-77.7:'- ' i The Weather ,t.«. WMtktr Bimi hmui P«rt|y Ow^y, Warm Tomorrow <*>•«»»» hw 1)7' : asr* ^':v'v;. 77 THE PONTIAC VOL. 121 NQ. 1A8 ' -jr PONTIAC. MICHIg4y."HQyPAY. AUGt^T 5, 1063 --82 PAGES, tmn^ FBI Men Guarding Informer for Future First Step T oPeace WASHINGTON MB — The government is confident ——-ti*«t an underworld figure it says has given federal agents a detailed description of the. dominant crime organization in the United States Will live to tell, his story to Senate investigators. In a secret hideout, FBI agents are guarding Joseph Vafachi, a 60-year-old New Yorker once the mob hierarchy, who has outlined the structure of Nostra” and put the finger on some top racketeers already under investigation. Valachi haa a date with Sen JOSEPH VALACHI Ford II Linked With Widow 'Seen Together Often' With Christina Austin NEW YORK M - Two New York City newspapers reported today that Henry Ford II a n d' Christina Austin, an Italian-born widow, recently have been seen together quite often. • ■ Ford and his wife, Asae, announced this past weekend they have agreed to a separation. They have been married 23 • 3mn< ■ ' ' ‘7-’ V''' 1 Both the Mirror and World-Telegram and Sun linked Ford and Mrs. Austin. Ford, bound for Europe, was unavailable for comment. Mrs. Ford also was Unavail-able. A butler at the family’s Long Island summer home, In Southampton said she was not at home hut “definitely, was not in Europe.” The World-Telegram k Sun said Mrs. Austin was leaving for St Merits, Switzerland. -. When asked if she would see Ford, the paper quoted her as saying, “Our circles may cross. Former French .Premier Is Reported Near Death METZ, France ttlW — Former French Premier Robert Schu-maq, 77, was reported near death today. Schuman lapsed into senucon-, sciousness yesterday and his doctors reported he was “very seriously ill.” He received the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church today, thefinalact before expected death. M Jobs L. McClellan’s Senate Investigations subcommittee when H resumes its inquiry into illegal narcotics traffic. The. McClellan panel began its probe of narcotics three years' age, then turned to the Billie Sol Estes investigation and fhe TFX warplane contract award. No date has been set, for the resumptions of its hearings, but McClellan, an Arkansas Democrat, said Sunday he expects Val-achi to be a witness. > The government considers Vela-chi’s account of crime in America —including aninsida- vtew-pMhg celebrated November 1957 mobsters’ conyehtioti At Apalachin, N.Y. — an important intelligence breakthrough. His Otory has been corroborated by other sonnet, and information he gate federal agents has been passed on to local authorities, Edwis 0.‘ Guthman, Justice Department public information director said, 1 The theory of a secret society at the hub of organized U.S. crime been supported for many years by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. > ■ Valachi provided a blueprint (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3} With Showers Warmer weather, interspersed witif a few scattered showers, is the weather picture this week icted for this evening, with light ers tonight and early tomorrow. Partly cloudy and warm—a high of 88—is tomorrow’s forecast. The Outlook for Wednesday is not quite is warm with a chance of a few scattered showers. Winds through tomorrow will be variable at five fol5 m.p.h. Fifty-seven was.the lowest temperature recorded in downtown Pontiac before 8 this morning. At 2 p m; the mercury stood ■fH; “v ' -' NATO Nations .Airborne Nudear Force Four Countrios Join Dospito Debate Over Multilateral Soa Float BONN, Germany (UN) Four NATO states h a quietly created an international airborne ft u c 1 e a strike force, despite the debate. about-a proposed multilateral seaborne missile force.. The United States, West Germany, France and Canada are involved in the organization known as NATO** *b Alima Tactical Air Force (ATAF). Its commander is American, .his deputy is French. Die chief of staff is Canadian and the chief, of logistics German. The White Hopse alone can poll the trigger that would release the nuclear bombs assigned to this 1,580-plane force. But the force itself is run by a multinational staff, and planes of all four nations" would ham the atomic warheads to targets. The 4th ATAF’s nuclear force has been made international and integrated while NATO govern1 merits continued to debate the principles and potential value of uudtilatenC mixed-manned seaborne Polaris missile force. UJ IDEA Die United States proposed ihe Il/JI latter late last year, saying it IT II D© VVUrm was unnecessary from a military. point of view, but was designed to answer Europe’s political requirement for a greater share of NATO’s nuclepr responsibility. So far, only West Germany and Italy have shown positive interest in the .scheme. — ■■( entered the airborne force, and is coming in unconditionally. In the beginning the force was ntegrated only on a conventional evel. But as soon as the tint German Luftwaffe units were assigned, it was agreed German planes would .carry American nuclear bombs to any targets assigned by NATO. •;# ★ *_______________; French President Charles de Gaulle insisted he would main-tain a national nudear strike force outside NATO control. j FACE IN THE CROWD - Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev beams as foreign ministers of the United States,. Russia and Great * Britain sign a limited nuclear' 'tret ban treaty far Kremlin Palace in Moscow today. The elite group includes (from left) Dean Rusk,. UR.; Andrei Gromyko, Russia; Lord Home, Great Pledges Grow Parade Through City to Aid Industry Launches Fair Britain. Just behind Gromyko stands U Thant, that further progress will U.N. secretary general, and Khrushchev. Just be Achieved toward that to right and behind Rusk are U-S. Sens. Wil- j ,» liam Fulbright and Hubert Humphrey. Next to- - ___ ________ Humphrey and partly obscured is Adlai Steven- 7° * n rcremonies m me son, U.S. ambassadorJttJhelLN.—--------------Kremtin Grand Pa atc, Sc^eUily —*—------— of State Dean Rusk, British For- ; ■:—:—1 ~4eign Secretary Lord Home and Soviet Foreign Minuter Andrei A. Gromyko affixed their signatures to-teei the atmosphere, in space and under water. Then they drank a, toast to peace. Others toRatiff ~Starting Aug. 8 7 MOSCOW tf) —- The United States, Britain and ~ the Soviet Union today signed a nuclear test-ban treaty they called “an important initial step toward the lessening of international tension and the strengthening of peace.*' ~7 ~ * : ” ’ r The three nuclear powers announced after t|w signing otihe historic,agreement lhat the treaty would be optin for signatures by otherpowers in Washington, London and Moscow Aug. 8. /-, A three-power communique hailing the treaty as a first step toward peace said the three governments “have stressed their hope x Support conhnued t°_ f«ur in Today’s 4-H parade through Pontiac began a Week over the weekend for the stead-i . .. ... , 6 ily growing'Greater chm“m8 year-long efforts of some 1,500 ' • \...*....> +'' • ~t (Fair. ‘ ■___ Staged again this year at the fairgrounds on Perry just south of Walton, the fair will feature contests* demonstrations, some 2y>~ 000 exhibits of all types and a carnival midway. Tomorrow’s agenda calls for home economics judging, beginning at 10. a. m., and competition the fields of photography, flowers, rabbits and poultry as well as general exhibits throughout the afternoon. Pledges to purchase shares in) the young corporation came in from 12 mort individuals firms, bringing the total to 9112,-100 pledged to date, up more than $3,000 sinccThursday. With tile additloanl pledges reported today, the number of stockholders has grown to 134, according to the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce. The corporation, formed to attract new industries to Pontiac, has options oh property .for an industrial park at South and East Boulevards; Additional Pledges Curson, Dr, Hubert H. Euler, Harold B. and Gone-vieve ■‘-" Fitzpatrick, Mr. and Mrs. Rob-“ ert -Katchka, A. S. Kingsbury, Robert S. Mack Squari Investment Club Mitchell, Donald R., and, Or , Flora M, l..;-Oliver, R, B. Simmons, Arnold R. Tsatsanis^john Vote, Berkley- Brandon In Today's-Press . Legislation Solon predicts tax cut, Tightr-™ ^wiR pass in house - PAGE 11. Dams Cuss JFK ' to vote -PAGE 81. Deepening Crisis Negrqes strive for equal opportunities — PAGE 12. Area News ... Astrology 24 Bridge 24 Comics .j» | Editorials ...» Markets M Obituaries .........a Sports Theaters a ' TV 4 Radio Programs 31 Wtisen, Earl . . , Women’s Paget sex and security scandal. ★ •..'it - ★ Before swallpwing the barbiturates that snuffed out his life Saturday after an 80-hour coma, Ward wrote in one of mkny notes, “The ritual sacrifice is demanded and I cannot stand it.” Leading lawyers and legislators voiced concern over several aspects df the trial in which Ward was cleared of three vice charges ; andfound .guilty 6f two others-^ living off me earnings of prostitutes Christine Keeler and Marilyn Mandy.Rice-Davies. Legal experts said U pect action against at least two prosecution witnesses. Call girls ____ • — . Vicky Barrett and Rasas WITH THE 1ST CAVALRY DI-j at 2:31 a.m. trying to scale idown and the "Reds broke off! When the Communists finally Rieardo admitted in court they VISION, South Korea HI —-Fivej steep cliffs leading to .the momentarily, beginning two withdrew, theyended the longest! .lied ynH»r oath. Sue Miller,' 17, .of Township. Other events planned for. the week are horsemanship and dog obedience demonstrations, tractor operating competition and Jive-stock Judging. Dus year, the parking lot has been expanded, allowing parking paces for many more cars. N. Korean Casualties Unknown Expect Trials in Ward Case Court Actions Seen in Wake of Scandal The evening program will include the traditional fradde on, tost, a drees revue and crowning of the 1963sking and queen. Chosen to reign this . year (f, Oakland Tomishto, andOinBortfie warthaseapegoaij of Britain’s LONDON (AP)—More court ac-tions appear in prospect in the wake of the 'vice trial and suicide of Dr. Stephen Ward, who believed The simultaneous signipg took place at 8:34 a.m. (Poiftite time), in the presenc,e/m Premier Khrushchev, UniteaNations Sect retary Generaivtf Thant, and a delegation ofmx U. S. Senators’. The U! Senate must ratify the treaty to-'seal of American oar-ticipatiOn. Adlai E. Stevenson, U. $7 Ambassador to the United Nations, also was on hand. Khrushchev listened with rapt-attention to the-words of the foreign ministers immediately after the signing ceremony. Khrushchev heard Soviet Foreign Minister Grofnyko- hail the treaty as a “success for the peaceful policy of the Soviet Union.” ^ A GOOD STEP Secretary Rusk said the three governments had a taken what mankind must bope will-be a step on the road to p peaceful world. He called the treaty “a good first step,” but stressed that it MOSCOW (UPD—Premier Nikita Khrushchev praised the United States and Britain today for signing the partial nuclear test ban treaty and he said he. hoped would better , relations between -: East and West. • West on Pact Hopes Better Relations Will Be Forthcoming - Its conclusion, he said, “means major success for all.people of good will.” . , . . . . . ' Khrushchev’s remarks to a — Kremlin reception following today’s signing ceremony were transmitted by the official agency Tats. He hailed the document banning nuclear tests in space, tiie atmosphere and under water as ‘of great international signifi- cance.” ..T~'1 He expressed, the hope that it ‘would, have a positive effect on the relations between states.” - :M— -«-• er— He said alsof “We would like to pay djf&trib-m r-gitqraidit “duw not J*? the threat of nuclear war.” AmeriC“ Great Britain who expressed willingness to reach agreement on banning nudear tests ind accepted the proposal advanced by the , Soviet Union." Khrushchev warned, however, that the threat of nuclear war still hangs over, humanity. "The danger oT thermonuclear . war is not eliminated'by this treaty,” he said. “Dus danger will hang over mankind as long ! as-the arms race continues.” Gls Beai-Bacl^^Mmir^ftack^ Lord Home called the treaty a “breakthrough in relations between our countries” which indicated that the great powers had come to the coadusion that nuclear war was impossible. Thant said the a g r e e m e n t Would not eliminate the threat of war, but expressed satisfaction that the three powers demfin-strated a willingness to continue seeking agreement on interna-pbnal issues. .. . , ___ But he repledged his gavern- iJ^ust K,i0r ^kthe **r j ment wants to settle i^miation-_ rtipny, Khrushchev hadj^eiy^^^^ (Continued onPage 2, Col. 2) I coexistence rather than war. American soldiers were wounded slightly today in a long predawn fight /with North Korean Com-I munisto, but tiieir buddies are certain they killed some Rod attackers. * * W it' “I know I got one,” said Pfc. Roger -Chalifour of Manchester, N.H. . “Whep he crawled to about 28 yards away from me, I threw a grenade and it couldn’t have missed.” v Ch alifour was a mong 13 Americans and an unknown number df North Koreans who for about two hours exchanged grenades and some small-arms fire. ESCAPED DEATH The North Korean patrol had crossed the demilitarized .zone and miraculously escaped death in the mine field. 7 High U.S. officers In front line units were untime.of the meaning of the sustahiril attack and the briefer clashes Of the papt. week. 7 The Communist! — nobody { Is really ssre hiw toafey they were — came across the zone American positions. American' grenades r ai hedforward' ____iwimc ho«*s of circling and attacking, fight that has occurred in eight) „ ... ______... _ mthdr.»Mi and th» protagjdays ol clashes along the Korean^1” r cepTTor a prison warden," his brother and the' hospital staff, and desmted by his so - it. The Journal* were issued irregularly, sometimes two or three times a month. A U.S. spokesman said they apparently were published more fre- quently when conditions were at af longer-spaced period* when things ~ irlittvcly nolmiMl The harsh ^inter of 196041 hit the regular army as weH as the civilian population . which, the documents showed, in some areas reached the point of near-rebellion. ■ ★ w. ★ The Peking government viewed tiie situation with great seriousness, the data IhdicaJed. and titok action aimed at easing tension in both tiie army and among the civilian population. —Thg army came first, whfcm had its food rations increased. This did not immediately satisfy the troops, however .yThey still were worried about then: relatives who were nrar starvation. The documents also showed that the physical condition of troops did. not materially improve because they were secretly sending their extra ransnObmeT N-Test-Ban Treaty Is (Continued From Page One) a stream of Western visitors, including Rusk, Home, Thant, Stevenson and the U. S. Senate delegation. After the talks, Sen. j. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., alluded to possible Senate opposition to the treaty and told Gromyko: ’ “No one can speak for Ike Senate unites'tt speaks for itself, bat .1 am personally in favor of this treaty.” When the three foreign ministers simultaneously signed the historic document, they drank a toast of champagne, proposed by Gromyko, to peace. After the toast, Secretary Rusk stepped to tiie microphones. ★ ' 'it ★, He warned that It would be impossible “for us to guarantee now what the significance of this act will be” “History will eventually record how we deal with the unfinished business M peace,” he continued. "But each of our governments can and will play an important role in determin- ing what future historians Will report.” Rusk made his remarks after putting his signature to the treaty binding the three powers to end all nuclear weapons testings in tiie atmosphere, in space and underwater. Underground testing is not affected. “In a broader sense,” Ru*jk concluded, ‘1the signature of this treaty represents the'readiness of the United States to Join with the two other original signatories and with other nations in a deter-minized and sustained effort to find practical mams by which tensions can be reduced and the burdens of tiie toms race lifted from the shoulders of our people-” The Wea ' . Full UJ. Weather Bureau Report SPBNTIACAND VICINITY - Partly ..cloudy and warm to-day, high $5. Chance of a few shower* tonight, low IS. Partly cloudy had warm Tuesday, high 99. Winds variable five to 15 m.p.h. today, tonight and tomorrow. Oaa Yaar Ac* la faatlaa ......«t teini>er*tnr» ... t-.t*;-:-. Low’est temperature i. Mean temperature ”—; Partly sunny s Temperature Chart ---->—Salariar la Peattae (aa recorded downtown: Highest temperature ___ .. Lowest temperature ....... . Mean tempentara Weather: Partly City 7$ SJ K1 Paso M U sit *5 tO Port Worth — naba 77 U Honolulu M 47 todiaaapa|U „ „ ... Rapid* <0 St Jacksonville 9t 76 \ Houghton SI rStj if n _ Jackson 79 5J Las Vegas — Lansing 79 SO Los Angel! Marquette > 74 64 Louisville Muskegon 79 St Memphis Pension vi 44 StKairTOi. M mm » ' AP Pkotofox NATIONAL WEATHER — It will be dear to Wtiy cloudy over mjidt of the nation tonight. The western halt of the nation and (he northeast will have Cool Weather while it will bn warm • atoinanld slatwberg. There will be scattered showers in the : central Walm,porttous ofthe Miada#pl Vafley and the western More than 39 nations have publicly announced they intend to- Sign the nuclear test-ban treaty. France and Red China have refused. West Germany has announced ,it will not sign as ofnow. Nations publicly . announcing Afghanistan, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Britain, Bulgaria, Canada, Czechoslovakia, De h-mark, East Germany, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Finland, Indian Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Laos, Liberia, Mexico, Mongolia, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Somalia, the Soviet Union,' The -United Arab Republic, the United States and Uruguay. FBI Guarding (Continued From Page One) (Continued From Page One) of the .“Cosa Nostra’,’ — literally meaning "Our Thing” but sometimes called the syndicate— and confirmation that such an organization of criminals exists. ■ The story of 1he, Valachi breakthrough appeared Sunday in a copyrighted story in the Washington Star. The Justice Department confirmed the essentials. At the head of “Cosa'Nostra’ Valachi placed Vito Genovese, 66-y ear-old - Italian-born narcotics serving a IS-yoar sentence at Atlanta Penitentiary: marked for death. When a prisoner approached him on June 22, 1962, he thought it was hjs assas-sin. Valachi struck the man with piece of pipe, killihg him: ★ it , it Valachi sent for Federal Bureau of Narcotics agent and declared toe slaying was a case of mistaken identity. What developed was a first-hand description of mother struck him and called the rackets syndicate. ' Genovese plotted the Apatechin meeting. While Valachi was hot prominent enough to attend, he was high enough in tiie organization to know whatwent oh — and for a time later, lie was Genovese’s cellmate to Atlanta. -'The Apalachin delegates were fhe bosses of the individual branches oT Cosa Nostra and their bodyguards. According to the Star, there were two main reasons for tiie meeting: Genovese wanted tiie organization’s support' for an attempt bn the life of racketeer Frank Costello and the slaying of gangster Albert Anastasia; Genovese- wanted to strike from the organization’s rolls approximately 200 “button men,” or' soldiers in the society, as no longer useful. LONG RECORD / ' Valachi had a long record of arrests for robbery, extortion, burglary, gambling and narcotics when he was arrested in November 1959 as a heroin supplier told sentenced to 15 years. While Valachi mu' serving time, federal agents broke an international dope ring. Vnl-achi, one of 24 person* indicted, was .given a M-year sentence, concurrent with his earlier Valaoni, who had' meanwhile leaflto guilty to the fellow con-tofs murder and drawn a Ufe sentence, was spirited from Atlanta to a secret hiding place.-An FBI agent became his constant companion, drawing names, places and of events from the American-born son of Italian immigrants. NEEDLED BY HUG - Robert Louis Barieska, 3, of Flint, recuperates in a hospital after his chest and heart were pierced by a sewing needle stuck inrthe dress of his grandmother, Mrs. ’lito Ledfora, When she huggedijtm Friday. Doctors removed a Tpiece nearly an tijph long froffl hls heart. His condition is tine. Hold 2 Women Teachers DETROIT (UPI) — Police were holding tjro teachers from the suburb of Southgate in tht beat-ing of one of the women’s son., — ' Police said the two womoi, Mks. Catherine Trebing, 33, and back to her home and punished again. Neighbors, attracted• by^tiie commotion, stopped the women ^«aistant military attache from beating tiie boy and called police. Mrs. Edith Bates, 37, had beaten —He was reported in good condi- Mrs. Trebing’s son. James, 13, after they tied him to a tree. Police said they used a clothesline [to beat the boy with.------ The boy’'had been taken to Mrs. Bates’ home for the weekend, but left Sunday morning to return to his home without teU-ingMrs.Bates. /. ‘When he returned home, his tiop at Wyandotte General Hoe-pital where doctors said his body was covered with welts. Mrs. Bates to say he had returned. Mrs. Bates, police said, ‘then suggested 4he boy be taken ‘Well, It K«pt 'Srtuiy EXETER, England (UPI) -Shirley Bruce, 21, who was given $2,800 by the cite to study teaching, said yesterday she completed the course but then was toid by Victim Listed as Satisfactory Edward Farnsworth, 26, of 492 Omar, reportedly is in satisfactory condition at Pontiac Gen--eiral > Hospital with scalp and facial cuts he received when his car'rammed into a tree and utility pole in Waterford Township yesterday. „ A passenger, Edgar Perkins, 26. of 312 Mt. Clemens, told police the car W»nt nut Af_gantgol as they were driving southeast on Birmingham Area Newt Bloomfield Hills Man to Command Reserves BLOOMFIELD HILLS *- Brig. Gen. Stanley W- Connelly, 5357 Van Ness, has assumed command of the TOth Division, an Army reserve unit noth headquarters at Fort Wayne in Detroit. > .★ . * Connelly, 50, a 1937 graduate of the UJLMQitary Academy, succeeds Maj. Gen. Beryel J. Pice, who left the position to accept a State Department assignment. The^ntov madder is pldyed as chief] of . the surface] equipment con tract division, U. Army Mobili-ty Command, Center Line. He served the regular arm] aftertotBrate_____ tion from West CONNELLY Point untH ha resigned in 1954 to enter private industry. • * - Connelly received his musters degree from Massachusetts Institute Technology in 1*46. His industrial experience includes executive positions with Rand Development Corp., General Motors Curp. and the Martin-Marietta Corp. His military assignments included assistant chief of staff of U S. forces in the Middle East, construction can start as somi as posMble. Ike improvements are kaewa as the Ruffner Avenue, 8outh Eton and Camming* relief >ew-ers. The RuffPer project calls for the construction of a sewer on Ruffner from Woodward to about 332 feet west. - The South Eton project includes construction of sewers varying in size from 12 inches to 42 inches in diameter on the following streets: Taunton from Melton to Croft; Croft from Taunton to 14-Mile Road; and 14-Mite Road from Croft to Eton. The Cummings relief sewer-would be constructed oiTSmith from Woodward to Cummings; Cummings from Chapin to 14* Mile Road; Davis from midway between Cummings and Woodward to Woodward. Lateral sewers would be built on Chapin, Emmons, Daviij, Smith, Bird and 14-^Mile itoad from west of Cummings to Cum- mings.’^^ - ....... Short sections of sewers would be constructed on Emmons, Ua-vis and Smith froin Just east of [Grant to Grant.' Sweden and associate professor of ordnahec at West Point. Among. tite general’s decorations are the Legion of Merit and the Oak Leaf Cluster. The 70th Division covers Michigan and Indiana. Special assessments on three proposed relief sewer projects will be reviewed by the Birmingham City Commission tonight. If tiie assessment rolls are confirmed, the City Engineering De-partiflent will advertise for bids Teen Dies. crsiBoaf Tips; [fwfriQr (lie Turncrv/fv Resident loses $15,000 Cash I An 18-year-old youth said to be a good swimmer drowned, white! Ris brother was rescued when their homemade The theft of $15,000 from the home of a Pontiac man Saturday is under investigation by city detectives. George Washington, 53, ot 319W Prospect, told police that he kept the money in a barrel-type bank in the closet Of Ms • bedroom. The money for tiie most part was $20 bills and 50cent pieces, that he had saved for over three years, Washington said. ’* ★ ★ ' it Washington said he had left his house about 2 p.m. after putting tome money hi the bank. When he returned from the home of to the cloeet to put a 50 cent piece in the bank and discovered it missing. . Set Tentative Date for Visit Six prominent members of fhe Cali, Columbia, community are tentatively scheduled to arrive in Oakland County for a two-week stay Oct. 1, Delos Hamlin, chairman of t h e County Boturd of Supervisors, announced today. ★ i ★ Hamlin headed a similar group front her? that Went to the South American city of 800,-000 people in May to study economic conditions. As a result, the county group is urging the U.S. government to send government officials to assist tiie growing Cali region in further develop-.ment. The expenses of both groups are being underwritten by the U.S. State Department in pn experimental \ local-g over n- Available sources say ValicM _____.. , heard he was suspected of having1 ment-to-local-government informed oq the ring and was' proach to foreign aid. The., idea originated with UJS. Rep. William S. Broom-' field, who has been critical of past foreign aid efforts. AID IMPOVERISHED He described the present experiment is an ‘attempt to improve the economic conditions of Impoverished people instead of lining the pockets of tiie for- ! eign wealthy. A spokesman for Broom'' field’s *fftee said the State Department isn’t likely to approve tending more county government officials at least-until after having consulted the group scheduled to come here, ■][/■"" *•./ ' Five of the six South Amerl-, cans have tentative^ accepted invfiations to come hero to study local methods of econo- ] mic development, education, [ pnd government. Their final decision is waiting for the reply of the sixth member. Hamlin said an agenda has yet to be set up for their visit. Bnf he said they would be introduced to local methods ot, government, education and "We will want to extend every courtesy to them, even as we received down thaw,” said Hamlin. it • it- Accompanying him on -tiie recent tour were Oakland University Chancellor D. B. Var-nar; George CdtUii, head of area industrial : development of Detroit Edison Co.; George Strubb, county planning direc: tor; and ex-officio member Of the group, Mark T. Jarosze-wicz, a Bloomfield Hills architect who paid ms own way.r: Oakland prawning Toll in ’63 14 canoe capsized yesterday in Lake Oakland, Waterford Township;. -Oakland County sheriffs ^^dep-uties say Timothy McCabe, 19651 Coleman, Mt. Clemens, slipped beneath the choppy water just before he could be heiped into a rescue boat. His brother Dan, 19, told officers they were retarning to . shore when a gist of wind overturned their 12-foot canvas canoe shortly before noon. The two straggled in the water, trying to right tfte- rotating canoe in 55; feet of water, about 200 feet off shore. Tkey reportedly did not call for help for several minutes. . Their Shouts attracted Gerald Crandall, 50, of 2421 Lever, Waterford Township. He hatited Dan who cannot swim, into his boat, but Timothy drowned- % The body was recovered an hour later by sheriffs and township" police divers. Press Publisher Sets Deadline for Scholarships The Inter American Press An-sociation (IAPA) Scholarship Fund will award scholarships next November to United States aiid Canadian college graduates and newspapermen for s year of study in Latin America. President of tiie fund, HarqJd . Fitzgerald, publisher of The Pontiac Press, set Sept 15 is the deadline for afplications. Scholarships to North American working newspapermen and college graduates will be awarded by the fund’s board of directors at its meeting >in Miami Nov. M-19, prior to the 19th general assembly of the IAPA, The award* committee toll meet in-,October to examine applications ana make recommendations to the board. Candidates may request Information and application forms from Cartes A. Jimenez, secretory, IAPA‘grind-, arship Fund, 067 Madison Ava., Suite 704, New York 21, N. Y. THB PONTIAC PRESS. , MONDAY'.AUGtZrST S. 1M3 THREE' Turffe Derby Set Thursday GOUtD, Ait.(AP)—llie genual races at Gould will be run off, sort Of, as Gould has its turtle derby on Thursday. MANILA (AP) - Leaders of lfl— iMalnyn, Tndnnsmin nnzf ton Philip- MkJUt Contestants are pulled [ pin^ ended their summit meeting from the Arkansas River. , ^ Each contestant is placed in the ' center of a circle 30 feet in diameter. The one that rushes beyond the edge first is the winner. ^Bad Breath Sweetens Mouth-Stomach Is 5 Minutes w iraur IMtock It druu 1st. Chew Beil-tnt tebleti whenever you think yew breath may offend. Bell-ana neutralize acidity, sweeten mouth end stomach like matte. No harmful Srejs. Set Boll-ana, tend postal to Sell-ana, WANTED 1,000 HUPTUBED MEN TO MAKE THIS TEST proving so successful, an offer is now being made to give everyone . who will test it a $3.50 Truss at' no cost. This invention’has no leg straps, no elastic belts, or leather . bands. It holds rupture up and in. Is comfortable and easy to wear. After using it many report entire Satisfaction. Any reader .of this paper may test the Doctpr’s Inven-. lion for 30 days. and reoeive the ! separate $3.50 Truss at no cost. If you are not entirely satisfied . jvith the irivention&i^ytufn it, but be sure to keep the $3.50 Truss lor your trouble. If . you are ruptured . Just write the Physician's jMj since CO., 4061 Xoch'Bldg. Asian Leaders Pledge Peace Hurricane Breaks Up TntoKamf today with e pledge to work together for peace /tnd progress in Southeast Asia. ★ In a solemn ceremony at the Philippine Foreign'Ministry, Indonesian President Sukarno, Malayan Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman and Philippine President Diosdado Macapagal sighed agreements designed to bring the three states, closer together and solve the Malaysia dispute. One agreement presented a detailed outline of instructions to U.N. Secretary General U Thant on how to ascertain the wishes of the people of North Borneo and Sarawak concerning Malaysia. SET TO JOIN 1flm IrTtish territories Art scheduled to join Singapore and Malaya in the federation Aug. 31. The statement -said the U.N. should take into account recent electipns Tn B^two't^torlesTo assess whether toe people want to Join Malaysia. Thant was asked to verify whether Malaysia was a major issue in the elections, whether electoral registers were properly compiled, whether they were free and whether toe votes were properly counted. The implication Was, thsd if these conditions were met, Differences over whether the people of North Borneo and Sarawak should be contacted before after the formation of Malaysia had threatened to wreck the Manila summit. Indonesia and the Philippines had opposed formation until after the people, were polled. Britain refused to permit referendums until after the territories are admitted to Malaysia. OTHER POINTS Other main points of the agreement: • I. Observers will be sent by toe three governments to witness the UJN. ascertainment process. 2. The nations will seek a Just solution to toe PhUIppfaae Haim to North Borneo, and make sure that establishment of Malaysia does not prejudice the claim. 3. Each Cofintrywill set up a national secretariat for consultations on matters of mutual concern. 4. F^reto baseg^-Temporsf nature—should not be allowed to be used directly or indirectly to subvert the national' independence Of any of the three countries. The leaders also signed a “Manila Declaration” which said they WiD holtf fi^uenT ind regular consultations at all levels of government to. advance-their tries toward a federation to be the Ituinnnxinne would nntrin- known as “Maphilindo,” from The Main St.; Kansas ’atyT .Mo., loribulwafk a?ain?‘ Communist en-^ ‘ ICroachment in toe area. mand a referendum. first syllables of each one’s name name. The federation is intended as a 1" «D three countries, people of, Malay stock predominate. MIAMI (A —Hurricane Arlene has disintegrated into a band of drawers. f* * '*r Sr "tote season’s first hurricane, which built up winds ranging to 100 miles per hour, lost power rapidly yesterday as Jt approached the Leeward Inlands of Guadeloupe and Antigua. . GbfdbriDtffift.^chtoLalnrrn fore-caster at Miami, expfeinedffilf pressure at -the 30,000- to 40,000-foot level killed Arlene. The weather bureau said in its final advisory on toe storm that scattered showers were associated with the area and highest winds were not expected to exceed 25 to 30 m.p.b. Meanwhile, small craft warnings flew along* the-southeast Florida aid from Miami through toe-Florida Keys as .0 easterly wavjmoved onto’ th el coast. The easterly wave, with ex-pWKd' top winds of 35' m:p.h. in brief squalls, was not elated with Arlene, which was more than 1,200 miles away. Express delivery stamps issued in fitina in 1913 mnnsiirnd 944 .by 2% inches. Siva Mdro At Simms [ NITE and TUESDAY FINAL CLEARANCE S? Mon’s A Boys’ SUMMER WEAR SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT IIP Boys’ So*or\ SWIM TRUNKS [jiao AQC Value Sizes 4'fe gin assorted stylos. "wa#*V’nW w#l BOYS* SHIRTS 3-1" Boys' Boatneck SWEAT SHIRTS Mon’s Boxer SWIM TRUNKS M Assorted colors, stylos. Size S-M. * 50e 59c __Striped clam diggers dnTizolZff io “32:— Mon’o Terryknit SPORT SHIRTS $1.59 Value 76* Assorted Stylo STRAW HATS . their trial offer. SIMMS as SOUTH Saginaw Straat STORE 4 Guaranteed BIGGER SAVINGS Whan YOU Buy At SIMMS 26 SOUTH STEEL CABINETS 2-Door UTILITY CABINETS Regular $19.95 Value 60" high, 22' wide, 10" deep. cabinet. 5-shelves. MagnoUc catches. Only 27 to go on sale, 2-Door BROOM CABINETS Kegular $26.95 Value 60" high. 22" wider 15'* deep. 3-shelf on One side, for brooms,ireffr board, vocuum cleaner, etc. *8!? WARDROBE Regular 936.95 6V" high, 36" wide, 21" deep. Holds 36 garments, hat sheK and place for shoot. Saiga* y Small Delivery Charge OPEN MON. & FRI. NITES fH 9 P.M. SIMMS 25 SOUTH DoMy Keen 10 AJtL to S P.M. Terrorist Blasts Strike Buildings in Bolzano, Italy BOLZANO, Italy (UPD-Three terrorist explosions jolted- this city before dawn today, destroying a customs house and causing heavy damage to a building under construction. - There .were no reports of in-| Juries. "MJ' .■ ■ *. = ★. The blasts were toe latest in a series of tension-raising incidents ip the Alto Adige (South Tyrol) where the German-speaking pop: ulation of toe northern province want more Autonomy, The blasts followed three other explosions in the Alto Adige yesterday that injured -two persons, heavily damaged a. police barracks and toppled electric power line poles., M MOTHER: Quake Jars Frisco Alia SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - *A 1 sharp earthquake jarred toe San Francisco Bay area yesterday, but therewert rra reportsof dam-t age—and only one reported in-j ljury. FRONT ------ DOOR PARKING rtf//l eUZABCTH LAKE HOURS: Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sit. 9-9 Tom., Wad. 9-6 ^ 2285 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD • FE 4-6216 V PLASTIC V WALL TILE ■.5n mm for IF SOUP VINYL RUBBER Mirat Line Rubber Tile If u. Ceramic Floor TILE OQc i Floor UuSq.1 mi. Rf RUBBER . , BASE 9 Factory Sac*. • 1 cSmmT *9” Full Bath Arts tWM • TOSn-HIfa I2S S2L ALL FOR SOLID VINYL First Qeefity AN Calttt ^ Dxl R* Way Reg. 21c Ea. ARMSTRONG INLAID TILE 1x9 6'u • liapDMM l a 10 Ft- »••• *15” 15* FORMICA 29 Cointer Top Ms. Pitt. mom&m \ Ladies’ Better DRESSES /Value« to 96.00 styles. Wo»h 'h • wear cottons, and oMdi in flawar prints. 77* Navy or white. Collar style. Sira SML__ Maw I Plm CABANA SETS S1.S9 Value 79* Men’s Abort Sleeve W SHIRTS -SO* Whit* or-prints Oniy57fefL Rayon Flannal BOYS* PARTS loo Cotton Cords MEN’S PANTS $2A9 100 Tatue -1 LigTit blue cotton cords. Si it 30 only. Little Boys’ PBnt a Shirt Set T0NITE Until TUESDAY HOURS 9 «.m. to S p.m. Sure, SIMMS SLASHES PRICES .OsAR-The ADVERTISED ITEMS But, Did You Know That SIMMS Hat Hundred* of Items That Ate Never Advertised? >*, Th* reason U simpl*: th*r* may ndt ba •uffictant quantifies to advartisa it in the paper, and wa don't usa coma-on advertising to antic* you to Simm*. Thom-fore, wo put'these Homs in 'BARGAIN BINS' thay'm easy to see and find, and tha PRICE IS CUT. Title ie the mason why YOU should toko a walk throughout the .fore to «ovo on unodvorttsod* tpaciols. . . , SolOOKTofTKe tfnvMvertited Bargains I While YOU Shop For These Tonite & Tuesday V Specials. Wo resort# the right to limit quantities/ DRUG and COSMETIC DISCOUNTS TAMPAX Container Pack of 40'e ••••• ' Ladies’ Wash -N Wear fin. Fall Blouses 01.67 Values "Super Specials for TonRa and Tuasday^ In SIMMS DISCOUNT CAMERA DEPT. CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS KODACHRQME COLOR FILM —Mailed Direct $1.85 Value-New Processing ailed Direct to Your Horn SOI Siring In your 8mm roil toad or . 36mm slide —20-eKp. for prutohhlng by Hstfywdod Teeh- prinrt it) long sleeves with, collars. Sizes 32 to ,38. tailored. o**».aeeeeeee»e**e--Ladies' Wash 'N Wear Capri Pants, 7-Pe. FLASH CAMERA SET In prints, chocks end solid colors. Choice, of sid« and back zippers. 100% wdsh . * 'n wear cotton. Sizes ^ lOto 16. . ~ eteeeeeseeeeeeeaa Ladies’ Sun Hats m Wash 'N Wear Cotton Girls’ Dressesf&\ As.shown-complete set has camera, flash, Him, bulbs and batteries , . : oil reodyto T^anp»bpsh6frT(TTj«^^ ‘SAWYERS 500Ar-^Biow« Cooled 2x2 Slide Projector H 169.95 Value-Now fp «-2x2-slides up to 36 slides o'any mount—push-, pull action, 4-inch 13.5 Ians, blower cooled projector with easy edit slide troy. $It holds in trie layaway. " realtor! V-trahsistor ‘RAMBLER’ D Pocket Radio $19.95 Value Table of dresses broken sizes 4 to 12J Sleeve ond sleeveless styles in wash ‘n —rotor fast cotton. —T1“V| Plaids and solid colors. Yj Girts* Night Downs or BabyDaUs Regular SI.59 % . ®aby dolls j^^^gMeossortod prints with rufff* trim. Alto night gowns in 100% cotton flower prints. Sizes 4 to 10 only. mmtjsk' Ri Ik Saginaw- Mala Fleer As shown—ftne trenststor fo-dio with 1 thermistor and .1 diode, fine hi-fi speaker Com; plete with case, battery.and earphpne. $1 holds. For Boating-Schools-Farms-Traffic Control-Sporting Events, Etc. PORTABLE MEGAPHONES ^ ALL TRANSISTORIZED - Battery Operated r Reversible 1 tion tor toot Simply hold rnegb-* phene tf eor tor deof loud 98 North cell batteries, pistol; 'grip with voluirte control ond carry strop. \ itovfef 31.59 pock of \ Tampax in-super or regu-^ liar types. Free purse con- \^ljy<>Sl|iliewwwi4,>ltwwwwX4k'i'4 *^Hair Spray I Regular 91.50 Value No lacquer or shellac In I Alberto's VO-S as ad- * vertised eh TV. Large I PRELL SHAMPOO pAe -Regulars 1.00 size of JlM® ■ famous Prell liquid. UmeP. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeea# CREME RINSE - - 86c Charfes Anted Creme Rinse in 16-ounce size........... MYADEC*VITAMIRS* * ** * * l*,, $7.75 pack of 100 vitamins by Park e-Davis. Therapeutic formula, SPRAY D*E0D0RAMT " * " * Regular $1.39 value — famous AM" Qdpreno deodorant In sproy con. -THi.. 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS ADHESWE Shelf Paper ■33i Regular 49c Per Yard PtoiHc copied paper tor decorating itablM, wails, counter tops etc. Many ■ t colors and patterns to choose from. ' eeeteeeeeeeeteeeeettheeSMSse 4-Assorted Pieces Stak-Away 7.71= Plastic Boxes 60c a*ll*r — os shown 4 round boxes with covert for storing foods in the re- f frigerator or freezer. [••• e e e e e sies eeeeee eeee eeeeeeeee ’Ballerina Mist’ Ovenproof 37* $2.00 Value - Now Oval shape platter with Permaci 13” Serving Flatter 29< eeeeeeeeeee Tube Cake Pan 92.65 Value-New r *2.6 Mirror aluminum tube cake pan. for sponge cakes, chiffon and angel food cakes. Solid bot- 2nd Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS Large 20-Gallon Galvanized Garbage Can cove* Regular $2.79 Value " Approved for city and township pickup, Side drop handles. Limit 2 CAR SPRING CUSHIONS Regular SI.49 Value Mesh cushion with coil springs R keep you xbol and-free R front fatigue while driv-l Several colors." One-Piece RUBBER ’Executive* Car Floor Mats = 2" Heavy. duty rubber mats protect car floor boards. Fits most cars door to dqor. White and colors. Not exactly as shown. iseesseeeeeeetsteteeeeeeeeeee With Lift-Out Tote Trey 19” Steel Tool Box $6.95 vale* — all sleet MB AW tool box tor) home and shop J M use' Handy lift-out tote trqy. Reinforced, corners, padlock eye. H . $14.95 Value — New or (team- or dry ironing V with control diol for all f Jpbricv $1 holds in lay- f 98 N. SAGINAW ST. TOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY* AUGUST'V1068 Rights Unif Plans' * Suburb Move-Ins By United Press Iaternatieeal James Dal Rio, chairman of the Housing Committee of the De- grate Pontiac in 1968. Del Rio. I Council for Human Rights (DCHR), arid yesterday Iris or-£*"‘*1**”" would move Negro famines,into every suburb in the Detroit metropolitan area within thenertHmonihs, Del Rio said hehadSM to 1,808 Negro families awaiting such ao-commodations. He said the DCHR bad called a meeting fer Aag. 14 in Detroit to discuss the Negro move-ins. Mayors aad council men from the aubarba have hen asked to attend the meeting, he Btk~ . - • > ' V “We will ask them to use their offices to minimize friction and prevent panic or violence," Del - Hte-cekLf said R took three years to complete the transition in Pontiac. His plan, he said, was to simply ase a list of homes .which had their Federal Housing Administration- or Veterans Ad- h Ha said he would use much die methods he~ueed“to tats- In Pontiac we .simply notified the federal government, that people were trying to destroy government property. That usually stopped it,” he said. The Detroit chapter for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People an- forertoaed. He said government lists were available and that the DCHR planned to use them. nounced sw ttawoe^Jt had iriM^flttea-llIcksr mortgages its jerfej of marches with a demonstration in the sub- Negro family had been moved into the suburb of Clair Shores only yesterday through use of such -a plan, he urb of Warren. Saturday’s Hisrch in Warren Iwris notable not lor the 67 per- Prelate to Lead Seminary Rite ORCHARD LAKE - Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston will lead the closing ceremonies of the annual Marian pilgrimage at Orchard Lake Seminary Sunday. The cardinal’s first visit to Mfchlgaa will ceiacide with the display of a copy painting of Chur Lady of Oestoehowa. Blessed by Stefan Cardinal WyMyiwkl. priaato of Poland, and the late Pope John XXHI, the painting is traveling through the United States under special patronage of Cardinal Cushing. sons wjio took part, but for those who failed to show up. NAACP officials had said State Democratic Party Chairman Zol- “If we meet resistance we intend to hold a housewarming of ,001 people,” he said. He did not elaborate on the comment. A. Hart, D-Mich„ would take part in the march. Ferency never showed up and Hart said be hadn’t been invited. CHAPEL STARTED — Ground was broken. yesterday forthenew chapel of Uhiversity Presbyterian Church on Adams south of Crooks ip Avon Township. Taking part in the ceremonies were (from left, foreground) Louis Wagner, finance nunmltta* chairman; Wendell Mason, ? • ‘ rutlll Pr... M»tl clerk of session, Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson,' who is giving an organ in memory of her husband; Rev. Robert F. Hermanson, minister;’ and Herbert Stoutenburg, building committee chair-’ JO Others Drown . AVON TOWNSHIP - The Fiftt Congregational Church, Rochester, was the setting for the Saturday afternoon wedding of Charlotte Joyce Ozbua and Allan Wayne Gibbons. _____________- ★ - ★ ★ Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. M. John Harris, 1525 W. Hamlin. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. andMr&Ljriek* Gibbons of East Lansing. For her wedding, the bride ehase a floor-length gowp of More than, 10,000 persons are expected at the campus during j uemucrauc rany uumiuo., ««- the Marian pilgrimage, sponsored _ . ... - ,r__. _ Um. Fcroncv and 11 Jt. Sen. Philin hv the ladies auxiliary of flu Qr- g"* "K* - A. Hart, D-Mich., would take part chard Lake school’s alumni asao- brtoanecktow and l«g-topered Cardinal Cushing will arrive at Orchard Lake at 2:31 p. m. and proceed to the Marin grotto on campus for the crowning ceremony. He will climax the day with a Rosary, sermon rind unveiling of the painting in front of Our Lady of Orchard Lake Shrine-Chapel. sleeves. Two tiers of lace accented the bouffant skirt of nylon organdy. ★ ★ ‘ ★ A double crown of pearls and leaves held her bouffant veil of French illusion. Her flowers were The painting is a copy of one now hanging in* Jasna Gora, a monastery outside the town of Czestochowa in Poland. Cardinal Wyszynski has said he to Mary as his chief Weapons against communism. gardenias and lilies of the valley with touches of variegated ivy. Maid ef boner was Mrs. Theodore Czajkowski of Grand Rapids. Mrs. William Ozbua, sister-in-law of the bride, and Mrs. Robert Heston, sister ef the bridegroom, were bridesmaids. Tamara Leiamer, niece of the bride. Say. Driver Tried to Bit Pedestrian Weekend Road Toll Hits Nine By The Associated Press killed in separate accidents to boost Michigan’s weekend traffic toll to at least nine. In addition, weekend drown-I at least. M lives o persons were miscellaneous accidents. The Associated Press death count began at 6 p.m. Fri-I __day and ended at midnight Sun- riay. The victims Included: James L. Smith, 17, of Vander-^ cook Lake. ldUed Saturday when His car skidded off Brown's Lakel Roid, south of Jackson, xndf struck a tree. i * .*. * t Mary Desilets, 42, of Madison j Heights, killed Saturday when the car in which she was riding ran off an Antrim County road. Wellington Edward, 26, and Robert Gage, 22, both of Bad Axe, killed yesterday When their car left the road and rolled over off M42 west of Bad Axe. Alfred Arnold, 19, of Saginaw, killed yesterday when his car ran off the road into a ditch just outside of Saginaw. James Htekm&n, 4, jot Detroit, killed Saturday when he was struck by a car in Detroit. Clifford Boyce, 51, ef Chase, killed yesterday whea his car rolled over near Reed City. Peter Kavanaugh, 20, of Caraon City, killed yesterday when his car ran off a dead-end rural road and overturned about three miles northeast of Elbert H. Ridtoe, 1». of Al-gooac, killed yesterday when his car collided with another auto at U' the intersection of M50 and. Elizabeth Road in Macomb County. ;..V; a a. ..... ^ Panda Wilson, $, of Rode- |J wood, drowned yeatarday when „ she stepped off a dropoff while, p, wading in the Huron Rlvar near ; Flat Rock. « * I near Sanford, drowned Saturday to Lake Sanford, Midland i County, when a boat from 1 which he was fishing capsized. : Floyd Kreger, 40, of Midland, drowned Saturday night when he frill from a raft in Lake Sanford. Howard B. Cotton,. 34, of Detroit, drowned yesterday while a swimming in Lake Leelanau at r the Hingham Township Park. ' a Timothy McCabe, 18, of Mount Clemens, drowned yesterday drowned in Lake Huron near East Tawas Saturday when he fell 1——■———.—■—• rldtpg on^Lake Oakland In Oak- & land County overturned. a BRUCE TOWNSHIP — A 41-year-old Romeo man Was arrested yesterday by Romeo State Police who said he tried to run down, an 18-y(*ar-oki youth with his [pickup touch.---- Edward Mandeville of 12*54 Kaeding was charged with felonious assault on the complaint of Arvil McCartt, 18, of Detroit, who said MandevUle pursued him down the shoulder of MSI. McCartt told police he Was driving on Van Dyke near Bard-man when he observed in his rear-view mirror that the truck -driver was driving “as if he were sick.” .McCartt waved him off the road and stepped out of bis ir. Police said MandevUle stopped his truck, walked upfo McCartt’s car and started talking to the youth’s female companion. McCartt attempted to get bade his car and leave, but Mandeville wouldn’t let him, according to the police report. The frightened girl drove off, leaving.both mei on the road. Mandeville then got in'his truck An observer alerted Romeo ha waslatote pohce, who: apprehended:: Nuptial High' Mass _........ ~ * ■ Dairy Cattle Weds- Area Couple i - Aiotion /found a revolver on the floor of his truck. . UNION LAKE - In a Nuptial High Mess at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church Saturday morning, Carol Ann Vlrictcr became the bride or David Andrew HemefiT Her floor-length gown of white1 silk chiffon over- taffeta was styled with a scoop neckline, and bell skirt, Alencon lace and seed pearls were used as trim, A high narrow crown of crys- tals and seed pearls held her bouffant harem vefl. She carried- a white orchid with Stephanotis. MRS. DAVID A. HEMELA Matron of honor was Mrs. Clay Miller of Parma Heights, Ohio, cousin of the bride. Rita Hemela, sister of the bridegroom, rind Esther Jones of Detroit were hridemaids. Michelle Mix of Bloomfield Townahip, cousin of the bride, was junior bridesmaid. ' Serving as best man was Frtd Molnar of Dearborn, with Clifford Eshelman of Sduthfield as usher, and John Soave of Union Lake as junior usher. Michelle Keresman of Parma Heights, cousin of the bride, was flower girl, and Mark Via-der, the bride’s brother, was ring bearer. The bride’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Alois Vincler, 8550 Gdfside. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hemela, 7653 West St , Washington, are parents of the bride-] grotoo. ' * ■ ‘ , v ★ * • : ★ The couple^ will live in Big: Rapids whero lie.wi& be a seniori Sfote College. | at F^ris Sta Gibbons-Ozbun Rites Held in Rochest GRAND HAVEN - Eighth een-year-old Dave Rude ef North Muskegon took off through the air across Lake Michigan today for Milwaukee—on a kite towed by a motorboat. Rude predicted the 80-mile qjght would take four hoars. Spectators reported ha became airborne at 5:10 a.m. Pontiac time. MRS. ALLAN W. GIBBONS ‘t PI* 1 I of 80 Mfles by KHe Rude’ ski kite, 14 by 16 feet, with an aluminum frame and nylon fab- Behm of Grand Haven, piloting a 17-foot outboard-powered boat.’ Rough waters and winds prevented Rude from becoming airborne on four other attempts to fly Lake Michigan in his kite. Livestock Judging, always popular feature, will be held hi the Coliseum this year during the Michigan State Fair, Aug. 23 through Sept. 2. Backs Finish *?■! of Highways " 2 Years Ahead MACKINAC ISLAND Highway Commissioner John C. Mac-kie said today be favored a proposal to complete the 41-mile interstate highway system two years ahead of schedule. 'America is growing at a foster rate than Congress anticipated when it passed the Interstate aircraft is "a aocalled Ww«y Art to 1W, «d our traffic problems are multiplying, ’ Mackie told the annual summer, ric sail. It was towed by Vm ta-et-flrnmr T&vwtl ruiotinc Builder* Association.” He said all would benefit i! foe system were completed ahead of schedule, and added that the road would save Jives and bolster the nation’s economy. A bill has been introduced to the UJS. Sengto to complete the system by 1«70T Instead of l»72r as provided by law. »_____________ WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP —. flower girl waa ^^yavrtd runaway boy from Roseville was injured .here in yesterday’s predawn darkness when a ear crashed into his bicycle. On the esquire side Jon Begick of Etat Lansing served as best man. Hie guests were seated by Norman Otto and John Gibtpns, brother of the bridegroom. Junior usher was RUssell Leismer, nephew of the bride. Ann Arbor Rights Ufsit to Picket City Council ANN ARBOR (JB - A tenth successive Monday night City ' Hall council meeting picketing is scheduled tonight by a civil rights group protesting a proposed housing ordinance. ... The' Ann Arbor Area Fair Housing Association announced it wrifl picket Again because the or-l diriance is “grossly inadequate." he suffered a broken leg. Runaway Bov Hit on Bicycle James Peppers told troopers from the Romeo State Police Post that he was ironing away from home aad going to Cadlllae; Police said the boy was traveling north in the southbound lane, on a bicycle which had no reflectors or lights. ' - Driver Roderick McIntosh, 18, of 37959 Hayes, Utica, was also traveling north on Van Dyke shortly after. 4 a.m. -His. car passed another auto and crashed into the rfar of James’ bicycle,, near West, police said. Thebo/^ condition today at Community Hospital near Ahnont. Police said lady pampering days Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday ..Every day we pkmper our, patrons, of course, but Mondays through Thursdays we are, able to offer that little "extra” because our pace is more leisuroly on’ these, days. Start the week right then — come in and get PERMANENT wave and shampoo, set and $ QQC styled haircut combined for dnly si ** ■ I U) - ijOUBSt? to 9 p.wi. (lOTinSll S Appointment Nof AJSraye Necessary Pontiac Mall Shopping Canter _ HAIR STYLIST - Phone 682-0420 ___ DAIRY EQUIPMENT THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1963 11:00 AJH. at the Farm Lecatsd at 11431 Hegel Road COODRICH. MICHIGAN 2 Mile* East ef Goodrich an Hagai Road BASE MILK US HIGH QUALITY GRADE H0LSTEIKS 80 Cews - 15 Brori Heitors This hard 'it 100% Mich. ABC bred for the last 10 yaara. Many cows and all heifart are due in August and September. IF YOU NEED MILK* ATTEND THIS SALE! Ti-—Saags Tested * Vaccinated DAIRY EQUIPMENT 800 GeL Mojonitr Bulk Tonfc 2 Sorgo SP-22 Fumpt Serf PfooHft Milkor - i Units ' Automatic Weshor lunch Served Terms: See F. A. Kohrl. Natienal tank Sf Detroit, Plymouth KOHAN BROTHERS, OWNERS GOODRICH, MICHIGAN Ijwiit It. Millar River (unction, Auction tor Hat* A. Millar ^ Williamton, Mich., "PedlgHtea" APPLIANCE BUYERS I OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: OLUI FRETTER __ One n/teirriianw'a Original Ditcaunlrrt FRETTER’S ' CARLOAD PRICES MAKE THE DIFFERENCE —‘WESAY YES TO ANY REASONABLE OFFER ON ANY APPLIANCE, TV, STEREO OR RADIO WE HAVE IN STOCK AT Tippan Electric Rang* “400” ... 239.18 Refrigerator 13 Cu. Ft. Auto Defrost 198.08 Range 30” Deluxe, Electric ....., 129.95 Portable Stereo Record Player.... 39.88 Stereo Walnut Lowboy......... 89.95 1-W«y Comb. 2IWTV, 7 Stereo, AM-FM Radio ............ 278.00 RCA Lowboy TV a...»..,......... 189.00 Hotpoint Auto, Washer...."..... 149.00 Whirlpool Washer Recon.......... 19.96 Air Conditienars 1-Ton........ 119.00 Refrigerator, Family Sixe........ 145.00 Freezer, 18 Cu. Ft. .............219.96 Portable TVs....... ..............96.00 Dehumidifiers, Name Brands ...... 49.95 Radio ANf/FM .................. 24.81 Refrigerators, used, from ...,.... 29.88 - Gas Range, 36” ..............*.98.00 BIG FAMILY SIZE TUB 2 Years FREE Sariict! Ofltretf ay Nor,. Mm to ct NOT« A«M- SooM*. option, of function.! pMt. roouirod to mointot, mochino in norm.l houmhokl opor.tin* condition. In d«»ltr-« ciSont ocworti WiwiOMltionioa pmoni,Anomintl cturf^/t WASHER • Super Spin-Dry for Maximum Water Extraction. " 0 Automatic Water Laval Selector BUDGET TERMS w^Futty Automatic Wash 'n Rinio Cycles • Regular for Everyday Fabrics... Gentle for Special Fabrics and Wash ’n Waar. Complete Washing Flexibility, —•- Five Fresh Water. Winzes... Most Efficient Rinsing Method Available. • Built-In Sediment Remover y; Automatically Removes Send "and Heavy Gail. 178 NORGE DRYER AVAILABLE 5-Year Warranty Drying System • All Fabric Heat Control • Sqpar Capacity FREE! 5 Lbs. Maxwell House Coffee if Fretter Can’t beat your price. NORGE Huge 94 Lb.Separata Freezer end ' Auto. Defrost Glide Out Shelf New Cold-lock Magnetic Doors Butter A Cheese Keeper Deep Humidor Storage Full-width Por-colain Crisper A V FREnER’S Miracle Mile Shopping APPLIANCE WAREHOUSE w. Confer (Ref. Kiwsge's and Krogers) S. Telegraph Rd. at SqAake Rd. OPEN MONDAY thru SAT. 19 A.M.-9 P.M. FE 3-JQ$1 FERNDALE STOHE-201 W. 9 Mile-LI 7-4409 Open Mohithru Fri. 9;39 to 9s39- e. ■ is w—_ At Suffolk, Va., a peanut'company got a package from San Francisco accortlpanied by a letter. The package contained an upper plate of false teeth, which the1 writer said w|s found in a baa of the nuts. The company checked and, suae enough, the teeth were lost last fall by an employe. When a couple arrived home In a suburb of Richmond, Va., from work, it Was clear the postman not only had rung but may have been stung. The house was full of honey the phenomenon in farmer Ttby Blanchard’s potato field was made by the forced landing of a 000-ton flying saucer carrying about 90 men, probably from the planet UTaiiiisi Scientists said the lump was a meteorite. wwiyti way wins — K. Hubbard had ordered by mail. The wire screen cage had broken in transit. In Charlton, England an eight-foot-wide Crater and strange object were found in the country* side. One “expert" declared that Columnist Says Barry Would Be Outstanding OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -Fulton Lewis Jr. told the Christian Crusade on Sunday thet Ariim"* bees. whichMr and Mrs ThomaxSwc^arrylldBiraterwouldmake an outstanding president. Lewis, a syndicated columnist and radio commentator, *said-“the only man I’ve ever met in pdblih Ufa I’d he Willinfl lo-unrierwrite blind on any decision he might make or any action he might, take is-Barry Goldwater.” Bomber Practice Runs Planned Over Michigan PERU, Ind: (A — Starting tor day, B58 bombers from 'Bunker Hill Air Force Base will fly six flight*, daily, — through Friday of next week — at twice the speed of sound and may cause sonic booms, The flights, at 35.000 feet alti- tude, win be in a corridor from over Lqke Michigan SO miles west of Renton Harbor, Mich., to Klncheloe AFB, Mich. Starting times for the lS-minate flights1 will bo 6:45, 7:30,8:15,8:30,9 and 8:13 p.m., (Pontiac time). tunnel 100 yards long in Moles have been known to dig single night. (Advertisement) (Advertisement) PEOPLE ALL OVER AMERICA PRAISE O-ilB.WA BITTERS ABOVE ALL OTHERS-WHY? It’S tree'that O-JII-WA It (wm from e—t fa ini! bet—■ N often helps where ether treatments ond modlcinos here WM. . 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Aw l. Rn.iT "Blift It Seems to Me.... TOehourtbnw in Accepting Nuclear Test Ban Limitations on nuclear tests Will receive immediate attention by the United States Congress and it 'Will produce plenty of oratorical pyrotechnics. Any constructive step towards peace should be hailed. Never can a measure be designed and drawn that peases everyone/ We must compromise with our most ardent wishes in the light of cold reality. ★ ★ * , There are some perennial and professional opponents, of the President who will try to scuttle anything he proposes. This is,an inherent part of a democracy and can be discounted. At the other - end, we find the slap-happy ex» tremists who would support any* thing the President suggest? with real and feigned enthusiasm. These can be discounted similar* ly. In between, lie the boys who will render the decision. An all-out global wir’aasumes such terrifying proportions, mankind must seize at everything that points towards,peace. - ★ ★ ★ Opponents’ principal charges 'will probably center around the fact that Russia has no real intentions of doing anything that doesn’t please her purposes of the moment. Further; she, will repudiate" her “word of honor” without warning. When-she' decides to bltot away In outer space, IheTl' do precisely that. * ★ ★ Secondly, the worid recognizes that the Soyiets would do anything that cotUdn’t. be detected. We have adversaries without honor. without decency and with-out any basic concepts of right, - They’re guileful cheats. This will be a “treaty” only as long as it suits Russia’s purposes of the Up to now, they’ve shown no ’ discernible yen for the newspaper . business. Allah be praised.' ^ (Busineas Of crossing ail fin-gers and toes'.) Aerialists Need Nets v . . . Once again we read of a high wire aerialist who fell and Who apparently escaped death, but faces tragic injuries. „ .. Must this continue? ★ • ★ ★ —Your reporter will never again with any favor whatsoever upon a high wire act without u 7 net beneath.. Tpe protection ia impentive. The net doesn’t detract in the slightest from the. artistry above but rather lets all onlookers watch closely with no mental reservations or uneasy fears. • v. ★ ★ ★ The tragedy In Detroit seepied to trigger a slow but persistent chain of aerial tumbles that gain absolutely nothing and which are 80 stupidly Unnecessary. I doubt whether there would be a single absentee out of the next 50,000 spectators if the comforting and reassuring net were Installed beneath. No one wants to see death. No one relishes serious injury. • r ★ . ★ ★ The circus people should restore nets immediately and if they balk, th« matter should be covered by statute. Why subject performers and audiences to this indignity?__ Perhaps by now H is a matter of false professional pride with the participants and tf this'is true, they must. be. saved from them-> selves and their own false conceptions of the general attitude. Voice of the People: ‘Globe Being Encircled by Russian Naval Bases’ The Russians have been efficiently and unobtru sively establishing small naval bases throughout the globe. So-called Russian fishing fleet* sail the uvfti seas gathering data under direct orders from the Soviet Navy.' /_ ★ t ★ ★ *- In Cuba, they have {acquired an Invaluable base k for espionage and subversive operations; and the Caribbean bids fair to become a Russian lake The Russians are using “fishing trawlers,” large add c^rrgggggfrTif »v+rnnrrlinarV >inPPf1 and mobmt^cdjj-able of remaining at sea for long periods. Flotillas if these potential naval guerrilla .forces r-r jgriremely efficient sea raiders — are usually accompanied by supply ahd repair ships, and in. some cases, by hospital ships. ' ' ★ .A ★ They are already strategically situated, and ready to act against the U.S. The forces of the Free World would be herd pressed to maintain dominion, of the seas in any naval conflict; and tire waters fhpt wash the shores of the United States are already contaminated J»y Communist Cuba. vCarlbs Todd Coral Gables, Fla.. Mad Dogs And Englishmen David Lawrence Says: JFK Claims Protests Subsiding ‘Dog Refuge Can Use Unwanted Items* The Sanctuary,, a refuge for homeless dogs on an oW hill farm, can use food (of any sort), old blinkets (or piecm), or old sheets and towels. Anything can find a place here and will be used with care and appreciation.v „ Lpuior Htmt Martinsville, Indiana WASHINGTON - it might be wondered whether President Kennedy really has any time to read the newspapers or, if not, whether he. is being told by his aides just what is going on in connection wKh the •Negro and whitei “d* e m 0 n sir a-] tions” in different. parts of the| country. LAWRENCE The^ impression conveyed by the President at his latest news conference was that the racial “demonstrations” were petering out, when actually they have been -spreading and their intensity has been increasing. * _lt- may be, of courset as often happens in politics, that the tactics of the administration are to “play down” what* is occurring,, but the newspapers are certainly printing the facts every day. 18 children were picked up while trying 10 iriock construction -vehicles. , ; On Thursday morning, on the first page of The New. York Times was a headline reading, “Near-Riot Flare* in Race Pro-' test at Project Here— Pickets Hit and Kick Police in Brooklyn After Blocking Street — 22 Arrested — 3 More in Sit-In Are Ousted at City Hall.” On the inside pages of the Times on the same day were arti- cles telling of riots and demonstrations. —On Friday morning, in the issue following “the President’s press conference, -a headline on the front page of the Time! in the first column read as follows: “7 Pickets-Seized for Blockading Governor’s boor — Patrolman Is Mauled.” » SO it fr« little difficult to see why toe President .feels that toe fever or vigor of the “demonstrations” is, “subsiding.”^ . (Copyright. INS. New. Tefk Herald Trihunt Syndicate. lac.) Says Catholics Not Persecutingr Buddhists Articles have been appearing in papers about Catholic persecution of Buddhists in South Viet Nam. There is no Catholic persecution of anyone there. ' . •' ^ ^ • / - Catholics are being tried and imprisoned for offenses the government consider! anti-government. Priests have had to leave the country to avoid imprisonment for criticism of the government. Even family members of government officials are not safe from the penalties imposed for any kind of oppoitton. , . • ' dir A' ★ ', The reports of Buddhists being .imprisoned by a government whose president is a Catholic are deliberate half-truths. The majority of the Smith Vtot Nam government’s ministers are non-Christian, and Catholics are being subjected to the same treatment as non-ChriAtlans. T. W. W. Bob Considine Says: - Reader Calls Attention to Press* Mistake Pacific Fleet Com Satisfied With But And in Conclusion.... We’re the key figure " /“ ’ Jottings from the Will-^humbled If Congress doesn’t ratify after notebook of your peripatetic reporter; a reasonable debate, we,will spread . Sokwy Liston didn’t bare his head doubts as to our own Intentions. w*ien played the. National We’ll taint an unhappy picture of Anthem but probably it wasn’t played our oWiTnation. We’re the greatest very often in his various peniten-peace advocates there are, and if we tiaries. ... . . Friends of falter It will affect the entire globe. Lyndon Johnson insist he’ll be a Russia will gloat. > candidate again And that he repre- —------w’ Tk ■ "fr1 ’ - ■■------------sente Kmnnrdy’b only- ohanee of Unless Ihcn are some hidden carrying Texas. ■ ■ ... OH- joksns tiht haven’t come to light, maying thoughtT ruR never bal-we should move father quickly anced the budget a Single year. . . and by a universal expression of . . , . . Banks universally report approbation and approval. The an increase In savings. . question should never hinge on ' ^ ’ it ■" it Republicans and Democrats. It-------—-— ---------—.. . . . .--- ■3,.., ... . .• ■I cant prove it but 111 bet a __ should be settled strictly on mer- 7. ... . —z— ------r. , sugar cookie Ave Harriman its without reference to political—-~ „T—,, - , ittu rru: 1 4 ui 4 w be the mr-SecieUtiy of affiliation. This is too big to let - • ai V 1# d 1. bi-partisanship sway-,the decision. ®. * . U8 Do we believe in peace? » s eps ou ... , If we do, we must act. . Trusted , '■ v' h.......______ scotitg advise _ __ . . me that Cheryl Barry Goldwatbr seems to shy .. . . . . . ... . Wartnen rates away, but some of this can be mention M ^ written off as political reactions. 0f the area’s es- . Early expressions across the Country penally attrac-lndlcate that the treaty Is greeted tive young la* with approval. dies. . ...... Our people want peace. 4 . Sign on a CHERYL Make no mistake.about that. bumper , sticker: “Don’t worry. ..— They’re still .90 miles away.” ■ ■ Prefer ChurchwTt ......... . “ Andy” Andemm, j . . .. general manager of the Lions, I’m tatriguedno end by theae m hag thfe fihe8t perceptive Presbyterian pigeons. It’s hy8,que he ever Mw pntofrlJ 200 feet around that fine # whttl ^ c. Girard was church and yet these abominable in NfW York, a friend placed a birds have selected the twelve feet thermometer on the pavement representing the main entrance as md u recorded an incredible 128. their official depository. The devil Then he put it on a card table at . himself must have had a direct hand the same spot ahd.it checked 122/ in anything as selective as tills. ........ . A 200 year old tern- ★ it "it pie roof in Japan fell from the ne Chamber of Commerce is accumulation of pigeon droppings, faring better. These iurious.cfea- Personal note to the Rev. Her-tures prefer the sanctuary of the ■'-../ vshey: “Parson, beware.” Lord’s temple fo the crass com- l /' i ★ ★ it ■' ' mercialism of |the Riker Building. Bob CarrcHriiLb invited me to play. % ••/ • r ,, ■• /■ - r /- A careful examination of The New York Times, for example,* in the four days preceding the President’s news conference of last Thursday, shows that on Monday the first page contained a headline which read, “Negroes to Pwh Picketing in CHy in Drive Tor Jobs — Demonstrations Due Today at Projects in, Brooklyn,' Queens and Harlem.” Oh Tuesday morning, a headline on the first plge of the Times rend as follows: “Pickets Arrested for Blocking Way to Mayor’s Office.” On another page, an article told how a.Criminal Court judge lectured nine persons, including sev-..........................guil- PEARL HARBOR - Peppery Adm. Harry D. -Felt, commander-in-chief Pacific, custodian of the security'of 40 per cent of the earth’s surface, looked out over his vast 'domain today und-found-things generally tolerable. The celebrated] airman, win of the Navy Cross1 during the war CONSIDINE for leading a hair-raising attack that clobbered a Japanese aird'aft carrier, heavy, eruiser and destroyer off Guadalcanal, seemed less than. tilings.” the admiral said, “but we let Peking tell the world when they happen.” He Could see no danger, jn the so-called “unleashing” of Chiang Kai-shek by the U. S. Seventh Fleet. . it seems, to me you .preach'credit should be bestowed where it belong. Who writes’ toe headlines for yto^paper? - ■ .0,' - -‘it tk ’ ’ - ■ ? Page 23, July 30 has a headline: “FBI Captures Two Prisoners.” The lead sentence reads: “Bloomfield Township police have turned over to FBI agents two men accused of fleeing a Mississippi jail.’* —★ ★ ★ . 7 ~ • A bouquet to Bloomfield Township police; a brickbat to you and your headline writer! ' Jack B, Baldwin Bloomfield, Hills (Editor’s Note: Is our face red!) Reviewing Other Editorial Pages rty-tO Yioiating the Taw by their -new in-thp Fpr-FW -p-r demonstrations on July 22. If some Republicans go on the next junket to-Moscow, we trust at least one of them will think to Khrushchev it is to the credit of the Administration that it has once more picked up the issue of Cuba. Cuba must be isolated, in much the same manner as the sieges of qncient history. and fire that today we cannot even conceive of all its horrors.” from Boston reported the first clash in that city as a result of a demonstration by both Negroes and whites.’ r “We sometimes fond to forget that Red JDhina has suffer&Tsbme' pretty bad defeats,1’ he said, moving over to a world map that entirely filled one wall of his office. '7 , . _ query something like this: “Hie record shows that, out of 50 ma--agraemems inade with thg fluoridation the Petroit \ News ■■It's a frightful thought, so frightful that almost anytiiing' seems better. That, precisely, was President Kennedy’s point U. S , the Kremlin has kept only r Mja&iaiiaa »***•■ m expect to live up to this one JS^mtv wu dis- on nuclear tests? ' * - * At the time \ gopwed city support for the limited test ban agreement initialed in Moscow. -It may not look like much, he seemed to be saying, but itTs something. —On Wednesday, The New York Times, on its front page, stated . that there-had been 691 arrests - Aiirinfl July an a tfiffit of demon- “They’ve discovered that they Miuliiiii'i.iii NfW llhlI I Hy Tliii rnn’t drive the Nationalist Chi-ty-one adults were arrested at a frlnnito nf medical center in Brooklyn and Quemoy and Matsu byartillery" ----■'-------------- bombardment, Though ; they've —been trying for years. golf with NoVlci 'G. Faw- “Now" they’re down to lobb-eRTT, President of 08U. The,: i«g ®v«r propaganda-staffed good prexy only plays a lew ««y.«fcr 4ay. times a year kut «• kU- “We haven't seen anything of -f • . , . •.. .. then* Au*'Force*since it showed sortie prodigious-drives that ^ disastrousIy, in 1958 neJr had Kis compatriots gasp- MIG lS’s and IPs had better per-Ing.. . .......Over- formance capabilities than the F- heard; “Always be tolerant °! Natir,S‘ ^ we . v had trained our side better. . with a zanv character who ■,■■ ■ . . .... '' ■ ' . „ ■ Adm. Felt acknowledged that -disagrees with you. He haa . „ W>| ‘"The Reds neV- v .. . a. er came back." »■ there’s another that act- , : w w * ually grows hair. . . , ./. it is true thit toe Nationalist . . Dept, of Cheers and Chinese hhve repeatedly landed Jeers / ThV &s. -r- College ^d» gJgJSjgmii; . „ * L" "T ,7... ' Tt mainland, Adm.. Felt fold us. All-Star Football team; the They gre landed by ship and J> — Dr. Stephen Ward, plane. 7—Harold A. Fitzgerald «we know about these Isolate Cuba The San Diego Unkm. cussed, the mpre fainthearted, or less enthusiastic, worried about possible lawsuits. ■' !/ '■// The United States, moving with "ihe-speed of H-glacier. finally The suits were duly filed and have been dismissed- by Circuit Judge George E. Bowles. He‘found,'as has a multitude Trozen $32 mitoOTi5l!S!W*6set3.__j6f respeasibfc dental and pub- on deposit in this country, to prfe’ vent their use in financing Sub-version throughout the hemisphere. The Cuban government held „ $29 million and Cuban citizens $12 million. The Cuban peso is not convertible and Premier Castro has drawn on dollars in the United States to support » his embassies in Latin America and to feed money into the conspiracies against his Latin American neighbors. lie health antfaofities, that the addition of a fluoride does not piake water unsafe, impure, or. unwholesome. He found also that the police power of the ciiy Includes the power to .jm--- prove the health of the clti-zenry. Perhaps the State Supreme Court will still hqve to be heard from on.the subject, but timid fears of court action have at least been dispelled. Beyond the fragile hopes ' it raises, the pact doesn’t offer jnucto The acopeJs limited To. testing in the sea, in the atmosphere, in space. Testing underground can, anct apparently will, go. on so this cah only bring a slowdown; -to the nuclear Tace. "The, signing nations —- Britain, -Russia, and the United States-* can pullout of the acebrd without pain or punishment if their interests dictate tt. The President admits some testing could be done, in secret And the' treaty does iMt, of course, cover either ^France or Red China, and there’s IRQeTMWOT“Td~belleve they’ll-'agiwe. ■ Detroit children have long beeir denied toe unarguable benefits of fluoridation by a small but noisy "v -. , ■ ,—-—;— band of obstructionists. They are, The United States imposed an we hope and predict, about to be effective embargo on trade be- nv»mum hy th» 1 " tween* this country and Cuba, and of more reasonable men. similar action has been taken by -some other members of the Or- Still, as Mr. Kenaedy says, it is something, a “first step.” Whether the stop is forward or backward only time Will tell. Here Today The Chicago Tribune ganizstion Of American States. But these are still half-hearted., Cuban ports are open to most of the trading ships of the world.-. The psychological moment, though, when these actions - would have bee a'most effective, sad commanded the most reac- A First Step The National Observer ' In the. dark world conjured up-by President Kennedy, a nuclear war lasting jpss than 88 minutes would wipeout SOF,OO(h0M people. The survivors, said Mr. Kennedy% would inherit Sa world so de-. A, m: \/f’, I Sb> I \ 7 vvVUIU IlUIClIi WUIIU 5U uc* tion, tong since has passed. But vastated by explosions and poison v 77 . be,on England ■unless Christine has a t^T- Th, Diiiiiiii rnM b Mania exclusively to MM tar republl-MtlM of aU local new* printed In thl* Bcwcpnpcr at well u all AT The Pontine ProtM U delivered by curler for M cento • week; where milled h Onkland, Oenute. Llvlnt-xtoo. Mnembb. Lapeer nod WW tenalw Countlei It 6 |1|M a Mar; elirwbare In Mlchlfan and all other plaece In the United BtaUe ISN a in mall nlncrtptlau payable Iranec. Poata(C iac kJ- ““ Utchlran . Member of ARO. .“s-e* -4\, s^;/ . THE PONflAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1963 SEVEN AJmw device with no moving itects electrical equipment andiby lightning. Hiese surges ac-parts and small enough to be] wiring in homes and other build- [count for 96 per cent of lightning-held in the palm ot the hand pro-lings from poster surges causedjcaused losses. A majority in an election it!east for all the candidates fori is an excess of votes over the m6re than half the total votes! that particular office. A plurality! number for the next opponent SURVIVOR HAS BABY - Mrs. John Burke, who little more than a year ago survived a 2,500-foot plunge Into a Cape Cod lake Whcn heE parachute Jailed-to open, holds her daughter, Linda Arlene, 5 pounds 10 ounces, born in a Cape Cod Hospital, Hyannis, Mass., Saturday. r to— 'fhcmkfur as Son Dies | MONTAUK, N.Y. (A - Twenty years ago, Richard T..G11-martin was injured in an auto-mobile accident He’s been confined to a wheelchair since. Sunday, his youngest son, Thomas, 19, was killed in an automobile accident. Told of hie.son's death, Gil: KATONAH, N.Y. (AP)-Logan Billingsley, 80, real estate developer and brother of- Stork Club owner Sherman Billingsley, died Sunday after a long illness. Billingsley at one time worked for the U.S. Department of the Interior and founded the Indian Hall of Fame at Anadarko, Okla. martin said: “I’d rather see Jiim go that way than be a cripple for 20 years, as I’ve been.’*”"- Monaco Monarchs Seek Summer Home in Erie LONDON (UPI) - The Sunday newspaper News of the World said yesterday it had been tipped Prince Rainier and Princess Grace of Monaco were looking for a 20-roomxsummer residence near Dublin, Irdand. It said the royal couple “have been anxious to return to the Emerald Isle where the princess i»s her-rootaJ%^ GROWING FAMILIES NEED MORE ROOM ENLARGE ’-------------—>— REPAIR... MODERNIZE We have a special PACKAGE HOME LOAN SERVICE To meet you/ needs NO DOWN PAYMENT • NO LEGAL FEES Oakland County** Largest Mortgage Lending Institution 761 W. HURON-PONTIAC 351 N Main -Milford 16 I. 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McFall, IS, a founder gf the IXXA medical school and professor of anatomyat George Washington UnIvertoly.'cHeff Sun-dav after a long illness. .. Woman Tortured by Agonizing ITCH f%jgwfcT>»« Ifmad* »ne mndtr crtmt. Ntw< I’m bspp%" writes P.RaJ,%,fLA.C*hiCsfff rtlitf tortures of veginal itch. , fecial itch, chafing, raoh ./WP and lomnl with an amwoiMW acicntiflc formuU caJM LAN AC AN&Thrt<.«-Ki necessarily be an American satellite. The Nationalists fear that the Russians would rather deal with Communist boss Mao Tse-tung, no matter hew difficult he gets, rather than have an American eUeat government runntoi Chtoa.., 11 ’ 1 .. ^ The Russians are not anxious have Ameriesn rocketbaaes looking down their throats from sfakinwg and Manchuria — which they feel would be likely If Chiang*8 forces conquer the mainland again. 'The Nationalists would Uks to convince the Soviets tills wouldn’t aeosssarilyfotiow. | But." in view of the vast amount people on Formosa, it hard to sell Moscow on the idea that the Nationalists will forget about Unde Sam if they go back to'the mainland. Italy Fascists Close With Free-for All ROME (AP) — Italy’s Fasdat party mded h three-day national congress Sunday night with Mack eyes and split ranks. * ★. "* A fist-swinging frte-lor-aff that brdce otff WhHi young membsrs jeered a speaker sent two delegates to the hospital and left scores of othsrs with shiners. ★ ★ ★ *. vthen a group of delegates walked out and set up its own meeting in an adjacent room to dramatize their disagreement With Arturo Michelini, party secretary g e n e r e 1, w)i6 favors achievement of party alms wiligs the framework of the current parliamentary framework of government. Almirante’s followers claim this won’t work. IISSIE SERVICE , All MAKES ,’twaKT ass g wwuum.isnsr FISHERMAN’S TOLLY To tall glaas, add 4 oil. Cask Burgundy Win#. Add I tape. sugar to wind. Stir until diaoolved. Fill glaoo with araekad or ahaved loo. Garnish with tndt Sana with Straw. UwWlwtnltai.0.iM«tata«ro«MKa. V^ACl^ tymltmlt, Vrf/lOIX miptrfnmM.Uquor -%a/i m te Q tten wjaryn. EARLY Bim VALUES "Super- iper- ihr GROUND ■beef. Prepared Fresh Many Times "SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY—BONELESS Pork Tenderloins 1Q-LB. BOX 7M LB. 79* “SUPER-RIOHT” MATURE BBF ^ ^ Rib Steaks * 89‘ ONE PRICE AS ADVERTISED—"SUPER-RIGHT” SKINNED Smoked Hams BUTT PORTION 49' Center Slices » 89c ilAt ■ ■b CANTALOUPES California Large Vine-Ripened 4 99* SEA SCALLOPS Uncooked j Cooked 12-Ox. Poly Bag j 1-Lb. Pkg. 49M 59* TEXAS STAR CLEANED JUMBO SHRIMP 2*69 Special Buy! Popsides x Many people have found thafThe 'Pontiac Press Classified Ads are their best friend. When you want to sell a House ... Pets-Huntina Docjs... Musical Goods ... 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CAN 33* Fruit Cocktail 141. 13-OZ. -’CAN.. 311 . lie OFF LABEL Lipton Tea Bags 100^87* Northern Tissue 4 s 30* ” 3c OFF LABEL Roman Cleanser 1Ec oal'■ ' df®1 Mi 7,1 fe iff." V ’ M , ; Bright So9 Bleach vwal 29c II prkeW In ti*U oel affwethro thrw Tuea., Awg. * in all Eo»tfw Michigan A*P Super Mark toe *WV.: TEN m m THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST r k i»68 ~~w Mr. Dm Russiaaa product about 3,100,000 bicycles anouaBy, about half the - MteMte Man and ^paoe Astronauts Get Alt Kinds of Advice GREENWICH, Com. (AP) Harrison H. Kennedy, W, re-tired investment counselor and By ALVIN B. CAPE CANA' from the mouths JR. M-Il ba^es there SPECIAL! 2 GAR GARAOE *899! i WHk Guarantied rtirf-m CTa*^—1’"- “"** r»Mjii>o)o PAYMENT PLAN . Gut Oar Free Et llmatu If owl Wu to: • ADDITIONS ■ *NO«rfc*«I AIABIIPA 7-YEAR MODERNIZATION PLAN GRAVES CONTRACTING CO. Cedi Us Anytime OR 4-1511 Now. .. The All N«w.. . Modern IMPERIAL BEAUTYSALON f“* b located 1 block west at 158 AUBURN AVE. opposite Parkhurst Street HAIRClTTUVC-STTLIJiG-TISTS the way YOU like It Park Free — No Apt. Neeeeeary Edith Stenson, Owner*, Operator (Formerly at 219 Ankara Ave.) FE 4-2878 WtSHHP Remodel! Build! All work den* by Craftsman' Free design tarylce or wa will build to your plans. No Money Down, FHA Terms. BARNARD CONSTRUCTION Pontioc — FE 8-8733 always came words of wisdom, Cape Canaveral would be a land of giant fans, sM-ratnp launching pads and “Satuniay-only” astronauts. lie National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has a file cabinet fufi of jproof that the mlada of America's children, I by physical la ws and J budgets, display a genius fiscal budgets, far the bnagtaative. Youngsters have carried into the space age their penchant for helping their eiden spend money. Uninhibited by worries about income tax 1040 and the like, they bombarded NASA with i scores of letters monthly suggesting ways to improve and often , speed up the use of that 135 million America has committed to conquering the moon. SUGGESTIONS COME IN Sometimes the letters are in the form of helpful suggestions, such as the one from Harry B. I Prescott, Ariz. “To help get ybur missiles off, why don’t you build an overgrown ski ramp with a half-mile slant at the right end?" If, Harry's suggestion ' is ignored and U.S. scientists continue to fire rockets in the old-fashioned strai^t-up manner.. some attention might be given the matter of all that blade blast-off, says Luther W. of Charleston, S. C.:~ naut, but it will have to be on a Saturday, as I pave to go to school during the week.” So what to dp when you get there? Eddie H. of University Park, Iowa, apparently has it all figured out; Judging from bis quay to the space agency: “I would like the names of clubs I can Join In spade.” How about a Uttie fame and prestige without all that risk? PERSONAL ROCKET Charles 6. of Baton Rouge, L, has his own idea: “I would like to have a rocket with my ame on, it., .rt Charles has Ms own reason for thex rathe? unusual request: Because everybody is not treating me right." Often the letters are merely inquisitive, particularly when they concern astronauts. Tommy T. et Sanditon, Va., paid sharp attention to the B-h-erbit flight of U.S. spaceman L. Gordon Cooper Jr. fat May, mid wrote: “Dear Major Cooper: In arithmetic .we figured you went around the earth miles per hour. That's 44 miles per hour more ffiah you were sdtofr uled to go. .. '‘Did you get a speeding (ticket up' there?” Lynda I. of Oklahoma City, dashed off a note to Cooper: •My brother thinks you are aeat.r,^,; aBh.nn,„fg Wfa> MUrm of I and he would like to be like you Jp* iwt Gem apparently noting that cities in AostrisNa planned to torn on thehr lights for Cooper as he passed ever, offered his own help to tee astronaut: “Good hide on your way around the earth. I’ll blink a flashlight on and off to say hello.” And more letters to Cooper: “Did you see aiqr fireflies?” •*8ay, have you met father yet"- ] “When yen were up there going around, did yon see anything strange-looklng?” But one said .it for all the youngsters who seem to feel e you (except he looks more like John Glenn because he has freckles.)” Ted M. of Twin Peaks, CRHf., an earlier era felt about Gene Autry and Tom Mix: “I bopp you don’t mind my saying fids. I low you.” Businessman Expires rh«ii»man 0f theHelsman Trojtoy Award Committee of the Downtown Athletic Club of New Yark, died in a Greenwich hospital Sat-urday after a font Hlneaa. Tormenting Rectal Itch Stopped In Minutes Now York, N.‘Y. (Special) -One of the most common afflie- Science Finds New Healing Substance That Framptiy Stops Itching and Pain of Piles ment” was reported and vert- ' fled by n doctor’s observations. This improvement was maintained in eases whtrs a doctor's observations were continued over a period of months! Among these sufferers wars a wide variety of hemorrhoid condi-ilnss i—s if Iff ts Iff f rr* duration. , ' ^ The eecret is this new heeling substance (Bio-Dyne*) — dis-covery of a world-famous research institution. This substance is now obtainable in eiat- tions is a condition wn __ “itching piles.” It ie most embarrassing for the victim during the day and especially aggravating at night _____ ■No matter what youvo used has. found a new healiM substance with the astomehing ability to promptly stop the burning itch and pain. It actually shrinks hemorrhoids — without surgery. Medical science has proven this substance produces a remarkably effective rate of healing. Its germ-jdlHurutoiw lias mss jwlp; vent infection.1 In one hemorrhoid ease after another “very striking improve- _ __________ . Ate for Preparation H Suppositories (iwrenient to cai^ awe^r Ointment with epedal applicator. Available at all drug counters. DOUBLE GOLD BELL STAMPS t4)MllWMUMWMWWiMAWA(lHAflUnmmmtel C5|i Foed Town-People’s B#au> tiaras Coanon I «* DOUBLE GOLD BELL STAMPS fjzsi With purchase of $5.00 or more, ox- £5% •59 eluding Boor, Wine and Cigarettes. Eh With $5 Purchase or More With.This Coupon Hew 7-Foot Vssmun Cleaner Rosa Braided Cloth, All Rubber FULLY GUARANTEED Attachments Included $1.25 Week Free Home Demonstration OR 4-1101 Within 25 Nil* Rodim CURTS APPLIANCES Suomy JmOmtmd WUo Orafar Wort on MdV Ie Akpeit ReL Mont, te Hoteheiy Two West 2 Slock* on Hatchery Rd. Opoo Moodioy'—d MAy U S FR. . “Why don’t you put giant fans tone side of the foundling pad?j • Regular nr Drip iles off, the smoke would bd blown away so you could see what’s going on.” There is a that sometimes .they would Just as soon not wee what Is going on. Cape Canaveral has its bad days. Grown-ups might be inclined to snicker at thesq youthful ideas. But the U.S. Navy once spent three years, trying to figure out how to use corn-eating pigeons to steer guided missiles. The Navy learned a lot about pigeons, including their inability to guide rockets, A fair number of NASA’s youthful fans volunteer not only ideas but themselves Tor flights into space—although, occasionally, there is a catch, as in the case of TDmmy W. of Chicago: “I am Interested In apace, and, would like to become an astrq- Postpones Date for Wedding to Preserve Income HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Actress June Allyson has postponed wedding plans because she would lose her widow’s allowance from the estate of bo* late husband, actor-producer Dick Powell. Miss Allyson, 38, told newsmen She and Glenn Maxwell, 35, owner of two baiter shops, would wed Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. Bpt on Saturday, Miss Allyson said her attorney' had advised her that immediate marriage would deprive her of incomfc from Powell’s estate Miss Allyson said Maxwell was t mutual Triend of both herself and her husband. “I am suit that Dick would approve very much," she sakL PowelitiedHrfeaneer-JanrB. Ex-Ambassador Dies SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-J. £>-Zellerbach, 71, former United States ambassador to Italy, died Saturday of a brain tumor. Zellerbach, who served a* ambassador from 1956 until 1860, was board chalrmair ^T T5twn ZcIIcrfrach Corp„ giant paper company ifounded by ZellerbSCh’s grandfather ' '• XWELl HOUSE MAXWELL HOUSE GOFFEE 3*1” Ripe, Delicious -i-- ■*—— - WATERMELONS Just Right for Summer Picnics 69 Each SALE DAYS NORGAY, Aug. 5 thru WEDNESDAY, AUG. 7,1963, Fresh Sealtest or Fresh POTATO GUPS £ 39! Bordens COTTAGE CHEESE &19* . Lean! Tender! ORNAMENTAL IRON BeavtSfy You Bomb with Custom Designed Ornamental beawoik Railing-Column!-Grills i See Our 1-Pe. Reinforced OORGRETC STEPS Luncheon j RING a, MEATS iBOLOGNA 49 lb. DELICIOUS SirloiNi STEAK FrggCiteiitM Wi Deliver Anywhere! CONCRETE STEP COMPANY *497 Highland Ed. (M-59) Phong 673-7715 S IGNMMiaGiBWBiffB.aDDamURINNNDDMMNUNNBBNBNNDNNNNilM«NND PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS ■ 2DAOOORR l OM L PKEST. I 700MMRRST. I m Opo»*to^»*««t WOtooVAai-ttf PAL ■ exit ubl* S IU1IIA ■ r«Ov*oWUk ■ ■ J aOUO IUNPAVS 1 OftNIUNO»VP>»« g Opw 7 Qn»« W«A g MO ORCKMR UWE ML -- Cqra v ML W*Pi»t * days a Week ’ OPEN SUNDAY * to 5 I FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS m IMRsMMifoe. I 1275 Coeley Lake Id. 0a»«0noow«b’ WX K + tt.uC OVEN SUNDAY B THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAYS AUGUST 5, 1963 ELEVEN Contract Bridge Champ f Die* in Philadelphia ! , PHILADELPHIA (AP)— Sidney Silodor, *5, world contract bridge champion four timet, died if a hospital Sunday. The cause of death was not announced. to , * * . Silodor, who lived in suburban Havertcfem, was the hattbn’a third ranking bridge player on the contract bridge league’s life master list behind Oswald Jacoby and Charles Goren. He won every major .contract bridge tournament at least once during his 32-year ’career and Won the Vanderbilt Trophy nine times. Urge Cooperation of Citizens This Is the season when dogs and'hotrodders are otf die loose, ^ghese and similar distarb-gnces create sne sf the asset common da ibis standards known law enforcers. The public offers violators both condemnation and salvation. Citizens are quick to report them but slow to sign complaints. EARN MORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE TOTH OF THE month EARN FROM THE 1ST AT COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY .,. OR YOU CAN PURCHASE Advanced Payment . , Shares Certificates n 1% • Current Rat* . gg / mm .# W IF HELD TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE Ettablitbed la 1890 — Newer mined paying a dividend. Over 72 yean el need management — year aeeorance ____el eeewily. Aiiel* Bow over M million dollar*. CAPITOL SAVINGS t LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 West Huron- . FE 4-05&1 Downtown Detroit Office: Washington Blvd. Bldg. Comer State Street WO 2-1070 Southfield Office: 27215 Southfield at 11 Mile Road Kt 7-6125 Heme Office: Laming Member Federal Home Loan Bank System The public often demands action, but rarely takas it * “We get many such calls from Irate citizens,” said Pontiac Po-lice., Chief Joseph Koran, “but many lade the information we need and vary few are willing to sign a complaint." ASK COOPERATION So, the Pontiac Police Department is urgently requesting Pontiac citizens to cooperate in making citizen complaints cm any in fraction of the law they might see, particularly traffic violations. “The willingness of people to make citizen complaints is a major factor in a good law enforcement program for any community," Koran said. , “!■ order to make a citizen’s complaint, a person must know 4to time, date, location and be able to identify the violator. -Divorces- Borate# V. from Herald P. Moron JMomho from 0*7 Olbion Catherine J. from Ulchtel R Broderick g*— J>- from Eugene L. Johncon Bum P. from Robert J. Hitch q. ftom Eunice O. Heigh Rile I. fmm IVn.U ■ 4rt|Vt1lglr --------Ill ** “ " » Nancy J. I nc». of »ww HObOlt Borden Will L. horn Ralph A. Otttmar fflnaj a. from Hof t, Johnioa Maurem A. from Richard 8. Neel, Edvard T. from Eunice H. Judd -Betty J from Orville H. Doric Mary B. from Richard X Calmer (Separate Maintenance) Mary L. from Thomae J. McDonough IBtaxTmulMi P. HMott Mauda from Arthur Voek Jaanna J. from Willem Lang Cornelia from LcroyWFraik Helen D. from Lawlc M. 'If a car is involved," Koran noted, “the cojnpalnant should try to get the license number and the names of any witnesses to the incident, if possible.' * ★. ★ \ Complaints may bo made by phone, post card or letter to the police department or the Citizens Service Bureau at City Hall. Korea said that the very hr-tore of some violations require a little police work by citizens themselves. Hera's a good example: “Someone just tossed a bottle from a car and it smashed all over nay driveway,” the irate citizen told a desk sergeant over *• the phone. “I’m sick and tired these hotrodders up and down my street every night’’ When a s k e d for something more to go on, the man would onfy“offer tHat "ft Wsi l light-colored car." ‘ OFTEN A SIGNAL Sometimes, police watch ’an Wto and catch the violators. Too many times, however, the arrival of patrol cars In any'given area merely signals the move of hot-rodders to another neighborhood. ; v* * . ★ -• “Dog complainerjs are notorious for not signing complaints,” Korol noted. “People will tell us their neighbor’s barking dog disturbing them, but- they won’ tell a judge. . . „ Dorothy A. mm luraora ■ Virginia M. from Harold H^LcQuc SharoB R. fromJectl.O.-Wlllicni____ Ruth M. from Aim E. Johnson Carol from Reymend Poelvoerde Winifred K. Irma Frederick W. Hcmpli Patricia L. from John W. Mahan Hotly J. Bern Robert l. noapm Jr Elisabeth from Nathaniel Shlkldt Dorothy L. from Donald O. Swain Mary fc. from Carl Raima Bana^nm Harold Haas Tract* Vera D. from william C. Ken Sr. Martin D. from Shirley Barr - -Edna from Philip J. Smith Opal B. from Myron J. Dey Linda M. from Richard Booth agitoe W, from Haul j. Pfcodke Susan O. from Peter M. Cooper Sandra L. from WUbV X McCeulley . Wynette C. from Lawrence E. Moore 8haran L. from Terry E. Tarket i Harvey R. from Oeorgeana Harrii Ethel M. from Richard W. DeOrow Jenell S. from .Kenneth It. Walker YANKEES Left-Overs AUlHHt WHITE SALE OPEN NIGHTS ’TIL 10-Sunday 10 A.Mr'TIL 7 I’t get very far to court claiming that someone was disturbed with nothing to verify the claim." vestigate all citizen complaints filed with them or the service bureau*, and pledges itself to initiate enforcement action when the necessary evidence is procured, Keren said. Commenting on the appeal for community, action, City Manager Robert A. Stierer said, “Other eities have tried out this typq-of program with good results. “We hope Pontiac citizenn^vill cooperate by reporting apparent vipfotions." YOUR NEWS (MHZ PART I - NATIONAL AfefMNTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for etch correct 1 Michigan honored the 100th anniversary of the birth of..... its moat famous citizen. a-Tlgpmas J. Edison b-Henry Ford c-Benjamin Franklin 2 The hueletr teet-ban treaty is ..... signing na-tiona. - a-completely binding for b-can be revised at the request of c-bas an etcape clause for 3 Authority to approve this treaty is given to the President and the Senate in Article ..... of the Constitution. ——a»Qna b-Two ! c-Three; .___ A New trouble flared fo divided Korea as that nation marked the........th anniversary of the sign- ing of the truce agreement. h-10 b-14 ©-15 V» 5 The population of the U.S. at the end of July was about..... million. a-156 b-180.2 * 0-189.5 PART II - WbRDS IN THK NEWS T- 5J—- i . Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1-deficit ' a-whole range of anything S* 2-defile b-riddle; puzzle 3-intertm c-time between -—1 h . 4-enigma d-fo march in a line 5-gamut e-amount leoking 1 . tpMbi PART III- NAMES IN THE NOWS V <1 1 t . Take 8 points for namhs that you can "'correctly match with the clues.- 1- Richard B. Bussell 2- J. Edward Day 3- Dr. Robert White 4wFarria Bryant r *T * 5-Edmund G. Brown a-Florlda'a Governor b-Georgia Senator e-CaltforniafoGovernor d-Postmaster General resigns e-new U. S. Weather v Bureau chief - ^ The Pontiac Press AaguctS, 19(^3 t J Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points tor each correct anewpr. land claim payment approved. h .....returned tooon-„ stitutional government SKOPJF—c......This industry la WARSAW PACT Setting a new record high. d .....gift from Secretary Freeman to 8ovlet Premier e .....rejected test ban treaty quake killer age increasing ..Prices are foiling throughout the nation. xo, y* HOW DO YOU RATS? (Seeie Each Sldo of Quia Separately) 91 ta.100 potato - TOP SCORE! •1 to 10 points - hesitant, y 71 to ID polnh - Good.' 41 to TOpatnto^ralr. 40 or Uniter???- HW Thl» Quia Is pan of the Educational fcogrem which This Nawopapar fumlshot to Saheeis In this oroo to Stimulate Inter*# In National and World Affbliae* an ltd 9m Developing Good Citlasndtip. — Sava This-Practice Examination! - ~ _________i STUDENTS Valuabl* Reference Material For Exam*. ANSWERS ON REVERSE! PAGE MEN’S ACRILAN KNIT SHIRTS ' 100% Acnlon acrylic. Zipper henf end button plocqu.t mod.li. Wacbai aatNy, Orta* quickly. N..dt IMq or na ironing. Siiat UAL FULL OB TRIM-FITTED MATTRESS COVERS WH BOYS’ ACRIUM KNIT SHIRTS 'stzfr Crystal Fruit & Bread Basket In cut glats ciyetol plat tic. 9” diameter. TEASERBRUSH Wip*^ clean, nraterpreof vinyl protector far your matt rate. Non-allergenic. . 2-PC. FOAM BACK MAT & LID SET Heavy-weight cotton chgnille in plain and 2 tone detign. Wochable. SCATTER PERRY AT MONTCALM-MIRACLE MILE SHOPPUtfi CENTER | 3FP MONDAY, AUGUST. I Deepening Crisis a i Equotr^ppodumiy Is Ultimate Goal f (EdXor’t Not*—The American Negro has achieved tremendous gams in recent yean -benefits of which leaders of dreamed at youngstert. But, they toy, there it still much to be done. This to the sixth to a special Associated Press series on the rdcial crisis.) This was 00 years ago ;40 years after the Emancipation Proclamation and the 14th Amendment, which provided equal protection of ttie law to all citizens. LOOKS TO FUTURE The other day, Wilkins, now 61, executive secretary of, the N^ACP and a leader in die current Ne- By TOM AP Newsfea tares Writer When Roy -Wilkins was a boy In St. Louis, the doctrine of separate but equal facilities for Negroes stood unchallenged as the law of the land. -S The eminent Negro Booker T. Washington counseled his people to work hard, get an education and, abora ill, do nothing to up-sat the delicate balance of peace between races'. Thsea wars no Nationai Agaod-adoo for the Advancement of Col- ored People no National Urban League no sit-ins no freedom drive, reminisced a bit and ITM I........tin llllm 11 visualise a Hank Aaron or a Willie Mays or^a Jackie Robinson.’ Only 2$ years "ago, high hopes of Negroes revolved around an antilynching measure that failed to pass Congress. Now, some the ultimate goal in sight. ULTIMATE GOAL’ “The ultimate goal is simply equal opportunity for all,” says Whitney M. Young Jr., executive director of the Urban League. ‘There will never be perfect Things are happening in myequumr Twi Uieie eupM net be j^, lifetime now- that ,1 thought I would never live to see,” he said. Tve seen goals that I dreamed of as a young man- suddenly attained. —-7 ‘Several years ago Cincinnati, one of our largest cities, had a Negro vice mayor; last fall Massachusetts elected* Negro attorney general; Connecticut elected a Negro treasurer. “When I was growing up in St. Louis and roottqi for the CanB- nals t always'hoped ter ti and worked for it but I could never an artificial barrier standing between a mart and his potential The millenium will have arrived when we see nothing unusual in a Negro occupying a high place in life; when we see Negroes in all situations and it is not a novelty.” Henry Lee Moon of the NAACP sees the ultimate Negro goal as the Negro and white man standing side by side as average people- A Negro should not have he a Ralph Bunche or a Robert “There’s prejudice on baseball teams—but it doesn’t keep them from playing ball together. They have found that they can’t win iffdess they play together” * - Robinson may be considered to' have it made. He’s vice president of a restaurant chain and lives with his family in a fashionable suburb in Connecticut. be lends his name and presence to the Negro cause. “Sure, ;T have qufye a lot,” be says. “And I also have three kids. What is going to happen to them? What opportunity will they have? 'Until the Negro in the deepest South has it made, I have to keep, fighting.” . Progress to education and policies, say Negro leaders, is moving fast; employment and housing are dragging their feet. YOU MAY WIN ONE OF THESE GREAT PRIZES! ADMIRAL ‘ OIL COLOR C POWERED TELEVISION 3 WATER SETS -------------------HEATERS - All the hot water you carl use ",—4 - All day long... 25% savings Weaver in .order to take.his right-ful place in society,” Moon said. Tbe big bottle tefo lower the barriers,” says. Wilkins. CHIEF TRAGET u.‘ > “It’s quite important to Remember that the chief target is wot private or personal prejudice— which may never be elimmated— the chief target is prejudice in public life that influences opportunity and rights.' portunities,” says Jackie Rob son, the first Negro to play jar league baseball and t member of the baseball Hall of Fame. ‘There will be prejudice long as people exist. There's prejudice in'every group of people; even among members of the same family. SPARTANBURG, S.C, (AP)-A mock battle rumbled over the South‘CaroteHFCountrysidt today after a giant assault by nearly 8,000 paratroopers tto Swiftly ho- gan land actfani in Swift Strike m, the nation’s largest peacetime war games, The 82nd Airborne Division landed deep in Red Force territory near Joanna, about 50 miles southeast of here{ The drop followed two weeks of jockeying by opposing air forces for aerial sup- Loads of heavy equipment carried by tot unexpected wind fell dangerously near high rankingtof- DREAMS OF FUTURE — A Negro youngster listens to an antisegregation rally in New YorlrCity’s Harlem. Speakers folk about the day when youngsters like this one will be able .'fays Moon: “The country is even more ghettoized now than it was at the turn of the century. “A large number of Negroes have moved info the cities but they have only expanded the ghettos. Most cities in thfe north with their big ghettos are more segregated than the South.” ■OPPORTUNITY LACKING’ “The area of lemptoyment wiH always lag behind the others,” Robinson says. “A Negro does not have the same opportunity to learn a skill. If he applies for a job and “can’t pass the requirements in skill, toe employer—and remember he's a businessman— says: “ ‘Sorry. I’m in business. I have competitors. I have to compete with toera. -T can't hire you lust because you’re a Negro. My jusiness would suffer.’ ” Wilkins feels that the ultimate goals will be achieved “within our generation.” “HD is so sure that he is start- ing to-look beyond the goal of op-1 the extra competition of preju- portunity. —t— '■ iHw -- ■-- - ■ ’There will be a lot of work “If you unshackle the Negro, to do in.toe Negro community aft-j you’ll find there are toe weak er the barriers are down,” he janes, there are the fast buckj says. “The competition in the guys, there are the con-men. But, white'world is fierce. And it has there are also' the solid Sunday-] nothing to do witoewlor prejudice, go-fo-ineeting people and even A Negro won’t be able to hide geniuses, behind toe excuse: ‘They did it , * * *■ because I was black.’ 4 “All toe-Negro wants is to he “I don’t entertain many fears let loose: Eventually he will shake thatfteNegro cannot compete in] down -and find his place—his white world. The good onesjrightful place.” ; wive already been sharpened by| • Next: The New Militants 'UfoV’DanK ,nfon*GHAdium Vfdl «\Oyw After Hand Amputation in S. Carolina CANOGA PARK, Calif. (AP)-Doctors haven’t told S-year-oid Lyn Seely that hejjrtght hand is gone. But, they Say,j*he started to use her left without any promoting. The youngster’s hand was amputated after it was mangled by a bear July 26, when she stuck It through cage bars to pet him; She thought it was a big dqg. had to scramble put of the way. No injuries were reported. Jtoe Blue Foree paratroopers ten ■fered 35 pet cent simulated casualties in their attack on two crack Red divisions. Fifteen actual injuries, all minor, were m* ~ About 100,800 Ac«y^flnd Air Force, men are'participating in the games. . Tense Nerves Block Bowels Your colon has nerve* putt control regularity. Wheo you an teoteornerv- ........... wwrWr" blocked—iid you become constipated. New Colon aid taUtt* relieve this misery with « now principle—« unique colonkl nerve stimulant plus special bulkingsctfta a* leoommendtd by many doctor*. Result? GdloMaid p.rt. yftMr coin hade to work neatly rellevea conatlpntton overnisltf. You fool great I dot clinically-proved Coujnaid tod»y. Introductory *iie 4J* ..... —. < AAveitiieaeat >.. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH WHk Mere Comfort « tirmlv IV not and M ....._ ilttlo FAS- teeth on vuttt otetas No (tummy, gooey pasty taste m teettna Checks t MV drug counter- limiiaiiiiuflrMJJ WE HAVE MISTER OH JINGLE CONTEST ENTRY BLANKS Come In, Write or Call FE 2-6343 for vour entry blank . . Don't forget that now Is the time to order Shell Furnace Olll Jaycees Give Hoffa Standing Ovation CLEVELAND. Ohio Ufl-Team-sters Union President James R. Hoffa got a standing ovation Sat-urday night for his- speectr~ntnsr junior3 chamber of commerce meeting. *—,T . '■——f Hoffa accused the Kennedy administration of flying to create a police state. He said “I’m here; to excite you tonight; to urge you to recognize there is no differ-1 ence -between you budding management men and me. We have Dj common cause, the survivai~ofr this nation.” ' Jaycees at the conference came] from Mkhigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois And Kentucky. BARBEQUE GRILLES With deluxe electric tetisserie NOME DEHUMIDIFIERS To add an extra measure of easy summer living GET RULES AND COMPLETE ENTRY INFORMATION FROM YOUR FUEL OIL DEALER OAKLAND COUNTY OIL HEAT COUNCIL HARD OF HEARING? if you hear, but DO ffOT Understand WE CAN HELP YOUI You’ve Seen the Rest Now TRY THE BEST! FREE HEARING TEST Consultation In Your Homo “----Sr Ovr Office Call FE 8-2733 CADILLAC HEARING AID CO. OF PONTIAC t V Wett Lawrence Street fP Cords, Batteries end Accessories / t* Mail Orders “It Costs No More to Be Sure ... That’s Why I Have Arranged to Have Geo Fuel Oil Again This Tear! “You Can Depend on GEE!” Northern Oakland County's changeable weather demands that your furnace be ready at a min* ute's notice. A warm, comfortable home promotes health and happiness. Gee's automatic supply assures you- of never being without plenty of this cleaner burning^ better quality fuel oil, as before your present supply is exhausted one of our modern GMC trucks, meter equipped for accuracy and radio , dispatched for quicker service, is at your, home to replenish your supply. For ever 38 years Gee.has been distributing better quality fuel in Pontiac and the surrounding area, during which time they have kept abreast of the changing methods in which to maintain On even, clean flow of warmth to every room in the home assuring you of COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION. Gee's, heating efficiency expert, John Geiger, is available at all times to help you on securing the correct type, of’fuel oil best suited to your heating plant and to arrange with you a contract that will assure you of warmth and comfort this coming wintar- ________ GET COMPLETE INFORMATION AND FREE ENTRY BLANKS FOR MISTER OH JINGLE CONTEST WRITE OR CALL GET FUEL TELEPHONE FE 5-8181 We Will Gladly Send Entry Blank and All Detail• to Your Home YOU CAN ENJUY COMPLETE ~HE*mWSATISFACTION No matter where you live... in Pontiac, Drayton Plain*, Waterford, Clarkaton, Orion, Oxford, Rochester, Auburn Height*, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor, Walled Lake or the surrounding area, you too, can enjoy complete heating satis-“ faction as one of our fleft-of trucks is in your neighborhood. Dial Ff-5-8181 today. Get set for a winter of warmth and comfort. ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ PART I: )*; 2-c; 3-b; 4-s; 5-c. PART jit i-d; l-c; 4-b; l-a. PART lilt 1-b; 2-d; i-e; 4-e; 5-c. 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Parking is ample and easy and we'd enjoy your visit and an oppor* tunity to show you these new quarters established to serve our policy-holders’ needs for all types of Casualty and Fire Insurance. We are pleased to be in thlg fine neighborhood and whether you're here to get acquainted or transact business you’ll be Welcome. Michigan Mutual ’ Liability Company Insurance 1600 N. Woodward, Birmingham, Michigan , Kdarafi-OUl • JOrdan 4-5240 V ' *ldw»it7-J700 ACCELERATIVE NH HERE’S THE BEST STUFF YET TO MAKE YOUR CAR STRAIGHTEN UP AND-FLY RIGHT'-IT’S MARATHON’S INGREDIENT MIX THAT FIGHTS POWER FADE DURING PICKUP! HOW DOES IT WORK? IT MAKES SURE EVERY CYLINDER OF YOUR ENGINE GETS THE OCTANE IT NEEDS WHEN YOU DEMAND INSTANT ACCELERATION. RESULT? A SMOOTH SURGE'OF POWER! TRY SOME. STEP ON YOUR ACCELERATOR; YOU GET RIGHT-NOW RESPONSE! WHETHER YOUR. CAR REQUIRES MARATHON MILE-MAKER REGULAR OR SUPER-M PREMIUM, YOU'LL GET THE MESSAGE FASTER THAN IT TOOK YOU TO READ THIS! MARATHON MARATHON GASOLINES AmmlfOmmorU...Afoui^m«»ntr Thank yaw for reading this message from Marathon. W# hop# you enjoy Marathon*. broadcasts of Oatrott Tlgai- baaabaB gamil a« Sadte a THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST S, 1068 THIRTEEN f# Halleck Predicts OK of Tax Cut, Rights legislation By JOB HAUi WASHINGTON (AP) House Republican leader, Charles A. Halleck, predicts a tax 1th duction-revision bill and some sort of civil righto legislation will be passed by the House. Ait he foresees stiff oppposition In the Senate. The Indianan gave this forecast Sunday in n televised Interview (NBC-Sunday Report). it. h ★ His somewhat optimistic predic- tion for the fate of the two meas-The ures in theHooae—given top priority by the Democratic adminia-tration—is contrary to the GOP leader’s earlier views. Barred From Greece SALONIKA, Greece (AP)— Greece border police turned back a motorcade of British ban-the-bomb demonstrators who tried to enter the country from Yugoslavia on Sunday for a rally in Athens today. Tha Greek government last month announced diet foreigners coming to Greece for the rally, timed to coincide with the 11th anniversary of ^the atomic homb-ing of Hiroshima, Japan, would be kept out. important sections to ' the dvili rights package—a ban on discrimination in public accommodations. It may start deliberations on die measure during the week. Tuesday or Wednesday, the This week, mittees may start making major decisions on tax .cuts and civil righto. But it remains highly certain when they will reach the floor of the House or Senate for debate. The House Ways and Means Cofnmittee took a series of votes aft the tax legislation last week JBEifilhrDumomfrqtof^ . M. mey iwh the most, tant question—reduced rate sched- ules—in the next few days. President Kennedy recommended a net cut of about $10.2 btylion to be readied in stages. Rep. Thomas B. Curtis, R-Mo.. her of the committee, said Sunday. in an Interview on New York television stations, "the most we are probably talking about is 1 $7-billion or (t-billion cut, net.” COMPLETE HEARINGS The Senate Commerce Commit-[ toe completed its public heseMsgi -last Friday on one of the most SAN DIEGO, Calif. (DPI - A retired vice admiral was to give his story today on die sinking of the $250,000 luxury yadit Freedom n. People in the News Greet Exiled By He Associated Press Peter H, exiled king of Yugoslavia, received a rousing wet-come Sunday in St. Louis, Mb. A crowd greeted him *t the air-pnrl »!lli f fonv-pfoce YUgO-slavian band. An orthodox church honored him with a plaque. A girl jjffoehted Hm wiUi a bouquet. King Peter is .on a goodwill tour of U.S. cities with large populations of Serbians—me of the nadoqgyties in Yugoslavia. He is to fly to San Francisco tonigtyt. ♦ ★ ★ Kisaburo Yokota, 67, chial justice of the Supreme Court of Japan, left Tokyo today for a two-month tour on which he will fair spect die judicial systems of the United States, Sweden, West Germany, Italy, Britain and Bd-atom, - - _; Sidney Bartlett, 54, motion picture writer-producer, and the former Carol Weber, a wid were married in .Las Vegas. Sharon Lee, blonde actress, and Mohammed Emil Shokohi, an Iranian socialite, were married Sunday night at a Las Vegas, Vegas, Nev., hotel. A Presbyterian minister performed the f 'r/: '•% House will taka up a bill to to- tablish the -domestic Peace Corps sharply the government’s Seaman Due to Tell Details on Lost Yacht outlays for vocational education. The first of Kennedy’s aid to education prbposate.to reach either float, tt has bipartisan support but ay run into tioubte becasise of drive by some Republicans to ttach an antidiscrimination Vice. Adi" GwsM F. Bogan and his craw of sty were to appear before a ui. Coast Guard board of inquiry, which was described as informal end routine, toga’s story was expected to be the same aa thi ‘ -------- he told aewsmea when file grasp arrived Satorday night aboard the UJ. sT Razorback which had picked them ap III mites eff the ceast of California Wednesday. The 00-year-old World War II veteran said he was certain, the 104-foot luxury vessel bad sunk. Looking spry and to good health, Bogan took the yacht’s owner Frank G. Jameson, aside and apologised for the sinking. Later in the week the House will debate a bffl to extend the $309 billion debt celling until Nov. 10. The Senate will consider on Tuesday a $5.5 billion appropria-»<«"■ mmmmttm for the labor Mid Welfare Departments. " ★ ★ ★ Later the Senate is scheduled to act on a $5.5-billion authorisation for tha National Aferooatutka and Space Administration, bills to cs- Jameson, a vice president the Douglas Aircraft Co. in Angeles, said earlier the F dom n was not insured, smallest of three Jameson owns 1t was en route front Iltwai where it had been used for char ter cruises for several months. Five of the six crew member: were inexperienced high schoo and college students. Only liam Stach, 40, ot Newport Beach CaliT, had been hired by tin regular 'skipper, Edward dvist, who had rem Hawaii. ICHIGAN BTDAL liability Company NSURANCE and to extend the Mexican farm labor program for one year, and possibly the military pay Increase bill. The military pay bill, developed a Senate armed services sub- committee under Sen. Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev., calls for increases of more than $12 billion a year for nearly Stmifllon persons. It varies to several details from e similar booet voted by the Boose to May. Relations ecutive The Senate Foreign Committee may complete action late to the week on e $4.5 billion foreign aid authorisation toll. ' A - The Senate Commerce Committee meets Thursday to begin ex- stsMona on emergency I railroad tegtelatkm. The Senate Judiciary Committee has tentatively scheduled for Wednesday additional testimony from Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy on tbs. dvil righto package. 5 Men and Girl Begin Around-the-WoHd Trip POOLE HARBOUR, England (UPI)—Five men and a girl departed on a planned three^year - voyage around the-worid-oboerd -16-ton, steel-hulled ketch tost night. .. ★ * ■ The girl to pop singer Paula Dolby, 17, Her father, Donald Dalby, 49, to owner and skippfer of the ketch Ipara. The crew to rounded out by four young bdche-including Jock West, 21, Lovely **Leohorcf* apfoet, c in Grinnell'* piono *octory MOVES... CONSOLIDATES, PARENTS! TRY BEFORE YOU BUY! A NEW GRINNELL PIANO • Your choice of new decorator-designed spinets and consoles. • Mqre than 30 styles qnd finishes. • No obligation Jo buy,’ but if you do, ell payments on the rental-purchase PONTIAC DOWNTa THE MALL STORM THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST Vll Parade Marks 'Venetian Ni FOURTEEN Wedding Vows Said In Evening Cermoriy Pastor Paul Laube performed the nuptial ceremony for Sharon Faye Hopps and Robert Charles Wilton Saturday evening in .the First Baptist Church, Grand Blanc. After a reception and supper-dance in the Flint Labor Temple, the couple left for a honeymoon at Mullett Lake. They will reside on Clintonvifle Road. ~ r..''j(. * Daughter tit Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hopps 6f Flint, the bride chose sequined white Chantilly lace and tulle with full chapel train. A Swedish tiara hrid her illusion veil. White carnations and Ivy comprised her bouquet. Mrs. Donald Hancock of Flint, her sister's honor matron, wore white organza with matching overskirt embossed in peacock blue. She carried blue-tipped white carnations. ~ - "*■—r~— that'll be great! Dad and Mom bought me a WiwAall piano bo-cause my teacher eaya teaming to play a piano cornea first, no matter What I’ll play later. Anyway. it’* really fun practicing on W KfanbaBr—----------- FREE LESSONS WITH EACH RENTAL ml rr**fi* ' t U ran MM ALSO Lowrey aad Gulbrantan Organs From $495 ap GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. '*Whcn Haste It Oar BailaeM” 14 E. Huron St. FE 4-0546 fm M—. aai fri Jtwatw ’til » 7 51$W. Huron Street Near General Hospital FE 4-366? ................. -----MEETtoEAT HIKER FOUNTAIN « thf-loMiy of thfr . . Riker Building 35 W. Huron St. Similarly clad were bridesmaids Margaret Fife, Clarkston; Susan LaVere, Flint; and ' Mrs,, Mervin Hickman. Their bouquets were white carnations. Teri Hopps was flower girl and Kenneth Bilancine, Ting bearer. William Wilton, was his brother’s best man. They are sons of the Grant Wiltons of Maplecreat Drive. William Neinstedt ushered with Jlrian Hopps and Donald Hancock of Flint. The bride attended Michigan State University. Boat Proving that children have universal appeal, these four elves at the end of a "Pot'& Gold?’ won third place in the sailboat doss. From. left are Pammy, Sherry, Debbie and Terry Morris,-daughtef s of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Corsages for Two Morris of South Shore Drive. Oakland County Sheriff s deputies Harold Hedges and Basil \Elwell kept lake traffic cl$or\ for the parade, which has been staged annually for more than tefi years. Birthday Honor Shared By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: All right, let’s see if YOU think I am “sick” and should sed a psychiatrist. My husband gave prise party for my birth- MRS. ROBERT C. WILTON He planned it all on the tre lephone with a -good friend of mine. I really was thrilled for it wgs a grand party. . But when he gave her a corsage exactly like the one he gave me, it spoiled every*, thing. This was the first corsage my husband had bought me in 33 years of marriage, arid I had to share the honor with another woman. I would like your opinion on this. A person doesn’t enjoy being told she Is “nuts*” LUMP IN MY THROAT Shermrtn-^^^vptiat^ Repeated in Church Shampoo and Sel DEAR LUMP: I don’t think -ypu are “nuts,” but: I ‘ do . think you are over-reacting., True, your husband acted thoughtlessly, but he was only repaying a friend for relpdng to plan your party. - And it’s the party that counts. Don’t mention the corsage again. DEAR AMY: My husband could he the “well-dressed, successful business man,” about-whom you wrote re-cently, who Walks around with holes in his socks. And it isn’t because his wife doesn’t give a darn.. v.______________ I have darned his soda until I am weary, but he can put his thumb through a sock * by just pulling it oh for the first time. I’ve bought ribbed socks, stretch socks; nylon socks and woolen socks, but. nothing lasts. Styled with elongated bodice, J’VV■“ my ^ the bride’sgown of white Chan- ona brand new pair of Me-tilly lace o&’ taffeta extended 81x1 ** Into a tiered skirt and chaoel later 1 look-down and he has J , • -- ; —k .------rt ---K ’ WAIW 111 lLA*$L’ liAiitA Wlim .'mtgT train. Her bouffant veil was fitted to a pearl-set tiara. She held a /-aarnHo of white roses and carnations. — - Diana King, maid of honor and MRS. W. SHERMAN Brenda Greer, bridesmaid, ap- - - --------- —Speared In yellow chiffon-and-Isce - '• •' - ■ .J 1 over taffeta. Flower girl and ring Birmingham-Hills News bearer were Marcy and Perry’ -• „ ... , .... ■— Sherman. , shabby because his wife doesn’t give a darn, they’re apt to get a sockin die eye. GIVES A DARN Tdl your troubles to Abby. For a personal, unpublished reply, please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Getting married? For ^b-by’s booklet, “How To ** A LgyelyJft........ ___Tulips and a windmill on this Holland scene'won first prize in the sailboat class for the annual Venetian Night parade Saturday sponsored by the Wat- ~ ' PratlM rr*»i TOJjrt Sx Roger Srlflejr kins Lake- Yachting Association. From left are Norman Ledwin of Detroit and his guests Mr. and Mrs. Paul Michaels of Milwaukee, Wis. Rev. William H. Brady officiated aa.Glea Caron Fox and Da-‘ vkl Wellington Sherman were wed Saturday evening in the chapel of the Central Methodist Churgh. V Parents of the newlyweds are’ Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fox of South Anderson Street and the David Shermans of Harmon Road. a hole in both heels the size of half-dollars. What can I do? If anyone tells me that my man looks cents Jo Abby, care of Pontiac Press. •/ -* [ < Bride-to-Be Is Honored With Shower Mrs. Donald Redmond of . Fortress Road was hostess af a recent bridal shower and buffet supper honoring Judith Grace Kunse. ■ *. ★ ★ Aug. 31 vows in the Waterford Community Church are planned by Miss Kunse,, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. Kunse, of Fortress Road, to Bernard R. Baer. -- His parents are the Raymond Baers of Allentown, Pa. , , Mrs. Gordon Bennett Jr. of Holly "joined the 25 guests from the,Pontiac area. New Heel Styles Stepping up front is the set-back.- heel — a favorite in every height from highest to nearly*low. First prise winner in the motorboat class was this Chinese laundry. From left are Lee Haertterof Clarkston, Ben ’Weber of Florence Street, Mrs Haertter and Mrs. Weber. . ..' ALL Permanents Complete With Cut ] 4nd Set*. Expert licensed operators to give you a fluttering hair cut! long lasting permanent, and becoming hoir style. All M$3.9S, HOLLYWOOD l/_ ; BEAUTY SHOP ' j Va > Optf Mening* et 8 A.M. 7S N. Saginaw Over Bosley Mist. 333-9661 On the esquire side were best man Jerry Cudnohufsky, and ush-ers-Robert Boomer. Jerrv Strebe and David Moczarski. Residents Go Fishing By SIGNE KARLSTROM Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wiet-rtoimUicr witliidmds Mr.- erons spent several days, as well, at Gratiot Inn. TBe couple left to l|an ifa. Ivm ftafiTSE-----Mrr-wU 200 Members Are Expected at Convention Garden Reception Fetes Area Couple Falls honeymoon after a recep-tion in the Union Lake homg oT her sister and brother-in-law, the William Kennedy*. ■ | Fall Vows i Are Set I by Couple I November/vows are i planned by Madeline Me-8 Math, daughter of Mrs. § Robert R. McMath, Bloom-f field mils, gad the late Dr. I McMath, to Charles Her-1 man, Sloan of AW Arbor. 1 The bridenelect is a ‘grad-| uate of Kingswood School, I Cranbrook and We Unlvef-| sity qf Michigan./Her fiance •> holds degrees from the Technical College, Han-. over, -Germany, and the | University of Michigan.» eM Mr« Richard Errat and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hance left for a fishing trip at Mani-tou Lake, Canada. From there the Wietings will go to the home of her parents We George H. Carys kt Higgins Lake, ' A„ , # * ★ Daughter Gretchen will join them from. Arbutus Camp, Torch Lake. Son Cary will be fit Higgins Ldce wiW hH grandparents. ' i:__■' '•* A- ■ ★'________. Recently, Mr.-and Mrs. Edward Asch of dtlonial Court had visitors jErom London, England .Mr. and Mrs.Brian Robinson, who had been on an extended trip to India and China, as well as the United States also stopped in Rif-, mingham for two weeks and visited wiW friends. ’ * ★ ★ Mr. and, Mrs. James ;L. Cameron of Suffiield Road together wiW Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Knight enjoyed several days at WT Stratford Festival last week. The Cam- CogsdiUentartainedsome^; friends for cocktails and supper at Weir home on Orchard -Lake Road Saturday evening.. ★ ...........★ ★ —Mrs. V. C. Genn of Stmt- * ford Lane rettntly returned from several months la Los Angeles, Calif., and a-Visit wiW her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Genn of Palo Alto. The Jphn G&ns are* 1®W....mdving to Saratoga, Calif. ' j it ★ ★. ’____V David McGaughey and his friend Bastel Kilian, from West Berlin, Germany, are 6n a 6,000-mile trip to the West Coast visiting relatives and friends. Mr, Kilian will be spending a year In this country as the guest of Mr. and Mrs; McGaughey tit, Guilford Road. He is here to study English End will return to Germany to teach English. David and his brothers, Andy and Bill have all been guests in the Kilian h.om t in previous years. - ", : _ nbers of the Lutheran Ladies " will attend the 33rd annual convention opening Thursday -in We EpiphanV Lutheran * Church, Detroit. . * ★. a . ,... Delegates fnrni Pontiac Chapter 28 are Mrs. Max - Schroeder and Mrs. James PutnWn^Mrs. John H. Ridgeway and Mrs. Emory Mitch- : eU are, alternates. , . a it • The group aids We Bethes-da Home for Retarded People at Watertown, Wis., and provides a $600 scholarship for a Lutheran teacher or deaconess. ' Registration begins it 1 p. m. Thursday. New Oven Cleaner A new spriy-on aerosol oven cleanerC can be used on both porcelain, and chrome-lined ovens. And glass doors, too." ’ a "; ' ’■ The Ack L. Bridgers ofo Taylor Road entertained at a garden reception following ^kT~ Vtnulay their daughter Brenda a to Thomas Ernest Cox. Buf: fet dinner was seiVed beside a blue-lighted fountain. I'or the candlelight cere- WBSm USS- THOMAS E. COX mony in We First Open Bible Church, the bride chose white silk organza wiW bouffant skirt - ending in a chapel -sweep. A Swedish crown of seed DearTS~tnpped-hpr silk illusion veil. , ■ Cascading white carnations^ ivy and miniature rosebuds were carried by the bride and her attendants. Honor matron Mrs. William Starr of Milford, and bridesmaids Eleanor Carney, Laur-al McCurdy and Iris Bridger wore embossed organdy iri rainbow hues, with matchingT picture hats and bouquet streamers. Brenda’ Starr was flower girl and Kirky Bridger carried the rings. ? William Starf was best man for his brother-in-law, son of Mr. and Mrs. Finest Cox of Lookout Drive. Seating guests were Ronald Hetherington, Clarkston, Dalen Pomeroy Lake OrBn ‘and PhHIip Bridger. 'The couple will .reside ip Drayton'Piains. , . I m -m THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST *. 1*963 zrm Sr*'?: -! . •/ i..-. FIFTEEN SAVE MMr'ogahi...ond tt/ ' _ ( vWWmniottop on reupholstering DURING OUR ANNUAL fitm W0fkmdmhlpa> WRIGHT'SI Phon» to-doy — WM b* glad to bring fabric tompU* to SUMMER SALE WILLIAM WRIGHT hutoHliliMi —iHjphalMaraca . 270 Orchard Lake o FE 4-0558 IwtwftiiiBiriin) |wfUw All Workmmtmklp Gmmrmntmmti ★ ~ EAST BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS GASH UV FIMILWBg ^ DRASTIC REDUCTIONS jwwyr DE LISO DEBS .. .:ERICA ... PEACOCK -RHYTHM STEP... FOOT FLAIWS ... SANDLER ARPEGGIE AND OTHER FINE BRANDS. Value»U>29.95 $6 $8 $10 $12 to pleatant thopping In Bloomfield'* tJkpoij^dl5' ANNUAL sale featuring seamless heel and toe • seamless mesh • seamless stretch rooular FE 8-1343 2nd Floor ROSE MARIE REID COLE OF CALIFORNIA DARLENE ALIX OF MIAMI ROXANNE j&mfc— GLEN OP MICHIGAN BAY CLUB PETIT* 40 to 70% Off ANDREW GELLER DeLISO DEBS ‘ CARESSA ‘ PROTEGES -TOWN A COUNTRY CALIFORNIA COBBLERS QOMANI O’OMPHIES - *3-*» HURON of TELEGRAPH Mon., Thurs., Fik l4 to 9 - Twos., Wed., Sol; lO.tO A jnXTEEK THE PQKT1AC PRESS. MONDAY,-'AUCXJST' gt 1^68 WWk\ ~ M______________^ 79 WORTH SAGINAW STREET i sfecial row Tuesday only; | van choice ANDMVE! FRESH immm CANADIAN ~ APx EICON 2 us 95c ENDS AND BUTTS MiBs ^Kspecial this week ’ DELICIOUS BLUEBERRY FILLED DONUTS _ „ 6 for 35* BIS* 29 N. Scciniw FE _8-6977 Open Every Morning; at 7 o’clock ,Sat. ill...Mon, wETIwm Dr, Wayne G. Brandstadt Discusses: Anticoagulants: Twenty There are three main typas of anticoagulants: warfarin, which has gained a wide use as a rat poison (the. rats die from internal hemorrhage), he- !par in, and phe-nindione. For over Agin anttooagu* lants have beeni given to personal who suffered] from the results’ of Internal clot- BRANDSTADT ting — notably strokes and coronary heart ^ rope it is necessary for tike person whs Is taking anticoagulants t% have fregjaent checkups of the amount of clotting efoaoris iu his blood. Under careful medical super such persons are under nO of fatarnal bomcr- as frostbite or an Infection enters the picture. The .reason for giving- anticoin teroal clotting. They are, however, always in danger of having an uncontrollable hemorrhage following a small cut, and if jjgokdjatractiewer ' other operation becomes necessary; special precautions must be taken to prevent severe loss of blood. This meant long-term treatment with these drugs, and meant striking a balance between the dose needed to prevent clotting and the amount that would cause internal bleeding, as in die unsuspecting rat. la order to walk this tlght- Thousands of doctors are still giving their patients anticoagulants and appear to be satisfied with the results. But an increasing number of reports now suggest that long range survival chances are as good or bettpr when no anticoagulants are giv-». Recently, astieoagilasls have hiisn^put to pie saw uks^Ooo-tradktory as it might seem, sease •’hemorrhages are apparently eaased by excessive iamuiits ef legio U Me d»-ting elements. Then heparin may be given to stop the bleeding. That should give yon some idea of Jrhat a complicated mechanism Mood clotting h. The other unexpected use of anticoagulants has to do with the spread- -of- malignant Plasmha and heparin have been shown to reduce spreading by keeping die tumor cells circulating in the blood rather than com-ing'tor«tfnasmallck>t. —* -tumors: doubt White stiU circulating they were more- readily reached by drugs that slow their growth. If that not only skitr them up but kill them can be found, anticoagulants may be a valuable adjunct to such treatment. -Meanwhile many doctors are convinced that the dangers of giving anticoagulants far outweigh any theoretical advantages. X)r, D. A,. Rytand, of Stanford University, believes that many of the favorable’ reports of the use of anticoagulants in the treatment of stroke and heart attacks arc based on statistical «r- If after 20 years of use ft forge part of the scientific world la in wbouMba value of these drugs, it is highly improbable that they are of any claims Rytand. There are about-400,000 blind plttsons in the nation and about 30,000 Americans lose their Sight drugs annually. SPECIAL PROTECTION FORMEUCOES Jett os It It imNerr for you to stor* food* to protect tholr nulritional valuo, sood lotto and frosnnesa •o must o pharmacy lake spacial proeautione to keep medieinet ot their fell potency and effectlvenoea. Certain products, raoh «t tWodoMj, vnootato and some vitamin* mutt bo rtfriljrated. OUwrt meat bo protected against light, boat.anfl water absorption. - On knob prescriptions yon will find the needed in-atrnetiont to keep the medicine safe onca It ha* left * the pharmacy and is in your home. 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Now Paying 4% on 12 Month Saving Certificates PONTIAC STATE BANK main office, Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights * Baldwin atYale Drayton Plains ^ Miracle Mile M*59 Plaza 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence member F.D.I.C. li s 8 i 11 §1 i' pip I *3 THE PONTIAC PRESS TffONDA V, rfttTGUST 5,11W8~~ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. - Lions Offense 'Tricks' Defense -eft-last Play by Fake FG Morrall Finds Defense Napping on Aerial to Larry Vargo By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sporte Editor, Pontiac Press/ Oh, those Detroit Lions srefuti of surprises! They caught 7,200 fans sleep-. ing and their defensive unit nap* ping at Wlsner Stadium Saturday night on the last play of the intra-squad game which resulted in a 24-18 victory for the offensive Blues over the defensive Whites. The defense battled back from an 18-5 deficit to tie the score ■ 18-18 and with Jim Martin lined up for a 37-yard field goal oh the* - last play of the scrimmage, Earl Morrall stood up passed to Lar- - ry Vargo ell alone on the 10-yard line. Vargo easily want into. the end zone for the'score. There were at few other sar-• prises throughout the evening of- this 3rd annual event spoonfed by the Community Na-tionai Bank and the Pontiac Jaycees. Even coach George Wilson may :have gained d.few bits of knowledge about some of his personnel which he had any doubts. BOOMING PUNT One thing for certain is that if Vide Lary should have any problems with his punting this season, Pat Studstill should be able to ■ fill the bill more than capably. ’ Studstill brought die ohs and aws from, the crowd in the preliminary events when his first punt boomed 88 yards throndi air and otu of the end zone. His second pant went out on the two-yard line and his third went out on the 13. , Lary’s punts went out on the 11-15-and 20-yard lines and Earl MorraH punted out on the 17- and B-yartftines; They were- idckliqr from the 30-yard line. . / ■■ .★ w -ir Field goal kicking honors went to Wayne Walker as he booted from 35,45,50 and 55 yards. Martin failed on his 45- and SO-yarders ‘ ancLSam Williams lost on the 55-yarotry. " _ . Darris McCord, Sam Williams and Dan LaRose finished in order in the dash for linemen and rookie Ron Schieber finished ahead of Dick Compton and Dan Lewis in the dash for backs. PASSING SURPRISE The passing contest whs a sur-, prise. Ernie Clark, ex-MSU grid-der hit big Lucien Reeberg, and( John Gordy passed to Jim Gibbons in a circle 55 yards away ■ to sharo-the honors:—__ Plum and Morrall each found the mark on their aerials but Plum’s receiver Floyd Peters and Morrell's receiver Mike Bundra couldn't hold onto the ball and ' Were •iimmatort- - The Lions offense started the iutra-sqnad game in spcctacu-lar fashion, On the flret play from the 20, Plum passed to - Studstill to dm mites M. The little Texan sidestepped Dick Lane and was finally hit on die eight-yard line for a 72-yard . ftBiffhtisa. ■ ■ Danny Lewis hit the line twice and then Plum went over on the sneak from the one to make it 80 after only 40 seconds. , - Martin tried three {points but his 37-yard field goal a few minutes tater waswide. It was 6-2 when ' two new units came in, with Morrall sailing the signals. He quickly found rookie fullback Nick Ryder waiting in the flat and completed a 58-yard scoring play to make it 12-4 for the offeree. ■ ■■■^-- MORRALL CLICKS —^--------------- -Morrall again clicked with former U. of D. ace Larry Vargo on a 34-yard scoring play to make it IBS at halftime. -*}. A fumble gave the defense a touchdown when captato-Joe Schmidt picked up the ball on the 25 and rambled over the goal. The defense then picked up two more points when Lane kicked Martin's 53-yard field goal try. The Lta> running game showed little, getting a total of 15 yards in 28 carries. Ryder had 25 yards in nine carries; Nick Pieirosaate seven in fenr tries; Lends M In t tries; Wat-(Continued on Page 48, Col. 4) Leaves Sick Bed to Win Tourney ST. PAlfU. Minn. (AP)-Young pro Jade Rule Jr. had $5,300 worth of pain killer today and the admiration of his fellow golfers Rule to rest on between shots. He used it often. Rule ltd Hawkins by seven strokes going into the final round. Wrynlly ft*i fiumniKii niiiiiliiy 1n llinrthiii shot rTT climbing out of a hoepitafbtflto -Vied for *b|rd were Bruce SPLIT sriiFT — Tom Hall (carrying football) worked the split shift Saturday night in -the Lions’ intra-squad scrimmage. Hall gets help from Wayne Walker (right ) and Joe Schmidt (left) after be intercepted one of Earl Morrall’s passes. Later in the game ho switched ty an offensive team dim jersey and made a' beautiful catchpf a Morrall pass. (Other photos next page). win the St. Paul Open. The 24-year-old Waterloo, Iowa, golfer started his final round numb with pain-reducing drugs after a kidney stone attack that put him in a hospital. The drugs wore off, but he wound up the round with a splitting headache. ★ Despite the difficulties, Rule fired a respectable one-over-par 73 for a five-shot margin over Fred Hawkins of El Paso, Tex., to win the tournament. Rule’s 72-hole card of 286 was 22 under par on St. Paul’s Keller Municipal wni. ----------------— It was the first professional tournament victory for the Iowan, who beat Jack Nlcklaus in a couple of amateur tournaments but who hasn’t been any great shakes since tqrnin^ pro. FROM MEMORY “I just played from memory, I guess,” Rule said after the finish ... He said at the start he had ”no feel” in his hands. Crampton ofS^HHnBnrHDavc Hill of Jackpon, Mich., at 273. Hill fired a SOW the front nine to tie the course record and had a 66 for the day. George Bayer, on the strength of a 10-under-par 64 Sunday, pushed into fifth place at 274,.- Rule was stricken while eating Saturday evening. He got only about two hours sleep in the hospital and went directly to the course for the final round. SSRSSKS A doctor lagged along for the entirr round, andeydered * fold-Irig camp chali1 kept liaudy for Pontiac Fran Photo* fey Edward S. Noblo BOOMER — Pat Studstill isn’t the Lions’ regular punter, but his punting in the preliminary events of the Saturday night intra-squad game brought smiles to coach George Wilson's face in the background. Studstill won the punting contest and one Of his three punts went from the 30, yard line out of the end zone 80 yards away. Good weather-and a fine spectator turnout greeted Part two of the city’s Amateur Baseball Day at Jaycee Park yesterday..' Seven games of the annual affair rescheduled from the pre- A/riafeur Day Comp/etecf; Class A AU-Sfars fall vious Sunday (due to rain) were completed yesterday with the fans seeing flashes of good baseball — and some not so good. Pontiac Wins Skate Trophy Special to The Pontiac Press PORTLAND, Ore.-Paced by a pair of first places on the final night of competition, Pontiac Rol-ladium Skating ?Club successfully defended its team title in the North American Roller Skating Championships. Ron and Gail Robovitaky won the junior pairs free skajing and teamed with Dou g Conklin and Kathy Wilkevich to place first in the intermediates fours last night. The team championship was the' pinth in the last 1$ yean fOT/tte RoUadtnm skaters. It is determined on the number of placements in the national meet. Helping the cause yesterday were second places by Sue Wab-tig and . David-Shafer in senior pah’s, free skating; Scott Harrity, juvenile boys free skating; and Sue Wagner, novice ladies free skating. , ever the Falcons. The Clast D All-Stars were also victorious, grabbing a 5-2 verdict from Auburn Heights Boys’ Chib. The only All-Star team not to fare well was the Class A squad which 1 was outclassed, 6-2, by Huron-Airway in the day’s finale. Other junior game scores were Boston 94 over the Optimist A T-Ball team, Perry Drugs 7-5 over St. Mikes in Widget hail, Arnold Drugs topped the Optimist Class D team, 7-0, and the Class F Pontiac Boys Oub nine fell to Lakeland A.C., 4-6. Perry Drugsovercame a five-run first inning by St. Mikes with one df its' own sparked by Bale Vandergr if f s three-run -home run. Jercy Morphy clouted a two-run c i r c u i t clout inside-tbe-park for Lakeland A.C. Auburn Heights’ only noticeable accomplishment as a lofty fence-clearing clout by Mike Meyer with a mate aboard. The Class A All-Stars looked anything but- -the part in failing behihd -44, to Huron-Airway jn tile fhst three-innings. Four hits off Jim Wagner, in the final two tuning* enabled the stars to cut the ftosl deficit to *4 ami outhit the Winners, 6-5. , Aguirre's Best Game DETROIT tf) — Hank Aguirre was mulling over the best-pitched game of his life when he indulged in a moment of self-criticism and • made a startling nonfeaston.1 I’d been pitching stupid base-haH,” said the Tiers’ ace left hander, who retied on a blazing fastball to win last year's earned -run average championship. .. 67616973—266 . 7(365-65.71—371 . 686968-70—273 . 686966-70-273 .. 7167-7266—274 .. 7166-7149-675 v.msat .. 65697360-276 . 726767-70-276 - Bruc* D*tU. = - tOUferT *».*»» .. uuu Folrfleld, 11,150 Rirold Knetee. 61.150 Claud Kin*. 11.156 i fillSrfetjt* ftof - - -- ii XT — .... ——— ““ 70486970—277 72-72676V-278 TT^.r , MB |............ 6971-7166-271 Jerry Barber. 6716 ,.... 8-797141-^16 Peter Brown. SW Tommy Jacob , 1711 ....19790-71—671 Bob McCallUter, $600 ,.,. 70697366-273 Joy Hebert. JgS Jacky fme 6720 jaca mcuowwi, evw .. Jerry atMlamUh. 6606 Bull, Ml . ... . CampbtU. 6406 ... Paul Booodaioo. 6406 . Ken .Venturi. 6406 .. . Jack O'Keefe. 6606 ... 3—Denotes amateur. . 7167-7979-161 . <971-7971—161 .. W6U-7.-7S-«l fast Workout SEVENTEEN TIGER HEROES - Hank Aguirre (left)_ gives Detroit Tiger teammate Rocky Colavito a hug and big smile after hurling a two-hitter at Cleveland for a 2-0 win m yesterday’S firit game of a doubleheader. Colavito speared Joe Azcue’s drive as the ball was ‘going over the left field fence to end the game. Palmer vs. Player Pro Golf Match Tuesday final inning as the bullpen .let him down. Dressen yanked Lolich after Max Alvis Was hit by a pitch and John Romano singled Fred Gladding took over and the runners advanced on a sacrifice before Woodie Held’s infield single brought in one run. . 1 was going about it all wrong, the results proved that, so I decided to change my method of pitching.” > “An Aguirre did'was forget about calling his own pitches It paid off in a brilliant two-hit, 2-0 victory over the Cleveland Indians in the opener of yesterday’s doubleheader before 20,945 diehards. . Mickey Lolich came within three oats of matching Aguirre’s shutout in the nightcap before suffering more ninth inning heartache. The Indians rallied for all their nms of the day in the fatal ninth and edged the Tigers 3-2, —Aguirre, his ERA skyrocketed -to 4.50 and inconsistent fell sea-snn, hflB Jag^td agvlye four innings inhis last twostarts. “I was shaking off too many signs,” admitted Aguirre, “pitch-ing what I wanted ‘to instead. That must have been my trouble, so I thought about it and made up my mind not to do it ahymore. ‘Mike Roarke caught for me the first time thfe year against When Gladding walked the bases full, Dressen rushed Jim Bunning to the mound. Tito Fran* cona bit bunning’s first, pitch for a two-run single. Gladding was the loser, (Box scores on pope 19) The dav’swclosest game was _ the 4-3 aM« F Ait^tare’ WtB~ CteveUmd- aod fag called every ___once. He’d give his signal and rd come throu^i with the pitch. ‘‘It wasn’t the catchers’ fault ftLbeen getting hit, it was trior. I was just stupid. Because of it, I didn’t throw enough fastballs Maybe I’d lost my- confidence in it. FIGU RED OUT ‘‘I must have been pitching just tike the hitters figured I would.” Manager Charlie Dressen has been campaigning for several weeks to get Aguirre to wise up and start depending on his fastball more. ?,f: I ‘‘My fastball against Cleveland was the best it’s been all year, said Aguirre, who evened his record at 10-10. “It was as good as last year.' Don Wert sent Aguirre ahead 1-0 wijh • homer in the third Off Jack Kralick. Rocky Colavito’s single brought in the second rub in the eighth. Lolich again found the ninth his jinx inning.-In hie last outing, he tost a three-hityer on a two-run homer in the ninths He'd entered th# inning with • L0 lead anda one-hitfer. This time the rookie left handler had a 2-0 lead and a five-hitter and couldn’t survive the by Kenny Lane for Big Bout SAGINAW (UPI) - Muskegon’s Kenny Lane boxed four fast rounds here Sunday afternoon in preparation for his lightweight bout with Paulie Armstead of Los Angeles at Veterans Memorial Stadium Aug. 19. Promotoc. Julius Piazza estl-mated the crowd at 3,000 asTane went through his paces and waltzed through, a one-rotirid exhibition with'Kelly Stanley, who _ billed as the world’s tree* climbing champion. The exhibition was part of Saginaw’s “Tim* bertown U.S.A.'’ festival. Armstead is ranked No. 1 and Lane No, 2 among contenders for Carlos Qrtiz’ lightweight i crown by the World Boxing Association. The Michigan Boxing ^Commission does not recognize Ortiz* crown and hopes the WBA will recognize -the Lane - Armstead winner as champion. Arnold Palmer, pro golf’s biggest money winner, will take time out from fining his own bank account, to help charity raise funds with his golfing talents. ... \ His match with Gary Player at Orchard Lake Country Club Tuesday will start at 2:00 p.m. and the proceeds will go to Camp Oakland, a boys camp near Oxford. Palmer, recent winner of the Western Open, set a new record of money earnings after the tournament by pashing his total Wi»iHHr—r--------------—— Ed Wright of Pontiac will caddie for Palmer and Adrian Camp-bell of Milford will carry the clubs for Player Both are caddies sit Orchard Lake. Prior to the 18-hole match, the (wo golfers will give a clinic at 1:30 p.m. Player will narrate the techniques while Palmer demon-strates and Palmer will handle the microphone as Player demonstrates his shots. . y; t '-,w-A maximum of 3,000 tickets will he soldv Ticket {gice is 110.00. Palmer and Player began playing a series of matches for charity two years ago. They are scheduled for four in the United States this year, plus others in foreign countries. Two local caddies have been chosen to tow the coarse for file two pros. Hall of Fqme Fete Today COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (UPI)-Former outfielders Sam Rllie and Elmer Flick, who tong ago des- . paired of achieving baseball’s highest honor, will be formally inducted into the Hail of Fame ■ today along with the late Eppa Rixey and John Clarkson. -A Capacity crowd of 9,700, including Commissioner Ford Frick and many other baseball dignitaries, will be oh hand for the ceremonies which will be held before exhibition game between the Boston Red .Sox and iMilwaukee Braves. t lOOO BURIAL POLICY AVA1LABLI TO RfAPERS OF THIS NEWSPAPIR UNPtfi AQE 20 AND NOW IN POOP HIALTH Tlmo Ufa ln»ufonco Company is making a special Introductory offer of'a $1000 Burial Insurance policy, with Graded Death Benefits, FREE for 30 days, to readers of this publication ___ _ ■- in health and under ogo 80» Thiy Is a single pitch. I didn’t ritakFlftnr ■ jjmnd n*w ppitey that provides many new and „** u., --»•*- n........... |Mati to TIME LIFE INSURANCE CO., pepi. 82K32, G«n. Wainwright Sta.f San Antonio S, TomsI My Nemn hfPriwt) - --------------- - ———. ., Occupation ............. .. Dat* bom: Month_________Day.____Yoar . .Blrthplnco HotohL-pJ^—Wt.. ...i**y*ng round with 5,055 pins, and finished with a 0,707 total. He won eight of his II head-fo-head matdieu. ■’*, * * * Final standings: St John, 13,000, 1,079 pins; Bourdase, $1,500, 9,032; Ray Bluth, St Louis, $1^00, 9,003; Barry Smith, Baltimore, 31,100, M17; Martich, 31,000, 8,900; Jack Biondollilo, Houston, 3950, c 1,7*7; Harry O’Neale, Charleston, S. C., 9900, 8,756; Moore, 3850, - 1,707; Ralph Bnmt, Decatur, Ga., 3900, SJ83; Bus Fazio, Detroit, 3700,1,133; J. B. Solomon, Dallas, 1650, Mgl; Bud Bodgsoo, Pomo-. na, Calif., |800, 8,532; Jetiy Rale, UrMnond. CaBL, 3550, 8,418; Johnny King, OtfcagD, 3325, 8,518; A1 Saves, Milwaukee, 8509, 8,261. idea of winning is foremost in my mind,” Oaig said Sunday after suffering his 18th straight loss as the Milwaukee Braves beat the York Meta 2-1. Dodger Hurler Uses Oxygen to Help Win Houston Heat Doesn't Stop LA Southpaw In 4-0 Triumph By Ihe Associated Press Los Angeles left-hander Johnny Padres, a «nw».hnkrMi pitcher who produced aipine-Ungier Sun-day night, kept his bid for a w>: hitter going with die aid of baa ball’s newest weapon—Oxygen. It’s no secret that the. major league dubs now keep oxygen tanks in the dugouL hut the iiae of the stimulant isn’t publicised either. Podres gave its use a thorough airing in the Dodgers’ 44 victory over Houston. ... * * * Pitching in Houston’s sweltering summer heat, Podres took a few whiffs as he set the Colts down until Johnny/Temple kid off the ninth inning with a sharp single Just out of the reach of second Podres, a 30-year-oid hurler with a history of back trouble, then hit Bob Aspromonte with a pitch and was relieved by Larry Sherry. Sherry preserved the triumph for Podres, setting the Colts wmn 1-2-3. NOUELP There was no one around to help Rofeer Craig of the New York Mets as he trudged slowly off the mound after# 2-1 loss at Milwaukee and slipped silently into die swollen book oTtaaeball lore by tying a ha If-century-old record of dubious distinction. The defeat was Craig’s 18th in irk established by Cliff Curtis ' ton in 1910, and ironically him the 13th pitcher in " leap* “history to tosr ao two years in, a row. No# 2-20 following last seasdh’s 10-24 record in, the Meta’ first year of operation, Craig let the Braves score the winning run on a wild pickoff attempt in the sixth inning and became the first two-time 20-game loser since Paul Derringer with SL Louis and Cin-cinnati in 1933-34. • ” * ‘ * # ■ Willie Mays made San Francisco a winner, hitting his 27th homer in the 10th inning for a 2-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs that moved the Giants into second place. Philadelphia dropped St. Louis to third, beating the Cardinals 7-3 and 5-2. Cincinnati swept Pittsburgh 5-1 and 4-1. ■. * ★ ★# *; Podres, who brought his record > 11-7, made his 275th major league start what he termed “the greatest game I ever pitched.” He said he was tired after running out a double in die seventh inning and took some oxygen 'lm-fore facing the Colts in the eighth. * i ES3S2SS2E titude, you won’t set me around,” the slim righthander said. “111 wilt firtt.” /.■T” r ball, and “it looked like Breeding only missedf^stabbing it by inches." The loss by the 32-year-old for-mer Dodger !Hide>hima20:game loser for the second year in a row. He is the 13th major league pitcher to lose 20 or more in consecutive seasons. , His 18 straight losses tied me National League record set by Cliff Curtis of Boston in 1910.. Paul Derringer, who lost 27 frith St. Louis in 1933 and 21 "for Cincinnati in 1934, was tiie last pitcher to lose 20 games in consecutive seasons. Last year, Craig’s mark was 10-24 and he hasn’t won since April 29. NOT TO BLAME Craig doesn’t feel be is to blame for all those losses. only deserved to lose five of those gamar” he said, “Look at ;tfae record.,! started 24 games and had 31 runs scored for me in all that time. I feel good—I’ve been pitching gowf — , . 4 * itrr' “But I’m not blaming anybody -they’re all trying hard. We’re just not storing any runs.” ' r'Roger is still quite a distance from thp records set by two National League pitches. Chris Fraser of Philadelphia lost 20 games three seasons in a row starting in 1904. Irving Young of Milwaukee gained similar notoriety from 1903 to 1905* Breeding, acquired from Washington only last Tuesday, had save Tm a lucky stiff,’” Mickey Mantle ’“Gee but I’m a lucky ■HR’” -___________ ★ ★ ★ The oft-injured Yank star made his first appearance in a game since he broke a bone in his left foot June 5. Ho stewed in as a pinch hitter Sunday and cracked a dramatic home run into the toft field bleachers, pulling the Yankees from behind and aiming them toward an 11-10 victory. This was the situation: The Yanks had lost the first game of a doublqheader 7-2, their two starting pitchers bombed out and the Baltimore Orioles, helpedalong by a very un-Yankee like lift of five unearned runs, had a 10-9 lead in the second game. BIG OVATION Mantle, accompanied hy a wild ovation from the Yankee Stadium crowd of 38,555, batted right-handed against the left-handed George Brunet. He lined the second pitch into the toff field bleachers, tying it 10-10. “You can’t imagine what this gives to the club,” Manager Ralph The 10th on In ot Chicago ames of the. leading Yankees on a 8-1 romp over Lto Angeles, jihus City beat Minnesota 0-2, Washington stopped Boston 7-6. . \# w ★ Mantle,Nwho had missed 61 games sinceNMs injury in Baltimore, was grated by wave after wave of applause when he stepped from the Yankee aqgout in the .second game. The ovation actually, chilled me,” Mickey said. “I could feel the bumps rising on my um I was shaking. \ ~ told myself, ’I’D settle for a single.’” His 12th homer of the season brought New York even again in a loosely • played, free-wheeling game. The Orioles had toads of 24, 5-4 and 16-7 and the Yanks led at 44 and 74. Brooks Robinson ha^a homer for tito Orioles, and Elston Howard connected for th* Yankees. Rome runs by winning pitcher Stave Barber, John Powell and John Orslno made it easy for tin Orioles to win the opener. The White Sox dosed up a half game as Camil Carreon drove in three runs on a double and a single and sowed another against the Angela. Skimping Boston was bombed by two home runs by Jim fling and a three-run pinch hit homer by Minnie Kflnoao in Washington's victory. ♦. - ★ Hank Aguirre tossed a sparkling tvojhitter in Detroit’s easy, first-game victory against the Indiana. •#.•■# h Kansas City backed Moe Dra-bowsky’s five-hit pitching with a 12Jdt attack in subduing tbe hardhitting Twins, who got both their runs on homers by Harmon Kilte-brew and Jim Hall. Tbe A’a rushed in five runs in the third and coasted behind Draboursky. VICTORY LEAP — Dick Scripter sails ova* the,net on an Oakland Park tennis court after capturing the Oakland County Open Tennis Tournament’s singles championship, 6-2, 61, from defending champion Leon Hibbs yesterday. The Birmingham y—n»tiA «iy> tMfhw tennis, won the title in his first try. New Champs Crowned in'Net Meet FRIENDLY GAME ‘ Participants in yesterday’s mixed doubles match for the county’s Open Tennis Tournament title were all smiles xbefore it began. Actually, it was nothing new any of them since .the same twosomes ' last, summer for (he championship. MIm fiM Yhotc When yesterday’s match ended With Sam Walker III and Ann Holmes (left) of Bloom-' field Hills defeating Pontiac’a Leon Hibbs and Angy Springer, 63', 66, only the scores differed from lastyelr’s result. ' Lie. Golfer Whips Long Drivers for GAM Crown The 1963 Golf Association Michigan title wasn’t for the longlsurance salesman who ball hitter. . lobty 5-feet4*4, had the serirai of| Little Jim Smith, 39-yearold in- task of facing two of the longest stands 6rJUUUS BOROSV^v U5.0PEN CHAMPION \Zs BODY TURN NATURAL - IN BACKSWING Some professionals advocate a a forward press—a slight move mod forward at the start id the backswing to relax the muscles for the uncoiling. That is purely tiie dioiee Of tbe individual. If It doesn’t feel natural, forget it. CLUB As the club moves back, the body will turn naturally as the arms are extended. The toft knee will bend slightly as the weight starts- to shift from toft to right. The wrists will start to cock r bend about halfway in the backswinf. - ■_________ Don’t make any deliberate effort to cock your wrists. That will come automatically. By the time you have reached the top of the backswing, the wrists will be fully cocked. Tbe toft shoulder is under tbe chin. The head has remained in,almost the same position as at the address. At the top of the backswing, the right hip should be turned completely out of the way so the chib can be swung all the way to the .top without restriction by tiie body. * - . / # : Tbe hands should be under the shaft ait this point, with firfn control of the dub. Tbe shaft should be ' parallel to the griiuad, the right tucked in close to the body to insure an inside-out swing, 4he weight shifted to tiie ritfit foot Don’t attempt to learn every one of these points now. If your swing is properly executed, these fundamentals wQl come mechanically. XMy practice can tell you when you have reached the top of your swing). hitters in the field in his last match of tifc tourney at Loch-and he did H witi\ ease. he whipped i Bud Stev-Saturday and holes be won ever Bfl! Alhrisfat. 5 and 4. ^ driving oon-frhamenf and Stevens . was third. v But in his matches with the two sluggers, it was his short game amryutting which won over distance. Albright In the semifinals of the championship flight, tournament medalist Dave MacHarg lost to Albright 2 and 1. In tiie quarter-finals, Stevens defeated' Gene Woodard 4-3; Smith defeated Bripk, 1-up; MacHarg defeated Funton. l-up; Al-GentH bright defeated Cooke, 1-up. jr4»g. Snritii’s fliW rouiiUK Andrews won in three sets, 5-7, ment-ef-tiie-wsuner-and he was M and 7-5. He"heid 4 Lljeadih ~ only two over yar after -the boles of play. Smith led Albright Skip after 1* holes of the morning round and after 22 holes he pushed his lead to 6up. From here he was Able o coast the rest of the way. First flight honors went to Dr. Leu Latos of Red Ran who defeated pr. J.' C. Murphy of Flint, 1-up to 19. John Auseon of Hillsdale defeated Fred Ewald in second flight finale, 4 and 3 while Chuck Newton of Barton Hills woh the third f li g h t with lkip triumph over Bill Wedemeyer of Aim Arbor. # ♦ # In the fourth flight, Chuck Mc-Gillivry of Atlas Valley defeated Fred Bens of-Lochmoor, 2 and 1, Miss Whitworth Wins MILWAUKEE (AP)-Mickey Wright, the top money winner on the women’s pro golf tour for three years, isn’t ready to relinquish her crown but Kathy Whitworth is waiting in the wings. Mias Whitworth, scored her second victory within a week by winning the -12,500 Milwaukee Women’s Open Sunday at Ihe: North Shore Country dub. Kathy Whitworth. W 0OO ., 70-73 7*. Loo 1m tun*. tl.M ..... 7J-7J-7I-7*—*» Jock to Puaf. lit -----7J-74-71-7*—*•* Rani Joucn. I1.0M ......**-71-77-77—m •ondro Hoytri*. I7M .7*-7*-7i-7V-l* ttn uio tht . .........li-n-n-w-m Morllyon Smith. *9*0 / 71-71-7*-7*—If? Kothy Cocnollus. ISl* ..i T*-7*-7»7h-»» Mlckoy Wrl*ht, MM . 7 I---1---------- Mixed Doubles Only Returnee Defending Champion Fails in Three Events A new array of champions were crowned yesterday at Oakland Park in the annual Oakland County Open tennis tournament. -y one division, the- mixed was a defending cham-ccessful. The team of ilker III and Ann Holmes took the honors for tiie second» straight by downing Leon Hibbs and Angy Springer, 6-3 and 84. ★ '■-'#■ ★ Hibbs, the defending singles and doubles champion, was shut-ruil ihio ypar ns he lost in the _ singles’ finals as well as in mixed doubles and also in the semifinals of men’s doubles. Dick Scripter, smooth stroking instructor from Birmingham Tennis Club, defeated Hibbs for the men’s title, 6-2 and 6*1-Tbe other half of the 1982 doubles’ combination, Ralph Alee, teamed with Dick Mine-weaser and took the title by I defeating Dick Venus and A1 / Craft. 9-2 awl 84. Hibbs and Alee were the 194 doubles champions. This yee Hibbs teamed with Bill Harf and they lost in a surprise 8 match to Venus and Craft. Probably tiie most i match of die day took plai the juniors’ finals, pP " tween Dale Andrews i Bunce, d o ub le s partners! and teammates last year at Pontiac . the first set and lost a rallied strongly. In the I second set Ihe, match^^ reversed. iselLi TODAY'S GAME* no Inna scheduled . TUESDAY'S GAMES Mlnnesou »t Los Angeles, nlftal Chleafo St TciSOI City, nl(ht Iritn si ntfili smH —•— New York M Washington, 2, I Cleveland *t Baltimore, night - MOW Tort ........ -M 71 AM _ SATtJEDAY’S RESULTS Milwaukee 10, New York 7 St. Laalg 7, Phllndalptkln S Pltleburgb t. Cincinnati 4 , > *" “-I-St*on S. Chicago S Ot 2. Houston 0. night SUNDAY’S RESULTS Cincinnati S-4. PitUburgh 2-1 Philadelphia 7-S, St. Lout* 3-2 * Milwaukee 2. New York l 7 Lot ,Angeles 4. Houston 0, Bight San -PNuistarn 2. Chicago 1, 10 1 TODAY’S GAMES San Pranclsoo (MgrMlM 174) M E (Notlebarg M) night [tie was and 62 defended Bunce held a 4-1 lead Andrews took five stri to win, 64, 9 NOVICE CHAMPS Tbenovice division won by Bren Petar. over Paul Moran. Pei Don Rice 6-4 and 64 inj the Semifinals while Moran Went three seta to defeat Bruce Bigler, 34, 6-3 and 62. * - - *' ■. ★ '5 The tournament, by The Pontiac PresS and Pontiac Recreation Department, drew the second largest field in four-years. A total ofl 123 entries-started , competition al Week ago. Tbe toumaftient was {directed by Jim Agee of the partynent. trophies, a w a r ff Press, went to the runnersup. sation de- d by The i inner* and Pole Vaulter Sn Shows improveln SEATTLE (* -r-spokestnan reported berg, University of ^ star vaulter suffering ! rioius neck injury, on « tory list Sunday. .In addition, his fall O. Sternberg, said he ' a high level in there are fluctuafi he said hty -eon to on end digesting normally. Harold . main-drit, at end foods I f THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST I, 196a NINETEEN - * • 1; ■ . Major League .Boxes. BOSTON i lluiHIU m Brown 2b 4 0 0 0 Wert Jb 4 11 Tuby M 4|1« MoAuliffe u 4 f 5 Kirkland cl Mil Kalina rt 3 0 0 Adcock lb IfitSKvitolf 10 1 bRatnoi, 0 0 0 0 jlMMO ft 4 0 1. Alrto 3b MM Fraohan lb * 0 0 0 Mah Mil b—Ran (or Adbook in I no. DP—Klndall CLEVELAND ■krhM Francona II 5 *Y| L______... L. Brown M 1010 MaAuMHa • Kirkland tt 4 0 10 Kalina it AdMak lb 4 010 Colavlto K < Alrli lb I 1 0 0 Caah lb 1 Romano • 4 0 10 Phillip* 3b < bOrant 0 1 07) Wort » Azcuo o 0 0 0 o Trtandoa c ! Taabr it . 0 0 o o dEorioi 1 Held lb I if} Lotto# p i Ramoa p 10 0 0 Gladdlnc p I a Taylor 1 0O 0 Bunnln* p < Abernathy p 0 0 00 eO. Brown ( c Whitfield * * “ * MU p Total! 0 0 00 Hill TetaU walked tor Abernathy li out for Trlandoi in Kb Bunnlnt in 8th. Tafby, Kaim Abernathy w Bell ....... xLqllch, . nlutrilnw Q1 oil _br h bl Kubek u l Aparlclo M. 8 0 2 2 Rlch'daon lb 1 Snyder rt . 11 1 0 Treah cf 4 Powell If 411 1 Howard c 4 Sarertne cf 0 0 0 0 Bright lb 4 Orslno c 4 1 3 2 Pepltone it 4 Gentile lb AOOOLopea U 4 Roblmon 3b 4 000|o]ror lb S Brandt cr-U 4 110 Wiry p- 1 Adair lb 411 0 HatpUton p I Barber P 1111 «jUB.. ' J Hall' p 1011 Mato Ufa p ( bBlanch’d 1 Total! 147111 Total! ... * a—Grounded out for Hamilton b b—Grounded out for Metcalfe In I Bright. LOB—Baltimore 4 2B—Orslno, Adair 1 eB—Howard. HR—Barber. i Pepltone. 4 Peplt’e rf-lb 3 1 Oil 0 Lopez If __ 0 0 0 0 BgKOT-4b— / McH5&. 4" P „ ''-Stock n 0 0 0 O Rrffqrd » a Valentine #10 0 Hamilton bkbM m ah r h bl —— - II1 IBlaa'ama » foot jSrat ijilS?. hr ■dal d 4 110 Qabomo lb 110 CUMoa rf 8 10 0 Lock cf 1(1. Oeiger lb IHimd lb old Oardner lb aoiORoMro 100 Hp ifiiHr. Wood p ‘ Nixon p pn Laliaho p 0 0 0 Get Started in AFL CR. Sad'skl_______ 31 4 8 7 Mall 11101 ■Ran tw Maxwell In tth; b—Ground-« out for Spring In tth; c—Struck out for.fljbiit la Mb- - .. rrvrrrr. .;::tooi'ob nm Lop*' Angela! ......... 104 400 000-1 *—McCraw, Moran. Oslntkl. po-a — Chicago 37-10, Loa Angeles 17-11. DP— Moran and Thomai; Hanian, McCraw; Rodgers and Moran. J«*o 0. Los Angtloa 0 -Pregoel, Ward. Carraon. Maxwell. - ------- Wala, WUhahn. I R ERBBSO x—Faced four four men In 8th. U—Valentine./mcKI] '—1:10. A-MSI. ■H--- 0 0 0 . Javier Ml 4 21 - - 1 1 Oawataki o 4 1 St 2 0 0 0 Burdette p 10 1' msar*p :s; R. Taylor p.0’0 0 M_l 7 Baldoohun _ . _______ 1*7117 Totals for Sieverk In 7th; b—Caul hi -7th; e—Wanted 'Tor Humph. wf-rr*'’ “ -<8r- 8*. Louis ............ ooi DM ttti i PO-A-PhUadelSa tJ-u. St. Lotus J 17,13. DP—Javier, Oroat White. LOB—Pbtlhdfclphto 4; St. S—T. Taylor: BP—1 Culp V buL L. m"! Covington If ( Demeter of 1 nVlfjw^le a-i 0Flood of 5 14' 1 Oroat i! 8 14 1 White lb - 10 1 0 Boyer 3b. 5 0 t 2nd ; b—Popped c—Homered for Walked for. Brow* for Brunet In Sth; r Howard In 10th BaiUmere " . W W 000 O—U New York ..............410 001100 1-U E—Brpwn. Bright 2, Pepltone... PO-A— Baltimore 28" «-* ”h*" ,,___________..... __t when winning J1 scored), New York 30-13. pp-Boyer. Richardson and p-5*— more 12, New York asmery 10 0 0 > .* Owen p 0 0 0 0 WgUm'' - 1 0 0 0------—»'V klippateln | 0000 laldachun p 0 0 '' ' ■ Petals 105125 Totals 10 .a—Orounded out for short In 7th. »— l»n for Covington to 0th; e—Struck out 8—Burette, Brandt. Stafford ^ nTpiTgo ' McNally ...... McCormick ., -T. Taylor______ hla 7. st. Louis u. Altman.' Don- JRlSS.—3B—Dalryniple. Gorat. HR—Cov. EgtonT SB-Goncalei.'. T. Taylor. SF — 514 5 5 -5 5 fj HBP—By starrette (Btaltord). D—Papa-1 Kltopstelp rella. HaUer. Honochlck. Smith.. T—3:44. Baldachun MINNESOTA KANSAS CRT Rollins 3B 4 0 0 0 Tartabull cf 5 0 0 Power lb ,4010 Causey u 501 KlUebrew If 41 Lumps lb 5 12 Mtocher lb 4 0 0 0 Slebern lb 5 13 Hall ef 1111 Lute 311 AUtoemf 3 0 0 0 Charles 3b 311 Battey e .3010 Clmoll it 4 1 S Versalles M 3 0 0 0 Aluslk rf 0 0 0 -----------------7-Harrelton If fit. LOS ANOELES HOUSTON sb r h bl 88 5411 rr--T- —r . . .J*%*4 E—None. PO-A—Minnesota 14-107 Kansas City, 314. DP—Causey. Lump* and Slebern, L08-Mlnnesota i Kansas CRT W .Pavla cf Roseboro e - 34 4 11 4 Breeding 2h 1. - Podres p 4 . . _________ Totals 31 4 I 4 Total! aOrounded out tor McN ■Las Angeles ............ Perry L. 54 .....* WUIIami----------J Roggenburk ...■.» Drabowsky W. 3-0 0 _ I ________ LOB—Los Angeles Houston c.---- —t.--- IB—Podres SB—Wills, Roseborb. I B ~ lodtog. ' H •— i R ERBBSO Johnson, Brei jBb . ... t—raoed 4 i four Meets on Gotf Cord This Week A record fieldj^piser^90-en* tries has signed up for the Michl* "fan seniors’ golf association’s annual 36-hote medal championship) at the Deimt Golf Club starting tomorrow. George Haggarty of the Country Club of petroit, the defending champion, is expected to play along with * contingent of 43 Michigan pros including Oakland Hills* A1 Watrous, Horton Smith of the host club, Franklin Hills' Walter Burkemo and Bob Gajda of Forest Late. WESTERN AMATEUR The Western Amateur Tournament, attracting^ the best amateurs of the country, starts Wednesday at Point-O-Woods in Bentdn Harbor. The 54-hole National Amputeel> tournament Opeos/lhursday at] the ^esteni Golf jt.lub in Detroit. ^ 'Hie 36-hole Northern Michigan Open wal be played Saturday and Sunday at the Cheboygan Country! * Club at Cheboygan. / . >J Dtokm ........ 1 IPS « TbinS 1 mull Kb. HBP—By Podres (As prom onto — *—o, Harvey. 1 Weyer. Barilck. Vsrgo, ' HOW’S THE SCORE? - Pontiac M#yor Robert A. Landry checks the score before going for his spare during exhibition match Saturday evening at- - 390 Bowl with -Leo Ladouceur , one of the country’s leading wheelchair howlers. Aided by a 25-pin spot, Leo took Peattob Press Pbete cjose wlns in the first two games but J#hizzoner” gained some revenge with a 202 third game for an easy win. Ladouceur, who has relatives in -the Pontiac area, is advocating active partifeipa-tion by local residents in the National WheeP' chair Bowling Association. Harveys S/fS/^Wctffs, in Inter-City League Graham’ National Football League cham-j pionsbip Packers at Chicago Friday night removed- the Packers’ aura of invincibility. No team ever has won three straight championships since the NFL started its playoff systefn in 1033 and the Packers may be in for lots of trouble now in their bid for tiie unprecedented triple. In the APIs, the three hot-shot teamswere whipped in the exhibition openers on Saturday and Sunday. San Diego’s Chargers thumped the champion Kansas City Chiefs 26-14. and Denver walloped the Houston Oilers, Easteiin Division champions, 27-14-on Saturday. To cap it all, the lowly Oakland Raiders, who finished last in the West with a 1-13 record last year, tqpped the Boston Patrios, runners-up in the East, 24-17 at Oakland on Supday. It will be either agony or ecsta-sey for Harvey’s Coionlkl House team in the Inter-City Softball League. The players must wait, a couple of weeks before they will know if’they win the championship or finish runners-up. And there’s nothing they can do about it. ’ Harvey’s, leading the league Softball Playoffs Start flnfHIks, Monicaili Triumph Elks No. 810 .and Monicatti Jumped off to early starts last night in the city softball playoffs to determine1, Pontiac’s state Clam D representative. The Elks scored five runs in the second inning and then relied fiie strong: arm of pitchier Gary Boe to take a 7-4 decision from 300 Bowl. Doubles by Boe and Chuck Graves were the big biows for the winners in their secoM inning outburst. . Lee Baerby’s sparkling mound performance paced Monicatti 4-0 victory over Howes Lanes in the other HD” playoff Contest. ; Steve Szabo’s second-inning single rained Baerby’s bid for a no-hitter. The winning hurler Close Battles in Horseshoes onf, 9t90 over Villon and-George Self; . SINGLES PT8. W ’ .PTR-- John Vltton ...102 H. Donaldson s, “ ‘ ‘— 05 , Don Johnson _______-Biown SI JnHf-QlcMon' Vlttoa-Sclf .... 00 D. Johnson-Rondeau- Doolsy ..... •ft Johnson .. SO Kllmowlti-llllllken- Kllmowlti % Donaldson SI— Monicatti took a 1-0 led in the first inning on Earl Montross' home run. The winners scored three more in the fourth-frame on double, a \valk, a fielder’s choice and a two-base error. In National League playoff action, Circle Inn and Bob & Larry’s Bar were victorious. Local No. 653 beW * slim one-run lead over Circle lnn entering tpe final frame, but two errors, - a walk: and a fielder’s choice uro-duced 2 runs 1o give the Circle nine a 9-8 win. .Hod Johnson led the winners- with a homer and a pair of singles. BIG INNING Bob* & Larry’s scored eight times in-the first inning and then held off Pontiac State Hospital to win the other National I-eague contest, 10-8. Morris Ykrnold led the Bob & Larry’s attack with two singles ^ and a double. Jerry Bouton was In the Thursday night division of the Parks and Recreation Department’s Horseshoe League, the competition was yery close with slim margins separating first from second place-In singles, John Vitton edged Cliff Johnson, 102-99, and Jim on-Was a riose third with 95 points. Clarkson team^ wifii Jack BroWn to take doubles hon- winning pitcher with help with a 13-7 mark, concluded schedule over the weekend by splitting a pair of doubleheaders with Saginaw Drewry’s and Prat Huron Shoffner’s. Harvey’s must now sit back and wptch Port Huron and Flint Buick in a second-place tie, one game behind Harvey’s. Both teams have four games to play. The Colonial House nine, behind the no-hit pitching of Floyd Hicks, scored a 2-0 victory over Saginaw in die nightcap of their state crew won the opener, 2-1. Sunday’s story icr Harvey’s was pretty much the' same. The ’city AA champs dropped its opener to Port Huron, 10-0, but then roared back in the second game to shut out the Blue Water city team, 5-0. ONE-HITTER - Johi) Herrington paced Harvey’s in the nightcap by hurling a one-hitter. Pontiac’s other representative, the Elks; took a pair of games from Spencer Floor of Waterford Saturday, 4-3 and 10-5. Spencer's dropped the two one-run games to Saginaw on Sunday, 6-5 and 3-2. The Elks double-header Sunday with flint Buick was postponed. Port Huron has two games remaining with Spencer’s and a big doubleheader with Flint Buick. Flint also has a twin bill remaining with Pontiac Elks. INTER-CITY SOPTBALL Tronf BillDeHousse~tn^fiie~ffnal two innings. . . u Tonight’s schedule finds Moni-„ u™ jonoson ■ „ Elks at. Beaudette as jacX Brawn ... «4 Park at 7 p.m. and 300 Bowl meeting Howes Lanes on the same diamond at 8:30. At (forth-side, Circle Inn will meet Bob & Larry’s and Pontiac State Hospital will play Local No. 653. Does Your Bowling Ball Really Fit? HAVE A PROFESSIONAL CHECK IT FOR 708 . .. FREE of CHAR&-NO OBLIGATION! At The BOWLERS DISPLAY BOOTH In The PONTIAC MALL Front Lobby Entrance Register for FREE Drawing Bowling Ball, Bag and Shoes, Bowling Shirts qna Blouses To Be Given Away! y •• ■ V'Sponsored By HURON BOWL AIRWAY LANES \ 2525 ELIZABETH LK. RD. 4875 HIGHLAND RD. ' . Saturday's nairrs NSW YORK—Joe# Stable ot N*W Tort. M7. outpolotod Stoolaj Harwart. 14T'». Pblladelpbix. 15. ’ AQANa, Ouam Jalwi Baa Ntobolaa, 115. RitoMMtf out OtHUK Typhoon, US. 3 , Rookie quarterback Mfickey n Slaughter threw two touchdown7 1 passes, George Shaw connected on’ ' another and Genn Mingo booted t field goals of 44 and 41 yards in [1 Denver's win over Houston. Linebacker Archie Matos ell* The exhibition gets going full blast this week with six NFL and - • Strast four AFL contests on the schedule. In the NFL, the Dallas Cowboys take on tbe Rams at Los Angeles Thursday night On Saturday, Baltimore plays Philadelphia at Hershey, Pa., the Chicago Bears meet the New York Giants at Ithaca', N.Y., the Cleveland Browns take on the Lions nf Detroit,'the Minnesota Vikings play San Francisco at Portland, Ore., and the Pittsburgh Steeiers oppose the enraged Packers at Miami. Kansas City and Houston will be on the rebound in the AFL Friday. The Chiefs entertain the Buffalo Bills at Kansas City jshile the Oilers test the New York Jets at Shreveport, La. On Sahjn^ay, Boston is at San Diego and on Sunday Denver plays at Oakland. The Auditors’ shocker over the Packers has revived spirits all over the NFL, especially in the camp of the New York Giants, who lost two straight playoffs to the Packers.' * San Diego’s victory over Kansas proved costly. The Chargers, who were crippled by, injuries last year, lost Tobin Rote, their newly acquired No. 1 quarterback, ON SIDELINES Rote, an NFL and Canadian league veteran, suffered a iom rib and bruised breast bone and is expected Jb be out of action fSr two or three weeks. John Hadl, available only ou weekend passes from the Air Force until Oct. li, came off the bench and threw touchdown of two and.16 yards. Paul Lowe, one of file Chargers' crip-of‘62« ran three and 65 yards for the other touchdowns. Len $j Dawson, the AFL’s Most Valuable ,5 Player, tossed a one-yard TD pass wjto Fred Arbanas, and rookie Iquarterback. Eddie Wilson pitched a 21-yarder to Jerfel Wilson for the dlhef Chief stuie. Collision will meet Hur-| The. Cjuugci's.liave a 13*0 m-AiFway 15 Class A under the m AV AFL exhibition. play -far lights at Jaycee Park tonight. three years but they Were only The game begins at 8. 14-10 in league play last year. Port Karoo Shofto Flint Buick Sectnev Drewey'e Pontiac Elks WStarioid Spencer' HEALTH STUDIOS Summer Economy Plan Limited Membership $125 I ONLY THREE WEEKS TO JOIN AT THIS PRICE FacUltlet Include! • MECHANICAL rollers a VIBRATORS o SAUNA STEAM ROOM o SWEDISH MASSACE o SUN TAN ROOM o GUARANTEED-RESULTS. „ 4 ALL SUPERVISED GUARANTEE 1 Year FREE If «'e FaU le Gel 11mm Retell* V OVF.R WEIGHT UNDERWEIGHT Loom 11 Ow. (..in 12 lb.. 1 lorhr. off Arid 2 inrhr. lo ■bri.in-n sad rKr.l, arm. • onto. and lex*. For Frss Trial Call Ml <-NM 625 Hunter Blvd. -BIRMINGHAM f Hssrs llklS Mon. Ikrs Fri—lsl. ISM I mt (7 NO CHARS* tor Ma DETROIT RACE COURSE SCHOOLCRAFT AND MIDDLEBELT WANTED! MEN-WOMEN from ages 18 to 52. Prepare now for .JJi- S. CMI Service job opsningi in this ares during the ' next 12 moRtht. Government positions paV as • high as $446.00, a month to start. They provide' much great-er AftCyrity thah private em-ptoymsnt and excellent opportunity for advancement. Many positions- require little of no specialized education or experi- But to get one of these jobs, you must pass 4 test. The competition is keen and in some LINCOLN HRVICK, Dept. 127 Pekin, Illinois. ve/y much interested. Please tend me absolutely .FREE (11 cases only one out of five pass. Lincoln Service helps thousands prepare fot these tests sypry year. It le one, of the largest and oldest privately owned, schools of Its kind is not connected ' With * the. Government.. For FREE Information oh Government jobs, including llst ef positions end salaries, fill out coupon and mail at' once—TODAY. You will alio get full de-teiis cm How you cen prepare : yourself for these tests. Don’t delay—ACT NOW! on how to qualify for t U. S. Government Job. ‘ OWN AND OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED We will select and train oris man only to own his own profitable exclusive lifetime, franchise in this area. Our established franchised dealers earn up to $20,000.00 and mors per' year operating a low overhead business where, there is no product to sell and no Inventory to buy. Men front all walks of Ilfs are successful In this business And age is no barrier. No special education required, If you are sincere) about being your own boss, write latter ' $7,750.00 cash is .required. We aft now selecting men tp start jmelt pwff buslrws5ln August and Septembpr, All ispllas conUden* Dnlantotnr Manufacturing Co. Franchisa Division, Dept. 63-10 Rockford, Illinois AUTO SERVICE COUPON SPECIALS Clip ’Em Out-Cart ’Em In-Count Your Savings BEST TERMS On Auto Service In This Area 20-6 OrigtottL Equipment Quality Mos. to pay DOUBIXVALVEACTION ■ llw**** SHOCK ABSORBERS 3. STEAM CLEANING ENGINE SPECIAL! Steam Clean Engine n2. Adjuit Brakes, AH Few Wheels 3. Check Front End Alignment, 4-. T Brake & Front End Special ‘95 A Cermet Comber, Cotter, Tee-in, Toe-ovt. • . , * •k Re-pock Front Whee] Bearing! ★ Adjuit Broket, All Four Wheel* ★ Check Balance of Front Wheels dr Read Test Brake Adjustment i 33° s! All Four Wheels BY APPOINTMENT I EARING BKED 79- WHEEL BEARINGS REPACKED THIS COUPON I BY APPQ1NTAAENT GOODY^Ak service stone 14 lb. average THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST S, 1W TWENTY AT WlnjtXl LONG LIFE — Mrs. Noriah Buyamen, who claims to be 13S years okl, sips a cup of tea in her Singapore home. She still walks steadily and helps with household chores. Orient Ancient (13$) ■fi, ■ 'X - Gets American Letter ^SINGAPORE-TAP) - ~5 pore’s grand oid lady — she claims to be 1SS years ojd — is chuckling over her first letter from Ipr off America with the question: “Where' is America — is it far from Singapore?’’ ALWAYS FRESH - ALWAYS LEAN HAMBURGER U.S. GRADE A PLUM, TENDER 3 lbs. or more SMALL BROILERS AND FAMILY SIZES Service Set for Publisher Shot Self fo Death at Virginia Home WASHINGTON (UPI)-A public memorial service is scheduled ft Washington National Cathedral tomorrow lor Philip L. Graham, president and chief , executive officer of the Washington Post and Newsweek magazine. A spokesman for the Pest said that a funeral service for graham “will ?he jwvato—lor members of tKemafly.” The family asked that flowers be The Cathedral memorial service will be held at 2 pm. (Pontiac time) by the Rt. Rev. Angus Dun, retired Episcopal Bishop of Washington, re .re ★ Graham, 48, shot himself to death with a small - gauge shotgun SofaiwUy at hk farm home l near Marshall, Va. His wife Katharine, daughter of the late Eugene Meyer, former owner of the Post, was resting in another part of the house when the shooting occurred. Abo sarvlvlag are four ehll-dren, Elizabeth Morris, Donald Edward, William Welsh aad Stephen Meyer Graham. As head of the Washington Post Oo., Graham, supervised operations of the Poet, Newsweek, two smaller magazines — Art News §nd -Portfolio— and television, stations in Washington, D.C., and Jacksonville, Fla. '^L-l ?. 'I Tributes following his dejt-th came from President Kennedy, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, Sen. J.' William Fulbright, D-Ark., and other personal friends as well as a host of other Washington officials. The le tter was delivered to-Mrs. Noriah Binte Buyamen through the Associated Press.! It came from 82-year-old M r s. N.Y. Mrs. Olson said ia the letter she read about Mrs. Noriah’s 133rd birthday in her local newspaper and wrote to ask the right prescription for long age- ‘ “lam 82 yeafs old and in very poor health and almost blind and my husband is writing this for she said in the letter. “When the article (about Noriah) appeared in the paper my hus-bind read it to me and I would like to know more about you. re ★ ★ ‘Would you write me and let me know what prayers you say and wbat time of jlay — also what to eat” When the letter tils translated into Malay lor Mis. Noriah, she listened attentive/ ly, then said with a Wrinkled smile: “I must thank Mrs. Olson for her letter.'? Mrs. Noripfa, who came to Singapore from Java World War X has outlived seven of her eight children. She has name than two “dozen grandchik dren and great-grandchildren. But she, still is up and about, walking steadily by herself, helping frith household chores in/ youngest daughter’s home aafd baby sitting with her greatgrandchildren. ' , /re '' ★ n'-#■«'. ’ Her longivity recipe? "As a Muriim woman I pray five times a day. I’m not particular about food. I don’t follow any special diet-and I eat what foe rest of the family eats." STEAK SALE r U.S. Choke or Blue Ribbon Whole Fame Center Slices ROUND STEAKS 7* fUSDAf (ogee) ,53*. SWISS STEAKS 50- mJSDAT (CHOICE) Seven Inch Cuts RIB STEAKS 80- : 4 '■ / rWk offoeWro through Tuesday, Avgvif 8. Wt rtserve the right t§ limit fesaf/ties. t Maxwell Hous* t Regular or Drip - ' Sfe 34b. CoHI COFFEE IN Save spfe 20c WJffc Coapae -wt Eight VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON ' Moxwtll Houaa— Regular *r Drip copm3rS«t»^ Limit On* With TMf Coup*n *nd ».u PurchaM *r Mar* excluding Mtr, - a*od -mm t ini and 4th, i Nr Family. jgsy Gaylord Pure CrtamRiy BUTTER LOOK WHAT |0^ WILL BUY AT m l|k Ink S HHi Wifo Coapoe ggT *** —y—y k VALUABLE WRIGLEY COUPON Gaylord COcSav* - i Print Be,. Limit On* With Thl* Coupon and (Ml Pwrdwaa or Mora excluding Campbell's TOMATO SOUP Bicyclist Killed in' Slip . BASKING RIDGE, N.J. (UPI) — Mrs. Clarissa Harris, 88, South Orange,'was killed and her: 70-year-old husband, William, was injured yesterday when their bicycle - built - for - two slipped on loose gravel and fell over. n.yi»ri appt^M»| -y Tft*' 8eek Matthw Elna Cream Ceril JO1 Heinz Acceded Beby Oereelt '£■ fO( ’10« Food Olub Salt H£j T£; 10* \ R Libby Temele Juice' Cvl QV. 31i JUi T Extra Services T 1 T Without Extra Cost T . A , A X The success of the Done Ison- X ^ Johns Funoral Homo Is duo to V-A the » many extra sorvicos wt JL j provide without oxtra cost. jc I FEDERAL 3Wjw j[ 4-4311,,, | o. 0* HMQQQIS Y mRShuSSns^tontiac Y p| rMeitl: . fro**0 Otu®*1 Save . Chickan of the Sea Save 6c _ Fom),/Siu Chunk Stylo Tuna ^ Kraft Miracle—Sava 10c 1 Save 6c—Upton m Sth* t it Block Tea Bag* /' ^ 59^ Cfn. ■ i 1 1 1 Durkeo Pure Ground IffsSmW J Black nonpar s!S S' 591 u J w GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS THE PONTIAC PRgSSy&ONDAY, AUGUST1963 xr^r TWBXfY-oyfr There'll Be Nb< Pajama Tops Majority Leader Mansfie/cf By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON — The mild-mannered mao who guides the destiny of tita.U. S. Senate wants no pajama tops, bedroom slippers) and tieless, A shaven sokwu public exhibit the upper ber. son/ M a J o r Leader MikellK^H Mansfield' doaa^^^^^"8 hot Intend to hold^ round-the-dock1 sessions to break a Southern filibuster on President Kennedy’s civil ritfits legislation. This does not mean, however, that he expects to let Dixie segregationists off the hook. Puffing - on his pipe, fee blue-eyed, black-haired Montana senator issued a flat declaration: “A. civil ri^its bill >111 be passed this session. It will be passed even lf werftave to stay "Tfire 'MtiTimn"srngH January third, recess for an hour, and go into second .session.’ "MONTGOMERY For all his soft-spoken ways, the one-time . copper miner looked like he ineant it. He himself is for the President’s bill, including its. controversial public accommodations section, because “It’s .a'question that’s got to be faced up to, and I think its application wUl.be less severe than many think.’* DOUBTS COMMITTEE Mansfield frankly doubts that the Judiciary Committee presided over by Mississippi Senator James 0. Eastland will ever re-_ port out a dvil rights bill far floor action, despite the fact that it/ is now holding hearings. Ia that event, Mansfield confided, he will “use the technique” of former GOP Senate Leader William F. Knowland. “I’ll step die House civil rights bill at Me door, and pat it en the Senate calendar without referring it to a committee for consideration. We’re going to get a clvfl rights bill this session. Period!” What manner of man Is this successor to -dynamic, power-hungry Lyndon-B. Johnson,-who gave up the majority leadership to become vice president? HERO STORY Mansfield's career is enough to put Horatio Alger heroes ' to shame as slow-starters. The fact that he first won election to Congress twenty years ago, while a professor at the University of Montana does not even begi£ to teU his fascinating story. .... TSfr— He was the son 6f poverty-stricken Irish immigrants — his father yu a hotel porter hi New York City. Left motherless at age four,'' Mike was shipped out to Montana to live with a childless great-aunt and great-uncle who van a owner grocery. 'dk , Mike also “ran.” When he was 13 he ran away from home, and spent a night in jail after being caught. Tha seccond time he'tried On the third attempt be made it, and enlisted hi the Navy at age “I realise taw that I was unfair te my want, who was alee and gentle,” he- mused, as he sat in Ms Mg capital suite. “Bat she was pretty strict, and I wanted to see the world.” , The first world war was on, and the youthful- seanian. made seven trips across submartae-ln-fested seas, convoying merchant ships to France and .England, w * ♦ He had pot even,-finished the eighth grade when he ran away, and on his return from the Navy he decided that he was too big to go toshigh school. . -—h—a - ft- — He therefore joined the Army, Blinking to get to Germany with the occupation forces, but served iQs year on Angel Island off San Francisco, emerging as a private. joined'MARINES The next day he signed up for a two-year hitch with the Marines in China ahd the Philip-1 pines, becoming a private first class: On his release, he returned to Butte and rustled a job as a, mucker (shoveler) 3,100 feet under ground in a copper mine. Eventually he worked up to become a full-fledged miner, but by that time he had met Ms future wife — a college-educated schoolteacher limed Maureen Hayes. — who reminded hini that miners die early from silicosis. To lump a lot of fortitude.into a brief paragraph: Mike enrolledi in college, also took correspondence courses to make up his high school deficit, simultaneously worked five nights a week in the mines to support himself/ sod finally earned a B. A. degree in history and political science at age 30. He then went back to college on a $25-a-month assistanceship, to earn' his masters degree the next year. His bride, who had tutored him, taught school, and cashed in her insurance policy to help feed1 them, also earned her masters degree while Mike was getting bacholor’s. As Horatio. Alger would have said, such courageous young peo-pie ware “bound to rise,” and they .did. After Mike’s election te Congress they drove cross-country fan tattered old Kid, through 30-degree-below-zero Weather in the Dakotas, arfiviag in Washington with $345 cash and their sole worldly possessions in the ear. Mike made ti» climb from lowly freshman Senator to. the majority leadership in only eight /ears. Is he happy about it? In w* the gentle, quiet manner qf speech that is his trademark, he replied: , \ ' ■ , . ■ - “I’d rather just be a Senator. I have no thought, however, oi {giving up the leadership. I didn’t want the job. I knoWf It hurts your re-election' chances, (he’s up next year), because the people of your state are likely .to think you’re too buay to look after their interests, but I took it with my eyes wide open, ahd I have no apology. Whemboth the presidentelect and vice president asked, me to take it, I thought it was thy Warren Store Burns,-Damages $100,000 . WARREN (UPI) - A general alarm fire strode the Motor City Jewely afldTurnlture Store early yesterday and caused an esti- duty.” mated $100,800 damages. There are over 30 million hi- Firemen from here and several surrounding communities fought ; cycles in use in America today. the flames for mote than one hour before bringing them under Control. v • \ * * * ■ / The roof of the two-story brick structure collapsed during t h e fore. Cause of tiie fire was not immediately determined. In medieval England, the salt cellar was a social boundary at a dinner table. High-ranking guests sat above the ornate ail- ' ver container, lesser guests below it. GENERAL RETIRES — After 35 years of military service, Gen. Emmett (Rosie) O’Donnell has retired. In stepping down, - the 56-year-old World War II air ace urged a combination of missiles and manned planes inTfie AIr Force His last post Was as commander, Pacific Air Force, with headquarters in Hawaii.' - ■ v In Person .. * DON McLEOD Dean of the D. 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Hotpoint—tint with i tha feature* women want moat. | SAVE AT ONLY •157 Of Colon ’WkUlfWvL 40” DOUBLE-OYER ELECTRIC RANGE •199 NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY Nath. * l\ *r.......I KPm iMACE CO^ Phone 682-2330 Elizabeth Lake Rtf., Corner Telegraph « ' £ Next Door to J. L. Hudson Co. - TWENTY-TWO w '.a,.• v ; .. _»l- >■■*'. ?■ •. •7iK&:>vy'KW&*x, ■ ('■ 'll' "1 "■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST A 1W , *■ ■ ;•. AwaiL Whit# House Baby Nation's Children Join Jackie WASHINGTON - “I hope the baby you 'have will be a girl became we have too many boy* la the world.” “I hope you have twins. M*rgat*Lagy-Jac^ queline Kennedy, i^ u expecting this month, abounds with such charming expressions,' mostly from children who are very excited about a new baby in the White House. The letters, maay in a childish scrawl en school notebook paper, poor tale the social of* flee on an average of Ml a day. Hey are labeled “Congratela- handsome as Mir. letter observed:* "Even th< they are sometimes a nuisance they are still a barrel of fun and love.” it* will be as Kennedy.” On the subject of having babies around the house, one little girl’s Hawaii Dailies Due jo Publish Again HONOLULU fflto—Hawaii’s two largest daily newspapers, the Honolulu Star-Bulletiif and Honolulu Advertiser, were expected, to resume publication Wednesday after a 44-day strike involving seven unions. The walkout, which began June S1K came to an official end Saturday when members of the International Typographical Union (ITU) and the pitoto engravers voted acceptance of a new contract. The five other unions involved in the strike approved the contract Friday night. * * * • They included the American Newspaper Guild, Press) Machinists, Lithographers and the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen's Union. Scout Hikes for 59 Miles With One Leg BUTTE, Mont. * - A one-legged scout has oompleted^n 50-mlle hike that took him across die Continental Divide four times, through moun- tain streams, over rocks and felled tree!. , / * ★ '★ . 'nv, l Robert ftedpelle, 12, made die trip on crutches with 23 other scouts in the primitive Anaconda • Pintlar wilderness area south of Moose Lake. Dick Matthew sa^Raopeile did not ask favors, and received none. Bobby lost his right leg after a firearms accident when he was six years old. LIMIT 00. 303 Orchard lake Ay. everyone wins playing coverall GET CARDS & DETAILS AT ANY KROGER STORE IN PONTIAC they are filed away, a “til yen” reply is sent from the President nnd Mrs. Kennedy. One little girl from Marion, Ohio, wrote to Mrs. Kennedy: "‘Have you decided what you ire going to name the baby if It is a girl or if It is a boy? And if so, will you please tell me, If possible. I am praying that everything wiH go well for you end the baby.” “Pj. I have a lot of faith for what you say and do, Mrs. Kennedy."—T ■ , * * ♦ foe reply on impresaive White. House stationary, social secretary Nancy Tuckerman thanked her for her “kindness in sending a message of good wishes” and , said, “no. name has been chosen for tile new baby at dir {resent time:” * * ★ Another little girl from Wesley* ville, Pa., sent the President’s wife a lucky four-leaf clover so that her third child “will be a very healthy one.” A Worcester, Mae*» yen ■ter expressed the lope the behy weald be born on her birthday—Aug. 4. A Shreveport, La., woman wrote: “My prediction for you is a baby girl. Name her Mary K. after me.” President Kennedy also gets his share of “stork mail." From Far Rockway, N.Y., a young boy wrote; “I would love and wish if, you coukl give me die honor of being the godfather for the new baby. I am 10 years old if you mot to know. And I’d be tbe happiest and proudest bo^ in the He answered: “The President and Mrs. Kennedy appreciate the thou^itfulnessa which prompted you to write and offer to be the godfather for the new baby. They regret, however, That this role is usually filled by e relative or a very close frigid of the family.” HONORARY POST Much the same reply went to a youngster who requested permission to be the bi&y’s “bon- • orary godmother” if die infant is “born on my birthdya, Aug. 10.” Thrifty Beef Sale! WUNDC STEAK SIRLOIN STEAK t-bone steak RIB STEAK - . CHOCK STEAK CHUCK ROAST i i i LB. | KLEIN'S HOT DOGS . . 3"- HYGRADE'S SLICED-6 VARIETIES LUNCH MEAT . . “ 99* LEAN A MEATY SPARE RIBS . FIRST CUT PORK CHOPS POT ROAST OUT Also writing to the president was a New Orleans youth who ] said; “I’m so glad Jhat Mrs. Kennedy is having .a baby. I hope it is a boy so that it can grow up to be a fine man like— yea. You are a fine President.” A Roslyn, N.Y., fan wrote to Mrs. Kennedy “I want to congratulate you on expecting an-~othef'^hlld: i~hope it UllLbc a girl and grow up to be as pretty ~ as you, and I’m surs-if it is a boy STOP PAYING HIGH INSURANCE COSTS F4C70* *YEAR BUYS gy ALL TH»i $10,000 *"$Tooo * MUSHROOMS .^lO* TREIUS BRAND ~ : WHOLE KERNEL CORN^IO* NUTRITIOUS LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE UN 10* ^UUCON DARK CHOCOLATE . , . ' •' ’ ii'-”, V ' JIFFY CAKE Mr-rr.glO* HEILMAN'S CREAMY SMOOTH ' . MAYONNAISE.... ... .a50* SWANEE WHITE, YELLOW OR PINK FACIAL TISSUE. . 5^89* ■OMMJ4_UVF ft* ORANGE PRINK:.?-?;? X9* SAVE UP TO ap-BORDErtfS ICECREAM WITH THIS COUPON-BORDEN'S ELSIE ICE CRf AM BARS 1249 Csupm valid at Kreger in Defielt and Eastern Michigan . thru Tuesday, Aug. 6,190'. HmR ana coupon par family. VALUABLE COUPON WITH THIS COUPON-CHUNK STYLE STAR KIST TUNA 4 99 Coupon valid at Kroger In Dotreit and laetam Michigan thruTuesday, Avg. A, 1963. Limit ono coupon par family. BORDEN'S SOUR CREAM MILD 49c tt GAL CTN. Frankenmuth Cheese “59* VALUABLE COUPON ■ 4 WITH THIS COUPON—LIQUID Lustre Creme SHAMPOO i SAVE ! BOTTLE 51' Coupon valid at'Kroger In Dotreit and Eastern Michigan _thru Tuesday, Adg. 4,1963. limit eno coupon per family. - J hiiiimiiiiiiMMiiiiienl SPECIAL LADEL~ KROGER FLOUR 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS lilltfaiel Coverages S& FE 4-3636 Mr| 0 AGENCY 144 JMlyn t FI 4-J535 ipjto e.tor v riwii THE ATTfiTTST 3,1063 TWENTY-THKEE -Deaths in Pontiac Area LILLIAN M. DRAKE Service (or Lillian M. Drake, 17, of Sit Hughes, will be 1 pjn. Thursday at the Macedonia Baptist Church. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. Her body is at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Horae. Miss Drake died yesterday following a one-year illness. Surviving besides her parents, Mr. and Mm. LeRay DraW-, a«> Hnmn, Gondteilavilto, Twin., Wfffi two brothers, Albert and Gwendle - Muimmi o(_Fpptlac. FRANK KELLEY Service for Frank KelleyTto-fant son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther KeUey of 5633 Berkley, Waters ford Township, wad to be today at 10 a.ra. at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. Burial was to follow in Waterford Center Cemetery. . The baby was* dead at birth yestenky. Surviving besides the parents are the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Myshock of Shepard, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mclnnes of Mayville; three ____brothers, John L., Timothy K. and Thomas A., all at home; and two sisters, Bonnie D. and Pat-x ritia, also at home. . WATSON OWENS Service for Watson Owens, 48, of 458 Irwin will be 1 p.m. .Wednesday at Messiah Baptist —Church. Butw wnrbe in oak Cemetery. IBs body is at the Frank Carruthers Funerai Home. Mr. Owens died Saturday following aiong illness. . Surviving besides his wife Grace are his father, Ollie Otorens, one daughter, Mrs. Joyce Daniels of Pontiac; four brothers’and five v sisters. ons k. shambarger TffiOY — Service for Otis K. Shambarger, 48, of 1319 W. Wattles, Vill be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at\the Price Funeral Home. Burial mil .follow in W h 11 e Chapel Manorial Cemetery, Mr. Shambarger died Saturday after an illneks of several months He was an employe and volunteer fireman of^ Pontiac Motor Division and a of UAW- taOLoral’No;t53r Surviving are hisVife Ellen; a son, Qtis J. of Ctomsm; bis burial to fojlow there. and five grandchildren. CLYDE L. HENDRICKS OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Serv- 750 W. Predmore. will be 11 a. m, tomorrow at the WilliamR.Po-tere Funeral Home, Rochester, Cemetery. A retired farmer, Mr. Hend- MRS. LESTER FISK Thursday at of California, Cecil and Hollis, both of Madison Heights, 'at' Lovell of Lake Oriorr, and daughter, Mrs. .Amos Bell < Warren. :) HERMAN M. KESSLER 3XFORD—Service for Herrai M. Kessler, .72, of 21 Lincoln w be 2 p.m. tomorrow' at Allen Funeral Home, Lake Orion. Military graveside service and burial will follow in Evergreen Cemetery, Lake Orion, under auspices or chartton-Polan Post : NoT 1837 American Legion-Mr. Kessler died Saturday after a year-long illness. He was a retired carpenter and farmer, j Surviving are three brothers,' William, and Frank, both of Oxford, and Albetf of NeW Hudson;; and two sisters, Mrs. Stuart Al-j lan of Oxford and Mrs. Carl] Bradley of Davison. Police 2 for Rope:: in Indiana Pontiac Youth to Be Witness _ had beep kift at-the heme of Fair’s pister. <•. it . it Sayles said the couple recently had been living ina cottage'near Rome City, Ind. Pair was listed as an Ohio parolee with a police Police Hold Parolees for Thefts In 3 States record sinoe he was 14, and the woman hail been' paroled from a federal auto theft sentence. They pleaded guilty to burglary SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) W of the Lowell Koontz home seven Police held two young men to; day for raping a woman they found napping; to a car parked along a highway. ALRlON, Ind. (I) — A Pontiac juvenile is a material witness in ifhat police describe ar'a .series oth home burglaries in three miles south of‘Albion op July 21: Vandals Strike Another man wanted in the states. . Sr +■ ‘W ’ police. Two more arrested with the accused, were cleared by of-ficers wfcO »M~ttey bad floth' tog to do with the attack. ‘ ★ ★ * Prosecutor Thoma^ Roemer said rape charges would be filed against David Flournoy, 21, and Myron Tabom, 18. . : W Hr * Officers said Flournoy; Tabom; xJames Williams, 22, who irowned; James Trayick, li. f The boy, whose name was withheld, has been released to the custody of a poUceman-uncle in PonjiAc pending the Sentencing of linn iisl'llWa Donald R. Fair, 31, Decatur, and Anna M. Marbnrger, 20, Dayton, are to be sentenced on felonious entry charges to which they pleaded guilty last Wednesday. The charge carries a penalty of 1 to 10 years to prison. ■ ft .|^/V >' - Grade School Hundreds of dollars worth of qiwnAte-waa I'niMAd hy vandals who broketoto the flerrlngion Elementary School, 541-Bay, during the weekend. The destruction was dlscov-- ered at 7:41 p.m. Saturday by a custodian when be arrived at the school. —Two fire extinguishers had been and Charles McCall, 17, were hitchhiking Sunday three mites west of New Carlisle, Ind., when they spotted Mary Helen Taylor and a companion, Donald Ed-ward Ingram, 30, botb of Cleveland, Ohio, sleeping to Ingram’s car. • ★ * Police said Trawick and McCall went ahead and were not implicated. » '* - A ★. s S The other three bound In- Deputy sheriff Roy Sayles' Jr; said the 16-year-old Pontiac boy, arrested with the couple July 22 signed a statement admitting 60 to—100- burglaries In the last throe month in Indiana, Ohio and Michigan. Value of the'loot has not been estimated. lie boy’s statement said the three, along with four nten be-, tog sought to' Ohio, specialized in country homes. " + * * : emptied, one ou tbe floor of the gymnasium, the other on the stage in the gym. . it ' it > 'In one classroom, books bed beeh torn and thrown aU over the floor. A bulletin board was smashed and lamps were broken in the teachers’ loupge. . A complete inventory has not been taken, but police said it was believed Bat nothing was taken froth the school. gram with a clothesline, police said, leaving him in a cornfield. They fled to his car with Miss Taylor. Sayles said a panel truckload of loot has been confiscated by police in Houston, .Tex., where it ornmended by early Tlhihese' for strengthening bone marrow and stimulating blood circulation. Alert Store Limits Robber's Loot An armed robber who netted some 6150 in a holdup at a Bloomfield Township candy store Saturday night apparently did qot notice a money bag containing about 6800 on the counter, according to polk*-Mrs. Jean Willis, manager of Crocker’s Candies at 2440 Woodward, told township police she was ordered- at gunpoint vto empty the contents of the cash register into a small paper bag. However, she said, the bag containing money for bank deposit remained next la her purse on the counter. Mrs. Willis, 136 Clive, Pontiac, reported she also cheated the robber of $90 which she left in the cash register. ; Hie manager told police she was looirinf the front door shortly after 94>.m. when tlto bandit shoved her back into the store and ordered her to close the drapes. After looting the cash reds-ter, the robber deminded-that Mrs. Willis open drawers ia die back room, police said. From .one of the drawers she drew a pistol. said ‘H you shoot,. II shoot,’ and he just stood there ] with an amased look on his face," nbmepurted:—^—•—;----------T7 The man then threw a stick i her and ran out, Mrs. Willis said. She did not pursue him. She described’ the bandit about 6 feet tall! Negro, 170 pounds and wearing dark clothes and sunglasses.' Better Freedom Festival DETROIT urv-Empioymant of t full-time manager for the annual International Freedom Festival, celebrated jointly by Detroit and Wipdsor, Ont., each July, to being proposed by Mayor William Patrick of Windsor. “The festival has not reached jits foil potential,” Patrick arid yesterday, “and I think the time has come to make it bigger and better.” QPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. MONUMENTS AND MARKERS Of ENDURING BEAUTY •MsetaH Cemetery—•HeaeuMse -—- a Word* Tim* N*. mtnt terms available •Satiifaction Guaranteed or Your Pontiac Moll MRS. EMMA KRUGER OXFORD — Service, for Mrs. 7 Emma Kroger, W, OTST^Pearl, will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Bur- win-follow in QxfON. CcraS- of Troy; three sisters, \Evelyn’ltery and Iva, both of Troy, and. Mrs. Robert Gamble of Utica; a broth- er, Lee of TYoy;.and i child. ; MABEL SHECK Service for Mabel Sheck of 122 Lafayette will be Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home.'- Burial will be^in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Sheck died Saturday. . Surviving are two brothers, Josiah and George, both of Pontiac; and. four sisters, Mrs. Wilma Lightfoot of San Fran-cisco, Calif., Mrs. Jane Scott of Keniwick, Washington; Mrs. Elizabeth Rice ofWaterford Township; and Mrs. Cora Skinfeer of Pontiac. j Mrs. Kruger died unexpectedly of shear t attack yesterday. She had been an employe of ^aftbnpl Twist DriB and Tw! Co.' :hester, and Industnal Ma-Products, Inq., Oxford. Iving are two sons, Mar-rtwig of Pontiac and Alfred Hirtwig of Attica; a daughter, MrsWern Brady of Oxford; | grsiMchlidreP; and three great-grandcljildren. MRSvWlLFRfa) ST. PIERRE washingtonVownship - Service for Mrs. Wilfred (Lillian) St. Pierre, 54, of 604ft Kittle will be 1 p.m. toRKHTOw\at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Rqqmo. Burial will'be in McCaffertj\ Cemetery. Mrs. St. Pierre died Frirta^ a heart attack. Her husband and a sister t KENNETH L. WALE, JR. Service for Kenneth L. Wale, Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Wale of 2062 Commonwealth was yesterday at the orta nr vanderver I -Hillmin Cemeterr HItam. Ar- ISS2SL312. -«»»ok, t. 3diy at 3 pm. at Ffcw birth Saturday* Surviving besides the parents are a'brother Keith L., at homer; and grandparents Mrs. Dorthea Fitzpatrick of Clare, Mrs. Nora Jones of Hillman and Bemeil Bergey of Mt. Pleasant. will be in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery by the Voorhees - Siple Funeral HomA. Mr. Vanderver', an employe of Pontiac Motor Division, attended First Assembly of God Church. He died yesterday following a one-month illness. " —JOHN C. DATT1CB-------------41---- TROY - Service for John C. »uylviu(| UUles lus -w4XeJ Battice, 53, of 3264 Lhrernois will.Mary P., are 10 children, Mrs. I be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Troy |J- D- Steward, James, Lonnie, Full Gospel Chapel. Burial wiU Marvin, Kathryn, Lacy, Grace, follow to Cadillac Memorial Gar- Pamela and Dpris, ail of Pontiac dens East, Mount Clemens. Mr. Battice died Saturday after a long illness. IBs body will be at the Price Funeral Home unti" .11 a.m.’tomorrow. Surviving are his wife Rjhel; two daughters, Mr*,' Kenneth 1 Snyder of Troy and Esther, at home; two sous, John C. of Clawson and Airman 3.C. Fit H., in the U.S. Air Force. Also surviving are two brothers, two sisters and sig grandchildren. * " WALTER G. EGGERS WALLED LAKE — Service for WaltAr Pr Emn.4tl. of 203 Charlotte, wifl bel pjp. tomorrow at the Richardaon-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will follow to Cadillac Memorial Gardens West; Nankin Township. J |______________JHHII A retired? nurse, Mr. Eggersti firm tm \ period of' ttotty iz»» tor*! died, unexpectedly Saturday. ^ p Tbo poard of Education reserves thR Surviving are five daughters, to°k!teehX Mmafi Mrs. Peggy.Spear and Mrs. Irene the win. and Patricia of Burchtree, Mo.; two brothers; and three grandchildren. Advertisement for sms .Hie Board of Education of the Walled. Lake Consolidated Schools ’will sealed blda for Vie drilling of at the Administration Building. Pontiac Trail and Agnes md, Waited Lake, Michigan for the Waned Lake' Consolidated Schools until »:00 pm. BBT. Monday. August M, IMS. at ths office and Airman 3.C. ~ TKT at whicn time and place/aB Mdr til ba publicly opened and load aloud. Separate proposals win be raealTsd as follows: Bass Bid "D"—Drilling af a WeU ala must be on forms furnished Architect and be accompanied H _____I bond or certified check ' amount of flee percent (*%: "* g posal submitted. Plans and specification* mar be obtained an end after Thursday, July 25. MSI at the office of the ArchlteetTtinn Smith Associates. Inc.. N4 South " Hoad, Birmingham, Michigan. Accepted bidders will ba required to furnish satisfactory performance Bend and Lnbor and Material Bond, each In amount of 1M4 of the contract, tbs , 4 cost of which shall ba paid by the accepted bidder. . , A|1 proposals submitted shall remain MaoDermaid, both of Walled Lake, Mn. J o a n Norton ofi Wlxom,' Mrs. Bernadette tem-mon and Mir. Matilda Pember-| Board M Education Waited Cake Consolidated Schools 111 north pootlae Trait Waited Lake, Mtohlgan Mr. Richard *. MUoa. . Becrotary. Jnl. da end A usual 1. MU TWENTY-FOUR it£ i' if i m 1• | gw i ^ THE PONTIAC FRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1938 She Starts Him in Summertime ' - $ : t ... ' >■ , * ....... * , / . .. . . Wise Mother Helps Johnny By ML LESLIE J. NASON It's • wise mother Who starts now to work with Johnny on his arithmetic. “But this isi stffl vacation,’1 Johnny says, quite logically. Mother’s answer, j ust logical, is that Jfl 1 be starts now he will be able to] • d* hi*_____ faster and during the com- DR. NASON ing year. Studying fifteen minutes a day during August can makrihe difference between success and fail-ure at the end of the semester next February. a little extra training, even though schools in general are doing a good. Job of helping pupils understand number factors and relationships. Two simple procedures will help Johnny speed up oirhhTimm;1 her work. First, he should learn to writ* down the problems neatly, accurately and rapidly. AD it takes is a little practice on his part (and a lot of insistence on his mother’* part). ,' She should see to it Alt He holds the pen without cramping his fingers unduly, and that, he is reaUy trying to Improve. Five minutes offoisa dty wtH makc his arithmetic papers look better (don’t underestimate the value of this) and improve their ap- wasn’t bom slow, but no one ever happened to take the trouble to show him'hot* to do his arithmetic faster. Many children need Second^ he c&n speed up Die thinking processes used in the addition and multiplication of numbers. JACOBY ON BRIDGE CD) ♦ J 7 _ -WA74 ♦ K64J . AAQjiO 1ST EA8T 4k K 10 62 4A952 we* ft ♦ J 8 7 ♦ Q 10 5 2 AKIfl *8742 SOOTH 4Q84 WKQ10S8S2 ♦ A* 41________ North But South Wert IN.t. P«m IW P*u 4 W Pass 4N.T. PM* 5 W Pus 6 V Pus. Opening lead—W f ' By OSWALD JACOBY If you don’t approve of Die bidding of today’s hand you won’t have nn argument from me. The hand »«« instructed-hy Joae Le.. Dentu, a French writer as a problem in play. ut course, u West opens a / spade there is no fi problem in play,.) but West opens * fltfg the tilt of trumps. a At this point! South can make! the hand ^a^ainst ® I^L any defense and JACOBY ately for . your purposes East plays low.’ : You discard and West anas the trick with die king. Now if he leads a spade you go down’ two, but you1 have worked out a neat bit of camouflage. YoUr discard on the queen of dubs was the nine of diamonds. West is pretty sure that his partner holds ,ace^ It now appears thaft it is the ace of diamonds so be leads a diamond whereupon you take the rest of the tricks because you can discard two spade: clubs and one spade on the king of diamond^. • Q—The bidding has been: Baat South Wert North 1 ♦ 1W Pass 14 Pdrt S* Pass 34 Pau - T You, South, hold: 4* WAQJVI* *4 4AKS87 A—Bid fssr stabs. Yea have two very good sulta. TODAY’S QUESTION «*-Your partner continuu to lour spadea. What do you do now? Answer Temonew The slow student thinks “9 plus 6 equals 15.” This consumes a full second, The fast student sees the problem as a single unit, a combination of 6 and 9, and knows instantly that the answer Is IS. Nothing but the 15 registers ip his mind. This knowing probably consumes less than a hundredth of~H-aecond. And It pays a dividend: accuracy. The slow process sometimes lead to error. The bowing Ja always Whether a child has been, la .the fourth or the eighth grade, the following exercise will help him if he has been slow in arithmetic: --—— Start with duplicate pages of simple problems, like: *-r—t I --------1 »-----—|— ' 9 Is to allow nothing to enter his mind except the answer, v Ha should be able to recite the answers as fast as he can talk. Any hesitation indicates a combination that be does not really know. He has had to stop and figure it out. A little practice can remedy, this, Try having him ready the problems from foe bottom to the top of the page as well as from top to bottom. As soon as this Is mastered, the student should write instead of say for answers as fast as mamm thinking procedure' B o t h knowh^ and writing the answers must be amWrfd Once the addition of single pairs of numbers has been mastered, foe same sheets of numbers can Mother holds one sheet (with the answert .written in if necessary), the student holds the utherrThe“*tudent is cautioned not to talk to himself by thlnKIhg foe procedures through silently. He is to look at a pair of numbers' and know the answer. He the requirement should be that the student know the answers without resort to a labored thinking process. Dr. Nason’s booklet on ‘‘Help Your.. QUld Succeed in School’ can ba obtained "by sending |1 to him in care of TTie Pontiac Press. AS Wiiifwiiw OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy “You should have Come to the^&rty, Cinderella. You won the door prise!” BOARDING HOUSE I will devote tomorrow's article to this double dummy play, but the first problem is to find out the best fine of play if you are actually at the table playing the hand normally. > If East holds foe king.of dubs you can make 12 tricks easily, [ so foe normal play is to lead] dummy’s ace of clubs and continue with the queen. Unfortun- Astrological Forecast j .* » # | hb<5 A 00/000.^ / ® 3 ) * ' 1 J J ra | X - 1 • ■ -rm. By Erpie Bush miller . . . Mnbn »•>« way." ARIES offer. 11 to Apr.- 11): Best course today biturn caution, quiet — SaP— ' ““— — -* —■"* 'TAURUS (Apr.*a«n& May to): Mach In your favor. Whether yon (at pends an wtoirtato to taka sfiMM Explore area Which yon find exciting, Challenging, Tou hare ability to lr non life into “dead” projects by c Uve Imagination! JMBW y itiSSttlEpiSK TO-WONT TtN ft IliM mmsm/M hfmume •—ijdus jqurdw syuMsws T04H0OT 130 ONLY COMINQ AUGUST 14th "WIST SIDE STORY" Truffles are a fungus fruit that grows a few inches to a foot deep in the ground. A small, black, warty tuber the truffle is prised by gourmets the world over. It If used mainly as a sea- By BOO THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD — It was just a year ago today that die news flashed around the world: Marilyn Monroe was dead. ★. 'it She had died alone In a Brentwood bungflow, her lifelong insecurity apparently having driven bar to a fatal dose of sedatives. Duo to length of program Shown 9:20 P.M. -ONLY Bette DawsITJoan Crawford 'mmmm TbBBrJMgr ~ Shown 7:10 P.M. ONLY jacKiemmon adieeBemiCK “Days of wni anoRoses”! She was 36 and still the world’s most famous blonde. No event in recent Hollywood, history had caused a greater] out-pour ingof jgoMAS words on the newswires. Now, a year later, fffr* rymeTni In the public COD-sciousness. Poets write odes to her. Artists 55 DAYS AT PEKING SUPER TECHNIRAMA' TECHNICOLOR^ I ““ I I* * Dl IIC 01/V DRIVE-IN THEATRE I * BLUE OM 332-3200 | ’jL* aiickludO^oi 2 weeks in I another 7biwil CydCJharteae .cm mascot.. MfmoCOUM I Suicide at 36 Marilyn Monroe—Dead 1 Year have found her tragic figure a subject for paintings. Essayists bays died hear as a symbol of today’s bitter search for success. A full-length- feature composed of scenes from most of hpr movies is playing In theaters across the country. A biographical documentary has played wid replayed bn television. Rereleases of hfer film* have had niccess, especial. V HOTTER NOW Curious as if* sounds,” said a movie magazine editor recently, “Marilyn la hotter with our readers now than she ever was alive.’’ Today’s anniversary will find her crypt at Westwood memorial Park decorated with floral sprays. But at other times there has been no unusual observance of her passing except for the six red roses wmeb. Joe DiMaggio onterea in perpetuity. ^ —-..★...★...*..... We’ve had no unusual influx of visitors,” reported a cemetery attendant. “There are more visitors right now'because ot the 2 Ohioans Jet i tourist season, but that is normal; • ^ 1 .. yy a tot of people always come from, ifi 47 Hours NEW YORK (UPI) — Two Cleveland, Ohio, businessmen claimed the record for an around-the-world trip by com-mercial planes last night when they Jetted into Idlewfld Airport 46 hours and 54 minutes after “they left it. , The two, Sam Miller, 41, and Louis Fodor, 38, wound up their 20,000-mile journeymen their Northwest Orient Airlines Jet touched down at 10UI2 p. m. (Pontiac time). ' it. :★ ★ In the airborn marathon, they beat by almost five hours the old record of 51 hours, and 45 minutes, which they said was set by Milton Reynolds, San -Francisco, in January 1960. Miller, vice, president and treasurer of the Forest City Material Co., a lumber firm, conceded that the trip waa “a ! crazy idea” when they took off at 11:06 a. m. (Pontiac time) Saturday on a British Overseas Airways Corp. Jet for London. warm motet smile and the dancing.eyes. But there weft Other times that only a few close friends ever saw, when she-was stricken with doubt and despair. She must- have hit one of those times a year ago. Lawrence Welk's Son Fair After Autd Crash SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)-Lawrence Leroy WeUc, 23, aon of bandleader Lawrence Welk, was reported in fair condition today at a hospital where he to being treated for head and hand injuries suffered in an auto collision. v" ' . Bfi ★ ’★ ’ t ‘ Police said young Welk: was alone in his car Saturday when it skidded ^nd hit an auto driven by James T. Callahan, 33. Callahan and his passenger, Caprice Workman, 19, also Were hurt. The Arctic Ocean te about one- ‘ xth the size of the Atteatic Ocean. ‘ LAST 2 DAWS TUUDAY* THE INTERNATIONALLY ■ ACCLAIMED MTU DARRYL F. ZANUCKS THE ■■i_______ jLoAs/&esr\ DAY fcw•. »• «m* ty co*mivs fttut q ,* NEW ★ AIR CONDITIONED HELLS THEATRE ROCHESTER 01 1-8311 Box Office Opua 7r30 PJW. — out of town in the-summer to visit relatives who me buried here. With * year intervening, it might be more possible now to assess Die legend that Marilyn left behind. It-seems-inevitable that she would he a star. Never before had so many rich and diverse ele-! ments combined to produce excitement and appeal. There was the saga of her or-phan upbringing. The rise mtm chorus girl’to star. The aura of romance and the three marriages -the cop, the baseball immortal, the playwright Her physical attributes need no elaboration. As for her acting, it was more than sufficient for what she was required to do; she even developed into an accomplished comedienne. She could be delightful company in her. moments of elation. Her public face was always with the Hart Backs Rights in Reunion Speech DETROIT IB - Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., urged support of President Kennedy’s civil rights program in a speech te a reunion of the 4th Infantry Division Saturday night. Hart, a lieutenant-colonel in the 4th during World War II said, “Those of us who tyave been un- -der enemy fire know that- that fire was color-blind." Hart said, “The bitter truth is that some Americas called Into the service of their country find 4n some sections of this land that they cannot-even get a cup of coffee on the way to the station.” Shipbuilders con-structing ships for export must: get, according to government reg-j ulations,-a 20 per cent down pay-. mpnt and payment of the remain-! der -ter installments oyer eight years. . , •....: -.. Planning A New— HOME! Visit the exciting ISIS IDEA HOME of Oakland County OPEN 2to 9 ,2902 Shown** Lan* At Walton Blvd. Jay no Heights Beauty’Rite Hom es * OFFICE FE MOTS OPEN Mon., Thurs., Fri. TIL 9 PJA FREE DELIVERY S. SAGINAW ST. Opon tonight Till 9 l».M. 4 COMPLETE FLOORSoTMOME FCMISHIIS Provincial • Cotonlol • Traditional • Modern - Ail by America'. Leading Monufadureral KR0EHLER DELUXE 3-PIECE SECTIONAL All cushions.are foam filled for solid comfort. Select from beautiful 100% nylon covert. All suites hav* reversible zip-off covers. Choose -from a wide selection of beautiful colors. *329 Value Terms To Fit Your Budget WARD-WAY BUDGET ELEVATOR — : '/ **1*"7f '• • No Inltrttt --- ALL FLOORS • No Carrying Char** • Make Payment! At Owr Store family sizfe 9-Pc. Dinette Group Beautiful FORMICA top table with sturdy bronze tone or chrome legs.- Complete with eight (8) shaped back chairs in durable vinyl. Your choice, of colors.7 A *119 Value **Ydu Mutt Be SatUfied—This We Guarantee! 17-19 S. Saginaw IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST^ 5, 1968 MARKETS ^ The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by tbe noon Friday. - Product Apple!, Duchess ....................*3.00 RaHy Continues -Union Supports Mad Disregards *Blue ' '60 MPlan ___ i t__________ ^ NEW YORK (AP)—The stock announcement ol favorable July continued to rally e*ly sales figure arid advanced a Detroit Bureau oi marneis -s or #hU \ With the way cleared tor its ao-r quisition by FMC Oprp., American Viscose opened with a gain ® of 4 Vs which later was pared to this, afternoon in moderately sc- p tive trading. ' The advance was a carry-over « from Friday. e It was the’ second Monday in a a row that prices have advanced 3; block of 30,009 shares, and Mac-Donnell Aircraft picked up 1H on a block of 34,000. Jones & Laughlin advanced a point while other major steels were up about half a point Rafter a series of 14 “Blue Mon- Investors apparently were en-“• “Icriurapd by a forecast that steel \ ■ 2 [orders will improve withllt a few : AMiweeks and a report that cohsun-iiS -ers’ installment debt increased ; J;5o in June. average of 60 stocks at noqri was.-up .7 at 269.6 with industrials up tl, rails lean Stock -Exchange. Trading Aih>»aosi included Unanimous Vote Cast for Retirement Options Rank and file members of the ’toher JRndw-pImil IjmaIi iiW HUF today unanimously voted to back the “60 Now", plan of earlier retirement for Auto workers. Cobbogo! tM. W /-//-............... Cabbage, sprouts, bu.............. • l.» Cabbage, standard, bu. ........ * Carrots, do». bch. ........... Changes of hey issues ranged from fractions to a point or two. Motors, steels, rubbers, mail order-retails, utilities, chemicals, rails, oils and tobaccos advanced. Chrysler was very active after ______________________. ¥> H [up .3 and utilities up .4. Y Prices moved up steadily after affirm opiHffiiglmff were at\ their »st levels around mid-day. A Stocks of financial institutions were particularly active, postin fractional gains. \ Bristol Myers was unchanged. 8J.W*** after announcing a dividend irv g*jjf sjijg • crease and a proposed 2-for-l nr nv«r .! Stock split mTow IT Lockheed advanced % on a Aj™du, Kirby Petroleum, New Mexico & Arizona Land, Occidental Petrol- -President Gerry Kehoe said the - eum, Syntex and Yale Express Corporate and U.S. Goveramnt bonds were slightly tower, American Stock'Exch. NEW YORK (AP) — Amtricon Stack , >1.3 Mead John ...S3. . 4 6 Mohawk Airl . 5 42 4 Muik P Ring . It. 11.2 NJ »aa ...... >1. 67 Page Bn- .... U. 1.1 Bherw Wm to.3 Bonotonw~... S 6 6 Teehatoo ...II. members followed the recommendations of the local’s execu- plan last Wednesday. It is also the first Pontiac area local to take a stand on the proposal. The resolution calls for an industrywide option of retirement after 25 years at half pay, 36 years at two-thirds pay, or at age 60 with a minimum of double benefits. Wirtz, Rails Confer -';.4,.. y;-.. • ILg '/,; to Spark New Talks WASHINGTON (AP) f^Secre-tary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz calls (n railroad management and union representatives today in an effort to spark a new r o u n d of negotiations on the strike - threatening work rates dispute.’ With a nationwide rail tteup in prospect Ang. 29 unless <3on-gress acts or a settlement of the fonr-year-old jobs dilemma CHICAGO (DPI) - Tension tive board, which endorsed the mounted on. Chicago's South Side sions was on the 6600 block of OnUuu, green, I 10 lb. ......... , bch. pickling, lb. ... ......., Parsley, curly, .bch. ... .. . Parsley, root. bch. ............ Peppers, cayenne ............ Peppers, hot ........... Peppers, sweet — Potatoes. » lo. bag ... .. ..... Potatoes, new, SO lb. bag . Radishes, .red ............... Radishes, white ............... Squash, Acorn, bu............... . Squash. Italian. % bo. ......... Squash, Summer, (4 bu............ Tomatoes, hothouse. I lb. bsk. . Tomatoes, outdoor .............. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API—Following 1. _ „ of selected stock transaction* on Um Now 2 York Stock Exchungo with 1:30 p. m • prices: —A— fhds*) High Low Last Ckf MW 106'4 106*. ♦ % LETTUCE AND SALAD GREENS celery cabbage .. ........... »2 ' Endive, bu. — Endive. bl( Escarole. b_....... Eacarole. bleached Letlues. Bibb. pk. Lettuce, Boston, .dc Lettuee. bead. bu. . ■ Lettuce, head. doe. Lettuce, mt, bu. . Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY -DETROIT, Aug. 6 (AP) — Prieoi (mid .g«|r pguyd^at pjstrbtt lor No. 1 Quality ■ Broilers and fryers 3-4 lb! white! M-10. Comment: Receipt! very Ught, Trad-tng confined to a lew fryers. Weekend clearancee generally good. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT. Aug. 6 (AP) -- E|« paid per dooen at Detroit by fit 32ty; medium 25-23‘yi small lg.: check Comment: Market unsettled. P unchanged to mostly two cent! u Demand for lar*or_el»o! slightly moved but movement of medium imaueiow.. ~ ~ 7 CHICAGO BUTTER,AND EGGS CHICAGO, Aug. 5 (API—Chicago 1 can tile Exchange—Butter steady, r - sale buying prices unchanged; 03 AA 07%; OJ A 57%: 0TJ1 58%; MW; cars 00 B 57',. 89 C (7. ( bigs steadier; wholesale buying prices Unchuged to 1 higher; 70 per cent or .•better grade whites 31; mixed 31; me-odiums 28; standards MW; dirties 26W; checks 35. CHICAGO POULTRY —Chicago (AP) pHPA) .xm .............WSm : Wholesale HICAGO POTATOES > UP> - (USDA) - . MM II; on Track 100; total U.8 for Friday 184; Saturday 122; nA second proposal ado that “the current pension be at least doubled* and full survivor benefits be established." GAINS SUPPORT Kehoe said Buick and Chevrolet locals at Flint haye already approved the resolution. After the plan gains more local support, ft Will be decided at the regional, company and international union levels, he explained. Executive boards of Local 653, Pontiac Motor Division, and Local 694, GMC Track and Coach, are scheduled to review the retirement plan Wednesday. If passed on,-and union officials expect favorable action, memberships of the two other locals will vote on it Aug, li. ★ ir Andy Wilson, president of Local 594, said demands for federal legislation to reduce the social security age level to 60 will accompany union demands. scheme’ is similar to the ‘60 Now" movement which was advanced, at the last United Auto Workers convention, but failed to gain enough support, Trade Slow, Mixed in Grain Activities Bulk _oi , supply ~«f»»»f»Ge^^M belteri. predominance of choice MM tat early run; Holstein steers and helteri In large supply,; cows In moderate sup ply; steers and heifers steady ;pa^^^oiNttw^06iWi. active] full]r »0| | -cento higher than last Bwirsdari 11 headJ Mixed Ugh chaleo to prime L150 steers 36.00 several loads high thplee prime 1.000-1.100 1b steers 36.75; most ' choice steers 34AMMO food choice steers 33.50-34.60 few fiSora 23-23.75 good il.00.23.00: ■ selects up 13-16.60. •1 Hog! 700. Barrows and down steady to _ — . heavier welrtto and aowe ttojjdyj U.S. 1 200-225 lb barrows and gilts 18 60-18/35, f und 3 100-235 U U.36-M.6p; 2 and i 100-260 lb 17.50-16.26 3 and 3 260-300 lb 17-17736 OS. 1. 3 •~J 14.25-16.00 ; 3 and 3 13.75; ‘ CHICAGO (At — Trade was low and mostly mixed in the ....grain futures market today in t * early transactions on the Board 7 ‘*j showed little change although aoybeana again were firm -Soybeans posted gains of well over a cent a bushel within the first several minutes bat steadied somewhat at that level as demand slackened. Dealers said offerings appeared to be light. Sqme of the support was credited -to speculative accounts.' ' ___ . M Wheat showed firmness but 7 Alcorn was .viftoally unchanged 4th- again today with reports that another Negro family planned move iqto a neighborhood where violence has flared- for a week. * w ’ Elsewhere on the South Side, integrationist picketing resume! in a neighborhood where the schobi board is attempting to in-‘ mat. Negro groups have charged that the mobUes foster a policy of “de facto segregation” in the schools. The pickets, pins spectators, totaled 150 persons, police said. Last week, pickets at the site lay down in the mud and police had to haul them away. There were no "lay-down" demonstrations at the start of today’s picketing. . South Morgan street, where tumultuous crowds have demonstrated for a week against the move-in of Negro .families into ^ previously aH-white neighborhood. MORE ARRESTS Thirty-five more arrests were made in the area teat night, persons »7* the Stressful 4 Investing * to invest. All her living costs are taken care of, but she would iflke a few dollars of her own each month tor spending' money; I thought that a check regularly, no matter how small, -would give her a feeling oftodependence.Whatcan yon suggest?”—*W.R. —^ • • A. I think ynur mother is extremely fortunate to have a son so obviously devoted to her you are. • I believe she should buy.two stocks that pay monthly dividends. My first suggestion is Winn-Dixie Stores, ‘a very successful Southern food chain, I advise her to put half her money in this situation--which- would--buy 72 shares and pay her about $6.50 a month. I would put the balance into 32 shares of Republic National Bank of Dallas, Texas, an aggressive bank in an expanding territory. This would bring her totai for spending money up to III a month. * —■;..—...★. _ - W ...'■ Q. “I have read in yonr column that it is nnwise to 1 Hie city’s focus of racial ten- bringing' the total of picked up in the area during the week to 227. Police hoped the worst of the violence was at an end, but stepped up their alert upon learning that a third new Negro family planned to move itv later today, ' . -A fourth Negro family has been kving in the area for some months. As they had on previous nights police moved in quickly last night ‘ien a crowd of youths, began gathering at an intersection Jq . the previously all-white neighborhood where three Negro families moved in last week. Scuffles resulted. One youth attempted to take away an officer’s gun. Police turned 14 juveniles over to their parents and booked 21 adults oi) disorderly conduct charges. Later last night,' above 'five blocks away, two black powder over thft weekend with manage-<* ment and union representatives. Asked last night if any Inove toward agreement had devel-oped, Reyhoids shid “not—s yet, BO,4 stpt. .. ..-r.. i.ii% Dfc ^ date vour advice.” P colo p ir >o u [CBS 1.40b 37-34' itondard and good 33-37; cull and ■^Aheqy- MB. Sluiuhter atoads; 2.75T O good lift! 1.9W ids mounwwij ’ -tttak; over 1.300 :b» raUier *low it«Ady to 25 lower: hei(eri Go* mo«tly iteady to a lower; ‘ now fully 25. off: cow! a toady to weak; bull* iteady; load ir prime l.iM lb alaufilter dwiMM nixed-' choice ■ and. prime 1,100-1.350 lbs 35.00-26.60; nearly a doaen loads at 2S.M. choice 000-1.266 - lba 3MMIJ6: crp. ............. Bln-DIcator ......... |Braun Engineering ........ {Charles -of the Rita ..... 'Detroiter Mobile Home! . |Diamond Crystal ...... ... iPrlto-Lay, Inc. ...... ... iMcLouth Steel Co. ... Maradel .Produets ........ [Mohawk-cRubber Co Ich. Seamless Tube Qo' ■■ PHll&ce ....: ... Printing ..... .... », Santa Pe Drilling ...... iVernor s Glnget Ale'...... .Wlnkelmaifs .... ...... Wyandotte C •mlcal bnrrtlAL FUNDS .14.70 16.15 e^ibftfkla year, an accumulative issue • wuni C % dividend! In anwanV p—Paid this. year. !u .Af*' + 1% dividend -omitted- -deferred or no betion' ... ,|taken at last dividend meeting, r—De-In 1962 Plus sfock ' flri- .........__,.'ldgend9^P-a’5I:■’» 'ibutlon dale. lea. in full:' .. -ailed. I—EO dividend, v—Ea.Wvi- “ ‘1 Hi x-dK-rEx dlstrtlM- DOW-JONES NOON AVERAGES CHICAGO OEAIN. >. Aug. 1 (AP) 1.81%: No. 3 red I — -.95-96: No. 3 yc___ No. 1- .yellow 1. ■“%: 'No. -3 —— ivy' white wins* or; /*- •—" No soybeai .—Nok> Moif* .01%: Ho. prev. Day . ,n"w hard week Ogo . Vii%;.Month Ago ; ■r‘_°.'...3- 1963. Hiteh ... . 377.2 142.0 140.3 I .. 376.1 143.3 140.0 i . 371.5 140.5 144.0 1 ;. 388 2 ] Ml J is reached, the Labor Department i« keeping the heat on the two sides, trying to propel them toward hard bargaining. -Wirtz offered suggestions “relative to the key ussues" Friday night - there has been rio public disclosure of their nature - and he and Asat . ^ -—1— Student Faces Ouster for Talk. at Racial Rally MONTGOMERY, Ata. (AP) -The Montgomery Advertiser says University of Alabama officials are considering expelling James A. Hood, a Negro, because of statements he allegedly made at a Negro rally. University officiate gJt/ Tusca-loosa confirmed ~that an investl-gation is under way. / :---^0 V .; 4 I A story in the Advertiser’s Sun-day editions said that Hood addressed a Negro rally July 18 in Gadsden, wherri /racial - demons strations'have been going on for several Weeks. The story said Hood strongly criticized Gov.-George C. Wallace, said that university officiate tried to trick him into a situation calling tor/his expulsion, and con- a” Si p jSl S5 R i tended that a university professor «;o ni oe.s oi.o might be fired because he had|lou low -- - -given Ifood and “A.1” }^22 The uniinis — which claim .the jobs are needed for safe and efficient train operations — have pledged In *trik» m soon ps this.... •ha^wrre."* -; it : * Last week the Senate and House commerce committees completed hearings on the President's plan. They will begin their deliberations later this week. The cantos 'have- endorsed turning the dispute over to the Commerce Coinmission; the unions are vigorously opposed to the proposal DOESN’T WANT JOB Yesterday, Commission Chair-itian Laurence K. Walrath said his agency can cope with the dis-pute, but doesn’t want the job and is willing to take it only because he can’t think of anyone who could do it better. “We are prepared to accept it if the Congress agrees with the President that that is the proper solution," Walrath said: He added that the Commission’s experience in settling job-security issues during mergers and consolidations gives it a background’in techniques, procedures and personnel that could be used in the'rail case. -AsketL J£_the ICC Is “ist nil happy over this new arrangement," Walrath replied: “Not at all." But, he added: “If I could think of anyone who could do it better I would certainly be suggesting it to th$ Congress at this moment." Still Ind. Util. Fin. L. YD Net Change --.1 +.1 ... .... H 4 ino l oto oo i Kf 00.7 iil______0L3— .....Ykntiod' under tbe Bankruptcy!BONDS 6r iecurities auumod br -iueh coin-! 40 Bond! «...... jlnlereet. j:t—Certificates.110 Higher grade ri . Ww+o-ooi. 1.4O.SO+0J4| 252.76 r 1.06 uM m $ Sit: %5^' IS SEaS*.::: : 64 00 oo AtVo.i oo.oi 03.30 r.. i Inv 111 . r;lsr ju SV Pi jpf . - Bear* Rook ..... CONFERENCE — An international-advertising conference took place lyhen E. Colin Barber (center) of Melbourrie, Australia; advertising director of General Motors Holdens, Ltd., visited __ ____ MacManus, John & Adams, Inc., Blooiqfield HUte. Colin H, segimlaol*^ rie«»rA oUe Join (right), vice president arid Pmitiac Motor Division account supervisor, displays an adverfisement while agency- President Ernest A-'Jones .watches. Jones firsf met the General Motors 'Jo" n i ji |o4 executive when on a speaking tour of Australia last year. * 1 Anny Scraps Rotation Plan WASHINGTON (A - The Army to acr»ppinf Its experimental pro-grant for rotating battla-group size outfits on six-month tours of duty In Europe. The termination of the program. announced in‘July 1992, apparently will bring back to the United States two battalions: the 1st of the 23rd Infantry end the j»d of the Mh Infantry. The three, other abroad far six months were the fantry, the 1st Battle Group of the 38th Infantry and the 1st battalion of the 9th Infantry. A brief announcement Saturday said the program - called “Ro- taplan” -n- w»« being Hrnpp*^ “because it generated considerable personal turbulence and did not produce hoped for” redaction in the spending of dollars abroad. In a previous experimentrt-. gun in IKS, the Army rotated hill divisions overseas. The idea was abandoned in 1959. TWE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST a. 1963 twentv-skvrn "Marriage Licenses ad Oladys Douglas H. Arnold. South Lyon__________ Nalda If. Retd, Soutii Lyon Stanley W, Bit wart, ftn Mott tad Donna A. William*, 071 Icottwood A Wen Q. Pettlbone Jr, Holly and Susanne ,M. Weaver, Highland Wlllltm J. Nlchol.oo Jr., Royal 0*1 •adHSr a. b*hi«r#n, Clarence C. Cassidy, Union Lake and ■baron A. Johns, Vnlop Lake Jeta ’l. Ooitschalk Jr„ 2732 Woodbine and Joan F. Smith. Detroit . John F. Findlay, Farmington and Carol A. Million, Farmington _ agjyjja. Jtepbloch,. Ptlea and Hasel R. MandUk. Walled Lake Thomas N. Tumor. Detroit and 3CV genla D. Morris. 43 City Lint ,aar^Jy Void**, Troyend Sylvia J. Jerald X. Darrol L. Juhl, Rochester and Bertha ' L. Todd, Rochester • Dennis W. Shermeta, Ann Arbor and MM* Menslng, Birmingham Daniel T. Berry. DaTlsburg end ley A. Lindsay, Clarks ton - John C, Noonan, Drayton Plains and Janice X. Oross, .Royal Oak Larry C. Bngler, Ortoovllle and 1 A... Whlnple, OrtonvHle__ _ ' ■ , Rohm X. Nielsen. Birmingham end «. Alice C. Bums, Royal Oak - "» y_ Donald C. Emmerltag, Franklin and Sum X. Brundage. Birmingham Meivta A. Joseph, Clarkston and Joyce - I. Oalllgan, Clarkston Roes A. Morphew, Milford and Marilyn L. Oerdy, union Lake Albert J. tophi, Rochester end Keren S. Barth, South Haven * Lewie H. Dental, Farmington and Bolen L. Stewart, Farmington Robert Dinkins. IS Wateut and AUio M. Hawkins, «53 Linda Vista - I Lawrence W. T**ker, Tsoy and Sharon i f. Tomko. Clawson ' Patrick H. Strahan Jr.. TN Young and - -Sally- A- -Strong,-311T Fernbarry Robert A. Frey, Drayton Plains and Halga H. Zahn, Drayton Plains Ronald X. Franks. 3M Lowell and! Shirley A. Jackson, 101 Ledyard Caryl* 8. Mead, Clawson and Dorothy M. Spies, Troy John R. Fischer,—371 Chandler and! Nettle J. -Kittson, Fayetteville, N.c. Robert J. Zewatsky, Royal Oak gnd| Sharon l&.tfMMn, Farmington David W. Sherman, 3538 Harmon and * - Olea C. Pox, 56 8. Anderson Boyd X. Daniels, 111 Seminole and Oloria J. Whitaker, 33 ijatitew Leonard J. Munson, 533 Howland and Willett* Young, set Luther John Ryslrlch, Birmingham and Mar-—~■ Birmingham Death Notices day. August Ith, at 1;M n,m. At L w£to.^:r,nl.tt,,7r:,00 lTr" WLLm, ji Co c s r 4, T Prank. 5433 Eorklay. Wat* Twp,: beloved infant, toe Luther and Darlene Kolloy;_____ £»Wr of John L.. Tlmcfov 17, Thomas A., Bonnie D. and Patrl-Ua KaUoy; doar gmadson of Mr. end Mrs. .Anthony My shock and Hr. aqd Mu WiniilMliiili Funeral service wee hold today ill. Furiley Funeral Hor1-it 10:00 kffl, with Rev. L| Harmon offlclathw7JWBh«5» Waterford enter. Babyland. / rangementa wart by D. E. Fi aley Funeral Home. UET OUTvOK DEBT i^BSe? s^Rvfcf i'ay Off Your Bills — without n loan — _P*ym*nte tow aa *10 Wk Aty Adjustment Service -I.W, Huron FE 5-0201 HYDROBATH FOR FOOT Amaral service will be sL‘:: ___ I IB with Rev. Robert J. Hudgins Funeral Home, dear moll Marvin a August 7. at 3:0ft p.m. w Fred _rtark ^officiating i Oxford Cei will lie In s ineral Home. OWENS. AUOUST ton, 450 Irwin St ; age husband ot Grace 0W( tether- of Mrs. Joyce Lorraine Daniels: dear brother of Mrs. Ann Williams, Mra. Addle .Mosley, Mrs. Era Mae Griffin, Mra. Dovl_Hunt, James Coleman,_ 8w____ . ,____ „— — ■“eld Wednesday^ August Jf, netery. Mr W at Rank , Owena will lie l.. Carruthers Funeral CRVER. A1 f C„ »0 [ jeloved bust-. Vanderver; dear 1______JVM J. D. Steward, Mm MWIi Marvin. Patricia, Kathryn, I — Grace, Pamela and Dons 1 ver; dear, brother of. Floyi Rufus Vandever; also surviv three gr*Mol|jartn. Fun--------- service WuL be held Wednesday, August T, at . 3:00 p.m, at ~-A Asaambly of God Church Rev. Arnold Q. Hashman < a ting. Interment In' Ferry Fare Cemetery. . Mr. Yam,_______ will lit In state «t. the Voorhees-Slpla Funeral Home until Wednesday morning at which • time he win bo taken to tho church tel aarvlce. ---------------' MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 1M Pontiac ^Stata Bank Bldg. Bpnttken oldest and Largest Budget Asalatance Company D. E. Pursley Dpnelson-Johnis ..eoAfs^- a FUNERAL HOICK URAYTON PLAINS " - OR 3-7757 HUNTOON Voorhees-Sipl© *®riSi^aftfD« FUNERAL BOMB FX 2-5371 MMMlIMrifc EataBUshed over 40 Year* SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME Thoughtful Senfloo" EXPERIENCED .SINGLE MAN FOR SSSSSt------------- Csmststy LsH-1 Bergey. Qraveaide service held .Sunday afternoon at the __ man Cemetery, Hillman. Michigan. Arrangements by Lewis E. wlnt Funeral Home, Clarks'— To Buy, Rent, Sell . or Trade . Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS Office Hours 8 a m. .to 5 p.m. - Cancellation Deadline 9 a.iQ7 day fifitowiiig - first insertion ... LOST: LADY'S YELLOW GOLD, Fisher Body aorvloo watch, •vavas - with name on back, -Milo Frl. evening 'near *33 a Xfglrieh. _____ s. Phlllipa, william J-. -K_^-............. ..... Huron and Jacqueline J. Davidson, g v n. uuuiii, union i A. Karr. Willed Lakt " .Decker,^ Royal I “------------- {lrmingbft and fttJ_______________PM - Rebecca J. Wagner, Birmingham LmUa X. DeGroat, La*--Alta Bennett, Lafcg Orion , Felix W. Pr|nce, Orand Blanc and '-Mary L. Feley, Holly , . ^ John B. Baxter, 5T1 Third ana M. Foe. 333 N. Perry • • Kenneth F, _ Gatee. Southfield and Sandra E. Mullaa, Berkley David W. Middleton, Walled Lake and Delate L. Spencer, St. Clair Shores 1 Frank O. Llnhart, Walled- Lake and Phyllis Y. Besotte. Walled Lake . Thomas K. Sansom, Orchard Lake andl Janice M. Hoogetra, Lathrup Villa WwuTt. jeandotf. .33 M«------- Neoml Ottls, Walled Lake James L. VanWagoner, Oxford and Anita L. Haddrltt, Oxford Joe X. Garrett, 31 Cooper and. Barbara • —, 31 Cooper p. warren, Farmington end Murphy andl ■cats* READ THESE Classified Columns 3 GRAVES ttf WHITE CHAPEL. .Confidential. -----------------"SOTeSSeS; 739 Menominee. FE 5-7805.___________ BN AND AFTER THIS DATX XU gust. 4. 1963, I will not be reepon-slble for any debts contracted hi any other man myself.. Richard Ray Barrow, 4534 Midland. Dray-*ton Plains, 3" ' rOST. A SLEEK BLACK CAT 1 clnlty Rochester and 30 MUa R red collar. mulUple toes, rewa 310. Call MI 4-0M9 H A. Daniel, 6R 3-3088. U^AFTERTP.M Must have 3 men to work 4 hours per evening. Earnings of 850 week. Must be neat appearing — good- Worker. Start Immediately. Op*nlniaMamdamd||i^l«mdMnJ Inter* 3-0922, . r_____ No Experience Necetaar ATTENTION ,w* offer the right man' a | figure Income, new 1063 Butck, transportation, many other plus elite, no need In contacting us less you can furnish bond. If t rted, have wife at present ttm Interview. Contact Mr. Smith, 1 tlac, 338-0438 for confidential fa view appointment.. _ Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED 08 Rh Positive. *7 Rh Negative DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE U SOUTH CASS FE 4-9947 BORINO ’ Steady wore over: 18 MM8 Coolldge ar portunlty employe! dustrlee;lnc~MI 1- BRIDGEPORT, Bands, first and Journeymen only. schedule. Jered Kerahenbtun BOOKKEEPER-OFFICE MANAGER Must be capable.. of taking tell charge of record* tor several medium sired corporations, also bo familiar With NCR operation. Include resume and state salary re- -------------— s- 1 Mary Lester..A. and Sharon----------- Ntcktar JX~ Lyaeh. ■ Carol A. Hewitt, Detroit .Ronald D. Butt. Royal Oak A. Alfata 18. 3730 Iowa, Troy - I Richard' P. Tennant,. 250 State and JoanK. Rlddle.^Dr.aytnn IftaSia ' *“llflm^ Neebir T^y und Dallas A, Koslowsky. Clawson MACHINE NO. 3 ------- MARRIAOE8—8TDO HED ■ Daniel W.. Goober, 675 Calgari Bally J, Smagllnakl, 134 S. Johns John Rogers, Farmington and Virginia L. Ihrly,' ^Farmington George R. SchnTteho Qenevor Crist. Highland CAB DRIVERS—FULL OR PART Kriy WxwHd Wtoh AUTO MECHANIC, DIALER EXPERIENCE preferred. Tel. Larry. H44MI. Van Camp Chevrolet, - Milford, c ©US BOY Ted’s hevo an Immediate open lor a but boy on the night sh Must be II., Person returning, „ school In mb fall ,m*y apply, Ap- ^ RESTAURANT Woodward at Square Lake I Draftmans Assembler' AN EQUAL -OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER • ELDERLY 1 :EN AND WOMEN TO ___ ___downtown parking Jet. Excellent opportunity to be'" In business ter yoursw. No taveat-ment neceasbry. Apply Clinton and Lawronea across Consumers Power. control. Do you have In Income " Ea back onf Investigate'e-- EXFERIENCED SERVICE STATION atteMBllt, with mechenlfially and ---- ability. Salary plus commls- awntv at—tSm ~8: Telegraph EXPERIENCED MAH. IN APPLL '=■«# or water aoftener service itallatlon. Must have refartu er. 35 years. Apply bet. 3 ;.m. Crump Electric. >«M Aub n work. 343ft Dutton, Rd. MBCXANICTON machines, 14 lano establlsnment. Lakewood Lanes. 3131 W. Huron X3CPBRIENCBD AUTO M O BI L'X POLISH DETAIL MAN, APPLY AT MAM MOTOR SALES. 3537 DIXIE HIGHWAY Cy, benefit*. Writ* Pontiac ____ 56. Olvtax complete r kxfbriencxd sump and faint Orchard EXPERIENCED MUFFLER AND brake mta with own tools. 373 or-chard Lake. FOREMAN QUALIFIED TO HAN; secondary shop. with BAS and —w- ply by letter giving full background and salary required. Write Pontlae Preee, Box 28. i R B A T OPPORTUNITY WITS new company. Man 31 to 40 With .......: j 8H 3-4875 experience deslrabli GRILL COOK Morey’a Golf A CoOatry Club, 22*0 Union Lake Rd. off Commeyr-INSURANCE MEN WANTED, are lutsretted la owning tbel Sottcltere Inquiry Invited. Wo shame baoK tew unpaid. ----* Llcoln 3-3151. PIANO SALESMAN For our. Pbntlac Mall store. OUTSTANDING OPORTUNITT for man with a strong sales background in real Mtate, insuranco appliances, or silted Item*—Foi the r)gbt- ma» wr^Ifer: Hi •gttfttnt guarantee: (3L selei guldaniri, ill builneirTriainir tattoo: <4i. advancement oppor-tuntty; (5) better tllan average Income. Music background cnot. mandatory. Apply -Grlnnell Brothers, 363 N. Telegraph, Pontiac Mall and art for the manage KITCHEN HELPERS. WILL TEACH to cook. Morey’s Golf A Country Club: 2350 Union Lake Rd. Off Commerce ~ KfTCHEM HELP WANTED, MUST be II or over, neat and dependa-able„ no exp, necessary, apply In. person only Cracker Barrel Drive-In, 3051 Union Lake Rd. Commerce “ ‘ MACHINIST ALL AROUND MACHINIST—VERT-leal min’1 and lathe hand, who can plan and set up uhA with minimum g ye*— — — ence. We have steady amploy-ment and a challenge in machining research proto-typ* parts, to- close tolerances from high temperature plloy. Most openings are afternoon .shifts only. Contact - Williams Research Corporation - 3380 West Maple Road • Walled Lake.__________- Must r Merle. MECHANIC Must have Hydramatlc transmission experience and or good ‘— up man. Pontiac dealerihlp: have tools. 893-6268, Ask fr- * MECHANIC Day or night empieyinout,_ equipped modern shop. Blue Cro4e available, paid vacation, and group Ins. Sea service manager. Wilson Pontiac Cadillac, 1358 N, Wood-ward, Birmingham- MEN - IF Y ■ioo m m 3 WANT TO WORK. Hth Wi*H4 HUk glnaerlng, 83804 Nbvl Rtf. Novi EXPERIENCED ON ALL TYPM OF OOMSTRUCTION AND RE-MODELOfO WORK MUST El ABLE TO FURNISH BB8T OF REFIRENCBB — GAM COM-STRUCTION, 'Mil DIXIE HIGHWAY. WANTED ROOFERS WILL YOU WORE FOB tlMP! weak? 3 tody men needed I mediately. Oliver Motor Sales. writSaBt. - MOTOR DIVISION HAS OPENINGS —FOR — Automotive • Bfuly nraltamsus- TJeilperT Checkers Detailed Layout. Men WAITRESS EXPERIENCED. NEAT. fUtttUM.Ariernoem^mt.ftdayt. Apply^^at Encore Restaurant. Mir- WANTED 3 GIRLS, EXPERIENCED ---1 preeeers. experienced - isere. Apply Main Clea —i gllaabeth Lake Road, WOMAN TO CARE FOR CHILDREN _____ STEAL ____ Easton cleaners, 1118 Cooley taka Rd. FOUR to SIX Month Program with a possibility of permanent employment. EXCELLENT WORK ING CONDITIONS AND BENEFIT PLANS. Apply • - SALARIED Pfrsonnel Department "UKnW^d & Kennett ' Pontiac, Michigan ' Telephone 332-8111 ext. 664 or -585 FOR APPOINTMENT An Equal Opportunity COOK, EXPERIENCED, pins*, male preferred, ei 10 S.m. 731-8364. ENEROETIC COUPLE 1 WalpW—twiiiiinIa ~y .YOUR; CHILDREN SLEEP 8. or'more dollar* per hoi Earn' I. _____ demonstrating G * i COUNT ' toy* •"’ deliveries Qi ““—^CallcoUedt GArfleld KEnwooft 8-38*0. BABYSITTER _FROM 6 30 - 5:39. 5 daya FE 8-8212. HAR MAID. DAYS, NO EXP. NEC-basary, must be steady ahd dependable. references, apply In person Dell's Inn, 3481 Elisabeth Lake Road. , BEAUTY OPERATOR WITH OOOD following, call 549-0608 — 8-71*8 aft -------- CASHIERr HOSTESS CLEANING, IRONING 2 beautiful home, Bloomfield HUla. Own transportation. MI 4-4459 COMPANION FOR ELDERLY Udp, seml-lnvalid, near Waterford “cil?T . j_________rk only. OR 3-4748 bstwem COSMETIC OIRL AND CLERK, fuU time, experience OMPETENT, M1DDLJL AOED lady to live la, genoral housework and care of eblldten. FE 3-3138 between 9 a.m. and 13 a.m.‘ COUNTER AND REGISTER. OVER * Drive-In. Telegraph 24. Suger Chi CURB WAITRESSES Night shift. Apply Big Boy Drive In. 3480 Dixie Hwy. CURB GIRL. 1* OR OLDER. MAR--'ed jireferred. luper Chief Drive i. Telegraph near Dixie, IRIVE In. Telegraph near tfURB WArrttBiSEt. t ln. 87* W. Huron. DO YOU NEED EXTRA MONEY? $76.00 youra tar setting only 100 Fieri W—*— ==--- Bsly Wwittl Fswls KITCHEN HELPERS/ WILL TEACH to cook. Morey’s Golf A Country (Sub. 338ft Union Lnko Rd. OH Commerce Rd. meres R INABLt YOUNO JADY FOR a mature woman e manage *L Attractive , Pitt* overlde.______________ benefit*. Apply JMraonnel firm, with •' guarani FE 4-0103 Or FE 4-70Ju.. . MARRIED MAN WITH J CHILDREN work, experienced In punt* ___________ nlihti~wy7 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHIWU Yc W7IM. MONTGOMERY . WARDS Ponilac MaiP . T RUN SPARE TIME OREETINO Card-Olft Bhop, at home L Show friend, samples now 18(3 jar- ------ eelinx ioo% profit No experience nl._ ed. Try -Without coat 1 Special fund raising pinna ter orgSntxs- approval. Regal Greetings, Dept. 338, Ftrndale, Michigan. _______ T^LEtrifflON ADVERTISEMENTS] N'uligESe XP E RIENC ED LAB Ml' JEi wtr Jo* your ’'cett." Doctor's office. MA 4-3576, For high weekly earnings and - „..---z---t---=-—r; plcaaant interesting work, servic Building SSITfiCB—SllpplitS 13 teg waiting Avon customers call _---------------V— Box! 81®rWe Drttyton A-l BRICK. BLOCK AND CEMENT WAITRESS .WANTED. APPLY 5« S®? aid'baa^SSSfinder'^ewSt Work Wanted Milo HEAVY EOUIFIdENT OPERATOR. els, of dozers 3 d loaders, cranes and thov- Wonted Real Estarts CXSH BUYER , Haa up to II,OW«- <>—«■ lawood Realty YOUNO MARRIED 12 CASH 48 HOURS V LAND CONTRACT* _ HOMES --- -'ftafiiMB' W,RIGHT':. . 382 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9441 COMFORTABLE NEEDED All types- of. Real Eatalo, D have property to tell call u. hate in disposing of.it. No obU- - WANT TO SELL? GIVE UBfA TRY- WE NEED LISTINGS, action on your home or contra AUGUST JOHNSON , REALTOR'1':-'— MODERN COTTAOB ON RIYERi CLEAN ROOM-FOR MAN. 7 - . - W B-8418 - '•.'7 HOUSiKEEPINd DOUBLE 6h 8 I N O L ft Vfc»Y Urge^. Oentleman preferred. FR GIRLS. APfER 4 P.U............. FH 5-8814.____________ tier oftAN MOM Ata OEN-tleman. Private entrance. 3N Not- * »on. FE 4-4373, nJtBFDfO Uoom POR LaSV. teacher preferred; kltqboa privj-IMes If das trad, nlcanam*. 33ft- MODERN UPPER LAROE ROOM ‘sleXpino' room, nicely fur Jttshed. pvt", bath pad, entrance. Norton, 43 WAITRE88. NIOHTS. OVER II, experience nece*eary.^Apgj I Rd. FE 2-2981. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS AND "I worker. General cook. Ap- I IMMEDIATE OPENING Taylor, OR iVOlfAM WITH establiehed Watkins Route. Watttd Lake arc*. Make IB-83 pei I tor aetual time worked. 10 N. Perry. i:4»-*:3» a.m. riLK fnnspdt —alm^ driver ________ opportunity m earn 83 to 83 per hour selling Watkins quality products. Apply 150 North Perry, 8:30 to 9:30 - - Soles Help, MlbAMb M CONTACTING { Fan TED: SALESPEOPLE work' full time. Experience w~~ ferrad but will train. Plenty of leads and floor time. No phono -rUs for Interview, see Bob Hat Humphries Realty. 83 N, Telegi EmployRWt AfSHClil ' Immediate Openings. / For the Foilowitig ADDITIONS, REMODELING. CON-crete, masonry, carpentry, underpinning, basement underAres- j amt AND Wr. No obttgallonCALL OKORO* «»«d»WHh I BLArRRI^STATE L°V^ type HOME. OR 3-1708 •__privileges, exc. food. PE 6-70*0. WANTED TO LEASE WITH OPTION ROOM OR BOARD POit JOnTsS me5tUy Who'S? w'th0”^ W tehn^t FE 3-0*42 acreage to raise a few doxen chick- Rent StOTtt 11 ‘ “Mf-7 -------^— a need of repelr end loving c ___ Plenee tu CE-- WANTED: 1 EM 3-0020. I AND, 6 ROOM ifTL____________________ ______ -f.,- ■ - -----, —------ ..w. -An get cash for you. . store, with wall fixtures. In Avhriai irfSymw ------PAUL JONES RJALTY, rg,A^kffl gwwptng CenterrlfoiTii. mmR. -----FK-4fj4lO 1 ....... ■ Emil. tituGfar ft'-llMiBh- tiwDfviptfia, Dora ooop we«K: Apartinsnt*-FsrHishsd 37 - “J ” *““ ible pricey, general remodeling. CEMENT* WORK, At __________PE 5-8447 PLASTERING NEW AND REPAIR j - KINDS 1. SLEEPING^ ROOM 6LL UTILI- Rent Office Sysci 47 OOOD LOCATION AT BARGAIN. ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT. Ill,'forced to tell. Will take 18611 Gentlemen. Pvt. bath and *n- ear or 61,000 for equity of ft* ‘ PE 4-1886: -CT- 1 CLEAN ROOM, PRIVATE BATH, utilities, bus line. Quiet, neat, ----------- 3-3800. public Invited. Inquire a ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained men. Oeneral Printing A Office Supply Co., 17 W. Lawrence St. • FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- , 1ySttneSt81NiVly Dimwiie) 4 TiIMh 17 j DRESSMAKINO. TAILORING, AU teratlona, Mrs-. BodettT FE 4-8053, | EMODELING. TAILORING AND work.' Egria'Wa'fner.TE... t ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH, W. Hqron, at Pratt, near Oeneral Hos-pltal. Apply caretaker, ~ ~ ~” LARGE ROOMS. OROUND floor. Prlv. ant. Util. Gentleman. Convalescent—Nursing 21 2- 3-ROOM APARTMENTS. aSl PRI- 1 vate. walking distance. ■ ddernt- Economy Used Car Discount, 2 CLEAN ROOMS. CLOSE IN. 143 Moving and Trucking -A MOVING SERVICE. REASON- 3 ROOMS, CLEAN, ADULTS, NO able rates. FE 5-3418. FE 2-2909, drinkers ~~ * *•**_________ IT CAREFUL MOVING. -LO W 3 ROOM8 NICE, PRIVATE. ADULTS ralet,- UL 2-3999, 628-3518. I N,. End. FE ~‘““ £ LIGHT—HAULING. RkASONAH ,1 Bob’s Van Servic* MOVtNO AND 8TORAOB REASONABLE RATES CRT Tompkh Have Pickup PeIntiRg l Dtconrtiin 23 1 painting, interior and ex- Wrier, free estimates, dayi.. 113- •1 PECORATINO -PAINTtNO gs^i^csarassi^ " LADY interior decorator. FEMALE PLACEMENT PRESTON WALKER. SMITH 3*0 W. MAPLE. SUITE 121 Birmingham. Michigan 646-3663 BOOKKEEPERS Full charge — Also assistant Mutt have experience, alary ..........,ISgM3 Midwest Employment 405 Pontiac State Bank Building Receptionist . — *300 Type 80, Initiative, attractive, eayabl*. 1 yr. experience. Tramp. 1 year Exp. >6 t (keeping 36, Trami INSURANCE GAL ............ *300 “ " Experience mandatory Transportation Future. 80 t B & C PAINTING ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE 3-BEDROOM HOUSE-. OARAGE breeaeway. corner/lot. Upper Straits lake privileges, quick pos- ____BATH, UPPER. adulte ,$20. FE 8-8275. BEDROOM, 3 CHILDREN WKL- ROOMS AND BATH, HIGHLY furnished. ADULTS ONLY; — 5-6101 and eve. and sun. 1 BABY. WELCOME. EXTRA CLEAN. [EXPERT PAINTINd! DECOR/ OR 3-73 GRIFFIS BROTHERS Commercial—Residential Painting and decorating. OB 3-0048 B;i.. PAINIINO WORK — INTERIOR OR ~‘ rtor. TT. 4-8087 or FE 8-7717. PAINTINO AND PAPER HANGING. PAINTING WALL WASHING REA-tonable rate. FH 3-8008. ’AINTINO, PAPERINO, WALL washing. Topper,/OB 8-70*1, Television-Radio Servic* 24 HAVE 1 RADIO AND 7___________ REPAIR WORK DONE WHOM YOU SHOP Trained Service Men, __ prices. Free Tube Teetlng. Montgomery Wow . Pontl! CLEAN 3 ROOMS AND BATH. Adults only, 38 Liberty. Can be seen between 3 and 6 p.m. i llecfianla It, OR 348*8 DOUBLE OR SINGLE. VERY L_____________ Oentleman preferred. FE 4-1319. NEAT CLEAN BACHELOR APART- ment, no drlnfc-" •* 2-9755 or FE 2-46- NICE APARTMENT IN LOVELY home, pvt. "bath and entran heat, - hot water, laundrlette, nf—cupboards, must be ch considerate, nn children,_p middle aged or working couple preferred,. 2740 Judah Rd. Baldwin. FURNISHED PREFER BACHELOR OR WORK tag couple, FE r ‘ Aportmentt-Unfumithed 38 ROOMS. BATH. FIRST FLOOR. heat and hot water. TH E7435, ROOM FLAT, WEST SIDE. ~~illable lit Of Sept. 23 54421 o Pontlae. Prete B iton LEAVINO FOR_ DEXTER, «ho- 290 n. Faddoox---- I Alberta Apartments t ROOM EFFICIENCY "Faddbok1-—— ~ FlfUq APART. Keep-this ct*lgi with daily; UnjngCToTI areowan u. Haynea, *70 E. Walton and Laaryno M. Day. Otorinton Peter A. Enure, Birr1--1**-to Ball. ------- Snure, Birmingham and K»? ’’ Gerald ;i.. ’Sandusky, Roehaster and Oneda J. Patrick, 111 W. Brooklyn Paul R. Ruttorbuab. 133 Proa pact and your ftvorite model and make at competitive: Alvina C. Ooff, Battle Creek Kemper B. Racaake. Troy *»» — , E: Barrette. Royal Oak Clarence A. Jarvis, Oxford a^d Janet. L. Metaner. Leonard . ' - ] Kenneth Z. Termln. T-i’ia *«a T«rV«: “ornate and! mid Bruc* D^^tanley. Willed Lake and Jaoguattaa j. fCm^burg. Uvwda : Abraham McLarahmore, 180 Franklin —Cedlta T. Byri. 330 Hu«he* — ---1—^ jr., Troy tod THE MARKET NOW or soon to be • When in Oodbt UseJ^ast-Aeting^ Tress" Want Ads ‘ 'Dial 332-8181 • Pontiac Press /'AVaiit Ad/ • -• ■r--FOP *>«,- «/’TttiN—--/ ’ NOTICE « 4 • ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BY I P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. All error* should be reported Immediately, or no aertton. when cancellations your "KILL NUMBER.” No adjustments Will ha given Nancy | f. Brown.‘'Mllford ' - John L. Willingham. Rochester and; - Maty A. JPM’hA Rooheeter —.— I Jerry Statabrook. Farmington and Carole L. Dietrich, Farmington Richard W. DOOWW, Union Lake and Jean Thorp, *553 Bonnla prior ____ fri&k It tuauTAr.. Blrtnlngham and Judith A. Johnaon, Birmingham John W. Copeland^ Orchard ^ko and LtedaL. Slmpaon, brttaaTOLake Claudia L. Key. Roehaatar and Juet S. Uhan. Auburn Haight* ■ • wiikia Collins, HOntoy and Carol J. ^wmeo’T XuiWl Madtwo Hotghte Bud ftinHS J. Ctedildd, Owl RiHdon J. Dxytdaoo, Franklin «nd *SSLV%5i.5SW»«~«. ‘•S,'j3*i!.ff iTSt DenniaL. Swtadell, m sVcinr and ^ Brnnie L. Routordi 4S Murphy . David O. Jackson, gMl'Dwight and Sharon L. Helland. tel Arltajpco " Thomas R~Whii* Tr . Clartatam and Pamela A. OordOo. 4*3 oranada » Raymond R. Wagner, HoweU bad Sharon J. Fleischer. Lathrup Village David L. Allen, *1 Colgate and Pamela ■ J. Wooster. Sylvan Lake . „ , .. r f Robert t. Pottereon, Madlaon HelxhU ktnd Catherine L. Bowden, aladlgoo “ 'Heights • b " .* ' ■ __ .Ml- Dennis H. Horrtgah. Waterford andl -' MaiV A. Peter*. Rochester - - ,| Ronald L. Curcuru. Rlrmtagfaam andt Merrily F. Handren, Birmingham . Faiff A. IlbaiiT?* Wailed Lake and Mtrilya L, Harsh, Romulus 1 Consult Classification •, 106 . *for Fast Results —. Tod»r MAX- RADIO, TV, HI-FI . Unusual opportunity Individual to o*r a* Magna-Vox Mlchjgan's boat qualified finest -lines such ' Fisher for known lelaller ADML\i-STRA‘Tf¥H ASSISTANT ^ M To handla administration details ter staff of nrofasslnala-.aaaaaed in agR ferred with training snt In buitness admlnlstrat counting a* well as jap in short hand, typing, Husky M 31 to 23, Traasp. •ERVICI STATION MORQ. Tratevo Program Mechanical Aptitude J Wanted Hoviahald Goods 29 ROOMS AND BATH. COUPLE only FE 5-1718. _____ -BEDROOM LAKIFRONT. BEF- o June, 6118, EM 3-31 *450 o 28, Transp . Sal. Bonus US ■ ability to auceoatfully “O" bookkeeper o 66 Heavy, Exp. AUCTION SALK EVERT SATUR-fj day at Blue Bird Auetten, "* 1#S"T OR 3- * 58. The Pontite OO O D ______ , I Muflanoy'* past experience’.”" age',""* health. Fine Food*. 2631 Qpdyke. ability to prodtim, amount of EXPERIENCED BOOK KKHFKH, 'flu!;* you-can. devote. Fay will be [ knowledge of typing and trial bal-how wefl you fit our buslnea*. ance. Full time In Bowling alley ThlV Is Jan opportunity. Write1 Umm — -----— Pontiac. Pres*, Box RETIRED OR SEMI-RETIRED Msh^ familiar *wlth steel sales, estimating shop, or offlct procedure, for email 'setlw, well-equipped shop In. East Pontiac. L.*?aK[S? fefiKEUftKC WBLDEHft iwalTou" gyrrlf-R-ir -COMififNitY) located in . Pontiac1 are a and J 7,,r* «*P - Tranap. ..AUCTION O* 8j3g*l. .^Kftnt HoUttl-UnfurRifhftd 40 • • 1 'WANT TQ BUY FURNITURE AND-------:--k— .......- --/ appttanees. or anything of value I isnnT Hall’s Auction Sales. 70S VV. * WHDWJOM HOME, 18» PORT-Clarkston Rd., Lake Orton. MY pool Union Lake, MA 5-2282 3-1571 or MY 3-0141. I 2/BEDROOM^RlCK TERRACE. IN-1 '■__' . ..............j quite rn ft,, Bdltta-1 ■ *■ j Wanted Miscellaneous 30 j8 ifitywd hUfM^iftw 9-* t,8ED ALASKA. OVCMEAS, ' U S. ^JOB >■ FE 8-0393, t. •‘Key.’' It 31. PI 1- LADD'S INC Body, 45 K _Merrtmae. all Oar-i»M Ugn Mn *'*7 W4) ______ Hl«h pay. Will’. Application Heines. [tffiftr* - ■' ------1 iFrick furniture.!,- portable . typewriter andJJ business machtaes. Urns 3-9767 or Ml 7 2444 _____ Maryland: lEitmfloftf—Sdi—tf- 10 Finish Hign^School No classe*. Rapid prog^c Prepare NOW for college or better job. For fret booklet write to Detroit Office, National School Home Study,. Dept, p.p, 27743 'WANTED CCJIN-OP LAUNDRY - lotto wing departments: ' Plumbing and Heating Vacuum Cleaner* Inside—Outside ----Hardware Apply Personnel' Office MONTGOMERY — WARDS t' ' ' - Fontlte Mall * Store Detective We need * mature man With nolle* background, preferably retired pnltoewan or^detectlvi good- opportunity, exc. employe bgMflt*. Reply to Pontiac Free* GROSSING—OVER $500 PER -WEEK. STATE. FULL FART1CU, LARS RELIABLE PARTY. RE-ELT FONTIAC PREM BOX «5g Carpenter, ^la roe or iasTer, full or partI^,b^ ttnw. oaU after «, OB I-1H1 tftHWkf AHD F AINTINO * FE 1 BOULEVARD HEIGHTS. — 2 Bedroom Unit —- 375 Per Monte --<-*- Contact Resident Manager 344 East Blvd at Vatenote r___________?«■*£»”........... •#l NEW 3 AND 4 BEDROOM HOME ---------------------Stanley 50X335 PLOT WITH 3-BEDBOOM. 1H rnamoth livtag room, family . >---------- —, Mft °*“iFrT^ ***i"** i ^ RENT , OPTION . &u2tamuhwi* $59.89 A MONTH aref. Immediately. FE 4-9147.- Excluding Taxes and Ins. 2’BEDROOU HOUSE BY 3 ADULTS j Immediate oc.cupancv. t>ared i — ---------------------------------------basement ^ HOUSEWrVLS e starting to Mr* for our all .stason. If you would full time or part Ume ond floor., MONTGOMERY - WARDS ...... Fonttac Mall I °33*-**te iretTri naWe. » ED PAINTER. REA I 434-9475,. Real V - Rent-Option TO aUAUFtED PARTaSI I Nexv 3-Bedroora<>Ranch OXFOREMHO*MO- ManomRldt. Co. ________CASS'LftKEJ ^ jilace. shower, porcb. i'rea! PIRR- 6*2-34** altar ism 5 LAROE ROOMS AND BATH, hamnunt isiagi Mliwl a«<|h ' . borhood. 54,550 caah. Call FE ID ACRES- BY DWNER Bt-level. 3 bedrooms on mate floor lower level can be used a* income. Union lake a no, partly wooded. «M 3-0*11. 541 MONTH Excludtag^tax^and insuranco.. , No Ctedtt Chock AW* b 10 down. 843 04 m basement, carpets, drapes, storms and screens, ate* —* -1 313 RuaaolL Price RORABAUGH Y 2-5053. - Realtor I Woodward- at Square Lake Road 51.00* DOWN. 4 BEDROOMS, FWl}, hackett realty"**1 88* DOWN. ________ Middle Straits Late hifresmi, largi _ telOMa MnSHI tx& ms N-r Utthirolfr ““ down: **•. g tedreQft ranch, a TWENty^EIGHT TflE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ AUGUST 8, 1968 M IPARTMyvT H0U8E n 4*33 Dtoto Hwy. BROKER LGILFORD •$400 DOWN; 3-Bedroom, Nearly New IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Everyone Qualifies tain CONTRACT TERMS. SPOTLITTC^l BCILDINO CO. / CHIPPEWA HURON: I BED-. good credit only I1.7W down with war 1 ~ COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK CRESCENT LAMB. TWO NEW brink ranch home*. Mcrlflc*. WHIM.. 1150 SQUARE FEaT" 4 BEDROOM CM* Odd. '---» bath* Full bn**- m £3j«- jrient. Lake privileges; Wooded r«rd. FE 8-3473. Mi. Take Pontiac Lake Rd. to ~■ Htghtate St. by Sunnyvale Casual; tarn right 1 block to model 3 . bedroom model being ~ $9,500° Virtu build 3-bedroom ranch style ipars^wc" ..boards. OR 3-5046 after t. RUSS McNAB ART METER ANYONE — HOMES ON LAND CON-tract. FHA and VA. SAUNDERS fc WYATT REALTY Open Daily M to I t4 Edbora n a-mi ■' *ATTENTION! WE BUILD "TpDROOM TRI-LEVI FEATURING: built-in vanity. .boards galore, fonnjca e- VW7’ *UHk' final*11' plaster- _ brick trim, $8,585 on your lot. 1 *0* model, call HUter Realty. Im i-aiw or pe t-mm. ___ ATTRACTIVE ^QUHTT LOCATION. ranch, living room It by 15, raa-eonable otter accepted 812-3588 ■ 'aub&rh mam's area’- 5 rooms, automatic hist, tail basement, 1V4 acre, $700 down. Newlngham Realtor, UL 3-3310, CUSTOM BUILT , HOMES YOUR LOT OR QURS Ross Horties,.Inc. non BALB BV' OWNER.- I ACRXB of land. Ire* had .clear with 7 ream* and bath bans*. 3 mi. BPrth of Ctarkston on Mil. Second bouts on Radley Rd. MA 5-1115. . ■ LAKE PRIVILEGE. S ROOMS. OAS Moat and hot waUr, large lot — down payment. At Paulv, Realtor 4510 Dixie, rear M 3-3800 ~ 5m. Bi 3-7444 " LAKE PROPERTIES WATERFRONT -lively 84x30 raneb home with 4 landscaped .lota.- Privilege! Sylvan a Otter Lakes. This maculate home . has a, 38 living room with flreptabe an large built-in kitchen ‘_______ Generous *lsed bedrooms. Walkout baaoasent with fireplace. B re seaway—I c*r garage. — LAKE (MUON AMU. S LAKE LOTS SlldrjMM, 5UM, ’O&m t 1-3515. mas. E. WMaoi LAKE-FRONT BOMBS. NEW AIR) used. 3.1. DalBr Qg„ EM 3-7U4. WW 3 AND 4 BEDROOM ROUES Iff W. Yale at Stanley 0 Down, $59.00 A ,Mo. NO MONEY DOWN ro mortoaoe costs, grand nt... teat a lob moves you In. tarts 1 hwirm vtth walk .In ulnaata. nak Carrigan Cons'l lolly 634-9261 Reek. OL 1-1749 CUSTOM BUILT RANCH HOME, 3 bedroom* furnithed. basement, carafe, many extras, (dust sacrifice. MY. 3-0604. -- 1-8 0 0 M MODERN bedroom. Recreation room in basement. 3 landscaped iota. Lake privileges. Owner retiring. Priced to .wall. Attractive terms. Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7601 Highland Road iMSOi-Miles West of Telagraph-Huren EM 3-3303 Eva*. *87-5417 -Edith St. $5,000 cated on corner lot In Keego_____ bor. )uat a atone’* throw from Cam La It* Each aid* ha* glasMd-Ui it and back porch**, full --nj Newlngham . UL , 2-5375. _________ BASIC BII,T On oltr lot or'-yours. seml-1_ _ a* you.want It You finish Interior if Bara mmaT . AnT lit* with or -without basement No^down payment on our*. We have 7 mukj* to allow. 2. 3, and 4 bedroom*. , A. C. Compton & Sons 4900 w. Huron “* OR *7e»4 Eves. OR 3-4555 PE 2-7050 >, 2-caT brick garage, at* a Ottawa Drive. F2f 2-7414. BY OWNER Exceptionally well^eared tor 1 room home. 51 ft. living room eluding carpeting and Ira v drape* remodeled kitchen and —I -Incinerator.- and almost . a, , . - .jjarale" buili hjfll | which I. Hansen Agency.-; Approx. M per o la ■reaaamnBjto ci L FE 4-181 STfcec BY OWNER. 5536 COLONIAL WAT. Bloomfield Twp, bi-level ranch, approximately 2.090 sq ft., 027.750, >*•»*»« kttee. FE paved street Offered ai Rolfe H. Smith Realtor ” 244 8. TELEGRAPH pH 3-7848 MA 5-643: ELIZABETH uw* mwTvrw* 1 bedroom, aluminum fc privileges OK 4-1515. _ Family room—1J4 baths J 3 - bedroom ranch, extra large carpeted living room.’ family steed kitchen, large auburban lot. Wcefy- Ijmdsca ped. . good—horth-west location, terms. LET’S TRADE W.H.BASS INCOME DAY LOTUS*LAKE FRIVILEOEg. 3-BED- ----■ trHkeulf glteabid mnm. Ate i», carpeting, tree*. OR 34859. handy______ ...........money YOU MUST HAVE OOOD CREDIT. Two bod-room bungalow on Central. Full basement. Furnace. Paved it. Home need* some repair*. Priced at only 54.750 and we can eeU or lease option for only -fl3 down and all par ^weer phar tsua^lhd insurance. AK8 FOR MR. BROWN. Evenings 0*11 OA MdU. Fix “ ■* —----------| it out. Will Pdf ' Browr Road. a Realtor. 585 Elisabeth L „ 5. Her* It'an toeam* homi ottt. renting 3 separate t over 8150 per month. Ox value at only 516,555. term*. 5. Lot’ 6-bedrc place, ideal ft - bedroom .bungalow, large corner tot, must a*U cheap, 55.500 — 55,Site down — 552 par------ iibiiiiu«*7«*i and Tna.. down - FHAor THdSfot room home. Paul Jana* Realty ROSEVILLE, 1-BEDROOM COLON ‘‘1. gas hast, basement, -aluml-im sided, fenced,, carpeted, 3-r garage. 667-3365, ’ REALTOR PATRIDGE-IS THE BIRD TO SEE > WALLED LAKE — 1 BEDROOM brick ranch la axe. neighborhood. 1 car garage. Porch. Patio. Dln-ln* room, don and 2 baths. Nlc* landscaped yard. Close to schools. *amt. rm Aahtnnr WATERFRONT,- t r ROOM, lib - hedrooms, fireplace, Hd OR l-fft^. PE 2-7521. . With, it. 135-ffOl. 1 NEW^HGUBE^ AND REMjODELlNflL A«|AMll Nyh| ^ ASPHALT PA VINO, BONDED. FE 55514 ' , DRIVEWAY. fAVDtO SPECIALISTS pontiacISc?^ MU Dfatto Hwy„ r OR -—no top have a bust prob- -lam? Cull EM 3-2440, anytime. Liquid chloride or road oiling, free eat. Oxbow Dual Control. Floor Sanding t. 4-1721 Batteries kar-life battery co. CARL L. BILLS HR., FLOOR Banding. PB 2-57*8. *52-5045. JOHN TAYLOR, FLOOR LATINO. - ■ ---••— ana — ig years expertence. 332A97S. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYINo! Generators—Regulators—Starters Batteries $5.95 Exchange 3377 W. Huron If MM— te H1B ______________I tollding Modomiiation GUINN .construction Garage Builders Rood Offing 49 CARNIVAL Mixed Neighborhood 1 - BEDROOM HOMELI K B HEW’- THIS IS A SUPER BUY gH A LAND CONTRACT — jgjggm Hi 2-9141.2 Open Ev«s. Bvm.after 0:50 PBWitl Cheaper than -- "RENT' north PONTIAC $69' Down NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME $55 Month Excludias tans and taaunne* “Everyone qualifies: Widows, di- vorcees. svan persons with o Mixed Neighbourhood 3 BEDROOM—PULL BASEMENT No down payment___ No mortgage cost First month free _ Payments lll|:e rent.... MODEL3 OPEN AFTERNOONS 1-1 r AND SUNDAY WESTOWN REALTY 48? Irwtr. off East Blvd. PE 8-270 afternoons LI 1*877 Eve*. NO MONEY DOWN IO MORTGAGE costs, brand new Just, a Job moves you In. Larg* bedrm. with walk-ln closets, oat flows, family sDwd kitchen. ~ G. FLATTLEY, BLDR. 9288 COMMERCE ROAD M3-0081 Eves. EM ItetOl NO DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COST NO PAYMENT 1st MO-FULL BASEMENT FE 1-2711 1 tq S Afternoons Beiaire Home Builders Ll 2-4677 After 7 EVANS * SZABO COMMERCIAL TolavisiaR, Radio end Hi-Fi Service REBUILT AND GUARANTEED *19.95 up. Obel TV and Radio. 3160 Elt-^-r-yUljlf" -T 1 1fl1 Tree Trimmieg Service Orion-Oxtord Area NEW 3-BEDROOM FUEETTASEMENT $150 DOWN $75 MONTH* (Excluding taxes) CARLISLE BUILDINO CO. By Dick Turner ! Lakefront-Beaiity KH "'w f*rt af fty wraa afiwwpsfiH place*. panaSd wSBT akrpotos. Sb baths. Itb-qar garag*. ate. 64*-— — *-ghown "by appoint- -BUILDING CO. PM .8-6121 _ learr wr, mm*. WARDEN TOM REAGAN REAL E8TAT1 111 N. Opdyko R -PB 5436S ; ’ CLARK ORTXERN HIGH ABBA, f roam bungalow, oak - (toon, blattered walla, tell basement, gu beat, lib car gang*. teb«Jl 7*”’ blacktop atraat. |n.7Q8 with 51.166 down on Land Contract. WB6T SUBURBAN. 1 bedroom ranch. — ...—.—ttze— — ktteb- m and LIAMS JimSi 4 *???• 2APARTHW .INCOME! 8 noma, and 5 room*. ;separate ■ basemept. fumsoei, meter and PONTIAC NORTHER,!;! High area:_______m 9 room* pad basement, I cap garage, tot -aim lOOxlB ft.. DOW* PAYMENT IBM. Full prlea 57,300. MACEDAY LAKE PRIVtLXOBB ta vrtth thli H up. Wall to wall carpeting, to inf and dtntng reonts. l large lots. Beautiful shade, trees. CLARK REAL EITAn W. HURON IT.__ FE Evenings call OR 1-1875 or FE 5-5141 ZZllgltlPl* Listing Service ffls^Ks-’aSbff'diiK. ..jssjawr Smith Widemarr 1«1S W. HURON ST. X)PEN^EVES.t F&^-4526 "How hungry am I? How hungry can you afford?” T TRADE i rtsmr YLV AN JT! Sole* Heeses 49 you? horn* for ■ 6VLVAN LAKE FRONT CUSTOM WEST SIDE, BY OWNER, - IVb rooms, completely carpeted, dill bssement with tali' out shelter almost completed, 9 ear garage, ' 460 -Washington- Bt. . ■ OPEN TONIGHT Come out and ravol ip luxury of this roeently built brick ranch. 1, bedroom, 3 baths, carpeted living room with ftraplasa.. beaement with tile floor and pamted Balls. 1 ear attached garage. Ovarlook->. Taka Elisabeth Lake Rd. : - fine AA/ILLBUILD Your plan nr ours don McDonald teat i iBay- crest. Turn lift, flrat_ „ Right la Xdgelake Dr. Follow to No. 106. $33,660, FHA t ~ HAGSTROM REALTOR 4500 W. Huron 7 ru Spacious BIO FAMILY BOMB — North suburban, consisting , rooms, erltb 1 ini and .. down and fulf *bath, modern ’ kitchen, aluminum siding, basement and 3-ear garb go. Pontiac Northern School district. llt.MO. “ Will like hem* in TRADB; $600 Down We have a fin* 3-bedroom brick rancher on the west' side with family room, 1 ear garage, big OLD ENOLISB ’ CHARM Excellent weet etde location. 1 bed-full basement, l-ear garage. living room with fireplace, separate dmlng room » only 815.-ooo^ *1,508 down plus, mortgage OAKLAND LAKE FRONT lOO foet tehe freat. y bedraeme. bite Msg i Struble - Clsrkaton — »».- WATERFORD REALTY 2111 Dtxla HWy. OR 1-1271. OFEN8UNPAY,- 10-4 ——-j§ — hew furnace — S 12.066 down. l‘-4 ACRE- ON CORNER — remodeled borne' — barn* — wen house — make offer. TRADE equity -la m ___’ds me pun ~ni*ir isveir iiM* —BEDROC" SCHRAM . • $9950 . NO MONEY DOWN Ion your lot) 7V. . 2-bedroom rancli, with 14x15 living .room, 10x15 'combtnatton kitchen and dinette, full basement, -^1 13x34 rte. — on your lot- THE BIG -bathe, lovely streamlined en. beaement recreatloir room, tached 2-car garage .only 32 down, phi* coots.' Fast posse* l buys this nice SApnunMiiA- Two bedroom starter heme, low up-k**p and low monthly pay- r homes nearing and Radio. --, yy - MODEL dH^a and n”_ place, separate CARPENTER WORK. NEW, AND - remodeling 5S2-8105 n , AND a£uMDTUM CBrptt Sorvico SCHWEITZER CARPET SERVICE. cl^anlog. repairing, laying, free . eiUmatei, FE S-CT33 or Fg 2 7893 MERION BLUE SOD. PICK DS-OR delivered. 3681 Crooks, UL 3-4443 8EEDING, 80DDINO. BACK HOE-tey. bulWoelpg. Free estimates. EM ORADINO LAWN MOWER REPAIR, ll YEARS aspertenc*' 1- to 1-day service. _plck up and delivery. OR 1-tfo, CEMENT WORK ALL KINDS, REA- Convaleicent Homes ,, PLEASANT ROME FOR CHRONIC' ally HI. Doctor 00 call. Oraduaie nurse oo dote at aR times. Individual attention. Rete. rates. Lo-- cal. refereilce Rowell 1884. 2575 N. Lntson Howell. Phone Rowell ALTERATIONS all types, dot dresses, leather coats. OR 1-7163. Slsctrical Contractors . Licensed Builders FHA TTOtMS. rt 4-to** TALaQTT LUMBER- 1825 Oakland Ave. MOORE PAINTING Interior. Exterior specialists UL M*7i - Praa w-*‘r-»rr TA8SI PAINTING; INTERIOR AND AAA PIANO TOTTING PIANO TUNING Recondition old players and np-rights, or consider buying.* AWNING * WINDOW CO. I wines, screen. Jalousie. Prgl est. 1163 W. Montcalm PE S-!lOl TREE fRiMMlNO AND REMOVAL. —rrr: Trewciiiig TRENCHING, SEP TIC TANKS tests or Sts-arii. » Truck Rental Trucks to Rent 54-Ton pickups * ’ 114-Ton Stake* ftVatl — tractors AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trellere . Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. n s. WOODWARD PE 4-0441 PB -4-144 Open Pally Including Sunday HAYDEN. 3 Bedroom Tri-Level $9,995 *• Family Room S3’ Lot 1'4-Car Oarage Oaa Beat OFFICE OPEN Mon. -Thru Sat 9 to 6 p.m. . C. HAYDEN, Realtor EM 3-6684 16751 Highland Rd. 1M-59) . HIITER w»*n wn.MAMd i.asrw a 11 baths, fireplace, oak fli steam heat, full baeemei garage, a11-7*0- terms. GITT OP PONTIAC. h«t clean 5 rooms and bath, b Jlfigt. call today on this. CONVENIENT TO ^BljtMIlJOHAM. BAKLES CUSTOM - UPHOLgTER- -to^MM Burleigh. Union Lake. EM THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 4499 W.. WALTON BLVD. FES-8888 filltfer* Realty* 31 Rd: FE 24179 or, FB M974 OPEN I Walla and windows, Rea>. t faction gu>ranlood.jTB 9»f3l. Wanted Household Goads NEW HOMES . Full Basements $00 DOWN $68 per mo. Ekcludlag lain* end insurance. . * Vl*l» 3-bedroom model *0 CarlUll off W. Rennett. 9 btotka Ira Ha Fuher Body . ,j OPEN 10-8 DAILY IPOTUTE BLDO. COs-1 ' FE 4-tW A»k about our trada-Js plaa - ilrenlace. ____ heat, attached 2>car gi munlty water, ltke p; e will take your KAMPSEN MILLER William Millet* Realtor FE 2-0263 Huron Open * i. Drape* and carpeting li ._______, _ log te 5* naff Ing roach with natural. fireplace. Modern kitchen and bath and 3 ■ ear janig*.* A perfect toeatten ter the children. ideal M all City i this attraeUve 1 meat, ni h carpeting, i fat beautiful and appointments >u wttl' admire. Just off Voor->li Rd. 311.1. Immediate position term* or trad*. DANDY EAfeT SIDE ROME 816.738 on easy terms, located on N. tndeisqn B. 5 very livable {rooms oo main floor wlm a tan* (termitary bedroom up. rm basement, dandy gah^e. andtrioetot. WE NEED LISTINGS ’ , BUYERS WAlTINO DORRIS A SONS. REALTORS 3534 Dixie Hwy. OR 4-0324 MULTIPLE LUratO SERVICE ’ frontage, EaeiBenl nggdSteR. ;_____ ment. Ga* heat. Nicely landscaped. Priced at only 314.^80. Terir-*EW TRI-LEVEL. - Situate large 94 x 135.. Jot near lal Spacious bedrooms. Family Oak, floors. BuUt In oven __________ range. Ceramic ttl«d bath. Terms. NEAR WATKINS LAKE - One of the best and well cared for homea to this area. 24 x 46 bungalow. 1*4 tor garage. Basement. QU Furnace. Anderson Windows. Plastic tiled bate: Large 75 x Iff if LAKE FRONT — Bell or trade. About 7 yrs. old. Rancher w'ltb 3 bedrooms and attached 1*4 car garage. Ceramic Uled bath. Large 24 ft., living rooin with ledge-stone fireplace. 75 feet of sandy k—-*■ ' EneaBtoi MW*- ---------m- TRADE In the OLD And LIVE In the NEW. GI No Down "... 4 bedrooms. - separate dining area, full tile basement, with oil forced heat, fenced lot,’ close to Northern and Madison Jr. High School. Only ate nan elnalng cnitf Hum North Side I TTbedrooma, a 13 x it living room, 16 x 18 kitchen, gas heat: on a corner lot near all schools, ideal for newlyweds or retired couple— priced oi onty 68.35C IVAN W.. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 643 JOBLVN -COR. MANSFIELD OFEN EVgNlNGB AND SUNDAY MULTIPLE LISTING 3EBV1C1 borhood. Prlced rlght ai 900. 8ELL OR TRADE — Country living at It’s beat. Praetletely new $ bedroom custom built Brick Rancher with large attached two car “ mger-^TW^mthar—BnBt—In—x range, washer—and dryer- I pletely carpeted. ■ Well tosuai Two planters, one acre lawi acres of alfalfa. Ten acres of pletely carpeted. Well insulated. with school bus at your <----- Only *24.408. Low taxei{. O'NEIL MODEL Open- Daily 2 to 9_ 29M SHAWNEE — Beauty Rite’s newe*t "ldea Home of Oakland County” Is decorator furnialied and profe*$tonally landscaped for your apworal and lniDMtlM aii «hn -MICHIGAN STREET Ntce'- 2-bedroom home with I basement, has aluminum rstbr «id screens. Real nice homes the surrounding area. It Is a b lain at nnlv k9.700 with FHA ten R. T. YDick^VALUET REALTOR FE 4*3531 245-OAKLAND AVB. OPEN 6-7 MOT OFTEN DO WE HAVE HOMES IN PIONEER HIGHLANDS for 313,500. But here is one for you. Two spacious bedrooms plus a 17 tool nil purpose mom. Clean, pointed basement. Williamson gaa furnace. Incinerator. 1(4 oar ga-I fate- ARRO WE BUILD—WE TRADE 1 ACRE FLUB SPACIOUS 3tbedroo brick ranch. 21-foot Uvtog too* fireplace. 1‘4 baths, walk-out baa ment. storm* and aeraana. 2-ci garage. Price reduced te Sl.TMi, i SHARP 1-BEDROOM. Cep* Cod |p excellent location. 'Oak floors • CLEAN. WELL-KEPT aider bon* ~3 bedroom*. Oak floors, pint-d walla, 1‘4 bath*, basement. race: paved drive a tog. Honestly, you'll you looked. 16 per ei RAY O’NEIL REALTOR MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE LOW DOWN payment yhome. Furnished . Large M. New tot aipbooedau 'to ra and dryer. rm take good 1143 CA88 EUZABETH ROAD PHONg 682-fill MULTIPLE LtoTlNO SERVICE "BUD" Near Clarkstoii . - Approx. 1 Acre Land -3 bedroom rancher, epncloui living room with fireplace, large , kitchen with eating apace. 1*4 , baths, llxllr TV ream, full basement, rac. space, automatic beat and hot water, »*"• atorma and, acreans, 3-car garage, offered at , BUD” Njeholie, Realtor. 4» Mt Clemen* - FE 5*1201 r. ‘ After 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 OE: Spacious t condition. S bedrooms. 3 bam*. Uvtog i dining room, kitchen wfib storage apnea, den and family room with flmplMse-rJ^n porch out basement, beautiful large tot. ' Priced with terms Shown fir. *P- ’ESTSIDE: Good central locatleo. larg* two story home, excellent condition. 15x20 living room, dining roam lend kBirtm " WALL STREET: V... . , OOod buy In toti family 1 11x25 living room, dining L. modern kttaban, I extra largo — g-neorooui uriva is*«mn, 2nd and Ed floors. Baaamant. ..ga* ataan* bant. 3-aar garag*. Union Lake Area Neat 3-bedroom home on 'ap-pr Brim ate ly l-rntj Qarpatid famlfy room wUfc' maptora! living room, dining area, family ream wtth fireplace, kitchen. 1 bedroom n bath en 1st floor. .2 ______ms and *4 both en- 2nd fldef. Beaement. 2-ear a }w3tim Bloomfield Brick Ranch ’ Custom-built 82-foot bams* with privileges on Upper Lon* Lake. Studio celling Uvtog room, ledgeotono fireplace wan, 3 spacious bedrooms, plus TV room useabla as —'Kitchen' wST buUt-ina^ta* eluding dtahwamw and breakfast area opening to patio, 2*4 ceramic bathe. Jeer attached garag* WHb ttUttty $36,950: |TT„ WILL- TRADE Realtors 28 E. Huron St. Open Evenings and Sunday 1 • 4 FE 8-0466 NortK Side ^ 17x16 heatm auproom ad- Tarm Home 46 acres — farm land t_ , has had- natural fertilizer applied for a number of yean. About Acres of hardwood timber. S BEDROOMS to ' farm home, It’s comfort*1 - , neat and clean. Dairy barn mlsc. BUUdtsgs. 2'A car gan • U mtlee north- of Pont-,-. PRIjgCP. .to BELLI Call for Humphries FE 2-9236\ If no answer eaU PE 2-5922 «3 N. Telegraph Road Member MultlpM Listing Servlco STOUTS Best Buys Today HOUSES — For the price — one Modern newly decorated S room bungalow with basement, 1(4 car garage.' plus 3 ■kHr----------------1 com*. All this FL______ fertile land, email orchard. Close, ta location, only 5 minutes from downtown. *1546 ' “ ' Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Pre^s Want A d ' ■ FE 2-8181 Mixed nelthborhodd. 5S5 MSI. WILL EXCHANGE ' i. flreplaoe. kpatm.au iMillfina! earpet, 4 Realtor-Exoh*rigor tail j w. HURON P» »1|76 NICHOLIE FHA TERMS . ^ ’s '_. West Side two-bedrodtn Mmcalow. Cameled living and dining area. SuJSeT Unftnlahed attic. Pull basement. Oil HA heat. Aluminum siding. About H66 nwvaa you to. Call today! Kl'm"for°further^ataUa!’ #°,B*r ASKASAW-MAYBXE AREA SrSfflSa. «n°WM,d u® gaSlpriyHi YOU IN. , WEST SUBURBAN_ ril|||| - Fenced back yard. Lake East-Side - Vacant 4-bedroom home to s room, kitchen on 1 Ain baeemenL gas h Zoned Prof. SeVvice GILES HURON GARDENS S room home In an excellent locale) near schools and atore*. 3 oar garage, lovely lot, nice and clean mid -only 94.950 full price with easy terms. vnniiDffto. down but miiiuf ■ us an offer on this gem located to the north side. Completely redecorated and ready-fot occupancy. Fenced back yard and glassed lim* yarab. . . .-—------ WATERfORD AREA. 3, bedroom*, large tot. good ar**, lovely paneled rec. room, attached wra**-Yard completely fenced. Thl* to« a good buy for only 518.590. Call ffl.ES REALTY CO. PB 54175 231 Baldwin Av*. MULTIPLE LL5TINO IsRVICE BATEMAN Trading Is OurBusmess 3 Bedrm. Brick* Owner transferred and -sslon. Pull basement. .. new home* and winding streets. Large extra nice i lot with excellent lake privileges. Just 514.356 knd take over present FHA-mortgage With approximately 11.866 down and no mortgage costa. Dna’t lall to. sea BUs. T - v ---- • ■ LET'S TRADE Everything fecial - this extra nice 3-bodroem rsneh-bullt to 1916. Oaa bat water t. extra nice ceramic tile bath, mttog throughout and other ex-Urge UtodEMoi TAYLOR IDEAL RETIREMENT BOMS—Located on large lotj across road from Cedgr Island Laka with privileges. Includes 3 bedrooms. Bnetoeod porch for family room. -New oil furnace, storms and ' acreepl. garage A good bay; at 67.461 gLlgg down. NEW MOTOR. w, brakes, $450; EM .3-0559. MERCURY MONTEREY. ! HARDTOP. CLEAN,' —* e MM PONTIAC STATION WAOON, Iff1 I, A.1 eHhdlMAn *695. OR 3-8657. 1859 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR STA-tlon wagon, radio, heater, stand-•rd transmission; -A- *- cylinder -economy, beauty. Mint condition. I told you not to put that .fence up across _ his short cut! -—-RAM AfahBNW- ________ —HI DOULaR, JUNK CARS AND trucks. FE 3-2666 dsys. evenings, ALWAYS BUYING AND PATINO MORE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS. ask for bbrnie at— 7 BIRMINGHAM $11 .QQ QUARTERLY - brummeW’agEncy Miracle Mile ' FE 4-0589 Hegt to FontlatTState - call Mr. O'Han BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 888 S. Woodward ^ MI 8-3900 ' New and Used Curs 10$ New and Used Can 106 1000 FOUR • hardtop, ________ _________ brakes, whitewalls, 37,000 f down, 833,00 per jj SUPERIOR! RAMBLER 550 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9421 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH INC. FOTaiOH COf* ~ ~ Woodward M TOR THAT "TOP DOLLAR" ON | 1981 ANOKU A .^CXLLENT CON- SBARP LATE MODEL CARS Averill's 2020 Dixie Hwy. "E 2-9878'. • ' ~ . Ft 148 LLOYDS BUYING 'Good Clean Cars. .2023 Dixie Hwy. - . We sell more ■ * ** ’ • ■ FE 8-4C M & M; ; MOTOR SALES , ■ More Money FOR SHARP/LATE MODELS OUT-STATE MARKETS 3S27'’DIXIE HWY. OR 4-8308 • OR 44389 , • mMSfIelp-' Auto Sales J07^ BaMadtPAver-"335-5900 Are you buying a new sir.courtesy ear. We will buy your lato fcodel • car- *• Pay more. * HI DOLLAR FOR JUNE CABS trucks. Proa -tew.*OR 3-1005 , 30 miles per gallon, t 1959 Chevrolet Convertible, V-8 powerglide, beige color, copper trim. Beautiful 1959 SUSROOF V RENAULT. SUNROOF. 33.088 |IOB ROADSTER. 2.808 MI. Llke new, FE 8-0334, ; Renault . 'Authorized Dealer" . OLIVER ' , BUICK and JEEP Corner of Pike and Cost NOTICE "Immediate Delivery notice. This automobile 2 lane "500" 2-door hardtop . dlo and heater. It ie In excellent 1 condition.__ 157 FORD 2-DOOR. V8 ENGINE -heater, sparkling blue and -and full authorized Haul_____ pried only 8297. ESTATE STORAGE- COMPANY. 109 I. South LLOYDS Llncoln-Msrcury Lot Ho. 3 2033 Oakland Ave. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC.. > vrolet - Pontiac . Butch pride. No money do— LUCKY AUTO SALES "Pontlac'z Discount .Lot" . Saginaw ■ Fg - 1980 C O M R T 2 • DOOR. RADIO, heater, automatic, 1st black, g ' priced 895 down, payments as ] as 833.53-pOr mo. For further ... formation call Hr. O’Hara, credit 0 COMET WAOON. 4 DOOR. ‘ t Now and Usad Cars IN 188 OLD CAM WXifTED 1980 RAMBLER CUSTOM STATION wtcaa.radlo and beater, white aide walls, vary, clean in aM out. Full iprlM «W». I» down, pay. menu as low as.|il.TS par. month. For furthsr Information call Mr. irfVRam, predlt mSpnbSf-. - jIZiZZ—-BtRMINOHAM RAMBLER I. Woodward Ml MOOS ' 1981 AMBASSADOR 4 DOOR 8E- 1981 PONTIAC Chkvy’straight , $100 sash: V tiffittas 8195 irn: '58 Cary list MM; T Chevies ’ll a 7 trucks, pickup and 1495/ 1960 DODGE, I. power 81385; 1961 81395 ; 2 ’55 Bulcka — convertible* lekup and long wheel, -_____jo from 338 up. — Mgtor Dlscoiint, 2335 SM9'___________________________ 1962 — 9 PASSENGER CATALINA fitfttion wagon, ft "-- —* condition, low nu—-____________ is® PONTIAC TEMPEST LeMANS ' coupe; Blr^ondltlbning a-J —■ Reae.-FE 3-2320. Interior. Luxurtouely appointed and , loaded with equipment. Yours' for only 91M down and paymants 343.18 per month. For furthsr Information sail Mr. O'-' Hsra. credit manager. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 888 S. Wopdwhrd .MI 8-3800 IMf RAikBLER CONVERTIBLE. 8 . automatic, rsto. heater, low tnlls-ags. Extra sharp. $1395. JEROME FEROUSON Rochester FORD psalsr , 1981 4-DOOR RAMBLER AMERI- Liquidation Lit 185 Oakland Av* Across From PonUac A SUPERIOR EfflZ 550 Oakland Ave. FE 5*9421 TRANSMISSION. WHITE SIDE/ jmL TiaES, ARROLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. PAYMENTS OF _______________ 629.75 PER MO. Sue Mr. Parks 1980 LARK at Harold Turner’ Ford, f” ----- condition, excellent buy 1 steering, engine. Like ,new throughout, 195 down, payments as lows as $31.93 pet month. For further informs----- call Mr. O'Hara. ---------- manager. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER B- woodteard “ ____________________________ RAMBLER 8495 WITH LUCKY AUTO SALES I18 'Pontiac's Discount Lot’ ” 1-- FE 4-2314 This ts the last roundup. Get that big deal on a '63 Rambler from . • ROSE RAMBLER IUPER MARKET RAY- SIMMONS FORD r 980 FALCON 2 DOOR, RADIO. 1, HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. DELUXE TRIM, W-- Rochester FORD Dealer . OL1-97U 1 MERCURY 3-DOOR, STICK, , shape.,8208 MY 3-1869. radio; beater, i DOOR HARDTOP, Was 81085, n< J9«l MONZA 2-DOOR . per month payments.__ LLOYDS- - Tf*l CHEVROLET acPOdt i^K^. — NEED ROOM! ;sr specials. 1954 and 1955 __jvyi, Pordi and Buicka. $35 to 195/Economy Motor Discount, 2335 "djjie Highway. Vi BUY YOUR NEW . OLbSMOBlLE —— ——■ FnoM —— - Llncoln-MercOry ----■. -Powergllde, radio, heater, whitewall*, light green finish,. 11.395 — PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1080 S. Woodward Ave. 1957 FORD STATION WAOON, RA-Birmingham, MI 4-2738. ----------------------— I860 FORD RANCH WAOON. < .door ...........I...,.... 189 Autobahn Motors, Inc. 4488 W. Huson,(M59> . OB 444W , - FALCON S DOOR* SEDAN 1 ,1th a medium green finish. *-ut-of-state car and only $1099. JOHN McAULIFFE SUPERIOR RAMBLER 550 Oakland Ave. ' FE 5-9421 . FE 8-4095 GLENN'S 954 West Huron St. F> 4-7371 FE d-17 WEJNEED CARS WANTED ^ OLIVER RENAULT........... e you looking for n car tha give you up to 40 miles per i Renault Is the answer. RENAULT DAUPHINE .... . RENAULT R-A .. 8150 down on above earl low, Jqjw payment# OLIVER • RENAULT — 40 S. Pike ■ FE 4-1508 ' VOLKSWAGEN 1889 BUsi GOOD rtwmnm. ulT i-ua. " BUICKS Highest prices paid in V r-GASH- 'FISCHER BUICK WANTED: 1958-1883 CARS Ellsworth . GOMPARioUR-PRIGSA ..... Demonstrators quality uaed can KEEOO PONTIAC SALES BLACK BUICK 1844 J4BABAF, good condition. MI 4-4488 1958 BUfCK r DOOR HARDTOP, power, full price 1395 with 55 down. Marvel Motors 251 Oakland As FE 8-4879 1961 Chevy ^ ^ Corvajr 7 ' > door. Automatic! radio, heate: *1295. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER MnM.1830" ON DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD — ST THE STOPLIGHT - • OR 3-129 : ~ 1183 CHEVROLET ’ IMPALA coi verMhle. V»,_, Pnwe,slide- - Fowl —stSSHngi radio, beater, whitewall solid red finish. *2,395. PATTE1 SON CHEVROLET' CO., 1000 I Woodward Ave. MI 4-2735_ 1882—SiHBYY CONVERTIBLE. Rf dlo, heater,- automatic, power steej tag. Sharp. Full price 82195. BOB BORST |M„. ______ __ ________r)CBe ECONOMY. ENGINE. WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN FORD See Mr.______I Ford. MI 4-7500. 1957 FORD FAtRLANE , 500 2-Di 190S OLDSMOBILE 2-DOOR HARD-~np. full HqniHaiiMi price 9187, a ume smell weekly payments. Liquidation Lbt V i 1861 TEMPEST WAGON, AUTOMAT-1c, radio and healer, whitewalls. DON’S USED CARS. 677 8. Lapeer ..Rd.itOBlQN. -MY 2-2041. 2881 PONTIAC 1 - DOOR. BEIGE, can't be (old from hew. The big bargain of'the day. Only 21885.. Spartan Dodge Inc. 211,8. Saginaw - ' FK '*-,_ _ 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DOOR hardtop. A beautiful i-6Wner bur, '• gundy sport .* coupe with Ventura trim Interior. 12,000 -actual miles and. loadei}-' with extras,. Including power. Special, 3£395. 6 SUPERIOR RAMBLER, - 550 Oakland Ave. ' FE 5-9421 COME VISIT i RUSS JOHNSON’S Used Car Strip5 I. VS sutOmiilc, white, *500. ' 1857 FORD RETRACTABLE CC 4 VERTIBLE, RADIO, HEATS AUTOMATIC. TRANSMISSIl POWER STE1---------- ------ -TIC. TRANSMIS I jteering! pc:_______ BRAKES, WRITE SIDEWALL 1. PAYMENTS OF 8! ___, See Mr, Parks at 1 Turner Ford. MI 4-7800. ____ORD OALA3HE 500. WITH A 486 .engine. 3 speed transmission “1 vinyl trim. 8^95. John McAullffo • FORD. 1957. OLDSMOBILE 88, 4.DOOR. motor cdhpletely overhauled, full price 8495 with 85 down-. Marvel Motors ® 251 Oakland Ave; "61 Bonneville Convertible ’61 gbevrolet'Convertible .... '61 Boneville Convertible . ., '62Tempest' LeMans .m.,,, '62 Mercury Comet ’62 Pontiac sedan ... . . '62 Cofvalr Monza sedan ’61 Rambler_slatton wagon . ‘61 Tempest wagon ..... .'. '61 Anglia English Ford .... 61 Tempest sedan '« Corvalr Monza, Coupe ... '68 Rambler American .. ‘60 Valiant, radio ........ '60. Ford Falcon 2-dr... ‘59 PonUac Catalina' .. '59 Rambler wagon ..... ’59 Chevrolet wagon ___ •59 Rambler Wagon1... ■59 Ford Galazle ........... - RUSS JOHNSON 'Pontiac-Rambler Deafer i I960 CHEVY 2-door with 6 cylinder 1 1962 HARMAN OHIA. This ear has 'exceptionally low mileage and It 1* In tip top condition. ond for the wife. SIMMONS FORD WHERE BETTER SERVICE KEEPS YOU SOLD _94l s. Lapeer Road 1958 FORD FAIRLANR radio and heater, runt'line*, tv frm tuf "pur!* SURPLUS MOTORS 171“*.' Saginaw :itrea~T“ FI 8-4036 -__________• 3 1959 Ford 2-door, radio, heat- er, automatic transmission, s a 1 priced 8585. This has a V8 engln ptur^many other features not met tioned. No money down, payment as low as 822.38 per month. Ft. further Information-call Mr. O'Hara ______________ MI '6-4538 '1S62 CHEVROLET IMPALA. 2-DOOR hardtop, V8. Powerglide, power 1857 CADILLAC HARDTOP, COUPE D*Villa model, power steering, power brakes, electric wind good robber. Runs’ and di very' good. Bale price 1785, down, payment ne low. as $22 97. . per month. For further Information call Mr. O'Hara, credit NOTICE Immediate Delivery Belt hereby known that one -1962 Corvair Monza 4-door sedan with a* solid niaroc finish, black '.vinyl trim,—blue bucket seats. SI.795. - Van Camp Chevrolet ' MILFORD' MU 4-l« ../eellent condition. This automobile may tx ne willing to take r$$ TOP DOLLAR $$ 1 ; - ■■ FOR . • •• ■ Dean Used Cars JEROME i "Bright Spot- Orchard Lake wt Casa— FE 8-0488 / Iliad Auto—Brack JParts 102 I FORD MOTOR AND Haw and Usad frockf,. N>3 let CMC '• TON PICKUP, 835-1(37 i 1954 GMC 2>* TON TRUCK WITH tandem axl«, Told - down atdea • Priced to sell. Hamilton Fuel Jc 'Supply, Holly. ME-4-52U. I|51 DODOK PICKUP; »81 FORD .-’rRlekup! mrchevf pickup; 1958 - GMC Stake. HUTCHINSON SALES ‘ 3835 'Baldwin Rd. ~F*~8=3T4I FE 4-0067 1953 CHEVROLET 'k TON PICKUP “6 cylinder, etandbra shift! healer. *1795. PATTERSON CHEVROLET w. 1888 Sr WeodWard Are , Bp. mlngham. MI 4-2735. ife GMC 5 TARO DUMP — 8285. FE 1-8313. Call after 4 p m • isgr CHEVKOLlt PANEL TRUCK. - I CHEVROLET CARRY ALL . passenger station wagon. Owned by the city of Birmingham. *695. PATTERSON CHEVROLET'CO., 1000A, Wwgward Av«., Btrinlngham, MI j|jt.CaEVT tb-XOM FUEET8H3E HBtcjSSyrTk-ten Apache "31" pick; .‘“^Iians-field;• ■' AUTO SALES ~ 1 1078 Baldwin ______335-5)06 1818 GMC 4HOKUP 8868 OPDYKB •Motor galea, pe mu, . *4> CHEVROLET 46-TON PANEL RUCk. Extra clean, 8885. PATTERSON CHEVROLET COrf 1000 8 ; Woodward Ave. *"—■—■- - ■ — . 4-2735.1 / ... ' '■ 6-3800 —--------— SEDAN BE YltLE. air conditioned. One owner. *1295, - No money down?---- - LUCKY- AUTO SALES ' ■ “Pontlac’e Discount Lot” • HR 8, gazinaw *— *—•• CADILLAC COUPE, HYDRA-matle, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, light beige flhlali. *1095. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.; 1000 6. Wood-, ward Are. MI 4-1735.1 ' transmlssfoii. white walls.' radio, heater. 882-43(3. 1882 CHEVROLET IMPALA ST A-tion wagon, V8. Powerglide, power steering and brakes, solid red finish,’ *2,495.-. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. Wood-' ---------- , MI 4-373*. of Jpgf. King Auto Sales ...., ... Yours for only TJ45 down ahd payments“as lovr as 530.39. ,The perfect vacation car. For further Information can Mr. O’Hara, credit manager. •BIRM1NOHAM/RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ml 6-3980 E ’l96S CHEVT"7t -4/DOOH; TgCYtlir. 1553 CHEVY STICK RUNS OOQD. 888. Save Auto, FE 5-327*. BEST^GFFKR, 340 H P, FE 60201 ~ . ... 1^« CHEVROLET. STICK. 091, AS jlicjuidation Lot- -1 181 Odgland Ave. 'Across.From Poatlac Ad Building 1*54 CHEVY CONVERTI&LE, 8275; 725 Auburn Ave. • - ’ irn chev¥7~bE; air^ i-door. ‘^^epndlUoa *395. OR jrg5S4 washers, heater. 1 I960 Ford Galaxie—~ dor. 8 cylinder. Ford-O-M lo; beater, wbltewalls. Blu, te.J1095. ■ ■ _ * BEATTIE NEW YORKER HARDTOP. - , - , w rvnu uaauut amce ijw donk Wee *1994 new Has power |,..ow mxig HWYrW WATERFORD, ateermr. brakes, windows and daatl *T THE STOPLIGHT *1895,"now *1695 Spartan Dodge Inc. \ 111 S. Saginaw ■ TI *-4541 195* ROYAL DODGE. HARDTOP. 1956 CHEVROLET BEL AIR HARD- 1 top, full price \ Rochester FORD Dealer .' t A ;_1 Oi» 1-6711 CLEAN, 0l7-480. 85 Leota,' Waleifuul EM 3-2054 t»8>JPi»y»p843' tx TON PANEL. - ; 4,000 actual miles, new car guar- PATTERSON CHEVROLET Oa 1000 S. Woodward Ave., Blrming-HlUBlC T ■ \3*tter U*dd Trucks GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND ^AT CAS8 1957 CHKVROLET BEL AIR SPORT coupe, VS Powerglide, radio, heat er; whitewalls. Extra clean. 9785 PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. ■ 1800 8. Woodward Ave., MI 4-2738 ; Dealer._____________________ 1857 CHEVY V-f, 3-DOOR, VERY" bite, FE 3-7542, H Rlgflne Deal- 1958 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR. 6 AU-tonmtlc. Just like pew, 8495' WlUl LUCKYdAUTO SALES „~^J'Poutlac's Discount Lot" aS STfag^aw ", ^ PE 4-2214 low Chevrolet convertible. STANDARD TRANSMISSION. RADIO, HEATER, WRITE SIDE-WALL TIRES. BIO ENOINK. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN PAYMENTS OP 827.96 PER MO. ^ ?Sd.% m “ H*roM^uro*r 1058 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. AN EX-eeUent ear. No money down and only 8298.32 per month, LLOYDS, 1954* PLYMOUTH 4-DpOR, AUTO- LLOYDS rR. & R MOTORS SUMMER CLEARANCE ‘58 PL3TMOUTH Savoy 2-door, V-8, -auto. ... 8496 '80 FALCON 3-door, stick ... *875 •58 8TUDEBAKER Lark, 4-dr. 8860 '59 FORD 2-door wagon, V-8, stick .... f..*—L 8795 •60 -VALIANT V-200, 4-door auto. ......... 8883 ’ll CORVAIR Moua 4-dpor, m;81.485 Many1 -other* to select from Wsrrthtr on an cars 1962 Tempest. Lemans Convertible', radio.'heater, V8 ' gins, air conditioning. * $2,295 . Pontiac Retail —Store 65 Mt, ClemenT^StT" FE 3-7954 “ REAL GOOD “OK” Used Car* at BILL ROOT CHEVROLET Farmington '... OR 44)500 1 This . Week's SPECIAL 1 Chevy* rn. 1954 to 1961-855 u*. 2 Prymduths — 1957 — *175 2 Ford Wagons — 1954 — *95 up Few trucks, pickup* and long wheel .base ' WE FINANCE VERY REASONABLY Mansfield AUTO SALES -1076 Baldwin Ave. ‘ 335-5900 AUGUST-SPECIALS )60 CATALINA 4-door hardtop, tie beauty. Hydrsmatlc, radio._IP or. power brakes power steering, wbltewalls. Low down payment. - _ WE HAVE A FEW ' 1963 DEMOS THAT MUST OOII TERRIFIC DEALS ! STOP IN FORD Matthews-Hargreaves 631 Oakland Avt. FE 4-4547 / ___brakes ......*...... 1157 PONTIAC trick ....532! ---FORD VI.........,...*191 ---PONTIAC hardtop, dean : *191 M87 CHEVY wttek . .. r«ZT! 1*54 BUICK 4-door hardtop . . *291 1958 PLYMOUTH 4-door . *351 H UTCH INSON SALES 3935 Baldwin Rd. r* K.mi r ■ mm I!* 4-4*5* ^ FI I41M “H 4-DOOR. CRRVROUrr, «*M. FE >-741*. V I S5* CHEvV, 4-DOOR. 8 AUTOMAT- SQUARE DE*L. -4U« 650 /Dixie, OB PATTERSON Motor Sales. asks you to check , these values ■ j I960 FORD Falrlane 14* 4 door, VI. autonuttc. 1959 Plymouth ' Fury'2-door hardtop. VI. al^omiitlc power steering, a sharp a r I960 Va|iaiit 3 on the floor:. 4-door Bare aoi i lof* today and gas tomorrow. | Mechanics Special ’ . 1959 Ford Country Man, V*. au-mauc. Power ateerin*. 84*5, with I easy terms'. *1 Patterson Motor Safes I Kf . J?1 Mato- Rochester; 7 OL 1*559 ‘ Dei. ft 5-4*60 I [BIRMINGHAM TRADES Every used car offered {or rcta.H’ tp-ihe^pubiic is a bonafide-1 -owner, low-; mileage, -sharp ~ car.. I-year parts' and labor warranty.-*' .* >' Reduce 1963 RIVEUtA ___________ 1963 SPECIAL convertible .. — SPECIAL 4-door INVICTA convertible ByiCK 4-door hardtop .SKYLAkK 1961 BUICK convertible . 1961VBU1CK 2-door hardtop 1961 SPECIAL a agon .... 1961 BUICtf 2-door : • *“• BUICK 4-door hardtop BUICK like new BUIOK air coudmoutm BUICK FISCHER I 1961 tie] i960 |W8 REASONABLE ECONOMY CAR DISCOUg 2333 DIXIE HIOHWAT HASKINS ___ USED L-..* ^ X^ARST — 1,960 THUNDIRHlftD HARDTOP. Fordomatic. power steering, brakes, windows. Radio, Use hew ^condition throughout. Solid Maroon fin- >. Beautiful white 1841 CHEVY PARKWOOO- 4 i radio, -showroom ISO* CORVAIR' MONZA equal, rad'- —— white finish. 1$69 CHEVY BELA1R 2 Warrkniy. Sllvfr blue finish. Sav# HASKINS , Ghevrolet-Oldsi clearance sale FANTASTIC^ RAMBLERS • Are Going / Fast '. ' • LARGE TRADE-IN >1 Allowances •'! BILL-SPENCE Ramliler-jeep . ; 0171 Dixie Bar st MIS ICLARItSTON MA-8RS81 Low Coot Tfeesyr Want Ada Work for Yo Day and Night. real ‘98 PONTIAC 3-door hardtop, *ttd“whtte. ‘80 PONTIAC Catalina 4' - < Power 'steering nod brakes, sharp, 30,088 miles. ‘59 FORD 4-dOOC, 6. stick, * gar saver. ’59 CHEVY Bel Alr !4-door hsrdtflD. 78. automatic, tent belt*. ». ■58 BUICK 2-door hardtop, power. ’88 FORD-Thunderblrd convertible, red with new top. ‘58 CHEVY station,, wagon, V-l, -8l FALCON Deluxe, big motor, automatic transmission; 4rdoor, beautiful blue flnlih. •60 FORD Galaxie S60. V-8. StfcK, 32.000 miles. 1-owner. 00 FORD Ranch Wagon. V-8, power steering ahd brakes,' automatic, like new. '57 FQRD Town’ and. Country I; steering and brakes, v-8, automatic. 58 CHEVY Bel Air, V-8, automatic, jfjdoor hardtop • —----------,—— '55 FONTIAC 4*door Btar ehlef. power steering and Brakes, auto- •60 CHEVY Blscayne 2-door, 8-cyK iiider, standard shift). l-owpec with 13,000 miles !0 MERCURY S-door. V-8, stick,{ low mileage; just like,, new. '59 CHEVY Impels 4-door hardtop V-8, automatic, black and-.white, bland new Inside. 8 FORD Galaxie. blaok, and white. V8. Automatic; real sharp. ■8 BUICK convertible.' power! steering and brakes, new tlrds, '57 BUICK 2-door., hardtop, Powyr steering, and brakes. ‘58 CHKVY 2>d8or hardtop, red ‘ 6 automatIc Ouc of Pontistc'*'. FastesMjCGwihg^ Deajeis' Because We SeH - -Good, Clean Late-MddelCars 4 DAY MONEY BACK Guarantee This guarantee means that if .for any reason (except ■for abusejir accident) you are not pleased with your purchase, we’ll refund your money. matte. AM-FM ri windows. Hydra- essorles. This Is a 4861 PONTIAC Bonneville Con- it wlH 8*11 Itself. Our service manager says, “It’s Just nicely . broken in” .......... .82296' 1961 CHEVROLET Impels Convertible. Automatic, V-8. Beautiful black ntelrwSa rar trim. One owner, pew car trade-in. Yes. folks. It's nice, ly brotenjta,’'. .. $2295 1881 BUICK Elecira Convertible. It’s big, It'L tirui, it's a Buicf. Bos* < -the road In any man's lai guage. smart as tomorrow1 styling. Just what you've been waiting for. A sin to' esll it-........82386 i lap- 1955 FORD Convertible. Auto-; matlo, V-8, radio, beater. Wonderful transportation, plus -good car tor summer — and the price Is right ..........5225 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop. Power steering and n iMnmiik —4 whitewalls. Beautiful aqua usl miles. Spare never tted-......... ............... 82785 1982 PONTIAC Catalina 4-Door Sedaff. Power steering and brakes, Hydrsmatlc.______r a dt.o,. heater; whitewalls, guaranteed *83? .This is ai /mijrnftoi«hnd|¥55 Hardtop radio, heater, 0uarantc'^yi381000 a - 1882 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-DOor Hardtop. Has all the goodies; power steering, brakes, "••-■-amatlc. radio, heater, white-White finish with Mua- ---- PONTIAC SUrchief 4-Door' Hprdtim. • Ia>w^ sweeping design -----me Alf of Pontiac’* noted dependability and performance. Regular sendee since new 81495 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door. . . .ar ever rode to fame more quickly. Always sought after/ ____ PONTIAC Catalina 3-Door. Your drqam Come t— most beautiful thing i and dollar for dealer 1*63 /PONTfac „ 4-Daar^Beaan, ’ performance wlRr-yott~ the high-be fine^-. *3785 1963 TEMPEST 4-boor mBL Mrf-------- — whitewalL. miles. It hi economy -One of .1 best looking cars on ^ y. Nothing could demonstration wit ‘"*2^5 1962 VW Sunroof. Beige finish ydramatle hltewafis. 1983 PONTIAC Bonneville Wag- kltchen sink. Car TUt* toy $5,300, 1883 RIVIERA. Yet, folks, let's go first class in a Riviera that's loaded. Buy this one with a big discount. A factory official' car. Lists out lor *5.500. Going prico now ...........-*4280 i860 PONTIAC 2-Door Hardtop. Hydrsmatlc, radio, heater anil fWtewalls.. Kimberly blue to* lsh with trim to mateh. Don’t agMAi 11888 1*80 RAMBLER I The foremost name in economy transportation. More OO on lees gasoline. You -can pay more but you can’t buy better .,$1285 1962 PONTIAC Starchief Vista. Don't settle for anything l«ss. More, ear per dollar and top all-around value. Buy U for the drlyj) Of your We *2885 1882 FORD XL500 Convertible. Power steering ahd brakes, automatic, V-8. radio, heater, whitewalls. Nice blue finish, White top, and mstchlni-bucket seats. Best Ford built 62395 1*82 MONZ* 2-Door. «-speetl' transmission, radio, heater * and < whitewalls. White with red trim. Guaranteed '12.008 miles; Real sparky and most economical. Get More-Pay Less SHELTON , ..PONTIAC-BUIGK . Rochester ■ / . OL 1-8133 -"ti —-Today's Television Programs- $ THE PONTIAC 1'RESS, MONDAY, AUGUST */ 1963 Programs furnish**! by stations listed in this column art subject fo change without notice €heweeljl«yWJBIHV Cheaaei4-WW.MV Chonwi 7-WXTZ-TV ChonneiV-CKLW-TV CWwl56-WTUS TONIGHT 9:N (1) News, Editorial, Sports, • - Weather \ (4) Deputy' (7) Movie: "The Tougher TheyCojme.”(la (9) Capt. Jolly and Popeye (56) Vhat'a New 6:25 (4) (7) Weather, News, Sports 6:16 (2) Highway Patrol (I) Mr. Magoo (56) Crossroads of the • ' World 7:00 (2) Phil Silvers (4) Lawman (7) Yancy Derringer " (9) Swttlriand ______ — (55) Summer Public Affi _3iM (2 ) To Tell the Truth (4) Movie: “My Cousin Rachel." (1953) Olivia __T:■ do Havflland, Richard Burton (7) Dakotas (9) Movie: “The Seventh r Cross.” (1944) Spencer Tracy, Hume Cronyn 9:96 (2) I’ve Got a Secret -------(50) Casals Master Class 8:30 (2) Vacation Playhouse (7) Your Funny, Funny Films 9:00 (2) Comedy Hour Special (7) Stoney Burke (9) Singalong Jubilee 9:11 (4) ArtLihkletter (9) Check-Up 10:06 (2) Password 1 (4) (Color) Brinkley’s Jour- nal (7) Ben Casey (9) News, Weather, Telescope UAW 10:36 (2) Stump the Stars (4) Inner City Forum (9) Red River Jamboree 11:96 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) Pioneers ' ll:2|-(7n«ovlei"Sev«ah- ners.” (1940) Marlene Deitrich, John. Wayne. 11:39 (2) Steve Allen — Variety (4) (Color) Tonight-Carson (9) Movie: “Three Men in White.” (1941) Van Johnson, Lionel Barrymore. TUESDAY MORNING 6:U (2) Meditations ! 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News , 6:36 (2) Family Living 7:66 (2) News (4) Today ' 1(7) Funews r® r r i r“ T n 8 9 W TT 13 14 li 13 17 r ■ t 33 2T 29 30 33 33 4f 43 ■ -J vr 48 ar 5T 54 55 53 37 6 ACROSS 1 Sunken ditches _ 6 Short cut « ' 12 Apology ,13 Actually li Ability 16 Flag 17 Knack 18 Hawk 20 Stain 21 Court sessions 24 601 (Roman) 26 Endangered 30 Erects 32 jjjtoug Indian , —-r 33 Moslem scholars 35 Toil 36 Defensible, 36 Negative prefix 39 Approaching 42 Wreath 45 Feminine name 46 Haul 49 Akin 52 Dry gully 54 More inquisitive 55 Anxiouq 56 One lost 57 Turf b “DOWN 1 Jap general ■ 2 Winged 3 Sword handle t Male nickname 5 Depressions 6 Hurried (slang), „ 7 Longing (slang) 8 Short-napped fabric 9 Fetid 10 Boy’s nickname (var.) -• 11 Force unit____ 15 Poetic contraction 19 Upset 21 Aviator 22 Epochal 23 Chinese province 24 Remove 25 Norman city . 27 Wotf ---------------- 28 English school 29 Indian timber tree 30 Wheel trade , 31 Understand 14 rkialgarr -------------.—- 37Befol». ...- 40 Man’s name 41 Nostrils 42 Dirt road 43 Selves . ; 44 Present month fab.) . 46 Roman garment 47-Legal term 48 Brief remark 50 Atmosphere' _ 51 Beverage* •, $>3 Unrefined Answer to Previous Puzzle 7:6k (2) Fun Parade 7^6f7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odio 8:06 (2) Captain Kangaroo TiM (7) Big Show 8:56 (9) Warm-Up 8:55 (9) M 0 r g a frs Merry-Go Round____• % /* 9:66 (2) December Bride (4) Living , > (7) Movie: “Let’sLiven Little.” (1948) Hedy Lamarr, Robert Cummings (9) Gene" Autry- ^ j _ 9:36 (2) To Tell the Truth 9:56 (2) Editorial 16:66 (2) Connie Page (4) Say Who) (9) Robin Hood 16:25 (4) News'" , 16:39 (2) I Love Lucy ‘ (4) (Color) Play You; Hunch (9) Movie: ‘/The Harassed Hero.’’ (1954, British) 16:45 (7) News 4:65 (2) Secret Storm 11:66 (2) McCoys (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jack La Lanne 11:36 (2) Pete ahd Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Seven Keys TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:66 (2) Lt»ve of Life — (4) (Color), Your Fixjt Impression (7) Ernie Ford— -(9) Hawkeye 12:25 (2) News . 12:16 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Eonsequenees (7) Father Knows Best (9) Dr.'Hudson’s Journal 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:55 (4) News 1:66 (2)8tarPerformance ' (4) Leave It to the Girls (7) General Hospital (9) Movie: “Girl of the Golden West,” (1938) Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy, Walter Pidaeon _ >. 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Best of Groucho (7) Girl Talk / 2:66 (2) Password (4) (Color) People Will Talk (7) Day in Court 2:25 (4) (7) News 2:36 (2) House Party (4) Doctors — -(7) .Jane Wyman 3:66 (2) Star Playhouse (4) Loretta Young —O)k i 3:l5.(9)News 3:36 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say! (7) Who Do You Trust? if) Vacation Time (4) Match Game? M. (7) American Bandstand 4:25 (4) Newt 4:36 (2) Millionaire — (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery '63 (9) Mickey Mouse Gub 4:55 (71 American Newsstand 5:66 (2) Sea Hunt A (4) (Color) George Pieirot (7) Movie: “Duel on the Mississippi.” (1955) Craig Steyens, Lex Barker — (9) Larry and Jerry 5:15 (56) Apericans at Work f:H (2) Whirlybirds (56) What’s New? , 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends 5:55 (4) C&rol Duvall Dixie Dems Votq THIKTY-ONE^ 11 Cuss JFK Campaign JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — President Kennedy is very much In the Mississippi Democratic "primary even though hiaiuune Isn’t on the ballot for the election Tuesday. What one Candidate calls a “cuss the Kennedy campaign” has overshadowed traditional state issues in the heated campaign to pick the probablA succes-65-year-old Gov. Ross Barnett. * ■*- ■ * ■■ Barnett, who attracted world-the federal government in the ins be waa too busy with affairs of state. , ★ ★ The four Democratic candidates ire: V '■ > —J.P. (for James Pknnon) Coleman, 49, of Ackerman, governor in 195660. A lawyer, he has been in foe state bouse of representatives for the past .four years. Before winning die governorship, he was a district attorney, Ciraiit judge, State Supreme Court justice and attorney general. He has never lost a statewide election. tiesburg, the lieutenant governor. H. Meredith, . a captain University of Mississippi, can hot succeed himself. Traditionally, the incumbent governor tatai no part in the campaign to choose his successor. AT V%*Mu WED IN FREEDOM! — Hungarian dancer Emese Szklenkay, 21, who fled Conununist Hungary 10 months ago to join her sister in Ann Arbor, Mich., was married to Flint, Mich, librarian Kalman Szekley, 31, who escaped Red tyrany as a child., in an Ann Aroor church yesterday: and aon^ot a former _ Johnaoftr-Hke Barnett—faces fed- orehip; he was defeated the last timajn 1955 by Coleman.. —Robert Muon, 60, of Magee, a welder who earned foe nkk-name “blowtorch” for his CDloc-ful stump speechu during the 1959 gubernatorial campaign: He finished last in a four-rhan field with about 20,000 votes. v... W * ★ ■ m —Charles Sullivan, 38, of Clarksdale, the third major can-date. Sullivan, a prematurely . gray-haired ex-district attorney, - finished a surprisingly Etnng th ; in the 1959 gubernatorial cam-paign. He is a state rights advocate who says he will bolt' the eraLtrifoinal contempt proceed-ings stemming from foe Meredith ed.Satur- VrtrlwjR. n«^5 r sho^tk** day- Berliner, president of the wxyz -‘"rr— I Hockwaid Chemical Co., fori been 1-J^rgtLW. jhiRh>^|r ,'Iritis. Berliner alsovwas active in , »gp« l , Ithe Amateur Athletic Union and Ben [helped organize-, the 1966 winter Geraldine Page/^tfp Torn Are Marr/ecf, Says Friend By EARL WILSON A friend of Geraldine Page and Rip Tom says they’re secretly I married. They’re now in Europe .. . Tonny Quinn’s wife Katherine DeMille doesn’t want a divorce . . . The Richard' Adler • Carolyn Leigh songwriting partnership ended before it jot started. Broke up amicably while they were working on “Romain Holiday” — a sad blow to Producer Leland Hayward. W # * __ Edd (Kookie) Byrnes, turning 30, tie-— cided on" a birthday present: a Rolls-Royce (used). “I deserve it,” he explains. You remember that Kookie was known as “The Comb” because he was always combing his hair on “77 Sunset Strip,” Well, np at Gary Wagner’s sttidio, for pictures, he surprised th&b present by asking for a comb. “Off TV,” never carried one.” v : ■ r J w" w w Michigan Man.killed CANYONVILLE, Ore. LW- Injuries suffered in a July 28 automobile accident have claimed the life of Ralph Rogers, 69, Ravenna, Mich. He died Saturday in the hospital of this southern Oregon community. UNLIMITED SOFT WATER RUST-FREE PER MONTH LINDSAY SOFT WATER 00. DtvMon of Mich, (hath* Inc. FI 64ttt *3 USED Refrigerators *39? H TERMS AVAILABLE ELECTRIC FE62S26 COMPANY 125 W. Iteroa —AKITIHMAS— INSTALLED AND REPAIRED SWEET'S RADIO THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . CBS is quite contented with the Keefe Brasselle show; the rat: ings are excellent... MGM postponed filming the Broadway show, chairman for former Presktent j “Carnival” . . Gail Storm’s 20-year-old son, Philip, will appear with his mother in summer stock, doing “Pinion's Rainbow.’’ WISH I’D SAID THAT: “My wife cooks the finestfoeafe you ever thaw^r ' « . '?} ^!»v! REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Being a gentleman,” Says Aronid Glasow, “is iike being happy. If you must try to be, you aren’t.” ... That’s eirl, brother. (Th* n*II S;nJlMt*, ln«.) Courtesy of • CONSUMERS POWER CO. THE TODAY SHOW Comes to Outstate Michigan AUG. 5 THRU * * 7-9 A. M. * CHANNEL 4 . Five, two-hour network television programs , originating from a different setting each day, . .tell all about your State at its summer-wonderland best ’’ ■ These j state J _______ viewers, nationwide, through the' cooperatibn of Michigan “progress minded” organizations including . 5 programs present the attractions of Out-Michigan to mofe than 26,000,000 TV ira, nationwide, thit * * CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY Plwi ffow to Watch The Teddy Show/ .THIRTY-TWO fTHE PONTIAC PRESS. Monday, august friues AWARDS • PRIZES lOfflrBITS«CONTESTS Y GAMES * SHOWS TJ BIDES • RACES CLUB TUESDAY AUG Fair ss > WEDNESDAY, XUD. 1 • THURSDAY, AUG. 8 4-HFAIRGROU North Periy St. Just South of Walton Five big days and nights during which entries by the hundreds of 4-H boys and girls will be on display and fudged ... Wade shows will feature carnival rides, merry go rounds and the usual camivalvattractions ... The fair is open daily until midnight ... Come out, see the many interesting attgj^^s... plan to make thiia gala week. r.gsr by breakfast by breakfast Parking Space Available for 1,000 Cars Three full acres of the vast 4-H grounds has been reserved for^parking of cars . . . 4-H members will be on hand to help you and the parking fee is'only 50c. ATLAS FOODLANDMARKET 1461 JBaldwin - FE 2-5192 AUSTIN-NORVELL^ 70 W. Lawrence St. -. FE 2-0241 ; BAZLEY CASH MARKET T8 N. Saginaw • 4648 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains BEATTIE MOTOR SALES SIN Dixie Hwy. - Waterford BENSON LUMBER and Building Supplies 549 N. Saginaw - FE 4-29?1 Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. IS W. Huron — FE 4-0561 -• 1 I 1 . - "■ COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK DETROIT EDISON CO DIXIE DAIRY 49 N. Telegraph Midway Betw. Tel-Huron • Pontiac Mill FEUCE F00DLAND MARKET ; 1116 W. Huron - 332-9032 B. F. GOODRICH lllN.Nnytt. - FI 2*0121 G&M CONSTRUCTION CO, 2256 Dili. Hwy, V FI 2-1211 THE GREEN PARROT 1650 N. Perry «t P.nii.0 Head GRESHAM CLEANERS 605 Oakland Ava. - FE 4*2579 HEIGHT’S SUPPLY 2661 Lapeer Rd. - FE 4-5431 Hoffman’s Pont. Freezerfoods "INC. 525 N. Parry - FE 2-1105 JACOBSEN’S GARDEN TOWN 545 S. Broadway — Lake Orion JOHNSON’S RADIO AND TV 45 E. Walton at Baldwin ~ FE 84569 . TOM KIGER HEATING OILS •5 W. Pika - FI 4-1594 KING BROS. Pontiac Rd, at Opdyke Rd. - FE 4-0734 IT K-MART Glen wood Plaza-N. Perry atGlenwood LEE’S LAWN & GARDEN CTR. 921 Mt. Clemens St.-FE 2-2412 L. S. FOODLAND MARKET 331S. Rroadway - Lake Orion MAPLE LEAF DAIRY / 29 W. Howard St. - FE 4-2547 MONTGOMERY WARD Pontiac Mall-Telegraph at ElizabefkLk. MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER 123 Er Montcalm - FE 3-1545 THE PONTIAC STATE BANK 6 Convenient Offices-Member F.D.t.C. THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC ROCKOTE PAINTS 2 $. Cass at W. Huron - 3324643 SEARS ROEBUCK & CO. 154 H. Saginaw t THREE SISTERS MARKET 601W. (turon - FE 2-3892 *4 TENUTA FOODLAND MARKET 3515 Sashabaw - OR 3-4445 The W*other ’’to* WMikcr Birtu Ktricut Fair, Warm Tomorrow . (MUita r»«. •*» _ THE PONTIAC VOL/lgl NO. 153 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY", AUGUST A, logs —3^ PAGES llnlr ,— — uiiIm—uuty FBI Men Guard 'Syndicate' Informer WASHINGTON (tft — The goveriynwit is confident 4 tint an underworld figure it says has given, federal agents a detailed description of ^ie dominant crime organization m the United£tates will live*to tell his story to Senate investigators. . * In a secret hideout, FBI agents are guarding Joseph Valachi. a 60-year-Old New Yorker once .fairly high irt - the mdb hierarchy, who. haa outlined the structure of the terror • ridden “Cosa Nostra” and put the finger on some top racketeers already under Investigation. Vatadtt has a date with Sen. John L. McClellan’s Senate Inves-tigations subcommittee when .it resumes Ha inquiry into illegal narcotic* traffic. The McClellan panel began —ttr-probe nf narcotics three yean ago, then turned to the Billie Sol Estes investigation and the TPX warplane contract award. No date ha* been aet for the resumptions of its hearings, but McClellan, an Arkansas Democrat, said Sunday he expects Valachi to be a witness. * The government considers Vala-chi's account of crime in. America \ JOSEPH VALACHI Ford, li. Wife irSeclusion including an inside view of the celebrated November 1957 mobsters’ convention at Apalachin, N.Yt — an important intelligence breakthrough. Separation Statement Only Word From Pair DETROIT (AP) WThe divided fanjily of Henry Pont II—he and his wife, Anne, have agreed to a separation—was in apparent sec-'lyskm today. Aside from the brief separation announcement that stunned the so- i NATO Allies Create N-Force New Air Power -Built Despite Sea Debate BONK,'Germany (UPI) — Four NATO states have quietly created ah international airborne nuclear strike force, despite jhe debate about a proposed multilateral seaborne missile force. * A- * f United Statee, Wert Ger-.. Prance and Canada are involved in (he organization, known as NATO’s 4th Allied Tactical Air Poree (ATAF). Its commander is American, his deputy is French. The chid of staff-is Canadian and the chief of logistics German. The White; House, pfeae can pull the trigger Ait would re- -Issue the nuclear bombs assigned to this I^Mi>laae force. Bat the force itself h tsskys multinational staff, and planes of all four nations would luiul tiie atomic wartieads to targets. The 4th ATAF’s^ nuclear force has been made international and integrated while "NATO governments continued to debate the principles and potential value multHatflrtl, Russia Joins U. S., Britain : MOSCQW (£> —- Representatives of the .United ■ otates, Britain and th^Soviet Onion today wgned 1 gglf-® tial nuclear test ban treaty in ceremonies in the Grand Kremlin Palace. . «v* Secretary of State Dean Husk, British Foreign Secretary Lord Home and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko put their sig-l ; . . . - , FACE IN ’THE CROWD — Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev beams as foreign ministers of the United States, Russia and Great Britain sign a limited nuclear test bai\ treaty ; in Kremlin Palace in Moscow today. The elite group includes "(from left) Dean Rusk, tlJS.; Andrei Gromyko, Rusala; Lord Home, Great: pMMpi Britain. Just behind Gromyko Stands U Thant, O.N. secretary general, and Khrushchev. Just to right and behind Rusk are U.S. Sens'. Wil- liam Fulbright and Hubert Humphrey. Nett to Humphrey and partly obscureddt Adlai Stevenson, U.S. ambassador to the WN. r itential value of mixed-manned'' It'll Be Warm cial world bver the weekend, the U/’iL CL^. •, Fords made no statemenfrEfforts y^l|Ti reach them were unavailing. * The Fords, married <3 years, annoanced the separation through counsel, sayiag they had agreed upon a “legal separation” and had entered into the “usual form of separation agreement” * A man- answering the telephone Sunday gt the couple’s lavish home in suburban Grosso Pointe Farms said Fosd was out of the city and not^xpecfed to Tetunt/for three weeks. Mr#. Ford was reported at an-. other Ford home at Watermill, Southampton, LJ., New-York. SPECULATION Social circles speculated that Ford, 45, chairman of the j| Motor Co., will continue to live in the Detroit area and Mrs. Ford, 44, will make her home at Southampton with their three children -Charlotte, .22; Anne, J», and Ed-sel, J4. The Ford Co. headquarters is in suburban Dearborn. His story harbeencorrobor-ated by other sources, and information he gave federal agents has bepn passed on to local authorities, E d w 1 n 0. Guthman, Justice Department public information director said. ^ The theory of a secret society at the hub of organised-U.S, crime has been supported for many (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Wqrmer weather, interspersed witb a few scattered showers, is theweather picture this week. A low of 65 is predicted for this evening, with light showers possible late tonight. Fair and warm—a high of S3 —is tomorrow’s forecast. The outlook for Wednesday Js not quite as warm with a chance of a few scattered showers. Winds through tomorrow will be variable-At ftafapUS. m.p.h. , Fifty-seven was the lowest temperature. recorded in downtown Pontiac before 8 this morning. At, 1 p.m. the mercury stood at 84, ■ .. U.S IDEA The'United States proposed the latter late last year, Saying it was unnecessary from a military to answer Europe’s political requirement for a greater share of NATO’s nuclear responsibility. . So far, only West Germany and Italy have shown positive interest in tiie scheme. France already hag entered the airborne force, and Canada is coming in unconditionally. In the beginning the force was integrated only on a conventional level But .as soon as the first German Luftwaffe units were assigned, it was agreed German planes would carry.American nuclear bombs to any targets assigned by NATO. ■ A ■ "Hr" : A French President Charles de Gaulle insisted he would maintain a national nuclear strike force outside NATO control. But he has permitted French Air Force imits stationed in Ger-many and assigned to tiie 4th ATAF to carry American nuclear bombs to NATO-designated targets. Well, It kept 'Er Busy EXETER, England (UPI) -Shirley Bruce, 21, who was given 82,890 by the dty tostudy teaching, said yesterday she completed day. the. course but then was told by Trial to Begin in Kalamazoo Poilr Faces Charge in Greene Slaying The'scene of the first-degree Attoiae White i Charles E. Hodges for the knife slaying of Kroger store comanager Robert A. Greene will shift to Kalamazoo tomorrow, Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer, who granted the change of location Tor the trial in June, will preside. r Judge Beer wps assigned as trial judge by Sfete Court Administrator Meredith Doyle. Tho trial will.begin, at 8 a. with, selection of a jury. Judge Beer last week turned down Henry ’s motion to move the trial from Kalamazoo on the ground that publicity dnd notoriety in the case made the selection it a fair jury there impossible. The judge previously had changed the trial’s location from Pontiac to Kalamazoo because White and Hodges had admitted .implication in the crime on Detroit television news programs. White of 79 V4 Wall .and Hodges of 174 Prospect, both 22, are accused of staying Greene, also 22, during a March 16 safe robbery at the Kroger store at Elizabeth' Lake and TelegFaph roads. Greene’s body was found the next Parade Through City Launches 4- Fair _______ White, « stockboy at the store, officials, We don’t need y ou and Hodges, his nephew, were now,” ’ | arrested two days later/ “TMtey’s 4-H parade IhrougR Pontiac began a week of activities clearing year-long eriorts of some 1,500 county youngsters for the 1903T Oakland County 4-H Fair. Jtaged again this year at the faii-groulids mi Perry just south of Waltoh, the fair will feature contents, " demonstrations, some 2, 000 exhibits of all types and. a carnival midway. Tomorrow’s agenda calls for home economics judging, beginning at 10 a. m., and competition in the fields , of photography, flowers, rabbits and poultry as well as general exhibits throughout the afternoon. natures on the historic document at4:$4 p.m. Moscow time (8:34 p.m. Pontiac lune). | Premier Khrushchev witnessed the signing. “Our three governments have today taken whatrtll mankind must hope will be a first step on the road to a secure and peaceful World,” Rusk said. a * * "The treaty we have signed today Is, a good first step—a step' ■♦for which the United States has long and devoutly boped/But is only a first step. It does not the threat of nuclear war.” . Rusk warned that it would impossible “for us to- guarantee now what the significance of this act wiB be;*1-. “History will eventually record how we deal with fee unite Charges China Favoring War Opposition Jo Treaty So Indicates, Red Says MOSCOW » - Defense Minister Rodion Malinovsky chargad today Communist'China’s opposition to the nuclear testjban treaty was tantamount to ccahpBcity in Eavoring a nuclear wari -* A A Writing in Pravda, the marshal also charged the Chinese with aggravating tension. continued. “Bat eaeb sf eur governments can and will play an Important role in determining what future historian will Pledges for Industry Continue to Increase Suppori-jcontinued to pour in over the'weekend-for the steadily growing Greater Pontiac Industrial Development Carp. ■ i a. n- Pledges to- purchase shares in the-young corporation game from 12 more individuals or firms, bringing the total to $112,-100 pledged to date, up more 'than $3,000 since Thursday. Additional Pledges BrookrSales Curson, Dr. Hubert H. Euler, Harold B. and Genevieve Fitzpatrick; Mr. and Mrs.. Robert Katchka, A. S. Kingsbury, Robert S. Mack Square Investment Club Mitchell, DonaldVR. Flora M. ’ Oliver, R. B. I. Simmons;-Arnold R. Tsatsanis, John Voss, Berkley In Today's Press Legislation Solon predicts tax cut, rights bill: will pass in bouse - PAGE 13. , Dems Cvss JFK Mississippians to vote in primary .— PAGE tl. Deepening Crisis Negroes strive for equal \ nppftrimniKai — PAGE II. Arep News ......f Astrology .. v.,..., .34 Bridge Comics ........'. ...v.>fl Editorials ..v....« ■ Markets ..... .....|$ Obituaries ..........33 Spcrts . ......114$. Theaters .......... fi jf 9 Radio Programs 31 r.iMl Gts Fight Off Korean / "■■■ -ih- ■ -. i ' ‘ ' ’ . / .. FIRST CAVALRY Dlyi-l North and South Korea.- | North Korea’s spokesman. atk.A U.N. Command spokesman SION FRONT, Korea (APH-Thir- Three American soldiers the armistice commission Satur- said today there were no reports teen American solders fought off were aad-wie wounded in day, rejected the U.N. charges as of fighting elsewhere along the The evening program will include the traditional freckle contest, a dress revue and crowning of the <1963 king and queen. Chosen to reign this year were Tom Middleton, II, of Oakland TownaMp, and Carmen Sue Miller, 17, of Brandon Township. v ; Other events planned for foe week are horsemanship and dog obedience demonstrations, tractor operating competition and-live* stock judging. Rusk made bis remarks after putting his signature to the. treaty tending the three powers to end alt nuclear weapons testings in the atmosphere, in space and underwater. Underground testing ‘ not-affected. ‘UJ. READY’ “In a broader sense,” Rusk concluded, “the Signature of this treaty represents the readiness of the United States to join with tiie two other original signatories and wife other nations in a determined and sustained effort to find practical means by which tensions can btreduced and the burdens of the Arms race lifted from the shoulders of our people.” Immediately after the sjm-ultaneous signing by the tfree foreign ministers, Gromyko made a speech hailing the treaty as “a success of the peaceful policy of the Soviet Union.” Expect Trials • 111 | cow iot me signing, in lA/arn I aCQ Khrushchev had met-separately III TTglU uQjV before the ceremony with both seven grenade-hurling North Korean raiders today in the longest clash in eight days of fresh aeon on the Korean front. V * Three Americans suffered scratches from grenade fragments. the two-hour battle in predawn darkness. There toere no known Communist casualties. The North Koreans used whistles like pheasant calls to guide their at$ckrThey struck 4jrt an American outpost in a narrow jfoger of tife demilitarized zone that was a bloody battfegroaadJzAe 1050-53 Korean War. The outpost whs about 1,000 yards east of where a Communist patrol ambushed three Americans in a jeep last weekTkUling two and wounding the third. ' - ♦ * it’ - / • The spot li* 13 miles from Pan-munjora, Where the United Nations Command wanted North Korea it would invite its own destruction if it failed, to halt at-tack# south of tbs border dividing Court Actions Seen a in Wake of Scandal LONDON (AP)—More court actions appear in prospect fat the wake of the vice trial and suicide otDc, Stephen Ward, who believed he was the scapegoat of BrHain’s sex atSd security scandal. Before swallowing the barbiturates that snuffed out his life Sat: urday after an' 80-hour coma, Ward wrote in one of many notes, “The ritual sacrifice is de* manded and I cannot stand ft. f _ , ir ' LeadingHhwyers and legislators voiced concern over several aspects of the trial in which Ward was cleared of three vice charges and found guilty of two others— living off the earnings of prostitutes Christine Keeler and Marilyn Mandy Rlce-Davies. ' Legal experts said they HOT EXCHANGE w Maj. Gep. Chong Hwang Chang (left), Noth Korean spdkesmaa, points to a walkie-talkie, and U.S.' Marine Corps. Gen. George,7 Cloud, U.N. Command spokesman, holds tfp<« Russian-made hand a w , many ieii me w-year-oia osieo- grenade during a meeting of the Korean MUi- path was made a scapegoat for tary Armistice Commission. It was called to protest raids the U.N. said Cmnmunist troops . made last week * over the demilitarised zone ) tbn|AT$ soldiers were killed. He proposed a champagne toast to\ peace and friendship among nations. Witnesses to the signing clinked glasses with Khruschev, U.N. Secretary General U Thant, another witness who flew to Moscow for the signing. —PWL bote Rusk and Home and their delegations and with Thant. The Soviet leader gave Rusk an (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) la a (net-page roBcrtal, *^ Communist party newspaper also heaped aew denunciations oft Communist China. , “The Soviet people angrily fa Met tiw cuncwiluftz of -the CM-nese leaders who seek to oppose the Soviet people to the Soviet government,” Pravda said. " ^ . * . *V.# , The editorial repeated Matin-ovsky’s charge that Peking was aggravating world tensions and said sharply: “The Chinese government strikes a direct blow at the unity of the socialist camp and weakens the united front of the stniggie against imperialism." ★ ★ After saying that the peoples of the world welcomed tiie signing of the treaty, Malinovsky declared the opposing stand taken by China “is tantamount to virtual complicity with those who favor a thermonuclear world war who oppose s negotiated solution of international disputes.” He listed other opponent^ as • wild men in toe Hnfteti States, the most extreme of-the West German revenge-seekers and extremists among the French ruling circles.” , , Ih WiTkaw, the PohsfinObSi-munist party newspaper Trybuna Ludu, supported the Soviet declaration condemning China’s refusal to join tiie nuclear test ban pact - ★ ★ ★’ 'Senate Ready to O if No Deals Involved' WASHINGTON Ml Sen. Kenneth B. Keating predicts overwhelming Senate approvrifor the limited nuclear test ban treaty if Secretary of State Dean Rusk makes it clear that no “under-the-table” deals are involved. ; -fj ,: . ' '■ ] Keating, a Npw!York Republican, said he asked Rusk for assurance that U.S. negotiators have not agreed to a nongggression pact or in^—~——^j creased trade as a price for tin I ' pect action against st least two prosecution witnesses. Call girls Vicky Barrett told Erwir lied under oath. Public sympathy grew with reports of Ward’s death—alone except for' a* prison warden, His - --------------- brother and the hospital staft,ior ratification. and -deserted by ifos so-called friends in high places. introducing former War.Minister Jotai Profumo to Miss Keeler, who A the same time warding an assistant Soviet naval \attachi. lay in Moscow. If we gq^__ a forthrigEf response, and a'denfel of any under-the-table deals, then I am confident that the Senate will ratify Ricardo admitted In court they this treaty by an overwhelming vote,” Keating sail Sunday in a taped radio-tetevision program broadcast in New York; A two-thirds majority is needed In a speech to the nation July 26, President Kennedy said..... Many felt the 58-year-old osteo- ra*t*edi no agree- ment on any other subject, nor to this treaty conditioned on tiny other matter/’ -V A 6emocrat, Sen. Strsm Thurmond af South Carolina, raised doubts Sunday abaat the treaty, which weald ban testa la the atmosphere, outer apace sad gMelr tife aim. : ~ Thurmond, in a /fetter to constituents, said Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s failure to 'keep agreements oq Cuba, Southeast Asia and other world trouble spats make it questionable whethar he can be trusted oq the teat ban. A ■ R . • . But Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman, who negotiated tiw treaty, said be does not believe Khrushchev has any tricks up his sfeeve in connection wjtii toft test ban. But ha added ht* television iatkrvlaw that the United States must ba ready to test at any time in case the Soviets break the agreement. , w i try I II .TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, A^ljG&fllT M Two Red Gidnis^-Ojne Rich, One Poor** tor Power ‘ (Editor's M* - Associated ' Press correspondent WBMam Ryan, a veteran at covering wigM in Russia and its satel-> Ides, has written a five-part series backgrounding the Smo-Sooiet split, tn this first install-meat, Ryan discusses the two kbits of communism existing in the world today.) rm By WILLIAM L. RYAN f>. AP Spfccill Correspondent 'There ate tteb kinds 4pf communism today: rich and poor. fj^Mo Uhve collided. The ex- * LIamam hoc tho pAmmn. has rocked the Commu-r nist world. , rj As a result, a different sort of cold war is taking shape. The dash of communism's two _ !*«■*« — Wed n»i— and the tfcftJLR. — will color policies of both East and West for yean to come. Attempts may be made to ^maintain the fiction of Communist .world unity, but toe split seems beyond repair so long Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s views, guide toe Kremlin. Ctemiy, two communisms are emerging. Red China’s represents the violent have-nots; the Soviet Union’s represents the cautious ' ivee. ~. *■. . . Although its enormoushuresO^ “ racy and a theoretical strait jacket complicate its array of economic problems, toe U.S.S.R: basically is rich: - - * ■ .. Russians today have something ip protect. They can see tonight of better days in the distanro^ is moving in, and as it never hag before, .public opinion has come to mean something among toe Russians. t DISLIKE GAMBLING They have little enthusiasm for gambling what they Jiave built up after four decades of priva-tion against- the possibility that nuclear war could be sparked ' by pushing the western world too' hard and too far. * *,*’ * ’ This attitude is reflected in a Kremlin shorn of toe absolutism Of'Stalin’s day. A,new generation ■ - Red China has littk to law except people. It has tWae* quarters of | billion of them. tapaUencC-jOpRekiag leaders ^"reflected among Communists in other lands, dismayed at the idea that the opportunity for power in their time ' might slip through their fingers. They rally to the Red Chinese side. It is not just an ideological battle.. SAME GOAL 'TteuflceOy, both toe Chinese and the Soviet Communists stand, for thi» unv goal: world Commu-nist domination/The main issue WfS: how and how fast, would toe -world revoMtion " plished? This made .toe question of war and peace of paramount importance. also brought quarreling about toe tactics and strategy of world revolution, about communism should deftlap in Red-ruled countries and elsewhere, and^ about how ‘‘national liberation movements” shquld be used. St ' it The term means revolutions whieh Communists can seise and dominate. 'The U.S.S.R’s might, in itself, caused Khrushchev to operate in an arena of poyrer politics, in toe-style of greet powers of the past, but witn. one big difference: Nuclear weapons rule&out major, war as an instrument of politics, r . ^ VALUABLE INSTRUMENT^ The Communist movement, jlhoUever; Is a valuable instrument, which will not be voluo-the Kremlin, Mapping strategy and tactics for world revolution became, in a senseptoa strategy and tactics - Of Russian grafrpower domination in the world. Moscow proceeded cautiously, and imposed caution m its fifth column, around the world.' Thus, Peking accused Moscow of “bullying and oppres-siag mid giving orders to other nations,’’ jhit like the imperialists powers of Old, The mid-July meeting of Soviet and Chinese Copmunist delegations in Moscow was the climax of five years ef intense bickering about theories of Wg”£nd peace and Leninist concepts1, of Communist expansion. ★ * * Behind toe curtain of tortured ideological phrases was a balk: conflict. Moscow, tied to Peking by . toe 1850 alliance, coukl be involved iq world wSragaiosf its will, by Red Chinese policies. There were Other irritations. Red China seemed to claim all Asia as its own sphere. Struggling Red Chiu* 'Complained of a lack of sufficient economic aM frymJte .big ally. It got little or as help-toward membership li the nuclear , It complained that Moscow was hmtg about grabbing for mew real estate for communism. Mos-cow did little to' exploit revolutionary .restlessness in the Underdeveloped world,'Peking vindicated. TWO MEANINGS What, about peaceful coexis-ttocel -Khrushchev Insisted peaceful co-existence did not mean easing the strug&te against the ■ western way of life. He claimed his policy, in fact, would sharpen .the straggle. He promised to support, “just wisrs,” meaning little wars against existing governments, for. the benefit of communism. But peaceful coexistence, in a nuclear age, had to mean-also what Khrushchev described as temporary compromises “with toe class eaemytY It would pay off, he promised, y weakening toe West’s will to resist Coimmiitist political anoes. >.. L To tie Chinese this was a lot of btattfor. To wm? Leninism meant that cataclysmic war with capitalism, wqh inevitable, add to fear it was to waaken the world movement. . Revolutions could be wop only with violence. To frightenpeople. about sparks which might start nuclear war was to inhibit rev. olutions. Or '★ The Red Cbin&e attacked de-Stalinization, too, as something which could set iifr motion processes leading to dilution of Communist^ parties’ rigid authority in Red-ruled countries. OFFENDED CHINESE Khrushchev offended theTted Chinese by scoffing at their “great leap forward,” by blasting their drives for rapid industrialization and their ill-fated Reveal Revolt Th WASHINGTON •OJPI). - Top-secret documents now In toe ‘ - hands of toe- United States show that conditions were so bad -Red China dtfring toe Whiter ,of 1960-61 that there was a threat (^.revolution. officials said today that the documents, in tbe form of journals of toe Communist Chinese Army, represented “oae of the most important caches . «f ^material” -Over obtained from behind the Bamboo Curtain. ^ One official said it was “‘like getting a look at toe dark side of the moon. “ ' .The documents depicted serious needy for both toe army and the general public. During qne period the jouraatf say, there were a number of “disturbances” in the area of Can top, where civilian tContoiued Ftom Page One) especially warm welcome. When the two had seated themselves at the conference table, the premie# j w pug^t remorlrn^ Ihof “TVir»«o ana rminrr . .. - _ - ’ _ protest and killed a number of Communist party members and disrupted eomxaunications. ARMY DEFECTORS The militiamen, who .are under indirect army rontrol, were said to have been joined in some instances by defectors from the army. Tbe -documents designate the number of defectors with X’s. *There was no explanation of how many men an X repre-. Rented, bat a State Department spokesmen said UA analysts believed each X represented at least 1,666 men — possibly more. 'Regular army troops; apparently were sent in to quell the uprisings pnd the militia was subsequently reorganized with regular army officers taking a more direct hand in controlling it. The State Department said the documents had been in U. S. hands for “some time” but declined to say how they were obtained. Officials said they covered activities from about' nhd-1860 to mid-1961. They wentjuily to top Red Chinese 'Army and government officials. The journals, were-issued regularly, sometimes two or three tones a month. A UA spokesman said they apparently were published more fre- quentlyevhen conditions were at peak seriousness and came out at longer-spaced periods when things were relatively normal, the hacght winter of 1966-61 ’hit the regular army as well as the civilian .population which, the documents showed, in some areas reached the point of near-retjel- : The Peking government viewed the situation With great seriousness, the data indicated, and took action aimed at easing tension both thf~artny- and among toe civilian population. The army came first, - which had its food rations increased. This did not immediately satisfy toe trOops, however,. They. still were worried about their relatives who were near-starvation. ' fhe documents also showed that the physical condition of troops did not materially improve because they were secretly sending their extra rations home. N-Te$M&rn Treaty remarked that “Thhus art going well, Very well. .“Yes,” Rusk replied, “and we want to keep them going well/ Home gave Khrushchev an envelope containing a personal message from British Prime Minister Macmillan. Khrushchev spent an*hour with each visitor before entertaining them at-a Kremlin luncheon-. . A State Department spokesman said Rusk and Khrushchev spent Relations Committee, alluded to possible Senate opposition to toe treaty. He remarked to Soviet Foreign Minister AndreiA; Gromyko: “No .one can speak* for the Senate unless it speaksJor itself, but I am personally^ in favor of this treaty.” Lord Home arrived before Rusk and his party had finished their talks with Khrushchev, most of the conference discussing toe test ban treaty. The spokesman said the pair also dismissed the need in both countries to solve such domestic problems such as school construction and population growth. ^ The source said no mention *was made of a East-West nonaggression pact or of Soviet difficulties with Communist China. Adlaf E. Stevenson, U.S. am- The Weather Fril PA Weather Bureau Report , llpfll ~ " Partly many and wrw today ^ high 85. Chance of a few showers late tonight, low tl. Fair ana warm Tuesday, high 88. Winds variable five to 15 m.p.h. today, tonight and tomorrow. (Continued From Page One) years by'the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. . * t * Valachi provided a blueprint ofthie“CosaNostra’’ — literal-1y meaning T‘Our Thing’V but sometimes called the syndicate-^ and confirmation that ouch an organization of criminals exists. The story of the Valachi breakthrough appeared Sunday in a Copyrighted story to toe Washington Star. The Justice Department confirmed the es- T>4»y ta P«iiUm Lovect temperature preceding l At l km.: Wind velocity a i Direction: West Sun" iet» Monday a Saturd.T la Pontiee ’ - (aa recorded downtown) Highest temperature Low cel temperature ../lv.’,,-... . Mean -temperature ................ Weather: Partly «iWMy Oae Tear Aga h Highest temperstere . Lowest temperature — temperature—u. ither : Partly cunn 17 mint : “ Or, Rapuu Houghton Weather: Kmny, windy Downtown Temperatures ■ ,71.....m ' 11 a.m u-m....... y 7» I . ______ ' (5 .60 Fort __________ Escanaba. 77 62 Honolulu SS 41 Indianapolis .. 60 66. Jacksonville 64 76 76 61 Kanaae City If « ________... w-Jf LaoVegae ito 7f Lansing 76 M Loe Angeles I] 63 Marquette 74 M Louisville 66 66 MaglteBea 76 SO Memphis . 65 M Pellsttm 76 44 , Miami . Bbt . S. 8. Marie 68 41 Milwaukee S Ttavaroa C. w •* w 2 Albuq uerq* TpsllanU . Atlanta 85 55 How-York 60 71 Omaha ' AP Pkotofks NATIONAL WEATHER i-.It will be dear to partly doudy over mbst of ytoo nation tonight. The western half of the nation end the nartbeast will have cool weather while it will be warm and humid etoowbore. There will be scattered ^hower^in the W central Plains, portions of toe Mississippi Valley and thc western bassador to the United Nations, and she UR.^ senators were present at toe talk. . Rome remarked during the exchange of pleasantries: “We have less of a -big party, than' our American friends.” “Yes, they brought quite a delegation, but maybe we have less difficult questions to discuss,” Khrushchev replied. “But actually the Americans have, more complicated questions —even among themselves.” - St , it “Yes, parliamentary,” Home said, “hut we have some of jwr own.” The two nien obviously-alluded to opposition in the U.S. Senate. FBI Guards Crime Informer (Continued From Page One) heard he was suspected of having informed on toe ring and whs marked for death. When a prisoner approached him on June 22, 1962, he thought it was his'assassin. Valachi struck the'man with a piece ofisipe,1rtHinf him. — Fj-4' * \ Valachi .seat., (or Federal Bu-reau^of Narcotic^ sgent hnd declared the slaying was a case of mistaken identity. What developed was a first-hand description of toe rackets syndicate. At-sthe head of *Cosa Nostra’ Valachi placed Vito Genovese, 6^ year-old Italian-born narcotics boss serving A 15-year sentence at Atlanta Penitentiary. * * Genovese plotted the Apalachin meeting. While Valachi was, not prominent enough to attend, ne ftps high enough in toe organiza-tion to know what went on — and for„ a‘ tiiite later, he was .Genovese’s cellmate in Atlanta. The ^paladhto t delegates were the bosses of toe Individual branches of Cosa Nostra and' their bodyguards. As-coriling to the Star, there were two main reasons toe meet-■tegt Gendvese v wanted the organization’s support for ah attempt ogjtoe life of racketeer Frank Costello a n d toe slaying of gangster Albert Anastasia; Genovese wanted to strike from the 200 “button teen,” or soldiers in the society, as no ibnger useful LONG RECORD. Valachi had a-long record of arrests for robbery, extortion, burglary, gambling and narcotics When he was arrested in November 1969 as a her^jn supplier and sentenced to 15 years. While Valachf was serving time, federal agents broke an inteinational dope ring. Vat achi, one of 24 persons indicted, was gjyen a 20-year sentedcC, concurrent pith his earlier' term.________............. Available sources say Valachi is experiments in agrteulture with “people’s cwnmunas.” The Red Chinese returned the cpmpUment,, sneering* at Khrushchev’s attempts to makB-new toeafy. Behind It all was 1 history of Chineso ribentmoht^lf Russians, dating to Czarist imperialism, Russian seizures id Chinese territory, nnfair treaties, Russian attempts to domiqpte Chinn, z /• ; • ~ Implicit in the f ight wm a challenge to Khrushchev oveyr who should inherit Lisnin’s mantel. Mao led a revolution, made theory, had a body of written works. As one old China hand put it, in Mao’s eyes, Khnishehov was only “a rich’peasant Tiding an H-bomb.” Tomorrow: Mao, K disagree on. who calls shots. Old •teihM.aad r AP Ptaotofai NEEDLED BV Hug — Robert Louis Haneska. A 6f Flint.’ r^uperates in a hospital after his chest and heart were pierced, by a sewing needle stuck in the dress of his grandmother, Mrs. Ida Ledford, when she hugged him Friday. Doctors removed a^, piece nearly an inch long from his heart. His condition is fine/ 1 BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Brig. Gen. Stanley W. Connelly, 5352 Van Ness, has assumed command qf the 70th Division, an Army, reserve unit With^iadquarters at Fort Wayne in Detroit.. ......★ it" ■ i Connelly, 50, a 19^7 graduate of the U^. Military Academy, sue* ceeds Maj..Gen. Beryel J. Pace, who left toe (Position to accept a State Department assignment. The new-com- * mander id em-liefj of the snrface| equipment con tract division, U. S. Army Mobility Corn mand, McNamara .Flies to D C. After German Meetings Valachi, who had meanwhile pleaded guilty to tee fellow convict’s murder and drawn a life sentence, was spirited from Atlanta to 6 secret hiding place. An FBI- agent became his constant companion,‘drawing names, places and- dates of events from toe American-born son of Italian immigrants. .____________ BORN, (UPD—Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara flew to Washington today, following a last-minute meeting with West ‘German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer at the latter’s request, McNamara insisted he. had been given no letter or message by Adenauer for President Kennedy. The 90-minute meeting, McNamara told reporters, was limited to a discussion of military affairs. ■ 0: p,, iS? ■.;/."* ■ * German> government p r e s chief Karl Guenther Von Hast told reporters exactly the same Minister Gerhard Schroeder participated in the meeting. Adenauer was supported only by his state secretary. Haps _ Qlobke, and McNamara was accompanied only by U.S. Embassy Charge D’ Affiares Martin Hillenbrand. McNamara drove to nearby Wahn Airport immediately after the meeting with Adenauer boded. His jet plane left for Washington at 12:45 p.m. (6:45 a.m. Pontiac time:). thing. He-also said he had been called into the'McNamara-Aden-auer meeting at its Close. Obse. vers, regarded this as a possible Indication that there had been an agreement between the American and toe chancellor On what to tell the public- Neither Defense Minister K^ii-Uwe von Hassel ’nor Foreign Ike, Mamie in France for Invasion Filming Birmingham Area News ■ ' " - --.-■■■ ' ■ •—^ -. ; '■ - f . Bloomfield Hills Man to Command Reserves so construction can-start as soon as possible. The improvements are known as -toe Ruffner Avenue, South Eton and Cummings relief seW-ejf. The Ruffner projects calls for toe construction of a sewer on Ruffner from Woodward to about 332 feet wiest. '* ' The South Eton projrot includes . construction of sewers varying' Size from 12 inches to 42 inches in diameter on the follow!^ Taunton from Melton to Croft; Croft from Taunton , to 14-MUfc Road; and. 14-Mile Road from Croft tfe Eton. * [ 1% uenterune. He swved, the regular armyl after his graduation from W e s t% CONNELLY Point until he resigned in 1954 to ‘Inter private industry. Connelly received his master degree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1940. His Industrial experience includes executive positions with Rand Development Cerp., ,.Gem eral Motors Corp. and toe Martin-Marietta Corp. His ntilitary; assignments included assistant chief of staff. of U.S. forces in the Middle East, assistant military attache in Sweden and associate professor of ordnance at West Point.'--r * Among the general’s decorations are the Legion of Merit and the Oak Leaf Cluster. ' The 70th Division covers kflehi-gap and Indiana . Special assessments on three proposed relief sewer projects will be reviewed by the-Birmingham Gity Commission tonight. - M toe assessment rolls are confirmed, tite City Engineering Department will advertise for bids tflEKBCHJKGrFraKeTJ*2 mer President Dwight D. Eisenhower arrived here today to take part in a filmed .television program marking the 20th anniversary of toe Allied invasion of the continent in World War II. He and Mrs. Eisenhower arrived aboard toe Queen Elizabeth and were greeted by local officials. Cali Residents Invited Set Tentative Date for Visit L fU* prmittnpit mbshm of tm Cali, Columbia, community are tentatively scheduled to arrive in Oakland; County for a two-week stay Oct. 1:- Delos Hamijn, chairman of; the County Board of Supervisors, announced today. Hamlin headed *a similar group from here that went to too SoutbkAmerican city of 100, 009 people in May to study economic eonditiens. . As a result, the county group is urging the IT.S. government to send‘government Officiate to auist toe growing . Cali region in further develop-ment. ■ . ■ ' 1 i ' • _ The expenses of both groups are being underwritten-by toe: .U S. State Department in ah experimental tocal-govern-ment-to-local-government * approach to foreign aid. - l The idea orieihated with. U.S. Rep. William S. Broomfield, who has been critical of past forejgn aid efforts. AID IMPOVCltBRED He described the phesent experiment as an attempt totm< prove fhe of impoverished people instead' of lintog the ^Qckets of the fort eign wealthy. ■ T-" A spokesman' for Broomfield’s, office said the State Departmentisn’t likely to approve sending more county government officials at least until after-having consulted the group scheduled to come here. . . Five of the six South' Americans have7 tentatively, accepted invitations to come hefe to study/ local metoods of econo-m,i c development, education, and government. . __Their final decision is w&it- ing for the reply of the sixth member. Haiplin said an agenda has yet to be setup for their visit. But be said they would.he introduced to local metoods ef mynnnent. education and iHmu, . .. '“We'will want 'to Extend every courtesy to them, even as we received down there,” said Hamlin. . ,. Accompanying him on the recent tour were Oakland University Chancellor D. B. Var-nar; George Catlin, head of area industrial development of Detroit Edison Co.; George' Skrubb, county planhing director; and ex-officio member of the group, Mark T. Jarosze-wicz, a Bloomfield Hills architect who paid his own way. Teen Dies as Boat Tips; Brother OK would be constructed on Smith from Woodward to Cummings; . Cummings from Chapin to 14-Mile Road; Davis from midway between Cummings and Woodward to Woodward. Lateral sewers /would be-buijt >n Chapin, Emmons,, Davis, Smith, Bird and 14-Mile ’ Aoed . from west of Cummings to Cummings. . '<+£. : " . Short sections of sewers woqjd be constructed on Emmons, Ehj-vis- and Smith from just east of Grant to Grant . . ' - ' Resident Loses mOtCash The tlieft of $15,OM from the home of ,a Pontiac than Saturday is under Investigation byjrfty-detectives. ”• 21 George Washington, 53, of 319th Prospect, told police that he kept the money in a barrel-type bank in toe closet Of his . bedroom. was $20 bills and 50-cent pieces, that be had saved for over three years, Washington said. i — Washington said he had left his housp about 2 p'.m. after putting some .money in the bank. When he returned from, the heme of friends about’ 9:30 p.m. he went to the closet to put a 50 cent An 16-year-old youth said to be a good swimmer drowned, while bis brother, was rescued when: their homemade eanoe-. capsized y e s t-ejday in Lake Oakland, Waterford .Township. Oakland County-sheriff’s deputies say Timothy McCabe; 19851 Coleman, Mt. Clemens, flipped, beneath the choppjr water just before Jie could be helped into a recue Boat. His brother Dan, 19, told of- shore when a gust of wind over-, turned, their 12-foot canvas canoe shoiftl^ before noon.—■ The two struggled in the water, trying to right the rotating canoe in 55 feet of water,' about feet off shore.. They reportedly did not call for help for several it missing. - Press Publisher Sets Deadline for Scholarships The Inter American Press As- , sociatton (1APA) Scholarship Fund will award scholarships next November to United States and Canadian college graduates and newspapermen for a year of study in Latin America. ' President of the fund, Harold , Their shopts affracte^r; Gerald Crandall, of 2421 Le^dr, Waterford Township. He,(hauled Dan who cannot^wlm, into his" boat, but Timothy drowned. . The body teas Recovered an hour later by sheriff’a ond township police divm-s. I ’ - ; ■ Pontiac Press, set Sept. 15 a? tbe deadline for >appllcations.' Scholarships to North American working newspapermen and college graduates will be awarded by toe fund's board of directors at Us meeting in Miami Nov. 18-18, prior to toe 19th general assembly of toe IAPA. The. awards committee wilr meet in' October to exampine. applications and mkke recommen -datkms to the board. Cwdidates -may request-information and ap plication f^ttp from Carton A Jimenez, >, awrriary, IAEA Bchol arship Fund, 667 Madison Awe. Suite 704, N#w York 21,.N. Y. , uw> j TgE f ONTIAQ PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 5,1968 at Miracle Mile Shopping Center PLENTY OF FREE PARKING-OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 ALWAV8HEIWST QUAt-*TY .SALE, of UNIFORMS v, MATERNITIES^ - MATtRN^TtES * JIWIfOlMS MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVENINGS UNTI.l NINE DON’T SUP, DUMMY! — Hal, a ventriloquist’s dummy, easts anxious eyes as barber Otis Murray gives Ms locks a trim whichis likely to ba quite permanent, Hal is a new dummy acquired by Ted Moss, 16,-of Snow Camp, N.C. who has .been winning prizes with his entertainment ler five years. 17 Area Motorists Taken Off Highways Drivers’ licenses of 17 area motorists were recently suspended or revoked by the Michigan Department of State. «-»>\ Sr : -* it Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility after cob-victions of drunken driving were: John W. DnbrtwE KM Rockingham, White Lake Township, and Ted Lawson, 23218 Spring-brook, Farmington. ’ 1 . Those ordered off the road^for —unsatisfactory- .driving were:. Robert G. DeGeer, 297 *S. EdtH; Gerard R. Calmeyn, 22600 Middle Belt, Farmington; James S. Atkinson, 3558 Hi-Lure, Orion - Township; ] and ■ Robert CroV 65515 W. Eight Mile Road, South . Lyon. * d Others were James A. Flani- gan, 4539 Major, Waterford Town- •' Clarence T. Garrett, 20925 Delaware, Southfield; George W. Kelsey, 1875 Oakley Park*. Walled Lake; and James S. Owen, 1550 Lakeside, Birmingham. Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility doe te unsatisfied, financial j n d g-ments against them were: Alvin J. Benard, 78 N-J&sie; Lawrence D. Dunlop, 123 Norton; , Gaston and J^ed-icf-- limited time draperies: MADE TO YOUR MEASURE records Robert L. fries, both 6f 493 Alton; Roscoe J. Watkins, 166 Nebraska, and Lewis C. Caverly, 2825 Deland, Waterford Township. , Jatpes Leavenworth, 44911 W. 12-Mile Roadr Walled Lake, was ordered off the road due to failure to pass a driver’s test. from oun* custom fabric. collection •Choose from hundreds of temples! • Beautiful prints! 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Big enough, bright ' faefe, for yeur whole gang teen joy without . wgMi------ ...w „ , Pi . ■! a hintof a squint. 23 transistors, 12 diodes, 3 ther-misters- in Sharp’s world, famous chassis provide extra circuits! that reach out for weak signals, eiim- X1 incite interference and pic- ^ ture “noise." Operates' r. agywhere on sJow-cost rechargeable battery ... or raevYrMIC on regular house currant. KIUk I Lllma SYLVAN STEREO & TV SALES OpWiNoi. and FA 'HI S—T««u. W«A, Tina, 'til •—Sat ‘til I 2363 Orchard Lake Road £yhran Cantor) Phone 682,0199 rs 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Store Hours PENNEY’S-MIRACLE MILE OPEN NIGHTS Till 10 P.M. SPECIAL SALE 8-Pc. Amethest SNACK SET 4 Cupl, 4 Snack Plate*, Heavy. Glass Sat Ik STORE MIRACLE MILE Entire Stock of Summer ; Sandals Regular to 9695 THE Dress and Casuals *2.niV,3 Regular to $9.99 Girls’ U.S. Keds Slip-Ons and Oxfords Diaconkinued Styles. Sizes 8'/2 to 3. Narrow-Medium. > Reg. to $4.29 the Pontiac press, Monday, Apyt&f), ipm -—NINETEEN S ft. 1 0 Kl tn( rt Linton |( IUI -OlfcMMp -------------------- ' ■ '*r; "mnaii ............ftftttw ijiMiiHio ## Brawn 2b 4 t ft ft Vert ft ft 11 1 WUlUou ft----------------, ¥e5»‘H 4 ft 1 ft MoJUiUtt* M 4 1.1 S T'trw tld if - ft 1 1 IBlnt_ _ -- Kirkland cf J ft ft ft . Xftlhw rt J #»0jMejia* cf ft 1 2 tOsherm lb lift Adcock lb let ft Colovlto If J ft 1 1 Clinton tf 5 I 0 0 Lock at UUano* ft ft ft ft Thome# of A ft 1 ft o«lf or lb II 1 2 Simmer, lb . ... . AHJTft Jftftft TtliiSft lft J ft* J Gardner 2b 4010 Itetier c 2 0 0ft Azcue «' 4 0 0 0 Roark* e I OH ftfTIlbnan a 1 0 2 1 aLepbert a 2110 I ftft ft baMi 2b Iftjft Tyiy^ft j» 1 ftgataer at |j{ Kraljck p 2 0 0 0 ftftli Wood =t> Nixon p‘ - talftabf | *«JI L «fto m m woo4 S' . 001 oae «li—S tfoaUn 0 ObMlnoto ------ ft 0 Burnside p 1 0 0 0 0 US IMala Mini __ lutaar tn ftlfc-._b-r Rudolph In ftth; c—Filed a-i rw-A—eoa ________ ■ I—Gardner________,___------------------- nC-Tbomaa, McAulWe. MB—Wort. ftBLtnaame.. LOB—Boston lft. waahtnftton J. _Smus. . . ( SB—King. Tillman. HR—King 2., Mtno- IP B B ER BB SO so. SB—Sin too.' S—Cottier. OabOmr BP— Krallok.-L, 10-10 2-,, *,3 1 2 WM CLEVELAND Francona US I Colavlto If I Cash lb I Phillips lb 2 LI O dalpfc. OxCariiftaa. Flahgerty. Hurl ft ft l ft DUIuro. t—t:Jt. A—7.237. 4 0 O OlCmgAGO- LOS ANOELE8 ataylor A 1 ft ft ft Bunntag p 00 0 AbMn«afir*r<2«2 co- Browo • eWbltfleld *0 0 0 a i sw s.oo.o».~, Ji 9th. d-Struck r Triandos In 9th. a—Walked -g In 9th. • - ' ■ - V ; SS^4- llrklanid. PO-A—Cleveland'*?-! Exhibition games don't the standings but the victory, of! the GoBcge AH-Stara aver-the great Green B5y Packers and the surprising results in the first batch of American Football League tuneups may have a vital bearing on the pro champion- " LOJ—Cleveland I. Detroit 0. *4i-:.i —. xLolieh a - : Gladding L. 04-,-—U-Bunnlng *& x—Faced l inen In Ml . HBF—By Lollch lAlvii Triandos. U—Napp. Kl Stevens. T-r-2:M. A—20.1 • . J First Gan BALTIMORE NE1 ab r h hi Kub *SpatIclo~ss—-5 0 2 2 Kiel Gentile' lb ftftO 0 Lopes U Robinson ft 4 ft ft 0 Boyer 2b Brandt dr-lf. 4 1 1 oVetTy P ■ Adair 2b- ' 4T 2 2 0 MamttMl1 p I Barber p 1111 lUw HaU p l o 1 1'Metcalfe p I bBlanchd ------ 34 7 12 7 Trials ■■ - for Hamilton. In .-Mb: r Metcalfe hi Mb. ■ ■ ■■■■...-1*11121 021- for- Osinkkl hr-9th;» ft- Chicago J* ‘'BdS“3fhBefes 1 *§—Mtcraw. -Monaas Osinakl. PO-A — Chicago 27-19, Lo* Angeles 27-11. DP— Pregosl, Moran and Thomas: Hansen, i FSf Pod Me Craw: Rodgers and Moran. • LOB—Chicago 6. Loft Angeles 8 • 2fti FTftgoil, Ward. Carreon, MuwpB. “T—McCraw. S—Hansen. Weis. WIlheTi jT------—- IF H B ER BB I HOW’S THE SCORE? — Pontiac Mayor Robert A. Landry checks the score befpre going for ± his spare 'during exhibition jnatch Saturday evening at 30ft Bowl with . Leo Ladoiiceur, one of the country’s leading wheelchair bowlers#Aided by a 25-pin spot, Leo took Pftntfale Press Photo .close wins in the first two games but “hizzoner” ~ gained some revenge with a 202 third game for an easy -win. Ladouceur, -who has relatives in 'the Pontiac area, is advocating active participa-stk>n by local residents in the National Wheelr chair Bowling Association. ~ . DP—Richardson. ;^C-$£«9tflb- Pftparella. Haller. -HopodUek. - ft 1 2 3 fBerra ft ft 1 ft Pepit’e rf-lb I t * 1 1 ft Lopes If 10 8 0 ft Boyer 3b .4ft •ft s Bouton p 10 t o o Stafford p . ft I 1 ft ft Hamilton p ft ft ft 0 0 cMantle 1 j ft ft ft Reniff p 1 0 t—Walked for Stock in 2nd; b—Popped up for Bright in ftth; c—Homered Hamilton to 7th: dr-Wnlked lor «’h. e—Struck out for Brunet t sacrifice fly tor Howard pu Sira ______13 Ml ft—lft now ............ Ut 002 196 1—lft "ip-Brown. Bright 2. Prpttooe. FO-A-BalUntore 21-11 (two out when wlnnto run scored). Hew York Ift-U. DP-Boye: Richardson and Pepltone. LOB—Balt we 12, New York *._ ‘ •• . JV—Oentlle. Adair. Tresh 3B-Brand ■ »r-«t, uiw-va lak; Rite. T-2J». r PHILADELPHIA , ST. LOU r. Taylor 2b4 0 1 0 Flood ef Sallloon rt ft'* * Covington If ft ■MMm «r I cf lf 4 0 0 ft _____Jb * 212ft - |i||gSb( Dalrymplo , 2 sey 'for Harvey’s Colonial House J|team in tha .IntCrCity Softball ft R. Tftylor p ft Harvey s Sits, in Inter-City League It Will be either agony or ecsta-fof weeks before they will know if they win- the championship, tit ■finish Tunnerr-up. v itod there’; B9PI --n— 24 ft 7 2 •—Raft for tlevera to 7fb: for Wine to 7th; c—Walked «S 7th: ft—Ran for Mu TJftUri^ftla ......oi .^E^-Bftldschiuii. ,PO-A—Philadelphia -27*I 12: St. Louis W-IL DP—Jr ---------1 and White'. - LOB^Phlladefp Louis ft. . • -r — MB-mmron. Javier, Tefal, son. ftawatakl, Dalrymple. %I »—T- Taylor. SF-Hoak. The players must wait a couple no]hJng 4hey Can do about ft. Harvey’s*, leading the league ftball Pjayoft Starts Elks. Monicatti Triumph T. Taylor 2b Cailison rf a* De mater .ftf I__ _ GonzTz oar ,,ft o 3 i Altman rl Slevers ,lb * 3 ft 0 1 Javier1 2b “"Te-lLw-.t 0 0 0 McCarver Irymple eft 0 1 0 Kolb .c Ito c•• • « a ft Gibson p ak- 3b ft 0 1 oschultz p lAmaro lb 0 0 0 0 cSawatskl jhft ss;^ * ft ft ft 0 Shantz p aEmery 1 ft 0 ft Green p 0 0 0 0' ---^ dMeLlsh looo - Xlippstein p 0 0 0 0 wkKaum p on . Totals . 311 It 5 Totals Rlkif No. 810 and Monicatti [M victory over Howes Lanes in abrhbfjjumped off to early starts last!the other r‘D" playoff contest, f} ‘ J night in the city softball playoffs I ^ Szabo.g second-imiing 181 jfe determine Pontiac s - state s, ,e ruined Ba’erby’s bid for a ft»2 Class D representative. - 3»!« The Elks scored five runs in the pi![second inning arid then relied ion »To-o?the strong arm'of pitcher Gary no-hitter. -The winning hurler fanned nine. —_ Monicatti took a 1-0 led in the with a 13-7 mark, concluded- its schedule over the weekend by splitting a pair -of doubleheadjBPS with Saginaw Drewry’s and Fort Huron Shoffner’s. , Harvey’s must now sit back and watch Port Huron and Flint Buick in a “second-place tie, one game behind Harvey’s. Both teams have four games to play. ' The'Colonial House nine, behind the no^hit pitching of Floyd Hicks, scored a 2-0 victory over • Saginaw in the nightcap of their . Stiilford. i McNally '■ S&MiMk''-H l itarette ........ J2-1 > Brunet .. 2 1 Miller L 41 ....2 2-3 2 SSSlWB, ■[[[[[■[[[ 21-2 ft Hamilton ...... 2 • ft * ‘Y W. 3-2 .. * ' * - ... -F—Bern I K ER BB 8 E—Olbson, Javier. Callteon. Groat. PO-k—Philadelphia 27-ift. Sti Louis 27-*, DP rT- Jay lor and Torre. LOB—Philadelphia 7. *. Louis 12. -"toed.-James, White. Altman, Gon-ML-Dalrymple. Qorat. . HR—Cov-SB—Gonzalez. T. Taylor. 8F — IP . ■ R ER BB BO ft KANSAS CITY abrhM alfrl ft 0 0 ft Tartabull cf S i 4 8 10 Causey ss .90 [ ft i Lumpe 2b 11 4 0 0 ft Siebern lb 5 f 3111 Lsu c 11 3 10 0 Charles 3b 11 Roftnourk p 4 bGreen. 1 Piets p lUho b—Plied out fi» Roft*snburk ln 4th. Minnesota .... ..... 444 414 Mtr Kansas City E—None. PC sas city 27-9. DP—Causey, Slebtnk. LOB—Minnesota 2. '2B—Parry. Uu. HR—Ball, KUlebrew IP H R ER BB 8 Perry. L. 8-8 Williams Roggenburk Boe to take a 7-A decision from first inning on Earl Montross 1300 A>wL, jhome run, The wiimers scored Doubles by Boe and Chuck j three rnore in the fourth frame on _raVes were the big blows forU double, si,-'walk, a fie’dMjm 14 .Ithe winners in their second inningjehoice and a two-basejrrpr g-.L.u~ to ~ V- outburst- T In National League playoff ac- jtatettK; a—csaiodlrwt '-^n Lee £aerby’s sparkling mound tion, Circle Inn and Bob & W Green to *th. . ^ performance paced Monicatti to tf Larry’s Baj; were victorious. Local No. 653 held a slim one-run lead over Circle Inn entering the final frame,- hut-two errors, a walk mid a fielder's choice produced 2 runs to give the Circle nine a 9-8 win. Hud'Jdhnson led the winners with a homer and a pair- of Single's. twinbili on Saturday. The Jip-sfate crew won toe opener, 2-1. Sunday’s Story Tdr Harvey’s was pretty much the Same. The city AA champs dropped its opener to Port Huron, 104,. but then roared .hack in the seeond game to shut out the Blue Water, city. team, 5-0t _ ONE-HITTER H Get Started in AR By The Associated Pirn.....j.^Ttoekie’ quarterback Mickey i’t count in! Slaughter threw two touchdown pa sites, George Shaw connected on another and Gene Mingo booted, g field goals of 44 and 41 yards in ■ Denver’s Win over Houston. Linebacker -Archie MatoS climaxed an outstanding performance tor Oakland Sunday with a 27-yard pass interception return that set up the touchdown-topt broke a 17-17 deadtoclito the last' | ■PP !verS"s the winner from the 1. openings in this area during the next 12 months.-Covernment positions' pay at high as $446.00 a month to start. They proihde much greaf- The 20-17 triumph of Coach Otto Graham’s rookies over the J National Football Leaghe Cham- ' __ pionship Packers 'at Chicago “FH-Wr*®r- tmvUe Btovi day night removed the Packers’ aura of invincibility. ' No team ever has won three straight championships since the' NFL started its playoff system in* 1933 and the Packers may be ii tor lots of trouble now m ttieir hid for the unprecedented triplE. In the AFL, the three hot-shot teams wete whipped in the exhibition openers on Saturday and Sundays San Diego’s Chargers thumped the champion Kansas City Chiefs 28-14K and Denver walloped the Houston Oilers, Eastern Division champions, 27-14 on Saturday. To cap .lt all, the lowly Oakland Raiders; who finished last in the West with a 1-13 record last-year, topped thg Boston Patrios, runners-up in the East, 24-17 at Oakland on Sunday. SIX NFL GAMES V * The exhibition gets going full blast this week with six NFL and four AFL contests on the schedule. In the NFL, the Dallas Cowboys take on trie Rams at Los Ang&les Thursday night. On Saturday, Baltimore plays Philadelphia iat Henhey, Pa., the Qiicagp Bears meet the New Yoak Giants at. Ithaca, N.Y., the*.Cleveland Browns take on the Lions at Detroit, the Minnesota Vikings play San Francisco at Portland, Ore. and the Pittsburgh Steelers oppose the enraged Packers at Mi-Mrii -' . #ansas City and Houston wilLbe on the rebound in the AFL Friday. The Chiefs entertain the Buffalo Bills at Kansas City while the uilers test the New York Jets' at Shreveport, La. On Saturday, Boston is at San Diego and on Sunday DenveK plays at Oakland. The All-Stars’ shoetar over th,e Packers has revkfid \spirits .all hver the NFL, especially in the camp of the New York Giants, who lost two straight playoffs to the Packer!. San Diego’s victory over Kan- ■Close Battles in Horseshoes iggztWn -l4-», .a *jjMb4oo l. H4 : 7 **' w ft ” * a ' In the Thursday night division Faced - ft men i* «$. ® 0 # * of the Parks and Recrfeation De- BIG INNING owikiT-Wy0Br7”S^TL2y5lSecory’ pairtment’is Honteshoe League, Bob &. Larry's scored eight ^rr- —competition was very close times in the first inning and then lob angeles^^^HorsTON rt^w'with slim margins- separating held off Pontiac State Hospital s o i.i Luiis *»_ ftaoojfirst from second place. [to win fhe other'National l^ague Aspro nte2 3b 300 *} In singles, John Vitton edged contest, .196. Howard WJjwrW- Roseboro Breeding ft 3 0 0 0 Bat< | JJjCliff .Johnson, J02-99, and Jim ["• ®; Clarkson was a close third with i o !•»- P°tots. Clarkson teamed with Brown Jpttake «• o ojors, 92-90 overVitton and George to* wf Self. ... > Kft otfti- JINGLES - - Tvas'-.—----.Jea *7-1. JoMb Vitton . , .-102 H. Donaldson LOB—L°» Angelez •>■ cliff Johnson . 98 Don JohnF"- SB—Wills. Roseboro. S—“ Johnson, Breeding. __ ‘ __ _ ______j',,or*e g four Meefs on Golf Card This We A record field of over 33ft en-| tries has signed up'for the M|chi-| gan seniors’ golf association’s an-nual 36-holc medal championship at the Detroit Golf Gub starting tOIlMHTOW./ . George Haggarty of the Country Club of Detroit, the defending champion, is expected to play! along with a . contingent of 43; Michigan pros including Oakland Hills’ At Watrous, Hortotf Smito of the host chib, Franklih Hills’ - Waltef Burkeme and Bob Gajda 1 of Forest Lake.-----‘ WESTERN AMATEUR The Western Amateur Tournament, attracting the best . amateurs of the country,- starts Wednesday at Point-O-Woods Benton Harbor. The 54-hole National Amputee tournament opens. Thursday at the Western Golf dub in Detooit. The 36-hole Northern Mkhigan Open will be played Saturday and Sunday at toe Cheboygan Country Club.at Cheboygan. / ■ „ Morris rYaraold led the Bob 8i La’rry’s attack with, two singles and a double. Jerry Bouton- was winning pitcher with help from Bill DeRdusse in the final two innings. - . "Tonight’s schedule finds Moni-^*|catti- playing. Elks at Deaudette .. *ft j Park at 7 p.m. and 300 Bowl meeting Howes Lanes- on the PT^ same diamond at 8:30. At North-u I side, Circle Inn will meet Bob & I Larry’s and Por.tiac State Hos-■■ *jpital will play Local No. 653. Does Your BowlmgBall Really Fit? HAVE A PROFESSIONAL CHECK IT FOR YOU ... FREE of CHARGE-NO OBLIGATION! At The BOWLERS DISPLAY BOOTH In The I Front Lobby Entrance PONTIAC MALL Regitter for FRf E Drawing — Bowling Ball, Bag and Shoe*, Bowling > _ Shirts and Blouses To Be Given Away! . f: ’ \ Sponsored By HURON BOWL AIRWAY LANES ■\ 2525 ELIZABETH LK. RD .4B75 HIGHLAND RD. r FREE ADMISSION AMftMy mpmit f* Am UDIB DETROIT RACE COURSE WANTED MEM-WOMEN - prepare for these testa every year. It is on* of the largest and oldest privately owned schools of its kind and is not connected With the Govern-merit. - ■ ' ''' -Fdi’ FltEE information on. Government jobs. Including' list of positions and salaries, ffH out coupon' and mail at once—TODAY. You will als9 _get full details on how- you can prepare yourself for these tests. ‘'’i" Don't delay—ACT. NOW! tunity for advancement. Many positions require little or'- no specialized educatiorr or experi- But to get one-of these jobs, you must pass a feat. The com- , petition is kderi ..and in some LINCOLN SERVICE, Dept. 127 Pekin, Illinois I artt very much interested. Please send me absolutely FREE (11 A list of U.-S. Government positions and salaries; (2) Information' • on how to qualify for a U. S.'-Government job. Name ...................................... Agg ....• Streef................. .-v... Phone ........... City ,v........ i.,...,. .♦.......... State ........... OWN AND OPERfATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED We will select and train one man only to own his own profitable-exejusive lifetime franchise in this area. Our established franchised, dealers, earn up to $20.000.0b and More per year oper-ating a low overhead business wb«re. there is'no product to sell and no inventory to buy. Men from all walks of life-are-eoccessful in this business and age is no barrier. No special education required.' If you are sincere about being your own boss, writabletter telling about, yourself. If you qualify, fuH details about this offer will be furnished. Total' investment $14,750.00 , of - which tiel. Write," husiness in August arid Septeniber. At) replies cbnfiden-Dclomater Manufacturing Co. Franchito Division, Dept. 63-10 Rockford. Illinois . . John Herrington paced Har- sas proved costly, The .Chargers, Doubles by Boe and Chuck|three more in me^ ourin irairas on vey-s-to toe nighteap^ hu^igUho were crippled by injuries Graves were the big blows for a double, a/walk, a fielder s 6ne.hitter last year, lost tSi Rote,*theii; lUl -------- mi »nri * two-hase error. Pontiac’s other representative, newly acquired No. 1 quarterback. the Elksv took a pair of games ON ciniriTVFq fromgp^cer FT&f^ of Waterford 0 1 N ■ ■ ■ Saturday, 4:3 and 10-5. - Rote, , an NFL and Canadian Spencer.’^ dropped the two one-ffea8ue veteran, suffered a torn run games to Saginaw on Sun- n“ an(* “ruisen breast bone and day, 6-5 and 3-2. The Elks double-1‘s «*?«««* ^ **^ actlon for header Sunday withT FHnt Buickrw® °r three weeks, was postponed. • John Hadl, available only on Port Huron has two games re-[5ekend Passes from Air mainiqg with Spencer’s and & bigjforce until Oct. 11, came off Ine 'doubleheader witii Flint Buick. I bench and threw touchdown Flint also has a twin bill remain- Passes of two and 16 yards. Paul ing with Pontiac Elks. ,___-- 1^0. orie of the Chargers’ crip- —ER-crfy aoFTB^xi. pies of‘62, ran three and- 65 yards pqgtiac Harvei- s n 7 for the other touchdSwris. Len mtturt f I? S’Dawson, the AFL s Most Valuable ____^^laygr, tossed a one-yard TD pass waurford l»ftMftr'('iiM^^ftJjlto Fred AftSffllas, and rookie quarterback Eddie Wilson pitched a* 21-yarder to Je^rel Wilson for .the other-Chief score. G. CoHision will meet Hur-| The Chargers have, Class A Game Tonight on-Airwav in Class A under the ord for AFL exhibition play-in lights at Jaycee Park tonight. three years but they were only ^TTie game begins at-8. 14-10 in league play .last year. HEALTH STUDIOS Summer Economy Plan Limited Membership $125 ONLY THREE WEEKS TO JOIN AT THIS PRICE ties Include: • COMPLETE EXERCISE FACILITIES • MECHANICAL ROLLERS • VIBRATORS . • SAUNA-STEAM ROOM • SWEDISH MAS^AtiE —* • SUNTAN ROOM 1 ERWEIGHT 04TOT 12 II... 2 Inches hff l MfKRmUf.llT Cain 12 lb». Adil 2 inches !• Bn* For Free Trial Call Ml 6-5596 025T4«uitsr Blvd. BIRMINGHAM f Hours II I* Hon. thru Fri'.-Iftt. II f* t T~7* AUTO PAINTING wltk new DIAMOND GLOSS featuring General Electric silicones, Any car—Any color. - ScvtlScJwfr WORLD’S LARGEST AUTO PAINTER W fouth Sayinaa AUTO SERVICE COUPON SPECIALS Clip /Ejn Out-Cart ’Em In-Count You?,Saving! BEST TERMS -On-Auto Service In ThisArea 20:6 •OriginalEquipment Quality. Mos. to pay ANY MUFFLERE MMHmltir’" ~4'Ag q DOUBLE VALVE ACTION SHOCK ABSORBERS STEAM CLEANING ENGINE SPECIAL! —with 'i- SA95 jms n CO CP ON Rl 1. Steam Clean Engine 2. Adjust Brakes, All Four Wheels 3. -Check Front End AKgnmant, Complete Brake & Front End Special "95 ★ Correct Camber, Cottar, Tea-In, ★ Re-pack Front Wheel Bearings ★ Adjust Brakes, All Four Whewis . 41 Check Reliance of Front .Wheat# Ar Road Tait . with this coupon 6! Brake Adjustment! WH“L„ bearings . . . ( REPACKED 33c^i BY APPOINTMENT . I GOODYEAR SERVICE STQRE All Fotti^ Wheels WITH THIS COUPON BY APPOINTMENT^ 79e Open te 9 fr.AA. lAendby ond Fr>d< FE 5-61(23 ,twb: PONTIA(ygliESS, MONDAY, AtJGUSt 5, 1963 jt^ I f ^ " Y*H' * ,4 * Ifcancel ^rrjfrv* i MARKUS Key Changes Narrow The foHqMng are top priori covering sates of teeily grown produce by gt^Wiers aiMl sold by • them in wholesale package lota. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets noon Friday. Produo* nun Applet, Duih*** ..— ./I......MS SEtt Blueberries, crate ...........^ Cantaloupe, bu. ........... 5.1 .peaches, Red Karen, bu. i....6.5 Cherries, sweet, 16-qt. crate ....... |.l Peaches, Sun Haven, bu. . .. 64 ' Raspberries, Jtpt. crate ....’,.7..'. eJ nanum SSS: ETkcSS*. Continues to Advance Union Supports '60 Now'Plan NEW...YGRK m- Stock Mar-ket priecs rose in moderately active trading early today. Most changes Of ke; were narrow. f key bsues It was continuation of tile advance with which the market closed the week Friday. 1 Brokers said there probably is enough bullish news around thenurket steady but —Keens! Beets, d ... 3.60 . si -- . i’- incjmvus cuiu VU »; tea t itroag enough to pro- ppnt were ahead by minor frac- ess dupA an assault nn tho fftrmpr si_____ <■ Beets, topped’............ Broccoli, doa. bch....... Cabbage, curly, bob. ....... Cabbage, rod, ML ............ cabbage, sprout*, bu. ....... Cabbage, standard, bu. ..... Carrots, dot. bcb. .......... Carrots, tapped, bu........... Celery, Pascal, stks. Celery. Pascal. 1-5 dog. crate Con. sweet, 5 do*. bag Cucumbers, dill ...Xtaft,,, Cucumber, pick]* dice aa assault on the former highs. - They mentioned expectation of increased steel orders within a few weeks, an increase in consumers’ installment tiebt in June and price increases ,on~a number of products by steel mills. ;.w American Viscose spprted 4*4 to 72 on an opening block of *i*0 shares following Supreme Csnrt Justice Arthur Goldberg’s refusal to block the company's acquisition by FMC Corp. FMC gained 2 If M on a hfoek of 19,600 shares. '"f Some other suable blocks changed bands in early trading. Bqthleheni and Jones & Laugh-lin added about half a point. American Telephone and Du tions. ★ * * Electronic Associates advanced about a potot. Opening blocks included: Chrysjg^ off % at 56(4 on 10,000 shares; Hilton 'Hotels up % at 19tt on 4,500; Sperry Raifd, off V* at 14% on 6,500;'General Mo- tors, up Vd'kt 71% on 3,300, and Sunray, up % at 36% on 3,400. i: t: t+ it * Prices were mixed, bn the America Stpck Exchange. Advancing' were {Jherwin Williams, Occidental Petroleum, CUB, gyn-tex and Universal Controls. Off were Creole Petroleum, Draper, Kawecki Chemical and Strong Cobb. r” ■ * ■ « ! Corporate a n d government bonds wore mixed. American Stock Exch. Unanimous Vote Cast for Retirement Options Rank and-file members of the Fisher Body plant Local 506 yesterday unanimously voted to back the “60 Now” plan of earlier retirement for auto workers. President Gerry Kehoe said the members folipwed t h e - recommendations of the local’s executive board, which endorsed the W/rf2, Rails to Spark New Talks WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz ~ calls ip railroad management union representatives today in an effort to spark a new r ,o u n d of negotiation* on the Strike r threatening -work rules dispute. With a nationwide rati tieup in prospect Aug.'29 unless Congress ^acts or a settlement, of the fom-year-old jobs dilemma Chicago Tension Mounts in New Negro Move-In is reached, the Labor Department .is keeping the heat on the two-raes,. trying- to propel them toward hard bargaining* Wirtz offered suggestions “relative to; the key isssues” Friday night — there has been' no public disclosure of their nature — and he and Asst. Secretary James J. Reynolds conferred over, the weekend yith management and union representatives. Asked last night if any move t o w a r d agreement had developed, Reynolds, said “not yet, no,” but he. added, ‘‘A very serious attitude has entered ip to CHICAGO JUPI) — Tension, The city’s focus of racial ten- these sessions.” . , mounted on Chicago’s South Side skms was on the 560Q block of Reynolds said Wirtz’ recom-plan last Wednesday. It is alsoiagato today with reports that ion- South Morgan street, where tu-! mendationa-^itould serve as “a . the first Pontiac area, local toother Negro, family .planned totnultuous crowds have demon-[framework for useful, hard bar-move into, a neighborhood where started for a week , against the] gaining." violence has flared for a week.|move-to of Negro fomilies iiftoj The4;Sbor Department is continaihg its mediation efforts mu Sggplam, n n. ......... . ...Eggplant, tong type, b«k. Kohlrabi ................ Okra, pk. basket ....... Onions, dry, -SP lb. ..... Onions, graan, ben. .............— Onions. pMldtBf, lb. ....... ........ •» Paralty, curly, bob. ................ » - Parsley, root, bob. Peppers, cayenne .. Peppers, sweet — Potatoes, a In. bag Potatoes, nsw, 60 lb. squasn, ouuiuicr. 7S uu. jfqkMlc,*. hofcoo**.’ I lb. bsk. lap Chsm .!!! 8 8 Sberw Wm bis N Aa .... *0.2 Sonotone Kttlser Indus . 6.6 Tcchnfr.n The Jew York Stock Exchange take a stancLon the proposal. The resolntion calls for an industrywide option of retinqnent after 25 years at half pay, 30 years at two-thirds play, or a.t age 66 with a minimum of don-ble benefits. i A second proposal asks that “the current pension be at least doubled, and.full survivor benefits be established.’ V YORK (AP) - PoUowlng Is a list ei selected stock transactions on the Mew York Stock Exchange with noon prtees: Sale# —. - — ........— —nr, (hds.) High Low Lost Chg. Turnips, topped, bu. ORBS Cabbage, bo. ....... Collard. bu. ......v Kale. bn. ......... MusUrd. bu........... gSrrd, bn. ' ^lair^lbMdi bn. -^iy . TUr£SiraE AND SALAD GREENS celery q»l>Mf* ....................82.50 Poultry and Eggs Mr pound at Detroit for Mo. live poultry: . Heavy type hens 18-20; roasters 5’ lbs 21-26; .broilers and fryers 3-6 whites 16-16; Barred Rock 21-22. Comment: receipts light. Trading mostly of a flll-ln nature. Supplies adequate hut generally well cleared. . DETROIT BOGS ~ DETROIT, Aug. 2 (* — Egg price* paid per dozen at Detroit by first receivers (Including U.B.) - Whites Grade A extra large 21 -37; . large 11% 11; medium MJB; — 20; checks 2114-26: ~ Comment: prices mostly unchanged although rending lower In Instances. Movement Irregular, Improving some quarters, slour .ln others. Supplies adequate and floor atocks falrlu heavy. CHICAGO BUTTER AND BOGS CHICAGO. Aug. 5 (AP)—Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady, wholesale buying prices unchanged; AA 6T44; *2 A.-Mtt: 90 ” *‘ 65W: cars 80 fi 57%; 60------- Eggs steadier; Wholesale byytng prices untmaogad to 1 higher; 70 per ceir* — . better grad* whites 31; mixed 31; Slums 28; standards- 28%; dirties 254 checks 36. D B 56%; 89 C CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) — (MSu --HI poultry: Wholesale buying.mmdMmd l>i lower; roasters 22%-24%; -White Rock fryers 17i CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO. AUg. 2 IP — (USDA) Potatoes arrivals 36; jm track 163; t U.S. - shipments 16#; supplies light; mand moderate; market for long whlti dull, round reds slightly, stronger; lot track sales: CaUfornla long wl--- .00; Colorado-round reds 3.30-3.80; Neb-.raska round reds 3JO-1.66;. Washington round reds 3.30-3.60. i Livestock CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. Aug. 6 (AP) — Hogs 8.000 moderately active, butchers end — fully steady; shippers took Ml per el aelsMe supply: 1-2 190-V16 fc ppi 18.50-18.85;'lW head" *t 18.86; mlxe< 190-260 lbi 18.00-18.80; load 2-3 280 lbs 17.60; 1-1 360-400 lb SOI 16.00; load around 370 lbs 17.21; 400-400 lbs 14.00-15.00 ; 460-600 lba 11.16 .14.00; 500-000 lbs 12.15-1." ” Treasury Position WASHINGTON <01 — The cash position of the Treasury compared with corresponding date, a. f“‘" — __ | . 5,326,681, Withdrawals fiscal yr. t 10,173,020,_______ Total debtf . 6306,400,107,302.31 Oold assets 0 16,031,302,307.' July M, 1602 Balance 6 0,404,677,420. Deposits fiscal year " July t 6 4,560.001,225.7; Withdrawals fiscal yr. 6 e,020,030.02*.<' Total debt MMJ04.5S6.4N/ Oold adsets S' 10.167J06.83U •Includes 83*7,334,004.15 debt not sul Ject to stetutory limit. News in Brief . Burglars tooted a toft macEbe but failed to smash open the safe of Stuart Smith Beverage Co., 1130 Sylvertte, it .was re-, ixirted to Waterford Toomship police this morning. The safe was battered, but still locked. Vandals caused 3150 damage to five trucks stored on a lot at 3356 Addjs, Waterford Township police reported Saturday. Windows and. headlights yvere smashed and-the tops of two trucks dented. Chrysler . Posts Increase DETROIT (BMf fr Chrysler Corp. posted a 47 per cent sales increase in the final 10 days of July compared to the same sales period last year'. Chrysler sold a total of 33,064 passenger cars during the period for a daily rate ol 3)674 units. the previously all-white neighbor-Elsewhere on the South SkteJ*10®*- « - integrationist picketing resumed I MORE ARRESTS to-. A nei^iborhood where the I Thirty^five more arrests were school boa* is attempting to ta-lafciB to the area last night, stall mobile classrooms. Negro bringing the total of. persons, groups tave charged that ^J*fpidt«d up in the area during the m/mtlM fnctor a nnhf*u rtf H While Coognss weighs Presi-dent Kennedy’s proposal to font the dftpEto pyw t>rth» Interstate Commerce Commission, which would hand down interim decisions for a two- mobiles. Joster a policy Of to r227. Police hoped'* the y*** P**1** pending a volun- facto segregation” in the schooU. wor8t of ^ violence was at an agUtomenL GAINS SUPPORT The ptokets, plus spectators, „-, __. , , ' totaled 150 persons, police said. Kehoe said Buick and -Q»vro-f' u.t week.^kkeU to the site lay down la the mud and po- in later today. Kce had to haul them away.' There were no “lay-down” demonstrations at the start of let locals at -Flint ha^P already approved the resolution. After the plan gtiins more local support, it wdl be decided at the regioiial, company and international union today's picketing!* levels, he explained. - ^ Executive boards of Local { 653, Pontiac Motor Division, and Local 594, CMC Truck” Coach, are icheduled to review the retirement plan Wednesday. end,- but stepped up their alert At- stake, are about 32,000 fire-upon learning that a third new fnen>s jobs on freight tnttnraad Negro fan^ily planned to move yard locomotives. Under the 5" later today. prestait sdwdule (he carriers' A fourth Negro family has plan to post orders Aiig: 29 start-been living in the area for some tog the elimination of these jobs, months. which the railroads contend are “ If passed on, and union officials is *8%^ i7»(.y4Mk + 4 expect favorable action, mem-| berships' of the two other locate! police moVed to quickly tost night, ** unwns 7 ^ .?* jwtten a crowd PWrths^ ^ llatfiefihg to an intersection f , • t ;r 1 the previously all-white neighbor-SOCCe$Sfuf 4* [hood where^Ihree^ Negro famffies jt ” ! moved in last week. lrU/OCfrn>» £ i Scuffles resulted. One youth at-ft IVCOifi ly ♦ !tempted to take away an offf-m ijjjlm k ' leer’s gun. Police turned 14 juv- ILAulCJ! will vote on it Aug. 11.-. ★ h ★ Andy Wilson, president of Local 594, said demands for federal legislation to reduce the social*) pany union demands. The scheme is. similar*to the “60 Now” movement which was advanced at the last United Auto Woricers convention, but failed to gaiifenough support, N— Trade Slow, Mixed in Grain-Activities CHICAGO* TVade was stoUr and -mostly miked in the grain futures market today in earTy transactions on the- Board showed little change although ^"r^ybeans again were firm. w , Soybeans .posted pins of well over a cent a bushel within the. first several minutes but,steadied Somewhat at that level as demand slackened. ^nver Jo then- parents and &*1- 7^2 ^ ^ booked 21 adults on disorderly tieliberatio^ later tiiuLweak. , Tbe [ carriers nave By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “My mother- is 65 and j LaterTast“hight, above f i . . living with us. She has a little {blocks away, two black powder over $4,060 that she would like bombs were found which police ! tut mid *»». ■ to the Uetunatiwi are. taken care. of, but she squad, would like a few dollars of her own each month for spending money. I thought that a check regularly, no matter how small,-would'give her.a feeling of independence.1 What’ can you suggest?”-r-W.R. , A. I think you/ mother is extremely fortunate to have a son so obviously .devoted- to hpr as you are. ... ' , I believe she' should, buy two dends, My first' suggestion is Winn-Dixie Stores, a very successful Southern food 'chato, I advise her to put half -her money in this situation^-which would buy 72 shares and pay her about $6.50 a month. I would' put the balance into 32 shares Republic National Bank of Dallas, Texas, an ag- Dealers said offering «nhe^reH gresslve bank W m exPanc,m8 ,ppear“ territory. This wouM fo-ing her to be light. Some of the support Wa, was credited to speculative accounts. , •- Wheat 'showed firmness but coni was virtually unchanged: ' Student. Faces Ouster for Talk at Racial Rally MONTGOMERY," Ala. (AP) • lie Montgomery Advertiser aa] University of AUroama. officials are considering expelling James Hood, a Negro, because of Last weak the Senate and House commerce- committees completed hearings On the Pres- , endorsed ~J turning'the dispute over to the Commerce Commission; the unions are vigorously opposed to the proposal.—-——h—----——■ DOESN’T WANT JfOB Yesterday, Commission Chairman Laurence K. Wairath said ids agency can cope with the dis- . pute, but doesn’t want the Job toxl,is willing to .take it only be-cause he.;.can’t think of anyone who could do lit better. . “We we prepared to accept -it if the Congress agrees with * the President that that is the proper solution,” Wairath said. He a d (he d that the 66ttimis-sion’s experience in settling Job-security issues during mergers statements he allegedly made at consolidations-^givaa’. ff a ■ a Negro rally background in teebniques, pro- University officials at Tusca- cedures and personnel that could loosa confirmed that an investi- in the rail case. gation is under way. A story in the Advertiser's Sunday editions said that Hood addressed a Negro-rally July 16 in Gadsden, where racial demdh- with commercial business slack all around. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN l July .. i Oat* i • Sept, i Dec. ... SeST .. . ?-& e.llmated ce— ex-Cletrfbutlon Stocks of Local Inter&t “ Ater decimal point# Ate.qlqtehe OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Th« following quotations do- Sot necos-irtljr represent- actual transactions but re Intended as a guide to the aproxl-»te-trading range of tbe securties: . ...» _ - BID ASKED AMT Corp, ..........IJ 13.1 Bln-DICator .............. s.s g.t Braun Engineering .........S8.4 '28 Charles Of the Rita .... .. .35.2 27.5 Detfdlter Mobile Hbmes .... 1.7 - 6 Diamond Crystal ............u.« jg g Prlto-Lay, In*. .35.4 . 874 McLouth. Steel Co. .. .... .-.42 tfj Maradei PrOducle "...... . . ,15 ie!l Mohawk Rubber Co. .........244) 264 Mich. Beamless Tube Co. ...17/ 16 3 Pioneer Finance .. ....... j . “ Printing ....... . i*e -H* Fe Drilling . 9 in stock during 1M , ’** **-dl»Wend .----- mV J/cld—Called, x __________ dend and sales In full. xMle—Ex dlstrlbu-‘^..jVpit*. xw-WUhout war, ------- J-fWtth warrants, wd -When dis l^uted. .etfr-When Issued. nd^-NeXt day , .TJ-fr' UeaMuptcy or recelrershlp or betog reorganized under the Bankruptcy Ash or securities aaiumed by such com. Peases, xl—Ex Interest, ct—Certificates st-Stamped. f-Bealt lfi n*t z~uiuitla bonA nagotfabUto Impaired by me&rlty. nd—Next day dellyery.^xw—Ex warrant*. Affiliated Fund *. ... Chemical Fuad ________ Commonwealth Stock .... Keystone IneOme K-l ... Keystone Growth K-2 ’:. Mass. Investors Growth . Mail. Investors Trust ... Putnam Growth -.......... Television ' Electronics ".. Wellington Equity ....." ’ CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, AUg. 1 (API — Wheat; * * — No. -2'red 1.81",4; No. tad. Util. Fgn. L.Yd Compiled0^6!The Auwlmd Pros ■ “ Net Chahf# ... Noon Yrl. 81.5 luv.o Prey. Pay 81.6 tMTl Week Ago 814 l*Q.O Month Ago 82.1 J00.5 Year-AM 77,0 *7.» 1983 High 82 2 '161.8 jm Low la.7 eea 1882 High 79,7 102.2 ye lo,w. hard 1,95-88; No. 3- yellow hard ■»4V4, Com: No. 1 yeHow lM'.-Vi; To. 2 yellow 13614; No. ryMMgn.28W. Jets: Jh. 1 heavy W“" — fi heayy white 87; No. 1 lro soybean Hit gressive bank ih an- expanding j 2*2' toy, been going on for total lor spending money up 10 severa, WMkl » $11a montii. Q. “I have read in your column jhat it it mrlHsr~tlB. get married to ttocks. I am 75 years old, a 'retired railroad engineer, and have held"C.I.T,, Eastman Kodak, Atchison,, and Pepsi-Cola for 15 years. Is that too long? I would appreciate your advice.”—E.G. A. J 'congratulate" you on ybur age and your good judgment, ♦when I .speak of getting married to .stocks, I am referring to the innate stubbornness of some., investors who find themselves in a slow: or deteriorating situation but refuse to admit their original error and hold their stocks untH the* bitter end; There is no harrn to betog married to good stocks, although these should be checked regularly to make sure that they’re still good. You"picked excellent stocks which have behaved „well over the years and should continue to do so. There is reaUy no limit to the lepgth of time that such issues should be held—provided they are watehed always for signs of weakness. (Mr. Spear cannot answer qll mail personally but will ans all questions possible to his column.) , Copyright, 1963 >v- The story said Hood strongly criticized Gov. George C. Wallace, said that university officials tried to trick him into a situation calling for his expulsion, and. contended that a university professor might be fired because he given Hood and “A." Net ChMige Moon Prev-. Week Month Ago _____ TW AgO r /No. 3 1883 High DOW^ONEg 6 STOCKS 7 AVAAGES 85,88+1.88 87 68+,0:85 40 Bond* ... ...... .... lt.17+1 10 Higher grade r»Hs.8J98 . 10 Second grade rxllz_____88.91+ 10 Public UUUttM...... -88.85 +i ’** — lustrlafe ........ 93.82—0.041 ... ..." 147.0 175. 641.1 121.8 134.0-942. ..377 1 127:2 142.8 SR: TREND or STAPLE PUCES NEW TOR K (API—The Anodl Press weighted wholesale prle* - lndti J5 commodities. . ’ ■ Pn-vlug-. Day 159.71.’W.i-k AgO IH Month Ago JM.37, . Year Ago 162.32. Asked if the IOC is “at all happy aver this new arrangement,” Wairath replied: “Not at alP”Bi!t, he added: If I could think of anyone who could do U better !l would certainly be suggesting it to the Congress at ti)is moment.” . Friday's KV PSuth P*R; VfV .35 Mont D Ut.......... .36 Mont P O 4.7pf 1175 Moot D U 4.5pf J.U6 , CONFERENCE — An international ahvferti^ing conference took place when E. Colin Barber (center) of Melbourne, Australia,’ advertising director of General Rotors Holden^ Ltd., visited JWacManas'^ John Si Adams, Iqc., Bloomfield Hills. Colin H. (right.)»vice president and Pontiac Motor Division account .supervisor, displays an advertisement while agency President , Ernest A*.Jones watches. Jones first met the General Motors .. executive when on a speaking tour of Australia last year.