE 4-8944, FE ARABIAN. WELSH, BAY GELDING, VERY GENTLE, I around children. S2S0. OR 4 or 482-6672. a series of basements In the Ore Weterford Areas.'This dirt, co sistlng of mostly fill sand ai Beginning the week of July 10 v shell proceed moving this dirt. right.*'i ?hlnk' we can h**i you. OR 3-8935 4-8 a m, .to 6-1 ) p. WHITE LIMESTONE. C R U SI and 10-A stone, rood, gravel, __ son sand, fill sand and topsoil. American Stone Product' HI 3-Zift:.'’ Pet*—Hunting Dogs . .. DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, Jiwn. JAHEIM'S KENNELS. EM, . , ..... pachshunS pops! 4...,. ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 391-tgQ*. POODLE CLIPPING. *3-up. Sarasota. FE 8-8569.__ POODLES, NO PAPERS, ALSO AKC TINY LOVABLE TOY MALE poodles, bed, collars, hanr — chetta coat and hat, FE ,2-MONTH OLD GERMAN ino cro-2-2872. rfRiP tBT ids — All Types Every Auction ■ Trade, Retell 7-d snts Welcome SATURDAY JULY tS, 10 A. James McKinley Rench Hoi N-9287 Hartland Rd., Fanti Details here on Thursday $ & Supplies ! SALE, 47 DIFFERENT in cants, In folder. Some scar 0. OR 3-3496.________ 'sacrifice S DOUBLE D RIDING STABLE HAS 3 iew stock. Gentle and spirited, welting. Also horses for r*‘* i 7 days, 8 to S. 473-7657. HORSE, SADDLE, t HORSE TRIMMING KLENTNER RIDING boarding, and rentli EM 3-0009. PAIR OF BELGIAN MARS AND COLT TOGETHER OR • separate 391-3616, MOUNTAIN klOlttG staple, a mi. north at Pontiac on M24. Special rates weekdays. $1.50. Also horses boarded "■ sold. Open 24 hours. 391-1784 ONY RIDES AN DC ART F Coll OR 4-2996. __________ QUARTER HOftsi, VERY SPIRIT- blanketed, also black brood man in loal, gentle.. 26t Highland Rd. Highland. 685-2180. tire. For only $895. ' Used Nimrod, at $250 1966 Trade-Winds $495 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT $25-1711 AIRSTREAM I GHTWEIGHT -----ERS demonstra- TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. GuarantftM* for tfon at*Warner frailer Sales, 3098 APACHE CAMP TRAILERS iva up te $400 on brand now 19c. camp trailers, over 15 motels of new and used camp trailers on display at all times.' Si9.r Open dally until 7 p.m., Sat and Sunday until S p.m. A Factory Hometown Dealer. COLLER, 1 mil* east of L McFoely Resort > CENTURY YELLOWSTONE .WHEEL CAMPER sit our complete and beautiful < play of travel trailers and t campers. A size -and price to every budget. TRAILER ACCESSORIES STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M59) FE 2-4928 Rsnt Traiitr SpucB ' 90 [ LARGE LOtS/ NATURAL GAS i $$$$$ July Clearance Sale loenix convertible camnart. V iba^o_ and_ Phoenix p $$$$ Tires-Auto-Truck FOUR 10-PLY 7:14.5 Tl TRAILER SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES AT JOHNSON'S Walton at Joelyn Auto Service THIS WEEK SPECIA paint |ob, $85. Free delivery service/ satis Orton vllle, $82-0173. Motorcycles Travel With Quality -Line Travel Trailers BOLES-AE RO-TRAVELMASTER FROLIC-SKAMPER SALES—SERVICE-RENTALS Complete I.T.S. parts center. 5-SPEED DUCATi Scrambler# 30 h.p.# 240 tbs. Full price# $795# easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 8. SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph_____FE 3-7102 ’$0 HARLEY DAVIDSON (74) — Good condition. 8S7-4697. 1963 HARLEY 74 ^ ^ ’i 35$ AUBURN ,AVE. 1965 250 DUCATI# $325. 1965 HONDA 305# G 1965 YAMAHA# TRAIL I condition# 8150. Must sail Mobile Hamas_______ 19 COMPLETE MOBILE HOME HOMETTE-LIBERTY-HAMPTON COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES ■FE 2-1657 623-1318 . $885. Call 673- k41 GREAT LAKES. 8x24 CAB Exc. condition. Skirt, Lak* FE $-6985. t'XSO' PARAMONT DELUXE . Awning, storage shed. Good locc-tion, 416-8568. I2'X56‘ PARKWOOD 1965. ! rooms, corseting, washer. good location- 335-51 GREAT LAKES lO^SS' FUR- nished or unfurnished. ........ Fating. Exc. conditior lot. FE 2-9665. DETROITER had. air conditio Mat sacrifice, F After 5:30 FE 5-3208. _ 'X10' FURNISHED SET-UP. Automatic washer# excellent cond. Terms. 3320362. 1965 RICHARDSON condition. 852-3891. MMMBI )$$ CONCORD 42'XIO', LIKE NEW, ----- Lake Park Lot ** 166 CHAMPION^ 2 BED 338-3641. C00LL SUMMER SPECIAL NO ADDITIONAL COST WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES DON'T BE A (STAY AT HOME) FAMILY Gat cut and enloy the outdoors In on Apache camper. The Remade offers such standard equipment as comfortable sleeping room tor 8 people, cabinet with sink and range. Ice box ind a family siz* dinette which converts eerily EVAN'S EQUIPMENT New 10, 12, 20 and 24 tt. wt Yes we deliver and. set up. BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) Drayton Plains OR ,4-1202 22350 Tetehraph Rd. Ill I 5 I Mil* EL Open dally till 8 p.m. condition. $1,258. OR FOLDING CAMP TRAILER, $350. - call FE M6t» attar S p.m. 1 OAKLAND CAMPER 1 open tor your inspection , • KARIB0U KAMPER Tour-A-Home — Sleeps 6 Only »9S ' Also aluminum covers 33541534___ Baldwin St Colgst* “PICKUP COVERSjOOS u UBf cabcovers, <1,285 and ... WCAMPER MFG. CO. Oxford. 621-1137. No Sunday a PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS «. CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEaN CAMePERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS R$i'-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND «. COLEMAN 891 W. Huron FE 2-3919 DETROITER-KR0PF Vacation Homes . wide with largo, expanding I •ooms and large expanding II' ■com only <2995.80, Free ivery In Michigan. Also 8 ft. it. and 12 ft. wide* at ban AERO-CRAFT. J-203L____________ FIBERGLASS RUNABOUT, ‘ Troian Express Cruiser. Full ed. Nice .................. <2295 MANY MORE USED BARGAINS U AUTHORED DEALER#r* - — Slickcraft FIBERGLAS, 40 HORSE, TRAIL- good Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 flDOWNEY Oldsmobile 95 ' FIBERGLASS, 45 H ' FIBERGLAS, 60 HORSE MOTOR, Used Cars TOP DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS 3400 Elizabeth Lake Road 334-5V67 338-0331 1 LONE SfAR FIBERGLASS, or'trailer, $750. Cell after 4'p.r 17 ALUMINUM SKI BOAT, .p. Evlnrude mtr., elec. *ti II access*. 646-8432. CHRIS-CRAFT 14 TRIUMPH $650 cruiser, Include* 2 twin 35 h.p. Good-'cond^^M-5628. ^ 3' CRRIS-CRAFT DAY CRUISER. 109 h.p., Gray Marine Inboard, sleeps 2. has toilet, 332-1594, 3-31 FT. 2-185 H.P. C-C. CAVALIER EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "'Check the rest, n gat tti* bast" at Averill AUTO SALES FE 2-9878 2028 Dixie FB 4-5895 D CONDITION $200, Call 625-2253. I SUPER HAWK, >65 HONDA 385 DREAM. 3400 A $425. 3844)115._______________________ chrome frame, I 166 DUCATI SCRAMBLER, $450. 626-4758, . BETTER BOAT BUYS I Ski-Boat, Johnson Motor, $1085 Fishing Boat. Johnson Motor, $288 “'WINTER'S. 1370 Opdyke Open (1-75 at Oakland University Ext I HONDA, 150 CC, EXCELLENT HONDA 160 SCRAMBLER. ) ml. *475. 394-0115._ 1964 HONDA SUPER 90, EXCEL- S SUZUKI. 458 C $485. 425-2)71. 1966'/2 HONDA 305, BLUE PAINT, call FE 2-3570. __________ 1967 HONDA SCRAMBLER,. 160 CC 2 mos. old. $550. Call ef(^d| weekdays, Set., Sun., all di 1967 YAMAHA BIG BEAR SCRAM-bler, metalic red, 2 mo. old, 1 condition, $550. 673-9859 or BRIDGESTONE SRI XT5. ‘ UCATI, 1966, 258 CC SCRAMBLER, $350. <26-84(6. EXPERT HONDA REPAIRS 3-6247 1426 Crescent L HONDA SUPER 90, 1*00 MILES, black. Ilka new, rea*. Ml 64W73. HONDA 1965 S90, LIKE NEW, MUST HONDA IN LAPEER SELECTION OF B 5, accessories, small taWr MINI CYCLES; GO-CARTS HODAKA ACE 90 HELMETS AND ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE^ ( NORTON P-11 SCRAMBLER, >50CC, > 1965 10 CC ' imaho . CC Honda im) CC Suzuki 258 CC Suzuki FREE HELMET ■250CC. Rupp _______________ THE PURCHASE OF EACH NEW SUZUKI cYCLE.^M|ga|tammmrf|j|fa 39.95. Compl tssories, Ti ind. Right o Demoda I HORSE MCCULLOUGH 3 18' SKEE-CRAFT CABIN WltH 5 h.p. Evlnrude, $1,558. 473-2975. 7 MERCURY 39, 3.9 HORSE-ower. regular $213. Now $175. HELP! WO need 300 sharp Cadillacs, Fen-tlacs. Olds and Bulcks tor out-of, •tat* markst. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ava. ■ FE $-5988 FB 8-812$ BIG SALE AT TONY'S MARINE ON ALL BOATS, CANOES, PONTOONS AND SAIL BOATS. $795. Glasspar & Steury flberglas boats ^ — Mirra Craft alum boats tralSrs.*1'Tak* M-S9 to0”W?°Hlghr land. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Dsmod* Rd. Lett and follow signs to DAWSON SALES AT TIP-■SICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179. GLASPAR 167 FIBERGLASS. Johnson Elec. Tilt trailer. E: condition. Convertible top. Skis. < tras; $858. 879-6657.______ Harrington Has Everything! Just Ini Swim Markers Dealer Distributor for LARSON Boats Specializing in Grumman Canoes and Fishing Boats Aluminum and Wood Docks Do it yourself—easy to install. We will show you how. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS >99 S. (Te°egraphnfU miles west of Williams Lake Rd. 343-7511. Hour*;. Weekdays 12 » 8 p.m., Sunday II to 5 p.m. SEE-THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OR ALL NEW Suzuki Cycles & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE 46*7 Dixie Hwy., Drayton ~~ ‘ YAMAHAS ALL MODELS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY K, 4 W. CYCLE PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie HWy., Drayton Plain: t 4-0411 At Loon Ll Open dally 9 a.m,-6 p.m. JUST RECEIVED Th» famous 4*1' Sport bo Grumman. While they last -In,., ; # * GRAND RIVER ' BOAT SALES GR 4-7326 f Middle Belt Rd. MEMBER OF MMPA M0NICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD- (MS9) NEED-TRADE-INS :arry all Chrysler Lone Star, stron# MFG boats, and tall ts. Riviera cruiser pontoon*. Gal© McAnnally's AUTO BALES have Immediate need tor sharp rsl Now shipping to Oklohomt, illfornla, Texas and parts wsst. >p dollar paid I Shop mo last and 4 the bast deal her#111 94 BALDWIN FE 8-452J Across trom Pontiac State Bank STOP HERE LAST M&M USD Oakland at VI TOP $ PAID for bit sharp PONTIACS, AND CADILLACS. We are prepared to makp you a better offer 11 Ask for Bob Bums. WILSON CRISSMAN “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S We would like to buy late model GM Cars or,will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600. k Cars-Trucks 101-A JUNK CARS-TRUCKS, FRE8 , n anytime. FE 2*2$$$. $73-5224. CARS AND TRUCKS 1 ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS ' "J FE 5-9941- RADIAfbftil COPPER, BRASS; and q— OR 3-5849. generators, C. Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 ) 6, ENGINE AND TRANS. Buick 401, crank, haodl, com, manifoldi Holley 4-V and Star, <35; Carter A.F.B. *25; cam, *15. 683-2157. Attar FOM> 652-298 ENGINE Alb' ars. 327 Chevy Ball housing, tic. misc. trlpowers-allcks. HS.H Aut* FOUR 12 PLY TIRES AND RIMS, $—14.5. Like New. 673-8*70. Mtw witf Ihod Truck* Id 18*4 FORD PICKUP, 4-CYLINDER, stick. Run* Ilk* new. *98. ADKIN* AUTO, 738 Oakland. FE 2-6X30.__ 954 1 TON’DODGE, EXCELLEnY running condition, good rubber, SI 50. 682-7514.______________ 858’ CHEVY EL CAMINO FICI<-uo. also '58 Chew eng, FE 2-7172. 858 FORp"» TON, HEAVY Quit MM_______... .. ..J. h.p. and Merc-Cruisar authorized dealer. cypress Gardens skis (ail oRUMMAN CANOES DEALER Fiberglass canoes .:...... . $168 3.8 H.P. Mercury Outboard 11*8.85. Cliff Dreyer’s Gun and Sports Center 15218 Holly R4. ME *4771 ' Optn D*lly at **->--l:—. 1961 GMC SPECIAL 1-T0N PICKUP GMC Factory Branch ; Oakland at Caw_Ft.SfQ) f F—10 THE. PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1067 N««r and Used Trucks 103 1967 GMC l Ton Camper Cruiser 4-speed, V-6 engine, and all of the necessary equipment. Color, Blue. $2595 Keego Sale^ SUSP, after S. 421-341)4. Foreign Car* 1965 MG 2-door 1100 writs, radio, he*tar, $795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth mo s. Woodward .j CHRYSLER SUNBEAM I Excellent condition. f— Ml 1006 VOLKSWAGEN, I . Il345 at-M IKEW $ A Chevrolet, Birmingham, i 1965 Chevy VAN PANEL Lika new and Is Only - $1095 HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. On M24 in Oxfords Michigan OA ±252% „ lf^1,075. FE 9-0761. PRE OWNED VOLKSWAGENS 100% I VW. Sunroof x black, AM-FM radio, w I tires. Today only * Radio. WSW 1965 VW. dlo, WSW Bahama I Ruby rad. 963 VW. Sedan. Sparkling black - Radio, wsw *lus a good sa lad Ion of otheri to choose from, EASY CREDIT TERMS TO FIT YOUR BUDGET . BUG ON OUT TO BILL G0LIING VOLKSWAGEN, INC. Maplo Rd. r- ..... New ond Used Cors KELLEYS USED CARS 756 OAKLAND FE 2-5335 MARMADUKE By Anderson and teeming: >d condition. *130. i CHEVY 6-CYLINDER. STICK, 00*00 CHEVY *-t>66erAUT,otoATIC, nice. 333-7542. Riggins. Dealer. Ml CHfyY GREENBRIAR on. (9 Passenger) 6 cylinder, matte, two-tone, sharp and . to sell. ROSE RAMBLER S3 Union Leke. EM 3-4155. 1961 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE. 332-0297. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 2 CHEVY Wage 1962 CORVETTE. 327, OOOO SHAPE offer over *1,250. 620-1947 at- ... 7 pjt).___~2__________ 1963 CORVAIR 2-DOOR. AUTOMAT- CHEVROLET T„ __ STATION WAGON, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. FULL PRICE $195. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments ot S6.92. CALL CREDIT MRG. Mr. Par' TURNER FORO. New and U«ed Car* 106 DON'S USED-CARS Small Ad—3ig Lot ) CARS TO CHOOSE FROM HAROLD “Nonsense, Snyder!. JJarmpduke KNOWS he’s not allowed in your fish pond!” TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1963 CHEVY 2-DOOR WITH 6-CYl.[| I CHEVY 6-CYLINDER. STICK, Bankrupt? CREDIT PROBLEMS? RECIEVERSHIP? GARNISHEED Payments Arranged To Fit Your Budget WE FINANCE HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_ Ml 4-75 Autobahn FE 8-4531 LeSabre W2 BUICK 2-door^ hardtop, radio, heat-anally nice. ^ BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward ______Ml 7-3214 1963 BUICK LaSABRE 2-DOOR Hardtop. Beautiful sliver finish *1195.' KEEGO PONTIAC SALES, t E CHEVROLET, Birmingharr 1959 REBUILT CADILLAC, MOTOR and pr *' ■ - ------- CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE *395. Save Auto- FE 5-3279.__ 964 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, condit ion,h *2OT5 P at 'm* I ^E *S A V OIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. U | 4-2735. LATE VIOOCL CADILLACS 0 HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME MOTOR SALES Weak Credit? today! CALL BILL FOX CHEVY Now Is The Time To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 HLPERFORMANCE 4-SPEED SALE — Spot Delivery— 1965 CHEVY Super Sport Convertible Gotham gray with black vinyl trim, black buckets. 4-j $1595 1965 TEMPEST LeMans Pull ASKING PRICE - I factory equipment, 4-speed. $1595 1965 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury ■ - 2-Door Hardtop It midnight blue finish, black vinyl top, loaded with goodies, 4-ed. 995 down. Full ASKING PRICE - $1395 1964 CHEVY Super Sport 2-Door Hardtop 1 full factory equipment. Showroom condition. 4-speed. With only down. Full ASKING PRICE - $1295 1959 CORVETTE Convertible, 4-Speed l engine red. with 995 down. Pull ASKING PRICE — $1095 , — No Payments Till September, 1967 — SPARTAN DODQE 855 Oakland FP 8-1122 ------^-P—-X--— $2295 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 0 S. Woodward__ _ _MI 7-3 KESSLER'S JACK LONG FORD SALES FORD, NEEDS OIL PUMP 10 FALCON, NO RUST. $60. 1344 Stanley_____I__ -A .CON STATION WAGON, beautiful . DOOR GALAX IE, 1962 FORD WAGON. \ 964 CORVAIR 2-DOOR SEDAN. 6L t k e s ^be a u t if u? *i vor y h fin I sh!^ S torp! Priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER SALES, UNION LAKE/ EM 3-4155. . 964 MONZA CONVERflBLE, 4-speed, best offer. 693-2709 or MY ■ ____ ____ BODY,, _____________EM 3-0081. 962 GALAXIE. HARDTOP -Wrecked on right side. 301 Going 961 OLDS STATION WAGON, Extra clean, tires like new, $375. FE 5-2766. G, Harris.______ 2023 Dixie Hwy. FE 8 New and Used Cers 106 I NEED A GOOD USED CAR???? See or Cali "MAC" Me Innas, "Cy" Owens^ —^Oakland Chrysler, 724 Pretty Ponies (] 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROM CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS 2 PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_ Ml 4-7500 New and Used Cart 106 OLDS: CUTLASS* 7-DOOR itop coupe. 4-speed double pow- radio, ex., FE 2 2224._ SHARP 1966“?UtLASSv(2DOOR^- gSi^atteTy 626-tlW7CVtrb' SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES 35 S Woodward_________647-51)1 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 966 OLDS Dynamic 4-door hardtop 4 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, F I CORVAIR MONZA. iSPEED, STAR AUTO WE FINANCE !' LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS tops, 327. ex-j'62 Ford Convertible $497 E A——— '63 Comet Convertible $597 r° , '59 T-Bird ..... .....$497 '62 Pontiac Hardtop . .$697 '63 Chevy V-8 Stick . $697 63 Chevy Convertible $497 j'63 Pontiac Wagon , $897 i'61 Mercury Sedan ... $297 ; '62 Rambler Sedan ....$297 '64 Corvair ..........$597 EASY CREDIT | ARRANGEMENTS 962 OAKLAND AVI. _____FE 8-9661 ___ 1963 GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR. FORD, INC. ------‘ ™ | |H||| WOODWARD A LUCKY AUTO New and lleed Cars 16 PONTIAC CATALINA V E t >- 421 H.O. 4-speed, tow bl »-jsr8r»a. ft. 677 M-24. Lk. Orion MV 1-2641 WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKIMtO GIVE AWAYS Right car* at right prices NO CASH NEEDED-BANK RATES 139* '41 Pontiac Star Chief H-top 1399 . '62 Chevy 2-door 1299 . '59 T-BIrd 3399 '62 Ford Galaxie *599 . '63 Tempeat Coupe 326 $599 '62 Pontiac Sta. Wagon ",99 . ‘62 Chevy Sla. wagon 99 ‘59 Bonnaville Hardtop 199 ‘64 Corvair Monza Coupa 199 '61 Rambler HALF-DOZEN CARS AT *99 EA. 0PDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd.' at Qpdykt E *-9237_____FE 1-923* '61 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, vary good condition, 549-3*64. Roy- SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 155 S. ROCHESTER RD. 651-5500 1961 PONTIAC BonnevIMg^ coni Capitol Auto 312 W. Montcalm, PE 1-4971 (Just east of Oakland) 1961 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, door, hardtop, hydramatlc, pc steering and brakes, 1 owner, — good mechanically, only 8475. 2755 Onagon Troll, FE 5-1392._ 1962 PONTIAC. 2-DOOR HARDTOP. A real nice car. Can be purchas j ILUCKYAUTO New and Used C«rt 106 Ml PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 12.' 474-217*. 1966 PONTIAC DEMO'S Save over 81,006. All with lull i lory . equipment, , power steering haust. 673-5126. 1966 CATALINA Hardtop 2-ddor with automatic, power stee whitewalls. Only — $2295 I960 RAMBLER 2 DOOR. GOOb EM 3-00*1. I FINANCE REASONABLE! i Rambler and '63 Flat .. 097 t '50 Cadillacs Full Power *21 „ Ford __________ Chevys 59-6) and Wgns. 15 vw *395 t taka over 15 Dodge Mi " Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland A TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS Factory Official 1962 PONTIAC, EXTRA CLEAN. Low mileage. $750. 674-3140.___ 1963 LeMANS CHEVROLET, Birmingham. I PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP, miles. Only $3995 o HI Ml5, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. >I.S. 1965 CHEVROLET ^ ^ HAROLD TURNER 9 PASSENGER CARRY 1965 CORVAIR MONZA CONVERT-whitewalls, beautiful matador red with white nylon top and rod Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford Oakland Ave. PE 5-4101 i CHEVY a DOOR AUTO., 6 Standard Auto. 763 FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN, V-8, AUTOMATIC, REAL CLEAN. $695. COOPER'S AUTO SALES 674-2257 ~79 Dixie Drayton Plains S3 FQRD FALCON 2-DOOR STICK' runs perfect/ $450.r*OA MMo'ettar T963_FORDbonve rtibre^ $995 HAUPT PONTIAC l—FORD 2-DOOR, AUTOMATIC, CHEVROLET, 965* CHEVyT $ ,000, Call 651-0245 966 MONZA 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC, *1595 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham., Ml 4-2735. 1966 CHEVY IMPALA 2 hardtop, automatic, VS, E air conditioning. Burgundy black Interior. $2095. VANQEPUTTE BUICK-0PEL 196-210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165 1966 IMPALA, 396 2-DOOR, POWER, low mi., cxc. cond., 625-4732.__ >7 IMPALA V-$. FE 4-6239 after TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS Factory Official 1967 CHEVY Caprice 4-door her top with blue finish, black virv roof. Comfortron air condltionin MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's- New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 CHEVROLET, Birminghi 4-2735._ -BIRD 1963 CONVERT1B 1965 T-BIRD 1c transmission, radjp an » $2195 only $49 down an I HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. ■ BIRMINGHAM_____Ml 4-751 11965 FORD GALAXIE 50Q LTD 4 FORD, 2-DOOR, 6-CYL. AUTO. Wk 6 : SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bir 1963 GMC SUBURBAN. 6-CYLINDER, automatic, power steering and brakes. Priced to sell. Rffifi RAMBLER SALES, Union I FORD 2-DOOR, FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 1964 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARD-V4, automatic, radio, heater, V8, automatic, radio, heater, 1965 FORD 4-DOOR, STANDARD transmission, rad’ mk tion, $895. 673-1391 FORD GALAXIE 500 CON- heater, power steering, beautiful deep burgundy metallic finish, 1 .white nylon top, $1688 full I $88 down, and $57.80 per m 50,000 mile or 5 year, Wari available. Get "A BETTER DEAL" at John McAuliffe Ford 30 Oakland Ave. . FE 5-4101 Village Rambler will allow' you' up to $500 more than wholesale (Book Price> for your present edr when you trade for a 196? RAMBLER - PRICES START AT . . . 666 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM 646-3900 1935 PACKARD 120 SEDAN. COM-plete motor. Body needs work. *500. 363-9929 between » p.m.-9 p.m. 1960 VALIANT V-200, RUNS WELL, lobks good. 332-0790. 1962 VALIANT GOOD COND. 3 speed. 6. one owner, $400. 338-6609. 1963 VALIANT CONVERTIBLE, I PLYMOUTH FURY STATION 59.86 per month. 5-year or 50,000- "|t only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at; John McAuliffe Ford Oakland Avex________FE 5-4101 2-DOOR HARDTOP, metallic blue. ROSE 6 MUSTANG 2 RAMBLER SALES, I l MUSTANG 2-DR. HARDTOP, letallic ^Blue. j.*^f^n*r ^auto- l,LERrlDoor Hardtop; V-8, automatic, radio, whitewall*. Only-— ' $1495 Hardtop ' 1966 FORD Galaxie 2-Door -----, V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, white-walls. Still in warranty with only 8,000 miles. 1 $1895 1965 COMET . 404 2-Door Sedan with V4. automatic, whitewalls and radio. $1045 1963 T-B1FiD 2-Doer Hardtop Landou with power steering, .brake- —* and windows. Ah- com Only— $1295 1965 DODGE Polera 2-Poor Herdtog with let' Mack finish, white lop, power steering and brakes, v-8, auto-~"—|||, Only— $1495 196$ DODGE Polar a Convertible. V-l, automatic, power steering, brakes and windows, lew mileage. Only $1545 1965 VW 2-Door with whitewalls, rad la and real low mileage. Lika howl OAKLAND Chrysler - Plymouth 724 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9436 I truck*001 ECONOMY USED CARS $595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Mt. Clemens F* 3-7954 1964 RAMBLER STATION WAGQN. 6-cyl. stick, *597 lull price. LUCKY AUTO i960 W. Wide Trick 1965 RAMBLER 770 convertible, radio, heater, automatic with power. Original one own- 51395 BIRMINGHAM , Chrysler-Plymouth *60 S. Woodward_ Ml 7-3214 1965 RAMBLER 2-DOOft—SEDAN, standard shift, frost whita, (72S. Autobahn Authorized VW Dealer Vi mile North of Miracle Mile 1765 S. Telegraph ...... RAMBLERS Stock, PETERSON A SON RAl BLER In Lapeer, large selection used cars and parts. 664-4511. KELLEYS USED CARS 756 OAKLAND FE 2-5335 BEATTIE FORD 1967 Mustang 1964 2-door hardtop.^^ith^ autoinatic. Ponneville $2295 ?uMrpowtrUPOnly — $15«5 1967 Mustang 1964 Convertible with power^steerlmj. Bonneville matching Interior. Only — Sport Coupe, with power steer- $2495 ing, brakes, automatic. Only - $1395 1965 Mustang 1950 Chevy 2-Door Hardtop with 6-cylinder engine, stick, rsdio, and hsster. Only— 2-Ton. Stake body with 6-cyl-Inder angina, power winch, ax-tandad boom. Only— $1395 $595 -On Dixit Hwy. in Ytoterford— Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 WE SPECIALIZE IN SATISFIED CUSTOMERS 1966 CONTINENTAL 1964 CHEVROLET 1965 FORD Country ^ Seder 1964 MERCURY^ 1966 TEMPEST r Sport. Automatic, power it $1295 $1195 * S? ' $1295 ' $ 895 1 $1395 ’ $1395 $1795 ’ $1395 $2195 LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland" 333-7863 TAKE A LOOK AT QUALITY! OAKLAND COUNTY CARS 1966 Pontiacs with double power, Hydramatlc, r ivy duty options. Only-- $1595 1964 CATALINA Sedan ................. ............$1295 4-Door with power steering and brakes, Hydramatlc, radla, heater, whitewalls. Only— 1962 FORD Galaxie ..................................$895 2-doon hardtop with power steering, brakes, V-8, automatic, whitewalls. radio, heater. White with red Interior. 1964 OLDS Hardtop ................... ...... $1295 2-Door with radio, haater, whitewalls, black with a white Interior. 1964 CADILLAC Hardtop ...!...................- - - - $2595 Fleetwood, with lull power, and silver glazt, radio, oversized whitewall*. Extra tharpl Air conditioning. 1963 RAMBLER Classic .......... ................$795 4-door sedan with 6 cyl., stick shift, radio, haater, whitewalls. 1963 RAMBLER Wagon............ ... -.......... $ 895 Classic with 4-cyllndsr engine, automatic, whitewalls, radio, heatar. Burgundy finish. 1960 CHEVY 2-Door ..................................,$395 uyitb V-8# automatic, radio, haatar# tintad windshield. Clean hroughoutl 1 _ l 1964 CHEVY Impaia ............... - -.$1495 2-Door Hardtop with V-#, automatic, power steering and brakes, rtdlo, haatsr and whitewalls. Extra Super Bdauttfullt PONTIAC-RAMBLER Optn Doily 'Til 9 P.M. On M24 In Orion MY 3-6266 THE PONT!AO PllKSy WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 F—11 —Television Programs-*— Programs furnished by stations listad in this column ora subjoct to chango without notko Chonngls: 2-WJSK-tV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKIW-TV. 50-WK1P-TV, 56-WTVS TONIGHT 8:00 (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “Joe Butterfly" (1987) Burgess Meredith, Audie Murphy, Keenan Wynn. (R) (50) Superman (R) (C) (56) Mtsterogers 8:18 (56) Sing Hi — Song Lo 6:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News — Huntley, Brinkley (CV (9) Twilight Zone (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Juvenile Court (C) (9) Bat Masterson (R) (50) Monsters (R) (56) Antiques 7:30 (2),Lost in Space — Dr. 'Smith finds the golden hammer of the Norse god Thor. (R) (C) (4) Virginian — A farm girl wanting excitement leaves home to wdtk in a saloon. (R) (C) (7) Batman — Mr. Freeze kidnaps a beauty contest-j TV Features ‘WILD IN THE COUNTRY,’ 9 p m. (7) TALENTFESTIVAL, 9:30 p.m. (9) STEVE ALLEN, 10 p. ant. (R) (C) (9) Movie: “The Charge at Feather River" (1953) Two women are captured by the Cheyennes. Guy Madison, Vera Miles. (R) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) Living for the Sixties 8:00 (7) Monroes — Clayt signs on as a cowhand in a Mapoy cattle drive. (R) (C). (50) New Breed - A lieutenant is assigned to find (S|) Navy ,og th* d™'er who kllled W 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News(C) wife. (R) (56) News in Perspective 8:38 (2) Beverly Hillbillies -Musicians join the Clam-petts in filming a soap commercial. (C) (R) 9:08 (2) Green Acres - Lisa tries to help Ralph the lady carpenter snag Hank Kimball. (R) (C) jj (4) Bob Hope — A lonely heiress falls in love with try boy is encouraged to be a writer. Elvis Presley, Hope Lange, Tuesday Weld, John Irland. (R) 1 (C) (50) Movie: “Always in My HearttHlM2) A convict wants his wife to marry a wealthy suitor. Kay Francis, Walter Huston (R) (56) Mathematics 17 9:31 (2) Gomer Pyle, USMC Gomer recruits a bank robber on the lam. (R) (C) (9) (Special) Talent Festival — Winners of the 1967 CBC Talent Festival are featured. 9:45 (56) British Calendar 10:00 (2) Steve Allen - Tim Conway, Lou Rawls and Stiller and Meara are featured. (C) (4) I Spy - A little girl with a fantastic memory has been taught the names and addresses of loose German war criminals. (R) (C) (56) Big Picture (9) News (50) "T h e Man Two Faces” (1934) Ed-| ward G. Robinson, Mary Astor. (R 11:30 (2) Movie: “The True Story of Lynn Stuart" (1958) Betsy Palmer, Jack Lord. (R) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) , , . (9) Wrestling handsome, but poor, 12;3fl (g) Window „„ the World dreamer. (R) (C) J 1;#0 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Movie: Wild in the, (7) Untouchables (R) Country (1961) A coun- 1:3# (2) Newg (C) TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene Reeves, Christine Kauf- mann. (50) Movie: “Brother Rat and a Baby” (1940) Wayne Morris, Jane Wyman. (R) 12:4$ (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) , (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) Jackie Crampton (C) 1:30 (2 As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:85 (4) News (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:55 (7) News (C) (9) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (9) Matches and Mates (C) (50) Topper (R) 3:25 (2) News (C) 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (C) (7) Dating Game (C) 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) ' (7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C) 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot — “Africa’s Big Game." (C) (7) News (C) <9 ( Woody Woodpecker (C) (50) Alvin (O 5:30 (7) News—Jennings (C) (9) Stagecoach West (50) Little Rascals (R) (56) What’s New 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant , 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall (C) Vanished titles ACROSS 42 Crimson 1 Ancient city in faBironet'iwlf* Asia Minor 44 Microbe S Gomorrah’i 46M»»CttUn» neighbor nlcfaum* 10 Byzantine 4* Female Iheep Catholic, for *1 Slowmovlng one 24 Spanish dance 12 Thought *7 Weight lor silk 14 Washes lightly 15 Capital of MWor^iper Answer to Prevloue ftmlo 60 Heredity factor DOWN 1 Diminutive of attorney (ab.) 37 Armed conflict Christina 17 Ancient city in 40 Make deeper 2 Chinese civet Africa 45 Juicy fruit - 3 Native of 19Morning 47Senpmtin (suffix) , moisture Phoenicia 4 Word of assent 20 Raised platform 49 Once existed 5 District in 22 Land rich in 50 Before London gold (Bib.) 51 Symbol for BMusieal dramas 23 Italian river cadmium t 7 Distends 24 Pitlpy substance 52 Legal point 16 Dance step' 17 Feminine appellation 18 Icelandic saga 21 At the summit 24 Extinct bird 27 Auricle 28 Cuttlefish 30 Ventilate 31 In the company of 33 Strong tobacco 34 Blow with open 8 Odd numeral 25 Lubricated 53 Mariner's 'hand 8 Males 26 Brazilian macaw directioi 36 Spectacle 10 Ancient city in 29 Old 34 Pouch 38 Adjective suffix Chaldea 32 Cavity. - 55 Poem 39 Biblical king 11Small particle’ 35 Ancient city in 56 Correlative of 13 District Italy either 2 3 4 1 5 6 7 8 9 . 11 12 Ir u IS . nri r 22 44 sr B1 34 sr r 43 51 52 53 * 56 ST 12 3 Wallendas Hurt in Crash LEWISTOWN, Mont. (AP)— Three members of the Flying Wallendas, famed acrobatic troupe, were, Injured Monday in traffic accident near Grass Range in central Montana, about 30 miles east of Lewis-town. AAA Carlos Gunman, 21, driver of the truck-trailer unit in which the three were traveling, and Ricky Wallenda, 12, both of Sarasota, Fla., were treated at a Lewistown hospital and released. A A 4 Joseph Perraz, 21, Oakland, Calif., was held overnight in a Lewistown hospital: Damage to equipment in the truck was estimated at spokesman for the troupe said its tour of Utah and other western points would be delayed about six weeks for rebuilding the equipment. AAA The troupe was , en route to Billings, Mont. House Rules Unit Develops Positive Look WASHINGTON (I3PI) - The House Rules Committee, celebrated in the recent past for dragging its feet, has developed a positive image under new management. Some of its liberal critics like the new look even less than the old. A A A Many House members had anticipated the committee, would go into decline with the de- parture of former Rep. Howard W. Smith, D-Va., its strong- willed veteran chairman. Bat Rep. William M. Col-mer, D-Miss., Smith’s understudy for yean and the committee’s chairman since the start of the current Congress, is making it evident he didn’t take the job to preside over the Committee’s demise. The rules committee’s traditional role has been to act on requests of legislative committees for clearance of their products for a vote in the House. Under Smith’s reign, some liberal-type, big-spending bills couldn’t seem to get cleared. A A ★ Getting such clearance has been less of a problem this year, possibly because nothing very controversial or liberal or new has been coming along. But something else has been added. A A A The rules committee, It turns out, is not just a traffic cop for other people’s legislation. It has the power to crank, up legislative action on its own,7 and this year it is doing just that. So far it can claim credit for a bill against flag-burning passed by the House and for an antiriot bill that Is just about to be passed. Under Colmer’s management it may have other such feats in mind. Take flag-burning. Early this year dozens of members,1 incensed when peace demonstra tors put tile torch to the national emblen\, introduced bills to make flag desecration a federal hills were deferred to the ry committee, where! touldered. Mississippi Is Dirty but Still Drinkable Baseball Game Stalls Groat Special on K NEW YORK (AP) — A vital American interest—the All-Star baseball game—almost pushed Nikita S. Khrushchev into television exile Tuesday night as the game ran an hour overtime and threw NBC’s schedule out of kilter. tained from sources within the Khrushchev family since few others, except Soviet officials, have access to the dacha.- Highway Dept. Will Offer U. P. Land at Auction LANSING (AP)—Now you can become an Upper Peninsula landowner for only $10. A A A The State Highway Department will auction off 44 parcels of access U.P. land Aug. 15 at Crystal Falls. The smallest, a triangle containing 50 square feet and located about six miles southeast of Marquette, is valued at $10. A A A The biggest, 74 acres, nine miles west of Sylvania Gogebic County, is valued at 'Cleopatra'Suits to Net Liz Taylor Millions NEW YORK—Elizabeth Taylor’* coming into MILLIONS of dollar* in a settlement soon to be announced of the lawsuits involving Liz, 29th Century-Fox, “Cleopatra," Eddie Fisher, the divorces, the children, and other disputable* points. Liz as usual appears to be the victor! with a staggering amount of money coming to a her, and, strangely, her ex-husband Eddie Fish-9 er will get a chunk, too, as a partner with Hsm ex-wife in their “Cleopatra” enterprise—although! as I understand it, the very clever Liz will have! arranged it that somebody else, not Liz, will be.® paying Eddie off. We’ve got our own campaign now: Give uplj standing ovations on Broadway (night clubs! especially). They’re mostly insincere, meaning- WILSON less, and leave the audience disliking the performer they stand up for. We don’t think it’s important, really, but at the Monkees’ great press conference at the Warwick, we wished to find out for a girt reader whether Mickey Dolenz^is engaged to British model Samantha Juste. Their press agents kept turning their backs on us till we finally said “Are ybu always this rude?” Finally, Ward Sylvester, their M.C. and producer, said he would answer—rthey are not engaged and Mickey, 22 now, will not marry till he’s 27. During all this, one of the Monkees said he's never found press people so impudent. So next time1 yon hear the British are bad-mannered, put in a word for the good old U.S.A. We’re bad-mannered as anybody and proud of it, right, Chums? THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Sheila MacRae, Ronnie Wayne and Irving Cowan formed a film company, Charisma, and want to star Buddy Hackett in the W. C. Fields screen bio . . . Govs. Romney and Rockefeller have something in common—both had a birthday July 8. Romney was 59, Rocky 60) . . . Jesse White’ll star on Broadway in “Take My Wife—Please,” directed by Allan Sherman. (The title’s an old Henry Youngman joke). Robert Goulet almost missed getting aboard the S.S. France -he'd stopped at Carmine the Barber’s fa* a haircut . . . Digging the Don Ellis jazz at the Riverboat: the non-jazzy Hildegarde ... Joe Louis did a mild frug at Trude Heller’s, showing his sister Eulala the town ... Guests at the new Mellow Yellow in the Village smoked bananas, community-style, in hookah pipes. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A showgirl went on a strict diet, and after a week all she’d lost was her voice, from’ talking about it. WISH I’D SAID THAT: One airline, Monty Hurst hears, gives passengers a choice of a drink or a Dean Martin movie. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “A man is never so weak as when some woman is telling him how strong he is."' EARL’S PEARLS: A fellow explained he’d found the fastest way to get his car across town—have a police truck tow it. Ronald Reagan’s installed a: hotline phone ih the governor’s mansion. It’s a direct wire to MGM . . . That’s earl, brother. (Publishers—Hall Syndicate) The switchboard at NBC was} first beseiged by telephone calls | asking why the Lucy Jarvis-1 produced “Khrushchev in Exile” was delayed and then, when NEIW ORLEANS (UPI) - 52.^ 6:20 (2) News 6:30 (2) Spectrum , (4) Clahsroom (7) Seven Seas (Ch 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Movie: “Say One for Me” (Part 2) (R) (9) Take 30 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 9:55 (4) News (C) 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye (R) 10:25 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep (C) " (9) Canada Outdoors (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game (9) Luncheon Date TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicate (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C) (4) Eye-Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: “The Last Days of Pompeii” (Ital-ian-Spanish, 1959) Steve tourist studied the wide, muddy oil-spotted Mississippi River at New Orleans, the product of perhaps man’s greatest pollution campaign in history. Then he turned to the Orleanian. “Vou drink that water?” The Orleanian does. So does the tourist if he stays here any time. The river water — carefully treated—is used for some of the most famous coffee in the world. more phone calls demanding to know why Johnny Carson’s “Tonight” show was not on. AAA NBC officials said they feared] the delay had cut deeply into the number of viewers of the show, which was a magnificent portrayal of Khrushchev and which Jack Gould, television j critic of tiie New York Times, called “an absorbing study.” , There was little to criticize I The muddy Mississippi Riverjabout the show* but there wasj (water doesn’t hurt anyone un* one example of American cen-i less it is mixed with too much Lprship being more stringent than Soviet, censorship. bourbon or Scotch. Louisiana Health Engineer John E. Trygg, a transplanted Iowan who learned to swim — Huckleberry Finn style — in the upper section of the river, put it this way The quality of, our water in New Ofleans is generally 4>retty good. Occasionally we may have a problem of taste or odpr, but. that isn’t often. It’s pretty good water." If the water jean be used at New Orleans, it can probably be used anywhere along the 2,500-mile river. By the time the Mississippi reaches here it has drained a third of the nation, picking up wastes from dozens of smaller rivers, including the giant Ohio nd Missouri. In Louisiana alone about 1.5 million people depend on the muddy river for their drinking water. So do millions of people upstream — including the city of St. Louis. This is all in spite of the awesome abuse and neglect of the Tiver by individuals, communities and industries that use it from Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. LANGUAGE LAUNDERED On the Russian sound track, Khrushchev called former Vice President Richard M. Nixon S.O.B.,” which the NBC translator rendered as “a good for nothing” for American audiences. AAA The film showed that Khrushchev has aged considerably since he was ousted from power in October 1964. The comment tary said that he had lost 20 pounds, and this was evident from his sunken cheeks and falling jowls. A f§ A There was one interesting scene in the film, upon which there was no commentary; Mjs. Jarvis said it was because she had not recognized the man: A shot on the terrace of Khrushchev’s dacha showed him with his reputed brother-in-law, Mikhail Shokholov, the Nobel Prize winner for literature. Shokholov, wearing a white Russian peasant shirt, playfully tapped Khrushchev on the arm". Internal evidence showed that the film used was largely ob- — Radio Programs— WJ8(760)%XYZ(1270) CiaWfOOO) WWJ(9S0) WCAttfl 130) WPONQ 460) WJBKd 500) WHfMPM(94Jl WJR,. News, Sports WWJ, News, Sports, Weather WXYZ, Newscope , wjbk, News, Music wcar, News, Jack Sanders wpoN. News. Sports WHFI, Uncle Jay Shaw «:30 CKLW, Nows, Music WWJ, Today tn Review WJR, Bus. Barometer «:4S—WJR, Lowell Thomas 7:00—WJR. News, Spent WWJ. News, Carlson WXYZ. Dave Dlles, WPON, News. Music WCAR, Rod Miller WJBK. News. Music ; WHFI., Dinner Concert . CKLW, News, Duke Windsor . hart * lock- t:oe—WHFI, Montage !!:«§—WJR. News, Music, Spoilt WWJ. News, Sports, Music WPON, Arizona Weston WOK, Medtcai Journal IlitS—WOR, Ron Rose THURSDAY MORNING ‘ 0:10—WJR, Music Hell WWJ, Newt, Bonders i wxyz. Music, Naan WCAR, Mews, Ootzetl ' CKLW. News. Bud Oivlee WPON, News, Music WJR. News. Music Me# , 7:30—WJBK, Sports 1:00—WJR. News, Sunnyslde Music 0:00—WJR. News, Harris t WCAR, Jim Devls t • WWJ, Newt, Neighbor WHFI, Uncie Joy CKLW, News, joe Van 10:00—WJBK, News, Music WHFI, BIH Boyle WPON, News, Music WJR, News, Music 11:00—WJR. News,* Godfrey WWJ. News. Neighbor , WXYZ, News, Denny Taylor WHFI, Bill Boyle THURSDAY AFTERNOON 11:00—wwj. News, Market, Empha:' WJR, Newt CKLW, New WPON, New.. WCAR, Ron A____ WHFI. News, Boyle WXYZ, News, Music WJBK, News, Patrick, Music _ t:oo—lklw, News, - Dove WXYZ, Dave Prince CKLW, NOWS, 10m anannon 3:00—WJR, Ttpers/Senaters Recently this riding mower was offered for sale in a Pontiac Press Want Ad . today it has a happy new cfwner. And who would have believed that Tedding the Pontiac Press Want Ads could help make lawn mowing an easier job? It will be for this happy Want Ad reader, and the man who sold the mower by advertising in the Want Ads is happy, too. When you have something to sell, it's easy to find a buyer quickly and at very low cost. Just Dial 332-8181 and Place Your Pontiac Press Want Ad Be Sure to Order the Thrifty Six-Time Rate! F_12 ________, _______-_______ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 ONE NUTIHEWS-HARGREMES BLUE RIBBON TIRE CENT THE PONTIAC PRESS, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, ANY S ZE TWO 4-PLY NYLON CORD DAYTON “FLYER 99 7 Remarkable NEW 70% PROFILE TRACTION F-70 34.88 G-70 37.88 H-70 38.88 Our very best Premium* Quality Nylon Cord Tire —Comparable with 90 or Royal Master. DUAL WHITEWALL plus FET o! 2.26 to 2.86 Per Tire — Price Shown With Trade Recardless of Condition Size Price Tax 6.50/6.95x14 $20.00 $1.92 8.00/8.25x14 $29.88 $2.36 8.50/8.55x14 $31.88 $2.57 SIZE TAX 6.40/7.35x15 2.08 6.70/7.75x15 2.23 7.50/7.75x14 2.21 8.00/8.25x14 2.30 Whitewalls Just $3.00 Additional. Price Exchange with any old tire. 6.40/6.50x13 7.10/8.15x15 2.33 7.60/8.45x15 2.55 8.00/8.85x15 2.56 / THE PONTIAC PRESS, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THREE Blue Ribbon s HEW Power Battery • You can't buy a better battery anywhere at this price • So good, we guarantee it for 3 years e Free Installation p Sizes to fit most American cars and some foreign | 36 MONTH GUARANTEE - HEAVY SERVICE" ^ Matthews-Hargreaves - 630 Oakland at Cass Blue Ribbon Tire Center -1910 Wide Track West THE PONTIAC PRESS, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FIVE FOVR DON’T MISS THIS GREAT EVENT! 9th bud 1710 sAte %"• CROSBY ,, » "'"">«iS0s92'ts»y».;£ • Uted Co, m i/Sfo cJJr5s new tirfs on , J| during *l* SoJ.d 1 oxo ,#fV iBHB 0Avs9s;uV.G,GANr/c ■ come tarty (or the best selections in colors and body styles in o 1965 Chevy/mpa/a v sPo»t Sedan V-ft . Ut QtllfjV/ J* Wjt nr Elections used cars Chevy /mpa/a / / "" ~~7/ Stem -ngine, p, (fln9. Radio W/,j ’•'itewali : Desert Be, Wrg/ide Power d Heat-*, V/ny/ Finish. ALL CARS W^ pwctS'.’. WTH Rt® n.lluenl .... nnClTC^T . • ■ HHR------ immediate Finance andCamaro^-^^^ «gSSU® "" WTES TO OF UNDERSOLD’.’. SAVE SAVE DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON MILEAGE DEMONSTRATORS p"" %795 966 °hevy lmP3ia Convertible §Sjpp* d°no Red Finish* °S' M°' Reduced $dj To J 1964Chevy lmpaia Sport Sedan 1 frtg, Ra(j(o 'P°lver Steer- '1,385 1966 Chevy BISCAYNE 4-Door V* Fngine pQlA/ . Remission, Rad*'9 '6* Heat0r Whit °, ° and Reduced $ To 199 6 CH Sport Coupe Warranty Pnl U Factory •sh. Y' Bolar° Red Fin- *** %595 1999 POHTIAC cataliha Sport Coupe Brakes Rnrl' nR' P°Wer £ wSMstfp H«‘- - 1966 Chevy ChevelleConvert. sil*' pJ“'°.'no,ic ln9, Radio j ®rSfeer. *?r$1,9# 1965 Malibu Sport Coupe *cu°r BImaK.' T,rM' B'lvei deduced $’«». t A.M. to 6 P.M.) INSTALLATION AVAILABLE Fits Most Late Model Chevrolets, Fords and Plymouths Lifetime Guarantee Muffler Never buy another muffler as long as you own your present car. If for ^ny reason muffler fails we will replace it charging only feriwitallatiofl —- Lifetime Guaranteed Muffler 13s* Choose from over STEREO tapes *T BMW M88OM STHMEQ CITY BLUE RIBBON TIRE CENTEHSSiL^ . m__ 1910 WIDE TRACK WEST 335-4181 OPEN 8 A.M. to 8 PM, ML 334-8619 EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12. 1967 C&nek AND MEET SLEDGE II HE'S HERE AT BLUE RIBBON Yes, "Sledge" is now here at Blue Ribbon after many years as Service Manager at another location. He has moved over to Pontiac's leading Automotive Center and is looking forward to seeing his old friends and customers at his new Home. complete brake job He/iei What Wa Do! • Install 30,000-Mile Guarantee Bonded Linings. • Turn all 4 Drums • Check all Cylinders and Master Cylinder > Install new SAE Approved Brake Fluid 1 Adjust Emergency Brake Road Test Adjust Brakes Free for 30,-000-Mile Guarantee SELF ADJUSTING $4.00 ADDITIONAL AVAILABLE ONLY AT — BUIE RIBBON TIRE CENTER 1910 WIDE TRACK DRIVE WEST 334-0519 The Weather THE PONTIAC PRE POOTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 —68 PAGES US. CONGRESS] VOL. 125 — NO. 134 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ JUNK ROCKET - Mrs, William Tymkow (left) and Mrs. Ronald Baker, both of Avon Township, will present this “Junk mail” laden rocket to Congress in early October along with a moving van load of the mail to make their protest emphatic. > Legislators Hope to Finish State Budget Work Today LANSING (#1 — Hoping to finish the\ budget today and take a recess after six wearying months in session, the Legislature gave final approval yesterday to bills spending $537.4 million in fiscal 1967-68’. Eliminated, meanwhile, was the most controversial item left on the legislative calendars — Sunday liquor. Proponents of the measure to allow counties to legalize Sunday sale of liquor ip restaurants without a popular vote let * it die yesterday. They conceded they lacked the votes to pass it in the Up for House action today were two of the biggest spending bills in the state’s anticipated $1.1 billion general fund budget — those making appropriations for higher education and for the Department of Social Services. Approved yesterday was a bill to appropriate $323 million to various departments from a number of special restricted funds, such as the Motor Vehicle Fund, the Trunkline Fund and the Watercraft Law Enforcement Fund. ADDITIONAL SPENDING ' That $323 million represents state spending in addition to the $1.1 billion general fund budget. Also passed by both houses in identical forms were bills appropriating $17.9 million to the Public Health Department, $2.6 million to the Department of Military Affairs, $24.68 million to the Department of State Police, $10.1 mil-lira to the Commerce Department, $3.72 million to the Labor Department and $2.14 million to the Department of Licensing and Regulation. The Senate approved House-passed bills giving $22.92 million to the Correc- tions Department and $131.16 million to the Department of Mental Health. ♦ W ★ Senate, majority leader Epiti Lock-wood, R-St. Louis, and House majority floor'leader William Hampton, R-Bloom-field Hills, said they hoped to finish by noon today. But a House floor fight was considered likely on the big higher education Mil. The Senate version would appropriate $240.2 million. The House increased the figure to $253.7 and tacked on a 5 per cent increase in aid to public K-12 schools, estimated at about $24 million. Reuther Takes UAW Bids to Chrysler Today ’Junk Mail Protest Is Going Very Well' DETROIT -Walter P. Reuther takes to Chrysler Corp. today new contract demands of his United Auto Workers union. They include profit sharing, with the threat of a strike to get ft. Reuther’s Chrysler visit is his third in as many days to members Of automotive’s Big* Three, where current three-year pacts run out Sept. 6. The drive by a group of Rochester area women to collect a moving van load of “junk mail” to present to Congress is “doing exceptionally well,” according to Mrs. William Tymkow, inia-tor of the effort. Dedication Set for Unit Hospital The board of trustees of Crittenton Hospital yesterday set Aug. 5 as the date for dedication ceremonies to take place for' the hospital's new Rochester unit. An open house for the public is scheduled die following day. Work on the new facility, located on Walton just west of Rochester, has been under way since Jnly 1965. The opening had originally been set for this month but was set back due to a series of strikes in various building trades. The 207-bed Hospital will begin receiving patients Aug. 15, according to Mrs. M. E. Allen, direct of public relations. Administrators have staffed the hospital with UO doctors; recruiting efforts are still under way for nurses. The $6,170,000 cost of the facility has been financed ^through donations, loans and federal grants under the Hill-Burton Fund. In Today's Press Sky Diving Pontiac man describes lure of sport — PAGE C-13. Troy Schools Principal, controversial system retained in heated meeting - PAGE A-4. City Affairs Commission approves land trade with Michigan Bell -r-PAGE D-6. Area News ..................A-4 Astrology ................. F-5 Bridge .....................F-« Crossword Puzzle .......... F-ll Comics .................... F-5 Editorials .................A-6 Food Section .........D-l—D-3 Markets ................. F-4 Mystery Series ........... E-U Obituaries-....... ....... E-12 Sports .............n .E-Ir-®-T‘ Theaters .................. D-7 TV and Radio Programs ..F-ll Wilson, Earl............. F-ll Women’* Pages ...... B*l—B-5 been received from a far away as Related Story, Page A-3 Mesa, Ariz., and Roanoke, Va. Forty-three centers have been established throughout Michigan to gather the mail, and some contributions have The Ivory Brothers Moving Co. of Warren has donated a large moving van and a driver to haul the accumulation to Washington, D.C., where it will be delivered to the doorsteps of the Capitol in early October. Members of the Avon-Rochester chapter of the Oakland County Democratic Women’s Federation, of which Mrs. Tymkow is vice president, started the drive late this spring. Congolese Said Eating Settlers KIGALI, Rwanda UR — A Congolese Cabinet minister today reported cannibalism of white settlers in the southeast Congo as a refugee pilot told of a stalemate between mutineers and loyal troojps in Kisangani to the north. Tshisekedi said he ordered a stop to “suoh barbarism' and reprisals” in Lu-bumbashi, which as Elisabethvllle was capital of Katanga Province and Tshom-be’s former stronghold. “I am going to Bukavu where similar acts could take {dace, all the more since the local population is still furious against mercenaries who mutinied there last week,” he said. He said the situation was fairly quiet in Lubumbashi, but the Congolese population feared mercehary attacks. Lu-bumbashi escaped the mutinous uprisings that raged last week in Bukavu, 650 miles to the north, and in Kisangani, the former Stanleyville, NO REPORTS The Belgian Foreign Ministry, which has a consul general in Lubumbashi, said in Brussels that no reports from its. embassador and consuls in the Congo even suggested that cannibalism had taken place in Lubumbashi or elsewhere in the Congo. “That does not mean such acts did not take {dace,” a spokesman added. A Cuban-American pilot who escaped from Kisangani said a stalemate seemed to prevail there with mutineers and loyal troops holding opposite banks of the Congo River. he describes as the union’* most ambitious” list of demands. Mrs. Tymkow of 47953 Dequindre Avon Township, said the drive is being made to protest a congressional plan to raise rates on personal main while junk mail (third class bulk rate mail continues to be sent by the millions of pieces each day at the same low rate it has always enjoyed. The profit-sharing goal came as a surprise Monday at General Motors. Reuther emphasized this as “essential” to a peaceful settlement at Ford yesterday. r A guaranteed annual income previously had been given top billing among union goals. INCOME PLAN Under a guaranteed annual income plan, Reuther says a worker must know at tile beginning of a year what his income for the next 12 months will be any layoffs not withstanding. RETURN FROM VIETNAM - Returning from an inspection tour of U.S. forces in Vietnam,- U.S. officials'arrive Undersecretary of State Nicholas Katzenbach and at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington late last night. Staff Gen. Earle Wheeler. McNamara is to report his From left-are Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, in Vietnam to the President. (See story, page E-U.) < On top of that, the UAW president disclosed as new bargaining opened that the union wants bonuses based on profits at tile end of toe fiscal year, just as company executives get bonuses and stockholders get extra dividends. Reuther repeatedly has failed, to gain profit-sharing from toe Big Three in past negotiations, there have been no indications toe companies are any more dis- New Michigan Law Adds to Township Officer, Trustee Terms posed to agree to it now. At a news conference preceding his visit yesterday to Ford, Reuther emphasized his determination to get it this time. A new law, signed by Gov. Romney Monday, will add two years to toe current terms of Michigan’s elected town-ship officers -and trustees. Interior Minister Etienne Tshiesekedi told newsmen at Bujumbura, capital of Burundi, that Congolese had baton several whites in Lubumbashi. He said he feared similar cannibalism might occur in Bukavu because (ft the mutiny there by white mercenaries and Katangan troops loyal to ex-Premier Moise Tshombe. The new legislation will eliminate the lame-duck period now affection township officials, who are elected in November, but must wait until April 10, before assuming office. two-year terms. Trustees are elected to four-year seats. Oh, What a Beautiful Morning... Poets rave ovdr the perfect days of June and October’s bright blue weather, but was there ever a more beautiful summer morning than today? But toe weatherman says the picture will change. He forecasts mostly cloudy and a little cooler tonight and tomorrow. mid-70s tomorrow. Considerable cloudiness and quite cod is Friday’s forecast. Township officers — including supervisors, clerks and treasurers — elected in 1966 will serve until Nov. 20, 1979,. in accordance with toe new law. For example, Waterford Township’s Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson, who was elected to a two-year term last November, will instead remain in office until Nov. 20, 1970. His term was slated to expire in April 1969. Northwesterly winds will continue at 10 to 20 miles per hour. Temperatures registering a low of 54 to 60 tonight will reach a high in toe . Precipitation probabilities in per cent, are: today 10, tonight 20, tomorrow 30. The temperature at 1 p.m. was a warm Trustees elected in 1964 also will serve until Nov. 20, 1970. ★ * * Trustees, elected in 1966 will remain in office until Nov. 20,1972. USUAL TERMS Township officers normally serve Waterford Township Trustee Herbert C. Cooley was elected to a four-year term in November. Under the new legislation, that term will be stretched until November 1972. The former expiration time was April 1971. Freezing-of-Bodies Process Detailed by Group Leaders REDUCES WAIT’ The new law reduces the wait for newly elected township 'officials to assume office from five months to two weeks. Beginning in 1970, township officials will be sworn into office on Nov. Of significance is tod no township contest will be on toe November 1968 election ballot. * A long-standing rule in the history of man Is that death signals the end of lifp. Perpetuity is not raw generally Considered a realistic alternative. But, there is hope for toe dead of toe future. Ne# techniques in freezing may open die way for prolongation of life on Earth, afterdeato. first freezing of a human last January in Los Angeles. ...... .... PURPOSE OF CRYONICS Dr. Robot C. W. Ettinger, a professor ri physics at Highland Park College, ratUned recent developments in his concept last night at an open meeting of the Michigan Cryonics Society at Stauffer’s Restaurant, Southfield. The purpose of toe cryonics (low-temperature biology) movement, said Ettinger, is to preserve a body after clinical death until such time as scientific means are available to revive, repair and rejuvenate toe whole person for a continued life. The body is packed in ice as quickly as possible^and cooled to about 10 degrees centigrade. Once the body is copied to the required temperature, the blood is removed and replaced with a chemical preservative. CADAVER FROZEN ' Appearing with Ettinger trad Robert Nelson, president of toe California Cryonics Society. Nelson, an electrical engineer, head-«ed a four-man team that carried out the The freezing process was outlined by Nelson' who carried ft out In January on Dr. Janies Bedford, n professor of psychology at Glendale College, Calif. Immediately upon death, artificial respiration is applied to prevent permanent damage to body cells that otherwise would hg deprived of blood. After this perfusion, the cadaver is frozen and stored in a special vault at minus 320 degrees centigrade. There Is no risk to the individual being frozen since failure of toe process will simply leave the person dead* according to Ettinger. About 40 people in toe Detroit area have asked to be frozen upon death, Ettinger said. Buyers Left Out In The Heat When First Caller Snaps Up Refrigerator “Plenty of action from our Want Ad. First caller rushed out and bought,” reports Mr. H.S. PRESS WANT ADS Move fast to sell what you don’t * need or want. Dial 332-8181 _ 334-4981 fV' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Birmingham Area News Ambulance Firm Loses Pact, Not Determination that an Increase of ent in income taxes Highest temperature . Lowest temperature . Mean temperature .. Weather: Morning. FM-AM Radio & Phonograph Portable AC A Battery Power W $59.95 value—compact' unit gives ~ you listening pleature wherever you go—4" dynamic speaker for brilliant sound. FM-AM radio and 3-*peed phono with flip-over cartridge: . . and batteries 3-shslf bookcase H88 ‘PANASONIC’ 10-TRS. Battery & AC Power FM-AM Portable • m x 30 x 37-Inch Hire • model 353 ot discount price. if you have a credit cord from a major oil company Or from Sear* Hudson's, Ward*, Kmart; Wane's, Penne/s, etc, you may be eligible for instant credit on purchases of $30 to $150 here at Simms. Ask us about it. NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are forecast tonight in foe Carolinas, Florida, the southern Plains and the Rocky Mountain region. Cooler temperatures are expected in the northern tier of states from foe Dakotas to the middle Atlantic states and^few England. [Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored! Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored! Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. High Taxes, Reserve Call-Up Seen WASHINGTON (AP) — 1 Congressional critics paint a dark picture of increased taxes, price-wage controls and mobilisation of reserves If President Johnson intensifies the Vietnam war. The doves are toiling Johnson through Senate and House speeches that he also will be risking World War in if he pours in a huge complement of ground forces and expands the bombing of North Vietnam. The hawks, diverted at the moment by the alarms of possible American involvement ip African conflicts, are otherwise relatively silent while awaiting Johnson’s decision after he confers with Gen. William C. Westmoreland and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. Both just returned from Vietnam. But Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen seemed to voice the general view of hawks that If Westmoreland wants |more troops, he ought to have what he needs. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, who wants a renewed effort to reduce the present level of U.S. involvement in the Asian war, cited the possible domestic effects of expanding the conflict. Israeli-Arab Forces Clash During Talks Mansfield told the Senate Tuesday that a third world war may be “already Incubating in the ever-deepening and expanding struggle in Southeast Asia.” He said every escalation thus far had failed to bring the conflict nearer an end. "Before we take another significant step deeper Into Vietnam,” he said, “it is to be hoped that we will have asked ourselves at what point we intend to Increase taxes, apply the wage and price controls, tighten the draft exemptions, call up the reserves and make the countless other adjustments in our national life which are implicit in further extensions of the American involvement.” Mansfield’s estimate that Vietnam expenditures will rise to $25 billion yearly brought a prediction from Sen. George D.l Aiken, RrVt., 18 to 20 may be WILLING TO PAT Aiken questioned whether citizens who urge intensification the war are willing to pay the price for an all-out effort. An effort by Secretary State Dean Rusk to placate senators who vigorously protested Johnson’s dispatch of three U.S. transport planes to help the Congo government appeared to have made little headway. Chairman Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Who said was immoral to send one American serviceman to file Congo, said after hearing Rusk in i closed session that he hadn’ changed his opinions about anything. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — New fighting between Egyptian and Israeli forces on land and at t sea was reported 'Riots Bring Antirighfs Acts' BOSTON (AP) - The first Negro popularly elected to the U.S. Senate says this summer’s racial violence is causing what appears to be a “punitive reaction” to the civil rights movement “Today,” said Sen. Edward W, Brooke, R-Mass., “alarmed by riots and cries of black power which have often meant violence, the mood of the nation is resistant to* progress in civil rights.” [ Brooke received the Spingarm Medal for outstanding achieve- ment by a Negro Tuesday night ■ ‘ elation from the National Associat for the Advancement of Colored People during toe organization’s 58th annual convention, today as angry Moslem diplomats at toe United Nations worked on a resolution to censure Israel for refusing, to give up the Old Gfy of Jerusalem. Israel announced that Israeli naval units sank two Egyptian torpedo boats Tuesday in toe first naval clash between toe two nations since toe Middle East war last month. An Israeli army spokesman said the engagement occurred the Mediterranean about 16 miles off the occupied Egyptian town of El Arish when the Egyptian boats fired on a patrolling Israeli flotilla which included the destroyer Elath and two torpedo boats. The spokesman said eight Israeli seamen were slightly wounded. An Egyptian communique claimed that Israeli machine guns opened fire on Egyptian forces on the west bank of the Suez Canal south of Ismailia. The communique said Egyptian guns fired back and knocked out two Israeli armored cars. It said there were no Egyptian casualties. Defeated Bill Is Slipped By LANSING (AP)—Members of the Senate Appropriations Committee demonstrated Tuesday that there’s more than one way to skin a cat or change a license fee. Observers said it was a clever maneuver, but some House members said it was * a dirty trick. Earlier in toe session, Senate Apprppriations Committee Chairman Frank Beadle, R-St. Clair, and members ChariesZol-lar, R-Benton Harbor, and Garland Lane, D-Flint, introduced a changing license fees for real estate brokers. The Senate passed toe measure but the House killed it. Then the senators tacked an identical provision as a rider the 1967-68 budget bill for toe Department of Licensing and Regulation — sending It over the House on a take it or leave it basis. Reason Why 6 Seized Ship Still Mystery MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A heavily armed band of greasy, thirsty stowaways who took command of a freighter off Miami Beach apparently vanished after listening to the ship captain’ ’ ikes for two hours Tuesday. The stowaways fled ashore after struggling for 30 minutes with the moorings of two fife-" i. They brushed past a barkeeper and his date and hailed a taxi, which has not been found, either. That was the story police and officers and passengers of the ship, the Freight Transporter, pieced together. The motive for the ship’s seizure was still a mystery. Ramon Carpio, captain of the 353-foot ship, said toe men told him they had intended to “use the vessel to hijack another ship.” When there was no sign of a rendezvous, the men grew nervous and abandoned the escapade, he said. Grand Juror Issues 2 Bench Warrants CALLED IN FOR QUESTIONING - Secretary of State Dean Rusk (left) and Sen. William Fulbright, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Fordgn Relations Committee, pause yesterday on Capitol HOI before a closed-door'session' of toe joint Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees. Rusk was on hand to defend the administration action—criticized by members of Congress—which sent three U.S. military transport aircraft to toe Congo, a new trouble area. Congress Wants to Hike Role in Troop Decisions WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress wants a much greater voice in deciding whether U.S. military forces should be ordered into new world trouble spots, members of two key Senate committees told Secretary of State Dean Rusk. He met with them Tuesday to defend the dispatch of three U.S. military transports and about 126 troops to toe Congo, Virginia Stride in Riot “We don’t wish to continue intervening here, there and everywhere,” Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., of the Foreign Relations Committee corn-molted in telling newsmen of the congressional demand served on toe administration. He also charged the administration’s Congo decision was based on. greatly exaggerated reports of dangers to Americans there. GROWING APPREHENSION Erupts NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP) - Police stood by today to maintain order at the strikebound Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co., where a two-hour riot erupted after midnight. A crowd estimated by newsmen as at least 3,000 persons turned on about 30 policemen in front of the shipyard. Some rioters overturned one police car, set it afire, and looted stores in two-block area across from toe shipyard. Bench warrants were issued yesterday by Oakland County Grand Juror James S. Thor-bum against two men who failed to answer subpoenas. Arrested, then brought before Judge Thorbum, were Emi Pavlovics, a Madison Heights druggist, and Roman Nowicki, a former Madison Heights councilman. Why they were ordered to appear Monday before Thor-burn is not known because of the secrecy surrounding grand jury proceedings. Early in the inquiry, then conducted by Judge Philip Pratt, both Nowicki and Pavlovics, along with two other men, including Rep. BUI S. Huffman, were cited for contempt of court. ducted by Thorbum cm the request of State Attorney General Frank KeUey is aimed only at aUeged criminal activities surrounding the Hazel Park Race Track. Thorbum’s authority as a grand juror expires Aug. 16, since the investigation is only a continuation of toe Pratt judicial inquiry which under law can only be conducted for one year. The crowd began to disperse at about 2 a.m., as five fire-trucks wheeled in to douse the blazing auto. About 20 persons were treated for minor injuries and -released from four hospitals. whose government is trying to overcome rebel mercenaries. Suspect Shot in 'Escape Try' One of two mpn arrested as suspects in the burglary of a Pontiac grocery store was shot by poUce early today when he attempted to escape, according to* city officers. Fulbright said the experience of toe initial involvement in Vietnam caused what he described as growing congressional apprehension over the authority of the President to order U.S. military forces into troubled areas. He said Rusk seems unaware of this apprehension. In the future, Fulbright said,1 Congress wants to be in on the decision - making. Consultation involves inore than notifying congressional leaders of decisions already taken, the chairman asserted. . In satisfactory condition in Pontiac General Hospital is Robert McCullough, 26, of 1117 Stanley. McCullough was shot once in the right leg, police said, after he and Sampson Miracle, 39, of 125 Parkdale were followed to toe Stanley address and arrested shortly after an undetermined amont of goods and cash was taken from Figa’s Market, 344 W. Ken-nett, about 3:30 a.m. Police, who said toe suspects were pursued because of a vehicle identification by witnesses, said Patrolman Robert Bates fired the shot when McCullough attempted to flee while being placed in handcuffs. O’Hara said his ambulances averaged four minutes to answer a call and challenged the hew firm to equal that time. $350 SUBSIDY O’Hara’s bid had steadily risen over the years. He started out with $350 subsidy, when the city was "hurting for an ambulance,” he pointed out. However toe costs of everything climbed since then and to keep an ambulance now costs $138 per day, he said. The Royal Oak firm at Monday’s commission meeting promised to provide equal service at a far lower rate. Miracle is in custody ip Oakland County Jail pending arraignment on a burglary charge according to officers. Theft Hits Police DETROIT CAP) — Thieves stole property from the parked cars of two policemen at an East Nine Mile Road precinct headquarters Tuesday. Representatives of the firm lid the/ were able to operate more cheaply . jue to superior bookkeeping alrd collecting services. O’Hara commented “If they can do it, let them.” He said he intends to bid again next year. Meanwhile, h i s service is ‘available any time to anyone,” he said. Wiretap Hearing for Hoffa July 24 CHICAGO (AP) - James R. Hoffa, Teamsters Union president now in prison,' will be brought to Chicago July 24 for a hearing to determine whether government wiretapping aided his conviction of fraud and conspiracy in 1964. Judge Richard Austin of U. S. District Court issued the order Monday for Hoffa’s appearance. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. The four contempt cht were later, dismissed by Michigan Court of Appeals, a] ruling that subsequently led to the disqualification of1 Pratt as the grand juror and toe naming, of Thorbum as his successor. The investigation being con- The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly sunny, cooler and less humid today. High 74 to 80. Mostly cloudy and a little cooler tonight and Thursday with chance of showers later tonight or Hursday. Low tonight 54 to 60. Friday outlook: considerable cloudiness and quite cool. Northwesterly winds 10 to 20 miles today. Precipitation probabilities: in per cent: Today, 10, tonight 20, tomorrow 30. be your own decorator with unpainted furniture *.. and when you buy it here at SIMMS annex store, you'll save more! SIMMS annex store hours are: Thurs. and Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. — Fri. 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.ifi. sanded and ready to finish yourself e smoothly sanded pine wood furniture is ready to paint or finish in any color you wish O kiln dried, too e select from many other pieces of unpointed furniture in Simms annex store. Get All the Latest 196a PANASONIC ^ Products Here at SIMMS Right Now! PANASONIC 8-TRS. Pocket Radio Camera Styled Miniature As shown — $16.95 seller — superb reception, push-pull audio output circuitry and superheterodyne for high sensotivity. Slide rule tuning. Smart leatherette camera styling. Model R1326. Only $1.00 holds in layaway. PANASONIC 9-Transistor FM-AM Portable Radio Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored Superb design and engineering. A. 2 Vi-inch dynamic speaker delivers full balanced sound. 2-step tone control. Complete ready to ploy. $37.95 seller. Model RF 680 by Panasonic 2»95 1 'PANASONIC' Portable Tape Recorder ICharge It! Major Credit Cards Honored 1 $37.95 value—lightweight and compact recorder m ■ operates anywhere. Automatic recording level — ■ control for perfect recordings, 2 speeds, capstan ; I drive wide range 3" PM Dynamic speaker. With accessorie: 1 and batteries. $1.00 holds in layaway. Model RQ113S. THE PONTIAC PRESS,. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 ByEDBLUNDEN TROY — In anemotion-packed school board meeting last night, the high school principal survived another motion to fire him and the “modular system” survived the educational trash can. In bom casee the vote was 4*3. school cafeteria. The board meeting was a climax to a long, bitter dispute on how to solve the district’s financial crisis — which is expected Jto be in the red about 1465,000 by next June — and the experimental education system in effect at the high school. the request for outside analysis passed unanimously and it was decided “sensitivity training” had already been done away with. Dr. Smith said he had “lost all confidence” with Beehard’s ability to administer the modular system. He said many complaints had been received of said, “I have to take a stand.” His proposals were; • Fire Joseph Bechard, high school principal. • Drop the Stanford System (modular) at the high school. • Return to traditional classroom procedure. School Millage Supporters Will Present Views the meeting ended with petitions being circulated demanding the school board bold another election asking for an eight-mill school levy, a request that was defeated by a 2%-l margin on June 12. 5-POINT PROPOSAL Dr. Rex Smith, schools superintendent, acting as a catalyst, clarified the issues by making a five-point proposal. “I’ve been backed into a corner,” he • Call for an investigation and eval-ation by outside educational authorities. He also attacked teachers who did not know how to handle the system and who were indiscriminate in handing out passing marks. MIXED VOTE * * * The first three proposals were defeated, Students were advised to retake classes Principal in Utica Gets Directorship UTICA — Hie Utica Community Schol Board has appointed Leonard Morrison, currently principal of Morgan Elementary School, to the post of director of elementary education for the distret. HOLLY TOWNSHIP - Proponents of a 10-mill school ballot issue will present their point of view at three meetings coming iqp in the area. Lake Orion Will Get Tough With Junk Violators The millage proposal lost in the June election by a narrow margin, but school authorities are hoping to put it across in a second attempt. At stake is about one-fifth of the school’s total «money. Of the 10 mills being asked, 7 are operating renewal and 3 represent a tax increase. The meetings are set; tomorrow, 8 p.m., Holly High School, 850 E. Sherman; Tuesday, Holly High, 8 p.m.; and July 19, 8 p.m., Davisburg Elementary. Morrison, 37, 45890 Brownell, before becoming principal of Morgan, was principal of Sterling Elementary School for seven years. The board also appointed Bernard Matrille of 11210 Saar to a position on tiie board vacated by the resignation of William Porter. LAKE ORION - The Village Council here has served, notice on residents that unsightly and unhealthy junk collections will not be tolerated. A third election may be held, if the second fails, and under study is a plan to institute an austerity school budget in the event all elections fail. According to school officials a group of 70 volunteers is helping with the mill-age election. The council added two sections to the village’s public nuisance ordinance stiffening the terms of the ordinance and establishing penalties for its violators. Excessive collection of jnnk, scrap metal, lumber and other discarded materials on private property or village premises will be punished with a fine not to exceed $199 and a jail term not to exceed M days. Complaints against persons accused of violating the ordinance will be investigated by Village Manager John F. Rein-eck who also serves as village health officer. Matrille, 44, is an engineer at the General Motors Technical Center in WaVren. Milford Rejects Bids to Fix Bridge Oxford Council OKs Hearing on Rezoning for/Expansion of Plant OXFORD — The board of education has elected Robert McWilliams as president for the coming year, replacing LouisCoryell. Roe V. Sausser was reelected secre-In January, when the council voted tary arid Stewart Langley was again to accept bids for the bridge repairs, named treasurer. Brophy estimated the cost would be approximately $12,000. While rejecting all bids, the council did indicate that it may prefer to completely reconstruct the bridge sometime in the future, Village Clerk Mrs. Norma The mice wasn’t right as far as the Milford Village Council was concerned. The ordinance was made effective immediately. REPRESENTATIVE SELECTED In other business, the council voted to appoint Village President Wallace Crane the council’s representative to a Lake Orion area recreation committee. Crane will take steps to form the committee to be composed of representatives of the Orion Township Board, the Lake Orion Youth Center, and the (Mon School Board. Formation of the committee was requested by the Pontiac Area United Fund which has approved a grant of $2,610 to the Orion Area Youth Guidance Committee to conduct a summer recreation program. FACE-LIFTING—Tbe trailer park site on Orchard Lake p"m*c Pr*“ Road in Keego Harbor gets a face-lifting. The lot was recently the roadway. The trailer park is to be relocated closer to Cass sold to the Roll Development Co. of Pontiac, whose first step Lake while space along the street will be cleared for future in renovating the site is the removal of large trees that lined stores. The 1board also discussed finding another building to house the administrative offices. Schools Supt. Roger Oberg said the high school, where the offices are how located, needs the extra two rooms which Would be made available if the offices were moved. Found in Bloomfield Hills Indian Skeleton Marked for Research The River Street Bridge has been closed since it was destroyed in an acd-man in this area, Dr. Wittry pointed out. dent lost year. FOUR FINDINGS _ 21 About four findings of Indian remains have been made recently in the Bloomfield Hills area, he said. However, he doesn’t expect many more.: “The places chosen to build homes are exactly the places the Indians preferred,” he said. ' > However, despite a renewed search the object was aot found. “It would prove extremely valuable in dating the bones,” Dr. Wittry said. He would like to know if the metal was a type brought to the continent by Europeans or one that Indians made for themselves. BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The bones of an Indian found at a building site across from City Hall will be used in. a study of ancient disease. Dr. Warren L. Wittry, director of the Cranbrook Institute of Science, said he has offered the remains for study by Dr. Donald Hagge of St. Mary's Hospital, Livonia. “Dr. Hagge baa an interest in paleopathology (ancient diseases) and is writing a book on the subject,” said Dr. Wittry. The skeleton is at the institute, and the bones are markedly arthritis and absecesses, the director safcl. They were found by workers for the Alden Building Co. on a site for the Kingsridge apartments. w 1 W ' ,1?1 Dr. Wittry said the bones were marked by the presence of a copper or bronze object believed txiried with the d e a d Indian. Gets Boys State Post 1,460 U^S. Planes Lost pontiac township — Robert mu . i 1 * of 2940 St. Clair has been elected to the SAIGON (ft)'— The United States has office of city assessor at the American lost 1,460 planes over North and South Legion Wolverine Boys State. Vietnam so far durihg the war, the U. S. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Command reported. Hill. _______ ■ • ' Oxford School Board Elects New President Copper-using Indians predated white OXFORD — The Village Council last night authorized a public hearing on a request to rezone 8.35 acres of land in the northeast section of town from residential to industrial. The rezoning was recommended for approval by the planning commission. Village Manager Robert Smalley said that the township land adjoining this acreage is now zoned industrial. He said the change within the village would allow expansion of a small Industrial plant now located la the township. The area la near some abandoned gravel pits. « 900 Baldwin Avenue For Letters to Viet GIs Agency Apologetic OPEN HOUSE DETROIT tf) — The Detroit office of the Michigan Department of Social Services was apologetic today over certain letters to servicemen in Vietnam. The letters — to servicemen whose families are on welfare — implied that the men might send home some of their combat pay. Mildred Fritz, a district supervisor for tiie state agency, said the letters were sent as a matter of form to relatives of be sent to soldiers whose income id limited and who are in battle is a question in my mind,” she said.. Hie practice was disclosed when one young soldier sent Ms letter home to ills mother. It reportedly was the first letter he got from home since arriving in Vietnam two weeks ago. The soldier's father was described as a wounded World War II veteran who has been in and out of hospitals since his service and unable to hold a steady job. Thursday, July 13,1967 Plant Tours From 11:30 A.M. to 2:30 Park At Receiving Entrance No* 1 6n Baldwin Avenue Adult and School Age Children The'form letter, received by servicemen as well as others, said, “It is important that We know about your income, obligations and contributions to this relative before we can help or continue to help your relative.” Invited She said the department is studying lie matter. “Whether or not these letters should THE Httmd erf* ife«(* STAR :. SALE! Nurtery prints on white grounds. Long-wearing cotton. Fitted comer won't pull out . ■ 800 Fitted white theet.,.Me - Hmmket eeeensie ■.Receiving blanket: aec- e. Waterproof: Vihyl. S,M,L,XL. 4 for 84c seconds of ‘Cnrity’ diapers 944 (mi Amt. STAR SALE boy*9 double- hue e | * an s NOW . . . permanent press in a boys’ double-knee jean. Our own Cranbrook brand. No-iran cotton-nylon denim. Navy, brown and olive; regular and slim, 6 to 12. Cotton canvas uppers with cushioned insoles and sure-grip rubber soles for safety! Colorful solids . . . also some > patterns in children’s sizes 8^2 *o 2. Save plenty! STAR SALE boy*9 summer-weight pujumu* Cool, wash ’n wear cottons. Coat and middy styles with short sleeves and long legs, also knee length styles. Assorted patterns on light grounds. Boys’ sizes 8 to 16. STAR SAlEr.V.: A. Sleeveless vest of Pak-nit* knit 1 cotton. Easy-rare, washable. Sparkling white in girls’ 4 to 14. B. Band leg briefs with elasticized waistband, hong lasting combed cotton. White. Sizes 4 to 14. brief* STAR SALE! Flat wcav* cotton gauze with woven-in fold line* and pinked edged Slight miiweavee won't effect wear. STAR SALE! ennitt shoe* or children stretch tots sleepers for extra freedom 44 Exceptional savings on sleepers that stretch to give with baby’s every movement. Little-care cotton-nylon terry washes easily, stays comfy soft. Convenient snap front and crotch makes them easy on or off. White, and pastels. Small fits birth to 12 mos., large fits 12 to 24 mos. STAR SALE! Eaay-care, no iron cotton piieec in nursery print* on white. Snap front. 1,2,3. We tala’ umdertremr A. Sleevelets: Cotton, 4, 12, 24, 36 mos. .*# for 88c I. Slip-on: Cotton. 4 to J6 mo*. 9 ft>r $ FREE DELIVERY With Lifetime MICARX [Plastic Tops (w) Be your own decorator... choose 1,2 or 3 pieces to tit your budget or your room. Here’s craftsmanship and. quality in beautiful nutmeg maple at low, carload quantity factory-to-you prices. Open stock bedroom furnishings styled to recapture the warmth and * charm of Early America apd constructed toBMM| • Solid Tops... Hardwood SfHRj W Interiors fLXdMj[. . Warm Nutmeg Maple Finish 338-6666 Open 9 'til 5:30 — Mon,, Thurt., Fri. 'til 9 1672 $. Telegraph, Pontiac HE PONTIAC PRESS MAKE BVEBPAQEjf May Miss Presidential OK LONDON (UPI) - Lynda Bird Johnson 'bought a mini-mini skirt and the shopkeeper.. who sold it worried today what her father will say. “I hope the President* approves,” said Harry Fox. President Johnson’s eldest daughter went into the Carnaby Street shop wearing a yellow dress that some fathers, might consider as mini as style should allow. Its hem reached the middle of Lynda's knees. Swinging London considers that most Victorian. Senior Couple Celebrates Date With Reception SIGNE KARLSTROM Recently Mr. and Mrs. Robert Livesay. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Pardee and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Gardner Jr. gave a reception in the Livesay home on Valley Forge Road honoring their parents, Mr. • and Mrs. Herbert H. Gardner. It was the senior Gardners’—50th wedding anniversary. It is rare on an occasion such as this that both the matron of honor and the best man can be present However, Mrs. A. W. Noling of California, Mrs. Gardner’s sister, came, with Mr. Noling. ★ * ★ They are presently at their summer home in Leland, Mich. The best man was Raymond Woolfenden of Birmingham both he and Mrs. Woolfenden were present. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Luther came from Grand Rapids, Mrs. Clinton Berry from Ann Arbor and Mr. and Mrs. Earle Gardner from Highland. SUMMER HOME (hi Saturday, Mrs. W. Lloyd Kemp wjll leave for her cottage at Harbor Springs. Daughter Mary Kemp of Chevy Chase, Md. will be corning for a family reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Riztey (the former Katherine Kemp) and their five children of Tulsa, Okla. will be there. The Rizleys have a cottage in Goodhart which is nearby. Lt. Col. and Mrs. Stanley E. Reinhart Jr., with their four children, will be coming from West Point, New York and Dr. and Mrs. William L. Kemp Jr. of Palm Beach, Fla. and their two children will join the family. ★ ★ ★ On July 31, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard T. Lewis will entertain at a buffet supper in their home honoring friends of Cambridge, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence M. Levine, whose son, James is conducting the Meadow Brook Student Orchestra this summer as well as performing as visiting piano artist at the Meadow Brook Festival. Tryouts Are Slated by Avon Players The Avon Players have scheduled tryouts for roles in the gay nineties melodrama “Dirty Work at the Crossroads” for 7 p.m. Sunday and 8 p.m. Monday at the Avon Playhouse on East Tienken Road. ★ ★ ★ Seven female and three male ro|es are to be filled. Experience or membership in the Players is not required. ^Performances are scheduled for Aug. 18 and 19 at 8:30 p.m. Mrs. Jack Lawson is producing the show; Mrs. Ted Stratton is directing with assistance of Mrs. Martin Rosalick. Waterford Garden Unit Plans Potluck Meeting The July meeting of the Waterford branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association will be held Thursday at noon at the Watkins lake home of Mrs. George Stout. . A potluck luncheon will precede the businros meeting, with Mrs. Arthur. Arnold and Mrs. Barry Church assisting the hostess. Fitzpatrick's Son Bom David Leigh Fitzpatrick arrived July S, his parents are the Garland D. Fitzpatricks (nee Diane Crawford) of Ida Terrace. Grandparents of the child are Idr. apd Mrs. Eugene Culps of Ferpt-barry Court and the Howard R. Crawfords of North Ardmore Street Here are two creations designed by Karen Stark for Harvey Berin, a house that makes clothes a man might buy for his wife. At left, a jersey wool dress with red, pink and gray stripes. The gray Let Her Attend These Gatherings metton coat complementing the ensemble is striped in similar manner as the dress. For evening wear, right, it’s a regal white crepe ball gown with the bib necklace sewn in. It eliminates lost jewelry. Lonely Woman Does No Harm By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: There is an older woman in our town who is a real weird character. She lives alone on some sort of pension. (They say her husband ran off and leftf^^^HHp ho- years ago.) Shea^f loves to get all dressed up and go where people Well, she must think her church membership entities her to attend the social functions that take place in the social ABBY hall of her church, because she never misses one. The fact that she’s not invited doesn’t seem to bother her. ★ * * She goes to all the teas, receptions, and parties where refreshments are served, mingles with the guests, helps herself to everything, and has a very good time. Isn’t it the minister’s place to tell her she should stay away? He sees her at all the gatherings and surely knows she hasn’t been invited. CHURCH MEMBER DEAR MEMBER: If anyone is to discourage an uninvited guest, it should be the hostess. The popr woman is probably lonely. And if she causes no harm and enjoys herself, what’s another glass of punch and a few cookies anrrid the:social-izing? * ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: I’ve always been a big fan of yours, but now I’m a bigger fan than ever, and here’s why: . While out at Arlington race track the other day I came across a horse named GABBY ABBY, so I had a hunch and bet a bunch. Die horse came in and paid over |55. I hope you won’t take offense. CHAS. FROM ELMHURST DEAR CHAS.: I’ve been told that I have “horse sense” (that’s the kind one finds in a STABLE mind). And horse sense is what keeps horses from betting on people. ■ ★ ★ , ★ DEAR ABBY: I would like to speak for grandmotHers who foel as I do, but don’t have the courage to complain: Why do young mothers 'think that since we have raised our family and now have some leisure time that we have NOTHING to do — so they give us the grand- Luncheon, Golf Game Marks Day for Club A round of golf at Pontiac Country Club followed a luncheon Tuesday for the Niblick Golf Club. Hostess for the occasion was Mrs. Paul Buechler of Motorway Drive. Some 29 members made plans for an outing Tuesday at Harsens Island. A day of golf with a luncheon at the Mid-Channel Golf Chib will be7 featured. Mrs. Wilma Dickinson will be hostess. children to raise while they go out and work to keep up with the Joneses, or to get away from the children. Senior Citizens to Meet Pontiac Area Council of Senior Citizens will meet Friday at 2 p.m. in the Community Services Building. Die speaker will be Joseph Perkowski of the Pontiac Co-Op Federal Credit Union. Please tell them that we did OUR job — now it’s tone for them to do theirs. GRANDMA W. DEAR GRANDMA: A general “statement” won’t accomplish anything. If YOU know of such a “young mother,” I suggest that YOU tell ho-. * ★ ★ For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding, send $1.00 to Abby, in care of Die Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. AT SIBLEY’S MIRACLE MILE SEMI-ANNML SHOE SALE FOR MEN FL0RSHEIM Selected Styles •17“ & $1980 Regular $19.95 to $29.95 WIMTRROP - SIBLEY HUSH PUPPIES* Selected Styles *7*o T(j$j08o VALUES TO$17.95 FOR WOMEN RED GROSS and VITALITY Selected Styles $goo g 90 REGULAR $13.00 to $19.00 SANDLER, HUSH PUPPIES® MISS WONDERFUL Discontinued Stylet *3.90 *9.90 REGULAR $8 to $20 FL0RSHEIM *15" Selected Stylet Reg. $18 to $20 Sibley's semi-annual sale is famous aft over the Pontiac area because of the wonderful values in famous brand shoes. Bring the entire family and save many dollars in this great event. FOR CHILDREH... SPECIAL GROUP HUSH PUPPIES® HOW MISS SANDLER $Q Qf| $AQA YANIGANS AND to RED GOOSE Values to $9,95 Mrs. Dennis Lewes, a former member, was a guest at Tuesday’s meeting. Mrs. Oscar Eckman of Large. Fla. 'was also a visitor. A guest day is slated at the Pontiac Country Club in August. "Michigan's Largest Florsheim Dealer' /shoes Every HI 9 P.M. Carnaby Street which popularized the mini skirt now features ' items which come nowhere near the knee. According to reports from Carnaby Street, Lynda Tuesday spent 20 minutes making up her mind and then selected the shorter model. Her yellow dress, with the knee hem and her wide-brimmed hat attracted virtually no attention as she strolled down Carnaby Street amid the wild stripes and thigh-high skirts it has made famous. ★ * * She was reported delighted. “Die weather is gorgeous,” said Lynda. Tuesday night she was guest of honor at a party given by her host and hostess, U.S. Ambassador and Mrs. David K. Bruce. Her frequent date, movie actor George Hamilton, was reported on location in Spain. It was not known if she planned to meet him in Europe. Nancy Walker Is Honored Sunday Honored Sunday afternoon with a bridal shower was Nancy Walker of Berea, Ohio, who will marry John D. Taylor Sept. 2. Seventeen guests attended the lawn party hosted by Mrs. Donald Lum, Mrs. Morris L. Hail, Mrs. Michael Drake and Mm Clarence Ridgley. ★ ★ ★ Nancy, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brown of Berea, was the weekend guest of her fiance’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D^ron H. Taylor of Harper Street, where the party was givan. Lynda Bird Johnson, daughter of the President, is shown qt left posing-in the garden of Hanover Lodge in London’s Regents fork, the official residence of U.S. Ambassador David Bruce. Early American OPEN STOCK Includes e Double Dresser • Mirror • Twin •“* Choice More BIG Values *- Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center S. TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE UKE HD. FE 8-9700 Adolescent Girls to Starve Selves Subject: Back Yard Cooks Now Appearing Wednesday Thru Saturday, BOSTON, Mass. (UPI) — Pre-adolescent and teen-Age girls who starve themselves to dangerous levels may do 'so because of inner fears of growing up, being lonely, 07 becoming independent of their families, according to a psy-chiatrist and psychologist at Children’s .Hospital Medical Center in Boston. The experts said the problem is one that may be increasing. Since 1960, they have seen about 25 cases at Children’s. Known as “anorexia nervosa,” the disturbance usually starts with a girl being-preoccupied with her- body size, contour, and a fear of STEAK HOUSE 24000 Plymouth Road CORNER OF TELEGRAPH *1.00 value now 50*: |r No-drip sponge design Can’t scratch bowl Comes With its own storage container with SNO'BOL label The refusal to eat any and all foods is connected with a deep-seated fear of something growing'inside the body. The experts figure such fears and fantasies turn out to be a disguise for the anger and built the children experience towards people in authority over them. Send 501 end one Sno-Bol label to A. E. Staley Mfg. Co.; Mop Offer, Box 9000, Dept. Fi, Decatur, III, 62525 utensil as Ray Linley of Hazel Park jgats an orqnge wedge. They are preparing seafood and fruit kabobs. The men in the class almost outdid the women in their enthusiasm. Students in the recently completed Gourmet Outdoor Cookery class at Oakland Community College find that sampling is part of the fun. Mrs. Leon Renner, Cooley Lake Road hunts for the proper H 2-9266 Amel Dunbar will teach a second and third group of students in his Gourmet Outdoor Cookery class how to bone chicken breasts. Two new classes start July 20 on OCC’s Highland Lakes campus. Hours are 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Further information may be had by calling OCC’s division of community services. Auto Agitation Motor-touring families can convert their car into a washing machine by carrying dirty duds in a large covered container filled with soap or detergent suds. The car’s motion, en route to the next campsite or motel, supplies the agitation needed for loosening soil; Wash After Wearing It is imperative to wash those conspicuous “new look” stockings — of all colors and textures — in soap^or detergent suds after every single wearing. This keeps them bright and snug to flatter legs which are always in the limelight. SPRING and SUMMER PATS and SUITS were to 69.98 were SUMMER DRESSES ready. Willis assists Dunbar in conducting the course. Prospective students are advised not to eat dinner before attending the evening class, say graduates of the first course. Mrs. J. A. Kratage, Wards Point Drive, waits with a pan of chicken as Steve Willis, second year food technology student at Oakland Community College, gets the grill Budget DRESSES were to 29.98 Better DRESSES were to 49.98 pF GET THESE SPECIAL VALUES! c°tT.l3..9« 12“ .0 M DSSJ7.9* 5“ lo ll SWIMSUITS 98J « were to 10.98 d to l SKIRTS Q88. A were to 7.98 u to 4 BLOUSES , were to 4.98 l SWIM SUITS BIG Shoe SALE! SPORTSWEAR KNIT SUMMER SUITS were to 29.98 SKIRTS SLACKS SHORTS NATURALIZER • DELjSO DEBS • MARQUISE JACQUELINE • LARKS Dress e CONNIE Dress CORELLI Casuals o LARKS Sports and Flats TTOPS Y OUNG FOLKS GIRLS' DRESSES for summer! Regularly *7 to *23 xi Now GIRLS'SKIRTS GIRLS'SWIM SUITS Famous Brands SUMMER HATS SUMMER HANDBAGS were to $15 BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS k *. , *^."d THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 AS Vvjyf La Savings on all rT our rug. 2.99 j dusters, shifts, / gowns, lingtrit - / winHm i 2.22 1A CHARGE IT Li Wm gnl Even new* mini-slips in this BSl collection of cool summer MP wear! Lace - lavished nylon tricot gowns, mini-slip*, baby doll pj's, cotton / Dacron® polyester/nylon sleepwear. E cotton dusters. 5-M-L, 32-40. Wk m Wonderful no-iron cottons, checks and novelty stylo Jamaica* wMh solid and print tops. Match them In stylo, save! 7-14. Reg. 2.99 lined Reg. 2.99 value Reg. 1.99 man-sleeveless shells Jamaica shorts tailored shirts 1.97 2-$3 3-*4 Sleeveless acrylic lacy Solids, ass't. prints in Choice of prink, solids, end 100% nylon shells, cotton, nylon stretch, novelty patterns. Many White, pastels. 34-40, Misses' sizes 8 to 18. no-Irons. 8 to 18. Little girls’ 1.29 shorts 67* Cotton sailcloth in prints, white,! colors. 3-6x. $3 to $6 summer handbags 1.67 ■ 3.67 Soft straws, wicker baskets, patents, whiles, bones and novelties! Casual and dressy styles In a fine collection! While they last! Boys* knit shirts Reg. 1.99-2.29 Flat, mesh and novelty knits in .solid colors and stripes. 6-16. Men's short sleeve sport or dress shirts, knit shirts now 1.77 CHARGE IT Regular 2.99-3.99 cotton and polyester/cotton sport shirts S-XL; Perm-press dress shirts 14-16; action knits S-XL. Shop today and savel California dresses, shifts, skimmers, 'n 2-piece outfits 4.97 CHARGE IT Right from the Gold Coast to you! Fashions to go everywhere! Dacron® polyester prints, stripes, dots, rayon linen-looks, acetate jerseys! Juniors', misses' sizes. Rayon antique satin traverse draperies in jumbo widths 2.50- Snowy white washable* that hang full from deep pinch pleats ... Easy-care window beauty ... for wide window coverage. Comfy 'at home* 2.99 daytimen 2.44 Fresh as a daisy day-timers—dll famous labels! Cation. Savel Ladies’ swimsuits 12.99-15.99 value 6.88 1, 2-pc. stylet-all mous labelsl Cotta nylons. Sizes 34 to 1x63" ;,...3.00 pr. 1x84".......8.00 pr. --- 60x84".......4.00 pr. 120x84"....10.00 pr. 180x84"............15.00 pr. Lady Popporell wide hum white cotton muslin sheets,, now Regular $3, $4 infanta* playtogs 1.79 Men’s famous underwear buys - .Sr- 3/2.99, 3/3.39 if perf. Briefs, T-shirts, A-shirts. Sizes S-XL; 30-42. Girls* cool baby dolls or gowns Easy-care cottons with cute trims. Prints and solids. Sizes 4-14.. 41*99" 72x108" or twin fitted, 1.99 81x108" or full fitted, 2.19 42x36" pillow com.....49c Finest quality snowy white mus-for extra long wear. Wide hems. Sheer whit# Dacron® panels 1.00 _ Dacron polyester wash, able white wonders. 47x45,54,63,72,81". Repeat of aotlout! Reg. 21.99 stroller 16.97 Sturdy blue sharkskin, matching bail trim can-opy, Adj. padded seat. Cannon blazer i-n "Beauti-fluff" finish. Bold, bright stripes; cotton terry 22x44" size. Guest S/S1 C«oHi4/$1 OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Drayton Open Sunday* Noon to 6 10*99 camp bad Rag. 1.29 inflatabla with mattress air mattress salt ,9.99 99* Strong aluminum Lightweight. An Inframe, folds for quick separable camping and easy storage. trjp companion. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Country, jir-ince Shadydale Gayboy R. C. Meridal# Dally Double: («- Famous "ALL-WEATHER" Tire ATTACHpD plus Fed. Ex. Tax $1.55 tb $2.05 (depending on size) and old tira • Your best fire bay in ifa price range. Pick ' your size now and Go Goodyear. Any size . whitewall tubeless listed at this one low price • Extra mileage Tufsyn rubber • Track tested e Discontinued tread design GOODYEAR RANCH AND COMMERCIAL foe Pick-Up and Panel Tracks * Tufsyn rubber and 3-T nylon bord! i Get truck-tire strength at passengeri car tire prices! J tSize listed also replaces size shown in parenthesis pOWN NO MONEY Easy Pay Plan! ALL FOBMS OF SERVICE STORE PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Saturdayt—Emergency Phone FE 5-0314 Phone FE 5-8172 1970 Wide Track Drive - FE 5-6123 - Mon.-Fri. 8:30-6, Sat. to 2:30 NUMBER ONE IN TIRES—CAR CARE AND GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Closed TrfE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY^ JULY 12, 1967 Takes Cage,Aide Pott CHARLESTON; S.C. (AP) Bill Foster, athletic director and head basketball coach at Shorter College at Rome, Ga., since 1462, has joined The Citadel staff as assistant basketball coach, Citadel Athletic Director Eddie Teague announced Tuesday. 2 Share Honors in Ladies' Golf Bobby Cruickshank and Jean Looney carded 49s yesterday 'to share, honors in the weekly Silver Lake ladies golf league. -- " - * ' W V Shirley Fredericksen took low net with a 37. Iola Dalton paced the first flight with a 39; Gloria Frank led the second flight with and Maxine Fogal had a net 44 to pace the third flight. Lake Orion's Miscues Help • OU's Pioneers Snap Losing Streak EXPERT IENGINE | OVERHAULING | GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS I LOW PRICES I j EASY TERMS | AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY AfOTOR EXCHANGE 1029 OAKLAND AVt ; R 3-7432 Oakland University took ad-jmen’s baseball league win Tues-vantage of a generous L a k e day night at Jaycee Park. Orion defense for an 11-5 city * * -. * ended a four-j Clay After Bout in Charity Cause SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Cassius Clay wants to defend his heavyweight championship in Oakland, Calif., and give all proceeds except 3100 to feed “the poor, undernourished people — white as well as black —I in Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia.” The champ, dethroned by the World Boxing Association but still king in New York and possibly California? was expected to apply to the California Athletic Commission this afternoon, in person, for a license. He let his old one lapse. The losing skid for the Pioneers (4-11) and moved them within one game of the slumping seventh-place Orion nine (6-10). The .Cardinals committed seven errors and had several other fielding lapses in handing Oakland seven unearned runs. Dave Call’s two-run double and two bases-loaded errors resulted iti a six-run decisive fifthinning for the winners. Call had three hits and three runs batted in for the tilt. After'John Rampsen’s ground ball triple sparked a three-run outburst for Oakland, the Cardinals rallied for five runs on two outfield misplays by the winners and singles by Jim Stitt, Erik Eriksen and Willie Williams. A key contest is set for 8 p.m. today at Jaycee when M.G. Collision meets defending champion Teamsters 614. 0 0 Maiming 1 1 p-*» 0 0 -Craig ss-31 State City Will Fete Goff King WHILE THEY LAST! One price offer! Sizef Plus' Fed. Ex. Tax and old tire 6.50x13 $1.55 7.75x14(7.50x14) $1.88 8.25x14(8.00X14). $2.05 7.75x15(6.70x15) $1.89 TRAVERSE CITY (AP)— Walter Hagen once ruled the world of golf as Babe Ruth ruled baseball and Jack Hemp, sey ruled the ring. Younger men have taken over te fairways since Hagen’ reign during the 20s. But the Haig, possibly the best golfer the game has known, still is viewed by many as master of them all. ★ w w Traverse City is having a testimonial dinner for the 75-year-old Hagen the second week in August. The guest list reflects Hagen’s enduring stature. Gene Sarazen might wind up as the toastmaster. And if aU goes as planned, the audience will include Arnold Palmer, Ben Hogan, Jimmy Demaret, Byron Nelson and Sam Snead. w w w A dozen 'stare from the current tour are expected. So are Johnny Revolta, Craig Wood, A1 Watrous and Ralph Guldhal, contemporaries of Hagen when ' Is name was a household word. In all, about 350 persons are expected. HELPED STATUS “This whole affair is sp fitting i a tribute to the man,” says Eddie Karcheski, Traverse City club professional, “because in addition to winning every professional golf tournament in his time, he (Hagen) did more than any other person to elevate the game of golf to the status and respectability it now enjoys. " Hagen won the PGA title a record five times. Four of those wins were in succession, from 1924 through 1927. * Hie one I enjoyed the most was tiie first one, in 1921,” Ha-says. “But it wae4un after tint seeing how many more 1 could pile up.” thrilled about the testimonial, describes it as a ‘shocking, wonderful sur- Race Results, Entries Hazel Park Results * Double (4-2-5-41 Paid $1,010.20 Hazel Park Entries THURSDAY J—Coral RMgd 2.20 Byt By* Lowell p«t» Adieu ' i ohow WMdrlng) _ ,om WIlM Stable entry 4th—410*1 Conditioned Paco, 1 ft Northville Entries Fleet of 80 Set for Sailing Event CHICAGO (AP) - A fleet of [more than 80 sailing vessels leaves the Chicago Yacht Club harbor Saturday for the start of the annual 333-mils Lake Michigan crossing to Mackinac Island — the longest inland lake race in the country. The ships leave the harbor shifts beginning at 1 p.m. They are expected to cross the.finish line at Mackinac Island sometime Tuesday. Fowl 117 Steeling Prince Issue 115 Royal T*x 1 _____ Secret 11J Deton 1 Rastus Bill 117 (—Apprentice allowance claimed Northville Results DAVE FOSTER Joined the sales staff of Homer Hight Motors in order to give his many friend* and customers the wider choice of nil three great lines of General Motors ears . •. Pontiac, Chevrolet and Boick . .. at the only showroom in Oakland County where you ean see all three. Dave^ a graduate of the G.M. Leaderahip Club, bring* with him the knowhow of SOys Homer Hight Motors, Inc. 160 S. Washington St., Oxford OA 8-2528 Michigan ft ■1 Wedges ■ is rnneoss Love 115 Shlnrono ____ Kathy xilS Hsya's Policy Fancy Atfalr xM3 Brock Brush Gallagraph !1B Whirling Sea Rory Adela 115 King of Bahram us BjGrand lit -52404: Claiming, 4 Furies ___innl L Kill Crowlse Flying Ob|*cf 11* Gogebic County xlOt Wautuccl Miss 115 Black Pepper xlll Casper ll* Buford's Duka 116 enade HP Miss Mich* ____ . smar xioa a—Emerald Court Bushsr 11* Chief a—Lofton-Blake entry Spring Babe iLady Vnix Fleet Byrd Sunny Byrd Seabiscult Scotch Victory Night Prowler wipe Res* 71h—41204/ Conditioned Tret, 1 Mile: * — TB (BtyjR Royal Abbadale 8 Graystono Lady Uncle Art One and Only , »th—ii5o#; Cmdlttenad Baca, 1 Mint Megaton , Cold. Sunday Jimmy K. Chief Marl B. Abbe Me lor Knox Green leaf Douglas '— Anderson ------Mi Claiming Pace, 1 Mila: Bobby Freeman Josedale Jet Arrow Marlin Grattan Caaandra Creed Victor Flanagan Johnnie W. Wilson B. Hedge wood 14th—SM4; Claiming Paca, l MHai Wiggle Wick Cardinal Ert Harry's King Smart Sailor Chub Volo Tessle Rosa Una Babe Dr. Medan Solicitor's Halo Star Princess Benny's Praam Betty B. Doan Dam Wary Nt Face, f Mila: Tad J, Direct • Gutty Storm W- B. McKlyo Kahla's Grattan Mentor Named at South Haven SOUTH HAVEN UR - Marion White, junior varsity basketball coach since 1963, Tuesday was named varsity coach at South Haven High School. WWW He succeeds Joe Lineman who resigned to become varsity bas-ketball coach at Farmington High School near Detroit. CARL'S GOLFLAND Pontiac and North Suburban’s Number 1 GARAGE BUILDER • Many Stylq? • AH .Sizes ^ Prompt Service ... in i , ftsa—HE STANDARD Bank Rates. So Down Payment Required Closed Sundays 852-4030 SUBURBAN Heme & Garage Builder 1598 E. Auburn Rd. Rochester SERVING OAKLiM) COUNTY OVER 35 YEARS lazelle Agency, Inc. | THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1867 •41 Choose'"Super-Right77 For More Taste —Less Waste! Enfoy; lh full flavor of "Supnr-Right" Mature, Con-Fad Bool "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS ALL-MEAT FRANKS STEAKS Round 59 JANE PARKER—SLICED SANDWICH OR Frankfurter Rolls i.37c DEE-USH BRAND m ^ Sweet Relish 39* T-Bone Steaks... ib.|19 | Porterhouse.........u.|z* "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS BEEF Rump or Rotisserie Roast .... -1 CRY-O-VAC. OVEN READY—3 TO S LB. SIZES Turkey Breasts Jr Savings A-Plenty on Fine-Quality Groceries J V. AGP—OUR FINEST QUALITY j V, AGP BRAND—LIGHT, CHUNK / ■ V, AGP—OUR FINEST QUALITY All Green Cut Spears Asparagus Tuna Fish Evap. Milk 3 89‘ h r )n^7Qc ^ cans S t 6~89( S i ^ r IN TOMATO SAUCE—SULTANA Pork'N'Beans 29* Luncheon Meat 31® 1°° OUR OWN (25 FREE WITH 100 FKG.) ^ _ Tea Bags . . A 95* PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING A A _ Crisco .... .3 ^ 85* Spic and Span . . ««•' 22* DOWNY ’ «* ' __ Fabric Softener mz 77* PERSONAL SIZE - Ivory Soap . . 4 **« 33* 13c OFF LABEL . -T m _ Top Job .... . £‘ 46* Zest Soap . . ,2 ■*« 31* IN QUARTERS—NUTLEY _ Margarine . . 5 TROPICAL PUNCH OR GRAFI ^ AsP Fruit Drinks 3 SULTANA—SMOOTH Peanut Butter ANGEL SOFT Paper Napkins 10c OFF LABEL—GIANT SIZE Sunshine Rinso GIANT SIZE Advanced All . . GIANT SIZE Fluffy All . . . . 10c OFF LABEL Vim Tablets . . . l-QT. 14-OZ. CANS 1-LB. S-OZ. JAR 3-LB. 2-OZ. PKG. 3-LB. 1-OZ. PKG. 2-LB. 6-OZ. PKG. FOR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS Dishwasher All 1-LB. 4-OZ. PKG. 89* 85* 59* 25* 66* 71* 79* 57* 41* IONA—YELLOW _ . ^ ^ Cling Peaches 4 as- 99* Fig Bars ... .2 - 39* ARP BRAND—ALL FLAVORS (6-CT.) Mrr WT _ _ Instant Breakfast ST 55* Green Beans 2H 49* KITCHEN CHARM A _ - Waxed Paper 2 ^ 41* irr*“w** NET WT. WJR. Sweetner . ... VS 59 regular or menthol nvtwt Aero-Shave 'S /---------------------- NIWI SOFTLY (2-FiY) B0XES H GRANULATED BEET mg M A Facial Tissue 3 ”* 59 | Sugar .. 5 ■“ 49 AW BRAND—AUOMM NITWT. Toothpaste 29 SAVfc AT ARP _ _ Miracle Whip . . - 49' HILLS BROS. Mrr WT A«a Instant Coffee . .'S51 l19 ALL FLAVORS |UB| • . . . M¥ - ^ IHetrecal Shakes ? 69* ALL FLAVORS - Carnation Slender 4 «« 89* Potato Buds • • 69* Silver Dust Blue & 81* LAUNDRY DETERGENT, LIQUID ColdwaterAII . SCOURING POWDER 4 Comet Cleanser t FOR WHITER CLOTHES Stardust Bleach TSc OFF LABEL—GIANT SIZE Surf Detergent | NET WT. ' 14-OZ. B CANS NET WT. 13-OZ. PKG. 3-LB. 2-OZ. PKG. Breeze . . . . 8c OFF LABEL Lax Liquid . . 2-LB. 4-OZ. - PKG. 1-PT. «-OZ. BTL. 73* 31* 39* 59* 81* 49* l-PT. 4-OZ. BTL. 99* 12c OFF LABEL—FAMILY SIZE Listerine antiseptic PINE SCENTED . DT — ^ Lestoil . .... 59' BIG ROLL 1g0 Scot Towels . . .sr 31 J* IXTRA DRY SKIN NIT WY. KM. Pacqums Lotion ,,&tI-69 10c OFF LABEL JJLt — — Instant Fels . . . 3;v=! 66* ARP Our Finest Quality S-Grnin m , a Aspirin Tablets 100 ^ 29* and a Share of Product Prizes, too MORE Of LAST WEEK’S WINNERS Robert O'Connor, Detroit....................$100 Agnes Pltilijps, Orchard Lake............... 100 L. H. Lynch, Warren..____________________ 100 Virginia Sprickett, Kalamazoo............ 100 Leslie Hiatt, Niles ______________ 100 Mrs. B. A. Sulkowski, Plymouth___________100 Lucilla Sklarczyk, Allen Park....________ 100 Jacguetine Nelson, Rasa City_________..._ 75 Mils Pat Root, Hartford.SO Haidn: M, Potter, Cadillac................ 50 CLIP THESE EXTRA PRIZE SUPS | TO HELP YOU WIN! \X? $500 WINNER FRIOBS EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JULY ISA. "SUPER-RIGHT" FUUY COOKED HAMS BONELESS 79s "SUPER-RIGHT" BONELESS Strip Steaks .... -I99 FRYER BREASTS WITH RIBS ATTACHfD OR m ^ Fryer legs . . . . » 69c "SUPBR-RIGHT" BOSTON STYLE BUTT _ Pork Roast . . . . «69c CUT FROM BOSTON SYLE BUTTS • Pork Steaks so* -79* FROZEN (5-LB. BOX 1.«9) Cod Fillets...................-39* FROZEN, DELICIOUS Haddock W . . .-49* -friO—3SBB1> YOUR CHOICE — AGP GRADE "A" Chopped Broccoli or CUT CORN 2“st39‘ Macaroni & Cheese ’SSf49* AGP—OUR FINEST QUALITY ^ Crape Jake . . 2 E 39* AGP ALL-BUTTER Cream Cheese Cake % 79* AGP BRAND—ALL-BUTTER PECAN Coffee Cake .-.Ml* YOUR CHOICE — AGP GRADE "A" Cottage Fries, Potato Morsels or PILLSBUKT A u„ WT m A Buttermilk Biscuits 2 ™is 19* Plastic Strips . J 59$ 77* 2 *■ 391 CHOCOLATE COVERED ICE CREAM Cheerio Burs 12*59* MEDIUM SHARP Frankennmth Cheese -79* MILD COLBY _ — Pinconning Cheese -75* AGP—LARGE OR SMALL CURD ... — A Cottage Cheese dt 49* Choc. Milk .. . *■ 27* PKStrr TO”'1— NITWT. «Oc Presto Whip . . 'SSf-38 ASSORTED FLAVORS YUKON CLUB Beverages Regular or Lo-Caf 12FL.OZ. CAN ASSORTED FLAVORS SOFT DRINK MIX CHEERI-AID 6 19 r THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 Jhe following are top prlcos cpering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by tham in wholesale package lots Quotat: ''ns are furnished by die Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Afonday. ' Produce FRUITS Applet, Delicious, Rod, bu....... Apples, Delicious, Red, C.A., bu. .. Apples, Horgierw Spy. bu......... Apples, Northern Spy, C.A., bu. Apples, Steele Red, bu. .... Apples. Staple Red, C.A., bu. - ■ • Strawberries, 14qt. Cnt. .,...... VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu. .............. Broccoli, di. belt, 2.90 ..... Cebbage, Curly, bu. ............. Oitlans, Green, dt. bch. ...-.... Cauliflower, dz. bch. ........... Ctfery. Pascal, dz. bch. ........ of dz. bch....................... KdHirabl. di. bch............... Onions. Green, it. bch. —w....... Pets ley, Curly, dz, bch. ....... Parsley, Root, dz. bch........... Peek Green, bu. Radishes, Red. dt. bch. ......... Redishes, while, dz. bch. ........ Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch.....».. Squash, Italian, V: bu....... , Squash, Summer, VS bu............ Turnips, dz. bch. ............... Turnips, Topped, bu.............. GREENS iter .£• • K4e, bu. ........................ MUStard, bu. ............... |3Mich,bUbu. '".'■■■■............ Turnips, b«...................••• lettuce and greens Ewl Bleached, bu................. I5S2!*-,' :: xso .. 5.50 Lettuce, Remelne, I Poultry and Eggs w , v DETROIT EGGS _ DETROIT (AF)-(USDA) - E paid per dozen by first race! CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mereanti e butter steady; whol *0 B *4; l» C _ Eggs steady to firm; -.— prices unchanged to^2 higher; 32; mediums 21; standards 29; checks II. CHICAGO POULTRY Need More Yanks—Viet Chief ABOARD USS CONSTELLATION un - Chief of State Ngqy-f Van Thieu said today South Vietnam's 350,000-man regular army will have to be increased and made more efficient to press the war against the Com' munists. But Thieu cautioned that any increase in the armed forces woqld have to be weighed against the effect on the nation’s economy, the availability of equipment and the time it would take to train the new soldiers. ★ ir it Because of this, he said, a substantial increase in American troops was needed as soon as possible in South Vietnam to 'exploit die successes we already have." he would make no estimate of how many Americans he believed were needed. “I believe that, with equipment and financial., help from the United States, we will have more troops ready to meet any situation," said Thieu, a lieutenant general who is running for president in the national election Sept: 3. MANPOWER LOW U,S. sources have 'indicated that South Vietnam had scraped the bottom of its manpower pool and could not substantially increase its armed forces. But Thieu said, “We„ still have the manpower for that." Echoing a statement made Tuesday by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara that allied troops should be used' more effectively, Thieti said “i big program to increase the efficiency of the South Vietnamese operational forces and popular forces militamen" was under way and would start to show results in about one year, Eventually, Thieu said, there will be more Vietnamese troops to ‘relieve the American troops from the operational and pacification task. It should and must be dpne." Thieu spoke with newsmen after presenting 62 medals to pilots and other officers enlisted men of the U.S. 7th Fleet aboard the big aircraft carrier Constellation, cruising off North Vietnam in the Gulf <3. Tonkin. The New York Stock Exchange AdMIMs .40b ‘ drtes 1.40 miril .50 ^...'Ridfn 1.50 Alley Cp .10o AltagU 2.40b g Low Last Chf. 4 55% 55% 55% -I 64 63% 63% -t I 63% ,63%, 63% .. 3 25% 25 Va 25% -4 I 40% 40% 40% ... 7 11 10% 10% — % t 70Va 70% ‘ 3 11% 81% 81% -79 46% 45% 45% — 2 41% 41% 41% <— 37 89% 09 It -, 12 51% 51% 50%«+ nHome 1,20 18 6 i 20% 20% — 1 AmMFdy .90 fmri I Am Motors i, I AmNGas 1.90 '"‘ Am Photocpy Livestock 27-S;' special fed AMP Inc ---- Atnpex Corp .Amphenol .70 ! Armen Sfl 2 I 23% 23% 23V. . I 52% 92 Vj 521k - ce Co i.4o nitCS 1.40 _. JltWT 1.10 GtA&P 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt Wttt Ffnl GreenGnt JO Greyhound 1 GrumnAir .10 Gulf Oil 2.M GullStaUt .JO I 58W 583« 5BH + I 2740 267/a 27V. I 234k 2340 23v2 ....50g 7 45 HewPado..20 Hoft Electron HoIMJnn .50 11 s 45'/. , Pullman 2.10 Reyn Mat. .9i Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.4 Roan Sel ,35| Rohr Cp JO RoyCCola .7 Royal Dut li (hds.) High Low l StJosLd 2.00 91 23 2240 23 + 4 128 3340 3240 33 — 4 Scient Data SCM Cp .40b Scolt Paper 1 SbdCst L 1.80 SearIGD 1 .......Atchison I-*# I 24.50-1 All Rich 2,80 , DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USDA) — Cattle SOwBstaughter steers »50-1 Wzwur— " |U 27.5E; mixed good and . choice _ —. goof 24.50-26; standard and low 23*50. Heifers - few lots choice 25.75- Avnet ,50b »Xm"pjw.is, - 7. Avon M '•* “ ^ report until later. | I BJWiwwteli S3S ffin'Si.S' £SB£ 48 » 2140 w _____ OH 2.10 « Sinclair 2.40 SiiiaerCo 2,20 Smith* 1.80a SOPRSU 1.27g SouCalE 1.40 South Co 1,02 SouNGas 1.30 SoMhPac 1.50 Sperry Rand 314 2 \5alers 0 9-10. Beckman .50 f CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)—Hogs ^ fisSbs* 24.00; °l-2 20G230r'lbs 23-25-2: 1-2 100-210 lbs 22.75-23.25. Cattle 1,200; slaughter steers genei steady; scattered loads mixed high ch inf -prime 0,100-1,250 lb slaughter st - 7- -- «». -*—«~v i |bs 25.50-21 000 - 1,200 Beech Ar 'liot&sV 1.10-27.00; choice 000-1,350 lb (nixed nod I ' (TO fl 25.25-25.75; sea1.--. — —— — — — i nunnr 85*1,000 lb slaughter heifers 25.00-26.00; Bu(ova LOFGIs 2.80a ‘ToS: American Stock Exch. ,54k 54k 54k-1 10 1544 154k 1 25 384k 384k 3S4k - 1 30 58 574k 58 -14 15 12344 12344 12344 I 334k 334k 334k I 254k 254k 254k - 40 514k 514k 514k -+ 2 1244 1244 .1244 + 34 7544 73.,, 7544 + 6 44k 64k 44k-J 98 73 72% 72% - StOlK StdOi 85 29% : 8 66% 4 35-50% ! 128 59 2 10% 10% 1 12 32% 32% 2 , 18 68% jA t 16 68% 68% i GIs, Red Units Battle in Jungle VC Strikes in Forcti at 2 Delta Outposts SAIGON (A^fcb American troops werej-iocker in heavy combat today with a Communist force attacking in the rainswept jungle of the' la Drartg Valley area of South Vietnam’s central highlands. As fjghting erupted In the central" highlands, Communist guerrillas struck in force against two Mekong Delta-outposts before dawn but were chased bock across the flooded paddyfields with heavy losses. it * it American warplanes and naval ships carried the war to North Vietnam again with air raids deep in Red territory Tuesday and ship-to-shore bombardments far up the coast. Five Red MIG2ls were reported sighted, The U.S, Command said they refuted battle. U.S. headquarters said a unit I of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division was fighting off Red fire from three sides according to the last report from the la Drang battlefield.- The size of the American unit was not known in Saigon. By Private Enterprise Council Big Government Fought ■ By JOHN CUNNIFF i 1>e Council for Private En* AP Business Analyst terprise, whose main purpose is NEW YORK — Philosophical’tot“publicize the importance of distinctions sometimes fail to disturb front-line fighters lit the continuing war between private] enterprise andl what some businessmen c on-sider to be the swollen monster of big govern-j ment. The brand-new i Council for Pri-j____________ vate Enterprise, ... CUNNIFF for example is headed by Edward Hood, who also heads the Shipbuilders Council of America, which represents an industry well-subsidized by big government. MOUNTAINOUS AREA Hie fighting raged in a Grant Awarded to OU Professor to Find Writers An Oakland University English professor yesterday was awarded a $3,000 federal grant to discover new literary talent in the Midwest. The grant will provide Thomas Fitzsimmons, noted for bis translations of Japanese poetry and his own poetry, with funds to seek out and confer with unknown writers and] those who oppose government regulation on the grounds that the fewer the restrictions on business, the better It is for both buyer and seller. And there are those! also who believe that certain government services in fields such as recreation and entertainment are inherently bad, even when they offer little competition to private. enterprise. LEGITIMATE RIGHTS The council, however, states simply that such activities are wrong because they deprive business of its legitimate rights. Private enterprise, they say, is the American way. It built the country, It is the strongest system. Despite its great strength, however, private enterprise is hardly winning the battle with a growing government, the council feels. > private enterprise in every p sible way," maintains a simple, I pragmatic approach to the contest. Its view is that the more work 8 the government handles," the s less there is for private enter 1 prise. And so it' suggests that o wherever possible the govern- ' ment get out of retailing, en-1 gineering, dredging, employment agencies, ‘florist shops, . parking lots, restaurants and * shipbuilding. MORAL APPROACH In this way it is unlike itsN3 cousins ih the fight against big c government, the largest enter-1 prise in America today. Many other opponents of big govern-f ment take a moral or legal or h political approach. First, there are those who c simply dislikd big budgets arid deficits. This group maintains that big budgets are mostly po- b litically inspired and that the e government is acting immorally e in passing orr debts to future P generations. 1 ... Another group consists oflw.as formed representatives of various industrial associations, many of which have lobbying as their main concern. They meet once a month, informally, in Hood’s office. This is a problem that won’t be corrected immediately, if ever," Hood said. "This little effort isn’t going to solve the problem.” The little effort Hood refers to .students who have undiscovered moun-1 literary ability. . tainous area/close to the Cam- In annouricing the grant from! v Tuesday Action in State Capital By TN Associated Press 23 26% 26% 26% — bodian frontier where fresh North Vietnamese regiments have been braced to drive into South Vietnam during the present rainy season for another effort to wrest the vital highlands from allied control. The 4th'Division infantrymen began running into Communist soldiers shortly after daybreak. An artillery barrage was called in on one group of 30 Reds. A few minutes later another group of about 150 Communists was brought to battle in' a jungle firefight. * ★ * * A short timb later another unit of the 4th radioed that it was being pressed on three the Office of the National dowment for the Arts, Congressman Jack McDonald, R-lSHh District, said it is the first of its kind. Fitzsimmons, 1105 Lake Angelas, Lake Angelus, will report his findings in three months to a panel in Washington, which will decide if any of the authors’ works will be published. miPJP American reinforcements be- !! gli 8S is Z £ gan to pour into the battle from 4j helicopters shortly after noon. 44 Reports from the remote battlefield were sketchy. The site is ^ j near the la Drang Vallex where ^ the biggest battle of the Viet-;«| namese war was fought two ‘ years ago with heavy losses on both sides. StdOilOh 2.50 Mn Warn ? StauffCh 1.80 SterlDrug .90 13 213Va 211% 213% Business Notes x PLd .359 1 18V, P -l A Bloomfield Township man, - H ETAIONSHRDS manufactur e a prove a tW-year agreement be--1days whereever possible until , 'Johri B. Nicolls, Jr, has been I j^rs l '1 named original Plotter Gets 2nd Jail Term A Livonia man, sentenced to prism last week for attempting to conspire with his parents to kill a witness to a robbery, yesterday was sentenced to*an-prison term for the holdup. Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem ordered that Jules V. Soma, 25, be sent to the state prison at Jackson for 4. to 20 years. * Last Wednesday Sorna, his father, John, and mother were sentenced by Circuit Judge Farrell E. Roberts for an attempted plot to have Mrs. Virginia Gogates of Detroit murdered. tlK^dbuthern portion of tho roeny relotod to Intlttrofion supplies Into South Vietnam Signed wverol bills h measure providing that ttii number of days of school s x—Denotes Immedii ,t°.r 'xrn: x-SBh. Beadle. Appropriate *17.» x—SB73. Beadle. Appropriates S22.0 ... restricted funds. — HP2232, Engstrom. Approprlslet *15,0 million lor llconslng and regulation. x — MB 2134, Engstrom. Appropriates $24.3 million for public safety. Accepted conference committee report x — HB 2443, Holbrook. Credl^ Interest Instead o! Passed: SZ. HB223i7 Engitmi ..m, a,____Regulation. - HB2134, Engstrom. Appropriate S24.3 million to dwortments of Stele I 374k 37 37 — V, Fetmont Oflc FlyfTIger J0H Frentier l,61f Geij Plywood Goldfield' '40 Gt ’ Bas Pet Guff Am Cp HoarnerW .82 Hyom Mfg A ■ ComICre 1.80 6 ComSolv 1.20 * , ComwEd 2.20 ^ConEdis 1.80 .ConEietlnd l lagnavox .80 37 4 58% 58% 58% -+ 223 7% , 7% 7% tnte % 124 3% 2% 3 60 8% 8% 8% — % 246 15% 15% 15% 4 .Minog NewPark Mn Paocoasf Pet ■ Pf mui Scurry Rain Sigpal Oil A 1 sSrry R wt Starharplnst Syrttex Cp .40 TeteM .40 WdWoclr “ 28 122% 122’/4 122Va 364, 37% 35% 35% 163,38% 38% 38% i 33% 33%» 33% — 1 i 25% ?5% 25V§ — \ Copyrighted by The Associated 303 88% 84% 87% 4*3%ban Riv 1. 163 29% 287% 29, + % OaycoCp 1 yin aiA «% + % |Day PL 1, + % j Deere 1.802 —D— li MM'' MartinMar MayDStr 1 “ivtag 1.6 . .“Calf .40t McDonD .4 Mont DU t 1.2 MontPow 1.2 MontWard 1 Motorola 1 ..jtCash I. NatDairy 1 Nat Dist 1 Nat Fuel 1, N lag MP 1.10 Nonir * a * t 24% '24% 24% + \ 30% 30% 30% + Unit Cp .50^ USPi^Ch 1.50 US Smelt lb US Steel 2.40 Slocks of Local Interest ■ loalf’ DomeMln DowChm } DynamCp .4 Figures after decimal points are eighths FoVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD ere rep sent alive Inter-dealer prices of approx,* mltely II a.m. InlarOealer markets] East Air .50 ctiihge throughout the day. Prices deiEKodek 1.40s m*rkUP' merhdown or f-J-Yy*, Xcoro. ....................WpM Associated Truck ...........10.0 10.4 Brapn Enginering CBtans Utilities Cj DGeex Chemical . OtMngnd Crystal . ■ Frank's Nursery . Kefty Services ... Mfhsuk Rubber Co. Central Airlines U ; Eversharp ::;tM pal . 24.4 27.2:Palrch Cam 1.20 Pia'pop 1J6 ptO PU t.44> FMC Cp .75 Poodrojr .» ' FordMot 2.40 ForeOair .50 1 iFroopSut 1.25 iJpruonQp 1.20 . 32.2 WEI .. .27.4 UA\ . 25.7 S0J I 32.2; 1 45V5 45 Vk> 454k + ] 4 304k 30V» 304* +1 43 184k 1844 187k + 4 —E— 129 567k 54 Vk 5444 — 4 22 1432 143 mB. +14 14 M4k 3344 334k + 4 22 B9'« ,8744- #9(4 fVi 3 344k ;344k 344k — V 4 M'/k 244k 24Va .... 12 044 044 944 + 4 22 25Vk 2S'A 2SVk - 4 —F— 17 105 104 104g2 - « 48'4 48Vi, 5(14 - 4 400 3344 33Vk 33Va — V 1 33'/, 33'4 33V, 44 241k EM , 244k + \ I 3 4444 + 4 if®-, Wi TOk '71VS ....; T 354* 381k 5544 .... 4. 164k 144k 144k .... 41 ,\S04k 5044 5044 15 244k 244k 244k + 4 7 52Vk 42Vk 42Va — V tl 3544 354k 354k .... Occident JOb nfcslBil Fund •M0IR88 --*••• ars, mm* 9m ... 9J5 9.79 .15*7 20.41 GemiSto 1.3 .11.32 1157 < - ■ 15JO *.25 W 1 J* sSmhiI 1 j 14.04 I tl* 12.07 g PubUt iS ..Ilia 14.00 oTet El 1.20 8 ..t*B >IJ4 Gen Tire JO £ m iiu mi +i 3 754k 7540 754k — 1 17 704 7014 70V4 — 4 98 794k 79 »40 . 23 75Vk 7510 7540 + 4 equipment | ^ _ , , manufactur e r s ; 5^:5 _ sales manager, i mu +i’m| tof Ford Motor J Ik- 44 Co.’s U.S. TVac-: k’liS- vk tor and Imple-l Mvo 1 it ment Opera-: l 69?S -i4k rions. J 4540 - vx Nicolls of ! 2Pk ,A 1723 Blair NICCHXB 74% i y* House Court was formerly on ? \$t ~ '‘jspecial assignment to Ford’s < 34/4 + v. | Overseas Tractor Operations!. 4oi* _ 4* He joined Font’in 1947. Change eligibility r _________ __ jetansiqn of workmen compensation to agricultural employes. HB2739, Kek* Est^llsh^tem^rer^ pt Gogates was operator of a party store ml * ^ ^ Farmington Township which]« 3 Witnesses Testify in Beating Death Three witnesses testified at a preliminary hearing in' Pontiac Municipal Court yesterday that Porfidio R. Acosta, charged with murder, had been involved in a'fight with his girlfriend less than two hours before she was found beaten to death. ★ * * Acosta, 19, of 307 Ferry, is accused of killing Linda D. Arnold, 15, of 142 Clifford, a runaway from home, last Friday morning. ★ * ★ The hearing, which will determine if there is probable cause to bind Acosta over to Circuit Court for trial, was adjourned until next Tuesday by Judge Cedi McCallum. . Treasury Position Withdrawals Fiscal 4 1,414.041,448.1 -Total Debt 324.451,414,791.1 Id Assats-^ Tuesday's 1st I I padartd b SIX. ot F i Asso 35 ». ; Pac Petrol PacPwLt 1.2 PaeTIrT 1.21 Pan A Sul A p«n Am ,4t PhalpD $M§ Phi la El v 1.44 Phil Rdg 1.40 PhiWMT TJO Phlll Pat 2.40 PltneyB 1.20 Pteyn 2 JO Polaroid .40 PrScterG 2.20 PubSvcColo I PuWdnd .3* PugSPL 1.40 9 70W MW TOW ... IS. $44 #0 V 13 $1% »Vk SI44 •* 9 29tk 294k 224k— W 20 344k ilVi 344k 21 274k 27 27% 114 154k ISVk 154% 11 25 2P4 2444 - 44 2B>/4 2744 2 74k - 175 324k 32Vk 32 V. .. 12 354k 35V* 3544 + ,;*i HI 244k & 3 3140 3144 3114 + 134 4944 49 49 - 4 110V< 1094k IKK* ... 38 444k 4344 44 — 4k 23k 38 3M 374k 21 #4 154k 14 .,,25,. 744k 744k :744k' 'em 334% rot wTisS rot ro$ M'ffiS (M liio . ... 25 454* 4544 454k — 4k M 219 Ik 21844 - ( 274k 274k 274k 4 30 5544 mt* 55'A V 1 | WashWat 1.14 WarnPIc .50a Woolworth 1 Weyerhr 1.40 Worthing 1.50 White Mot ^ 2b WnBanc 1.10 19 29 29 Vestg EJ 1.40 34 S54k 544k Whirl Cp 1.® 15 41 40W Vastn AirL 1 45 5414 J39k —X—Y—Z— (erox corp 1 58 29144 289V. 2 /ngstSht 1.80 If 3244 M«k 1.20 1# 4314 ( Unless otherwi l, unofficial 4344 + ___ noted, rates of dlvl- .... jregoing table are annual disbursements based on the lest quarterly 'anttuai declaration. Special or vidends or payments^ not desig- "oltowin” footnotes. ,, . ■ . .... Also extra or extras, b—Annual plus stock dividend. c-Llquldatina >nd. d—Declared or paid In 1947 stock dividend, e—Paid last year. Payable in stock during 1947, estl-j cash value on ex-dividend or ax-dlstr(button date, g—Declared or geld. » - -r- uear, h—Declared or paw attar id or spill up: k—Declared DOW—ZONES AVERAGES STOCKS: ’ *> ' 30 Industrials i Higher grade rails News in Brief Waterford Township police are investigating the larceny of a chain saw and gasoline, total value of 9175, from a garage at 740 Lakeside owned by Elizabeth Lake Estates Improvement Association. Mrs. James T. Moore of 4230 South Shore, Waterford. Township, reported to township police yesterday the theft of a diamond' ring, valued at $1,100, from her home. Garage, Rummage and Brie-a-Brac. K35 Menominee, corner of Ontario. Sat., July 15.—Adv. STOCK AVERAGES mp ii li J Ind Ralls Util III . +U +fJ + 4 + . 440.8 202.3 140.3 f . 459.3 200.9 1 49.1 3 .. M2J HU tAJ | . 4flJ 1«J MU' i .. 444.8 174.3 lSlI 3 .473.9 200.9 159.1 3 ...jmj'.m* 140.9 2 > 537.9 VM \ EJ ft J 83.7 (OJB+0.03 Yepr -Ago h' **hM| IM High Mj7-Fg.«1942 Low i2.2l4€T3 1WS High 85.80..... 1944 LOW BOND AVERAflpS ' by The AteeelMad Pr« ■ a 'w j#*' -Rails ind urn fed l $ as ■ ELI HI;. *1.| mi 04.0 12.7 ’ 92.7 73.0 95.4 8L9 92.4 , 70.1 91.4 iCf. 90.5 8! i,4 li 1 ELECTRICAL SYSTEM CHECKER-Pon-tiac Motor Division has announced a new, method of checking the electrical system on its cars through a built-in diagnostic system called the Sercon, which stands for service connection. The procedure (right) utilizes a new analytical device that connects with the chassis wiring and allows the Pontiac me-, chaidc to check all of the electrical systems at one time. A series of colored lights (left) on the Sercon panel shows any electrical malfunction immediately. New Way to Check Car Electric System Pontiac Motor Division today anrmnnred a revolutionary new method of checking toe electrical system on its cate that is said to be considerably more accurate and time saving than existing electrical checks. The new built-in diagnostic System, called Sercon, w h |c h qtepriq for service connection, is a Pontiac exclusive, according to a Pontiacspokesman. The procedure utilizes a new analytical de vice that con- nects with the chassis wiring so that the Sercon checks all electric systems at one time which formerly bad to be in- Spected one at a time. series of colored lights on a portable instnnnent panel on the Sercon enable the mechanic to immediately .spot any electrical malfunction in the three miles of wiring in ti» car. * The Sercon gives the customer a thorough electrical check and indicates if the entire elpetrical system coming through the diagnostic connector is working properly, according to a Pontiac spokesman. V- Sercon was developed in cooperation with v Pontiac’s engineering department and the Sun Electric Chip, It will plug into all 1968 Pontiac, Tempest and Firebird models,and adapters are available tor all 1964 and later-model Pontiacs. tHE PONTIAC PHESg WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 196T —Television Programs— Programs fumishod by stations listad in this columnar* subject to chang* without Wtice TONIGHT 6:11 (2) (4) News (C) . (7) Movie: “Joe Butterfly" (1857) Burgess Meredith, Audie Murphy, Keenan Wynn. (R) •, (50) Superman (E) (C) (56) Misterogers , 6:15 (56) Sing Hi - Song Lo «:S0.(2) News - Cronkite (C) (4) News — Huntley, Brinkley (C) (9) Twilight Zone (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Juvenile Court (C) (9) BatMasterson (R) (50) Munsters (R) (56) Antiques 7:26 (2) Cost in Space — Dr. Smith finds the golden hammer of the Norse god Thor. (R) (C) (4) Virginian —< A farm girl wanting excitement leaves home to work in saloon. (R) (C) (7) Batman — Mr. Freeze kidnaps a beauty contestant. (R) (C) (9) Movie: “The Charge at Feather River” (1953) Two women are captured by the Cheyennes. Guy Madison, Vera Miles. (R) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) Living for'the Sixties 8:66 (7) Monroes - Clayt signs on as a cowhand in a Mapoy cattle drive. (R) (C) (50) New Breed — A lieutenant is assigned to the driver who killed his wife. (R) (56) News in Perspective 8:10 (2) Beverly Hillbillies -Musicians join the Clam-pet ts In filming a soap commercial. (C) (R) 9:60 (2) Green Acres — Lisa tries to help Ralph the lady carpenter snag Hank Kimball. (R) (C) (4) Bob Hope — A lonely heiress falls in love with a handsome, but poor, dreamer. (R) (C) (7) Movie: “Wild in the Country" (1961) A coun- Reeves, Christine Kauf-mann. (50) Movie: “Brother Rat and a Baby" (1940) Wayne Morris, Jane Wyman. (R) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C). (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (Rf 1:2$ (2) Jackie CraMpton (C) 1:30 (2 As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (4) News (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) ,, (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) , (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Love That Bob (R) 2:56 (7) News (C) (9) News 3:01 (2) To Tell the Truth (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (9) Matches and Mates (C) , (50) Topper (R) 3:25 (2) News (C) 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Captain Detroit (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Bozo the Clown (C) (7) Dating Game (C) 4:36 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) One Step Beyond (9) Fun House (C) 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 5:00 (4) George Pierrot -* I “Africa’s Big Game." (C) . (7) News (C) (9) Woody Woodpecker (C) (50) Alvin (C) 5:30 (7) News—Jennings (C) (9) Stagecoach West (50) Little Rascals (R) 11:30 (2) M o vi e: “The Trudk « (56) What’s Ne* iarf” 5:45 House Rules Unit Develops Positive Look TV Features ‘WILD IN THE COUNTRY,* 9 p m. (7) TALE NT FESTIVAL, 9:30 p.m. (9) , STEVE ALLEN, 10 pJIL I (2) try boy is encouraged to be a writer. Elvis Presley, Hope Lange, Tuesday Weld, John Irland. (R) (C) (50) Movie: “Always in My Heart” (1842) A convict wants his wife to marry a wealthy suitor. Kay Francis, Walter Huston . (R) (56) Mathematics 17 9:30 (2) Gomer Pyle, USMC Gomer recruits a bank robber on me lam. (R) (C) (9) (Special) Talent Festival — Winners of the 1967 CBC Talent Festival are featured. 9:45 (56) British Calendar 10:00 (2) Steve Allen — Tim Conway, Lou. Rawls and Stiller and Meara are featured. (C) (4) I Spy — A little girl with a fantastic memory has been taught the names and addresses of loose German war criminals. (R) (C) (56) Big Picture 10:30 (56) Navy log 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News (50) “The Man With Two Faces” (1934) Edward G. Robinson, Mary Astor. (R) Story of Lynn Stuart’ (1958) Betsy Palmer, Jack Lord. (R) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Wrestling / 12:30 (9) Window On the World 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R) 1:30 (2) (4) News (C) TOMORROW MORNING 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (0) 6:30 (2) Spectrum (4) Classroom (7) Seven Seas (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman (C) (4) Today (C) (7) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Movie: “Say One for Me” (Part 2) (R) , (9) Take 30 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 0:55 (4) News (C) 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye (R) 10:25 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Yoga for Health 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Supermarket Sweep .(C) (9) Canada Outdoors (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4| Hollywood Square! (C) (7) Family Game (9) Luncheon Date (56) Friendly Giant 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall (C) WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House Rules Committee, celebrated in the recent past for dragging its feet, has developed - a positive image under new management. Some.of its liberal critics like the new look : even less than the old. ; ★ ★ # ; Many House members had ticipated the committee would go into decline with the departure of former Rep. Howard W. Smith, D-Va., its strong-willed veteran chairman. But Rep. William M. Col-, mer, D-Miss., Smith’s understudy for years aitf the committee’s chairman since the start of the current Congress, is making it evident he didn’t ' take the job to preside over : the committee’s demise. The rules committee’s traditional role has been to act on requests of legislative committees for clearance of their pro* f ducts for a vote in the House. Under Smith’s reign, some liberal - type, big-spending bills ‘couldn’t seem to get cleared. !. ' * ★ fr Getting such clearance has ' been less of a problem this year, ; possibly because nothing very ^controversial or liberal or new ;has been coming along. But something else has been added. :■! The rules committee, it turns *|dut, is not just a traffic cop ‘for other people’s legislation. It Mias the power to crank up legislative action on its own, and “this year it is doing just that. So far it can claim credit !! for a MIL against flag-burning ;; passed by the House and for > an antiriot bill that is just ■i about to be passed. Under '! Colmer’s management it may have other such feats in mind. ‘ Take flag-burning. Early this 5lSymbol for 6 Musical dramu 2S ItaUanHvar cadmium - 7 Distends 24 Pulpy substance 82 Legal point us mow wnn open 8 Odd numeral 25 Lubricatad S3 Mannar’s . band 9 Males 26 Brazilian macaw direction 36 Spectacle 10 Ancient city In 29 Old - 54 Pouch 38AdjecUve suffix Chaldea 32Cavity. 88Poem 89 BinUctt king 1- ----------- - '■'ll r" 3 4 I 5 6 i 8 8 1, ho r 12 IS 114 15 n 6 30 r. 34 3d r c_ 4b Si 52 53 bi $9 bd 96 ,12 Baseball Game Stalls Great Special on K If the water can fie used at New Orleans, it can probably be used anywhere along the 2,500-mile river. By the thne the Mississippi reaches here it has drained a third of the nation, picking up wastes from dozens of smaller rivers, including the giant Ohio and Missouri. In Louisiana alone about 1.5 million people depend on the muddy liver for their drinking water. So do millions of people upstream — including the city of St. Louis. This is all in spite of the awesome abuse and neglect of the river by individuals, communities and industries that use it from Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. New YORK (AP) —1A vital American interest—the All-Star baseball game—almost pushed Nikita S, Khrushchev into television exile Tuesday night as the game ran an hour overtime and threw NBC’s schedule out of kilter. dr ★ W1 Hie switchboard at NBC was first beseiged by telephone calls asking why the Lucy Jarvis-produced “Khrushchev in Exile” was delayed and then, when finally went on, there were more phone calls demanding to know why Johnny Carson’s “Tonight” show was not on. it it it NBC officials said they feared the delay had cut deeply into the number of viewers of the show, which was a magnificent portrayal of Khrushchev and which Jack Gould, television critic of the New York Hmes, called “an absorbing study.” ■ * ★ * There was little to criticize about the show but there was one example of American censorship being more stringent than Soviet censorship. LANGUAGE LAUNDERED On the Russian sound track, Khrushchev called former Vice President Richard M. Nixon “i son of a bitdh,” which the NBC translator rendered as “a good for nothing” for American audiences. ★ ★ ★ The , film showed that Khrushchev has aged considerably since he was ousted from power in October 1964. The commentary said that he had lost 20 pounds, and this was evident from his sunken cheeks and. falling jowls. tained from sources within the Khrushchev 'family since few others, except Soviet officials, have access to the dacha. 3 Wallendas Hurl in Crash LEWISTOWN, Mont. (AP); Three members of the Flying Wallendas, famed acrobatic troupe, were injured Monday to traffic accident near Gras! Range in central Montana, about 30 miles east of Lewis-town. , .* * Carlos Guzman, 21, driver of the truck-trailer unit in which the three were traveling, and Ricky Wallenda, 12, both of “ asota, Fla., were treated at a Lewistown hospital &niV released. * r J * ★ r* y Joseph Peiyaz, 21, Oakland, Calif!, was held overnight in a Lewistown hospital. Damage to equipment in the truck was estimated at 86,000. spokesman for the troupe said its tour of IJtah and other western points would be delayed about six weeks for rebuilding the equipment. ★ * * Hie troupe was dn route I Billings, Mont. Highway Dept. Will Offer U. P. Land at Auction LANSING (AP)—Now you can become an Upper Peninsula landowner for only $10. ★ ★ * The State Highway Department will auction off 44 parcels of excess U.P, land Aug. 15 at Crystal Falls. Hie smallest, a triangle containing 50 square feet and located about six miles southeast of Marquette, is valued at 310. ★ * it,,, it The biggest, 74 acres, nine miles west 6f Sylvania in Gogebic County, is valued at 8925. |bdm/Syfts Expected- -to'Net tiz Taylor Millions • NEW YORK—Elizabeth Taylor’s coming into MILLIONS of dollars to a settlement soon to be announced of the lawsuits involving lriz, 20th CentUry-Fox, “Cleopatra," Eddie Fisher,.the divorces, the children, and other disputabley points. Liz as usual appears to be the viqt with a staggering amount of money coning toflL her, and, strangely, her ex-husband Eddie Fish-jij er will get a chunk, too, as a partner with his : ex-wife in their “Cleopatra” enterprise—although I as I understand it, the very clever Uz will have! arranged it that somebody else, not Uz, will bel paying Eddie off. We’ve got our own campaign now: Give up ] standing ovations on Broadway (night clubsli especially). They’re mostly insincere, meaning- WILSON less, and leave the audience disliking the perforrqer they stand Up for/ We don’t think, it’s important, really, but at the Monkees’ great press conference at the Warwick, we wished to ftod out for a girl reader whether Mickey Dolenz is engaged to British model Samantha Juste. Their press agents kept turning their backs on us till we finally said “Are you always this rude?" Finally, Ward Sylvester, their M.C. and producer, said he would answer—they are not engaged and Mickey, 22 now, will not marry till he’s 27. ». 1 During all this. 'one of the Monkees said he’s never found press people so impudent. So next* time you hear the British are bad-mannered, pnt to a word for the good old U.S.A. We’re bad-mannered as anybody and proud of it, right, Chums? THE MIDNIGHT EARL . Sheila MacRae, Ronnie Wayne and Irving Cowan formed a film company, Charisma, and want to star Buddy Hackett in the W. C. Fields screen bio . . . Govs. Romney and Rockefeller have something in common—both had a birthday July 8. Romney was 59, Rocky 60) . . . Jesse White’ll star on Broadway in “Take My Wife—Please,” directed by Allan Sherman. (The title’s an old Henry Youngman joke). Robert Goulet almost missed getting aboard the §.S. France —he’d stopped at Carmine the Barber’s for a haircut ... Digging the Don Ellis jazz at the Riverboat: the non-jazzy Hildegarde ... Joe Louis did a mild frug at Trude Heller’s, showing his sister Eulala the town ... Guests at the new Mellow Yellow in the Village smoked bananas, community-style, in hookah pipes, TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A showgirl went on a strict diet, and after a weeks all she’d lost wsis her Voice, from talking about it. ^ WISH I’D SAID THAT: One airline, Monty Hurst hears, gives passengers a choice of a drink or* a Dean Martin movie. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “A man is never so weak as when some woman is telling him how strong he is.” EARL’S PEARLS: A fellow explained he’d found the fastest .. way to get his car across town—have a police truck tow it. Ronald Reagan’s installed hotline phone in the governor’s mansion. It’s a direct wire to MGM . . . That’s earl, brother. (Publl>lMr»r4taM Syndlc«t») Hiere was oi :ene in the film, upon which there was no commentary; Mrs. Jarvis said it was because had not recognized the man: A shot on the terrace of Khrushchev’s dacha showed him with his reputed brother-in-law, Mikhail Shokholov; the Nobel Prize winner for literature. Shokholov, wearing a white Russian peasant shirt, playfully tapped Khrushchev on the arm. Internal evidence showed that the film used was largely ob- 6:00—CKLW, News, ToW WJR?hN*ws! Sports wwj. News, Sports, Weather WXYZ, Mpwcops WJBKt NOWS, Music WCAR, News, Jack Sandei w PON, News, Sports WHPI, undo Jay Show SltSCKLW, Nawa, Music WWJ, Today WJR. 4:45—WJR, 'Lowell Thornes Haws. Sports . ---- ..„w Carlson ' " WXYZ, Dave Dues TilS—WXYZ, Joa Reynolds 0:00—whUi, Curtain Call WXYZ, Noids, Davt Lock- WPON, Arizona \ THURSDAY MORNINS 4:00—WJR. Music Hall WWJ, News, Borders WXYZ. Musfe, NeWS WCAR, News, Delreil CKLW, News. Bud Davies WPON, News, Music WJBK, Marc Avery, Music 7:00—WPON, New*. Music whfi. News, Almanac WJR, News, Music Hall 7:30—WJBK, Sports 1:00—WJRi News, 3 7:00—WJR, News, Harris WCAR, Jim Davis WWJ, News, Nelohbor WHFi, Uncle j£ CKLW, News, Jea Van 10:00—WJBK, News, Music , Patrick WXYZ, Breakfast Club, Dei mcwohi , WHFI. Bill Boyle WPON, News, Music WJR, NOWS, Music l!:S0-WJR, News. Godfrey WWJ. News. Neighbor WXYZ, News, Danny Tsyioi whfi. Bin .Boyle THURSDAY AFTERNOON 11:00—WWJ, News, Market, Emphasis, WJR, News, Farm CKLW, News, Dave Shafer t wpon. News, Music WCAR, Ron Rose whfi. News, Boyle WXYZ, News, Music WJBK, Haws, Patrick, ■ Music ■■ t:aa—CKLW, ■; Naws, Dave ' Shafer ■■ WHFI, Encore wwj. News, Marty WJR, News, Music ttie-wPON, Naws, Music WXYZ. Dave Frttica ' 3:00—WWJ, Newsline WCAR, News, Jack Sanders WJBK, Naynt, Music. Tolas CKLW, Newts, Tom Shannon f:(S—WJR, Tlgort/Senotors Recently this riding mower was offered for sale in a Pontiac Press Want Ad . Today it has a happy new owner. , And who would have believed that reading the Pontiac Press Want Ads could help make lawn mowing an easier job? It will be for this happy Want Ad reader, and the man who ?• sold the mower by advertising in the Want Ads is happy, too. v o When you have something to sell, it*s easy to find a buyer ' -quickly and at very low cost. Just Dial 332-8181 and Place Your Pontiac Press Want Ad Be Sure to Order the Thrifty Six-Time Rate! V THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 STARTS THURSDAY 9 A.M.-9 P.M. 1roebuck AND CO. DOOR BUSTER SPECIALS DOOR BUSTER SPECIALS /'lilorin* Pool Tallin. 2? Regular 13.98........ Phonograph CHARGE IT on Sears Revolving Charge. Hershcy Burn......... Mb. Box Defer#* Three-Temperature Automatic Suds-Saver Kenmore Washer Sale Priced Simple One Dial Control Sale! 2-Speed 3-Cvcle Washer lairhoui Canister Vacuum A *22 Powerful motor. Use* disposable paper dust bags... no mess. Attachments for cleaning rugs, bare floors. Money Down “Set-and-Forget” washday. 6 vane agitator gives excellent wash action.' Porcelain finished wash basket. Built-in lint filter. Safety switch stops spin with lid raised. 2 speeds give brisk wash action to get grimy clothes really clean ... or gentle wash action to get your delicates clean. Lint filter. Sale! Portable Machine Clearance 36 ^7 Priced *> § Mend, darn, baste, do applique work easily. Push-button reverse stitching and handy dial-type stitch length control. Complete with base. Warehouse Clearance . . . Electric Warehouse Clearance ... Kenmore Installed Dryer ;er Washer Sale Priced HURRY IN -SAVE 10% TO 40% Sgje Priced Upright Vacuum Has 8 convenient wringer positions with manual flipper board and safety release bar. 3 vane agitator. Porcelain finish tub. Use “Heat” for drying . ,. “Air Only” for drying plastics. Top mounted lint screen. Tumble action s.tops when door lid is opened. Venting extra. / Sewing Machines, Floor Polishers, Vacuum Cleaners; Floor Samples, Some l-of*a-kind! Hurry in For Best- Selection. All Are Backed by Sears Famous “Satisfaction Guarantee.’’ Has revolving brush adjustment for rugs or carpet cleaning. IS-ft. cord stores on and handle. Save at Sears. 2 Pc. Bedroom Set Was $118.95 Includes panel bed and double dresser .mirror* Danish styling complemented by rich satin finish. Storage space- 4 drawer chest, was #61, Sale! 44.88. Sale! 2-Piece Suite, Was $199.95 Here is a modern style sofa and a chair ttl {Pdl graced by sloping arms. Both pieces have reversible foam latex cushions. Choice ]\0 Money Dow* of decorator colors. 5-Piece Sectional, Was $249.95 Dramatic! A full 16-ft. around the walls. Reversible Serofoam cushions. Upholstered in cotton and rayon tweed aqd other coven. In attractive colon. No Money bowi No Money Down Divan Bed Safe 180 coil spring mat- Mas 1 tress. Plastic covered; g| j with foam cushions. ’’ J[. * Colonial Lounge Save 50%! 76” lounge Mas 9‘ converts to bed. With . q tweed upholstery. 18” Picture Measured Diagonally All Channel Portable TV Hollywood Bed Sale "rr'Ti w-.7o.8o No Money Down on Sears Easy Payment Plan Ward- robe 48” Game Table Chair, Ottoman Uhrome.steel laminated 109.95 09 Octagon table is perfect for informal dining or an evening of games. Walnut-grained plastic 119,95 ported vinyl cover with |rfoam reversible “T” cush-, tufted back. Complete 40-inch steel. Stores dresses, suits.' Enamel J>0-in. Buffet0 Modern styling in' Was99.' rich walnut veneer i,ith ottoman. Browi Coldspot All -Frost less 15-Cubic Foot Coldspot Chest Freezer Stores 525»Lbi; 14 €u. Ft. Refrigerator 10-Year Tank Guarantee 30-Gallon Gas Water Heater Sale Priced Space-saving thinwall insulation gives you more inside space than types with ‘thicker walls. Total-contact freezing coils. Magnetic lid gasket. . No Money Down No defrosting ever, even in the 157*lb. capacity bottom freezer. Full width crisper stores 25-qts. of fruits, vegetables. 32” wide, 651A*’ him. 25 5/16” dees. low take with price . inUWf VCJJUMUWWPt jJMQ 65Vh” high, 25 5/16” deep. 108-lb. Capacity Top Freezer 14 Refrigerator kitchen Add Convenience To Yonr • Has temperature control dial • Glass-wool insulation seals in • heat .. - • Mm drain valve, steel burner ..Sahn Priced Sale Priced Easily handles small family’s hot-water need. It features a glass-lined tank (hat keeps -your water clean because tank can't rust or corrode. 100% pilot gas cutoff, high temperature cutoff. Low Cost Installation Available. > Sears Plumbing and Heating Dept. Cook family-size meal in this large overt ... chrome plated handle. Separate smokeless broiler. Convenient front controls. Automatic defrost in the refrigerator section, manual defrost in freezer section. Porcelain finish crisper. Left hand door. Shop 9 Until 9 Tomorrow Sears Downtown Pontiac—154 N. Saginaw St, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! FLOOR SAMPLES, I, 3, 3 and 4-OF-A-KIXD, ODD LOTS. DEMONSTRATORS . . . ALL AT LOW LOW SALE PRICES. ALL ARE MECHANICALLY PERFECT. Some As-is. Demonstrators, Floor , Some Crate-Marretl! Most Items Are Brand A nr. All Fully Guaranteed by ; Mark A White Film f^C Playing 9Bc Cotm 0» Open End Wrench** ggc w , 8|c Ttiinucr........ gal. 01 •Sun t;i*wr» 77c ’ Limits.. II Zl|i|»er 133 B»* I Men'. T-Shirt.. S. M, Ah’ 1. XI. „iF.e«. l imit(i... T) ":r:;8r.... fa 44c