The Weather UJ, WMHwr •h^ P«mnt pm A. THE PONTIAC, PRESS Horn# Edition VOL. ,123 NO. 147 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 - PAGES TTT LBJ Orders Draft Call Doubled lOe U.S. to Send 50,000 More Troops to S. Viet GM Sales, Earnings Climb to New Highs NEW YORK (iP)—General Motors Corp. earned more money in the first half of 1965 than any other company in a like period. The world’s largest manufacturing concern set records for profits, unit ______ Metro Study Starts Monday Transit, land Use Guide for 6 Counties and dollar sales, dividends and employment. GM earned $1,275 billion or $4.45 a share, in the first six months of this year, compared with $1,138 billion, or $3.98 a share, in the 1964 first half. Sales climbed to $11,215 billion from $8,868 billion. In the second quarter, the auto maker’s profits totaled $639 million, or $2.23 a share, against $602 million, or $2.11 a share, in the comparable 1964 period. SALES UP First half sales rose to $5,657 billion from $5,082 billion. The company paid common stock dividends of $1.56 a share in the second quarter and $2.25 in the first half. A year earlier payments were $1.15 and $1.80. A $3.6-miilion transportation and land-use study ~of the state’s six southeastern counties, including Oakland, will begin Monday. The study, which will span 3'4 years, is being financed by boards of supervisors and road commissions of the six counties GM’s worldwide factories as well as several other organi-sold 4,056,000 cars and trucks in zations. the first half, a gain of 11 per Asks UK Help in Peace Quest * WASHINGTON (/P) — President Johnson announced today he is adding 50,000 troops to U.S. forces in Viet Nam, doubling the draft call and asking the United Nations to start a new search for peace in the Southeast Asian war. . Johnson told a news conference: • The monthly draft call will jump from 17,000 to 35,000. • U.S. military forces in South Viet Nam will increase from 75,000 to 125,000 men. • He has directed Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg to go to New York immediately and to present to the United Nations secretary general “a letter from me requesting that all the resources, it -k it energy and immense to LBJ Policy Dissenting Governors cent over 1964. Second quarter sales totaled 2,036,000 units, ' an increase ol 9 per cent, w * ★ Employment averaged 741,008 in the first six months and 744,-053 in the second quarter. HIGH LEVEL Data obtained in the study will be used to develop a comprehensive long range plan for the metropolitan area to guide development of future land use patterns and to provide a balanced transportation system. “Our plans will be aimed at NEWSMEN USTEN - President Johnson speaks to a packed conference room in the White House today as he outlines a policy for increased U.S. military manpower in Viet Ae.*eiMMM Nam. He also announced the appointment of Abe Fortas as justice of the Supreme Court and John W. Chancellor as new head of the Voiee of America. Chairman Frederick Donner 1990, ” said Irving J. Rubin, di-and President James M. Roche rector of the study, said there were many reasons ★ ★ ★ why the high rate of economic “We intend to anticipate activity is being translated into change, not catch up with it,” Rubin said. “The future investment of billions of public and Here's How You Can Apply Troy Man Dies for Medicare Cash Benefits a high level of car sales. “One of tht. most important,” they said, “has been the steady increase in consumer incomes over the past seven-year period during which car prices have remained unchanged.” private dollars should be guided by findings of the study.” ROADSIDE INTERVIEWS Teams of interrogators will begin roadside interviews Monday in the six-county area and They added that the recent the house-to-house survey will reduction in the excise tax on start the next day. cars should further stimulate _. u- demand. • ^ h e University of Mich.- if it it gan’s Center for Urban Stud- Factory sales of cars and Carnes * i 11 trucks produced in GM plants question a total of 266 006 resi-around the world totaled 2,036,- ““‘s “J on.iranspor- 000 units in the second quarter, an increase of 9 per cent over This confidential information the 1964 second quarter. will be turned over to the De- VEHICLE SALES Regional Transportation In the first six months vehicle JJse Study^ (TALUS), sales totaled 4,056,000 units, an increase of 11 per cent over the 1964 first half. Records were set for GM worldwide employment during the second quarter and first half. Employment averaged 744,6.53 persons in the second SIMILAR AMOUNT Oakland County’s share of the $1.9-million first phase of the study is $52,000, with the board of supervisors contributing $29,600 and the road commission $22,400. quarter. For the first six months it was 741,008. In Today's Press : Voting Bill I Conferees differ on two I key issues — PAGE A-7. ’ Retired Generals s Say greater force is ^ needed for Viet victory— f PAGE A-3. I i Protection Series ^ I Potential dangers of I II telephone outlined — f PAGE B-5. I Area News ......... B-8 ^ I Astrology I Bridge I Crossword PuMie i Comics .............D-3 Editorials A-6 Food Section . ■ C-2—C-4 Markets D-2 Obituaries D-4 Sports ........C-9—C-12 Theaters D-16 TV-Radio Programs D-11 Women's Pages B-1—B-4 The county is expected to contribute a similar amount for the balance of the stud y, Rubin i oaid- ^ Other participating counties ^ are Wayne, Macomb, Washtenaw, St. Clair and Monroe. Joining with the counties in underwriting the cost of the itudy are the City of Detroit, 1 the Metropolitan Fund Inc. and I the Michigan State Highway I Commission. I WWW ^ others are the U.S. Depart-I ment of Commerce, Bureau of I Public Roads and the Housing I and Home Finance Agency. D-11 Bulgaria Announces Political Shoke-Op VIENNA, Austria (AP) Communist Bulgaria today announced a shake-up of the political security apparatus, curtailing the functions of the minister of interior and setting up 'a watchdog state security committee on the government level. • A ★ The shakMip appeared to be a result el the ibortive military coup against the immier and Communis party chief, Todw Zhivkov, crushed last April. (EniTOR'S NOTE - Thus us the fourth in a series of 14 articles on the new health care and Social Security bill by John Troan. special -.rrlUr for Newspaper Enterprise Association.) , By JOHN troan" Three types of monthly payments are available under Social Security: ★ ★ ★, Medicare Bill Goes to LBJ WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate passed and sent to President Johnson today the Social Security-health care bill establishing broad health protection as a matter of right for all Americans over 65. The Senate passage, by a vote of 69 to 24, completed congressional action on the measure. The House passed the compromise version yesterday, 307 to 116. The measure contains the most comprehensive revision and extension of the Social Security System since the original act was passed 36 years ago. Its final passage climaxes a fight that began in 1935, with the writing of the original law, to include health care for the elderly benefits under Social Security. LBJ TO SIGN Sponsors said they were certain Johnson would sign the bill this month, probably tomorrow or Friday, so that the increases in present Social Security benefits can come in September. The $l.$-bmion bill contains broad new health protection available to all 19 million Americans 65 or over as a matter of right and at sraalf' cost. It also increaws all present Social Security checks — for retirees, disabled persons and family survivors — by 7 per cent, retroactive to Jan. 1. Chedu going to 20 million bene-fleiaries will be increased. Retirement benefits. Survivors’ benefits. Disability benefits. To draw any of them, you must apply at a Social Security district office. For the nearest offiQ^ inquire at your post office or check under “Social Security Administration” in your phone directory. You nnist be at least 62 years old to get a retirement benefit. But you can never draw your full retirement benefit unless you wait until you are at least 65 to start col|edting it. RETIREMENT BENEFIT When you apply for your retirement benefit you should take along: • Your Social Security card, or some record on which your Sociai Security number appears. • Your income - tax “withholding statement” (Form W-2) for the previous year. (Or, if you are self-employed, a copy of your last federal income-tax return.) • Some proof of your age. The best proof of age is a birth certificate, or a baptismal certificate issued shortly after birth. If you don’t have either, you may use some other document to establish your age. Such as a certified hospital birth record; a signed statement from the midwife or doctor who attended your birth; a marriage record showing your age when married; a child’s birth certificate which happens to show your age; a family Bible; a military discharge paper. Others include an immigration oj- naturalization record; a passport: a vaccination record; an old insurance policy; a certified union record; an employment record showing your age; a record from a foreign church or government; or a license, permit or voting record 'showing your age. Generally, the older the document the better. And if you don’t have any other satisfactory evidence of age, you may ask the U.S. Census Bureau to check its records for you. The fee: $4.' ★ ★ ★ If you qualify for retirement benefits, your wife also may be eligible — provided she is at least 62. In such case, she must prove her age and her relationship to you (a marriage certificate will do). She also should produce her own Social Security card, if she has one, so the government can figure out whether she qualifies (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Woman Passenger in,Poor Condition Oakland Highway Toll in ’63 95 A Troy man was killed early this morning when the car he was driving ran off Dixie Highway north of the 1-75 interchange and rolled over six times.' • N e w 10 n W. Krebiehl, 41, 6396 Norton, was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. Mrs. Lucille Hartwig, 49, of 3779 Minton, Orion Township, a passenger in the car and Krebiehl’s former wife, is listed in poor condition at the hospital with multiple fractures. * * * State Police at the Pontiac post said the car was traveling north on Dixie Highway at a high rate of speed when it left the road. * * * The vehicle rolled end over end and stopped 690 feet from the point at which it left the road, police said. The accident occurred at 3 a.m. in Springfield Township. prestige of the United Nations be employed to PA|Y|nA\#, 'KIa^ find ways to halt aggres- IxUllllIvy* llv sion and bring peace in Viet Nam.” Goldberg, successor to the late Adlai E. Stevenson, was scheduled 10 fly to New York Hatfield Only and meet with Secretary Gener- ' al U Thant within three or four hours. • Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara will ask Con- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) gress for ai^itional money to —The Natlwial Governors Con-meet the increased costs of the ference went on record today, U.S. effort in Viet Nam. with two dissenting Republican I • There is no need at this voices, ewibrsing I^esldent time to mobilize military Re- Johnson’s expansion of military serve units or call National strength in South Viet Nam. Guard units to active duty. # ★ ★ The decision to put the Viet- GOP Govs. George ^mney namese peace quest up to the ot Michi^n and Mark 0. Hat-United Nations was a surprise b®kl of Oregon voted "no on move by the President - evl- » motion of Gov. Carl E..Sand-dently made to emphasize the Georgia Democrat, to sup-often-declared U.S. goal of port the President’s position, simply protecting South VIel immediately after Johnson’s Nam from Communist con- televised report to the nation quest. on decisions he has made in The 50,000-man reinforce- ^iet Nam. ments will be sent immediately, The Sanders motion put the Johnson said, adding that mor< g'qvernori on record support-men will be dispatched to tWi ing the President’s position fighting if and as necessary. and the principles he ennnei-* *-k‘ ated at his televised news After making his statements conference today, on Viet Nam, Johnson an- Rut there were some Repub- "T He has chosen Abe Fortas complaints that the Pres- w Went still had not furnished Dealer and long-7me’frSJd of sufficient details as well as e^ Johnson, for the S u p r e m e hopes that he wiU^ Court replacing Goldberg, much mwe sp^ifte in« sched-Johnson said Fortas was White thmse .q^erence first Choice for the assigi^’^^* the state executives Uy morrow afternoon. • He is naming John W. W ★ Chancellor, White House cor- Romney said he had* heard respondent for NBC, to be the nothing in the President’s tele-new director of the Voice of vision presentation that he America. hadn’t known before. After his lengthy statements gcRANTON SURE — they took about 25 minutes — Johnson opened the news con- ference to questions. IMPORTANT DOCUMENTS Here’s t check list of Important documents you should have on hand for Sdcial Security purposes: □ Husbandl Social Security card (or a xaoord shoir* ing his Social Security number). □ Wife’s Social Security card (or a record ahowing her numter). ♦ □ Proof of husband’i age. O Proof of wife’! age. □ Your marriage certificate. □ Copy of your latest income-tax “withholding statement”^ (Form W-2). Or, if you are self-employed, copy of your last income-tax return. □ Birth Certificate of each child for whom a benefit la fought. □ Certified copy of adoption order (if child is adopted). □ Death certificate of worker who dies. □ Receipted funeral bill if aomebody other than widow or widower claima lumpeurn death benb-fit. □ Divorce papen (wheie applicable). Also, if you should become so dlubled that you can’t work, it la a good idea to keep a list of doctors who have treated you aa weU ai hoi^tala, clinlca and othar in* stitutioBa whera yon have been treated. Pleasant Weafhet Continues in Area Fair skies'Und cooler temperatures will provide pleasant weather for Pontiac area residents through tomorrow. ★ ★ * Today’s high will be 74 to 82, with the low tonight in the mid- 50s. Tomorrow will be fair and cool with a high of 71 to 84. Northwest winds are J to 16 miles per hour today. ★ ★ ★ Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. today in downtown Pontiac was 57. By 2 p.m. the mercury had climbed to 73. Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania, a Republican, „ . J L .1. .1. he is sure the great major- “y of Americans support the United States is prepared with additional plans should North ^‘^osiaeni. Viet Nam escalate Its activity. Romney tried to get the con-And what about possible Chi- ference to postpone action un- nese reaction to the steps he til after the governors receive announced today he is taking. a White House briefing from Johnson said he did not wish ***« President tomorrow after- to speculate on that. But, he "o®"-added, “this country always Romney and Gov. John Chaf-will be prepared to protect the fee of Rhode Island, a Jlepubli-national interests.” can, wondered out loud why the Asked if he ^lieves the war president had chosen to make can be contain^ “m this comer announcement of Supreme Court of^utheast Asia wlthwt in- and Voice of America appoint-volving a U.S.-&viet confronto- tion, the President said, ‘ We ^3,,^ ^ hope very much that it could.” ' ‘KNOWS OF NOTHING’ ★ ★ ★ He qdded that he intends to Both indicated they thought “avoid provoking” that confron- this reduced the Impact of the tation. President's appeal for unity be- “I know of nothing that we policies. ^have In mind that should * * , * arouse distrust” by the Soviet Democrats attending this 57th Union, Johnson said. annual conference have pven II Sovi« Uchnlcl™, are manning the missile sites in h>v* rriH North Viet Nam, Johnson said *3 “iX ‘ J, ^ S.’S S’JrSSSK To other questions. Johnson xSa** ^ said the United States has com-municated wjth most of the __ w * ★ friendly nations of the world ^ conference recessed to-and has received from them day’s business sessions to hsten responses that have been en- and view the President’s tele-couraglng. He declined to give vised report on the Viet Nam details. * A~2 THE PONTIAC PBESI^ yEDNKSCfA^, JU^Y 28, Teen Breaks Right Arm Thai Made Medical '1st' BOSTON (AP) - Everett Knowles, IS, has broken one of the most important right arms in medical history. * ★ ★ The frisky, freckle-faced teenager, whose arm was cut off more than three years ago by a wheel of a slow work train but was then successfully reimplanted, fell recently from a stone wall — and landed on the still highly sensitive arm. ★ ★ * The Associated Press has learned that the boy was then rushed to the Massachusetts General Hospital where some of the surgeons who performed the original operation reexamined the arm. • ★ ★ ♦ They wu-ked late into the night a week ago Tuesday and found that the arm had been broken less than an inch from where it had been tom from his EVERETT KNOWLES Arraign Lum Man in Last Month's Slaying of Coed Koineth R. Cooke of Lum stood mute yesterday in Oakland County Circuit Court to a charge of first-degree murder in the slaying of an Oxford Township coed last month. The |»-year-old Lapeer County man is accused of killing Barbara K. Hodges, 22, of 545 Second on June 23. Caake was retimed ta the Oakland Comity Jail to await trial Be was arraigaed before Judge PhiUp Pratt No triai date was set. Sheriff’s Department detectives said that Cooke admitted the crime after he had first told them that a hitchhiker was re- Miss Hodges, a junior at Central Michigan University, was beaten and riwt to death on Dunlap Road, about two miles north of Oxford Village. body in the freight yard accident. FIRST OPERA’nON It was on May 23, 1962 that the doctiH's had performed what is believed to be the first operation in which a human limb was successfully rejoined to the body. Since then there have been several others. The hospital confirmed today that young Knowles will have to remain hospitalized for several weeks because of the break and a knee injury also suffered in the fall. Knowles said he and some friends had gone out for the evening and were sitting on damp grass on the side of a monument in his home town of Somerville, near Boston, when he slipped and fell. He said, in an interview, he dropped about 12 feet to the pavement and as he hit, thought, “My God, the arm." KNEW IT WAS HURT “I knew I had hurt it because I couldn’t straighten it out anymore,” Knowles said. “Actually the bang on the knee hurt more than the arm.” A spokesman for the surgical-medical team at the hospital said it now appears that the bone break, a crack in the upper arm, will probably have no effect on the long reimplantation process. “The arm had become so strongly reimplanted that the break itself was no different than what could happen to anyone else, and probably will mend just a; easily," he said. Knowles said until the fall last ^ week, he had been able to li "much as 15 pounds with the arm. He said he has no real use of his fingers. He can move them only slightly. SERIES (W OPERATIONS Since the first operation, he has undergone a series of others to try to regain full use of the arm and band. Tendons have been connected and nerves repaired. Just last month a one-inch piece jof bone' was placed inside the palm of the hand to keep his thumb in better position. His arm was in a cast when he fell. Knowles blamed the cast for the break. He said be did not the arm woidd have broken had the upper arm and shoulder not been forced to bend against it. “Except for the fingers, that arm is better than my left one,” he said. “When I have a cut it heals faster, and my fingernails grow faster than on my left hand," he said. Young Knowles would agree that he had been through a great ordeal in the last three years. At the hospital he said he has seen nwny people who have had a “tougher time than I ever had.” The Weather - Pnll U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy, a little cooler today, 74 to 82. MotUy fair and cooler tonight, low 58 to 58. Thursday, fair and cool, high 78 to 84. Northwest winds 8 to 18 mOes per hour today. Friday outlook: generally fair. YMay In PmiNk I a.m.: Wind valocity, U n ctlon: Nortliwtit. Mis today at 7:S7 p m. risas Thursday at *:ll a.m n aata today at i:3T p.m. This Data Ui fi Ynn }f» S4 m II Taaaday's TsOipaAltart Chart n St Dwhrtti 7S 7« 47 Fort Worth tot S4 S3 Jacksonvllla 7S 71 S7 Kaniss City 14 41 S3 Los Angsiss 33 IS 47 Miami Bsach 34 33 S3 MlhNSUkSt 33 _______ 73 S3 NSW Orleans 71 Trsv. City 77 S7 New York 7S AlbuQUsroM 34 47 Omaha Lansing Muskaeon Peilston .. .. -. Francisco 47 77 73 S. S. AAarla 44 31 44 Seattle 77 NA'nONAL WEATHER-ScattAed showers are predicted this evening from the southern plateau and plains regions eastward into the lower Mississippi Valk^ and Tennessee Valley. It will be cooler over the Great Lakes area and New England. Warmer readings are expected in the central Pl^ and Pacific Northwest. C BACHELOR WED - When 32-year-old Gene Ryeson of Ryeson’s Market, 4678 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford ’Township, deserted the ranks of bachelorhood, hid brother and business partner, Steve, announced the wedding in this fashion on the store’s front window. Gene noarried Bonnie Bayley of 5900 Watout Lake, W^st Bloomfield Township, Sunday evening at St. George’s Romanian Church. How to Apply for Cash Benefits (Continued From .Page One) for a’higher benefit on the basis of her own work record or yours. Even If slip’s under 82, your wife may draw a retiremeat beacfit provided yon have in your can a ddid who is under 18 or is incapable of self-support due to a disabBity la-cnrred befon age 18. In such event, the child also would be eligible for monthly benefits. So proof of the child’s age (or disaUlity) would be ire-quirad. Where a wife draws a retire-' ment benefit on her own, her husband also may qualify — provided he is at least 62 and can prove he depends on her for at least half of his financial support, AVOID DELAY You may apply for retirement benefits three months before reaching retirement age (to avoid delay of payments) or any time thereafter. But retirement checfcs can’t Seven Rescued From Sinking Pleasure Boat TRAVERSE CITY (AP) -Seven persons, including two boys, were rescued from a motor yacht in upper Grand Traverse Bay ’Tuesday, shortly before the craft sank near Fisherman’s Island. Four Coast Guard boats and a helicopter converged to rescue Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas George of Muskegon, owners of the 46-foot Jacoba, and their five passengers. George said something struck the hull of his pleasure craft, but he did not know what it was. The Jacoba sank as it was being towed to Charlevoix by the Coast Guard. Passengers were Aaron Springstead, his wife Ruby, and their 10-year-old son Richard; and Mrs. Peter Vatsakis and her son John, 12. All five are from Traverse City. be dated back more than 12 In case of death, the widow may draw survivors’ benefits ^ovided she is at least 60 — ,or has in her care at least one child who is under 18 or was disabled before age 18. w ★ To claim survivors’ benefits, a widow must submit her hus- Asks State Pay for City Police LANSING (UPI)-State Sen. Carl W. O’Brien, D-Pontiac, today called for state support for local police department salaries. ★ ★ ★ O’Brien said he would introduce a resolution when the legislature reconvenes tomorrow asking for a five-man committee to study the porblem and to recommend a formula by which the state cOuld subsidize the salaries. “The formula would be similar to that now used by the state for its share of support toward public school education," Obrien said. He said such a step was necessary because the salaries offered law enforcement officers are “so ridiculously low” that young men aren’t joining police forces, * ‘"There simply are not enough police officers to adequately patrol trouble areas and apprehend the petty criminals and vandals,” O’Brien said. “This problem stems from understaffing' and inadequate pay. ★ ★ * “Michigan should take its moral plac6 in protecting citizens from violators and provide funds so cities and municipalities can afford to hire enough of the right kind of men.’' band’s death certificate, bis Social Security card or a record of his Social Security number, her marriage certificate,* and proof of her age. Also, birth certificates of any children eligible to draw such paymmits. SURVTVfHtS’ BENEFITS Ihdidentally, an unmarried child aged 18 through 21 who is ' in school may now qualify for retirement or sundvors’ benefits but the mother doesb’t. Agaia, evidence k Ihe child’s age It needed — as well as proof the child is a full-time student in a college or other bona 'fide school (including vocational school). Survivors’ benefits also may be'drawn' by the parent or widower of a deceased worker provided the individual is at least 62 and depended on the worker for at least 50 per cent of financial support. ^ ★ In event of death, a lumpsum benefit also is payable. DEATH CERTinCATE This goes to the widow or widower — who must present a death certificate to claim it. If no spouse survives, the lump-sum death benefit may be claimed by the person who paid the burial expenses. In such instances, a receipted funeral bill as weD as a death certificate |s required. To draw disability benefits, the worker must establish total disability which is expected to last at least 12 months or to result in death. ★ ★ * If you’re unable to apply at a Social Security office, the agency vdll send someone to take your application personally. ★ ★ ★ If you qualify, disability benefits would be payable also to your wife if she is at least 62 or is caring for a child under 18 or one disabled before 18. Benefits would be payable also to such children plus any child under 22 who te still in school. Sex Proposal of Cleric Is Hit Hiji Plan for Tiitni Irks Area Residonh A Farmibgtoo clergyman’s proposal that taen-agers, with parental eonsent, be permitted to liye together as if they VNre, married has enraged some Farmington Township residents. In a newspapCT guest column, the Rev, Robert M. Eddy advocated that the state “not forbid or punish voluntary pre-marital intercourse between persons over the legal age of consent." we* The Rev. Mr. Eddy, pastor of the Universalist Unitarian Church, said the State should place no restrictions on the freedom of individuals to have Intercourse Ukh^ at the sanne time it should set an age below which conception would be illegal The Rev. Mr. Eddy wrdte the oolunm in the Detroit Free Press of May 1. - . DEMAND REMOVAL At a meeting of the Farming-ton Township Beard this week, 30 citizens demanded the Rev. Eddy ’s removal as chairman of the township’s youth guidance committee. The board refused to allocate 81,200 to finance committee projects. Supervisor Curtis Hall called the pastor’s views “‘a real shocker for a man of the cloth” and said the committee money is being withheld pei^g board approval of membm of the Birmingham Area News Art Academy President at Cranbrook to Retire BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Zol-tan Sdbeshy, president of Cran-iHook Academy of Art since 1960, will retire next year. The intrtnationally acclaimed pai^ in ten^a has been associated with the Bloomfield Hills institution since 18111. effective June 38, >1888. The announcement prompted Ernest A. Jones, chairman of the school’s board of trustees, to make this tribute:, “He was a major force in the prestige and growth of the school both as an artist and as an administrator.’’ LEAVE OF ABSENCE Following a year’s leave of absence, Sepeshy is expected to return to the academy as a painting instructor. In the meantime, the school will contlpne Its search for a The Rev. hfr. Eddy has been committee chairman since April. i“The citizens took exception to his vietfs and they |»otested the expenditure of nxmey on a committee which he heads.” The Rev. Mr. Eddy was un-ayaila'ble for comment. hf A-Bomb Is Near, Says Indonesian JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -Indonesia is likely to explode its first atomic bomb after the second Afro-Asian conference in Algiers next November, the director of army arsenals said today. w * ★ Brig. Gen. R. Hartono’s statement in the armed forces paper Ngyatan Bersendjata did not elaborate on the bomb project. President Sukarno said recently Indonesia would be capable of producing the bomb “in the near future.” ★ ★ ★ The United States has helped build up Indonesia’s first atomic reactor in Bandung, West Java. It was designed for peaceful scientific purposes, and the U.S. government did not consider it capable of producing matoaial for bombs. He's No Stool Pigeon NIJVERDAL, Holland (UPI) —A homing pigeon released two years ago for a seven-mile flight returned to its coop this weekend. There was no indication where it had been since July 1963. ZOLTAN SEPESHY Lawmen Differ on Foster Test Law enforcement officials were at odds today over the results of a lie detector test taken yesterday by two-time killer Carl F. Foster in connection with a third slaying. “As far as I’m concerned, any link between Foster and Connie Crossland has been eliminated,” said Sheriff’s Detective Charles Whitlock. “We won’t pursue it further. We ran enough tests to make me believe that there is no tie-in.” Asst. Prosecutor Walter D. Schmier said, however, that he “wasn’t entirely satisfied with the findings,’’ and would attempt to talk to Foster again. Whitlock and his partner Herbert Dolby have been assigned to the (frossland case since the 14-year-old Corunna girl was found strangled in Orion Township July 18,1963. Foster, found guilty July 21 of first degree murder in the slaying of his wife Angela 17 months earlier, had volunteered to take the test at the Bedford State Police post. Foster, 29, already was serving a 10-15 year prison term for manslaughter when he was charged with his wife’s death. successor to Sepeshy u president of the school. A hative of Hungpry, tiie 67-year-old Sepeshy wgs edixated in numerous EuropOan schools before coming to .file United States in the 1920s. ★ Hr * He fought briefly at Wayne State University and the Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit before establishing residence at Cranbrook. RESIDENT INSTRUCTOR In 1932, he was retained as a resident instructor in painting and drawing by the late Bliel Saarinen, the academy’s first president. Saarinen relinquished many of his administrative duties in 1947 and Sepeshy was named director of the school. Sepeshy helped the school gain its state charter as a degree - granting institution of higher education in the arts and accreditation by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. He is acknowledged as an authority on tempera technique, having written a book entitled “Tempera Painting.” ONE-MAN EXHIBITIONS Over the years, he has had 32 one-man exhibitions in art galleries, museums and universities £nd has participated in national and international exhibitions in 21 art centers in the U.S. and abroad. He is a member of the National Academy of Design, National. Institute of Arts and Letters and Commission of North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Grant OK'd for Training of 100 Nurses A $291,951 federal grant for training 100 persons as practical nurses in Pontiac was announced yesterday. The project, under the Manpower Development and Training Act (MDTA), will provide 48 weeks of training leading to licensing as practical nurses. Of the total amount, $164,648 will go to class members as income allowknce during the period of training and the remaining $127,311 is earmarked for training costs at the Pontiac Practical Nnrso Center. ’The grant willpllow formation of two new classes at the center. Six classes already have completed training under the MDTA since 1963. New classes of about 50 each are expected to begin in September and December at the center which is administered by the Pontiac Schools’ vocational education department. In announcing the new grant yesterday. Sen. Patrick McNamara and Congressman Billie S. Farnum said that 475,000 trainees have benefited nationally since MDTA was passed in 1962. New Concept in Education OCC fo Use Tutorial Method of Instruction (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second o/ tvoo articles on Oakland County’s projected^ community college.) By L. GARY THORNE Charter class members of Oakland Community College (OCC) will participate this fall in an innovation that could radically change the business of higher education. Opening the doors of two campuses Sept. 7 to 3,000 students, OCC Witt begin operations committed to a new concept of teaching. ’The technique will be new to teachers, students and parents. Students, most of them fresh from area high schools, ”wUl discover that the college’s tutorial method of learning is a sharp departure from the traditional lecture approach. The tutorial method is defined as supervised, self-instruction. The plan emphasizes maximum contact between student and teacher. College officials state that the lecture method will not be entirely abandoned, but will be incorporated into the plan and used in the form of weekly “assembly” sessions for each course,’ CEASE TO EXIST Old-type classrooms generally will not exist at either the Auburn Hills'or Highland Ukes campuses. Instead, the college will substitute tutorial laboratories made up of individual study carrels. Study carrfiis are three-sided booth structures housing a desk area equipped with devices, Wh as a small' movie projector, tape recorder or ^e projectyr, for individual study. ♦ ★ ★ Plans call for the. tutorial labs to be open 14 hours a day, 8 a. m. to. 10 p. m., for student use. , COURSE CONTENT ^ In each course, students wm meet at the beginning of week with their instructor in an "assembly” session. The teacher will lay out the course content for that week, make assignments and generally direct the student’s individual study for the entire week. Dr. John E. HrreU, college presUeat, said that “asseni-bly’’ periods will im|«rt the objectives or goals for fiiat wcdc’s study; the purpose being to motivate individnal study. After receiving assignments and instructions in “assembly” sessions, students will schedule themselves in using tutorial laboratories. •k it if Instructors in various courses will be on duty in the labora-tmdes, enabling the student to sedc help 8s he proceeds in In-dividuq^ studies. « FACE ORAL QUIZ AttlMcoaeluiionafthe week’Sv lesson, the student will |o before the insfructor for an il quiz. Of course. Dr. ’Tir-reli s^d, the week’s work will Include so-called homework, written papers and library work. In some courses, such as English or political science, the oral quiz may consist of a discussion session between the instructor and half a dozen students. College officials feel that the tutwial approach comes closest to the recognized learning theory of a one-to-one ielation-shlp of student and teacher with instant feedback. This theory is that a per$on learns best when he can te told whether he is right or wrong instantly after he poses an answer to a question. ARE CONFIDENT College officials arc confident the tutorial systmn will provide almost instant foecBback. Making extensive use of toriai plan should cut down on written assignments and higher edujcation’s famed bogeyman—the' two or three-hour final exams. [Dr. ’Tirrell said that some f (XX? officials react to this possibility with a sitent twinkle in their eyes, leaving the “yes, it could” unsaid. a trimester calendar, the coOcfe will offer yearHrouad odoenfioa. The first ses^n begins with registration Sept 2 and ends Dec. 24. The winter session win be Jan. 3 to Afwil 21 and the summer session May 2 to Aug. Students living in the college district (Oakland County) will be charged $103 tuition for the average class load of 12 credit hours. Nearly 2,800 students, including about 500 part time students, have enrolled to date at the two campuses. Registrations are still being accepted, according to college officials. Most of the conrse offerings this year will be ft the freshman level. However, some sophomore level courses are set up to accommodate transfer ktudents. When actual classes are convened at tile two converted college sites, OCC will pioneer use of the tutorial plan on a schoolwide basis. There have been some limited experiments with this tech-ni^e, but no school has completely adopted the approach for its entire education program. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 pmHIliureday 9 AM. to 9 P.M.-Friday 9 AM. to 10 P.M.-Soturday 9 AM. to 10 PJI. Lost 3 Days of SIMMS Big Sale MARK CLARK EDWARD M. ALMOND 4 Retired Generals Favor Greater Force in Viet Nam NEW YORK (AP) - Some retired American generals who fou^t the Communists in Korea believe greater force is needed to bring victory in Viet Nam. Four of the generals say there should be a single armed forces command for U.S. and South Vietnamese troops. One general, Edward M. Almond, favors use of atomic bombs if “needed to protect our troops.” Gens. Mark Clark and John E. Hull say there is no present need for such a weapon in Viet Nam. Clark says he might chaise this view if there is in-crea^ participation by an outside Communist power, such as Red China. KOREAN ARMISTICE Tbe four generals — Almond, Clark, Hull and Matthew Ridg-way — made their comments Tuesday — th^ 12th anniversary of the Korean armistice, in re- sponse to an Associated Press survey. Ridgway declined to go into detail about Viet Nam beyond his belief in the need for a single command. * * ★ Clark, 69, who as supreme allied commander sign^ the Korean armistice in 1953, said: “We must commit ourselves, however reluctantly, to whatever it takes to do ^e job.” Almond, 72, whose 10th Army Corps troops were hit by the first Communist attack in Korea, said, “I have no hesitancy in using any weapon needed to protect our troops in Viet Nam.” CLARK’S SUCCESSOR Hull, 70, successor to Clark a commander of U.N. forces in the Far East, said he didn’t believe in using atomic weapons “in this situation” in Viet Nam. Almond, Hull and Gark approved conventional bombing of military targets in North Viet Nam, even in heavily populated cities. Qark said he would first warn civilians so they could evacuate. “I believe we should hit the most remunerative targets we I can find in Viet Nam now,” □ark said, “and clobber them Don't Nogloct Slipping ^ wherever they are, includ- --------------------’ mg missile sites.” The generals also advised heavy reliance on air power and a commitment of greater forces. FALSE TEETH by nicb alkallni landleapi. FASTUTH. an non-aefd) powder to sprln- ------,-jr plates, keeps falsa teeth more firmly set. aives confident feeling of security and added oomfort. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Get PA8TEETH today at drug counters eyerywhere. WANTED EsHmalor and Soles Representative far Glazing Contractor Ossd Salary and Cammltilon F.O. Sax lit, Psntiac, Michigan Complata Optical Sarvica PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER HaniSiEElIj OMIi tvaninp >HI liM M2-1I1I Visit Tb» HEARING CENTER in the MALL a TESTS e AIDS a BATTERIES (In with Pontiac Mall Optical Center) Open Evenings Til l;N MMIIS Thos. B. 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All ports Inclodi ,or complete j ■*-W-«»4 Frofcut Ciystol D*kn Stand _ ' «»ke ttmd of 6_ I S r"* to k I In gift eorton, loa 'Pictures Sbpw Mars Is Lifeless' LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los Angeles Times reported today that Mariner 4’s best pictures of Mars show the red planet apparently is a dead orb similar to the moon. The newspaper said it learned that the pictures — not yet made public — show crates gouged in the surface of the planet but no evidence c‘ nals. , w * ★ Some astronomers have theorized that canals exist on Mars. Marvin Miles, Times aerospace editor, wrote: “While no direct evidence of life could be detected, this did not rule out the possibility that plants such as lichens and algae might exist. CLOSEST PICTURES “Mariner’s closest pictures were taken at a distance of about 7,000 miles. At that range it is possible life forms might not be detectable in the series of yet undisclosed photos. “These later pictures, taken under better lighting conditions that cast shadows on the Martian surface, are reported far better than the first photos." ★ ★ ★ The Jet Propulsion Laboratory in nearby Pasadena had announced Tuesday that at least three more of the Mars photographs recorded in the historic July 14 fly-by would be made public before the weekend. Mariner 4 began last Saturday to replay the tape on which all 21 pictures of Mars were recorded. The rerun is expec* d to be completed early next week. ★ ★ ★ Meeting Hears Plansfor Space Ideas Include Pulling Satellite Frdm Orbit SAN FRANCISCO (tlPf) -The United States la condUar-ing proposals to snatch one of Its veteran satellitas from orbit around earth and tp shoot radio-equipped “darts" at the planet Mars. Also in the nation’s space fu-' ture is a possible attempt to send a manned capsule to an orbital meeting w 11 h a giant balloon satellite, and a ^ay astronaut voyage around the North and South Poles of the moon. Hiese are among the more dramatic ideas now before more than S,0M U.S. scientists and technicians attending today’s third session of the four-day annual meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. L. M. Tin nan, director of spacecraft systems for, N o r t h American Aviation’s Space and Information Systems Division, revealed yteterday that, at the request of the federal s p a c agency, his company is developing a plan to send a manned Apollo ship up “to capture and return to earth the Syncom 3." ★ ★ ★ Syncom 3 is a U.S. communications satellite orbiting earth about 22,300 miles up. OLYMPIC GAMES The moonlet, launched more than one year ago from Cape Kennedy, was used for relaying television broadcasts of t h Olympic games from Tokyo to the United States in 1904. “Returning a satellite for the first time would make an interesting experiment,” said Tin-nan. “It would allow us to see the weathering effect (from radiation and cosmic dust) on an orbiting spacecraft.” * * A Recapturti^ Syncom 3 is one of several ideas North American is looking at as a possible future used for the Apollo spaceships and Saturn rockets that will be used to land the first men on the nmon around 1909. None of ttiese programs has gained official approval. /■ ‘ THE PONTIAC PRES», VVEUNjESDAV> JULY ,88^ im TOY GAMES 2 for f 1.00 6 for $2.30 Send Caih—Check—Money Onlor TRU TOYS •ex 94 Hh., MichigM S-. T.v- ,.,U ■ m H K ' / " -'.V V ..*/ .‘r, \ IP'-? . ' f. ^ ^ ><''■ r . .. The end of July is a ball at Osmun’s. (Our great July Sale ends this Saturday.) Catch? O a part ol Pontiac sinco 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & YOUNG MEN FREE PARKING at ALL STORES I Downtown Pontiac Open Fri. & Mon. 'til 9 I Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac ■ Tech Plaza Center in Warren Open Evefy Night 'til 9 Open Every Night 'til 9 WEDNESDAY. JUl.y 28; " A-ywtf • Flower Garden Flannel Backed Vinyl I TABLECLOTH o . - Reg. 2.99 £2x52-inch i -I Reg. 4-99 A2x70-lnch Reg. 4.99 60" Round Reg. 5.99 70"Roond Reg. 6.99 60x88-lnch I Lovely pll^jver floral tablecloth In core vinyl with flonnel bock. Blue, "green, gold or pink. Irish Linen DAMASK SETS ^5.99 *6.99 *8.99 *10.99 Lovely rose or chrysanthemum floral pattern In snow white linen. Imported Irish linen to enhance and beautify any table. 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Fourth Floor MAGNIFICENT MANTILLA by Calloway, 'The Label of Luxury" Bath Towels ^$199 Reg. 2.99 ' Hand Towels Reg. $149 1.79 I Face Cloths : 59^ Bring the beauty, splendor and pageantry of Spain into your bath with Callaway's luxurious Mantilla. This woven jacquard beauty has a lush all-over design of sculptured roses . . . reversible for double decorating magic. So thick, so ultra absorbent and caressing to the touch. So beautiful in rich, yarn-dyed fashion colors. BELLEAIR Solid Color Terry Towels Reg.l.99Both From tender to torrid In this quality terry you love. Choose from a wide ossortment of eye- JLQ catching colors. Chorge Yours. | ,0 x Reg. 49c W. Cloth...............39c Reg. 1.29 H. Towel...............99e PIPING ROCK Reg. 10.99 Bunk Reg. 10.99 Twin $799 $g99 $^99 America's sweetheart in bedspreadsl Rugged, yet beautiful Piping Rock has everything — dramo, durability, washability, disciplined finish, unsurpassed quality. Preshrunk, rounded corners. Assorted colors. SOMINAIRE BLANKET by Bates Reg. 8.99 $799 Botes thermal weove printed blanket In pink, blue, geld print. Mode of 100%cotton 72x90. Mochtne woth-able. / THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan # ffM Huron fliraet llinttlBl Bdller WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 HAROU) A. FiraoWULD ----- --Id PublUhir Clrculttioii Uuwitr JONM A. KlttT ' ■lertUfV ««d AdTtrtUbil Dlnetor O. ItAUMUt. Amuf Local Ad»«------ Manuter New Life Is Infused Into Industrial Park Scrambling to attract industry with the object of stimulating locai economies, American communities have resorted to many enticements. Free factory sites, tax concessions, organizational underwriting have been dangled as bait for new or struggling industries. More often than not, such blandishments have gone for naught as under-financed or poorly-administered enterprises have failed, resulting in substantial losses to civic-minded sponsors. ★ ★ ★ Although Pontiac has been singularly blessed in the area of major industry, conservatively priced land and facilities, with growth area assured, have been lacking. To fill this industrial need, free of unsound “giveaway” inducements, the Greater Pontiac Industrial Corp. was formed a year ago to acquire and develop a 25-acre tract at the southeastern limits of the City. Some $110,000 was Subscribed in support of the plan by a sizeable number of area institutions and individuals interested in the future of Greater Pontiac. Unfortunately, however, initial financing proved inadequate to complete the concept, and it appeared that it might go by default. ★ ★ ★ Fortunately for all concerned, the Cjty, after a careful survey, saw the feasibility of the development, has now assumed the corporate entity of the industrial park, and will proceed with Improvements necessary to make it marketable for the purpose intended. ^ We warmly commend the City administration on this forward-looking step that should establish our community in a favorable position to compete for the small, diverse manufacturing enterprises that seek locations in Michigan. field of social science to determine specific, underlying causes for the saturnalia of crime that is engulfing the Country. If this powerful enemy within is to be vanquished, a united front of government agencies on all levels buttressed by the active involvement of all Americans worthy of the name must answer the call to arms. Ir debt were sinful, as early Christians considered it, Americans would be by far the sinningest people on earth. It is estimated that of each 1,000 books people take with them and plan to read while vacationing, 17-are refad. Crime Upsurge Threat to America’s Future The annual report of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover on criminality in the United States is a shocker in , every respect. No laW-abiding, responsible American can read it without feelings of dismay and foreboding over the deteriorating moral fiber of thev Nation’s population. ★ ★ ★ During 1964, the national crime rate rose 1.3 per cent over the year previous as each minute saw five crimes committed. The year’s total reached 2,604,-400. Since 19.58, the crime rale in the U. S. has increased six times as fast as the population. One of the mast grim revelations of the Hoover report is'the increase of crime in the under-18 age bracket. Thirty-seven per cent of the crimes solved fall in this category, which comprising 15 per cent of the population was responsible for 43 per cent of crimes against property. Significantly, the heaviest increase in lawlessness -occurred In metropolitan suburbs. Here the crime rate was up 17 per cent from 1963. In the cities proper, it was nine per cent higher while rural areas reflected an eight per cent rise. ★ ★ ★ Never has America faced a greater danger to Its national well-being than that posed by the growing ranks of the criminally inclined. Compounding the insidious threat is the inability of authorities in the Romania Shows Loosened Reins By MICHAEL GOLDSMITH BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) - Romania is scoring points in its policy of maintaining a national communism free of Kremlin control. When Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Soviet party chief, endorsed the policy before the Romanian party congress, he formally put an end to Soviet efforts to make Romania toe the Moscow line. The action left the impression that such countries as Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria also might break loose and get awa/^ith it. The Soviet endorsement was a per-soaal triumph for Romanian party leader Nicolae Ceausescu, 47, a Communist intellectual. He was the right-hand man of f o r m e r president and party leader Gheorghe Gheorgiu-Dej. When Gheorgiu-Dej died last March, CeamsesCu took his place at the head of the party. Under his guidance, Romania is following in the path of Marshal Tito’s Yugoslavia without leaving the Soviet bloc or abandoning the ruthless application of Comniunist theory. * ★ ★ Unlike Yugoslavia, Romania remains a member of the Warsaw Pact, the Communist counterpart of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. But no longer can the Russians count on the Romanian army in all circumstances. OBLIGATION NEEDED The constitution says Romania will go to war alongside its Warsaw Pact allies only when “a situation has arisen for which an obligation to declare a state of war has been laid down.” This wording would allow Romania to stay neutral, for example, in an armed conflict hetwoen the Soviet Union and Red China. The Romanians have made several attempts to mediate the Chinese-Soviet dispute but without success. They have kept their links to both sides and take every opportunity to stress the need for worldwide solidarity of all Communist parties. ★ ★ ★ However, their endorsement of “peaceful coexistence” and the Moscow treaty limiting nuclear tests clearly places them on the Soviet side of the argument. ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE Asserting their economic independence, Uie Romanians refused to accept Soviet plans for a “division of jabor” among the Communist countries. That would have kept Romania a relatively underdeveloped supplier of raw materials for the industries of the Soviet Union, East Germany and Czechoslovakia. ’ ■k it It Instead, Romania pushed ahead with her own industrialization. "The West has much to gain from the general loosening up of the Soviet bloc,” one American source commented. “The more we help countries like Romania to stand on their own feet, the more %ey learn to resist Soviet domination.” Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Jessie Crocker of 644 Riverside; 88th birthday. Mr. and Mas. Matt J. KeUer of 89 Marjva; 61st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Alberta Nemey of 42 Park Place; 84th birthday. Mrs. Lottie Stites of 2100 Woodward; 81st birthday. Mrs. Herbert W. Butterfield , of Lake Orion; 83rd birthday. Many a grocery shopper thinks if she can’t stick her thumb half-way into a cantaloupe, it’s too green; il she can, it’s too ripe. Facing A Fact Of Life—And Death David Lawrence Says; Union Shop Bill Threat to Rights WASHINGTON - America is about to give the world an example of conformity by coercion — how intolerant m a-jorities in Con-gre.ss and in labor unions ride roughshod over di.ssenting minorities o fl wage eamersl and compel [ them to surrender their “free- LAWRENCE dom of belief” and “freedom of association.” The House of Representatives and the Senate are engaged now in the process of passing a law taking away from the 50 stiates of the union their constitutional right to protect minorities in their employment opportunities. For, under this measure, unless a person agrees to join a labor union which has a majority status in a plant, he can be dismissed from his job after 30 days. Nineteen states of the union have forbidden this form of compulsion. llut, even in this age of demonstrations for so-called “civil rights,” a basic human freedom of the individual — the right to a job without being forced to sacrifice his beliefs — is about to be taken away. ★ ★ ★ The general public isn’t informed on the Issue. If it were, the voters would be protesting now to Congress, and every single representative or senator who has supported such a discriminatory measure would be marked for defeat in the next election. ‘VOLUNTARY’ AGREEMENT The argument usually advanced is that the employer and the labor union would merely be entering into a “voluntary” agreement for a “union shop” and that the law doesn’t actually require either the union or the employer to make such an agreement. Rut what of the individual? Where can he get protection? The courts offer him no help as yet because the agreement is supposedly “voluntary.” The language of the bill is sweeping. It provides: “That nothing in this act, or in any other statute of the - United States or in any constitution or law of any state or political subdivision thereof, shall preclude an employer from making an agreement with a la-boc (H^aniMtion ... to require as a condition of employment membersRip ther^ ... if such labor organization is the representative of the employes . . .” ★ ★ ♦ Passage of the new law will mark the loss of minority rights and the emergence of the intol-. erance of majority^nile. ALWAYS RECOGNIZED All this is happening even though the right to work and to. keep a job has always been recogniz^ as an individual lationship between employer and employe. • tils was supposedly protect- ed from the earliest days of the republic. The Declaration of Independence sets forth that “all men are created equal” and that among the “unalienable rights” with which they are endowed are “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” The Constitution forbids “involuntary servitude.” ★ * * To be compelled to join any organization — social or religious or political or economic— as the price of a job in' free America is certainly a form of involuntary servitude. Voice of the People: ' Japanese Girl Requests Year Stay in This Area I am a Japanese girL 20 years old. I am attending an English interpretertranslator school in Tokyo. It is my ambition to someday become a professional interpreter-translktor and guide, r ' either in Japan hr some' foreign country. I would love a chance to j study for one year in thq United j States. I would study English hard, I and learn everything about your | great country, ★ ★ ★ Such a thing seems only a dream I because my father is a farmer ahd I doesn’t make enough money to help me. ★ ★ ★ . Is there a family in Pontiac that would like to have me live with them? I like little children, animals, and cooking. I would do my best to help a .mother in her home. If I could-become like an adopted daughter for one year, I would be the happiest girl in the world. TOSHIKO TSUNODA c/o Fujie 1-chome, 85b, Kanamachi Katsushika-Ku Tokyo, Japan Student Is (irateful for Press Scholarship I am grateful for ’The Pontiac Press scholarship to the Conununication Arts Institute at Michigan State University. It's • been a rewarding session, both in my advanced journalism class and in the experience of living in a dormitory. I’ve learned so much to help me toward my goal of becoming a journalist. JEAN PRIESTLEY 2973 EDGEFIELD WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Bank Chief Replacement Sign of Viet Economic Rift The Better Half By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — The replacement of Dr. Nguyen Xuan Oanh as director ot the National Bank of V i e t Nam spotlights a. rift between Saigon financial officials and Brig. Gen. Nguyen Coa Ky’s military government. The government announced the switch Tuesday. Nguyen Van Dong is taking over the key economic post that Oanh, a Har-vard-t rained economist, had held since Jan. 27. A government^ spokesman declined to say whether Oanh resigned or was fired. Other sources reported he decided to quit because Ky insisted that the bank support the government’s economic programs without giving the bank authority to institute measures necessary to make them effective. It is an open secret that Oanh feels the economy under Ky’s stewardship is headed for disaster. CRACKDOWN In recent weeks, Ky has sought to crack down on the inflation resulting from .rice spec-hlation by threatening to shoot speculators. A prominent banker commented: “You can’t halt inflation by shooting people. A crackdown on speculators may be useful, but it won’t work unless you make a much deeper over-all attack on the eco-homic problem.” The Vietnamese national deficit is about 20 billion piastres — about $2i)0 million. The Ky government is planning to add three or four billion piastres to this deficit, and bank officials are bitter. * * ★ They contend the bank should at least have been consulted on the question of whether the economy could stand such an increase in the deficit. PERSISTENT RUMORS There also haVe been persistent rumors that Ky intends to nationalize a number of foreign interests here, such as the huge French-own^ plantations. Varioas Saigon economists oppose this idea, believing the plantations yield nMre reVe-irae in taxes to the govern* ment than they would In income under Vietnamese national ownership. The big influx of American dollars has created a lot of liquid capital that many economists have eyed with interest. If some of the hard cash now in free circulation in Saigon couW be sopped up In ex- change for national treasui^ bills, the bank could control discount rates and thus bring some control over the economy, bankers say. TURNED DOWN But the government is reported to have turned down this idea. As it is, Viet Nam’s foreign exchange reserve is expected to drop to a new low of million or less by the end of th^ year, they say. “Don’t plan anything special for this evening — I’ve scheduled it for the start of my fall coat nagging sessions.” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Less Criticism for Stalin The Hamburg Die Zeit Only by a great stretch of the imagination can recent happenings in Moscow be called re-Stalinization. Although criticism of Stalin has not entirely disappeared, it is definitely on the wane. During . the past few years almost every issue of the magazine Historical Questions of the C.PiS.U. (Communis^ Party of the Soviet Union) has contained the names of rehabilitated victims of Stalinist persecution; such articles no longer appear. In his speech on the twentieth anniversary of the Soviet victory over Hitler, Party . Chairman l>conid Brezhnev avoided all criticism of Stalin. He failed to mention that Stalin’s dismissal of all warnings of imminent attack by Hitler in 1941 greatly contributed to the Soviet Army’s heavy losses during the first months of the war. Instead, he portrayed the outbredk of the war as follows: •“The State Defense Committee was formed with J. V. Stalin', First Secretary of the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U., at its head. It led all organizations in the resistance against the enemy.” ★ * * . The Soviet Union is distributing a film which presents Stalin in a positive light on three separate occasions. This reidforces the impression that the current Soviet leadership, stepping cautiously, is changing its official stand. The new men in the Kremlin are downright scared of any ticklish conflicts, perhaps in view id the. forthcoming Twenty-third Party Congress which mnst be convened by autumn at the latesL Like a Western government on the eve of a general election, Moscow is now striving to grant concessions and minor political favors to certain elements seeking greater autonomy and influence. ★ ★ * There is a little something for everybody. Industrial managers receive greater powers under the new economic reform, but the importance of the planning councils is simul-Umeously enlarged. Party functionaries gain more political control over the military, while Marshal Zhukov (who fell from grace under Khrushchev in October 1957) is dramatically reinstated, implying that the Kremlin has not forgotten the Army. Atheism remains the official credo but antireligious propaganda has recently fallen off. And as to the politically significant question of nationalities,' there is tpuch emphasis on the contribution of non-Rus-sion groups to the victory in the last war. Die lists of “He-' roes df the Soviet Union” include 107 Jews. All this demonstrates how much attention thp new leadership must pay to all the divergent forces, currents and groups in the Soviet Union. ★ ★ ★ Recent U.S. actions in Viet Nam and the Dominican Republic may lead the Soviet Union to try-^or the sixth time since 1958—to reach a modus Vivendi with Peking. The first sign of such a move came when .Soviet Ambassador Chervonenko, a shrewd politician who had taken an active part in the Moscow-Peking feud, was recalled from China. Career diplomat Sergai Lapin replaced him. And the replacement of the pro-Right chief ideologist, Leonid Ilychev, by Piotr Demichev, Central Committee Secretary for Chemistry, was obviously connected with the new ideological emphasis. Anti-Chinese criticism has been drastically reduced of late; the partial reappraisal of Stalin apparently underlines Moscow’s readiness to meet Peking halfway in their quarrel. ♦ ★ * Thus far the (Ttinese Communists have ignored the Kremlin's cautious moves on the che.ssboard; rather, the Chine.se attacks have increa.sed and now concentrate on the new Soviet leaders. Increased Soviet concessions are met by increased Chinese demands. Moscow is trying to protect herself on all sides. While attempting to pacify Peking with a cessation of criticism and re^aisal of Stalin, the Kremlin also woos Yugoslavia. Pravda recently published two articles by Yugoslav politicians and praised Belgrade openly. In his anniversary ipeech, Breshnev lauded the Yugoslavian People’s Army under Marshal 'Tito’s leadership, the Chinese CommnnistiT under “Comrade” Mao Tse-tung, the Italian refarm Communist leader TogHatti, and eveu the Albanian Stalinists. The leaders in Moscow are trying to make everybody as happy as possible, just as they are hoping to do at home. 1%ere is a good chance, however, that they will succeed ingtead hi angering one and all.' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1965 A—7 Voting Rights Bill Hits Snag Senate, ..House Differ on Two Key Issues WASHINGtON (AP) - Efforts of SenatfrHousp conferees to reach agreemeot on a voting, rights bill and * hasten final congressional action have bogged down In dispute over two key issues. “The next move is up to the Ifouse,” Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois said, after reporting House conferees had ba&ed at what he called “a very acceptable compromise" between the versions of the bill passed by the Senate and House, w ★ * No date for another meeting of the conference committee was set after a fifth session broke up in disagreement Tuesday. Both bills provide for suspension of literacy tests and appointment of f^eral examiners to register voters in much of the South in an effort to prevent discriminatory denial of Negro voting rights. POLL TAXES The dispute centers chiefly around a bar\ in the House bill on state poll taxes as a requirement for voting — a provision narrowly rejected in the Senate on the ground that it was of doubtful constitutionality. Also involved is a Senate provision under which persons educated in American-flag schools in languages other than English would not be required to pass an English-language literacy test to qualify to vote. Rejected by the House, this provision would have the effect of enabling thousands of .Spanish-speaking Puerto Ricans in New York City to enroll as voters even though they are unable to pass the state’s English-language literacy test. Dirk.sen said the Senate conferees unanimously proposed Tuesday to retain this provision and to drop the House poll tax ban in favor of keeping, in altered language, a Senate provision directing the attorney general to challenge the constitutionality of poll taxes as a re-quiremAt for voting. He said the House negotiators disagreed among them.selves. Some Americans Have Never Yet Seen a Doctor WASHINGTON iAPi The Public Health Service reported today that an estimated 2.4 million Americans — or 1.1 per cent of the civilian population -say they Have never seen nr talked to a physician for care or advice. Most of them are under 15 years of age, and most are non-whites, but a few contend they’ve gone 75 years or more without seeking out a doctor. ★ ★ ★ Estimates of the total number are based on a nationwide household sampling. Interviews were conducted at approximately 42,000 households, containing about 134,000 persons, from July 1963 through June 1964. A similar survey in 1957 reported 2.3 per cent of the population had never seen a doctor. Cash Awarded Woman Hurt by LBJ Copter .SAN FRANCISC:0 (AP) - A 71-year-old Concord. Calif., woman, injured by the backwash of a helicopter during President Johnson’s visit to the bay area in June 1964, has been awarded $6,240 in damages against the United States government. * ★ * US. Dist. Judge Bruce Thompson of Carson City, Nev., found Tuesday that Margaret Lovell suffered permanent injuries to her left leg when she was struck by a metal chair hurled through the air by the rotor backwash. A plastic covering for landing areas that can be sprayed on in minutes from the ground or a plane is expected to save wear and tear on vertical take off jet aircraft. (AdvtrtiMmtnO Quick RcHsf from Pile Irritation PETERSON'S OINTMENT IhouwnOt tt Iwnn. Atk t«d*y l«r y»c b«» *r IK --- PETEHSON'S OINTMENT OiIIeNU f Oil paint sot. Reg. Cindy Beauty kit. 13-pc. kitchenware 1.98. Paint a mas- Your own personal • set. Pot and pans, terpiece......88c beauty shapi . 88c covers..........88c Bag of blocks is Luger gun, regular-educational. Reg. ly 1.49. lodks like 1.49. New . 88c a real onel . 88c OPEN EVERY NIQHJ TO 9 Drayton open Sunday noon to 6 Daniel Boone play Assorted Bagatelle set. Fun for the games. AAot^ skill whole family. 88c with friends. . 88^ DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINS THE PONTIAC PRESS. WP^DNKSPAY, JULY 28. 1963 New York aty police tTrested I duty severely enou^ to lose I About six trf “ch W passen-M8M persons last year, wift time fr6m work. Seven lost their ger cars In the world are In l,6tt officers injured In line od I lives.______ _________________I the United States.____________ Desirable Positions-^- Prepare Yourself NOW PBl Evening Division The demand for stenoRraphera, secretariea, typists and other trained office help is greater than the supply. Beginning salaries are larger than ever before. There are good opportunities for advancement. Review Students in Shorthand and Typing May Begin Any Monday PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTimE 18 % Lawrence, Pontiac, Michigan FE 3-7028 Heal to lead Tory Onslaught on Labor LpNDON (AP) - Edward Heath took control of Britain’s Conservative party today at a critical stage in British politics, signaling a furious onslaught on the embattled Labor govem- Heath’s two declared rivals, Reginald Maudling and Enoch Powell, withdrew from the race. The withdrawals, came after Heath, on a first Ballot of Conservative members of the House of Commons, won ISO of the 2M votes cast Tuesday. The party’s new rules required the winner to poll both a majority and 15 per cent more than the runner-up. Although he had the ihajority. Heath lacked the IS per cent because Maudling polled 133 votes. But the latter bowed out and promised to fplly support Heath. New trials emerged for Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s Lidwr-ites, who rule with a majority of only three votes in Commons. URGENT MEASURES Wiison’s financial Executive, Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callaghan, announced a series of urgent economic measures. Callaghan ordered tighter controls on mortgages and installment buying, cuts in government spending both at home and abroad, and a general squeeze on public and private spending. His purpose was to accelerate the process of balancing Brit-auv’s trade and so nudntain the value of the pound sterling. ’The grumbling a^ong the voters. Heath, 49, Will make his first real assault on the government as opposition chief next Tuesday. Up for debate is a Conservative motion deploring the 7 per’ cent increase in the cost of living since Labor turned the Tories out last October. If the government loses the censure vote, it will^have to resign. One main target of the Conservative attack undoubtedly will be Callaghan’s announcement that plans to lower costs on house mortgages must be deferred. The Labor party made a strong impact during the elec-tiaibe$72M ,»59“ ^ trouaer Suita . uM he $79.50 „.66“ f Trsmmimu$sU€iiom(AUiiM44,bmtmMpmmair§UP€k} All iHiritions without chirff Just say **Charge it** Pay y% toch month ... or UM our 6-month Account THE PONTIAC A4ALL THE PONTIAC PRESSi^ WEDNESDAY, JULY 28. ' I ........ii.,.ggr)ma;!^r.!ri:;ariaa|| jPeop/e in the News! By the Associated Press Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower went skeet shooting yesterday in Minocqua, Wis., and twice broke 23 out of 25 clay birds with a 20-gauge shotgun. Arthur MacArthur, a veteran member of the Wisconsin Conservation Commission said Eisenhower then took a 410, a smaller shotgun, and “was going even better when we gave it up.” MacArthur said: "He swings that thing like a real pro.” EISENHOWER Zero Mostel to Ploy in TV Special Zero Mostel, the Broadway comedy star of “Fiddler on the Roof,” is gohig on television.. CBS announced yesterday in New York Mostel will be costarred with Carol Burnett in a comedy-variety hour special program. It will be shown early next year. Mostel is leaving “Fiddler on the Roof” Aug. 14 and will go to England to make a movie version of “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.” Queen Approves Official for Australia Queen Elizabeth approved today the appointment of Lord Casey as governor general of Australia. Lord Casey, 74, is an Australian. He is the former R. G. Casey who until 1960 had boen Australian minister of external affairs for more than eight years.' End-Bias Order for Apartments DET^lOIT (AP) 1- A Detroit firm which rents apartments in Ann Arbor was ordered Tuesday to shun racially discriminatory policies as the Michigan Civil Rights Commission handled its first formal housing bias case. The commission ruled that Cutler Hubble Co. acted unlawfully in March 1964, when it told Bunyan Bryant, a Negro University of Michigan student, there were no units available in an Ann Arbor apartment building. In a hearing last month, three white witnesses testified they were shown several available apartments in the buildings during the same week Bryant was refused. The commission ordered the firm to cease such practices and to offer Bryant the next available apartment in the building if he wants it. STUDIES APPEAL HuMe’s attorney, John L. Stairs,I^Mid J>e was studying the 'decisioiTto see if there are grounds for appeal. He had! argued at the hearing that leasing of an apartment is a privilege of the owner, not a right of the renter. The commission previously had mediated informally more than 100 housing complaints. Tuesday’s was the first to require formal hearings and legal orders.’ Cure Hypertension Through SurgeryPlj ANN ARBOR (AP) - Some four million American hypertension sufferers probably can be cured by surgery, a team of doctors at the University of Michigan Medical Center re- Doctors say the concept of surgical relief for “essential” hypertension (high blood pressure), first publicized 10 months ago, has been tested by a suc- cessful operation at University Hospital here. ★ ★ ★ Essential hypertension cov-I ers about 75 per cent of hyper-[ tension cases—those in which the specific cause of the disor-I der is not known. The report, released Tuesday, says 20 per cent of the cause-unknown cases probably are caused by a small tumor on the patient’s adrenal gland. Application of a new labor-! | atory test for renin, an enzyme i made in the kidney, into the to-: j tal diagnostic procedure has[j been a key factor in developing 11 the new findings, the report^I says. I The largest standard-g a u g e, g railroad in the world is the Cen- j ■ tral Railway of Peru, rising to i ■ the Andes, more than 15,000 feet | Jj above sea level. I ■ JUNK CARS WANTED U$ED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 ■ PONTIAC SCRAPII eniteiff ALWAYS RRST QUALITY ^ This little cord does the trick! The tempo is bold and new.. in modern shapes, rhythmic designs, vibrant hues! area rugs 48"x72" 2, $7 $7 $17 for y 24"x40" # 3«"x54" | ^ Here's a summertime display in this new decorator beat! Pulsing color and brilliant rhythmic design combine in deep, plush viscose rayon pile rugs to scatter about the house, moke your rooms come alive! These striking combos are machine washable ip lukewarm water countless times. ^*rotective skid-resistant backs. All at low, low Penney prices! PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 AJM. ta 9 PJN. TIRED ROSES? NOT SOI, THAT’S WHY THTSE HHiHlAND SUMMER CLEARANCi VALUES ARE SO EXCEPTIONAL' Generally the last roses of summer are pretty tired by now ... But not so with these four extraordinary buys! These are new factory-fresh models . . . and we've got 'em specially tagged at our low clearance prices . . . Here is everything you want in appliances . . . NAME BRANDS, TOP QUALITY and "PEACE-OF-MIND” SERVICE . . . Here's the most wanted convenience features—plus top-notch performance and dependability . . . Delivery, Service and warranty included. Buy now at our low summer clearance prices and you pocket the savings! HOTPOINT 3-CYCLE WASHER Lorg* capacity for big family loodi — handlat biggar loads fattar, claanar. 3 cycloa for normal, gantl* and wash 'n waar. Tamparatura control, lint filtar, ditpantar and othar daluxa faaturai. All porcalain — intida and outtida for long-laiting boauty! Spacially Highland claaranca pricad. Free delivery, installation, service and warranty. ’137 RCA WHIRLPOOL 2-SPEED WASHER You couldn't want mora in fully automatic washing convanianca faahirat . . . You couldn't pay loss than Highland's rock-bottom price . . . chack iti ... 2 spaads, normal and gantia for extra core fabrics. 2 cycles. Big 12-lb. capacity. 3 wash and rinsa tamps. Water level control feature, axclusiva magic mix filtar dispenser. Exclusive 9 rinses, surgilatar action agitator for brighter, claanar clothes. Free delivery, installation, service and new 2-year factory warranty. •168 HOTPOINT 2-SPEED WASHER Mow . . . wash loads from 2-lb. "personals" to 1 5-lb. family tixe loads . . . without wasting watarl . . . without special attachments .. . Hera's 2-spaad versatility . . . normal and gantia. Here's 2-cycla washobility . .. plus water tamparatura selection, dual lint filtering system. "Deep-dip" triple rinsing, all porcelain finish . . . inside and outside! All brand new. . . and Highland specially low'-pricodi.. Including fro« delivery, installation, service and full factory warranty. •178“ NORGE 2-SPEED WASHER spin and rinsa. 3 cycles for regular normal a temperature selection. Timer controls, lint filter, "plus capacity" powerful action agitator, super spindry. Water level control feature and other deluxe features. Big price reduction. Free delivery, installation, service and warranty. •178“ wo MONEY DOWN • 3.YEARS TO PAY APPU AWeg ^Phono eaa-aasb CllBaibwlh Uako IM., Cernwr Tofogrwpli - ...... A—IO THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28. 1963 Hitting Viet Missile Bases Puts Russia on Spot By WILUAM L. RYAN AP Spedsl CorreapondeBt The time may be near when the chips will ^ down for the Russians in the Viet Nam crids. Ibe Pentagon announcement that U.S. bombers knocked out an antiaircraft missile site and damaged another in North Viet Nam could mean a big step has been taken in escalation of the war. The Soviets installed the sites and probably are manning them. From all appearances, this is the sort of development the Russians feared. The Kremlin felt obliged to install antiair-CTaft missiles sites in North Viet Nam to demonstrate its willingness to aid a brother Communist regime. Now the sites have been attacked. Will it mean another confrontation similar to the 1962 Cuban missile crisis when Nikita Khrushchev backed away from a brink-of-war situation? The development can cause trouble in the Kremlin, already involved in jockeying as the result of internal a^ external pressures. Perhaps a large section of the Communist world has banked on years of U.S. involvement in a costly Vietnamese war. Pdt-ing, at least, seemed to be gam-blhig on it. Red.China could afford to be patien*, to look upm attrition as a useful tool against the United States and at the same time against Soviet influence in Asia. Up to now, at relatively small expense. Red China seemed the principal beneficiary of a prolonged war. it would seem that the longer the localized conflict, the more Peking stood to gain through the losses of others. * ★ ★ The United States so far has paid a price in men, material, i prestige and propaganda set- | backs, in prospective domestic dislocations from increasingly heavy commitments, in quar-j relling at home over policy, in i the diffusion of U.S. forces and in the impact on^.S. alliances. Moscow’s collective leadership also stood to.lose. Reliable sources say that apart from the specter of a n:w missile confrontation, the Kremlin feared that Soviet-U.S. strains would force big militar:’ budget increases, setbacks to the con-su’-'er economy projram, tne use of Viet Nam indefinitely by the Chinese as a stick to beat Moscow for lack of total support to a revolutionary cause, and enhancement of Chinese cha i to spread influence at Mos'" v’s expense. SOMETHING NEW Something new was added when the missile bases were bombed. Red China already is crying that “a showdown between the people (meaning the Communists of the world) and U.S. imperialism is inevitable.” In effect, Peking tells Moscow: Put up or shut up." Possibly Peking would have been happier if the Americans avoided the big step. It may have welcomed the idea that years of localized war would work attrition on the U.S. world image and on U.S. domestic problems. ★ A * Ordinarily, the prospect of America expending its resources in Southeast Asia might please the Kremlin, too, but benefits would be negative. Risks — like the one looming now — are real. Unless Moscow faced up to the risks, it would stand condenmed by the Chinese in the eyes of world revolutionaries as being mmrevo-lutionary. The new development will likely increase pressure on the Kremlin to build up the Soviet military to an extent where the economic side suffers again. The military v(gce in Moscow already is strident. AWKWARD TIME All this comes at an awkward time of new Soviet experimentation with production policies, profit motives, crash programs to solve livestock and other food problems, educational reforms, political changes to reverse some of the trends of the Khrushchev era. It is fiwkward, too, because in recent years MosCow built a workable way of life with the West which could be useful in a time when the U.S.S.R. is devoting resources to curing economic ills. Will there now be a climactic showdown? ★ ★ A The Kremlin might still labor for some kind of talks. problem is that Peking seems to be galling the riiots for North Viet Nam and Ho Chi linh's regime. Red China (wobably would want to avoid overt participation in the Viet Nam war so long it seemed the Americans were unable to win either in the field or at a conference table. Should the picture change, it is possible there would be another Korean-type “(Chinese volunteer” exercise. Red China has 36 million in its armed militia and pn^gan- dizes heavily now for intensive training in all provinces. TheroeUcally China coukl inundate Viet Nam with manpower. Whatever the effect on the U. S. effort, tips would remove for good the last vestiges of Ho Chi Minh’s independence. Even North Viet Nam has made clear that it considers a long war less of an evil than saturation of the country with Chinese. There is no indicate Red China would be averse to a Soviet-American showdown. NEW) y reduce I^^ATcind LOii ^ UP TO 6 LBS. k WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to take and mote effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including (^sules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUST EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFFl MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 PONTIAC 338-6544 PONTIAC 338-3738 ■erli Victor Paint Stores Open 9 A. M. te S P. M. Twet., Wed., Thurs. ond Sot. Open 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Mon. ond Fri. TH^ PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY^ JULY 2ft, 1965 A—11 ,■■. BEGINS THIJBSDAY ... gee how you eon save plenty on your linen needg ... loir, low prieeg on gheetg, towelg, Manketgi bedspreadg, mattregges! Hurry! SALE! 10% duck down, 5K)% crushed duck feathers. Well-known quality. Cotton tick. 21x27 size. •■edlni 0and>cottons, batiste oxfords, and airweaves, in whites end solids ......................................2.99 WASH 'N' WUR PIMA RATISTI COTTON SHIRTS with short sleeves. White with refuler, button-down, and snap-tab collar. Blue with regular collar .............. .........3.39 THRU MOST FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS in batiste oxfords, cot- . ton batiste, KodeW-cottons, broadcloths, and ain^aves. Short sleeves. Whites and solids................3 tor $10 TRADITIONAL STYLED SHIRTS with button-down and snap-tab collars in solids and stripes; regular collar models in assorted checks ..........................................3.95 IMPORTED FABRIC WHITE-ON-WHITE SHIRTS with short sleeves. In tab and regular collar models......... i.99 FAMOUS MAKER DACRON8-COTTON SHIRTS with short sleeves in regular collar models. In white . . 3.99 or 3.for 11;.75 BEST MAKER SHIRTS with short sleeves In Dacron* polyes-ter-and-cotton, and all-cottons in regular and button-down collars. Solids and stripes in all sizes............4.99 SAVINGS ON SPORT COATS DACRONO-COTTON AND MADRAS SPORT COATS. Choose from natural shoulder DacronO-cottons in seersucker stripes or muted plaids and checks. Imported India madras coats; young men's high 2-button models in seersucker stripes, and silk-look shantungs 24.95 FAMOUS MAKER DACRON«-WOOL SPORT COATS: Tailored by the country’s leading makers in 2- and 3-button models, and natural shoulder Charter Club models ........34.95 SUPERB COLLECTION OF FAMOUS MAKER SPORT COATS. Hart, Schaffner Cr Marx, Eagle, Frost & Frost, H. Freeman, Austin Leeds, and Petrocelli ... in l-2-and 3-button regular and natural shoulder models. In OacronO-worsted tropicals, mohair blends, silk shantungs, imported fabrics, end pure silks_39.95-89.95 NO CHAR6E R« ALTERATNmS SAVINGS ON SLACKS DACRONO-BLEND WASH TE' WEAR SLACKS. Shantung weaves in plesHess and beltless models; bengaline weaves in pleatless or plain-front belt loop models ................6.79 DACRON*-WOOL SLACKS in bengaline weave. Pleatless belt loop model in olive, blue, brown, and Cambridge. One pleat belt loop model in brown, grey, black and blue/olive .9.99 EAGLE SLACKS in Dacron®-worsteds and Dacron*-rtK)hair and wools. In pleated and plain front models with belt loops, and plain-front models with adjustable waist. Also, other fanrtous maker slacks in this collection .. . . •.........15.B5 DISTINGUISHED GROUP OF SLACKS in excellent fabrics indud-mg Forstmann gabardines in plain-front belt loop models, irtdes-cent two-ply imported trop^ls in pleated belt loop models; Italian bemberg-sllk in plain-front belticss styles. Haridsome summer ................. ...............................19.85 NO CNAR6E FOK ALTERATIOIIS SAVINGS ON SPORT SHIRTS BIG COLLECTION OF SPORT AND KNIT SHIRTS with traditional ivy button-ddwn collar, regular collar, shirt jacs, cotton knits, add Italian wool knit models. Including Dacron* polyester and cottons and imported cottons — many famous maker shirts . .2.99-14.99 ITALIAN COLLAR SHIRT JfCS In a wide assortment of solid colors, plaids, stripes and checks. Styled with adjustable side tabs ..........................................3.99 FULL FASHIONED BAN LON* KNIT SHIRTS in 3-biihon pullover models at big savings. Full fashioned to retain their shape and completely wash 'n' wearable.... ..........4.79 ITALIAN COLLAR ^HIRT |ACS IN 2 POPULAR FABRICS. Choose from polyester and nylon blends or 100% Arnel jersey models .................................... . .r.4.99 SAVINGS ON SHORTS A SWIMWEAR FAMOUS MAKER SWIM TRUNKS In lastex, stretch, boxer and tailored boxer models ......................... 3.99 TRADITIONAL AND CONTINENTAL WAL^ SHORTS tailored in cottons and Dacron* polyester and cotton blends. Ivy belt loop and continental models ................... 3.99-6.99 OACRON®-COTTON WALK SHORTS tailored by many of our better makers in wash 'n' wear styles in plain-front^ Ivy belt loop, or continental models with extension waistbands .4,79 CABAhjA SETS, many by famous rttakers in a handsome assortment of batik prints, plaids, checks, and stripes; many lined in terry, sizes S, M. L, XL. .......................1.99 SAVINGS ON FURNISHINGS NECKWEAR in a fine assortment of fabrics and patterns . , .1.69' NECKWEAR BY OUR BETTER MAKERS in luxurious fabrics 2.69 BIG SELECTION OF HOSIERY: cottons, cotton iisles in solids and patterns; stretch Ban Lons; Orlons and wools.69c-9Sc ‘ TEE SHIRTS in combed cotton and DacronO-polyester 3 far 3.50 UNDERSHIRTS in fine cotton lisle'...... .3 fee 2.89 BOXER SHORTS full cut styles In white, fancies and solids ...................................8 far 1.89 SADDLE SEAtIoXER SHORTS In smart patterns.......9Bc SUMMER PAfAMAS, short sleeve knee length styles.3.29 SAVINGS ON NATS A SHOES FAMOUS MAKER STRAW HATS. Milans and Panamas In a variety of brim widths .................... 4.99-9.99 ENTIRE STOCK OF WRIGHT ARCH PRESERVER SHOES RE-DUCED, smooth and grained leathers......^1.21-26.78 lOHNSTON D MURPHY shoes in a special group of wing tips, rtwjc toe and slip-on styles in smooth or grained leather; black or brown, sizes 6-12 . 21.97 ENTIRE STOCK OF BOSTONIAN AND MANSFIELD SUMMER SHOES REDUCED. Slip-ons, lace-ons. woven leathers, nylon mesh, bladi/whlte, brown/white .............. 9.99-23.16 SPECIAL GROUP OF HUSH PUPPIES* AND OTHER FAMOUS MAKE CASUALS REDUCED ..........................6.99 Lost Chonce to Cash In on These Big Savings on Fomous-Maker Suits! Just 3 more days to cash in on the big savings.. And you'll find not only big savings but big selections: groups of suits in imported arid dornestic fabrics: tropical worsteds. Dacron®-wools, Dacron®-wool-mohairs, pure silks, mohair-worsteds, Doc-ron®-siIk- wools, stretch fabrics, and wash 'n' weasr Pacron®-blends. You'll find suits in one- and two^troLfiler models ... In conventional, natural shoulder, or high-fashion styles. You'll find wide selections in shades and patterns. And you'll find them in a big range of proportioned sizes. (Some year-around suits also included.) MONTCLAIR • CHARTER CLUB • KINGSWObD SUITS REDUCED TO EAGLE • NORTHBROOKr • MNGSWOOD • CHARTER CLUB • WYNHAM • SUITS REDUCED TO HART, SCHAFFNER A MARX • NAMMONTDN PARK PETROCELLI • H. FREEMAN • FROST A FROST EAGLE. • SUITS REDUCED TO GOG • HAMMONTON PARK • FASHION PARK • EAGLE • HART, SCHAFFNER A MARX • PETRO-OQM BELLI • SUITS REDUCED TO MO nBtt'1 NO aum mo uimothns 39“ ”49" 54-*64“ 119“ OUR PONTUC MAU STORE OPEN EVERT EVMMI6 TO 9 PJM. OUR IIRMMOHAM STORE OPEN TNURS. ANP FRL TO 9; SAT. TO S:M THE POPmAC PRESS ^DTJESDAY, 1M5 -rm PONTIAC. MICHIGAN * B—1 Oil's Carrol Whit^^ Has Started All Over Again It’s only a table decoration and the anguish on the face of Mrs. Robert V. Daly, Woodlake Drive, is faked! John Mahony, Birmingham, goes along loith the act. Lobsters will set the theme for Friday’s New England lobster dinner at Bloom- field Open Hunt. Sponsors jire the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital auxiliary. The dinner dance is open to the public by reservation and proceeds will go to the hospital building fund. Lodge Group Canadian Honeymoon By JANET OKHOX. Tontiac Pren WMna*i Edil«r When you’ve goniB up at high as you can go, time’s nothing to do but start in a new direction, even if it means be-glhning again ' Carrol White, head resident of Hill House at Oakland University this summer, had an interesting and cbillen^ Job with Mueller Brass Ck»n-pany in PJDAY. JULY 28, 1965 B-a Michigan Stcde Faijf^ Again Offers Prizes Midijgan women again have the chance to win prizes for their best efforts in community artsi (formerly home arts) at the 1965 Michigan State Fair. Fair dates are Aug. 27 to Sept. 6, but dates for entering the items you make are earlier. ★ * ♦ In the booklet prepared for exhibitors and available to anyone, rules are spelled out. You have until Aug. 4 to send in an entry blank with your 92 fee. This entitles you to entries in 20 classes. There is a 93 fee for the art exhibition. ' ★ ★ ★ • Address request (or premium books and entry blanks to White French crepe fashioned an Empire sheath gown and court train for Virginia Frances Clover who recently became Mrs. Mark Phillip MouUrup in St. Perpetua Catholic Church. Rev. Bernard Zaglowiczky offered the nuptial Mass for the couple whose parents are the Frank L. Clovers, Manning Street, and the Lester Moultrups of Mill Street. Attendants were Mrs. Gregory Clover, Mrs. James Willoughby, Mrs. Dorothy Moultrup, Gail Girard; Gregory Clover, Michael Moultrup, Ronald Willoughby and Bradley Chase. the Community Arts Department, Michigan State Fair, Detroit, Mich. 46203, giving name and address clearly. GRAND AWARD For the second year Mrs. George Romney will present a silver bowl to die person receiving the highest totaled point count in three divisions — needlecraft and other handicraft, baking and canning and preserving. In 1964, Michigan’s First Lady homemaker Award went to Mrs. Fred W. Cobb of Northville. ; W ★ ★ New classes this year include «ie in cdke decorating and a group of sweepstake prizes from national manufac-urers, area merchants and newspapers. Only amateurs are permitted to enter their work in competition and anyone teaching any of the homecrafts is ineligible. NO FEES In the section devoted to creative hobby craft, senior citizens (over 65 years) may enter without an entry fee. There are also special classes and awards for boys and girls, 14 years of age and under. ★ ★ ★ Almost 96,000 in prize money, exciusive of special awards, will be given to winners. Sorority Offtee for Andro Tynan Andra Tynan, daughter of Mr. and M rs. John J. Tynan, Angelene Street, is newly elected chaplain and program chairman of the University of Detroit chapter, Alpha Sigma Tau, national social sorority. A senior English major in the college of arts and sciences, Miss Tynan is also a member of the International Student Association. UNTIL TODAY when you bought three cans of Empress water-packed white tuna you got: 1 prime filets of solid white Albacore tuna 2 an easier to digest tuna 3 half the calories of oil-packed tuna 4 a more natural, fresher flavor. Mrs. John Buhr, president and delegate of the PUot Club of Pontiac, Inc., (right) meets Dr. Vilda Shuman of Waycross, Ga., new international president of the organization. The women attended Pilot’s 44th annual convention held recently in Dallas, Tex. * Accessories "After-Six" by RUDOFKER PERFECTLY FITTED BY OUR MASTER TAILORS RANDOlPH ^ itanti0iid CUSTOM TAILORS AND CLOTHIERS UNIFORMS FE 2-2300 908 W. Huron at Telegraph —Pontiac 48ih msd-summex ^ SALE ^ Store-Wide Reductions — Special Orders Included! Except A Few Price Established Items Colonial Furniture Specials By KLING CO-ORDINATES ANSWER ALL YOUR STORAGE PROBLEMS! Enjoy the distinctive look of “built-ins" at a fraction of the cost! These wonderfully versatile units stack, fit into corners, fit under windows and stack as yon please! Start with a few and add from open stock! Shown loft to right; 40” Upper Bookcase . .. 40” 3-Drawer Dresser... 30” Upper Bookcase ... 30” 3-Drawer Chest_ 34” Comer Desk... few and add from open slock! Reg. SALE Reg. SALE 74.50 63.95 .30” 2-Drawer Cahinet.. . 79.50 69.95 104.50 89.95 48” 6-Drawer 54.50 46.95 Double Dresser . 134.50 114.95 84.50 69.95 40” 4-Drawer 67.50 56.95 Student Desk . 99.50 84.95 Ask To See The Complete Collection! TODAY you also get: TWO FREE CANS OFFER GOOD ONLY WITH THIS COUPON. MAIL TO; TUNA, CANAL STREET, MIX S4, NEW YORK. N. Y. 10013 - AMOTHta RNE eOOOUCT OF MITSUI A COMrANT IsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtJ LUXURIOUS SOLID MAPLE KLING BEDROOM GROUP Warmth, charm and practicality in this group which includes 6-tirawcr (!hest-on-Chest, 60” 9-Drawer Triple Dresser, Framed Mirror and Spindlte Beil. Drawers have patented slides for feathertouch opening! SALE Refc. 548.00 $45950 SOLID MAPLE 3-PIECE KLING BEDROOM SET Hand-rubhed solid maple group with 50” 6-drawer double dresser offering tremendous storage space , . . mirror and handsome panel bed at extraspecial savings! 50” Double Dresser, Mirror and Bed Reg. 218.50 SALE ^199^® fi-Drawer Chest, Reg. 119.00 .SALE SW.50 HAND-DECORATED CHAIRS AND ROCKERS BY KLING Perfect colonial accents for every room in the house! Turtle-back decorated chair has hand-woven rush seat (ideal dining chairs). The Concord rocker adds cozy comfort to any room! Your Choice: • Black Decorated • Maple Decorated • White Decorated Reg. 39.95 SALE Choice of Chair or Rocker Budget And Hundreds of other Store-Wide Values! Interior Terms Decorating ^ _ Consultation 1680 S. Telegraph Rd., jaat Sopth of Orchard Lake Rd. > Open Thuraday, Friday, Monday Evenings ’til 9 — FE 2-8348 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY^ JULY 28, 1965 Usually No Tax on Children's Bonds ByMARYFEELEY CoMoltant in Money Mani^ement Dear Miss Feeley: Friends of ours say they are buying U.S. savings bonds to provide for their child’s ed' ucation, and will not have to pay any tax on the interest from these bonds. I How can thisi be so? I understood one must! always pay income tax on the interest. Mrs. M.H., San Diego, Calif. Swing Into Summer With a New PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE Tinting—Bleaching Cutting IMPERIAL'StSI' 158 Auburn Ave. Park Fiw FE 4 2878 £dylb Slenion, ownat Uni WOMEN'S WEAR Dear Mrs. H.: If parents buy E bonds registered in the child’s name — either almie or with one’ of the parents as beneficiary — the interest becomes income belonging to the child. At the end of the first year of bond purchase, a Federal income tax return is filed in the child’s name, listing the increase in bond value. As long as this amount is less than |9(W, no tax need be paid. Thereafter, it will be necessary to file a tax return for the child only in the years in wUch the accmed interest from the bonds — plus any other Income — exceeds the $900 exemption. ($000 personal exemption plus $300, the new minimum standard deduction.) There’s also another way of handling the situation. The parents can wait until the child begins to cash the bonds to pay for his education. Then he files his own tax return each year, reporting the full amount of interest earned by the redeemed bonds as income. As it now stands, if the boy (or girl) has no other income, and his total earnings are less than $900 for the year, he won’t have to pay any tax at all. ★ ★ ★ Dear Readers: So many times your letters ask for help in making money go round in a dozen differeni areas of living. And WMi Your RouMbU Hom tndi 7 roOT HOSI AIL CLOTH NO PLASTIC ‘IP* Untct M MafcM and Jfadrb dll r*rfc CavaalMd/M- Omt r««r” JACOBSEN'S FLOWERS Downtown Storo 101 N. Saginaw St. Phono FE 3-7165 Groonhouso, Gordon Storo and Nurtory Loko Orion Phono MY 2-2681 New Otsign! New Style! New Comfort! WeOGtt STYLI Rugged for wear, with |ust the right dash of smartness! believe me, I understand every one. But in the limited space this column, offers, I just can’t take up every question you ask in each of these letters. For this reason I’ve written a. booklet, discussing the most pressing problems that seem to harry the average family — and the single person, too. It runs about 50 pages, and there are U chapters—including “Financial Traps,” “Planning the Food Dollar,” “B^ing and Borrowing,” “ChUdren: How Much It Costs to Have Them and Raise Them.” I also get into the subjects of how to buy a mattress and how to get the most for your money when ’ yon choose a refrigerator. ★ ★ ★ The aim of this boiddet is to help you find answers to quea-tions before the questions become problems. If you’d like to have a copy, you can send $1 to Dollar Book in care of this newspaper. The title of the booklet is “Make Every Dollar Count.” Maybe I should add that I have included some budget guidelines for the single woman, the woman who marries late in life, newlyweds, working wives, and couples who are ready for, or are planning for, retirement. I tri^ to include all of us, so I skipped the' froth and just stuck to the basics. Lynn R. Boulton Wed to Douglas Gardiner Marriage Popular Some 1.7 million couples took their wedding vows last year, and of these 1.3 million were first marriages. SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer Dear Eunice Farmer: Why don’t pattern sizes correspond with ready-to-wear sizes? I would spend half of my time sewing if I could just buy a pattern small enough. I wear a size 3 or 5 and a size 10 pattern is much too large all over. Surely I’m not the only gal with this request. Mrs. V.F. Dear Mrs. V.F.: Patterns are sized according to standard measurements agreed upon by all the pattern companies and they do not correspond with ready-to-wear. However, ready-to-wear sizes are not consistent either. The more expensive * the garment, the smaller the size. 'And of you who want smaller sizes in'patterns, please write to me today. I have just returned from the East where I attended the National Home Economics Convention. You can be sure tiiat every company connected in any way with home sewing—such as the patterns, thread, zippers, notions of all types, fabrics, etc., are ready to listen to any suggestions, good or bad. * ★ ★ The market is geared to your demands, so you must make yourself heard. These people are interested in my crusade to^ present them with thousands of letters at one time, instead of an j occasional letter now and then. Don’t put off another day, write me today, in care of The Pontiac Press. | .SUMMER STOLE IS CURTAIN “I enjoy your column so much. With you and my new sewing machine, I have secured a new lease on sewing. “I wanted to share my idea about my new summer stole that turned out so lovely and so inexpensive. I bought a single panel lace curtain at the dime store, removed the heading and the hem. I sewed the fringe on both ends and had a lacy summer wrap. From the compliments I received. I’m sure it didn’t look like a panel curtain.” This is an excellent idea for making many lace things this summer. It will work for beach jackets, dresses, etc. It often is cheaper to buy a curtain. Always shrink any cotton lace before using. Mrs. James A. Schaaf, Royal Oak, Mich., is this week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner for this suggestion. MRS. GARDINER Tea Honors Newcomer to City By The Emily Post Institute Q: My husband was recently transferred to this city. 'The wife of one of his business associates is giving a tea next week to introduce me to some of her friends. As this is a new experience for me, will you please tell me what will be expected of me? When should I arrive and leave? Do I send a gift to the hostess or just a thank-you card? Also, do I shake hands with the women when I am introduced to them? I am not a conversationalist and get extremely nervous when meeting new people. I never know what to say after, “How do you do?” I would appreciate any help you can give me. A: If the invitations read, say, “from four until seven,” you should arrive a few minutes before four and stay until seven, or until the last guests take their leave. You need not shake hands unless the woman you are being introduced to starts to offer her hand to you. Don’t be nervous or panicky, be your own natural self and think how glad you are to meet all these new peogle who will probably become your friends. When you leave, thank your hostess for her kindness in giving the tea for you and for introducing you to so many of her friends. A white floor length sheath , of. peau de sole trimmed with Alencon lace was diosen by Lynn Rose Boultwi Tor her marriage to Douglas Lee Gardiner recoitly in St. Andrew’s Catholic CSiurch. Rev. Edward G. Baumgartner officiated. ★ ♦ ★ Parents of the couple are the Joseph J. Boultons of Whims Lane, Oakland Township and the Earl Gardiners of Otsego. Completing the bridal ensemble was a lace trimmed pillbox holding a bubble veil. Her flowers were a bouquet of white daisies -and miniature white roses. SISTER ATTENDS Mary Beth Boulton, her sister, was maid of honor add bridesmaids included Jane Frink, Susan Sykes, Cassie Beck and Mrs. Joseph Ferry. Dean Scott was best man and ushering were Paul Boulton. Faye White, Dean Miers and Roger Morris. A ★ ★ A lawn party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Jarvis of Rochester followed the ceremony. ★ * ★ After the evening reception in the VFW Post Hall in Drayton Plains, the couple left for a honeymoon on Mackinac Ifland They will make their home in Flint. SPECIAL BUDGET $A50 WAVE ^ CaUies’ us N. Porry St. FE S-SSSI Trading boats is easy with a Pontiac Press Classified Ad. Just i^one 33^8181. ALL WOMENS SUMMER SHOES REDUCED! and »899 MEN’S SHOES Nunn Bush - Edgerton - Pedwin UNUSUAL VALUES! PAULI’S SHOE STORE, 35 N. SAGINAW Specializing in the Finest Steaks Enjoy a Sconic Drivt Any Evening MicMgan't Finutf WuWurn Style RutUurant Invitet Your Family to Dinnar . . . DINNERS START AT $2.50 NO LIQUOR —JUST GOOD FOOD Call 796-2245 TAKE-OUT ORDERS 5S00 Drydan Road. Drydan, Michigan Opan Daily 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. Many of you have asked me what to do with your suits that have the heavily padded shoulders no longer in style. Most of those old suits were very, very fitted at the waist- ] line — which is still out of style. However, ifiyou decide to take TiS Shoften cap oP Sleave ShoultLor too hi^h dhoL VA/idle out the shoulder padding, you will have to take the shoulder seam up a little deeper, beginning at the armhole and tapering to nothing at the neckline. You will also have to shorten the shoulder width. Before cutting, be sure to baste the sleeve back in to be certain you have marked it correctly. The last chdnge to make is to shwten the cap of the sleeve slightly. The more padding that was used, the higher the cap of the sleeve. These are all simple alterations, but take a little j time to do correctly. ★ * w Eunice Farmer regrets she cannot answer your letters personally, but she does answer those of general interest in the column. Her questions are chosen by the number of requests that pertain to any one sewing problem. Please send your letters to Sew Simple, in care of The Pontiac I*ress. R Summer ® SALE % I’.’’ )4 Off • Ladies’ Swim Suits. • Dresses • Lmiies’ Spntswear • Men’s and Boys’ Summer Sportswear OPEN SUNDAYS 10:30-2:30 DAILY 9:30-8:30 P £ M uk” n 0( If I STORE VILLAGE M ONTGOMERY WARD for better living . . . gracious giving Save ^5-11-Style House rayon-acrilan blankets COLORFUL BOUQUET PRINT Wondarfully warm, downy soft, non-ollarganic and mothproof. Complataly wothobl*. A mirocla bland of 75% rayon, 25% virgin Acrilon Acrylic. 72x90, fits oithor twin or full sizo bod. SAVE NOW! 788 RE6UURLY 12.99 Telegraph Road at Elizabeth Lake Road Telephone 682-4940 Pontiac Moll Open Daily Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. THK POyTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 B—« AAore Doctors Sought to Serve in Viet Nam WASHINGTON (AP) - The Agency for International Development and a voluntary agency. Project Viet Nam, have set out to more than double the number of American doctors serving in rural areas of South Viet Nam. ^ AmKNincing -the program Tuesday, presidential press secretary Bill bi Moyeia said doctors will volunteer for two months service with 2Q serving at a time. THE INTERNATIONAL WHISKY... , ------^ *op of Vio 40% ttnighi whisky InSIrJtihn s 12 years or mort old »t\d blettdod with 60% of tho choiftst 6«m Neutral Spirits. Eighty proof, Schertley Distillers Co., N.Y.C. WHIILPOOL 5-DAY SAU j ; 1-Speed ' Automatic Washer 129“ ’ 2-Speed ’ Automatic Washer . . 169“ i • Electric ■ Clothes Dryer 109“ i ’ Gas Clothes Dryer 124“ i i 14 Cu. Ft. ' Bottom Freezer .... 219“i ; 30" White Gas Range ; automatic burner . . . . - 159“ 1 ; Mobile Dish Washer-copper 189“ i Terms $10.00 Per Month NO DOWN PAYMENT HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. i : 825 W. Huron St. FE 4-2525 : How to Protect Yourself—3 Ways to Lessen Dangers of Telephone (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the third in a 12-part series on “How to Protect Yourself on the Streets and in Your Home,” serialized from a book by Gene Accas and John H. Eckstein.) ★ ♦ * By GENE ACCAS AND JOHN H. ECKSTEIN The telephone and the. 'telephone number can prove a source of danger to yourself and your home. 'Die following section tells why, and how you can lessen the danger. First of 'all, when you get a telephone, don’t have_lt listed in such a manner that anyone going through the telephone book can immediately determine that you are a woman. Do not nse *‘Miss*' or “Mrs.** with your phone listing, and do not give your first name. Instead, play it safe; use your last name and your initial (s) only. In addition, as a further precaution, dpn’t list your home telephone number in your company’s personnel directory. Limit the accessibility’ of your I number to your immediate superior and the personnel department. Under no circumstances should you list your phone num-I ber on stationery or on name-and-address stickers. I DON’T BE GENEROUS Don’t be generous about giving your phone number to new I acquaintances or other casual contacts. I Never volunteer your name, address, or phone number to someone who calls and asks, “Who is this?” Do not engage in conversation with crank callers. If they are legitimate, they .should be able I to be direct about their busi-, ness, identify themselves, and not be evasive or “mysterious.” If you have a rash of “strange j calls” or "wrong numbers,” re-. port the incidents to both the police department and the telephone company. If you answer your i^ione and are met with a torrent of obscene language, foul words, indecent suggestions, etc., do just one thing — hang up! Don’t utter a word of any kind. It is more than likely that your number was dialed at random, and the warped individual at Ihe other end will probably not be able to ring yon againi So, your be«t bet is to disconnect the call. If you receive wrong number calls, dp not volunteer your numbqr. Just say, “No!” If the caller asks, “What number is this?” don’t give your number in reply; instead, ask him what number he is calling. REPORT jDRANK CALLS Crank calls (but not those which appear to be legitimate wrong numbers or other reasonable errors) should be reported to the telephone company and to the police, giving complete details. If you are persistently annoyed by crank calls consider having an unlisted phone number. That way, you will know that a stranger is not calling you, or, if he is, it is only a random dialing that put him through to you. The telephone company will arrange to change your number and give you an unlisted one on request. The nominal monthly charge is well worth'the peace of mind it will bring. Also, in this way, you can rigidly control the availability of your number — giving it only to close family and trusted friends. TAP PHONE When you have the crank on the phone, here are some do’s: • Tap a ring or some other hard object such as a pencil tip against the mouthpiece of the phone, tp make it sound as if you were connecting a wire j or tape recorder to take down the caller’s words. • Half covdr the mouthpiece. and say, audibly, so that the crank can hear, “It’s that same man again, officer” (as if there were a policeman • When you are speaking, act as though someone else were with you in the room and you were turning the phone over to them. If undesirable calls persist, have an answering service take all your calls when you are at home, as well as when you’re away. The service can attempt to hold, the “crank” in conversation and alert the police on another line, and the police can attempt to trace the call. (It takes at least 20 minutes to trace a call.) In addition' you should never give a caller the impression that you are alone (even if you are). HE’S BUSY If someone calls and asks to speak to your husband, never say that he isn't home or is out of town (or that you don't have a husband — if you are unmarried or widowed). Instead, say that your husband is busy at the moment but that he will call back, if the caller will leave his number.' Have a bedside telephone. And don’t let it be an extension, which can be rendered 1 inoperable by someone’s tak- I ing the receiver off the hook of the “companion” phone in | monthly charges is hardly worth H.) If your apartment has an intercom system — one by which you can speak with someone at the downstairs entrance door — make sure it is in working order. And nse it! Never let yoursetf be lured out of your home by a phone call to meet someone. It is easy enough to make sure of the legitimacy of a call by saying that you are busy at the moment and will have to call back. Get the number, and do call back. Any legitimate business will not hesitate to give you the number of their offices. If the caller tries to be evasive, have nothing further to do with him. Arrange with one or two good friends — who live near you — to have telephone "code words.” These should be innocent-sounding words, which, when used in a conversation, mean, "Help! Come quickly! I am in trouble!” Thus, if you are ever in trouble and it is po.ssible to make a call — even in the presence of a criminal Out of Town to Find j A Good BUILDER ... FE 3-7833 739 NORTH PERRY - PONTIAC- Operator On Duty 24 Hours Daily I In other words, have the bedroom phone be an extra line, or j even a separately listed telephone, so that it can always be used to call for help. Do not have your phone "temporarily disconnected” when away from home on vacation or the like. The “interrupt message” given by the telephone company is a sure tip-off to potential housebreakers that your home is vacant and a target for burglary. (The minor amount you save on SPARTAN EUniilimiB SALE! THIS WEEK! Buy 4 Smt NOT JUST ANY TIRES, BUT HATIONAUY FAMOUS TIRES i KAONIT DOWNl |:>HHAeiinii«Mr xmtm-).. ... SPARTAN SALE STARTS TODAY! f/ FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES Girls' 2-Pc. SHORT SETS • Sizes 3 to 14 Styles 89’ Boys' Camp Shorts ]00 t 2 pockets t Ideal for Boys' Short Sleeve Sport Shirt 68 • Many Styles • 100% Cotton • Sizes 6 to 18 1.95 SPRAY CAN NEW DAWN HAIR SPRAY Men's Short Sleeve Sport Shirts e Cool Cottons 100 e Sizes 14 to 16 I SCOOP UP THESE BARGAINS LADIES' DRESSES • Lot«t» StyUi __ OOO • SiiM 8 »e ^ 20—MYi »e 24'/^ Lodiei' SLACKS e 100% Cotton e Gay Colors e Many Styles |47 POWER MOWER • 19" Cm» 04»» Stratton * Adjuttible Whcalt POWER MOWER • Cut jroo .rr* tU Oriu Calchtr POWER MOWER 0 >1" Cot—cm oX?r tt88 Stratton M M • AdiutfaMt ■■■■ whtatt w w a Prat Orati Catcher PATIO Table 77c Tray * ■ 16-Inch Table Top Grill • Wind 7 7 Breaker ImJL • 3 Pesition 22-Inch Portoble Folding Grill e Ideal for _ _ ^ Lostiiif LAWN STATUES 24" Motorized GRILL • With Hood ^ ^ PATIO Parti-Lites • Madonna • w Fronds M M 788 Motor M • UL Approrid ^ • Ligfcta and A A Rackrard jmg • 7 Light Sat SHOP SPARTAN 9:30 A.M. TO 10 PJNL DAILY SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 7 PJUL Corner of Dixb Nigliwoy end Telepropli Rood IN PONTUC B—^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. WBTOJBSDAY. JULV ij 1965 SOAHWAWO FRK FRYER PARTS LEC OWARTER I BREAST QUARTER 39 POLISH SAUSAGE RING BOLOGNA LIVER SAUSAGE t YOU* CHOICE ! 59: SAL AD DRESSING... £ 33' SAVE 6'-KROGER EVAPORATED CANNED MILK .8:^^1 SAVE lO'-FROZEN HAM, BEEF, TURKEY, CHICKEN OR SALISBURY STEAK MORTON DINNERS 39* SAVE d‘-COUNTRY OVEN PLAIN, SUGAR OR COMBINATION _ FRESH DONUTS . ..21* SAVE 10‘-KRO6o brand _ SHORTENING.... 3a. 65‘ HEATH <£. BARS 11 - 89‘ SAVE 20‘-KROGER LIQUID _ ^ SWEETNER......... 59‘ KROGER REGULAR OR DRIP COFFEE ^ £^189 ■ WITH NEWSFAKR mill WITH NEWSPAPtB COUPON BELOW KROGER LARGE GRADE 'A' FRESH LARGE EGGS 2”79* FOR A WHITER WASH CLOROX BLEACH ................h oauon juo 33* PIN|.^INTED-AU-FURFOSI LESTOIL CLEANER..............i-ft nor gti. 61* SfICIAl lABIl-FRE-MEASURED . VIM TABLETS..................i-ii *-ot fro 57* SPOTLIGHT COFFEE pr^th^'oa^^ 3.|79 GET CLOTHES CLEANIR ACTIVE "ALL"...............s-u ioz fro 71' SMOOTH SFREAOINO-KRAFT'S MIRACLE WHIPPED MARGARINE. i4t ctn 36' NABISCO TWIN-RACK FIG NEWTON COOKIES.............i-lb. fka 39* WITH CREAM SAUCi-FROZEN BIRDS EYE SMAU ONIONS i-oz wr *«g 39' THE PONtIaC PRESS. .WEDNKSDAWJULY 28, 1963 TOP VALUE STAMPS U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE TENDER^ , ROUND STEAK AIREADT 6IVEN AWAY! PIAT "TOPPIE'S nNTH" ...EVERVONE WINS! ■•fe SiMMtWOlSS HAMS UAOY TO RRIRARI YOUR PAVORITI WAY! NATURALLY TENDER .. . THE KIND OP TENDERNESS YOU JUST CAN'T "SPRINKLE ON "I 30 T V. STAMPS WITH COUPON-All BEEF HAMBURGER............... FROZEN All BEEF, CHOPPED, CUBED HAMBURGER FAMILY STEAKS .. . 10 TO 14 IB OVEN READY YOUNG TURKEYS_____________39 LB. U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE TENDERAY BONELESS BEEF ROASTS CHUCK ^AST I BOSTON ROLL | _RUMP ROAST BALL PARK WIENERS.69' HOT BURNING, LONG LASTING CHARCOAL ^ BRIQUETS SAVE 4‘-ALL PURPOSE PILLSBURY FLOUR 5-49 NEW PACK! KROGER RED TART PITTED PIE CHERRIES . 2^.29 SAVE 6‘-LIQUIO ROMAN BLEACH ^47 SAVE 10'-FOR FURNITURE JOHNSON'S PRIDE POLISH . 59 SAVE 17'-FOR DISHES ELECTRASOL.........3£’1 LA CHOY BRAND BEAN SPROUTS.. i.. n 791180 20^79* I YOUNG TENDER lEG 0' LAMB.. .79' SHOULDER CUT * LAMB ROAST.. .59' FRESH SlICEO BEEF LIVER ... .59' FRESH TASTY PORK STEAK .. .69' BULK PORK LINK SAUSAGE. .79' PONTIAC AND DRAYTON PLAINS ONLY! KROGER FRESH HOMOGENIZED GRADE "A" 1/2 GALLON MILK 3 • ‘1 SWEET CALIFORNIA GRAPES ARBOR-FRESH . . . LOADED WITH JUICE . . . PACKED WIT FRESH SWEET NECTARINE________3 Z. 69'' 140 SIZE SUNKIST LEMONS .> 69' SWEET CALIFORNIA - ORANGES.-4;:;. 69* g^mm TOP VALUE F TOP VALUE ,25 STAMPS^ 50 STAMP I WITH THIS COUPON ON I WITH THIS COUPON ON I IcHOCOUTE DEVILS FOOD 0«l ....... Imbihw AIM ' «Aia« ALMOND SILVER I . puaiar I |BRINK-Ali srXANY ZOO JcoNNHY OVEN LATER ail! PORK CHOPS ! V.M H** A' WITH ONION SAUCE-FROZEN BIRDS EYI MIXED VEGETABLES............toz wt pko 39* BIRDS EYE FROZEN CHOPPED BROCCOLI WITH CREAM SAUCE io-oz wt. pko. 39* OUT-TASTES THEM AUl SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS . i-u pko 28' ^ BRIGHTENS YOUR WASH-SPECIAl LABEL IFAB DETERGENT.......... . . . I-U. IVi-OZ PKO 64' I SPECIAL LABEL DITERGEJ4T JUMBO AD...................10-U. PKO $1.75 SANDWICH SIZE-J>ISPOSABLE BAGGIES PLASTIC BAGS..........so-ct pko 29' SANITIZES YOUR DISHES PALMOLIVE LIQUID........ . . . 1-PT. 4-OZ. BTL. 58' ASSORTED COLORS-V SALE CASHMERE BOUQUET . 4 regular size ears 33' MORE WHITENING POWER ACTION BLEACH.......... . . . 11-OZ wt pko 41* 2S0 REFUND OFFER AVAILABLE AT YOUR KROGER STORE SARA LEE FROZEN DESSERT CAKES 134-OZ. GERMAN CHOCOUTB "VA 1SVS-OZ. FRESH BANANA /OC 14-OZ. CHOCOUTE PKO. # 7 HOOR AND WALL AJAX CLEANER.................in «-oz pkg 82* LIKE BATHING IN RAINOROPSI VEL BEAUTY BAR SOAP .. 2reouursiziiars39* NEW ROSE LOTION-POR DISHES VEL LIQUID...................I.PT A-oz. itl 58* •STA RICH SWEEPSTAKES CPECIAIC sta-Fio* s";:r.£i24' Sfa-PursXr.r\r77' Sfa-Flo*s'"“' - Starch 44)Z. can 76' YOU COULD WIN $10,000.00 details and ENTRY BLANKS MERE 1^ 4my, Juty II, lUS. Mafia oaM ta ^aalaw-CafyHfltl IMS. Tlw ^ Kt«f«r C»mywy. TO J=i- THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESply, JULY 28, 19M ROMEO’S ‘JULIET’—The new queen of Romeo, Rita Hemela (center), was crowned last night in the Miss Romeo contest. Runners-up were Sara Higby (left), and Carol Emmett. The 5-foot-6, dark-eyed queen will Washington Teen Wins represent Romeo in the Romeo Peach Queen contest in September. To accept the awards last night, Rita wore a blue gown, Sara a white gown and Carol a pink one. Coed Is Crowned Miss Romeo ROMEO — A brown-eyed brunet who wants to be an elementary school teacher was named Miss Romeo last night. Rita Hemela, 19, of 7653 West, Washington, won the title over nine other amtestants. She is now eligible to compete ip the Peach Queen contest. The new queen, who will be a sophomore at Western Michigan University this fall, also received a scholarship to the John Rob^ Powers Finishing School, a dress and accessories. The first runner-up, who will fulfill Miss Romeo’s duties in case Rita is ever unable to do so, was Carol Emmett of 400 Morton. ★ w ★ The second runner-up was Sara Higby of 252 Church. FIVE FINAUSTS Also among the five finalists were . Carol School of 291 Benjamin and Paulette James of 308 E. St. Clair. Miss Romeo was crowned by Mrs; Donald Snyder, formerly Pamela Gumming, last year’s Miss Romeo and Peach Queen. Oldest Active Fireman in State Is Honored by Holly Council Rita and her court will participate in parades and other activities in the coming weeks. WWW Judges for the contest were Mrs. R 0 b e r t itnicks of the Rochester. Chamber of Commerce; Jack Martin, director of the Miss St, Clah: SbN‘es Pageant; an■Uu n 1-4071 Library Fines Allot fed for Addison Twp. The Oakland County Library Committee yesterday released $304 of penal fines for Addison Township which recently subscribed for service from the nine-library North Oakland Library Contract System (NOLCS). it ★ ' ★ Based on a formula of 18 cents per resident, the township’s penal fine money will be turned over to the NOLCS. Addison Township’s membership in the contract system permits residents of the township to use the services of any of its libraries. ★ ★ V Penal fines collected in communities with no library or library cooperative service are distributed at the discretion of the county library committee. CARNIVAL to Be Given in Heuor of Webster Widget Baseball Team to Bo Hold at the Springfield Baptift Charch 35 East' Blvd. North from 5 to 8 p. m. Thursday, July 29th Forecast: Clear..Crisp..Dry NEW TELEPHONE - On Monday, Michigan Bell Telephone Co. customers in the Pontiac area will be offered this new wall phone which has the dial in the handset. Because of this feature the phone can be installed in out-of-the-way locations that would be awkward for the standard model. DAVE DILES that’s the taste you get with FLEISCHMANN’S GIN & VODKA Ex-British Official Dies LONDON (AP) - Lord Grid-ley, 87, who as Sir Arnold Grid-ley was a Conservative member of Parliament from 1935-1955, died Tuesday. He was a director of electrical manufacturing companies and a former president of the British Association of Chambers of Commerce. There are more than 100 million individual accounts in the nation’s social security records. APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLLIE FRETTER SAYS TRY AND BEAT THIS DEAL! Buy the appliance you want from me, and in addition to the iowest price. I’ll give you a transistor radio FREE! How can you lose? That's right folks, I actually dare you to try and boat my deal, I'm offering the lowest prices on every appliance in my huge inventory, and to make.it even a more attractive time to buy I'll give you a powerful transistor radio absolutely FREE. And don't forget that any time I can't-beat your best price and service you get 5 lbs. of coffee also free.’ How can you lose? Just stop in this week and give me a chance to save you money. I really con. TELEGRAPH RD. \k MILE S. ORCHARD LAKE RD. i MU# North ofMtnuU Mile Opan Daily 10-9—Opan Sunday 11-6 — FE 3-7051 NO MONIY DOWN-UF TO N MtNTNB TO MY Pick Ybur Price! PAY AS LITTLI At 4«< POK COPPII WITH COUPON MLOWI lere’s aiMtiier great idea from )usl cut eut tlw teepeu ef yauv friendly folks at Food Fair, choice end bring it ikmg when Choose your favorite coffw fr^ you do your weekly shopping, one of these famous brands: v~... iiwum.«... Maxwell House. Chase & San- You can py as littia aa 49c fa e bom. Hills Bros., Food Fair or ^ Shop Beech-Nut, and pick your own Food Fair this weak and enjoy price! this “Pick Your Price" eale I MAXWELL HOUSE, CHASE & SANBORN, HILLS BROS, FOOD FAIR or BEECH-NUT ifHOUSt Coffee 49« PURCHASE OF *25.00 OR MORE AND COUPON BELOW I-LI. CAN I I-LI. CAN I l-UI. CAN | l-U. CAN WITH WITH WITH WITH PURCHASI OF PURCHASI OP PURCHAU OP PURCHAU OP $20 OR MORI $15 OR MORI $10 OR MORI $5 OR MORI AND COUPON AND COUPON AND COUPON AND COUPON mow mow ------------------------------- -------------- 54* I 59* 163*168* GRADE 1, SLICED Peters Large Bologna GRADE 1, THE ALL-AMERICAN FAVORITE , Peters Skinless Franks LARGE AND SMALL CURD, CREAMED Farm Maid Cottage CheesM ORANGE, GRAPE, PUNCH OR LEMONADE Farm Maid Fruit Drinks VACUUM SEALED IN BUTTER - Birds Eye Green Peas 4 NATURAL FRUIT FLAVOR I FROZEN ^ Food Fair Grape Juice FOOD FAIR SOLID PACK Tomatoes FOOD FAIR TENDER Sweet Peas FOOD FAIR WHOLE KERNEL Golden Corn YOUR 0 .Id ddffdd dd Md dd't^'\£|d?d d d ddd 6 < Kidney Becint FOOD FAIR FRENCH STYLE Green Beans FOOD FAIR FABRIC _ _ Softener Rinse49* d 6 6 6 d d 0 6 0 u 0 is FWE $SM STAMM s|| ........ PUICHASI OF §1| s’* Slip Xltese {/oduabU Savoys! I - - ---- — —- - r,—“ “ “"M7i"£,|3r(SMu^dWi”i,”u'i^iV!Sf ^ \FOOD LFAIR ; j^OOOOOOOOjMOolfliM^j^OMOOPl)UOO()Uul!Blj!^OOQdOOOJ)OOQOdlBMii__- , , , 'BL^MREiD B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 Dolf - Rich Flaror PINEAPPLE JUICE 100 Dolo-Lo Cal S Chnck Steaks | Center Blade Cut lb. Naturally Ttndtr-Tabit Trimiqed Round Steak Fancy Center Slices PRUIT COCKTAIL 3-69* Dole Pineapple-Grapefruit Fruit Drinks Dole Sliced Pineapple Dole Tidbit Pineapple Dole Pineapple Juice Dole Sliced or Chunk Pineapple Dole Chunk or Crushed Pineapple Dole Crushed Pineappje Qt. 14-oz. OO* Can 4H’/2-oz: $100 Cans I 3'c^;“'69‘ 3 12-oz. Cans Zy. 31-lb.4'/i-oz. $100 Cans I 3 69' Mb. 4'/4-oz Borwlm B««f Rump, Round or Patio Roasts Freeier Queon Beefburgers k«.p Delight for the Whole Family Fancy Cornish Hens Hunt's Family Size Swiss Steaks Save Rich Tomatc 7c Flavor I Bottles f effacthra thru 5 ? ’ day, July 31, 1965. Wa ratarva tha right fa limit feaetitlai. Rice Krispies Variety Peck Corn Flakes Sealtest Homogenized Plus Deposit CDairg \Jali ues Jairy Sealtest Half & Half Sealtest Lo Cal dMKolale Drink ' Sealtest Ice Milk or Velvel StKibel Sealtest IceCnamCiips 3'A-g>l. S|00 Ctns. I ’-ir 59 ^pS’:59* WHiTl SA1§ Cannon Beautycrast Bath Towels 49* Choice of Colors Save Over 50% Rich In Flavor-Save 12c MMPIIBIS BEANS Limit Tfcraa with Caepee an Opputitu fepa Wesson- Ideal for Salads limit Oku with Cae|we ee OppuHu Pagt Whitena Teeth Fest Large Economy Size CREST TOOTHPASTE 5-oz. ”7 re Tube / 0 Cleaner with Ammonio Boggles Plastic Ajax Liquid Sandwich Bags 95' '^29' Spry Shortening 19 2-lb. 10-oz. Can Assorted Gelotin Flovert Jell-0 Desserts ’pSIO* Ourkee Garlic Salt 6Vi-oz. A re Shaker 40 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1965 B—11 Wrlgley’s Naturally Tender • Corn fed for finest flavor # Tabla Brimmed fOf value • Naturally aged to peak tenderness • Personally selected by ex-perienciiid Wrigley buyers. ‘ ' Naturally Tendjer — Club or - When that at^me occasion demands something very, very special,^enipy these favorites of beef lovers all over America. Just look at* the magnificent variety of juicy cuts included in this sale. Naturally Tender — Porterhouse or ALL CENT£R SLICES LI. ■T-Bone Steaks I LB. Tabla Trfminad Swiss Stecriss :«nt*r Round * Bon* Cut* gj lb Top Froif Bonel*** Turkey Roll Roast Foncy Grad* "A" Smoll Broiler Turkeys Foncy—Grod* "A" Cacklebirds Light Solid Whits mpRCV frictt tfftefiv* thru Suturduy, July 31, 19(5. Wu tutunu thi r'rht to EMPRESS Soljd White Meat (Birdseye Sale! • French Beans with Almonds or Mushrooms Pkg. # Green Peas With Mushrooms 1»«i. «c*., • Mixed Vegetables o^'ons Pki. • Broccoli Spears In Butter Sauce 10.01. Bk*. chr.3'“*- $|00 Hath Brawn. .'SSSi. 2 "£ Str.wbarr». 3 ’.V,! 79* Lemonade pfnklTr* dale Ml. iVhlts Can 10* imn BiEU Mel-O-Crust Mb. 4-ox. Loaf Kraft's Cheese Loot V liinif Ono with Coupon pt Might Save 26c Gordon Fr*»h . Potato Solod TobI* Trimmod ‘ Pork Chops 69*^. Eckrieh Smorgas Pock pm'’99' Importod from Donmork SUcod Bacon ST c!n 79' Tigor Town Boilod Ham 79' Rings of Bologna, Knock* or Polish Kielbota 59*16 Canned Hams ^ rfon'j Cooked *nd Breodied Perch Port Roody Halibut Steaks Reody to Eot C*n Ji^89* it*r CAC DV lb. Summer Spruit Pkgt. Nabisco Cinnomon Almond Cookies P.D.Q. Instont Chocolate Beads ■r 45* —IZZT Roo (prune Detroit's Fovorit*—Wide Fresh Whit* Sliced Chunk Tuna Prune Juice Pure Egg Noodles Silvercup Bread 77 , ^ bS;,.37 Schmidts ro-ox. oo« Pkg. 00 Mb.4.ox. OT« ■ Loaf Z/ Sr-.|f THE POyTlAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 roWSDAY, AND S^RDAY ONLY PLENTY OF FREE PAREIf^ Wjth This Coupon - July 29, 30, 31 WOMEN’S HANDBAGS 77g. Our Reg. 2.77 3 Day Only] LIMIT 2 Whilo QiMintitiot Last _ IIIIIIB With This Coupon, July 29,30, 31 MEN'S SHORTY. PAJAMAS Co«t and middy styles. Siam S-Md^jtL. limit 4 pair while qnentities last.' . CHa3BsinjEni'""f''"i WMiThltC.i>poii-Jiily29.30,31 S WiH< Till. Coupon, July 29,30,31 lAutonnbileilHBMI BOOK Timing It MATCHES 1.99 I Our Beg. 2.46 S ^Ue6mt» Priced ^ 3 Day Only x ^ Only SI LIMIT4pkgs.il lie s| Quantity S' Lasts B iiiiii With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 S With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 i MEN'S CABANA I JUNIOR BOYS' I , SETS I BOXER LONGIES i Compart to 12.95 _ T. 1 j 1. j .^1 r.. .55 Days Only! Half boxer waist, aipper S l‘]rtedMn^ nTi^td Charge iL = ^ ^1, front, 2 pockets. 3 . 7. Limit = Limit 2 while tinantiues last. = 2 whUe quantity lam. = K MART COUPON UnMlK MART COUPON MS K MART COUPON WiHiTliUCwipon. July 3«, 30,3T INSECT SPRAY IT'. £ Our With This Coupon, Jtily 29, 30, 31 “ PATIO TORCHES SPOff 1/^9,34,131 SEAMliSI] Nftll|4 12*^56^ Wjth This Coupoh,July 29,30,31 1-QT. OF I10RCHFUEL 67« Rig. 3.94 'wiili'niitCwii ^ly 29,30,31 Metal Patio TABU r»»g»>«Qm3isisz With This Coupon, Juh .^uly 29, 30, 31 9x18" Stair TREADS i 18^ 29,30,31 6-TRANS. RADIO 5.00 "K MART COUPON With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 . iCHIUHlEH'S I Tennis ShM With This Coupon, July 29,30 and 31 S 18-OZ.SPRAY il With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 13-OZ. ENAMEL si 32^ I With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 100 PAPER PLATES 56^ ' K MART COUPON ^ July 29,30,31 CASUALS i July 29,30,31 "‘girls 2-6x1, DUNGAREES 79c Quantity With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 ^250 PAPER SI NAPKINS I 26^' I WOh Till. Coupon, July 29,30,31 PATIO CANDIES \2<"77*^ OurReg.33e xir 3 Day Only S in, July 29, 30, 31 = WHh This Coupon, July ^9, 30, 31 = IfT’lHH WOMEN’S I PANTV if/OXFORDS | 15'= 1,43.. I LIMIT 2 piin.B| While El Quantity S With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 x VINYL I SO’ HOSE s 1.00 I With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 WOMEN’S GIRDLES 72'^ July 29,30, 31 ~ WOMEN’S PANTIES aanSEi'""i'"'" SUetS-M-L.X 3 Day Only! LIMIT 2 While = Quantit/ E Lasts X iiiiiEnAi With IbisJZoupon, July 29, 30, 31 HSHING I MOTOR I ?4.32i _.With This Cwpon, July 29,30,31 1-iB. OF ICASHEWS 77« B With This Com iDEiaiiifiii upon, July 29, 30, 31 E “*9-V. Ttans.i K MART COUPON K MART COUPON B / With This Coupon, July 29, 30, 31 BATTERIES I 14^ M Our Beg. 37e IDkyOnly LIMIT 4 < While * Quantity Lasts ' iiiieiiNil o;jury29;30,3l 1 ~R00M-SIZEi| CARPET „ 11.88 =\ LIMIT 1 . Whilo S Quantity^ S Lasts ' X iiiiiiiiiiniiiiiihiTii BAG OF HARCOAL 42' Reg. S7e 104b. Bom 3 Day OtUy LIMIT 2 While Quantity Lasts inim ^iy 29,30,31 lOT.OF GULFU1E 24' GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD TI!E POXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 THREE COLORS C-1 / J^dPleamre^o ShopandSaveA^ CAMPBELL'S FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS ITMNigMaMllltMl|i||| MMwiii Av».| miCMtayUteM-l PEOPLE'S FOOD MARKETS TIMATO SIV PKE ST. I 7WAUM«lltT. | I «BAYSAY«IC OftMfUNCAY 10-oz. Von Camp's TAMAUS HAJtTS TOMATO JUICE 14^1. OUl Sale Days: Wed., July 28 thru Sun., Augjist 1, 1965 PIONEER SUGAR PLUS GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS GuH INSECT SPRAY 12-oz. Can 2-lb. jar Velvet PEANBT BUTTER 69^ U.S. CHOICE PORTERHOUSE T-BONE STEAK 99? Stockton Whole Peeled 1-lb., 13-oi. can APRICOTS Tender! U.S. CHOICE SIRLOIN QQt STEAK 03.E Peters BONELESS halt HAMS or wholo PORK ROLL SAUSAGE 49fb. PETERS ' _ JAl! LIVER SAUSAGE 49‘ HILLS BROS, or CHASE & SANBORN COFFEE $199 rs5^ ^ HECt OF : RUMP R9A$T 99t IIr POUND VAC. CAN Peters HICKORY HOUSE BACON TOWELS 2 Rolls PLUS GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 196g Frozen Orange Juice Concentrate Is a Bargain "I? Long considered • good omen —tgnaabd of a happy life ahead for hridee — orange bloMoms this year signify a great many Try a Baktry It’s not always easy to find the cooidng parchment paper needed to prepare firii en papil-lote for which recipes are sometimes given. But you may be able to buy some sheets of the parchment from a bakery or fiabstore. ‘ good things idiead for homeaudt-ers as well. Over 60 per cent more, frozen orange juice coficentrate la on hand this year than last the most since 1962. For this reason, frozen concentrated orange juice is on the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s Plentiful Foods List this itRiag 1 pound carrots, washed and scraped 3 eggs 14 cup flour Orange juice concentrate is far more versatile than that — and current prices make experimenting quite apropos. Old Fashioned Filling For those picnic sandwiches, mix cho|^ hard-cooked eggs with gro^ cooked ham, sweet pickle relish and just enough mayonnaise or boiled dressing to moisten. 114 cups wange julee, singif strength 114 teaspoons salt Vi teas|)oon hot pepp^ sauce 1 tablespoon mdted butter 1 small onion, minced Orange slices Grate* carrota medium fine. Beat eggs with flour until smooth. Stir in orange juice, salt, pepper sauce and melted butter. Add grated carrots and onion. Mix well Poor into battered i 14 s ing again befpre using on salads. Makes 114 cups of tasty dressing to top fndt sala^. Any all-purpose barbecue sauce used for chicken may also be used for hamborfera being ' cooked (HI the outdoor grill. KING OF ROASTS! "Super^" Mafur« eeni-Fedletf CloMd Sun«lay Ai Usual m Jhw 1965 Crop! **Supt^ltight" Quality—USDA Gradn "k" Young lURKEYS 39 8 TO 14 POUNft SiZfS c lb MILIO AND ^IINID CAFN JOHN'S Mtiliulii Shrimp.. Fish Stijcks No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits • • • IVERYDAY LOW PRICES DOLI CRUlHia A m Pi,. Pinoapple ^ . 2'u» 45 DOLS-CHUNIU A m Pineapple .... 2"<^*47 STOKILY'S PINUT WHOLI Green Beans_____________-29* ITOttlY-S PINIST - Cream Corn . . . 4—^69^ GoMenConi . . . 4^69* KiVkOoWITH CORN Oil , Margarine ......27* RIAOY TO SAKI ^ ^ Pnffin Biscuits . . . 10* DUNCAN HINIS LAYIR |.|,l a Coke Mixes... v< Block Pepper.... 4-ez. 10 Oa/icieiir flavors ( VILVrr RUND [ Peanut Butter... ......2 75* C CAN > UVI AT ADP ON Hondi Wrap. .. ) SAVI AT A»P ON ( Action Ble«ch..i 200 PT.-90* ...^-65* SAVE 10* Jane Porker Lemon ot f'- - Pineapple Pie 39“ A JANI PARKIR Cracked Wheat Bread 2 1-LI. LOAVES UVI 20«-JaM Parkw All-R 73* WASHDAY DETERGENT j Omjm- Trend Dry.............'isi 39 SAVE AT A&P Trend Liquid . 2 57 ALL PURPOSE — NEW RLUE ^ Dutch Cleanser . 2 »” 29 TOILET SOAP A Guy Bouquet . . . *•» 35 ONE CENT SALE . a a Sweetheart Soup 4 »» 33 e-4 THEPONTl AC. PRESS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1965 Vegetables Can Be Interesting By JANET OI«LL PMtiae Prai F«ad Editoc Vegetables can be the dullest part of a meal or a truly delicious course. We’re sorry for people who like only one br two vegetables. ★ ★ ★ Now is the time to enjoy farm fresh produce. With roadside stands dotting the countryside and the thrice weekly farm-mers’ market, the supply good. ★ * ★ Cook fresh carrots and green beans, then marinate in a wine dressing overnight. Good fare for the buffet table. Buffet Carrots and Green Beans 6 carrots, scraped 1 pound green beans 2 cups boiling water 2Vt teaspoons salt 1 small onion, cut in paper-thin strips cup olive oil or salad oil 2 tablespoons wine vinegar til teaspoon white pepper Halve carrots; cut in half crosswise, then into 6 long strips. Wash and tip beans and cut in half lengthwise. In separate saucepans, using one cup boiling water and a teaspoon of salt for each, boil carrots 8-10 minutes and beans 10-lS minutes, or until tender. Drain. In a shallow container, toss together vegetables and rest of ingredients. Cover tightly and refrigerate until flavors blend — several hours or overnight, turning mixture once or twice, w ★ W Before serving, if oil has congealed, allow to stand at room temperature long enough to have it return to its liquid state. Makes 8 servings. Zucchini squash are those long dark green summer squash that resemble cucumbers. Here is a way to serve course, if desired. OUve-Stuffed Zucchini Vi cup ripe olives 6 medium-size zucchini Vt cup fine bread crumbs 2 tablespoons chopped onion legg % teaspoon salt V4 teaspoon garlic powder 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning w U teaspoon sweet basil and ' »teaspoon each thyme and savory 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese 2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine Vt cup tomato juice Oit olives into pieces. Wash zucchini and cut off ends. Cook zucchini in boiling salted water IS minutes or until just tender. Drain and cool. Split zucchini lengthwise into halves. Scoop out pulp and finely chop. In a bowl mix chopped zucchini with olivet, bread crumbs, onion, egg, salt, garlic powder and seasoning. Stir in cheese and butter. Spoon into zucchini shells. Place in baking pan and pour tomato juice over stuffed zuc-: chini. Bake in 350-degree (moderate) oven 40 to 45 minutes. Makes 6 servings. Creole Com takes the place of both vegetable and potatoes or it can stand alone as a casserole to serve on the patio. Outdoor Creole Corn % lb. link sausages 1 onion, chopped Vt green pepper, chopped 1 tablespoon flour 2 (8 oz.) cans tomato sauce 2 cups cooked whole kernel corn teaspoon thyme 1 teaspoon salt til teaspoon pepper Cut sausages in small pieces. Cook slowly in electric skillet until browned. Add onhm and' green pepper and continue cooking until sausage is done. Blend in flour. Stir in tomato sauce. Add corn and cook until slightly thickened. Add seasonings and simmer 20 minutes. Makes 4-5 servings. Blueberry Sauce Is Pancake Topping Fresh fruits add so mudi to summer meal enjoyment! Fresh Blueberry Sauce 2 cups fresh large blueberries Vt cup sugar Vt cup water Rinse the blueberries in cold water and drain well. In a small ^aucdpan, puC^l top of the Mua-| ^berries, the sogi|r and the water. \ Over low beat, stir gently until | sugar dissolves; bring to a boil; simmer for 15 to 20 minutes; if syrup is quite thin, continue I :il it is thieker. Remove from heat and cool slightly; gently mix in the re-maini^ 1 cup blueberries. Serve warm with pancakes. Makes about 2 cups sauce. Kidney Bean Rarebit Good Supper Dif|i Ever add drained red kidney beans to a dnese sauce for Sunday night supper? If the cheese sauce is made with tomato, this combination will be especially good. Serve this rarebit over crisp buttered toast or steamed rice. TTRIO of your kiteiion? KITCHENS DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND! • fnm BtHmtmU* • StntU* • JV* OUlgmtian PONTUC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES Pbanei IU-MM-111 Orehard Lake *»e., I hiks. I. «f Tab This Recipe Produces a Rich Moist Cake This redpe for a gingerbread Is an old-fashioned one. The texture is fairly coarse, the crumb is moist, a^ the color of the cake is rich dark brown. These charaderistics are specially due to the use of soda as the only leavening. Rich and Dark Gingerbread Vt cup butter or margarine % cup boiling water V* cup 9Ugar Vi cup molasses 1 egg, beaten 1 teaspoon baking soda Vi teaspoon salt 1V4 cups sifted enriched allpurpose flour 2 teaspoons ginger Melt butter in boiling water in mixing bowl. Add sugar, molasses, and beaten egg. Stir until sugar dissolves. Minted Sour Cream Dresses Up Cukes Here’s a surprising but delicious accompaniment to lamb. Creamy Minted Cucumber 1 cucumber, about 8 inches % cup commercial sour cream Vt teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon white pepper 2 teaspoons minced fresh spearmint or 1 teaspoon crushed dried spearmint Pare cucumber; cut off unseeded ends; slice as thin as possible — there should be 1V4 to 2 cups. Stir together the sour cream, salt, pepper and mint; mi)t in the cucumber. Cover tightly and refrigerate a few hours or overnight for flavors to blend. Sift dry ingredients together and add, all at once, to liquid ndxture. Stir vigorously to ndx thoroughly. ★ ★ ♦ Pour batter into greased and floured 8-inch or 8-inch square baking pan. Bake in a 375 degree (moderate) oven for 30 to 35 minutes. Cut into squares, and serve warm with butter, applesauce, whipped cream, or ice cream. LOOK B«tt«r... feel better! with a MASTER CRAFT Belt Vibrator FE 4-4044 140 Oakland Ave. THIS COUPON WORTH 50c >1,0a|>t.0.1A,0«i A. m. STALIV MFO. CO., Map UWar, Bai Gentlemen: I enclose 5(X plus one Sno-Bol label. Please send me the handy Sno-Bol mop. Name _________________________________ • rtitriclad. Offar ai V3iue sponge TOILET BOWL MOP ONLY • CANT SCRATCH B • NO DRIP, NO M • RtACHtS UNMR RIM Sno-Bol cleans batter beeauae H's liquid. DeodorizOt, aanitizes, makes bowls gleam I The modem liquid bowl cleaner Outdoor COOK-OUT Specialw^) delicious, tender LAST CHANCE! A '^Wonder Horse'’ for Your Child 1 Yei, 1 would like fe h'ova on* of the - THREE WONDER HORSES GIVEN AWAY CHILD’S NAME ARbRESS AGE 1 1 undorilond thoro it r 10 obligoiion. Drawing to bo held 1 July <31 «t. 1 do not hovo to bo prosont to win. FRYING CHICKENS Excellent for Bar-B-Q! PORK STEAK Tasty, Tender Steer Beef POT ROAST 39f Snow White RIB or SHLDR. VEAL CHOPS km M lb. sh^'ribs Wilson’s Thrifty Brand SUCED BACBN V PKf- y all Hoffman’s Famous •’*** HAMBURG 49C m-m-good ^ ▼ H Gordon’s Spicy Pink Baby Link y^mKsmms U.S. Gov’t Grade “A” LARBE EBBS in 3-dot. pkgs. Patio or Rotissarie ROASTS W" 79{ 4-6-lb. avg. FRESH niRK RBEST «9P' 25C FRESH PICNICS lb. OLEO 5‘"85^ choice • Large Head Lettuce ■■f* • Fresh Green Onions mw • Home Grown Radishes • Green Cabbage ea. Cut, Wrapped and Daliverad FREE! HRr FULL SIDES np Rpep FRYING CHICKENS ^ with each FREEZER 4VV ORDER W "T m lb. NO DOWN PAYMENT > JUST SAY “CHARGE \Vl I 49! PARK FRU IN RIAA HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc. RHAIl CMVIWOW mt OAHLAieM PACKISeC " QUALITY AAEATS AND PBOOUCE AT WHOUSALf PRICKS Kl DEDDV CT ------- 3-^0 IM. KtKKT M. Wl BISIBVI TMl BIOKT 1 WE RISUVI THE RIGFIT TO LUy«IT QUANTITIES FE 2-1100 THE PONTIAC PKESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1968 liioDnilf OUR LOWEST YEARS I TURN THE PAGE AND SEE! : Are Your New BIG 'D’s in Pontiac 2375* Monday-Soturday n Sunday : m100LEBELT_RD.) V"-• '• -----HURON) f SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Famous Drassing, for SolorTs or Sondwichts Kraft Miracle Whip Shodd’s, A Smooth-Spreading Sandwich Treat 2-lb. Peanut Butter.................. 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JULY 28, 1965 New 'Killer' 3-0 Winner in Nightcap Tigers Sparrna Again Salvages Split With Yankees NEW YORK (AP) - Ex-collegian Joe Sparrna is the Detroit Tigers’ “Yankee killer” for 1965 at least. The New York Yankees, fallen on troubled days gthis season, are less an obstacle than in the past when Detroit’s Frank Lary wore the “killer” toga over a period of years, * -k * On the other hand, the man- ner in which Sparrna cooled off the Yanks and saved a double-header split for the 'Hgers Tuesday night was meaningful. The 23-year-old former Ohip State right-hander’s 3-0 victory in the second game was his fourth victory over New York this year and fifth straight over two seasons. Behind Whitey Ford, the Yanks took the opener 4-3, mak- ing victory a “must” for Detroit in the second game if the Tigers vfere to get this 12-game road trip off to a decent start. Sparrna shut out New York on five hits for seven innings until he was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the Tigers’ three-run winning rally in the eighth. FANNED nVE Pitching his first fuil season for Detroit, Sparrna struck out five moi and waiked only one in keeping the Yanks in hand and notching his seventh victory in 10 games. Don Wert’s bases loaded sacrifice fly brought in the winning run in Uie eighth. The fly scored Jim Northrup, breaking a scoreless duel between Sparrna and Jim Bouton. The Tigers’ two other runs came over on an error by catcher Jake Gibbs on Jerry Lumpe’s squeeze play bunt and a bases loaded walk to Dick McAuliffe. Tom Tresh’s 16th homer vnth a man on base and Ford’s tight pitching in the pinches were main factws in New York’s first game triumph. HIT HOMERS The Tigers collected 10 hits off Ford and two reliefers, including homers by Don Demeter (hisTlth) and Don Wert (his 7th), but never could put a clusttf together. Hank Aguirre, the losing pitcher, allowed six hits and all the Yank runs in his five innings of work. It was Aguirre’s sixth defeat against 10 victories. ♦ ★ ★ ’The divided doubleheader pre- served aq odd record between the Tigers and Yanks. The teams have played three doubleheaders. Elach followed the same pattern. Ford won the first game and Sparrna the second. FIRE BLANKS Sparma’s shutout Tuesday night was the 10th of the year against the Yankees. Detroit pitchers now have hurled nine whitewashings. Dave Wickersham (34) is to pitch today’s twilight game with New York, possibly against Pete Mlkkelsen (3-7). TaiNHiM earn* NSW YoaK If Joe Foss, American Football League commissioner, would do the job expected of him, he’d put an end to the perennial nonsense between Cookie Gilchrist and the teams in his league. Gilchrldt has been the bad boy of professional football and the poorest representative of any form of athletics since he went from high school in Western Pennsylvania right into pro football. Granted he has great football ability, probably more instinctive than rational, but as ambassador for the game, he has been a disgrace, discredit and a disgusting example. He went from Har-Brack High School (this writer’s Alma-Mater) as a Junior into the Cleveland Browns’ training camp. He left the NFL camp and admitted it was impossible to make the team from prep ranks into'the pros. He started his pro football career in a smaller Canadian circuit and then moved into the Canadian Professional League where he made his mark on the gridiron. BLACK MARKS But he also left a bagful of black marks on police blotters, court calendars and in the front offices of the Canadian clubs. He was the highest paid player in the league, filed for bankruptcy and squandered his money in ventures that called for the business tact of a 4th grader and his piggy bank. The Buffalo Bills obtained his football contract three years ago and found he was as good a sideshow for luring crowds into the stadium as he was on the gridiron. Buffalo coach Lou Saban was actually too generous in keeping the many stories about his football problem child as quiet as he. did. He even put Gilchrist on waivers amidst a 10 game winning streak for open defiance in front of the Bills’ players on the field. ★ ★ ★ After a rehearsal of what to say. Cookie apologized to the players and the coach, but after Buffalo’s championship last season, the bosses knew they were asking for trouble by keeping him around. They traded him to Denver. He made it clear he wasn’t going to go ^ Denver and wanted to go to the Oakland club. Now the trouble has shifted to Denver where Gilchrist says the club intimidated him into signing a $37,5(X) a year contract. WONT PLAY Five days of training camp went by and Cookie wasn’t to be found. Denver has threatened him with a $400,000 breach of contract suit. Gilchrist said, “I never intended to play for Denver ... If they try to make me apologize, I won’t play.” Denver coach Mac Speedie replies that if Cookie doesn’t apologize he won’t make the team and adds, “This isn’t a personal thing.” The last phrase is the half-truth of the whole career of Cookie Gilchrist. It IS a personal thing for Gilchrist and it SHOULD be for Denver, the AFL Commissioner Foss. Football is the only thing Gilchrist knows and when he says he was “intimidated to sign a $37,000 contract,” he personally insults the ethical values of the AFL. ★ ★ ★ Why let him retire? Foss ought to put an end to the Clay-tonian attitude of “I’m the greatest,” by retiring him out of football for good . . . that is of course if Foss puts any value In ethics himself. Winning Orioles Keep Bauer Puzzled Second Place Birds Squeeze , Past LA, 3-2 Twins Divide Twinbill With Senators; KC Belts Boston Twice 4-^ Kdiiw ef 4 0 11 Mooc'itto ef 11 0 0 Horton H 4 0 0 0 Troth cf 4 111 Dtmtitr rf 3 111 Howard c 3 0 10 Frtthan c 4 0 10 Upaz rf 3 0 11 M'A'Ilffa u 4 0 10 Ptpitona 1b 4 0 10 Aguirra p 3 0 0 0 Boyar 3b 4 10 0 Wood ph 10 10 Ford p 10 0 0 Brown ph 1 0 0 0 Rapoz ph 10 0 0 Tatala 33 3 10 1 Talab M 4 7 4 Oat rail 001 lit 000—1 Now Ytrli 101 101 tax—4 E-None. DP-Naw York I. LOB—Oa-troll 0, Now " IB-Ptplloi ler (ID, Wl Lopaz. IP H ■ BR BB SO Aguirra L, 104 3 « 4 4 1 1 Sharry .......... I 0 0 0 0 0 Pant 1 10 0 11 Ford W, 11-0 .... < « 3 3 1 1 Ramoa .......103 1 0 0 1 1 Hamilton 1-1 0 0 0 0 0 Aguirra tacad 3 man In tih. T-IH. Wart lb 10 11 RIch'ton lb 4 0 1 0 Lumpt lb 3 0 0 1 Kubak u 4 0 10 Cash lb 4 0 10 Manila H 4 0 10 Horton If 4 0 0 0 Moac'ltlo pr 0 0 0 0 M'A'Illta ts 10 0 1 Troth rt 4 0 0 0 Damatar cf 4 0 0 0 Papitona 1b 4 0 0 0 Northrup rt 4 1 1 0 Rtp« cf 3 0 10 Sullhran c 3 0 0 O Boyar 3b 4 0 0 0 Brown ph 1110 Gibbs C 3 0 0 0 Gladding p 1 0 0 0 Bouton p 3 0 10 Tatatt Datralt Hicks Hurls Softball Win Spencer Forces Playoff A three-hitter by Floyd Hicks In the season finale carried Spencer Floors to an 11-0 decision over Town & Country last night in the Pontiac American Hazel Park Has No hAore 'Room' for 2 Winners HAZEL PARK (AP) - The Hazel Park Race ’Track disclosed Tuesday the banning from the track of two bettors whb reputedly have hit the twin double for more than a million dollars this season. One was the bettor who walked off with the July 5 twin double pot of $103,987, largest in the history of Michigan parimutuel ws/gering. He was ordered Monday to stay out of the track, 10 minutes after he collected $63,277, second largest payoff. In another twin double bet. The Detroit Free Press, which has been checking out the story of the fabulous bet winnings, named the two barred bettors as Beirnie Weiss and John E. Oppenheim. League softball action and boosted the winners into a tie for 300 Bowl for the loop lead. ★ ★ ★ Spencer and 300 Bowl own 15-3 records and they will battle it out tomorrow for the league championship in a playoff game at Beaudette Park at 7 p.m. Hicks struck out six and walked three batters in keeping Town & CounU-y (2-16) under control. He gave up a double in the first inning, a single in the second and another two-bagger in the fifth. Hicks also helped himself with the bat. He slammed a two-run single in the second inning and collected a double in the fiveF run fourth inning. Third baseman Fred Calleja also collected two hits, both singles in the fourth an(I fifth innings. In Waterford Township action. Bill DeRousse tossed a three-hitter and teammate Chuck Steinhelper clouted a three-run homer as -Bob A Larry (9-8) blanked Dixie Bar (9-8), 8-0, and Bob Fraser ran his record to 10-1 in pitching Day’s Sanitary (13-4) to a 10-4 triumph over Haskins (Tievrolet (4-13). tRmccr FiMn IN tO—11 I 1 TMm B CMMlry MB MB- B 3 3 Winner—Hkki. Loser—Hughes. By United Press International The Orioles have Manager Hank Bauer so puzzled he figures they have to win the pennant. “We haven’t been playing our best ball at ail," the Baltimore skipper explained. “And we’re still in second place. We haven’t been hitting, our fielding has let down and we’re still up there.” The Orioles trail Minnesota by four games. ★ ★ * A couple of items that aren’t mysterious to Bauer are third baseman Brooks Robinson and the Orioles bullpen. While Hank waits for the rest of his team to jell, Robinson’s consistent bat and the relievers’ stingy hurling are keeping Baltimore close. Robby has driven in the winning run for the Orioles in two of their last three victories, including Tuesday night’s 3-2 10-inning triumph over Los Angeles. Reliever Dick Hall earned his ninth victory in the contest, enabling the Orioles to move within four games of pace-setting Minnesota. OTHER AL GAMES In other AL games, Kansas City swept a doubleheader from j Boston 7-3 and 10-8, Minnesota beat Washington 9-5 after losing the first game 10-7, Cleveland defeated Chicago 7-3, and New York tripped Detroit 4-3 in the first game, then lost the nightcap to the Tigers 3-0. Robinson, who is hitting .301 and has been near that figure almost all season, singled with the bases loaded and one out in the 10th inning. The blow came off loser Dean Chance, who entered the game in the 10th and gave up a double to pinch-hitter Russ Snyder, an intentional walk, a sacrifice bunt and another intentional pass before Robinson stepped to the plate. / ★ ★ ★ Hall relieved starter Wally Bunker in the seventh inning and allowed the Angels to tie the score in the eighth on a double by Merritt Ranew and a single by Willie Smith, but blanked the Angels over the last two frames. The Orioles have floundered in the vicinity of ninth place in team batting much of the season but their bullpen has kept Baltimore near the top in pitching statistics. Hall, Stu Miller and Harvey Haddix have saved more than two dozen games and won a total^of 18 while losing eight. Don Mincher lashed his 13th homer to drive in the decisive runs in the Twins’ second game triumph after Mike Brumley’s first two homers of the season led the Senators assault in the opener against loser Jim Perry. Earl Bafiey slugged a homer in each game for the Twins and H-irmon Killebrew and Z;ilo Versalles also connected- Amateurs Set for Tough Test BENTON HARBOR, Mich. (API—A giant of a golf course, lurking with trouble at every turn, awaits a field of 180 players teeing off today in one of the game’s great endurance tests—the 63rd Western Amateur Championship. The 7,000-yard, par-1 Point o’ Wood's layout poses a supreme test for a star-packed field which includes six former Walker Cup players and the 1964 National Amateur runner-up, Ed Tutweiler of Indianapolis. * * * Now that the National Amateur has shifted to 72 holes of medal play, the Western remains as the biggest tournament featuring man-to-man combat of match play. The format, however, is unique. There are 72 holes of qualifying—18 each today and Thursday. The field then is trimmed to the low 50 scorers and ties for Friday’s 36-hole windup. LOW SCORERS After this introduction, the 16 low scorers enter match play with two rounds Saturday leading to the 18-hole semifinals Sunday morning and the 18-hole championship match in the afternoon. “I don't think anyone will break 290, which is six over par, in qualifying,” says Dam Drake, pro at Point o’ Wood’s, where the tourney was held in 1963. “Perhaps just five or six players will break 300. And any score of 308 or better should win one of the 16 qualifying slots.” pqrs Dr. Ed Updegraff, Tuscon, Ariz., Bob Gardner, Essex Fells, N.J.; Bill Hynaman, Huntingdon Valley, Pa.; Dick Davis, Los Angeles; Bob Cochran, Normandy, Mo.; and Jimmy Jackson, Kirkwood, Mo. Updegraff was the 1%4 medalist and won the title in 1957 and 1959. The only other previous winner present is Art Hudnutt of Elyria, Ohio, who won in 1962. Champions of the last two tournaments — Tom Weiskopf in 1963 and Steve Op-permann last year — have turned pro. Other strong contenders include four players who have, won impressive titles this year: George Boutell, Phoenix, Ariz., who recently captured the Trans-Miss at Kansas City; Norwegian-born Arne Dokka of Los Angeles, National Public Links titlist; NCAA champion Marty Fleckman of Houston University; and Tom Draper, a Birmingham, Mich., veteran who won the North-South crown. Gladding Bouton 1., < MB MB wy . DP-M#W York I. LOB—Do-3, Brown. Monlla. SF—Wort. IP H R ER BB $0 7-3 7 S 0 0 I S ?,-3; s M 1 0 I 0 0 e B m fl 0 0 I I - TODAY’S AMBRKBN LIAOUB Chicago ........ S3 43 .347 Now York « a .4B5 Loi Angolas 4t S3 .4BS Cleveland, 7, Chicago 3 Bsltltnora 3, Lot Angelos 3, IS Kansas City 7-10, Boston 34 Now York 44, Detroit 3-3 Chicago (Horlon (TIant ^3), night Los Angolas (Ntwman tl-7) OPEN DOOR FOR GATES - Detroit Tigers outfielder Gates Brown found enough room to slide under the tag of New York Yankee catcher Jack Gibbs in scoring the Bengals second run in the eighth inning of second game of a double-header in Yankee Stadium last night. Brown, who doubled and moved to third on a sacrifice fly, came across the plate on a squeeze bunt by second baseman Jerry Lumpe. Gibbs fielded the bunt and was given an error when he missed the tag on Brown. Detroit won the game, 3-0, after dropping the opener, 4-3. (Ortaga 114), night Detroit (Wtekorsham 34) at Haw Y (Cullen 04), twilight TBursMv's Gamas Chicago at Cleveland, night Only games sdwdulad. NATIONAL LIAOUE .43 - 54 .443 14'/k Clippers Earn Berth in City Playoffs I Don Voth was medalist with 294 here in 1963. Only four play-1 ers broke 300, and a score of| them played off for the 16th j qualifying berth after tying at! 310. “Experience will mean a lot here,” Drake added. “A player must be long and straight on the tees. But this course can’t be overpowered, and the younger amateurs who are accustomed to doing this will be disappointed.” FORMER CUPPERS If experience prevails, favorites must be listed among Tutweiler and former Walker Cup- The stage is set for an exciting finish to the regular season race and rugged playoff battle for the city men’s recreation baseball title. The fourth-place R. T. Clippers* clinched the final playoff berth last night and mov^ within one game of first place with an easy 11-1 five-inning win over Talbott Lumber at Jaycee Park. * ★ ★ The Clippers scored five times in the first inning against shaky Talbott pitching and fielding. Although four of the first five i batters for the winners reached base on three singles and a walk, only one of the runs was earned. The losers errored a rundown and a pick-off play dur- ! Talbott lost its first in four I through Aug. 6, following which starts and now is 4-11, with a will be the double elimination chance to gain a share of fifth playoffs among Huron-Airway, place tonight when it meets CIO | Pontiac Business Institute, No. 594 ( 5-10) at 8 o’clock. J Cranbrook and the R. T. Clip- The league race will run I pens. Sons Follow Dads, Sign Pacts With Red Wings Lo> Angalai f, Cincinnati 7 Mllwauftoa 7, Houtton I St. Loult 3. San Francisco 0 Chicago t. New York 3 Philadelphia 3-^ PIttiburgh I a (Stallard 7-3) at 34 ■I 4-3) I (Johnson IB-5) i Now York at Chicago, 3 Phlladalphia at Pittsburgh, night ing the frame and two key Three Stale Wot))en Win Golf Matches Spartans' Ducats Gone EAST LANSING (AP) -With the Michigan - Michigan State football game still IVt months away, MSU reported Tuesday its share of game tickets has been sold out DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) -j Michigan’s three entrants in | the Women’s Trans-Mississippi j Amateur Golf Tournament en-| tered the second round match play today. ] Patti Shook of Saginaw, 1964 j national collegiate champion, I scored a 7 and 5 victory over Mrs. E. J. Somerville Jr. of River Forest, 111., in the first round Tuesday. Sharon Miller of Battle Creek, who successfully defended her women’s state amateur title two weeks ago, defeated Nicki Nordstrom of Minneapolis, 4 and 3. Joyce Kazmierski of Detroit eliminated San Lynn Merrick of Toledo, Ohio, 2 up. hits just fell out of the reach of an outfielder. Dave Simmon’s two-run single was the ' key blow. Bob Readier was touched for five hits, four of them scratch singles, and earned his second mound win. The game was called after five innings on the ten-run-lead rule. The Clippers are now 9-5 to league-leading Cranbrook’s 10-4. A native of Montreal, a resident of Union Lake and a Pontiac Central graduate was a key figure in the historic contract signing yesterday afternoon at the Detroit Red Wing offices. Jimmy Peters Jr., son of the former Red Wing (1949-51 and 1953-54), of 8569 Cooley Beach signed a contract with the National Hockey League’s regular sea.son champions at the same time Gerry Abel did Tuesday. Abel is the son of current Red Wing general manager-coach Sid Abel who conducted the signings. The latter was ★ ★ ★ ■. Clijparj Runt Batttd In—Simmons 2, Sl«ph«ns, 2, Trudeau, Msfray. Brooks. Plfchlng-Raadter 3 H, 14^R-ER, 4 SO; ROUM 3 H, 4-1 R-ER, I SO, 1 W, Jones 1 H, 14 R-ER, 3 W, I so, Kratt 2 H. 3-2 R-ER, 4 so, I W, Gilmore 4 H, 4-3 R-ER, 3 so. 4 W. WInnar-Rcedler (2-2). Loser—RouM (l-l). Errors— a star center for Detroit during the 1939-52 era. This is the first time in Red Wing history the son of any former player has turned professional with the organization. Canadien-born Jimmy Peters Jr., stands 6-3 and weighs 180. As an amateur last year, he was the leading scorer with the Red Wings Junior A team at Hamilton, Ont. He scored 101 points, including 36 goals. EX-VIKING He attended Walled Lake High School through 1962 but was ineligible for varsity competition. He left there after 11th grade and finished school last year at Pontiac Central. Both Peters and Abel made amateur appearances with the Memphis professional team last season, a Red Wing affiliate. Peters also played one game with the Wings as an JIMMY PETERS JR. They each signed bonus con-: tracts yesterday. They will train with the parent organization this fall and may play at Memphis, Pittsburgh or Detroit, depending on what they show. They bring to five the number of Detroit recreation hockey products who have ever signed with the Wings. Ex-Michigan State star Doug Roberts signed last month, and goal tenders Pat Rupp and Carl Wetzel had tryouts previously. New Hurler Shows Class in Waterford Young Larrv Riggs of the Food Town Market Rebels in the Waterford Township 14-and-Under Junior Baseball League has made rapid strides as a pitcher this year. Trying the mound for the first time, he wop his first start, 1041. Then, he learned a hurler doesn’t yield eight runs each time and win — he dropped his second verdict, 8-0. Monday night he made his third start and was a 3-1 winner over Elizabeth Lake Estates, allowing only three hits. Riggs personally accounted for all the outs, fanning 21 batters in the tilt. Skipper Stengel Hoping for Cane by End of Week NEW YORK (API-Indomitable old Casey Stengel, his left hip held together by a metal ball following successful gery for a displaced fracture, looked forward today to being back on his feet and walking with the aid of a cane by the end of the week. Stengel, who’ll be 75 Friday, was expected to remain in Roosevelt Hospital for three weeks. k * k Dr. Peter LaMotte, club physician of the New York Mets, headed a team of orthopedic-surgeons who performed the 45-minute operation on the elderly manager Tuesday. C-^10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 SERVING OAKLAND COUNTY OVER 34 YEARS Lazelie Agency, Inc. ^ ALL FORMS OF ^ ^ INSURANCE ^ Cloa^d Satardayi Dartnic Julr and AoKnit 504 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. Phone FE 5-8172 SUZUKI Walled Lake Moves Ahead Little League Stars in Quarter-Finals Walled Lake’s All-Stars were among six winners yesterday who advanced to the District No. 4 Little League quarter-H-nal playoff round this afternoon. Walled Lake pinned a 6-4 elimination on MilfiHxi as pitcher Tom McMilUon fanned 11 batters. Three doubles, a single and two walks led to five runs in the fourth inning as the winners rallied from a 2-1 deficit. Milford catcho* Tom GU-liam rammed a two-run homer in the lixth to bring bis team closer. Otlier winners were South-field’s American and National teams, Birmingham’s Continental and Federal nines, and North Farmington’s National squad. The semifinal games will be tomorrow and the championship final will be 2:30 p.m. Saturday at Birmingham’s Eton Park. MSU Teaching Matmen EAST LANSING (AP) -More than 200 high school wrestlers— i most from Michigan, but a few j from Oklahoma, Colorado and Virginia—are learning the latest I techniques in the first of { two week-long clinics at Mich-1 igan State University. I Mrs. Cova 10 Strokes Ab^d in Women's Golf Tournament Mrs. Midge Cova entered the final round today of the Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association M-bole medal play tournament with a 10-stroke lead ih her bid fw a second medal championship. Playing on the familiar Bob O’Unk Cwrse — owned by she and her husband'— Mrs. Cova fired an 81 yesterday over the 6,000-yard layout to go with her first round of 75 for a 364iole total of 156. Sharing the distent second place were Mrs. p o n g I a s Hagen Rests After Surgery NEW YORK (UPI) - Golfing immortal Walter Hagen, one of the great sports figures of the 1920’s, is resting in St. Vincent’s Hospital today following an operation for throat cancer. The hospital reported Hagen’s c 0 n d i t i 0 n as “satisfactory” Tuesday night after the surgery. “The Haig,” who retired from tournament golf in 1939 after a brilliant career, had received colbalt treatment at a hospital near his home in Traverse City, Mich., before entering St. Vincent’s on July 15. Graham of Detroit and Mrs. Nkk Paaasiak of Tecnmsch, Oat. Defending champion Mrs. C. J. (Bobbie) MiUer of Farming-ton was 20 strokes behind at 176. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Cova carded five pars on the front nine and came back with four on the back nine. She Pitchers Sharp in City Action Four Junfor tjurlers Turn in 2-Hitters I Two-hit and three-hit pitching keyed most of the victories yesterdav in the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department’s Junior Baseball program. Hiere were four pitchers who allowed onlv two sa^’ ties and three others were for three hits while won her first WMGA Utle in 1966 at Rochester. it It * Trillis Jacks, a school teacher from Novi who held down fourth place with a 167; posted an eagle-3 on the 475-yard par-5 fourth hole. She hit a couple of wood shoto and then knocked in a 15-footer for the eagle. Mrs. MMO* Cova 7141-IM Mrs. Dousm Graham U4*-\U Mrs. Nick Panasluk 1541—1M s. Hanry Pi s. Harold V Mrs. T. . . _______ Mrs. Charlas Zahm lUrs. John Manafea 54-M—1M First Flight—Mrs. Andrtw Lalshman 1541-173; Mrs. GaorM Todd W45-J74; AArs. William Pale tMF-174; Mrs. Sidney Ayles »4»-i77i Mrs. William Foster ♦047-177. ♦Ot5-1l7j Mrs. T. F. McColl ♦443-lW; Mrs. Eugene Wlolock N-1M-1tll Mrs. Donald Fargoson ♦5-9S-TO; Mrs. Zaflle Cova ♦54f-ie4. Third Flight—Mrs. Raymond GUecek 10547-Mli Mrs. Robert Morton 104.103-M7; Mrs. John TIposkIn I03-I05-2I»; For A Deal That^s Right SEE Gerald Hight at the only show room in Oakland Co-unty where you can see all three . . . Chevrolet, Pontiac, Buick. Homer Hight Motors, Ince, 160 S. Washington, Oxford, OA 8-2528 Clean-Up SALE, Of All ms Mean [J], s/fenliwi^-Tempest Must Be Sold Now During Our * GO TIGER GO * Sales Contest At Pontiac Retail Store ★ Immediate Delivery On Cars In Stock r Top Trade-In Allowance On Xour Present Car DEAL NOW and SAVE THERE MUST BE A REASON: Others Talk Deals, But the Pontiac Retail Store Makes Them I Tb PotiHofi lte£ Store 65 Mt. Clemens St. Downtown Pontiac FE 3-7951 In Class D, Aubiim Heights Boys’ Club rode the twq-hit hurling of left-hander Jim Burton to a 15-0 romp over the Police. ‘ Steve Kraft’s two safeties and a sacrifice fly led the Pontiac Boys’ Club to a 5-2 win over Northside BC. Probably the best mound ef- ^ fort was Clyde Dugan’s 8-0 blanking of the Lakers for the F.O.P. Yankees in the Class E National League. He whiffed 13, allowed two hits and left only three runners stranded. Pat Thomberry allowed three safeties in St. Michael’s j 7-2 win over the Tigers; and Dave Webster yielded two hits in a 1^2 Met CInb conquest of the Warriors, both in “E.” Gene Sealy of (Columbia RA and Roger Strait of the X-15s in Class F National action toseed three hitters for wins. Sealy ! struck out 14. ★ ★ ★ The Widget B games featured a two-hitter by Gary Kilgore of Webster. CITY JUNIOR SASEBALl. CMM 0 Pontikc Boyi Club 5, North»ld« Boyi Club 2 Auburn Hkighli B C 15, FO Polkk 0 Cliu B NatlWMl Kmnerly's Service IX Eagles 3 FOP Yankees I. Lakari 0 St. Michael 7, Tigers 2 Met Club 12. Warriors 2 Class F Natlanal X-I5S 21, Moosa 1 r«h,mhi. B A a. Pilgrim Church 4 . . „ , c 2 _ _ Jears 0 (tortelt) Yallow Cab I, Huskles-Chlefs 5 Webster 24, Will Rogers 4 T-Ball Yankees 24, Webster No. 1 4 Indians !♦. Webster No. 2 13 Braves 19, Senators 7 Optimist Tigers 5, Red Sox 0 WE WILL OVERHAUL YOUR EHGINE Special Low Price! 6 Cyl.............. V-8's..............»115~ This inciud«s . . . Rings, Rod Bearings, Main Bearing, Grind Valves, Fit Pins, Deglaze Cylinder Walls, Gaskets, Oil and Labor! QIsoTTTfac^ STANDARD ENGINE REBUILDERS 695 AUBURN RD. • 338-9671-338-9672 EXPERT ENGINE GUARANTEED TUNE-UPS LOW PRICES EASY TERMS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS OUR SPECIALTY MOTOR EXCHAI^GE 405 S. Saginaw St. FE 1-7432 ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL U.S. ROYAL Safety 800^ e Narrow Whitawoii e TubaloEB e ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT TIRE 8JMx14 all other sizes proportion-8 25x14 prices. 21 Pius Tax CLOSING OUT ALL SECONDS COME FOR OUR DEAL-NO PHONE ORDERS FREE RAIN PONCHO SPECIAL PRICES on RAIN TIRES and TIGER PAWS CRESCENT U.S. ROYAL 520 S. SAGINAW 333-7031 'i. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 C—11 Major League Boxes cmonm\ * ?ass’v»''rf jssiSm “ 55^5 0. J'tw 3b 5 1 I 2 L. J'nion If 4 J 2 0 Edwbnii c 4 0 0 0 Lcfobvr* 3b 2 0 0 * Cardonm u 3 I 3 0 Parkor 4 2 2 > CMICAM •OrkM CLIVILAND Kaougb ph 1 o o 0 McCool p 10 0 0 thaimky ph 1 0 0 0 3 0 Parkar ssewpo" ClaciMiatl Ua Aapalat HE - 0. Jotu^ 07), enRam (4). $ - Harpar 2, Parkar ^ wTlIt 2. $ - L & ill] Parranoski W, 3-2 2 1 0 0 1 • Mlltar tacad 2 man In Ofh. . HEP - By .iftCool Brawar; By I -. ■ y«*MCI$CO Irock If * 0 0 Schofield »i*4 Broal u 4 0 0 0 J. Alou rl 4 0 0 Fload cf 4 2 3 0 McCovey 1b 3 0 1 McCraw H " oc" Bre«yn la *4 0*1 AAaHIn c 3 0 0 0 Hinton cf 3 111 15IJ»o''rf Jil? 5SH»3g’-JiJ: &TblSfo?S!;M‘“ }IU I 4 12 2 Tarry p 2 0 0 0 p 10 10 10 0 0 II 2 0 0 0 Tafaii usioi Totait linos [ cioyfloas'ffSIS^ ^K^ma^DP-^hlcay 2. LOB-Chleo- 8-Tarry. SF-Sarry. IP H K IK BB so U 7-4 .. 21-3 I 4 S 1 1 1 2-3 1 0 0 2 2 mil 3 3 0 4 Th^B^lk), Tor^. PB-5Martln.*T-? Five Golfers Share Honors Five members shared the hon-orsyesterdayinthe weekly Tuesday Silver Lake Ladiei^ Golf Le^e results. Jean Looney had low gross, 4S, and Fran Marts's 14 putts were best. The low net flight leaders were Peggy Dorman, 37 in the first flight, Hope Campbell, 37 in the second, and Bea Mobey,32inthethird. \ WiOitlm' . s wry Wy U s.* 0 0 0 0 Burda ph l 2 0 0 0 Oavanp'f 2b 0 furaay p 2 0 0 0 Spahn p 1 J.W. 30 3 4 2 « f1- 010 100 001-3 EraaelKO ooc too---- • E-MeCovay, Harf, Hollar. D Louis 4. LOB—St. Louis 3, San Fra aswYoaK^^^^^ CHICAOO aiMor 3b^ 4 0 10 Stawart If *3 . . « fiuam EB 112! Landrum ef 4 I 1 1 MWIIIan u 4 0 2 0 Williams rf i l o 0 KranapM b 4 1 1 o Banks 1b 4 * " * U 3®12 2 Taiala » < t « Oi-M^w York 1. Chicago 3. 4.0B-Naw York 7. Chicago 4. - la-Kranapool, LANDRUM, Banka, SMto, Smith. HR—Banks (14). SB-Sfaw- k; 12ft"' Abarnatl MaintBnanco-Fr«R Gloss Hull INBOARD Four Old Boat OR ^199 ON. ----E-Z TERMS- ONLY AT OAKLAND -T Marina Exchange I A ast S. tsginaw FE1-4101 •nil 111 ISil V'Id'pIno ph 1 0 0 W'th'ot'n p 1 1 0 artallaa, Horn lahlngton I. I f, Akar (7) and L I, Dullba (4), Ear . 001 212 OU-7 12 1 000 101 100-3 13 1 KANSAS CITY If eatna .aoSTOh 1 Tillman p rrya" ........... a-j a j j MossI .......... 1 1-3 0 0 0 Conbcra L, 4-2 ... 0 51 5 Bannatf ........ 4 4 3 3 Rlfchia ... ... 2 0 0 0 Earlay ..........3 3 1 0 Radali 1 2 1 1 -borg faced 5 men In 1st. - >-Sy Huntar, Mantilla; By Bei Causay. WP-Lonborg, Bannatf. ” ”:»4. A-4,474. Night Oama LOS ANOSLES BALTIMORE ab r h Bl ab Cardanal cf 5 0 I I Stobarn lb 3 -----r c 4 110 Adair 2b 4 ll ss 4 0 0 0 Johnson ss 3 0 2 0 B______ , .12 0 Hall p Adcock 1b 1 0 0 0 Snydar pi Totait 35 2 II. 2 Totals E-Orsnd). DP-BaltImora 3. LOB-Lot igeles 9, Baltlmora 0. 3B-Johnson, Robinson, May, Ranaw, Snydar. 3B—Slabarn. $—Powell, Hall, Ra. —5dalr. IP H R ERBBSO 7 4 2 2 4 5 2 0 0 0 0 2 Chance L, 4-1 1-32 117 0 It couldn’t happen if you hod the Automobile Club ef Michigan helping you plan your vacation I Join now and . UAD THE WAY with • Personalised travel service, Including routings, reeervatiens, tour books, maps, and guides • Around the clock rood service • Bread personal accident insurance • $5,000 bail bond protection AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN FE 5-4151 "" 76 Williaim St. H. E. Hucmonn, Mgr., Toronto 5-4, Jackaonvilla 25 Robin Roberts Requests, Receives Release BALTIMORE (OPD-Robin Robehs, one of baseball’s great pitchers over the last two decades, is looking for a job today. The 38-year-old ri^thander, winner of 276 games in a major league career that started in 1948, was placed on waivers by the Baltimore Orioles Tuesday at his own request. ★ ★ ★ Roberts had a S-7 record this season but had started only one game in the last five weeks. “I eqj(^ pitching and want to go on,” Roberts laid. ”I had never planned on being an qc-casional starttt and a long relief man. If I continue in this role, it would be assumed by everybody I’d put in my last year. It’s a role I don’t care to assume.” Twice before Roberts was let go by teams who considered him washed ap. After serving 14 years with the Philadelfdiia P^es they sold him to the New York Yankees in October. IMl. Robots, trying to get by with- out his biasing iastball, never got to throw a pifa^ fw the Yankees as they released him unconditionally abortly after the start of the 1061 season. ♦ ★ * Baltimore took a chance on him, and Roberts obliged with 27 victories and 29 defeats over the next three years. He won his first four starts this season but then lost seven in a row. Roberts asked Orioles General Manager Lee MaePhaU for his release and MacPhail complied. icr "t? - j S sis Id l» 13 9 3 10 '1!7”4?1. ’i ’5 103 15 21 • 3 1) -ill i W J 2 .1 ^ iS Agulrrt ... 42 23 5123 121-3 134 571-3 ikSfc'-, TUnOAV'l PieHTS RICHMOND, V«; - Suotr Ray •«V 141, Ntw York, awtaoliM v. WtieM, 13P, PhllidalpiiTa. Pariy, kllppMfln (4), Nalion (5), Sir tor (7) PMf Batty; Rlekart, RMilk (7), UcCormlck (I), klhto (21 and Bruffltoy. mm It) 4Hi) /McCormick -3:04. A-33,421. CauMV 3b Chtrlei 3b ____ Lpekwood 3b 0 0 0 0 Schilling ph 1 0 D.Graen 2b 5 111 Yastr'iki It 5 0 Har'Iwn 1b 4 13 3 Mantilla 2b 4 I Rosario lb 0 0 0 0 Thomai 1b 3 1 H'bar«r rf 5 2 3 0 C'nigl'ra rl 4 1 BItnchsrd c 3 0 0 0 Nixon c 4 1 L'hem'n c 3 0 0 0 Bressoud u 4 1 . . Landli cl 3 12 2 Longborg p 0 0 0 0 Rcynoldl If 4 0 11 Bannatf p 1 0 4 V a^pb ??sjK’r?r'pb'* 1182 ^litl^ 44 14®14 J S’aiato' ** 27*l*i? 7 Kanui CHy .......... . ... oil IM 411—14 etMan . ............ 144 IW pt- I E-TKoma*: NIxan. DP-Kaiwat Clt) Bolton 2. LOB-Kansai City l/Battoii ' 3B-HanhbtrBar, Landit Rayno Nixon, Conlgllaro. 3B—Campanarit. H.. Harrtlun (14), Campantrls (4), Cgnlgll-aro (31), Brtstoud (7). SB-HerUiArgar, OPEN DAILY lOi to 10 - SUNDAY 12 to 7 Look Ai Wll.vr Wll.l. Ill V GLENWOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry Street at Glenwood MS- ■ !' THB POItmC PEBSS, W»P»B8DAY, JULY a«, IBM Alp^ the Oiiitim If Mil wiih DON VOOa.4rtOMr UHw, PmOIm ftm New Leader in Press Derby Kent Lake Attracting More Fishermen HEFTY BASStJoHii R. Walker, 5335 Drayton, Independence Township, holds the five-pound, ISKtdhce largemouth bass be entered in The Pontiac Pre(|s Big Fish Derby yesterday. The lunker has taken the lead in the Derby’s bass divisldn. Walker caught the fish at Lake Oakland Monday night. Michigan Expert Objects to Gun Bill LANSING (J» - A restricUve gun bill now before Congress poses a real threat to the i^civ-igan economy -r- particularly in the north countiy — a state game expert has warned. Dave Arnold, of the Con8e^ vation Department game staff, testified recently before the House and Ways and Means Cotqmittee at Washington. ★ ★ * Arnold also represented the Association, of Midwest Fish, Game and Conservation Commissioners. His views further followed the opinira of the majority of organized sportsmen. The bill was inspired by the assassination of Pmident Kennedy and also is aimed at pre-ventiite flrearms from falling into the hands of criminals. DODD BILL Anxdd protested that the strictness ot the measure presently proposed — the so-called Dodd bill — would discriminate against legitimate spcatemen a^ firearms dealers. One provision calls for a |100 fee for selling sporting ammu- Amold said this would put many small northern Michigan sporting goods dealers out of business “and remove deer hunting and 32-caliber ammunition from the shelves of corner stores throughout northern Michigan.’’ The banning of mail order sales of shotguns and rifles to anyone except federally licensed dealers was termed “a most unrealistic approach to preventing crime’’ by the Con-servatiMi Department spokesman. POSSIBLE SNAG The department is concerned that hunting license sales will sag if it is made too difficult for hunters to obtain arms and federal funds derived from an excise tax on the number of licensed hunters in the state. The State Conservation Commission has opposed the firearms bill in its present form. TOURIST DOLLARS Michigan’s reputation as a prime hunting state for deer, as well as small game, has helped attract tourist dollars. A special season on elk last fwbiter, although open only to Michigan residents, attracted nationwide attention to the state. It will be repeated again this year. ★ * * iTuiteys will be legal targets for the first time since before the turn of the century during a restricted season this fall. Hunters' will be able to go after quail for the first time in many years im a tier nt southern counties. All these programs will suffer, the conservation experts fear, if the federal government makes it tough for legitimate hunters to .get guns and ammo. Hunter license fees contribute more than 35 million a year to state revenues. The money is earmarked fen* wildlife management and recreation programs, w ★ * Department surveys also show that deer hunters contribute about 130 million a year to the state’s economy and small game hunters add other $40 million annually. Michigan game projects receive about $800,000 a year in DEFENDING CHAMPION - Dave Keaggy Jr., 3807 Aquarina; Waterford Township, will defend his National Archery Association senior men’s title Aug. 2-6 at Purdue University. He also won in 1963. Over 300 archers are expected to compete. N.A. Catamaran Races Scheduled on Cass Lake Any time*! boat livery has a turnover of 9,750 rentels ip one year, it’s pretty safe to assume that the lake must be a fishing Hot spot. This was the story |t Kept Lake in 1964. , W ★ * ’ Now the livery operpton, are foracastfaig a new record for rentels - over M.OOO ili|l965. That’s a lot of fishermen tft any lake. And the l$l boats at the livery are used almost ex-'’^dnsively by fishermen. Kent Lake Is located in Kensington Park, sooth of Milford, and rigid restrictions cover’ tee nse of meters. The speed is 16 miles an hoar. The lake has been producing excellent catches of crapples and Mack bass. Even the shore fishermen are taking large mimbers of crappies. . And the bhiegillaare hitting, too. Conservation officer Waimi Kendall remarked that crappies are dmng everything but jumpinlg in the boats.’’ Last week more than 40 bass were taken by fishermen renting boats at the livery. PRIVATE BOATS “This doesn’t count-caught by persons using the ' launching ramps and fishing in their own boats,said Tom Chapman, an assistant at the livery. Dav^ 0. Laidlow, park super- Deadime Set hr Entering PKC Show The deadline for entering dogs in the Pontiac Kamel Club’s annual All-Breed Show aod (%edi-ence Trial is Aug. 10. Waterford Township High Sdiool’s football field will be the site of the Aug. S show which last year drew^ a record 739 dogs representing 79 breeds. The Pontiac Press will present the best-in-show dog with a large trophy. All entries for the PKC show must be at the Bow Dog Show Organization, 9999 Broadstrea, Detroit, by noon, Aug. 10. Bow will serve as superintendent for the show. •k -k * Judges assigned to the show by the American Kennel Club are Rudolph W. Buchmann, Detroit; Herman G. Cox, Fort Worth, Tex.; Mrs. Edith Nash Hellerman, Severn, Md.; Mrs. A. Alfred LePine, Carrollton, Ohio; Percy Roberts, Norotoor Heights, Conn.; and Maurice B. Widgerson, Mequoi, Wis. intendent, attributes much of the gain in the number of anglers to the fact that the Conservation DepiRtment rtmoved rtze aiDfi bag fimi^ on fish at the 1. Two other factors, however,' Hand-out more'than the possibility of uidimlted catches: 1. The which tend lack .qf sp|Mjboatpi < 1 to make fliheraMn: Three Rivers Man Hits Archery Mark WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP) —Two more records have bepn set at the end of the 56th • tfi*-get field round of the National Field Archery Association Tournament. For the second day in a row, Dick Roberts of Three Rivers, j. Mich., has set a new record in men’s free-style competition. He had a combined two - day total .of 1,063 points Tuesday to break a record of 1,063 points set last year by defending champion Jack Rudy of Syracuse. The 27-year-old truck driver There will be m tuneup race' broke a record Monday by scor-' for the North Americin event ing 547 points in the 28-target tomorrow night The regatta of-field roi^ to surpass the old fidally comprises five The Cass Lake Yhcht Club enters its busiest period of the season tonight, beginning with its weekly race and continuing through the end of the N 0 r t h American Shearwater Catamaran championships Sunday. The club will host the event for jhe second straight year. Last year approximately 20 boats were entered. Although there is no definite indication on this year’s lineup, craft are expected from Florida, Missouri, New York, Ohio, the District of Columbia and Canada, phis the local contingent. Cass Lake’s Ro Redaer is the defending champion. All shearwater catamaran sailors are eligible. An Olynqxic course will be used. The triangular course requires six legs for completion and tests, the sailor in all wind conditions. It wili run approximately five miles. TUNEUPRACE. sailors had two of their best races of the season. Redner tuned up for his title defense with a close victory thdl morning over brother Bob'. The afternoon race was three-bopt battle that saw the lead change on every turn. Ed Stack won with Chuck Cartwright close behind. Ro Redner settled for third. Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s Solunar Tables. Tod«V . Thuriday Friday II;« S.n l:» $;43 record of 541 points. Mrs. Mary Lee Craft of Tabb, Va., cmnpiled 834 poihts for a new record in the women’s bare bow divisioa. The
P' per, Famous Artists Sdmds. bo*n a point or so were ANdex and Caldor. ' ■ ^ Corporate bonds were miked. U. S. Government bonds were to slightly lower. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP)-FollowlnB Dl selKted stock transsctlons on York Stock Exchangs with 1:} prlcat: —A— Salat (lidi.) High Law I Abbott Lab 1 32 42SS 43 4 ABC Con .70 t 20'/S 1»«i t ACF ind 3a 23 72'/b 7 1 27W 24 27 +1W g^ry Ca^ga, dz. Sndiwe', bltichad, bu. tcarola, bu. • • Lettuce, Head, i AmEfi^w'’l.24 . n Motors 1 : AmNGas 1.70 I Tm 4 234 444k 44W 4 ■ >•>* Am Zbte l'.40 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlcas paid per po tor No. 1 live poultry: Heavy type h »2lV light typahaos 7-Bl c S lbs. 24'-ti-25'/zj broilers and Iryers lbs. whites l»-20V,; barred rock 23 DETROIT EOOS ___ DETROIT (AP)-Ego Pf*'" dozen by lirst racelvart (Inclodlng U.S.). Whites Grade A [ur 34-34; large 32-34; ArmtICk 1.10 t 27V<| + H ■ 44 -five I IW -t- Vk ■ 4S4k -hlH 1 354k 1 43 22'A 23 —1 25'k »Vk -J- 14 ■ IS'* llVk 11’* 11 52 42'* 41'*'4 ’•‘J* y? V.'fi ' Crumn A .M 42 53'* 53 23 25’* 25 —R— gsk S'* +11 3044 3044 + > 3144 39 — 1 3 ivi 7Vk 7'* + 1 3 3544 35<* 354b + ’ 34 52'A 51 51 --144 54 401k 4M4 4014 + 14 'l M44 434k-44 3 5244 521k 52Vk 5 134k 1144 1344 .. 11 MW MW MW — '* IntarlkSt 1.40 .... Harv I.SO IntMlnarals 1 IntNick 3.50a Inti Packers JpnLogen .M JonedL 2.50 Joy Mlg 2 32 52'* 5144 $144 - ' 24 3044 30'* 30W - ' .47 424k 40W 414k +1' 29 53 5114 53 + ' —K— 14 34'* 3544 . 34 + ' I, 2144 21'* 21'* - ' 131 104'* 100W 10344 + ' •• 57'* 57 p7 31 5444 ) I 54W - LehPorC4m Leh Val ine Lehman I.TIg LOFGIs 2.10 LIbbMcN .39f 2 55'* itW 55'* 7 39W 39'* 39W —L-— 71 14'* 15'* 14 + H 4 1444 1444 1444 + '* LonaSCem l LoneSGi 1.12 Long 1st Lt 1 Loral Coro ' LorlMord 3.50 Mad Gar MagmaCop 2 Marathn 3.N Mar Mid 1.25 Marquar .15g MarflnMar 1 MayDStr 1.50 McCall .40b McDonA ,40b McKess 1.70 MeadCp 1.70 Marck la MerrChap .N MGM 1.i0 23 33'* 33 33W + 14 I 744 I - I 44'* 44 44'* . 31 24W 34'* 3444 + 10 3744 37W 37W - .. 25 73 7044 72W +2'A —M— 30 3344 33H 33Vh 13 54'* 53W 5344 - W 10 30’* 20W 1044 10 244 344 244 9 4444 45H 4144 + 45 3944 SOW 39W + 24 54 5444 5544 - 10 3144 3t44 3144 . M 11W 10H 1144 + 11 19W 19W 1 I 55 AOoPac 2.5flg 1 7444 7444 7444 OOohasco .70 II 19W 19 19 Mons4n 1.40b 14 U4k 1344 U44 MontDU 1.40 2 37 3444 37 ... ^ MontWard 1 55 31 W* 30^* - H MorrellCo 1b 5 HW 1244 2214'— Motorola 1 32 95'* 93 94W +1 —N— Nat Alrl .M 134 12 7944 M + Nil BIsc 1.N 39 5444 54'/x 5444 NalCan .40b 17 2544 15'* 25H . NCashR 1.30 33 74W 75V4 7544 NalDalry 1.40 9 MW 14 14 - 3744 .3744 - I 7044 7044 - I 51W 52W +... . .. j 1444 1444 - W 4 1l<* 1IW II'* + W 12 3144 31 211* + Vk 17 34 3344 3344 + H 29 4944 4IW 49H +144 3 27W 27W 27W + 11 114 1M<* 114 - .. 143 55>* 54H 5444 + 1* i.s PfborChO la PhalRiD 3.40 Phllb El 1.40 PhllRdg 1.10 PhllMor 1.40 ... ‘ ^ Reading Co 7alchCh " lilt p 21 7304 n 70 1444 14 3 74* 714 33 47W 44H —R— 119 334k M>* 11 19W 39W I 31 30W 10 1444 340k ’?4 81 “ It Chg. * -1* 39Vk-+ Ok 05V* +04 8w^.| 70k + W 47W -i- W Repub J---- RepubSteel 2 Revlon 1.30 Rexall .30b SX:: sow - Sooburg .40 Shell W 1.70 SIMIITre .510 Sinclair 3 SingerCo 3.30 SmllhK 1.40a Socony 2.00 SoPRIur 90g SouCalW .1.31 Sou^nCo 1.10 SauMGai 1.30 Sou Pao-1.40 South Ry 2.M Sporry Rand Staley l.M StBrands 2,40 ltd KollsmEn StOIICal 3.10 StOIIInd 1.50a StO NJ 1.50O StdOllOh I.H St Packaging StanWar l.M SlautfCh 1.40 StarlDrug .75 StavtntJP 2 Stugpbahsr Sun q|l 1b Sunray l.40 swm CO 2 I S'* S»4 + Vk I 31W 314k 310k-^W 74k 74k 74k . 10 7»k 74'* 74'* X34 MW M4k 3 194k 194k 194k 51 3IW 31 3t<* Xl4 45W 44'* 45W 14 3244 31W 3344 114 304k 37W 30'* 34 53 534b S3 514 I3H 12 124k 44 3704 3TV4 3704 11 44si 1304 1404 . 1 34'* 34’* 34’* 4 7744 7744 7744 ^ 14'* 14 + 1* +1W 114 74<* 7504 7 9 54'* 54 5 V 9 144 15 33W 33'* 3 4 ^W 4314 * 37 MVk 3044 3 13 40 41 4 14, ^ low i xM'MW 19'* 3 Tann Gas 1b Texaco 3.20a TaxEastT .90 TexGSul .40 Taxaslnstm 1 USBorax JOa 21 44'* 42’* 44'* +1W 41 31 37W 3744 - 44 4 544 504 S?4 + W 4|t 45 44<* 45 +04 M MH M Ml* - 1* —IT— n ______________ .. ......... “>* - w 9 m IH lOk + 71 IMk 1 9 194k + 41 iHh 34Vh 34'* - 20 15W 24Vk 24’* - 1 3144 3144 31’* - gW MW 49 - 13’* 13W 134b + 5 3144 3144 3344 - W 4 40>* 39’* 40'* ■ •' 5 MV4 M 40W 7 94W 92W 94W 154 4IW 4144 41 VandoCo .40 Walworth Co WamPlct .50 WomLom .90 WnAIrLIn .N WhTr 7 2IH 2144 31'* - 44 11 4*44 45’* 4514 - ' —W— 2 7W 744 7H - I 13H 11W. 1344 . s 32 3544 MW 3544 - 70 31 31 3144 + 11 35 3444 34Vk - 51 37H MW 3744 + 135 49W 4044 4IVk + 19 43W 43<* 41<* - 19 35 34** 34’* - WInnDIx 1 43W 43'* 41'* -3044 1144 1044 -27H 27Vk 27'* -. 4M* S9W 4044 + ~X—Y—Z— Xorpx Cp .50 113 151< YngitSht I.W 91 40 Zonllh 1.40 . 40 71' Salas Lw____ _________ Unless otherwise noted, rales o. dends In the toragolng tobla art a disbursements based or —- MW 1944 +IVk I 77 7S44 +1'/ t unoHiclol. noted as regular following foolnotos. a—Also txira or aatras. rate plus stock dividend, c-dlvidend. d-Doclortd ~ — ■ dividend. -Paid laai ytar. 1 srraars. n-----. — I year, dtyWend omitted, Eai Ktlon tokon at last gividand ,—Declared or gold in 1904 pi dividend. l-PaM In slock durt estimated c. ‘ ‘ ' distribution during I ridend or panies. in^erelgi?*T2roe* ^|ac tarast equalization tax. Talks Planned on State Issues Summfr Meeting Is Set for Legislators LANSING (AP) - Michigan legislators return to the capitol Thursday and Friday for a midsummer discussion of judicial appointments and three other # A ♦ ■ ■ . r IlMi Other three i»UM. ura: -ShouW any, of Gov. ed with computers, nu-cl^ reactors and accelerators to feed inf(xmation to distant college laboratories. Once the system is in opa*-ation, a researcher will sim. ply type a query into die information system. ’The an* swer win come back by ma-ehbie bi a matter of mbmtes and consist of a Ust si recent pabUcations and summaries of articles. At present, U may take days or weeks to obtain snch an answer. ’The plannfaig for tills revohi-tionary method of disseminating knowledge is being done by the Interuniversity Cnnmuni-cations Council, formed throu(d> a $750,000 grant from the Kellogg Foundation. Its executive director is Dr. James G. Miller. Founders or the organization are the State University oi New WIST EAST AKB AJS V64S W 10762 ♦ QJ 1032 0 9875 4954 4853 SOUTH (D) 4 Q10 8 6 4 W AK98 ♦ None 4AKQ2 Both vulnerable Sratli West North East 14 Pass 34 Pan 44 Pass 4 ♦ Pan 4 4 Pass 84 Pan 7 4 PaM Pass Pan Opening lead—♦ Q By JACOBY & SON Jim Jacoby gets his father reminiscing today. He asks: “What is the most interesting ace-queen play you recall?’’ Oswald: one spade and found herself in a grand slam contract after the bidding shown in the box.’’ Jim; “A very poor contract when yon look at all the cards but tiiere certainly was tremendous duplication between the North and South hands and while Mrs. Wagar did make a slight overbid, it is hard to find any serious criticism of her grand slam bid.” Oswald: “Mrs. Wagar, one of the two or three greatest women players of all time, managed make the hand. She ruffed the opening diamond in her own ,S| Astrologicalj Forecast j yourMif. Highlight SIM- Icgal approval. Communicafa Weai. Ba avallabla for consultation. Throw oft tendency to " ‘ * ( could confide proMem. GEMINI (May 21 to Juno 20); A' acattering forces. Obtain hint f TAURUS message. Give full play to tallectual curlosTty. Confusion with worker could arise. Be fair. Isi CANCER (. Then others will respond favorably, wilt ba happier If you don't force I Listen—absorb and learn. confidence. Others can be favo Impressed. Utilize Innate sense o« i manship. Cycle high. But be war one who spreads rumors. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. M): SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov find yourself part of ^ km. WISHFUL THINKING may a Ive. Ofherwisa you Stick to familiar ground?6et sufflcRmt rest. Emphaslie PRACTICAL approach. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. II): Accept changing conditions. Go with the tide. No time to challenge superiors. Emphasize tact, patience. Then you Ultimately achieve goal. Know this — 'uct accordingly. PISCES (Feb. !♦ to Mar. 20): direct approach gets best results ---- M^s s^le meth^s, statements strike rosponslve chprd. Your "poetic sense" omphaslzad. Others are fascinated. — Rtental outline of goal. GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle hl^ for LEO, VIRGO, LIBRA. Special word to ARIES: Fine day for cementing ties of aftoettan. (CepyrIgM ml, Ooootol Fsttorts Carp.) hand and led the queen of spades Just as if she didn’t have a care in the world. West also had no cards. He ducked quickly on the theory that Maggie held queen-jack seven times and would not finesse. Maggie let the queen ride and picked the king and jack together on the next lead.” Jim: “A nice swindle, but also an example of p^ect technique. With that combination the play of the ace brings home the contract if West holds a singleton king. ’The Wagar play makes it if East holds a singleton Jack lor if West holds -^king-small and makes a mistake.” Oswald: “Incidentally, her team would have lost the match if she had gone down. As it was they went on to win the tournament.” Q—The bidding has been: Bast South West North 14 Pass 1 NT. Pass Pass Dble 2 ♦ 2 4 Pass ? You, South, hold: 4AQ76 WKJTSS 43 4K942 What do you do? A—Bid four spades. This is a very slight overbid, but you havu the distribntioa to warrant n alight overbid. York, Duke University, the Uni-vorsity of California, the Utiiwaity of Illinois, the University M Michigan, Oie University of Pittsburgh, the University of Rochester and the University of Virginia. Every college and university in the United States and Canada will be Invited to join. Officials say the councU’s first actiytties will probably eoocem the medical and bio-legical sciences. ’These areas wfll be used, staice noncomputerized and partially computerized national information cento's m these subjects already exist — and the need is acute for rapid, up-to4iate information in tte prevention and treatment of diseases. ’The availability of instant research will, to a degree, offset the inability of small colleges to provide expensive libraries and research equipment. ’Their libraries will be augmented but not replaced. Needless duplications of research efforts can be avoided as SOCHI as the information centers can be expanded For example, the thousands of independent investigations into methods of teaching reading are not only unavailable to a new researcher in the field, BERRY’S WORLD but the time and effort nqces-sary to bring order out of the confused mass of information would be astronomical, even if it were possible under the present setup. Consequently, each new researcher starts afrerii and re- BUT NOT ANOTHER SrMN,BMSE AND 1 ww. you THi. xxjtsuppORraes ouT- ^5«>e TO TONEpOWN THilR SINSINSf done nuny times by others. ' The recent accelerated interest in compensatory education provides an example of the need for central information centers and better means of disseminating knowledge. When money became avail-^ able under the war on poverty program for compensate^ edi^ cation, a rash of pilot programs and research efforts appeared at state and local levels. Many of these were unnecessary. For example, prekindergarten training and ungraded primaries had already bpen tried out in many communities and proved to be successful. Had a central information center been in existence, the whole program could have gotten under way promptly, more effectively and more economically. (For a copy of “You Can Get Better Grades,” send $1 to Box 2160, General Post Office, New York, N.Y.) DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M. Levitt. Tom Cooke and Phil Evans By V. T. Hamlin By Leslie Turner By Dick CavaUi Ernie Bushmiller By Charles Kiilm By Walt Disney v-28 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JUI^Y 28, 1965 4 Die as Plane Crashes in Sea HAMILTON. Bermuda (AP) — All four men aboard a U.S. Navy patrol plane were killed when the plane fell into the sea Tuesday just after taking off from Kindley Air Force Base. The plane burst into flames and narrowly missed oil storage tanks and then fell into the sea. A spokesman said the plane regularly was stationed at Jacksonville, Fla. * ★ * The Navy identified three of the victims as Lt. (j.g.) Michael G. Nation, 24, whose wife lives in Jacksonville and whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Nation live at 1746 Homewood Ave., Springfield, 111.; Chief Aviation Machinist Mate Edward J. Whitcraft, 36, whose wife and seven children live in Jacksonville and whose sister. Hazel Jacobs, lives at 6603 Tor-resdale Ave., Philadelphia; ★ ★ ★ Electronics Technician 2.c. David George, whose wife and five children live in Jacksonville and whose mother, Pearl Fontaine George, lives in Amsted, W.Va. Greek Premier Fights for Time Working for Majority in Vote of Confidence ATHENS. Greece (AP) -Premier Georee Athanasiadis Novas sparred for time today in an effort to mobilize a majority in Parliament for the vote of confldence his government needs to survive. So far his chances of winning place.’ the vote looked slim. Rich Man Enjoys Life in Subsidized House LONDON (AP) - A British businessman with a yacht and two cars , today defwided his ii|^ to live hi a govermnant-subsidixed house that coats him only |7 a weA. "01 course I could afford to buy a big house with a swim-pool and a double garage," says Dan Tobin, 44, “but I’d feel uncomfortable in such a STARTS SOLO VOYAGE - Lee Graham (right), a veteran sailor at 16, says goodby to his father, Lyle Graham of Torrance, Calif., as the youth left San Pedro, Calif., yesterday on a solo around-the-world cruise. His only Ap PhoWix companions aboard the Dove, a 24-foot sloop, will be two cats. The trip is expected to take several years, with the youth completing his schoolwork through correspondence courses. The new premier, named by King Ctonstantine 13 days ago to replace ousted Premier George Papandreou, had been generally expected to go before Parliament Thursdav to ask for the confidence vote. But political sources said he now did not plan to make the request until Friday. After opening formalities and Tobin, a former bus driver, started in business with a capital of.$2.45. He now owns a string of bingo parlors. “I know that people in this town have been upset about where I live," he said, “but I’m happy where J am and I think I’ve a right to live there." WIDOWED MOTHER Tobin and his widowed moth- statement by the new pre- er, 79, live on a housing estate mier, the 300-member Parlia- —* - ------ ment was exnected to recess for, the weekend, postponhig the I confidence vote debate until i Monday. The debate could last three or four days. U.S. Red Dies at 67 in Russia MOSCOW (JR — American Negro Cwnmunist leader Pettis Perry has died after a long illness. He was 67. Pravda, organ of the Soviet Communist party, said Perry died lost Saturday. The newsman" living on the housing es- paper did not say where he died. in which the rents are subsidized by the Port Talbot County Council. ’The house is in his mother’s name. Complaints about a “rich i 'Let's Declare It's Fedicare' WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Republican leader. Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, h^ contributed a word — “fedl-■'nSare" — to the political vocabulary. w w * Ford said ’Tuesday Congress should declare ‘‘Fedicare Day” because it had passed a (7.5-billion housing bill with a rent subsidy provision and a $6.5-biilion Social Security measure which includes health care of the elderly. Ford called these “renti-care’’ and “medicare." Deaths in Pontiac Area NOTICE OP FORECLOSURE Dafwit having baan ntada In tha tarmt ind eondltlona of a cartain mortgaga nada bv Frank N. Prano, Jr., a tlngla nan, of tha Tovmahlp of Springfield, Jakland County, AMchigan, Mortgagor, o Caddia Homaa, Michigan, Inc. a Mlchl- Deada, for tha County of Oakland and Stata of Michigan on tha 11th d - -* ' bar, l««3 In LIbar 44n of a Mortgaga i Pannaylvanla for tha County of Oakland and Stata of Michigan on tha nth day of March, IM4, In LIbar 4SM, on paM $3) which aald nuM-tgaga li clalmad le ba dua, at tha data oT thli not lea, for principal and Intaraat, the aum of FIFTEEN THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED SIXTY-NINE and M/tM Dollart with Intarest to data. And no iblt or procaadbiw at law or In aquity having baan Inatihitad to ra- -----... ....----^ mortgaga Kif. Now, therafara, provided, notice hereby given mat on Tuesday, the day of October, teas, at 11:00 i o'clock. Eastern Standard Time, i mortgage will be foreclosed by a : at public auction to the highest bln at tha main entrance of the County BuUdlng In the City of Pontiac, Oakland County. Michigan (that being the bi Ing where the Circuit Court tor County ot Oakland Is held I, of ths pr Ises described In said mortgage, or much thereof as may be necessary pay the amount due, aw aforesaid, sekt mortgage with interest thereon six per cent (fi%l per annum and all legal costs, charges and expenses, in- ctudinn the attornav fees allowed by which may be necessary to the premises, iremiaos are described as that certain piece or Part of tha East Vk of tha NW'A of Sec. 21, T4N, RIE, Springfield Twp., Oakland County, Mich, described as Bag. at a point In ths centerline of Bridge Lake Road, said point being N if- SV 3#" W 21*.70 ft. and S 32' 20' W 4I3.M ft. from the North 'A corner of said Sec. 23; th S 32* 20' W 2M.52 Hi th N «• 07< Jl" w Aja ft. to tl th N 32- 21" E MO (I . _______________ containing 2.0S Acres, and the right of way of record Lake Road. Dated at Lansing, Michigan Ji d LONGSON Lansing, Michigan CENTRAL STATES MORTGAGE COMPANY By: CONWAY LONWON** Attorney (or Motit- r 21, IMS end August Notice .. _______ ...... .... signed that on Thursday, July 20, 1015, at 10 o'clock a.m. at 205 Main Street. Rochester, Oakiand County, Michigan, pubik sale ot a 1000 Ford Dump Truck bearing aerial number COH 40021, will be held, tor cash at auction. Inspection NATIONAL BANK OF DETROIT 330 Main St.. Rochester, Mkh. By: A. J. BAILEY Aaaialant Cashier NOTICE The CHy of Pontiac, acting by through the Pontiac Housing Com-' will open bids at 2:00 p.m. August 13, 1005 on tha following: 77 to 102 1051 NASH KELVINATOR REFRIGERATORS: (70.051 AA, (3) 7.0 o " ■ ■ Pontiac. Michigan ROY B. MacAFEE Executive Director July 20, 27, 21, 20, 30 and 31, 1005 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice Is hereby given by the undersigned that gp July 30, lOOS, at I0:M a.m. at the corner of BaMwfn and Tre-gent at Sunoco station, Pontiac, Oakland Pontiac C»Op Federal Credit Union 151 W. Huron, Pontiac ------------------------------------- MRS. FRED CUMMINGS Service for Mrs. Fred (Ester M ) Cummings, 72, of 276 Chandler will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Vincent de Paul Catholic □lurch with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by Melvip A. Schutt Funeral Home. Mrs. Cunynings died Monday after a lengthy illness. She was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. C. E. Freeman of Pontiac and Mrs. Duane Johnson of White Lake Township, and three sons, Harold, Ward and Fred, all of Pontiac. MRS. L. F. KLAUSMEYER Service for Mrs. Leonard F. (Ada B.) Klausmeyer, 58, of 4082 S. Shore, Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Lutheran Church of the Ascension with burial in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield, by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Klausmeyer died yesterday after a bHef illness. ^e was a member of the Lutheran Church of the Ascension and past president of the Oakland County Dental Society Auxiliary. Surviving are her husband; two sons, James of Cupertino, Calif., and John of Golden, Ckilo.; six grandchildren; and one brother. The family suggests that me- Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Workman died yesterday after an illness of one month. She was employed as a cook. Surviving are a son, Floyd Justus Jr., U.S. Army, and two brothers, James Blade of Henryetta, Okla., and Lon Blade of Pontiac. MRS. PAUL G. COX COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Paul G. (Joan) Cox, 44, of 1626 Glengaiy will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will be in the Walled Lake Cemetery. Mrs. Cox died yesterday after a long illness. She was a member of the Walled Lake Baptist Church. Surviving besides her husband are four daughters, Mrs. Denee Riker of Pontiac, Mrs. Tamara Bowers of Union Lake and Cynthia and Dara, both at home; a son, Larry R. at home; a brother; and eight grandchildren. TRIES COMEBACK Contrdcfor to jl0nd! *77, has been wimuvivi IV ^ u u muster enough supoort to win back the post he lost in a dispute with the 25-year-old monarch over Papandreou’s plan to purge politically active rightists from the army. It appeared likely that some third figure — possibly former Deputy Premier Stephanos Stephanopoulos—would emerge as a compromise choice. Trial on Conspiracy DETROIT (AP) - Lester ,C. EUerhorst, convicted in 1963 of shooting then - Mayor James Tierney of Garden City eight years ago, Tuesday was ordered to stand trial with two Florida men on charges of conspiracy to murder and extort. EUerhorst, 60, was a Garden City contractor when he critically wounded ’Tierney July 25, .1957, claiming the mayor had cheated him on a contract with the city. Tierney, also 60, now is a state representative. The contractor is charged with hiring James Clark, 46, and Edward Szeles, 34, both Florida ex-convicts, for a revenge slaying of Tierney, Garden City Municipal Judge Russell Swarthout and Detroit attorney Arthur Bichan. Bike Rider Struck by Car Sunken Ship Sparks Interest Crowd Is Gathering to Bid for Freighter tate began when Tobin was granted pennisskm to build a garage beside the house for his two cars. ★ If ★ One taxpayer wrote to the council: “Any man able to afford a yacht and two cars should be denied a subsidized house.” 74 CENTS Housing Manage T.A. Collins said Tobin and his mother previously lived in a cottage that rented for 74 cents'a week. “We had to rehouse Mrs. Tobin and her son because the cottage where they lived was being demolished under a mandatory clearance order," said Collins. * ♦ * I “Mrs. Tobin is the tenant. It ! is no legal concern of the ■ council how much money her son has." Said Tobin: “I like sailing. I lUie my cars and I’d like a rich expensive meal occasionally, but my tastes are generally modest. I’m no snob." Still No Jury ROLAND G. HARMES SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP-Service for Roland G. Harmes, 47, of 12985 And6rsonville, will be 1 p.m. Friday at Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township. Mr. Harmes died yesterday. A six-year-old Pontiac girl is Usted in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital after she was struck by a car while riding her bicycle. Rochell Hardiman, 264 Luther, was riding on Luther when a car driven by Shelton L. Drake, 59, of 277 Luther, collided with ...c _______ Pontiac Fish- the bike. mortals made to m Church ' J® parent“T 3234. ^ Wwrttd I, FULL OR Furniture Salesman We need on experienced solesman who knows furniture and needs to moke good money. Com-pony blenefits: group insurance, profit sharing, ond retirement plans. Apply personnel department or write personnel manager at: Montgomery Ward I Fontlac Press Bex f KITcWN''lllLP.''^rLklNS Restaurant, 4105 Orchard Lk. Rd„ Orchard Laka, plications I ENGINEER preferably with collcga train-nd minimum 2 ytars txparl-In heating and air conditioning . —, n,,|5inQ' LONG ESTABLISHED FIRM DESIRES SALESAAAN FOR LOCAL ES-TABLISHEO TERRITORY. TO SELL COMPLETE LINE OF FARM fertilizers AND AGRICULTUR AL CHEMICALS. PREVIOUS EX PERIENCE IN AGRICULTURE RE QUIREO. SALARY. COMMISSION, COMPANY CAR AND EXPENSES FURNISHED. WRITE. STATE AGE AND QUALIFICATIONS TO BOX 1341, LAN^NG. MICHIGAN. MACHINE SHOP HANDS, 2 TO ................. ......... ."RS'/ay FOR SNACK e EXPERrMENTAL SHEET METAL anced In layout and fabrica gn italnleis and atum. worl BRIDGEPORT MILL OPERATOR ENGINE-TURRET LATHE OPERATOR It ba able to let up own lobs OVERTIME McGREGOR MFG. CORP. KLAUSMEYER,'JULY 27, V 4M3 S. Shore Drive; bell o( I Dr. Leonard F. Kli rs. Klausmeyer w t the Sparks - c me. (Suggested vl r of Floyd Justus X nieces ond twi it* 3a'^aM:M"p Card of Thanks WE WISH TO THANK OUR REL-dneighbors for *- ot kindness dur- 2 MEN HIRING PART-TIME try branch It taking for Immadiatr ~ worikr mutt ba 21 to 45 age and hava a ttaady day iob. Hourt 5:30 lo iv:4v. Guaranteed talary plus share of profits, earn $50 to $100 weekly. Cell between 4-7 p.m, 551-S424. 3 YOUNG MEN-19 TO 29 rnT.ol.n^'^ i!hll ^INTSH~'CA'R'p¥NrERS'~ NEEDED, r^ld T strike or '^lovoft ' 332-»12l. BEFORE 5. _ In Mveral yeart of operation, has RETIRED MAN steady year-round work, $420 a i ^nth. Call 574-2M1, 10 a.m. to l<*.S:.^2-29^15. Manager For Shipping And -Receiving Department Large retail organization needs an experienced man with executive ability and ombition. Excellent opportunity for right man. Many com pony benefits. Apply personnel department daily between 9:30 a.m. ond 9;00 p.m. Montgomery Ward AAA OPPORTUNITY ; Opening |u';l available tor aggres Siva real estate salesman Incen- ness. Member Pontiac Multiple Listing Service. Check this oppor.; tunity. Inquire lo Warren Stout.< 1450 N. Opdyke, Pontiac, FE 5 4145 Inquiries strictly Mntidenlial. AMBULANCE DRIVER? 75 OR top wages, apply at 115 5, Con necticut. Royal Oak. kPPLIANCE SALESMAN NEEDED lo sail \maln brand appliances. self starter .. .... -------------- work. Over 25 ond have Call FE 4-3573 for appoinlnftenl. 1 AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION I ' with ot least lO years experic Contact Service Man. Homer I-----------ir Sales. OA I-2526. Soles. TO 6-aOO. Ask lor CIsrence. AUTO PARTS MAIFfOR NIGHTS, le knowledge ot ports noces- y. Keego Pontiac Soles._ AUTO ' MECHANIC ' ____J5, slMd|L ColljS»2J«l MEAT CUTTER. NEED TWO, NO nights. Wholesale and retail cutting Good pay, fringe benellts. Pontiac area. Mr. Rondel, FE 7:0110._ Mechanic Wanted for large well-equippad modern service dapartmanl. Man| fringe benefits Including a retire man' program, training, hospitali zatlon, etc. See Service Manager Wilson Pontioc-CadlMoc, 1350 N ------' BImUnghom.____ U-i- m—M.—I g---.-I- INB WM1W rEEMM 2 GIRLS TO MEET PUBLIC, I-- or butr. Apply flN Oakland BABY SITtkR IN E^KINI~ BAEV ' SnrfER, VERY LIGHT Iranaparlatlon H __________on area, 625-4741. BAKERY SALESWOMAN. ANOERk m Bakary, 124 W. 14 Milt, Blr- ___ilnghom. Ml 4-7114. ___ BAR MAID, DAYS. SOME EXPER'i. top wogoi 4(3-4350 or 333- Teautv TcHTOiTI MSTRuc toir _ OR 34127 BEAUW OPERATOR - PREFER one oKpatloncad In wig Mitt and tarvlto. 473-0717 or 4ft-457l altar 4 p.m. CoRteur Par-Anna. lEAUTV OPERATOR WANTED Union Lake vie. 363-3443. BEAUTY OPERATOR FOR BUSY ■ I. businan hero II you con hen-It; also, needed shampoo girl. 4-2776_ond MA 4-3037. clerk-receptionist FOR DOC- ---- oMIee. Who Is porsenoblo, and Intoresicd In routine ol- quollfy. ^ St Box 57. _ COUNTER OIR'l. PERMANENT -ixperlonct RICEFfldNISt FOR BEAUTY SA-lon. Mature uwman, adapt at llfurat, sand compkNa ratumo to Fantiac Frau Bex No. 17. Startine ulary S45O-S440 with shin dlNtrantloli, ond incrooset every six months. Active Inurvice pro-grom, vacation. Blue Cross, tick laavo, ond insuronco plant among parscnnol pollclot. I, Detroit, Mlchl- UTILITV WOMAN, EXPERIENCED, Bar maW, grIHeiraltrau. nWM. Jack'i Bar and Grill. Fb ajk tar Mr. Oabom for aapelnl- WAITR'bP; nToNTS” DOBSki'S. Unfcn Laka. EM 34112.______ WAITREU, FULL TIME, DAYS. Apply In ptrtan only. Ho students. JtM Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plaint. WAITRESSES Full or part time, night shirt, tl hour tor oxaarltnctd woltrassos Fold VKOIIon ond hospitallisllon. Apply In parson. Big Boy Ret taurant. TtMgraph and Huron or Dixie Hwoy. ond Sllvor Lake WpRKIt» MOTHER DEBFI__________ ^ ntatii suoman la H«a In. LlaM iSUMO LAhv VR-giK*- '-------- HeV W«iito4 *«• » TENTION COLLIGE AND NIGH choel studants: Sunimar amplay-nant. Now taking appRcallans. tponinos In all dapartmanla. Fart-imo and luii-tima. Apply In par-on, Ellas Bros. Big Boy Orlva-ns.. 20 S. Tsiagraph and 2400 >lxle No plwrw calls occoptod BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED I Potlllvt M.Ot I Nog. 37 00, 110.00 - 513.00 J3ETROIT BLOOD »iRVTCB_ 14 S. Csss SALESLADY, DEPENDABLE PEI son tor Fleworland In the Mol . knowledgo of llowtrs ond plants necetury. 363-2441 for Intr—'— _aj^lntment. sales' wo^'n part^Fme 'some experience. Apply Young ' —' Chlldron Shop, Wirocio Milo Community old. Alr-condlllonod | MM M26*'**''*" daT c'bbkrCiNroN' ■nt. Blrmlng-I. Woodward. ake area r the right ( Sig’ Boy™r’vo-ln?''?elegro^r and EXCELLENT s'a"LA'Rv"'fOR“C'OM. petont exptrlancod office and medical receptionist. References required, hourt flexible. Write Box 20 Pontiac Press. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, GOOD pay. Harbor Bor. 6(74320. EXPERIENCED SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO. Apply 10 a.m. to {2 noon, 3 P.m SEARS Oakland Mall work. 505 Oakland A WAITRESS, 4 NIGHTS PER WEEK. ! w2^ard y'* WAITRESS, OVER 10, MINIMUM'' y#or't oxporlonco. 330-0303.1; tor moni^r WAITRESS. NICE,' PARt TIME. Apply In person after 4. Dell's, Inn. 3401 Elliabeth Lake Rd. X VAITRESS j naot. Psid voc?*fons**o«j'ln«j'roncr Wa1 TR'ESS F ULL TIME ‘ EVENING National Bank work. Rkco'», 5171 Oixif Hwy.^ Df yton Plalni. Apply >v»nino8. ^ Of Pontiac WAITRESS WANTED. APPLY IN hOTo'w' H^**'"* Rostaursnt. WANTED: L'AbY TO LIVE IN AND Colf*telwMh*'l0 am and'"3:3o“p'm! OR 3-7137_________ WA,NTEO' w6mAN t'6' nights In bar, capable o alone. Good pay. Call tor opp^trnont.______ WANTED AT ONCE, AN EXPERI-i onetd woman to managa kitchen ln’’o newly oponad rcstourant. Rtf | of^sl omploymont roquirad. 343-j wiDbw''LAbY TOTiVE~IN ‘wiTHj ... service, must general rei ' Holly 437-7452Mves. FE 04^. Mechanical Engineer i XSntcaim*"----------------------------- ive’o^ ri'ence®or*'reMnt* raduote EXPERIENCED .WAITRESS COOKljLgEvER referred. Must have potential lorj *e'r^n*''*hllt.*'^'57™'^AuSirn'' Avo.! yi Log Cabin. I ' .“(EXPERIENCED WOOL PRE5SER. I top quality, ‘ " * 14 MILE AND JOHN R. D FOLBER, EX-xt working condl-'. Janet Davis Shirt Box. 105. 'fnd '^e?elting^ °App°y In^'^lwl?i EXPERIENCED PREFERRED FOR I Rochester Aerosol Core. 607 Wood- " eldtrly lady * . .. ond needs assistance. Cooking and! Ilgt^ housework. OR 3:H30. WOMAN TO lTvE IN - CARE I for 3 Khool children, t'nd lignt! housokeepIng. PE 7-3437. WOMAN FOR KITCHEN. APPLY! ■■ - -rive In, 3440 Dixie n7-5p.m_._________ WOMAN FOR GENERAL HOUSE-cleonlng, half day 0 weak, own Irosportatlon. FE 2 0412. ^ WOMAN wanted' AGE 30 TO 40.| Now Accepting Applications For Full Time Employment. TELLERS 21 to 40 years of oge for Main and Branch office positions. We train you. BANK MESSENGERS Men 45 to 55 years of age. Must be able to oc-quire a chouffiur's license. Rochesttr. MILLING MACHINE OPERATORS ! BORING MILL OPERATORS | _ . f accounting, h figures ond * -■— dern plants. Cargill D. IS, Clawson. Detroit Corp., 1750 NEED $$$ ! 0135-0150 lor 40 hr. week I 030-050 lor a flexible 15 to pain, iv, live m, j uors. •*» hr. week, call OR 3-5565 to tee 636-5670._________ _| you qualify for either oppor-| IxPERl'ENCED WAITRESS. APPLY _____ _ ( Court House Snort Bor. NEED 3 MEN TO REPLACE 3j EXECUTIVE SECRETARY neces-, yvork in aviation lor lost moving ury. 675-7645.. company located at Pontiac Air- port. Experience necessary. Call I Mi^ Bommo^lto at 674-7^. ' FULLEREfTES" Unusual opportunity lor housewives i to earn odditlonal Income^^serving full time. Report to, Michigan Employment Security Commission, 247 mo sea m. ...................le contacted Im NURSING must b_ _____________ .. , premises, will provide own utuitles and meals. For mi formation call 651-6377. I croft, Rochester. suPERvisbR, Ceromlc YiHiig NEW 4 Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER ISS installed In doors end win-_.«s. Complete building service. 7 1075 Oekland Ave. FE 4-4545 Moving and Storage SMITH MOVING CO. i________■_ _ FE 4-4(64 I Pointing and Decorating -a'paiNTING - INTERIOR - Exterior - FE 5-5734.__ Tl INTERIOR and" E'TCTERIO'R painting, free estimates, guaranteed. Reasonable rah 0420. ____________________ AA PAINTING AND DECORATINQ Interior and exterior, trar — mates. UL 2-3557 or UL 7134 iLL AROUND PAINTING paperhanging. FE 2-2674. RETAIL PLUMBING , ND H" — ----------- --.--Ir Pai 34 Oakland 4 Rontal EguipmoRt Trot jrrfaMiii^ Strvico -I TREE EXPERTS, TREE WORK * BBL TREt TRI44MING, REMOVAL Free astimala. FE 5^444, 674G515. EXPERT TREE SERVICE, TRTM-ming and removal. 3340056. LAKEYS "tree CO., TRIMMING, removal, tree estimates. FE 1-0403, 623-1414. Trucking Also Sunday. 3344043. [UtAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME ---------ice. Any Hme. FE B4W41. LIGHT TRUCKING AND HAULING 672(675_________ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, till dirt, grading and gravel and front-end laeding. FE 34Mn. lig'ht hauling, garages and --------------1^676-1242._____ i Trucks to Rent J) CQUIPMENT Dump Trucks - S#ml-Tp«U«rt Pontiac Form and Industrial Troctor Co. 135 S. WOODWARD E A046I FE 4 144 Open Daily Including Sunday Undtifroand S^inUors Wall Cleuiiors BLObMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Walls end windows. Reas. Satlt-I act Ion guaranteed. FE H631. WALLS AND WINDOW CLEANING. 2(015. INTER-LAKES PAINTING AND decorating. Work can" " ---- OR 4-3(41.____________ West Detroit Glass c Wood *5^ WEED CUTTING, LOTS. FE 4-1(47. Heavy Equipment.__________ WEED CUTTING. AL'S LANDSCAPE y employment, I EXCEPTIONAL YOUNG MEN WITH draftlns and mdctianical ability Ap ply el 1(15 GoH Or. near Orchard Lake end Telegraph. EXPERIENCED CARF'ENTERS __________UL H412. iXCELLtNT OPPORTUNITY For young men, age 30 to 25 to earn tlM par waw In the telling professlen. Car nacaeury. Fori infeiivi^ call Mr. O'Laary, 133-, Rochester (227, between l( and 5. I Monday MACHINE REPAIRS MAINTENANCE MAN Box 54. mediately h_ _ I AfTENTTONn^N'S' and LPN'S “ Openings. Educational benefits. ; Salaries competitive with area hos-I pitals. Call Mrs. McCarthy, 331- PRACTIC4kL NURSE AND HOUSE ! j 7154^ _ „ ! keeper lor 7. 30-54 years old. n' ! ATTENTION, MOTlftRS! 1 I SANTA'S TOYIANO mfmMim 1>- 6 THg PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1965 ^ Wmla4 KL tf. PNULOK, WfIKINOt nanet «k». nacMtary, Nomt» uHl., Dlnctor Camp Ohiytu, Rti. 3. iXrtTrieNCBO cook, full ^ime nIflMt. Apply In parson only UST Dlxla Hwy., Drayton Plains, LABORATORY TECHNICIANS Immadlata opanlngs tor ASCP Itch nklana. Minimum atartinp sala^ ol latMl lo maximum of tS43.n. Apply Parsennal Dapt., Pontiac Oanaral Hospital. FPBE RiENT TO RETIRED COU MAN ■ AND WIFE TEAM FOR lo*T5y a.m''*AppIy' at Big Boy Priva-ln. TaloBraph and Huron. NEED EXTRA MONEY FOR Vi lion? Start aarning now. For ttwr dttplls call Mr. Laggalt, FE t-3»53. i-IB. 3-S._______I OPERATING ROOIM SUPERVISOR. full lima. RN. some on call. --- basad on axparlanca. Ilbars. .... sonnel policies, contact Diractor ol Nursas. Community Hospital. SHOE SALES. EXPERIENCE PRE-farrad or will train ambitioui — apply in Mrson, Neal Shoe Drayton Plaint Shopping Co ItalM Helit, Moit-FBimlii S-A IF YOU EbUOY MEETING PEO- pie, are ambitious and like "--- decorating and would Ilka a i to express yoursalt In this ---- we at the Wall Paper Bargain FE 1-0427 It TALEsSiANr' ... ..... Intangible sai( background. SI50 weekly guarant, to man meeting our requirement Write manager. Box 4117, Clevelar (23), Ohio. _________________ initnictiMS—ScIimIs 1 ACT NOW TO GET THAT JOB I DIESEL TRUCK DRIVERS Train on all new diasal tractors DIESEL ENGINE MECHANICS Fuel Inlaction-Engina OvarbauL CRANES Dragline-Back Hoa T / . Operate Speclelhed Equipment I "World's Largest Trade School" GREER TECH. C “ "" ‘ Wwk WMtad Mab 11 CARPENTER WANTS WORK I all kinds. «yd-1B74. CARPENTER WORK, CEMENT CONTRACTOR, Olivt-ways. sWawalks, etc„ FE S-W7S. CEMENT WORK, COMMERCIAL , COMWNATION TOOL MAKER A commission, «S2-0B«a. maH with new pickup yyANtS work of any kind. FE ^325». YOU CALL - WE COME - WALLS, & ctsss: 7oUNO man desires WORK (}F kaid pm A.10a ar FE S-40e2> any kind. FE 4-3M7 or FE 5-40t2.^ Work WEBtid FiiHub 12 cleaning and wall washing. housework BY the DA ____________d»3-l733. ___ Ironing, i-oay service, donna Halcomb. FE S-7H7.___________ IRONING. T-OAY SCRVICL, MRS. McCowan. FE 5-1471.____________ WANTED IRONINGS TO DO I my home. Baby sitting. Mrs. W son. FE ABSB3. 135 Omar. Phone FE 4-3WI. I TEil^ng 17 DRESSMAKING. TAILORING AND alterations. Mrs. Bodeli FE 4-a053. SEWING AND ALTERATIONS *Ow2w* Prutala fed"" mark. Alto ell... pieces. Alae naael ptank-ailtom chairs. No dealers. M3-1)7S. PrL CASH PAID FOR YWR' USED tumKura and appllancaa. FE 4-IM4 Days only, ask tor Mr. Grant DESKS, files; office FURNI-ture, portable and olfics typewriters, adding machines, drafting tables, etc. Forbes, OR 3-yr<7. We alto tell tame. _ CaVh FOR PIANOS, FURNITURE, musical IntIr'umanIt, taels, etc. PS WflHtMl MEEty Si tf.000 AT « PER CENT INTEREST, hflvt pitnty 9f coilattr*!. FE 4-^._________ _ Wantfd to Rout 32 3-BEDROOM house, rent with option^ ______ COUPLE, NO CHILDREN, DESI HOUSiNG NEEDED BY SEPTE^ RESF^STBLE EDISON SUPIRVIS- WANTED t6“R|nTI Garage on Summit Street OR surrounding area. Preferably on alley. FE 2-8181, EXT. 234 VVATERFORb SCHCJOL ADMINIS-Irator desires to rent 3 bedroom home near or In school district. Call Flint collect, 7B5-S5I2._ Shore Living Quorteri 33 BACHELOR 32 WILL SHARE LUX-—‘ tP*. With lamr Btrtr«ma Box ( HOME WITH 1 TO 50 ' Warren Stout, Realtor 14S0 N. Opdyke Rd. FE S-SI4S Dally til 8 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ALL CASH FHA AND Cl ESUITV _J tape, no dalayt. ..... ately. DETROIT BR 3-0440. CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS - HOMES WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave. FE 2-8141 CASH BUYERS ... can tell your property. Elwood Realty M2-24I0 DO YOU WANT TO SELL? We need listings on homes, also apartmanls and lots. A. JOHNSON & SON REAL ESTATE I. INSURANCE 1704 $. Talagraph FE 4-aSM_____________ FOR F Jonas Rabity — F E 48530. NEED 200 LISTiN(;S trt B Wyatt FE------ Ret Wmm, twnUkid n ATTRACTIVE LAKE FRONT YBAR-araufid. nehmla ipad. Mandon Rit Heeeiw, UBfarEiilied 40 3-BBDROOM, WILLIAMS LAKE, l|3 per mo. FE 3-833S. 3-BiDffSOM, CdM^LfeTfLV M06-ernlred oMor farm home, SIN a month phis S30S dafxnH. LI S-14N. ^BESiSgfeM hSuSE IN RSCHES-ter, sirs per month, plus lacurlly dawn. 3»1(»4;__________ BOULEVARDiHBIOHTS AppllcalioAi now being acceptld Contbct Roaldont Manager 344 Bast Blvd. at Valancta fDEAL FOR COUPLE OR BACHf- i: W allabW Aug garagt. Ytar't laasa . - mos., Wl advanea. Aug, lit. 074^735. Inaj^A. AVAILABLE AUGUST 21 ....----- w^"*‘.r 41 - CLEAN ^234^A FURNISHED COTTAGE. ACCOM-modatas I, Aug. 31 to Sopt. 4. SIN, Brimley Bock Bay, Upper Peninsula, dock and boat, FE 5-4282. _________________ LODGE, SLEEPS S. ^RIZE fISH- MODERN 2 BEDROOM'S, IS MILES ^rth ol l^ljac, 01^7337.___ ON MISSAUKEE LAKE, MODERN. MA ^7084 or MA 5 484J^ Rent Rooms 42 PRIVATE HOME-MAN OR WOM-an meals optional FE 1-4181. PRIVATE liODM IN CHRISTIAN home. No drinkers please. 33 Florence St. ROOM AND OR BOARD. l35'/i OAK- SLEEPiNG ROOM, KITCHEN PRIV- NICE WEST SIDE HOME. GOOD food, for clean ganllaman. FE _8-3m________________________ Rent Office Space 47 IHIROPRACTIC 0 Huron at., off s' bulR-lns, carpotbiA Kar garaga. Call MA S-3313 affar 5 p.m. lY OWNER - S-BEDRObiW TRT- taval. Lam carpatad living---- cualem tmlthad racraatlan I'/y bathe. Shaded, landscape. ... lSl'*tlLww3^ ptiona BIRMINGHAM FOUR BEDROOM quad-leval. Walk to naw Bleomllald grr-'* 37-tool family room, tl h^hg^TTTr t^Outaianding WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE 388 S. Waodwprd, Birmingham 4444308 PHONES 544-3333 BY OWNER, RANCH CLARKSfON, 303x148' lot, ttnead, IVk baths, 34' spaclaus living raom. 3 bad-rooms, largo kitenon f - ROCHESTBR-LAKEVILLE ARE) BY OWNER -> AUBURN HEIGHfS area. NIct Hiadroom home, larr lr"s«.',;' BY OWNER, 3-BEDROOA4, RANfiH. ninum tHungy omwmfwm, Rorogoa larRo lot, SISgfOO. 152- City of Walled Lake North Point Realty S8(M s. Main Clarkslon MA 5-2341 *** ■ DRAYTON WOODS NEW AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICES, located it 4311 Hurbn Straat. OR 34331 or 343-7474._______. OFFICE SPACE ON WEST HURON let. Off stroat parking, 474-3338, yiDE TRACK DRIVE WEST, NEAR Huron St. Approxlmataly-------- ft. — mm divida. Imtna. cupancy. Call Leslie R. Raalter, FE sei41. Ret Bveineie Pro^rty 47-A 43x43 F(30T GAS HEATED, 2 13-“ 1oer openings sultaMa lor bump ____.> or sferago, MiFmklln Rd. LOCATE v5ur Business WHERE ly O'Neil^Realtor ^ ‘’0R*4-3233 “ Ret Miscellaneous Near schools. By ow^”S% 2-BEOROOM, newly decorated, gas heat, mixed neighborhood, 34,-500, 81,00* ------ V FE 4-7370. Cenvaleecet-Norsing Moving and TriKkliig 22 AA MOVING ) CaraluL oncletod vans. Insured, low ratos, free astlmates, UL 2 3888 or 438-3510. _ ________ BOB'S VAN SERVICE MOVING AND STORAGE FREE ESTIMATES ROBERT TOMPKINS _____^EM 3-7030 LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING, cheap. Any kind. FE 5 8383. _ LIGHT HAULING, ANY KIND; ___________ 333-1833 Pointing t Oocorgting 23 PAPER HANGING A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Papering. FE |4343. INTERIOR AND EXtERiOR>AINT Ing, large or small lobs. For estl-mataa-OR 34347. INTERIOR, EXTERIOR DECORAT free estimates. FE 3-0054._ PAINTING AND PAPERING. YOU are next. Orvel GIdcumb. 673-0484 PAINTING, PAPERING Tupper. OR 3-7041 PAINTING AND DECORAtiNG, IN terlor and exterior, blacktop patch Ing. and coating, reasonable rales, tree estimates. FE 2 3153. DUALITY WfJRK assured; PAINT-Mg: papertng, wall washing. 673-2073.______............ Transportation 25 IF YOU'RE (xOING TO CALIFOR- t, ‘3725 0 ., OR wanted RIDE 08 rid8s from* Oroyton ria»w ..........tea Ford Strriin I. shift. 674-39S7. 26 EXCHANGE , —avion PI ■ to Utica Insorance 15 PER CENT SAVINGS ARE Possible on homeowner policies. In AA-plus mutual companies. There era a X c c 11 a n t dependable companies, «vho make prompt loss ---------■- .... —— FE 44304 Scalps. FE 3-5dt1 < Wotod Childran te Beard 2S Wonted Hoaiolield Geeds 29 > buyers, call us today I Clarkston Real Estate 58M S. Main MA 5-5021 CASH FOR YOUR HOME OR EQUITY WE BUY, SELL, TRADE and LIST CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. HURON FE 3-7000 ______RES. FE 44113 VACANT LOTS WANTED In Pontiac we pay more. Immediate closing, REAL VALUE REALTY. 624-8575. Mr. Dayls. WANTED - EXECUTIVE HOMES ■jr college faculty members -- ^iA^Y ....... Apartments, Furnished 37 1-BEDROOMr UPSTAIRS. REASON abl^ Inquire, 38 ^ec^nlc. _ ' tlfOOM, BACHELOR, BASEMENT apt., private bath MS ^mo._Ffe 4-1538. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, CHILD welcome, 824 per week with a 850 deposit. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Call 338-4054. PAUL JONES 3 ROOMS, BATH, MIXED NEIGH-borhood FE 34484. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, ON SILVER Lake, 24' knotty pine living------ fireplace and bar, utllltes adults. OR 3 1373. 3 ROOMS, BATH, UPPER ON Lake Orion, adults, —‘ “ 3-ROOM, BACHELOR, (JUIET, "PRI-vale, carpeted. North end, nice. 830 per week. 332:«74. _ 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CHILD W^- 875 deposit. Inquire at 373 Baldwin Ave^Call 3384054. _ ROOMS IN PONTlAi:, $37 M PER N CANAL, 053-1875. 1 ROOMS AND BATH, 830 a w^,^830^dep„ .k, I ROOtAS A'N^ BATH.'CHILO WEL" come, 833.50 per week with a 8100 deposit, Inquire at 273 Baldwin Call 338-M54. :lderIy Lady" or bachelor. no drinkers, FE 3-8755 or FE 3 4447. ...... Aportmentt, Unfurnished 38 ROOMS, KITCHENETTE, VERY clean, adults only, 308 N. Saapina ■ ROOMS. PART OF DOUBLE housa. 603^5445. ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. garbm disposal. GE refrigerators snd stoves, beautifully Tand-scapad surroundings. No chlldrAi. 8140. 3-bodroom 8185. Wt 1 HEAR OUR PRICE BEFORE > . It auction It or buy It. 6 & B Auction OR 3-3717 xtra I------------ „ ______- Wo daalart. 48^3174. #ILL hUY ANTieUES, fURNI- --------- giuebird Auction. 7-5183. OR 3-3181, MS 7-3181 Phone FE B3847 or OR 3 3833. DORRIS t SON REALTORS. MODERN 3-ROOM TERR, 3-3331^444 3408. ADS WANT Reach the Most Responsive Buyers 2-BEDROOM LAKE FRONT Cottago on Round Lake, needs some work, large living room. Insulated and tlM callings, 88000, $1300 down on land contract. 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW Aluminum siding, basement, new gas furnace, carpet. 80,500, terms. FLATTLEY REALTY Commerce___________363-d»li 3-BEOROOM HOME leroe lOO'xISO' Mr V/t cttr ga Just oft M59 with Watkins uaxe i privileges. $13,100 with 11.000 down | on land contrect. Call OR 4 I23S. | sliEDROOWT BRICK, FULL BASE-stormt# curbs. FHA approved. In 3'eEiSoOMS clean home located on ^ aped lot with sewer Garage, basement and :luded In the low price HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty UNION LAKE ISC' to axcallant boach privllagas, pratty snow whita Immaculate home. Plaatarad walla, 2 extra targe bedrooms, full bath, bright kitchen, separata dining area, gas furnace, attached garaga, a good residential area, first time offartd. 813,800. Terms. Everett Cummings, Realtor 3383 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 3-1208 343-7181 HOME ANO-OR INCOME. ON DEEP corner lot. FE 4-1340. HOUSE 38x50 Bl LEVEL. ROUGHEb In. On 3 acros for best 0"— FE 2 3154. IN OXFORD; Real njee fbedroOT ;a Sub. - ~ 3-bedroom n 3-car garage. Large living r( I. 131,000 830 par month. JACK PRESTON CUSTOM-BUILT HOMES FOR INFORMATION CALL I KEEGO HARBOR 3-bodroom house. Gas heat, ment. Good location. 87,000. JACK LOVELAND 3100 Cass Lake Road ______ 483-1353 LAKE PRIVILEGES ;e go with this dondyj with lull bosement. NO JSWeOXd'^’^ •' BfLAIRE HOME BU'"''RS ploca In ilvifia i floors, 3 coramic » LOT 40’x330, vicinity tnd Joslyn. 8MOO casn or w cemplotoly tumistigd. FE *0ra. ROCHESTER ARAAt-WILL TliA6B Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1308 Pontiac Stalo Bank BMg. — imerr ROCHESTER AREA Cute 3-badroom homa. W _____ A^llancas. Carpatad. Sacrifice. 473- R DOMING HOUSE ON fiORtON Ave. Good Income. 813,000. Ta— '"bWIr REAL ESTATE William B. MItetwII, Salasmanai... 4 E. Huron St.______________FE 43181 WALDON AT ALMOND LANE, CLARKSTON. Brick, 1330 sq. It. 818480. ARISTOCRAT BUILDERS. WHITE LAKEFRONT, $ ROOMS basement furnace, needs sor terlor repairs 3210 Duck I87-3M1. WATERFORD AREA neighborhood, paved straet, I AL PAULY, Realtor 4314 DIXIE, REAR OR 3-3400_______EVES. FE 3-7444 WATER FRONT lOO-ft. of wattrfrpnt. 3-bcdroom, large carpeted living room, natural flrapladb, 2-car attached ga-ragt. Extra large boathouse. Many tina features. Only l17,7S0 ------ Ba..,n.ws^mB —-e||ent COn* Immediate SYLVAN 425-1M6 ____lf_i» ws. ^:«2M 47-49 CHAPMAN AVE. 2-famlly, 5 rooms each. Gas heat, private. Basement. Terms to suit purchaser. Positively the best bargain in town. HURRY ON THIS ONEI BREWER REAL ESTATE William B. Mitchell. Saletmanager I E. Huron SL ____FE 4-5111 ' $500 DOWN Puls you In a nice home In Pontiac or Suburban ^ or 3-bedrtxmi homes. Small monthly payments. Mtcheel's. 363 427 4485. Detrnll WE 34380. $9,990 I. Lovely 3 Dme. full I Less Than Rent $175. Moves You In principal. Interest, "t»aa aiS*’^l! Take Orchard Lake Rd. to Con mere# Rd., take Commorca to .! Commerce Rd., turn right at Glat gary SI., left to Los Arboles Rost AMERICANA HOMES Wf TRADE YOUNG-BIIT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER-BILT RUSSELL YOUNG, 53W W. HURON _ _ _rE_4-3*3»__. __ AUBUfc ranch, Road ___ AUBURN HEIGHTS, 3 BEDROOMS, redecorated, near schools, 88,500 052 5lS'^*' ‘**''‘"9 CboMFIELD NEW RANCH MODELS OPEN NOW 3badroomt, family room, llroploce, 2 baths, baaamtnt, ]HINE. 1-bedroem, lull basanwnt, 311.000. FE 0-1420. _ near'blue sky theatre 3badroom. Basamant., Gas hast. THE ECON-O-TRI AT $11,000 ' y Room . Attached Garage Will duplicate on your lot J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 3434404 10331' Highland Rd. (M38) TAYLOR MODEL OPEN DAILY 1 to 9 7929 HIGHLAND RD. (M59) 5 MILES WEST OF AIRPORT sMIng,______ - . ______ -jalk-oirt lamlly room, 3-car garage. Will dupllcete on your lot or ours. Highland Road (6438) at EMiabath Lake Road. WEST BLOOMFIELD Immaculate, Opdyke Rd. New 3-car garaga. TOM REAGAN RORABAUGH bquert Lafct Rd, ___________ plus tax ant Ms. HAGSTliOM REALTOR, 4800 W. HURON, OR 4-0350. EVENINGS 483-B413. NEW HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWN-er, tO.OOB. 0400 down. 2740 Buck- ner. Lake Orton. MY 3-1338.___ NEWLY DECORATED 3-BEbROOM faimlly riom, tl2?m'FE 3-4108. *' BY OWNER. 3^EDROOM HOME, heat, lenca^yard FE 3 «74. North Ehd-i7M Down 3-hedroam ranther, 3-car garaga. new altwnlnum siding, oak floors. Ks heal, localed 3 blocks from Idwln Branch-Pontlac S I a I a Bank. 38.750. No closing costs. 4 BEDROOMS Rancher lacattd 0 miles Was! el Pontiac, built In 1854. Full base mani all pantlad mad* Into living quarters. Oak lloert. large M. 813,-800 farms, no closing cost. CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY • REALTOR 720 W. WAIJ'ON ' 110-40U MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE UNION LAKE VILLAGE 2*bodtooms'*t'ar^ ^Laka Campus firtplaca, Marata dining room! largo attic for future bedrooms. Full boaamant. 2-car garage. I acre ol ground with fruit treat. AUBURN HEIGHTS 3 badroemt, I'/t-slory homo, 3-car garaga. basamant, has FA haat. Low taxaa. Zoned eonunerclal. (ieod Investment. WHITE LAKE TWP. , garage. Chiaa parochial and blk schools Low foxes. house phis many more faatun CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. SMITH & WIDEMAN REALTORS FE 4-4526 ____413 W. HURON ST._ Gaylord: VIEW OF VIEWS - A brand naw ranch home, aluminum siding, iv, baths, basement; 2-csr garage, drapes, bullt in stove, oven and stereo Included. Indirect lighting, tee lor miles and miles. It Is beautiful. Quick possession. Owner LAZENBY ' DRAYTON AREA This lovely 3-bedroom home with a 30x13' family room, large car- Thrae-bedroom bungalow. LI; room, kitchen and dining a Utility room, automatic HA h vacant. About 8330 nwvts you It Eva. Call MR. ALTON, FE 4-53 CLARK 4-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL - Localed in an exclusive area west of town. Bedrooms are extra large, 2 full baths, dining roam with glass wln^w ^nto large family room, 2m, 3-bath Cape Cod. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 3218 Dixie Hwy. 674-2233 Across from Packers Store Muttipla jJstlng ;^Sarvica Open M XI Cedar Island Lake. ORTONVILLE GILES WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP home, 4 bedrooms, » file floors, all heel. Lake block away, nice sr let. Only 82.080 dnw^ on coni N DYKE TRAHER, mode; new gas turnaca, hardwaad floors - pissterad saalls. bssimenl — Nice shaded let. paved -strae*. canvanlant tor schools. Only 88,-8108 on land oentracl. GILES REALTY CO. No. 76. BE THE FIRST TO SEE this 4room, 3-h split-level rancher-on I acre lusi west of town. Attached end carpeting lo bool, i terms or trade. Chalke real bargain — wo don't No. 77. CLOSE IN WEST SUBURBAN |i )d cred- u a musr No. 14! SAVE $4,500 FOR QUICK SALE on this picturesque lake front. Owner says "make a deal." Spacious 3-bedroom bilevel, m baths Aid large I6rxl87' lot with beautmilly terraced front yard overlooking lake. Very scenic setting, many extras and built-in faaluras. Reduced from MODELS YOUR CHOICE of I In Ihrac ., right apt lan sign. LAKE OAKLAND SHORES ,1. u„. saihabaw, right It to Bateman sign. ULTRik HOMES SI • VhlHMr r BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITES TWO NEW SUBDIVISIONS 440DESTLY PRICED YOU CAN TRADE pm*ba|Jy*l'8*‘^ l»ny oth#r bulIMn f^xlurts. WHY NOT LET Ivan W. Schrom BE YOUR REAL ESTATE IVAN 1111 Joslyn Ave. FE 5-8471 O'NEIL MODELS Open Daily 1 to 9 Westri(fge of Woterford FOR EVEN GREATER CONVENIENCE lo all of you, O'Neil Realty now has lour professionally decorated and furnished model homes In one grouping. Namely the "Elegante," our gracious ceipniali the Lane, left to Conn# Mara Lane. TRADING IS TERRIFIC CLARKSTON LAKE ERONT Nice 7-bedroom horn# on Doll Lake. Just the Ideal setup lor y OTTAWA UlUS 1We*sry 34«om t^ In Mis quiet raildantibl dislilct. LIvlii raom with naturYjHraplBCa, full dMIng EAST SIDE This Is a horn* tor the small lamlly or retired eoupla. Thru bedrooms, living room, dining robm and kltchtn. Full baiamdnt and gas heat. tmicr Nr Nb MbcalhNMMS 47 volt bat^. 80i ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN_______FI AUTOMATIC SPACE HEATER. plpa..tatik and oil, 330-3871. ATTIC PANS FOR "WHOLE HOUSE vantllatlon," compWe. 8133. Chand-lar Haallng^OR 3-5833. EATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND ----------------d bollart. automatic ‘ She’s very mature! Ask her what space is and right away she'll tell you it's the word that comes after parking!" 3815 Lan^ Rd. _________re 8-5431 Bottle Gas Instollotion' Two lOGpound cylindtri and agulp-ment. 813. Great Plaint Gat Co., FE _54073^^ _____ _________ CASH AND CARRY ..i8 Mahogany V-Groevad ... 83.35 4x7 Mahogany V-Greovad .. 83.49 DRAYTON PLYWOOD V. Walton ________OR 34913 CERAMIC TILE, 1", 3" AND 4'5", JIM'S OUTLET OR 4-0818 Car. Airport and Hatchery Rds. louri: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.Sal. CLEARANCE OF U a E~6~0FFICl nacblnat. Ferbav . OR 39787. Wa c6aL~^RNACETni'OR'CED^^ArR, 34" JjrapOt^ Beat ottar. 173-058*. COMPLETE sfOCic OF-piPE AND (iuttom threading. Imme- SoIb Household Goods 65 . STILL UNDER GUAR- ONDE TVyiN CRi'BS AND MAT-ssesy good condition, SjO. MA 1 MORE TIME BRAND NEW FURNITURE 3-ROOM OUTFITS $278 (Good) $2.50 Weekly $378 (Better) $3.00 Weekly $478 (Best) $4.00 Weekly fables, matching colfea l( APPLIANCE CLOSE-OUTS OE -11" Portable TV . Sale Household Goods LIVING^RO^^SUITE MAPLE dining" ROOM lor 8350. Navi. 474-4338 evc-TAGE TENT, 9.4x138." UL LEY 13 CUBIC FOOT RE-»rator, good condition. Wood ne storm windows. FE 5 9830 »f§ 9 p.m. _ _ green IHOUSE, 34x3*4x26,' V20; *OSTER waa, carp.,. «5. m. 4-3,79'”li': j er mlsc.'FE'4-3798, 3 Utica RoadilPOR RENT: ALUMINUM LADDERS MUST SELL,' MOVING. EXTRA' • lang dauble bed, ’ - ' SUNBEAM CLEARISAL ELBCTRIC THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE til W. LAWRENCE ST. _ Elotbing. FurnlfMra. Appliances TONEMASTIR H E A R I N G AlS, varji^ rtaaonabla, 33MISI after 3:30 USEO~RroiNO' (MOWER, 0 0 0 0 condltlgn, »!. « 3r33. WANTED! USED C'EMENT BLOCKS _ 8SS-I333 WANTED; W8 MERCURY BODY. PONTIAC LAKE BUILOERI BUP-plj'^Sand. gravat, m «r3. OR and, gravel, pill OiTy.' W SAND, GRAVEL. PILL 6lEf, AKA- ----- SODT"feat, GRAVEL, tOP^BoFL. black dirt, flatdatona. 8831H7. TOP SOIL, BLiciTonnrpAVfL, ■---------- — HI «rt, PE 1457J TOP SOIL, PEAT HUMUS, SANDY FisJo'”'' ‘***^ TOrsoTL, THB¥eST. billVtdED __________PE 84371_____ Hiiid TbgIb—MachiiiBry 61 HEAVY PRODUCTION MACHINES, lurral lathaa, grindara, waldar. punch praat, ate. Pontiac Slecktr, FE 3-4388.______ _____________ INSLBY MObiL K02, BACK HOC with ^-yard bucket. tfSS metfet, arch type boom. Terms. Ray 011-Nr, 4745 Sutton Rd., Drydan. 738- J175. RAOIAfOR' REPAIR EOUiPMENf Evarytblno necasary for a modern shop. SSM comglota unit only FE 4-43S0, I a m. to . WELL ORILLINO MACHINE. 3" 4". Soma toola. 3338003. Camtrat • Service 70 835; I, 830; 1 p UI5 WhUhr tc. Other house- op'^Rd.T^il off "wood! >lock north of Square or call FE 2-2954. NECCHI Ing Center, thorjzed Nec NICE KENi lORE AUTOMATIC ____ _______ ___ Electr., . . Idaire range $15. J58 Kettering. REFRiGBRATOR, STOVE, FREEZ- r heater, 835, Electric range For the Finest in Top Quality Merchandise Shop MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC MALL FOR dusty"concrete"floors" Use Liquid Floor Hardener Simple Inaxpanilva Application GARAGE DOORS . --- .arage Iron! remodel- Fret eatimales. Berry Door sales Co., 3300 Cole Street, Blr-mingham. FE 3-0303 or Ml 4-1035. IARAGE SALE: FURNITURE, mitc. July 30-31 at 1414 Ledbury near Adams Rd^ and South Blvd. (J'aRAGE ■ SALE, baby' FURNI Massaga-A- Gibson 13-foot rt GOOD HOUSEKEEPING S OR 3 1. .._____ REFRIGERATOR, $35. DRYER, $35. Gat stove, 835. Refrigerator with top freozer, 843. 31-Inch TV, 835. Waahtr, 825. Eltctrlc atove, 835. y^Harrii. FE 5-3748. Repassessed Kirby WITH ALL ATTACHMENTS, ONE YEAR OLD, CALL AFTER 5. -451-847 • OF PONTIAC Drastic reduction or . Building iiYoJoo?. I STRANAHA t party, 673 13 Highland R ( BIKE AND HOBBY SHOP IN PON- | ' i lease, Veas. P^ Of?lce"Box ls3°° ' CAR ' wVs H AND 5-BEDROOM I home. Ally Really, 473-9701. j j CLASS C 4- Coxy lake front liquor bar, no food or entertainment 10-room house, first time offered. $65,000 total price including real estate. NATIONAL BUSINESS BROKERS FE 3-J84I DUE TO ILLNESS BARBER SHOP • - — ----- ' Drayton I Tm to 5 "30 "-'Sst. '3 :30"to ?! WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 '^s'tate* fTnance'ca ■ 508 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 4-1574 r sale. I COUNTRY 9R FRETTER'S WAREHOUSE OUTLET ■ 1450 S. Telegraph ' FE 3-7051 An Automatic Singer An Automatic Zig-Zag j Se_wlng Center. FE 5-3283. Iapartment size refrigera tor, 815. FE 4-0853. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE sale, BRAND NEW, Large and kuNK BEDS, COM swivel rocker, »: WANTED, saddle, _set,;^rnlK. F^E 5-7332._ Singer Cabinet Model Zig-zag equipped for buttonhohies. hems, etc. Used. New payments of $5.00 monthly or $44.50 cash. 5-year guarantee. Richman Bros. Sewjng Center. FE ^9283. SINGLE and' FULL-SIZE BEDS, desks, gossip bench, playpen, dropieaf OR 3-9644. * SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists of: tables, 1 cocktail tabla and 2 labia USED SPECIALS also a aalectlon of 8 r BUY TRADE-SELL- RENT AND SERVICE Cameras Prolectors and Photo Equipment MIRACLE CAMERA SHOP Miracle Mile Shopping Center 2305 S. Tel.,7E 4-S333 Musical Goods 71 130 BASS ACCORDIAN, LIKE NEW, 8700 or beat offtr. FE 1-3834. AMERTCA'S PR'EFERRE'D' OIS count music centar. Guitars, 817.35 up. Elec, gullars, 833.35 up. Full Ireda-in tor I yaar. MUSIC CENTER CHORD ORGAN. WALNUT C 0 N-tole, 34 chords, 37 ktyt, 885. 834-3731^. EXPERT PIANO MOVING PIANOS WANTED Bob's y^ SarvIca ______^EM 3-7120 GUITARS GUTtARS GUITARS Flat topi, classics, and alactrl Large stock of all types of gulti from 830.50. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. Across trom Tal-Huron r^3-im7 HAMMOND ORGAN, MODEL t 3. " condition. Owner. FE 5-SS33. PIANO SALE! Kohler and Campball pianose spinel consoles, many sl.'ei and fin-hes to choose from. AT RE 3 a :h misci " / 30, 31. WYMAN salej FURNITURE CO. iI-aVe- 17 E. HURON FE 4-4381 n I 18 W. PIKE _ ...........FE 3.2t50j-„^-i SINGER DIAL-O-MATIC, ZIG ZAGI console. $54.50, terms. i .. CURTS APPLIANCES______OR 4-tlOI PiJillac TWIN HOLLYWOOD BEDS AND' Woodw; ---------- • overslulfed chair,, i) LAY-AWAV ’ ■ I TAKE OVER PAJTMENT5 I Complete houseful ot furniture, llv-Ino room, bedroom, dinette, range! FE 2-0338 - Ask antiques, I Buick. .. .. Jr 4-0737. Ike Shores. Drayton GO-CART-GOOD CONDITION __________FE 4-0038________ HAGGERTY HAS IT! 3' pier kit. Dock section with 1 set 4' steel legs, 838.50; 8'x10' diving ratt built up, 873.50. HAGGERTY LUMBER 2055 Haggerty Hwy. “A <^551 INVENTORY REDUCtKJN SALE-Used and new typewriters, adding JET PUMP. 44 Newberry, Pontiac. KENMORE GAS INCINERATOR. "■ new. 850. 257 Marion St., TONE AIR COMPRESSORrUP-t tank, large, 2 h.p., quick 8235. OL 2-3154. pDmPS," 30 GALLONS PER _____Thompson, 7005 MS3 LARG'E QUANTITY OF USEI dustrial porcelain 3-Nght fix also several used chain I LUMBER r. H*ubba* IRWIN 2 3-room apartments wit on lake level. Fenced lot garage Lots ot storaoe boats and floating dock 9 beach. Priced at 835,000. tract terms. Make us an r NORTH END - 4- and t lent, gas inside a LAKE FRONT - 3 nice 50 feet on beach. Oak tl terad walls, basement, t'T-car garage at Union B-FAMILY APARTMENT HOUSE. Excellent condition. Ext. return. 873-7885, Pontiac area.______I i 8 APARTMENTS, FURNISHED, | SherMin St., 815,300, FE 5-7105. I Clarkston Real Estate Choice building sites on winding Paved^ streets. Many on hills. Ex- Low as $2*450 vvi'th 1250 down. LADD'S, INC. 3185 N. Lapeer Rd , Perry (M24) FE 5 3231 or OR 3 1231 after 7:30 Open ^lly 10-8 Sunday 12,8 LAKE FR'o'NT HIDMES^n'EW AND j;sed. J^ L. Daftly Cq^ ^M 3;7jl4. OWNER TRANSFE'RRED. NES-tied among 7 lakes. 40 min. Detroit. acre, Milford-Highland area, swimming pool, clubhouse. on in Oakland County i BEAUTIFUL, SPACIOUS 2- High grossing bar with bedroom lakelront home. Complete-d“*"' carpeted. Large screened porch. he mlnlmui asis lor tht ............ y maker tor you. ’artridge real estate W. Huror\, F- ■ ID FOR FRE Gr^N BUSINE ____ --JTES FOR I established routes I MODERN RESTAURANT SfAts 72 pwopif. 61 cur biACktop parking lot. Closed Sundays and holidays. Open ' — *- * — BEDROOM SET, chrome' kitchen SET: antique frames. 682-6882. CHROME DINETTE SETS. Grosses over SlOOeOOO y 108. Fluores 5. Mlch- . Sell business * ase building, ikland Coun-:e - $25,000. SELL OR TRADE IDINETTE TABLE/ YELLOW AND *11 our rental equipment we have| chronse, 6 chairs, 335-3289. left will sell or trade for Income.; ' bleCTRIC STOVE. $45. house, truck, car or what have. pg 4.^324 C()NE'S FE 8-4842,ELECTRI<: " S t o VE, REFRIG SELL OR TRADE-LAKE FRONT y?'" year around home, lO r ' Pontiac or Fisher Body. Holly. Call 692 Sols Ciothing 64, ! FUR COAT, BLACK HUDSON SEAL,] 5 . 825. jy Fenton orlFRIGibAIRE Sweet's Radio A Appliance Inc. - 422 W. Huron 334-5 , I WHITE ESTATE GAS RANC ' l I good condition. 334-4855. icj WYMAN'S ° USED BARGAIN STORE E I Armle* t * *'‘"'* °"'$I9 n-j 34" Electr?** rangT 833 I Electric clothes d lo*‘^w«he?* Credit* Is^G EASY TERMS Antiquei ANTIQUES FRA Royal Bayreath 2156. VERY BEAUT :i Burmeister's we Deliver EM 3-4171 ,, Open 6 days a week-8 a.m, to I p.m. ; Sundays, lO to 3_ '' medicine'CABINETS, LARGE 20*' mirror, slightly marred, $3.95; large selecHon of cabinets with I or without lights, sliding doors. Terrific buys. Michigan Fluores-J cent. 393 Orchard Lake - 36. "iGAS C payments, $19 at Bloch Bro «r n« <:aM Chuck i highway 30 minutes irs, FE 4-4503-OR | pontiac. Includes a 4-room h ( STOVE, FE " ELECTRIC ■1545 A Wvman's Cornar Airport and Hatchary Rds., FE 2-2150, ®P?? * to 3 Mon.-Sat. OR 4-0118. ' oil FURN., 84:oW Btu, new'8135 AC A Opdyke hardware____ FE 8-8484 "^■''plumbing - pumps - air - Conditioning Sales end Service .MIRROR, Rebuilt pumps guar. 693-6567 _ ipi Ombing'barga'ins, F R E E , r.o4K.n,l H*"®'''®..‘ YKnot Holly. ME 7-5I38. Open Hi-Fi, TV t Radios 31" USED TV; $33,( Ihreaded SAVE PLUMBING < JOHNSON T . 45 E. Walton, n INCHUSED 1 PAUL JONES realty______f6 4J5SO A'Nick littlb house on CRAN btrry Laka, M53. Beautiful mi. 8I4.5M. Phooa FE 5-8412 alter 4 beautiful hLoH LO'T~At CEDAR 6v iaWNlR, 3-bToroom lake trqnt, all bullt-ln GB kitchan, two natural flrtplacas, jecreatlon room. MY 1-3*44. Upper Long Lake BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOLS Paved, many trees, accesi to th( lake. Close to 30 attractive nev HOUSEMAN-SPITZLEY ED IN PRIME AREAS. ( lege. 71 choice bCK DIRT. TOP SOIL, fill sand, road gravel, buiWars suppltaa. FE 34130.________________ MONTH FOR . OR 883 I FE 5-5007 AFTER 5 P.M. E L vVnATOR refrigerator, electric sewing machine, Kirby sweeper and all aHachmenls, large cabinet base, ether misc. items. 482-4336. LIGHT BLUE SOFA, STUDIO ______ot Free Perking „ —L--7 - couen, ivvacoaeiecTnc rpesTer, 3Plfce DUNCAN PHYFE DINING tag wringer washer, gray For mem suite. 3xl3 rug with he]l dinette set. 4 yelkiw chairs. Dick Mimeograph. I Rex-o-graph duplicator, 8731573. 1 9'x13' LINOLBUM RUGS'I3!3S BACH Plastic Wall file Ic aa Celling tr jSAG Tile I BALANCE WE R 8 COMPLETE i 818.95. Michigan Fluoresetnt. 333 Orchard Ijke - 37. 5TBEL BUILDINlii, rxr UTILI-ty house 8tS».30 9«OE, OOZING. EXCAVAT landscaping, trucking and ng, aaptlc tank installatinn. Bud Ballard^R 31773! BLACK, DIRT, SAND AND ORAVBL FE 3)7*1 or 833I88S. BLACK DIRT. GRAVEL AND SAND. I ennditioo, 333; *■**”■-1?” ' Sir hSiM « ... . _ _____30 HAND-HUED barn timbers,] TAIOriTT IIIUDCO FE 3 3404 or FE 1.00 per teol. Call OA 33778 after lALBUI I LUMatK choice black DIRf," 8 YARDS fee Sit del. FE 38MI_____ GOOBHiCH CLAY LOAM TOP- . JAHEIMS. FI I______ TkC PEKINGESE PUPPliS, ALL coleri, FE 3*450. AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPlfeS. STUb service. lAAATODD-S, 333713*. XC E N G L I $ H SPRINGER. 3 years old, tamale, ree*. 8BS-433*. AKC REGISTERED FEMALE, NO berk, Basanll pugpla*, AKC RIG-Isterad Weely proven female, AKC rylijered proven Basanll female. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, ITUO dogs. ESTELHEIMS. Ft HIB*. ,kC NORWEGIAN iLKH6ul8b ^s. Champion sirtd, 8300. 874 Akc~bACHSHUNO"T>UPPll$7~a3- 748J. AKC POODLE PUPS, MiTrTtdv. block.JW up. 33I-II31. AKC WHITE AAALt TOY AND MIN-laturo poodle pups. Vary good with children. Call mornings FE 5-0535 AKC MALf" TOY P066lKS. I brown, I black, mull soil. Call after 8 pjn. OL t-3750.____ AKC BLACK AND TAN DACH-shund, Vy mlnlaturt and small standard, 4 yaart oM, would make lino brood s. Holly 'e also hi *577 Dixie Hwy._ FOR RENT: 2 Wolverine Hhtt. ca '*5 GMC pickups. tlOO “sCOTT RENTAL SERVICE It* w FE * KENSKILL "The Greatest Name In Quality Travel Trailers" 16' 17' 19'/2' and 23' KENSKILL All these models on dltpley FRANKLIN Truck Campers lOW'xTVi' sWth hot water heater, —. -------y selt-conteinedi • CREE 13'/i', 15Vi', 17' and 20' Travel Trailers All Models on Display FRANKLIN Truck Campers lOVteTW With hot y---- Holly Travel Coach I Holly Rd., Hally ME *4771 -Oeen Dally and f------ INTRODUCING First time In this area YUKON DELTA Freeh M BEE Kury ntw comfort TRAVEL FOR LESt JACOBSON TRAILER SALES B RENTALS 5*90 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-S911_______ PLAYMATE'S BUILT RIGHT STYLED RIGHT PRICED RIGHT JOHNSON'S 517 East Walton at Joslyn - .... - F E Af" , TRUCK CAMPERS FROM WS Travel trailers from St95 plate, 11,291 Perry at W TRAILER, 19*3 APACHE EAGLE. » hitch. 5117 [ ;spens.... . ____. OR 3-134*.____________ WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS ' sleepers. New and used *395 Also rentals. Jacks, Intarcoms, _____ - lalns (on Leon Like) iWeedwerd et t. Blvd. HARLEY-DAVIDSON 194B 7* F.L. SUZUKI OMEGA and WHITE BIG BAD BULTACO LIL' INDIAN MINI BIKES CUSTOM COLOR _____23* W-. MONTCAU^ Bicyclts 9( USED piKES-SPEED SAVILLE Boots-Acwsoriei I' ALUMINUM PRAM, LI Cheep. FE 14377. 12-FOOT FIBERGLAS SAILBOAT with custom tare and trailer. E> condition. S*00. QL 1-303*. 14-FOOT STARCRAFT ALUMINUM 4' DUNPHY molded PLYWOOD, 2S-H.P.. Johnson, electric starter. 14-FOOT WAOEMAKER, RUNNING lights, spotlight, 3S H.P. Evinrude elec., treller, S475. OR 34493. 15' WOLVERINE, 40-HORSd MER-cury elec., trailer, .axtres. FE 4*190.________________ 1* HORSE POWER SdOTT ATWA- 1*' THOMPSON, 40 HORSE EVIN-rude. tilt treller, exc. -UL 2-4027. 14-FOOT sE^RAY, 75 EVIN-$1550.' ««2-*01*! CONDITION, 1*50. 9' HURRICANE SAILBOAT, DAC-ron sells; treller; motor. $950. ^FT. 19*3 OWENS CABIN CRUISER hours, *4100, Includes su age. 3354BB9. engine. *1475. FE 5-91**. 9*4 15' FIBERGLAS. 75 EVINRUDE — tllMraller, best oftec received " ■ ' 29. must sell. 33*3l«0. 19*5 SEA RAY 100, DELUXE, TOP 90 H.P. Evbirude. Alloy trailer. 1250 Cherrylawn after * p.m. FE STEEL tRUISER, 2B-FOOT, I TONY'S MARINE JOHNSON MOTORS 29 yeirs repair exparlenca. Open to I. 2*95 Orchard Lake Road. e Orion, 405 W. flarkston Rd., MY 3-1*00. Mercury Outboards, Shell L a k beats. Alloy trailers. BEAT tHE HEAT BUY NOW - UP TO 30'». OFF ON BOATS NOW IN STOCK Pontiac's Only Mercury MERCRUISER DEALER FOX SNOWMOBILES NIMROD CAMP TRAILERS Marine and Sporting Goods CRUISE OUT INC. 43 E. Walton FE 9-4402 DaMy 94___ BEST BOATS Starcraft — Thompson — Johnson BEST MOTORS Johnsons givt 2-ytar warranty BEV SERVICE Double AA Engine Repair Rating BEST WATER SKI SHOP PINTER'S 1370 Opdyke 9 to 9, Sat. to_4 (I-7S at Oakland University Exlt)_ BOATS - BOATS canoes and pontoon boats. Over 30 different models to choose from. (3pen daily 9 a.m. ‘‘ " Century SALES AND SERVICE 1945 models on display. Lei selection of used boats. Inboar outboards. CASS LAKE MARINE Cass-Ellzabath Rd. M2-0051 _______OpwJI D^y* chrLs craft OWENS arge Selection ot Used Boats MAZUREK MARINE SALES 97 TIZZY HARD TO FIND. BUT EASY TO deal with" RInkar, Stoury, kaa boats, Kayot pontoons. rudo motor*. Pamoo traitors.---------- MU9 to W. Highland. Rjgtrt on Hickory RWo* Road to Dwnedt Road,toft and fellow s^ lOHNSOhTCRjYBOAlD /MOTORS oats Canoat Traitor Everything tor the boat OWENS MMIINE SUPPLY Must LiquidotB Stock of Alt Boats, Motors and Trailers to Make Room for Our New Building Lone Star-Glasstron MEG Boats-Canoes-Pontoons Cliff Dreyer's Gun ond Sports Center IS2I0 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 Open Dally and Sunday B I G FIBERGLAS fcUN-I, lapstraka, 45 alKtrlc — liar, banal ixtlngulshe s, S9f. Tral Aluminum boats, S9f. Traitors, *105. BUCHANAN'S Highland Rd.________3*3-2301 WYMAN 13' RUNABOUT, A Airplanes 99 1957 ERCOUPE, 415-C, O-S/WOH, )w Fournay glass, naw gabric ings, all new Intarier, outstand-ig paint design, *2,750. OL 14447. New and Used Tracks 103 New and Usad Cnrs____________106 tor' We Bet You Can't Beat corvaiir Moor.'*51-011*.__ Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth's Price on a New or Used Car FE 2-9150 Wanted Cnrs-Trucks 101 California Buyers ' r sharp cars. Call . . . M & M MOTOR SALES old You Knifw? VILLAGE RAMBLER III tor Appraisal. Aute-Mnrine Insurance 104 AUTO INSURANCE TERMS AVAILABLE STOP IN TODAY Anderson & Associates FE 4-3535 1044 Joslyn MANSFIELD AUTO SALES I buying sharp, lata . NOWr See us todayl 1104 Baldwin. Avc. FE 5-5900 AVERILL'S gat the ba*r AVERILL'S « 2-9I7S 2020 Dhde_FE MKt HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR SHARP CARS COAST-TO-COAST MARKET Gale McAnnally's NATIONWIDE AUTO SALES 1304 Bj^ln____ specialTrices" Paid for 1959-19*3 cars VAN'S AUTO SALES 4540 Dixie Hwy.______^OR 3-1355 GLENN'S trucks. Economy Can. 2335 Dixie. . WE NEED CARS! TOP DOLLAR FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS Motthews-Horgreaves *31 OAKLAND AVENUE FE 4-4547_________ WE NEED Averill Auto Sales 2020 Dixie Highwoy Junk Cnrs-Trucki 101-A 1-2 AND 10 JUNK CARS — TRUCKS Free low.^R 3-293S. ALWAYS BUYING Uied Auto-Track Parts 102 1957 CHEVY 3-SPEED, AFB CAR-buretor, Dunttov Cam. Solids. THIS CAR RUNS. *734*13. CHEVY - FORD - COMET - FALCON *-cyl., toctorv rebuilt motors. *99 can li|^ll._Tormi. Other ---------- PORCHE ROLLER BEARING, 21,( running, many other parts. . mounted In VW. S400. MY 3-1*52. USED AUTO PARTS, OF '57 FORD New ond Used Tracks 103 hoe, g^ condition, 13,000. 5-5*21, ask for Stan._______________ 95l FORD ',^-TON PfCKUP. cyl. Sell or swap for equal va 1940 FORD DUMP. F400. 19*0 FORD tandem dump F-MO. Good " tkm. EMJ^73._________ 19*1 FORD F-750 TRACTOR, elr brakes, 332 Cu. - - reedy S2095. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. ... Vk-TON PICKUP, *97$ Opdyke Hardwaro______/L.L _ 1943 ECONOLINE PICKUP-SHOW truck, 60 miles, new ----" loaded. Must see to be __ $1,395. JEROME-FERGUSON . Rochester FORD Dealer, OL 1-9711. IMS' JEEP Vj-TON PICKUP. 14* W. Beverly or 334-4929.______ 19iM FORD PICKUP, WITH I FOOT box. Caper build-w and Is yours for only S149S. JEROME FERGUSON Inc. Rochtstor FORD Oaotor. OL I *711 COMPLETE LINE OF OORSETTS-Doys — Mariner ond Pann Yans Plate Boats — Pantoon boats -Aluminum and FIbargtos canoes. num water cycles. . and motors. Many e plate usad outfits at-- --- ond troltors. GUARANTEED ond pricid right at only 10 dmvn. Wa^gontr-'---- PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixia Hsvy.,' Drayton Plains (On Loon Lake) Monday "CWr^CTTiAFf ced from SL095. Saa and t M quality boats at OAKLAND MARINE ;. Saginaw FE S Dally 'til S, Sun. 'til I p m. 1965 GMC $1810 —Priesa Are Born Here— —And Raised Etoawticra— 1965 FORD '/i-Ton Pickup vllh the *-cyl. ISO h.p. engine, signals, washers, haator, dafrostars. 5-775x15, 4 ply Hrts. Serviead and 2 year warrantyl Only — $1,795 Plus Taxes and LIcensa John McAuliffe FORD 30 O^andjkyi_____P* >4101 ■GUC By Katjt Onuin New md UmU C«n I9SI CHEVY STATION WAGON, *»5 FE 4BS7*, 99B Berwick aftof S:« ----------------T, V4 EN6II 7'2S r had to put safety belts in his car. He doesn’t have any doors!” Repossession AUTO-RITE BUY AETNA casualty dam high quality, auto Intur-;e. at rates that save 20% TO 40% NO DUES OR FEES . US FOR NO OBLIGATION DETAILS BRUMMETT AGENCY Miracle Mila____ FE 4-05*9 Fersign Cars 105 1957 JAGUAR XK 140. MUST SELL. _______*7341175 ^r S^p.m.__ 1940 VAUXALL, G(X>D CONDITION, LOW MILEAGE, HO MONET DOWN, ASSUME CAR PAYMENTS OF S32.17 PER MONTH. village rambler, **« S. WOODWARD AVE„ BIRMINGHAM, Ml *-3900. 944 VW 2-OOOR, RADIO, HEATER, whitewalls, solid blue finish. S1.395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-2735. _ 9*4 TRIUMPH SPIT FIRE ,R E D convertible. In excellent condition. 332 sm after «. 944 VW, RADIO, HEATER, WHITE walls. 11,400 or bast after. Must _sell. 332-jM._ ______ 944 VW SUNRCibF, RADIO-heater, low mileage, *1,595. OL 141*16. ______ LOOK 19*3 Buick LeSabre 2-door, straight stick transmission, radio, heatr-lust likt now. $1495 full prk S5 down. CREDIT NO PROBLEl WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1*40 W. Wide Track intorlor, UkRVEL money down, *3.10 par weak. Call Mr. Brown. __ ESTATE STORAGE 109 S. East Blvd. 333-71*1 1959 CHlVROdT IMPALA $4*7 CREDIT Auto sales 125 Oakland al Wide Track *FE 2-9214 1959 CHEVY, A-1 SHAPE, 1 OWNER. Tel-Huron Auto 3152 W. Huron_______FE_J-9*n ■ 19M CHEVROLET ImpalB 24oor hardtop with -*■- transmission, this BUICK LeSABRE, 2 - DOOR ;ner Buick, 554 5. ^»Si*. YOU CAN SAVE HERE 1964 BUICK Ivlera. NEW CAR WARRANTY -Has power brakes and power stoerliig, eutomallc transmission. 7 Hempstead, Pontiac. Volkswagen Center Autobahn Motors, Inc. AUTHORIZED VW DEALER Vi mile north of Miracle Mile 17*5 S. Telegraph__ F£ *-4531 New and Used Cars 106 : 4-OOOR ELECTRA It power, ice cir wi ew Interior, *W5. ^ BILL SMITH-r USED CARS 462 N. Perry St. FE 4-4241 1959 BUltK HARDTOP *41 CREDIT AUTO SALES 12$ Oakland at Wida Track FE 2-9214 I ms un« Af LLOYD'S Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 rylhlng p •Ivan In t «w. Must sail as I have 2 ars. This car can be seen t 333* Gton Iris Drive, olf lensteln Road 2 miles west t Commerce, after * p.m REPOSSESSION - I**S BUICK hardtop, only SI1J7 waakly, no -------------•" brtng car to- 1963 Buick T stoerlniB, brakes. $1595 Patterson Chrysler-Plymouth Valiant—Imperial INI N. Main Siraal ROCHESTER OL 1-«SSS tires, S14* or your old car Payments ot *20.95 per weel Turner Ford 4*4 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml A75N JMF John McAulifto Ford 1964 BUICK Special Coupe. V-l engine, auton radio, heater, honey tan f. One owner, kept In storage < dition. One ot the sharpest ( In town. S9S down, balance $1897 John McAulifft Ford ATTENTION!! Aid like e good used car. ture spot delivery. FE 3-7863 ros CA week. Spqf delivery, cell Mr FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 WJV\ontcalm_ 940'“"chevy HARDTOP, ALI black, 34* trIpower, stick dsm aged rear fender, best offer. Ml 31205. 1960 Chevy Bel Air 2-door with economical I rnd*|u«Jt''‘’*you**''’lIa'vr'^V looking for. Moving Sale Special. $497 Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Just ’/4 mile north of Coss Ave ) Spartan Dodge 0 CHEVY, WftTfE, REAL NICE, 19*2 CHEVROLB^T ^r'S?*q3’a‘?1:tY''3I toot can be yours only 11*9*. BIRMINGHAM Chrystor-Plymouto *14 S. Woodward________ 19*2 MONZA JIM) mltos. tl,lS*. ow™, tfiamt' '|1,I*5. JenofAi; FERGUSON Inc,. Rochastor FORO Dealer, OL ■ 1962 CHEVY 2-Door with *1140. 1*S CADILLAC COUPE OeVILLE, 47,000 actual miles, SI95. A I. S Aulo^^M, R^xhat^,JU314J4. 1957 CADILLAC FLEETWCtOD, lull power, exc. condition, after *, Pontiac's Best Buys 5UPERI0*R* RAMBLER FE 5-9421 . CADILLAC, PONTIAC, RAMBLERS FORD and CHEVY 550 Oakland Ave. You Con't Buy BeHer :aoillac, 4-OOOR, ermine 9*1 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE -All power, bucket seats, new tires. Pertact. raka over piyments. 33»- Cadillacs 1962s, '63s, and '64s. All body styles, all colors, most with full power ond several with air conditioning. As low as $299 down, 36-month financing. WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC Birmingham Ml 4-1931 k top, a real nica car. LUCKY AUTO . Woodward, 447 S4N. 1940 CHEvY coupe. 1**3 CHEVY IMPALA, 2-DOOR hardtop, stick *, radio, hootor, ««-cellent condition, tl,*N. EM 3-317*. 1963 Chevy whiteweMsa vinyl .... CREDIT NO __________ WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1940‘W. Wide Track FE 4-2214 or_________FJ y*54 1**0 CHEVY « BEL AIR 2-DOOR, 1 owner, very nice. FE >7542. H. Rlooms. LLOYD'S 1962 CHEVY ■al air .waaan. Power steering c transmission Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 harmonizing intarior. An ai buy at $2rlfs. BIRMINGHAM Chrystor-Ptymouth 19*5 CHRYSLER CONVERTIBLE, KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Sotos and Sarvica Oxford QA H400 CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH VALIANT - RAMBLER and JEEPS Sat All 5 In On* Showroom BILL SPENCE 4*73 DIxto Hwy, CLAJ^KSTON____MA S-2435 1951 ttoSOTO,"2-DOdR“’“HA’RbT6P, clean, full power. Asking $475. DODGE DART NO. door, redio, auto., Owner, 334-1924. handle and arrange all financing. Cell Mr. Dan. FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM T^fHlTNDERBIRO, PdIWER, *497 CREDIT AUTO SALES 121 Oakland at WIda Track FE 2-9214 Repossession 1959 T-bIrd. 2-door hardtop, no money di MA S-7it 1959 FORD GALAXIE WITH STICK thift, radio and heator, extra iharp, full prict only $397. NORTHwdOD AUTO SALE* FE B-9239 1959 FORO 2-DOOR, FIRST S2N tOkH. *52-18*0._____ T95^F0R6^ V-*> AUTOMATitrF006 1W T'BIRO HARDTOP WITHUpOW-ER BRAKES AND POWER STEERING, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITE-.... TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO 19*6 T^BIRD HARDTOpT POWER 30,000 miles, 11,395. JEROME-FERGUSON Inc. Rochester FORD Deeler, OL 1-*7t1.____ SOO^FORTTaLL red CONVERT!. « FORO GALAXIE, I^ADIO A . se ^ angina, autORWuv axcalltnt condition* 1960 Fard Felrlane 2-door with VI eulomatlq radio, hoator, oxcollont 1st or 2nd $297 Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. Spartan Dodge _____ whItawaMsr axtra claan. Only S49$. Easy farms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., li(U S. WOODWARD AVE.e BIRMINO- MI_4-2733.___* 960 FORD vs" GALAXlir IMS — Opdyka Hardwara FE 8 66M 1960 FORD SUNLINER GALAXY 2- ESTATE STORAGE 109 S. East BlvB, 33>7I*I 19*0 FALCON WITH 4-CYLINDER tnginc and. stick shift transmission, radio,’heater, l-owner, full price *397. NORTHWDOD AUTO SALES FE a-923* 19*0 FORO COUNTRY SQUIRE 9-PASSENGER STATION WAGON — HAS AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, POWER BRAKES, POWER STEERING, RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of S24.4S per month. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. ____ cholaf* tod'ay. CALL MR. DAN WE FINANCE FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 WEST MONTCALM look lo«d«ni,49s'*fulf prlca,^ down CREDIT NO PROBLEM, WE FINANCE BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wida Track HILLTOP AUtO SALES, INC. WHERE YOU CAN • BUY WITH NO MONEY DOWN too PER CENT GUARANTEE 19*4 Buick Ji^s wABon, Ilk* naw, 19*4 Bukk Elactra 22S, toUd whito finish. 19*2 Chavy Bel Air wagon, V-*. auto., deubto power, real sharp. 19*3 Chavy Impala 24fr. hardtop. 19*4 Impala hardtop, 3B0 angina, 4 19*4 Ms Ojri^lc It 2-dr. hardtop, 19*4 Pontiac Catalina cenvarflblt, rad with whito tap, aharp. 962 OAKLAND FE 8-9291 YOU ' down. Paymonts of $12.4* BIRMINGHAM l"9*l FORD, y-B, RADIO, HEATER, WM^^shlft, axe. canditlon, IS2S. 19*2 FORD STATION WAOON VI, automatic, power staaring, nei-whltawalls, 51,095. UL 2-*ia, 19*2 FORD STATION WAOON WITH POWER BRAKES AND POWER steering, automatic transmission, RADIO AND HEATER. WHITEWALL TIRES. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY 0(^N. Paymanta of S29.9S per monto. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, *...... FALCON 4-DOOR, MYL. ...ck, radio, ctoan, only 1791 JER-OME-FERGUSON Inc. Rodiat-tor FORD Daator, OL 1-9711. Repossession 19*2 T-BIRD Landou Hardtop, full power. No Manay Down, Call Mr. Johnson, at MA M*04. DaalK. • 4f - < THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 28. 1965 D~9 Cwi 106 1962 FAICON !!!•• h .tnWnlght bhM. Hwt h ttw Birfict car wlm rtdio ~1 hMNr, wtomatlc trammlt-■ ------------. tlTM FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 312 W4Montcolm YOU CAN SAVt HERE 1963 FORD ConvcrtlMe with powar brtkai ind Rowar ataaring, automatic trant-miulon, radio and haatar, whlta-.wall tirai, IM or vour old car down. Paymanti of $13.95 par waak. Turner Ford At* S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM ______Ml 4-750C REPOSSESSION - 1963 PORD CON-vortibla, only S11.S7 waakly. No IMF John McAullffa Ford 1963 FORD Wagon Country Squira. V-S angina, auW matic tranamiulon, power iteer-Ing. A raal iharp car for your vacation. $9S down, balance of $1687 John AAcAullffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. ________ Repossession 1963 Fgrd XL 3Htoor hardtop, no money down. Call Mr. Johnson at MA M604 Oealer_ _ _ I9tt TsPIRO HARDTOP" WITH 4 way power, automatic transmls-flon and lots of other extras. A Immaculate "TOP QUALITV ^criminating person. D^'T MISS THIS ONE I Full price only Repossession 1963 FORD FAIRLANE 500 2ja up I I9» Chrysler .... 177 I960 and 1963 Pontlacs 1695 up Plenty of others. A few trucks ECONOMY CARS, 2335 Dixie H\^. COME IN AND TEST DRIVE THE "HOT" 4-4-3 lEROME OLDS-CADILLAC 310 S. Saginaw St. FE S703I 1959 OLDSMOBILE WITH POWER ________FE $-9339___________ 6lDS 9$, AIR-CONTIONED, I powar. $995. FInkle's Auto LLOYD'S $37 Down $5.50 Weekly Lloyd Motors 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 New md Ihed Cert 104 MARMADUKE Repossession ..jtton wagon. Power steering l brakes, radio. Meal family ca Only one Ilka this, only ll,5$$. A: for Pata, Fischer Buick, 554 I CAN FINANCE YOU I you are 21 years of age or oWar, and hava 6 months on the lob Call Mr. Dan. Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM FE 84071 l$6l OLDS STARFIRE CONVERTI-M. Loaded. Evarythtng but air. By original owner. Lika new con-dltlen. Bast otter. OR 34M17 or 67JMS93. Repossession I. Fully t I $3795. 9 1951 PACKARD PAThlClAN, A-door todan, alr-conditlonad, full powar, seat-belts, radio and heater. Original paint Good tires. Milford, 684-4335. _ I960 PLYMOUTH, AUTOAAATIC $397 CREDIT AUTO SALES 125 Oakland at Wide Track FE 2-9214 dowp. 7-W55. 1962 PLYMOUTH FURY CONVERTI- steerlng and brakes jwall tires and other 1 attractive Ught bttaa that performs and handles y nicely. Full price only $1,595. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler — Plymouth U/awwdsaa.^a* Ml 732U 1964 Plymouth 2-Door Hardtop with automatic transmission, white-walls, power steering, one owne Factory Warranty tor 25,000 mile ONLY $2095 Patterson Chrysler-Plymouth Valiant-Imperial loot N. Main Street ROCHESTER OL 1-0550_ PONTIAC WAGON Power, top rack, very clean. 332-4376. 1959 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. " FE 3-0833 before 5:30 p. By Anderson and Lecming “Listen! Either let me line it up myself or get your own clubs!’’ New sad Used Cars 104 STEERING, RADIO AND HEATER, AUTOAIUkTIC TRANSMISSION, WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Payments of $32.95 per month. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks, at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. Repossession 1961 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop. FE 2 2491 1963 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, spotless, $1795. 1963 LaMans Tam-past, $795, 25,000 miles, call 335- New and Uud Cars 104 white, black Interior 2 3638 or $53-176$.___________^ 1964 GRAND PRIX, SUNFIRE RED. powar brakaa, ****'''''^'2^1^''*'' POWER BRAKES 000 miles. V New awd Usad Cars 104 see us LAST Par A Great Deal **"alllartlnt^r KEEGO PONTIAC SALES A SERVICE 682-3400 1960 Rambler Sparkling rad Adoor sedan, with gas savrim 6 lots of power and full fad equipment. Moving Sale Special. $1997 1963 Ramblar CItasIc Adoor sta- PRoSlEM,HvE FINANi^E^BANK RATES. LUCKY AUTO k SN ADOGR. ACYL--M graan >ATTER-... 1164 $. BIRMINC- Autobahn Specials SiMrklIng Suneet red tl 1963 Comet. Harvard blue llnish, s^lasa condition ............... $ 195 1963 Mercury AAateer Adoor custom. Beautiful green finish, full power, V$ engine .......................$995 1962 Chevrolet convertible. BeeutHul Autumn goM finish. Just right tor summer driving FUNl Bxeellent^^^ k Skylerk Ml Me« I Additional Location 855 Dakland Ave. (Oudoor Showroom) 1 (Jusd.’A m)lo north ofCeu Ave.) | Spartan Dodge )963 PONTIAC Star 1963 PONTIAC 2-do 1963 PONTIAC Convertible $1,995 ;,1963 FORD Galexle "500" .. $1,595 [ 1962 PONTIAC Bonneville $1,795 ' 1962 PONTIAC Wagon, powar t1,79S 1963 RAMBLER 4-door, nica $1,055 i RUSS I JOHNSON Pontiac-Rambler M34 in Lake Orion MY 3-6266 1961 Pord Sunllnar convertible. Full poworl automatic, tract white Autobahn' Motors, Inc. 1765 S. Ttlagriph IT'S TIGER TIME AT THE PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Keep Your Eyes on This SPECIAL SAFARI The Hunt Is Dn for the Next 55 Days 1963 CATALINA 4-Door Sedan $1395 FULL PRICE 1964 BONNEVILLE Coupe .$2495 Power, of Course! 1964 2 plus 2 3-woy power, with black bucket ^eats. This one is almost new, $2595 65 Mt. Clemens AT WIDE TRACK FE 3-7954 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-OboR, excellent condition. $595. FE 3-1589. j 1959 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE $4971 CREDIT ‘ AUTO SALES I 125 Oakland at Wide Track FE 2-9214 d 111 0 n Bbnnevllle hardtop, wll guaranteed 32,6n Pn II matching morrokide interior. $1797 1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX. light blue with black cordova top/ all power Including stereophonic rear speaker and tinted gleu. Can arrange financing, $2,500. 1596 Sandringham Way, Birmingham — Off q^rtoi^Rd. 646-1040. 1965 TEMPEST CUSTOM" 4-SPEED, extras, S3,350. FE 4-1975.__ 1965 TEMPEST 4-DOOR, 6-CYLIN- mlleaga. FE 3-5000 aWer 5 p.m. HAUPT ^ PONTIAC CatAtind/ automatic, double p I960 PONTIAC. CLEAN. TRVpOWER SHELTON PDNTIAC-BUICK 855 Rochester Road _____ 651-991) I960 PONTIAC 2-DOOR HARDTOP. ____ FE 4-6996 I960 PONTIAC CATALINA "CON-verflble, auto., power steering and brakes, $875. 338-3636. 1960 PONTIAC Call 338 453$ NOW OPEN Additional Location 855 Oakland Ave. (Outdoor Showroom I (Just V. mile north of Cass Ave.) Spartan Dodge, me.' IF YOU ARE HAVING TROUBLE GETTING YOUR CREDIT RE-ESTABLISHED - NOW YOU CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE ALL YOU NEED IS A STEADY JOB. $5.00 DOWN PAYMENT AND A DESIRE TO HELP YOURSELF CALL MR. WHITE: FE 8-4088 mm mum ‘ Including credit 1963 PONTIAC 4-DOOR STARCHIEF. 1964 CATALINA ____________________ Power. 1 owner. Exc. $1995. FE mafic, powar steering, brakes, J-4402 or FEWTg. _ $$9.t0 down. Pr-------- -• 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA, 3-DOOR | Including hardtop, 319 automatic. $1,7(XI. 693- ' 4683. _________ ______________ I 1953 PONTIAC, $40. ____________FE 5-$002. ______ 1963 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, 16,-000 miles, power brakes-steering, JI950. FE 4-13^841 N. Perry. | 1963 Pontine Catalina, 2-door, hardtop, a u t o- floor, nice. I fer, whitewall I and ull price only $697. State Wide Auto Outlet 3400 Elisabeth Lake Road FE 8-7137 steering, brakes ____ _________ ... dio, heater, whitewalls. Raven black Interior. $2395. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1104 s. woodward, BIRMING- HAM. Ml 4-3735._______ ____________ 1963 GRAND PRIX, SHARP, ALL the e------- ■ ------ - “ * REPOSSESSION - 1961« PONTIAC convertible. Only $11.87 weekly. No money down. Will bring car to FE 4-5955._________ 1961 BONNEVILLE, 4-DOOR HARD-top, full power OLIVER BUICK SUMMER SUN BRINGS SUMMER FUN Double Checked Used Car YOU CAN SAVE HERE 1963 PONTIAC 3P with V8 engine, stick shift insmission, radio and heater, iltewall tires, $89 or your old r down. Payments of S13.88' Turner Ford 464 S.WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM____ Ml 4-7500 REPOSSESSION - 1963 PONTIAC hardty, only $11.87 weekly, no 1963 TONTIAC 2-DOOR CATALINA, 4-speed floor shift, radio, heater, whitewalls, blue, Ventura trim, 1.--------- *•,700. FE 4-2309. ”?Llof°'tSater,“'’" 960 FORD Filrlane 4-door sedan, radio, heeler, standard transmls-tion, new tires, runs beautiful $695 963 BUICK LeSebra 3-door hardtop, radio, heater, power steering, brakas beige with black vinyl too, rMdy tor that vacation I $2,095 964 BUICK Electro 325 4-door hard- 63 BUICK 335 4-door hardtop, white finish, power steering, brakes, alr-condltloningl electric windows, e alMl at I2.S95 OLIVER BUICK Homer High! NTIAC converllble, power ____ng, brakes, automatic, $85.80 down, payments of only $71.18 month including credit Hie. All the Above Prices Include Taxes and Transfers On N. Mein Street CLARKSTON 5-5566 1945 PONTIAC CATALINA, 3-DOOR, power steering and bra^kM. 682-1644. 1965 GTO CONVERTIBLE, MAG wheels, ALL little goodies. 638-2707. Call alter 6.___ _____________ 1965 CATALINA 2-DOOR HARDTOP. ----------3, vinyl top, double pow- 1965 BONNEVILLE, conditioned, newer sti 6$3-5075. 1964 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF, 4 door sedan. Power brakes, steer-Ing. Light green, $2350. FE 3-1589. Repossession 164 PONTIAC Catalina HardfoP. Nc money down. Call Mr. Johnson at _MA S:J^_..P*^er^^_ Repossessed Cars RELEASED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE '60 FALCON $297 $3.50 wk '59 PONTIAC $397 $4.45 wk '60 RAMBLER $297 $3.50 wk '60 FORD $197 $2.25 wk '51 OLDS $197 $2.35 wk '60 MERCURY $247 $3.00 wk '59 FORD $m $2.35 wk '56 CADILLAC $247 $3.00 wk '40 CHEVY $497 $5.85 wk '58 EOSEL $397 $3.50 wk '59 PONTIAC $397 $3.50 wk '50 PONTIAC $297 $3.50 wk '40 PONTIAC $497 $5.85 wk '60 OLDS $497 $5.85 wk '58 BUICK $187 $2.25 wk ■51 CHEVY $197 $3.35 wk '40 CHEVY $787 $9.45 wk '59 PONTIAC $397 $4.65 wk INSTANT CREDIT AND DELIVERY 960 APPLICATIONS TURNED DOWN CARS STORED AT 312 W. Montcalm AT OAKLAND Capitol Auto FE 84071 1962 RAMBLER STATION WAGON, automatic, radio and healer, A-l conmtlon, runs almost like new, no money down, S6.10 per week. Call Mr. Brown. ESTATE STORAGE 109 S. East Blvd._333-7161 Drastic discounts on new! 1965 Ramblers- We hove reached our quota and can really sell for less. Don't wait, get one of the best deals of the year * NOW at- ROSE RAMBLER 8145 Commerce Road Union Lake EM 3-4155 EM 3-4156 VACATION SPEQALS VAL-U-RATED USED CARS 100% Written Guarantee 1964 JEEP Wagoneer, 4-Wheel Drive. Yours for Only .....................................$1995 1963 OLDS Cutlass Coupe, V-8 Automatic, Power Steering, Brakes .........................$1895 1963 COMET Custom 4-Door, Automatic, Radio, Heater, Whitewalls ...................... $1395 1961 OLDS "98" 4-Door, Luxury Sedan. All Power. Sharp‘Birmingham Trade.....$1395 1964 OLDS "98" Custom Coupe, Foil Power, Sharp Birmingham Trade .................. $2795 1963 OLDS "98" Luxury Sedan, (3 to choose from) with full power $2395 1962 CHEVY 9-Passenger Wagon, V-8, Standard Transmission, Special ................... $1495 1964 OLDS "88" Hordtop (2) Power Steering, Brakes, 30-Day Unconditional Guarantee $2495 1963 OLDS 2-door hardtop “88", power steering, automatic, radio. (We have three) .. $1995 1962 OLDS "98" Hardtop, Full Power, Factory Air Conditioning ........................ $1895 1962 OLDS "98" Luxury sedan, power. A Vacation Special at ............................... $1695 ORIGINATOR OF 2-YEAR WARRANTY 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 -ABSOLUTELY- NO CREDIT PROBLEMS - SPOT DELIVERY 1959 PONTIAC WEEKLY PAYMENTS $5.14 $597 1959 CHEVY WEEKLY PAYMENTS $2.35 $297 1959 PONTIAC WEEKLY PAYMENTS $5 14 $597 1959 BUICK WEEKLY PAYMENTS $4:72 1960 RAMBLER WEEKLY PAYMENTS S3.14 1959 PONTIAC WAGON WEEKLY PAYMENTS S3.I4 $497 $397 $397 — WE HANDLE /(ND ARRANGE FINANCING — 60 5. Telegroph ACROSS FROM TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Mansfield Auto Sales FE 8^825 FE 5-5900 WE SPECIALIZE IN UTE MODEL 6.M. 1-OWNER USED CARSI 1844 CaBHIac Coupe. Poiaar, dark biua witti IIM $a$u OM exaeullva'i car, OM warranty. 1804 CadHIac CaiM. Pawar, whita with Mack fid^, lew mllaaga,' GM werranly. t$U ChavraM litipala ^Oeor Hardtop. V-8, automatic rad with rad tatarlor, a raal craam putt. IMl Cadillac Coupa. Powar, ilj^jblw, lady'i car, low mlla- IH1 Chavroitt BalAlr. Adoor, V-8. automatic powar ttaaring. )$4d Pord Sunllnar 3-Door Hardtop. V-8, automatic, 1-ewnar. 1*65 Pontiac Catalina ^Daor itaarl^ Mlae, GM wi 1864 Grand Prix ^Door Hardtop. Rad wllti whita Intartar, pawar ttaaring and brakas, d ipaad. A Tlgar, prkad right. 1*64 Bonnavllla AOoor Hardtop. Powar, sharp, alamo balga, ona- 1*64 Ppntloc Star Chlat. Pow sunfira rad, vary claan. ( warranty. 1*64 Pontiac Catalina vtnh ^Door Hardtop, /terlmba r 1*63 Pontiac Catalina ADoar 1*63 OMs "*t" ADoar Hardtop. tllvar-Wua, powar, lust IBM now, pricad right. 1*63 C6dlllac ADoor Hardtapk Pewtr, now IItm. BtaemfMd Hills car, ihorp. 1*63 Grand Prix. Powar. nao-tuma blua, magnesium whsalc sharp, sharp, Marp. 1*62 Pontiac Catalina ADaor Hardtop. Alamo balga, vary 1*60 Pontiac Catalina VanlurB ADoor Hardtop. Powar, shorih I Chavralot Bel Air ADaar. war, A^tader, white witk a 'niarlor, good ga« mllaaga. >1 Cha*rolal Impale 2-Ooor 1*63 Olds "$r' ^Doer Hardtop STATION WAGONS 1*60 Chavrolat Parkwood, A Passangar. V-S, automatic bkw with white top. 1*64 Pontiac Safari APastangar. Powar, rad with rad tatarlor. Sharp, OM warranty. 1*64 Pontiac Catalina APastam 1*63 Pontiac Catalina APoaaan-gar. Power, white with rad tatarlor, low mileage sharp 1*62 Ford Country Squiro P Passangar. Powtr, V-C atdp-mafic dark blua, almost Ilka 1*62 F c Ttmpsst A ird shift, rsal matic, light 1*62 Ttmpssl good, priced rtghl. IMI Ford Falcon APaiiangar. 6, stick, white with rad talarier. Raal clean. 1*60 Pontiac Catalina APataan-gar. Powar, now car trade Runs good. 1*5* Pontiac Bonntvilla APaw-sangor. Powar, rose mist with leather Inlarlor. Lots of axiraa. CONVERTIBLES mi ^ds Power, rad 1*64 Pontiac Catalina. Power, powder blua with leather tat*-rior, dean, OM warranty. t*63 Pontiac Bomavtlla. Powar, rIor, sharp, GM vmrranty. 1*61 Pontiac Bonnavllla. Powar, rad with whit* top, rad Intarter, vtry nko. 1*61 Olds "88". Powar, rad with white top, vtry sharp, lets of extras. 1*40 OWs "»8". Cantry boM COMPACTS 1*62 Corvair 2-Door. tartar, vary nic*. ranty, 1*64 Plymouth Valiant POeor Hardtopi Power, bucket seats, automatic, sharp, warranty, rad with Mack Interior. 1*62 Bukk Sptclal Convertibta. V4, automatic, powar, Mua artlll white top, sharp. 1*62 Corvair. Automatic Mua, Monza, 1-owntr, vary nIca. 1*62 Chevy II, A automatic A door, Mua, lust Ilka new. 1*62 Mercury Comet l-Door. A 1*61 Pontiac Tengwfl ADoor. Standard shift, lots at (Ha wMfa with rad Inlartar. 1*61 Olds F-tS ADoer. V-B, ante n^l^ raaAmist taethor Mansfield Auto Sales 1104 BALDWIN FE 5-5900 FE 8-8825 ^ / ofthtH KSTofthe YEAR!’’ -N.Y. HiRALO TRtlUNt TkmThMUrChUUr HU ofThm Y*arl KIM STANLEY I AND RICHARD Wtemborough "SEAMCE OU^ WET /rTERWOOM «l l!l0-l:20 Btar”-Color Cartoon / Writer Falls to Death NEW YORK (AP) - AJlen Jansen, W, a correspondent for Berlingske Tidende, a newspaper in Copenhagen, plunged to THE PONfiAC PRl his death Taeaday from an apartment house. Jensen, one of the most widely known forei^i correspondents in the UniM States, was bom in Denmark but came to this country in 1S24. Need Work? iTse Pontiac Press Classified Ads. Low in costi Fast in Action. Phone 332-8181. Thursdoy Speciol! BUFFET 11:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. Moderalcly Priced PARTIES-BAMQUETS ln/hnwsLn Privata Dining Raom SMtInfl Up T* 70 PeiMM I ClQStP MONDAYS | 1650 North Parry At Pontiac Road FE 5-9941 BHI Will Help States in lmmunizin(^ Childrtn WASHINGTON (AP) - The government would help pay for immunizing young children against five diseases under legislation awaiting President Johnson’s signature. The House completed congressional action Tuesday on a bill providing grants up to |33 congresekmal action Tuesday on a bill providing grants up to |S3 million to the states over a three-year period for immunization against polio, diphtheria, whooping coi^, tetanus and measles. Most of the shots would be administered to preschool children. AHOTIER FUST FOR OUR BOWIiR FRIENDS From Now to September 1st PER LINE Ml THE TIME THE NOW APPEARING NIGHTLY The 300 Lotmge' Presents AO) GO/ Hmjb Complete With GO-GO GIRLG } Dance to the AAusic of THE WHISKEY A-GO-GO REVUES starting MON., July 26 andl Continuing EVERY NITE 9*2 The Fabulous 199 S. Cats Lake Rd. 9S2-6399 MI ra c Ie Ig lifiSEil] ' { THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1965 D—11 BIQ SAVINGS! SWEEPS W H».w, aj4.»677 Comt up and sea ^ usall-atthe CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION AU&.2Q.SEPT.6 Where your dollar is worth more Saa Victor Borga Aug. 20 to 27. Bob Hopa Aug. 28 to Sapt. 4. • FREE Watar Show a FREE Air Show a Sciantific Mirada— tha Lasar Baatn a World Championahip High Diving a Tha living hiatory of tha Indian, a A mlla of Midway Hatr Bands, ass apactator aporta. watch tha raat of tha world go by. Maka a data now—tha C.N.E.—10 minutaa from downtown Toronto. Not opan Sunday. Far furtkar iaforaiatiin mita: , —Television Programs— Proflicims Wiikhad by •tatiens liftad in this column am subioct to chango without notico. Channala; 2-WJIK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, y-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 80-WKBD-Vv, 56-WTVi WEDNESDAY EVENING •:M (2) BaaebaU: Tigers va. Yankees (4) News, Weather, Sports (7) Movie: “The Jungle” (In progress) (50) People Are Funny (56) Television Journal 6:36 (7) News, Weather, Sports (9) Bat Masterson (50) Comedy Carnival (56) Invitation to Art 7:66 (4) Juvenile Court (7) Have Gun, Will Travel (9) Movief “Sea of Lost Ships” (1953) John Derek, Wanda Hendrix. (SO) Littie Rascals (56) Regional Report 7:86 (4) (Color) Virginian (7) Ozzie and Harriet (50) Lloyd Thaxton 8:66 (7) Patty Duke 8:30 (2) Beverly HillbilUes (7) Shin^lig (50) All-Star Golf (56)'What in the World 9:00 (2) Dick Van Dyke (4) Movie: “Key to the City” (1950) Clark Gable^ Frank Morgan. (9) 20/20 (56) Kyle Rote’s JVorld 9:30 (2) Our Private World (7) Burke’s Law Master (9) (Special) Music Master (50) Auto Classics 16:00 (2) Lucy-Desi Comedy (9) Mystery ’Theater 16:36 (7) ABC Scope 10:45 (50) Conseiration Special 11:60 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:15 (7) Nightlife 11:36 (2) Movie : “The Big Sky” (1952) Kirk Douglas, Elizabeth Threatt. (4) (Ck)ior) Tonight (9) Movie: “The Shadow” (Eng., 1936) Henry KeiP dall, Elizabeth Allen. 1:00 (^) Thin Man (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) Highway Patrol THURSDAY MORNING 6:10 (2) On the Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Operation Alphabet 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Furiews 6:50 (2) News, Editorial 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: “I Dood It” (1943) Red Skelton, Eleanor Powell 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Kiddy (5)mer 9:55 (4) News 10:00 (4) Truth or Consequences (9) Vacation Time 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) What’s This Song? (9) Space: The New Ocean 16:50 (7) News 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Ckincentration TV Features Report on the Bircbers By United Press International .REGIONAL REPORT, 7:00 p.m. (56) John Birch S(h ciety is subject of 90-nunute report. ABC SCOPE, 10:30 p.m. (7) “Western, European Style” ' peeks at current fad of European film-making. THURSDAY TODAY, 7:00 h.m. (4) New York Post sportswriter Maury Alim discusses history and histrionics of New York Mets. I (7) Girl Talk (9) Film Feature 11:30 (2) McCoys (4) Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Hawkeye AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love Of Life (4) CaU My Bluff (7) Donna Reed (9) Tugboat Annie 12:25 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) rUBet (7) Father Knows Best (9) Across Canada 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 1:00 (2) Scene 2 (4) News (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “Two Guys From Milwaukee” (1946) Dennis Morgan, Jack Car-son 1:16 (4) Eliot’s Almanac 1:15 (4) Topics for Today 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond 1:55 (4) News Pet Raccoon Alerts Family to Faulty Fan BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -A pet raccoon awakened his owners after a faulty electric fan motor filled their apartment with thick, choking smoke Tuesday. The raccoon, named Gingus, is owned by Mr. and Mrs. John Ahlfeldt. ★ * Mrs. . Ahlfeldt said Gingus aroused the family about 6 a.m. by banging a bedroom door against a bureau. She said she found the apartment filled with smoke, but was able to pull the plug on the fan and ventilate the apartment. Mrs. Ahlfeldt’s husband was at work. He is an animal keeper at the Baltimore Zoo. 2:66. (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Where the Action Is 2:36 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) A Time for Us 2:55 (7) News 3:66 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Long John Silver 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Forest Rangers 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “The Wasp Woman” (1959) Susan Cabot, Fred Eisley (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Swingin’Summertime 5:00 (4) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “Fire Maidens From Outer Space” (English 1958) Anthony Dbxter, Susan Shaw (50) Movie (56) Preparing for Reading 5:30 (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) What’s New 5:45 (9) BugsBuntiy 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Here’s Carol Duvall (50) Scores State Man Is Elected MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - John McCurry, general manager of the Michigan Manufacturers Association, has been elected vice chairman of the National Industrial Council State Associations Group. He will be installed at the council’s annual meeting in New York in November. Lansing Boy Drowns PERRY (AP) - Bruce Soul-liere, 9, of Lansing drowned in Moon Lake five miles southwest of here Tuesday. Witnesses said he dived off a dock into 18 feet of water and failed to return to the surface. ACROSS T-^Mtaterson 4----HoWdiy ^ < ^ 7 — James 12 Feminine appellation 13 Three (Roman) 14 Assumed name 15—Bill 17 Breezes 18 Lamb’s pen name 19 Require 21 (tuiescent 24 BUck Sea port 28 Time units 30 Even (contr.) 31 Rice entree 34 Map 36 Group df Moslem scholars 37 Snake worshipers 39 Expire 40 Moral 41 The —- brothers 44 Blacker 48 —herd 50 Trieste wine measure 51 Spanish city 54 Rousing from sleep 57 Sharp 58 Turbulent quarrel 59 Take into court 60 Adjusted in pitch 61 Indite 62 Possessive pronoun DOWN 1 Infants 2 Grown-up * 3 West Indian distilled spirit 4 Asunder (prefix) 5 Lubricate 6 Plant shoot 7 Having jaws 8 Ignore Wpj) WESTERNERS r" r r" r r- v r TT rr 12 iS 14 \T hr il 19 21 26 i! r B" b H sr ir 45 46 47 44 SI 52 53 sr SA 66 ar 61 62 Barry to Undergo Neck Surgery Today PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Former Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona undergoes surgery today to correct an old Injury to vertebrae in his neck. The operation was scheduled at the Neurological Institute of St. Joseph’s Hospital where the 1984 GOP presidential candidate has undergone tests. Goldwater has been plagued by chronic back pains for years. The surgeon, Dr. John A. Eisenbeiss, said the recovery period may require four to six weeks. 9 Transgression 10 Somber 11 Worm 16 Comprehend 20 Aurora (Greek) 22 Jot 23 Carve 25 Chair 26 Withered 27 Social insects ' ’ 29 Origin 31 European fish .32 Skeletal parts ■^lose eyes, as of a hawk 34 Facial part 35 WUd Bill-- 38 Greek letter 40 Finis 42 Boring 43 Seeped slowly 45 Celtic 46 Tedium 47 Raves fiercely 49 Wyatt — 51 Feline Answer to Previous Puzzle 52 Needle (comb, form) 53 Demand payment 55 Sorrow 56 Grain beard TONIGHT! for the twenty-tirst year the welcome mat's out St the Nelson home! Drop In and share TNE ADVENTURES OF 0I?IE « HARRIET 111! P.M. Bn ChaiNiBl 7 Co-sponsored by Drop in U, S. Payroll Is Hailed by Johnson WASHINGTON (AP) - A report that employment in the executive branch of the government is down 602 from the level of last year has brought commendations from President Johnson. The report, listing employment at 2,468,663 as of June 30, was made by Budget Director Charles Schultze. Johnson told ^ Cabinet Tuesday he is grept-iy gratified at the success of an ^fort to hold down the payroll. Bandit Flees With $291 KALAMAZOO (AP)-A bandit fled with $291 from the Imperial Loan Co. office near the Kalamazoo city limits Tuesday after hitting clerk Delores Harvey, 19, on the head with a movie camera, authorities said. IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT '^'^BUILDER^”^ FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $OCQC COMPLETE 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQQ0 COMPLETE £99 INCLUDES: Upper am Lower Cobiriets, Counte Tops, Srnk with Faucets CALL FE 4-4138 Open Daily and Sun, CALL DAY OR NIGHT ★ ADDITIONS FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION PtI«- IHB POMIAC PRBSS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, IDW [ . . I ii N ( i.-i 3 Days Onlyl SEARS Isl’CK AND ('() SAVE *1.57...So Good I Guarantee It 4 Ways Sliiir lliiiii's: i n. .mil Naliii’ilin Pura-Pore White House and Trim Paint Regular »7.79 6^ gallon Charae It 1. Guaranteed 1 coat coverage. Easy application saves time, expense. Guaranteed not to chalk. Keeps a fresh, new appearance far longer. 3* Guaranteed not to yellow. Finest alkyd resins defy weather effects 4« Guaranteed not to stain. Remains pure white years after applied Non-Penetrating House Primer Rea. <5.79 4»2 Velvet Smooth Jet-Black Driveivayi Coating 5®®* Regularly at $7.19 ^In five-gallon can Seals bare wood and adds life to oil base paints. Ends blistering, peeling. White. Caulk Tubes ... ea. 19c Just say, ««CHARGE FT’ at Sears Stops graying, softening and breaking n(i of black top. l^tects from gasoline and oil deteriorition. Simply apply with broom or long bandied squeegee. Dries hard in just 4 hoars. Save now! Master>Mixed Applicators, Just...............3.98 Sale! Chain Link Fence Installed! Series “600” Gas-fired Basement Furnaces Regularly at $229 105,000 BTU______ *199 Our Series “600” Gas Space-Saver Furnaces NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 135,000 BTU, Reg. $269..................$229 With Sears exclusive life.elad ceramic- coated heat exchanger for long life. 100% safety pilot $69.95 Homort Power Hnmldifier...........59.88 PlmmMmg^bH*mtimgD*rt.,PmrrySt. Regnlariy $179 75,000 BTU ... NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 105.000 BTU ... $189 135,000 BTU ... $209 Connterflow Gas Fnmaces 105.000 BTU ... $199 135,000 BTU... $219 Ideal for installation in closet or utility room! INCLUDES: fence, top rail, line posts, loop caps and hardware At Sears PonMa^ Store Only! over 70 ft. NOMONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan .■ ■" ........................ For protection, utmost strength and dependable sendee year after year choose Sean chain link fencing. Galvanised after weaving, There are no anrfaees exposed to rust Regnlar diamond pattern complements any yard, any arcldtectnie. Epj^ ehainiink protecfion (keep trespassers out, peu and children In) at minimum cost Ideal for enclosing swimming pools, dog runs and lawns, too. See about our standard, 48dneh high ehfin link fencing tomorrow; open 'til 9 p.m. for yonr shopping convenience! Gates, Comer and End Posts Extra Fencing DepartmsHt, Pmrry Su Btumment 'Salisf’K lion guaranteed or your money bark’ : SEARS l)o>^ntouii IVuiliar IPhone FK .1-1171 I ■m b. MJt THE PONmC PRESS - . WEDNESDAY, JOIY 28^ l^V “ j *- ' -vVA"'X' vAiAriT t9iii :# <%(»« m U ‘Fl/Ii^m/I{E SALE Look to Sears for the Newest in Home Fashions W.W the new SPANISH LOOK 59?® Your Choice a. Studmt Daak b. Bachelor Cheat c. 4-Drawer Cheat d. Lattlee Stylo Bod f. 4b-iii. Wide Baee g. db-ln. Stack Unit h. Baoord Cabinet f. MJS BY ©OWN ’ It Plan I How You Large^ridily carved pieoee recapture the romance of Old Spain. AH exquiaitdy crafted of aoUd aah with beautifully grained adi venem A dark antiqued brown finish highlights these costly woods. Antiqued brass hardware and tq>inide-tiim doon cm many pieces. Start your coUection now and a ’Matching Might gtaadi DouMedreecH C beae 7t.W FuQ or twin. ‘XVibIc W-SS deor L Coatampocary Rockar RacUner T SAVE •3007 to *4007 Rockers and Recliners with Soft Foam Cushioning Regular $129.9S 0088 and|lS9.M C/tl7«Msh« Lean back... rdax ... and enjoy the comfort of Sean big luxury chain. All deluxe styled with soft tufted backs and foam latex or polyuretbane foam cushioning. The wood-trimmed Cokmial rocker is uphobtend in ridi nyon and acetate tweed. Redinm am covered in auper-eoft vinyl that looks like leather. Both redinen adjust for lounging, TV viewing and full-length redining. All Top-Fashion Designs... Traditional, Contemporary, Colonial and Elegant French or Italian Provincial SALE! 4088 and 6088 Once you see the beautiful crafting you’ll want to buy these dudrs in pairs, the way smart deowators do. Each is lavished with costly detailing. You’ll see sudi luxuries as carved wood trim, deep tufted backs, and there’s even a lovdy cane-trimmed design. Most are cuahioned with polyurethane foam for deep omnfort. Fabrics of inspired textures and patterns in a brilliant array of colors. a. Italian Provincial print tub chair. Wood trim. Regular 169.95... .49.88 b. French Provincial chair. Rayon dam- ask cover, tufted back.......49.88 c. Traditional lounge in rayon matdasee. Loose cushion. Regular 69.96.. .49.88 All 89.88 Chairs Are Regular $79.96 d. Italian Provincial chair with ridi cane back, antiqiied wood firaming.. .89.88 e. Cokmial lounge in rayon and cotton tweed. Wood trim, looee cushion .89.88 L Contemporary swivel rocker has looae foam cushion, textured cover.. .89.88 g. Colonial awivd rocker with charming patchwork cover. Looee cushion. 89.w Candlestick Lamp shown above. .Xt.88 You Gem Count on U*./ QusOity Goeta No More att Seam DECORATOR SOFAS WITH THE LOOK and THE LUXURY OF CUSTOM MADESt THREE COLOK SAVE »2005 to •60o» *179 and *199 Regular $1»9.9S to $2S9.95 Hand'Glazed Finlsli Just one look will tell you these sofas are worth much more. Magnificently styled with the niceties you expect only cm custom designs. You’ll see soft pillow backs . . lavish fabrics such as tapestries, damasks and quilts... and even fine hand detailing. 'They’re pure luxury to own! All have reversible foam cushions of buoyant foam latex or deluxe polyurethane. Save now on top-fashion styles in many colors. a. Colonial sofa. High pillow back, solid mMle trim. Rayon twe^ cover. 86 in........$199 b. French Provincial in elegant acetate and rayon damask. Carved wood trim. 81 in. $199 c. Colonial sofa with arm covers included. Cotton and nylon tapestry. 93 in. long. . . .$199 d. Traditional in stain-resistant quilted rayon damask. Loose back pillows. 100 in. long. $199 e. Contemporary with loose back pillows. Textured plaid and plain cover. 92 in.. ...$179 f. Colonial, wood trimmed and covered in heavy rayon and acetate tweed. 82 in.. .$179 Antiqued Bronse Column Lamp..........24.88 Big, bold and beautiful taUes in authentic Colonial designs. You’ll love the rich maids veneers, warm Ssdem brown finish and lovdy turned legs. Choice of dough box, step table, end table, 48-in. cocktsul table or commode. f. Colonial $179 NO MONETY DOWN on Seam Elaay Payment Plara 8 Adjiwtabl* back ■MohaniHU allowa jrou to rimw TV or rmd in bodl Decorator styling by day... luxurioua 72z63-m. beds at nigbt. Wonderfully comfortaUe, thanks to Serofoam polyurethane mattresses and Serofoam cuahioDS. 84-in. long Colonial in rayon and acetate tweed. 79-in. Contemporary in textured plaid with plain fabric. You Can Count on Ua...QuaUty Coats No More at Sears NO MONEY DOWN on Sears £iaay Payment Plan $139.95 Swivel Rocker 1119 Colonial Coordinates, Rich in Authentic Detailing SAVE •409S on SOFA *199 RemiUr $239.9$ Seldom do you find big beautiful Colonial pieces at these low prices. Authentic touches include deep tufted backs, gracefully shaped wings. Reversit^e deluxe polyurethane foam cushions. 80-in. sofa and ^in. loveseat in textured fabric. Rocker in rayon and cotton tapestry. duality JfiKJLULUK S AVE3 •3000 A Pair of Twin Beds with Solid Maple Headbocu^ds 2 bods »129 Sagular flSt.M Inetud0u «U thb: • 2 finn polyurethane foam mattreoMs for buoyant sleeping comfort • 2 matdiing box m>iing8 with metal bed frames. • 2 maide headboards in an authentic Colonial style. Twin Arm Student Lamp. 13.88 A Sears exclasivel All ear iaaersprias bedding it to remain hygienieally clean and resist bacteria fermation. QUILT-TOP^LUXURYf • Save •20.07! 6-lnoli Foam Latex'^rJ' or i260-Ck>il Innersprlni^ Mattres^s Fbem latds BastteewmalBW dreams (rfreetfbl deep come tnk Exduaive dimided top foam fen^ csMdiMm you, yet yob fet the de^ film siqpport you need Odorleee and non-allergeiuc. Deluxe rayon bridal satin cover. Boa aprinpe: 1888 veil fUB ae 888 anil tertas Your Choice 6988 Ragular $m.M Baeh full sts No More at Sears ^ Country French Round Commods ICetchM 80.88 Freaeli tables. 98-ia. dianiatar.iBril 84 in. bifiiL Country FVtach DnnUi Style* Above table is available aouai or rectanfular. COUNTRY FRENCH...DANISH...or MEDITERRANEAN STYLE TABLES with Inlaid Marble Tops! SAVE Your Chtdoe 398* Regular |4».N The look of far more expenaive taUee . . . with creamy beige Poitugueae marUe inset into the tope fw an air of elefanoe. All are exquisitely crafted of dwioe hardwoods in warm ridi wood finishes. Mediterranean designs in a fine antiqued fruitwood. Danish styles in satin walnut. Country French in a mellow fruitwood. Hurry in to Sears and save on styles for every purpose! Lamp tables, cocktail taUes, step tables, commodes and more. NO MONEY DOWN on Oeare Bawy Payment Plan MRMNIU.1A. m Wn-tIMam. Th» Wmpthmr MMtly fair THE PONTIAC PR«g«™ VOL. 123 NO. 147 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY. JULY 28. 19fiA -52 PAGES uN.T.^.'raSWT.oHAL Draft Calls to Be Doubled-Johnson Profits for krst Half Are More Th^ Any Firm in Like Period NEW YORK (iP)—G( eral Motors Corp. earn< more money in the first half of 1965 than an other company in a like period. The world's largest manufacturing concern set records for profits, unit and dollar sales, dividends and employment. GM earned tl.27S.NI,NO, or 04.4S a share, in the first six months of this year, compared with 01,138,ON,IN. or N-N a share, in the 1904 first half. Sales . climbed to $11,215,000,-000 from $9,868,000,000. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson announced today that monthly draft calls will be more than doubled ~ from 17,-000 to 35,000 - in order to help increase the U.S. military forces in South Viet Nam ft-om 75,000 to 125,000 men. Johnson, reporting to the nation on Viet Nam policy,talks, told a news conference that “additional forces will be needed later and they will be sent.” But he said he has concluded there is no need at this time to mobilize Reserve units or call any . National Guard forces to,.|£|ive duty. “If that necessity should later be indicated,” he said, "I will give the matter careful consid-eratiolf,! and I will give the country due and adequate notice before acting.” • Expressing American determination in Viet Nam, Johnson said: “We will not surrender. And we will not retreat.” CARRIED BY MEDIA The news conference was held in the East Rooirr of the White House, and was carried by radio and television. As be has many limes before, the President spoke of eagerness to prooMte peace in Southeast Asia, and be announced an initial assignment for Arthur J. Goldberg, the new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. “I have directed Ambassador Goldberg to go'to New York immediately and to present to the secretary general a letter from me requesting that all the resources, energy and Immense prestige of the United Nations be employed to find ways to halt aggression and bring peace in Viet Nam,” Johnson said. Speaking of his own dreams as President, Johnson said he wants to promote education, equal opportunity, better hwsing and improved health. RAVAGE OF WAR’ “And I do not want to see all those hopes—the dreams of ao many people for so many years — gnmnd in the wasteful ravages of war.” JohnsoB pledged diat “I will do all I caa w that aever TOP-LEVEL CONFERENCE—President Johnson is shown with some of ^is Cabinet and advisers during yesterday’s top-level meetings^t the White House on Viet NSm. Seated (from left) are Secretrh;y of State Dean Rusk, the President, Treasury Secretary Hbnry Fowler and Interior Secretary Stewart Udall; standing are (from left) adviser's McGeorge Bundy, Jack Valenti and Horace Busby Jr., Budget Director Charles Schuftze, top economic adviser Gardner Ackley iind presidential assistant Marvin Watson. Planes Strafe Troops in North for 1st Time The President opened the news conference by reading a statement that grew out of a wee|( of policy talks on Vitt Nam. j * ★ He noted that “15 effwts have been made to start discussions” with the Communists aimed at peace — ail without response. WILL PERSIST “But we will persist, ii persist we must,” he said, “until death and desolation have led to the same conference table where others could now Join us at so much smaller cost.^ Johnson saM his first goal in V|et Mam is to “convince the Communists that we cannot be defeated by force of arms.” In the aeoond quarter, the auto maker’s profits totaled $639 million, or $2.23 a share, against $602 million, or $2.11 a share, in the comparable 1964 period. SALES UP First half sales rose to $5,657,000,000 from $5,082,000,000. The company paid common stock dividends of $1.N a share in the second quarter and $2.25 in the first half. A year earlier payments were $1.15 and $1.N. GM’s worldwide factories sold 4,056,000 cars and trucks in the first half, a gain of 11 per cent over 1964. Second quarter sales totaled 2,036,000 units, an increase of 9 per cent. A New Concept Troy Man Dies OCC to Use Tutorial Teaching as Car Rolls SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AWU.S. planes made their first announced direct attack on North Vietnamese troops in North Viet Nam today. They strafed an advancing Communist unit to protect a downed pilot (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second of two articles on Oakland County’s projected community college.) "T Employment averaged 74i,008 in the first six months and 744,-053 in the second quarter. HIGH LEVEL Chairman Frederick Donner and President James M. Roche said there were many reasons why the high rate of economic activity is being translated into a high level of car sales. “One of the most important,” they said, “has been the ‘>8teady increase in consumer incomes over the past seven-year period during which car prices have remained unchanged.” They added that the recent reduction in the excise tax on cars should further. stimulate demand. By L. GARY THORNE Charter class members of Oakland Community College (OCC) will participate this fall in an innovation that could radically change the business of higher education. Opening the doors of two campuses Sept. 7 to 3,000 students, OCC will begin operations committed to new concept of teaching. The tech- nique will be new to teSdhers, students and parents. Students, most of them fresh from area high schools, will discover that the college’s tutorial meUiod of learning Is a shprp departure from the jector, tape recorder or slide Woman Passenger proleclor lor mdi.Wual stud,. Condition until he could be lifted to safety by helicopter. The action, 65 miles north ol the border, followed by 24 hours /’The tutorial method is defined as supervised, self-instruction. The plan emphasizes maximum contact between student and teacher. Plans call for the tutorial labs to be open 14 hours a day, 8 a. m. to 10 p. m., for student users: COURSE CONTENT In each course, students will meet at the beginning of the A Troy rnan was killed early this morning when the car he was driving ran off Dixie Highway north of the 1-75 interchange and rolled over six times. See Analysis, Page A-10 Medicare Bill Before Senate Passage Will Send Legislation to LBJ In a key paswge on the dispatch of increased American manpower to the jungle war, the President said: “I have today ordered to Viet Nam the Air Mobile Division, and certain other forces which will raise our Fighting strength from . 75,000 to 125,0N men. Additional forces will be needed later and they will be sent. “This will make it necessary to increhse our active fighting forces by raising the monthly draft call from 17,000 - which it now is — to 35,000; and stepping up our campaign for voluntary enlistments.” Metro Study Starts Monday College officials state that the lecture method will not be entirely abandoned, but will be incorporated into the plan and, used in the form of weekly “assembly’! sessions for each course. Transit, Land Use Guide for 6 Counties CEASE TO EXIST Old-type classrooms generally will not exist at either the Auburn Hills or Highland Lakes campuses. Instead, the college will substitute tutorial laboratories made up of individual study week with their instructor ir “a s s e m b 1 y“ session. The teacher will lay out the course content for that week, make assignments and generally direct the student’s individual study for the entire week. Dr. John E. Tirrell, coflege president, said that “assera-biy” periods will impart the objectives or goals for that week’s study; the purpose being to motivate individual study. After receiving assignments and instructions in “assembly” sessions, students will schedule themselves in using tutorial laboratories. Nekton W. Krebiehl, ,41, 6396 Nor to n, was dead on ar-rivaLat Pontiac General HoSpi- the first American aerial strikes at Soviet-supplied missile bases in the Hanoi area. Mrs. Lucille Hartwig, 49, of 3779 Miiiton, Or-- ion Township, a passenger in the car and Krebiehl’s former wife, is listed in poor condition at the hospital with multiple fractures. State Police at the Pontiac post said the car was traveling north On Dixie Highway at a high rate of speed when it left the road. Military spokesmen said five U.S. Air Force F105 fighter-bombers were lost on the strikes yesterday, which pilots reported destroyed one missile xite and damaged another about 44 miles northwest of Hanoi. The spokesmen said three of the jets were shot down by conventional ground fire and two others crashed after colliding near their home base as they returned from the raids. WASHINGTON (AP) — A bill providing a new health-care system for the elderly and other sweeping increases in Social Security cpmes up for a final Senate vote today, with leaders predicting approval by a margin of at least 3 to 1. Passage would send the legislation^ President Johnson, who has placed a top-priority tag on the measure. The House passed yesterday, 307 to lie, the compro-m i s e version of legislation embodying the greatest single expansion of SociaT Security ever voted. MUCH SPECUUTION In advance of the conferoice, there ()ad been much speculation about a ponible goal of 200,-000 men in Viet Nam and an order for the muster of Reserves and National Guari units. i> carrels. Factory sales of cars and trucks produced in GM^ plants around the world totaled 2,036,-000 units in the second quarter, an increase of 9 per cent over the 1964 second quarter. VEHICLE SALES In the first six months vehicle sales totaled 4,056,000 units, an increase of 11 per cent over the 1964 first half. A $3.6-million transportation and land-use study of the state’s six southeastern counties, including Oakland, will begin Monday. The study, which will span 31^ years, is being financed by boards of supervisors and road commissions of the six counties as vvell as several other organizations. Study carrels are three-sided booth structures housing a desk area equipped with devices, such as a small movie pro- Instructors in various courses will be on duty in the laboratories, enabling the student to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) The vehicle rolled end over end and stopped 690 feet from the point at which it left the road, police said. The accident occurred at 3 a m. in Springfield Township. How You Apply for Medicare Benefit Planes involved in the action against the North Vietnamese troops were Navy fighter-bombers from the carrier Midway, a spokesman said. PILOT PARACHUTED Newsmen were told mechanical trouble forced down a Navy A4 Skyhawk during raids on a group of bridges. The pilot parachuted. The health-care portion ends a generation of effort in Congress to write such a provision into the Social Security System. The Senate took up the measure yesterday but held up the final vqte until today so that some absentees could be on hand. In Today's Press Data obtained in the study will be used to develop a comprebensive long range plan for the metropolitan area to guide development of future land use patterns and to provide a balanced transportation system. (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the ninth ptrt of a 12-part series from the new book “How to Protect Yoyrself on the Streets and ih Your Home’’^ by Gene Accas and, John Hs Eckstein.) chicken-bearted.) Jab, slash, cut, and gouge. Tty to hurt your assailant, to mark him. Remember, choosing a weapon and practicing .with it is something you must do immediately, before you are actually in danger. Voting Bill Conferees differ on two key issues - PAGE A-7. Retired Generals Say greater force is ! . needed for Viet victory— I y PAGE A4. Protection Series Potential dangers of | telephone outlined -PAGE B-5. i; Area News .........B-8 : Astrology ............D4 1 Bridge D4 ! Crossword Puzzle ...D-11 i Comics ............' D4 Editorials ’ V......a4 Food Section C-2-C4 I Markets D4 I Obitiiariet ........ D4 I Sports ..........C4-C-12 mters ........ . D-10 I TV^Udio Programs D-11 Women’s Pages B-1—B-4 “Our plans will be aimed at 1990,” said Irving J. Rubin, director of the study. * f * “We intend to anticipate change, not catch up with It,” Rubin said. “The future investment of billions of public and private dollars should be gdided by findings of the study.” ROADSIDE INTERVIEWS Teams of interrogators will begin roadside interviews Monday in the six-county area and the house-to-house survey w,i 11 start the next day. The University of Michigan’s Center for Urban Studies, Deariwm Campus, will question a total ot 200,000 residents M the area on transportation habits. Here are some tips on what to do if attacked. To begin with — scream. Yell at the top of your voice and keep on yelling as long as you have to. If you don’t have a weapon, use one of the self-defense methods described in “How To Protect Yourself.” Again, you should select a few of these techniques now — .and work on them. (Either with a friend or have professional instruction.) Remember, everything you do betw^n the time yoil read this book and the time you find yourself in a personally dangerous situation will reduce the chances of your being attacked. You must learn to be con- North Vietnamese Soldiers mov^ up a hill toward the plane, but were held off by rocket and cannon fire of half a dozen Navy Skyraiders, the spokesman said. Casualties, if any, among the North Vietnamese were not determined. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Try to get away from your attacker if yeu possibly can. Run and keep running. If you have to nin, don’t try to do it in high heels. They are wobbly and unstable, and the heel can become caught in cracks of sidewalks, gratings, and so on. If you have to run, kick your shoes off! This confidential information will be turned over to the Detroit Regional Transportation and Land Use Study (TALUS). Oakland County’s.share of the $1.9-niillion flrst phase of the study is $52,000, with the (xiard (CkHitinued on Page 2, Col. 4) V ' Better still, slip your h i g h -heeled shoes off and use one of them as a weapon. Grasp the shoe at the toe and use it like a club, hitting with the heel. Aim especially at the attacker’s face. FACE ASSAI^NT If you cannot get away, turn and face your assailant and keep yelling. Use the weapon you have chosen previoasly. (Use h as if you meant tt; don’t be DvlPORTANT DOCUMENTS Here’s a check list of important documents you should have on hand for Social Security purposes: □ Husband’s Social Security card (or a record show- ing his Social Security numb4^r). ] Wife’s Social Security card (or a record showing her number). □ Proof of husband’s age. □ Proof of wife’s age. □ Your marriage certificate. □ Copy of your latest income - tax “withholding statement” (Form W-2). Or, if you are self-employed, copy of your last income-tax return. □ Birth certificate of each child for whom a benefit is sought. □ Certified copy of adoption 6rder (if child i« adored). □ Death certificate of worker who dies. □ Receipted funeral bill if somebody other than widow or widower ciainu lump-sum death bene- □ Divorce papers (where applicable). Also, If you should bedome so disabled that you can’t work, R Is a good idea to keep a list of doctors who have ^aM you as wall aa hospitals, clinics and Other institutions whort you have been treated. A U.S. Air Force H43,helicopter picked up the pilot. He was reported to be in good coqdition. JWILITARY TARGETS American and South Vietna-(nese air raids into the North jiave been aimed against such' military targets as radar installations^ barracks, fields, supply depots and transport facilities rather than personnel. U. S. Marines and Vietna-mcM troops joined in a sweep under gnerriila fire throngh flooded rice paddies 00 miles louth of Da Nang in an attempt to smash Viet Omg iorces estimated te total three LBJ TO SIGN Sponsors said they were certain Johnson would sign the bill this month, probably tomorrow or Friday, so that the increases in present Social Security benefits can come in September. The $6.S-billion bill contains broad new health protection available to all 19 million Americans 65 or over ns a matter of right and at small cost. It also increases all present Social Security checks — for retirees, disabled persons and family survjvors — by 7 per cent, retroactive to Jan. 1. Checks going to 20 million beneficiaries will be increased. “After this past week of deliberations,” Johnson saM. “I have concluded it is not essential to order Reserve units into service. If that necessity should later be indicated, I will give the matter careful consideration, and I will give the country due anri adequate n^l!l before acting.” Johnson made only a passkig reference to the mounting ceit of the war in Viet Nam. He said that Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara "will ask the Senate Appropriations Committee to add a limited amount to present legislation to help meet part of this new cost.” Johnson indicated that a supplemental defense appropriatioii measure, involving more nmn-ey, would be sent to Q)ngress next January. “These steps, like our ac-. tioos in the past,” he said, “are carefully measured te do what must be done to bring about on end to aggressioa and a peaceful settlement. “We do not want an ex- panding struggle, with consequences no one can foresee. Nor will we bolster or bully or flaunt our power. “But we will not surrender. And^we will not retreat.” He" said that pledge is backed by “the determination and re-sources of the American na- tion.” Johnson went on to predict Pleasant Weather Continues in Area They' overran the village of Due An'in a sweep toward the S|^ from a helicopter landing zioM inland. Fair skies and cooler temperatures will provide i^asant weather for Pontiac area ‘residents through tomorrow. Today’s high will be 74 to 82, with the low tonight in the mkl-50s. know, as we knew, that a violent solution b impoosible, then a peaceful solution wiH be inevKabie.” The Communist aim, he said, “is to conquer the South, defeat American power and extend the-Asiatic dominion of commu-nfam.” The Marines killed 12 Viet Cong and captured three wouM-ed in the opening phrase. Viet-ttainese, operating two miles oway, killed five. Both Ameri-ean. and Vietnamese eesualties weK termed light. Tomorrow will be fair aod ,coolsHtiiaUghof7ftoM. Northwest winds are 8 to 16 miles per hour today. Low^ temperature preceding 8 a.m. today in downtown Pontiac was 57. By 1 p.m. tha mar-cury had climbed to 77. Flash WA^NGTON on — Presi-deat Jakasoa today naamd Abe Fortes - qaotad two days ago as saying ho wanlod no goveraneat jab “frap Praal-deat oa dam” — to ho a )as> ticc of the fapresN edfert THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JlitY 28. 19«5 Teen Breaks Kigni Arm That Made Medicanst’ Talks Planned Birmingham Area News on State Issues Art Academy President BOSTON (AP) — Everett Knofirles, IS, has broken one of the most important right arms in medical history. The frisky, freckle-faced teenager, whose arm was <»t ott more than three years ago by a wheel of a slow work train but was then successfully reimplanted, fell recently frem B Stone wall - and landed on the still highly sensitive arm. The Associated Press has leuned that the boy was then rushed to ^ the Massaohusetts General Hoi^tal where some of ^ surgeons who performed the (wiginal operation reexamined the arm. They worked late into the night a week ago Tuesday and found that the arm had been broken less than an inch from where it had been torn from EVERETT KNOWLES Arraign turn Man in Last Month's Slaying of Coed Kenneth R. Coo^of Lum stood mute yestcrd^in Oakland Comity Circuit Court to a charge of first-degree murder in the slaying of an Oxford Township coed last month. The 26-year-old Lapeer County man is accused of killing Barbara K. Hodges, 22, of MS Second on June 23. Cotdie was returned to the Oakland County Jail to await IrlaL He was arraigned before Judge Philip Pratt. No trial date was set. Sheriff’s Department detectives said that Cooke admitted the crime after he had first told them that a hitchhiker was responsible. Miss Hodges, a junior at Central Mchlgan University, was beaten and shot to death on Dunlap Road, about two miles north of Oxfoid Village. body in the freight yard accident. FIRST OPERATION It was on May 23, 1962 that the doctors bad performed what is believed to be the first operation in which a human limb was successfully rejoined ( body. Since then there have been several others. ' Th hospital confirmed today that young Knowles will have to remain hospitalized for several weeks becaus of the break and a knee injury also suffered in the fall. Knowles said hOi and some friends had gone out for the evening and were sitting on damp grass on the side of a monument in his home town of Somerville, near Boston, when he slipped and fell. He said, in an interview, he dropped about 12 feet to the pavement and as he hit, thoi^ht, “My Qod, the arm.’’ KN^W IT WAS HURT “I'knew I had hurt it because I couldn’t straighten it out anymore,’’ Knowles said. “Actually the bang on the knee hurt more than the arm.” A spokesman for the surgical-medical team at j the hospital said it now appears that file bone break, a crack in the upper arm, will probably have no effect on the long reimplantation process. “The arm ha'd become Bo strongly reimplanted that the break itself was no different than What could happen to anyone else, and probably will mend just as easily,’’ he said. Knowles said until the fall last week, he had been able to lift as much as 15 pounds with the arm. He said he has no real use of his fingers. He can move them only slightly. SERIES OF OPERA’nONS Since the first operation, he has undergone a series of others to try to regain full use of the Summer Meeting |s; Set for Legislators | at Cranbrook to RetitSi^ LANSING (AP) - Michigan legislators return to the capitol Thursday and Friday for a midsummer discussion of judicial appointments and three other BLOOMFIELD HILLS Zol-tan Sepeshy, president of Cran-brook Academy of Art since 1960, will retire next year. The internationally acclaimed painter in tempera has been associated with the Bloomfield Hills institution since 1931. Penttac Prtii Phof* arm and hand. Tendons have been dbnnected and nerves repaired. Just last month a one-inch piece of bone was placed inside the palm of the band to keep his thumb in better position. His arm was in a cast when he fell. Knowles blamed the cast for the break. He said hb did not think the arm would have broken * had;,-the upper arm and shoulder not been forced to bend against it. v - ___j “Except for the fingers, that arm is better'than my left one,” he said. “When I haye a cut it heals faster, and my' fingernails grow faster than on my left hand,” he said. Young Knowles would not agree that he had been through a great ordeal in the last three years. At the hospital he said he has seen many people who have had a “tougher time than I ever had.” The Weather FuU U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy, a little cooler today. Ugh 74 to 82. Mostly fair and cooler tonight, low SO to S8. Thursday, fair and cool, high 76 to 84. Northwest winds 8 to 16 miles per hour today. Friday ootlooki generally fair. BACHELOR WED - When 32-year-old Gene Ryeson of Ryeson’s Market, 4678 Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township, deserted the ranks of bachelorhood, his brother and business partner, Steve, announced the wedding in this fashion on the store’s fronts window. Gene married Bonnie Bayley of 5900 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield Township, Sunday evening at St. George’s Romanian Church. . The other three issues are: —Should any of Gov. George Romney’s 23 vetoes be overridden? ^an a, highway sign law palatabfe to commercial inter-. ests, scenery defenders and the U. S. government be adopted? ' —What’s on tap for the fall fiscal reform session? QUESTION FOGGED The judicial appointment question has become fogged since last week’s announcement by Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley that they support a con-: stitutional amendment giving His retirement will become effective June 30,1966. The announcement prompted Ernest A. Jones, chairman.i^of the school’s board of trustees, to make this tribute: “He was a major force in the prestige and growth of the school both as an artist and as an administrator.” LEAVE OF ABSENCE Following a year’s leave of absence, Sepeshy is expected h return to the academy as a painting instructor. .. In the meantime, the school will continue its search for a successor til Sepeshy as president of the school. A native of Hungary, the 67-year-old Sepeshy was educated in numerous European schools before coming to the United States in the 1920s. How to Apply for Cash Benefits ; appointment power to the gov- ernor. At the time, it waB' indicated legislative leaders were in agreement on the plan (Continued From Page One) stantly alert, wary, and cautious. You don’t have to be fearful; you don’t have to withdraw from the world. But you must prepare yourself physically and psychologically for possible trouble. You must also prepare yourself by selecting a few methods of defense that are suited to you. Choose one or two weapons and always have them with you when you are out. Choose one or two weapons that ypu can have readily available in your home. Your self-confidence will grow as your self-reliance does. Your decision, to learn to be able to protect yourself, is a vital one. If you are ever under attack, the fact alone, that^you have been preparing yourself for your own self - protection, will strengthen your resolve and determination. DANGER SPOT Stay out of “Lovers’ Lanes.” It’s natural to want to be alone with your date, but experience shows that “Lovers’ Lanes” are favorite haunts of sex criminals. COUNTERATTACK And as you counterattack, re- member — the criminal doesn’t expect this. He expects you to be a mouse, to offer no resistance, to do whatever he tells you. Here is a letter from the director of ^the FBI — J. Edgar Hoover. It reads: I’ve spent 40 years, my whole career, dealing with the se!hmier side of life — rob-beryrLkidnapping, gangsterism and murder. It is possible that the nation’s youngsters think of me, when they think of me at all, as a stem sort of person. I a.m.: Wind vdloeWy, H m.p.n. rtetlon: Norttiwwl n wM tod«y t 7:» p.m. I «JII...........*3 TMPdpy In I CM rpcprdpd * « Mpnppraturd .. ft pad Lmm TkIrbaM I* THMdpy'i TMnptnivrt Chart . . RapMl M S3 Jackionvllla tS 7S Marquatta 71 S7 Kanaaa Cily W 70 Houghton 61 S3 Lot Angalas C 61 Muskegon 13 5S Mllwaukae S3 S7 Pension 71 S3 ■■ . — - Trav. City 77 17 Albuquargue M 6* Atlanta 16 n Bismarck 03 SS Boston . 77 61 new Tore ,re m Omaha 01 S7 Plttsburfh M SI S. Lakh City f* - Cincinnati U 64 Seattle 77 S6 Oenvar 71 S7 Tampa H 71 Oetrolt N SI Washington II 61 NATIONAL WEATHER—Scattered showers ax$ predicted, tbip evening from the southern plateau and plains regions into the lower Mississii^i Valley and Tennessee rer the Great Lakes Valley. It oHU be cooler over the Qrat Lakes area and New England. Warmer readings are expected in the central F||uu Pat;;ific Nortlto’est.^ ' Perhaps that's just as well, for I want to give the young people of America some friendly, fatherly advice, and I would like them to take it very seriously. NEWS HEADLINES The advice has to do with the sex-crime headlines in the newspapers, today." These headlines worry everyone with any decency — they worry your parents and they worry you. And they certainly worry me. So I’ve worked up a list of ten “Teen-Age Tips” thal I feel will help young people to steer clear of danger. When you look them over yon may say that some of them are only common sense. Obscene reading matter is a favorite habit of the degenerate. If the authorities can run down (he source and trace the material, they may be able to rj,d’’the community of danger before |t starts. Know your date. Don’t go out on “blind dates” uniess another couple is along, and even |then be cautious. ty, they can strike with frightening speed. If someone phones and says he’s^ friend of Jack Jones, teil him you’d be glad to have Jack Jblnes introduce him. Don’t* wander away alone from the crowd at picnics and ' outings. Stay within calling distance. Sex criminals are easily attracted to any group of young people, and given an opportuni- Don’t ask for trouble. Dress sensibly. Provocative clothing may attract the attention of a potential sex criminal. CIVIL BUT WARY Be civil to strangers who ask directions, but never go part way with them. The “directions” trick is a favorite among sex criminals. They county on the natural ’ helpfulness of young people. Never, never hitchhike, and never, never pick up a hitchhiker! Be very careful about accepting work from a stranger. This is another insidious dodge. Always make sure that the person is a respectable businessman. approve the amendment this week and present it to the voters j in a special November election for ratification. But House Speaker Joseph Kowalskr,*-D-Detroit, and senate majority leader R a y m din d Dzendzel, D-Detroit, .say they weren’t consulted and necessarily ready to ger^long Don’t go about the house half-dressed. This may seem harmless,. but it’s an invitation to “Peeping Toms,” who may later becOitte something more dangerous. with the plan. The new constitution requires judicial vacancies to be filled by retired judges pending special elections. The proposed amendment would give the governor power to fill all vacancies— including those occurring -upon the retirement of judges at the end of their terms. He taught briefly at Wayne State University and the Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit before establishing residence at Cranbrook. RESbENT INSTRUCTOR In 1932, he was retained as a resident instructor in painting and drawing by the late Eliel Saarinen, the academy’s first president. Saarinen relinquished many of his administrative duties in ’ 1947 and Sepeshy was named director of the schcipl. Sepeshy helped the school gain its state charter as a degree - granting institution of higher education in the arts and accreditation by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. ZOLtAN SEPESHY FIRST ELECTION Each future judge would be in office by gubernatorial appointment forat least 18 months be- Lawmen Differ on FosterJest He is acknowledged as an authority on tempera technique, having written a book entitled “Tempera Painting.” ONE-MAN EXHIBITIONS Over the years, he has had 32 one-man exhibitions in art galleries, museums and univer-[• sities and_ has participated in national and' international ex-! hibitions in 21 art centers in the I U S. and abroad. fore facing his fit|t election. There has been gene Cleric's Teen Sex Proposal Angers Farmington Residents general support for an appointment amendment since a shortage of retired judges made the present constitutional provision unworkable. ' ♦ * ★ But Dzendzel said gubernatorial appointments should be 3:»nfined to seats becoming vacant in midterm and to new seats. Law' enforcement officials were at odds today over the results of^ a lie detector test tak^ yestefd'ay by two-time killer Carl F. Foster, in connection with a third slaying. "As far as I’m concerned, any link between Foster and Connie Crossland has been eliiqinated,” said Sheriff’s Detective Charles ’Whitlock.j;W.e won’t pursue it further. We ran enough tests to make me believe that there is no tie-in.” He is a member of the Na-i tionaL Academy of Design, Na-! tional Institute of Arts and Let-Itdrs and Commission of North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. . Grant OK'd for Training of 100 Nurses 1st A-Bomb FARMINGTON (AP) - A clergyman’s proposal that teenagers, with parental consent, be permitted to live together as if they vyere married has enraged some residents of this Detroit suburb. In a newspaper guest column, the Rev. Robert M. Eddy advocated that the state “not forbid or punish voluntary pre-marital intercourse fctween persons over the legal age of'consent.” The Rev. Mr. Eddy, pastor of the Universalist Unit a r i a n Ghurch, said the state should place no restrictions on the freedom of individuals to have intercourse though at the same time it should set an age below But remember that the common-sense rule is often the one we’re apt to forget. Metro Study Starts Monday You’ll also note that some of the “tips” apiriy only to girls. But remember again, every boy has a sisthr or a girlfriend who needs his protection and advice, so. he should study the whole list too. TEN KEY RULES In any case, these are the ten rutes that, in my judgment and experience, are the most impor-tant. If any stranger, ^^even a slight acquaintance, makes im-pn^r advances, tell your parents immediately. Young people are too often kind-hearted about such things. They dislike the idea of getting an ^fender into “trouble.” Just remember that if ydu don’t report him, he’ll pro^bly get into worse trouble later f' HH , if k.& i f - IT'S A SNAP TO PIAGE YOUR WANT AOv / with this easy-way-to-do-it form Be your own Wont Ad writer. To sell. To buy. To Rent. \ To Swop. To get a job. To find a lost pet. To find help. To do almost anything. Just write your ad on the form below circle the number of days you wont the ad to appear fill in yO^n name, address and telephone number fold mail. No postage necessary. Your Want Ad will start working for you the very next day after we receive it. ^ \ POSTAGE FREE WANT AD ORDER DIAHK L se This Handy Postage-Paid Order Blank o^elephone 332-8181 - BLANK FOLDS INTO ENVELOPE... NO STAMP IS NEEDED WRITE YOUR AD I IN THIS SPADE J- FOLD BACK ALONC THIS LIHE FIRST FIRST CLASS PERMIT No. 840 „ (S.C. 34.9 PL*R) PONTIAC, MICH. » ONE WORD TO A SPACE PLEASE (PRINT) BUSINESS REPLY ENVELOPE No Poitago Stomp Nocossory If Moilod in tho United States THE PONTIAC PRESS P.O. BOX 9 PONTIAC/ MICHIGAN 48056 WANT AD DEPT FOLD BACK ALONG THIS LINE SECOND Send bill to. CIRCLE THE NUMBER OF DAYS YOU WANT THE AD TO APPEAR 3 Days 6 Days 12 Days 3D Days ✓ . COUNT 3-Day Rate 6-Day Rate 12-Day Rate M-t*l Salt 5 AVERAGE 2 Lines ’2.70 ’4.20 ’8.40 ’20.40 City •Zip WORDS 3 Lines ’3.96 ’6.12 ’12.24 ’29.70 TO A LINE 4 Lines ’5.16 ’7.92 ’15.84 ’38.40 I AAy telephone number is. M i CUT ALONG THIS LINE V , 6 THE PONTIAC PRESSi. VVEpyESDAy. JULY 28, 1965 TOP VAEUE W (iy£» «nmi AWATi HAY "twni's hnui" ...mRTONE WINSI SEMI-BONEl^ ItAMS MAMl# -* - --- RIAOV TO miMlfe VOUt MVOMTI WAYI .C 50 T.V. STAMAS WITH COUPON-AU BEEF HAMBURGER . ... 3.liz wt mo 39* VEL BEAUTY BAR SOAP .. 2mouu>sizibars39* OUT-TASTIB THIM AUl mw ROSE lOTION-fOR DMHIS SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS . m mo 28* VEL LIQUID ........i ft *-oz bu 58* BRIOHTINS YOUR WASH.SFKIAI UBH JfAB 0ETERGENT.... ... S4B. i%«z.‘mo. 64* I SFICIAl lABIl DtTIROINT CfSi.BI#!* LlqUld QT. Mi|( ' JUMBO«AD.............1B41 mo $1.75 Starch §tl M SANDWICH MZI~DISFOSABU • Dl 7T* BAGGIES PLASTIC BAGS...Hm mo 29* ^ " I'Jf™StB“Fl0*8l«'rW«ii%.76* PALMOLIVE LIQUID.....i.«. *.©1. irt SB* ASSORTID COIjORSwI* BALK CASHMERE BOUQUET . 4 noiaar »». .ah 33* MOM WNniNINO FOWM ACTION BLEACH........nor wt mo 41* 25^ RPUNO OPFIR AVAI^AILI AT YOUR KROOM STORI iH I f SARA LEE FROZEN DESSERT CAKES SitSJ « ■ « I* J * ' T3h-OZ. GERMAN CNOCOUTI wm^ MkMt«i Hm. smw. I5H^2. HffSH lANANA 70^ 14-01. CHOCOUTI fed. / # Nw.irf4i.4wtm. ' SI 0,000.00 OETtILS and ENTRY BLtNIlS, HIHk ‘ I " , THB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1965 MAKEDVEBP I Dial in Handset - ) New Kind of Phofie for Area A completely new kind ol telephone which has the dial in the handset will be introduced in the Pontiac area Monday by the ’ Michigan Bell Telej^nd Co. The new tel^;>hone, caUed Trimline, will become commercially available throughout Michigan Bell territory that day, and then offered graduaUy across the nation. Frederick B. Hunt, MieU- $10,000 in Stolen Furs Found in Depot Locker SAN FRANaSCO (AP) - Police have recovered from a locker at the Southern Pacific Railway depot $10,000 in furs stolen July 10 from the home of former San Francisco Mayw George Christopher. The furs included a mink cape given to Mrs. Christopher by Nikita Khrushchev. Jewelry valued at $4,000 was still missing from the haul. The Christophers were' vacationing in Hawaii when the thieves fthiSk. TrimBae Is designed to make the oae if the telephone hand>- Its dial-in-the-handset feature eliminate the need to reach fw the base when dialing, and makes H possible to have the phone located in places where a standard instrument cannot be installed, according to Hunt' ANOTHER FBATURfi Andther feature of the Trimline is its dial tone button. Tfie set will be offered on an optional basis at a monthly charge of $1. A press of the button on the handset brlngs'lback the dial tone wtihoat the need to reach over to the base to hang up before making another call. In order to build the dial into the handset, Bell Laboratories developed a smaller disc that** is easier to see and operate. Hunt said. ' t -k * It is smaller than tfie standard size dial because the space be- tween the numeral “!’* and the serf) is eliminated. Finger holes remain the same sise. FACEUOHTED ¥(hen the telephone is in use, the dial face is lighted by a ,bi^ that is designed to last for years. Inyrovements In the moving parts of fhe dial make tts The voinme of the soFs beU Both waB and desk models will be offered in nine colors. WWW Hunt saiddhat the wall set is the answer to customer wishes to have telei^ones installed in out-of-the-way,; but convenient, locations like under a kitchen shelf, behind a closet door or iU the space between counters. VOU ARE GUIDED Regardless ol your age. Rogardless of what else you may eat. You need the nutri-ortta in milk—for vitality. Milk Is recommended for every balanced diet, every weight control diet. That's why ovotyone needs milk. Including you. Only milk has 86 nutrients. Michigan Miik Producers Association Owntd And OpertUtd fry fi,000 Miehigm Datry Pitmen • do- it- yourself Specud • JULY ALUMINUM SlUING SALE • Treckloed Prkei • Hoevy Dago J •t Acrylic neiihts • Free liistroctien Shoots HARTFORD ROOFING A SIDIN$ I SSS ScoN Lake leal, PeitUe FE t-4071 '^NEW TELEPHONE - On Monday, Michigan Bell tele^ phone Co. customers in the Pontiac area will be offered this new wall phone which has the dial in the handset. Because of this feature the phone can be installed in out-of-the-way locations that would be awkward for the standard model. Library Fines Allotted for Addison Twp. The Oakland County Library Committee yesterday released $304 ol penal fines for Addiapn Township which recently subscribed for service fnnn the nine-library North Oakland Library Contract System (NOLCS). w w w Based on a'formula of 18 cents per resident, the township’s penal fine money will be turned over to the NOLCS. Addison,. Township’s membership in the contract system permits residents of the township to use the services of any of its libraries. WWW Penal fines collected in communities wUh no library or library cooperative service are distributed at the discretion of the county library committee. CARNIVAL te Be Given in Honor of WBstern Widgot Baseball Team to Be Held at the SpriagfiBld Baptift Chmch 35 East Blvd. North from 5 to 8 p. m. Thursday, July 29th Clear..Crisp..Dry DAVE DILES SINi $xn MM •a 4/e ot. • nm that’s the taste you get with FLEISCHMANN’S GIN & VODKA FLEiscMMMiet ii«-M NOW. nfiKHiuieriVoo«-io plMor • ooni biitiueo m««iiwe« imm • mi niiniiwm nmuiei «eer,AT.i Ex-British Official Dies LONDON (AP) - Lord Grid-ley, 87, who as Sir Arnold Grid-ley was p Conservative member of Parliament from 1935-1955, died Tuesday. He was a director of electrical manufacturing companies and a former president of ithe British Association of Chambers of Commerce. There are more than IQO million individual accounts in the nation’s social security reccntis. APPLIANCE BUYERS: OLLIE FRETTER SAYS TRY AND BEAT THIS DEAL! Buy the appliance you want from me, and in addition to the lowest prise, ni give you a transistor radio FREE! How can you lose? I Tholes right folks, I actually dor* you to try and boat my deal, I'm offoring th# lowest prices on evory opplionco in my hug# invontory, [ and to mako it ovon a more dttractivo timo to buy I’ll give you o powerful transistor radio I absolutely FREE; And‘don*t forget that ony timo I can't beat your best price and service I you got 5 lbs. of coffee also frsm.* How con you lose? Just stop in this week and give me I a chance to save you money. I really can. I «bie*ptWhMpoel PAY AO UTTU AS 40« UOn Hers’s aeolher greet Mm from the friendly folks et Fbod Fair. ChooM your favorite coffee from one of theio famous brands: Just cut set the saepee of your choice arM bring It along when you do your weekly shopping. You can pay as little aaA9c fore ivHunmii House, Chase & San- ^ ^ Chm bom. Hilit Broe., Food Fair or ^ Boich-Nut, and pick your own Food Fair this weak and enioy price! thia “Pick Your Price” tale I MAXWELL HOUSE, CHASE & SAI^RN, HILLS BROS, FOOD FAIR or BEECtMWT Coffee WITHTHE A PURCHASE OF n *25.00 iHiSV V OR MORE AND COUFON BELOW UH MJ. CAN I l-U. CAN I 1-U. CAN | l-U. CAN WITH WITH WITH WITH PURCHASI OP PURCHASI OP PURCHASI OF PUROUM 0 54*159*163*168* GRADE I, SLICED i ts. A Qc Peters Large Bologna GRADE 1, THE ALL-AAAERICAN ^VORITE Peters Skinless Franks /**• LARGE AND SMALL CURD, CREAMED , i,. ^ Farm AAaid Cottage Cheese cm* A# a# ORANGE, GRAPE, PUNCH OR LEMONADE Farm Maid Fruit Drinks VACUUM SEALED IN BUTTER Birds Eye Green Peas NATURAL FRUIT FLAVOR ! FROZEN Food Fair Grape Juice FOOD FAIR SOLID PACK Tomatoes FOOD FAIR TENDER Sweet Peas FOOD FAIR WHOLE KERNEL - Golden Com. YOUR CHOICE 1-LB. CAN GiMii Beans FOOD FAIR PiiRE VEGETABLE Shortening FOOD FAIR, PLUMP, RED , l. . „ - Kidney Beana ' FOOD FAIR FRENW STYLE Green FOOD FAIR FABRIC Softener Rinse is Sir £S2i. i\ all MMCHASIW Ij FARM MAID ^|jS $1 OR MORI g,l ... “ I i1C« S(if) TTifist tib-a Scu/iiys I i Treasury corwred July it 1H4 'smiss.sw.*; •.«i,7il.39S.O 311.»30,1M,410.53 $ t wm«l¥.w.l. fik.1 Y«r- DOW-JONUS NOON AVBRAOUI STOCKS JO IMm .. IM.30-H.10 . W0.W-H.W .. 1M.IS-0.9 301.11-l-OW .. 'l0.1S-B.B4 BOND AVBRAOBS -Jj,Tly^AM^IOBF« Rath M. UNI. FfA. L.YB iim Tun: n.i 100.0 io!4 n!i m Pnv. Day 6.3 100J M.3 *3.0 Abo 03.1 100.* 00.3 *1.* — iG OM 100.0 00.0 *3A *3.4 ' A^ 03.4 103.0 10.0 *0J nj High 03.3 103.4 OS* *5.0 *4J 1*«S Uwi S3.0 100.0 10.0 *1J "' 1*44 High «.* 103.5 004 *3S ^ ^ 1*44 Low 00.5 lOOJ 07.3 *0.1 *3.* Un Comral Jl 37 404 VS 404-h W ^ f Melville Shoe. What stocks should I buy for long-mge grovTth? Do you think that MelviUe Shoe should be held?” 8,8. A) Melville Shoe is a pretty good holding for its well-secured is per cent yield, but it has not yet established a real growth record. Earnings were up sharply last year after a fairly long period of Irregularity, and should rise a8per, lead, zinc apd tin have bem particularly in demand. In the United States, copper has risen, and also wool and soybeans, with traders giving Viet Nam as one of the reasons. R R R In all cases the thinking^ is' that stepped4ip military activity means greater demand for noost of the commodities that find their way into tbe hardware or the soft goods of war. For example: more planes are used ¥ and more must be rejdaced. Also larger military forces use up more uniforms, food and hospital supidies. But for many conunodities expected increase in military demand is only part of the pi^ hire. Greater consumption by an affluent peacetime society had been anticipated thh fall. And manufacturers and merchants have been building up their inventories — partly in expectation of greater demand and partly to h^e against anticipated price rises. ALREMIY RISING In the case of many metals, prices already were rising in the United States. Producers have cited rising productiim costs under new labor contracts which on average have been exceeding the Sidelines proposed by the government. Tbe producers have been able 1b make their price increases on commodities finished goods stick because of rising consumer demand. What stepped up military ac-i^vities in Southeast Asia might do to this demand remains to be seen. But traders on tbe commodity futures markets are betting that the demand — and the pr^ — will rise. But some traders also realize that the United States has huge stockpiles of most sf the commodities needed in wartime. If the market prices go too hi^, it could use Its own supplies instead. mg *"*9E! THE PONTIAC PRKSS, WEDNESDAY. JULY 28, 1965 (, < H I n I < > I \ I . C > 11;» 3 Days Only! SEARS I{()K1U’( l\ ANP ('() PAINT SAVE *1.57... So Good We Guarantee It 4 Ways S Pure-Pure White House and Trim Paint Regular *7.79 «*? Charge It 1. Guaranteed 1 coat coverage. Easy application saves time, expense. Guaranteed not to chalk. Keeps a fresh, new appearance far longer. 3« Guaranteed not to yellow. Finest alkyd resins defy weather effects 4« Guaranteed not to stain. Remains pure white years.>after apphed er with LAST 3 SALE DAYS! Insulated Aluminum Combination Doors Regularly at $41.95! FuUdength piano hinge NO MONEY DOWN on Sear* Easy Payment Plan IVi in. thick at jamb, wool pile weatherstripping for comfort both in winter and summer. Push-button key locking hardware. Welded comers for strength and durabUity. Fiberglas® screening. Building MalmriaU, Perry St. Batement JL 3688 Aluminum Insulating Basement Windows Reg. $2.59 Instant installation . . . just apply the 59c adhesive to the existing frame and you have the job dope. Aluminum frame has screen built into unit Buy now, save! 199 Series “600” Gas-fired Basement Furnaces *199 Sears S-in-l Roofing Shingles Reg. $2.99 2®’ Non-Penetrating House Primer Velvet Smooth Jet-Black Driveway Coating Reg. $5.79 4^2 Regularly at $7.19 *In five-gallon can Seals bare wood and adds life to oil base paints. Ends blistering, peeling. White. Caulk Tubes ... ea. 19c Just say, “CHARGE rr* at Scars Stops graying, softening and breakih^ up of black top. Protects from gasoline and oil defterioration. Simply apply with broom or long handled squeegee. Dries hard in just 4 hours. Save now! \ Master-Mixed Applicators, just................. .> . . 3.98 Rastproof44k. Aluminum Laddeg* Renews roofing and damp-, building foundations. proofs building foundations. Elastic . . . expands, retracts. ... j nylon bristles. Use to Vond«fid thnimnol ^ply oil, water base paints. Gives smooth, even finish. . . 6dL . . . 9.99 31^xl3V&-in. 32V4xl4V4-in. 34V4x9V4-in. Sale! Chain Link Fenee' Installed! derwriters Labs, and FHA. ur Series “600” Gas Space-Saver Furnaces Aluminum Siding Installed INCLUDES; fence, top rail, line posts, loop caps dware 92 Regularly at $229 105,000 BTU------ Regnlariy $179 75,000 BTU ... *149 , loop and hard^ At Sears Pontiac Store Only! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Han per foot on pnrehases over 70 ft. NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 135,000 BTU, Reg. $269..................$229 With Sears exclusive Ufe-clad cenmic- coated heat exchanger for long life. 100% Mfety pilot. $69.95 Homait Pdwer Humidifier............59.88 igDmp*.,PmrrySt. Batumuut NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan 105.000 BTU ... $189 135,000 BTU ... $209 Connterflow Gas Fnmaees 105.000 BTU ... $199 135,000 BTU ... $219 Ideal for installation in eloset or utility room! V Compurs Smt* Quslity V Compar* 8««ri Fsaturss V Compur* Smwb Ptlw PHONE SEARS TODAY FRKB ESTIMATE For protection, utmost strength and dependable service year after year choose Sears chain link fencing. Galvanized after weaving. There are no snrfaeea exposed to nut. Regular diamond pattern complements any yard, any architectoire. Enjoy chaii^link protection (keep trespassers out, pets and children in) at minimum cost Idw for enclosing swimming pools, dog runs and lawns, too. See about our standard, 48-ineh high chain link fencing tomorrow; open *til 9 p.m. for your shopping convmieneo! Gates, Corner and End Posts Extra Fencing Department, Perry St. Baaement "Sal isfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Dowiitowii Ponliac IPhone I K .I- 1 I 7 I