Th§ WBafher " V.t. Wntlifr Biirm rorietil Partly Cloudy te“asnar''s6!rtouch’’ reviewed. I’m in full agreement. If we are not now requiring that, I would be glad to have a. specific case which I could take up with the administrator. We deal with many coun«; tries and l^rge sums, and some mistakes cretgi In. The Russians are In this foreign aid business too, and for motives very different from ours. I saw scores of tractors the Russians had given to a neWly Independent Equatorial African nation. They were good tractors, but, they were built for arctic nse^ the exhaust pipe ran through the cab and the windshield^ couldn’t be opened. The Russians make mistakes too, but there is no congressional review. integral part of American foreign policy. Our purpose?' To assist the countries establishing thcm.selves as ir^endent, solksupporting jwHonirWe do not .seek sntellite.s. it is in ()ur interest to help develop free, strong, and indc'pend-ent countries. We must demand the sharpest vigilance in peeing that each dol- lar produces worthwhile results. 'ink Foreign /aid has been consistent since the end of World War 11 on a bipartisan basis under Presidents 'I'ruman, Eisenhower and Ki^nnedy. » It is a key^tool Iri seeking‘major policy objectives, arid there is no alternative to continuing reliance on the program as an We are criticized by those who say “our aid program has gained us nothing and lost us friends.” The membership of the United Nations has doubled, yet the overwhelming niajorlty continues to support the charteir and a world community consistent with our own long-term goals. Secretary Dean Rusk has said, and T agree, that the times do not call for a massive (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ■ SEN. PHILIP A. HART merce Commission for prompt: Salinger made his announce-hearing and disposition. Lent after Kennedy' had con- * * * dUcted a round of conferences “Provisions tor employe se-1 representatives of the rail-cunty will be contained in any . . .i. u ICC order of approval. Unlike compulsory-arbitration this pro- the trains. Democratic and Reposal would preserve collective | publican congressional leaders, bargaining and give precedence land various labor leaders inciud-to its solutions. ing George Meany, president of Salinger declined to go into AFL-CIO. In these meetiflgs, any detail pending the actual Kennedy outlined his legislative release of the message, but it proposal, Salinger said. appeared clear that Kennedy would ask Congress to hold off any strike until the ICC has disposed of the case. Some Congress members said that as they understood the plqn the ICC might spend as much as two years studying the dis|iute. Securities Tax Loophole Opened at Canada Request WASHINGTON (UPI)—INie Kennedy administration is opening a loophole in its proposed balance-of-pay-ments tax on foreign .securities to prevent the tax from crippling Canada’s economy. The action came yesterday after a weekend of secret talks between a U.S. team led by Treasury Secretary iJopglas Dillon and top Ca-' nadian. finapcial officials who had hurried to Wash ington to 4xresent their country’s case. The United States ill effect agreed, not to apply the p r o-posed “interest eqiializiation tax” to new. Issues of Canadian securities, so Jong as the flow of U.S. dollars Into Canada dose not c x c e r d Canadian needs. „ ^ Canada agreed not to use the exempiton to try to build up its foreign exchange reserves. NEW YORK (AP) -- A young lan fought IwKse from a guard and jumped from the Empire State Building today, plunging to the sidewalk from the 86th floor observatlpn deck of the world’s jallest building. Similar exemptioiKs would be avililable in other “exceptional situations’’ where couhtrie.s were endangered by the tax, t joint .statement .said. Howeyer. U.S, officials said no 0 t h e r douhtries had asked to have the proposed tax lifted. “It is the hope and expectation of both government.s that, by inaintai'niiig close consultation, it will prove possible in practice to hove" an unlimited exemption tor Canada without adverse effeejs on the United States,’’ the Joint statement .said. Canadian Finance Minister Walter Gordon .said in Ottawa he was 'very much relieved.” Man Plunges 86 Floors in New York Police tentatively identified the victim as George Alex Frost, 35, address not learned. Tlic guard, Frank l5i Gesu, said ho first saw the man standing on a ledge outsido lhe_ protecting wall and fence around thd observatory of the 102-story building. Oi Gesu said he tried to talk to tlic man, who only shuffled away along the ledge. He twice readied through the fence and grabbed the man’s teg, but the man kicked free, Dl Gesu said. tlie guard made one more grab tor his leg, but the man sprung backward to his death, Dt Oesa said, 1 ci'L ^ i THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 22. 1968 Red Powers Agree to 'Future' Unity Try MOSCOW (AP)-Red China and Uie Soviet Union say they have agreed to meet—“some time later”—and make another try at settling their bitter ideological dispute. Diplomats in Moscow did not expect .^e meeting would be held soon. The announcement, made simultaneously Sunday in Peking and Moscow, coincided with a new Chinese attack on the Soviet Communist party. Peking accused it of trying to incite the Chinese people and party against Mao Tse-tung. The Soviet-Chinese talks broke off Saturday. Premier Khrushchev took his first public notice of the lord Astor PoritiaVPost Office will herald the beginning of its new Accel-erated Business Collection and Delivery (ABCD) week with^the "visit-of—WaH-ew -Christine P. Cleary, deputy executive assistant to the postmaster gener- LONDON (UPI) - Christine Keeler testified in court toddy that Lord Astor had paid the rent on the apartment she shared with playgiri Marilyn (Mandy) Rice-Davies. Christine, whose affair with War Minister John Profumo nearly toppled the British government, resumed her tale of sex and sin that raiiged from high society to the underworld when she appei^red as the first witness in the trial of Dr. Stephen Ward, playboy osteopath and ar- Ward pleaded innocent to a variety--«f~vice”Cbargefr-to^ included the accusation he lived off the earnings of Christine and Mandy.- the trial as Christine was being questioned by Prosecutor Mer-vyn Griffith-Jones. After she said she had moved into a flat with Mandy, the prosecutor asked: “Who paid the rent of the flat? Did you pay any of the rent yourself?” “Yes, I and Miss Davies paid some of it.” Christine’s voice was , nearly a whisper, and the judge interrupted: “Who paid the rent, Miss fleeter?” “Lord Astor,” she replied. It was the first time Christine had testified directly that the apartment rent was paid by Lord Astor, although she had said at Ward’s pretrial hearing that the osteopath had told her the rent once was paid with a check from the wealthy head of one of Britain’s mostMnfluential families. Chinese delegation, giving it farewell dinner. The communique issued Sunday said the central committees of both Communist parties would the place and time of the next meeting. It reported that during the talks Post Office Set for New Service Fast Business Delivery to Start in Pohtrac itensibly, the meeting of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (Comecon)the Communist counterpart to the European rill be to dis-cuss^conomic plans. Cleary, 36, will be here to inaugurate the new ABCD mail service. Pontiac is the tenth city in Michigan to get the unique system. Under the plan, a letter mailed in certain designated mailboxes by 11 a.m. will be delivered by 3 p.m. the same day. Cleary will deposit the first piece of mail to be delivered under the new service. He will drop his mail in the box in front of the main post office, 735 W. Huron, about 10:30 a.m. Wednesday. A 10-year veteran of the U.S. Foreign Service in India and Afnear CTeary is also a fdflhw special consultant on problems of underdeveloped areas. Soviets Get U. S. Agent? Poland, Hungary, East Ger-Roraania, Bulgaria and Mongolia are to be present. Communist China’s balkan ally, Albania, is a charter member but has not participated in council activities for more than two years. The terseness of the Chinese-Soviet communique was in sharp to a bitter editorial in the official Peking People’s Daily which indicated the Chinese have no intention of easing their war of words against the Soviets. The editorial said “those who are tacking their brains to slander Comrad Mao Tze-tung and our party will accomplish nothing save full exposure of their own foul purposes. The paper accused the Soviets of lying in their open letter last week when Moscow, said the Chi-nese scuttled trade relations between the two Communist giants. It charged the Soviets them-.selvesjut off aid, doing incalcul-able harm to China’s economy; defense and scientific research. The latter could include Peking’s efforts to develop an atomic bombl MOSCOW (U^I) - The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia today 'reported that an Arab-born former employe of the U.S. National Security Agepey in Washington has defected to Russia and asked for political asylum. Izvestia said that the former agent for the Americans defected because he was “out-I” by U.S, intelligence activities endangering peace in the Middle East. The alTegM defector was identified as Viktor Norris Hamiiton, bbrn Hindala, who said hi an open letter to Izvestia that he was 44, and a graduate of the American University in Beirut. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICTNITY-Partly cloudy and not much change In temperatures through tomorrow. A chance of a few widely scattered thundershowers mostly this afternoon and evening. Highs today and tomorrow in the 80s. 1|;,0W8 tonight 58 to 67. Winds variable mostly 5 to 15 m.p.h. through tomorrow. Wednesday’s outlook: Little change. : Wind Vflodtr 3 i Mlllhest lemprrutui« lowcit temperature ...... Mean tfmpenilure Weatliori Partly cloudy ' IIUUKlltOII Jackaon Sl&tta, r'«^T*^»e^atur 88 "’BIT IWfiii 88 88 Honoli 88 81 Jack JiaK )r(h 103 3^ 1 "88 " lolls 88 Miss. 83 34 City 80 35 Sunday In Pontlao , »iir I 83 Miami neh r 83 Mllwauksi-I 88 Mpla., Ht. I '*W?atb*r**earl 88 33 New York 83 81 88 North Platte 84 88 01 Omaha 80 34 83 .Philadelphia^ 83 11 03 91 KalBlKh 43 66 fl»pld City 66 66 ilt. r.iOUlM . M«. 67 both sides “expounded their own views and stand on a series of . .... t questions of principle concerning contemporary world developments, the international Communist movement Sino-Soviet relations,” i' MUTUAL LECTURES ^ Western quarters interpreted this to mean Chinese spokesman Teng Hsiao-ping and Soviet theoretician Mikhail .Suslov did little more since the meetings began July 5 than lecture each other. Premier Khrushchev is expected to defend his stand and outline his strategy in the Communist power struggle at a meeting of East European Communist leaders opening in Moscow Wednes- The official New China News Agency in a separate statement claimed the Kremlin leaders are ‘flagrantly attempting to incite the Chinese people and the' members of the Chinese Communist party against the beloved leadership of the Communist party of China.” Runaway Seen Last With 2 Men (Continued From Page One) nie, an habitual runaway, caped with two other girls from the Jackson County Juvenile Home. ^ How the girl got to the Birmingham area is a mystery, although she probably hitchhiked. During the following two weeks, Connie went from one restaurani and teen-age hangout to another the Woodward drive-in strip. Connie would sip coffee at one place, strike up' an acquaintance with other young people, then leave with them for another drive-in. Some 25 teen-agers came forward with this information after the murder story was published. “She was with as many as 12 to 15 fellows in one h‘8bl,” Hazen related. USES REAL NAME 'Fhe girl would spend the nights with youths, or at the homes of girls she met in the restaurants. She often Used her real name, and admitted she was a runaway. In the 24 hours btifore her body wSs found in the creek, the girl speht the early morning of 4uly 17 at a motel with a man. national WEATHER-ySkles are expected to be cle^r lo, partly cloudy' throughout the nation tonight except for southerh Ohio where acattered showery alre expected. It will contlnua .hot and humid in the Plaln6 states and on the Gulf ; is efpecti .Coast. Some cooling i Bctod over the Pacific Northwest. He advised her to head fw Toledo qnd dropped her off 1 p.m. last Wednesday at Telegraph and Five Mile Road so she^ could hitch a ride. But by 5 p.m., Connie was calling a Birmingham youth and asking him to pick her up ot Telegraph and Schoolcraft. He refused. , Connie’s movements for the next eight hours, until she rang the bell at the home of the other Birmingham youth, are a blank. - Some 25 teen-agers and others who saw the girl came to the sheriff’s department after Connie's picture and accounts of the Names of all wltnessfs are being kept confidential by the sheriff's department. County Republican chairman today announced the appointment of Mrs. John Pfister, 2849 Buckingham, as chairman of the county GOP’s 1963 Neighbor-to-Neigh-bor fund drive. Chairman Charles Lyle said he selected Mrs. Pfister because the drive’s success “Is in direct proportion to the organizational background of its chairman.” Mrs. Pfister currently holds GOP posts in the county’s 3rd Legislative District, the City of BOMBED VILLAGE-Viet Nam troops ap Ph.».f.k charge through a bombed village in fierce soldiers were killed; 19 guerrillas were capfighting against Red guerrillas during the tured. The village is in the Mekong delta area ----- ■ — . . . _ . ■ 19 government- of that Far Eastern country.. Viet Buddhists Give Ultimatum President Diein Faces New Street Disorders SAIGON (UPD - President Ngo Ditih Diem faced an ultimatum today from his Buddhist foes, threatening new street disorders unless their latest demands are met by midnight. The Buddhists rebuffed official efforts at conciliation over the weekend. It. was, npl.cer^^ tain Immediately whether the government would return to the “hard line” It employed against BuddWst d^CMutn s Lr a Wednesday. Club-swinging police waded into a crowd of Buddhists on that day, and scores of prisoners were hustled away by truck to improvised concentration, camps. On Friday, Diem — who is a Roman Catholic — broadcast an appeal for new negotiations on Buddhist charges of discrimina; tion. Vice President Nguyea N:gqc Tho sent Buddhist leaders a I# ter formally advancing the government proposal. From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - Humiliation stalks America’s Negro citizens and they will not be dissqaded by talk that they are hurting their cause by demonstrating, Negro leader Roy Wilkins said today. Buddhist leaders said they would negotiate with a special cabinet committee set up by Diem for the purpose only if police removed barricades from around Buddhist temples here and released more than priests, nuns and laymen who they say were arrest^ Wednesday. Police removed the barricades and threw open the gates of a camp set up in a Saigon ceme- tery where they were holding lOlMd Buddhists — according to the government, all of Wednesday’s prisoners. For Rights Bill Negro Testifies Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), said their protest dem-onstrations are not subversive but ‘fhordughry Americanw^ He expressed his views in testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee as it started a fourth week of hearings on the administration’s public accommodations hill. The bill, a key part of President Kennedy’s civil rights program, would require the desegregation of restaurants, hotels, stores, and other privately-owned establishments serving the public. OTHER RACIAL NEWS • In Cambridge, Md., a Negro integration leader said today the commander of National Guard troops in this racially troubled city has refused permission for prayer meetings on the courthouse lawn. The leader, Stanley Branche of the NAACP, said Brig. Gen. George Gelston ruled out demonstrations in a letter to Branche. ly would be legal but could not be permitted under present conditions in which nine persons have been wounded by gunfire since demonstrations begari. Saturday night, 900 National Guard troops were alerted and a tear gas grenade was thrown to disperse an angry crowd of 500 Negroes. Guardsmen used their bayonets to drive a crowd of some 200 whites off the streets. # In Jackson, Miss., five white Protestant churches here rejected six groups of integrationists yesterday in the first attempted “kneel-lns” in about a month. The Rev. Ralph E. King Jr. a young white Methodist chaplain at Tougaloo College, tried to enter Galloway Methodist Church with his wife and a Negro student. King said they were rejected by an usher who told them, “This is a Christian Church and we intend to keep it that way. We will not admit Negroes.” • In Clarksdale, Miss., two young white segregationists who admitted firebombing the home of Negro civil rights leader Aaron Henry were freed today of arson charges. Theodore A. Carr, 24, was acquitted on the charge by an all-white jury Saturday qight following a 15-minute deliberation. WASHINGTON (AP)-The Unl^ ed States announced today agreement with Britain and I-"‘ to stren^en India’s defe against possible air attacks from Communist China. Integrationists had asked the general to permit them to hold 15-minute prayer meetings at the courthouse each day if they guaranteed no more than 50 persons would take part. Branche quoted Gelston as saying the prayer meetings normal- The prosecution then dropped an identical charge against Aubrey Cauthen, 26, who was scheduled to go on trial this week. • In New, York, police rested 250 persons today when nearly 1,000 singing and chanting racial defmonstrators massed at a Brooklyn construction site and blocked trucks from entering. Senator Hart Reviews U.S. Foreign Aid (Continued From Page One) increase in the foreign assistance program; likewise, times do not call for, us to leav> the field ~ either in discouragement or complacency. There Is nothing the Commum ists want more than rfor withdraw support from independent countries. It i? their njumbef one ubjective. You suggest w6 ‘review” our foreign aid program. We .should and we do. Probably no program has ever undergone such extensive and constant review. Every facet continues to be scrutinized -- not only by the Congress, but by the executive branch. 1 agree each project should be scrutinized; each be justified. President Kennedy has requested $4,525 billion for our programs of mutual defense and assistance in fiscal 1964. This request will be studied by four committees of the Con-gre.s.s. It is on a careful analysis of the situation in each country, and recommendations of the President’s committee headed by General i,ucluS Clay and the Judgment of David ft. Bell, administrator of the Agency for In-terimtionul Development. ’ ★ * if The program has scored some notable successes. There have been horrible mistakes, too, bnt I reject the gloomy conclullon that we throw the program out! Do you throw out a bushel of apples because stitutions around the world. The some have soft spots? price has never been cheap; it wasn’t in the bargain basement, and its preservation won’t be found at a bargain counter. Building — and defending — freedom has cost heavily in treasure —and blood. All of us prefer to isee freedom defended and expand- I'ield. The United States has provided substantial aid ($30 per capita) to 41 countries since the end of World War II: 33 have achieved a rate of increase in national output *i.n« I c „„„ Isce irccuuiii uciciiucu aiiu eaiiaiiu- Of more than l'.5 per cent per cap- , . . . .i . % for five conicuUve yeaS or®'* >» longer. Of these 33 countries, 14 — the eleven Marshall Plan countries, plus Japan, Spain and Lebanon — have become economically self-supporting and our aid has ended. Half a dozen are .approaching self-support; Greece, Israel, Free China (Taiwan), Venezuela, Mexico, the Philippines -7 all are doing well, and economic aid should end within two to five years. Another dozen have made solid progress, including India, Pakistan, Turkey, Thailand and Colombia. The remaining eight have not yet made good progress for various reasons Including inadequate governmental leadership and adverse economic circumstances. We face a Communist thrust that Is relentless and powerful. We must be equally strong, tenacious and enduring. The challenge Is severe, and we will continually be advised to give up the struggle as too costly, too exhausting, too risky — as We are helping those who help themselves andiexpandlng free In- Birmingham Area News Woman Picked Chairman of Republican Fund Drive BIRMINGHAM - The Oakland BIrnUngham and the BJnJn** - . 4a. ham-Trov Republican Women s ham-Troy Republican Club. , . Before moving to Birmingham In 1961, she was a precinct delegate, executive board member and office manager for Wayne County’s 15th Congressional Dls-trlst. U.S., Britain to I The board of education will hold a special meeting Aug. 7 to open bids on $1.5 million worth of tax anticipation notes. The notes will be issued in anticipation of the Dec. 1, 1963 taxes in order to meet operational expenses. Dated July 15, 1963, the notes will mature March 1,-1964, and carry i maximum interest rate of 4 per cent, according to Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelly. issuance of the notes has been approved by the State Municipal Finance Commission, of which Kelley is chairman. Announcing the air agreement, the State Department said that in the event of renewed Chinese Communist aggression against India “the United States has agreed to consult with the government of India regarding possible measures to strengthen India’s air defenses in the light of the situation existing at the time.” The State Department said the agreement “does-not, however, involve any commitment-^on Ibe. part of the U.S. government to come to India’s assistance in the event of a renewed Chinese Communist attack.” Under terms of the agreement, the U;S. Air Force and the Royal Air Force will hold periodic, joint training exercises in India with the Indian air force. Appoint Chief atStateFadlity Dr. Robert A. Braun, clinical director, has been appointed acting superintendent of the Pontiac State Hospital. The appointment was made by Charles F. Wagg, Michigan State Director of the department of mental health. Dr. Braun has been clinical director at'the hospital since 1960. He is a member of the American Psychiatric Association, a diplomat of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, American Medical Association, and Wayne Medical Society. Dr. Braun is temporarily replacing Dr. Walter H. Obenauf who died Wednesday of a heart attack, and had been with the hospital for four years. Kin of T. Roosevelt Dies OYSTER BAY, N.Y, 141 - Dr. Richard Derby, son-in-law of President Theodore Roosevelt, died yesterday at his sumnier home in Proctorville, Vt., il was learned here. He was 82. Boy, 12, Hit by Boat h 'Critical' Twelve-year-old Earl J. Bren-dle lay in critical condition today while Oakland County sheriff’s deputies pressed their investigation of the boat accident that nearly tore the boy’s arm off and almost cost him his life Saturday. —EacLwis^it by an outboard motor boaTviBffe"^wl^ Walters Lake behind his home at 8809 Lakeview, Independence Towhship. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brehdle. Lt. Don Kratt of the sheriff’s office said today he was investigating the accident to determine whether criminal charges should be brought against the driver of the boat, Warren Baker, 31, of 436 Boyd. Though it was first reported that the boy was 70 to 75 feet from the dock when the accident occurred, Kratt said further checking revealed Earl was only about 30 feet out. Witnesses said Baker was towing a water skier to shore when he suddenly saw the boy and swerved. At the same time, the boy dived in an attempt to escape being hit, they said. Earl was taken to Pontiac General Hospital and then rushed to Detroit’s Henry F'oi’d Hospital, which reported today that the boy “was making some prowess” but was still on the critical fist. Kratt said the hoy’s right arm was almost severed by the blades of the 40-horsepower motor. Earh leg and back also wcrV/cut and suffered a fractured skull. The boy’s j)athing trunks were afterwards found wrapped around ' the motor’s propeller, Kratt said. The lieutenant reported that Earl was standing on a submerged log about 2'k feet below the surface wh6n he dived to avoid tho boat. Stale law prohibit.'* motor boats within 100 feet Of a dock or swimming area unless they are traveling five miles per hour or less, Kratt said. DODGERS COWED BY UPSET-i-WIlh pails ready, Los Angeles Dodgers Lee Walls and Frank Howard, right, warily circle an uncooperative cow -dufing a milking cbntest at County' Stadium between games of their double-header with the Milwaukee Braves yesterday. The Braved won the milking contest as Walls’ cow rolled around after Howard's had already bolted. The Braves also won both ' 1 . I'i'„7t, \ THE PONTIAC PREIsS, MONDAY. JULY 22, 1963 TI^REE Decorate your Bathroom 3-Pc.Toilet Tank COVER SETS $2.95 Value Fomouj Americqn • Brand lal (ila rii* tolle> tank ond 'seal lid. Woth. obit, it hides marred spots and Krotchei on the tank, absorbs tank moisture too, Assorted colors to choose from. ing a iMioar, 5>day week, with another three hours set aside lor court an>earances or emergencies. At the moment, there are lew- _________________ __________________________________ r ■ toah 1,100 persons in the Editor, Port Huron Times Heraldipervise the laws have either re- force, which i» allowed T,155 peo-mained static or been reduced, ple. They have never been able to come up to the 1,155 strength thAnoh because pay increases and insur-have, soaked up PORT HURON ~ This straightforward appeal for an adequate state police force to patrol our highways] Just a few years ago we had nearly enough. Now — in plain words — by any set of standards e don’t. This plea' for more men is supported by the National Safety Council in its traffic inventory analysis for 1963 of the state’s program and needs. “To cohipare favorably wlfli Twin or FiiinmfNitU^ „ BEDSPREADS $2.95 VtUuc______________ 2 for S3.S0 Wasliqble chenill# spreadi In choice of assorted colors. Choice of twin or full sizes. American made spreads. Big 10x90 Inch Sixe $3.49 94% royon biended with 6% nylon, satin bound blankets in choice of ossorled coiors. Washable American mode blank- 98 N. Sciflinaw —Hniiompnt Force Deteriorating Michigan Must Have More Stale Police '1 Spencer Tracy Improving After Lung Difficulty /Editor'e Note—This is the fifth in a series of nine traffic safety articles by F. Granger Weil, editor of the Port Huron Times Herald, and chairman of the Traffic Safety Committee of the Michigan Press Association.) the (op 30 per cent of the states reporting in our inventory program, Michigan would need to add 382 full-time traffic person-nel”, an NSC spokesman said. were working a 56-hour^ 6-day week. Now, by Civil Service Commission order, they are do- ByF. GRANGER WEIL The^frpblem is one of money, of course. The crime and acci? dent rates Are climbing but Budgp ets for police to enforce and su-« HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actor Spencer ’Tracy was reported improving today from an attack of lung congestion suffered as he was going on a picnic with actress Katharine Hepburn. Tracy, 63, was stricken Sunday in front of Miss Hepburn’s Malibu Beach home. ' An ambulance rushed him to St. Vincent Hospital where his physi-Dr. Karl Lewis, said 'Tracy was suffering from a congestive lung condition. These are fact they don’t seem sense. Come to think of it, the state has money enough r to the factory. 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor 'anile and Tuesday Ot^ MEN’S PANTS ’The problem is simple. It’s just lack of money. The legislature provides funds for a state police budget which won’t do the job of protection that we here in the ■ Michigan ought to have regardless-of -the Jact that putting~iTTew-^BUlLon mofe'in an adequate state p^ would save many times the number of dollars in prevention of property daihage and personal injury. Nor is there any water in the state police budget. Commissioner Childs is the type of man who asks for nothing more than what is absolutely necessary for his department. Perhaps, this is his mistake. Maybe he, should ask for twice oC three times as much as he really ,| needs in order to get what he wants! WASH 'n WEAR POLISHED COTTONS —All At One Low Price Special group of men's pants — for sports and casual wearing, assorted styles including popular Continentals, solid colors to choose from in sizes 29 to 42. Stock up at this lower price. We risk our necks and our property by not providing for this* fine and efficient police force.] During -the past few years the jsituatioa has deteriorated. Unless sorhething. is, done — and done soon — this dry rot will continue until we have another state scandal by way of accidents | and crime. i We are, in a nutshell, being penny-wise and pounds-of-flesh foolish. Next: Legalized Murder Beekeepers can work without veils and still avoid stings by employing newly discovered chemical repellents. TRAVEL ACCIDENT Hospital Policy AVAILABLE TO RRADW5 OF THjS NEWSPAPER UNDER AGE 80 »Pays $150.00 month, tvtn for lifo! Dui^ng total dliabllity and lenflnomont while under regular medical care (hoipltal er heme) heginning within 10 days of accident I Pays 50% cash rtfund of promiums each 10 years If no claim • Poys $5,000 doath bontfit »Pays maximum $1500 if hospitalizod within 10 days of accident at rate of $1S.00 per day for 100 days. (This is in addition to $150.00 , 30 days of an accident. This benefit Increases each month policy Is In force to a maximum of $7500 \ »Guarantood ronowabit for Ilfo • Evory paymont to you is Incomo tax frto Every premium you pay Is Income tax deductible Time Life Insurance Company is making this special infro-duclory Free Offer so you con see for yourself WITHOUT Ic OP COST, the morvelous protection this wonderful new policy affords. So few of us realize until loo late that over. 150 people ore infured EVERY HOUR and o long confinement con wipe out one's entire life-timp savings. This policy Is specially designed to lake away the burden on yourself and family, to protect you even for life should necessity arise. This policy covers accidents while the Ihkured is traveling in any 4 wheel motor vehicle or os o fore paying passenger on o licensed public conveyance operated by o common carrier for the regular transportation of passengers, Including com-morclal aircraft. Of course, the policy does not cover suicide nor occiderits while taking port in any race or stunt exhibition, war, while under the influence of alcohol or narcotics, or taking poison or gas. This policy is available to age 80 years. Above oge 65 years, payment schedule reduces one- MAIL COUPON-SEND NO MONEY-NO AQENT WILL CALL Immediately upon receipt and approval your policy will be sent to you. There will be no charge for the first 30 days and no obligation on your port to continue It unless you yourself wont to. No agent will coll. If after reading its remorkdble benefits you feef It Is so advantageous you do not wont to be without It, the omozingly low rote will be shown on the policy. Otherwise just drop It. That’s oil. But you will be protected for 30 days with full benefit, whether you continue or not. So moll the coupon today —RIGHT . NOW —while the offer Is still available. cut Oil HLRt mile rqnge. Anyone can operate this unit - nc Citizen band channel no. / :• I 27.035 MC frequency. C ryMul < ond receives ... lor work, i boaters, oltices to stockrooms,^ porkmg lots, sporting evepti. Boy Scouts, Involids etc. Complete with batteries, leather cate, earphone lor p Ing, telescope whip antenna. Has removable crystals, Only $1 holds in (ree layaway. Comerai . . , NO PURCHASE NECESSARY, juat coma in and aik for your fra# ticket. Swo Wednesday, July 24th Pontiac •Press for full details. All specials in this odv. for Tonite and Tuesday only, ....... ■. ... 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS Automobile SEALED BEAM Headlight Bulbs m Regular $2.50 value — for single or dual systems in 6 or 12 volts. Sealed againsf moVstofO and dirt. Limit 4 bulbs. Galvanized - Large 29 Gals. Garbage Cans $2.79 value—with cover. 20 gallon garbage can with side drop handles. Approved for city and township pick-up. Limit 2 cons. 2nd Floor PAINT DEPT. DISCOUNTS ODORLESS MAC-O-LAC Miracle Plastic Laytex Paint Regular .$6.59 value—white and colors for walls' and , 1 ceilings. Miracle plastic pairtt A I goes on with brush or roller. " TntemraalExterior Surfaces " “*^ints KODAK Kudacolur Films .$1.35 Roil in 628-128^127 Sizes c Non-Chalking-White Outside MAC-O-LAC House Paints $8.25 gallon — non | ^chalking paint for i ' terior' woocf surfaces. Weather tested, non-yel-1 lowing gleaming white,' GARNET FINISHINQ PAPER $1^88 MASKING TAPE %x60 yards of masking tap. for »hile painting, etc. . 66*’ KIXT UtmUSH REMOVER 179 39' 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS 18-In. Sweep HANDLE Push Broom |47 Regular S2 Seller HcHrdwO.OcL.J3tQck_ w hairs. . . for home, shop, office use. - Limit 1 per per- Full 58 FOOT ROLL’’ALCOA” Aluminum Foil Wrap value on sale duty oluminum wrap with improved metal 50-foot roll by DRUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS 200 ANACIN TABLETS $1.98 value — pack, of 200 Anacins for fast, fast relief of fieada.ches, neuralgia, etc. DRISTAN -TABLETS BRYLCREEM NAtR OROOM SHAVE BOMB^ LARGE SIZE ,15-OZ.BRECK HAIR SPRAY NEW HALO SHAMPOO Sl.l.tSixe — Choic. ■ 2typM. ALBERTO VO-5 CREME RINSE SI.00 Val. -7-oz. 64( DEODORAIITS St CREAMS 19$ N, ta|ingw-«3 Flogrji of Discount p \i • m .r FOUB THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JULY I Religious Retreat Burns Lutheran Home Leveled by Fire Flames Hit Structure in Addison Township PantiM Pr«« Ph»to TOTAL LOSS—Firemen are shown here battling smoke and fire in a vain attempt to save St. Augustine House^ a Lutheran religious retreat in Addison Township. The fire was put out at 1:20 this morning only to break out again three hours later. The building was a complete loss. Oxford, Addison and Lake Orion fire departments answered both calls. ADDISON TOWNSHIP .-r- A building once the palatial home of a Detroit businessman—which he transformetl into the center of a Lutheran religious community — was destroyed by fire last night. Father Arthur C. Kreinheder, a former ^executive with the J. L. Hudson Co., discovered the fire at 10 p.m. when he returned with his 10 house guests from a visit to the Benedictine Novitiate just down the road. Cut off by thlTTire from telephones in St. Augustine. House, at 3316 F. Drahner, Father Krein-.er of Wixom and Baliant Kormos of Warreq seated guests. Over Freeway Suburbia Battles State . Suburbia isi either route, the Highway De- the battleground for the biggest! partment will be wiping out hun-freeway fight in thc history of dreds of homes, demohshmg tax «nt * Ridge, Ferndale,, Royal base so dear to the suburbs, and Oak, Madison HeighU and Hazel Park— will be involved. If the freeway goes 11-Mile, It would involve seven cities as well, with Lathrup Village and severely altering the face of neighborhoods. If the 10-Mile route is selected, eight cities — Southfield, Huntington Woods, Oak Park, Pleas- Hazel Park and Pleasant Ridge included ouL T h ese cities, conditioned to each other through years of dealing with problems sewers and water — that tras-cend political boundaries, have harbored hopes of being able to agree. Beauty Queen'Fair' After Boat Accident HOLLAND (UPI) - A Holland beauty queen was In fair condition in Holland Hospital following her rescue by the driver of a powerboat which struck her pad-dleboat In the Kalamazoo River at Saugatuck Saturday night. Karen Clean, 20, suffered scalp lacerations, several broken ribs and posslble'mther internal in- Berkley included in, Ferndale,- 3 boat she II—1 D-.1, ««A rMm by a. boat driven by Larry Higgins, 22, of Saugatuck. Higgins dived Into the river after the impact and rescued the semiconscious girl. Karen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 4ohn Kolean, has won several local and college beauty contests. Five different routes w e re proposed, but they boil down basically to only two: 10-Mile Road, or 11-Mile Road, with variations. Whichever is selected, there will be trouble. By settling on SET SAIL-A clothesline on the foredeck of their Chinese junk must be taken down before the Lowell Keith family can embark on the second leg of their journey to St. Croix in the Virgin Islands. Off to make a new,life for themselves, the Farmington family left Saugatuck Friday after a day’s delay, sailed 18 miles along the Lake Michigan shoreline and were forced by choppy waters to spend the weekend in South Haven. The Keiths will sail to Chicago and travel down the Illinois and Mississippi waterways on motor power. They estimate the trip to their new home will take a month. OAKLAND COUlitY’S LARGEST MORTGAGE LENDING INSTITUTE NEED MORE LIVING ROOM? i t YOU N ENLARGE PAIR...AAODERNIZE mm We have d special (PACKAGE HOME LOAN SERVIC to meet your needs NO DOWN PAYMENT • NO LEGAL FEES / 761 W. HURON-PONTIAC 1102 W. Mapli Bd. -Walltd U. Hwr.-Ofoyten Wni. Cer. M-l $-Clarkiton 471 W. Ireadwoy—Lake OHen k: MRS. NORMAN L. GIDCl|MB Dan Gidcumb, brother of th«' bridegroom, served as acolyte. | The couple is honeymooning In Miami Beach. • i \ \ 'I? . jN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1963 FIVE Army Commander Diet WASHINGTON (AP)^Lt, G«n. John P. Daley, 53, conutumder of the Army’s Combat Developments Command at Ft. Belvoir, Va., died Sunday of a heart attfeck in Albany, N.Y, Daley, who had taught physics at West Point, and his wife were on a visit to his father, Maj. Gen. Edmund L. Daley, retired. The ocean contains 99 per cent of the world’s supply of bromine. There is about one pound of bromine in 2,000 gallons of ocean water. It is being removed and used for high-test gosoline. Next to the Chinese in numerical and economic Importance in the Philippines are the 8,272 Americans who occupy substantial positions in industry, banking, mining and importation. " NEW! TUBELESS MID- A FAIR Ma^navox STEREO PHONO A vast improvement in the re-creation of music ! So depgnWahIff that _ parts are guaranteed for 5 years I The new Magnavox (right) gives you stereo realism you'd never believe possible at such a low price. Miqromatic player has diamond stylus guaranteed for 10'years — records last a lifetime ! Two 8'_' and two 5" speakers. Mahogany or walnut. ONLY 139^^ No Down Poymont Required 4 MAGNAVOX 19" TV ONLY The ideal 'second set' to use all around the house or at the cottage. Automatic picture staBinzer.'SflvirSeal WaiTanty allows 90 davs ^rear-on all parts and tubes. Rolling cart, 10.00 GRINNELL'S, WORLD'S LARGEST MAGNAVOX DEALER Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Plan PONTIAC DOWNTOWN STORE, 27 S. Saginaw St. — FE 3-7168 THE MALL, Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph—r Phone 682-0422 SPECIAL! ; 2 CAR GARAGE ■ REFRESHER COURSE—Felix, the weighty sea elephant, gets a welcome shower from a sympathetic young girl during a recent heat wave in Frankfurt, Germany. Actor Wagner WediJicirest A statue of a cowboy adorns the site of the Dodge City, Kari., -City HaTl, once known as the .Ilcowboy capital.” The hall is built on Boot Hill, burial ground of many cowboys. NEW YORK (AP)-Film actor Robert Wagner and actress Marion Marshall were married Sunday by State Supreme Court Justice, Joseph A. Brust. Wagner was divorced from actress Natalie Wood last year. His bride previously was married to Allen Davey and to Stanley Donen. The couple left for Los'fflifiles shortly after the ceremony. Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? n wobbling when you eat, talk uf luugb JuBt a^ri^f^ji Uttli^PAStBErrH on your powder gives a _____ Tble I remarkable i ___________ and security by boldtnK niates more firmly No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling It’s alkaline (non-acid). Uet FAUTBETH at any drug counter. am HOIKEKEEniK; and you SAVE EVEN MORE with our EASY CREDIT PLAN Open An Easy Payment Account in 3 Minutes or Less KM WHIRLPOOL 2-Door 12-Ft. Decorator-Freezer Automatic defrost with 105-lb. True-Zero freez-I er.no messy defrosting. Designed to fit under a 60” cabinet. •218 32” Wide, 59%” Hi|th RCA VICTOR Portable TV Full Widili $ Storage Door MAYTAG Automatic Waster ihudly, lint ejector ji* riniio teni|ii. New HOOVER Portable Vacuum Cleaner All the eleuning tools siore* neatly ill the lid. 2 Only •198 '54** UCA WHI1H.I>00I, mM DRYER Complete New iioovbiiimriiiT Vuciiiiiii (Aleuiier Only The proper lieel for every febrio EIcc. Model..... $129.90 (ias Model......$I.W10 EilEE DEI.IVEItV FREE SERVIGE '138 Refuriv Wheelbarrow! RISING SUN, Ind. (iPI - A notice in the Ohio County News: “Will the person who borrowed the wheel barrow from my prenv ises please return It. The owner, Raymond "Baker,- would like to borrow it for a few days. H. L. Baxter.” In Person ... DON McLEOD Dean 0f the D.J*m BROADCASTING 9 A.M. to 12 Noon Daily Direct From FELICE FOODLAND 1116 W. Huron St. On WHFI 94.T On Your FM Dial ADDA6/UM6£ Complete With Overhead :Dooff and Cement Floor *8991 Guaranieed Custom Consiruefion and Complpte Finishing UP TO 20-YEAR PAYMENT PLAN Get Our Free Estimate Howl WE SFECtALIZE IN— e ADDITIONS e GARAGE BEMODELiNa GRAVES 7-YEAR MODERNIZATION PUN CONTRACTING CO. Call Us Anytime OR 4-1511 i GE 304nch Electric Hange Fully aiitoiiiatie clock trolled oven with lift-wff dour for easy deuning. Detroit Jewel 36” CAS RANGE .5 hiirncrs and griddle, 2 liriiilors and roliMserie. ' *188 - EASY SpindriRr Washor Do II full week’s wash an hour. Washes fuH lO-lh. load in one tub while rinsing a l()-lh. load in other tub. Spins clothes drier than a wringer. on N I Hill \Y \MI M(IMI\Y I N I S, I II 9 COOD HOy^EKEEPINO Be Si WHITE SALE GREEN SECTION in this edition- just lift out and fold for BIG SAVINGS! Spanning the seasons In ityle ... our Acetate and Cotton Striped Seersucker --Hero‘s"S"‘piirr iinie season-spanner with slimming vertical stripes on acetate and cotton seersucker. It's just right for all of your daytime activities, Chorming rope belt, two slash pockets. Brown/black or blue/black, sizes 12 to 20 and l4'/2to2|’/z. $Q99 F'alle'i nayiflmii Presses . I. Third Hoor ■:tv r THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Street MONDAY, JULY 22, 1963 mnow A. pmosKAtD Pontiac, Michigan JOHN A. Bnir Becretan and Advertbing Olraetor BAtar J. Rua Local Advertlilng It Seems to Me — Congressman Puts New Light bn Controversial Dune Topic The subject of our Sleeping Bear \ Dunes is so controversial, we’d like \to reprint a quotation for the consideration oL those who are opposed. This comes from “Planning and Civic Comment," a quarterly publication,' which is the official organ of “American Planning and Civic Association on State Parks.” ★ ★ ★ The statement originated with John F. Shelley, Congressman from California, and we seize this brief excerpt from his bill “to establish a national wilderness preservation system for the permanent good of the whole people of our nation.” That in itself, is a „ suggestive statc- IJpper Michigan, and Iron County, where it belongs. “The Michigan Historical Commission has become convinced that they are the creation of former county road engineer Herbert F. Larson Sr. Their origination is attributed to him in a cast metal standard which will be dedicated in July. It would appear that the dispute has been settled in favor of Iron County.” Aw shucks. ★ ★ ★ A student in 2063 is asking a history professor about the peoples in the United States a hundred years before—in our day. The un- dergraduate inquires whether these Coiiclusioil . We still vote for Murray. We believe he did it, just as much as we believe-that George Washington heaved a silver dollar across the Potomac—that Cinderella faded at midnight—and that the sunshine fairy watches over curly-headed little girls when they take their naps. Pat’s oUr boy. •He may have spied a lone, splintered table in the wilderness, but he made the idea a national institution. Voice of the People: ‘Bill Would Have Stopped Bottle, Can Littering' When will the lavirmakers of this state start representing the public? I’m referring to aLhill they had passed and_alL set tonga-into effect which would ban throw*away bottles and cans. They yielded to the pressure of a few, commonly known as lobbyists, and had this law squelched-. I would advocate a 10-cent deposit on all beer and pop bottles. Then if they were thrown from cars there would be someone there to pick them up before they stopped rolling. In the meantime I’d like to pick up a truck load of these throwaway bottles and cans that are cluttering up our roadsides, and dump them on the front lawn of the persons responsible for getting the bill killed. . . Wil :: ‘Fine Celebration in Auburn Heights’ ‘Troops, Weapons Increase in Cuba’ The Fourth of July celebration in Auburn Heights was made financially possible by the sup-pori of the community and surrounding area. Reports from Cuban sources say the number of Russians on the island has increased; training of Cuban troops has been The ABhurnHeights Fire De--tmrtineiitrTrToiri”^G^ and American Legion thank everyone for their cooperationv— - "Mssilesliavenaeen insfalled; and Ti¥ge stocKpneDf weapons continues to grow.. Stop The Presses! David Lawrence Asks: Pl|ns are being made for a bigger and better program next year. C.K. Evans •. Publicity, Chairman Unidad Revoiucionaria (UR), Cuban e Is U.S. Fiscal Policy Immoral? Dog Foe Fon^ of Cartoon Canine statement which shows that the Soviets have stepped up their shipments from 18 in January of this year to 70 in April. Troops and hardware pour into the Island at an increasing rate. Washington does nothing. Patrick “courageous, farsighted people ever ,^stopped their continuous building of schools, highways, homes and playgrounds.” ★ ★ ★ The professor replies: “No, they never slopped. They were bold, ambitious, enterprising people — these energetic citizens of the sixties. They went right on building their schools, homes, highways and playgrounds. “But they were not so consumed with their own destiny — —^ 4h«ir own needs and ambitions — that they forgot about ours. “They left us their spirit — they left us their natural resources — they even left us some of their wilderness as a reminder of our past and our heritage. This they inherited from those who went before them. This they preserved for us. This we must preserve, too.” ★ ★ ★ The Press believes these peoples ^f a century hence—2063—deserve the fruits of ^Trent thought, consideration and planning.. They should expect a part of our heritage intact. The good of the masses is paramount. Future airports, highways, schools and parks must be planned and started now. And always — always they must inevitably occupy land that belongs to SOMEONE. Can it be otherwise? ★ ★ ★ But picture the added cost, dis- location niul hardships, if these steps were postponed a century. And the Stale doesn’t confiscate. It pays its way—-which is some mitigation. Wi! can’t lilock progress. Table Disputed .... Hold everything. Wc’fe challenged. The Crystal Falls Diamond Drill takes exception to our suggestion T*!! T that Muhray D. Van Wagoner origl- Jottin|[s froim the well-thumbed notebook ofe.your peripaitetic reporter; Harold Wn^N, British labor leader, has slippeXvSeveral notches in JFK’s estimationX He batted very well until he started campaigning for favor with Khrushchev ........ overheard: “Doctor: You’re badly run down. Lay off golf for TO days and rest up In the office.” .......... Sonny Liston was taken for $20,000 by the home industries in Las Vegas ........ U.S. Is seriously considering a sharp cutback in nuclear weapons. We have enough to blow Russia into tiny pieces. (And she has enough to do the same to us.) ★ ★ ★ I can’t prove it but I’ll bet a sugar cookie there’ll be a Negro on the II. S. Supreme Court bench before the year ends............. Trusted scouts advise me Karen Lee Hooper deserves mention as one of the area’s most attractive young ladie.s. ...... .... We’ve been flooded by the lowest form of sex literature. KAREN One of the worst (ransgres.sor.s was convicted on 27 counts and faces an interminable pri.son sen-(ence. Other producers are under surveillance. The volume is a( an all-time high................New York citizens are aroused over the recent dismissal of a judge’s son who Was involved in an accident (hat killed five people. A grand jury is probable with nasty charges. ★ ★ ★ Hey! I just learned that at the Michigan Press Association golf tournament at Traverse City, our own John W. FitEoerald was golf WASHINGTON -In these days when spokesmen for the administration are piously stressing ‘“reminders of conscience ” and “moral issues ’ in the "equal rights’’ crusade, it may be wondered why those symbols of national behavior don’t seein to apply also to the fiscal policy of the government. ' It might be assumed that it’s!______________ all righjt to spend LAWRENCE the totid revenues taken from the citizens during the year and then to borrow still more and spend it, thus increasing an already record-breaking debt. there has been a deficit every year with few exceptions, and there is still enough unborrowed billions to send a man to the moon. The President, after surveying his own figures — showing that the current deficit isn’t as bad as last January’s esti-. mate—fipds comfort in a budget of $92.6 billion because it Isn’t as high as the $94.3Tiif^"^ lion estimated'last January. Yet, the Federal budget was $87.8 billion just twelve months ago — in the fiscal year 1962. Why couldn’t the United States government have gotten along in 1963 with that big budget of $87.8 billion? , How can a reduction in tax rates now be considered sound finance? These are the simple questions that are left unanswered today in the “moral” atmosphere of the national cwpitfrl where the preachers of “equal rights” and J„:!equal protection OF the law” show no signs of becoming con-.science - stricken over the age-old principle that it’s wrong “to rob Peter to pay Paul.” (Capyrlfht. 1M3, Ntw York Herald Tribune Syndleite. Inc.) I’m not a dog lover, but I read “Marmaduke” every night. Pauline Koop 412V* W. Huron Portraits Fire Departments Praised for Work We thank the fire departments for the wonderful work performed during our recent fire. We especially thank onr own Keego Harbor Fife Department. R. Pazik Keego Sales & Service, Inc. Bob Considine Says: The Country Parson If the citizen were to conduct his affairs by that code, .could' he, too, -plead that»just a few years ago somebody else spent as much, if not more, and never paid off a dollar of debt? Old Memories Spice Trip by Airplane to Honolulu (n the parlance of the day, it has become "a iad to deffouiice anyone who wants to balance the budget as some kind of “reactionary*’ or “right winger.” if the argument is offerk that a “conservative” is a fellow who wants to conserve l(is s«(vings and his property, the retort usually is that this is the “obsolete” and unsophisticated doctrine of a past generation. FLIGHT 843, En Route Honolulu — A traveler to the Sandwich IslesrSOth-state of The U.S. of A., takes along with him more, than a sandwich, toothbrush and dram-amine. Accompanying h i m, among his i m p e d i menta, are always little I clouds of memo-* In another bunk, fathoms deep in the hot 8-knot nig))t, a hand-someT muscular correspondent who had an outstanding war record in combat would call out in his sleep for his mother. That was, our last trip this way by ship — though it can be a most congenial and comfortable way to go. By JOHN C. METCALFE A small apartment now I rent . . . And it is really very nice . . . For I have found that T can thrive ... In such a neat device ... It used to be across the past ... That daily I was prone to roam . . . Around a spacious garden ground . . . And many rooms within a home . . . But at my present residence . . . The rooms are rather small and few ... And so in caring for the place ... I haven’t half as much to do , . . There are no hedges now to trim . . . Nor any hillside lawn to mow . . . And I have time to spare at last . . . And even other places go ... A small apartment is just fine . . . And suits the kind of ways I lead . . . And I believe my dog and I . . . Have found the quiet life we need. Smiles “I doubt if a man ever finds out if he’s given to profanity until he’s bit in the face by the switching tail of the cow he’s An Indiana woman was given a ticket for driving while eating off of a tray attached to her car. A cop was the car hop. When you sing your own praises too often your friends have less reason to. If fears are expressed, moreover, about the future value of the dollar — that it rtiay buy less when it is taken out Df the savings banks than when it was put in there, the answer given is that the “national welfare” demands such confi.scation. - CONSIDINE nes of previous trips to this enchanted region, real or imagined. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages The President said that last January his budget experts estimated that the fiscal year 1963 would show a deficit of $(t,8 billion, but he added that it now is only $6.2 billion. Thi.s drop of $2.6 billion is supposed to bring sighs of relief, since it is pointed out that $1.7 billioii of Ibis decrease ha.s been made po.ssible by a cut In I’ed-eral .spending and that $900 million more than expected came in from tax receipts, .sales of a.s-sets and other payments to the government since the January estimate was made. The first time my wife and I ventured this way was in the old S. S. Maisonia. The altitude of that holy roller of the Pacific was 31,000 feet lower than this Boeing 707 we are now flying. The pace was .somewhat more deliberate, 18 knots as oppo.sed to 487. But it was a fine voyage achieved in four .swift days, with hardly two of them encumbered by .seasickness. Home Town The Wall Street Journal One’s home town is the place luhere people wonder how you ever got as far as you have. Argentina's Choice The Nashville Banner nated the Michigan roadside tables. We quote Jihls outstanding publication : V “Downstate Oakland County claimH that Murray IL Van Wagoner, former governor is (he founding father of Michigan’s roadaide table. An editorial from The Pontiac Pre8.s, reflects senti-mentH exjuisiSFliy theTTi^^ State Journal. The Journal said; *No Other state cun boast as many picnic tables as Michigan ‘has along Ha roadaidcs.' , “But the Pontiac Press writer attrlbutea their origination to the wronff man. We will concede that Van Wagoner waa fine but we . would like to get the origination of the roadaide ayatem hack in the feminine boss with 100. Hmmm- mmmmml.................Professional critics didn’t greet “Beverly Hillbillies” very kindly last fall but it ended the TV season as number one among new offerings. Donna Douo-LAH (KUy May) has leaped lnto the top echelon of our glamor girls .... . ... Because of her nude pictures in Playboy, Jayne Mansfield has been cancelled out of two big TV appearances and otlicr rcjccUOns arc imminent...........Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: Uie C's—prospects for the U, S.-Ru-sso test ban talks; the J’8-^ ^fxtremists on both sides of the integration pi‘i6blem. , / -^HAgbLD .A. Fitzgerald .1 I ■•/’ Now $900 million isn’t the only increase in revenues. For, actually. the tptal receipts of the government in the fiscal year 1963 went up $5 billion above the 1962 figure. Of this, sum $3 billion wa.s contributed by tax money. But all of this was eaten up in government spending, just the .same, and the budget was still left unbalanced with a deficit of $6.2 billion. IS IT HEALTHY? How can any Institution remain in good health, fiscally speaking, if it uses up all of its increased receipts each year to pay current expenses and incurs also even a bigger deficit which requires the borrowing of still more money We were overwhelmed by the reception at llanolnlu; the happy talk of the crowded tug of lei-bcarers which boarded us like gift-giving pirates . . . Diamond Head . . . Waikiki . . . the surf-riders ... the people. No person can forget his first trip to Hawaii. Nor his last. Even with the electoral college still to cast its deciding vote, the fog has lifted enough fsu',a glimpse of two definite accomplishments 1 n Argentina’s national election: (1) The hopes of the fugitive Juan D. Peron were further blasted; and it) ex-PresIdent Arturo Frondizi was similarly rejected. Sion installs Dr. lllia, any coalition government he forms surely would include the wise and stabilizing counsels of General Aramhuru. Argentina needs a quality of leadership with (he courage of devotion, and knowhow to bring social, political, economic order out of a muddled state of confusion and dissension. Dr. lllia is an untried hand. Ills tenure will be watched with concern. cause the exuberance of the police was supposedly not authorized. But the episode is part of an alarming pattern of intimidation. Reporters h|ave been expelled from Viet Nam for being Insufficiently optimistic about the war against Communist guerrillas. They have been denied access to areas that (he Saigon regime wishes to curtain from view. Millions Working The National Observer There was another trip In 1948, this one on the S.S. Appalachian, the Big Apple, the press ship for the Bikina A-bumb tests. The spit-and-polish executive officer hated us all on .sight and took it out on the crew to such an extent that tile correspondents eventually called liim on his conduct. We dropped cigarette ashes on his decks, appeared in the stifling ward room without ties, and his superiors had winked at the blasphemy Of our bringing beer and stronger drink About 25 per cent went to Dr. Arturo lllia, a member of the Papular Radical party, termed a left-of-center moderate. Something like 15 per cent went to the candidate of the other Radical (action -• Dr, Oscar AIcnda; and about the same percentage to Gen. Pedro Ar-amburu, former provisional President, whose concept of democratic principle commands respect among conill-tution-mlndfd men throughout the hemisphere. More Americans—70, million-plus—wcre at work last month than at any other time in the nation's history. Included in the working force, of course, are the pessimists Who toil full lime finding fault with the nation's economy. See No Evil They have been subjected to insults because they persist in telling the truth about the government’s private war with adherents of the majority religion. No doubt a civil war ravages the country and official tempers are frayed by Impcrtlticnt foreigners who work for a lamentably uncensored press. But the police thuggery is going vastly to increase the growing disquiet of many citizens over the kind of government this nation is supporting with its money, its arms and its soldiers. The Washington Post Seven American correspondents have asked President Kennedy to protest the indefensible harassment of reporters in South Viet Nam. Vote Once The Chicago Tribune \ * I* I. T. i: Yet this dilemma, which hafs gone unresolved for many ycar,s,| doesn’t appear to bother mosl ofr the politicians in Washthgton; They |)oint out that it must be ail right because in^ the peacetime years siflce World War II There were so many of u.s that it was like a slave ship must have 1)0011. Tass man, lying endlessly seasick on the bottom dock Of a four-deck stack in an airless room of such slacks. Would occasionally htpan, “Havay-yec, soon. Women!” But, alas, he. was too ill to leave Uie Big /Apple .during Us short stay at Honolulu. Dr. lllia should recognize the hazards of reopening any diW.T hospitable to Peron or hkrdiehard Peronlstas, Because he was their adopted candidate, Fromllzl made that mistake of concessions to them -- the resulting turmoil, along with Communist-born trou-bl|!8. bringing aboiit his over-tt^ow In a biobdiess military coup in Mairch;^ 1962. If (he elecloi'al coflege decl- U Is bad enough when (he regime of President Diem imitates tiR! oppressive tacllcs of communism in persecuting Buddhists and non-Communist ^ political critics. But the affront is compounded when American correspondents are stoned by secret (loliee when the re.-porters attempt to cover a A man taos sent io fail for tioflng three limes last Nov. 4. iMoks like he'd know us Chicagoans never vote more than twice. H fnay be, as the Unitod Stales embassy in Saigon seems almusl too eager to believe, that no Wmal protest ii necessary be- \ / X \ , \ XjuM’ -H- /->-*-!-■- K~'7 7‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 2j 1963 Sukarno Plans Show of Force JAKARTA, Indonesia (#) •— Indonesia’s armed forces will hold ^ Joint maneuvers In thr Sn u t h China Sea and the Strait of Malacca to underline President Sukarno’s opposition to the projected Federation of Malaysia. There were no immediate details on tile size, type or of the maneuvers. Information minister Roeslan Abdulganl said the war games Were “in the framework of confrontation.’’ The Malacca Strait and the South China Sea bracket Malaya. Across the South China Sea from Malaya are the British Borneo Territories of Sarawak and North Borneo, which Malaya Is scheduled to lead Into Malaysia Aug. 3. Indonesia is vigorously opposed unless U.N. Secretary General U Thant determines that the Borneo people want the federation. Indonesia has taken several ROME m ^ Police finally discovered why they could never find Pietro Ansebnl at_ home in the six months he had been wanted on a charge of purse-snatching, “He might as well have slipped down the drain each time we rang tiie doorbeU,” one poVceman remarked. It seemed unlikely, but pent time poUce checked on him they gave the bathroom a good going There they found him, in hollow he had tunneled out under the tiled flooring beneath the bathtub. He was breathing through a plastic tube stuck up through the plumbing. Wall Street, New York, was one of the first publicly light^ streets in the nation. 10. These include formation of an “alertness fleet’’ and plans to build air defense bases on outlying islands, two of them fronting the Malaysia area. It was learned from high level naval sources an “alertness fleet’’ consists of, about 60 ships, or about a third of Indonesia’s navy, and Is equipped for various types of operations including amphibious assaults. 50 May Have Dlod In Kashmir Cloudburst PAHALGAM, Kashmir (AP)-A cloudburst struck this picturesque holiday resort Saturday night and unofficial reports said SO persons may have died. The deluge washed away parts of two hotels and some tents on the banks of the Ladir River. Many persons were injured. Official sources said there were no foreign tourists in the resort. More than 2,000 varieties of apples are known and cultivated, and about 1,000 kinds are grown in various sections of the U,S. ,Police Capture Fugitive Drained of Hiding Space -1 Negotiations Stalled in Chile Mine Strike SANTIAGO, ChUe (UPI) - Finance Minister Luis MacKenna broke off talks last night with union leaders involved in the 20-day=oid-striimaHhe-HrSH»wned P*r«>n Teniente c o p p e r mine, saying their “exaggerated demands’* lade a seMement impossible^ -Ut^n leaders meet today to dbduss a possible “general strike’’ of copper miners in support of the Teniente strikers. The union is demanding a 49.9 per cent wage increase for miners employed in the Teniente pit. The company whicdaperates the mine, a subsidiary of Kennecott Copper, is offering 40 per cent. Family Full of Queens SAN FRANCISCO UV-Barbara Caselli was crowned the Parkside District’s May Queen in 1939. Twenty-four years later, as Mrs. Eldward Shaules, she helped crown her daughter, Laurie, as the 1963 May Queen. 4th to Succumb After Undergoing Liver Trdnsplant DENVER, Colo. (AP) - A 54-year-old Florida man, the fourth ever to undergo a liver transplant operatiohTdledBunday, apparently of causes unrelated to the surgery. Arthur W; Curtis of MonticellO had undergo)^ the rare transplant at Denver Wterans -Administration Hospital July 16. A VA spokesman said he appeared to be improving up to the moment he died. A physician said the patient’s temperature was being taken when his heart stopped.. . All four liver transplants were done by a team of VA-Colorado University Medical School surgeons. The fhfst, a 3-year-old boy, bled to death on the operating table. The other two patients died later of complications not directly related to the transplant, physicians said. KEEPS PRICES DOWN SHOP IN COOL A/R-COND/I/ON£D_ COMFORT I holds in l^away Buy now of special pre-season savings YOUR BABY'S 5x7" PORTRAIT AT THB rOllOWINO 8TOM ONIY DRAYTON RUINS July 22nd through July 27th, 1963 SIX DAYS ONLY 55 NO APPOINTMINT NKtSSARY Choice of several adorable finished poses, ready in a few days. Your child's beautiful but fleeting expressions captured forever with space-age electronic equipment—taken by specialists 'In ehitdren's photography. Greup pictures priced slighlly higher. DRAYTON PLAINS ONLY HOURS: 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Monday through Saturday YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL OiVG youTfelf 10 points for each correct 1 AverellHarrlmantook 6,000 pounds of equipment to Mosoow aa part of our cost of the new... between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. a-airllne b~oultural exchange program c-“hot line” oommunloationa link 2 President Kennedy said that any agreement made at the 3>nation test ban talks in Moscow would be submitted to the ..... for approval. a-Supreme Court b-Senate o-State Department 3 In the other Moscow conference, *'peace talks” between the U.S.S.R. and ..... apparently failed. b-Weet Germany o-Red China 4 The Soviets proposed a summit meeting at the United Nations in 1965, to observe the world organization’s »....th anniversary. a-10 b-20 0-26 6 Defense Secretary McNamara ordered drastic curbs on participation by military persons in a-olvil rights demonstrations b-private fund-raising campaigns o-publlo contests RARTII - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with Its correct meaning. 1- longevlty 2- palatable 3- paiAey 4- deplete 6-prosaio a-ordlnary; not exciting b-long life o-empty; exhaust d-pleasing e-ooitierenoe RART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 pofaits for names that you caul correctly match with the clues. l-Mlnuteman a<*a sponsor of planned mans maroh to White House b-proponed power project 3- Candy Spots 4- Passamaquoddy o-missUe d-slte of a border ad- e-raoe horse R VK. bw.. MwNimi I. WlMSMln The Pontiac Press Julv 22,1963 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. 1- ■ a ...U.S. Agriculture Secretary tours Russian farms b ...a U. S.-Canadlan defense line ..here, a junta controls d ...used jets and rockets to observe sun’s eolipse e ...Liston-Patterson f ...training season opens g ...American mlll-' tary base h ...warm White House welcome for President of this naUon 1 ...once again a surplus problem J ...attacked by Italian Communist newspaper HOW DO YOU RATE? (Seen bek Side of Owls Segantaly) 91 to 100 polnH-TOP SCORE! II to 90 point! - Emellent. -71 to 10 pelnH - Good. 61 to TO point! - Pair. 60orUidw7?7-H'mm! Thl! Quia It part of the Eduoatlonal Ptogram whioh This Newi|hpof kimlrtio! to Sohool! In till! eirea lo.Stlmulato Intaraat In National and Wbrld AHilf! ai an aid to Dovalsplne Good Cltlaamlilp. _ —Save Thil NetlC* EKSwIrtitlon.'; ^ STUDENt^ Valuable Rafaraiwa Materia I For Emma. ANSWERS ON' REVERSE PAOE - , /i' - BOYS' WINTER JACKETS Jr.TSoys'favorite nylon ski jacket 11®* Jr. boys' reversible of Norpole fabric Corduroy goal ^ coqt, Orion lined Reg. 13.99 1.00 HOLDS 10” ^*^13 88 Machine washjable vertical quilt. Hidden hood converts to collar, shirred elastic wrists, snap chest pockets, zip pockets. Block, blue. Sizes 12 to 20. Comfortoble nylon jacket is waterproof, windproof, washable, dry cleonoble! Worm pile lined hood, quilt lining. Blue, brown loden. Sizes 6-14. Large bulky knit button-down collar, side vents, buttons that won't pull off! Antelope or olive Crompton cord. Orion* acrylic pile lined. Sizes 12-20. ’ *Reg. TM. DuPont Corp, PRE-SEASON SNOWSUIT SALE Toddler girls' and juvenile boys' big snowsuit savings Special! Reg. 10.99 to 14.99 tots' warm «now$uifs, only SRECIAL RURCHASE T88 $1 HOLDS IN UYAWAY 8 88 TODDLER GIRLS’; 2, 3 pc. in Orion* acrylic pile or woven plaid cotton, warmly lined. 2-4.' JUV. BOYS’* Many styles in 100% cotton plaids and solids. Zip fronts. Quilt lined. 3-6x. */{(•*. t.M. DuPont Corp. Galey and Lord plaids, waterproof nylons, wool meltons and more . . . Many styles, many Orion* pile lined. All but meltons ore hand washable. Some hove stretch pants. Girl's 3-6x. 09IN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday! FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON 9LAINS ' il ... • 1 At . \ , i'5 y EIGHT ^ THE PONTIAC PREgS, MONDAY. JULY 22, 1963 actor was **Jnprovlng nio^” and that his. temperature * dropped to noiimal over the w end for sthe tirst time since he was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance last Wednesday. SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI) Actor Marlon Brando was to andergo diapostic tests this week at St: John’s Hospital where he was recuperating from a kid* ney ailment. Attendants said the S9-year*old Attendants said it was too early to ^edict when the Academy Award winning actor would be released from the hospital. He italized last April,for the same illness, an inflammation of the kidney and bladder. Things He Might Never Know There is no soda in.sodi water. Carbon dioxide gas, held under pressure, is generally used. More Tidbits Gleaned From a Columnist's Mailbag By HAL BOYLE , NEW YORK (AP)-Thtags columnist might never know if 1 didn’t open his mail: Expectant parents might be terested to know that 415 sets nransiM SnTM ' f YOUR EYES MUST LAST A LIFETIME! The imporfance of your vision is so greats . so necessary that we need not point it put to you.,. YET .. . isn’t it easy to "put-off” making on appointment? oEHEXMlMTiniS triplets are born in thW country each year. Swinuning isj the best exercise! summer. Itl doesn’t overheat the body, and the cool water is refreshing. Gambling expertssay^ it’s much easier to cheat at poker thap most card games-but that’s no recipe for longevity. FE 2-2895 109 N. SAGINAW ST. Daily 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. I. STEINMAN, O.D, Friday 9:30 AM. to 8:30 P.M. BOYLE An experiment in a California prison < camp produced evidence Uiat jdeep-therapy can. help al-cohollcs. The prisoners were subjected to recorded antiliquor talks by microphones placed under their pillows at night. If your house costs more than 2% times your gross annual income, you’ll probably run budgetaiy trouble. Some 18,500 people are killed annually by falls—and about two-thirds of them happen in or around the home, QUOTES Our quotable notables: *Tn America there are two classes of travel—first class, and with children”—Robert Benchley. Nero, the playboy Roman Em-[teror, was also one of the earliest {nown players of the bagpipe, now Scotland’s favorite folk instrument. Salt Lake. Our 49th state, Alaska, has over 15,000 miles of coastline. On the Atlantic side of the Panama Canal, the tide rises and falls about two feet; on the Pacific side, about 20 feet. America now has more than eight million widows, and gets about 550,000 new ones a year. Today one out of every 10 wives becomes a widow before her 55th birthday. GENmAL ELECTRIC^ LOWEST PRICES! HIGHEST TRADES! NO MONEYDOWN! Ali;^ MODELS BIG 13.2 REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Zaro-dagra* fraatar—3.1 cu. ft. —holds up to 108 pounds. Door shall for Va>gal. ica craam cartons. 2 mini.^uba ica trays undar wira tor saction. a 4 cabinat shalvas, ona slida-out a 2 porcalain vagatobla drawars. a Buttar compartmant a Door stoiaga. bottom shall holds gal. milk containars, tall bottlas. A MONTH 1350 MODEL TB304X 'aneikaM range'' “OHIQDE SKYLIGHT WINDOW RANGES” ^ Automatic Senal-Temp*^ Unit Eya-Livol Panorama Window Upper Oven ^ Automatic Rotisaarla 4/ Modern Built-In Styling A MONTH ELECTRIC COMI»ANY 825 W. HUflON Many a modern dentist would agree with Mohanuned, who instructed his followers to brush their teeth as a means of praising Allah. In some Moslem sects, brushing the teeth is considered equivalent to saylhg 70 prayers. Twenty-three million Americans over the age of 18 haye less than 8 years of schooling. It is in the ranks of the least^ucated that unemployment takes its highest toll. blly as you might. A tree isn’t a tree until it’s eight feet tall and two inches in diameter—before that it’s a sapling. Birds fly ipto a storm so their feathersuront get ruffled. A The Chinese invented paper money about. 650 A.D., printing the notes from woodblocks. If your bed isn’t at least seven inches longer than you are, you Storms, Quakes Plague Italy )ME (AP) — Earthquakes, rainstorms and death-dealing lightning plagued Italy over ^he weekend. A quake Friday jarred a vast section of north Italy along the Riviera, driving thousands from trembling buildings into streets in fright. No one was hurt. Three women were injured by pieces of falling cornice stone in a quake Sunday which shook a 150-square-mile Appennine Moun-■ >f Rome. ling killed five farmers working In fielffsT^^ three others — a woman in her home, a man in a store, and a patient walking in a clink' garden. I A bolt of lightning in Udine, in northeast Italy, started a fire that destroyed a thousand canaries Eiused in a warehouse. Torrential rain caused innumerable traffic accidents. cricket can leap 100 times its own lengto. ^ . It was Philip Wylie who observed, “We’re about to enter the age of flight before we’ve even developed a chair that a man can sit on comfortably." Dwulirsip r^: TMUeXAPH J FLOOR SHOP FRONT DOOR PARKING Afa// HOURS! Mon., Thurt., Fri., Sat. 9-9 Tuns., Wad. 9-6 Shot> 2Bllcf.W«t nUiraph German Flees to West BERLIN (AP) ^ A 21-year-old East German soldier slipped through Communist-built barbed wire and concrete barricades into West Berlin Sunday, West Berlin police reported. PLASTIC WALL TILE lA ARMSTRONG INLAID TILE 6. VINYL ASBESTOS TILE 7a VINYL SANDRAN The Best and Moif Beautiful Vinyl Floor Coveilitf^ rV'-l2* VIHde^ 6' Wide Rag. $3.1 SOnHER SPECIALS GOLD SEAL Inlaid LINOLEUM ..149 a I Sq. Yd. ARMSTRONG IHIIRAZZO METALIC CORLON 95 MaSR'Yd. XIWOUEIIM RUGS 9x12 395 Rag. $2.4 6M RUBBER BASE 4*' HIGH IRREQ. 9! LINOLEUM WALL TILE 54” High 391 FREE! USE OF OUR TOOLS It’s the Extras That Really Count You get something extra when you heat your home with cleaner burning Furnace oil from Gee. The extra niceness that teems to radiate appreciation when you call Gee’s on the telephone. The extra care in the cleanliness of delivery of betfer quality^ fuel t>iL by extra courteous drivers. The extra cleanliness in heating your home... as Gee's better quality fuel oil actually cleans as it burns... eliminating many costly furnace repairs. The extra warmth and comfort In colder weather ... the extra ease In which Gee's better quality fuel oil adapts itself to this changeable climate, giving a mild, cleaner heat when needed. The extra security you get with Gee's "Degree Day" record which automatically tells us when to replenish your supply of Gee's Better Quality Fuel Oil. The Extra security backed by Gee's 38 years of continuously servicing Pontiac and Oakland County with Better Quality Fuel. The extras you can get with Holden's Red Stamps which are given at no extra cost. No Maltor Where You Live... You, Too, Can Enjoy Safe, Clean, Dnpendablo Warmth, Comfort and Eoonomy naw modarn OMO NOW IS THE TIME TO SWITCH TO CEE . ■. Now is the Nmo to atari to enjoy oomploto healing saNtfaeflon and all tho oxtras . . . DIALFES-S1S1 Gee’s fleet of truoks, meter equipped for accuraey end redio dispatched for quioker service, deliver better quality fuel oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Water-ford, Olarkston, Orion, Oxford, Auburn Heights, Bloomtiald Hills, Kaago Harbor, Waliad Lake and the surrounding araa. May $«rv» you? Dial FE SS181 ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ Hwr It 1-0,2-bj l-ei 4-lij l-a. FAnT III 1^b| 2-di S-t| 4-o OUR EMTIRE STOCK OF CHILDREN’S SWIMWEAR Now 1/2 PRICE SAVE BIG NOW! MUSLIN SHEETS 81x99" 166 Reg. 2“» | STEEL TOOL ^HEST 3 Drawers-Locks Automatically Special Purchase BOYS’ KsirtHim Large Assortment of Styles Sizes 6-18 l| SO Zfor^J ^lAMBOO CAFES 50% OFF ALL SUMMER FURNITURE REbUGED 25% OFF FIBER GUSS PIPE WRAP • dovert 21' of Va" pipo e Eliminates sweating • Insulateii hot water pipes Special ll BOYS’ SWIMWEAR SIZES 6-18 t-y 99^ SHOWER HEAD • Chrome Plated Brato A • Fully Adjustable • Nylon UPiyP WHILE THEY LAST SUPER HUUSE PAINT Sett Gleaning Regular 41^77" 5^’Gal. FULL SKIH CHAMOIS Extra Large Size Oil Tanned 14/1" Special 1 While They Last Rotary Power Mower -ft, . SAVE*J1 • 20-Inch AReRR '• Impiulse Starter SISII • R^uldf99» VO FUSTIC GARDEN HOSE ’/a”-60 Ft. Length 12-YEAR GUARANTEE Spedai AsisORTED PUNTERS * Metal and Pettery S OFF ONE WHEEL TRAILER ' Ideal for Vaoalionere R.f. «(.U • All Steel A • 500 lb. Capacity • 17 Guage Body STORE 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.AA. Dr^ri^GS^rb JUImII 682-4940 HOURS AAoiTdoy Thru Saturdciy r)9i1TICIC fTlQII 1 Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road I- .-r -7, J' Refugees ol'Hungary mi Wed ANN ARBOR W- Blonde E m e s e Szklenkay, Hungarian dancer who fled C!ommunist guards to America from Paris last fall, is soon to be married. Miss Szklenkay, 21, and Kalman Szekely, 31, Flint librarian who was a 1945 refugee from Hungary, will speak their vows Aug. 3 at St. Francis of Assisi Church in Ann Arobr. The church is die one where Emese^s brother-in-law, Stephen Dinka, 39, prayed fast September before going to Paris his dramatic mission fai the dancer’s behalf. Dinka, aided by newspaper correspondent Mary Goodfellow the Detroit Free Press, spirited Miss Szklenkay aWay from her Hungarian dance troupe’s Communist guards and flew with her to the United States. The willowy dancer and Szekely told of their romance at the Dinka home yesterday. “I saw alt the stories about her in the newspaper,” s curiy • haired Szekely. He found an intermediary at the University of Michigan to introduce him_ lO ;£mese=4hronglv the Rin“Ra'family. They had date, at a ballet. _________ “It didn’t get serious Until about New Year’s Day,” said Emese in her newly learned English, “Like a woman, she waited until April to say ‘yes,’ ” said Szekely. Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland Coujity Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Melvin E. Waltmnn, : Lawrence'V..________ im Scott Lake Road' ’‘■-'ll R. Judd, 2074 Phil Robert W. I vwv JO. r'ourtn Merlin D. Rice, sIm, N. Roselawn Roy Fowler, HO Parkdale Jimmy D Pasamore, 68 W. Yale Eric U Sorlerberg, Boston Lawrence J. Sowter, 6794 Shetterland Way Dale R. Moss. 1841 Henbert Oakland . kevem. 6765 Loch Leven e O. Crand Ronnie L. Crobett,’ 441 Fourth Dolan T. Sontag, 681 First Eugene R. Rode. 608 Bay Ralph H. Hawes, 3181 Dixie Highway Ernest J. Sheglna, 1384 Jeffwood Kenneth L. Furman, 2333 Hempstead carl M. Vert, 841 Myrtle Kenneth D. Wright, 1267 Naneywood Oscar B. Boyca, 633 Avon Edward R. Bushey, 128 N. Princeton Richard L. Furgurson, 64 8. Shirley Oene W. Case, 2824 Davlsta, Highland Howard J. Vaug'h Warren L. Wlllla...„............... ....... William W. Moulton, 3062 OreOnlawn James T. Thickwell, 200 Robin Charles E. Schelb Jr., 866 Commerce 3 I.ocustwood Johnnie _, —....... 6717 Carroll Lake Bond Ray B, Whitney, 881 Rldgemont' Gordon E. Boronson, 3340 Royal Blvd. Albert R, Stout. 314s nronkucal Stanley 6. Howlck, Joseph F. Laflninni Lee R. Lamphrre, 8808 Round Lake jjivu. Eugene P. Sohantz, 4741 Whitlow Blvd. —xatarlee^ B, Morris; 660 Lochaven MILFORD Darrel K. Burget. 811 Duke Lennard B. Anareasen, 160.6 Bogle Lake Tommie Collins, 402 Hickory Norman L, Raymond, 86.6 Panorama REEOO IIARIIOK dary B. Trammel, 2868 Hensman Arnold h. Zohnder. 3187 Orchard I.nke Ferris L. Randolplh 1800 Maddy Lan* Luli PIores.^2086 Prldham David Dill. Uoa Maddv hsne Sana W. Land. 2484 i'lordhum Buy Har o 10x10-fr. FATIO for oijtly $l4.Tf Complalaii Patioa on Dllpkiy roger a. authier PATIO STONE 00. 10570 Highland Rd. I MbiWNl«f PNdMJUrf^ EM 34825 Op»w Pally 8 to a V,-. .\ ' ■■ i : V. ■ - If THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JULY 22. 1068 _- ■■ ■ ' —- — asm PUmUCKY LETTER GAME Illltlll W iI AT THE FOLLOWING PONTIAC AREA KROGER-STORES ■HRF , 265 N. Telegraph M. andMizabem mm:. Pontiac 2341 S. T#lforopbfrd ,MiroelrMll»ShcippIiifl Cunttr - 750 FsrryStrvufatJoslyn, Pontiac 4370 Dixia Highway at Sothabaw, Drayton Plaint 1 5 RIB END 0^1 / 7 SVnSSSTEAK®.»0«-| ^ LB- ______________________ ““®“ «aupK roast Bttr ,w«wtn|0R$T .............................. “ —I SPARE RIBS_39,1 UJNCrMEAT/ ro"K SAUSAGE... 49- ^ HOT DOGS----------------------------------------—.3OS' SAVE 6‘-KROGER^nCED mmmmmmm^............ SANDWICH BREAD ^ 5^ 38: Coupon valid at Krogor in Oatroit and Eottorn AAichigan thru 5 —: TRELLIS BRAND | WITH THIS COUPON-KROGER REG* OR DRIP ■ WHOLE KERHEL CORN vac P*c coffse ; KROGER BiSffiarSlii S APPLESAUCE....;.:;7.3?^n IH iiaZEll SAVE- SAVE 4‘-PURE WHITE SOAP PEBSONAL 41 . g ■ ■ HE wIPBm H bars adEl6P * Coupon valid at Krogar in Dotroit and iattom Michigan thru ■ SAVE 11--KROGER WKNEg 08 B SANDWICH BUNS a*®39* lORDEN'S SHERBETS 19’ CHERRY PIE.......................6f29‘ ! YELLOW ■ H ■■■I 1 HAWAIIAN PUNCH.3ta*| i arjarA-iyjarja.'''----- ; SAVE KP-KRAFrS CREAMY § mSEBBBSBMEE^Snr CHEEZ ! FRESH ■ mm- ■ r!!i M‘‘h'0on thru ! Tuot., July 23,1963. limit On* Cotipon par faiNly. fl H H H H Wa raaaree lha right to limit quonlltlai. Pricas and Hams afracllva ol Kroger In Penflad, *v Droylon Plains ond Union Lake thru Tues., July 33, 1963. None sold lo gaolers. £»' ■ B,mmaisiii,ma,MT»MiaiMH'a!| ■ ^IM nna vSSj stamps|ioo nna «!Si; stamki| ^.g OP J-ID.OR MORI ■ OMIO-CT. PKO. lONOWARI «4NCN 1 miow onions I WHin puTis iKUimjT^Bl FRiSII I SWEET CRISP H I My^^ !BwlwnrimnIS!’II ’ CVeUMBIRS PASCAL CiLIRT ■ Amri.wiHiia liLI IdV O ^^Ch^Rs *• **™* *“» *™*P* !»• M«» STAMPSl| ■ ■A L^^^STALKS^^ R|| witN INIS COUPON AND PURQ4AII I'MTM TH» COUPON AND PURCnAM |l EACH ^1 OP Uk-OZ. PRO. KROnM i OP 9 JARS KROOIN SMOOTH OR ■! INSTANT |IA^ ■ cRusMiD la-oz. |B ii CMipM viM 4rt «NBW In OMnrit 4mmI I FIANUT,, IIITTIN I ^ ImtnmAAbfc. rim TtMteJvfrai, 1961. bCmjimm v«M 4M Know In OotiwlT 4MnI y S ■•MlwnMkb.rimTviw., Julyaa, mi, ' NhI RB HR HR Mi RB ia Hi Hi BB hAI'NRI HR Hi M H H m M M ' _ ——' ’ |. • .A,.. y;^- ^ —— ‘=, '' I * '^V ■ '= , ‘ -y V - ^ ' V ^ f I * i ^ i nV \ ^ . ,v *1W, ‘.i,/ i .... .1., ,v A . 50 Extra TOP VALUE Stamps EXCEPT BEER, WINE OR CIGARETTES THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY H2, 1963 KTtiecr Marina's Ex-Husbands Suspect Accidents Kill Many in Europe By AGATHA CHRISTIE ------ IiMtallment XUn ‘'If. I could only think what to do,” Miss Marple said. “Now, let me see.” I a gesture to Cherry. "Take the tray away, Cherry, and send Miss .Knight up to me. I’m going get up." Cherry obeyed. Miss Marple dressed herself with fingers that fumbled slightly. It irritated her —when she found excitement of any. kind affected her. She was just' h««)king up her dress when Miss! Knight entered. ' “Did you want nne? Cherry said—” Miss Marple broke In incisive-ly. “Get Inch,” she said. “I beg your pardon,” said Knight, startled. .........t Miss Marple, Telephone for him to come She found the book she wanted In a shelf In the drawing room. Taking It out she looked up the index, murmured “Page 210,” turned to the page In question, read for a few moments then nodded her head, satisfied. * "k it "Most remwkable,” she said, ‘most curious. I don’t suppose anybody would ever have thought of it, I didn’t myself until the itwo things came together, so to ' .speak.” Then she shook her head, and a little line appeared between her eyes. “If only there was at once. “Oh, oh 1 see. Yon mean the taxi people. But his name’s Roberts, Isn’t it?” “To me,’' said Miss Marple, “Jje is Inch and always will be. But anyway get him. He’s to come here ^ once.” “You want to go for a little drive?” “Just get Inch, can you?” said Miss Marple, “and hurry. Miss Knight looked at her doubtfully and proceeded to do as she was told. "We are feeling all right, dear, aren’t we?” she said anxiously. “We are both feeling very wcii,” said Miss Marpie, “and I am feeiing particuiarly well. “ Inertia doer not suit^ inei and never has. A practicai course of action, that is what I have been wanting for a iong time.” “Has that Mrs. Baker been saying something that has upset you? “Nothing has upsbt me,” said Miss Marple, “I feel particularly well. I am annoyed with myself for being stupid. But really, until I got a hint from Dr. Haydock this morning, now I .wonder if I remember rightly. Where is that medical book of mine?” She gestured Miss Knight aside and walked “firmly down the stairs. She went over in her mind the various accounts she had beep given of that particular scene /.. Her eyes widened in thought. There was someone — but would he, she wondered,, be any good? lion on her face. One of the great mysteries of it. Mary Mead was what made the Vicar remember certain things, only outstripped by tbe greater mys> tery of what the VicaT could manage to forget! “The taxi’s here, dear,” said Miss Knight, bustling in. “It’s a very old one, and not too clean I should say. I. don’t really like you driving in a thing like that. You might pick up some germ or other.” “Nonsense,” said Miss Marple. Setting her hat firmly on her head and buttoning up her summer coat, she went out to the waiting taxi. Good morning, Roberts,” she said. Good morning. Miss Marple. You’re early this morning. Where Nevertheless she went to the telephone and dialed. “Good morning. Vicar, this is Miss Marple.” “Oh yes. Miss Marple. Anything I can do for you?” “I wonder if -you could help me on a small point. It concerns the day of the Fete when poor Mrs. Badcock died. I believe you were standing quite near Miss Gregg when Mr. and Mrs. Badcock arrived.” “Yes, I was just before them, I think. Such a tragic day.” “Yes, indeed. And I believe that Mrs. Badcock was recalling to Miss Gregg that they had met before in Bermuda. She had been iil in bed and got up specially.” “Yes, yes. I do remember.” ..“And do you remember if Mrs. Badcock mentioned the illness she was suffering from?” , “1 think now, let me see, yes, it wasjneasles, not real measles, German measles, a much less serious disease. Some people hardly feel ill at all with it. I remember mj^ cousin Caroline.’ CUTS MEMORIES Miss Marpie cut off reminiscences of Cousin Caroline by saying firmly: “Thank you so much, Vicar,” and replacing the receiv- Thcre was an awed expres- ‘In that case,” said Miss Marple, “I shall wait until this.after- £[,affled, the new butler retired. Presently a young man came to Miss Marple. He had a pleasant manner and a cheerful, slightly American voice. “I’ve seen you before,” said Miss Marple. “In the Develop-niient, You asked me the way to Blenheim Close.” Hailey Preston sniiled good-naturedly. “I guess you did your best, but you misdirected STRASBOURG, France (Jf) -Sixty thousand persons are killed and 1.5 million injured each year on the roads of Elrope, according to a report recently presented to the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe. Eighty-five to 95 per cent of tkese acideBts are due to errors by Hie driviws, adds the report, which was compiled by the Economic Committee of the organization. The report, put before the purely advisory body by Karl Cernetz of Austria, also s certain preventive measures. Among ihese were: stiffer examinations for drivers’ licenseis, periodically repeated, perhaps even a psychiatric examination; more schooling of children in rules of road safety, and Increased propaganda for safe driving. Police Arrest a Thief Working Old Rome leW ROME (J) Police arrested a thief they say they caught working one of the oldest beats in Rome. He was robbing tourists at the Colosseum. That was a favorite site for purse snatchers and pickpockets as far back as 2,000 years ago. The beginning of the Americaniemployed to give instruction ^ Chool system was in Boston children who lived in the-pioneer rhere in 1635 a schoolmaster was settlement. (AdTcrtliement) "NEW'' ISN'T ^‘**"‘* ^ modleol {sro^rcsa m fine, but as yet. nobody hoe im- a I tit k\iC proved on nofvres pure herbs. As Thom-ALWAT J os Edison sold: "Until man duplieofes "BETTER" " of Brass, notnre eon loogh at his so-called seientifie knevftedge." YOU ARI DISeOURAOEO, DISAPPOINTEO. POWNHIARTID OR . JirpCKm-ntsousuo with medicines containino harm. PUL DRUOS, DOPE. ALCOHOL. SALTS-OR PAIN KILLIRS. THIN OINUINI O-JIB-WA BITTERS IS MADE POR YOU. IT CONTAINS 12 PURI, PRISH HERRS IMOTHER NATURi'S PIN-ISTr SO WHIN YOU ASK YOUR DRUCOIST POR xxvx A lOTTLI OP O-JIB-WA BITTIRl, YOU, KNOW YOU ARI CETTINO THE IIST REMEDY AND ' TONIC AVAILABLE ANYWHERE. ‘Dear me, did I?” said Miss Marple. “So many Closes, aren’t there. Can I see Mr. Rudd?” ‘Why, now, that’s too bad,” said Hailey Preston. “Mr. Rudd’s very busy man and he’s fully ipled this morning and really -t^dfitarb^.” ------------ s Marple. “I’d better come with you, hadn’t I, dear,” said Miss Knight. “It won’t take me a mbiute just to slip on outdoor No, thank you,” said Miss Marple, firmly. “I’m going by myself. Drive on, Inch. I n Roberts.” Mr. Roberts drove on, merely remarking: 'Ah, Gossington Hall; Great changes there and everywhere nowadays. All that development. Never,, thought- anything like that’d come to St. Mary Mead.” “I’m sure he’s very busy,” said Miss Marple. “I came here quite prepared to wait.” ‘Why, I’d suggest now,” said Hailey Preston, “that you should tell me what it is you deal with all these things for Mr. Rudd, you see. Everyone has to see me first.” Upon arrival at Gossington HAll Miss Marple rang the bell and asked to see Mr. Jason Rudd. Giuseppe’s suceeSsor, n rather shaky looking elderly man, conveyed doubt. ‘‘Mr, Rudd A he said, “does not see anybody without appointment, Madam. And today specially.” “I have no appointment,’-’ said Miss Marple, “but I will wait,” she added. She stepped briskly past him into the hall and sat down on a hall chair. I’m afraid it will be quite impossible this morning, Madam.’’ “I’m afraid,” said Miss Marple, “that I want to see Mr. Rudd himself. And,” she added, “I shall wait here until I do.” She settled herself more firmly in the large oak chair. Hailey Preston hesitated, started to speak, finally turned away and went upstairs. He returned with a large man in tweeds. ‘This is Dr: Gilchrist,- Miss-^- “Miss Marple.” "“1^ you’re Miss Marple,-’ aald Dr. Gilchrist. He look^ at her with a good deal of interest. Hailey Preston slipped away with celerity. “I’ve heard about you,” said Dr. Gilchrist, “from Dr. Hay-dock.” “Dr. Haydock is a very old friend of mine.” (Copyright, IMZ. See The DETIOIT HORS INTRA SQUAD HNTBAll GAME Saturday, August 3rd - 8 P.M. WISNER STADIUM General Admission t|M Reserved Section Spomored By The Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commeree TIGKETS ON SALE AT ANY OFFICE OF COMMUNin NATIONAL BANK BV fully |oinHtf"w«tkinf M wlrii foefud hnir, ilMpins Pinafore droM, panfriai, akoan. Rockt. 14-inch pluah poodia on laaih. Both for........7o88 OriN IVIRY NIGHT TO 9 Monday Ihrouuh Sotufdoy i: - .. :".l , L,..:., FEDERAL'S ptilWl ipokf whooli, hakad •titnid eontinantai buidy ......7.8U 1 DOWNTOWN ANM DRAYTON RUINS V , -./r 'I ■ i- •: 'I > J ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JJULY 22. 1963 -Junior Editors Quiz QUESTION: What makes cold air come out of an ,air ’ conditioner? ^^^NSWER: Air conditioning means more than just blowing in cool air. The outside air may be uncomfortably hot, but it may also be humid, that is, carry a high degree of moisture; it may also carry dirt and soot. The modern air conditioner corrects- all these conditions at the same time, providing a circulation of air that is cool, dry, clean and comfortable. There are several ways modern air conditioners can do this.*We show how the outside air tjomes in at (1), passing through a filter (2). This is made of fiber glass metal or woof _^bers, which have been coated with a sticky substance. the^aii^tl^ to the fibers. Now asses through~spiiyS~or^vater"^ rednce W temperature (3), and a fan (4) moves the clean, cool air into the room so that it can circulate. Sometimes air is cleaned through the use of fine Water sprays or with “electrostatic precipitators” which attract to negatively charged collector plates. Some conditioners cool the, air by blowing it over coils filled with cold water or cheinicals. FOR YOU TO DO: Few of us have summer air conditioning In our homes, but we all have cold water running out of a tap. if you’re hot enough to be uncomfortable, roll up your sleeves and let the cold water run over your wrists. SAVE HOUSEWORK FUEL and MONEY Have Year Fsrnace Cleaned NOW M. A. BENSON GO. Heating and Cooling Division 45 Forest St. FE 3-7171 WEEK-BHD To a cocktail ehakar, add 1 tap. p o w d a ra d tug a r; 3 a11. C a t k Sherry Wine; 1/S pint milk. Fill with cracked Ice. Shake well. Strain Into 12 oz. glatt. Sprinkle nutmeg on top, Serve with ttrawi. . CASKiS WINES Somewhat Beyond Normal Call of Duty NEW YORK William F. Butler, being a policeman, is used to helping people in trouble. But a dog a mile out in the Atlantic? The patrolman was water skiipg July 1 when he spotted a buff-colored Cocker Spaniel swimming off Long Island’s south shore between Merrick and Freeport. Slipping out of his skis, he seized the dog and brought it ashore. When the grateful animal refused to leave his side, he took it to his home in Ozone Park, Queens. Drug Specialist Dies ARLINGTON, Mags. (AP)-Dr. Heber W. YouhpM, 77, considered the world’s authority in pharmacognosy, died Saturday of a heart attack. He was professor emeritus of pharmacognosy and botany jat the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy in Boston where he had been a member of the staff, since 1923, Pharmacognosy is the science of-druga-derived from plant and animal sources. AUTO SERVICE COUPON SPECIALS Clip "Em Out - Cart Tm In-Count Your Sayings BEST TERMS On Auto Service In This Area 20^^ “6 Hh ^^down ^ Mos. to ' pay Oritiinttl luiuipmvnl Quulily « MUFFLER GOODYEAR..... 90 DOUBLEYALVE APTION SHOCK ABSORBERS. Brake S Front End Speoial W CoiTtCt Cambar, Collar, Toa-lrt, MmC 93 it Ro-oack Front Whaal Baoringi with it Adjuat Brokai, All Ybur Whaali au:, Vb Chock Bolonca of Front Whaali r-nimnn it Rood Tait coup®" 6’ Brako Adjuttment! ““"I'*®* - I REPACKED ® “‘ I S 7Qc I COUPON I 1# BY appointment I BY APPOINTMENT AH four ^ WhCBlt llll ■ BY APPOINTME 6bSbYiAft SERVICE STORE STOP! LOOK! SAVE! at MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTElt vni'u BE HAD VM BID! TWIST-O-FLEX WATCH BANDS Choice of 5 ^ HANDSOME DESIGNS "f Have Your Watch Overhauled BEFORE VACATION Right Here hy Our Own Expert Craftsmen LOW PRICES — Security Charge LOU-MOR AAIRACLEMILE SHOPPING CENTER At The ARCADE JWW! WHITE STAG PLAYWEAR Vs FAMOUS^MAKE SWIM SUITS Vs OFF MIRACLE MILE I Special Lingerie Values! KRESGE'S iNwialf ^ Summer HALF SUP SALE! 54^ Easy-care acetate tricot half slips have shadow panels, 3" lace hems! In white and pastels. S,M,L sizes. UDIES'SUMMER COOL RAYON-MESH PANTIES 2!P Regular 39c S. S. KRESGE COMPANY MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER STORE HOURS 9:30 to 9 P.M. Connolly's Offers Budget Terms If You With Registered Jewelers American Gem Sofiely JEWEIEINS • 3 Locations to Serve You - DOWNTOWN 16 W. Huron FE 2-0^94 BIRMINGHAM MIRACLE MILE 162 N. Woodw'd —ShoppinflCenter Ml 6-4293 FE 2-8391 AT BOTH YARKEES SUMMER PEBBY at MeHTCALM MIRACLE MILE SHOPPIMO CENTER APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FRETTER SAYS I OLUE FRETTER , of Michigan, tl Uiseounlcrs rwmFT" CARLOAD PDICES MAKE THE PIFFERENCE "WE SAY YES TO ANY REASONABLE OFFER ON ANY APPLIANCE, TV, STEREO OR RADIO WE HAVE IN STOCK AT Tappan Electric Range <‘400” . .. 239.98 Refrigcratcr 13 Cu. Ft. Autc Defrcst 199.00 Range 30” Deluxe, Electrie ......129.98 Pertable Steree Reperd Player .... 39.88 Steree Walnut Lewbey .............89.98 3-WayCemb.23”TV, Steree, AM-FM Radie......... 218.00 RCA Lewbey TV................. 189.00 Hetpeint Aute. Washer.............149.00 Whirlpeel Washer Reoon......... 79.98 Air Cenditieners 1-Ten............119:00 Refrigcratcr, Family Size ........148.00 Freezer, 19 Cu. Ft.............. 219.98 Portable TV....................... 98.00 Dehumidifiers, Name Brandt.........49.98 Radio AM/FM....................... 24.88 Refrigerators, used, from .........29.98 Qat Range, 36” ................ 98.00 BIG FAMILY SIZE TUB 1 YEAR FREE SERVICE! WASHER • Super Spin-Dry for Maximum Water Extraction.______ • Automatic Water Level Selector BUDRET TERMS • 2 Wily Automatic Waih^h e Ragular for Everyday Fabrics.. ■ Gentle for Special Fabrics and Waslv ^n Wear. Complete Washing Flexibility; e Five Fresh Water Rinses ... Mott Efficient Rinsing Method Available. " e Built-In Sediment Removir . Automatically Removes Sand and HeaVy Soil. *178 NORGE DRYER AVAILABLE 5-Year Warranty ► 4-Way Drying System * All Fabric Heat Control ► Super Capacity Cylinder ► Automatic Shut Off FRER! 6 Lbs. Maxwell House Coffee if Fretter Can’t beat ybufjii’ioe. Miracle Mile Shopping penfer (Bet. Kretge's and Krogtrs) S. Telegraph Rd. at Sq. jfaks Rd. OKN MONOtY thru StT. 10 A.M.-* P.M. FE 3.TUI 'III ....llillMli^WM.....nil FERNDALE STORE-ZOI W. 8 Mil«-LI J-4409 Open Mon. thru Fri. 0i30 to lilO-lat. 0 to I 't' : THE roxTiAC press. mond4y, July 22, im ('■■■■.- \ ^ 4 ' ........ ■" ...;. at Miracle Mile Shdptiing Center PLENTY OF FREE PARKING-OPEN EVENINGSr^tlr^ Penney’s always first quality IwR -^■■^SIORE Greater Reduetions In Our Great MIRACLE MILE Ladies’ Jamaicas or Bermudas Regular to 5,98 P Men’s Bermudas Regular/}’*^ I- Boys’ Bermudas Regulars’" P \ 1 'avr; N'' Governors Debating on Rockefeller, Goldwater WE’LL FIXANYTHINQ MADE OF LEATHER (Editor’s Note—the major topics o( the annual Governors’ Conference are civil rights and the political implications in<- i By JACK BELL MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Sen. Barry Goldwateri R-Ariz., kicked up a cloud of political dust over the annual Governors’ Conference today with a whirlwind race for the 1964 GOP presidential nomination. HURON NOW!_____________ TONITE at 1:30 ONLY! TRUE,..TURBUL0ff... USI volved for Republican hopefuls for the presidential nomination. Veteran AP political writer Jack Bell gives an insight to the high-pressure campaigning already in full swing.) most of the Republican governors cause. Goldwater, the man who isn’ here, was keeping a hot pace with I Rockefeller, on hand with his wife and riding a civil rights horse with a heavy hand on the whip. GOP. National Chairman Wih liam E., Miller declined to the political results that might have been registered by Rockefeller, ahd by the Democratic governors who pinned a segregation- GOP Gov. Paul Fannin of Arizona, who described Goldwater in glowing terms at a news conference,. remained unsure whether he would support the New York governor’s move to put the state executives on record as favoring a strong civil rights stahd. After a series of sharp news conference questions about his candidate’s position, Fannin finally said that Goldwater was neither a segregationist nor an in-tegrationist but simply “an American.’ Democratic Gqys. Edmund G. Brown ot California and Carl E. Sanders oL Georgia described Goldwater as a segregationist. ist label on the Arizona senator. In Washington, a Goldwater aide said that the conference statements indicated that “the Democrats are beginning to panic because of Senator Goldwater’s dramatic rise in popularity." IS SMEAR TACnCS this spokesman Brown, who is supporting President Kennedy’s bid for a second term, said Goldwater had come into the position of the civil rights issue occupied by “extreme Southern governors” opposing Kennedys’ program. GOP Gov. Henry Bellmon of Oklahoma quickly got out a statement in which he said that “anyone who calls Goldwater a segregationist falls in the same catfe-gnry fls the John Birches who have accused the" conservative METRO GOLOWYNMAYER^,..^.^ w.. - ~ [l^Mormon relfgiorr"Serantoe is ^ |not attending the conference. BRANDO TREVOR HOWARD RICHARD HAf^KlS MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY TECHNICOLOR* AbULTS $1.25 Inc Ta« CHILDREN - 50c AIR CONOITiONEO ‘Otherwise,’ said, ‘I doubt that the Democratic governors would be engaged in low-level smear Tactics;’ Absent from the political firing front were Republican Govs. George Romney of Michigan and' William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania, both mentioned as possible :1964 GOP presidential contenders, j Romney avoids , all political dis-Icussions on Sunday becaus'e Tof . The Rockefeller objective to draw a sharp line between himself and Goldwater on civil rights, ithe only issue the New York governor has been able to find to re-jvive his slumping hopes for the 1964 GOP presidential norpination. By all counts the conservative I Goldwater has plunged into the jlead since Rockefeller divorced ihis wife of 31 years and married iMargaretta (Happy) Murphy, divorced mother of four childretl. NOW! "THE RAVEN" "TRUE STORY OF JESSIE JAMES" ‘IfllOHT THAT OISSAPPEAREO" Pontini;'ii Poimlar Thritlre The blonde, attractive new Mrs. Rockefeller was a sensation at a preconference beachcomber party Sunday night. CONSIDERS TV Importuned by representatives of national television to appear on their medium with her governor husbaqd, Mrs. Rockefeller answered that perhaps she might go , 'but not with him.” The governor, though, said he might consider it. Rockefeller, hoping the civil rights battle would boost his pres-presidential stock, worked hard for an opportunity to get a conference vote on the issue. He TDIHUr IMnsmtiM iMh,HAROlDHECHTM«i.on IWIASBDIin 'U. N. Should Outlaw S. Africa for Apartheid' ,W/\CK^iS THE WORD —^—' FOR iT! fRiO KOMI WAR PROOUCnON JACK IfMMOK RiCKy 'NEISON WASHINGTON (UPI) --.President Julius Nyerere of Tanganyika says he favore expelling South Africa from the United Nations if it adamantly continues its apartheid policy of racial segregation. Nyerere, who is visiting this country, said in a teleyision in-torview yesterday that “if South Africa decides to go completely against world opinion, 1 would back up outlawing South Africa.” I^KEEGO seemed to have the support of ident’s proposals for enforcement!might carry his state. He added has voiced opposition to the Pres-1 that Kennedy couldn’t get the ident’s proposal for enforcement ipjorida electoral vote unless of desegregation of all businesses WE DARE YODW SEE... MK—I ...and not talk about it! STARTS WEDNESDAY! Arizona senator of Communist theory of many of Goldwater’s leanings.” REFERS TO ROCKY With obvious reference to Rockefeller, Bellmon’ said that those who had injected Goldwater into the conference civil- rights civil war were “closely aligned with the present national administration” and are “afraid to give voters a clear choice between the New Frontier frustrations and dynamic conservative leadership in our nation’s highest office.” Goldwater has said he could support several of the recommendations Kennedy has made to Congress. But the Arizona senator backers that the senator can win the GOP nomination-^and defeat Kennedy-by gathering support from the South, the border states, the Middle West and the western mountain Sanders said that Goldwater “is thought of as a segregationist in Georgia.” He added that .Rockefeller wouldn’t do well in the state as a GOP nominee but that a Kennedy-Goldwater contest would provide a horse race in Georgia. MIGHT CARRY FLORIDA Similarly, Gov. Farris Bryant of Florida said that Goldwater Rockefeller happened to be the Republican nominee. Rockefeller drew back from accusing Goldwater of being a segregationist. He said, in response to questions, that *■ 1 haven’t seen any statement which would classify him as a segregationist.” But Rockefeller sniped at Goldwater’s stand on civil rights and said the Arizona senator ought to clarify his position. PURSES, BAOS, CASES, ANY-THING. BRING ‘EM ALL IN. serving the public and to a provision which would permit the attorney general to bring school integration suits. Goldwater has proposed, however, that unions be made subject to fair employment practices laws. Sanders gave support to the BBEEQ LAST 2 DAYS • JERRS LEWlSas '1HE|||i||.|| TO-fHBHT 8:30 ONLY! mm? TO-NIGHT 7:00 & 10:01 The TOWN COBBLER LAST NAME-LAST PAGE 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. '(BmQiiffMjtjg IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS ► Modern — All by America's Leading Manufacturers! “Fom Must Be Satis fieri—This We Guarantee!'' • Provincial * Golonial • Tradifional * special purchase TECHNICOLOR' WONDRASCOPE TUESDAY, JULY 23rd U0:45 A.M.-1:00 P.M. LUCKY 13 KIDDIE SHOW KIDS UNDER 12 With This Coupon 13' SPECTACULAR SIGHTS AND SCENES '■'t/ “Tuc ^ THE STEVE BEEVES SLAVE, THE SON OF SPflRTflCUS » BLUE SKY^ |MIRlSCHPICTl»ARnBtRlWlsri>RfSENI TWOFoRTHESEESW HweIHRM MACHiWf CInrji-naScok'6 MctruColoi OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 P.AA. Your Choice No Money Down-Monthi to Pay! EVERY CHAIR ILLUSTRATED REGARDLESS OF PREVIOUS PRICE! TUFTED BACK Swivel Rocker Reg. 59’=^ All coverecsl in (durable nylon' and super soft vinyl. Choose from'decorator colors to fit your decor. Other chairs not illustrated ore olso'^sole priced ... so come in and take your* pick. Early American Platform Rocker Reg. 69’^ STOftE HOURS OPEN Mon,, Thurt., Friday TIL 9 P.M. " ^ Reg. 69’® X'Modern Swivel Rocker FREE DELIVERY ELEVATOR SERVICE TO ALL FLOORS ^eg, 59’^ Open Arm Platform Rocker- I) !' •r'« ' ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 22, FIFTEEN Future U:S. Farm Exporting to Europe Looks Good 1 By WILUAM ANDERSON BRUSSELS' (UPI) - The fu-jyre of American farm exports tfte six European Common jUarket countries appears fo be fairly bright — dwjJte protec-jjve tariffs. ” Europe’s bustling economy, its Increasing standards of living, should enable the United States M at least maintain agricultural axports at the present $1.2 bil-]ion>a-year level. But the protectionism which win lobbies in France, West Gerniany, Italy and the Bene-lux countries arp. demanding — and in some cases getting — undoubtedly will lead to elude the complete disappearance cessing standards for these items of Mme traditional export items have met with no success, to Europe. But trade in other items will increase; change in the nattern of iifi geiug_5ey_MJh>riJot. meet thep rice>estrlctions, they ____paiwn 01 airripnitare. .... . ^ furmiexports, The U.S. will not be alone. ^ ind a burgeoning populationsucceed-____uif iU* .t? . ‘ ed in hatna fniU ......i.kt. ed in halting fruit and vegetable Imports from North Africa because of a local glut. As in the U.S., European farm interests are highly effective politically. This changing pattern will in- OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P. M. I even if U.S. exports can mme sectors of agriculture. But as one Amerlcan~parttcl-pating in recent poultry negotiations with the Europeans told UPI: “We can’t stop Europeans copying U.S. farm methods and growing more food through increased efficiency.’* One of the early American casualties has been the export of chickens — primarily to West :Germany. U.S. farm efficiency I boosted poultry exports into a $67-million market in fiscal 196L 62. MONUMENTS AND MARKERS OF ENDURtNG BEAUTY • Meet all tomotory • Honoit Price • Choice of Soloct Granite or Brorae •Wards Time Pof« gabbed up most of the i ket. Some went to government-subsidized Danish producers. This market would have disappeared entirely for American farmers, but for some tough talking and bargaining by U.S. agricultural officials in Brussels and Geneva lasting more than a year. • Includes lettering, carving. Cemeteiy fee additional •Satitfaction Gua^ anttod or Your Money Bock. Phone 6S2-4940 Pcstiae Mall • SPECIAL THIS WEEK < DELICIOUS APPLE FILLED DONUTS^ _________ 29 N. Saginaw FE 8-6977 Open Every Morning at 7:30 <1 Tlmru. « EXCEPTIONAL BUSINESS SWIFT’S A-FRAME DEPARTMENT STORE OF HOMES . Sill till nstion's most Besutiful Lino of Swift Precision Cut Homos. LOOtrWHAT SWIFT PROVIDES: Homes ihai are architecturally correct, designed for maximum livahiiity a HighesrflualityTnaterials a DeKim versatility—a Swift Home for all tastes widest range of styles in the industry a Long term, permanent financing for your customer with NO MONBY DOWN a National acIveiTising and national promotions a Local level cooperative advertising a Full color catalogs, direct mailers, promotional lilcraliire and local level promotions a Factory and Held training program fropi AAA I D & B-rated manufacturer. Franchise now available for Oakland County. Local agency is well established, and offers a profitable, lifetime business career. Terms available. Call FE 8-0803 for confidential inteiview. may find import standards being used as a restrictive practice. GRAIN MARKET America’s $122-million European grain market also may be hit by the variable import duties. TTie duties have been increased by 10 per cent up to $l;lO if ton.^ “ France, however, js pressing for higher duties in the hope of becoming the grainery of ^Europe; French farmers claim they can supply all European grain needs by 1970. France also is pushing for a lower' grain price within the com- munity for the same reason. But export trade German farmers successfully have resisted French pressure on Chancellor -Konrad Adenauer to get him to reduce subsidies to German grain farmers. The U.S. hopes that German grain prices vrill remain steady while the lower French prices Will be forced upwards. from which the Europeans^ make Hverwurst nnd-pate. U.S. exports to flour — mainly to Holland — can be expected to disappear because of levies and increased European production. Flour exports already have slumped from $43.4 million in 1962 to $14.1 million so far this year. Under new European legislation, tariffs on pork will be upped from the present 9 per cent to 20 per cent. This will hit the $10 miliion-a-year U.S. pig liver year 1961-62 — is expected to boost this figure in coming years. ~ On the positive side, increases may be expected in exports of grains, which are running about 1271-million a year, European farmers can increase their yield, but increased acreage can be attained only by sacrificing other cropb. ' An increase in consumer income also is exposed to result in higher exports of soya and protein concentrates to keep pace with an increasing deihand of about 10 per cent a year in meat consumption. Exports here are running about $160 mHlion^ year. U.S. cotton exports are expected to go higher. Hard and efficient selling in practically cottonless Europe—- which has pushed sales up to $160 million in fiscal COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL emm lUi Op.. IVOTi... tn iiM HMItl (Adyertiiement) (AdTcrtiumuM} . Fr^htening Asthma Attacks End In Minutes As New Formula Unblocks Lung Passages Fast New Medical Formula Restores Free Breathing f^thont Vacdues, Shots Or Narcotics. Calms Anxiety. No Prescrkitioa Needed. New York. N.Y. (Spedal)-A ta of edentists has announced formula that etope frightening aathma attacki in minutee aid unblocks lung paaaagea fast. Medical testa prove thia formula promptly restores free breathing, so galms anxiety and relieves the wont symptoms of asthma —the straining ■ for breath, fhe-gBBping. tb».wbe«zr ing, the terrible fear of euffocation. All without vaccines, painful ahota or habit-forming dnig8.Thia formula ia ao lafe when used aa directed, it can be sold without prescription in tiny tablets called BRONITIN*. Doefon know that when asthma len, lung passages beomne blocked. BRONTTIN, with two aatbiMrfeBey-ing medicines that docton prescribs for their patients, acts quickly to open bronchial tubea and iobaen tha mucus that blocks lung paasagea. Trapped air is released and new vitaToxygen enterB the lungs. The result is: free breathing li reatorqd, tension eased and so foaia are calmed in mindtea. Sufferers can now look forward to restful sleep. Get BRONITIN—available at all drug stores unthoui prucnption. Another U.S. farm casualty to, increase Euroj^an efficiency and variable tariffs in the epm-ing years probably will be exports of apples ahd pears. They form a high percentage of the present $81 million-a-year market in fruit and vegetables. Tree plantings in France’s empty acres will start bearing crops within two years and are expected gradually to replace.... the Anaerlcan exports. Minimum import prices set by the Common Market for fruit and vegetables are not hurting^ exports so far. But efforts by U.S. ohicials to get the Europeans to accept American growing and pro- Marriage Licenses Peter M. Ursu, Tr^ and Christine ” Michael’7 KIlngeislHth, 3«8 Anders nd Judith K. Morrliff Drayton Plains Jamee D. Willis, 43 Niagara and Judy Reid. 631 E. Columbia Prank Flelden, 3t1 State and Beulah Tolbert. 8 Miller Jerry Q. Patterson, 32 East Blvd, and haron L. Bertram, 16 Edison Thomas P. Lyons, Whitmore Lake and nn Liu, Orchard Lake ^ . Wallace C. Conin, Alexandria, Va. and usan M. Pead, Birmingham . , Charles O. Merlthew, 427 Montcalm nd Patricia A. HarberL 83 Olenwood Robert M, Brodeur, Perndale and Patricia J. Ward. Royal Oak Joseph P. Krause, Bloomfield Hills and andra J, Harter, JKalled XaikB Harry J. Kltohner. Troy and Mary , Kolodslel, Troy ... .. William V. Huntoon, Rochester and ^Wendrii E'.""v ■ OF 12 I9< JANE PARKER FOR SALADS AND COOKING dexoln Oil 39 1-QT. 6-OZ. BTL. iC 7e OFF LABEL A&P PREMIUM QUALITY INSTANT COFFEE 99* 10-oz. auC JAR Many Every-Pay low Prices at A*P! Why Pay More! Soo Our 1-Fc. Roinvorcfa g OONCRETE STEPS rmtilliml«i-W»llellwr>ew*w«l CONCRETE STEP A497 Wjhlond^R^^^^^ SoAetyTraidRaducai COMPANY 3 Phona 673-7715 ■ WHY PAY MORE Scot Tissue 12‘ super-right Corned Beef 12-OZ. CAN ALL FLAVORS—CANNED Yukon Beverages 7* WAXED PAPER Cut-Rite I25-FT. ^C ROLL Jill PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT A&P Fruit Drink 4'^i99‘ CARNATION OR Pet Evup. Milk Your e M C HV2-OZ. Choice n 4K CAN SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip »yi,"45‘ Sultana Salad Drasting . . jkV 35c KRISPY OR PREMIUM Crackers Your ^J%C 1-LB. Choice PKG. Ariitocrat Soltines ..... Vox 23c Campbell Soups All MEAT VIO. VARIETIES VARIETIES Excapt Asporagui, Mushroom or Onion 16* 13* CLAPP'S STRAINED Baby Foods Gold Medal Flour 5 - 49* Sunnyfield Flour .... 5 b'^ag 39c KELLOGG'S Snack Puk PKG. Giant Sail HOUSEHOLD C , POWDER 1 ■« Mf M/i L All priw. in thli ad sffuctlvs Ihru Tu«. July 23rd 1 Pflft S Ulnna Bits in an Ea»tem Michigan A*PSup.rMarkst> 37' ^arketsl ^ AMIRKA'S OIPINOARII 1000 MIRfHAMT Slkd j .';r 'V t I. 'll !! H , . .t _K ' r\.r- I : ‘p: L y, 1 / THE rONTlAC rilESS> M( dayT New 7-Foot Vacuum Gleaner Hose Briirded Cloth, All Bubber Exchange with Your $il95 OldReusableHoseEndi Regular $7^ TT Plastic Hoses • •. 3.95 Com* in or FrM Dotivory Parts ond REPAIR SERVICE . on ALL CLEANERS i-BsItt-AHachmsnts-Ete. Boston Man Held as Murder Suspect FULLY GUARANTIED Aftachmonts Included^ $1.25W«ek BOSTON" (AP) - A 46-year-old south end man was held to-, day on a suspicion of murder in the strangling of a 63-year-old woman Saturday. The body of Miss Ethel Lomax was found in the hallway of a south end tenement, after police questioned the suspect who, they said, was acting suspiciously. He denied any knowledge of the slaying. A medical examiner said the woman died of manual strangulation. Police said the slaying appaiv entely is not connected wiW the eight unsolved stranglings of women in the greater Boston la, since June. 1962. Former Editpr Dies Free Home Demonstration OR 4-HOI WUbin 25 Mile Radiiu CURT’S APPOANCES FaeUryAuthoriied Whitt Dtahr NEW LOCATION 6401 HATCHERY ROAD OR 4-1101 W«t on M-59 tp Airport Rd., North to Hateh.ty Tom W#.t 2 Block, on Hotchory Rd. --....Opnn Monday and Friday Til 8 P.M. ..CSPBD--------------- LOWELL, Mass. (AP)-rPhilip •S. Marden, 89, last editor-in-chief of the defunct Lowell Courier-Citi-jzen, died Saturday. He joined the j newspaper in 1901 as managing leditor and later became editor-in-i chief, serving until the newspaper I was bought by the Lowell Sun in 1941. He was president of the Courier-Citizen Printing Co. from 11906 until bis death. 125 ArQ Unhurt in Derailment of 5 Baggage Cars MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPD - Five baggage cars of the crack Milwaukee Road passenger train ‘The Pioneer Limited” derailed yesterday, but 125 passengers escaped injury. Engineer Harold Borkhagen said one car evidently jumped the tracks and struck a IMs-ton concrete block. It caused four other cars to break from the engine. The 14-car Minneapolis-to-Chi-cagp train was moving about 30 miles per hour at the time the accident happened on Milwaukee’s west side, Borkhagen said, The only injury was suffered by patrolman Otto Wagner, 33, who fell and broke his arm' while running to the scene. The Department of Agriculture library contains about 1.2 million volumes and is staffed by 1,000 employes. Used Reactor Fuel, to Be Reprocessed SAVANNAH, Oa. (AP)-A railroad flat car carrying 400 pounds of used but heavily shielded reactor fuel is on its way to Idahoi The fuel arrived Sunday from Sweden, cradled in four lead-lined casks weighing about 12W each. INTERLOCHEN tf) - Philanthropist Charles Stewart Mott of Flint was presented an honorary doctorate of humanities degree yesterday by officers and trustees of the National Music Camp at Interlochen. The reactor fuel, valued at about $50,000, is the first to be returned to the United States for reprocessing under the Atoms for Peace program. The casks were loaded on a dal flat car for a 10-day trip to the Atomic Energy Commission’s Idaho chemical processing plant at the National Reactor Testing ■Station. Speech Teacher Dies NEW 'VORK (AP) - Elisabeth Ferguson Von Hesse, 86, former voice culture teacher for the late Eleanor Roosevelt, died Saturday. In her 50-year teaching career Mrs. Von Hesse instructed about 40,000 men and women in the art of effective speech. Interlochen Gives Honorary Degree to Philanthropist The honorary degree, presented tn Mott in recognition of his service and support in cultural fields, was conferred by Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, president and founder of the music camp and Interlochen Arts Academy. The presentation was made at a convocation ceremony attended by some 2,000 students, parents and visitors following the camp’s Sunday services. Mott was cited by Dr. Maddy for sponsoring community music, art and drama projects and for providing instruction and facilities for schools through the Mott Foundation. CHECK YOUR FIRST AID KIT Prompt trralment of cut* tml bruiie. i* (..enllol to guord •iwin.i po.»iblo infection.. For thi. reawn your family .hould have a fully equipped fir»l aid kit in the hou.e and al«o in the car. During the aummer when family driving trip* are more common the one in your car i* e.pecially important. There are many type, of firal aid kit. to chooae from and our pharmacy carriea a varied aeleclion. Wq can help you pick out the onea mo»t auitable for your need*. We al»o alock all the individual ileraa to replenish all type, of firiit aid kin, YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping near-by, or we will deliver promptly wilhoul extra charge. A grrul many |M*ople enlruHt «s with their preM'rip-lions. May we compound yours? I PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS “ promssionaliy PtRiECi PPOCERLY PRICII) Thanks to The Pontiac Press Classified Ad my parents ran. The extra money they received from selling some old play swings'and patio furniture rhade it possible to spend a week at a cottage on the lake. My parents have mode it a good habit to use 'Pontiac Press Classified Ads and have always gotten quick results at a low cost. TO PLACE A PONTIAC PRESS FAMILY CLASSIFIED AD Dial 332-8181 Now 2 Lines 6 Days 70^ Pontiac Press classified Department , I, l-\ I 'I*' r PONTIAC STATE BANK main office,Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights Baldwin at Yale Drayton Plains ' Miracle Mile M-59 Plaza 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence member F.D.I.C. r, 9 , m ■ ■ 4 .ii J TV' '1, 1 A /, • k Ik THE PONTIAC PRESS ]^IONDAY, JULY 22, 1968 PQNTIAC, MICHIGAN. SEVENTEEN T* From Birdhou$es to Balloons Sf. Mary-in-the-Hills Presents Annual Outdoor Fair Martin Parker of Lake Orion hits the nail on the head as he assists at the St. Mary-in-the-Hills Episcopal Church annual outdoor country fair Saturday. Making sure “The Price Is Right" on jewelry and novelties at their booth are (from left} Mrs. David Gray, • Clawson; Mrs. Russell Hibbard, Lake Angelas; and Mrs. Moffatt Gray, Birmingham. Disturbed Over Delay of Thanks By The Emily Post Institute Q: What is the correct length of time for acknowledging wedding presents? I have sometimes waited as long as three months before knowing whether the bride received my present. This is disturbing because I usually have it sent directly from the store and have no way of knowing if it was received. A: The courteous bride always writes notes of thanks as soon as she possibly can. Sometimes if she has received many presente this will take her some time, but certainly few brides receive such numbers as to excuse a three months delay in writing thank you. Nancy Hibbard, Lake Angelas, with Rick Thomson (left) and his father Edward Thomson of Clarkston, wish someone would invent an automatic balloon inflator. Q; Am I being needlessly punctilious in expecting a boy’s mother to write my daughter and ask her to visit them? The boy spent a week at our house not long ago at my daughter’s invitation and she feels that Inasmuch as I didn’t write him, his invitation to her should also be sufficient. I know manners have greatly relaxed since I was a girl but I still feel this Js the proper thing even today. A; The two Instances are quite different. It is not at all necessary for a girl’s mother to second hdr daughter’s invitation to a boy, but before a girl may accept an invitation to stay overnight in a boy’s houee, she must be invited by his mother. Q: Am I Just touchy, or is it proper for my husband to be asked to take part in a Wedding and for me to be left out entirely? A: Your words “just touchy’’ perfectly explains the situation. You should, of course, be invited to the wedding and reception, but it is neither incorrect nor discourteous not to include you in the bridal party. Other speakers include Congressman Neil Staebler, Rep. Gilbert E, Bursley, Ann Arbor, also George, Tuttle of The Detroit Edison Cornpany . Nat Weinberg, special projects director for the UAW-AFL-CIO will present the unions’ viewpoint. Prof. Dale Hathaway, national authority on agricultural economics air Michigan State University, Is serving as workshop consultant in his field. Dr. ’Theral Herrick, director, Michigan Council on Eco-™mic Education, will lead a session on “Economic Education in the Schools.’’ Clyde Reed, director of the Institute for Economic Education, Detroit, will describe the Institute’s program for Detroit-area teachers. ★ ★ A Enrollment' may be made through the EMU graduate school office. Previous work in economics is not required. The course offers two semester hours of graduate or undergraduate credit. Bobbie Bailey, Lake Angelas, looks closely at bne of the handmade bird- rrnn riioltn bjr Kil V»ii. You’ll learn by trying it out for awhileT^ (For Mary Feeley’s budget suggestion booklet, send long, self-addressed stamped envelope to her in care of The Pontiac Press.) Reception Held After Nuptials The Hawaiian Gardens near Holly was the setting for a reception following the Saturday marriage of. Sharon Elizabeth Hennin to James Jay Davis of Auburn Avenue. MRS. JAMES /AY DAVIS Interlochen to Feature Van Cliburn in Concert ' The NaiHonal Music C!amp, iRfgrtochenrwilMeatUEg^ Cliburn, distinguished young pianist, in the third benefit concert Thursday in Kresge Auditorium. Van Cliburn will perform Brahm’s “Piano Concerto No. 2” with the National High School Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, at 8 p.m. The third dramatic production of the camp’s five-week schedule will be “The TIeifg5S~Trr-drama_of family RICHARDW.TRAICOFF Richard W. Traicoff, son of the Walter Traicoff s of Voorheis Road, was recently graduated from Wayne State University., He received a bachelor of science degree with majors in mathematics and chemistry and will enter the College of Medicine at Wayne this fall. jNeumode NEISNER'S Beauty Salon2nd Flooi J Vf 2 pairs 11.50 82 N. Saginaw St. presented by the high school drama department. This will open Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Grunow Theatre. Under the direction of Robert C. Burroughs, director of the camp’s speech and drama department, repeat Club Meets for Luncheon Mrs. Glenn E. Hayden of Kenford Street was hostess for the Lotus Lake Friendly Neighbor Extension Club July luncheon meeting. Jars of coffee were brought for the senior residents at the Lapeer Home and diapers were hemmed for the infants’ ward atrPontlaG-General Hospital. Linen Becomes Easy to Handle ■ perfmmanees-"Will be given Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and -Sunday^ULinj^ All p e r-formances\m^e1bFthe^ru5_ now Theatre, “The Heiress,” written by Ruth and Aupstus Goetz, was adapted from Henry James’ novel “Washington Square.” The University Choir's presentation of “King David” with the Facility-Staff Orchestra will replace the traditional “Symphony Under the Stars” cbncertrlunday . at 8 en Bowl. Maynard Klein will direct. The National High School Band, directed by Dr. George C. Wilson, vice president of the camp, will present it$ regular Saturday night concert in Kresge Auditorium. Other major concerts this week include University Band and Percussion Ensembles, Friday; Faculty concert Tuesday and the Faculty Dance Concert Wednesday. Each will begin at 8 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium. New Wall Tile in Stainless New stainless steel wall tiles with decorative finishes don’t show scuffs, scratches, fiiigerprints or other smudges, the manufacturer reports. Crop Style in Men's Sweater The continental sweater look for men: Vertical panels, in contrasting colors. Lengths , have been cropped. Bottoms are narrow and ribbed as well as plain. Esther Court Holtds Lakeside .Picnic Have You Tried This? Linen fabrics, ranging from sheer handkerchief types for biouses through coating and suiting weights, arc as washable as your damask tablecloths. So many fashion linens are enhanced by color or embroidery that you might say there never were so naariy pretty laundry loads coming up! Bring Music Into Your Home From Gallagher's Wide Selection . . . one of a complete line of outstumling models from spineln to full-cotiRole organs developed and perfected l»y Lowrey . . . available in a wide selection of styles and fine wood finishes . . . for homes . , . for churches, schools and other institutions , . . for professional use. Sec and hear all the Lowrey models, each the finest in thjs price range. $1895 $495 ft THI SSINtWOOO OllUXI With pre-sets, percussion, A-O^C, end ' built-in Leslie speaker STASLIT DILUSI $675 THI UHCOLNWOOO M A complete lull-console Qraan...ataspinat price THI HOIIOAV A complete 2-keyboard •pinet with percussion on both mlinuals $895 THi'UNCul,NWOOD u bauks The Llncolhwood 2S plus A‘0*C, built-in Leslie speaker, and stereo THI HOUDAT CHOSO Two orpans In one, B chord organ plus a full 2-koybonrd HolidSy 1995 THS HOLIDAY OELUXI The Holiday plus A-0>C and built-in Lea^o^agM^or THI riSTlVAl lowrey's Incomperable "lour poster" wllb ' built-in stereo controls $1495 $1995 ----$T695.'" $2695 $2995 FREE LESSONS WITH EACH PURCHASE-LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR PRESENT PIANO OR ORGAN UP TO 4 YEARS TO PAY - 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 'Where Muhic Is Our Itusiness" Opwn Monday and Friday Evsmingt 'til 9 P.M. 16 E. Huron St. ' FE 4-0566 Swedish Cake Is Rich Bv JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Mrs. Gunnar Karlstrom, our Bloomfield Hills-Bir-tningham correspondent, has many Swedish recipes in her collection. One of the best we think is a spicy cake. This keeps well and needs ho frosting. Swedish pepParkaka By Mrs. Gunnar Karlstrom I'/ii cups granulated 2 cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon cloves 3 eggs, well beaten 1 teaspoon soda 1 cup sour cream 1 cup melted butter or margarine Mix dry ingredients together. Stir soda into sour cream. Add beaten eggs and melted butter or mar-. garine. Mix all liquids with dry ingredients. | Pour into greased 8x8x2 ^ pan. Bake 35 minutes at ^ 375 degreeai. i *. Shampoo and Set ALL Permanents «395 Complete With Cat and Set Expert licensed operators to give you o flattering hair cut, long lasting permanent, and becoming hair style. All for $3.95. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOP 0|H7 a|>|>l. only IlMireuI nnl)' • • $150 $350 I / liaireiil and Set.. f ^119 IimiR.H< 9 a.m. Jvn.m. UOttftfCll ff Apimlnlmeni Noi Always Nee* HAIR STYLIST Ponllae Mall Hhopping Gehler/ PhonjB'682-0420 ^ \ don't nogloct ..your wedding dress Let us help you keep your precious wedding gown as fresh and lovely always as on your wedding day. Gall today for information about our special storage Wedding Box COMPLETE iSHIRT SERVICE AfuaUty Cleaniuff Since 1929 719 Weit Huron FE4-J536 It is usually best to use plain whtte^Bulbs, pleritynbrighL The lights at the sides of your dressing table should be about on level with your nose.' It is also best to have a light above your head too. Goto a window and test your make-up if you are going out during the daytime. ,Q. “I read your column every day and have gotten lots of help from it; but I have a problem you have never mentioned. My eyebrows and lashes stay the same length. Why don’t they grow? My hair grows very fast and people are always telling me that my hair is so thick and beautiful. A. Your hair only grows to a celftain length and then stops. ’The same is true of your lashes except that they do hot grow so long, thank heavens. Gentle mas- designed for this, may promote the growth of the Igshes. Q. “If a man or a 20-month-old baby uses one part in his hair, should it be on the right or the left side?” Be it man or baby, it depends on the individual. A side part is good for the wide or large face. Usually one side of a man’s head has thicker hair than the other. Let this influence you. Which is most flattering? NEWI , REDUCE lATomlLeSI ^UPTO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! EASJEIL JQ . MORE EFFECTIVE THAN THE POWDERED AND LIQUID FOOD SUPPLEMENT. AND COSTS LESS INCLUDING CAPSULES SUITED TO YOU INDIVIDUALLY, BY Lie. PiHYSIClAN. M. D. NO GASTRITIS OR IRREGULARITY WITH MEDIC-WAY CAPS. DON'T DIET — (UST EAT!..AS THOUSANDS HAVE DONE, YOU CAN LOSE 5. 50 OR 100 LBS. AND KIEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 OFFICIS IN OAKLAND AND WAYNE COUNTIES—ONE IN MIRACLE MILE BRIDES TO BE We Can Cover Your Wedding With Quality PHOTOGRAPHS ; As Ljow As Seeing Is Believing Photographer 518 W. Huron St. FE 4-3669 FOR SPACE ? Remodel! Build! BARNARD CWSTRUCTION All work dono by Craftiman Fro* dotign lorvico or wo will build to your ploni. No Money Down, FHA Tormi. Pontiac - FE 8-8733 YOU CAN NOIV JOIN BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD WITHOUT BELONGING TO A GROUP No physical exam! No enrollment fee! No health statement required! Join now by maii... offer closes inly 31,1963 UNDER 65 READ THIS • 30 days ot hospital care, 30 days of physician’s care in the hospital, each ronewable each Gme you’ve been out of the hospital 90 days • Surgical sorvices, including anesthesia and post-operative care • Up to $15 per day for hospital room and board PLUS many costly hospital extras covered in full. Maternity coverage on family contracts effective after contract is In effect 270 consMutivo days* Immediate coverage for aaidental injuries, first aid and health conditions originating alter contract effective date. 65 OR OLDER READ THIS • 30 days of hospital care, 30 days of physician’s care in the hospital, each renewable each ttmt you’ve been out of the hospital 90 days • After a modest deductible on the Orst $500 of tho hospital stay, Blue Cross covers in FULL: ward KcommodaUons including meals and general nursing care plus most •xtrsi • Blue Shield covets surgical services including anesthesia and post-•perative cars. AfioMStry Umltatlons and Waiting Periods art dotaiied in your Certificates I ^ I------------------------------------------ MONTHLY RATES | UNDER 65 j 65 OR OLDER ---------------------L—--------------------------------------------- \....................... 3 Categories of coverage Choose Plan A, B, C or D 1 Senior Citizens coverage is are offered: according to ^our income. I confined to individual con- Soo application below. I tractp: • • '«» I ONE PERSON ONE PERSON..........;$9.77 $10.27 $10.77 I S10.23 j Each person 65 or older TWO PERSONS .....$20.99 $22.25 $23.51 | must have an individual j contracL Additional appk-I cations may be ipcwed FAMILY...........S22 2I $23.92 $25.53 I from any Bine Cron-Btnn j Shield office or ask yew I hospital or doctor. APPLY NOWI No physical examination, no health statement required. Just complete the coupon-application and mail it. Sond no money. If your application is accepted, we mail you your booklet outlining your benefits, the detailed berrefit certificates and a billing'for your first month’s coverage. Read your certificates carefully before making payment. If you pay your statement by the due date, your coverage begins August 20,1%3. before making payment. If you pay your statement by the due date, your coverage begins August 2l COMPLETE AND SEND TO: MICHIGAN BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD, 441 E. JEFFERSON, DETROIT 26, MICHIGAN. JOIN BY MAILi JUST FILL IN THIS COUPON MICHIGAN HOSPITAL SKRVICK (BLUE CROSS) - MICMGAH 30DICAL SKRVICX (BU« 8H11IJD) APPLICATION CARP - N0W-6R0UP AND SENIOR CONTBACTS _____________________________________ ' titellMtHaM ' rri>t rinl lifiiM MnUUIaMtal ' BooEai SMmrilr kliuiW jli ac WIFE OR HUSBAND^ ;.ii.....- nKcnrac: ■■tra— □ r« CHHPRIM Undnr 19, unmorrlnd and Inqally rildinq wilh you (M««.an>in»a>»pU«i«»*«oBiy) MICHIOAN BL.ua CROSS-BLUB tfHiBLD NON-GROUP FLAN E (for oppliodnlt undnr ag* 6S) mwnu. MNOW L OR , . ,.. C uBdnr $2,300 - $2,300 but law than $3,000 i; — $3,000 but Inwi Uuu $7,300 |l-^ $7,300 or morn if allhar huaband or wif* In unefar flS, a "" Sl|at«ara at , Fir»t ehoicd with thoMuAo hai’e (t cAoice V'. -ii* .\l" ' ■/ ‘ • V ' J'"' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 22> 1968 ,x ROME UR — Italian Government Statistics Institute reports 8,987 Italians died in road awi-dents in 1961, compared with 8,-197 fatalities in 1960. One reason Prosperity Ups Fatality for the increase is more and more Italians have become automobile owners during the, country’s current proqperlty. There are approximately 140,-000 Chinese in the PhiUpplnes. Beery Gai Don't AAix, Stalled Policeman Finds someone pohred beer in the , ollne tank of the police car while it was parked outside a city cafe. LYONS, Kan, W Beer and gasoline don’t mix. Particularly in a police car. Police Chief Al Buckman said One-eighteenth of the land in North Dakota is reserved by state law for public school purposes. Thatcher, end Wernet INSURANCE AT BOTH BIG YANKEES HALF A HOUSE—This is what Joe Conrad in a move to clear the way for a new street. left of his^house in Charlotte, N. C., after Joe says he’ll remodel and put in office space. WIHn’SOIP' OPEN NI6HTLY TIL 10 P.M. OPEN SUNDAYS TiL 7 P.M. PERRY at MONTCALM MIRACLE MILE S KIDNAPED?—When thieves stole the car of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bertram in Boston, they really had something—the couple’s 3-month-old son Eric Eugene. Police searched for 30 hectic minutes, then found the car abandoned by youths, ^ric was safe and sound, his kitten at his side. Argue With Presidenf- Philippine Leaders Quit MANILA (UPI) - Two lead-ers of the governing Liberal par-^^^^^=%^olcejvith, President Diosdado ,a halsle^ of deported AmeflBaif Harry S. Stonehill. Vice President Emmanuel Pe-laez resigned as foreign secretary Saturday and Senate President Ferdinand E. Marcos boycotted a Macapagal speaking tour Sunday because they held the President responsible for statements linking them With Stone-hill. Other liberal leaders Are trying to soothe their ruffied feelings, fearing a major split in the party. Jusyce Secretary Salvador Ma- (Advertlnemuil) Tense Nerves Block Bowels Your colon has nerves that control regularity. When you are tense or nervous, normal bowel impulses may be blogked—and you become constipated. New CoLONAio tablets relieve this niisery with a new principle—a unique colonic nerve stimulant plus specialbulkingactionasrecommended _ _ byVnany doctors. Result? Colonaid the people.” puts your colon back to work—gently relieves constipation overnight. You feel great I Oet clinically-proved COLONAro today. Introductory size 43d ritio said In a radio-telecast Saturday that a notation in Stone-hjlU’s ‘Tittle black book” indicated he paid Pelaez $2,500 in a ^^ck^deal. Marino said Marcos [edjn the Stonehill lyejio FormerTusl Diokno charged some time ago that Macapagal himself received $2,500 from Stonehill in 1960 through Ira Blaustein, the president’s agent in New York. Pelaez denied Marino’s statement. ‘‘I cannot represent our country with dignity when the secretary, of justice has raised a dark cloud over me by making' hialicious imputations against my integrity and honor,” the vice president told newsmen. “What makes it all the more horrible is the inescapable conclusion that his ignoble effort has the sanction of the man (Macapagal) who appointed him to his high office. For this reason, I am tendering my resignation as a member of the cabinet. (AdTcrtlnmciil) Burial Insurance Sold by Mail . . , You may be qualified for $1,000 life Insurance ... so you will not burden your loved ones with funeral and other This NEW policy Is especially hel|)ful to those oetwf T shall remain as vice president of the Philippines because I do not owe this to President Macapagal ... I owe this to Stonehill and a business associate, Peter Lim, were deported last year on charges of evading taxes, shipping dollars out of the country and “establishing a network of corrijption” in the Philippines. Northville Man Elected Chief of State Legion .......... botwcon 40 and 90 No medical examination necessary. OLD LINE Legal reserve LIFT-: INSURANCE. I ... No ngenl will call on you. convention. Fix'.e informal Inn, .no obligallon. Tear out this ad right now. . . . Send your name, address and year of birth to: Central Security DE’ITIOIT (UPI) - G. Oscar Hammond, a retired Northville businessman, was elected state commander of the America Legion yesterday at its annual • -'ll % I >■ - I- ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAV^-JULY 22^4^63- 1 1- TWENTY- -ONE Fort Worth 4, Texas. Hammond, 69, is a World War I veteran who joined the Legion in 1920. The convention opened Thursday and fended yesterday with Hammond’s 'election. m m mm ALL PRICES REDUCED Even Special Orders Thfi Conctmt Choose From the Following Styles: EARLY AMERICAN TRADITIONAL • MODERN PROVINCIAL you MONEY on Furni- Our lower overlien<| Will si lure of Belter ODALITY. n Vi3U to 3>30 •ill V I'.IH. 1 OAKLAND AVE. Xl m i Cloeeil WedneMlay Aflernuone Dur|ii( .Summer II ILLEKS FlIRINrniRE ^THOUSANDS'^^ tueS OF LOW LOW PRICES Ixtra Oeld Bell Stamps Exespr Bmt, Wins, Tobacco LMIt On* Ptr Rsmliy. ■spirts Tutidtv, July U. U.S.P.A. CHOICE CHUCK MMSR Blade Cut 45: Round Bone Cut 59: Benoless Xhuck -69: Pot Hoast Cut U.S.D.A. Choice PrICM tffactfv* through Tu$sday, July 23. Wo reueryo tho right tu limit quantltius. Swiss Steaks Dund Center >one ilQ Blade EwU :ut V7lb. Cut lb Fully Cooked E-Z to Carve Whole or Half Portion Seml-Boneless Hums Lb. GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS TEL-HUROH SHOPPING CENTER ^ TELEGRAPH ot HURON / ROCHESTER PUZA MAIN Sy., ROCHESTER 'M.' ‘\ . A. . I'nr-’A V.- •' ■ \\-..., TWENTY-TWQ THE POXTIAC TRESS, MONDAY, JULY-22, 10631 Wins at Dallas With 279 fiiicklaus Adds PGA Crown to His Golfing Honors By DON WEISS Associated Press Sports Writer DALLAS (AP)-Big Jack Nick-laus, at the tidy old age of 23 and after a spectacular amateur career, has added the Professional Golfers Association title to his 1962’U. S. Open championship and his 1963 Masters crown. It’s left him happy but hungry for more. “Sure I’m stilt hungry,” the blocky, cherub-faced Columbus, Ohio, heavyweight said after a sizzling 3-under-par 68, capped by a title-winning 30-foot birdie putt on the 69th hole, had brought him from behind to the PGA crown by two strokes over Dave Ragan and three over Bruce Crampton and Dow Finsterwald. ------—^___± -HIr'—-k- “I’m in this game as a competitor and I want to win every time I play. There are some times when you can’t get yourself keyed up quite a bit —like maybe next weekend in Chicago at the Western Open. But if 11 have a couple of good rounds theiand never feel quite right. I canidon’t think Pm as good a putter first two days, that in itself Will hear somebody in the crowd say-as Arnold or Gwy.'They’re fan- days, charge me up. “When I get to the stage where I’m not hungry any more, then 1 don’t see much point in playing. I don’t think that^me will come very soon.” -----------------_ ^ NEEDS TO LEARN “I’ve still got plenty to learn about golf,” Nicklaus emphasized. ‘For one thing. I’ve never learned ing ‘Why doesn’t he go ahead and tastic. I’m not all that bad but I hit it?’ I know I’m taking a long could b« a lot better, I’m just time but I just can’t bring )nyself| thankful I hit enough good shots to putt fast. 1 won’t hit the ball here to overcome all the bad putts until I’m ready.” I’m goirig^to have to work on developing some type of rhythm in putting — so that when I put the blade down behind the ball I to get comfortable over a putt, i know I have> the putt, lined up. I stand there and stand there They might tell you I am, but I I made.” In his rounds of 69-73-69-68-279 on the 7,048«yard, par 36-35—71 Dallas Athletic Club course Nicklaus used 134 putts, which averages out to slightly more than '' Jack’s normal putting pace for . a tournamehl. T felt I could have made a 65 or 66 on the first round, about that or better on the second round —I was playing that well,” he said. “Actually, though» I don’t like to think about what might have been. As long as it was good enough. I’m happy—nautral-But until the last round, I thought this was the worst scoring in a major tournament on a well in a long time. I thought it would take 275 to win here and I thought there would be a lot of fellows— certainly more than just four-under par for the four rounds.” Although sub-par golf turned , with more frequency in the third and fourth rounds, only Nicklaus at 279, Ragan at 281 after a closing 69, and Cramton and Dow Finsterwald, at 282 after shooting 74 and 72 respectively, were under a round. It is about 14 more than|conditloned course that I’ve seen par. Willowy A1 Geiberger and Liston Remains 4-1 Favorite Las Vegas Set TitlaMalcL 1st Fight Nightmare Haunts Ex-Champion in Bid tor Crown LAS VEGAS, Nev. (API-Awesome Sonny Liston remained a most formidable favorite to retain the world heavyweight title in tonight^'fi^t^Tritlr'FloytFFaii _tersnn, Jhe^^man-Jic________utterly: jYon^s Lead by 1, Belt Tribe Twice wrecked in one devastating round in Chicago last Sept. 25. Scheduled for 15 rounds, although you can get even money in the Las Vegas gambiing parlors that it won’t go four, this return encounter goes on at 9:30 p.m., (EST). A capacity crowd of almost 8,000 will watch in person in the Las Vegas Convention Center, and an undetermined number will vi^ it in more than 140 theater and other outlets around the na^ tion via closed circuit television. The rematch, one that many| thought never would take place, figures to draw around $250,000 in the “live” gate and upward of $700,000 from television and movie returns. SMALLER GATE This would be far less than the $4 million-plus paid out for the original match, a statistic easily explained by the tick of a stopwatch. The first one lasted two minutes six seconds, third quickest in heavyweight title boxing history. No surprises were expected at! the 1 p.m. EST, weigh-in. | Liston predicted he would weigh I 213-214 pounds, a pound or so un-i der his Chicago weight. Patter-' son said he hoped to come in at 195, six more than before. | The betting odds in recent days have been 4-1 bn 30-year-old Sonny, who now calls Denver his home, and 30-1 the 28-year-old ex-! champion won’t be around after 15 rounds. ing opposition in the American Ticague if me pace-setting" New By The Associated Press It might be better for Jthe rad- York Yankees had Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris and Tom Tresh back in the line-up. With the three regular members of their formidable outfield out with ailments, all the crippled Yankees did over the weekend Cleveland’s vanishing Indians and I two-run homers Saturday and Sun- stretch, tbeirlead-to seven games, largest bulge of the season. day and .Hec Lopez whacketLart other. _________ TTie Yanks took the Saturday The reserves, eager as a bunch of high school scrubs trying to earn a letter, have been getting the big hits as- the Yankees just roll on. Harry Bright, one of the repent brighter lights from the deep was take three straight from:Yankee bench, belted important game 5-4 and swept the Sunday doubleheader, 5-2 and 5-4, winning the nightcap in the 11th inning on Bobby Richardson’s run-scoring single off reliever Early Wynn. Far behind the Yanks, the battle for second tightened as the Boston Red Sox nipped the Chicago White Sox 3-2 in 10 innings, the Minnesota Twins edged Washington 3-2, Kansas City topped Baltimore in a third 3-2 affair, and Detroit trounced Los Angeles 8t2 on Frank Lary’s qomeback victory. A scheduled second Bos-ton-Chicago game was rained out. 3 STEALS—Dick McAuhffe, Detrgit Tiger shortstop, caught “After five, I'm quittin’,” said i the LA Angels napping in the 7th inning and stole third base. The White Sox now are only a half game in front of both Boston and Minnesota and \Vi games ahead of Baltimore. Bright, a 33-year-old handyman who played for Washington the past two years before coming to the Yanks via a deal with Cincinnati, drove in three runs with a single and homer in the first game Sunday. This helped lefty A1 Downing, who yielded four hits and fanned 10 in eight innings, to his sixth victory against one defeat. He got able relief from iHal Reniff. In the nightcap Lopez hit a two-run homer that gave Jim Bouton a 3-0 lead. But the fastballer and reliever Bill Stafford couldn’t stand prosperity and Steve Hamilton eventually got the victory at old Early’s expense on Richardson’s clutch single at Yankee Stadium. It was the Indians’ ninth straight defeat. Billy Maxwell matchod it at 284, in a tie (or fifth piace. The other two members of the Big Three Gary Player and Arnold Palmer — had their troubles, although Player came back in the stretch with two good rounds and finished at 288. Palmer, weary and woeful, shot 74,73, 73,73—a duffer’s pace for him— and wound up way back at 293. The game’s No. 1 money winner tied for 40th place and won $410. His bankroll inched up to $85,995 in official PGA money. Nicklaus, his $13,000 pot o’gold, jumped into second ahead of U.S. Open champ Julius Boros with $75,140. I By winning here, Nicklaus created a proposed playbff among Palmer, Jacky Cupit and Phil Rodgers for the fourth spot in the “World Series of Golf,” for a first prize of $50,000 in Akron, Ohio, Sept. 7-8. Nicklaus qualified first as the Masters champion. The other spots were reserved for the U S. Open, British Open and PGA champs. Bob-Charles has made it as the British champion in a playoff with Rodgers after Nicklaus missed by a shot with two closing bogeys. Boros made it as the National Open winner in a playoff with Cupit and Palmer. “I hope Palmer does go in the playoff for the spot,” Nicklaus said. ‘ But he told me he probably won’t. I shouldn’t say that. That’s up to him to decide.” PALLAS CAP)—riMl «core« and mon«y vhmlnsa In tha 4Sth PDA OoU C Jack NIcklaui. tl3.0« TucBon. Aria. Dave Raian, 17,000 Orlando, r* Bruoe Crampton, $3,750 7O.73-O0-74—$03 Dow Finsterwald, $3,750 72-7$.6S-7$-$8$ Maxwell.’^ 13.128 .! 73-71-8071-284 7$-73-e».70-2a4 ____ Vegas, 1 A1 Oeibergcr, $3,125 Santee. Calif. Jim Perrier. $2.7,50 Burbank, Calif. Tommy Jacobs., $2,000 73-73-70-00- 285 AP Photofai Bermuda Dunes. Calif, Bill Johnston, $2,090 .... Phoenix. Aria, 71-72-72-71-288 PGA CHAMP—Smiling Jack Nicklaus holds the Wanamaker Trophy for winning the PGA championship in Dallas yesterday. Runnerup Dave Ragan sits on the left. Nicklaus had a 72-hole score of 279 and added $13,000 to his winnings for the year. ................. , 73-78 06-71- J Pocono Manor, Pa. Gary Player. $2,000 ..... 74-75-67.70-^9 Gardner Dickinson. $2,000 72-74.7$Jl«-$*$ Bob Charles. $1.550... OO-70.72-7O-M7 .New Zealand 5.i..lfn. RnrAs, $1,550 ...... 09-72-73-73.--2I7 Pines, r “ Bad Day for Pitchers ITony”Lema. lUM "..r.' 70-71-77-00-287 San Leandro, Calif. Jack Bellman. $1,550 .... 75-70.74.6$-2a7 Dlck"°Har’l"’ $1*75 ......... 66-72-70-74-289 Liston, who has from the outset! B was his third stolen ba.se of the game as ex-Tiger Frank looked with professional disdai on Patterson’s chances. Has he thought of the possibility that Floyd might win'.' “It didn’t cross my mind the: first time, why should it cross' my mind this time,” said Liston. Sonny, replying to another re-i cent question, said he regards! Patterson personally as “a- reaL nicfr person.” [ Kostro takes' the thro the game, 8-2. V Irom pitcher Dan Osinski. The Tigers He added he is not an intimate! friend, explaining, ”I never hor-; rowed any money from him.’ Strong Lary Back in Form Patterson has repeatedly de- •-'’'"y received an Oscar for his LOS ANOtlLES (UPli — Frankiinning that put them ahead, 5-1. precated himself for his’ ‘ shame- Pei'tormance yesterday at Chavez ful” showing at Chicago. Ravine but gave most of the plau- ‘Tll probably be applauded if •'*upporting cast the I get by the first round,” he said I Detroit Tigers, in his final press interview, smil- Detroit drove Angel starter and loser Dean Chance from the mound in that inning as the 22-year-old Los Angeles hurlcr contributed to his own downfall with Bob Tillman’s 10th inning homer off reliever Hoyt Wilhelm gave the Red Sox their squeaker over the White Sox at Chicago. Dick Stuart’s two-run single in the ninth had tied it up for Boston. Dick Radatz, the big Boston flamethrower who came into the I game in the ninth, boosted his record to 12-1. Minnesota’s Don Mincher, another recent escapee of the bench, clouted two homers —his fourth in two days — in the Twins’ home victory over Washington. John Goryl followed up Mincher's last homer in the eighth with one of his own for the winning run. By The Associated Press This has been a great year for pitchers. But you couldn’t prove it by their work Sunday in the National League. There were 183 hits sprayed around and out of NL parks in eight games, including 22 home runs. The Pittsburgh Pirates rapped out 22 hits in an extra-inning victory, Philadelphia’s streaking Phillies collected 29 in a double-header sweep over the New York Mets, the Milwaukee Braves got 26 in tripping Los Angeles’ frontrunning Dodgers twice, and both St. Louis and San Francisco ran up big totals. Strangely enough, the big guy for the day was Ron Fairly, who belted a grand slam, another homer, a double and three sin-gle.s~ for the losing Dodgers. Milwaukee did in the Dodgers by scores of 7-2 and^l3-7, and second-place St! Louis moved up to within six games of the, league ing abjectly. ! “But I hope and I think I can win this time,” he insl.sted. Floyd was a.sked what he thinks of Liston, the man. “I’ve heard things he’s said about me. He’s a man who hates. I feel sorry for anyone who hates and hates,” he observed. Just how this fifiiht will go is anyone’s guess. Liston promised to go all-out to even better, if pos-silile, his first knockout time. U8 VSAOS, W»v. ary, whose middle name is Strong, Was just that for his third appearance on the mound for the Tigers since returning to Detroit three weeks ago after a stint in the minors. Anticipalod trlsvlslon ,Fl|tl.lsrs‘ t>ursos.roaoi of all rfvaimas Ramaloh Noiia. TIokal piloa Simla I »«, avrn louiid, Rulas-Tha. Iliraa knockdown ri. baan waived, bid Iho iiiamlaioiy muni In Ilia avanl of a knuckdoi b* In affacl. Wal«h-ln lima '$ p m., BHT. Clliattiprunihlp The Tigers helped out too, coming through with a 13-hit attack and some flossy base-running to aid his win. “Man,” the beaming Lary said in the lockeroom, “when you get 13 hits In back of you and baserunning like Dick’s (McAuliffe) you just nat-$7(Ki,ooo| urally look good on fhe mound.” j I,ary Indicated he wiis over IliC’i |.sore slioulder tlia( laid held him *" ito two wins captured 23 games flic previous' year, The .32-year-o|d I,ary struck ' to score and opened the gate to an unearned tally. The Angel defense collapsed after that, and Los Angeles was guilty of four errors. Lary’s praise of Dick McAu-liffe’s baserunning was earned bccau.se McAuliffe acted |ike a downright' thief in stealing three bases‘and twice putting himself in scoring position with the nabs. WWW DKTkOIT LG8 ANGELR8 $ 1 2 1 CCRl-sim cf 3 9 s 4 3 2 9 Wignsr « 10 5 I 2 l L. flio'ss lb 3 0 4 f 1 r a sk'skl rf 4 1 Aniclc" 001 000 Ofll—I WiikiitM. I'likJicc, Usliiakl. KlrkpH-iiu!.) ..n,.. 1. 1 j I’O A Ocliult 27-11, Los 1962 allei he bad An»i>ifs nJ, i,oa Oonoii $. i.,o» An- The home run also produced the winner at Kansn.s (’Ity Wayne Causey’s sixth inning blow brought the A’s their triumph over the Baltimore Orioles. Causey’s homer was better than a birthday cake for Moe Drabow-sky who celebrated his 28th birthday with a five-hit win. Haskins Ties for 2nd in Waterford Softball Waterford Township Classs C softball last night found Haskins Chevrolet moving into a second place tie with a 4-3 win over Rockcote Paint. Three runs in the bottom of the sixth enabled Gene Coon to gain the win on a five-hitter. An exhibitiort game saw Pontiac’s Huron Bowl lop the Class B Lakeland Pliarmacy nine, 6 3 Natal League Hitters^Go Wild leaders by trouncing Houston 9:4. ***'^B*’^^ F* U'^^record, The Phils extended their winning streak to seven and the Another Title Is Added by Mrs. DeBolt Mets’ losing string on the road I the Pirates, tying the Cubs at 5-5, to 16, 8-0 and 7-2. Pittsburgh for the 14th pinch homer of his nipped Chicago 6-5 in 14 innings career—matching the big league on Jerry Lynch’s . record-tying pinch homer and Bill Virdon’ single. And San Francisco erupted for a 10-5 victory over Cincinnati. Hank Aaron and Denis Menke homered for Milwaukee in the opener and rookie Bob Sadowskl posted his first pitching victory after four losses. The second game was decided by the Braves seven-run fourth Inning and Tony Clonlnger’s tight relief pitching. Joe Torre had a homer and two singles in that one, driving in four runs. Manager Walt Alston of the Dodgers was ejected from each game in disputes with umpires. Dick Groat increased I league-leading average to .3 with a double and triple in the Cardinals’ romp over the Colls, who now have lost six in'"a row, 10 of their last 12 and 13 of their last 16. Bob Gibson won his fourth record set by George Crowe. Then in the 14th, Donn Clendenon and Bob Bailey singled, setting the stage for Virdon’s deciding hit off loser Jack Warner. Don Cardwell, loser of the first game, won the second with three innings of one-hit relief. Paul Toth pitched a seven-hitter for the Cubs in the opener and was backed by Lou Brock’! two-run homer. The Cubs pulled the first triple play of the season In the second game. The defending champion Giants, fighting a prQlonged slump, cut loose against the Reds. Orlando Cepeda paced the offence with a homer and two doubles ior San Franci.sco, which had won only three of its previous 13 games; Bob Bolin won in relief, while Cincinnati’s prize lefty, Jim, O'Toole was tagged for his sixth straight defeat and now is 13-9. The Phllsi who have taken 13 of their last 16, got a four-hit shutout performance from Chris Short in the'opening game against the Mets, thi* Dennis Bennett and Johnny Klippstein combined for a strong job in the second game. Meanwhile, Philadelphia batters unloaded, with five hits each by Johnny Callison and Ruben Amaro leading the barrage. Lynch hnmered with two on in the last of the ninth inning for WArkRrnicn rowNeuir boftrau. Saturday’s eclipse didn’t darken 'the golf enthusiasm of Mrs,* Zadah DeBolt who has made a habit of winning the Pontiac city woman's golf championship. Mrs. DeBolt took home the medal championship trophy for the'8th time in her golf career when she fired a 43-40—83^ one stroke ahead of another past champion Bobble Miller who had 44-40-84. Her first city title came In 1936. Last year she edged Phyllis Boyer and Gretchen Bouwens by one staroke with an 82. ' T ' ^ Yesterday Mrs. Boyer was fv third with an 85. ^ : During the eclipse there was a playoff between Mrs. Bouwens and Eva Miller for the hfindicap f ^ championship and between Mrs. • Bouwens and Betty Wallace for the 8th position ort the recreation,, IcatT) for the state tournament. a I Mrs. Miller was handicap winner boV iwlth 71. > iiponi Jout five men while walking only Riici'i'l two. ' The 'I'iger.s won (he game with j„„, !a lliree-nin outburst in the sixth • ; • DrDoU 2 l4,DotjbWi Mlllor Phviiu novor j'.-ISkS , '"1 Mxrbxi'A ChUdrixi 00. has made a habit of winning the city medal play golf JJijo-Jj C'hampionship. She won the 43!42- $5 woman’s title for the 8th time w ............ Saturday with a 43-40 -83, one 02 ^ oJrfV ^FfRthSrxton’t $f: Stroke ahead of another past Aii.n 0$ •i.d champion, Bobbie Miller. • TODAY’S AMERICAN LKAOeV: 5‘J NCNDArs lir.MIll.TS inxA City 3, Dnltlinor* 2 all 8, Lot Angela* 2 Imi 3. Chicago 2, 10 llinlngi poxiponed, rain MInneiota 3. Waihlngton 2 •Irw York 6-8, Ctaveiand 2-4, • "" "VATimftArn . r«w York A, 4 Chicago 3, Hoalon 0 (inntanta II. Waehington .laUlmnrd 8, Kahaaa (7ltir 3. >> Loa Angela! 11^ Detroit 2, nl| Chicago I Minneeolg Wiiehlngton i. Ahgalaa at ... Franclat Phlladelplila PIttahnrgh Milwaukee AlINnArSRBStILTH Phllarieljihla g^-7, Ne^ York 0-2 Fraholaco 10, cinclnnall g lago B-5, nuaburgh 18. Second 14 Doug Sander*. 11,071 OJal. Cain. Milwaukee , , 74-69-70-78-288 ,075 71-71-74-72-288 11.078 . 71-74-71-72-288 Went Caldwell, N. J. Dave Hill, $1,073 . . : . . - 73-72-89-74- 288 Jack*on. Mich: ^'^BnievSle. 111. Bobby Nichole. $77$ . Midland, Tex. 14-73-71-71-289 Lehigh i 1775 .... $f76-71-74-28$ '$775 !....7^74•71-72—289 Mlk."“S"chit? $7??"':.... 72-7^73-72-289 Oro«»lhger, N. Y. Freddie Haaa. $55$.57 Metairie, La. irMkvW’Ni’v." . 80-70-70-70-290 . 70-72-71-77 J. C. i IS0.97 . 74-74-74- Oklahntna City im oneaa, 9090.o/ ........... ii-fo-fu-fi While sulphur Springe. Weel Va. -73-200 71-7I-70-70-2M Final acoree and money winning* of Mlohlgan Oolfera In the 45th PQA golf champlOnahIp: Dave HIM, Jackaon. $1,075 73-72-8$-74-98$ Bob Oajoa Foreat Lk. $200 72-72-78-$l-30l T, Watroue, MIr'hi Cranbrook Nine Moves Closer to Loop Lead The Cranbrook express, der layed only once in its last seven starts, showed a full head of steam last night at Jaycee No. 2 diamond. An 11-1 thrashing of M. G. Collision boosted Cranbrook only one-half game out of the Class A baseball race lead. The victory was the winners sixth in the last seven games and made them only the second team in the loop with 10 wins. Three moundsmen eomblned for a threc-hit vlctery, Al I.evy, the middleman, received the credit for the win although he permitted two of the hits and the only run — a homer by Dick Bushey. Offensively, Cranbrook’s Bill Estes and Tom Demrick both joined the loop's .400 hitters with productive nights at the plate. Estes moved into second place with a double and triple good for four runs. Demrick had two singles and double and accounted for two runs. Tonight at 8 p.m. the Clippers will attempt to tlghteh the first )laqe race with a win over Tal-lK>tt Lumber which Is in the four-team fight for fourth place. (iRANJIRnOK .A KeUoner. .................... |s| Wipht »',’"rw''t.k'T“"’"'"' ^*‘"1 L«* Aiigrle* Milwaukee 4 Hi lioule 8. HOuetiin I. niglii Cliicimiall 3^Hen rianoliioo 2. nl tOIIAV'H TAMES eoheduled TOEHDAV'S (IAMBS ClMcImmll at Chicago f it. Laid* It Milwaukee, plghl Fhlladelphla at lloualon.l nlglil PUiaburgh it Loi Angelet, n1$hi NewYorC t( Bin Frinolioo. iilgli u 41. COLLISION -...jiilet of Y Miroum 2 R.'’fiiMpheri^ r;Ve-«i» ! I no’v'’;ii ,h-r. I n fcd'js f t feMh! 11 in|>r 2b-if j ) 3 L ^.impheri^ ' Coriwi ill I Tolala !I5 II 18 Tillla 7t I 3 mi')heiiute'’lllll?*d!)ii’’4, IIITvvL "Vi,iV.,!LJeLfcTn? pheia 3, Cimwiy 2, winaing Pllch«r ■ lew Loa.n,.fi;.che^j^Ji£p{:...^ 1 .LlSwtT'J} IWra‘*l*ii.( LVwV,, .'tv,,. J i THE PONTIAC PfiESS. MONDAY, JI^LY 22. 1963 TWENTY-TRREE Track Squads Show Poorly at Moscow Draper, Fry Annex Birmingham Crown Women Beaten; Men Pushed by Russians Before 5-Point Win MOSCOW (AP)-When does a winner feel like a loser? When he beats the Russians by only five points. The American track and field team scratched out a victory over the Soviet Union in their annual dual meet here Saturday and Sunday by that slim mari^n, lowest American victory fetal ever. But It would be difficult to identify the winners today. The Russians were flashing their thumbs up ‘thunky dory” signal all over town. Big Tom Draper, who has wealth of experience in state, national and intemational. tournament play, plays even the local tournaments as he does in any of the t^ eventalffthecounTiy'. “ on the 19th over A1 Robinsin and Earl Burt. In the first flight, the favorite dud of Jack Geiss and Mace Brown were defeated by youthful Chuck Meil and t rahlrBrown; ” He and Con Fry of Birming- 4and 3. Meil, who is a 19-year-ham teamed up to win the Uthiold University of Miami student annual Birmingham Invitational I dropped in a 30-yard chip shot by defeating the medalist duo of|for an eagle-3^^~^ 8th-hole-as| Sam Greenawalt and Fred Ewaldihe' and his partner moved to ai in the championship match yes-4-up lead iifter^he first five! Weiss' Winning Ways Art and Guy Weis^ sparked the Circle inn River I^ts to, a 8-0 win over Rochester Saturday. Guy pounded a three-^ homer and Art permits two and fanned 13. ' ” \ outpointed Kd Saromb*. tW*. vauMuu, Micb.. 11, PHOKNIX. Aril. - Al OoBMlal. Mou. Aiiz.. and Kirk Barrow, Saa FraneUeo, drew, heavlof, MEXICO emr — Antimln Mexico, outp( Mexico, 10. terday, 2 and 1. Draper and Fry took a 3-up lead at the turn, pushed it to 4-up'< after 12 holes and then fought off the Greenawalt • Ewald rally to end it on the 17th. In the semi-finals, the champions won over Tom Lowery and Bill Yearnd, 1-up, while Green-wait and Walt were 1-up winner holes. The "second flight went to thet Orchard Lake pair of John Uf-| ner and Paul Gibbons with a 4| and 3 triumph over Jim Beale; and Don Nelson. Pine Lake’s Jim Seregny apd L. C. Hare took the honors inj the third flight; Keith Bliss and! Bill in the 4th flight; Norris Host' and Ron Sandberg in the 5th flight and W. Heebsh and F. Coo- NEW HEIGHTS ~ Russia’s Valery Brumel scales the high jump bar at 7 feet 5 and ®/4 inches to better his own world record which he accomplished against the U. S. last year in California, '^e American team defeated the Soviet team in Moscow over the weekend. One County W4mier— at Loon Lake Races ney in the 6th flight. THE RESULTS: ___ fMAMPlONSHlP FXIGHT Scml-Flnals — Draper aim — " Lowery antf^fearnd,-l-u| and Ewalt J93 EAST CONFORMITY For them, conformity in clothes and hair-dos becomes all important. Schoolwork takes a back seat to the problems of group behavior. Because a teen-ager shifts to a new school at this time, the pressures of conformity are especially likely to affect (Dr. Nason’s “Help Your Child Succeed in School” booklet may be obtained by sending $1 to Help Your Child,” Box 1277, General Post Office, New York City.) . (AP Newsfcutartl) DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt, Tom Cooke A743 ' WK97 ♦ A1075S ♦ 84 ffODTH (P) ♦ JIO WAJ5S ♦ Q2 ♦ AKQIOS Both vulnerable ‘ Sooth West North East 14k Pass !♦ Pass 2W Pass 8W Pass 4V Pass »♦ Pass .8 V Pass 8 4 Pass 6 ♦ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ A By OSWALD JACOBY Some of the easiest slams to make are the hardest to bid. At six clubs South had to remember to ruff one diamond in dummy before drawing trumps, after which he must discard his jack, five and three of hearts on dummy’s 1 0 n gj spades. South can also make five hearts or North five spades, hat the major suit slams don’t make because tiie heart finesse is needed and it doesn’t work. JACOBY ’The bidding shown in the box is the way one expert pair bid this slam. The first bid . that requires explanation is North’s raise from two to three hearts. In some circles South might well have passed that bid, but in that particular sector the three-heart bid was what might be called an Inferential force. So ^uth went on to four hearts' whereupon North continued his snaillike pace with a bid of five clubs. Astrological Forecast •.■.mS-ffltt’.rsV; condition*J ill hill dcillnr It): Umiauil --------- ,BU. Many *re — ------- prcptrins for vacation or ratumtnv from trip. Boat to 1 partial. Maintain aimn* of humoi TAOBOS (Apr. ao to May Soi i lunar aapaot nlinllabta romance, travel, Opportunity for axcltlng progrcaa. M»at new people, exohann* Idea*. Check plane before etartint joumeyi. Bo with one who ellmulatee you. OEMINI (May 31 to Juno 31): Btreei Independence, honor, adherenejs to high-oet principlee Shake off lethargy, time-wanting metliodn. Oct to h< matter No lime (or worrying, hri Be SPEOUrje. CANCRB (June 32 to July 31): Pueh forth witli Idea*, improvemenln. Cheok AM, iioenlhllllleii. Don't be dlncouraged by one will) It iillra-oonaervatlve. a chance on vhur owp ablllUea. Oo viniting. making (riende. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 21); Dnlnl Plan « ) that recent i pllnSment hi........ ................ Now. renpret vourneUI Extra effort r< •Ulte In 8UCCE8H, vmOO (Ang. 22 to Sopt, 22): Tilt ln>tlatlve. Strena greater or)glnal)ty, li dependence. Be a leader rather that a follower. Bonpect opinion otfereil lij LEO Individual. Check factn. Pei ’^TiTrA (8e"pt, 22 to Oct, 23): I ■ n gel behlnd^he-ncenen jioii eave^ ...... bapnenlng ") ‘"flCpBiW 'where )t countn." Trunt you emn iBAOmAI^^S |N0V will"* iltflf," u*nder»tmitllng' RAJir* ^ tly.^Meami don't get naught mdy Meatiii don't get naught up i 33 to Jan. 30, .wa..a.ai.e..t.l7. ItSlatem >tl I Atl to : ...Xn.'^lTt’; U> Mar, 30); i-ii>' on't oom^nUt le. Realnie illfferei wrong Take c Ilf ■'I'flEkDAli' IH* VOlfR BIRTHDAY L.................voii are dynamic, love Irave^ and _ tlKNERA^^^'l»Mt^N(A THE PONTIAC PRfeSS. MONDAY, JULY 22, 1963 twenty-five Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas MARY P. UNDOREN HEIKKINEN Service for Mary P. yndgaen HelkUnen. 70^ of m E. Mane-Raid, wlRbe tomorrow at^ 8 p.m. at the Donelaon seph and'^ Allen of Lapeer, (Hyde of Albion and George in Korea; three daughters, Mrs. Margaret Van Horn of Lapeer, Mrs: Ethel Miilikin of Brown City and Mrs. L y d 1 Sh Boyden -of Attica; 22 grandchildren; and M greats grandchildren^ Mrs. Leflle, a reglsteri^ nurse, died yesteroayv sne was a mem* ber of the Shrine of the Little Flower and the Shrine Mothers Club. Survivors Include her husband; her motoer, Malre Thlefels of Pontiac; four children. Frederick J., with the U.S. Navy stationed at Virginia Beach, Va., and Mary C., Anne E.. and Joseph A., all at home; two sisters, Mrs. Fred Harrison of Farmington and Mrs. Vincent Aderente of Birmingham; and one brother, Robert J. Thief-els of Pontiac. JULIUS I. KINDEL WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-SHIP — Graveside service for Julius I. Kindel, 61, of 3980 Spencer, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Richardson-Bell Funeral Home, Walled Lake, under the auspices of Ck)mmerce Lodge No. 121, F&AM. Burial will follow in Oakland Hills Memorial Garden, Novi. Mr. Kindel died unexpectedly Saturday,-—______ - was a member of the Mos-|, lem Temple, No. 71 of Milford; the Scottish Rite Club of Pontiac, and Walled Lake Chapter No. S08, Order of the Eastern Star, of which he also was a past patron. Surviving are five brothers and five sisters. MBS. HARRY D. WENDT Service for Mrs. Harry D. (Edith M.) Wendt, 73. of 6375 Highland, Waterford Township, will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Cemete^ty, Detroit. She died yesferday lollowlng' a long illness. Surviving besides her husband, are ope son, Howard W. of Pontiac; six grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. MRS. JAMES BALHARRIE LAGE ORION -• Service for Mrs. James (Jane) Balharrie, 84, of 829 N. Lapeer Road, was to be at 3 p.m. today at Alien’S Funeral Home with burial following in East Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Balharrie died Saturday after a lengthy illness. She was a member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church of Oxford, and had been a captain in the Salvation Army. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. P. S. Marsa of Lake Orion, a son, Gordon S. of Walla Walla, Wash., apd seven grandchildren. FLOYD BANKIRK GOODRICH-Service for Floyd Bankirk, 80, of 8147 State, will be I p.m. tomorrow at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Orton-ville, with burial to follow in Metamora Cemetery. Mr. Bankirk died Friday after a brief illness. He was a member of the Goodrich Lodge No. 548, F&AM. Surviving are a son, Charles 3f Goodrich, three daughters, Mrs. Grace Richards of Grand Blanc, Mrs. Oda Lambert of East Tawas and Mrs. June Fox of Fraser; 12 grandchildren and II great-grandchildren. MRA. HAZEN CASEY ROCHESTER - Mrs. Hazcn (Ruth) Casey, 54, of 337 Linwood, died last night after a lengthy Illness. Her body Is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home. THOMAS J. JACKSON LAPEER TOWNSHIP - Serv- ice for Thomas J. Jackson, 81, of grandson. mation will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. McRoberts died Saturday after an extended illness. Surviving are a son, Henry J. of Pensacola, Fla.; three daughters, Mrs. K. R. McMath of Rye, N.Y., and Mrs. Robert Rowlson and Mrs. Scott Mitchell, both of tester; three sisters; 12 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. MRS, ROBERT MULVANE OXFORD -^ Service for Mrs. Robert (Blanche) Mulvane, 75, of 1940 Lakeville, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the McQuate Funeral Home, Plymouth, Ohio. Burial will follow there. Mrs. Mulvane died unexpectedly Saturday, Her body was taken to the Bossardet Funeral Home here. Surviving are a son, Hollis Cole of Oxford; a step-son, Robert Haas of Montclair, Calif.; daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Conn of Maysfleld, Ohio, and Mrs.__Ruth Mulvane of Plymouth, Ohio; and two brothers, and MRS. EDWARD A. MARfON OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Edward A. (Rose A.) Martin, 73, of 5415 N. Livemois, died unexpectedly early this morning. Her body is at the William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. MRS. JAMES W. McROBERTS AVON TOWNSHIP - Memorial service for Mrs, James W. (Ida) McRoberts, 83, of 690 W. Tienken, will be 8 p.m. today at Pixley Funeral Home, Rochester. Cre- H.W. Gentry of Clarksfon Succumbs INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP Gentry’sOolonlal House furniture store, Clarkston, died unexpect-yesterday. He was 65. h^r. Gentry of 6130 Clintonvllle was a member of the Clarkston Rotary Club, Clarkston 1 mens Association and a member and past patron of Joseph C. Chapter No. 294, Order of the Eastern Star. He was second vice presl-deni of the Oakland County Association, OES, and vice president of the Board of Trustees of the First Methodist Church, Clarkston. Mr. Gentry also belonged to Ceder Lodge No. 60, F8tAM and was a past member of the Waterford - Drayton Rotary Club. Ea.stern Star service will be at p.m. tomorrow at the Sharpe-Goyetfe Funeral Home, Clarks-ton. Service will be 11 a.ni. Wednesday at the First Methodist Church, Clarkston. Masonic graveside service will be 2:30 ).m. at Chapel Hill Memorial Gardens, Lansing. Detroit Finds Bogus Checks Dravm fdr $6j500 DETROIT (UPD — Police sought to track down a bogus check operation that used counterfeit City of Detroit checks in the amount of 16,500 since June 7, Hie City Treasurer’s Office, op which Hie cheeks were^ drawn, said the numbers on the checks did not tally with the office’s system of numbering which led to their detection. Police said the checks averaged about 3100 each and were printed on special forms-used to give city employes advance vacation pay. The names used on the checks were those of two city employes, whom police said knew nothing of the scheme. Waterford Township Board lembers are eknected to take action tonight pnuhe establishment of a public library. The most widespread day-by-day use of Latin is .the Roman Catholic Mass. To Eye Library in Waterford WIni W«*d Avrard jpls^ in f wKd.growin( enntcit. BURFORD, England (UPf) - y^t^d-y witlra weed 184 inches Miss Barbara )^de won firstltong. will discuss reported junk yard problems in various parts of the township. The board will act on separate resolutions call|ng for the dedication of library properties by Waterford Township CAI and establishment of a public library. In other business, the board will set a date for a hearing of intent to establish a special assessment district to install side- walks on Bender. The board also will review a request from the township’s Youth Assistance Committee to provide space for a case worker and will consider water department requests for the purchase of materials. In other business,,, the board Pope Labels N-Ban 'Hope' VATICAN CITY (UPD-Pope Paul VI yesterday referred to prospects for East-West agreement on a partial nuclear test ban as ‘‘greater hope" for mankind. The Pope did not mention the nuclear talks specifical- ly in his address to a crowd of ! 20,000 in St. Peter’s square on the anniversary of his first month as pontiff. i But the Vatican radio later confirmed his remarks referred to favorable reports from Moscow j and were intended as “praise andi encoufagement for those who| have known how to offer to men this motive of hope.’’ 1 :k| TURKEY aiSIOfl DRUMSnCKSW'”’"’ EARLT.SWINEY ROCHESTER — Service foi Earl T, Swlney, 28, of 3065 Melvin, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Voorhees-Siple Chapel, with burial to*.follow in Perry Mt. Park. Mr. Swlney was killed yesterday in an automobile accident on 1-75 in Pontiac Township. He was employed by J. A. Freedman Contractors and wus i membef of Laborers Local 1076. Surviving are his wife Diane, two daughter, Michele and Roxanne, and a son, Jeffrey, all at home; his mother, Mrs. Eugene Sifers, of Elkhorn City, Ky., a sister, Mrs. Juan Arellano of Pontiac: and a brother, Thomas H. of Flat Rock. ROBERTS. TATE INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Service for Robert S. Tate,.55, of 4531 Maybee, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Tate died unexpectedly Saturday of a -heart attack. He was an employe of the Fisher Body Division. Surviving.jire Jiis wife Edna - Herman W. Gentry, owneFof Mae- two daughters, Roberta Jean, at home, and Mrs. Gerald Langdon of Lake Orion; two sons, Robert S. Jr. and Timothy, both at home; four brothers, Hamilton of Pontiac and Tennessee and Thomas, Herbert and Usher, all of Ireland; and a ' ' Pedro Rodriquez Wins 150-Mile Seattle Race Surviving are his wife Georgia: , daughter, Mrs. Harold Steele of Arlington Heights, HI.; and a . aSt or. ^Q)eHali 3L Jejtm All Funeral ServiccB... ... Are arranged with high regard for the wishes of the family. At the same time we offer sympathetic relief from the numerous details that arise at this time. Depend upon the competent and undefstandlng service of the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home in the time of need. (Pa/iklnEN tUNDAVS I~ UN ealdwln Av«. I I M Mumkl* I _ OPtN hUNOAYS M I 75N HiglilMi48i |ilNeaidwin Av«.| l275CMiiy UiioRi I UtilM Uk* I SUNDAYS 9 to a I WUU»BUII.GER PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS J2U AUBURN I 415 i. PIKE IT. I 700 AUBURN ST. I CtOHD SUNDAY! | OftN SUNDAY f t> ♦ | Or.h 7 « W.tll | III ORCHARD LAKi AVL . ■ 1, ' * 1,. ! .V. * !■>' 'V THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 22. 1Q03 Widespread Effect Seen Fair Skies Aid Trade The folloveing arejpp prices' covering sales of locjilly : grown produce by growers and sold by them in wh'blesale package lots. Quotations var^ furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of “ noon Thursday. Produce , 16-qt, ( 16-qt. I Currants, red . Easpberrles, 24 pt. crate .. VEGETABLES Beans, green, round ........ Beans. Ky. Wonder .......... Cabbage, curly, bet Cabbage, red, bu. . Cabbage, sprouts, t CaulUIower, - Celery, -dog. Celery, c Celery, Pascal ...................... 3.5# Corn, sweet, 6 'dos. bag " ■ Cucumberii Cucumbers, Foreign Issue Rally Dwindles NEW YORK (JFI - A rally by Canadian and other foreign issues petered out and the stock market moved irregularly 16wer early this afternoon. The foreign stocks — clobbered last week by President Kennedy’s proposals for a tax on Americans who purchase foreign securities — came back handsomeiy in early trading in response to a Washington decision to exempt Canadian new issues. Soon afterwards, however, came news from Washington that a railroad industry spokesman said there was no chance of averting a nationwide rail strike unless Congress enacts legislation for compulsory arbitration. was apparent Wall Street was, in an extremely cautious mood awaiting whatever the next hour might _^ing in the w^ of news from Washington. ★' ★ The foreign issues as well as stocks throughout the list were apparently dampened by this news. Although the foreign stocks retained an edge to the upside their gains were cut. Other stocks declined. Trading was so slow that it Fractional gains were made by Syntex, Massey -r Ferguson, Canadian Javelin, Bell Telephone of Canada, Rayette and Data-Con-trol Systems. ^_______ Among losers were. Occidental Petroleum, Radiation, Inc;, Kirby Petroleum, and Falcon Seaboard Drilling. County Road Commission b^ielt iiLiime as The New York Stock Exchange liOW liMM 19 43 424i 42H-Vii 2 23V» 2V/i 23Vi - V* ■ 16>/i 16V« 24 58V4 57Vj 57',4 S 32>/< 32Vt 32V> — >/a 13 24»/, 24 24 2946 29H 2944 Can't Decide on Concession By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)-Americans' love affair with the faniily car is making weekend weather an economic force in many busi-' es, large and Several Considered for Airport Expansion small. If the weather was miserable in your area the last, few___days. DETROIT (UPD -The Wayne the effect may still up in the air today over who will get the miliion dollar concession business at Metropolitan Airport when its expansion is completed in 19^. At present, Interstate Hosts, Inc., of Los Angeles, is maintaining a $2 • million annuai business at thC airport. » But Interstate’s contract runs out in 1968 and^er-airiMrt-£a--terers would like to take over. Interstate would Ijjce to expand its .present operation from a $2-million annual business to $7 mil-But any expansion would mean an investment of about a miliion dollars. The concession brings in about $1 million annually in revenue to the road commisssion. Officials for Interstate say it would be unreasonable to expect a million-doilar investment in a contract that wili have oniy three years to run after the new airport facilities open in the fall of 1965. The Wayne County Road Commission, which supervises the airport’s operation, said Interstate’s ^• service so far has been satisfac-l-vjtory. T 48-H 48-y; 48>r+>. interstate Officers said its net 7 S’ kJv 3s»4 - profit is 3 per cent of sales after 7 «4v, <.41/. - K41/. _ pgyjjjg county 15 per cent on liquor sales and 13.81 per cent on restaurant food sales. (or good) weather could mean a variation of up to 10 billion vehicle miles of highway travel. Suer an extreme case would mean a difference of about 700 million gallons of gawline burned up, 350,-000 tires worn out, and perhaps 30 million meals at roadside eat DAWSON far away as Detroit and Akron or the oil fields of Texas. It certainly was noted sadly by auto dealers, resort operators highway restaurants and motels, both near you and some distance away. The United States has so many family cars—66 million, or 60 per cent of the world’s total—that it is the only nation_tha_t_can carry all its population at the same time (at three persons to a car). A summer of especially poor Also affected by weekend weather are many things, from the safe of bikinis and sun lotion to picnic supplies and car renta" services., For example, makers of suntan and sunburn lotions and creams have raised their annual sales from $7 million ten years ago to $14 million last year. Whether this summer’s weekends are fair or dreary can have a lot to do with the industry’s reaching its 1963 sales goal of $20 million. The $1.7 billion per year motel industry is particuiarly sensitive to family decisions to take off for long weekend jaunts or to stay home because of the weather. Grain Trading Ends With Weak Prices CHICAGO (5V-Trading in July futures contracts ended today with prices generally weak and 'and all other months mostly lower on the board of trade. July corn was down four cents or more at the finish and soybeans a cent or mbre. Trading in tho9e deliveries ceased at noon and activity was never more than moderate in other contracts the remainder of the day. Brokers said there appeared to be very little movement toward expansion of long positions anywhere in the market after speculators had balanced positions in the expiring contracts. SuccesskiNnvesfing ‘■it n S H iliiiliili m By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am planning to invest $10,000 in common stocks. I also intend to add to this investment through a quarterly Investment Plan. My objective . is appreciation and additional income for my retirement years. I am 35 years old. My special interest Is In consumer-type growth stocks and I would appreciate five recommendations.” F.D. A) You show good investment sense, if I may'say so. The types of stocks for which you show preference have been emphasized Cardinal Dies; Ex-Candidate for Papacy VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Valerio Cardinal Valeri, prefect of the Vatican’s Sacred Congregation of the Religious, died today at his residence in Rome, a Vatican official announced. He was 79. Cardinal Valeri was stricken several days ago with a serious throat infection. Pope Paul VI, informed immediately of the cardinal’s death, went to his private chapel to pray. Valeri, a widely respected man, had been among the cardinals mentioned as a candidate to the papacy, both in the 1958 conclave thai elected pope John XXIII and in the conclave on June 21 that elected Pope Paul His health in recent years had not been good. He underwent surgery la.st April in a Rome clinic. The nature of the operation was not disclosed. Valeri’s death reduces the size of the College of Cardinals to 80. There has beep speculation that Pope Paul might call a consistory soon to increase the size of the college, and the los^ of another cardinal — the fourth so far this year — would seem to increase that possibility. here for years, because I believe that they offer the best opportunity for consistent growth in the type of Civilization we have developed in this country. Another way of characterizing leaeiStoeks is by the use of the term “effective merchandisers.” Texaco has been selling at all-time highs pot because its products are necessarily superior, but because it is probably the best oil merchandiser in the United States. For your investinent along these lines, I suggest Bristol-Myers, Standard Brands,.Franklin Life Insurance, Long Island ~ ighting, American Express. Some 45,000 motels and motor ho-tols, with 960,000 rooms, have a national yearly average occupancy of 69 per cent. Good weather can raise this by 1 per cent and give an even greater boost to profits'. “ Resort hotels suffer from prolonged wet spells, but motels are even more sensitive to weekend weather prospects. As Secretary . of Commerce Luther H. Hodges recently told operators of Howard Johnson’s 650 roadside restaurants and 160 motor -lodges, some 100 million Americans make 230 million,trips for long or short distances each year. Weekend weathei* Is a prime factor there. " ★ ★ ★ The Automobile Manufacturers Association says auto travel has jumped 47 per cent in ten years to 733 billion vehicle miles a year. TIME SAVER This is expected to increase further as the Bureau of Public Roads pushes its program for a 41,000-mile highspeed network of highways, tempting Americans to lengthen their travels because of savings in travel time. And the more mileage clocked Dn weekends, the better in the long run for sellers of new and used cars! The nation’s 200.000 service stations sold 66 billion gallons of gasoline last year. Officials of Humble Oil & Refining Co., affiliate of Standard Oil of New Jersey, estimate that a drop of 10 billion vehicle miles in pleasure travel due to bad weather could cut sales by the industry by $210 million and federal and state gas tax revenues by $21 million. This year the tire industry hopes to sell around 35 million new tires to the auto makers, and 81 million replacement tires to motorists. Q) “I have several series E savings bonds which have matured, but I do not need current income at present. Would you advise me to (1) leave them to accumulate interest; (2) exchange them for series H bonds; or (3) redeem them and buy Treasury 4’s of 1980?” M.H. A) Your series E bonds have been automatically extended and are accruing interest at the rate of 3-y4 per cent per annum. You WQuld get no greater yield by exchanging them for series H bonds. By so doing, yoii would simply defer the tax on your series E interest accruals and get current taxable income which you say you don’t need instead of accrued income. If you redeem your series E bonds and buy Treasury 4’s of 1980, the entire interest accrual on your series E bonds becomes subject to Federal income taxes for the year in which your bonds are redeemed. In your position, I would stay with my series E bond.i Mr. Spear cannot answer all mail personally but will answer all questions possible in his column. (Copyright 1963) Italian Air Show Plane TURIN, Italy (UPI) - An Italian air force plane crashed during an air show yesterday, killing a 17-year-old girl spectator. The demonstration marked the 40th anniversary of the Italian airjorcc. REFRE.silMLNT--i^nusing from the busy activUles at the i’ontiac Motor Division liOcai 653 picnic'yesterday Is Lloyd Boone, 8, son of Mr. and -Mrs. jlohn Boone of \l040 Clienlot, Waierfonl Township. Next in liiie /is his sister, Sharon, 9,’ holding Ida Mane, 2. In tiie foreground wearing the $traw hut at the John F Ivory Farm event is Lloyd, pissmo Highland, Waterford Township. r, Sharon, the ^raw morj^, of 6 i ■ TIRES VS-^HEAT^ Heat is the big enemy of tires, according to officials of U.S. Rubber Co., especially heat built up during sustained high .speed driving of the kind that fair weather weekends encourage. The result: the more good weather, the more fast trips, and the more tire replacements. Makers of air Conditioners for cars report a 49 per cent jump in sales, to more than one million units, last year. Hot weekends, of bumper to bumper driving can only feed the desire for the gadgets. Building Damage Disrupts Traffic in Buenos Aires BUENOS AIRES (UPI)-Traf-fic around the national capitol was disrupted today while city engineers strove to prevent the collapse of a cupola on the famous old Molina Sweetshop, a favorite haunt of Argentine politicians. If the highly - ornamental tower atop the seven-story building were to fall, it probably would hit a corner of tlw capitol, across the street. The busy intersection of Riva-davta and Callao streets was closed to traffic yesterday and nearby subway stations were shut down when engineers warned the cupola was unsafe. Men from the salvage squad placed huge beams to. shore up the cupola, but engineers said further precautions would be necessary to make sure it will not fall. News in Brief Arthur Barnes, 4421 I_______ Waterford Township,' told police Saturday that a 7Mi-horsepower motor was stolen from his boat docked on Elizabctli Lake. A 12-foot rowlMiat owned b Mike Chersack, .3260 Alco, Watei ford Township, was reported sto en yesterday. The boat was va ucdat$200. Somebod/ Stole Jail for 'Old HoiHi Week' MOUNT JEWETT, Pa. (UPI — Authorities today were looklni for a stolen Jail. Tile four-by-sIx-foot lockup, be ing used to liouse violators o “Old Home Week” regulations vanished during the weekeiul. , CHIC AttO (.ASH (IRAIN ‘■'•’.T’ J"'*'. J!* 'AP'~Wh»«t No,I L*-'.'*!'. ‘ l No. I ■ y»llow li»rd " i. Oil* 1(4. coV,? N'o’‘;'>,i’fo"i iiCi 15 I h»s¥» luuod Mj No. I whiu i-. - THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JCLY 22, 1963 Negro Chosen for NLRB Post WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presl-dent Kennedy has selected a former law professor to be the first Negro member of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) Kennedy announced yesterday at Hyannis Port, Mass., that he would nominate Howard Jenkins Jr., a 48-year-old Republican, to succeed Philip Ray Rodgers, whose NLRB term expiref Aug. The selection of a Negro for the. |Z0,06e-a-year Job stressed employment opportunity in government and private industry. And the administration had Rodgers to keep the 3 to 2 party ratio on the Democratic-domipat-ed NLRB, a target of GOP criticism. / The other members are Chairman Francis McCulloch, Gerald A. Brown add John Fanning, all Democrats, and Republican Boyd sought a Republican to succeed Leedom. . Mounfie Myth Falls Beneath Chief's Words WASHINGTON (AP)-Ala8, another legend has come crashing down: Canada’s famed Mounties don’t always get their man. In fact, says the head of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, they don’t even try to all the time. t ★ ★ ' ‘‘It would be utterly ridiculous to continue chasing a man through hell and high water, no matter what offense he had committed,” Commissioner C. W. Harvison said today in a copyright interview with U S. News & World Report. The legend that the Mountie.s always get their man ‘‘was never true,” Harvison said. ‘‘That expression has been built up—principally by Hollywood. "We try to discourage young, men who want to join the force thinking they will i;ide gorgeously across the prairie^ in their red coats to the tune of‘ Rose Marie.' Our men can expect long, hard woi*k and not much pay compared with the responsibilities -they carry.” She'll Be U When Starting College Work MOUNT CARROLL, 111. (AP)-Whcn Tamara Moat starts freshman studies at Shimer College in September, she’ll be only 14 years old. Donald G. Reuter, vice president of Shimer, a school of just over 300 students, said Sunday Miss Moat, of Tlnlcum Township near Easton, Uppdr Bucks County, Pa., is 14 now. He said he believes no college has, a student that young. Miss Moat is being admitted under Shimer’s early entrance program which provides for acceptance of students with less than four years of high school who demonstrate by college entrance examinations that they can handle collective-level work. Reuter said Miss Moat, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grenville T. Moat, has completed two years at Palisades High School near East- Tax Cut Bill May Be Lost WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Russell B. I^ng, D-La.. warned yesterday that the tax bill may bo lost in the battle for passage of President Kennedy’s clvl rights proposals. I,ong said during a radio program that chances for a tax cut “get dimmer all the time” although he said it was still possible Congress would pass the ad-mlnlstratldn's tax reduction and reform proposals. The measure is still being considered In the House Ways St Means cbmmittee. Following House action, the Senate’s finance committee will hold hearings before sending it to the floor tor a vote. Smallpox Clearing Out of Swediih Capital STOLKHOLM (UPI) - Health authorities indicated today they soon would declare this capital city free of smallpox after a virulent outbreak which killed four Twenty-flve-jpcrsons contracted the disease believed t« liai'e been brought In by a sailor,^ <3 Death Notices TWENTY.SEVEN odrlob; .... Mri. Or*ea ..... p’is. a “*"* ‘n Metam0ra CemeUry, Mr. Ie(am»r iniurk win 11a \n Rtata at tha C. P. I Otton - peadtaet Twp. nufbMd. M Oc cVw Sjs' .'tH'V.. *4 “ a"m. JoUowed b» Or»v«>lde •ervloei »t »:30 Vbf. _________ . tlMDlcei ot tbc Muonic Lodi Intermont m Chnool HIU Mem. w*ll juT***"*’ -------- JULY ao, 1M3, JULIOS L iJudd), 3»a6 fencer, W. Bloomfleld; Ace ei: Belovedf hue-band ol Sarah Kindel. dear briber of Mr», Cecilia Allleon. Mre. Jeeele Allleon, Mre. Beatrice Ma-aon, Mre. Rpaetta LaOore, Mre Matilda Nyetrom, Art. Tbomae, Jamee, and Cliarlee Kindel Funeral service will be Tueeday July 23 at 1 PM. at the Hlchard-eon-BIrd l^neral Home, Walled Lake with Rev. J. Albert McCrory offlolatlng, followed by Oraveelde Servicee under the Ausploee of the Commerce F 4 AM Interment In Oakland Hille :_____ rial Oardene. Novi. Mr. Kindel will lie In etate at the Rlchardeon-Blrd Funeral Home, Walled ' JULY 20. 1003, Blanche, 104& Lakeville Rd., ford; Age 75; Mre. Dorothy u........... ..... Mulvane, Robert Haee and HolUe Cole, dear eteter of Mrs. Foster Harrison, Clyde and Grant Long. Funeral service will be Wednesday July 2« at 2 P.M. at Mo-Quats Funeral Home, Plymouth, Ohio, interment In Plymouth, Ohio. Arrangemente were by the floBsardet Funeral Home, Oatord. 8WINBY, JULY 21. 1103, EARL Tiiden. 3M6 Melvin, Rochesl—' Age 2(; Beloved huabAnd oCDli R, SwIneF, dear Son of James and Rhyndla Bwiney, dear fat of Miohaler Roxanne and Jeff Swiney, dear brother of Thon iano. Funeral service will be Wedneeday July 24 at 1:30 P.M at the Voorhoee-SIple Chapel with Rev. Walter J. Bennett officiating. — snt 4^Fwry Mf Park ri. Ur7 Swiney will he In 20. 1003, ROBERT ._jbec4 ‘ — ------ f Edna llton, Tliomas, Herbert, sn(f Tate. Funeral service wl.. .. Tuesday July 23 at 1:30 P.M. at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Carl Hester officiating. Iti-.-------. torment I ............... _*l_i*'* Huntoon Funeral Home WENDT," JULY "21, “11)03? ' EDITH ..........."and Road; Age 73; sf Harry D. Wendt, ______ .J Howard W. Wendt, survived by Six grandchtt-and Nine arent-grandcbll- Beloved a e Donelson-J ith Rev, V. ...g, InlermeKl. ... Cemetery Detroit. Mrs. Wendt Tell Every.body About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad VE 2-8181 READ THESE Classifiecd Columns Keep this column fre.sh with daily listings of yotir favorite model and make at competitive prices. IF YOU ARE IN IHE MARKET NOW or soon to be Consult Classification 106 for Fast Results Today! Ings and ...................— the friends, nslghbors. and churches during our tiros of sorrow. Your good decdi will Iona be remerobered by thli family. Special thanke to Rev. The dore Allebaeh for his comforting worda and the Ruhloon Funeral Home for the service. The family of Howard Batten, the B. C. Bat-ten family. WE WISH TO E X T eIT DOUR heartfelt thanks and appreclatloi fnr the acts Of klndnsss, messages •thy, memorials to 1 b • Presbyterian Churc.b —« .... beautiful floral offerings received from our friends, neigh* ' relatives during of sympatb] Richland P 1 bereavement In the loss of We especially thank tha doctors and nurses at Pontiac Oensral Hoapltaf. The Rev. Allenbaoh of Pontiac. Rev. Russell Demstra of Richland for their comforting words the pallbearers and the- Huntoon Funeral Home for their .servicee. Howsl-d Ray Holatlne, Kirby and you can affordi MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSEI.OR.S 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 8-045C ■ largest GET OUT OF DEBT ' 18_W. Huron FE 4-01)01 GROUPS, CHURCHES OROANIZA-Hons, 880 for ssIlDig? ? FE 2-3033. Pay Off Your~HilIs payments ^Protect :joui City Aflju.strnent Sei vice ..... Huron___________FE 5-))2i)l THE ECHOES. 731-3183 UTICA . Simms Bros. Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_OR 3-7787 D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Service Donelson-Iohns FONERAL-.HOME--"DestghecTfor Funerals’ HUNTOON PUN lervlng P tkland A FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 60 Years 79 Oakland Ave _____FE 2-0)89 SI\AlU3-292^ _ BABY SITfER. LIO'hT HOUSE-work, live In. call after 5, EM ^6080^_____ _ _ _ _ BUBINiS^N'AND WlPE D'ESIRE services of woman to do light ,(keeping and care of 2 chll-I, must live In, best of wages. FE 8-3182. COOK, >SHO^ 0R5eR. MOREY'S OOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB. 2280 UNION LAKE RD. OFF COM- specialized' SELLING MALE OR FEMALE FOR YOU WITH BUSINESS. SOCIAL OR CIVIC CONTACTS. -I- THE J. L. HUDSON COMPANY Has an •opening, for an aggressive person In this area to sell these groups our Experience In contacting top background preferred. Pefm*a-^nt> seasonal ^ob earnings. velop own territory, Apply Now Midiigati Eaiplm-mcnt Si-c'inry lommission : . 242 OAKLAND THE WONDERf-'L’L WORU) Oh' Billie Burke RADIO AND TELTIVISION REPAIR WORK DONE WHILE--. YOU SHOP Trained Service Men, Reasonable prices. Free Tube Testing, Montgomery Ward______Pontiac Mall INSURANCE: FIRE. WINDSTORM 20 per cent off. FE 2-5011, FE 4-3403. Wanted Children to Board 28" , RELIABLE LICENSED HOME BY _day_^week J'EJ-6340. ___ DAY CARE FOR CHILDREN Wanted Household Goods 29 aay at Blue . we ii buy fnriiUttferlMU-and appliances, __0jrSf*fi847 jor MElrose 7-5198. _ s 2 BEDROOM, UNION LAKE PRIV- neges, eves. MA 4-2493. _____ 3-BEDROOM HOME. NEWLY DEC- —->---------‘ new. Very, very lAL VALUE. 928- Immediate Possession Rent Option $69.50 a Mo. MICHAELS REALTY 333-7855 • WE 3-4200 , UN 2J2(|2 Contact Resident Manager It Blvd. at Valencia. AUCTION. OA 8-268L WANT TO BUY FURNITURE AND | ippUances^ or ^»nythlng of | Hall’s Auction Sales. 70S W Wonted Miscelioneous____ 3ft F I C E FURNITURE, •S Wanted to Rent : ENOINEER-iaoVINO I -f—wShes 4 or 3 bedroom ' FOR ELDERI.Y letghborhood. .Re-OPqatH Help Wanted 'Chliircab Co’'''waid£o*n Jlorcf i COOK"'w"ANTEb,“ MALE OR FE- i ^Py^'^Mlih^r ! m'oney A^^HOME^ JR. EXECL’TIN i'? Rose city Huron, between 9 Cbl !E.SSI-:.S Ted^s has an Immediate opening for curb waitresses, must be 18, apply In person. TED'S RESTAURANT 2518 8. WOODWARD AVE. DEPARTMENT HEADS AND ASSLSTANTS For snorts wear and rcadJI In wear, ;perlenced only. LIbsrsI )ly In person. benefits. Apply ALBERT'S , Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elisabeth L Dining^ Room HOSTESS Ted‘s at Pontiac Mall has an Im- hostess. 20-35 "/ears of age.^ Apply In "person between 2 and 4 p.m. TED'S ■PON^ri^ MALL EXTRA"money? selling Ol • KIO P Splendor^CtalMipM ^-- - - j -j ■ 25 b^es. etc. Free personalised Samples, plus leading boxes on ap proval. Write today. It costs voii nothing to try. Cheerful Card Co H-430. White Plains, N Y EXPERIENCED WOMAN FOR Cigar and llauar couffter. day work ^^^YA-days. MI 7-0334, between EifPERliNCEb'T) i N EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, MUST be 18 years or older. Apply In person. DeLlsa's Bar and ResV taurant, 6980 N, Rochester - Rochester, after 4 pin._ FREE I EXemNO r-~ ----- ••Name Imprinted^’ Christmas Cards! Run spare time greeting cards, gift shop at home. Invite friends, lakf;, orders, earn up to 100% profit. Experience unnecessary^. Fund raising plans ^for af?um**othef samples on approvoi. Regal OreetIngs, Departmenl 2087. Ferndalc, Michigan,__ OIRL FOR G work, r—“ ' JloWI. ^ B R A L OFFICE ainl TO WORK in shirt dept; -* ---- Cl( ------------ ------ toV'Mr? I^UcheTl? KELLY ESiABLItiHIbD WAlKiNU AUUXii:. j gaming aboyg average. PE 2-3053 I experienced or nqt*» .--• you lu sales worr^^' ___... balriana. County ai.^^_ Oret" 25. fair educaHoiT Very ...........■■""orfull tl —• r WOMAN WITH CAR, i Watkins Route. Walled • e $2-S3 per hour worked. Apply STUDENTS, OPPORTUNITY TO Watkins quality products. Apply 180 North Perry, 8:30 to 9:30 a m. TENANTS WAITING, PAST SKRV- Ice. Adams Realty, FE 8-4095.____ YEAR AROUND^ 2 - BiDROOM option to buy. Prefer on lake or lake privilege. Around $100 lonthly, 882-0109. privileges Couple or 1 child. Available Aug.-1. Call Sat, or sun.-OR 3-9562. _ ___________________ NEw'S-AND-i-BEDROOM HOME 297 w. Yale at Stanley ' Kl^'.NT Ol’TION $50 84 A MONTI [ mmedlale occupancy, paved street, ____Modcl open dally — Sundays ■Michaels Realty Rent-Option W A N T TO QUALIFIED PARTIES New ,5-Hedroom Ranch I OXFC)RD--$110 MO. kr Marlon Bldg. Co. Rent lake 2 CABINS AT ATLANTA," 2 b'eDROOMS^NjORWT tJac,-049-Weeir OR 3-722 FOR RENT MODERN 2-BEDROOM cottages on Long Lake, south of Cheboygan $50 weekly Including boat. Write or call Huntley's Pines. Rt. No. 2. Cheboygan, 827-4892. Ma'niSTBE lake, KALKASKA, Exclusive lake front. Pvt. beach, boat, 2 bedrooms, avail. Aug. and Sept. Holly. ME 4-9412. Shore Living Quo^ WORKING OIRL TO _SHARE 4- ON MISSAUKEE LAKE, MA 5-7088 Wonted Real Estate 24‘-'a E. Huron ___ FE 4-0584 1 I'T'NM'Ai;!': PI.AC1':MI'^NT! PRESTON WALKER SMITH I 280 W. MAPLE, SUITE 321 ! Birmingham. Michigan i 646-3663 Needs lots In Pontiac. Immediate offer, no commission, Mr. Davis, I)2I>-'I575, Real Value Realty ______________________ LEARN HEAVY EQUIPMENT,-weeks, on Dozers, Drag Lines, eti Free ^^acmenL •^Kc^, ’^ 7323 ' I'll Pay Cash Pe'^4-35': nei-:i?)I';d AH types of Real Estate. If you have property to sell call U" '■ help in disposing ot It. No 10 ORGAN LESSONS ________FE IL8029___ WILL TUTOR "HANDICa'pPED chlhl^It^s Peters -051-8521 Work Wanted Male 11 LARGE A-1 CARPENtER. . small lobs. FE 6-2841 CARPENTRY AND PAINTING. FE 2-1053 F CEMEN'T WORK AND BHIck'vv'ORK wanted. FE 2-3701. _ _ DRY wTLUN67’*CEMEN'r WORK. TRY WALL, TILE, ALUMINUM siding, cement work and painting, FE.... FAMILY MAN WANTS' STEADY MAN WANTS JOB? jANlfOB, jiBlnUng Ol- yard work. 8M-3437, _ MARRIED MA'n WAN'fs "STEADY midDleaoe man desTres work WANTED: CARPENTER WORK, ...... le. cabinets, rec- Idlng. roofing, etc. rhatlon r J_FE 2-37C____________________________ WANTEb HOUSES TO PAINT. Exterior only. 332-8476. YOUNG MAN DESIRES WORK OF kind, has pickup. FE 5-0904. T2 iffork Wanted f«wal» ANT WALL tailing, FE 3- ,1. ■■ A-1 IR'oNINOS.' 1 DAY SEItVICE Rsfeiumees. 7 vrs. exp FE 6 1471, EXP'ElUENCffD “oiRir 25." WANTS - general office work, eao take eotn. OEOROE R, IRWIN, REALTOR 98 W, Walton _______ FE_3-78M '■‘w A’Vt'Yo SF.'LL?' GIVE US A TRY ■ WE NEED LISTINGS James A, Tavlov. Realtor, 7«^ Highland_Rd.' 'Y P"- HAI.F.H ' LADY FULI, TIME, K X - Hillings Simms Hnill J Siijfliiaw, No phone nille. WANTED; BlI.riBlflLY WOMAN FOR for hoins Ihnn^wages FE n-IISiie. WOMEN over' 81 FOR TELE-phone survey work rviinlngs 4 to 8 45 W Huron SALES Positions Available HUDSON'S PONTIAC Bu(iget Store Building Service-Supplies 13 A l BRICK, BLOCK AND CEMENT i FE 5 1 It'oOM.S, UPl'EH, 117? ADUl.lh I ' FE 8-1718, I 'ROOMS DAY WORKERS, “near I • It LEASE, 49 CEMENT WORK. 35e A HQUAHE I loot, traiiHlt mix u«ed, FE 4-8876, I dava. I RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL I building and rrmudellng. Julm W. i ROOM, DECORATED. 8 Buiineti Service All, makes of 1 NICK ROOMS, LOWER, WITH utllltlea. FE 4-4(188. RO()MH^AND^BATH, AIR CONDl-IIOOM.S AND IIA'IH, 1 CHILf) 8- OR 3-HEDROOM HoME - HEt.L-hig for my equity. OR 3-5159. 615.5 Aiidei'HonvIlle Rd 8 HEDROOM CO 1TA(1B~BBTWEEN 8-OEDROOM HOUSE. BIIEE/.EWAY. I Prliilhig s CEMENT DRIVEWAY AND work, FE 3-8447. ELEcriiic motor SERVIC ...................... FttEE ES'l'fMATES ON Al.I LORRAINE COURT •tilrance, $80 'week, FE tcH'ELon's, west' hid Lake wllh lakejnlvIle^eB, 6B8-184!i .2-UE'IIROOM RAN'cH?“$B?000 WITH $1,100 down, monthly paymenis $86 or will refinance. FE 8-0'881 2 HEDROOM”. C'LEAN? 'cl,ARkB'rON. I. ALL KINDS. IL I Dreiimuking & Tailoring 17 I'REFEH BACHELOR MYLBiM. nUlLDRR tar^ionn, Mni. Hodoll. FK 4-(H)53. KI«Mor)KI.fN<)*"’rAlli()ltrN(j‘ ~A DI(|I;HHMAKI|SU. TAUiOHINO. AIj- Moving vund Trucking 22 l-A MOVING SERVICE. REASON- CAREFUL MOVING, tea. U), 8-3IIU9, 688-3518 TRASH. LIGHT HA1 .....|g - 18 Y«a.„ .. ROnEUT 1'OMPKINS or Painting & pecorating A-1 fiAINTmOv IN'rEHIuR A * terror, free eatlmalea, da .. DECORATING -PAINTING -plaalerlng - papering. Free Eat-F dlanounta lor oaali 882-0620 RlltA'TOK, _,ADY INTEHIOR Paiiering. FB 8 0343 EXI’KHT PAINTING OI'HTAIKH^^ APAIl'imN'r ^31) ME- •'Ul’PER 3 ROOM, HATH. UTII.I Hob. 2112 N Caaa FE 4 I9II5 Apurtmentt-Unlurniihed 38 ROOMS AND HATH, UPI'Ell, HE. 3 HEIIROOMH 0 (I UlimiCa 'ijoOM UI'l’iCR. c PV'l I IIILLTDP HEAL'I'Y ^ 6'13-83.h I ,V Hfdnioiii—Bfisniiriil I Uaa heat - - hardwood floors I noo^-ANfTlLA'nL .■\,i,ilv N Mfial ^ MAHON niOMPHON DMCOUAfo)!, I OllCHAriD COIJ Ailulltt only wmr Hinic nkWiy DurouATKi) I ^rnoniH. itniKUft tnei ni; H-2IIH7 Houihi, rurniihAd 39 J Yl'iAlt KOtINI) liAKVI IIOMKH, $100 Down 'AIIIN home at alone flreplsre. irnaee, Pvl. beach ............ X predated. Even. Sal'. 8i l-edn Di oH Ellsalidli Lak i.iiKDitooM,'Fui-i? wining :"l«f ;:''ll1mur rul^i^lNO^HlllW Vl le lo, an a noui 1’iiiitiiiy jindni’l: SIdit N, ‘t’((/'lr|«i'ii|)h Kd. PONTIAC MALI, waalil)ij(, 'I'u^ipeii, oR 3 7081. , PAINirNG, I’APlilRfNd, llEMtmL waahing. 073 28». c. 'Vhlle, It.r, I H HOUND HOME on wime i.nae Irulli Ailgllal 18 lo ,)ulv 18, 11)64 8 hedi'ooma, gaa heat, aiiil complelely turiilalied TTimllv of 8 lo 4 dealred $68 a REAGAN: Rent Houiei-Unfuiniihed 40 8 MEtUtODMS. 8 TM room. Tlliilng room, hsaeineiil 'gaa heat, exeellei ------ -..... - -iX leri II Ion $330 down ,FHA tin ms „\1R KI'-'M,' I'.STAri' . F« 4.6378, till 3 T/08 s “U L T S ? TRY W A N T A D S FE 2 8 1 8 1 i ‘\ ' 1: THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 22, 196.3 „;^W|SNTY-NINE Local Landmark For Sale Ott»W» Drt\................ Av«., Ikn* hom* tuiubic tor your K. L. Templeton, Realtor NEW HOMES Full Basements $00 DOWN per mo. Vlilt 1 M OPEN 10-8 DAILY t obout our troSo-ln Dim HAYDEN 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $9,995 $1,000 DOWN Ftmlly Room *«3' Lot —l^Ww-OorofO...- " Ooi He»l OFFICE OPEN J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor iCM 3.(WM 10751 Hlghlond Rd. (M-59) a-aiDROOM, full basbukn'F NO DOWN PAYUBNT NO MORraAOB COSTS FIRST MONTH. NO FAYMBNT HURRY! HURRY I HURRY! PRICKS FROM M.2M TO tl WESTOWN REAI.TY 498 Irwin off Eoat Blvd. FB 8-3763 Bvoi. oftor 7:30. LI 2-4677 iBcowe Prsfittly ^ 50 mlly -Fur — Invoi----- >r rutoefi yoari. John K. Irwin ______- Realtora 313 W«»l Huron - Since 1928 Phone FB 8-9448 - EVE, FE 8 180 I ford. I .ATTENTION SHOP I’KITS 220 H. of loke front over 2 acre* with 2 bedrdom brick home. Title le 0 dream home. Owner trane-ferred to Colorado. Baay terma. State Wide—Lake Orion 1170 M-24 OA 0-1600____After 8 OL 1-3803 i:XKi! anoiclub lakbfront Lot. “ X 207. Owner. 338-3893. EaKB-PRONT lots. WATKINS AND Ponttoo Lakee. PAUL JONES REALTY FB 4-8880 t laiTe Lima uri's -18 minotes to Pon'lac. 3708, 010 down, 810 mo. Boat — Flab — SWtm. OR 3-1308. FE 4-4800. Bloch Broa. Corp. moBekn cottaoe. excellent condition, fumlalied. wooded lot. Cat Lake. MU 9-0209, _ _ CSflTBY 78 ON BAOINAW OR 3-8007. _ ___ _ itlnj. flehl m Orion B Nsrtliarii Proptrty~~' "5^ „.d trout------ - ---- c. OlO down. FE 8-4601. ifoFoHTONLAKill I 3-bedroom cottage on i . 03.800 With 11.300 down. KAimSitA AREA. 5 ACRE WOOD-ed lot, 9398 full price. 310 down. 110 monlh. Adame Really. FE 8-4098. maMinaw c I f y! downtown bualnaai altea, for motele, gae ala-tloni. ratall eloree, ahopping center. or you name It. Low aa 33.800. J. Ternee. Mackinaw city.__ , BELL~5il TRADE, NEAR TRAV-eraa City, 8 roome and bath, modern, Knotty Ptna living room, glaaaad-ln aun porch. 3 aprea. wooda. Alao Kalkaaka County 8 ‘ ‘ “ 10 ftoret. OR 3- am. Rtitrt l^ro|Mrty 52 MOBILE iOlTBB, DON'T RENT. BUY Hi acre, m down, 3«* a monlh. OR 3-1293 Blpoli Broi. Crop,... “Tfiw sprucbToo co'Ttaob Only 01.000. Small down paymant. Bal. 030 monlh, 2 badyoom -‘■* On 'baaullful Chippewa. MODERN coltaw RBADY% MOVE INTO. IM ^wn, Bncloaad oomph ‘ ■eV|^ viiniijie haiSer ettm nay,' eepllo lank, Lnte at Diamond, Townllna Lakea, Office 10 ml, norlli - ----------- 2V4 Jill, Beet “— Townllna Li of ROmua, brochure, rt ,pe, plate. Write Henry ____ ytrni 354, Mich, _______ OOLF manor. LAm AREA. 3-badroom brisk ranch. Full baae-ment. AtUehad garage. Make h oHer to FHA of 013.000. BM E»i^Acrs 54 6 WOODED ACRES Beautifully wooded |iUI tide building alte, for belter homee. to a ejulal and aeoludad ^ lofatlon ~ yet only 3 mllei weal of Pontiac. Carl W. Bird, Realtor " 22 ACRES' - oi[ Laitaar Bd, Plenty of , incl. fome w<^a. frontage, exoaltant 10 nilnutea from downtown, oil.ooo, . Brewer Real Estate FB 4S1Q1 Bxaa. FB 8-0023 30 'AiCtiiS ON BOU'TH HOLLY and Fenton Rd., moving, will take 00,000 with reaeonable down iAo^B.“Bifa£MANrw^^^ of tiehinl and hunting area, Lincoln 6-3iVl after 0 p m. HBaWIful ip'ACB'BS nbAIi Clarkaton. 13.000, 0300 down. U^AcrMjjjl *®?'i «n** to’*''*****'- •OR'* 1!4 gsrei, aoma traea. 01.350. LADD’S, INC. FB *■»»»" OR i2^*g*“**' MWar*|?BKM ***■ PONtIac lake 1MX33F cloae jo good beach. 11,800, O800 down. iio’mo’** HAOBTr'oM real B8TATB. 4600 W. iSSr®"'.5.R. ■«*«*• 0*11 682- nortkclaIkSton I imall farm alte with 170-rn.,1 4.Terma. WATTS REALTY 1980 MIB at Bald Eagle Lake_ Oakland Avenue commercial property, a g®AL hot spot H I a H 4 un RgHfOKIB HWY, INCLUDES A 8-ROpM HOUSE WITH TILE "ARAOE. USB THE OFFICE. BIO LOT IIW' " ............ ■'~PTH, BATH,^ HOUSfc________ FRONTAOE BY u,„ PURCHASE ON CONTRACT Brewer Real Ivstate FB 4-8181 Evea. FE 0-0823 SUMMER BARGAINS 75 laku frontage — Lovely 2-bed-rpom modern. Newly decorated (In-.f.tf",** ““0, large lot; reduced to 38,230. Low down. Terma. ^ , WEST SUBURBAN 4 arge adjoining lota. Shade. Lake privileges. 3790 each. "Baaullful terrain. Treea. Savaral Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7001 Highland Road (M-58) Wanted!, WLST WALTON Near Dixie Hwy. Large commercial corner 77‘Ax300. Good bualnesa location. To close estate. PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin ____. FE 54127.5 Sale Farmi 56 ORTONVILLE 3 Mill 8t_ _ NA 7 2818 i A(3RES MbDERN HOME. FIRE- Xand Contracts Sale Buiineii Property 57 3,000 SQUARE FEET BUSINESS property fo- small nianufaclurliig. Brnalt down payment or land con-' tract. 838.820I1!: ^_ _______ actIve commercialTcorner — Opdyke iM3V and Feallurslona with frai bldg. 30'x6O'. non as in or Improve ' — buyer or tenant. Owner ( Ises 3-8 dally. Will otfica, 033-0201. , church, doctur i CLARKSTON COLONIAt. ' Downtown looatlon, lOO year old. 6 room homo, with 128 feet commercial fronlaga. City aewer ~ priced for only oiLr*" ............. Prime Inveatmenti Ideal lor eervlco type busineea. RJiWLTOR 1‘ARTRIDCll': Is the Bird to See W. HURON. FE 4-3501 _ FOR 8ALE.“ lease' OR TRADE !B Inc,. FE 2-2144. Buiineti Opportunities 59 8 ACRES. O-ROOM HOUSE. LARGE lawn, garden; faad and pat aupply atora, iiaw black-lop road, near i-78 —Very good location. ^2.8“ plus the alock. OR 3-«til2. _ For balb' or'lease, larob building. Vli all equipped for aiiper. market. Some alock, 305* Ormond Rd., White Lake. 887-8084, CLASS C JIAir each, jnventmeiit hack In o j. J. J oil Realty FB 8-0897 «r 683-0383 “WAi^rTO ' BlTY'A-....... SI'OUTS SHOP? (ON'i'ACT PARTRIDGE FEEfiToARDEN AND PET SUPPLY atora, established buelneas 30 years, 33300 plus stock. Cash for will hr—- ■ *'‘-‘ atpek landla. BM 3-3070. WANT TO BUY A TRAILER PARK? CONTACT PARTRIDGE 1080 W. Huron ovfR $io,ooo.6bo WORTH OF CHOICE i!u.siness and Investmcnt.s TO OEf YOUR COPY SEND 01 TO Partridge & A,s8oc,, Inc. y080 W, HURON PON'l'IAO laprant, Tike new, saorlfloa price, can OA 0-3887, after 1 y.nn_ ■ "“ijRIVL-TN" ‘ I,ake area. Lots of parking. Rea-aoiialila leaae. Like new equipment MICHIGAN t lliisinc.ks Siile.H, liic, .fOIIN l.ANDMESBEK, BROKER 1873 Telegraph FB 4.188 WANT TO BUY'A VARIETY STORE? CONTACT PARTRIDGE Wj BUY 6R sell a BUSINBn CALL NATIONAL Buslnesa Broken -- Orchard Lake WANT TO BUY A BOWLING ALLEY? CONTACT PARTRIDGE General .Store With SDM You can make a good llvinr and do It easy too (no preafuret) in thla general etore In a thumb area town. tool, real eatate with living WARDEN UNIVERSAL REALTORS PROBLEM WITH A BUSINESS OK REAL ESTATE? PERSONAL ATTENTION TO ' YOU AND YOUR PROBLEMS 50-STATli COVERAGE Call FE 4-1579 LEW HILLMAN, S.E.C. Reaitor-Exchangor 7. Huron St.I Pontiac Restaurant-Owner Priced rlghtl Located.on busy hi way m _ misy area. ^ Now ehow limited poselbtlttles. Includes build. Ing. an(f equipment. 28 per cent down or tra h.p. outboard mo-“■ 320. FB 8-1843 25% to 50% OEEl Going Out of Rusines.s Everything must be sold at Wat aon'a Hardware, corner Auburn anc 42 INCH PUSH BUTTON ELECTRIC stove. Best offer. 1957 Hepault, 3230. FE 2-7328.___________ A-I HUGGED VINYL SIDING,' That Hall will not damage IF YOU ABE WILLING TO PAY JOE VALLELY CO. PE >0548 Llcenaed, Insured, Referencee. BEAUTTFOi SINGER SEWING a month on new, contract. MICHI- LS GAN NECCHI-E AUI'OMATIC smqER ZIG-ZAG. aM model In sewing desk with drawet- spacer No attachments I IMir NIAteTja. t«.I “I wish somebody would break MY heart. I think the experience would mellow me!” nt 62 I Sole Household Goods CASH Loons^Xr$2j50O home purchaaes Loans available ..... r~ on auto, home equlturs, and . ture. 24-4S munths to repay. Group all you debts with only one smalt monthly payment. Eamily Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bl(|g. to W. Huron Telephone FE 8-4023 ___ Swaps ^ ____63 13-foot HURON CHIEF WITH 1 9 BB air PISTOL, 3 PIECE 8EC-tlonal, typewriter, wheel balancer, saxophone, garden tractor, portable ler, porta 5W, 5/4 t( - 17" TV.......... _.... alr-conditlohcr. ce-bench grinder. FE iO FALCON PICKUP $100 1 iquity, take over payments wap. 852-9085. ... IDEAL 3-BEDROOM HOME, south of Ort'onvnio with basement, attached garage and almost 2 acres down payment. C. I’ANGU.S, Realtor ORTONVILLE ____ ______ MODEJRN bungalow only 7 yei basement. Oil AC fui......... storms. ANCHOR FENCINO. Oak o-irpetlng. A real good home B(( far,below most homes In thFs Move In tomorrow, Will trade our $2,000 equity for good boat, car or housetraller. Ask for Mr. Brown. PE 2-4010. After 5 call OA 8-2616, lELL 1989 DODGE-AND ELECTRIC Range. 334-9499. Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST 4 Land Contracts Slout."'Re’allor! FB 9-6169 __________ CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS'^ WILL SWAP MERCURY MARK 30-la HORBE POWER MOTOR WITH TANK AND CONTROLS FOR 25 TO 40 HORSE MOTOR. WILL MAKE UP DIFFERENCE WITH CASH. CALL FE 8-0615. NO WAITING Immediate sale ------------------- land conlracta. For a quick deal call 333-71)7, WARDEN REALTY, 3434 W. Hur- OVER $2,000 DLSCOUNT This comfortable lake home sold In 1962 for 912,500. Present balance of $10,799 with $2,191 discount. Call now for complete details. REALTOR PARTRIDGE Is the Bird to See ' redecoratlun, 8 teopening 10 a 10 to 6, Tues E 4-3581 IManey to Loan 61 $25 to $.500 on Your .SKiNATURE O^ho^r '^ciirlty Home & Auto l.oan C!o, BUCKNER 3 ROOMS FURNITURE BRAND NEW WITH RANGE—REFRIGERATOR $3P>-$15 MONTH Beautiful living and bedroom suite factory seconds, about half price. $79. New furniture of all kinds, AIJJO 56 USED STOVES. HEFH|U-ERAT()RS AND WASHERS, cleaneil .. ... *“ I'lNANCl'' COMPANY , WHERE YOU CAN liORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pdhllac—Drayton Plans—Utlr Walled Lake—Rlrmlngham Get $25 to $500 Signature SELL -TRADE Casa closed use Lafayette PIECE ■ BA'i'TAN "set. ' klT(.'IIEN table and 4 chalrSj,MI 6-82(|7, 9-PIECE DUNCAN PHYFE 'DiNINO aiilta, exc. comllllini. Also twin hunk beda complete, PHONE FE 2 93 OAKLAND LOANS 996 to UOO -929 TO $900 ^ COMMUNITY LOAN CO, I B. LAWRENCE__FE 804 WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 We will be glad to help you STATh: FlNANCh: CO. h'E 4-1574 fEAGUirim^ANOrc 202 N. MAIN rochest1':r romeo 214 h',, ST. CLAIR LOANS $29 TO »0D^ AUTOS LIVBSI'OCK UOUHBHOLO GOODS PL 8-38M Pli i35. Call F^3j4M7. IRONBITE mONEB 'AND BR WHOLESALE V MEATS AND GROCERIES All nationally advertised brands. Savings up to 40 per cent. Soap, sugar, coffee, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vegetables, fruit juices. Kleenex, pet mlllj. YES! UP TO 40 PER CENT For free catalog and Information QO'OD BEFRIGSraTOR, COL spot, 772, St. Clair. _____ HIDE-A^BE'D, LlkE NEW.' 'ELVINATOR, BSFBIOEKATOR IN gddd working condition. Freealn sompartiyienl cabinet type gas st f. Huron. Pontiac. sew In tippers, ere. uuaranue can be transferred to purchaser. Take -over payments 01 $7,21 on $72.19. Call PE 3-7023, Electro Hygiene Co. Hand f go|t~Machinary 68 PORTABLE WELDER. A-FRAME chain fall, radiator equipment. 092-40,14.________________________. ANCIIOR FENCES __MONEY DOWN____PE_J;-7471 BATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL AND PRAKTICA IV 39 MM REFLEX, 80 MM. and 300 MM Lens. $100. “ 3-7500. Musical Goods BALDWIN OROANSONIC SPINET walnut finish, complete with lion. ^ mo. ok!. New guar- ___ j6 ^moUhs*CaSy'MnsIc 1W N. Saginaw. FE 5-8222;__ H-ALD^-TiERWOW^ F I N E"T Bottle Gas Installation •100 ^Ib^^cylln^ra and equipment 812_, BIG TILE R]':DUCTI0NS The Floor Shop 2299 Ellaabetb Lake Road CONN AND OULBBAN8EN ORGANS Used Organs from ........ Store Hours July—August BROKEN SIDEWALK FOR RETAIN-Ing walls. Cone's Rental, FE 8-6642. CABINET SINK, COMPLETE WITH cabinet, Trom $49.98. O. A. ......49c; 3" X 8’ .65c YOUNGS 244 E. BLVD. NORTH "and COMPLETE STOCK OP _ fitting — plastic, coppei Iron for drains. Ptostl ElNA A'uTOMATIC ZIO ZAO SEW-Ing machine, "Super-Malic" model. Makes, all fancy stitches, button hole^, over casts. I etc. Pay off account In 9 months at $8 per month or $72 cash balance. Unl- sewlng machine. Zlg Zagger, In modern cabinet. Pay off account In d months at $7.25 pdr month FOJ^MICA stock sizes and odd sizes Discount prices Mica 29c square ft. and up ruble sinks $10.90 Faucette $0.98 Range Hoods $25 and up " —-ip to 60 per cf* MOVED TO 21(1 E. pike PEAR. ci'AS FURNACE, USED. LIKE N cainpr 2-7iji4.____________ d'OOD USED GAS FURNACES.'/ . MAple 5.1501 or MAple TRADE 14 FOOT FIBEBGLAS BOaT and Johnson 39 horse motor fur good pick-up ' ■ SWAP SMALL HOUSE AND 4 lo'ts, need/repair, for a better plaoe^and pay iha difference. FE I Clothing BARGAIN BOX 469 8. Woodward. Birmingham Closing for summer vacation and ‘pi 9. Dally Sals Household Goods 65 I $36 u big picture chests, (iressera, chlfferobes. bunk furniture I N. Cass 1 2'l iNCil USED tV7^«8. WALTON TV FE 2-22!)7. Ol>en a-a -tia E Wallon. Corner of Joslyn 46 YARDS OF BEIGE CARPETINO apd pad, $40; Lovi seal, $So; two-piece secllonal, $70. Call allcr 6,,10 OR 3.'17.’I5. AIKRIT ANYTHING YOU FOR THE HOME CAN BE F A mile out ol the way bill a lot less to nay. Funilluie and a|)|)ll-aiioes of all kinds NEW AND USED. Visit our trade dept. lor real bargains. nk- Phone FE 8-6241, 24 MONTHS TO PAY mites E, of Pontlao or 1 E. of Auburn IlelglUt on Ai M89. UL 3,3300 Ain’OMA'nc' w'AsifEii $40.90. beds, etc., hoys English racer, by ownei^ OL 1-61(66. BLOND CO'kFEE TABLE, (,'OllNER table. 3-slep up tables, 3 table lamps, g pleite red sectional, 8128 completa,_FE 3;7879;_________ Bi(f, ilin; Specials Refrigerator, family alee, new, •dqor automatic defroal refrlgeri Buy spimiera .............. Maytag wringers ........... OB portable TV's, new , all guaranteed Vinyl Flooring HAG Tile, FE ■ CHAIH HEI) 46^i(j, yd. OLD ROHE C (•'i.o,sin(; OUT all FLOOR BAMI’LEH ipen 0 'III 8:30 Moll, 'll ledrimm aetai box epringe and trees, living room ants. « rockera, lanina ami Ishlea, •ehetta; dreasera. beda, buhk EVEIRYTHINO must 00 EMiy Terma Aedroou outfitting c 4783 Dlxla Drayton : REFRIGERATOR, $7.' $12. Rust lounge chairs, Snd tables and antiques i: Good Used l.uriibcr MUST SELL AU'Fo'MATIC SINO'er' Bwlng-nficdle and ooiinolf. Button- Thl« one docs «vcryth1r inents of $5.90 I fop cash. MICHIGAN, CHI-El/NA. 338-48 "Ng^: R'EFRl'aERA’TOR $36. NEW HATH-room Sink. -$12. Call 6S2-3762. R'e'f¥iof;RAT'OR. $25'; EuiiliTRIC stove. $29; 21" television, ' ~ trlc dryer $30; washer, stove. $2.y_FB ,5-2766. ,V. _ SECTIONAL 'SOPA, RE(:llNINO nylon, gas "SEe I ____ CARPET ON SALE , 1-1 Rug Plant-336 Whlttemore SINcJeR CONSOLE ZIO-ZAO' $29.m! Large aeiectlon. OR 4-1101. i Lar^a sTnoER AUTOMATIC ZIO ZAO sewing machine. Just dial for decorative patterns and bullon-holes. Win sacrifice at $67.43 or take on payments of $6.13 per month. Discount fnr cash. Capitol payments of ______________TK “ gleno Co._____ _ Lavatories complete SdOb MAHOGANY BED. BOX la, ahower stalls. Irregql rrlflc values. Michigan Fluo nt, 393 Orchard Lake, — 1.____ mSVED TO ‘2l'd’E.'PIKE <- PEAR- . SPI'XIAL $20 A MONTH BUyS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE — Consists of: 2-i'lcce living room suite with 7 tables. 1 cocktail table and 2 with 2 vanlly lumps. WA'M/VN FURNITURI': CO. HURON 16 W. PIKE STROLLER, 1"E 2-2150 WAY $6,' NYLON Stella Oulinr. case. s kM 3 WAHIIINO MACHINES CONVEN-lliiimL aiitomatlo pump, $138.80 value 190.80. Scratehed. Nn down naymenla. Michigan Fluorescent, ,16;i Orchard Lake. _43. ^ WHITiT 3 PIECE SECrnONAl’ lualchlng divan, spinet organ, other fiirnUuie, Clean, modern. Tlso clothing, $lze 14, FE 8-198o. • ' \VVM.^N’S' UAIKIAIN S'I'O FE 8-M87__________ HAN'd weaving loom, 48' — paclty — custom built — 2 beams extra reeds — perfect — HO'T WA'TE'R heater, .10 GALLON as. consumers approved 989.09 slue. $39.98 and $48.98 marred. I THE WALL GAS HEATED, chimney needed, new, .1500 L..-. Semi automatic, water softener. FE h guarantee. £ :e over last 17 monthly ( ■ — pfe 3 OR ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH AND Step Railing corners, and posts, room dividers, AVIS CABINETS, 1870 Opdyke. PE ^-4360. ___ PEAffsON'S FURNITURk -MOVED _ 210 E,_Plkc.________ PLASTIC PIPE." NEW LOWER ' ed per hundred $I2.'87; ■ $10.20 .....____________ 3-piece belli $80.09. FIbarglas laundry tray, $10.03 32.1ncli shower stall, $32.95, 2 bowl sink, $3.08. 1 $2.65, tubs, $10, and up. Pipe _ arid threadOd. SAVE PLUMHINO cd._172 a^SaglUBW. FE 9-2ir-PLYWOob'OP' Att KINDS Plywood Dlst. ________________ POliCH GLIDER D pump'‘6roa'n; ; r> .4MALI, OH, IIEA'IE 56 63I eiemric motors, $6 ea. F, ..............."SI’l'iClAI, ■ x% lfl‘rch'''$12.9r'»Kl' Antiques ANTIQUES MANY TYI'EI REAtl'ni' I, ANTIQUE H I.ID N ) FE 4-1766 DEACON'S' bench; bOUOHIlOX, 5 pliie chests, all In rough Y-Knnt Antiques. 10349 Oakhlll. Holly. ME 7.6166, Open Sunday, EDISON I'HONOORAPM 1636 WITI? 160 records, ohenp. FE S.II073 8-8 or FE 3-3482 after 8. Hl-FI-TV-Rodloi 66 c Plywood Co. 14 !843 , ' SHOWERS STOI’ THAT DU.ST CALCIUM Cl II,OR I Di: FOR DtlSTY ROADS OR DRIVIUJ USED TV II WARRANTY I'f-iiich Motorola . $4 8YLVAN_8THREO-/V, _ Sale Miicellanaoui l-CAR frame OARAOB COMBINATION "coal gas range, $76. Tappan ,,""iiow*" i^lilMOl'' Phlfimii 10 opd,v I INCH HKIU, SAW. HEAVY DUTY, ■ oifeYKE HARnvfARE 1000 Opri^Vke Ril, 1 b'l.O'l MtlNTHLY Foil "AMA'dlNO Hlnger,, l|lg zag sawing machine Designs, buttonholes ami con-' aide. Avallahla fnr $33.31 halsnce Capitol Sewing Center. PE 8-6407. SINGER SLANT NEEDI,E, r'’riif;ir:: Electro Hygiene Co,_ _ STEREO,' WEBTINGHOUSE POUR-speed .automatic, radio, hl-fl blond cabinet, Firestone low boy stereo I'-IRI'-S roNK STORI'-. 40 N Haginsw FE 4 0076 tl M M E It CLFARANi'E SALE, Sale Miicellaneoae TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON Demonstrator wringer wublng machine $2 per week. GOODYEAR - SERVICE STORK , FE 5-9123 THIS WEEKS SPBCIAIi-_H 9x9 Pte-Unlahed wood tito -walnut finish Vk cents each Natural Finish 7tkc each 4x7 Pre finish Mag. $3.69 DRAYTON PLYWOOD Hxle Hwy. OR 3-8912 SL imt sravBj vrauvr, ua« 3935 Pontiac Bd. PE ».3M8. 2-42 by 84 conamerclal ol WATER AND SUMP PUMPS, f GERMAN SHBPHERD8-S1NCE H«2 —Guar, Lto^straum^_^58 .Lahser. GERMAN SHORTHA'IRED POINTER thoroughbred. FE 5-2969. OERM/lN SHEPHERD PUPS. $10 TO 71 PARAKEET BABY MALE $4.95. _305_Flrst. R^chester._OLJ-8372. PARAkEE'TS, CANARIES,' THOP'l- plano. custom v_... ...... maple finish, floor display m< ' --ge discount. Calbl Music C iaglnaw, FE 5-8222. Pl^iNOESE yjf OODl5r"FuPPIE8, BLACK able. EM 3-3380. BABY GRAND PIANO fruitWQOd finish. Completely refip 34 8. Telegraph Rd. PE 2-0567 __________'small. 8 WEEKS,' male 11 months, studs, UL 2-2200. POODLES. LOVELY MINIATUREB" dal, 13-pedal board for only $499. Tab III for free heme demo and you hang,up the phone. (iALLAGHHR’S E. Huro_____ FE 4-0566 YOUNG FEMALE CAT FREE TO good home. OR 3-3463. Auction 80 Mon. to Frl, 9 LEW BE'rtERLY MUSIC COMPANY ... . —ij Parking In rear from Birmingham Theater ' HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN Wftlnut With bench and lots Acroftff fro m Tel Huron REAI, BUYS IN. , ANYTHING IN MUSIC AT THE WORLD'S LARGEST MUSIC STORE CHAIN (;rinnkll’.s 27 S. Saginaw St, PHONE'PE 3-7168 Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph PHONE 6824)422 il K, best of. MONO SPINET OROAN, hed mahogany, almost new, I and organ lamp Included. KAY ELECTRIC GUITAR "WITH !aae-$a!l-EM>4978. ftOMBONfe, EXCEI excellent' (iONDI- JULY BARGAINS GRAND PIANO ............ 1st class condition, mahogany finish. PIANO TUNING-LESSONS WIEGAND MUSIC CO. PONTIAC'S Sheet Music Headquarleri 4"6 Elizabeth Lake Road (Opposite Pontiac Mall) l i: 2-4924 Office Equipment 80 USED AUTOMATIC BOOK-keeplng tray with stand. Just like new. $23.35. GENERAL PRINTING AND OFFICE SUPPLY, 17 W, Lawrence 81. _____ SKETCH AND TRACING PAPER . In varloua llzee for your summer art classes. GENERAL PRINT-INO AND OFFICE SUPPLY, 17 Store Equipment 5 ToF .CHRYSLER COMBINA’I'ION Sporting Goods 14 FOOT BbAT, TRAILER, 39 eleolrlo, runn'— ------ hie top. skis. Ijr^hlng APACHti CAMP T'R a ... ..v„ sbld by ...V ..r-..., lory dealer In Detroit. The _________ Improved models at the low price. Nn handling charges. Bring I Mile Road. 3 ; FO 6 dollan. Campers Par-309 E. Eight Bast of John CAMPER"Klf;"'l?iw; BOON. $bl9. Call Romeo, ru s-iisvo. HAND GUNS.' SHO'foUNH, RlFLEf new and used, buy. Sell or trade. Murr-Hlicll, 979 S. Telegrepli. " .SI’()Ktl,\'G CKJO'DS .SALE! us, filVEIVB DIVING LUNG wltji_accessories. FB 9.39S;I after 6. Sond-Gravel'Dirt 76 CRUSHED STONE, $3 YARD. MAN-ufactured road gravel tl. " gravel $1 yard. I9-A stone $2...... soil $1. Fill dirt 30o. Delivery extra. American Slone Proi'-'- r. Rd., MA 8-2181. GOOD RICH. ntjACK DIRT fftrdG $10, dGlIVorod FS 4-61MUI "¥Ki;ihTRU(!:KiN(i A-I top 8911, black dirt, fill dirt, sand and gravel, FB 3-7774. BAND AND GRAVEL, BLACK DIRT and top soto FE 4-8639. SAND, GRAVEL. FILL, end adding machines Forbes, 4899 ?''r.k';*.^ih?,iUiirKj‘i'"^ '■■■ 'I’EWIUTER, GOOD UONDl'l $28. FB 8-1873. E SALVATION ARMY II xn SHIELD STORE ,118 WEST LAWRENCJ! Iverythlng In tneel your ne 'lidlilug, Furniture, Appllaiioes, WHEN iff'DbOB't" “■ Peti~Hunting Dogs IIOXEII, 3 AKc natri'ANY spanibI-s, fe- mele. 7 Veeks old 928-1926 2’ KEOISTERBU MALE "hBAOLES 16 mo. one partly trained, ..... 9 mo, ,011 3-9309, ^ 3 BLACK MALI6 POODLE PUl’I'IES, 938; 1 apriont tiiipiiy, $98; ■ ‘ males, t brown. 1 black, ai $78. FB 8.949B, 79 Troval TraRon ’ APACHE CAMP TRAILER, S' AirvlHo down, $1.38 a waek. FE >3113, ----evenings till 9. ---------------------- antes, Trotw^, Oarwi Frolic, Searoi " Camper -with of used. Net Trailer Sales. Rd. OR 3-89S1. iKTUSK Biet^ Nmnftd nuus. JMobMa. SALES and RENTALS Right Camnersi Wolverine Truck Campers. Winnebago Trailers. — , Draw-Tlte, Reese, E-Z lift bltobes. Sold and Installed. F. E. HOWLAND 3345 Dixie _________OR 1-1480 THE NEW 1963W BY 8________________ LINE — The Aristocrat of the highway. '26'10" long, NOW OK DI.SPLAY. In Holly, Michigan for your viewing pleasure, Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 1921 HoUy Rd., Holly ME 4-8771 Cranee Bird Hatchery TRAVEL TRAILERS Avalali—The-new-llght-welglrtr aett-~ contained. Also .Fleet Wing and .Taw.a»..Br»ve-.4MiU -wntalned trail........ IHJ.SWORTH AUTO and 'i'RAH.ER SALES 6577 Dixie Hwy._MA 5-1499 ris, . yari VACATION TRAILERS, HITCHES ._ Installed,- cars wlredr used hltchesr"" $5. OOODELL TRAILER, 3200 8. ' Rochester Rd., UL 2.4850.______________ like REGISTERED TOY FOX terrier puppies. $35. Toy to: chihuahua stud service. FE ; CENTURY CUSTOM BUILT TRAVEL TRAILERS LIFE TIME GUARANTEE Rd.. _____A'UCTION SALES every WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.M, EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVER SUNDAY 2;00 P.M. Sporting Goode — All Types Door Prizes Every Auction B buy—sell—trade, retail 7 days Consignments welcome I DIxIq Hwy. OB 3-3717 PRIOR'S AUCTION. FURNITURE, will pay 1-1260. 2837 Lakeville R SATURDAY, . Plants—trees—Shrubs 81-A NICE SHADE TREES. BLACK valnut, free. You get them for the price of thla ad. 346 E. Avon, Rochester. Mich. DAY LILIES In bloom, newest variety: also 50c clumps. Nancarrow’s Gardens, 618 E. Long Lake Rd.. between Rochester and i LIvernole. ■ MU 9-24(13. -...................... YEAR OLD HOLSTEIN fresh, has been tested. Harold Webb, 430 Orange Hall Rd.. Or- 3 HEREFORD STEERS. APPROX. BRED SOWS $88. FEEDER PIGS, '9 weeks old $12. 3871 Ray Rd Oxford.______________________ EVENING AND SATURDAY RIDING LESSONS ALL APPALOOSA HORSES Children, Adults HORSES BOARDED GOLDEN H CORRAL NEW RIDING STABLE, 13890 NEAL Hay-Grain-Feed Greenfield for-Lawns ^Insectlcldea — Garden Tools Feeds — Softener Salt Open 8-7 Sunday 10-3 Barber's Lawn Pet Supply 109 Cllntonvllle Rd. 473.9— 188 HIghlanil Rd, (M89) 873-9162 86 CftOICB B SIDES, 4Sc LB.. V< .... ....s 29o lb., many amall hinds, fronts, sides halves at great savings, mond Meat Packers, Inc., M-59. % mile east of the Pc_________ Airport. Friendly peeple serving you with respect. Open “ " ■-8 'tll 6. 90 da^s la cash. CHOICE BLUEBERRIES Pick your own. bring own talner. Open now, 7803 Pontiac Like Rd. Just East of Wll " C'USTOM COMBINING - VtE WILL combine your wheat, 12' self-propelled combine, ready to g " a date call Ed Oroulx, after OA 8-3081. RDSQN HUCKLEBERRY __ ____Rd, (M99) OR 3-7368, RED H/TsPBERRiEFyOU "PICK 30c - .... 62^1971__________ hrm Equipmant PRICES, SEE US BEFORE YOU MASSiY-FEROUSON "" K9 S FE 4-1442 NEW AND ■U8ED'‘HAY~CONDITION, ers. Mowers and aide rakai.XDavls Machinery. Ortonvllla. NA 7-3262. NUMBER 82 INTERNATIONAL c o m b I n e, motor driven, sell or SEE UB FIRST AND SAVE. .JOHN DEERE. HARTLAND AREA HDWS Phone HARTLAND ^611. fhO FOR Nl LOADER, "new EN-gitie, new Ford tractor equlpmeiil York rake, Wagner loader and (liiniion blade. TI)I4 angle, (loser, liaise top aoll loader, several low-hoy. ami equlimient trailers. 966 hoy. and equipment ti Cat loader, 7DI4 loader, ........ en also 3 loaders on rubber. JU 8.9B28. U.SET)~TRA(T0RS KING BROS. PE 4.0734 |£B 4- Pontlao Rd Jt Opdyla _ , travtl Trallart sG n-FOOr HFAClirOMBER SLEEPS 6. exo. (mndlllon, FE 3-6016. I6.FOOT ALUMINUM TRAVEL trailer. $800. FE 2-4124. 1660 NIMROD. FDt.niNd CA .IraHer. perfect nundltlon, $326. < "ARSTBljil AM'LlGHTWglOH'# ' lift. has lhaiii and gat a dtinonalra-llon at Warner ’Trailer Salea. 3088 W. Huron (plan to join ana nl Wally Byani'g txouliti earavaiw). )f quality, organized travel- TOM STACKLEB Auto and Mobile Salea 3061 W. Huron______ 33! 20-FOOT DETBOiTEB, SELF CON-talned. $1,200. 29’ Landcrulset, $1,090. 31' Pontiac C"........... condition*. FE' 2-2916. 51x10 DETROITER MOBILE HOME. cellent condition. 333-05( HURRY The money you now "at Bob Hutchinson* ; early bird at the biggest to 7 years,-Yes . . . One, tv room models a Ye.s ... We ha mobile homes. slashing prices e trade-ins e financing up Bol) Hutchinson MOBILE HOMES 43(11 Dixie Highway OR 3-1303 Drayton Plains Open 9 to 9 Dally Sat. 9-8, 0 BLCAR 2 BEDROOM. J 1963 DETBOITEB, 10X54, 229 B. Walton Lot A6. afterJ/30;______ EXPERT MOirCi HOME REPAIR service, free eetlmatez. Also part* . Bob I Mobile Home Sales, too. 4301 Dixie _H/wy.. Drayton Plains. OR 3-1203. TRAILER. 45 X 8; CABANA. 18 x 8. Two patios, yard fenced. Cheap., 256 Red MIH Dr.. Auburn Hta. 5ito-Village. ONE BEDROOM 8X40 NEW MOON. $1,200. EXCELLENT CONDITION. FE 2-3236. OXFORD TRAILER .SALE.S 1 and Gem Iravtl untta 0 ytnir satlifaottan. _________ many used 8-iu ana cmiiirfb. ou on display. Order your 12 Parkhur.st Trailer Sales Venture — Buddy Quality Mobile j1J)*'»''''_®1.M24. my 2-46ia. SHORTS 'MCiBILE HOME.S'" ood used home type trglleri. I PER CENT DOWN. Cars wired 3d hitches Installed. Complete WE NEED Your trailer"! BUYERs'wAI^'INOI I BU^’“wE*8BLI/-Xe trade Holly lYavel Coach Co. 19210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4.8771 TRUCK TIRES 825x20-10-ply nylon 1st «70xl8-8-ply traction tuheleie Blemish ............ $23.80 each. - 34 Hour Service oh Reoappina — Lugs 828x20 • - 000x20 1000x20 Hwy. CALL FE 3.62BI CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN oar. Cylinders rabored. chine Shop, 33 Hood, Phone FB Motor Scootori ___________________94 loot VlfflPA 190 CC, At,L EXTRAS, StIAft. FK !I.A(14A Motorcjfcloi 1981 TRIUMPH CUB. IIICYCLEB AND RE- USED 88 UP, NIW"150i"l5P." dcailelt s Bicyolea and H()bby,Slmj 3 POINT HYDRO, ASSEMBLED IN 1083, also an outboard moloi par to, 1983 Mercury, Call Si i2ii’()(^'r luiNAnou'f c'otl'POFFV; best nflei, FE 2-3828, 14 - foot' CEDARSTRiP RUH-ahout, 9100, OR 3-3398, _ li-moT CtlHIB CRAFT 4S~H P (led. 8700. lOi W. Lnnylallnw. THIRTY THE PONTIAC RRESS, INIONDAY. JULY 22^ 1903 (AVKXS aI'akinI: SlJI’I'I.Il'.S ”-fr:ln“;,ralv” 1 lariiti)jl(M) liii.il Wurki '•F iViI i') I sroi'x'r'’ Al T 1963 Willys SURI’Ll’S MOTORS Jeep f lIrSS ■ATTIE "'J'l':RRA'iMARlXA 110USI-: ROATS TROIAN .... (,K T12«M '^AITO INSURAXCK ANY DRIVI'R Sl'.l-; I'S Liquidation Lot, .. .........: R&R MOTORS jriA' CI.I'ARAXCi: iaS»£“V.i ■UtSci. PonK IN JIJI.Y! 'ii'.RToirrimAi.s! ■s DEAL TODAY I puiia'T A(:kn(T ;;;,r.S'a!r..r:,»V.":,,;'“‘’ .................. “OK” I’sed CaiH at nil,I, Roo'i' ('III'.VROl.l'.l' COME VISIT RUSS jOlIXSONTS Used Car Strip PATTERSON Have you l)eeii tic-nied the privilege of l»uym}j: a ear reeeiitly l)ee;uts(; of previous credit or l)ankruptey? If so, aji«l yiMi liave a steady jol), and a $5 liill to put '‘down llieii I Can I'd you a car and pjet your credit re-established. If Mr. O'ok. KiiiK Aivto Sales BIRMINGHAM TRADES Kverv used car offered for retJiil to the puldic is a bona fide I-owner, low mileaRe, shai'i) car. 1-year parts and labor hetvs-HaiRreaves ___j‘K%r i.ookini' for a TV Chonnri 4-.WWJ-TV ChenoRl 7-WXYZ-TV ChomwIO-CKlW-TV CtwrimC36--WTUS TONIGHT lijN (2) l^itorial, Sports, ity (TTSIcR^'A^Llttle Bit of Heaven." (In Progress) (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (86) What’s New 6:25 (4) (7) Weather, News, Sports 6:30 (2) Highway Patrol (9) Mr. Magoo (56) Face of Sweden 7i00^2) Phil Silvers (4) Law)nan (7) Yartcy Derringer (9) Scott Island (56) Perspectives 7:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) (Color) ^ovltr “The Barbarian and tTe Barbarian and tlTe^i—^ ■— Geisha." John Wayne, i BIOIGEbEY’S JOUHNAL, 10:00 p.m. (4) Great Britain’s Sam Jaffe. (7) Dakotas (9) Movie: “The Highwayman.” (1951) Charles ' Coburn, Wanda Hen--^drix^ race problem is covered^in color show. 8:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (56) Casals Master Class * 6i3#J2) Vacation Playhouse (7) V0 uT-fHhn-n^£unny 9:00 (2) Danny Thomas (7) Stoney Biirke (9) Singalong Jubilee 9:30 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Art Unkletter (9) Check-Up ; 10:00 (2) Password (i) (Color) Brinkley’s Journal (7) Ben Casey (9) News, Weather, Telescope UAW 10:30 (2) Stump the Stars (4) Inner City Forum (9) Red River Jamboree 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) Pioneers 11:25 (7) Movie: “Scarlet TV Features Ginger Plays Twins MOVIE, 7:30 p.m. (4) “The Barbarian and the Geisha." I John Wayne, Sam Jaffe in color film about first American I consul-general to Japan. VACATION PLAYHOUSE, 8:30 p.m. (2) Ginger Rogers stars in dual role , as twin sisters who get romantically entangled with fickle playboy. CHECK-UP, 9:30 p.m. (9) Cancer, particularly leukemia, is discussed. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-. Miss Universe, shy 18-year-old leda Maria Vargas of Brazil, had her first .flate for her coronation ball—a thronged formal affair with all the trappings of royalty. ★ ★ ★............ Wearing her jeweled crown and white floor-length ball gown, the black-haired Miss Universe acknowledged her 1,000 well-wishers Sunday night with a polite Thank you,” the only English she knows. Street.’^1945).-Edwardr^ --------GrUoBinson. 11:30 (2) Steve Allen — Variety (4) (Color) Tonight—Carson (9) Movie: "Dr. Kildare’s Strange Case.” (1940) Lew Ayres, Laraine 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) Spectrum 7:00 (2) News ^ (4) Today (7) Funews 7:05 (2) Fun Parade 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odio 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo 8:30 (7) Big Show 8:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Ga Round 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: “Love Me Forever.” (1935) Leo Carrillo, Spring Byington. (9) Gene Autry 9:30 (2) To Tell the Truth 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:00 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When UJ[tobin Hood News 10:30 (2)Ti:^= (4) (Color) Play Hunch (9) Movie: “The Gilded Cage.” (1956) Alex Nicol. 10:45 (7) News 11:00 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys r- i 3 g~ g" r" 9 10 iT 12 ts 14_ IB nr is 19 22 23 24 25 26 ^8 k 3T 3?" 5T 41 dS" 46 4T 4& w BT SB" 56 57" B9 ACROSS 1 Cream-filled pastry 7 Sticky, nut-filied cakes 13 Spanish strong man 14 Dry seed receptacle 15 Tufted ornament 16 Long-legged birds 17 Sergeant (ab.) 18 Building site 20 Deep hole 21 Quivering 23 “Staff of life” 27 Cultivate mentally 32 Canadian river 33 Small drum Var.) 34 Concede ‘ 35 Mongol conqueror 36 Tropical fruits 39 Approaches 40 Fell in drops 42 Mariner’s direction 45 Assam siikworm- 46 Hindu title of veneration 49 Minstrel performer 62 Russian marshal 55 Bread-crumb delicacy 56 Belted 67 Turkish cavalryman 58 Subsides DOWN 1 Newts 2 Rocky cliff 3 Final 4 Responi^ (ab.) 6 Sherbet 6 Truned-over biscuits 7 Tested for flavor 8 Month (ab.) 9 Greek letter 10 Mound (arch.) 11 Babylonian god 12 Snug retreat 19 Unclose (poet.) 21 Number to be added' 22 Nodding 23 Tattle 24 Baltic inlet 25 Deserve 26 Flat surface 28 Sweetbread 29 Father (Hebrew) .30 Rip 31 Does wrong 37 Amphitheater.s 38 Title of respect 41 Spiced, tomato-filled tart 42 Serpent(Gr.) 43 Break off 44 Girl’s name 46 Shoo! 47 Fixed course 48 Test colorimeter 50 Persian angel 51 Fruit drink 53 Fireplace peg 54 Feminine appellation BERLIN (AP) - A 20-year-old East German girl told her step; father, a Communist official, the Berlin Wall is unjust and then escaped to West Berlin. Asking to be referred to only Barbara, she told newsmen after OTcapfaqr n week ago^Biaf^ Herlfepfather is Lt. Col. Heinz Stahn, 38, of the East German Defense Ministry. She said that for five years she had been quarreling with him about politics. ‘^He is a. fanatic," said. Barbara, “That’s why he has such a well-paid job." TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Your First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (9) Hawkeye 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best (9) Dr. Hudson’s Journal 12:45 (2) Guidfng Light 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Leave it to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Bitter Sweet.’ (1940) Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) Girl Talk 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk (7) Day in Court 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Jane Wyman 3:00 (2) Star Playhouse (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 3:15 (9) News 3:30 (2) Edge pf Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Vacation Time 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand 4:25 (4) News ‘ 4:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Make Room for Daddj (7) Discovery ’63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:55 (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Sea Hunt (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Badlands of Dakota." (1941) Robert ^ Stack, Broderick Crawford. (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Americans at Work 5:30 (2) Whirlybirds (56) What’s New? 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Shy Brazilian Beauty Miss Universe Has first Ball my whole life I think”—was With actor Dana Andrews. NOT ON Tipj_ , The actor, seated at the head table, escorted the 5-foot-6 Miss Universe to the floor' where an orchestra waited to play the ’First Dance, the Dance of Miss Universe.” leda’s . escort, Luis Menezes, 20, didn’t show up in time, so Andrews took over. I’m a lousy dancer,” he said Her first dance in public—“in Criticizes Red Parent, Tften Flees In their final quarrel, her stepfather reproached her for watching West German television and for liking-such Western clothes is blue jeans. She retorted that people should not be held against their will and, “the wall is unjus^ let those who are against you go." Her stepfather replied that people had be educated and that the wall was a bulwark a g a i n s Fascists and therefore protection for the population. Her stepfather also objected to her liking for horseback riding which he regarded as a bourgeois sport. He wanted me to train as parachutist because it is more suitable for Communist youth, but I refused,” she said. She said her mother gave her no support. Doctors Get Insurance afterward. Andrews speaks no Portuguese and leda speaks no English. “You might say it was awkward,” said, the actor, in Miami for a play. leda won her title Saturday night over 15 finalists chosen from field of 92 shapely beauties, Ai-no Korwa of .Denmark was first runnerup; Marlene McKeown of Ireland, second: LaLaine Bennett BREAKFAST IN BED-Ieda Maria Vargas, 18 of Portp Alegre, Brazil, who won the Miss Universe title Saturday night, started living the life of a queen yesterday when she awakened early, put on her crown and had breakfast in bed. of the Philippines, third, and Kim Myung-ja of Korea, fourth. Language barriers created several - uneasy moments.^ for the world’s No. 1 beauty at'her coronation. UNESCORTED Twice she was left unescorted and without a translator at the head table. When 5-year-old Sharon Gray of Miami, “Little Miss Universe,” was asked to bow to Miss Brazil so photographers could take a picture, the youngster pouted, stamped her size-3 foot, and stated: “No. I will hot. My daddy wouldn’t like it because he doesn’t think you’re the prettiest girl. And I don’t either.” As “daddy” wilted into the crowd, leda only smiled at the child. The big Miss Universe didn’t understand-a word of it. While the orchestra played rumbas, sambas and mambos — the twist noticeably absent—the' 92 beauties took advantage of the pageant’s last event' to say their goodbyes. Many will leave today or ’Tuesday. leda will begin her year’s reign with English lessons and telecasts in New York Mr. pnd-^fsr^se 'Joaquirt_w Vargas, who accompaniei Miami, will return home to Porto Alegre and their other four children. STARTED EARLY The shapely (35-23-36V4) leda spent most of her day Sunday with photographers. Her morning started early, after 5V4 hours of sleep, with a roll, coffee and posing for pictures in a pink bed jacket. By midafternoon and after an hour ip Miami’s 90-degree heat, the fair skinned Brazilian complained of being tired and was taken to her hotel penthouse where she burst into tears. ‘It’s all so much, so very much. Sa many pei^le, always so many people. And I cannot even understand them. It’s so confusing,!’ she cried. leda’s predecessor, Norma Beatrix Nolan of Argentina, said. She will learn. The year will change her life, as it does for many who receive the honor of being a Miss Universe.” Scientists Eye EelipseData By United Press International Scientists today studied photographs and other data gathered during Saturday’s total eclipse for possible secrets of the solar system. Evaluation of the still and movie films, sound tapes and other recordings was expected to take weeks to Complete. The eclipse was seen iii totality in a 60-mile-wide path starting In Japan. It continued over the Pacific Ocean and North America and ended in the Atlantic. ROME, Italy WP) - Italy’s Medical Association has announced insurance plans to cover its doctor members against sickness. Workers in Italy are provided with state insurance — but not doctors, unless they hold state jobs. In the United States only Maine and Alaska were directly in the path of the total solar eclipse. For the rest of the country the eclipse was partial. At Boston, Mass., the'sun was obscured 94.4 per cent. At Seattle, Wash., the percentage was 63.3. In the Southern states, only about half of the sun was blotted out. MIAMI “ Happy Rockefeller’s debut into national politics was impressive. But it is too early to count the votes. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller introduced his pretty, 36-year-old wife last night at a cocktail party given governors attending their annual conference. The newlyweds held the spotlight. “Say hello to Happy,” the New York governor said to most. To others, he was more formal: “I would like you to meet Mrs. Rockefeller.” The new Mrs. Rockefeller, who might play an important role in her husband’s unofficial campaign for the Republican presidential nomination, was greeted warmly. Some said politely. “She is . much better looking than her pictures,” one woman said. Another described her as Harris Speaks His Mind While 'Heistin' at a Cafe By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—You mlist hand it to the Irish for speaking their minds. There’s an Irishman here from Limerick, “Best Actor’ Richard Harris, who has brought some candor into our phony world. ‘ s “What do you think of that Cabinet mess In Wj London?” I asked him. “I wish I was in it!” he shouted over the vodka-and-tonic he was “heistin’ ” (old Irish expression) at Fornos, the fine Latin restaurant on W. 52d St. . . . Plymouth Doctor Dies PLYMOUTH yp) - Dr. Luther Peck, 83, died at his home here Sunday. Dr. Peck claimed to have delivered more than 2,000 babies during his 48-year career. He retired in 1952. -Today's Radio Programs- WJa(760) WXY20270) CKlW(aOO) WWJ(950) WCAR(11 SO) WPONQ 460) WJBKQ 500) WHFI-FM(94.7) tlOS-WXYZ, I...... Uaton-Pstterium •i»6-WWJ, World N«w» WJR. Continental Hollder fidS-WWJ. Mutio Scene lOiOO—WJR. Jim Launof WJR. Newe OKUVr. Jot Otntlla WOAR Newe, 8|lorta JhniKu ..,Il"'Wolt“* ***'*' . Newa, Roberla '7, jrarm. Iliya Opanae ckijW, aiyt opanat, . WPOl7, Hawa, Dale ’t Opanat, oaald . Newe H. ouaal WCAR. Hawa, Martyn >n, newe, atar WiUi, Mneie f _ WHPl. Hawa. McLeod liaa-~WJR, Mewa. Harria K|.W, Mery ^ jtVZ^Trjd^V WXYZ, BieNHtaal C OKI.W. .too WPpH. Hawa, oiaan llilf-WJR, Hawa. Arthur pod- wxvxt’winlur . CKLW. Tima to Ohal lliia-CKIlW, JOa Van Ilia- WJR, Newe, ( i. Newe. Hnitn Z. Bebnallan Bot* I.a< ..... WPON Newi amo-cKiw. iiaa-WJR, CKLW«,Mvlea IrlO.-f.W.m, Muila Mall 4ild-~CKl',W. Nawa, Davlia. WWJ. Hawa, Bumper Clu Hewi,. WILSON After recovering from that, I asked, “Is that] the way your actor friends feel?” “I don’t have actor friends.^ I have actor enemies. I prefer ordinary peo^e. Actors are always acting.” “Didn’t you get close to Marlon Brando in ‘Mutiny on the Bounty’?” “Close enough for him to run,” Richard Harris said. “We didn’l see eye to eyev My part suffered,” Harris continued. ★ A ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL: Jimmy Ryan’s death at French Hospital saddened all Broadway. Dedicated to Jazz and conviviality, he was a symbol of a passing era. Eddie Fisher now sings his love songs nightly to model Renata Boeck, German beauty whom he may marry, then sneaks her off to their hideaway. Dear Mayor Wagner: NY’s crying need is for real European-type sidewalk cafes; can’t you cut the red tape and get 'pm in time for the Fair? Chubby Checker broke an arm in his living room, showing footballer TImmIe Brown how to throw a block. Richard Burton tells friends he hasn’t seen “Cleo,” won’t attend the July 31 premiere in London (but he’ll be at the party afterward). TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: There^s a local fellow who’d like to buy one of those electric toothbrushes, but doesn’t know If his teeth are AC or DC. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Not all those people carrying suitcases around New York are tourists. Some of th^ are June brides going home t() mother. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “StatlsUes can he used to support Uythlnf-lnclndhig itatlsticiani.ATHAT’S EARL, BROTHER. t . Tk« Hkll SfttSUM*, ln«. “ Rocky's Wife Enters Info National Politics Movie Dispute Won by West Communisfs Tried to Vote Down Film MOSCOW (UPI) - U.S. producer Stanley Kramer helped win an ideological battle with Communist judges in the voting for the best ti '' ‘ Tfwailearned tc ■man jury, with Kramer the only American member, awarded the grand prize to Italy’s controversial “8A4,” but only after a Western walkout forced the Communists to recognize its worth. Movie festival sources said many Communist members at first refused to vote for the film, directed by Federico Fellini^ because they claimed its abstract technique contradicted the Communist line of “Socialist real-isrn.” battled on the'civil rights issue before the conference, Mrs. Rockefeller stayed in the background. She limited her activities to social gatherings held in conjunction with the meeting- After the cocktail party, the Rockefellers attended the buffet dinner at the hotel poolside. Today, she plans to attend a luncheon and fashion show for the governors’ wives and then qttend what is called an “executiveX^is-cusslon session.” j'' Tonight there is a reception and dinner and tomorrow night is the formal dinner and RATING NOT RAISED While “Rocky and Happy” appeared to be getting a friendly reception, Gov. Henry Bellmon, a Republican of Oklahoma, said his presidential rating had not beep raised. The night before the festival ended, the jury met and refused to vote on it, the sources said. When the jury reassembled the next day, a majority voted-against the movie and suggested a specialiirlze as a way out. But Kramer, France’s Jean Marais and Italy’s Sergio Amidei walked out and forced a reversal of the decisions. ‘Hasn’t she nice teeth,” a western governor commented. . CROWDED HOTEL „ There were several hundred people crowded into the hotel room where the cocktail party was held and the Rockefellers got less than half way around before it was time to go to dinner. The dinner was held in another section of the hotel and the governor and his wife were stopped dozen times for greetings and autographs. Most of the autograph seekers were young children and the Rockefellers obliged with: “Rocky and Happy.” Mrs. Rockefeller said it was her first trip to a governor’s conference and she described it as ‘great.” While the New York governor I don’t believe he stands a chance,” Bellmon said. “And, his marital problems haven’t helped.” That was the general appraisal given privately. Test Helmet on Freeways LOS ANGELES (A?) - Scientists are testing a new space hel-mqt on Los Angeles freeways. They say a trip on the freeways can be about as tension-filled as one into space. 'The helmet is clapped on pci-entist-motorlsts. It records brain waves as the scientist forges through bustling freeway traffic. The recordings are analyzed later in a massive computer at the University of California Los Angeles' Bruin Rc.searcli Iiistiflite to compare changes in brain wave readings wllli the (;hunges in driving conditions and stresses. ★ I* ★ V Eventually, ihe helmet will be used by American a.strotiauls to take brain wave readings during extended space fliglits. Wagner OKs Times Square Clean Sweep SOUTH HAVEN (UPI) - A man and wife, who have admitted beating their six-year-old child to death because she wet the bed, were being held in the Van Buren County Jail today. The child, Linda L. Smith died Saturday in South Haven Com-munity Hospital after being rushed there by police. When police arrived at the home Saturday, after be- , ing called by neighbors who said they couldn’t stand the “screaming” any more, they found the child’s mother, Mrs. Shirley Antcliffe, and stepfather, Gordon, applying a wet cloth to Linda’s head. Police found two broken wooden paddle^ which the Ant-cliffslatcr admitted using on Linda because she wet her bed. Two boys were taken to a county home, unharmed. All thrqe children were Mrs. Ant-cliffe’s by a previous marriage. The couple will appear in court Thursday. They, are held in lieu of $5,000 bond each. NEW YORK iJfy- Breathes there the man with soul, so rare that he’d be willing to sweep Times Square? There Is. He is Snowey Tobin, a London street orderly who has been sweeping Westminister Bridge and the road beneath Big Ben for 13 years. Snowey, who claims to have swept a very important square in London and several abroad, including Red Square in Moscow, plans to arrive in New York Sept. 1 for a vacation. He has Mayor Robert F. Wagner’s official blessing to sweep Times Square. In a recent letter to Wagner, Snowney explained he’d be in New York three days before going on to Boston, “so if you could let me do your Times l^quare, I’d be (the) most happy street orderly in London.” Wagner rdpUed on his best gold-sal stationery extending “a hearty welcome for you to assist bur continuing ‘dean city’ effort in this novel manner.” Snowey replied . the golden seal i.s something that I Would not have seen if you had not r plied and might I say that if liad sent a idler to any mayor in my lAvn country; if. would have found Uie waste paper basket.’' Parents Admit Fatal Beating Television Writer Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) ^ Arthur M. Slander, 46, television writer and producer and former husband of actress Janis Paige, died Saturday of a cerebral hemprrhage. He ivas the creator of the Andy Griffitti Show and formerly had written the Danny Thomas Show for five years. UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUST-FR PER MONTH W« Swrvic# All Makat LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. Dlvlilon of Mich. Hoaling, Inc. aa Nowboiry M. H *.*«ai COLOR TV SERVIClt I “ANTENNAS INSTALLED AND I_____REPAjRED SWEET'S RADRT Rosamond Williams SONOTONE I 39 ( Corntll FI a-l»| f $«rvle«i and luppllas for I AU HIARINQ AlOl ) 1:' ''li y-J' '-1; i ' ' - fHlRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. ;M0NDAY, JUI,Y 22, 1963 Evary 4th Hopeful Foils Gerino^ Driving test ure rate was 71.4 per cent during Britoin Discontinues livion—just as the farthing ((quarter penny) was discontinued as of Jan. i, 1961. 'Not a Bit Nervous/ Governor Says Hotly sures might be getting on bis cigar and stuck the ash end in his mouth. Fortunately, the cigar had gone out While the delegation chatted. . There is a sales tax on new automobiles In Australia of 4( per cent. HeaitGss? StopChoWflgHiirHailflinMfiitw [ ^ppUM»CECO. TO BRING YOU THIS GREATEST SALES EVENT OF NAME BRAND TO BRING YOU THIb GlftMItOI 3ML.W &¥i;ni wr iifieaata & Fi^z^Muei We searched the market for months! ... We bought manufacturer's close-outs, distributors* entire lots ... We bought by the carload - by the truckload!... We bought 'em at great savings — to be sold at even greater savings: Now, we are ready. Here in Highland is probably the country's greatest array of fantastically low priced nationally advertised brands! We doubt that any other dealer can offer you this variety! If you need a new refrigerator or freezer now or in the near future-Don't shop, don't hesitate! Hurry to Highland. Everything new. Prices F.O.B. " Store except where-free“delivery "fs indtcotedi 4+orfy io-today—tonight, — - ' -"'Sv^iHif ii”“~" ■ ^'---®-'-'^ I ^ .i} ’’—V- V- -.r ARtCrX save a whole dollar on the bath sizel Reg. 1.79.16 by 30" Hand .........1.49 Rag. 79c Fingertip ........... ... 69c Reg. 69c Wash Cloth . . V . ......... Js9c A garden full of radiant blooms on soft, richest terry. Utterly beguiling! In blues and lavender, pinks and fawn, bronze with olive. Compare quality, compare size, coitippre price . . . you'save a whole dollar on the bath sizel Gay little AAARTEX "PRIMROSE" ffi£ ftt.79 Reg. 1.29 16 by 28" Hand .... 99c Reg. 69c Fingertip ......... 55c Reg. 59c Wash Cloth............49^ Dainty little roses in pink or robin blue sprin Brighten yo.or bbth with lique gold, misty mint, d«9d gaily on rich white I Martex Primrose at sav e nkes cut on famous brands 0 Extra savings on our own exclusive Belloir e Brighten your bathroom t colorful towels and rugs e Add charm to your dining room with lovely tablecloths e Cheer up the kitchen with new ’ dish cloths and towels • Bring luxury td your bedrc with lew-priced sheets, sp blankets, and pillows WbiFe flowers on colored bockgroundr MARTEX "MARGUERITE" »1.79 W r.2916 b^^ ;...... 99c Rag. 69c Fingertip ...... ........ 59c Reg. 59c Wash Cloth...............49c Large white daisies on rosebud, blue mist, misty mint or candlelight backgrounds. The llowers hove o bond carved look oh tlie thick, rich terry. They moke wonderful giitsi Phone FE 4-2511 SHOP M0M.i‘TNUSS., ssd UTrHtOHll p i S-T-R 1-T-C.H Your Whits Whi$* Suir . . . l-'tmrlk Floor Colors mix and match with prints! large'THICK AAARTEX "WESTMINSTER" * «•«. 1.W ' ' 25 by 46" Bath -Towel' • » Reg. 1.29 Hand Towel............89c . Rsig. 49c Fingertip.... ......39c Reg. 49e Wash Cloth............39c ? Choois from^ EIGHTEEN striking colors, mix and match them witTt the print towels obovel Handsome dobby borders. Shop Ond compare lor sise, quality, price , , . you'll gqf ipore for your money at Woite'sl ■ the»I>on^iAC -Ypur^hot^^^of Cool, comfortable, plump fboiti latex pillows with removobie zippered tickings for foundering. Odorless, non-ollergehit, sonitized ond fully lob tested. They keep their shope olwoys. Outfit your beds now| LUXURY IMPORTED WHITE GOOSEDOWN PILLOWS -YourX-Hoic^''"SOfT-i;oo%-^Gobi[o3(^^ MEDIUM 50% Dawn, 50% Gooiafeothart FIRM 25% Doyyn,75% Goosefeathari 10.99 Valuat These luxury pillows ore'filled with your choice ol down or down-feother combinations so you may choose your degree ol soltness. The 25%“ down Is flrm^ the 50% down medium and the 100% down very •ofl.'^Down ^d featherproof tickings, sturdily corded ond sonitized. CHARGE YOUR PILLOWS ON WAITE'S FOURTH FLOOR . . OR PHONE FE 4-2511 Th9^ro#Firara3van^ In e«y^ fitted bottom sheets ;. ELASTIC CORNEG5 sun Mns isniiiWM krous Sprini-On Cwneri tili* tS« itriis •W ms —Ulit Iht prtHurs Ml IksiNrswi tMitrt m«lt SItfS ihttti wtir sst (nil •«cra? % Rj»g. 3.19 $£39 $26* Reg. 1.50 TWIN SIZE FLAT OR FITTED BOTTOM DOUBLE SIZE FLAT OR FITTED BOTTOM 42 by 381b" Pillow Coft............ 90 by 108"...........................Reg. 3.59 108 by 122".......... Reg. 6 79 Cot Fitted.................. Reg. 2.99 Three-Quorter Fitted . *.............Reg 3.19 Top Twin Fitted___..... 7777. V77.v.^egr0 39 Top Double Fitted .................,... Reg. 3.59 45 by 38%" Pillow Cases ........... Reg. 1.79 81 by 120"^^. ............... .Reg. 3 69 YoUth Fitted . .................... .Reg. 2 69 Queen Fitted ........................Reg, 4.19 Kino Fitted . :......................Reg. 5.49 Single Fitted.......................... Reg. 2.99 Extra Long Twin Fit^d ...............R^g. 3.39 Extra Long Double fitted ............Reg. 3.69 Day Bed Fitted . . . ; ................ Reg. 2.99 Foam Twin Fitted .... *................ Reg. 2.89 Foam Double Fitted ..................Reg. 3.19 AIL THE PERCALE BOTTOM FITTED SHEETS HAVE SPRING-ON 1.38 pr. 2.99 6.29 2.79 2.89 2.99 3.29 1.58 pr. 3.49 2.49 3.89 4.99 2.79 2.89 3.29 2.79 2.49 2.79 CORNERS DUIIABtE WHITE SmNO^ Twin Flat or Fitted Bottom...... Reg. 2.19 1.79 Doubio Flat or FiHod Bottom .......Reg 2 49 1.99 Muslin Ptllowj^itt^..^...._____..... Reg 1.20 _ .91 pr. PASTEL PERCALES nSTELS - FLOnU. niMfS - ECHO STRIFES ALL COLORCOORDINATES BY SPRIN6MAID - TWIN SlU FLAT •r FIHED BOnOM R«9. 2.99 2.79 TWIN SIZE FLAT or FITTED BOHOM R«0. 3.39 2M ^ DOUBLE SIZE PUT er PHTED BOTTOM R«g. 3.49 3.29 1 HA ^ > DOUBLE SIZE FLAT or FITTED BOTTOM^ Pillow Cases, Reg. 1.99 pr.. Rag. 4.39 3.99 IMSN bases, nee. i.ot pr. t 10 pretty poiteli, r«etcti with prints A ddrker tiripe eclioExI by c 1 light one. 10 colon. FLORAL PRINT PERCALES ROSE PRINT MUSLINS TWIN SIZE 72by10B" 2.99 TWIN SIZE FUT or FITTED BOTTOM Reg. 2.89 2.69 DOUBLE SIZE FUT or FITTED BOTTOM Reg. 3.29 Pillow Casesi Reo< 1.79 pr..................... ________ ImwHM wnbioMsfed row pcMt^ Wait«'t Whit* Said . . . Fourth Floor Phono FE 4>2511 White Flocking on Five Beautiful Solid Colors . • • "CMeLOT'' TABLECLOTHS 52 by 52" R«g. 2.99 52 by 70" R«g. 3.99 60" Round Rog.6.99 60 by 90" Rog. 7.99 A Wipe of a Damp Cloth Cleans These Flannel-Backed Vinyl '^SHANTUNG^' TABLECLOTHS 52 by 52" Rog. 3.29 ’2.M ’S.SS ’S.SS Reg. 49c Napkins . . Camelot is a beautiful solid color cloth with a troditlonol design in white flocking. Its loyelycolors stay bright and^ ne^ wash after wash. Shrinkage is controlled 50 you will olways. have the original fit and beauty you bought. Cbrne in or phone now and choose yours from pink, gold, green, brown or white. _______ - — 52 by 70". Rog. 4.29 60" Round Rog. 4.99 60 by 88" ,^-4logr6.99^ 60 by 105" Rog. 7*99 *2.99 *3.99 » 6.99 Warm, cuddly soft... Floral Print DACRON FILLED COMFORTERS 1J*?9 ‘ This fli^ffy comforter is filled with DuPont "Red label" Dacron polyesfer for the utmost in softness ond flufti-ness thru many woshings. Colorful rose print acetate cover In pink, blue or meidn. Fils twin ond full slie beds. Sovol ' ^ No washingl-No- ironing! Just a wipe v^th'irddfmp cloth and tUiW smort woodgroin solid colorjdoths_cire-j’4»ady4a--u5e-ogtrmr“Scrfr adTcushions^ur dishes. Sand, gvocodo, pink, blue, gold or vihite. Provincial Print Percale Covered DACRON FILLED COMFORTERS Beouliful provincial print* on smooth,.^ long wearing percale. Filled with fluffy DuPont "Red lobel" Dacron polyester fiber-fill. Choose blue, green or pink for yeors of bedroom beouty. Charge Yours on Worte's Fourth Floor Phone FE 4-2511 FIVE Machine Washable, Cloud-Soft, 100% DuPont Nylon Non-Skid ft^njisuiu^RJ^^ 24" Rawnd 21 by 36" Contour $299 $099 $099 $099 MateTiIng OidXovers . ....1.99 Like walking on o soli, fleecy cloudi They're thick ancf • Aqua • Sandalwood ■jpringy, are - skid resislonf. Colorfost, machine wash- • Roto • Topai oble 10(5% virgin nylon that wears and wears. Dress . • Pink- • Lilac up your both or bedroom with lush, new beauty .'.'v '' • Mint • Yollow choose from 10 striking colorsi • Blue • Whit*....... ^ Colors Mltcli Rugs Above! Luxurious DuPont Njrfen WAU-TO-WALL BATHROOM CARPETIHG Made df l00% Virgin Nylon with that soft, cushiony fe^l. The utmost 5 Ft, by 6 Ft. Si*« in luxury, foam rubber backed to give extro springinesis, comfort ond ^ ^ Me*** skTf reilstdhceTTdr'ydW dr^^ISliig^roonrtoo^^^r^^ --------- It's easy to do, just follow simple instructions enclosed. Solid colors ^ I 00 motch Belleoir rugs. " N«w Fodm Backing Will Not Crack or Pool! HAND CARVED AVISCO RAYON RUGS 21 by 36" 27" Round 24" by 42" . $299 $399 $^99 $1 Lid Cover 99 “W*" Distinctive rugs with Scott Securi-Tee backing, o loom that will not crack, peel or disintegrate. Machine woshable ond dryable Horixon blue, sproy grieo, topaz,Jlloc or ordnge. Ternflc low * '/ l^undrodt of Tiny Grippors for Skid Rosistanco! AAACHINE WASHABLE NYLON RUds Your Choico: 21 by 36" 24" Round Contour 3 99 24 by 42" .... . . 5.99 Lid Covor 1.99 Hand corved design rugs with new Tox-A-Grip bctcking . , . thot will not crack, peel of disentegrate. Light in feeling, heovy In quality. Sandalwood, orange, oquq, pink, white, topaz, green, rose, purple or blue. NO NEED TO PAY GASH - CHARGE THEM ON WAITE'S FOURTH FLOOR Nostalgic yet new\TTTfiirmach^ washable Pride of Sturbridge" BEDSPREAD -.fe; ” . Reg. 12.98 Twin Reg. 14.98 Double *io 99 Living in the past is delightful . . . with this Bates bedspread.; This new Pride of Sturbridge is right out of the Revolutionary period. (Arid our sale price is a revelation!) But its lush texture and deep pile and magnificent design could only be 1963! So nostalgic yet so new, why shouldn't your bed have it? Machine washable, machine dryable. • Snow White • Antique White i. ' 5 i; Rich fringe enciretejNs waslialile, lintless '^Cumberland" HEIRLOOM BEDSPREAD by Concord MHU R«g. 14.99 ^ Twin or Double This Eorly American heirloom Bedspread is washable and never neteds ironing. A reproduction with all the graces qnd charm of its colonial ancestors. 100% long staple cotton. • Snow White • Antique White The bold new look for bedroom or dorm ... ' ,, .. 'S’ .. Ouadrangle^V BEDSPREAD Reg. 6.98 Twin or Double . . . Reg. 5.98 Bunk or Dorm ST*e .. $599 $^99 Decorators soy timidity is out —dash ond drama definitely in. And the new, BATES Quadrangle hos them—at a great pricel It's bold, colorful, brilliant blocked pidid designed to lift any room right out of Ihe doldrums. Your bock^to-schpojer especiolJy. livill wdnT onel Disciplined finish, machine woshdble.' ratWE FE 4-2S11 OR OOME IN MD CNMIK YOIM NEW lEDSPREAD AT WMTE’S I SEVEN "EXTRA-LOn" "NAP-IOC • Dowbl* th* fluff, fhJeUr • Protect* nop through • Lightor in wotght, wcinnor , countio** washing* • Softor, doopor, moro luKuriou* - o Stop* tho pilling,'shedding BOXED ... Handy to Give *. . Use Box for Storage! BEUEUR BELUXE-THEJITMOST IN SUPER MRIUW* RCRYLIC LUXURY 14.99 Volvo *1Z99 The finest Chemstrond Acrilon acrylic fibers go into this 72 by 90" blanket. 7" nylon binding'gooronfeecl for blanket life. Blue, pink, yellow, light gree^ l^loc, beige, white, red,^ dork green, dark blue or gold. ALL BLANKETS ON Machine Washable in Lukewarm Water THIS PAGE ARE: Mothproof, Non-Allergenic, Nylon Bound 85% Royon, 15% Acrylic, "Suprom*' BELLEAIR BLANKET ■ FluHylOO%Aciylie... BELLEAIR BLAMKET 100% Acrilan® Acrylic . . . BELLEAIR BLANKET 2 for *10 10.99 Volvo »Z99 12.99 Volvo *9.99 With "Extraloft" for double the fluff at half the weight . , . and "Nop-Loe" stop* the pilling. 72 x 90" tizU for full er twin bed*. II beoutiful colors. For true wormth without weight. Fluffy texture . . . lasting durobility. 7-inch, lO^fc nylon binding guaranteed for' the life of the blonk'et. 72 x 90" *lzei Choose blue, pinkj white, green, yellow or beige. Thick, luxurious Acrilan acrylic fibers by Chemslrond give you wonderful wormth, easy core ond losting beauty. Extra-Loft and fclap-Loc treoted. 72 x 90" In 11 lovely colors. CHARGE yOUR BLARKETS OH WAITE’S FOURTH FLOOR OR PHORE FE 4-2511 BELLEAIR ‘‘ROSE BELldHF PRINTEB BUNKET lO.M Volite *6.99 Dolnty roses In your choice of four colors on white. 91% rayon, 6% nylon ond 3% other libers. It retains It's fluffy nop through many vwsshings. . . has Extra-loft and Nop-Loc. 72 x 90". • Pink • Blue • Gold • I Ho c KIGHT THE PON-tlSVC PBESS. MONDAY, M. ---- ■ T ShopTonighV,Thors.;Fri.‘and Nig^its fll Phone FE 4-^Sl1 for Your Wh»e Sole Savings) Doublo'box Lock Stitched... Fitted Combination tWRESS PAD AND tOVER Bright white cotton pod hos ____ stitching to stay comfortably smooth." The" hemmed-in elastic grips the cover firmly to your mattress. Easy to put on . . . connot shift, slide or wrinkle. Come In tonight for yoursi 4.99 Twin or Tul( Sixo New Comfort! Approximately One Inch Thick ... FOAM RUBBER AAATTRESS TOPPERS Twin Size Reg. 10.99 Full Size Reg. 12.99 Cushiony foam rubber transforms your present mattress into blissful comfortTHundrecIs of tiny vents allow cool air to flow uniSerneath-you^ Save $4.00 on each of .these thick toppers . . . outfit all of your b^s! WaileU Whit0 Sale ... Fourth f loor < Quilted Cotton MAHRESS PADS 2.99 Twin 3.99 Full »2** *3** flat Sonforired pods with strong lock-ititchina. Zipi^red Pillow PROTEaORS ■ lto«V’«9c.. 4T‘ Combed cotton in sparkling white. Zipper closing. , ___________L„_ . _______.............’ Anchor Band Corners Hold in place ... BELLEAIR AAAHRESS PADS Twin Size Reg. 3.99 Sturdy close-woven fabric remains snow whffe. The-soft pbmpT filling is pure ceipcioud acetate that's quick drying ond can . be tumbled dry. Perfect for all of your beds. - Striped Linen DISH TOWELS “S9« VoluM Goy cotton stripes at the ends of white linen dish towels. Famous Morlex WashCbths 49c to 89rVailue« 4 «- »1 First quality wash cloths In many colors end styles. ■- : /■"'! . ^ ^mi COLOR ■'“ ' .i;.:v / THE PO Tfi« Wtjofher V I. Wmthir Bnr«*a rurccant Partly Cloiuly (D«Mit rtf t) VOL. lai NO. 141 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1963 —36 PAGES .UNITElf w'ras'mTlI^SlTIONAL Finishing Touches Put on N- Police Get Tip on Girl s Killer; 2 Men The search .for the slayer of U-year-olcLConnie Cropland has been riaVrowed down to two men in a white 1961 Pontiac Bonneville convertible. This first strong lead to the girl’s killers was revealed this morning .by Oakland Covinty Sheriff Frank Irons. He said police have pieced togetlrer an almost com- —-----------L-.—~—“^plete picture of the dead girl’s movements during County Traffic Takes 3 Lives Traffic accidents in ,the county took the lives of two persons over the. weekend and another this morning*. Earl Swinneys.'^26, of 3065 Melvin, Rochester, was killed Saturday at 11:50 p.m. on 1-75 just west of Giddings in Pontiac Township when, his convertible went out of control and rolled over six times. Sheriff’s deputies found the body'02 feet from the wreckage. The crash victim was driving a car owned by Paul Rayment of Utica. j6hnTV(5yei^87, a passengfer in ar driven ny his daughter, Mrs. Gwendoline Moore, 59, also of Detroit, died Sunday at 12:30 9.m. following an accident at 13 Mile and Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Township. ran light Police said Mrs; Moore’s car, traveling east on 13 Mile, ran red blinker light |i¥l co|lided a carq driven by Thomas J. Clark, 20, of 24158 Eliza-b e t h. Farming-ton. Mrs. Moore is in fair condition at William Beau-m 0 n t Hospital with facial lacerations. Clark was treated for scalp lacerations at the hospital and released. .A man whose natpe is withheld pending notification of next of kin was killed; at 7:15 a. m. today when the tractor-trailer he was driving east on 1-75 in Pontiac Township plunged qver the guard the week before she- was murdered. Connie was in the Birmingham-Royal Oak area and seen by doSens of t^n-agers who frequent the score of drive-in restaurants along Woodward. Avenue Sheriff Capt. Leo Hazen said the girl was last seen at 1:30 i.m. Thursday. That was seven hours hefore her body was found lying face down In eight inches of water in Paint Creek, beneath' the Clarkston Road bridge in Orion Township. At 1:30 a.m. Thursday she appeared at the east Birmingham lome of a youth she had met at one of the drive-ins. She was looking for a place to sleep,” Hazen said. But the youth turned her away, saying he did not want to get in volved. Connie’s “ last words were: Well, I’ll have to stay with these other fellows.” Outside, the white convertible, or possibly a hardtop, with two men inside was waiting. rail and flipped over. The driver was pinned under the wreckage, which had to be lifted by a crane. He was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Witnesses told'sheriff’s deputies that the truck, carrying corrugated cardboard, was traveling about 35 miles per hour when it left the road a half mile east of Giddings,' about a mile from where Swinney was killed. Jn Today's Press Un»y Toth Reds say they'll try again at patching rift •» PAGE 2. Hocky vs. Bony Governors debate 1064 GOP choice - PAGE M. Farm Bxporft Future looks good for U.H., Common Market — PAGE 11 Agatha Christie .....13 Area News ............4 '/Bridge..............M Comics ............. M Editorials ...........I . Markets .......... 28 Obituaries ..... ... 25 Snorts ■......... 22-23 Theaters .......1....14 Traffic Series........3 TV A Radio Programs .11 Wilson. Earl.......... 31 Women's Pages .... I7-18 Capt. Hazen requests anyone who saw the girl with these men in the white car to contact the Oakland County sheriff’s department immediately. Police also want to talk with anyone who saw the girl earlier. Intensive investigation over the weekend by teams of detectives turned up these facts: Connie probably was seen July 4 in a state park in the Irish Hills. This report came from i girl schoolmate from Connie’: hometown of Corunna. HA^BITUAL RUNAWAY That was two days after Connie, an habitual runaway, escaped with two other girls from the Jackson County Juvenile Hom1# ^ Powers Agree to Future' Unity Try MOSCOW (AP)^Red China and the Soviet Union say they have agreed to meet—“some time later”—and make another, try at settling their bitter, Ideelogical dispute. Diplomats in Moscow did not expect the meeting would be held ‘soon. . The announcement, made simultaneously Sunday in Peking and Moscow, coincided with a new Chinese attack on the Soviet Communist party. Peking accused it of trying to incite the Chinese people and party ' against M?io Tse-tung. The Soviet-Chinese talks broke off Saturday. Premier Khrushchev took his first public notice of the Chinese delegation, giving it a farewell dinner. - • The communique issued Sunday said the central committees of both Communist parties would set the place and time of the next meeting. It reported that during the talks Crew Saves Tanker Ship After Wreck PORTSMOUTH, Va. (UPI) -A stubborn captain and 17 crewmen apparently won their battle to keep their collision-torn Norwegian tanker afloat today and began moving toward port under the vessel’s own power. A Coast Guard cutter, the Cherokee, escorted the damaged 13,-490-ton tanker Honnor toward Norfolk and an at-sea rendezvous with a tugboat which could tow the vessel the remaining distance if necessary. The Coast Guard here said at 10 a.m. EDT that the Honnor was making 3 knots about 220 miles off the Virginia coast. Twenty-two of her crewmen were transferred to the tanker San Juan, from Wilmington, Del., following the collision yesterday. The San Juan, despite bow damage, headed for Wilmington. Capt. Eli Abrahamsen and 17 crewmen returned to the Honnor after all 40 men abandoned her . shortly after the collision. By nightfall, they had the pumps working and. one boiler in operation and this morning the vessel, with a 15-foot gash in her side, slowly got underway. The tug Sparrows Point headed out to sea from Norfolk this morning. A Coast Guard spokesman said it was not certain whether the tug would take the Honnor in tow or merely escort it to port. Kin of T. Roosevelt Dies OYSTER BAY, N.Y. Iff) - Dr. Richard Derby, son-in-law of President Theodore ^osevelt, died yesterday at his summer home in Proctorville, Vt., it was learned here. He was 82. WARREN P. CLEARY Post Office Set for New Service 'Fast Business Delivery to Start in Pontiac important questions of principle concerning contemporary world (Developments, the international Communist movement and Sino-Soviet relations.” MUTUAL LECTURES Western quarters interpreted this to mean Chinese spokesman Teng Hsiao-ping and Soviet theoretician Mikhail .Susloy did little more since the meetings began July 5 than leciture eaph other. Premier Khrushchev is expected to defend his stand and outline his strategy in the Communist power struggle at a meeting of East European Communist leaders opening in Moscow Wednesday. Ostensibly, the meeting of ’th6 Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (Comecon)the Communist counterpart to the European Common Market—Will be to -discuss economic plans. The leaders of Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, East ' Germany, Romania, Bulgaria and Mongolia are to be present. Communist China’s balkan ally, Albania,, is a^eharter memiber but has not partidpated in council activities for more than two years. The terseness of the Chinese-Soviet communique was in sharp contrast, to a bitter editorial in the official Peking People’s Daily which indicated the Chinese have no intention of easing thejr war of words against the Soviets. 'The editorial said* “thcise who are racking their brains to slander Comrad Mao Tze-tung and our party will accomplish nothing save full expo^sure of their own foul Pontiac Post Office will herald the beginning of its new Accelerated Business Collection and Delivery (ABCD) service this week with the visit of Warren P. Cleary, deputy executive assistant to the postrriaster gener- Cleary, 36, will be here to inaugurate the new ABCD maiP service. Pontiac is the tenth city in Michigan to get the unique system. Under the plan, a letter mailed in certain designated mail boxes by 11 a.m. will be delivered by 3 p.m. the same day. Cleary will deposit the first piece of mail to be delivered under the new service. He will drop his mail in the box in front of the main post dffice, 735 W. Huron, about 10:30 a.m. Wednes(jay. A 10-year veteran of the U.S. Foreign .Service in India and Africa, Cleary is also a former special consultant on problems of underdeveloped areas. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy and not much change in temperatures through tomorrow. A chance of a few widely scattered thundershowers mostly this afternoon and evening. Highs today and tomorrow in the 80s. Lows tonight 58 to 67.-Winds variable mostly 5 to 15 m.p.h. through tomorrow. Wednesday’s outlook: Little change. Sun »cts Moon eem Moiiday ut » 32 p.m' Moon rUeii Tuesday at B:0S a m. both sides “expounded their-q^ views and stand on a series of The paper accused the Soviets of lying in their open letter last week when Moscow said the Chinese scuttled trade relations between the two Communist giants. It charged the Soviets themselves cut off aid, doing incalculable harm to China’s economy, defense and scientific research. The latter could include Peking’s ‘efforts to develop an atomic bomb. The official New China News Agency in a separate statement claimed the Kremlin leaders are “flagrantly attempting to incite the Chinese people and the members of the Chinese Communist party against the beloved leadership of the Communist party of China.” U.S., Britain to Bolster India Agree on Air Defense in Case China Attacks WASHINGTON (AP)-The United .States announced today agreement with Britain and India to strengthen India’s defenses against possible air attacks from Communist China. HlKhCNt temppNituro ........ ..... Dpirott -H8 «8 K1 Pi E-icimsba 8S. 67 Tort Plliit itir !>t Hi'lcn Or. RBpIda 8B 88 Honol Announcing'- the air\ defense agreement, the State Department said that in the event of renewed Chinese Communist aggression against India “the United States has agreed to consult with the government of India regarding possible measures to strengthen India’s air defenses in the light of the situation existing at the time.” The State Department said the agreement “does not, however, involve any commitment on the part of the U.S. governYnent to come to India’s assistance in the I event of a renewed Chinese Com-Imuni.st attack.” BIRMINGHAM - Hie County Republican chairman today announced the appointment Of Mrs. John Pfister, 2t4» Buckingham, as chairman of the county GOP’s 19^ Neighbor-to-Neigh-bor fund drive. , - Chairman Charles Lyle said he selected Mrs. Pfister because the drive’s success “is in direct proportion to the organizational background of its Mrs. Pfister currently holds GOP posts in the county’s 3rd Legislative District, the City of BOMBED VILLAGE - Viet Nam troops charge through a bombed village in fierce fighting against Red guerrillas during the weekend. Fifty-eight Reds and 19 government , .AP Pholefai soldiers were killed; 19 guerrillas were cap^ tured. The village is in the Mekong delta area of that Far Eastern country. Viet Buddhists GiveUltiinatuiTi President Diem Faces New Street Disorders SAIGON iUPIl - President Ngo Dinh Diem faced an ultimatum today from his Buddhist foes, threatening new street disorders unless their latest demands are met by midnight. The Buddhists rebuffed offk dal efforts at concilialipn over the weekend. It was not certain immediately whether the government would return to the “hard line” it employed against Buddhist demonstrators ’Wednesday. Club-swinging poiice waded into a crowd of Buddhists on that day, and scores of prisoners were hustled away by truck to improvised concentration camps. On Friday, Diem — who is a Roman Catholic — broadcast an appeal for new negotiations on Buddhist charges of discrimination. Vice President Nguyen Ngoc Tho sent Buddhist leaders a letter formally advancing the government proposal. From Our News Wires WASHINGTON - Humiliation stalks America’s Negro citizens and they will not be dissuaded by talk that they are hurting their cause by demonstrating, Negro leader Roy Wilkins said today. Buddhist leaders said they would negotiate with a special cabinet committee set up by Diem for the purpose only if police removed barricades from around Buddhist temples here and released more than 300 priests, nuns and laymen who they say were arrested Wednesday. Police removed the barricades and threw open the gates of camp set up in a Sdigon cemetery where they were holding 200-odd Buddhists — according to the government, all of Wednesday’s prisoners. For Rights Bill Negro Testifies Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), said their protest demonstrations are not subversive but ‘thoroughly American.” He expressed his yiews In testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee as it started a fourth week of hear-jings on the administration’s public accommodations bill.. The bill, a key part of President Kennedy’s civil rights program, wouM require the desegregation of restaurants, hotels, stores, and other privately^wned establishments serving the public. OTHER RACIAL NEWS In Cambridge, Md., a Negro integration leader said today the commander of National Guard troops in this racially troubled city has refused permission for prayer meetings on the courthouse lawn. The leader, Stanley Branche of the NAACP, said Brig. Gen. George Gelston ruled out demonstrations in a letter to Branche. Integrationists had asked the general to permit them to hold 15-minute prayer meetings at the courthouse each* day if they guaranteed no more than 50 persons wouid take part. ly would be legal but could not be permitted under present conditions in ’Which nine persons have been, wounded by gunfire since demonstrations began. Saturday night, 900 National Guard troops were alerted and a tear gas grenade was thrown to disperse an angry crowd of 500 Negroes. Guardsmen used their bayonets to drive a Cfowd of some 200 whites off the streets. InuJackson, Miss., five white Protestant churches here rejected six groups of integrationists yesterday in the first attempted ’kneel-ins” in about a month. The Rev. Ralph E. King Jr. 1 young white Methodist chaplain at Tougaloo„College, tried to enter Galloway Methodist Church with his wife and a Negro student. Branche quoted Gelston as saying the prayer meetings normal- ing superintendent of the Pontiac State Hospital. The appointment was made by Charles F. Wagg, Michigan State Director of the department of mental health. Dr. Braun has been clinical director at the hospital since 1960. He is a member of the American Psychiatric Association, a diplo-mate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, American Medical Association, and Wayne Medic^il Society. Dr. Braun is temporarily replacing Dr. Walter H. Obenauf who died Wednesday of a heart attack, and had been with the hospital for four years. King said they were rejected by an usher who told them, “This is a Christian Church and we intend to keep it that way. We will not admit Negroes.” In Clarksdale, Miss., two young white segregationists who admitted firebombing the home of Negro civil rights leader Aaron Henry were free today of arson charges. Theodore A. Carr, 24, was acquitted on the charge by an all-white jury Saturday night following a 15-minute deliberation. The prosecution then dropped an identical charge against Aubrey Cauthen, 26, who was scheduled to go On trial this week. Officers said Carr and Cautben admitted the April 13 bombing of Henry’s home. They were dr-rested less than 12 hours after tw(^ “Molotov cocktails” were hurled through a window of Henry’s home. Senator Hart Reviews U.S. Foreign Aid (Continued From Page One) increase in the foreign assistance program; likewise, times do not call for us to leave the field — cither in discouragement or complacency. national WKATHEIV-Skles are expected to be clear' to partly clbudy throughout the nation tonight e^:ept for southern Ohio where scattered phowers are expected. It will (!ontinue hot and humid in the Plains states and on the Gulf Coast. Some cooling is expected over the l^acific Northwest.' \ I V . ’ \ . I ' --...t 'l^.^r. JJi Under terms of the agreement, the U.S, Air Force and the Royal JJJ Air Force will hold periodic, joint 2“ training exercises in India with 80 the Indian air force. 81 j The United Slates also will pro-“o vide India witli radar and com- inunicatlons equipment. 'fhe first radar will be sent in “" the form of mobile units untili fixed radar units can be installed,! The United .States also will pro-i ide training for Indian tech-: mcians in the operation and maintenance of mobile and fixed radar installations and cqmmunicaUons equipment. ' The air defense agreement follows the recommendations of an air defense missiori whidh made an extensive study of India’s air needs following the Chlne.se Communist border attack on India last fall. Th<> arrangement is part of a larger program of military assi.st-ance , being provided by the United Slates and Britain to both the Indian Air Force and Indian Army. The joint training exeri'ifUMMmg. expect^ to involve rotation of U.S. and British supersonic jet fighter squadrons. » There is nothing the Communists want more than - for us to withdraw .support from independent countries. It’is their number one objective. You .suggest we "review” our foreign aid program. We should and we do. Probably no program has ever undergone such extensive and ((onstant review. Every facet continues to be scrutinized jonly by the Congress, but by the 'executive branch. I agree each project should be scrutinized each be justified. President Kennedy Idis requested $4,525 billion for our programs of mutual defense and assistance in fiscal 1964. This request will be studied by four committees of the Congress. It is based on a careful analysis of the situation in each country, and recommendations of the President’s committee headed by General Lucius Clay and the judgment of David E. Bell, administrator of the Agency for International Development. The program has ^ored some notable lucecsses. 'There have been horrible mistakes, too, but 1 reject the gloomy conclusion that we throw the program out! Do you throw out a bushel of apples because some have soft spots'f Tlie United States has provided substantial aid ($30 per capita) to 41 countries since the end of World War II: 33 have achieved a rate of increase in national output of more than 1.5 per cent per capita for five consecutive years or longer. Of the.se 33 countries, 14 the eleven Marshall Plan countries, plus Japan, Spain and Lcb-have become economically self-supporting and our aid has ended. Half a dozen are approaching .self-support: Greece, Israel, F’rec China (Taiwan), Venezuela, Mexico, the Philippines — all are doing well, and economic aid should end within two to five years. Another dozen have made solid progre.ss, including India, Pakistan, Turkey, Thailand and Colombia. The remaining eight have not yet made good progress for various reasons including inadequate governmental leadership an(l adverse economic circumstances. stitutions around the world. The price has never been cheap; it wasn’t in the bargain basement, and its preservation won’t be found at a bargain counter. Building — and defending — freedom has cost heavily in treasure —and blood. All of us prefer to see freedom defended and expanded without resort to the battlefield. We face a Communist thrust that is relentless and powerful. We must be equally strong, te-npaclous and enduring. The challenge is severe, and we will continually be advised to give up the struggle as tdo costly, risky ->• as We are helping those who help thCjmselves and expanc^ing free in- Birmingham Area News Oakland Birmingham The board of education will hold a special meeting Aug. 7 to open bids on $1.5 million worth, of tax antipipation notes. The notes wUI he issued in anticipation of the Dec. 1, 1963 taxes in order to mMt opera- Appoint Chief at State Facility Dr. Robert A. Braun, clinical director, has been appointed act- Dated July 15, 1963, the notes -will mature March 1, 1964, and carry a maximum interest rate of 4 per cent, according to Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelly. Issuance of the notes has been approved by the Sthte Munidipal Finance Commission, of which Kelley is chairman. The Aug. 7 meeting will .be held at 8 p.m. at the board of education buildings 'Lord Astor Paid Rent' (Continued From Page One) tine had testified directly that the apartment rent was paid by Lord Astor, although she had said at Ward’s pretrial hearing that the osteopath had told her the rent once was paid paid with a check from the wealthy head of one pf Britain’s most influential families. ^he pretrial hearing,-Mandy ta^fied she had been intimate with Astor, who later denied it. It was at the famed Cliveden Estate of Lord Astor that Christine met Profumo in the start of an affair that led ta the war minister’s resignation and an outcry that brought the Conservative government of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan close to collapse. Union Planning Anti bias Effort Throughout U. S. WASHINGTON (^ - A new major national campaign against racial discrimination was announced today by the AFL-CIO. George Meany, AFL-CIO president, said he will assume personal command of the ef- fractured skull. tional expenses. Boy, 12, Hit by Boat Is 'Critical' 1 Woman Pickied Chairman of Republican Fund Drive ______and the Blrming- Ham-Hoy Republican Women’s Club. Before moving to Birmingham in 1961, she was a precinct delegate, executive board men*er and' office manager for Wayne County’s 15th Congressional Dis-trist. Twelve-year-old Earl J. Bren-dle lay in critical condition today while Oakland County sheriff's deputies pressed their Invest tigation of the boat accident that nearly tore the boy’s arm off and almost !cost him his life Sat-urdayr Earl was hit by an outboard ........................to Walters Lake behind his home, at 8809 Lakeview, Independence Towhship. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brendle. Lt. Don Kraft of the sheriff’s office said today he was investigating the accident to determine whether criminal charges should be brought against the driver of the boat, Warren Baker, 31. of 436 Boyd. Though it was, first reported that the boy was 70 to 75 feet from the dock when the accident occurred, Kratt said further checking revealed Earl was only about 30 feet oUt. Witnesses said Baker was towing a water skier to shore when he suddenly saw the boy and swerved. At the same time, the boy dived in an attempt to escape being hit, they said. Earl was taken to Pontiac General Hospital and then rushed to Detroit’s HOnry Ford Hospital, which reported today that the boy “was making some progress” but was still on the critical list. Kratt said the boy’s right arm was almost sever^ by the blades of the 40-horsepower met tor. Earl’s leg and back also were cut and he suffered a ^ fort. He named four other union chiefs to serve with him on a special committee. Meany said the campaign will be directed at all forms of discrimination against Negroes — in unions, employment, housing, voting, public accommodations, services and schools. Meany gave President Kennedy advance notice of the campaign in a personal letter sent last Friday, an AFL-CIO spokesman said. The boy’s bathing trunks were afterwartls found wrapped around the motor’s propeller, Kratt said. The lieutenant reported that Earl was standing on a submerged lot about 2Vt feet below the surface when he dived to avoid the boat. State law prohibits motor boats within 100 feet of a dock swimming area unless they are traveling five miles per hour or less, Kratt said. DODGERS COWED ukET-With pails ready, Los Angelea Dcidgers Lee Walls and Frank Howard, right, warily circle an uncooperative cow <|urlng a milking contest at County Stadium between games of their Ar vdouble-header with the Milwaukee Braves yes- terday. The Braves won the milking contest as Walls’ cow rolled around after Howard’s had already bolted. *1116 Braves also won both games. ■ .' " V .. J 'A.;, '4t\ I'l X' I'- ''f ,.■■■.. ■■1 ■■ ■ I ' I- •__ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULV 2a, m:} „ .. .: '■■ 't ■ I ' ■!-'' ■- '■' ' '■. iqlous Retreat Burns Lutheran Home' Leveled by Fire Flames Hit Structure in Addison Totwnship Over Freeway Suburbia Bottles State TOTAL LOSS—PTremen are shoWn here battling smoke and fire in a vain attempt to save St. Augustine House, a Lutheran religious retreat in Addison Township. The fire was put out at 1:20' this morning only to break out again three hours later. Tbe building was a ■complete loss. Oxford,-Addison and Lake Orion fire departments answered both calls. , ADDISON TOWNSHIP - A building once the palatial home of a Detroit businessman—which he transformed'into the center of a Lutheran religious community -r was destroyed by fife last night. Father Arthur C. KreinKeder, a former executive with the J. L. Hudson Co., discovered the fire at 10 p. m. when he returned with his 10 houde guests from a visit to tbe Benedictine Novitiate Just down the road. Cut off by the fire from telephones in- St. Augustin^ House, at 3316 E. Drahner, Father Krein-Hheder was forced to return to the LANSING (AP) - Suburbia is the battleground for the __ freeway f i g h t in the history of highway - conscious Michigan. The State Highway Department is mai:8haling.its forces — engineers, public relations men and lawyers — to face the stiffest opposition yet in the decade since freeways began to stretch across the urban and rural landscape. , ^ And in south Oakland County, the battle lines are being drawn vyith cities, accustomed to coexistence like the back-fence, su-borrowing neighbors who inhabit them, suddenly on opposite sides. either route, the Highway Department will be wiping out bun’s of homes, demolishing tax so dear to the suburbs, and Completed Orion Youth Code Ouflines Parent-Teen Rules novitiate to phone for help. When the Oxford Fire Department arrived at .the scene at 10:20 p. m., the rjetreat home, was in flames. Help from Addison Township and Lake Orion fire departments arrived soon after. 36 s 3-2 COMPLETED ORION (Editor's Note—This is t!he concluding article in a series analyzing the results of a survey which have led up to the formulation of a youth code in the Lake Orion Community' . School District.) However, any overnight plans or use of the car should be discussed and approved by all parents concerned, according to the guidebook. By ROGER Sl^GLEY LAKE ORION — Party "crashing” here is strictly against the rules. And the rules referred to are found in the recently completed Orion Youth Code. Sponsored by the Lakb Orion • Youth Guidance Committee, the conduct edde will soon be offered to students and parents in the school district. Teen-agers should avoid going out on school nights unless all homework assignments are completed and they are working,” Is another rule in the book-. Although a slight majority of the high school students disagreed with this statement, it was included in the code because of parental opinion and results of the junior high poll. .Some 2,000 junior and senior high school students and their parents completed questionnaires from which the code was determined. « Their answers were tabulated and put into the, guidebook by the guidance committee, which uas composed of adult representatives from juvehile court an^the school system. Also assisting in the editing la.sk were delegates from student councils in the school district. As stated in the coile's intro-fliiclion, its”purpose is “not to re form, but rather to influence maturing youth toward acceptable guidelines of behavior/’ IDEA.S COVERED One of the ideas whiclj the Code condones is that “young peo-' pie should be encouraged hot to smoke.” Few of tho.se answering the questionnaire disagreed with this premi.se. Another category covered in the code deals with parent-teen relationships. “.Parents are cjyiected to encourage their young people to invite their friends home and make them welcome,” the code reads. Fraud Case Goes to Jury FLINT (UPl) A federal Jury f George Greenlee, former vice president of the Davison Stale Rank, who is accused dt fraud In ther disappearance of more tjidn $4.')0,(HM). The SO-year-old Greenlee look Ihe stand Friday and lestlfled he never defrauded anyone of anything. The bank with which he was connected has since merged with t h c Genesee-Mcrchants Bank and Trust Co, here. . The, dlkclosure that Greenlee was accused of money shortages roekdd the two suburbs of DnVl'^ son and Lap war, where Greenlee was well known. Several people have said “George will get out of this if they will just give him a chance to'prove it.”. '.rhe alleged .shortage,s were revealed last August when he suddenly was firi'd from his position at the bank. He left town ■^and went to a summer retreat in Ontario. Hjs assistant cashier at the bank is Mrs, Joan Phelps, 32. .She did not testify and .is listed as a co-defendanl. Another portion of the code deals with parent-teen-age religious participation. “When parents and teenagers attend church together, family unity is strengthened. Religious participation aids parents and youth toward a deeper understanding of our religious heritage and the moral concepts of right and wrong.” The use of profanity and drinking of alcoholic beverages are discouraged by the code. Continuing further in this category, the pamphlet states that “on all school nights, regardlesk of activities, all teen-agers should be home by 10 p.m. Other categories covered in the guide include driving, studieggg^o-Cial events, dress, finances and dating. All of Ihe statements in the JO snsuasuoa aqj juasaadoa apoo opinion of the participants. Wedding Ceremony Set in Presbyterian Church AUBURN HEIGHTS -- Patricia L. Spock "became the bride of Ralph W. Battishill in a ceremony at the United Presbyterian Church Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Spock, 3059 Martell, are parents of the bride. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William-Battishill, 2319 Island View, West Bloomfield Township. Lace outlined the sweetheart neckline and formed the short sleeves of the bride’s embroid-red silk organza gown. The fullness of. the floor length skirt extended into a train. The bride’s elbow-length veil was hold by a dauble pearl crown. Chinese mums were ar-* ranged In a cascade bridal bouquet. ^ Renee .Spock was maid of hon-,or for her sister, and Pat Tracy of Pontiac was the bridesmaid. MRS. RALPH W. BATTISHILL The blaze was brought under control at 1:20 a. m. with one wing of the 2-story cement block buBding left untouched. At 4:30 a. m., Gerald A. Fillmore of 1460 Hosner discovered the fire burning once more and called the fire .departments back to the scene which Jhey had left only a few hours before. .ant Ridge. Ferndale, Royal Beauty Queen'Fair' After Boat Accident HOLLAND (UPI) - A Holland beauty queen was in fair condition -in Holland Hospital following her rescue by the driver of a Oak, Madison Heights and Hazel powerboat which struck her pad- dleboat in the Kalamazoo River at Saugatuck Saturday night. Karen Clean, 20, suffered scalp lacerations, ' several broken ribs and possible other internal in- Park -- will be involved. If the freeway goes 11-Mile, it would involve seven cities as well, with Lathru'p ViHage and Berkley included^ in. Ferndale, , ^ Hazel Park and Pleasant Ridge included out. was riding in was struck by a boat driven by Larry Higgins, 22, • i T h e s e cities.* conditioned lo'of .Saugatuck. Higgins dived-into severely altering the face .of each other through years of dea|-|,the river after the impact and neighborhoods. jiog with problems — .such as rescued the semiconscious gir|,. ; , sewers and water — that tras-j Karen, .daughter of Mr. and cend political boundaries, have!Mrs. John Kolean, has won sev-harbored hopes of being able to eral local and college beauty con-agree. . tests. - If th’e lO-Mile route is selected, eight cities — Southfield, Huntington Woods, Oak Park, Pleas- The issue is simple, yet complex establishment of a route for the new $115-million east west freeway (1-696) which eventually will link 1-96 at Wixom to the northern end of the Ford Freeway (1-94) in Macomb County. For years, this highway has been in the planning stoges. But the fight is just now beginning to warm up, since Highway Department Engineers — in a meeting with 0 ff i’c i a I s from the affected cities last month — produced a series of proposed alternative routes, Hampered by spectators who drove to the area from miles around, firemen were unable to save the remaining wing Which crumbled into the basempnt along with the other standing walls. Father Kreinheder said he had no idea of the amount of the loss. Cause of the fire is still- undetermined. While records were saved, several highly valued pieces of art were lost. Only a large chapel, separate from the main house, was not touched by the fire. ★ ■>! * Father Kreinheder was an executive with Hudson’s for over 20 years before he decided to fulfill a life-long ambition and study for the priesthood in the, Church of Sweden. In 1949, he resigned from his position and left for Swedcn-4carances or emergencies. HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actor Spencer Tracy was reported improving today from an attack of lung congestion suffered as he Was going on a picnic AVith ac-'ess Katharine Hepburn. Tracy, 63, was stricken Sunday in front of Miss Hepburn’s Malibu Beach home. An ambulance rushedliim to St. 'Vincent Hospital where his physician, Dr. Karl Lewis, said Tracy was suffering from a congestive lung condition. . And, just to complicate the situation, there are 1,000 miles more of highways for the troopers to patrol. A good portion of this mileage is in expressways. State Police .Commissioner Joseph Childs has said — and hold on to your hats — that he should have 500 more men to meet his total needs, 382 of these for highway duty. The problem is simple. It’s just ladk of money. The legislature provides funds for a state police budget which won’t do the job of protection that we here in the State of Michigan ought to have regardless of the fact that putting a few million more in an adequate* state police force would save many times the number of dollars in prevention of property damage and personal injury. Nor is there any water in the state police budget. Commissioner Childs is the type of man who asks for nothing more than what is absolutely necessary for his department. Perhaps, this is his mistake. Maybe he should ask for twice or three times as much as he really! I needs in order to get what he I Wants! I We risk our necks and our prop-j erty by not providing for this fine and efficient police force. During the past few years the situation has deteriorated. Unless something is done — and done soon — this dry rot will continue until we have another state scandal by way of accidents and crime. We are, in a nutshell, be-ig penny-wise and pounds-of-flesh foolish. Next: Legalized Murder TRAVEL ACCIDENT Hospital Policy AVAILABLE TO READERS OF THIS NEWSPAPER UNDER AGE 80 Pays 50% cash refund of premiums each 10 ycori if no claim I Pays $150.00 month, oven fpr lifo! During total diiability and eonfinomont white under regular medical care (hospital or home) beginning within 10 days of accident • Pays $5,000 dtath benefit l^ether accidental death occurs instantly or wlti^in 30 days of an pccident. This benefit increases each month policy is in force to a maximum of $7500 • Pays maximum $1500 if hospitalized within 10 days of accident at rate of $15.00 per day for 100 days. (This is in addltion'to $150.00 monthly benefit.) »Cyii^r laranteed renewable for .life »Every payment to you is income tax free Every premium you pay Is Income tdx deductible Time Life Insurance Company is making this special Introductory Free Offer so you can see for yourself WITHOUT 1 c OF COST, the marvelous protection this wonderful new policy affords. So few of us realize until too late that over 150 people are injured EVERY HOUR and a long confinement can wipe out one’s entire life-time savings. This policy is speciolly designed to take away the burden on yourself and family, to protect you even for. life should necessity arise. This policy covers accidents while the insured is traveling in any 4 wheel motor vehicle or as a fqre paying passenger on a'*licensed public conveyance operated by d common carrier for the regular transportation of passengers, including com-msrcial aircraft. Of eburse, the policy does not cover suicide nor accidents while taking part in any race or stunt exhibition, war, while under the influence of alcohol or narcotics, or taking poison or gas. This policy is available to age 6(T~ years. Above age 65 years, payment schedule reduces one-half. MAIL COUPON-SEND NO MONEY-NO AGENT WILL CALL Immediately upon receipt and approval your policy wijl be eent to you. There will be no charge for the first 30 days and no obligation on your part to continue it unless you yourself want to. No agedt will coll. If after reading its rhmarkable benefits you feel it Is so advantageous you do not want to be without it, the amazingly low rate will be thown on (he policy. Otherwise just drop it. That’s oil. But you will bf protected for 30 days with full benefit, whether you continue or not. So mall the coupon today —>■ RIGHT NOW — while the offer Is still available. Time Life Insurance Company Is an established eld line legal reserve • Mail to TIME LIFE INSURANCE CO., Dept. 82A29, Gen. Wainwright Sta., San Antonio 8, Texas ! ! Without obligation of any kind send me the Free travel Accident Hospital Policy with 50% ; I refund of premium benefit. i the Ifrte General Jonathan M.* Wainwright, hero of Bataan and Cerregidor in World War II.. My Name is (Print)............................................... Occupation....... Date Born: Month......... Ooy....... Year....... Birthplace............Height. (Staisl Beneficiary's Name............................................................... o I h«v* any amputali.eni of a ,.1....Wt........... ly pliyilcal.dsloriNlly. If epcppliefl, giv* lull duloili on Mpo ■Sign Her4 X..................... ..................................................i................. Address.......................................................,f....................L,,i..................... II You Won) Sroo Pollclti tor Olhor Mombori of Your Pomlly Moko Coupon lliio Ahevo lor lock. No OWi- on. No Agoni Will Coll. .w,.» SIMMS OPEN TONiTE’rii IBEHOUaS;9A.M.toSP.II». P.M. Miss Hepburn called the fire I departihenj .for a resuscitator when tracy was taken ill. She I told the dispatcher the actor had i sufferecl a heart attack. Dr. Lewis ' said later that was incqrrect. IlHbhrliHlfwailKBIiniE $522 CASH Give-A-Way SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Stroot STORE Repeat Of A “SELL-OUT” ^ Another IIIG SHIPMENT Direct , A.. Erom A Leadinft Choice of 100% NYLON or 70% WOOL mth 30% NYLON Compare to $S8.^S Qimlify Full loops'.,.. cut loops ... stripes, tweeds, solid colors. Guaranteed FIRST quality .. . full bdund edges. Foam rubber and latex bocks — NO PAD NEEDED. Ideal for any n $3 HOLDS YOURS Cash and Carry Priced-Sitlall Charge for DELIVERY Extra DISCOUNTS Tonite & Tuesday In SIMMS CMIEBii Deparimciit CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS KODAK Kodacolor Films $1.35 Roll in 620.120^21 Sires c Take wonderful color | pictures with Kodocol- ’ Or. Fresh doted filtn. jf Limit 10. Illuminated Model Slide Soriers 179 Beekeepers can work without veils and still avoid stings by employing newly discovered chemir cal repellents. See Your Slides TV Style Argus Slide Viewer lllumindted viewer 470 with batteries. See i H ■ w See your slides fully illumii easier to sort 'em out. 35mm or 1.27 Super slides. Deluxe model hold 35 slides. On ofl switch. BELL HOWELL LL Automatic Threading 8mm Movie Projector WHh Z-O-O-M Lens Compare to SCtO Projectors 198 8mm autodbading projector with fast fl.6 zoom lens, reverse and still projections, rapid re-winding, ^ gear driven reels, takes up to 400 ft. film reel. In •self contained cose. Only $1 holds in free layaway. AMERICAN Made >‘JEWEL’ I-TRANSISTOR Pocket I AlflCniWMI 10 Compare $19.93 Powerful pick-up o tionS, good tone. R with case and battery. $1 ■ holds. Another Shipment of Simms Popular -Transistor ‘Walkie-Talkies’ 9-Traniiator'TRANSCEIVER' 2-Way Walkie-Talkie To Speak and Liiten Without Wire! lUttally PriveA At $40 — at Simmt i Anyone can operate this unit—no license needed. Citizen band chonnel no 7 -k T to 5 mile ronge. 27.035 MC trequeneV. Crystal control Iransmili ond receives . . . tqr work, and sport uses, hunters, boaters, offices to stockrooms, parijing lots, sporting events. Boy Scouts, invalids etc. Complete with batteries, leather cost, earphone for private listening, telescope whip antenna. Has removable crystals. Only $ I,holds'lit tree loyoway. Cemaros ... NO PURCHASE NECESSARY, juat come In and oak for your free ticket. See Wednesday, July 24th Pontiac Preii for full ffetaiU. All apdclala In thii adv. for Tonite and Tuesday only. ■ .. . ' ■ 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS Automobile SEALED BEAM Headlight Bulbs 99^ Regular $2150 value — fpr iingle or dual systems in 6 or 12 volts. Sealed against mpistur^ and dirt. Limit 4 bulbs.' Galvanized-Large 20 Gals. Garbage Cans 1?^ $2v79valu|^—with cover. 20 gallon garbage can with side drop handles, Ap-■ proved for city and township pick-up. Limit 2 cans. 2nd Fleer PAINT DEPT. DISCOUNTS For Interior and Exterior Surfapes FORMULA 99 Paints ODORLESS MAC-O’LAC Miracle Plastic Laytex Paint Rfegulor $6.59 value—white and' colors for walls and ceilings. Miracle plastic paint, J goes on with brush dr roller. " No limit. Regular $7.95 _ value-white. and colors for onyM surface. Won't chip, peelB or blister. Point in or. shine with Formula 99.^ Non-Chalking-White Outside MAC-O-LAC Heuse Paints $8,25 gallon - n chalking paint for i terior' wood surfaces. | Weather tested, non-yel-1 lowing gleaming white, ^ GARNET FINISHING PAPER 9c sheets of 9x11 -inch paper m 2/0-4,04/0 grits, limit 10 sheets. $1.00 MASKING TAPE %x60 ycjrds of r®asking t es while point 66? 39*’ 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS 18-Illi SwaOp HANDLE Push Broom Heifular S2 Seller Hardwoo,d .block yvith bristle hairs... for home, shop, office use. Limit 1 per person. Full 50 FOOT ROLL ’’ALCOA” y^T,^^AIiiminum Foil Wrap value — on .sole Heavy duty aluminum wrap box wtth improved metal cutting edge. 50-foot roll by 18-ihch width. DRUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS 200 ANACIN TABLETS '$1.98 value ~ pack of 200 Anacins ‘f.or fast, fast relief of. headaches, neuralgia, etc. |30 DRISTAN TABLETS NEW HALO SHAMPOO lit Im me Pi, 25TabtD«-congattant.. BRYLOREEM HAIR OROOM ALBERTO VOeS CREME RINSE 7
,v - '■ ■' ''il 1 >A ' » . ' A ' .i-v —f- ^ ^ 5^, * '*^*' I \ TWENTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1963 Widespread Effect Seen Fair Skies Aid Trade MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by’growers and sold-by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets -s of noon Tffiirsday. Produce Apples, transparent, Cherries, sour, 16-qt. Cherries, sweet, 16-qt. Currants, red . Weekend Traffic Claims 10 Highway accidents in Michigan claimed 10 lives during the week‘ end. Nine more persons drowned and a lightning bolt , that hit a tree during a thundershower near Jackson killed an ll-year-old girl and fatally injured her mother. The Associated Press counts the deaths from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday, Beets, doz. bch........ Beets, topped ......... Broccoli, doz. bch. .. Cabbagei curly, bch. . Cabbage, red,, bu...... Cabbage, sprouts., bu. Cabbage, standard, bu. TRAFFIC Lacey Monroe, 51, of Vandalia, died last night in a Dowagiac 00 hospital from injuries suffered Saturday. Police said Monroe’s car was hit broadside by another at a Yandalla^intersection and he was thrown out. airy: £. Stennett, 25, of Coleman, was killed yesterday when his motorcycle failed to make a curve on U.S. 31, seven miles north of South Haven, and hit a tree. Ronald V. Manning, 22, of Muskegon, was killed yesterday when his car went out of control on the U.S. 31 bypass in Muskegon Township and crashed into a parked car. Jack H. Spillane, 33, of Swartz Creek, was killed yesterday in a fiery rear-end collision on Miller Road in Genesee County. State police said Spillane’s car was struck in the rear by another vehicle and both cars burst,into flames. John Troyer, 87, of Detroit, was killed yesterday in a two-car intersection collision at 13-Mile and Orchard Lake roads in Oakland County. £arl T. Swinney, 28, of Rochester, was killed ^turday when the car he was driving overturned on 1-75 in Oakland County. Timothy Beal, 4, of Detroit, was struck and killed by a car Saturday in front of his home. Can't Decide. on Concession Several Considered for Airport Expansion A two-car collision on 1-75 north of Monroe Saturday took the lives of Ralph C. Smith, 36, of Detroit, and his adopted son, Ralph J., 6 weeks, and Manuel F. Menendez Jr., 27, of Wyandotte. , ’ DETROIT (UPI) - The Wayne County Road Commission was still up in the .air today over who will get the million dollar concession business at Metropolitan Airport when its expansion is completed in 1965. .. stalks'". cucumoerBi am ................... Cucumbers, slicers ..........^ 5.M The New York Slock Exchange At present. Interstate Hosts, Inc., of Los Angeles, is maintaining a $2 - million annual business at the airport. But’ Interstate’s contract runs out in 1968 and other airport caterers would like to take over. Interstate would like to expand By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)-Americans’ love affair with the family. car is making weekend weather an economic force in m a n y busi-large and small. If the weather was miserable in your area t h e few days, the effect may be felt in time as far away as De-I troit and Akron or the oirfields ^of Texas. It certainly was noted sadlj^ by auto dealers, resort operators, highway restaurants and motels, both near you and some distance away. The United States has so many family cars—66 million, or 60 per cent of the world’s total—that it is the only nation that can carry all its population at the same time (at three persons to a car). A summer of especially poor (or good) weather could mean a variation of up to 10 billion vehicle miles of highway travel. Such an extreme case would mean a difference of about 700 milHon gallons of gasoline burned up, 350,-000 tires worn out, and perhaps 30 million meals at roadside eateries. , DAWSON Some 45,000 motels and motor ho-telsi with 960,000 rooms, have a national yearly average occupancy of 69 per cent. Good weather can raise this by 1 per cent and give an even greater boost to prof- Also affected by weekend weather are many things, from the sale of bikinis and sun lotion to picnic supplies and car rental services. For example, makers of suntan and sunburn lotions and creams have raised their annual s from $7 million ten years ag $14 million last year. Whether this summer’s weekends are fair or dreary can have a lot to do with the industry’s reaching its 1963 sales goal of $20 million. The $1.7 billion per year motel industry is particularly sensitive to family decisions to take off for long, weekend jaunts or to stay home because of the weather. .... -------------Jsl Chg. 19 43V. 43‘/j 43‘/j — V. 8 73 72>/a 72V. — (bill.) High Low I •3 64 63V. 63% — % 26 68% 88% 68V. ... 24 30% 30V. 30% — 8 64% 84 Vi 54 V. — V. 18 36% 36% 35V. + % ~ 64 V* 64 V. 64% — V. its present operation from a $2-million annual business to $7 million. But any expansion would mean an investment of about a million dollars. The concession brings in about $1 million annually in revenue to the road commisssibn. Officials for Interstate say it would be unreasonable tq ex-, pect a million^ollar investment in a contract that will have only three years to run after the new airport facilities open in the fall of 1965. Resort hotels suffer from prolonged wet spells, but motels are even more sensitive to weekend weather prospects. As Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges recently told dperators of Howard Johnson’s 650 roadside restaurants and 150 motor lodges, some 100 million Americans make 230 million trips for long or short distances each Weekend weather is a prime factor there. The Automobile ManufabturerS Association says auto travel has jumped 47 per cent in ten. years to 733 billion vehicle miles a year. TIME SAVER -This is expected to increase fur-, ther as the Bureau of Public Roads pushes its program fop a 4L000-mile highspeed network of highways, tempting Americans to The Wayne County Road Commission; which supervises the airport’s operation, said Interstate’s service so far has been satisfactory. Interstate officers said its net profit is 3 pfer cent of salbs after paying the county 15. per cent on liquor sales and 13.81 per cent on restaurant food sales. It pays 5, per cent on part of its in-flight meals, but averages more than 10 .per cent on total in-flight meal sales. Iraq Asks East Geriifian, 5 Bulgarians to Leave BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) -Baghdad Radio reported today that five Communist Bulgarian diplomats and an employe of the East German Embassy working in Baghdad have been asked to leave Iraq within 24 hours. The broadcast said the diplomats were declared '‘persona non grata,” but did not say why or give further details. Successfuhfnvestfng ^ ■ **' * ^ By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I am planning to invest $10,000 in common stocks. I also intend to add to this investment through a quarterly Investment Plan. My objective is appreciation and additional income for my retirement years. I am' 35 years old. My special interest is in consumer-type growth stocks and I would appreciate five recommendations.” F.D. A) You show good investment sense, if I may say so. The types Flint Officials to Vote on Tax FLINT (UPI) - The City Commission is expected to cast a final vote today on the proposed Vz per cent city income tax which has kicked up a storm of controversy. Residents recently rejected a 1 per cent income tax at the polls on June 4. Nonresidents, who work it Flint and who also would be subject to the levy, also have complained about the tax. Some suburbanites said' they would picket City Hall today before the commission meeting.' The citizens groups have demanded that the new proposal be submitted to voters, T^e groups have threatened recall action against commissioners Who vote for the levy. of stocks for which you show preference have been emphasized here for years, because I believe that they offer the best opportunity for consistent growth In the type of civilization we have developed in this country. Another way of characterizing these stocks is by the use of the term "‘‘'Effective merchandisers.” Texaco has been selling at all-time highs not because its products are necessarily suf^rior, but because it is probably the best oil* merchandiser in the United States. For your investment along these lines, I suggest Bristol-Myers, Standard Brands, Franklin Life Insurance, Long Island Jghting, American Express. ■k -k -k Q) “I have several series E savings bonds which have matured, but I do -not need current income at present. Would you advise me to'*