The Alabama contingent Is staying on, despite a ruling, it can’t participate without signing a party loyalty pledge. Although it.got to its feet with other delegations last night when those .who. support the party were asked to rise, National Chairman John M. Bailey said as far as he ires .concerned the Alabamians still were not official participants. OCCUPIED — Five Negroes, apparently members of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic party, moved* in last night to occupy convention seats meant for regular delegates from that state after the regulars left. The newcomers took the seats without authority of convention officials. By the time the session recessed, some SO of the Freedom Democrats were in seats in the section reserved for the Mississippi delegation, although only two of die contesting group were entitled to be on die floor. What happened was this: m Weather HE PONTIAC PONTIAC,-MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 —PACES Humphrey Seen as VP Nominee suiniiiiuinvi auucjU — several days ago, a big Goldwqtersign appeared above on the "piers In Atlantic Cuy.'sKe bf'ffie DetiioftiBc " National Convention. Today a smaller b IffidWeiFUji MHararOR^lglf.---; UAW Faced Film Provides Leads With Decision jn Cass Lake Death ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. W) — Democrats turn from convention battles to the loud but peaceful ritual tonight of acclaiming President Johnson as their and hearing finally his choice of a running All hands — including Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy’s — pointed to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, the bustling quick-talking party whip in the Senate as the man Johnson wants for vice president. McCarthy, who had" been another favorite in- the vjce-presidential derby, declared today in favor of Humphrey, a fellow Minnesotan. McCarthy sent a telegram to Johnson this morning, acknowledging he had been interested for several weeks in the job but concluding: “It is my opinion the qualifications that you have listed or which you have said to have. -...listed as .most; desirable Jn man who would be vice president with you would be met ad- State's Dems Unite, Divide Have Mixed Emotions on Mississippi Issue mirably by Sen. Humphrey. ‘4 wish therefore to recommend, far y e u r primary consideration Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey.’’ The White House said today ATLANTIC CITY (AP) -President Johnson would an- Michigan Democrats were nounce his choice for the Demo- united today behind a party de-cratic vice presidential nomi- cision, but divided among them-nation “in due time," but then selves, as the result of a amended this statement to leave compromise settlement of the Strlkt Dus Monday . .. .. .. ... . . . .. . Detectives working on the hit-run boat death of a to Suppbrt Demands? Cass Lake swimmer Aug. 3 are seeking to contact the occupants of three boats sighted near the accident openlhe poMibWty that John- Mississippi credentials fight at DETROIT (AP)-*-TWs is the scene a few hours before it occurred. son might prefer not to make the Democratic National Con- day of decision for tbs United . The boats were shown in an 8mm color movie strip an *™*w|^«nent. ^ vention. ^ + Aalo Wottan PoH». WH » uken by » Pontiac man rtout 7 p.m„ twa hour, be- it ,11 up to continued Mkhisan. which a hours ear- *K* lor. Alan L. Akerley was hew contract demands or not? ^ ^ , power boat UAW President Walter P. and killed. Reuther, supported by a $66,- Police believe that persons on million strike fund, has called J* ***** .. • Park No. 4 swimming area, his International executive board may t0 provWe lnforma-for a meeting tonight to pick a tion on the boat that rammed contract target. Akisrley while; he was swtan- Some sources, however, are anticipating that this may become Mtenptive day Instead of pfct-npM|r*«kut-up day on the part of the onion. The alternative would bq Nice Evening; 76s Tomorrow See Pages 8-6, B-7 A pleasant evening is in store Shown ia the background of for, Pontiac residents as tem-the film taken from the beach peratures dip to the 50s. of persons on a' small 'sail- , A, .t >. .ltW'(acl. boat were two inboard boats Clouds will fwe” Friday to fit Johnson’s prescription crats”—although not the two turmpU of the national election Chris-Craft from 15 to 17 feet rooHinfl ter a consensus party withla named by the credentials comil out of the way. long with a white stripe at the I? which Sorthera conservatives n^ttee-wound up ns guests of .................*>“r li«. p£Tt£ ^,rM1Chig“ de‘,g*“°" “ ----- era liberals in the campaign ,loor- In Today's V Press . Ob Ih Special preview 6ti World Golf Tourney at Oakland Hills—PAGE D-2. nnedy Starts Wmpaign for U. S. Senate «eqt—PAGE A-1S. Romrtey Wages eamj>atgn of silence against primary foe — PAGE D-l Area Ptews'... . :B-4, B4 Astrology ......... D-7 Bridge ............ D-7 Cemics .............D-7 Editorials ..........A4 Food Section .. C-l-C-tl Markets D4 Obituaries DA Short Story M Sports........ D-l—D4 Theaters ..........B-15 TV-Badio Programs D-ll Wilson, Earl ......D-15 Women’s Pagan B-l—B4 Both inboards had open roar I cockpits. The boat that killed Akerley was described generally as about 20-feet long with an inboard motor. , * + + Rewards for information leading tp the conviction of those responsible for. Akerley’s death now total $2,900. ★ ★ Added to the previously announced total of $2,700 are new rewards of $100 each offered by the Oakland County Boat Club, 2330 Femdale, Sylvan Lake, and the Loafers Club of Keego Harbor. Ex-Russian President Pays Visit to Vatican VATICAN QTY W — Leonk Brezhnev, former president of the Soviet Union and widely regarded as heir apparent of Premier Khrushchev, visited the Vatican today as a tourist. He did not see any officials. * A * Brezhnev and Semen Kozyrev, Russian ambassador to Italy. n hoycJn the Vatican art ns and atotine < t Chapel. DEPARTURE—Carting suitcases, Dennis Parle and Marjorie Hannah, spring graduates of Oakland University, bid farewell today to family and friends. Parle, 244 S. Tilden, and Miss Hannah, 414 W. IS Mile, Royal Oak, departed for the University of Valle In Call, Colombia. (See story, page 2.) “Participating in this was a line of authority that went all the way to the top," the Negro Congressman said. “I hadn’t intended to say anything about this but the news reports have indicated that intervention finally lame from Pennsylvania Avenue. “It was fiaally oat in the open that this has the stamp of our President. I would characterize this as the official stamp of the admiaistra-tion.’’ Left unanswered by Diggs and everyone else, however, was whether the key role In the final settlement was taken by Sen. Hubert Humphrey, reported to be President Johnson’s personal envoy, or. United Auto Workers President Walter . Reuther. ■k % Sr The UAW chief turned up in Atlantic City yesterday and tokl newsmen his visit was “social." But he reportedly conferred with Humphrey on the Mississippi matter. ★ . * * Later, in the Michigan caucus—the wildest, noisiest the delegation has experienced since it came here—virtually all of the UAW officials and staff workers who are delegates went along with Diggs’ recommendation to accept the majority report. ( pauMnrW emewrr jvom ATLANTIC CITY — A rip-snorting two-hour Michigan delegation caucus preceded the boring preliminaries of platform reading here last night. . . Beginning at 6 p.m., the Michigan crew met while still trying to reconcile the developing facts of political life with its initial all-out delegate recqgnition of the . . .« Mississippi Freedom Dem- /ylOn \jrUllty ocratic party, as opposed . to the regular state party. Of Beat I HQ, After many days’ wrestling with the dilemma, Congressman Ifil/inri [Jnn Charles S. Diggs of Detroit, one l/w3 of Michigan’! two Btoiimaw on the credeiM tials committee] gave a major-lty re,por‘ adopted by the] committee. Under it, del-] egates of tile] estab 1 i shed Mississippi par- A Pontiac man pleaded guilty yesterday to a charge of “cruelly beating and killing a dog” and was sentenced to 10 days in the Oakland County Jail by Municipal Judge Cedi Mc-Callum. ★ * *■ The charge, whidt court work* ers said is unprecedented, was ty would be seated on wndl- tevied against Jay wisterman, tion of signing a loyalty pledge „ . ... h M|th whn to the party and its nominees. 381 i71 S‘ m™' wh0 —. j . portedly struck his small mon- •ne Freedom party wouW d with a 5room handie. be seated as honored guekts 6 6 of the convention, and two of . its leaders givw delegate-nt-' Waterman explained that he large states with one vote didn’t want the dog anymore, rirl according to police. __ " t L J Cruelly beating an animal is Thrdebate over the proposed a vk)latk» of state law. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4> THE COMPROMISE The credentials committee recommended — and the convention approved. — a compromise proposal in the Mississippi contest which would have seated the regular Mississippi dele-gates, provided they signed a loyalty pledge, and which also would have seated as at-large delegates two of the Negro group. The regulars balked. In aa-angry statement drafted ia a two-hour caocos, the Mississippi all-white group said that aever before had a legally constituted delegation been required to sign such n loyalty pledge. \ They also protested that the proposal would seat an outside pressure group with no legal cbdm to delegate status. * •’ * St' Three of the regulars — Dong Wynn, Fred Berger and Rlidy Halladay — signed the loyalty pledge and, after being given credentials, sat down In . the Mississippi section. ' r However, after the first group %of five Negroes arrived, the throe regulars arose and departed. Court of Appoolt Ar-f •' - ' . • V .f TkE PONTIAC PRESS- WEDNESDAY* AUGUST 26. 1064 Enough Funds for CHy Raises i Will Cover This Year's Pay Hike ■testing revenues an expected to cover the cost of in* piemen ting nee wage scales for Pontiac dty employes this year, acconfog to a report last night by Oly lUMfir Joaepli A. ran. Warren said (bat the total coat of 04,011 to hilly implement the new wages for the remainder of the fiscal year (to Doe. II) could be handled from la npertoi to the City Cemmlsatsa that sales tax re ruses Ibis year are ex-ceattag badget estimates by HMN. Otter revenues are also ex- ci sdlng expenditures. * ♦ * Cost of the pay plan for all genual fond departments for the balance of the year wu put at P1JDS. The Bates tax rev-enuae were to cover this portion of He pay increases. PAfaunoii Pay adjustments for employes In sanitation and waste collection, sewage treatment, public housing, water works and water collection departments will come few manual produced by (boat departments or special millage over and above general fund levies. Broken dawn by depan-—meats, the Increases amount to 99,642 for sanitation and waata collection; $tjm far ••wage; 61,636 far pnblic hous-iag; ami JMN tor water Whfla revanuea are exceeding aapactatlani this year, a problem will arise when the budget tor 1986 Is prepared, according to Warren. Or a a ' Calculated for IMS, the total coat tor all funds waa set at 9MJM by the dty manager. Goat to tbs general fund will ba|M6,IOO, he said. STARTS SEPT. • The mw pay plan, expected to go Mo effect Sept. 6, will be reflected on pay checks issued floptlS. A public hearing to amend the UN budget to allow for Impte-mentation of the pay plan waa aat tor next Tuesday by the City Commission. City employes generally ap- said diet the com-i might want to consider a similar study of classifications during 1M6. The pay plan, covering 776 dty employes, was recommended by the Michigan Municipal LaagM (MML). 7 Area Beauty Queens Vie for State Fair Title YVONNE C. ICKES (of Miltord) JEANNE OSBORN MIsj Southfield OvU Defense MARILYN DENTON Miss OrtonvOk JUDITH A. PIPPER Milford’s Junior Mias Judge Says End 'Shadowy Definition' Move Fast oh Acting Chief, City Told Pontiac dty officials woo told yesterday to move briskly in determining whether acting Police Chief Wultem K. Hanger was chief of police or not. Circuit Court Judge WUUam J. Boer urged dty officials to move “with alacrity” In determining Hanger’s present status. “That shadowy definition of acting chief of police should not endure,” said Judge Beer. • "Eiwrie tedUKrerpiaiee or he is not chief.” The designation of Hanger as chief or not wu suggested to City Attorney William A. Ewart yesterday at the opening of a trial that challenges the validity of Hangar’s promotion from lieutentant to inspector. Hanger la currently acting chief with the rank of Inspector. He was appointed inspector last December, a rank second only to that of chief. Judge Beer said that there is Two April OU Grads Head for Golombia Another phase in the Alliance for Progress program pairing Oakland County with the Call region of Colombia literally got off the ground today. Two April graduates of Oakland University departed by airplane for a year of study at the Univarsity of Valle In Cali. Selected last spring by a three-man cOnUhltteo, honor students, Marjorie Hannah, II, of 414 W. U Mite, Royal Oak, and Dennis Parle, tl, of 144 S. TUden, tom OU’s half at an exchange plan between the two universities. OU mid the South American university are Partners of the Alliance for Progress program conceived in 1963 after an exchange of delegations between Oakland County and the Cauca Valley in Colombia. ★ A A The student exchange will be completed this fall with the arrival of two University of Volte OU officials said Renato Fuchs and Amparo Castaneda will arrive here In time for the fall term. Mias Gutaieda la ■ third-year hmnanittes student, while Fuchs to a fourth-year elec- no legal objection to the action making Hanger acting chief. In stating that Hanger should bo designated police chief or not, Judge Beer said, . . not an in-between, shadowy thing referred to as an acting chief ef police.” City Manager Joseph A. Warren, who admitted he had talked to attorneys for two hours yesterday about the case, said he TiSff no wfifflSSir SB WC:' - ★ : A A- Filed in June by Pontiac police officers Lt. Raymond E. Meggitt, Capt. Donny Ashley end Capt. George T. Scott, the suit charges that competitive examinations for the inspector’s Job were not offered, which they claim is in violation of city personnel rules. ★ * * Setting Sept. 8 for resumption of the trial, if the issue has not been settled, Judge Beer said that his decision would determine if policies exist for promotion and discipline within the police department. Meantime, Miss Hannah, who faMivmLMr degree la teacher education mil continue her studies (n bar Spanish major. A history major at OU, Parle will study Latin American history, political science and philosophy during his stay in Colombia. Tuition scholarships and automatic admission to the Cafe university were arranged for the Alliance for Program students. .WWW No definite date has been set for the arrival of the Colombian students. Louis L. Lovette, 41, formerly f Alpena, succeeds Alexander G. Zaphiris, who resigned to accept a position in Denver, Colo. A graduate af Michigan State University and Western Michigan Ualversfty, Lovette has hern in social wwk since INI. He" holds a master , of social work degree from MSU, 1962. and master of arts degree from WMU, 1959. ★ it. it Lovette formerly headed the northeastern Michigan branch of the Children’s Aid Society. The ew director te married mm as one child. State Kiwanis Post Goes to Area Man George L. Stout, 4437 Forest, Waterford Township, has been elected lieutenant governor for the 5th Division of the Michigan District of Kiwanis. ★ A A Active In the Kiwanis organization for several yean, Stout is the Immediate past president of the Pontiac Kiwanis Chib, e e 4 His duties as lieutenant governor win require at toast two visits during ttie year to each of the 18 clubs in the division to keep members informed on state and national Kiwanis programs. City Locals Schools Slate Vote to Strike GM Members of UAW Local 594 at CMC Truck & Coach Division and Local 653 at Pontiac Motor Division have voted overwhelmingly in favor of a strike, It was reported today by loca union officials. The tabulation at GMC Truck showed 3,103 votes in favor of a strike and 147 votes against. Pontiac area public schools are dated to begin registering students for another sdiodl year this week and next, with parochial schools following suit the second week of September. Secondary pupils — junior and _ ... _______ senior high 4* new to Pontiac v#t“" PDPUg 6Cfiuett i m wMrim nil i 5.837 for »nH lil »»!».< ^ week New students Mid transfer pupils who did not register last spring can sign up until Friday, Sept. 4. j Students in grades 14 who are going to a new school this year may register Monday through Friday at next week. This would include students who are new to the Pontiac district or have moved within the district since June. ed 5,237 for and 344 against. -The balloting was conducted Monday and yesterday. Similar balloting is scheduled for completion tomorrow by Local 596 at Fisher Body. Hie strike vote, termed “pro-cautionary” by union officials, is being taken in case General Motors Is named the “target” company In a nationwide auto strike. Negotiations between UAW officiate and representatives of the three major auto companies for a new three-year contract currently are In recess. The present contract expires Monday. UAW President Waiter Reu-ther is expected to announce tonight which of the three companies will be struck if no settlement is reached by Monday. 'GOP Frontlash Worse Than Racial Backlash' ATLANTIC CITY (UPI) -Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman considers Republican “frontlash” a more potent force than racial “blacklash” in dermlning America's future. ‘The backlash deals with dvfi rights, but I consider that the frontlash Is the destructive reaction by (Sen. Barry) Goidwa-ter to the farm program and rural America,*' Freeman said in urging the South Dakota delegation to become rural Americana for Johnson. State Dems ip Row (Continued From Page One) compromise, if it could be called that, was tong, bitter and at times unruly. In the end, it passed 7640-35, and the fatigued delegates rushed for a snack before heading for the convention session due to begin. Former Governor John Swain-son and Democratic State Chair-led a fac- SCHOLLE FORCES They lost to the forces of Gus Scholto, Michigan AFLCIO resident. Michigan’s ientor senator, Pat McNamara; is chairman ef the delegation, and as such presides at the encases. He’s a man after my own heart — probably my own vote, too. He loathes excessive discussion. Verbosity irritates him, and as his irritation grows, verbosity diminishes. Pretty soon the caucus is over. There was an air of expectancy as the evening's excer-cises got under way at Grand Canyon, called by some “Convention HalL” The expectancy stemmed from the feeling that the Mis- tite fireworks of the convention — Just as civil rights racked jfee GOP convention. All was not sweetness and light. The credentials committee report was read and motion mitee for adoption. Somehow, members of the Mississippi Freedom party got into the hall, and sat down in the seats of the regular Mississippi delegates. TUG-OF-WAR A gentle tug-of-war began, and it looked like New Year’s Eve in a nightclub for awhile, with everyone in that area jammed together. ★ A | A The platform committee re- source of agitation for t h a s • who like things to proceed with order and dispatch—was also passed with nary a dis- Sen. Philip A. Hart, one of Michigan’s two members on the committee — read the concluding beettoh of the platform. A 1 a A Our own Neil Staebler was again honored — this time as the introducer of the permanent chairman of the convention -* Speaker of the House John W. McCormack of Massachusetts. GOOD JOB Hie chairman delivered the address of the evening, and did a good Job wanning over the castigation of the Republican party and extolment of the Democratic, that his predeces-sors at the rostrum had cookea up. I , \ ' ■ '' .A A ' A So endeth the second convention day. 1 Registration This Week and Next for Public System Two weeks, Aug. 31 to Sept. 14, remain to register kindergarten pupils. Registration is necessary only if a student was not registered last spring in the district’s annual kindergarten roundup. Registration for parochial (Continued on Page 2, .Col. S) schools in the (Pontiac area can be niade the first day of classes on Sept. I, according to the Archdiocese of Detroit. DOORrf OPEN Public schools in Pontiac open their doors for elementary grades, except kindergarten, on Sept. 9. 1 Secondary public school pupils have (heir first full day on Friday, Sept. 11. New students, including entering freshmen at the high schools, report on Sept. 10 for a day of orientation. Kindergarten classes b Safe- 14. Students at the * two schools in Waterford Township will register tomorrow through Tuesday of next week. Registrations for students at the two junior high schools will be taken Tuesday through Thursday next week. All elementary school pupils, including kindergarten youngsters and 7th graders at Grayson and Silver Laka School, will register the morn-top ef Sept. 9 and 19. Classes will begin Sept. 9 for all senior high students as wen as the 7th grade junior high pupils. Other junior high students will start class Sept. 16. ' All elementary school youngsters wUI begin classes Sept. 11. Teachers in Potptipc will report Sept. 8. They will .attend an assembly at Pontiac Northern High to the morning and report to their respective buildings to the afternoon. Trinity Lutheran School students register Sept 2 with classes beginning an Sept I. Emmanuel Christian School 16 and begin classes the Mowing day. However, kindergarten students begin the school year on Sept. 14. UAW Faced With Decision (Continued From Page One) termination notices on etch (her. Reuther has asserted that un-ess the companies sweeten an conomic offer they made a veek ago Monday there will be a strike agairtst at least one— tost when 1965 Inodeto are getting to dealer showrooms and when none wants to get left at the poet In a model-year sales {Birmingham Area Hews Rians Near Completion for Hall, Fire Station BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Plans now an bring completed for a new 6190,006 master fire station and 9N.600 addition to the township hall. Supervisor Homer Case and Clerk Mrs. Ddoris V. ........ have been authorized by the Township Board to advertise for bids on the two projects. "ane zxMHii hopwltso-struetkm could be started yet this year. Specifications on the fire station are bring prepared by Ta-rapata MacMahon Associates, Inc. of Bloomfield HIM A ★ A . Architects for the Township Hall addition are those who planned the original building, Swanson Associates lac. of Bloomfield Hills. FINAL PHASE The master fire, station, be constructed west of the h . wife be file final phase to the township’s fire /department building program/ The project was initiated seven years age with die approval ef a half-mill levy tor liyteti. Present stations are on East-over near Adams, Maple at Woodbank and Franklin at Square Lake Road. Headquarters are at the Township Hall. A A " A . The new station will provide room for six trades- The upper level wfll contain offices tor the fire chief, fire marshal and station officer. CONTROL CENTER There also will be a complete control center. “Eventually we ' tor the police and (be stations,” Case saM. Completing the upper level will be a day room, dining n kitchen, apparatus room, hose storage and repair shop, hole drying tower and 16-bed dormitory. A A • A Beneath these facilities will be the storage areas, mechanical repair shop and large meeting and instruction room. . TRAINING AREA Also planned is a blacktopped training area at the rear of the building. When the fire department’s master station is moved from the Township Hall, the police department will be enlarged and the courtroom moved downstairs. The 26-foot addition to the south side of the building will provide for enlargement of the supervisor’s, clerk’s and treasurer’s offices. BLOOMFIELD HILLS ~ Local police are seddng state help in till case of the sickly raccoons. That something is a good share of the city’s protected pests is a certainty, according to Cnpt. Walter Sluiter. “We’ve had to MB I « 16 af them to the tost week,” be said today. Shifter’s department has been receiving frequent calls about raccoons that Just won't be chased away from doorsteps- ..A A A, ’ J ! “We got two calls yesterday," be said. “The coons took sickly — like they were having a EAST SIDE Most of tfes reports, hi noted, have been coining from the least side of tbe dty. Last werit, 12-year-old Jeff Campbell of1 IN Canterbury was bitten by a raccoon and now Is receiving rabies antitoxin shots. A A A Police wore able to capture one of the raccoons alive yesterday. Today it was to be picked up fey a Michigan State Conservation Department officer and taken to the state health laboratory in Lansing fcg analysis. AAA Meanwhile, Sluiter warned residents to keep their distance from raccoons sod to notify police if they sight one. Chaancey M. Sanders Service f o r Chauncey M. Sanders, 74, of 2100 Woodward. Bloomfield Township will be 2: p.m. tomorrow at the Beebe Funeral Home, Ithaca. Burial will follow at Emerson Cemetery, Gratiot County. Mr. Sanders died’• yesterday, after a tong illness. He wu a retired horse trainer at the Fred Winegar Stables. Survivors are five daughters, Mrs. Chris Tmtooff, Mrs.,Truman Brady and Mrs. Ronal Wilson, all of Pontiac, Mrs. Map garet Briggs of Brackenridge and Mrs. Alfred Smith of Midland; three sons, Robert of Wheeler, JI.V. of St. Louis and Burton of Shepherd; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Two Honored for Service to Hospital Two retiring members of few board of directors of Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital were honored tost night wrtm a dinner at the Fox and Hounds Inn, Bloomy-field Hills. Feted tor their service were Harold W. Kruger, 4190 Midland, Waterford Township, and Harry Park of Detroit. Krager, a put president ri the beard, has served 16 years. Park is u eight-year Principal speaker for the occasion, Dr. Donald Fraser, pres* ident of the board of directors; praised Kruger and Park for their service to the hospital. • A A A They were presented wrist-watches as a token of appreciation. .A A i A . Dr. Donald Evans of Detroit has been appointed to fill one ri the board vacancies. The other appointment to yet to be an- Dens to Acclaim (Continued From Page One) probably tbe moat unpubUdzed walkout to history. GAINED ENTRANCE Five members of tin predominantly Negro Miaalsrippt Freedom Democratic Party gained entrance to the ball and sat down to tbe all - but - empty seats under the state’s banner, where they weren’t supposed to be. Pramptiy Jhe only three , members ri the all-white regulars wba had agreed to ga atopgwtik Jahuu—anlthu had bam seated — vanished to the crowd. A—8 TBfK PONTI AC l*RKS8. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 Changed U. S.' Prison System Renowned Pdnolog Retire WASHINGTON (AP) - Forty-five fears of government service ted this week for Junes V. Bennett, renowned penologist and director of the Bureau of Prisons -l a post he has held since 1037. The gentle, blue-eyed reformer who changed the shape of the American prison system while he strove to change the hearts of its inmates retires Friday bn his 70th birthday. i . it 'it He takes with him the gratitude of hundreds of convicts who found in Burnett more a humanitarian than a custodian. He saw the danger of idle hands and gave them useful jobs to do. A REMINDER He reminded them that they were still human beings by replacing lock-step- mess hall lines and bucket feedings with informal table arrangements. He befriended many and became an easy mark.for some who, out of prison, needed a small loan for a grubstake. ★ it it . ,“I think I can say modestly ‘that I’m leaving the federal prison system in as good condition as it’s ever been/* Bennett told a visitor to his pleasant office, with its picture-window view of Capitol HU1. “We've overcome a lot of JAMES V. BENNETT problems. Werve got a good program. Every prisoner who wants a job has a job. We’re running economically, and the Federal Prison Industries is turning out a good profit. Our personnel are well-trained and improving." A CONSULTANT Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy has said Bennett will continue to be a consultant to the Bureau of Prisons under its new director, Myrl E. Alexander, a former assistant director. Why didn’t he seek a waiver of the compulsory retirement age, such as President Johnson extended to FBI Director *J. Edgar Hoover’ h it -it “I believe a fellow ought to move on and give his juniors * chance," Bennett said. “Yen can’t hang on indefinitely. This is a hard administrative job: every day there's a crisis. I think perhaps it will be most useful If I trite my experiences and make them available to ethers.” ( Bennett is working on a book “dealing with the kinds of prisoners I’ve known, and their problems, and the general problems of trying to deal fairly with a defendant." MAY TAKE CASE Given enough free time, Bennett added, “I’m still a lawyer, and I might take on a case or two to help put across my point of view.” That print of view, which appears time and again in, Bennett’s prolific writings, is that prisons must not stop at being jails. in Negro Educator Death DANIELSVILLE, Ga. (UPI) — A grand jury in this rural Georgia county seat of 362 people yesterday indicted three tor-mar Ku Klux Klansmen for murder in the night - riding slaying of Negro educator Lemuel Penn. A judge said when their trials come tip, possibly next week, decorum , will, be so strict that he will tolerate no “chewing of Switch Site of lunar' Space Tests BEND, Ore. (AP) - Space scientists moved their simulated moon walk today to a field of volcanic ash, softer than the rode lava bed on which astro-* naut R. Walter Cunningham took a spill Tuesday. The rite had nothing to do with the fall, which neither injured Cunningham, nor surprised scientists. The schedule called for another rite change Thursday so engineers could measure man’s ability to perforin tasks on various surfaces believed to resemble the moon. ★ it * The ash on which the National Aeronautics and Space Administration team worked today was spewed from Mt. Mazama more than 7,060 years ago. It lies in a great blanket over a remote area SO miles south of the central Oregon town ,of Bend. Ltghtaokred cinder pumice is piled more than 00 feet deep in some spots. QUITE A JOB f Cunningham found out Tuesday that climbing a 50-foot dope at an angle of 30 degrees is quite a job for a man burdened by a pressurized space suit and a 30-pound back pack. . After seven minutes of careful stepping over the jutting uneven lava he had moved to within 10 feet of the top, then be lost his balance and fell backward. 1r ' ♦ * . Cunningham was not hurt, although a glore puncture caused a slight pressure loss in the suit. After complaining that his space mask was foggy end that a walking staff did not help mud) he climbed to the top. it it it Engineers then moved the tests to another field where Cunningham had no trouble with a 20-degree slope, a 600-foot walk and a test of the baby walker, a mechanical device that surrounds the astronaut and aids his balance. -barge Viet Violation 'HNOMPENH, Cambodia P)—The Cambodian Press mey charged today that ee South Vietnamese planes lated Cambodian territory g. n. The planes flew oyer a »rd post, the agency said. gum or chewing of tobaceo,' drinking of soft drinks or eating peanuts" in the courtroom. Courthouse source* said Negroes are on the joy lists. Named in the Indictments nts interned yesterday after f our hours of deliberations were Cecil William Myers, 23, James Lackey, 29, and Joseph Howard Sims, 41, all of nearby Athens, Ga. • it '1c it A f o u r t h suspect, Herbert Guest, 37, was not Guest was listed as a conspirator in the slaying in the original FBI civil rights warrant under which the four were arrested. FEDERAL CHARGE Solicitor General (prosecutor) Clete Johnson said no case against Guest , was presented to the grand jury. Guest is being held under $25,000 bond on a federal charge. Penn, of Washington, D.C., was killed by a blast from a shotgun fired from an automobile as he aad two Negro companions drove along a highway in the early morning darkness of July 11 eu rente to Washington from a training stint as Army Reserve officers at Fort Bearing, Ga. Pena, held the rank of lieutenant colonel. Johnson said last night that “all trial cases will be called next week and the calendar set after we hear pleas." ♦ * * A court - appointed attorney for Lackey, John W. Williford, said yesterday he intended to file a federal suit to keep FBI agents from appearing at the trial. He contended that such an appearance would violate the civil rights of his client. ■NO MERIT Johnson said he didn’t think much of that. “I think the suit has no merit,” he said. President Johnson ordered FBI agents into the investigation of Penn’s murder, and the four former Klansmen were arrested on Aug. 6. They were charged under the civil rights law, but the State of Georgia subsequently filed state charges against the four and federal authorities agreed to hold up their plans for prosecution. Sr .★ h The FBI described all four ten as members of the Ku Kbi t Klan when they were arrested, but the Klan later disowned them. He speaks with the authority of long years of service in the field. The son of a minister, he was born Aug. 28,1603 in SllVfer Creek, N.Y., and was graduated from Brown University in 1918. The following year he entered government service as an assistant investigator of government efficiency. DRAFTS REFORM Working with a congressional investigation of federal, prisons in 1920, he drafted the reform legislation which set up the Bureau of Prisons as a brand) of the Justice Department. He was named assistant director when the bureau was established in 41930. He instituted Federal Prison Industries, Inc., an inmate-staffed organisation which yielded sales of $40 million last year alone. He was in charge of that until he became director of the bureau of prisons in 1937. “No man is ever really satisfied with the job he’s done, Bennett said. “There are always new things to do. But I leave with no regrets." State Income, Outgo LANSING (AP) - State Treasury income during the past week was $59 million and outgo was $88.2 million. The treasury balance at the end of the week was $148.3 million. fDOWNTOWN (MADE FRI.AU6.Z8 L 8RM. . liteiMi . .JM» AUG IMffr 7 TIRED I of your kitchen? KITCHENS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND! FONTIAO KITCHEN SPECIALTIES 334-0129—917 Orchard Lake Ava* 2 blks L af TaL; TOMORROW Only 12N00N’til 9 P.M. At SIMMS ( TERRIFIC $AVING$ DURING ALL ‘DOLLAR SALE’ Prices Good For Tomorrow Only Here At SIMMS! And wo reserve the right to limit quantities —sail prices subject N stock on hand. Sorry —'no mail or phone order* at these tow prices I SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Faamue Had Label’ Make Back-to-School BINDER-PAPER t BALL PEN MEN’S T-SHIRTS 100 America's most famous make In T-Shirts . . . while cotton with reinforced pnack, won't stretch out of shone. Size* S-M XL. \ 1st Quality •BALLSTON* I ATHLETIC SOXS , if $1.83 4 A Value 100 Galvanized Pails 2*”1 e 4 nri1 Si Got 3-rlng conns 1 tindor 5 holo 1 1 75c vloue — brge 10-quort water poils with hondy bale hondle. Mot J dipped galvanised to reM rust. Limit 2 per pereon (Each 59c) | LOOK For Many Un-Advertised Specials Plus BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIALS! Many ijjms not being advertised because of limited quantities — but are cut below regular retail price*. Hurry-bring a friend and neighbor to share in the savings too. 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS 100 97c value - 50% wool end 50% f nylon socks with striped crew tops. Re- L inforced heel and toe. Sizes 9 to 12. T Perfect lor gym. Boys’ Whipcord $389 value - first totality leans In color ’Whipcord in Western styling. Sizes * or 10 ot Jeans 1 1 Sanforized nan-shrink I sly. American mode. |00i Boys’ ooFur Sweatshirt $1.76 volue 4 let quality sweatshirts, fleece fining for warmth, live I color only in sisal small and medium. American made. . i00 Men’s S Sweatshirts ’JOO Choice of A POPULAR CIGARETTES Hardwood Tpilet Seats 900 and hinges. Fite standard bowls. Limit 2. Hat quality. I Transmission Fluid-4 fluid tor eon. Mlxee 0 m. 400 f Steam ’n Dry Iran ® 8 _ aoo ' Tf??qul5n of H'.M-W I General Electric iron (or steam | or dry ironing of most all fab-I rics. Full factory guaranteed. Bungalow DRIKOTE ^“"Paints 2“*5 00 Choice of White Latex Paint or White Mellow-l full gallon cans. L,)aiit Men’s S Sport Shirts 1 | $2.77 yohm—washable oil cotton In white only. Breast pocket, action 1 i sleeve, stay-in-toils. Sizes s-m;l. ' J ml | Boys’ 3-Pc. Pajamas 8 $2.49 value — eat with putl-over tope, short and long bottoms. Emboe* 1 1 led cotton in oaeorted prints. Machine washable in site 4-6-8-J 2. , J 1001 Famous 'BHAPSODY' 6-TRANSISTOR Pocket Radio $9.95 COO Value O Propane Gas Tanks >100 rubber Csr Mats [ 2-piece rubber floor moN for the front floor boards of your cor. Pro* | PTi tacts carpeting and floon. Limited color selection. ItinO 2 pr. 1 0D Plastic "stlowis’ Curtains M.98 Value—5-gauge vinyl t 1 00 HI Main Floor CLOTHING DEPARTMENT 1 Ladies’Nylons 4 Pr. 1 | American 1st quality-in 60/15 dark learn and sell seams. 4 shades to 1 choose from In sites 8V% to l i.Umit4 poir perporeon. . ,00 1 Dresses-Cullottes-Ski rts I Values to M.«5-dreeses In capons, acatolet, slit 8 to U, skirts In 1 & tweeds, acetates, cartons in full or.straight slytos size • to 1*. . t-vnulnisTos Radio Batteries 5 Jsr 1®® nported radio batteries Will fit • 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS Golf Balls 4 for 100 .Mb w*h tssiM Mes Included to swW (roup. tdsol ■t>toctl<(itfr'WlWi-fcuyWI>wwpii>«t)(il>prios. t 4 for ^ 00 [jfl 1 Mixing Bowl-2 -| 00 Molten oil otoinloM otool mining bowti ore easier to tek« cere of — Won? tarnish, rust, chip or potl. Limit .2 bowls per peroon. Ladies’ sup CHAIR Seat& Back Pad *| 00 Children’s Swim Suits 100 dm out of velum to *2.<9 rnHwi. ertoeh nylon suhs for glrltlnas- B sorted color,. Sizes 2 to 6k. Buy lor next y$ar now. Girls’Sports Wear 2-100 One table of shorts, pedal pusher* toppers end lee-shlrls. Assorted B styles and color* to choose from In dips 3 to 4x for girls. H Boys’Lined Jackets 100 Zipper (reel iochets hi green only. Ideal for school wearing. Washable. I fabric end lining. Sizes 5 to 6 only. *2.90 mine. Bi Children's Anklets-10 •» 100 DRUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS Children’s Vitamins—100’s 13.00 vfut — Fruit flavored 'Tosty-VHe* chewable vitamins Large Hair Spray 2 *”100 Jeris Hair Needs lodent Toothpaste 3-100 Ragulor 69c aim tuba* of lodant Toothposte — mode by a dentist for ' H cleaner, brighter teeth in odultt and yteungriera«Uriiit Ah Nestles Shampoos 3* Regular $1 size.of 8 ounce*-choice of Eg& Lemon Of Nescurljham| ...there's shampoo for you in thfe group. ^roNSi Children’s Permanents 100 SI.75 volue—children's hjm. penhottnnU by Toni 'TanePt' or lilts B ‘rintyCurr. Soeoey to use In the home, limp 2 per person, ,_Bi Cream Deodorants 3<«1 00 Dry Skin Bath Oil Z-SInllStMl Utility Tallies. 2?* 'S!?1 ¥ to plug, 2-shoH, onomsl linitoM steal for forint. M . *.. i Q.nufns IZOS Make KITCHEN GADGETS Choice Of con oponort, knlfo shorpon-ers, lodles, spoons. • tomato lUeorr and many othar kite ban gadgets. No Plastic Food Boxes-6 *” *i 00 gowf Brush & Holder 100 tothiooei. . B Drip proof and rustproof. Artorlsd colors. Ill Main Floor SUNDRY DISCOUNTS MUQu^Cigars-Box 50 R00 $6.25 bow of 50 R. O. Owe cigar* glue a 25c softy cigar holder in-flL^V eluded. Bouquet is the regular 2 for 25c eiza cigar. Tom included. | ‘BIG BEN' Alarm Clock | U $7.98 value—amort 'Big Ben’ olorm clocks by Weridot In Mock or ML 1 { bory caso. Model 10001 with foctory guorontee. Plus 10% fed. to*, rei }00l r j 3-Turret Microscope ( 1 *14 95 volue—200 ms sikrescopp wMi 3 tenets for 50l to 750.^ ji power.completewHheonylnjcoseIdealforpudents. |00 I POLAROID Sun Glasses 2^1 1 jl $1.98 value—choke of Jodies medium eiso cRp-on's or lodiet email 1 (j^ size sun glasses. Limit 2 per customer. • ' .j * | 100 2 5-Year Diary i KB *1.73 vplua-4et Inch dleryIp heego recorderyeerde»ye»perleecee 1 FI far 5 yean, leatherette In assarted colars. Kay Included. 100 1 Clothes Lint Roller ■ 1 Compare $1 JO—receive the Dm roller wPh a 50c refill Tokee hat 1 1 off dtohlng polity. UnHt 3 deals per pareaa. | joo SIMMSJE 98 N. SAGINAW ST. tgaam pi Shop Waite's Thursday, Friday and Saturday till 9 P.M. Boys' Admire the Bright Colors of Health Tet® m SPECIAL SALE i “I raised my camera and be (one of the Beatles) saw me. He had a glass In his hand. ‘Oh, that’s the one,’ he said, as he hurled the contents of the glass at me," the photographer said. Health-tex* ■ Mo Money SAQA95 Jgmm * Bm 71RIw/tw. Vmi' COMPARE AT <400°° OR MORE ENDS WEEK the Southern California visit culminated a week of hectic appearances which began in San Francisco. Then the Beatles mnwn1. to Ua JVcgaa. Seattle. Wash., Vancouver, B.C. and Los Angeles. a w a Still ahead were such dties as Denver, New York, Chicago, Dallas and Montreal and Toronto in Canada. Health^ SYLVAN STEREO & TV SALES The number of red-haired orangutans of Bomel and Sumatra now is less than 5,000. 2.99 Value -T3 THE PONTIAC- PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUWST 26, 190* Downtown Pontiac ^. . Teen Bgrigle Bracelets Regular 1.00 7jc Jingle, Jangle, lots of flosh with a light price. Many different stylet to choose from In geld end silver; Charge Yours. Jewelry,. .'Street Floor A Md Is 141AM. MLS7-47fc part of a year. Most docks now set aside l-86,#0th ef a day Yott lor LA Sighs Relief as Beatles Depart LYNN D. * ALLEN tile l*M oSwa Cieety P PPR||El HHi Dtotrtef STATE SENATOR Qwliassnis t* Your Sappoit LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Today ww D-day tm the British Beatles. They dspert for Dn-ver, and hundreds of eshwated law caforoanant officers and breathed a collective sigh of relief. The mop-topped entertainers capped a wild appearance in Hollywood Bowl before 18,700 of rest at a “secret” Bel Air Bat the “secret” get oat aad for the flaal U hears ef their alar * Southern California, teeiiagrd fans turned swash Bel Air tale a gigantic ptay- Three of the Beatles visited a nightclub last night in the company of a blonde believed to be adreas Jayne Mansfield. ♦ ★ * Fans lifted the Beatles bodQy above their heads and passed them over the crowd to % corner booth where they immediately were engulfed by edmir era., UNHAPPY SITUATION The Beatles couldn’t see the show and became unhappy with the situation. They also asked that photographers refrain from taking too many pictures. One photographer, a sheriffs deputy and actress Mamie Van Daren aaaertedly were sprayed by liquid from a glass allegedly wielded by •ae ef the irate Britons. el girts pkyiag Just Hi time tor bock to campus savings. Choose from pullovars or cardigan styles Hi tollds, and novalty. patterns. Wool*, wool blends and 100% Orton*. AH firm quality. Sin* S-M-l-XL Charga Your*. Similar to ptefcree. Men's Wear... Strsst flear Boys* Washable Sport Shirts Wide Assortment’to Choose From Fall Dresses Siftei 3 to fit 'Sizes 7 lo 14 Subteen Slits $299 $399 .48" Others to 7.99 _ Others, to 10.99 3 Others to'14.99 WWW aisortmsnf of A-llnos, Drop weWi, shirt wabll, coat stylo* . lumper dresses and step-ins. Fabrics at corduroy, cotton, rayons, .orions, and rayon blends. Assorted solids, florals, novelties ond plaids. Loce and embroidery trims. Charge Yours.. ChUdrw/i Wear... Second Floor • Boys' .Polished Cotton Slacks ,S™$299h-2*.$359 100% combed codon stocks qre Son-forixed washabl*. IHde or no boning.. •• Choose from Mack, olive, tan or antelope. Sixes A to 30. Says' Wear... Second Hear Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings 'HI 9 2MI Orchard Lake Reed (Sylvan Center) Phene 412-0199 Choose IrgnSbullen down or cdswerffble jteltor Oyfcn. Ivy's woven-pWdfc checks and' seMs. Cs.epbtsty ssesk eed mar. Wide osiartnient to cheesS tromShneS told. •ays'Wear.. Second .Floor Shop Waite's Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Nit& 'Til 9 Sweater Sale! Save Up To $8tf7 Regularly 12.95 to 17.95 Schools Set Times of Physical Exams Downtown Pontiac With regular practice sessions permitted to start Monday for state, high school football teams, area coaches are busy prepar- vwwiw wuajr ing for the comtag season. Many teams will be bonding out equipment and uniforms, tod several have physical examinations scheduled this week for fall sports participants. Waterford Township High! School will have health checkups at 1 p.m. Thursday for all football candidates and cross country /toners. "Cosmopolitans" Hues of Autumn The gridders at Bloomfield Hills High School are requested to report Friday morning for equipment distribution and physicals. Seniors will be taken at 9 a.m., juniors at 10 a.UL and sophomores at 11 a.m. Qome In today for dll those bock to comput needs. Zephyr Suede and crowfoot tweed separate* with blouses and sweaters dyed to match. Choose from Cinnamon Stick and Storm blue. Sims 8 to 18. Charge oil your Purchases. STOWAWAY IN CHAINS - Vuseyin Tunay,. 16-year-old Turkish stowaway, is handcuffed and chained to deck of American freighter which docked at Baltimore yesterday. Longshoremen unloading the freighter protested the youth's not being allowed to go ashore. He was believed to have boarded the ship at Izmir, Turkey. ' . , A national aquarium is to be built on the Potomac River that will show aquatic life of a 11 kinds from the Continental Divide to the depths of the ocean. LAST CHANCE FAMOUS SPRINGMAID SHEETS' with SPRING-ON com.re in both muslin and porcalo fitted bottom sheets! Back-To-School Handbags Fmr*0 SHEET Spring-On’ SPRINGMAID PERCALES SPRINGMAID MUSLINS BMutiful assortment of back to school hond-bags. Chooio from shoulder itropi, top hahdles and <;lutch bags. AN the new.it fall colors and materlois. Chorgo Yours. Newest Styles and Colors Ladies' Hats. Reg. 3.19 Doublo Size....... Reg. 1.50 pr.'Coses.... Rag. 2.99 .Twin Fitted Bottom,.. Reg. 3.19 Doublo Fitted Bottom Reg. 2.69. Double Size ..... Reg. 1.20 pr. Cases ........ Reg. 2.49 Twin Fitted Bottom . Reg. 2.69 Double Fitted Bottom PLUS Other Sizesl Rose Printsl Echotones! Pastels! All on Sotel 10.98 $C90 Valve J Wide selection of the newest styles to choose from. Assorted colors. Shop earlyl Millinery Dspt... Fitted Mattress Pads Twin Size M Sis* R»g. 4.99 Reg. j,99 ' $399 $499 Mattress Toppers tog. 10.99 tog. 12.99 Twin Site Ml Site *6" *8” BELLEAIR BATH RUGS 24" ltd. 2txto* Contour 27*41" $2.99 $3.99 $3.99 $6.99 ROYALTY RUGS J|x»* ,24x42* 27448* aid Cow $2.99 $4.99 $5.99 $1.99 Dacron Filled COMFORTERS Fashions Contribution to Casual Shoes Mart ex "Westminster,' TOWELS • »». Rog. 1.29 Hond Towol Hog. 49c Nngortip... Regularly 6.99 and 7.99 Down, Dacron, Foam Rubber Smooth or "Moeco Crocco" leathers in deep rich autumn colors, with the softness and fine fit you'd expect from a hpndsewn shoe. Choose from block, brown, red, burgundy and bronze waxhide. Sizes 5-10 NAM widths. Not all colors in all sizes. Charge Yours. Women's Shoes ... Street floor PILLOWS or 2 ter $10.00 MARTEX "MARGUERITE'1 Reg. fwlmd.......... Reg. 59c W. doth..... CALLAWAY MISTY ROSE tog. 1.99 A Towel- tog. 1.39 K W........... • tog.59cty.CMi... BeUeair Acrilan® Blanket 'Bonded Orion" Knit Suits CONCORD HEIRLOOM BATES® BEDSPREADS "Safari" Bunk \ ' A > p, Twin or Ml ▼A'' tog. $7.99 \ - jy ’ "Piping Rcw*1 tog. 1099Twin Sin toe- WtyM ft $8W *9*? Charge Your* BEDSPREADS "Ponded Orion" Basic 2-fle. knit suit of Orion acrylic. Suit feature* collared neck, slim skirt with elastic waist bond. Blue, Greenor Block. Sizes 10 k>20.14Vito22ty. Dr«Mi . I . Third had* TVS :r'-n m; i,..'M.M • ai•\ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 A t9 i Wx THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST M, 1994 HAROLD A. nTTOKRALD PrMtdrat Ud PublUbcr iMMlf IM AdwrttalBf I Imr 1. ftm Circulation Manaftr 1 Robert Y. Moore • Robert Y. Moore, who died Sun-~ day, could properly be termed Mr. ^Oakland County. He had spent more "than half hie life jin the service of 1 WtKk’ -his County. His 1 -years of devoted j §L service had been most productive in the growth Df Oakland County. m ^ It can be said that Mr. Moons was a successful Mil MOORE man In all the ways one can thlnYof ★ fir ★ As a member of the County ; Board of Auditora for 34 yean ! and as chairman of the board for | 24 years, he was responsible for ‘ the outstanding financial post* tion of our County. He had a well developed business sense, but never allowed any selfish interest to interfere with what he took to be the right policy to support. Above all he was loved by his friends and associates. He created the impression -of iTisi4s^,’v"v" ★ fir ★ ' ^ ■* Robert Young Moore had received many formal honors, but the real honor that he earned in his 78 years was universal respect from his associates. His passing leaves us poorer, but his career should be an inspiration to everyone. for three months. Water rationing, mild at find but increasingly severe, did little to plug the drain. By last week, there were only 4.8 million tons of water left — 1ms than a normal two-days’ consumption. fir ★ fir Hut heroic efforts are being exerted to keep the Olympics from being a dry run. J*wo new canals to bring in more‘than 1.3 million tons of wa-, ter daily from nearby rivers will be operative within weeks, and crews are frantically drilling four emergency artesian wells at the supermodem Olympic Village. - ★ fir ' fir Japanese Self-Defense Force planes carrying dry ice have been assaulting every vagrant cloud in hopes of loosing a little desperately needed rain. And a Shinto priest in the mask of a scarlet lion writhed through a ceremonial dance, praying to the gods for rain. The Olympic gods, no doubt. Let’s Pet the Pets— Not the Children It’s no news, of course, that a *' ;’s life—once conslderedfi^tanadir existenceis something that many a man should have as good as. Does a French Poodle have tes worry about making his sales' quota or mooting the payments on the family car or putting Junior through school? ★ dr ★ For that matter, have you ever heard of any Siamese cats cracking up from overwork? And now ifity aay that there are 750,000 pet monkey* in-Jlie United States — all of them no doubt living just as poshly as the pet dogs and pet cats. Before we grow morose over this, let’s hang on grimly to the brighter side. ★ ★ It seems to be the nature of people to spoil those they love. And if this tendency can be confined to animal pets, maybe there will be fewer spoiled children. So let’s keep on with the pet monkey business, go to the dogs with our excess indulgence and give the kids a chance to grow up unspoiled. This will please everybody but the kids. Japs in Deep Trouble-Water Supply a Trickle When five years ago Tokyo successfully bid for the 1964 Olympic Games, it is improbable that the city listed Water as, cme of its attractions. Doesn’t every city have water? Well, it looks as though the Nipponese metropolis will be hard pot to hoop itself in that vital element as the games get wider wsy eight weeks hence. Fbr the world’s largest city (10.6 million) has been drying up. ‘ y % ★ ★ * Taxed by an exploding population, deteriorating water mains and an unprecedented lack of rainfall, the dty’s reservoirs have been emptying Platform. Speech ShowDem By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - The Democrats have laid down, in a speech and a platform, the main lines tiny will pursue in the 1964 campaign. But the platform showed the controlling hand of President Johnson, even tl tough he was etUl in Washington, as much by what it left unsaid as by what it pinpointed. It’s a compromise document plainly intended to prevent party.-shattering m . _ - nSgZ, city-dwellers pr farmers. The platform was finished late Monday. The speech was by 8en. John O. Pastore of Rhode Island, who made the keynote address at the opening session of the Democratic convention Monday night. Yet, the very conscious, and apparently successful search for harmony here is going to make the^ Democrats’ get-together even duller than lari month’s Republican convention, where the forces of Sen. Barry Gold water completely dominated the show. ★ ★ ★ Here are those main lines voters can expect the Democrats/o follow: 1. Americans never had It so good, and were never militarily so strong, as under the Kennedy-Johnson administrations. The Democrats claim the longest and strongest peacetime prosperity in our history. PERSISTENT DEM TARGET 2. Extremism will be a persistent Democratic target. The platform condemned ft, specifically naming the Communist party, die Ku Kiax Klan and the Jabs Birch Saclety. Pasture sakl the Republicaas have been taken ever by reaettasaries and extremists. The Republican platform avoided repudiating extremism and, while Goldwater later said he did not want the support of the Ku Kiux Klan, he-did not do the same about the Birchttei. ★ fir ★ 1 The platform promised new programs — such as expanded aid to education and broader health facilities, to name a couple — which would mean even broader participation of the federal government In American life. BASICALLY DIFFERENT V The Republican platform promised some new programs, too, but because of its heavy emphasis on less government help and participation it is basically different from the Democratic document. It was oa some very sore subjects that the Democratic platform was most cautious. For Instance, civil rights. It promised “fair, effective enforcement” of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This is the legst it could do without alienating Negroes and Northern liberals. Because it- was a minimum, it would not infuriate the South, fir dr • The best evidence that this was the language of political compromise is that Northern and Southern members of the Platform Committee acclaimed their work, as a , “unity” platform and a winner in November. Verbal Orchids to - Mr. and Mrs. Jake Halbert *f of Snover; golden wedding anniversary. Off Arid Running: Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Unmarked Cars Punitive --- Tha Motor Atoms Unmarked police cars, assigned to traffic enforcement have been branded punitive rather than protective by Russell Singer, AAA executive vice president. He called well-marked patrol cars “living safe-. ty posters,” and described them as one of the most effective deterrents to traffic violations. Singer admitted there are some drivers who are potential killers, but he noted there are also kill- er roads, killer traffic laws, killer signs, signals and markings which do not conform to uniform standards and which contribute dlroctiy to accidents. We -thoroughly agree with that and with his further comments calling for more research into basic causes of highway mishaps. True The Construction Digest The home may lose popularity, but there never will beSs substitute as a satisfactory place to eat com-on-the-cob. Bob Considine Says: Recall Lead by if the Reporting Gets Dull Wrong Idea of Cuba -— -----FHnf Journal ,. The Canadians must triva short memories. Our eye was caught the other day by editorial comment in the Toronto Globe and Mail anent the United States’ attitude on Cuba and the threat qf a Communist dominated government within 90 miles of our shores. • ★ * * ' The Globe and Mail said in part: •“What farm of government Cube has b Cuba’s basinets. That b one of the cardinal rules on which the United States rests, and it cannot be United States has a pho ah but communism in I the Democratic ild recall Louella I ATLANTIC CITY - Pundits and other sensation • seeking columnists and commentators now struggling to wring a startling fact out of the foregone conclusions of the Democratic convention should recall Louella Parsons’ disarming pro-nouncement at the Republican convention of 20 years ago. Miss Parsons remained magnificently aloof from the ideological and philosophical shot CONSIDINE and shell of that conclave. She was studiously deaf to the shouts that FDR must go, that he was prolonging the war to preserve hb dictatorship, that Tom Dewey must prevail, despite hb mustache. * * * She summed things up neatly in the first sentence qf one of her in-depth reporting jobs. Lolly’s story began: “CONVENTION HALL, CHICAGO, July 24 - (INS) - My ^feet hurt.” Perle Mesta is undergoing a bombardment all but as intense as that which her niece, Pearl Harbor, once underwent. Calls from all over the U.S. and parts of Europe are coming into tile hostess’s Claridge Hotel command post, pleading for ' invitations to one or more of the string of parties she has scheduled during the Johnson coronation period. If she okayed all the appli-. cants, she’d have to hold each bacchanal in Convention Hall, which can hold the entire population of Atlantic City (M,-III). The Johnson family’s unleashing of Perle, who was restricted to dinners for two during the Kennedy years, is the biggest news since her friend President Eisenhower unleashed Chiang Kai-shek. The main difference b that it has suddenly involved more mouths to feed. Die most famous boardwalk (or broad walk) in the world was constructed here in 1170 at the suggestion of a local innkeeper who was rick and tired of patrons dragging sand into his lobby as they came from the beach. The boardwalk, ha figured, would knock it off on route. Dm fbri wsk, seeardfog fo historian Diane MresMarg writing b «M cwreat “Ualted KatsMsar,” was twe t bat asiy 19 fact ft. Now it b 99 foot wide, 9Vfc miles long, and has restraining barriers. Costs 1200,000 a year to harvest the splinters. * ★ * • The old boardwalk used to be unhinged and taken indoors during the rough winter months. The present one b a year-around phenomenon and’top lure of it,000,000 annual visitors. Salt water taffy, which is gumming up the plates of countless thousands of Democrats this week, thus cutting down sorely on the lengths of speeches, isn’t made of salt water. Seems that half a century or so ago a taffy puller’s wares were impaired by sea spray drifting into hb shop. ★ ★ A He advertised a bargain sale to rid hb shelves of what he called “salt water” taffy. Name stuck. So does the taffy. Die Globe and Mail should know that our feeling about communism b no phobia but rather an awareness of the great threat communism poses to our way of life. A A A The -Globe and Mail should remember, too, that not too many yean ago, Canada was rocked by the famous Gouaenko spy case in which Canadian and United States secret atomic energy and radio-location data were stolen and turned over to Russian Communist agents. The dbebrare at lafiftratfea ef spies working for foe Com-* moists se recked the Canadian government that a royal commbsba was appelated to investigate. Its report was a lengthy document revealing wide activftity of (plea and agents working for the Ras-«(an Communists. We wonder if the Globe and Mail at that time pooh-poohed the efforts of the Canadian government to solve the Gouzenko case as a Canadian “phobia about Communist activity.” A A A We doubt it Voice of the People: ^ i Says Lets Clean Downtown Rest Rooms Residents should go to some of the downtown stores’ restrooms and see the handiwork of some of our fair dty’s brats! Hbw they put lipstick on the ceiling, FU never know, but it is a mess! Let’s dean up our rest rooms. They’re our responsibility. ANONYMOUS ‘Released Dog: on Approval; Got Took* A man came to look at my dog after reading the ed in the paper. He asked to trike the dog home to see how his family liked it. He gave me |5 and a name and telephone number and promised to return the dog that night if not satisfied. He didn’t come bade and the telephone number was not hb. I’m out $45. fir ... ★ ★ Don’t be cheated ai I was if you’re selling a dog. Don’t let ft ge uatil you have the mosey. Fas a loser, bat I’4 like to protect ethers who might face this situation. ' ONE WHO WAS GYPPED ‘Why Just Talk? Let’s Do Something:?* Why do Waterford Township residents sit by and let a handful of Lake Oakland Heights residents carry the foil load? Instead of just talking about the political situation, why don’t they do something about it and elect responsible and dedicated people? STEVEN WAYNE MAXWELL WATERFORD ‘Squirrels No Bother; Starlings Are* A VOP letter writer complained about squirrels. We have no trouble with them, but wr certainly are bothered by the starlings. We had to tear down six nests this year because the starlings wouldn’t let another bird inihe yard. DISGUSTED Criticizes Picture of ‘Hanging* Barry Have always been phsaed-to have Die Pontiac Press seen in my home, but why that terrible, ugly picture of a hanging man on the front page? You say ft* b trick photography, but my boys, 10 and 11, can’t agree because they believe in pictures. Let’s keep ugliness off the foont page where children eee it. MRS. ROBERT HILL LAKE ORION Some Parks DO Have Electric Stoves I had to laugh at the letter which stated that “the next thing people will want are electric stoves in the parks.’’ Well, some state puts near Portland, Ore., already have them. They contain four units and an electric outlet. fir ★ ★ ■ I can agree with “A Hardy One’’ that a little Ume or lye would help the outdoor real rooms, but on the other hand, I’ve been in many modern once that were just as dirty. ' fir ' fir- - & Our taxes go to pay people who try . to keep the parks and facilities up, but we all have to do mu* part, too. MRS. CLYDE BARNES 214 W. RUNDELL ‘Majority Auto Workers Are Satisfied’ The i e companies have made handsome profib because the customers have indicated at the rate of 25,000 per day that they ere satisfied with the product and price. Dib adds up to approximately 7.5 million yea votes, against a handful of nay votes of disgruntled labor leaders who have overestimated their ability to perform and face a showdown. ★ fir ★ Working conditions are a continuous subject for stady and adjustment Financially, the auto workers are among tike highest paid grasp to file world. The majority ef Am rank aid ffie of tbe aaions are satisfied with the present wage rates to addition to the other benefits being proffered. J. D. S. ‘Spend Wisely; Send Athlete to Japan’ Why doesn’t President Johnson put some of the money he’s spending on pens into something a little mare useful such a an athlete to Japan tor the Olympics? B. RAYMOND LAKE ORION Names Roll In for Renaming New Road I think the new perimeter road should be named after our late President. Let’s call it the Kennedy Trail. MRS. D. HALL 141S. PADDOCK Good Idea The Baltimore Sun Personnel man to trainee: “Or if you 'prefer, you may elect to skip coflee breaks entirely and retire three years early” The Better Half “Yea can just take back year old gas—there’s M | ii the ladies room!” / :g The perimeter road wasn’t a bad name for our new road. Others might be Wbner Road, . Lynch, Knudsen, Estes Road, but please not an advertising slogan, gone in another year, as “Wide Dock” will be. MISS ADAH SHELLY 151 WASHINGTON ‘Quit Blaming Car Accidents on Youth* It’s time adulb stopped criticizing teen-age drivers and realize that there are just as many, if not more, adulb involved in accidents. I was prompted to write following the recent accident where a Lake Orion boy was killed on I-7S when a lady (in adult) was going down the road on the wrong ride and had bean for three Wake Mb America, and realise you’re 1 agers for something the adnfts are equally guilty for. A DISGUSTED DRIVER ‘What Can Be Done to Improve TV?* I can hardly wait to see what idiocy the tefovbion networks will present this fall. Since they have Ignored the average intelligent American’s taste for the past years, I don’t expect My better viewing. Even if a program designed above the IQ of 14 Were to make the screens, the present rating system would have it off in two shows. Is there anything ‘the average viewer can do to improve tiie quality of television programming? THE NAUSEATED KID I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 A—7 ROME (AP)—Luigi Longo, a veteran Communist leader, today formally succeeded the late ■palmlro Togliatti aa secretary-general of the Italian Commu-nlst party. As expected, the party elected Longo at a dosed meeting on the morning after Togliattl’i funeral. Longo, 64, became Togllatti’s deputy after World War n and helped him organize the West’s largest Communist party. Togliatti died Friday. In addition, Hendershott makes “movies” of school bus operation. The films show ordinary bus operation, desirable and undesirable safety practices and even role playing with a script, {dot and actors. He transportation consultant said the effect Is similar to a football coach showing movies ef the last game. Next on the list of efforts to improve bus driving is experimental use of a movie camera mounted on a bus in take pictures of the bus route as well as pupil behavior. Oakland County has SS2 bus drivers. More than half of these j drivers are women, and 60 per' cent are part-time employes of their school district. Hendershott feels this does not detract from the need for quality individuals. “We recognise that the quality of the bus driver determines the effectiveness of cur training program,” he said. Other subject matter taught includes the psychology of safety, emergencies and responses, defensive driving and human relations. ' Formal education for bus drivers is not new, according to Hendershott. It was established in 1850 in Michigan by the field services departments of state colleges. However, Oakland County began its own program, in 1860. ■Hi EWHEN? gmsfflp Nnsisaafi WAVS FIRST QUALITY * / BUS MOVIE - Edwin J. Hendershott, transportation consultant for Oakland Schools, takes movies to be used in classes for bus drivers. Equipped with camera, Hendershott takes films of school buses in action. Later, the films are used in the county-run courses of driver ipstruction. SUMMER TURE SALE tfbing Included Except A Few Price-Established Items 29 YEARS ATTORNEY cotton corduroy ...all set with cotton shirts! Jumper sets or suit-able ensembles.. . all mix and match many different ways ... all gear to campus and career life. Lush, plush mla-wale cotton corduroy for o smart start! And cotton in the zippiest checks and stripes for a topper! C(tw$b, mossy greep or lively brown with linings to match, one of each of these sets — the/re such a buy! A Three-part ensemble, striped shirt. Junior Petites 5-13, B. Cardigan jumper-shift and check shirt. Juniors in 7-15. C. Three-part ensemble, striped shirt. Junior in 7-15. D. Godet-pleated jumper shift, check shirt. Junior 7-15. * PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9.30 A.M. to 9 P.M.. COURT 0F APPEALS * \ • Togliatti Successor Is Long-Time Red County 5*Year Pijogram Bus Driver Job Improvement Job improvement for school bus drivers is the aim of the county’s five-year program of driver instruction. Classes for bus drivers will get under way this week and run until March, according to Edwin J. Hendershott, transportation consultant for Oakland Schools. “We believe tfcescheol bis driver Is a prsfesrisesl person,” explains Hendershott. “And be is interested in Jab improvement.” Hendershott builds upon this interest. Hie county offers .an extensive driver education program, employing the latest methods and equipment. ★ * * He has a collection of over 300 slides of buses in operation, showing hazardous railroad crossings, curves and intersections throughout the county. LAST 4 DAYS i FINAL AND GREATEST REDUCTIONS THROUGHOUT THE STORE Early American, Traditional, Modern and Contemporary Furnishings SPECIAL ORDERS INCLUDED AT SALE PRICES Opan Thun., Fri., Mon., Evenings Until 9 P.M. Just South of Orchard Lake Road • FE 2-8348 - Parking Free | Interior Decorating Consultation At No Extra Cost , AW MwMM BIGGEST PRODUCTION -r Stan Irwin (left), producer of shows at Las Vegas’ Sahara Hotel-Casino, watebds as flames bring dorm the curtain on performances for a few weeks. The blaze, estimated to have caused over $1 million \ta damages, gutted the casino and main showroom. Money . was- left on tables as gamblers evacuated the building. ' One solar year is 11 minutes! Mt. Kilimanjaro stands alone and 14 seconds less than 365V« on the heat scorched plain at days; [the Tanganyika-Kenya border. Cadillac Boy Drowns CADILLAC (AP) - Keith Stott, 8, of Cadillac, dhowned Tuesday-in Lake Cadillac, city Most hail storms occur < ing afternoon and evening. JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARIS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 STAIRLESS STEEL KITCHEN SINKS Double Compartment -In 32x2? Sis* Terrific Value While They Last! Michigan Fluorescent Ught Cc. 393 Orchard Laka Ava., Pontiac THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY*, AUGUST 26, IMS Dr. Woyn# G. Brandsffqdt Says: No Btu's in Booze CHICAGO - Alcohol canj’ warm you up, aaya an article in Fight Against Disease Baffle at the «ame time building up antibodies against the latter in the blood of those who take it. Instead el the eradication of poUomyelitia, this accompUshea • replacement of one virus strata by another oee with which man con live In harmony. Come On la-We’re Celebrating Our Want Against Gas Sold as Fuel Oil SPECIAL AT ALL 6 STORES Q. Do all of the candidate* running for Congress in the 19th District live in the District? A. No - Jim Dickerson DOES NOT . lire in the 19th District. DETROIT (UFO-Ftre officials issued another warning today to people who purchased gasoline which was mistakenly sold as fuel oil at a service station last week. Officials said possible serious explosions could result if tha gasoline were used in spaed beaters hr in any way fuel ofl would normally be used. About 100 gallons of ths fuel oil was sold at the Quaker gasoline station Friday. * - * * The error was discovered Monday. Except in a few instances, this tat virtually Impossible. When antibiotics are used they kill die weaker strains of dis- Q. It Mr. Dickerson employed in the 19th District? Q. Con Mr. Dickerson vote in the 19th Congressional District? A. No, became he POES NOT live in the 19th District. Public Hearing Set or Labor of Minors abpcwB ROOhL BEDROOM, IRNITlfoEATANYO . »Mpfi,.u— A more rational approach 1> seen in the use of the Sabin oral poliomyelitis vaccine, now widely used and shown to be 100 per eent safe. Unlike die killed vacepe, the pew vaccine confers a lasting immunity. Tha live but harmless virus used has the happy faculty of oversowing and crowding out die dbeaae-produdng virus and sines 1944. 4 big pieces in. one end \ you can choose 1 from many... menyeolors! Support a candidate who ie QUALIFIED and who lives in the District. cpsraun. 23-INCH SCREEN CONSOLE RCA VICTOR Mwtout COLOR TV • ll m RCA VftlMMwHstd COLOR tV • All-channsl (VHF and UHF) tuning • Glare-proof RCA Hloh Fidelity Color Tubs e Improved 18,000-voK (factory adjusted) chassis e Automatic Color Purifier a Super-powerful Now Vista Tunara •Two big 8" x 6* duo-cone opsakafa • Easy, accurst# color tuning BIG SCREEN FRETTER’S Low 14995 PONTIAC WAREHOUSE TELEGRAPH RD. V* ML Se. ORCHARD LAKE RO. I MIU North ofMlracU MIU OPEN SUNDAY - FES-7061 OPEN DAILY 10-9 SUN. 10-7 NO MONIY DOWN - UP TO 11 MONTHS T9 PIT APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLUE FRETTER SAYS FREE! A SALE SO BIG. WE DON’T WANT YOU TO MISS IT! V FRETTER’S • COLOR TVs e WASHERS e FREEZERS ■ a- • PORTABLE TVs eDRYERS • ELECTRIC and 0 i • STEREOS • REFRIGERATORS BAS RANGES a a HI ■ LOTS OF FREE ml PARKING! 1 [ OPEN H s TONIGHT P 1 8 , ■ manna ’til 9 ’ ©NTT SAVE*!00 WITH THIS COUPON MO. »!09PJ mi ON VICTOR #400 EXTERIOR HOUSE FAINT LaPoints, II 8. Ardmore; and Ethel and George Ostrander, both of 1171 Cherrylawn. Other es were Ronald D. Larson, 114 W. Third, Rocheater; Ronald L. Love, 1973 Webster, Birmingham; and Evelyn and Harry Pruitt, both of 22115 Middle Belt, Farmington Township. Stfl! others are John H. Spear Jr., 206 Oak, Rochester; Lloyd A. Stead, 2799 Simpson. Avon Township; and Harry Thornton, 'Jr., 100 AngeU, Walled Lake. Jewell D. Hackney, 39 Frank-Dn Nyd., was cited for driving Others are Daniel E Althouse, 9619 Roselawn, Independence Township; Thomas M. Bfcrin-ski, 5970 Cambrook, Waterfohi Township; Larry J. Bogatay, 27690 Spring Valley, Farmington Township; Herbert A. Butt, 9760 Marshall, Lyon Township; and GALLONS QUARTS I IwHH Model TI905y STEP LADDER 6FOOT s (WOOD) THE PONTIAC PRESH WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2& 1M* A—0 World Nows Roundup Malaysia Orders Curfew in Trap Raiders KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (API — Authorities slapped a 24-hour curfew OB a 200-aquare-mile region of Malaysia’s mainland today in an effort to trap Indonesian invaders who may have escaped the cordon drawn around their landing The new curfew area is along the southwest coast of Johore State, north of Pontlan where 100 armed raiders reportedly slipped ashore Aug. 17. Police warned residents they will need special written permits to move out of doors. * * * So far 14 Invaders have been JDad by government troops, and more ttyn 40 captured. * COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) - A group of Buddhist monks has started a campaign against a government bill which would ea- tabllsh a press council to control At their first public meeting last night, a speaker told the crowd: “If anybody gives his conamt to musde the press that is becaues he wants to cover up his ilkWap.” HAMILTON, Ont. (AP) — The robber introduced hiipseif by a cheat signed Jesse James. Thant Cautious in Congo Crisis When the toOer looked dp, she found herself staring at a pistol. The robbsr demanded aB of her 96 and <00 hllli. She gave him about <5,099 and bo made Ms getaway. The check was made out for only <9,009. MOSCOW (AP) - A flying instructor recently crashed with a student pilot aboard while stunting over his fiancee’s house near Minsk, the newspaper So-vetsky Patriot said today. By JOHN D. PARRY UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.5W — Secretary General Thant is handling the latest Congo crisis with extreme caution. Bui! reports that the government of Premier Mdse Tshombe Is recruiting white mercenaries to put down Communist-inspired rebellion in the central and eastern Congo are Area Motorists 40 Lose Driving Rights Drivers licenses of 40 area motorists were either suspended or revoked recently by the Michigan Department of State. Ordered to show proof of financial raponaftilitydiM town-, viction of drunk driving were: Thomas D. Francis, 240 State; Calvin C. Jones, 210 Elm; Herman C. Robinson, 12 Jefferson; Harold W. Nelson, 5059 VanNess, Bloomfield Township; Charles L. Hamlet, 870 Fairiedge, Orion Township; and Sam McBride, 6979 Colony, West Bloomfield Township. Unsatisfactory driving records caused the following to \he ordered off the road: d R. Carman, 99 Blaine; '1. Goff, 18 Clark; Saro- Thomas F. Dertinger, 219 Oak Island, Walled Lake. Still others are David J. Fon-dren, 41740 Asper, Novi; George E. Jenkinson, 1959 Alpha, Com-morcs Tpwnship; Craig H. Rogers, 22600 Middle Belt, Farming-ton Township; Martin J. Rosenberg, 2591 Whiteleigh, Bloomfield Township; Rodger H. San-dula, 96911 Ridgeway, Farming-tan Township; and George 6. Young, 28209 Violet, Farming, ton. Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility due to Copper-Ion* or Colors somo pried L*/t found doort avail. Terms Available causing misgivings among some high-ranking members of the U. N. Secretariat. Aad ambassadors if several African nations have made ft clear in private conversations that the hiring of mercenaries can only deepen the gulf which already separates Tshombe from many other Af- U. N. spokesmen have been cautious in their comments on the reported arrival of mercenaries In the Congo. The U. N. still gets dally reports from its technical assistance mission in Leopoldvfile on goings on there, but spokesmen have so fur declined to say bow much Information on the reported arrival of mercenaries has reached Press reports that Tshombe is recruiting white South Africans, Southern Rhodesians and Britons to put down the rebels have caused concern however. The men involved are, in many cases, the very mercenaries who fought the U. N. in the protracted Katanga campaign, which ended with the collapse of Katangese secession in January 1969. Thant himself has made ao public comment on the measures being taken by Tshombe to put down toe rebellion. His only comment, to bet, on the assumption of power in Leopoldville by a maa who less Hum two yean age was too U-N.’s archenemy, was a remark that “A country gets the Had sf government Since then Tshombe and Thant have been In touch by letter. Tshombe asked for U.N. assistance in halting what he termed “subversive activities” directed from across the borders of the neighboring states of Burundi and the former French Congo. it ♦ W ' Thant baa already replied— but his reply has not been made public. It was understood he fttal promised to pass on Tshambe’s request to the two governments, but gave no guarantee of any further U.N. involvement. NOT PREPARED The secretary ^general has made it clear the RN. is not prepared to intervene, again militarily in the Congo. NThis sentiment is shared by his Senior advisers, particularly MaJ\ Gen. Ihderjtt K. Rikhye of India, his military aids, who is understood to feel nothing short of a major military intervention would pacify the country. There is no chance sf such intorveadsu coming about. The U.N. is still deep in the red as a result of the tost Congo operation, and aay further involvement would only increase foe debt. U.N. sources feel, however, that the arrival of mercenaries would MO any chance Tshombe has of enlisting the aid of other African states militarily. • ★ ★ ★ The world organization therefore is adopting a strict "hands-off” policy while awaiting developments. It's Time for TEMPLIN and Time for Top Quality Law Enforcement in Oakland! Rated! Beci Qvalifiri by Citixaas' UifM Vote Tuesday Sept. 1 ' for the ... Republican Choice for PROSECUTOR The report said both the Instructor and his student* were killed. h At it An Investigation disclosed feat flying dub personnel had broken air safety rules on many occasions. The head of the dub was find and the group now is under the firm control of pickad Communists, the paper sakl. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) — More that 1,000 scientists from 92 nations gathered in Prague today for the third Eu- ropean regional conference on electron microscopy. ■ - ft . * The participants include Dr. Ernst Rusks of Weal Germany, coinventor of the electronic microscope, the Czech news agency CTK said. I PONTIAC MAUI OPTICAL CENTERl A7% 071 M AMERICA’S MOST MAGNIFICENT BOURBON nnmmmimv* m p»t9f o Hi mwimmmn .mA OPEN Labor Day, Moiday, Sept 7th 906 Wen Huron St. EXHIBITAT . TELEPHONE OTfflKlNLIB FE 8-3738 '-my: THE GREATEST SAVINGS SPREE We'vs planned for months... used our volume buying power... left no stone unturned to bring you the-latest fashions, everything for home and back-to-school at almost unbelievable savings! j Skirts and cardigans for those lacky school girls SEPARATES 2.33 2.97 Ours exdusivehMhese sheer seam-free mesh nylons are the very newest in fall tan-tones. You'll want enough for'all winter at thie extraordinary low Lucky Days' savings price. Sizes 9 -to 11. Buy several! SHOP NIGHTS TIL 9:30 PM Tonight, Than. Fri. and Sat. (ikU wmhmlr) FEDERAL'S - DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS |? ftrt *fiiA' A—1# m THE POKTIAC TBESS WEDNESDAY, AtJQtfST tt. JM« for Farmers? Meat Price Rise Laid to Holdback lorn (AP) -of increases In the picture today in the National Tinners Organization livestock market boycott. The NFO drive to withhold antmak from market in an effort to get higher prices from processors was fas its seventh full day. Wholesale and retail outlets In cities of the Midwest and the EaO say they are feeling the effect sad have raised prices. Choice cuts of hoof were raiaad (torn- or flve cents a pound In parti of Ohio and at Lout* vilk,Ky. . A meat packer at Baltimore predicted that housewives wifi lie paying 11 to U cents more a Stores at Boston and Portland, Maine, said they expect a boost in prices later fa) the NTO headquarters at Corning, Iowa, claimed that increasing retail prions is unwarranted and that some dealers “art tal * advantage of the situation.” flupplfcs of hop going through the Chicago Terminal Market bounded upward Tuesday and forced a drop of M cents par high of f* a hundred. LOT RECEIPTS Chicago Hated receipts of Mr 000 bogs, highest since Jan. I. Receipts also were up at other major markets. NTO President Orea Lae Staley of Rea, MU., charged that It waT "an organised selling day by those who don’t want the (armors to receive fair prices.' On the retail aide, one store at Columbus, Ohio, Jumped the coat of • pound of bacon from 39 to 70 cents a pound. But at Chicago, the Jewel, National and Kroger chains said May had not raiaad meat prices. Hit American Meat said In a statement: “Any tem- Sreduction in supply and f In price from a wilb-action must be followed later fay an offsetting incieass in supply and decrease In pries.” SENDS BULLETIN At Indianapolis, Kroger C* sent a bulletin to Indiana stoNi telling managers to aqpeet * “sharp increase” in meat prices but officials refined to blame the NFO directly. Back Seat Role for Champions In Ladies' Golf Only one of the seasonal leaders managed to email in bar class as the Tuesday Silver league play yesterday. Jean Looney led with lot putts (13) yesterday and aha also emerged as the season's i age lender tor putting. Shirley Frederick—)'! II low net In the first flight Tuesday, Irene DenleTsSI led the second group, and Wanda Zion's 10 was boat in the third flight A A A Seasonal leaders in each flight ware Madeline Castleberry (first), Helen Thayer (second) and Miry Turner (third). The ladies Will have, their annual tournament Friday ini an awards luncheon Is slated for Tuesday at Pontiac Country Club. lot Water level Said Area Disaster SAULT STE. MARIE (AP)-Raymond Clevenger, Democratic candidate lor Congress to Michigan’s llth District, said Tuesday 1he Lall Midilgan-Hunm basin should be do-declared a national disaster MU Under such a designation, pawns who suffered losses on of low water levels ctgld apply for a disaster loan frsm the Small Business Administration, Clevenger said. “This program has been especially designed to make federal help available when an artft's economy has been ad-fected by natural i-andi as drought” Cle- Boys' machin« washablt back-to-school casuals Our awn finest quality Lady Caroline seamfrees 5.99-7.99 famous maker Shetland*, Orion bulkies 2.99 SLACKS NYLON SALE SWEATERS 2.37 2-77’ 3.97 N- I N I tolx Continental or hry bolt loop model in cotton twiH or polished cotton t..andeverypairls wash'n wear and Sanforized Plus®! Black, dark olive, brawn. 6-16 slim, 6-20 rag. A groat buy, so don't miss Hi All the looks you lovo—kitten soft long sloovu Shetland wool slip-ons and cardigans and big, beautiful Orion* acrylic cardigan* in Chanel looks, ‘ wing collars and rag Ian sleeves. Fall colors, S-M-L, 34-40. **«#. T.M. DuPont Corp. J I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 Police were alerted to the refugee’s plight by his children, Hefla, IS, and Gerd, 12, who ran into this border town shortly after midnight pleading with 'everyone they met <#o help • their father. Mm’s socks salt! Rag. 71c to $1 pr. Dress riba, — . crews, ever L J|y the coif. 1 size ■■■1 fits 10VW3. w " Save Vi\ Ladies’ “bootie” slippers $2 velvety cor- jk duroy slippers; QQC many colors. Sizes S-M-L W W reg. 2.99 to 3.99 The East Germans apparently did not dare cross the mine-sown “death strip” for fear ol NOT AIMED They fired several shots near the injured man, but they waff apparently not aimed at him* Western police said. tdm Hondy. Plus VS. taa Not Draytm Plahu ..9ttKg$ ACCESSORIES Finally he readied the demarcation line, andtheWestern poUoe pulled him acroas. Ha was taken to a hospital where ha was said to be in critical condition. Police Mentifed the refugee only as a technician. United States Traasurwr Undergoes Surgery WASHINGTON W - Kathryn O’Hay Granahan, treasure ti the United State*, underwent surgery yesterday to make car* Jain that bones in an injured elbow knit properly. Mia, Granahan fractured the elbow and a knee when she fell 3.98 bowling big, ‘Kentucky Club' Remington Envoy .. . with 16 big mpehine ^ features The rugged, low prlc- ■ M 4 4 14 character key* ■ f 1 1 Your Choke! Automatic movie or slide projector Save half price or morel mmg mb 4 Sale! Reg. 23.95 barbell set to keep in tip-top condition Complete set. Includes JRggAA dumbbells, bars. 5-fi. V M if J mate control Airequlpti for slide showing. famous Lullabye 6-yr. crib will be 29.99 after the sole Annual sale of our own . "DEE-lightful" cosmetics Beautiful white or walnut finish, 4-position spring, double-drop sides with 4-way teething rails. It's a beauty — save 10.11 during salel Sole! Compgct. 4-trtfifsiitor 'Aiwa' pushbutton recorder 29.9f*valuel With sen- Jte Ote AA .Hive variable speed MU VIM control and mike-tele- J M phone adapter. 2 mo-tors; only 3Vi lbs. OHI Wtm Columbia custom-measured guaranteed bowling balls No charge for alterationt! Just say "Charge lt"- "DEE-lightful" double tale •lipstick ePressed _ powder a'Nail enamel *1 (lfflA •Mascara a Eye liner ms 9C ** •lye brew pencil •liquid make-up. " Plus US. tax sobers opplicablo Velgss t* It. You'll spend many a long hour jn the d•n.-rr-r-,;; t;U Matching haw spring 28.77 SHOP NIGHTS TIL 9:30 P.M. Tonight, Thure., Fri/V.&w^ DOWNTOWN STORE ONLY THE PONTIAC PRESS,, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 Pontiac City Affairs Commission Hears Housing Blight Report Blight c •u a ed to several neighborhoods by repossessed Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and Veteran’s Administration (VA) bpmes was discussed last Right by the Pontiac City Commission. An investigation by City Manager Josagll A. Warren disclosed that certaid real estate dealers are responsible for the •pksep of the repossessed bouses. Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson had requested that the city manager leek into who was responsible for maintaining these vacant houses. Warren said that two VA representatives responded to his latter detailing complaints on certain homes. The VA spokesmen outlined op for of . sale. ASSIGNED TO DEALER Each boms is assigned to .4 particular real estate dealer, •bo la required to Inspect H once a month, according to the spokesmen. • ' V .. Finds art provided to Ifcep the grass art, replace windows and make other repairs. Wamn added that money is aim available to repaint the ex* terior of these vacant houses during the resale period. In feet a contract has Just been let by the VA Mr exterior painting of 80 repossessions In Pontiac. Warren said that the Job of Houston Battles Disease as Toll Continues to Rise mproving maintenance at repossessed houses would be easier now that ties city knew which eal estate dealers to contact WE MEAN BUSINESS’ "The idea is to get across hat wa mean bastneaa,” War-In told the commtsalnn. Warns said that if FHA ef-fldais did ast rsspsai to Ida letter, ha wauM coatact them hyphaaa. In other business last night the City Commission debated possible legal action against Sam Allan ft Sea, be., 88 Congress, a local scrap metal dealer. : ■. * * . * '• City ofBclala have been in Am rocess of negotiating an agree-Mnt with the Jaak vard owners to abate the tom of the peration. RESIDENTS COMPLAIN Residents of the ana have complained about the noise and ha dust. Laat night, a matins to ga HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -Houstonians by the thousands battled the encephalitifrcarry-ing mosquito and its breeding places today as the number of suspected cases of the sleeping sickness rose to 818. Free insecticide was doled out by the city and residents armed themselves for the war with the female culex mosquito, now bjjmegjBLff jkRttH.tlS HgJ It days. 1 v ★ ♦ ft Residents in this city of one million flocked to fire stations fqr the spray chemical they hoped would protect them from the mosquitoes which cqiry the disease, commonly called sleeping sickness. Fireqwn at 65 fire stations mixed .the Insecticide and citizens ptiently waitid for it canyiig pickle Jars, Jugs, buckets, plastic bottles and even empty paint cans. At Colt Stadium, baseball fans stayed away in droves. Attendance Monday was 4,499 3,858 paid Tuesday night. The average attendance this season has bfgn 10.8M. , Many parents said tiny refused to let their children play outside after dark and stayed Chief W. C. Simon ton, in charge of distributing the chemical to the fire stations, “Tuesday wa sent out approst mateiy 8,000 gallons of condensed liquid. Each gallon mam iw niton,, ihot:* 000 galkma of spray." ft .;ft ‘"ft A helicopter and 40 trucks were spraying and fogging ditches and bayous — prime mosquito breading places. Dr. C. A. Pigford, city health director, said the epidemic — tint recognised as such last Thursday — is. probably at Its peak. "Outbreaks usually last about 18 to II weeks, with the peak in the sixth to eighth week, and we are in our eighth week now." . ....ft.- * • ★ He warned, however, recent rains could increase the swarms of mosquitoes and cause an upsurge in cases a week or 10days from now. Dans H. Taylor Jr. indicated farther action may ha taken at next Week’s masttog. City Manager Warren said hat a survey to determine if he Arm is in violation of sooing rdinancss is under way. * * * Such a. survey, ha mid, could la nsod in court action U the fommiaaton wished to go ahead. Praise Grants for Research on Economy LANSING (AP>—Leaders ft the Michigan Economic Expansion uepairtment’s 18 raasareft fund projects Indicated to Gov. George Romney Tuoaday that the program of state grants should be continued. Marrjage Licenses Roberta L. Wlntoro, F^ftrm Pneumonia Strikes brother pf President MYRTLE BEACH, 8.C. UR~ President Johnson’s brother, Sam Houston Johnson, is in a hospital at this resort, suffering from pneumonia and a kidney infection. Dr. R. L. Jackson said yesterday that Johnson, an Austin, Tex., attorney, is responding Well to treatment and will be discharged in a few days. Johnson was vacationing whan- he became ill about 10 daya ago. men at a day-long project port meeting. The Economic Expansion Department granted about |SM,000 to the 18 projects, which were selected in competition earlier this year. They are being conducted by six state colleges and. unfair- g.* MDom tide approach to raaearch have merit and vantages?” Romney asked. All hut one man rwpqnded “yea.” Tha Inna iU—nwir, Dt.Mffiua. M. Muelder of Michigan State University, said the schools rather than the stats should determine what projects would get funds. POSITIVE RESPONSE Romney also told the group— and got positive responHe-that he thought some extension program needed to' be developed to insure that nonagricultural 'research findings are communicated to outside sources far their use. Romney told project officials hat recommends tioni for continuation of the proghun would have to be in Ms hands by November to be considered for submission to the 1968 session of the legislature. for just 4more days your coat dollar is worth 1.25 at Hughes-Hatcher & Suffrin pick out any coat from our entire stock and pay 20% less than the regular price during our AUGUST COAT SALE 1011 We Can’t fell You Who to Vote For...That’s Entirely Up to You! We Can Toll Yon How the Voting Machines Work and How the ffishjob Are Divided And He Hill Do Just That in Saturday,, August 29th Edition of 4^ The Pontiac Press mi , Choose arty coot in stock, and deduct 20% from the regular price — that's our dramatic saving to you in August. Remgmher prices, go back up September 1. You'll choose from an excellent selection — in terms of fabrics, colors, patterns, styles, sizes ... and best of all, fdmous makers; including GGG, Eagle, Hart Schoffner & Marx, Alpacunna, Barron Anderson, Sheffield Tailors Guild, Custom Shop, BelvedertfTlCingswood, Philcraft and Montclair. A small deposit will hold your coat until Oct. 15. ZIPCOATS OF FINE VELOUR AND SAXONIES Excellent quality fabrics In muted plaids, muted JfJ( checks and neat patterns. In split re glen models. TOPCOATS OF IMPORTED REGULAR HARRIS TWEED, ZIP-LINED price Finest quality Harris tweed in hendseme compound gf shades. Raglan shoulder or set-in sleeves. All-wool zip-out lining.- REGULAR 88% 20% OFF IN FINE QUALITY ZIPCOATS WITH ALL-WOOL LINER RESULAR wa From one of our hotter makers. Saxonies and H.SS velours In muted checks, plaids and diagonals. In split raglan and dteisy models. EAGLE TOPCOATS IN A VARIETY OP FINE FABRICS REGULAR 10% OFF M AUGUST 81% OFF IN AUGUST 55" 55" HART SCHAFFNER & MARX IMPORTED FABRIC GOATS PRICE Most luxurious fabrics: Imported saxonies and C1AQ CAU’ T 81% OFF IN AUGUST 100% PURE CASHMERE regular 80% OUTERCOATS BY ALPACUNA price OFF in The finest siJken imported cashmere. Tailored 12V.50 AUGUST •with: fiend-stitched edges and datailing; fuW satin lining. *80 IIS" OUR PONTIAC MAUL STORE IS OPEN EYBY EVENING TO « PJL THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AU6TIST~flV1964 Scientist Predicts Frozen Human Suspended Animation Near ciety for Cryobiology, an organization devoted to studying the preservative effects of applying extreme cold to living tissues. * • * . * , * Lillehei in an interview said recent advances have bean made at the University of Minnesota in taking kidneys from Dr. Richard Lillehei of the University of Minnesota said teat might be possible when top statesmen, scientists, humanitarians, athletes and other outstanding persons die from diseased hearts or other organs. By FRANK CARET Associated Press Science Writer WASHINGTON—A pioneer in kidney transplants forecast today teat vict|pn of organic ailments may eventually be frozen la suspended animation and later returned to life when replacement organs are ava&able. KRESfiFS MMOLE MILE "MAD FRIDAY" AUOUST 28th 0|WS 7110 P.M. See Thursday’s Ad for Exeitiig Specials! One lC-yearold girl has non survived a year with a corpse’s kidney, be said. Only last week, Lillehei reported. be and other surgeons transplanted both kidneys from the corpse of a 20-year-old youth into a 50-year-old man, who is “so far doing fairly well.” * * ★ . The surgeon said various studies, together with animal He said such a concept would raise ethical questions as to who should be so preserved, but expressed a belief such problems InjuriM Kill Cyclist PORT HURON (AP) - Raymond Kuschel, 19, of Port Huron, who was injured last Saturday in a motorcycle-auto accident in Port Huron, died early today in a Port Huron hospital, oolice said. On Shopping Trip Freak Mishap Kills Woman ROCKTON, 111. UV-Polifie say s bizarre chain of circumstance yesterday led to the death of Marjorie Harrison of , Joliet. As Mrs. Harrison walked toward tee Red Roosters antique shop, delivery truck driver Dudley C. Alexander drove down the same street with tee same destination. [ ' SpiMEB He parked his truck about 110 feet up the hilly street and got out' to make his delivery. ★ ★ The truck rolled forward and smashed into the antique shop just as Mrs. Harrison .reached it. She was struck and killed. Alexander, who lives in' South Beloit, was ticketed for operating a truck with faulty brakes. —GAS HEATr- 100,000 I, T. U. Sumac* ? Nat — S lUtonii $5t5 Average |«k ICE BITING CO. OB 8-4154 682-551 SPECIAL CLOSEOUT SALE un fllLES TQ ■ Williamsburg Listers*, Mattel Cartes Upte, Modarn Etc. Regular T* UHaL YVITn nooa, Ifgwfa Mepar, diwihpblf Qrill 20 Only rennew WAV HAW OUAimr^- Your Choice Folding lop Lag Lavalar* 2 Vi” Official Bnll< Regulation Cuas scons TURF BUILDER UNIT 6 MBS Jltl PIN PERSON U IENT COMBINATION CAULKING COMPOUND CARTRIDGES SUFFERERS! a nautilus AIR PURIFIER in demand! s-t-r-e-t-c-K denim SOU. CLOTHES Regular 34.9S For Bartiie-Midge *nd-other dolls CLOSE OUT SPECIAL! STYRAFOAM ICE CHEST Hera ore your favorite straight forward, no fuss'-or-nonsence slacks ... but the difference is stretch denim! Trim, tempting cotton and stretch nylon, featuring horixontal stretch to give neater fit without sag-n-bag! So-o-o-o-o ... scoot dawn and scoop up these rugged individuals for you,yoHbig and little sisters! PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE 1AM PJIID MERCHANDISING ilWE rMllf CORPORATION DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron , y.; IJKJ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 A—1$ Says Ho Understands New York L jC* Kennedy Opens His Campaign the Kennedys on thelrarrival, and crowded around diem at the reception. VOTE CONCEDED Kennedy generally la conceded the Democratic nomination at a state convention next Tuesday. He aaya he , will resign as attorney general when he la nominated. But Rep. Samuel S. Stratton mittee, at the state convention, before the secretary of State and in the courts.” • In Albany, Fled A. Young, Republican state chairman, said he would recommend a state law baning persons who can't vote in New York from running for public office. A year’s residence is required for voting. „ Kennedy, his wife, Ethel, who Is expecting their ninth child, and the two dogs flew to Atlan- Kennody said President Johnson would campaign for him. Accompanied by his wife and two dogs, Kennedy read Us statement of candidacy In front at ^tirade Mansion, Mayor Robert F. Wagner's official red-dance, while Wagner looked on. - Be said his parents have maintained a home in New York *1 hale it on tbo eanviptioa that mar experience and my record equip me to understand New York’s problems and krdo something about diem: I base it on the net that the greatest state in the union must play a lending role at the federal level in solving three problems. "And I wish to play a part in that effort." SEEKS CONGRESS SEAT - Atty. Gen. f AP ***** Robert F. Kennedy, next to his wife, waves to of Mayor Robert Wagner, announced he would a crowd In New York City yesterday. Ken- seek the Democratic nomination for New York nedy, staying at the Grade Mansion reaMance senator. ____________________________ Oweate/3 for fall in a most comprehensive selection... Come flit your sweater needs from one of the best selections around. “—(A) Arnold Palmer blend of 609£r alpaca, 4006 wool. Oistinctive link stitch in many fall colors. 6-button cardigan 21.95. (B) Jantzen long-hairs in a luxurious blend of 65% mohair, 35% wool. High V-neck pullover 16.95. (C) Six-button cardigan 19.95. (D) Blazer-stripe cardigan of pure brushed wool. Neat 64>utton styles in many handsome color combinations 13.95. (E) Lord Jeff alpaca 5-button cardigan with ribbed bottom, bell sleeves. Pure alpaca in handsome fall shades 27.50. (F) Arnold 4 Men'* 'Bowser' slip-on, sizes 6Vi-13, N-M-W-J 9” Women's 'Fritzio' oxford, sizes 4-10, N-M widths 8»» Boy's Topped oxford, tizM 3J4 to 6,N-M-W S 8” Misses 'Pixie' oxford, sizos B&-4, N-M-W 7” U1 ereW SVi-J, N-M-W >,»| CUMne't M, M-W wMHm ^ Sat th# mw aNchad |wd sheas for woman..............10.95 ' * \ "Colon in the group include gray mist, sagebrush, pale face, fudge, gunsmoke, wild hopey. turtle, houii' dawg and black thunder but not in every style. See them! OPEN UNTIL t:>0 P.M. , CEnEDAI 'C DOWNTOWN AND IUs WsA. Then. NL Sab rEI/ERflL 9 ' DRAYTON PLAINS HUSH PUPPIES* ARE A FAMILY AFFAIR Hush Puppies, set the pacel Weigh just a mere 12-oz.... yet take tough- * ost wear in stridd Hell-cat tanned genuine pigskin leathers shed everyday soil and water! Bouncy crepe soles make sidewalks softer! Steel shank gives needed support where you need Hi Wear Hush Puppies ^ ‘ ^sGreyRSlEilN “ * “ M . the official shots for tho C i Now York World's Fair guides. Palmer V-neck pullover in a multitude of colors 19.95. AUia THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUOITST 28, 1W« One look and you'll see why these [ 2 refrigerator values are so nw^rr\tishnfi;:n nnnn See them ^ . and you’ll understand why they are among our best seller^ ... Here isevorytbkig you want in refrigerators-NAME BRANDS, TOP QUALITY, LOW f*{& AND "PEACE of MIND” SERVICE . .V Here's the most wanted ivenience features ... plus top-notch performance and dfpendablfity f,» Service, delivery and full warranty included. Buy j*. with NO MONEY DOWN at Highland’s unchallenged discount price*. * Side-bySide REFRIGERATOR 1 FREEZER COMEM ET0URVER1 special LOW PRICE mmm' ^PPVXMLCE Civil Rights Movement Launched Ala., Bus DETROIT (AP)-Intheraih of hroriltrini over passage of the aril Rights Act, over deaths in mmlsstppt and opts in Hartan, over sit-ins and stall-ins mid the white backlash, perhaps few people today, white or Negro, remember a December evening on a Montgomery bus. And yet the American Negro ■ay have traveled farther and ■stir that night in Alabama than he did on the long road up from slavery op* on the short (hematic march down Pennsylvania and Constitution avenues In Washington, D.C., last aum- Even today, nine years later, the details of that evening are so lacking in drama and emotional content as to seem hardly die stuff of which history is made. It Was shortly after 5:30 pjn. and getting dark when seamstress Rosa Parks put aside a pile of new suits waiting alterations at bar work bench in the Montgomery Pair Department 8tore and walked a weary half-block to the bus stop on Court Square. TAKES SEAT She boarded the bus and took a seat about halfway down in the first seat behind the forward Motion reserved for white people. As was the prevailing custom and law at the time, Negroes yielded their seats and moved progressively toward the rear as more seats were needed Rosa Parks paid no attention that particular evening to the other passengers. The white section wfinTM yet wiTher thoughts were of home, 15 min- FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Nat Embarrass utes away, where her husband, Raymond, a baiter, was busy getting together dinner. . i t ★ ' 00 A.M. to Ml Ml. TELEPHONE FE 2-6935 W-*----------ini. ■ ...... .............T-r- Sensational Savings During Bill Kelley - Seat Cover King's - Big Slfifin'1 In iliinftf Model Change-Over” Time Sale! Get Set for "Trade-In" time before the new models are announced . . . add dollars to the value of your car with the newest seat covers cut especially for your car and tailor-made by expert craftsmen. TAILOR-MADE ... SARAS PLASTIC SEAT COVERS $249S Value COMPLETE Sava from $8.00 to $15.00 on your New Sept Covert — Choose your pattern from our (election of the neweri and finest fabrics... No appointment Nocostory... Drive In Apytlmol \ ________________ NYLON VINYL AUTMOPS Regular 990" Value • ONE-DAY SERVICE ON REQUEST o Ghoict gf Newest Fabrics! • Bast Quality Nylon Vinyl! o Expert Workmanship! o Adda IS S To The Value of WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 CHOOSE FROM 40 EXCITING PIECES Barbara Ritter, daughter of the Howard D. Ritters of Birmingham and Robert William Haioley of Oak Park, IU., son of the Mathew J. Hawleys of Newport News, Va.,-exchanged recent vows in the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham. Desk Vanity . Desk Chair . ... Straight Hutch .... Door Storage Unit Corner Hutch Corner Unit Drawer' Bachelor Cheat. , Night Stand ...... Spindle Bed .... 2079-7J Hutch 2079-72 VUit Our Young America Model Room* PHON£ 338-4400 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RO., PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. -1=1 Convention Secretaries Are Executives Dressed in attire for their annual costume day are these members of the Niblick Golf Club. From left iare Mrs. Harry Kerns of Motorway Drive; Mrs. Andy Condon of Winkle man Drive; Mrs. .Robert Kingsbury of North Lake Drive; and Mrs. David Warrilow of Dick Street, The women played golf m their fancy, garb and then luncheoned at the Pontiac Country Club. Prizes in various costume categories were awarded at Tuesday’s event. Wife Winning Nerve War By JOY MILLER APWWMl’l Editor • To do secretarial chores for three major convention committees the Democrats are drawing on the experience of ah inteDectualiy formidable feminine bio: a nationally known lawyer, a college instructor in political science, -a chancery court official. WWW They are Mrs. Constance Baker Motley, civil ri^its attorney and first Negro woman to be elected to the New York State Senate; Dr. Mildred Otenasek, who teaches at Notre Dame College in Baltimore; Mrs. Ruth Russell, onetime Business Woman of the Year in Gallatin, Tenn., and a deputy court clerk. NEW TO POLITICS Mrs. Motley, a handsome, quiet - spoken woman of 42, has beat a lawyer with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for U years, w w w She led the legal fight to get James Meredith into the University of Mississippi, w . w w “I’m new to politics really," she say 8. Before January of this year her political role had been that of voter. WON ELECTION Then she won a special election as state senator and became not only the first "wwHanjrnw race Durof ■the— Democratic Party to win a seat in the statO senate, w w w In the senate she was an unusually active freshman, introducing 25 bills and speaking twice on the floor. . W W, W " By now imbued with the well-known political fever, she plans to run for re-election this fall. w w w Mrs. Motley’s husband, Joel, an insurance and real estate agent, is proud of his Wife's activitiesj and keep* a scrapbook on her. STACKS OP PAPERS “Thptrneans that We have s stacks W papers that never * get clipped,” she laughs. Her son, Joel Jir., 11, got out of an upstate New York camp in time to conie to the convention. Mrs. Motley, who was born in New Haven, Com., one of 12 children, attended Columbia University Law School in New York and started with the NAACP as a law clerk. W W ; ' W • Says a colleague: *lf a case is important or tough, one that requires a major undertaking, then Connie gets it.” WOMEN ACTIVE Dr. Mildred Otenasek, who is secretary of the Committee on Credentials, has been a national committeewoman from Maryland for eight year*. She served on the convention site committee, which selected Atlantic City. 'Til let you know later if we did the right thing,” she jibes. * * - • ★ In Baltimore Dr. Otenasek, Who got her Ph.D. in political economy, teaches both .economics and political , science. “It’s my 25th year of teaching," she admits. For 20 years she has been active in Democratic Party work and she finds that “women are a more important force than ever. “Both parties realize that today,' and both parties will make a pitch for the women’s vote.” . COURT REPORTER Mrs. Ruth Russell, 5 foot 4, with gray-green eyes and hair she describes as “practically gray,” is secretary of the Committee on Resolutions and Platform. Her job, as she sees it, is to call the roll of committee and help the chairman any way she can. “I was court reporter in Sumner County and in an adjourning county for a long time,” she says. “It might come in handy. But it will be so exciting. “If I’m called on to take .notes I hope I won’t get so interested I forget to take V all down.” DEPUTY CLERK Mrs. Russell has been deputy clerk of the chancery court of Sumner County, Tenn., sincel945. Her husband, Oscar, Is clerk, plus serving as master of the chancery court and title attorney. * * * Consequently, the Russells, who have no children, are a study In togetherness. Working in the same office “he always- knows where I am,” ' die laughs. ■ * * * But Mrs. Russell, who attended the 1960 convention as a delegate will make this trip alone. “My husband is not coming,” she says. "Someone in the fainily has to work.” RUTH RUSSELL ^ ’YfV Hi ■K -i - ||B ■L, 91 CONSTANCE B. MOTLEY MILDRED OTENASEK By ABIGAIL VANBUREN DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a wife who keeps asking her husband, age 64, when he is go-« ing to retire? I , Die husband is a successful ij o u sinessman * who enjoys be-|_ _ ing in busl-J|| ness, is to j good health, and never] thinks about! retiring until ABBY His wife brings It op. Also, what would you think if this wife took out TWO ad- Doris S. Neuman Plans Marriage A Sept. 26 wedding is planned by Doris Suzanne Neuman, daughter of the Edgar T. Neumans of Wellington, Mich, and Paul Alfred Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Stevens of Cohimbus, Ohio. The bride-elect is a sophomore at Ohio State University and her fiance attends B1 i s s ditional policies on her husband’s life while she was his bookkeeper and was authorized to *ign his checks? (This wasn't discovered by the husband until several years later.) VV-TC; This same wife reads every magazine article she can find on things a widow should know. She claims she is only being “realistic.’” I would like your opinion. SOMEBODY’S HUSBAND WWW DEAR HUSBAND: Your wife’s waging a war of nerves — and winning! Relax, or you’ll acoommodate her sooner than you both think. DEAR ABBY:} am mad! I just returned from a friend’s house and she slyly accused me of having amorous feelings about my doctor! What’s with people? They think the milkman, postman, salesmen and repair men are all the secret lovers of every woman who looks at them sideways. w , ,w. w „ - Some people can’t forget sex for one minute! Why can’t ,Wed recently in Silvercrest Baptist were. Jessie , Elaine Elliott, laughter of the Rufus L. Elliotts of Charest Drive and Robert Wmiam Scott, son the Eugene O. Scotts of Island Park Drive. MRS. ROBERT WILUAM SCOTT people be motivated by art, music, world peace or'sotne-thingelse? “VIVA LA SENSE” IN FT. WAYNE w w w DEAR VIVA: Some people ARE! What’s with you? CONFIDENTIAL TO ROjSS: Ulcers are something you get from mountain climbing over molehills. Take it easy. w w w Problems? Write to ABBY, care of The Pontiac Press. For a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Miss Elliott Wears Silk for Vows The Silvercrest Baptist Church was toe setting for the recent vows of Jessie Elaine Elliott to Robert William Scott. 4 4 W Parents of the couple are the Rufus L. Elliotts of Charest Drive and the Eugene 0. Scotts of Island Park Drive. . w w w For the ceremony .performed by Rev. Lee LaLone, the bride choee a floor-length gown of white silk organza over taffeta and ah illusion veil with pearl and lace tiara. -BRIDAL BOUQUET She held cascading white roses and ivy, surrounding a white orchid. W W W • Mrs. George McClure attended her sister as honor patron along with Mrs. James Fish, who was bridesmaid. .4 4 4 Debra Lynn McCItotock was flower-girl and Kevin Bertram, ring-bearer. * 4 4 On tbe esquire side were best man, Rodney Scott and ushers, Rufus Elliott Jr. and Ronaklfi^Elliott. The bride was graduated from Oakland Untrersity where her husband is a senior. Altrusa Club Greets Three New members of the Altrusa Club of Greater Birmingham are Dr. Nanette J. Jagnow, Mrs. Walter Reason, and Mrs. Harry Heutter. They joined the club at its recent semi-monthly meeting to the Birmingham Community House. The group also discussed plans far the performance of Franz Lehar’s “The Merry Widow,” featuring Patrice Munsel. Altrusa Club la sponsoring the event which will be held Sept. 21 in the Fisher Theater. Honor Parents Ainong the parties preceding the wedding of Ann Marie Hodges and Richard Brown was a buffet supper Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dailey of Packer Road honored the couple’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. jH. Vere Hodges and the Norman R. Browns. Mr. and Mrs. Brown have just returned from their summer cottage at Higgins Lake. Breakfast "?n Church After Vows A chapel ceremony followed by wedding - breakfast in the First Presbyterian Church, Birmingham, marked the recent vows of Barbara Ritter to Robert William Hawley of Oak Park, HI. * 4 4 Hand-dipped Chantilly lace highlighted the bride’s princess-line gown of imported white silk organza over taffeta styled with organza-bordered lace chapel train. r w 4 4 A veil of Imported illusion and bouquet of white orchids and miniature carnations completed her ensemble. 4 4 ' ★ Attending the daughter of the Howard D. Ritters of Birmingham were honor matron Mrs. Ronald Reinking, and bridesmaid Marcella Witvoet, both of Chicago. 1 * * 4 Gilbert Hill was best man and Donald Ritter seated the guests. , „ * ★ * After a Canadian honeymoon, tbe couple will live to Oak Park. She is a graduate of University'of'Michigan. Her husband holds a paster’s degree in social work. j MRS. ROBERT WILLIAM HAWtSY J^oufic of JHebrooma Annual Mid-Summer Sale . LAST 3 DAYS Savings Up To 50% Off\ . “’ft?® ■St, Bunker Hill Collection THE F0MT1AC FilMS WKi^jyKSDA AUGUST 28, 1964 ^tffCIAL! Bright Stitching A few stitches of bright colored thread ia the* front of • email child’s undergarments will help to put them on correctly. ■__________ Part of Food Paint for Keyhole A keyhole that Is hpri to -find after dark can be toadied op with luminous paint to prevent fumbling for the Jock at night. Ghfldren'a Latest FASHIONS mffiABBS BOVS an* GQtLS%EAR Costae Mods Sip Cam* Average Chair $27.95 Average Sola $44.95 FABRIC FAIR “Can you tell me bow much of my food dollar actually goes for food —and how much I pay for packaging?” askes a reader in eago. “When look at all paper, boxes, bottles, and cans I bring home, wonder what||j|gBHB| I’m rehlly buy-B|3H^M tag!” A lot of wom-^H mi trying to economize right MARY up to the hilt FEELEY undoubtedly wonder the same thing. However, it’s not an easy question to answer. The best estimate ia that $20 worth of groceries, on the average, has about $2 worth of peckaging cost included. Or, figure that about 5 per cent to 10 per cent of die food dollar pays for what the food comes in. INCLUDE EVERYTHING The confusing thing is that, when you talk about “packaging," you have to Include labor, materials, and overhead. But Just to give you an idea of what you might be paying per item, I Paul Shaffer, - of the Transportation and Facilities Research Division of die Agricultural Research Service of the USDA, for a few specifics. He otters these estimates: In a dollar’s worth of meat, | approximately • cents goes She pan choose die powdered milk in the box that provides 6 quarts, or the one that provides I quarts —and for foe same price or within a few cents of tt. tribudoa to nutrition, speed of preparation, convenience and eye appeal. The item that provides the most of what you want and need Is the real bargain. W W ★ >' (You can get Mary Feeley’s Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. ONLY 8he can buy sour cream in a pretty cocktail glass or in a cardboard package. When every penny of your grocery money .has to do die work of two, it’s wise to take Famous Brands nnmr FE 4-2878 SPECIAL BUDGET $£5d WAVE... • •-WP CALLIES’^JJ* Open fume on Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. will honor the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Nique of Oxford. Hostesses at the Oxford New Baptist Church will he the couple’s daughters, Mrs. Earl D. Spring of Children's i la M csals uiwlli .if ImrtML meats, approximately 4.7 cents goes for packaging. Whether packaging is an expense or a blessing depends on now you look at ft. If it weren’t for efficient packaging, some foods wouldn’t even be available in your local markets. Packaging can save time when time is more important than money. Miller Street and Mrs: O.’BrFrrtck xrf Detroit; There are four grandchildren. The Niques were married Sept. 8,1914. Make Someone HAPPY The sanitary and health benefits of good packaging are obvious. So it’s only fair to assume that the packaging industry has grown to be. a $14-billion giant only because we’re willing — JACOBSEN'S FLOWERS DAYTIME, EVENING AND SATURDAY CLASSES IN • VISUAL POISE • SOCIAL GRACES • PERSONALITY • WARDROBE • MAKE-UP •- HAIR STYLING • FIGURE CONTROL • SPEECH NEW FALL CLASSES NOW FORMING FOR SEPTEMBER Cod 961-7460 for an Appointment. Golf Women Hold Election Mrs. Floyd Levely opened her Shawnee Court home recently for the annual meeting Ot the Tues-Sllver Lake Ladles League; The meeting followed the last round of golf for foe ^Mrs. Charles Campbell, president, Mrs. Jacob Marts, vice president, Mrs. Fred Frederidnen, secretary, and Mrs. Glenn Bartle, treasurer, were presented as the group’s officers for the 1985 season. Prizes and trophies for league and tournament play will be awarded Tuesday, following a luncheon and day of golf. “Doe Day" will be held at the Pontiac Country Club.' JACOBSEN’S - 'flowers STAPP-S Greenhouse, Gordon Store and Nursery Lqka Orion Phono MY 2-2681 ... remind that in the "rush" of back-to-school necessities don't forget baby's shoe sizes are constant changing... bring them Jn for this exceptional value in a Hi-White Shoe for Never Leave Child Alone in BSthtub It is far better to let the telephone or doorbell go unanswered whan you have a child fat foe bathtub than to risk an accident. A child left in foe. bathtub unwatched can eaaily'elip under the water or even turn the hot water on hlmaelf. First Impressions! Sarong criss-cross smoollief the figure, the $2 savings smooth oat the budget! Back ta school moans now friends, now situations, and first impressions are of utmost Importance. You can be confident you'll look your level best whan your entire wardrobe is sparkling hash, like now in appearance through Gresham's expert cleaning processes. “it’i The Little Thing* That Count At Gretham" a Lease Usings Retaekede Open Seams Rasewn e Broken Buttons Replaced e Balt Loops Repaired Don Auten Ra* 11.95 ealar* SeraM *iia* 27-34 Mr. Auten invitea you to stop in and see fine quality Colonial furnishings for your bedroom, dining room, and living room. Open 9 to 5>SO . . Fridays TUI 9 JVut^n’a Colonial IM§f JHouse Now; ..bra limited time... you can enjoy the unique comfort, fit and control of Sarong of substantial savings. Sarong's criss-cross panels lift, support, flatten tummy; sides dip low to sleek thighs ... yet you have complete freedom. Try SarojaT today for comfort! EVERT FASHION NEEDS ITS OWN FOUNDATION ... Ut our expertly trained coneheret fit you for comfort, figure flattery. JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 E. Lawrence Sr., Downtown (Open Mon. to 8:30 and Fri. to 9) and JUNIOR SHOES 928 W. Huron at Telegraph (Open Fri. to 9 and Set. to $36) STAPP'S JUNIOR SHOES 418 N. Main St. OPEN UNTIL 9:20 PJd. Tonight, Thurs., Fri* Sot. PE 4-2579 i McCALL-CHAPEL Norma Jean Chapel chose a white organon over lace gown with sequin trim for her recent marriage in Emmanuel Baptist Church to Arthur Lee McCall. Dr. Tom Malone performed the candlelight ceremony at the bride carried a cascade bouquet of baby yellow roses with white pom poms. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Chapel of Shanan Street and Robert L. McCall Sr. qf Buick Street. Attendants included Ruth Fenner, Evelyn Keith, Janet Morrow, Lisa Kittles; and Terry Frizzle, Ralph Groves, Floyd Chapel and Mike Clarno. Ushering some 150 guests were Harvey Keith, Randy Bunce and Gary Hud- ...they’N frisky, take to fun and frolic as only Banjo Flats can do. Hurry in, try on a pair today! MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE Open Evenings THE PONTIAC MALL mmmmmmmaammmmmmmmm Matching Handbags 7,97 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUcfosT -26, 1064 B—8 MATERNITY FASHIONS MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MIRACtJ! MILE* SHOPPING CENTER ARTISTIC FLORAL Arrangements Flowers that add the special touch to entertaining . . . flowers that say "welcome" to your guests.—p------**f—— Q OMEGA YOUIX'SAY “off with the old and on with the new" when you see those exceptionol Omega watches. The ladies’ Sapphetle watch, features a facet edged jewel-crystal; the Constellation Chronometer never needs .winding, has a date-telling dial, is triple sealed against water, dint and ihocks. See our collection of Omega timepieces... one of the largest in this area. „ REDMOND’S Jewelers—Optometrists 81 North Saginaw jSt.—Phones FE 2-3612 TWEE PARKING IN BEAR Off STOiE TURNER-SJOBLOM Wearing a white satin sheath gown and tulle veil with floral croton, Doris June S jo Worn became the bride of Baby Lowell Turner in the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church, Rev. Theodore AUe-bach performed the recent ceremony*. The Van A. Sjo-bloms of Commonwealth Street, and the RUhs J. Turners of Herrin,'lU., are parents of the couple. Attendants were Shirley Cox, Theda Sfoblom; Donald Gray, St. Amte, Mo.; Bart Lindsay, Jack Sgwman and Kenneth Steams, all of Herrin. After the church reception, the couple left for a honeymoon at East Tawas. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer lew York Visitors Here Dear Eunice: I am an avid Rotting fan, bat can’t resist reading your wonderful hints dn sewing. I am hoping you can tell me just which kind of lining to use in a knitted skirt to avoid that baggy took. ■ Mrs. P. E. ’ ★ ★ ♦ Dear Mrs. P.E.: You will find very little lining in most knitted garments, probably because the lining won’t keep the shape entirely. As a lining, I would suggest a firm, lightweight silk, a drum-type lining would be best. The most successful knit skirts we have found, have been worn over a taffeta-type slip. This will not give in any way and will probably control the give In the knit more than anything elae. Try itl When knitting sweaters with many contrasting colors, add a little vinegar in the cool water you use before blocking. This will help make the colors fast. 'Always remember to roll your sweaters in terry cloth towels immediately after washing to remove all the excess moisture before patting into place. This will also keep the colors from running into each other. Dear Eunice: I have so much cotton lace left from summer clothes. Can I use this in any way for fall or is it definitely a summer material? Mrs. R. T. Dear Mrs. R. T.: Your question was very appropriate and I think i can give many of you ideas for those extra scraps of lace you have left over. You can make many types of collars, vest-type fronts, ruffled cuffs, etc. These are so wonderful because they caa change plain T The John F, Hatchetts and son. Franklin of New. Yori^ City are visiting Mr. Hatchett’s sister Mrs. William Scruggs of Bassett Avenue. Mr. Hatchett, a native of Pontiac, is the recipient of a Danforth Teacher Grant for the academic year 19M-65 and Aj lA O^k or solid colors into party dresses. And what little girl doesn’t love to dress up? I would suggest making these collars detachable. Since most party dresses don’t get worn enough to wear out before they are outgrown, here’s another suggestion. Rip file hem out of a dress that is too short, fdunnaatr ngm maw tbgeaaf?, am wi aanspea sag?. Clip, turn and press the hem flat. Make a separate skirt out of left over lace, attach it to the upper hem of the dress itself. Some of the newest dresses of the season are made this way. Child's Appetite Quickly Returns If a side child refuses to eat, gift wrap a number of small gifts from the dime store sad tell him that one may be opened after each full meal is eaten. Watch his appetite return quickly. Try this Delicious, Nutritious Way to NATURAL REGULARITY TRY THESE 3 EASY STEPS 1. Buy n package of Unde 8am Cereal at your grocer’s. 1 Eat a generous serving each day—it’s ready-to-eat 8. Drink plenty of liquids daring or between meals. ITS THAT SIMPLE! This delicious canal is a bland of nouriaMag foods that aids regularity, gently and naturally. It has bean ths favorite regulatory food in thouaands of hotnaa lor ever UNClf ctrij* Adequate Spread Lampshades that measure 16 inches or more across the bottom give an adequate spread Of light for reading. JNeumode ISAIEI "SMART GIRL” SEAMLESS Plain Or Micro with nude heels and demi-toes. 44‘ t pairs ISt 82 N. Saginaw St. sssjr MIRACLE MLE-FK 8-9689 is attending the Danforth Teacher's conference at Camp Mini wanes near Muskegon, this week. He is an assistant. of philosophy and religion at Bennett College, Greenboro, N.C., on leave while working on Ms doctorate at Columbia University. IpdfiEsor'i Use Baking Soda- Restore the transpsrsDcy of file glass door in the oven by' cleaning with baking soda. SMI t WALTER Delicious Sausage Party Trays AvaSaMa PONTIAC MAUI M2-NII COST PENNIES MORE AND WORTH IT I KOEPPLINGER’S famous breads insist ON KOEPNINGER’S quality buns DIFFERENT TEXTURE-TASTES DELICIOUS NEW! L // REDUCE 1 CAT and LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK j* CAPSULES! Easier to taka and more affactive than the powdsied mid liquid food supplement, and costs lass including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D. No Gastritis or irregularity with Medlc-Way caps. DON* DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP IT OFF! MEDIC-WAY. MEDIO-WAY 336-0206 You Can Count on Ua Quality Costa No More at Sears New for You from SEARS ^ in High W rV Banjo Flats m Save oa snarl 10” V'MiS' Alligator grained leather Pumps -Thursday # Friday • Saturday Only! Fashionobls Jungle Look high or mid fleets with afli gator-grained upper leathers. Count the places you'll wear these in Black or-Bfown. Smooth Calf In 8loc;k or Brown,. Choose yours now at this value! ' ' * Shoe Salon—Mezzanine Charge It Pick Your Style... Pick Your Sine! e Black Sises 6 to 8, B width Shoe Dept., Main Floor Try tfrfm on sM you’ll be glad you did! *Ihe white saddle stitching zings the soft styling of smooth! glased kidskin leather uppers. And you’ll love the soft foam-backed nylon tricot lining. Composition soles. CHARGE Your Fists on Sesn Revolving Charge Shop at Sears and Save CT? A "DC Downtown Pontiac Setlafectien Guaranteed or Year Money Beck WIJJLXmXVJ Ph. FE 5-4171 TALK OVER PLANS - Pour officials concerned with the proposed construction of Sit Rochester Business and Professional Complex on West University discuss And plans for the |1 .(-million project to be released next week. Included will be a multistory tower office building plus specialty shops Arthur Coot, Rochester village attorney and acting village manager; Helen V. Allen, Avon Township treasurer; Fred Houghtan, president of the National Bank of Rochester and a director of the new building corporation; apd Mitchell L. Bacow, Pontiac attorney and also a corporation director. graders into junior and senior high school, respectively, will be held Sept. » at both West and Central Junior High Schools and tbs senior high school. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Elementary school, from kindergarten through 8th grade, wlllbegin on Sept. 8. Secondary grades will begin school on Sept. 10. Teachers new to the Rochester system will have meetings on Sept. 3, and all teachers wUl report to their respective schools Sept. 8. day, according to Supt. Dr. William J. Early. year will be as fellows! Seventh and 10th grade boob will be available at,the bookstores Monday. Eighth and 11th grade boob will be sold Tuesday. Ninth and 12th grade boob are to be purchased Wednesday, w * # Boob for all students wbo Cars, Appliances Catch Public Eye * FULL-FLOW HOSE iriti - 5/8”X50' - krass CHpIliii EDWARD'S LIQUID Sweetener Seeks Wdys to Contrbl Sale of Cigarettes HOLLY—City Attorney Robert A. McKenmy is checkhig BOTTLE of 25 COMCIDIN TABLETS fed. He was asked by city coua-cilmen last night to investigate the cigarette vending machine ordinance recently adopted in Birmingham a* weU as any la Holly which Because of road construction on Old Porch Road, Dr. Early said that parents should approach the school from Walton, turning at Wlmpole and following Wimpole to Ansel, acmes Old Perch Road to the school. Orientation for 7th and 10th FREE! 3x6’ VINYL ACCOLON® THROW MIT INCLUDED WITH EVERY 9x11 ROD HNHSMSE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 26.1964 On Master Plan Oxford Hearing Set OXFORD — Village of Oxford stressed current land aae as had now commerctally-iooed OXFORD - Village of Oxford citizens will get their first chance to be heard and ask questions about the new master plan Sept 20. * * *’ The first public hearing *on the new master plan was set for that date last night at the regular meeting of the village council. In describing the master plan accepted by the planning commission from consultants ViUcan-Leman and Associates, Southfield, Village Manager .Michael M. Kilgore this morning said that it School Books in Rochester tr Will Go On Sale Monday 9x12' Vinyl Accolon ■ Rugby... Armstrong 1Q93L charge it Deepened and brightly colored patterns fat long-wearing, easy-to-eare-for vinyl Accolon® fay Armstrong. Their gleaming colors are scaled in deer vinyl to keep. them fresh and new looking longer. Smooth hard-fdoM surface need* lew ear*! a guide to fntare aae. Kilgore said that land uae, population, the economic baae (commercial and industrial' uae) community facilities and thoroughfares are the key factors integrated in fits plan. Calling the plan “a guide for decWon-making, not a decisionmaker,” Kilgore said that It calls for a reduction of commercially-zoned land from the present 97 acres to an eventual Mams. NORTH PERRY STREET CORNER GLENWOOD This weald maintain a centralized business district, he said, aad weald probably result in the rexoniag of some to either single-family or mul-tipfodwelllag residential sense. Kilgore termed the master plan "a long-range, comprehensive and general guide for the development of the land in and around foe village. • w w ★ ■ "It’s foe result of an orderly process of survey and study by the planning commission,” be said, “and is a land-use plan which is foe physical representation of what the planning commission thinks the citizens of foe village desire.** Pastor Called hr Davisburg BaptitfXhurch DAVISBURG—The First Baptist Church has caDed as its new pqstoe Rev. Robert Hfrm Of Lapeer. Rev. Hazen is a graduate of foe Moody Bible Institute of Chicago and foe Midwestern Baptist Seminary of Pontiac. His two previous pastorates were at foe Wahjamega Country Church of Caro and foe Hunters Creek Community Church of Lapeer. He and his wife have three daughters and a son. They will be making their home in foe parsonage at 13137 Anderson-ville Road. Rev. Hazen is replacing Rev. Jack McCurry, Area Ball Diamdnd Now'Jaycee Field' FARMINGTON - The City Omneji has officially named foe ball diamond in foe city park the Jaycee Ball Field. The move was made in recognition of foe work foe organization did to improve foe facility. • ★ * ★ An earlier request that foe park be named for foe group was withdrawn after objections were expressed during council consideration. unniuqtiam’s DRUG STORES ffaeAcniptiovi, 3peaia£oot4- ILOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILI SHOPPING CENTER, S. TELEGRAPH TIL-HUROH CENTER;'I S. TELEGRAPH —PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTIR. N. TELEGRAPH — ROCHESTER, 1451 N. MAIN OF-SEASON CLOSE-OUT! TBU-UTEOABDEN HOST bran CM'lbf* .... REGULAR 1.77 7/l4”X50’ - |MH opon* 1.44 2.38 • SOLITE GARDEN HOSE 14,,X60I- glossy roil ffialsli -2 ply Hflsr couplings rtf. 2.77 REG 100’S WILSON PLASTIC BRUSH ROLLER BOXES Durable plastic boxes in assorted colors. With soo-thrautfi cavers. Keeps unsightly curlers hlddsn from view.'Perfect catch-all box for vanity or drOseor. JUST WONDERFUL HAIR SPRAY 13 OZ. OUR REG. 1.00 BAN R0LM)N DEODORANT OUR LOW LOW PRICE BONNE BELL iMOISflIRE LOTION I For dry skin problems I and e younger leaking, I smoother complexion. ' Moisture Lotion starts Instantly fa give your skin a deep moisturizing beauty treatment. We reserve the right,.** limit quantities. SALE DAYS THRU SUNDAY IliM^^^^RHNMRNMSRMMRghRM^^MMMNiRNNNNHMNMRNRNNliNI WOODBURY family Size LIQUID • 9 GLEEM SHAMPOO ml Toothpaste m % Si t 1 Gunuingham’s^s JB—6 LANSING (AP)-If a college student stopped you this sum-. mer to inquire about your Michigan vacation, then you've become a statistic in a (78,000 project exploring economic aspects of the Mate’s tourist industry. It*s too early jo reach conclusions yet, say project officials, but the summer staff of nine interviewers is accumulating a mountain of facts. A preliminary feport on the study was presented Tuesday to the Michigan Department of Economic Expansion, which is financing the program under an appropriation designed to help spur the^ state’s economy. - IntcrytewBoi are, asking how, much tourists spend on food, beverages, vehicle expenses and lodging, and inquire into general tourist experiences. Spokesman Charles R. Owens of Central Michigan University’s center for economic expansion said the stydy seeks to pinpoint the economic impact of the tourist on the economy, to identify tourists and to learn areas of potential new attractions. wPtHlHg aid ninth through 12th graders at' the high school* Fee collections at the various buildings will begin Sept. 10. FAVORITE COOKIES Fig bars, sandwich cookies, windmills, coeoanut and oatmeal cookies.I Big bonus value.«. complete whit 8x10" ruled paper, index organiser. Two and 3*rrag Men's and Ladies' 17 Jewel 3 Days—fog. 77* 5-Hob PAPER-500SHEETS 105&8" Looseleaf notebook mm m ^ paper, fits 2 and 3-ring bind- S Jl “ ers. Ruled, with margin. & *0 Vinyl Pencil Ptvdi... 2U 3 Days—Child's fog. 2.99 3-6X SWEATERS Patterned crew neck and col- 4 fared styles In bulky jcnic P#/ A turbo Orion* acrylic Red, white, or sapphire blue. ifah • Du Pint T.M. Regular 9.99—3 Days Only I The priceless look of mohair, plus die long-wearing qualities of wool... hand knit in Italy!. Long-sleeve cardigans of 72S wool, 201 mohair, 8$ synthetic fibre. Two-tones and exciting solid colors. 3440. Save this week end! 3-Day Sale—Regular 58* JR. MISS NYLONS Sheer, seamless mesh nylon hose, shaped to fit and flatter # f slender kgs. Mist-Tone, Sun- M tone, Cinmunon. 8J*-10JL elf. Gooseneck desk lamps with metal bases, metal or plastic cone shades. Black, beige, turquoise, white, tangerine. .Candy-Coaled Chocolate Boys' Regular $1 Cotton Sam 3 If lb. on these famous Hersbey milk chocolate candies with crisp candy coating. They're delicious, and are tidy to eat—even "CHARGE tT" AT KRESGE’S TllK PONTIAC PHKSS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 26. 1064 til-muronI bnayfON Rochester DOWNTOWN l TEL-HURON I BLOOMFIELD I DOWNTOWN , I ROCHESTER PONTIAC I CENTER | MIRACLE MILE |; BIRMINGHAM | VlAZA PONTIAC MALL DRAYTON PLAINS MAPLE PLAZA , Holly Schools Ready to Open HOLLY—Only kindergartners will not head for classes to the Holly Area School District the day after Labor Day.. The youngest pupils will be given almost a week’s reprieve. ‘Their classes will start Sept. 14 I Am mm Tourist Query Is Project Job and they will receive instructions by telephone or mail before then. Per all ethers, the big date Is Sept. 8. Elementary pupils will attend classes from V a m. to noon Sept. 8. Their schedule for the rest of the week will be 9 ajs.-1:45 p.m. The regular hours of • a m.-3:35 pjn. will begin Sept. 14. * W Sr Shortened class periods are planned for the first school day at Mabk D. Bensett Junior High School. At 8 a.m., seventh graders are to report to the north balcony of the gymnasium for enrollment information and directions. WWW Eighth graders should go to their study hall for enrollment directions. vTbe first fol) day of classes for Junior high youngsters wiU be Sept I, when they will arrive at 8 a.m. aad be'dismissed at 8:4i p.m. There will be an assembly for alt students in ninth through 18th grades at f a.m. Sept. ‘ Following the program at the Holly Area High School, the students will attend shortened class periods until 11 un. W W fr; Their regular 8 a.m.-2:50 p.m. schedule will begin Sept. 8. ENROLLMENT DEADLINE Brother-Killer Is Sentenced A Royal Oak man was sentenced yesterday to 3-15 years at state prison in Jackson for the fatal shooting of his brother in their home June 81. Paul.R. Farley, 58,'had pleaded guilty to tilting his brother Andrew, M both of ISIS W. Win-demere, at his hearing in Circuit Court last month. ’ w w w Royal Oak police said Andrew was shot with a rifle about 7:48 p.m. following an argument. Farley was ordered to prison by Circuit Judge Frederick C. Bern. Michigan’s gigantic agricub tural industry stretching from the Upper Peninstda to the Ohio-Indiana border produces more than 58 important food crops. 3 Days Only—Regular 9.99 "MARXWRITER1' Really types! 10Xx4xl0X" two-rone plastic quo; die-cast keys foe all alphabet, women-ait, signs; space bar, ribbon. MMMMMmuttMWNamummuaaMBnmaaaHauauawMaM^ I Cleanup Still On j I in Paint Creek , Troy Schools Open on Sept 10 Misses' Cotton Coordinates! DOUBLE-KNIT CAPRI PANTS 237 Reg. 2.96 3 Days Gspris with s casual elegance ... tailored or elastic waistband. Blade, royal, loden or-, ted. 10-18. Made to go with out long-sleeve turtleneck stripe or solid tope. Save now! MATCNNG TOPS, 32-38....1.97 3 Days Only—Reg. 33.88 26’ DELUXE BICYCLES 29.88 Famous quality "Galaxie" tank-type bikes... flamboyant ted foe boys, brilliant turquoise for girls. Strang twin arch frames. With luggage carrier, chracne fenders, rims. Get out those waders, chmn saws and power equipment and be ready to work again Saturday. The job of removing debris and obstructions from Paint Creek is not yet completed. But it win take ouly Me ar two mere Saturday* to finish “Operattan Clean • Up,” accenting to Rochester Village President John O’Donnell, project chairman. Even if Volunteers have no special*- equipment, their services nonetheless kill be most acceptable, said O’Donnell. ; This will be the third Satur day crews have worked on clearing the entire length of the stream as it winds through five area villages and townships from north of Lake Orion to south of Rochester. This project is the first in the Paint Creek Citisens Conservation Committee’s program to reatoro the stream to its original state of nataral beauty and parity. Team captains are supervising the "work in each of the five areas. They can be contacted, by volunteers wishing to offer their services. ★ * . ★ The captains are Irvine Unger, Lake Orion; John Less!ter, Orion Township; C. H. Williams, Oakland Township; Ed Alward, Avon Township; and James McCarthy* Rochester. TROY — Schools in the Troy District aU will ha open for business Sept. 10. , * * -k. New student* are to register next week at their respective schools between 8:90 and 11:90 a.m. or 1 and 9:90 pjn. All principals and sere taries will be in their buildings that week to register new students. Farther information regarding registration of new students can be obtained by contacting die Troy Board of Edo-■cation, 188 Hart. Troy High School classes will begin at 8 a.m., with school bus pick-ups beginning at 7:15 for those who five more than 1% miles from the high school. * * * Commercial buses will, operate on Livernois for those who wish to use them. Baker Junior High School classes will start at 8:90 ajL, with school bus pick-ups beginning at 7:45 for those outride tiie lW-mile limit or south of 1-75 hi the Rochester-Stephriisbn area. Leonard School wtn begin classes at 8:98 with school bos pick-ops starting at 7:48 for ail students except those •u Eckford. Niles, Colerain, Union, Pop-pleton, Morse and Big Beaver elementary schools .will begin classes at I a.m., with/bua pickups beginning at 8:15 for the students outside tfie walking areas. PARENTS ASKED Parents are asked to provide transportation for their kindergarten students on their first day of schoM, and are asked to bring a certified record of birth if they have not already done ao. tori' Noon kindergarten delivortes and pick-upo wiU continue as in the past, with frequaut stops closer to the children’s homes. \ “ # *' a A All walking students are urged to make nee of future probable sidewalk locations near the edges of the public rights-of-way, usually from 39 to 80 feet from the center of the mile roads and from 85 to 98 feet from the center of the side-roads and subdivision streets. SHOP WITHOUT CASH - "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE’S UN r.wt mm, Values to 98c Yd! 3 Days! SCHOOL COTTONS Rich darkaone cotton fabric* in fabulous tell designs. All have wash *n wear finish. Neat-line prints, print oxfords, sateens, reverse twists. Buy ahead now and aave! Spectell Mr 'V- THE POimAC PBESft, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST Perns Say Campaign 'Lashes Most KTtAJftlC CRY NJ. (AP) they didn't seem disturbed Harrison of Virginia, for exam- again #nd again; and again la*, said, "We*re Just going to others witt — Ahoost all Democratic land* about their disagreement. The P*, Mid, “People are getting here in Ateptic City. I believe deal with the positive aspects of themselves.’’ era shy they harbor no fears bncktash, hi their view, was not W up with the sit-ins, wade-ins, the great majority of Americans what the administration has no- DKM vtfws about aqy white voter “back- M mat M some people sup- imeeMns, and what have yon, I understand and support what complished. We think there is a ZT TV la#* Ja die November presi- posed. think unless the situation abates the President and the Demo- frootlaah. The righteousness of °ov. jonn dam election. • i awes H will be very harmful for Dom- cretfo party are hying tedo.” our position was shown by the gSr*," Instead, they confidently say ocnUc chanoes." The Afferent views oo how to many Republicans voting for “ they hear what they call the . *■ f* A A A deal with the problem were re- the civil rights bill.” mitth latter crack of a motor- But most leaders agreed with Humphrey, elaborating on the J* jj** ate Republican “froothuh" “*• *“ mtfte backlash signi ^ ^ mento front Gov. Edmund G. strategy of meeting the issue wespoi against Barry Goklwater on Jjj 19u SmS/Sn. Ambassador JJJ" had-°R by obtaining the dvfl Jor tbSTJ5?t ta ^ backlaah * civil righto Here are other Democratic "Ms ” • backlash, and, Beo, "•^er ^uw «*^s conserve- uahh^StevwmT^ki “ wU1 ** dispelled tt we explain views on the lash, back or front: * bow the Democrats should meet MTYWUMrowiJW MacUy what is in the bUl,’’ ss)d Sen. Philip Hart of Michigan Gov. John ft. There were some sharp die- ™kty frinofles Humphrey. - “The backlash to dvfl rights - “The best Most rid not agree on how to sents from the prevailing views “The Democratic party has Brown, elaborating on the win fade as people realise that offense in too handle It At the same time, in the survey. Gov, Albertis 8. proclaimed these principles strategy of forgetting the back- they can grant hum™ rights to we wfli take moderate Republicans who - . ^ Oklahoma - The tri» R*e irresponsfljflity of £jj|j2forma^ Democratic cam-Goldwater. puign tone “cm do more to al- “OVEREMPHASIZED” lay ill feeling among white and Gov., Endicott Peabody of colored than anything ebe." Massachusetts “This issue W A A has been overemphasised. Pee- Sen. John 0. Pastore of Rhode pie should begin considering island — “this la a non-parttoan how much the Democrats, par- responsibility and we’ve got to ticularly in the Northeast, are meet It head-on and explain to going to benefit from Republi- our pestle him un-American it can defections.” to to treat one segment of Our Gov. Cerift. Sanders of Geer- population with less equality gia - “I think the platform that than others." UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL That folksy White House weekend recently enjoyed by the Johnsons and the Wagners seems now not to have been so folksy after all. Rther it appears to have been a strategy meeting between the President and Mayor Robert F. Wagner of NOW York to plan some cold war or cold water treatment for young Robert F. Kennedy. The consensus mi Robert F. Kennedy to that he is a young man of ruthless determination and of infinitely aggressive ambition. Ho is. accustomed by mason of money, family position and brains to having his own way. It b reasonable, at least, to assume that Kennedy seeks to establish himself with a New York 8tato political base which might be useful in another Kennedy thrust for the White BATHER GREETED - Reedy to shake hands on the beach at Atlantic City is Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy warming up for his campaign for the Democratic nomination for THREE TAKE SEATS - Members of the Mississippi all-white delegation to the Democratic Convention occupy seats on the floor of the convention hall yesterday in Atlantic City. They signed what they called an “intention to support the party nominees.” Other members of the Mississippi delegation refused to sign a pledge and withdrew from the convention. Seated are (from left) Fred Berger of Natchez, Douglas Wynn of Greenville and C. R. Holladay of Picayune. Say Mississippi Action Ends Party Ties JACKSON, Miss. (AP) ~ State political leaden say the walkout by the Mississippi regular delegation from the Democratic National Convention sev- “ There can be little question of bow Mississippi and her sister states of the Deep South will oast their ballots this November,” said former Gov. Ross Barnett, obviously predicting that Republican nominee Barry Ooid water would carry tbe state. ' Barnett, wbo had earlier said he leaned toward Goidwater, dM not merited tee Ariaona conservative by name Tuesday right as he commented on the refusal of tha state’s regular Notarise worked opt . over the 'gfcritenge by tbe largely Negro SlHtetosippi Freedom Demo-^erm. Iflssissippians, said Baraett, “can forget about working things'out within the party hf our fathers and begin to chart a realistic coon* of political ac- The convention credentials committee called for tbe state’s all-white, regular delegation to sign a loyalty pledge to support President Johnson in November and accorded at-large delegate status to two Freedom Dmno-crat leaders. The regular delegates balked at the loyalty pledge and walked away from the convention. a * Mr,* The Freedom Democrats, said Democratic State Chairman Bid well Adam of Gulfport, “could not carry one bos (precinct) in the state.” . , , * * a Adam, a former lieutenant governor, said: “I glory In the courage of our Mississippi delegates in having the guts to take this stand representing Mississippi and tbe South.” STAYED AWAY Barnett, Adam and Gov. Paul B. Johnson, titular head of the party in Mississippi, all stayed away from the convention. . Gov. Johnson, in Enouncing ha had asked for the wriknut, said be would not support Presi- dent Johnson’s bid for election under any circumstances. The state Democratic party holds another convention Sept. 9 tochart Its course in tbe presidential election and many observers briievp it will endorse Goidwater. ■WWW Mississippi bolted the 1948 Democratic convention and the state was carried by the Dixie-crat ticket headed by South Carolina’s J. Strom Thurmond, now a U.S. senator. Fielding Wright, then governor of Mississippi, was the vice presidential nominee of the Dixiecrate. • »A * ' W Four yeafi ago, Barnett led v Mississippi Into the unpledged elector camp and the state’s Electoral College votes went to Sen. Harry Byrd, D-Vs. • . A t .t At Greenville, Miss., Tuesday, a special three-judge federal court upheld Mississippi's unpledged elector-laW. Adherents [ of the Freedom Democratic party had fflad suit contesting tbe constitutionality REJECT COMPROMISE - Aaron Henry, head of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic party delegation to the Democratic National Convention, toads Dr. Martin Luther King to a church meeting where' the delegation voted unani-mously to reject the Humphrey-Reuther compromise accepted last night by the convention as a whole in tha credentials committee report. It recommended seating thorn members of the Mississippi detofatkns wbo sign toyalty osdfas and that Henry’s group ba given two delegatee-at-large. senator from New York. Kennedy and his wife (right) paid a visit to the site of the party convention yesterday. To make New York Ms own useful political base, Kennedy would need to dispose of Wagner as New York state Democratic leader. ■if rh. it To obtain the Democratic presidential nomination in 1972, Kennedy Mm would need to impose his will on President Johnson. It to not unreasonable to believe that LBJ expects to be ending a second White House term in that year. It la naceasary to assume (1) that LBJ will want to be free in 1978 to name his own successor, (2) that he could not at this time mala a choice and (3) that under no circumstances would his choice be Robert F. Kennedy. ADOPT CAUSE Powerful New York State county leaders adopted Kennedy’s senatorial cause as their own. This was bad for Wagner who has kept himself afloat politically by fighting boss-ism in the Democratic party. Bat Wagner flunked tee baste test of good political eperatioa. He had handy to out to oppose Kennedy for tee senatorial nomination. Ike mayor had forgotten teat yea can’t beet somebody witt nobody. Wagner was compelled to endorse Kennedy for the Senate, thus assuring hte nomination. ★ ★ ★ The old pro in the White House moved hard and fast on Aug. 28 to protect Wagner against an ultimate Kennedy takeover in New York State. PROTECT SELF LBJ, of course, was moving also to protect himself against the threat of a powerful new Kennedy political axis stretching from Massachusetts where brother Ted is a US. Sen-a tor to Now York whore Bobby plans to. move in and ail the way to California where Kennedy associate Pierre Salinger won • UJS. Senate seat by appointment and seeks to hold it by election. UNINVITED GUEST - Roy D. McCord, Gadsden member of the Alabama delegation to the Democratic National Convention, talks to newsmen outside a hotel hi Atlantic City yesterday. McCord was one of four Alabamans who signed a loyalty oath ahd were not Invited to sit in on a caucus held by their Rift Leaves Alabamians Eying Barry BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -Some Alabamians say they probably are going to vote Republican in November because of the fight over seating the state’s delegation at the Democratic National Convention. “What do they mean, changing the rules now?” said James Wilson. "Trying to make us sign a loyalty oath. Why, that’s a disgrace and in insult.” A A A Wilson, a hotel derk, said he planned to vote Republican. Charles Coleman, a druggist, said ha wan’t a member of either party but that he would vote Republican because of the loyalty oath dispute. “I think they (the Democrats) should give us a few concessions If they are interested in Alabama," ha said Tuesday eight. VOTE FOR BARRY Others, asking that tosy not be identified, arid && also would vote for 8en. Barry Cold-water. “The Alabama and Mississippi delegations ware legally elected by the people of their states,” said one, “Now, we have groups of so-called delegates picked by one man or a group of men claiming the right to taka their seats. A A ‘ A “Why can’t you and I say we’re unhappy with the delega- tion and run up there and say we want to taka their place?” be asked. A* ' A , A “I’m tired of being kicked around and token advantage of for purriy {political, gain,” mid another. “The Democrats can go hang:’’ LOYALTY OATH The j convention’ credentials committee wants tbe delegatee to sign an oath of loyalty to the party. ' Owe of tl *e bate is gates, John F. Britton of Montgomery, returned homo. “I’ve been a loyal Democrat all my life, and I see no reason why I should be singled out to take a pledge to that effect,” ho said. “If they weren’t going to let me taka my amt, I see no reason to stay.” 2 Tols Rothtr Fight Than Switch From LBJ ATLANTIC CITY (DPI) -Two tots for Johnson with simulated black eyes, riding on the boardwalk, sported a sign on their tandem stroller saying: “I’d rather fight than switch.” The youngsters, Raymond En-gler, 4, and slater Alicia, 2, are children of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Engler of Springfield, pa., nooedetagate Democrats attending tte party’s National Convention. &*&££!%£ ' Mak« Vote Prediction egstos to defy tbe convention of- accurately in 1988 Oat FDR •***“• _____ "wdd can? all but two states, COMPLY WITH REQUEST Maine and Vermont, says teat But former Gov, James Fob both will «e to Pnridsnt John-som says tee delegation should ton this year. But tha former comply with tbe reqwet to rign postmaster general concedes the loyalty oath. teat Johnson may lose two or Ode of the Alabama dels- three or four other states. thorn refusing to sign is former Birmingham Police Commissioner Eugene (Bull) Connor, who lad a walkout from the 1948 convention in n dispute over a dvfl rights plank. A as# A . . Atty. Gen. Richmond Flowers of Alabama says Connor already has signed and) as oath — four years ago whoa ha ran for Ms poet as national commit-. A DELEGATE — Mrs. Ted Kennedy, wife of the Massachusetts senator suffering from a back injury incurred in a plane crash, is a delegate at die Democratic National Con-vention from Massachusetts. She sits nextvto Gov. Endicott Peabody (foreground). Mrs. Kennedy was named a delegate to replace her brother-in-law, Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for senator from New York. CHECK 8IGNALS—Down in the center of the quarterback of the delegation’s battle with this on the Democratic convention convention leaden over signing a loyalty oath floor w night is Bbaene (Bull) Conor, who hi order to be seated. The delegation has is an Atabra national committeeman. He is taken over the seels without signing. DDOE DELEGATES HUDDLE — Eugene (Bull) Connor (left), Alabama national committeeman, confers with two members of the Arkansas delegation on tbe floor of the convention. Connor was back hi the big arena in defiance of an edict from die,credentials com- mittee that he and other.,Alabama delegates sign a loyalty pledge in order to keep their seats. He said he pledged party Oddity h) response to remarks made by House ISpsalwe John McCormack, permanent chairman of the convention, during last night’s session. El'. %I§ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 B—7 EXPLAIN COMPROMISE — Democratic National Chairman John M. Bailey (left) and Credentials Committee Chairman David L. Lawrence, former governor of Pennsylvania, Appeal to Youth , explain details of a compromise in die Mississippi seating controversy, worked out by Sen. Humphrey and UAW President Walter Reuther, at,a news conference yesterday. Solon Speech Stirs South' WADES IN SURF — Luci Baines Johnson, 17-year-old daughter of the President, is accompanied by a coterie of young blades as she wades through the surf off Margate, near Atlantic City yesterday. The occasion was an ocean-front clambake for members of the President’s Club who have kicked in $1,000 each for Johnson’s campaign fund. SPEAKER SPEAKS - John McCormack, speaker of tha House of Representatives, Is permanent chairman of the Democratic National Convention and used his opportunity to speak yesterday In Atlantic City to blast tha Republican party. He said this Republican , party has been captured by cctremists wfao use methods of totalitarian movements. ATLANTIC CITY (UPI) -Youth,called to youth at the Democratic National Convention last night. Youth responded with tha convention’s first “spontaneous ifrlTMfflflfitor * fUupiuftfn-tion celebrating not only youth but what the marchers mid bellringers, and Confederate flag wavers called “the new South.” The spokesman for youth and the “new breed” of Southerners was Rep. Charles L. Weltner of Atlanta who was elected to Congress in IMS when he was 141 Weltner is the great grandson of Gen. James Longstreet, a soldier who fought with more than considerable courage and conviction for the South in the Chi} War. ★ ★ ★ In his turn, Weliner demonstrated more than considerable courage and conviction when, alone among representatives of the hard-core South, be hpoke out In Congress and voted for the civil rights bill of 1164. In other days, this could have killed Weltner’s chance of political advancement. Maybe it will be held against him In this year’s campaign. But last night, at the Invitation of the national -putty, h»j$wfai ngnbi -------* Of the party he espeuses be said: “We have tried to view things as tiny are” To the “new generation” he said: “Come' with us , . . We are going somewhere . . . The verdict of history shall be ours!” ★ w ★ Weltner said nothing specifically about the South or any new directions it may be traveling. But when this trim, earnest, intense young man stopped talking, others took up his theme and enlarged upon it. ‘NEW BREED’ , They, too, were young. They boiled onto tbe arena floor »d, marching behind the flag of Gen. James Longstreet, brandished handlettered placards which reed: “The New Breed, the New South.” “Ahead with Georgia, and Weltner.” “Dixie on the Move.” “The New Georgia.” “rfrriU Tf ■ , “Charlie’s Our Boy.” The demonstration didn’t last leeg. It obviously was not wen endowed as many another to the history of political conventions. But toe marchers were young and they looked happy, Charlie grinned" Ms thanks. When the brief hubbub was over, and Charlie turned to leave the podium, a long arm restrained him for a moment while young and middle-aged and old to the Mg hall applauded again. The restraining arm on his shoulder belonged to House speaker John W. McCormack, toe convention’s 72-year-old per* nyuient chairman; McCormack’s gesture was friendly' and gracious. It was age saluting youth. LOOK AT ONLOOKERS - A view of spectators at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City yesterday shows youngsters and men and women of all ages. Last night's proceedings packed the Convention Hall to capacity while a huge television audience watched At (tome. Convention Hall Noteworthy CIRCLE GROWS - The ring of civil rights demonstrators sitting on .the boardwalk to front of Convention Hall where the Democratic convention is in progress swelled considerably yesterday Just prior to the start of the second session. The group has been here for several days, directly to front of the hall’s main entrance. By HOWARD HELDENBRAND ATLANTIC CITY — The setting for this meeting of minds, Convention Hall, is something to write tonne about — and that’s just what your news ferret is doing. * * * Built to 1029, it to approximately the stoe of Rhode Inland and, needless to say, the largest such facility to the world. Could Cheops, toe ancient pyramid specialist, take a gander at the.mammoth strnc-ture that towers above the Atlantic, he’d indubitably tarn green — from Jealousy. Not seasickness. tion of Atlantic City (more than 50,000) could be accommodated. ★ * * ' The place abounds with security — and It ain’t social. Many official prying eyes check you in. CHILD’S PLAY Wandering to unannounced to browse around Fort Knox would be child’s play compared with crashing the hall’s gates without proper certification. About the outy pwcuutlou ary step too gendarmerie haven’t so tor taken to to give saliva tests. That woald bo hard to swallow. As a prelude to1 last evening’s session, a caucus of tbe Mkhi- Twenty-five thousand persons gan delegation was hastily can be comfortably seated, and called. It began at 6 pm. and in a pinch, the entire popula- lasted two hours. The delegates wen still trying to reconcile the developing facts of political life with their initial unqualified delegate recognition of the Mississippi freedom Democratic party, an opposed to tile regular state party. For those who tjjrita tbdr semantics rtrnl^d. "caucus” comas from an old Indian word - “Kaw-Kaw” - moatoi« “to talk.” Imagine the silent, stoic red-men having a word for it instead of tbe Greeks. I always though their complete vocabulary consisted of two words: “how” and “ugh.” Incidentally, the Indian connotation of caucus isn't exclusively oral-It’s town the scene of a bit of scalping too. ^ PHONE CALL FROM LBJ? - Texas GOv. John Connally receives a phone call on the floor of the Democratic convention during a'flare-up of the Alabama seating rift. Connally la credited with cooking up‘a.. demonstration, pledging support for President Johnson, which Alabama delegates cootend qualifies them as loyal Democrats, since the entire delegation participated in it Had Key Role in '48 Crisis ATLANTIC CITY, N J. (AP)-Mississippi and Alabama, the two delegations embroiled in the only controversy of the 1964 Democratic National Convention, were the key actors to the crisis that struck the party’s convention 16 years ago. In the 1040 Philadelphia convention, which nominated Harry S. Truman, the adoption of & strong civil rights plank to the platform prompted the Mississippi and Alabama delegations to walk out. Their walkout led to the formation of tbe States Rights party for the 1048 election. Now, Mississippi is withdrawing from the Atlantic City convention, after moat of the state's delegates refused to sign • pledge of loyalty to the party. The Alabama delegation, most of whose members also refused to sign the pledge, is staying on, hut it is officaHy unrecognized by the convention. * * * Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota also had a role to both incidents. ★ * ★ In 1048, he proposed the strong civil rights plan that irked the Mississippi and Alabama delegates. In 1964, he ptayqd a major part in woricing out a compromise in the Mississippi seating dispute. .The compromise includedthe loyalty pledfp that most of the Mto- sissippi delegation has refused to take. I B—•; THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, T26i Khanh Fails to Talk Viet Nam Le Resigning SAIGON, South Viet N«m (AP)-Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh f.Hari today to convince fellow m—iff of the ruling revolu- they should quit politics to pre-vent new riots. “We an not even ctoss to a decision,” said LL Gen. Tran Thton Khiem, one of the most puiworful officers on the 60-man Fresh Woodshed to the north attended deepening of the political crisis tost led Khanh to resign Tuesday as president, Junk a controversial constitution, and pledge a new deal for this Communist-menaced republic. CLOSE SOURCE A source dose to the ]i said the question of electing a now national leader-part of an arrangement with toe loaders of student and Buddhist demonstrators—was not *evu dis-issed. ' Before the five-hour meeting broke up, student leaders threat' ened new maos demonstrations unless the military men returned to fighting the war, opening toe government to civilians. KHANH TIRED Khanh appeared tired and tense. Speaking alternately in Vietnamese, and Regjteh, he said: “The situation is very serious. We men in Vietnamese Army must take time to think about the problem." Buddhist rioters thronged in and around Da Nang, 360 miles northeast of 8aigon, for the third straight day and South Vietnamese troops intervened for toe first time to check their antigovemment, anti - Catholic and anti-American demonstra- The troops fired over toe heads of toe crowd. The toll of the riots rose to 11 dead and 61 wounded. Two of the dead were Vietnamese soldiers. Da Nang police arrested 40 of toe rioters for looting. Catholic-owned shops were sacked and burned. Demonstrations also' flared again‘ln Hue, 50 miles north of Do Nang and 40 south of Communist North Viet Nam’s frontier. Students commandeered the Hue radio station. Police and local officials Joined 4,000 demonstrators hi a street parade. As the Junta marched downstairs from the secondfloor room where they held the meeting, the officers were smiling and chatting in a relaxed man- Full Hurricane Watch in Effect ner. But none would say bow things were going. Hm next meeting is scheduled to resume at 0:30 a.m. Thursday—0:30 p.m. f!ST Wednesday. A student tarter said it seemed to him tost the council might be reluctant to raslgi it announced If would do Tuesday. He said antigovemment demonstrations would he resumed with full force if toe council goes bade on its word. KEEPS CONTROL As the Junta—or revolutionary coundl-went into the meetfag, resigned as president, was re-MaJ. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, who ported assured of resuming control but Under a new tide. Although Khanh bowed .. Buddhist and student mobs by giving up the presidency and scrapping the new constitution Tuesday, he clung to power as head of the junta. ■ A A ■' A Diplomats described 37-year- 'Qeo'Aiming Straight for Florida Coast MIAMI, Fla. (II - Hurricane Cleo boiled off the north coast of Cuba today, regained strength rapidly and picked up speed on a path toward the southeast coast of Florida and the western The Miami Weather Bureau placed toe Florida coast from West Palm Beach southward to Key Lergo on a full hurricane watch, and warned residents of Car Can't Keep Pace PATTON, Pa. (JB-Henry Myers, II, wants to sail his HU Model A Ford sedan because “they're speeding for glory, and I don't fail safe on toe road any more. There’s too much traffic, and it moves too tost.” '•jj* "it e Myers said he had bought the car new and paid |600 for it He said it has been 61,000 miles-never over SO miles per hour—atnd is in good condition. “The fasteat I aver drove was 46 miles an hour-end is in good con-cause I was in a funeral procession and I had to keep up with the other cars," he said. this heavily populated area to be ready for quick safety meas- While toe eye of the tt-mOe-an-hour storm was expected to oeast wad Bimini Island, 00 miles to the Oast, forecasters said enfy a slight westward ton weald bring hurricane renditions to Bento Florida. Oeo’s top wipds w*re ax-1 period fo»u^ 100 mpl as the storm passes Miami early this evening. Reconnaissance aircraft located the storm center at noon at latitude SS.6 north, longitude 76A west, about 160 miles south-southeast of Miami. It was moving northwestward at 12 miles an hour. GALE FORCE The Miami Weather Bureau laid windf would rise to gale force in squalls in this area this afternoon and would reach hurricane force tonight on Bimini forecaster at Miami,,said, toe eye of the hurricane prat ably would pass east of Miami early tomorrow, cheer to Bfrsatol than toe Florida ceast Gradual intensification of the storm was expected as it moved over the Florida Straits* building energy from the warm subtropical waters. * * * During the time the hurricane was over Cuba, U.S. reconnais- High Court to Get Civil Rights Appeal WASHINGTON (A?) - The Supreme Court agreed today to hear on Oct. S an appeal questioning constitutionality of the public accommodations sections of the new Civil Rights Act The court’s action was announced by its Cleric, John F. Davis. The tribunal is now in summer adjournment. it it e ■ Davis said the argument will concern only the Heart of Atlanta Motel Corp. The Pickriqk Restaurant, also of Atlanta, Ga., was involved in nreUml-nary steps in the case but will not be concerned directly hi the Oct 8 argument. FEDERAL DECISION The motel and restaurant were principals in the decision by a special flpwe-jirige federal tribunal in Atlanta. Tbe special court upheld validity of toe nub* lie accommodations section. The case was the first in which a ruling was given under the New Chdl Rights Act - A ♦ * iM Oct 8 is the first day of the Supreme Court's new foil term, and ordinarily the tribunal does not hear arguments or transact other than routine business on that day. Requests for a speeded bearing of the motel case wore filed by toe motel and the Justice Department. The motel has agreed to Ills its printed appeal with the4 tribunal by Sept. 21. The Justice' Department will file a reply brief by Sept. 28. The Oct. 6 argument will coyer at least two hours with each side being granted one hour. Juatlco Hugo L. Black of the Supreme Court on Aug. 10 refused to stay enforcement of the special court’s order requiring admission of Negroes to toe motel and restaurant. DOORS SHUT Later, Lester Maddox, operator of the restaurant, shut the doors and said he waa closing it for good. a ★' a Black, in declining to block enforcement of the public accomodations section, said he agreed with toe motel and the Justice* Department that it would be wise to have the constitutional issues decided by the Supreme Court as quickly as Solicitor General Archibald Cox, in ^memorandum to tfie Supreme tJgurt on AUfl. 7, said that any (May to enforcement of toe public accommodations section “might well encourage motels and restaurants” in other parts of toe South to refuse service to Negroes. sance aircraft were unable to fly into toe storm. MART CHANGE When It crossed the northern coast of toe Communist island this morning, a sharp change in its forward path was noted. A mere definite track, and a better idea of Ctoe's strength, will be avpQgbk when it has moved for eaeata from Cnba iraflftr Navy Tit r lea ■ e Cleo was moving toward toe north-northwest at about 10 miles an hour. She was expected to swing to a more northerly course and gradually build up forward speed. ★ ♦A'i§y Small craft sailors in South Florida and the Bahamas were warned to seek sale harbor as the hurricane, with 84 dead in her wake, approached. TURN IN DIRECTION The turn In direction took Key West, at toe end of the Florida Keys, out of the danger pine. ' Miamians made preparations to board up and rushed to stores to lay in supplies of food and other necessities to toe event of a power loos. A businessman In Lea Cayes on Haiti’s southern peninsula radioed to Port au Prince that a hospital had been deatroyed by the storm and 80 bodies found. Les Cayes was still rebuilding from the effects of Hurricane Flora which devastated the island and took thousands of More than 1U,000 persons were evacuated from exposed areas on Cuba’s southwestern coast. There were no reports of casualties. A A A • Hurricane Flora, which lashed Cuba for four days last year, caused an estimated 1,500 deaths In Cuba and hit the Cuban economy a staggering blow. A A A Cuban military shortwave frequencies were kept busy throughout the night relaying hurricane damage reports - to Havana. MILLS DAMAGED One station, monitored by The Associated Picas in Miami, re-ported that a number of sugar mills in Orient* Province were heavily damaged by the storm. One was the mill at Pilon, center of a Cuban exile hit-and-run attack last May which caused an estimated 62*8 million In damages. ■it A A- The Pikm station called for medicine, doctors and food for those evacuated to safer places. No details were given as to toe number Injured or killed. For Astronaut Jaunts. Plan 6-Wheel Moon Bus SEATTLE, Wash. II* — Plans for a six-wheel vehicle capable of taking two astronauts for a 14-day, 280-mile Jaunt on the surface of the moon were disclosed yesterday by the Boeing Co. Boeing, which is heading a nine-month study for toe National Aeronautics and Space Administration pn payloads for the Apollo logistics support system, calls the moon vehicle Molab, short for mobile laboratory. : .it . ★ jk - The vehicle would be sent to toe moon aboard an Apollo spacecraft. If radio signals showed it landed, safely, the astronauts would follow in another Apqllo. The wheels of the vehicle would be five or six feet in diameter, wirewrapped and covered with steel mesh to cope with jagged rubble on toe moon’s surface. old Khanh as confident he could weather toe storm. The 86 generals and colonels of South Viet Nam’S Ui-backed armed forces mat under heavy fpard at general staff headquarters near Saigon Airport. GENERAL MINH Among them was Ms]. Gen. Duong Van Minh, the popular Buddhtet who directed toe overthrow of President Ngo Dinh Diem last November. Minh was ousted as figurehead chief of state in Khanh’s Aug. 16 shake-up, which precipitated the current crisis. Minh did not attend toe Junta session 10 days ago when Khanh moved up from premier to president mid received dictatorial powers under the new constitution. A A A Also present today were four generals — including three suspected of favoring neutralisation of South Viet Nam — who after Khanh seised power last Jati.ll. Although student leaders in Satan promised to accept the dedston of the military revolu- ued h at least two cities. HEAVY FIRING Reports from Da Nang, told of heavy firing around the gov- ter. The center i A small Roman Catholic settlement at toe edge of Da Nang lay far ashes after Buddhist mobs burned 60 houses Tuesday. The Catholics, many of them refugees from Communist North Viet Nam, sought safety on nearby piers or in sampans offobore; AAA Tbs riots began Monday when 1,000 Buddhists stoned n U.S. enlisted men’s barracks 160 yards from the Catholic village. The Americans toed shots into toe air to ward off the rioters. Reports from Dan Nang told of/hsavy gunfire near toe barracks again Tuesday night, hut' there was a6 word of new casualties. During toe night mobs sacked and burned six shops owned by Catholics and act top to several care and trucks. STAYING OUT Col. John H. Wohner of Canton, Miss., senior UB. Army ad* riser in Da Nang, telephoned Saigon for instructions, hut American officials apparently were staying out of the turmoil. A terrorist grenade exploded at a bridge near (fat U.S. Embassy in Sajgon Tuesday nl^bt. No one was injured by the blast — the third in tot capital in five days ” nor was there significant damage to the bridge. The blasts were believed to he file work of Communist agents. A A ’ A - A communique" issued before toe junta’s meeting said it would be dissolved/ . The junta hinted at increased putidpatkai by driUans in the government, saying the new leader would summon a national convention to rebuild the nation !a freedom and democracy. NEW CHIEF In Washington, State Deportment officiate said Khanh appeared to be in control but anticipated Mlnh’s return ns chief of state or in some other titular capacity. UA. Ambassador Maxwell D. m Taylor held a postmidnight conference with Vietnamese officiate before . Khanh announced Ms stepdown to a crowd of 30,-000 Tuesday, tiiytar conferred with Khanh later In the day. ★ ★ a So far Taylor has made no change in Ms plans to return home Sunday for conferences with President Johnson. The Soviet Union described the political maneuvering in S*ig«i as “only 8 trick designed to gain time.” Thank You Mr. Megdeli! The surest way to bring customers and merchants together is through newspaper advertising. It gets into the home where the 'family purchasing agent/ mother, can read it thoroughly at her leisure. In this area it's The Pontiac Press she reiiei upon for local, state, national and inter-national news. It's her newspaper. ItTs where she looks for shopping information too! Mr. Merchant if you want your messagi, about the values you offer, to reach the buyers .. . do q$ Yankee Stores do . . . use The Pontiac Press advertising columns. „ % \ " presidenti^ nCilPllCRni«*sm™ I10LIJMW** MtWWft ^ HodIM^S [IS3S8& fiasfc fijBb Wi#j ft"**** THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 ONf COLOR He Trimmed and Finances, Too LONDON (AP) ■— John Martin weighed 350 pounds and kept losing Jobs, so he went on a diet. He also took up gambling, and now he has a new problem bankruptcy. “I couldn’t get a Job because I was too fat,” Martin, 39, testified in bankruptcy court Tuesday. “Employers would take one look at me and say: ‘Sorry, but your weight puts you out.’ ” * ★ * Martin sakl he used to be a truck driver. But when his waistline readied 00 inches he - W PUBLIC AUCTION _Q" AMf. M WH" #t *:45 ».m. Paddock and Auburn, Pontiac Michigan, iNi Chovrolat, swtot no. nwwiflaii "HI te *>w at PUbiic Auction for cuh 1$ eS!f w$S5£.Cer m*y h* . ___________________Aug. IS and St, IN4 ' NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO TO—The •proporty owners a * of Itw City of Pontiac: .UgHM J* JFlfr tfvon that Purauant tl jht City Charier, a public haarlng will botofo tho City Commlaalon v E a item Standard TfRo Tat day. oTjpatnbtr, A. .1 m ...... PwiiicWchigSri^'lhS'pI!)! r^yanua for aajary and waga Incraaaaa usxiftf OLGA BAKKBLfY City Cltrk . - . ■ Auguat it, 1M4 couldn’t squeeze behind the wheel. Then he took over a toy shop. He couldn’t bend down to pick up boxes, so he had to hire assistants. EXPENSIVE CAR He bad to buy a big, expensive car. “It had to be large,’’ he said, “because I couldn’t get into a small qne.” He couldn’t save money by using buses. ★ +;• * i “When you’re fat,” he said, “you can’t travel by bus. You get so many ignorant people staring at you because you take up two seats.’’;1 ATthis pot him into debt. IQs money trouble really became serious, he said, when he tried gambling to get out of hock. CAB DRIVER Martin’s diet knocked off 78 pounds and 20 inches from his waistline. This enabled him to get a Job as a cab driver *- his -present occupation. The bankruptcy examiner asked how he managed’ to reduce so drastically. “Partly by cutting down on starch and liquids — and partly by worrying over money,” Martin said. BIG THRILL—Little Kini Devore, daughter of Sy Devore, famous tailor to the movie stars, sits on RJhgo’s lap as Paul points out something of interest. Britain’s Beatles attended a garden party in Hollywood yesterday tp help raise hinds for the Hemophilia Foundation. Hie federal Soil Conservation Service last year ass. 1,041,528 landowners and tenants to plan and supply soil and water conservation projects. Arrests in Red Protest Are at 3,000 in India NEW DELHI. India (ft- Ar rests in a nationwide Commu nist protest against food short ages and high prices passed 3,-000 today when about 100 Red demonstrators tried to invade the rood Ministry. and, after a brief scuffle, loaded them aboard paddy wagons there were no injuries reported. The third day of Red demonstrations began with a street inarch of about 500 persons in New Delhi. The Egyptian University of Al-Ashar was originally established-as an academy in i he. year 989. Bard Has Immortal Longings Alas, Poor Humphrey! I , Him Well! WEST By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI)-During the 400th anniversary year of William Shakeepeare’s birth, I have been do-i ing a series of “ interviews" with the Bard! on selected contemporary subjects. Another situ-j ation has arisen] which would appear to lend itself n 1 c e 1 y to some of Shakespeare’s well turned lines. And bo, without further ado, we switch you to: Q. Mr. Shakespeare, you have beea actively seektagthe Democratic vice presidential nomination. Would yea mind tdUag us why? A. “I have immortal longings in me.” % Q. I assume yon are aware that yea have a number of rivals? - * • ■ A. “They say we are almost as like as eggs." Q. What usually happens when a pen on is mentioned as a vice presidential prospect? A. “Today he puts forth the tender leaves of' hopes; tomorrow blossoms,- and bears his blushing honours thick u^on the third day comes a Q. The frost already has hit •ne if the pen one who was prominently mentioned. ' Do yon knbw what his reaction was? A. “Big round tears coursed one another down his innocent lose in pieteous chase." Q. It is widely beljeved that President Johnson will pick a member of the Senate as Us raaalag mate. WonTd yea comment ea that? A. “Oft expectation fails, and most oft there 'where most it promises." Q. be yen think any of as at this point who tbs win hpr . A.'“If you can look into die seeds of time and say which grain will grow and which-will not" Q. Has the President given yon any reason to thiak he § 4 Youths Tour 273 Miles for Only 30 Cents { PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) •-A bus fare costs Portland, and four that price Monday rode for 14tt hours. Brace TTaceseO Cervallis, said “I guess we made 78 transfers without being caught.” He said the trip took a month to plea. “If you’ve never seen Port-m.$jg£tbg dyyirtJHi I can recommend,” Tracewell might cheese yea? A. “Such stuff as dreams are made on." Q. Bat he did not make any deQalte promises, did to? A. “The best in this kind are but shadows.” Q. Do you think he has given aay of the other prospects mere encouragement than ho has given to yen? A. “They are as sick that sur* actioo be if » the n«l? A^A good mouth-filling oath.” Q. Thank yaa, Mr. flhahe- GUP TODAY SAVE TODAY and prove to yourself... New Instant' Tender Leaf Tea ■always tastes; Bright and Bold-even icy cold 1 INblANT m Tender Leaf e>a»Avo Tea •00% PURE TEA I THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDXtSDAY, AUGUST Atlantic City's Residents Lost in the Shuffle Convention Social Whirl Keeps Democratic Feet Aching sippers ire bound to smile sweetly at whoever upsets the scotch mist on his shirt front. By RUTH MONTGOMERY ATLANTIC CITY - Democrats ere on the inarch — every aching foot of them — from one party to enotber in Atlantic City’s donkey party social whirl. passed by with outstretched sculptured practically everyone of renown aince William E. Bor ah and "Princess Alice”, Roosevelt Longworth. HARRIMAN IS HOST Harriman, whose social antecedents outshine th( Mestas, Connallys, Johnsons and Ken-nedys, will host one of the two top parties of this party-packed week. BUFFETBOUNTY The raw bar featured oysters and clams on the half-shell, lobster, shrimp and crab fingers. The nave serious diners lined up for rounds of beef, turkeys and bains. The consumers, running the gamut from one-time Truman cabinet members like Treasury Secretary John Snyder to LBJ kitchen-cabinet staffers like Horace Bushy, stampeded the 10 bars and buffet tables. Ail seemed to agree that If ing an effort tol ive up to LB’s new slogan about "The Orest Society,” valiantly kicked off with the first of her ftSe soirees at a rented mansion in nearby Ventnor. the aaridge Ballroom. So eager are the gatecrashers that . * small army of guards has bees hired for both the Harriman and Meats parties to separata the men from the boys. Madame Perie Meats’! cosy little buffet-dinner for S00 last night may have been more selective. Buff or sheer magnitude, munificence;and muscle, the Tens delegation's wing-ding for Gov. John Connelly had her beat. Resident society is virtually rith Adkii Stevenson and the ^ 0* Claridge Hotel drew bree Democratic Roosevelt such a fascinating cross section ona — Franklin D., Jawwv and ** President David McDonald Sniott. of the Steelwprkers’ Union, Un- .i a. fc. dersecretary of State Averell fJSJ"J* £ Harriman of the railroad mul- timillions, Perie Meats of the Meats steel fortune, and the ais-buag, iraeee heart hetaags to ter-team of Elena and Bertha nairy oewwawr at KepaMi- Defe^Uefaranth, famous portrait caa‘u,,a* artists who live yew-round in The Trenton lady banker is Ventnor and have painted or Front-running Vice Presidential Candidate Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey was held in reserve for her second buffet party Monday night, but Sunday’s featured such do-or-dte'hopefuis as Sens. Eugene McCarthy, Mike Mansfield and Edmund Muskle and Mayor Robert; Wagner. Sineb at this point, only President Lyndqn Baines Johnson knows the identity ef‘ his running mate, the martini MAUL girls’ washable cotton jackets • THURSDAY, FRIDAY. . . tiff «• Bmrfml • PLUS many unadverttsed, special vainem •Odd* mm d Ends, Broken Size Ranges, Soiled • Seconds or Irregulars with sUyht Imperfections 24x40-in. scatter rugs electric Drapery fabrics; 3-10 yds. 27x48-in. cotton rugs kitchen clock; seconds receiyiiig blankets*.. 1-3-yd, decorator fabrics ‘Autumn Leaves’ girdles, bras pentg girdles Little Ymmkee children** shoes 4.97 24x72-in. cotton runner Scroll pattern nylon rugs assorted linens and totvels Savings too good to Tote* Plastic Pants • . • • . Crib Rianhets: sec. . • . . . , Men9* Cotton Slacks . . . . Men V Knit Shirts • • • ’* ^ Mon9* Sport Shirts • • • • • . Subteens9 sportswear . . . . , Electric Hair dryers . . . . , ’Miracle Tread’ casuals; colon... Young Designer Jr. Miss shoes... mens well-known young men’s basketball shoes slacks 3*9 wipe-clean vinyl plastic table coven 6/1.00 seconds of . 7(lft men’s shoes . . . / #1/9 - Summer-weight a ij .J.44 72x90 blanket. print 72x90 blankets... *4 Summer Jewelry; asst • • • • . . ip Jewelry; pastels* few white ... 4P. 8P 9x12"ft. Rayon tweed rug on foam 18.88 Decorator Fabrics; 1"3 yd. pcs. . „v f *f 'Dan River’ Wrinkl-Shed totton in 3 to 10-yd. short lengths. Many patterns. 39! f ■ r < 1 :" THE PONTIAC PRESS,! WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 86, 1964 B—11 Are Sexes Alike? Yes, Sir (Oops!) Ma'am BOYLE By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) — It is a truism of our times that the sex-da art getting more alike in America. Aa e matter of fact, it is getting harder and harder to tall them apart. . In the Middle Ages there was| no such problem. If a creature had long hair and wore a long dress, it was a woman. K it had on a suit of metal and clanked when it walked, It was a man. Each could tell die sex of the other von sight. But since knighthood no longer is in flower, the identity of the sexes has become more pushing. The spread of the equal rights movement and the riae of the togetherness cult have so Intermingled the historic roles of men and women that both have become somewhat confused. SAME JOBS Women and men now work at the same Jobs. They play the same sports. They ditos alike, particularly In their youthful years, and they talk about the same things. As an Inevitable result, they look more alike. As a matter of fact, teenagers now look so much alike that only their own parents can tell which B son, which is daughter. But it is almdet as hard to tell Pop from Mom when both put on slacks to go golfing, or Grandpa from, Grandma . when they dress up in old clothes to go fishing. What we need is a king of Baedecker of Sex to tell the genders apart. Hoe are a few ways it stOl can be done: If it smiles when you address it as “Ma’am," it is feminine. If it grunts and growls, it is masculine. ITS A HIM If it strikes a kitchen match on the teat of its trousers, it’s a him. If it waits Coyly for you to light its cigarette, it’s a her. If ii takes off its shoes at the movies, it’s a woman. If it gets down on its hands and knees and starts looking for the shoes, it’s a man. ' * * •* Dots it do its fair share of pushing while gobig through a revolving door? It'a a gentleman for sure. Does It leap in front of you and grab Hie taxi you Just flagged down? It's a lady — every time. If it brags about the steaks it cooked in the backyard, it’s a man. If it dimples when you praise the roast it codes indoors, it’a a woman. DUCKTAILS If it wears a red ribbon in its hair, it’s a lass. If it combs its hair like the north end of a dude going south, it’s a lad. If it says it-has given you the best years of its life — “and for what I ask you’’—it is a wife. If it asks for lunch money before going to work, it’s a husband. Pope Issues Peace Appeal Racalls World Wart; Urges Arms Race End CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (AP) — Pope Paul VI, in a peace appeal recalling Hie tragedies of two world wars, urged nations today to avoid an arms race, * The Homan Catholic pontiff said there was a return to the “illusory concept that peace can only be based on the terrifying power of extremdy homicidal Speaking to his regular weekly general audience at his summer residence just south of Rome, Pope Paul expressed concern at the “acute disagreements, already stained with Mood and pregnant with menacing omens, existing today* between various countries.’’ He said his thoughts were stirred by the current anniversary commemorations of the start of World Wars I and n. NEW SYMPTOMS “New symptoms are noted of a regrowth of divisions and oppositions between peoples, between the various races and different cultures: this spirit of division is guided by nationalistic pride, by prestige politics, the armaments race, social and economic antagonisms," Pope said. “Then returns the illusory concept that peace can only be beeed on the terrifying power of extremely homicidal weapons; and, while on the one hand noble but weak discussion and efforts an made to limit end abolish armaments, on the other tile destructive capacity of military apparatus is being continually developed and perfected." Commission on Aging Gets Women Members LANSING (AP)—The appointment of two women tojhe State Commission on Aging has been arniminfwH by director Harry Kelley. The new appointees are Dr. Ruth Preston, of Detroit, and Mrs. Helen Jacobs, of Traverse City. They succeed Dr, u D. Punk, of Athens, and Earl Woifman, of Detroit. If two go to the supermarket, the one that pushes the loaded cart la the mister. The missus is the one that holda up the Uae at tile checkout counter as she fumbles through the wilderness of her puree. If it Ukee to dine by candlelight because this is romantic, it’s the Mama Beer. If it grumbles, “I can’t see whet I’m eating,’’ It’s the Papa Bear. WHICH ONE If it would rather go dancing than do anything, it’s a her. If it would rather shoot pool, It’s a him. If you open the door to it and lk. tries to sell you a bok of cookies, It’s a Girl Scout. If it helpe old ladies across a street, It's a Boy Sccftit. ★ ★ ★ Does it bring its paycheck home in Its mouth? It’s a man. Dose it think money grows on tress? It’s a woman. It it rwritee newspaper columns such as this, It’s a pirn. If H reads columns such as this and loses Its temper, lt’« a her. Wonderful School Clothes 'Shaggy Blazer’ MgnL This colorful cardigan by Robert Bruce it made of 100% virgin wool brushed to luxury softness and striped boldly in handsome color combinations. 1095 Truck Kills Child, 4 BYRON CENTER (AP) Linda Sue RuBeen, 4, wee killed Tueaday when hsr 15-year-old sister An over her whin back{ ing a trade out of the driveway of their Byron Center home, Kent County Sheriffs officers said. 1 Girls School Clothes 'Girls’ Dresses A wonderful world of style for the back-to-achool miaa. ‘ Plaids, solids, fitted, dropped waists ... all the fashion available. Sizes 3 to 6x, 7 to 14 498 »1298 Boys9 Shirts ff Classic button down styles in w-*- wonderful new -plaids and fresh -|f solid colors... Very right for the 1§ .classroom. Sises 8 to 20. from 300 Use A Convenient Lion Charge Pin with option terms Orb’ Sweaters Pullovers and cardigans, clmiot mm ■ 398 k> 898 Skirts Slim and pleated styles, washable wools, waistbander styles. Solids and plaids. 3-6x Mi * s 9—IS s • m -V. Sy V T THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY! AUGUST 86, 1904 MICHIGAN DELEGATES - The Dem-ecratlc delegates from Michigan are shown in a gay mood in Atlantic City as they gathered to caucus at the Democratic National Con- TirtitontN0 limit rirVHSn? GUARANTI iniStr" jjflWW i «*•* - 1 1 saLtittiT* ■ Car and Home Washer • Kta any standard %-inch garden how • Finger-tip “On-Off" water flow control e Leakproof one-piece construction with top quality bristles________/ ^ Discoverer GAS CAN Gallon Only flexible pouring spout YOUR OLD BATTERY 0NLY$1H jirettont Dri-Charged Batteries Additional bant *1.00 Each lonsnakn • Tru-Tension winding Well give you a generous siMwanco lor your old battery Liquid BLINKER LANTERN Open Mon. andFrL TUI 9 -Saturday* TUI 6 * TWO GREAT STORES * 146 W. HURON 333-7917 140 N. SAGINAW ft 4-9970 TIMOTHY C. QUINN An Open Letter From q Circuit Judge What Kind of Men Do You Want For Your Appeals Court? To the Voter:. Would you hiro on untrained person to do on important job for you? Or would you first seek someone with Experience? At the Primary Election Sept. 1 you will voto for 3 man to do vitally important work for you for tho noxt 6, 8 and IQ years on the new Court of Appeals. You cannot measure their experience by the number of the billboards, their name, their politics or thair handshak^ Ypu con only measure it by what they hove done. I ask you to judge my qualifications. I hovo hod 20 years experience in the general practice of law, f years as Tuscola County Prosecuting Attorney and over 11 years os o Circuit Judge. There is no substitute for such axparionce. Timothy C. Quinn Circuit Judga Candidate for the Court of A|>p«ols, Non-Partisan Ballot, Sept. AS Vhststsx vention. There are 102 delegates and 90 alternates from Michigan. Among them are 12 delegates representing Oakland County. 70 Delegates, 2 Alternates County Dems Send 12 Id Convention Twelve Oakland County residents are attending the National Democratic Convention as delegates and alternates in Atlantic City. Tea county teea-agm also are there aa volunteer kelp-era. The delegates-at-larga are Stuart E. Hertzberg of 10100 Burton, Oak Park, and August Scholle. 271Q Ytasetta. Royal Oak. Alternates-at-large are Eugene Kutby, 4114 Colonial, Royal Oak; Avern Cohn, 25580 Dundee, Royal Oak; Leon Fill, S77S Nadine, Huntington Woods; end Mrs. Clifton Eldridge, 471 W. Oakridge, Ferndale. ■k k ' ★ • Representing the old 10th congressional district aa delegates Sander Levin of 1022 Edge-wood, Berkley; Kenneth Morris, 2025 Binbrook, Birmingham; Mrs. Luther Olson, 3599 Shoals, Waterford Township; and Urn. William Clark, 540 S. Cranbrook Cross, Bloomfield Township. ALTERNATES Alternates are Otis Lawrence, 470 Ferry, Pontiac; and Mrs. Donald Bock, 25203 Inkster, Farmington. The teen-agers are Jamie' Blanchard of Royal Oak; Harvey Dzodin of Oak Park; Bridget Eldridge of Ferndale; Edith Lawrence of Pontiac; Robert L. Hencken of Hunting-ton Woods; Arthur D. Cherkin-skl of Oak Park; Ken Monnett of Pontiac; Mark Pankin of Oak to*; William Roberts of Walled Lake; and Sue Scholle of Royal Oak. ★ k k The total state delegation to the convention numbers 102 delegates and 00 alternates. REAL ESTATE PEOPLE, APPRAISERS, MINDERS, CARPENTERS, INVESTORS, PROPERTY OWNERS AND OTHERS twtott, 6:00 F. M., FUST ClMS^MStOE REAL ESTATE BUILDING THURSDAYS, 14 P.M., 16 SESSIONS REOINNINO THURSDAY, SEPTWIWR 10TN ROOM R-2, PONTIAC N0RTMRN HIGH SCHOOL TUITION *40.60. 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Super-Strength . nylon cord for greater impact resistance. | auaaMUs | [ VNITIWALLS | | auoawm | 1 WNITIWAUS | | auacauu | mlTSMSUS 1 1 TskdM I 1 KMNMUt1 1 TMMNns I | WHITEWALLS .1 1 Meta 1 | tlACKWALU | 1 TaMsn R 1 WMTIWAlia ff | Wtowsl warns | LM**_I |T*ss-tjm| TsmsIns 1 [**43 nwaH 1 *• Tin M Tin M VMs TVS m VMS Tin M VMS SMI Tin M VMs a Ml TM* ms M VMS 7J» 1st Tin S3I9 M Tin M Tin g IN VMS I 5» VMS VMS M Un gr M VMS TMO Un Tire IN Tin M TMs M Tm leg TVs •JM* "I? ftr ijT tr - T - T a B E Ml "T UK T T UN UN UN IMS StJS UH UN SU7 SMS lS.lt MS-SI ’"T - 3 ftr «r‘ nT — Zr O UN lit ■T BBE Mt - SMI UN - - UN IUI UN IMT SMI 14.42 17JS IMS UN tt«S^* 7.90-14 ; rz* •T 17.N Ml 3 - Ml 55" - a UN £■ 3 am IMt - * UN 55 z. - IUI UN . SMI SMI IMS IUI M.SJ IMS uu IMT™ 1 tail *- z. •-» - a IMS BBC UN - IMS uit 3 3 55 I4.IS . UN IMS UN USE sms' IMS S9.7* '"sms'1" MO-14 — — — — — □ MJI ust — BOS IMF — UN [55 — — UN IMt UN IMS SMI USE SMI Ism 41.40 "5jP* | ", I M-U 1 '«■' - s - "ITl - .y 2" a - - - nn — ; "• IT - E tr m. « IMS an j SMS 22.S2 UN SMS U27 " [ stall UN w IMS M7 I74S tit UN 1M7 UN EC 1LN u ■a IMS IMS Mi UN [55 UN un UN IMt UN sue "SM>» IUI SMI : un IMS "usr"* tjau - •• *» 1 — — — — •sue m Mt 55 UN JUE UN SMS IU» SMS [55 M ua UN IMS | 1U9 IMt SUN USE UN | IMS MiH IMS** r ..I 1 zJ — — — ati E UK IMt un H3QE UN SMS tt> ua [55 55 UN 55 un, K4I . IMS SMS! JUS Nje1 UN 4UI SLM~" tan 3 — | ZJ - - ~3 a IMS 55i BE UN — — 1 [55 UN S3 UN IMS JUS lilt sms' -*«-l UN | 7ST\ 4.S9 sur™ SJa» 1 L=J El 3] El Ej EJ £2, Ej L3 a UN s El am IMS *■■■ E E3 E E UN UN | .UN sms'" UN L^J sms'. IUI ~usr " X THE PONTXjAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1064 David Lawrehce Says: Got Stick-to-ltiVtwmf ROCK SPRINGS, *Wyo. U* When Rudolph Anselmi gqJ hold of a political job, he real holda on to It. People Kept in the Dark About Election Issues the shiftless or for the benefit of the politically shrewd, The adroit politician Inevitably scoffs at Intellectual honesty. He concerns himself primarily with finding ways to channel public funds to areas where votes aren’t exactly bought but where members of Congress claim nevertheless they can obtain for a state or city more public funds than the candidate of the other party can possibly get for his constituency! ATLANTIC CITY - The American people really don’t know what’s going an here or bow It can affect their destiny— that* Hvm ' are going, to stand for such'man-test nonsense. Even outdoors around the convention hall, there are "rallies” designed primarily to attract television cameras and the press so. that they can report, for instance, what was said by Adam Clayton Powell, Negro clergyman, who is the Democrat representing the Harlem district in Congress and chairman of the all-important Committee on Education and Labor of the House If Representatives. He told a cheering crowd that Sens, Haitian^ and Sten-nis of Mississippi, Democrats The whole game is to reach television audiences acmes the country and to give them the illusory idea that this is a well-ordered meeting of highly intellectual persons engaged In die solemn task of nominating a president and vice president of the United States. CONTRIVED METHOD If this is the contrived method whereby presidents are al- • Practicing Attorney • Graduate of MSU • Worked 3 Years in | U S. Congress • Con-Con Delegate • Family man with 3 children • Lives in the District ELECT A FIGHTING CONGRESSMAN! .. (Pd. Pol. Adv.) in the commun- (ties where wH 'they live or their opportune . ties to cqnserve^^^^^^ the their earned money. HMMHI The people do LAWRENCE not know what is back of the political chicaneryf b o a a tf u 1 phrases and artificial glamour There is no dissent. Even selection of a vice presidential nominee is carried out very much as Mr. Khrushchev would pick his second in command. AMERICAN VICTIMS One wonders how long the American people will continue to be the victims of such unpresen tative processes. Strangely enough, only mil- The "affluent society” in the Atlantic City convention, moreover, la conspicuous. ★ ★ Sr One wonders also what has become of the rights of the "common people” — those who earn their own living and want others to do likewise so that thfe taxpayers’ money will not be wantonly appropriated for that the system is much different from the way the Communist party is run In Moscow. This is the essence of American politics today. Incidentally, representatives of the Russian Communist press are here to observe what’s going on. jams foe nadpn.” But there Were no resolutions adopted by the convention denouncing this at “extremism.” Nor was there any denunciation by name of those organizations which incited violence and "hooliganiam” in Harlem re-, cently and in other cities of the the image of an oqpmbed show, lacking in dignity, lacking in respect for the delegates, and lacking in regard for the electorate itself. was not confined to apoken epithets or innuendos but extended to acts’ of violence that cost several lives and caused injury to many innocent persons as well as millions of dollars of damage to private property. BEHIND CAMERAS Inside the Convention Hall Itself, the scene is milks that of any other convention. Hundreds of delegates are seated behind three huge stands, each rising platform on which newsreel, TV and other cameramen are sta- The exuberant phrases of pride in the administration's activities, reflected in the speeches, are matched only by vehement denunciations of opponents. * ★ * These utterances, ok course, are characteristic p 1 e« e s of demagoguery evident in all political conventions. One wonders bow long the American people These delegates cannot see the speaker or others on the rostrum or the state delegations seated ii front of the obstructive carpentry. In this .kind of conclave, perhaps it Isn’t necessary to worry at all about* whether delegates themselves can see anything. Prisoner Won't Sign Papers %Wn GRANITE, Okla. (It- Billy Joe King refuses to sign the papers that would parole him from Oklahoma Prison. It WMBROBC r* wnwn,| end —« - y ;*»,**• wi? •."£?• i to the Oakland County Drain Commission yesterday an a project to raise the level el Commerce Lake in Commerce Township. The apparent low bidder was O’Laughlin Construction Co. of Detroit which offered to do the construction work for 996,450. Hie other bid was $29,475. iactaded M foe project win uled for Sept 1 at the drain cnmmi««lw> office, 560 S. Telegraph. Tha contract will be awarded 10 days after the assessment review. ■ * Sr ★ Hie project is designed to raise tha tovel of Commerce Lake from its present reading of 0090 feet above mean sea lonrel to flM legal lavel of I0M. Cycle Crash Injures Man. Russell Foote Jr. of 19U Kin-mount, Orion Township, tain fair at Pontiac Osteo- pathic Hospital with injuries suffered when his motorcycle left the toad early today « Pontiac and turned over. Foote, who was traveling east on Auburn near Eastway when file 5:90 ajn. accident occurred, told po»kw Ms motorcycle Mi the curb and went off foe road. He suffered facial and arm cuts. a part ol Pontiac since 1931 Etodt....*.. FARRELL E. ROBERTS COURT OF APPEALS Cowt of Appeal* Act# which re* etored to Michigan efti- Use One of’Osman’s Individualized Charge Plans E ROBERTS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WED! AUGffSff 20,18(84 IM Tussaud’s in London and tbo Grerin in Pari*. Whan ha raturnsd, he prevailed upon Earl Dorfman, a Baltimore designer, to hdp him. They had planned to import the figures from Europe but it was Dorfman who made thfcir first figure seven years ago. ■ Pour sculptors are now employed to make the are hollow when removed from them. The heads and figures are then filled with plastic foam so they will retain their shape. The heads are fined with trip of human hair. Additional hair is implanted, a strand at a time along the forehead and sides to give a natural appearance. The tame implanting of hair Is also done around beards and eyebrows. President Johnson and Lady Bird have Joined a distinguished group of Americans in the mu* seum. The list includes all the famous men in American history from Christopher Columbus and Cajpt. John Smith through Davy Crockett at the Alamo down to the astronauts. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUG0ST 80, 1964 Woopt for Nino Hours After Film Replacement HOLLYWOOD in-Jom Crawford says she cried for nine hours straight after bearing — from newsmen — that As was being radaosd In a movie for the first time in bar career. Producer-Director Rdbert Aldrich replaced die ailing Miss Crawford with Olivia de HavU- Is John Writing Another Book? Congo Planes Strafe Rebel-Held Airstrip ELISABETHVILLE, Congo (Ap) — The Congolese Air Force attacked and strafed-the Albertville airstrip today, Wowing up two of four rebel armored care. * Hot Time Is Scheduled for Sunday School DALLAS, Tor. (AP) - Dismay Is a mild word,to use in expressing the feelings of s local minister when he opened his church bulletin to check on the services scheduled for the day. .It read: “Sunday School will be bell at 18 am.” Beatles Answer Questions The Beatles, smoking cigarettes and looking world- weary, disappeared In a mass of photographers. * * • + “George has the prettiest hair,” observed my assistant. QUESTIONS BEGIN After minutes of shooting, the pbotograpiMrs were admonished to sit down so tbs news conference could start. It was more minutes before mis was accomplished. Then the questions began. * A report ftom observation air craft said there was beivy traffic and a lot of movement in the capital of North Katanga Province. How long does it take Beetles < John and Paul to write their 1 songs? t “It depends. Sometimes an ! hour, sometimes as long as two ' days. ‘A Hard Day’s Night’ was written overnight because the producer said be wanted a title tune in a hurry." NEVER WORRY Do they ever worry about their safety? “No, because the fans have never gotten to us. We won't be concerned until they trample us to tiie floor. The only time we really worry is when protection is inadequate, as in New Zealand, where there were three policemen to handle a crowd of 8,000.” * ★ ★ What about reports thpy were craxy about Ann-Margret? “None of us know her. None of us, including Ringo, has even talked to her on the telephone. It must have been the work of her press agent.” ANOTHER BOOK Is Beetle John writing another book? “Ye«." What is the nicest place they’ve ever played? “uverpool." ★ ★ ★ The conference ended with the announcement of presentation* on the platform: “Goorge will accept the gold records, John and Paul will take the trophies ffln dlnla anA Hlngn _ will receive the key to Califor- Davis — in “H Sweet Charlotte. Dorman’s A c o u p 1 e hundred newsmen crowded onto the floor of the Cinnamon Cin-der, a San Fer-nando Valley nightclub forJ|^H|||||kj teen - a g e r s> While a hundred or more young girls stood atop platforms and THOMAS EM 3-0661 BOTH IN COLOR Shiifey MacLalne-Qene Kelly-Dean Martin Robert Mttohtim-Paul Newman S. Rhodes Emergency State Called FRIDAY, 5 to 9:30 P.M. desia (AP) - The Southern Rhodesian government declared a state of emergency today in Salisbury’s African Highfield Township and called out a battalion of white troops to help police enforce order. The government sealed off this major township and declared a ban on two major African nationalist political parties. ★ ★ * /V A HAtiAMUMani lisin ■ ilnwt aaU DORMAN’S Old Mill Tavern OR 3-1907 Waterford, Michigan HEADQUARTERS ’ Our Speciality It In imiiimo __ VUMJUW PKWWHWB, . allies - Banquets - Meetings For 10 to 200 Bufffot Style or Tibia Service Special menus and party deco- j A rations available. Prices A start a* law as $1.35 A government broadcast said the state of emergency would ,liaAj8s»UMl6l^a^W-U HUB and Intimidation in the township. Desmond Lardner-Burke, minister of jaw and order, said members of the two nationalist parties had intimidated other Africans. The situation was endangering public safety, he said. Police Immediately began screening every person In the township. The two parties banned are Joshua Nkomo’s Peoples Caretaker Council and the Zimbabwe African National Union of the Rev. Ndabanlnge Sithole. Ao-ist leaders are restrictecT by !S1 noticed an ecstatic young girt clutching a glass of soft drink to her boeom. “It was Paul’s,” die 'Captain Newman, ild: ” STEAK H011SR FHINKENMUTH STYLE CHICKEN W» is determined not tel SAVE. ON THIS LIVING ROOM COMPLETE GROUPING WKC 108 NORTH SAGINAW IN MOBIL DEALERS’ GREAT LAKES 1MVEL SWEEPSTAKES $3^,500 GRAND PRIZE It VACATION TRIPS TO GREAT LAKES RESORTS •hired in the IMS Havel Quid*! Experts*-paid, 3-day vacations. Six trips for two to oodi of fttrso charming spots. ☆ where to stay ☆ where to eat ☆ what to see ☆ how to get there PUIS BM BONUS PRIZE! World’s Fair trip for two PffP ■ ' th Complicated Motives of Turk, Greek Bathe Cyprus in NICOSIA, Cyprus (API Years of battle and bushwhacking between Turk and Greek have turned this ruggedly beautiful island into a threatening cauldron of hate and fear. The 400,600 Greeks and 100,000 Turks on Cyprus think of little Abe. They are bundles of sensitive, self-centered nerves. <« ■ ■ i k ★ |r I Facing isolation, military defeat and possiblt starvation, the tWrUsk Cypriot thinks only of aurvjyid. Stoically, he hopes the Turkish government in Ankara Will save blqi. He b willing to Salen to Ankara's advice. The Greek Cypriot is more complicated. DREAM OF UNION He dreams of a union with Credos' which will somehow weave together a tapestry of conflicting desires. Jle wants onion with “the motherland" but no part of the North Atlantic Alliance, which Greece values. He wants,union, but no lessening of the heady rob now played hy his tiny island. ♦ ★ There is • genuine fear among responsible diplomats that the volatile Greek Cypriots #- te the absence of a settlement —may make of their bland a Mediterranean Cuba, f* ★ it No Greek Cypriot voice b raised publicly to point out the contradiction in President Makarios, a bearded Greek Orthodox archbishop, asking for military aid from the jolly atheist Nikita Khrushchev. —isn’t thought the bast odd, either, when the Greek high commissioner in London says a third world war would ha preferable to making concessions to Turkey. MILITARY ASSAULT Greek Cypriot seemed equally universal whs SP£C//U Kfpoxr Makarios threatened military assaults otf every Turkish village —which would have resulted in a massacre. In Nicosia, where fortified houses, slit trenches and sandbagged gun positions divide the city, both rides maintain diligent “information” serivees. On the walls of each office are gruesome ’atrocity” pictures which taken together sadly prove that both Greeks Turks are still sometimes capable of Byzantine savagery. The • unreality of Cyprus strikes an outsider almost as soon as he steps from the plane. A machine gun burst rattling fit (he distance causes hardly a head to turn. Beardless youngsters with burning eyes poke guns about with unnerving seriousness. - The bland has taken on a seemingly permanent embattled character ..since practical cHrll war broke but In December. It includes, between gunbumts,' peculiar touches of business as usual. The doorman at the Le-dra Palace Hotel will arrange for newsmen’s tours to fighting areas as casually as hb Paris counterpart sets up an evening -at the Bergere. UNREALITY WRITTEN Unreality Is Almost ‘ written into the island. It nestles along the Turkish coast but b and has long been 75 per cent Greek though peopled by many Mediterranean migrations. Its present difficulties date from a warm August day London four years ago. With restrained enthusiasm, Britain, Turkey and Greece reached an agreement granting toe former British colony indpendence of a sort. Turkey and Greece would maintain troops on the island, the Turkish minority would have a veto over certain legislation and a constitution wrappedit nil up neatly. Gen. George Grivas, whose Greek Cypriot guerrillas had harassed the British for years, .went home in bitterness and disgust, charging Makarios with treason for accepting less than full union with Greece — enosis b the Greek word for it. Grudgingly accepting Jhe restraint placed on him, Makarios almost immedbtely again rtddpd the banner of enosis and unswervingly kept it high. Vice President Fasti Kuchuk, a Turk who was once the archbishop’s personal friend, now raib at him. bitterly and sgys Makarios never intended to make independence work. The Inevitable blowup came r Junior. Editor* Quiz MONA bv Order of Ahepa Several area residents attended the recent Order of Ahepa Supreme Convention In Toronto at which delegates resolved to pledge the organization's financial support to the people of Cyprus. The Order of Ahepa, consisting of some 50,000 members, b the largest organization cl Americans and Canadians of Greek descent. dr ★ A Among the local delegates to the convention were Jo h n Loizon, William Gregory, Dr. Stephen Socrates, Charles Babb, Gas Furkioti, Nick Sekles, John Tsatsanis and Paul Theodore. ★ ' it- ■ it'- Visitors to the convention included the Socrates Sekles family of Pontiac who met Mbs Universe, Cortona Tsopei, while there. Sekles is chairman of the board of trustees of the Order of Abepa. ^Bpots Stolen Shoe on Foot of Boy, 14 >aPk forest, m. (AP) - A policeman took erne look at a 14-year-qld boy Tuesday and concluded he was wearing a shoe stolen 12 days ago from a local department store. The shoe, which the youth was wearing over his regular shoe, was a display model — size 25D, weighed three pounds, was 20 Inches long and had a sob 44 Indies thick. He said soother boy gave It to him., . - ■ su laixiuua; ANSWER: This picture was printed by the great Italian Leonardo da Vinci, who lived between 1452 and ISIS. It b a portrait of the wife of a merchant, Francesco del Giocondo, and b often called La Gioconda. Up to that time, pictures had mostly been of events or religious ideas: This was one of the unusual portraits of a real human being, of special iaterest because she so warm and human; we can almost see her thinking. What b she thinking about? Perhaps this is the secret of La Gioconda’s fame—everyone b trying to guess her secret. The faintest of smiles pbys over her Ups—but again, what b she smiting about? Everyone has hb own idea. Here b oar artist’s special theory: “Most people b portraits," he says, “give me the feeling they are thinking about themselves. But this wise, lovely lady looks deeply into your eye and seems to think about you rather than herself.' Somehow, she seems to have guessed your secret. And she gives the impression that even if she shares my secret, she will keep R in confidence." ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Find a color reproduction of the Mona Lisa and look deeply into her eyes. See if you agree with our artist. If not, work out your own explanation of that wise but tantalizing smite. (Political Adv.) (Political Adv.) For ALLEN Republican Candidal* Now 17th District STATE SENATOR • Experienced • Veteran a Life-jLong Resident Oakland County • Dependable • Capabli Tuesday, September Ist-Vote For LYNN D. ALLEN 7 Modern Pieces Huh stylo and quality now available oven tor modest budget*! "Roomy, deluxe size sofa and lounge chair with deep coil construction and reversible foam cushions' for real comfort. Covered in long-wearing nylon fries*. Modem cocktail, 2 step table* and 2 lovely lamps are also inducted. *149 PERSON TO PERSON CREDIT ^WOnnuMl * 70 Days Seme as Cash Let Pui^ttendant Park Your Car Free In yJUHSLot At Rear of Our Store! Op*n Monday, Thursday,. Friday Nights 'til 9 WATCH FOR THE NEW, BLUE BAND AROUND THE STATION. ENTER WHERE YOU SEE THE "TRAVEL SWEEPSTAKES" SIGN Here’s the opportunity of your lib! You don’t have to buy a thi^g You don’t have to write a thin*-except your name and address. This Sweepstake* is open only to licensed driven living, traveling or vacationing in the Gnat1 Lake* region. Entfr often. You’ll find entry blanks and full rules atMoIri' station displaying the "Gnat lakes Travel Sweepstakes” sign. While you're there, make sun your car is tsavel-nady. Ask ypur Mobil dealer fee a bumper-to-bumper check-up. Ybur Mobil dealer will give you dependable automotive service and dependabb travel advice tea Get to know Um.. See America Best...By Car LET MOBIL BE YOUR TRAVEL GUID? Starting out, or on the road, ask your Mobil dealer: OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK ffty tow s* mg Mobs *mmt item** mOpIM Lakes TVbvH Swwpitilitt" gjm Srruip cMm fBptmfc* 15.1964. 1 THE PpNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 36. 1064 put more flavor on your table with our. I SALE DATES L Wed., Aug. 26 | thru 1 Sun., Aug. 30, ML 1964 Delicious-Fresh Ground Young, Plump Tender Frying iusump; WHOLE Hygrade Sliced BOILED HAM With Coupon !★ Chicken LEGS...... 39! ★Chicken BREASTS .. .49! ■ flleertfr*N» MIIMfif uniGKen wiruo s■ ■ ■ n ★ Backs and BECKS ... 7l 7 YOUNG AND TENDER ROASTING CHICKENS Jur Favorite „ . fUT’ORIIti Hygrade CORNED Seeltest or Borden’s COTTAGE Pure Granulated KRAFT'S Derby CHILI f^LAPA Instant TEA BLBIlUiBCN NAPKINS 1V2-0Z. JAN With Coupon Coupon MEAbOWOALE FRENCHFR1ES economical AJAX Dleanser CALIFORNIA Seedless GRAKS 9 Pure Granulated PIONEER SUGAR 5 Lb. OAc Limit 1 Bog 09 With Coupon Kraft's MIRACLE WHIP at. QQc unit 1 lar 09 With Coupon I FREE GOLD BELL ) Stamps With Purchase of any 2 lbs. of j BACON Cn free gold bell y|| Stamp With Purchase bf any 10 lbs. or more of POTATOES W FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Pwehesa of any 100-ct. Pkg. of PAPER PLATES BEEF ROAST FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS Assorted PET RIT2 CREAM PIES -I Treesweet ORANGE . JMICE 1 « igt Economical CRISCO Shortening >59* Star-Kist TUNA CIJUNK STYLE “19* Stokely's APPLE SAUCE m*m 1 l( GSR | |T Aqua Net * HAIR SPRAY ^58* ■ 7SM Npml U. 112M UM Am. I 1275 Cosby Lskt U. OFIN SUNDAYS | OFMSUNOAYI B "OMN SUNDAY t fl K3MNMN ra »A.M.'l»fFJL ■ aast« SUNDAYS I 415 E. tm IT. 1 I Qpee t A.M. YB t P.M. 1 ■ 4 Oeys e Week A ■ OPf N SUNDAY fist 1 ■1 ■i | / W^nnntMmi W GIGANTIC Y BEEF SALE! Lees, tinder laky leaf, Vsfce-WayTrimiatd f* Siva Ym Mm IiHri Mm» fir Year Nanay ^SIRLOIN, RIB or ROUND B STEAKS What Is Bab Beef? BabyBeef with Its Naturally Tender Flavor is full of Hist young Booff Goodness. Sptcially Selected for your eating plosturo. Value-Way Trimmed of oboom ht and buna to giro you mora Loan, Eating Moat for your monoy — Naturally at Narional It'a Cuaranfood to Hoaso or your HMUoy back! ' * Mmm Man . • . this is aloak! Thoso aro a Chefs Choice for that Hg.occasion Cookout.. • fonder, )u)cy and ontia flavor* fui. And of course they arc cut and Value- Porterhouse 8pene»ao tem. ....’""auaof ,mk* 9mm4‘ kBVeel mg* ttAsiNk . . 98J NMllMf . . . . 49i MWr UrMe Free, Safe* Beet . NaHaeil*. Stw to—. mg*. OteStoab . . . . 98£ Ground Beef Chuck . 59, UA MMr,Mr M 4BJUC Sufcrtdi. MMMmu CwCu I IA A« MB) .... 29: Sntorgaspac . . & B9 Mahao *• TeeHe* So- iA( HilbMe, Michigan Grade 1 —— ( Mato Bolling Beef . 19,1 MU Sausage . . 59J L—, NUnt SUy Beet m g* f NMuMu, MleMtM CfMt 1 .. m**, leueteBeelSew . 69* Ring Bologna . . . 491 Cllffohar, Slow-Burning Northern Hardwood, Charcoal > M* —- * i dfiSnSuSSLiS- I ■BQuIUUB M0kn I — Mwtluhutcoupon 71 DC I SO EXTRA ***** ctaum 50M|a "ST STAI WW Tho PwrchiM of a 17-01. J JOHNSON'S (CLEAR 25 EXTRA "p” SI swWiffiff ran with tub coupon DmU® STAMM Oxydol National Has the Freshest... Daws fresh Vegetables! ran wiWTinnSIPB^™ M DtTUA ^ STAMW with ThePurchaae af Any Mh a * MpSoi&m" Homo Grown, Michigan Honoy Sweet, U.S. No. 1 Fresh Peaches 50r EXTRA *t5" STAMM With The Pureheie el Any Windier Cannon TWH, B«tH Mat, Bath Shorter 2 Washtfothyot F)ncsiMp Tfoms For canning, for cooking, or for serving fraud Try them chiliad and sliced with cereal for breakfast, or for dessert with ice cream ... sweet, tree ripened Michigan Peaches front' National. 25 EXTRA HP" STAMM With TSf Nrsheie # a Avert Am. #vi , ctoqoAL lightiT EXTRAS STAMM Vgffc The rajeheee e» Any GULF IINSECTICIDE 25_EXTRA "p" STAMI Head for thsHHI* / Hills Bros. Coffee . ^ Get* W Clothss Sparkling Clean! Giant’SuzJj >■/.C ,'t Washday Miracle Giant Tide ; /•. ,. . , Gfois Your Clothes e Fresh Outdoor Smell! Gtont Cheer: For Your Finest Baking. Preeifted Robin Hood Flour 25 With Glass in Every Package Premium Duz . . r Cuts The Grease-feet Comet Cleanser ... All Purpose Cleaner Mr. Cleon ; .1* ♦ . 20 Heed for the Hills Hills Bros. Coffee . No Measuring, No Waste Giant Salvo . . • . Gets the Stubborn Dirt Out Quick Giant Dash . . . Dishwasher Detergent 'Cascade Head for the Hills Hills Bros. Coffee . 3 5n Wonderful Fabric Softener Downey . . . . 8 *tJx Always Fresh fir Crisp for a Snack or a Picnic Vito Boy Potato Chips riStH* Hot T«B or teed, Quick end Convenient Upton Tea Bags ; Jfo FOOD STORES “WSSSsSgS WIN 4 EXCITING WAYS: Repeated. By Popu All steel eon struct ion. Roomy interior with hot sock and plenty of storage 108 NORTH SAGINAW jm; ;’JR THk rOXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1(164 New Food Experiences Fun Cr-3 for three Combined with the refrigerator are a freezer with an automatic lee maker and a dispenser for coffee, tea, fruit Juice, or otter beverage made The c 1 r c u 1 a r refrigerator-fieexer-liquid dispenser is mounted qn a pedestal and has two separate tiers. Each tier rotates on a central shaft The interior compartments can be brought around to where you want them. A circular work surface forms the top of the lower freeser level. Compartments can be reached through an access door in the work surface. In tye upper level liquid dispenser, either heated or cooled water is di-rsited through concentrated powders or fluids. Currant for the thermoelectric power unit of the food and beverage center is furnished though gas conversion in a fuel cell. * An interesting innovation on the week’s menu proves a welcome sight to slightly Jaded appetites. Going along with this line of reasoning, you might try a delightful Veal Paprika with TaifiatbAfegetable Sauce. \A p a c k af g e of tomato-vegetable soup mix cuts the chef’s choresm half. It provides the DON’T BUY THIS WHITE TUNA UNLESS YOU WANT FRESHER, NATURAL FLAVOR AND 1/2 THE CALORIES OF OIL-PACKED TUNA base for a delicious sauce for the meat. Tlw soup mix goes into one and a half cups of boiling water and is simmered for ten minutes. After cooling a bit, blend in a cup of sour cream. Veal Paprika With Tomato-Vegetable Sauce 1 package tomato-vegetable soup mix 1% cups boiling water 1 cup sour cream “TpoundST veaFsteat, cul' Info 2-inch squares 2 tablespoons shortening 1 4-oz. can mushrooms 44 teaspoon salt Pepper H teaspoon paprika Stir tomato • vegetable soup mix into boiling water in saucepan. Cover and simmer 10 minutes. Cool slightly and blend in sour cream. Brown veal in shortening then remove to a 2-quart casserole. Add mushrooms and seasonings. Pour sauce over browned veal. Cover and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 1 hour or until meat is tender. Makes Olo 8 servings. BY JANET ODELL Pontine Press Food Editor Throe Weeks of ja rambling vacation-la the eastern part of the country brought us a few firsts .. .‘7.; —, Our first fresh ripe tig Our first soft pretzel Our first Maryland crab meat Our first shoofly pie It was a real vacation — no camping, no cooking — Just swimming, reading, hiking and sightseeing in the ’part , of the United States where history was made in the 17th and 18th centuries. The fresh fig came from Williamsburg, Va. In that restored colonial town we had breakfast at Williamsburg Inn where they serve apple fritters and hominy for the first meal of the day. We first encountered soft pretzels in Philadelphia where a street vendor was hawking them. We first tasted them in Atlantic City where we went to parade on the boardwalk and to peek into- Convention Hall ahead of this week’s convention. PRETZEL BENDER Last week in Sturgis, Pa;, we became an official pretzel bender with a signed certificate to prove It. The little Sturgis pretzel factory — granddaddy to all such factories in the U.S. — encourages visitors t6 try twisting a pretzel. These also are the large soft ones, not the crisp ones you buy in packages. In Pennsylvania, too, We visited a company that makes the famous Lebanon sausage. Containing on ly fieeT ika qticM, this sausage is not cooked, Just smoked over seasoned oak logs. Our third and final plant tour was of the giant Henhey corporation. It was interesting, bat the route was backward. We started seeing the candy bars wrapped and put into packages (they were filling “Trick or Treat’’ packs for Halloween). The last stop on the tour Was seeing the chocolate mixed. In Lancaster, Pa. which is Pennsylvania-DuUdi country we had a dinner that only a Paul Bunyan could do Justice Fortunately, we had only coffee that morning — in anticipation V and we didn’t eat again until 9-30 that night. Plain and Fancy Farm in Bird-in-Hand* Pa., is a show-place Amish farm, restaurant andjgift shop nn by the Men-nonftes. They serve dinner family style from Jost before noon until early evening. We meat the Felix Wotilas of Sylvan Lake there. Although there weren’t seven sweets and sours for the first course, we did have chow-chow, corn relish, apple butter, a meat salad and homemade bread. The main ‘ course included ham, meat loaf, fried potatoes, buttered noodles, green beans, 36" Wide, 19” Deep, 63” High tot Oar Attendant Park Year Car In Private Let Rear at store-Open Thurs., FrL, Stewed dried corn and apple sauce. / Dessert started with pineapple tapioca and concluded with cherry or shoofly pie, ala mode or plain. . Here’s a recipe far Shoofly Pie which is sometimes saved for breakfast in Peimsylvania-Dutch homes. SHOOFLY PIE -1% cups flour 1 cup brown sugar - V« cup lard or butter H cup molasses JA cup hid water % teaspoon soda 1 unbaked pie shell-Line pie tin with unbaked crust. Mix flour, sugar and shortening to make «•"""** Dissolve soda in hot water and Pour molasses mixture into pie shell. Top with crumbs. Bake at 350 degrees 25-30 minutes, or until firm. Rice Is Excellent to Put in Salads A rice salad is fun to prepare for lunch because you can pick and choose (from what’s available) to add to it. Here are suggestions: cooked shrimp and ham; cooked gi%en peas and green beans; celery and green onion. Tbss the cold cooked rice with the additions you pfroose plus an oil-and-vinegar dressing; serve on crisp salad greens and garnish with tomato. Summer Quickie Summer is the season for hay living. A broiled dinner is a good choice for this time of year because the meal can be cooked quickly. ‘ WWW For instance, ground beef patties require only 12 to 18 minutes to broil. Tomato halves topped with grated cheese, and cooked potato slices brushed with butter can be popped into the broiler when the meat is partially cooked and ready to turn. The entire meal comes out hot and savory after only fa minutes total cooking time. HURRY! STILL TIME TO PLAY Play Top Value Stamps KROGER "GIFT BMGCf VaUjb ^Cl/pmdstn. You con play mom than ona card1 Get a .free slip every time you visit our stores. Lift off the "Gift Bingo" panel. 1* If a gift is pictured, match with gift on Playing Card. A filled row givee you 1000 Top Value Stamps. 2. If it reads, "You Win a Gift”, you win your choice of any one of the 25 gifts pictured on the Playing Card. 3. If it reads, “You Win 50 Top Value Stamps’,’ turn in lift-off panel at any of our stores and recsive your 50 Top Value Stamps. 4. If lift-off panel states you win a ftee food product, turn it in for the item you have won. EASY! FUN! NOTHIN^T^UYMIUNDRED^FWINNEHSI. TURN THE PAGE FOR LOW MEAT, PRODUCE and GROCERY PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS C—4 ; r i vv m "■;',v.''ij}•■■■<,•■■ v /V, „1 ' I; , :V^ • 'k*’' ’-i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8B, IBM CLEANED WHOLE Mtvlwf T-BONE STEAK Country Sfylo mm LEAN SOUP. MEAT CANNED HAM ..... K *6* Klein's Brand HOT DOGS.......3^99 Serve tl Save SLICED BACON . ... 49.f Beer Salami, Ring Bologna, Llvor Sausage or POLISH SAUSAGE .. .49; Gordon's Roll PORK SAUSAGE..... 39; Confer Cut Rib . t *4 *i| • ' PORK CHOPS .. i . : :T49 s Country Club Sliced 6 Va LUNCH ARMOUR WIENERS PICNIC STYLE SAVE MORE AT KROGO* COCOANUT BAR COOKIES BIRDS EYE POTATOES HYGRADES WHOLE OR ^ HALF MEAT. BREADED SHRIMP Kroger Melon Patch I MIXED VEGETABLES Simkist lemons BIRDS EYE GREEN PEAS SLOTTED Your Choko BAM BAKED BEANS fltliWg. Iff ’ | /• pgfff f; ; .; \IT^ DOUBLE BORDEN'S SHERBET or SECOND to GALLON SAVE gk ON 7 CANS sot cans I WHOLE SEAN KROGER BRAND Spotlight COFFEE CREST TOOTHPASTE THE PONT}AC PRESS. VtEDNBSDAY, AUGUST 1 80,; 1064 C— A TOP VALUE STAMPS WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY, August 26 thru 29, with coupon at right - save fr«*»nnn» push ,,,——- —,—— BUTTERMILK_______________.... W SAVE 9*—BORDEN'S HEATH ICE CREAM BARS. .B«.*9' MILD FRAHKENMUTH CHEESE ... . .’M LIGHTLY SALTED LAND O' LAKES BUnER ... .£49f BREAKFAST CEREAL KEUOGO'S CORH FLAKES .. TOMATO JUICE..... 4? ORANGE, GRAPE OR ORANGE-PINEAPPLE UK DRINKS . ... i. 3< 1ASTV Del Monte CATSUP... 2; 599* 589* 29* SUN GOLD SLICED WHITE BREAD rfiJflOO loaves I U VC5 QUANTITIES AT REGULAR^ PRICE SAVE 6*-KROGER PLAIN, COMBINATION OR SUGAR FRESH DOHUTS.. . ... « 21* SAVE 6-KROGER FRESH WIENER BUNS OR SANDWICH BUNS . . . . £ 29* SWIFTS SHORTENING SWIFT'NIND .......... 3 & 49* PURE GRANULATED PIONEER SUDAR.... 10-98* SAVE HP-KROGER CRUSHED OR SMOOTH PEANUT BUTTER..... 5? 49' KROGER FRESH WASHDAY MIRACLE* GIANT TIDE M§ «• 'tWBBMESwami I WITH (Ml COUPON AND ■ ■ is PURCNAH OR MOM I | THI WASHDAY Wit ACM WITH COUPON AT RIGHT I MART TIM uyl ■ A $5 PURCHASE j pro St* T I ■ Cwpm nU « Knf«r w OMmIi mi | II l—Hm MkMfao Mm SWNwMpp. Awpwl * 19*4 UMlt mm tmpm pm *•"*! J liodid . t : . ^sfw- SAVE ID-SPECIAL LABEL DIANT 0XYD0L. . . . .. . . . . . m S9‘ KAN DU BRAND fj BALLON BLEACH.......39* 100 FT ROLL PLASTIC HANDI-WRAP ......... 4« « *1 CHOCOLATE HERSHET'S STROP ...___2^39* *3S*Wi ^WE£r\ .JBBF _2*00*" ( tm JUST HEAT & SERVE SWIFT'S BEEF STEW..... 3ssM READY TO EAT ' ' . SPAM OR PREM . . . . . . - 39* SPOTLIGHT INSTANT COFFEE........*289* MAKE BISCUITS QUICK WITH BISOUICK. KRAFT'S SALAD DRESSING MIRACLE WHIP. ----------*T4S* newMmhy size .... RIGHT GUARD mmmmt & OPF LABEL-FAMILY SIZE 6LEEM T00THPASTI .;.. ™.41* YOU SAVE V' PRELL SHAMPOO..... . »73* NUTRITIOUS AND NOURISHING HUT l NINE UVES CAT FOOD.... 7 cans $1 CORNED BEEF HASH ...... m-oi can 59* SWIFT'S SAUSAGE..............................sol pko 49* HIT SPECIAL HOME PERMANENT * REGULAR OR HARD TO HOLD V.O.-5 HAIR SPRAY 5i.i9 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2C, 1M4 Salami Will Do No ham in the bourn and you feel Nut having a chef’s salad? Urn thin strips of salami #tth the usual Julienne cheese (Swiss! PbanlhiEyi M OF QUAUr? White IN PKG. A4P PREMIUM QUALITY Instant .Coffee . Irapes IDEAL POR M CHILDREN'S LUNQ.HU> • * j • . 2 LBS. 29< Acorn or Butternut Squash 2 m 29c c California Plums *19 BLUE BONNET WHIPPED Margarine i 32* Treet ’»43* Chopped Beef . .'<& 53* HEINZ m White Vinegar Sffi 27* AUNT JANrS PICKLES ... mmm Sweet Midgets . . $ 59* SAVE AT AfrF A A Naadi-Wrap .. . ’W-Margarine . . . 3 ^ 73* ROBIN HOOD 1 egg 17 FAMILY HOUR... « T SULTANA—FAMILY SIZE Pork and Beans £5 29* STAIN REMOVINO A A A Comet Cleanser 2 ^29* Family Flour 5 ™ 53* 1-LB. CAN I5« A wm Crisco SHORTENING um J «« / |C FOR LAUNDRY OR OISNBS ... A A large Dreft . . . 33* SAVE AT aop t a a Thrill liquid . . . ^ 80* FOR FLUFFY CLOTHES Downy Liquid . . '^77 ALL-FURFOM CLEANER ... A Mr. Clean ^ ’ffilt* AW* Fine Quality Salad and Cooking 01 elexola 42‘ 1QT. 6-OZ. BTL. 7e OFF LABEL DEL MONTI FAVORITES WHOL1 KERNEL OR CreamCorn 49 YELLOW CLING, HALVES OR SLICED Peaches 79 CALIFORNIA FRUIT Cocktail I 3 3 1-LB. 1-OZ. CANS 1-LB. 13-OZ. CANS 4^99 DEL MONTE ^ Crushed Pineapple. 2'caw 35 DEL MONTI—CUT ■tm. mvne r- vwl ^ 6nw Emm. ..... 2 cam 43 Spinach.............2 35* ML MONTE UOHT, CHUNK a* _ _ _ - T«W HAT...........3 *83? 79* Bar Soap Ammonia Beads O' Dleach giant size Dry Trend CLEAR 1c ■: Liquid Trend obts the narr Dutch Cleanser REGULAR SIZE SwMtWl Soap , «AV ROQUET Bar Soap 6x35* » 19 I-QT.1.PT. ^A< s-oz.size 4m M 73* -■ 47* 2,i»57*- 3 as 29* 4*ss*30 4 BATH BARS 42. SPEAS, DELICIOUS, REFRESHING 79 4 1-Qt. BHe. VLASIC POLISH STYLE Dill Pickles HALF GALLON JAR 49 SUNNYBRpOK GRADE "A" SMALL SIZE Fresh Eggs 4 * 9$ IN JOY FISH CAF'N JOHN'S BRIADID • ^ A A Fish Sticks. .3^98* OCEAN PIRCM ^ ^ Fillets »uT ■ .. - 29 Sultana French Fries Popular jWtumia 9 KING OF ROASTS! "Super-Right" Matyre Corn Fed Beef Standing Rib Roast 4th and 5th Ribe 69 First 5 Rib* I5U79 "SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY-GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Fresh FRYERS WHOLE FRYERS Qrt-Up Split Qvortmd LEGS 49* No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits • • • b m THE PONTIAdPRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 mUm C—7 U. of M. Term Sfarti ANN ARBOR (AP) - The University of Michigan begins the fall school year Moqgay with its largest enrollment In history. Approximately 8,100 'are regMwaA Includ-i than 4,000 freshmen. Calumet, Mich., had 40 Inches of snow in January, 1065. ! Killed in Auto Crash NEWAYGO (AP) - Louis Sanford, 41, of rural Newaygo, was killed Tuesday in a two-car collision at an intersection about a mile from his home near the Hardy Dam. The Empire State building rises 1,473 feet with the 222 foot television tower. Four Business Leaden on Advisory Council DETROIT (AP) - Appointment of four business leaders to the Michigan Small Business Advisory Council was an*, nounced today by the Small Business Administration. Hie new council members are Jan S. VanderHelde of Grand Rapids; Foster W. Daugherty of Cassopolis, Richard Y. Burnett of Sault Ste. Marie and R. Ludwig of Detroit. Wood chips have beep found to make an almost ideal livestock bedding. Hastings Man Killed CALEDONIA (AP) — Dudley Bliss, n, of Hastings, was killed .Tuesday night when Ms car and a truck coBUsd near Caledonia. Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! ■ oFQUAurv SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONET SACK Chock Steaks THE rrs MEAT in the T COUNT THAT Has it ‘'Super-Right Guarantees it! Center Cuts "Super-RigM" Selected Fully Matured. Corn Fed Beef CHUCiROAST Arm Cut... 55* English Cut » 65* P rape red Fresh Meny Timet, Every Day! All-Beef Hamburger 47s Llr-x., PKG. OR MORI Lesser Amounts ... lb. 49e nUHS.ngKT^WJAOTT T---~ ’J' J1" Stewing Beef « 79* A&P WHOLE KERNEL DEL MONTE TENDER. GREEN ANN PAGE LAYER Golden Corn. f Sweet Peas Cake Mixes REGULAR ISM C PACKAGE M Campbell's VMwmis SOUPS 6 & 97c ANN PAGE CREAM SOUPS Tomato...;..... "ST 10. Mushroom.<'^gp. SULTANA iRAND Purple Plums 4^09^ ASP WHOLE, UNVEILED Apricots 3 S- 79c NUTLET—IN QUARTERS me * Margarine / f | Jane Parker Freeh Doled Daily—Enriched ite Bread With tho now rosoolablo wrapper thot stays closed for convenience end longer freshness. . A&P Tomato Juice mmm dl *«Sx. Grade "A" UK CANS Jg Jf, 1-LB. 4-OZ. LOAF JANE PARKER PLAIN OR SUOARBD Our Finest—light, Chunk UIHIIHK TUNA 5 99 6V2-OZ. A&P CANS Homestyle Denuts 2 49* CHOICE OP SEVERAL PIL&HSE JANE PARKER Sandwich Cookies 3 f00 swu?Swl!!ht«!um? Tuna Fish ........... 3 * CHICKSN NOOOLS A.. Lipton Soup........ . jL Italian Dressing....... HILLS BROTHBRS Coffee 'S&Z ..... CHICKSN Rtee-A-Roni........... OMAN SPRAY — WHOLE - Cranberry Sauce .... OMAN SPRAY CRANRIRRY Juice Cocktail ..... ' COLOATB—POt bRY HAIR Halo Shampoo m . SANITARY NAfKINS Regular Modem......... 179* Mti. 27. m‘. 63* cw 85. v>”.‘33« s&47< at 47. , iff 53* « l» SERRA—COLOSSALS ' ', • / CRESTMONT—OUR PINIST QUALITY Ripe Olives . .379* he Cream ... 79* RED SOUR pftTBD ' ASSORTED GRAPE, CHERRY AND ORANGE A&P Cherries 3 - 49* Popsides . . . 12- 39* NONE PINER, EVAPORATED _ wi««*m«.m mm cunu White House milk 6 ’-J9* SharpCteddar ..-69* Sunnyfield Flbur 5*39* j^SSCT. . . * 29* Sluing . . . 3*49* dSTm .12 &9* SPECIAL CAKE SALE! Your Choice- Jane Porker CHOCOUTS OR CHERRY ICED—11-OZ. Loaf Cokes CRESCENT—PLAIN OR MARBUU-15-OZ. Pound Cakes * FIGURE "t"—10-OZ. Coffee Cake Twist THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC - AM Mess Effective rim SeteMe* Aeg. 29Hi In AR lectern MleMgea A4P Stercc Anacln............ 100 89* Aspirin £..........100 £ 17* Listerine ,Jt0"tAm .... Personna Blades GENTLE Feb Liquid 22-oz. COc : SUE Jo Ketex Belts a 39* piUlM BELTS_ee.SS» REGULAR SIZE Ivory Flakes 34* ■ FOR DISHWASHERS Cascade it orr laoel * Ec 35* RSOULAR SIZE Zest Soap :s 14* OIANT SIZE Salvo Tablets 2-ls. TT« PKG. "9 HE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1904 Quick Confection for Small Fry together In ■ Urge bow! 3 cups chow mein noodles and 2 cups miniature marshmallows. Add the butterscotch mixture, and mix thoroughly. Drop by heaping teaspooofuls onto oooUe sheet lined with wax paper. Chill till set. Makes 90 Cook Ahead KabobBase Quick and Easy Vegetables cooked in sufficient boiling water to cover were milder in flavor and greener than those cooked in Just the water clinging to them after washing or ia a pressure saucepan, according to a University A good base to prepare ahead for outdoor luibobs... Almond Pilaff Vi cup butter or margarine ti cup varmiceQi, broken U short lengths % cup chopped blanched at . U.S. Gov’t ^ rW? ■•E'v Inspected MATURE STEER BEEF .FRONT QUARTER Meat Specials i ill 1 Center Cut CHUCK STEAK Standing 5th, 6th9 7th Rib RIB ROAST i Tender-Delicious LCHUCK ROAST ^ Juicy-Tasty S^SHORTRIBS Fresh Lean | PORK ROAST 1 can (BVa-oss.) crushed pineapple, well drained 12 cuplet cones 12 maraschino cherries, with stems Blend together cream cheese, marshmallow topping and grated lemon rind. Stir in -crusMldneappler Chiil l hour or longer. Just before serving, spoon into 12 waffle cuplets. Top each cuplet with a maraschino cherry. Makes 12 serv- Picnic Sliced -FREE* Both treats start with crisp cones make wonderful holders for ice cream, sherbets, and any thick creamy desserts from rice puddings to cream chiffons. IheyTe fun to serve and fun to eat. And Just think! No dishes to wash afterward. This time the cones are filled with cold md creamy fruit concoctions. Either one chn be whipped up dn hour or two ahead of time. No need to use precious freezer space,' they’ll keep firm in the refrigerator. Cherry Creams 1 cup heavy cream 2 tablespoons sugar 1(1-B>. l»oz.) can cherry pfe filling, well chilled llcuptt cones. Whip cream until quite stiff; add sugar. Fold in cherry pie filling. Refrigerate until serving time. Spoon into waffle cuplets. ■^STEAKS Ribs • Clubs I Butcher Boys A gourmet treat is made with canned onion dry soup mix is an elegant liver pate. Serve if with crackers, as an appetizer. Liver and Oaton Spread 1 package (t ounces) cream cheese, softened 1 % cup milk 1 can (1% ounces) onion dry soup mix 1 package (t ounces) frozen chicken livers, cooked and finely chopped Fancy Sugar Cured Hickory Smoked SLAB, BACON farm fresh FRYING CHICKENS Produce • SPECIALS* Crisp Head • Lettuce 2 • Tomatoes 2, • Peaches 3^ Cottage Style PORK STEAK TO TASTE BETTER than any spread available in grocery stores Smoked Lead and Tondor PICNICS “Back to SchooV' FREEZER SPECIAL We mink you will agree with us that Shadd’aSafflowerMargartnw tastes better than any spread you are now using. Wa guarantee your complete satisfaction. Try ona pound of this delicious spread and if you don’t agree that this is the finest tasting spread you’ve aver used, simply send the empty carton to us and we will refund the full purchase price. yv SAVE* That's right! Hoffman's will ffHI your frasztr with a side off hast without any carrying charga or down payment! This wfll sava you monay to da your School Gordon’« Fresh BABY . LINK 1 F0NK1 SAUSAGE SAFFLOWER MARGARINE Cut from U.S. Govt. Graded Mature Sliced Beef HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc i QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. wr reserve tme right i PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, Liver and Bacon Skewer-Grilled Liver has never twee the greatest mealtime serving to come down the pike, bat an unusual recipe for the dish won a major prise at America’s Cook-out Championship recently in Hawaii. in preparing the recipe fbr the Kaiser Foil national barbecue competition “for men only,” Leland C. Ellis, the mayor of Dillon, Colo., cut a two-pound piece of liver vertically into thick slices and then into small servings resembling steak fillets. A strip of bacon was encircled around each of these. He then placed the skewers on the grill, rotated them oc- Meat! Line firebox with quilted aluminium foil; let coals bum down until covered with gray Get 'em on ALL porch—i la our Fresh Moot Deportment! FARMfRiSH, WHOLE I bacon nntfl It was brown. When the skewers are removed, the liver again separates into fillets. These are cooked about five minutes on each side and served immediately—brown and succulent. * PRIZE-WINNING—Beef liver fillets^ncir-cled with bacon ace a barbecue specialty invented in Colorado. This prize-winning recipe in the Kaiser Foil Cookout Championship “fbr PORTION Wfiat is it that some people drink for their teeth? for their waist? people drink true cola taste? Others drink V/1TH COUPON] i BfcLOW Col* ***7 Seedless SALE! FOOD FAIR BRAND Fancy Apple Sauce SALEI FOOD FAIR BRAND Rich Tomato Juice [coupon] l BElOWj ronel calorie y/tslty's 1 Zte" Fig Bars with i Popsicle* I NEW PROCESS WITH CORN OH 2p£ 39*1 Imperial Margarine SOFTER THAN EVER! WHITE OR PASTEL CHARMIN-WHITE OR PASTEL Toilet Tissue Only one-calorie per delicious 6-ounce serving. Avoilable in handy half-quart bottles, convenient 12-ounce cans, and family-size full-quarts. FREE WITH THIS COUPON FAYGO-OAKLAND DISTRIBUTING CO 93, KATHHtSTONE PHONE: 334-M05 TrfB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AtTGUSl* FrySherbef for Dessert' Put Fresh Blueberries jhCustard, Then Bake 5 tablespoons sugar % teaspoon salt ' y« teaspoon nutmeg 1% teaspoon vanilla Wash and drain freah blueberries, being careful not to crush or break berries. Dry on pepep Country Stylo Tandtr & Crisp HaSrlBH Hew 6"» **** Yellow On Carrots Pork Chops Peed Club Instant Coffee Paw Paw Cider Vinegar White Vinegar Food Club Canned Milk Soft Absorbent Whit* Northern Towels DoW—Special Lobal Fabric'Softener , Ajax WHh Ammonia Liquid Cleaner . Admiral Keyless Sardines . Mueller's Sea Shells or Elbow Macaroni Pickling Spice Food Club Shortening . Nine Uvw Kitty Burgers Sore Gallon 10s Jug Premium Duz . Whitens Clothes Cheer Detergent Sow 15c6V2-OZ. on 2 Can Breeze Detergent Washday Mirada Gaylord hira Creamary Ffcil Jouoh,SpecM Label Fabric Softener For Whiter Clothes Action Bleach Special Label Detergent Rinso Blue . , Coldwater "all' Special Label Praise Soap . Best 0 Bics Cookies GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS Wednesday1. THE PONTIAC AUGUST M, IM4 New Combination for Salad Bowl Rings Do Not Slip if Shank U4Js8d • - The ring can't dip off the finger, says the manufartaur of a hinged expending shank which can ha affixed to any lady’s ring as part of the rtag mounting. The shank expands to slip over knuckles and then doses to hold the ring in a nonslip position. This combination of tngredW ents may be new to you. Different Salad Bowl 4 cups torn salad greens 1 cup thinly sliced cabbage i oranges, pared and diced U.S.D.A. Choice Table Trimmed Sumhihe Sprinkles Cookies Guam Lotion Derma Fresh ; . AntlMptie Mouthwaih * Micrin . . . . . Hair Spray Aqua Net . . . Theme Book . . four In One Typing Tablet . Gragg—Ruled Steno Notebook WoMey Wonder Dash Detergent Ballard or PIIMbury Dessert EXTRA COLDBELL STAMPS EXTRA COLDBELL EXTRA COLDBELL STAMPS EXTRA COLDBELL STAMPS EXTRA COLDBELL STAMPS EXTRA GOLD BELL STAMPS GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS 1- small cucumber, pared mi sliced S Mists or scallions, sliced Olive od and wins vhMgax Salt and freshly ground pepper Ttarn salad greens, Chinese cabbage, oranges, cucumber, Seafood Fillec Want to give n ta*y lift to • very special summer (toner party? Albert BondU, executive chef of Chicago’s Hotels Ambassador suggests a Pump 1 Pineapple.Is < Room, this dish combines chilled pineapple with shrimp and lobster into a colorful, new dinner delight Pomp Beem Pjnenpple and Cool Summer f fresh lohstsr chunks (six chunksparssrvlng) toasted »im««iifa kumauats your favorite dreasing intree Save all pihsappls meat, except the tough cert,. Dlee the ptoeappfe meat mi mix with Meter chunks. FIB the scooped eat center with ahh the phsepph head with ■ whale kuhqaat • •!' “ • ~ Chef Bonelh suggests serving the Pump Room Ptneupplir and Seafood Boat with a dish of your favorite dressing on the side. ana MfiMp uho i Biiaq dowi. Toss with oil, vinegar, salt and pepper in the proportions that suit your taste. Makes 4 to • servings. Roam Pineapple and Seafood Boat, an elegant entre that’s aimpls to make and refreshing to eat. As a specialty of the Ambassador's world famous Pump Seafood Boat whole fresh pineapple (each pineapple serves two) cooked jumjjo sbrimpo (six shrimps per serving) in half, keeping the hands and head on each half. With s grapefruit or paring knife scoop out. tbs center of the pineapple. Bm mixed pineapple and lobster. Drape three whole shrimps ever each side ef the shell. Sprinkle the top with sliced tenettd almonds. Gar- Safety Warning Never, heist canned foods tn an unopened can. It might burst and cause serious injury. TWEEN SNACKS Praams Strawberry 2-lb. im Fwtivel Jar •» WEDNESDAY, AUGUST X, 1864 Test May Indicate New Life for U.P. Mines nological University'* Institute ef IttMral Research, said preliminary laboratory work indicates a successful process can be developed. velop a method of improving the quality of conventional Michigan iron ores, thus making them more competitive with' uniform size and physical characteristics, would be highly porous and would contain’approximately 80 per cent iron. Such pellets are currently the preferred feed for blast furnaces in metal production, be said. SAVE ON THIS COMPLETE BEDROOM GROUPING propaaad Michigan Department of Commerce and said the Earn, nomic Expansion Department might establish a priority list of suggested research projects in addition to accepting project suggestions from researchers. This, said Volin, would compete with pellets now produced 'from the ore of open pit mines. Until now, no efficient process has existed for producing pellets bom the so-called, “soft” variety of ores which have been \ shipped for years from Upper Peninsula underground mines. Preliminary ‘work niow indicates ttw desired pellets can be produced from “aoft” ore by use of finegrained solid carbon and heat. PROCESS GOOD Volin said it appears that toe process tone and fuel requirements are considerably leas You Get 8 Modem Pipcea . Style and comfort complete for one tow pricel Handsomely styled double dresser with landscape mirror, full bookcase bed and chest. Select woods In beautiful finish. Hus comfortable innerspring mattress and matching box spring! 2 foam bedpittows. GoldwatersI Not Barry's.i\ ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. M — There’s a Gold water at the Democratic convention. In fact, there' are two, one ftpm New York and one from Nevada. Neither claims relationship to the Republican presidential candidate, Sen. Barry . GOld-water. Bert M. Goldwater, a delegate from Nevada, says be is taking a lot of kidding about his name, but he figures it won’t last past November. The New Yorker is Monroe Goldwater, 78. torn in other iron ore reduction process. , Tests,- he said, now must move from a laboratory to a continuous shaft Reactor which is being built. * * ■ ,* | Rep. Gilbert E. Bursley, R-Ann Arbor, chairman of the House Economic Development committee, said the projects have generated mi additional |1 CREDIT • No Down ID OUR ATTENDANT PARK YOUR CM FREE IN UR AT REAR OF OUR STORE! Open Monday, Thursday, Friday Night* 'til 9 BOY$r POLISHED COTTON This kind of valut has mad* Richman’s famous! Fin* sll-wool suit, in the campus-right natural shoulder style, in muted herringbone and diagonal patterns. Its textured look makes ttte coet a natural to double as a sport coat -—to wear with the slacks of worsted wool flannel In specifUy coordinated solid colors. Choose from gray, eliv*. heather tones and browns. Exceptional buy! - SLACKS Favorite slocks witb all the boys. Ivy model with no cuffs.. iLittle or no Ironing needed, ever. In block, olive and tan, sixes 6 to 18. You can't beat these for value and long wear. Cushion foot ■oeks •with striped tops. White combed cat-ten In sins 1 Oh-13. Comfortable, absorbent, long-wearing. MEN’S \ AND YOUTHS’ CASUAL SUCKS JR. BOYS1 WIDE WALE BOXER LONGIES Men, you'll find alt the authentic natural shouldsr detailing In this Riehman-taitored suit — lapped seams, hook vent, and slim, no-pleat trousers. Superb all-wool worsted fabrics In classic herringbone pattern. Olive, black, brown and navy. You can save 420 on this Richman value atonal BoyiVsixos 4 to 16 Mtn’i sizes 28 to 42 BOYS'- MEN'S Cotton and line-line twill slack* for men in ivy model* and adjustable waistband style*. Sizes 29-38 in black, •live, blue, tan. Imported. ....2.99 Youth's 11 3/4 ox. twill sleeks, topored lags, adjustable waistband, cuff-tots. Wheat or black. Sizes 27-36.. 3.99 Wida-wala corduroy longies with double knee, snap-front and zipper closing. In black, brawn. Richman JR. BOYS’ T-SHIRTS AND BRIEFS 3 to 8. Bock to school necessities far the junior bey. BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE Shopping center Ormi Daily 9t9Q A.M. to t F.M. Charge it now. take up toa/xmontha to pay fart end long-wear in |r. hem; sizes 2 to 8. 3 te pkg. 108 N. SAGINAW I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST M, 1984 C—18 Iced Coffee-Hits the Spot A tall glam of (rooty Iced coffee am hits the spot on • sweltering day. Beit way to make it? lbs Coffee Brewing Institute gives rules (or three methods: • Start by making some extra hot cottas at breakfast time. Cool the coffee, poor It Into a refrigerator ice tray and turn up the controls for quick framing. When yon want an afternoon cooler, fin a tail glass with the coffee ibs cubes and poor in regular-strength hot coffee. You’ll have a full-flavored frosty beverage without dilution. • Here’s another easy method. Brew a potfUl of extra-strength Tabl« Trimmed Naturally Tender Pot Roast Cut* tfTfUCE commended for iced coffee be- Calumet mediately. To ami Glendale Michigan Grade 1 Skinless Onions Add Fine Taste to Meals SAVE NOW! FOR THOSE FREE CHRISTMAS GIFTS-CLIP THESE VALUABLE COUPONS Washday Miracle MiLOCrust Buttermilk While arew delicacy, Hunt’s Tomato Raw Cauliflower Good in Salad Gaylord Pure Creamery Salt and pepper to taste Lettuce cups Mix together ground nut meats, carrots, cauliflower and celery. Add lemon Jules. Com- SUPERMARKETS GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS i Hot j>_ib j ■ Dogs piJ C—14 THE PONTIAC PBESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1964 Perfect schoolmates! Adorable cotton corduroy Sizee 4 to 16. CARDIGANSI V-NECKS! CREW-NECKS! SOUDS! STRIPES! FANCIES! Gigantic selection of premium yams featuring warm, bony blends of Alpaca, Mohair, Orion" acrylicsl k Stay-bright Autumn colors. Grown-up styling for young fashion fansl Buttoned and inverted pleat fronts. Saucy bow and applique trims. Washable cotton corduroy. Rad, Black, TAPESTRY DRESSES UOIIS'MECHANICAL COTTON S-T-R-E-T-C-H PANTS dfelgner styles. Zip fronts. Heed on ski pickets. Handsome Pall colors. S-M-L- XL. tmina svarT MEN'S SUM'S TRIM \) PORT SUCKS • Gorgsoos Array of Prints! • 100% Tsxtursd Cottonl • Mints'and L«liM'Siz*sl SHOP SPAR1 rAi i9:30am.to1 Qpm. daily... SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 7 P-M. *Cmrk°ng?EE m ADCC 1 Dixie and Telegraph Warren and Conner 1 2015 Dix Are. VRCw | PONTIAC DETROIT J LINCOLN PARK 1 24411 Michigan Are. 1 Gratiot and Prosha DEARBORN | ROSEVILLE Iff M m a i I THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGU3T 26, 1964 |ttl® PAPER • Sensational values for Pall "touch-up” Hmel • Rich colonl Smooth textural • Easy to apply! ll^&l 1 SCORE HAIR DRESSMC i-JEL 54* = URGE 7-OZ* 9 VITALIS HAIR DRESSING 2 COMM M A 5Qc #• j Rmlt 1 par caatamarTaa I 1 36's commm Jhfl flic [ AM 1 pat tartamar B BAN 1 ROLL-ON DEODORANT 1 WWW mm gj^ r 49cj BmH t par cMamar ■ ^ Taa g I WITH ANY PURCHASE OP SCHOOL SUPPLIES • OP . S1AS ORMORII E flEPET PTIMICS 1 Dixie end TMegrapfi 2615 Dix Aretuie [ Warren odd Conner 1 24411 MteMjen Ave. 1 9 URERI 9IUIKC9 1 pontiac LINCOLN PARK DETROIT DEARBORN ROSEVILLE 1 ■mnnmhhmmi i * fHE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1064 TODAY thru SATURDAY . tflirt** SAV! 75c. t—wrrtwl Here's a girls' fashion show of adorablo blousos in your choico of roll-up, short or Va sleeves) Dainty Petsr Pan, Bermuda collars. Sparkling whits, colors. Sizes 3 to 6X and 7 to 14. Stock up now! j Pillow-soft luxury from "FAIR SETS"I Loathor uppers, foam-cushionod lining. Black. Slzos S to 10. Wonderful saying! Latest stylo sensation! featuring quilt-lined nylons and pile-lined cottons for extra warmth. Tailored for rugged action. Most popdlar colors. Sizes 4 to 14. Great value! FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES SELLING FIRST QUALITY ONLY SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M.DAILY...SUNDAY 12 N00N T0 7 P M jc illllCMT 0TADC0 Dixie end Tdegropir I Warren and Conner I 2615 Phi Ayepwe I 24411 MtdSgew Aw. Gratiet end Ptexho 9 WCHI OlvIlCtf ________________ PONTIAC 1 PfTROIT 1 UNQOCN PABK | P1AMOBN________________________ 10HV1LIE I wm THK PONT!At: I'llKSS., WKDflKSDAV, AUGUST 20, 1W Golf's Greatest Challenge 'Monster' Tomorrow 1 jw ^ ® ■ . . .v,-- IMK .* S E & 7;flO A.M. 11:00 A.M —Witfrod Mom*nuik. Winnioea. Manitoba. Cmulm. Mill Famous Site of Tournaments 7 A.M. Tee-Off [florid o!»n Nature's Golf Pricfe Is Oakland Hills ....... HwimauK. Winnipeg. MMlItrt*. Canada, MIN 0art*- dala, JaduonvWa. Texas. —Gordon Carol M. HcwktwwKi, England; Karmtt Zlrtty, Yakima, Washington. John Davit, Sydney, Australia. —Sort Yancey. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Lionel Platts. Brentwood, England; Jerry EdteerdOi rgrt Worth. Texet. —Anget Miguel. Madrid. Soain; Roger Ginsberg. Alpine, now' Jersey; Jean GarnWde. Versailles, France. —George Archer, Gilroy. California; Christ',- O'Connnr. Dublin, Ireland; Donald SwaelenL UIoM, Bats’’— ■ P^ Biefft Agyeea^ Twit. MHW Illinois; Hugs Marl, Lima, Perth —Billy FerreflT Greenwich. Conn.; ptorgnthw MoMna. Cordoba, Argentina; Jarry steeIsmllh, Glendale. Celltornla. —Starters Time M—Johnny Pott. OvH Hills, MHsImIqpI; Daniel Slkn Ponte —Tommy Jacobs, Bermuda Bonos. CalBonilei Jack Rule, —Tommy Jacobs, Bermuda Dunes. Cethomla; Jacn Rule, Cedar RipldB. Iowa; Paul Runyan. La Jena, .281 Course Record Facing Onslaught; Venturi Shoots 67 By FLETCHER SPEARS The greatest array of golf talent ever a is s e m b 1 ed on one course tees off tomorrow morning in the opening round of the $200,(700 Carling World Open Championship at Oakland Hills Country Club. And some at the top names | * quietly predict that the "Green I Monster” will be whimpering g after the star-studded field ends 1 the 72-hole route Sunday. ★ * * Included in the 155-man field | are golfers representing 14 coun- 1 tries. Canada's Nick Weslock is | the lone Amateur in the field. 1 "The course is in ideal cot* | dition for a new record,” host I pro A1 Watrous commented. | "The greens are soft now. Wheq | they’re hard, it’s often the dif- ft ference between a par and a/ | bogey. And It would take ’em; | 10 days to firm up now.” | The 6,907-yatd, par 70 course g • is 1r top oonditlan snd the 71. 1 hole record of 281 is expected to S' tumble when the pros start ma- I neuvering for a slice of the 1 richest golf tournament purse I ever. The winner will have a $35,-•00 payday with the raaner-up picking up a $17,000 cheek. Gene Littler set the 281 Oak- j land Hills mark in winning the | 1061 U.S. Open, but the La Jolla, j Calif, pro is expected to take j a back seat this year to such j names as Ken Venturi, Arnold j Palmer and Jack Nicklaus. HOT SWINGER Venturi is currently the hottest swinger on the pro circuit, j and he established himself as a favorite with an unofficial three-under-par 67 in his first practice J tour yesterday, equaling the of- ; ficial competitive course mark shared by Ben Hogan and five other players. “I am playing so well; I am so sure of myself on shots to the green that it -startles me,” the 33 - year - old Venturi remarked, after the practice round. “I’m hittin’ the ball so good I’m c u 11 i n’ it in half,” he quipped. Venturi, wallowing in n e a r -obscurity in 1862 and 1963, started his comeback with a dramatic victory in the U.S. Open in June and followed it up With a record • breaking performance in winning the American Golf-Classic-with a 378 at Akron Sunday. Ken will tee off tomorrow at 13:11 p.m. along with Gary Player of South Africa and Wesley Ellis of West Caldwell of New Jersey. First off the tee will be Wilfred Homeniuk of Canada and BUI Martindale of Texas at 7 “We didn’t build this course, nature provided it for us.” Course Still Monster for Jirri Ferrier Robot Trent Jones designed it, and Jim Ferrier j gave Oakland Hills 'golf j course its unsuave name, j “The Monster.” It was in 1961, when j Ferrier walked to the first j tee as one of the most j confident players in foe j National Open. Two days 1-ater the j transplanted AUstr all an packed his baggage, ad- j mttted he was beaten by Jones’ creation, called it a “monster” and left town at midpoint of the tour- j ney. la 1961 he returned j uni la foe practice j rouadof the National j OpwleFameTnfrtfnf j the course bolding foe ; bead of a wood in one hand and foe shaft in j foe other. Asked if he had broken the dub on the course he said, “You’re dam right I did. It’s still a monster.” Anrt-he-stalked. into the clubhouse, ■k A ★ He made the cut this time with 146 and finished in 22nd place for the tournament with 292. Thursday, Ferrier tees off at 9:09 am. in the World Open on the “monstrous” course with the “monstrous” 6200,000 j purse. This was foe historic remark Of the late Joseph Mack, the pioneer founder of Oakland Hills Country Club, organised in 1616 with the Miller farmhouse as a chib house and the Miller’s ben house as the pro shop. Head pro in foe converted hen house In 1918 and 1919 was Walter Hagen, Open champ of 1914, who found he could not keep the Job because of the demand to play in tournaments around the country. The chartered 140 members of the newborn club were happy with their farmhouse, electric piano and Juke Ink, and lodging at $1.51 per night while bids were befog let for the beautiful colonial structure which new stands. In 1920 Mike Brady, who lost the 1919 Open playoff to Hagen, took over as head pro and it was the same year which officially opened the new clubhouse. it it it Mack and the club, board of dfMtfort MgagfoT Dofi-' aid Ross to design the course and the architect pointed out that the entire course was laid out to center around the 10th and 11th holes, “two of the greatest holes in a row on any course in any place.” In 1923, Ernie Ford an Englishman s u c c,e e d e d -Brady as host pro and in 1924 Oakland Hills was host to its first Open tournament, won by Cyril Walker. Famous clincher Wafoer clinched the tournament on the famous No. 10 bole. His second shot cleared the trees and lake and landed within club length of the pin. He birdied the hole and defeated Bobby Jones by three strokes 297-300. The first prim -for the victory was $500. Walker gave the check to his caddy. WATROUS PRO In 1930, current prrf A1 Watrous took ova- as heed Littler's 281 in '61 Tops pro and ’folder his reign, Oakland Hills has seen three more exciting Opens. In 1937, Ralph Guldahl closed with a 69, defeating a 25-year-old rookie named Sam Snead from West Virginia, 281-233. Guldahl startled the crowd gathered around the 18th green by casually walking to the edge of a trap and carefully combing his hair.. He knew he was in. He slowly walked up to his ball, putted it in from four feet and raised his hand a champion. Oakland Hills, they said, was softening, -so Robert " Trent Jones was called in to rearrange the county. He did to such an extent that only two golfers were able to break par in a single round during the 1951 Open at the course. Ben Hogan brought the “monster” to its knees coining from 15th place at mid-point to 5th after . three rounds end a 33 back nine finish for 67 and a 287 total. The year 1952, however, was the year of celebration for Oakland Hills. A profit of $69,000 from the 1951 , Open ended 35 years of in- debtedness and a mortgage burning party put the final $124,000 note into flames. In 1901, the Open returned for the 4th time and Gene Littler proved that the course wasn’t made strictly for foe big boomers off the tee. His 73-68-72-6$-—291 was one stroke better than Doug Sanders, whose chip foot from 75 feet rolled dead center ova- the cup. The bird wouldPhave forced a tie. Starting tomorrow, 155 of the world’s best will be out to see if the “mobster” had . mellowed. 1 R ■............. Lthigh ACres, Florida; Don FMrftuM, Perdido Bay, Florida; Al Watrous. Royal Oak, Michigan. —Jack Nlcklaui. Columbus. Ohio;. John Bulla. Pheanlx, Arizona; Marty Futgtir ?--------------- —-----------— ■ ■DOW Flnsterwald, Colorado La* Vegas, Nevada i -------- —Bill Collins, Grossing _____j - City, AMaoMUk o Springs, Colorado; Bp WMngtr, o ■ ■Ajfv.y-' . Thomas Nldiairta, 1 i Jim Farrier, Burbank. Fort Worth, Texas; _______ —Jack Flack. Northbrook. Laka, New York) Tad K —K«l Nagle, Sydney. Au; Louisiana, Chick Herbert, —Bruce Crompton, Sydney. A—.——.___________ Ontario, Canada; Gardner Dickinson, L m jaewa Cuolt, Corona, Cal Horn la; jpfR Rodriguez. Dorado Beach. Puerto Rico; Bon Hogan, *------ |—- Barber, Los Angeles, CaWomla Illinois; Jack Burke, K lame she -oil. Franklin MW*. Mldjlgaa. ralia; Jay HtMrL Lafayette, South Miami, Florid*. - __________________________ ansj Fred Hawkins, Cl Paso. Tsxas. On-The-Hill, England; Leap*Ido Ruiz. Boulonga. Argentina. On-The Hill. England; Leopoldo Ruiz, Buulonge. Argentina. —Thomas Aaron, Gainesville. Georgia; Keichi, Ono. Yokohama. Japan; Barnard Hunt. PInner, England. —Starters Time. . —Francis Buckler, Hamilton, Now Zealand; Robert Watson, Haw Rochelle. N. Y.i Bill Wright Jr- Edmontun, Alberto. Canada. —David Jimmez, Dorado MOCK Puerto Rica; CMfKTfifiv Capetown. South Africa, Richard Sikes. Springdale. Arkansas. —John Panlon, Larbert, Scotland; Bob Batdorft, Reading. i Pennsylvania; Darrell Welch. Sydney. AustrBBO. —Sebastian Miguel. Madrid Spain; Chuck Rotor, Vlclarvllla, California; Ralph Moffat, Covington. -England. —Starters Time. ----------------^JPrLargp,.. Florida; i Carmichael, Martinsville. —------- Hi ------| ad •' tM* ------ Dorset. UnglatL.. —Buster Cuplt, Cherokee VHMga, Ark.; Ramon Sola. Psdrsna, Spain; Bob Verway Johannesburg, South Africa, i] —Charles Sltford, Los Angelas, ClTitortlla; Bob Goetz, Lang-vMw, Texas; Yung-yo Hsieh, Taipei, RgpubOc at China. —Aloe Norman. Kitchener, Ontario. Canada; Temoo Ishll, Tokyo, Japan; Rod Funseth, Spokane, Washington. —Rex Baxter Jr., Amarillo, Texas; Robert Cnertgs. Christ Church, New Zaaloodt Rgyntonii Floyd, St. Andrews, IIIMils. —Fete Brown, Los Angeles, CBW«rtll«> Fred Haas. Metairie. Louisiana; Fatar Thompson, Toorak, Australia. -—Julius Boros. Mid Pints. North Carolina; Tommy Bolt, ’ Sarasota, - Florida; DaUH/MHl Naw- Roc hello. Now York. —Tony Lema, San Leandro. California; Lionel Hgrbart, Lafayette, Louisiana; Vic Ghezzl, Rumson, Now Jorsey. —Gay Brewer Jr., Dallas. Texas; Robert Rosburg, Portland. Oregon; Ed Furool, Export, Pennsylvania. ... Francisco, Calif.; Gary Flayer, Jot Wesley Ellis. Wow CjjBptH New J ■------ California; Dave HIM, Jl • Jolla, California. —Bobby Nichols, Corona, Michigan; Phil Reggr*. L< WpiMifi Time. —-Arnold Palmef, Laurel Valley, Pennsylvania; EHly Casper, Corona, Calgbagfti .Butch Baird, GatvoikxL Taias._ ^_ ColMOmla;' ton January.' pmiok'texMr' . —Doug Ford, Perdido Boy, Florida; Cory Mldflioili, Memphis, -Tennessee; Mb McCollltler, Corona, California. —Al Bessel ink. Groulngfr, Now York; Doug Sanders. 0|oL California; Jtlti Turnesa, Elmsford, New York. -Al Gawargar, Carllon Oaks. California; BlOy Maxwell. : MUhSW|7fMH|i Bob OaolMr, Belleville,. Illinois. —Paul Bon Jason, Palm Springs, California; Brian HUggrtt, . Essex, ItWUNb LiMrtiMWlj*, Hong raRB. —Miller Barber, San Abtortld, Texas; Gordon Jonas, Orlando. Florida; Fatar Butler, Birmingham, England. —Starters Tima. —Nick tartldi Jr., Gibraltar, Michigan; Lorry Mowry, Portland, Oregon; Guy Wolstenhelme. Virginia Water, England. —Pate Flaming, Hoi Springs. Ark.; -Amt Thompson, WMip-dale, Ontario, Canada; Robert Gafda. Bloomfield Hills, Men. —Randy Glover, Florence, S. Carllona; Nick Weslock. Burlington, DnlarlOk Canada; Dole Dougfase, Lakewood, Colorado. ■ FljMTliWHWly. Waterloo, Ont„ Canada; Allan Henning, Johannesburg, S. Africa; CIHt Brown, Cleveland. Ohio. —Starters T ’ S. Africa; Oakland Hills UnPARdonable a.m. Nicklaus, foe Ohio belter whose earnings are nearing the $160,000 mark far 1904, thinks the winner will creek the course mark. “Somewhere around 279t”ihe estimates. Palmer joined Nicklaus for a tour of the course yesterday and both finished “around par.” Nicklaus has an 8:46 a m. tee date for the first round along with John Bulla of Arizona and Marty Furgol of Missouri. Palmer, trying to calm a nervous putter, will leave the tee at 1:16 p.m. with Billy Casper of California and Butch Baird of Texas. Hogan, the sentimental favorite in the field, recorded one of his greatest triumphs at Oakland in winning the 1951 US. Opm. He will Join “Chi CM” Rodriguez of Puerto Rico and Jerry Barter of California on the tee at 9:24 a.m. Ite field will be eat to foeV low 75 plus ties after 66 holes for foe final rounds Saturday and Sunday. Every player surviving the 36-hole cut is assured of $629. Every professional, who swats a ball off the first foe will'make $400. Tickets for the tourney are available at moat area golf courses. Prices ere $5 for the first tiro rounds and $9 for Saturday and Sunday rounds. A tournament ticket is available at $». YOUNGEST IN FIELD -Allen Henning jof South Africa fo only 20 years old but be will be playing in the world’s richest tournament, the $200,000 World Open starting tomorrow. He is the youngest play-er in the field. , When foe 154 professionals and qne amateur tee off Thursday morning fo foe opening round of foe $200,000 Carling World Open Golf Tournament, they will be tackling one of foe toughest courses in the world—Oakland Hills. Oakland Hills isn’t the longest four, but its 6,907 yards of green grass are loaded with trouble. No player has ever broken pur (2tt| fo a 72-hole tournament Owe. Gene Littler came foe cleeeat with u 261 la winning the 1961 U.S. Open. Here’s a rundown of what the professionals will see when they atop onto the course Thursday: No. 1—A 435-yard, par 4. Fairway traps 230-275 yards off tee. Left side of heavily-bunkered green is slightly elevated. No. 2—A par 5, 510-yarder. Slight dogleg to left, trapped on both sides 230-270 yards off tee. Bunkers in front prevent rolling shot onto green which has a center crown, preventing easy approach to foe hole. No. 3—A 200-yard par 3. The green and trapping are on a No. 4—A 448-yard par 4; Slight dogleg to the left with a nest of traps at the dogleg. Green well guarded with traps. With pin at back, putting is more difficult. * * ★ No. 5—A 437-yard par 4. Players need a 220-yard drive to dear a crest in fairway and take advantage of a downslope. High second shot over fairway ditch needed to rolling green. Trapped left and’right. No. 0—A 350-yard par 4. Shortest par 4 on course. Traps guard fairway on left from 230-260 yards out. A large oak tree guards the right side 250 yards out. Second shot is slightly uphill to a severely trapped green. Contours and an elevation jn tear of green. No. 7—A 380-yard par 4. Pond and trees to the right 230 yards from tee and bunker gurrds left side. Green is heavily trapped. No. 8—A 458-yard par 4. Slight dogleg to the left. Tee slightly elevated but’shot fo still uphill with a steeper grade for second shot. Green trapped left at right. Fairway bunkers < about 250 yards from tee. TOUGH BEAUTY - Considered as one of foe world’s moat beautiful and great golf holes, No. 1A at Oakland Hillr b « dogleg right 405-yard par-4 hole which calls for one of the most exacting second’shots on the course. The sausage shaped putting surface lies on a peninsula. .No. 9—A 203-yard par 3. Green contouring is severe. Bunkers on rijpht and left of green. No. 10—A 448-yard par 4. Bunker at left on rolling fairway 280-270 yards out. Right traps cut into edge of fairway. Second shot uphill to contoured green. ' a,. * * * No. 11 — A 407-yard par 4. Carrying a knoll 240 yards out gives player added distance. , Fairway bunker lies to the right [240-260 yards out. Well-trapped green has two levels. No. 12 — A 566-yard par S. Pond and trees at right of fairway. Fairway banker 50 yards short of green. Rolling, well-trapped green is slightly elevated. No. 13—A 169-yard par 3. Tee and green are slightly elevated. The green fo almost, surrounded tty' traps./ Green has a pronounced hollow fo front center. No. 14—A 447-yard per 4. No fairway bunkers but two long shots needed to carry green , which falls away from front to back. Green trapped left and right. * , * * No. 15—A 392-yard par 4. Dogleg left with a bunker In middle of fairway 250 yards out. Heavy woods protect left side of fairway. Small opening between traps to rolling green. No. II — A 465-yard par 4. “The water hole.” Called one of world’s greaj golf holes. Lake make* a dogleg with second shot going over water to^ktogSirfOTrfreen extend--tof -into foe lake, two-thirds protected by water, the rest by four traps at the back. No. 17—A 194-yard par 3, The green fo piateaueds 30 feet higher than the tee and protected on all sides by traps. Tfie large green has pronounced contours with the left front slightly crowned. No. 18—A 459-yard par 4. A dogleg foght with bunkers jutting into the fairway at the corner, about 260 yards out. Second shot must carry green becauty-of the severe bunkering in front. Mound fo center of green complicates putting. Money, Course Have Talkative Pros' OK arnie of the top players entered in the $200,000 Carling World Golf Championship at Oakland Hills agreed that they face one of the year’s most severe competitive tests, but they express it fo different ways. Some of their comments: Jgjius Boros: “It’s going to take a long, straight driver end a good putter to win this one. I think the greens at Oakland are as severe as we’ll play all year long.” ' ★ * + Gary Player: “I just hope I’m Jiufjipg, well. That’s the most important thing in winning the big money nowadays. 1 tell you, there will be a lot of swallowing the apple a* it cornea to that last hole with $35,000 first prize at stakes.” Arnold Palmer: “Pretty near every player hi foe field will have a chance to win. The best player fob particular week will be It” ’ Jack Nicklaus: “I think it’s only fitting that a golf course of this caliber should be used for the first $300,000 tournament fo our country. All the. players are looking forward to it, and -I think it’s going to |be a great tournament.” Asked what score he would settle for on Sunday, Nicklaus quipped, “One stroke less than foe runner-up.” * * ♦ Tony Lema: “I’m looking forward plenty to playing at Oakland Hills for $200,000. I’d even look forward to gofogt-to Vfot Nam to play for $200,000.” Jim Ferrier, playing the par 4, 458-yard No. 8, a converted par 5, said: “I can reach this green in two if there’s no wind fo front of me, or a hurricane behind me.” Jerry Barber, playing with Ferrier: “I've got a few comments too, but your wife’s along.” indr~tof FAVORITE — U.S. Open Champion Ken Venturi established himself as the favorite in the $200,000 Carling World Open when he toured the Oakland Hills course fo a “relaxed” three-under-par 67 yesterday in his first practice round. The /72-hole tourney opens tomorrow. 1 n~t V; THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 N\ , ! 'Monkey'’Prevents Record by Venturi A “monkey” kept U.S. Open Champion Ken Venturi from cracking the course record at Oakland Hills day. TV 33-year-old pro carded an unofficial 17 over the MVtywd, per 70 layout, equalling a mark set by six other proe, including Bantam Baa Hogan who turned in a similar aeon in the final round in winning the 1961 Open. Aal Ben’s <7 isn’t recognised since it came is a practice round. The ethers were scored daring tear- But a “monkey” kept Ken hem a 06 or better. Venturi was four-under-par after nine holes. Is . W W ★ He bagged a per on No. 10 and canned an eight-foot putt for a birdie on the 407-yard, par 4 No. 11 and dropped an eagle putt on the 806-yard, par 6 No. 11 The eagle 'S’ pushed Ken seven under par with boles to go and the “monkey” allowed qi. WWW A record-breaking performance might on dm Open champion and Venturi Mid, i ’monkey' on my back.” After the eagle, Venturi eased up and of the final six holes for a closing 67. H three of the final four greens. Day With Chi-Chi at Oakland Hills Practice rounds end today at flaHud Hills for the World Open, but It may not be the end of the sany tactics of 29-year-old Chi Chi Rodriguez the mighty-mite of the drivers. Fortunately, his Saanteh words were not recorded, but his actions were in the adjoining picture sequence taken, by Press photographer Ed Vanderworp yesterday. . # TOP PHOTO: CU CU watches kls putt hang on the % of the cap on thallh green. SECOND PHOTO: He waits hnpatlsntiy Hr a breeze that mUht drop the tofl. THOU) PHOTO: Chi Chi takas a cneetfek shaf ts drop the hhHWe the cap. BOTTOM PHOTO: One of CU CM’S “Bandido” fans, Mi Keefe, H, of Bfrmiag-ham, Is then to console him for missing the bird. He flatted wMh 79 far the practice rawed. Argentinean Overcomes Expensive Slices, Hooks Mo Ml UPHILL PROBLEM - Don Whitt found OMutd Hills’ rolling greens loaded with tricky putting problems yesterday. 11m OUforaian, Ms feet nearly hidden .by a sharp rim, tries an uphill putt on tbs 16th green. To be a golfer In Argentina takas some dedication and, if an Argentinian wants to play American or English equipment, it takas straight shooting. Banana ball dices and duck hooka can be expansive. A S77 per cent import duty on balls and equipment jumps the price of a 61.35 American ball to M.71 and a lost ball Is huntad with dpa fervor of an oM western posse chase. One Argentinian who doesn’t have worries along that line is Leopoldo Ismael Rids, the Arnold Palmer-Jack Nkklaus combination of the South American nation who will be at Oakland Hills for the Carling World Golf He has been playing since be was eight — he’s 17 now — and, like most of the American stare, began caddying when be fas 11 From packing hags as a youngster at Buenos Mm’ suburban Hindu Country Club, Ruiz has risen to bead professional. He’s also found time to FOUR TIMES pany in the Carling World, United Nations of golf. Ruiz played in five Canada Cup fain, bom Europe to Asia •tope in between. " WnfHHirHaf finished fourth in tba 1911 British Opea firing a record-equaling IS aleagthe way. It’s been a long trip up, bow ever. Argentina has only some 12,000 gdfen, only 70 courses end Just five of those public. WWW Ruls won hie place in the Carling by capturing the Argentine Central Open earlier this year. He is one of three South Americans in the field including fellow countryman Florentine Molina. W WW Wilfredo Uculmana, winner of the Peruvian Open, also qualified but recently brake his arm and will be replaced by Hugo NhriofPeru. V- > 3A four times id Masters one W 1 Through Soutu aub m the Uruguayan Oj Ties plus the Chilean mbian Opens. He hasn’t restricted his tour South America and will be familiar international com- Harness Driven Alone in Respective Fields NEW YORK (076 - Bob Farrington and Stanley Dancer are drawing away from the pack in their respective bids to cop the most races won and money earned titles among the nation’s harness racing drivers. WWW Farrington leads with 170 triumphs in 796 starts, while Dancer has amassed 967,006 in prim money. Chi Chi Gets All 'Daylight' Game Rodriguez to Show “"Driving Power Off Oakland Hills Tees Then is a good reason why Juan (Chi Chi) Rodrigues, the cocky, colorful little Puerto Rican, is one of the fastest playrs in golf as welT as one of its longest hitters. WWW.' “I was so crazy to play golf In my caddy days, the pro would let me go out when he dosed the pro shop,” CM CM explains. “there would be only 45 minutes of daylight left. I’d get In 18 holes by hurrying. It was a that’s why spectators gallery-tag Mm In the 3200,000 Carling World Golf ChamptonaMp at 0 akiand Hills Country Chib shouldn’t take their eyes off him when he steps on the toe if they want to study Mm to saa where he gets his tremendous Mtting power. The 6 • foot-7%, lMpeead Puerto Rican htt fewer pe- lt dates bade to Ms caddy days which began whan ha was nine. However, ha became acquainted with golf at the age of six. *...... “My brother Julio and I took the wheels off a roller skate a a cart,” Chi CM ro-push Mm. Next-time me. We came" to the of the Berwind Countin Puerto Rico). Wo BASEBALL PLAYER Actually, CM CM liked baseball more than golf. His father raa a baseball player. ★ ★ ★ “I was a pretty good pitcher one year in Class AA,” says CM. Chi. "My best pitch was a submarina ball. My good friend Orlando Gbpsda (San Francisco first bassman) once toll ms I throw as hard as WMtey Ford. Ha say I throw maybe 8540 miles an hour. tEEL, % % A w ^ mC |i| * \ 1 A ITS A LONG WAY — Arnold Palmer, on a practice tour of Oakland Iffils yesterday, grabbed an iron for Ms second shot on the par 4, 466-yard No. 6, but he changed his miqd. Ante went to a No. 4 wood and rapped the ball on the green., WATER TROUBLE-New Yorker Bill Coltins i time ‘'fishing” .ona practice tour at Oakland Hills Collins rapped two balls into the lake on No. 16. WMGA Survivors Enter Tournament Semifinals Survivors in the Women’s p«^npilHdi (rftif liWflntkB match-play tournament entered the semifinal round today at Rochester Country Chib. ★ ' * ♦; '' ■ Holding one of the semifinal WBA Delegates Proposing Ban on Title Fight NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - A majority of the early arrivals to' the World Boxing Association convention this week favor outlawing the proposed Liston-Clay rematch. it it it ... Pre-convention talks with delegates also indicate there will be a floor fight over the WBA’s suspension of Sonny Liston after he lost the world heavyweight boxing title to Cassius dajr. Jamas E. Deskin, executive secretory of the Nevada State Athletic Commissian; said Tuesday he plans to take the floor at .the convention Thursday and challenge the WBA's suspension of Liston. He maintains that the WBA did not have the authority •Iota was Mrs. Chris Milter of Farmington, Pontiacli Modal champ in 1961. Mrs. Miller moved ap when sees forced her Off rs. Harold Whiten • tit, oat of actlon/\ Mrs. Miter to-I BurraR of De- af De- troit, oat of actioa\ Paired with Mrs. 1 day was Isabel Bum r trait, e 1 up winner odor Mrs. Nick Panasiuk of Windsor yesterday. * ★ * In other matchee, Phyllis Chandler of Detroit downed Mto. Frank Brooks of Farmington, 1 up, and Mirs. George Schade of Detroit downed Mrs. Charles Zahm, also of Detroit, 9 and 1 Miss Chandler and Mn. Schade were slated to duel In the other semifinal match today. * Or * Winners of today’s rounds meet In the finals tomorrow. CHAMPIONSHIP PUOMT 'Mrs. Chris Millar, Farmington ovar Mrs. H. Walton. Detroit by tMtaulti las- WJgTCTQsiBjBBfi Cltsrlaa Zoom, Datroit. 1 an* l FIRST PLIOHT Mrs. W, Korbut, Detroit Oaf MTS. M. Ststanac, Datroit. 7 an* ii Mr*. U Flam-Ins, Birmingham ST Sink L wK Mrs. - VL Hanson, iE=n'x— Lowell, Detroit, J i Mrs. W. Brown. DstrsN dsf Mrs. 0. Ren ns, Dstrstt. » and 11 Mrs. S. Olllsesk, Royal Oak «sf Mra.'W. Wootsn, 1 and J» ypjB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1964 D—a Rakow Provides Tigers With Relief BOSTON (AP)—Detroit Tiger pitcher Ed Rakow, who keep* his right elbow in shape during winter by tending bar-in Kansas Oty, turned in a clutch relief performance Tuesday night in Detroit’s ll-« victory over the Boston Red Sox. Rakow entered the game In the fifth inning after Boston had shelled rookie Denny Mri^in for three homers to knot the score «t 6-6. i He got the next two betters on infield grounders and ecat-tered five hits over the final five frames for Us seventh victory against nine losses. The effort included getting out of a no-out, bases-loaded jam in tte-aixta, and a pair of twoon, ohe-out situations in the ei^ith ahd ninth innings. Rakow fanned the red-hot Bob Tillman In the sixth add ★ ★ ★ thei/got out of the inning by getting pinch-hitter Red Smith to hit into a double {day. INFIELD TAP * . ; He got Eddie Bresaoud and Tillman again after two were on in the eighth, and ended the game in the ninth with two men aboard by fanning Carl Yastrzemski and getting power hitting Dick Stuart on an infield tap. Chicago Mound Ace Showing 'Potential' By The Associated Press Juan Pizarro has been a potential 20-game winner since he started throwing rocks in Santurce, P.R., 11 years ago. A1 Lopez is betting a World Series ticket that the White Sox left-hander makes the charmed circle in 1964. * .* f * Pizarro pitched Chicago to within a game of first place Tuesday night when he blanked Minnesota 1-0 on a masterful fivehitter. The victory was No. 17, tops in the American League,.for the 27-year-old fire-bailer and the shutout lowered his earned run average to a brilliant 2.0fr. ★ dr ..-St He has neveif been this dose to the 2ff-victory mark before, though tagged “another Bob Feller* before Ijp had thrown a pitch in anger in the major leagues. Juan started the 1954 Winter As Dodgers Triumph Infrequent Winner Stars By The Associated Press Howie Reed doesn’t win very often. Not at ail: In fact, his pitching victories are so well spaced out he might even pass for a Met. But when the 27-year-old right-hander does get around to winning one, he does it in convincing fashion — and he makes the licking hurt. Reed, who hadn’t won in the majors since 1958, got around to it again Tuesday night. He fashioned a six-hitter — with ninth inning help — for the Los Angeles Dodgers and beat San Francisco’s struggling Giants S-l. The loss dropped the Giants into third place and left them tit games behind National League leading Philadelphia, a deficit that becomes more imposing each day. SECOND PLACE Cincinnati took over second place, rapping the New York Mets 7-2 behind the six-hit pitching of Bob Purkey white Philadelphia took a 7-5 licking from Milwaukee for the Braves’ second straight over the league leaders. Houston held off .Chicago 54 and Lou Brock’s 12th inning homer sealed St. Louis’ 74 verdict over Pittsburgh* it) the other games. * v Reed, whose last major league triumph was a 2-1 decision over the Chicago White Sox while pitching with Kansas City Sept. 23, 1968, was in top form against the Giants, . He allowed only five hits through the first seven innings, gave up another in the eighth, then weakened in the ninth. With ohe out, he issued walks to Chuck Hiller and Matty Atom ★ ★ ★ Ron Perranoski came on to get one out and Boh Milter was called in to strike out Willie Mays and end the game. It was only Los Angeles’ fourth victory over San Francisco in 15 games this year, hut It left the Giants with an overwhelming task in attempting to overtake Philadelphia. League season as the Santurce club’s batboy but wound up on the pitching staff when he discovered he could fling rooks harder than the team’s pitchers could throw baseballs. Two years later he was. Milwaukee’s prize farmhand, striking, out 318 batters for the. Braves’ Jacksonville club in the old Sally League. The Braves had paid Santurce $35,000 for his contract, lUk they never got a return-on their invi investment. SPRING FLOP Pizarro and the Milwaukee management suffered through four season with equally intend" ’ "w" m r > w ,0,T0" pressive results, the oouthpa# EL"** *1*1®?* flopped each spring, was demote " ed to the minors — where he was virtually unbeatable — and finished • each season in the Braves’ bullpen. Finally, In 1900, the Braves traded him to the White Sox and Lopez made him reclamation project No. 1. Pizarro has been a winner eyer since. Elsewhere in the AL Tuesday night, Cleveland upended league-leading Baltimore 54; third place New York topped Washington 4-1; Los Angeles defeated Kansas City 5-3 and Detroit slugged Boston 114. Pizarro, 174, pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the top of the ninth before the White Sox broke through lefty Dick Stig-man in the bottom of the inning. ★ ★ Stigman checked the Sox on three hits until Jim Landis ted off the ninth with a single. Ode out later, Floyd Robinson singled. BUI Skowron lined out before Ron Hansen broke it up tilth a run-scoring bit to left. It was the 10th complete game and fourth shutout lor Pizarro, who was a spring holdout until March 25, but got off to the best start of his career, reeling off five successive victories. The Tigers wrapped it up on Don Demeter’s three-run homer in the sixth, and added two more funs hi the seventh when Yastrzemski dropped Rakow’! fly ball, followed by singles by Don Wert and A1 Kaline, and an infield out. * * * ' Boston starter Dave More-head gave up two runs in the first on three walks, a single and BUI Freehan’s sacrifice fly. The Tigers chased Morehead with two more runs hi the second with Kaline and Wert picking up the RBPs. Dick McAuliffe’s 22nd homer with Freehan aboard in the third made it 6-2. Boston’s first two runs came in the first on a single by Dalton Jones, Yas-trzemski’s double and Stuart’s single. JTGERCHASED The Red Sox chased McLain in the fourth with three homers: Stuart dubbed his 29th of the season; a walk to Frank Mai-zone was followed by Bres-soud’s 13th, and Tillman connected for his 14th before Rakow took over. Demeter, who hed two hits, including his 18th home run, and Kaline led the Tiger’s 15-hlt attack off four ,Red Sox pitchers. Kaline had four straight hits and drove in two runs. The two teams wiU meet again tonight with Dave Wick-ersham (154) pitching for Detroit against Bob Heffner (44) of the Red Sox. ;# iTilS&rV’ 1 ?! 11 Winww rt It' 111 - 4 • 1 . ill Cart lb I 6 1 6 SrMtoui g&rtt " MifjHSl ,.I flcjurtl 0 1 1 0 0 Morrtead p 0 0 0 . liakow p 1110 Ritchie p . 2 0 0 0 talMl ph 10 00 ratal! S11111 n ^9TB^a^•P,^W,«*1® « ggjjj* .............ta w na-i i & «* Tillman 04). SB-w.rt. .. SM f .. n-3 ; .. 41-3 if ... 1-*. i r—»:<•. A-12.W2. Tiger Averages Or The AtMCtoM .rex MlvMu.1 .Sfln. Kaline ..’I Brown ... 417 am 13 52 ... 31f 51 81 13 J0 Phillips ... ... Ml 35 74 11 9 .... 14 <32 j U Bruton "" McAullffe . WBrt ...... ... 451 1*114 22 54 Cash i ■Statin' ... 112 1» 25 1 " WMonhon Pttrtln* W t IP .is i m RaK .. Iparma . Agulrra . s Iff 14 4.31 1 Ji| 01 114# 1-3 Of REPEAT OF A SELLOUT I ALL NEW, Magncnrmc 82CHANNEL UHF-VHF STEREO THEATRE. This all-new 3 way Stereo Theatre Combination costs , • 280 sq. In- TV |e9S than comparable TV and Stereo purchased separately. Compact-saving model, only 45" long, has 82 channel • FM-AM RADIO UHF-VHF' 23“ TV, FM-AM radio, Micromqfic record player with 10 years Diamond stylus guarantee and twin 38910 • STEREO munyj high fidelity speaker*. Person to Peraoti Let Oar Attendant Park Your Car FREE CREDIT in RUStW Private Lot Rear of Our Store • No Down Payment OPEN THURS., FRI., Mon. NIGHTS TIL 9 P.M. e 90 Doye Seme Ab Cash e Up to 36 Mouth# to Pay. MMM38HJR.it paoHATommm %»HMN0OtOPMIN» ' CHAMPIONSHIP AT MAULPMWC' E’50 MARSH HAS RECMAMONO 1H6 W-TSN DASH WINMStf INTH£ US. HAUL PARK HARHC8S RACEWAY, TEN MU.E AND DBJOlNPRE, TIN RACES NtfiHTW {.EXCEPT flUNDAY ) ROST TlMC-ft'SO RM, Stale Wrestler Tries, but Is Ousted by Draw NEW YORK (AP) ~ Jack Barden of Port Hbron gave U aU he had but ended up lbeteg out his Olympic wrestling bid by a draw Tuesday night. * ★ . ★ ★, Barden, who moved up in the 213.6-pound class by outpointing Larry Sclacchetano, of Union City, N. J., 74 earlier in the day, lost tea draw match with Steve Shlppos of Ithaca, N.Y. Both Barden and Shippos eliminated themselves in the tie bout The 213.5 Olympic berth went to Gerry Connine of Tacoma, Wash., who pinned Joe James of Chicago in 2:35. Connine gained the finals by ousting Russ Winer of Dtirand, Midi., 24. OTHERS 'OUSTED Other Michigan entries eliminated Tuesday toduded (tela Johnson of East Lansing, John Rollins of Lansing and Charles Ginther of Sturgis., Johnson was outpointed by Joe Marsh Has 16 Wins Leisure Rare for Sulky Driver Harness racing driver Joe Marsh Jr. is not a. man of leisure. His goal' is to train horses and'thea win races currently TSaffig Harness Raceway. ’» exactly what he's 'doing at Hazel Part After the first 15 nights of the track’s meeting, Marsh to ahead of tost year’s pace when he set a Hazel Park record by winning 49 racea. He did it in 45 nights in 1983, but this year’s meeting has been extended to 53 nights and doesn’t end until October 3. The 38-year-old native of Findlay, Ohio, already has 16 victories to his credit, in addition to 16 second places aad 11 thirds. A much-sought-after-driver, Marsh runs a private stable at Hazel Park. He trains and drives 40 trotters and pacers for a variety of owners and also drives for others. __________________ BUSY DAY His day to a busy one. The 120-pounder trains the horses from $ a. m. until noon, tends to blacksmith, veterinarian and other business in the afternoon, and drives at Hazel Park in the evening. For the past -four years, Marsh has teen in the top 10 among the nation’s drivers who won 100, or more races. Only four retesmen have recorded five consecutive 100-plus-victory seasons and Marsh has an excellent chance to become the fifth. Marsh considers Butch Harmony “my favorite horse.’’ The pacer, owned by Bertha Alexander of Detroit, has won many races under Marsh’s whip. --- ——r~- Butch Harmony has been clocked in the fastest time this season at Hazel Park when he paced the telle in an even two minutes on Aug. 8 to win a $5,000 race. Ex-MSU Gridder Cut LIBERTY, Mo. (AP)-Safety man Dewey Lincoln from Michigan State was one of four rookies cut from the squad of the Kansas City Chiefs pro football team Tuesday to bring the number of players down to 43, Keith Kestd of San Francisco 7-1 after an earlier 54 victory over Jim Hasewtakd of fit. Cloud, Minn., in the U4J class. * . * - * Ginther won by default over Alfred DeLocon of Britt, Iowa, in the 138.5pound category before being outpointed by Bob Douglas of Norman, (tela., 74. Rollins also was eliminated in a draw bout in the same class. He tied Lou Giani of Hunting-ton, N.Y., after an earlier pin over Richard Leonardo! ta 8:15. Big Time Pitchers Returning to MSU east Lansing (APvnme former Michigan State pitchers who graduated into big time pro baseball are scheduled to hurl once agate- in an old timers game Qd 10 at the MSU campus. * * * Scheduled for the appearance are Robin Roberts of the Baltimore Orioles, Dick Radatx of the Boston Red Sox and Ron Perranoski, of the Los Angeles Dodgers. They’ll he supported by otter former Spartan base-ball greats.f The old timers will play the varsity in a game to benefit the memorial fund for former athletic director Ralph Young. State Hospital Plans 1 st Teen-Age Olympics The Pontiac State Hospital will have its first Parade of Olympics beginning 1 p.m. tomorrow for teen-age inpatient competitors. Both boys and girls at the hospital will be eligible to contest for prizes in track and field events. This will be tee first time such competition will be attempted for patients ta Michigan State hospitals. WEST. COAST FRAMING LUMBER DOUGLAS FIR * Construction t Better. 21% 3tin4ird 1888 Ode ft. 2x6,8* thru 20* *107X0 2x6,22' and 24* 135.60 2x8,8' thru 20'......., 109.50 2x8,22* and 24f 13740 2x10,8' thru 20' 11730 2x10,22'and 24' 13740 Prices Slashed On DIMENSION FIR PLYWOOD SHEATHING 4x8 Sheets — (Certified Grade Marked) Sq. Ft. Shaat 3/8" CD ^ M6Vi *2.64 80 pcs. or more .... ...07% 2.48 1/2" CD...... .... ...is 3.20 60 pcs. or more.. 1....... *. MYi 3.04 5/8" CD.................im 3.76 50 pcs, or more.......11% 3.60 _ FINANCING AND DKUVKRY WICKES fra Hung ALUMINUM Combination Doors 2'8"x6'8" 3.0x6f8M 2'8"x6'8" 3.0'x6.8" *19" $2460 Borg Warner Water Closets Wash-Down Economy . ww*.................. $20.91 Reverse Tree White. ..............$22.99 Color...............$22.96 Toilet Soot (White or Dolor) Solid Plastic White... .$5.75 Wood...................$2.35 Flexible Mastic Water Pipe H.5.F. Approved (For lOPColU) 88 Lh. W to* 1» m” pressure SMI $4.11 $7J8 Still IN Lb. Prauere $«.N $1848 SERVICE AVAILABLE ON HIGHWAY M-53 * 2 MILES SOUTH OF ROMEO 7*3001461 Saturday Your Complete BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER Original equipment tlras on now IBM ears ... at tko lowest prises of tlo yoarl SMEW B.F.600DRICH TIRE PROTECTION PLAN guarantees* every BFQ passenger car tire ■ Extra-wide traction tread ■ Passenger tire tread design ■ Extra skid depth. Ideal tar form and field use NB MONEY DOWN No additional charge i for mounting large early gallery. Jack Nicklaua (left) and Arnold Palmer both shot “around” 71 or 71 for the (iractice round. B.E Goodrich 'p-o.4- THE PONTIAC PRESS, 1 WEDNESDAY/AUGUST 26, 1004 —r------*-----—} Giardello in Training PHILADELPHIA Pf?g©6, |f HgLP© 6fAR-f -fWB BMCKBWlNflr » at K City (O'Donoghuo M), night 1 Clswgtan4 (Stsngs *.11) st BaNtmsrs (Robsrts IM). night WBMMMjNarum BIN at Now Las Angslss at Kansas City Mlnnosota st Chicago Detroit at Boston Only gamsa ichsdwM NATIONAL LBAOUi Wsa Lost act. H 0 -saa 9 E MMsMNT'S...V*--- ,.-W Vat* f Houston L Chicago 4 S». Louts 7, Fhtiaweh <11 Innings (Jackson 1S-1W) at Houston (Nat- Sighting on Does, Fawns LANSING (AP) - Claims of serious crop damage and an alarming increase in cm-deer accidents were advanced by the State Conservation Department today as Justification for extending the area for hunting of anterless deer. * * ■ n - The department has proposed addition of nine areas in tito southern Lower Peninsula and some 774 square miles in central and southern Menominee County to tiie regions where hunters could take a limited number of does and fawns. In the southern third of the state, special a ^ . , posed for parte of Mrokagon, Ottawa, Kent, Ionia, Bsrrien, Van Boren, Kalamazoo, Calhoun, Eaton and Livingston countittaend a 190-acre am in the southeastern corner of Barry County. The joint legislative committee on administrative rules fans called a hearing for FMtagr in the Senate chamber on the proposals. The committee meanwhile ' suspended regulations adopted by the State Conservation Commission adding the areas to the any-deer hunting program. V? for TAXES, MEDICAL BILLS, NEW CAR, VACATION, FURNITURE, etc. We Can Loan Yob At Math At *3000CASH On 2nd Mortgage* and Land Contracts one payment... one place to pay... a payment plan to salt your budget. Your Leon Fully Protected by Life Insurance FAMILY ACCEPTANCE C0RP. Grapefruit never had a nightlife before, but wait’llyon see how this one mixes at a party. Canada Dry Grapefruit Drink’s no timid little breakfast-table type. It’s sassy, and sophisticated, and smooth enough to tame any liquor in the house. That’s because it’s got Special Sparkle—a Mend of costlier ingredients and pinpoint carbonation. Want to raise your’spirits? Go ahead and pick a number from one to four. 1. Salty Dog Add ice cubes to a highball glass. Add 1 Yt ounces of vodka or ^n. Till with Canada Dry Grapefruit. Drink. Dashes of salt to taste. 2. Rabbit Punch In a large punch bowl, over ice, pour 1 bottle (28 oz.) each of Canada Dry Grapefruit Drink, Ginger Ale, fClub Soda, and Hi-Spot Lemon. Add V4 cup powdered sugar, small jar (8 oz.) Maraschino cherries and juice, sliced oranges and lemons, and 2 fifths of your favorite liquor (gin, rum, bourbon, or vodka). Makes about 45 servings. . 3. Mad Mad Russian Add ice cubes to a goblet Add 1 Vi ounces of vodka. Fill with Canada Dry Grapefruit Drink. Decorate with Maraschino cherry. 4. Tropical Twitter Pour 2 ounces of rum over ice cubes in a tall glass. Fill glass with Canada Dry Grapefruit Drink. A P THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN^SDaV, AUGUST 20, 19*1 the Outfatf^Ti-ail with DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Frost BEAR HUNTING HME-The black bear hunting season gets under way in the Upper Peninsula Sept. 1, for a 15-day run. Dogs can be used under the special license and many a the one above will be repeated. i will be held below the r will be legal targets during the f and rifle seasons for deer. Conservation Office Eying Extra Funds The Conservation Department is trying to come up with a preliminary recreation plan for the state which could put Michigan in line to receive more thank"' million hi federal funds lari irly atk> The money would be provided under the Lnd and Water Cook serration Fund Bill which re-portecBy is an oddeon choice to pees Congress in the nest ' It calls for making hinds available to states on a matching basis to underwrite their planning, acquisition, and development of recreational lands Te qualify for Race fends, .............rmelate a i which ha i time aeeda and spell eat ways te meet them. In Shaping such a plan for this state, the department his made a 179,000 grant to Michigan State University for carrying out a needs-and-demands study which win project future trends in recreation. wee Also, the department will soon undertake an inventory of. all publicly-owned water frontage in die state to measure and pinpoint the quality and potential of these holdings for recreation. It will supplement a survey already completed which classifies some four million acres of stale forest lands according to their uses. STAFF INCREASE With die prospect of more federal money in the offing, Director Ralph A. MacMullan has cited the need for increasing the department’s recreational staff as pa# of its “be prepared” approach to handling the expansion of recreational facilities. He reports the department will soon bring before the Conservation Commission a proposed policy statement descrlb-' its responsibilities in recre- As for the department financing Its share, MacMullan services could be used to match a large port of the federal grant which is expected under the bill pending in Congress. BroadheadArcheiy Starts This Week A four-week broadhead archery league will get under way tomorrow at the Oakland County Sportsmen's Chib in Waterford Township. * * * Two daily sessions of the league are on the schedule—11 a.m. and 5:99 p.m. * ft Cost of joining the league is f 1 for Sportsmen Club members and flJS for non-members. Persons interested in the league may sigh up at the dub. Bow Permits Have Deadline Archars May Apply Until Sapt. 15th Archers have until Sod. 15 to register through the Conservation Department for hunting deer this fall at the Fort Custer Military Reservation near Battle Oeek where whltetail concentrations are the highest known in Michigan. Pre-registration is required to hunt there on weekends and during the first 10 days of die general Oct. 1-Nov. 5 archery deer Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, asp rinted below, has been taken from John Akien Knight’s Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that efch day has to offer. >rMw . Saturday TW Tn nl? • 40 MS t:00 1:50 ::*f if £223213?: ON LOON LAKE SUNDAY, AUGUST 30th Jut* North of EDQEWATER MOTOR On Dixie Highway YOU! HOSTS — Waterford Jayceet Per each sf theee days, free hunting permits will be tamed by the department to the first Ml ppsrtsmen who apply fir them. To spread sport among as many hunters as possible, each permit will cover one day only. During the balance of die season, up to 900 archers a day win be able to get onto the reservation without permits. Permit applications can now be picked up at license dealers in the Kalamazoo, Battle Greek, Grand Rapids and Jackson areas and department field offices in the Fort Custer vicinity. Anyone asking for these forms through the department's Lansing office should send prestamped, self - addressed envelopes with their requests. Pontiac Lake Site of New District Offices Pontiac Lake recreation area will be one M the three sites for new district offices being organized by the Conservation Department. The others will be at Grand Rapids and Rose Lake. Warren Shapton, Region | manager, said die Pontiac Lake office will-be temporarily housed in the fire office, Mil Williams Lake Road. The new district will cover all of Oakland, Macomb and Wayne Counties and parts of St. Clair and Monroe Counties. The office will open about Oct, 1 with the appointment of a district parks supervisor. “We havt been delayed ap- pointing a parks supervisor," explained Shapton, "because the necessary civil service examinations are bring revamped.” The sew Southeastern Mick-Igaa district, kaewn by the organisers as Me Metropolitan district, probably will become No. 14 when the office 300 Permits for .Season Romney Starts Elk Drawing LANSING (AP)—Gov. George W. Romney pushed a button at Lansing this morning to start the wheels whirling on Michigan’s elk lottery. n * * * There are 23,339 applications for hunting permits during the special rik season late this year. But only 900 of the army of would-be elk hunters will be successful. - An electronic computer In die date-processing division of the State Revenue Deportment will pick the winners. xantf In tWfcx Inr SM van aar v an u n uepan- 4,131 Boats Are Exported NEW YORK-The United States exported a total of 4,191 pleasure boats valued at a record M,IBB,745, over 91 million more than in 1962, according to a compilation of faires made by the National Association of Engine and Boat Manufacturers from statistics of the U.s! Department of , Commerce. Tbe 1962 figures were 4,417 units valued at WAM,119. The largest foreign customer for American boats is Canada, which last year Imported 1,799 American boats valued at M,* 835,580. This was a new six-year low for boat exports to Canada, a condition attributed generally to a Canadian boat tariff rate that is much higher than American rates. * ★ ★ Imports of foreign (raft also rose in 1989 to 8,1M units valued at MJ69f949, up from 4,781 unite valued at 96,806,900 In ML The rise hi units Jmpc was mainly doe to the influx of lower priced Japanese craft country's export n but increased the Japanese export dollar volume by little more j that 12 per cant. * * * The average value of American Imports'from Japan dropped from #441 in 1912 to M22 In IMS. The NAEBM compilation does of a revision in the tariff classification effective August 91, 1999. This information will be included in the report for 1994. MORTGAGE MONEY TO PAY ALL of YOUR BILLS! Home-Owners With Or Without Existing- Mortgages - Consolidate Your Bills Into One 1 Low Monthly Payment: BORROW *2200* REPAY $18.57 A MONTH for 16 YEARS Larger Amounts At Proportionate Ratos. • Cemolletln feTeer ffea GET ADDITIONAL CASH 2nd MORTGAGES AVAILABLE OR SELL YOUR LAND CONTRACT! CAU. TODAY •92-2111 - 24 HOUR SERVICE | SYLVAN REALTY CO. 1311 Orchard Lak, M. mm. ....... Pontiac uLNa......... The special season, authorised by tbe last session of die legislature, is set for Dec.' 5-19 by, the State Conservation Department Game biologists estimated the 900 hunters will harvest some 200 elk. EARLY RETURN Winners will be notified as soon as possible. All applicants for the special license had to The losers are promised an early return of their checks. Tbe hunting will be allowed In 600 square miles of Presque Isle, Montcalm, Cheboygan and Otsego counties. Each hunter is limited to one A. * * ★ The elk herd, centering in the Pigeon River State Forest, currently is estimated at about 3,500 animals. The herd grew from an original eight elk planted there in mi and 1910. The elk have never been shot at legally and this will be tbe first elk hunt In Michigan sines the last of tbe native animals were killed off before the turn of the century. ALONG ROADS The rik, which often can be seen grazing along the sides of roads in the northern Lower Peninsula area, have become a tourist attraction. Conservation Depart- ever, that the elk population is exploding so fast the big animals are overbrowsing their range and also competing wttii deer for forage. Some farmers and orchard owners also have complained of damage by tile rik. * The December season was set to avoid conflict wttii the regular deer season. The lata date also was selected so the mating season would be well over and to increase the possibility of snow for tracking. It has been tbe southern part of the district controlled by the Imlay City office. The Imlay headquarters will continue to operate, directing operations from Lapeer County to Saginaw Bqy. #, ■ '-is ★ “The formation of three new districts will make it possible for tbe department to get more supervisory personnel Into the areas they direct,” said Shapton. OTHER OFFICES The new areas are part of the department’s reorganizations! program. Other district headquarters are at Jackson and Plainwell. A fire supervisor, who will have charge of Jne eastern half of Region 3 will move into the Pontiac Lake office after the parks supervisor. Then will come law, game and fish supervisors. An education supervisor will be assigned to the Detroit office. There will be no change in tbe forestry setup at this time, according to Shapton. tag will bn raaitnwtad, said the regional manager. “We have no money for construction at this time?’ he said, “but a new building will ba in-cluded in the proposed 1985-86 budget.” Five to seven persons will be hired as secretarial and risrical help. These positions will be filled by area residents through civil service procedures. ♦ ★ a “We don’t anticipate having a full work force until the fish supervisor is appointed some time early next year,” Shapton printed out. He said the new building will be located either adjacent to tbe fire office or on Gale Road near the recreation areal headquarters. “Wa may have to split 19 the office space between the fire office and the recreation area buildings until the new structure is complete,” be said. No additional firefighting equipment will be transferred to this area. i w ENGINE OVE :f 1HAULING GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS AUT0MATIQ 1 TRANSMISSIONS EASY TERMS I OUR SPECIALTY . MOTOR EXCHANGE 405 S. Soji.ow Stmt n 1.7412 10 DAYS ONLY! IN TIME FOR LABOR DAY < Hie Same Great lire that comes oft New 1964 Cars! NEVER BEFORE ATI SUCH LOW PRICES! GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE j CITY TIRE 30 S. Can FE 5-6123 ] 508 N. Parry FE 8-0900 Open Friday 'til ? • Open Friday 'til 9 i T r* PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1964 -‘P^T Key to Success BBN CASEY Students Need io Gain Self-Confidence By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed. D. Self - confidence goes right along with success in school. Lack of self-confidence and a tendency to underrate their own abilities Is present almost universally among underachieving students. While self-confidence is an attitude to be nurtured and encouraged practically from birth, self-discipline is a behavior acquired through training. Self-discipline leads to self-confi- At the start, parents must set the standards and establish the controls. As children learn the boundaries of accepted conduct, they can begin to use self-dis-cipline. As they are able to accept the responsibility for their own actions within these limits, their parents-can gradually relax controls and allow them to gain practice in self-disdpUne. The wise parent watches far evidence, helps build sdf-eea-fidence and tries to keep that NORTH M 4* 7 VAKQJ 42 ♦ KQJ07S4 NUT BAST Not shown Not shown an Vulnerability doesn’t matter Mh West Nerth Bast 1* Pass ? Opening load—Doesn't By OSWALD JACOBY When you use any bid as an artificial demand to partner to tell you how many aces he use that bid with a natural meaning at the same time. The Gerber four - club convention never became popular because players found too often JACOBY that they needed natural four-club bids. The Blackwood four no*, tnunp has become popular because you can afford to use an artificial four no-tramp call most of the time. The North hand is the only one you have to.see today. It is a rather unusual hand and When partner opens the bidding with one spade ail you need to know Is the number of aces he holds in order' to bid to the right contract. It is possible that he has no aces? In that case you should be able to make four no-trump. If he has just one ace you can make five chibs, but if yba use Blackwood to ask for aces you will be at five diamonds and there is a chance bat you Will he overboard. If he holds two or three aces Blackwood works perfectly. You play six if be has two and a grand slam if be has three. Part eMhe Jacoby slam method is te use the jump response of four clubs to any opening one bid as an ace request so bat you can respond four clubs with this hand aad keep out of all trouble. If partner shows no aces by a bid of four diamonds you close be bidding at four np-tnunp. If he .shows one ace you settle for five clubs as the final contract. If he shows two or three aces you bid the appropriate slam. v+cmiD«ftv*K*s Q—The bidding has been: South Woof ' North B 14 Pass 2V Paw 2N.T. Pass 3# Pass ? You, Soub, hold: 4K« VK4 4A108 7 6 AK7 5 4 What do you do now? A—Bid four diamonds. You have a live-card suit and while your baud to of minimum typo you have nothing to be ashamed of and yon can take the first or second toad of any snit TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner continues to four hearts. What do you do now? Astrological. • •* .JForecgst £ & M. 3 "Tin WtM man contrail his Osti , . . Astwlisr points in* My." ARIES (Msr. 21 io Apr. It): Cycn —*— hloh. BUt Iter* art money Mich requirt cartful analysis. ______ specific. ers. Sind out the Se AtftCKFtlViii quest! umWRB Check Ver WHVr* — ___ CRITICISM. methods, pertonr Vw IBS-*0 *P ou IMSM-Twr _ ------- - Stress VURSATILUapprooch. GEMINI (May MtO Jims 20): OhO who expresses uncertainty can hs mads FACTS, TRyjj^ Not idways aasy to "^canc&r (Juno * So jiitr Roy rr ^i&rssz NETISM. Crsatlua torcas coma to You will tosp'MM." No Umo to light under bushel I ___ Tip (July 23 to Amo. B)I 0« voluntoer for proloct that onhancOe i. Ing In community. Family member takes 19* luk~" -"viRGO (App. 22 to SapJ. 22): What SnOderattST fry to te XUHMiSopt, M h) Oct. »); In th* UNKNOWN comes ta 1 curiosity. Important, however, —mm mi/ r3— ds. don't stick you CORPIO (Oct. 22 to Interest -TfOBt. ictual ; bs "SCORPIO (Oct. 22 to Nov. 21): Ton to bo overcome. Soma associate! fffe JBSSynago-om yS’^h.'fecE^vVfsEN^ difficult bat tionahip with thdr children la which self-disciptine is being developed although iknII controls stiff are la tone. Too much permissiveness or too tight control maintained too long to disasterous. Much haa been written recently about the effects of too much permissiveness but the effects of the other extreme are often overlooked. Here to an example: TYPICAL TEENS John, Jim and James are three teen-agers typical of the results of prolonged detailed control—each to near be edge of failing in high school. All three have mothers who still get them up in the morning, remind than to eat their breakfast, hurry and get dressed and off to school. Their after-school activities are run on schedules set up by their respective mothers. The homework bat through the grades was done under mother’s BERRY’S WORLD direction now is seldom completed in spite of almost constant nagging. EACH EXPLAINS Each of the boys explains his failure to study by be statement "I han’t make myself study — my mind wanders off to other things.” Along with self-discipline, what these hoys lack to self-confidence. Iley have become oo accustomed to having their mother’s direction bat without someone to start them, they do nothing. This tendency Was concealed in the elementary school since the teacher acted as a substitute mother. But in the junior and senior high schools, their failures to be self-starters showed up. Development of self-discipline and be maintenance of self-confidence are successfully achieved by parents who recognize the need for such behavior. f THREE HUNNlERT SMACKEROOS-, THAT'LL t>0 PER OPEMERS/X'LL BE HACK TO FEED, IT AFTER T SWITCH SOME OFMYOUTA- V TOWM pooouA "Here comes what I would call ‘alive one’!' BOARDING HOUSE C IF NOO HfTMe, ULLT&jl') > AAOETY—H»AfPBMSZ. < {^WMOWCHMiPUNJJ kSBVOl £1001*01 TXefEBEH HIM/ HE HASNTOOTAH/NGBB MacLB»TMfKeac*emH.t WHV QOVOUHM/BTO ) J&&, GO WALKING ABOUND I WBBB&BtmXM OMrOBSOU? Jtfgt jj# WL 35! • NM If MM, be. pa I* *1Hi ML By Ernie Bushmiller ~SSJa*IU» (JmI to to F» o lldt to ill M«r« OT “ mmali projects. You'll to hoppi IF THURSDAY |I^OUR>J^THg^ mini, You have qwimM wWcb hr* awterairto, s» «B5 Srs,“JSK CHI wwo .to. LlO: . morfcto. toMkto D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST Stake in U* S. Economy Foreign Holdings Up MARKETS | The following an top prices covering Mice of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lota. Quotations aro furnUbed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Trade Temperature Down Auto-Strike Fever Hits Mart NEW YORK (AP) - As the [ question of a possible auto strike overhung Wall Street, • dull stock market headed lower again early this afternoon. ___£-z: - In early trading the market < » was fairly steady, showing so* JSi SSsSTeSf^ m lective recovery from the sharp £6£rt5"eii; *7* hiking spell of the previous ses- cSSSSZ tu. ..zz'.v.z..'-....*“ ■**" PMChM, ilbtrta. bu. ... PMn. Clapp* Pavorlt*, b VMM, BartNtt, bu. ...... PNML Suftank, Vi bu. Ptam, Dtmton, V* bu. ... ex-dididend. Some of the hifd> lyers which ' stumbled yesterday made a selective recovery but H was only partial. MOTORS, STEELS MIXED Motors and steels were nar-owly mixed. Rails, aerospace ssues, airlines, building materials, drugs and nonferrous melon. tills ware generally lower. UUU- * ★ ★ I ties were ahead on balance. Tbe list wavered as the ses- The Associated Pirns average Jon wore on, however, and of 60 stocks at noon was un- more and more of die market {changed at 313.6 with industrials wheelhorses began to show loss- Whanged, rails off J and utilise. lies up .1. Averages also were depressed * * * by a number of stocks selling | The possibility of an auto strike by next Monday was the major facto in the stock market climate, analysts said, although political uncertainty also was involved. * * A Syntex recovered about point from recent losses as the rican Stock Exchange Stood unevenly in dull trading. )ennlson, plaining to introduce new office copying machine, gained more than a point. BOND ACTION Corporate bonds were mixed. JA. Government bonds were snchanged. The New York Stock Exchange CMmr. P***B1 «*... Cttory' whit*. art.'. Corn, Swart, ba* DIM ...... Eggplant, bu. ......... Enr.! Looks, Ml be*. . ! York Stock Ixebongo with 1 —A— i .... .. .MT) we> loot iaSssjvi,j> ink i St L imrl I I ff! “■"» LM .M 14 33** «RI 3*1 > it ijH ii4t I m JH* 41H — H II st as - .. I 4aVt EB «*- w «r> HMl 3 §§ K Sts i ffii si IW-'b ■ ffif mV S; v 171* 4714- 4 L flb *1* *9*.... I m m » im 4ou» mm -lv _T1 leading Co 7 Wb Jb 1# - 14 sm* M 11 ™ n “ ■■ BiQ _■ §S^ ! g-j K. buttoraup, bu h, Buttomut. bu. .. OnEsisfl. Him Kata, W. Murtard, bu. .... Borroi, M. ..i,,,,..,.; .. l.M AMot Cl 1J# Df: 8*8885*::::: fit M -1= 4* 154% W m ... If r '$£1 M *jv% ffii tm-w Endlvo. Ndt.......w***i.J! Endive, BIlBSW* bu. .....................» iii.' ; I Am Tob 1.M ■ Am ZM 1.40 JkMPjbtc .4J , AMdDO 1.40 i Atchlaon 1.M 4 AttCUne It ; AjjSWlJ t 33 149* 144* HW + V* u mi mi iii* + 4% T® P'P-i i si lb Sail t !| F:8 Lettuce, Hoad, bu. Lofluoo. Hood. dot. ......... Lottuco. Lori, fell. ......... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULT*Y DETROIT (AP)—Prleoo paid par pour* tor HO. I BuMtly li™ poultry:_ Heavy typo MM IMfl IW.Ig* J*" Mi wwvjyiw rewNrs I fetjm 14) broUtn pnd'lrybM H He. white HV*-lt; Borrod Rock 31-32. oiTRorr eooi DETROIT (API—PrtCM Prid lMr dam ♦or No. I Mjrivorp UjeS36» U.Wi White* Grade A *«»* IBTM larM 0-01 mtdlum 14-34,• iimII U brown* Orodo A lumbodMI)^ IWBriW Hb4| RMBH 1M1) Chock* H24. CHICAOO BUTTRR AND SRM CHICAGO (AP) ■ RaJuri^ Jills mi Trrf:ii II it ifth... . ISSVVfi USvySS Houpf LP 44 N fM Jhb Haw Sd .40 J HUPP s Jit 30 Kim sti mo feio im i bordtn I bora War I •flows Mi'Soo itCTw i i Bucv'^r 1.10 buSSnf°.lSo° lip 17 47 4414 444* - V* 1 ilS im m iiJ T f|C WVb fiw + w l|m .... ISSe'SSl InporRand 1 InEndSIt 1.00 ; 83&1 IntMln 1.00a IntNIck l.Mt ; IntPack .SOD Lja ^L j is r r=s lillil roPwCTl Ttor lie ii OarPi .40 41 Livustock DETROIT LIVEBTOCK Htlfor* icarcoi cow* bw BWM good 1% cholco M0-1 ISO lb. « EmUI) tow load* low to ova. SSkTlM0.3L7Jl PtbndMd *ndlOw | WJ0-W.7S) port IfdTliMMbi door* » MM lood chcieo TlO Rk hodtM 1 HOW BOB. Borrow* and jl»» i eonH, lowtr. taMono** 1.JB ffiMWi So^^US-IMO^^d 1 WOO » J Wk S1V* I ■ £• E inn nn 4 44U 4S44 44V4 + ^ • j Rfi fljs 6m4 ChampSpk J i CHMWM°StP 1 1, I B tiSsi\ »*0P 10B. F** **£* . CHICAOO LIVESTOCK ’•arjfa" Stocks of Local Interest FHium attar dodmol poMH art obOilli» OVER TMR COUNTRR STOCKS mote Iroding W ri lb. >^D ^edto'Trw*‘::i"l|l gwEte::::K & Cont Can 1 In* 1.46 font SS* 1 Control Dot* §Tp-*W CoxBrdc .10a CTWW C .75* Crown Cork CrnloMI JO CrucStaol .00 g; Opt Stool JO DomeMI n.M m&m 14 Sh 4044 4044 + V4 if 1E E;i » 31H J1H I 14*4 14V* 44V*- ta 147 IT1 SSM SSta + H S1W 1*44 130 + 44 14 4444 Mti Gb - 44 +1 1044 4444 1414 — 'A i 4 11 ii"- tt -44 49 40 3044 1044 -V* M MM 0044 M44 4* Jb n M Jf\4 47>A + 14 1 <144 *144 fifir-44 10 MV* W4 3144 -V* n § r 1-44 Xll *044 4044 .MW t 44 IS 1144 im ' 114* + 44 Xl4 4044 « M44-44 01 H 144% M +144 t 341* MV* 3414 ..... 30 MV* MV4 MV4-V* SSS SiSv*-w Issll 8 88' D5«8 —D— * 4 104* mb im . _ 1 SvS 33V* M14-14 14 4314 4314 4114 - 44 1 3714 37J4 3744 - 14 » W4 7*4 7414 — H N f!rM“ JonLooon .70 . JonotLL I SO Joy MtR UO mil »Hn m Lohman I JPt LOFGI* 1.00a L|b McN .40* lBsiHmi * Lionel Corp Llttonln l.Mf LoekA Ire 1.40 MlK'wMit LonoOCom i . LonoS Go* 1 UiatHU Jt Loral Sloctr I Sta + 14 17V* 1714 11*4 -4 IM4 ‘ S4 Miner Ch MlnnMngM 1544 1544 MV* + B ft Sr..., 1 o to 8S 88 ^ —M— 30 M44 H4I 3044 1 W4 M mi 10 144 114 J14 ■ 1 MV* Ml* 30V* + 44 17 »4t »14 1014 ... 7 414* 0114 4144 + 4* 34 M44 34 + S 37 3444 ffii ., 14 4714 *7 471* + " ES !!!> 15 5 tjk » 15 3“ JF" NatCan ,40b NCaihR 1.10 NOalry 1.40 NalDlat 1.10 NatPutl 1.34 - 44 I Nat T#* .30 i » .WT r - 31 1* 30V* 2» + ■ NlaoM Pw Norfolk W HA Avid Lw NorNatOo. J NorPac 3.40a BwePw 1.1* , Northrop 1 4 NwtiAIrl JO Kini ft * » S -‘ii tssssts h MV* 0SV* + 14 I » Kb «b II Ml Ml* 101* M 441* 44 44V* - - 37 Wtaita 7704 -J* xll K MS 4044 40 4741 171* 1744 14 1714 Ml* 174* . ~ " * 4714 4014 AV* — 4* 171 4014 Ml* M4* -1 !! ’S.'S. 7' MV* MVV MV*.... P Ml* 5444 544* ..... 4 UVs u W*-\k w#nr warp. y.* SkEV'-#;!" '"B mj WySSSta aSwteri' ■' .ftO 7M «ut^7«omm#)# AtfllieM Fund . .t.tt 7.74 . i 1001“™' “111 rj MB via IfittONG^l mertonEl 1 IWM'IIld JO Xll ISP 1304% tl044 + .. ift wap,* S H ftIks 70 449* 4444 449* Z 14 4 iov» 10 To ... to Mm Mi* mv* — v* ♦ 339* 334* S3V4-4i I S i5'S::: PacGAE 1 fecTIT 4.™ Pan Am .40 ParkoD I ►oBbCbal JO mm ,1.30a PiPwLt I J> RLS9.fl MCI 1.40 PfSarOiw 1 "Iffi --P— < (03 (44* — 44 * 374* 371* — 44 S Sri 1 i Wt* BS!P,j,di l pFx.1^ pSS^ous ' Rttflo PuroOH Ml Romney Calls Strike Meeting Publishori and Union Officials Requested LANSING (AP) -Publishers of Detroit’s two regular ' . . newspapers and officials of two striking unions are scheduled to meet with Gov. George Romney Thursday to try to settle the 44-day-oid newspaper strike. Romney asked the publishers of the morning Detroit Free Press and the afternoon Detroit News, and both national and local union leaders to confer with him in separate meetings, scheduled for 10 a^h- and 11 am., respectively. ★ ★ .★ Both sides have agreed to attend. ‘The Detroit newspaper strike has increasingly affected the economy of the state and the public’s knowledge of critical local, state, national and international developments,” Romney said in identical telegrams to all parties. VITAL CONCERN ‘‘Because of the cellapae in negotiations and the vital public concern, I want to discuss with you and the other 'parties in-.volvad aqy steps that can be. taken to avoid a prolonged continuation of this strike,” he 6 DAWSON I (ft* — 4 l 179*-1 is 48 iii* miVi* lIiFg+8 4S >3044 1W4% 11*44 — 4k 4 MV* 339* M9k — V* 30 4S44 4^4* 40H -'l* lilt ill! The telegrams were sent to A. J. Deandrade, president of the International Printihg Pressmen and Assistants Union; Freeman Frame, president of Local 18, Detroit - Newspaper Printing Pressmen; Bart WteDo, president of Detroit Paper and Plate Handlers Local 10; Peter Clark, publisher of the Detroit News,, 'fend Lee HUls, publisher of the DeUei^FteO Press. Soybeanfttemand Is Brisk on Boai By SAM DAWSON AP Bustness News Analyst NEW YcfcK-Forelffiier share of American assets have gone up strikingly in recent months. And American lave s t ments abroad are setting records. But there’s a difference. Tbe money flow it something short of making It two-way street. * * In tbe case of Americans t^e big cause of the Jump in dollar holdings outside the United ^ I has been expansion of American-owned abroad. This Is a trend which the UA. Department of Commerce sees continuing. Most of the gain in foreigners’ stake in tbe Andean economy has come of lide from the Increased market value of their previously acquired holdings and only a little from new investments. HOLDINGS RISE - The department says that the total of American private holdings abroad climbed to |66 billion at the end of 1963, with that figure continuing to rise so far in 1166 at last year’s rate, which is dubbed massive. * * * The Investments here by for-iprodwiaQiiir were put at (83 The U.S. government is hoping to attraot more foreign investments here, both tong-term and short-term, to help hold down toe U.S. deficit in international payments that has been a problem in recent years. 3 7 t But to IMS. when the value of foreign holdings rose hy M-6 bfl-lion, about 82 billion represented increase in prices off foreign held American securities. PRIVATE INVESTMENT Amerto^T private investment (AP) -Transport workers returned to- day to their Joho nt Pnn Amsri- employes **Srtj5rin< V1700 MO I StBrtnO UO fere ItOPNJ s!?So MJOIIOh^l.M |t*nW»r 1 JO SltuHCh 1.10 StarlDru« .70 itawimTlJO m iSS&’ifi Tow OM lb TtauMtuI T:;oiuurp3d TtxlMlm .0* TmPLd .33* ftffirTft TMMNi 011 tiMiilll 3 Mr. to. CHICAGO (AP) » was brisk for soybean futures today to early activity on toe Board of Trade and prices again , f* R ” u moved up rather broadly. Other 1 “i grains were firm. I Wheat was H to % cent a ; bushel higher, at the end of the , Brst hour, September new grade > $1.43%; corn % to % higher, ! September $1,22%; oats % to % ! higher, September 65V« cents; 1 rye % to 1% higher, September MJB; soybeans % to 1% high-4 er, September $2.55. Unit Alrctt J iii fg- HP 1=1 I m a 3is*-4* J K Bta K..... vlra;?- MM* so 44 47 4444 sms —U— M 1174% 11*4% 1144% - 44 xi* *4** n£ 8 8% 88 __ Jl TT MM 3044 So** I W fFB#?; fill+it s! SS»* M14 SS44 + 4* sCffh 1 » JB JB PS S 1344 1M4 1344 + 4% ^ rzs *4 4 tv* )»* \r+1* S 154* 151% 1544 + 1* X7 40 40V* 40V* - V* —w— 4 iT^ !«% 17* +‘fo i 8 jLp£±8 3BLLS W sPifts rsryi* ssssss.:: asft'ir a.aa n» i»- Worth In MO 4 4044 4* 444* .. XeroxCp .40 1*0 101 079* 1004* + —Y— Grain Pricat CHICAGO (APT-CpoMjBSBTt N*w Wh«t-SM«. 1.404+44; D*C 4-9k) March )JW*49) May ljj July 1J4V4. . ._____, Corn—3«p9. 1.1744-44) OM. 1.1444J*) March 1.M44-4*) May im 0«H—S*pt. 4344) D4C. 44-4594) March 07BT Mjf 474*. WHI. IJH DM 1J744-H) March 1J7H) May Mfv*. American Stocks NOON AMSRKAN NSW YORK (AP) ~ AritaWtaR I* l llri df taiactad dock Tran*action* an Rm Am«r lean Slock Exchange with IMM prk*»: • ~ (Ml) HM Law UgtChjt Aarolrt JO 1 3*4* 304* 3044 - ft Am Patrol A .15 I* 44* 644 *44 + 14 AmLaoat mo i 3744 m J744- 14 *-=rOnji G * 49* 44* 444 Trac I 394 344 34* * Co JO I 13*4 13V* 13V* „ B* Pat 9 31-14 3 3 can Javalln I 1144 1144 119* Clnaram* 4 44*. 4% lit Crtole P l.OOaxd 5 4* 44 40 m3Ai a WnAIrLIn .60 .--{y t WUnTtl ‘ “ By ROGER Q) “Recently I an only child. He---------^r— Florida Power and Light; SM Florida Gm; 30 Xerox; MfH Webb & Knapp; Ml Elmar Electronics. I do not understand stocks. What thomld I do shoot these?” E.B. A) Your list of stocks Is of vaiylng quality, but mostly good. Florida Power k Light Is s very fine growth stock, but the yleld.at present is only 1.75 per cent Florida Ges is a fast growing pipeline issue which as yet pays no dividend. Xerox is one'of toe best stocks on toe Big Bond, hut toe yield is negligible. Hold these Issues for growth if you do not require current income. If you do, switch to Libby-Owens-Ford Glass; Atchison Rwy.; United Gas Corporation. Webb k Knapp and Elmar Electronics are highly speculative and I advise their sale, with proceeds going into a savings account. (Copyright INI) I 114* 114* 119%.. SSL •!I&{! Treasury Position ,a,!S3S 1 74*+4* SriM HhtfwHi noted, rata* of 4M- i iliBtiimtwta ba*M an th* Im or. MhOowari OBcjwoiwL I j teoKoJa*. WASHINGTON (APV-TM « . of tht troaowry campBr-* ■ 1 ^affsi 8m * I 7,534,*43.MBJ4 | 7,111.»51,705.»5 D*a*M* Ptacri Yam- Jcty M a im*Gr*** ~ — 0«W Aweta^-311'531'15 MMIun'4N^( 15J61J4JJ41J7 15.J*3ja7J*0,06 X-lRChMIl 9340J77,75*.0J MM not Bub-loct to OtaMofy -— OUvMontf. d—Doclorod or poM In pM MMk OMSimL b Doclo rod or JP •o for thl« yoor. i-Pold In slock Ourtna 9*43. *Hbimta4 cooh voluo on tx 4NMono -----distribution doto. D-Prid toot yoor. yoor, on wxumwtothm loouo with riyi-dond* In orroon. Morm Mar. «*♦-• J omIHod. dotorrod or no MM tokon «t dlvldond mooting. r-Do«lorod or to 1*64 am* alack divldand. t-Poy- If Jill! llllli! , . meaifflao- i Baotarx Co .. .so . 9 M*di)*r"Part*Som ’ 1 , Q ! ^M»H ri J l 1 8WW.% c^akdl x—Sx 4. x-Sx dlvMand. y-Bx DIvF i Hi In full, it Ha Bx dhtrlbu- | r—With warrant*. wd-Wlwn dl*-wl—Whan luuod. nd Noxt day rocolvonhlo er JIW Wf-Hft Miwrupfci VSTSSSMSi ponlu. to—Foreign 8B 8:1 ♦!:» » IXo-« 18:1 Si Hi » 1^5 l| Wt¥ i S TanovH m 777 **.5 *7 J *0.4 1 USM abroad rose a record 86 J billion in 1968. About 8U billion was new capital from this country and 81i billion was earnings from previous investments reinvested in foreign enterprises. Some 8500 miQioa represented gains in the market value of ss- U.S. investors have bean sending dollars abroad for several reasons. In the short-term securities market toe lure was higher yields there compared to Interest rates obtainable here. In long-trim securities the goal was a rising stock market abroad that accompanies the Mg postwar economic boom. But this largely dried up when Western European stock prices turned down for while. WWW The big outflow of dollars, however, has been in the founding and expansion of American Industrial subsidiaries, aboard, or in toe teaming up with too eign industrial concerns.. The department puts such investment now as dose to 841 billion. la 1163 almost 81 UIUoo in new dollars went abroad tor this purpose and mora than A billion of overseas earnings was reinvested there. Europe got the largest share, with Canada next and investments rising in Australia and Japan. PROFIT AVERAGE The department figures that on all investments abroad American companies averaged around II per cent profit last year. While some of these earnings wen left overseas waiting for lower tax rates hare, toe American take was nicely above that of foreigners on their holdings in this country. W W , 'W And In terms of balancing toe international financial books that’s all to the good, since sooner or later toe dollars should be coming bade as dividends from toe American-owned subsidiaries abroad. Pam Am Workers Return After Strike Settlement stranded about 6,600 passengers and idled more than 20,000 of Its can Airways following a strike-ending agreement on a new labor contract which one union official called toe best ever negotiated in the industry. The strike of AFL-CIO Transport Workers Union members lasted less than 24 hours but crippled toe airline’s operations to foreign points from New York, Miami, Washington, Seattle, Wash., Portland, Ore., San Frandsco, Los Angeles and Houston, Tax. W W W Pan American operates no domestic flights. The airline recalled til its employes to duty shortly after the agreement was readied. Company President Juan Trippe said extra planes will be operated in transatlantic service to fic-commodate any backlog of traffic. FERRYING JETS The company said it would ferry four Jets to Europe empty to pick up westbound passengers. Details of the new contract covering 12001 union members and ground The walkout began about 2 a.m. Tuesday after negotiations between union and management readied a stalemate. The final agreement cm a new contract came after a marathon negotiating session which lasted about IS hours with the National Mediation Board aiding in too talks. Union members were ordered back to their Jobs after both sides agreed to contract language about 1 a.m. today. “We’re all happy with it” a union spokesman said of the The union had sought wage increases of 15 per cent im-, proved working conditions and fringe benefits including a reduction in the 40-hour workweek to 87 % hours and more Ik beral insurance and pension irovisions. Present wages average $3.31 an hour for mechanics, $2.56 for ground service peraopnel, $3-63 for port stewards and $f75 monthly for flight stewards, stewardesses and pursers. This is expected, to be completed by the middle of next week, the union said, but a formal signing of the contract by union and management negotiators was expected today1. About 1,600 workers wen involved in toe strike over wages, working conditions and fringe benefits The .remaining union members working at the Cape Kennedy, Fla. missile center •nd handling military charter flights have no-strike agreements with the federal government. 8J06 STRANDED Pan America said toe strike News in Brief James Skinner, 176 Melrose, told police yesterday that the top of his c c n v e f t l b 1 e was slashed. Damage is estimated at $75. A pneumatic air wrench valued at $806 was reported stolen yesterday from the Mobil service station at SIM Auburn, Pontiac Township* 4 Twenty-one wksdsws valued at $97 were reported broken yesterday at Lincoln Junior High School, 181 Hillside, and 14 windows valued at from 860 to 875 were broken at Wilaon School, 510 S. Sanford. Special for bowling, 4 lines for $1. 800 Bowl, ' es. -adv. Rummage Sale: PMday, Aag. 28, 16 a.m.-l p.m. St Andrews Church, 6661 Hatchery Rd. -adv. Clarkstoa Community Center, Aug. Ml, 66 p.m. -adv. Rummage Sale, 6 to 6. Apostolic Faith Tabernacle, 08 Park-dale, Sat. Aug 20. —qdv. 29th Record in Car Sales Pontiac, Tempests Set Another 1(M)ay Mark Sales of Fontiacs and Tempests set a record for toe 29th time in the 1904 model year last week ud led the industry in percentag^\of increase for toe second 10-day period in August, it was announced today Frank V. Bridge, general sales manager at Pontiac Motor Division, slid 18,072 units were sold in the Aug. 11-10 pvled, an increase of 84 per cent oyer the same period in IMS. \ Ike previous record of II,- ^ 070 salts for the period was set la 1165. Elsewhere in the auto industry, Chevrolet Division reported delivery of 71JM new cars, and trucks during mid-August, an increase of 32.8 per cent oyer the period of IMS and 2U cent above the 1960 10-day showed a gain of 41 In the today period 80,979 units delivered. PERIOD The company sold 1U67 units in the same period last year. This year’s mid-August sales were toe best stoce 1965, Chrye-ler reports. Ford previously reported today sales of 48,679 ears and 11,750 trucks, both records for toe period. Business Notes Roy T. Tribble of 172 Dunfoy, Bloomfield Hills, has been named implement and Industrial equipment forward study manager, Ford Tractor Division, Ford Motor Company, according to R. R. Owen, assistant chief tinier the Railway Labor Act tag Improved vacations, holt-have three members. . > days and health and welfare . \ w w . ' provisions. All 11 unions are involved in A second dispute, involving blUzatkm of employment and wage increases. In the third die* pate, six shop craft unions are demanding increased wages. —\ AX U1UVKI9 U1VUIVOU ill A BWWU UlSpUlC, lUVUlVUIg Usually/such boards created lone dispute. They are demand- five of the unions, relates to sta* The boasd is headed by former Philadelphia Mayor Richardson Dilworth and also-includes Paul D. Hanlon, Portland, Ore., attopwy; John W. McConnell, pRutem of the University. of New Hampshire; Robert ‘ J. Abies, Washington, D.C., attorney; Lewis M. Gill, a Philadelphia arbitrator; H. Raymond Ousters, a Baltimore attorney; and Frank J. Dugan, Georgetown University proiea- Pushes Freedom Dems In Emotional Appeal ATLANTIC CITY (UPD - III an emotional appeal yesterday to the Maine delegation to support seating of Mississippi Freedom Democrats at the National Convention, Mrs. Rita Schwer-ner, widow of slain civil rights worker Michael Schwerner, said: “Many of the people who are with the delegation m going back to Mississippi to die. Some of diem do not have tang to rail strike so her grandmother could come from New York to Park Forest, DL, for Kathy's first common ion. Kathy now ttvea to Yonkers, N.Y. and 16,106 years old in a cave aear Sasebo on Kyushu Island. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; AUGUST D-B Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Aregs GERALD L. EVANS Service for Gerald L. Evans, 5L of 3808 Malden, Waterfbnl Township, will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Coats Funeral Home with burial in Lakeriew Cemetery, Clarkston. up Mr. Evans, a carpetner, died Monday. He was a member of Calvary Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, May-belle; his mother, Mrs. Grace Evans of Waterford Township;, a daughter, Mrs. Don Longo of Waterford Township; and two sons, Sam and Ronald Sommers, both of Waterford Towntolp. Also surviving are nine grandchildren; and a sister Mrs. Carl Cooper of Waterford Township. yiOLA L ROSE Service -for Viola I. Rose, 18, of 279 N. Can will be l:gO p.m. tomorrow to the Hun toon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Miss Rosa died Monday after a two-day illness. KENNETH A. STRICKLAND Service for Kenneth A. Stride-land, 65, of 2636 Grandview, Waterford Township, will bn 1:90 p.m. Friday at the Donel-son • Johns Funeral Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. ^ Mr. Strickland, a retired safety officer of the Michigan Department of State, died yesterday after an illness of six Surviving are his wife, H. Estelle; a daughter, Mrs. George Dill of Rochester; four grand- tisc and Mrs. Merritt D. Hill of Wilmette, HI. JOAN M. WILHELM Mass of the Angels will be offered for Joan M. Wilhelm, baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wilhelm Jr., 4146 Eagle, Waterford Township, at 8:16 am. Saturday in Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church, Waterford. Burial will follow In the Catholic section of Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. Joan’s body wSl be at the Coats Funeral Home after 8 p.m. tomorrow. One-year-old Joan died this morning after a three-week Ill- Surviving besides her parents are her grandparents',*Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wilhelm of Waterford Township and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Robak of Pontiac. DONALD J. BLACKMORE Mr. Butterfield died Monday after a tang Otaess. . He was a member of Attica Lodge No. 296. FfrAM. Surviving are two sons, John of Detroit and Ehren of Attfca; three daughters, Mrs. Ethel Maes of Flint, Mrs. Aleta Jahn-keof Attica and Mrs. Dos ale Hale of Ohio; a slater, Mrs. Ms-' bel Smith of Lapeer; a half-sister, Mrs. Vernie Cole of Port Huron; n halfbrother, Leonard of Lapeer; 22 grandchildren and 31 great-grandchildren. MRS. DAVID E. HARTLE PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Serv-toe for Mrs..David.E. (Robert L.) Hartle, 97, of 2416 Walnut will be 8 p.m. Friday at the ____, , „ ,. Friehdly General Baptist Church HOLLY — Service for Donald Pontiac. I Mr* Hartle died yesterday th? u *fter an ,UneM of two y**™- BuriallIier body is at the D. E. Pursley will beta Lakeside Cemetery. Funeral Home, Pontiac. A«^«ptaraof the Oak- ae wu , nurse.8 aide at the land Ostaty Rand OamnlMtant;OMkl>rtd ounty ra sanltorium. Mr. Blackmore died this morn- Survivors besides her husband « . '" ■ law a son, David, at home; her He was a member of the First mother, Mrs. Joseph Thebault Presbyterian Church of Holly. Surviving aw his wife, Leone; a daughter, Mrs. Barbara Wells of Holly; and a granddaughter.1 EDWARD BUTTERFIELD ATTICA — Service for Edward Butterfield, 81, of 4475 Im-toy City will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at die Attica Methodist Church. Burial will follow at Attica Cemetery. of Pontiac; two sisters, Mls,s Sharon Thebault and Mrs. Michael Ballard, both of Pontiac; and a brother, Donald Freel of Union Lake. CHARLES MARSHALL LAKE ORION - Service for Charles Marshall, 78, of 409 Shady Oaks will be 11 am Friday at Allen’a Funeral Home. Burial will follow at East Lawn Cemetery. Mr. Marshall died yesterday. Ha was a gatekeeper at Kei- HASTINGS (AP) - George Frank White, 54, of Middlevffle was killed today when his car went out of control on M37, truck a series of guard rails and turned over. Through Police Check Hippo Truck Hustled SOUTHAMPTON, England (UP!) - Truck driver John Goddard and sob owner James Chipperfield were stopped by police for a routine inspection while hauling an excitable hip-potamus named Douglas. “Pull over for a spot check on your truck,” the policeman said. “Right,” said Goddard, “but make it fast I*ve got this Mppa named Doeglas to the back sad he gets restless if be gets hot” “Sure,” said Inspector George Howarth with a knowing smile. Then he crawled under tbs truck. it ★ ★ Chipperfield, seeing that the inspector did not believe in Douglas’ existence, said: “Excuse me, but you are lying under q hippo which weighs nearly a ton and gets upset if ho la not kept cool by the wind as he rides. Any delay could upeet him a bit.’’ Howarth was impressed, particularly when he heard Douglas start snorting. “TMa is a case for minimum delay,” he said. \ ★ ★ ★ Howarth cleared the truck in 10 minutes—a record—and Douglas was on his m to Chipperffeld’s Zoo In York. was a former machinist at Ford Motor Co.’a Highland Park plant. Surviving are his wife, Ger-frude; a son, Russell of Pontiac and three grandchildren. MRS. SYLVIA SHAFER LAKE ORION — Service for Mrs. Sylvia Shafer, 83, 128 Slater, will be 2 pm tomorrow at Kencall Funeral Home, “ Charles, with burial in Riverside Cemetery, St. Charles. Mrs. Shafer died yest after a brief illness. She was a member of Lake Orion Methodist Church, chapter No. 14, Order of the Eastern Star, the Maccabees and the Lake Orion Senior Citizens Club. Surviving are,two sons, Jack of St. Charles and Robert Floyd, of Ledyard, Conn.; a brother; and eight grandchildren. SAMUEL A. WILSON AVON TOWNSHIP - Service hr Samuel A. Wilson, 89, of 2526 Norton Lawn will be >J p m. Friday at Pixley Memorial Chapel, Rochester, will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetenr, Trpy. A retired Chrysler Carp, employe, Mr. Wilson died yesterday after a long illness. He was a member of the Rochester Senior.Citizen’8 Club. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. John Gilmore and Mrs. Mur land Pearsall, both of Rochester; a sister, a brother and eight grandchildren. 'U S. Stockpile] Stats Voters Expected to Decide Issue of A-Arms Still Rising' WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s stockpile of atomic weapons is still increasing, but at a "reducedrate,”theAtomic at a “reduced rate,” the Atomic Energy Commission said today. * * * Hie disclosure — representing the first evidence of a slowing down In file buildup of nuclear arms since the A-bomb was developed in World War n — was made in answer to reporters’ questions. It also was an unusual, though relatively alight, lift in A EC secrecy. LBJ STATEMENT The questions were prompted by a statement by President Johnson in a film shown Monday night at Hie Democratic National Convention in Atlantic Chy, N. #. Listing various steps taken in the “quest for peace,” the President said “already we have cut back our production of atomic fuel and weapons.” w w w AEC spokesmen said that Johnson’s statement was originally made by him in a speech at Minneapolis, Minn., on June 29. ' The commission declined to saft when the cutback in the rate had begun, or how extensive it is. North America’s first social dub, the “Order of the Good Time,” was founded in Nova Scotia by explorer Samuel de .Champlain -shortly after pentasula was settled in 1606. The club’s purpose was to ease the boredom of life in the wilderness. Dems File Massachusetts Ballot Petitions LANSING (AP) - Democrats filed a miniature mountain of petitions today that certain to put the chuaetts Ballot question to ’a voters on Nov. 8, Party state counsel Tom Downs led a Democratic team that submitted an pstim 330,000-plus signatures to Secretary of State James Hare, a supporter of the drive. The petitions, from all 83 counties, filled 8 large cartons. The State Board of Canvassers will have 10 daya to certify them. If 130,000 of the signatures are valid, file question of whether or not to adopt the Mi chuaetts, or office block, ballot will be placed before the electorate. The 1064 legislature passed the Massachusetts ballot law, but validation of 139,000 signatures on petitions will rule out use of fids ballot form in this Youth Gats One Year for Bottle Beating A 20-year-old Pontiac youth •esterday was sentenced to one ear in the Oakland County Jail or striking David Sherman, 831 •felroee, with a beer bottle at • party in Pontiac Township on June 7. Ordered*by Circuit Court Judge Frederick *C. Zlem aggravated assault was Claudie Key of 8 Gingell Court. He had pleaded guilty to the charge I Jtaly 24. TOO YOUNG TO VOTE -Susan Krasnomowitz, Miss New Jersey, Is only 19, but Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota is glad to shake her hand anyway. Humphrey was awaiting word on who would get the Democratic vice presidential bid, for which he Is a strong candidate. year’q general election. Instead, voters will be asked whether the ballot should be adopted for fkiture elections. SEPARATE VOTE On a Massachusetts ballot, the Individual must cast a separate vote for each office contest On the party ticket ballot used In Michigan in recent years, the individual may cast votes for all members of one political party by pulling a single lever or marking a single “X”. The party ticket ballot will be used Nov. 3. w W . W . Democrats have said they will make the ballot campaign a major issue in this years election. But Republican Gov. George W. Romney, who signed the Massachusetts ballot bill, said Tuesday ha does not consider It a major campaign issue. WOULD DO BETTER’ Political observers generally agree the Democrats would do better in elections with the party ticket ballot than with the Massachusetts ballot. * W W Hare, the state’s chief election official, said past studies show that about 75 per cent ofvoters cast a straight party ballot when the ballot form permits. The other 8 per cent split their ticket, in essence voting as they would on a Massachusetts ballot. Detroit Man. Bound Over A Detroit man, charged with assault with intent to murder a police officer, was bound over to Circuit Court yesterday by Waterford Towntolp John E. McGrath following a preliminary examination. Scheduled for arraignment In the higher court at 1:30 pm. Monday was Marvin Jamas Jesse Jackson, 37, whq was arrested Aug. 15 in a Waterford Township after a running gun Bond of 850,000, set by McGrath at Jackson’s Justice Court arraignment, wu continued. Smoky Fire Hits Sub-Basement of Saks 5thA venue By GUY W. VON SCHRILTZ Fluffing up like an indignant banty hen, my mother glared at my fattier. “Well, Old Man, where under the sun have you been ail day?” she demanded. ‘Scaring the daylights out of everybody.” W w ★ Without a word he placed a ' package he carried on the table near my teacup, took off hia bat and coat and hung them up. Seating himself by the package, he nodded complacently at my mother and asked casually, “Weald it be safe to year present state of hostility to suggest that tome tea might ease ‘the strata?” Then the old imp winked broadly at me. NEW YORK (AP) - A smoky fire broke out today In the subbasement of Saks Fifth Avenue department store. Hundreds of customers and employes fled to the street. The store is at 611-Fifth Ave.. across SOBTStreet from St. Patrick’s Iathedral. W w w, Smoke poured up elevator shafts and through air conditioning ducts in the 10-story r. Among the persons hustled onto the street by Employes and police was a large group of women In hair curlers and wearing pink smocks over their slips. Without makeup, the woman had bean taking beauty treat- California exceeded New York last year for the first time ta the amount of liquor con- News Briefs From Motion's Capital Record Enrollment of 52.9 Million Students Seen for This Fall WASHINGTON (AP) - The Office of Education estimates that a record 8.8 million students will enroll In the nation’s schools and colleges this foil. This represents well over a quarter of the U.S. population and merits the 20th straight year of record enrollment. Last fall 61.6 million were enrolled. College enrollments are expected to be up 6.7 per cent to million, secondary school (grades 9-12) enrollments up 4.1 per cent to 12.7 million and elementary school enrollments up Ll par cent to 8.4 million. The office said it expects expenditures for education to surpass file record 88.7 billion spend during the 1083-64 school ■yeur. \ WASHINGTON (Ah~ President Johnson has come up with a labor first: a jm Inmates Cut Way Out at State Prison Farm JACKSON (UP!) - Southern WASHINGTON-(AP) - Abbott Laboratories of Chicago has telegraphed doctors, clinics and hospitals throughout the country to warn of a label mix- up on some of its Intravenous solutions. This was reported Tuesday by the Food and Drug Administration. An FDA spokesman said there have been no reports of any adverse effects on any individuals. The spokesman said Abbott had assigned its entire staff of some 800 field sales and detail-men to inspect stocks of the products and recall any improperly labeled products. As of Monday , about 8 lots of solutions have been found ta which units bore labels that seemed to disagree with the identifying legend on the caps of the containers. LBJ Has Manager Despite Certain Vote ATLANTIC CITY (UPI) -Although President Johnson is unopposed and may be nominated by acclamation, he still has a floor manager. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield will fiU the Job. He will direct such matters as communication with state delegations, assisted by Sens. Clinton P. Anderson, New Mexico, George A- Smathere, Florida, and Abraham Ribicoff, Connect!- Hare opposes the Massachusetts ballot because, ha says, it would create delay and confusion to the pons. W ’ * * W Romney has pointed out that , essentially a Massachusetts ballot since there is no party ticket ta a primary. W *„ '/• t The pile of petitkxu resulted from a last-ditch campaign by the Democrats and labor Isadora who feared tost than a month ago their signature campaign hiight fail. The petitions were filed two days ahead of the legal deadline. SHORTY A2‘M“* Short Story UM lY Hbwgpaiir MnyilM J 'Pop's Fling' hear It all before deciding hot toad aha would get LIVING DANGEROUSLY That was part of what I told her,” Pop arid. Ha was living dangerously and ha knew tt, “What das?” The old fool went right on and told her. All apprehension swamped in ‘fresh indignation at his levity, my mother arose to her feet and started for him. I stopped her In her tracks. A STORY "Nope, Mom." ( suggested appeasingly. “Hold It. I think he’s got a story to tell us.” “Wear she pulled away, faring at him, bat backing toward her chair. “It batter be a good stn bles and didn’t know what to Her! Her! Who’s the hussy?” He Ignored her question. HAD SPATS, TOO ‘She seemed to understand. Said she and her husband had spats, too, at times and the best thing for me to do was to go to a good picture show and forget nil my troubles. “Said to take her twe Utile girls akag and they’d keep me tea busy to wanry about ‘No story,” he shook Ms head. “I’ve Just been to the picture show.” WWW ‘You at a picture show!" She didn’t believe him. Nrithor did 1. “Why you haven’t been to a picture show since yon p linked a banjo for the silent movies.” TO SEE WQMAN “Well, I dkL” ha declared. "I first wont to a house to sea a woman I know." “A Whs He brushed the question aside, sugaring the tea I’d poured when toe pointedly failed to do so. ■ W ‘ W W , •' “You made me mad, woman, this morning,” he begin again. mad I coulda cuffed you- • ■" SHE FLARED “You Just try it,” toe flared. Just once you try it. Why I’d. ..” “Aw my feet!” in disgust. ‘Ta not tossing at .you. I’m trying to tefl ^M.” “Well, then,” she settled back, “tell It and quit your bragging and threatening. I don’t aim to stand for . * .” her voice trailed off Into silence. ’As I said, I was mad,” he started afresh, “and wanted to talk to somebody. Somebody who didn’t fly off the handle -every word I ...” , w w w Huh/’ she rumbled, eyes darting at Mm. NO ATTENTION They weren’t paying ahy attention to me and I didn’t exactly know what to make of It. la th# first place, Pap wasn’t exactly a Beaa Brnas-meL He might have been handsome when be was younger, but that was quite a hug time age, by my standards. “And I wanted to talk to somebody that didn't think everything I said waa a dad-burned lie,” he added. 'W W W “Is that what you told bar?” Mom asked. She would-wait to paused, teak a sup af tea, brushed Ms Ups with the hack at Ma rid withered musician’s hand. “So we did and they did," ha sent on. “We stayed and we stayed and we stayed. And we bad hamburgers mid hot dogs when I left, they guve me this to give to you.” WWW A second sly wink my way intrigued me as much as her. She opened the package and extracted a large flashy birthday card which said: “Dear Grandma: Make Gramps go to bed without any supper. He’s so full now he can’t m his vest. And his next birthday you come along and we’ll all gwto the picture show. And you send our daddy home. You’ve had Mm all day and wa want Mm now. Love, Emma, Joan X bar mark Ann X her mark” My wife! My daughters aged 4 and 2 respectively. BULLY WIFE “Why yeuoM fool," Mother said to Fatbwv “You old rascal! It is your birthday. You’re 77 yens old today V and you still bully your wife/’^^v I hurried home to my own family. (The Eud) low a PRUDENTIAL AUTO LEASING Phene Mi 4-0322 NEED HELP WITH YOUR INVESTMENT PROBLEMS? ...CALL PE 2-9274 Watling, Lerchen & Co. tH. SAGINAW PONTIAC, MICHIGAN n. & , M* It Xwtffi Nm Ym* Stick “—‘uriji f i f .'15—10 THE PONTIAC PttESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26. 1064 Notices POK (ALE — MIMIIMHIP AT ClWli CrMk Ranch, Mm Part, Lot 2M. *300 cnsh. OR j CiRPrtff«'»: S0U0H ANft L-AV •lit mon, mmn attar *:30. co6k. iH^ttTooRbiR, reliMle E INeMnMeIe B N^WriHEriMMi TSSTr » IMp »H4 PeweIb MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS I 702 PONTIAC (TATI BANK ELDO. _ ,._JdHT safeLy .. Dn-A-DM Tablet*. Only n o ot Slnffn* 8 rotten Drugs. IK HWIUtK, KELIA' Z.£T»nj, WJB X REPLIES— ngy. il•ltu» Hi mo —BOX F At II there were replies i The Press Office ta the j following boxes: ■ % 4, 1, 8, Uf IS, II, i m, a, a, u, it, ii, n, 84,18, It, 72, 71, 8S, 81, 84,«, M, *1, M, M, tl, | N, IN, ltt, IN, COAtS INERAL HO* PLAINS D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME Invalid Car Service PS 4-mi________ D0NELS0N-J0HNS FUNERAL HOMS "OaaHinad tar FufSirifc'* HUNTOON FUNERAL HOMS Serving Pontiac tar M yaara 7t Qgktond Am. - PS SOW VOORHEES-SIPLE CetSMtery I ___________ OR 3-S*2*. twWvlTjWr Iwi M Mount Park Cemetery porters. Night onca. MavartdFa dward t ‘ i Road. Designers Detailers Checkers Per Bady fixture. Apply •rat eeenlwsa available Hudson's Hat opanlng tor part time Licensed Engineer IMMEDIATE NEED MALE ATTENDANT NURSES MALE INSTITUTION WORKERS SAURY RANGE: Attendant WANTED: i DIE CAST SET UP • man, 5 yaara experience. ataady oTcm S’ 1100 Stavanaon. Tray. WANTED DIE CAST TRIM DIE Md&MMllfiilL if 1 yaara hlttlofc frliw EXPERIENCED WOMAtf haem 2S and St for a., lake home, llva in, ctaanfei tar parmanant part tlma wbHl local company. Working war wttl extend tram appraxImaNly Oeto-l^hEjM. Prafai married worK and who haa good panaral flsttai WE ARE HIRING It pasftlon available I service. Must ba r tndlnad and aalaa n appearance, car ia yaur i. Plaasa report to factory means a.m. 2207 Eliza- wi ARE INT^RESTEglff'X'Wira hand. Movlna la I ST 1 NK3 ty. to w S35I to /•liable % quak Opportunities tor ■ Aga not ut Co. m MAPLE AND IMS MAPLE cuwfoir Koltanbar Eng. ----if ANU ._ mi" Designers DIES PRESS WELD BODY FIXTURES ENGINEERING SERVICE, INC. 21SM TELEGRAPH RD. , ', SOUT^I^LD DRIVER 4ALESMAH Guaranteed salarY sfa frlnga bane-tlta. No Inveatmant required. If you daslrt good Income, otaady work ami tap security, call Jack Ralph, FE HStrar call IT~==™ MILLS BAKERY mm —j civil aarvlca poat-ftont. Outstanding frlnga benefits, including a state contributory Insurance program, an excellent ra- ' tlremont plan plus Sadat Security, and liberal ■ vacation, and sick, leave. For ad Information, Un- it aqual opportunity FIELD DIRECTOR Par local Camp Plra out a Coftapo graduate. PE frlftl. full time Employment, d * taBtacSBctata tpeWtae Istry helpful. Apply In paraan at Rochester Aerosol Cora., *07 ward, Rochester. GENERAL OFFICE WORK, TYP- •nty qualified i a. InttrMt in a Chanp? SmSt qua* r part-Hnss Tired of Layoffs? t and part tin* Mtiauo « rs for i ? fiWh YARD MAN WANTED yard, experience ns 71*0 Coolay Lake YOUNG MAN OVER IS TO WORK In atora tar stack ant sales .tall tank. See Bob Dunsky. Thrifty Drugs, 4MS Dixie Hwy. Drayton YOUN6 MEN, 1S-2S, Fort hSSTAU-wa will rant man dlttono, n and baapu. ________ graph at Maple Rd. Ill M cooking, family a veto bath, air • Drugs?*4lfe DIxle.^DravtonTpialns. HAIRDRESSER, EXPERIENCED, hourly to I 3-05*5 ft HOUSEWIVES SUM TOM . BETWEEN IS TO MT or maturity, experience and 1NTWIEIBJ6D_____IN A CHANdP ««i, 'Bit polntmant ceil MY SEMI. ./.-EiiaRi^AR— MACHINE SHOP Mutt ba able to replace parts i JOB HUNTING TRY International PERSONNEL EBRVICE We rsoromnt an unlimited number of local and natltmal firm* aaak-ing qualified appjlSmts In all fields of ampieymant,^ StailtaE vMEPig light papar wark. Wgakly salary. /MNataHc advancamant. 112-159-MU 1:30 a.m. till naan. T\ V&jMh MAk MA wholesale ^ dtatafer —i - ™ - - £w»tt5r«jrk5,y I_____ tuarkar and drtvar. i appartanity la team r ‘—* u Reply to FonttaC Prs imy WmmIeB fywlE A NATIONAL FINANCE COM* pany Baa an Immediate opening tar a vaunt lady, 21 to 2S, with • high school sducatlo~ ^-------- paarancp and gaad p mutt. Type *0 words general office axpartai___________ Call PM Mitt, f a.m. tp 5 p.m. oragdy In ^person, 10 N.|— — II and part tb « Pontiac sto LADY FOR CHILD CARE, DAY work, Tuaaday It hours —Friday * hours. Owl trgnapartoften. Ra^ OiBY If B t Cl1anin6 M6ttL wife at Henry G. S< sister at Mrk MM William E. Rolllmn, O. Hansen and Ral ?S,T?Uncii. «vc ---■ iFSaltlea. „ BIRMINGHAM “ m E. MAPLE Ml *31*2 ■ REPAIR tten. MA S-I7M, Erasw Ed. PaSnac. • __________ in. with* akterly widow. PR M735 mi n «5 a i ti fTMsri>JWtkLII».'ht August 27 « la Ml Lsiths ,... ChanaT Camatary, Troy. Arrastga-mants bv Nta ' OeMMpm Iptyii. Pu- ' accgsion or area, FE M*U. DAYS-0VERTIME FRINGE BENEFITS MUST BE JOURNEYMAN ApsNy la Michigan Employment Sacurlty Commission, 717 1. Washington. Rriyb) OaETMtaMgan. MOWER * jipir i Drayton Plains; aga 4&i batovad huatend at H. Estall* strlcklmdt r m sm*9'?souf- Funaral aarvlca will ba hate F LOST: 1 ERITTANY SPANIELS IL. I Auburn, Aprleat toy Poodte iwars to name at BoBo. Ra „,rd. SS2-3071. o STRAYED FROM 27* SHORE WOOD daMhtar of Mr WHhalm Sr. < Andaw Labia Church, Watarfard. Intar-mant In tha Catholic Sachon el LpMafiW Camwary, Clarkston. Ar- Mrs. Raymond | I man AITWEEN SMI YEARS >f aga, high school Bradur*- tquai tar aaatatant manaL.. _ l*t station. Nondrlnkar with knowl- HOLD m ____Call Mr. R. I. Bahia*, OR IS ViARt—STOCK BOY, KR^iAI- A6WCi"WrT PROCESS ENGINEER lust Ba expsrtencad in taacaatlnb and astlmatlng, tooling far heavy stampings and assambllas. Exeal-lant fringe banatlts. I AN EQUAL Opportunity Employer DANA Corporation Foot of Great Lakes Ecorse, Michigan MA^HiitisT, opp6AtiMltV T6 ■ MM teats ail Mat. Steady work. Days enly. aMH^fltedk Ajh Star 217 CiMral Ava« Pentiac, mmm %. Saginaw ahr^ — Man for JhUtM^' .„„_____ ^310^^71^td^SM'-SI^ AAAN TO TRAIN Al AltlMT LIAO-mMM| atetttli|f bactar it traat factory Tr _______. ly Pontiac Press B MASON FOR MODERNIZATION, ------QgMSJS. MECHANIC LWlt sarvlce, tuna-upi dallvary, alectrlcal v_I ■■ '— ^ Scar daaiarshlp. Cal ArnNYlON TOY DEMONSTRATORS Oaorga's Toy* and Hama Parttes have combined to bring yau better •Srvlca, wide aalectlpn of Jjpma- SI pdr cant discount! Prwdmry month. CMI tar dHMI*. WTSMtS. HOME PARTIES INC AVON CALLINO woman who want to ba succataful and aam gaad money In thalr •para tuna. Monty back guarantee makes Avan Cosmetics vary much In demand and aaay to sail. Par kitarvtew write PA. Bax yi, Drayton Plains or phono BE 4-4MS. lAEY SITTER, HOUSEKEEPER. S2 schooter^*lH^f*liouMworkd j' pr®" awfatramportlMeiL*sSdan 15K ASOtHtR'S HELPER. LIVE IN room, Ratarancas. S3S. Ml 7-00t7. t^AAV-flMl wArY r rt s s. fas- permanent lAAV sirrblt wIth — tranaaertatlon, 5 day week te S:30, **3-*503 after « P.m. PIZlA Allb SHORT ORDER C06K. to bermald, EM M121. BABY SITTRl TO ta'tSiSiTT REPINED LADY AS COMPANION — «a Mldmrlv unman, must h* ahla J3STW1 needed aT OncH cart, lama dallvary, must 'havis drivers Ucanaa In gaga •*“■**— Steady ampteymant, aaa______ tig, IN PERSON ONLY, Houghtan I. SON, 531 N. Mata St- , NO EXPEDIENCE NECESSARY . With work, SMmrw lAlt (LtYER, area- «7Mil*. babysitYei boy In Unk WAYlRI^Oftb POP t-YEAR-bLD llva In and drive cat —tawerk. MA *-7005. rN l*bH bbCtolil opaitu, Wjll _________Pontiac Prow Box 100, SALES GlAL P6A AFTERNOON work for candy tforo Pontiac Moll. Apply of 1440 woodward._ SALBGIRLS—SOME EXPERIENCt, Kj&IIGtente’wiI^M^Ia0^ Shopping Cantar~ SALESLADY WANTED #QR RE- •ALU UpiES: WOMEN EX; High I no to InTarvlav partanca, reply to Pyntlac Eax 7 glvbiE taBMafalls. BlWARt TOY AND'DETAILERS . MECHANICAL, ELECTRICAL STRUCTURAL |Bn opportunltlaa a banatltv Must ba graduate so , 11734 Wood-f Park, Midik- better way to earn extra money! It's quick, simple and productive, Just look around your fiome, gari basement and list the many items that you no longer use. - Hundreds of readers are searching The Press' classified columns daily for just such articles. Perheps the piggy bank itself would bring more than the change that it holds! Try .it! Y0UU BE GLAD YOU DIO I ’ •tonal engineers, sxperlencad d tlgnars, datallers and dr attorn* naadad tor parmaitont paaltlona. HOLFORTY, WIDRIG O’NEILL * levin Associates inc Ml 74771 EXPERIENCED auto mechanic MauaMm it Sin, —z • Rombtar, Rohnltr, IxAfeRIENCED - 1TRIKBS, Nb 'LAVbP par weak guarantaad aft-In&rviaw Mr’ M,l#' °* *>nu tar ► openings poiT 'CtiM boWI hbUI replacing summer hate, —iploymsnt. Mult w 111_______ Iss Bros. Big Bay. Tatogrdph d Huron, Ml Obda Hwy. Apply tORtUNITY DEMONSTRATORS SALESLADIES claims at high parcantaga. They i don't my what you pay aut at that parcamafa. Ba fair to yoursaiv and urfthout obllgatton call tha: THE TOY CHEST ... YM •rlglnaB'ffVgrty Plan. lad man, II4k naat appearing id good wgtkar to atgrt BWtd toly wgrktog 1 to * hgun pgr WIM, For Information dill Mr iea. OR SdPIt I p.m. to 7 p.m. AGE 2l-3i Midnight shift, ..... |toHtncd halpluk Id S.____ ALUMINUM SldfNO APPLICATORS VniBNIR ■ ma flald of special madlbto signs. Must be iigpgrlintid layout, datalHim and icapable original design. Small aataMIs firm located In Troy. Sand raau... tPjQ, e«n Mi Trey, Michigan. MtoMMn bdtoam sf and_ the good housekeeping shop p> <4mi to 10 hours waakly. da?''afternoons, no' tuniAiys, ex- ^M,Sr%dJS£Srm*te c56V - ICnIAaL, i AbULti I tandanf. i Orchard PHARMACIST Raglltorad, B.S.C. dagrae, Immad EXPERIENCEO GRILL MAN, a la aw minuaa sawaman to COVar establlshad territory raiki iwyattajBr Hm.________ 000k, preparation mb piy. ----1parlance dasirabto, day shift. In parsan, Rlpte,ttl W.Hur- !Sr Pontfac' ttr« COUNtlR iALBA LADY OVkR Panttoc. Mlchlpan. ' ‘ Wn 1B|A porters. aLL IMR . Bawl it w. Par- ----- 1 son, FE 5-7111.________________ A&rYRr M OR *5 YEARS OLb To Apply «nBL BoyPD?lvo Inn, filta graph and Huran, Pontiac. PORTER^ FOR .NIGHT WOAKj waar. Full or parMImta avonlngs °BLOOMF?ELO FASHION SHOP PONTIAC MALL SALES WOMAN FULL OR PART TIME Experienced, peed starting salary —“ | "mmlsslan. ■ - n < NADON'S Mirada Mila Shopping Cantor - llCRITAltY, IXFiRllNCED -Shorthand snd typkig wtth account-Ing background. Parmanant pash J top with walPastaMiahed earn- In wbutbrn arm. Band ra to Box M Pentiac Pram SECRETARY WlYtt KNOWLEDGE ' of shorthand, accaunWtab emtoitta, bands and insurance tar Blrmlnp- Neb WmrteO Femrie CHILDREN WOMAN oyii 3* TO Oo AlL phataa of panaral atflca worti. Writ* ’po*st’omS1'Bw,m»li'9Pon; WOAAAN FOR GENERAL HOUtl-m>rh mdauatarli^^ to vicinity at CmaLakaRd. and Pmtiae Lika Ro*d. Days 33*4055. I GENEI Wfb: EXAfeRIBNCkO RN aupatvtoar In small mining b 2-WAY RADIO DISPATCHER. LOCO) cab company. FE 24205. APPLICATION! MW fcEINS~W i. Monday through Friday. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED ALL RH POSITIVE M DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE l Cam tip am.-* pun.) pe *4**3 CARETAKERS WANTED — APART-mant and tacllHtog In Itou of Apply weekdays between 12-7 worktop eon ■ Bahtoa, C * SCHOOL AT HOME, 1 IBM TRAINING Loam IBM, Keypunch, operation and wiring. Id puter pnarpmmtoB. Mkt.. --- Board gf Education gmnRNd. PPM plpcwngnt atrvlea. Frao parking. Comp lata ttoandm, no —— ^"""sYSTtMS INSTITUTE 3 A-t CARPENTER AND ALUMINUM A” EXCELLENT SMS CAR GARAGE, PONTIAC dPM; After t:Sk FE SdWB. S OR S4EDROOM HOUSE, CALL bdwpm »7 PJW. PB ddEB. MINISTER desires JKWOOM house to Pontiac caH 3354*4*. NEEDED AT 0N« PAINTING AND, DECORATING, froa estimate. OR 3-1*4*. «aW»: IUMnYEr wTrk CaU attar «pjn.FB34Bt7. any kind. FE *33*7. Work WmM Fimtoh 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTA ACREAGE, PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-ERTUES ANO UNO CONTRACTS Ungnm naad tor tonmiidato aatol WARREN STOUT, Realtor s» MULTIPLE LltTINO SERVICE BUILDER Heads tote In Pontiac. Immediate attar, no ccmmtoaton. Mr. Oavh *a*4S7t. Ragl-VBtod ttoaly. IP-YEAR-OLD HIGH S C H O O I ----- panarwl otflca a ____ ____ULS-SSM. CLEANING ANO WALL WASHING. **24*53 or M2-5S3* IRONItid ONE DAY SERVICE MRS. ~—--------------a, PI S-1471, tM mV NOmI. 1 pm hour. Phene 333-7*51. IRONINGS. REASONABLE, RATES, CREDIT CLERK Y Paraonnal < si Hospital. DRUG SALES Mato Or tomato, experienced only. See Mrs. BUI tog* *tSimms Brat. EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER. mmBm 1 no ■■—— 2335 Dixie Hlg) EXPERIENCED ---man and__ dljld RbfiTU- E'CTkJylTrffi EXPERIENCED"' SHORY ' WbBI S3L'ortl' T iRPims am p>m, , FULL AND EaET-TIME, BAY M rfoker.1 government npowasied FHA and VA homes. Member* at tha MuIMpto Daring Service. No Sunday svark. CLARENCE RIDGEWAY REALTOR, m W. WALTON, tit tint REAL ESTATE SALESMAN, EX- jnmTvaea mission. I kfies; SANDERS NEEDS Males-1* to 11 yarn at aga Female* 1* to IS yaart ol aga WORK NEAR HOME Working in a Sanders Store Is Clean and Pleasant WE WILL TKAIN YOU FOR FOUNTAIN SALES WORK WE OFFER YOU 0000 PAY VARIETY OP HOURS MOO ALLOWANCE MERCHANDISE DISCOUNT PAID VACATIONS, HOLIDAYS NO OPENINGS FOR STUDENTS Appflcmito M. to IS years at aga must thaw proof of aga. Main BmptoymetU Office _ ' *tarough FMdayd*y 00 Oakman Wvd., Highland Park FRED SANDERS in Eaual Opportunity Emptoyar SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS Part-Thnr Man or woman. Auuly I School Oaraga, 3M s. I OL *4211. promotions and tlta. Can FE 242#, f a.m. to S p.m., or apply to paraan. It N. t--1— Pentiac, Michigan. ibS®* ATTENDANT FOR SERVICE STA-iton> maghtalcMly ""***•* “* wlliHm to team. PE b APPLIANCE salesman must be GOOD MECHANIC FOR NEW SF —Haw egulemant, tot* at wet naad man who oowM qualify aarvlca managar, attar tram frlnga banatlts. Anrty to narL__ to Tin kaanca, t*73 Dixie Hwy Clarkston. , RHP —i SaiML Maray** tar tall tlma counter and grin wotk -Apply In patten. t4 P.r SERVICE MANAGER Excellent appartanity far rl#tt mi Salary, plus liberal bonus pla ExcaNant potential. SPARTAN DODGE ttl S. SAGINAW Sib car; Atttntion truckers Wttl) IBM modal ‘ltM„ tractor agutopad to transport mabUa homos MM iwuulramants. Paid tratolng, aaalatbnaa to purdwaa new tractor tar nm who duality. Far Interview contact National Traitor Convoy, hSTfan Williams LmTSmE Drayton PWimllfita. AUTOMOTIVE IRlYlCt gTR 332-^81 POR IMMEDIATE CLASSIFIED SERVICE Pontiac Press BARBER (MASTER OR APPREN-*'ct). Mac's Barter Step, OR lists tortP.m. ' , «ad to mlxad drinks, work night AdMS' after t:M to Mr. Oavls » Write!, Canopy ,Hotel, 111 W Grand River, krttfiton. BROKER-ORIVERI YEAR AROUND lease. Avaiiabia Immad lately ter hauling ' IMteBT tfftL CMta tent revenue. Sat Mr. Bowman, Saturday atay. Mlt GUtotto Slraat Detroit. Michigan. I7MS4S. | BUMPER ANtfWRiTfR. IXPEftl- r®Sx"wa'Vi OTHER FOLKS DO . 1 . Other folks moke money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS If you haven't... try one. Hundreds of dthers do . . . daily!’ It » enly. 10 B_______11 ■ .......elner. SR) toy's Floratelm Shoes. Mlrtcto Mile Cantor, tlta . S. Telegraph. PE 147(0. ‘KILLED M A C it I N 11Y P5fc BrtSgaporl mill tout shaote. North-wtatwOft and yngto"^1 ~ CURB WAITRESSES must to lk Appt TED'S PonttoeFroas DEPENDABLE BAlYlltYlR TO ■UH car* 'at 4 child rat — rwork, call any tlm pgrtittota tto a ul s: DINING ROOM WAITRESSES I you onlay meeting people an rking with talMtmn^TCn has IlmtMd numter of aptintaga to '» wotk In tha fnandl i Engineering, Inc. d. NavL AMdwgan. rr or W part time. Far totormattosi id night shin, aw Maal fumlsted. Top ssrnlngs. transportation, | toomftold HIM*. TOOL PLANER OPERATOR TOOL LATHE OPERATOR OR MTlt. Aak DRlJd CLERK WANTBt Part nun* will tram parson. Rats' Country pays Phone 332-8181 and Ask for ' Classified Deportment t iUo CLiRK. OVEl iTNi wANtlO: PX*Yt cOUNtlk A DM axpertones necessary, cat_ Ed. WaNgn. Patterson Chevrolet Dx- »(ta W^--------* U ~SMm BROKER. 25* WL WAL- Id. top p EXECUTIVf FEMALE TRAINEE Department Mat* has opanlng far wwnan^ Interested^n retailing cjj< STVh. Pontiac PnSauS! EXPERllEttCiD wlufRlis'WATW- SHIRT FINISHER, CABINET UNIT, tall tMto. Salary tSt wee* ' bonus. EHta Ctoanars, 10 Woodward, Royal Oak, nap shTrt PRiiswmktct WKL Wee Me%, Mole Femeli BnA IS SALESMEN NEEDED Wanted doar-tadaor lalaaman. goad canvassers can make *25 o da^or^mare commission. H43»t2 sa weEkly for wearing love- phana axparlanca.MA 5427*. WILL DO IRONINGS IN MY HOMl IIS N. Parry Apt71*0. *. WORK AS TISSUE TECHNICIAN, f years' axparianea sacratary, 1 year's ___________ raglltorad by A.s.C.P. Par to tarmdttota OR • * • CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTNACTS — HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT Mt Oakland Ava. FE >4141 GET RESULTS we NEED Itettaga. Call us today ter quick Ml# and top mark* salMtl M ^ ate, wa can DON WHtm INC. / lit! PONTIAC bRjyR, PONTIAC ___________PE44EW BLACK-TOP PAVING Driveways, ^parking ^krts, resurfte- Hockett Realty EM 34703 nRdIB 1 or 3-bedroom wHh besement. In Pontiac TowneMp or Pontiac. Buy- " lJ&nby realty FE 4-2581 Nsncti tha buyer*, call ua today I Clarkston Real btate 5854 S, Mato MA 5-5821 NOW IS THE TIME —ICL-UST WiTH-TIMESk_________ ALL MAKES OP FOUNTAIN PENS rgpiIr*>¥Y factory tratoad man. Oanarql Printing 4 Otflca Supply - Ce.,17 W. Lawrence St.__ ELECTRIC /MOTOR SERVICE-RE- m^ajiStodto.. mi.Ptota PmwiEfclE| A YoSwrlEfTT ALTERATIONS AND PUIN SEW-ing. FE $4(71 DRESSMAKING, TAILORING AND i Plonaar Htgr1—1 O3*13,500*cai IEMODELING, TAILORING AND tar work. Edna Warner. FE M5R, iMWIng d6ne in mV. home. TIMES REALTY John Kinzlor, Realtor Ol* DIXIE k E 4-514L BROKEN CONCRETE FOR RETAIN-ing walk paving brick tar patla, fence poet*. Oakland Fuel and Paint Co., 45 Thomas at. Phona FE 5415*. WANT TO SELL? GIVE Ut A TRY . PROSPECTS GALORE . JAMES A. TAYLOR, Realtor- 7712 Htohland Rd. IMS*) OR 44104 WANTED: 4 WtI ‘a6>ES Qp . , level land, unturned. In Ortonvllle- iLA bfjnrrlTjnr BEDROOM fUUol* ITfii WE NEED LISTINGS DANii UNMCAPi I. «1A- CbLUMBO CONVALESCENT HOME ilttemore. 338-1492. openings tth. 71 Whl °" AWUST JOHNSON REALTOR 1704 S. Telegraph _________ FE 4-2533 . WILL BUY J-JRI MEDROOM homo- VictoNy W. Panttoc, Bloom-flald, or Sylvan. Write.datolta to Star, M» Elliabath Lk. Rd. No Realtors. ■■________ NEEDED IMMEDIATELY nursing heme can tor - - A __ - — I veteran wtd Shrlrt- MWIMNMtoWMMI' 37 .paralytic stroke, ted patient. -—.— ---- sSfiaPtsaarrat *«ui!orE w» veto heme. Apply 2310 Hummer 4342. Lake feed. Phone NR 74223. ST LAlkbl R66MS,.TlLf lAfH, prlvete antrenca, i tody only, MM Sylvan Shores. 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT NEAR ‘-aka Orton, call MY 24741. BEDROOM TRAILER, i /tow Traitor Parti. Adults J=E2-3*i 1-lVOOM MovlHf and Trudrif tl l-A MOVING SERVICI, REASON-•^i rote*. PE 44454, PE mgg. mOvinE, careful 05w Bob's Van Service /MOVING AND STORAGE REASONABLE RATE* . _ JRTCTOMF1(INSUr*l>COR 4-15111 light UAUUM4 aN6 M6YINE, 3-ROOM APARTMENT, N i W L Y NhHhqi * PeciratlH t» a. MS par « I. Inquira I --- 331-4054. ROOMS A Sf. PE 5-55 . 37 Park Place, experienced iStHlSr exterior painting, wark guar, 15 years axparlance PE 2B5 . EXPERT PAINtlNb, DECORATING paper ramevlng. OR 3-7354. PAINTING ANO CAULKING fAlNTINO AND PAPERING. YOU •ra next. Orval Oldcumb, 47144*4. PAINTING ANO WALL WASHING reaaanabto. FE 5b Juna. EM 1-0134. IwUmn, MMiM 41 •sod araa inNortti Pontiac, I *®ljteSnHUB^ t» Par Month Cent ad Resident Mwipsr gas heat, children welcome and K SSema. RIAL VAUil, 424- 7&RM.fcAil-44kilBftUM.1 KITCTt- an, dining ream, living ream, oarage- Fenced tot. Mjnenth, De- and bath, stove heat. 113-2*3-4524. MOlt ATY*ACTIVE J-YEAR-OLb ranch. 2-bedroom and dan, Water-tord efttti Wlttlams ■TS= churches. SeourbY i references. *74-1003. Use Fast-Acting Press Want Ads . Just Dial FE 2-8181 THfe PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST U 1M4 IM evaitobto weeks of Aug. H OR MWI. HOUSEKEEPING CABINS. 133 PER week. Private Mtt safe beach. Cany sites, MdFeeir Resort, Qr- HUBBARD LAKE FRONT, era safe beadv boet. Ftoyi Realtor. FE MIPS.______________ Twin and Tee I* OR * GENTLEMEN, PRIVATE home dose In. FE 2*514. BUSINESSMAN, WfcST tlbl •dwelt, kitchen privllegt* optional. Mayfair MMt,_________________ ROOM AND/OR BOARD into Oakland Ave. FE 4-USd. SLEEPING' ROOM, KITCHEN PRIV liege*. No drinking. FE ewil. tonchae packad/FE HW. FOR RINT, REASONABLE, MOO-' am new store or office building on Oakland Avenue, J mMe — downtown Pontiac, PI M421 CARNIYAL NEW, BIAUTIPUL, ■tore an Oefcland Avenw Weal tor baetoMe or «M fesay. tut OHke Ipoce ^nce^L^n^cS: Montcalm, MxlT, reeeonebls. — F| seen. OFFICE SPACE, sew hiohlaSTd (MSt) near ahport. OR Htt lit Hihwn Property 42-A MALTA-TEMPLE Church, seats 1W, reoms _____ lodges, buekwte meetings, social events. Storing available. BHU ' "sYlvan'shoPpinA Ml- S 1 » Air Conditioned Star* Mcdtonl traffic Sg|g Homes 4 ROOMS tb aged lam I, SaCO down 2-BEDROOM. PULL' BASEMENT, 1- . BATHS. fireplace, __________privileges. 4 3-BEDROOM. BRICK I garage, 1 acre, IliM, month, good lit standing. Call HacMt 3-BEDROOM, BRICK, FULL BASE-gas heat, *2,voo do«"- *•*>• payments. FI Milt. “X’^WifrUM fcbiM 'WJfcMI,“ * storings. Vtoyl ajdbg. imtoNed or Kraft Siding 81 Roofing Pill estimates m sopnreuminp-, Complete aavettreughlng a Gelvanlied or etonwwm. estimates. 473-Hia. / Betfralight REBECCA BUNNER - PI nent removal at unwanted OL 1-1S3S. T^ROOP I ^SUPERIOR FE aim. new house and RIMODILINO pIbm drawn. ISI SHI._ AeghonPErieg PONTIAC FENCE CO. 5*32 Dixie Hwv. OR 3-4SM FREEESTIMATES. parktog lots, SS3-42K. --_ * ~ bRlViWAV specialUT^ PRl^STMAATIS DRIVEWAYS. courts IYc. ANy size, contrector, FI 3-3*14. SEal-c6t1 and protect y6UR eld Jrtve to leek new ageln. PI MI47. JOHN tAylqr, floor laying sanding and finishing. H years experience. 333-4*75. . 0. JhVDBR, FLOOR LAYlNO, INSTONE WALL REPAIR KAR-LIPl.IArniRV.CO, Generators nyu^atora-Btorters Baturin $5.95 Exchange fE S-WI4 W Atwurtt Home Improvements Porch**, additions, stop*. general ramedeRng and cement work. Guinn Construction Co. FE 5-9122 K. P1ISTAMMIL. ENGINEERING ilBCklfil HOUSES FOR SALE TO RE MOVED HI modem, delivered to you D'hondt Wrecking Company Brick Work do ell types of residential end commercial remodeling and build kW. laqito, rebNnf PW »■—1 num sWIng. Free designing ... estimating, leal references. Easy Terms. Pi 4-413S. DOZING, HAULING... AND END CeRMEt Work Cement Work ad cement contractor. FE 5-9122 ■ttHaagb FLOORS AND DRIVEWAYS, WORK foundation, floors, prei bs- lejlee Ufdr~ ERICK WORK AND FIREPLACES Remodeling. MYS-llSS OAMwTfe fcWaid>ingiion.aiitordl InetEEtPrkrtlt MIT PRINTINO. IB flee an offset prtnttnn. Printing, Romeo, PL 2-i >CAIt GARAGE, 1199 Iiwbceplis ■TwsrTis°8*|r A-1 oozing) - excavating, to mIL blade dirt# trM rtmoval*. Pro# •stimates — PrtoM MM. FE Mill. ^sssaswsBi"* A4 mEriqn or KRjtn^KY tdb laid or delivered. Seeding *r re-dressing eld lewns. PeHe*. Free •stimates, Rreece Llndicspfng, PM 2-0141 orFE MW. hW'MURhY'S SODDING AND Seeding. FE-344# or 473G534. 1 CONTRACTOR FOR kYBFV-thing. EMo Lumber G Medemtte-tlon Co. Is Uceneed end .tosured to . do efl type* of reeUentlal end.com-merclel remodeling and build Ing. Reesenebto. Oeorge Lee, FE T-7»22 PLASTfeRINGTTnfEB ESTIMATES. 0, Meyers EM VC163 plastering, new ano rCpaiK BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS - POLISHERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS DRILLS > POWER SAWS WaHpaper Steamer --- —j— pollehera In eeuum deem senders, Oakland iTLWffje* BOB'S RESTAURANT, IBIS JOSLYN ___________pe >teii BIG BOY dirYC-in. dixi Silver Lehe-TetoBreeh at J. D.' Candler Roofing Co. e lob toe large - By Dick Timor NEW Full Basement, 3 Bedrooms from $11,900 nm £ urence. BUB you pl lbs eyerepe to acre n van lances, ctoee to Wheels -chard Lake Rd. (Mill) j Trelt right to Deda Hi Oemmerce. right to left to Merkene liomee -— llb lTwIiei Ttoire age. 1 north at Waterford light, turn at ItoTUM* Reefeurent, keep Mt to Ml Reckcreet. or saw. 7 NO DOWN PAYMENT NO PAYMENT FIRST MONTH ‘But I’m trying to obey you, Mom! You said you didn’t went to hear about me fighting and I’m trying ~f"~“not to tell you!’’ Sale Haases USS LAKE aNAL r AND 4-SIDROOM homes -II2,toe to 114.400. on your M or mine. Nelson Bldg.. Ce. OR Vtttl. 4-BEDROOM. FULL RAiSMlNT. carpeting, Ito-cer garage, 1 lets. Si,ooo down an land contract. UL 2-1730. CLARKSTON-BBAUTIFUL BRitK ----------------- yjrt “"*> BBDRDOMS, garage, famil reom.^fjreplece. »es heet_ Wete 5 ACRE5 Across street tram Clerkston Gelt Course. Your own private term with a reel jr— rancher. Odto lM, This wenT last, cell —. WARDEN REALTY 6-ROOM HOUSE IN OObD. c6ll| 80 ACRES kept l-room farm home plu yoed^Nrn^wd oat bulkllnoe a OTTER ELIAZBETH LAKE ESTATES - WEST SIDE - 7-reem brick. ... "is, large living teem with tire-e, sun perch, taeernant. 2-garage, paved drive. Calf today. EMBREE & GREGG, Realty IMS UNION LAKE ROAD Peye EM 1-4H3 Evee. EM S-37M StfTSR tUV BEAU.TY;RITE_ Sold by O'NEIL REALTY-#! 3-7IBI moves yW In Heme itotttm Jr. High school area. Full basement, ifowly decorated Inside and out. Only M2 per mento. piw We* Jn^!SSce' Cell Waterford Realty- OR S-1271. 1550 DOWti — BBBDfcoOM, Orion. Giles Reel Eetoto. Pl E M173. WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE [ E. Huron PI 44111 MI-0141 WO 2-0512. For Free Eetlmeto MIO-Elizabeth Lake PE 4-4745 1 Tret TrirniniRg Service L E. DALEY TREE SERVICE reylneTyE bSel’pB mSS**0 C. WILLIAMS A SON. TREE AND -------- > sidewalk ter retaining wells lead or Instilled. Old caw me- oT7b tl. | merion blub sod, pick up or delivered. 2401 Crooks. UJL 2-4*43. | REMBACH'I BULLDOZING AND yard grading. ROeeanebll. Free es-flmetee. OR MO, ODDING, SEEDING, RETAINER wells, pallee, basement celling PBd-dUT. ____________________ S6bblNp.S6EDING-GRADINO M0 CASS-ELIZABBTH RP. I CCTj 3 bedrooms, beoimsnt, wooded. Lake privileges, sii.too. Term*. 403- MONTROSS TREE SERVICE b ratnovai—trimming. 335»>wjw, OAKLAND TREE SERVICE, TREE 'rimming and removing, Free or" mate*. Phene WdlSS. Ttssner Tree Service Ml types at tree work, Free • note*. Topping, cabling, cav work, fertilizing. 437-2722. TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL. BASIC BILT Alumlnin1's!dlng,b*™u^V*umb,0'lk electric comgMg, full baewnenC nothing down an your let, wr furnish materials to tMih. ARTHUR C. COMPTON * SONS tirmsT pi 4die>. LIGHT HAULING, CLARKSTON - BIRMINGHAM _____________ ... 1 ■ Colemans perish. 1 bedrooms, lVj baths, Caps Cad brick, basement 3 acres, wooded let, S3t,000. I, W, I 4-7W. TALBOTT LUMBER Glees Imtelled In deors and win dews. Complete building eervfcs. LIGHT AND HiAVY . TRUCKING, g^as-ffliggJSSiBRICK.... A-1 INTERIOR And exterior Trucks to Rent Vb-Ten pickups lto-Ton Stakes TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EOUIPMENT u Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailer* Pontiac Farm ana Industrial Tractor Co.' OS S. WOODWARD FE M441 .. . . . JFE 4-1442 AAA PAINflNO AND bfCfkn- U-HAUL TRUCKS ■ M— — . 1-WAY ANYWHERE Per Information and reset call FE 3t7M end FE 343*1 _ _ ....___PH Reas. Free **• tlmetes. Fh. UL UIto, iNtgftibfc"- ikttRibi AAjtffTBo . l- J etlonr FAintlNO INSIDE AIM! OUT, puerentoed. Wee eel. PE 2-4114 paintiNg ^ iIhmm______AND but. ttuerentoed. PE HM Ft >di|t. A-1 wallYvashir pl wile ^ BLOOMFIELD jihLL.CLBANfcRS. WILL CONSIDER TRADE I Humphries FE 2-9236 Brick-Aluminum (bedroom colenlal, only J -old. Twin leech Ares, leke privileges. Priced at Ml JM. Dan Edmonds ___j family roor ge, beautiful levm try neat and else d drapes. 425-2402. Leer ga-I shrubs. Carpeting _____ ...______ 21# Dexter, alt Walton, near Oeklend University. OL 1-4721 or 4BLMI1. BETTER BUY BEAUTY-NItl Sold by Q*NEIL REALTY-FE 3-7103 ?ALL* B. 4444 1 ad living teem. F *1, on large let, wn. On MJt wet Read, right to- Clyde Reed, left OWNER TRANSFERRED 3-bed room brick trl level In Htgh-Wtoia P«~ —--------- burn-ins, sltliek OR 1-1143. BETTRR »UY BBAUTY-RIT# Bold by DT4EIL REALTY—PE S-71M OXBOW LAKE I bedreems, large Hvmg Lck*e prMtogeoJSee eerSM^ SofinTyKaKS 1wr HILLTOP REALTY PIKE ANO ANDERSON Large l-fleor, 1 bedrooms, a tached piaetored garage, bet we “^PONTIAC REALTY 717 Baldwin PE M275 PINE LAKE AREA, OUR LAOV OP WIST SIDE Seminole Hills H R, IROQUOIS-MOVR RIGHT IN pjnQjrtJh? sSTgirSS ------yIlonLy Ntod both, carport, newly decor*1 •d. quiet nelghborheed. 1I0kI4>‘ let. 457.44 month plus to----U—i once. HAGSTROM 4N4 W. Huron, OR A-1 BUYS ITS A HONEY t ranch, sparkling nlng area carpeted II H4MMNI with 2- Ceuntry Club, On MMriMrwgRM paneled reersewn L„_ ____ banka end bua. String value. NEW COLONIAL - with 4 bed- estates. Blacktop drive, Prtgldelre kitchen. Ding at a kind, WEIR, MANUEL & SNYDER IN 1. Wobdwerd, Birmingham 4444MB PMONtt ■ • S4A2325 i hornet. Priced m ONLY $400 DOWN Neet I bedroom brick ranch ijnM iMB^nMrBRBZjQL^_I A^frJSBLSI^ ** THE RIGHT SIZE Pleasant living room, modern *n, full basement, Mealy lend-scoped. Priced el tiEMe. Be ay WATERFORD REALTY O. Bryson, Realtor Van Welt Bid T...-UCTT-..- OR Si| BETTER GUY BEAUTY-RITE aid by O'NEIL REALTY-FE 3-7H3 PIKE-BAST BLVD. AREA CITY OF PONTIAC Mixtd Area WHY RENT? $55 MONTH Jdlns Texes end Ineu $47 DdWN OTHER CASH NIII NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME ALL WORKERS ACCEPTED AND PEOPLE ON SOCIAL SECURITY ANO PENSION! WIDOWS, DIVORCERS. EVEN PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS ARE O.K. WITH US SEPARATE DINING ARIA CALL ANY TIME DAILY SATURDAY OR SUNDAY REAL VALUE ._________MME HAYDEN NEW HOMES NEW CUSTOM BUILT HOMES MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 TO 8 3485 PLAINS DRIVE CORNER W. WALTON BLVD. "YOUR PUNS OR OURS" $13,950 ON YOUR LOT — Over l.ltl square feet. Three bedreems. GAYLORD 44IDROOM Mm* to enctoltoe In- 4 ACRES. Greem Mm* on Pin* Knee earner parcel wMh el ream. Seer gerep*. Basement, garden Lake Orion, AUcMgen BETTER BUY MUnV-Rlti Sold by O'NEIL REALTY-PI HID SUBURBAN LIVING CASS LAKE - 1 in.veo. Terms to suit. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP- tear aueranM r«sr Ing today $18(9S0 ON YOUR LOT — Three bedroom ge* Mil, two car enrage. A For New Homes— KAMPSEN SCHRAM Val-U-Way WONDERFUL LOCATION tor children. It you are worried about a piece tor year children Ip play yeur worries ere ever, itowty listed Vbedreom brick ranch, breezewey, l'xer etteched garage, located en 4 ecres. lake privileges. A truly weAerful buy. Only SIMM. $300 DOWN Per this IMdreem hem* In * goad are* off leMwta Ave. Til* bath, all hr - ^ MMI«l1S**7hel.°*"-R. J. (Dick) VALUET IEALT0R FE 4-3531 « Oakland Open *4 ARCHT.—SERVICE—FINANCING 3 BEDROOMS TRI-LEVELS RANCHES it included Gei w Gerag* Family FROM $10e500 WITH SLM DOWN WILL GUILD ON^YOUR LOT OR Open Dally 44, Sun. 34 J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 344B4 Wit HtghtaM Rd. OMM n 1 m—a. . ..... . EMREllBieE -J Beeutlful OH pedreem ranch home with 12'vH' riving reem deelgned tor tenrify comfort, lrxlS' etap- pH yeer round tun tor lh*' wt family. 3 bedroom rancher and < at the nlcett hemes you have * saving kitchen and dlnetfe, full t3*x43' rocrggHen ere* tor Mure relaxed ennfment. Price only tolr SSI ptoe ctottog eoefs and urn yeur tot ae down payment, win duplicate en your M er ears. Min. Newly carpeted living , dining ream. AttacMd Mar gars fenced yard and beautifully is seeped. Price |utt reduced *13.500, 41450 down, gtoo cost*. 4 BEDROOMS—2 LOTS In Wetorferd and near Tet-Hui NIX RRaLtY UL 3-3121 1 lea* let ctose- to schools tor i "^ftlLWELL A TNBIBEN 'SMITH' t UKE PRIVILEGES KSma? ^3wsraj«.,»! $21,250, convenient term*. CURKST0N VILUGE R0LFE H. SMITH, Reottor ^ T*^y ri l-Ttot South iftltH St*E*T, Small LAZENBY WATERFORD DRAYTON AREA 3300 Warrlnghem, 115,500. OR MODEL OPEN 2-5 DAILY TrHevtl, 3 Mdreome, carpeted I.. --- PhEtigrupRy photography |Y pranl. PIoog Twhf WEED MOWING. LIONT HAULING. MA H4» - . •“ *■“> war stairs, Waterford. 07,050. *02-3771. BY OWNlS, VREBROOM. RlCRE- etlon roam, 110 oath*. Dr --- garage. 013m OR 3-HBS. 413,030. FE 2.27*0. OSS LAKE AVENUE ^ ___brfak.___ __ ffWiSS^rS&'to'toira OL 1474B. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor ggSSrLWgjMap,*^ > Need A Home ? Even credit problem*. \ Model At 37 N.L Blvd. Call FE 4-6683 with 41,34* I . __ costs Let u* show ye* 4M MEDIATE POSSEUlON. DON WHITE, INC 3#l Dixie Hsry- OR 4 Tenipleton FOREST UKE COUNTRY CLUB SUB. 3-bedroom, 34-loot living teem, el teched garage, ges heel, let I00x nr. Only 420,000, eacellont torrni K. L. Templeton, Realtor _J30 Orchard Lake Read IMl. THREE-BEDROOM HOUSE. LARGE living roan flreptace, I price It,*" EWred, I Mkhlge-TRI4JBVl WN" *00. 4 Wot#rford-$500 Down ’ Parmer'* Mar- ket. Only 47440. Elizabeth Lake Estates JACK L0VEUND Sill Cost Lake Rd. • 4KH344 ______ Watsrford-Clarkston carport, largo lot, paved street, vacant. Price 44401. 471 menthty. RORABAUGH _____________IMdreem. TMJ bedroom ha* 71b acre* at lend, ether Me about W acre. These are math 3 - bedroom trl • *____1 with tong - Mm m nance free brick trentT Also, recreetfen ream designed tor_____ --“■•wee - Thrlfly gee hr* d at only on,450 glue WE HAVE SEVERAL TWO- AND gnH| • BEDROOM HOMES AVAILABLE WITH LOW DOWN PAYMfNTt. DOWN FAYMfNTS town. Prtoad from 411,000 .. 44,200 With eo tow gf 4444 . Wo mi bMeveL 2 3-bedreom ilklng dlatanca *4 tow Ikto, *M indy tor Fisher body and POntlac notor employe*. TM** Mmai • earn to M epprecletod. heme, and there I* ream tor -pension. Thl* won't Met long. Office Open Sunday 1 to 4 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GEORGE IRWM4. REALTOR 14 Walton_______________PE 3-7443 START AT APPROXIMAfELV 0250. Near Eastern Jr. Three bedrooms, 12'xM' 11 vine ream. Will1 dining teem, V'xlf kitchen, garage In nr"1 — repair, but cheapness It - Only S44S0. Near General Hospital He* e lrmr living ream, ll*xir dining mom, V'xl? kltchm, phi* g^l^tor tmt. IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 MS JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE Mixed Neighborhood First month tree MODELS OPEN AFTERNOONS V WEST0WN REALTY 4X444 dawn. NEAR DRAYTON SHOPPING CEN-— sot' deep let1 en g**d bam t bedroom*, full basement, 3 ACRES - 3-bedroom heua*. ___________ - * '—iment, IV* baths, targe cm-may, no cramped towtog to A else I ream to* prmerty te help M 1$. 421,*50. . UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 444-1411 BETTER Seld By OTII $9,900 r en yeur let. lively 3-n renctvtype heme, hill nt, birth eupbeerde, o * k FULLY INBULATBO. Oe- Immediate Possession 3 bedroom frame Bunge lew, nett tide, Mt family kitchen, best ment, an Mat, large jet. Oil PJK easy term*. WE TRADE Y0UNG-BILT HOMES ReALLY MEANS BETTBE-GILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53Vi W. HURON PE A3S34 .tov/ High and dry, let* *4 »had*. Le-csled In Brandi* WBp Sub with lake privilege*. Full price. JAMES A. TaYLOR, Agency RIAL ESTATE — INSURANCE 7731 H toh land Retd. (MS*) TIMES vx 55 • new hear garage. Owner mmttog I* California. New onto 41X500. 41,300 dawn pto* costs. Better mt Brit on* today I 20 ACRES Bern. siLOOo. Terms. Ale* IB atm*, vacant. HJM with 11 AH down. TIMES REALTY John Kinzler, Realtor Stl* DIXIE HWY. MLS 4744M* OPEN V TO t BETTER BUY •BAUTYVMI'^ Sold by O’NEIL REALTY—PE X7W1 RHODES OFF BALDWIN AVI. - ----------^ Mm- -*-* gee ft •lent * __________iwr BROOM IRANCt BATEMAN GUARANTEED HOME TRADE-IN PLAN GATEMAN REALTY w sheto* you to buy NO1 of owning twe heme* « BETTER GUY BEAUTY-SITE Sold by O’NEIL REALTY-FE 3-7103 WEST SUBURBAN, 3-BEDROOM trHtveL tori* living rotm end family teem. Attractive Utohen, jH* heet^Onty II7A4B an ctnven- tom ■ • REAGAN REAL ESTATE 2551 N. Opdyk* Reed — -- fl 3““ WtSTACRtS-1 acre Pin* eemmunlty. Memberdilp end use at duB home and utptnrimt beech IhcMtd to emignhtoW JHt lovely family Ih story heme. Corner landscaped acre, 21-toot carpeted living ream, 3 bedf-- Kid* at deeet end storms i furnace. Owner* leaving f20.230.n purcfuiiei through s morfgai*. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 34411—“ ------- em ia UNION LAKE ROAD Fireside Weather teen wlh be here^ UMt^le^^ln Over |» en wptor. -street. Perk IIM seNIn MvON down — rest easy HAGSTROM MS W Hur!^7^ OR «« Evening! cell *43-0433 NORTH PONTIAC AREA $55 MONTH ALL APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED IMMEDIATELY WIOOWS, DIVORCEES, PENSIONER! ANO RETIRES!-EVEN PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS ARE aiL WITH US CALL ANYTIME DAILY, _, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. 343-7131 REAL VALUE • *34*5 $650 DOWN PHA TRRMB—Choice weet. eto* ere*. 3 bedroom*, IWbelh brick bungalow with 3hc*t gerag*. Large and ipecleue end wonderful condition. Carpeting througMut, reel family livtog and term you can afford. Beautiful shaded street. CITY WEST SIDE BEAUTIFUL, shaded street) tl time offered, this excellent AC ream with new kNdwn, beeemi 2-car gerega end many other I togtoree. Clean and iMp 1 priced at 415.500 whh uet SI. MONEY IN YOUR POCKET, oav* 41,000 on newly reduced prke. Suburban clhMirnilt an ^hle street. {Jolt, Abedreem rmSm with tenrily ream and Acer garage. Extra Veer garage at rear tor toeti and etoregi. Washer and dryer, rang* and wall to w*M cerpehng. er* lust a few of the extra wahirof Included. Beautifully taadMWtd end Anchor fmced. Price reduced to M4VM with *1.500 dMR phM costs. QUICK POSSESSION,' UKE FRONT EXTRA SPECIAL! Oirty.l veers TWO-IN-ONE DUPLEX house r«E«rlsii> leke privilege* I lust West ortiow ntto ar-utnitles. SILVER UKE ESTATES Xcar oarage. PmUm W beffi oN1'*^— * ether delu) want quick K NT i________—, _ 4X100 down pkn costs, your appointment TODAY. 'loads o! — Owners ■gain, their 420.500 with A NEW HOME? BUILD E0R LESS WITH BATEMAN INTER-CITY REFERRAL SERVICE ixtre lprvi WlffTthf i- to you, meki ■ leading broke f your aototj* t MAY WE HELF YOU7 377 $. TELEGRAPH OPEN 9-9 REALTOR M.LS. FE 8-7161 SUNDAY 1-5 4 D^-12 49 Uk* FHA TUflkS C1TV*MT' Attractive j-oewrtxxu 1 Mii . tiled dining ■KLEhx”. SsS&V' CONOmoA THRO NICHQLIE we Tm^TxSllISS THROUGHOUT. SEE WATERFORD ARIA :*kw RANCH - WILL DUPLICATE CLARKSTON AREA 3-b*droom bungalow. Living, dining tret. Kitchen end utility room, >tt HA Mil. Vtctnt. About UTS board tptce. Formkt tops. Itfge dining grog. Veetlbult entrtnee wHh clottt. It* btlt>«. Ml bttomont. Smith & ' Wideman' /.REALTORS FI 44526 4irw. HURON »T. •OPEN 2 to 7 6342 GREER ROAD 1 hrlrX and xhlngla Shod ax/a* potlng - -012.2M in* end dining room*, kitchen, dtn, full biinnonf, oil HA hogl. fha It Mr. Alter FI 4«M CLARK ,MR with (Mir, living and Ing room, utility porsh. Nice with etme fruit. In gold M borhtbd, now floor tHe In r car c ludlng mx an aiwranw. WEST SIDE INCOME Two family — the itrg and both each. Eataman, heat. Large two-ear garage. Ntcq earner, lot near General Hoapttal, . eefl rMliS wlt^^J^dwm-ttl a month. 2903 ELBA-L00N LAKE I lovely left with lake prlvllegej. Over tatoto IM take, N fee 4-bed- famity ream twHi,---- . large Mmp. Batemenl — Bear garaeg. Price reduced I* SHktM , ^WEST BLOOMFIELD -t SuNdert Model Hemet IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Golf Country Club Estates . in Shenandoah Detroit tower ayttem, community water, underground utility Rrtrtt, lake grlvllegt. The Alleghany — Jamet Shannon, Builder. A trl-levei heme, lint right lor the row big terrain. 4 Mlrggmg and stUfy; large family room wttn fireplace, SUti living room, U*1l4 dtnfcig mam, large kitchen, nook and pantry. Cathedral cell- — tags In Nvlng room, kttctwn rnd m. 11 1 uV ’ ______v tC% 0 ThO Virginian — Ward Si Builder. A colonial with Iht tta of anpoltonca in dailgn and i struct Ion throughout. Lott at sp tar living and ontortolnInn. ll.a mattar Tmdroam hat f wan ctoeeti; other I bad rooms h walk-ln ctotal tpaca, 2 full ba on^uaoiir ttoor^an* atrvIn^masM 12 living mom, N.12x12 far room with fireplace. 11.ixtt.t1,1 roam, 7.*xlt.n kitchen i t nook, center entrance with Mlk-ln closet, porch across front; 20.10x21 garage door leading Ir- I lace mS aad Price including t landscaping. »5J,I THE 1*0 NTT AC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26,1964 _____________. . ^ ^RMti PPSRaHy iT Barians JW MILLER By Kota Osann - IMMEDIATE FOSSES-bedrooms. north side M corpot, i tut) gp* i hoof, largo tun nerd spa and only tMbt» o 1 FLOOR RANCH It HOME PLUS INCOME located o I largo rooms All mla tor |i DREAM 4 . TMa la It the city, d walla (It it.torapbs n petlng In largo living mam, —M th with bullt-Tns, Formica and bat! of Near ilia In this 0-yoar-oW home, S12.2M, terms. CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES - CLARK RIAL ESTATE The lemon — Paul J. Forcter, Charming colonial with j ________..i, ft* baths, master PaA roam 14.7M1J with I0x7walk - In closet, private dressing room, shower bath. AH closets extra large, 7.4x11 jkltchan with Tapptn built-ins and gantry, Ml jmwjjh EXECUTIVE HOME hi anc,^... condition. 14x10 carpeted Hying room, cut rock fireplace, kitchen, full beawmnt, me. parage. EaoutHuily landtcap blocks £rom Sylvan Lake. Miller Realty FE 2-0263 W» Huron - Open t i Frushour Struble u&,*28f> STSi'! Ed. ON SSMOTav tnlRBa. M-59 Frontage sth at only S12JM with ( If-UNIT MOTEL, f DOUBLE, Id l units. Lacatad a miles Of Mackinac Brim* an us-a. M frontaoe on hisSiwav. K Itch-Coffee , Now tlx lnch wen ana i-mcn watt Ceramic HI# pie wort, Buftdtngs la a**g candP ttaa. 445,000. Selling duo la Hl-ness. Brevorl, Michigan — Phone “Sure I know how to behave, only I’m not Very good at it!’’ ,ohS-rwl" O'NEIL Solid Bungalow iNOIONI ____M.TORS St) W. Huron - Since Ifli Phone FE S-f444 DORRIS 2 BEAUTY RITE MODELS1 2 OPEN EVERY EVENING 6-8:30 SUNDAY 3 to 7 e occupancy; or * down or trade your faulty' brand now home In a prime TfaertinS V l Clarkstan with 4 windows, 11.1x17 1 room with nraolaco In c 10.5x11.5 kitchen erWh dtslm.---------- enframe tram service porch. 1 114 dining room, 10.10x23.2 L. tochod garage. 12.4x10.1 mooter bsdream. has t largo Closets, private both and vanity. NO. 1 3, ar- LAKE LIVING, PONTIAC UMlN-utts. Lais 2221 lio dawri. $10 month. SwML fish, boot docks. FE 4-4501, OE 3-1215. Bloch Bros. LAKE SHERWOOD You don't have to ba a, millionaire to Hvo llks ons In this custom ptonnad community. Visit with us CHOICE 1-ACRE LOT* IN SUB division near Oakland Univsrsity Alts near 1-75 Interchange, si.200 SI.N0. Beautify/ rolling cr community ai I bow ha..™ ... _ Wm Directions: Dixie Highway M to Clerkston Meadows. Mr OR Mm.. TRADING IS TERRIFIC bedrooms. Price Inctadlm I lot, ctrewt, drape* and scoping, *34,ON. OPEN DAILY 1 to 8 P.M. Walnut LabaR4jM.‘at MapH) ar Draks Ma window sills, formica counters, birch flurtt daors and bullt-lna In M kitchen. Beautiful aptgmlc bath and vanity. 3 bright chaartul kitchens, axcanant basement, fas heat, alarms and screens, laves-troughs, lot 10x130. Decor In doc-oranng excellent. It par cent tf - ing room 14x11 with Hugo picture window with panoramic view of lake. Price »!2,f75. Consider offer. Brick Ranch wHh Contemporary Touch^Meot of^ Ww^outaHAdlng^oa*1 days meat discriminating buyer. Living roam 15x11 outstanding •wtmjjn Mup.' gjpjygfe - jii.lBm All nilaHbaftMwf wjii wall kgpt hom and yards. >14,*41. Dandy 2-bod ream bungalow, 07,41.. with S5W down, MS month. Nice kitchen ■ wHh dlshmaator, - law oak floors, ptaagargg _ gas PA furnace excellent basement wHh built-in bar and plana will ba left. Lot 00x150. Mack tapped street OH Oakland Ave DORRIS B SOM, REALTORS 2534 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0324 -TMAnRUt USTIttR SERVICE KAMPSEN rage. Large lot ana goon uss pnvllagot - 411.7S4. LP WATKINS LAKE FRONT. 1-bed room, oka paneled family room or third bedroom. Fireplace In largo taebad proa mrnmif area at Pontiac. Hoys* In axet lent condition and only JOAN wl terms or trade. Lot's Look Today! TWIN LAKRI: 1)1 tael of nice sand beach. 7-room brick ranch, IV* baths, Island AftMWMy Qgfr attached garage. Reduced to IN. IOEAL LOCATION. near school Owner has moved and la Orchard Lakt Rd.) 1______I are tn Pocono Drlv Terms: If atr cant dawn 30 years. IVSjpsr cant Unmet* Starting School .WILLIAMSON COMPANY 4044 W. MAPLE RD. BlRMlNOHAM ANNETT Sylvan lako Front Ideal home ter retirees i couple. One of IDs most a. tractive an the lake. Expertly fintehad knotty pine interior and coiorad aluminum tldlnB on exterior. 2 largo picturo windows overlook Ing gio lake dnd landscaped yard. Hat iga. master bedroom, carpeted living room with ftrapioca, dtn and country stylo kitchen end dining arae. Screened parch, eft ached garage. ltt,N0, terms. Elizabeth Loko Front loarty new Ibsdroom n this deelrable Me. rrjzri HI .1 sMfre family. 25 mlnutas tram Pontiac. C. 0. BALES RtALTOR 2210 Commerce Rd. RM 2-41N PONTIAC LAKE Beautiful year-eround homo, < Plately furnished, fenced y a new Coleman gas fumaca, to *ookIng,Vpont2c,n'' ‘“’CAS? LAKE FRONT HI-HILL VILLAGE JUST OFF 1-75 ON PERRY OR LAPRER RD CHOICE BULGING SITES 100x141 FT. ON PAVED STREETS EXCELLlifTMUINAOR, OOOO WRLLS LOW AS S1450, SIN DOWN LADD'S, NC. S Lapeer Egad Parry (M24) : SdlOt or . OR 2-tin after - -Open dally 21-1 Sunday 1*4 VO) Ai CASS LAKE. MOO. rinHng epar ». Sandy ROUND LAKE, IS MINUTES TO ' ‘ -iliac, near 1-75 X-way. No mo-l allowed. Lots SrxISt’, S725. JACK LOVELAND tut Con Lake Rd. 41*1 MS " WALTERS LAKE Neat 2 bodroom including t__„ stairs recreation mom ovsrlodfclng taka. M.ttg. terms. Now all brick 1 bedroo... hide-e-wey an north shoro. SI3.ftO, FE 4-4501, OR 3-1225. SELECT YOUR nRW HOME SITES KENT 425-241* H no pntwor 425-1443 id In 1214 Brick Ranch—5 Acres Norltem Pregwly 51-A WATERFORD AREA - Nice, In ENd niksiborhaad. Wall-to-wall carpatadliulno mom, handy kitchen. Largo enclosed porch. * car garage. Near stores an school. Now at >12.754. Ttrms. WIST SUBUREAN - Attractiveil bedroom homo Hjwjeallant a lion. 21-feet caipatad living r $16,000 PROFIT Reported last war an this part* Mara- Can be yours. lust tl,2N Plus Rack wail >14,000 '‘""’warden REALTY 124 W. Huron, Pontiac 2)*-71S7 BUMP AND PAINT SHOP ww of Hie bast on main highs**,> big lot, largo swll-a a real money-making Rare. Partners disagree, stock about >3,-ON compkta modorr equipment, don't toil to im mb only S4AN down plus atack. « HILL AMO MERCIER _ - „ CE 3-3030 12311 W. 7 MILE RD. PRICE REDUCED Thk lovely skodraom honw In Donelson Park, close to St. ERto-diets. Large carpeted living and dMap rooms. 1 bedroom down, IV* baths, basement, gas heat, 2-ear garage. Must ba seen tr appreciated. Immediate posses Pull price only SMJN with to IMMACUlATf It the best way to describe 111 taka prhrttogaa. 41* p mortgage. Full price *11,2 tormt. HUGE 4-bedroom ranch homo In Sylvan Manor, |1* bathe, NMUE port, gee hoot, lowly large •choel bus at dear. Owner I Ing Rato. Only S1.4M dawn closing coats., J. J. JOLL, Realty FE *34N OR N2 — EiNT - 2-ROOM NRW KkOTtV _____ „ goad location. FE 4-94M, MA 5-1410 OVC4. R ESTAURANT, 2W sale GOOD business. 55,201 FE %¥&. SOFT ICE tWHi. AND F00fi drive-in. Loot than 2 year*’«“ and arose rising each yaw-. La Man coR ot buildings and muI ment tor pash. 517,000. EM 3-411 DIXIE HIGHWAY » SOFT ICE .CREAM Rid Hght lunch baoktoii in busy Qiifgkn cantor an US-11 >3,500 cash and taka over laata. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 425-2414 H wo anawor 42S-14M ESTABLISHED BEAUTY SALON, TRAILER PARK 224 sites with city utllHk* awry tot. Wide saved roads parking areas. A terrific Inv ment opportunity- S1SA4N cash down required to handle. F” complete Intormation, call C. B. Chapin Assodotos I72N W. 2 MILE 357-S4N ___SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN WANT TO SELL?, LIST WITH WARDEN. FOR FAST ACTION CALL 333-7157 2434 W. Huron, Pontiac 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS sr WARREN STOUT. Rwltor 1450 N.^Opdykt Rm. . _ FE Mt4f- on your land contrac* small. Call Mr. Hitler,--------- Broker. 3»40 Ellrabeth Lake Road. Seasoned - well secured - lion on US-11 (Woodward A vs In North Detroit suburb. W thaw 20 per cent return on yo >00,000 tnwetmont. For compk Information and photos, .call Chapin Mottl Brokers 73N W. 2 MILE 357-04N SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN Hackett Realty play room. Sway fir and work Rtop, Got h— — tor heat.'Attached Scar garage. outdoor ffroptaca and NalghbwTi hy Don't Yi ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Lakaalde privileges and the ueo of f 40-ocre park ao with thk sharp two-bedroom with expansion attic, ’ 14x10' kttctwn, ceramic tile bath, ' basement, gas boat, landscaped tot -pWarad at tt£aas-*UN down. m, kltcn#n wwn ommy bpo*. i [ting mortgage. OR MAN down B com on 0 now mortgage. RAY O'NEIL. Realtor petto. Scar garage. FEW JR* tcapad. Sea thk Tovety home < >21.500. _ WEST AJPl - CjM*ln bwMan. GILES i Romeo Area—4 Acres Celltomla Redwood 3-bedroom ranch. Huge kg burning fir place with raked hearth carpeted, living room 2*x__. dining aM 11x13, kitchen wtm Hotaplnf built-in SB--- . 2 Ilk both., oil heat. Abickid'SC >3*.5N, terms. ' WE rlswi" ttSN cash terms. MY 2-5702. alFenX - rftukbER day area. Cottage, fritter sites W a S4»5. « down. N month. ftRi, swim, dubhouso. B>~-* Ft 4A)W, OR 3-1225, FRONTAGE, id mkpto. IV* TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE OR TOO EXPENSIVE SST wide 5-ocrt parcels, keeled lust northeast of Ortanvllk. •- — It good, toll on fl niRwd near Parry an US-12. Spa clous grounds Rid 5-room apartment tor owner. A real beauty for onlyttlON down. For c— tot, call or write: Chapin Motel Brokers 272N W. 2 Mile 357-04N SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN location. Let us thaw-you. LOTUS LAKE ESTATES Neat at a atn, with atmast new carpeting, throe bedrooms, tub baosmom, large dining area, garage, svorilaod tot, lou privileges ak a dandy ba«2i. Just SLUO INDIAN V1LLAOE -wins, gas*heet. Cc SSSL. T Bautmr jMTvaflifii 15 trees. Shown by' eppolntme only >12,230* WEBSTER SCHOOL - WjN™? homo, clean ,and sharp. Oak floo SS^liraplac* 'Vul'l boaarmnt. FA haiat. IVScar —— available. Cali N OFF BALDWIN - 4 Floyd Kent, Inc., Reoltor 22N Pixie Huty. at Tatograph FE Sdlll Open Eves. FE suet STOUTS Best Buys Today Colonial ibodraom family home to V lags ol Rochester, carpeted II Reeert Preptrty FE 8-0466 "BUD" Just Right *1r a small famllyi talc l «n. 1 badraom, oaat sift ho AT MORGAN LAKE. BALDWIN —J i-75 X-way. lN x ISO', thdm, boating. U minutes to- Fbn- ‘W«— 14IMOMP ACRBS Oak and white pi stream and two i homos, lust on the blacktop • gptog, MK loto North resort area, adlolnlng state torast. Hunting, fishing sw'~ mtog. MAN. IIN down. ttS i._ Jerry Moribw, Gladwin (Skadto) Michigan. OA UEO. A6un6 lak#« ts MiViutis to Bros. FE 4-4309, OR 3-12»5. o good madam hema and N X * bam with beaamant, ether bulk toga an property. 127AM, I3.M BEAUTIFUL SAcrO parcels to Me restricted area tor homes. IN : 441 NAN wHh 10 par cant dauyi. miles eft the I-7S Expressway. Ala a 4-acre earner parcel tor MAM. C. PANGUS, Realty UPPER LONG LAKE, LARGE COR-- nor wooded tot - canal. UN sulatod. >5,5M. I full LAKE PRIVILEGES with this three badraam heme to tllaabath Lake Estates. Only 4SM dawn. Let us shew yaw, Wl W. HURON CT, MLS FE WN2I Altar I SR. OR swi I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE -BROWN- REALTOR BUILDER SERVING PONTIAC SINCE 1936 RAMELINO RANCHER Lacatad Jn ana of Oxford's most exclusive areas, wo are you this beautiful 73-ft. custom-built rancher. There k carpeted taring room with a natural brick ftraplao I ream entirely carpeted; bright, cheery kitchen; IV* tile b t extra-large bedrooms with 010 closets; full basement; dan; I -decorated Florida room. The 200-tt. town k landscaped to per-a and you are right- across tha street from fha taka. 2Wear attached garage. Priced at *12.204 with It,IN down or your pro to trad*. CASS LAKB WOOD* arming homo to «ino Of Faunae's meet exclusive areas. One b Cass Lake. Lovely carpeted living room with a natural b ace; carpeted dining area; cherry ktlqlwn with plenty at I ipaeti ceramic tik both; attached garage; all aluminum ak screens; oak Moors; plastered wells and marble sills ThL > o deluxe homo In’ tounacuiata condition. Pricdd at HUM and OXFORD AREA m-bullt rancher situated on over halt on acre. KMt. carpeted I ream, finished family room, * real country-style kitchen, tochod Scar garage. Lake privileges on j takas. Priced at Ml SUM down or your probant homo to trade* DELUXE TRI-LEVEL Thto new trl-lovel'WM has aavon spacious rooms. 24-ft. taring r a picture window view ot the surrounding countryside; 3 large «ms, master badream 14x12 « ie a.dream country kHDwn with aH ' a pantry; IV* ceramic Hi* bi tot aad a built-in vanity; ttokhad famHy ream; Scar garage; rsaj- Pleasant Loktfront Attract iva brick and alumtoi rancher, toatures carpeted I tog room, 14x22 family roo bat water, garage, p* i. Priced at tio.ooo. v Brick Roncher You'll antoy more living pkaa to. this 3-bedroom brkk ra horn* near I-7S and MSUO; I lures big 24' living room, fireplaces, carpeting and drai tvuilt-ln stove, ovyn and ref erator, I1/* baths, full basamr . beautifully paneled recreation "room, attached Scar oarage, approximately one acre grounds. Priced at S22.2N. "Bud" Nichotie, Reoltor 42 Mt. C tomans It. FE 5-1201 After 6 P-.M. FE 54)198 Lots-Acreage S4 V, WOODED ACRC, BLOOMFIELD, mil utUMk* tarmi BB sontbte offr'lWilBt n.58NarX,Pe $500 Down Balanca on land contract, 2-bed room home, located ------ * Tel-Huron Confer. Basement, now gas furnace* 1-cer garage, Ida Fwpty 4-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT, WALK n ELWOOO REALTY NSSMO N2-N3 I ALL LAKES "SINCE 1225" NORM RICE—ON GREEN LAKE EM >2311 - CM >4412 WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 5-1145 ' —Listing—£ let. The .full price h pertanro If wo can I* y S1S.5M with MAN down or your present ROCHESTER ir Root Estate problems ARRO Trade Yours for Ours IDEAL FOR THE KIDDIES. Approx, acres plus neat 3-bed room ch. beautiful kitchen, toads at board! hill basement, coos nbtng. OH hast. All thk a to tar eaty sii,2M. Terms. PRICE REDUCED TO ft SAM thk I bid room wotorfrent ram Lara* family ream, attached 2 c BAST SUBURBAN - 1 L N. GROWN, Reoltor . 509 ELIZABETH UKi ROAD H 2-4810 OR IE 4-3564 OPEN 9-9 ~ MEMBER M.LS. OF ROOM FOR FRI- PHONE 682-2211 -1 M43 Coao-BlUaBath Road ' MULTIPLE LISTING SERViCE LAKE, ^___ CRAWFORD AGENCY CASS LAKE FRONT 3-bedroom bl-level custom-built 4 years ago to take full odvr-*— ot N toot at lake frontage. I leyel richly ponded, ranch ttoori and bianiad celttoe- -I____ hearth fire*I*CO. Andrson thermal LESLIE R. TRIPP, Realtor FE $4141 (Evfntoga Mt 7-2272) ClarRStOn Atio kotifiAC SECTION Rent with option to purchase — terms. Lake preparty. For' an oointment call Detroit coltect, WE COMMERCE LAK# PRIVILEGE toto. View of toko. EMS4W. Nome irrak. tfinik HUN ■-^^ttogTn rivTleo fireplace, doubt* garan exclusive IN. TT xiar. tSSAlir TbnM* FLATTLEY REALTY 22N Commerce - * overlooking W* « tor MAN. ' SYLVAN Waterford Hill Manor Large estate Iota in on* ot Oi land County’s moot beautiful at divisions. Priced from S3.7M. Don White, Inc. Wl Elxk Hwy. OR 44V ______Open Dolly to I p.m. 10 ACRE HOME SITES HfSO $6450 STM Down PARTLY WQODID Excellent location comer of ' Lake and Ormond Rd. AL PAULY, Realtor _ 45it Dtxto, rear OR UEt Ivantoja Fl *-7444 ACRES, NOT IN FARM 101-' EARL SUGDEN REALTOR Days, ONtoe-MO 4-3S3S Days, Offlca-440 40241 — ' Michigan loleFfi 10-ACRE SITES OR MORE IN THE SYLVAN 4**2IN Of 42S-IM4 120-ACRE MUCK AND PEAT FARM for riding a FE *4244* 304 ACRE DAIRY FARM. MOO-ant milking partor with areaant milk check from >1400 to MSN par month. Real gaod term land with sufficient outpulMUnge to operate thk (arm efficiently. There ‘— looting barn 72x71 total * 42x41 Ram 4oxf«. 2 milk k 20x2* and 1MI* Thk torn e bought Mr HUE with 44 ho ■eottk for >25,000 ait land tons N ACRES, DOTTEb 1 oak and birch. Exes m*nt red building a»L nit area. Agent. 42*4135. K'X225* LOT, DRAYTON WOODS. Edmore 2t„ SIAM. OR >*144. x 4S4 M WALTON RLVD. OF-aedjr L 2-3541 Fl^TrftST'tfl tt-t 1 “l| provemenls, phaaa Dt 1-4472. TN Jt. CLAIR AVENUE, dhtlOS’. Cheap. Improvements. 01 1-4477. AT MORGMi LAACTa L D W I N and l-re x-wey. 1*0x13*', “*~ (ish, boding. 10 igtogfaa N I Sl.ttS. S26 down, S» month. Bria..FE44IW. OR >t«41 : . BEAUTIFUL LARGE L 0 T iS Drayton VHaodS. only *1250. Terms ^ ^Wy REALTY ____________FE 4-2511 BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS Sale BoNooee Pregirty 57 DORRIS SIX-ROOM ALUfillNUM SIDED HOME WITH 22T an DM* Hwy., SN dtep. Ideal tor mete' wonderful Investment Ot I within i rear* should b SllNtl MOTEL, 8-ROOM CC HOME situated on i M enhanced by towering she add take frentage, JW « elderly todir must sell. 150x141 ANracHut -tot L___■ — ftold't ftaost subdivisions. Ctty water and paved street, next to beautiful homes. School but service, 14.101 terms. CoH. tor ptat m<,,'HOU*E«liAN-$F1T»tEY. ^/fwjwNa Good 1-SCrt bulldtag sit*, W n from schools and shopping Clerkston. V* mlto from 1-71 i DIXIE HIGHWAY HOME AND COMMERCIAL LOT kcetod JU ‘ west of Telegraph Rd. Lot WtlX perfect toganan-far-g voterInorlo attic* or antique' salesroom, 04,2 - Consider trod*I * * STATE OUT-PATIENT HOME sti250. Walking pMtonto who a . seminormal help with alt war CLARKSTON AREA Mere homeslt* on Rattatoc Lake Rd. near £Sl(4. Gantly sloptr-well restricted. Only tidML Tire Clarkston heal Estate IBM *. Mato MA 5-1 ?i3aPto* . Grocery, SDD and SDM Grossing over >300,000. Popular III of groceries. Prime location m ample parking. Reel estate ai BATEMAN 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS gently wanted. See us beta 'WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 1454 N. opdyke Rd. FB 5-1145 Opan Even, 'tit I p.m. mortgages avail; ulloucta. Sr. 482-ARRO REALTV mortgage on om acrr of. wtih mm fren*a»i. *«■_*»- pralsal to*. E. 0*^£toi0ju}' CglaSk Lean eamric*. 4*2-0 rot lljm EQUITY IN 3-BEDROOM randt tor MxM hswaatrallar. OR M5i IVONTIAC. 1257 FORD, MAKE AUBURN HEIGHTt AREA LAVENDER RfcAL ESTATE 334-M12 MSN** „*IMay CB *A0t6 AND JUNIOR ORACWI, washer, bird tM cage, TWn. sistor car rmto, and miac. tor ___wtradat E*U&T 1 OOultV IN CEMETERY LOTS OR >3473 Dot* Hampshire NEW - USED LAWNMOWERS. WE buy. tan. trad*. Ml iwaTlywrev* hardware, 742 W. Huren. FE MHI dag.' CAR OR 344N. PAN AMERtCAIT 1 S*hCh1727. ____ HMMI tights, Excellent condition, OR >1221 ■ * VWB MriTbP DAKS BLACK* SIZE 34, 31 Inssom. One dark blu* and one sky bit;*. Also, regular alyl* light grey summer weight atone size 34 with It Inseam. Condition - ilka new. Price tti a pair. Blue aport jacket with -011*0 overplaid kde Meotitili G—G» AS I SOFA, CUSTOM, S-PObT, LIKE now, Irenrltt. Fl 2-44*1. i Fitdk Ilf Wrfit " springs and Innoreprlng mat-a IN. Sava Uiad Auto. Ft 3 ROOMS 3RANO NEW FURNITURE ONLY $3 WEEKLY 7-ptoc* living i large mlrra - iwigi | _____m *8rm*C* jRT for $288 CAIN, LAYAWAY. R-Z TERMS Batwaan Paddock and CWy H*H mOYEl , CASH FOR LAND CONTRACT* -H. J. Van W*H. 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR >1254. I NfeEb LAND CONTRACTS, RBA- 'Roflia Maike new, Itoywood Wakefield Included. 43*1 Mlddk L*k* Read, Clarkston. MA »tMl *Xt2 LINOi-iUM RUM .... S 2J2 PLASTIC mi ........ tc Ea. VINYL ASBESTOS (Random) 5c Ea. CERAMIC Till ...... Sc Ea. ASPHALT TILE (RANDOM) 4c Ea. THE FLOOR SHOP 22SS ELIZA1ETH LAKE ROAD 12 cubic foot fraatar, floor modal. " CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 Auburn Ay*. FE 4-1373 21-Inch 0i tv, wifw’ Ooors' I-InCH RCA TV, BLOND OR MA-hogany. Used, New picture tubes — guaranteed. Mil Petrusha £ Sons, TahHuron Shopptog Canter. 34-INCH FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC stove, S21 call attar 4 p.m., EM >0412. JPElOlDAtRK ELECTRIC store, exctlknt o -a-r,^Tt,*4>r ■mf; electricTtove, tablPTS^ ■Good condition. 4*20272, Trey. 1241 NORGE AUTOMATIC WASHER, b lan6 (imtUufn .Zan NET $1,000 A MONTH In hwy, small town restaur_ Vary- reasonable lease. Requires about tlMO dawn. MICHIGAN SEASON Mfl!lCAIM?b£r'SAVINGS”*; ~L< rtSNj 71 W. Huron. FE 44B41. 61 (Llcansad Money Lander) BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $1,000 OFFICES IN ■ Pontiac—Drayton Plalns-Utlc* WwkA LaMEIrtotogbam LOANS S2S to SIAOt Iakgjg1*iaym«nt Flan BAXTER LIVINGSTONE 9Tw Chapin Motel Brokars MO W. 2 MILE 357-4400 SOUTHFIELD. MICHIGAN Partridge FAMILY GOLD MINE Busy, modem Forty Store ... . choke locetton. It's large parking area makes It a vtrtwl gold mbr You'll ttod It a financially rawer Ing and Intoresttog occupation, beautiful homo Is Included In th opportunity. Your personal sail faction will only ba exceeded I only your bank account. Bacau. of health, owner mutt retire to Artiom at once, a* he la toiling at a very tow dawn payment to FISHERMAN'S HAVEN Like t dream com* truol Beei tolly equipped, well stodnd. tre farm tor you. Big, ready restaurant market tor all you can rale*. You'll enjoy the sight of fishermen trying their luck In yew ponds, at a price par Inch for Rah caught, ai war — yaw commercial business. Ri tor a trash trout dtomr restau it you want to expand, stuas > MEM. FAETEIOOE 1 ASSOC., INC. OFFICES THRUOUT MICH. 1 INTERNATIONAL TRADERS CLUE COAST-TO-COAST TRADES -RE UlSt LOANS S2S to St ,040 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. » B. LAWRENCE • F« >0421 LOANS TO $1,000 Usually on tint visit. Quick, friendly, helpful. FE 2-9206 is th* number to call. OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac Slat* Bank Bldg, f:30 to 5:30 — Sat. 0:20 to f LOAMS “~ TO $1,000 T* con solid at* Mill Into on* monthly payment. Quick service, ww raurtaona — Credit A-1 VALUES Adjustable bedfram* ......... SMS Hollywood haadbaard ....... S 5.2S Cotton mattress .......... S 2.25 Innarsprlng mattress ....S12.25 4-drawer Chest ........... S14JS 2-piece living room suit* .... SI2.25 4-ptec* badream mil* .....- sot.15 MANY OTHBE BARGAINS Open Til * p.m. Mon., Fit. Til 2 p.m. BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO. 4470 DIXIE HWY. Drayton Plains 673-9441 APPLIANCE BARGAINS “ Refrigerators .......w....... 022 2T awctrlc rang* ........... 022 12" portable TV .....,...... S4I Console stereo ............. SM FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE Tatograph Read W Mlto South of Ordtara Lake Read. 46Wral Dlr'tft ’PI''115IUt freezer. Excellent copdRtan, 42> APARTMENT flip llANGE. USED Fetrujha, 1 Earn, Tel-Huron .Ping Cantor. _________ APARTMENT SIZE STOVE, GOOD condition. 820. FE 2-0353.____ AUTOMATIC DIAL ZIG-ZAG SING-er sowing machine In wood table. Do** fancy and practical tawing by dtoMag. Used. Payments of . >5.20 o month or full price 042. N. Party St. 2 to I Bo Dally. Sat. 2 to 1 WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $1,000 Wb will b* glad to help you. STATE FINANCE CO. SM Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574- POPCORN WAGON AND ESSEN ^■daiMniMit. Unlimited figgjBf to location available, S440. Partridge uttfully tol * WiMtlft verythlng you naad- Oar can trvica. >3.750 buys o sacu and a growing business. Ho ry on Ettol MEM PARTRIDGE 1 ASSOC, IN OFFtCBS THEUOUT MICH. Tiujxi CASH f.cxms to $3,000 ■ Consolidate your Mill with only am payment. No cloelag costs and lit* neurone* Included an unpaid be lone* at NO EXTRAtott. Pasay over o canvenlent term Pham or Apply hi Person .Family Accopfanco Corp. 317 National BMf. 10 W. Huron Telephone FE MS22 hogany chart, walnut chats cabtoat, walnut vMlty with full length mirror, kitchen table and 4 chairs. Mlsc, articles. EbbaoniBla, Lavender, 334-3012. BEDROOM SUITE, DEHUMIDIFIER, tot of metal ‘-— —3E- dryaf. OLl-BEDROOM i ream suites, ammg ream suites. Gas and alactric ranges. TV* and mlscaWanaaui Coast «*o u>. Lines, 371 E. Flk*. _ Closeout 1244, new $170 FrtgkMre MaSttilng dryer, 0121 x OE ir tortabto TV, new *02.25 GE IE Refrigerator SISO.OO Admiral AR-Speed Hff l Automatic, with records S32.2S The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of Panftoe SI W. Huron FE 41255 4LACR. Abb white biNirnE with 4 choirs, SHB. 7-toot gram BLOND DROP-LEAF TAOlC PAbi tton. 402-4141. Home Owners NEED CASH NOW? CALL ANY TIME LOAN-BY-PHONE . :• SYSTEMS WIDOWS, PENSIONERS CAN EE ELIDIBLE.' CHECK, LOWEST RATES t 6.25 «*.» 1 lad mortgegei slightly higher Borrow for ANY useful purpose on sol (date Bills New Can Haw Furniture -Hama repair and modernize Fl 8-2657 I you cmT call ... Mall l Loan-By-Phont son's Furniture, 210 E. Pike. BUNK BiM. COMPLETE 024, COFFEE . AND dUp' TABLES. lamps and drapes. 4(0-2154. COLONIAL FURNITURE, LARGB aetocNon, everyth tag tor Mar bam* Family Ham* FurntoMaga, 2125 bStoittofy mt. TNtoriiiB. Dark ArowN davenport, vary good condition, ss*. OR S7427. deEp FkitfliE LikK NEw >125, *2,000 . ELECTRIC ANb OAS EAnGCI RE- FRENCH PROVINCIAL DESK WITH NCIAL DESK WITfi top iTBr. Ex-n. *40., OL 1-4702. 4P4nth, m OxtifUB. Ml 7-1*02. OE. DRYER .Ml. iPWING. SET t ■ISO 2 OrtUinQ 18DIIGp InfrlT BfGfl f l THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST i 10&4 0—IS ••fflteftK HSTRiNT-pUsH 6v85£i»l' yU^tuYTON «LEC-■nt lllw new. rn. 34X431. HOWNTAL^IID ^ANO MATTRISS, kirby.used.in oooo c6ndi- WHS, TV 1 Mh> TRIPLE "A" BARGAINS'" * Si.IS par weak.: GOODYEAR STORE frsr ■NieNwiw »y nllmawi articles. 1135 E. GW ptr M of U Mil* *nj Rochester Rtf. MU 3140. PIANO OH AUTiMAtit iuMCThlC WATER SOFTENER RENTAL. UN-•bnnad gtltaaigy n gor^manth. zig-zag .. *5*J0 ... MAM ..... |P OR SHIM E KITCHEN *tT, Nr S* MitciBnww tf VA ALUMINUM SIOlNO, STORMS, "■ilnftf. vinyl iMAiaIiwMM or tor la Is. Quality ! lew S3. PE 3*545 VALLELY OL IMP ANTIQUE CHAIR, .CHEST AND ssH; 3K@S3B-? ' LITTLE JOE'S ~ 1 BIG TRADE IN SALE Wtf Mt... Sri HIGH AS SM HIGH AS MO , shop our saroaIn RASEMENT Lamp, a. Odd ■-Z term, — Buy — Sell — Trad* Mon. thru Pit. 'til f'te.m. Sat. 'til 4 LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE INI BALDWIN AT WALTON PI 1-4*43 Pint truffle light south of i-7Sr across fnrn Aha, Super Market. LIVING R06M SUITBWjPLAT- -- LINOLEUM RUGS SJ-M EjifcH Plastic Well tile .........lc Ey Calling MM*jwl'- paneling, dmay BAG Tile. PI tmfTIMS W. Huron $5*.50 GRADE A LEtTiR FILS AT *“ “-----ti Printing and Offlce ItM GMC ISM GALLON OIL TRUCK "lh electric hosa real and ip neter $1,000. t*M Pertf 7-ton •I dump with hydrauayar MOO. rdfc**sB"us Mb' MISCELLANEOUS HOUSEHOLD tufmty!.$3A07a°. salt. Several rows stack. AMs aeverul ,»« m remnants. Select from our stock. Wa also specialize In carpet end furniture cleaning. We take trade- Avon Troy Carpet Setae, tSM I. Auburn Rtf., Rochester, past John * **NEW and USlD Stones at St JS ear weak and up Refrigerator $1-45 per week and up, HsarfSS®Sw~ set and electric dryen at S1JP «e"uS FORUTERRIPIC BUYS GOODYEAR STORE IS S. Cess________PI Mf ALL POPULAR GAl ANb dlL FDlt-naces expertly Installed. Prde estimates. AM Itobtlng B Cooling. OR 1-4114 ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN . PI 37471 BATHROOM FIXTURES, bRautiful singer IN CAftiMVt Used. Equipped to do menogram-iidna, itency daifgw buftanholaar -etc. New payments of ILN a month or full price SH.il. Domel-co, Inc. HS7 f. Telegraph. Mirada Mile. Next to Pontiac State PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES Spring clearance of kitchen cablr displays. L aafei S17_MwdL—- f/M ■■MP < -mr awp~ quarters. Opdyko Mkt. PIHNl BLUE LUSTRE NOT* 6NLY kfbs ----|| pf esB Wit leaver -1*- d tatty. Rent electric SI. McCehdwss Carpi RE-ISTAhLliH YOUR Ckiblf Why do without the thinos i neat tor your home? I carpeting and appliances...... could give you a second gltanss. Family Heme Furnish tags, SIM Dixi* Hwv* ear. of Tologrogh. -----RdFRIOfeRAtoftS, &UT~ Coeat Wide Van Llnaa _______ 371E. Pike_____________ REFRIGERATOR S3J, GAS StOVE REFRIGERATOR, S20 , Bottle Gos Installation Two 11mpound cylinders end equipment, SU. Greet Ptobio Get CO. PI BSPS._____________________ •RACE YOURSELF FOR A YHIlLL “it time you ooo Slue Lustre n rugs. Rent electric them- I____si. Foy-Jahneon Point Co. CIR6J' fi-UORESCENT LIGHTS. Nowsst lights tor kitchens, Si2.*5 value, se ts, factory menaiLjMa* yen Fluorotcsnt, 353 Orchard Lk. COLOSPbf PEEP FRlkiC,Jl tjj. ft. S17S. Taylor Tap stniler, ST, PE rbmolpIlihg apartm)nVI. excellent condition rafrigaralori cheap. PE 4-S4I3_____ EPOSSESSiD SINGER 327 LATE -Wr,, RBI___ - ■ wdl a 3®= __________J. McCIU and Sarvlc*. SINOfl AUTOMATIC r dX?J ieds. $47.25 b D. ftJ. CABINET SHOP CusluWfcablnota, Formica tops, satan dTFtarmlca, sinks, hoods , and faucets. OBMPARI OUR M4 W. HURON SINGER ’ sewing » Dial AM pjgIOc.b^G buttonholes. makes _________ . Used. Tske over SPECIAL nu«MiiuiiH"r “ “nWSfas fxii rug k3uded.*All'for Sift, WYMAN FURNITURE CO. SAWS* FFg.«TM USED EUCTROLUX, LATB Mofr USED ELECTROLUX, ^"h^UuidV tachment. Cash price reenmem. vfflW 3H3. McClures Salsa end Service. USED TvT .................»" ?i Sweat's Radio B Appllenco Inc. Uin PuiNITURE - Mb Wdtta full ol hotel quality funwHli, Beds, ' carpet, GKSMfe, couches, ot drewers, choirs, lamps, ■tuftod placet. Nyw on dlselay ln thar Information. • WASHER SM. ELECTRIC STOvi, \ $35, rafrlgarator with top freazar S4t, gat stava SIS, ratrlgar-*-$25, ff* TV SIS, V. Harris, Whirlpool imperiXl ------------ SIB universal mtrtlM M ratlfB $75. Llansl Train sot SIB All A-t USED GAROAIN STORI AT OUR1S wrWlCl sfOk* ONLY |axp.."r If pbi&xr-..pi 454 l^&rsa cTSistd..^ IS Mila Road. *lvikAL"6LO DESKS, CHESTS bf drawers. ^M^Amtceiji,, Wf Ookhlll, Holly. Vi Ml. I. old U.810. (NAlnUY WWiTAIY^WS taflrTYAI 40 WATT ST|RIO_ AMPLIFIER. ■ r - fota. S4B FI 4440S. ___fH —.JmICH CAill ll. FI S' rarfc_ color from SIMS. _ j > Dolby W PI MLchWt... EiJAIAMi OP usib dPHg ■R Walton TV PI HjP Opan M sis E. waiton Camar of Joafyn AtCCfflOfflONIO AND QUARAN; LIMITED TIME ONLY — PRII COMPLETI with aqulpmanf. $141. MY 3-4151. RADIO antiNMA YOwlft, CARAT BRILLIANT SLUl DIA- OUAaJE^'«S,plusd w H6kSEPOWER lawn skklNkL- lasgsywr-0- ( _ . .ysesn, ....NLU drayton plywood am Waat WaBm or hiii STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLE sinks SSt.tS. G. A. Thompson, TOM MSS PORTABLE SWIMMING POOL STALL SHOWERS, ST7.S5, COM-piets with foucots. G>. Thompson INTERIOR bOOltS, Storms and screens, esse 33S-16S4 after 4 STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucets nM curtaTns SSt.50 valua.S34.5S. Lavatarlet complete with faucato S14.SB to* lets SIMS. Michigan Fluorascant, 3P3 Orchard CABINET SIN ___ ... ... ik, comp lata, II hHsttsa, Ifc-nEW. IIS W. LAWRENCE IT. Jvorythlnu to moat vaur Clothing Usitf i x"iB m fIIT. PE MOP. USED PURNlYuRf, APPLIANCES. Chantflar Healing, OR 1N1LL 'MILLW MACNINI P6k Blnch walk. 3SB4SI7._____________ WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AT. ^—mt prtaso, OR 34747, HoihI Tpats-MocktRary 41 MAMIYA-FLEX C-t TWIN LEN^ COMPLETE STOCK OP PIPE AND fittings. Custom thrtadlM, 8n»r"“ its tarvica. Montcalm Supply, W. Montcalm. PE S-47IL T LOCK YOURSELP OUT, an Mirra hey matfe at War-:k Supply Co. lbs Orchard Lako ■ 4SS-SSW. flUkTH'itfcM tllATlIk. tfBAlCV — “Slink wim lAjaV“ **1- UMUfflfflPtaor Merdcnor 100,000 ITU, $75 up. mX a«t 'up.""Lhj»i? supply. O'Brian Haatktg, PE dktUXf. IWHIIL TNAHir l FurnEr __________PE S-74S1 11 HAGGERTY HA5 ITI Now 1x4 Ooug. Pir ... 04Wc iin. ft. NEW ft«S Dpt*.. HAGGERTY LUMBER . MA 4-tlll HlbSTkOM DELUXE TWIN STRCH.-tar and buggy combination *Hth canopy—axewant condition *12-4031. IM S 4alyAgI dutLit, IvIkV thing brand now. PIfd salvage. LUMBER Buraieister's MAtiw. ' MASONITE SAli Vhx4xS standard 1LM l%x4xS tamparsd S3A5 <^x4xt standard S2.55 Cassis MS43 PONT IA I BALDWIN m Av1?CABINifS WMOadPks MOVED TO 40 CONGRESS tt.l DB^NAo1>TuV?L^5lr^sl)MPS ■aatonitWJir -- !■ Moiw»ta rW# -.oowm -..iretlpi rr«£5?.cH *ton« ______ S47.M) Bataao___________I SMI Laundry trey, trim, Sta.tJi shower stalls whh Mai, SSltSj Mow) sink, SLPSt Leva^ SS-PSt ZZT *•*---• -- -=7^-1 and IING COe _ —s up. p&i c [ SAVE PLUMGIH w».PEe-wi. $110; ■HOfSMm conaitloiL taw 9 Erring iUSMSAGE |fA L E, THURSDAY, Friday gnp Saturday, ww Avaunt, ACCORDION, GUITAR LESSONS. Sataa-Servlce Pulanackl, OR 3-55N. YOUR CHILD SHOULD HAVE MU-alc lessons, private plane organ, guitar. Call today ter further Inlor-motion. Gftll ftOttint MUSIC iHoTpragr OffkGlytpuR* 72 SEVERAL OFFICE DESKS. CHAIRS ItiGwcaaaa and mduidrlal fluarat-* Ughts. Pontiac Farm and In-ttrlal Tractor Co. FE 4-1441. CASH REGISTER. 1 UNIT SELF-cantoInad frozen food counter (S toot), 11 Soot dally caaa (1 shetvesi, S tigr, compreaaar, hamburger grkxter, OR 3-ye*. sandwich eaww, prhL^twmburger broiler, S and S setpat aada die- wisher, cash reglater. IS R. steel drug Island alactrf^ maat^ grinder^ TALBOtT LUMBER Int ctaSNUt I 3.S-J gallon. 5 Oakland A SpirH»| Goods 12 GUAGE REMINGTON SPbRTS- 15-FT. SWiYZER CRAFT, M HORSl-power Evenruda motor. Electric starter, skis and all accessories. Excellent condition, SIM. . Call at-tar 4;3G EM MSSS. n AUTOMATIC mDSSBERG AND WE DARE ANY FOOD SERVICE TO MATCH THIS. "Why buy a traamrt" Use our loaner freazar If naadad. Take advantapo at these praat savings delivered — ----- — For tree toformotton. 447-1577 CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT 1 Ford loaders. 1 Case bulldozers. n iqutammt o IT 437-745$. nipt Dtvkw _____________________MMigi usko haN6 ' GUWi ANB IWt ATTENTION-ATTENTION The greeter Metropolitan Society ter the Appreciation of Fine Aria la heldbG audition Alia. “ Miss Faya, 547-SaM. PUT' CUIIRIY-A?ffi6Vlb for school uaa, S*». Spicer, 343-3S73 or PI EALDWIN OKGASbftlC GIG Ak. I-A TOP SOIL, SLACK DIRT, PILL, sand, gravel, jMtaamdraasanablB Judd Parguaen, OR 3-4SIS. v-1 klCH nLACk FARM SOIL OE-llvared. State fame.' Trucking, trenching, gjgWg gyasami installed, repaired. Morrle Whal, OR 4-1741. :-Y ■sHREOblD blaCK BIIt. SSS 1!8 tSSi Lake Rmidl 1 mile t. of Dixie. OR J-5S50 or OR 34447. XlwaVT^mt *IfcBIT""lil'™*IIKCB I, gravel, Sep aall. BWrs. Sup-F Bud Ballard. OR 3^773. •ill MALE^i Pit, sand, o*av- c4n^ 11 TENT, STOVE. LANTERN, excellent condition, 17 wm. MARMABUKE By Anderson ft Looming AQC. 4BPOOT^ MOBILE HOME, _ 'iSfe-, ™_ H lank, lawn chalrt, 755-5441. ANOTHER FIRST r wide. Whh living tea lion. Bob Hutchinson 4381 Otxto Highway OR 51302 Plain* Sal. *4 “Now there’s t picture for your picture window!” hiwfljNjjW ti 147 DODGE BUS CONVERTED' tor trayat uaa. Must aaa to an.: praclata, FE I-47DS after 5p. EVERY UtMMY 7:30 P.M. ____ ___________ 7:|» PjS. EVERY SUNDAY Ml PJ)4v Sporting Good*—All Typos Das' Prize* Ivory Auction Wa Buy—Satt-TradB Retail 7 day* Consign merit* Walcoma AUCTtOIS nlgnment* w BBS AUCTI IBOf Otxla Hwy. to I p.r 4 p.m. . T_ town daalar, at umd frailer price* taaiTOgan Bally f a.m, Sunday* E f“ ** ache factory , BILLCOU GUNS-GUNS-GUNSI Wa carry me camp tote line of aliOWNtiB WWTMBflY WINCHESTER-COLT PISTOLS —Try them before you buy— WE'DO ALL OUk OWN |aHM.Mauntlno—Gun Smithing RIFU^^N^I^^kPflll# * CUFF*0DR*EYErS Gun and Sport Cantor 15210 Holly Rd., Holly Mil 4-4771 Open Dally and Sundays GUNS-G0V-*lLL-tRADl- EwwikaC STS sTTr1-B IOTI GOAl ratagraph. QiAlC- Opdyka Hardware. PE B 6t B Auction 5089 Dixit OR 3-2717 SATURDAY. AUGOst If anchor —, Jewelry « ClartorC. Kre*t off Dye Road watt Oat off I-7S at M-21 Interchange •mt no we«t. Stan Perkin*. Auc-tienawr. Swam Creak. 4i5-f4eo. THURSDAY. XuflUlt ». JlH arf"-Located at M ^PkCMNar Bulld- M?ch. Evarybeffl^' welcome! rcwna eyt and help support thl* worthwhile causa. Wa Raya aoma vary fine manpantlee in.lu X. 14j> 3XSZ Cash Door Prizes at lusty, Aactionl-, gAWHW “nAILtjL ILfW - *250. 411 I. Lika Angtlus Rd. I?* hURTIW^lFfi Ni your d Jack o coma tr liber- — bulk auctioneer' far 'mffls. .... Ml and effort far mi mi, Wa have TVs, electrical aaplfancai. furai-FE* 2-0*23 ’ n*11*- Auettonaar. TODAY 1$ fHE DAY I AUCTIONEERS’ JUBILEE new — used — abused. This sale It haM only once a year. Hall'* Auction haa bean chosen. So coma ana and all and bring your consignment*. Food and refreshments. This Is vary rate and unique to see. Leads and laada of mdea. sold tt>* modem way. Ilia auction way IS or mem auctioneer*. Con- by 15 or slgnmenfs Hall's Auction Sataa W. Clerktton Rd., Lake Orion ’ *4141 MY 31171 Sponsored by the Michigan Aucftonoori Aweclatlon DEMONSTRATORS (U It-foot Centuries with Iwl fully aathcanfahtair......... TOM STACHLER AUTO 8. MOBILE SALES SOU W. Huron U. 337-45 PhtefcafTlM ***" ** -----vftLdHMdV, NIC-------- Produce Specials Tag quality peaches tiff a busht If lb. Michigan potatoes it.to bushel, aegtoe all uariaftog si.... a bushel, other araduca at good erica*. 74505 Highland Rd. M5S, 1 mile waat el Airport, 4755431. ,3055 Gregory Read, ( gelffilie FftsH" BCfWlE-'BBfir-AP- plat, paachas, pears, plums. Dlahls Orchard and ° CMM- Mill, 1471 paachai, t r i _____S2.t5 bushel wk._. »llmrtod. Oakland . Commerce KB.. Milford belw .eke Rd. I li PEACHfcS-Af^LtS Richhaven and Halahavan peaches for aatbw, freertng, canning. Early afgtoa. SarfMf dbaswJM jm||m end. Oakland Orchards, 111 Commerce Rdu 1 mild ea Milford between Burnt an# Lake Rd. S to I mHv < Pear* piCK YbuK'ffwTf 'pkASs;' bRino 017-4442" DAVID BRADLEY SMALL TRAC ter with Imata manfv SIM. 144-453* LAST wtffex TO MAKp YdUR BID. all mam ef new, mad or 1 ... teaewrt and tarwi aqulpmant are avaltobte at sale. Devi* Machinery Co., Orfonvllle, NA 7-31*1. NEW AR6 UllB TRACtaiS AND t C PaAMALL rTOTTi end culflvetorTOA Hie*. ____ HARTLAND ARI ____J Phene: HARTLAND MU. TRACTOR AND 4 ACCfeSSORlIS. PART# AND SERVICE. 13P00T VACATioNETTE, SB 15^TVACAff6k tRAlLfef'Wfc rent, tliaps 4. FE 5WTI. 19 Beat* — Acceeeeriei Heed Aate-Tradk Nrte 112 i 14-FOOT STEELINER DAY CRUI5 LhfyCwSninX?,fc. btaTTaSy 155 h3. Norberg angina. 51 rw-ducfIon gear, ptanfy ef rear* — 75 HORMPOWBR JOHNSON AND CenfmTPK e-WH ALL-WAV) - - 1 BOATS—MOTORS MERCURY-BCOTT McCULLOUGH traftan Marine Acceeeeriei CRUISE-OUT MAT SALK 3S3pSams 07-1117. Nodyyr Hwy., Drayton Plalny OR 511*1 WM -43POBT MARKING, to! / OA »1tw or FE 5447*_____ AIRSTREAM lightweight TRAVKL TRAfLlRS Sloe* mt Guaranteed ter IK baa them and gal a damenttr llor at Warner Trailer Salty 11________ W Huron (plan to loin on* of MARLETTK, VAOAB W*l>y Byam’i exciting caravan*).' I ner, skyline, Saner iIRO • FLOW LIFETIME GUAR- M wide. 40 “ ante*. Frolic, Trotwood. Garway. Wolf*. Comanche, Driftwood, Tour-a-hama and Baa Lina. Truck ^-T^LER SALEB^O ____..AL, SMI William* Jr?" Road. Drayton Plalny OR 55*41, ALL NtW 1964 •WeSrU&tAVBli wicHfvY mm 11WNNI t, sin or 4-iea*. ABOND. GARD- campars am JACOBSON rintal; See Gem, Merleft*. « Avalairs, Hollys, Tawas, Crtt Travel Trailers -- JN, i *4*5. 330-3514. it 1-75 Exprei___ CAMPING SITES McFwIy Resort, lies MIS, Orteiv »ate - Metofy Lake Oria* NiiM CRrs-Trvckt 1B1 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLBR-FLYMOUTH INC. *11 S. Woodward Ml Fill' — aVHTO PI 3 Did You Know? VILUGE RAMBLER Pays mar* far ANY make uaad Call tor Appraisal 010 S. Wwiaard E~2-3*4) "High Cai*LFri*g* ' Sullivan Bulcfc-Pantlac Sataa M&M * MOTOR SAIi$ I gay higher ariaaa for MANSFIELD AUTO SALES a’m bu|rin^aharp lata ' 1104 -Baldwin Avy FE 5-5900 SPECIAL PRICE PAID FOR 1*051*41 GARS Misn.............. 731-02*0. ________ H0RT6N-BSA 5-SPEED DUCATI PONT iAC CYCLE SALES 372 S. Saginaw PE 44545 SIMPLEX KART, 4 HORS I POWER ■Wir1' cart ■ . W&v m engine, hlgtwst rea- Bicycle) 15 2—24-INCH eOY'f BIKES, tims and tubas. PR4-SS3I. New SCHWINN, 14-INCH. BOY'S EXCBL-lent condition. 332-2221. teats—Accessories 97 14-FOOT CUSTOM BUILT SPEED- DM Thunderbolt radtog engine, and traitor. S100. Fy-2Kf. 14-FOOT speedliner trailer, Kk —- "it-offer. -1 shape. 474-1240, I4WFOOT THOMPSON, — traitor, toll vlrtyl —— .. inp, many axtray ail naw t sacrifice. OR 30053. ___________^. Lots af axtray Attar 5 pjn. U& 31343. 17-p66f W'CENTUkY. 3UN SLID sacrifice 31740. CABIN CRUISE!. It im-to appreciate. S3 FOOT CHRIS-CRAFT CONSTAL-latton . 1*42. fully *qulpp*d, like naw, detaily FE 2-4132. VAN'S AUTO SALES 44N Plato Hwy. OR 31355 top i for ClKaIi cars -or FOR "CUBAN" USID CARS GLENN'S ~ WanTIA: itoi-iM Cars. Ellsworth f- AUTO SALES TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 431 OAKLAND AVR. .■ " '• FE4-4I47 '■ " ' ■ ' . WE NEED YOU! LATE MODEL ,USEt) CAR TODAY 1*40 TO 1*43 MODELS "Top Dollar Paid" - John McAutlft* FORD Jmk Cors—Trucks pickup. OL 31011. 1957 FORD Pickup” with V-0 anghtok rad tow haator, hr owner, now truck tradtl SM dawn, 0MJ7 gar mwdh. PATTERSON CHRYSLRR-PLYiiOUTH V AL IANT-OOOOE TRUCKS I “ “ —KHfSTln or 50,00* mil* W- hi sagIBST FORD CO. TRUCKS 1964 Ford 1963 Ford. £si23s!,!S,',* 1963 Fold 1963 Ford H-m tractor, MB a . ■—-—I Maas as! rw truck, n straight ny other (5) 1963 Fords F-OSto whh VS angtey S-apaatf axles, many oikar axtray gtlei la am Over 30 Trucks TO CHOOSE FROM Ferguson _*tor PMD Oat 01 1-9711 G.M.C. Factory Branch NEW and USED TRUCKS FI 5-9485 ttoaaar. OR 31313. 1965 GMC TRUCK SALE INVENTORY REDUCTION STAKES ft VANS l(M CHIVY/14' Stoky V+ egggM INC chevy, IP Van, v-Ufc W« OWWt« MC »i8ii Pert Dealer. ol Y Attention AH Sports Like «M km ratal buretac «Ml «f a true sporli car? W* have th* an* tar you now and at •_ ntaj*~-tovlng prtca. A triumph Roads will runs Hkt now. Roll pries * Coordinator. 'LLOYD'S New location 1250 Oaklond Ave. RIMW fUSTIN I HbeerryWAMfT_______ OJTMM»KS‘DEAtlR #dh 1 SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oaklond PE 5-9421 Renault ^ OLIVER BUICK and JEEP Career ot RHw and Cast PIA-HB1_____________ [BUICK, 2-OOOR HARDTOP W, ttS-2173. ■OiCtC StlCK, ItUNS GOOD PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES BfgPAKLANP PE MBI t**7 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, GOOD •sndttlor wk BOwj Lucky Auto * 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 JOHN McAULIFFE ROND K Princeton, can B* M l«i0PBUl6c CdNVCRTiBLin •r staerlnn and tiralrss « Mass, m >43470*. 1961 BUICK PARADE SHOW CAR Lato model^ wtth lm M .retra*. C "dr dtaartTR—Rtaasr Rrakes I pka Mm, >1,4#_______________ ladTiutcic ^fecial, .dirt. dRi 1*42 LaSABRE. POWiR, Ml nil tUltk WILDCAT i-ftodR hardtop. automatic, power *“ mg and brakas, aaddlt tan mmeMn* Interior amt whits TERS&N ttc7lRfR0LBT,*O0.; Comblns this CADDY'S matchlass styling and you Mao a package that wowW dsttsRt anyons. Jut SI 147 weekly with no money daws Call Mr. Dais, Credit Coordinator. LlncotnMancwry-Comat Now Location 1250 Oakland Avo. RE 3-7M1 sit—mm ConVIrYible. a corvette aspeIP,1V4 §1.-no. RE At*77 after 1 g-nk a chevy, 2-006R, ACYLitobtR wsT chIvy, harot6K \# tits. Pontiac Auto Broksrs, Walton at Rsrry. RE 44100. IM7 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, GOOD nZv >«fter IMS CHEW _J-oooA b4u Aik. *200. OR MEM. eddveTTE H >UIL"1HJI& ttons, hardtop, naw Intsrlor, and extra*. MA A7*3S.______. TWA* ' Mb IMPALA CONVERT. 54*5, MA 4-300$. CHdvV STAfiON wao6n, sun powsr, IlfS. Cooper 1»Jt CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, POW-SROLIDE, R A D I O, HEATER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Payment* at stl.ra nsr. n — Sas Mr. Parks at Harold T Ford, Ml 4.7500. If* CHEVROI.it 4DOO R BEL , Air, 1 cytjnrer radio, n a a t r -whitewall tires, *575. Private oi or. Mi 44144 attar 4 p m. ", fad MANY CARS! Late model and transportation *25 UP ECONOMY CAR? MM DIXIE SHELTON Credit dr Budget Problems? We Can Finance Youl j 100 Cara to Select From! Call Mr. Dale • SE 3-7865 ■f A,. LLOYDS m TOO MANY CARS 4 Late modal add transportation ECONOMY CAM1* tas Dixit JEROME OtOS t CADIU4C New Car Savings... .Today ail §E 3-7021 Mew aad Need fifff „ MTEii liMMl ..._Lake Rd. ___________.igAWiT If* CHEVROLET, BEL AIR BE- dan, has VB engine --- ---- trensmtsaton, blue 0— ------- OUR PRICE, Off, weekly pay- 1*43 ' CHlVdOlEt IMiPALA~CM yertlMa. V4 engine, Rowarglkle *■----J—*—, radio, htotor __________d rad smh Mack _ and Interior. Only IMtL easy terms. PATTERSON' CHEVROLET CO* IBM S. WOODWARD AVE* > IRMI NOHAM. Ml A3724. >>mdan.Hw)Cra. toflAEmi 44t4». 1*43 tbRVBTTE STlMO R4V, Pa»T. back, 300 h.p., perfect condition, S3,OH, MA ArM4> , Nil CtAvY BISCAYNE, 2-OOOR. Autobahn Motors, Inc. mites, SWS: OR 3-1411. f 1*44 CORVEtTE. MUST SpLL RED ivertlble, 345 hp. Hp**A pool-sctlon, AM PM, rant belts Itawalls. Going Into Army, make sr. TO *4730. Attar Spin. MONZA CONVERTIBLE, RED h Mack top and tntorlar, wtilte- 1044 CHEVY BEL, AIR RED i- _ 230 h.p. angina, radio, hoot- er, whitewalls, white WMt Mack interior. Extra claan. Only *2100. Easy terms. PATTERSON OtEV- ad. BUM. DON'S, 477 1. Lapeer Rd., Orion. MY 2-2041. 1*44- CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vorttoto. V4. stick shift, radio, .... years, vary niaa ___ out. Easy bank financing. Pu Prlca - r STARK-DICKEY FORD 1M4 CHEVY SUPER SRORY Cok-vertlble, 40* cu. In. 140 P*sl-tract Ion, radio, whltowails. Taka over pa^mants at ItS par *40 CHEVY 4-DOOR PARKWOOD wagon, VI, POwergllda, steerliw, radio, heater, whitewalls. -SUM. RE 5-3314. t*40 CORVAIR 4-DOOR AUTO*AAT- .btot^y^wadan IBM CHEVROLET 2-OOOR STICk, vs. prlcad to i Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (Access open to lots Mdllto street tf«l CtJaVROLET~c6NVERTlBLE i, tudy oquippad. 371# Ivans, Sauthttold, Ml MIS1. 1*4) CHdVY PARK WOOD WlAOON, PATTERSON CHE VROLL MM S. WOODWARD AVI Ml NOHAM. Ml 4-2735 t*41 CORVETTE, MUST SELL S2.250. Pood condition. PL MU7. i *!USSWSs£?SS: 1*41 monTa, EXCELLENT coNdI-•• Vspoad, ms. t tH|VtYi~'"lprBR SPORT, H®. Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED vw dealer '/» mile north ol Mlrocla Mlle Wjifgeaf#B IHa, 102 h.p., < IR»»d, ryd, black B 1*42 corVair w^onza. AlL"W-luxo gecaoaortoo, txcollonf condl- tton. MA 4-1S4*. 300 b«v am-lm radio., finish"*lntartor. Mats. 1963 CHEVROLET mpala Bonvartlblta V-B, auto., to powar, ilka naw, Bfctts. VAN aMP CHEVY '•MSB. Easy tonus. PATTER-CHEVROLET CO., IBM B. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM sir WOO! Ml »amrara. _____ 1963 CHEVY Btl Air 4-door with B-cyttodar atlek shit radio, heatar, whitewalls, enaowi er, extra nlca> St.7*5. PATTERSON CHR YSLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-DODGE TRUCKS Ml N. Main S*., ROCHESTER OL I-SB50 1*43 imWluTbp6rts COUPErv^ axtras, undsra toSjikda than 7400 BEtoik. r ~ jUPlR , Jramatlc. power itoorlr* brakat. RE WOSO or RE 0-47*0. 1*43 CHEVA&ldt IMdAllA WPVIt I ■ or hardtaPb V-B' engine, i, radio, heater, whlte- RAT CHEVROLET CO.. WM S WARD AVE.. BIRMMiet 4-2735. . AKE OVER PAYMENT*. L 1-0414. OWWoanditbyt 'IfeiiiMPMII 143 CHdvROLtt BEL AIR 4-OQOB sedan, a-cy under, Powerglldt, radio, healer, whltawalls. Two 'to choose tram. Cordovan brawn Or azure blue. O n I y $1,0*5. iEasy terms. RATTlUltpN CHEVROLET ' CO., ION S. WOODWARD *w£ BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-273B. Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth BRAND NEW 1964s MODEL CLOSEOUT PLYMOUTH . . . All Models VALIANT . . . All Models CHRYSLER ... Alt Models IMPERIAL ... All Models Anything of value accepted as down payment; Diamonds, real estate,- boots, livestock, houfe trailers, etc. Oakland r On 111 New and llsad Cm price with ns money ’ERT1RLB, 1 OWN rede to. mi tufl __________jnay down. • Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 (ACcesa open to tot* white street underconstmctleni 1*40 T-dlRD, 3-VMV power, goad condition, only SI^M. OR >^3114. INI FORD CONVERTIBLE. WHlfi with white tap, heater, iMiMlto, standard transmission. SfTK WA 1-5522 or OL 1-2044. INI RAUiQN RANCHlkO, BftAU-tltvl metallic green, naw tires, ra- AWC OMiMWwMAAL .1 1*40 CHRYSLER SARATOGA ‘wor sadan. Its a beauty, <— HI give you the bast at service, ■ $1,085 2-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE I B, SAGINAW RE S-4541 1*57 DODGE CONVERTtBLE, V F^iEST" brakM *nd 51*40 DODGE 2-DOdR Hardtop, ana owner, only $895 2-YEAR O-W. WARRANTY SPARTAN U0DGE FINAL CLEARANCE —Out They Go Now- 1964 Ford Fairione 4-Door BEATTIE' w,J oTXIEJNWAfMU---- Home at SERVICE sRsr the tala AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 *3P MODEL A 2-DOOR SEDAN, 8*. RE S-7MB. 130 MODEL A FORD, GOOD CON- dltkm, extra parts, salt or trad*. OR W" restored, FE B-1215. i*f4 FORD HARDTOP, 1*57 FORD M— good condition. FE 5-2741. wis P6r6 V4 ibteR, runs good.^ Body fair. B*5. FES-4317. ____MSI T-EIRL. ir, naw lira*, sbod right. FE 4-57)1 1** THUNDBRBIRD, GOOD CONDI-Han, stoo. Pasty Hawn IfiwtoefwL corner at Nailtakaataiin Hwy. and Orchard Laka Road. 42MM0 - 424-3177.___________________ *3* FORD, 4, AdYOMAYEri— cellent transportation. $200, 4(2-3037 FORD, t*», FULL PRICE automatic. money down, 24 months to p4y. Credit1 no problem. Wa handle and arrange all flminelhg. Daaiar. HURON MOTOR BALES S IJD1 Baldwin •ticks rum DNuiiTuiiy. ktk Cooper Fine Used Corel 427B Dlxle OR »-l2t3 Drayton 1*5* FORD 2-DOOR, RAOIO. HEAT-ER. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Raymantt gT UM — 2nd Coir Free Wall, almoat free, bacaura la a 1*40 Rard VI wwysnTl just ttw thing tor min a* aids tor aniv $4*7 toll prta no money down. Cab Mr. Dale, Credit Coordinator. LLOYD'S New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. _ FE 3-7*43 *40 T-BIRD. FULL POWER, LIN-coin angina, Moltory Ignition. KE 5-4542. 77 t-bird Convertible, with raoio, heater, automatic trananr’ slon, powar steering, brakas s windows, beautiful burgundy flnli white topi Only BUM). Call 4 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD INO BLACK FALCON, RAOIO. heater, whitewall*, vary good con-ditlon. Coll after 4 P.m. OtHEllP. THE HOME OF " ;y Goodwill ond Top Value v USED. \:ahs WILSON PONTlk-CADILLAC 1*42 FORD convertible, black ftofch white i*ti FORD hardtop. Mack with rat Interior, 3-SPEED. Ml CORVAIR Msnta Candy anal red, black Interior. Ml P-BS CUTLASS hardtan. vs ay tomatlc. Buckets! HASKINS Chevy-Olds THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1966 —d Bead Cor* 1>6 MERCERY CONVERTIBLE c green, n ....... cohdjtkin. , hurry) This l Autobahn Motors, Inc. a away* lad unit* W* have t «can*my mlMad that can handle any talk. A CHIVY pickup or 1VB1 FORD bultt van tor only S3F7 toll prlca. •( dean. Call Mr. Dale. « LLOYD'S UncabMAarcury-Camat New Location 1250 Oakland Ave. ________RE 3-7143__ mi t-biRd hardtop with iA. tana paint, only *),**4. Call M Al Peters at JQHN McAULIFFE ,tonn tpls M a classic axainpl* < utility comMnad with aWto. PI Ishad to glistening Mack, Ilia mull LLOYD'S lnTwwcaW vC Bruto> q MaRc trammi*-and' brake*, sharp I IUM 1(42 GALAXIE 4-DOOR, V-l, AUTO-matlc. radio, heater, whltr " *1,250. 412-4437. 1(42 FORD 2-DOOR HARDTOK 6A- j6hn McAULIFFE aasr. .... priced to *all at ***5. JEROME FERGUSON, Radiaatar FORD 1*42 FORD GAUXIH ME W|C automatic si ,250. 5100 diiitodilB ever pitomant*. W*4B11. 1962 Ford Don't drtva that ttraA Md bus orlcs* Ilk* "this. A Gaiaxte” 4 In Marlin Mu* with S Nka-npw whitewalls, economy VI and auto matte. Knit 11,0*7 full prlca. Call Mr. Data, Credit Coordinator. „ LLOYD'S Llncotn-Marcury-Camat New Locotion 1250 Oakland Ava. _________Pi S-7B4S,______ 1*42 FORD V-PASSENGBR WAGON. L Call A McAULIFFE ftljii . This 1*41 FORD XL convertible cw be your* for only B1BJ7 weakly with any old car down. Call H~ Dala, Credit Coordinator. LLOYD'S Ltncotn-Marcury-Camat Naw location 1250 Oakland Ava. PI WHO FINAL CLEARANCE -Out Thay Go Now— 1964 Ford Custom 500 2-Door BEATTIE ^ MjUKMWiSKS Horn* o* SERVICE attar th. , , AT THE STOPLIGHT . ‘ OR 8-1291 Hilltop Auto Salts, Inc.. You Can BUY With No . Money. Down No Credit Problems— Spot Delivery! '54 Pontiac 2-door hardtop ...B 2*5 '51 Chevy 1-door. .,.$ 2*5 ’57 Pontiac doubto power .{ 2*5 ft gravy Wapon, automatic.. S 445 'M Falcon 2-do*r automatic ...S B*S ’41 Ford 2-door .I, '41 Pontiac^ douM* powar .514*5 '42 Chavy, » passanapar .114*5 "42Ch#vy.................$1,9*5 'MBukk Etoctra convert. .. S13*S '42 Fomlac. choose from two . 514*5 Lot Special 1963 Chevy Bel Air 'waaon, power steering and brakes, olmost brand new $2495 962 Oakland FE 4-9969 _,W toaflwr tntattaf. atlda away whaaL Baa* attar. 234-5114. 1*43 FORD GALAXIE » XL 4 prod* under 7book" price. II Mr.' Dab, Credit Co- LLOYD'S Lincoln MarcuneCamit New Location a. «• 1250 Oakland Aye- Rj S-3B4I 1*43 FORD 2-DOOR1 HAAbTOP ..... dtttonod. to* dosm and 24 on balance. A* about OUT money teBOwwwePr RAMBLER VILLAGE 444 S. Woodward, Birmingham Ml BtoW . . i*44 C6Mi+ AuA6iT LlW HRD (1) to etna** from. Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FI 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 t*rr— men to tot* ssMto »trmt er construction) and Mto*. whitewalls to*. Only ttl77. Call Mr. Dick OtapRI at JOHN McAULIFFE mi comet waopn, radio. HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANS-M I SS ION. ABSOLUTELY NO JMT DOWN. Payments of *24.07 par nwnlh. (a* Mr. Far* at Harold Turner Ford. Ml A7500. 1*43’/* FORD FASTBACK, EXTRA sharp bwhto and out. Full prto* SUPERIOR RAMBLER t*S7> OLDS. FAlRj)dHDlYl6N. pIX* seat*, ftobr shift, red lRth ----- top. Roat sharp. Mil trad* tor anyRdnp you have.’ Fenton, MA FINAL CLEARANCE —Out'They Go "Now— 1964Ford Custom 2-Door BEATTIE Hem* a* MUVjU attar thn tain AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 me^ORO FAI^ANi |(CUSTOM . 2-DOOR D#LUXB. milmg^Heve two— ______uswrsar 1*07 huObon HORNET, 4 • 666r i*54_MEicu*V CALANV BAMc station wagon. V-4, bptampNc. power steer ingandbrakes, white tra stwrp.taS?ly"**t5.Pea*y fcrms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET Co; 1*00 £ WOODWARD AVO. OIR-MINGHAM. Ml *tm.______ 1 ift* Lincoln 4-dOoA Hardtop, a let Stock beauty, ha* avarytntop including factory air condltlonMp, only $1,285 S-Y1AR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE »l) 8. SAGINAW_______PE B4B41 1959 Continental Onlay tit* comfort and prattle* of driving this mudvcoptod Classic. Drlva to carnal*** comtort to It* tunurtou* deep toam seat*. Ravel In th* cahvanlanc* of It* aver' Imaginable powar a**i*t. Oe o live It up and for leu than yau guess. Only I1IJ7 >ra*ly maki you top owner. Call Mr. Dal Credit Coordinator. LLOYD'S tUtoaPi-Marcury-Comat - Now Location 1250 Oakland Avo. FE 3-7*43 I960 MERCURY Wagon appreciate. Oaautthl Ito finish, with mate* mp vinyi irUn. ON down, *3*4 monthly. PATTERSON chrvblor-plVmouth VALIANT-DODGE TRUQU 1001 N. Mato tt. ROCHESTER OL 1-PSBB 1*40 MERCURY 2-DC®Rl AUT^ matlc transmission, radio, «"*“ BOB tuU prlca with no i Lucky Auto 193 4r 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 1960 Mercury A sparkling turnuohe Moor Marc's famous VlL and hard-ti stick Udtt This ftn* read a lust wait top to po Itomt wn LLOYD'S Ltocbto-Marcury-Cbmat Now Location 1250 Oakland Avo. _____ PE 3-7*43 _____ BRAND NEW TbPCkmUINE 1964 AMBASSADORS RADIO, H f ATI R, POWER STflRtNG, POWER OR A turn limtCATOR, OIL PltJlAf DOUBLE ACTION BRAKOS, BACK UP LIGHTS, VISI0LITY GROUP, AND OUTSIDE MIRROR. VILLAGE RAMBLER Credit or budget Problems? ? Wo Can Financf Youi 100 Corvto Select From! Call Mr. Dale FE 3-7865 LLOYOt COMEVISIT RUSS JOHNSON'S Used Car Strip 1*55 JEEP Fkkup. Shore ... gifts 1*40 DODGE Pioneer ' --— * *** 1*57 DODGE hardtop 2 MONTEREY CUS- tjSKtJiff 51,5*5. Ml 4- 1*9* OLD* 501*1* "BP1, iUOOR hardtop, 1-owner naw car trad* r M*l full prlca with no men* down. Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 Accaat open to JH* ,*WI* *tr* under construction) 19* 6ld$, 4-DOOR, JET BLACK "*•". 57*7, weakly payment.- ■ ESTATE STORAGE *9* 6Lbs 4-door hardtwTa-DIG, H(ATE *6 AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOOrN. Payment* of *27.44 par month. . *00 _Mr. Parks at Herald Turner Ford. 1*9* OLDS'SUPER "SB" bar, an* owner trade. This car tap* to gwtjnaajf, only I YEAR PLW. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 21) B. SAGINAW FE t-454) 1940 OLDS SUPER SB. VHRY GOOD Rpdto, hantor. ytoltoiiratto.-■■ finish with match top Interior. Only S1J9B, easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. Nil £ WOODWARD AVE* BIRMINGHAM. 1*44 OLDSMOBILE, CELEBRITY 1*57 PLYMOUTH B-DOOP transportation. It29. PE $495 t-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 £ SAGINAW_____PE I 1940 PLYMOUTH, B, WOO A. W- 1960 PLYMOUTH Wagon with v-B angina, automatic, rad heater, whltawalls, anmownar ne car tradai SMB dawn, *41.4* ptr PATTERSON CHRYBLER-PLYMOUTH VALIANT-DODGE TRUCWl --HI N. Mato St., ROCHESTER OL MUBB f»40 VALIANT STATION WAGON Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S> Saginaw FE 4-2214 or FE 3-7853 HAUPT PONTIAC- —SPKIAIS—‘ INI PONTIAC Catalina Canvartl Coup*, wtlh hydramatlc, rt. heater, whitowalta. a IHtl* beauty) 1*11 FALCON Datuna, let black, r*. Haupt Pontiac 1 mil* north *( U J. 1# on M1B Open MONDAY, TUESDAY and THURSDAYS TH » PJH. *" lmi FINAL CLEARANCE —Out They Go Now— 1§B4 Ford Custom 2-Door with th* N* VB engine, stnndar transmission, 2-speed alactrlc wh ers and washer*, 52,0*5 plus taxi and Deans* teal BEATTIE "Yaur ford dealer Stoca mg’ ON DIXlklN WATERFORD Hem* of SERVICE after th* safe AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 ■tw on! teed Ore 186 New Nsfy VALIANT. 2-006R SEDAN. 314)00 miles, braRM, radio, *P#re tlrr ___.ash, automat 1MB. MA W# md Nul'-Cpe. Ml Ml BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, UtofW PftaBd rt»f. saadtkL mi bonnEville C&nvertible, sharp, priced right. 5MPIB. fm'mm pdHTiAC starchHf 4doarhtodtoPLeiAl4BI- > t*43^ PONTIAC • CATAL.N^D^R 1*41 VALIANT 2-DOOR IN BBAU-Nhd caniiltlan only M • 2-YEAR GW WMtRAtfTY Spartan Dodge 211 S. SAGINAW PE B454I 5- 1*43 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE Bey Under, 4-door. Factory fresh, everything an It, save. $1,080 3-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY ' SPARTAN DODGE 111 8. SAGINAW PE MM1 1962 PLYMOUTH Savoy 4do*r with BCyttoper, radio, heal er, naw tires, and I* to mto* car ditlon. S1B0 down, $31.22 month. PATTERSON tffl VALIANT 4400R Sharp, th* c** you hava to looking tor, Sava $800 2-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DCDGE *"--- PE m PLvMdUtH Sav&V, dear, v-B engine, automatic, rat heater, 3,000 mlM*. »,**$. . ROME FERGUSON, Rechat FORD Dealer, OL 1-*7IL 1*55 PONTLA^A-1 TRANSPORTA- 1*97 PONTIAC, I-D06r, 45,0*1 actual *■“— —— *“ black t_______________________ Ml 4-1*24. Pleas* aak tor Jim Bar-nowsky. 1*51 POnViAC, VERY GOOD ditlon, 0275. This an* wHI sal «*i It at IBB Ml. Ctom*h». 1*5* PONTIAC SU?11CH|!f. AU-tomatlc, radio, haatar, food rubber, no no*, excellent rr.ech»n-kal ^candlHan, BIBB. OR 3-I3W, 1*5* PONTIAC 4-DOOR, F^Wfc.R, Auto., vary clean. 3*3 W. trtauol*. 1*9* PONTIAC BLACK cSHVfSTl-bie, by original owner, axe. rendition, all power Including Hearing, brakes, window*, and seat, 5 Royal Matter tires. Mr. Eaptovar. Lewis Purewure Co. " « «-3«— red Interior. MPtmatic, radio, and haatar. Whitewalls. p3f Prlca $695 Easy Bank Financing STARK-HICKEY FORD cars. KEEOO PONTIAC SALES. )240,^ATALUU^.JLDOOB. . SEDAN- 1S44 CATALINA STATION WAGON hill powar, must sail, LI *4771 er OR B414A- A CONVERTIBLE EM >4734 altar $1,185 8-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 I. SAGINAW PE 44541 1940~ "RgNtiAC. 4-DOOR, ITiCg. i, haatar. 57*5 h Lucky Auto 193 or 254 S. Saginaw FE 4-2214 ar FE 3-7853 1*40 BONNEVILLE 1-DOOR Hardtop, a beautiful car, to ^^1,295 2-YEAR G.W. WARRANTY SPARTAN DODGE 211 S. SAGINAW_PE B-4! -Special- 1961 PONTIAC Catolina 4-Door hardtop, r $1695 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 to of Wlda-Treck" WHERE THl HUNT ENDS Stop Shopping NOW ’« Bonnovlll* Convortlbl# ... '41 Oldi 2-door hardtop .. 'SI Dart CanyartlM* .... 'll Polar* SB* Convertible .... ‘42 Oart 4-door, Utargl .. *13t5 'tt Dodgt Lancer Moor ....*12*5 'tt Ramblar Convert Rita . • **• '42 Rambler Wagon ....SMS '41 BukkCtmtarttoto .... ‘41 Patoan I deer ^. .JM________ '4t OWa Dynamic ......... *14*5 "M Valient 4door V-200 ....* **5 '** DeSoto Hardtop .......... *10*5 4| ainrttar«Jip»Tkrtto|L. •••• (111 'tt Galaxl* Convertible ....... *005 *tt Dodge Adair hardtop 'M Falcon Mow ............ 'SB Chivy * ponongor ..... * *05 "M Fury Hardtop .......... ( t*S Hunter Dodge 499 S. Hunter Birmingham MI 7-0955 Closing Out bur 1984 Ramblers Year-End Discounts in effect right-now ROSE RAMBLER 1145 Commerce, Ufhn Laka EM 3-4155 RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler Daaiar M-24 at the S.topllght. Ll & '■ ACTION SALE 1955 OLDS 2-Door Hardtop $69.00 1957 CHEVY 2-Door ..$189.00 1949 CADILLAC Sedan .v '$69-00 1957 STUDEBAKER Sedan $189.00 1957 BUICK 2-Door Hardtop ..$189.00 1958 FORD 2-Door $99.00 1957 FORD 2-Door Hardtop $129.00 1957 MERCURY 2-Door Hardtop .......$229.00 1956 CHEVY Sedan $169.00 1955 FORD Sedan ....>,....$79.00 I960 RAMBLER Sedan ...$169.00 1957 CHEVY 2-Door ..$189.00 Storp) *2,3*5. WO 3-437* or 444- w?WlAfc~a>q6h tWPm Radio, automatic. 473-3M4. s _ 1*43 TEMPEST WAGON. AUTOMAT-mitotan, decor group, i whltawnll*. OR 3-7051. fr*». tfclBA 1400 Htobmrer. Btoom-ftald HUH. MA AeNi. __________ 11.5*5. Easy farm*. PATTER CHEVROLET CO^Jttf''4 WOODWARD AVI, BIRMING ttW. 1*44 GRAND PRIX, POWER STEER-' Wh' pah# automatic, taMta, with rad Intartar. tt,*75. MA ABBB1 af- PONTIAC TEMPEST 4-OOOR an. Power togmJEliiilto . engine. S3.M3. ttAll. 1*44 PONTIAC CATALINA, J-DOOR hardtop, powor iteerlng 1 ‘ - radio, ^ whltawalls. Low Muir f - ..■- 1*44 CATALINA, VENTURA TRIM, pewar, ttttB. OR A44W. 1*44 CATALINJi, AUtOMAtlC transmission, bmS•Mitring, dark blue, whitewalls. S3,4*0. OLT-BB35. ^ ^ Plus' two. 1M4 CATALINA, ... ■ Ira*id. MA 5-226*.______________ 1044 PONTIAC GTd, Al> 11 b. ■raft carburetor, posltractlon, bur-tundy outsldk with black totartar. Royal Bobcat option) Ml, 4-347*. TEMPEST CUSTdM BPOhT* cqupe. Automatic transmit* tan, powar ttaartag. Low mllaagt- PE luxe, 4,000 miles, SL75*. 8R 3-4771. K4 hONTIAC, CATALINA ADOOR hardtop. FE AE»7£___________ pontiac IaVALiUa, ado6r OL 1-5305. extras, OR 3^3415.' *44 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, power steering and brakat. FE MB* AMBASUDOR ADOOR SEDAN — ^ igtomsiit 2*-"— •teerlng and VILLAGE RAMBLER 47 E. Maple TROY, MICHIGAN JU 80536 1*9* RAMBLER CLASSIC StATION Wagon, automatic, MM,. J|H. er, toiw mileage, vary clean, IS SUPERIOR RAMBLER Credit or Budget Problems? We Can Finance Youl 100 Cars to Select Froml Call ML Dale FE 3-7865 BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered for retail to the public is a bonafide 1-owner, low mileage, sharp car. 1-year parts and labor warranty. .. *1,1*5 • *M*5 .. fMM * BUICK « BUICK I BUICK >1 BUICK 3 BUICK 3 BUICK___... 0 LeSABRE 4-door # a BUICK Adoar 3 FORD wagon . 3 BUICK BgbcM M....|R 1 S*AND*PfTx ‘ IhBM mu 1*0 OLDS Ms 1*43 LaSABRB FORD 2-door .. .... OLDS, like MW Nil BONNEVILLE . nS FISCHER BUICK Cwr W AMERICAN. NOW 5TATIOH WAGO». sdto, haatar, nuto-.jttah. A-1« condition down, 24 months on VILLAGE RAMBLER TROY! MICHIGAN JU 80536 mi RAMBLER WAGON, RADIO, HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANJ-Ml* 5 10 N. ABSOLUTEY^INQ MONEY DOW^JPlWMBto *f 534.72 par month. Sre Mr. Pnrfcs at Harold Tumor Ford. Ml A75CO. 1040 RAMBLER AMGAB5ADOR A door sadan. radto ksator. auto-matic transmission, povrar ttaer-ing and brakes. Beautiful .Men* grata and Ivory and tow mltoaa*. 52* dawn ft months on balance. Ask about our money back guaran- VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 5. Woodward^BIrmlrtoham INI RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE, RADIO, HEATER.,ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payment* a* *24.07 ptr month. See Mr. Park* at Harold Turner Ford. Ml A790C. mi .(UnSKler metropolitan hardtop, radio, haatar. NM toll prlca, (5 down. 54 month* on VILLAGE RAMBLER trovmSan / JU 80536 BY OWNER, LIKE NEW, 1*41 RaW bler Classic deluxe, taw mileage, 1750. 474-0524. VILLAGE RAMBLER MB B. Woodward, Birmingham .____Ml 43MB ~ 1*42 RAMBLER AMERICAN T ' or custom, da lux*, am bony »do red Intartar, sharpest on* oundl **»5. fupfbtpr d u-iiLni wri RAMBLER 550 Oakland_PE BA421 1*43 RAMBLER 2-OOOR, RADIO, J,»4 fuii'prte*,~34 months on balanca. Ask about our money back guaran- VILLAGE RAMBLER 4M S. WoodwarcMtlrmlngham -1*43 RAMBLER CLASSIC ADOOR I of ttorcgc. $1,9*5 I R& SUPERIOR • RAMBLER 550 Oakland FE 9-0421 . igon wan, A 1963 RAMBLER Wagon WHh automatic I cylinder angina, raon, nearer, ana whltawalls, one-owner, only *1,1*5 Crissman Chevrolet 5, Rochestor Rd. Rochastor OL B-*721 1*44 RAMBLERS, ALL AT CLOSE- SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland F« BA421 1*44 RAMBLER AMERICAN 4-door, 4-cylinder, eutomatic, radio, heater, solid white finish, tl^OS. JEROME FERGUSON, Rochester FORD Dealer, OL l-WH. Get a Good Deal .on a '64 OLDS—RAMBLER—GMC Houghten & Son . 1964 RAMBLER Close-Out -NOW GOING ON- BILL SPENCE far That Ramblerl 4473 Dixie Hwy. •l^tor-Plym^'ltar.bto.J^^ -No Credit Problems With- MARVEL 251 OAKLAND AVE. , FE 8-4079 SUBURBAN OLDS 'Birmingham Trades' •100%“ WRITTEN GUARANTEE Every car listed carries this guarantee. Take the guesswork out of buying. Get one of our Certified Used coral Bank rates. 1962 CHEVY Jmpala Wagons, Sport Coup**. 4-Doors, Mom*, all V-* engines, power Hjsrtag and powar Vina from 1963 BUICK LeSobre Convertible. AH pawar. Sharp. Birmingham car. Naw C«r War- 1961 T-BIRD 5, radio , haatar, pawar. c with rarf totoriar. 120*5. 1964 OLDS Demos. 9P,________________Coupas. New Car Warranty. Large savings. 1963 OLDS ' CanvtrtlbkM. A and 1963 OLDS Jetfire Coup*. V-B, automatic, power, metallic blue with matching Interior. BBSS. 1963 OLDS "88" Convertible. Red with whit* top, all pawar. Tit* one you have bean looking tor, only 529*1 1963 OLDS 2-Door Hardtop, Dynamic "If’. All power, priced to sail. 1961 NASH Ambossodor • ADoor. v-B, automatic, bewar steoring and brakas, radtot haatar and wnltatrella. pnarpl 1959 OLDS 2-Door Hardtop rpr*. AH gewer. Only Quality 1-Owner Birmingham Trades at Lower Prices 2 Year Warranty \ SEE BOB MARTIN. STUB STUBBLEFIELD \ 565 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM MI 4-4485 THB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1064 - —Television Programs— Program* fumishad by stations listad In this column aid subject to chaiigo without notiesff ChuWl f—WJBK-TV M 4-WWJ-TV Channel 7-Wm-TV Channel 9-CXUV-TV Channel 36-WTVS WEDNESDAY EVENING •.'ll (2) News (4) (Special) Democratic Cooviatoon Third day actiytttas from Atlantic City include nominations balloting for prss-vice presidential (7) Movie: "Man-Eater of Kumaon" (In Progress) (•) Yogi Bear (M) World Horlsons "Golden Kimono" tolls story of Japanese boy and family. till (7) NOws, Weather, Sports g:9l (2) (Special) Democratic Coovimtton Special reporters Bill Maoldiil, Theodore H. White, Meade Alcorn Join CBS anchor men Robert Treat, Roger Mudd (7) Special) Democratic Convention Former JFK aide Arthur SrhijMringsr Jr., Sens. Humphrey, Ervin provide background for ABC team headed by Edward P. Morgan, Howard K. Smith (I) Interpol Galling Whan Duval goes to Sooth America to trpek down oil technician, ha walks Into the middle of s revolution. (Repeat) (56) At Issue 7:90 (9) Lock Up Emotionally disturbed man stages robbery, plans to got oven with lawyer who sent him to Jail. (Repeat) „JBp 7:26‘(9) mw «*- hlnd the Gun" (1959) Randolph Scott, Patrice Wynton, Philip,Carey. Cavalry major is sent to Investigate group of revolutionaries who want to make Southern California a separate state. - (56) Jam Casual Woody Herman and band •:M (56) Of People and Politics Cameras follow urn mitted delegate to Republican convention. ItN (9) Camera West Film about'health ranch. f:M (9) Newsmagazine Report bn progress of Democratic convention. 11:19 (9) Peache Island 11:11 (9) Miry Morgan 11:19 (I) (4) (7) (9) News Weather, Sports 11:2$ (l) Movie: "JOs Kind of Woman" (1981) Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, Vincent Price. Gambler is offered huge amount of money to amply take his vacation at Mexican resort. 11:99.(2) Steve Allen Guests include actresj Barbara Nichols, aviatrix Joan Merriam Smith. (4) (Color) Johnny Carson (7) Movie: "Road House’* (1949) Richard Widmark, Cornel Wilde, Ms Lupino. Two men compete for love of torch singer. 1:99 (S) Peter Gunn (9) Best of Groucbo (9) Featurette 1:18 (7) After Hours 1:19 (2) (4) News, Weather THURSDAY MORNING 9:18 (2) Meditations 9:11 (2) On the Farm Front 9:18 (2) Nows 9:81 (2) Summer Theater (4). Classroom (7)/unews 7:99 (2) News (4) Today Report from Atlantic City (7) Johnny Ginger 7:19 (2) Fun Parade 1:99 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 1:19 (7) Movie: “Maryland" Walter Brennan, fay Bainter, John Payne. will never ride a horse iftar husband is killed riding. f 9:81 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round TV' Features > Convention Coverage By Untied Press International DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION, 6:90 p. m. (4), 9:80 p. m. (2), (7) Third day activities from Atlantic City include nominations, balloting for presidential, vice presidential candidates. NEWSMAGAZINE, 9:90 p. m. (t) Knowlton Nash reports on progress of Democratic convention. STEVE ALLEN, 11:90 p. m. (2) Woody Woodbury hosts actress Barbara Nichole, aviatrix Joan Merriam Smith. THURSDAY TODAY, 7:00 a. m. (4) Program includes taped highlights of previous day ’s session at Convention Hall 9:99 (2) Movie: “Adventure in Diamonds" (1940) Nigel Bruce, George Brent, Isa Miranda, Cecil Kellaway. Government flier helps girl smuggle diamonds without knowing It. (4) Living (9) Kiddy Comer 19:99 (4) Make Room for Daddy Military school student gives Rusty example of discipline. (Repeat) (7) Girl Talk Panel: Dr. Rebecca Lis-wood, June Graham, ....musical iter Ulo: ...... '*** (9) Robin Hood Refugee band wants to flee from England. (Repeat) (4) (Color) Word for Word (7) Price'is Right Guest: Marty Ingels (9) Movie: "They Can’t Hang Me" (English: 1968) Terrence Morgan, Anthony Oliver. Man convicted of murder wants to make a bargain with the police. 19:88 (4) News 11:99 (2) McCoy’s Hassle's forthcoming marriage is all right with grandpa. (Repeat) (4) Concentration (7) Get the Message Panel: Fran Jeffries, Darryl Hickman, Wally Oox, Constance Bennett. 11:J9'(2) Pete and Gladys . (4) (Color) Jeopard/ (7) Missing Links Guests: Nlpsy Russell, Dorothy Kilgallen, Tom Poston. AFTERNOON 12:99 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) Say When (7) Father Knowk Best Bud goes on a trip without telling anyone. (Repeat) (9) Royal Mounted Police 12:28 (2) News 12:99 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) Truth or Oon- (7) Ernie Ford (9) People in Conflict 12:48 (2) Guiding Light 12:18 (4) News 1:99 (2) December Bride Ruth brags about her expensive watch. (Repeat) (4) News (7) Movie: “Here I Am a Stranger" (’39) Richard Greene, Brenda Joyce, Richard Dix. College student’s father is an alcoholic. (9) Movie: "Hotel Berlin* (1948) Helmut Dantine, Andrea King, Raymond Massey, Faye Emerson, Peter Lorre, Alan Hale. Life in a Berlin hotel Just before Berlin fell. D19 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:18 (4) Topic for Today 1:19 (2) As the World Turns (4) (Color) Ldt’s Make a Deal 1:55 (4) News 1:99(1) Guests: Betty White, Robert Reed. (4) Loretta Young 8:99 (7) News 2:99 (2) Hennesey Hennesey tries to gain culture. (Repeat) (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 1:88 (7) News 2:11 (2) To Tell the Truth - Panel: Cheater Morris, Sam Levenaon, Phyllis Newman, Barbara Cook. (4) Another World ~—(7) fleam 9:18 (9) News 1:98 (2) News 9:91 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say Guests: Tommy Sands, Nancy Sinatra. (7) Queen for a Day (9) Vacation Time 4:99 (2) Secret Storm (4) (Color) George Pierrot. Expedition goes to the Arctic. ' (7) Trailntaster Old woman claims to be mother of adopted child. (Repeat) 4:91 (9) Movie: "Henry Aid-rich for President’’ (1941) Jimmy Lydon, Charles Smifli, June P r • 1 s s er. Henry wants to be president of the high school. (9) Hercules 4:88 (4) Carol Duvall 5:09 (4) News (7) Movie: "Fitting Guardsman" (’4|) Willard Parker, Anita Lonlee, Janis Carter. Bapd of men want to rob the king’s tax money and give it to the poor. (9) Popeye ' 8:11 (4) Feature Story 8:18 (4) Weather (86) Industry on Parade 8:19 (4) Sports 8:89 (4) News (89) What’s New? 8:81 (2) Weather Missionaries Urged to Flee U. S. Embassy In Congo Radios Report LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (UPf) — The UK. Embaasy radtoed warnings today to the more than 906 American missionaries in the northeastern Congo to taka refuge to neighboring Uganda because the Communist - backed rebellion to preading. The embassy said the situate "getting serious.” Most of the missionaries to toe northeastern region are evangelical Protestants and Roman Catholics. There were fears that the rebels worn massing for a paw attack on Bukavu, capital, of Kivu Province, which government forces recaptured last week. According to reports from Bukavu, rebels were rMtoaghifT In the neighboring republic of Rwanda. RWANDA TOWN I reported to havp attacked Bugarama, a Rwanda town near Bukavu, and to have been repulsed by Rwanda government forces. « rne tionb 'Tqpsi' Soaring Around Earth in Search for Data VANDENBERG AIR FORCE $A«rCalif. (UPI) - “Topsi,” America’s 97-pound Explorer 20 satellite, soared around the earth today in a near - perfect orbit. It sent bade valuable information to scientists trying to team why the ionosphere reflects radio and radar signals from space. “Right on the button," was the way the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) described “Topal’s” launch from this pacific missile range base. The orbit carried “Tops!” and its scientific instruments 925 miles and 549 miles from earth at its farthest and nearest points. The orbital period of the satellite was placed at one hour, 44 minutes. Radio Programs— _WJIt(y#)!MP^127Q)Ck^^ mfiraRuar 11:M-WJR. New*. Farm WWJ, New*. Fran Harris CKLW, Auatln Oram WPON, Nam, Ran Knight WCAR, Nan, Puna WHFI, Him, Nanai, Bur Mk Bud Guert WWJ, Ttaar Saaabatt i raa-wjR, Nam, Ait UN I WWJi NOlpl ■ WXYZ. Nawi WJBK, Nam, . _ WCAR, Nam, Joa ftaearetla WPON, I-------------*— wSaf'V_____ r**-CKl.W, Bud Davtaa . tits—wJR. miNe Hat aiW—WWJ, Nam, ftwnpir WftWSRB Mam J troops —ppseted by 29 white mercenaries aad air cower opened their counterattack on toe rebel-held city ef Albert-rifle on Lake Taagaaytka. The mercenaries were said to be led by a former British Army captain and to include ■HI - - Greeks, They recently moved up from EUsabethville, capital of Katanga, to Baudoinville, 120 miles south of Albertville. Premier Moise Tshombe, while recruiting white mercenaries, also was moving ahead with his efforts to get help from ther African countries in flght-ng the rebels. Tshombe sent Health Minister Audrey Lobaya to Ghaaa for taika with President Kwame Nkrumah. Lab ay a was expected to visit other African countries as well. Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia sent Vice Premier Mammo Tadesse to Leopoldville. Jokers at Atlantic City Make Convention-aGags . By EARL WILSON VERY BORED WAUL ATLANTIC CITY-The Jokes are flying and soma an about the newspaper’s hotel space. That’s where some of their rooms are located. In Space. S’Tvg got a room with a wonderful view,” a T "Of toe Boardwalk?" he said. “No, ef Baltimore,” he aaM. Atlantic CUy has some of the greatest hotels In the world ... and also other kinds. A couple of Red Shelton’s lines about hotels are quoted. “Every other day," Rad says, “a maid cones in, and dirties,’’ “Tbs walls art so thin you can soa right through them," Red claims to have said to the WILSON maid, who replied, "That’s the windows." But the Jokesmitos are ceneeatrathg on President Johnson and givtag Barry GeMwater a alight rest. “LBJ’s picked his Vice Presidential candidate . . . Arthur Murray," alleges comedian Jackie Mason, due at the Black Orchid. "Johnson says .his wealth is only $9,494,099. Ha’s trying to win the sympathy of toe poor people ... This is the year of the topless bathing suit At the White House swimming pool, President Johnson invoked the bottomless bathing suit" Any Jokes art welcome. One that Buddy Hackett uses at toe Las Vegas Sahara is around. "I kinds hops Gold water wins," Hackett says. "I miss toe Army.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL Ye . The Beatles wfll live in nine rooms (half a floor) atthe new Lincoln Square Motor Inn when they come here Aug. 26-29 . New hot linger Morgana King (of Mr. J*a) was signed by Joe Glasser for the Hollywood Bowl Sept 6 .. . "Motorized” prostitutes now cruise midtown looking for drunks in the early hours Just as it’s done in Paris .. . Karen Jensen, a 40-chester from Palm Bead), TV-debuts on tot Vaughn Meador ABC special Sept 17. Eddie Fisher chose toe Delmonloo this trip ... The Imperial Hotel in Tbkyo, Drank Lloyd Wright's masterpiece, is reported due for demolition, like the Savoy Plaza ... Harriet Aadorsaoa, Ingmar Bergman’s favorite, will be among stars arriving for the Lincoln Center film festival Sept I486... Louis Demtagnto, Ava Gardner’s bullfighter ax-beau, went to the Cope to see sexy Free HayEesfie wMTMfflhg,'!ffil3Biae^ Bergere was heard saying backstage that she wouldn’t undress Uke the nudes: "I am much too beautiful to, and have too much talent to go on stage wearing nothing." ★ ★ ★ TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: "Sen. Goldwater’s been . such a depressing picture ef bow things are in this country," says Vaughn Mender, “that some Americans are tuning in Radio Flree Europe to get their confidence bade.” wish I’D SAID THAT: "When my wife gets angry (says Rainbow Grill maestro George Cort), "toe becomes a Jade of all tirades.” EARL’S PEARLS: With all the politicking going on now, we’re reminded that a speechmaker is a man who talks in other people’s sleep. REMEMBERED QUOTE: People are growing taller, hut they’re still up to their necks in hot water.—Arnold Glasow. Washington (according to Don Miner) Is where half the people are waiting to be discovered and toe other half are afraid they win be... That’s earl, brother. \ (TN syedteate, ft.)_________ ACROSS 1— of Bridgewater 5—Bias 8—Fox 12 Nine (comb, form) 19 Compass point 14 Helper 15 Villain frtm "Pilgrim’s Progress" 17 Mr. Coward 18 Nothing 19 Bom 20 Elmer-22 Entwine 24 Nautical rope 28 Correlative of neither 26Meccan pilgrims 30 Direction 93 Ikes 94 Fuss 35 Unclose (poet) 36 Consume 38 Open receptacle 99—of Os 41 Christopher — 43 Pheasant brood (varj 44 Arterial 49 Lord- 51 Behold! 52 Color 53 Flat plinth 54 Twelve o’clock 57 Describe 58 Barrier 59— apparent 60 Essential being 61 Female saint (ah.) 62 Newts DOWN 1 American negotiator (1779) 2 Unfasten 3 Hillock 4 Lamprey Answer to Preview Puzzle 5 Violent hot spring , 6 Equal (comb, form) 7 Durations 8 Denounced 19 German river 11 Depend lOOasy 21 Hindu nurse StfBoda! Inssct 27 Shake 20 Miso Lupino SONoHoud 21 Upon (prefix) 32 Turkish cap 39 Near 99 Inland 37 Numbers to be summed 38 Son of Odin 40 Person indiscriminately 41 She danced before Herod 42 Bird 45-of Bagdad 46VerUy 47 Malign looks 48 Only 49 Mr. Speaker 50 Shade trees 55 Grain 56 Article AMUSING RASCALS \ 2 3 4 r 6 r 8 1 IT rr 12 19 14 IB 16 IT 18 a 22 28 w 30 91 X 371 H IB 46 sr u 53 5r w SB 80 n JB m THE ADVENTURES OF OZZIE AND HARRIET Twenty yoore on the etr-twelve yeere on TV! Join the Nelsons ter top comedy I 7:30 P.M. TONIGHT ON CHANNEL 7 • tpontored by CONSUMERS ROWER COMPANY . NEED CASH & *2,200 ■spay $1M7\a Meath ■PAYMENT SCHEDULE •m1 Rilmto *Hmm"cnm Southfield Mortgage fi. State-Wide FE 4-4300 && UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUST-FREE a PER MONTH Vfo forvtw AH Mokes WATER KING soft wim CO. BIG SAVINGS! (Ml Modal* Mart Go • RANGES • WASHERS ■ at Foreign orders for French aircraft totaled a record f>51 million last year. 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Higgins, a Ferndale auto dealer and framer state | The governor was asked at a recent news conference Ip confirm that be has not mentioned the name of his opponent since Higgins became a candidate. “That’s right," said Romney. “Who is be?” L Romney, S7, and Higgins, It, are neighbors in Oakland County. Romney, a former president of American Motors Corp., is a resident of Bloomfield Hills, about five miles north of Ferndale. POSITIONS VARY But their positions vary widely. Higgins, for example, liys, "I will work to prevent the imposition of a state income tax.” A state Income tax was a major feature of the fiscal reform package Romney offered to the legislature. The package was defeated. • '■■?! *' •■+ * Romney, already looking ahead to the Nov. 2 election when the Republican nominee will oppose Democratic Congressman-at-large Neil Staebler says he will campaign “on the Republican record” in Mlch-~m : 1 The nationwide Republican position is something else. Romney has indicated reservations concerning the positions of the Republican presidential nominee, Sen. Barry Goldwater of reasorr -thing NO REASON He has said there is no why he and Goldwater should agree on every Issue. Higgins also has said, “I may disagree with the senator on certain points.” . ★ ★ ' * But hi his platform, Higgins says, “I unequivocally support Sen. Goldwater’s candidacy and platform.” He has challenged Romney to do likewise and some Republicans have suggested Romney should run ns a nonpartisan. NEVER CLAIMED When Romney took office Jan. 1, 1063, the State still had An operating deficit of MO million. At the end of the 166344 fiscal year, its operating surplus was |48 million. • The governor never has claimed all the credit for recovery, but contends a return FRANCIS L O'BRIEN com OF APPEALS District No. 2 September let UNDERSTANDING PAIR—CAPABLE to “fiscal integrity,” a central theme of his 1962 campaign, has played some part in it. More importantly, be says, business confidence has been restored in Michigan and this has had a major effect on industrial and commercial Activity in the state. Main reason for Michigan's economic comeback, be says, have been the reaurgency of the auto indusfry, with its three big sales years- in a row, plus io-called “nuisance taxes” passed fay the Republican-controlled legislature in I960. CAN DO BETTER Higgins insists state government can do better. “I will work toward stream-to eliminate unnecessary bureaus and agencies and put the administration of state government business-like basis—a promise the present governor made but did hot keep,” Higgins says.. He adds, “I will try to bring sanity in spending to our government, recognizing that during the present governor’s term state costs have increased 120 million dollars over the last Democratic governor’s (John B; Swainson, 1961-62) term.” In addition to oppoidng 8 state income tax, Higgins promises, “I will take the salea tax off food consumed in the home.” OTHER PLEDGES Among Higgins’ other campaign pledges: —”1 will further the development of community colleges, to improve the educational standards of our young people. tiring nutty in two major divisions of the state by lowering folia on the Mackinac Bridge. “—“I will do something to provide safety on Michigan highways and cut the slaughter now existing. I will shake up the Michigan Safety Commission and force them to do some-or I will get a new com- Romney has said he will be ‘‘working governor” until the final several weeks before the November election. Then, he says, .he will wage a concentrated campaign. But citizens’ groups have been at work for the governor. And Higgins has charged that Romney was using high-salaried Romney Raps Chief Justice Says Appeals Stand Belittles Constitution LANSING (AP)-Gov. George W. Romney, spurred by State Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Kavanagh’s position on traffic court appeals, has accused Kavanagh of trying to belittle the new State Constitution. Kavanagh, a Democrat, maintains that tlie consitution gives the right of appeal • In every case down through traffic convictions because its section giving the right of appeal states no limits or exceptions. "The chief justice is trying to belittle the new constitution,” Romney said Monday, “I think that’s improper.” “The basic purpose,” he said, “was to provide the right of appeal. Should someone be denied justice because of indigence?” he asked. PROVISION INTENT Robert Danhoff, Romney’s legal aide and chairman of the judiciary committee of the Constitutional Convention, said the provision was intended to give felons the right of appeal. He said long-time law has given persons convicted of a misdemeanor in Justice Court the right to a new trial hi Circuit Court. state qpiployes to bolster his I controlled headquarters telling i more to advance the glory of I second page of this letter,” he campaign. the people around Michigan I Romney. went ^oo. “There is listed the Higgins said be had a copy bow they can get in touch with “The crowning insult to us—I telephone numbers — not the of a letter “fnjm the Romney-1 the right people so they can do I foe taxpayers—comes on the | home phone numbers, nor even a private business phone... but | Romney aides immediately a state telephone number that said that Romney’s campaign is part of the cost of state activities were not costing government.” | Michigan taxpayers a cent. 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UAW President Walter P Reuther, supported by,'.a $66 million strike/und, ha$ called his international executive board fo| a meeting tonight to .pick a . contract targets Some sqnrces, however, are. anticipating that this may become altenative day instead of put-up-or-shiit-np day on the part of the union. The alternative would be a suggestion by the UAW that no progress has been made toward settlement opt new contracts, and. therefore negotiations should be knocked off until 'the turmoil of the national election is out of the way. UNOCCUPIED SEATS - Seats assigned to Mississippi’s delegation are unoccupied last night just before the start of the convdnUon’s second session. Hie regular all-white- delete-. tiop announced it was going home rather than AP Photofax accept a compromise in the fight over whether it or a predominately Negro delegation should be seated. The rival group also rejected the compromise. ■ But the auto makers have been antidpating t he alternative move for months, and none showed a disposition last night to run current contracts beyond their expiration dates of next Monday midnight, TERMINATION NOTICE Both the union and the Big Three—General Motors, Ford and Chrysler — have served termination- notices on. each other. Mississippi Unit Boycotts Convention; Alabama Stays demonstrated at the Convention Hall after only five of Its delegates had gained en- ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. CAP) — Mississippi’s delegation is boycotting the Democratic National Convention, declaring it “did not leave the party — it left us.’* The Alabama contingent, is staying on, despite a ruling iti- , can’t participate without signing *** tor the Missis, a party toyalty pledge. Although «PP> delegation, although only it Sot to iteftmt with other dele- " **“ “““ "”,n By the time the session recessed, some 30'of the Freedom . u -Democrats were in seats in the ' Under present three-year contracts, the Bureau of Labor Statistics figures the average hourly wage of auto workers at $3.01, excluding fringe benefits. m w lie ,TOl W,M1 UHna two of the contesting group gallons last night when those were entitW be on the floor, who support the party were delegates two of. the Negro group. The regidari balked. In an angry statement drafted in-a • two-hour .caucus, the Mississippi all-white group said that never before lal a legally constituted delegation been required to sign such a loyalty AU hands — including Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy’s — pointed to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, the bustling quick-talking party whip hi the Senate as the man Johnson wants lor vice president. McCarthy, who had been another favorite in* the "^vice-presidential. derby, declared today, in favor- of Humphrey, a fellow Minnesotan. McCarthy sent a telegram to Johnson tliis morning,' Acknowledging he had been interested for several weeks in the job but concluding: “It is my opinion the qualifications that you have listed or which ^ou have said to have listed as^moat desirable in the man who woukf be vice president with you would be met admirably by Sen. Humphrey. “I wish therefore to recom. mend for your primary con-sideration Sen. Huhprt H. Humphrey.” / Sometime in JHb next few ATLANTIC CITY (AP) -hours, JohnspiTwill. * one way Michigan Democrats were or anothep — make his choice today behind a party de-knowm/ cision, but divided among them- / * ★ * selves, as the result of a comp2 yBut no one professed In ad- rom^ settlement of the Missis-■ vence to know just how or when. s^pi credentials fight at the State's Dems Unite, Divide Have Mixed Emotions on Mississippi Issue IN MISSISSIPPI SEATS—Four Negrofs, apparently meta-bers of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, occupy convention hall seats’ meant for regular delegates from that state. They entered the hqli last night and took the seats witiw out authority of convention officials. > Film Provides Leads i . in Cass Lake Death Detectives working on the hit-run boat death of a ready FOR show Democratic . National Conven- Cass Lake swimmer Aug. 3 are seeking to contact the Delegates who eddied around tion * . # occupants of three boats sighted near the accident in this' football field - sized hall .. ... - . > scene a few hours before it occurred. . had gone through «Uof the MI?hi?an' 24 houfs Reuther has asserted that unless the companies sweeten an economicoffer they made a ’ week ago Monday, there,, will be a strike against at least one-just, when 1965 models arti getting to dealer showVobmg and When none wants to get left at the post in a modef-year sales race. ....,... On the other hand, some sources insist Reuther would not want to embarrass his freind ' Lyndon B. Johnson, by calling a crippling strike in the midst of Johnson’s . reelection, campaign. Customarily, after picking a target, the UAW presses to a contract thq^e, by strike or -otherwise, and then demands the other two meet or beat the v original agreement. The UAW’s international executive -board was summoned tonight to fix a target, / What happened was. this: - A THE COMPROMISE . The credentials comrtflttee recommended -^-eutd/we conven- ^ They also protested that the proposal would seat an outside claim to delegate status. * W Three of the regulars - Doug asked to rise. National Chairman John M. Bailey said as far as. he was concerned the Alabamians still .were not official participants. commended — ^nd/me conven- \yynn Fred Berger and Randy tion approved*a compromise H.ns(1-V _ jJrLx , v.ltL As developments invoMng # p^posai in the Mississippi con- . JjFbeta 5wm the two Southern delegations test which Would have seated credentials sat down in* the tickhd off last night, hundreds the regular Mississippi d«le* Mississippi’section * of supporters of the pre- gaties, provided .they, signed a ■ dominan(ly Negro Mississippi' loyally pledge, and which also ARISE, DEPARTS Freedom Democratic Party wpmd have seated as at-large However, after the first group _________. ,■ - jr s, of five Negroes arrived, the threp regulars arose and departed. Arrival of the Negroes was tier had unanimously agreed to The boats were shown in ah 8mm color movie strip seek a minority report and force ^ken w a p0ntiac man about'7 p.m., two hours be-a floor fight on the issue, fell Z £ _ ... ta. swiftly In line when the show- f°r® Alan L. Akerley was down came yesterday. struck by a power boat There were a few shouted and killed. characteristic motions of a protests, but nothing more, Poljce believe that persons o pressure group with no legal Democratic convention, and now from the Michigan delegation the boats, filmed off the Dodge i •_x. ...______a x ... uraita itaflHv fnr iriiAV __■_________________* j________«... . ______________ - were ready for the big show. They had adopted a platform giving the Republicabs what-for but carefully tailored' to fit Johnson’s prescription for a consensus party within which Southern conservatives could labor alongside Northern liberals in' the campaign vineyard for the President’s election ip November. when the, convention adopted park No. 4 swimming area, the credentials committee’s may be able to provide informa-majority report, calling for tion on thp boat, that rammed seating the all-white regular Akerley while he was swim- Schools Slate Registration Mississippi delegation and two representatives of the .Mississippi “Freedom Democratic” Party. The regulars left the-convention in* protest over the compromise but two “Freedom Demo- ming. , Shown in the background of the film taken from the beach of persons on a small sailboat were two inboard boats and an outboard. This Week and1 Next for Public System . Pontiac area. public schools are slated to begin registering The outboard is described as students for another school year State Dems in Bitter Row Oyer Seating Controversy By HOWARD HELDENBRAND ATLANTIC. CJTY — A rip-snorting two-hour Mich- the signal for a rush on the Mississippi section by reporters and television and radio crews. Newsmen struggled to interview with newcomers in a crush that 'continued for the rest of the session. They patched up a compro- crats’’—although" not the two a 14-footer, believed to have a this week and next, with pa-mi8e nobody liked over the ques- named-by the credentials2 com- white exterior, aqua deck and rochial schools following suit the tion of seating a Mississippi del- mittee—'wound up as guests'of powered by a black motor. second week of September, egation not pledged to support the Michigan delegation on the * * ★ Secondary pupils — junior and the national ticket. floori One. inboard is described as a ■ - -- . ^ - . . senior high — new to Pontiac . - - - ttriMJft from l$Jto 17 ffet schools can register aH This brought on last night US: ■■Chyte? ?*«**- a *"* "ft a white 8tnpe at the this week. New students and probably toe mosTunpubuS memb? ft transfer pupils who did not reg- propaoiy me mosi unpuuuuseu committee which ubored three , uter last spring can sign up walkout in history. -GAINED-ENTRANCE committee which labored three 4 OCCUPANTS days pver the compromise, in-. dicated in a " Michigan caucus ig4n delegatiert cawtfus^receded-the boring preblbi- •'SJt ELS? ***'* This* boat contained four men, until Friday, Sept? 4. Five members of the predom- yesterday that the fipal.terms ST&^bSlirS -IZS ____Z. x,_____cw. h»H hppn HirtntpH hv Pr«M*nt and the otner twee ugmer coi ire gotag to a new school narifts of platform reading here Ia$t night. " dale and the R«v. Edwin_______________ _____________________ Beginning at 6 tun., the Michigan crew met*while ^"8 of Tougaloo ~ were en- d^n“ta ^ alT - but - empty “Participating in this was stii^t^ying-to reconcile the developing facts of political Bn*r'conven' under the date’s banner, tine of author^ life with its initial all-out ^ Vi, - / pear heavily tanned while the d thnngh M ^ other two are lighter skinned, weeL nj, sroakl include sta-» aocordum to detectives. dents who are new to the Pontiac district or have moved within the district dace Jane. Tl- In Tjafoa^l; Press ■m, / Frozen Surgery /, Scientists see bodies in \ deep freeze for futurp — • PAGE A-14. Kennedy . ♦■ I Starts campaign for j U. S. Senate seqt—PAGE A-15. Romney . Wages campaign of | : -silence against primary I foe - PAGE D-ll. : Area News .....B-4, B-5 Astrology ......,..^.D-S : Bridge*.... ....... D4 Coadcs ........... D-5 Editorials A4 ’! Ftad Section . . C-l-C-U-Markets .......... D-6 delegate recognition of the Mississippi Freedom Dem-oc|atjc. parisM^opposed to'The regula^stPU^afty. . After many days! wrestling . with the dilemma, Congresanan Charles s. Diggs of Detroit, one of Michigan’s* two members! on the creden-l tials committee! gave a major-! . ity report! adopted by tbeg committee. Under it, deb! egates of the! estab 1 i shed" Mississippi par- HeMenbrand ty #ould be seated on condition 6f signing a loyalty pledge to the party and its nominees. -The Freedom party would be seated as honored guests of the .convention, and two of its leaders given delegate-at-large status with one vote each. Theaters TV-Radio ’Wilson, Earl Women’s Pages D-l-D-6 • D-13 « D-13 B-l—B-3, The debate over the proposed compromise, if it could be called that, was long, tatter and at times unruly. In the .end, it passed 70-to-35, and the fatigued delegates rushed for a snack (Continued on Page 2, CM. 4> * entrance to tjie hall and sat ............‘ .. . iey»ng tn mis was a according to detectives. seats under the state’s banner, tine of authority that went ell where they weren’t supposed to the way to the top,” the Negro be. Congressman said. “I hadn’t acribed •« » to 17 fe*t iong _ ._ intended to say anything about with exhaust located in the Prompt the only t h r e e ^ btlt the ^ rep0I^ ^ center of the nor of the boat members of the ail-white reg- indicated that intervention fi- Iu coioring appear, to he nlars who had agreed to go naUy came.from Plfihsylvania brown and white, along with Johnson*^ and tans Avenue. ' - - - - had been seated.*-vanished .. ^ in the crowd. 11 JMV «*. open that this has the stamp Alabama delegates who had of our President. I would -refused^to take thrUyslty characterize thte ns the offl-pledge but had fdled up the ck, stanip of tht pg^tastn-teats in that state’s sector ^ shouted a loyalty yell when * House Speaker John. W. McCor- L®" unanswered by Diggs and ing to .^e conviction of those mack, who took over as the con- . e*ge’ however, was regpohsible for Akeriey’s death vention’s permanent chairman, wb^mer the key role in the final now total $2,900. asked for it' settlement was taken by. Sen. * * # ' - • * * ld ’ U, - The .Alabamians said this $ made them legal delegates. Two weeks, Aug. 31 to Sept. 14, remain to register kindergarten pupils. Registration is necessary only if-a-studsnt was 'vB^ inboards had open rear not registered last spring in4he cockpits. .. ; . "distrtct’j annual kindergarten roundup. The boat that killed Akerley was described generally as about. 20-feet lopg with an Inboard motor. Registration for parochial. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Rewards for information lead- Nice Evening Due; P®”0”3* nounced total of $2,700 are new (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) rewards of $100 esch offered by High 70s Tomorrow 'Unprecedented Charge' over tne area tomorrov Guilty of Beating Animal MalcM 5M,' V / ’ DUBLIhL Ireland (UPI) - warm is the predictibn U the Oakland County Boat Chib, A pleasant evening is in store 2330 Fjerndale, Sylvan Lake, and for Pontiac residents as tem-the Loafers Chib of Keego Har- peratures dip to the 50s. bor. ’ ^ yj Clouds will form and drift over the area tomorrow with the high ... . . , M i|d DUBLIN. Ireland (UPI) — warm is the predictibn for Fri-Preqjdenl Eamon de Vaiera, 31, day. , . ' recuperating from an emergen- Rainfall will total about ooe- PEPARTURE—Carting suitcases, Dennis Parle and Marjorie Hannah, spring graduates of • Oakland University, bid farewell today to family and friends. Parle, 3M S. TUden, and Miss Hannah, 414 W. 13 Mile, Royal Oak, disparted for the University of Valle in Cali, Colombia.- (See story, page 2,) A Pontiac ’man pleaded gqilty yesterday to a fcharge of. . . . . Hi ____________ “Cruelly beating and killing a dog” and was sentenced to 10 - cy hernia operation Monday, feurtk .iuch in showers Friday days in the Oakland County Jail by Municipal. Judge Cecil was reported making steady or&rttiirday. McGallum. progress toward recovery to- The low thermorrwter reading The charge, which court workers said is unprecedented, was day. hi downtown Pontiac prior to levied against Jhy Wisterman, 36, of 471S. Edith, whq repeatedly - - ■ ■ - ■ -—*- 3 a m, was 51. By 1 pja., the struck his small mongrel dog with a broom handle. o»«n aownii. 4 uS, ^ ® i# aowi. mercury had climbed to 73. a. a, a, " Primrose Uw - -t . - . ........j........... Wisterman explained that he didn’t want the. dog anymore, —-~ according to police. CruelVbeating an animal is a violation of state jaw. •4 . 1 • I The Wedther IU. mpmm Bwtw Fotkmi . THE PONTIAC PONTIAC, ’MICHIGAN, WEHNF4SDAY, UAW Faced With Decision on Strike Issue Union Motto Tonight to Solect Target Auto Firm Shutdown Humphrey Seen as VP Nominee ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Ufi — Democrats turn from convention battles tg the loud but peaceful ritual tpnight of acclaiming President Johnson as their nominee and hearing finally his choice of a running mate. EnougH Funds for City Raises THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY. Al'GlIST 26. 1064 Revenues Will Cover I This Year's pay Hike Hbteting revenues are ex-. pected to newer the cost of implementing new wage scales for Pontiac city employes this year, according, to a report last night by City Manager Joseph A. Warren. Warren said that the total cost of IM.S11 to fully implement the new wages for the re* mainder of die fiscal year (to. Dee. 31) could be handled from He reported to the City jCaaunissloo that sales tag revenues this year are exceeding budget estimates by MM* Other revenues are also exceeding expenditures. Cost of the pay plan for all general fund departments for the' balance of the year was put at 377,813. The sales tax revenues were to cover this portion of the pay increases. PAY CHANGES J Pay adjustments for employes in sanitation and waste collection, sewage treatment, public housing, water works and water cAQACtm departments will come from revenues produced by those departments or special millage over and above general fund levies.. Brake a down by depan- to MM3 for sanitation and waate collection; $3,(24 for sewage; $1,131 for public housing; and $5,596 for water works and collection. While revenues are exceeding expectations tills year, a problem will arise when the budget tor 1965 is prepared, according to Warren. 7 Area Beauty Queens Vie for Fair Title MB CHERYL BARANSKI Mbs Utica YVONNE C. ICKES (of Milford) PAMELA HUMMING Romeo Peach Queen JEANNE OSBORN Mbs Southfield Civil Defense MARILYN DENTON 1 Mbs Ortonville JUDITH A. PIPPER Milford’s Junior Mbs Judge Says End 'Shadowy Definition' Move Fast on Acting Chief, City Told Pontiac* city officials were told yesterday to move briskly in determining whether acting Police Chief William K. Hanger was child of police or not. Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer urged city officiab to move “with alacrity” in determining Hanger’s present status. “That shadowy definition of acting chief of police should not endure,” said Jadge Beer. “Either he b chief of police or he b not chief.” The designation of Hanger as chief or not' was suggested to City Attorney William A. Ewart yesterday at the opening of a trial that challenges the validity of Hanger’s promotion from-lieutentant to inspector.' Hanger- U currently acting chief with the rank of inspector. He was appointed inspector last December, a rank second only to that of chief. NO OBJECTION Judge Beer said that there to la stating that Hanger should be designated police chief or not, Judge Beer said, ”... not an in-between, shadowy thing referred to as an acting chief of police/’ City Manager Joseph A. Warren, who admitted he had talked to attorneys for two hours yesterday about the case, said he had no comment on the trial. Two April Oil Grads Head for Colombia Filed in June by Pontiac police officers Lt. Raymond E. Meggitt, Capt. Donny Ashley and Capt. George T. Scott, the suit charges that competitive examinations for the inspector’s job Wfere not offered, which they claim is in violation of city personnel rules.. Calculated for 1965, the total coet for all funds was set at $291,050 by the city manager. CoM to the general fund will be'$40,9M, he said. STARTS SEPT. 6 The new pay plan, expected to go into effect Sept. 6, will reflected on pay checks issued sept. 25. 1 > A public heariito to'amend the 1964 budget to allow for implementation of the pay plan was aft tor next Tuesday by the City Commission. City employes generally appear enthusiastic about the new pay scales, Warren added. However, some question! and objections have been filed. These mostly involve classifications. Warren said that the commission might want to consider a similar study of classifications during 1965. - The pay .plan,, covering. 770 city employes, was recommended by the Michigan Municipal League (MML). Another phase in the Alliance for. Progress program pairing Oakland County with the Cali region of Colombia literally got off the ground today, j» Two April graduates of Oakland University departed byaft-plane for a year of study at the University of Valle in Cali, Selected last spring S three-man committee, honor student Marjorie Hannah, 21 of 414 W. 13 Mile, Royal Oak, and Dennis Parle, 21, of 244 S. TOden, form OU’a half of an exchange plan between the two universities.' OU and the South American univgptit£Nafe Partners of the Alliance for Progress program conceived in 1963 after an exchange of delegations between Oakland County and the Cauca Valley in Colombia. The student exchange will be-completed thb fall with the arrival of two University of Valle Students. OU officiab said Rena to Fuchs and Amparo Castaneda will arrive here in time for the fall term. Miss Csttaaeda to a third- Fucbs Is a fourth-year elec- Setting Sept. 3 to resumption of the trial, if the issue has not been settled, Judge Beer said that his decision would determine If policies exist- for taro-motion and discipline within the police department. Meantime, l&ss Hannah, who received her degree in teacher education will continue her studies in her Spanish major. * ★ * V A history major at OU, Parle will study Latin American history, political science and philosophy during his stay In Colombia. . Tuition scholarships and automatic admission to the Cali university were arranged for the Alliance for Progress students. George L. Stout, 4437 Forest, Waterford Township, has been elected lieutenant governor for the 5th Division of the Michigan District of Kiwanis. No definite date has been set for the arrival of the Colombian students. Active in the Kiwanis organisation for several years, Stout b the immediate past president of the Pontiac Kiwanis Club. Public Schools Set Registration Period Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report -PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Fair and pleasant today and tonight, high mattiy to 70a, low tonight near 50. Thnraday increasing cloudiness and warmer, high 73-66. West to southwest winds 8 to. 16 mites, becoming light atad variable inteuday and tonight and south to southwest 19 to 11 miles miles Thursday. Friday scattered showers and warm. (Continued From Page One) schools in the Pontiac area can be made the ffrst day of classes on Sept- 9, according to the Archdiocese of Detroit. NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers s are expeetad tonight in the central Plateau and Plains, the > 1 lower Mississippi Valley and the lower south Atlantic CoAst. It will fit wanner to central part of the nation from north to south. Colder weather will prevail to the northeast and the mlgdf^irtetni DOORS OPEN Public schools in Pontiac open their doors for elements^ grades, except kindergarten bn Sept. 9. Secondary public school pupib have their first full day on Friday, Sept, Ilv Neb students, including entering freshmen at the high schools, report on Sept. 10 for a day of orientation. •Kindergarten classes begin Sept. 14. ‘ j f ’ Students at the two high schools in Waterford Township will register tomorrow through Tuesday of next week. Registrations for students at the two junior high schools will be taken Tuesday through Thursday next week. * All elementary school pupils, including kindergarten youngsters and 7th graders at Grayson a a d Silver Lake School, will register the mornings of Sept. 9 and 19. Classes will begin Sept. 9 for all senior, high students as wen as the 7th grade junior high pupils. Other junior high students will start class Sept. 10. All elementary school youngsters will begjn classes Sept. 11. Teachers in Pontiac will port Sept- 6. They will attend an assembly at Pontiac Northern High In the morning and report to their respective buildings in the afterfloon. St. Trinity Lutheran School students rejpster Sept. 2t wjth classes beginning on Sept. I. no legal objection to the action making Hanger acting chief. ^ Stile jOwanis Post Goes to Area Man His duties-as lieutenant governor will require at least two visits during the year to each of the 18 chibs to the divbion to keep members informed on state and national Kiwanis programs. City Locals Vote to Strike GM Members of U^W Local 594 at GMC Truck ft Coach Divbion and Local 653 at Pontiac Motor Divbion have voted overwhelmingly in favor of a strike, it was reported today hy local union officials. The tabulation at GMC Truck showed 2,1* votes to favor of a strike and 147 votes against Sales of Pontiacs and Tempests set a record for the 29th time to tiie 1964 model year tost week and led the industry in percentage of increase for the second today period in August, it-was announcedtoday ed MM for and 914 against. The haBsttog was conducted Msaday sad yesterday. Similar balloting b scheduled for completion tomorrow by La cal 3* at Fbfter 3ody. The strike vole, termed “precautionary ~ by union officiab, is being taken in earn General Motors ip aaaaad the “target” company hi a nationwide auto strike. Negotiations between UAW officials and representatives of the three major auto companies for a new three-year contract currently are in recess: The present contract expires Monday. , UAW President ’Waltet* Reu-ther is expected to announce tonight which of tl& three companies will be struck if no settlement is reached by Monday! Frank V. Bridge, general ■ales manager at Pontiac Motor Divbion, said 18,072 Units were sold in the Aug. 11-29. period, an increase of 94 per cent over the same period to 19*. The previsas record- of II,-*9 units tor the period was set in 1955. 'GOP Frontlash Worse Than Racial Backlash' ATLANTIC CITY (UPI) -Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman considers Republican “frontlash” a more potent force than facial “blaeklash” in undermining America’s future. “The backlash deals with civil rights, but I consider that the frontlash is * the destructive reaction by (Sen. Barry) Goldwa-ter to the farm program and rural America,” Freeman said in urging the South Dakota delegation" to become rural Americans for Johnson. State Dems in Row (Continued From Page One) before heading for the convention session due to begin. * t , *■ Former Governor John.Swain-son and Democratic State Chairman Zolton Ferency led a faction which held ouMor- a floor fight rather than the majority report compromise. SCHOLLE FORCES They lost to the forces of Gus Scholle, Michigan AFL-ClO president. 1 Michigan’s senior senator, Pat McNamara, b chairman of the delegation, and ns such presides at the cancnses. He’s a man after my own heart — probably myown vote, too. He loathes excessive dis- Somehow, members of the Mississippi Freedom party got into the {tall, and sat down in tiie seats of the regular Mississippi delegates. TUG-OF-WAR A gentle tug-of-war began, and it looked like New Year’s Eve to a nightclub for awhile, -with everyone to . that area jammed together. Verbosity irritates him, and as his irritation grows, verbosity diminishes. Pretty soon the caucus is over. AIR OF EXPECTANCY There was an air of expectancy as the evening’s excer-cises got under bay at Grand Canyon, balled by some “Convention Hall.’’ - ” - The expectancy stemmed from thA feeling that the Mississippi delegation's hassle, over which the Michigan delegation had done so much soul-searching might assume national proportions nnd provide the fireworks of the convention — just as civil 'rights rocked the GOP convention. Ail* was not sweetness And light. The credentials committee report was read and motion made for adoption. The i mittee re- port — another potential source of agitation for t h o i e who like things to proceed with order and dispatch—was also passed with nary a dissenting voice.' Sen. Philip Ai Hart, tone of Michigan’s two members on the committee — read, the conclud: ing section of the platforfh. Our 6Wn Neil Staebler was again honored this time as the introducer of the permanent chairman oftbe convention — Eer of the House John W. rmack of Massachusetts;-GOOD JOB The chairman delivered tiie address of the evening, and did a good job wanning over the castigation -of the Republican party and extobnent of the Democratic, that,, his predecessors at tiw rostrum had cooked up/ ' f ‘ . So endetfa the second convention day. 29thRecord in Car Sales Pontiac, Tempests Set Another 10-Day Mark Elsewhere in- the auto industry, Chevrolet Divbion reported delivery of 71*9 new cars and trucks during mid-August, gn increase of 32.9 per cent over the same period of 19* and 21.9 per cent above the 1959 10-day record. Chrysler showed a gain of 46 per cent in the 10-day period with 30,979 units delivered.” SAME PERIOD The company sold 21/157 units in the same period last year. This year’s mid-Augusj were the best since If" ler reports. Ford previously reported^ 10-day sales of 49,579 cars 11,758 trucks, both records/for the period. Birmingham Area News Plans Near Completion for Hall, Fire Station BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Plans now Are being completed for a new $190,000 master fire station and $90,000 addition to the township hall. Supervisor Homer Case1 and Clerk Mrs. Deloris V. Little have bran authorized by ,t h e Township Board to advertise for bids ota the two projects. Case said he hoped construction could be started yet thb year. Specifications on tht fire station are being prepared by Ta-rapata MacMahon Associates,. Inc. of Bloomfield Hills. Architects for the Township Hall addition are those who planned the - original building, Swanson Associates Inc. of Bloomfield Hills. FINAL PHASE The master fire station, to be constructed west of the hall, will be, the final phase in the township’s fire department budding program. The project was initiated seven years ago with the approval of a half-mill levy for 10 years. Present stations are on East-over near Adams, Maple at .Woodbqnk qnd Franklin at Lake itoadr4l«dquar-ters are at the Township'Hall. The new station will' provide room for six truck!. The ppper level will contain offices (or the fire ddef,- fire marshal and station officer. LOUIS L. LOVETTE New Director jor Aid Society A new executive driector has been named for the Oakland County branch ot the Michigan Children’s Aid Society, a United Fund agency. Louis L. Lovette, 41, formerly Of Alpena, succeeds. Alexander G. Zaphiris, who resigned to accept a position in Denver, Coto. A graduate of Michigan State Untyershy and Western Michigan University, Lovette has beeh to social work since 1*1. He holds a master of social work degree fTOtn MSU, 106, and master of arts degree from WMU, 1959. CONTROL CENTER There also will be a complete control center .v “Eventually' we will have separate telephone numbers for the police nod fire stations,’’ Case said. Completing the upper level will be a day room, dining room, kitchen, aparatus room, hose storage and repair shop, hose drying tower arid 16-bed dongb-tory.• Beneath these facilities will be the storage areas, mechanical repair shop apd large meeting and instruction room. TRAINING AREA Also planned b a blacktopped training area at the rear of the building. When the fire department’s master station to moved from the Township Hall, the police department will be enlarged and the courtroom moved downstairs, •-* The 20-foot addition to the south side of the building will provide for enlargement of the supervisor’s, clerk’s and treasurer’s offices. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Lo-cal police are seeking state help in the case of the sickly rac coons. That something is ailing a good share oil the city’s protected pests is a certainty, according to Capt. Walter Shifter. “We’ve had to kill 8 or 10 of them in the last week,” he said today. Suiter’s department has been receiving frequent calls about racoons that just won’t be chased away from doorsteps. Lovette formerly headed the northeastern Michigan branch of the Children’s Aid Society. The new director b married and basunechik). “Wp got two calls yesterday,” he said, “The coons look sickly — like.they were having a fit." EAST SIDE mf Most of the reports he noted, have been conting from the east side of ttjfe city. List week,! 12-jrear-old Jeff Campbell of 160 Canterbury was bitten by a raccoon and now is receiving' rabies antitoxin shots. . Police were able to capture one of tiie raccooqs Alive yesterday. Today it was to lie picked up by a Michigan State Conservation Department officer * and taken to the state health laboratory in Lansing for analy- Meanwhile, Stutter warned residents to keep their distance foam raccoons and to notify police if they-sight one. Chajmcey M. Sanders Service for Chauncey M.6 Sanders. 74, of 2100 Woodward wtij be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Beebe Funeral Home, Ithaca. Burial will follow at Emerson Cemetery, GrAtiot County. Mr. Sanders died yesterday after a long illness. He was a retired horse trainer at the Fred Winegar Stables. Survivors ait five daughters, Mrs. Chris Traicoff, Mrs. Truman Brady and Mrs. Ronal Wilson, all -of Pontiac, Mrs. Mar- ■ garet Briggs of Breckenridge and Mrs. Alfred Smith, of Midland; three, sons, Robert of Wheeler, R.V. of St. Loub>and Burtoh of Shepard; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. ,• Two Honored for Service to Hospital State Dems Unite, Divide Two retiring membeoOtof the board of dlrectorsVpf Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital were honored last night with a dinner at the Fox and Hounds Inn, Bloomfield Hills. Feted for tiielr"service were ftarrild W. Kruger, 4180 Midland, . Waterford Township, and Harry Park of Detroit. Kruger, a past president of the board, has served 10 years. Park is an eight-year member. 'Principal speaker for the oc-qLrion,'Dr. Donald Fraser, president of the board of directors, praised Kruger and Park for theft service to the hospital. *' ★ , * • They were presented wrist-watches as a token of "apprOcto^ tion. Dr, Donald Evaiis of Detroit has been appinted to fill one of the board vacancies. The other appointment is yet to be an- (Continued From Page One) envoy, or United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther. The UAW chief turned up in Atlantic City yesterday and told newsmen his visit was “social.” But he reportedly conferred with Humphrey on the Mississippi matter. ACCEPT REPORT Later, in the Michigan caucus—the wildest, noisiest the delegation has experienced since it came here—virtually An of the UAW officials and staff workers who are delegates went along ' with Diggs’ recommendation to * accept the majority report. I WlW- . 7 .• ’ k l ■ .m -tf- THB PONTIAC PljtRSS. WgpNESpJlY, AUpUSfr Changed U. S. Prison System Renowned Penologist to Retire WASHINGTON (AP) - Forty-five years, of government service cad this week for James V. Bennett, reoowned penologist and director of the Bureau of Prisons — a post he has held since 1*37. The gentle, blueeyed reformer who changed the shape of the American prison system while he strove to change the hearts^ of its inmates retires Friday on' his 70th MriSxluy. ' it 'it ,: h He takes with hlin the gratitude of hundreds 6f convicts -who found in Bennett more a humanitarian than a custodian. He spw the danger' of idle hands and gave- them useful jobs to do. A REMINDER He reminded them that they were still human beings by replacing lock-step mess hall lines and bucket feedings with informal table arrangements. . He befriended many and became an easy mark for some who, out of prison, needed a small loan for a grubstake. '■ . ♦ -“I think I can say modestly that I’m leaving the federal prison system in as good condition as it’s ever been,” Bennett told a visitor to his pleasant office, with its picture-window view of Capitol HU1. - -J "We’ve overcome a lot of JAMES V. BENNETT problems. We’ve got a good program. Every prisoner who wants a job has a job. Were running economically, and the Federal Prison Industries is turning out a good profit. Oiir personnel are well-trained' and improving.” A CONSULTANT Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy has said Bennett will continue to be a consultant to the Bureau of Prisons under its new director, Myrl E. Alexander, a former assistant director. Why didn’t he seek a waiver of the compulsory retirement age, |pch as President Johnson Grand Jury Indicts Three in Negro Educator Death DANIELSV1LLE, Ga/(UPI) -s A grand jury in this rural Georgia county seat of 362 people yesterday Indicted .three former Ku Klux Klansmen for murder io jhe night * riding slaying of Negro educator Lemuel Penn. A judge-said when their trials come up, possibly next week, decorum sill be so strict that he will tolerate no “chewing of Switch Site of'Lunar' Space Tests BEND, Orb. (AP) — Space scientists moved their simulated moon walk today to a field of volc&feadi, softer than the 'rock lavabed on which astronaut R. Walter Cunningham took a'spill Tuesday. The £ite had nothing,, to do with the fall, which neither injured Cunnihgham, not surprised scientists. The schedule called for another site change , Thursday sq engineers could measure man’s ability to perform tasks on various surfaces believed to resemble the moon. * * * The ash on which the National Aeronautics and Space Administration team worked today was spewed jfftm Mt. Mazama more than 7,000 years ago. It lies * great blanket, over a remote area 50 miles south of the central Oregon town of Bend. -. Light-colored cinder pumice is piled more than 60 feet deep in some spots. % ‘ QUITE A JOB Cunningham found out Tuesday that climbing a 50-foot slope at an angle of 30 degrees is quite-a'job'for a man burdened by a pressurized space suit and a 30-pound bade pack. After seven minutes of careful stepping oyer the jutting uneven lava he had moved to within 10 feet of the top, then he lost his balance and fell backward. ..... ★ ★ , ♦ 1 ' V Cunningham was not Wt, although a glove puncture caused a slight pressure loss in the suit. After' complaining that his space mask was foggy and that' a walking staff did not help much be climbed to the tdp.b W Sr h Engineers then moved the tests to another field where Cunningham had no trouble with a 20-degree slope,' a 600-foot walk suad a test of the baby walker, a mechanical device that surrounds the astronaut' and aids his balance. gum or. chewing of t o b a e c o, drinking of soft drinks or eating peanuts” in the courtroom. Courthouse sources said Negroes are on the jury lists. Named in the indictments returned yesterday after four hpurs of deliberations were Cecil William Myers, 25, J a r Lackey, 29, and Joseph Howard Sims, 41,' all of.nearby Athens, Ga. * . * , t * h y A fourth suspect, Herbert Guest, 37, was not indicted. Guest was listed as a conspirator in the slaying in the original FBI civil rights^warrant under which the four were arrested. FEDERAL CHARGE . Solicitor General (prosecutor) Clete J o h n s o n said no case against Guest was presented to the grand jury. Guest is being held under 625,000 bond on a federal charge. , Penn, of Washington, D.C., was killed by a blast from a shotgun fired from an automobile as he and two Negro companions drove along a highway in the early morning darkness of JulyUVen route to Washington fro* a training stint as Army Reserve officers at Fort Benning, Ga. Pena, held the rank of lieutenant Johnson said last night that ‘all trial cases will be' called next week and the calendar set after we bear pleas.” A court - appointed attorney for Lackey, John W: Williford, said ypsterdaV he Intended to file a federal suit to keep FBI agents from appearing at the trial. He contended that such an appearance would violate the civil rights of his'.client. ‘NO MERIT Johnson said be Ain’t think touch of that. “I think the sujt has no merit,” he said. President Johnson ordered FBI agents into the investigation of Penn’s murder, and the four former Klansmep were arrested OP Aug. 6. They were charged under the civil rights , law, but the State of Georgia-subsequently filed state charges against the four and federal authorities agreed to hold up their plans for prosecution. ' ^ ' ★ a ♦ The FBI described all four men as members of the Ku Klux Klan when they were arrested, but the Klah later disowned them. Charge Viet Violation PHNOMPENH, Cambodia (AP)—The Cambodian Press’ Agency charged today that three South Vietnamese planes violated Cambodian. territory Aug. 19. The planes flew over a guard post, the agency said.'• extended to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover?* * . ■**» W 1 it ‘T believe a .fellow ought to move on and give H9“jttoiers chance,” Bennett said. "You can’t hang on indefinitely. This is a hard administrative job; every day there’s a crisis. 1 think perhaps it will be most useful if I trice my experiences and make them available to others.” Bennett is working on a book “dealing with the kinds oF pri-soners I’ve known, and their problems, and the general problems of trying to deal fairly with a defendant.” MAY TAKE CASE Given enough free time, Ben-nett added, “I’m still a lawyer, and I might-take on a case or two to help put across my point of view.” Tha{ P°*nt of view, which appears time and again in Bennett’s prolific writings, is that prisons must not stop at being jails. *- * it- He speaks with the authority of long years of service in the field. The son of a minister, he was bom Aug! 28, 1893 in Silver Creek, N.Y., and was graduated from Brown University in 1918. The following year he entered government service as an assistant investigator. of government efficiency. DRAFTS REFORM • Working, with a congressional investigation of federal prisons in 1929, he drafted the ‘reform legislation which set up the Bureau of Prisons as a branch of the Justice Department. He was named assistant director when the bureau was established in 1930. He instituted Federal Prison Industries, Inc., an inmate-staffed organization which yielded sales of 640 million last year alone. He was in charge of that until he became director of the bureau of prisons in 1937. “No man is ever really satisfied with the job he’s done,” Bennett said. “There are .always new things to do. But I leave with no regrets.” State Income, Outgo LANSING (AP) - Stai Treasury income during the past week was $59 million and outgo was $88.2 million. The treasury balance at the end of the week was $148.3 million. fvmom (MADE FRI.AUG.28 8 PM. ffinniVAN - • ^ mm oeraoiT AIK 28-SEPT 7 SIMMS!!, |gg TIRED of your kitchen? KITCHENS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND! PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES at 334-832$-911 Orchard Lake Ava., 2 Mks E. of Tel.; »»......»-**«*; *•'•**•««**r»' TMKWBDW Mr- 12 nOONTH 9 PM At SIMMS TERRIFIC $AVING$ DURING Boys’ Whipcon whipcord In Wsitom styling. Sizes‘6 or 10 ot gji Mil |ooi Boys’culm Sweatshirt j $1 79 volue — 111 quality sweatshirts, fleece tilting for worqith. Blue ■ color only in $i!t»lmoll and medium. American made, . [bo j ALL DOLLAR SALE’ Prices Good For Toimnow Only Here At SIMMS! SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Famous ‘Red Label’ Make MEN'S T-SHIRTS 2 *0,100 America'* most lamou* moke In T-Shirt* . . . while cotton with reinforced neck, won’t stretch out of shape. Sizes >-School (•PAPER I BALL PEN tl.83 Value 97c value — 50% wool and 50% f nylon socks with striped crew tops. Ro-1 inforced heel and toe Size* 9 to 12. * Perfect for gym. Men's.® Sweatshirts 1 00 \ leogulori ef $1*98—crew nech styled seme with region sleeves. Heavy- H vmtght cotton in gleaming whit*. Six** small to •xtra-lar*«««« ' ^MLsgsi*! ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT Of MITSUI 4 COMPANY The soup mix goes into one and a half cups of boiling water and is simmered for ten minutes. After cooling a bit, blend in a cup of sour cream. Veal Paprika With Tomato-Vegetable Sauce 1 package tomato-vegetable soup mix - lVk cups boiling water 1 cup sour cream 2 pounds veal steak, cut into 2-inch squares 2 tablespoons shortening 1 4-oz. can mushrooms % teaspoon salt Pepper Vi teaspoon paprika Stir tomato - vegetable soup mix into boiling water in saucepan. Cover and simmer 10 minutes. Cool slightly and Mend in sour cream. Brown veal in shortening then remove to a 2-quart casserole. Add mushrooms and seasonings. Pour sauce over browned veal. Cover and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 1 hour r until meat is tender. Makes to'8 servings. New Food Experiericse Fun BY JANET ODELL . Pontiac press Feed Editor Three mul^ of a rambling vacation in. the eastern part of the country brought us a few firsts...... V • Our first fresh ripe ftg Our first soft pretzel . Our first Maryland crab meat Our first shqofly pte It was a real vacation — no camping, no cooking — Just swimming, reading/ hiking and sightseeing in the part of the United States where history was made in the 17th and 18th centuries. The fresh fig came from Williamsburg, Va. la that restored colonial town we had breakfast at Williamsburg Inn where they serve apple Miters and hominy for the first’ meal of the day. We first encountered soft pretzels in Philadelphia where a street vendor was hawking them. * We first tasted them in Atlantic City where we went to parade on the boardwalk and to peek into' Convention Hall ahead of this week’s convention. PREfZEL BENDER 'J Last week in Sturgis, Pa., we became an official pretzel bender with a signed certificate to prove ft. . The little Sturgis pretzel factory -r granddaddy to all such factories in the U.S. — en< ages visitors to try twisting a pretzel. These alao are the large soft ones, not the. crisp ones you buy in packages. In Pennsylvania,, too, we visited a company that makes the famous Lebanon sausage. Contain iag oniy beef and spices, this sausage is not 'cooked,-just smoked over seasoned oak logs Of third and final plant tear was af the giant Hershey corporation. It wns interesting, hat the rente was backward. We started, seeing the candy bars wrapped and put into packages (they were filling “Trick or Treat’’ packs for Halloween) The last stop on th# tour was seeing the chocolate mixed. In Lancaster, Pa. which' is Pennsylvania-Dutch country we had a dinner that only a Paul Bunyan could do Justice to . Fortunately,, we had only coffee that morning — in anticipation — and we didn’t eat ag^n until •:20 that night. fbln and Fancy Farm in Bird-in-Haad, Pa. h l *ow- aad gift stop ran If tie Men-nonites. They serve dinner family style from Just before noon until early evening. We ment the Felix Wotilas of Sylvan Lawe there. Although there weren’t seven sweets and sours for the first course, we did have chow-chow, corn relish, apple butter, a meat salad and homemade Mead. The main course Included ham, meat loaf, fried potatoes, buttered noodles, green beans, stewed dried corn and apple with ehorry or shoofly pie, jdl mode or plain. Here’s a recipe for Shoofly Pie which is sometimes served for breakfast in Pennaylvahia-Dutch homes. SHOOFLY PIE > Ilk cups flour 1 cup brown sugar Ik cup lard or butter % cup molasses % cup hot water % teaspoon soda 1 unbaked pie shell Line pie tin with unbaked crust. Mix flour, sugar and to make ciuntoa. Dissolve soda in hot water and add ' Pour, molasses mixture http pie shell. Top. with crumbs. Rake-ft 260 degrees 25-30 minutes, or until firm. Rice Is Excellent . to.Put in Salads A rice salad is fun to prepare for lunch because "you can pick and choose (from what’s available) to add to it. Bert are suggestions: cooked shrimp and him; cooke^ green pens and green beans; celery and green onion. ,* Toss the cold cooked rice with the additions you choose plus an oii-and-vinegar dressing; serve on crisp salad greens and garnish with tomato. .. . 108 NORTH SAGINAW Repeated By Popular Demand ' DeoMa Door All Matal UTILITY CABINET AN steel, baked ee wMte enemei. 5 roomy shelves for plenty of sSsrepe. $12** o ROOMY DOUBLE-DOOR WARDROBE All steel construction. Roomy interior with hat rack and plenty of storage $1988 CMU-VTIUTY GUMET 30” wide, 15* deop, 66* high. Sliding glass doors, 3-way electric outlet. Open work shelf, full width utility drawer. Double paneled doom, magnetic door catches. $28“ PERSON TO PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment • 90 Days Some As Cash •-Up to 36 Months to Pay WHITE ENAMEL ALL-STEEL BASE CABINET 20* wide, 16* deep, 36* high. All rteel, white snamsl: Handy storage drawer plus shelf *ih » base. Marproof top. $14“ NOMONCYDOWN Ut Our Attendant Writ Your Oar In KMSfdfi Private Lit Bear of Store-Open Thurs., Fri., Mon. Til • Summer is the season for lazy living. A brayed dinner is a Rood choice for this time of year because,the meal can be cooked quickly. w ♦ e For instance, ground beef patties require only 12 to IS minutes to brail. Tomato halves topped with grated cheese, and cooked potato slices brushed with/butter can be popped Into the broiler when the meat is partially cooked and ready to torn. The entire meal comes out hot and savory after only 15 minutes total cooking time. HURRY! STILL TIME TO PLAY Play Top Value Stamps KROGER TfflFTSIlKHf Clip end save. You can play more than one card. ---------------- ^ man unu uaru. f—*"--------------------- WIN 4 EXCITING WAYS: Got a free slip avary time vnil visit nur ttnrat I iff Gat e fret slip avary tima you visit our storos. Lift * off tho "Gift Mingo" panel. Is If a'gift is pictured, match with gift on Playing Card. A filled row gives you 1000 Top Value Stamps. < 2s If it roads, “You Win a Grer”j you win your choice of any one of the 25 gifts pic-• tured on the Playing Card. 3. If it reads, “You Win 50 Top Value Stamp*" turn in lift-off panel at any of our stores and receive your 50 Top Value Stamps. 4s If lift-off panel states yon win a free food product, turn it in for the item you have won. EASY! YUMl NOTHING TO Bp?! HUNDREDS OF / O ISS4 TO* VALUE ENTERPRISES. INC. Get your "Gift Bingo" slip at... - TURN THE PAGE FOR LOW MEAT, PRODUCE and GROCERY PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS . oaer TUB' PONTIAC 1*11 KSS. WEDNESDAY4 AL’GCST 2tf, 11HJ4 center crown, preventing easy approach to the hole. . ' No. 3—A 200-yard par 3. The grqgg and trapping are on a diagonal. ditch needed i Trapped left at No. d—a : Shortest par 4 guard fairwaj i player has ever broken (291) in a 72-hole tonrna-t there. Gene Littler came closest with a 281 in win-the INI U.S. Open. The field will be cat to the low 7S plus ties after M holes for the final rounds Saturday and Sunday. Every player surviving the 3d-hole cut is assured of $620. Every professional who swats a ball off the first tee will make Bunkers on right and left of green. No. 1#—A 443-yard par 4. Bunker at left on rolling fairway 2^70 yards out. Right traps cut into edge of fairway. Second shot uphill to contoured green. No. 11 — A 407-yard par 4. Carrying a knoll 240 yards out gives player added distance. Fairway bunker lies to the right Golfs Greatest Challenge 'Monster' Tomorrow 7 AM. Tee-Off for Huge Field in World Open 281 Course Record Facing Onslaught; Venturi Shoots 67 By FLETCHER SPEARS „The greatest array of golf tel- I ent ever a s s e m b 1 e d on one 1 course tees off tomorrow mom- | ing in the opening round of thl | .$200,000 Carling World Open j Championship at Oakland Hills | Country Club. And some of the top names | quietly predict that the “Green I Monster" will be whimpering 1 after thp star-studded field ends 1 the 72-hdle route Sunday. | - 4FV 4. * ■ V" j Included in the 155-man field | are golfers representing. 14 coun- | tries«,Canada’s Nick^Wfeslock is • | the lone amateur in the field. f “The course is in ideal con- | dition for a new recordi" host \ pro Al Watrous commented. “The greens are soft now. When f they’re hard, it’s often the dif- | ference between a par and a -j bogey. And it would take ’em i 10 days'to firm upmaw” The 6,007-yard, par 70 course, is in top condition and the 72- j hole record of 281 is expected to j tumble when the pros start ma- j neuvering for a slice of the j richest golf tournament p u r s’e j . ever. * ’ The winner wiU have a $25^1 000 payday with the nmner;up picking up a $17,000 check. Gene Littler set the 281 Oak- | land Hills mark in winning .the INI U.S. Open, but the La Jolla, j Calif, wo is expect to take j a back seat this year to such j names as ,Ken Venturi, Arnold ; ' Palmer sand Jack Nicklaus. • HOT SWINGER Venturi is currently 'the'hot- j test swinger on-the pro circuit, j and he established himself as a j favorite with an unofficial three- j under-par 67 in his first practice ; tour yesterday, equaling the,of- i fidal competitive course .mark shared by' Ben Hogan and five other players. “I am playing so well; I am so sure of myself on shots to the green that it startles me,” the 33 - year - old Venturi remarked after the practice round. “I*m hittln’ the ball so good I’m cutt'in' it in half,” Ns quipped. * , Venturi, wallowing in obscurity in 1962 and 1963, started his.comeback with a dramatic victory in the U.S. Open in June and followed it up with a record - breaking performance in winning tjie American Golf Classic with a 275 at Akron Sun- * * ★ * • * I ★ Famous Site of Tournaments World Open Starters A.M. U OO A.M.-WMr*d Hcmmu*. Winnipeg, MR" Note, Canada. MSN ■Ma’HO Solo, JoeX**"»lll*, Two*. . 11:00 ' —Gordon Cargill. Haw*,worth, England, Karma ZarMy. Yakima. WaMikiglon. John Davit. Sydney, Audra(ia. , W 11:10 i —Sari Yancey, PMMolpMA Pgrm*yiv*m*i LlenM nMk Brentwood. England; Otrrv Edwardi, Fart Worth. Tanas. H:Bt ftp Miguel, Madrid. Mai Roger Glnaberg. Alpine. Maw W Jonty: AM SprellliMi Versatile*. Franca. ■ _ 11:9 Wail Archer, Gilroy, Celitamle; Chrletey O'Connnr, OuWIn. Ireland; Donald StaSUmA Lotawv Belgium. 11:00 - -Frad Marti. Ueytawn. TMM; Bobby Brut. Na IHtaalai Karl, Lima, Poru. I. Greenwich, Conn.; Florantlna Molina, Nature s Golf Pride Is Oakland Hills -Sartori ilii V M.-Johrmy Toll, Gulf HMta, I______UNI NM Vtdra, Florida; QwwTllW NSBk -Tommy Jacob*. Bermuda Dune*. CMNorala; Jaca Rule, Cedar Rap Ida. Iowa; Paul Runyan. La Jalla, California. -hXIttlar. La Jolla, California; Sob Marriaon. Gothenburg, ' o Campbell, Peraldq Bay, Florida. .—ilrei. Florida;, pan FajrlMri. . “We didn’t build this course, nature provided it for us." . Course Still Monster for j Jim Ferrier Robert Trent Jones de- 1 signed it, -and Jim Ferrier | gave Oakland Hill? golf | ^course its unsuave name, | "The Monster.” It was in INI, when \ Ferrier walked to the first i tee as one of the most j confident players in the j National Open. TwO days later the j • transplanted Australian j packed his baggage, ad- . mitted\he was beaten by | Jones’ mreation, called it j a “monster” «nd left town j at midppint of the tour-. ney><: In INI he returned j and in the practice j round of the National | Open be came in from the course holding the head of a wood in one hand and the shaft in the other. "....% , _Asked if he had broken j r the club on the course he, said, “You’re darn right I 1 ■did. It’s still a monster.” And he stalked into the | clubhouse. * '* „ ★ * j . He made the cut this j time with 146 and finished j in 22nd place for the tour- j nament with 292. Thursday, Ferrier tees off at 9:00 a.m. in the World Open on the,, “monstrous” course with the “monstrous” $200,ON purse. This was the historic remark of the late Joseph Mack; the pioneer founder of Oakland Hills Country Club, organized in 1916 with the Miller farmhouse as a club house and the Miller’s hen house as the pro shop. Head pro in the converted hen house in 1918 and 1818 was Walter Hagen, Open • champ of 1914, who found he could not keep the Job because of the demand to play in tournaments around the country. The chartered 148 members ef the newborn club were happy with their farmhouse, electric piano and juke box, and lodging at 91.89 per 1 night while . bids were being let for file beautiful colonial struc- • tore which now stands. In 1920 Mike Brady, who lost the 1919 Open playoff to Hagen, took over as head pro and it was the same year which officially opened the new clubhouse. ♦ Mack and .the chib board of directors c engaged Donald Ross to design Um course and the architect pointed ■ -out that the entire course was laid out to center -around the 10th and 11th . holes, “two of the greatest holes in a row on, ..any. course In any place.” f In 1923, Ernie Ford an Englishman succeeded Brady as host pro and, in O 1924 Oakland Hills was host to its first Open ’tournament, won by Cyril Walker.' FAMOUS CLINCHER Walker clinched the tournament on the famous | No. 16 hole. His seednd shot cleared the trees and lake and landed within club length of the pin. He birdied the' hole and defeated Bobby Jones by three strokes 297-300. The first prise for the victory was 8500. Walker gave the check to his caddy. WATROUS PltO 'In 1830, current pro At Watrous took over as head pro and under his. reign, Oakland Hills has seen three more exciting Opens. In 1937, Ralph Guldahl closed with a 09, defeating a 25-year-old rookie najned Sam Snead from West Vir- ■ ginia, 281-233. Guldahl startled the crowd fathered around the 18th greenby casually walking to the edge of a trap and ! carefully combiqg his hair. He knew -he was hi. He slowly walked up to his ball,' putted it in from four feet and raised his hand a champion. Oakland Hills, they said, ‘ was softening, so Robert Trent Joneu was called in to rearrange/the course. He did to such an extent that .only two- golfers were able to break par in a single , round during the INI Open .at the course. Ben Hogan brought the “nunatar” to its knees coming from 15th place at mid-point to 8th after three rounds and a 32 ' back nine finish for 87 and a 287 total. The year 1952, however, was the year of celebration . for Oakland.Hills. A profit of 869,ON from the INI Open ended 35 years of In- -debtedness and a mortgage burning party put the final 8134,ON note into flames. * * * In 1981, the Open re- ' turned for the 4 th time and Gene Littler proved that the course wasn’t made strictly for the big boomers off the tee. His 73P08-72-68 — 281 was x one stroke better than Doug Sanders, whose chip shot from 75 feet rolled dead center over the cup. The bird would have forced a tie. Starting tomorrow, 155 of the world’s best will be out to see If the “monster" had mellowed. _______Florid*.' Don . I ■ Perdido Say. Florid*, Al Watrous, Royal Oak, Michigan. -Jack Nick lout. Columbut, Ohio; John Bulla,* Phoenix. Ariione; Marty Furooi, rental City, Mutvrt. —Daw FinttorwoM, Colorado Springs, Color mo: So WMngar, Las vogaj, Nevada; Dave Ragan. Orlando Florida. -—BIM Collins. GrossInofr, New- York; Thomas Ntoporto,. Locust Valley. Long .IslandT Ji. Y.; Jim Farrier, Burbank. Calf. —Starters Time. —Juan Rodriguot, Dor am Beach. Puerto Rico; .Ban llagan. Fort Worth, Texas; Jerry Barbar, Las AngaWk, California —Jack Flack, Northbrook, Illinois; Jack Burke. JHimpB • ■ Lake. Now Yaik; Ted Krall. Franklin ** —KM Nagle, Sydney. Australia; Jay’ l.—... ______________ ’ imANjwt ChjUL Hartwrt. south Miami. Florida. -Bruce Crompton, Sydney. Australia; George Knudton. Toronto, ■' Ontario. Canada; Gardner Dickinson. Mbit W8ub:re. -Jackie Cuplt, Corona, California; Jim Parrot. Pino Bluff, Ark.) Frad Hawkins, El Fdae, Texes. -Richard Crawford. Ryr. Now York; Goorgo Will. Walton-Qn-Tho Hill. Snitond) Loapoldo Ruiz. Bouwngh Argontma. —Thomas Aaron. Gainesville, Georgia; Koichl, One.' Yokohama. Japan; Barnard Hum, tinner, England. —Starters Time. —Francis Buckler. Hamilton, N; Zealand; Robert Watoon, Now RachMIe. N. Y.t Bill Wright Jr., idmonton. Alhorta. Canada. —David Jlmlnot, Dorado Beach. Puerto Rico; COdHc Amm. Capetown, South Africa. Richard Slkos. Springdale, Arkansas. -John Ponton, Larberl, Scotland; Bab BMdorff. Rtading, I Pennsylvania; Darrell NMUR, SgURM.' AuMroWo, . -Sebastian Miguel, Madrid Spain; Chuck Rotaf, Victorville, - Calilornia; Ralph Monel, cpyington, InglFlt —Starters Time. ,M.—Alex Sutton, .Son Mateo, California; Trevor Wtlkae. ’ Durban. SMB Africa; Ben Lu'1, Roseville, MMhlton. —Richard Howell. Ortnge Connecticut; Edward BML Otaley. . Australia; JmK McGowan, Largo, Florida. —Sam Carmichael, Martlmvltte. lndlana; Harrv weetman, Ssndersteed, England; Harold .Kneece, Alkei —Robert Duden, Portland, OregoR; TMM; I Texas; Peter Allltl, Dorset, England. -Buster Cuplt, CherokM Village, Ark.; Rambn Sola. Padrone. Spain; Pnt- A y, Johanngtbyrg, Sgim MrUA —Cnx-'w. Sifiord. Lei Mitbir CkBuiiBi Bab Oeeti. Lang-View, Taxbs; * Yue ayg Hsieh, Taipei. RaMIc of China. ----------- -------*- Canada; Tomoo laML - ■ _______^WUMiUL ' Si—' Tayas; (tabirt Charles, ChrM end Floyd, Si. AMRMU illinots, _______________ Jalitomla; Frgd Haas. Metairie, Peter Thompson, Toorak, Australia^________ Church. New Zealand; .... Pete Brown, Los Angeles, v-i------i, i oorax, Sarasota. Florida! David Marr, New RodwIN. New York. Tony LMM, San UmmML California; Lionel . llgtUln. Lafayette. LatriMMi Vic Gheztl, Rdmeov New Jersey. , ,E“ 4--------- £ 4-“- -----Robert Rosburg. Portland, —Gey Brewer Jr.. Dallas. .Texas; Robert Rosburg. Orggen; Ed Furaol, Export, Ptmisylvonls. , —Bruce Ddvtm, Hughes. Australia; George Beyer, —gtartgrg T ..I -Arnold Palmar, Laura! Valley, Penasylvanla; Bitty Caspar, Cggna. Calltornls; Butch Baird, OeNotion, Texas. . -Mtke Souchuk, Orosslnger, Now York; Paul Hamay. Rock IK California; Don January, Dallas. Texes. -Doug Ford. Perdido Bey, Pier Ida; Cary MWdtOcMf. Memphis. Tennaosee; Bob McCalftaRff. ^BBlfc Celilornla. —Al >»swlInkT aroeokigar. Now York; Doug Sand Calilornia; Jim TurnilO, Elmsford. Now York. ______________________ 5. SL----------- Oaks, California; Bllly_ AkamogU. “ ■ -oolby, Belleville, Illinois. _ i. se" earnings are nearing the l,ON mark for 1964, thinks winner will crack the course i rk, “Somewhere around ” he estimates, aimer Joined Nicklaus for a - of the course yesterday and 1 finished “around par.’ icklaus has an 8:44 a.m. tee t for the first round along i John Bulla of Arizona and rty Furgol of Missouri, aimer, trying fo calm a p«r-s putter, will leave the ' 1:16 p.m. with BUly Casper California and Butch Baird ’exittK. ogan, the sentimental fa -Ite to the field, recorded one tis greatest triumphs at Oak-i in winning the lNl U,S. in. He will jota “Chi Chi”" Iriguez of Puerto Rico and ry Barber of California r tee at 9:24 a.ra.‘ in ery ball < $400. Tickets tor the tourney are available at most area ‘golf courses. Prices are $3 for the first two rounds and 96 for Saturday and Sunday rounds. A tournament ticket is available at r YOUNGEST IN FIELD -Allen H.enning of South Africa is only 20 years old but he will be playing in the world’s richest tournament, the $2N,0N World f)pen starting • tomorrow. He is the youngest player in the field. When the 154 professionals and ae amateur toe off Thursday in the opening round the $2N,0N Carling World Golf Tournament, they will be tackling one of the toughest courses in the world—Oakland Hills. . Oakland Hills isn’t the longest . tour, but its 6,907 yards of green par < ment I . ^ w 1 Here's a rundown of what the professionals will see when they step onto the course.Thursday: No. 1—A 435-yard, par 4. Fairway traps;230-275: yards off tee. Left side of heavily-bunkered green is slightly elevated. . No. 2—A. par 5, 510-yarder. Slight dogleg to left, trapped on both sides 230-270 yards off tee. Bunkers in front prevent rolling No. 4—A 448-yard par 4. Slight dogleg to the left with a nest of traps at the dogleg. Green well guarded with traps. With pin at back, putting is more difficult. : \ ■ * * * v. J No. 5—A 437-yard par 4. Players need ' s 220-yard drive to dear a crest in fairway and take advantage of a downslope. ‘ shot over fairway I to rolling ‘green, and right. Mp PPr 4. on course. Tra|» j. on * left fr<»n i out. A large oak the right side 259 yards out. Second shot is slightly uphill to a severely trapped green. Contours and an elevation in rear of green. No.. 7—A 380-yard par 4. k Pond and trees to the right 2M "yards from* tee and bunker guards left side. Green is heavily trapped. No. 8—A 458-yard par 4. Slight dogleg to die left. Tee slightly elevated but shot is still' uphill with a steeper grade-for second shot Green trapped left and 240-2N yards out. Weil-trapped green has two levels. No. 12 - A 898-yanl par $. Pond and trees at n$ht at fairway. Pairway tankor 88 yards short of grata. Reii'eg, well-trapped groeo i« ilightiy elevated. No. IS—A 199-yard par 3. Toe and green are slightly elevated.. The green is almost surrounded I *00* by traps,' Green has a pronounced hollow in front center. No. 14-t-A 447-yerd par 4. No fairway bunkers but two long shots needed to carry green which falls away from front to back. Green trapped left and right. w. ★ * No. 15—A 392-yard par 4. Dogleg left with a bunker in middle of fairway 250 yards out. Heavy woods protect left side of fairway. Small opening' between traps to rolling green. No. 18 — A.498-yard par 4. “The water hole.” Called one of world’s great golf holes. Lake makes a dogleg with second shot going over water tea long-narrow green extend-' ing into the lake, two-thirds t. -Nkk Berllch Jr.. Gibraltar, Michigan,• Lorry Mown;. Port-lore, Oregon; Ouy WoMenholme. Virgin:* Water, England. -Prto Flaming, MM Spring*. ArX.; Alvle TtioihfOORv wjjjw-dale. Ontario, C*n*Oa; Robert G«ld*. BleomfloM Mill*. ARICh. -Tinndv Glover, Florence, S. CarUong; Nick WONock. Ourllng-oh, Ontario. Congd*; Dale Douglas;. I akowood. Colorado. -Frank Whibley,- Waterloo, Onl., Cinode; Allan Hunnlno. JjhonneadUrg, I. Atrkoi Clltt Brown, Cloveland, Ohio. —Starters Time, ” ■ Money. Course Have Talkative Pros' OK Some Of the top JplayerS entered in the $200,ON Carling World Golf Championship at Oakland Hills agreed that* they face one of the year’s most severe competitive testa, but they express it in different ways. Some 6f their comments: Julius Boros: “It’s going to take a long, straight driver and a good putter to win this one. I think the greens at Oakland are as severe as we’ll play all year long.” ★ * A Gary Player: “I just hopq I’m puttingL well. That’s the most important thing in winning the'big money nowadays. I tell you, ,there will be a lot of swallowing the apple as it comes to that last hole with $35,000 first prize at stakes.” ^ Arnold Palmer: “Pretty near every player ta the field will have a chance to win. The best player this particular week will be it” Jack Nicklaus: “I think it's only fitting that a golf course ef this calibeh should be used for the first $2N,0N tournament in our country. All the players are looking forward to it, and I think it’s going to be a great tournament.” i . Asked what score he would settle for qa Sunday, Nicklaus quipped, “One stroke Jess than the runner-up." Tony Lena: “I’m looking forward plenty to playing at Oakland Hills for $100,000. I’d even look forward to going to Viet Nam to play for $3N,ON.” Jim Ferrier, playing the par 4, 458-yard No. 8, a converted pur 8, said: “I can reach this green in two if there's no wind ta’: front of me,or e hurricane behind me.” Jerry Barber, playing with Ferrier: “I*ve got a few comme-ts wife’s along,” TOUGH BEAUTY - »«««.« HUW «* the world’s most beautiful and great golf- < holes, No. 18 at Oakland Hills is a dogleg j----------| _ right 405-yard par-4 hole wtjjph calls for one right Fairway bunkers about! protected by water, the rest 2Sff yards from tee. \ by four traps at the back. * * * No. 17—A 194-yard par 3. The No. 9—A 203-yard par 3. -green is, plateaued ’30 feet ill • ----M *- ——. highpr than the tee and pro- [ i tected on all Hides by traps. The pronounced _____________________i left front —A 499-yard par i A ght with buifcrs jut-_ the fairway at the corner, about 260 yards out. Second shot muvL carry green t because of the aevBe bunkering . in food. Mound in cenh»[ of t green, complicates putting. jm itfM THE POKT1AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26,1964 1 Stake in U. S. Economy MARKETS The Mowing art lop price* covering sales of locally grown produce fay growers and sold fay thorn In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished fay the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce After Slow Decline Selected Stocks in Recovery NEW YORK’ (AP)—The stock market steadied today, displaying selective recovery Mowing Tuesday’s slow decline. Trading was moderate. Most gains and losses of key stocks were fractional. Many were unchanged. Suspense over progress of ito labor negotiations «remained the chief background factor in WaU Street as the strike deadline neared. v Among the auto stocks, however, General Motors, down ■ fraction, was the only loser. American Motors and Ford edged higher while the others were unchanged. Steels leaned to the upside. SHARP SELLING Some of. the high-flying stocks hit by sharp selling Tuesday Xerox rose more than a [ ■nd U.S. Smelting about 2 while Polaroid and Control Dfata wen fractional gataerr IBM slipped more than Tuesday the Associated Press average of II stocks fell 2J to MU. Syntex recovered more than a point in a mixed list on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange NSW YORK (AP)—Following It a I atlectaa stock transactions on ttw N Mock Exchange with MiN prlc .—A—-, . I 17% 17% W% • • s r jsx- 5 15% 15% 15%-% (KiiU 4 42% «% 4|% + % .. 41% 44% 44% - im m m-i 4 m am 4i% -1 . i 12% uw ij% - v 11 41% 41% 41% ... n ffl -1 I 1|W ttw 11% • ■ 4 47 67 47 - H II B% h% n% ... ■ 11 11% 11% W%- W 41% 4% 41% ... |i u% 11% 11% + % 44% 44% 44% -% S RR Ml-"RRRtB PP ¥il 11% n% flw-% 70 70 7# + % 46% 46% 44% - % S» 8» fe-s *fi-------- U% .1 Poultry ond Eggs 74; hapvy type n 14; brown aM •stars over 4 (bs. »%• I 11-22. DETROIT BOOS DETROIT (AF)—Prlcei paid par Satan far No. 1 receivers (Including U4.): Whiles Grade A extra large 4446; ta)f» -!------3— —II ll-Mi Brewht n 33-36; man ■ as targe 4*-“' “ N Sli cbgck* II. CHICAGO SUTTBR AND BOOS 33-ni _CN*Cft>OI (API - QWagf 4(%rcanHle Exchange—Butter *mtli ibalaiaN buy- VS 4 11% 11% —B * » “£ ffil% 1 R P R^S t *1% s% 4 .40% 40%0 t «% «% ffe#* jllifl Brunswick , jj g* £ * 2% 41% 44% ii 8% »% t*% 41% 41% 41% i R i ] R m S+» Sh 14% S% , Veelars m Steady._____________—- ,--------- 31.06-17.00; standard and good 11.004140) cull and utility 12.0011.00. ^ Sheep m ^Sjsrbr ~~ end™prune* yla^Mnbe Ooed ___43% - 41% ft » jp Z 1 Jl% 11% If 34% 34% 7 14% 14% « 5K P F" u im im - —E— gifcoQ LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API-IUlDAl-Mogs 10,000) 14 EMI lb butchers WJO-lfjOr bulk 1-1 1W-1S0 IbS 1440-1740; S3 340-170 lbs W4S.M.7S. Cattle 1,100; cahwt 25; few loads mostly MW abolee wSb a few prime uso-. 1,325 lb slaughter steers 20.00-2040; choice 1.100-1400 lbs 2740-3140; (Sod 23.00-25.50; taw standard and law good 17.50-2240. ~ — ^ ---------------d prims 01-100 lb > 15.00; good and Eaat Air tM EastKo 2.10a fetan MM 1 -----dS 1.40 Elect AME EIPstoNG 1 EmersonEI 1 BmerRad .40 III ■11% 21% «% +< [ 8% 8% 8%- I atauataer let i 1140*440! o FelrCsm 40g ESS*™ ftatnCp i.oo __j as ikf-' —F— J 1 M% »% -1 ® !»15 +' Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The cath position Of the treentry compared wdb 1----- spending data a Mar ago: AWL IT, two Abb. tt. Ford Mot 2 Forem D 40 Frlto Ley ,70 Frvobf 140a I mt 100%*% 7- % 1 41% 4|W fl% n p% aj w% - % 16 14% 24% ... $ 71% + % 1 31% f% 11% + % 1 54% J4% 54% - % 1 15% , 11% fS% » 51% MH 11% * QW 11% 11% — % 42% 40% . , 32% »%.+ % 0 yiMdU0144 0 7,111451.705.75 Depeelts Fiscal Year 4afy 1— I 12477,”*—” OsmSk 1.100 Gw Clg 1.10 Gen Dynam ’»<«■»»*••»IS!!'f54a UOMH.16 105454,171,474.15 n Tit iiivi 44144141147 15,503,077,540 0) npISvc ' S* I 0340477,7*745 debt not sib- SputuT I 28 OenTelAEI^I _ „ The Aseectetsd Praia if to to w w MBs tad. UtIL Fga. L. Vd 104 01.3 734 SM 13% ’ 71% 71 n 41% 41% 4ns » 71% 71% 03% x2 37% 27% m ii a 5% 4% 35% 15% GanTIt OaPac... OettyOII . GltlMta 1. 1,10a Goooyr 1.15 OracaCd 1.10 N •»% fP 2 34 44 34 SO 14% 14 « 4 B% 53% 53% HarcPdr 40a1 n'afRsr^ft 1 R 43% + % 8 pH M SM ) IMA IMA IMA *•!: I Textron 1.40 TlmkRBear 1 Trans W Air - Houst LP .04 Mom Sd 40 HOOP Cp .lit i 12% 11% u% .. I SEA SSftrHS Wt l i cm .»§ UGasCp 1.70 UnltaMtM l ^roim i US LlMO lb ii r r «±a t 6nR8%U KsrnCL 2.40 >r Me 1.% ImbClark 1 •Coppers I —K— 1 31% WUr 11% + % 2 14% Bfi 24% — % 7 07% 0% 07% + % « xsas 4i% Bo __ % mm %+% I* K 4 47% 9% 98 s nu n% mS —w 1C — 9 Lshman ijm LOFOIs 2.too LlggettAM S Lionel Corn Llttonln l.TOf LockAlrc 1.40 Loews Thaa 2 14%_____ I a% 31% tt% .... —Lr— .11 13% 11% 13%+1 1 27% »% R + 1 J 11% 11% 31% + % I *r j» aTt» 7 47% 47% 47% + % * a% NJ* f® 1 R R im- %, MackTr 1.(0 SU °7ta Si” assew-T MayDSlr 1.10 WkM,. ili-% Mont DU 1.4 S 11 17% 17% mo 2 10% 10% 10% 1 SR 34% + KIM MM 17 57% '57% 57% . - 1'W 14% 14% + % t 77% 77% 77% + % %-H NCashR 1.30 NOairy 1.40 NatOM 1.10 —N— 7 47% 47% 4 i 17% w% j I 77% 7f% 77% - I 17% l?% fiW I n% 32% 32% ... I 10% M% 10% ... 44% N% 44% — H I 17% 17% 17% I 24% i tt 74 40% a% 37% -1 -S4W S4% 54% .. f ifi. 134 114 11 41% «% 41%.-6 54% M% 54% .. 4 54% It 54% .4 1 5% 34% 34% ii 53% am am Owenslll 3.50 >13 401% 1« -V-P— J High u 44% « i )|% mppi E W% : ■ + % ; R s%-% -u- i 18mm: 4 47% . 47% 47% iRRRtg •dr 8ttu 30 130% 1^4.130% +3% 34 *7% P% 0% + ta 2 13% fifi 1M7 —V— 7 11% 11% 11% + % x? R R R -—w— The telegrams were sent to fA. J. Deandrade, president of the International Printing Pressmen and Assistants Unka; Freeman Frazee, president of Local 13, Detroit Newspaper • Printing Pressmen; Bart Piadtello, president of Detroit Paper and Plate Handlers Local 10; Peter Clark, publisher of the Detroit News, and' Lee HUis, publisher of the Detroit Free Press. i it arfdan. w-PakOhlt ys«r, I .. paid In 1744 pta stock dtaMMta fa. afisas t Rjfct Ex dividend, y—Ex Dlvl- trlbutad. wl—When Issued, nd—Next d delivery, i American Stocks NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) — Following st ef solectad stock transactions oi American Mock Exchange with prlcoap ‘ - ; .11 Pa RR JM Ranntoll 1.30 PasCola 1.40 PtlierChas 1 Fhlla El 1 32 Phlla El 1.32 PhitaRdo lb PhiiilpsPat 2 . 3 pi -37? *, JR SJ . xj 47% 47% 4 «Ssfv Raven ler 1.30 Rafmaon .40 j»h ^ RepubAvla 1 x5 1% 4% 4%3 *1 14% 34% 34% - % fU 34% 14% 14% — % it n% si% si% — r 1 41% 41% 41% - 1 IMS ki 4 114 133% 111 .+ | 4 B% 04% 14% + 1 I 12% 32% im + 44 41% <1 01%-' —R— ■■ 44 30% 30% 30% +J 1 11% 11% 11% — ' 1 ore ore 4b t! 2 15% 15% *35% + 1 i ® r M 7' 14% 14 jo - 1 mU&'So. 1 m 86 Richfoii i.» o i p% am g%-“-RoyDutdJ lr V 44% 0} <* .,‘1. «% 13% 13% • - SatawyM 1S0 StJos Lead 3 Imp JW _____lay t Scherg 1.40a SosttP w .70 SeabAL M0 v, SesrlGD 1.10 } Tmo % | 14% 14% 14% + Saarsl 17 110% 1W% '2% - % 5 40% 00% 4Mk . 4 77% 77% 77% ... 11 14% «% 14% + % U 12% 37% 12% ... . 1 61%, 41% M% - * 0 Brai Tree . Brown Cs .1* Can So Pot Cdn Javelin Clnarama _ Creole P 2.40axd I Data Cant Draper 1J0 EquItyCp .IM Fargo Oils Pslmt Pal .15| oia Duval Giant Yal .40a Is.) High Law UN Oil 1 28% 28% 20% — \ 1 37% 3% 3% 3% .. S 13% 11% 11% .. 131-16 f 1 -1 1 11% 1140 11% .. i I 47% 4TO 47% .. Kratter ,|0b Livings Oil .71 Mackey Mr McCrorv wt .7 M .« J|- Swr-’*] 7% 7% 7% + W MMI WI TS I f arrm bm» -a? " Un Control 10 25 Stocks of Local Ifitorost ta tSSS rongo Ot me tocuritlw.,^ :>kN m Class Associated truck BimOK^or Braun Ingbworl ttame Utilities OtatNrion Home Bylktars CttBme UNMIee.* Diamond Crystal iswrcw*. . toatntaaa Tuba Co. ai Wahr Com. .....I WtaUlmanta ...............I Wyandotta CtSmlcal 'II :-::i MUTUAL NMM|t AWIIatad Fund .......... * CNamlcal Fund-.. ......,.1} Romney Calls Strike Meeting Publish«rs and Union Offlcicls Requested LANSING (AP) -Publishers of Dstroit’s two regular daily newspapers and officials of two striking unions are Scheduled to meet with Gov. George Romney Thursday to try to settle the 44-day-old newspaper strike. Romney asked the publishers of the morning Detroit Ftee Press and the afternoon -Detroit News, and both national and local union leaders |0 confer with him in separator meetings, scheduled for 10 gim. and 11 a.m., respectively. Both sides hive agreed to attend. “The Detroit newspaper strike has increasingly affected, the economy of the state anti the public^; knowledge of critical local, state, national and international developments,” Romney .said in identical telegrams to all parties. VITAL CONCERN “Because of the collapse In negotiations and the vital public concern, I want to discuss with you and (he other parties Involved any steps that can be taken to avoid a prolonged continuation of this strike,” he Soybeans Demand Is Brisk on Board Foreign Holdings Up By 8AM DAWSON AP Easiness New* Analyst N E W Y OBK - Foreigners’ share of American assets have gone up strikingly in recent months. 'And American in-v a s t Meats abroad ire setting records. But there’s a difference. The money flow is something short K — Foreigners’ lean assets have I abroad rose a record $6-3 billion in 1961. About 64-3 billion was new capital from this country and $1.5 billion was earning! from previous investments reinvested in foreign enterprises.' Some $900 million represented gaifas in the market value of securities. of making it two-way street. DAWSON In the case of Americans the big cause of the Jump in dollar holdings outside the United States has been expansion of American-o w n a d businesses abroad. This is* a trend which the U.S. Department of Commerce sees continuing. Most of the gain in foreigners’ stake in the American economy has come of late from the increased market value of their previously acquired holdings and only a little from -pew in- HOLDINGS RISE The department says that the total of American private holdings abroad climbed to $66 bti-lkm at the end of 1963, with that figure continuing to rise so far in 1964 at last year’s rate, which is dubbed massive. The investments here by foreign individuals and companies were put at $23 billion. The U.S. government is hoping to attract more foreign tan vestments here, both long-term and short-term, to help hold down the U.S. deficit in international payments that has been a problem in recent years. But in 1963, when the value of foreign holdings rose by $2.6 billion, about $2 billion represented increase in prices off foreign held American securities. LANSING (AP) - A third launching of an experimental meteorological rocket tentatively is scheduled today from the tast range in the Upper Peninsula’s Keweenaw Peninsula.. Leslie Jones, director of the high altjtbde engineering li ratory at the University Michigan, said Tuesday Tensing that launchings so — can be considered “a qualified success.” PRIVATE INVESTMENT American private investment pSiMxemvl % CHICAGO (AP) - Demand was brisk for soybean futures today in early activity on the Board of Trade and prices again moved tip rather broadly. Other grains were firm. Wheat was % to % cent bushel higher at the end of the first hour, September new grade 61.4344; corn 46 to % higher, September 61,2344; oats 44 to % higher, September 6644 cents; rye tt to 144 higher, September $1.28; soybeans 44- to 1% higher, September $2.55. Grain Prices ___^JO (AP)-Ogan tetaYt Now Wheat-Sap*. 1.40%*i DiC.1^0 %-%; March l.4*%-47; May 1.4HM0) July 144%. "’%%; Dae. May tJE I Dec. 44+ Business Notes Roy T. Tribble of 872 Dursley, Bloomfield Hills, has been isW named implement and indui equipment forward study manager, Ford Tractor Division, Ford Motor Company, according to R. R. Owen, assistant chief Direct Line tq;OrC. ATLANTIC CITY (UP!) -President Johnson and his White House aides are keeping dose tabs on the Democratic National Convention via six telephones installed directly behind the platform. They are direct lines'to White House, and a key Johnson aide is reported to be manning each. R-w gahJji fj* T 5J | ItOIINJ .llllt^ I* + ™ WdOUOh U40 Mttrr ICIlTlO o as% «•% eu% — 41 05 14% K + l 4 R r Stl! 0 54% 54 fi -% 1114% 34% 24% Tm ij% a% - % Mi 41% 43% + *P* U 17 J 00.4 0.1 ftelHbur 1.30 Sludat Sun C Sunray 1.40 SwEtCa' 1J1 1 MV‘ j a m%° 2 ii% - Tam Gat lb TNliooTjB TexGSul .40 Ttxlmhn JO TaxP U .35* —T~ .3 n% n% n% + w 17 02 ,M%, Ml ... 31 B%' 2% 51% + % 5 75% ..«% 75% — % 1 20% 20% 20% - % SR M -wltt*M. »'• 1 K AVBRAOBS HTn fill. Balk ML Mod —4 +.1 . 4411 175J 117.3 313.. . 443.2 17J.I 117.1 31U . 447.1 1774 lS.7 314.5 411.7 ttaj 117.7 mo m lE 18:1 “■ Mi.i mi H4.7 'the* ___ Star CM ..I Q S^r^la , 1 i “*•■ Worrit 4 pi I JO 8 Aorrls 3.7 pf .771 0 08. AO ••• .W 0*0 a w M 10-1 40 174.1B—0.47 SS+oj* W MN gredo n '/nvesfiag.f By ROGER E. SPEAR ' Q) “Recently I lost my aon, an only child. He left me 166 Florida Power and Light; 366 Florida Gat; 36 Xerox; 566 Webb ft Knapp; 266 Elmar Electronic*. I do not uader-stand stocks. Whaf ihould I do about these?” E. B. A) Your list of stocks is of varylhg quality, but mostly good. Florida Power & Light is a very fine growth stock, but the yield at present if only 1.75 per cent. x Florida Gas is a fast growing pipeline issue which as yet pays no dividend. Xerox is one of the best stocks on the Big Board, but the yield is negligible. Hold these Issues for growth if you do not require current income. If you do, switch Libby-Owens-Ford Glass; Atchison Rwy.; United Gas Corporation. Webb & Knapp and Elmar Electronics are highly speculative end I advise their sale, with proceeds going into a -sayings' account. Q) “Four years ago we bought Union Carbide for oar young son aa an .investment far Us fatnre. At that time, we paid IIS a share and the stock has made little progress since we bought it Should we continue to hold this stock or sell sad pat the money in his savings acco^?” C. T. A) You made one of the commonest and most natural mistakes in investing for your objective. You bought an intrinsically strong, “big name” issue, but one that has shown no real growth since 1966. Earnings then were $6.70 a share- compared with $6.12 last year, and 15.31 in 1961 The dividend has bean unchanged since 1967. The stock at its recent price was around its low levels five years ago. U^you want your money W grow, I would not add to savings, but would switch to Texaco, which has compiled an ^Mr. Spear cannot.answer all tfpil ~ " personally but will answer ell questions possible in Ua, (Copyright 1961) UA investors have been sending dollars abroad for aev-eral reasons. In the short-term securities market the lure'was higher yields there compared to interest rates obtainable here, in long-trim securities the goal was a rising, stock market abroad that accompanies the big postwar economic boom. But this largely dried up when Western European stock prices turned down for while. * ’ The big outflow of dollars, however, has been in the founding and expansion of American industrial subsidiaries aboard, or in the teaming up with foreign industrial concerns. The department puts such investment now as close to $41 billion. In 1963 almost $2 billion in new dollars went abroad for this purpose and more than $1A billion of oversea* earnings was reinvested there. Europe got the • largest share, with Canada next and Investments rising in Aua-tra.:i and Japan. PROFIT AVERAGE , The department figures that on all investments abroad American companies averaged around II per cent profit last year. While some of these earnings were left overseas waiting1 for lower tax rateq here, the American take was .nicety above that qf foreigners on their holdings . ffl this country. And in terms of balancing the international financial books that’s all to the good, since sooner or later the- dollars shouid.be coming back as divi-' dendsNfrom the American-owned subsidiaries abroad. Third U.*P. Rocket Launch Is Scheduled for Today i labo- far He explained at a progress meeting on 13 research projects being conducted by the state .universities that rockets have been successfully fired at Keweenaw and limited data has been obtained. The State Department of Eco-„ nomic Expansion- provided r grant of $52,000 for the expert as ■H PREVIOUS LAUNCHINGS .Rockets previously were launched on Aug. 5 and 15 from the site.’ “Both rockets performed normally,* but neither payload yielded significant meteorological data,” Jones reported.. Jones said that in the future it is hoped that tracking radar will be available to increase the efficiency of the rockets. Jones said studies have shown that the tip of the peninsula is a most advantageous location for the launching of small and medium range Bounding rockets. Local sentiment is in favor of establishing such a range, he WEATHERS SPACE WORK Following completion of — project, proposals will be submitted to the UJS. Weather Bureau and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for further launchings, Jones said It has been estimated that the cost of a permanent site would be about $150,000 and the annual budget for operations would be about $100,000. Rockets and payloads News in Brief James Skinner, 570 Melrose, tokl police yesterday that the top of his conver tible was slashed. Damage is estimated'st $75. A pneumatic air wrench valued at $200 was reported stolen yesterday from the Mobil service station at 3191 Auburn, Pontiac Township. Twenty-one windows valued at $97 were reported broken yesterday at Lincoln Junior High School, 131 Hillside, and 14 windows valued at from $50 to $75 were brokeo at Wilson School, 520 £. Sanford. Special far August - Open bowling, 4 lines for $1.300 Bowl, Primrose Lanes. —adv. Rummage Sale: Friday, Aug. 21,10 a.m.-l p.m. St. Andrews Church, 5301 Hatchery fid. -ndv. Rummage — Clarks ton Cens-munity Center, Aug. 304$^ 9-5 pjn. —ndv. munage Sale, $ to I. Apes-, tolic Faith Tabernacle, 99 Pirk-dale,. Sat. Aug 29. —adv. would be furnished by the weather bureau. The cost of a site capable of firing the next largest group of such rockets is-estimated at just under $500,000, Jones said. Success in obtajgjng surplus equipment from tiie government could cut tills cost by as much as one half, he added. Cyprus Coup Said Imminent Claim Rebels Will Join Greek Nation By RAY J. MOLONEY United Press International NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI)*-Three Greek Cypriot newspapers today publis hed unconfirmed reports that a coup d’etat allegedly aimed at t h e overthrow of President Ma-karios was imminent. - The newspapers, the pro-government Phileleftiieros, the extreme right-wing Makhi and the pro-Communist Haravghi, said the object of the alleged coup was to proclaim immediate union with Greece and forestall current Greek Cypriot approaches to the Soviet Union for arms aid. 'The government did not issue an immediate statement •n the reports. __The three morning newspap- eirs claimed that the plotters, who were not identified, planned to seize the presidential palace, arrest, isolate or assassinate Makarios, take control of all communications and .proclaim ■“enosis” — the union of Cyprus with Greece. The newspapers claimed enosis would be proclaimed “on the basis of the Acheson plan.” ins PROPOSAL This was a reference to for* mer U.S. Secretary of S t ath ~ Dean Acheson. According to reports from Geneva, be was proposed that the Cyprus dispute be settled by allowing the island to become Greek, territory. In military base on Cyprus, or one would be established under tiie North Atlantic Treaty Organisation NATO. Diplomats in Nicosia said that Anglo-American attempts to mediate the Cyprus crisis appear to have failed. Generous Dams Get 'Free1 Lobster Dinner ATLANCTTC CITY (UPI) -Generous Democrats who contributed $1,000 or more to the party’s war chest this year were treated to a “free” lobster dinner yesterday. James Lunsden of Freeport, Maine, supplied 3,666 lobsters for a deluxe meal for the members of the “President's Chib,” whose rolls an limited to $i,IN party contributors. * An alloy of ate is used in more of coins.